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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-01-31 - Orange Coast Pilot;
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Ter-ror in· FqneralHonae
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~.· Ki~sing~ .Believes
. ' ' '
Samuel. Goldwyn~
.. ~ -~ . ' . .. . -~ .. -..
·1 ,Ar:.~h Oil EJDhargo . . -• • • ' . . . ' .
' ·~ . .
~ ,_' . ... . .
' .
--. .. -· . .
·-Will Be Lifted:
Last of Movie
' Pioneers~ Dies
_ra-s es, urns
• ~-a.mo.a ~ . + ~ . ' .,.t . . ""' ~, . "' . ..
EmMrgo Olrt
Oil Countries
To Meet Feb. 14
' WASHINGTON (AP) "-Secretary of
State Henry A. Klssin&er 11id today
that the lilting of the Arab oil embargo •
"will be nioommended by oeveral oil-
'
,. 3 Murdered
In Oakland
Funeral Home
producing countries" at a meeting in
TriJJOll Feb. II. •
Kissinfer said be0ll "qµlle optimistic"
that the embargo will be lifted. He
(Mde his remarks to newsmen following
a closed door meeting with the House
Ways and Means Committee.
But Damascus radio today quoted
EDlsoN TELLS 1Niiu"'· s=rR=v=--
DF NEW RULES -P1 .. 14
STANDARD OIL EARNINGS
UP ~ PERCENT, P1 .. 22
PRESIDENT SEES NO
'74 RECESSION, P1 ... 22 E·~2 ~ « \·L~'Wil· .. ~ '. ~.,,, • . ' .. ;u,tijrs~!
~ o,; &...:: &.J.!•e . , . · · • • , .. • ..: ' ' "' ·· ;: · -.. ~ -l~:.i .......... ' -OAKLAND '(AP) _ 'l1aree mortuary Kuwait's ,!oreign minister as saying ~is ,Qj,0 <>t't~;i..·.ln~;w,bcl;).11~~.~·to ·'.~''f~'.arul.'$ioi,'n ' employes were fouud hllcked Jo death country would not reconsider lilting ~ • .at',f Miami 1illil(."~~wt· ,f!'Old,tbe.ovihhlned getaway In their bloockplattettd IUneral home the oil embargo on the Uruted States
ca_r following, a high,-Sileid'~m..11) downtown Miami. .• • eariy today !>DIY~our after roving unless Washington proTldes guarantees
. .. ,....__tllic... . . k~-"""' '·ocrupieclthat, ~~· ,,,'l!illJdral!n~..ii • '1. r ~ _,., • "r "&'.•'· ' 11 \ "' .. • ,, .... =1~ ~ ,...... .. •. .... ,, . *" ·to . •" •". > • ·J oe11111 at -"""'-acroea bay In San · · -l ·: ' . · • ~~ . ' · Tl!' minister, Sheik Sabah al Ahmed,
M F Pollce Utd. apporeitly nolbini bad • wa!·J(lOmmentlng on .J7esicleilt NIJon'• D · f c ·1 been l!oleo. ,annoanc.ment Wednelclay Dlgbt m his ·._ .. ore · og '' ue . or oas ' PUliceSlldth•!bodyofonemortUary ._._ of 'the Union-.dcheu that "the .. vlctlm was bound betwien two pews Ara~ soon will reconsider the oil cutoff, .... ~ ~ . • , , • --.....:-. _ the 1broascast said.
• · . RILATID STORIS "-3 ind s . 1t "" the first n!a<lloo froD\ the -VtherWi8e High ·aouds.. ~e~-~~ln-= ::~~.51E"~5'.~
, ~. . . , , • far mlllllllt!' to view~-' (See EMBARGO, Pqe I)
~-log··thal ~ the Qnnce F....-Clll lar connDuatlaa of the Tbe vtdlml wen ldOalllled as
Colll lod81 ta liDl1 to nlam for the coutaJ log that portiaJJy .-. <nqe Olnlllde and Dorio Bryut, uv .. in
nm'_'' r.w. _,.._ .-.. lo the care!Uen of the bulldln(, -In their ·~ --.. Coounty Airport IDd bad log boml 'Ills, and Michael -.., In his !Ito,
U. S., w.-Service. •blowing from Seal Belch to San believed lo be a mortlclu am-, police
V; _ L._ V · 1:: • Cl~=~;...; ..i:. lheJ ..d a. ,.;~ Ponce Chief Tom Donohue said.
Civil Rights
Pay Awarded
;
Utt,....... --• MOVIE PIONIER DDD'.
·Samuel qoldwyn, ~f
,samuel:Goldi.,yn, ·
.Last.of Movi.e 1
Pi-Oiieers, Dies
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -S a m u e I
Goldwyn, one ol the last of Hollywood's
(abu)ous pioneer moviemakera, died
today .. He_ was ~I.
Goldwyn died during the night al his
home wbel1! be ·bad been under the
care: ol a nurse.
A family spokesman said he died
IOI Aboard;
Most Perish·
In Wreckage
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (UPl)
-:-A Pan American World AirwaYi
Boeing 7fTI calTying 101 persons caucJit
fire on its approach to the Pago PIP.
Airport in a violent thunder squall toda)
and crashed 1,000 feet short of tie
runway, killing most of those aboard. •
Witnesses said 91 persons· died, moo,
burned to death when trapped inside
the flaming wreckage. Of the fu
survivors, several were not expecteil
to live. :
The Federal Aviation Administraticii
ordered the airport, on the island ol
Tutuila midway between Hawaii and
New 1.ealand, closed following the crash.
Dr. Peter F. Veales, medical directll'
at the Pago Pago A-1ed.ical Center, saUt
"most of ~ dead fried in the plane." :.
Veales said the survl~ors were thr~
women and seven men and that eight
.were in serious or worse condition with
bums over SO percent of their bod;Y.
.;'.i;"Ao sµrviv,o,rs .. ,~ ·In fl!ir condi\joh .
8n<J able to wane aboilf.
"We all tried to• get out and jammed
the exits," one of the two maJe survivors
said. "I managed to · get ·ou t ove r a
'6ng but most of those aboa rd did
not."
.The pilot, capt. Leroy Peterson of San
(See JET CRASH, Page I)
Oraage
•
Weadler
1'qu~ in his sleep." Mostly cloudy skies are on the ,
He w..as released urller this month' agenda Friday, with cooler temper·
·from St. John'• Hocpital In Santa Monica · aturr,s along the coasl lllgbs al • :ietnum e88CU!I mom1nc"" to beoame 1'111.....,... ·= "i:. ~~~
' .!. • I'~ d tbrauCb tbe "'' 1. eatal:ed tbe ,baildlng at T:JO a.m. md s~ t~~(U). ,s:0':',,;;'~-::•1(t~;;1~~· =1!'.Jr.:t'tbim:i~~
when! be bad been .under treatment the beacbe.o 56, rising to 66 Jn.
. 'ATLANTA (UPI) -A federal for ID undisclosed ailment for several land. Oyernighl lows in the 40:!. =-~"!·r.'W1;~.-'"'"\i.'::;/~-i.v.:~··;:...; ~,;: .. -"" -'iN;~~ ~o..\r
. • llliauP '"""" ....,, ;nie -bad been llaobed or SAIGON J~l -'l1lre< Sou t.b -'-"" • latll hlllc: .-m hadted wttll 1barp-lnlltnunents police Vlelnlmeiie ..... With 150 ~ W-y afPI llld twil In ju~ y laid. '
...,..... """1 -..! the Spntb • -eal1y Udl ...... wbldl ..., • Ill la1d 'lllt ... bad problbly been , .
"'• adlHW "1 Ibo~-attrlbated to tbe poor Ylllbtllly. · --t 1' 1-1. Wboii the munlers '
C1i111a l'f<Sllly toot -Island 1. ~ ftr)bo O....,•Qarty ....,.dlacovenlll~two-setswers dilln. !Iii .,_, ID a Saulb Odna •, ~ towtr Slid m }!lllii 'llnded llllD 111 In the Upllllrl llYlq quarters ' ~ unl aM ....... f!ottle wttli -at . lhe fldUty dlrms tile ...-.Ing, ' of the two-otory bodlclq bi the heart·
'VletnlmtKt far6IL I aJthouch I few WWW -to talie of OUllDd. • I llllltlrY . _... lit Soipi !"id the . GIL _ , Bry111t'1 boc1J wu ,..... In a small'
8lllltll Y,1etna11• -""'*"' tile : The , ~-OCllClillftl,bi al · 1o1 . parlor near the vlewlns niom where
'!II, J con!fnqlnf "lhow of al!emed to be bet•..., Newport: Belcli the -victim wu dlacovered.
•; le lllet ...._,.., da1lll '!' "' and Loqi llolch, lltlloaP -Mn. Bryon~ dttssed onl)" in ber
--., Tbe .... lllQ' Oll1lAln Oii tlopli-..._... Ja.illnl lllrbor bathrobe, WU found nelf tile rtlf door
• ftllllr1ed """'"" 1111)' 11e1.y 1og tbert. . o1 the bulldlnc. . '
ff-. /
million to blaci\S he said were studios -MGM, Paramount . and (:alifornia paid $B6!,22.1 ii•
Ylcthns of job dilcrlmlnation, the Goklwyn Studios -was fncapacitated survivor and retirernent bene-
Julllice Depart111<11t said. for the past haH-d01.en yean, the result fits lait year for ll6 former
'1be department said It "11 one of• stroke. legl!lat<>rs and stott o/ficlals. of the largest such aettlements Jn November, 19'10, Goldwyn turned Storu Page 11
ever . awarded in a contested civU "!lltroi of 'his motion picture empire ' _· _
rflbtl cue. 0'9tt to his wife, Franc.-es. He wu then l . M • ...,, 14 Mtvllf ,..,..
-Federal Judge Skinty o . Smith a and aUIJ'lg. c...._• 11.J M•hlll ,...., "
siped a decne propolid by the Medical -staterr.entl ittachfd to the ~ " ::'.=:-c= 1;
Justice Department's Civil Rights petltkln indicated he bad suffered from ~ ~ ::.. ,,.: ~ u a final bnplementaUon ' ce~bral tbrombolll and a r t e r I a 1 •11•'-"" ,,,. • steel Mtr11ett •·u
at a u.s. Clrcult "..ourt or Appeala 1elero1ls since Marcb of ,tMl ::1--:.n = .~ ~ backing a government suit At lhlt Ume, the value of his flltate =:, 1~ !~ :: • ....,. 1,..: lfl'llilt the btg utility. wu put 1t $19.1 million and his yearly -'-' " """ -•
(See GOLDWYN, Pqe II
r 1 •
"
'
,.zc_o_•_IL_v_Pl_Lo_1 ____ • ___ ,_r.-h-'-'ursdoy, Janu11ry 31, 1C)74
... ll'ashi119to1t D.C. ,,.
t Murray Chotiner
~ Funer~l Pending
1 Funeral arrangements are pending
tod~y In Washington o. c. for Murray
M. CboUner, long time friend and
political adviser to President Nixon, who
died there \Vednesday.
An autopsy performed by Or. James
L. Luke, medical examiner ror the
pistrict of Columbia, showed that the
former Newport Beach resident died
as the result of a large blood clot
Grove Wife
'
Held in Stab
Death of Mate
.,
that developed following an auto accident
last week in ~1ctean. Va.
Chotiner broke hi1 leg and suffered
a concussion In a colllslon between his
car and a truck.
News or the attorney's death came
in an announcement from the \Vhite
House which quoted Nixon as saying
he was "profoundly saddened" by lhe
loss of' his Jriend.
"For more than a quarter of a century
he was an ally in political battles;
a value:d counselor and a trusted 1
collea~e. But above all, Murray
ChoUner was my friend," Nixon said. •
''While !9.me ,rtCOil from the label
'politician' MWT!IY was rightly prou d
of it because he was a professional
who ·bad the respect. and admira tion
of thole who worked with him," the .
President added.
The two men had been associated
polltic3Uy since 1"6 when Chotiner
handled public relations in Nixon 's first
campaign !or CMgress.
-•
UPI T.._..'9
. ' -
Radiation . .
War'riing
t
Plans L«w
WASIDNGTON · (A. P) --The
govemmeot dlsclaoed plans today to
-create a · speclal warning • s '(s t e m
designed to minlmlu radiation casualties
in the "highly unlikely" event of a
major accident in a nuclear power plant
anywhere in the country. •
The Atomic Energy <;ommiqion said
the system would involve a Centralized,
computer-equipped facility linked with
nuclear reactor facilities across the
nation.
The center would be manned around
the clock and equippCd with sophlsticated
communications and weather-analyz.lng
gear.
Ii woold be designed I<> offer, within
minutes after an accident, accurate
forecasts of the "travel arid diffusion " · ·
of any rad ioactive or other potenti ally
hannful material released into the
atmosphere.
The forecitsls would be used by
organizations charged with activating
emergency response and countenneasare
procedures. .
i A Garden Grove housewife is in Orange
County Jail today after police accused
Iler of stabbing her 50-year-old husband
t~ death \\'Ith a kitchen knife \Vednesday
night while her young son watched.
'-Lois E. Cannou, 43, was arrested at
~· family home at 12841 Dungan Lane,
after police discovered the woman's
hUband , Albert, sprawled in the kitchen
bleeding from multiple stab wounds.
Ctiotlner participated in e v e r y
successful Nixon campaign except his
re-election to the vice presidency in
1956 becau.se of a brief retirement from
politics following a Senate investigation
of alleged influence peddling. The
investigation was dropped shortly after
it was begun.
NIXON FAMILY ATTENDS.PRISIDENTIAL' PRAYER BREAKFAST AT WASHINGTON HIL-TON
The system would forecast JX1tential
doses of radiation to which people in
the surrounding countryside might be
exposed and the geographic extent of.
possible danger beyond the involved
plant.
+. )\ Garden Grove Fire Department
Jjscue squad rushed Cannou to Palm
Harbor Hospital where he died an hour
later, police s<Ud.
·lnvestigators at the scene found a 1*o<fy, eight-inch kitchen knife and said
ciaestioning of l\.1rs. CaMOu led to her
arrest on suspicion of murder.
• Po1ice said the only witness to the
rhurder was Mrs. Cannou's 5-year-0kl
son by a former marriage. The child
has been placed in protective custody
ai the Albert Sitton Home tor children
p<IUce aai1. '
.. Mrs. Cimnou ls being held In lieu
of '250,000 bail. Police said she will
~ arraigned Friday or early next week.
F..OmPageJ
JET CRASH ...
Francisco, radioed the Pago Pago control
tower abortly before the crash at 12:52
aom. (3:52 a.m. PIYI') that the plane
was on fire . He also reported violent
thunder squalls and one of these was
in progress when the plane hit 1,000
feet short of the runway.
1 The aircralt was flight 806 from
Auckland, N.Z. to Honolulu, where most
ol the crew lived, with an intermediate
stop at Pago Pago. Many or the
passengers were scheduled to make
cormecting flights for the mainland when
the plane was scheduled to arrive in
Honolulu at 6:35 p.m. (9:35 a.m. PDT.).
·A temporary morgue was set up at tJ:ie Pago Pago Airport \11hich was greatly
enlarged by the Navy during World
War II. However, the wreckage of the
plane was stilJ blazing-hot hours alter
the crash and most of the bodies were
still in.side the wreckage.
·A Pan American Boeing 707 crashed
JWy 23 shortly alter takeoff from
Papeete, Tahiti, killing all 79 passengers
and crew members aboard.
Pan American said 49 of the
passengers had been scheduled to
disembark at Pago Pago and that the
other 42 were en route to Honolulu and
L?s Angeles.
Great Grain Robbery
,FREEPORT, Pa. (AP) -The United
Slates wi ll soon be buying grain from
1'Ussi11 for five times what the Soviet
Union paid this country in the 1972
grain deal, Sen. Henry M. Jackson
t'\l&rged Wednesday night. "We're going
l.ll: buy Russian grain back at $5 a
bushel and they bought it for $1," the
~ashington Democrat said at a fund-
r4lsing dinner here.
OU.NM COAST IT
I J DAILY PILOT
'
l TM Omlfil C-1 DAILY PILOT, Wllll Wll~
lfl ~-fllt H9Wl·Prru, It M lllMd llY
fM' or. .... P.lt P111>1Wlin9 Cl!flH11y. S.,pa.
l'tf9 elllt""' 1 .. "'*41111111, M.,.y """"""
l'r"9y, fW CM!a M ... , H"""'9rl IM(h,
Hllflllflf!Oll l•ecfl/FOllfllll"' \'11!1y, Lttlllll
'""" '"""-'51dd!.-ck 11!111 Siii (ltmflll&/
1111 J1,1111 Cap!1tr11111. A -.lrlt'lt r"t-1
.. 11-.i 11 ..... t11Md s.tt1.1rdt'(t n ..,,..,..,..
fr>t prl!lclott P11llli.lllllt pltftl It ti »t Wnt
••Y itrMI, (01!1 M ... , Ctlllor,..11. f26H.
Robert N. W11d
Pthlliltfll 11'!11 l"r.*lllhei
Jat• R. Curl1.,
\lk.1 Prttldlftl 1nd Offtlfll MIMOtt
Tliorn•t K11¥il Ecllftlr
Tillll)t' A. Mu,"piil11•
Ma,...•ll'IO fdlhll''
Ch1~11 H, L101 1tlch1r4 .,. Nill
• '
A11l1!t nl M-1i.... f clhitrt
With PrHlcUnt 1ro lho Fl"t Lldy, Daughter, Tricia Cox ind tho 'Rev. Billy Graham ~
Jn spite of the success that his bare-
knuckles campaign tactics had for Nixon,
Chotiner's own attempts for public office
were unsuccessful. He ran for the
California Aswnbly in 1938 and the
House of Representatives in 1960, losing
both times.
Chotiner had not lived in Newport
since a diyorce more than three years
ago, although he vacationed at the
Balboa Bay Club.
He had lived in Washingto n since 1968
where he served the White House in
·several capacities befo re going into
private law practice in the capital.
Olotiner was injured Jan. 2..1 when
his car collided with a truck near the
home of Sen . Edward Kennedy (~
~tas.s.), who called an amublance.
He seemed to be recovering from
his injuries and told a reporter Saturday,
"The doctors think 1 'm OK ... I hope to
go home by Tuesday."
11e is survived by Nancy, his wife
of two years, two daughters and a
son.
Bandits Hold Up
Liqu~r Store
In Huntington
Two men armed with a shotgun and
a revolver Wednesday night held up
the 5 Points Liquor Store taking $350
in cash, Huntington · Beach police said
today.
Store clerk John Clifford told police
he was ·working in the stock rOom when
one of the suspects, carrying a shotgun,
ordered him to the front of the store
and told him to open the cash register.
The second su~pect then pulled a blue
steel revolver from his waistband, waved
it at Clifford and said, "Get back in
the back room," police said. He refused
because he thought they might shoot
him there and the robbers fled the
store.
Both men were des cribed as in their
20s, about five feet 10 inches tall and
170 to 185 pounds.
Driver Gets Year's Term
In Death of Coast Man
A Las Vegas casino porter has been
sentenced to one year in jail after
plea ding guilty to leaving the scene or
a traffic accident that killed Horace
Fritz Ill, a prominent resident of
Emerald Bay.
Fritz, president of an equipment
leasing firm and well known in Emerald
Bay circles, was struck bY a car as
he attempted to cross a street in the
gambling mecca during an October
business trip.
FromPageJ
GOIDWYN ...
income at !650,000. Mrs. Goldwi'll had
been active in her husband's busin~
since 1934·.
From the ti me he struck out on his
o"'ll at the age 0£ 11, mak.irig hi s way
fro m the ghetto where he was born
ln Warsaw, Poland . to America, Goldwyn
was an independent in thought and
action. He remained independent through
the stormy years which saw him rise
from a $3-a-week glovemaker t o
multimillionaire "in the movie industry
which he helped found.
He became interested in movie-making
\Vhen he dropped into a nickelodeon
on Broadway to watch a five-mfu.ute
comedy reel.
He talked his brother-in-law, Jesse
L. Lasky, into forming a movie
production company with capital of
$20.000. Goldwyn and Lasky Sent a young
friend, Cecil B. DeMille, then a
playwright, to Hollywood to take
advantage of year-round sunshine.
Four years la ter the fledgling compa,ny
became the $25 million famoUll Playefs-
Lasky Corp. This company later became
Paramount pictures.
In 1918. Goldwyn organized Goldwyn
Pictures Corp., which later became the
giant Metro-Goldwyn l\1ayer. But he
\vithdrew to become an owner-mem ber
of United Artists Corporatk>n with
Joseph ~· Schenck, Douglas Fairbanks,
Mary P~c~ord, Charlie Chaplin and
D. \V. Gnff1th.
Freddy Hail, 22, entered the guilty
plea in Clark County District Court.
Hall originally had been charged with
a felon y count of hit and run, but
the charge was later reduced to the
gross misdemeanor of 1eaving the scene
of an accident because no other traffic
violation was involved, said Charles
Thompson, a spokesman for the district
attorney's office.
Police said Hall did not stop after
Fritz was struck, but later turned
himself in amid a police investigation
for the vehicle involved in the accident.
Hall told police that he saw Fritz
in the roadway, and st opped
accelerating, but did not apply his brakes
because he thought F~i~ h3d -:: baci.td
away.
-. . ' '' • r I • P ~··1 ~•1~ ~ Woman lnjnred,
Driver Arrested
In Auto Mishap
A Three Ach Bay woman is in serious
but stable C()Odition today at Orange
County Medical Center after. 811 auto
crash early today on a fog-shrouded
South County street.
Ruth Becker, 55, of 31285 E. 9th Ave.,
suffered major leg injuries and multiple
cuts when the car she "'a~ riding in
smashed into a parked car along 9th
Avenue, south of Clubhouse Drive,
California Highway patrolmen said.
The driver of the car, ~year~ld Julius
Collin, was arrested at the scene of
the accident on charges of driving under
lhe influence of alcohol, police sald.
Collin's wife, Marilyn, 46, was also in
the car but escaped without injury.
Police said Collin and his wife live
at the same address as Mrs. Becker
in Three Arch Bay.
Investigators said dense fog was partly
responsible for the 2 a.m. collision, which
demolished Collin's car and did serious
damage to the parked vehicle.
Collin was released from jail at 8
am. today on his own recognizance
pending arraignment on1 the dnmken
driving charges, police said.
From Page J
EMBARGO ...
Kissinger sa id .he put before the
committee "our plans for the energy
conference and our general expectations
in the energy field, the situation in the
Middle East and we had a very useful
and very oonstructi".e discussion about
trade matters."
Asked to clarify President Nixon's
reference in the State of the Union ·
message Wednesday ' nlittt about a
meeting to discusa the lifting of the
oil embargo, Kissil]ger said:
"The President polntf11 ..:..out t~t in
his penonal correspondence with friendly
leaders in the Middle East be had been
assured that a conference would be
called with a view of ,ending the
einbargo." .
Questioned whether there ls any
difference ~n the Conference
mt.ntioned by Nixon a® the one
previously scheduled in Tripoli, Kissinger
said that he understood that "thi s will
be the principal item on the agenda
at that conference."
While Nixon ·said it was a ·new
development, government ofncials said
he might have been referring to the
scheduled Tripoli .meeting announced
earlier.
The White HOUie ·.provided no
clarlltcation today. A>ked whethe< the
President referred to the Tripoli meeting
or some other' sesalon, an official there
said only .. we're not in a position to
say." .
In hls State of the Union address
Wednesday night, Nixon said tbe Arab
meeting "is an encouraging sign," but
at tbe same time asked Congress to
approve Administration measures to
reduce dependence on foreign oil.
"Irrespective of the possibility of
rest<>ring the flow or Mlddle East oil,
we must act now to. ensure that we
are never again. dependent on foreign
sources of supply for our ·energy needs,"
00 said in a separate message.
'
Reagan Liked Speech
' SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan Wednesday night said be was
"pleased" to hear President Nixon
declare in his State of the Union speech"
that he intends to serve out his tenn
as president. "I was particWarly P1eaeed
I<> hear the President say that he will
not resign, that he will serve out his
tenn and that he will cooperate with
the House Judiciary Committee,''
Reagan said.
The AEC told about the plans in
its annual report to Congress on the
peaceful and military applications of
nuclea r energy.
"Although an accident which· leads:
to a su bstan tial airborne release of
radioactivity from nu clear facilities is
highly unlikely," the AEC said. "it is
the policy of the AEC to be prepared
for this contingency."
It disclosed that during the-past yea r,
its Lawrence Livermore Laboratory at
Livermore, birthplace of the hydrogen
bomb, began the conceptual design of
!M"proposed alert system whlcj1' WGlld
be known as the Atmospheric Release
Advisory Capability system.
''Eventually, it would be capa~le of
serving some 300 separate nuclear
facility sites," the commission said. · '.fhe nation has about 40 ope~attng
commercial nuclear poWer plantl, · bUt
aboul 1,000 are forecast f0<· operation
by the turn of the century. •
Oakland Star
Reggie Jaclison
Sued 'in County
Oakland Athletics' slugger Regie
Jackson and his club have been •ed
for $300.000 by five Orange County fans
who claim the colorful outfielder did
a little slugging olf the diamond .
Jolm B. Christensen, Gordon C. Schick.
Robert M. Kling, Jolm B. Oberto and
Scolt Rumaey cialm in their Saperi9r
Court action that Jackson leaped lrito
the stands al Anaheim Stadiwn la.<t
Aug. 3, threw them all lo the . ground
and then kicked and beat them.,
Noting reporta that Jackson's exploolon
was triggered by rans hurling debris
onto the field -the A's won the game
2 I<> I -the live plaintills deny that
they were involved in such actions and
that Jacbon's attack was unprovoked.
Also named in the lawsuit u a
suhsidlary defendant ls Charles 0 .
Finley, the club owner.
· Escalator Hurts 3
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -An
escalator uneipectedly reversed at a
Bay Area Rapid Transit Diltrict 1tation
Wodneoday, .. injuring three ·penona and
toppling dozens more. Dorothy Hamey,
63, was bospltallzed with a· possible ankle
fracture, plus chest and vertebrae
Injuries.
The robbery took place about 8:30
p.m. Police said at least one witness
saw the suspects run from the store,
which Is in a shopping center at 18661
l\1ain St.. and head in the di rection
of a black car in the parking lot.
He broke off his aJSOCiation with
United Artists in 1940, charging that
his studio alone was carrying the
production burden while other members
sat back and shared in the profits.
l~·STORE MICRO·WAVE DEMONSTRATION by a HOME ECONOMIST
!\fail Can1paign Set
NEW YORK IUPil -The National
Committee on the Presidency. see king
President Nixon's i m p e a ch m e n t ,
announced Wednesday it will launch a
mail campaign with the hope of reaching
six million voters within 45 days . An
initial mailing of 500,000 letters began
this \Veek. according to Charles L. Mee
Jr., chairman or the committee founded
in September.
He broUgbt to the screen such figures
as Lionel Barrymore, Geraldine Farrar
Irene Rich, Lewis Stone, Constanc~
Bennett, Ronald Colman, Vilma Banky.
Joan Blondell, Helen Hayes, Eddie
Cantor, Loretta Young, Melvyn Douglas
Merle Oberon and Fredric MaPch. '
He spotted a lanky cowboy extra on
the set one day and made Gary Cooper
a star in "The Winning of Barbara
Worth."
Sear~h for Gas
Simo1i to Urge Limit 011 Sales
WASillNGTON (UPI) -Fared with growing traffic !ams at
gasoline stations, energy chief William E. Simon is expected shortly
to urge gas stations to sell each customer a minimum amount of gas
to prevent drivers froLn buying one or two gallons at a time, it was
learned today.
Energy officials blame part of the long lines at gas stations on
motorists wbo want to "top off" their tanks at every opportunity
just to .keep the tank lull rather than waiting until they are actual·
Iy in need of gas.
As much as 5 percent o! the nation's gasoline shortage "could
be due to motorists keeping it in their gas tanks," energy officials
said.
l Simon Is reported conllderlng urging a Urnlt of five or 10 gal· ons pet sale;the sources .. id.
Simon also la erpected to uree gas atatlon.s to post their hours
or busi-s. Officials say ps ls beiiig consumed unnecessarily by
motorisla cruising areas In search o! open gu alallons.
'
Sa~rday Fe~. 2, 12 n~n til 5 P.M.
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ThllfldilY, Jan111ry ll, lq74 S DAJl Y PILOT '
campaign Fu:µding , Controls Rejected
Kfdaap <Jase
Killer, Company
Sued by .Wo·man
Convicted killer Jared Allan \Vallace
and the security rlrm that employed
tum as a part time guard were sued
for $6 million \Vednesday by a South
Laguna X-ray technician who managed
10 escape from bis patrol car.
Carole Ann Rowan, 24, names the
26-year..old Marine and the Bums
International Security Service, Inc., as
co-defendants in her Orange County
Superior Court action.
She claims that Wallace, v.·ho is now
serving a st ate prisoo term or five
years to life for the killing a year
ago of Fountain Valley cocktail \11aitress
Nanette Post. 27, kidnaped her f."eb .
9, five days prior to that murder.
She testified at Wallace's trial that
she was responding to an emergency
call from a San Clemente hospital when
Wallace, his rooftop light flash ing , forced
her to pull over to the side of the
San Diego Freeway.
The attractive blonde testified· that
she managed to escape from the vehicle
after WaUace attempted to handcuff her
at gunpoiol. And she claims that her
experience at the hands or the Marine
has left her 'v.·ith substantial emotional
stress.
Wallace bad earlier been ·sued for
Sta million by David Post, husband of
the woman \\lallace raped and strangled
and later stuffed under a juniper bush
on a Huntington Beach housing estate.
Post , ol. 10079 Quail Coort, Fountain
Valley, also named Wallace's employers
as co-defendants in an action containing
the allegation that his children, David,
7, and Shannon, 5, are now motherless.
It was successfully alleged that
Assembl y Oka.rs
Life Terms for . ,
Heroin PtIShers
SACRAMENTO (UPI} -Legislation
providing life prison terms for big·llme
heroin pushers and relaxing I h c
maximum penalty for use of marijuana
ha11 been passed by the Assembly.
(Related story, Page 7)
The bill. by Assemblyman Raymond
Gonzales CO-Bakersfield), would give a
district attorney the option of charging
large-scale pushers with the proJ)OSed
stricter provisions for mandatory life
tenns or charge them under existing
Jaw which provides lesser penalties.
The bill (AB2669) also \vould reduce
the maximum penalty for marijuana
possession or use from a felony to
a misdemeanor. The st rictest .penalty
would be six months in jail rather than
a prison tenn.
The bill went to the Senate Wedneday
on a 59-21 vote. nine more than it
needed for Assembly passage.
Wallace picked . up Mrs. Post near the
Santa Ana tavern where she was
el1\Pl<>Yed and' drove her to the
lhmtington ~aeh area where she was ·
raped and killed. . ' . . ~
Zodiac 'Killer
... 4•'--• -.. .
Ends Silence
Of 3 Years
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -After nearly
a three.year silence, the 1.ocliac killer
has written another of his cryptic. hand·
printed letters claiming responsibility for
a Jong string of murders.
In the Icitest m.Wive, rec e Ive d
Wednesday by the San Francisco
OnOOicle. the author claimed ~ has
killed 37 times since 1966. The badly
misspelled note, scrawled with a blue
felt-tip pen, also quotes from a Gilbert
and Sullivan operetta anJ reviews the
current film "The Exorcist."
Police attributed six killings between
SF CITIZENS TOLD NOT
TO WALK ALONE, P•ge 5
1966 and 1969 to the unknown writer.
who dubbed himself "Zodiac" in his
first letter to the Chronicle in October.
1969. His last previous Jetter was dated
March, 1971.
1be new let ter made oo mention of
the random street shootings here Monday
night in which four persons died and
a firth was seriOusly injured .
Homicide inspector Will iam Armstrong
said the Jetter was examined by ·a
hanch.\•riting expert who verified it as
the work of the same person who wrote
the ea rlier notes. It was postmarked
Tuesday from somewhere in San Mateo
County, Armstrong said.
'•J saw & think "The Exorcist·• was
the best saterical oomidy I have ever
seen." (he Jetter opened.
"Signed, yours truley:" it continued,
and then quoted a verse from Koko 's
"TitwiUow Song" in the second act of
"The Mikado.
"Ps. If I do not see this note in
your paper. I will do something nasty.
\\1hich you know I'm capable of doing."
the Jetter continued, ending with the
nofation: "Me--37: SFPO-O:·
The conclusion was similar to previous
Jiirnofts in -itich Zodiac boasted of how
many persons he killed and dlided the
San Francisco police department. ror
failing to catch him .
County Supervisor
Baker Expects Heavy
Campaign for His Seat
.
Orange County &lperv!sor David Baker
predicts a high-powered, expensive
campaign will be waged against him
in the upcoming primary election.
But Baker, whose Second District
includes Huntington Beach and other
west county areas, said he plans "to
meet any and all competition full bore."
In an impromptu diacussion with the
press in Sant.a Ana , Baker sa~ he
knows there art moves afoOt to unseat
him and tl'N!re could be a Jot or money
behind thooe efforts.
"I plan to do whatever it takes on
a low-budget campaign to keep my teat
on the board," Baker said. "lf I nm
into a $250,000 competition, 1 will pray
I lot."
Baker said be hti J9enl lea than
$25,000 totally on his campaign11 since
being elected to oltice ll years ago.
He said he spent "only 18.000" the
last time he ran.
Baker still has no campaign manoger
but does have "a war chest and a
good organlzatioo0 behind him.
The superv isor said he knows he can't
meet big-money competition on a dollar-
for-dollar bas is becauoe he said that
"would be1 harmful to the whole process
of govemmcnt.1'
He will depend instead on the
Ol'lllllllzallon he has l>ttn building for
more than a year and a "vta:orowi
penonal ClqMllp."
The 1upervl*>r Ul\I ·0ne of the most
dllflcult problemo he will lace lies In
the fact that up to, !II perotlll ol the
people In hls dlitrCot were , not there
the last lime he ran.
llu(lllllflioOJpenl, ~q the !i!al few
yean · hos' reilraim • the 'cllilitcl lines
Deity ........... ,_..
EXPECTS ST"F CAMP~I°"
· Su~r~.ioor David .. kor
• and made II ......ary for li!m to
acquaint hJnlS<U wllh a new 8'gmea1
ol the elecwrate.
•·t have made every J*Sible. effort
to .oommunicate with tfie new peoR&t
in my district and If I haven'f dOl\e
enooah for lh m, it will ihow IP at
the polls," he said.
'
Batting Around
Richard Epstein and Valerie Kirkgaard demonstrate
the ~a.test tools fpr r.elease of excess anger, energy,
hostility or frustration -the Bataca, a specially
made bat filled with foam rub~body gets
hurt if users avoid hitting the face, crotch or
breasts.
Mh1ority Group Arcl1itect
Eyed for County Project
Orange County Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich wants the county Building
.Services Department to look for a
minority architect to draw up the plans
Reno Pair Held
In Deaths of 2
Young Children
DIXO~ CAP) -Authorities in two
states have aJTeStcd a Reno coUple fn ,, ·~ ,.., . . ... connec tion with lhe deaths or two young
childrt>n, one of whom apparently was
buried ip a shallow grave here nearly
t~·o years ago.
Reno. Nev .• police booked James Steel,
~ and his wife, Patricia, 21, for
investi ga tion of murder Wednesday after
their three-month-old da11gbter, Annette,
died at a local hospital.
Steel also \\'as arrested r o r
investigation of murder by Solano County
sheriff's deputies after he led them to
a makeshift grave where the body or
his step-daughter, 4-year-old T i n a
for a $1 .7 million n.re training center
near El Toro f\farine COrps Air Station.
Diedrich won a twcrweek board delay
of action on an architect for the project
lo give Building Services Director Joseph
Smisek time to look for minor ity finns
in the county.
"\Ve should look for a minority
architect with some expertise on this
type ol construction and submit him
on the slate of candidates [or the job,"
Diedrich said. ·
Smisek said the county maintains a
list of architects expressing willingness
to work on county projects but none
are minority finns.
Diedrich said he want s a more detailed
study of lhe matter to prove to him
that no minority Orange Countians run
such companies.
Supervisor Ronald Caspers said It
might also be advisable for Smisek lo
ask the finns on the list how many
minorities work for them .
The Ostennan Fire Training Academy
is to be built on about 100 acres of
cotmty land, adjacent to the county jail
honor farm along Trabuco Road.
Smisek said it will i n c I u d c
administration offices. b a r r a ck s .
classrooms and training facilities for
county firemen trainees and cities that
work out cooperative agreements with
the county for use of !he facility.
Fa1nil y Fi glit
Batters Autos
FAIRFIELD (UPI I -Both ·
family cars were \vrecked when
a man and his wife got into an
argument in a tavern, drove into
a muddy field and rammed each
other repeatedly, authorities have
reported.
Police" said ?\tr. and ?.1rs. Rodger
W. Thompson, both 31, were
r e ported reconciled Wednesday
after Mrs. Thompson angrily fled
the tavern in one car and her
husband pursued her in the other.
The cars ended up ramming each
other in a field next to the tavern
until both, a 1968 Dodge and a
1968 Chevrolet. were total wrecks,
police said .
Man Torcl1ed; ·
Four Teens Held
NE W YORK (UPI ) -Six teen-agers
poured lighter fluid on a man sleeping
on the floor of a laundromat and :set
tlim on fire. The man, R ob e r t
Durham, 42, New York City. suffered
third-degree burns ove~ the lower portion
of his body and was twspitalized i.n
critical condition.
Police Wednesday arrested f o u r
suspects. including a J5-year-0ld boy.
Board Backs.
Awa y From .:
Leg islation
•" "'
Orange Cou nty supervisors back :
a\1•ay fron1 adopting loca l campaign
fin ancing control s Wednesd ay, claimi1
a ne111ly proposed state law might matt
local legislation a waste or lime.
Three proposed ca1npaign ord inanct_s
\rerc put in limbo. making it like6'
no control s will be in effect before
the closing of the candidate filing peri~
~larch 8. ~
During a. hall·hour debate. Supervisor ,
Ronald Caspers' proposed ordinance died
for lack of a second . Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich 's plan u•as u1ithdrawn for
reworking and one by the f.nvironmental
Coalition was ne\•er considered. ,,
The chief excuse given for not acting :
ra pidly on spending and donation controls ·
was a Jaw which is no\v moving through' ,
the State Legislature.
Sen. John Nejedly (R·\Valnut Creek 1·
has offered a measure that would limit
expenditures and contributions to an
average or 25 cents per registered voter.
l ~ contains some di sc Io s ur &
requirements. .
Supervisor Ralph Clark said. "If this
state law ~wld supersede anything v.·e.
do here, acting on one of these proposal!\
\11ould see1n to be an exercise in futility.",
Supervisor Robert Ballin. whose last
campaign ran up expenses approachi!"g. :
$200,000, said it appeared any local law .
"'ould be "a waste of lime."
Diedrich, whose Jaw proposes full '
disclosure or contributions and expense~
but no limits on the total amount, said'
he wants to polish up his ordinanOF-
and resubmit it at a later date.
He said he still opposes any kind
of limit as "unenforceable" but will
insert a blank in his redra!ted law
1vhere a limit could be imposed.
Caspers' measure, which proposes 1a
limit of 50 cents per Tegistered vat«
and some disclosure. was offered. a:111
a motion but got no second.
Caspers said he thinks somethin'g ~·
to be put on the books q~k1y because,
the elections i(re right around Pte corna:1
Jan Boer, a member of the audience
and longtime county govern m e at,..
watcher, commended the board for •'·
least trying to do something about
runa"'·ay campaign costs. . ;.
"But I am just afraid no law yo11-
pass will really work as long as there.
are clever players to work around iti''
she said.
f..tost of the supervisorll have already
had 1100 and $500-a·plale Iund raisin&
gatherings and more are in the worts 1
in coming week!. 1
If the county passes no law aQd
depends on the state law, no controls--
would be imposed at all this year sin~e
the state measure wouldn't normally
go into effect until Jan. 1 of next year. .
Diedrich promised he would bring hi11
rewor ked ordinance back to the board:
for another look in the coming week1:-.1
However. no date was set for it.
:.
\V~al~a:'eas ~~ve~light Wednesda'y
when a Reno hospital asked police to
investigate the death of the infant
Annette, whom officers said died of
massive head injuries, a broken jaw
and malnutrition.
"It appeared to be child abuse ," said
Sgt. Charles Nearpass. "We cheeked
back in the files and found another
case of child abuse involving the couple
and Tina Woodall in May, 1972. Mrs.
Steel finally told us she was dead, too,
and 'we notified Califorrlla authorities.
(}a1•rell6 Special Promotion on Leather ...
Nearpa" said Slee! finally agreed to
lead police and sherifrs deputies lo
his step-daughter's grave, about ~ miles
west of Sacramento.
Deputies said the girl was buried in
a sh.allow grave covered by rocks in
a drainage ditch behind a saloon near
here. They estimated the body had been
buried nearly two years.
Reno police said Steel iold them the
Woodall girl died ol natural causes while
the family was living in Valejo. He
said he buried her because he could
nol af!onl a funeral
Police Ibo said ·Steel claimed the
infant . Annette had been injured when
he accklenlly fell on her.
Standard Ti1ne
Retur1t Puslied
SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A reaolutlon
UJ'g!nc Congre8' ID pul the nation 'back
on atandard time has been proposed
by Senate President pro tern ~ames R. Milli (!).San Diego).
Miili said Wedoesda,y the expected
energy savlnp resulting rrom C.Ongress'
authorizint Daylight Saving Time on
a year-round basis "have not occurred."
"The only signifiCIDt result has been
lnconvenlence IDd pre.dawn deaths of
children who must go to school In early
morning darkness," Mills said.
Rockets Wound 10
PHN6M PENH, Combodi• CAP l
lnsurpnla ftred tM> rocklla Into· Phnom
Ptllh'1 -loday, "'1Jndlng 10
civilians, neWllDttl on the scene said .
Tile rockela slammed Into Tuol Kok
IJld -... Poung Pe111, about 21> mu.,
to lhe wat. llld ~ al the hoort
or t~lty.
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INTERIOR DESIGNERS Til"'" & F•L E"" COSTA MESA, CALIF.
•
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646-0275
'
lf OAll V PILOT Thursday, Jinuary 31, 1~74
Nixon Accorded High Marks in Speech
wlda
Tom
arpbine
Beating the 55
Frusb·ations
BEATING THE RAP DEPT.-Arsene
"Blackie" Gadarian, the Newport Beach
boatyard w ·ner, anti-philosopher and
savant by-the-bay, has just struck again
~<ith anolher scheme to save mankind.
Emerging from beneath one of his
drydocked boats, Gadarian proclaimed •
hi s latest invention will strike at the
heart of the energy crisis. lt Vt'ill relieve
multitudes of motorists from the
traumas visited upon them by the new
:;.a mile-per-hour speed Jim.it.
"I have discovered the ans"·er to the SS
mile-per-hour Crazies," Blackie boomed,
"'aving a monkey wrench expansively
at the overcast Newport sky. "You know
what the 55 Crazies are?"
"No, what are they~"
"WEU., IT'S A NEW traumat ic condi-
tion created by driving the freeway these
days. You get out on those long, lonely
stretches and the only human beings
around are the cops behind billboards,"
Gadarian explained careCully.
"And you know they're lurking out
there. Just waiting for you to nudge
your old heap up to 56 miles an hour.
' So you keep going. Mile after mile.
Grinding along at 55.
"Next thing you know , you've gone
stark, raving luny. They carry you away
babbling nice things about Nixon. You've
lost your marbles at 55 miles per hour."
"And you've solved this problem of
our times ?"
"lNDEEDt'' BLACKIE ans\l.·ered, his
voice towering into a conspiratorial rum·
ble. 118Ul listen , don't call me that savant.-
by-the-bay stuff anymore. I prefer to
be known as Humble Blackie."
"Okay, out with it. How do to solve
the 55 crazies?"
"With. The Great Gadarian 's
;rhert1peutic OU-Ramp, that's how."
"What in the world is that?"
"I'm going to buy up propert y just
alongside all the major freeways. see?
'fhen I'll pave long stretch-several
miles -running alongside these major
routes.
"THERAPEUTIC OFF· RAMPS will
lead to my paving strips," Blackie ~xplained.
"So there you are, driving along at
that awful 55, and after hours of it,
you slart getting the 55 Crazies. So
what do you do? You pull off on one
of my therapeutic off-ramps. You get
on my private pavement.
"SO FOR TllE NEXT several miles,
you can drive as fast as you \\•ant. over
110 if you want. Drive in circles. Screech
your tires. You work out all those 55
mile·per-lx>ur frustrations, inhibitions
and trauma!.
"Of course," Blackie continued, "For
this small service in saving your mind,
\\·e shall charge a modest toll fee ."
"I'll bet," you venture . "You are flying
in the face of a nat ional e1nergency.
f<·irty-five, you know, is good fo r the
coun!ry."
"WHATCllA J\.1EAN?" Gada rian ex-
ploded. \\1hat's sacred abou t th is 55 any-
way? \Vhat kind of a number is that '!
\\'hoever heard of 55? It isn't even in
1he Bible. You can find things in there
111 tv.'os and fours and scor~. But just
try to find 55."
"J was unav.·are you had such a
working knowledge of the Good Book,''
you suggest.
··1 do when it comes to emergencies,"
Bla ckie answered , snapping off a rubber
band and unrolling a set of blueprints.
"LOOK llERE." he annou nced in tri-
umph. ·Here's where the first: one goes
just off the San Diego Freeway."
'
Bo11aes Take1a Away
Part of 500-man poli ce force clears squatters from
their cardboard shacks near Tijuana \Vednesday.
rifilitant students protested 1nove and held nine
hostages for 17 hours before being forced to re·
lease them.
•Tried to Defeat Ene11iy"
Berserk Student Kills Self in College Librar y·
NEW ORLEANS (UPI ! - A college
sludent walked into the campus library
and, claiming it was und er rocket attack,
grabbed a hostage, fired several shots
at police and finally killed himself toda y.
Je'.aving behind a note that said. "1
tried to defeat the enemy as long as
I could."
''lt was a very tra gic situat ion.,. a
police detective said ... He was obviously
quite sick."
The victim v•as klenti fied as Paul
D. Caldwen Jr .. 2ll, of Marrero, La ..
a senior in the college of business
administration at IAui5iana S t a t e
University-New Orleans.
POLICE FOUND a notebook next lo
the body with th e h8.nd\.\Titten message :
"Lt. Col. Drumwright, I held them
as Jong as I could. Please forg ive my
offense. I tried to defeat the enemy
as Jong as I could ." It was signed
M usiciaris' Sivi rn
Causes Ripple
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI ) -Five
n1embers of the Emerson Lake and
Palmer Rock Group were fined $75 each
\Vednesday on disorderly co n du c t
charges after being arrested f or
swimming nude in a motel swimming
pool.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Drtivrry of thr Daily Pilot
is guarantrrd
MefMll••·F•Ml1y: 11 r111 •• 1111 111vt r1vr
,.,_. '' J1JO '·"'·· c•ll •Ml r•ur ,.,,. will IN .,.., It 'ftU. (1111 1rt llktll vlllll 71••·""'
s...,,.., •"' $v11C11y: ti r•• ff Ml HCeh't
'9Vr ce,y It t '·"'· Sll•nllJ. tr I 1,111,
s_.,,. c1ll '"' 1 ,.,,. will h ~'"'-"' It Ytt. (lllt 1rt lt klll 911lM 11 1.111.
Ttltphont~
Mtll Or•• Ctv11lr ,.,... '. . . H1"4HI
MHfllWlll H11llllfttl.i1 &ttcll
111• W1tl111ln"'' 1•1m
S111 Clt111t11t., C1,11tr1111 &ttcll. Siii Ju111 C1~1tlrlM, Olftl ,11111,
Stlllll LftUllt, LllUlll Nlt ..e! OJ·Utt
PauJ ·D. Caldwell Jr.
Campus security officer Joseph Bistes
said he heard Oa.Jdv.·ell shout "I'm tired
of taking orders from ~farine Corps
sergeants." Bistes said Caldwell also
shouted oaths and profanities during his
45-minute siege.
Bistes said Cald\\'ell "rushed into the
bu ilding and grabbed the hos tage."
screaming to students "he had three
grenades and he was going to blow
himself and everybody else up if we
came ne ar him.··
BISTES SAJD CALOWELL threw two
chairs out or the second floor windows
in the front of the library~ Fifty persons
were inside the building, 25 on the
second floor, when Caldwell entered
around 11 :30 p.m. \Vednesday.
Denata Apparau. 30, a graduat e
student from Pakistan, was held hostage
for 45 minutes but released unharmed.
''He walked into the library, which
was an open building at the time,
mentioned something about being a
Vietnam veteran . and that the place
"'as under roc ket attack,'' police
informatio n offi cer Gus Krinke said .
''HE TOOK APPARAU hostage _and
went up on the second floor . When
police arrived on the scene, Rev. Peter
Rodgers tried to talk 'to him, but within
seconds the chaplain heard a single
shot.'' Krinke said.
Krinke said Rogers, police and 8 fire
department chaplain "rushed to the top
of the stairs and found him lying in
a pool ol blood."
Kinke said CaldWell fpUt the muzzle
of a .38-caliber snubnose revolver in
his mouth and pulted the trigger. He
"fired several shots at the police but
the officers did not return the fire,"
Krinke said.
Federal Judge Rejects
Indictment of Hughes
RENO. Nev. A(P) -The Justice
Depart1nent plans to seek a ne\v
indictment against industrialist Howard
Hughes after a federal judge dismissed
the original charges against th e
billionaire as the "worst criminal
pleading I have eve r encountered."
Hughes and four others had been
charged with conspiring to lower the
value of stock in regional airline whil e
llughes \Vas trying to buy 'it in 1968.
The airline is now Hughes Airwest.
U.S. Attorney De Voe He aton ,
appearing shaken by the dismissal of
the charges and lhe crit icism, said on
\Yednesday that he would seek a new
indictment from _ the same grand jury
wtlich returned the rejected one on Dec.
27.
U.S. DISTRICT COURT Judge Bruce
Thompson, in dismissing the original
indicbnent, said it would be "a
perversion of justice" lo try the five
men under the indictment. He said it
was the worst indictment he had seen
in 36 years in the legal profession.
Thompson said the document 5hould
have been more specific. It contained
duplicated charges and left room for
speculation or interpretation as to what
the offense actually was, he said.
A 'l'rORNEYS FOR HUGHES and other
defendants were jubilant.
Moses Lasky, representing Hughes,
said he felt the ruling would have come
-even faster had the case Involved
someone of lesser prominence than the
58-year-old recluse billionaire.
Defense attorneys cootended t h e
indictment didn't show a clearly illegal
action but 1nstead detailed "an ordinary
business transaction.''
Winter Storm .Rampages
South Dakota Hit by Near Blizzard Conditioris
I
1
V .S. Summ•r11
I\ MW wlntw storm 11~ 1111-
ITlldcontrntnl 1114 hffdtd 1 • 1 t WHtneM11y, wfllte l'!IOll ol ll'MI n1tlon
blsked 111 1unn' lt'ld !"lld "'I/Mir. Hlfll wlrM11 ~ 111b11ro cold cl1"'"4 _, lht upper Ml»Wrl V•ll•Y· Wl!ldl
comJ1111 off ttw northtf11 •lld c1111r1I
Rockie.I gultld llP lo 60 111.p.1'. 11
Jt1wtrnt. Wvo.
Soutll 01koi. w11 1111 by "''' bli111rd CO!'ICIUlon1 wllh blowlllll ll'IO\ll'
rfducl119 vl1lbllllr to ltu-Iha~ a
ti.Ill mllt. ·
South of '"" 11orm, the C•" Ml1110Vrl Vt lltY !ltd I d IO r t t ~'"l'ltflhJrtJ. I nd IOlltll ol ft'Mot
re1C1l1"1111 wt•t '" t!le .0.,
Coattal We•d•er
\.foll! v1rl1bl1 wino. llltflt Md "*"'" !no ,,_, bM.O<!'llt'll we11 " ...,......,
I 11 U k"°" this 1ner-tflf It ..
20 llllOll FrldlY tt!HllOOI\. W..ll'llt II
t •PKlld to bt ltlr •~ 'fl'lrmtr ltirWOll l.1h1nlfl(. C011l1I tfmll«t-
111rn .4f to '6. lllltl'ld """P«'""" ..0 lo &?. Wttw ...,..,...,,_ SS. s ... , ...... Tiiie• . w-•~a ,,..,...., , ... ,, intW .,
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klfllll 1'11111 ........ 1:11 •·"'-'·' l«ond low ,,,,,,,1, lt:U p.m. f J
$1111 !'t"I 1:51 1.m, Hit l :n pm,
MOOtl rt• lt:11 p.m .. NII l:J7 1.m.
British model Twlgy, 24, will
m1rry American actar Mlcbael
Wltney as soon as his dl•orce
becomes final, according lo a
spokesman In tondon, •
President
Won't Go
V oluntnrily
lly RJCBAllD LERNER
W ASJUNGTON (UPI) -Pesident
Nixon sought to show the nation and
the Congress in his State of the Union
spe<dl that he 1tlll is firmly in
coounand, despite the tunnoll o1
Watergate and a threat of impeachment.
In doing so, Nixm allo made clear
Wednesday lllght he would no t
voluntaril y leave the White House and
that ·he is ready to go to court again
to resist congressional efforts to obtain
confidential presidential documents.
It was 1 critical .performance that
pi'obably scored well foi Nixon among
millions of Wlcertaln Americans who
watched him on television and heard
the repeated applause he got from
members of Congress.
BUT TJIE JMPACT of Nixon's tour
de force among congressmen waa less
clear. ~fost of those who clapped were
conservative Republicans who have
backed the President from the beginning.
Many Democrats and liberal or moderate
GOP members wilhhefd their support.
In short, Nixon's success may prove
( NEWS .ANALYSIS )
short·lived and his posture may invite
yet another direct confrontation with
congressional investigators.
If there were any doubts, Nixon ruled
out resignation again.
"I WANT YOU' TO know that I have
no intention whatever of ever walking
away from the job that the people
elected me to do," he declared.
Few in a list of 10 items he listed
as top priority were new, and much
of his speech reviewed past actions or
pending legislation.
Nixon saved Watergate tor last and
spent only a few minutes on the scandal
that has engulfed his administration for
the pa.I 19 mooths. He neither offered
any further explanation for the events
nor said be wa5 willing to take more
responsibility for them. . · -
ALTHOUGH HE promised to cooperate
with the House Judiciary Committee,
which is studying impeachment, Nixon
said he would .do oothlng "that weakens
the office of the President" or "imparirs
the ability " of future preslden~ to make
essential decisions.
That is basically the same argument
Nixon has made in fighting aUempts
by the Senate Watergate Committee to
get possible evidence from the White
House, provoking long and s t i 11
unresolved court struggles.
AS'FOR THE legislative outlook, Nixon
provided few surprises, and may wind
up having to accept some major
legislation initiated by the Democratic·
conlrolled Congress.
. He said the federal welfare program
was drastically in need of an urgent
top-t~bottom overhaul. but he and
Congress have been battling over reform
propmals for three years and Nixon
did not yield on any of hia past positions
\Vednesday night.
He cited the energy crisis as the
prime legislative concern, but bilb to
deal with that already are well along
toward final congressional action. Most
of his plans for revamping federal aid
, to education were submitted in 1973.
The president 1treased the need to
press for a permanent peace in the
Middle East, but that Is largely out
of Congress' hands.
Dylari Cheered
•
lrt New York
Concert Stop
By MEL LA YTNEK
NEW YORK (UPI) -A> Bob pylan
stepped onto the darkened-itage,
Madison , Square Garden burtt into a
li111Inlnf atorm of Daoh bulbs 1ild
thunde!0\11 applau.se.
Wednelday night'•· New York concert
wu the 15th •top of Dylan'• tour, but
the JI.year old •Inger told frlenda he
wu 'eager to return to where It 111
1>es111 over 1 decade aao In the small,
snoU-ftlled a>lfeebouan al. Grlllnrich
VIiiage.
For over two lloun Dylan and the
B8nd -..,. of America'• nnat rock
,...... -pw I0,000 ,..... and mJddle. aaod lam one ol the llnat dllplayl
<l lllllllc: and. 1howmll1lhlp yet -•tlll-. .
'Blue Eyes' Back
LAS VEGAS (UPI) -OI' .Blue Eyu
WU bocl! W-y night.
Fruit Slllalra, makiat -Iii !Int
n!Ptdub • ..,....... . In ~ yein, m-~ Mollda1 and Tuelday ol tbt to.day .... _t, to tbt llaappotn-Of ....._ .,.,.
paid .. •pleat to hear him .. a\
Clelar'1 Palace. Staltra, M, 1"alDld "V-,,,_,., a eondlttoa couoed by
tl}e dry -air berw ' that allilcu
-• 1lnpn. lie retumed to !lie t11aft Weclnmday nJpt.
* * * Mes~~ge
Features
W ASH!NGTON (AP) -Prelldent
Nixon saki "one year ol Waterpte is
enough" and vowed never to ~Jen
\\1edneaday night in ,his State Of .the
Union address. He also recommended • 10-point
program for what he tenned "a year
of progress."
ENERGY -Break the back ol the
energy crisis and. through Project
Independence, lay foundations for future
capacity to meet the natlon's energy
needs: from America's own resources
-at reasonable price3 and with
protection for the env ironment.
PEACE -Take a step toward lasting
peace in the world through continuing
a policy of negotiation rather than
confrontation and helping t o w a rd
achievement of a just and lasting
settlement In the Middle East.
PRICES -Check the rise In prices
without a recession and move Info a
period of sleady growth .
HEAL11i -Establish a new system
of comprehensive health lnlurance to
make quality health care available to
every American in a dignified manner
at a price he can afford.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT -Establish
a new era of achievement in atate
and local government by cutting strings
of federal control.
TRANSPORTATION -Strengthen the
ability of local communities to deal
with their transportation probl~ms.
EDUCATION -Reform the system
of federal aid to education to provide
it whtn it is needed and where it is
needed.
PRIVACY Make a btginning on
the task or defining and protecting the
right of penonal privacy.
\\'ELFARE -Start on a new road
toward reform of a 'A'elfare system.
\VORLD ECON0~1Y -Together with
the other nations of the world establisb
a framework within which Ame ricans
\\'ill shclre more fully in expanding v.'Ofld
lrade and prosperity in the _years a.heed.
Egypt Newspaper
Reports Israel
Pirating Firms
From Wire Servtees
The semi-official Egyptlan nenpaper
Al Abram reported today t h a t
withdrawing Israeli troops pirated entire
indwtrial plants from Suez ctty and
took them to Israel. but indications in
both Egypt and Israel were that the
reported thefts were not affecUac the
disengagement agreement.
Israeli Defense Minister ?.iosbe Dayan,
( IN SHORT ... )
addressing a meeting of Jewish fund
raisers in Tel Aviv, said he believes
Egypt is honoring its m i I i t a r y
disengagement agreement with llrael
and will go o_n to rehabilitate the Suez
Canal and the ruined cit ies aloog its
banks.
• At11eMea1t Rele.,ecl
HONG KONG -Cl!Ine9e author\ti.,
today released a smiling, bearded
American civilia n who was captured a
week and a half ago in a b&oody two-day
battle bttween China and South Vietnam
for the disputed Paracel Islands. ·
"Thant you/' Gerald Emil Koab , %7,
o1 La Fayette Hiii . Pa .. anld as he wall••<!
to freedom through the 'British colony'•
IA Wu frontier crossing, 15 mlle1 north
or Hoag Kong.
e SlcylafJ Readies Pa•
SPACE CENTER, Houston -The
Skylab astronauts are prepafinl for their
longest earth resourceJ survey, 1 27 000:.
mile pass completely arowxt the globe.
The astronaut.. have also scheduled.
a news conlerMce today and they espect
to ,...Ive a go-ahead to complete the
final week ol their marothon journey.
e 'l'rf•I llfa9 Be /lloNcl
HOUSTON -A -diltrict courl Judfe II cooslderlng a poutble -looitlon for the trial ol Elmer Wayne
Henley, one of the two d<lendanta In
the Texu man murders.
e Tl111e c ..... e Sttallecl
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -A
opedal legtslau .. oeulon hu 1djoumed
wllhout' taklnf action on Iea~latlo!t to
rtttore penlnlular F1orld1 to Eutem
Standard 'nme. .
Leglllatm· ad]ourned •tho two-dq
affair W-y after !Ito -
-to .-.ier I ileMIO :polMOI meuure that ll'tlkl Ila" made the tlma
dlap no1t °*""'· · "U 0..,-lalla to act be/on! the
rtplar -ol P'IDrlda'1 Le(lllaiure
tldl it(trllll. I llo(lll our lawmabrs w1ll
,.......... Ildl -prob\.., and
placo ... •late ..... -anl Tbne. ,
{; ,.
•
Se
Stu
star
seri
be
on c
OX
Holl
Ba
SA
Gov.
bero
czar
grap
unde
app
WI
Jegis
orde
"roll
ha•
or a
ac
that
leve
con
con
kill •
el
.. ~
' U,1 Tel~
Se11te11ce Due
Stu Gilliam, 40, co-
star of cancelled TV
series "Roll Out," will
be se ntenced Feb. 27
on charge of waving an
ax at a headwaiter in
HcJUywood's 'Lobster
Barrel Restaurant.
Governor
To Control
E ' ? nergy.
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -
Cov. Ronald Reagan would
become C31ifomia 's energy
czar with sweeping pov.·ers tQ
grapple with fuel shortages
under a bill "'iMing narrow
approv al in the state Senate.
Wlth the consent of the
legislature, Reagan co u 1 d
order gasoline rationing or
"roll~g blackouts'' of
electrical power undf:r the biU
by Democratlc state Sen.
Alfred Alquist of San Jose.
The governor would not need
legislative approval to order
cutbacks in street lighting,
arcllitectual or display lighting
or interior lighting.
e Drink Level
SACRAMENTO (UPI )
Legislation degsigned t o
tighten the state's drunken
driving laws pu9ed the1Senate
Wednesday on a 27-8 vote and
moved to the Assembly.
'Don't Walk A.lone'' •
SF Citizens Warned
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -r-'------.. police told him they belleve
the atta.cks are part of an
,Initiation process. Police warned citizens not to
venture out ak>ne after dark
as the "Operation Zebra"
manhunt'<Ompleted ils secQno
day wltjlout a sign of the
gunmen who shot four perSOlls
to death at random earlier
this week. .
'1W PEOPLE must go out
of doors' · after dark, they
should go out in pairs or in
groups," said San j Francisco
police Lt. Bill O'Connor.
CALIFORNIA
.
••THEY SAW this as a very
seri()Us and horrible rorm of
terrorism and they said there
had been at least 40 attacks
of this nature since 1970 in
the Bay area, Southern
California and back·East," the
unidentified victim ~as q,uoted
as saying.
In his 8nn.ouncement
Wednesday, O'Connor noted
that none of the killings
Monday occurred with two or '---------' more people on the scene.
Chief of Detectlves· Charles'
Barca said ballistics tests
confirmed that two .3z..ccttlber
guns were used in the Monday
night shootings that left four
dead and another seriously
wounded . He said the finding
added support to the theory.
th at two men were responsible
for the incidents, taking turns
as ·gunmen as they drove
around the city in a. Jarge
car descri bed as a Cadillac
or a Chrysler.
But Mayor Joseph Alioto said the massive police effort have to catch someone fi~t."
to find the a s s a i 1 a n t s But . the San Frru:ic1sco
described as two young bfack . Chromcle quoted a victim of
men _ the largest manhurit ' a bru~l ~ttack last yea; that
Jn the city's history _ should leU his w~e dead and homsell
make the streets safe. senously wounded as saying
"I can assure them that
the rnaJ.lmum effort is being
made to protect the residents
of this city. Litera11y every
police unit ls involved in the
investig'a tion and the
protection of the JX1blic1" he
said. "I can see no reason
why citizens,' because of the
maximum police e f r or t ,
cannot walk lhe streets with
a feeling of seCurity."
ALTIIOUGH THE police
switchboard was jammed with
calls, O'Connor said "nothing
solid" has turned up.
Police orncials held at least two strategy · s·t;,s s Ions
Wednesday to plan the next
several days of "Operation
zebra," w h i 1 e discounting
reports that the shootings
were the work of a n
organization tha,t demands a
killing as an Initiation rite.
"We don't have a n f
evidence to indicate that these
people belong to any club,
sectoro r ga n iza tio n,''
O'Connor said. "It's a n
interesting theory, but before
we cin say defmitely, we'll
SCAG Bill
Gets Okay ·
4 ttorney Questions
Nixon's Appraiser
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -·. may very weil be that he
President Nix on 's tax wasn't at the Archives on the
attorney, who a 1 t e g e d l y dates he told me he "'as
backdated Nixon's controver-there."
sial private papers donation The appraiser, Ra Ip h
by a )'W'. said Wednesday Newman, coul~ ·not be
"tqere's some question now" reached for comment.
abOut the truth of statements DeMarco was called before
by the expert who appraised Brown's· st;iff in his capacity
the papers. as a notary public. The
Frank DeMarco, a law Secretary of State supervise!!
partner of long time Nixon notaries public. De~1arco was
f u n d r a i s e r H e r b e r t subpoenaed after investigators
K a I m b a c b, made his for Brown found that DeMarco
statement as he emerged from had notarized the deed, by
the ofUce of C a 1 i f o r n i a which Nixon donated the
Secretary of State Edmund papers to the Archives, as
G. Brown Jr. having been signed in April.
llE GAVE a two hour
deposition to one· of Brown's
legal aides, in response to
a subpoena demanding an
explanation for his handling
of the Ni1.on donation deed.
DeMarco sa id he still feels
that Nixon's donation of
P.apers to the Nat ional
Archiyes, v.1lidt gave Nixon a
$576.000 tax deduction, was.,
legal and valid.
1969; in Los Angeles.
In reality, Brown's
investigator's said, it was
signed in the White House
-outside D e Marco's
jurisdiction as a California
notary -a year later, ln
April , 1970 -nine months
after the la.w bad been
changed to bar tax deducUons
for such donations.
.. . . Bu.t,"he said,' ·"Now some
·1· n Assembly fact s have developed in the . last two weeks which I didn't
The proposal would make
it un1,w1u1 /OJ; a. ~I"!" who . . .
· know existed at the time in SACRAMENTO (AP) ~ . 1970.
~iJislation to give new ·power "But I don't believe they
to the Southern California changed my opinion that he
Association of Government.. (Nison) complied with the law
Veneman
To Reveal
Candidacy ( CAPITOL ) to the extent th at was at
(SCAG) has squeaked through all possible and I think that
the Assembly without a vote the donation was good."
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Former Nixon administration
official John G. Veneman
plaM.ed to formally aanounce
his candidacy' for t h e
Republican nomination for
lieutenant governor today.
has mo.re than .•10 percent
of alcohol in h1s blood to drive
a car. CUrrently the law states
that if person·s blood alcohol
level is at that JeVet he is
presumed to be under the
influence d. intoxlc.atlng bev· -• Bill Dies
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
Gov. Ronald Reagan's "law
and order" proposal t o
eliminate a legal rule which
his backers smd only benefited
criminals died. quietly In the
Senate Wednesday night.
The bill (SB1153l by Sen.
Robert J. Lagomarsino (It-
Ojai), was not brought to a
floor vote by Wednesday's
constitution al deadline f o r
consideration. Thus it was
killed automatica lly.
• NO\Weddlng• ., .
SACRAMENTO (AP)
There will be no marriages
oJ. state prisoners while they
are behind bars -that's the
to spare.
The 41·34 vote Wednesday
sent the bill to the Sena~.
THE BILL would make
membership in the six-cowity
SCAG organization mandatory
instead of voluntary, and
would give SCAG n e w
authority to coordinate area
planning. It was introduced
by As s embl y man Joe
Gonsalves (!>-Cerritos).
Critics said jt would make
SCAG a "superagency of
government" with what would
amount to indirect taxing
power. .
But Gonsalves said It would
do nothing except attempt to
follow planning guidelines set
down by the fede r al
government.
THE BILL would cover the
counties of Los Angeles,
• Ventura, Orange, Riverside,
San Bernardino, and Imperial,
and the cities within ·them.
DeMARCO SAID there was
tesUmony. which has not been
made publi c, "developed in the
East from the appraiser, as
to what he told me and
(whether) what be put in bis
affidavit was in fact true. It
Quake Rocks
Riverside Area
RIVERSIDE (UPI) - A
mild earthquake r u m b I e d
through the Riverside and
Perris area late Wednesday
night and touched orr a flurry
of phone calls f r o m
ho.meowners.
The Cat Tech Seismology
Lab in Pasadena said the
temblor, felt at 11 :05 p.m.,
registered about 4.1 on the
Richter sale .
'.I'here were po immediate
re)Xlrts of damage.
Veneman, former under-
secretary of Health, F.ducation
and Welfare, scheduled news
conferences in Sacramento,
~an Francisco, and Lo s
Angeles to make t h e
announcement.
Another appearance i s
scheduled in San Diego on
Friday.
Veneman is a former GOP
assemblyman from A-todesto
who went to Washington as
top aide to Robert H. Finch,
who resigned as lieutenant
governor to become Nixon's
first HEW secretary.'
Veneman · stayed on after
Finch transferred to a White
House job and worked under
Secretary Elliot Richardson.
~%::~y~.l~.::~t: Bound. ar. ies Dispute Wednesday killed a measure
that would also have given
prisoners the right to own :lia~~~I ~1:::Y· and ~ . City's Law Would Fire Most Emp(oyes
ePoHBlll
SACRAMENTO (AP )
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
A superior court judge ruled
Wednesday that Inglewood
city employea living out8kle
the city boundaries can legally
be fired. · ~ anO: more than half of all
And legallr, at least, ,that,... municipal workers.
would take 1n 71 percent of
Inglewood's firemen,,; 89
percent of the police force
Legislation requiring
California pollsters to disclose
details of their operation was
killed by the Assembly
Wednesday.
Assemblyman Walter
Karablan (!>-Monterey Park),
said · his bill '""1ld •'<ofttrol
pollsters becaUH of their
Influence on Ille outcome of
elections.
Bill Allows Husbands
To Prove Fatherhood
THE JUDICIAL decision
only add! to the legal thialtet
t , of opinions o.n 1be residency
question, and It waa , not
, . immediately c 1 e a r how
Inglewood city officials would . • proceed.
A similar · residency
ordinance in Torrance was
upheld by the C ,1u o rn i a
supremo Coutt, but I s
currently on apj>eal to the
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Sex Gets ·1
No Display
.. Husbands would be given the
chance under I e g Isl a ti on
approved by the Sena!• to
prove they ar~ not f•thers
of their wives' ehlldren.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A blllor tnldative . whld! wo~ld
alfempl . lo ~ ' I 0 X
magazines out of view ol
m1non has l(lllllfied' ·r.r the
dr<ulalion of petition$, the
secretuY of sta~'4 office
announced. . An oriler by the atlon)ef,
general lvlll title the petitions
"eJ<P(lclt sexual matm1ol · -
11110 and displ ay," the office
·' added Wedneoclay.
The blll by Sen. John
Harmer, (R-Olendale), would
repeal what be said ls an
unc11an1eoble presumption in current law that a husband
ii the lathe< of his wile's
children.
"The issue Is the Injustice OI being ordered to pay
SUPJ>Orl when It Is medleally
i>roven he could not be· the
father," Harme r aald
Wednesday. "~ a ptr!on gets marrled,
then they are stuck , with the
good and the bad," said Sen.
George Moscone ( D • S a n
F,ra ncisco ), who said
Harmer's · bill would cause
11aavage11 battle!! and the
stigma or illegitimacy for
Innocent children.
Harmer's bllf WOJlld allow
admlulon In court ol medical
evidence such as a bloOil t<St
at _proof ol Impotency to
cbe~ legitimacy ol a
child.
He said the state bar
auociatioo proposed th e
me1111tt and the }<atlonal
Organila lion for w o m e n
opposed I!·. It was sent to
the Aase ... ly on a 22.a vote.
U.S. SUpreme Ciiiut. '
A state appeals Court has
banned the enfQrcement of a
residency onllnance in Los
Angeles, where one court aner
another has deli ve red
coofilcling rullnp. The cue
in Los Ancelea la still pending.
STli:PBEN WARllEN
Solomon, attorney for
Inglewood employea, arl!Ued
unSUCC9eSfully that an
lnjunctlon pn>hiblllng t he
residency law oltould remain
in eUeet .unUJ the U.S.
Supreme Court rules an the
matter.
)
Thursday, January 31, 1974 DAILY PILOT 'a
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Seven cyde; inclcding
exclusive Kltchenaid
pot washer cycle.
Aut omatic rinse agent
di~penser.
Porceloin-oorsteel
int'erior.
KITCHENAID
FULL CYCLE
DISHWASHER
259.95
Undercounler model
wilh full selection •
of cycles. including rinse
and hold for portial loads.
Gold Seal 'Ii h.p. motor,
porcelain.an-steel interior,
large capacity.
KITCHENAID
TRASH
COMPACTOR
279.95
Needs no bogs and con
be oolt·in or used freestanding.
Aclival ed chorcool filler removes
odors.
Crunches trash in 35 seconds ~at.
Triple ram design for reliobiliiy.
Trash CoqtaClor 8-s.
A package of 30 ~ash
bogs at no oddilioool
charge wilh yoox purchase.
Major Appliances, 80
•
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// / ; ,. , .
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THE BROADWAY
A>W<EIM NEWl'OllT
444 N.1;.<1c1 Pt4J '3Stl2l 41F..i...hbd111•) 641112
. CUG. MAU. CJ' OAANGE crurros
2llXI N. T• S..,0 (7141 '"'1311 ltl) lo< y.,,,. Mon ~ ll) 8"'0411
' ~ IOAJ.l.k> .. lO P.M.MQtGIY 'll«OUOH lljt>AY, SAT\.IUlAY IOAM. I06 P.M. IUNOAY 12 l.ooN •o S P.M.
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• DAD.Y PILOT EDITOIUAL PAGE ( ( The Question Remains
Emerging from his long seclusion, President Nixon
made it clear in his State of the Union mesaage lut night
that hi! plans do not include stepping down.
As outlined to an apparently receptive Congre5',
they do include just about every go al anyone coul!I wish
for America. One can only hope some will he accom·
pliahed.
· Mr. Nixon's overall goal -peace for the world -
indeed deserves the priority he gives it and hia claim for
credit in achieving world peace today is well-founded,
with the lion's share of praise going, of course, to Secre-
tary of Slate Kissinger.
His Immediate goals - self-sufficiency in eN!rgy,
inflation control, improved mass transportation, continu·
ing the fight against crime, welfare reform, comprehen-
sive health care, election reform and protect.ton of in-
dividual priva cy -are obvious needs if legislation to
fulfill them can he accomplished.
The President's strong delivery of his 40-minute
speech gave an impression of assurance and self-confi·
dence noticeably absent in some of his recent television
appearances. An unusually warm reception by the as-
sembled legislators may have contributed to this.
Referring to the most pressing issue of tl!e day In
what ·amounted to a postacript to his message, Mr. Nixon
exprtissed the view that .. One year of Watergate is
enough." That might be expanded to read, "More than
enough, Mr. President."
The question, unfortunately, is resolving Watergate,
not wishing it away.
A Political Football
Whatever doubt there may have been that the Starr
Ranch is .being used as a political football was quickly
erased last week by the so-called "new majority". on the
In another blatantly political move, Supervlsora
Their mot.ivea were crystal clear -to make Super-
visor Ronald Cupen, who badly wanll the park, oqwrm. ·
The three claim lllat lin<e tile '4.4 million tag&ed
for purchase of the 5,500-acre ranch would he the Wt
put into Ca$pen' ·diJtrict for a Jong time, he'd better
he sure of how be want& it spent.
They and aome mis¢dod souls from . the Friends
of Upper Newport Bay clalm ttie endangered uplands
around that estuary seem more worth the money than
the property to the south. ThJS Is utter nl>nsense.
The Upper Bay is indeed a.prime piece of property
for natural preservation. But it ls hardly in danger of
development, especially with hard·line · agencies like
the Coutal Zone ·C.Onservation Commission around. ·
It is also a far more likely candidate for federal
and state funding than the Starr Ranch.
The ranch, on the other hand, is one of the last
major wilderness areas available in the county. It would
be a gem in the county's open space crown., available to
all the county's residents.
Misguidoo Pet Lovers .
Orange County Supervisor Ronald Caspers tut week
bared a serious problem thaf is developing in the south
county's rural canyon areas -packs of stray dogs run-
ning wild, and endangering residentJ.
Caspers said it appears many people take unwanted
pets into the canyons -Silverado in particular -and
dump them, think)ng they will he better off running
free than in the pound.
Instead, the dogs die a slow, agonizing death. Starv-
ing, they will kill domestic animals for food or turn on
each other a.Jid have even attacked .residents.
ff they survive the first week or so, officials say
they band together in wild .packs and. roam the hills.
We are sure no pet-lover wants this fate for his
animal. County shelters will tak& ·unwanted pets fm
of charge and look for homes. ·
Admittedly, some are destroyed. But at .ieast It is
more merciful than• a gruesome lingering death in wild
county canyons. . .
,
1
, i"' Board of Supervisors. ·
Ralph Diedrich, Ralph Clark and Robert Battin threw
11 an unexpected monkey wrencb·tn the works by -delaying • 1 IX>N'T. U' l<E 'YOUD A~.· TITU"-;,," a decision on buying the ranch as a regional park. , " ,,, v £:" I ~~~~~~_.:.._:_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~-:-~~~~"'--~~~~~~~~~~-•
11 Signs .Point .to Flournoy .. • t .
If As Republican Nomiµee
: The primary battle for the Republican
tJl\lbematorial nomination is just about • I ~ -everything but the voting and
f ~the counting. ("'"_R_u_s_w_l\_i.:_ro_N __ J
I Unless he or some of his people pull
t:
real dumb-dumb, State Controller
Houston I. FJoumoy will be the ~ide-
margln wloner on June 4.
, I take no special delight in making f that considered observatioo. True: I like
;m1gh and maoy o1 hia friends are my
'friends, tOD. But, I ~ye known LL Gov. '
~ Reinecke fOr a
,~e. since he was
•a successful busi·
nessman-engineer in
Burbank. I consider
'him a good friend; a 1 COMerVative as I am
'a conservative.
But, facts are
facts; politics is reality. Flournoy and ru. team have all the marbles. I; r VIRTIJAU.Y the complete string of
~key R<agan supporters (the S<H:ailed
f kitchen cabinet) is behind Flournoy : Vic
f
Andrews, Justin Dart, Wm. French
Smith, Earl Jorgenson, Jack Hume and
, others. Holmes Tuttle, the unof'ficial
~amrod « that power ·group, announced
:tor Flournoy this week.
; Almoet all of the "Blair House Group"
,-the Nixon-Finch backers -have
~committed to Flourmy: Leonard
1 t Firestone, Tom Pike, Dave Packard,
I Taft Schreiber, etc.
: Flournoy has already picked up most
~of those who had been suppor1ing the
It •gubernatorial aspiraticm -of £velle
:·Younger and Bob Finch.
• All or that together represents a heap
tof power, influence and money.
\ Add to that tlle fact that Flournoy's
I ~rank-and-file grassroota support has been
~growing -rapidly. At the recent
•catifomia Republican Assembly board t !meeting in Monterey, FI our no y 's
~ receptlon and ovation was equal in
I uralion and intemlty to Ed Reinecke's.
,.Not many years ago the conservative
t vollDlteer group would have given
Flournoy a cold shoulder.
1 ? TODAY, they love Ed Reinecke but
: many o( them see Flournoy as "a
1 wi Mer".
:· Starting later this week the Flournoy
~conunittee will be announced. It will
l (be a broad·bascd collection of
1 , all levels of the party. lt is an impressive
~
~
deeper than the on< Ronald Reagan
......,bled for hia 1916 pOJitical debut'.
, Relnecte't main strength oomes from
the Callfornla Republican women, the
moot powerful volunt.er group In state
poHlf!ii. Bui, thit is: weakening becauae
of inattentl011 and lack of
comQ1m1ications from the Reinecke
camp.
It WU back in late 1973 that the
Reagan biggies started ~
Reinecke. Since then· Ibey have cest
about for a candidate. When no "Nn''
face could be recruited, or "sold'',
they were forced to ""'8ider Floumoy.
As conaervatives, they had -.
misgivings; Flournoy has the Image ol
a moderate or slighUy 11 be i a I
Republican. In lllM, most ol the blg-wlp
backed Goldwal«; Flournoy supported
Rockefeller In !he primary.
rr TOOK aome ooul-searchlng and a
session with Flournoy to reconcile their
misgivings. At that Los Angeles meeting,
they raised three questiaas:
-U elected, woold Flournoy dismantle
Reagan's "creative IOCiefy" plans and
programs. His answer: "No.".
-would be engage In wholesale firing
of Reagan appoin~? Flournoy: "No''.
He ·certalnJy would maJr.e clwlgee but
Reagan had made some good
appointmenll and be """1d ask lbooe
to remain. _
(One report on the meeting asserts
Iha! conservatives demanded, a n d
Flournoy gave, the right to name or
at least veto key appo i ntments .
Flournoy'• people vehemeolly deny that.)
-had he made ony commitment
on 1976 and the GOP presidential race?
Flournoy : "I have not" -DOI to Rocky,
not to Percy, and not to Reagan.
THE MAJOR ........ for the declioe
of Ed Reinecke -once Reagan's "heir
apparent" -are obvious, and ssd:
Go¥. Reagan's aJ1llOl-.I neutrality
Jn the primaries released many ol his
followen to join the Flowmy camp;
Fklurnoy ulted for, and gut, practi<ally
all ol tfle support from the folded Find!
and Younger camps; Reinecke'•
campaign has suffered from tired blood
and inept or inoompetent a I d e s ,
Floomoy's group has beeo llllOOlh, swift
and effective. . .soft on pllllolopby but
strong on pragmatism. I .malition ; in some respects wider and
Raining Space .Trash
~ I ; j • .. IL ·tsn 'l mainl y rain that falls upon
I the plain ln Spain. Or at least it isn't I only rain. Some of it is space trash;
Jor example, three 72-pound spheres
~pparently from 1 Rualian space craft
fen on Spain In 11165.
AND OF courae, it Isn't only Spain
which spa ce debris rains. A aecUon
of John Glenn's booster rocket re11 on
an African Cann in 1982. Manitowoc,
QWi.seonsin, hosted a 11>-pow>d chunk ot
a Sputnik that same year -right In
the middle of Its mail iDteraectlon.
" ortunately 1l a harm1lll pre-dawn
hour. -•
According to one report the North
i\lr Dd.,,.. Commaod "'ports
that spa ce debril 11 ptpperlag the planet
at the rate of one objecl a day. The
l'.'fll bulk Jaods In the OCOOllS. and
no ,.,.,e damage hu been /reported
IO 1'1. But NORAD upects the rate
o/ fall to Increase ID relation to the
Increased frequency of · Jaunchlngs and
the lmp-oved deslp tedllllques and
materials which wlll llV. debriJ greater
resistance iD the searin( beat ol frlctioo
with the earth's almolphere.
NORAD's Space Ddense Center at
Colorado Springs keeps clooe, around
the clock tab on ail man-made objects
launched lniD space. Debris 11 well aa
payloads are recorded. The most recent
count showed 2,349 pieces ol dObria and
624 payloads pmeally ID orb11.
Al l this could be a UUle '"'1tfadnl,
except for NOR.AO'• awwwwww that the
odds on anyone belna bit m -..
like one In 1 bill ion. Since the beclnnln&
or the space ag~ In 1117 the only fatality
has been a Cuban cow. ·
So, no need to worry too much about
catching a rallil1g star on top or our
head.
CllUonla u ture Service
Dage Wlaeat £rep Pred~ted for ~7 4
' Dear
Gloomy
Gus
:Bread Panic Called Phony
What tnrtlr Is there to the ,,,_
that The ED>rcisl has beeo busted
for possession?
G.O. .......... _ .... , ...... ............. , ........ ,.... ...
.,... If .. ~-··~ .... _. "" ......... ......, .... ·~
A.thletic·· Flea
Doesn't Win
Any TrophWs
(smNEYJ.~
• 'J1ooaPll at Laree:
The common f!ea can ·Jump 100 times
ill ovm length, bot you don't see
tholl!IDds ol Deas cmgregating In a
stadium to cheer It on. · • • •
WASHINGTON -Excuse me II I
doo'I panic over the proopect of the
ooe dollar loaf ol bread. Given any
kind ol iood weather, wheat, which
represenlS only a fraction of the -ol bread, will be doUIDg the IUJ>PIY
Jines thia fall. Farm state Congressmen
running for re.elec-
tion may be clamor·
ing for higher prices.
Panic i.s the spirit
of the time. Every-
body ;., gloomy and
grim. Nixon can't
govern. Gas is short.
Houses are c o 1 d .
Mornings are dark.
Government c o m -
mils one blunder after another. Hope ""5
only in Henry Kissinger.
But spare us the bread panic. 11 's
a J>ho!1Y. ~ spring and summer of
1974 will bring forth an enormous crop
ol wheat ID response to ,.._ Jle'W, and
maybe · temporary, world demand for
the bread gr~ln.
Alarm of the American Baken
A.ssodation di.al the nation may nm
oompleteJy oat ol 'wlleat be/ore the new
crop begins to come late In May has
to reflect more than its ooncern over
·the price o/ wheat. Since the wheat
in a loaf of bread represents about
one-fifth ol llS aist, maybe there are
some other factors -such as lnelflclent
operation, extravagant promoQon costa,
and shaky ftnandng -which give .the bi>kers cause for thouid>I.
NOW, it .goes without saying that if
the traders hadn't IOld all that wheat
to Russja last year there could DOI
now be any concern over existing
supPlies of wheat. We would b.lve too
. much, as usual. The bakers would be
getting their Dour hued cli the usual
low wheat price and-~·~ liave to
-ry so much ali0at4t\e; effideacy
and utility of their .-.ua I.el the
farmer worry. , ~. ~
A strange kind of· logle ,.,..mi 'in
thi1. '!he bakers, with all tbeir foade<I.
On costs. are pictured. u '.the ftltlQa."1
benefactors denied the mellils lo ·J>IOVlde.
the hungry with the staff ol life al
a deceot price. The ,farmer is the
avaricious peasant lqUeezing the deer
life out ol the helplea urbanite. In
betweeo them is the b u n g I I n g
government' mismanaging supplies over
which it actually hu ven little control.
1be picture is about as false as it
could posalbly be. In the first place,
Ulete is no accepted, reliable estimate
that the U.S. will run out of wheat
before the new crop comes in. Even
•hading the 11<>vemment's estimate that
there will be 200 million busheiJ left
over, there -.Id 11111 be onough.
IN 11IE SECOND place, wheat would
have to double or triple in price
(according ·to ooe eatlniate, rise lo $31)
per bulbel from l6 p1 .. ) lo provide
any justification for the ooe _dollar loaf
ol bread.
And in the third p\ace, the Rualans
have alrea<IJ.r0ceived lllOll of ·the wheat the\' bought . lalt year and ale willing
to put off ~ tlie •rtst. They have ..
said they don't plan lo buy any U.S.
"'heat this year, and if they do, it
is not expected to be very much.
SO WHAT'S to panic about! We panic,
for one reason, because the U.S. DO
longer sits here on a huge supply of
wheat whJch gives the world a continuous
glut aod makes domestic suhlkUe.s
ne=sary.,Stm>e argue tblll Is America 's
responsllility:i. the world.
'·We JIO!llc'·bemt-the ,baker> don't
et a O<Jii!fo<1oble ride cm' cheep wbeat.
We panic bsea,.. 'It makes ...,. lo
Import .Wheal lhlt m!pt be mor<
clleeply ~·In .... -of
'the country even u We don~ betPn lo
run sliort.
. We panic, Jn fad, beca... supply
and demand is working Jn favor o/
the farmer, for once, and Is putting
the squeeze on the mWleman. And,
finally , we panic just because M ts
in sea.son.
TRUE ENOUGH, the. N 1 x on
administration hasn't caicuJated as
clolely as It might hive. It's scrambling
around DOW for ways to tmu.re a aare
margin when the , 1upp13' · begins to
approach the danger mark in March
and April. That lnvol-..s gelling the ea.
nadlans to disgorge some wheat and they
are hard OO:rgainen.
But there is no doubt anywhere that
the wheat already In ·the lll'OUDd and the wheat to be planted,...._.,.,._
by drought, will bring fonh a crop
putting the· old days to -lllll·maybe
approachlna the flllllat!c level of 2
billion. bushels, a e cord la I to one estimate. · · . .
Claaalca! education s!>owod only the
sl\fe of polo to the . pupil., and made
~ dnldgery; progressive ~lion llhinn: only the side ot pleaiure lo· the
pupil, and ~ learning a lark; !><>th
are equally ..... lded J1fU1 1ne1rec1ua1
In fallli)g to stfi~e . a . balaoce between
drildgery and delight. • • • 'liio gifted enjoy being loved · and
admired for their lllent; the beautiful
rir their looks; the brainy for their
brightness; It is only the rich who resent
being loved for their money.
Integrity and Honor Live
• • •
Nothing reveals our a r r o g a n t
etbnocentrictty more than our •mlhi.mn.
assumption thai 'columbm "~ei;f1'C
America-although a million -le
were Jiving here long be/ore Europe
was oetlled, and the ooly thing Columbus
"ditoovered" was the lporance of bis
lcftbean.
'W ashi1igton Still Aura,ct.s Men of Distinction
. . . '
What .... -like lit 18 ii ·due mootlJ fo a fortunate or unfortunate
caocatenation ol g-; wllat one JooD
like al llO ii due moctly to wllal -
has -to fuJfiD or lo fruslnte tlll genetle pofential. • • •
It p..ml lianlly -lbte that only a
year aco President N11on was celebrat·
Ina bis trlmnpbant Jnaucurat and the
end of the American Jnvolvement in
-Vietnam. flO lbad both the mandate aod
the favorable~ to ovircome
p-oblelllS .lhlt had .
been bulldlnaupdur·
ing a decade iii fruit·
less war.
Tbea it bunt upon
UI tb1t Presldent
Nimn'1 greet1 eleo-
torll victory w a s
Whatever bis other faults. Napoleon ' tilnted by ftaud and
wae singularly devoid ol cant abol!t crmie: Each day,
governments and pollllcs : e.g., 111' month alter moolh,
comment on the leading polllldan of brought """ o1 Y.et -moral
his day -.. _ ...... -lo calamlly.
beinl a silt-...; he u. very ...U." . ' Iha • . ' ·---~ • • • THE CRIMES t we1' uownu:~
It ii a • remartrable tribute to our were lhown, not u Ille 'llolatod adl
lnllnlle C!tpodty for aol-d11 t pllal 111111 of a eouple o1 lndlvltilllil, but u the ·~-..... had...,_, ...... ... dellberate madul Qplftlltll f!. ·lilt ..... ~ .--I l •
...... -lo -.,.al -presldeney. ' ~oi:,-~--)1""11tlN/lC '°a:;::.w~~~::=.-.=,
• • • erupted Ill a -major dtlel. A ~ who lllordlnately pr Id e strtnc « ~ ~ta pleaded lhllllael•• on their ''moderate" poiltloo guilty 1o *'*" lllepl pollllca.t mlPI rocall Robert P'rolt'I remtndor: ~Ille -.at labOr leadln
"Tiit middle ol Ille rood Is where tile tiidli>alf • Ill • their p e r e a n I a I ~1 ~.;-... 11111'• the --C'8""· Jll ~ '!Y"'I lo .. out ol .--Jo , , , or rwldll being lllroWll ID.
~ .... Jn the Eftn tho nallOOal .,.P ho> derby , • TNtdllt Is Ille one ·..,,... thequtnunrottOuyAmerlcan-~ ~ ~Jy paranteecl lo .., _ .. tlon among 12-yeeMJds, WU
• • • won by a car that turned out to have . What men call 11woma.n'1 Inconstancy'' tieen llleg1Uy wired up.
Is a maJe invenllo salve bis brulsod Thus depqved ol Jrust In man or
ego when she cldy dl9Cems his boy, a ~ already feeling t"lnges
emoUonal immat ty. of self-doubt were now stripped, one
••
( JA~ ANI>~nsoNJ ~
by ..,.,. of oome·ol their .-cherlslled
Illusions. • •
YE;'I' Tiii! ~~nave ~ panl~;
our inslltullonll have not collapsed and
the wbeeil 'ol de!DOCl'lq are ll1II
grlnd1ng. Molt govenunent ol!lclals are
1tlll meo o/ Integrity and -· • Take, for inltaoce, RuMell ·Pelenon,
Who WU defeated for rHloolloo II
governor ol Delaware lo ·Jin.• Ila
recently took over iltt ·PiioJtlent'• •
Council on En:FEI ~IYI after .iunilling a1I -a !'Jli!r*' cll '
fleh!inS w:odiod ~-1· 11• ·Ill! Delaware coasl. · · •
Russell '!'rain, a conservatlOnllt wl!fl •
)qlpeccable ~ -the .-ol a. Envim•'""llt Pllitedtaii '-'!' 111111 Jn Ille ... of ...
Vfaleijatw -· lie hu --bla ._ lptnst the Whljo llcmse on --tal.lssuel ..
Sidney J-became the CclnuM'C.'O
l:i.olla..-r1 dtlel ~ tut Joly
aDtl ·-Into the ~-tloo'I •
-Jll'*)eall. lie ........ war.
be -... a "' It\ .. -'"" a tUaJor -1111 nply: • .,,,.,.., •
-'"' --.r... llMtt•illll In the allaln ol our -.y."
LAST Sl!PTJ:MBll., the
Administration p<rlltaded Dlnlel Parhi,
head of the Parkho P•ICompany, to lake
charg~ _of the ~ for International lleve~t.
Parler lmpresoed c.n,reas with bla
background and Intelligence. Since laklng
over at , AID, be has qulelly belW1
1lralgbltrung out the problem-plagued
agency.
Aa ooe old-time, loreign aid bureaucrat
lold tn, with ~ed exubennce :
"'!he ll1Gllller hu been harnessed."
. In wbat ..... ptrha.. the saddest
moment or the Watergate hearlnga last
summer, a disenchanted young Nixon
aide advised young -1e to stay out
ol Wubingloo. A great many talented
Amerlcails, thankfully, are not llkJnc bis
advice. . ! .. ; --DAllY PllOT
Robm N. W1td, PubU.lltr
• · Thomai Kt..U, Edftor
Barl>ml Krellric~
.Edltonal ,.. lditor
'"
r
a
(
t
' '
Lousiana Board Def ends-
t
50-year .. P~t Senrence
AllCOL.\, La~ (UPI) -The ,;I r WASN'T disa ppointed dJ.smayed at 11111 oatloll.
'1-lana P a·r d ons and beca,.. at the beclnning I "I argued that U..ir .Ott-
p • r ~ ~ • J B; o a r d 1 · h a s flpred tbil wu going to docket was full " J'hurd1~
r ec a m me nded qain1t happen. 1'ha~·s wtiy I wanted ' robberies and raJ>ll which get NduclJia 1111 It-year prlaon to go Into court from the lighter sentencts than this,"
Mlltent.! Rh'• . Robert E. '~g. but the lawyer aa!d, 'be sald. "I just don't know
A)Jll>lua o( ~ York fo r No, we ll try this way .flrsl • what l'D do next."
aelllng '5 wortll.al mar!Juana. "I dldii't think they would "[WU·~ that Wll , be tbat lgrw;>rant." ' ' IN MARCH, 1967, A~blar:a
all," the 35-yeaf.!.o1d' prl111ner In New York, his tqal Aid . was armted for se lhng a
aald Tueoday wh'en ·told )he attorney William H••i...t.in matchbolhd ol marijuana to
board's recommenUUona. aakl w\ Wu ' "lhoc~r mf ~ undercrMr narc o t l c 4 , ~ . · 1nwtt.lptor 1n New Orleans.
~ · ' · ~ He was tried and sentenced
A bl V . 'R· · \ ' 1-' to llO years Ip jail with no ssem y. ·, ote.8 ,, e~a pros:;~io;::,: ~~le~d be
• .. • •. 1 transferred to Angola Prison
0£ Mari1" uana .Sentence\ t'~b~l~~ ~~ · , ' • Prbon. He. fled to New York
•• I
bu Bil Keane
"Mommy, will you f1?k~. out y~Sterd!ly'I knots IO I can
put'my shoes on?;,
.hursday, Janu.atY 31, 1974 DAILY PI LOT 7
Possessed 'Fad' Discounted
NE W YORK (AP) -The
archbishop 0 r Canterbury,
Michael Ramsey, says there
are genuine demonic powers
In the world, but that a wave
or claimed cases of posse5.5ion
Hit-run
Do g Seen
< DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(A.P) -Police are
searching for a "brov.'tl ,
white and huge" hit-and
'run suspect which knocked
dov;n a man and broke
his leg.
Eugene Bonner, 73, oC
by the devil Is moslly "a
lot of fiddlesticks."
"I regret it has been turned
into a stunt," he satd
Wednesday. "There's an
element of superstition in it
and an element of n1orbidity."
the movie. "probably are
phoney. Atllhenlle cases are
very small In nwnber. 'lbey're
not frequent ."
As in Roman Catholicism.
he said some dioceses of
Anglicanism in England, in
this country and in other
TllE. AR C II BI S H op. national branches have priests
spiritual leader or the world's,•d;;;;es;;;;ignai;;;;;;ted;;;;;;;;;;;;";;;;;;;;"e;;;;x;;;;or;;;;CIS;;;;. ;;;;ts.;;;;";;;;;;;;;
45 million Anglicans including 11
Episcopalians in this couittry,
made rus C()mments about an
upsurge of concern about
demonology resulting partly
from the current movie, "The
Exorcist."
"There are forces of evil -
of a supe.maturat kind that
sometimes get hold o f
people," he told a new s
conference. ''There a r e
~nuine exorcisms. But there
also is a lot of phony
superstition around."
""" ............ ,
A lnlllt< tr11..-.. .,
...--will llslt11 •• """' Co11lklt11ft1I, 1r C111r ... .... ,,,,
A a C COIHISllllile
A Ml1'1....., If SI. Allclr9WI .. ,...."""*' CJ\ltr<ll.
STOP IUlGLAlYI
Slmpll lni trvctl.nt t. -k• ywr IW!I
IUICilAI ALARM
24·""'" .. ,.~ ..... "-· Otfic9 Ir f"Klltfy, latbfMtlefl •r DM'le
YMlr lrMMy h<k. Mall 11.• ..
Stcll'l'lty Sf$111Mo 109 tlll SI,.
S11111 Mlnlc:1, Ct tt4M
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The Assembly has p13xed a:
bill repealing tpo 9 o. d a·y
ma nda tory Ja il aentence for
-~ ,~ 1 '! ..... be .. and worked at odd. jobs Wl tll
wanniu 91118 1 • wuwu •~ ArTes"'1 on a fuglUve warrant -------------------miltake to 1 n-d l cat e a ln February '1970 , weakeotng "po sl tlon t ' ori 1 ·,
Pitts~. told police he
' waS trying to extri cate his
·car trom soft sand on a
beach when a St. Bernard
dog cane bounding along
and bowled him over .
HE ADDED that most of
the reported instances ,
occurring around the country
usually af ter people have seen
KIDS LIKE TO
ASK ANDY
~ ' • .
marij""I"' becauae It Would , ms A'fl'ORNEY~ delayed
encourage me of the weed. his return to Louisiana whDe
persons convtcted of being . The measure. would only he •pent al.molt two ·years
under the iafluence o f affect aenttnceS for those In a new York jail. He was
Snakes. ·"Alive!
marijuana. under the tnnuence o ·1 later freed when they were
The bill (AB72S) b Y marijuana ,.._ not I o r successful· in having tben-
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI)
-1be district attorney 's
office is going to investigate
a midway aldelhow where the
main attraction, "Glug Glug,
the Swamp crea,t ur e,''
1uppoaedly eat.I, live snakes.
Assemblym an Alan Sleroty ~~n. Gov. John;· McKelthen drop
(IJ.Bev•rly !Dils) was sent to Sleroly said th at his bill· extradition proceeding•, but
the -Senate oh a ~&-22 vote wouJ!I: pinnlt ·i\ld1e1 to '_,i Apablaza r eturne d to
W«!rtud1 y. ' • the :sen~. or g r ant Louisiana last February to see
A 11 e m b I y man B o ~ .probaUon in the same way his daughters. He said: his
McLennan "'(&-Downey), the they .can for per10nJ convicted · former wife would not ROd
Legislature's only :d o c t'o i' , for ponelskno the two children tO tee. hbn .. _,
Barry !Dcldll90n, It, is
"Glug Glug" u.:' &a)'I he has
c
e -
..
"
' CAMERAS l ~S · STEREO l SOlN> EQUIPMENT· PHO!t>'PROCESSING lElC.
Ptla• .n.ctl ........ ....., ,...,. •• 1t74
BONUS BUY
HONEYWRL PENTAX SPOrMAtlC F . · . -· . . ... willi F 1.t T1kum1r lens,
• •• lllCT P l~::o-· i-•lll·C""C e llMllll tM llM' . 1&.Q'1tl•
• ·-1-:U.ta,l/lllf IK. eD11Qt1111tlM ...,'ftliiilh
Mfr: List Price J71.00
TRADE ·INS wacOME
.. lt'ilA l'REE
$289.9!5 .801J•I Kit . . '
l'REE BONlll K/1' lt'il/J p•rc/Jut . ol tPF
V~1 40 Strobe Velbon .V&B 3 Tripod
• R1c"81111tll Nlc1d 81t11r1
• i ,oslllH shoe 11oun1
e a.111-111 11c11¥11r V.•klt
e '-t lftelld flC:)'C II 29 95
• •• •• ""' ••• 25 •
frlaz
1s1mm r 1.1
Aatomatlc
Telephoto
Lea a
.,.-...... ,f
erll111111111 u
e INHISl 1pwtwt f/22 , .......... .
0i~~ 44.95 ., .....•.•..
0~.:•· 54.95.
•.
•
.
e I 1ectllfl chlMtl .. P t-
. '"' "" ... , ....
• "''" fttJ ...., ... e ""911111• ru*r •nil
. '"" lltt •
... ,.,
SLIDE
PROJECTOR
•. Alft~ ftc1s . e "' Ufl ll1HW e IOO Watt e R1 ... 1 c•t1 ·-···1-u.. • 100 Sllh R-•· l\IC. Tur
l~~~i 1·0 9 •· 9 5
"'
.PROCE.SSl'NG
Fro• KODACOLOR,
&AF, FUJI
··12 EX~. ROLL
" $ 49 ·
v ....
39.95 ,
, F-f;.J frHI!, --.C~~~R
P ·Rl'NT
l'ILM
126·12 EXP. ...
O~.r le t -.97 t
49~
• INCLUDES ;/
F11D POCKIT PHOTO CASE BORDlRLESS SILK FINISH
ANO M ..... ,,.,. Mlfl _,,.,, ,,,. .....
:iRRllRRRRRS
OAILYt MOH.·IAT. ll ·f :JI P.M. -IUMDAY1'11 1H 0 6tll P.M.
" 979.1371
..
·.been -.performing in midway
. ahows for three years because
''J just want to do it. It's ENERGY SAYING HOURS
~~hr~g fti~· ~pre~'c i a 11 y Daily10to9,Sat.10to6,Sun.12tos
"Glug ,Glug" splits . the
snake$' skin with his teeth,
'peels away the skin and eats
the snakes live as the reptiles
writhe about his head.
South Coast ?tua
" ' ..
1 . '
:, ~ .. :. ' ·.-;,, . ~ ~ . . ' ·,
The security.gate-guarded entry of
Sunrise E~st . A sniall community
in·the desirable South end designed
for people Who value their privacy
. ~nd are seeki'ng a serene
atmosphere.
Single .. tory, Low Density Luxury
.. At Sunrise East you 'll find just
three sprawling, single-story two
and thr!!ll-beoroom con<1ominiyms
to 'the .acre. Up to· 2,000 sq6are
feet _qf living spaca as lavishly
appoin\ed .and detailed inside as
they are luxuriously landscaped
· ' outside.
Th• Am..,iti• of• Fine Resort
Sunrise East offers 80% of Palm
Springs' ni01t·valuable propeny in
' •• '· <I ,vast expanses of lushly landscaped
open space~-Scattered throughout
the scores of pina, olive, palm a·nd
peppe r trees are six beautiful
swimming pools with companion
1her'apy pools . And three tennis
couns. slightly sunken so as not to
obstruct the views . Total luxury as
only Sunrise Corporation, t~e
desen's most succassful builder.
can provi de.
A limited Opportunity
The second and final phne is now
under construction and, while 11ot
all ·of ·the condominiums are fully
completed, there are a limited
number of prime locations available
. for immediate occupancy. If it is
your w ish to own the finest
condominiu'm in Palm Springs in
l o' ierms pf beauty, security, privaey
6 ,, and value vi sit Sunrise East. And i lji.,.j:;"iii; .. iiltA,;,•,;,•·.-,;:":,.---1] be sure to take our map along.
'3 -~--=-"' We're a little hard to find •.• and a
s i -""I:" · ---lot harder to forget.
· l I d A ·~ s..., .. Rd., Twoan ThreeBedrooms
l ~-.. ~ ... EOi .. •' P··;,;;•m-C•;;";i;'';;"~D;;;'·& From $49,995 ·sunnse .
A oMlopment of Sunrise Corporation and ALODEX Corporation
, 2251 MesquiUI A.)lnue , Palm Springs,
Calif. 92262, (7 14) 313-1811
'
I
•
PILOT·. . .i-. . 1974
...
GUAIAmED .... ~•-Cl1C~·••• ---·-"" -· -· ~"-4·-"'
'"'no .. .,,,0 • ., tt~tt-0
~ 4r--
•
COPYIMGHf 1974
•EXPERT SERVICE
AND ADVICE .........
• BY QUALIFIED
. PROFESSIONAL
SALESCLERKS
•YOU SAVE MONEY .. :.THE FIRST PRICE MARKED
ON THE MERCHANDISE INDICATES THE PRICE
FOR COMPARABLE QUALITY ....
•AMPLE FREE PARKING
ADJACENT TO All STORES
• 9200 PAINT AND DECO RA ti NG ITEMS .
' •EVERYTHING ALWAYS SOLD.WITH AN
•THE SECOND PRICE IS YOUR COST •LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES ON EVERY ITEM ..•..•. EVERY OAY! •
UNCONDITIONAL MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
•OVER 35 YEARS OF SERVICE & INTEGRITY •YOU SAVE THE DIFFERENCE !!!
PiCTORE
FR.J\MES
•4 SIZES •2 SHAPES
•GOLD SPRA YEO INJECTED PLASTIC
•REAL GLASS ANO FULL COLOR
REPRODUCTIO NS BV THE GREAT MASTERS
•PERFECT FOR ANY DECOR ·· ..
WALL "OR TABLE GROUPING 39
RECTANGULAR l'h X 2% IN. OUR PRICE c EA.
COMI'. RETAIL 60c
REC TANGULAR 5 X 7 IN, OUR PRICE 99C EA.
COMP. RETAIL 1.50
flECTANGULAR 8 x 10 1N. OUR PRICE 1 ss COMP. RETAIL 2.60 EA. c EA.
RE.JlDY .TO USEI
HOUSE PAi~l
, 100% PURE PREPARED , .
· •FINE QUALITY
OIL BASE
•TOUGH & DURABLE
. •IDEAL FOR-ALL
'f EXTERIOR WOOD
·•PRE-MIXED, USE
STRAIGHT FROM CAN
DUR PRICE
6.50
BRIGHT WHITE•& COLORS
tAsTs ·--numRRRFeD 12 YE.llR~U •n :g:; ·
1· COAT: se,tf ·GLoss
PURE ITE & COLORS
Et.lMEl • "'•INTERIOR
.. EXTERIOR
• SCRUBBABLE
•SATIN FINISH
•EXTREMELY ·
DURABLE FOR WOOD
PLASTER •METAL
DUR PRICE 95 ·
GAL.
BARN & FENCE
EXTERiOR PAiNT
CIVE All YOUR EXTERIOR . . .
WOOD TtlAT NEW LOOKI
•BRUSH OR SPRAY
--•FINE GRADE
•OIL BASE
COMP.
RETAIL
3.75
DUR PRICE
99
GAL.
WHITE &
4COLORS
'
.-
•
.
·vi-~'fl ACR~DC
.-· . . 'LASTS 8 PAl~l YEARS!-
BOTH INSiDE & our . . .
•A'TOP QUALITY EXTERIOR
. ST\JCCO-ll!~SONRY PAINT
~
. •CLEAN-UP WITH'
WATER
. .'' • 30 MINUTES . FJ TO DRY ~. BRUSH OR ROLL
:.· ~ DUR PRICE
'98
GAL
COIP.
RETAIL
6.25
ECONOVIN11°
V!n14Surfoce
FLOu11COVERINC .
•12 FQPT WID'J~S OUR PRICE
•STYUSHP-ATIERNS 25 •A PERFECT WAY
TO SAVE
COMP.
RETAIL 1.60
I
IJ
I .II!.·
•
-SAL •
SPECIAi PURCHASE! .
50,000 ·CANS
SPRAY· LACOU ERS
• THESE WERE MAN~~:c~~~~~ 39c TO FEDERAL SPECIFICATIO N .
TT·L·SOF COMP. :!
WHITE&COLORS RETAIL 1.45 . CM
GUARARl'EED
l·COAT
ACR1bC IAllX
1~1E1\JOI FIAT PAllcl
•USE ON ALL
INTERIOR WALLS · '
• 1 HOUR DRYING
•WASHABLE
•CLEAN-UP WITH
OUR
PRICE
WATER
98
, ' · :t_F~ OutiOffJ-·.
·-~JHANE VARNISH
•INTERIOR
•EXTERIOR
04 HOUR
•FLOOR
•MARINE
•BAR TOP
YOUR CHOICE
' . -
~ . l IAlEX . . lblRANTEED .
. ·SEMl~GtOSS . l~COATANq~teLATEX
··g· -ii -·. -PAi-·1rr HOUSE ·PAINT · · NAmEl ·. · · ·~, · ms·Ts 12·vr11;1s·1 CLEAN UP Wi1R WATERl · en ' . ' . . • BEAUTlf.UL FINISH
• SCRUBBABLE ·, -•
•DURAB~~ ·
• FAST DRYING • _
• INf'ERIOlt .c;O..,.'
• EXTERIOlf RUA1L .1
~.so ouR-Ph1cE ·
• :;f. .. $ELF· ADHESIVE
VINYL ASIE&TOS
FLOOR .lilE ... DUR PRlcE . ,COMP.
Ci2xl15c
EA •. 11·cH
I
ARMsTRONG '@
QmUAI Vlt.~l
CUSllON
FLOOR
•
QUIK•BRIK
6 SQUAR~ FOOT PACKAGE
•LOOKS AND FEELS REAL .
•MADE OF FIRE·PROOF MINERAL FIBER
•EACH BRIK 7'% X 3% IN. •
•SO·EASV TO DO.IT· YOURSELF
YOUR CHOl!=E OF TWO STYLES
' •EXTREMELY DURABLE
INTERIOR JOB
•SCRUBBABLE
•1-HOUR !lRYING
o FOR PL/>.STER,BRICK
ANO STUCCO
WHITE AND COLORS
,. OUR. PRICE
39 .
GAL
'
\
.. ·sPi'Aj
~. 'E.QME.1: .
COMP. RETAIL 79c •TOUG~~~!'!~~ 39c
•HIGH GLOSS PEA
•FAST DRYING ~A~
MAK :YOUR ·OWN CAND[ES .. ·
. cJ.!:~!~~x a!.l!!. 1 ss
3/4o~. $1111.E DYES
OUR PRICE 451 13 COL:.ORS .
COMP, RETAIL 50c
3/4 oi. CAl111E sC~iTS
OUR PRICE jf:: I 12 5e;ENTS
W · COMP. RETAIL 50c
I
POlYFoAMPA
• 4" x 24" x 36" .
OUR PRICE 221 COMP.RETAIL
• 3.59 EA
• '
January • 1974 PILOT·.
SPECIAL PURCHASE!
CARPET
SPECIAi ·
ORDER
55% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT 45%HERCULON OLEFIN
Dartmouth® OUR 3ss •Hl-DENSIT:Y FOAM BACK PRICE
•12 FOOT WIDTHS
•MEETS FHA SPECIFICATIONS ~~.
•AN EXCEPTIONAL CARPET cow;
•VALUE F,OR THE ENTIRE HOME RETAILS.t o
•SPECTACULAR COLOR COMBINATIONS
. . '
e HAND SANOED C9,Mr .. RETAIL
e READY TO PAINT·OR ST'-'IN . • ·. 1.QO
•SHUTTER HARDWARE AVAILABLE
7 X241N .................. 1.89 9 X 26 IN ••• •-·······""·· 2.39
7 X 26 IN ..•••..•....•.•... 1.99
7 x 29 IN .. _ .... _ .. _,_2,19
.. 7 X 32 IN .. _,, .. _._,,.2.39·
'X 31 IN,"'--'-•·-··.2.79
, .9 X 29 IN ................. 2.59
7% X 4d IN.·--····-· .. 2.99
I X 20 IN ............. ; .... 1.79
• 9 X 32 IN·-·--·-···.Z.71
9X381N , 2ft
9X481N ... , ,A ..
10 X 24 lN.-..--2.31
10 X'28 ·~i--.... -2.11
OUR PRICE 41t9·
COMP. RETAIL 1.50·; ~
WON'TCRACKoR RUN cJu.
ABERh ·.
ASBESTOS .:·
5 GAL. s1 i e O,UR PJ!ICl COMP.A.ET~IL 7~,. 539
e FINEST 'GRADE'
· •!!LACK Olj l V . • . S.
• STUCCO·MASONRY
PAINT
• 1 HOUR OR YING
•CLEAN UP WITH
WATER
e BRUSH OR 'ROLL
eSCRUBBABLE
•GOOO HIOING
OUR. PRICE
99
GAL.
• llPEll D~YS &5 NIGHTS· MONDAY.THAU FRIDAY._ I~ Ti i f.M.·SATURDAYS,I A.M. TO 6:3U P.M.· SUNDAYS. 9 A.M. TO 5:30P.M.
· i" $~~M~na ~ · , . Long Beach ·standard BranCJs
lalnt &. ~orating· · ', 1 BLK. SO. OF WARNER IOELHlf Hunt1n~Ofl Beach 2401 LONG BEACH BLVD.
•• TELEl'HONE 17141141'4197 ,. • 1% BLKS. SO. OF WILLOW · ~ GBOOWARNI"' ,\VE. EAa GOLDEN WEST TELEPHONE 1213) 4Z7-3'1M ·· ~ ··.Anaheim TELEo;;; · . La 'Habra
CORNER 0~ LINCOLN a LINDS EY 8636 E. FLOAENcE A"" ( · ji .•~eoo.dent , . .eors U6'loclallo.1s 1n .. •••t 1 llLK. EAST OF BllOOKHURS\" AT LAKEWOOD ILVO.
'RLIPHONI (714t1D-"'7 • • 1'l\.1'"0Nl (211) Mt•ti
• { • •
CORNER WHITTIER llo IOAHO
2 ILKS. E. OF BEACH-HACIEllD4
Tl\.IE"40NE t11Jl R14 10I
•
',
JO DAILY PILOT Thursdl1, J~uary 31, 1CJ74
Dancer Hospitalized
Costar Biros in Old Age
I .
BIRMI NGHAM, Ala. (UPI) roommate, aloo·1 dancer. front of her.
• -For eight years. t:t-UI· She said Jt wu the third
, gunan Carol Cybulskl has used time· ID recent J0011ths Ms.
"AJI oJ a sudden, the thin&
coiled up like you see in the
movies and started shak ing
Us rattle. She bent down like
she was going to stroke him
behind the head and the snake
bit her twice on the arm."
: spiders and snakes Jo spice up Cybullki bad be<!1 hospitalized
• her exotic dance routine. as a result of the act. Ms.
Boa constrictors, pythons, Cybulski was listed in fair
cobras and ratUesnakes ...are ccnditlon"' at U n l v e r s i t y
:.:. often performing compp.nions H01pital where docton were
of the 35-year-old F o r t trying to determine whether
:. Lauderdale, Fla. woman who the snake was po.llooous. Gt.ENOS SAID the dancer
'.: performs as "Jesse James." was bitten repeatedly on the
111£ DANCER could not arm as she tried to pick up
·· Bur THINGS don't al•a)'I remember if Sam had the snake.
go as planned in the act, and undergone a treatment that "Finally she threw a rug
P.fs. Cybulski remained leaves rattle&nakes non . over the rattler," he said.
hospitalized here today after pol!Onoos. "She thought she had him
being bitten se\-eral times "The act seemed to be going then but he stuck his head
during her act Monday night pretty well," said Nick Glenos, out from under it and bit
by a ratUesnake n a m e d manager of the Patio Lounge her on the foot."
"Sam." where. Ms. Cybulski was Ms. C)'bulski's roommate
"[ guess Sam's getting a performing. "She wu dancing ~id the snake was finally
little bit irritable in hla old around on the stage and the .. ~aptured and returned tQ Its
age," said Ma. Cybulaki's snake was atretched out in caie. ' ,p;;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;;i;;=======;;i;;;;;;;;;===mjil •
..
', .
"
. . . • . . • .
' ' ' ' ; • •
-• ' ' •
TO A WELL INFORMED PUBLIC
WHY SHOULD YOU CONSIDER BUYING A SWIMMING POOL NOW IN
THE MIDST OF THE ENERGY CRISIS THAT PREVAILS IN OUR COUNTRY TO-
DAY? We feel the Americ•n public won't be teklng as m1ny vec1tions in their
cars, using alrlin•• for long summer v1cation1, or utili1ng th•ir bo1t1 or summer
recreational vehicles for long trips 1s years gone by.
F1mly recre1tion u1•1 •nergy. Just going to the movies, witching t•levision,
boet ride1 or night b1llg1mes takes energy end does not, in •••enc•, serve fully
the health i nd recreational features es a SWMMINW POOL do••·
WHAT ENERGY DOES A SWIMMING POOL REALLY TAKE7 Studios ro-
cently heve shown that th• use of •lectrlcel power to run • pump for In EIGHT
HOUR PERIOD CONSUMES AS LlnLE ENERGY AS WATCHING A COLOR
TELEVISION FOR ONE NIGHT. Tho hHlth and fam ily rocrHllon onfoyod by a
SWIMMIN6 POOL can ne••r be m111ur•d in dollars ind cent1. As to th•
INITIAL outloy for• SWIMMING POOL, it is on• of tho FEW MAJOR RECREA-
TIONAL items avai11bl• tod1y that do•• not come ln direct c.onflict with energy
conservetion. The faniily sp•nding money for • recr•1tion1l vehicle, bo•t or an
eutomobile vec:afion is b•rred from usin9 them, since travellng is now too
•xpensive for the •v•r•9• household due to 91soline r1tionin9 end price infl•·
ti on.
We et SUNSET POOLS feel. th•t the dey where th• f1mily spends more
time together is ne•r •t hand and whet l:.etter way to spend family recreetlonel
enjoyment thin with • SUNSET POOL. At pr•s•nt, th• cost of putting in• SWIM-
MING POOL is as LOW es it will be for th• y••r 1974. In all sincerity, we
·--il19"'l"'t YOU AVOID th• spring and summ•r rush on SWIMMING POOL con·
struction by c:1llin9 us now.
-nset poofs "The C.u~tom Po'~~uilder,·~
1237 SO. BROOKHURST . .:....:ia392 M~~ITE WAY ·i
ANAHEIM, CALIF. 92804 -MISSIQJll~'liiJp, ~LIF; ',.. -'!'·, ' .
• • • Phon1 772-6866 Phono 495-6500
• CU-2l1M1 ~~ ' . ' • • ' l ' ~
i : ' f • l ' •
Sa11s Who?
Labor Secretary Peter
J . Brennan has denied
persistent rumors that
he plans to resign this
spnng.
3 Norco
Councilmen
Make Plea
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The California Sqpreme Court
has been asked to allow three
fonner city councilmen from
the Riverside County town of
Norco who were bQoted out
of. office In a recall election
Jo •eek election to the polls
again.
Louis de BoUari, Melvin
King and William Jarett aaid
the state law prohibiting them
from seeking office within a
year after being recalled
deprives lhem of e q u a 1
proloct!on of the law.
t 'lbe tbrM··· were remo.ved
'-from omce 1n the Nov. 20
recall in the community·
because of oppotltlon to a
freeway and views on certain
1.0ning matters.
When the lhree f i I e d
nominating petitions I a s t
month for the March 5
balloting, the dty c I e r k
·refused to· put their names
on the ballot, cltina: the law
which says a perao:n who iJ
recalled "shall not be a
candldale for or appoinled lo
.Uch an office within a year
after the recall."
The Riverside C o u n t y
Superior Court denied a
similar petJUon Dec. 26.
Trns1 May . Be ~ispla~ed!
~
D-ou'"'de chance that the answer to the ·energy crisis. We certainly don't waot to By ·-WEST ~ f -·~ the IJ into a s1'tuation where we trashman will be able to Within a ew ' mo1n.11e, ~ WAS!IINGTON (UPI) retain his rellabiiity image. truh lobbf W<lllld be might. becOme dependent on
Accordi111 , lo a survey, In C&lilomls, a 12.9 mllilon pre18Urtng Congr<u lo enact lortign garbage, partlcularly
Amer l ca a 1 bave more federal grant is m 1 k1 n g a glJ'ba&e depleUon allowance trash from the ~11ddle East.
confidence D trub collectors pouible 8 pilot project. for ito encourage exploration for Meanwhile, I would advise
ha the do · ,,_ oonverti'ng tra·"" into a hqWd new 10Urce ol rubbiah. you to hold your garbaae off I n Y '" co...,.. ~ the market loc the time being.
p r of es s o r a, generals, organic fuel. G EVEN be •-If a ,~-ge devellVllll, we'll Should this process prove ff Ml HT w~e ·~u ~
preachers, ,supreme Court feasible, it could be one to set qp tax incentivet: now. all get ricll.
jljftices, .!'leni.bers o( ~~>02....'.'._.::~'......:_:;..::::_;..:::,,~.:::~:::::::;2 ~:.:..::..--::-'-:'--~~-.~~-::~::-
Congres!, tbe news media ,
buslneN and labor leaden and
lhe ivhite ·H,,,..-.
This , attitude Is
understandable. .But no t
necessarily sensible. It !Iowa,
most likely, from an
incomplete picture of the trash
mllecting operation.
AS A RULE of thmnb, we
have the most confidence 'in
the thinp we know the least
about.
Most of us know almost
nothing a b o u t astronon;iy .
Therefore, we have complete
confidence in the s o 1 a r
system.
Trash.men, by the same
token, have received far less
publicity than c o 11 e g e
profeasor s, generals,
preoc!Jer.J, elc. Hence they
enjoy a higher degree of
public trust •
A couple ol yeara qo, the
public prob.ably would have
expressed similar eonfldence
Doulile-ilate; •• •ave ga11ollne.
The more the merrier ... double·date for
twice as much enjoyment ... and to all
dine rs who arrive lour or more to one car,
enjoy special, surprise hors d'oeuvres.
compliments of Don the Beachcomber.
• A delicious. delightlul and. .
delectable even ing with exotic
foods and beverages, there's no
better way to relax and replenish
your e.nergy.
• Le ave the worries behind you,
savor the languor of the tropics, the
carefree, easy.going atmosphere
of the South Seas ...
3901 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar7 Phone : 714-675-0900
Frss Valet Park.iltg
ID the oil Industry. I==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~~========
THE FACf , IS that moat
people ooly -tho truhman pkkllll up reluoe. If they saw
what he Wll doing with .the
traah after it is collected, they
mia:ht have a 1ood bit less
faith ID hta prolldency.
In lnlth. tho dumping end
of tho trub collecting
operaUon is bordering on
chaos. ~ are rapidly
running out ol places lo put
their dally .harvest.
When you consider that
present annual djscard rates
nm something m I h e
magnitude of SO million tona
of paper, 211 billion bottles
and 48 bUllon cana, you can
see that coofldence in the
trashman may be misplaced.
BELIEVZ ME, f e 110 w
wastrels, running short of
gnollne is a minor
Inconvenience compared to
running out of. any place to
put the garbage.
There ls,
646-5527
2640 Harbor Blvd.
'COSTA MESA
. . . . .-.
OPEN DAILY 9 -5:30
SUNDAYS 9-5
HOME AND GARDEN
greenery· ... and _ .. color!
Boston
Fern
Lacy and Lov•
ly. R 1 ad y to
hang.
...... $
5.98
All Available Models in Stock & On J)isplay . -
Wrought
Iron
Plant Stands
AZALEAS 1n
Hanging Baskets
Beautiful, hardy
A11le11 In Valentine Colors
16.50 25''::r..~'tuba ZENITH soJ:O;;ATE SYLVANIA 19'' dl_.I
picture tube
• lnst•nt Picture
e Instant Sound
• One Button Tuning
e Auto l'ino Tuning ' e 30.000 Volts
of PlctuN Power
' e Supar Gold
Vldoq GuorJI
Tunor
• Glbroltar 95
Chassis
e Color Bright
100 Plctur• Tubo
• Auto Fine Tune
e Perma-Lock
Now Only
' ,,.,....~•ANll( :aCOLoR'
Handaome stands fit
•ny decor. Use in or
outdoora. Approx. 30"
high.
••• o.ily 4.98
TJU?y:re easy
to grow ...
Plant
"' Each leef produces
new planflet1 In
pl119y-back fashion •
.59 .
" CymbidiUm.
Iceland
Poppies
I!•
"
. . ' • .. •
• ,• ,• • . • > ~ ' ' ,,
• • • . • ~ ..
• • • • . • • • •
SE2580 Rtmole CO?ltrol Ill Stock
C11l for our low
price on this top-of-
th•line 25" diag.
Chrom1color 11
... ..
RCA
XL-lOO's, 100% Solid State
19" d1-1 ·PORTABLES
YOUR CHOICE
Cl21'74
Note: Remote Control
Modal •CX2177WR
Available $449.95
539800
' IS471
Why luy At AIC
.... -et ..... pol4 lo" ...... Lew Dewt1 M JI M .... to ,.., re.e.c.I
• 1 , .. "" ,... • ' '"' "" ...... • J y.., ,..,.,. T• w~· • ,,.. .. .... c...,,. ... lenke .........
• We ._ .. ,..._, l..W. _. o.t
• ... c. t••• ····-· •nc1n FAii TRAii mMt
ZENITH e RCA
snVANIA
HOURS: 1f'41 ll0091HUP.IT ST •
SATURDAY 1015110 HUlfflN•TON HACH
SUNDAY 12:5 961-3329
DAILY 10-7 . L..~~~~~~~~--~-...;...~~~~~..;..~~~~~~~...ir~~-: .-\ • l
Orchids Flower• of rich
bold colors will
delight you for .
months. The super gar-
den p I ant in
blautllul bloom
now.
.89
PltCID PIOM 6.98
Buy 2
Pony Pek1
Got a third
on1 FREE.
WHERE THERE
ARE HEARTS,
THERE ARE
FLOWERS.
·&andini
W9edpiaenllon ....
FTD Lovo Bundle
from 12.50
with Joie de Flour
.. .parfumo •
Save Money Now .
S.foct #3 S.i.ct #6
for for
Dlchonclro 0r •••
. Lawns L•wn1
91 OFF ·~ 'OFJI flla12.ll5 . fllall.ll
HON11.lll HON118
SA
'C&l
R
Sh
bou
In t of
u
lo~
me
,kno we
'CO Jrl• p
F ..
In
'.tuu
for
' •1•
Ill
i
;
'
..
'
·rhrusday, January 31, 1974 OAIL Y PILOT
Retired Politicians Pick Up Hefty State Paychecks Good De1d
...... tho oc:ene
m
•uL'S
"'1':t....-
SACRAMENTO (AP)
·ca111om1a patd 1113,121 1n
survivof and r etireme nt
belleflll last year for 111
former l .. lslators and state
officials, Including f o r m e r
Gov. Edmund G. Brown's
_ $2.1~ '"'!"\hiY,penslon, ~ sta~
report~·
nie 11111U1i flnlllcW
up to 8 perc..oent from the
paychecks of current office
holden brought in $124,090,
while retirement b e n e f 1 t s
totaled $687,740.
Dlaablllty, death and
survivor benefits added
1175,481 to the expenditure
total. State payments as ... erii'"ploye'i into-the ~runa were
$639,638 -or five times the
employe contributions.
Earnings from a $1.7 billion
portfolio of Inves tmen ts
brought in another 1131,758 in
income.
for the PUC posts. appeal of a court
which awarded ~1rs.
opinion
Bonelli
,, __ .. __ &nlays
in the
who served both in the
Legislature and as lieutenant
governor, receives $1,286.13 a
month from the fund.
ONE. PERSON listed as a the benefits.
beneficiary In the report is:!i~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;~iiii;iiii;iiiiiiii~~~~ actually not receiving any
.... -.... ._ '41·171)
ANOTHER F 0 RM E R beneflll. That ls Mary P,
lieutenant governor, Harold J . Bonelli, widow of William P.
Powers, draws $1,658 per Bonelli, the former head of
month. ' the state Board of
r.. Virginia -Knight ,-widow of .,_ Equalization,~ who .fl~ . to
former Gov. Goodwin J. Mexioo in 1956 to avoid
Knight, is issued monthly prosecution on char~~ or
cheeks ror $916.11. accepting bribes. He died in
Public Utilities Commission 1970.
members Vernon Sturgeon A total of $113,059 in benefits
FRIE ••••
CHlllTIAN SCllNCI LICTUll
·"MORI THAN A SUl'll STAI" ~1
010101 LOUii AGHAMALIAN, (.I .I.
Fiii. •••
Mr. A_...11111 ti I _.. .. T'Mi thrlttllll kleMI ... ,,. If LKtllrMI .. Ml lilllt
kl-1 _. t"4, hi 1fM 11t _, 11 ....... 111 1 Cllrll~ kiMUI MM!W YMtll Hf'llM
..... 111 1111 ........ ,,Ktlce If tllMKI• SU... llll(t ltU ... 1 tMClltf .. CllrllMM
TNwthl'll' ...... 1M ..,, 11 lille ywtll .. Ult -lrlM. Mr. AtMo-KM ll'lttldelll C.....
Me UlllYtnlty ... """"' W.W WM' II Wft I WINM "" Air M .... wl• f9W WtNI
OM Leef c .... 11n wllllt ~1111 wllll lllt •..-• IJr ,,,,.,
draws 1316.40 a month pension In her and Booelll's name NEWPOIT CINEMA THU.TIE_ FASHION ISi.AND
and William Symonds Jr. have been issued since 1959,
report on the Leglalaton'
Retirelllellt System, wbldl
was .,bmltted recenUy to the
Legi>lature, 111111 a hoot ol
former and present familiar
name• in caucornla poliUcs.
IT INCWDES J e ss e
Unruh, f12S.J9 a month; Sam
Yorty, 113'1.70; Stanley Mook,
$1 ,583.11 and Thomas Kuchel,
$1,517.lt
draws 1158,20 .That's on top but all are impounded due 10:00 A.M. SATURDAY, Fii. hd
111E INVESTM ENTS _o~f~th~e~l3~1_:,soo.~'i.y~ear~ly~sa~l~ary~~to~an~a~lto~r~ne~y~g~e~n~e~r:._ia~l~'~s~~,;;.;~,;;.;~~,;;.;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ portfolio includes long-term
notes and ci;rtificates from
such companies as PG&E, .----...,j----------------------------------------------.,,. Southern Pacific, Southern
'nle fund Is one of the most
geoeroQI retirement programs
in IJOVemment in terms of
benefits for the number of
years of employment and the
employe contributions.
It provides pensions for
former state senators and
assemblymen -some of
whom served as little as four
years -and COD1tltutional
BEFLECl'IONS ...,
Reyn
Sheffer
.~, ........
(teecWi , llwenlfY .. J •,
'~.,.. .... "~ tM MIM; prlw•tlon trains ... ·-""'"It ... • .r -H•alltt
We hear much of the
great education and moral
stren'&thenlng to be pined .
·from adversity and prlva·
tton. We wouldn't presume to argue this point but we
tome~ wonder U' It Is
ao utterly debasing to be
apoUed just a bit by the
bounteous prosperity with-
in the reach of mogt cltb:ens
of our pat country.
U al!verstty ts to be one's
lot. perhaps there ls some
measure of consolation in
knowi ng that if nothing else
we are being toughened and
r conditioned to race any
· frightening .eventuality , ••
1 prosperity, for example.
For many years\ We have
terved people of 811 faiths in this community. No one has ever been turned away
for lack of funds!
£;H6FF6R.
motlTllo\aY
t7• SOUTH COAST HICiHWAY
_L>.$UNA lEACH
4'4·11JI . -
SAN CLEMENTE
t Sll NORTH El CAMINO REAL
492-0100
,,,_
$1,517 MONTHLY
Thomas H. Kuchol
officers. It does not bar
benefita to those holding other
state orfices, such as JusUce
Mosk, or private jobs.
THE REPORT ON the Im·
71. flJcal year, which ended
June 30, aaid deductions of
Callfornla Edlaon, San Diego
Gas and Electric, Ford Motor
Co. and (ieneral M o t o r s
Acceptance C9r)l.
Tbe report says several
former state leg islators who
are now earning $42,500 a year
as . congressmen representing
California are also drawing
state pensions.
Tuey include Reps . Augustus
Hawkins, $901.74 a month and
Harold T. Johnson, '4:74.60 a
month. Rep. Glenn Anderson,
Retirement Funds
Hiked This Year
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
The bitterness • of political
defeat and forced retirement
will be sweetened f o r
legislators this year by special
lucrative pension b e n e f i t s
linked with reapportiorunent.
Gov. Ronald R e agan 's
proposed state budget contains
almost $500,000 in retirement
funds for lawmakers for the
comlng year, fattened from
previous yean, in p a r t ,
because of "projected in-
creases in retirement resulting
from reapportionment."
Stephen P. Teale (D-Rail Road
Flat), retir ed in 1972 after
20 years service. He receives
a pension of $14,148, only $41
a month less than the top
salary he received f o r
legislative duties.
A SPECIAL clause was
writtoo into the retirement
law in 1971 .to provide unusual
beneflll in reapportionment
years. The :provislon .-.quires
a contribution of a percent
ola legislafur'1 aimual salary.
If a lawmaker resigns or
· loses bis seat during a year
A NUMBER OF legislators in which his district is
are ezpected to quit rather I redrawn, he can receive a
than nm in ,new districta pemston i m m e d 1 at e I y -
draw,o by the state Supreme regardless of age -if he
Court. Others are predicted has served four years.
to Joee ~lectioo bkls ~ 1. When the clause w a s
they will be naming in enacted, it applied 1 t o
unfamiliar territory. And lawmakers elected before 1970
some tawmakeQ are giving -nearly all those holding
up seal! to nm for higher olfioe al the time. It does
oflice. not include legislators elected
The legislators' retirement since' then. But that feature
system, su pported primarily is expected to be updated this
I with taxpayers' f u n d s , year.
basically allows g e n e r o u s
benefita at age llO with four .SEN ARLEN Gregorio (D-
san Mateo) ·LS critical of
special retirement benefits
granted solely be<:ause of
reapportionment.
years service ·as a lawmaker
or at any ue with 15 years
of service.
For eumple, former Sen.
lntroduci~g the
new Coast .federal
•
•
• • savings
plans.
•
' I
W!'ll pay you the highest i~erest
in coast Federals history with rates
that ranse from 5X% to 7y,r,.
Choo~ frnn1 five savings plans, designed lo
give you lhe besl. rCturn for your saving-..
Highest guaranteed rates
Annu.11 Annu.11 Min. Min.
rate yield balance te rm
7.S()cyo ~ 7:79,.o S1,000 4 year
cert .
6.75 6.98 1,000 21/2 year
cert.
6.50 6.72 1,000 1 year
cert.
5.75 5.92 1,000 90-day bonu~ accounl
5.25 5.19 no min. Passbook
account
Federal regulations requ ire a subsiantia l
interest penalty on all cer1ific;ite accoun 1
Withdri!WJIS priQr 10 maturity.
The Insiders dub
Just open an ,1ccount .it Co.1st for ~1 .000,
and you CilO ge,l special low "l n~ider" prices
·on consumer goods and services. From
au1omobiles, .lppliances, furn iture to !ravel,
~tertainment <ind ho1ne decortlling.
For a $1 ,000 account, you get free traveler's
checks, money orders, notary service, note
Collections .. Atto free. for a minimum S2,SOO
balance, a personal checki'ng account at a
m,1jor b.lnk, and a sale deposit bo'if.
saturday hours
Coast offices are open·Sa1urdays, 9 a.m. to
1p.m:Weekldays,9 a.m. to4 p.m. Fridays all
offices except downtown lo$ Angeles are
open to 6 p.m.
COAST
A~w!~
O\·f'I
°"'' ll1Lhun
FEflF-RAL S/\Vl;\.J(_,~~ \ r1o>11~r), e . .
\\\!want your llllll"Y·
And we'll do more for It.
•
l ... d ... 1 ~<>Mr:.: 91 ttuft~tnttf (71-i) 897-1047 •L.A. M• ~It ' Hill. 6:ll·13St eon~n~~I Offices Throughou t C.iliforni.i
. I
I
Grand Opening, Sequence 3
, .
Above everything else,
The North View has
ext.raordinary values.
,
One thing, perhaps more than all the
others, stands out about Sequence 3
at The North View:. the extraordi-
nary value of the homes. It comes
from tl combination of the breathtak·
ing v!,ws 'Of Saddleback Mountain,
quiet·l:ui-de-sac streets, greenbelt,
and parklike areas, serene atmos-
• v • • pher~ plus the homes
tbemLves. Ones which
crest.e a whole new per-
spective of country-
view liviiig.
.The question is:
how much longer
will these out.st.and-
ing values remain
at these prices?
Large expanses of glass have been
blended with soft earth·tones to
• create f-teriors of wann wood, brick
and slbne ... much like a country
manor. The front yards are land·
scaped and have sprinklers. The rear
yards "f." fenced, especially designed
for ea,Gh lot. Inside, tbeee..
•
autiful 3 and 4
bedroom homes have large rooms,
deep carpeting (in 111ajor living
an!BS), fireplaces; built-ins, even the
luxury of oelf..cleariing ovena:
· Surround all this with Laguna
Niguel'• 8,000 acres filled with freoh,
ocean-cooled air and aflluent neigh-
bors and it's extremely attractive;
even more so when you add in tbe
pool, clubroom; and playfields of The
Highlands Club provided by The
Homeownel'I\ Association for a fee Of
$15amonth.
And there's more.
Golf at the private
El ~iguel '
country
' Club. Tennis at the private Laguna
Niguel Tennis Club. (Memberships
are available. Memberships in the
'
" . . ' .
t ~·
country club and the tenni8 club aie
. volµptary !pld 8l9 controlled by AWo
·Community Developers, .Inc., which
isthemanagementand -,,..._
operations agent of
the club facilities.)
The ocean
beacbes8?9only4milesaway, and the
Dana Point Harbor, "home port" for
Laguna Niguel is down the ""'8t a bit.
What more could someone who
desires a larger home aslt for?
From Los Angeles, go south on the
San Diego/Santa Ana Fwy. to Crown
Valley Parkway exit. Turn right
(approx. 3\i,mi.) to Niguel Rd. Tum
right on Niguel Rd. to saka office at
top of hilL
From $48,500 to $59,400
'
......
Velley ...... ...
""-
Put a lif in your life ..• today come to
-Ranchollemanloand Vlllap~ otheT6ne New'Thwnlby AvcoCo'"!'!!!nityI>ewlope ... loc. (71•) 496·~ 830-5060
, A.CD'1CoftttM~r'1 LlcftlM.NO. It tt914l. t..N.C.C-...... U.-Met. It t•Mlt,
@ --'' £2122 f
•
J! DAILY PILOT
· Deatlis
Elsewhe re
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -•
Y.1Ull B. Boyer, 58. chairman
of the board and chief
executive orncer of the
Republic Steel Corp., died in
a suburban hospital today ot
cancer, a company s kesman
salil. -
LOS ANGELES (UPI) ~
Burial wlll be held today for
Jack Y. Bermaa, 67, movie
house owner and Jewish civic
leader, 'NM died of a heart
attack Tuesday. Berman was
past president of t h e
Independent Theater Owners
Association of So u t h e r n
Californ ia and Arizona, and
owned a chain of theaters.
Thursday, January 31, 1q74
ln1tall~
Gerhard Kohn of Hun·
tington Beach has been
installed as 1974 presi-
dent of the Orange
St rike Loo11ain9?
Supe1~vi-sors Nix
Court Oerk Bid
By WfLLIAM SCHREIBER
Of .. ~lh' itii9iliiH
personnel department
negotiators.
"'.HEN 1HEY came out, ORANGE COUNTY SANTA ANA -Orange
County Superior Court Clerk!
Wednesday Jost a bid for pay
raises twice as Jarge as all
other county empl.Qyes when
the Board of SUpervlsors
rejected a compromise
reached a week ago.
supervisors rapidly voted to ""'-------..-"
reject the proposal and sent
it back for further
negotiations.
Registration
For Music
Classes Set
•
Regi ster
To Vote
Deadline
•
RICHARDS BEAUTY COLLEGE
1 .... H OO ICHUllT ITlllT AT •A•PllLD
HUNTIM•TON HACH, CALIP. tl'41
Phone 962-8831 ---OPEN • TUES. THRU SATURDAY 1:30 TO S:~,
425
AVING (with thJ1 coupo") __ ...
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Coun\y Association of
Minerva Barr, 81 , mother of Psychologists.
actor Raymond Burr., died at-~--=-----
The board met in a brief
executive session to discuss
an agreement reached. by the
clerks, represented by the
AFL-CIO, ·and co u·n t y
The clerk< had asked for
pay hikes ol 10.! perceot for
newly-hired clerks and 9.8
percent for veteran clerks.
Pi.1ost other county employes
got raises of about five
percent this year.
'I1le. pay agreement rejected
by the board would have been
in effect until the end of the
fiscal year in June, afte r
which the clerks would have
renegotiated for a n e w '
Mt. Sinai Hospital Wednesday.
She was a theater organist
durhu!: the silent screen era
and fater ran a piano and
sheet music store and taught
music. ,
MERCED (UP!) -Funeral
services will be held Friday
for C. Ray RoblnlOI, 70. a
local attorney who served a
term in the state Assembly
in the 1930s. Robinson died
Monday at a local hospital.
SEA'ITLE (AP) -James
H. Wbeeler, IOI , known as
"The Cat Pi.fan of the Yukon,"
died Monday. He made a
small fortune during the
Alaska Gold Rush , not in
prospecting, but in picking up
stray cats in Seattle for 50
cents and selling them to
Yukon dance hall girls for
$300 each.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Funeral services are pending
for Charlotte W b I t I n C
Faucette, 73, a 1 e a d I n g
vaudeville singer, dancer and
comedienne at the old Palace
Theater here. She d i e d
Monday.
Death Notice•
PISHlll Gr1c1 ,~1rollM FISl'I«. Aire U ; resldenl
of SOVlll laoll'll•· DIM of dNlh, J1mu1 ry
2t. 1914. .survlvw:t by son. flobe:rt E. Dwyeri dllughltr·IM1w, M1rlorl1 0Wy1r.
Soulfl L119un1; 11r1nOchlldren, P11rlc!1 D. O'Donntll, Newport lffClt; ChMI
Owy..-, l)rlncll; l!lt\ICI Qwy1r, Vtnlce;
1wr 111'1M"11r•ndehlklrtn., Gr• v • 1 I d 1 1trvke1,I' Frld1y, F1bn11ry 1, 2 PM,
Forts! ~ Hollywood HUI.. $1Mlffr Ug11n1 l llClt Mortvtrv. orrtctor1. , HI UIUll.0£11..,
Hlddl N91Jburv..-. lnt1nt d1ughltf' of
Mr. ind Mrl. J1mt1 N111bllr1jiir, l'U
Vlrv!nll Pl1c1, Cm11 MIU. Diii of
dNllt, J1n111rv 711. lt11.. Abo 1Uf'Vlvtd bY tirottier. llOlllld; alst1r, JOdy1 m1tern11 11r1ndp1..n11, Mr1. Dolorn
Klllty, Cosi. MH1; Mri. Ktnntlh Mldlson, St1nton1 pet1rnal 11r1nc1~r1nt1. M,,. Flori Monl1t9ut, G1rdfll Grov11
Mr. Wlfllll'l'I HIVburger, Plll'l'I Dfft1"1; TWO 111"••1 or1ndmofhtr1, Mr1. Nllllt Holl,
Cl'Jll Miu/ Mr1. AMI A. !.Mrp, Glnkn Grovt. G!"•v"lde 1ervk 11, Friday, 11 AM, Hlrtior ll"t MtrnOrlll ,Irk, wilt! R..-. $\NII ltldllntt of N-siorl H1rbor Unity ChUl'Ch llfflcl1ttno. a.II lrOldw1y
Morru.ry, DINdon. ,AULIN Bonll• J . Pnlln. 2100 E ... lbol llvd.,
Belboli. °'" If c1t11t1. Jin.,.,.., a . 1974. Surv!Wlll by 1n1111Mr, M1rl1 Wiiks, Pomo1111 br"Dtl'ler, wr111rd E. Wllkl, N ....
Ze111nc1. StrVlc" ww1 lleld lod1y, ThuncUiy, 2 ,,M. ,IClfk: Vltw Ollr.:I,
with RIV. 8~ A. Kurrte offkl1I ng, lnltrment. 1'1cltlc Vltw Mll'l'IOl"lll P•rk.
P1clrtc Vltw Mortu1ry, Dlrlcior"
AlllUCKLI & S0H
WHTCLIFFMOllTUAllY
A27 f . 17th St., Ce»to Mew
646-.4888 -·-IALTZ-IUGIRON
Fl!NUAL HOME
Corono de! Mot 6 73.9450
Co~ta Mesa 6 .46-242.4 -·-llLL lllOADWAY
MO!ITUAllT
110 Broadway. Ca~o ~a
5•8·3433 -·-DtLDAT BROTHERS
MOllTUAllT
17911 Beot"h B!vd.
Huri!ington Beoch 8.42-777 1
244 R~o Ave.
LOflg ~h (2131 43a,.1145 -·-McCOllMICK LAGUNA
IEACH MO!ITUAllY
1706 Loguno Conton Rd.
494_9.1 15 -·-PACtflC VIEW
MEMOlllAL PARK
Ceme1ery M0t1uory
Chapel
3500 Pon!K; View Drive'
NewpO!"t Be()(:I\, Ca!ilarnio
644-2700 -·-PEEK FAMILY
COl.ONIAL FUNEIAL
HOME
7801 Boho Ave , 'Ne~m·~:ler
89J.J525 -·-
6'27 lo'\o1n Si.
Hu11hngt0t'! Set1th
536·6)39
PUBLIC NOTICE
Cory's Educational
Bill Dies in Voting contract ·
There were unconflnned
reports Wednesday afternoon
of disgruntled clerks talkine
about taking • a strike vote
because of the board's action.
By OC.C. HUSTINGS
Of lie °* 'II" "-" 1be Assembly Wednesday
killed a bill by Asse mblyman
Ken Cory (D-Garden Grove)
that would have taken $14.l
million a year in state funds
away from county school
superintendents and given it
directly lo local s c h o o 1
districts.
Cory 's bill (AB 746), an
outgrowth of the Orange
County Grand Jury's criticism
of the county schools office
as an unnecessary layer of
educational bureaucracy, died
on a 19-43 vote after a 30-
minute floor debate.
Cory said his bill would not
prevent districts from using
the money to pay county
superintendents to continue to
provide services such as
audio-visual aids if th e
UCI Lec h.ire
To Feature
Brita in
counties indeed are providing
needed services. The
assemblyman had a r g u e d
previously that, in counties
such as Orange, most school
districts a r e sophisticated
enough to provide their own
special services and th e
county schools office i s
redundant. • • • 4'111E ME ANING of
\Vatergate for America" will
be the subject of U.S. Senator
Howard H. Baker, Jr., (R·
Tenn.) in a lecture i n
Crawford Hall at UC Irvine
at 8 p.m. Feb. 15.
Senator Baker is v i c e
chairman of the Senate select
committee investigating the
Watergate scandal.
Tickets to the lecture are
available at $2 for general
admission, $1.50 for UC!
facully, •l.aff and alumnl and
50 cents for UCI students.
A MAJORITY of the cler!f
staged a one-clay "sick-out
last October because or the
county's reluctance to reach
agreement on the pay issue.
Clerks originally demanded
an increase of more lhan 20
percent, which would have put
them on a scale equal to that
used.for clerks in Los Angeles
County.
The average clerk In LA
earns about $1 ,300 a month.
while the average clerk In
Orange County gets a little
more than $1,000.
In agreeing to t h e
compromi[;e, the c I e r k s
reasoned that it would give
them good leverage when the
contract came up for renewal
at the end of June.
They may be purchased from ORIGINALLY, THE clerks
the Associated Students Ticket were offered a 2.5 percent
Office, first floor of Gateway increase by the county which
Commons. weekdays between was subsequently upped to 4.4
11 a.m. and .3 p.m. or from percent -about the same
the Committee on Lectures as all other county workers.
Office,' Room 154 of the '111e pact rejected toCiay by
L i b r a r y -Ad m ini.stration the board would liave rrilant
Building, weekdays from a aQout $100 a month mo~e in
".Q(itaiD'&;v MjUabneat to~ a.m. W ~ P11tl: 1~ P!IY to the clef.ks at ~--~t ~pe""irftl be the .subject info~ .may be 'ObtatDed of nearly $6,000 a month to
of, a public lecture by Dr.. by calliti~ 833-5588. county taxpayen.• A. F. Thompson of Oxford"_...:__..,.:'---------:...
~Diversity at UC Irvine Feb. --·W Al '.rTED--•
Dr. Thompson. whose ..c-..J. ....
speciality. i, comparauve n•. -o-s • GEMS....,.,.,.,S AD g I o -French history, .anLl.fA ..1...... AVl"'tEI
currently is serving as Kratter
Professor at Stanford
University for the second
time. At Oxford he is a tutor
In modern history al \V adham
..._... ..., .... ,.. 11 -hi111 ,. dio-dt ..............
lro. ,,......... illdificWalt eMI t\toflL Cor1f~ es.•i...ti911 ...
1¥Gi_.loll 1rt ._. e1perb. Hlghl!1t pricet poid. t.11 JA0.9066
10.9 doily, .S.I_., J0-4, .Suttdcry do»ed, olk tor Ml. DeMlill
follr or Mr • ...,._
Frld1f (Noon • 9 PMl
Saturday (10 AM · 7 PM)
Sundoy (11 AM · S PMl
College. He is ro-au thor of i"e els b "oseph "History of British Trad e W Y I u~~ ~~f I~~;;, open to SOUTH COAST PU.IA I 33U lllSTOL. COSTA MBA. S40-'°" l)\l£-o
the public without charge, isL~---======--.11 s . ll '-acbeduled for l p.m. in Room lr-
158 of the Physical Sciences m•
Building under sponsorship of . ..
the history department. BJlRI. Is
Fullerton's
Reunion Set
FULLERTON T h e
Fullerton Union High School
class of 19:>4 "'ill hold its
20th reunion Jw1e I at the
Newporter Inn in Newport
Beach.
TH I EARL'S
PLU MllNG, hie.
Class members who are
interested in attending should
con tac t Pi.lr s. Do n a ld
Stoughton. 3708 Ocean Blvd.,
Corona del l\1ar.
Time 111r11 II YOUI' ...
24 HOUll •ftt:. ftJlft1 SIRVIC• WV"U'IU
A beautiful 12 oz. glass FREE
with _!!!1 lood item wh en you
order either Coke Of Tab!
Hurry to our house and
COLLECT A SETI
o'rn 7 DAYS A WEIK SERVING BREAKrASl. LUNCH 'OINNER
Complete Plu~, Heating
~d Air Conditioning
NEW LOCATION
ITEM~RAll'I')
"Do it Yourseif Stores"
27601 FORBES RD. NO. 25 .. '
+
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brightens every table! ----nostalgia
and cha1m .•.
UMJT[D TIME ONL y
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4-COLORS
R09. low
price
$2.99
NOW ONLY
IMPORTED
LADDER BACK
PEASANT
CHAIRS
GivHway
Prica
3088 BRISTOL
NOT TO WMITI
FlONT STOlll
COSTA MESA
STARTS · TONIGHT 'TIL 9 PM
ll'E PREPARED
' SAVE ENERGY
1EAunFUL , 16" CLEAR
OIL LAMP
Rev. $5.99
NOW ONLY ,, $444 ~
~
~
-12'' TAPE
CANDLES
Assorted Colors
BOX OF
TWO
Rev. 27¢
Now ·
130
1qx
' I
LAMP
OIL
SIX SIX
c c
0 0
L L
0 0
R R s s
. Reg. 88¢ NOW $1 .17
ALSO:
SEE THE AREAS
LARGEST
DISPLAY OF
WICKER AND
RATtAN
FURNITURE "
SOMEJ.!~TID
PIE.,;;u 'ON ' · •
e.u~~'Pi'l.4;-
N=~~iJl~~.~'D'A:!°sVD. . FRL (NOON~9 PM> s4T. (10 SUN. (11 AM-5 PM)
551-0590.
)
FOUNTAIN VALLEY. 16155 HARIOR •Lvo. M 3nia BRISTOL, COSTAi.MES' DISCOVE~ THE FINE FOOD AT OUR! HOUSEi """' "f "9 IL..~_.;. ............................ ;._ .................................... ....., ............ w (next to White "front!
Gove':rior
Tweaked
By Boy
'1hursday, January Jl.1'174 fa1L. PILO f ,13
********************* Lru1d Panel Backs Long Beacl1 : ~ERC';!~.!...!ev1Nos : ;.
SACRAMl!:NTO (UPI) -IN A LE'M'ER ta the city, oil extracted from the East
1be StMe Lands Dlvllk>n la E.H. Gladish, executive officer \Vilmington field, Lingle said. l 'ord Lost:>
A convicted swindler auppor1bli a move by the city of the State Lands Division,
· N y k . of • -· Beach against major said he "appr. eclated" the THE FIELD IS producing in ew or 1 Wednes· .._... day, told a courtroom oil companies which could action by Long Beach and 125.000 barrels a day ,
th -at former Yankee ide •CM""" ..aft 1 backed its position. according to Lingle. He * ·~ Fhim Wlre Sen;ce1 prov ........,,INV""a"'\Uly n Deputy City Attorney Harold estimated the pot en I i a I
Four.,ear .. ld ams ,.._, pitcher 8 tar Whitey addltlooal revenue for the Lingle said Standard Oil of additional revenue to the state * •STATEMENT S·AVINBS ".PRESTIGE Card
1ot a chan¢e to do what some l<"'ord invested $61,000 state. , California 1 n d Jc ate d a if the city's position prevails *
Democratic politicians may in a get rich pyramid Attorneys for the city have ·willingness to pay as much at $500,000. * IUfMAPWMtra11ySaV1ngsBldg.,VaUeyVlewatUneoln *
have been wanting to do for scheme and was a •informed oil companies with as $9.09 per barrel for the Under the teriru of the * HUmN&To•tEACH MerCllrySavlngsBldg.,EdlngeratBeach *
a long time: tweak Gov. heavy loser. an interest in the East royalty oil, compared to the contract bet\veen the state and TUIT'llt MereurySavinosSldg.,lrvineBlvd.atNewport Avt.
Rtnald Rlqu'1 nose. Wilmington field off Long present price or $5 per barrel the firms developing the field, * LA llAllA·FUUHTOM Mercury Savinos Bldg., Imperial Hwy. at Harbor *
Chris, the 1974 poster boy Beech that the price they for nonroyalty petroleum. the companies were to, in * * 1
ror the · Crippled ClJ.Odren's "' indicated they would pay for Unk>n Oll indicated it was effect, buy the oil from the* CAllOll MercurySavlogsBldg.,AvalonBlvd.itSanDitl}OFrwy. *
Societyoll.osAngelesCounty, royalty oil would apply to all willing to pay more than $7 state at prices determined by* llPYUllUSMercurySlrinpBWr.,t.on1Bt1t11BNd.itCarSOt1SL *
grabbed the R ep u b1 IC an oil taken from the field. a barr~l for the quantity of--the companies to be fair. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
governor's nose and gave itl jiiiiiiiiii~Pl~i;ilj!i~ijjjiij;iiiiiiiiiiijiiiii"'iijiii a hearty tug aa he and Roagan 11
took part in a Capitol
cere mony ~arking the start
of the society's fund-raising
campaign.
The Governor then good·
naturedly tweaked ChriJ·back.
* A Swiss court lowet'tll tlle
bail to $1.8 million for Jtenar•
Cornfe\d, a onetime matua1
funds magna te charged Wltb
fraud, forgery and dlshoMal
management.
His lawye rs said the ball
still was too high for Cornfeld,
rounder of Investors Overaeu
Over 100,000 nni
ot Low, Low Pricis.
.
( f.EOPLE . ) RA' DIALS ' ,-TUN.E UP $AVE$
Services who ooce claimed a , · . . -GAS & SS
personal' fortune of about llGO •, · m~on. OUR 40,000 'MILE STEEL RADIAL REDUCES FUEL CONSUMPTION & TIRE WEAR Gene~~~;d m ~a~ i e~1 k~ OVER CONONTIONAL TIRES .... ALSO VEHICLES SHOULD BE TUNED·UP TWICE ·A
Antoine Jan 11ince his arrest VIAR FOR PEAK FUEL EFFICIENCY & PERFORMANCE!.; • SAVE GAS & SS$
eight months ago.
* Secretary of Interior llefen
C.B. -. toured Alcatraz
and rejected at least one
sugestton ,for the future of
whit wu once the moat
feared prlaon Jn America.
Alked by a repqrter if the
cellblock or the 0 Rock" With
its more lhan * stark
cUilcles might be returned ta 111 former use to hold
W•!Ul•le defendaoll, the
wblte-ba.lred Nixon cabinet
member replied with a slight
smile:
"No. it might mt be big
enough."
* Kini Ollv of Norway · was
expected to return to the. roya1
palace after being hospitalized
with pneumonia hlt ti days,
a royal spokesman saicl. i.
The king was lloof>llflI!id
JBn. 19 when he developed
pneumonia in connedion wiUi
ftu. The ~e11-,pld .monarch
had pneumooia lut year, tao. * . U.S. C'hlef Justice Warren
E. Barser paid a courtesy
call on Japanese P. r I m e
Minlater Kakaet Tuaila at his
resideaoe lD Tokyo.
Burls and hil wile are
In Japaa at the invitation of
the Ja-Supreme Court.
ff • • ' •
An Austnllin man is tryJna
to find Rtwird. Rogbes ao
he can sell him a World War
II battlelhlj,. '
Teura M•lfd of S o u th
Yarra, in a cable to a
newspaper In Ro9o, said ho
wantl Hughes' address so he
can begin 1 'i mmediate
negoUalions."
The'batUeshlp, Maffei• said,
can seat 100 pauengen and
lo'BS the 11first to shcto:t down
a Japanese plane" in 1944. . * TM U.S. Supreme Cou\l haa
agreed to review a lawsu it
filed by Jeulca Miiford
agalnot Artzooa State Prl90n
officials, \he joumaliat and
author uy1. ·
Addmalnl about !Otl
persoea at Arizona State
11verslty, Miu Mitford said
else ii amooa: a ball d01en
1 e m.ed In. aeveral statea that
' will "affect the right of all
media. people" ta 10 into
~ Mitlllrd rued the 11\llt
two ·~ • while dolna
reseai'cll for her laleSI book,
"Kine! and Usual Punishment:
The Prllon IUIDea." * . i ·Former .S. At to r-.n e y
Ceneral EUkM Rlcbanlson said
In answer to a question that
he mtpl nm for -ldant
in !tit.
. The comment came durlnl a questioo-IDcl-«nlWer period
at the UDivenl7 of Malnt.
STEEL-BELTED Guar~eed 40,000 Miles!
~SIZE .
135/13 &.20/13
115/14 &A&/14'
156/15 5~60/15
185/14, l.35/14
195/14 l.l&/14
I '
205/14 B.25/14
205/15 8.25/15
215/14 8.55/14
RADIALS
185/14 nll/I•
195114
••70114
205/14
Hll/14
FREE ••• Installation Y,,,,__ ~~. •
FREE ..• Rotation .
FREE ••• G1HJ101tee
WffM Atrt t1e1 "llKMUI:
POLYESTER CORD BODY
•FULL 78 SERIES • 12/32" TREAD DEPTH
171114
171114
171115
171115
STEEL,IELTED TUllWSS wtJITEWAUS
F78/14 • 195/14 2495
~,,1~•,2a•s ~.Z.~/1.5. 3195
~~!11.4. 3195 ~!f.1~.5.'. 3395
!i~/!.~:28'1 ~~-:: ...
FAMOUS IM ITID IAOIAlS · $1495 145/13 ••
155/13 .. ' 1995 175/13 •. '239
165/13 .. •21 9• 165/14 .. '1995
155/15 .. '1995 • 165/15 .. '2495
0.r MIS If ftllcf'k te ""9r 19'" .,.., N fel....,. I~ .......
CMC ...... ..,1 .. Ctl If' le"ktl f'll41 .... te ~1 •fHH Clll Mr II·
rtttw ef C111i11r Affeirt. Mr. S. AnlltM 1111) IJ0.11'7 tr '91·
1111. H • .-.W "II••• 1f.,..., 1it1, • "1•111 CMck." witl N ltNM .,,.,1 .. e l.ttr •llwtry 1t tltt 1ft1rtlt14 ,rice.
• '4 WHEEL DRUM or
2 WHEEL DISC RELINE
• AIC & IJISTAU. UNING
• fOlllll & -TIC
1-CAIS)
• QUAUTY llAKI UNING
• CMKI SNllllS & RAIS
• CIKK WMHL CYL
• MUSUll &
JNSnCT DIUMS
• JJISPICT MASTEi CYL
•'• ADD HAU RUID
• IOAD mT CAI
NOW
ONLY • • •
01 SAVI 40% & GIT A COMPLETE
PACUtl •m JOI fw ••• $49.11 cu.• "''"
COST A MESA . GARDIH GROVI • ... HA~~.
OR " 14040 .... ,, .. 2000 Wllllltw·IM.·
IUEHA PARK
2961 LIMalo •"-
-el Lio<• ....... ,
FULLERTOH ·
1321~ .... d
ORAHGE
410 Herltl '"""' .~ 3005 HA.RI II.VD. t_w, · 1 "' _ .. _ 1-ofltMrooclH ....... 1 ..,..,, tie• _._
(7 I 4J 557-8000 17141 IJ0.3200 '7 .. J666
' I'
~
1714112'·5550
')I-
, ..............
Rl--1 ··-17141170.0100 171416lt-4J21
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• .
' •
, • •
J.f DAILY PILOT
Requirell
Cutbacks
Outlined
llOSEMEAO !UPI) -State·
required 'mandatory Power·
reductions have been spelled
out ror more than 270,000
-commercial and Industrial
customers of S ou t h e rn
eaurornia Edison.
The rules. filed with the
state Public U 1il i ti es
Commission, we.re designed to
comply w i t h PUC.Ordered
statewide power cutbacks by
prohibiting or r e d u c i n g
excessive electrical use.
11IE PUC lS trying to trim
clectrlcal usage in the state
by IS pen::ent below last year.
The new rules will rc1naln
in force un tll cancelled by
the commission and "''ill affect
a 14-county area served by
Edison.
Edison Vice Pr es ident
Edward A. l\1ycrs s a id
Wednesday the curtailments
will not affect F.dison's 2.3
million residentiaJ customers.
"However, vo I u n ta r y
reductions to achieve l 5
percent less usage than in
1973 continue to be a PUC
goal for homeo\vners," Meyers
said.
UNDER THE rules, Edison
will disrontinue service to
violating customers. Service
will be restored u p on
compliance.
Any requests ror exemption
or relief because or "special
hardship or impossibility of
compliance" will be h~ndled
by the PUC under a modified
formal complaint procedure.
Edison customers w i 11
tti:eive the new regulations
by mail in February.
AIL OECOllATIVE lighling
is prohibited under the rules,
although window and display
lighting and lighted outdoor
signs are allowed between
sunset and a half hour after
closing or 10:30 p.m., \vhich·
ever is later.
Functional outdoor li ghti ng.
such as in used car lots. will
be curtailed 50 percent. It
w~I be prohibited during the
day and · when the firm is
closed.
BUILDINGS CAN be heated
no more than 68 deg rees and
cooled no nlOrc than 78
degrees.
Lighting for public outdoor
gatherings is to be cut back
85 percent. ·
And, indoor lights n1ust be
turned off during nonbusiness
hours, except for maintenance
or security.
•
L.itJ. Boyd
Not1·e Dm11e Not
ror Joe Namath
Consider elementary schoolteachers. Those research-
ers v•ho check out the drug statistics insist one out or
every se\•en such teachers uses tranquilizers, one out of
every 10 occasiooally smokes marijuana. The tranquilizer
statistic may be right, but I certainly quesUbn t~t mari-
juana figure.
That musical master named Handel was quite an
met?"
eater. At a tavern, for instance, he
liked to order dinner for three. Rec-
ords sho\\' a waiter once told him
that the grub would be ready as soon
as his company showed up. And Han-
del reportedly said, "Good, so bring
it right now. I'm the company."
QUERIES FROM CLIENTS
Q. "In what states can you legal·
ly ride a motorcycle without a he!·
A. California, l\tlssissippi, Nebraska, Oklahoma and
Utah. At last report.
Q. "Oictn •t Joe Namath y,·ant to go to Notre Dame
rather than Alabama?"
A. Until he found out Notre Dame was all boys, he
did , says he.
Q. "\Vhat's the prescribed salutation in a letter to an
archdeacon?"
A. "Venerable Sir :"
, Q. "\Vhat's• the cost of a vhone call from hereabouts
to Great Britain?"
A. About $1.25 a minute.
Q. "How come chickens roost so early!"
A. Because their night vision is bad. Very bad. Ter.
rib\e. .
LOVE ANO WAil
Question arises as to whether hair on a man's chest
really denotes a more vigOl'OU! mas'culinity. Don't know,
don't know. Can only report that surveys prove the la·
dies think .so. "As far as sex: appeal goe.ir;," says our Love
and War man, "studies make it clear that a hair on the
chest is worth 10 on the head."
\Vildlife notes ... Remember, it's the male firefly
that does the flying, not the female. But the female does
the £iring .. , Did you know a little old toad comp,letely
fill s his midsection with live in.sects just about four times
in every 24 hours? ... Never saw a hummingbird without
its feathers but am advised such \\'OU!d be no bigger than
a bee.
That boss born under the sign of Aries tends to be an
explosive sort of fellow. Apt to blame his employee: when
things go wrong. The Leo boss, hol,\.-ever, is fairly easy to
handle. With flattery. Or so say the starg32ers.
Elia~ Ho,ve's toughest prob!em in his experiments to
invent the SC\ving machine was where to 'put the eye of
the needle. Delayed him for months.
\Vas none other than Helen Rowland who noted, "Love
is \\'Oman's eternal spring and' man's eternal fall." Quaint.
Address mail to L.il!. Bo-yd, P.O. Ba:r 1875, New--
port Beach. 92660.
non
THE TOREADOR
MocNI 131601. 17"
Dl .. o•I Solid $tote
CltrelMICIOlor II
/,1 ·-~". 'J . ~· ..
·i . . :·
I .• .< l' .:r.. _:!: ·-·: 11.-· ~I :1•...:......:...:-~ 11 --·-. . .. ~-"-
THE MADEIRA
MIJClol E40lOW
BEST PRICES OF THE YEAR!
WE WANT TO SUBSTANTIALLY REOUCE OUR INVENTORY
BEFORE FLOOR TAX TIME. WE HAVE THE DEALS TO
PROVE IT. PLUS AA&O 1 YEAR PARTS & LABOR AND S
YEAR PICTURE TUBE WARRANTY.
11" dl•9o•ol
IL-Color ncn
IUlll THE MODERNETTE
Modet FS410 "-"' THE PRODIGY 5249'5 19" Di ... MI rktltt9 Mo4el IS40l
11'" Dle4)011ol ~t11r•
AA&D ELECTRONKS
ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST JVC DIALER
27s EAST 17th STREET,
COSTA MESA 642-8882
Ov1llty Products -. Profnsionol S.rvico
Open D•lly 9-6; Thurs. 9-9
., . . " . ..
Pay 'lloilet
.1..L • l • egis a,tion,
To Sen,ate
SACRAMENTO (AP )
Pay toilets would be. banned
in public buildings under
legislation sent to the Senate
by a 52-10 AM<m~ly vote.
Asscmbl)'\\'oman M a r c h
-Fong (·!}-Oakland) I o l·d
colleagues Ylednesday, "After
all the fri volous bonter. 1 think
\\'e should reallze thi§ is a
serious problem."
She maintains that persons
are frequently unable to use
pay toilets because they have
no money.
With Every King of-Queen: ·
Fieldcrest No-Iron Top and Fitted Bottom.
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Queen-size Pillows. Mattress Pad.
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Proofreuer
Frederic Malek, deputy
director of the O!fice of
Management and
Budget, wears a print-
er's hat a9 .he checks
.President Nixon's fiscal ·~"'4;.,,.__,,915-1>udget which goe.<
to Congress Monday.
ling Size
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This Giant·slzed beauty contains
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FRl!I! DELIVERY
. .
. '
.
SAMUEL HOROWITZ, M.D.
' Announce• tho Opening of hi• Office
for the Pr•dico of Acupuncture
, ACUPUNCTURE MEDICAL
CENTER
Taj M•h•I Prof•s1ion1I Building
Suit• 307
' 23521 P1 seo 01 V1l1nci1
L19un1 Hill1, C1,liforni1
(714) 586-8700
'
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Includes: 2 MlttrllM, 2
Matching Found1tlon1,
2 Quitted Co....rtet., 2
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!
I
l
• • . • • . • . • l • •
THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN 'OF. MATIRESS S
ORANGE SANT A ANA ANAHEIM LAKIW
CIAYSTS 0# .....
2445 N. Tustin Ave. & POUHTAIN VAWY 1811 'w"' u....ln Ave. 4433 w-uil Aw.
(oucu lr1;n Oronga Mo!O ~ be.lid & 6,o,(i;;,. A .. ,,_
!Just Eosi of 'Ill~ "'°""' 7
1
.. _,...Im J~ ~ .-QOl\IO ... ._. ..... .... _ ......
'"'.. "'OOll• -...... '"'
I
I I ASH
Ji corr
ral
CIN
"DI rec
help y
That
soon
Bell I
v.'ee k.
QUE
we·
the
st ...
·1 •
Thrusday, January 31, 1q74 OAILY PILOT JS
Hashish Oil: Potent Stuff---and .Easy to Brew Up
ASHINGTON (AP-Bubbling away
colfe~ percolators, h o m e • b u i I t
aratus in secrel laboratories are
ucing an illicit drug which. although
nown three years ago , is now a
or worry for narcotics enforcement
ials.
ailed oil of hashish, or more
' monly "pot oil," it Is refined from
marijuana plant and when used, 1ernment scientists SfY, packs a
lop several times that of the ordinary 1 ijuana cigarette, or "joint."
' • HILE TlllS HIGHLY potent extract
illarcntly is not being distilled in large ~ .
quantities at present, the 'federal Drug
Enforcement Adminlatratlon fears that
H may be in the future -and the
ease with which It can be produced
and transported could then become a
serious problem tor laW officers.
Close-motlthed officials are reluctant
to say much about hashish oil beyond
the fact that six clandestine laboratories '
making it have been discovered in two
years, four in the United States, one
in Costa Ric.a and on.e in Afghanistan.
Jn particular, they are hesitant to
characterize it as of great concern for
smuggling and drug Jaw enforcement,
fearful that too much publicity could
" ·~Even Operator to Cost
have · the effect ol popt>lat11ing It amonr
youthful drug ... ra.
I
BUT SOME DETAILED lnfonnation
•i!Out hashish oil emerged tbta lllODth
in lranacripts of clOsed-<loor te&tlmony
by Drug Enforcement Mmin&ttratlon ·
officials before the Senate ~~
C o m m l t t e e ' 1 internal ltCUl'iCy
oubcommittee. '
' Describing tbt oil u "a highly potent
and concentrated halluclno1enlc
subltance which can be manufactured
with relatively aimple eqUJpment,"
Acting DEA Adtnintatrator John I\,
Bartels Jr. told Iba 1ubcommillee:
11Jt must be 'regarded u f novel
and \brutening lhifl in marijuana abuse
which lbOdld give thole who advocate
Its legali2ation cause to rethink their
position."
who popularized acid in the 1960s. In
addition, says Lund, '·'the public has
become aware of the dangers of LSD."
l\.feanwhile, smuggling of hashish into
number or times It ls put through the
processing equipment which u s es
chemical solvent s to extract the oil.
the United States is on the upswing, "IT'S A LOT UKE brewing coffee.
officla18 say. Despite what they term Th t• ii hro gh IN su~a·T OF that wami•• the e nw re 1mes you run t u , ..-..-vn. ... the "severe crippling" of th c th ~--•t t " Id ~--1<1 age"""''a j···--', Drug Enfor--ent, e ., .. vi ,ger t g e s, sa vuua .... ., U\Umu ........ Brotherhood, Its members are believed John d f · save that because of its potency, ba·"''Ai. son , a rug agency ore n s 1 c ,.. aw:u• to be prominently involved in hashish sc·e ,. t oil presents serious problems for Jaw 1 n is · officers, tcienUats and users. · ~ ~tarijuana's potency is measured by
It adds that the user's problem is 'IC ma•t be ·regarded as its content of te!rahydrocannlbOt. or
the worst -the fact that almost nothing i d h I THC, the basic active ingredient which
ls known or the pbyslcat effects of • nove an t reafeta 119 gives the cannibis plant its hallucinogenic
hashish oil. One drop of the oil allegedly • la i I t its t11arlJ11ana properties.
can tum an ordinary tobacco cigarette aftate ••• ' Johnson said mosl marijuana found
into a "joint" two or three times as ~ in the United States has 0.5 to 2.0
powerful as one made with dry percent THC, and n1osl of the imported
marijuana. Bartels, questioned on thi s smuggling and hashi sh oil manufacture. hashish averaging 46 per cent and some
l'ax Put point, told the subcommittee that "I One, a former New York chemist, is n1ay have run as high as 90 Pl!rcent
dµnt it is new enough, hashish .on , . believed by law offi cers to have been -4$ times as potent as ordinary
,
1
J that we do not know what it will do." the f1r1t peraon to produce hashi sh oil marijuana. ' o· s ,..._ Official interea:t in the oil comes at from bulk baahish. He is now a fu gitive
8'; si.itlinl ~.«,.....,, n ex a time when law enforttrS have shifl..i on drug charges. DRUG AGENCY investigators were ~iiief gets thNt ·lne reaourceo away from marijuana use to an id .to have found tha t 82 . pounds of
• CINCINNATI, Ohio (A!') -THE TE,LEPHONE ' . ·~Directory assistance, may 1
help you?"
That cheery greeting will
soon cost 20 cents, Cincinnati
Bell told its customers this
week.
company says tan nmny
people don't Ide the tjm•'
to look uo a telephone nurOOer
that's m the direc(ories.
lnltead, they call t be
uyormation o~ral9r·.
• ..
Woniia.tton calls a sDaath. .-. LONDON CUPI) _ '1be eoncentrate on other drugs. ALL HASBISH FOUND in the United marijuana was used by one laboratory Aft« that, It's 20. cenla for • oldest ~esston ls liable States comes from abroad, accord ing to produce 21h: quarts or oil. more than
ever'y number he doesn't look to man s oldest misfortune HEROIN REMAINS priority No . 1 for .to the Drug Enforcement Adm inistration, :7,000 Individual doses. That would be u~ , · -1>91lng taxes, the the DEA although John A. Lund, the because climate and soil in this country enough to get the ent~rc city or
"-~--" Bell id .. "'. government says. ag~yis deputy assistant admini strator not being conducive to gro wing high-Hackensack, N.J. high at one Un1e. ·~~ Ii Ame ..,,. profits of the trade for eruOrcement, says there has been strength marijuana from which the dark The oil can be smoked, .either In
QUEENIE
t cha1"9 .• neceuatJ ~ of i:IQIUtution . are liable a tevellng off in heroin as the resJJ)t resin is obta ined. cigareltes or in spe<:ial pipes, put into '"" Phll w rl di 22 percent rt its customers, ·to "'°"°" tax," Mintater of effective anu .. muggling efforts and Some ready-made hashish 9ii also is food or wine or. as the journal points ~· .-' Y ,,,,. ,an ~ ~· Jll8i.DJy business flrms, rDau ·wttbDut portfolio L o rd the cooperaUon of foreign governments. smuggled in, but the agency refuses oo t. ··even smeared on bread ."
•' .
-
87 percent o ftse calla to Aber'dare told the Houae Agency officials also claim a decline to say how much or from where. Most Detection is' made difficul t, officials
operator&· seekilll te~ ot Lords Wednesday. in the use of LSD, attributing this in apparently ls tutned out in clandestine said, by the fact that the yell owish
nwnberl. Of' UlOle calls, 78 ~::B¥t there II areat pan,to .u.e smashing of the jnternatkmal laboratori«;s in·the United States. oil apparently gives off little of the
percent of the numbens are difllcQlty in collecting 1t," "B r.othe.rhood oi Eternal Love" 1be oil can be distilled from ordinary tell-tale marijuana odor, and Can be
io teleplli:llie direclmies. be edded. organizaOon founded by Dr. Tbnolhy marijuana as well as from hashish, concealed and carried inconspicuously
..: ~ . · \ ' ' : · f i.;=====::::!===~....'.'.Leary=:~o:.f ..'.La~gun~a...:Bea~:"'ch'.'.;•_:th~e~dru~g~gur~u-.'.'.th~e_!po~t:"'en~cy!.._be~in"_!g:_~d:"'et~er':.'ml~ned~_<b~y~th~e-~in~an~y~k'.'.in~d::o~f;ii'.!Jq~ui~d_<eo~n~tain:"..~"'.:.· --·-•.. 'Tin! PIJBLIC Utllit e• .
. Comrnl!lion of Ohio apJ"1)Ved
, the charge iut AllgUll. The
charge ts ~ed t~ not •u
million annually.
P h y s i cally handicapped
persons, incllldJni the blind,
can be exempted from the
charge by submitting a form
signed by a physician.
Cinciru\ati Bell aald the
t.htee free directory Ul1staace
calls a month would take care
of most of the queries for
telephone nwnbers that have
changed since the last direc-
tory was · issued.
DQW! more ways you save
. you save at a
WSANGELES FEDERAL .SAVINGS
,. • • Iv
• K!o>f F...;..,,....._, IO£. ltrt. ,,_..~~
CilLERS WHO dial "0"
for operator, instead of dlallng
the special •number IOI' Iba
informatioo . operator, will be
charged double because two
operators are involved.
. family cial center
: . , . fl1CC , -·~Slop tick, '.~ick1"ticking my lµe away, you ~onst~.
you!" ·-
• Rubbel'meid.
None of the llnn'o "7
operat<>ra will. ioee their jobs,
the compony said.
CUTLERY TRAY KITCHEN HELPERS :'.::"!4":' 6~~7BP
FiveC..-Menllso tt holds IAKlll'I IECllET finish • '*'""""',;., 13x9"M43:ll!P
it alll Fiio, kitchen drawer. 1urelevenbrownlng;n01Stick .... Clflt"'"Sx8"M430l!P
Plastic.-of color..2922 interior and exterior. Alum. ----M410BP
11---..... --llm'I .... ------
Prsciical t ook .. erv.•1nd·
store dis~ Qblron(ltlit.own
to the toble tb tlll Ir..,..,
White wtlh ... pd9n.
Pack of 2 lrelling QUEEN SIZE
Boenl COVERS. LAP TJIAY
Taflon-coatedforamoothlton-• 1111117~~
ing; dampclottiwipesit c:laan. • .... llriealfold
Fon11ndard 64"table. 887 /2 , llldll for aioroge. Cl-238
Caiimnder Fluhllght
Sturdy,ch,.,,.,..flnished metal
caaoi; •fot>Mlow lanl ring'
Ind. 2 I><:ell bait. 6261WB
lb. PICk
IOI.Tl Ill SCREWS c--anc1 motat bd!a
Ind null .,, -ll1d .-
-HM/WS2/101
1
M ..... --•••
kl••4wt
"' -1M
lmc»>•'l'a ~ "'Join The Informed
Let ii profeulM&I p~ ,fOllJ"pinoilal tax ret~rnl at n<>
coot, in private, with aU itlformation Held in atmteot conA-
den<t. Required: fi;,000 or more In 1111 aavlnp adl\<>unt (ex• ,
cept 7'h% Certificates, which must be •10,000 or more). If
you want to ttanafer Kiur account from another t~titution,
we'll lw!dl~ the:_,. I f<J:s~f you have a Cei'.tiftcate of
Suyers "Club" ••
IloPo1lt, we11 al'ftill!il · l'l?P<>lnbnent now .. d trans-
fer your Certiftcaw at mAtu with nct lou of in~
Get all.the in1ide.infonnation without having to fill out any
0 club" application (your Los Angeles FederJll Savings ac-
count. for $1000 or more aqtomatically entitles you to uae of
special direct phone line for discount sources). Impartial teat
re~ri.. beat buys in .1974 Cars, cameras, fishing, camping ~u1pment, home appliances, tool s,.etc. Plus travel bargains :
charters, group and indiyidual·tours: . , ~
OVER-the-OOUNTER
I .ife IDsuraDce I
'
Personal Checking Account
\Vhy pay a servic"e charge to have a checking account! You
Can have one free-including your fi rst ol-der of personalized
checka -at a cooperating statewide· commercial bank. Re·
quired: a Los Angeles Federal tSavinP, Account of $2500 or
more.
Income Tax Preparation'• ?eMal ehecking A~unta • Informed Buy-
ers' "Club" • OVER-the-CPUNTER· Life Insurance • Date 8eminder
Service • Travel • RTD Exact Fare Tokens & Schedules • Los Ai:ireles
Federal $8,vings Quarterly ilagazine • Safe DeJ>o!;it Boxes • Travelers
Checks• Money Orders• Notary Service ·· Personal. DocuqJent Copying
Service• Buy or Cash in U.S. Savings Bonds• Note and Trust Deed
Collection • Special Tax Deferment Savings Accounts ··'CHECK-A·
MONTH'" Income • Passbook Loans •.Payroll Sav ings • Piggy Banks •
.Gift Checks• Postage-Paid Save-by-?tfail Envelopes • Funeral Expense
Protectiori • Free Parking .. Extra Hou l's -Open to '6 on Fridays
(some require minimum balance).
Most Important Service
at each Loa Angeles Federal Savings F amily Financial Centeri of
course, is " .
-high Interest, year after year, oil insured savings
You also get the valuable assistance of the Los Angeles Federal Savings
·Counselor, who is trained to
-translate the sometimes baming language of fin ance into plain
· English (and sometimes even plain Spanish, Japanese, Chi·
~· nese and other languages). '
.,-!landle all the details for you when you \Vant to transfer your
• .account to Los Angeles F.ederal Savings .
.:-.help.you decide_ whiCh account, or combination of savings ac.
' COunta:,·will give you the highest income on insured aavinga
and the best protection for your estate. -
START YOUR LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS ACCOUNT
TODAY. ONE MINUTE AND ONE SIGNATURE IS ALL IT TAKES.
' . ANNUAL INTEREST RATES ON INSURED SAVINGS
All Interest compounded daily -
5}{% 5%% 6Yi% 6%% 7Yz%
:="'-=~ == "wl!Mtaw MY .. w.tt~ .. Ii .. tolMY\olol• •I ... , ... '"'' l~ttmt, OI' Ml lor •111.,..,.IM tit!• ti
5.39% 5.92%
C•rlllkllt Ctttlllc.W '"""'" tf0.,..111 ot.tll1 ktOlllll!i 11.000 Of_., I ,.1rm.i.1111
$1,000" ...... , 2\llo , .. ,, m11url 1: 11.000 Of flllltt:
4 "''"'"' 111111•11 t~lllllltf dill, !Of tlO ol !"''"'' :=1111·• ' 0111, /Of •If " ..........
6.72% 6.98% 7.79%
' WILSHIRE '1NANCIAL DISTRICT•
6'00 Wilshire Blvd. at San Vicente • 6,J.7360
CRENSHAW CENTER•
J690 W. Santa Barbara at ~1arllon • 29S·i621
SUNSET VINE TOWER -HOLLYWOOD•
6190 Sunset Blvd. at Vine St. • 466·64 I l
VALU:Y Pt,AZ.A TOWER -SAN FERNANDO VALLEYi
ll160Victory Blvd. netr Laure.I C•nyon • 911 4·2lS6
CERRITOS CENTER:
11 J'S Swlh S1. at Gridley Rd.• tl4·$Sll
NEWPOR7 IEACHt
3llS Newport Blvd.• (7 14) 67S·4SOO
(Acroa the 1trett from City Hall)
~.=r.:::1.=,~:i:.
Fl:OflllAl
CHA"TElll
PROTICTION
HEAD OFFICE -OOWNTOWN1
One'Wihhirt Bulldina, Wilahire Slvd. at Grand
LCJe; An1eta. Calif. 90017 • 61,·7341 Of Zenith 9691
'
T \
J 6 DAILY PILOT
•
Thur~ay, January 31, 11174
I • '1
• • •
" • . .... .
•
I •
MAYBE YOU SAW ·IT· ON: TV? MAYBE
YOU 'HEARD . ABOUT IT ON THE RADIOT
•
IF NOT, HERE IS ·A REMINDER OF OUR
GIGANTIC WEEK-LONG .
.
HBIE'S JIST A SAM PU 8f THE SAVI• YOUU FIND JlmllHIJl THE STORE • .
SAVE ••• ll.HrlX
FACE TISSll·210's
Sott. absorb<n! Kleenex
tissues. Buy now &
save. Limit 6 per ~us
tomer. · 3Fo!1
II&. J7c IACll
SAVE 28% • Nmlll.GIA
FRAGIANJ OIL UMP
Au!lien!ic Earty American
kerosene lamp comes
with pt of fragrant oil. 311
RIG. 4.97
STUM I DRY IRON
BY PROCTOR SILEX
SAVE 16% .. Adjustable
spray/ste am/dry iron
over-counter warranty.
7ee
1903L lfG. 9.S7
MllGE PERM PRESS
20 LB. FAMILY DRYER
4 position heat selection,
incl. perm: press, deli-
cates. Electric. 20 lbs.
capacity.
8149
l lG. 159.97
r.rra,
SAVE TO $16 ... iOO% 1399 · polyester till velvalure
quil trasonic in 6 colors.
Slightly irregular. COMP. $25 (TWIN)
IF Pllf. $JO (FUU)
SAVE 'B·CASSEI It
TAPE , ... , ., " • I I'" 1 I
Rolary con!rolled play, 1
1
98 stop & rewind. Molded
mike holder; mike, bait · .
llG. 22.97
NO·lllNTIEI
KITCHEN CURTAINS
Decorate your interior PR. SAVE TO 37% 2 s5
w/easy care curtains. 6 FOR
styl es. 24" length. H I, ~.ff/l.ff.
PAii
MAGNAVOX COMPACT rlf STEREO SYSTEM
0111:. r.111110£ m .1s 81
1
1 AM/FM stereo radio, stereo
cassette recorder, auto pOOno
and stand. Two. 6" speakers. sav1s100 . '
SAVE 17% ••• Ill. UN SAVE '8 ••• :: 18.UXE.
14 OZ. MPS• Fii . DllTAI. CUICI RAPID
Hearty, meat·packed meal
for Fido, MPS Chunky is
'delicious.14 oz. 2 I C Full feature. · Easy to 2318 read digital clock radio.
Walnut grain finish. -
COMPAll AT JSc Ill. 2t.t 7
. SPllAl.l lADBl .
.nEISYUIES
SAVE UP TO &i% ,. s3 Below MFG, cost Poly, '
polyfrayon; button-1ronls, .
shirrtll waists, mim1ts. · collared; V-11et:~ styles, Dtte, :cola~ Jg.JS. . 5.ft ti 7.H
... EOITIBS . 1 IWUTlll
SAYE llf Til 51%
Machine washable Orlon®
Acrylic. Solids, jacquards,
cardigans, turtlenecks. As·
sorted colors S-M-l-XL.
51e .
OllllMAUT
SIO·S12
SPECIAi.i WIU'
P•YESIEI PMJS
SAVE45% · ·s
1 .a~w MfG. cost. fashion !lare·legs with zip-Uy ...
cu!led, uoculted, and IKIC~ed _. te
styles. Colors. 6 to 16. ••II fw lt.H
S CIAL
•
MEN'S NEVEi·•
INITDIEll nlm
!All "% .. SPICllL M · 3 !10 CUSl Sllort·sleeve Polyester-·
allCl-nylon ~nits. long-point ·
collar wftapered body. Sizes: fer. 14¥1I~1 7. '!_llM_tte ... I
. ferS:"Hdl
• SAVE 50% ••• · IPll-111
AITO OIL FILllll
. SAVE 51 % ... easy· lo 99c ·use filter s fit most
American cars. Kfl &
KF15
•
. MITEFml 20 ll ...
· IAl•Y IEIElliENI
SAVE 33% .. No P~os' 199 . phates. Bio-degradable.
Thorooghl! cleans. .
111.2.H
-
24141-m FBAMED
GAllllY PICllE ·
SAVE 21% ... Rich !ram-.. 411 ed repr<iductions 19<1
• a touch _of elegaoce. ·
111.t.ff .. -..
' .
AumtATIC TDASlBI
BY P•TDR lllEX . . a• SAVE 23~oa 2 'slice •
Pastry toaster with food 9
heat selection bar. . -• ·
#T-6118 ' lll.·l .t7 . .. . .
. . -mlml231lJ::t,
Cllll MAB II'·
SAVE c$5l ·W<l<ls in. a s399 drawer chlssis. Pusllb!Jt·
ton fine tuning. WUSOOO.
. 110.44t.t7
I
PIU8 'Clli8M. ·! oft.
14W:lfl llllATII
SAVE $M. She~· in 8199 . freezer door, deep stor·
age shelYes, crispers.
lll.nt.t7.
..... .
.n11111m&
SAVE 21% on procision 59c made ammunition. A
.geooine stock up price!
LIMIT lll Ill. 7tc
' . . ,
llvE 1D 47%: .:;. liG
:'CDATS I SWUTIRS
· lfeep your canine warm . . 79c . & ·comfy all •inter long.
/.Ss't:· stylei & colo~.
. . COMP. TO I At ,
SAVf4ti, •• I RICI Sllll.UPE <BI
Automatic I ' 1113.,.1 24'' ' trac\ seloctio~ Vinyl •
case •/slide controls. . ...
COMPARI AT$4S ,
•
·' ' . ..... . .
:uVEMM320Z. _.
'MICll-111·.
·fhe .. tr>stiol!it~moutll-Bit wash that gives all da!
protoction. Stock ~p.
111.1.37
... SAIE !1% ••• 11 PC.
MELMAClml•
Attractive· chip-resistant . r
melmac comes in cboice • • 1 ot colors & patterns.
iff.<'7 •
IAVE_ l.21 ••• 7 PC.
Tlflll ~ • m
IOTAL C1IEf -cook & clean easily With fantas·
tic non-scrateh Teflon II. ·911
111.11.'7
A.M.F. BllE TllU
Al A BAIGAIN PICE
come in & check the ggc quality! AC-441 through
AC·446 inclusive.
UVE ¥:54% ... lM.F.
llAl.ITY BIKE nm
SAVE TO 54% on these
sturdy, made to last
tires. ~C-381, 8$.871 • Bf
111.TOt.17
. LOOK FOR THE SIGNS
ON MANY MORE ITEMS
DURING THIS BIG
SALE-A-THON EVENT
..
COMPAll AT 1.ft ' --~~~~~~---""-:.~~~~~~.....1
•
ONLY 4 MORE DAYS TO SAVE •1• THIS .GIGANTIC IALE·-A·JH•
••• POSITIVRY. ENI.I SD•AY. FEB. 3 ~ ••.• VE IS JIU A
SAMPLE OF THE SAVI• Yll'll RND THRO THE ITOIEI . . . ' . .
9HDP WITH CDl\IFIDEl\ICE AT WHITE FRO~ ••• sATl!iFACTIOl\I ~ . UR ·\111.JR MllNEY,WK
HOURS: MONDAY t~,. FllDAT NOOll-9 (llctpl Tt.....,.t 10.91•IATUIDAT10.7•SUllDAT11·5 *TV & APPUAllCI MAITSt llOllDAY .... FllDAY 11.f •,IAT. 1C_ 7 • SU.L l M .
"
COSTA MESA . 3088 BlllSTOL ST. . . .
f •
• • • ... _ ....
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•111.-.ia --·· ... __
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,
Lil
of n
ski ..
skil
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the ..
(Li
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acf
for
Cali
the
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ga
dut' ga
tak s
in
..
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J
Nursing Sc:o~e C
.
Sltrlet By AUJSON DEERR
Of .. Dlily l"'9tt Slaff
Lila Maples sees the expanding scope
ol nursing practice as an extension of
sk1lls, not a revolution.
0 Nune.s have been extending their
skills for years. When I first went into
nursiifg, more tHan ,., yea-rs-ago;-atmos
every lhing the nurse dkl was under .
the direct aupervlslon ol the phyaician.
' . '
Auoclallon, CNA, llld Calllorn-la
Hoopital Auociallon were studying Ille
Issue. •
A joint statement made tbal yUr
cited the Deed for a new Jecal definfUm
ol the role ol lhe llUl'le.
In December of 1973, alter more than'
a year ol j()lnl meetlnp, the Advisory
Committee o1 Pbyalclan'1 Asalsianl and
Nurse PnctJtioner Programs lasued a
final report on the development ,
, educaUon and utlllzatian of nurse
practitioners ln the state of California.
FINAL REPORT
uniere were no nurse's aides, LVNs
(Licensed Vocational Nursea ) or
orderlies. The ·nurse did everythiog,
acting al most as a private duty nurse
for each patioot."
Ms. Maples, preskient~lect or the The report, presented to the state
California Nurses' Association, noted that legblatunf and Qae ~ examining
the "nurse practitioner'' is a natural M:d licen'1ng~ bOardl, * ctefined a· nurse
extension of advanced nursing skills. pra,ctl~ as ~11 l~ nurse who
"There Is a defin ite trend. As nurses _bU a~ . additional m e d l ca I
galned more skills some of their fonner knowledge and skills lt1 order to gather . . .
'One area in whic·h medicine has
missed .the boat is Rrevention.
Children should learli :more thari . -. . .
washing hands and brushing teeth.'
duties were delegaled lo LVNs" As Ibey d!ita. niake· bypotbeses, Ide h l I I y
gained skills, soon nurses' laides were problerm:, Implement ~ent and
taking on duti es formerly done by LV.Ns.'' tv!lluate ~ fetults in OmultaUon With
She has found that the most resistanc!! •'a li4eftae\t pbyli(:ian and.,Jlll'geon."
in medicine to the "nurse practitioner'' The nur'Be practitioner would "continue
concept are from th05e least affected. to function as a nurse, providing direct
RESISTANCE a.tET patient care.~' 1be report 1auggf;lted that 1ucb nurses
'would be prOpored lo assume'an·expahcl.
ed' role in ptlJOlllY and/or speciallied
health care of inillviduab aniI lainilieS in
11Uch areas a& family nurse, pediatric
nurse , adult nurse, obstetric-gynecojogy
nurse and psychiatric-mental health oUr:ae '
"For example, n1y specia lty is
geriatric nursing. The physicians we
worked with on the geriatric nurse
practitioner program were enth'ustastic.
Resistance came from people in other
areas, who knew nothing about the
program.
•
"Resistance often comes from fear,
fear from a lack of knowledge. The
ph ysicians who understand do not feel
threatened by the nurse practitioner."
As early as 1957 in califomia, a joint
committee of the California ' Medical
r. ·) I. . f
, ' ..
< .
practice. .
A proposed revision lo the cumnl
laws relating to nunlog education.
licensing and practice s u g g e s t s
formation of an advisory board on joint
MD-RN practice.
,"This woukl ma• for a ·much
' • •
·! -~ \ ~: . '.'
~
' '
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
lltwMly, ,...., ai, 1'14 _,, . '
'· . '
•
··-.~ . ./ , .. ._.._ . . . . ..
"
"
•
smoother tranalUon," explaiited Ms.
Maplea. II phyalcianl, ....... and the lay
-memben "" inYOlvacl there should be no ..-In ktepjl)g In-miud wh!ll
we're. beOe' lcr.,. ·IMlrlng the. well being
of the paUenL '! .
,.\J)VOC!TEI!' OIANGE
Ms. Maples advocittea a unified
licenling and review bOa.rd for all
medical profeMlons.
Currently woi'klng as project director,
California Nurses' Association-Regional
Medical Program Quality <i Patient Care
Program, she feels education is needed
on all levels. "
"One area in which.I feel the. medical protta;;,n has , missed' ~the beat Is
pnwenilve medicine." · ./ ·
She feels that· education regarding
nulriUon, hy&J.e.ne and venereal disease.
should start early.
"We do not educate people in
this country to the life cycle, stages
of growth and the changes that come
with "di 1tap,,
"How many women with good Incomes
and suppoeeclly well educated don't get
preveaU,ve medical care? How many
wotnen know what to ask their
physicians? And if they do, bow ,do
they know the answer is right !Qr them"!"
<llildl'!D, sbe added, should learn mono
than ,wubing tbeir hands aDd brushing
their' teelli Nutrition education should
be more extensive.
"Judging . by the lada In dieting, ll
• 1s obvious that peo~le ;. do not know .aiiytjuni about aileq,uate:. nutrition," Ill/"·
'said. ' . . • •4
. ·111. Maples .... th.,. as problems 8 c0rpS Of nft practitioners could
alleviate.
FM/m. Y C!RE·
don't want lo bother the -about.
And I thiDk Ibis la really Important."
Ms. Maples !eels that maey mental
as well as physical beallh problems
could be ameUorated if preventive
measures were taken. 11
"Th~ things ClOUld 1te el!ectlvely
achieved with the nurse practitioner ~
gram ." I 1
"U,. ol nurae pnctltlonen could help
to bring down the costs of medical
care," she added.
"More and· more nurses are taking
on duties that were once reservt'd for
doctors alone. This frees the MD to
llandle the n10re difficult problema."
She cited the use of a nurse-mklwife
lo monitor delivery In caw When labor
and delivery are normal. This •-ouJd
free .tbe Ob/Cyn lo handle the premature
in!ant·or problem pregnan·cy.
QUALITY SURVEYED ·
Ms. a.raptes, working through an R1.1P
grant, is working on a statewide survey
. of stand.ants ol. P{ltient care. ' ,
• • 1 Prior to her Current post, m;· was nurse coordinator for the Callfomia RMP
Area VIII, It UC Irvine. She bas also
been .di...ior o1· nursing al Loog Beach
General Hoopltal and lectured al
UCLA; SC,. ~I State LA and UO alonr
with other nursing poslJ and Clllllllllng
positions, •
. "Nuntng hiw; cbal)ged quite a bll.''
she ·added. In ·her 26. years of mll'81ng,
even the philosophy of nursing education
bas cbangeoJ.
"We were taught to ,Ile objective, DOf.
lo get .blvol.,.I with the: qaes on which
we worked.·. . . ,
"Today/ . Dunes ""'· taught that Involvement Is good, as long as ll is
constructive Involvement.
'"l'Bke, !or example !be lliidwlle or
6bl<lrlcs-gynecology praclilloner. She
can spend more iline wiUt lbe patient
than the physician. ·
"A1so, 8he can do more lhan. give
prenatal care to the erpectant ,mother.
Sbe· can lalk with the rest ol the family ,
preparing the -le family !or the
arrival of a new child. .
".Families will ask the nurse. things they
"ior example, there.is notbing •-.rrong·
with · crying wllli: the family· ol a dying
patlenl"'
She-says that patients and their
families are very receptive to this kind
of care and appreciate added skills of
the expanded nursing role.
"1be medical profession must accept
the lacl that the expalllled role ol the
nurse Is a· trend a,nd' . dlange Is just
a malter.ol time and iicceptance."
Lila Maples, president-elect of the
California Nurses' Association
keeps tabs on issues related to
nursing from her office in Irvine ..
She is proje_ct director of 11 joint
:study on the quality of patient care,
• .. , .. '
· S peCial ,,;Services Delivered
• • . ., • •.I\ • l. .. ;; ~ .
., l l " 'Ci 'l • i r.t t • 1 (-.1 1 ~ ~ '• , I ,~ ~ • . 1 '"-i.ndwivel °'deJiv'e~ l)ai pertent Ol 'he Under the Otd'dctwilerY lfW)·. ,i •• part of their culture. Jany 'of them
wor~-~~s&t~ .... tioh nJ:i~A'f.a :m~· = :&i ~'ir~e ~ia11l)li:~ •. ~~i
and, acivMc.. · medicioe aluioot made providlllg ~ . and · malal ca"' havlfti people lbilllr. • we ol · us as
the· midW!fe '~,' e11cepl' In some and •• ~' labor 'J:'.delivery ai some\l'\"!l else1",
rural and 10 w. i D c 0 me ethnic long as sign! are normal.' ,She eiplained ttiat the Ob/Gyn staff l
communities. One such program is located at Los tee 'the nurse-midWife as an asset to
In the past lew years, however , a Angeles Oounly·USC Medical Cent<r. providing good maternity care .
new kind of midwife bas come qoto Nurse-director of the p:-ogram at USC In an article in California's Health.
the scene - a reaction to a scarcity. is Irene Matousek, a nurae-midwife since one. member of the staff noted that
of pbysiciaDI, a burgeonlng population 198S. She delivered more than 500 babies mOst physicians would accept the nurse-
and growing need for auDllary medical before corillng to California. Midwife as long as she is under the
aervices. Sbe summarized lbe goal ol lbe nurse-~ect supervision ol doctors.
"1.bousanda ol ... \vomen," one nurse ~e ~ "caring for ~l mothers
aald, "liu< ll1eb''bobies wllholit ever during pr<.,ancy and d!ilVety ·under ACCEPl'ANCE
aeelng a doclnr. Many wail llll they medical ~ whllo !be doctor He noted Iha! the biggest part ol
are In labR lbea come to a ,hoopilal 111e1 .bis ,iUi\e lo ~ alter more lbe problem is public relations . "You
to deliVer." '"( complicated .cues. have to convince the doctor he'll be
The new breed, called • ' n u r 1 e -'"lbe ~dwile is not a substitute .able · to give his patients bet~ care
midwives" are def med as a Registered fot either ·physician or the nurse." lt norma! deliveries are taken cilre of ·
Nurse who 11 by virtue Of. added Al LA.-U , the maternity patient is bY nurSe midwives.
knowledge and skill gained through an linlt checked over by an ob&le\rldan.
rural areas near the Texas border.
NATIONAL PICl'UllE .
Bill the midWile is m ...,.,i limifucl
lo the rural and the JIOCl'. In New
York, after -pa961lge of new looser
regulations in 1971, more than IO'l
midwives ·are delivering babies in 18
hospitals .
An appraisal made ty the California
Nurses' Associalion, compiled by Eliza
C. Avillar li!ted several services a iiurse-
midwife could oiler.
"Other services which tbe· nurse--
midwife provides are to help the mother
care for herself aM her infant; to
adjust the home situation to the new
child ; and lo lay a healthy loondaton
for futw-e pregnancies.
"The nurse-midwife is prepared .to·
teach, interpret and provide support as
organized program ol study and clinical II the patient. is bealtby, with prospecls
experience, bas extended tbe limits of for a normal delivery, the nurse-midwife
her practice into the area of takes over. She rollowa tlM;_ patient'•
management ind care of motlters and ~·remaining aJert for baz.atdous
.babies llir'O!llhoul the maternity cycle, ccndlUOns. .
so long as ~ nleeis 'criteria "She teaches the motber lo look !or
acoepled u normal" warning lligns, tel!S ber what is being
done <UMi' why."
'Can you imagine what a hospital
visit is like for someone who is not
well educated, is poor, and p~rhaps
HEALm NEED& This Involves the mothir In ber own
Ula Maples, pr1$idenl-<lect o1 the • """'· sile added, and increases ber trust
California Nurses' Association, noted the ln ttie midwife. .
there is great concern 1n the medical Lila Maples feels thll is something
professloo about inadequate prenatal an expectanC p>otber can ask lot' and
care and Che high infant mortality rate receive from a nurse-midwife, that she
inadequate care can mean. 1 wouldn't seek or expect from a
"We are really COf1CIOl1\ed about the Pl>Yl!iclan. -on in~ Often !he father ·or some other pefS!lh wilh rio medical SAFETv FAcroR
training Is ~ the clllld. ' "Many -ol course, feel safer
''Tbese -le doo'I -the signs with a phy!leian, although they aak or .: o, ·abnormal birth and have no quesllona ol bis nurse becauae they doo'l
proyjsjmi !or emergency can. if molber w..,i lo bolber the doctor.
Qi' cblld,JS in trouble." I . l "Ibere is IO mudl I DUl"9e-mldwife
'l'.here are many, sbe added,, who do could do-hetp ·prepere the rest of lbe
not know about, or may be atrald of, tamily: offer emotional IUPl)Ol't, teach
'the coonty rileaical' ""11er. ' lbe lmlher'lo care lot' ber baby and
"Can you Imagine what a bospital wbal lo .expec1 u be gi'ow!."
visit Is lille !or aomeone wbo is nol Ms. Matouaek noted lhljl the lenn
, wdl educatod...is JIOCl' and .perbapa does ntne-mldwlle bu nepllVI! connotations
nol speak El;lilisb1" &be asked. !or aonie, bul ts a ~e at 'LA·USC
It 11 . ill..,i lot' a mlchrile" or nur>e-Medical Cetlter becaule ol a hip per-
mldwlle lo dellvor a baby in Callfomla ceotage of SpaniJHpelldDg patients.
(exoept for a small nl.Bllber llceOled "They know what a midwife· ii; it'1
does not $peak English?'
1"1bl1 would make specialty or
~tetrics . a little more exciting in
medical school and it 'tl-'OUld be easier
to recruit students for obstetrics if they
fel( ·thef'would be ·doing a less routine
job."· '
Ula Maples· rioted that in ·California,
·many physicians strongly object lo
Dune-midwives as they do for any kterisioa of the r,une's skills.
· "And, ' like other extensk>m of the
ICOpe of nursing, those who are lea.sf
Jnvolved and least affected feel the most
threatened, II
The stalUs of the nurse-midwife varies
from llate lo st:ate.
Some operate as the old-fashioned
mfdwlfe did. _1',or example, "grarulies"
as lheJ, are often. l'Blled, deJiver a
large percentage of. the infants in areas
IUeh 11 Appalachia, Mississlpj>i and
an integral part of her service. ~
is prepared· to administer methods of
birth control, as well as COWJSeJ. and
provide supportive services to maintain
chntraceptive practices.
"The nurse-midwife always practices
within the framework of a medically di-
rected health service. She is never an in-
dependent practllimer."
"We are concemed for the J>OOI', who
""' l!I06l likely not lo seek medical care during pregnancy," added ¥5·
Maples.
"There is a definite need for another
approach to providing good medical care
to these people. Many of us feel thlt
the riurse-midwife, and other nurse
practitioners, can' help to improve the
quality ol medical care, and lbe quality
of Ufe for the community .
"And, isn't that ¥i'hat it's all about?"
Httsbane1 r ·~y :Skit<? Breakfast:ilf ~ou Kill
+· I t ~
.~is Appetite
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l\l+Y I boriw' more pl._I to' 1qt h.or ,lo~""" Jn
!be largest billboard In tM ' world to • Wei "Wliile jllll enJ6y .,rd Jaico' lftd
• get a message ~' r.h. Al!>"'ita? c:a(fee '!'I. "°II '~, downtown. -
Madilme: Does ' ~. ,af, BOB !!;'or Tiit ~ STATE' ' • •
"Slay In bed, dear. ' ' fbollier about Ha IVN!lllilllC: , .. ._, ·wta ·· i 1;
rettini up to !ix !!""liflst. '1'.11 .gel •J -tr -~ lo tbo _.,, aomelhinl downtown. Do you lheil brag ,_. I .all' _. lo ._ft .._.,Ml
lo your nellilRlrl' llld lbe'brtdl!• dub ...,.. "".: •"' "" • --r, how coootdiilfti M iJi Well, 1 hive ·w111t . ..,, ~111110, mi •. fir .lie lolO'I
news !or you. a.nee. are 'better lban '"IC"''' W l "a, II' W ...... .,
even thol be· ls tJmldnc ot lllMSi:LF. I to M. • - -lie ,_ l Go ..... any --.unnt Ami ........ lle'I..,, .. ,..eo1·cr111c1
belOi'e ,.~ hplll'I' llld ,..11 ...
~ tJt -, , ..., -'"c lhelr DIWI • ANlfo-l>AllDERS: -
f. oo01fll*>, bat wi.-h --r -It' 1"11 neW!y lad uked why
• ol ,tupd blir, Pllf1 .,., a ntl1 lo-Ibo flee ol Ille -,. dlwrce
ballrobe ind a pair ol )Jollle 'lltppera rate 1"11 dkln1 ..,.11e . more about
llopplnc around like two dead .-11. marrtap !he way It really ts r.r moll ~ Who w11J11S to lace that! ll'a ~ people, mlnaa Ille ~· T b e
I~,..., lllal )'.Oil .were derelict In yiollr cllitf. • ,
UniOltm....,, too -kida tinie ll'om bolnll wlleh tbolr pa.-are
aoporlted, di-or lllelr pan!nts'
m ........ II =brq about. '11ll:y tool< to ,... for •because Ibey
-,.. tell II u Is. So, Amt, '1111)-didn, ,.u mention )'OUr
.bookl<C, "llanlalt.,.. Wllal to Elpect"l
' -"" It two .,.... • and It was the beat 50 cenlt t ever apent
••
. '
In my lije. l was 11 and S\)re I WU
In loV.. I had already accep!ed a ting.
Aft.r reeding lhal -.t I ~
I • wasn, readY lot' marri... and the
BUY I W&I encaged lo WIS even less
ready than I w11. W1-I told him
00w I !ell be fOUlbed • up &114 -my blome. lie married ...... llrl
--kalller. Don~ be bublUI, ANL SPEAK UP.
Thal booklet Is nea1. -GRATEFUL
IN GREAT NE°'f
. ' DEAR G.: Me , lluMll?lf Sloce
-T OK, 1" -me Ialo K. Allyone
• wnts, ,.Mm1iage -WU& lo
Expeet" ~· write dlrec:dy ' te Ann
L.-den, Boi: 2U&, m w. Rsnk Dr.,
a.te.p, UI. -· Eoclole It eents
·ad 1 looc, aell............., stamped
. ...... ,.,'
DEAR ANN LANDERS: That man
who wrote in llld said goats, both
naMles and billies, wbo are well cared
!or cloo't smell must either be crazy
or Ile amelbt like a goat bimsell and
-·t know the dillerencc.
A lew JOOn back I was privileged
lo watch the changing ol the guard . I
• •
at an old fort in Quebec. The mascot
was a billy goat. A prettier animal
'llqlld have been hard lo find -snowy
white hair. gilded horns and hooves.
Bui it happened to be .a . windy day
anrt lhe spectatOrs v.·ere OOwnwind from . ' ... the parade -grooods. There v.·as never
any doubt as to what Iha! aiilmaI w•
especlal!y !or those ol us who had beoo
around goals before.
Thal apresslon "lo amell Ilka a
goat" didn 't get Info the Iansuase by
accident. It's ooe that Is ...U-
and you'd better belie,. It. _.
BA 1TLING BONNIE
DEAR BONNIE: OL Yeo wta bJ
a ..... I'm 1 city girt myoelf, .,,,.
• my !..,.. rrleods tell mt yoa're •rl#
I
•
•
J 8 DAILY PILOT Thursday, January 31, }q74
Bishop Sheen: Woman Must Help
By JO OLSON .. "" .,..., "'"' ,..., that he \\'35 next going to speak
to liouston oilm~n and he'd
"tell them" about the energy
crisis.
yoo can. The cleric illustrated with
an example from his own llfe .
As a student he won an $8,000
scholarship for g r a d u a t e
3tudy, but one or h i s
professors said that since he
was planning to enter the
ministry, sludylng for a PhD
would be invaUd.
just on 'the way." the University of Utah \\'hich
looked at the effect ol music
on plants.
You're amphibious creatures.
You Jive in ·time and eternity
both. You're more eoncerned \Voman, who was closest to
the cross when Oirist was
crucified and first at the tomb
on Good Friday, has a mission
for the 709, according to
Billlop Fulton J. Sheen.
He fDld the Los Angeles
Dbtrld Aaembly ol Delphlan
Chapters In the Beverly Hilton
Hotel that "lhe mbslon ~r
wamea, ln a decadent
civlli.u.tlon, is to teach man
to be amphibious, to remind
him ol the phllooopby or life."
Before beglnnlng the serious
part ol his Wk, lhe 73-year-old
bbbop told a few jokes and
talked about his penonal life.
"I talk to all );Inds of
alliiencea." he 1a1d, adding
Wedding
In Offing
'Ibe engagement of Manny
!,!cHugh of Newport Beech
and Colleen George haa been
announced by ber parents, Mr.
ll1d Mrs. William Geo<ge ol Costa-..
Swl ereek Co mmuni t y
Onrcb in Grants Pass, Ore.,
will be the setting for tbe
April I nuptials.
The bride-to-be graduated
from Newport Harbor High
School and Lawton Medical
Assistants School.
· Her fiance . son of Mr. and
Mrs. Emanuel ~cHugh of
i
@aRAss RIN(i_
w .... ·, AfttMrel "' .......
• "-Wistt e AM SHOD
MelM&I I c .......... ~
3127 E11t
Co11t Hwy,
Coron• 11111 Mer
673-47-40
BJshop Sheen also revealed
he sometimes spends a week
at a time talking 10 prisoners.
"! !ind people today lire
rather lost.. What they are
looking for is a philosophy
or life.''
TWO PIULOSOPffiES
Th e bishop, who is booked
solid with speaking
engagements through
December of 1974, then
described two 'p o t e n t la I
philosophies a person can
adopt for his Ide.
•1one is that life has no
meaning. Because it has none
you get out of this world all
COLLEEN GEORGE
Syracuse, N."t .. sludied at
Syracuse University, Link
Co 11 e g e of l\'lechanical
Engineering.
Your Horoscope
Gemini
FRIDAY
FEBRUARY
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARI ES (~1arch 21-April ~9):
Accent journeys, v i s i t s ,
repo rts. Get infotmat.ion and
put it to use. Refuse to be
bypassed, deceived, given
MODEl!!RREl\fOOEL
Put It All Together
For Fun, PoPUlarity, Conliderice
John Robert Powers
Khoote ol pe~l lmproMtMnl IOJ '"'" wom1n
WROUGHT IRON SALE!! FINAL MARKDOWN
Featurin9 Gourmet Buffet with thick, rock-herd
maple choppin9 block counter; half-rou nd bak-
•r's racks, many different si1•s. Lar9e selection
of 9 ift it•ms on s1 la.
HOURS: 9:30 TO 5:30 P.M., EXCEPT SUNDAY
~ 1803 Westcliff Dr ive, Newport Beach 548-3 303
MARTEX
TOWEL
SALE
r::g_.._n.~~ EVERYTJUNG
FOR THE
BATHROOM
Tewtlt. rvtt• "'9Wff cvrl•1111
llMI I CMl!lfftl tint
If ac<HtlriH
31 FASHION ISLAND • :.2353 J
IAMKAMlllCAID MASTll CHAIGl t"' '-~~~~~~~~--,,.··
SHOP
"The othtr ls that u•e can
defer real happiness. \Ve do
not take It immediately, like
the student who must defer
his P.leasure.
"the . difference between
them ~the difference between
radar and a gyroscope."
These two philosophies of
life are as di!ferent as
detective stories and classical
literature, Bishop Sb e en
commented.
"In detective stories you
never know how it's going
lo end. Classical writers, such ·
as Homer or Shakespeare, tell
you at the beginning what
the story's about but you
never lose interest.
SIMPLE CHOICE
"Plants have a harmony.
They nave a God-given destiny
to fulfill. Are they allocted
by rhylhms ouislde? 'Ibey
are."
He said that when the test
planls heard Bach, I h e y
leaned toward the aound at
a 3S<legree angle. When the
music was rock, they leaned
away at a 55 percent slant.
with life.
1'Men tallt about things. You
talk about persons. You can
readily go from one to
another. You can teach
technologiCal man lhat be is
not just a ~eve! man. He
can U\'e In twoJevell.
'"Mio lave! cl aoy c!vilizati-Oil
is lbe lev'el of 111 womanhood.
11Wbat1 America. will be in
Bi shop ShMn .
the next ilO years will depend 1 __ ~------
..
Bishop Sheen then e!plalned
that radar "takes in every
single object in the
sky~louds. other planes . The
gyroscope is fixed . It has a
des tiny.
He said that when be dld
give up the opportunity, he
was rewarded because he was
able to have seven years of
graduate study. "Why? Slmply
because I followed a goal
lhrough.
"Life becomes r e a 11 y
adventurous when you have
a destiny.
"More simply, It's fast then
feast, or feast then hangover."
The minister, who officially
retired three years a g o ,
further expanded his theme
with a discussion about plants.
"My good people, that Is
what life is all about," he
emphasized.
on the demands' women make .
"You cannot flnd a single
Instance ol 1 woman failing. RUFFELL'S :·
UPHOLSTERY :~: "SO some peopJe are like
radar. They are governed
entlrely by what's around
them for the moment. Others
have a goal."
"Lire is duU to some people
beca use they don'L know
\vhere they're going -they're
'lben he challenged lhe
Delphiam :
"I wonder i! it Isn't the
mission or you women today.
"'Ibe mission of women ls
to teach man to b e
amphiblOUs, io remind him or
the phi~ ct life."
WW. Y .. Wat ·~·· ~-~:.
He cited a study made at ·-:·~ 1tU 11.n. l lfll. ~:. c ......... -141.0JS t • · Ir;===~~ ~·:·
Couples Announce Betrothal
LUNDE-WALSH fiance is at tending Cleveland escort when she was a
· Chiropractic College. · Children's Home S o c i e t y
debutante last month.
HANSEN-DEMATEIS
An Ang. 24 wedding in St. TANNAHILL-HESS
A July 20 wedding in St .
DRAPERY SALE
SAVE SOo/o o• sroc• •A1•1c•
SAYE 200/o o• 1-410•
e 4'Mt ,.._OM OUI SH•LV•5 e MILL· TO· YOU SAVINGS
e TWO WlaK DIELIVll Y
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HOM E
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IN OUI
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CAll"aT • Ul"MOLSTaly • .'UINITUI• • AMTIQUIS • ACCISIOl llS
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Lunde
of Costa Mesa have announced
the engagement of t h e i r
daughter, Patricia Ann Lunde
to T. D. Walsh. Bo1h are
graduate students at. the
University of New l\.fe1ico.
DUNLAP-PORT.rous
Newport Harbor High School
graduates, Teri Lynn Dunlap
and Bri'anjames Rennie
Porteous plan to marry March
16 in Newport H a r b o r
Luiheran Church, Newport
Beach.
Andrew's Presbyterian
Church, Newport Beach is
being planned by Tyra Lee
Hansen and Rocco Demateis.
Nicholas Catholic C.'hurch, La·
guna Hills, is being planned byl':=:;;:===;;;::====:::;:==== Paula TaOIUlhiU and Gary!r :1..~ ~ #~1r~r ~w~ ive a "Song o Love" h1iss Lunde graduated cum
laude from UC Jrvine and
also is a graduate of Estancia
!Ugh School. Her fiance is
a graduate of h1inot State
College, Minot, N. D. He also
is a member of Sigma Tau
Gamma fraternity.
The affianced are planning
to n1arry in August.
Their parents are the James
B. D.mlaps of Colorado
Springs ood Mr. and Mrs.
Mort Porteous of Newport
Beach.
Miss IAmlap ls a student at
California State University.
Long Beach where she has
pledged Delta Delta Delto. Her
'Mleir parents are '-Ir. and
Mrs. Arthur w. Hansen or
Costa Mesa and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Demateis, Laguna
Beach..
Miss Hanson 'viii graduate
in Jun~ from the University
of Oalifomia, Santa Barbara
\Vhere she is majoring in
cultural anthropology.
Beach. For Valentine's D1y
'(be bride • II> • he Who
graduated from Orange High =:::r.=,,,
School is the daughter of 111-11 ••• ..,, ut111
James Tannahill and Mrs. ~"' c, ... .,, .•. t1u1t1 m
Patricia Tannahill, both of =:1
::•,::.·5· ·14 95 0range. ~-·•~• ·" · ... · ·.. •
Olfow m11Mc •11d 11 .. lrY ...ff ... Swlu, 1ta H111 and J .. IMtt IAtll l.n
Her fiance is a graduate
of Laguna Beach High School
and also will graduate in June
from UCSB. His major is
Latin American studies.
Afater Dei High and Orange
Coast College are the flance's
schools.
Shoes Trip sabfna's Wff~dlYI I ...
-M1l1r Crtdll C1nl1
Finishes Task LORENZ-TRUAX Vintners
l\lr. and Mn. Hans J. Lorenz NEW · YORK (UPI ) -
proverbial sob story. You have of your own voice. Give and oC Corona del ~1ar have an· Platform shoes are a hazard
· ht to a1·d In! 1· receive Jove. Open up _ nounced the en~agement of to the wine industry, says Edy ng v I orma 100. thei·r daughter, Heidi '-1ildrcd W'tllm, an Al,satian vintner: express. \Vhat was in doubt TAURUS (April 20-May 20): will be settled. For a time, Lorenz to fellow UCI student In an interview, Willm said ~1oney and collections are you skate on thin i c e . Philip S. Truax. the footwear industry is using
featured. Includes ability to He is the son of Dr. so much cork for the toy,•cring PISCES (Feb. 19'-March 20 ): Elizabeth Truax, also of shoe soles thit there 's not
<.'Ollect needed mat e r i a I . \Vhat seems tO\ be turned C.orona deJ. ~tar where the enough of good quality for
Definite financial gain is upside down colild soon be June ,vedding is planned in wine bottles .
indicated. Older individual rearranged or comprehended. St. Mi chael's and All Angels Supplies of wine also are
CAllOS-OlnS-.JEWl!LIY
*9 All111ta 11 MltftOlll
H1111t1111ton 9uc:ll-Ml-0111
-NICI Gill Wr••plnt
-4.IY•AWIJ
D'l'ERY
BIG SALE
NOW .,
IN PROGRESS! lends beQefit of. experience. Know it and don't walk aw ay Church. short because manufacturers
GEMINI {May 21-June 20): from what · coukl, be a The bride-to-be graduated had expected plastic pctrole-"
Assert yours e I f. Take profitable Situation. Ar ie 1, from The Bishop's School. Her um products in a pclr"Dleum-' .
initiative. Get message to !Jbra per9011S might be !iane<>. a Newport Harbor short world . to make up for 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA
more Pe r s 0 n 5 . Distribute, featured. High School alumnus, was her glass shortages. 5 4 1 • 2 7 7 8 · ..
publish and advertise. Aries.,...:_ ___________________ .----------~~~~·~·~•5••!•~M:;U~1<~•~·~·5•~~·~M~•!'~"~"~'~··~·~••:;.;:.•~~~ Libra persons cou1d b e
involved. Finish task.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Throw light on areas which
were secret, dank, dark,
sacrosanct. By facing truth.
you feel strong and free. If
you withhold, skirt issues, you
pay a price which i s
outlandish.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22\:
Friend.1y contacts result in
solution to di lenuna . You want
what you need -and some
who perceive your innate
\\-isdom lvill p r o v i d e the
means.
VIRGO (Aug. 2:1-Sept. 22):
Emphasize goals, ambitions,
abilitiC{i, will ingness to work
overtime. ln personal area.
stand tall for principles. Make
room at the top.
LIBRA (8ept. 23·0ct. 22 ):
\Vhat seems far away might
be closer thani you suspect.
You oould be engulfed in
details. Know it and prepare.
Check accounts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2:1-Nov. 21):
'-·loney flow improves. LegaJ
decision is likely to favor you .
Know It and prepare and
make contacts v.;hich help
make money y,·ork -for you.
SAGmARJUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Lie low. Wait and
observe. Listen to mate,
partner. Reserve r in a I
judgment. Create a more
harmonious atmosphere at
home. Diplomacy is your ally.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Study Sagi t ta ri us
message. Fight off tendency
to ·be deceived -by you.
Many are frank, direct -but
you tend to read hidden
meanings into \'arious actions .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb.
18 ): Create. Heed the sou nd
SEW THESE
for Dick & Jane
have fun sewing and saving, too!
TERRY PRINTS
M.chl"• • ......W• Cottff, colered
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DAILY PILOT
I le ""' t• ••,.., I• CM• • . ........ ~~~~'"'IO ... ':""~~~~~..;..-~~-::t .......... .__ ....... -
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.Club
Dinner Dence
1'lt'1' a Small Worldn sets
the theme for the 10th annual
dioner dance benefiting Holy
Family ServiCes, Counseling
and Ad~ption "'hich will be
Thursday, January 31, 1q74 DAILY PILOT J9
·Efforts Turro to Philanthropy, Lectures \
Satw'day, Feb. I, In the
Olaneyland Hotel. •
Irvine Juniors
The Irvine Junior Woman1s
Club donated SUIO to the
Foster Parents >.uoclatlon
during a Community
Cablevision show, "Tbere is Antiques
a Need," SPoDJOred by the A third lecture series on
youth committee or Irvine antiques f e a t u r in g Gwen
Juniors. The shQw is to be Znerold as lecturer will, be
broadcast Monday, Feb. f, at sponsored by. the Virglnla
8:30 p.m. on Channel 3. ·Castle Auxiliary of the
The club u also selling AIStstaoce League of Newport ~UA bracelet• to assist in Beach beginnintl Mooday, Feb. efforts to obtain an accounting 4, ·at 1· a.m.
of all men still listed as The sessions will continue
missing in action in Feb. ~7 from 9 a.m. to I
Vietnam. · p.m. each day ln the Uague
Juniorettes
Usabl~ old clothing and toys
are being collected by the
Huntington Beach Juniorettes
for their annual drive for a
Tijuana orphanage.
Service center, Newport
Cost ts $26 and relervatlons
are required, according 'o
Mrs. David H i bbard ,
chal1')l1an.
Ebell Club
of Newport Beach, will be
repeated at Golden West
<Allege beginning Monday,
Feb. 4.
Appealing especially I o
housewives and mothers, the
class will emphasize "those
rebels, m·av ericks and
outsiders, in literature woo,
for reasons of per sonal
c on v I c lions or conscience,
have defied authority, custom
or accepted community stan-
dards this spring," Mrs.
Strauss said.
Chambers
The Orange County Council
0£ Women in Chamber of
Chambers of Commerce will
celebrate its 10th birthday
during a luncheon meeting
Tuesday, Feb. s, in the Alta
Vista Country Club, Placentia.
Needlepoint
Foor needlepoint classes will
be offered by Orange Coast
College during tbe spring
semester.
Late registration is being
held in the OCC Records and
Admission office lhrough Feb.
14.
Auxiliary
Dr. '111omas Gordon, author
of the bes.t-selling b o o k ,
"l?arent E f Ce ct i ve n ess
Training: The No -Io s e
Program for R aisi n g
Responsible Children," will
speak at 10 a.m. Tuesday, Feb.
5.
The occasion \viii be a joint
n1eeting of the \Voman's
Aux.iliary to the O r a n g e
County ~fedical Association
rind the UCI ~1edical Faculty
\Vives.
The IO a.rn. gathering \\'ill
take place in the Orange
tounty ~tedical Association
tlall, Orange.
Dr. Gordon, a licensed
clinical psychologist, received
his PhD from the University
of Chicago.
He was a consultant to the
1970 \Vhite House Conference
on Children and is a
psychological consultant for
the NBC television program
for preschool children and
their parents, "\Vatch Your
Child": (''The M e ·TOO
Sho\V"), launched in 1972.
There is no charge for the
lecture. DR. THOMAS GORDON
The Items will be delivered
the last week in February ..
according to Ginny Laursen,
chairman.
Eric Henderson, guitarist,
will present a concert for the
Laguna Beach Ebell Club at
7:30 p.m. Monday, Fe&. 4, ,
ln the Three Arch Bay ---~-------------------------------------
clubhouse, South Laguna. . The girls also will march
for the Arthritis Foundation
Sunday, Feb. 3, and make
candy cups and cookies for
Valentine's Day for Fairview
State Hospital.
Juniors
Tours of Huntington Beach's
new Central City Park will
be given by the Huntington
Beach Junior \Voman's CJub
for children in the fourth, fifth
and sixth grades.
Sponsored by the club's
conservaticn committee, the
tours will acquaint t h e
children with the species or
plants and wild life inhabiting
the park.
The guitarist Is a Laguna
Beach resident and high
school student. He recently
spent several m o n t h s in
Madrid where his work was
praised by Andres Segovia.
Child Care
Golden \Vest C.OUege's child
care center will expand its
hours to include eve1.1ing care
beginning Monday. Feb. 4.
First priority will be given
to students enrolled in at least
six units. The center is located
at Grace Lutheran Church.
Edinger and Golden West
streets.
Literature
, DAILY PILOT CARRIERS
The Daily Pilot is proud of its corps of young sales people wh"o .deliver the newspaper to your door .. These
young carriers are the cream or the community. Each month the best or them are selected for listing on the
Honor Roll. Each carrier listed here has obtained al least four new customers during the past month, has
had no more than one customer complaint for the month and must have paid his or her bill ror newspapers
bought "wholesale" within the proper lime. Numeral in front of star(* )preceding name indicates the
number of consecutive months that carrier has been on the Honor Roll .
Gt9'•-John Rotes it.nny '-'m 3" Mik• Z•la1.o
Tim C.lliM" Joe Mi1Mllo l ichctrd lod-3" Dovid La Marrtog11e
ERIC HENDERSON
The committee aJso has
made and sold enough life
saver puppets and tree cookies
to purchase an acre of pine
trees for a Cslifornia forest.
A course entitled Great
Ideas in Literature, designed
and taught by Dorothy Strauss Mik• Tham•• frank Luuh.ii lichard '°"bon 3° Da.,. MelllM
DrtWChoo ............. 3"Manulllln'ft
ROBYN VANCE
~J J
J u.f y. /Date .
'
.selected
Minute by Minute
Timetable Overturned ·
By ERMA BOMBEC!t
There aren't any surpriles
in my life anymore. "' AT
WIT'S
END
mothers \viii become so im·
portant and so inaccessible
that she can see the family
"By ap(K>intment only."
Picture this. A-child comes
running in shouting, "Mama,
Sarah just broke her leg."
Every Thurs<jay, blll\!l'g
death, I go lo"Jhe' bealily
shop. Every · sir months: I
have a standing ,dale Y.'ith my
/hygienist to clean my teeth.
ahd ev~ry year an
appointment to see 1ny doctor.
I am scheduled to see my
JaW}"(lr. my lax man, my son's
gukl3nce co unselor , my
washer repairman and my
Avon lady. I an1 programmed
to put the garbage out on
"Sorry," smiles 1'1other, day and yau don't have to
wait in lines anymore. You "but I don't have an opening
just drive m and we fill your right DO\\', but if there's a
tank." cancellation, tell Sarah. I'll
I sat there nwnbly. "Do give her a call."
you \\•ant to schedule me~" · Or, "Mama. I'm just not
l asked. hungry."
"Certainly," she smiled. Sunday nights, the empties in "That'll be 8 ~·eek from
tlie trunk, every Friday. and Tuesday. Now, will you be
the checks in the ntail by needing a lube JO' b, new points the 15th. Heaven knows there are few or 8 motor t u n e -u P ? ' '
imppbes ·left to me. I pulled "Just fill the tank and touch
into a gas station the other up the roots," I smlled.
day and nilled down the I guess thal's whal happens
window. A girl with a when tie people to be served
clipboard said, "Hello, are you outnumber the servers. How
a standing?" ridculous can you get? \\'ill
1'But of co u r s e you're
hungry," she says. "I mad,e
an eating ap(K>intment .for
y9u."
Or the husband who
"·hispers "Dear, the children
are gone and I could put, on
some music and pour a few
glasses or the bubbly," only
to have mother flip over her
calendar and say, ·'I'm sche·
duled for a headache.''
St..,. Storr
hulSmith John Mano Chri1otM" 3• HNI Mofhin
o.nno Cold~! St..-LD.,. G...Ridt 3•~wllfd ,_ ..... louls lodiet' DilMKHrti 3• it.vi" ,...,,...,
Kirt Wilk• ,_...,, &any Cu"-"-4" loy S."to Moria
Jonlumu Joe~nclmo" Da" ...... l 4° K_,-IM.rts
DtblM H.ndrl• Kip DIMmardo OeMCl!Nffl 4° Zulmay Gimther
Chudc 59ell-n Km" loncl rMetts1-J•lwsJ•"kiM
SamWilllom1 .... , ......... 2• Jeff DIU°" $0 Scott JDnkiM
Timt.nli" Dlr¥9"""•' 2".lohrtlocef~ s•s.e..-Hlll
Stew SdwniMi"I Donnyrtottff r,wti.a.w, l "J.y"'-
lill w,." Phil stHpma 2° loy Uk~• 9"Mik1lns
Dwg KDith .Mori! Hotcflen 2·.1oc11•..i.,_, 11 • km" Ml"Nch ... .,,.... Dari"WoMt
,._ ..... l9"Chn1 .. ul._
Mik• Thom•• lsTyC. ...... 11
,. __
31 • "" S.nchoi.
KtMy l.ddi"' .......... 2'QiotlZ.-31•T9nyS.rtehl1.
Hor.w Smith Miklhdy 2'Marily~O~ 37"~-
CARRIERS OF THE MONTH
Matt Stearns, Costa Mesa
·,
Joe Hindman, Huntingto~ Beach ·
·•.
Cu1lwa1,0t-. ,_. .. M.11 s .. --. M, ... of..,._ Jmt Sll••of 220J 1•11il-. C.... W..~ Joe
IU.dli•, 12. tOll of Mr .......... c ..... II "' • of 9411 M I •• II Pl ............... I ••
Estmcla Hhjll Sdlool. Mmlt ..... • a3rd collt c1l1ctloe _. •· 11111111 of a3rd llolllls. Sw .. II W.
morite _. ..i ..... • --..--• ....... .-.-......_Joe 11 • ..-9 .. , at.
Wwdow School. Ml h scni.g fer• MW blie 111111 ..... to• ' ... *Fllh Ill•,... ••• ..,. ... occ••I lw
IMll ill tlte ltmk........, Im••~. foolll .. md coll c1l1dilg ... --.1111 ... w W1r11h.
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Fon,ner Orange C o a ! t
resident, Thomas R u s s, e I l
Kruger 11 and Robyn Lou'ise
Vance are planning to marry
July 7.0 in the First B:iptist
Church, Covina.
''.A standing what ?'' I asked. we · ~ave t. o m a ke
"Have you a s t a n d in g an appointment with our butch-
appointrnent?" she persisted. ·er? Reserve a seat on the ferris
"FOR GAS?" wheel? Take a number at Utei;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
"Yes, we take a certain diMer table to talk.
number of appointments per Who knows? Maybe someday MARTIN
FURNITURE 1111111· Vote . Law Clarified
. ·-Parents of the belrothed
couple .are Mr. and Mrs.
Merlin G. Vance of Covina
end Mrs. John G. DeSoto Jr.
or Palos ;<erdes ~!9· ATLANTA (UPI) -.A three-iudie federal panel has l)lled
a state election I a w
...,..-tiooai that prohibits
wives from voting in Georgia
Jf their huabands. maintain a
legal residence in another
s~.
Mrs. Kane Wanted to vote lU.,.l<ft-l-Pl9'"1"H"4"H~ in Georgia even though her
husband, a U.S. Marine
statiooed in Albany, had
maintained his legal residence
in New Jersey and did not
want to vote in Georgia. State
law had required that a
maITied woman's I e g a I
residence be constdered the
same as her husband's.
Miss Vance is a graduate or Northview, High School.
Covina and' the University or
Redlands. CUmntly she is
studying Jor her teaching
· credential at Cal P o l y ,
Pomona.
Her fiancC is a graduate
of Palos Verdes High School
end altended Los Angeles
Harbor and Sadd le back
colleges.
Mrs. Emily Carsaow, an
American Ovil L I b er t t e s
Umon attorqey who filed the
suit on beholf of Mrs. Palricla
Kane' or Albany, said 111e
ruling ts "one more inroad
into ·discriminatory I a w s
against women."
Mn. Carssow argued the
state law violated women's
. right to vote as ·guaraM.eed
by the 19th amendmeot to
the U.S. coostllulioo.
'ATURIDAY,. FEB. 2
SAVINGS FROM W'lo TO 78°/o AND MORE
~-e M•1l11 Le.pl e Well...,_ e S.-e AMT .... L..Mpt '
ELECTRIC
' LIGHTING
646-3737
• m Victoria Street Costa M-o..i..., .. ..,.._.,..,,....; ._ ..... ,
CONYINllNT
LAYAWAY !'\AN
' r • I
I .
crafted for the
most elegant home
PINE .... AS YOU'VE NEVER KNOWN IT! THOMASVILLE
GIVES IT THE RICHNESS IT DESERVES! Thomesv;!le now b•;ngs
a fresh, but authentic look to this favorite sty19 of 9ener•tions
of Americ•ns in an all new collecion celled PINE MANOR.
Many piec•s in our stock now at sale prices for a lim ited
time, including bedroom, living-room a nd dining room groups
... all at sale prices
,~i ':W5t'1 c. ~ -··~ ..
to see our large selection of
other Thomasville fu rniture
at cleara nce sale prices.
(sale prices li mited to mer-
chandise in stoc.k only ).
1865 HARBOR BLVD. • DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
• BankAmericard • Master Ch.rge
• Our 'Own Rovolvitlg Chor9e. 548-5131 .
I ' .
'
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,. DAILY Pf OT I ~ ~,>.J. l'r14
I
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Al! sorts of problem s are dealt
with in Me sa Hi g h's G uida nce
lab by Kevin Edwa rd s a nd
Joe McCoy (above, left to ri ght) .
Below, Heather Kuhn
tutors a student.
AFS Students to Speak
•
New
By ALLISON DEERR
Of flte Dlilly ,llM Staff
Lab
Costa Mesa High Scbool"s Guidanre
Lab acts as a buffer.
Students having problems at scOOol
are assigned to the guidance program .
Joe McCoy, director of the Jab, and
Kevin Edwards, in charge of supervising
guidance in the lab, see the program
as an extension of lhe classroom.
One facet is an "inside suspension"
program. Students who might in the
past have been suspended from scbool
and sent home for three days are
assigned to the lab.
"They are ooly assigned to the lab
after other steps have been taken. First
the teacher tries to work out the problem
with the student.
"Then," Edwards explained, " the
student might be sent to his or her
counselor. After this, the parents will
be called. Only ii these don't succced
is the student sent to the guidance
lab."
ADDED COUNSEIJNG
In the laby the student is given what
is described as "additional cwnseling"
to determine bis ~ and try to
resolve it.
"The purpose,'' said McO>y, "is to help
the student resolve his problem and
get back to the regular classroom as
soon as poosiblc."
For example, a student v.'ho regularly
cuts class is sent to the Guidance Lab
to make up the amount of time he
lost If he misses a per~oo •.. he makes
a ·Positive Step
it up on his own free time.
Incentive for working in the lab is
simple, McC.oy and Edwards said. A
student can't leave unless he's produced
some work.
The studen1 voho in the past might
have been suspended is given a
maximum three-day assigruntllt t.o the
Guidance Lab, they explained.
A student who completes his \li"Ol'k
leaves after five hours, a mini1num
day schedule. If not completed, he stl.}'s
!or a full school day. . NO SUSPENSIONS
'"It lets tbe studmts know that they
v1on't be able to get a awipemion from
school and use IC as a three-<Iay holiday.
They know they have to work. Very
few students want to go as far as
doing anything major to get a
suspensioo."
Other students are directed to the
lab for other problems. For example.
Edwards and McCoy noted that many
students are referred because they aren't
. keeping up with regular ~'Ork.
A! the lab a Nelson reading test can
be administered to d e t e r m i n e
comprehensioo, vocabulary and ovenll
reading skills. 1ben the student can be
referred to the reading specialist.
"If the student' doesn't fit intO one
of the reading classes, then he can
be tutored in the lab."
There are two student assistants in
the Jab every period. Added tutorial
services are provided by students from
Orange Coast COiiege.
'"We hope t o expand the tutorial
program soon lo include more OCC
students," said Edwards, v.•ho headed
a similar program in Pasadena, nMv
a coun.seloc at CMHS.
GET ADVICE
Joe McCoy hopes that the Guidance
Lab v.•ill continue to be a place where
the students can come to gel advice
and talk over problems.
"From there we can rerer them to
counselors if necessary. But I do think
the students need a place to talk out
problems.''
Parents are enthw:iastic about the
program, they said. Because of the
Guidance Lab, and new re 1 ale d
attendance procedures, the schJol 9ta.ff
is more easily able to keep tabs on
students and their problems.
Students seem to see the guidance
lab as a positi\•e thing as well-not
so drastic as suspension.
"It isn't as much of an adjustment
going back to class after working in
the Guidance Lab. compared with an
outside suspension," they explained.
McCoy, v.·ho has been a campus
supervisor iind is now junkr class
advisor, has ·.\7>rk experiences that
include legal clef,, court reporter and
plans for a law cartc.r. He is completing
work on his seoondafy t e a c h i n g
credential and plans to te~ before be-
ginning a law career.
"I have hig h hopes for success ol
the program. It is a benefit foe a
lot of students who would normally drop
out of school ," he said .
"It is a good thing for identifying
specific problems that come to the
surface and are dealt with before they
become serious."
Parent Units M ·eet to Learn, Earn
'.
BEAR PFO: Additional
volunteers arc needed for the
learning center. Persons who
can donate a fuw hours each
month are urged to contact
Mrs. Allen Penton , chairman.
CdM lllGll PTA: General
meeting with coffee served at
9:30 a.m. ~·iii Lake place
• Thursday, Feb. 7,· in the
'" facu lty lounge. t.frs. Ruth
\Vilson will present an
Coeds Selected
• Zonta
Le 1 de r ship, cilizcnship,
! IChofanhJp and service have
, qualified four seniors in the
:: Newport.Mesa High Schools as
Zonia Girls-of lhe·month:
'Ibe young women , who were
lllectid by an I • I I 1 t a II t
jiCtldpll, • club momber and
1ll1dld feeulty members, In!
CIDll)< Holm. Lyndon Dickey,
ot.. Werley and Linda
lllPY· ' Miu Holm, daUlllliar ol Mrs.
: OWildDe 11o1m, ol eoa .,.,.
11 editor o1 the ....... t
-per 11 EJtandll ~h
explanation of the American
Field Service program and the
four exchange students ~·ill
discuss their experiences in
the program. Speaking will be
Bruno Be r chtold of
Swiuerland , Karin Iret on of
South ACrica, Handan Kanter
of Turkey and Jennie Lilinc
of Sweden.
HARBOR COUNCIL PT.I :
Business meeting will be
Honors
School. She also has served
in Girhl Leape, SIOOent
Council and the girls gym-
n.8.$tlC team.
Miss Dickey. daughter ol
Mr. and Mra Donald Dicker.
Costa Mesa, ls a member of
the Student eo.gr.., and
reviewing boo.rd of the 1\terary
magazine and is vice president
of the Science Club. A
participant in the Mentally-
Gifled·lllinor program. she hH
achieved the honor roll a II
!our years at Newport Harbor
I!lgh.
t.iiss Werley, daughter of
conducted by Mrs. James
Schafer, president at 9:30 a.m.
Monday, Feb. 4, at the Girl
Scout Council Ofnce. Corona
dcl Mar Elementary School
will host. Founders Day
program will be presented by
ti.frs. Richard Riley and the
nominating committee
C.'Onsisting of the Mmes John
Sca pple, Earl Dewolf; Thomas
llerndon, Hugh Thm1pson and
Given
?.irs. K. L. Mason and Robert
Werley, Corona del Mar. is
a v a r s I t y cheerleader at
Corona dcl Mar High School.
A former swim and drill team
member, she was sophomore
homecoming princess.
Miss Bagley, · daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald E.
Bagley of Co..ui Mesa. Is Girls
Leap Pmldent at Colla
Mesa High School. She hBI
also been active in tht Girls'
Athlellc As>ociatlon, several
alngJng gro ups and
publicatloos.
Roy Ffeiffer will make its
report. Program will be
presented by Ms. Dorothy
Rubottom and James A. May,
psychiatric social workers who
wil speak 00 when Should
Families Seek Outside Help
For Family Problems? All
interested PTA members are
invited to attend.
MATER DEi mGH PG:
Annual Mardi Gras B a II
Frida'y, Feb. 8, will take place
in the Disneyland llolel.
Gourmet diMer will be served
at 8 p.m. preceded b y
cocktails at 8:30 and followed
by dancing ID the SOclely for
the Pr....-vatioo ol Big Bands.
Mrs . Roger Wood ls general
chairman and assisting her
aro the Mmes. Doo Culver,
Thomas Townlng, A k I r a
Shimizu and John Macauley.
J a m es Griffiths, president
aruiounces that proceeds from
the event will benefit the
school.
MEADOW VIEW P TA :
Founders Day pr ... ntaUon
will highlight 8'110fll .... ting
Tuesday, Feb. 5, at 7:30 p.m.
Fubion show ol bata datin&
from 1776 to the p..-1 allo
will be featured . Mrs. Lyla
Eklon ts In charge of the
fashion show entitled "Tilt
Hal 1t'·"
MESA VIEW PTA: New
reading program will be
discussed by teachers of all
grade levels at ge ner a 1
meeting Tuesday, Feb. 5, at
7:30 p.m .•. Paper drive will
be sponsored by the unit in
school F r i d ay, Fe b .
15 ... Plans are under way /or
a PTA-sponsored rwnmage
sale.
MONTE VISTA PTA: Ice
skating pllrly from 5:1> to
7:45 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 8,
at Klondike Ice Arena.
SUPElllNTENDENT PAii-
ENT OOUNCIL: All interested
paren1s In !he Fountsin vaney
Sdlool District are invited to
attend !he council's gene<al
meellng at 9:30 e.m. W-
day, Feb. 6, in !he Fountain
Valley Civic Cmter. Coffee
hour will precede the meetln(
at 9 a.m. Guest speaker
Elizabeth Myon ol the district
oflke WIH show a slide in-
te11tslloo oo middle 9Chool·
electives and explain the elec-
llve procra1111 cumntly in
[HllW la lildMdlal -
wltHn ttie dtltl1et. Mottmg
Will be hooted by Nleblu and
Fountain Valley School ~
units. ' ' '
CdM HIGH
Kathy Wataon
CM HIGH
Jodi P1lmbl1do
DAR Names
Good Citizens
Col. William C.hell Chapter,
Daughters of the American •
Revolution, Newport Beac!I
honored tour ootatandlng high
school glrlo during a lea in
1111' Corooa del Mar home ol
Mrs. William Fllber.
Named as good cltW!ns, the
students were cholen by their
schools on such ootstsndln&
QUlllU.. u leadership ,
dependability, service and
patriotism.
Students. !heir ochools and
~ are J<athy Ann
' . 'W1ttoo, eoi-del Mar High
School, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Watson: Jodi LYM
Palrnblade, Costa Me sa, the
Wilham Palmblades: Cindy
UJulse Holm, !:ltancla, Mrs.
Qirlstlne Holm, and Julle
Holcomb, Newport Harbor, th,
John Holcombl.
Otller l!llelts ol honor ......
.Mrs. 1..eroy· Conrad Kaump,
'bononrJ lllte regent. and
Mrs. HerlJorl Ertel, stale
~lnMn, DAR good cltlans
fOt Dlltrlct 12. t
·ESTANCIA
Cindy Holm
NH HIGH
Julie Holcomb
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Thrusday, Janu1ry ll, lCJ74
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DAILY PILOT II
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(/)
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·'° • .,. .... . · . ~. : ! •• • • • • •
• • • • • • • ••
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'lf'Ma1001 •••111 w11•••1sa111• ' .... ..,... ... .,_._ ...... , ...... , _______ .......... _ .. 111
'
WE ARE CELEBRATING OUR lOTH
ANNIVERSARY TODAY. YOU ARE
INVITED TO JOIN US FOR MANY
MORE YEARS OF ENJOYABLE MUSIC
ON STEREO 103.
•
"SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR" ' .
NO. 57 FASHION ISLAND. • NEWPORT CENTER, NEWPORT BfACH, CA 92660 (714) 644-2727
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%0 DAILY PILOT 111rusday, Janvat)' )J., 1'114
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All sorts of problems are dealt
with in Mesa Hi9h's Guidance
Lab by Kevin Edwards and
Joa McCoy (above, left to right).
Below, Heather Kuhn
tutors a student.
AFS Students to Speak
New
By AWSON DEERR
Of rite Dally PllM Sl.tf
Lab
Costa Mesa High School's Guidance
Lab acts as a buffer.
Stud<nls having problems at school
are assigned to the guidance program.
Joe McCoy, director of the Jab, and
Kevin Edwards, in charge of supervising
guidance in the lab, see the program
as an ext'ension of the classroom.
One facet is an "inside suspension"
program. Students who !Jliibt in the
past have been suspended from S<:bool
and sent home for three days are
assigned to the lab.
'"Ibey are only assigned to the lab
after other steps have been taken. First
the teacher tries to work out the problem
with the student.
"Then," E d w a r d s explained, " the
studenr might be senl to his or her
counselor. Aller this, lhe parenls will
be called Only if these don 't 1111ceeed
is the sludent . sent to the guidance
lab."
ADDED COUNSELING
In lbe lab, the student Is Kiven what
is described as "additional counseling"
to determine his probl,em and try to
resolve it.
"'Ibe purpose," said AfcO>y, "is to help
the student resolve his problem and
get back to the regular classroom as
soon as possible."
For example, a student who regularly
cuts class is sent to the Guidance Lab
to make up the amount of time he
lost Ii he misses a period, he makes
a ·Positive Step
it up on bis own free time.
Incentive for working in the lab is
simple, McCoy and Edwards said. A
studenf can't leave unless he's produced
some work.
The student v.'ho in the past might
bav~ been suspended is gi\·en a
maximum three--day assignmept to the
Guidance Lab, they explained.
A student who completes his '''Ork
leaves after fi\·e hours. a minilnum
day scbedu1e. If oot completed, he stays
!or a lull S<:bool day. .
NO SUSPENSIONS ...,
"It leis the students know that they
,.,on•t be able to get a suapelBion from
school and use it as a three-day holiday.
They know they have to v.·ork. Very
few students want to go as far as
doing anything major to get a suspension.,,
Other students are directed lo the
lab for other problems. For example,
Edwards and McCoy noted that many
students are referred because they aren't
, keeping up with regular v."Ork.
At the lab a Nelson reading test can
be adm..inistef9i to d e t e r m i n e
comprehension. vocahulary and overall
reading skills. 'Iben the student can be
referred to the reading specialist.
~ "If the student' doesn 't fit into one
of the reading classes, then he can
be tutored in the lab. 11
There are two student assistants in
the lab every period. Added tutorial
services are provided by students from
Orange Coa!t College.
"We blpe to expand the tutortal
program soon to include more OCC
students,·• said Edwards, v.·ho headed
a similar program in Pasadena, now
a counselor at Cl\tHS.
GET ADVICE
Joe McCoy hopes lhat the Guidance
Lab v.•ill continue to be a place where
the students can come to gel advice
and talk over Problems.
"From there we can refer them to
counselors if necessary. But I do think
the studenl5 need a place to talk out
problems."
Parents are enthw:iastic about the
program, they said. Because of the
Guidance Lab, and new re I a fed~
attendance procedures. the school staff
is more easily able to keep tabs on
students and their problems.
Students seem to see the guidance
Jab as a positive th ing as well-mt
:'JO drastic ns suspension.
"It isn't as much of an adjUJtment
going bnck to class after working in
the f.iuidanoe Lab, compared with an
outside suspension." ~Y explained.
McCoy, ""ho Im been a campus
supervisor •nd It ~ junior class
advisor, has •Jnrk e:periences that
include legal clerk. court reporter and
plans for a law ca reer. He is completing
y,·ork on his secondary t e a c hi n g
credential and plans lo te~ch before be-
ginning a Jaw career.
"I have high hopes for success cl..
the program. It is a benefit for a
lot of students who would normally drop
out of school ," he said.
"It is a good thing for identifying
speci fic problems that come to the
surface and are dealt wlth before they
be<»me serious."
.. Parent Units Meet to Learn, Ear,n
BEAR PFO: Addilional
volunteers are needed for the
learning center. Persons who
can donate a few hours each
. month are urged to contact
•· Mrs. Allen Penton, chairman.
Cdl\1 lllGll PTA : General
meeting with coffee served at
9:30 a.m. ~·ill take place
; Thursday, Feb. 7,· in the
faculty lounge. 1'trs. Ruth
\Vilson will present a n
Coeds Selected
Zonta
L e 1 d e r ship, citlzenship,
tcholandllp and service have
qualified four seniors in the
Newport-Mesa High Schools as
Zonta Girls-or tbe-monlh.
1be young women, who were
• selected by an assistant
,.tac1po1, a club member and ••ctad faculty members, art
CJDcty llolm, Lyndon Dickey,
D1au Werl•y aod Linda
llolkY· Miu Holm, dallllhter ol Mrs. ~ CllilllDe Holm , of Colla Mesa
Is editor ol the -t r"" at Estanda ~
explanation of the American
Field Service program and the
four exchange students will
discuss their experiences in
the program, Speaking will be
Bruno Berchtold of
Switzerland, Karin Ireton of
South Africa, Handan Kanter
of Turkey and Jennie Llling
of Sweden.
HAR.BOK COUNCIL M'A:
Business meeting will be
conducted by Mrs. James
Schafer, president at 9:30 a.m.
Monday, Feb. 4. at the Girl
Scout Council O!Hce. Corona
de! Mar Elementary School
will host. founders Day
program will be presented by
l\irs. Rich rel Riley and the
nominating commit tee
consisting of the Mmes John
Scapple, Earl Dewolf: Thomas
Herndon, 11ugb 'lbompson and
Honors Given '"
School. She also has :rerved
in Girls League, Studenl
COuncil and the girls gym-
nastic team.
Miss Dldcey, daughter ol
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dickey,
Cosla Mesa, Is • member or
the Student Congress aod
reviewing boord of the literary
maguinc and is vice pN!sldent
ol tbe Science Club. A
participant in the Mentally-
Gifted-Minor program. 9l>e has
achieved the honor roll all
!0or yean at Newport Harbor
High.
Miss .Werley, daughter of
Mrs. K. L. Mason and Robert
Werley, Corona de! !\far.· ls
a v a rs I t y cheerleader at
Corona del Mar High School.
A former swim and drill team
member, .. she was sophomore
homccomlng prinetss.
Miss Bagley,· daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald E.
Bacley ol Costa Mesa, is Girls
~ Prffident at Colla
Mesa High School. She haa
al.lo been active In the Girls'
Athletic Assoclatioo1 several
singing gr oups and
rblicatioos.
Roy Pfeiffer will make IU
report. Program will be
presented by Ms. Dorothy
Rubottom and James A. May,
psychiatric social workers who
wil speak Oil when Should
Families Seek Outside Help
For Family Problems? All
interested 'P'f A members are
Invited to attend.
MATER DEi WGH PG:
Annual Mardi Gras B a 11 .
Fridiy, Feb. 8, will take place
in the Disneyland llotel.
Gourmet dinner will be served
at 8 p.m. preceded b y
cockla ils at 6:30 and followed
by dancing to the Soclely for
the Preservatioo ol Big Bams.
Mrs. Roger Wood is general
chairman and aSllsting her
are the Mmes. Don Culver,
Thomas Townlng, A k I r a
Shimizu and John Macauley.
Jam es Griffiths, president
announces that proceeds from
the event will benefit the
school.
MEADOW VIEW P T A 1
FOIUlders Day presentaUon
will highlight general meeting
Tuesday, Feb. s, at 7:30 p.m.
Fashion show cl hall dating
Irom 1778 to the pment al80
will be r .. turod. Mrs. Lyla
Eklon is in charge of the
I ashion show entitled "1lie
Hat .llQx."
I
MESA VIEW M'A: New
reading program will be
discussed by teachers ol all
grade levels at general
meeting Tuesday, Feb. s. at
7:30 p.m ... Paper drive will
be spoosored by the . writ In
s chool Friday, Feb .
15 ... Plans are under way for
a M'A-sponsor!d rummage
sale.
MONTE VISTA M'A : Ice
akaling party !rom S:4S to
7:4S p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 8,
at KJoodlke Ice Arena.
SUPERINTENDENT PAR.
ENT COVNCIL: All Interested
parents In tile Founlain Valley
SdJonl Dlstricl are lnvied to
attmd tile council's general
,,_ng at 9:30 a.m. W-
day, Feb. 6, In the FOIBltaln
Valley Civic Center. Coffee
hour will ptecede tile ~
at 9 a.m. Guest speoker
Elizabeth M,.... nf the district
nfllce wtH llhow • slide .....
eentatloo m middle ochool
electlves and explain the eleo-
tive prograrna eumntly in
.... ,_ In lodlvldlal -
wttliln tf1e dl&trict. M~
will be hosted by Nieblu and
folBllain Vllley School PTO
unils. ' ' ' ,
CdM HIGH
Kothy Wotoon
CM HIGH
Jodi Polmblade
DAR Names
Good Citizens
• • Col. William Cabell Chapter. 'Wa1-Corona del Mar 'High
Daughters o( the American ' School, Mr. and Mrs.
Revolution, Newport BettjJ Raymond Wataon; Jodi Lynn
honon!d lour oulltllidinl htgl\ P1lmblade, Colla Mesa, the
aeliool glrbi during a tea In Wllllam Palmblades ; Cindy the Corona clel Mar borne ol LoulN Holm , I!'Atanda, Mrs.
Mrs. William Fleher. Christine Holm, and ~ulle
Named 11 llOOd cltttens, the Holcomb, Newport Harbor, Ill'
studentl were ·-by their John lloleombl. IChoola on suclJ outstandlna Otl\er ,,_ ol honor wm
qualltleo u Io ad i ra h Ip , Mrl. Leroy' Conrad Kaump,
dependability, aervlce and lmonr7 llato regent , and
patriotism. Mrs. Herbert Ertel, stale
Students, their schools and chit._,, DAii' l!IJOd clURIJS
pomJlS art fa Illy A n n for District 12. )
·ESTANCIA
Cindy Holm
NH MIOH
JulJe Halcemlt
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Thrusday, January 31, 1974
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DAILY l'ILOT I I
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,, ............. _ .. ,,-........................ -... ·--·· .. ····---·· ....... -... ~ ....................... .._ ........ __ ...... --.. -· ..... -... ..
'
WE ARE CELEBRATING OUR lOTH
ANNIVERSARY TODAY. YOU ARE
INVITED TO JOIN US FOR MANY
MORE YEARS OF ENJOYABLE MUSIC
ON STEREO 103.
"SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR"
NO. 57 FASHION ISLAND_ • NEWPORT CENTER, NEWPORT-BfACH, CA 92660 (714) 644-2727
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ff DAILY PILOJ Thurldly, Jaoult)' 31, 1974
~VER THE CO UNTER ..
l : , I
NASO Uoti"" for Wod .... y, Jo__., 30, I 974
MUTUAL FUNDS
Up lS.1 Up 1~.0 UP 1(1.0 Up '10.0 Up i..1 UP lf.4 Up II.~ Up 11.2
Up i•.1 Up , •. 1
UP u.• Up H.• Up U.2 Up 14.0
Up ' 13.•
UP 13.•
Up U.l
I
Standard
Oil Tells
54% Hike
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
The um earnings or Standard
Oil Co. of Ca1ifornla increased
by 54 percent over 1912.
Fourth quarter e a r n i n g s
jumped by 94 percent.
STANDARD OF California,
Jhe natJon's fifth largest oil
company, said on Wednesday
that Its estimated earnings for 'J oint B·lds•••·•-1973 totaled $843.6 mllllon, or
$4.97 a share. The 1972 net Fr income was $547 million, or ank Ikard, president
$3.22 a share . of the American Pe-troleum Institute, told
Fourth quarter e a r n i n g s a House Judiciary Sub-
ro.. by !H percent to $283.i W dn million or $l.67 a share. The committee e es~ay
1972 final quarter produced that he opposes a sug-
$145.8 million in net income, gestion forbidding oil
or 86 cents a share. firms from banding to-
In Los Angeles, Atlantic gelher to bid on le,ases.
Richfield Co., the eighth _:;_ _____ ___c __
largest U.S. oil company,
reported a 38 percent earnings
gain over 1972.
Arco's Tiet income was
$270.18 millirin, or $4.76 a
share, up from $195.56 mUlion.
or $3.46 a share. in 1972. Sales
rose 17 percent in $4.48 billion.
JN tt73'S final quarter Arco
earned $91.69 million, or $1.61
a share, Compared with $65.25
million, or $1. 16 a share, in
1972. Fourth quarter sales
increased 31 percent to $1.33
billion.
The sales · gains resulted
froril higher domestic crude
oil prices and Jmproved
perionnance in chemical and
international petroleum oper·
a lions. said ·.Robert 0. Ander·
son. Arco J>reSident.
Standard of California is OnEl
or rour partners in the giant
Arabian-American OD Co.,
controlling oil production in
Saudi Arabia, the Mideast's
leading petroleum producing
3J1!a. lt was the last of the four
to report 1973 earnings. Exxon
previously reported a 59
percent gain over 1972, Mobil
47 percent, and Texaco 45
percent.
BOARD CHAllt.\IAN 0 . N.
l\1iller said Standard's earn·
ings gains resulted from
increased sales and recovery
of oil prices abroad from low
1972 levels.
"'In no way do they support
statements that profits are
excessive," he said.
He said the 1973 earnings
amounted to a 15.3 percent
return on net investment.
lri~reases
lrt 1Plastic,
Fiber See n
WASHINGTON (AP)
Substantial price increases for
nlOSt plastics. rubber and
synthetics fiber products
appear in store for consumers
as a result of action by the
Cost of Living Council .
The council on Wednesday
lifted most price controls from
petrochemical feed stoclts.
The action 'vas taken to head
ofr grov.•ing shortages of the
materials and to head off
mounting job 1 a y o f f s
throughout the petrochemical
industry, the government sa,id.
The council also removed
tire manufacturers f r o m
Phase 4 price control.
regulations, a move. t he
government said will mea n
a $250 million increase in
wholesale tire prices.
James W. McLane, deputy
director of the council, said
the five largest tire producers
agreed to limit wholesale price
increases on all passenger car
tires and tubes to 5 percent
and ' to limit r:eta~ pi:ice
increases for all standD.rd
small.car tires, to 4 percent
through Aug. 1:
EPA.Kills
Lear Steam
'No Reeesslon'
Nixon Sees Bad
Economic Year
WASHI NGTON
President Nixon
(AP)
ba$
-~
told
Congress to expect economic
stagnation, btcreased
unemployment and b i g h
inflation· in 1974, but he said
there will be no recession.
His no-recession p 1 e d g e ,
however, did not promise an
eConomic bed of roses but
only a choice of thorns: ii
necessary, he said, he would
speed up federal spending and
sthnulate still more inflaUo~.
rather than let a tight-fisted
and anti-inflation po 1 i c y
.destroy . too many jobs.
IN HIS ANNUAL State of
the Union message o n
Wednesday night, Nixon said
inflation and the energy crisis
were combining to worsen the
nation's economic ouUOOk and
he warned the day of bargain·
priced energy was over.
Broadcasting nationwide a
shortened version of h i s
message, Nixon p u b 11 c l y
scorned "the perennia l
prophets of gloom, telling us
now that . . . America may
be headed for a recession.
"Well, Jet me speak to that
issue head-on," he s a i d •
rlst ·somewhat and Inflation
will be high," the ll'.lf.SSC!ge
said.
Nixon said he will propose
a fiscal 1975 budget of $304.4
billion. a $29.7 billion increase
over fiscal 1974, which "wUI
support the economy, resisting
a major slowdown, but •..
will not provide a de~ of
stimulation that c o u 1 d
accelerate inflation.
"If future events suggest
a change in fiscal policy ••.
r will not hesitate to use the
stimulus of fiscal policy if
it becomes neCessary t o
preserve jobs. in the race of
an unexpected ' slackening in
economic activity," t h e
message added.
Nixon said he h a d
assurances of a forthcoming
meeting among Aratf oil·
producing nations to discuss
lifting their embargo against
oil shipments to the United
States which have, so far.
reduced U.S. oil imports by
about 2 million barrels a day.
"IF TIIE EMBARGO is
lifted," Nixon said. "this will
ease the crisis, but it will
not mean an end to lhe energy
shortage in America .
Volwitary conservation will
continue to be necessary,"
"There will be no recession ~---------
in the United States of
America."
"Primarily due to our
energy crisis, our economy is
passing through a difficult
period, but I pledge to you
tonight that the full powers
of this government will be
used to keep America's
economy prod ucing and to
protect the jobs of America's
workers."
HE ELABORATED in the
complete printed text of the
message, which said ••a
slowdown in economic growth
is inevitable in 1974.
"During the early part of
this year output will rise litUe,
Beriefits
Irt Beacli
A new, neighborhood
office of the Social
Security Administration
has opene~ in Huntington
Beach at 88.11 Adams i}ve.
Any business cormected
with social security may
be conducted at this new
office, betv.'een the hours
of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m ..
Monday through Friday.
The phone number is 836-
l68t. '
il at all, unemployment will.:..,. _________ ,
'
FINANCE . ·
Locklieed
Get8 Break
On Goofup?
From Wire StnieR
S AC R AM ENTO
Ulckheed 1he ..... ·-' . • 0:-.. ~
finn, would get a 11 mi!Uon
tax break under legislation
approved by the state Senate
with one vote to spare.
The 28-7 vote. one more than"
the required two-thirds, sent
the measure to the Assembly
Wednesday. There was no
debate.
Introduced by Sen. Ralph
Dills (]).Gardena), the bill
would retroactively e:xcuse
Lockheed from a $1 million
sales tax levy ordered by the
stale Board of Equalization.
The tax has not been paid.
The tax was levied in 1973
on a sale of assets to a new,
Lockheed-owned corporation.
The sale was made to help
the company qualify for $250
million i n Congressionally
guaranteed loans to put the
L-1011 widebodied airliner into
production.
In a related development.
the Soviet government and
Lockheed have signed an
agreement for joint research
on aircraft and other projects,
it was announced in Burbank
Wednesday.
The agreement provides for
cooperation in developing
civilian aircraft and
helicopters. navigation and
communications s y s t e m s ,
medical electronic systems,
computers and earth
resources exploration.
acconilng to a Lockheed
spokesman.
Trucker
Murdered
In East
By Tbe A1soclated Press
P e n nsylvania authoriU~
said a· truck driver was killed
early today after ·a. large rock
was thrown through t h. e
windshield of hi• truck. On
the ·edges of Ohio, truc~m
said they were staying out
of the state in fear of the
violence and vandalism which
has marked a trucker
1hutdown.
POLICE SAID the
unidentified trucker was killed
when his rig left U.S. 22 about
20 miles west of Allentown,
Pa: Authorities said a large
rock was found in the cab
and Sgt. Jolm Repko said,
"It's obvious to me somebody
threw it." There \\'ere reports
of rockthrowing and other
harassment of drivers in the
ar~a prior to the incident.
Four Youngstown, 0 hi o ,
food suppliers said their
trucks weren't moving ,
preventing food deliveries to
·450 area grocery s t o r e .s .
Steelmakers there also ·said
they were Wlable to ship by
truck.
A spokesman for Armco
Steel said the firm was cloeing
its plant at Washington Court
House, south of Columbus,
Ohio, indefinitely because of
a shortage of trucks. The plant
employs 565 persons.
GROUPS OF about 200
truckers blocked s e r v l c e
station pumps or parked at
,truck stops in several states
as part of the protest
movement, and other groups
met to decide what course
they would pursue.
ll.1illtant t r u c k e r s are
protesting high fuel prices and
other oil and fuel·relatcd
issues.
There was no clear
indication how widespread the
shutdown had become today
amidst confusion over Its
liming. Some truckers said
it was set for midnight
Wednesday while others said
it was to begin at midnight
tonight.
Complete .~id"day American Stock List
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Wednesday's
Closing Price.
l
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows
Appear Every Saturday
Oil Ban Repo11s
Awaken Mai·ket
S1i.s Net p E Htoh Low CIOH c""'
Ask Andy
Kids Like To
•
~ •
. . ..
DAILY PILOT
U,I Ttl .......
Cheeking In
Sen. Richard Schweiker
(R·Pa .) delivers w of·
fice of secretary of
senate a 1,722 page re·
port listing all of his
5,148 contributions to
his re.election in 1973.
Donations amounted to
$299,160.40.
. . , '-. . .
Ast Inna
·Sprays
Jerked
...
WASHINGTON (UPI\
The Food and D r u g
Administration says t h a t
thousands of nonprescription
aerosol asthm a sprays are
being pulled off the market (
because they may squirt too
much medicine into a patient's
throat.
The brands involved were
identified ·as Asthma Nefrin
and Vaponefrin. The FDA said
Wednesday that anyone who
rn8.y have bought such a
product should stop using it
and see his druggist for
something , comparable.
' mE FDA said the usv
Pharmaceut.i,cal ' Corp, ,0 {
Tuckahoe, .N. y ... is mak''ing
the 'recall because ~ests by
both the FDA ,and the firms
show the sprays may deliver
several times the" a c t t v e
ingredient -ephin~phrine -
needed to cure an attack of
asthma.
It said no deaths or injuries
have been linked to ttie
products but "FDA considers
use oJ these defective~aerosals
a potentiallY serious health
hazard."
KIDS LIKE TO
ASK ANDY
THE AGENCIES could not
estimate boW many canisters
of the two products are on
store shelves or in home
medicine cabinets. Vaponefrin
is sold by either U S V
Pharmaceuticals or by Fisons
Corp. of Bedford, Mass ., the
FDA said, while Asthma
Nefrin is sold by Mitchum-
Thayer, Inc. of Tuckahoe.
•
I · v
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69.c,
Complete
Pro Draft ·
Selections ·
•
---~ .
.... ....uiy1 J•nuary 31, 1974
Miami Drafts Former FV Sta.r NFL Eyes
...
.~· fliMtdal lo Ille Dally Pllol
~ '•KNOX,VR.LE, Tenn. .:... Former
Foon~ Valley High and ~· Coast • • C9iJOie football standout Gary Valbuena
~119d turpriae, happiness a n d Cltfidenoe after learning he was pick~
In the 10th rOund by the world"clwnpion
Mlaml Dolphins In Wednesday's National
Football League draft.
Vllbuena, woo just <0mpleted his
second seuon at the University of.
Tennessee as a backup quart<rback, felt
he would go eailler In the draft. ..
"Cincinnati talked with me and said
Jt planned lo dralt me around the llixlh
rwnd. if I wa1 still available. Atlanta,
San Diego and Oakland also ...,.
lnleresled In me," Valbuena told the
Daily Pilot.
"So, I'm surprised w see Miami picked
me, bot I'm r..Uy happy they did .
•Miami bas a great team."
Valliuena had earlier been Ollllacted
by the Soothem Callfomla eotry In the
new WoHd Football League.
"l talked w Tom Fears (-~h)
!
Team Disgrun'tl,ed ..
Wilt · Called Flop
By Q's Players
SAN DIEGO (AP) W I I t
Olamberlain. pro basketball's all-time
leading scorer and rebo'under, ls a flop
as a coach, say two men 'Who have
played· for .him this seeson. on the San
Diego Conquistadors.
''He treats you more like a boy than
a man," says Gene Moore, a veteran
center who was released by,· the
Ariierican Basketball Association club
two weeks ago.
'*We have a lot. of talent on this team but we have no goals," says a
Nastase Eases ·
•
.To Triumph;
Graebner Wins
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) -Top-seeded
Ille Nastase of Romania e a s i I y
eliminated Pat DuPre, 6-0, 6 • I ,
Wedneaday night In the lirsl round of
the 15(),000 World Olampionship leMi.s
tournament.
~hil Dent of Australia blew one set
but managed to come back and beat
Pierre Barthes of France 7·5, U , 6-2.
Bay Ruffeis brolie slxth-aeeded John
AJaander in two ..U: 6-3; H . Pattlsoil
.detat.d Jim Mc~tanus or Berkeley, &-2,
6-2. In -.,,. late matdl, Cliff Drysdale
~I Soolh,Alrica edged by Busler Mottram
of England, H , H , 6-3.
e A•ritr•J TrlHmphs
BALTIMORE -Veleran Clark
G~ ol New York City hasn't been
on the tournament trail much lately,
and U showed when the !ale enlry In
the $?A>,OOO Baltimore lnlematiooal
Indoor tennis cbampiooshlj>$ advanced
to•the qaarterfllllls.
~. w11o joined the field after
top...edod .Tunmy Connon wilbdrew
because, ot· Ulness, outluted 17-year-old
Belux Prejoux of Chile Wednesday at
'i'o\V900 State< College, winning 6-t, ~.
6-3.
Jn otller second-round matches, second-
seeded Vijay Amrittaj ·of India defealed
Jaime Pinto-Bravo of Oille 6-1, Q-6, 7-S :
Je!f Austin of the United States ousted
Ian Crooi<e'1den ol New 7.ealand H ,
&-1. and American Sandy ~fayer
elelmlnated. John Feaver of England,
6-7, 6-1, 1-4.
e Co:it Ellmln.Ud
DAYl'ON, Ohio. -Dick Crealy of
A~ia eltmineied third-seeded Mark
Cox of Great Britain 6-1, M Wednesday
in the first -round of the Dayton Pro
Tennis Classic.
In other' rnatd»es, Dick Stockton ousted
Ross Case of Auslraila, 7-6, 6-3, and
Raul Ramirez of MeJ.ioo was an easy
6-3,, ~l victor over Geoff Masters of
Australja.
~· Jaime. Filiol ol Chile
defelflld· Barry MacKay, lh'I, H .
team member who asked not to be
Identified. "We jull go cut there and
nm." He Said at Jeaat half the team,
lncluillng himseU, want lo be traded.
The UooH Qlamberialn WU paid
a reported !'00,000 by San Diego owner
Leonard Bloom last fall to jump lhe
Loe Angeles Lakers of the National
Bliskelbaii Association and sign as
player-coach of lhe Q's. But a coUrt
order bas barred him from playing this
season.
San Dlego has been last in the ABA
West most of the season. The team
is expected to move to Lo! Angeles
next season .
Chamberlain was atleOO.ing the ABA-
AJl-Star game In Virginia Wednesday
night and couldn't be reached for
comment.
"At first he was trying to coach,"
Moore said in an interview. "But as
soon u he found out he wasn't going
to play, he stopped coming to a lot
of practices. One time be missed three
straight. ·
"He rum it more as a ptm.lsbment
than a practice anyway. The majority
of the team hates to see him come
through the door. We wouldn 't really
'o\'Ork on anything. We had no offense.
He hasn't taught me anything. But when
we lost he would complain, like you
did it to hurt him.
"After losing a ballgame the 17UYS
were afraid of doing anything · like
smlle, because he'd accuse you of not
tattng thegame seriously. And you
couldn't tell if we won or lost because
his attitude was so negative.
"He's such a great player and he
could be a great coach. He talked at
the start about bow so many ooaches
treated players the wrong way. But
this is about the worst way he could
do it." _J'
The seCond player said Chamberrain
showed little respect for his players.
"He does treat you like boys, and
when you try to stand up to him YoU
get in trouble ," be said. "I looked for
a lot more from Wilt He knows that
we're a young team and that we 're
goi~ lo make mistakes. But he hasn't
realized that or he doesn't want to." •
He also criticized th~ release of Moore,
"'ho started .. for San Diego last season
but was a reserve this year.
"It was senseless to snuff out
somebody's career," the player said.
"We don't have. a backup center now,
and Geno <0uld do the jo~."
Moore said Chamberlain approached
·htm after 8 loss in Virginia, accused
him of being overweighl, and said he
was being placed on waiven.
"I played at this weight or a little
bit over all of last year," s8.id the
6-fool-9 ~er. "He had never said
anything before, and It seemed like
he was grasping at straws, ming me
as a scapegoat. We just didn't hit It
off.
"l lbought it would hurt, but actually
it was a relief for me. I had intended
on making this my last year anyway,
and now I can ~ave aome peace of
mind."
' R~~·.Bo"lster Attnck; -..
Draft Two lr.ish. Stars
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Los
Angeles RaJ\11' polenl running -carried them Into the National Football
Leeg\le ptaYoff• ~ ~ but that
· didn't stop them from picking nmners
first In botll clays ol the pro football
11ran. ' llelsm•I' '"l'l'opll)' · winner J o h n
Oappelietti ol Pam State .,. the Rams'
first ...... -Tueaday and -the oeiedlJt( ..ane11 w-i.1. tl\e llrit
player -by Loe Angeles WU
another runner, John Harvey, tabbed
In the ...enth round.
Harvey gained 1,1114 yudl in 111
canie1 for the Montrul -ID his flni _, ID the ~an Foolholl
League last year. Thi Hoot·2, la;.pound runner wmt to re-ArllJll!OO.
Two piayen from national champion
Notre Dllllo ....... pldred.
Bob 'l'lllllllla, a AllCCANIY!e klcbr
-Rell .,..i lloal Alollall"' ill Ibo
Sugar a..t, -ap Ibo lllh ....
and the llnlil Ram dlOloo ol the drall
WU -_..... 'llllJlt 'fo--' in
the 171b ....i.
UCLA lhol'palter llopr-Flefbtq, w11o
~ .
played football In hlch school but DOI
college, was taken In lhe 12lh round
by the Rants, WOO"laY. lhey 'Want to
try the H, 210-pounder IS an offensive
lineman -ol hla llttqth. Reserve wide receiver Joe Sweet was
dealt lo the Washingtoo Redsldna for
a nlnlh round draft piclc used to take
Don Hutt ol Boiae Stale, a wide receiver
wbo made both the ll1lall <Ollege AJl..
American and all·Blg Sky teams.
Another ninth round choice waa Derrlclt
Wi!Hama, a rt<Ord...Uinfl runnbig beclc
at UCRlverside wlto tltlnb hla best
chan<e w make the pros Is u a defensive
back.
Offensive tackle Rick Hayes of
Wuhington, wllo ·played In the Hula -1. wa iaken In the 11th round and
-on-i .. lackle, Pele Solvenon ol Drake, WU piclced In lhe !lib.
Tbe Rams tool< wfdo recet ... Ananiaa canon o1 LaJtC110!t in the 14th round
and pomtor Dive Ottmar of Stanford
In the 111111. •
•
and Curly Morrison (general manager)
early In January and they offered me
a <Ontlact. But 1 told them I -ltd
w wait tii t1>e NFC draft. !'ii have
to wait to see what both teams have
to ofter before J make a decision."
Vaibuena, a 6-3 11, 2t~ drop-back
passer, fits lbe mold of the pro-type
quarterback. He's tall, strong and has
a riflearm.
~ was the No. i signal-caller at
Temesaee for two years behind Conridge
Jlolloway, a H sprint-out type.
"Everyone clo$e to me knoW'S lhat
l wao dissatisfied that l didn't play
u much here, but l feel I'll-definitely
get a chance with the pros."
U Vaibuena does sign with Miami,
he is reaUstlc enotigh lo believe that
he won't step Into the No. I spot right
away -especially with A 11 -pro
quarterbac,k Bob Griese running the
show.
But Griese's backup. 40-year'<>ld Earl
f\forrall, Is contemplating retirement -
which. couJd prove to be advantageous
for Vaibucna.
UPIT.._... . .
JOHN LUCAS, NC STATE'S DAVID THOMPSON (44) BATTLE.
Sports in ·Brief
Thompson's Nifty Play
. I •
Whips Maryland, 86-80
CO!LEGE; PARK, Md. -David
Thom~ scored 31 of· hi.s 39 Points
In the·seconil half. rallying second-ranked
North Cifollna Stale to an -come-back. victory over sixth-ranked Maryland
Wedn~y night.
The Wolfpack, which has won 12
straight, trailed 67-59 with 9 : 0-3
remaining, before Thompson turned on
the heat during an incredible 41A-minute
span. •
The State senior pumped in IO points
as the Wolfpack outscored the Terps
17-4. and went ahead 76-71 with 4:35
left.
e Ea:·COfleh Dies
EDMONDS, Wash. -Wiibur "Mac"
Duckworth, 45, fonner University or
w~ basketball coach, died o1
a. hear\ atta~k while jogging Wednesday.
He coadted at Washington for five years
In the !NOS before resigning w go fnw
bois-
•w0..111 M•rk •
qli\ISl'CHURCH, New Zealand ~
Wendy Cook of Canada . set a woril:l
recotd · ol 1 :04.78 for the ,women's lllO
meters backstroke. In the lirsl leg of
the ~meter medley relay swimD)ing
fine! at the Olmmonwealtb Games
today.
It w.as first world record of any .kind
set durillg the games . The old mark
was 1 :M.99, held by Ulle Richter of Ea;. Gefmeny. .
Mi,s Cook, •a p-year-old blah school
student from Vancouver . B.C., swam
the ·opening leg In the relay and ..,,1
her learn on the way to the gold medal
In an overall time of 4:24.77.
•'.RV•tt to BHCS
Pl'M'SBUllGH -Tiie Plilsburgh
Pirates today announced that shortstop
Jackie llemandez bu been traded to
1he Plliladelphla Phillies for reserve
catcher Mil<• Ryan.
Ryan, 32, played for the Phliiies for
slx years after spending three seasons
wllh the llo!lton Red Sox. He appeared
in :II games last season and balled
.m with one home ru.n and five runs
halted in.
eRtlSslatu Win
ZAGUB, Yugoslavia -lrtna Rodnlna.
24, ond Aleksander Zaycev. 22, ol lhet
Soviet ~ _, the pairs champiomhlp
Wednesday night at .the European Figure
Skating championships.
The Russian . duo, also the world
cbampiom, · oollecled a total of 142.69
points and 9.00 ordinals out of two
.·events, the short compulsory program
Tuesday' and the free skating Wedoesday
night.
The silver medal went to the East
German pair of Romy Kenner and Roll
Oestreich. Th e earned 137 .67 points and
'rT ordinals. The bronze was captured
··by the Soviet pair of Ludrnlla Smimova
end Alek.sei Ulanov, wlth 137.35 points
and 30 ordinals.
elnflation
. BLOOMINGTON; 'Minn. -Mlnnesola
Vikings ticket prices will be increased
by $1.50 next seasonj the National
Football League .team announced
Wednesday .
All bu~ a rew hundred tickets, aold
for f1 last season. 'Ibey will> be raised
to $8.50 land the south end-zone bleacher
seats will be increased from $S to $6.SO.
·e Cager Back
CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. -Austin Peay
forward James "Fly" W 1111 am s ,
suspended lndelinileiy Monday nlg)it, has
been reinstated on a day·to-day basis
by coach Lake Kelly. 1 1
Willlaim, who Is averaging 27.9 poinls
a game, was suspended after arguing
with Kelly over strategy during Austin
Peay's game Mooday night against
Weslem Kentucky.
"Fly and I talked Tuesda.r,:ternooo,
and l think we got tblngs
understood," KeUy said Wedneaday.
"l di8CUSlled the situation with several
toam members and they were in
unanlmou& agreement that whatever I
decided· would be the rigllt thing. 11tey
all wani.d him to come back il that
'WM the dtcl.sion."
• A•ron LaHded
ATLANTA (AP) -U . Gov. Lester
M11ddox, an avowed segregationlst, has
told Georgia legislators that a portrait
of AUanta Braves bueball superstar
Hal)k Aanin should hang in the Capitol
poftnit gallery.
Johnson,
McAlister
By 'lbe Associated Press
11te Oakland Raiders and the San
Francisco 49el'9" have declared war oa
the upstart World Football League by
drarting two of its star college recrultJ
from UCLA .
The Raiders chose running back Jamfs
?wlcAlister in lhe sixth round of tPre
National Football League college draft
Wednesday and the 49ers selected ·
McAllster's teammate, Kermit Johnson,
in the seventh round.
Both bac~. who have played together
since high school, already have signed
contracts with the WFL's Southern
California franchi.se.
"Of course we knew McAli ster was
signed," said Raiden coach John
Madden. "But we have respect for hi s
ability. He's a fine fWlnlng -back."
Or as 49ers President Lou Spadia
put it: "Every contract has a beginning
and an end."
Spadia's comment could ~uggest a new
round ol salary battles between the .
NFL and the WFL, similar to the war
between the NFL and old America n
fo~ootball League until eight years ago.
But the two playen could wind up
in NFL unifonns in two other ways.
If the WFL fokls, or Johnson and
~tcAlister grow disenchanted and play
out their options in favor of the NFL,
the Raiders and 49ers wouJd have first
crack at signing them to new contracts.
17-year-old
Johnson Newest
UCLA Whiz
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Marque$
Johnson, only a ,freshman., is the hottest
shooter on the top-ranked U C L ~
buketball team, and he asserts, "If
I can set the world on fire now, wh;-
not?" ;
Johnson, who won't be 18 until Feb.
8, said "I know I }\ave 1bree mor~
years but I'm living foi today, play in Ji
for today. Who itno,n about the' future? '
The 6-loot-4, 2111>C>und ·~ last
Saturday night ·became-'lhe 'Ii "'.t
freshman to start 'a varsilyj.IwketbaD
came at UCLA in more thall ie years.
"I dkln't really expect to start," tie
said. "I !bought I was capable of playing
but I was not looking forward to it."
He was Los: Angeles' player of the
yea r at Crenshaw High School, and was
widely sought by colleges.
"[. chose UCLA because of the
basketball program," he said. "I wanted
. to play for coach Wooden on a
championship team, and I felt if I donlt
make It in basketbaU, I'd have a good
education to fall back on." .
Johnson, an undeclared major leaning
toward political science as a field of
study, added that .10111e other schools'
recruiting tactics helped make up his
mind.
"They said I wouldn't play at UCLA
until I was a junior, or that I may
get to play some as a sophomore. Nt
just made me want to go to UCLA
and prove I couJd do it."
Johnoon ·said be enjoyed •tarting but.
his goal as a freshman was to be ,
among UCLA's ~rst eight players, lhe I
number Woeden 11111aiiy piaya.
He said be wouldn't have blamed
Woeden if be had been beocbed for
lhe se<0nd half Salurday night.
"I felt that my role as a starter
was to contribute something to the
team," said Johnson, who played the
right wing as Dave Meyers moved over
to Pete Tr&Qvich's spot at left wing.
"Although l played prelty good defense
I was not doing what I was supposed
to l>e doing -S<Oring and rebounding.
Everyone else was doing so well that
Jt u•as not that noticeable, but I felt
in myseU disappointment. ..
Wooden, who said he worried about
brlnging.Joi)naon along too last, wouldn1
say 'l\'hether' Marques would start
Salurday nlg)it agaimt USC at Pauley
Pavilion.
Kentucky Trio
Leads East Win
In All-star Tiff
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -The Kenlucliy
lrio, ol Dan lssei, Mis Gilmore and
Looi> Dampier got the East oll lo a
rousing start en route to 121-112 victory
over the West Wednesday in the seventh
annual Amepcan Basketball Auociation
All-Star game.
The lriumpb, before a record sellout
crowd ol 10,624 at the Norfolk ScoPe,
gave the East a 4-3 lead in lbe series.
Despile the Colonels threesome who
combined for 55 points, lhe game's hl&h
Scorer was rookie Swen Nater of San
,.\.ntonlo. The former UCLA center "ho
was caddie to two-time All·American
and college player of the year BUI
W•ilon finished with 29 points for lhe
Wtst.
lssel paced the East with ll point•
while the Moot·2 Gilmore, who wu
VOCed the game's Moet Vlluable "'-""•
ftnisbed wilh 18.
T' ...
\
•
~ DAILY PILOT
Vikings
In 73-55
Victory
l!y llOWARD I. HANDY
Of .. D9ltr' ..........
Byn>n Kooick and Bob
Losner <Ol?lbined 10 !<.'Ore 46
poinl.! In leading undefeated
Marina High 10 its 19th
straight basketball victory
V.'ednesday night over Western
lfigh. 73-55, In Sunset League
action oo the winner's court.
The victory leoves Marina
on top ol the loop •tandlni!•
with completion of the firat
round. Friday nliht t he
Vikings travel 10 Loara IO
open the stretch drive.
Kostek was hot early and
often, hitting from around the
: key on swishing jump !hot>
that seldom drew Iron. He
posted 18 of his 24-point IOtal
in the first hall IO give coach
Jim Stephens' Yikes a
oomfortable 3t-19 advantaft.
The senior guard hit bis
lint three shota lrc&lhe Door
and made -ol U lltlempls In the half u the Vikes sbol
at a 5S percent f!lure.
' Looner-lided up the pace
Jn the leCCilld half, IOOring
m outalde. then moving in
10 drop layups under the
basket.
: The tigllt Marina de!enae
lc>n:e<I Western to shoot from
outalde throutJ!>out the nlcht
-until reaerves took over m1d
way 1hrougb the final sllma.
The score Was close only
; in t.he early going when
Western enjoyed its only lead,
5-4. before Kevin Landgraf hit
a pair with Losner and Kosick
adding one each to make it
112·5. The outcome was never
'again ID doubt.
~""'cm .... " " L1rdgr1f .2 o 3 4
Fick sos• ~ 110122
• Ka.lctl 1:t 0 1· 24
Koelle!' s 1 1 11
•M...W soo•
Jtlfl 0010
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TtiarMtM S 2 I 12 And-•• ,.
~ 72116 ,..,. :1211
c.ri.. 2004
lttlllr I 1 0 J ~ 1 •• 2
Tot ... 2JttU _,,_
NMffl• 14 z 1' 20-n Wdlfft 7 12 1$ 11-6.S
Big Four
Iads HD
Triumph
By GLENN WRITE
Of .. Dlllr ,.,.., Stiff
The Big Four -Rocky
Clarelll, Scott Rankin, Doug
Rabe and Jim Weir -look
charge ro give Huntington
Beacb lllgh'• highly regarded
Olien a 17~ SWISet League
basketball triumph o v e r
Anaheim WedneJday night.
Thus the O!len remain off
the pace set by Marina and i take another stride toward
• THE GAME Il when they host
MariDa Feb. 8.,
Coach Emil Nee m e's
' ,
'. . .
JEFF JOLLEY 150) TRIES TO REACH ll!ITO A HORDE OF SANTA ANA VALLEY REBOUNDER$.
Tars Dealt
77-52 Loss
By Loara
By CRJAG SBEFF·
Of .. DaltY ...... Stltff
Loara High, utilized its
overall quickness to the fullest
advantage in destroy Ing
Newport Harboc, 7 7-5 2,
Wednesday night in Sunset
League basketball play in the
loser's gym.
The winning SalOOS wrapped,
it UJ> early, springing IO 10.
point lead near the end ol
the first half and steadily
increa.sing it as the game got
older.
Loara repeatedly drove the I
baseline for easy I a y i n s
against the slower Sailors.
And when the Saxons had to
fire from long range they
usually hit.
Meanwhile, tbe Tars found
a lid over the basket through
most of the icUon, frnishing
with only a 35 percent shooting
mark from the field (21 for
60).
Newport, trailing bY 10 at
the hall, cut the lead to 40-'12
early in the third period. But
Loara, behind the play of Rick
Sweeney and Ted O'Donnell ,
outscored the Tars, 19-2, IO
enjoy a 59-34 advantage with
6:26 left in the game.
Anaheim Colonists gave the FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S TIM HILL 154) GOES PAST PHIL BOLDEN.
I victorious bolts. tough i"-~~;.:.:..;.:.:..;.:.:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
for 3.11 quarter>, trailing 54-45
Sweeney finished with 29
points, hitting II ol 13 free
throws. B r I a n O'Flaherty
topped the sailors with 12
points, \\ith six of those
coming ln the final quarter
when the gmne was out of
dOubt.
and hanging · tou!lh on the f ~~1\~1e't~~~~yes Edison Wins, 61-58 ; Collegiate
! v~t 10.i:'/ 1 ~Y ' ~ Basketbali
='~~~c!i:°!! Los A l Raps .Eagles , as the latter 9COred fewer
t field goals (2) than be "" ~ auened personal fouls (3).
His IOtal ol lour points was f the lowest be's chalked UJ> t in CO straight games, sJll!lllllng
•· t"-o seasons. And he 'd gone I 21 games In sw:cessloo in
« double figures. 1 Valverde, meanwhile, potted i IC points -all In the last
hall.
Yet, his efforts were in vain
as the balanced Oilers slowly
a ss erted th emselves,
extending their fourth quarter
advantage until it reached 67·
49 with 47 seconds remaining.
Ciarelli was one of the
pillars In Huntington's efforts.
He hit II points, grabhed JO
rebotmds and his pin-point
passing "·as a thing of beauty
as he had eight assists.
Rankin. whose hmtle gave
the Oilers many second and
tl1lrd lhota, had a sterling
pee fo1 n1&11ce with 2' points
and IS rebo\lnds. Welt chipped
In six rebounds and also
puled well oo occasion.
And the always reliable
Rabe e:.:. ~ i:i11.
-A"'-" 9111'11llft IJ O I U
ft1Dt 401:12
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c
I I
F.d.ison High's Chargers rode
the hot shooting of Dave \\'hite
and Jay \Vilson in the fourt h
quarter as the Chargers swept
past host Magnolia. 61-58, in
Irvine League basket bjl II
action Wednesday night.
In other clrtuit play, ~
AlamJtos took the measure of
visiting Estancia, 56-45.
Coach Dave Mohs' Edison
quintet thus pulls to within
two games of Fountain Valley
ln the race for the title, aod
a game away· from second
place Santa Ana Valley.
Edison bad four players In
double figures, but in the end
It was the shOoUng of White
and Wilson that did the trick
after 6-5 Jack CJark had fouled
out in the third period.
U>s Al's triumph •Was a
similar Item in tenns of
soortng as the Griff ms had _--;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;,:; lour playen in twin figures.
l'tcklllm La .,.....,ll<J1 "! t~
.
!le.owt> 11:.:""
BIG -n-TALL
BIG SALE
NOW IN
PROGRESS I
117 I . l'M St,, c ... M ... ..,_ Slffttr a Thrlflr °""
....... C-. LI 1-JJtJ
...... Allltftc1,.-""'"" Clltrte
r
Con!'lfC!lM 71, H&tv Cntn 641
Penn $1. 61, SyrKUll »
Fon!Mm 65, l\rmy 55
Sf. Jowph'I 1S, LtS..li. 7:1
N. C1rolln1 St. 16. Marylencl Ill
s. C1rolln1 U, Nl•r• llO
~rg,e W1tl'llr-gt1111 f1, N1vy 61
X1Y"lt r·Hew O!'IHM •1, T!,111111 SJ
H. C1rolfn1 11, Wtkt For11t •1
Duk• 1t, 01vldlOl'I n
Old Doml~lon llO, E. Ctn1ll111 71
LOfl9 ltlll'l<I n, l lK..,llt 1•
Clemson 62, Clla<!e! st
W. Vlr11!nl1 fO, Vlr11lnl1 15
Toledo 16. l(fnf SI. 55
01yton t1, Clnclnn1tl 1'
lowHn; GrHn 7•, 01110 u . '6
Otlroll 6S, St. Fr111Cl1, Pa. M A.Jr Fore• 11, Rtdlor1ci. 5'
Arlrono t7, C1n1tn1ry M
Wllllller 10ll, Occlatnle1 n SI. M1ry'1 n, S1cr1m1nto St. 1T
Concordl1, Ort , t2, Al11k1 N
I
l.Mrtlnl
"""" s-v ' 11 .s :n l(ondr1ck 4 S 3 11
O'Donnell ' 4 3 I• P'rollllflll 5 1 , 11
Martin I I 1 0
l(l'\flcl k I I 1 1 Ml!mrll 0 2 1 .,
O..lo 101 2
SC"°9 1002
To11t• t7 n '' n ,...,... """" (It, """'' O•Flahet"I'!' 4 4 4 12
V1n0trA1 S 0 4 10 511Vmour 3 0 1 6
R'"Mr J:l2t
Spt,"(lltr I I S 2 Eccltl 2 O 3 4
81ekt r 2" 0 '3 4 Glb$0n I 0 0 2 Cal~c1rt 0 0 1 0 Dey 0702 Totals 21 10 1' 52 Scort .., Q91r1M'I
Lotr1 11 20 17 D-11
H1wporl Htrtlor 13 15 ' 11-$2
NOW OPEN
JIARBOR BASEBALL
BATTING RANGE
' TH E NATION'S MOST MODI RN
AUTOMATE D BATT!Na ltANal
HOUIS: -. tin l'rl. J P.M. 'Ill ' P.M.
I
WUDND1 ' A.M. 'Ill f P.M.
........ 646-39'6
380 W. Wiison, Coot• Mela fDhcttJ ......... ....., ••• ,, •• , c..e.•
Barons Suffer First
Irvine Defeat, 62-51
By ROGER CARLSON
ot Ille o.llV Plllf Ila"
Fountaln ·Valley II I g h's
Barons ran lnto a snag in
their quest for the Irvine
League basketball
dlampioosblp We d n e s d a y
night, .. the host Santa Ana
Valley Falcons took control
of the boardi and the game,
SUL
Jt "'as the first loss for
coech Dave Brown's Barons
ln clrcuJt play after seven
starts and it pares the
'Fouotaln Valley margin to one
game over the Falcons with
sWl seven games to go.
'The hosts dominoted the
-from ~ to finish and the Barons led only once 1n the game--24-22 with
2: 49 lelt in the sel'Olld period.
5ant. Ana Valley deserves
the credit-ii outacored the
Barons from the floor and
al the gratis line. But it also
must be pointed out that the
lack of officiating in the
extremely physical test was
to the wlnner's advantage.
Play at .times reiembled a
rugby match with pushing,
shoving and general mayhem
going llMOti~ bY olficialS
Ed Staub and John Hill.
1bey were con s istent,
• however, as the flnt free
throw made by either teem
was with 3:56 left. 1
'Ilte Falcon.s shot well from
outside the Barona >one,
hltUng 27 of 47 attempts from
the field for 57,4 percent.
Meanwhile, o n I y Dan
Malane, the nifty Si D l 0 r
SO\lthpaw with A 11-C I F
credenUals, couJd tolve the
Falcons man to-man pressure,
scoring 22 with II field goals.
The rest of the Barons were
Icy however, as evidenced by
a 39.4 percentage from the
field (:M ol 116).
Sager's Hot Shooting
Paces Mesan s, 55-46
The Falcon! lead was cut
to 36-34 with 3:5S left in the
third period on Tim Hill's
basket, but that wu the last
time the Barons serk>usly
threatened the 5anta Ana
Valley le"ad.
'n>e final blow came with
5:10 to eo after Brown's crew
had pulled to within loor
pointa al 46-12.
By RANI WESCH
Of .. Deltr ...... , ....
Forwan! Andy Sager ocored
the key basketa u Coata Mesa
High mounted tbe larger
•treaka and felled Corona del
Mar, 55-46, in an Irvine
Lague basketball g a m e
Tuesday nl!Olt on the winner's
court.
Baskets came In bunches
as the two close rivals met
be!""' appi'0%1mately 550 fans.
O>sta Mesa's Mustangs strung
together 11).polnl streaks in
the l1nt and thin! quartors,
and even though Corona del
Mar tallied 14 straight points
in a span which covered the
late
qua
second and early third
rters, it never caught up.
And
doing
that was roostly Sager's
"' • result ol the 14-point . O>rona clel Mar bad ~ I 16-point deficit to
'l1 with S:IO left ro play In • tile lhird quartel'.
a free throw padded Alltt
the Oos1a Mesa lead, Saget' -ed a missed charity -and 90lftd to up the ad-
e to five. Eleven sec-~ er Sager swished an
oater rrom the baseline to 111-1
liar! ......
hopes
a 11>po1n1 outbum and Corona del ~1ar's last
ger, a 6-1 eenior, wa1 a
for the Sea Klll(5 o11
enlng, blttln& 10 baskel.! and , · · wiUi a carter-high
polnts.
comia del Mar, playing
Sa
plag\IO
ev
llnilbing
22
without starting center Joe
Korzmata who sat out with
an illne9s, had trouble getting smts agalmt Ooota Mesa's
asgresslve mon-fl>man de-
fense In the early going.
Ell_.. -.. .., ... ,_
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Qulltlil
Tol1l1
c1mca
C11n1mlnt ·-H1rtlt
Sw1ln
Tottls
CtnM ffl Mlltr ( .. I " " ,, "' 3 , • •
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CCI'!• Mtw
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1• 11 lS 1)-.S.S
Sii THI "NIW 1974 DATSUNS
COST A MUI. DATSUN
1141 NAUOI ILYD. C.M.
540-6410
'
'
Mike O'RoW'ke intercepted
and wen~ in for a layup, then
moments liter fed the ball
to teammate R.B. JamilOn for
811)'UP to mab it 50-41
&.-....... .., ,,,,
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Hlrmll'I ' • 0 12 Wllttw1' I f II I C-moN 0 • 1 0 Tot111· 2' 4 11 '2 ......... Yllll'I' 1$1)
°""'' 1 ~ "! ~ L.Dltltlelft 4 I 1 I T'*" 3101 Mall!W • 11 Cl , It
Jtrry Jollty 0 ' 0 2 Jtff Jollt'I' • ,, 1 •
Hiii 2044
Totll• ~ 14 2 12 ii
. keN • ., °"'"'" Sin!• AM Valley U 11 14 11-42 fCllilllllln Vt lllY 10 1• 10 15--ll -
SIR WALTERS
Elly to ttllt ur1 of Wltll H' W.r
Wtl 11111 l1M In pltct Mhlr•llr.
2052 IMwport Blvd.
a.i. .... • s.9'11
-
DON'T DISCARD THOSE
OLD TENNIS SHOES I I _...,._._ ............... -._.._.
ANTllONT'S IHOI HllYICI
•WISTC\IJf PLUA •LIDO •fAJNIOH lllAND -CD l llA DIL MAI
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THl CARBURETOR SHOP
1 .. 1 --.._ .. ~ CIH1t....,, -All--·····--....... --
SAVE\ENERGY
~0BOATING
There has been a lot of misinforma tion and confus ion
regarding the use of fuel for recreational boating during the
current "energy crunch." Before you rush out ond put your
boat on blocks, take just a few minutes to separate these
FACTS from FICTION. ·
FACT!
FACT!
FACT!
FACT!
, FAcn
r
Although boating is America's number one family
reaeation sport, all of lhe pleasure boats in lhe U.S.
consume only 1(2 of I per cent of the fue l used
nationally. At the same time, recreational boating Is a
clean, heahhfu~ family activity enjoyed by 40 million
middle Income Americans.
Recreational boating is a $4 billion industry directly
employing 500,000 persons, plus providing Important
support for thousands of other firms. No responsible
government could conceivably think of seriOusly
damaging an industry that has such a profound
impact on our nation's economy and people.
By far, the overwhelming percentage of recreation
boats in the U.S. are small (average 16 feet) with low
horsepower engines (40 per cenl under 20 horse-
power)-NOT the large luxury yachts feaiured
In flctton
When you spend tlie day boating wit h yourlamlly,
you probably are using LESS energy than ~ you
stayed at home. You're saving energy because you're
not running several lVs or hi·fi's. The air conditioning
or heat can be turned off. You're not burning lights.
Your wife Is not using the range, hair dryer, VllC\llllll
cleaner; or other energy consuming appliances.
You're also not burning up fuel In your car ~ng,
visiting friends-or fuming in a~ inlfto jam.
Boating Is a clote-at·hqme ll!)cx1 for Southern
Cahfomlanl. You are just a short fuel-<111!'-drive to
many exoellent Wiiier recreation mas. ·
Boating Is Important to mllBons of Americans. And to
Amertca. It Is a healthy way (or you and your lamIIY
to get away from It all-and get togcilhet On IOI> bf
all this, boating can actually help you SAVE ~ERGY.
Think about IL '
T '
I
. I
1
Westminster .Bags
64.-5'1 Cage Victory
TOllJ E"iedal, Ed Jirgcs
and Dave Walsh combined to
.Joil Santa Ana's upset plans
and lead Westminster to a
64-57 victory in Sunset League
buketball play , on t h e .
wiMer'1 c o u r t \Vednetday
night. .l ·
, Employing a four·man zone,
with one man assigned to
cover Walsh, Santa An a
surged to an early lep.d. J!ut
,Eniedal and Jlrgcs, !ell r ....
with the extra attention given
-Walall, paured In 211 .points
' bctween·~em and coach Doug
Stockham's Lions pulled away.
Wffl'"4Mfer i'4)
W1IM1
~••k•• WllllOll Accom11'1do
En!ilfd1I
Jl1'9ll Tollll
Hiit Galwt
GodlY '"' '''" SIPNard Totals
... II 111 II I I j 17
' 2 l ' 4 0 S I 1 3 , I 1 .'I 1 l 17
1 0 I It ,.,,,,,
s11111 ,t,111 U1J
.,~·:r; .; : I 1~
' s 2 17 2 1 l s
' 2 ' ' 10 t2 ll 1! 151
,,.,, 11y Q11art•rs
wn1m111111r l? 10 11 1s-..t S.nta Ana 11 IJ lt lJ-11
Rustlers
Fall, 90-61
SANTA MONICA -·Golden • \Vest College's T~ras Yolll}g
scor'ed 31 points. but the
Rustlers were manhandled by
Snnl!l A1onica, 90-61, in a
Southern Cali f orn ia
Con!erence ~sketball game
\Vednesday nlghtl-here.
' o.!Mn W11I ('11
ftHpflp
YOl#lfl IS I 1 31 Slo~r" l 3 I 9
S111dtr5 1 J ' 7 flM1 1 1 2 t
POl)O¥ 0 2 0 1
H1tll1ld 1 0 I •
And...WI 0 1 I 1
Ax1l1Ct1 0070
Tllon'IPIOll I 0 0 1
TolllS 2• 13" I• 61
H1tfllme: S1nl1 Monlc:I, 44..:11
I
Thursday, Janu;uy 3\, 1q74
' Gau.c hos in ·First Swimf est
Saddlcback College su'im
coach Flip Darr is one guy
.,.,.ho doesn't believe in
discriminating egalnst ,,·01ncn.
l:lis current swim roster lists
four men and !Our \vomcn 011
it as the Gauchos pi:epare. for
their first eVer :awlm meet
Friday (3:30) a\ Easl LA
College.
"We think ·Vt'e are JOing to
get a lot of inatvldual satis--
fnc'Uon from this.team," says
Darr, "'ho fonnerly coached at
Rancho Alamitos High.
Heading the ' list of the
four male swimmers i s
rreshmAn Scott Campbell from Laura I.Jove lOps the JiSl SMllli.N<k Swlrn l'llfd~I• ~1ission Vieio· , a breaststroker or four freshmen s.,.,•im1ners. Frt, F•o. 1-.11 e1i 1 LA, J:)O , ...... 1\lff., Fee. ,,_,, Mi"lon Cot1Nrtnc1 and individual , med I e y She'll compete in the dlslance Rtl•'ft tPalomari. ·
specialist v.·ho 'vas the top events, the indi vidual 1uedlcy Fri .• s11., F•P. u.1.._,, uc s11111
I I nd h bu II 11r1M~ 111vi1111ooe1. Saddlcback water poop ayer a 1 e tter Y· Tu~u .• Fto. 1,_1 Al~•r$ldt' •
last · season. . Others Include Kathy De ily, Frf .. Fib. 21-San Btrnt rdlna'.
Frl .. M1rch 1_.1 SOUth ... ·ntltft,.. Other men swim m e r:s a transfer from the Pasadena Wed .. M1reh .._,, so~thern c11 ll•-
include sophon10re . Ear I :e area and l\11sslon Viejo High l•vs !P1QC!tnt).
du ~ R . h nd Fri., Mal"th a-Gronmonr•. Wellsfry and fres~men Dave gra ates ,ory e1c art a Fri .. M•!'l:h 1.s..-ctw1fe.,..
Gibney and Jerey Silver. · Klm. Philpott. Fri., Marth n-1 P•tomar". Fri .. March tt-al _Cltru•• Wells[ry is best in the l\1iss Deily is a treestyler F•l .. sa1., AP..11 s-._, Mlu1"" Con· ttr•fl(.a mfft, IP•lom.1rl middle distances and freestyle and butterflier, l\1iss Reichart 1m.r1 . .s11 .. Aprt1 15.21-1 so111htrn
• • Cal nwtt (South·..,.s11r11). events, Gibney, from Servile, specializes in lhe indi vidual Th11r1..-5e1 .. Mey 2--.1 s1111 m1er
specia lizes in the freeS tylc, n1cdley and backstroke and 1e1s1 LAl. 'dtnoltt Mf\,lan COt1ltrt11c1 mee l. sprints and breast.stroke. l\li!s Philpott s "' i m s th e Au d1111 mHl1 bf9ln ,, 2 p.m., ~ ...
Silver (FooUilll) is aliO a breaststroke and indi\·idual 1n;11 ~,::,':".~a~~Qllfl'll• llecr~-
DAILY PILOT 2
RCC Belts
Saddleback
RI VERSIDE -~1 i 11 i On
Conference leader Riverside
City College ran its circuit
record to !}-0 1vith a 11 1·79
basketball victory o v e r
Saddleback College, her e .
\\'cdncsday night.
c:uard Rick Bauer sparkled
for the losi ng Gauchos , hitting
16 points.
S•4lfltlllc• (nJ ,, " ~ " .. ~ • • ' " R \llSO ' • ' • i.u uey , • , • No..m1~lt • , • " "'" ' • , " Holl!'Wn • ' ' ' ~·•re • ' ' " T 1lltt , • , ' 111ta'' " ' " " H1tfUinc: A:lvt r1lda, 631 sprinter and bre.ast4roker. medley. 1t1an center poo1
iiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
COAST GENERAL TIR 'E FEBRUAR.Y SPECIAL!
' '
SinA71-•
tsibeleu
whiteWllft,
pt us $1 .83 Fed. EL Tu
FEBRUARY TIRE
RADIAL TIRES.
FOR IMPORTS
.Resppi,sive Radlal Ply Con:
stru ction • Aggressive.
European Tread Design
SIZE
SI• 14SSR·13 tubeless bla<:kwal.
ptus $1.41 Fed. Ex. Tax per tire.
IEGULAI LOW 4 fOI FED. EX. TAX
4 FOi PllCI SALE PRICE PEI TIRE
•Wide 7-rib tread design to deliver start/stop traction • Wra~around
shoulder for steering control • 4-Ply .polyes1er cord body for smooth
ride and durability ,
15551·12
145Sl·ll
15551·11
16551·11
'15551·14
lilSH-14
17SSR014 ·
155.51·15
1655t,.15
111sa.1s
-4 lor $105.10
t for $105.10
4 for $109.10
4 for $1 ll.10 •
4 for $113.10
4 fo r S 125.10
4 for $1]).10
4 for $117.10
4•for $1 25.10
4 for, $141.10
.4 ,for S 95..00 .
4 for S fS.00
4 ,., ' ''·" 4 ..... $103.00 ' 4 for 51 OJ.DO
$1.49
$1.41
. $1.61
.. $1.14
• $ t.69
$1.91
$2.C5 s 1.91
$2.00
$2.41
I REPLl.\CES I REG. LOW
SIZE PAIR PRICE
A78-1 l 6.00-1 l ~; fo'r $51.90
878-I l 6.50-1 l 2 for $.53.90
E78-1 4 .7.00/7.35-1 4 2 for $57.90
F78-14 7.50/7.7,5-14 2 for $59.90
G78-14 8.00/8.25-14
G78-15 7.10/8.25-15 2 for $65.90
H78-14 8.50/8.55-14
H78-l 5 ' 7.60/8.55-15 2 for $71.90
J78-15* 8.00/8.85-15 2 for $75.90
L78 -i 5• 9: 15-15 2 fo r $79 .90
I SALE
PAIR PRICE
2 ,., $39.90
2 for $41.90
2 for $45.90
2 for 47.90'
2 for $51 .90
2 for $57.90
2 for $61.90
2 for $63.90
Charge•,
~--At General Tlfll
FED. EX. TAX
PER TIRE
$1.8l
$1.81
·s 2.22
S2.37
$2.53
$2.60
$2.75
S2.80
$3.01
$3.1 3
4 ·PLY NYLON CORD
UNIROYAL .
800
855x14, 885x14
'•Aval .. bla In Whitt well only Btackw•11s S2 LIU Ptr Tire
ltAtN C"ICK1 $11oulcl l)IJr suPSllv of 30me slits or HMS run short dudl"9 lhl1 ,....,.,, ,,. will hOnO• any orde,.. pl•ced l'IOW for fl1lur1
dtllvet'y 11 Ille •dverllHd prlct. • Plus $2.18 Peel. Ex. T 1x
. '
Complete
Brake '
7HB WEEK ONLY. ..
ul
•
1. Install NEW hHvy duty lin-
ing on 111 4 whHl1I
2. Rebuild the cylinders on 111
whHISI
3. Bleed br1kes-. instill hff.
vy duty brake fluid
4. Inspect brake rllvrn springs
5. Turn ind true 111 4 bralc1
drums. \
6. Repack front •hHI bear-
ings. •
7, Adi ust brak11 and check
em•r,.ncy linkage.
I. Roecl tet t your 1utomobil1
Reg.
$70.10
ExlN Charge"" dloc
brakes, larger carw, and
• additional parto II -
I STANDARD'& COMPACT AMERICAN CARS
Delco
20% OFF
SALE!
This week only, you
uve 200/a OFF our
Reg. Low Price on
' '
any Delco Battery in
stock. Includes FREE
I INSTAL~Al'.19N._Ex·
change B1ttery
Requirtcl.
FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT
Wt correct C1ster, Camber,
Toe-in, Toe-out to your car
' ' syianufacturer's specific1tions
, , , Sf ltly check ind 1djuet
' jour stHrlng! •
$ 50
U.S. Ctm,.d Cir•
l11tta Srrv+ct Cll•rt• f9r C•,..
Wlffl Al' CMlllltnlllt •r T1r11tn .., ..
SNOW TIRES-WE HAVE !EM!
. lit 1ust the sizes to · flt yolll' .Wheels
• FOR SAFE SNOW DRIYING-
WE 'HAYE CHAINS FOR MOST TIRE SIZES
• DON· SWEDLUND'S
•
COAST ENERAL
S&S WIST lfTl:I ITv COITA MUA -DAILY 7:30 TO 6:00-646 5033 540-5710 • ., -
( ( ,
• •'
-
4 for 5111.00
4 fw .s121 .oo
4 for $106.00
4 '°' $113.00 •4' for S 121.00
' '
• Steel Bellad
Protection Agalnlt
Punctures
• Radial PIY.
Construction ·
for Responsive .
Handling
• Calibrated8
For A Smooth
Ride.
GUARANTEED 40,000 MILES
ou, DuaJ..Steel Radial will giue you 40,000 miles of tread-
wear In normal p.Uenge' usage· on your car. 11 It doelrl't,
bring your Guarantee Certificate to an authorized o.ntral
Tire ietailer. We'll give you replacement tire credit or
cash refund at our option equal to the perc9nt ol mileage
not received, based on y01Jr purchase price if avallable,
or th• current selling price, Whk:hewr le to your ad-
vantage. Excluded are repairable' punctum: ti,.. u.d
on trucks, commercial, or racing vetik:ln; tlrw •idlf'C"
ing Improper care or vehicle malnt.enance; and tlfM
branded "blem."
'VMOnaMMM'PPM!PDPP'''B'
MOVE UP TQ. THE RADIAL AGI T!)DAY
•
l
• '
' \
l
..
(
Area Prep
Basketball
Results
Jalor V111lly
··-(If) (at) MttiM!'-....... broll<ll Ctt) " 1111 ICPll'ltllltr
1-icn 12> F Ill 1111i...dlct GWl'lti 0 01 C U1J l<•rl
l"orttrntld (II G (fl l<lndr.ct
Zlrtltl 01> G 01 Ca11t-
Scorl1'11 IUbl: l!:dl-Wll-..
M1!1tlll'\f: Edlton, 2'·17. C.,_ ... ,.._, c•I Ctll c .. 1, MtM
Mllf'PllY (7) F llll IYffl
Nflbb (2) F (10) ~"
"••l•I (10) C (2) St>lllll
C"-"! 121 G (') Rlc/\l'rdt.on
Cutttr f9) G {10) Mllltr
SCOl'lllO IUbl-CNla ~Si r Hatrlt.on
l , JOl~ht.on I, WOfl9 2. Cor°"t chi
Mar .coring aubl: Wtbb 7, Main 1, Ch1ptl 2.
H1tfTI ...... t.eor1: COiia M-tt-lD.
IM ~ {Ill 1411 Ulllventty
H11111 (ISi I' Ill K•l'lllM
IUl'IOfr 171 F 12'1 llKk
Htrotr (I) C 021 S. Caldwtll
Dunllam Ill G !2) Ct rvenl"
Horv1t11 1:10) G (II A. Ctldwtll
SCorlne Subl: Sin Cltmf'n!e-.Acllt,.
m111 2; Unl-lr-n '• Mottlll J, Glll!k.tl 3.
Mtltlfrrit: Uni, 33-27.
II T.,. C>O CUI Cy(H'th
C:tpl1fl'1n Cll F fO I LtllW
ltk ktr 116! F UI OW.n1 ~ll1tva U) C II ) Mur~ W1f~ 171 (j. Cl) Atndel
MllOMy IJI G (I} Nlcl'IGl1 H1lfllmt: El TDro, 1 .. 12.
ScDrln; SuM-Et Toro: JKQVeS '· Mullllfl9fMI .. Id! (ff) (41) A11alltln1 Ta!~ (I) F 111) 8ower1
Ctbtt [I) F 119) Shei>trd
J1ni,en (U ) C I•> Al<nlllau
Torrtt !11) G (11 Cottman
Thornton (I) G {21 1"9ttlboll
$corl119 .ubt: Hllfttlrttton ltKh -
c~-,.. 2. \11n Gotdtft 2.
Httttll'M: Hllnttlllton llNdl, •lt.
N ............. 1121 (U) LNra
Wtllt"' Ill F (10) Url1ll
"•trldl (ltl F (IJ O. Dr111tr
lrocltmev•r (ll C (10) Stinton
kr111t (II) G (•I TIKl'l ter Slr1w (•) G (7) G. O<llltlf
r NtwPOrt H1f'bor Korine II.lbs: 1Cllne-
en1tr1lftt 1, Ftducll •· Ho " L1mer· .. ... COOlll .. Sdlwl& •• ,. .... 90 2.
Html,,..: N'-f, 0.20,
I MlrtM (II) (II) .....
llJft ,(,I F 1171 Crooll
Boldt (OJ F U ) S!ll'I'
Cook {12) C (0) TofedO uw~ no o f2J ldoll'lt
Ugand 121 o 111 eonvm•
korlnt IUbl: Mtrlr. -L1rY11 20,
Wtndlll 11, Alrundtr 6, S!ltlW1t011
2. Ger. I , NUH1r 4. Wflltrn -M.,.. roe S, ~rl 4. la!" 11, Ml-
)'lkt lJ.
Mllffime: M•l1111, 53-7S. .. .... VlftW (Ml (ttl SA ValitY
K•t-fl ) • F 1111 F. Mor11f1 Mltdltll nn F 121 Hinde .
tltllodt (1!) C 10) Dt'•ler Mllll!'I' (0) G {11) $ .Mo<llH
"leteMr l•l G (2l lilncM
F-11111 \ltllf'/ K ori"' l<lbs: Du,,. kl~ ...... t, M1tl1r •• M1l111e !, S1un-
i:ltrt '· Htlftfme: f'\I, 2'·17. w ......... (111 l•I Sllltl AM khlndl« 01) ,. 171 Brown
JKMIOtl (10) " ft) WoofWI' l"1rk• Ill) c (10) ~
9olwelf (4) G UT) COrtv 1l1~1 101 G {21 WootlltY
• SCorlM tube! WlltrnlMler -Jolln-
aon •· °"1):fM 4. H1l'l'tl-: Sanf1 Ar., 1t·ll.
Mii.._ Vltje 1411 CUI on.-
WerMI' (ll) F ('! IOtst
Henry Ill F f15) l<othrtk1
Rytn fl) C (t ) Fllrm111rlt1 w,,,, n •l G fll G•lther
~ntdY fll) G 1101 Ff'nltt
ScOl'lnt II/bl: MllSion \llljo -
lel!lontt 2.
Halltfmt -Mi11lon Vi1Jo, ''·'°· ll,_ llfffil (fl) {411) DIM Hllll
Albld• (17) F ftl Ander:ion
Mor;lll Ill F (11) H11Hl.led
lacon (17) C I•> Culbtrls.on
0.WIOll Ill G C•l l ruM
Hill fJI G fl!) Pauli.on
L...-Swett ttorlno Wbf.: JIC-'°" ., HVlll !. 01111 Hiils 1e0rl1111 s1i1b1:
Hein '-Hllm!M -.: 21-20 l.a;lllll lftdl.
Freshmen
hUtllM Vitti 1•11 U11 PMlhiO
Slum 00 F It) Sull)' •oorn 171 F 12) G1rr1rt
Rinn 11•1 c (21 l!tt1ler1
Gfl'l'lchtn (6) G tll J-llJI
~om.b 12) G 121 Shlmllll
H1ltttll'\f: Mls11on v1e10, J:l-16.
Scoring SuM-MlulOl'I Viejo: Swe11y
I, Oltfl 2. Flldll 2, H1wtr.Jru. 6. lllU
3. Twining 3.
Or11191 Ill) (fl! Ml.._ Vll!I
Mc0on1ld Ill F {ltl llurn
c. Koctl CSl F n 11 lootn
Krl'lttz!tt,...,. l•l C flll 1t1n11
JaflnSOfl l•l G CU) Gtnslchtn
Ml\ollltl'(k Ul G !0) l<lllblb
Hllflll'M: MIU)Oft VltjO, 41-11.
Sc:Dl'lno Subt: Mlu lon V1t10-SWHl'
10. lelft '· Scon " "lacht 2, l!9'fl'150!! 2. Hawkins S.
E.i .... (61) ID) MltMlll
l"!dont {10) F (2) ltut»
Gomtt 112) F U) \Ian Shroedtr
lt11kl 12) c 11) Flttcller W1Cklrlhlm (11) G (0) H11119hlotl
Sl'IKkbt'"°' 121 G (2) 111rry
Sc:Dl'lllO avn-f:dt_,: COOPtr •, Wl1·
lllm• I, Cl'"""" 1. lovd 2. DI~ -· M1ltttmt: ad!_,, •-t.
I0¥#11-I W-"Nlltw 1'41 1471 llllta Au -
Wolff 131 F fl•> c1-ro1
$ftl,lln (7) F (10) McFarltnt
Gtr1rdf l•l C 15) C01l1
W11llbUl"ll !0) .G (fl Andtr10n
loo:ldtrs (20 G (7) Sltwlrd
Scortl'tO tubl: W"ll'lllM..,.-.S1n61r1
2. C•rJltlllw t. 1-t1111rme: w .. tmlntt.', 21-21. e:.i-147) l»'I Let A11ntl'" C~ (2) F (') ltOM
l'la-fl•l " Cl) Froel!ch
DllhwoOd' fOJ C ll) MlffTl 'f
Ltme:tll It) G Ct) Cll1mprn1n
llmort f21 G t11 Schell
ScorfllQ' •11bS-l!dl11n: Wllll•rN t,
Gomez '· W!cM.,.ll'l1m ,, 51'1KMbolli.r« 10.
Htlltfmt: LOI Allrnllo&, 19-12.
Hlllllfllff91t -..C.JI (11) (It) ANlllllfl
Contw-•s 1271 F f61 Clf'tY
D'Altu11r>dro llOl F fOI Mor1l11
Simi !Ill c In 11rthllng
S"'lnh1111 Ul G (() 1'1lr
~ (') G (I) M1rtll'lft
S<Ol'll'lf tllbl: HIJ'!lllngloll lllcr.-
J Ol!rtt.on '• Wlcllllnt '· Amy 1. Wlf>b 4. Malrtlrnt: Muntf1111fon ltKll, 0 -11.
Plflll Vllll'Y (1111 (iii) ltltft AN \lly
l o..old tOJ F fll Cor1111ll111 M1roerum fO F' (11) Fld11ecl1
Tlrioev fll l C 12) Dlm11
a1rrlOI O•J G Ill ~"l'lllOl'I
l'onl Oi l G 12) l lllullo
SCorll'9 9lo'OI: Fount11n Vtll..,.-
w11M1ni.on IS, ltoltr 2. Fletcl!tr u.
Sv1lstl'd l t Huld'lln1u t.
L.Q-!Ml (47) ~ fl llft
Munll fll) F (I) 8tfl'lkt
Al'IOlnofl 011 F (41 St11Pl11
Gretno119ll (11 C (IJ ,,Mdd1~gh
S!rombolnt !1) G !7) Orn:IY
Mc:Mtnv1 (U) G (21) Aetves Hl llllrnt: LH11n1, 21-16.
Scorln1 SI/tis -LfVUM : Htnderson
•· CUflNlrd 2. 011111 Hiiis: Thornt>-.,, 1
Ullf...,..ty CW lffl Siii Cl•mtt1lt
Grfftl 0 21 F (If ) MlkMll
Mlld'ltll !II F 110 Fr1rlll
Tlloma1 (10) c (t) AClltnt
H1rrat111 1111 G f7l Forn1lw
Hlllori:f (I•) G (ti l!IMrd
Htlrt!mt: U11!vtrl!JIV, l S.%7.
Sc.orl"' Sub-I: Ulllwtr.lll'-Etkolltt t.
lhut5di1Y, Jitnuilry 31, 1'974
Barons Find a Grid Foe:
Swordsmen of St. Paul
Fountain Valley ffigh'a Baroos-lo ... rclt
of an opponent for their first non-league
game ol the 1974 football aeasoa-bave found
a aultable Ice.
St, Paul's Swordsmen have accepted 1 year
setup with the Barona and wiU play aome·
where alaog the Oran.Ke Coast, hope!Ully at
Orange Coast College !f Fountain Valley can
get that laclltty, accotdtog to FV athlet ic
director Ken Duddrlcfee,
"We'll !Ind out In a hurry how good
ROGER
CARLSON
a ball club we are," muses Fountain Valley
football coach Bruce Pickford.
"It's a very ·tough opener," add! Plctrord.
"but we're going to be in that kind of
comP,etitlon all yea~ in the Sunset League
anyway.11
Mlnlol Vlejt HJP'o Diahloo bve earoed
Ille dablom laoeor as bard.i.ck tam el
tlie ,.., la prep -elllall' dreleo for Ille
Orup Coos! Area.
'l\e lllabloo are W la cr..tvtew Leape
plly~ yet are eve• moeey 1g1lmt a.,...
exctpl; Klttll1. 1'elr flnt twot lollel were
by oae polat-ud tbere were IO muy cncl..a
tu.Inc plll!a la -ti --b It .S-1.dtlleo tlla ....... Ille
'!'be CIF Southern Secllon wW l!Ave Ove
represeotativea 111 each weight dua al the
<tale wrealli"I meet Mar. 1 11111 Z at Cal
State (Hayward).
Other oectlom 11111 n u m b o r ol
repraentativ• are CenrtaJ (S), Cealra1 Ooaat
(I), Loa Anl•lea (1), North Clout (Z),
Northtrn (1), OUland (I), Sa!Noaqulo (3)
aod San Diego (3).
v ... 1a1a Valley HIP ..m Ml be ptaytq
uy -llueNU al Foulall ValleJ'I
Mlle ~ Parli Ilda year, ... .. lad<
ti -tut -lrod .... -.... · •I pla• ta establbk a llPled facl1lly at
tllat •lie. .
AD Indicator In the power ol &Imel League
awimmlng u.. with Marina ' coach · Tom
Lloyd's statement that thls aeuon'a Vikings
squad is the strongest ever.
Vet realistlcalty hil Vlkts tlgure behind
Westminster and Newport Harbor ln the
race for the circuit crown. The reason:
Westmillater. On« a doonnat, the Lions
are toup under coach Gerald Mannion.
Double allmlladoo hooeblU toaraamento
are " IHcer ·available Mi ,,., teams. New
nales r'lltrict balftd, water pale. ud
blsketllall ie-to -p .... mnlmnm
la elgll-m oelapl, low -i. If.team
-..ys ... five -to II team toaneys.
Teama are charged two games for every
tourney entered 'and anythlni put nullifies
the two-jame atandaftl.
For Coast Area
Prep ·swim Results
V11'1tt't' CIMlt ISl. 3. Jollrltort ($). Tltnt:
DIM Hlltt cn1 (II) • .,.,.,.. 111,.3.
100 Mtdlt'f ll:tl1y -I. DIM Hllt1, «ID Fr• Atll'/ -1. lll""I INCIJ, 2 E...,. ll Tlmt 1 .st4. 2. L1gU111 ... ct!. TlrM: l :P.t. • 1,.... •• 11 • : : . • ......... . 200 FrH - l. Donl ldton {E l. 2.
Sehlt rb 10), 1. Wya!I IEJ. Time: LlpM IMO tnl Ill) 1.-....ck 1:$2.7. 200 MtdleY Itel•'/ -I. u,vn1
20CI Ind. M.ctlev - 1. To.d•I (0), lllcfl. 2 ..... -..ck. T1mt: 2:•.s.
2. Kofftrth Il l, a, Mllolcl'I (0 ). D Frtt -1. IU!llfl'lf (LJ, 2.
Time: 2:n... ~ IL). Th'M: t :Ol.6.
SO "'"'-1. ClmplleU (EJ, 2. lit Ind. Mlclll'/ -I. Llnklett.,. Htmltton (0), J. Crui {DI. TllM: (L), I. Mort9'I (L), 3. A"*'" {L).·
2•.'-Tlmt: l :Ot ...
Olvlno -I. Wyltt {E), 1. HuMtt '° Frtt -1. O'H•r• Ill !. (E), J. No Third. INCh (S). Timi: M.O.
100 Fl'i - 1. TOld1t ID ), t. ltlloM 5llD Fly -I. Otll (S), 2. D'H1rt
(El, 3. Miiosch IDJ.'Tlmt: 1:00.•. IL), 1. Morton Il l. Tll'M: 2t.O.
100 Frtt -I .00Mld9011 IE), 100 Fret -1. l!lunllng (LJ, 2.
'· C1mpbtll (E), llruci (0 ). Tlmt: Llnkllll.,. (L), 3, l ucll IS). Time: Sl.6. Sf.I.
$00 Frtt · -1. Maum1n 10!. 2. SO lacM -I, Dell (SJ, 2. Amsden
Wlllll (E). 3. Cru1 (OJ. Time: •:41.L (LI, 1 Wtltn!l'"lll (L). Tlmt: :n.o. 100 llack -1. Hofftrtfl (EJ, 2. SO lr9111 -I. Suml'nfr1 IL), 2.
S1w1 (El, 3. MeCarla11 CDJ. Tlmt: W1ndtt (LJ, J. $tled1ll lLI. Tlmt;
1:0..,, :J6.S.
100 l!lr111I -1. Joyct (Ol, 2. 200 FrM lttllr -1. Laguna llltll.
Jotm1on (E), J. SIWI (E), Tlmt: 2. L19un1 lt1ch. Tlmt: 1:'6.1. l :lt.f. Yanl,.,
100 Free Re lly -1. EllPlll'tn11,. •I T~ 14') (41) Dn•
1. DIM HUit, Tlrnt: 1:51.A. :100 MM!/llrt •efw -1. Dfll'lfl, .. ,.......,.. 7. El Toro.. Tlmt' l :Sf.S.
20t Frlf -1. Andtr-!El, t. D-Mitts It'll 11,JI • .,......, $Chu6tl (El, 1 McGlnley (DJ. TllM: '°' MIClll)' ltNry -I. E..-lfllll,-,...2:07.3.
2. DIM Hll._ T1'"":.t:l .. 1. D Ind. Mldlt'f - 1, ltlY 111!),
200 Frtt -1. C1rdello (0), t. 2. Andtrt.on (0), 3. Crumtr l&l.
McC1rtln ID), 3. MckMYtr (£); T1mt: Tim.: 2:13.t,
2:14.S. JO Frte -I. Nwlllt CK), t. Bott.I!. ..
100 lllCI. Mfdlwy -1. Dlnmln (01. ,; C, 1tnw Ill. llrnt: 21 0. {DI, 2. Cook IDJ, J. Rtlll IDI-Dl'o'll'!ll -1. Net Conltlfed.
Time: l;IJ.4. 100 Fly -I. lt•y fEI. 2. Murphy
50 "'" - 1 c.rdtllo {DI t. ID ), ,, McGln\tr (DI. Timt: I :N .2.
Kalmbtt l'I (El. J: 01roa tEI. TlrM; too "r" -1. Aflder'IOtl tOI !.
21.3. •olllk• (0), t. M. Strew CEI. Time: 50 Fl' -1. McCat111\ (Dl, I. SJ.I.
Dtnmln IDJ. 1 Cr.J<g (0). Tlmt: a Prft -I. Mnflte 111. t .
lO.I. Maloy 10). 3. wn-Ill. Tlmt: 11ro "'" -I. Cardtllo (DJ, 1. s:n" Md:•rtln (DJ, 3, IC.lllmbaal IE>. Tl,,..: 100 IKll -I. M1kw {D), 2.
l:CW.7. AllClttton (E), 3. ar.srtron (0). Tlll'\f: 50 aac.k -I. WI,_ tEI. L 1:10.2.
Ubr1d't (£), l. Cook ID). Tlll'll: 100 a,.a1t -1. Mllllll !Ol, 2.
:13.J. M. Straw IEJ, J. WllMfl IEJ. Tlrrtt: SO lre111 -1. R-tDt. 2. hclte !El, 3. Grllfln (El. f ltM: ~.'-
200 FrN A ... ,. -1. D1n1 Hills,
1. Elllfl'lllLI. Tlrnt: 1:!1.7.
vA•11rv
lit-hlc1I (1Ml (U) S14'111Ntt
WO Medley Rell'/ -1. L.1111111
ltKll, 2. L1gun1 ll1(h, l.. No Third.
Time: !:SI.I. 100 Frn -1. LIU)' (SJ, 2. MorrHll
(LI. 1 Splll'-rl. Tlmt: 2:10,
20ll lllCI. Mtdlly -I. FIKk IS), LAucllH ISl 3. A~ ILJ. Time:
2:tt.
JO Frn -1. LOtflltr IS), 2.. /f'•l«lll ILi. Tlmt! %1.t,
DIVlnv -l . Wart [LJ, 2. \1111 Mour1c IL). 1 Fn (L). 100 Fl)' -\, Morion (L) 2. FIKk
(S), J. W1r1 ILJ. l lmt: 1:00.1.
100 Fr..e -1. Loeffler ($1, 2.
DtYort IL), 3. Spll1llrl Ill. Tlrnt: ,..,,
SOO Free -1. L111Y lSI. 1. Slew1r1
(L). t. Johnsot1 !SI Tlmt: •:11.
100 Back -1. Halloc.k IL ), 2. A~liOll 'L), l. SlrOl\9 CS). llFM:
l:Gl.1.
100 l rH ll -1. Mil-CL), 1.
UCI Swini
Sophomore
Basketball
It's• Knif• ....
lt'la Forlc, ••
It'•• Spaon •• ,
All in o,.,.
Paramount Sports
Gver'llking in :Jenni&
!ilfa,..,__.OM•H''-CMILOf:IMT
WARM-UP 51 I" 54251 SUITS TO
Maw ...._.... 'l'•llOW AVITULIM
TINNIS BALLS
It's a knife, forte, and lpOOft ... , all In one. Porloct
for outdoorJ. Groot fw -Ing buflwt dlnntn, Portlll
barbecues and potlo dining. For office or glowt bo~
of vour car. Dfop -· Mii but "'" tcnlfe t11ge Ind forte haa fnur big 11..._ It's midi of llalnl~
-Stool ·1• ...... <f ..0 ltMIT
... eUAMTIT't' ,.. ....... , ......... 1
PN•T IT• ..... eMI Rl,Alltll
333 E. 17 .. St., Costa Meso
C...,_ nit -.al II ...... 9' 1"11W.•ll1t1
PHONI '42-6186
........... ~-;;;:;;.· .. -.... fllwl.. It!, .... ""· .... '-· 11·1
'
I -$ 149 --........
6 $14.00 ~ 12 -$27.50
Mtll .. KO LITSCHllT .._ • P'.O. lox 551
L11uno IMch, ·catH. '2612 ,
'
MASSACRE
TEA.MS SET
'!'be Dally Piiot opot11 sWI
and CIF Soulbem SecUoo have
IMOunoed Ille nucleul ol the
-they wlD tllrow .. -Heh other In tbo Vllentlne's
Day m 11 I IC rt hulwtblD
double bill at °"""' del Mar
HIP-CdM and. ' Newport
Harbor HID _. will
colllde In tlie -haU· ol the-am. '
Perlormln( for the CIF will
be vWaln Lou .i-pli, ...
ol -,..pmlllhle f o r horrendous rOlequlnc. H1'1
jolnod by Tom lforslD, Duol
Roundy, Tom llymel, Kendall
Webb.. Commialoner Ken
Fag11n1 II glvtnc aerious
eomlderalim to a limited
appeoranot, bealth permlttllW-Golnc !or the Dally Pilot
are llank Wach, Sieve Brand,
<nig Shel!, Steve AadreWI
and Glenn Wblte--tbe Iron
Ove •.
JC, Prep
Basketball
Second
AnnlYen•ry
SALE!
Huge S•vlng1
en • • . . ..
SHIRTS
SLACKS
SPORT COATS
IELTS, etc.
Collar
'n
Cuff
JJJ · .. ,,,. ... --~
·•
Wrestling
·Summaries
'
ACCESSORIES DISPLAYS
MARINE ART SHOW
IT•'-Anlllol ~INE FASHION SHOW ..... ~:311' .... ~
+
•
10,000 TIRES
Must Go Sunday
February 3, at
•
' " "MUSf GO"
PllCiSf
AU BRAND NEW
NATIONALLY .
ADVERTISED
• BRANDS
See °"r Ad
Sund.y, Feb. 3.
In 1he
Dally
Piiot ;
t
t
t
.
I
.. , '
MIXED SINGLES
' TUMBL!WEEDS -· ...
' '
11llLP·°411U 10 SfAYOUSIPE
AtW WATCH 00~ . llORSPl
MUTT AND JEFF
.BIT MUTT,
OUR CICERO
19 RUNNING
AWAY FROM HOME !
FIGMENTS
NANCY
" ~ "' . •
~
llJI~~
I
fl ND 800M6~
800lle r
I ~ I,• I
. l ~ ~ •
... ' I ' j
by ftm •. F. Brown awcl Mel C•Hll
'
l t
"
I
, . by Tom K. Rye111
' •
by :Dale Haie •
by Emie . Biishmiller
STOP l<IBIT,%tNG-.U~. . . . , ' .
' '
.....
· ..
PEANUTS ·
llDIT'I. CIDlllDID · RllLI '
I ACffOIS J ..... ~ • • ; . 1··..oiift.-:2
·~· ........ fir.:+*if*l ._ .... .,.,..... .. _
·---..! ti:lll:2WOftll 10pr ...... H.....,
. -~ 14 ...... , ' u. s. 9llllOt •i.tlll
15 Jfti RfUl'I, 18 AllWt city
lot CM 17 POk• pot
18 l.HllelaMd II, Ctk•
17 "Enclughl":3 • clecotl\of •.
• ...,.. t tll1Cfdlir9
19 ..... 70Flltl~
20 ~ 71 Oul1.,of
21 ~ monit .
Z3 = DOWN" .,., -.. 25 hlUlle' 1 lheliC.of 29 om. biiilk ,,.n.ct cotlOl'I .
3C1 IMrlMlt 2 Turklrlft IMder
34 .... ' 3 lr111h -·-35 Pleld ) rlMlt
37,....... 4 ........ .. r•·Plftod ~1
39 lndJfMI ""'°" ,
paflt • s Gr1nl
""2 Pronoun e s.a.,. pi.re
•3 Spltetul 7 ;._well lhlt ......
45 8hol'lly
48 Eagl•'• Mil ..... -&() AcrclMt•
!Z l'dl
64· Alonttldt:
Prela:
I s.
7
el'ldl .... ~
I Awtrd ,: :;rrdl
11 Nltcleiul 12:
'
13 Cllendlr
llbbttvl11tlonii
11 "°"'"""., lnntr 1ource
22 Arigw
24 DeleflM or;.
28 Rffpond lo In
..
'"4 81\t•'dl· ~i=•
49 PecW ~t
5,11~.
53 1 .. 11'1:
Comb ....
·""" •vlll'll · S5 Teft W.
Z1 Brttlltl 61 C.lttomla
CompoMI" ' cltY
:ZI Rellglou. 'i1 utnlt«I
Plltlllnt IS8 C .. •11111
29 Hurry 'I ~·
31 F~ rl'l'll' 90 MefJCll'I
32 ActlV• food lllNlll
33 Flow.. et Nor1t
38 Stitctl(fU4okly; AmwlOM
2 Wordll lndll!nl
Ml Ell• , '52 Sa!fCY~ ''
41 Swordl:V•. ·e ·MM•dO
•·
.... I -
JUDGE PARKER . . .
MISS PEACH '
• 'J ..
!
I •
• )1' -~
. ... ">
. . . . ~
( 1..,-1--1.-1-+--
DICK TUCY·· . ..
I ' > I I
•
..
..
I') -
.
DOOLEY'S WORLD
Dr. SMOCK
IW/116 Att50N. 1116 /)()C17;1R !
•
· Mt!i/116 MYbl, 1116 JJ0(;1l:1R ! '
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS ...
. .
Thnlsday, JanuMy 31, 1974
------....
IMVBG YA
SEITER l().IOCK
rf Off, 1J.l EN ••
...
_ DAILY PILOt_, %8
by RCHJfi' Bradfield
-Mlo NQ;DS A
SOUL wrrn
IN 01G•STI0N ?
by Geor9e Lemont ....... --..........
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
' • • •
•
by R_09er Bolen •
~ •' , . . ........ h, • ._._.. ......... -_...,_ . ... ' ' .
' .,
~.
I
,,
by Charles M. Schulz
..
by Harold Le Doua:
, " lo • •
'by M.U
-Hlflllll)l.IP,
INGtDtNi',<µ.y,
I~,. ...
\ANITIC> ~,<Tff
.A'1/AY , ••
by Chester GOUid
THE GIRLS
"M1 lnable It I've readied Ille nage wbere Ille only lhlng
ill.at will blde,my f.lpre faalta if the abtwer cw1ala."
DENNIS THE MENACE
•
I•:\'
;fiM'>"< . --I
• •
•
•
t
.
i
30 DAILY PILOT
TONIGHT'S
TV IIlGHLlGHTS
NBC D 8:00 -In Search of Ancient Mysteries.
Rod Serling narrates this special which studies the
possibility of visitors from outer space colqnizing
the earth.
CBS It 9:00 -"The Autobiography of Miss Jane
Pittman." An original drama about a fictional llO-
year-old woman, a fonner slave, who lived from the
Civil War to the 1960s. Cicely Tyson stars.
ABC D 9:00 -Primal Man -the Battle for
Dominance. The oldest natural game is examined
In this study of prehistoric behavior.
TV DAILY LOG
Thursday
Evening
JANUARY Sl
'"° II THEWALTONS ISTHE * SEASON'S SMASH HIT
Friday
DAYTIME MOVIES
l:JO IJ (C) ~ Vlrrtl11" (dr1) '57-
Mtl Ftrr11, Pier An1ell, John Kerr.
~ (}.) ...,,.,. Ari Ordtn'" (com)
'J7-¥1ter Stllttt, M1raot Gr1N11ne.
IZ:llO m ~ (dr1) '.43-Doro!l!y
McGuire, Robert Youn1.
l:JO B (C) ......... It ,._... (drel
g_:.Wllft1111 Holdtn, GtlCt Kiiiy. t:00•(C) ....,. .. (Kl·lil.'&1-8id
frlvm, Wini1m Sylvester. Iii (CJ "l1lt ......... (odv) ~S
Enol Ryan, .lo&n111 Dru.
ll:IO{I,')....,." h I•" (dr1) '58-
Erifl o·etieft:, rfrtm limbalist J1.
• ........ , ... (sd.fO 'Sl-How·
IN Duff, E~• B1rtck.
3'110 \.f) "l1lt .... Mlmr" (d~) '4&-
0\ivil dt Hn1111nd, Lew Aym. a.,......,.. C*•> '&5--lltc:hNI
,...,_~.,..
3'30 l!J Cl) ..... _. 1-> -1n8n N~•eff, D•vid llemmi111!1 .
4:00 B CC) "If A Mn .WW.rt" (rom)
'6i-5Hdrt Die, BobbJ D1rin.
U:• • -n. .,...,. (srl lil '57 -
,. ... Ovltcl11. "Alltll1 l11t lifl9'
C•I '41-Suun t11rw11d, Albtrt -.
4:3# CJ) S.-• IMM lltd11t (~(Ii) "Cry lr1 H.,,... Cooel.
(com) "61-Gltnn f«d, Ooft*
D'Coan...
KOCE TELEVISION LOG
7:JO At Mell • t It •"• 1 IC) "tnttllli'Mt" ...... _ =
1:00 l'tc:llt Or111" CwMy (Cl "Unwtd
Motllt•t" Holt Jim COOPt!'
dfl(U•IH l!lt l:llW'I kltrll'ltllt • '/'Ol,lllO
WOITIMI 1111 to IKt •• an ~ ""'"'· t.lO W-ICI "Ollf l o d lt1 , Ovrttl.._,. wllll twill Wllrn.t
Dl1kl" •llO Jucty NOrtlOl•n.
t.00 l'!rlftf Ll11t ICI uo mll\,) "Pt nal
ltttgrm" -'"""'fii1J.tl1va rrp0r11r JHi!~I) MlllOrd Wiii lain wwr.'" F. &w:Ht-y, Jr 10 t •trnlNI IM
comp!t"• 11""~''°" crf pl10f'I riHnr!"'I
Slave Drama Premieres
And
' Ruth Gordon
' Gffr!• Segal
"WHERE'S
POPPA"
Bath in Color
Ratl'd "R"
Kids Like To
Ask Andy
LIDO NEWPO<T
BE ACH
lMllAHC'~ lQ llDO 1\1 I
6'll!lSC
EXCLUSIVE!
His Story le lncreclibl•I
,_ .............. ••-c--·----w STARTS FRIDAY 1
WHALE WATCHERS!
Every wMklfld during Janu.rv and into Flbnlary (until mil'ationstops)
Dnr,'s locker will offer 2 Wti.11 W1tchlnt Trips flKh d"V i.Yint 9 -
end 1 pm from thl B8'bol Pnilion, 400 Milin St., 8alboL TeMphoM
1714) 673·5245 F1r1: $3.50 Adults; $2.00 Chilchn 12 9nd under
IEST PLAY OF '72-N-York Critics
"STICKS AND BONES"
Crltlc1 o!Mf .Audl"cn Acchalm This To11y Award Wlo11I .. ,
Oft••. Coatrowrliol Work.
LAST TWO WEEKS
~ Jbuth Coast Repertori'
-,_, ... -.::UL.:
CtNEODME 20~;;
.. ~:....'.!..-l:-1~
.. , ... _.,,Lu •
CtNEODME 21 :
.. ~·. ·· ·~· .... tr;::..·•
~OEA0Ft7 AlL ~ ,St.AHO OF THE
BlUEOOl~IN!I" Botti 11'1 Color! IQ)
"PAPILLON" (l'GJ -Stt'll Mc;Q-a
Ou1t1" Hoff~n
Waif DhMy'1
"ROllN HOOD" (GI + "ME•UN JONIS ..
'C:HAAIOTS OH ... GOOSr ln Q:lloll !GI ....,., Price
Nol.-.o.r f:Of»_()O
5:~7,00 .. OCIP.M, •
'
Gtlltar, Dnans et OCC •
·.Duo .in ·Fine Form''.
This <rluC -on hlo way lo the ~ Cont
CoiI<ae IUdllortwn I a s t
--just wby Arceallnlan aullarilt ..;'J'i Morel had seen ltt lo . bis lnldilionally
... perl«manceo lalo • doo.
He loot the lllqe alone and
Ibo old ld<nl magic was very iimch there !or a delighted .. ff.arbor Area Community
OlaoertJ "-elation audience
wilh Miperi> rmderlnp of
seven! guilar cluslos.
A.m(.ng them were a
•magnificent ''Suite
Castellana" by Tom>ba, a
Fantasia by Aloll1.0 d e
Mudarra that takes on a new
glow under Morel's sensitive
fingers and Luis Milan's lovely
"Two Pavimas."
1XCLUSIVl1
..... 1111 ICtRllS
Golden Globe Award
MARSHA MASON
JAMESCAAN
"•Avco [..a..l.yMI-t...-..,..,_,.._. ........ -.£\ ...... ~
"LovtR's AND 9
OTHER STRANGE!lS" MATlc WID. "'· ....
This time the bullets are hitting pretty close to home!
SHOWING
NOW!
a·1e1Mtww:o11
... ,, llall f !In
R 5 .. 11 Fer11 ·
DPINS TOMQUOW .
FllDAY I
Nearly Et;eryone ·.
·~iftens tiJ Landprs
• •
TOM B4RLEY.
Music Box
half of the M0<el doo and and he roundad off I llaw!ess
ooe wondered, again, if lhe P,elformance wilh a IOlo
adv o rtiled peraiaaiooist's aessloo oo his drunui that
journey was reaUy necessary. brought him the ovation
Jorge and his guilar seemed lhe evening.
to be a classic case of t"°'O's WHAT MAKES hls
company. achievemet)t ajl lhe more
AT THAT point Ra Ip h lncftdlble ts that this gifted
lorful artist haa had no formal Dorsey brought his co moslcal trairung· wilh lhe drulm on stage and we quickly learned what a pair er<eptlon of aomo ac~tterod
of drums bj lhe right hands P1fr'° ~· a .._ from can do In tenno of enhancing -..-U)e_p:<\cluct of the solo gullar. lhe Royal College o1 Music
·Doney'• llelaoo wilh Mor<J be <Ojlldn't "'-• on the was -utely astoolshing · .......,,Ing llailoa he baa
The brilliant pair were note achieved with Morel. 1be two
for note in a rousing rendition bli:nd . together like anndy
of. Mariano Mores' "Mllonga" anCI gmger.
(another spleodid More I It was regrettable · that
arrangemeot by lhe way) and much o1 the second hall of
,._ t ' •· --~t thi the _,.am had to be devoted •= wen 00 w ••• ' to the rkes of of! lnp from critic tabbed as lhe highlight "W t 8
1 "de' Story' ~ 'Holida of a memorable evening -es 1 , . Y
Jorge Morel's own "Dania in for Strings" and '' B 1 u e
A" Rando."
Doney "·orked .with Morel Morel and Dorsey are at
in that fasctnatin~ Danza as their brilliant best in the class·
if he had helped th e !cal phase of lhelr i:epertoiro
Argentinian write the work and tJteJr P-.0' lhould be
CIUUUDTS
•1111
CIMl!MA CINTl!ll 4-C .... Mell PM1•1
UA CINl!MA .....C .... MeM l*tlt4
WISTlllOOK 1-W....illlttf ...... :=D CllflMA-·-· 01-4-a ..........
lllOOlt:NUlllT_,,.,, rl•
MfllAMAll-"" C.......
LIMITED INGAOl!Ml!NT
ONLY SUN INT. l'.USl!I ACCl!,..,.D m MANN
THEATRES
· CIDM
Eastwood
ils
1111 .........
FoNelll
DMY1 7111 ·fl ...
IAl . .suNI 1• • J11J • JsJO
7:41 & 10.00
•
~oualy geiored to that
concept. #
INCIAf. lm*"-'"1
"JEREMIAH
JOHNSON"
pfTLO DR~·IN
lllBD .,,...
THl!ATll• Ll'AUD
TO l"llODUC811S
NO PASSES ACCEPTED
•
Crosby's Sec ond
Fa mi ly Grmvin g
' By MARILYN and HY GARDNER
Q: How old 11 lhe oldeol lloy Ia Bing Crosby'• se<ond
flllllly? A.ad wtlli -lhe dlffertnce In !Mir ag., wbtn
1llq married Kathryn Grant?-Mn. Cynthia Slowbath,
Qdcqo. '
, A: The same as it is now! A ».year generation gap.
Bmg was 54, Kathy 24. It turned out to be one of the
happiest ol all showbiz marriages, co-starring two of Its
nicest people. The pioneer in Bifli's second family , his
fifth aon (Harry Lillis "Tex" Ci'osby, Jr.), will be 16
Aug. 8. We have his birth anooWlctment in our scrapbook.
'"('Glad You Asked That')
A replica of a Decca record label imprinted: "Another
Crooby Enterprise ... Date: Aug. 8, 1958, 11 :32 a.m.,
Ne nallty Serles ... Not licensed. for broadcast out-
side of nursery ... A new world of dimensional sound!
••• Just Call Me 'Tex' ... Words & Music by Katherine
(sic) & Bing Ctosby ... As Sung by Harry Lillls Crosby
Jr., with Orchestra Dir. by Dr. Abner Moss.''
Q: What doet P1ul McCartney think about the BeaUes
maklac a comebact?-Pr:fny ~tayor, Garden Clty, N.Y.
A: That It would be more of a comedown than a come-
back. Says Paul: 0 1 wouldn't think the Beatles v.'Ould get
together to play again. I think if they did It might be a
bit ol a kind of comedown from what it was.''
Q: 11 Dyan Cannon sUU feuding wilb Otto Preminger, n directed lier In lbe Olm "Suell Good Friends?" -
ReUty Waldo, Columbus, Obie.
A: Th•,Y're not such good friends since they traded
Insult& durmg and alter the film was finished . Now Dyan
hu unleased another cadnooade -In Viva. "Such Good
Friends," she wrOte, "could 'have been one of those really
brilliant movies. Preminger mucked it all up ... and I
tell you he's the rottenest man I've met in my whole life.
·,His wort stinks! He's not A director. He couldn't direct
my S.~ daughter in the bathroom." (The fact that
the fonner Mn. Cary· Grant, in the same article, tells
how she wu booki?llt on dope for four years -how she
would amoke marijuana before breakfast an_d even between
takes while filming -might explain Preming~r.>1 attitude
lowarda her.)
Q: 1've ·111 a bel that Wlncbtll wu die 1.-1 talker
la tlte dl11 of ndlo. My fltbe r says Walter came la HC·
1114, tliol No. I bi that deportment wu a lellri IUlllled
Glblloa1. Wio was Glbbon1?-T .. Sandbelm, Bufflle.
A: Father is r· ht. Floyd Gibbons was the all-time
champ of the fas lkers. He was clocked at 217· words
a minute. When t off the air, Lowell Thomas bl·
herited his jo .-u has it.
Looki ng t o Past
Rod Serting narrates a special exploring the pos-
sibility that ancient astronauts from outer opace
not only vl~ted but colonized the earth tonlgbt on
"Timex Presents: In Search of Ancient Mysteries"
at 8 o'clock on NBC, Channel 4.
'Migi·ants' TV Drama
. Airs on Playhouse 90
By JERl\Y BUCK
LOS ANGELES (AP)
111be Migrants," as star Cloris
Leachman points out, is not
a documentary.
But It is as powerful as
Edward R. Murrow 's
"Harvest or Shame" in 1960
and the NBC follow-up ,
"Migrant," IO years latoT.
The 90-minute drama, a
make the picture for 12 years,
but could never get backing
for a theatrical m o v i e .
Lanford Wilson wrote the
script from a story by
Tennessee \Villams. Tb e
special also sU!nl Hoo Howard,
Sissy Spacek, Cindy WiDiams,
Ed Lauter, Lisa Lucas and
Mills Watson. ·
~fw Leachman's portrayal
of the migrant mother is
hauntingly like Do r o the a
l:.ange's 1936 photograph of the
dust bowl woman taken for
the Farm Security
Administration. The hair is
stringy. The face worn by
poverty and wort. The mouth
set against adversity. Only in
the eyes is there hope.
•
Thursdl)', Janual')' 31, 1974 DAILY PILOT :SJ
'Night Wah!h '
Suspense Fills Mesa Play
Technical excellence, 1
prerequisite of every
sUccesaful community theater
producUon, ts both the hero
and the villain ol "Night
Watch" at the Calta Mesa
Civic Playhouae.
Intermission
Tom Titus
demanded in the final scene
mars an exceptional effort.
In this new suspertJe drama
by Lucille ("Sorry, Wrong
Number") Fletcher, technical
director Stan Wlas~k's audio-
"Night Watch" is that rarity
in the theater, a SU$pense
mystery with a totally
unexpected twist, f r o m
established play writing fonn
as well. It continues Fridays
and Saturdays through Feb. 1 flawless, are sharply defined Mesa stage. On1y the eOOless 9 in the Community Center
and subtly characterized. clock-ticking and taped sounds auditorium on Costa Mesa's
The standout ol the cut where Jive effects a re Orange County Fairgrounds.
is Genevieve MWTay, who -11~iiiiiiliiiiiii!!!il!!!iliiiii!!ii!!ii!iiii!~~!i!!li~iiiiiliii ....IOMT WATCH"
A dr-b¥ Ludtl• F~. dlrlCtfd
1W "•" T1mo.tMlll, fldWl!c1I dlrectW'
took over the demanding lead
role late In rehearsals and PRE-RELEASE tUl'rul in a gripping and
, •nd Mt dftlClllM' Slln wi.tick, ,.._.... bY 1i. Costa M9w CIYle.
P'1•Yl'IGUM Frkl•v• tnd S•lvrd•Y• ,,.. l :JD t~h ,..b. ' II , .... Community
Onlitf' 11,1dl!IWl1Jm, w.sl g1!• of tM Or...... County F1l19round~ CM11
MtM. lttwrv•llolw SS.J.100.
sensitive performance. l\llss SHOWING l\1urray enacts a woman given •
to hysterical O;Utbursts .and
TM• CAST
haunted by ghosts of the past, FRI DAY FEB. 1 9 •• 00 and she draws out the deep
emotion of her character with
frightening credibility. 1!111 ... Wheelw .•.•. ~ Mlll'TIY JoM WllWl•r ........... .-O.vld P'1ul
lt1nci. Coek• ······· .... Miry SUlllVll\ Cllrtl1 Appleby ..••.•.. Got,.. Benldkt
Or. TrlCtY Llkt .... B1rl:IMI V•n Holt
l.I. W1lktr , . ... .. .. .. . . . JKk MUf'tlJY Hilo• •••..•..•......... Cat1!9rlM Atnff
V1nell! . .. . •• .. .. . . .. Joe 1M"pur1
S•m Hok• .......... Wllll1rn Spenctf'
DAVID PAUL is quite
strong as her husband, a
character less finely
deli~n eate d but well
interpreted. Frustration is the
~ce or his role and Paul
visual contrlbuUo.ns s bare delivers it skillfully,
equal footing with t he Mary Sullivan presents a
direction of Pali Tambelllni well-rounded portrait of the
in creating and SW1taining the famil y friend, filled with
ominous mood of the play. surface warmth which masks
Both are, for the most part, a chilly interior. Gene
quite impressive. A company Benedict handles what comic
beaded by veteran performers relief exists as the nosy
ROBE RT BLAKE &
ELLIOT GOULD
SIAR IS I Pill Of V~E-SQUID
IGEllTS OUT JO IUSI Ill
UNDIR-WORlD CRIME SlNDtCITL
'BUSTING'
(FllDAY Fii. 1 ONLY)
''PllVlfW" AT 9:00
CLINT EASTWOOD
IS DllTY HAllY IN
'MAGNUM FORCE"
with top credentials lays the neighbor, perhaps a bit Hmp 1-;:::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==,-intricate ground.wort for what in the glove. with relish. I
essentially is no.t a whodunit, The lady psychiatrist is done
but a who'lldoit? And the coldly and efflpiently by
eerie, !oreboding sound effects Barbara Vin Holt, while Jack
and low.key lighting set the Murray lJ properly irascible
mood perfectly. as the police l le u tenant
harried repeatedly by non-Yf:l', AT THE very climax, productive murder reports.
the Costa Mesa production is Catherine Ames is strong as
betrayed by its technical the buttinski German maid,
embellishment on two crucial though her accent wavers a
points. InltiaUy, too much bit and hel'I line about "filthy
time is Allowed 1o elapse with foreigners" failed to elicit a
no one on stage; secondly• reaction from S a t u r d a y ' s
the use ol taped sound effects small audience. for the !Tl0$t important area
= ;:Jeremia JOJJnson"
The man
who became a
legend
The mm destined
to be a
classic!
~
"CBS Playhouse 90" to be
aired Sunday, Feb. 3, follows
a migrant farm family as it
picks its way north along the
East Coast. Every day is
another field of beans or
tomatoes. Every day is a
!ltruggle for existence and
hope is always at the next
stop.
"SHE IS spare, I ea n, of the show (ambiguity Is OOMPLE"nNG the cast in
'jl HOPE peop1e don't think despairing, yet not defeated." employed here rather than smaller assignments are Joe
this is a documentary," said Miss Leachman said. "She'll disclose tbe unex p ected Purpura as a cop with an
Miss Leachman, "or a survive. She may not flourish, ending) jars the play back appreciation ol. art a n d
r---HELD OVER !-2ndBIGWEEK !.-.....,
'Tobacco Road' or a 'Grapes but she'll survive." into the realm of the artificial William Spencer as an irate
of Wrath.' This is its owq The role is as unglamorous 'I11.ls is regrettable, for up . delicatessen owner. B Qt h
BUENA PARK BUENA PARK CINEMA {522·28115) 1116 I EAC ... llL\10. COSTA MESA CINEMA CENTER 3 Ii 4 (979'4141) KAll&Oll IL\ID, AT ADAMS
COSTA MESA PAULO ORIVE·IN 154S.331Jt .... EWPOllT 'FWV. AT IAKi!:l'I ST.
HUNTINGTON BEACH SURF 1538-9396) P ... CIF'IC co ... ST tnvv ... 11 ... t.T. story, own character. It took as her · Academy Award-to that point, Miss Tambellini deliver adequately in their
_J me weeks to gel over it after winning character in "The and her cast eme r ge cameo roles.
Se11d your questionr to Hy Gardner, "Glaa You making lt.'' Last Picture Show" and in victorioua over a situation Wlasick's set is attractive
LA HABRA CINEMA 11697·&781) 20• W, WHITT If"' 8LllD. ORA~GE STADIUM ORIVE·IN 3 1639-78l!OI
KA TELL.A NEAii STADIUM
ORANGE VILLA 1&500661
Tut.Tl ... Allr.. so. oF KA TEL LA Asked That," care of thU newSJXZPeT, P.O. Boz 1560, M a drama the story is contrast to Phyllis on CBS' which fo.rced w h 0 Jes a I e and imposing, a splendid
Co.1ta Mesa 92626. Marilyn and Hy Gardner will an-able to penetrate the statistics "Mary Tyler Moore Show." shuffling of personnel and a backdrop for the at r I ca I
1wer ai manu questions aa they can in their column, and deal in human terms. She won an Enuny last year week's delay in the opening intrigue, and his lightlng
but the vnlume Of mail maMs pe:rsonal replie1 im-pr 0 du cer-director Tom as best actress for the ABC of the show. Ind iv l du a 1 effects are among the best
T.USTIN TUSTIN CI NEMA (544·1696) NEWPORT AT SANTo" o"N" FWV.
WESTMINSTER CINEMA WEST 3 & 41.1111112·4493) >#t:5TMINSTE .. AT QOLD£N wt:$f-
poUibl.& -·:-~. ·' \ ~A~" ~ ..: t# Gries said he bad wanted ,J:r ,. .IPQVie "A Brand ~ew Life.·: performances, while ~ no t yet displayed on the Costa .. ~~~~~_.::....~....,.~~...:'..~.;;~~:,;;.£,::__~~~-=-.':'.'.:~~~;.~~~.~ ..... ;;;~ .. ;;;,.~.~,=.~.;_:....:.:..::::=..::::....:::_;._....:~:::;;====::......:...::::::._.::..:...:......::..~--'--'~~~~~~'--~~-,-~~:'-'-~~~~~~~-:~~~~-..
• • • .cs~~.
.:;Jeremiah • A JOlinson"
e SYDNEY POLI.ACK FILM
•
• • • 11Elllf 111!I !RUTHE FOUR
e MOH • .fRI. MON.·FRI.
7.9.11 6-8-10
S,\T,•SUN. SAT. & SUN. • • 1-3-S 2-4-6-
(PG) • • • e 7.9.11 1.1 0 • .................... ________ .....,, • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • •
•
FROM Fish ion Island . .
Newport Beach
l\IOW SHOWING
cit both t heatrea
~DISNEY PllODt>CRN'
WILD lmV CAllTOOll FEATURE
HRD
OVIR
'S•~fDA1EISAND
8AEDFORD
TOGETHEAI IME
WAY '"' -WBIE
-THEATlll 1WO-
MOH.-llL
7:1Cl-9•1S .. ,_,
12 .. S.2141
4:45-7111
t :•1112J ,._, "'°"' 1214J
IDWAllS TMN CNMAS
THE WESTBROOK
U«'«MUllT ON WUTMIHSTll AYL
2 1UCL to. Of U111N 010V1 rwY.
I
....., ,~O~UOT__.-;:•OO .. T .fl'i"i"I. l.AHCASTl'.lt ftYAH
ALl<I FROM
WALT DI SNEY
THI MISAD,YINNlU
OF Mll LIN JONIS
' . !!ii \
ALSO "WALT DIS.NEV'S .
FEATURETIE
"NATURES
STRANGEST
CREATURES"
,•
"POUCF'-7-10:41
"6XEC" -IM
SAT. & SUN.
FROM
1:30
1llJ
111£1
11
llllll£ 1II1I
•
• • •
• • • • • • •
• • •
R~~
•s'1eremiah AJoonson,,
SYDNEY POUACK FILM ~
.WM THREE-*THEAIHE FOUR*
MON • .fRI. MON ,°FRI •
7-9-11 6-8-1 0
SAT. & SUN. SAT. & SUN.
1-3-5 2-4-6 (l'Gl
7-9-11 8-1 0
,•} .. . ·'
A l(n1ch ()f ('lass
. 1•1.
• •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • •
• • • WALTER • 2nd w.nH•u 'THE LAUGHING POUCIMAN" •
••••••••••••••••
•
STEREO SOUNDS ·OF THE HARBOR
't ' •'•
·'
,.,
•
• ' . . ~ . ~ '
•
% DAILY PK.OT Thursct.1, J&nUMJ 31, 1~74 ~ ~==P=UIUC~~~NOl'ICE======ir-.:.:::::.::'.!!..==.!~:;.;..;;.; ......................... ;;G,;e;,,.;;;;r:;:.t1 ------;;o.n;;;;..,.:;;.:.1----~-:-;;(Nt;:::..,.:,;;..~;l------u;;;;,·-----.-.-G;ntr•f--.... _. --: e;:ee;,~, -·----··
P\JBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
' , PUBUC NOTICE
PUJUC NOTICE
ITATSMllft' Ofl wtTllDIUWAL PltOM •
l'ART'-l llSHll' 0Na.t.T1•e UMDlll
, -#ICTITIQUI IUSt•lll 1 NAMI
TIM followlnti Ptf'SOM '9v• wifhdr•w11
es te!'lertl JMittntr fl"GITI lt\9 l»rfnerilllp
tpWtllflO ul'ld1r !he nctl"ous blls/11as
111.n. 'of MISSION ·l AH D'S C A I" E
SEfl:\llCES 't i 7"1 Grau· 1.n., CO.I• -·TM flc!lrlOllS Dutlrm9 Mmt '"fefMttf fot''. ttit ~rh'lll'tlllp -"llif • Jul1
'· lt7J In ·IN Cel.inty of .CW.11g9. I
P,.lltl "-•nd ..,,...... ., tfl9 ' ~ wlll'ld<IW'lno: ~ l ffl L. l lrdl. D7J N~ C•l1 'r'Ht· c.i. , .. Mv-1111 hrM.t 1UQ Lei Carllrilb,
;11111111111 V11ley. Ctl. •
8'11 L. l lrch
JtuMlthtd Oftllll• Coast OtJly 7f:.
J1111HrY 11, 24, Jl, l lld f'eot'lllry 7,
1'14 111·14
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUI IUllNISS llAMS ITATIMI MT
'Ttw followl111 COf'f!Orl tlOft I• doing
Mislllfl.I u :
HAltaotl VIEW APAltTf.\!iPITS, ~
NorPh ClliPCl'WI, A11&helm, Callton•I• I
"'" E'f'erett L. Hodges lrw:orpor.1lecl, US
Norlll Clllpl)IWI Av111~. .r.n1111lm,
C1lltornl1 t210l. '
Tiii• bull,,_. ls COl'Mlltclld by I
corpor1tton. EVElt£TT L. HODGES
INCOfl:f'OltATEO
Slgnld Ir:
Morrl• v, ~. l"r.tldlrll
Tll!1 11111"*'1 w11 tl!lllt w!l!'I the
County c1 .. 11.. of 0••• County on
J1M11ry 22:. ''''· l'ULOI", IOUTON,
I Ult•t & MCi<ITTltt<tc, Attp.
AftJI: a. A. 0-,.. •Mt·• tMS WlhNfl ,....,.,.._ 7ttrt ,.._
11.,.,ty. Miiii, C1Utii'1161 "111 ... u
Pobli&hed Or.1noe COit! Dally PllC>'I, J1nu1rv 24, 31. 1n:I Ftbr11<1ry 7, U, ,,,, 24f;7•
PUBLIC NOTICE
'~''"'' J(ll1•"901t COtlltT CW TN• ,STAT• 01' CALlflOltlllA ll'Olt
TN• COUNTY 011' HANG•
' l11. A·JlJM '
llOTtCI 'Ol'"MEAlllMI 01' PITlflOll
11'011 l"ltOIATI 01' 'WILL 'AMO l'Olt
1.l!TTl'ltS TUTAM•MTAltY
E11.111 of STEW.r.ltT W. METZ.
Qll(:l!ISltd.
NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN !hit
ADEL!: M. METZ flU flied htr1ln I
petl!lon for ·pr~tt 'Of Wltl .Ind for
llJUltlCI of lttll" Tlll1fTMnl1~ ID
tne P911fioMf r.io1renc1 to ..nrc11 Is
midi for 11/rtller H r1icul1rs. 1n<1 tll-1
IM time Ind plKll of l'lffr1nt. Ille wme M1 ~ le! for . Ft.brul{'I' n,
1f1"-11 t :OO 1.tl'J·• In ?Jll Chtr!f~
of De1Nrlm1nt frfO, 3 of Mid ~I,
1t 700 Cl'f'k Ctntw Drlv.' w.r. In
It-. Clh• of S1nt1 ....... C1llfornl1.
D•'*I Jlnu1f1 Jf, 1'74.
WILLIAM I . It" JOHN,
COU!ltY C..,_
llMl'SOll MO llMl"SOll, A" ......... ! C.,.. '
31' Wnt SlxM SL Swill lit ".o ... ••• "' ~-,,. ..,,..,,..., CA f'Ma
Ttl: 010 ~J .... ._,.,.. ... ,.t"-
l"ulllld!Mt °'81111 cout o.i1., l"itet,
J1nu.ry U 2S. JI, 1t1• 2*14
PUBLIC NOTICE
JIOTICI Of'•tALI
'"' •ccord1nct .... 1111 tile pnt'f'hlont of
'"' C1lllMnfl Vrtllorm Com~clM Codi,
fhlfl 'Mff'lll ful Ind llllPlld llOI' ... tor which nw Li.. v"' .,., si.111 CL It lr\ll1*'1ittt ··111t1" Wtr*UHIMl'I M the foofl llif"lfNttw ,_,.bid tM
•0t nollct "'"""' 111.n 11 .... n to pertl" kl'IOWl'I kt cWm .,. lnf'trlll llllreln
•nd l"" tlfN:, IPICl!lff lfl MICll Mtlc. tor ~mlflt . If llldl lll'f'lntl tXll!rld. ~ Ii ..... tl'f'tft 1t11I !tint eood•
Wiii be ... tl.llltlc ~ltlll If UM l=· .?"&~ ri.:':'~.l:"J!: '" thl ,.,. ..,,, ., l'ltll'ltlrY, .,,, ..
ti IO:• ....... A.#1, ~
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ERRORS: Advorli11r1 -·-----------------';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;; thould chock tholr 1d1 •
dolly '& report errors Make Offen! ·APPEARANCES * Balboa lay Propertle1 *~
I mm e d l 1 I e I y. Tho Som•tlmOI when • buytt ;, All DECEIVINC. · ' D•ILY PILOT 111 .. -•lltirc • blt too much tor a BAY AVi . MI SA VE•nl! ~ -·-· home and v.·e •&k him to Ita blper th.II) h looks, This """ lfablllty for the flr1t lower the price, he says, C!!;"(pandcd Nf!WIJOrt Hel&htl 4 Units • f15,000 Cu1t. bit. 4BR. Lux .. . '
1 n co rr• c t ln Mrtlon '1\Vell, bring n1e an orrer, home has S Iara:e bedroom&. OCEANFRONT u~loua pool w!"jacuzzi.
only. • and n1aybe 1 \\•Ill." \\'e urce 2 baths, and dtnlng room. !ft I you 10 do this on lhe»e fine Alley a<.'Ce&S for camper or N Y dup lex Best oc.. 1 blk from
ho boot 11orag• . ..,umable WA $155,000 675-7060 golf course. Bargain at IND IS$0Cllll$
mes. loan. Owner movlna:. Priced .. · at 144.900. Call Colwell MESA VERDE $64,500, .842.7491_. __ • .' "!. .
.RICH AND WARM
DellghUul 4 Bedroom hoine
in Harbor Vie"' I-fills.
Paneled family r o o m ,
formal dining area, covered
patlo and lush landscaping
makes this a.n exceptional
hon-.e.
ESTATE REALTY . ,
1303 AVOC ADO OR.
NEWPORT CENTER
&40· 112q .; .
" .
SALESPERSONS~
1.
Cute "as a bug, all freshly
painted and decorated, close
to pool and recreational
aree ·Custom drapes. Great
location. 3 br. townhouse.
$33,500.
2.
Roomy 4 br. family hon1e,
\vlth two patios, sharp cor-
Mr .location, beautifully
landscaped. Tennis, pooli:;,
bike trails, and otJ1er fsmlly
oriented actlv1tles nearby.
1·19.500.
3.
It vie\\' Is in1po11ant to you
1ve hltve 11 beauty. Four bed-
roorn, zn. bl}lh, fRn1ily room
on lovely SPYi:lllSS Hill .
l l.39,500.
Coll 67>7225
~. GoH Course LIDO SANDS
LAKE FOREST 11th Green is right at your back door. 3 BR. 3. BR. 2 ba. home.
N@W lake front 5 bedroom 2 ha. home w/pool. 3 Steps to ocean. Drive home In .~ area of Lake Forest onttect at Car gar . $79,SOQ. by 4804 ~ver Ave.,
$72,"10 or will 1e ... at $650 55&-8809. • N.B. $49,~. 673-7420.
month. Call Colwell -· m . 4 Local =.T:-:rv .. You r CB
FOUR BEDROOM
MESA VERDE
FOR UNDER
$40,0001
Heres son1ething that'll hard
to tind on todays market!
RAMBLING CONTEMPORARY~225,DDO
1mpressiVe Dover Shares 5 bdrm home. Cus-
tom built,: fine design, lop quality approx.
4,500'. I,ge FR, form DR, jacuzzi.
'WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO.
TRIPLEX AND A VleW 'TQO!l t .
ON E BLOCK TO CORoNA b l L AU.II l i AC:H
.:. Pri<le of ownership propert~ In high rental
area. All units have a view. JUST REDUC:ID :ro $129,SOO:·Don'i wail or hesiiatel• Call for
appointment ta see.
CALL 644,7270
21:,1 E. Co11t Hl9hw1y, CoroM del Me; ,.
WI CMI HILi' YOU -VY, ,
-.. o~ TllAlll • -ANYPLACE II .THI NATION
* ·WATERFRONT ,((>TS .. ...
l . . '
• , L!Dp ISLE ·-LJDO.lt!ORD ... ; ..
30'xl 05'. Magnificent view! $165,000 • · . • \ "'1 ......
" 70 LINDA ISLE DR .. -' LINDA' ISlil
Prime 45 !t. lagoorrlot.c-'U50;ooo· . '" ' ·. . HARBOR ISLAND
Prize. 50' tot adjoini~g e.S.menL $400,000 .
N ... . A four bedroom t.tess Verde 2111 S.n Joaquin Hills Rd. e\V or cxpe .. eoced n1en or ! \Yith J yr old shag, patio, women, join the NBA 1eam. . NEWPORT C~NTER, N.B. 644.4910
lllL GRUNDY, REAL.TOR ..
341 ll1nffle Dr., 5ulto 1;1'!:L "67S-6T~l "
•
Work In a congeniul, creat· -~~~~:'.'.::'.'.:=:~ and walk IG everything ........ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Pl
ive atmosphere und er S BEDROOMS locstiG11. All of this plus , • no doo•n ternis 10 \1ets. For Gener•I Gener1I Gener•I G1nt1r•r ·
proven inanagement. Enjoy $ O further infonnation please ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j /. · I mi11imun1 reglmentitUon ·anct 4 ,500 call a4>949l. ---------1 -----~-;.;;.-1
I !~vocable rom'!!i"ion """'· 8'lieve thl•! A la"'e 5 bed· S,EA VIEW VILLAS YOUR HOME BACK . •A·i'f,' •• ' '
, . ~:,;11.',;f~nn1""' training room · tamily ""'"' · '""r" ~ c ·onclomiiliuins AT THE BEACH 4 IEDRO~ ... I Ca.II NIGEL for intervle\\'. living i:oom 1vith Ron1sntic # , , , VIII '44-l2ll " ... e1aco. •ing si'e """"'. Walker & Lee OPEN. DAILY 11 TO s 1n th• ~eted ,1ng1c ram.ny POOL S36,000 ,
large yt11'tl 11·ilh patio -~••~ 111•11 residenhol So th of be I hea"'' shake roof. All for Pres•. nt1d by Nola n Real Estat e, Inc. ""' area u ' I 'l t e N_...:... •J ll"'Y in Corona del l\tar. \ ml'!'acu a , .... .,....., rJD.NIC.EL
CAILEY ~
ASSIJCIATES
only $-l-0.500 -$4100 do11·n. BEST BUY An approximately %1tlCI 'sq, Riviera :. storv with hU&t Take advantage call Great white \Valer vie\V from each unit, over-baJconv O\'cr/ookl1w _,.. 9WG767. , ' · ft. 3 BR 3 BA hon1e wilh iii ... • -'\,!, ~ 00 ."j)Qlf='_,,,_ ..
LAKE ARROWHEAD
OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN 70 BE NICE!
''a · THE REAL
ESTATERS
NEWPORT looking Monarch Bay. Starting at $68,150. family room & """" m8'ter ,,,.. • ·~ .• • • ~ . ''B' UFF.,S'' Early Mediterranean stylingi 2 BR., 2'12 suite only one block from ffO~~r ·~,··I~f :.!i; ' ., baths to 3 BR. plus JamUy· rm., 2>A bathll; c Ocean Siva. 'ff . , • ri;:;;
Deluxe 2 bedroom, 2 bath, ~atios; fantastic amenilieS! -Directions: :g, <. It._CI:!) .be ... y~s for 01111 , room,._'.--~ .. ___ _:.~ -~·· Great for year round living ~=°""~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I
&. close to the village. 3 •0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0ii0iiiii I
yr old Bavarian style 3 le"'I
home 1vith open beam ce1l-. SUPER BUYS
ings thru-out, 3 br 2 ba R·l Lot Lot , ..... ~ + "'mpletely futiMed beae-2 BR D I $34 9·50 ment for playrm or shop. • up exes . , ,
1
Lndry facilities. $36,500. 1 Units . ; ...... $59,500
· (213) 451--3898 after Gpm or Beach Duplex .$119,SOO j
anytime u-eekeods. Cnll for utlditional In fo .......,.~· &aa..1m I DYNAMIC DUO 1797 Orange A\''·· C.M.
New Eng land style · Penirl-
sula duplex! Frp)c, beanis,
bltns, plush crptg. Pvt
patio. steps to surr~ VJE\\7!
Roomy o"·ner·s unit! Priced
al $84,500. -10~ do1\'l\ or
trade~! Call • 645-MOO.
' ' '
•
V. E. llo.•rd & Co.
""""u-~ ..
Newport Heights
· .' School
·, ---. - ---pne block ;uvay-3 bedrooms.
PERF ECI" fan11Jy honle riear Jarrcer potio. ;uxJ b o a t
park&. sc~!s. _4 !>?':"'• 'storage. ·compl e tely
3 balhs, fnnuly r'!I & hv1ng l'~f1!.oc1el~d. nl!'lv paint and
rm \Y/u~ brick , \\'OOCI carpet throu g hou t.
buqling fireplace. Located I n1 n1 e d i a t e possession:
In small development on $37,950. CaJI 646-TITI.
cul-de-sac. Only 2 yrs old
& tastefuly decorated. Bp
O\\.ner $47,000 lK>3 Parkvlsta
Circle, Costa ~1 e sa .
642-1000.
*RENT*
LEASE '
SALE .
3 BR, 2 BA, blW, fplc,,
in prin1e Joe, $325 mo.
PROFESSIONAL, medical,
recep + 5 oUices $·150 nw.
4-PLEX, prime Costa ~fesa
annual inc $7440 $64,500
SouthCo Realtors 545-84ZI
Newport Hgts Fixer
Secluded 3 Bed·rootn
Cliffhaven home 'vith (amily
room & fireplace on a huge
lot sWTOunded by towering
OPENTll 9•"'SFUN10 BE NICE! :a: THE REAL
ESTATERS
. DOWN DH THE RANCH
Irvine. that is!! Beautiful .
upgraded 3 year old. 4 bed-
room, 21; bath Pacesetter
hon1e, Prlced at S.53,950. A
fireplt1ce "ith a c.-onversa·
lion pil plus a 1ret bar and
2000 sq. ft. ot living space.
A 3 car gal'age for Dud
\\•ith loU: of cen1ent for boat
and trailer space.
trees. owner will pafr!t & ~ COATS carpel to suit. $$.500. tall
Prestige Homes, ;....-WAL~ACE
L~RGE .LQT REAL TORS EASTlilDE COS'i'A MESA 75 x •16:) with 2 ~ -$46..4141-
honle" -·large , dble · Car (Op~n Evenings )
garage. plus huge workablp. r '""'""'"""'""'""'""'""''""'"" And room to build. $32,{QJ. p I Red eel Roy McCardle RHltor r Ce UC
1810 Newport Blvd., C. M. $2l,500
548-7729 Corona· del Mor RUSSELL & ASSOCIAT,£5 Real Estate QpCn Hou·se Custom built. Extra features
Februury 4, 5-10 Pi\J galore. I-luge living roon1
Look .. con1e : See 1vtth ocean vie\v. Dream kit·
Creations b.v ~1ati c!K>n. Coz)i study. Four bed-22.ill Brookhurst St., HS" rooms. Storil,gc for boat.
7l4--962-7787 · Call 673-8,j;j().
BEACH GIANT °""""'"'"Jl'10 BENCEI
Ra1nbllng ranch. 5 + den I;-·, '
1
'I ~. • + dine. $2:;,95(1, Agt. 645-0303·
CORONA DEL MAR \..:_ )
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Attentkln Btdrs! 2 Prime R-1
Ocean & Bay Vie\v Lots. J Bdrm1 & Den-
1110.000. 9'11>001 or G44-4ii!O No Own. G.I .
RO?\JAN Pool! Atriun1 entry. Lo\·ely family -home \vlth
Open spacious floor plan. large used-brick fireplace.
4 Big bedrooms. $48,CKX>. 2 baths. Enclosed front
847·6010 egt. courtyard. F" o r c e d -a i r
C d I Ma hea t ing. Hon1emaker's Orona ' e f kitchen Flexible I e r tn s ! •-h I p d $32,500. Call ~1720 -c e or 0 TARBELL, REAL TORS
With Pool MESA VERDE
On a """""""' '°"'" lo! FIX·ER UPPER in walk-to-private c.001mun-
lty beach• Corona l~igh
landB, a wen. docorstcd 2
Br, 2 Ba hom~ \\-ilh forn1al dininr, spacious master
auite, ~ )'&rd \\i lh pa:io
sun deck end large free
form pool. 169,500.
CALL 644-7211
nME FOR .
9UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
64ir5678
1t's meay -but its 4
bedl"OQma in l\.Jesa Verde
for $34.500. Ha.rd price to
beat clOR to ·everything -
11"'00d bumlng firej,lal'e. Call
Red Carpet, Realtors
~ or 546-8610.
T BY oWNER*
HAnBoR VIE\V, t\formco
model, 3 Bdtin, 2 BA,
beautifully decorated St
landscaped. B asketba ll
cOUM in backYUd. 1951 Po11
Locksle4,oh PJ .. NB. $66,900.
Vacant & ready to n1ovc l
642•403.1.
' N""J""' HeiPU Dupl<x
Sparkhna: dl!an, completely
upgraded. Eaeh tmlt h&• 2 bedroom• &: 2 baths &: a.
cowred garoge. Loc1ttt'd in
great . "'llghbol1>00d. Call
Red Carpet R ca Ito r 1
546-$640, G<S-8080.
Bill-paying time? Sell "Don't
needs" rast and easy with
a OallY Pilot. Clus1"1 Ad!
one ouoner home in the S96i5(I) ....... ~ ....... 'UIU ~
envied style or BluU living. ,. rown Valley Pkwy., just off af So. Co •-... ' Can ror Details •· "· n1uch more. A ·t r.1111·
Impeccably maintained like Hwy., in· Laguna Niguel. . . 6"--7211 delightful place to II\'.! .• can
a model. Conve nien ce today ~2313..
location. Green belt selling. "!'""'""'F~o!!r!!f!!u!!rt!!h!!e!!r!!i!!n!!lo!!r!!m!!•~l~lo!!n!!!!ca!!l'!'l:!!4!!96-<1'"'"5".5"1"'"""'"' I OPEN f'/l • • J!'S,tlMfDrii MCEI Grand entry u·ay, 11paciOll.s ~
rooms -lots of closets -General I General
double attached. garage. --------------------·.! ~=:==tl~~;=="' se~t'8le laundry roon1. Let I[ MOBILE HOME 701 S '2np /
us introduce you to gracious COSTA MESA 10 ~ · ~ ., mo.
living. By a ppoi ntment only · FOR SALE : Golf. Coune
.. call 5'&-2313: I MS01LBVIELRECHROMESTE . MINI.RANCH Prestige neighborhood. Step•
OPENTIL 9 • rT'S FUN 70 Bf NICE! to Golf Courst'. Assume 7~1-
B, -· . ) 3J' xpedSJ' 2 .~~ ! BA, c::2., V.,\. In. EASY TO QUAL-
' ,
1
·•
1
', rs ' -in ·• re .. ,... JFY. Atrium ent~. La,.....
COUNTRY CH •RM \\'Rl:ihcr & elec. dryer, wired "" ·e-" for 2'20 air rond., ~dtch. li1•ing ares. Huge family ~~·~"'~::::::::::::~::::::~ clock, storage shed, land· room. Banquet area. Bright Ii CITY CONVENIENCE scaped patio. Three yrs. old. gourn1cts' kitchen. Huge
-like nu. ~aled in new patio &: bonus yard! Take
adult pk. 81,·sy front noiay ad,. fl n tag e, call "°""
HORSES, ANYONE ?
This beautllul home is loaded
11·ith charm from· its 'brick
fireplace to its 1: acre l~e
lOAded lot The ron1lilete
fencing-n1akes this' hon1e
ideal for youn~sters · and
prts . F'oi· fUrther
inforrnution pleAsc. c a 11
j 15-949\.
App1"Uxin1at.cly 1 :i ac1·e; over-
looking sack Bay, in aN!a Walker & Lee
o! la>'ge "''"'"'· A •plendid ... , .. ,.,,
large bon1e she. fo1· 01)1,y 1.,;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;~ 139,500.
4 Br. + Den
Newport Heights
Reduced To
$43,950
~lake an appointment to see
and bring rou1· checkbook.
Because this house can't
last. 4 BR. L"Onvertible den,
2 BA, built-in kitchen, pool
s.lzed ysrq. \Valk ID e\·ery·
thing. MQtivated seller says
SELL.
~au· 64~~n11
.... ~
"Owner Wants
·Out" S202 • • Per Mo.! ·
RENDEZVOUS
CONDOMINIUM
CANNOT BE DUPLICATED
-again In Newport Beach.
Rare opportunity. to live on
· the oceanfront for less than
$100,000. Top floor with
sensational view. security
b uil di n g, subtcmmean
garage, elevator.
2 Bedrocun, 2 ba $TI,OOO
2 ~'001\l, 1 ba. $69,500
CALL 5'40-1151
· ' ... HERITAGE
REALTORS
~t. One-hall bl. [rom club-842-Z.-->35.
house. $15,495. Cull EVES.
21H94-4690.
CAN BE SEEN AT:
CRESTMONT
. . EST.t.T~t. . , ,, I ~;iiiij 1051 Sile Dr .. Bt-er. Centnu Ii
Ave. across •trom ., Brea ,LOTSA..aOO
Co1nn1. Hosp.) Lot •46. • ' • CONTACT RAY, PK. f\IGR. 4 BEDROOMS, FAMILY
(or show·ing. ROOM -2 baths,' big unfinished playroom, cloee
to schools and church6.
Lots of e:ttras.. Asking
$29,000. CALL 540-1151 .• ,
~"~;"• THE REAL ~.tOi~ ESTATERS
.. . . ,... ... .. . ... ,
Afodern 3 BR~ BA. Penin-
sula ~tory bon>e! Blln!!,
beam centnP. frplc, dining.
ove.r..u.ed pr, ._ to st. R·2
lot. ·Vacant • nw. ~ re-
quired! Fantudc Value et
$57,SOO. Lov.• down /I'D'• or
trade OK!! Call.~ ..
·MAC.NAB,
l'RYINE
.CHOICE LOCATION!
Nestled away in a countryside settipg, beau-
tifull y' decorated. 3 bedrooms. 3 fireplaces.
Enjoy watenide Ille at its best for only
$76,500. . '
BEST BUY-BIG CANYON i
Beatttuui p'rolessionally decorated and limd·
scaped 3 be<lroom home . 2 master suites. ,
Fotin'ill ilinlng, conversation pit, tlo!>l.
$1S4,llM. UNIVERSI T'T-·PARK~l·BEST,..' .. •
,and biggest townhome on ui., park near
pool and tennis. Irpmacdfllle 4. 'bedrooms,
dining room 8llll f4m\1y ~ ~·Lasalle"
$65,450. :.: ' ' • 1<'"
,_, JIARIOl!\ VIEW ~IS
Larae •'¥roorlf liome, dlllliic *80m. family
rodln, 2~ bathl:'Z fire plaeeo and tier. OUt-
atandlnJr,llmdacUIDg . LOCATED IN NEW·
FlOR'.1' SCHOOL 'blSTRICT .. Owner tr1111-!frfed 8!ld i'eady to sell. '81.500. l C:LAS51C to~ONIAL
9over Shores area.'1 st.ones pf traaj.tloul
Uvln&. 4 bedrooms; de~ 2~ ~-lnvttlq
and •¥'llll.Y Cea\fortable. UDCl'Owded be ...
ty. ,121,IOO. • . '
! -....... CollhrJI ...... ~-'
'
644-1766
. '
s
vi
I
fi
• 5
SI'
2·
'
. -~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;:i~~~r:::::::::::::::::::::::~j~!!!!~r::::::::::::::::i~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::J!~~:!:::!!;!!!~:::::ThruWay, 1'nuvy3l, lq74 ~· ' r•I I ~;;;;;g~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; j 1 Gener el rv ne L .. una h Newport JMc ·
DAILY PILOT , 3:J lj
bile Homts • ,
.. . ' ' '
"' 1' .,. I I , , \ I
I ' , t i
, ',,. ,. lJioilOO~ ffli'tl:.S ' '
• A PAIR Of'>THE FINISJ
Sl'YGLAS$ HlLL -Comtortable elegance!
fyut ~nl'(or slll!)•witb'deligbtlul decor,
paUo, i~ng, an inv1t.iug pool and capturing
view. ,,.,autiful at $189 500 !
!fr. .' ( . • t iilG ,c~'(OH -:-A lieautiful five bedroom,
~q{&l'C/111· )l'•l!Plljlers and draperies fantas'
'Uc •'l!iiiacaplng including fountain; ·every-\!lloi\J8 YP&rade4 and shows beautUully-
, all on il 115xl70,\ot at $147,500.
•'UNIOUi·:HOMES RHlto•
2443.1 •. c ..... Hwy.
•·
. 675-4CIOI
CwoN clol Mor
WATCH THE SUPERMONACO VACANT DUPLEX SUNSIT OVER Tired of look\oii ...... back Ho"'' looki r<aily ~at. A DOORS TO
For Stle 125
COt.OF.N STATE kl t ,
ot your nc1a:hbor's fen("t? C'hannlng 3 bdnu .. den, 2 6 CATALINA How about twutkH'll! city both . beam•. wood Ort.. BEACH
12'X4j', '+ l2'X4Z.' Cabana,
I Bit , expandable 10 2 BR, t
On thtl Buy UI Newport. 0 11•mt.a bv nlght and n:illb><• French doo1'1 to red\.VOOd Ile of the l!e:sl vle\\'8 in Hal'· >t> ~ .. dt'Ck1 & level vard will• hor VI • HUI TI It Jo 1.. green lilll$ topped off by •
hon '"11 't· I velv sno~~ cap~ l\11. Baldy by f18h pond! A nul&l gee • le " s ou on a po nt O\\'ner very 1u'lxlous. Aaklng O\>etiookJ.rc a 1reen belt day. The hon~ '-a 2.BR, TOWN 'N COUNTRY S59 500
and \Vlth a tot-ever 180 de.' 1.:0fl\'erdble de.n '"111r tor1i1i1tl Ranch style 4 bdrm., 3 bath J'unlOr estate. ' · l:ltt vieiv of Ol-ean and dlnhia: only 2 tloors tro1n Seid f Catalina. Very shaii> 4 bed,. co1nn1uttJlY pool, ja<.-uu;I, 0 1n seen eatures include 2 fireplace s,
rooi)l _ tanUly room . 3 and lentils oowu. Hl&h on .welbar, plush carpeting, formal dining.
bath, 3 car garage • spa1·kl· the hill& or N"ewport, Only S\VEEPING COUNTRY VIEW! Offered by
tnr H & ,-J>Oo1 , ~"" rt.,. 174.500 :JEE. moli"8ted seller at $112,000.
and n\&n)' n\Ol'e extnll lo or L .. M for
ma"e indoor-outdoor llvlng $500/ mo. GRUBB & ELLIS co at_h• best, •nd )'Oii OM\ the C•ll 644-7211 •
land. Call n°l' 6'Jl.8550. REAL TORS
OPfNTll.I •I 67S.70IO
-/.}.o. NIL EL
BAILEI &
ASSllCIAl ES Co1t11 Me11 Huntington H1rbour
~~~;;::;;;;;;:::'.1 ~~T.,. "'"'..:i ~ IDEAL: Blir · "'
down to assume r.m per l , ~ nt0. Full ·price $29,900. Call Sharp Cind_et'\!:lla' bQn1e \\•Ith .;;:::
847-$)10 for nlOre info. agt. hard"-'OOd tloort, 3 bedrms, WATER VIEW fan1 rm, lanai, 1ll c e Belboe ,.,.inaul1 location, owner mQ.tivated. \Vatch the boats lron1 your
~I
• •
... ,panoranllc1 Your feet
1ink deep In this co1npletel)'
carpeted hou11e & your bod)•
is y,·anned by the flanilng
bi>IC., as you observe lhe
PsciCic happenings [ron1
Pa,los Verdes to Avalon, In
this 3 bdrm. hilltop d1\'Clllng.
s;<,900.
\VIII consider VA oUera. dining l'OOn1 or deck. Enjoy ••su··'BLE~·i VACANT.~4 BR. tam. nn., ~3380. Red Ca rp et, the n1artl11i p i t ~O 1-H ~ MA lge. kit. 2-Sty. $84,500 Realtol'S. fconversalion areal and ils VTO~-#.,
" '
oon·t pay high 1iun1 n1er renl nro!lOnabfy pticcd. C n 11
1\'hen you can rolle<·t It. and 673-84:?1 •
still reserve ~1e bc11t pcriod''N~'E~l~V-c-,..-1-.. -,~bl~t~be~au-ty-~to·•
for yoo and )"Our:· 3 ll!t. 2 ;tdult park on the bay.
Bi\ do\\'n. ss 1.500 Jo EE sis.300. sra-am.
LAND.123-43.i•d St .. NCY,'IJ0•1 i'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!~~~I '' Bet1ch. ~ \\'ed. arld li
1
~ "
Thurs. 12-S: r n. t().S. I ~ £1tat•.
C•ll 644-7211 . "'""" ' .,
Acre1ge for ule 150 ~.~IGEL
UAILEY !.,
ASSllCIATES 91~ -ACRE .ORANGE GROVE -
GRAND OPENING-lli\·ersltlc. Prinil· location tl
Newport &.y Towe rs suitable tor Apt.!, Condoa po ss i b I l• neighborhood 1 .~ 2 B~~DROO~f shopping. FP S 1 57 ,°500 .
CONOOMJNIUl'll HO~JF.:s lCl'lllS. D. Findlay, Rltr.
Bayfront Honies 496-1345, 24627 oet Prado,
Boat SliJ>S Dann Point.
FulJ Security llii.:hrise 1-~G~R~A~S-S_V_A_l~L~E~Y--t Steel le C.'Oncrere construction .
Private l:lalconiN> Sy,·!111 · Boat -l''l5h -Retire!
2 garage spaces per un it. No hassle, no pollution. 2
Roof top sundeck be1111tiful , wooded acres
Unusual OpportunUy to Pur· 1•1500. Agent (1141 642·9666.
chase Bay(ro.nt Proper'.)' in Commercial
' . • ' FHA L'OAN ' ' . Manhall Really 61>4600 cheery n,,,place. A block RE "L ESTATE l"l:!~~~~"""""''!""!"''""'"l"'""'"""""'""'""" Huntington Beach to the beach Coodo 101• just ,. ,,..,
IG.neqt,,f'\ . J. ,. Generil This home is a "~fUST CorO'nl del Mar ' . $21,500. · 1190 Glenneyre St.
Ne\l,oporl Beach. p
310 }'ernarido Rd., !\.B. roperty 158 -
675-1551 NEWPORT BEACH '!~s~:;:~~i!~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I SEE" Qn every vnlue-1>.•ise 1---------exe'cur1'vE HUNTINGlON HARBOUR <19-1·9473 549-0316 1:,uV:::o· u ·'D'uG· HT shoppe" list. Everytl>i"" ~ 'et Pl II ... ,IW I & from the .ahake rool to the . .,.u1 ease.. L• c ... ,. Mansion ' l!fA!,lY OPEN HOUSE Wt ·lt1 Ht(&..C< H111>a 11.v Prilne Bayfl'bnt Slte
FOJ• boat l'i'pHil' .~ SAies
6 1llAUTIPUL UNITS .,d. ,, sv•eeping view. Spe\ls It's 'A Sfeen.r OVERSIZE POOL, formal l7214COASTHW'v . B lid Cl ' . . .... -.4 JOtning Costa ""gracious living. Ta ke ovel! r-din r1n., lg fam rn1, 3 spac n•:· 846-ll84 &: 2i3: • 592-2845 u ers osa-out Mesa G~ Cot,i:rse. Great copdition inside & the e.'l:lsUng FHA 5'4, ~'-loa n For an active faniily that ba + huge glUlle r1n. . , 7 Custom models to choose
out. 'Plenty .of renier ap,peal. Quality con-or let us atTa.l)ge fli'W "'"'uld \'{ii~~ nearby grusy Approx 2900 sq It. fron,. Sewer bonds Jn & •ru ti financing for you. Please park and tennill :-courts. A Transferred. Irvine · . • · paid for. Prices range fro in .. c !lll •• Pf••,acy,1nd ~ne. bl.ock to shopping. II I d 3 BR 2 BA OCEAN R Id I f .t ,., call 545-9491. \i'e P ann~ · Al $44,750 to $63,000. Fhpmclng '8-. ,.or owner OCC upaJV. Priced rigb~ and ' llclme w.11.h· fo1m .. 1. d!ning, PRICE REDUCED _ 4 Br, YOUNG AT HEART available. Will be 11ho11•n ~mum.down payment ·required. Great tax beam cei~ and profitable tafn rm w/1rplc. Unique Darling condo. Just for you! 11-om 10 A.~I. to 4 P.i\I.,
Shelter! Fif'st' tim~ .adVertised. CALL NOWl. renlal P uclng $2(Kl/mo. kitchen w/extras. 2 Bdrms., den, Upgraded Saturday .l Sunday
Bill Grundy Rhr. 675-4il61 * BIG CANYON* TY.'O a~joinlng 1 n co Ill e '' DEANE CONDO Jll'll l>ert1cs, "-enter Costa
S . 3 BR ~1C!Sa. 01\•ner. pac1ous upgn1dl'd &&2020/642-6560 ~tonal"O n1odcl. Bes! locHtion ~~=.,..°'·""-"-'='---·I
-end unit, d ght on lOtti fair· Condom1n1ums
\Va)'. Con1plctely landsi·apt;.'<I for 11le 160
\\·/trellised patio. lnuucd .1;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;1
.4~110. -•Walkttll' 0 'lee M~Uvated seller !ias reduced Cathedral ceilings. Sllper carpeting, '"'ood ... vallpaper, i;•eb. 2nd & 3rd
SP, A. . , "¥H
1
•a , . _ IUI U' price to .only $83,SOO. ~ cpts thruout, cu.st drps. utility nn. & lots of slo.i'8ge. 1059 Sac,Y An• St. 1~ ~ •••i. ••1'•1'• Call 6'4-7211 Owner transferred. It's alr-c.'Olld!Uoned & has Arch BeaCh Height&
2 ORY • a $34,500 a large back yard with taguna Beach
IX:cup. Just listed at $149.500. 8 0 h ,1 V ~ ~ • )' 11· er " ci;a e1-..1e,
condo Nu orange shag, all
elect kitch"cn, gar & car
parkini. paUo, p o o I .
Jn1n1ac. A!ISumable 7~2 S~
·rHA Loan. 545-1580. -. n Ults only towohouse, adjaCent . PENfN. POINT ' VACANT -3 Br, 2 ·Ba, patio. Only $31,000. Appojntmen(I may be se-to .Yfl"\ ¥erde ,Country Club. Park·like' set· 2 Bdrm .. t bath + '"'""• •PPI~• 1600 ,.. It. FUiiy CALL 552·7500 fU!'Cd by calllng 4!»-0301.
linl 'Witl) beautiful pool and grounds. Offer-sh°'\·er oU garage. Used crpld, dJ.•¢.. oov p&tio. New HIGH ON A HILL
bri k trpl bar-k' ~~=~~=~-tpaint out•lde. N r VISION ed. aj. o~y $39,500. CALlio S46-58IO. che~: "Ca~ Cod "t~tag~: GLOOMY·GLOOMY shops/fnvy. VA/FHA or Overlooking ~ the ocean .
I t ... I Good Lot I I I 1.erms to oult. Almost ne'v 3 Br. 2 ,Ba c ose o c 1, cond. s o peop e g ooiny· home. Has lots of po:r1slbil· 546-SllO $59,950. . gloomy 'cause they missed BRASHEAR REALTY • red hill itics. A ,·ecy functional noor
. "--. Eves. Call: 673-3663 67J.8086, Eves. the roomy-roon1y. But , S!Z-7411 oi eves' 968-1178 plan "'Ith good carpeting.
""t""\'11 here's just as good. The very cleanest 2 bedrooin 2 Bdrm ·+ Pool RE.$.LTY REALTORS Paint & d&."Ot'RUng couJd
• HERITAGE
f<lALTORS
BEST VALUE
NEWPORT DUPLEX
2 BR. & 1 BR., ney,· copper Duplexes/Unit•
plun1bing, lo n1eintcnance, ule 162
xlnt-area. Serisible inves1-1-·~~-------I
nient. Xln.1 f i n a n c ing .. GREE.NTREE
J45,000! ! ~ Cnll &15-8400. Ne\¥ Duplex Income lfon1e
under construction 'at ~~..,""'""'-""'""!i..!IJCI., I 214 Koox St. Ott
Gtilorel associated
8kO~Ei;i::. QfALTO~S
~'I'•...-Bolo~" bll !foll
home Yl'ith rrplc., carpels & • · Univ. Park' Center, Irvine 111ake this a sho\\' phu..-e.
drapes thruout & u;gg"t $24,495 Mklrig $52,500. Cnll 8!.!ildcr, 6-IB-4~14 • ,.
===:::::::==='==!!Income Property 166 ·, ..
DUPLEX
OVERLOOKING
GOLF CoURSE
This sharp, lm11111.culate, \\'ell
• k~pl up duplex Is a bargain
'at $45,900. Each unit has
2 bedrooms. and one has
a fireplace. Grounds In
excellent oondiuon, wiits
nev.•ly painted, sit on the
IWldeck over the garage
arid "''8.tch lhe golfers play
by. Call Red Car p el
Reallol"ll f>46.8640 ot &!:..SOSO
C'fO~S street to ocean.
ltucHo condo is perfect
summer perch. LUXUIY .is
the rozy conversation pit
& lush shag. Nearly nev ...
Unbelievable-$2-1;500!: ·Call
agt., now;84"6DIO ... ,
double garage, all nev.'ly 2 Bdnn condo., desirable ·WALNUT .; · . •) ~
painted. immaculate! l\Iore ground level floor plan l~l 5nu a "E _,__ ,,,._.
good ne\\'51 owner will carry yeal's new, Freshly Painted T ~ · · ~·«r
the )Qllfl -no p¢nts, no \\'Ith tastefully panelea and T\\·o townhol,lSes, nearly fie\\' ·
penalty. $58,500. mil'l'Ol'ed living room, plush & sharp! Pool &: rec. area. 4t4°1671 4ff-2100
Uniwr1ity Realty 1\·alJpape1'ed dµi ing area, Each 2 bdnns.: only $2.5,000
3001 E. Cst. 1-twy. 673-6510 shag carpel, & custonl each. To buy or sell, see Laguna Broli•ri
REDUCBD TO SELL drapes, ovei·siicd pantry !Itel Kiddie. OPEN u-J
•1• ~-9.!-'ea, 1\Car schools, \\'alking CALL l!\o ,,,.1414 10070ro ~:;r.io.500 di.Stance to Hunt i ngton ,,~~ 1015 Ot'O
E.xtra sped.al 3 bdrm .. den, Center, S1vimmlng pool and · • ·-•l'L 1248 Morn~ide
2 baUia, Ip. pe.Uo ,1f/BBQ, many park areas. FOR .,. ...... ,.....,, ~io '""Id ' I ;,,· .. ..a.r REALTY ~ .. rn~'bs e o sze garage + s_.. .. mg SALE BY OWNER. Asking: Niarl'fiwparl Pait Offle• 675-1219 new 2 ~· apt. with only •$24,495 ~ today
e v ~ r y th 1 n g, Immed. 847.J095. · PLAN· I04 , Lqun• Hlll1
152.950
156.950
la',950
l!M.500
occupancy NEA ' One of the most popular . University RHlty ' REY NEW!! style• 01 CaHlornra Hom" ASSUME 7%% LOAN
3001 E. Cst. Uwy. 673-6510 2 !i Year old Exec home. in ,Irvine. Rejl ' tile rqot: 3 BR., 2 be.. condo. PooJ,
CORONA DEL MAR Thick, thick carpets, vecy 3 barms .. den & ~1pacioUs gru:age. $27,900
VIEW
* NEW DUPLEX * custom defprator drape&; family-room style kitchen; Capi1 Realty 6#-75~
* BY BUILDER .* \\Wen \\"OOC:ls &. Valances. lge. tiled bflcfst. bar. F .A. VIEW lot, .3 BR, 2 BA. ·den, I ~""'-'~7.ir.-,,.t;;..,..=,.--I
..
"
2~~ .. ~
~t
~ '" 5155 -:;~,---""""":', ---.
Ouinning 3 QR. 2 'BA.12 BR. Vaulted:ceHfngs, candlelight heat SIUD1p1to_ne fi:Pll!: Nfet dlnini area, (rplc, ~ ~
2 BA. ,\II bit-ins. beauUfuJ .. fomutl':ld\rili!(, c~g carpets; ~b~lot. Better drPs; pro'f. decorated,·J!J·.
ly crpt'd & draped. ,Buy adobe _Ai171~"'M.t . A ~~P a,i ;~~-'Call no~. P8-t!o!·· ~l .~186.1. ..,-,
brat higher building COlits & 1f~~~-~ ..... · .,· MO,pG.AN REALTY Latun1 Nigu.I t•ising inflation. $118.500. ell, UJllJl .. ;l"CJll.!.~ n }'OU R
OPEN SUN 11·5 P~t auwne this gov. loan W/ 673.6642 675-64591--'--------
1 • I I L
Gohor•l · -•
' •
. . .,
~f'•t. • I a .. ""' , H~· . .
~ ..
. ::,, '. :.;.1',UQ'Y fo(Y1}.o/,C49i<;e!:-
. : f Hiilf :QO(le Jn.half a year and the rest will not
·' la&t.!On9. Hurry' td See· this distinctive Newport
·"t"8·11a(ff dkVeroPro¢nt Of cbndomi nh.lm100nNs, ~ ~b~lk ~n".fJu·ste.r~ ~round h~ndsome courtya~ds.
•. I .);191\1 .$\>P!!rb i;r?!l'!•ls >each a masle~ ol.
·"· Ji.O<ur?t c'Omfort.'Cbhveni'ence a·n<f q .. Uanty
~· const ructlpn . SU11d~cks. firl.!place. wet-bar,
.1., . (legant Maste,r\Sllite, Sun·Litec-kitchen.
··,pt'llJ.ete enclqsed.double .ga;age. R,ecreational
, , -ff!cilill~s includ~ hep!~ ~wimmlng pool,
, lighted tennis courts, sauna. therapy pool.
All exterior building and grounds maintenance
.. , ·: p(~Cled. Satisfy your curiOslty-see
• ' · ~ · ' · NeWport Crest today!
CLASSIFIED
HOURS 700 Narcissus .Ave. ea&Y. ~.,..,. ... plus owner SQUE~Y CLEAN BY owner 5 ·BR + den,
514 D •HLIA may elp }'OU finance!!! 14m Groveview, nr CUJ·-r beach &ide NiilJel Shores,,2 "" Only $38,950. You OY,'ll the • ., yrs new. Guarded gLUFFS Condo, 3 BR, 2 Advertisers may place DUPLEK under coruit. 3 land! Bia 962-$11. &: \Valnut Has 7% govt community. Rec ce nter is' ba 2
•
their ads by telephone BDRMS, 2 BA ea: unit. loan, anyone can assume. '"/tennis -·-s, -1, etc. ' • yrs .. new. lowest
8 00 t • 30 4 BR 1 1 2 ba 3 .. """"'' ...,.,, price in area. Must sell,1,_iiiiiiiiiiii..,iiiiiiiiiiil : a.m. 0 ..,; p.m. $ll7,500. Sec plans at OWNER DESPERATE -. ' p . ' I yr old, Walk to beach. $79,500.. m 500 K s . 1·
Monday tbru FTtday Fltzmonis Realty Co .. 3135 MAKE OFFER h.i\s: 220, nu cpt., drps. phone 496-8122. ~t5 ·'~ m•lh. Rite. WALK TO BEACH
8 to noon Saturday E .. Coe.st Hwy, Cd M. Spnnklel'S· tron ·I ..rear n~. B h C t
COSTA ·~ttSA 'omCE 673-9010. . fluge oorner "'Ith 20 x 20 Usually open ' on &(t/SUn Lido Isle EASTBL!J1',F Condo. Owner. B~D~~~l :.P~S ••
330 \V. Bay 2 SEP. houses on 47' R·2 4J1Mter bedrm. Try $1400 Quintard 642--2991. . Formal . D.R . ., 3 ~R. 21-{i & DUPLEXES. . . 't
642-5678 lot, beaut gardens, gd, inc, iJown -only $26,500. ... SEU. brand new "2" Plan' LIDO ISL£ $65 ODO Ba, fam rm!>:, patiO. Spin E-Z Terms or Trade
So. or hwy $89,500. PS Rlty I' hoi;ne Turtic~k. 3 ~ .2 . - ' level. Incl,,.:iec. Ja c 11 : SCOTT REAL TY " NE'IVPORT BEACH BA: y,·et bar + !xfu.s. . $67,cro. -~ ' ..
'3333 Newport Bl\'d. Cost11 Mesa Lovely &·priced to sell fut. Here is your chance to live , BAYFRONT 5J6.7$33 c11ll anytime
"2·5678 20·IO >'EDERAL. 3 Bd-. 2 fU.4471 ( :;::) ~01 833-8282 on Lido Ir: enjoy prestige by F·ne t · ie & st' f ~~---"" BY Ol'~'ER 3 B the sea.. Your own Spanish 1 5 vie~v. P r ip or -CLOSE TO BEACH I HUN~GTON BEACH Bath plus Anthon• pool "' r 2 Ba super yacht. t 1 5 9 , 5 0 0 .
....... , ' J • ----· ---di • • Castle. Just s1eps to the . Den•'son •··-•'·· ~nu Brand New D.cilL'l:e .3 & 4 17875. Beach Blvd. sharply upgraded Freedom , wl_ n nn, lrg llv rm, frplc, be V ~ ••r 8 home. ~~~· !\1aintenance THE THREE p S bluns. ' beaut landscaped, 1rg acb. acant &: the owner , to-. ... ,,,S R Duplex. 3 BA. dbl "'I 540-1220 ...,.,,.,,. t 0 will even carry the loo,n. DUP~ near the ocean gur ea. $80,000. 514 18th St. ·
yards. Owner will ~II VA .... r,irst patch., tl~n paint, •pa 10· ':lnge grove 81 rear. Herbert Hawkins Realtors !\tiles Larson Realtor fl B Ca'll Bu1lder 847-.J957
LAGUNA BEACH or Fl:IA at appra!SB.l of !hen PROFIT y,•ilh this 3 $41,900 551--0620 839-1600 or 963-56Sl * 673-8563 * . . '
222 Forest.Ave. Sl'.>,200. Open house. bed--ho•ne near beach. L•gunai D--ch N · . h 7 SEPARATE houses an * 0 494-9466 100-SOOTue Th •n. '""'" •--=----=;:;.;.---l *MEDITERR•NE•N ewport He ... ts aCre, Arlaheim. Gro ss ·, ' ' i .. ., """ 1.a,., added 1..Uly room • ~ ~ 113 920 • -k' SIJO 500 o N:elson .Ro~ .. Rltr. w/Co)Onial style',fireplace. Own Your Own 3 Br's, family nn, dining ' · ""ing ' · ·
-•SAN ~~IENTE 67'".Hll.Xl. 'i ' Priced to sell at $28 000. A~rtm•nl nn .. 2~» ba, beautltull" ST ARTER du p I ex. Findlay, Rltr. 4 9 6 -4 3 4 S. ,,,
305 ,N. ·E1 Camino Real MESA VER.DE I r-nted $89 500 J Ren1odeled. Lowest price in 24627 Del Prado, Dana Pt.
. ~?~~20 · Call . Only $3!,l;iO .ror this Laguna ~*""y·' 1A .LIDo NORD N.B. Must sell! DANA POINT-BRAND NEW
5 Bedroom or 4 bedroom The Reif Estate F1ir Oianner \\'tth 2 ~ms , , . . , Owner/Agent~ 615--0l44 DUPLEX , 4 l?LEX NORTH .COUNTY + formal dining ·+ den 536-2551 Uf..6133 dining room, kitchen built': Older bodi'e on ynluable 50
dial free 540..U20 + family rm. lnterior ins. Phatio, shake roof. Close ft lot •$285;(m ' Newport Shorn Ocea~Ji~.~·~wcr"
CLASSIFIED atrium wtwaterfall. Huge to· t e beaches & shops. . Lantern •. Buildtr. G.12-4900 ;
DIADLINES mas er rm wt rp c OU ry lovely landscaping. 1.1ove in * , . T * HOUSE + 06 UNIT$ t bed 'th f l C rtyard~ \Vith pool , cable. TV &. WATERFRON
Deadline for copy & kills & 3 car gar. Only $64,95(). Contemporary 4 • in + condition! Cn ll 4~·8003 · . ·-4 .. BR., 2~: ba., dm. ml., Ne1v unit! at 2637 Elden •
is 5!30 ii.m . the day be· Call 545-Stl4 S outh Co den. -ranch style.' Form'.a.1 TARBELL, REAL TORS . NEW OFFERING brkfst, ar'.ea. 2 Waterfront 0-t. ls1 user i1·/200<"k .. .,...rit~
fOl'l' J:::biication, except Realtors. . diiiing room, living nn w/. ,,...... Bri...,, & ~ 4 bdrm decks. Cornei\ lot, )'Ou O\VN off Call Builder 646-4-114 f ..-.... It M--.1 PERFECT fanuly home near lplc.'Imn>aculate -nd,·t•-'. IN'V S. Coast Hwy, ·L.B. ' s •v c ry . · lhe lnnd! ~.950 · · or u • ........, .......,ay ...... nJn BIG 4 B d home with special charm. C oon RE NEW TRIPLEX Editions when' ~adline park & schools. 4 bdrnl, Reduced! to-' $37,900. BKR. r, , en .&. tam.Uy Lge. patio, tlet. garage, AYW -i AL TY
,isf·satui;day. 12 noon. 3 baths, family rm & living 962-4495. f 1 • rm., w/wct bar & slid1!1& recently paintCd in & out. * SU.1290 * 3 BR ffOuSe + 2 Units at
rm w/used brick v.'OOd glass to ·garden . pat Jo Just steps to ~ch.;$92,800 At 4J6 Han1llto11. C~1.
CLASSIFl!D ~ dreptace. Located *JUST LISTED.* w'vl~'OOd d~; llv. rm. · GIB WALKER Sant• ~1 ~C~ll 8u.ilder.'6·1G-~ REGU• 6 TIONS m small development on Go . /beam ceil fpl Unique 4 PLEX c M 2 ., 8 1 " '"""' cul·de-u.c. Only 2 yrs old rgcous model-like 3 BR, kitch. \''/blt~ins. ' Approx REAL TY 67.S..5200 .. -· · · · · ... r, 'IW ::g~~kA='~hread: §T. f~telully decorated. ~y -~9,;orm. Many extras . nXJ sq. ft. Entire grouM~ 3355 Vi1 Lido, N.B. 4°/o ~~~ZG~f·~sisu;~i~VA~~~~ ~
daily&._ report errors Owner .. $4~,900. 1833 OPEN SAT/SUN l.S spri nklered '& 'ericl. BEST COR To BCH Connn ission i!I the toral you 556-617\
)mmediately. THE Parkvlsta Circle, Co 1 ta !002'2 SPAR CIRCLE W/plaster & red brick • ' pay y,•hen we !ist vacant DUPLE~X-... -.. "".m=.r.oo=---1
DAILY Pit.OT assume• Mesa. 642-_1060 JOHN P. CAREY S6~.~ Best buy in village, 4s~i~; 3w1j~il~1~~e ~~t~~ or 0111n~r occupied honies. FOURPLE:..X ..... $55,9CXI 1 liabllll)' for tHe first In· AIJ.,l'HIS 1)1: 01tANGES TOO RI .,01 , ~0 $I32 l'IOO! n...J. 1:: l r: • 7 ~lull1ple Usling ~ords j2 UNITS ..... ll7ti,OOO , orrect 'insertion only. B to 4BR & trs. ......,.. 41" ;JQ0-7287 MISSION REALTY< 494-0731 · ~ ......... n "Vun, .:!-pm, avollable. Chatlcs Qu111tnrd, YEA-GER REALTY """-"lTI , Jeno~'ra~UI rm~ nr good REPOS5tS$ION$ CEDAR A CLASS -By 42.5 V : ~Nord . .67:>-7414. Realtor, 28th yr. 642-2991. .MfrV
CANCELLATIONS: sehooll & neighborhood, ~ , OWNER 6 , roo. ,o Id, Mluion V1e)o 3 BR hou!;C In C.i\1. w/gcl ~hen killing an. ad be Imn\ed jloss, mi Aliso Ave, .·~r t11lorn1a11on and location • architect design custom ' \ 1enant!I xlnl shape, $30,500 ~~h!0 iOtte N'u= Open 7.5 Sat A: Sun 61:>--0936 ~~C:te-Ji'llA &: VA ~es,, home. P~mlc ocean vu. 4 BR PLUS po()i,. ...... ){i •l ;~ olfr. Prine only ,·
given )'OU by your M · OPEN HOUSE • . KASABIAN ~~t~~w~~1;:om,:n1tub, \Ve have it & that's not all. -12 UNITS WI pool,cenlrl 0 1 , taker as receipt of your •3 BR • tge )Ot • to settle: • rm 0 be · am. One yr""'old. 110111 down. As· :00 000 cancellaUon. This kill ~tale. Sun, l''c~. 3rd. 1939 Rul E1.t1te t'2""'44 8·tain. ~lllS8~msB tl~i !Ilse, su"!le 7~ loan or J~ase 1v/ Mobile Homes inc. $2~~~64\_9520 •.
number mUlt be tpre~ Feder&J, C.M. ior addlOon-inter-com Ce tra1 • option. Call & \,·e ll stmv for S•le 115 ~ntcd by the advertiser al info 645-382'1. VACANT frplc, decia £ gar~as1'5~00; you. Asking S.U,500. C·21,
.in case of a dlspute. , By Owner, 3 br, ram nn, WALK TO BEACH 499-3275. 495-4121. 493-0200. MOBILE HOME $111,750 -
TEN UNITS ·cc0ANRRCEE~0.nNooNrNEWOR fl'plc, ·a1r;um, 2 ba tli•, SURFSIDE CONDO ADECK,Aw•v · Newport 11 .. ch FOR SALE:
v a4 mut. Roman. 1yrold.1900 ONLY $19,900 FROM TH "' . SILVERCREST 10 Unll Apar1me11t. 2 Bed· 1
AD BEFORE RUNNING: 81J'fL $41,ID> .. 333i Maryland Sharp, clean . ~Iust Sell E OCEAN * OCEAN VIEW* MOBILE HOME roon1 unit.!I. Prime Orange t
Every effort ii m.de to cr .. CM. 979-3685. SCOTT REAL TY A privat~ 6e~ch :aoo pool. New custom 4 BR., N'pt , ,,. ,. 53., 2 BD 2 B~ carp., County area. Earns .13.4~r ..
, ~tot:?~~tna !!!}!~ MESA VERDE NORTH 536-7533 call •nytime ~s ln1ght. e li e e ry 12 Heigh111 · (n0t a condo. l 2 dl'8pcd, bll·ins.. rerrig., o,.,r;,;!n•,'~v'?.',~'1011,.~·~.,~"'°'cy'. ,._ ~ ~""'·~ 4 'BR-. 2 Bi, fam rm &. rooni own your own s ~lln. 1o Hoag &. rest. l'O"'· 1vasher & eiect. dcyer, \vlred "-" ... -" J • • "
but we cannot guaran-sep. din rm. pro t . 3 BR. 2 ba, beautitul eond. for your .enJorment or Fan1asUc! Asking $79,000. for 220 air' co1ld., kitch. Hurry -tuke 11.dv~ntagc of
tee to do '° until the ad landscaped. Atrium. Prine. In/out. a-·· to -~1,, 'ee.,..scln:eh. living in Laguna John Carey, llltr. 646-1414 clock, !ltorage sheet land-11.lmOli.t full ~n.r "'nte off ot -
has appeared. in the onl" 1!_.11 900 Phone 557 .2175 """ ,,.;,..,.., C scaped palio. Three vrs. old more NO\V! Call· 333-330.\,
~~ BY OWNER 3BR 2BA ~ • San•·-SBR r RM · like nu. ·Located In n~w I '
,Th~. adl are atrictly blUns, fnm nn, frplc In n.v-l'm'°'=EAL~""."---~tlo--· -ho-n~b-loc-k MONARCH BAY w/fencc-d pool, for sale by St. one-1~1 bl. ftonlEVclub--_. caah In advance by mail trig room, Jrg cor lot, RI· ..,.... n, a owner $105 ooo 645'-4494 or bowie. la,4~. Call ES. • • •
"'"""r. • ' ~· .,...,, • -parks< & shops. All ·termS Rtd C•r-t R••ltors BAY REST, location. HiO't J NVESTMlllll
DD.1£.A·UNE ADS: den/dinirut fm. kilch wi i.f~.e_r,ed . $34,450. 497·1761 I: t~"a1 din ~.a~ lot adult pk. away £rom no15y [--•-:-•-·•
or nt any one of our of-sumable 6~, at loan 54().992S. to park le, lake. Mod. l This 4 bdrm., 3 ha., Spanish 646-7559 ' · · :213-IDl-4690. "' ,
' ~ flees. NO pborwi orders. .,c:~~~·uc.~'-""=-'-7=i'I BR, Yam-rm, + lge cul style home has a pa_neledl-'-"-=-=""'=----CAN BE SEEN AT -!' 1
1-rom PtG'i!c.COt81 t11gti ..... ~y Dee~· 3 P.in. FHday •Br. 2 Be.. Liir fenced ya.rd, de .aac lot. By owner, family rm., frplc. ill mstr. $61,000 CRESTMONT lnduatrlil Property 161 1
and SuP,11Jor Av.in~Jn~""°3 Colla Mes& t ofttce 1:i ~ garage, llf!a r $38,500.' 8474164, 847-8831 bdnn. It a pool. Guarded HARBOR. VtE)Y HO~tli:S EST• TES e1~<dJ'.~i11.·e.\itS1';utif1i6'10 1 noon _ .u. branch of-S.A\ .country Cub S.14.950. 2 HOUSES on 50.'oc200' 101 gates, prlv. beach club. . 3 :BORM'. 2 BA.TH ·"" ilcondtfot., 111tf'qn;taly 10 flees. • N'pt 'Pli.<'t Real!J' 67!>-3600. (2 BR Ii: 3 BR) $32,000. Bf $110,00J W@ deckinl'MMY Extras! 10S1 Site Or .. Brea. (Cenlral
N ..... por(Cmt lnl~~ 3 an. 2 be.i., &ck Bay owner TURNER ASSOC. Owner/Agent, 644-00ll Avu. A.~ rron1 area 10000 FT c1tnta:'1'~;1~4!c,.~~~~· ~esDt~··~1~ffiTcl!:: area, ,.UOO Ml fl, neWly ' 6T;>-267'l llO:l ·N. Cout Hwy, t.aauna SPECTACULAR ~~~er~~. P~.t ?o·J~~; (h•er 10.000 Ml· ft , +:1800 rt.
10 ... sn.to 1\1!1Wt slty,·edlt, oeneor or Te-:!:!!'~l$~~9J34·000·1 ,By* :SHARP ExecutJVe JlOnle, 494-1177 Linda Isle 4 BR. fa1nilY, ~l,,or~•lo;'°"~'""""'~----l"o1tHce spatt. Air cund ltion· >
.1 . ....t, ' .• t fl.SM! any adwrtllement, • Auumable 6%. 320J sq ft, LOWER 3 ARC'Jt Bay 41), BA, pier &: slip. Only ff AVE IJO OOO ng. 4 loedtng doo~, 600 anip • .r... •tld to chanae lb nt• CATALINA vu, 2-•kqt,5 BR, 2 trptcs. 4 .BR, 96;2..lSlS ' SPANISH VILLA $195,000. Call Den ls on ' Ba>' front J)Ol\'er uver t 11cl't' Prlnle
'• .. 1 • • & i:efulitl<m1 • wltMut 4' BA. $60.f)Ol)l Owner. Prin. Old Lag una Oienn. A11~. 67~7311 • ::~'\~ 2 &&~~1n1}~r"'~ Ort!~c Coon~y l0ca.1ion. Co....--tu.:t-.,w...,., ~.(fi,...,y,. dllO ll'" ki.t!t '""' r.o!f•9".""" 1 prior n()tice. only. &6'"3831 Open Sit Ii Huntington k11rbour • unbelievable y1... .......-...., HARBOn · vu l'ttoNTECO 1•1 .. ,, •!;"""'· ... '"'•<:Ji ~k• 1~r •vi A netu· 2 h'ee\Vl"lf'. ·W~·''°""f'\lo\~-,if!AJt ~-11.ivM"..,,b"''tl..•tQu SUn12-5,1861ParkvHl• .. Cr .• "'(""" , "'w .• ~"'"·~ · · '~ · ...... • ··~..,""· '\IV\.'·· St"""· 1 t "~0001 -it•,,.,> ••i.• .~M. l't:RCL1'TMLi!.An " _ , lot, 1st Ume oUtted tor Sharp, upgraded 4 BR. u l\nd clu hou~. \V\11 trl\dc · i,,,,,., "" uc Cl .......,,
L :):1 · ,J CLASSIPllD BY owner, tee . ER:r1t1kle LUXURIOUS wat erfront aalt-. A must stt for the new. ~n 1-3 daily. for llleal property or l-lurry -Call 8.13--r.OO. ~ i ;..r.;..;~....,.4"'*"-c:.."". • MAILING ADDlllSS Mme., 3,000 sq fl, OPE.N condo. Pvt boet i l\p It yoor .IUOIL di$Cri1n lnating buyer, 1741 Port M1tnleJgh Cir. Fallbrook. tt 11 ?.tr. ,__
\mJi;'"":' • ...,..M.0i-c.,..-o..•c...u ... -:;.:..:::: · P. 0 . Box 1560, dally 1 to 6 PM 646-1203 door. $llettoculor TI\ a I I\ S\59,000. Arc Relllly 666-~Jll Owner. 6H-G249 Schwanz ~1-3012.
~1.i'='='S:.=:.::~="\."".:::1~~~~ eosta~Meu Sta OAK St. 4 Bit, 2 BA Channel Wlw. Bea.utJf\llly Clualned ads .ell bi& Items, 2 BR, expend11Ne; 2 Ba., e ROD & JW-EL 10 \\•Ide 'r·_.::·~-:!· ~·!:·::::-Cr:~:;::±•:•._==:::~3-.0:::::~:·::::::'.:...J ""' .... , -.. ~. + fJm-dln«Jf,_nn&. $34.DJ. d~ . .2 Br. 2 ba, trplc, small ~mt or any Item. cbaMel, ple.r/slip. $97.fiOO. him .. lmnlflC, SJJ. perk rent.
r. ' ·~~--;,.;;'-_;.i -Bn>k<r'5*-71ll ~ • patio, gar. 84&-J530. J"'t f' 64U6781 A Sand It S.a ~· m-aoo .. -'-12'""-'l>.;..J;..l::....:.J.;,;Ui::;-<OIO.=;;.· .......,11,_., ·=
WAREHOUSE
•... l ll,f • ll :i •••
. ,,.. 'I THE Rf''I 'I " I . rt .
,,11,·1, E'i1All41
, ..
' •
J
'
;J1f DAILY PILOT
,'' )ildustrlal Property 168
FOR SALE ncar1.Y .,...
m1.11>nry bldg,. lncludc-s 2
lots. Approx 1100 sq ft. Split
in 2 p{1rla:. CM be used
for afflrc & 1tonge. Lott
or parking. can manager,
S.t2·8252,
Thursd.tJy, Jan11ary .31, 1974
Business HouMt Furnish.ct 300 HouM1 Ufllum.
Opportunity 200
TV & S1oroo Ropoir
\Veil L"5t. • must gcll!
Auto' Body & Paint
Ql.l·ncr le•virnr !tll1te
R IVIERA REALTY
J'19 Bn>lldway, C.~I.
G•n•r•1
l BR, House.SUS. uW get
C.M. Ah10 2 Bil. & den,
CdM. Bach. Uni!, NB, $90,
Agt. Fee. 979..s4lJ
llalboo Island
RENTALS
305 HouH1 Un urn. 305 Hou Mt Un urn. HouH1 Unfum. 305 01,fp •••• Furn. Aph. urn.
Corona clol Mir Irvine N-rt looch Newport S.och ~rt looch
N&<R New.2 BR, dtn, 2 .2 BR--~ ~-·-BLUFFS 'l'OWNllOUSE. Spa· BAY VIEW 2 BR., 1 ba.: l·b!IL to oceen.
BA, aelf clean oven, ........ uu • •• ••••• ~....,.~ cloul ,. 4 Br., i% Ua. 4 BJ\, 2 iµ, upper. C\ln1pl. $285. 4 BR., 2 be., bey
dabwhr, comer toe. 5~ lrto/lse. REDEC. Pool vie\Y, schls. furn. Re-O«·. 2 bJka to A ocean view, SS50
o.hlia. $33511'10. Open Sat. 33 BBRR CO!ldobo • • • ~ MMo/1!~· $4M. Call to aee, 714-t94-3973 beach, 44th St. AvaU lm· Ask for Mike
675-2132 me ''' ~ o -=· DELUXE 4 Br, 186S Port med . Call evtlf, 832-941'8, JON&S REALTY ~
2 4 BR home ••• $425 Mo/lse. 1 BR
I. Loll for Salo 170
RESIDENT lo1, Port
Charlotte, Fla. for
WlMebqo or equivalent.
Johnston, 2339 Cornell, CM
llouMl*Apll. * 141•0111 * BDRM + den, completecy RANCH REAL TY Carlow, nr club hse, $500 S•n Cleft'MftN $35 per wk & up. •
3 Br, coiy, nr water & bch. remodeled. Patio k deck. mo. 6441\46 Ol" 844-1295 2 Bt • bach's. Color TV,
lnvosl.,,...I 1271' Opal, $300 mo. y•I> '°9'41sW.1tlflCOITAMllA Available new. $310. mo. ** 551-2000 ** Newport ~olahti LRG. dlli 2 •DR dp!x, pool, maid strv, poc>IN. THrtE * 642-7007 *
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lse, 673-2288. 112 0 ... u n fur.. Bach, Realtor 644-7270. J: ocellO view, totally rum: MESA, 4l!S N. ewpo
_W_o_n_tod"'------"°-"Y"RL"Y"",-.2-=e"R-. -=ru7·,.-c:,,.::1"1o, atove/retrig, ·~w pd. LRG 2 Br, 1 Ba, new crpts, LEASE brand new "2" Plan cozy & warm 2 BR&. bath wuher A ttryer. Must See. Blvd., NB. 64&-9681.
VE'NTURE capital investor $250. Avail . immediately. E/alde. trplc, rarage, $215/MO. Aft ~~ ~e~ +3 ~~~ pe.Uo, beaut. yd, pr, rir'. 204 Delgado Rd, Sl95 mo. e OCEANFRONT 3 RR, lti
HUNTINGTON Beach Jota with $50,0M desired for 64&-592.S Sl~Bachelor, furn. Util pd. -6:30,~6'f3...2925 Lovely & prlced to lse. fast. schools. Avail 2/15. $280. 213: i48.:s3TT aft. 3 Collect. BA. Avail Feb l, '74. to
from S900l up. R·l, 2, 3 & company with proven track Balbol P•nln1ul1 E/alde. COZY rustic 1 Br cottage 833-8282 mo.6'5-6625or6'13-l235Gaey Duplex• Unfurn. 350 J une 15, '74. N~ta.
4. Call Art eves. SJ&..4558 record 1n exciting new Sl41)..~ BR triplex unf, nr beaut &:arden, $225. AduJt~ L •---L San Clement• S350/MO. (213) 861 Bkr. industry. Excellent return 45' Bayfront pier, Ooat, 5 beach, Infant. Crpt/drpa:. no pets 673--069 ..,una D9eQ'I hlboa J1lancl NEWPORT TOWERS
LAGUNA Beach 170 Olff Dr., avail. Phone Cn4)~1262 Br, 4 Ba, winier or )Tly, $200-Splc &: $pan sml 2 Br , FOR 1se 8an Clemente 5 -8th floor bayfront 2 BR, 2 ba, ""'1Cd for J!.plex, S120.00l. MoMy to Loon 240 673-2039 hse, 1 child. Car. Fncd yd. NEW Spyglau Hill hon1e, $135 -UtU Pd. Bach apt, Br, 4 Ba, fantutic custom RUSTIC OiARM! 3 Br, 642-8931 &16-8316 $250-Lovely 3 br home, new Magnificent w, 4 BR, 2~2 a:tOYe, reiria, crpl/drps, built house on golt course ateps tO" bay. $250/MO. S C'~ I Cotter) 642--0844/494-9907 Coron• d•I Mar shag & drps, consider ba, 19 Tiburon Bay gar, yard. panorama ocean view Yrly. &14;8856, an rwmen • ~~· Detort 174 1st TD Loans •CHARMING 1 BR, 1rp1c, ~'i':i'(;., ~Y. MANY Cost• Mesa ~." 1uY1t111dr.'~nr:!~.1o, <92-7743 a.11ioo Peninsula s... Clem••" Rakl<nt Ho1e1 I wooded yd, BBQ, util pd, MORE! 1 SMALL, clean 1 bdrm house, $225 -Redec 2 Br. hltns, We1tmlMtw S79.50 Per r.1onth
_ LAKE ARROWHEAD UP TO 90~ S250. Adults, i.o petll. 833-8974 LANDLORDS FREE 2 car garage, workshop. gar, con.sider nn1 pet. . 2 BDRM, l~ Bath, Range, Quiet • Secure
' Great for year round Uvlng 81A % INTEREST Cost• Mesa Adults, no children. Pets S240 -Secluded 2 Br. house, fOR lae deluxe new 3 Bl', Retrlg, frplc. Private patlo. Fum·util • walklna: dia:tanct t· I: cloee to the village. 3 2nd TD Loans 3 br, 2 ba. Laguna. $350. on approval only. Water pd. t..aiuna Canyon, dbl gar, 2 Ba, 1 aty Condo, shag Completely redecorated. to evt'rythin, .. _
• yr old Bavarian style 3 level SF£LUDED 1 Br 1 Ba ~ ~~: ~fj'°Q,',,,';;';~~$425· $42S. M·l zoning. After 6 pm, yard, patios, ~ts, custom drpt. air cond, Yearly only $300. m:>. SAN CLEMENTE
home with open beam Triplex, Sl15. Sngls ok. Util &t!r-~7 $300 -Charming 2 Bl'. Frplc ub house & rec avall. $375 Nelmn Robin.eon, realtor 2ll'.l HOTEL
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ceiliQp thru--Out, 3 hr 2 lowtst r1te1 Ortnge Co. Pd. ~~:.· ~~·Shoreclltfs·$500 SO. Coast Plaza & Bullock's, home, Victoria Be a ch. &i:r' Carpet, Realtors Main St .. Balboa 6'JS..8l2>. e 114 DEL MAR, S.C. e
, ba + oompletely ftnished Settler Mtf. Co, Hom•flnders 547-9641 "'alk dist. 3 BR. 2 BA. Mnny Others Available! l Corona del M•r Apt. Unfurn. 365 bo9e....,t fo• playrm o• 642-2171 _ 545-0611 Bolboo Island NU-VIEW RENTALS Housos Furn. or
,,.'Orltshop. Lndry fa c . Se . Harbo .. ~ ~•gun• hach ~. ::~~. ~l~icnlerman,ovfamc-. 673-4030 or 494--3248 Unfurn. 310 NEW 3 BR 2-5tory, So. of ""---I $.16,SOO. <ZlJl 451-3898 afttt l"Vlng r area VI yn:. 4 BR & den, 1Ai blk. to " ---------1 Hwy, near shop pt n g , -r•
6pm or anytime weekends. MortgAgeS, 2 BR, 2 BA. close to beach. Yearly. $500 Mo. Greenbrook Home. 992 La~ Hiiis \ L Buch Spacious &-aunny, all elec.•---------1
T "---~ downtown & beach. Year Winton R. E. 61;;>-3331 Carnatkln. C.M. 67$--0771 •1un. kitclten entry hall frplc l BR Apt with rrar acrca
BIG BEA.R.-2 br, 2 story 11hell rust ...,._, 260 'round. $350 n10. 642-0&W Biibo• P•nin1ul• 3 BR, 1 ,BA, 2-car gar., 3d BR, 2 ha. f~ cpts, A-FRAME 2 BR, loft & deck patlo &: Iota of Storage:'. from park and tennis -
cabin Just off lake. Close ------------494-9907. rear ot lot. 2559 Santa Ana rps; gar., poo · .,_., Ocean w, leaae, adults $325 833-1144/646-6075 -beam cellnga bu 11 t-In a ·
to ma~ ~ $22,'150.d:l ~ Lido lale BAY view 2 br, din rm, St. Avail. Feb. ht $250 mo . Capri Realty 644-'1525 ht It last 831)..5225, Newport hech $200/mO. aaerrt 6"-7211. ~Se .. !· 66-:dyt 1 • CASH NOW -'--"'-"-----thick shag, drps, gar, yrd, lst & la5t + clean dep, 2BR It den -~·pdpool~I Condominiums &.lbol 111•..d _,,, · SlOOO to $20000 2 BR, 2 BA, fireplace, very ~~ blk to bay, l blk to 54.5-0062 gar&iE!·, ma .. 1ul. • .,.....,, 2 BR. 1 BA patio
RM.I Eatfte Loan cofflndtmen~ by phone nice. Lease until July 1. beach. S325 )'l'ly. avl 2/ll. FOR family. Nice eastslde 548-0595 or Z13-3~9808 Unfurn. 320 nr. heh, aduli ;,r·no peti WATERFRONT 3BR. 2BA,
Exchange 112 Subject to verification ol -0$300=-"m"'o_. 64G-'7'-"4343-=. --,=I ,:963-0353~'="-'-~""'=--,,.....,,..-I 3 bdrm, dbl garage, fenced Laguna Nl9uel Coste M.s• or children S250 mo. 1st upper, frplc, crpll, drf:!,
facts. Monthly payments HouHS Unfurn. 305 ON Polnt 3 Br, 2 Ba, yd, patio, frplc, w/w crpt, &: last, yrly. Shown Sat It gar, S450 mo. yrly, ad ts,
HAVE water front lot canyon
Jake . . . want Sailboat er
tnJst deeds ~ etc. 642-5851
BKR
SPF£IALIZING Jn excftan.
ges. 1lwin & Irwin Real-
tors, 6"-6111 or 675-6060
RMI E11.t. Wontod 114
tailored to your individuall---------1 pet/chUd ok. llll ewly drps, bltna &. forced air. NEW garden home 3 Br, 2 SI'ORY, 3 hr, 2~) ha Sun til rented. 208 Grant ,:640-"""72=13;;,·~..,...--,---
requirements. Gentr•I painted. $350/mo. yrly. $2S.5, mo. 586-6919 eves 2 Ba, frplc, lleCUrity gate, all e I e ct , stove/refrig, Sl, 642-3656 B•lboe Pfflkttule N~~~~tr~ro~R~iiTGA. ~Gi~E~ ALA l.ENTALS o,c~c-•cc~~cc~~:~5-515c-in~t'°'~=·,,R-, f.,-am-nn--.-.1 4iu:!:d fu.sb~ii1:~u1~1~ ~~:,·g ~nte~r ~t~~~:1gar, water Apt1. Furn. 360 2 BR, trplc, patio, yrly lease.
wt ina.i.111 '"uwa frpl 2 $335 crpt, drp&. Wood burning 2 BR. 2 Ba bl . $225. per month. Ca 11 ro. Let. your equity \\Wk c, car 1 garage! ...;.,7495 frplc, no ..,..1s.· -. mo. SEA tetTace garden home. .... cpts , drps, """. Adgcul,ts. ;~· S.lboa lslend 6~6 for you. JWit give us a call; per mo. Year Y se, v•.r ,.-•~ 23951 T Bay 3 b .... ~ .,., ...
No.obligation, f fiil HOUSIS Corona d•I Mer (213) 1135-7319 I I urim:~ 551....Goos r, 546-8397. DELUXE 3 Br 2 Ba oll 1 BDRM. 3rd Door. $185.
CALL W l .. •",.",, 2 BR, gar, encl patio, adults ux ' · 3 BR. 2 Ba bltins bit • 1 TV f 1 ' \ mo. lat &: last. N H I Mo C SEAWIND only, Newly crpt'd & 3 BR 2~) ha, view~ near ' garage, , M, co or ' rp' av (213)697-1496 PVT. PARTY WANTS TO • on• rtpg• o. painted. SOO/mo. 187 E . schools, $385/mo, 1 n c I. nu cpl!&. drps, adu1ts. $300. now til June 15. $315/mo.1~---'~~7"~--
FRBUYO'I HPORMIVEATED IPRARETYCT. 27.QO N..:_ M:.-~ S!nta ~na NIWPOl1' & u.i, c.M. '42'-UIJ Next To Spyglass 21st St. C.M. 642-1960 water 831-2144 F5'6-83971 l,~~l~~~:::'~er;' C..:~~~;,,,~vl~wkl-:;-:y~thru-:-liCjjjoijl'OtWliiiiiiiicloiiiil jjjMliiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiil " _ _ _ _ _ _ CLOSE In Bach suo, .11.vail. ""'"='~"='~c-==~-1Mlsslon Viejo ounta n V1ll•y · · 5.19-9715. -w~-furn & utll pd .• POOL. VIEW *3 BR, 3 BA, 2 story town-YEARLY, newly deco r . -I~
2ND TRUST DEEDS
To borrow on your Real
Estate, ~t for good
yield, or sell existing not~. Call us Sign.al l\fortgage Co. C7W5.16o-0!06 ,
BusinHI 1 ~~~~!!!!~!!!!""'.!'~
Opportunity 200 1 45% DISC well·sccurcd !" j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; bal $51, ll3 pays $.1,2 mo
incl 10% all due 1979. Bx
3 Apple Valley n4/242-3144 Wntdlff Area
QUIET area 1 hr dplx SUS. hse, Back Bay, pool, gar, 2 BR, New Barcelona. Crpta, 1 STY. 2nd J'.)xJ) BR., over studk>. Fem. only. $135 mo ~~ -st / 1 c & 0 1 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home, $325. mo. 833-1653/833-8974 1 , _ _. _..... dbl gar., elec door opener, or '! 6i.,..n09 bet\\·n ~Tpm .,, "' v re , , gar, av . fi-pla-formal diru·na dt'J)S, A/C, b trui, '-' ... ~ ycuu. 1 k' h pool __ ,_ '"' , GARAGE Apt l hr $150 now .... .... ... , .,., l BR Houae, $1l5 utU pd. S240. 8.Jl-5891 e ec tic • te,u.ua crt, only. "rt•
util pd, furn· Brand N~! ~J~~::a~i:i'~"·te!~l 2 BR., Sl.SO. 3 BR., $185. Newport Be•ch ~ 4 miles~ ocean CHARMING Ba.Ytront. Avail
MOBILE Home 2 br $150. swimming pool in this Agt. Fee. 979-8430 S 548-1574• • rm.• tmttl Jwie 14th. 2 BR, TOWNHOUSI
cov'd pa!lo, 2 single men. prestigious area above EASTSIOE, 2 BR. Fourple.1 Ntiwport Be•ch l BA. $300/MO. 401 N. 2 Br, fireplace, pool, private
CHAru.1ING 2 Br Sl.80, quiet Corona del Mar, $495 per $175. Gar, kids/pets ok. WHY RENT? Bay(ront. 673-3245. patio!I. continental break·
&tv/ref, C le D, garage. month -leate. 644-4687. Hom•flndtlrs 547-9641 LEASE.OPTIONS 11IE B3LUFFS.BR ~~~g BALBOA Isle Charmer 1 fast. Spacio!a &'J'OWlda. near EASI'SIDE 3 br $250, gar. new . , ~u.:nt to • .....,..., .. .._'"' L.-h. ~ •• fncd fOr kids & pets. BRAND New 3 BR., 211 4BR, Fam Rm. bltlns, aU Available 2-3-4-5 bdrms. pool carpeted &: draped BR, sundeek, ~. mo Ulils •1~··f' ~ ~~ ~
IDEAL 4 br FR $450, appU's Ba,· vaulted ceilings, bllns, fenced, near shopping & outside ma.int. tncluded1 pakl ~3560 n or un a •
NB Hgts, frpl, garage, now. lrt aundeck, encl garage. schools, S335 mo., 545-7645 $575 per mo, 1st & last Belbol Peninsula ::'an Corona el Mar,:
OH! so ?.!ANY MORE-CALL l\!ust see to appreciate Dana l'oln1 &: depoglt, 64 4 -1 8 4 6 •
ALA Rontols 6424383 $350/MO. Call 8". 6, ev<slwkcnda 135 WEEK & UP ~----
67S-l0'76 2 BDRM, garage. COM~ANV EXCITING Bluffs 3 hr, 2~~ e Sleellfnl Rooms S011I'H or the H W y' LANDLORDS! Sharp 4 BR, 2 BA Mesa stovc/relrlg, $225. or $200. ba, !)l' t•Mu club. Lac e H-plng Rooms opadoos 3 B•. 2 Ba, w/gar,
We Specialize in N~ del Mill' home. Close to + maintenant"e. 493-7925/ REALTORS $495/mo. Sale by owner e Ocean View Apts ne'll'ly dfCOl'ated. f rp 1 c .!
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Houses Furnished '300 Beach e Corona del Mar e everything. Avail now. $350 646-123L SINCE 1944 S00.995. Will take 2nd. BALBOA INN bltins. rdrlg. $.YiO mo. SUi
& Laguna. Our Rental Ser-mo. incldg gar<lencr. Call "'H"'u-nt"i-ng-=1-on-.llff,----,ch,..--'!!!!!!!!!!!6!!73-4400!!1!! ... !!!!!!~"" 83J..8635. !ll5 Mal" SllMt ~~ Sat " Sunl: Goi __ -_,._r_o_l ______ 1 vice ~ FREE to You! Try Larry 546-5880 SHARP 1 sty Bluff.s condo. S75-1740 • 1 Nu Vi•w' 2 Bdrm 1 ba So of H-TRY Thi•! 3 Br.2 Ba. $200 •TENNIS BUFFS 3 BR 2 Ba. Vacant. BAYFRONT ~--1 Br UPSTAIRS 2 br, ''°'"• dlspl., $135 -UW Pd. Bach V.•/scp NU--VIE, W RENTALS , ' . "J• Dbl , $395/ Sal b \...U"'\IP ' refrl&, 2 blka mrkta, lhops,. kl ard Laguna $295. per mo. · gar., fncd. yrd., kids Only steps to tennis court, mo. . e Y owner, nicely rum. w/tw1.n beds. China Cove Ideal tor i $1~ ~Uili Pd. a..~ 67l-«J30 or 494-3248 Cail 6734.lTI after 6 pm. ok. s"•imming pool from NEW $49,995. \Vill take 2nd Share kitchen, patio prlv. llngi soo.fn Sat· A Sun
Bach, trplc, patio, beams, 2 BR & Oen ,CdM 2. BR, COZY cottage, 2 BR, 1rplc., HorMfincler1 547-9641 Jf bcdroom1 ..ti-i:.~lof;_2 1& den)U, 833-8635 beach $145. utlls tn c 1. fltiS/'!o. a•£ Femi.eat·,;
Laonn•, CM & HB, Sl.50. 4 BR Horse So. of Hwy. SZ75 orma \U.ll.lll6• u..:p ace, SC 2 ~i BA Townhouse. Swtm 67J...Q5.5 CdM 711 , •--Hal Pinchin Rltr. 6T'.,...t392 VACANT 2 BR, Sl60. 3 BR. cleaning oven, beautiful Can-Pool 2 ear encl gar o BO T SLIP I $1$ -2 Br, frplc, carport, Ran c h , Sl75. Agt. Fee Mobile, S185. 3 BR. Nr. yon view/night lights. Im· $335i 646--0147 • BA\'FR NT & A • 1 BR Apt with gar aerota
patio, 1 blk beach, Pal .~m-84,-'--=30c.,-...,...---,~-NEW lrg 2 BR. 1 ha, beach, Sax>. Agt. Fee. mediately available. Located San J:;:; Ca istrano less than 13' beam. CO.OP from park and tennil _
Penin. . We are having a January w If r PI c' v Jew & 979-84ll high on the hills of Harbor p 1 Br. w/twin beds, $225, beam ceilifWs bu J l t -ins .J
$2» -1 ~ bplc, bit "White Space" sale ... Sell dishwasher, 500 Poinsettia. FOR lease unfurn. 4 Br, View Hills. $400 per month. NE\VPORT CREST CONDO utU inc. 67l-6C65 $200/mo. age:nt. ·644-1211. j
bookcases, gar, L.tlguna. · something: with a Daily Have something )'ou want to newly decorated. S285. mo. 6444687 2 BR, 2 BA. \Vet bar, frpl, 2 BR 2 bu new cpt'g $3)). 2 BR. 1 BA trpl " N,U-lllEW .. RENTALS Pilot ~---w-• Ad'. Call II! a !"-• ds do It ••• 0 ·-• near pool tcnn1' Drps ' y · 'I --01 ' c, ep ''
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642-5671 673-4030 er 494"-3748. 642-6678'Nc:w1 eu se ass~ a ~~~·~u~·~~~~~-3 Bdrm -2 Ba. near ocean, extras. sl751mo. 562--0175. ' :;:3i;Ts.-.tf,OO ease. v1.>-;r,;i;:i drps, nr. shopi adults only.I l=========---===°"'====·'-z========-==""="=·=call.;="='U='W-"'642;:'j678=o,=--CLOSE In! 2 Br. $150, Stove, feed the ducks on the PARK UDO 3 BR 2~ BA . -No pets. $300/lse. 64C 6883'
1
ref, fncd yrd, tot 'ok. channel, Inside pat Io, Cr/pJ, elec pr dr opener, Coron• del Mar 2 BR. 1 BA. carpets, drapes,
Hom.tinders 547a9641 comm. pool, t c n n is, nu cpts drps. 646-64.16 fireplace. Pool.
0 $150 Crp clubhouse, quiet one-"'RY S J C • l BR. ~ blk to ocean. $225/MO. 8'15-m62
0
0 ~!1n!t ~. · ts, street outside view, steps an u•n ap1str•no S165/mo .. uW pd. No pets. Cost• Melli
Homfllncl•rs 547-9641 to lhe blue Pacific, lease SAN J uan Capistrano Villa! ~2500~!!:Se~a~"'!!;•w~,~CdM~~·---1·:::========1
•
Think
0 ° Think
O Think
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for the space, just write a Doily Pilot Volentine Ad
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pages are all the same 1 $3 per column inch.
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To place your ad or ask
for more information,
dial the direct line:.
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
LOVELY 3 BR, 2 BA, nr.
beach. $275 mo. lease.
Singles OK. 968-6215/962-44TI
Irvine
3 BR., 2 baths ........... $280
3 BR., 2 baths ••••••• " .. $390
2 BR., den, 2 Ba ......... $400
3 BR., 2 baths •......••• ·$400
3 BR, OOnus rm, 2 ba •• $425
3 BR, 2 baths ........... $435
3 BR. fam. rm ., 2 ba, •• $450
4 BR, lam. rm, 2'i2 ba .. $475
"I : 1111 I '1· 11 ii.
----1 L·11ll11r
2 BR., l bath .......... $300
2 BR, 2 ha, den a/c •. S275
3 BR, 111 baths • • . .. • $300
3 BR, 2 baths •... $385/425
4 BR, 2% baths $300/425/450
CALL 552-7500
VISION
e red hill
REALTY ltF.ALTORS
Unlv. Park Center, Inrine
SJ5(I mo. ~7767, 642-3850, ] ·
64&41n To\\'ll.house, 2 BR, 2 BA, C I "-
VIEW
BRAND NE\V PALERMO
4 Bdnn. 2% Ba, crpts, drµs,
gardener. Pvt swim & ten-
nis club. 6 mo. lse.
$575. Por Mo.
83:J.ll7IO BOB
2 . patios, !rplc le Pool. OI • f'IWN
$250/~10. 213-596-5617 eves 1---------1
Condo. Fum. or Casa de Oro
Unfurn. 325 ALL tmUTIES PAID
---------Comp:u'e before you rent
Hunlintfon Buch Cuotom cleslincd, featuring: --~------1• Spacious kitchen with ln-
4 BDRM, 3 ba, dshwor, trplc. direct llahtlng PINECREEK neY,.ly redec, 2 pools. 2 ear e Separate din'g area
gar, $300/lse 968-8872. _ •Home-like stor1•ge LIVES UP
Townhouse Umum 335 •. 0Prlv:~• polios / TO ITS NAMI • , • _______ • __ , Ol!or:u garage w stol'lli'
Huntl_....n Buch • Marble pullman Over 500 tall trMI and 10
3 BR, 2 BA. SHAG ---·,.~··------1• Klng-si Bdrma: stream. .with waterfalls
Bltns, trpl, gar w / CLOSE TO BEACH I I e Pool · Barbequcs • ..,.. create a relaxlnc -for
d ,.._, .rounded with plush land-your a:pacloul new 1~ or 2·
work.shp.Lrg, patio. Beach BBranR 3NowBA ~dbluxe 3 "a1~1 seapin& bedroom apartment From ~i blk.$395/mo. Y r I Y • • • gar, Adults No Petll tt'TQ Fumlture available 6Th-2124 bltns. Close to recreation ' · -.,.. · · ===---~~~ t &: schh: 514 18th St 847-3957 1 BDRM. Furn. Sl90. OWce oPe:n 9:00 to 6:00. 2300 BLUFFS, view, pool. Brand . ' 365 W. Wilson 642-1971 Fairview Rd., Colt& Meas.
new lg. 3 BR., 211 ba., Newport Bo.ch 135 WEEK & UP Phone: 545-2300.
fam. nn. Only $&50 month! LRG 2 Br, 2 Ba, nu cpts • Studk> & l BR Apts. MAKE tun out ol apt living
H.B. Dowd, Rltr. 644--0134 & drps, S260 mo. yrly or ,e TV ~ Maid Service Avail, 1 A 2 b r, tum « unf.
NEW exec 4 BR, 3 BA S225 mo. till June. 5-18-4802 e Phorie Service • Htd. Pool Pool, rec. hall &: Pl Bar-S
,v/180 degree view, tennis e Odldren & Pet Section Ques, Call 6C-4C7D
& pool $EiOO mo. Eves &: Duplexe1 Furn. MS 2376 Newport Blvd., Ot WALK/BIKE to work. Beaut.
wknds, 644-1791. B lboa p i I 548-97SS or 66-3967 2 br triplex on quiet street * 4 BR, 3 BA, ~ story 1 •n nau • SI'UDIO Apt l Room & b&lh, EnQ~ gar, ac!lts, s200:
townhse, Back Bay, pool, YEARLY, fum 3 BR, 2 ba tum., utll tncluded,$US/mo. 673-8364 or 642-0247.
gar. $.175/mo. 833-1653/ brand new unH. 3 doors P.fust ~ over 40 I: sober. $165. UNFURN or n 75 F\Jm
83J..8974. from ocean $400 mo. (905 2191 Harbor Blvd, CM 1ingle sty beam ceilings' * BLUFFS, 4 BR, 21h BA, W. Balboa) 673-2058 Agt. (Acrou from K-Mart.) infant er .;ru pet considered
din rm, fam rm, pri patio, 2BR, 1 Ba. Upper w/ View. Furni1Mcl BKhelors & 2049 Wallace No. E. ~924.1
$425 mo., 644-1480 $235/nio. Jncl. utJI. Winter 1 Br's Exceptktnally PERFECT for ec>ed. t.zg
HARBOR VU Home, Call Ji'l>.3531. nlu. 2110 Now port Blvd studJo, beam cell, cnclsd
Portofl:no 3 BR. Bonm Corona del Mir Coste MeN patio w/frplc, ahr kitchen, Room. $475/mo. 847-8583 -uW pd SlOO, 642-1001 * * EASI"BLUFF 4 BR , 2 BDRl\f., 2 ba.. close to BEAUT FURN t Br Ioli LRG lBR, 4-plex, crpts,
VJE\V. $600/MO. 556-6177 ocean. & stores. $265 Mo.~ ef blttns, pool, w&1k to drpa. retrlg, d/w, no pets,
nJRTLE Rock, lease, New or ~ anytime. Franklin, Rltr. 673-"" Mopping, ml from bch $150 Sl40. n> C Sha 11 ma r ,
38R, 2ba, fam rm, frpl c, It'• a breezt! .••. sell YoUl' Any day 11 the BEST DAY to mo. 931 WJ9th St. SCS-Ot92 ~3ill
nr UCI & nil schools, items with o!ase, use Dally I run an ad! Don't tlelay, -:*,.-,E"LM-;-;-G"ARD="'EN=s,...,A=P=I1S,.-I ~8=33"·:;320:;;1;:, ,:&~10-J600======P:il:o•;Cl::as:•:ifi;cd:·:G4z.~0078==· ::;;:C~L~A=SS=SE:L::LS='==00.=5117=8= ICOMPI.ETEL Y furn l BR. e· AduJts • Poolside $150 ~p apt.Adu1ts only, no pets. 131 e Aho Children's Section
$©\\Jtl1'\-/J,~trs-e rio.<rSt, CM. St30. 646-7883177 E . 22hd St., CM 642-3645
,. 1 & 2 BR Trailen, furn, 2 Br l ba. &: 3 br 1%
$100..$125/mo. + UW. No ba bttn range drp1 'crpt, Thaf Intriguing Wore/ Game with a Chuckfe chlldren, 00 pets. 64&-1809. ..,.;,, clubrm, ~. :rm
BACHELOR API', 1 adult, Coll• Ave. HHi032.
Uite4 ~ C&AY L POLLAN no pets. Otll Pd. $ll0/mo. BR Upper. Crpts, drpa, O RfOfrong• '-tt•rs of tkti Call &t2-19a> bltns, beam cell. S14S/mo .
four tcrombled words be-Huntington BNch 1 chUd ok. No peb. M&-3786 iow to 'orm four ilmple '#Ofds. or 545-0790
I Y Y R E E I i Overh11rd: "Things ""' IO 1 j j j j bod. w• no longer c11l It
· " · · · wafer. It's mOt"• Ilk• drrho&li
.--------~of the--." 1·3t
$155-$165 EAS't'SIDE 2 BR, 111 BA,
BAOIELOR • 1 BR, Pvt bltnl, ~.. cpts, clJi>I,
gnr, laund 1 rm, aduJta. pool. no' pell. l170. 846--0474
1112-7348, • 2 BR. $1l5. SJove, """'-• ~un• S..ch cpl.I, 'drps, pool. Adulb, no
' -petL • t 6'5-8965
VICl'ORIA Beach area. l 2 BA film boch 1/55 + $50 ref LRG 3 BR, ' shag aiit. c1Watnc dep. 1 BR part: ~net patk>, nr. occ. $19.s
lurn. $210 + S50 ref. tno. 551-4350
'clMnlng dep. 187 &1nsct 1'B"'E"'s "'T ""vu"'7u"'P"'P"'E "'R-=IA=v
TCIT. 497-1569. 2 Br in 4-plex, pool.
EFnc. eipts from $50 wk 2453 Irvine 548--1729
flt $110 mo, Pool, m:tld, 2 It 3 BR, ba, erpt/drps,
pll, ldry, Vlllap Inn pools, pl.,,......... $1511 UP.
-' Call Hl-GltO
• '. I LIFTEL I t--r:l,,-1.-..1 -iltr-j "T"l -10 Complefo tho <huQlo ......,
. . . . _ by foll"'° ;, tho ml---' ~~~~-~~~ Vo" -lop 1 ....... No. 3 ........
Volentine Ads Deadline: 5 p.m .. Tues .. Feb. 12
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8 PRINT NUM!!REO LEtlEIS IN 11 r 11 I' THESE SQUARES I I
• UN$CRAMllE MOVE LETTERS
TO GEi ANSWER I I I I I I
2 BDRM, 2 ba, $111$ • .-JI
2BR, fl'Olll duplx, f\Jrn/unfurn Call 51HJ81 ftOfalays
1 blk«t&n; $210 •yaJ.I OOW 6, ail d&f. Sat 6 Sua..
-~2! ti St, SHAG, -· LGE S Br w/pr. Adults
OCEAN front, nearly new, no peta; · J1511mo. a&
luxurtoos 3 BR, I bu, HOmllton. -11'),
'$350,/ Wlllt•. 64S-3lll LRG. !SR, .-, crpt, la
ERS IN CLASSIFIC .anON 800 Any day ls tile B!:ST DAY to rm, -.& -· ma SCRAM-LETS ANSW " run an ad! Don't delay •• , adlt only. 9llG Valoncll, 1140 ~~~'--~,~~~~~~~~~~~• ~
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Apt. Uftlum. m
CHI• M.1•
El Puerto~
2 IR :r.i·• Unfum $171. A I Utll P•W
No Cll.lldren, No Pet.a Pool &: ~reatlon
1919 M•plt Av•, C.M •
•
Apt. Unfurn. 36J APt• _N._owport ______ h _ _.;..;.;, ,um . or Unfurn. 371
Huntl~ton llNch
2 BR., 1 ba., DELUXE adult po o 11 l ii e Channeltrnt • , •• • • ••••••• $3(D ..... _._ ..,,_,_ nr -· ! BR, 2 ha. •--" -.-. -·
Ne.wty2de<orB 1 ba •• :unf ......• ·.~ ~Jn.,IU.~~s,
Llf» r, · · ·' ~ AllO 1 Br -m ~•• 2 BR., l bath older boule, -==..:.,;;;.:·..:•.:.:;::'":.;-=:...· -
lumiahed •••.•••••••••• 1195 :!-"!="""=-.::"::i''i;:""=':-..--: .. -. s1 • .,.. Yllate • •RANo NEW • . I . 1 Small Adult Complex In Lusb l A: 2 BR, 2 BA. From t' • FOf'St Settlng. l...ocattd 5 Sl.95 \!nful'!l.. Furnished un.lta I Min. from Beach & Frwy. AVifi. .
•• 2 Br, 114 Ba $1115. Gu &1 '""'!"!''!'!'!~!iii!i~~·I CROWNVALLEY &-11. i Water PaJd. No Pm. I? San Di'B'O Frwy or c:a.t !" 1~~-~· PARIS NEWl!ORT -Hwy to HiUhunt. 23134 I • APARTMENTS HWbunt. Lag. Niguel ' FOUR SEASON'S APTS. Bachelor l or 2 Bedrooms lTI4> 831-{)73(1 ~~ • spacious 2 story 2 BR, l~i and Townhouses N n. ch l·. BA, prlv. petlo, pool, new Fr. 1194.50 Open 9-6 Dally ewport -•
1 shAI, dJi><. Conv. loc. No Spa Pools TeMll LIVE ON THE BEACH! ~t& i110. Across from Fashion Island 1 BR Fr. $181).$225 ;. ' Joe.nn St. 646-1450 at Jamboree on San Joaqum Bachelors Fr. $195-$21l)
IMMACULATE 3 BR, 2 BA, Hills Road. Heated Pool. Security
custom apt bwith lovely (714) "4--1900 patroled. Leue. Adults, no
cpts, drps & ltns. Private D I n .. ch I pets. Asst . Mgr. Needed.
'· _ oovered pat1o. Vacant now. e uxe _. 'l'eir Y LAS BRISAS APTS. 1235 Pe• mo Call Agt 2 BR, lrplc, ·-•· •-·.view ,·.· 546-4J41 r ' • balcony, bit';;; "'diw, 3 5515 River Ave., NB
houses to ocean. No pet.S. 1 ~-~"'Cal=t ..:&12-=-=™=· __
$215 + Util. 646-9218 or Sen Cle menti
I.
1
TffiED of amall 2 br •pts?
BRAND NEW 2 Br1 2 Ba,
ll50 aq. fl. adult apts Nr.
20UI • Npt. ~!250. For reserv•dons. 675-6900 agt.
, . Din• Point 1
•
~5--0555 1 ::.::::...::.:.::.::;;:~~--
3 BR, 2 BA. Frplc, din nn. DELUXE 2 BR, 2 BA. Ftee
Split level. Priv ent. New mo with .yr lae. No pets,
crpts. Encl gar. Adults. Nr · lniant OK. 492-1368.
Thru$da.y, J1nuary .31, 1974
Rent1l1 to Share C1rpet ~c.• Te evl1lon ~epel r Help
ltOOMMATE wanted Male "'111E Factory' haa a IJ'R SUNSET Bt&Ch area, Aua. * Dlbe:rnardo It Sons * COLOR TV repafT. Expert, AVON
to •hare 2 b r.1._2 ba. Oak shop avail, S185/mo. In 23rd, 1973, 1 Surfboard, Carpet sales, inltallation It rtuone.ble serviet'. Free CHRISTMAS MAY
Carden Apt. oo. 6'16·2288 Ca<>nery Village 42S 3JJtll St., Stp1. 19, 1973, 1 Gold ,.pa1n, 963-2639. E 1Imate1. BERT II OVIR
oft. 5. .N"'B.""'00-1"""""9tll"-'--.,.·~~--1 eaninc. aw ...... may clabt c • .,.., Cit•••-GALLEMORE TV 968-7183. But, Eve-Still ~ at Harbor Patrol orrlce, .... TI I • •--WANTED-MATURE male to STU DIO-'"'~sinea1-Harbors Be&chc8 It Parks Floor .. Cere A Wlndowa • Nffdt Avon ProcluctL ~~be'...'!'° HBllle 161,...U1!;~ H211 nns$U5. prt4-:_.. ~ .. Ba. O:>ut Olltrict, 1901 Bay$1de Or., Dutch Ma.int. Serv. 537·15al CERAMIC • TILE NE\V & YeA, AVON dally care pr.>
w ~" • ~.~-. wy • ~·-uewport Beach b C d t ··-1•-JI ·~ Y Cement, oncrete remodel. Free est. Sm jot» uc • oi: ---rne ....... se year 3rd ROOMMATE Fem11le lnduttri1I kent1I 450 I -'f"'urnts""'"hlng"'-"de"l<ri~~p!'.!tlon""'.--w .,,e1,,oo~m;!•;;·..::.r..16-~242&=:::.· ---I arowld, & now i. the pafect
Needed to lhr 3BR, 2BAt ----------DOG _ thrown out of green , = time to become a ftep1&
beach houR, 673-3004 * COStA MESA * vw on Jamboree n r CEMENT & Block Work. Top Soll sentative. ··ou can make
G1r1fM for Rent 435 680 S.F. ·•~ -r IUS. Freeway, mixed breed -Walls, patk>I, •klewalka, money At mr O'Nn pace •
F ~•Pri..-~-female, obviously just had etc. By hr. or job. 646-6915. •QUALITY• meet new peaple in your
S. · V'.lte ottice, pupple •·• Call al PATIOS, drlv....,..vs & .;de * MULCH & TOP SOIL * community, too. For n\Qn! M.INI W"REHOUSES Of -•king. 1' any ••0· t ···~ -58tJ..6930 ,.. r-_,, A "'~A1851 walka. Commttc.lal •--sld. -...-.--=i'-""'----l~d~c~ta~;~~·~Cal~t'.,;M0-~7~041~.-STon•GE '·-r units av~able. 1,:;•,.:·~-=~"-· ----1 ~ •• .---•· LRG Call 556-0868. TrM S."'lce BABYSITTER No Move-in Ot' Move-out Ready for occupancy, male dog, fnd Sat, ;::;;=.~-;;c;:;.=-,==,.-1::.;_::...:;;:~;;:;~----I
ch•-s. Fmm l?.5<1 . .-r-C. ROBREALERT TONARITRE.SS wearing collar -vie of "The PATIOS, WALKS, DRIVES, REASONABLE. Competent An 8 yr. old boy A Ute -~-.,.. Wash" -Costa 111esa, off CONCRETE PUMPING Tree Trlmminp;, Removal. housekeeping. After
month. Costa Meaa· mGSn 19th St., Owner identify C~~Cal~J~Don~~642-85~=l~<iiv.11,Free~!!E~st~,~586-8764i~~-~~;;~J stllool, son1e evenings Hamilton & Newland St., HB [ .oiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii ~9040 CE~!ENT: PatM>, drives, & some v:eekends.
ALLSPACE NOW LIASINO .M:cALE::..::cSt::..._am_e_se_, 1-.,..--, 2-yrs walks-Repait's, saw A [Ill Call Y.E.S. office
H0-1970 Huntl~h:M'I a..ch old, also grey & while remove. Free est. 544-8998. ~ I 6-'2--<W74 days Ol'
2 CLOSED gerag,., $20. .._,, nuLty female cat &: black D I S"· lk ,..., .. _. Carol 6~ eves.
eaclP. Avail. 1''eb. 4th. See N Wm-I male cat. Corona del Mar, r veways. -wa S . BABYSITTER/HOUSE·
Mgr, El Patio, 130 · A 940 Sq. Ft, & UP 673-7079. . patios, blk walls, 979-969'.J KEEPER. 1'.ton·Fri, 2 to 7
Broad Hamilton & Newland St. Contrector 700 pm. Jl.1otherless hon1e. 2 way 9'0-1970 WHITE male cat, shaft hair,
12 x Z'1 oversize S30. mo. r !!!'!!""'"'!"!!!!!!"'!"'!"!'!!""'!!!t [ l blue eye, 1 yelJow eye Taul boys , 9 & 12 yrs. 1'1atul'e
2176 Placentia ( in rear) I' found vicinity Paularino & JA~ add~ ~1P ~~1;2 MANAGER-\\·otlld. like to \\'Onlan. 847-3239 aft 6:~.
can between 1·5. 636-4120 N85X ~~it~/~o~nits. Bpr11stol,u D .~8587Jan 15th.~ ."'y'-'w"8y"-eo=··..:64:::'24::' ;;':::°':::· __ 1 ~~a';:~ 1~e~~ ~30YSITIM EFrR.a1 d"0urlt. 7:30"° to SINGLE garage for rent, 185 2 Units 1500 sq. ft. $225/mo. ease ca '"r · """ · -· :>: • on-· me Electrical Call 64fr.3632 or 645-1791 to care for 1 infant. Trans. Delmar, C.AI. $25/:no. Front OUice, crpls, large FND-Irish Setler· male, Vic. PRAC'T CE 1 $30 Co
can 548-0919 ~f Wi;~· :1~:::. T~~ ~~S:. ~: ~ A~a1~i: ~~ci: n~b~ld t~ would Juke t~ c!re n :C.fi:n~ ~!sa n~a. sa7-10i~· sta
$35. to $40. MO. 2293 64t)..50.13 646-0081. ntale dog mix -part Beagle place. 8313-7689Y • In your home $90 p/5 days BABYSl'M'ER wanted. my Fairview, _ Costa Mesa • eves · (!) 646-55ll. ref, & Exp. ~2249. home, z.5 M·F, 1 child, 1st
64>-()000, ext 51 ART CENTER. Laguna ELECTRICIAN J b W 1_, F I 702 grade. CM area. 549-1285 $25 010 9XXI new secure Beach. Sml. shop. Year FRIENDLY gray long haired Uc/Ins, 545-3780 o In ._, em1 • aft 5. :.):u ~;.n J St CM See lease. 1438 South O:>ast female cat -8 mo -l 1..:::..:::_----~-~1
• BR, 1 ba, New ___ 1, CHOICE then call, ~~1'163. · · Hwy. $180. 494-2186, (800) yr old -Vic. 19th & Tustin, G1rdenlng NEED hP.lp at home! \\'e BABY SITTER, exp'd, for
"' -l"' *LA PARISIENNE 527-9665 Costa Mesa, 548-3277. have aides, nu rs.e s , 4 mo baby. Ref~ .• Mon & !,.,., drapa:'cy',·
1 I~ e ~~ t. e' 2 BR. Fum & Unfum. ~I LAKEFRONT ~Off=lco=-'11:.:•;;;•;;;1•:.:1 ___ 440-'-' l,-=.THE=:::::;Fac....ct_ory_"-has--a-h:g~_ FND Leisure World, sml, ~~re~ G i.:n~:C:P~,; .. : hHo us ekprs,k 00r mpaUnp""",.. hn. \Ved -mornings. o .... 'ft trans.
Hoag Hosp, $275. For Appl; ::S.::•:::l;:•_:A::;:no::,_ ___ _ 644-2404 or 557--9993 1
I ho ·1 $1851 In male, blk cat. Vic 148 ---o· 0 me m • e s 644-8110 586-5478 e ect. Fireplace, htd pool. LOCATIONS s p aV8'. mo. Tree Removal. very '4?"'68l. 1..::==------I 2 WEEKS FREE RENT. 3 Adults. $195. & Up. 979-1268 LES Cannery Village 425 30th St., Majorca. Very Ione I y . reaJJOnable. 642-5329 eves. BABYSmER loving \\'Oman
Across from golf course VERSAIL NB. 642-1960. 6T:t-TI15/6'15-85.13. WANTED -Part time to care for inf & tod. NB.
Bv!Rew", 2trp\l lcBA .• b·1·1n's'.,Utgarleagv•,I., ~~2002~~San""'ta!!!"Ana""'!!!A~v!!e!!. ~d 4001 Bl RCH, NB FOUND vicinity Warner EXPER. Gardener. Know sec-retarlal N.B. area -8 Hrs. & pay flexible. 64$-5417 how. Maint. Trimming & yrs exp, exc shthnd & .
patio, laundry. 496-492(). APT Unfurn lrg 4BR, 2BA ON TlfE LAKE 3600 SQ. FT. 541-5032 ~l~~v e tn·T!;S::r 1::;::J~ cleanup. 968--~ ~~call 673-5140 or (213) B~i:JSf[Efi ~~r m~h~i:;
2 BR, patM> apL w/w cptg, Super bayview, yrly, 16l5 At Sou.th Coast Plaza. Rent1ls Wanted 460 puppy. 847-1764. Garden M11nt/Lndscp . · home. 5.52-7189 after 6PJ\ol ,· stove, dswhr. lndry faci no 1L w~ Balboa Blvd. ~Ann Pool • Acapulco Aqua Bar ...,_up Sprklr rep "'A"'"'""" MATURE nurse exp with
I'll '"
0
' ,,,,._ GRAY male poodle found in \..lla • • ~ '· . · BANKING pets, $195. mo. 493-6115. per mo, &-8038 & Jacuzzi. Spectacular 8 ========:;:== San ~.. , I •-the <lde•·ly seek•ng pnvate
E I Bluff "r Acre Lake w/'Towerlng RENT 1 or 2 Br, unfurn; vicinity of la y,-lU, Gener• -rvice1 duty. !162-3802 NCR OPERATOR Al BAYFRONT 2 Br, 2 Ba w/ 1'~ounlains. % Million Dollar Stove, yrly $210. Vic Balboa Laguna Beach 494-1512 -Part Lim E 'd 0 t Call
lrg patio, priv beach & C1 ""·.... G "-Ot' Balboa Pen. 646-8074 • . PLUMBING, ELECTRICAL, RELIABLE college girl will e. xp r no · e DE LUXE e 1 $.525 979--0631 uunuu~. yn1, .-una, Law Firm to rent attractive ~UNO · male · Irish Setter CAR p ENT Ry. Minor do part/tin\e housecleaning Jl.1r. HefDey _
3 BR. 2 BA apt for lea...e. ~510 /mo, • Total Security. office with sec re tar la I Vic Santa Ana ,Ave., C.111. adj t t 1'-l""'"'i ~C~al!!l~'7~9-~7l~70~1~2':'50~pe~r~hr~:l·a.;:;;;;;;;;j646-ii;;tl563:;,;;ur;;;;;-lncld spac. nla!iler suile, din ADULTS-SINGLES space, Including telephone Call to identify 646-8294 u • men 8 · ...,....,I· => • • Bkk /P oll Cl k
nn • dbl ......... a,.. A"'" door 2 BR, 2 BA. Nr .Hoag Hosp. 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms answering, re ce pt I on ~ Lost ·555 alleralrllo&ns.modAll ~1' hobmkl~ Hetp W1nted, M & F 710 P"ICall ~~'I,,' G'J'Jo er
• •-~ w Pr;v ent Gar Adults 1~ services, -•nplete l•'b~~. repa re ·LA: us · --opener" avail. Pool & Recrea-• · · · wv. from $175 per mo. .." ·-~ F & 8 H Repair Uon Fot' Appt; 64f...2404 or con f el' enc e room J ----------6i2-l403 ome ' s 111-• Vi»• Va• BOX BOYS ana. 5291 e 5.57-9993 .3700 Plaza Dr. privileges, ffil\I copier lnnouncement1 500 $50 Reward, black male cat • Aply Richanrs Lido Market,
865 Arni ... Way, NB Newport Hti .. ht1 S•nla Ana too!. Call 833--0730 w/small white markings. REPAIRING? REl\.fODEL-Accountant/Cost, Lag. 112K 3413 Via Lido New por I • Recently altered. Wearing ING? or REDECORATING? lo ' h ' l\Janaged by Next to South Coast Pl&za * 1 MO FREE RENT * NOW FACTORY yellow collar, aJso fl ea Large or small jobs. Burt QC Electro l\1e<"h. to S20Kl~Bc:::•::'::::.· -------\\'llJ..IAM WALTERS 00. NICE 2 BR, pool, garage. 71 .. 55'HM66 Deluxe offices a/)JOrt, full DIRECT collar. Lost Vic. Mesa Dr. 4!}.t.6467. \Va.rehse Supervisorto$12,600 CARPENTERS, l\lln. 2 yn
Huntington Be1ch ~. r::~Sooi~ts, no pets, Rooms 400 ~1:,!c;:· ra~~.pl~:r11dnJ; Padded Bars: Custom or & Newport Blvd. on 1126/74. "THINGS" by itoose. ~n'I ~~t~~fv~filters to $953 :m~~ent, c~; t!~~u &
to 1000 Pr. Also desk space Standard, Formica Works, 548-1363. Carpentry, RepaU'S, Teleprocessing 360 BAL benefitl Apply Willard Boat UNDER NEW Sin Clemente A'ITENTION Elderly, Pvt from $6().µio. 833-3223 9 to Kitchen Countet-s, . LOST; Iri.sh Setter. mixed. Plumb In a: . E I e c. • $l%K W ,__ ' ~.,IV\ 1 ,,_ A room 'home like atmosphere •1 y Prod"c'" I c ed dog 1 h Ired o. odelmg· 640 ""1,1 P1'0grammet' lo or..,., .Lo}\N ~an ve MANAGEMENT NICE apt for rent. 2' Br, ' noon. •• urra. "'• n · m sz. · ong a ' n.cnl l;-iJfJ • Purchasing Agent to S12K Costa Mesa . • • I I 2 !la U k. I . localed ''ery nice section NEWPORT CENTER 1501 \Yest Orange1vood Ave.. white \\'·tan spots. blue H1ullna Supervl-·/Retail lo sssol-"c"A:=.T,::E::R::::.IN~G~S-·-L-E~S~· I ' •• 2 BR. B tns, new y decorated, I v 1m, 1t w pantry, Cosla Mesa Ladles onl• call Orange (714) ~1010 eues v.·, El earn.·,,. 0 ·al 1----·"'-·------1 -"
' encl garages. Beautiful din area, gar. 219 Santa ~ 2 R00~1 office with fantastic I .~~~~~~~~~~· ~ 3
' • ru: Exec. Secy' /Ofc mgr $800+ need d'-~. • .. landscaping. Lrg play area, Barbara, Apt B. 63J..tm. o9:.:'l!Hl656.:,..:::'::,,,~-----view of Newport Harbor &_ in San Clemente, 492-5942 YARD, garage c:ean.ups, Engineering Sec'y to $750 experle .i.-='wr, :-oM'Y
ll child's dream., Close tn NEW, large 2 BR., Extnui:, ROOAIS $20. a wk up, with Catalina. 565 sq. ft. $4251 ~ aft 3:30 red ml ove . trees, dirt! ' ivy, Secretaries to $750 + nt!:°m~s::n. re~;lte:
shopping "-schls. Chlldt'en $195. per mo. 105 Ave. kitchen $35. 'A'k up apts. per mo. includes utilities. _...., 1 • SML rec. altered n1ale cat. r ve ways' s umps. Med. Girl Fri/M. Viejo $700 OPr.r· I
welco e 842-0m U ~--· 26 548-9T:;,5 or 64.>-3967. janltor service, carpeting i;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\i"iii B1k w/whlte toes on rear 847-2666. Comm'I Unes/Agency 10 $650 salary to Classified Ad. #13. m · ; no 'l..ftrnle:lo, So. SC. 49S-19' BLOCK lo ocean, shopping, & lots of free parking. feet. Had flea collar \\'/ LOCAL moving & hauling Sec'y/Lile ins. exp $600+ Daily Pilot, P .O. ~x 1560•·
ans &4?·733l. Apts., pvt bath • ent. Mature non-ESTATE REALTY 640-1120 P'eraonels tag. C. L. SCHU~. V ic by sludent. Large truck. Ski Bunny/Girl Fri $500 Costa J\olesa, CAiif. 9'2626 f
BRAND New 1 & 2 BR Fum. or Unfum. 370 smoker, refs. $1.lS. 675-4958 LEASE/OPTION l '-;.;.c.=....;. ____ ,;.530:..: Ne....•port Heights . ..,._3159. Reas. Barry. S&f.9438 or Girl Friday $500 CHILD care/Lt. Housekpr,
1 Apt.a cpt drpg bit lnl encl LIVE at the Beach. $25 wk. LL BOATE S LARGE long haired cat, 5.341846. Insurance Oerk to $5bO $3, per hr. 3 lo 6 PM pr.· $1'15!$3X1.' 2 °Blka sa: Corona def Mar Pine Knott Aiotel, 6302 w. Professional building • 2 A . R reddish tan, bushy tail, SKIPLOADER & dump truck Typist/GOn.1 Viejo to $4Ta wkdays except Thurs; 1 to1
of Huntineton Harbour. Off Coast }lwy, NB. fi73...-0l40. c;i:ce:cun':1:J"~ oi1~t:Sr AnENTION! family pet. Reward ! 'A'Ork. Concrete, asphall, P.T. Girl Friday SJ hr 4 PM, Own transp. Ref~.! We.mer. 16872 Lynn St FDIALE only, lBR. MY .-552-7024 sawing, breaking. 846-nlO. CALL TRISH HOPKINS Pref older \\'Ol'NID. 962-0058-1
DOG Ru ' home, overlooking I u ah BAL Isle quiet mature man, I excellent for owner/uset'. Bas' Boatin Co JERRI WHITTEMORE E IC"L
.• · N tropical patio & Newport $15 per wk, winter, shr Reception plus 5 ollices. ·ic In g urse FEM Gennan Shepherd,'Blk MOVING? Local fw·n. or CL R "'
Spec. 2 Br. CID cloled gar. Bay jacuzzi lawxl privl kitcb, ba, & TV rm, 6/~3613 Call 545-8424 BKR. & white, named Truda 65 gen. hauling. 32 Ft. furn. ~ PERSCJNNEL Immed. AslJgnments. Top
Pool & rec rm. $165/mo. pvt 'enl, no' kitchen, ran? Sl.2. to SlS. WK. 1st & last OFFICE SPACE FOR scamamhlp t boat handling lbs., 19th &: 1\-fonrovia, van. MS-1862 5.57-2736 ~ $U. lDng or short ternt., 3 BR, $1.99. 842-0389 or find. 673-2793 or 67>2297 k -·d 2293 Fairview RENT Costa Mesa Harbor Ht. Beach Power Squa•-n 646-8"737. Hou·-INRllMI ·~ Call MOMS(). ~. ' ( amwering service ) \\' ....... . ' . ' w.u lO 1\10 old 130 lb St ..,. ··• , NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO
.. ·, 2 Bt, C11Pta:. ~. Blt-lns, Cost• Meu C.l\!. 645-0600, ext 51. ':!oo~ms.alrB e ~ ~ ! 1 ~ '. January s~s at 1 pm Bet1'Ulrd.,. sborthair. ~le: JAPANESE lady lQ do 488.E. 7th.St Cat I_rvine) CM TEMPO TemP,:Jrary Help
carporfs, 1 blk to sch1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;; NICE Bdrm, kildlen privlgs janitorial, O ass A Walker at vie. Lag. Bch. REWARD. h ouse work . ·Needs Suite 224 642·1470 COMPANION, older woman
shopping A freeway, 1 rhild ~~i. ~~borne. & Lee Bldg. Call Gene Hill, !\-farina High School & 494-8103 transpO~tion. ~40:::.133'2 ~ w-Jt,-w·J&,r:=a to11ve-with shut-in. Minor
ok NO PETS. Call ~ LA MANCHA APTS. ~=~~::::.;'°":::::"-~~I ~55=.7:,..0~136~;:0;,r,;546-5828.:::..;:::;::;·=-~t. Valley High School LARGE black male German eves... .. duUes. Call 642·5000 j 1 ..:::orc.;545--01W==:,,,,..,~~--I N!,;~.~c~~'(;a~W~ ;;G;;ues=t'-H=ome=---'4-"15:1 OFFICE -SHOP A great opportunity !or Shepherd, vlo. 21st & Dedlcoted CIMnl"9 ACCOUNTING CLERK • . I
WALK TO BEACH Pd. Adults onlv or family LAGUNA BEACll all boating enthusiasts Tustin, C. At. Reward. * WE oo EVERY'rHING * Costa Mesa finn . seeks ma· CQNNECTOR Dl!SIGN 1 & 2 Br, Crpts, drps, Bltns, ( J PRIVATE & Semi-priv. rm. Top comer location Information (714) 968-0494 642-4447 Refs. 1''ree est. 646-2S39 ture reliable lnd1v. w/AIP, ENGINEER
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308 ,... St ·~:n"'"" w teen. Blt·lns lncl. dshwhr. w/nursing cat'e. good food 0 It ""~ VIVACIOUS altracu· e 1 T y dark bl k AIR & 10 key adder. Lite . . rcial
•. • .u;K.11 • ~ "" Shag Crpts. Small pet ok. & lndry. 642-9278 n-s e l'<U""''g • v ga • IN onde pee apoo, H OU SE CLE AN ING . accurate typing. Salary to With exper. in comme 1 ~:; or 847-3957 Pool. Gas BBQ. ~V:....::::1:,.c....::::R:..:::.:1::..,,1 --,-2-5 1 525-800 Sq. Ft. Util. paid mid·2(rsd to n1ee1 t unencum-lost Vic: S later & Japane~ lady. Exp. Own $500. Call Helen i\la.son. & military connector deslgn.1 ;;,t~ Clean, quiet I & 2 Br, nearly 1, 2 & 3 BR Studio. -i"~c~o~o~o~niiii~""~"~'iiii~~~J I Call Realonomics 675-'700 bered, ynam c, successful SpringdaJe. Sol Vista, H.B. transp. 646-3528 or~ 541)..6()55 CoaslaJ Personnel Applicant n1ay apply all ~1•. new bldg. Wtr/ga.s pd, child Prtv. Patios I OFFICE SPACE '~:i •. ~~ve~'!~ c.!~~: Re\\·ard 842-5816. COMPIEI'E House & Office Agency,' 2790 Harbor Blvd., SAE Ad.vanced Packaging,•
:· oit., no pets. $145 & $160. $160 to $250 per lifo. LIVE in the all new Dana ].OCX)..500) Sq fl avail. in able Dunn & Bradstreet WHITE kitten k>st vie. 38th Cleaning. \Valls, windows, CM. 3080 Airway Dr., C.M.
,.:: ~l6S2 TIS~:;.,~-Point Harbor at the Landmark Financial Bldg. rating, Reply to Classified ~..\nge?:lf.~ ~;we~~~ floors, etc. 842-4.w.i, 5304~. 54G-SS. ~·· LRG 2 Br, 1 ~i Ba studio, ~utiful l\tARINA .INN located in new Bristol Town ad No. 14. Daily Pilot, PO 6T.Hll9 J.t\PANESE Housecleaning:. A/P Clerk, Corutr. $700 J:; encl gar, yard. Couple: THE EXCTI'ING Motel, 34002 Del Obispo St. & Country Center, S.A. Call Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626 . ..::;""""-------Experienced, and do a good Clerk Typist $500
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COOK
· •• NEW Apts. Walk to Bcb. MINUTES TO NPT BCH ficlencies & Apartments. NEWPORT CENTER Spiritual ·-•1ngs 10 a.m. chest & paws. Vic 17th & I T. Bookkeepet' Jo $700 I: $157.50/mo. 847-4440 PALM MESA APTS. {49&-2353), Kitch e n, Et· Mr Kelly, (TI4) 979-3600. LICENSED SPlRITUALIST DOG. Small blk male. White job. 546--0527 Recept, Genl Ofc $5i2()
• Bach 1 2-3 Br Fr $150 • • Healed pool, direct dial •-.u Santa Ana, CM. Barny. ncome IX Purcnas. Agent to SlOOO t : • • ~..,,2579· · · Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $157 ..--,, •·J-'slon, Muna Desk space available $59, -10 pm. Advice on all Reward ~1303 •1 .,., 1 Asal 15 h. r Evenings •• Extras . .,,_. · .,...,.n:: """'"' receptionist will answer matters 312 N. EI Camino ai.>-I T S. • "ac,U-1 .. s · Adults, No ~ bath, I au n d r y facilities. ho . 1 REW ARD for return of ncom:e IX rv1ce Med. Front Ofc $500 Apply In Perm.n La 1 Bdrm. $125. mo. bltins. 1561 Mesa Dr. meelli•a room, close to San P nes, mail s er v c e . Real, San Clemente, for personal or business Se 1 $600 '·· Ava1 Feb lst. Beach & (5 blks ~ N Blvd) ...,. &14-933'3 appt call 492-9034, 492--9136 beloved male Irish Setter, ere ary Before noon or aft 2 pm uvm ewport • Clemente & Laguna Beach. "Rustv". &i5-8715, 543-70&6 23 Years Harbor Area General Office $650 .·• Warnerarea.847..-. ~-Come play bt our OFFICE SPACE PROBLEM Pregnancy. ' (714)675-4676 LVN $500 REUBEN'S ,: CUTIE. l·BR, 1-sty. Carp., 2BR. elect blUna, partly furn, sportfishlng, shopping & Harbor & Adams, $210 total, Con f Id en t , sympathetic LRG Light gray & white _.....;Fo.°'oo..°'A~ppo=tnoctm=•c.cnt'---1 Ex. Sec'y to pres. $T:>O
drps., Infant O .. K, ~ pets. walking diatanoe shopping Je!faurants. $50 week It Up. approx 600 sq ft consisting pregnancy co un 1 e l ln g , cat, ans to l\1yra, had flea M can Jeannie Sisco
: ';~ $140. 833-1.Di/ 536-8900 centers, suiblble tor middle Bt'ing this ad &' f1ceive of a reception room & 4 Abortion & adoptions ref. collar, East.side, 548-7240 • iaonry & Sid Hofbnan
.•.· 2BR, 2BA, fireplace. Cples, aged or oldtt couple, fond $5ofton flrstwe!ek'•rent. private offices. can Jitn. APCARE 642-4436 BRICK block & stone work. NEWPORT
. • no dUl d/pet. Quiet. l blk ·<>I gardenhia, no pet.I, Hcue. 8.3J..3Xl5 HAVE recently moved here [ jlfml Quality \\'Orkmanship. Personnel Apncy
I bch. 213-C: Atlanta.. ~~A VICTORIA * Rent•lt to Sh.Ir• 430 F=:~D :Cf! ~ ren~ ~~lt~~:~ &~~:~~ c---···----.:~o.•.; I PStew~ Maso& nry, 640-0887 133 Do64"9: .!>!.:' N.B. 1:··· 2V:0 • bltins, ~ti, dips, 1, 2 le 3 BR. turn &: unf MALE, female, waterfront Newport Blvd., CM. can people from '69, '70, 'TI 1 lint ng ...._,. ! :.; JSOfc ff-t.:U.. ~· Carpets, drapes,' Dtw, TV apt on canal Balboa Isle. 646-3928 or eve. 673-4577. or '73. ~2497. Schools & -;;P;•;;pe;;;r;;h•;•;g;;l;;"9;;;;;;;;;;;;;J~~ COOK
4647 MocArf!>ur, N.B.
Equal ()ppor. Employer m/f
': ·. e ~~mo .• 2 BR, 2 BA ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria Unfurn. with Zi yr ba.ctielor. W.E. Lachenmyer, Reallor. BEST MASSAGE IN N.B. , • 575 • a 'R-lv•ble to $700 Fast-· -•· tun "-......, st at Harbor CM 642-8970 \Vlnter $13>. Yrly $175. 3400 Irvin A s · 1038 1nstruct1ons II d p I • "" ... ~ u..JUK, .......... , I ,•, POOL. cpt&, drpa, bltns. · • · 646-894l DESK space available $50 e ve., u1te *Wi Ir I ntU'Sf Exper. in payroll, 10 key Bob Burns Reataurant
1 ·: Kkls OK. 960-2064, 646-9666 LIVE Near the Beach! ..::.::..:=· '-------mo. Will provide furniture (at Bristol) Open 8 AM. e VOCAL TEACHER e Contractors* adding, figuring of oommts.,1 _ _,Ca::o::ll..:J::uli=·e"n,c..:f;#,::..;:ml::::.__1 ,1 .• :· Hunto-'. on Harbour 1 a 2 BR. From. $145. MALE room.mate wanted, at $5 mo. Ans .... >erlng service Ann. 5.57--0539. James Kenneth Chapman. CUSTOM HOMES sions ,._ mbt 45 w Pm COOK Expe~enced Coov ,.,,. '"·ture adults. No peta. nonsmoker, 3 br/2 ba apt a·-''-ble. 1-0 ·-ch Blvd. ~A" ,. ..... •M ~". G37-59J'o • ...,.,.. · · · · •• · l •~ "· Pl ( ..,......_ 101" .uc. LIFE or DEATH; Let our .,_...,,.-'-'" ,.,-~ COMMERCIAL Fee Nego. Also Fee Posl· Home, Santa Ana Ave. can • 1887 Monrovia. ~ .?:"::: OCC.'lll23 ..... t-aza, $60 mo. Huntington Beach. 642-4321 babies Uve. For alternatives Finest Craftsmen lions.. • , ;:54>-"'-'3061:::'.'::.·~-~----I ; ; FOR. rent or lease, brand .nor
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.., :·~·· new2BRTownhouse,swim Oa1ly Pilot Want Ads bavt MAN "--3 BR do FOR Added prestige, lo AB,,qRTI2,N 24call LIFE 1 ll5J Ins. Coverage, $500,000 Other Positions Avail. t'OOKS. Qualified. e.'<perl-i'• pool It rec. Close to baraalns plore, to S'ua.1-.: con locate your office on the LINE iJi:Jl"""iJUOI"• hrs. .._ _, _ Call For Estimate NIGUEL ence necessary, call 00-0375 !:,:, -an.patio• ·-prlvate. ,,,...._ in Costa Mesa. 1$100 . Penin, Lido Building nolv ~IASSAGEfBATH *644-2199 640-11~ p 'I A-t It
' ....... • ~""3 ,..,..._, 546-2054 12-2 or 4-6PM bas NEW avall to " -JI( ersonne .._ency or appo n menl.
, . call collect, 213-m-4427 aft Furn. or Unfum. 370 _w::."'°eo:kda~ysc::.. ~~~-~-suit, ~pace A touch of class. Complete State Lie. No. 281038 27635 Forbes Rd. COUNTER girl, must be 71 :·~· 6 pm Do 't •-the ball ·ee1 S privacy .• 645-M60. Appll1nce R-ir E XTER!OR/I t rlo LaJnina Ntmiel or over. Eves/wknds. S2 !.· LlJXURIOUS wate r f ront Fount1ln V1lley n w.up · · · BAYFRONT OFFICE * PALM & CARD READER n e r 831·14n 10 start. Apply 8847 Adams boa II ;..:.=;;.;;;...;;;.;;;;.:. ___ I Put your budget beck, on 40 = ·~ red Uon 111831 h & P1rt1 Painting. Also Landscaping. condo. Pvt t s P at your th t k Sell ldt It Prestige area. 1 ,;w.J, ,),,JO.I ad wt uc Beac _;_...o,;.;.; ______ I Pr 0 1e 5 s 10 na 1 results Ave, Hunt. Bch. • • ~ Spectacular ma ln e rac · · · e ems sq. ft. 3700 Nemnnrt Blvd. Bl d Stant ir.?'I' 3406 ' ......,., \\ith a low-cost Daily Pilqt ··...-v ·• on. =x-' APPLIANCE serv. Washer/ guaranteed. Call 64S-Q82 fllDI rn COUNTER help le cook.
:. •. . 2~br 12 vi::· Befrpiut deco:;· r---, Classltied Ad! Call 64Z-6678 N.B. Phone 675-122() EXECUTIVE, 39 to m~t d rye r/dshwshr/disposals. WAl.J..S decorated, -· ting, 1 ASSUIDLUS Apply Kentu~ Fr I ed ! , ai:r. i.eue Option. c8.4l:530'. CUT OUT , today! PR 0 FI MED IC AL HB. slim & trim compatible . All makes. Reas. 646-5848. paneling & wall papering. Chicken, Lagur-. Beach. ' I POii I Apts., Prestige loc. Harbour area. gal l9-35. P. O. Box. 1JJ93, Babysitting Bonus rooms completed EXPERIENCED COUNTER help, fltime for ~ -Lagun1 Buch Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Ample prk.'g. lo re n I . ~nta Ana, Calif. Free Est. 968-4902 dry c I ea n e r s . Apply
!,.·. * SPECTACULAR * 8U•PAllC• !J60.l24Sl5.1!J.50SS. '·s.c==1.'"1 ~C~l~ubs=~--53~5 MY home lovbtg «ere by PROF. walloovering, state Montgomery Clean.,,, 112! I I Newport &..ch OFC Suite, 1000 ft. SUltable the day or week. West lie. No. 279514. Insur, all VOLT Irvine, Westcllff Plaza, N.B. ~:1 : OCEANFRONT l.Mln I ..... W :.;::;;;.:;:;..;,..;:;;;:;:;;. ___ I for doctor. Hunt Ing ton IN Orange Co. for an instant Newport. 675-1706 COUPLE to all
''•' 2 BR. 2 BA, bltnl, cpts:, I .~ .. _ * --1 Gardens. 846-1323. date. Call Corpenter types paper. 71418424386· Instant Personnel hotel n ••. ~~, apt "!'_ • drpa. dedu, no depotlts nee. •wv.,... 836-6679 Jfrs 12-7 Mon-Sat · •W1llpaper Ha""'* · ~ uy.. • llll"ll ~:· $$>/le.ue. 499-2389 PM .,.... ::--wtlh sg~;: ~'tinn~~c~ec~~~~. CUSTOM WOODWORK C~ Rebko 646.2449 Temporary 8ervlce + comnU..lon. 673--lt40
: • SPACIOUS Studio, c p ts, I .! L .. ~c::: I Newport Center. 644-9440
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Cabinets. pan'lg, pa tt o•, INT/ EXT PAINTING 3848 Camp.,. Dr., S"ite 106 DAY wa;u.ss U.2 -lhru t ~ atps. l BJk to Main beach, •••~· _, ~ t1 .. t 1617 WESTCLIFF"N.B. Lett_,,... remod Newport Beach 546-4741 Fri. Dillman's Restaurant, ·". $115. •!M'olm. ,644-M78 . panlllld living room, "' rw'H. . Duke Dad"'ka &16-)598 Free Esl Jbtl 615-3559 Eqwtl Oppor. Employer. 801 E. Balboa Blvd, Balboa
' ' l..t~.!:!:::!'.O'."-==::....-1..mcolaraccftwalll. I 720 sq.ft. It up. 541-5032 lliiiiii Jack Bergman 846-9495 Paperhanging & painting. DELIVERY Help full or v. -Verd• a ldlchm Ml al bUlllft 11,.:,... 600 Oft ft $95 Mo. CM I I :n yrs Harbor area. Rell ASSEMBLeRS for ,ht & 2od p/Ume. Male "' female.
_.. ~ ·~ 64G-2130 * Found {free Ml) 550 G!paN~~FreeL c •,rs~.~ ~oe~ r,.y as& furn. No. 183281. 642-2356 lhlft.N•~t bt mlumelectromu'='-prmN. Chamber ~~ Com m er c e
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HOMEATMOSPllERE-Dlx2 l~llud'._IJ_llwt•~~lh I --~~~~---1 ::::=-:---;-:::--;--;::-0% U Wall . Int ... pro o ~~" o Adver"""' promotion ~~~;...~~otc. 3095 -· ltlllai =-~:N: N~CEi!~CE,,.,:,. ~~~> =·>~ 6~'/X. Frank.~ atter i= ext c!i:'gf.'tn•i %.':'·t't'.;.~~~~v ie:::u1."'Y:r~ ot~
:,;::.: 1~ .... ~w~ .... ~rt~j ...... ~~'.:=::-1 1 ~·!..lllJ..llMto, w• I ... , •. 1 .. a...... AQ<nt 6T.J.;;2JO ~.!?!'. Ranjo St., F. v . DOORS. windows, lormlca. AMF lnoorporal Above '"" -· Good I.~ lllnia ,_..... ~ Ulf" l ee."• We will itot Business Rentll 445 __,... shelving. Expert f In Is b. PROF, painter, honelt work. 261Sl Ave. Al'n?puerto after school job. Paid dally '•PARK NEWPORT 2 Br, lllldln.-..._. I rlillllflbMr •mW· CHQO)LATE Slamese, 839-29:56eve1. reas, Int/ext, he estimate. San Ju.an Cap11trano Pick """'" own hr i• -~-pool 1111111 ef l l 111e111 tis 2 Reh 548--2759 642-39U M/F equal p1o ,_ , ... 2 Ba, tCUU111, • gym. lttll 11•• t its JOU OFFICE on Newport Blvd. male, yrs, neutered. CUSTOM Woodworlt. remod., • , • oppor em yer 9am"8pm. Apply llS 3rd St.,
:·. ·• i.J'stll!:!l.!!!Ila>~-547..:_-«3_11~· ..,"""= ...... ......1 mo•t l1. avail on lease. Part. tum, Pouch on stomach Vic. paneling 4 repair. Vince Pl1ster. Patch, R.-lr ATTRACTIVE girl, nice Sulte E, H.B.
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9U &I. • I r. = ...... =.. At 01kwoff lit tt'I carpeted, .atr/cond, prk'g. CdM. &'D-7079. Lenhoff, 536-8475. figure, model 1 afternoon DENTAL ORTIIOOONTlC
1 BDRM penttiouae. $185. ...,...._ ,.. $1 iailllH in rtetet• Approx. 100> sq. ft. FOUND: small, all while * CARPEN'I'RY * * PATCH PLASTERING * a week. TettiJic pay . ASS!STANT. Expet-, for ~ mo.'llt(t,~·1496 ,:,. • .:s.-• 1 =~=: ~~dea~~:trac~ ~=edco11~~r •M1~S:.~S: small By Allty~~matet =.:J~~ed~~t~e~ =~iae ~cnC:~ll~
LRG 2BR1 trplc, drp1, crpts, Ill ,......, = 1 ctter J?,'::::"· It-can 54H616 FOUND, sm. tm. Red Corpe! •·-,c• Plumbi.. tAo P~,2;. Box 10516, Santa City of Orangt. Full time. adlts only, no ~· $210 1 ·=·-·-• dlor.,.... ,.,.., DlO or 4000 llQ. ft. building Dachshund, brwn collar + ~·· na .,...,u, no Sal. Startlne Salary S1m
83$-M47 or 66-«iOS aft 6pm -'8 ,,.. 71, -.pl'•17IWJ S.., fat 18.ae. Avail apflT'OX. Dea colJar 540-0083 OHN" t. L.R. OflS PLUMBING Auto . to $800 pe_r mo. Family
I.__ lilnl1•111 I """"'"'llh -· ·Maret> 1. Presently occupied • J ·s C&rpot Upholstery R<modela a Rrpa!n. Water DMV/Ccnlract 'Clerk J...ith Insurance, paid atok SUPLEX. Steps to Nnd. 2 -_•-, ill frl Sl•t"L 1 & t ~t•· by .Mar Vac Electronlca. FOUND:. Man• Wedding Or:I Sh am Po o. (Soll heaten, dispoM.11, tu.maces, GM dealenhlp seek& mature leaw, uniforms. A 2 "'ttka
br, 2 bl,=· bJHns. emu. 11,1'' • ros111. l t tll frt 11 1829 Newport Blvd., CM. ~. ~7~':tt i;e;~ 1'TI ~t=ts~~ 1~ 1:,T·uhrs.Cont ~ M/CblngA: experienced applicant tor paXI vacation prov kl e d;
1275, SO. 1548-a&e pm. Sl•S. SOrrr. •• Phone Deno Va c eh er, min t bl h 1 hit · Pee um key pm:nabent poeltlOn Send mume 10 OGMC 100 SPACIOUS 1Jdo Ille Bay lli'7f 21 W llO_pslL MD-3280 HAVE you lost u e eac or w e Service. Lie. 2726$4. Le .. ..a.1 ..... IOOh to a.ssista.ni Soutl\ Bixel Loi An&e.11!9. wtdl ....:i.. brlech.. S Modlk OllSI 10.7. · dog" c1rpets. Save your money ........ <& • • fNDt,i lo'"''..-. .,.,_. .. ....._ FOR Lease Commercial ~· by saving me extra trlpa. PLUMBING REPAIR. olficemanqer.Outst.anchrc1....:Ca:::...· 900=15:::.... -====
BR. 2 bu,!500.111!>-1'11 ~-Bldg. oo mojor Blvd, clooo WW cleen Uviltfl rm .. dining No ~.~~&mall ~County location. GM DENTAL RECEPTIONm',
SEIDi rentals.SA 4 BR. --:-;-. to new civic ttnttr In FND little black Poodle, rm., le M.Jl $15. Anv nn. ** V'W"'oJ.uo ** expttlft'IC'e prdttftd. All Eiqt'd only. H.e.. area • • : saT5 tno A ~· .YIU'lY 1 .... ..._~111 I Gardin....,.,..... Huntington ~acb., Oftlce north part area .... H.B. cau $7.50, l'.'OQCh $10. ctiair $5. Roofing cmd.lUonl 1xeelltnt. Write 846-0097
:-" Propec1)t Hout ' . eo-l&57 --... ....,...~ space A llora.gt: •re:a. 545-f11l. l:i )'Tl. np. II what counts "''lthout delay lo ad No. KEEP THE BOTTOM OF "', · '* BAYriiONT SPAdOUS fUll..... ...... r;:• Apprwc. 2:JOO tq. ft. 5.16-dl f'OttNO..:. !fO&ll 1hqgy fem. not method. I 'do work ROOF lor less, rtpe.ln. 80 c/o Daily Plkrt, P . 0. ROUND .WASTE BASKETS
""· lblkBrtrom. -~. Inc, lltil •. 2 ~=-= IMl71~ I FOR i..,., R<!All s.,.., clor. uw before 6 PM. myself. Good m. !i!l..otDL !hl"li•~ rock, como -8"" ~.Costa M-. Calli. •JoM by ptactno • pa-r~.· ...... .,..., fS'l5.:43t7 rw• 4-982... ~ .. ...._ 23x40 In lhoop1rw centtt, 546-1317. STEAM CLE AN ? e.xt . L ie. 161163 ma. plate In the bottom (I( lhf
' UtG/Kew 3BR. 2BA., yrly, •10 Mocllll GI*' dlilY 11141 ..,..,,. · 333 Batt 17th St, 0... FOUND; main Slam e "e SANITIZE! All dirt out SCl.-3388!830-5tm Don't I.Ive up U. lhtp! butet. 'l\trn Idle ltenw
L $3$0 ptt mo, 4819~ Rl\lt"r -• Mtaa, $275, G7:J-0140, mtx., CAil berore 6 PM Aladdin Hou.e ot Sttvtce: "Lift" It tn classifled, Slttp "Lllt"-lt tn classlned, stup tuh with a De.ilIPUol
Ave, '1S-lm8. - -1 ____ _;. _ _;.__ 6i..t-0707, &tS.2400. \ 546-1.377. 55\;W to~ ~Its! &U-5671. to Shore Results! 642~ 01'qlffed Ad. 642--56'11-
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1
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DA.IL\' PILOT Ti.ur$day, Ja111.11ry 31, 1974 1,.,_.,...=....,...,.....,...,.,,.,=.,.,.,,..,....,.,,_,,_...,.,...._..,=,,..,,_.,,_-----="'""-,,,------.., =-=-~,,-----.==~1"'.7.:0iil'iitr--[
p , M & f 710 Help Wanted, & 10 ;;•;p;W;;;;•n;t;;;;;;;;;;F;;;;;;;lO Help Wanted, I' 710 Antlq... tl!uoo IOO. Pianos/Or-126 TV, liadlo, Hfl'I, .J. St.reo
F;NTAL Office: lnsur . MAINTENANCE MAN 5u..1,,, l"'at long run oppor. DECORATOR hU tcrllfle _;.;,;;.;,.;.'---:---:-:-:I ~und. Able 10 hantlle ~(Wit be f&millttr v.·/plunib-PRTh'TlNG hmlt.Y with Lingo Real buy 300 yrda new Ruaty COLOll. TV, Po r 1 a b 1 e ;
.VP " AIR • bilck up fnr. eleetrical ' gen 'I .... OFFSET E>tatc In C.'Ondolnlnlwn Publt"c Auct1"on Brown ...,~ •• short -· Excellent cond. stt;. ttont ofl'ice. Typlna, heavy ptntry. 131da e~per. nee. 11ales. Seekln&: " mature In. 642-t2:>5, ~ ~J68T t1ves :phone•. Exper. prcf 'tl . sirong 8/c A re.frig. knov.·-divldual. Cootac~t Ken ~w°'oo'="o"su~O~P-.--,-.. -,~,-11 Sportint Goods 130 -SP-EAKE-='RS~."'=s-w"'ay",--;:tr;;;;,I
Salary open. 11.B. 11re:t. gledg•·.e. See Personnel Mann.· PRESSMAN l\tachcn, 49;>.1920. 1nstructor, work w/ )'OUths Woofer. $99 a po.Ir. 962~. • S A LES WO M AN»'.,hlon 1 thnl 18 ,,.. old. 64J..83'12 Antln•~s Antin•-SACRIFICE 2 Pain of ~~~~8"~1-l~IOIO~~~I
DEPENOABLE person to Balboa Bay Club bland. Exp, tssentlal In «> ~(~9~·~5~P~M~l~~~~·~ ,-' ' ' ,-• ~· * Anti * standard head 1kb. car stock shel\'es le: clean llti. 1221 w. Coast ·Hwy, NB 2ND SHIFT O•wnated women's fa.lhlon. ques Ka.roach boots &: polce, A L-----~JI' Part time. $2 hr. Apply ,;;;;ii;iiiiii&i;iii.iiiiioi.... Any quallfled, ma t u rt ~ Frid "'-b l 7 p M car aid rack. S4CH0711 f\00 to You io.;;, ·Thwit. Fri or Sat. 190 MARINE MECHANIC .,.,'Oman apply in person al •*2 •• J f.l!i.. lay, rw ruary It, • •
So. Coast Jf w)', Laguna Reh. Experienced with all type.s KORD 64 •nd 1250W N\IBCh.'WICK, Fashion Island, 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~J~V~·~ Lots of Oak : Tables.t Chairs, Rockers , Drop. 'rixc~it glaa• ~~ ~:i~1r::.
OISJJ\VASllER for cor!ee O[ engines: In b ()!!.rd • w'fth T.s1 two colot' ~~·;:;·'-=~----~-' I front Secretary. ·~ptnninf Wheel. Some i;ki boo~en·· iilie 8 m. 3 Linea, 2 Times, $2.
1hop. 263.1 \V. Coast ll"'Y, outdrive & sn1all diesel. unit. Must be •bl• to SAVINGS &. Loan needs 800 French ·& Vi t l F I DI In Lind ... " ••••llJlllJl~-~~I Newport Bch. Call 642-8475. Perm. position. n 00 t expcr. person to assist AntlqUll C or an urn ure · · · n g a .,.......,..18.
DRAPER'' 1'-lfg nff'<i• exper. Spcoci&llsts, Inc.. MS-0001. m1ilnt1i ln uniform col-Manager tn branch ofnce.1 ---------Room Set. Marble Top Buffet. Wine Cabinet. Stora, Ra1t11ur11nt, DAL f\t AT 1 o N Beautiful,
o\-er lock, blind-stitch & 2·l39 w. est 11 .... 'Y. Ne"'POrt or b11l11nce and h11lr· 1'1utual Savings & Loan * AUCTION * Cane Chairs. Curio Cabinet. Decorator &11r 832 papers, 2 yrs old, had ~~~~~ ~a~rr~1~p~ Beach !':t.di~'~I:~ .~~ ~~ili· :;~7 '&~~~~s~t!! FEB .• 2ND. 10 AM ~i:~eJ~gs·, ~~~::: ~~~~l°&inABf:~eCkoe~~~: 832 ~~re lessons, Icniale,
St-rvice. 9CO \V, 17lh St, C\t. MARRIED Pft'llOtl over 21 be •ble to setup 11nd ~:f'~~;~-:~oyer ?ol/F Uncl1imed Storage tion of Bric-A-Brae. 2 LGE. trained mlrt'Ol'll, 3~1' NEUTERED feline mother
DREMlS bigger tll8JI your car & phone neceu. $125 print on 40 pound lit.. Consisting Of lOO's of Bar-x 51~· $50 ea. 1 complete & daU&htcr. ~f111I leave
paycheek? \\!ant ID estab v.ic. ID start. 8M-8<XXI weltht ,atock. We need ·*Sec:'ys, Bookkeeper• rels & boxea, office furn .. Jake's Ant1'q ue Baker'1 sealc $50. Proof box home. Prefer e Ide r I y
that 2nd income? If you 1-tATURE Woman to manage a cr•fhm•n who Is 11 1Jz Reinders Agency household KQOd1 & api)li-$50. Commercial co ff c e persons. Desperate. M&--3572
ha\•e 6-8 hn: per v.-eek, I'll home & children 7 &: 8 -4020 Birch Street ancdl:. '70 Toyota Corona grinder $150. 8 pedestal pat· FR.EE puppies. 3 Ftm. 2
5how you how. 642-tJ>28 during ~!others extend~ self st11rt•r with 2-4 Suite 104, NB 833-8190 4-dr, not part ot auction. Auct1'on Gallery lor 11tool.Ji, $20 ea. 675-8581. Ptfalc. Collie Ir Shep.
absence. Live In 962-1418 bet ya11r1 axper .. nca In Dl•I A Job 833-0855 $UOO. ISLAND lreei:er. 8' renlOte 5:i7-7032
bomastlc Help Nffded 9 ani, 2 pm or afl 8 pm . offset prasswork. Ex· No Ch•rga To You Lido Van Ir Storage Co. 2722 No. M•in unit $100. Sho\vcase 4 ', 2 Purebred Siamese altered
•P $3.25 per hr. & up. * MECHANIC callant benefit pack· __ EJJtabll5hed 196.'i lctO<OR Colldor Av.e .• FV. tnr Bullockil $100. Rotating Shoy,•case )'0\1ng feniale1, bluepoint,
art &: full tln1e In Npl. Foreign cars, 642-Sll.l •9• and st11rting sal· Sec'y/Bkkpr Coma;-s AM-LETS S•nt11 An• $125. ~314 Ask for lUacpolnt. 4!)6.-8413. :C~f·1 T:':c.·J'rtor1nance Med hck Ofc to $100 I ary. 1 Glrl ofc. Fashion Isl. Send NO LIMIT, NO RESERVE Harold I ='o•"'n;,':L"'l7:No;Gc..::p::=:up='=p17',:',,•eec:a::g:;:lel
0\l'n trarup. a nlust! Flne position for bilingual resu1ne & phone No. to ANSWERS DELI CASE & SCALE &: rox Terrier. 6 wb.,
714: 675-28&1 (2" hr"&\ LVN or RN. As 5 Is t 1 Apply In Person Classified ad No. 42 c/o 64Q...8286 518--0960 aft 5
prominent doctor. Will also I or Call: Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, TV R di HIFI
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EXE-CUTIVES-consider back of f Ice Don• Leverett Cosla l'Ytesa, Calif. 92626. Garlic -l:l.lker -Vervl! -Garage Sale 112 Mlicell11neou1 Ill Star:O o, '
assistant \V/ several years SERVICE Station Attendant. Fillet -RIVER 1--· --------1 ----------I I PIU ~ • $15,000 to $75,000 exper. Call Lois Jae, (7141 MO.!iOOO, Ext. 2;;o D•v• onJv Sal•~ open Overheard: '"Things are so l<ENMORE wa!lher/dryer, 1· ~-nd resume or call TODAY !>10-6035, Coastal Personnel ..,, ,,. _,, ' bad. '"e no long~r call U SUPER GARAGE SALE 5 under warr. $90 ca. Flr RICE'S TV SERVICE
f'for confidential NO COST Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, HYlJNO ~S:..~r V~ewa~~!~· ~~~ water: It's more like cirrhosis Sa!lboats .. $l~$500. Sabot, poliAhcr, elec broom $5 ~a. (fOlmerly tn Pantry S Cntr)
1executlve interview. 0 1 Joaquin Hills Rd, N.B.o -::.' ..:":::":....:;R::.IVE=R::.·c." ____ \ Snipe, \Vild Fu-es, Austrnl· 11 X .12 avocado rug & pad * TV S-cial1 * Dogs l54
1 EXECUTIVE SERVICES, 1 -~~=--~----Ian 18 footer, Enorn1ous S10 2 Ktfbi'd 20" .--Med Recapt/Typi1t LABORATORIES 11 blk • So. :"! MacAl1hur ANTIQUES gold carpetin" & pad, desk, ', · 1· .rcn!I. Uired & Color TV M>IK · \Vhile e PUPPY WORLD e INC. Blvd) 8 Ilall tree tak '" ;:h•l I Scnwtnn bike $12.50. they last!! Color fron1 S65 ....i I
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888 N. l\faln, Santa Ana \V1th all front ofc cxper. N.B. · 1. e your chairs tables cou ch 646-4219 C!Uhuuhuas, J 1ny Pood es, Paychlatric ofc. 642-3866. SERVICE Station Attendent, choice, spi1oons. COJ?per coal childttns turn',. Playpen: up, B & \V fron1 $35 up. Fol'' Amer. t-~11khno, Pit Bulls,
(71 4) 547·9625 NE\V Vetertn,...., Hospital 3300 Hyland Ave. full or part lime, Apply baskets. coffee duipcnscr. clothes childrens clothes BDRM set, chests, tAbles, old 11crvlce call: Bull ·rer11er, Kceshond1,
1 11 1 ~~ ln pel"60n, 990 East Coast coffee grinders, VictJula J.::nciss~I skis Lange Boot"' cruneras, new wheelchair, 546.fill2 or 5'6-G003 Cocknpoo, Oobcrnian, Shep. Fee or COllfiU t ng &erv ce \Vants ~1edlca1 Receptionist Costa l\fesa, c.n1u. 92626 11,vy, NB Oak ice chest, &12-9187 pol-& bi·....l; ...... , & otlier' glass\\•are & much nlOre. 1375 Loi;:nn Ave .. Cl\1 lie~. D•cli•h""'f, !00 'If,''-Not an offer of employment & A•• is tan t, 16161 "'" ........ 06" 3 B'S FURNITURE •u " ...... " '"
$ Brookhurst. in 'Vesthaven Equal Oppor.,Employer SHIPPING CLERK ANTIQUE PIANO, Eng. fantastic bargains. Sat & ZENinl& RCA.color,B&\V ED PUPS!! Stud Senice
,EXEC. SEC'Y 700 Shopping Center. Fountain['!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!~~~~~!!!!!!!! Exper. preferred Broad wood 18 0 6' Sun only; 332 lt!arine Ave, 2430 Ney,·~11, Costa !11esn 'TVs & :steroos priC<'d to !ll05l Breeds. Open Eves:
f'ee Paid. Xlnt skills. Chance Vall "'-' REAL ESTATE rectangular mahog ca5e Ba1boa Island 548-2848 clear. Priced le!ls than the 5.11·50'17 to advance w/bright future. ey, no exp nee. \ .-ite Pernianent position avail. v</ 2'X.'6" k · &. • ' k · .FORGE for metal w'Orking, discounters with 3 y r c:;:;.,=cc,=~=,..,--.,,.-
. Some I-al backg •ound Cla!l.Silied Ad no 946, ~~ SALESMEN growing mfg. co. Good sat· ~ • e)'s .. v.ur:s GARAGE S a l e, 1 be PEl\1Bll0KF.: \Vcllh Corai ·• • Dall p;]o oomplete Sacrifice •185 \" "-o R I · 7" diameler, burns coal. has P cturc tu , 1 yr parts & ·he}pful. Also Fee Positions. ~r:=y ,. __ 1• p O BoCax lno \Vhy not \\'Ork In the hottt t ary; benefit program, incl. 673-1232 ' .. · ..:_asr~r. ryer, ed.rhei g' AJC blower w/vnriablc send<.-e. No charge for Pu P s · A K C r eg · 'Cati Conlrot Ca, e e.. ........,.,, ....ui.ta Mesa, U, a-a • lluntln~on "·ach _ 8 pd holidav.:, co. pd med,' un:ssers & lamps, IS 1, d 11 19.. Ch• .... pionship stock, 6 wks
• ............, '"' •• Q<:: ,,. ANTIQUE V t I odd " nd C I speed oontrol & DIC bloy,-er every or Rl·UR on 'r'"''' ,Emp loyment Agency, ;J~ Fountain Valley. Let us life Ins, pd vacs & sick c lor an s °" e s, ompcte w/2 spd control. Ideal for & larger. 25" Solid State .,0;o1d'='•9'-"=7692=~-.,....,.......,,0 1
556-850J, 3400 Irvine Blvd., NURSES: Morgan Nurses train you. Call Phil ?tic· leave. E. 0 . E. Dresser, beaut cond. $:nl Bed r 0 0 m set • v er Y crafts. $75 830-3719 from $499. Cash 90 Plan lR1SH SettC'r pups, 7 wks,
... N".B=:·"""~~~----I Registry, C.Ptf. now taking Namee, VJLL.\GE REAL Apply Jn Person S-3 or best offer, 675-2422 t:ble, 833--0285 Starts Ml II or tcrn1s. ABC O>lor TV. AKC, shots, 20 Chan1ps on
-F /C Bookkffper applications for RN' s, 1 °"EST:;:::::,:A:;T:=E:.c•_::963'=..;456=7.:_· ___ !11oody Sprinkler Co., Inc. Appli1ncn 802 .::.cm="------~ sea •neou1 9021 Atlanta or 1 9 o 4 G papers. 673-49'2:1
Call &42-8338 L1 VN's,•t&PraF c., "~Jd9e361s. Live REAL ESTATE 30'10 Pullman St ., C.M. HOTPO!NT d GARAdGE/ Snlbe,1 Sat Feb 2nd, Wanted 820 2:c'°khh· ~~· .. ~ n 1961 ~ ~~"~n "3"r"'UR'==E'-"B_red,_,.-, "'La,_.,b--;Pu,--, ... .,'!!· .... "~ . .......-or * Great Opportunity SILK & y,.-ooJ presser, good gas r Yer' use r e t vacuums, , ...,ac ' -..~ or _,.,,,,,., mixed color, no papers, $10 n;"lllALE Beauticians (2\ ,,...,...M)Q;J N pay, 5 d•v w•·k. Apply F'i:igidaire elec cir ye r, dinette, stereo complete, PRIVATE party \\'lshcs lo SPEAKERS Qu d St 11 B ~,119-•-·· I tt In ! ho I cw or experienced real ...., "" p t I h · & boo t thin buy old or unusual silver • a or crco. ell. · · ...,.,... a iw/somc o ow g, n te NURSES Continental Clea11ers, 8ION. enncre!I auo "'as e r , skis ts, co g, foldl!d baHle ablnet l\fust ;salon. 833-2534 RN-LYN-AIDE estate people. Your own prl· El Camino, San Clemente. your choice $4(1. GF. auto 111ucho misc. No junk, all or china items, no colns, <: s, NE\VFOUNDLAND Puppies.
fRONT office receptionist vnte dl!sk k phone, good ,,·asher $50, Lady Kenmore quality. must sell. 1M22 Ir no ans please call afl .c'o:""""'~"f'=7'*'~c;1 ____ = ;\KC. 5 \1·eelo; old, 11 ·7 & other shifts. Top pvt walk-ins, free advertising. Super G irl Frid11y auto \VA 8 h er $ R 5. Eiffel, Irvine. 6pm 114·839-5919. SONY RECORDER TC\27. 114-337-7162 r!~~~ ~fu!~ ~~·H~dfe; nduty pady.tylmmced. pay fodr ~i~t!~T~!~~ 18 yrs. Call Needed for 1 gal ofc. Exper. ~uarn..nteed & delivered. GARAGE Sale . Stenotype BOYS to 11peed wanted, Can Ul!Cd once8.1~1•10ncii·! 1 fJO. _BO_X_E_R_:,:P.:_U°"P:;S..;, :;A7K°"c-. "'r,-wn-, I
!bookkeeping, insurances & oor u . o un t Y w ln al I pha ses o t 54~12 machine. girls bike, ml!\C. poy $25 or $35. Phone * * 6 y,•eeks, pet & 1bow.
!transcribing. 494-ml. intervwfl, Mon-Fri 9-5 . \V, E. LACHEN?\-IYER bookkeeping, payroll, typing We're No Beauties Sat only! 2326 Cornell Dr, 675-2449 after 5 pm. 5· 1.-tEDJ'ITERANEAN A~t. ___ ,,::.84&-:::.,:Slc;96~-~=I
. Lescoulie Nurses Registry, ~3928orEva.67M.577 &sh.642-8080. I CM SILVER COi S F~I Stereo Ga rrard -c 1''ULL OIARGE 351 Hospital Rd, N.B. R C S -TELE~-P-H_O_N_E_____ ... our co ors don't n1atch, ,.=·::::_· ~-----= N -. -• • DANE PUPS S50 & up. AK ,
1 BOOKKEEPER (Lobby Park Lido Bldg) E EPT·TYPI T Ans. serv. but \\'e're a good Whirlpool Miscall1ineous 811 PAylng 140'/,. over face. Call changer. Sl95. &l5-.i6.l7 l\ft:'rlt", Black, BI ue ·
. , C.Onstruction background. &12-9955, 54()-9$4. Thru April 16th. Apply In Relief graveyd opr. Tues auto. washer &. gas dryer. 962.3646 eves. llCA 21" Color, ne~1 picture Pet-e.00....1• 493-4581. 1 AIR. A/P, p •Yr 0 11 , ===":-7-,,..---,,-..,., person (Open 7 days) 23361 & \Ved nites. No exper. nee. You can have both of us forl----------\VANTED used p b lube, w/UI-IF, $65 firm . "H-0-,-,..------~,=56
art ty tax t job NURSES Aide, exp. pref. All El Toro Rd, El Toro, (El Phyllis, 646-8000. $75. Call 642-3589 bl!!. 5:30 FINAL WEEK arac ute or 5.58-1782 fqu 11 .. e.; 1 ,,!:_urns,/ shills full or part tin1e. Toro Prof. Bldg, Suite 1021 & 8 pm 10 see. Spinnaker or scrap nylon. _ cos ... ,., am ........ w ~n-Beverly Manor 24452 Via TELLER EXPER Richard 49S-1812. SONY TC 152 port Able
tracts, accurate on details, ,,...._da, Lag Hi"-Part time 9 am to 2 pm, S EP' RK Rent WaoL-ro/Dryoro Ch'ld J I J" cassette deck. $200. Ca 11 rcood typist. Hrs, 8-5, 5 day -~-"-·~~~-~---f\lon thru Fri. Full time 2:30 AFE D OS. CLE 09 CLEARANCE I s ung. Im 6&4598 before 3. week. 842-1411. NURSES -we have cases pm to 9 pm, 1-fon thru Fri & STATEMENT CLERK sz. \Vk. Ful\ ma.int. Call 494-7161
f, ULL ~.-, •··"'--per •~w -only SSC. commission. Ace Sal 9 to 5. * 639-1.."02 * 0 1. -• . ~-·"-• UUUAA"'" ...,. N .. --•~ =L S • p 'f' I B k \\IHffiLPOOL el-. •·asher ras 1c 1 o:uucuons on ··--"-r•-In "··ta --· ~ · RECEPTIONIST ocurity •<• 1< an .... 11 1 t k I~ ...... ,.... "'" U11S &. ..i--r $!50. Coldspot a 11·are 10use s oc . !Mesa. Please send resunie NURSERY y,urkers, mAle, Nice bof;s &: trit:'ndly J>t'Ople. Ne\1'J>Ort Beach branch. rerng:J; cu ft $100. g.17_9303 Furnitur• ~to Oau:ified Ad No. 71, must have exper. 6 Day Looking for happy person Evelyn EJlsy,·011h 646-8931 L
tJ:?ally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, wk. 21 Yrs. & over. S2.50 w/accurnte typing to train Equal Oppor. Emplo.)ler mJI WESTINGHOUSE \\'asher, amps
Costa Meaa, Ca 92627 ht & more, Laguna Hills for gen'J ore. likit ne w, $100. Import Accessories
Musical lnstrument1122
6 li10S. 1-lorgan Qrtr, Colt.
halter broke, fa n ta 1 t l c
disposUon $75. 892--9887
1 GELCOATER Nunery, El Toro, 830-565.1. J•son Best Agency TRANSCRIBER, X-ray &lf>.64~ Oj:len 7 days a week. ~' Exper. Swing Shill& only. PARKING ,att_. Ml ki"! partlo 17400 Brookhurat, F. Vly. t1'1mmue'not1a'~. Preqtenu"~CO· nFutacltl KENMORE ' htavy duty 16'19 i\lonrovia Stree_l
Gr Y ht C time, app Y in par ng t s It ~s ~'6115 · ~-~ 'vasher, w/filler, Like new, Costa i\tesa 6-15-613.1 C -r ac orp u e "' J<N'" ;, pe-nnel ou1·ce, S. 0 ---1
SALE: Brand new PeAvcy
Standard P.A. $400. 2 Shure
PS5 Mies $50 each. Sig;ma
acoustic guitar + hardihel1
case $150. Also, Sunn Solaris
Amp $:rl0. Sonic I &'\ss head
$75. Call 557-8151 aft. SP~I .
I A CONVlNlfNT ~NC ANO
8£WINC CUIDE fOR THE
GALON THE CO.
--at llOO Pa.c:ilic Coast li'A'Y·• ·-u ~ 1 Id -"~-I BUY'' . 1631 Pl•centla, CM N.B. RECEPTIONIST $455 H6'pital S. Laguna 499-1311 yr 0
'-· ~-' . ••
I P-art--ti-. --1----_-,." -., Lite typing. Beach area. UNDERGROUND Installer, REBLT Washers, Dryer.;, GIRL FRIDAY me cassroom alU\: a WESTCLIFF Dishwashers, S50 & up to Good. used f"-ltu-& local 7th, 8th, gracle school, exper. Trainee consider~. 1 ••• .~8 ·~ -20 -" '"
P Tl pt Cabl TV yrgu.ar . .....,..., .. 1 ,.,,,.,...•u appliancesorwill sellforvou
COi\1PLETE set Ludwig
drunis, Ziljan, CymbaJs &
all accessories, $300.
492-4291 For •n ad In WOfl'l•n•1 World
For president of nu goll
requlpt. Co. Outgoin g
lpenonillty, SfH, typing.
basil! bookk~plng. New
1office complex nr Orange !Co. Airport.. Resume &
salary req, Position open
for a drafting class. Hours ersonnel Agency e eprom er e • · OLDS i\mbassador Tro1n·
2:oo.3:oo. No tea ch in g l!!Iark III centerl 2624 \\'. Coast llwy, N.B. Building M11 .. ri11l1 806 MASTERS AUCTION bone, case. both pertect, Uke
credential req. H.S. Diploma 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Equal Oppor. Employer. e S I B lldl 2075~2 Newport, Cl\f 64ti-8686 riey,• cond. Used G nios.
req, call 847-6008 842-Qll2 542-8836 WAITERS urp UI . U ng 839-097..! nft. 6 for Sunrlny GI0-1319. ~tATERIAL • 1000'1 oI NE\V Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'I. I-'-""'-'"--------
Coll Mory Both 642·5'71, .. ,. 330
Modem Women New, Longer Look
! PART time--M/F, eves & Receptionist &. Ccn'I Oflice P/time work in estab. dinner ITE~IS! Doors, lumber, ply. d d' _ Office Furniture/ Sat Al\1 Ideal student work. Good lyplst. For an house. l\lust be 21·25, ool· wood, alum sheetlna:, niold-LRG roun in .tbl, wl_a chrs E I 124 l>......;i\
l lli~tED. \VRITE Classified
ad No. 62, Dally Pilot, P .O.
Box 1560, Costa ~Ie11, CalU.
,90626
jobs·lnside, no exp. 636-8995. accounting flrni in Costa Jege stude11~ & eager to Ing, windo\\'ll, etc. & lea\'es, 2 H1-Lo ty,·1n hed -=q.;;U:.:P;.;· ____ _:.::,
PERSON w I ex Per in Mesa. Please send resun1e learn. No prev. exper. BUILDERS SURPLUS ~ets. Delu,'(e bunk bed sets, HA.'lDS01i·tE Executive rles
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to ClassiUed Ad No.70,' neces."I. Apply betl\.'Jl 2 & 4 _ lawn sy,·eeper, Scott's mow-camera &/or stereo sales, Dally Pilot, P.O. 1560, Costa pr.:. 2-106 So. Main St.,:).,\, c.r, 9COO silent BTU \\inUow & crcdena, Custom quality.
or y,•/educational exper. in l\fe.sa Ca 9262'1 1i>Ion thnt Sat 10-5 ai'r cond. pa'" of nr nu hi·,•n Near new. Original t'OSI
th.-f'1elds. Under ~ ~ ::,-::=:::c·,:::::,,=:::,:----Cask & Cleaver • " ~-St 100 IVUI ··II for •0= o1d:"°y,·iU train. Call si}._i130 RECEPTIONIST, part time, 16525 Brookhurst, F. Vly n .. : 546-1031 n·beds, 10 key adding mnch, C~ll 'ri.tn. H~. ~ GRINDER
Exp'd precision surface
Grinder. Stanford Applied 1 Engincerlne-. 3080 Airn•ay,
J:.M. ?40-9256. Ask for J oe
f\Iurncy.
HDSrESS, days, apply aft
5: JO at . Petite Auberge
Restaurant , 3800 So. Plaza.
Dr. Santa Ana , 5.'i6--05.".iG
H OUSEKEEPER/C.ook
wanlcd for ooupll! w/ 1
schoochlld, Newport Beach
area, Exp in housekeeping,
cooking, serving, J\I u 11 t
drive. Ref nee., Xlnt salary
& \\'Orking cond., 675--2692
HOUSEKEEPER
Salary open. Care for 2 nne
children in fine fl un t
Harbour horn,. Uve-in, ~~
days. Sl&-001.1 fOI" appt.
HOt..:n:KE'E PEP-. m a t u re
••oma.n li\"e-in, care of
1t m1-in \·a\i d & lite
howekee;nmg ~m2 for .....
HOUSEKELPE?. to care for
nlOther L'l •tJttkhr. Pref.
li\"t in. f'.m le brd + sa.I.
Span. ~Of\ ~66
Pl11tform Secretar y
Experienced
Apply
Security Pacific
National Bank
5:iO Ne\vport Center Dr.
Newport Beach
644-0113. ext 324
Joan P. \Villia nis
Equal Oppor. Employe1· m/r
PORTER
Must be expel". F/tln1e.
See Personnel )tanager,
Balboa Bay Club
1221 \V. Coast Hwy, NB.
PRODUCTION
DESIGN
Soll boats
Several yrs. expe.r. in prod.
boat bldg. dolng detail de·
i;ign or prod. engrg pref'd.
Xln'I future y,•/iastcst grow·
ing mfr of beautitul cruising
yachts for young, hard \\'Ork·
ing lndiv. Call 642-8824 for
appt.
WESTSAIL CORP.
INHALATIOS T h trapy PUBLISHERS
Teeh. °"'~"" "' oligible REPRESENTATIVE
full tifTlt" / p:n-11:30 pm Lil'Jeral Arts Background,
2 )'TS exp. C.n incl 1 )T I Sa les exp, hl!C. Part time
schoollng. G<I l'alary + possibility. \Vrite Bellenr
benefilf;. P!~aM! \.'O~tact phon Books, 153 Steuart SI.,
personlll!l olf1et:'. S. Coast San Francisco, Calif. 9411Xi. Hospital S. L.--i.guna 499-13ll
INSURANCE SALES ·
No exp nee., earn "'hilt:' you
team. part lln1e. e\"P.S &
wknds, full time y,·hen quali·
fted .
Farmers Insurnnce Group
Ed La.Ill * S.M>·l.834
INTERMEDIATE
ACCOUNTING CLERK
FH Pa.kt. lf you fttl you'rt
ttt1.dy to move up the ladder
this rouJa be the co. for
you. BeeuUtul ofcs In ra~h
Jon bland .. Salary lo SZ,75.
Al80 Fee Job9. Call Lh1d11
.R8y, 54(Mj056, Cofatnl PC'r·
IOMd ~. 2790 Harbor
Blvd., CM.
LUBE MAN w/mechanlCAI
btic)csround • aper. Apply Jo pmaon, M'fM Cent~
...,_ .. , 196 E. 16th St. °""'JI( ....
""Y day i1 me BESTt DAY to
:i.in an ad! Don't delay ••
call today 642-5678.
on temporary basis for Real 531-3615 C11mer111 & All priced to sell. 847·3742. before 6 PM. 1"'-1.J
Estate office in Corona del --W-A-IT-R~E~S-S_E_S__ Equipment 808 We're No Beavtle1 2 -=FR::l::_G"-'...'.::1'---nd-.--,-~ J\'lar. Typing 40 w pm I do ' h . ar co nn ~. ·~ Pho s I I D•v •-ru'te shift A e 21 • VIVITAR =205 1 Ca · · · our co ors n t male . L,,.. Carrier air-cond $l0. requ11 ""· ne a y ...,, oc · g "" ...,. ens. non but ... ,·-a good "'hi',lpool •-~,193 f ove' E~, f .A I tn E d "-~t .. '"' ., New desk chair $JO. ?i.1cdical °'""' l or appt. · ~,... . pre · PP Y mount. x. con . ·~ u y auto. \\·asher & ~· d~e,·, person Jolly Roger, 203 used w/cue. & filter .. -.,, Dental chair, hospital bed.
Robinson's
Fashion Island
Jlas Opening For
Cosmetic Sales
Exper, only need apply
}'ull ·Time. Xln't benefits
Apply In person 10-5
No. 2 Fashion Isle .. NB
Equal Oppor. Employer
RUSTY PELICAN
Kitch~n Man
5 days per v.·eek.
Also ,P/tlme
Oyster Bar M•n
Exper. not nl!Cf!ssary
Apply ln Person
2735 \V, Coast Hwy, N.B.
SEAMSTRESS. young &:
exper. Pattiaon Sail Design,
836-1757.
SALES COUPLES needed,
comm'I &: home. Shaklee
Products. 714: 893-8451
Selling anything with a Daily
Pilot aa~!l\fJed Ad ls a
5lmple 1natter . . . just
call 642-5678!
l\Iarine Ave., Balboa Island . · · · you can have both of us for old. 4~ 6-*-~ $75. Call 642-3589 bet. 5: 30 ..::::::.c=='------\VAITRESS \\'anted from WIDE angle auto 28 mm & 8 pm to see. OLYMPIA office e I e c.
6:00 am to !lam. $2.00/hr. Mamiya/Secor, w I M I s . typewriter, \vlde carriage, Surf & Sand Hotel. Lag screw nwunt, case Incl BABY cnbs -I n~ar ncy," Perfect cond. Cost $600.
Bch. Call Jackie 494-6514, Xlnt cond. $00. 552-8028. ~: 1 ?l~r. Sl2.50: (_)ther Silcritice $250. 499-3702
f\lon·F1i before 3:00. children s llems. 58 pieces POLAROID folding camera 1'1elamine, $12.50. Carving
WAREHOU SEl\.!AN; to work black or color carrying case set, ne"" sa. Chevy. \Vheel
packing & other relat~ & attach. New cond. cost w/tlre, $2.50. Fam i 1 y
jobs. !11ust be reliable, Hl'!I ~S80::,,:Se::;:ll,.:$.15:::::,. ,.:968-5:::..;"7'.;;2:..' =-games, 25c ea. 543-2642.
8 to 5 or 'viii consider part VIVITAR Zoom ~205mm RED TAG SALE
time. Phone 551-9906 Auto 3.8, 1.-famlya/Sccor Yacht Junk & used mai-ine
\\IE have a fe\v openings for screw nlOunt w/case. Xlnt equiprhent. Sara"s Marine
boys & girls to become cond. 552-8028. Salvage. 4U-30th St ..
Dally Pilot carriers. Jn furniture 110 (Cannery Village). N.B.
Laguna Beach call Mr. WALL PAPER
Lambert a:_. 642-1321 ,ior BEAUT French chn, Mar bro 1 t & 1 11 Mil bell' ·
OKS. $15 up Exec 'SWVI chrs
$15/25 Sec chnl $8/24.
Pierce 867 \V. 19, C~t
00-3408
e PIANOS e ORGANS.
Rentals from $5
available tet·1·1tories. lamps, Beauty Rest 1,vin 1:1: • ess o · c s,
\VHO \VANTS TO \VORK? matt. & Box. springs, like Stock\\Cll & VanLult. e P l•nos & Gr11nd1
ORNE A CAB! nu. French dresser & 847-80IO ALL MAJOR BRANDS
CHOOSE your hours, v.'Ork matching chests. End tbls. BLACK & Decker twin blade Used & rebuilt pianos also l!~;E~
for yourself., be your own !)48...6289 lawn n1ower. Brand ne:iv, Uprights fron1 .......... $691•
boss. ?.<Jen or l\o'OJl'len. Can l\.1AGNAVOX console stereo under wan". $20 oil hsl Spinets " .•.•••.•.• $145
be slightly handicapped. unit, antique green, $200. price. 548-9793 Players .'.' •.••.•. , .••• ~~
Nent • Clean Appearance. 3x6' glasa coffee table $200, BROWNING Auto ma l I c Granelli: ....••.••••. $395
Vts., retired. Age 25 to 70. Both ex cond. 54(i..6562 Rifle, ThlM. s e v era I · e Org11n1
Supplement your inoome. ROUND table & 6 ladder Antiques. Chelsa Shlps Bell ALL MAJOR BRANDS
Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a back chail'!I, harvest gold Oock. !)48..7100. Op,Ugan . ". demo •. , • $195 day. Apply iii person, Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th seat111 Span. type. $175. 2 VW 14" wheels with new Spmct · ·•· • ne1v • · ••• $493
St C 'I 531-8788 Firestone super belt dclu."<e e FRE~ e 9146
SIZES 10Y.i-20Y.i " osta " esa. Ti ET 8-1' 1-tEDITERRANEAN couch & champion res "" Org11n lessons \\'Ol\.lEN-TELEPHONE y,•ork love scat, used. Red & blk Both for $35. ~9076 UJ\vrey theater (new) ~. from own home. Secure new ., .. ,,..., In, 1ff ..,.i;,., 1ff~-acct!I. for well known store. $65. 8. SOFA, $25. POOL TABLE FULLERTON MUSIC
Call collect (2131 670-4497 5~175 · 4' :< 8' $:75. 18191 Euclid; :~ountaln Valley
Npc_d a "Pari"~ Pu.ce an ad!
* SOFA & LOVESEAT * CALL 6T....OOS't EVE 1 Blk. No. of Sar Olcgo F'wy This Ill the \WI)' the n1od1?n1
Never used • Very gd. qua.I. POOLS tbls, antique.style, 557...c836 \\'Oman kloks. by day -alert,
Usually borne. 968-7910 slate, 4JC8. $3.5.i. Wlll deliver 122 N. fltlrbor, 1''ullerton attractive, al ease!. Zip up
CORNJ..."R Bed·Dlvan, Or use free. 836-8102. 171·1805 this yoked casual m. llght-
as h\'O twin bed1. Excel 18.7 CM glass skis Crand open Nights 'tll 9 v.·=t!;11~~t~!~:i~;"~iur
cond $85. sst-80'Jl Prix bindings S80. Unda S11t: 'tll 5 :30, Sun, 12-5 Sites· 10~. f.2~. 14-%, 16~;,.
7' Sofa brand new cond, 516-4418 18~'· 201,,, Size 14') (bull
aturdy fabric, green & gold LEAnJER ski boots, Men'• PIANOS -ORGANS 37> take1 2 yds. fiO.lnch.
stripe, $100. 493-0081. slie 81$ro. Linda New l Uaed. Creat t.electlon. SE~W ·f1VE CENTS
CHERRY dining room set, 546-4478 CompetlUvf! prtces. Open for each pattem w add 25
Round table .,.,,1th :il leavea, PAClftC View Memorial Eves. I: Sundaya.·The best cents for each pa.Item for
4 chain. 545-t.i!M. Cemetery lot. Prem. 1oc. <tea.la 8-t'e alwl.)'• at: . Air Mail and. Speclal •land-
BUITET, D•nbh Toak, 1200, Cost $395, self 1295. 64~2019. W 1llichs Music City ~~~":;;)\" .. ~=
Xlnl oond. * Bob Dylan Tlcket1 * South Cout Plaza ~2830 weeks or more. Send to 213-$2-2323 644-5903 Marl.an Martin, the DAILY
ANTIQUE Walnut Dining 25.. RALEIGH Grand Prtx FR.EE ORGAN LESSONS u PILOT, 442, Pattern ~"
table I! 4 chain, RllJ, Call blcyclc. XI n t condition. long a1 yo1.1. like! Adultl ~rit,W~.\ uroou~·p r l ~~
eves, 642-9874 ~lust see. 646-!m& wtlcome ID attend 1'ueJda1 NAZ-I.£. ADDRE88 · with
2 LETDOWN 1afas, reg n, CARPETING, & ptld good nl(hl at 7:30 PM. \\'e want ZIP, 81'ZE and STYLll
used very little. like llC\Y, rond. 37 yds. $1.50 Rf!r yd, evti:ryone to learn to Plnl' NVM&£&. 61~~ a'75--4630, Evci. 64&--l063 the Of'it1n! Tom Dieterich SEE MORE Q u I c: k • in charge 642-28.Sl. Coasl 8hlonl and 2 TWIN bed• w/lnnersprlng CASH REGISTER rtfu11\c, Ntwport Blvd. at Fa . c:hOoM one
matt. $15 each; % mll'°'wA.y SHOW CASES &14) 956-5700 llarbor, CM. N::.~~1-Sun:eer &'fa'P . ~U $7.50. 64H207. •Jog S I N G E R J;; 1-E CT R I C 5' 4" HARDMAN Grand, Wal· ot ... I Qn\y llOc.
G11r• ... S11le 112 SE\VJNG lrtACHJNE In nut, xlnt ton~&: touch, $995. INS'TA;NT SEWING BOOK
SAT·Sun. l8891 Ant I 0 ch, cabinet $25. 492-4715. 54g.3420 or 979-6046 ~ todl,y, wear t~.
lrvtno. 833-4129. 14' akl WEDDING rlng1, 6 moo. old, YAMAHA M2B eon.olo. Nr. "INSTANT FASHION
boftl. Dre88er, m 1 r r or, Starfirc.20dlac. COit $3SO, new. 5 yr. bal.fact. warT. BOOK .. Hundrd 0 r
vibrator n1eu , mite. Alllke oner. 557·5939. ;;•~1u~otffi(s.ij11ri!!m~. ~&&-;"..::51ijT"'ilb';l.!!!!~~:!!:J!: ___ _ fuhlon facla. SJ, GARAGE' SIU&Jn. 9-5 ESTAn: aale, an t l q u e 1, ANTIQUE Kna.be Bab Y
1640 Iowa C.1.1. Nr wash. m&e:h. $4781 Doheny Cirand, Ellrty 18fll's, S5CMXI Have an extra IPIC9 heater
Harbor Bl SM D"8o Pl .. C.po Bch . .f96..5230 S4'"'5021 evtl )'OU no lqer ute! Sell it
J-""'Y· r.11sc. ltt'JT11 Incl chain, pie-llAMMOND T400 o r p n, now with • 'Dilly PUot
7324
\Vann up 1o winter wltb
lhls dashing, new Jon I
cardigan.
Get into the fAshion picture
with the newest -sashed
cardigan or Jong v e 1 t .
Crochet or sport yarn 1
eltS)'•to-ml!morize 1 he 11
pattern. Pattern 732-1: aize1
lG-16 Incl.
AEVENTY·m'E ~
.for each pattern -add 25 cenb for each pattern
Air !\tall and Special 1-lan-
dllng; otherwh1e thlrd-clau
delivery will take three
Wel!ka or more. Send to
Allee Brooks, the DAILY
PIWI', 1116, N-.rt
Dept. Box 163, Old Cbe!aa
StaiiOli, New York. N.Y. lOOU. Print Name, ~
Zip. httent NmnMt. ,
NEEDLECRAFT "1'21
Crochet, """· •tc. nee I dlmtioM, llOc. I
....... Mottame -&lie, fancy knotl, pal·
terns. fl,OQ, '
IMta•t Crothet Boot ..
Leam by plcturn Pat· ,
fem,. $1.00. \
~l ... utOUI-
-more than 100 11ft1 -11.00 •
0.,-Arp.. -• 11.00. '
11 111r1 11q 8oob • Mic. , -.... _........., llOc.
- - l -16 pattomo. ,,.., .
Mw•n Q.at ... I ..: llOc. ci-... .....,.. l.htor.
15 beludful pall..,,.. SOc.
f
l'hc fa.tlt'l!I draw In the \Vttl. tutti, 2 new 00811, sz S to I rythm, Ltsllc built ln. Oap:\Ucd Ad! &Uj679·
•. ·" DAiiy P\)ot OaMifiro 110. CdM. 673.7893, _!6!'.~~:im~~·'------!1 1·------------------·'
Ht.
A
BO
24'
'° en
un
10
I
)
Thrusday, January )1, 1974
i::::~"';;;:..~Ge~~ner;::;.:;•~l ---=::::Tcgy;c;.1~s-,•aITTll<~n=----~ruck:::-::::~s-:-----~1;21r.-:;A~u~to=s~.•1m==po=rte.i:::::.--.,~"o;--::::::::::=:::::::::::::-~LA~u~to3~s~.}_1;m3po3:r_•;od'£::::~9~7_:0.~AJ:u;;-1_0~~s~.::1;:m:f'po;3;}rt;30d:!::~-:;:-9~fto1~4~ut"-os:;-,;r.::r---....-,....:.=:-ti:-::::r---•
ALL BOATERS ,_..,. 925 1960 FORD, \i T P.U. F·IOO, BMW MAZDA TOYOTA CHEVROLET MERCURY A mNTION! ·n MONTESA 200cc, Ill nu Ecooomlcal 6 cyl, Exel oona
"""'· wllllna to accept any -"mo=.-'Q)-3119"'-''=----ORANGI COUNTY'S 73 MAZDA
BuJc Boltlnf 0>une ~otter. 968-l!i61 dr Vint t63 OLDI ST RX·l WAGON
P.fOVING, mu.t Rll '69
Impala, 4 dr, alr, auto, 327
'Tl MARQUIS, 2 dr hardtop, ,
landau, !ully loaded, 'xlnt
cond, new tires, Tnke Over \
Payments or make otter.
5.57--5066, art 6 54~
' oeamatllhlp ,bin boat handling '!O 300 SUZUKI Twtn. Xlnt ----vw--v .. -. -p-... -u-,.-, &' .
. Y condition & runa atrona. Bed. In ~ a o o d
Ht. Beach Power Squadron Ask1.ne $450. Eves 673-742.8 oondiUOn. <::all Frid a y
'""' .... I 6-8.PM or Saturday til noon. January 29th at 7 pm ...vi I Homes , 935 -l!l!I , ;_.. ru::: School,. MOBIL E HOMI '73 DODGE 'rl'd8mn 100 LO ~~\:ti: ~ .J', Valley Wah School FOR SALi: ml. 11-3/ltlck, 17 -· DIMO SALi
A .... t opportunity !or SILVERCREST Cuit. Int. ~'1881/eves. SALES-SERVICE-I.EASING
all boating enthusiasts MOBILE HOME 673-4426 OVER$AS DELIVERY
lntormadon <n4) -94 lO' x 53', 2 BD 2 BA, c•-.. l9ti6 FORD Econollne Van, ROY CARVER I draped bit,__ -· 6 "'· rood cond. eup.11ng, , nc. loltl. l'ww 906 ' "••., ,.Irle., bed, Icebox & maga, $ll0l), 234 E. 17th SL ---------"''-'I washer &: eleML dr):er, wired 644--2$1.3 Coata Mffl. 54M4tt
'. '83 34' CHRIS Connie TS, for 220 air c:ona., kitch. aulo pllot. m watt s.s, clock, 1torage shed, land-'72 DODGE Van, 1Z1", p/b,
VHF, CB, OF, 12v/110Y leaped patio. Three yrt. old p/1, 318 en,, stereo, unique
' -~-RDF t • like nu. Located In new wood pane116'l..:.J· A insulated. ·~·· ' many x ra1. Be ..M '12 ·CAPRI, v.e *O CC, $13,~. Call 552-T436 (eves) adult pk. away from nolly, ,,;;;o''=',;"="•r;;.~"-"="'' ~~·I St. One-hall bl. from club-1 •73 CHEVY v Bed lnk midnight brown, xlnt cond, 24' SEA Ray, '71, Cuttycabln, house s15 495 Call EVES. Ice chest, ~ma ' ~ms'. lo mlleqe, new tlrel, ~~ m dl/O, ~~rs, VHF, m.694-4soo'. . $1.61Xl/bf]st offer 494-4613 I =&G-8056i--'~=,-,:-::--:== -er,. ayi ~l610 or CAN BE SEEN AT ·. '73 CAPRI V<. AM/FM eves&: wkends ~T4 '66 FORD VAN, xlnt , 2> .. ._,,., CRESTMONT 6 1 led radio beater, 8,000 ml,~
Bolts, S.h 909 ESTATES ~'. xtras~ ~ •. nu ~•~rl_v_•~'::'·..,673-=:l067=·,,.---
LI' CATAMARAN, Hui~. 1051 Sile Dr., Brea. CC.nlral Auloo Wi-, HI DA TSUM crou arms, trampoline, 1811 1.ve. acroas from Brea
+ trailer. You tlnlAh mast Comm. lt0&p.) Lot #46 TOP DOLLAR PAID
& rlalng & rutten. $250 g;~;l:.!'.°'Y, PK. MGR., IMMEDIATELY
vaue Will deal or trade, 7~"'i"2"~-----6'2--700'7 Motor H-i FOR AI.J.. FOREIGN CARS .... , ... Call QJ' come in to 1ee U&
SACRIFICE! Evinrude 3 Sale/ Rent . MO H.P. Outboard P.1otor. Used -="'-'=.:.:...--.;..;.=
only 3 times. $2'15 new, 1 20'-25' Motorhome, Superior, want fl.25, Call DeMl.s Llfetlme, Open Road : a:
MH.)81 Barth, B of A/MC aept.
UDO 14 No. 2147. New "6J9.""'29S=I,,,. =~~~--~---" Trail $UOO 23' MOTOR1 home llke new. ra ..... ,. -.ua. er. . Will * ~ * sell or trade for local
MINIFISH Sailboat. 14 , real estate. Rau 962-2811/
boa 962-44TI . bCJu'd.cype t.Eullycar-·~ --~99 e Dale'a Motor Home Rentala: ~·· -· ~· '73 n.26• M.H. & Mini> 14' HOBIE CAT. "1? model. Free miles 9 tll 9, 838-0900 Many xtras. Has trailer. suso. Zll/287-7262. Tr1llen, Travet 945
LIDO 14 for aale No. l816 '73 PROWLER. 23• Sell
w/boat cover. $750. 81 ronlained; sips 8, tub &:
Unda Isle. 67>n98 shower, xlnt cond, T.O.P.
HOBIE Cat, 14' with trailer, 842-2338
xlnt cond. $950 f I r m · A_uto Service, Parts 949 ~2738 aft 6pm •
DART SAILBOAT ** WANTED ** new aJI Ir riaing, $3)0, 6 or 8 cyllnder motor
or bt1t otter, ~7067 to fit 1960 DODGE pickup i,B;:;o;..,."'11"',"'s;;1"'1,."'°'10oc"'-"k"-s'-o9~1,0 I cri1.~motor that would
BOAT SUP tor rent, up to
NEWPOR T
IMPORTS
3100 W, Coast Hwy., N.B.
642-MOS
WE PAY TOP OOu..AR
FOR TOP USED CARS
U )'OW' car ls extra clean,
see u.s tint.
BAUER BUICK
2925 Harbor lijvd.
Costa Mesa 979-2500
IMPORTED AtrJ"OS BEST PRICES PAIDI
l>Nn L1wls lmpor11
1566 Hubor, C.M. 646-~
WE 8\1Y
CASH ~'OR
YOUR CAR
5411-'ro!O
Autos, Imported
AUQI
'T' OATSUN 200Z. Just to
name t ne of the many fine
imporled can we oiler! But
why buy or lease a used
import with no guarantee?
You can lease a brand new
one with a factory warran-
ty and &ave on maintenance
too. Leasing for you could
mean driving a different
new car every 12 months for
the next 3 yeaiJ. Or LOw
Buy Back (bring back)
Leasing features No Down
Payment with an intended
resale value at the end ot
$500 regardless of mile• or
condition. Or I! you choose
try revolvtnv lease. 'T4 Dat-
sun 260Z $119.00 monthly.
No Down Payment 36 mo.
0 .E.L. 556-00n or 998-4560.
PRECISION
SHOW CAR
'72 • 24Crl, Met8.utc Black.
sunroof, telephone ext., +
many more extras, this car
is perfect. Must See!
6f4..5010.
WILL BUY YOUR
DATSUN, TOYOTA
OR VOLKSWAGEN 24' power boat.
&73-6819 aft 6 pm
40 IT. Slip near channel
entrance & B.Y.C. Avail
until July 1. 534-1769
AUDI 'TI 2 dr, 71,500 mJ, PAID FOR OR Nor. WilL
4 nu radials, A/C, llUl'tf'OOf, PAY TOP DOLl.AR. CAIL
auto, 24 mpg, $3950. ~ KENT ALLEN, 540-0442.
912
ORY Sk>rage; Sall bot.ti! to
11 ft., launching lncl. 90lne
-· .. Newport 613,IO!O.
11i•t4 •rtaitlllt ]fi]
925
RKrHlloMI BENTLEY '72 DATSUN 510 S/W Xlnt Vlhlcln 956 ___ _..____ cond. lo mil. Sell $2575.
~~,;,;;;;;,;c_ ___ ;,;;.; 1ll55 R Type Bentley, xlnt ~Book'°"'~$~2650~~~-~..,26677---.,..-
0UNE BUGGY for Ale or rond, pvt party. 673-6619 '69 4 Dr W:q._ New valves
trade. Street legal, xlnt aft &pm A paint. $12!l), 642""637l or
cond, top & .tde cur;.Jna, =="--"'l"'MW""'"""--· I ~-""""'-'~all~6..,. ,,...,.-...,.,,., 1 SSOO. 496-2981. 'G9 Datsun Pickup, Xlnt
BRDNC'O, '68 4 x 4 , like
new, many extras. Must
see! Best offer. 673-2440
'67 SANDRAIL ·
CALL aft 6pm, 645-3865.
Trucks 962
conct new smog &: '74 tags. BMW 3'.0 CSA. air, leather 28 + mpg, 644-':j&j. int., AM/FM stereo. Lease for $269.82 mo. + tax. 36 'TI 240Z Xlnt condition, All
mo. O.E.1.., 831-aMO Dir. extras.Silver, blk. int.Will
72 BMW Bavaria., 4 IPK'd. ~'":::cr!li=::"'.:ce!'-548-&m='-~"---
AM/FM ,.....,, air, RAT
metallic paint &: mag wbi.. · ' ORANGE Can leue. ~1-lOIO Dir. FIAT '72, 12< BS!, convert.
COUNTY ·n FORD \lton apt.. ""'" 10,000 ml. Prlv Pt y , ~ • Rad. Htr. New 10x16.5 tires, .,._ llllll fll TI.f..558-0393 -83l-8981' eves SUZUKl-IULTACO Ukenew,.;,OOOq.ml!... BAVARIAN "wknd"
.. MEW~ __ iowner~OO·~~~· I & i ~;;,1 ~7!..i';4~.=: STR~ET & DIRT 1972 FORD c.urteT Pick-up. ' ', '• , . _-__ '_"" __ o11_er_8ll_-0168 __ R11C1y for DlllVlry AM/FM ....... U.S. Maga, HILLMAN
100% Flnenclng, O.A.C, Rood for mlleqe. Excellent
2255 HARBOR BLVD., C.M. oond. 66-0283 before lOAM '59 HIU.MAN Husky.
!HARBOR AT Wll.'!ON) oraltor8,30PM.'REASON· 1974 BMW's Good condition, $.100.
646-242&, 646-4655 ~AB~LE=! ==-~--6<2-3449
HODA KA 100 Dirt, Good '69 CHEVYV'an, Ill xlrU, ARE HERE NOW JAGUAR
oond. Belt offer. trade fo r 4 wheel driVf: ready for
96.J..479'7 truck of llJne value~M6-6814 IMMEDIATE DEUVERY 'T2 JAGUAR XJ& poMr .::~. i,s T. P.U., 8' Ei' ~· rid(,.~~· st:=~~ FOR Sale • Honda Street
Bike $1!50. 250 Montesa Dirt
Blice $300. 5.36-4863. " ' bed, 6 eyl auto, R &: H, ~ • ' lB,{D) miles. $7400 call
dock bumper, aome extru, t6;...,..,,.;;..,..,;':· ~ Glenn ~'1503 (Dlr.l
Excel cond, k>9,o mi 838-9197. ""-"""L..."-"-'--'=---== 1966 JAG XKE 4.2, blk on 72 Hlilky 250 wr. Ultn trick.
9D-&f75 '63' ebevy P.U. B u i I t _..,,., M--~l p-...L... blk. aunroof, low miles. -~==~-~--• homemade camper It ,.:nw; .. ~~~·Vie• jo ... -.. way Beautiful car. $2500 .
Oteap.
HONDA CL l~ ..__ .aN\ ..... ,uw:: Pl.LINMUI• 1658 atreet ' dirt. $325. itorqe uwi;, -· -~· 831-20«> • 495-4949 67J.. . -=~1511~11981~-:--,,--!I m; Meyer l't. C.M, USE AVERY PWY EXIT, llm V12 ROADSTER, 5000.
ijj SPEED Bicycle, Good '.72 FORD Ptcla!p, V-8, air, I •!'!"~~!!!!!"!'!!II!!"!" mlleL $8200.
cxmc11t1on, $40. ~,~clc:.!w. :=·=.,box.::,: '74'1 Are. Here! ===-~6'2-c-71725-'-",..,,=.,,. ~ ._. JAGUAR Mark IX Qasslc. SZl.50. 586-2883 Immediate Dellvtryl Near Concoune. Best otr
SUZUKI, 250cc, e o o d '59 Ford 'Iii ton pk/up, Mag Seve On Remaining 73s ewer $Z!OO. 499-J!d.
• condition. Sell or trade for whl, 352 "! eng w/auto CREVIER IMW JENSEN ·what have )'OU. 89'2-4938. trans. R/H $500. 64.>215T
flonda 450-1967. E n g l n e
ncently rebuilt $35 0. ·-Auloo, lmportwd 970
Salts e Service e Leasing
.•. a Dally PUat Cl...Uled 3)8 W. ht, S.A. 835-3171
Ad. 642~5678. 1.,....,..-Cl_Oled.,...-Sund°', c-a-i>"~-.,;;:;
Autos, lmf!!rted 970 Auloo, Im~ 970
There's a lot more to it
than gas economy!
MERCURY
CAPRI
e IMMED IA~E DELIVERY
e '4 SPEEDS -V / 6 • AUTOMATICS
e SEE 9NE ·TRY ONE· YOU'LL BUY ONE!
• •
-MAMOfl It.YD .. COITAMllA .• .... 4
JENSEN
INTERCEPI'OR
Large Selection
of Colors
Immediate Delivery .
FUU. SERVICE
DEPARTMENT
NEWPORT
IM?ORTS
3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. --MAZDA
SEE THE ALL NEW
RX4
IMMEDIATE
DEUYERY
'73 D C~RANCE
ISll6 -· C.M. 646-9.103 •n MAZDA • 2 dr, etr, low
ml, blah MPG, Excel cond,
$2550.or Best 645-3751 '* 'i2 RX-2 * R A H o ... , aood 1bape.
64&-4671 alt. 5
NEW '73 Mud& RX2, a.tr
cood, radio, ndlal -· Q.1$83 alter 7PM
·n RX2 Muda, tmli\ac.
coddttion. Stereo, · Map,
~-
. .
1 '71 L•ndcrulMr -,
' $~99
) Low mllffff Hardtop Wlltl
i wtiae-1 drlva •nd roof ratll.. (2650LOI
'66 CORONA
$1199
A11!om1Uc, Lo mlla Toyola
Sell. Ill /radio ••• Pltnty
of mu.. & 1mllr1 lett
(TBZ2501
'71 VW BUG
$1899
H11rry ror t11!1 ~rp, Oood
running car . . . Good
m1tu111! ••. radio, pr1ur
r Y•llow. !71.SCIG)
'73 CORONA·
$3099
,GINrnlnv whrta Tovota
w/1>1111 vinyl top, 1uto ..
tact. 1fr con., radio . , .
F1r billow prlc1 ol ~
'74. !216HSOJ
'69 DATSUN
$1499
BrltH111t yfilow 1600 n:l11T.
w/rlldlo ..• A real cull el,
Gt't flr11 plctl (tHS2..,I
, '70 OPEL WGN.
S1699
. Altr1cUv1 Oranv•. A11lo,,
1lr cond ••. S.v1 s In Oii Ind QPttallon. [fllBHKI
'70 CORONA
$1599
S119r'ldlnv Sliver Toyol1 auto, Mdan. radlO, run1 1 Ut1 I loo. (ilSB'eOI
'71 PINTO
$2199
Sl\1rp, sllerp rid, Iulo.,
2000« eng., alr cond., r•·
dlo •.. H11tryl 17llOCEVJ " . -.
v .. , l Mst A Brand Htw
'1• Toyot1 Corolla 1200
Stdan with full fac1ory
1t1ndard l!'llUfpmtnl for
only US.25 per rno ....
)I mont11 open ~ 1111•
, . • 111 pli.rs last Iliff
pymt pl11S uc .... fff llfll
vou Into lhfs f'NI m/11191
! mtkft' on •ppt'OVtd crldll.
Siva dollars O!'I 11111, m11f""
ftl\lncl I n d optl'lflon
·co1t11
• • • BUY
A NEW
'74 Toyota
rOR ONLY . '
$685P~RMO •.
81 fl< GOod Provldtrl .. , / Drlva ancl rld1 a brand
new .'7• Toro•• coro111
uoo Std1n aq11IPPld with I
flrll factory aq11lpm1nt pl111 rldlo, cocoma'1 and ,
door ada• lllMlflit fflr only
Mil.511 119r ma ••.. • "'°' with '200.00 downl Total C11h prio:ti 11 $216U.04
lnc1. !Ill & lie. . , . To!ll
daf9rrld priCI II U2fl.M en 1pprovad crldll . . ,
APR 1._lS"' • . . GET
ONE TOOAYI ••• YOll'll
loft Ill
F\dly loaded, lmn1ac_ula te,
Tonnau cover, and more
C51SFSRl
BILL MAXEY
TOYOT A
MUSTANG
MUSTANG
1967 FASTBACK
Low mileage, meeh exc.-eJlent.
New paint. J\.1ajs & 1'11ckey
Thompson tires. Air shock.II.
Must &ee 10 appreciate.
!\.take offer. MS..208.'t
$2695
WEEKEND ONLY
DOT OATSUN
" '
'60 2 Dr. Good transp. car, '67 MUSTANG, very gd rond,
$100 .tncludlng 8 traclc tape. nu brakes, trans,. hatte~ ~ .=--=----=,--~,-I Call aft 5:30pm, 53&-228T. & tires. Going abroad. S990 . ·i~ Corona deluxe 4 cir. '70 If.WALA V-8 2CV; 4 dr., <Jr bst offr. Call Or. l\.1ichele 1 · Call 673--2319 full pwr. 51 ,<m ?III. Xlnt Dicasa SJl.8960 from 7·9 • • •• 1 ••• ~.
. cond. $1100. 847-7951 PJ\.1 * M•al• '74 Rotary * 'GS TOYOTA 4 dr automatic, '66 6 CYL Il\.1PALA nu '72 J\.IUST fstbk, auto, fact
"' . ' ·~' ' ""
$77 MONTH :~{ best cash otter. shock!:. reblt trans. '$350. air, R & H, p/s, xi cond,
36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE 8ll-fi029 or 5-15-4783 aft 5. nu 1.ires, pvt ply 644-1$1'
Will accept trade-ins TRIUMPH ·n EL CAMINO PS/PB 12500
CAU. MR. 'FRY 842-6666 A/C, auto, nu tire~. Superb'. 1 ··-10-~-IU~ST=AN~G-, -.u-lo-.~P~S·,I
H I B h Sle'•e days ••• •~3 Gas saver . Excel cond. new Un • e"C '69 TR6, gd oond, rebll eng. ' '~· II nu rear end, $1400 COMET paint & tires $1680 673-4360
673-0912 '65 Mustang hrclt. 289, auto, MAZDA VOLKSWAGEN '61 COM"rzi~ cyl stick ~;,, r;.::: coixl. 557"'166
WILL BUY YOUR * &46-3629 "''°"8 PM * OLDSMOBILE
17331 Beach_!ll~~ GAS SAVER DODGE
MERCEDES BENZ PAID FOR OP. NOT. WlLL ·'i'3 CHALLENGER 318 V-8,
1---------I PAY TOP DOLLAR. ~ALL auto, a/c, pis, p/d/b,
70 MB ~ Sedan, auto. KENT ALLEN, 540-(}114... copper \\'/wht vin. roof.
trans., elec. s u n r o o l . 1967 VW Van. Paneling & 12,000 ml. $3000, 557-3279
831-2!»0 Dlr. Bed. In general goo d '63 DART $150.
58 MB 300SL Rstr. 6Uperb oondition. Call F 1'. id a y 64&-l529 aft 5 condition "-priced to sell! 6-8 PM or Saturday til noon.l---'"=''='='=~--
831-lOIO Dir. 494-1!1!1 FORD
50 USED '60 vw ·MER'CEDES RUNS GREAT 1972 FORD , $300 Firm 544-3417
COUNTRY SEDAN
Sales • SP:vtce OLDSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS
HONDA CARS
UNIVERSITY OLDS
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa ~
PINTO
1972 PINTO Sq Wgn, disc
brakes, A/C, CUBIOm int ..
L. rack, li-1lchelln tires,
12,<m mi. $3000. 673-1658 ON DISPLA y '73 vw Camper w/lenl, like
Factory Authorized Distribu· new, ~sed only on E~ropcan
tor for all Mercedes products vacaUOn, 3'.>?<.IPG, 552-8-182, 3 N Parts Servi 833-6440 wkdays bet 5. seat wag1:1n. ew cars -• ce , Air Conditioning Alk About Our Unique ro VW Bus . Ex c e 11 en t Power disc brakes
Used Merctdes LHM Condition inS1de end out. AM Radio
'72 F<lrd Pinto Runabout. 4
spd, stereo, custom Interior.
Wide ovals. 968-2447 aft . 6. 1
. ' ·n Pinto, Runs: good, New
!ires, 8 track tape, $!DJ. (
548--0329 I Pl•ns· Good ml!eage, one owner. New WSW tlre11
H f I Trailer hitch. $1800. 546-4478 Very Good Condition
OUle 0 mports 'TI SUPER BUG. I)ync>tune, Luggage Rack PLYMOUTH on the Santa Ana Frwy. mags, new radials, many $1395
523-7250 options, SNAZZY. 642-7315 Sec at
6862 Mancheltei:. Buena Park $2100. DAILY PILOT DtPLOYEE
1961 VW Bus, new 1600 cc PARKING LOT
engine, new tra.M & brks, 330 West Bay, Costa Mesa. ·NOW OPEN
71 DU!n'ER, economical 6 1
cyl. eng. auto. trans., &
low m i I e s . Immaculate
831-20IO Dir.
Mission Vl•lo Imports neY.' tire11 & mags, new or
fe:'.lturi ng paint. Real sharp! • 847-2389 Call Margaret Greenman
· MERCEDES BENZ NICE vw cnmper bu•. $UOO. e 642-43Z1 •
& Call after 5pm, 'T2 GRAND Torino Sta Wag, FIAT 548-.Ql81 Royal Blue, PIS, P/B, air,
Con1plete Sale:'i & Service '69 VW Bus, xJnt cond, New AM/FM stereo, m e i s ,
Visit U1 5-At eng & trans, call Mill!e,1'"'586-38;.;;=.17:..,..~~-~=
28701 Marguerite Parkway 673-511J3 '65 Ford Rarichero $450
'65 PLYMOtITH Baracuda
$375. Good oond.
call .it 4: 30, 548·8163
'TO Duster, clean, mags, 20
MPG, AM/FM, slick. $1900.
63&-TnO all 6.
ATLAS M.illlon Viejo 495-1700 '57 VW, 40HP eng, ..vood Call 646-0815
(USE AVERY PWY, EXIT) paneling Inside, $250 or best RREBIRD
JIM SLEMONS ,.;0,u;::e"r,;;;c646-"-i:10:::72==-:=~l---.:.;;..;----.68 VW Camper-tent, etc. ,
Chrysler I Ply"'"th ,
IMPORTS AM/FM, steel radlali, H.D. 67 FIRED~ .. Auto trans,
Open Dally le Sun. 'W 10 PM '
2929 Harbor Blvd.,
MERCEDES IENZ s)>ocko $1650 49>-LI06 eve. pis, p/b, lo m.i ..... Good cond. $'150. 960-1826
Costa Mesa
546-1934
, AUTHORIZED '70 VW Bug. excellent oond. GREMLIN SALES le SERVICE Call after 5 pm,
Jim Slemons 847--0033 Imports VOLVO
PONTIAC
c::ireM~~ MY '74 VOLVO'S T·BIRD · 1'
=Quail HERE NOW JEEP
'TI GREMLIN, stick, posl-
tractlon, 34,000 mi I e 1 •
2iMPG, $1800 w/apa r e,
894-lOJl eves alt T
'64 Tempest 6 eyl 63,000 .mt, '
one own. Xlnt c on d 1:1 auto/trans R/H 548--0034
Newport Beach Immediate Delivery 1972 mtJNDERBIRD. xlnt l
833-9300 On All Mod la '69 JEEP Wagoneer, 4 whl dr oond, Best offer.
ENTER FROM MacARTHUR e w/hubs, alt powtr, xJnt 979-8450 <Jr 640-0668 , ·n MB 2lO Sedan, auto. IUY or LEASE cond, $2295 54>-1615 '57 T BIRD. -hole top • .'
& lo mlleo. Can trade, 3>f4Jl' •. ..!, MERCURY , Auto, lull power, very or!&. , trans., air, power steering, . UAN , _________ $2300. 838-6988 t
831-1.040 Dir. -Vft '67 Couger XR7 '64 T·BIRD, full ..,., like ,
l969 280 SIL Roadster, 2 IV .. tW Coupe _ Automatic, Factory new. $315. 1
tops + every extra. $7200. Air n--••t1o 9611-2'94 finn.54T1469 1966Harbor,C.M. 646-9303 u.1uw ning, Power ---=~~C:-:=--1 Qeeting & Brake1. Leather 'VALIANT
'72 MERCEDES 280 SEL 4.5 '73 Volvo Interior • Sharp • good --------I
fully equip. Xlnt. Orig. J4CE miles IVZW05Tl. · ,64 Valiant , can be fixed 'owner $8975 494-3684. Only $1199 M-'·-oiler. air cond. &: fac. wRM"anty '"""" ·~~ .:~ ~"'~: ~1-20<0 Dir. Howard Chevrolet ---,,.,646-=5753~---i ..
offer. 499-J729 19'12 Volvo. Sia Wgn. Auto MacArthur end Jamboree VEG-A
1961 MtRCEDES Benz In trans, air, roof rack, 25,000 Newport Beach
good shape best oiler 4307 ml S4150. 673-4303. 833-0555
SeasOOn!. 6T.J...l246. ·n SUPER BUG. Auto AM, The faatP.st draw lll the Wl:St.
'66 MB 250 SE Classic cpe. Nu tires. Tof. co~. $1750. ..: • .a Dftlly Pilot Claallied
'72 Hatchbk cpe. auto, 12,000
ml, like new, good gas mi~ ,
$2095, 494-5502 or 644-3494
Mettallc paint. Superb, will • 55 -339 • Autos, New 9IO
trade. 831-3}40 Dir. '73 SUPER Beetle, 1unroof,
Auloo, New flO l
MG yellow, perlect cond. $2500.
49H977, 675-3524 .
-MIDGET--,-. -'QI-, -good--body-·,• Autos, Used 990
~-· $60(1, or otter, CADILLAC
MGB
'72 MGB, white, only 7500
mi, AM/FM, under
complete warranty. Gets
27mpg. 960-2315
PEUGEOT
CADILLAC 1973
EHcutiVI &
Demonstrator
SALE
NEW PEUGEOT Cpe. DeYllln,
DEALER EIDorados and
Complote Sales and Service. Seel. DeYllles
50 compacts on d~play. 10 TO CHOOSE FROM PACIRC MOTOR ALL METICULOUSLY
IMPORTS sfil~~D
PEUGEOT /SUBARU All Low Mll11g1
1557 W. Lincoln Ave., All Fully Equlppod
Anaheim 533-8220 (Ser. 247590) as low aa
PORSCHE $5888
1961 PORSCHE Modol 1600, SPECIAL DISCOUNTS
xlnt cond, 12100 n.., paint DURING JANUARY
· call all 6' 638-4-039. INVEN'l'ORY SALE
TOYOTA
70 TOYOTA. O>rona Dix. 4
speed, fine gas saver!
8ll-l040 Dir.
.l>fAll lf.IOiA W TOYOTA
191 3 ELDOR ADO ,
magnlllcent! Black, loaded,
2!>,000 m11... $6695. lfrm.
547-6469,
1966 Harbc>r, C.M, 646-9303 SEU. or trade for motor
Slllpmonl of Now home '69 or '73 Cod Coupe 1974 TOYOTA'S de vm ... Desperate .
JUST Arrlvodl 1-~=-==~-~--
lmmedlalo dell>~ry on .... , CAMARO
hard-to-get models; tnic:b,
SJt.5'1, O>rona wagons, etc. CAM.ARO • '70 a1r, PIS.
auto, Mich. Urn. Clean, rood mileqe. 567-9494. ~lll.11 l]ili" lll11t111'.
,,.. C o " \ I 'QI CAMARO: 3 spd., 6 cyL.
52,<m Mlle!!. Good cond.
A"'ey-,d&)',-!it"'' "'tht-.B"'EST=D"'A°"Y"""tol $1500. 5IH750 Alt. 6 PM
nin an adl Don't dt'IQ. • CLASS SEU.S -64£5678
CONNELL CHEVROLET'S
f Nf RGY SAVING TIP :
T1ke • clo•• look 1t your fir11. Poorly b1l1nc1 .. a11d
'out.of.lt11e tir11 c1111 coif you ma111y, Ancf t11t1 h1v1
•hown th1t 1v111 u"-'1ri11flaled lir11 c1tt you 9a1olln a
ma ... , •••• fl'lllCh If 5 ". Thi b11t w1y to l'f'oid thi1
u11111c111ary coil i• fa t.a¥e your tir1~ ch•ckacl '•twl1rly.
Why 111t 4riv1 111 to Co1111all Ch1vrol•t tocfay a114 Iii u1
check v•ur tir••· O ur 11p•rt tir1 rn111,c111 1how yow how
to •1v1 11\0lley In mor1 w1y1 th111 0111,
CONNELL CHEVROLD
2121 HARBOR BLVD., Cost1 MIN 546-1200
SDYICI DI". HOUIS1
MM. J:JO •·•· I• f:OO p.M, e Tlin.•fri, 7iJO t9 l :JO,
·\
. -
Jf DAILY PILOT
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOU1. IUSINISS 9'0Tlt• OP NON·RISll'OMllllLITY
MOTKI: TO c••••To•s .",_,.. STATlfl'l!NT Holle• h Mrtb'I' lfVtl\, lflll ttlt
su,11110• COUllT· 01' TMI TM following Ptfton l• cldno bu1ln"' vno.r1l1ned wlll not ~ re1p0mlbl1 tor
STATI 01' CAt..IP:O•NIA llOlt ••: ll'l't' debts or' n1t1-Ullln conlr1cltd b\o
THI COUNTY OP OltANOa ERA ,AGENCY, 610 H.-..,,or1 Ctni.r •llYGM othtl' !Mn m'(Mll, on or llltf'
Mt ; A·tun Orlw. SUIM uo, NtWl)Ol't 811<1!, C.Ut. lfllt d.ltt'. E\1111 of IOA J, PAL.MER, llll IOA ~ o.ted ltllJ t)rd dl'f of J.nu.ry, lfJl,
PALMER, Ot<Nted. ~r•kllr14 1,.. chlcol111, lfOO !"enc Siiiy M, Glltord
NOTICE IS HEit.EBY GIVEN f1' tile Newoort Mo. '°'' Ntlf\'POl1 hKh, C/0 Mn. IC. "°"" crWl!or• .. the 1oove -'*' Oteeidefll Ctllforflt. ""° 111\S O.W'btrry ""-' •" "'"'°"'' flolvlno dalms .,.11151 Tnf• tiu•lnM• b conducted 1w -" lrvlne. C1Utotnl• "'4 Mid ·dtctdeM M'I ""'"'"" to Iii. lnd!Vld111I, Pllbllshed Orin.gt (:0.11 0.HY flllct, them, w!tll <ft!• -wont V01,1Chtr., 111 Gtt'tldlrw Chleolnt • J1-ry 2•, u, 31, lt74 211·14
111t otflc• of 1111 cltnc at tnt 1bcw1 Thi• illtell"lflll w11 flltd wllh tti. ------cc:=-,,"'.'."'.:::"'.:=---
""'l"fd court, or to .,.._, thetl'I. Wl!ll c-ry Cllrk of ' Ori~ Cwnty on PUBLIC NOTICE
tl\f necu•1ry vouchtrL to th• Jl!'lll1ry 2f, 1t74. \/fld1r•n1c1 at lh• ottlc1 et hll 1ttor111v, '""41-----------,----
HENRY N. COWAN, ESQ,. 1'00 Av•-Pubtl$htd Oflngt Co.11 D11IY Piiot, ILICTIOfil OPl'tc'111s •
of lllt Si.rL Sult• lt90. LO. Angelft. Jitnu1rv 24, )I, -Mloit Ftllfllll')' 1, 1.. AND PDlLING PLACIS
C1Utornl1 90067, Wllkh 11 It'll Pit<:• 1t74 :ltf.7• NOTICE IS ~EREIY GIVEN tMI
of bllslr111i of n.. llllCIM'llfl'lfd In tit II 1111 QeMrll l'l'lunlclpll 1IKtl011 to
m•lltrs perttlning to tM Hiii• of CE .,_ l'llld In thl CIW of f'Ollllt.in v 1llty a1ld det:fdenl, within ,_ l'l\Of'ltlli lflfl' PUBLIC NOTI on TlllWIYo It'll filth <11v of M1rcll,
tilt tlt'lt JM,Jbllc111on of 11111 Mlle.. -· -191•, V• Mill bi tW11111y·.&b CNJ
D1lfd J1nu•rv t , 197• STATl!MENT Of' A•ANDONMINT votlrio prec 111ct1 conlftlJnq of
LAWRENCE W. MACK Of' USI Of' f'ICTITIOUS ) con10Hd.ltlons of !ht r~•r 1lletloll
ElCK utor of !hi Wlll of aySI NISS NAME prKlnd$ 111 1111 C!ly of Fount1I" V1lley
1111 1bow ... ~ dlctdent Tiii follOWltlil perlOl'I• lil'll 1t>tnOol'lfd nl1bll111fd for tM l\oldlflll of il•i.
Hl'H!l't' H. COWAN. ISQ, till ust of 11\f tlcllllous ti;i1lnHS ,,,,,,. tnd COIHllY eltt!I0111; 11111 1M polllll!I ·.~ .. ·.-OM II fllt Sllt'I A.&M .DIMENSIO"Al GRAPHICS I I n1 p11CH for !hi t"PfCllYI intlf1Cf1 9Nfl "' W. 16th St .. Coslt ~ C1tlf. 92'77 ~ 1111 pl1cH heA;lfwifter dl1!9t11r.d ;
LH A....,.., C11fflr!ll1 ,..., Tiii tkllllOlfl bUtlne11 "'rM rtltrrfd llilt !hi plr'50rll llW9!nffl•r ti.med lllYI Tll. (2tJ) '1t·l"6 to 1bov1 w11 lllfod 111 Or1ng1 Ccx111ty beln ippOlnlld ottlc1r1 ol ir!lctlon for
..,. (tlJ) '211·2NI on June 11, ltn. thllr rttPKllYI votl119 prt<:lnch.
AHM'Ml' for 11111;_..,. ROblrT Andi''°"' n1 W. l6t'h SI.. Vffllll Pl'IC:lllCI 1, comprhl119 r19ul1r
Publlshtd Ora• COflSI DlllY Pltol, Cosll M ... , C1llf, llKtlon pr«11Kt1 11•2tl J1nu.ry IO, 17, 2 .. 31, 1f7• 90-1• llk h1rd F. Moof1, S«l llrldoep0rt, Polllno PIKt : Wlndtol'" Sq. ChJbhouM
PUBLIC NOTICE H11ntl119t011 Buch, Call!. 11161 Liiie WIY
Thi$ bu1l11111 WIS ~uclfd by • lnspKtor: Mrs. Ellfffl L••kosky
par1111rlhlp. J"'°l": MrL c1rol P+ortfl SLl'·141S2 Rlclilrd F. Moo"' ' Clerk· Mrs. Cl1udlnt AIUIOn SUfl•lltCMt COUllT 0' THI 'fl•2'911 Clerk: Mri. Loh Ltt'lm•n •
STATI 0' CALlllOl.NIA f'Oll. Publlshtd Or1ngt Co.if 011ly 1'1101 Vottfll Pl'IC:lllct 1, com!ll'ltl,,9 rteular THI! COUNTY Of' OllAHGI J1nu1ry 10, 17, 2'I JI, lf;U H·7• 1l1ctlon prtclncl1 M1·21f
NI . A-71124 Potllno Pl1ce: La. AmlllQI High School
HOTICI Of' .Hl!AlllNO OF l'ITITION PUBLIC NOTICE 14566 NI~ l'ott Pll.OaATI! 01' HOLOGll.l.l'HIC ln1p1etor: Mrs. L.G. Kel11r
WILL ANQ ,011 • L Ii TT •• s ••CT•TtOUS aUSlflll!SS J!Jd9e: Mrs. c. w. WI.Well TISTAMINTAl't' Cl1tk: Mr1. H.F. Ch1mbll11 Elfllf or PHILLIP LEA ELLllHOllPE, NAMtl STATIMtlNT ... , Cltrll: MN. M•rlhl Cooper also known If PHILLlf L ELLITHORPE, T~ followlng pef!.Onl irl ...,.ng Vlfl119 Pr.clllct :a, cornprl1!ng reg11!1r
Oec111fd. bu1lnHS 01 : tlKtlon f)t1Clnct1 !lt-.141 NOTICE 1 IS HEREBY GIVEN lhll 'R. W: MILLIGAN a. CO., 1''117 Polling PliU: Monrot Schoto
!STHElt M. ELLITHORPE NS flied W1yf1rM' Line, HunlltK1IOA &t1ch '26"' 16225 NtwhDPO -
htffln 1 Hfl!I011 for • ,rotNi. of Robert Willer Mllll111n.' 16 2 • 7 ln1P1Ctor: Mn. Etllll Newsom
Hofoer•ph!c wu1 ind tor lsSUl!\el ol W1Yl1rer L1n1, Hunl1n91on Buch m4t Judge: Mrs. Delorn Trevor
Lltllrs T••!1m1nl1rr lo "'-pttltl-r, Thl,1 bllt1niru 11 c-onoucted by 1" C!trk: Mrs. BO\ltttv Wllklni.on rtftr~t lo wllkh 11 midi' lor turtlltr lndlvldu1I. CIM'k: fv\t'I. F1Ye Gutfev
p1rUcul1r1.,, 1nd lhll the lllNI ind plKt P. W.·MllllP!I '''"' ·'• .,. Vlfllll Pncl11<! 6, 'compri1!"g rteular of heorl1111, !ht Umt hll bH,, .. , Thi • lllllftntnt' Wll W! elec;!lon p<Klncti" 217·US
for Fib. lt, 197.. 11 t :lil 1,m.. In County Cltrk of Or•nt• County Oii POtllne Pl•ct: FOlll'll1ln "Pirk
!ht courlroom ctl OfPlrltl'ltfll . No. 3 NO\llff'lblr' 30\ 1973. 10971 Edinger , -
of · 11ld court, 11 700 Civic Ct,,ltr ' 1'2'f'11 ln~tor: Mrs. M. ).1Wel1WO\)ll Orlve West, In 11\f City ol S1n11 Att1, PubU1htd Or1n111 Coesl 011Ly Pllol, Judg1: Mrl. J ,A, l(eeif Cillf01"11l1. Jin. 17, ,_.. JI, Ind Ftb. 16. 1974 3612 Clerk: Ntr1. P. M.lslck
Oiled Jon. 28. 1974. PUBLIC NOTJCE Clttk: Mrs. Bobbll Chlkoltl "WILLIAM E, SI JOHN, . V«llll Pndlld 5, comprlslne neul1r
Countv Cltrk POCTIT•••• '"''"''' tlectlon pr1e1nclf .11 .. 241 All.THU• O. GUY NAMI nATl!MINT Polllne Pl1c1: Nortilcllll School 11303
111 PIN Aw1., Ste. 113 Thi loflawlflll pMWl'll 1r1 doing Sandslonl L ... lofldl, C1llfor11i1 ...i bulllllll is: ln$PK_tor: Mrl. Nalolll W!nt!W
1213) U2""47 INTERMAllC, Sull9 .u.1, 4500 Ct""Plll Jlldlll; S. J, MIKI
Att«Mr fol'; Pelltiollfr Orfve, Newport e .. ch, C1llf. '2660 Clerk. Mr1. 0. N. LIKl'l"O
P1.1bll"1fc! Or11'1111 Coesl Diii\' Piiot Jamts c. Horlllln. 6l6 Clnter St., Clerk; Mr., Joeq1,11l}n6 IC•w«kl Jin111ry lD ll Febl'\lary 6 1974 147·1• Coslt MllMI Cll '2&27 Vollllf l'rKll'ld 6. com11rls!119 reeular ' ' ' • · tlecllon prKlncts '102·216·fU ArpH A. Cn•bltv. 415 E. 2nd St., Polling PllCI: Elh•n Allen S<:llool Apt. 9, Tust111, C11il, '26110 . 1620!I 8U1lllnl
Thl1 blJltntn 11 conducted by • g1ner1I lni.pKtor: Mrs. MarY MQll"lon
SI-fl 7_, Ptrl'nlt'lhlp. ' Jlldpe: Mr1. Juitll'll phf,,nty
NOTICE TO ClllOITOllS • Jimn Cj. Horttlln , Clerlc : Mfl. At" L1ngsdorf
SUl'ElllO• COUllT OI' THI Thfl 1t1ltmffll Wit flltd With fhl Clerk: Mrs. Dorolhy Komodlna
0 '
•L•FO•••• ••• County Clffk ol Or11191 COurlty on Vlfllll ""9Clnct J, comprl~ing reguf1r STATE f" .. "' Dt:etmblr 26. 1973. eltctfon precl,,d1 21M·21Ja·t1S
THE co~~~!-~OllANO• ,,... Poflltlil P1ICI: Vl1t1 View SthoOI
PUBLIC NOTICE.
Esllt• of ESTHER M. WINKIE Publlshld Ortl!De Coeil O.lly fl llot, 16250 Hickory Oeteised. ' J1n1.11ry , .. 31, •nd F1bru1rr 1. 14, llllPKtor' Mrs. !". w. Hll'ffml
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to It'll lf7• 251"7~ J~: Mrs. E. C. Gihring
credltcr1 of 1111 abOYI n1rl'lld dl!Cldmt Clerk : Mni. lluth L11wr
lhll 1!1 ptnoM hiving cl1lms -e•lnlt PUBLIC NOTICE c11rk: Mrs. Olsl• Mlfl"t
till 11id dKedent 1rir r1q11lrltd 10 tilt Volllll l'l"ICIMI I, ~prising reeu11r
them, wittl the l'llCIU.l'Y voucilerL Jn IUPe:lllOlt COUllT OF CALlf'OltNIA, elKllon pretlncll 11 .. tu·Ul
thl otflc• ol '"' clttk of lhf lboVI COUtlTY' Of' OllANOE Pornne P11U: Nlebl1s Scllool '3llO
t nllllfd courr, or 10 p,....,,! lht(l'I. with ,111 Clvk Cl'lltlr Df'ln Wu!, G1rdenl1 till ntcftury vouchers, lo 1 h e Uni• AM '21tl lnsp«tor: Mrs. M1r1Jvn E~11s
vndet'llgntd 11 1111 olflc1 of lrvfflll CASI, NUMalll. ~ Jlldp1: M,..,,. P1uUn1 Mlrtt E. Rosen Ind As!IOCl1tei, 1221 E11! SUMMONS IMAll.lllAGll Citric: Mrs. OOMI Wooch
Thlnl Strttl, Sullt 403 DownfY, CAllfornl1 In "' 1111 m1rrl11te of Ptllll-r: <;ltrk: Mt'I. J1Yn1 llaUey
90241, wlltc.h fl "" pl.c• of bO)lnlll llAR8ARA 11.0SENE <;LEGG I lld V011111 Pf'IClnct ,, ampr15ln11 reaul1r
ct the ll!ldenlllftld 111; 111 milt.rs ltl$4IOl>dlnl: NORMAN EUGENE CLEGG 1lec!IOl'I JIO'Klnc!S .... m
Plfflinlnt 10 Ille ,at•I• of uld Oecedffll, TO !I'll lllSCIOl\dtnf: Tiie ptlltlner hll Polling Pl1~: UtMln l'l1v1n Scllool within tour mot)ll\ti 1!11r !ht first Hied 1 petition· COllCll'nlne Your m11Tlag1. 9675 WM'ner
publk•tlon of 11111 l'IO!tc.. You ,,,..., flll 1 -11ttn rflPOllll Within lnspK!or: Mt"L a. J , y,,111u1i
O•lld Janu1rv 28, 1t7• JI d•Y• of 1111 d1!1 lh1t tnls 11,11T1monS JV(lgt: Mn.. Vlvl1n Reuter
KATHRYN T. MEYER Is served on you. If yOIJ 1•11 lo 1111 Clei""k : Mt"L Al"flnl Jorwt
£1CJ(;Ulrht of fhe WIU of lht 1bove 1 written rnponN within well lime, Clerk: Mr1. Ro$1!ll ltol'ld1ll. 'ntmed d1Cedlf!ll your dtfoull m1y ~ lfllltted al'ld !ht Vllltlil P...cincl 11, COll'lPft!ln11 reeutar
lllVING I! llOSIN court m1y tnlff" a judgmtnl cont1ln!ng 1lectlon 1'1'1Cinct1 *·m
ANO ASSoCIATIS l11l11nCllv1 or otl\tf' ordfl'I concernlne Polling 1'11.c.: T1mur1 SchODt lr.J.IO S1nto
ml 1111 Thlnl st....i. Suitt 40J division of pr09trty, lllOU$11 support, Su11nne Dlwnrf, CllihM'llll "241 chlld c111tody_, child tullPOfl, 1ttomev'• l"SPKIOI': Mrs. Mllr111rlt Bixler
· UU) 1•1·2119 1tt1, cost1, Ind 11.1Cll other rellel 11 J\111111: Mrl. Bttty Rfl'llS Att-vl tot CxKvtrlX m1v bl eranted by file court, Clerk: Mr1. R1clllef H1rvll1
'publl11itd Or1"111 COl51 Oilly Piie!, II YOlf wllh to -" 1111 Hvlcl 11 Clerk: Mrs. Jtall Mass
Jinult"Y 31, Oilnd Februiry 7, 14 .21. 111 1ttornev 111 tlll• n11n1r, \IH lll'llUIC Vlllrtt 1'r1C:ll'ld 11, COll'lllf"l1ln9 re1111!ar 1f7• · 363-7' elf; M pnn1plty M 11111 your wrltttfl election 111'1(1,,cts •·226 ---------------1 rtSpfllllt II '111y. ''"' .. lllfd ... Pal!lng Pl1ce: John McDowell School "PUBLIC'NOTICE 111111. 1n10 01k strMI D•lfd 'J1nuary 2'. 1973". IMPtCIOI': M~. Klrfil Acklw " ... , ·' " • ' WILLIAM E. $T JOHN, Cllfk Judgt: Mrs. Miry COOPlr
. . SLP·J.-srf . . . ., s~ !-1~r1t1. OtpUly CIM'k; M!"I. Nomll Lff Griner • NOTICI-TO c1teono1ts !SEAL) ' ; • . . . Clerk: Ml"I. LllO!llH"• Lynn
S\,IP:IRI09: tOVll.T OI' :THI PAIS, "AltltllltY A AUGUll. V«llll fll"9dllct 1t. tomprl1lng r'IUllr
STATI ~ CALll'OllNIA POI: A~ If LI• 1lecllon Pf•dnclf W-Ht TH& COUNTY OF ORANGE Sutl• ... Ullltlti ••'* TIWH' Polllno PlfCI: P1rkhul"ll llKl'Mllon
Ho. A·716n 21111 H.......,.. 11"11. Cttnlfl' 9'25 LI All!Tlldl
Eshte of FRANK PAUL SCHWARZ, T1rnK1, CA tl!il [ftlPIClor: Mrs. P.G. Lynch
o.ce1sec1. ' JJt.IMS "' rn~ Judoe: Mrs. M. 81ney NOTICE IS, HEREIY GIVEN lo till Alhll'Mp lw l'ltlllMlf' Clerk: Mr. Edg1r liker
creditor. of tht 1bove nemed decedent t7S1.0C Clerk: Mrs.~I nl• 81ker fhlt 1U PlflOnl lllvh19 cl1lma 1111ln11 PubU1hld Ofa"Df COIJI 01llv Piiot, Voflltf Pnd 1:1, comprlllnt regul1r
Nie N \d dtcecltlnl '"' required to ftll J111u1ry 10, 17, 2 .. JI, lt1• 101·14 llldlon pr-1< nc11 224-241
l'htm, wtth Ille nKHSlf'Y vouc:hlrs, In PotlftKI Pl.a Uri!on Fedlrl l S1vlng1
tilt offlc1 ol The cltrk of 11'11 1bovl PUBUC NOTICE & Loa11 17 l rookhursl
enllllltd courl, Of 10 pr111nt !him, with ln•pector: Mr$. A. O. Lunt
lhl neusa1ry vouchln, lo I h I SUPlllOll COUll.T 01' CALlflOINIA, Judgt : Mr5-J, D. Osut11 und1nJ9Md 11 cfo R0111ld H. Prtflner, CO•NTY OP Ol"NGI Clerk: Mrs. S. 0 . Sl-:r Allorlll't 1t L1w, 315 WHI Third StrHt, " Clerk: Mrs. L, S. M1rllnt1 S1nl1 An1, C11!torn!1, f'VOI, W!llch b 7M CIVtC CINTI• DlllVE Wl!ST, Vttl111 Pl'Kltld" 14, comprlllng regular
till pllc1 of ti;i1I"'" of 1111 Uf!Olf'1lgl!td SA~I '*::-.::~'~=IA tll<:llOll prtclncl• 222·247 il'I 111 m1lltrs pert1lnl119 lo lhl HMlt SUMMONS Polllne Pllcl: Gr.on Vtl!rt CFubhouM
of uld dfletdtnl. wl)hln four monlltl Plil,,lllfl: ALAN EMIL cHAvEt tnd (edult).l12JO_LosJ1rdlna EIS!
•lltr !hi flr1! PVbllc1tlon of thl1 llCll!Ce. FASHION ANN CHAVEZ. ollendlnll' lnSPtCTor. Mt'I. R, S. Enns Olf9d J111 29, lf74 • JWgoe: Mt'I. Myrtle B1um9orln1r MtLTON·S s"cHWARZ ALFRED NORWOOD PARl(S JR .. ROE Cltrk: Mrs. V, M. Tl'(!Of"
A.(lml,,l11t1ior of !hi E1flll of f~:~TION. DOES I thrOUllll )(, Clerk: Mrs. D. S. S.lcldo
1111 1bov1 n1m1<1 dKedtnl T " Olfend II A lvll I I I Vlf1111 l'ncl11tl 1J, COrr'llll'ISlnt r~ular 9"*AlD H PllENNlll o Ille In '· c comp 111 el«Tlon precl11cts tu-244 A"°"'" 11·'--h11 been filed, b\' !lit PlllJ1!1lf1 19o!n11 PolH119 PtK'I: CoJI School 17615 Los
,,J"W.Jt ·mn1· str..1 you. II YCIU Wtsh 10 dtmld !hll llWIUll. J1nlfnts Eis! .
S•lll• Aill, c•Htoml• '21Cl1 rnu must 1111 In lhl1 court 1 written Inspector: Mr-$. Ji"' Weller
T.i.,hoM· ln•I Ml..Qll plNdlng In resp0n11 to Ille COITIPlll"I JllQgl: Mra. Juinlli Arnold
A""""" ~r Admlnl1tr1tor (or a wrl!ten or or1I pltodlng, II I Clerk: Mrs. 811frlc1 Csmpbell
'
•• , •••• 0 C 0 '' '' Just!ce Courl) within JI d1y1 1fler Clerk: Mrs. Florene• Burki u"' .. ...., r1~ 011! 1 Y P ot, !hi$ summons It served on you Jinu1,Y Jl, Ind Fet1ru1ry 7, 14, ll, Olhtrwlse. your dtlaul t wUI bl ffllfl'ed Viti"". Prteinct ''' comprlslne regul1r
1f74 362·7~ on appl1c1llon by !he plolntrffs and el!"Cl•011 pr":lncll t17·2l1
---------------ltt1t1 court may Infer 1 lodo~.,,.lnsl Pon1tK1 Pl1ee. Fulton School El L1go · . & Sanl1 EllM PUBLIC NOTICE YOU for tilt money or otlMr rehef Fnsptelor: Mrl. Vlol1 Almer111 ------~~------·I req1111ted In 'thl complllnt. · J\/dlil: Mrs. Janet Reotse
SLl'-74153 " YM wllll lo ... "' H vle• ., Cttt1c: Mt'I. Mabtl Contrss NOTICI: TO c•EOITOll.S Ill lltlrtllY Ill lflls nllttw, ,.. lhtllld Cllf'1i:: Ml"I. Elhll V1$C1UH
SUPElllOll COURT Of' THI! ~o IO '"'"1ttllJ' .. ""' ,..,, PllMI .... V9"ftt Pnc:tllct ' ,,, C°"'9r11!1'111 rea11t•r
STATI OF CALl,OltN1A f'Olt if lflY, ""Y " ftlld 1111 HIM. elect10ll pnc-!11C11 2'S·ttS
THI COUNTY Of' Oll.ANel! Olltd Sei:tl. 1• 1912• Polllng 1'11C1: Fount1ln v I 11 • y Ne. A-11111 w. E. ST JOHN, Clerk Eleme,,tiry 17'11 eu1t...rd
E1t1t1 of FORREST W. PONO, 11«1 ISEAL) By Marlon L Graul, 0t91,1ty ln1pKtor: Mrs. Ev1tvn .SPllr
FORllEST WELDON PONO, Oece11ed. OU.Hn & OU.ffTI• J\1d91: 'Mr1. Pal JICbon '
NOTICE IS "HEREBY GIVE N lo "'-ls:ut V ... url at..t Slllte .. , Cllf'1i:: Mrl. CO!ld'l!ll Rofoll ~llM..S of 11'!1 1t19ve neined dKlldtnl Shltmllt 0.kl ciiif9nlla flotQ Clerk: Mr:i.. M1rlh1 Rlc~ds
tn.t i U ptl'lonS hi vine 'cl1lm1 1111!,,sl fM.7313 m-Volllll l'nc:htct 11, comprl1!ng rigular
11111 111d dtc1da1{! 1r1 r11111lred lo flit ,..ttwntY, lw 1'1lillll:fffl 1fectloll precinct• Ol7·212 'ttiern, wlfft 1111 neces11ry vouchtr1, In lfJ'hOC , PoJUne Place: Community Ctnler Bldg.
fft• Clfflct of th1 cler1t, of tllt 1bove Published · Or•ntt Cots! Dallv Piiot 10200 Sl1!1r entll~. court, or to pr1Hnl lhem, with JanlllN 10 17 2._ JI, 197• 102_74 ln1peclor: Mrs. M. A. Btlfher t1'1 "11Cfl$1rv vouchlr1, to 1 ht ' ' Judge: Mr1. a. Plutl'lmer
u,,d..-slfl\ld 1t cfo Ronald H. Pn1tn111r, PUBLIC NOT!. ·CE Clerk: Mrs. E. M. Winnow 315 WIS! Third Slrffl, Senti A,,1, Cllf'1i:: Mrl. K. A. W1rdlow
C1Hfoml1 921!11,, whlcf'I rs the PIKI ·•-•<• TO , •••• ,-....1\. Vot1111 PrKlllet 19, comprl1lng regttllf of t>wl""s of the und1ril9ntd In 11t ... , vtn eltcllon P<'tlCln<ll OOl-245 m1tt.n p..-tllt\lftt to the 1111i. ot IUCC 611141m Polling ,1'1au: Gret111brook Cl11b11ouw
qld ~· Within four moritltl 1fltr To Creditors of AUOIO MAGNETIC.S 18222 Santi Joe...,nt ·~ ftt'lf publlcltlon of this llCl!ICI, CORPORATIOfl, Tr1mfll'or: IMPICIM: Mrl • .,H1al COUrr1911
D•t• JM'I.. 2J, 197•., / ,NOTICE IS H~RE.aY GI.VEN lttll Judie: Mrs. E. L Doylt . ICATHEitlNE BEJTY POND 1111 T~1nsflror, AUDIO ·MAGNETICS Clerk: Mr1. S. 8ojlll'IQ
'Admlnlstr11r1~ ol the E1!1!1 of CORPORATION •• o.111-. corpor•tl.,,, Cltrjl: Mrl. Shlrlly 8udrn&n tM •bo\l'I "'med dacl'dofnt 11 •bout to ·m1k1 • Wk tr1n11tr Of V"""' PrtelMI 20, comprbfl!ll' reeu11r iONALO ... NINNE• proptrty fO !hi und9r!llfollld. 'NEWAUDlO llKll011,PC1Clncl1 l1f.:ti7
A"""" It L1W INC .. I Olt1w.n COl1IOl'lflon, Tr1rtsferM. Pollr"11' Placa: RlllCIMI LI Sll .. 1 Mobflt
·.tlJ .., tillrtl Stn. Thi' Mmll •nd blittlllSI ldd~ Hor.le Ptrk 1819• l tHhlrd ,
Slllfll .... ClllWltil '21Cll of 1111 Tt1,,sltror Ind Tr1ntfere1, Ind IMPKtor: MrL WUl1rd Emrick
,....,....1 (1.14) Ml-4311 111 olhlt bVlfness' ...m.. li'ld lddr1s111 Jt.t;dol': Mrs. S1k1w1 1(1!0
,.l,l1911tY fir' ....... lll1tr1h1• lllfd bY; Tr1ril'9!'1r Wlthtn lll'l'IM YllfS tie.ii:-: Mn. loi'tl P!cio.
-flutllllMd OrlllOI COis! Dally f'Uot, Ut1t Piii to fir •• ktloWn fll Tflln1MrH, Cllt1t: Ml'I. Viola Mllcntl1 J111u.r.y .ti, Ind l"fbrlJtry 1, 1,, 21, lrt IS follows! ' • ... ..... f'"tdfld 11, comPt"ISlllO ffllUltr ·'ttt• 311.7, (1) TrlMlerW: elec:t1G11 precincts 22).UT .-AUOIO MAGNETICS COlll:PORATIOH, Poltl"11' Pt1tt: Trlburon ClubhouM
PUBLI. C NOTI I~ soutf'I llroedw1y,-G • rd •" 1 • 10101 -'40bt Rivet Avfflue CE c 1111omi.1 234 Wiit •• Strfft, Inspector: Mrs. F. c. 'totUl\l
G.lrdtnl •• Ctllfonll1; I" Wnf ' 1il6 Judgia: MrL c . E. Pt11roc1
. I 1521 SlrHI,. G•"*"'•' etnfornl11 14505 s . Clt1k: Mr1. ... E. ••lley llOTICI TO c•eDITOllS M•ln Sh·911_, G4lfdlnl, C1lllornl1; 29U Ci.rtt: Mr1. It. £ .•• ,.
SU .. 111.to« COUll.T o .. THlf E11t Vlctori., C'"""1W!. C1Hfoml11 2Ml2 y ..... PndMt n. comprlslnt l'9(IUl1r
ITATl'OP C.1.1.l"OllNIA f'Oll Mlchlbon Drive. lrvlnt. C1nfomi.1 lflctlon pncll\Cf$ .,.,,,
THI COUNTY Of' OllANGli: 1$105 SOllftl • .--.... G. rd. II I ' Po!Hno P11m: ""' Touc1n (Stdl•k • • ..._ A·JM» Callfol'nl1i IS117 5ol.lth lr~y, ml~)
e ., ... "' .ARTHUR T. STllAHORN . G1r~. Cttlfomi11 .. W..t '°"""""' lftN*Mr; MB. J. K. s.fllk
,DeclNMd. ·• Gird_, C1Ulornl11. Judot: Mn. G. C. Of1ty
• NOTJC6 IS HEREBY GIVEN lo lht (2) Tr_,..., Cr..tt: MrL G; N. F1ulkner ""'· '""' °' the lboW n1mld decedl!ll Newalldlo Inc.. SISO • 0 I I c r. II I Cl..-k; Mra. II.. M. '"'' ~t '" PlfW!'IS t...Ylne cl1lm1 11t•lni1 Awn1.11. Hl"WltlortW. Clllfonlf•1 Attri: V11t111 PT'ICIMt 2l. comprJMne r19ular f1w Mid dk90tnl ,,.. r1<1ulrtd to file Stephen W19ntr tllcllon prtclllCb :tn·121' t!Wm. wllll 1111 l'llCHllfY VOUC:htrJ, In Tiii pr0ptrly to 'bt !r•l)lfetrld 11 Pollltlil 'f'IKf; Hl/'lllf" SChool 1'"5 Sin!• tiff -~ of the cfrlrk of the. lbo'o't loc1ted 11 IN follOWll'IO llddt'nM'I: , Ynti •
tilrllrtM cwrt, or 1G prlStflt !him, wj!h 1-"00 Soulf'I ll'Oldwl'f", Glrdlnl, flMPfCtor: Mr1. W, A. McC.Ubbln
ltll ~I')'. wucher5, lo !ht C1lllorn!1; 2:M W..I ' 1 .. · Stl'lfl, Jlldte: Mn. D. P.,For.ttr ~ .. 10tll l'loor Jef'91"' Tr111t Glrotnt. C1lllornll"I t# w .. 1~ , .. Cltrk: Mrl. Gf91• Murphy =~·Int OCNll al'ld., LOl'IQ ... ch, Sll"ltt, G1rdll'Mt, Ctllfoml11 1.COS S. CJ«t<;: Mrs. l ucllM 1(111..-
1 fll02. wtllch Is 1111 Piie• M1ln Str11111, G.lrcllrM·, C1llfoml11 2111 Y9'llll ,....... .... cornprlslnl ngul1r
f/11 tM.lntss of 1111 Uricll"'lened In 111 El&! Vktorl1, Compton. C1Hler'lll11 2'02 11tdlOl'I preclnctl »UI ......... Oll'f•lllf119 to lhl 111111 of Michel~ Ori ..... lrvl,,., C1llfW1'111 PoOl1111 ""9: n10 •Sllkltt (Wll!t.lloull
se1c1 ~. """"'II four mtlllhl 1l1tr Tiit !ll'operiy fll tit tr-flt-rid I• r..icMnctl ""flnf pulll'lc:doli of lftt1 notlct. IUbStantl1ll, ltl of thl 1JM!j, Pf'OPfl'fltlt. IMP«lorl ,,,,.., ~ DI'*"
C>e,_ J,,.....,,ft, lf7• • bt.l~n1111 ind fO(ldWIH of h'9r'I" kind Jl/dtl: Mn. 0. A. 11\llteffl IOI'. \., ST""HORN Ind description In Whlctl Tt-fmlr' 1111 CJ«t<;; Mn, lMM Mtl(U • • a-:wt11 1nv rl9ht, 11111 or lnltrnt on tf'll Cllf"k: Nll"I. H, 'Trlllltlt •
• •. tC ... Wiii °' dl11 of lt1nsflr, wlllf'IVlf' loc1'9d, .,..., f'fMNd tit eorn,,r11ll'IO retui•r
ffW lltlO¥I ~ dlcedent lilngltilt or 1nt1nelblt , • rJtl. per.-1 ftldlon.indnctl 111.ftl .10~-f-· or mixed, lnchldlng WlltlO.,,t llml11ll011, ,... • .,. P11c1: Mii• Jc1M1e1 t190 Flnc:h
> • Trwt ...... lhe mtler!tlJ, suppllA mtrC ...... M Ind 1t1'W1 ' '
' ......... ...,.. oThlr lnvtnlorY flll "Tr1111flrw. ··; lflttllCfOI': Mn. EIMlll a.tt.rd e . ,...._ -T"' bulk tr1mler IJ 11 ~ ~ Judol: Mt•· KUIY 9.,..._
,_.. on or 11t1r Fttltv1ry 1t. 1'1• It "' Dirk: Mr:i.. l . t . ''"'" .., ......,,.. olflces of !rtll & Mllllll1, ,. Annue Cltrk: Mr•. W•nN MCPhlnOl'I °'Wiii c-1 D.tlly Piiot, of lhl Sllr.. Siii!• 900/ LOI ..... le .. V""'9 f'NdMt M. C*ftlll'flfftll 1'9tul1r .MR. 11, ... ffa 1, 11. 21, 1t7• .)6.1,14 C11ltornl1 90067 or 11 Ill(' OffkH of .ttctton pr«:lllCll Jl4
-~-MlCkt1Mlll, 1e;1rntr. ~·1'4n, ~. "°'""' PIKI : Glsllr School ,.,. Loi K1mln 4 ~I. flt Tlllnl A11911W1 NIW l"IOl'ft
York. New Y0tk 10022. ll'llPICIOI": Mr•. EJNnot ..,. O•led' Januatv ff, ,,.,.. Judgl: Mr1. H. H. ~Ohl
NEWAVOIO INC. Cllrll: Mn. lortft• Corrler,..
lTr1ns!ttH) Clm: Mrl. M1r)IM: I(, l!l'HI •v Roblrt w. $1tdl'l)tl' Thi Plfts will bl llPll1 ..,....n "" Aul~'·"' SKr111ry l'IOtlrf of 1 O'Clock'" A.M. .... I O'clock ROB!lllT W. STIDMAN, ISO, 1',M,
lllllL a MAfll11.LA
... A ..... lffllllSI~
LH Afltllll. Cl'"'"9MI flN7
l'ubllti'lld Or..... (Htf 0.llY Jlllu.ry 21 , ,.,,
EVELYN ... GltlPPO o.irr cerv cltrk 01!'.ld: J~ry 1l, ,,, ..
1'11ot ~ OrMlfl Cotlf O•lly
M0-1' JtnWl'y ~I, 1f74
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I
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·s5m: $,1-tW
oUART Hl<LF GALLON
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Today's Final
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOi.,; .67, NO. a I, 3 "SECTIONS, '39, PA6ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANU>;RY 31, 1974 TEN CENTS
. . . . . .,
San Jua11 Growth Seen Top Campaign Issue
By JORN VAi.TERZA
" Of .. .,.... '"" ,..,.
San Juan .caplstrano'a majOr grw!JI
poteDtial emerged Wedqe!Jdu as ' prime
c11npa1in issue u tb.e ·10 asplr111ts far
three city council seata appeared at
their first open fonll'!I> •
A capacity crowd at San Juan's El
Adobe Restaurant beard a three-minute
presentation from each of the 10
candldalet, then sent written questions
lo the bead table.
Two luuet, however, were
inlentkmally 1idr\ed in the chamber of
co~ evening -the. pair
~f ballOI propoa!Ullllt aet for a decision,
in .the Mardi i electlona.
Chamber spoteamen said that wu
tbe only rule Ibey would aet In the
dlscussions, thus few comm~ts came
from candldatea tll! proposals ID allow
the city council to organbe a local
pol!ce departm~nt or to levy a 15-eent
maximum tax .rate for p a r k 1
'
deve\oPtnelll.
Chamber apokesmen later saJd the
I;Ule wa'1 Jet ~use diacusakm on either
point could have laated "well Into the
morning .houri. It
As it was, the candidates' appearances
gave them a chance for a brief
explanation of background experience
8nd rudiments of a platform.
nie oaly lncwnbent, IG-year council
veteran Edward S. Cbennak, spent his
three minutes punching out a defense
against what be tamed' "unfoundOd
rumors" about hla ftnancial lnttresta
and hi.I outapokeo .aWtude from the
council chair.
"Let me dispel these rumon here
and now -the major one being a
report that I have a ·Large~ .amount of
money lnV<Sted In land Jn this city.
That ·simply is not true," he said.
"The only real property I own In
San. Juan is a 7,21J1Hquare-foot lot with
a house and garage on it, .. be added.
Laguna Niguel Viewed
-. .
For S_her·if f's ·-~_ S_uhs-tation
·Park Residents
Protest O.dor
-
lrlle mldents o1. 1 molille home park iold to &ii.., Wblcb •repreaents· ia
near the entrance lo 1>@111. fflrtJor where .IOPOlll>i ~ qmcioa lloiig ··the ' , oilan frilm lll)loelii ~ tr..tmeat Sooth c-. '
~ -~ ~ ... r.•t•1o ... ;f1 ~ J1<..r·~~ .,.,._. "' 11111 --• ..,.. w•w m•""""' i air Ill " .. ..,_ all.·llili ' WI -Ml ·11111en117.
W-y. , • ' ·-t1M1 smlO II jolll. bod u "°' lllil • lfl1· fnlm 1111 lior':.: ~ •. Ullo IDIJlj ,... ll
Dua ..... --lhiS -....,,.,. lbowed Bt11e 1o1.18!1as m tbeli
-11.t lhe _.. from I -ty Unprowd plant ........
•
3 Murdered
; .
Kn. MiJJle Yorbl, 1 resldeol -COid! f_, Ute plant opented by the
SoUth Els!~ Recl1m1tlon
Aatllaril)' (!lem), Did Ibis momJna that
.. .... her oellhbon -ved little IOlll'*'1lan ,at Wedneoday'1 b~ -on. In Oakland ' ' ... _
Funeral Home ·MIMI PmElt DEAD
......... (lolclwyn, 9t Th1r emi....,, for the ..wage llder<m
wu San Juan Clplslrano Publlc Worts
Diredor Bill MlllJlhy.
"He liatened, lo JI, smiled, bit could OAKLAND (AP) -.,,_ mortuary Movie Pioneer give ui no pramllet of ~." llld employes Were found blcked lo de8th . . -,
Mn. Yorba . in their bloockpllUerod funeral home ' : '
"WO 'all ,~! home 11111 lit lllOther early loday only. foor days after nmn1 Sanittel Goldwy" n
vlllllll Cllldle, she said. "PoYchopalblc" -~ four -le 1
Musick Asks
Approval
Of Coll9.ty
.... '!OM IIAJll.EV . . •
ol "" Dlltr ....... : -. ' • Sheriff J11111e1 Ii. MUlid<.'sald loday
be lntenda lo ulc . Qrlnge County -
111pervilon lo· approve ' pllm for 1 new •
,~~,~~4 .~ .... "'.d.'tipifa .... -
-<11'1111111 g:,i;-... ·ii! l,lcliDI N!Rel'• ...... a.II!' ~·If
it Is aPi>aovecL ~ · . t f :lr~
Muslclc saJd .the aubatllloii .wtu lemt
the communlUea of Aoilean Hills,
CljJlllrlllO Beach, Clplstrano lllghldds, . n..a l!oilit, El Toro, Laguna m11s,
Laguna Niguel, Lake Foreat, Lelsara
Wor:ld,. Live Oak canyon, Mlssion Viejo,
Modjeslla canYan, New World, S.. Juan
Clplatrano, Silverado Clnyon, South
Laguna, Tbree An:h Bay 11111 Trabuco Oaka.. •
Miiiick and his patrol captalns
predlcled . loday that the ..... -
woold be . 1 tremendous Improvement
OD 'the pmenl system In which polldng
ol., the aouth COUl!IY le!Tiloq iJ bandied
1hrough the abertlf'a complex in Santa
Ana.
Olermak denied other userted rumors
from his foes that In the past he bad
aerved as a strong supporter of heavy
development.
Cbermak's 1 ho r t , but bltmt
presentation came cloeer to controversial
matten than the appearances of his
nine fellow candldates.
Realtor Keiineth Vise ouUlned ·his
background in busineU and in the armed
forces and said his fondness for the
community and Jt5 futW'e was one factor
. ' . '
which motjvated his candidacy.
Robert C. Roark, an insurance agent,
echoed the energetic tone of his
campaign brochures by stressing that
San Juan "must return to reason.''
He stressed that the city has far
to go in developing a :i;:tronger tax base
of more local business and "clean, light
industry."
Only then, he said, could the city
generate enough lax revenue to provide
(See ISSUE, Page !)
Workmen for Southern California Gas Company lay new gas main
into trench dU(.,along ocean side of San Clemente's El Camino Real
in emergency J<)b~ tO replace·· 'sec:tion oi pipe involved in blast and
$100,000 fire euly this month. Initial tries to repair damaged main
-in the ground slnce.1929,-.wtre scrapped when new leaks .were
found. · • · c~. with .that_. fnlfll!Ci, ·Ibo ' -•t rmloiii oer... ·tlie bly 111 San ' ' .... ,.,,, h 91'. ·'
ldded, ... lo --al 'O!'llntl Francisco Suec· 11m s at .,. the odor wbldl afll!cll meat COOl:hel Police ;..id ._...uy nothing had · · . ,.
They. laid \be !"'"' will alloll' the departm,.,t lo -the level ol. patrol ' ..,..-~---...,.---....,... .. ......,. ..... -----'-------"-
aeryices llld public contact With aouth In the port along Del Obispo,llo.d. been stolen · ·
Kn. Yorba said the group ol. aboot POiice aai.i tho body of one morluar)' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Samu e I ,
IJll. permanent ...-ts· of the park vii:tim wai' ·-between two pews Goldwyn, one of the· .last of Hollywood's .
qteed lVednesday !bat Ibey planned -· · -fabulous pioaeer moviemakers, died ;.::~~lo: = =: RELATID STORllS,.P-3 ind 5 tocfoy. He was IL ,
o1.·Feb. 14. In 1 first.floor', viewing room in the Goldwyn• died dUJing the nlghl at his
"We've . got our peUtloni oe1rl.y Albert Brown Morlulry, a room used liome where be. bad been under the
mnplete llld we hoj>e lo ha•e a majir for mournen lo view romalna. care of a nune.
-.. 1111\11 meeting," she said. The vleUms were ldenUfled 11 A family -apokesman said be died
. The ~teat llOUrCe ol lrrttatlon, aald Clarence llld Doria . Bryant, ll>e-in • "quietly In his sleep."
tho ·apoteowommr ·for lbe tealdeola, iJ caretakers of lhl! building, both In their He waa released earlier thiJ month
t!ie• prvmlae"lllt year 1hat odors, whlcjl 71i's, llld Mld)ael M9'Jre, in his, Ills, lf6m St. Jolin;s Hospital In Santa Monica
have pilgl!ed the part.for yan -bellm!d lo be a mortician )ralnee, jiOllce where ,be bad been under treatment lf<it>. OllCe. the Serra plan\ wu complete: said. • · · for an undiJcloaed aliment for sevetal
''nlilt facllltY onoe served only sin »epaty PoDce ·Chief Tmn Donoliue .aid weelis., ·, Juan:ca~ano. but was e1parided llld (SelCMUllDBlll, h1• I) Goldwyn who helped found three . ' • .: , lludlol' -· MGlol, Patamounl. and
. . ... tleldwJD -- -ln\2plcltated
fresiderit .of Saddleback ~~~~::::=
• • --• • .. • .. -of. bla· -picture enqilre • • --•• -,. • • -·. -ID his wife, Fnaces. Be wa tllm
P_ e./_en_ds ~o~eg~'~ _Role ~:~:~~~ua~~;,:
-- . . • ... . caebnl tbrombom IDd arterilll ··-:: '"iir JAN .0imi • · ·aa.ier-..ttie T1u11n e11art "Ille --lbttb ol.11111.. • °' "' "'"' ""' '"" iiaOll pro111em face lhll , • Al tba1 Ume, the •alue of bis •lite JI there were "9 • ~ communtty "I'm ctrlalD : -'e year. ' ·••·put 11 •1t.7 mllltca ~ his yearly
collol• lq·.1 lllO:milt iodlm, Siddle¥ II 1,_ ~'"lie IPO~~i:l · (lloe GO!.DWYN, ~ I) =:i: hi~~:.-, ..... , to. t\li ... ~ otnllht: ~ •..
have haH the cr1tlcbl1l 11 does." . ---..-1a mode. -M • y· fun' "Unbtunaloly we --In .. -Uc 11111-.. def .... filled anne IC
tiy older, .. lbllibecr ICllOftll.''. Bremer with .staU!lllcs, Br1m~1ted
told the _.., Viejo i-.... -·· ..... "I lb ·of Cr .._ Di A9ocll11on. "People • ""' -..Uy oieata QJllege,·· 111111 -• asn. es ~ U1 • with tliem, ad tlllt'I Cl!lleao of the ·~ • IOftliilla' wllo ,
rp loir."· ....... Ill llllout Jiii - -A ,_ C1mj1 POndletoa Morine wbo -~ poaple ~ lhlll ,.. ........ ~ ... ,....... . '' suflend. .......... llld -in)urlel
..,, lilft 1 ,.._,, coll•I• Cii_oMI .llil • eiilllll, Batie ha In 1 Cir cnm m the base early Jul o-~l" Br-aid. . • • Ill -11111 (,lollose of the caa,.m -1111 aled II the -bolpltal. .
His nre plllllc .1-noce Wore 1 1111 • -Iii,· ·lie· polalell -I'll. lllohol ~ 1 memblr;of
... 11111 -.. at"1111 .._ -1&111111<~· ----.. --!bl ......... CD. .; the lat ,.... ss•-'---11y -'11* .,. 111e ·ldlllt • m saw .,.,., _._F.f.' -·•ilied MGa!ol' a *""Ill ·-Nl!iM~ ID Illa "II•-:, '' · , < .... ,. lllleted Ja 21 -~ pul1oUt o/. , "the NiUa Unll1id 'C~ ~ o ........ 11111...... b1111t. -If ... trol llt I dell!l'ted
county reaideots.
At the aame tlme, lbeY said, the
move woold result In aubstanUal savings
iri man hours and vehicle use.
Mualclt aajd the subelatlon. will provide
residents with local guldaoce,. in tlme
of emergency, more.· immediale access
lo la~ In law enl0rcetnent problems
and a grut.r opportunity lo meet tlie
me~ lilndllng law enlo....,..I In the
area.
Sheriff's off\Cfrs plannh)g the new
facility said Ibey have .no Idea at this
tlme on the cost of the building needed
(See SBEFllFF, Pqe 2)
cnu.se Victim
Sl\es Company
A ·Son Clemente Mdeot wlio. clalml
he~ serious ~·during •
whale watching cnlile a year ago sued
two . lacal aport : fllhlnl , oom[llllles
WedDeaday (or fllO,lllO. .
-G. Gray 1iames San ·(;lemente
Sport Fllhlng, Inc., llld Dani Wbarf
Sport.Fishing u defendants In 1n Or111ge
Counly S.perlor COurt -baaed Ill his alleged mlallap Feb . .J%, 1173.'
. Gray claims be ...tfered 1 punctured
IUlll 11111 . bll>ken rtbl 1q an accident
that occurred when .the chartered vessel
"Sea HOl'le" was about one and one-baU
miles cut of San C!lenwrte.
DOG FOOD STOLEN
.BY DOG CA.T(;HER .
.·.
91· Kilkd i~ Pqn A~
707 Crash in Sarona
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (UPI)
.:.. · A Pan· American World Airways
Boeing 7fT1 carrying IOI perllOns caught
fire on Its approach lo the Pago Pago
A!rrlOrt. In a violent thunder IQll8ll loday
and crashed l,lllO feet short of tbe
runway, killing most of those aboard.
Wl-..S said It 'ptnOtlS died, most
burned. to death wlien trapped Inside
the . Darning wreckage. Of . the . 10
ltirvivon, aeveral were not expected
to ,Uye. • .
'Ille l'ederal A vtatioo Administration
o!\lered the airport, on the Island of
Tulillla midway between Hawaii and
New 1aland, clooed followJnr the crash
Dr. Peter F. Vealea, medical director
at the Pago Pago Medical Center, said
"-t of the dead fried In the plane."
Vlllet Aid the surVtvors Were three
women and aven men and that eight
were in aerious or worse condition with
burns over 5Q j>erceot of their body.
Two survivors . were in fair condition
and able to walk about
"We all tried ·1o get out llld jlmmed
the exits,'' one of the two male survlvon
11kl. "'l managed ,io get out over a
win. but meat of -1bolrd did •?"· The pilot, cap1. 1-Potenon ol San
Francllco, radioed the Pqo Pago control
lonr shOrtly ,before the cnsh II 12:52
1:m. (l:U 1.m. PM') that ' the p~ .
WU on fire. Be aloo reported violent
thunder 1q111lls and .... of tbeoe was
In _ ... -the plane hit 1,000
the plane was scheduled to arrive in
Honolulu at 6:35 p.m. (9:35 a.m. PIJI'.).
A temporary morgue was set up at
the Pago Pago Airport which was greatly
enlarged by the Navy during-World
War II. However, the wreckage of the
plane was still blazing-hot hours after
the crash and most of the bodies were
sUll Inside the wreckage.
A Pan American Boeing 7f11 crashed
July 23 shortly after tak<off from
Papeete, Tahiti, killing all 79 passengers
and crew members aboard.
..
Weather
Mostly cloudy skies ""' on the
agenda Friday, with cooler temper-
alures along the coast. Highs ot
the beacbea 56, rising to !6 In-0
land. Overnight lows in tb.e 40s.
INSWE TODAY
California paid J86J,22I in
aurvivor and retirement beM-o
fits last ll"O' for !16 fo""et
l•Qillotor! end state official$,
St"'l/, Paoe 11.
Scliool Dllt1tct fOrilo!i .. !bl Blddloblclc 'till ta llllld -........ Ill llld. rood Cid 1111 lllO -
-· &Oddlrhdl.il In ....... Viejo, ''W'e hloo -I................... 'llll Jllllllll _,....In Ille wreclqe
CHICO (UPI) -WIDtaro · J. Hlli •
I Butte c.unty q <ltdar, ... -
fined l!U 11111 si.... I ·...-i JO.day
Jill Mlllenoe for i1NFin1 If.fl -ol. q food from the (Jiii» poaod.
Hllin, who ldmltled Ille -lblll, also
..... pllced .. -yeai; pnbltlon, Fie
wu arrated by pojlce . Jan. II alter
be Wll 1ilqedlf -llkln( eiibl
poundo ol. dos food -• ,......
. feet lllort ol. the rumr1y.
.. -.... Mut)lll ....... It ... ,..... ,.... .
Or-(....., 1t l'TA •
If tho !lrea.loned· wlltlii!ial .llJ olliit ~ 1 I I tllll wt .... • lar I 11111.i.... -.......,. ua1nc dl....,lled 'l'lllitln raldellta· •••• .... been called '1111 lllnanl of ... ..... JoeD • -Worked to free
tis ... Ille ........ ·-will ..... .... --.: . '
... alt bJ J7 ................. « . ..,,. r-Plllllo -... -... --Ille lint •• dellla ... '9lallllm bJ a j+eatl. " <leo,111111111; Pap I) lbe +awlllta ... IO far Ilda;-.
I •
•
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The alrcrlft waa Right IOll lrom
Aucklond. N.Z. lo .Honolulu, where most
of tho crew ijved, with an Intermediate
stop It Pago Pago. Many of the
~ were scheduled lo make colmectinc Rights for the malnlond when
ti
I l
,_,. ...
Sttdl Mir""* DD .,......... . ........... ·-. ._.. ....... " --.
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:t8 DAILY PILOT Thundl,Y, J""'ilfY JI, 1974
PUllLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC N<mCE
,ICTrTIOUS I USIMlll lllOTlta Of' H0tt·••1N111&111LITY MOT.Cl lO Cl l lDfTOltS Mt.Ml STATIMl'HT Httlc• 11 Mr.OV gl-lh•I ll'lt
SUPl l lotl COUIT 0, TMI Ttie fo!jowl119 1191'-11 ool11t IWtffttU lltldllnlfMCI wlH llOI be rt&&*ltl* fOr
ST.t.Tlt: 0 .. CALlf'OlllllA .. Ol '"' •nr dttlt1 or' ll•o/Utl"' ConlrKltd tW
THI COUNTY o,r Olt.t.N•• • ERA AG!ltCY. 610 H.....,,ort C«lttr •rrr-ottltf """ my$eU, Oii or tit«
Ht. A·1U71 Orlvr. luli. U, !'<l•WPOrt llkll, Clllf. lhls dttt:.
"'"'' af l().t. J, PALN\£11:, ·-· IOA ,,.... Oltld ""• 2:1rt1 M'f of Janu.rv. 1t7•. PALMER, DKfflfCl. G«tldh" L, C"1'°'11t' 11100 P.tk S.lly M. Glttonl MOTICE IS HEltEIY GIVEN to tlW N..._., ~ »t. N....,.,t teach, CIO Mn. IC. a-
c,..oltorl If 1111: •--*' deC.a.M Ollflt'll9 '*"° 11115 ~ "'411 tM ~ !lrll119 tltlf"' ... 11111 Tl'di ~ 11 cond\ICIM 1W an lrYlM. CtHIOl'ni.
ttw Mid deeftltnt Mt NQ\llred to Mlt ll'ldlvld~l. Pllbllshed Ot't..... (Mii 0.lt'I' Piiot,
ft!tm, wltll tM llfCHMll' -lier&. 111 Gef•ktlnt Chlcoliw J1-ry 24, II, 31, \f1l 27'·7'
11'11 Ol'fk• ot 11'11 c~ ot tM •llllW Thll .,,,.._, w•• flled with 11'111-----,-,,,,,-,-,.,,--:.,-::::-=:,,----
t!!lltttd ef!Ur1, or to "'-' thMI. W!tll c-iy c1wt. or · Or.ntt C01111ty wi PUBUC NOTICE the ...u1.,ry \'OU(f'ltrt. to I h • J•nuerv :n, lt74
ulld..,signtd 1t lh1 offlc:t II 1111 •"°"""f, •""41---------------HENll:'I' N, COWAN, ESQ., 1'00 AVll'IUI PubltU... Of•flll Cot1t Dtlt'y l"l\ot, •LKTM* OPPIC••S
ot 1114 Sttr1. Sult. 1090, L°' Antt111. Jtllu4u·v 21. 31, tnf Ftbtutry 1, \4, ANO l"OLLlll• l"U.C•S
CalllornT1 '°°'7, Wlllcll Is 11'11 i>IKI 1t74 •·74 NOTICE IS ~·E•Y GIVEN tMI ot DUSl!leli ot 11'11 \lllOtrsltntd kt tit •I It'll f9'11".-I ~IP.II tlKllDll to
"''""• Pll'••"'i"ll to 11'11 nl•t• ot --PUBLIC NOTICE •· hlkl 111 ..,. c1w ot ,_1.in v11 .. .,. H id dt<~I, wlllllll '-l\'IOlllll1 l t't.r °" Tlll$dliy, 11'11 l!flfl dt'o' of Mttdi,
the 11,.,,1 put1tlc1tlon of 1'1111 noti«, -·-lf74, tlllfre 11'1111 ~ twonty-Jlx 1261
Dtted J ... ulf)' t. 197• STATI MI NT 0 , AaAltOONMI NT YO!lna p rec I 11 e t1 conslttl11q ot
LAWllENC'E w. MACIC. °' USI 01' l'ICTITIOUI conMikl•tl-of "" ,..., elKtlon Ellt<Ulor ot tM Wlh ol •Ul lNlll NAMI pr.c:lllCh In tht City of F-'1111 V1t .. y
11'11 1b0 ... n1rnec1 clt<ldfnt lM followlng "''°"' hi.,. 1tHl!ldoMd "'•bll1htd for tile l'ddlne or 1tlfll HINll Y N. COWAN, 1:10. ltle UH ot Thi lldl!I0!.11 DU1lneta ntrne •nd c,eunty electl-1 fl'lll ti. polllna
UM"""""' ot 11111 l ltn .. &M DIMENSIONAL GAAPHICS II 1'V pl1C'1 for ttM r~lve prt<l11eh IMll
Slllt. IMt W. l•ftl St., Cotti Mlt.1 C1UI. 9'2627 ti. thl plt(n hlttl11o1tllr deslg111ttc11 Lff A..,...., C1tlfonll1 ,...7 Tiie llcllllow b\lllMl5 1111M rtt.rttd lt'Mol ,,,. PlflOll• hlrelnall<ff' Nmed lltve
Tit, 11UI 11t·IDI lo 11111W w1• flltd 111 O!'lnlltl Couflty bfe11 ~nttd offlcer1 of •ledlon for
111111 (211) 177·1161 on J1111e II, lt7l. thllr ,._ctl..,. YOllllO prec.lnd1.
A"-' fw ••tclllttr Ao!W1 AndlrlOll, n7 W. 16111 St .. Vttlllf l"Nd!Kt 1, eomprtslng Ngul1r l"vbll'l\90 Ottr'll'f COiis! Dilly Piiot. Co.!1 M.H, C1IO, t!tcllon pr1Clnct1 '1S-IN
J1n111ry 10, 17, 24. 31, 1f1• K-14 Rlc:lllrd F. Moorf, WI Bridgeport, Po~lllll Pl1e1: Wlnd.w Sq. Chlbtlo\IM
HUl'llfng!On Buch, C1llt. HNI LlllC W1y PUBLIC NOTICE lttl• bllslnt11 w11 conduclld by I lll'Ptctor; Mr._ IEllMll L••k°'kY ------~=~-----I 1>1rtn1rlhlp. JIHlgl: Mrs. C1rol NorTtt
!U'·74"1 Rlc111rd F, ""°°'' , -Cltrtl;: Mr1. Cl1udlne AJlllClll IUP•lltoll COURT o• THIE •· c1 ... ~: Mf'!,. Loll Lellrn.in
ITAT• O, CALl,OllNIA •Oii Putlll111ed 0!'111111 COl$i D1lty Pllol Vetllll l"1'9C lll(.t t. comori1l119 r9011t1r
TH• COUMTY °" ORANG• J1nu1ry 10, 17, 14 31, 1'14 ... ,. •IKllOll pr1clt1Cll su-11•
N1. A·1'11U Polllno PllCI ! LOI Nnl(lff High School
MOTIC• OP -HEARING 0, PllTITION PUBLIC NOTICE 16366 Nl'illtlOpl ,Olt PllOIATIE OP HOLOGllAPHIC lnlpt!:lor: Mrs. L.G. Ktl11r
WILL AND, ,OR L •TT I! II S ---,-ICTITIOUi1US1Nl!ll J\IOp9: Ml'I. C. W. Wffbl(h T•ITAMa MTAkY Cl1rk: Ml'$. H.P. Clllmbll11 Esll!I ot PHILLIP LEA ELLllHOllPE. NAM• ITAT•MI NT Cttrt: Hr.fl. M1t1he (aoper
1bo Mown•• PHILLll" L ELLITHOllPE. lhe following Pfl'IOlll .,. 6olng v.11., Pr.cillct i. ~•111111 regul•r
Dec•tsld. bu1ln111 11: .itctlon l)l'Mlnc11 11 ... w
NOTICE IS HEAEI V GIVEN tllll A. W; MILLIGA N & CO., 161*' POlllfl9 PJ1e1: Monr,. Scholo
l!STHEll M, ELLITHOll:PJ: Ml llled W1yf1r1r Llflt, H"'"tlngton lttch '26d 16225 Ntw~ hlrtln 1 petition tor ProN!t ot lloblrt Wetl•r Mlll!g111, 162•7 INOt<for: Mn. Elllt>I New.on'!
Hologrtpl'llC Wiil ind lot lsWlnct of W1yl1rei' L-, H\lnflflglon Bue/I '26.ff Judge: M,.,,, Dtt..-n lrt\IOI"
Letters TKl1menlary 10 tht petlll-r, l hl1 blniMll •• condllClld b'f an Clerk; Mr1. 11r11rlY Wltkl111on
tl'ltlffncl To wltich 11 midi for tvrll'llr lnd1Yl6u1I, Clll"kl Mn. F1ye GUJM'I'
p.11rtlcu11r1 incl !hi! '"' tlrnt Ind pll(I P. w. Mll!lgtn VMl111 Prt<IMI .. COfflptJ1[ng rlQullt of he~rloii tilt wme liat bffn 111 11111 lllltmtnt w11 flied wltti tllt 11.c:t!on preclnct1 !17·2'1
lot Feb. )t, 1974, •I t :cO •• m .• In Cou11ty Cl1rk ot Ot•"9' County on Polll119 P1tct! flll,llll1ln Pirk
!ht courtroom of Dt1>1rlrMnl No. l November 30. 1t13. 10t11 Edinger
o1 uld <-' 11 100 Civic Ct11l1r • • •mil lnlPf'Ctor: Mrs. M. ~.Well~ Drive W•il, 111' the City of S1nl1 Anl, Plllllbhed Ol"tllll• (OISI O.Jly Pllol, Juclg9: Mr1. J.A. IC.ieet.
Cilllornli. Jin. 17, >I. ll, ind FIO. 16, 1,7. l6l2 Cllrk! Mrs, P. M1$ltk
D•led Jin. 21. 1974. PUBLIC NOTICE Cl1rk! Mrs. Bobbit CfllltOM WILLIAM e. SI JOHN, Vlflfll Prtdnct s. comprl1lng A11Ul1r
'"-·n ... Clerk ....,ITIOUS l''"'UlllS elec.tton preclnch .t1H41 ARTMU'ii'D "'o l.iY ..... ..~ Porn119 Pl&CI: Norlllcutl School
'''
•. A · Sit. llJ T NAMI ITAftM•NT ..,..., S.lldltont' '"" .,..,, hi lollow1ng pw.ons l rt ...,.ng 1n1P1Ctor: Mn. N•l•llt WlnclMll' I.ml a11t11, Clllltrlll• ... t bu1f1W11 '': Judge· S J M•K•
n1J) 43:1""' . INTERMARC, Suitt 46-1. •SOD CllT'PllS Cllrk: M'r•. 0 N Ll.ICerG
Att-y Ion ~hl}Wwr . Drive, Newport l u cll, C11lt. '2660 Clerk: Mr,;_ Jicq;,.11111 Ktweckl
Publl'111d Or1"91 Co-11 D11ly J~~j! JlmK C. Hor111ln, '26 C.nllf' SI., ve11..; Prtd!Kt 4 ' eompr11ilng r1gul1r
J1nuery 30. 31, fetlnlary '· lt7( CO.II MIH. (II '2627 etec:tlon l)rtclncl• 112·216-241
A1111d A 0.1lwoty, 41S E. 2nd 51., Polling Pl1ee: Elhlfl Altl'!I khool PUBLIC NOTICE, Apt. t, T1.11t1n, ''111• '26eD 16100 e111111n1 lllft b111fn1» It con.dueled by • lllfllr•I lnspec.tor: Mrl. Miry Morton
SLP 7_,, perlnlnhlp. Judge: Mrl. Juttllll PltinMy
JtmH C. Hor1lllfl C111"11' Mr1 A111 l.lfl0$CIOl1 NOTIC I To Clla DITO•s Thi• .,.,_, w•s ffled wllll 'the ,, ... ; w.: Oorothy IC.ornodln• SUPl lllOll COUllT Of TH• c .., Cl k ot O ,..... COlllllY on STA Ta Of" CALIFORNIA fOR GUl'I., ..-r ,.,... Vlfllll l"TKl!Kt 7, eompr1,;119 nJO\lllr
THli CDUNTY O• OllANO• Dec•mbel" 26• im. .i.ctlon ptldllCIJ 11:lA·2lJ•·US
No. A·JIUol I O C I "•II l'p~ Polling PllCI: Vlsl• VI-Schc!OI KIE PUbl lhtd ru1;1 o&I .,.. 'I ""' !'250 Hickory EJ!ltl of E5THEll M. WIN • J1nu11Y 24 31, Ind Febnlal'T 1, 1•, llllPICI«: Ml'$. I". W. Htrrem1 ~~~E IS HfllEIY GIVEN lo 1M 191' 251•7~ J\lcla9: Mr1. E. C. Gihring
crtc111or1 of 11111 1bove n1mec1 dlC..t.nt UBLIC NOTICE c1tr11: Mn. •u111 LniM 11111 111 pe.--. lllYlllll (11lrru a;1ln1t P Cl1rk: Mr•. Olll• M1r1nl
thl w id dlC~I 1t1 nqulred to t!le V.tlllt Pl'KIMI 1, oomprlstno revul1r
them, wlfk 11111 ne<11wiry voucner1, 111 IUPl!RIOR COUllT OP CALll'OllNIA. elt<lkln precltlCll 016-236-211
tlit offkl ol tlll dttk ot the IOovt COUNTY OP OllANOI Polling PL.Ice: Nlebl11 ~ .... 1111 1• Chic C"""" Dti ... WK!, G1rdenl1 tntl!led court, or, lo P!'ftl'nl .... m. w Slllt• Allt t27ll lni-tor: Mn. Mt rllVTI Ev1111 11'11 ne<:•$al"'I llOllClll... to I II e ..-~ underi!gflld 11 tht oiflce of lrvlng CAii. HUM••• D-61JH Jud;1: Mn. P•ullne Mtrll
E. Aoten Ind Aucc:J1t11, ml E11I SUMMONS (MA•lllA~I) . Clerk: M!•· Ooon1 Wood•
Third 5tr11t Sulll 403 00....flt'Y Cllllornl1 In ,.. 11111 marrlClll9 o1 Pelfll-r • <;ltrk: M,.,,. Jeyne 9e!lt'( !0241 ~ Ii tl'll pl.ct o:rl lilll!n111 I AAIARA A OSEN& CLEGG 1 fl d Vlfhlt Pl'KllKt f , campr1"ng re;ult r
ot ftie Ul'ldenloned ill. 111 matten ll""°"°"'I: NOAM.AN EUGENE CLEGG l lectlon preclncll ~t>S
pertiinlnt to 1"' tsl•le ot Ulcl 0tetd111t, le thl ~nponOlint: The pttlllntr 116$ Polllng PIKe: ~lfl l"ll Vll"
wlltlln tour monlt\t 1t11r lht llr1t lllld • ptlollon (Onctrnlng your m1"L19'. H1$ Wt rMI'
publlctllon o1 lhl• notice. You ma' flit 1 wrltt1n rlloPOl'IH wltflln lnspec!Of: M,.,,_ I . J. Y11l11ut1
Dlled JlnUIO' 21 1974 JI de'/I of 11'11 d1le 11111 tllfl lilll1lf'flOll1 JWgt: ~-Vlvl1n Atvftr KATHAYM T. MEYER ls !CfVed on you. II you flll to 1111 Cllfk; Mn. Art..-w JOll'1 ·
E•tc11trb o1 lt'lol! Wiii ol 11111 •bove 1 wrlt1111 ruPOllll within wch llmt. Cllltk: Mr1. Aowllt A1nd1ll
' ed d edllll your det1ult "ll'o' bl lflllfed and 1111 Vet1111 Prt<lflCI 1•, cornprf1l11g rt;Ul1r lllVING n.: ROl~N C0!.11'1 m1y enllf' 1 ludllrntnl cont1lnlng eltctlon pl'<tcil'ICll tN-m ·
AND ,us0c:1ATIS lnluncllv1 or other .ordtrl C011Cernl119 Polllllll Pit~: T1m11r1 SChool 113«1 S111t1
ml Ell! Thlnl SlrMf Suite 4CIJ dlvblon ot property, lpouUI 1uppor1, Suunne
D9wlll'f' Cltllenlll toi4! (lllld c111tod'(, child 11,1pport, 11torM'f'1 111511Kfor: Mn. Mll'O•rt'i ••xt.r
UUI Ni·111' IHI. c°''" Ind IUCh other relief 11 Judge: Mrs.,. lll'lty A"""
AttorfttW• ,.. l•1e"'1111 may bl Qr1ntecl bV Ille covrt. Clfili: Mn. ·11:1clllel Hervlll
• -1 .... 0 COi t Otlly Pllol II yow willl ti' -k ltM ldvlc:e •I Clerk: Mrl. Jt111 Moss ... u ... ' ranlll! 1 ' 111 '"'"'" 111 11111 m11ier, "" 1hot1ld Votl111 P!'Kllld 11, comprl1lng re;ut1r J1null"f 31, •!'Id Febrw•O' 7, 14 ,21. • ,. pnomptty ,. thlt '/lilUf wrtn... election PAC:lnc4 •m
lf7• iu-74 ,...,......, 11 111y, -y h lllld M Pol llng Pllet! John McDowell
"""· 1n10 01k Strlll D•lld 'January 2', 1912. Inspector: Mn. Kl r"l'!I Ackll't . PUBLIC NOTICE ' WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, Cltrk Juog1: Mn. M1ry COllPlr
SLP 1•M I~ $~ l!ipar111, Plwty Clerk: Ml'$. Norine LH 9 rlntr"
"MOTICl 10. C:lll!DITOllS !SEAl.-1 • ' . ' C19rk: Ml'$. Ltolliort L'/Tlfl
SUPllllOlt cov•T °" THI ...... ,. ,.1 ... ••ltf • AUGUR Vlfllll Pl"ICMd IL COl'tlPff•lnt
STATI OP CALIPO•NIA !'OR: ~ti \.nl elldlon IH'ldllCll W-24'
THll COUNTY Of OllANGI suite ... u.;. .... T-Polling Pltcti P1rllhanf Me. A•7Na tUll H""*""-llYG. Cftllf'I'" 9'25 LI Alat'Tltdl
E1t1te o1 FAANK PAUL SCHWAAZ.. Torn-. CA .. ., IMf!K~: Mrs. P.G. Lynell
Dectlled. VMJU If m..sns Juclte: Mrl. M. 91My
NOllCE IS HEAEIY GIVEN lo t111 A"-fl for PttllleMr Cllfk: Mr. Eclg1r l iker
cNdltor1 o1 the 11X1V1 111mec1 oecldlnt 17n « Cltt11: M,.,,. Minni• ltkltl' lht l Ill per10111 Mvlll(I clillnu a;1lnJ1 PllblftlMd or111111 COlll 01(1y Piiot, Vo41111 Predllct IL COl'fllll'l1ltlf re;ul1r
the !Wi(d o.tlde11t 1r1 rl'Clulrrd to 1111 J111u1ry 10. 17, 21. 31, 197' 101·74 1lection prec.lnct1 U.:MI
"""""'' with the ntcnwry vlW<:lllr1. In l"olllng Pl1c1: U11lon F=t<!erl l
ttMI ofllct ol the clerk ot ttoe 1bove PUBUC NOTICE & Loan 17400 llroolthur1!
111tllled court, or to pr1Mnl thtm. with lni.peclot: M,.,,. A. D. LUM
tl!e MU1Hfl' wuclllr1, to t fl I SUP••tOll COU•T 0, CALl,O•NIA. Juclg9; Mrs. J . D. OWN uncitrslQflecl 11 c/o A:-111 H. p,_, COUNTY Of' OllANN Cltl'k! Mn. S. D. Sl-r
AlllM"llt'I' 11 L1w, llS Wiii Third ••rMI, INT OllYI WI T Cltrk: Mr._ L, I. Met1lne1
S1"l1 Anl , C1tlfor11l1, "101, Wll kll Is TM.~:~ CAHA..~Al.ll'OltNIA S ' Velllll Prt<lllCI 14, comprising rtgultr
t11t pltct ol bulkllu of !hi lll'ldlrllgMd l MVM••ll l"'4t lltctlon PrKlllCll 222·'147 I" 111 1111111..-1 r19r11lnlng IG tllll 1Sl•l1 CAI IUMMOMI Polllng Pl1c1: Gflln V1llty ClubhovM
ot Hlct decedlllt, w!Jhln four monllll Pltlnttf'1· ALAN l!MIL CHAVEI Ind (ldull) 171!0 L°' Jtnl!MI E1sl
l lllf' lht llr1t pWtlc1tlon of flllli nollct . FASHION • ANN CHAVEZ.. Deltnd111ll: ~n-SPK.'~.:':.,~it se!.::rtntr
Dlfld J111. tf, 1974. ALFAEO NOAWOOO PMl:IC.S JA., AOE .' MIL TON S. SCHWA.AZ COAPORAl lON, DOES I lhrOUgh X, Cltrk: Mr1. V. M. T1ylor Admln!1tr1tor of !ht E1t11t of Cltrk;. Mr•. 0 . S. Sllclclo
Ille 1DOYe rotrned dlCldtnt 1~1""~'t:,· Dttend•nh· A dvll ,_11111 Vtfl111 Prt<lllCI IS. comprising r1Qul1r ltONALD H PlllNNlll 0 . l'ltctlon prtclncl• .... t .. • his been flled b'f tltt Pllllltllh i91IMI f'olHng PllCI: (OJI School 11615 Allorlll'/ II Llw you. u YOU wish !Cl d11end thli l1wsull, J1rdll'IH £111 .
flJ W11t Thlnl =' yov must lilt In thl1 court 1 wrll!en Inspector· Mrs. Jine W•lltr 111111 Alll, Cl lt 1 HTtl pludl119 In respot\H to Ille cornpl1lnl J • ,.;. J ., A nokl
Tei.,i-t: (114) :t~»I (or 1 wrlnen or Gtll pl11>dfng, 11 • c=.' M::: 1!':1~k:~ c~mpbln Aft.,.., for Adm 11rltlr Justice Court) wllltill • d1ys 11t1r Clt1'11: Ml'$. Flortne• IUTke J1~:~shl<J1, °!':;e F.;,.°:!~Y D;'.1Y14~11;/; ~rw~":! d~liul~ bl., 11111;;: v":wi . Prt<l"r 11",,f:i1rrhlng reoul1r
1'74 :i.12·74 on 1ppll~1Uon by the pl1lntlfll end Po~~'°"p1'::e:; llCF=~llofl. School
tl!t cCNrl m1y inter a ludllrntnl 11111'!'1 & sinll,,E"M PUBLIC NOTICE you for JM _.,. or other relift lntptctor: Mrl. Vlol1 Almgf'ltl
--------------lreqUtslld \11 '11111 compllln!. • JIJd!ie· Mrs. J1nel Aee1.11
SLP·74H3 If ,_ wlM M Mtl ""' H Yie. 9I Ci.rt:' Mrt. Mlbtt Contr11
NOllCI TO ClllDITOlll lit lftlflll'I' fll l'flll !Miter, 'fOI llltvld Cltrk: M,.._ Elhll VIS(!\1111
SUPlll lOll COUllT OP TNI dO IO "91'11,ity 111 lhll 'I-Pltllfillt< Vetlllf Pr9ClllCI · 17, comprh !ng
STATI OF CALl,otlNIA ,OI: ii l ll'f', ll'll't' ... ,. ...... lll'lll. electlM\ Prt<lnch :aes-ns
THI C.u.TY .....
-
D1ted Stpt, 1, 1'72. l"oll'-Place: F=«mtlln
Ht. A·7Mlt W. E. ST JOHN, Ct.rll E~t1ry 11'11 lustllrd
Esl1le d FOll:AEST W. POND. 1kl l y Marion L. GrlSll, Deputy lnspKfor: Mrs. Evelm Sr19lr
FOA:REST WELDON POND, 0tc11sed. ~NLiz & Gt.Afn'1· Jlld;e: Mf'I. Pit Jtckloll
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N lo !ht IJUI v•wi ..... llllt. -(llf'k; Mr1. Conclllll AofoU
credltors ol l!lt lbjlve 11111\fd Otcedtnl S*-Gib c.iifetW fl40J Cllf'tl: Mr._ Mlrll'll Alct11rd1 11111 .iU ptriOlll h1vl1111 cl1l1T11 &11111111 ,.._7311. m-ait 1 Voll• l"1"9Cl!Kt 11, comprl1lfll rigul1r
the Wld dlCldln! l rt requlrM ft! file Altl'rMYI .... ptMtlffl tlecflon P.-l'Cl11Cl1 tl7·fl!
!him, wllfl !hi 1>1C1H1ry 11011Chlr1, In lrn« • Poll"'9 Plt<I: Community Center
1111 office ol flle tier~ of ttoe 1bo.,. Publlsll«! · Ortnte Cottt Dilly Piiot 10700 Slaler l!'lllllld cour1. or le l>f"•11111 them, wltfl Jiii..,. 10 17, 24 31, 1.,4 102_1.j ln1pector; Mr•. M. A. Bel~ller tflf necnseO' YGU1:her1, to 1111 ry ' Judllf: Mrs. B. Plummtr
tlnd1rsf11Md 11 c/o ll:oro11d H. Prenner, PUBLIC NO'l1. CE . Citric: Mr1. E. M. WtrdklW .1U West Third Stru1, S...lt Ant, Cltt11 : Mrs. K. A. W1rdlow
C1llloml1 '2701, Whl(fl 11 1111 plec.1 Vllllll l"redflCI It, comprlslno l'IV\lll r
GI bw.lnlss of Ille Ynd1r1l9ned In 111 'NOTIC• TO Cll.OITOltS llllC!lon pttclncll OOl-141
"''"'" ptrltlnlng to Ille .... ,. ol (UCC ''''"'m Potting P111;1: Greenbtoolt CIUbllovll H iii clfl;ldefll, Wilhln . toor fftGflllll 1tl1r To Creditors ~ AUOIO MAGHETIC.S 1ntt Sll'llt JO-nlNI
Ille !Int P11bllc1tlon o1 hlls notlC9. COAPOAATIOH, Tr1n1fll'Of: 1"1r,etor: Mrt. Html '°"'"'9;11
D1led Jin. 29. 197"-NOTICE IS H~AEIY GIVEN thal JU!tg9: Mr'I. I!. L Doy'le
KATHIERINE 8ElTY POND !hi Tr1111'-ror, ;t,UDIO MAGNETICS Clllrll: Mrs. S. lc:J~ng
.t,dmlnl1h'1trl~ o1 !hi E111lt ol CORPOAAT ION, 1 o.ltwerw corpor1tlon. Cllf'tl! Mr1. Shirley Budll'Wtll
Thi Ibo.,. n1mtd dt<tdllll 11 lbol/1 lo •mtkt a bUtll tr1n1t1r of VltU., Precll!Cf 20. compr1sfno
llOMAL.O Ill. P•INHEll property to lhl und9rllOned, NEWAUDIO tllcllon Pf9(.lncts •15-2:27
Al'-Y 11 Llw INCu 1 c.lt-N corpar•flon. Tr1MferM. l"olllng Pltc.: lltne:ho I.I Sle1tt
JIS ... TlllN Str'ft Thi _, lfld btll.llllSI ~ Home P1t11 lllf4 l llllllrd
S1ni. Alie, Cl l"'*' Hi'tl (If !I'll lr1nil9ror Ind Tr1Mlwiee, Ind IMpte191': Mrs. Wlll1rd Emrick
T'elellMlil1 (n 4) 541 ... n1 111 ollllr b•nlntu "'""' Ind ICldre1111 J!/d119: Ml'$. S•klVI Kilo
Al'-f tw'..,,.lllslr•lrl• used b'f· Tr1nsfffor wll'llln """ ye1r1 C(er1c: Mn . 1-Plckll
P\lbllu.d Orlngt Cot1t Dally Piiot, Jtst NII to tlr 11 knoWfl fo T~an1!1f'ee, Cllrt.! Mr1. Vlol1 Mllchlll
Jt lt\llf'(' "· I nd Febnl1ry ,, It. 21, lfl •• lollows: v ..... p~ ''· coinOrllllro "'9\ll•r 1'74 3'1·1• Ill Tr•......,.: t*:llon pr1Cl11Cl1 m.111
PUBLIC NOTICE
AUDIO MAGNETICS CORPOAATION, Pdllno PllCI! Trlbunlrl Cl\lllhovw
14600 Sovlh 8roedw1y, G 1 r cl 11'11 , 10101 ·Adobe ltlver AYenut
Ct lllotnl11 234 WKt 146 Street, lm.pector: Mr1. f . C. 'Co111111
G1ni.nt, C1lllorftl11 lft Wnt 1.<16 Judtt: Mtl. C. E. Penrod
• ,,. $1rHt, GI,.,., c1nfomf11 14505 s. Clffk; Mrs. ,._ e. ••Illy
NOTtc• TO t••DITOllS M1ln Slrllt, G1rOlnl, Ctllfoml11 2113 Cllft: Mrs. ft. E. a.ti
SUl"llltof: COUllT 01' TH• E111 Vklorlfl, c°"""°"" C.Hlornlt l 2'" .,..... ..,..., n, comptlllflO
STATI Ofl CALl,O•NIA 11011 Mkh44ton Dtl.,.., lrvlnt, C.llfoml1; etec:tlorr PAClncll .,._nt
TH• CDUfllTY OP OllANGl lSlOS SOUtll l l'otdWl'f, 0 'Ir d 111 I , Polllflt l"llClt: ..... Touctll
"'· A·1'UI c1111otnt•1 11111 '°""' arotetw..,, fftlct.neel E1tato ot ARTHUA l . SlRAHOllN, G1rW1N, C1tllornl11 :m w..t Comptcin, llllJl9(tor: Mn. J . K. s.M1k
DICMttd. GtrOIM, C.lltor11l11. Juott: Mn. G. C. Gr9Y MOllCIS IS HERE•V GIVEN lo Ille (2) Tr1111'9lwi Clltll: Mrs. Q. N. Faulkntr
etedllorl of 11'11 lblr,,_ n1rned decldt11! N"""llld!o lllC., SIJO R o I I c r I n 1 C1t rk: Mn. R. M. I N ll
11-I 111 P1rton1 lllv(ng C1tllTll 111111111 ........ _, lit'WlhlJrne, C.iltoNtl11 Alll'll VIH"I ~ 11, C9mJ1f)slflO
11111 Mid cMcldtnl IA r9Q\l!rld to flit Sltplltn W11111er · eltctlon prec.lnclt nt-nt
lhen'I. with 1111 nteHHr, vouc._., 111 The prl!plrt't' to bit Jr1Mfreri'td II l"oflllll PLtct: HlfllJlf SdlOol 1"'5 Slnll fll:I ofll« ot lhl cltrll OI lhl lllOW loc1tld 11 t11t 191 ........... ~: , '1'1111
eitt111td court, or to P"f.....-it lhtm, wtfll 1'600 lovftl lroHwl'/, Gtrdlnl, lnwecfor: Mr1. W. A. ~"
1111 nec-rv YOUChtn, to 1111 c1u1orro11; D4 Wtst 1 .. Slr..i, J\IOfl; Mt., o. P. Fonttr unOll'"tltnld t i lOlh P:I_. J1111ln1 Tru1t Gtrcltnt, • C1lit0Nllel .,,. WHI l .. C .. rll: Mn. Ort11 MurJllly
•ldo .. 120 Ent Ocffll ., ..... l.olll INcl'I. ..... ,. Ge,..., C..Hfomf11 14505 s. Cletll: Mr1. Luc.:10• IC.ell«
C•Uforrll1 toM2. wtllcll k Ille pit« Me!n Slrett. ~ C.lltornl11 2111 ........ Pftdltd M, comprl1l111 feCIUl•r
ol bullllltll ot Ille ""'"""9Md 111 111 Etlt Vkklrl1, tornpt-. CtllftrN11 Mm ttKt1o11 pnclllCll •m
mttltrs P9f1•lnh''4 to the ••Ill• ol MIClllJiOll on ..... lr"'"9, C1lltornl1 Poltlflll Pl«t: "'° Sb•d,_ (WhflettouM Hkl --.111. wll!ll" ,_. montr11 1fttr The proptrty Jo be tr-fwAd 11 r•ldt!IC'll
1111 flrfl ,wtleattorl of 11111 nalJte. 1ublt1m11n, '•II tf ~ 11M1l. pr~les. l~tor: ,,.,.,,, M. Dinn
0.lld J..w.rv 2', 1974 buslne11 Ind f(IOdwl ll of 1WrY lt:ltlll J : Ml'I. D. A. llllltrMgl
!OE L. SlMHOlllN tlld dncrlptlofi 111 wlllclt Trlfllfefor llft C : Mr .. l.o.11111 Mllll!
E99CVlrlx • 1ny rl;hl, 11111 or lnterllt on tllt Cltr11:: Mn. H. lrllWI ' or. .... Will ot dlto of ,,_..,., wtllf9VW foc111d, v-.. Pndlld u. «miwl•lnt
ni. 1bclvt n1med clKldtrlt ''""'Ible or 1111111111~. · r.11, Pl'!'._t ot.cilon prec.lfldt atl..ttl
:leMAM IOtfn. J•. or mlxld, lncllldl!IO wttllovl Hrftlt1tlon, 1"9tllnt Pllel: Mol~• khool f1'0 ,Inell Mrll ,_. ,.,..... Tfwt ..... the -ttrl1l1, Wl'flll• mercntndl11 Ind lirw.t
1• ......... ...,_, other ll'l'tl'!ltorl' ol 'TrlftffffOr. ll'llll'Clet: Mrs. El-.. ltlr4
U111 ..... C ....... I ... Tiit ~ fflMfer II to bl c~ Jllllplf! M(I, Kitty l lfllft
t n ') • .....,.,. °" or 1fttr F*1!1ry 12, 1'7• 1t flrll Clffk: Mrs. L. c . Ptrtff A""'*" fw •~1 oftlcn of lrlll & M1nell1, 111> ..,....,_.... Clerll: #Ml. W1lldl McPllloon
P .... tfled Ol"tnol CO..! o.llY Piiot, ot II" 5llrt. S\lltt to(I, Lot A111J11ft, YtNlll Pf'tdillCI ». Ctmprl1l119 .... Ullr
Jf"" Jl, ... F• 7, 14. 21, lt1l lM-14 C1llloml1 ...., or 11 llW offkft of 9ttclklrl prw.lllCll 114 :::::::::::::.:::::::::::":::::::..:-;.;-;_,I Hick ...... Kr-. l.owtflllefn, '"'"'"' .......... l"f«lt Giiier ktlGot 11120 Lii K•rnln & Sell, flt Tlllnl A--. Ntw 'lllttl
SUnday IS
• York, H-York IOOl'U. 1'*'9Clor: Mrl. Ei.-9oblff
Ottecl· Jtll\llN lf, 1"11. Judge: Mrs. H. H. Kohl
NEWAUOIO INC. ci.rlt:: Mrt. l.orftt• Conilrrt
!Tr1n1i.r""I Cltrt.: Mn.""'""' K. Zinn F"'DftJl'f ,., "*" w. ,...,,_, T ... ,.. .. """ bl °'*' ._ ,,. ~ lilft I ""'''"'' s.tret1ry i-r-1 ., 7 •'clock A.M. w • o·c1oc11:
1!11111111!1111!11 r..0:1it•r :.,r.:~N, l lQ, P.M. EVEL'+'N N. GRIPl"O
• .b==,,:in;,,;tho~Jj~,f~.j~jf~j~j~!~(,~]~IJ [': :=. ~.~ .. ,..., 0 •• ~~~l~~~~ P'v!MllllM Or.. t ont DtUY ~lot Pvtl"'*ll Or.. Cot1I Dall}I
J1nV1ry JI, 1f7l .M0-74 J•nVlt"t' JI, 1•14
r I
,s5m: S·•
aUART HN.F GALLON
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San-Cle•nente . -Today's Final .
~-= ~pist.-~11:~ EDITION N.Y. St0eks
VOl;,.67, NO. a1, 3 'SECTIONS, 038 PAGES . -ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1974 TEN CENTS
'. I C
Issue San Juan .Growth Seen Top e-ampaign
· I . . . . .
By JOHN VALTEIZA Two ~. bowe•er, were development. against what be fenned · "unfouMOd
rumors" about bis flaancial lnt.relta
and hill oollpokeo .attitude from the
council chalr.
~ denied other userted nunors
from his foes that In lhe past he had
served as a strong supporter of heavy
development.
which motivated his candidacy. .. °' ... °"" P1111 ,..,. ' in~lkllJally •kt!Wd in the chamber of ~ber . spokesmen later said the
Sin Juin Caplslrano'a majOr growth co~ evening -!be pair i;ule wu le! bec~use dlacusalon on either
potinU1l emerged Wedn<adv u 1 prime of balibl !>-'!km' let for 1 dedslon point could hive luled "well loin the
campaign ~ue u the ·to aspirants f6r in the March $ electlonl. • morning boan."
three city council seats appeUed at Chamber spokeamen aald that was At Jt wu, the candidates' appearances
their .lira~ open fon&m. ... the only ruJe they would set in the gave them a chance for a brief
A capacltyr crowd at San Jdan's El dlsawlons, thus few comments came · explamtioa of backgl1>Und experience
Adobe Restaurant belnl a three-minute from candldalel oll pn>poaals lo allow ind ruill.,.. of a platform.
-ntatiou from each of lhe 10 lhe city council to orgllllae a local '!be ooly Incumbent, Ill-year council
candkialel, then sent written questions ~lice departm.ent or to levy a 15-cent veteran Edward S. Cbennak, spent his
to the bead table. mal.imum taz ,rate for p a r k 1 three minutes punching out a defense •
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"Let m• dispel -rumon here and now -lhe major one being 1
report that I have 1 ·large• amount of
money lnvelU>d In land Jn tbls city.
That simply iJ not irue," be aald.
'"!be only real property I own In
San. Juan la a 7,2IJO.lquare-foot lot with
a houoe and garage on I~" be·added.
.
For S_heriff's ~~ S.uhstatioll
·Park Residents
•
Protest Odor
lrale raldenta ol a mobile lane park liold to Sam. 'liblcb i:epmelllir otx n_ear lhe, entrance ~ ~ l{lrb;or where IOpalOti -_. aloiJc .. the
odon from lldJac<iil RWll• trutmeot Sooth Coul. • ~~~o111~··--:r1~ .. ~ · 1W1 ....... .-ro· ····•-..... w•~ ,---1 lo alt-tll • .,.,_ aU 'ttiin!WmlftailedlOPlllmtl1.
Wedwdio7. • • ·Nbw 1"" m1111 i.· Jiii • bod u ,.,.,
Bal-• '1 ef•--! l°"iilll °"'· "'°IDOll,Jfllill O...lllrlnlllolllielllmll:llMMtb!s • -
monin1 -Dtde da1llll cm their
-!bat the odon -a newly imP'owd plant 111111 eod.
Mn. Mlllie Yorllo, a nsldent -CMd! r-tbe p1a111 operated by the
South Eat~ Reclamation
Aalhorlty (Serro), 8lld tbls lllOl'1linl lhlt
... and her nelabbon r.cetved little ~.at w.;&.;;d.y•a brief -OD.
The !mllury for lhe oewage lnteresll
wu San Juan Capislnlno Publlc Worb
D!redor Bill Murphy. . -
0 He liatened, to JI, smiled, but oould
give uS no pramilel of felief/1 aakl
Mrs. Yortio.
"WO ~ ..... t home and ,llt another
vanilla candle," she said:
3 Murdered
In Oakland
FuneralHome
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-MIME PtONIER DEAD
'""'""' (!oldwyn, 9f .
Movie Pioneer. . . .
Siunuel Goldw~ "!..~!··., .-.!
Musick Asks
Approval
Of Cou~ty
. By TOM BAJll:;EV
o( .. ...,,.., ...
Sheriff James A. Mllliclt.'sald today
be inlenda to ask Qrange County •
IUpervison fo apprOYO'pllma for a new .
• ~I ~lion 1n-·~111pe1. -" ..,,,~ .... ~· ' ......
DOW ...dl~·lif ll's ' _ ' llPIJ8I•
. ~--.. -·oll!mfj'. -Ille -~ eertailllJ o:.,• 1*111 la ,.,..... Rllael'a ltlllll ·CM! _.,i U . it la IPPI oWJd. • • { 1
Muaick said lhe IUbltriOn ,i!U lemt
the communities of AetJOID Hills,
Caj>iltrano Beach, Caplstnmo lllglllands,
llaaa 1!ailit, El Toro, Lquna !Dils,
Lquna Niguel, Lake Forest, Leia11re
World,, Live Oak Canyon, Miaaion Viejo,
MoclJWa ea.yon, New ·world, San Juan
Caplatrano, Silverado Canyon, South
Laguna, 1l!ret Artb Bay and Trabuco
Oab.
MYlk:k and hi• patrol captains
predicted · today Iha! lhe new· center
would be a tr~ Improvement
00 the ..-aystem In which policing
of .the ... lh COUllly lfrritory ta bandied
1hn>Ulh the sberiff's oomplex .In Santa Ana. .
Cbermak's short , but bhmt
pruentation came ck>eer to controversial
matten than the appearances of his
nine fellow candidates.
Realtor Kenneth Vise ouUlned his
background In business and In the armed
forces and said hl.s fondness for the
c:ommunity and its future was one factor
Rult.JofJ .
Robert C. Roark, an insurance agent,
echoed the energetic tone of his
campaign brochures by stressing that
San Juan "must return to reason."
He stressed that the city has far
to go in developing a stronger tax base
of more local business and "clean, light
industry."
On1y then, he said, could the city
generate enough tax revenue to provide
(See ISSUE, Page 2)
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Workmen for Southern California Gas Company lay new gas main
into trench dug ~ng ocean ' side of ,5an. Clemente's El Camino Real
in emergency )Ob, fo replace se<Xion of pipe involved in blast and
•100,000 fire early ·this month. Initial tries to repair damaged main
-in the ground since 19291-,-.wtre scrapped when new leaks _were
found. ·-Candle/' with that· (,........,., ·Ibo! •
added, _,, to 1iorlt belt« at .,..tnc
the odor which allUcts moot -In tbe park along Del Obiapo llood.
OAKLAND (A!') -'Tine' mortuary
employes Were found lloi:ked to dealh
In. their ~ funeral home
oarly today ooly. four days after roYing ':P.Yc~tblc".8'!l!IJIOIJ -~ four people
-ii ,.ua..;; -the bay Ill San Franclaco.
Police aald ._..,,tty nothing bad S·ti~at9l .i They llid the ...... will aua.. the
departm,.t to lncrWo the level"' patrol -~-~----, -~-....,.-----------'.:...
~-and public oontact Wilh IOUih
Mn. Vorbl said the group ol about
120 permanent -ol the pirk agi'oed .Wednesday Iba! Ibey planned
a major abowlng befo~ lhe boonl of
Sein wbeil II meeta OD !bl alternooa
«Fib. H.
"We've . 10t our peUUoni nW-!7
l'l'Dplele and we bope. lo have a majir tW:nout 1£ that meeting,'' she said.
The groatat soun:e ol Irritation, said
the··spit-·for the -· ·is lht' )lrolllile ·1ut year that odors •ldcl>
ha~e Plail!ed the park for y.oan -~· oni:e· lhe Serra plant wu complete:
''Iiiat f1eillfy OllOe served· only San Juan 'capUtr~, .but.wu,ea~,and . . •.
been stolen. · ·
Palfce Aid lhe bodJ of ODe mortuary
victim wai' .boUnd between two pews. --· . -
RELATED STORllS,. P-3 and 5
In a Dnt-lloor'·vlewing room In lhe
l\lbert Brown Mortuary; a room used
for mourners to view nmalns.
1be vlctiml were Identified a s
Clarence and Doril . Bryant, U~in
caretakers of th.e hrlkllng, both In their
70s, and ~I Moore, in bis l>s,
belleved to be • -.trainee, •pollce Aid. • • .
'Dejlllty Pollce'Chlef Tcm DcnollueJald
(lloo:&llJllDDI, Pap I)
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HOLJ.YWOOD (UPI) -S·a mu el , county reaideats. At lhe ume time, they aaid, lhe Goldwyn •. one of. the .last of Hollywood'• . move would result In substiritlal savings
fabulous pkmeer moviemakers1 died iri man boun and vehicle use.
today. He was 91. MUlick said lhe subltation. will provide
Goldwyn died during lhe night at !.;, . ~ideota with local guldance_ In time
home where be bad been under the of emeqency, more. immediate lct'eSI
cire of a nurse. to -lawmen in law en!Orcetnent problems
A f mil k id b died and a greater. opportunity to meet lhe
"qw.Jy ii hf:~C:~~n 58 e . men handllog law enforcement in the
He was releued earlier this l110!\lh ~f'~ offi.cers ·planning the new
from St. Jolln's Hospital In Santa Motllca faciilty aald •'-· have no i"'"' it !his where be bad been Wlder treatment ~, -"""
for-an llftdl.sclosed ailment for sever'1 ume on the ·cost of the building needed
........ (See SllERIFF, P ... Z)
Goldwyn who helped foWlcl lhree
-· -MGM, Paramount. and Cruise Victim ' .
Sues Company
-, .. Geldwflll Stadlol · -was incapacitated President · of Saddlehack ~~.~~,ball~ yeara. the nmdt
. -• In November, 1970, GoldJJY1I -
: -.;·. -• I •• A ' eoalllllatbll-plcture~ i)~,fends ~ol)ege's It6Ie . Si~::~;;;;~
• :-. -~ _ • • .. -~. cerebral lhnlnbcBll and arterial
. -J"' -....... B -•-"" •"-'~-~ ~ ••~ -alace -ol 1111. .•
A ·San Clemente r'etidenl wtio. c1aim1
be JQffered serious lpJ\lrleS ·daring a
-le watching cruise a year ago sued
two Jocai aport : !ishlng. componlea
W-y for lll0,000. .
.;~ ::., ~:.:,---iauer m'"llBI UJ111 i1m1o111 ~· -,. M. lbat time, tbe value ot bit •tate
JI there were no ~ community ~ pnblem we face tbls year. ".wu put at $11.7 m!Dloo and. bis ·yearly =. 1-. -" • radlm, ............... ' I m @rtain the peophi llPWbeodlng • (See GOLDWYN ..._ I) u.nuu ~ It 11'1~ comet~ 11 be .said. "But ' • -. ~Diati~ ~.:;: ·c_.-to ~ tl,li' ~ atrallbt. Tbott •
ha baH ••• cr1~-k ~ .. --111811)' -ta moc1e." M . v· . ·~y~· ·~~ 1n an ...,.,.tie half ...... def .... flllod arme 1ctim
:zdoi:-:i:..-Vlei!°°1'~= ~'!!Cl·.J:......, ~.~t1~: ·or er h rn AliDclatloa. "PeOple ... -..uy cUe.ta eoue,.;, llilte • m1 · as . es
_..,,. Ill with them, and that'• COllep ol the ~ ...... ..... •
not lair.'' .....,i . al •-Ille lli8a -• A ,_ CaD)[I PlmdletCll Marine wt1o .. Don'i people llMleotand that ,.. laddlllall llld Ill JWI • • IUl!end. sme tw and bead btjurlel
can't bo'9 a ~ co 11111 ~ • llil ilol aiir-. Butte ha In a cai cnob Cll the hue early lut .. IOnlllbl'" •-laid. . m _.,.. m1 ClollMe at the~ wee1: bu died 11 the -11oop11a1. •
His m public .-ance belw1 1 bit • www•• , lie· ~ all. Pia. 'Oehul ~·a m-rl
-11111 -ltllf at'1llo ---· I II '*'' ... at --llo ...W. 1111 .......... Ci. r1 1be lit ,_ --wu -NJ by..,.. 'lllli 11m1 lbe ·aclllat 1111 m a w S,.•loJ ....,...... .. wlied llanda7 an -Ill ·~ riip-· to Ibo ·la • 11eC.119: , , : ~ r .,_ ;.._..llhlllillncthi:. 21 wllea
lmpMliar paJlGiji" • 'tbe 'lWtlli u-·--~ .......... tltl;..... bis ~ -.......... trol ... 'del&led
Sclloor lllstrid .... " tbe 8addllbock Wt ... llold .............. bo aid. rood 1114 Mt -liw. ' dlalrict. SoddlNrcll Ii ill ..... Viejo, '<We llo .. -I ..... , ... -.... ,,,. ,.... _..,.Ill Ibo wftCbp
If i1'e illr1 ... 4 w .... i!;al ,lo, ..... -ty Hiii I !bat ..... ~bol .... 'IYo ~ 1111ar
dislrUalle<I Tl;;tin ft91deata· •••a ,.,.. -called ,.. Bimini "' ... . ~ •, -Worked to free ......... Ibo-................ _ will Illlli.' -
tie art by J7 ,.._el \I' rr1111114 · "'llli TUillD -re ha .. aUI w Illa 'Wa Ille lint ~ deatll .., ~ ll)r 11 pwwlll. · ( .. llllDID, .... I) '1lle ijil ..... w fi!r 1ldi ,_,
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-.G. Gny naipes San ·<;iement<
Sport Fbblng, Inc., and Dana Wharf
Sj>ort. Fishing u defendants In an Oranie
County S.perlor COurl action baaed OD
his allepd mlsbap Feb. -12, 1'13.'
. Gray clalms be lllffered a puoct18l!d
lq and • -en rlbl In an -accident
lhlt occurred when .the cbartmd vessel
"Sea Hone" was about one and ode-ball
milea oot of San Clemente.
DOG FOOD STOLEIV
.BY DOG CJTC8ER
CIUCO (UPI) -Wllllam J, UabD,
a Butte Colmty q -catdler, 1--lined 1125 and glveq • 8lllpdlCW »<lay
jaU 1entence for itealin& II.ti -
ol doll lood from lhe CNc» pOund. '
Hiiiin, who admitted the !bell, also
WU -piacod Oil _.yeN; fll'lbatloa. Jle
wu .-.cl by poll<:e. Jan. II after
be wu allegedly _, tU1111 elabt
poandl ol doc lood from Ibo pound.
· 91· Kilkd in Pan AQJ, ;.
707 Crash in Samoa
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (UPI)
-· A Pan American World Airways
Boeing 7fll carrying 101 persons caught
fire on its approach to the Pago Pago
Ahwrt•ln a v!Oteot thunder squall today
and crashed 1,000 feet short of the
runway, killing most of those aboard .
Wltnesaes aaid ti ·peroons died, most
burned. lo dealh when trapped inside
the . Darning wrecbge. Of !be . IO
· survivon, several were not expected
to ;Dve. -.
The Federal Avlailoo Admlniatralion
or\lmd lhe airport, on the island of
Tutillla midway between Hawaii and
New 1.ealand, doled following the crash.
Dr. ·Peter F. Veale1, medical director
at the Pago Pago Medical Center, aald
"moot cl lhe dead fried In the plane."
• Veales said the turV:ivors were three
women and .even men and. that eight
were in aerious or worse condition with
buru over 50 j>erceot of their body.
Two survivors . "l'fe In fair condition
and able to wailt about.
"We all tried 'to 1et out and jammed
the mts," one of the two male IUl"Vlvors
aald. "I manapd .lo pt out over a
wino but -of a.. aboonl did DOI.To
,,,. pilot, Capt. lAroJ --ol San !"randoco, radioed Ibo Pqo Pqo control
-abOrUy .belon Ibo crab at 11:52 a:m. (S:D a.m. PDT) that the plane
-an· fire. He Ibo nported Violent
lhunder oqualla and cme of -was
lil ---Ille plane hit 1,000 feet abort ol the nmny.
1be all:crafl -flight 1116 from Aucki.nd1 N.Z. to Honolulu, where most
of Ille mw lived, with .. intermediate
stop It Pago Pqo. Many of lhe -rs were ICbechtled to make coimectlllr fllcliis fllr Ille mainland when
the plane was scheduled to arrive in
Honolulu at 6:35 p.m. (9:35 a.m. PDT.).
A temporary morgue was set up at
the Pago Pago Airport which was greatly
enlarged by the Navy during World
War 11. However, the wreckage of the
plane wu slill b1-·hot hours after
the crash and most of the bodies were
slili inside lhe wreci<qe.
A Pan ·American Boeing 707 crashed
July 23 shortly after tak<off from
Papeete, TabiU, killing all 7ll passengen
and crew members aboard.
Oraage
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Weather
Mostly cloudy skies are on the
agenda Friday, with cooler temper. ·
at~ along the coast. lliihs at
the beaches 56, rising to 116 lo. ,
land. Overnight lows In the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
California paid $863,221 In
auroivot and retirement bene-
fits last year for 116 formtf'
legislators and 1tate officiali.
Story, Page 11.
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,Z DAILY PllOI SC
j~treet
~
Lighting
Cut Back
Four-dozen street li ghts in t h e
briableat·sectlons of north San Clemente
wHf be turned off tonight in a new
~rrort to cut energy consumption.
But city orficials stressed today that
even tbougb lhe large number or llgbt1
wUI be out, no meaaur11ble efrect1 will
• be felt In crime prevention in tbe area.
, The bulk of th e lights will be darkened
along sections of Camino de los Mares,
1Avenida Vaquero, tamino de Estrella
1Wld Avenlda Pico.
•• f'ubllc Safety Director Clifford Murray
,said that surveys of the brightest areas ot the clly have been cooducted for
almost alx weeks.
"We made sure ln our surveys to
study the altuatlon from the prevention
,standpoint," he said.
.• "We feel confident that the changes
W1ll have no effect on the ability or
people to see what is necessary in the
affected area!! at night," he added.
j·~ 'Ibe shutdown is the first ln San
Clemente and was described by city
olicials as an effort to reduce
gOvernment consumption of energy by
15 percent In accordance with ordeni
from Ute Calllornla Public UUl!tles
Commission (PUC).
, Billing cl property owners In Ute
'affected areas will be reduced ln the
service charges for the street lighting,
City Manager Kenneth Carr explained.
"·Besides shuttlng off the selected street
·Jigbts, the city has Instituted a fuel
saving program wUh city vehicles, and
stretched the strtet sweeping schedule
to allow sweeping once every two weeks,
lnltead of weekly.
' ·The remainder ot the measures Include
thennoatat changes and an awareneu
in city employes not to waste fuel and
eloctrlclty.
' Carr lllld he w.. confident Utat Ute
measures will work to meet the 15-
I?tttent reduction figure.
'Four Men Seize
:Five Hostages
:In Bomb .Attempt
' SINGAPORE (AP) -Four men irled
to bP up a Shell oil refinery here 119C11y, then seized five hostages aboard
~ ferry and threaloned to kill themselves
@nd Ute hostaies 1mless they got safe
conduct to an Arab country, olflclals
said. · 1 The Singapore government aald Jt
would meet their demands.
Olficlals said the terrorisb attempted
•to blow up three oil storage tanlta but
managed to set only one afire. They
described them as three Japanese and
90e "Arab-looking" man.
In a note dropped overboard from ~be ferry ln Singapore harbor, the men
identified themselves as members of
tbe radical Japanese Red Anny ani1
.the Popu1ar Front for the Llberation
of Palestine.
They said they set off the explosion
"for the solidarity with Vietnam
revolutional people. and for making
revolutiooal situation after considering
tM: situation of today 's oil crisis." They
didn't elaborate.
'
Members of the Red Army took part
in the Lod airport massacre in Israel
in 1972. The Papular Front is the Marxist
Arab group that hijacked American and
European airliners to a Jordanian dese rt
in 1970 and blew them up.
!Mail Can1paign Set
' : NEIV YORK (UPI ) -The National 1Committec on the Presidency, seeking
!Pres idenl Nixon's i m p e a ch m e n t ,
• announced \Vedncsday it will launch a
\mail campaign wilh the hope of reaching
\six million voters within 45 days. An
:initial mailing of 500,000 letters began
lhis "'eek, according to Charles L. lt1ee
Jr .. chairman of the committee founded :ID Seplember. ·~·~~~~~~~--. ou••• COAST IC
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'
Thursday, January 31, 1~74
Embargo Otn
Oil Countries
To Meet Feb. 14
WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of
Stale Henry A. Kluin8er said today
that the lifting of the Arab oll embargo
"\Vill be recommended by several oll·
producing countries" at a meeting µt
TrlPoU Feb. It ·
Kissinger said he ls "quite opllmlltlc ..
Utat the embargo will be Uftad. He
made his remarks to newsmen following
a closed door meeting wit~ the Ho~
Ways and Means Committ~·
But Damascu.. radio today quoted .
Recreational '
Park Plan
Has Reprieve
A propou.l for a major recreatiorial
vehicle park In San Juan Capistrano
- a project embroiled In the Ill-fated
llnanclal empire of C. Arnbolt Smith
-appean headed for a reprieve from
city councilmen.
The panel this week heard from th e
new owners of the project along Allpaz
Street and agreed that the special
circumstances evident In the project's
history could cause them to extend a
conditional use permit to allow the new
owners to continue construction.
The source of the problem was the
failure of the ortglnal developer -a
subsidiary of the U.S. Financial Corp.
-to obtain a legal Jot split separating
the new .project's parcel from the
already built moblle home park next
door.
Arter Smith's financial e m p i r e
crumbled, a new . firm bought the
recreational vehicle park plan and
started grading and paid ree1 but
suddenly was halted when It was
discovered that the lot split never took
place.
And come Feb. 5 -next Tuesday
-the original use permit passed by
councilmen by a slim 3-2 margin expires.
unless It can be proven that "substantial
constructJon" has taken place.
Councilmen now are saddled with the
dilemma of possibly setting a major
precedent and ruling that simple rough
grading and payment of thou.oands of
dollars in fees conatltutes "substantial
, conatruction."
' Spokesmen for the project appealed
for councilmen to do just that on
Monday, but the panel agreed to wait
a' week ~ all,...0. a, 111ore defipljlye't1taff
study on the-·exact wording of an
extension clause.
If aucli a pact is ratified by the t!ouneu at Its next 'session on Monday
it would come with stiff conditions
stressing that once the formal division
of land Is complete, real progress would
be made on the constructlon.
Daniel Hulette
Funeral Rites
Slated Friday
Graveside serl'ices \Vill be held Friday
for long time Ne\vport Beach resident
Daniel T. Hulelte who died Monday
of a heart attack.
~1r. Hulette, who was 47 at the tim e
of his death. was known to his friends
as "Bud" and had Jived in the Harbor
area for more tha n 20 years.
He worked at a variety of occupatrons
and served at one time on the San
Clemente Police Department. He was
also a movie stunt man and skippered
several yachts from Newport Beach.
Mr. Hulette leaves his wife; Edith ;
a daughter, Liza Karges. and his moth-
er, brother and sister who all live in .
Huntington Beach.
Services will be conducted at 2 p.m.
at Pacific View l\temorlal Park. Baltz-
Bergeron Funeral Home, Corona del Mar
is handling the arrangements.
Kuw1ll1s rorelan minister u 11ytna: hil
cowUiy "would not reco0 •lder ltfUac
the oil embargo on the Unltod Statet
W1less Washington provides ll\llf8lllees
that Israel will withdraw from all
oe<upied 1t1r!tocy."
~'ht m!n1ater,' Sheik Sabah al Abmod,
Wl\S commenttna Oil Prelldtnt NlxOD'•
announcement Wednesday nJgbt ~ln his
State of the Union address that the
--~ .. ~~-EDISON TELLS INDUSTRY
DF NIW RULES -Pago 14
PRESIDENT SEES NO
74 RECESSION, Pago 22
Arabi 10011 will ..-ialder tho oU cutoU,
tht broascaat aald. ,
It was the firlt reaction lrom the
Arabs to Nixon'• announcement ~which
was generally thought to rerer to the
meeting set for Feb. H In TrlpoU, Libya.
Kissinger said he. put before the
committee "our plans for the energy
conh!rence and our general e1pectatlons
in the energy field, lhe situallon ln the
Middle Eur and we had a very useful
and very constructive discuulon about
tr?.de matters." ·
Asked to clarify Pruident Nl.ton'•
reference 1n the State of the Union
n1cssage Wednesday night about a
meeting to discuss the lifting of the
oil embargo, Kissinger said:
"The Pres ident pointed out that in
his personal correspondence with friendly
leaders ,in the Middle Eut be had been
assured that a conference would be
called with a view of endln& the
einbargo."
Questioned whether there ls any
difference between the conference
mPntioned by Nixon and the one
previously scheduled in Tripoli, Kll51nger
said that he understood that "this will
be the principal Item· Oii the acenda
at that conference."
\Vhile Nixon said It was a new
dc\'elopment, government officials said
h~ might have been refenins· to the
scheduled TrlPoll meeting lllltlOW\Cod
earlier. '
, The White House provided no
clarification today. Asked whether the
President referred to the Tripoli meeUng
or some other seaslon, an official ,there
said only "\:,re're not in a p:>sitioD to
say."
In his State of the Union address
Wednesday night, Nixon oaid the Arab
meeting "ls an encouraging llgn," but
at the aame time asked Conaress to
approve Admlnl1tr1Uon meuure1 to
reduce dependence on loretp oil.
"'lrre9pective of the polllb!Hty ol
restoring Ute now of Mlddle East oil,
we nwst act now to enmre that we
are never .again dependent ao lorolgn
sources of supply for .our eqera needs,"
00 said In a separate meuqe
Woman Injured,
Driver Arrested
In Auto Mishap
A Three Ach Bay woman is in serious
but !table condltloo today at Orange
County Medical Center after an auto
crash early today on a fog·shrouded
South County sireet.
Ruth Becker, 55, of 31285 E. 9th Ave.,
suffered major leg Injuries and multiple
cut.s when tbe car she was riding In
smashed Into a parked ear aJoog 9th
Avenue, sou th of Clubhouse Drive,
California Highway patrolmen II.Id.
The driver of the car, ~year-old Julius
Collin, was arrested at the acene of
the accident on charges of drlvlng under
the lnfiuence. of alcohol, police said.
Collin's wife, Marilyn, 48, was also in
the car but escaped without Injury.
Police said Collin and his wife live
at the same addrtl.1 as Mrs. Becker
in Three Arch Bay.
Investigators said dense fog was partly
responsible for the 2 a.m. collision, which
demolished Collin's car Blld did serious
damage to the parked vehicle.
Collin was released from jail at 8
am. today on his own recognizance
pending arraignment on the drunken
drl\ling charges, police saJd.
More Fog Due for Coast
-Otherwise High Clouds
The fog that blanketed the Orange
Coast today is likely to return for the
next rew mornings, according to the
U. S. \Veather Service.
Forecasts call for cont"inuation of the
coastal fog Utat partially closed Orange
County Airport and had fog horns
blowing from S.al Beach to Sari
Clemente today .
But weathermen said they expect the
morning log to become high cloudiness
through the --· The fog _,..u,, pre9e11toc1 few
problems, althollflb poUce In Huntington
Beach reported a fatal tralfk: acCtdcnt
Wednelday night and two Injur y
accldeoll early this morning which lhey
attributed to tile i-visibility .
A spokeanan for tile Orange C.un\1
Airport tower said no planes landed
at the lacJUty during tbe morn!rg,
although a few ""re allowed to take
~. '
The heaviest ocncentratlon ol fog
~. ,
oeemed lo be between Newport Beach
and Long Beach, althou&h Harbor
Department spokesmen id Dana Harbor
reported OCCMtooally beovy fog there.
Fret11P9fleJ
ODOR •.•
and no one will tell u. WllY ,Ha
happenlnJ," Aid paJt ......... JOlll
Jerke.
Many mldents cl the lark haft tllOftd
because cl tho odor.
"It -to hit bllWt alloul I
a.m. -do11 and lt'I ao -.
that lt -you QI> and -,... feel al>oolutalJ w.
"I haft a •yell'Old -ucl It -blm up, too.
"Do ""' --bow hard It II IO -a~QPatllathe
morntnc!" .m. Yorba oalcl.
'
Seareh for Gas • .
Simort t.o Vrge Limit on Sales
• WASHINGTON (UPI) -Faced with ~rowing trafftc Jams at
guollne statlom, energy chief William E. Simon l.s expected shortly
IO urge gas lltaUona IO ie11 ilcb ciillomor a Gllnlmum llDOUllt of iu
. IO prevent driven from buying one or two gallons at a time, It wu
leamad lodlJ. 111&111 Otlldall blame part of tho long lines at gu statlona on
motor!Jts who want to "top oil" their tanks at every opportunity
•
11111 to keep the tank full rather than waiting until they are actual-
y in need of gu. . -u. . •
As much u S ~ of the nalion's gasoline shortage "could
be due to motorisl.s keeplng .It In their gas tsnks," energy ol!icials
S&id.
Simon Is ~ported coilllderlog urging a llmlt of five or 10 1al·
Ions per sale, the sourcea'aald.
Simon allo Ls ~to urge.gas stations to1>0st their-hours
ol business. Officials oay 'giS is being consum6d Uooeressartly by
motorists cruising areu in search of open gas stations.
Substation. Plans Mf ect
San Juan Police Issue
' I • >
" .. "'
Tlte .'IAl!lot propiiti>. JO San .Juan
Caplstranii seeking cltlien i>plnloils on
the lormalion of· a li>caI p o Ii c e
FroMP .. eJ
SHERIFF .•.
to centralize south county operations.
But one aeaior officer saJd today that
he thought the building, which will be
cooa:tructed with a view to possible later
expanalon, could be pa.id for out of
the 11v1nis effected by the transfer
of between 30 and 40 officers and patrol
cars to the area. .
"Gasoline savings alone woulcl be
tremendous," be said. "But we can't
pt1r a finger on cost at this time Wltil
we get a report from the building
deplrtmenL''
FrotltP .. eJ
MURDERS ••.
the bodlea were dls<overed by mortuary
handyman Hans Langscbwagber who
entered the building at 7:10 a.In. and
aw the bodies lying In several blood·
splattered rooms of the funeral hlme.
The victims had been olaahed or
backed w!Ut sharp inltrumepb, pollce
oaid. '
He oaid Jhe lhreO had probably be,en
deod about 10 houn .• Wlton the mqnlers
.Wdllcovered, i.o telntaioli'tetl were ·
1Ull on In the upotajra, llvlnJ quarters
,,, the twMtory building ill Ute beart
of Olkland.
" Bry~t'o , body WU 10\ll!ll II! ,1 .• ~al!
parlor near the viewlni room wbere
the -victim .... illacovored. Mrs. · Bryant, drOooed <Illy In her
bathrobe, wu found near the rear door
• of the building.
Civil Rights
Pay Aivardcd
ATLANTA (UPI) -A federal
judge today ordered the Georgia
Power CO. to pay almost $2.1
million to blacks he &aid were
victims .of job discrimination, the .
Justice Department said.
'ftle department said It wu one
of the largest such settlements
ever awarded in a contested civil
righla case.
Federal Judie Sidney 0. Smith
signed a decree proposed by Ute
Justice Department's Clvil Rlgbta
Division as a final lmplementaUon
of a U.S. Circuit fl>urt of Appeals
decision backing a government suit
agaln.ot Ute bij utility .
department appears to be deeply
affected by today's propo.oals for a SouUt
County sheriff's substation to serve the
ares.
And several C9tldldates -illg in
the llrst opon lorum in San Jlfan
Wednesday appeared confident that Ute
propoeal was imminent.
Cand~date Mrs. Judith Beggs, a foe
of the first attempts at local pollce
control, Jftdlcted Wednesday before a
co.pacjty audience that ''.announcement
In a few days could change dramaUcally
!he issue of police services lo SID Juan.''
Her fellow candidates who did addre11
lhe lsme brleny each warned that the
local police idea demanded ''extreme
study" and caution by voters and
ce:.ndidates alike.
Despite Ute presence ol the police
proposal on the ballot, however, the
increased crhne rate in San Juan last
calendar year did not emerge as a
topic for discussion by any candidate.
Pro•P .. eJ
BREMER ...
administration ~ inflexible and refUses
lo give inter-district permlta," Bremer
said.
"But I want to tell you, last fall
we is.sued J,900 permit! and denied 340.
If Utat's inflexibility I aPologiu.
''Dey say we don't have IUfflctent
1taff. But our atudent·inltructor ratio
ls one to 22-and I'd I.lb to know
wilicb oommwlity . couece ,1n Orange
Clounty CID mltch lhlt," be 11id.
Bremer alto dtod that Ute Soddleback
library bas 5',0QO >)>11111* -lllQ<'.ll, i!"'t time I co1mled, than' San la Ana College."
Santa Ana College lists 52, es.
He also pointed t the 1chool
offers 23 I procrams, with
five new proposed for next year .
His al defense was of the school's
lax rat and buildIJtg program.
After a $21 million bond issue was
dumped "disastrously" in Sept. 1971,
Bremer said the school faced two
choices: to scrap lt.s lll·yeer building
plan or flnd other meam to finance
it.
"We needed tbe bulldlnp Uten and
we need them now," he aakl. "So the
board levied a pennisaive tax."
The Ont year (11172-73) after Ute bond
defeat, the il.latrlet's tax rate jumped
from II centa on 1100 aaessed valuation
to f5 cents:
This year an additional pennlaslve
tax was added, lncreesing the di!lrict
tax rate to 91 cents.
The scbool'o first pennanent building.
Its IS.I million library, was opened last
summer.
"We are keplng laiUt wtth our
taxpayers by proceeding with !he
building program u fall as possible,"
Bremer said. "Building costs keep going
up, so the 8000er we get our buildings,
the more money we c:an save."
------·-· ··-·· ................................... ..
Front P .. e J
ISSUE .•• l
the 1ervlou the citizens reqalre ...
He, u did ill the rest of !he
candidltes, advocated a vigilant, but
moderate approach to 1 ' 1 c ontro11 e d
arowlh" for lbe city, •
At least two fellow candlates -both
planning 00mmtsslonen -;. used the
cltlien's Polley plan as the foundation
for their candidacy. .
• Douglu Nash and comml!slon
chairman John Sweeney eacfi etressed
Utat the policy plan developed by
hundredl of volunteers from the commu·
ntty llhould be the basil !or !ho commu-
nity'• (l'0"1h patterns. Eacl\ pleldged
to uphold ~ sentiments expr"""'1 Jn
Ute policy plBll ii elected. , Lawyer Yvon o. Heckscher stressed
his concern with d eve lopment
surroundlng the clty limits, especially
what he asserted was threatened high·
rise on hllbldes In county territory.
He urged a strong stand at the country
level by local city COWlcllmen to protect
local Interests.
Veteran banker John C. Gibson cited
his 45 years In the profeuton as well
as dozens of tefms 1n commwtlty·service
work In his travels. Intentionally vague
on specific issues, Glbeon stressed lhlt
as a councilman he would bring 90llnd
business practices to the !ore in the·
running of the city.
TtJomas A. ''Tony1' Forster, attempting
a comeback after losing a re-election
bid two years ago. stressed his-· life-
long )Inks with the city.
Later In the evening Forster conceded
that two yeal'I ago he stoutly supported
the formation of a local police force,
but he has since restudied the issue
and he said he believed that "now is
oot the time" for another effort at
local police control.
Gerald Horton, an Orange COUnty
Sheriff's investigator, ·cited his long-
1tand1ng affection for San Juan and
pledged to use his experience in law
enforcement as the basis of his
performance on the council.
Local housewife Judith Beggs, the only
woman candidate. used that distinction
1n her presentation , stressing "women
deserve a stronger ro1e 1n government''
Long a watchdog of city nscal
practices, Mrs. Beggs stressed that
wasteful spending in the city must end.
One project, however, did deserve the
commitment of majo'r funds, she added.
"The city should start immediately
lo purchase a site for a civic cent er
before development ta kes up all available
land," she said.
Front PG§e J
GQLpWYN ..•
inoome at '6501000. Mrs. Goldwyn had
been ac\ly~,to her il'"'band'a business
since 1931.
From the time he struck out ou. his
own .at the age of 111 making ·his way
from the ghetto where he wu born
in Warsaw, Poland, to America, Go1dwyn
was an independent in thought and
action. He remained ind ependent through
the stormy years which saw him rise
from a $3-a-week glovemaker t o
multJmlllionaire in the movie industry
which he helped found.
lie became interested in movie·making
when be dropped into a n!Ckelodeon
on Broadway to watch a five-minute
comedy reel. r
He talked his b~er·ln·law, Jesse
L. Lasky, into (ofQllng a movie
production company with capital of
!20,000. Goldwyn and Lasky seot a young
friend, Cecll B. DeMllle, Uteo a
playwright, to Hollywood to take
advantage qf ye.ar·round sW'tShine.
Four years liter the fledgling company
became the S2S million famous Players-
Lasky Corp, Th ia company later became
Paramount .pictures. ..: ~
In 19t8, Goldwyn organized Goldwyn
Pictures Corp., which later became the li!"'I Mel,r<>Gold,wyn Mayer. But he
wilhd'"n!w to become an owner-member
of United · Artists Corporation with
Joseph M. Schenck, Douglas ~airbanks,
?i.tary Pickford, Charlie Oiaplin and
D. W.,Grill!Ut.
IN-STORE MICRO-WAVE DEMONSTRATION by a HOME ECONOMIST
Saturday .Feb. 2, I 2_noon Ill 5 P.M.
SPICW
l'llCI MODEL 11
RR-4 ~1 1 ~~
PORTABLE
MICROWAVE OVEN
••
5399'1
EB LITTON
Litton Microwave Ovens
Nokdy k""9 mor• tbcul mlcrowa•11 cooking ltlan Lhtcn, Nobody.
l'ricn
Slwt Al
s2599s
90DAYSCASH
WITHAPPllOVID ClllDIT
1115 llWPOIT Bl.VD.,
llaai.1111 Cati Mnl-PU11541-7788
, •
I .,,
I
I \
'
I •I
I I
J
• I
•
• •• I • I • • •
I
'
..... -......... 0 ....................... -.... -............. _ .............. .
WE ARE CELEBRATING OUR IOTH
·ANNIVERSARY TODAY. YOU ARE
INVITED TO JOIN US FOR MANY
MORE YEARS OF ENJOYABLE MUSIC.
ON STEREO 103 .
"SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR"
'
Thrusday, January 31, l.,/4
<
NO. 57 FASHION ISLAND· NEWPORT CENTER,' NEWPORT BEACH, CA. 92660 (714) 644-2727
I
* DAILY PILOT II
.... •• •
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.Standard
Oil Tell s
54% Hike
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The 1973 earnings of Standard
011 Co. or Californto Increased
bY 54 percent over 1972.
Fourth quarter e a r n i n g s
jumped by 94 percent.
STANDARD OF California,
lbe nation's fiflh largest oil
company, said on Wednesday
that its estimated earnings for
1973 totaled $843.6 million, or
$4.97 a share. The 1972 net
Income was $547 million, or
$.1.22 a share.
Fourth quarter e a r n i n g s
rose by 94 percent to $28.1. I
million or $1.67 a share. The
1972 fina l quarter produced
$145.8 million in net income,
or 86 cents a share.
U"lf ......
.Jol11t Bid•
Frank Ikard, president
tlf the American Pe-
troleum Institute, told
a House Judiciary Sub-
committee Wednesday
that he opposes a sug-
gestion forbidding oil
firms from banding to-
gether to bid on leases.
16'.< 1''-V.111t1 S... S S't u~, 1t'IJ v.1n OYio. H \, 11"
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It 2'0 Yi(lorl 'SI l l, 9'•
IO'lt l~lt YIOf<I S1' t l, S' /
In U>s Angeles, Atlantic Richfield Co.. the eighth -~-------
10>, 11 '• V~I Sc 6 •'• •'• 10•, vot s-1 1 1 t'i l h W•r EB• ,,., 10
11 '• 11'• W•Sll NG 12'1 U
1>, I'• W1om11 I I' 1 ~' • I'•.~, WlltlN!fl t'1 I'•
Wt•GI WI t>.o I'• 2ll UI W1ll114 M •l o 10' •
R.1vmo lt\lio 11•, Wslcsl Pl 11• I•• llltM P.1t 12>:0 ll~t ws Ky(.!. 1µ, 16'•
llt(O(I Eq l l'I 4i, W.11• Fd 11'1 ll'o
Reo 'EIK 20 20~1 WUl.1m1 I lt'l 20
Jtell Uni¥ IO\.'r 11"' Wll!ll H J o~, 10'\ Rea Pl.11 s>, ~. WiM\ Sir 1' JS Aey,. I.A 71'n 2'~1 w;,., Pl<T n u•·,
lliwll Ml 26"• 11'• WIK Pl.I If ll>o
Ao.id e. 111,1 ..... Wood I.Ill "\\ 1••1
Aot>rt o;, 9 ···1WO•ld SY 10•, ,,,, Aotlil'I' B lll o 11'• W"""'t W J' 1 l'1 llol.IW Co • t~t Ytllo Fri 4"'• tS
Rowe FM 6'• 11, l ion' utll l•'• u
OTC IO ~lo•t .-lctire •H• ei.. ...... 11 011
Pfo"" Life
8u•llUll s .... ,
R.1nll Or<;Jn
Teo•to ll'lt P•n Oc" Oii Am Fncl 1114 Nill P1I bl-w
Mo\tek C., M,ljor Alt Cio
VOlllnlt
10J.'i00
91.IOO 11,j,(IO 11,)00
ll, llXI 11.'llXJ 69,200 . u.~ 19,lOO
•1.600
,~o A~~,';" r'"'1; ,:!: 4.,: .. ;;
... 6'• . " ;<t•, Jello ~ 1
111' 1111 ~ t l lo 1•0-I 0 12 121,~ ••
ll•:. Joi • 1 •'. .~ ...
NASO Volunw Toci.1 J.tll,600
AOvintt' 101
I
~<Untl Xl1
Uf>clllr>Qfd int Totlt "l/12
Cai11era a11d Lo•er1
MUT UA L FUN DS
Uo uo Uo Uo uo Uo uo Uo Uo Uo Uo Uo uo Uo Uo Uo uo
0" o ..
"" 0" Off o .. OH "" OH OH OH
"'' 0" "'' "'' "'' o ..
lS.1 15.0 ~·· ~.• 19,I
18.1
11.• 11.l
t6.1
''-' \t.9
1•.• 11.2 u .o
ll.6
IJ.t .,,
U.) .,,
13.0 12.S 12.2
10.• 10.0
10.0 .., .., .., ..,
'·' u •• '·' • ••
I
N"°' Yo•--Fol-Oretl Cl! •.00 •.ll· lilel Fnd 20.8'111 .Sol Mtloe•w O' 1.00 1.00
10"'111;1 Is • 11,1 01 OOCl9C... U,11 11.17 lwy Fund 1.61 1.61 At•,•• F J.11 t .21 I)" •"" ,.,_eel iori-Ofeoel E a,tl 1.93 J p G..,11 •.oo 9.18 A!nl•et !II 11) '"'te' on MutlHll DlllY,USGllP Jenus Fd 1J.011S.OI Soile< Eq '1.1'1 Ill
F....:i\ .tt quoted by Dr'(! Fd 10.lS 11.l' JH.11'1 !Ill 6.97 7.SI s.<!•11•• 1.08 2.0I \lie NASO IN:. Eqly f'cl l .M l.tl Hin 19 1.66 8.ll SCUDDER ,05,
--Dr'(I Lw l•.10 U.IS JohMtn n .IS l!.IS 1111' lny 11.'2 ll.92
largest U.S. oil company,
reported a 38 percent earnings
gain over 1972.
Arc.o's net income \Vas
$270.18 million. or $4.76 a
share, up from $195.56 million,
or $3.46 a share, in 1972. Sales
rose 17 percent in $4.48 billion.
IN 1973'8 final quarter Arco
earned $91.69 million, or $1.61
a share, compared with $65.25
million, or $1.16 a share, in
1972. Fourth quarter sales
increased 31 percent to $1.33
billion.
The sales gains resulted
from higher domestic crude
oil prices and improved
performance in chemical and
international petroleum opcr-
atio~, said Robert 0. Ander-
son, Arc.o president.
Standard of California is one
of four partners in the giant
Arabian-American Oil Co.,
controlling oil 'Pl'oduCti'ln in
Saudi Arabia, the Mideast's
leading petroleum producing
area.
It "'as the last of the four
to report 1973 earnings. Exxon
previously reported a 59
percent gain O\'er 1972, Mobil
47 percent, and Texaco 45
percent.
BOARD CHAIRMAN 0. N.
l\1iller said Standard's earn-
ings gains resulted from
increased sales and recovery
of oil prices ab.road from low
1972 levels.
"In no way do they support
statements that profits are
excessi\·e," he said.
He said the 1973 earnings
amounted to a 15.3 percent
return on net investment.
Gra1n Loses
I ts Voice?
""""'I Sp lll(;m 1.11 7.11 KEYSTONE: 1!11•11(; lt.~ 1•.~
Jilfliw•r XI n• lHI Cfnt 9,92 10.11 Cll!>I B1 186S 19 11 Com 9.31 9.12 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) _ ' E&E Mil ),QI J.01 Cusl B1 19:01 2o:lll St>«•• 21.lob 2•.81i
a.11 Ask Ei glt Gr {II 41) C~I M I.OJ I.IQ SOd Lev t.~S t,9'f U · h ked th ,Adm G• J ... 1.:n EATON .. Cll!ot 1(1 6.8' 1.IS SECUll lTY FDS: \Vestern n1on as as e
Adn'I IM l.•I J.U HOWAllD: C~t 1(2 5.Jlll S.8' EQu•ly l .ll l.6'1 t t p bl·c u t ,. 11· ties .I.elm In\ I.SJ l .1S 1!•1" Fa l .U •.70 Cll!ol SI 19 .• ~ 21.JJ l"Yt.SI 6.2' 6.11 S a e U I
.1.awiH• •.:19 •.•9 G..,,, F 11.2' n,:a. '"'' s2 '·"° 10.11 unr• F •.11 6.16 Comm ission for permission lo Min.I Fd I.JI I .OS INCME Cust SJ 1.IXJ 1.61 SELECTED FOS:
,,,.t111 •n n .2111.XI ..... 't ~··'"-c1»• s.i J.10 •.os Am Sh• 1.01 1.01 discontinue singing telegrams. Aluture I.fl I .I• ~II F f.2S l.'2 Apollo I.II •• ~I o~ Fa 8" l.U d t bo t
AG E Fa , ... •.SI 51'11. Fd tl,12 \).1S Pollf\ l.1S J.IS Sp.I Slln. n 7• 111• "\\1e're own 0 a u a
A11s111e 10.1.111.61 E01E so 11 ... 11 ..... ,.;<•• s.w 6.14 -wn111111 10.10 10.• dozen requests a day for the .l.lpllll Fd 11.01 12.0J EQrtt Gt 11.20 11.2' Knll.r G1h 1.Jl 1.Cll Sentry F 11.92 ll.96
Amcitt F 1.!o<I •.9l Ellun Trt 11.~ , .. L1'0m•• ~.19 7.20 SHAllEHLO GltP ' • ht W Stem St ate S ' ' Am 1!1t1h t.19 10,16 Emtrg 3.2.J l .!J LO Edie U,6111,llO Com~! J.ll J.IS eJg e • "'" DY•s 1.31 t ,1s E111r1v 11."6 11 ... u11• Fa ui 11> El'ltrrir s.~1 6.02 operations manager R ex Am Eqty l .S7 5.01 F1lrt d l.N l .61 Flet Fd 1,1' 1.)6
AM EXPltESl Fm Bu•f l.ll l .ll LEJI GltOU,.: H••b• I.SI &11 Parcels said Wednesday. 'lilNM: Feel RR\ I.SI (II Ltd!' 1t.S11S.91 Le'Ol'I I. 6.5'1 I.IS tel (.-Pltl 6.!J 7.U FIDELITY Gr .. 111 S,11 6.•2 P•ce Fa 1.2) 7.90 Singing egrams 'v ere
IMOm &,, t .06 GllOUP: Rev<~ tl.191•.61 SHIEARSON FDS: • trod ed 40 ars ago but l nw~tm l .ll 1.21 Bnd oer> t.M 9 71 Lift lnlw 1.n a.u .I.ppr( 1t.lt 20.09 in UC ye · ~1 6.'6 ,,,, C..Pt.i 1a.1• 11.19 Linc C•P •.•1 1.01 •nc~m 11.0111.61 no"' California is one of the Sloe• t ." 1.6" Corltr1 9.20 •.. LOOMIS lnvt sl t ,Jf 10.2S
"'"' ~" 1.11 •.J1 cv sx t 6.~• SAYLES: Sn Oe•n n .16 n .1t rew states where the melody Am ln\111 l.t~-.l.81 0.'!it t.4 •. (•P Ow 11.lt 11." Sia. Fii 6.U 1.21
Am ln•~I •.ti •.911 Esi.e• e.t6 ... Mu!IHll ll.MIJ.66 SIGMA FUNOS: lingers on.
.1.m Mui 1.11 e.91 E:v•r~1 n .11 n.11 1.01110 •••= c..o Stir 6.U t.M ';;iiioiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiii;;-0-.-.-.-iij-AmNt Gt' 2.11 2.l8 Fund U.30 11.•J Altll•I 6.Y l.11 1ny ••.l2 10.19 II ANCHOll P\u'•ln ~·11010 Am Bus 2.89 J.ll ff~\ 1.IJ •.12 GllOUP: S.llt m F , J,63 JU 8no a.r> • •.S• 10.4 Ventur 7.00 7.6S &rw1n 693 1.S9 Tren.d l'O.tS 22.90 Lutl'ltrn t.tSl0.11 Smitn B t .ll •.ll l"(om 7.08 7.16 FINANCIAL Lut"" In t.ll 10.09 SB !&Gr 10.19 10."9 Rtwr v 10.Q.I !1.00 PROGlllAMS: MASS CO: 5o GenF 11.76 11,lt !.pec!r •ti •.~ Fin Ovn 4.08 I 08 Frt@m 1.8.1 I.St Swst In¥ ~.ti 1,311 ~nd Inv 6.1' l.•1 Fin lr.d J.to J ~ lndp f I.JI 8.09 Sw In• G S !ii 6.0l W• Nat l 11.0lll.11 Fl" lrw; 6 0) 60) M.n~ F 10.11 11.86 Sovr 111 10 ~11.6S
.. \11011 3,31 vent 169 l.•• MASS FNCL: Sot<!•• 3.91 •.l8
AuW• F •.lt .:n .,IFd Y• 10.ta 11,!ia MIT 10.s• 11.SI !>&P !nO ·s.n S.A •1tll FIRST -1 MIG 11.1t 11.20 STATE IND GllP:
C & H SILVER
Immediate Delivery
556-4420 556-4421
HOUGHTON : INVESTORS: MIO 11 61 UJS Cam Fa t.)t • 11
F\lfld A t.l l •.IS Oilt FO S.01 S.S6 MFO 11.IS 12.95 Ol••Sll •.10 5.U ii~~~~:~~~ Fund 8 t ,tS I .SS Grtll Fd •.&J l.•I MCO lJ_JO 11.SI Proi;rs l.4 •.to -----Stotk l.SI •.09 IMll'll U ! fl ) Ml1•s IV 1.112 1.11 1't Fr Gr I.St • S1 Aoe Sd 3 ... •.71 Stac~ F 1.31 I OS Ml11'1tr t.Sl t .SJ 51 Fr 111(; B.•7 t.•1
Bl.C Gtn 10.1' 11.1• ht Mulh 7.71 1.ll Mid .Am ~."8 S.11 Sl61f Sir ICl.tl 41.1'1 Bltl'.Oll 10.oM10.41 Flm Ber 8.10 $.10 MrlnV Fd t.UlO.ll STEADMAN ,05,
a,,roc t.ot. 6.63 FOllUM GADU,.: MSB Fa 1l,l'0 1J.20 Am Ind 2.90 ?.~
a..,ri.. gr J.69 6.12 100 Fncl 9.91 t .9S Mtl BnG 1.69 •.12 AHO Fd 1.1• 1.1•
8'1<1'1 HI l..06 I .CM 101 Fncl l.tl l .ll MIF Fd 1.63 8.1S l"W'\I 1.2' 1 7t
&.1<on t.t l t ,tf Colom I.ti 1.t1 MtF Gro J.n •.1~ Oce11\ t .98 6.9"
kr•shr 3,J.I l .lt 11 Fund S.117 5.tl MuOm qt I 11 t .6" STEIN AOE FDS: 6!><'111st-•.n •.13 Fdn G• 3.A 1.11 M4IOm rn 1.61 •.6? l!.1l1rw; 11.JS II.JS So\~ Fdfl •. 11 10.01 FOUNDERS My! s~., 16.01 lt.01 C•oitl •. ., I 12 Brown 1,90 l .11 GltOUP: Mull l•i 1,n 1.SJ !.HK~ 12.~ 12.90
&rnhm •.II 9.1S Grwtll 1.12 S." Nat lnou 9.Ml 9.llO SIS GROUP: CALVIN FUNDS: lnum 11.11 11.1• NAT SEC f:DS; Gr.,.tn 5 7• 6.n
l!ull Fd 12.01 13.U F MtlHll l.U 9 11 Bill M l .'-l.'8 lncom 112 1.90
Cdn Fd n.w 1).18 F 5PKH 9,26 10. 12 Elona St •.Ill J 06 Smm11 1-12 9.01
Olw '51'11'" l.?t l .58 Follf)q F 1.39 l .Jll Cl"an J,O l.19 lecll~I 6 11 t.10 N'1wd 9.1110.31 'llANICLIN Pl'•t Sue. 6.11 6.11 Surv~y F' '°' 9,93 NY Ven 10.lltll.:W GROUP: 1oicam •.St J.02 ~1111:;0 G 6.1? 6 ... C.G Fl.lfld l ,9'19."" ONT ( 1.l2 1.02 Slot•St 6.14 1,11 l ell'!lll c; ltO J1t
C...p t rill ··'' 10.SO G..,,, 5' 6•2 l.(M Gr .. tll I~ 6.t9 ,,,., (Ill ,· .. Ill C.llfl'f S/ls 11.I• ll,W Fr lnc:m 1.$11 1.06 NEW ENG LF! lr•vl Ea •n 10'17 Cl'l•I lflv •.St t.:i. USC•S •MIO.sq EQ\lity U9111,1' ,_ H to,u 1o:u
CMANNING UUlfhe •.JJ •.IS Gr.,,~ • 21 10.00 10!11 CG 2 ll 2.'19
fUND$: R1s C•r> S.11 S.llO ln(om U,1111• ll 120!~ Cl 1 IQ '110 .-.mer 1.20 1.11 R\ Eq1 y l.IQ •.16 Sia.. 1•.>6 1~.es un.11,0 1 ~ 113
S.lnc:CI ..... 10.51 Flo.I LIEQ •.•1 10.U NEA Ml I.II e ·~ unUurn:t 6.lo& 1:so Bfld Fcl 1...0 •.n f d,..,I do 8 32 l.ll Neu Cent •.f.1 •.'2 UNION 51!1tV1(E EQly Gr 1.06 l .n 'UNDS INCP '*""'1h l ln 1.01 GROUP: £qly Pr 2 . .0 J,11 GROUP: f*wtO!I n .{itolJ,11 llrdS Iv 11 .. ll.10
fNI Am l.M l ,70 COmm l.M t.tl Nw Per\ 1',11 \Slt N1tl Inv •. IQ 1.•l Cifwtri 1.11 •.11 Imp"-, .. , 1.38 New Wld 11.08 !l.11 Un CiPt 1.n •.is
lntom •-ta 1.21 INIY' Ir 10.11 11.21 NiChl., n .ro 12.0l Whtllal 11.U 12.9]
soetl I."" I.,. PilOI 7.•S 1.11 Hes! lvtr 11,12 11.12 UNITIEO FUNDS:
\ll!fll.ut' •.01 1.11 Gitt .. , S.M t.U 0me9' ISi l.M Atcum 641 1,10 (M.t.SE: GE. S.S P' Xl.ll ... 0 Hell Id 11,22 11.21 l!nd Fd 7.11 8-16
90tTON: Gen Sl'c 6.Jl •.n OM w.11 I! 01 n.01 'tf>n1 9W 1.0& •.12 Ffld Sos 7.St I.~ Giii FA"' •.21 t,tl DPPENMM FO: Coi'tl Int •.111~.Ql ~rlll\ Cio 1.61 ).10 Grlll Ind 11.11 17.11 Op Aim f.fo.1 10.\1 lntom l20ol ll.I• Sl!Tt 8$ 1.26 1,'3 G\WfO 12.1121.111 Op Fl'ICI 6.11 I.II S<ieflC 6.11 6.11
$OKI 5.11 •.2s HAMILTON Giii": Op Tme ··"° '·°' V.in'l'O I~ 6 OJ Chell\ Fd t .O'I t.'3 flll'ld ltB 1.?l OTC Sec •.6t tOil USAA C.i 1'to I .IQ
CNA MNG FDS: Gfwt~ S ... t.SJ P1ttmt 6.6" 116 I.IS CvtS •.tl 10.<* ' LlbttY •.S• J.02 lnc:om ~.J.I 6.tl P.1u1 At ¥ 6.21 6,1) USLIFE FUMO\: ,,,..nlll J.36 J.17 ~rl Giii ~.l'O t.'10 P;•s~s "' • 38 1.11 .1.1111~ F 1 Sl •.,. St:lll.I\ I" 7.1• I.It Hart Lv 9,1t 1.1' Ptnn Ml 109 1.0'I II.JI FnO 1.16 1'1i
1 S(llu Sp 1.•s 1.ao """'°'9 120 1.11 Ptnn !iQ 6.M ~ ... cc.ms1-10'1t 11'1Q TMR A 1.Jft 1,IJ HtllOt • u .. Pl'lll.1 Fd rn Il l VALUE UNi: ,0s.
COLOtlllAI. H,rn111 In 1.li PllGltlM GP: V•I lnt ).OS •. o3 '"'"°'' HCltlc:I 16, .. 11.7' P1I Frm ll.16 v .. II\{ • 10 4 '° C,ollwet' t.12 10.0'I tmPl'I Co l.61 t,10 C.0111 3.l8 l.lt Ltv Gtll 6'.olO 6:~ l!<WllY J.'l'O 3.11 1mpGr 6.11 J.l' rntom I.Ml •1~ \lj1 Spe: 100 :in
"""" 10.CU "·" Int Am 12.10 u .111 Pllg Fd J.2J l.'D VANCE ' • (lfwlll l,J> t.113 IM lost ),10 t.lS Pine SI ~1110,11 SANDEltS'
ffKOfl'I •.:it 10.tli 11111 FAf'l'I !.Ii ),Ii Pi!'I Tr• '·" ... l"Vf'M • .,n 'IO
V.nlw 1,i! 2.11 ''""""" 1.60 •.JO PIONEl!lt FDi VS ~ 6.tl J;µ ft\lm G 11. 11.IO Ill ll'lvtSI 1t.t7 II.to Pion En t..11 J;,$1 ~I t ti J, II u o.w. " 1nwr11 G •• ?• I.JI PIOl'I fO 11.D 12.ll Vnd~t in • n 111'1: tnw Co A U.U U.11 PlOllr II 10.!J 11,01 Venro 1'» 1·i. "•I 1.11 1,2'0 Inv c.u;o t.ll •AJ PllMd t.Jt 11,ifi V•n 1090 1:1s ' C • 1.11 t.)J lflw lr>CllC lU , , Pl.I GllO 11,0t lf,IJ VtroH I l lt 1··;
t .CIJ t ,M lflw Be\ IOA 11.:lt Pltltl llOWl1 Vitflt G< Soo 'oo ... 4,1' INVl$l Gf•tll 11,2111s W•Ust 91' 611 J.41 1.11 1,12 COUN$El tll<Ol'll .... ..,,, W•\11 Mii l!'Q1f ..
1.12 1.st "'""' 1.11 1.ot "'" E11 11,.111. '111111119 ,<:11 !0 14 Ki'u .... •.M c.pit lw ,, .. 1 If f'lw HOr '·" '·" WILLINGTON ' •.ti '°.J1 CM!lt Sill 1.11 •Ill Pro FO '·" •• n fftOUP: .s. .... 1. IN\11$1 Cllll04.tP: Prov1oft t .11 1,1) E•piof 211.tl n.n Lii .. ,. 105 Gt~ ).It • , '"'°"" GI J,t.l I.Joi h-.H t IS •.ti n• ""° IDS NO 5.0. l ~ Fl'llll \IP t.1f'10,1S Mo•:r t0.1111.10 l.n .... IDSPr J )') I.I! PUTNAM f·~ IG SI n.s~ ,1' t.t1 MIJfWI I.I:! t 17 FUNDSi Wthll' 111611.U us MOC-u ,.1It1S eon... 10 .0 \IJI w.111.. 10.l t 11.1' 1M 6".if 5-tec.t t.1t t tt EOllllJ l ,lt t.IU W1lml'I wt" 10.h
V• --~ 1,1-1.1'1 C...9 U I) H.H Wil'lll\f 1.0. 1,IS lrrt' ~' I.SI .... CirWltl t.IO "11 Wtit 11111 1.16 l,11 t' •1 tnc.f'l'I ,,ti ..... W\lld "" 1,11 1.11 G<w~ j..M t,'6 111 ... M ..... ,, ... W•tcom 1,,1 S,11 llllllm _., •.st Villi I' •.It t.tf l i..,!tr 10.1611.11 t.a UI. ,... Y01f9 9.JJ 10.tol ... ~·Cl YillfnO,
SAFETY CONTAINERS
CAN WIAR OUT
···'!· ·. I - . • • >)' .
~~·· ' I. . ' '~
lly TIRI~ GaANT, R.Pll
This ne\Y year we are most
hopeful that dea th s due to taking of medicines by smaJI
children "'Ill be drastfcally reduced. The one major rea-
son !or this hope is the In · cl'casin.gly wldesp1-ead use of the nelv safety containers
for most medicines.
But along \l.·lth this ma-
jor dCvclopment in pharma-ceutical packaging comes a
nc'v danger. A false sense of security that the safety cnJJ \Yill automatically stop
accidents. But, after pra-
longed use the closure mech·
anli;m on the safety topS can
\\'Car OUl. Be A\\'8-l'e o( this
and do not reuse thete con-
tainers.
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PRONE us when you
net'd a dellvtry. \Ve will de-
liver promptly without extra
charge. A great many.pe00le rely on ut for their he1tlth
needs. We ~lcome requesttc; for dt'lh·try M'tvlcc and charae llccount s.
,ARK LIDO 'HARMACY
lSI Hot,attl ReM ,,.. .,......,. .
Newport -h '42-lAt
Increases
I1 i Plastic,
Fiber See 1i
WASlflNGTON (AP)'
Substantial price increases ror
most plastics, rubber and
syruhelics fiber products
appear in store for consumers
as a result of action by the
Cost or Living Council.
The council on Wednesday
lifted IJ\OSt price contro ls from
petrochemical feed stocks.
The action '"'as taken to head
Off growing shortages of the
materials and to head off
mounting job I a yo f f s
throughout the petrochemical
industry, the government said.
The council also removed
tire manufacturers f r o m
Phase 4 price control
regulations, a move t h e
government said will mean
a $250 million increase in
wholesale tire prices.
James W. McLane, deputy
director or the council, said
tbe five largest tire producers
agreed to limit wholesale price
increases on all passenger car
tires and tube! to 5 percent
and to limit retail price
increases ror all standard
small-car tires to 4 percent
through Aug. L
EPA Kills
Lear Steam
Attlo F1u1ds
WA1SHINGTON (UPI)
The Environmental Protection
Agency Wednesday canceled
a $900,000 cont ract w i th
\Villiam P. Lear, designer of
the Learjet, for developmerit
of a steam po"•ercd car.
Lear, 71, claims a personal
investment of more than $la
million in the steam turbine
powered automobile
propulsion system.
An EPA spokesman said the
contract was canceled because
Lear \Vas unable to meet
government timetables. The
EPA s2id three other firm s
are working on the same
project and it expected. to
choose cne of them very
shortly to fulfill EPA plans.
The three companies are
Steam Engines Systems Co.,
Waterto,vn, r..tass.; Aerojet
Liquid Rocket Co .,
sacramento, and T h e rm o
Electron Corp., W a 1 th am ,
Mass.
The EPA said it would
attempt to recover $300,000
it had advanced to Lear's
rinn, Lear l\lotors, Leareno,
Nev.
COllELLUSE
El [i]
y.., Foctort ..............
Clle'net.t ....-.. 0.. .... • Mt• '74 Y9941 H.rchbock seaco I'll MOHTM
Plus Tiit & Lie. On """'· CrtdU aol Mo. 0.1!,L.
CONNILL CHrYIOLIT
Jltl HAl lOI ILVD.
COSTA MISA 546-1200
J
'NoReeesdon'
Nixon Sees Bad
Economic Year
WASHINGTON
President Nixon
(AP)
lw
-~
told
Congress to expect economic
stagnation, increased
unemployment and h I g h
inOatlon in 1974, but he aald
there will be no recession.
His no-recession p 1 e d g e ,
however, did not promise an
economic bed of roses but
only a choice of thorns : II
necessary, he said, be would
speed up federal spending and
stimulate still more inDation,
rather than let a Ught-fisted
and anti-inflation po I i c y
destroy too many jobs.
IN ms ANNUAL State or
the Union message o n
\Vednesday night, Nixon said
inflation and the energy crisis
were combining to worsen the
nation's economic .ouUook and
he warned the day of bargain-
priced energy was over.
Broadcasting nationwide a
shortened version of h i s
message, Nixon p u b I i c l y
scorned "the perennial
prophets of gloom, telling us
now that . . • America may
be headed for a recession.
"\Vell , let me speak to lhat
issue head-on,'' he a a i d .
rise somewhat and lntlatlon
will be high," the mesaage
said.
Nixon said he will pro-
a fiscal 197$ budget or $304.4
bllllon, a 129.7 billion increa1e
over fiscal 1974, which "will
support the economy, resisting
a major slowdown, but •..
will not provide a degree of
stimulation that c o u I d
accelerate inflaUon.
"If future events suggest
a change In fiscal policy ...
I will not hesitate to use the
stimulus of fiscal policy if
it becomes necessary t o
preserve jobs in the face of
an unexpected slackening in
economic activity," t be
message added.
Nixon said he h a d
assurances of a forthcoming
meeting among Arab oil-
produclng nations to discuss
lifUng their embargo against
oil shipments to the United
States which have, so far,
reduced U.S. oil Imports by
about 2 million barrels a day.
'11F THE EMBARGO is
lifted," Ni1on said, "this will
ease the crisis, but it will
not mean an .end to the energy
shortage in Am e ri ~a.
Voluntary conservation will
continue to be necessary."
"There will be no recession ~----------
in the United States of
. America."
"Primarily due to our
energy crisis, our economy is
passing through a difficult
period, but I pledge to you
tonight that the lull powers
of this government will be
used to keep Am erica's
economy producing and to
protect the jobs or America's
v.·orkers."
HE ELABORATED in the
complete printed text of the
message, which said • ' a
slowdown in economic growth
is inevitable in 1974.
"During the early part of
this year output wUI rise litUe.
Benefits
I1i Beacli
A new, neighborhood
office of the Social
Security Administration
has opened in Huntington
Beach at·~l Adams Ave.
Any bu!iness connected
with social security may
be conducted at this new
office, between the hours
of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
The phone number is 8J6.
1681.
if at all, unemployment will '------------'
FINANCE
Lockheed
Gets Break
On Goofup?
From Wire Services
SAC RAMENTO
Lockheed, the giant aerospace
firm, woo]d get a $1 mlftion
tax break under legislation
approved by the state Senate
with one vote to spare.
The 28-7 vote, one more than
the required tv.'0-thirds, sent
the measure to the Assembly
Wednesday. There was no
debate.
Introduced by Sen. Ralph
Dills (o.Gardena). the bill
"''Ould retroactively excuse
Lockheed from a $1 million
sales tax levy ordered by the
state Board of Equalization.
The tax has not.been paid.
The tax was levied in 1973
on a sale of assets to a oew.
Lockheed-owned corporatlo_n.
The sale 'vas made to help
the company qualify for 1250
million i n Congressionally
guaranteed loans to put the
L-1011 widebodied airliner into
production.
In a related development.
the Soviet government and
Lockheed have signed an
agreement for joint research
on aircraft and other projects,
it was announced in Burbank
Wednesday.
The agreement provides for
cooperation in developing
civilian airc r a ft and
helicopters. navigation and
communications s y s t e m s ,
medical electronic systems.
co mp•ut ers and earth
resources exploratl on ,
according to a Lockheed
spokesman.
I
Trucker
Murdered
In East
By Tbe AslG<laled Pm1
P e n nsylvania autborltles
said a truck driver was tllled
early today after a large rock
was thrown through t h e'
windshield of his truck. On ,
the edges ol Ohio, truckers
said they were staying out
of the state in fear of the
violence and vandalism which
has marked a trucker
shutdown. ...
POLICE SAID the
unidentified trucker was killed
when his rig lert U.S. 22 about ·
20 miles west ol Allentown,
Pa. Autho rities said a large
rock was found in the cab
and Sgt. John Repko said,
"It's obvious to me somebody
threw it." There were reports
of rockthrowing and other
harass ment of drivers in the
area prior to the incident.
Foor Youngstown, Ohio,
food suppliers said their
trucks weren't moving ,
preventing food deliveries to
450 area grocery s t o r e s ,
steelmakers there also said
they v.·ere unable to ship by
truck .
A spokesman for ArnlCO
Steel said the fir m was closing
its plant at Washington Court
House, south of Columbus,
Ohio, Indefinitely because of
a sho rtage of trucks. The plant
employs 565 persons .
GROUPS OF about 200
truckers blocked se r vic e
station pumps or parked at
.truck stops in several states
as part of the pro test
movement, and other groups
met to decide what course
they would pursue.
l\Tilitant t r u c k e rs are
protesting high fuel prices and
other oil and fuel-related
•
issues. I There u·as no c I e a r
indication how widespread the
shutdown had 'become today
amidst contusion over its
timing. Some truckers said
It was set for midnJght
Wednesday while others said
it was to begin at midnight
looight.
Complete.Mid.day American Stock List
Vol. Ne! L.nt 019.
-•A-.I.bf<' Pt-t•ol 1 1 ir..-Vo
A<mit PrK J I';, .. ,
kUon lncls.t l JU + \I All•m~ Aull l 1\o •.•
.l.OoO.I OilGs ,. 10 -'"
AerOIKI Inc I UP-~" AltlldGlp SI l l \'o , ••
... II HD\P .'10 I l !'i AllllPbl ,Old S 1\.'r--I• AIC Ph!o !It 1' J\\+ \• .l.irbclrne Fr S "9 , . ,
.l.itPl•EI Sit 1 114--~ .. Airwi<k .10 1t 1l 1+ I\ •1•• MiJ .n 3 18',I + to A ... WclodS I u
Al•sk1 Alrl 10 6 -II
A.1tot11: .OSD • 51,1 •••
AtleQll Airl\ lt 1 .... + 'I .1.tltt;i Air..., J 3*--\I
Allef.l.wln • l .. , A!Ued At11ll • ll<-\'II AlltC Corp 6 IJ-16 •.. Allee CDwl I 1·16--1·1•
Alte•Fds .!oO 1 l'l* ~ A!<ot plJ>, i100 Wl'•+I '~ Amc:o h>ml I ll.--1~
AlftHess wt\ IQ 111-'•
A CnMIQ wt 6 9·11
.l.mFlt 1.llb I 10 • '1
A Fletcll W\ 1 p ,
ArnC•rd .24 11 11'•+ >, Amllrli.2MI S ''•+ ,_
Am Mot I"" 11 ·~ .. ,, A Ptl•o 1.10 6 Jl'nl+ to .-,m All .lloO J tl.1 ...
Am RecGrp 3a 2\'t-\'1
Am Soilet •• 6 S"1 "'" Tee .030 1 1•-'lo Am Tr.1i""9 1' •\• + \lt AMICCp .DI lt 11!1-\ ..
Anlhony Incl 1 t + •;,
A 0 Incl Int SO IS.16 ••• .l.Quitu.-,1(1 ll 211 ~ ... Arqu' Im J IJ·16+1·1t A•rCLd ,1()0 I 1••0+ \ .. Ar,L.IG I.XI (2 21"• .. t o Arm.IC Efll JI 1 Armin Corp 11 11 + \~
Arrow El1ct 2 1 ~...-It
Atund!Co SM 1 l''I + l~
ArwOod (p l 11 ... + 11
.l.S¥ne•• Cp ISi U lt t ~,
A\llldOll C.I I Ul1-'• ASPRO .<109 3 t + ...
All••• Inc 1S l'I ,,, AllCM11 .?'IO l3 lO•• ,., All CM B\fii 20 11~> •.. AU•\Cp ...,, IS p._ '•
AUQll 111 .IG 1 l:Ho-~)
Au\ltl l Oil Jt 1• t l t
Alllom Blat;i • 501 , .• Auto R~dlo 1 1~1+ \'II
Aulo SYc ,l'O • l l•-· lo AVX CorPlll 13 lt:OO-l'• _,,_
8.110 541 ,Jib ' 6 + \'I
Brw;fOfl .lSO I IS\\+ V.
&ln!IO<P wt 10 !Vo , , .
S1fl"1t r U •I llM+ ~ 8;111-Ulll .20 6 9~·1+ ,~
8al'lntr I ,CU I 2 + \'i Bitl'bft I.VII 1 3 + ~'i
B•rnes Ent 1 4\l ••.
9.lrryllG 5i. U S\• •.•
0.lrrywr .31 1' ''" ... B;,rltU Med 10 1'111-°"' 6.trth so ,21 1 31'o + ,,,
611'10!\$ Cnd 1 1l'it-"" S.ruth FOSI ?I I'•-\' 8'!111 "-!ti t1 71/) •••
H.1ynx .11d l 10\lo + lo\ i.u 1nd .oe 33 11,~ •••
Btne!Sld ws 6 '*+ \.lo S.•9 ~1 .1:111 2 s -1/1
6tr9lll1y "'1 S f.1.._1.11
Bernl11m!t $ 4' • •••
Serie• Corp t l\'1 ••• Oetwe .. c ,10 l 1\1+ ·~ 6t!li!rly Ent l 11'11 •• , l!lc Plin .?I 2) 13 -v. BIMly s .n l 11Yt-~. Bio Dyl'llmt I• 1:;..,_ 11 6h•l!llifa 111 2 -\1
Blutbl•d wt n l'I ••• &adinAp ,*!) t •i..+ I~
UOFl•t\ Cit 11 Sh .. Ii Sow V•!I ,IG 10 30 + :U Ha.,.,,,., Int 31 ll''o-•1
Br.taR.IQ«I ' t '1 •.• er ... 111 Mt 5 11 ••• Brnc.tn lg 15 161,i+ v.
8rttN c.orr I • -\.II Broo•sf' ,1 4 l\lo-4< \1
OrownCo wt ll l 'h-+ VI 8rF0tB .Q 7 1,_+ ~
8rwnFlll . .0 1 ! Mllltf' Co 2 + \\ 911110.~ ·" ~ ·~,. \\ ~vc 1.01 111 14 + "9
lufl\\lnt ,6(1 • ·~ ~ Ill/lier A¥i.11 4 Jt YI :;s"":c~1~+: c:.ao1ecom $ l l•-\1
CAllln 111< A I 6\'1-\t C.fdof ,,,. 4 11..-...
C.I ~r ., IOi.' j~
(""'O I~ ) 6'1t-\.o
Utrpb 0,.b J~ tt '1'I (dfl Ii 0 c;..M '10 J\t> c;lln Hm1tt'<I 10 71 1•11 Clln!P.,. I.Cl $ Ui..o+"' Clln OC:tid\'11 ' 11 12'•, \lo C•~ Oil • ~ i, CMM!v•t tllll • )!\ ,,. c. • ..,~ .. ,2'0 i -~
C.un.tt .... 1 ·~ -'"
Vol. Net
UUCl>t;i.
(Mtltr( wt I )l , ..• Ctrrals bl-w 1• 21;,.,_ \• C.ntle\O!\ In 5 11:. ...
(.HllfW(t 11! 1 11~ ... '•
(.lyltron Cp 10 10 • '• (en S..c .O'ltl 3 I'>---'• ClrtUltd 10i 1 1', ... Cttl•an Cp 5 I
0..dMill • .:! 1 S'n + '• CllmpH .l»b 21S 4•1+ \o
CH B Fa>k 1 I'', ..
CH C Coro S 1'otW
Oli<• Un $1< l ·~· l'..lll•a.. ..... 1 e•. Cll•l~llW Co s 1'• (l(OllY .JQd I U'o
C!t<lf K .2• JS A', CL FiMI (p I •
Cl•r• CO..~ 1 '"• 0.rke G.XI 1 l·t-'• (IMOl\tl M 1 I', •.•
Cl••Y (Orp l ,',, ·.· .. · C M1Corio I
CMl lnv •1~ 1 8 -'•
CotclYnen I) • • 11 Coll ,,.,., .St t ll'o• '
Collu 111 .l!O 1t Jq+ \
Coil lnU lf'K 111 ' l".-\o
ColeN~ll .S2 ~ 12.,,_ "•
(Oletn•" .... I) 9'11+ ·~ ColCotnl .IO 1 1•.-V. Cambel Com 20 11 .•. ~1X:-111~ 1; 1fi~: :~
Commo<lor 11 2'. + .... ComPSl,6~ In•;, ... ''"'"!'" 30 24~·+ '.~ CO<np q,ulio 2 1'. . "
Comp lnvst I 1'1 •.• t'..ltnpr Mell s l '1 ••.
COncrd F.111 1 l ' 1-+ lo Cot!Oec Cp 2 :µo-•,
CO!lrw::UyCn 1 ,,,,. l·'o
ConsOll GitS •? 11\ , • ,
(On' Rel .20 s 11 '9+ 1.
Con\"11! c., ~ 1~~+ v. Cont Ml~tl 11 IVt '
Cor!tT•t 11U 1 1 , ..
Cool< El .IO 1 I H•-V• Cook In .20d lb 217·1t '•
(Ooptr J.1rr 2 l~\ ... Coukw• 11111 l 8', 4 ' 1 Cor•Lob IN: 1 16~.--I•
Corr&8 .91• I'''•+ I\
COllCorpllVt 1111 ·16~3-16
Co• C.Dle 2 ~-\It (r•l<J Colp 13 7h C•a me•EI 31 1 11+ ·;~
Cre•llw Mg ll •'•+ '• Cre~Pl.20 t 1•111-\,
Cft\t f<Wm 2 2 + '• ''°"A .llb II Y.)\:o + ~· Cry,111· Oil 110 11 _.. '·)
CSE Cp ,.j(I 1 14l9• ~·
Curl!i M.1111 I 1i\-~
-00-0.l'llelln .21 l 11'1> •••
0.lf (.(wltrl 1 II I • •• '0.1• Clo< 111 3 ~ \lo
0.1• Prodd 14 :P~+ " 0.yNln ,IOb 160 lS'h+ 'lo O.ylln .,,., 10 1 + \It DCL lr>eorio Jt \Ii ... Dt.,bl!S ,15 11 UU-VI
Dtll.1 '°'" l It) ., . Or!TIEt .OSd t l•'N+ \ Oeto !Nlu\I 1 41.+1·16 De\!'Ph .1911 l 'l -I\ ~~· 1: 2~ ~\lot-1-4
Oloersey .S6 s 11 • , ,
Olvt!' Ind ""' 11 ~ ••• OIMIJfl Coro 13 t .+ V• 0o .... '-tro l •l"'+ .,..
OD'"INIY ,1S I • + ~ Ort'ffN•I Cp t Jt:. , .• Otlwr Hlrr 3 7W-
Ollro1s .2i;o ) 10 -'• 0yn•let!r C 1U St\-~, OynellE!c)I .3 4(1 •.• -··-£ 5ys!m ,llCI S t tlo t 1\
E.llrl SCll ,)6 I 71'1-V. E••lllAe .17 11 ,_._ 14.
E•*>O ,IOtl ISS ltYI-1\ E•$\A ();r )I t •o,;, t-1.11
E•1«E .04d 3 l • ~'t Etkm¥ Co l 1U .. ,
Etod'ff\t Co I t -~· Edgn1n01 SI 1n n .. +. 1!.do C#ptll I J!'t •. ,
1Ehrt11dt .20 t 10Vt-~Elco Corllln 1S 4~•-I• E!tor CMITI t ,,.,_ \9
El H->!oe ,Hid t 11; t ""'E:'i. I 1014 , •• E1Ktr11 :I "''' 15 £1t(1~ l l\1 ...
El-Mt"... 1~\'I , •.
E!..t Inc: 1 ' , •• E~ly ~ti i 1~ \"' EJC>tr IWoJ 1 J'•t 1\11 EtQurre Al j i~ ... aw• oitm • -l't
ElllllS'l"I ~ 1 6'•-Vo Ev.tn~A ,109 ·I t l• ~ 1.11
E•Une .1• 1 911" \\ __,,_
Felt No »:! • I l 'I ,.41tOl'I Shd' 11 t(I'\-'•
Ftm11y O St ,, •' •-f'l \l'litnF !Ill • l'•-1•
l'ldMrl ·"' • 1t +-'• ,.., Rtwur 11 11~ , ,,
Ft llT!otll Oil t U1 •-\• f'tis.,.•v .n t •'' ... l'itnlld ""S' IO J~ '(' FkMtco :no 1 11 • ,
FltlCll l'l~t 1 1~ •••
VOi. N~I Vol, "°'' U !I C/WJ. U~I (fig.
Filmwy loic ll ~ -'o l~VRI' l.11b 2 11
F1lt<O! .GlD 3o1 1 -J J-
F1nc1 B .1ll to 11 -" Jt1rw::11 st; • 1 .. •, FinGen .o.d I 9•,,. I• JDllnPrd .20 1 1n• ...
F'Oenv .nd 11 I~'• ... ---tt IC-F\1 Oenv .. t 10 I'•-'' 1C.11\erl .10b l\O ,,...._ ''o F"~tt'llrHd 10 1 •10-10 IYIW• lrw; t l 'o• •1 F\t S..L .'9 J lllo •.• K.!rw::Mlllwt l l '1r l o htV.1MI 1'1~ 1 1).16 ••• KlntO Srv 1 l JS•..-lo F•U lltfPI SI 1 9'o , .. Kaull.Br w1 IS I'•-\0 Flat;ill!0 .12 l<1 )•>+'1 ICayCOrio .20 Jl Sl ••'O
Fli•0•1d .JO I I >,,;.\, Kewlnn A 11 """'" \0 FllK• lndu!i 1 1 + '·• U'(lo ln0.30 J t'1-'o Fl1ll<~ .100 I 6'1• '• KU..,.D .l!O 1 7'\ •..
FIUlt.JonJlo; 1• 10'1+1'., ICiHt·.,n Pr 10 2..._o-lo
Fl yli9"<..., J'I 10 •. ICin Ark Co 20 '•-·lo
For C•tY ,11 1 ~·1 ..• Ki"Sl!ilill .11 1 t'o-\o Fort\\Lb ?k 1 I'•-10 ICl.,!'lef1 Co 1 s~
FooS\.111 .ll> 3 11•1 •.• Knitkttlay 11 12 -'• Fr•nllll .18 I )>1 •.• Kall""G .ICI I 11>.o-'•
Fr•11•sN .:12 I •'• 11;,....ftl Intl 2 l'or '•
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Frif!'a Fto' J 1•' •. Lilly llad•a ~2 n.• \,
F1i9itronlc l6 1•••-'• Uke S/lfMn 111 6'•-'• Frontier Air 11 t>10-h Lonam• LO ll ·1'l.. ...
FrorrtAirwn 6 21 \o ~ '• U r All .lid •2 "~ ••. ~ G--L•Tourl! Fd ~·'6 I ... G.lbril 111 S-. 1 /'•• Vo. LCA_ Cp .•S t 9'1-\1 C.l.1q (rp 1 •-lo LCIJCowh 1 1\•+'• C..ra11 1 .lN ~ 9"'• •1 LeGt1n(.1t 10 10'•+ •1 G.lynor StH 3 ) •-1'1 Lfl Aolll .74 U tl'•• '• Gen 8ultdr~ 1 p , Lftlll Co .!iO 1 I Go!"Cint .olO J 11•1+ \, LN Ent .JI, 11 11'0+ '1
GtnEa Sollrv 1 t •; • '·" Lee Nall Cp 10 IL•-·~ GnEmp .Ub 3 l~'I ••• Le. P111rn'C 1 IJ)t ••• Gii Hau-r 8 HO+ \\ Ulgll Pr .ICI 1 Sl-11
Gt11 l11terl0t J ~I• LAlw•e Tee 16 "' •-', ~ IM I t + I• LilyLy"" In 1 11'1 + \o V."tUO Te<. 11 2 -h LlllCOll'I NII 11 7" ,. • Gean ll'IOll\t 6 11 -'i4 Lloyd$ Elec I t i .... '• Gtr~r5' !11 l 4V.+ \4 Lo6QeS .0511 I 1";. Ill Gi•ntF .~ 1 ll'• ... l.oewl Tll.., 26 5'•-'•
Gl.1n1Y1 ·'°'" m it)llo;. \lo 1.ctctl1Uc IN! l H'o-•,, Gliadifl'I ,_ 1. J • . • utenSv .62 • 1 Gl•vock Pr 1 2''o • . • Uil! Ind !Ok l l
Glet'tGe .lOb I 11• ••• LTY CP""~ 12 3\i+ Gloe.Ina .ICI 2 •~1 ••• ---M ,,,,,._ G~5ec11t l 5'1 •.. Mlcrody 111 SI lV.+ Vt
Glo...ef l11<p 1 6~'"° \'I Mall0f7 Rd II Ii>-'1 Go•Oblal .36 1 s~-1, ,,.,.mlll Mrt • 1 + \'I Goldr> Cfi:le 18 22 + "• Mi1"9fl Sir' 6 l''o •.• C.OIOM Hom J 7'>to-l1 MlttsTlr .iO 11 6h t-\.',
GooCltitftwt l6 :Mo .. \" ,,.,.rlllduq8 21 •'•+lo Gollkl 1.6'1!1 I t -I .. ,,,,.,It CO!\lrl 11 611+ >1
Gr.ilfl9t' .11 s :n + \• ,,_.,~IF .OS s •', ...
Gral'lile MQI I J \•. ". M.l"llal Ind " 61\ \I) Gr.i~'V .18b l 11 + V. M>JSl.111d .olO I ~ -:f \\ Gtl.l.m Ind 61 ~16 +1·1• MllReM:.l'O 1t Ul•t l\, Gr1 l!a\Pel 61 Ji, .,, M<:CIOllchO! 111 t -I• GtLltCll .lltt ·tel tl\o--'1 McDltno .olO 1 101'1+ li
G1SCott S Ill. I l lo +-\~ Melt-01 n 11'1+ Vt
Gte"'"'n 511 31 '"' • , , Ml!a11' FW 1 1 10" ... I~ GREIT 1.10 I 1\11-Vt Meditl\l .Jt 1 •Y.t \lo GrevllC .20d 6 sti.-•• MtO«Ko .11 • 1io+ l'I G AICp .10 ll)) +-''• Medl•Cn .~ 12llo+\i
Grl6Clk .!Set 1 lf''i"' '• """90111! Inc IS J +\It
Gro.,. C .J19 SI olt1 +-\~ Mi<l!Ge11 Cp S 2~• t \~
Gruen lnau. 3 · IU ,,, Mi<FISug .1() 1 •~-l1
GSC en .Ololt S' ·1'•+ I\ MICJWfl ..114 31 II'>+ v. G T I Corp • 1~'t-v. MUgo· eur11 31 II -.,..
Gu•rdMtwt 2 1'10 •.•. MillOnv••-I •~-lo GullMl9 Wli 1 1 , . • Miit Ay JOI) l 11 • ,,
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HollM!fl 1.60 3 4" -1\l f-N~•· A 2t l l;, . , ,
Holly Corp , 2 "' """'Pl' .l?d I ... v. Hofl\OIA .!o<I 1 $~1)• n NYTlme .60 ' 1010• h
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CloaiugPricee
I
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• •
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\
Thur-Sd1y J1inuary 31 1974 SC DAILY PILOT
'
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
l
Year's High-Lows
Appear Ever y Saturday
Buyers Uninspired
By Nixon's Address
•
•
OAILV PILOT
Checking Ill
Sen. Ric hard Schweiker
(R-Pa.) delivers to of-
fice or Secretary of
senate a 1,722 page re·
port listing all of his
5,148 contributions to
his re.election in 1973.
Donations amounted to
$299,160:40.
KIDS LIKE TO
ASK ANDY
Thu""31, '""""'1 31, 1974 .
Asthma
Sprays
Jerked
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The Food and D r u g
Administration Says th a t
thousands of nonprescription
aerosol asthma sprays arc
being puUcd of[ the market
because they may squirt too
much medicine into a patient's
throat.
The brands involved were
identified as Asthma Nc!rin
and Vaponefrin. The FDA sakl
Wednesday: that' any011e who
n;iay have bought sUch a.
product should stop using lt
and see his druggist for
something comparable. -THE FDA said the USV
Pharmaceutical Cotp. o f
·Tuckahoe. N. Y. is making
the recall because tests by \>
bot h the ,FDA and the finns
sho\v the" sprt1Y,S may deh\•er
several times the ac t i v.e
ingredient ~ ~phil)ephfiQe -
needed to cUre an attack of
asthma .
It said no deaths or injuries
have been linked to the
products but "FDA considers ~
use of these defective aerosals
a pOtentiaUy serious health
hazard."
THE AGENCIES could not
estimate how many canisters
of 'the t\\·o products are on
store shelves or in home
medicine cabinets. Vaponefrin
is sO!d by either U S V
Pharmaceuticals or by Fisons
Corp. of Bedford, l\1ass., the
FDA said, while Asthma
Nefrin js soJd by Mitchum-
Thayer, Inc. of Tu~kahoe.
Sylvia Porter's 1974
Income Tax Guide
helps you save time
and money
Everything you need to know about
filing yout· Federal Income Tax is in
this dependable, easy-to-understand
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i> USE nus HANilY ORDER RlRM
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Lag1111a Beael.t
· EDITION
I
VOL 67, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
• --
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
•
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
:THURSDAY, JANUA·RY 31, 197• TEN CENTS
1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~-.~
Musick
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... DlllY .. I ... Sl•ff
Sheriff James A. Musick said today
he intends 10 ask Orange County
supervisors to approve plans for a new
sheriff's substation in Laguna Niguel.
Musick said 40 percent of the crime
now logged by his department happens
in the sooth county. He said lhe center
almost certainly will be built in Laguna
UIPI,_....
MOVIE PIONEER DEAD
Samuel Goldwyft, 91
/
Movie Pioneer
Samuel Goldwyn
Succumbs at 91
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -S a m u e I
Goldwyn, oae of the last of Hollywood's
fabulous pioneer moviemakers, died
today. He was 91.
, Goldwyn died during the night ot his
borne where he bad been undef 1 the
care of a nurse. '
A family spokesman said he died
"quieUy in bis sleep."
He was released earlier this month
from Sl John's Hospital in Santa Monica
w~re be had been Wlder treatment
for an undisclosed ailment for several
weeks.
Goldwyn who helped found three
studios -MGM, Paramount aod
Goldwyn Studios -was incapacitated
for the past hall-dozen years, the result
of a ltrOke.
-1n November, 1970, Goldwyn turned
control of his ·motion picture empire
over to hil wife, Frances. He was then
88 and ailing.
M,edieal staterr.ents -attached to the
petition Indicated he bad suffered from
cerebral thrombosis' and a r t e r i a l
&clerolis since March of 1988.
At that time, the value of his estate
was put 11 119. 7 million and bis yearly
income at "50,000. Jllrs. Goldwyn had
beeQ, active in her hu.sband's business
since 1934. ,
From the time he struck out on his own at the age of 11, making his waY
(See GOLDWYN, Page Z)
Seeks
' ~ Niguel's South County Civic Center if
it is approved.
Musick said the substation will serve
the communities of Aegean Hills,
Capistrano Beach, Capistrano Highlands,
Dana PoiRt, El Toro, Laguna Hill!,
Laguna Niguel, Lake Forest, Leisure
World, Live Oak Canyon , Mission Viejo,
Modjeska Canyon, New World, San Juan
Capistrano, Silverado Canyon, South
Sheriff's Center for
Laguna, Three Arch Bay and Trabuco
Oaks.
Musick and his patrol captains
predicted today that the new center
would be a tremendous improvement
on the present system in which policing
of the south cowity territory is handled
through the sheriff's complex in Santa
Ana.
They said the move will allow the
department to increase the level of patrol
services and public contact with south
county -residents. '
At the same time, they said, the
move would result in substantial iavings
in man hours and vehicle use.
Musick said the substation will provide
residents with local guidance In time
of emeyency, more immediate•'8ccess
to lawmen in Jaw enforcemen.t problems
••
and a greater opportunity to meet the
men handling Jaw enfon:ement in the
area.
Sheriff's officers planning the new
facility said they have no idea at this
time on the cost of the building needed
to centralize south county ~rations.
But one senior officer said today that
he thooght the building, 'Yhich will be
constructed with a view to possible later
ere . Ill
Pago Pago
Jet Crash ·
Kills ·91
PAGO PAGO, American Sa111Qa (UPI )
-A Pan American World Airways Boe-
ing 7'11 with 101 """°"' aboard crashed
in a violent thunderstorm 1,000 feet short
of the runway today and burst into
flames, burning to death most of those
aboard when they were trapped In the
wreckage.
Witnesses said 91 persons died. most
burned to death when trapped Inside
the flaming wreckage. Of the 10
surviVOl'I, aev~ -· DOI ~ to Jive. ~ • .. •
The Federal Aviation Adminiltralion •
ordered the airport, · on the taJand of
Tutut11 mtdlray 'between Rnall and
New Zealand, closed following the cruh.
Dr. Peter F. Veale1, medical dlrector
at the Pago· Pagd Medical Center, said
"most of the dead fried in the plane."
Veales said the survivors were three
women and seven men and that eight
were in serious or worse condition with
burns over 50 percent of their body.
Two survivors were in fair condition
and able to walk about.
"We all tried to get out and Jammed
the exits," one of the two male survivors
said. "I managed to ·get out over a
wing bUt most of lhose aboard did
not."
The pilo~ Capt. Leroy Peterson of San
Francisco, radioed the Pago Pago control
tower shortly before the crash at 12:S2
a.m. (3:52 a.m. PDT) that he was en·
countering violent t6under squalls and
one ol these was in progress when the
plaoo hit 1,000 feet short of the runway.
·The aircraft was flight 806 from
Auckland, N.Z. to Honolulu, where most
of the crew lived, with an intermediate
stop at Pago Paglo. Many of the
passengers were scheduled. to matte
COMe<:ting flights for the mainland when
the plane was scheduled to arrive in
Honolulu at 6:35 p.m. (9:33 a.m. PDT.).
In San Francisco, Pan American
identified the eockpjt crew as Petersen
ol Salt Lake City;. Richard V. Caines:
(See JET CRASH, P1ge Z)
Reagan Liked Speech
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Raoald ·.'
Reagan Wednesday night laid be _waa
"pleased" ·to hear President Nixon
declare in his State of the Union speech
that he intends to terVe. out hia tenn
as ,president. "I was port¥ularly pleased ·
to hear the President say that be will
not resign," that be wUl aerve out his
tenn and that he will' cooperate with
the House Judiciary Committee,''
Reagan sai4.
·' "
•
c.ity "'"' steff .......
FOLLOWING DEATH OF THREE,YEAR.OLD BOY, POLICE CHECK SPEEDS NEAR TOT FACILITY
Mothers Aro L1unchlng 1·P1tltlon C1mp1lgn to Control Tr1fflc by Bluebird Pork ·
: • ..
Park ··Safety Deman~ed
'
Laguna Mothers Irate After (/)eath of :~9.f!-rigster . . '
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of .. o.11, Pli.t Sl•ff
A growing group of Laguna mothers
are up in arms following the death
or a 3--year~ld child near the city's
Bluebird Canyon Park last week.
Among their demands are a lowered
speed limit in the vicinity of the park
and tighter police patrols of the area.
The matter will be considered by the
Laguna Beach City ouncil at its Feb.
6 meeting.
"I pray we ~·t have to have another
child killed before we put up a few
simp1e 1signs. That's . too great a price
' . .
to pay," Barbara Kopf said.
Mrs. Kopf who called the Daily Pilot
to discuss the park hazard, r said she
and her children frequent the pilrk daily.
Although she hadn't seen the accident
where tiny COlby Shields was killed,
she said her friends had.
"They were absolutely tramatized
It was just terrible. You know how
little children are, they dart so quickly
and they can dart out theie before
you know what's happening," she said.
Another caller was Christopher
Peabody of South Laguna. • .
Mrs. Peabody said that cal'!" ·traveling
along Cress Street' are going too fast
and many don't stop for the stop sign
at Cress and Temple Terrace ·before
heading into the dip along the park's
northerly edge.
She said she wanted to see 15 mile
per hour limit ·signs ins la.lied near the '
park.
She pointed out, too,· that with the
completion of the Girls' Club Ho'use
in the park, use of the area will increase.
City officials visited the area today
Tuesday and with aide of the police
radar unit clocked ears coming throUgh
the area. Moot seemed to be obeying_
(See PARK, Page Z)
Woman lnj.ured,
Driver Arrested
In Auto Mishap
Driver Get~ Year's .Term
A Three Acb Bay woman Is In serious
but stable condition today at Orange
County Medical Center after an auto
crash early today on a. fog-shrouded ·
South Coonty street.
I
In Death of Coast Man
A Las Vegas casino portei; bu been
1011teneed to one year In jail lf1er
pludlng guilty to leavin1 the .,... of
a traffic accldeot that kiDed' Horace
'P'rlll Ill, a prominent ·resident ol
Emerold Illy.
Frill, preldent of an equipment
leaainl Orm and ftil known In Emerald
Bay . circles, wu struck by a car as
he attempted to croa a air.et In the
gambling mecca during an October
b-trlp. .
Fndd1 HID. Z2, enlertd the guilty
pin Ill Clal'll County Dlstrl<t Court.
lloll orlclnally had been charged with
I
a fetooi cotmt of bit and nm, but
the eharr• wu later redllced to the
grou mlldmnWIOI' ,of luving the 1e<ne
of an 1ccidont ble.iuae no other trameo
violation wu lilvolved, said Clllrles
Thompoon, a spofleamon fer the dlstrlel
attorney'• oftlee. '
Police tatd lflfJ did nOt 11Gp 111<r
Frill WIS struck, but later turned •
himself in amid I polJce bmltlptloa
for Ille vehicle Involved In .the -L
• lloll lotd pollce tlllt be """ Ftltl In the l'Oldway, and atopp·ed
accelenltlng, bul did not apply Illa bnteo
becauao he tboacbt Frill had bocllod aw•y.
. --·-IONNll RITTIG COMFORTS SON LANCE WHQ PELL AT'}'LAY
lluoliird Pirie H.1 HMvy Uie by Sm1ll Children
..
Ruth Beeker, $5, of 3128$ E. 9th Ave.,
suffered major leg injuries and multiple
cuts wlien the car she was riding in
smuhed into a parked car along 9th
Avenue, south of Clubhouse Drive,
California Highway patn>hnen said.
The driver of the car, 56-year-old Julius
Collin, was arrested at the scene of
the accident on cltarges of driving Wider
the influence of alcohol, police said.
Collin's wife, Maqlyn, 46, was alsO in
the car but escaped without Injury.
Police said Collin and his wire live
at the same address as Mrs. Becker
In Three Arch Bay.
InvestiPtors said dense log was partly
responsible for the 2 a.m. collision, which
demolished Collin's ear and did aerlous
damage to the parked vehicle.
Collin was relee.1ed from jail at I
am. lodoy on hla own recognlunee
pendlnc amigmnent oo the drlmken
driving cbarJes, police said.
~·
Niguel
expansion, could be pa id for out of
the savings effected by the transfer
of between 30 and 40 officers and pat rol
cars to the area.
''Gasoline savings alone would be
tremendous," be said. "But we can't
put a finger on cost at this time until
\Ile get a report from the building
department.''
Employes
Murdered
In Oakland
OAKLAND (AP) -Three mortuary
employes were found hacked to death
in their blood-splattered funeral home
early today only four days after roving
"psychopathic" gunmen shot four people
dead at random across the bay in San
Francisco.
Police said apparently nothing had
be"en stolen.
Police said the body of one mortuary
victim was bound between two pews -. -RELATED STORIES, P1ge1 3 ind S
in a first-floor viewing room in the
Albert Brown Mortµary, a room used
for ·moumen to view remains.
The. victims were identified a s
Clarence and Doris Bryant, Uve-in
earetaken of the buil.U.,, both In their
70s, and MJchael Moore, in his l>s,
believed to be a mortician trainee, police
said.
Deputy Police Chief Tom Donohue said
the bodies were discovered by mortuary
handyman Hans Langscbwagber who
entered the building at 7:10 a.m. and
saw the lxKties lying in several blood-
splattered rooms of the funeral hime.
1be victims had been slashed or
backed with sharp instruments, police
said.
He said the three had probably been
dead about 10 hours. When the murders
were discovered, two television sets were
still on in the upstairs living quarters
of. the two-story building in the heart
of Oakland. ·
Bryant's body waS found in a smilll
parlor near the viewing room where
the younger victim was discovered.
Mrs. Bryant, dressed only in her
bathrobe, was found near the rear door
of the building.
Donohue said Mrs. Bryant, and
perhaps her husband. may have been
trying to escape their attacker or
attackers when cut down.
Police could not give a motive for
the slaying, saying that nothing had
apparently been stolen.
The discovery came as San Francisco·
remained tense while police conducted
an intensive search for the men who
killed four and gravely wounded anoth er
in a series of motiveless sboolin~
Monday night.
Escalator Hurts 3 • SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -An
escalator unexpectedly reversed at a
Bay Area Rapid Transit District station
Wednesday, injuring three persons and
toppling dozens more.
Oraage
Weather
Mostly cloudy skies are on the
agenda Friday, with cooler temper.
atures along the eoasL lligba at
the beaches 56, rising to 16 iJl..
land. Overnight lows in the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
California paid 1863;221 m
1uroivor and retirement bene--
Jita ra.t u•ar /0< 116 formtr
leglslator1 and state official1.
Storu, Page 11.
...,... ~.--·-" ............. OrMtt c...., lt ,,. . ...... .... ..... _ .... ·-. -.... -. ..... ~>"'' --.
•
DAILY PILOT LD Thursday, Januat'}' 31, iq74
Saddle.hack Replies •
Bremer Calls Sc1wol Comparisons .'Uni air' 1
.. .
"'-By JAN WORTll told the Miuioh Viejo llomeoWnen .. eleventh ·boar -lo Ibo ,-•• •• °''" .,., "'" Asaoc:il\tion. "People ire COOll•lilY lmptad~uiiGul ot . thoi~ If there wefe no other community comparing us with them, ind tblt'1 .SdllOf . ....,. of ·
colleges In a 100.mile radius, Saddleback not fair." dtettict.fbaC:~ Is in M : .. '
College Supt. P'red Breme r pointed oul "Don't people understand that you If the threitened wltbdrawal i"~Y
\Vednesd•Y night, his school "y,·ooldn 't c:in't have a full-blown c-o 11 e g e di11gruntled Tustin realdent,t g o e: a· 0·1emi ght?" Bremer said. through, the tcbool 's attendance wW
have hair the criticism it does." llis rare public appeara nce-before a be cut liy 17 percent and ill usesscd
11Unfortunate ly, ~·e are surrounded town hall meeting of the homeowners valuation by 2S percent.
by olde r, established schools," Bremer association -waa consldercJ by tome
.More Fog Due for Coast
.,;_Otherwise High Oouds
The log that blanketed the Orange
Coast today is likely to return for the
0-hext few moming s, according to the ·
U. S. Weather Service.
FC>recasts call for continuation of the
coastal fog that partially clo:sed Orange
County Airport and had fog horns
.blowing from Se.al Beach to San
Oil Embargo
Lifti11g Seen
·By Kissinger
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Secretary of
Stale Henry A. Kissinger said today
that the lilting or the Arab oil embargo
t;lvlll be recommended by several oil-
P.roduclng counlries" at a meeting in
Tripoli Feb. 14.
Kissinger said he is "quite optimistic"
that the embargo will be lifted. He
made his remarks to newsmen following
•· closed door meeting with the House
Ways and ~teans Committee.
· But Damascus radio today quoted
Kuwait's foreign ?Jlinister as saying his
coontry "would not reconsider lifting
the oil embargo on the United States
'1flless Washipgton provides guarantees
that Israel will withdraw from all
occupied territory."
1bt minister, Sheik Sa bah · al Ahmed,
was commenting on President Nixon's
anmuncement Wednesday night in his
State of the Union address that the
EDISOI! TELLS IND,USTRY
OF NEW RULES -Pago 14
PRESIDENT SEES NO
'74 RECESSION, Pago 22
Arabs soon Will reconsider the oil cutoff,
the broascast said.
It was the first reaction from the
µabs to Nixon's announ~ment which
J>BS generally thought to refer to the
ruet.tlng set for Feb. li in Tripoli, Libya.
Kissinger said he put before the
committee "our plans for the energy
conference and our general expectations
in the energy rie!d. the situation in the
Middle East and we had a very useful
and very constructive discussion about
tr~de matters."
Asked to clarify President Nixon's
reference in the State of the Union
~ge Wednesday nlgbt about a
meeting to discuss the l.iftlng of the
oil embargo, Kissinger said :
"The President pointed out that in
his personal correspondence with friendly
leaders in the ?--fiddle East he had been
assu red that a conference would be
tailed with a view or ending the
"c1 nbargo ."
Clemente· today.
But weathermen said they expect the
morning fog to become high cloudiness
through the weekend.
The fog apparently, presente d £cw
problems, although police in Huntington
Beach reported a fatal traffic accident
Wednesday night and two injury
accidents early this morn ing which they
;ittributed to the poor vislbi:Jty.
A spokesman for the Orange cOunty
Airport tower said no planes landed
at the facility during the morning,
although a few were allowed to ta ke
off.
The "heaviest ocnce ntration of fog
seemed to be between Newport Beach
and Long Beach, although Harbor
Department spokesmen in Dana Harbor
reported oceasiooally heavy log there.
Mineral Experts
Plan to Convene
In Laguna Beach
A collection of distinguished mineral
experts will b& present in Laguna Beach
during the display of a collection of
gold and at Kristalle, a mineral and
gem shop in the Forest Avenue Mall,
332 Forest Ave.
Guests include Dr. Ole Petersen,
curator of the Mineralogical Museum
at the Univers'ity of C',openhagen; Paul
E. Desautels, curator of the Smithsonian
rnstitutioo division of mineraloa; Dr.
Frederick H. Plough of Santa Bir bar a;
Dr. William B. Sanborn of Newport
Beach and capt. John Sinkankas.
A reception will be held from 1 p.m.
to i p.m. .Friday at the shop. It is
open to the public as is the display
featuring jewelry, 19th century U.S. gold
coins, Roman coins, ~ di~t
samplet·cir f!Old bre·frpop 18 ctiB1ries.
From Page l
JET CRASH ...
Half Moon Bay, Calif.; James S. ·Phillips,
Sonoma, Calif., and Gery \V. Green,
Seattle. A temp:irary morgue \Vas set up at
the Pago Pago Airport which was greatly
enlarged by the Navy during World
War II. However, the wreck.age of the
plane was sun blazing-hot hours after
lhe crash and most of the bodies were
sti ll inside the wreckage.
A Pan American Boeing 707 crashed
. July 23 shortly after takeoff from
Papeete, Tahiti, killing all 79 passengers
and crew members aboard .
Pan American said 49 of the
passengers .had been scheduled to
disembark at Pago Pago allP that the
other 42 were en route to lfonolulu and
Los Angeles .
Br'l'1"f termed the Tustin effort "the
biggest;p:oblem we lice this year.
"I'm Certain \he people speqldtng
It are conscientious," he said. "But
I \Yant to set the record straight. There
have been many missta tements made."
In an energetic bal!·hour defense lilied
with statistics, Bremer c o m p a r e d
Saddleback's course offerings w l th
CUesta College, Butte College, and
College of the Canyons, 1cb:>ola who
opened at about . the same tl,tne
Saddleback did six years ago.
Cuesta has 506 coµrses, Butte ba$
672 courses, and College of the. Can:puns
has 502 courses, he pointed out.
Saddlcback has 584 courses, he said.
This term the school has 472 courses
in 550 sectiOns.
11WtieJ1 -you COplpare US 00 this basis,
we can 1 hold our beads high," he said.
1'We have such a good JSQ1Jtatim amOng.
other commutrify colleges"\ha~ we have
even been called 4the Harvard of the
Hills.' .
"The Tustin people have said our
administration is inflexible and refuses
to give inter~istricl permits," Bremer
said.
"But I want to tell you, last fall
we issued 1,900 permits and denied 340.
11 that's lnllexibilily I apologize.
"They say we don't have sufficient
staff: But our student-instructor ratio
is one to 22-aDd I'd like to know
which com111UDity college in Or1111e
County1can match that,'' be aald. ·
Bremer also cited that the 5addfebeck
library has 56,000 volumes -more, last
time l counted, than Santa Ana College."
Santa Ana College lists 52,IOO volume.a.
He also pointed out that the achoo!
offers 23 occupational ·programs, with
five new ones proposed for next year.
His fJnal defense was of the school's
tax rate and building program.
After a $24' million "bond issue was
dumped "disastrously" in Sept. 1971,
Bremer said Ute school faced two
choices: to scrap its 10-year building
plan or find other means to finance
it. "We needed the builcliDgs then and
we need them now," he said. "So the
board Jevied a permissive tax."
The f1ISt year (1972·73) alter the bond
defeat, the district's tax rate jumped
from 41 cents oo SIOO ~ valuation
.. 15 "!Dls. ..
This year an additional pennis.\ive
tax was added, increasing the district
tax rate to 91 cents.
The school's firil permanent bulldlng,
its $3.9 ml!Uoo library, wu' openecl"iast
summer.
"We are keping faith with our
taxpayers by proceeding with the
building program as fast as possible,"
Bremer said. "Building costs keep golhg
up, so the sooner we get our buildings,
the more money we can save:"
DOG FOOD STOLEN
BY DOG CATCHER
CHICO (UPI) -William J. Hahn,
a Butte County dog catcher, ha! been
fined $125 and given a suspended 30-day
jail sentence for stealing $1.49 worth
of dog food from th.• Chico pound.
Hahn, who admitted the theft, also
was placed on one-year probation. He
was arrested by police Jan. 19 alter
he was allegedly seen taking eight
pound! of dog food from the pound. : .Questioned \vhethcr there is any
.dif!erence between the c o n re r e n c e
1f1·•nlioncd by Nixon and the one
Jl!CViously scheduled In Tripoli, Kissinger
faid that he understood that "this will
;be the principal item on the agenda
fit that conference."
: \Vhile Nixon sa id it \\'as a new
Clc\"elopment , government officials said
be might ha\'e bee n referring to the
Jch~uled Tripoli meeting aooounced
~arller.
Court to Hear Recording
Of Child Iilller Suspect
OIAN•I COAST u
DAILY PILOT
\
,. ..
,
By TOM BARLEY
Of lfl• ~HY Piiot Sl•ff
A tape recording that authorities allege
contains highly inc riminating statements
made by the imprisoned defendant will
he played back today In the Orange
County Superior Cour t trial of accused
child killer Larry Wayne Co bb.
Judge H. Warren Knight today
overruled vigorous objections by defense
attorney Robert Brodie and decided that
the tape. recorded in the Orange
Police De partment headquarters last
Ap ril 18, is admissibl e and can be
heard by the jury.
Orange police said they recorded a
conversation between Cobb, 22, and his
paramour. Sandy Rockwood, then 17,
and turned the tape over to district
attoney's investigators for possible use
In hi• trial.
The tape wifl be played back while
~1iss Rock.,..·ood , molher of the allegedly
murdered child, listens from the wttness
stand.
Investigators said she listened to the
tape early today before belng transferred
from her county jail cell 14 the
courtroom and she agreed It was an
accurntc depiction of the April 23
conversation .
Mt" Rockwood l<!tlfled I a s t
Wednesday that Cobb told her when
ohe relurned home from work late April
11 that Todd, 31 was dead.
Sbe told the Jury that Ibo did no\
at fi rst believe him dtsplte whit ahe
said w., a long hl1tory of beatings
In relationship between Cobb and her
son.
Bui then, she testified, she wu shown
the beaten body of the little boy In
his crib ;and was later ordered by Cobb
to remain on the living room couch
for the next 24 hours.
Testifying that she was 11verY much
afraid" of Cobb at that point, Miu
RockWood said she was or<fered to drive
him to a remote construCtk>n· ·Ille in
the Anaheim area where he burled the
cardboard bo• containing the 11\lle boy's
body in a sewer line. ·
She said she again acted on Cobb's
Instructions and noUl!ed 0r1111e police
that her little boy was mlssln1.
Police asal!ted by coocemecl nelihbon
and many volunteers ICOUred the Orlllli•
area for five day1 before allea«f
stetemenll by Mlss Rockwood IDd Cobb
led them to the Anaheim ma 11111
the dlocovery of the d!lld'1 body.
Miss llockwoocl, who 11 oervtnc ~· .,,..year lall term on acceuory cbaraea,
1!11> testified that htr son wu beaUn
ll!d humlllated by Cobb throu&boul Ole
couple's two-year retationlhlp. : '
She testified that lhe hid llllally
decided to pennanenUy ead h 1 r
rel1tlonthlp with Cobb lhorlly before Todil •dled and !hat lbe Ud her ""' """ to move t!>e next day to ail apartmeal Ibo iented In tbe Oranp .....
II II aJlepd that lea than U boun
before that plaoned move Cobb ll1tllcted
1,111 iDJurlet on the child Wlllle he
and Todd ,. .... alone ID tbe llolnt, · '
. Se,,..-~Jt for Gas
: Si~on· to Urg~ Li~it on Sale1
WASHINGTON (UPI) -(aced with growing t.rafllc "Jams at
ga!OUne •t.aUona, ener0 chief William E. Simon Is expected shortly
to urge gas statloJil to Ml! Wb. CllltolDU I minimum amount of IU
to prevent driven from buying one. or two gallons al a Ume, lt wa.s
leaiucl today,.' Ener;y Oflldll• blame ·PJlrt ol !he long lines at gas stations on
motorists who want to . "top ofr' their tanks at every opportunity
' lust to keep the tank fUIJ, rather than waiting unUI they are actual· ,
• ylnneedofaaa. ,, · '
· As much as five pe~nt of the nation's gaoolioe shol'lafe "cOllld
be due to motorists keeping-j t in their gas tailks/' etJeigy o(ficials
said. • • • Simon is reported conalllering urging a limit of five or 10 gal·
Ions per sale, ill• .IOUfC9' 1111!1, ' -Shnon also is exp!'tled.to urge gas st.aUons to post \heir hours
of busmess. Officials ·say gas is being consumed unnecessarily by
motorists cruising areas it't search of open gas stations.
Study Legislature
Laguna Student,s Battle
Fog on. Capital Trip
.
After a. start, followed by another
sbrt, 33 .students from South Lagtma's
_Aliso ~1 eluded· the log and finally
arrived .• in Sacramento Wednesday for
a day..Joilg 1ook at the workings of state
government.
Arriving three hours late, Uie group
or sixth grade students had to rush
through a busy schedule that Included
a chat \ldth Assemblyman Robert
Badham, a visit to Sen. Denn.is
carpenter's office, a lour or the capital
building IDd a qulclt stop at Suiters
Fort. ·
The delay-riddled trip began 11 9:30
1.111. wbon the stuclenta llld .three faculty
advisors gathered ID the predawn
darkness at Aliso '• parking lot for the
trip to Orange County Airport.
They, went through security · clieel<s
al)d wail<d In the mimlns cold on
the nm.way only to learn' that their
flight had been canctlled because of
log.
Air Cillllornla then OOsed the group
to Ontario Airport for the flight. Midway
In the trip, the captain announced they
c:ooldn't land in sacramento because or log there.
The plane finally landed in Oakland
and everyone boarded buses for the
Four Men Seize
Five .Hostage&··,
l1i Bomb Attempt
' 'SINGAPORE (AP) -Four men tri'ed
lo blow up a Shell oil refinery here
today, then seized five hostages abOard
a ferry and threatened to kill themselves
and the hostages Wlless they got safe
coDduct to an Arab coun'try, officials
said.· I
The Singapore government said it
would meet their demands.
O!flclab said the terrorists attempted
to blow up three oil storage tanks but
managed lo set only one afire. They
described them as three Japanese and
one "Arab-looking" man. -
In a note dropped overboard from
the ferry In Singapore harbor, the men
identified themselves as members of
the radical Japanese Red Army and
the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Pale&Une.
They said they set off the explosion
"for the solidarity with Vietnam
revoluUonal people, and for ·making
rcvolutional situation after considering
the situation of today's oi1 crisis." They
didn't elaborate.
Members of the Red Army took part
in the Lod airport massacre in Israel
in 1972. The Popular F,ront is the Marxist
Arab gtoup that hijacked American and
European airliners to a Jordanian desert
in 1970 and blew them up.
tw1>hour trip to Sacramento.
"It really worked out okay,'' instructor
Barbara Mudge said today. "'Iba.. kids
got to see the Golden Gate Bt'ldge,
the Oakland Bay Bridge and San
Francisco.''
After the rushed tour a r o u n d
Sacramento. Including a brief look at
the Governor's ?\.1ansion, the group
headed to the Sacramento airport for
the trip home:
When they boan!ed the plane, they
found a special passenger on the Dl1ht.
As>emblyman Badham decided to !Ake
their filght back to Newport Beach.
"The trip home was great. The kids
were able to see 1.1L Whitney. They
learned a lot about the geography of
the state," said Mrs. Mudge.
Five of the 3.l "earned their wings"
on the trip. It was the first time they'd
been on an airplane.
•
From Page l
PARK •••
the posted speed, they said.
Two women at the park Tuesday
afternoon said they felt the can on
the road adjacent to the play areas
were traveling too fast, even if they
were within the speed limit.
"We always tell the kids, 'stay on
the sidewalk, stay on· the sidewalk,'
but you neYer know," said Bineke Hall
who played wtlll her two children Kirsten
and llrian.
Bonnie Rettig said s"he comes to the
park about once a week. "It's pretty
hazardous akm8 there. ~t only takes
a· split 8eCOlld for the kids lo run out "
she said. · '
City oUi<:tals pointed oot that one
of the difficulties with the area is the
layout of the canyon playgrond and the
lack of space for automobile parking.
Cars 1 parked along the curb next to
the playground screen children from
on-coming driven but II the parking
were removed to give drivers a clear
view. the remaining parking would be
so far away that small children and
thtj.r mothers would be walking much
farther along the busy road, creating
more of a hzard.
The lowering of speed to 15 miles
per hour was said not 14 be possible
for the area, they Aid.
Mothers, however, are g1rding for a
battle to get someUUng done and are
readying a petition campaign and an
en masse turn-out at the city council
meeting.
Killer Whale Dies
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A 6,000-pound
kill er whale died Tueaday night ·at Sea
World mari ne park, about four months
after the 20-foot male was captured
near Seattle.
From P.,,e l
GOWWYN . • •
fl'Oll1 the .--bl ... bonl
ID Warsaw, Poland, to America, Goldwyn
was an independent in thought and
action . lie remained Independent through
tbe •lormy y'Wt which uw him rlae
from ·a $3-a-week glow:rnaker to
mulllmtlliooalre In the at0vle Jnduslry
which he helped lomld.
He became in terested lo movie-n;iaklng
!Vh•n ha ·~ropped Into 1 ni~odeon
on Broadway to Watch a flvMninute
comedy reel.
He talked his brother-in-law, Jeae
L. Lasky, lnto forming a movie
proclucUon co111paey· with capltel or
ll0,000. Gotd.,Yn and Lasky sent a young
friend, Cecil 8. DeP.1ille, then a
playwright, to Hollywood to take
advantage of year-round sWllhine.
Four years later the fiedgling company
became the $2S million fam~ Players·
Lasky Corp. Thil company later became
Paramount pictures.
Jn 1918, Goldwyn organized Goldwyn
~ctures Corp., wh.ich later became the
gt.ant Metro-Goldwyn Mayer. But he
withdrew lo become an owner-meinber
of United Artists CoJ1>0ration with
Joseph ~-Schen ck. Douglas Fairbanks.
Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin and
D. W. Griffith .
He broke off his association with
United ArtistS in 1940, charging that
his studio alone was carrying the
production burden· while other members
sat back and shared in the profits.
He brOught to the screen sucb figures
as Lionel Barrymore, Geraldine Farrar.
Irene Rich, Le wis Stone, COnstance
Bennett, Ronald Colman, Viln1a Banky,
Joa n Blondell, Helen Hayes, Eddie
Cantor, Loretta Young, hfelvyn oOuglas,
Merle Oberon and Fredric A.1arch.
He spotted a lanky cowboy extra on
the ltl ooe day and made Gary Cooper
a stir ID "The Winoing of Barbara
Worth."
Goldwyn was divorced from his flrtt
wife, Blanche Lasky, in 1915. Ten years
later he married Frances Howard, a
New York actress. They had a aon,
Samuel Jr., born In ltna.
Oakla1id Sror
Reggie Jackson
Sued in, Count)'
Dakland Athletics' slugger Reggie
Jackson an<I ·his club have been IUed.
for $300,000 by five Orange County fans
who claim the colorful qatfielder did
a little 1tugging ol! tht diamond.
John B. Christensen, Gordon C. Schick
Robert M. !>ling, .John B. Oberto and
Scott. ~ clllnr IA tbair ~r
Court actio"n that Jackson leaped lnto
the stands at Anaheim Stadium Jasl
Aug. 3, threw them alt to the ground
and then kicked and beat 1hem.
Noting reports that Jackson's eXJ>losion
was triggered ·by fans hurling debris
onto the field -the A's won the game
2 to I -the five pla,lntiffs deny that
they were involved 'ln -s uch actions and
that Jackson's attack was unprovoked.
Also named in the lawsuit as a
subsidiary Oefendanl Is Charles O
Finley, lhe club owner. ·
Visitors Sliown
Sights of Laguna
. More than 200 wives of dele1ates
atlending the International Swimming
Pool Institute convention in Anaheim
came to Laguna Beach today to take
tan Art Colony sights.
The lailleo · repreacnted countries from
an over the world, including Australia ,
Ireland, England, Europe and Africa.
While in Laguna., the group vi.sited
the Forc!t Avenue MalJ, Eschbach's
ft~lorists and other doYmtown shops.
Alter spending the morning in Laguna,
the group went to the Tale of the Whale
Restaurant , Newport Beach, for lunch.
IN·STORE MICRO·WAVE DEMONSTRATION by a HOME ECONOMIST
Saturday Feb. 2, 12 noon til 5 P.M.
PORTABLE
MICROWAVE OVEN
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90 DAYS CAS 'H
WITH APPllOVID CRIDl1'
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11111111111 Clsta Mesa-P111n .541·7788
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_Saddlehaek
EDITION
Today's l'lnal
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 67, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANU>;RY 31, 1974 TEN CENTS
:Uni High Divided on
I,
Open Campus Pro·posal
I
Ttte Irvine school community split
down the generation gap Wednesday as
school tf-ustees .debated whether or not
to allow University High School students
, to go off campus for lunch.
! Citing te·ars of possible increased drug
use, smotlng, and crime among students,
a majority or adults at the school board
meeting argued against adopUon of an
"open campus" policy.
t
I
"I think it's a cop-out for teachers
to let the students go where they want
during JWJch ,0 complained one man. "As
a parent, I want to know where my
kid's at during school hours."
On the olher side of the issue were
a half-dozen ' student speakers who
argued that achools ought to give them
the option to make "responsible choices."
"We believe that students who are
on the verge of becoming le&ally voting
citizens shouht be -permitted to manifest
their respoOJibility by making lhia kind
of: choice," said Martin Cronin, a student
repretentative to the Board of Trustees.
After nearly 90 minutes of discussion,
trotees finally tabled the controversial
issue, promising to make a decision
in two weeks.
"I'd like to do some thinking abou~ an 0£ this stuff," said Board President
Charles H. Bouianeer in closing off
discuailon. "I haven't been able to make up my mind on this yet." ·
Students presenled survey information
to trustees showing Uiat 901 of university
High Scllool student" favored a nopen
campus policy while only 99 oppooed
it.
But students also presented data from
a poll that showed parents In the
commwrlty oppooecl open campus by
a S to 2 margin. '
Student investigation' further pointed
out that the citY's police department
oppoeed the, open campOo policy.
Acknowledging lhls opposition, Cronin
said students were asking for a 10-week
trial period. If students s h o w e d
themselves Incapable of handling the
additional responsibility, the tugh school
senior said the open, campus policy
should be. revoked.
Most parents in the audience, however,
said the open campus policy shouldn't
even be tested.
"Once students are let off campus,
1 bet t,hey'll either stay off for the
rest of the day or come back late
to classes," .predicted one woman.
Another woman complained t h at
students "can't demand responsibilties:
they have to earn it." She then argued
the acknowledged fact that many
st udents curren tly smoke Jn restrooms
on campu s as evidence that they haven 't
yet fully matured. .
Trustee Sharon Sircello was the only
school board member to come out openly
for a non-restrictive policy.
''I don't think the dangers are so
great that we can't risk trying open
campus." said ~irs. Sircello.
''That's the only way we'll find out
whether it works," she said.
According to a student poll or 30
Orange County high shools, 20 now have
closed campus policies, seven have open
campus policies, and three other schools
now have closed ca mpuses aCter having
abandoned an open campus policy.
Tapes· Nix
John Dean
Three Murdered
I
-Anderson Oakland Mortuary Employes Slazightered
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Summaries
of a March 21, 11173 tape-recorded
meeting between President Nixon and
John Dean, his ronner counsel, support
Nixon's contention be dkl not know about
the Watergate coverup until then,
cohunnist Jack Anderson said today.
Anderson said sources with access to
the secret summaries told him the tapes
refute Dean's sworn testimony that
Nixon knew of the coverup as eerly
... Sept. 15, 1972.
But, wrote Anderson , "In view ,of
the erased 18 minutes of the vital June
NIXON SEEKS TO PROVE
COMMAND. An•lyil1, P•ge 4 . .
NIXON ATIORNEY QUESTIONS
ARCHIVES APPRAISER, P•ge 5
!ll, 19'12 ta"Pi, If IS '=-\\•"that the
White House summaties don't flisclose
the whole Rory."
lAndenoa"s a>llDM optiein• recwarJt
on the Dally Pilol editorial page.)
"1biJ is going to take you by surprise, ..
Dean is . reported to have told the
Presidenl March 21 when be allegedly
told Nixon of White House aides,
iDchiding hh:nseU, who were involved
In the coverup.
"Ob, John, you have no problem,"
Nixon said, according to the summaries.
"Yes, I have," Dean &Uegedly replied.
Dean then evaded Nixon's question
as to whether his chief aide, H.R
Haldeman, was involved, Andenon
reported, and lhey went on to discuss
"lbe possible guilt of Jeb Stuart
Magruder, Frederick LaRue, G. Gordon
Liddy, E. Howard Hunt and other
Watergate figures."
Ni:1on told Dean raising $1 million
to pay for "the costs of Watergate",
according to the colwnnist, "Will be
no problem." But Ni:1on eventually ruled
oul paying the defendan_ts to keep silent.
Asked by Dean about granting
executive clemency, Nixon is reported
to have said, "That's out. We can't
offer clemency to anybody."
'l1le IUllllD8l'ies also ~w, Anderson
said, that Nixon told Dean in reference
to bl! aides who were lmplicated:
"Everybody has to go to the Graud
Jury."
41'I'he 1UD1111aries give the President's
verbatim language, including some
startling cuss words," A n de r so n
~-Meanwhile, the Watergate prosecutors
have_ 0 no bu1s for believing" Dean lied
and .have no lmmecfuif. plans to charge
him with perjury, on uststant to special
prooecutor 1"oo Jaworski said today.
Asslatant special prosecutor Richard
. Davis, appearing lo federal coun to
(See TAPES, Pqe Ii
..
Bilce-Tflfl•·•eadu .-·. · , ·'. . ,
On l/ridu, · Irviae PG.ltce and firemen of Ille ubivarsity Fire 'StaUbn ·
on-ZO..SU,0! .at 'CAulpus Drlve,.begi~ helping cyclists; affix li~e~s.
Mrs .. Beatrice Beaman of Culverdale ts aistste<f ·6y ftr~man Bob Bare.
The $1 plastic stickers carry number matching that of records files
to be kept by Irvine police to aid in recovery of lost or stolen bikes.
Bike licensing programs will be held Feb. -16 in Walnul•.Village•illd
University Park Shopping Centers. , · ". . : • , '. .
•
Airport Drive Starred
By County .Businessmen
By L. PETER KRIEG
• Of llM o.llY Plllf It.fl
. A.group of Orange Coonly buslnelsmen
have ·launched a fl00,000 ruiid-ralslng
campaign deeiped to finance a ~
relations tdfort··on lleball ol .c>ronae
County Airport. • • . •
More than 200 per-a~·a
kldoJff lomc:heon Wedoe1dal" noCi\ et "!he
Airporler Inn sponsored by I h e
t;ormmmity Airport CollJ!!'iL 'Ibey heard
a rail .ol speakers, including Airport·
Director ~ Bresoaluin, m a k e
plU:bel for t!>elr support.
1,Bremabarl )reiterated his predi.:Uon
that tho: alrpoli will have to shut down
II Ille C01111ty doeln' get a waiver next
month from ne.w state noise standards.
OAKLAND (AP) -Three mortuary
employes were found hacked to death
in their blood-splattered fugeral home
early today only four days after roving
"psychopathic" gunmen shot four people
dead at random across the bay in San
Francisco.
Police said apparently nothing bad
RELATED STORIES, Pagos 3 and 5
been stolen.
Police said the body of one mortuary
·victim was bound between two pews
in a first~floor vtewing room in the
Albert Brown -'1. a room used
for mourners .to view remains.
The victims . were ~ identified a !I
Clarence and Dori! ~Bryant, live-in
'· '
l'• • .. ' • ~ .. "' ... :asg-~·~·
,Die in Ct-h
Of Pan Am Jet
PAGO PAGO, American Samoo (UPI)
- A Pao American World Airways Jloe.
Ing 7fJI with 101 penoos aboard crashed
in a violent thunderstorm 1,000 feet short
of the nmway today and ·bunt into
flames, burning to death most of those
aboard when they were tnlpped In the
wreckage.
Wllnesles said 91 peraons died, most
burned to death wben trapped Inside
the fiamlof wreckage. Of the 10
sunrlvors, several were not expected
to live.·
1be Federal Aviation Admloistralloo
ordered the airport, on the island of
Tutuila midway betw . ..., Hawaii and
Ne'll Zealand, closed following the crash.
. Dr. Peter F. Yeates, ·medical director ,
at the Pago Pago Medical Center, said
"'most ol the dead fried In the plane.''
Veales said the survivors were three
women and seven med and that eight
were in serious or worse concUlioo with
bums over 50 percent-of their body.
Two survivors were in fair condition
and able to walk about.
"We all tried to get j)Ut and jammed
the exits," one oc.the two male survivors
said. "I managed to get out over a
wing but · most of those aboard· did
not."
1be pilot, Capt. Leroy Peteraon of San
Francisco, radioed the Pago Pago control
tower shortly before U., crash et 11 :~
a.m. (3:~ a.m. PDT) !hat be was en-
countering violent thunder squalls and
one ol lbe>e was In plogresa wl1eo the
plane hit 1,000 feel ~ of the nmway.
Tbe alra:alt was flight 808 from
(See JET CRASH, Pqe I)
President of Saddleliack
The State Dewtmenl of Aeronautlcl
will conduct 1 bUrlog an the v'rla&:e
req-Feb. If.I! In Santa Ana. •
Bresnahan also confirmed In an
Interview alter the meeting" thal the
Calllomia Publlc Ulillties Qlm-n
(PUC) ts lnvestlpling on Io In g
complalntB about tho lack , ol l"'kiog
and other facilitlerr al the airJr!>rt.
Oakland Stnr
Reggie 1C1Fkson
Sued in County Defends College's .Role
By JAN WORTH
OI .. Del" Plllf .....
II 11ie.. ...... no other commuolly
colleps In a JOO-mile radlus, Saddlebod<
Collep SUpt. Jl'red Bremer polDled out w-,. Dlll!t, _bis lchcrol "-.ldn't
have ball die enuclllD It does."
"Unf«tuDalely . we IN rrumrunded
by older, ettoblill*i "tcboola," Bremer
told the; Mias~· Viejo Homeowo•n
"-lotion. • ere -Uy COllllJll'inl UI wt lhetlt, and tllll'I
not. lllr."-
"Doa't people understand !hit you
c .. i haft a lllll-blown c o 11 e g e
01ernlght!" Br-llld. lilt l'll't putillc ._ ..... -l>elore a
"""' ball meelloc o1 tho bomeownen ·-otlon -.... arnadm:J 'by iome
... -hour ~-to the impending pullout ol .Tuatin Unified
School District portion of the Saddleback
• dlltrlct. Saddleblct 11 !o Mbalon Viejo.
•a -j • . If the lhrealmed wllhdrnal by
diqrunlled TUltln -II go ea
tlu)llCb, tile ICbool'• -will
be 'cut '1 17 -I and 111 8-led .-bf a per<eot. •
-lermed the TUltln effort "the bia-1 pnrblem "° lace thll yeor.
"I'm -tbe ~ _.,...._
11 are --·" bo Aid. "IUt 1 want to oel the r-4 lllnllbl 11.e
baV. been llWll' mlltto-made.''
In an energetic Mlf.m d1I • IDied
with llllllltlca, 8-compared
Sadcllebaclt'• coane ~ wl-tb CUellll College, Bual ... .... c.-nep of the Canyo111, ocboaltr ....
oplllOd at abollt the -time
(See BREMER, Pa .. I)
Martin UVan, uecutive director of
the CAC, told · the audience the PUC
WU auinc the alrport becaU3e of
Inadequate facilities.
11That was a milquote, ,.. Branaban
(Se ADIPOltT, Pqe I)
'
'Informed' Burglars
Ooklaod Alhletlcs' lluaer Reggie
Jac1tson· and his club have been sued
for $300,000 by five orance Coonty fans
who claim the ~ llUlflelder did
• little slualni off the diamond.
John B. Chriitenoeo, Gordan C. Schick,
Robert M. lllln8, Jolla B. Oberto and
H, R S f Scott ~ claim ·kl tbelr &lperlor 1t estaurant a e . Court action that Ja<bon leaped Into
' the stands at Anahllm ·Stadium lut llurlltn who .,.,.,.ntly knew Ille Aug. 3, lhmo them ill to the ground
-ill tM olllce aafe In a and then kicked and boat them.
Lapna 'HUii ~ ·"-urant helped Noting reports lh•t Jickson's OXJ1loalon
tbemlel,. to ... ii IUlllp Wednesday na ttiUerod by fllJI •burlin1 ilebris
'llOI. Onop CGldJ 8llerlll's olllcen ooto the-lleld -the A'I --the game aild. _ . :,.. r l to 1 -the five p!ai,,tlffs deny that
Dopotlea ml Uii lol\bdm also ~ Ibey we'" Involved In such actlooa end.
a -bf to ~ entry· to 1....,.. that Jackloo'• aitacl:. iraa unprovoked.
Plddlon Inc. llldle 'the mtaunntl -Also named ln the lawsuit 11 a
drml for the 111(111. Tbe tbllr JI lllllng/;-dlary defendant · ls Charita 0.
lnveat!gated loday. ' Flnley, the clu• owner.
•
caretakers of the building, both in their
70s, and Michael Moore, in his 20s,
believed to be a mortician trainee, police
said.
Deputy Police Chief Tom Donohue said
the bodies were discovered by mortuary
handyman Hans Langschwagber who
entered the building at 7: 10 a.m. and
saw the bodies lying in several biood-
splattered rooms of the funeral hime.
The victims had been slashed or
hacked with sharp instruments, police
said. .
lie said the three had probably been
dead about 10 hours. When the murders
were discovered, two television sets were
still on in the upstairs living quarters
of the twq-story building In the heart
of Oakland.
Ul'IT .......
MOVIE PIONEER DEAD '-
Samuol Goldwyn, 91
Movie Pioneer
Samuel Goldwyn
Succumbs at 91
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Samu e I
Goldwyn, one of the last of Hollywood's
fabulous pioneer moviemakers, died
toclaI. He was 91.
Goldwyn died during the night at his
home where he had been under the
care of a nurse.
A family spokesman said he died
"quietly in his sleep."
He was released earlier this month
from St. John's Hospital In Santa Monica
where be had been wxter treatment
for an wxlisclosed ailment for several
weeks.
Goldwyn who helped found three
studios -MGM, Paramount and
Goldwyn Studios -WU lncapocillled
for the pas! ball-dozen years, the resull
of a stroke.
In November, ll'ro. Goldwyn lµmed
control of his motion picture empire
over to bls wife, Frances. He was then
aa and a111n1.
Medical staterr.enu attached to the
petition indicated be bad suffered from
cerebnl lhron'fbosls and a r t e r I a I
sclerwll since March of 1988.
Al that lime, the value of bis estale
wu put at $19. 7 million and his yearly
lnoorne at fel0,000. Mrs. Goldwyn bad
been active lo her husband's buslneu
since 1934.
From the lime be slnrck out on his
own at the ase of 11. making hii way
from the ghetto whe'" he was born
In Warsow, Poland, to Americor Goldwyn
(See GOLDWYN, Page !I '
' Bryant's body was found in a small
parlor near the viewing room where
the younger victim was di scovered.
~frs. Bryant, dressed only in her
bathrobe, was found near the rear door
of the building.
Donohue said Mrs. Bryant, and
perhaps her husband , may have been
trying to escape their attacker or
attackers when cut down.
Police could not give a motive for
the slaying, saying that nothing had
appa rently been stolen.
The discovery came as San Francisco
remained tense while police conducted
an intensive search for the men who ·
killed four and gravely wounded another
in a series of motiveless lhootings
Monday nigh~
Musick Seeks
Substation
•
For Niguel
By TOM BARLEY
Of tflt DlllY l'lt.I S"'"
Sheriff James A.' Musick said today
he intends to ask Orange County
supervisors to approve plans for a new
sheriff's substation in Laguna Niguel.
Musick said 40 percent of the crime
now logged by bls department happens
in the south county. He said the center
almost certainly will be built in La~a
JVlguel's South County Civic Center if
it is approved.
Musick said the substation. will serve
the communities of Aegean Hills,
Capistrano Beach, Capistrano Highlands,
Dana Point, El Toro, Laguna Hills,
Laguna Niguel, Lake Forest, LeisW'8
World, Uve Oak Canyon, Mission Viejo,
Modjeska Canyon, New World, San Juan
Capistrano, Silverado Canyon, South
Laguna, Three Arch Bay and Trabuco
Oaks.
Musick and his patrol captains
predicted today that the new center
would be a trem endous improvement
on the present system in which policing
of the south county territory is handled
through the sheriff 's complex in Santa
Ana.
They said the move will allow the
department to increase the leve l of patrol
services and public contact with south
county residents.
At the same time , they said, the
move would result in substantial savings
in man hours and vehicle use.
Musick said the 1111batatlon will provide
residents with local guidance In time
of emergency, more immediate acce$5
to lawmen in law enforcement problems
(See SHERIFF, Page I)
Oruge Ceut
•
Weatlter
Mostly cloudy skies are on the
agenda Friday, with cooler temper.
atures along the coast. Highs at
the beaches 56, rising to 1111 Jn.
land. Ove.,,;ght lows In the !Os.
INsmE TOBI\ y
Californ ia paid $863,221 In
survivor at1d retirement .,...
fits Jast year for 116 former
legislators and state officiall.
S IOTJI, Page 11.
L M... 14 C••flnll• J c1_,.. swr c-. .. c-.. °""' '"""' 11 ....,... ...... ............. ~ ,,._. .... ,
Hy..... JI -" ,,_ u.lln 11
·.
I
~ UAl\,.Y PILOI JS
Most Wru1t
Council
For Viejo
Final results ot a survey of Ji.Ussion
Vie,io residents about loca l government
altemattves ghQw 90 percent of those
v.·ho responded \\'.!lllt to see a municipal
advisory council set up "without further
delay."
In a town hall meeting at ~fusion
Viejo Wednesday night , Pat Schubert ,
who added the 1'.1AC (1,415) study com·
uiittee said 10.9 percent of the 7 100
questionnaires mailed were returned.
• But the most enlightening part of
the SW"Vey, fitrs. Schubert said, were the
spontaneous comments some 9 O o
~ents added after they completed
the multiple-choice quiz.
Residents expressed opinions o n
eVerything from saving the orange
groves of Jhe Saddlebac~ Valley to
building a public ice-skating rink to
Setting up a local train service.
· In general, most of the remarks
f"'vored the MAC concepl-\Vhelher for
the Saddleback Valley as a whole or J
for h·lission Viejo alone. If set up, it
would have five to nine elected members.
· It v.-ould make recommendations to
the Orange County Board of Supervisors
on local matters of public health and
welfare, parks, law enforcement, roads
and traffic.
From Pqe I
GOLDWYN .••
I
was an independent in thought and
action. He remained independent through
the atonny years which saw him rise
from a $3-a-week glovemaker t o
multimillionaire in the movie industry
which he helped found .
. , ,He became interested in movie-making
when he dropped into a nickelodeon
on Broadway to watch a fiv~minute
com~y reel.
· He talked his brother-in-law, Jesse
L. La!ky, into fonning a movie
production company with capital of
'20,000. Goldwyn and Lasky sent a young
friend, Cecil B. DeMille, then a
pla)'J'rlgbJ, Jo Hollywood to take
advantage of year-rotmd sunshine.
Four years later the fledgling company
became the $25 million famou.! Players-
Lasky Corp. This company later became
Paramount pictures.
In 1918, Goldwyn organized Goldwyn
Pictures Corp., which later became the
giant Metro-Goldwyn Mayer. But he
~·ithdrew to become an owner·member
o,( United Artist~ Corponi tion with
Joseph l\.f. Schenck . Douglas 1''airbanks,
Mary Pickford, Charlie Chaplin and
D. IV. Griffith.
He broke orr his association ~·Ith
United Artists in 1940, charging that
bis studio alone was carrying the
production burden while other members
sat back and shared in the profits.
Irvine Planners
Eye W oodhridge
Village Project
After a joint stud)' mee ting with
community s c r v i c e s co mmissioners.
Irvine planning commissioners take up
tfl,e zoning plan for the ·l,715-acre
\fbOdbridge Village tonigh t.
•The joint session begins at 7:30 in
city hall. 4201 Campus Drive.
, Among concerns expected lo be
covered in the discussion of the plann ed
Community are:
: -Resolution of the flooding problem.
: o-Traffic, noise and air pollution the
rM:,w village may create.
' -Phasing of commercial and school
developmenl
: -Provision of moderate cost housing.
OU.Mal COAST ..
DAILY PILOT
TN Ori""' CNtl DAILY PILOT, wflll wt.~
II Ull'lltlned IM Htwt·ll'rn1, 11 pullllllllM fW
"" O••noe CO.ti l"llblltllmt Compeny, Stpt.
rile Mlllilllt 1r1 llUlllllMll, M....:lty throutfl
Frldty, for Ctlll Mt", NtWPO!'I 8e1cll.
MIJfl•ll'ltlol! 8NCll/Fo ..... t11n Valley, l11una
l tKl'I, l••lntl!ttOO+tc..ck u'4 St n Cltffttoft111
i.n JW!I Ctplt1r1no, A li"'illti •'lloNI
'°lllOn h ,ub1ltllld S&t11rd1yt tnd 5uncN)'1.
f~ ~lntlclll PllDlltll .... Plf~I fl ti Jll Wn t
lt1 5trttt, C°'!t M-. Ctlltomlt , f1'2i.
Robt rf N. W11d
l"•Hllltftl 11111 Pullli!.lll'r
J1c~ R. C11rl1y
\lic:t l"••kllttl lltll c;..,,.r11 M1Mgtr
Tli1"''' K11•il Efl,.,.
11101'11111 A.. Murpliiflt
Matltt!N Ed•ltr
Clri•tf11 H. l"' RiJ.1NI P. Nill
.... htetil Me,,..lnt H I*• .......
CNlt Mtt.t: UO Wt1! .. , •h'MI
H"""'1 lttd'I: J:W H'""""' lfl.l""trf
L.,_, 9"dl: m 1'.,ttl ·-""""""'*' 1ttc11; 1,.,, eM<t1 aev111r.,. SM °""'"; JCS 'NOf.11111 CllftlN 1t111
'"•••• 1n•1 '42"4)21
Cl ii .... .W.M.11 I ; '42·1171
S.. Cl111 I lh Al ..,.. ffll
Tnln,•111 4tJ-44JU
C#rl'liitM, "11. 0....... '°''' """""""""' ~. ... ,..... tftotltt.. Ul\llllrtl-., .. ,""" -nw tr .... trllt.......,. ...
-v .. ·•••ti• """""' .... 111 -..... ~ --·
ltcW ~ ....... et e.t• .... Ctllflrilll. ............ .., Urtltt •• --..i ., _,. ••• ......,., llWI...,., .....................
From Pqe I
JET CRASH •••
AU<kilM. N.Z. Jo ff..,.lulu , ~rt most
of tbe' crew lived. wllh an lntennedlate
stop at l'sgo Pago. Msny of lhc
pusengtn were scheduled to make
connecting filgbu for Ille mainland wh<n
lhe. plane wu scheduled to arrive In
llooolulu at 6:3S 'p.m. (9:35 a.m. PDT.).
In San Frandtco, Pan American
Identified Ille oociqJIJ crew 11 Petenen,
of Salt Loke City ; Rlch.W V. C.ines,
llolf Moon Bay, Calif.; James S. Phillips,
Sonoma, C.llf., and Gery W. Green,
Seattle.
A temporary morgue was set up et
the Pago Pago Airport which was greatly
enlarged by the Navy during \Vorld
War II. l~O\\'ever, the wreckage of the
plane \\•as stlll blazing-hot ll>urs alter
the crash and moat ·o1-the bodies were
still Inside the wreckage.
A Pan American Bpeing 707 crashed
July 23 shortly after takeoff from
Papeete, Tahiti, killin g all 79 passengers
and crew members aboard. .
Pan American said 49 of the
passengers had been scheduled to
disembark al Pago Pago and that Jhe
other 42 were en route to Honolulu and
Los Angele3.
UCI Talk
SPEAKS ~T UC IRVINE
Candldlte Herb Halli
• ~
'
)
•
'No Campaign P:ledges'
' Candidate Hafif :Clainis
"Our next governor has golta· be
somebody who won't say the same old
thing ," Herb Hafif told UCI students
in a campaign speech Wednesday.
He didn't, and Hafif made it clear
he knows WOO that next governor shou.ld
be.
A Claremont attorney and forme r
president of the California Trial Lawyers
Association, Hafil, 44, blasted polilicians,
intellectuaJs, the criminal justi ce syste1n
and attorneys.
He is lhe seventh Demoorat to declare
his candidacy for governor.
And though hl! admits San :F'rancisco
Mayor Joseph Alioto and Assemblyman
Bob Moretti, also candidates, would be
"reasonable in that they know how to
push the political buttons," but he told
From Page I
BREMER ...
Saddleback did six years ago.
Cuesta has 506 courses, Butte has
&n courses, and C.Ollege of the CanYons
has 502 courses, he pointed out.
Saddle back has 584 courses, he t said.
This term the school has 472 courses
in 550 sections.
"When yo,u ~9f!~.e vs on ~~ ~. we can hdld out" heads high, 1lfe\ sa,d,
"We have such a good reputation among
other community colleges that we have
even betn called 'the Harvard of the
Hills.' "The Tustin people have said our
administration is inflexible and refuses
to give inter-district permits," Bremer
said.
"But I want to tell you, last fall
we issued 1,900 permits and denied 340.
.If that's inflexibility I apologize.
"They say we don't have suUicient
staff. But our student·instructor ratio
is one to 22-and I'd like to know
which community college in Orange
County can match that," he said.
Bremer also cited that the Saddleback
library bas 56,000 volwnes -more, last
time I cowited, than Santa Ana College."
Santa Ana College lists 52,600 volumes.
He also pointed out that the school
offers 23 occupational programs1 with
five new ones proposed for next yea r.
His final defense was of the school's
tax rate and building pro gram.
After a $24 million bond issue was
dumped "disaslrously'' in Sept. 1971 ,
Bremer said !he school faced lwo
choices: to scrap its JO.year building
plan or find other mea ns to finance
j t.
"\\fe needed the buildings th en and
we need them now," he said. "So the
board levied a permissive tax."
The first year (1972·73) after the bond
defeat, the district's tax rate jumped
from 41 cents on $100 assessed val ua tion
·to 65 cents.
This year an additional permissive
tax was added. increasing the district
tax rate to 91 cents.
. The school's first permanent building.
its $3.9 million library, was opened last
summer.
"\Ve are keping faith \Vlth our
taxpayers by proceeding with the
building program as fast as possible,''
Bremer said. ''Building costs keep goin g
up. so the sooner we get our buildings.
the more money we can sa\'e.''
From Page I
SHERIFF ...
and a greater opportunity to meet the
men handling law enforcement In the area .
SherUf's officers planning the new
facility said they have no idea at this
time on the cost of the building needed
to etntralize south county operations.
But one senior of(Jcer said today that
he thought Jhe building: which will be
constructed with a view to P911ible later
expansion, could be paid for out or
the uvings effected' by the transfer
of between 30 and fO officers and patrol
cars to the area.
"Gasollne savings alone would be
tremendous," he said. "But we can't
Jllll • finger oo cost at this time until
we get a n!port from tbe bullding
department."
(,
the UCI group Tuesday "v.·e need
someone who is not political in that
way.
"Furthermore, you are not going to
get any campaign promises out of me,"
he said.
Sounding at times like a combina tion
of night-club e.ntertainer and old-time
evangelist, Hafif (pronounced 'half') told
the audience if he loses "I'll kill
myself .... or maybe move to Oregon."
Hafif said he believes narcotics
problems should be treated like a disease
as in England, 'rather than a crime.
He blasted the court system for
C'dtching "only 15 out of every 100
criminals-wasting resources chasing
homosexuals in toilets." ·
11e also called for revampillg the
taxing system so · as "not to penalize
those who Wal)t to keep their land in
agriculture.
Land use planning needs to be
overhauled onto 30-year timetables
plans. he suggested. "I favor rapid
transit. but it's too late," he said. "We-'11
have to build our cities from the inside
out !irst.
He said if be is elected he will begin
programs to return beaches to the public
over ~year period. • 1 •
A specialist in congestion of court
cases. Hafif coordinated a drive in U>s
Aageles ·County. last yea r that,crMOlted
in a more efficient court calendar at
::i n increased cost of 30 cents per
res ident.
He was honored as National Consumer
Advocate of the Year in 1973 in l\iiami ,
Fla.
Hafif also pointed out that he organized
JO Good Government chapters Jn the
state and founded the trial bar's
consumer protection and environment
committees.
A 27-year resident of Calilomia. Ha!if
attended Claffey C.Ollege and Pomona
College and graduated a Phi Beta Kappa.
Besides his law practice he has owned
restaurants, a general construction firm
manufacturing plants, and has promoted
concerts.
"I intend to be governor of all the
people," Hali! said. "1'11 represent no
special group.''
Irvine Parking
Lot to Receive
Federal Relief?
Irvine's longest rush hour parking lot
may be about to become eligible for
federa l relief.
G. Brent Muchow, city public works
director said today the stretch of Mac
Arthur Boule~d from J a m b o r e e
Boulevard to the San Diego Freeway
may be included in the Federal Aid
Urban (FAU) H"a ..
Despite $1ai1Y"lraffic jams on the main
route past Orange C.Ounty Aif1>0rt it has
not tcchnicaUy been considered 'an ur-
ban street.
~ha t's partly because the FAU map
\\'htch governs eligibility for federal
high~·ay constJilction funding , was drawn
\Vhen most of the area served by Mac
Arthur Boulevard was farmland.
Muchow said the state· Department
of Transportation has indicated,•the route
will be considered for addi tion to the
l<'AU area in Oi.:ange CoW1ty.
J
Asthma Victim
Sues Pest Finn
An lrvipe man who allegedly cltveloped
a severe asthmatic condition after bJs
home. was sprayed by exterminators Oct.
U sued Jhe company Wedn•sday for
$25,000 in damages.
Robert C. Levlsee of 1339 Siem Elena
Road claims in his Orange County
Superior Court action ' a 8 1 I n 1 t
Extermlnetics1 Inc .. that he Wu assured
an eight.hour lbsence from the house
would be sufficient for health purposes.
Levlsee claim• that the ~yrelhum med
by the compeny throujhOut the home
IS .l'MpollSible flo' the oooe\ d .hb Con~
d1Uon.
Frot11P .. el
.AIRPORT ..•
• • •aid. "But::! did -1 PUC in..,Uptor
11' m;'-offtCe not }CJlll qo, v
Re aald be doesn't know what action Ille PUC may be coniemplatlng, U any.
Bresnahan's ominoul forecast of a
cl06ed-down air focillty -dlillenced
lmmedlalely alJer the luncheon by Mn.
Jean Morril, 1 mamber or lh• N•1Yport
Beacb-bued Airport Action .ASOllClaJlon
that II suing Ille airport for fl50 mlUlon.
11They are not going to shut down
r1tbe airport, you and I know ~t,"
·•• J.tra. fl1orris said. 11.And we ar6 not
t11yl11g to make them close.down.
"All we want Is Lbe ettabii.$ment
of absolut e limitations on the JtUIDber
of flights and on tl)e ~ of .qperatlons
as there are now," 5be said. '1
"Bui Bob Clifford (president o1· Air
California ) just said in thete tba~Uie.re
was a 35 percent increase in passengers
this January compared with a year
ago. U that keeps up you know they
are going to ask for even more flights/'
she said. .
Clifford, fn belplng to rally support
for Jhe CAC, also pointed out Jhat
Orange County had the seventjl largest
retail sales in the U.S. last year and
ls currently ninth among the nation's
counties ill popularity. ·
"TO s8)-Orange •·County can live
wi.t~ralr; tr~~tion Js ricilculowl,"
Cllfl<znf srud. . • 0
Ariothei .speaker," Thomas Wolff .
president of t1* . Jrvine Industrial
Complex,· made the direct appeal for
money.
He &lid .membership in the cowicil
Will .... , al least $50, but he pushed
!'fowHling membenhips," which cost
between $500 and $5,000 each.
"'1iere are many businesses relyi/lg
on : that airport. And it will not serve
us if it is in Ontario or anywhere
else," Wolff said. '
Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers, who
reoollly propooed shifting Ille bult of
c:ornmerc1a1 aiJ1!0rl °"""'tloos to Onlario, wa. in the audience, ~ wilh !WI>
other supervisors, Ralph Diedrich and
Robert Battin. Caspers made DO
comment ..
Bresnahan said he is optimistic that
Orange County will get its waiver, but
he pointed out th.is is the first application
that will be heard and there is no
pre«deot.
"We must prove to thlt hearing
examiner that there is a dire need
for the airport - a need that outweighs
the inconvenience to the homeowners,"
he said .
"The burden will be on Orange County
to prove its case," he said.
"We can be quite sure that Newport
Beach will argue every claim that we
m~e in our applic,ation," Bresnahan
said.
"The hearing examiner will not ))e
knowledgeable with airport problems po
we won't koow what to expect," he
said. .
"U ,we're' go~~to :.win ... we:re. eoif'ig
to ltil•e·a· lbt of htlp'from 'dillerenl 'in-
dividuals," he said.
Bresnahan said he "can't see how
lhe ,request will ·be ~ because the
st;lle will l(O<ln be faced will> stmilar
requesis' from Leis Aqgeles 3nd · s8n
FranC!seo ·airport•.
"And ·if they deny their claims, they'll
close down the entire airport system
in the United States," Bresnahan said.
A partial budget for Jhe CAC klcludea
more tllan $32,000 in salaries, fl&,000
for displays, $2,000 for airport signs
and fl5,000 !or brochures, posters and
campaign mailings.
British Miners
Casti1ig Ballots
LONDON (UPI) -Tens o! lhousands
of coal miners voled today in a ballot
ordered by their union to decide ''lhether
to plunge Britain into a national mines
shutdown \\o'hich the government said
lVOUld spell disaster for the coitntry.
Un ion officials said 80 to 90 percent
of the miners were voting "yes" for
a walkout.
The balloting was scheduled to go
on throughout today and Friday. The
result Is to be announced Sunday night
or Monday.
Seareh for. Gas
Simon .to~Urge-Limii op, Sales
W ASIUNGTON (UPI) -Faced with growing tra!llc Jams at
gasoline staUons, energy chief William E. Simon is expected shortly
lo ur,. pa llllloaa to Mil 11cb cutlomer a mllllmum amouoi of· gu
to proven! driven tJ'om buying oiui ot two gallons at 1 .time, lt wu •
learned today. •
Energy olliclals blame part of the long lines at gu statiohS on
motorists who want to "top off" their tariks at every opportunity
just to keep the tank full rather \ban waJUng unUI they are actual·
ly in need of gas. · · ·
As much as !Mo 1>6~t of the nation's gasoline shortag .. "could
be due to motorists Reeping it in their gas tanks," energy officials
said. Simon is roported considering urging a limit of five or JO gal·
lons per saJe, the sources said.
• Simon also is expected to urge gas atatio111 to post their hours
of business, Officials iay''gas ls being consumed unnecess arily by
motorists cruising areas in search of open gas stations.
More Fog Due for Coast
'
-Otherwj~e High Clouds
'
The log that blanketed the Orange
Coast today is likely to return for the
next few mornings, accordirig to the
U. S. Weather Service.
Forecasts call for rontinuation of the
coastal fog that partially closed Orange
County Airport and had log horns
blowing from Seal Beach to San
Clemente today.
Grove Wife
Held in Stab
Death of Mate
A Garden Grove housewife is in Orange
County Jail today after police accused
her of stabbing her ~year~ld husband
to death with a kitchen kn.ire Wednesday
night while her yOWlg 9>ll watched
Lois E. Cannou, 43, was arrested at
Jhe family Jiome al 12841 Dungan Lane.
after pollce discovered the woman's
husband, AJbert, sprawled in the kitchen
bleeding from multiple stab wotmds.
A Garden Orove Fire Department
rescue squad nW>ed cannou to Palm
Harbor Hospital when! be died an hour
later, police said.
Investigators at the scene round a
bloody, elgbt·lnch kitchen koile and said
questioning of Mn. Cannou Jed to her
lllTf!9t on susplcioo ot murder.
Police said the only witness to the
murder waa Mn. ca:nnou·a ~}'ear-old
-by a funner marriage. The child
bu been placed In protective· custody
at the Albert Sitton Home for children,
pblice said.
Mrs. Cannou is being held in lieu
o! '250,000 ball. Police .. id she will
be arraigned Friday "' early nexl week.
Frotn Pqe I
TAPES ...
argue on pretrlal motions of fonner
White Hoi.ae aide Dwight Chapin,
vohmteered the proaecut.or's office's
belief about lleao.
"So far as the government is
concerned, based on the evidence we
have now, we have no basis for believing
Mr. Dean committed perjury .. .in any
proceeding," Davis said.
Sen. Hugh Scott (R-Pa.), saiJ recently
he has seen evidence at the White House
Indicating that Dean lied when he
testified Nixon knew about the Watergate
cover-up before March 2!, 1973.
Dean's name was brou~t up at the
Chapin hearing becauSe he is expected
to be called as a witness at Chapln's
trial on charges of lying to the Watergate
grand jury.
But weathermen said they expect the
morning fog to bccrime high cloudiness
through the weekend.
The fog apparenlly, presented few
problems. although police in Huntington
Beach reported a fatal traffic accident
Wednesday night and two injury
accidents early this morning which they
attributed to the poor visibility.
A spokesman for·the Orange County
Airport tower said no planes landed
at the facility during the· morning,
although a few were allowed to take
off.
The heaviest ocncentration of fog
seemed to be between Newport Beach
and Long Beach, alJhougb Harbor
Department spokesmen in Dana Harbor
· rtpOrted occasiooally h<avy fog there.
Four Men Seize
Five Hostages
l1i Bomb Attempt
SINGAPORE ·(AP I -Four men tried
to blow up a Shell oil refinery here
tod ay , then seized five hostages aboard
a ferry and threa tenOO to kill themselves
and the hostages W'lless they got safe
conduct to an Arab country, officials
said.
The Singapore governrnent said it
would n\eet their demands.
Officials said the terrorists attempted
to blow, yp Qlree ,eil~storag~ ww :oot
managett to set only one afire. They
described them as three Japanese and
one "Arab:looking" man.
In a note dropped overboard from
the ferry in Singapore harbor. the men
identified themselves as members or
the radical Japanese Red Anny and
the Pop ular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine.
They said they set off the explosion
"for the solidarity with VI et n am
revolutional people. and for making
revoluUonal situation after considering
the situation of today 's oil crisis." They
didn't elaborate.
Members of the Red Anny took part
in the Lod airport massacre in Israel
in 1m. 'lbe Popular FrOnt ii the Marxist
Arab group that hijacked American and
European airliners to a Jordanian desert
in 1970 and blew them up.
Great Grain Robbery
FREEPORT, Pa. (AP) -The United
States will soon be· buying grain from
Russia for five limes what the Soviet
Union paid this country in the 1972
grain deal, Sen. Henry M. Jackson
charged \V¢nesday night. ·"We're going
to buy Russian grain ba ck at $5 a
bushel and they bought it !or $1," the
Washington Democrat said at a fund-
ralsing dinner here.
IN-STORE MICR0:.WAVE DEMONSTRATION by a HOME 'ECONOMIST
Saturday Feb. 2, 12 noon til' 5 P.M.
MODEL,: SPICIAL
PltcE
539995 RR-4 .lF-1 ~~
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Litton Microwave Ovens
NoOOd)' ~ore nboul mlcrow•Yt cooking lhan LIUon, Nobody •
l'rfcn
SlwtAI
5.2599 5.
'90DAYSCASH
WITH APPllOYID CRIDIT
1115 llWPOH BLVD.,
llw•ll• Cata Mm-PHii• 541·7788
'
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H~niingion Beaeh
Fountain ··Valley
VOL 67, NO. 31, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
Pago Pago
•
()RANGE COUNTY, CALl~RNIA THURSDAY, JANU ARY 31, 1974
Oakland Bloodbath ,
-. I
Today's Fin al
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
•
Jet Crash
Kills 91
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (UPI)
- A Pan American World Airways Boe-
ing 7lrl with 101 pel'!OOS aboonl crashed
in a vk>leiit thunderstorm 1,000 feet short
of the runway today and 'burst into
118ines, burning to death moot of those
aboard when they were trapped in the
wreckage.
3 Mortuary Employe ·s
Slaughtered at Work
Witneues ~Id 91 persoii.s died, most
burned to death when trapped Inside
the flaming wreckage. Of the 10
aurvivors, several were not expected
to llve .•
The Federal Aviation Administration
ordered the airport, on the island of
Tutulla midway between Hawatt and
Ne!' 1.ealand. closed following the crash.
Or. Peter f . Veales, medical director
at the Pago · Pago Medical <;enter, said
"most of the dead Iried in the plane."
VeaJes said the survivors were three women and seven men and that eight
were in serious or worse condition with
bwtls over 50 percent of t~ir body.
·Two survivors were in fair CUldition
and able to walk about.
'"We all tried lo get out and jammed
the elits," o.,e of the two male !Ul'Vivors
said. "I managed to get out over a
wlng but most of those aboard did
not."
The pilot, Capt. Leroy Peterson of San
Francisco,.radioed the Pago Pago control
tower shortly betore the crash at 12:52
a.m. (3:52 a.m. PDT) that he was en-
countering violent thunder squalls and
one of these was in progress when the
plane hit 1,000 feet short of the runway.
The aircraft was flight 806 from
Auckland, N.Z.. to Honolulu, where most
of the crew lived, with an intermediate
stop al Pago Pago. Many of the
pessengen: were sclieduled to make
coanectibg flights for the mainJand when
~ plane was scheduled to amve in
Honolulu 1111:15 p.111. (1;15""" fOT.).
In Son FnnClaco, Paa American 1 ..... €w ,tilo .._...,. aa P-..n,
ol Solt Lab City; RJdlanl V. Caines,
Hall -1111. caltf.; James s. Phillips,
Scmma, Calif., and Geiy W. Green,·
Seattle. ..._
A temporary morgue was set up at
the Pago Pago Alrport which was grutly enJaraed by the Navy during World
War II . However, the wreckage of the
plone -still bl.ulni·hol hoots after the crash and IDOi\ of the bodies were
still Inside the wreckage.
A Pan Amerlcao Boeing 707 crashed
July 23 shortly atter takeoff from
Papeete, Tahiti, killing an 79 passengers
and crt!w members aboard.
Pan American said 49 of the
pusenflera bad been scheduled to
disembark at Pago Pago and that the
other 42 were en route to Honolulu and
Los Angeles.
Nuclear Tests Made
WASHINGTON (AP) -Seismic
e:ignals preiumably lrom a Soviet
undergroUnd . nuclear explosion were
recorded by tJie United States, the
Atomic F.nergy commission says. The
signals beard Wednesday originated at
approximately 9:50 a.m. PDT at the
Semipa]atinsk test area in Siberia. This
was the first test reported. by the
commission slnce Dec. 15.
!Wberine-"Kitty" wa!llil· _re-
• slgnlll from the Orange County
Gruel, Jury ~ to COMeh·
Irate on lier campaign for
·HunUnglon· Beach cllY ·c1erk.
But •he said •be won't leave
her dty Plllllling Commission
Hll unllU aha Js elected city
clerk.
•
End of .the Line . t
U'ITe._....
One of three men who allegedly tried lo cash forged and stolen
checks at a Miami bank tries lo crawl from the overturnett getaway
car followjng a high-speed chase in downtown Miami.
Huntington Council Race
Will Have 15 Contenders
OAKLAND (AP) -Three morluary
employes were found hacked ·to death
in their blood-splattered funeral home
early today only four days after ro.ving
"psychopathi c" gunmen shot four people
dead at random across the bay in San
Francisco.
Police said apparently nothing had
RELATED STORIES, Pagn 3 and S
been stolen. .
Police aaid the body of one mortuary
vk:Um was bound between two pews.
in 8· first·floor viewing ?"09m in the
Albert Brown Mortuary, a room us~
!Qr mourners to view remains.
The vlctinls were identified a s
Clarence and Doris Bryant, live-in
Fog to Stay
Along Coast
For Few Days
The fog that blanketed the Orange
Coast today is likely to return for the
Flllng closed at noon today for the
April t HunUngton· Beach municipal
election and there will be 15 contenders
for four Qty Council ... ts.
Armstrong, a retired Marine Corps nei:t few ·mornings, acconling to the
'!hii!e-• ' Teel Bartlett, Aj'
Coeft ihd lionna ' .,.. = :re I -~ .. • • .. er. _:
for one pen seat """'ted by Jack.
Grem who decided 'mt to 'Flt a thlnl -........... ·1n addltk.l ~ u.e. Incumbents, the
final list ol Oandldatel Includes: Roberi
Alberts, an attorDiy: William D.
Bandits Hold Up
Liquor Sto1·e
In Hunting ton
Two men anned with a shotgun and
a revolver Wednesday night held up
, the 5 Points Liquor Store taking $350
In cash, Himtington Belch police said
today.
SIA>re clerk John Clllfonl told police
he was working in the stock room when
one·of the suspects, cairying a shotgun,
ordered him to the front of the store
and told him to open the bash register.
The second suspecf then pulled a blue
steel revolver Crom his waistband, waved
it at. Clifford and said, "Get back in
the back room," police said. He refused
becauoe he though\ Ibey might shoot
him there and the robbers fled the
store.
, Both men were described as in their
:Ills, about five feet 10 Inches tall and
110 "' 185 pounds. .
1be robbery look ploce about l :IO·
p.m. Police saJd at least one witness
saw the suspects run fr'Vfn the store,
which is In a ~hopp!Jlg center at 1111111
Main St.. and head In the direction,
. of a black car In the. l'O!:klDI '""·
" '
Paid Olf Ag~ew,
' ; Engineer Says
,
officer; Dr. Ralph Bauer, a trustee of U.S. Weather Service.
both the Hi.mtington Beach Union High Forecasts call for continuation of the
School District and_ the Ocean View ~ ... A1 tba ~~ n... •• · (elementary)'districl.. ·-~log t partially"ra-,--.e.
· ;. Giunty Airport and bOll-ter borni -i\llo Robert· At~ ' :;;· .• -~-····---ucea~[i;Jiil_liliioi~.•...-••i.111111111!_1 •-.. ,,.ai --. ._ ..... -· -, dein ...... ~ ' '""'"'· . Dorri>, businesmlan; John Flood, MD ~·• ,_
and atlomey; BruCe Ga b-rlelson, But weathermen sald'tli"r ·ftJ>ect ~
ele<lrlcal ...,._, George McCraclwl, --'-'-lo be<ome "'•" -1 Ion.tr ~; Mark Porti!r, a .. -.... -.: ~ ' _.
city. planalng conimlaaioner; Philip thn>ush ,the weekond.
Putnam, iltomey; John Patrick Swain, · '"'°'·fog apporeritly, pre,..ted few
businessman; and Harriett Wieder, problems, although police in Huntington
chairman of the environmental cowlcll. Beach reported a fatal traffic accident
In the city clerk's race, incumbent Wednesday night and two . J n j u r y
Alida Wentworth is challenged by accidents early this morning which they
Katherine Wallin, a p I an n in g attributed to the poor visibility.
commissioner; Bernanl Mahoney, who A spokesman for the Orange County
ran successfuily in 1972; and James Airport tower said no planes landed
Dukette; an employe of the Orange at the facility during the morning,
County Harbor District '-•• ll ed lbere are 00 challengers lo the City alt • ..,..b a few were a ow IA> take
Attorney Don Bonla. off. Tbe heaviest concentration of fog
Mansion Relocated ?
SACRAMENTO (AP) -California 's
new governor's • mansion would be fn
downtown Scaramento rather than out
in suburban Csnnichaet under 1egislation
sent lo the Senate Weclnesdoy by a
44-25 AsseD)bly vote. There was only
brief debate 'before the vote came on
the bill by Aasemblyman Edwin Z'berg
(0.SacramentA>).
.seemed to be between Newport Beach
and Long Beach, although Harbor
Department spokesmen in Dana Harbor
reported occasionally heavy fog there.
Killer Wha le Dies
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A 6,00fl.poWld
killer whale died Tuesday night at Sea
World marine park, about four months
after the 20-foot male was captured
near Seattle.
Newport's Clbbarelll
New · Seal Beach Police
Chief to Be Youngest
' .
By CANDACE PEARSON _ Of 'f!I! !"'f I"..., It.fl
N_.-t Beactr Pollce U . E d
Clbbarelll, lO, will he -the youngest police
chief in Orange County when he takes
over the relni of the Seal Beach. police
,· departllient .Feb. II.
-CibbarojH'I appointment IA> the $31-,00I).
At Graft .Trial
· •year job-from · an lnillal lleld ol 125 candidate. was formally announced
, W~f by Seal Beach City Manager
llfnnili Courlemar<:be.
· . ·, ,. • "The .first peraon I probably .ought
BALnMORE (\IPI) -;--Eoginee; to .meet is my secretary and find out
Lester Mat1 1\11 tifld ·• lederal court whit'• going oo," Clbbare!li, a
he gave S<""ni T/." Ape.. $411,000 ID .....,.year veteran ol . the Newport
kickbacks ln~t f~da wh119 · IJeacb po!i"' for<e, said W~ay. "-....r Coon'•" "Then I'll meet wtlh my captains.
-•'-' o( "·-·~ .,. Clhborelll Nld be doesn't kllOll' yet -·... · _,_ aad what'"'-' 111 •wtll make ii any ~Ptf:*~li!i,!11111111. 1iedne.d. bout the In law tnlon:ement. pracuc.5 in Seai
yofb in ~ " l!'""Pli!, a !rial of Beach, which bas been Without a pollce
J:e Andel'loll, ;Ajnew•1 ~c ~ ~ ~~~t on medical
llUCCellOr aa cotmb' ~-· AaderlOll •-· l '"'t " and •·-Ured II lCCUled ol ·"-'"• ta,000 !ram" _ .. • -.me -t!O" re . -·•-and .:i.u""_.'":"ror ._.,,_.,._ CaPI. A. R. Chafe bas been acting chief
., .... --•• ,..._.,. -·-·-of ihe 1111nemhef •deplriniont. the_ award .ot· 1.-.... aod IYlillll Ctbboriilll, wl» ~ In BunUngton
WJ,000 In feaeroi ~ Jueo. --bia Ht, 'ramela, and
"Wblle Acnew l'll Ylce prllld!tal, I llo'9ll'<tl ...., llan, was 'picked from
peld him llO,OOO 1or t.,. 11a1e "'""' ellbl laalilta , hoc1111e oe blli'leadersblp
com....., Jobi I got," illd Nall, lbe illlllflol 'mNletlp ol lea! Beach and
tecoad ' -to directly link ~ ~'*""' In comm u n l t y ' lo file olleced 1lclbact scheme. . liM ClllEI', !'Opt)
DINtl' ''"' ..... """'
YOUNG MAN AT THE TOP
S..I INch Chief Clbbo,_111
h
caretakers of the building, both in their
70s, and Michael Moore, in his 20s,
believed to be a mortician trainee, police
said.
Deputy Police Chief Tom Donohue said
the bodies were disc0vered by mortuary
h&ndyman Hans Langschwagber who
entered the building at 7:10 a.m. and
saw the bodies lying in several blood·
splattered rooms of the funeral hi.me.
The victims had been slashed or
hacked with sharp instruments, police
said.
He said the three bad probably been
dead about 10 hours. When the murders
were discovered , two television sets were
still on In the upstairs living quarters
of the two-story building In the · heart
of Oakland.
U,IT ......
MOVIE PIONEER DEAD .
Samuel Goldwyn, 91
Movie Pioneer . '
Samuel Goldwyn
Succu mbs at 91 .,
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ..., Samu e I
Goldwyn, one of the last of ,Holl)rwood's
fabulous pi011eer rnovie~1 d,ied
today. He wa.l 91. " ·
Goldwyn ditd during the night at ,his
home where he had been under the
care of a nubie. ·
A family·. spokesman said be died
"quietly in his sleep." ·
He was released earlier this month
from St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica
where be had been under treatment
for an undiscl<Rd ailment for several
weeks.
Goldwyn who helped found three
studios -MGM, Paramount and
Goldwyn Studios -was incapacitated
for the past half-doien years, the result
of a stroke.
In November, 1970, Goidwyn turned
control of hls motion picture empire
over to his wife, Frances. He was then
88 and ailing .
Medical staterr.ents attached to the
petition indicated he had suffered from
cere bral lhrombosis and a rte r i a l
sclerosll since March of·l968.
At that Ume, the value of his estate
was put at'$19.7 milllon and his yearly
income at $650,000. Mrs. Goldwyn had
been active in her husband's business
since 1934.
From the time he struck Out on bis
own at lhe age of 11 , making his way
irom the ghetto where he was born
in Warsaw, Poland, to America, Goldwyn
was an independent in thought and
action. He remained independent through
the stormy years ~ich saw him rise
from a $:HI-week glovemaker t o
mutUmillionaire in the movie indll.!try
which he helped founcl.
He became lntere1ted in movie-making
when he dropped Into a nickelodeon
on Broadway to 1'atch a rive-minute
oomedy reel.
lie talked his hrother-l1>law, Jesse
L. wky, Into forming a movie
production I company with capital of
120,000. Goldwyn and wl!y sent a young
friend, Ceell B. DeMUle, then a
playwright, to Hollywood to take
advantage .i Y••l'round 11111Shlne.
Four )'eOl'J later the fledgling company
(Ste GOLDWYN, Page II
Bryant's body was found in a small
parlor near the viewing room where
the younger victim was discovered.
Mrs . Bryant, dressed only in her
bathrobe, was found near the rear door
of the building.
Donohue said Mrs. Bryant, and
perhaps her husband, may have been
trying to escape their attacker or
attackers \Vhen cut down.
Police could not give a moti ve for
the slaying, saying that nothing had
apparently been stolen.
The discovery came as San Francisco
remained tense while police conducted
an intensive search for the men who
killed four and gravely wounded another
in a series of motiveless shootlogs
Monday night.
Five Unified
Districts Plan
To Get Airing
Details of a pro110sal lo split the
Huntington Beach Union High SChool
District into five , separate unified school
systems, will be unveiled tonight in
Fountain Valley.
·A special consultant .. Artllur lc'.ounc
and Co., will report an how new districts
might be formed along the boundaries
"' aisling elemen:r dlatrlcta lrithin the ~uare mile lchool territory.
The '\'oung report w· he made at 7:30
p.nt. lo a 81udy oommluee fonned by
the st< districll inYOlved. The committee
will gather at Fountain Valley School
District headquarters.
In addition to high achoo! pel'SOMel.
spokesmen Will he pre&e11t from the
Htmtington Beach ·city, Fountain Valley,
Ocean View, W estm.inster and Seal
Beach elementary districts.
An alternative plan, based on city
boundaries, recently bas been brought'
to the forefront by the League of Women
Voters. it would divide the high achoo!
district into four unified districts -
lumping together Ocean View and
H1m!ington Beach City, and unifying
Westminster, Fountain Valley and Seal
Beach along municipal bordera.
Membel'll of the Unif"'8tion Study
O::munittee have indicated t h e i r
impatience with the slow pace of the
consulting lirm, and are anxious to
fonnulate some kind of a plan acceptable
to all.
"Everybody want.s to get on with
whatever it ls that will happen,"
eJ<plalned Glen Dysinger, a high school
district administrator.
"After the re Port tonight, t h e
committee will probably decide where
to go from here," he said. "Also, we'll
be discussing the time line needed to
get the Item on the ballot."
Mail Campaign Set
NEW YORK (UPI) -The National
Committee on the Presidency, seeking
President Ni.:J:on1s impeachment,
announced Wednesday it will launch a
mail campaign with the hope of reaching
six million voters within 45 days. An
lniUal mailing of 500,000 letters began
this week, aq:ording lo Charles L. Mee
Jr., chairman of the committee founded
in September.
Orpge
•
Weat•er
MosUy cloudy skies are on the
agenda Friday, with cooler temper·
atures along the coast. Highs 11
the beaches 56, rising to 86 in.-
land. Oveo>ight lows ill the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
Cal ifornia. paid $863,221 ni
1urvivor and retirement betie·
fits last year for 116 former
, legislator& and state officials.
SIOl"l/, Page 11.
L. M, h'fll 14
C•ll""7111 J
Cl1nlfftoll 1247
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2 _DAI_, Pll01 H
'C hild Ki ll
I
Suspect
Xa pe Hea rd
8)' TOM B•RLEY
Of fllt D1llr l"llot 51111
1 A tape recording that authorltles allege
contains highly incriminating slatemenls
made by the imprisoned defendant "'ill
be played back 1oday in the Orange
County SUperior Court trlaJ or accused
child killer Larry \Vaync Cobb.
Judge JI. \Yarren Knight today
l)\'erruled vigorous obj ections by defense
attorney Robert Brodie and decided that
rhe tape, recorded in the Orange
Police Department headquarters la st
April 18, Is admissible and can be
heard by Ille jury.
Orange police said t.hey recorded a
tlonversation between Cobb, 22, and his ·
paramour, Sandy Rock~:ood, then 17,
and turned the tape ove r to district
attorney's investigators for possible use
in his trial.
The tape will be played back while
'Plfiss Rockwood, mother of the allegedly
1nurdered child, listens from the witness
st.and.
lnvestigators said she listened to the
t'!,pe early today before being transferred
fiom her county jail cell to the
courtroom and she agreed it was an
accurate depiction of the April 2ll
conversation.
Miss Rockwood testified I a s t
Wednesday that Cobb told her wben
1she returned home from work late April
II that Todd, 3, was dead.
.she Jold Ille jury that she did not
at first believe him despite what she
said was a long history of beatings
in relationship between Cobb and her
son .
But then, she testified, she was shown
lhe beaten body of the little boy in
his crib and was later ordered by Cobb
to remain on the living room couch
for the next 24 hours.
·Testifying that she was "very much
afraid" of Cobb at that point, l'.1iss
Rockwood said she was ordered to drive
hlm to a remote construction site in
the Anaheim area where he buried the
cardboard box containing the Jittle boy's
body in a sewer line.
She sa.id she again acted on Cobb's
tnstrucUon! and ootlfied Orange police
that her little boy was missing.
.police assisted by concerned neighbors
and many volunteers acwred the Ortlllie
area for five days before alleged
statements by Miss Rockwood and Cobb
led them to the Anaheim area and
tbe discovery of the child's body.
,Miss Rockwood, who is serving a
~year jail term on accessory charges,
abo testified that her aon was beaten
and humiliated by Cobb throughout the
couple's two-year relationship.
She testified tha t she had finally
decided to permanently end he r
relationship with Cobb shortly before
Todd died and that she and her son
were to move the next day to an
apartment she rented in the Orange
area.
It is alleged that Jess than 24 hours
~ore that planned move ·Cobb inflicted
fataJ injuries on the child while he
aod Todd were alone in the home.
Seaview League
5eeking Support
The Seavicw Little League I n
Huntington Beach needs managers,
coaches and field maintenance men for
the summer baseball season.
Volunteers arc needed as team
.l}'Ulnagers and coaches, but the league
4oes ofrer salaries !or young men to
tnaintain th e league diamonds.
• lnterested Individuals should phone
Gary Stuart at :>40.1 054. The league
Covers southeast Hunlington Beach,
i'.nciudlng all areas south or Adams
~venue and east of Beach Boulevard.
'
OI AN•l COAST M•
DAILY PILOT
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• •.
E1nbargoOtrl
Oil .'Countries
• •
To Meet Feb. 14
WASHINGTO N (AP) -Secretary or
Slate He'nry A. Kissinger said today
that the Ufting of the Arab oli embargo
"1\·lll be recommended by several oil·
producing countries" at a meeting in
Tripoli Feb. 14.
Kissinger said he ls "quite optimis tic"
!hat the embargo will be lifted. lie
made his remarks to newsmen follo~·ing
a closed door meeting with the }louse
Ways and ~1eans Committee.
But Damascus radio today quoted
Kuwait's foreign mini.!ter as saying hi.s
coontry "wou1d not reconsider lifting
the oil embargo on the United StJtes
unless Washington provides guarantees
t;1at Israel will ~·ilhdraw !ro1n all
ocrupied territory."
'J'be minister, Sheik Sabah al Ahmed,
was commenting on President Nixon 's
announcement Wednesday night in his
State of the Union addre ss that the
Columnist
Says Tap es
Back Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Summaries
of a March 21, 1973 tape-recorded
meeting between President Nil:on and
John Dean, bis former counsel, support
Nixon's contention he did not know about
the Watergate coverup until then,
colwnnist Jack Anderson said today .
Anderson said sources with access to
the secret summaries told him the tapes
refute Dean's .sworn testimony that
Nixon knew of the coverup as early
as Sept. IS, 1972.
But, wrote Anderson. "In view or
the eraSed 18 minutes of the vital June -NIXON SEEKS TO PROVE
COMMAND. Analysis, Page 4
NIXON ATTORNEY QUESTfONS
ARCHIVES APPRAISER, P•ge 5
Asse nibly Nixe."i
Pl>llst.e r Bill
SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A blll which
lhe author said was designed to make
sure political pollsters -'ere "on 'the
up and up" has been overwhelmingly
rejected by the Assembly.
The measure (AB2330 ) by
Assemblyman Walter Karablan, a
Democratic conte.nder for secretary o!
Slate, W8' killed Wednesday on a 17-41
vote.
The bill would ha ve required pollsters
to dl&close Jbeir flnancUil Interests and
th e na mes and addmses or pel'IODI
surveyed for their political opinions •
Arabs soon wnl roo>nsider the oil cutotr,
the broascast said.
It. wq.s the first reaction froi:n the
Arabs to Nixon's announcement which
"'as generally thought to refer to the
mce llng set for Feb. 14 iJI Tripoli, Libya.
Kls.slnger said he put before · the
committee ·~our plans for the ·energy
cooference 300 oiir general expeclaUons
in the energy field. the situation in the •
Middle East and we had a very useful
and very oonstrucUve discussion about
trade"matten." ....... .:.., ..
Asted lo clarify· PreakUof "NIJm's
relertnce in the State of ttie Union mc""g~ Wednesday nigh{ •bo\11 •
meeting to discuss the liftin&-. ~ · ~
oil embargo, Kissinger said:_ ... r.
"The President polni.d out Ulilt Ii(
bis personal correspondence 'witb frlendly
leaders in the Middle East: he had· been
·------~---EDISON TELLS INDUSTRY
OF NEW RU LES -Page 14
PRESIDENT SEES NO
'74 RECESSION, P•ge 22
assured that a conference wou1d be
called with a view of ending the
e1nbargo."
Questioned whether there is any
difference between the c o n fer e n c e
mt>ntioned by Nixon and ~ one
previously ocbednied iJI Tripoli, Kilainpr
~aid that he understood thal "this will
be the principal item on . the ageDda
at that conference." ,
While Nixoo said It was a new
de\'elopment, government" officlell said
he might have been ref•rrlnC to' the
sch"1uled Tripoli meeting announced
earlier.
The White House provided no
clarification today. Asked whether the
President re!erred to the Tripoli meeting
or some other session, an official there
said only "we're not in a position to
say.''
In his State of the lfnion address
Wednesday night, Nixon said the Arab
meeting "is an encouraging sign," but
::n the same time asked Congress to
approve Administration measures to
reduce dependence on foreign oil.
"Irrespective of the possibility of
restoring the flow of At.iddle East oil,
Yle must act now to ensure that we
are never again dependent on foreign
sources of supply for our energy needs,"
00 said in a separate message.
Four Men Seize
Five Hostages
In Bomb Attempt
SINGAPORE (AP) -Four men tried
to blow up a Shell oil refinery here
today , then seized five hostages aboard
a ferry and threatened to kill themselves
and the hostages unless they got safe
conduct to an Arab country, officials
said.
The Singapore government said it
would meet their demands.
Officia1s said the terrorists attempted
to blow up three oil storage tank.! but
managed to set only one afire. They
described them as three Japanese and
one "Arat>.looking" man.
In a note dropped overboard from
the ferry in Singapore harbor, the men
identified themselves as members of
the radical Japanese Red Army and
the Popular Front for the Liberation
or Palestine.
They said they set off the explosion
''!or the solidarity with Vietnam
re:volutional people, and for making
revolutional situation afll:r considering
the situation of today's oil crisiJ." They
didn't elaborate.
~1embers of the Red Army took part
in the Lod airport massacre in Israel
in 1972. The Popular Front is the ~tar1.ist
Arab group th at hijacked American and
European airliners to a Jordanian desert
in 1970 and blew them up.
Agent 'Pursuing
Sus pect' Cited
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -A federal
narcotics agent has been fined ~ for
speeding despite h~ plea that he w ...
chasing a smuggling suspect.
California Higtrway ,Patrolman J. J,
Hansen said Wednesday he arrcated
Paul V. Mrtjn, •39, or Jamul, 'J9r, speed·
ing after clocking him at 120 miles an
hour. Martin said he was cbuing a
suspectal smuggler llOl'lll oa lnl>rstate
5.
Mtmiclpal Judge J. Robert O'Connor
suspended 125 of Ille fine and adlllOlllahed
Martin to use his flasher, as rtqulred
by stale law, when exe<edlng the speed
limit
DOG FOOD STOLEN
BY DOG CATCHER
CHICO (UPI) -Wllllam J. Hllm,
a Butte County doe calther, hal been
fined 1125 and given a RJSpende<I = jail sentence for llealina 11.41
of dog food from Ille Chioo powid.
Hahn, who admlti.d lhe lhefl, aloo
was placed Cll one-year probation. He
W8' arresi.d fl!' police Jan. II alter
he wu allegedly ... n taking eight
poun<1s or dog food trom the powid.
Valley Voting
Registration
Deadline Set
F0111tain ValleY nstdenll hive lhnlufh Friday lo ,..i.ter Jo vote
In the Mordl t ol!f. ~ell eleclloo,i
•t the dtj dert 1 ,office in city
hall.
The aotiiaI deadline lor thoae
voter! Who haven't registered yet
ls Sunday, but city hall, at 101;00
Slater Ave., isn't open on
weekends.
R<gillratlon Is abo tokon by any
Orange County deputy retiJtrar of
voters.
There is no reside n cy
requirement for Ille municipal
election.
Aboentee ballots for voters who
.,. disabled or who will be out or to"l' Mareh 5 can he picked
up at the clerk's office Feb. 4
throogb Feb. 26.
Pentagon Snoop
Probe Annolinced
By ·senate Unit
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senala
A~ Services committee agreed today
to investigate the fwmeling or National
Security Council documents lo Adm.
Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of the
Joint Chief• or stall.
Committee memben said Seeretary
or state Henry A. Ktsslnger, who al.to
serves " bead of Ille National Security
Council, and Moorer would be called
lo testify.
No date has been set for the hearing
but It will probably begin nell 'week.
Chairman. Jolm C. stennts (O.Mlss.),
has already completed ~me initial work.
De!ense Secretary James Schlesinger
exonerated Moorer after conducting hi!
own investigation. l'.1oorer also was re-
appointed as chainnan of the joint chie!s
after the "leak" was discovered.
The funneling of the highly sensitive
documents was uncovered by the White
House "Plumbers" unit, an intelligence
team secretly set up by President Nixon
in July, 1971.
111oorer said he received s o me
documents but said they were useless
to him because he already had the
information. He blamed the funneling
or documents on overzealo u s
subordinates..
Frowt Page J
GOLDWYN ...
became the $2$ million famous Players-
Lalik)' .Cqi:p. 'l11ia company later became
Paramount pictures.
In 1918, Goldwyn organized Goldwyn
Pictures Corp., which later became the
giant llfetro-Goldwyn Mayer. But he
withdrew to become an owner-member
of United Artists Cofl)Oration with
Joseph M. Schenck. Dooglas Fairbanks,
l'.larY Pickford, Charlie Olaplin and
D. W. Griffith.
He broke off bis association with
United Artists iJI 1940, charging that
bis studio alone was carrying the
production burden while other members
sat back a.00 shared in the profits.
He brought to the screen such figures
as Lionel Barrymore, Geraldine Farrar,
Irene Rich , Lewis Stone, constance
BeMett, Ronald Colman, Vilma Banky,
Joan Blondell, Helen Hayes , Eddie
Cantor, Loretta YoWlg, Melvyn Douglas,
llferle Oberon and Fredric ¥a~.
He spotted a lanky cowboy· extra on
the set one day and made Gary Cooper
a star in "The Winning of Barbara
\\'orth."
Goldwyn was divorced from his first
wife, Blanche Lasky, in 1915. Ten years
later he married Frances Howard. a
New York actress. They had a son,
Samuel Jr., born in 1926.
Cory Denies
Bankrolling
GOP Rival
SACRAMENTO (UPI )
As,.mblyman ( Ken Cory (!>.Garden
Grove ), d"11ed today he 0 bankrolled."
a write-in Republican opponent two years.
ago lo weaken support for hll main
oppooeot.
However, Cory 11lcl he o p i n I y
advocated that write-In conlonder Jameo
Sartin of Anaheim Wll a "better
candidate by far" than FUl1erton
attorney Willi&.m Dannemeyer, hia main
oppooeot, and hlni.d Iha! OODtributon
should donate to Sartin'• campaign
lmtead ol Donnsneyer'1.
The Anaheim BulletiJI r e p o r I e d
Wedneldey that the 0ranse Comty
Grand Jury waJ ln...UgaUng charces
that Cory may have helped IInance
Sartin'• candidacy.
"I don't know whet they oould be
lnvestlgallng," Cory told UPr.
The assemblyman said he did • ll!l•
citizens to support SartiJI -with
contributions and votes -if they were
dissaUsfied with Cory's record.
"But I don't think' there's any law
against that," Cory added.
He said he knew of no contributions
from bis campaign chest nor bis
eGllJ:t!l>uton that Wefll lo lllij)flOrt Sartin'•
campaign.
llonnemeyer has filed 1 1138,000
damage auit charging he hid "every
reason to believe" C'.ory contributed to
Sartin'• campalgn.
Dannemeyer declined to comment oa
the grand jury probe but lold reporters
"nothing has occumd lo change my
mind" regarding the financing or Sartin's
candidacy. He said he still believes Cory
bankrolled Sartin lo help siphon votes
from DaMemeyer.
Follo\Ying his defeat, Sartin told
newsmen he received $20.000 i n
contributions, but refu11ed to reveal his
sources. The grand jury reported1y
subpoenaed a number of his documents.
Fro111Pqel
CHIEF ...
relations. Courtemarche said Wednesday.
The city manqer Aid. he IXpecta
Jhe department's public 11falrs office
to grow under Cibbarelli's command.
"There·, a lot of good . thlnp iJI Ille
police fiettl to sell," he said, "aDd Ed's
the one to sell them." r
Cibbarelll bepn as a Newport Beach
patrolman, became the department's
first community relations officer and
moved up lo polrol sergeant
He then became a juvenile detective,
was appointed lieutenant in 1972 and
currently serves as adjutant to Newport
Beach Chief B. James Glavas.
Glavas said Ile Is "extremely happy
Ed's been given this opportunity. I'm
also very cognizant we've lost a very
valuable man. Our enthusiasm outweighs
the reeling of loss."
Glavas praised Cibbarelli'1 rapid
progress and his dedication in the
department and expressed confidence
Jhat Ille new chief will he able to
overcome "whatever disabilities" bis
relative youth may bring.
"We have a more and more youth
oriented society," said Glavas, wbo is
more than twice Cibbarelll 's age, "and
maybe this is a sign of the times."
A Marine Corps veteran, Cibbarelli
was born in the Bronx in New York
City. Whtie In Newport Beach, he
received a bachelor! degree in political
science at Cal State Long Beach.
He is now "orking on a masters
degree in public administration at USC
and said Wednesday he doesn't plan
to give that up. "It will probably take
a few years now," Ile sald, smiling,
"since I can only go part lime."
O.Ur Pltet StliH "'"' R eaelles Plwnu le
Huntington Beach High &boot
student Jerry! Short, 14, has I»
come' an Eagle Scout. The son
of :l!Jr. and Mrs. Tom Sb~rt,
17452 Jefferson Lane , Hunting-
ton Beach, is a. member o('
Troop 555. ·-. . --•
Grove Wife
Held in Stab
Death of Ma~
A Garden GroYe hoUsewile i• i. 0ronp
CoW!ty Jail loday after police accmed
her of stabbiJI& her 50-y<M10lcl busband
to death with a i.Jtcben kftlfe Wednoday
night while her young sun watched.
Loi! E. Cannou, 43, w~ arrested at
the family home at 12841 Dungan Lane,
alter police discovered the woman's
husband, Albert, sprawled in the kitchen
bleeding from multiple stab wounds.
A Garden Orove Fire Department
rescue squad rushed Cannou to Palm
Harbor Hospital where he died an hour
later, police said.
Investigators at the scene found a
bloody, eigbt·lnch kilchen knife and said
questkmlng of Mrs. Cannou led to her
arrest on suspicion of murder.
Police said Ille only wilneas ·lo the
murder was Mrs. Cannou's ~year-old
son by a former marriage. The child
bas been placed In protective eustody
at the Albert Silton Home f0< childr<n,
police said.
Mrs. cannou ts being belcl In lieu
of '250,000 bail. Police said lbe will
be arraJaned Friday or early nell weet.
' '
'Oakland Star
Reggie Jackson.
Sued in County
Oakland Athletics' sluggt!' R<ggle
Jackson and his club have been sued
for '300,000 by rive Orange County fans
who claim the colorful outfielder did
a litlle slugging off the diamond.
John B. Christensen, Gordon C. Schlck,
Robert M. KliJlg, John B. Oberto and
Scott Rumsey claim In their Supertor
Court action that Jackson leaped into
the stands at Anaheim Stadium last
Aug. 3, threw them all to the ground
and lhen kicked and beat them .
Noting reports that Jackson's explosion
was triggered by fans hurl!rtg ' debris
onto the field -the A's won· the game
2 to I -the five plaintiffs deny that
they were involved in such actions and
that Jack.son's attack was unprovoked.
A1so named in the lawsuit as a
subsidiary defendanl Is Charles · 0.
Finley, lbe club owner.
IN-SJOREMICRC?·WAVE DEMONSTRATION by a HOME·ECONOMIST
Saturday Feb. 2, 12 noon Iii 5 P .M.
PORTABLE
MICROWAVE OVEN
•
I MI CROWAVE
MADE ONLY BY ~$mill '
Sl'ICW.
PllCI
.:EB LITTON
Litton Microwiive Ovens
Nobody knowt mort •bOut rnlerO'd'l't cooklnt th•" Utton. Nobody.
•
52599 5.
90DAYSCASH
WITM Al'l'llOYEO Clll OIT
'
1115 NEWPORT BLVD~ .
Dlntlll C1sta Mm -Pmll 541·7711
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DAILY PILOT ~ H
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Canipaign ·Funding Controls Rejected
I .
~ D•llr l>llel Iliff Pllolo
EXPECTS STIFF CAMPAIGN
Suptirvl1or 01vid Biker ..
Baker Sees
Big Battle
For His .Seat
Orange COUnly Supervisor David Baker
predicts a high-powered, expensive
campaign will be waged against him
in the upcoming primary election .
But Baker,. whose Second District
includes Huntington Beach and other
west county areas, said he plans "to
meet any and all competition full bore."
In an impromptu discussion With the
press in Santa Ana, Baker said he
knows there are moves afoot to unseat
him and there could be a Jot or money
behind Ume efforts.
"I plan to do whatever it takes on
a Jow·budget campaign to keep my seat
oo the board." Baker said:· "lf t run
into a $200,000 competition, I will pray
a lot."
Baker said he has spent less than
$25,000 totaHy on his ' campaigns si nce
being elected to office 12 years ago.
He said \he spe nt "Onl y $8,000" the
last time he ran .
Baker still has no i;ampaign 111anager
but does have · ... a Wac. ~4helt. ':and a
good organization" behind him .
The supervisor said he knows he can 't
meet blg-money rompelltfon on a dollar•
ror-dollar basis because he said that
"would be harmful to the whole process
of ~oveplment..."
He will depend instead on the
organization he has been building for
more than a year and a "vigorous
personal campaign."
The supervisor said one of the most
difficult problems he "'ill face lies in
the facl that up to 30 percent of the
pOOple in his district were not there
the last time he ran.
Reapportionment o,•er the past few
years has redrawn the district lines
and made . it necessary ror him to
acquaint himself with a new segment
of the electorate.
"l have made every possible erfor t
to com(llunicate with the n(!W people
in my district and if I haven 't done
enough for them. it will show up at
the polls.". he said.
·Man Torched;
Four Teens Held
Sear~h for· Gas
Simon. to Urge Limit on Sales
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Faced with growing traffic Jams at
gasoline stations, energy chief William E. Simon is expected shortly
to urge gas stations to sell each customer a minimum amount of gas
to prevent drivers from buying one or two gallons at a time, it was
learned today.
Energy o!!icials blame part o! the long lines at gas stations on
motorists who want to "top ol!" their tanks at every opportunity
just to keep the tank lull rather than waiting until they are actual-
ly in need ol gas.
As much as five percent of the nation's gasoline shortage "could
be due to motorists keeping it in their gas tanks," energy officials
said. ·
Simon is reported considering urging a limit of five or 10 gal-
lons per sale, the sources said.
Simon also is expected to urge gas stations to post their hours
of business. Olficials say gas is being cqnsumed unnecessarily by
motorists cruising areas in search of open gas stations.
Zodiac Murderer Writes
Paper, 'Reviews' Film
SAN FRANCISCO (APJ -Aller nearly
a three-year silence. the Zodiac killer
has written another or his cryplic, hand·
printed letters claiming responsibility for
a long string of murders.
In the latest missive, receiv e d
Wednesday by the San Francisco
Chronicle, the author claimed he has
kille:d fl times since 1966. The badly
misspell~ note, scrawled with a blue
felt·tip pen, also quotes from a Gilbert
Reno Pair Held
In Deatl1s of 2
Young CJµldren
DIXON (AP) -Authorit ies in two
states have arrested a Reno couple in
connection with the deaths of two young
children, one of whom apparently was
buried in a shallow iirave;.!iere nearly • t\VO years ago. • J ·• ,
Re110. Nev., police booked James Steel,
35, and his wife, Patricia , 21 , for
investigation of'.murder Wednesday after
their three-month-old daughter. Annette,
died at a local hospital.
Steel also was arrested f o r
investigation of murder by Solano County
sheriff's deputies after he led them to
a makeshift grave where the body of
his step-daughter, 4-year-<ild Ti n a
Woodall, was recovered.
The case came to lJght Wednesday
when a Reno hospital asked police to
investigate the death of the infant
Annette, whom officers said died of
massive head injuries, a broken jaw
and malnutrition.
"It appeared .to be child abuse," said
Sgt Charles Nearpass. "We checked
back in the files and found another
case of child abuse involving the couple
and Tina Woodall in May, 1972. Mrs.
and Sullivan operetta anJ reviews the
current film "The E1orcist."
Police attributed six killings between
SF CITIZENS TOLD NOT
. TO WALK ALONE, Po~ S
1966 and 1969 to the unkno.wn ·writer,
who dubbed himself "Zodiac" in his
first letter to the Chronicle in October,
1969. His last previous letter was dated
Mareh, 1971.
The new letter made no mention or
the random street shootings here Monday
night in which four persons died and
a fifth was seriously injured.
Homicide inspector William Armstrong
said the Jetter was examined by a
handwriting expert who verified It as
the work of the same persoil who wrote
the tlrlier notes. It was postmarked
Tuesday rrom io~htre in s.ah~r.tated
County. Armstrong said.
.. I saw &. think "The Exorcist" was
the best sateriC41 cbmidy t hiave ever'
seen," the letter opened. i
"Signed, yours truley:" it continuea.
and then quoted a verse from Koko's
"Titwillow Song" in the second act or
"The Mikado.
"Ps. If l do not see this note in
your paper, I will do something nasty,
which you know I'm capable of doing,"
the Jetter continued, end ing with the
notation: "Me-37; SFPD-0." .
The conclusion was similar to previous
signoffs in which 7.odiac boasted of how
many persons he killed and chided the
San Franciseo police department for
failing to catch him.
Ji'llmil:r Ji'i15lit
Blltters Autos
Steel finally told us she was dead, too. FAIRFIELD (UPI) _ Both
and we notified California authorities. family cars were wrecked when
Nea rpass said Ste~! finally agreed to a man aqd bis wife got into an
lead pol ice and sheriff's deputies to argument in a tavern. drove Into
his step-daughter's grave, about 25 miles a muddy field and rammed each
west of Sacramento. other repea,~y, . authorities have
Deputies said the girl was buried In reported.
a shallow grave covered by rocks in Police said Mr. and Pi.frs. Rodger
a drainage p.itclt behind a ~loon near W. Thompson, both 31, were
NEW ·voRK (UPI) -Six teen .. gers
poured lighter fluid on a man sleeping
on the floor 1()( a laundromat and set
him on fire. The man, R ob e r t
Durham, 42, New York City, suffered
third-degree burns over the lower portion
Of his body and was hospitalized in
critical condition.
-here. They estimated the body had been r e p o r t e d reconciled Wednesday
Police Wedn\sday arrested · f o u r
suspects, inclUc!it)g a 15-year-<>Jd boy. ..
buried nearly two years. after Mrs. Thompson angrily fled
Reoo popce said Steel told theft\ 1be , the :tavern in one car &rid her
\Vood all girl died of nat4f8.]. causes while. fiusband punuetl her in the ·other.
the farhily was living in Valejo. He The cars ended up ramming each
sai d he buried her because he could other jn a field nnt to the tavern
not af!ord a funera l. until. boUC a 1961 Dodge. and a
. Police also said · Steel claime{ t_he: • ~--CllevrQlet were total wrecks,
1nrant .Annette had ·been 1@urcd when ... poJ!~'5}'\c!: ·. ~ .
he 1acculently fell on her.:-., .: ..• ~'. '"' .'----~--------;... __ ,1 . . • •
N,iguel Sheriff lf nit .. J ...... • • . . -. . . .
.Musick Seeks substation:
By TOM BARLEY
of 1M EHl!tt !Jfllt St.tf
Sherirf James A. Musick said today
he inlendl to ask Orange County
aupervison to approve plans lor a new
ah!riff's substation bi Laguna Niguel.
MUIJck said 40 percent of the crime
now logged by his department happens
ln the south coonty. He said the center
almott ctrtainly wlll be bultt In Laguna
Nlguel's South County Civic Center if
k Is apprdved.
Musick sal~ the aubslatlon wlll serve
the communities of Aegean Bills,
Clplatrano Beach, Coplsltal>o Highlands,
Dona Point, EI Tot<>, Laguna HIJls.
Lquna M&ucI. Lake .For<;st, Leisure
World, Uve Ook canyoll. ll!Ulon Vie Jo:·
Mo<ljatca Canyon, New World, San Juan
• . •
Capistrano, Silverado Canyon, South
Laguna, Three Arel Bay ll!ld Trabuco
Oaks;
Mualck and h' palrol caplalns
predicted ~ thllt 1he new C<111er
would be A llemtndoul improvement
on the Pl"'M.lfll system In which policing
of lhe south counly territory Is handled
lhroullh the llflerlffs compl.X in lianta Ana.
• They. ,.id the move will allow the
department lo lncroaao. the level of patrol
services and public• contact. with south
county residents.
Al lhe ,.me time, they ,.Id, the ·
move woutd result in subslt'.nt'-1 8'\tlnp
in man hour'! and vehlcle use.
Musick said the substation wlll provide
ruldent.s with locAI guidance bi time
or emergency, more immediate 1cce11
I
.to lawtnen in law enforcement problem s
and a greater WJ>Ortunity to· meet the
men handling 1.aw enforcement In the
area.
Sheriff's off~rs planning the new
facility said they have no idea at thi s
time on lhe cost of lhe building needed
to centralize south cowity operatlons.
But one senk>r officer said today that
')le thoaght the building, which wilt be
const.ructed with a view to ponslble later
e'1'8"51on, could be paid for out ol
the ,.vings effect"I! by the transfer
or between 311 and 10 orricers aoo_ patrol
cir9.IO "tile 1191. ' "G1.nne saving' alone would be ........ ' t~.'' he: said. "But we can 't
put • 11bi:er on cost at this time until
we gc\ a report lt<>m the building
department."
llp for Governor
Candidate Haf if
Speaks at Irvine
Dllltr ...... ,,.,, ..... ,.
SPEAKS AT UC JRVINE
C1ndid1te Herb H1fif
Assembly Okays
Life Terms for
Heroin Pushers
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Legislation
providing life prison terms for big-time
heroin pushers and relaxing t h e
maximum penalty for use or marijuana
has been passed by lhe Assembly.
(Related story, Page 7)
The bill, by Assemblyman Raymond
Gonza1es ([).Bakersfield), would give a
district attorney the opUon of charging
large-scale pushers with the proJ)Osed
stricter provisions for mandatory life
terms or chai'ge them under ·eliJting
law which provides lesser penalties.
The bill (AB.9) also voould reduce uD. yMirimwri> $e~alty\ '° )111arijvan1
possession or use from a felony to
a misdemeanor. The strict~st penalty
would be six months in jail (father than
a prison term.
Rockets Wound 10
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (APJ
Insurgents fired two rockets into Phnom
Penh's suburbs today, wouriding 10
civilians, newsmen on the scene said.
The rockets slammed into Tuol Kok
and Boeung Poung Peay, about 21k miles
to the west and northwest or the heart
of the city.
$699 ,'•\'
84 inch leather sofa
"Our ~xt governor has gotta be
somebody who y,·on't say the same old
thing." Herb Hafi{ told UCI student'\
in a campaign speech Wedne;.sday.
He didn't. and Hafir made it clear
he knows who that next governor should
be.
A Claremont attorney and !ormer
president or the California Trial La'''yers
Asoociation . Hafi f, 44, blasted politicians.
intellectuals. the criminal justice system
and attorneys.
He is the seventh Democrat to declare
his candidacy for governor.
And thoUgh he admits San Francisco
Mayor Joseph Alioto and Assemblyn1an
Bob Moretti, also candidates, y,·ould bf.'
"reasonable in that they know ho'v to
push the political buttons,•• but he told
the UCI group Tuesday ""'e need
someone who is not politi cal in that
"'ay.
"Furthermore. you are not going to
get any campaign promises out of me,"
he said.
Sounding at limes like a combination
or night-club entertainer ahd old·time
evangelist, llalil (pronounced 'half') told
the audience if he loses "I'll kill
myself .... or maybe move to Oregon."
Hafif said he believes narcotics
problems should be tieated like a disease
as in England, rather than a crime.
He blasted the court system for
catch ing "only 15 out of every 100
criminals-wasting resources chasing
homosexuals in toilets."
He also called for revamping the
taxing system so as "not to pena lize
lhose who want to keep their land in
agriculture.
Land use planning needs to be
overhauled onto 30-year timetables
plans, he suggested. "I favor rapid
transit, but it's too late,'' he said. "We'll
have to build our cities from the inside
out first.
He said if he is elected he will begin
programs to return beaches to the public
over ~year period.
A specialist in congestion or court
cases, Hafir coordinated a drive in Los
Angeles Count)' last year that resulted
in a more efficient court calendar at
an increased cosi or 30 cents per
resident.
He was honored as National Consumer
Advocate or the Year in 1973 in Miami,
Fla.
Hafif also pointed Out that he organizea
10 Good Q,veinment chapiers in the
state and founded the trial bar's
consumer protection and environment
committees.
A 27-year resident o( California, Hafif
attended Chaffey College and Pomona
College and graduated a Phi Bela Kappa.
Besides hl1 law practice he hai owned
restaurants, a general construction firm
manufacturing plants, and has promoted
concerts.
"I intend to be governor of all the
people," Hafif said. "I'll represent no
special group."
" ... ~ ! " .
luxurious 1of1 covered in le1ther
• unique look ind feel of luxury .
A full , 84" wide, 1v1ilable in 4 colors of
leather.
leather chair
Select a button b•ck
chair in
le•ther
llO'lV $299
Board Backs
Away From
Legislatio11
Orange County supervisors bac kecl
a"·ay fron1 ado pting loC'al Cllmpa ig~
financing controls Wednesday. clain1ing
a ne\\•ly proposOO stale la\v 1riight make
local legislation a waste of tin1r.
Three proposed ca mpaign ord1nancc:o;
\\'ere put in Jimbo. making it likely
no controls will be in effect before
the c1oslng of the candidate filing period
i\larch 8. .
During a half-hour debate. Supervi.90r
Ron ald Caspers' proposed ordinance died
for lack of a second . Supc!rvisor Ralph
Diedrich's plan \vas "'i1hdr awn for
rev.•ork ing nnd one by the F.nvironmcntal
Coalil.ion "'as never considered.
The chief excuse given for not acting
rapidly on spending and donation controls
was a la\v which is now n1oving througtt
the State Legislature.
Sen. John Ncjedly tR-\Va lnut Creek)
has offered a measure that \VOi.lid limil
expenditure s and contributions to an
a\"crage or 25· cents per registered voter.
L contains so1ne di sc lo s ur&
requirements. 1
Supervisor Ralph Clark said. "If this~·
state law would · supersede anything we:
do here, acting on one of these proposals·,
would seem to be an exercise in futility.\'".
Supervisor Robert Battin, whose last'
ca1npaign ran up expenses approaching,
$200.000, said it appeared any local law
would be "a waste of time."
Diedrich, whose law proposes full .
disclosure of contributions and expenses
but no limits on the total amount , said i
he wants to polish up hi s ordinance
and resubm it it at a later date.
He saKI he still opposes any kind•
of limit as "unenforceable'' but will •
insert a blank in his redrafted law•
where a limit could be imposed. •
Caspers' measure, which proposes ••
limit of 50 cents per registered voter
and some disclosure, was offered as.
a motion but got no second. '
. Caspers sa id he thinks something. has
to be put on the books quickly because,
the elections are right around the cornerli
Jan Boer, a member· of the audience:
Rfid longtime county gov er n·m en ~1
watcher, commended the board ·ror i'ti
l~;ist trying tq do something about
runaway canlpaign costs,
''But I am just afraid no Jail( yo~
pass will really work as long as the~
arc clever players to work around it,'
she said.
~1ost of the supervisors have already
had $100 and $500-a·plate fund raising
gatherings and more are in the works
In coming \veeks. 1
·If the county passes no law and
depends on the state la w. no control!
'vould be imposed at all this year since
the slate measure wouldn't normaUj'
go into efrect until Jan. 1 of next year.
Diedrich promised he would bring his
reworked ordinance back td· the board
for anothe r look in the coming week§.
However, no date was set for it. .. •
~ . .
1~.J.GAl\l\ETf fURN11URE 646·0275
PROFESSIONAL Ope• Moo.. 2215 HARBOR BLVD .
INTERJOR DES IGNERS T~u ... & Fri. Ev... COSTA MESA, CALIF.
-l I
.f DAILY PILOT Tl'lur$day, J.tnu1ry 31, 1974 ,
Nixon Accorded High l)la~ks irl Speech
President
Won't Go
* * * Messa,ge
Features
1 Beating the 55
Frustrations
, V oluntnrily WASHINGTON (AP) -Prelldinl
Nl<00 Aid "one year ol Walel'P!I ls
enoqb" and vowed DWIZ',..-to . JtliCn
Wednelday niCbl In bis Si* ti the
'
BEATING THE RAP DEPT.-Arsene
"Blackie" Gadarian, the Newport Beach
boatyard owner, anti-philosopher and
savant by-the-bay, ha1 just struck again
with another scheme to ~ve mankind.
Emerging from beneath one of his
drydocked boats, Gadarlan proclaimed
his latest invention will strike at the
heart or the energy crisis. It will relieve
multitudes of motorists from the
trawnas visited upon them by the new
55 mile-per-hour speed limit.
"I have discovered the ansv.-er to the 55
mile-per.flour Crazies,'' Blackie boomed,
waving a monkey wrench expansively
at the ov ercast Newport sky. ''You know
what the 55 Crazies are?"
"No, what are they?"
"WELL, rr•s A NEW traumatic concii-
tion c:reated. by driving the free way these
days. You get out on those long lonely
stretches and the only human beings
around are the cops behind bill rds,"
Gadarian explained carefully.
"And you know they're lur · g out
there. Just waiting for you udge
Y)lUI" old heap up to 56 miles hour.
SO you keep going. Mile afler mile.
<Jn-g aloog at 53.
1 "Next thing you know, you've gone
stark, raving luny. They carry you away
Dabbling nice things about Nixon. You've
lOst your marbles at M m)les per hour."
"And you've solved this problem of
our times?''
''Jf\TOEED1" BLACKIE answered, his
voice lowering into a con11piratorial rum-
ble. "But listen, don 't call me that savan t-
by-the-bay stuff anymore. I prefer to
be known as Humble Blackie."
''Okay, out with it. How do to solve
the 55 crazies?"
,.With Tht Great Gadar i an 's
Therapeutic Off-Ramp, that's how."
·''What in the worli;l. is that?"
"I'm goi ng to buy up property just
.iilongside all the major freeways, see?
1ben I'll p1ve long ·stretch-several
rhiles -running alongside these major
routes.
"THERAPEUTIC OFF -RAMPS will
lead to my paving strips," Blackie
explained.
"So there you are, driving along al
thal awful 55, and after hours of it,
you start getting the 55 Crazies. So
what do you do? You pull off on one
of my therapeutic off.ramps. You get
on my private pavement.
"SO FOR 'I1IE NEXT several miles,
you can.drive as fast as you ~·ant. over
110 if you want. Drive in circles. Screech
your tires. You work out all those 55
nlile-per-hour frus trations, inhibitions
and traumas.
"Of course," Blackie continued, "For
this small service in saving your mind,
we shall charge a modest toll fee."
"I'll bet," you venture. "You are fl ying
in the face of a national emergency.
Fifty-rive, you kno"', is good for the
country."
.
"WHATCHA MEAN?" Gadarian ex·
ploded. What's sacred about this 55 any·
way? \Vhat kind of a number is that:
Whoever hea rd of 55? It isn't even ln
the Bible. You can find things in there
in ty,·os and fours and scores. But just
try to find 55." "I was unaware you had such a
vtorking knowledge of the Good Book,''
you suggest.·
"I do when it comes to emergencies,"
Blackie answered, snapping off a rubber
ba nd and unrolling a set of blueprints.
..tiiLOOK HERE," he announced in tri·
umph. 'Here's where the first one goes
just off the San Diego Freeway."
UPI T.....,,...
Hoines Taketa Away
Part of 500-man police force clears squatters from
their cardboard shacks near Tijuana Wednesday.
Militant students protested move and held nine
hostages for 17 hours before bein g fo r<:ed to re·
lease them.
~Tried to Defeat Enemy~
Berserk Stude11t Kills Self in College Library
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -A college
student walked into the cam pus library
and, claiming it was under rocket attack,
grabbed a hostage, fired several shots
at poli ce and finally killed himself today.
leaving behiqd a note that said. "f
tried to defeat the enemy as long as
I could."
"It was a very tragic si tuation ," a
police detective said. "He was obviously
quite sick."
The victim was identified as Paul
D. caJdwen Jr., 23, of Marrero, La ..
a senior in the college of business
ildihinistration at Lo uisiana S t a t e
Universily~New Orleans.
POUCE FOUND a notebook next to
the body with the handwritten message:
"Lt. COi. Drumwright, l held them
as long as I could. Please forgive my
offense. I tried to defeat the enemy
as long as I could." It was signed
Musicians' Swim
Cause~ Ripple
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Five
members of the Emerson Lake and
Palmer Rock Group were fined $75 each
Wednesday on disorderly c on du ct
charges afte r being arrested f o r
swimming nude in a motel swim1ming
pool.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
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rs guaranttrd
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Paul D. Caldwell Jr.
Campus security officer Joseph Bistes
said he heard Oa.Jdwell shoot "I'm tired
of taking orders from Marine Corps
sergeants." Bistes said Caldwell also
shouted oaths and profanities during his
4S.-mioute siege.
Bistes said Caldwell "rushed into the
building and grabbed the hos tage,''
screaming to students "he had three
grenad es and he was going to blow
hi mself and everybody else up If we
came near him.".
BISTES SAID CALDWEIL threw two
chairs out of the second floor windows
in the rront of the library. Fifty persons
"'cre inside the building, 25 on the
second floor, when Caldwell entered
around 11 :30 p.m. Wedn esday.
Denata Apparau, 30, a graduate
student from Pakistan, was held hostage
for 45 minutes but released unharmed .
"He walked into the library, which
was an opeq build ing at the time,
mentiooed something about being a
Vietnam veleran, and that the place
v.·as under rocket auack," police
information officer Gus Krinke said.
"HE TOOK APPARAU hoslage and
went up on the second floor. When
police arrived on the scene, Rev. Peter
Rodgers tried to talk to him, but within
seconds the chaplain heard a single
shot." Krinke said .
Krinke sakl Rogers, police and a fire
department cha plain "rushed to the top
of the f.lairS and lDwyi, !!inf lying in
a pool or'blood." '
Kinke said Caldwell put the muzzle
of a .33-caliber snubnose revolver in
his m<Nth 'and p(lDea ,the -trigger. He·
"fi red several shofs at the police but
th e officers did not return the fire,"
Krinke said.
Federal Judge Rejects
Indictment of Hughes
RENO, Nev. A(P) -The Justice
Department plans to seek a new
indictment against industrialist Howard
Hughes after a federal judge dismissed
the original charges against t h e
billionaire as the "worst criminal
pleading I have ever encountered."
Hughes and four others had been
charged with conspiring to lower the
value of stock in regional airline while
llughes was trying to buy it in 1968.
The airline is now Hughes Airwest.
U.S. Attorney DeVoc Heaton ,
appearing shaken by the dismissal of
the charges and the criticism , said oo
Wednesday that he would seek a new
indictment from the same grand jury
which retW'lled the rejected one on Dec.
27.
U.S. DISTRICT COURT Judge Bruce
Thompson, in dism1ssing the original
indictment, said it would be "a
perversion of justice" to try the five
men under the indictment. He said it
\Vas the worst indictment he had seen
in 36 years in the legal profession.
Thompson said the document should
have been more specific. It contained
•duplicated charges and left room for
specula tion or interpretation as to what
the offense actually was, he said.
ATTORNEYS FOR HUGHES and other
defendants were jubilant.
Moses Lasky, representing Hughes,
said he felt the ruling would have come
even faster had the case involved
someone of lesser prominence than the
58-year-old recluse billionaire.
Defense attorneys contended t h e
indictment didn't show a clearly illegal
action but instead detailed "an ordinary
business transaction. n
Winter Storm. Rampages
Soutli Dakota Hit by Near Blizzard Conditions
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bl1ked In '"'""' 11\d lftlld -tlwr, HllJl'I wrtwb I nd 1u1ntro Ct ld d l "'pld 111tr IN upper 11111-i V1ll1y. Wlncl1
tOml"ll oll !tit nor1111n1 lfld ctn1r11
Aocltln fl!llM "' to 60 lft.p.11. .i
A1wllni, ~· · SOo.tlh 01koll w11 1111 by ne1r
bllu 1rd conclltlon• ""''" bll'llWll'MJ .,_ red1Kl1!9 11l1!bllll'f Ja Ith 11'1" I ti.JI milt . · $or,rlh of lhe llOl'l'n, !I'll Ctftlrll
Mllt.OVrt V1llt't' Md S d t 9 t t 1
ttmper1tvrn , ll'ICI llOU!h ol fllll
rffdl1191 were In lht 60i.
Coastai Weatlter
l /ghl Vl rflltll wl"<!I nlfhl llld lllOl'flo
ll'MJ houri btcOll'lh111 Wii i to IOVll!wtll
I !O 1' knoll lltb 1119rrl00" Intl lt to
!Cl •noll Frldly 11t1r-. WMll!tr It "'*'" to bl' 111r 1~d wtrl'MI' througl\ S1lvrd1y. CCMlll l ftlTIPll'I ·
lurt-'o ill to ... lnl1nd lt!TIPl!'ll""9t ~
to ''· W1t.r !M111tr11vr• S.S.
S11n, M-n, 'l'ldes
n.r.fly, , •. ''
$te:llM fllll! • " .••.. J :41 ,,.,,. ~··
'9cond krw •••• ,.. 1:06 p.l!'I. '·' ,,...,, .... 1
Flrit hlgll •• , ••• ., (:32 1.m. S.I
Flr-.f tow .... \ .... IJ;Jt p,l!'I, G,J
StcOfld high • .,,,, •• 1:11 p.ITI. t.f
~ 10W . ••• •• •• lO!M p,m, M
Sll!I r1tff 7:11 1.ri'!, Mlt 6:n , ITI.
" MllOll l'IMI 11:11 p.M,, Mb 1:21 •.m.
•
Wri1Hn9 Plclu
British model Twiggy, 24, will
marry American. actor Michael
Wltney as aooo u bis dlvoM
becomes final, 1ccordlng to 1
spokesman in London .
By RICllAJID LERNER
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Peaidenl
Nixon aolliht to show the nation and
the Congms in his State of the Union
speech that he still ls finnly in
command, despite the tunnoll ol
Watergate and a tlnal of impeachment.
In doing so, Nlxon also made cl.ear
Wednesday nll(hl he ...Wd n o t
voluntarily leave the White Heme and
thet he ls reldy to .. to court .....
to resist COlllll'MS!Gnal ellorts to cibtain
confidential prealdentlal documents.
It was a crlUcal performance that
probably scored well for Nixon among
mill ions of uncertain Americana who
watched him on television and 1-d
the repeated applauae he got lrom
members ol Congress.
BUT THE BlPACT of Nixon's tour
de force among congrumnen waa Jm
clear. Most of those who clapped were
conservatlve Republicans who have
backed the President from the begiM.ing.
Many Democrat.a and liberal or moderate
GOP rnomben withheld lhelr support.
In short, Ni101i'1 succeu may prove '
( NEJrS ANALYSIS J
short-lived and his posture may invite
yet another direct conlrontaUon with
congressional investlptors.
If there were any 'cloubis, Nixon -ruled
out resignation again.
"I WANT YOU TO know that l have
no intention whatever of ever walking
away from the job that the people
elected me to do," he declared
Few in a list of 10 items he listed
as top priority were new, and much
of his speech reviewed past actions or
pending legislation.
Nixon saved Watergate for last and
sptnt only a few minutes on the acandal
that bas engulfed his ldmlnltlntlon for
the past 19 months. He neither offered
any further explanation for the events
nor said he was willing to tab l'IKft
responsibility !or them.
ALmOUGH HE~ to.~•
with the House Judiciary Committee,
which is studYin& impeachmenl, Ni%on.
saki be would do OOthing "that weakens ·
the office of the President" or "im.parirs
the ability" of future preaidmls to mail•
essential decisions.
That is basically the saipe arcUment
Nixon bas made in fighting allempts
by the Senate Watergate Committee to
get possible evidence from the White
House' provoking long and I t i II
unresolved c:ourl struggles.
AS FOR THE legislative outlook, Ni""°
provided few surprbes, and may wind
up having to aettpt some major
legislation lnlUatecl by the llemocratic-
conlrOlled Coogress.
He said the federal wella,. program
was drutlcal'1 In need of an urc•nt
toi>to-boU.m overhaul, but he and
Congms· have been haltllng over ,.form
proposals for three years and Nixon
did not yield oo any of his put pooilions
Wednesday night.
He cited the energy crisis u the
prime legis1atlW: concern, but bills to
deal with that already are well alollg
toward final congr!sslooal action. Most
of his plans for revamping federal aid
to education were submitted in 1973.
The president stressed the need to
press for a permanent ·peace in the
P.fiddle East, but that is largely out
of Coogress' hands.
Dylan Cheered
In New. York .
Concert Stop
II)' Ma. LAY'nOOI
NEW YORK (\IPI) -,.,. Bob Dylan
stepped onto the darkened stage,
1Mldlaon Square ~cardeb burst into a
Ughlnlng storm of fiuh bulbl and
thunderous applause.
Wednesday night's New York concert
was the J5th stop of Oy1an11 tour, but·
the 33-year old singer told friends be
was eager to return to where it all
bepil over a clecfde· ago in t)IO llllllI,
, .-.filled ~·of o....,ro1ct1
Vllage.
For over two hours Dylan and the
Band -ane of America'• !Ines& TOCk
, """"" -gave 20,llOO young lll1d middle-, aced tau ... of the 11nm dllpli1a
ol muaic and abowmalllblp yet -
on the tour.
'Blue Eyes' Back
LAS VEGAS <UPI) -01' Blue Eyt1
..... htck· w-, ttlihl·
Frank Sinltra, maldnc hll llrtl
nlchlclub appearance In three )'WI, mllled perlormanc:eo MO!ldl1 a n d
• ,.,_, of the l~y ~ lo
. the disappointment or thoulandl who
f)lid Pi 1plece to hear blm llnC II
ca.tar's Palace. Sinatra. II, blameil
HY .... n.rc.t," I ......... bJ
the dry, -.rt air bin UiM alllkll
llOlllO singers. Iii returned lo the llap ,_, nl(lil.
•
-.
Unim-. >
He alao recommended a ltf.polnt
procram for what be termed 111 year
of lll'OCfUI."
ENERGY -a .. ak the back ol lh<
• ....., crisis and, thn>ucb Project
Indepo[Ddeoce, lay lollndallonl for luturt
capoclly to meet the aatlon's eael'l)I
needl from America'• own resourcta
-at reuon.able prict1 and with
prolectlon rw the envlruun«1t:
PEACE -·Me a step toward lulln(
-fD the wld lbroul)l oontlnulnt
a pollcJ ol negollatlon l'!ther tllln
conlrmtation and btlpbi( 'Iowa rd
adllON1IODI of a JWI! and lullng
settlemet In lhe Middle East.
J>itJCES -Oleck the rise In prie!S
without a receuk>n and move into a
period ol sleady growth .
HEALm -Establish a new system
of comprehensive health lMurance to
make quallty beallh care aVailable to
every American In a dignified manner
at a price he can a(f.ord.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT -Estaliuah
a new era of achievement tn state
and local government by culling strlnga
of federal conllol. •
TRANSPORTATION -Streqtllm the
abilHy ·of local communtll.. to du!
wllh their tr11111portation problems.
EDUCATION -Rdonn the system
of federal aid to educallon to provide
it when ii ls needed and wile" It ls
needed·
PRlV ACY -Make a heliMlng on
the task of defining and prolectlng the
ripl of pcnoaal privacy.
WELFARE -Start on a DtW road
toward reronn of a welfare sratem.
WORLD ECONOMY -Togetller wllh
the other natlom ol the world establlsb
a framework within which Amulcanl ~ wiH afia"' more fully In expandlnc wMd
trade and prosperity in the years ahead.
EgyPit ~~~sr,,per
'Reports.Israel"
Pirating Firms
From Wire 8enteel
Tbe semi-official Egyptian ......,.per
AI Abram "'ported today I b a I
withdrawing Israeli lrOopl pirated entire
lndulltrlal plants from Suez City and
took them to Israel, but Indications In
both Egypt and Iarael were that !lie
reported thefts were not affecting the
disengac•ment acreement.
lmlell Defense Minister Moshe Doyan,
( IN SHORT ... , )
• addressing a meeting of Jewish fund
raisers in Tel Aviv, said he believes
Egypt ia honoring its m i l i t a r y
dlsenragement agreement wltb llrael
and will go on to rehabilitate the Suer
canal and the ruined cities along its
banb.
e AMerlean Released
HONG KONG -OW-authoritie.!
today released a smiling, beanled
American civlllsn who was captured a
week and • haJf ago in a bloody two-day
battle -Cl>lna and South Vietnam for !lie disputed Paracel Ialands.
11Tbank you," Gen1d Emil Kolb , 27.
of IA ·Fayette Hill. Pa., said a hewo!Qd
to -m lhlouCh the British oolooy'a
Lo Wu 1""1tier croalng, 15 mllea north
of liq Kong.
e Slc•l•IJ Redle.• Pas
SPACI! CENTER, Housm -The
Skylab astronauts are preparing lot !heir
longest earth re10Urces survey , a 27.~
mile. pus completely around tbt giobe.
Tbe astronauts have alao acbaduled
a news oonlerence today and they expect
to receive a ~ to oomplole tbt
!final Week of tllllr mm-joumey.
• rr1a1 ,.,;, :ae ,.,._,
HOUSTON -A lllate dls!M court iudce IS considering a possible new
location for tilt tnal , of Elmer wa,,,.
Heoley, ... of the ""' defendants In
the Tfll&I mm """"""'·
• n-C"-e SU!Uetl TALLAIWSIE. t'fa. (AP) -A
. apedaI Jeclalallft ......... adJoamed
wllllDul IUlnl adlon on Jeclalatkln lo
-penlnlular rtorlda to Ealltm Stantlard 'nme.
Leclalaton adjourned Ille 1""41f
allllr WadDeldoy Iller tho lloual
-to -a --P"-"" measure lbal would b1ve made Ille Ume
chtnle nm Oclohr.
"If ~ !all• to lcl belora tlMi
....... ....,.. of Florida'• Lei1slat1"
Ibis oprtnc, I bopo our llwmUm d
,_......,. Ibis aorloal, pnblen" .,.
plam oar lllle bid on StaadlJd TlmL
I
I
I
I
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I
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l
l
I
•
• • Today's Final
N.Y. Sto ... ks
.
VOL.' 67. l{O. 31, 4 SE.CTIONS, 46 PAGES ~ · ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI>< . . ' THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1974 N TEN CENTS
. l .
r r.
Bi11tall Coac~e11 Huddl~ llp lor Strihe
By JOHN ZALLER
Of ... Otilty ,, ... Sleff
wonien coaches at a11 six Harbor Area .
middle schools today .relused to do any
I ,_ alieNcl>ool oooching until they
, are given p1y .raiies Tetroactlve 1o Se~
-1972.
A apoi<esman for the 14 striklng I coaches aa1d the "decision to Withhold
· ,.. doeo Is based OO· the principle that I women coaches ought to be given the
1 same pay. as1men coaches."
\ ~ ,action means that after school
I -·-
.
sports Pl"ORrama for an estimated 1,M
New,port Beech and ,Coota Mesa 'J'hOOI
girt. will be halled iadeflnltely.
The-women will continue to teach
Jf>yslcal ec1uca1toii dasaes during the
regular school day, . however. ·
Earlier· this week, oft'icials of the
Newpor~Meaa ·Unified School lllstricl
8llllOWt<ed thet, hourly. COIT\penoalioo to.
WOft1e!1 aiochi)!g· after achoo! 11J10N
would be roughly doubled. to bring it
into line with "'1J! men c:oacbes earn.
UPIT .....
• . . === ~1#,.o.ii:">=::;;i;:;:lr ~-. •
One of thrM men who Ille&~. tried to cub forged and J!olen
. checb at a Miami bint lliel to crawl, from Ille overturned getaway
ear tol!Gflftg•• 111~· chase In dolrntown ¥.~·· ", -. . -.
Candidates for 2 of 4
Council Seats 'Scarce'
NomlnatiGos for two of the four seats
Oil the Newport Beam City Council that
wPI. be up for election April 9 clo8ed
al Mm today with only two candidates
!Ding In each race.
Nominations for the other two seats,
.Oistrlcts 3 aDd 6, will remain open
until Feb. 5 at noon because the
incumbents there are not seeking re-
ele<:tlon.
The' race for Corona 'de! Mar's Sixth
District· seat is getting crowded.
ho more persons today declared,their
candidacies for the seat that CQuncilman
JJlchard D. Cl'oul wUI vacate.
'lllat brings the total to live in lhit
cn.trict, alone. ,
Latest to obtain oominalion papers
ftJr Ille .Slztb Dlalrld race . are Jooepb
C. ~. 431 Carnation Ave., and
_Joseph 1-Sit Jumine.A,ve.
' ' ,,
lt~ll ·be Thic.k .,..
Fo'r Next Fe~ ..
D<!-y~ on Coast :
'
The fol that blankeled the 'Orange
eoait loday is likely to return· for• the
next few mornings, acco~g to the u. s; •Wetther Service.
Forecasts call !or continuatioo of the
Cl(Oltal reg tbll ,.nlllly 'dao!ed Orange
c-tJ Airport and bad q horns
blnloc-from Seal -to Slll CIM>ente tuclay. •
But --aald •they eq>ect the -abc lot 1o bew•ie blgb cloudiness
tluVqh the -· The C.,. _....,tly, presented low
problems, a1thoulll ponce In 111111111c1a11
Beocti '"""ltd a lalal !raffle accident
Wednelilay nlchl and two I n j u r y
accldaots early this morning wblcb they
·~ to the poor Ylllblllty.
, ~ __... for the <nice, Counly
Airport tower said no planes landed
at Iha r.dltl1 d\l'lng the morning,
allhougb 1 ltw wen allowed to take ol.f,
Mn. Lucille Kuehn, 1131 Seadrift Lane,
Irvine Terrace, and John V. Baker,
2500 SeaView,Ave. obtained papers earlier
this week. Only Planning Commlssioo
Chairman .WUliam Agee, 71S Larkspur
A~e .. bu filed papers with City Clerk
Laura Lagtos, however.
1be other seat where nominations are
still open ls District ~. representing
Ne~port Heights, Cliff H~ven and
Bay shores.
Ellis Glazier, president of Newport
Rakleirta United, and John J. McKerran
hive filed nomination papers for that
seol, whicb wil. be vacated by Council·
mm Carl J: Gymla after the April 9 e1.aioo. , .
Rbltor Peler Barrell has oblalned
nomination papers lo ruJ) in tl}at. race, b<il'be bu DOI yet relurtM!CI them.
11: .ylll be bead-tHlead cojifrontatlons f~r tbe, two incumbents who will "-try 1J totalii 1heir seats. ' · · ·
Vice May0r Howa!d Bogen wllf' be
•llJlPClled by lilrs. Al• '°'ii~ .,..,. of
.tliefarD)l!l' ~·· bli~ !or "tliird ..... ~111 • Dlltr(ci''T ~JUie '1llllioa-PeDlmala • mi ., Lido IaJe. -. ... ·,
'Couocllman , Milan llollal ~ being
cball~ , by ~' treacher Lyn
Geronlml .aa he 61da for' a ae\']Oll ~
in Dlstrl.ct I, repmenttng Weslc!Uf,
Dover Shores, Jlayerest, Bayside Village aoo Linda Lole.
• 'l)Je. two lM!\f Sixth lliatrld candidates,
Stewart and Ingram, concede they're
DOI ezpel1enced In city affairs.
•.Stewart didn't 'dedde be waa running
unlll af~ • oelgbbor took :out the
nomlnalioa papers ftJr bim. lie 'didn't
even tell bla wife.
0 1 don't know what you're taWnc
about. I didn't -,he'd -Illa~" Mrs. Stewart told a nporter wbo bad
called to opeat with ber b,.-Jlllnm, a retired Marble, Ayl be
11181 .... change bil 'J!llnd llld not
go tbnlacll ' w)lb It -whldl be did
two 1Ur1 ago when he Uved . In the
SOYenth llialrlcl and took out pipers
but didn\ file them.
"It will depend ii there 11 anyone
elJl'I Mining who I • coald 1UJ1POr1,"
lnll'llm .. Id.
Stewart, 41, and lncnm. M, both
IOllDded Ute lheJ bad atmllar ,._,,;
11Jout,Qlnina de1 Mar"
The belv1eot -.o1. roe ·
--lo be beiw .... = -alld Loar -. • lladlor
~ ......... laDwJlarllor
"I ... -a -t ol. Coraaa del
Mar, -IMS and I don'I • too much bnpnwement," lnlnm IUI. Re
aald be II ClllllCOrllld .,.. Iha -niporleCI ......... Dy ...,..,. .. there. (See CLOSED, Pip l)
'
niat pay raise ·was made retroactive
to Seple!nbtr 1973,
llbwever, Lincoln School coach Dody
Ancjonoo, !ipeAl9ng lot the WOl1t<fl
coad>es, Ill.id that uwe. have always been
asli!ni ·folo rai!ieo rOtroocllve to 1'72 and
we're still· i:skinl for that.''
Dr. Nonnan Loats, dopu!Y superin·
tendenl of the Newport-Mesa school dis-
trict, said he was "surprised." at the
women's announcement.
"I talked' to them yeSlerday· and every·
thing was fme . 1 don't know what hap.
pened, .,.. Loats said.
Mrs. Ander;son explained that ~ 14 women coacl)es met Wednesday nlg!it
to .dbi;uss whether 0< not to accept .the
district offer of relroacllve pay through
September '1973.
"We a.11 agreed that we have a right .to
retrvactive ~Y through 1972, and we're
going to' keep asking for it," Mrs. N>.
denon·aaid. .
She ·said tbe demand is based oo fed-
erat ... anti.discriminat.ion legislation that
•
went into effect in September 1972.
"The district has been pulling out state-
ments that we're happy with what l'l'e
have. But that's simply not true," she
said.
The. amount or money in dis pute is
relatively small , according to Mrs. An-
denoo.
"All it really amounts to is one staff.
lng w1it per school year," she says.
"1bat comes to $633 per year to be
divided among two or three teachers.
''So you can see "'·e're not in this for
the money. It's the principle," she said.
Loats said the distri ct is "legally re-
stricted" from paying the u·omen retro-
actively to 1972 unless it is ordered to do
so by the Fair Employment Practices
Commission (FEPCl.
The women have filed a complaint \\'ith
the FEPC, but no verdict has ye t been
rendered.
Loats said that no decision has been
made on ho,.,. to handle the striking
coaches.
Airport· ' to Get Backing
. Business~n St,art P-q,bJic Relntions Program
By L. PETER KRIEG
Ot: .. ~" ,. .......
A group of Orange County businessmen
have launched a •100,000 fund-rai sing
campajgn designed to finance a public
relaliom effort on behalf of Orange
County .Airport.
Mqre than 200 persons attended a
kickoff luncheon W~esday noon at the
Airporter Inn sponsored by t h e
Community Airport C.OUncil. They heard
a raft of s~kers, Including Ajrport
Film Pioneer
Sam Goldwy11
~-..
HOLLYWOOD> (UPI) Samuel
o.ij..,..,-GC'1111,'lltt ~ ~·1 fa~~-~m,~ died
today. He waa 91.
Goldwyn <tied during the night al hi!
home where he bad. been under the
care of a nurse.
A family spokesman said he died
"quietly in his sleep."
He was released earlier this month
from st. John's llo6pital In Slllta Monica
where be bad been under treatment
for an undiaclmed ailment for several .......
Goldwyn who helped found three
studloe -J\IG!of, ParaiDOIDll and
Goldwyn Studloe -waa incapacitated
for the. past bal!-do&en years, the result
of a stroke.
In November, 1970, Goldwyn turned
~trol of his motion picture empire
oVer to his wile, Frances. He was then
88 and ailing.
Medical statements attached to the
petition indicated be had auf!ered from
cerebral ~mbosi.s and a r t e r i a I
sclerosis since March of 1968.
At that time, the value of his estate
waa put at·$19.7 million and his yearly
income at $650,000. Mrs. Goldwyn had
Dirfcior Robert' Bresnahan, .m a:Jt.e
pitches for . theif support.
Bresnahan reiterated his predl:tion
that' the alrPort will have to shut down
if the county doesn't get a waiver •11ext
mopth from new state noise standards.
The State. Department of Aeronautics
will conduct a hearing on the variance
request Feb. 19-21 in Santa Ana ..
Bresnahan also confirmed in an
Interview -after the meeting that the
California Public Utilities C.Ommission
,_, •• 1
• • ·"'"··~ MOVIE PIONEE.R DEAD ':
Samuel Goldwyn, 91
been active in her· busbaod's businm
since 1934.
)"rom the time be· strµck out on his
own at the age of 11, making his way
from the ghetto where he was born
in Warsaw, Poland, to America, Goldwyn
(See GOLDWYN, Page ll
Newport'~ Clhbarelll
New Seal Beach Police
(]hief .t;O: Be Youngest
• By CANDACE PEAIL!ION
Of .. OllfY ,.... ..... .
Newport Beacb Poli<e Lt. E d
Cibbarelll, Ill, wW be the youngest police
cltiet In Orlnge ·County when he takes
over lhe reins ol thO Seal S..cb police
departmenl Ftb. IL ',
Clbbarelll'a ~ to the IZl,IJOO.
1-year. job from an Initial field of 125
canclldales wil lormally lOllOUllCed
Wednesday by Seal Beach City Manqer
Donni• Courtemardle.
'"!'be !Int jienaU' I probably ·O\iihl
to meet ii my oemtary .and find out
wbat'a ... on." Cibbllrelll, a
....... ,.... YelenD ol. Iha Newport
Bea<li pollce.. force, Aid Wedntliloy.
1'1'hen I'll meet with my capt.aim." a-aald .ho -.,•t tnow yet
What be Will make, tt any,
In law, In Seal
lleadl, wblc ' )II · a JIO!lce -lblCI~, ... "" '
adol' Let r: Cioe Wlbl oa miJdlcal
lea'te al Iba! ~and 1111 now retired.
Clpl. A~R., -acUng chief ol. the . . •
Cl~ · · In HunUn&ton -Wiili ~ Wife, Pamela, and ,.,........ 11111 ..... wu picked from ..... lhlell.,.,.,. ol.1Ua leadenhlp'
ablllllol, --oC 8eaJ Belcb and llrlnl -...... JD community
(Boe Cllll!t, .... l)
.. ' Y.OUNO MAN ' AT THI TOP
S..1 -h Chief tlbllorol11
I
(PUC) Is investigating o n go i n g
complaints about the lack of parking
and other faCilities at the airport
Martin LeVan, executive director of
the CAC, told the audience the PUC
was suing the airport because of
inadequate facilities.
"That was a misquote," Bresnahan
said. "But l did have a PUC investigator
in my office not long ago."
He said he doesn't know what action
the PUC may be contemplating, if any.
Missed Runway
Bresnahan's ominous forecast of a
closed-down air facility was challe:1ged
immediately after the luncheon by ~1rs.
Jean Morris, a member of the Newport
Beach-based Airport Action Association
that is suing the airport for $150 million.
"They are not going to shut down
the airport , you and I know that,"
~frs. Morris said. "And we are not
trying to make them close down.
"All we want Is the establishment
(See AIRPORT, Page 21
Pan Am Jet C1·ash Kills .. .. .
--~l Alfi?~, -·Samoa Flight
~
• P.AOO PAGO, -~ (UPI) -A Pan American WOrld Airwajs 'Boe.
ing 'Im with 101 perm·abOard crashed
in a violent thunderstorm 1,000 feet 'short
of the rimWay today and burst into
names, burning to death most of those
aboard when they were trapped in the
wreckage.
Wltne""' said 11 persons died. most
burned to death when trapped inside
the flaming wreckage. Of the 10
Three Burehered
In Oakland
Funeral Home
' I OAKLAND (AP) -Three mortuary
employes were found hacked to death
in their blood-splattered funeral home
early today only four days after roving
"psychopathic" gwunen shot four people
dead at random across the bay in San
Francisco. .
Police said apparently nothing bad
RELATED STORIES, Page• 3 and S
been stolen.
Police ~Id the body of one mortuary
victim was bound between two pews
in a first-floor Viewing room in the
Albert Brown Mortuary, a room ll!::>d
for moumen to view remains.
1be victims were identified a s
Clarence and Doris Bryant, liv~in
caretakers of the building, both in their
70s, and Michael Moore, in his 20s,
believed to be a mortician trainee, police
said.
Deputy Police Chief Tom Donohue said
the bodies were discovered by mortuary
h&ndyman Hans Lari.gschwagber who
entered the building at 7:10 a.m. and
saw the bodies lying in several blood·
splattered rooms of the funeral hime.
1be victims had been slashed or
hacked with sharp instruments, police
said.
He said the three had probably been
dead about 10 hours. When the murders
were discovered, two te&evision· sets were
still on In the upstaln living quarlera
of the lw<Htory building In. the bear!
of Oatdand.
Bryanl's body ,... found in a small
park>r near the viewing room where
the -victim .... discovered. Mn. Bryan~ dr<aed only In her
· bathrobe, was found near the rear door
of the bolldlng.
Dooobue said Mrs. Bryant, and
perhaps· her husband, may have been
trying to .,..pe their attacker or
atlackers when cut down.
Police could not give a moUve for
the slaying, saying that nothing had
apparenUy been stoleo.
The discovery came as San Francisco
remalried tenae while police concluded
an intensive 1earch for the men who
killed foor and gravely wounded another
tn a oeries of motlvelea lhoollngs
Monda)' night.
' • r"
survivors, several were not expected
to live.
The Federal Aviation Administration
ordered the airport, on the island of
Tutuila midway between Hawaii and
New Zealand. closed following the crash.
Dr. Peter F. Veales, medical' director
at the Pago Pago Medical Center, said
"most of the dead fried in the plane."
Veales said the survivors were three
women and seven men ·· and that eight
were in serious or worse condition with
bums over 50 percent of 'their body .
Two survivors were in fair condition
and able to wait about.
"We all tried to get out and jammed
the exits/' one of the two male survivors
said. "I inanaged lo get out over a
wing but most of those aboard did
not."
The pilot, Capt. Leroy Peterson of San
Francisco, radioed the Pago Pago control
tower shortly before the crash at 12:52
a.m. (3:52 a.m. PDT) that he was en·
countering violent thunder squalls and
one of these was in progress when the
plane hit 1,000 feet short of the runway.
The aircraft was flight 806 (rom
AuckJand, N.Z. to Honolulu, where most
of the crew lived, with an intennedi&te
stop at Pago Pago. Many of the
passengers were scheduled to make
connecting flights for the mainJand when
the plane was ·scheduled to arrive in
Honolulu at 6:35 p.m. (9:35 a.m. PDT.).
In San Francisco, Pan American
identified the cockpit crew as Petersen,
of Salt Lake City; Richard V. Caines,
Ralf Moon Bay, Calif.; James S. Phillips,
Sonoma, Calif., and Gery W. Green,
Seattle.
A temporary morgue was set up at
the Pago Pago Airport which was greatly
enlarged by the Navy during World
War II. However, the wreckage of the
plane was sti ll blazing-bot hours after
the crash and most of the bodies were
still inside the wreckage.
Oraage Coast
Weather
Mostly cloudy skies are on the
agenda Friday, with cooler temper-
atures along the coast. Highs at
the beaches 56, rising to 66 Jn.
land. OVemight lows In the !Os.
INSmE TODAY
Califon1ia paid $863,221 in
.turvivor and retirement bene-.
fits last year far 1J6 former
legislators a.1id slate officials.
Story, P,oge JJ.
«\ I
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It ~LY PILOT N Thllt'Sday, J'1!uary 31 , 1974
Hos pita Needs Aired
Hoa ,g Reviewing Paramedics, Admissions
f'The need to irilprove admission
proc«turcs and the need ror paran1edics
In Ncwiiort Beach Tuesday v.•ere laid
before a speciaJ Hoag fl1emoria1 Hospital
pane.I th.al is studylng v.·ays the hospita l
can ilnP.rove its relations v.ith the
con1mwuty.
Hospital Administrntor SCOll S. Parker
v.·as rel uctant to discuss the input the
from pcrWnnel directors of lhe Jlarbor
Area's largest employers, however.
"\\'c are taking this committee serious.
~
Nixo••'s Ex-aide
ly and I'm alrold lhele -le wtll llllnl<
we're ttylll( to make ljill a public
relatlona ripoff Jf we rele11e lnformaUon
about the discussions.'' Parker said .
Parker, however, did confinn that
the panel heard complaints about
admlssioa procedures and anesthes/olo-
gists during the noontime session.
Other sources told the Daily Pilot
that the admission desk was the subject
of most criticism.
"\Vbile. the Comments were generally
Funeral Services Today
For Murray M. Chotiner
fo'uneral arrangements are pending
today in \Vashlngton D. C. for h1urray
J\t. Chotiner. long lime friend and
political advise r to President Nixon, who
died lhere \Vednesday.
An autopsy performed by Dr. James
L. Luke, medical examiner for the
District of Columbia, Showed that the
former Newport Beach resident died
as the result of a large blood clot
that developed following an auto accident
last week in McLean , Va.
Cbotiner broke his leg and suffered
a concussion in a collision between his
car and a truck.
News of th~ attorney's death came
io an announcement from the White
From Pagel
AIRPORT ...
of absolute limitations on the number
of Oights and on the hours of operations
as there are now." she said.
"But Bob Clifford (president of Air
California ) just said in there that there
\Vas a 35 percent increase in passengers
this January compared with a Year
ago . U that keeps up you know they
are going to ask for even more flights,"
she said.
Clifford. in helping to rally support
for lhe CAC, also pointed out that
Orange County had the seventh largest
retail sales in the U.S. Jast year and
js currently ninth among the nation's
counties in popularity. •
"To say Orange County can live
Without air transportation is ridiculous,"
Clifford. said.
Another speaker, Thomas W o J ff •
president of the Jrvine Industrial
Comple.s:, made the direct appeal for
money.
' He said membership in the council
will C06t at least $50, but he pushed
•ifounding memberships," which cost
between $500 and $5,000 each.
"1bere are many businesses relying
on that airport. And it will not serve
us if it is in Ontario or anywhere
else," Wolff said.
Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers, who
recenlly proposed shifting the bulk of
cioounercial aifl>ort operations to Ontario,
was in the audience. aloof with two
other supervisors, Ralph Diedrich and
Robert Battin. Caspers made n o
conunent.
Bresnahan said he is optimistic that
Orange CoWlly will get its waiver, but
he pointed out this is the first application
that will be heard and there is no
precedent.
"We must prove to this hearing
examiner that there is a dire. need
ror the airport - a need that out,veighs
the inconvenience to the homeowners,"
he said.
"The burden will be on Orange Count y
to prove its case," he said.
"We can be quite sure that Newport
~ach will argue every cl aim that we
make in our appl(cation,'' Bresnahan
said.
"The hearing examiner will not be
knowledgeable with airport problems so
we won't know ~·hat to expect," he
said.
OU.N61 COAST M
DAILY PILOT
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I t
House \\'hich quoted Nixon ils saying
he 'vas "profo undly saddened" by the
loss of his friend .
"For .more than a quarter of a centUry
he was ·an ally in political battles:
a valued counselor and a trusted
colleague. Bul above all , Murray
Chotiner was my friend," Nlxon said.
"While some rect>il from the label
'politician' fl.1urray was rightl y· proud
of it because he was a professional
who had the respect and admiration
of · those who .... wked with him," the
President added.
The two men had been associated
politically since 1946 when Chotiner
handled public relatloru: in Nixon's first
campaign for Congress.
Chotin.er participated in e v e r y
successful Nixon carppaign except his
re-election to the vice presidency in
1956 because of a brief retirement from
politics follo'K-'ing a Senate investigation
oC alleged influ~nce peddling. The
investigation was dropped shortly after
it was begun.
In spite of the success that his bare-
knuckles campaign tactics had for Nixon,
Chotiner's own attempts for pu bUc office
were unsuccessful. He ran for the
California Assembly in 1938 and the
House of Representatives in 1960, losing
both times.
Chotiner had not Jived in Newport
since a divorce more than three years
ago, although he vacationed at the
Balboa Bay Club.
He had lived in Washington since 1968
where he served the White House in
several capacities before going into
private law practice in the capital.
Ciotiner was injured Jan. 23 when
his car collided with a truck near the
home of Sen. Edward Kennedy (~
Mass.), who called an amublance.
He seemed to be recovering from
his injuries and told a reporter Saturday,
''The doctors think I'm OK ... I hope to
go home by Tuesday."
He Is survived. by Nancy, his wife
of two years, llvo daughters and a
son.
Newport Dunes
Cit.es Revenues
For County Pay
Orange County will get a litlie . more
than 10 percent of the total revenue
returns reported for December by the
lessees of Ne\\1>0rl Dunes Aqu atic Park
in Newport Beach.
Newport Dunes. Inc., 'vhic holds the
ma ste r lease on the 70-acre parcel
front ing Upper Nc\vport Day. took in
a total of $40.200 in revenues last mooth
from the various operations on the
property.
Of that total, the county's percentage
as the property owner is $4,650,
according to Newport DWles, Inc.
spokesman Russell A. Pelley.
The biggest lease returns were paid
by J\.1arina Dunes, Inc., which reported
a total of $15,023. That is followed by
Anchor Marine Repair at $14,190 and
Bay Development Company's trailer
park at $5,850.
The future use of the Dunes property
is still in question.
The county is still tvaiting for a
reworked master plan of development
by the lease-holder, a group of wealth y
San Diego busine ss m en and
professionals.
Their original plan for the land was
to build a multi·million dollar wnter-
oriented amusement pa rk, but that pion
\\'as shot down by county officials
because it did not provide enough public
access to the water.
CoWltY offi cials asked the developers
to draw up another proposal with greater
\\'aler orientation. The lease-holders
claim the amusement park Is the only
way they can make the· property ll.'Ort.h
their \Vhile to develop.
DOG FOOD STOLEN
BY DOG CATCHER
CHICO !UPI) -Willia m J. Hehn.
a Butte C.Ounty dag catcher, has been
fined 1125 and given a suspended 30-day
jail sentence for stealing $1.49 worth
of dog food from the Chico pound.
Hahn, who admllted the tnell, also
was placed on one-year probation. •le
was arrested by police Jan. 19 after
be was all•gedly seen taking eight
pounds of dog food from lbe pound.
lt¥1ftbli, tllo ....-1 ...... llld !bay
felt " thl -procei1..... obould bl
I JllQe 11$1 callo\LI and I litlJo DIOte
homey,~· the source said.
"They have a tendency to run people
through like cattle, it's a little COid, ''
he said.
Parker confir1ned that he has met
with City Manager Robert L. Wynn
on a possible paramedic program.
\Vynn said he bu done some
preliminary studies of ' a paramedic
program similar to those now in
operation in neighboring cities such as
Huntington Beatj) and Irvine.
"But I'm, going a litUe 11ow," Wynn
said, poinlln8 out that the city Is aerved
by two private ambulance companies. ·
Ile eaid there l.s a possiblllty of getlin8
into a paramedic program in cooperation·
with the private compa.JPes.
"It's pretty darn expensive,'' Wynn
pointed out But he quickly added, "It's
hard · to talk about dollars when there
are lives at stake."
Discussion of anesthesiologists arcse
from complaints that patients weren't
gelling to meet these doctors.
"Patients are saying they don 't even
know who the anesthesiologist is,"
sources said. "And ·they are supposed
to meet them at least once."
Parker also said considerable time
"'as spent reviewing federal health
insurance programs, such as the Health
~tlaintenance Organization (HMO) now
under study.
"It looks like the federal government
will retjuire something like this in the
future and they just wanted to know
about it," Parker said.
He said he told them that the hospital
"really hasn't addressed itself to this,
but we will in the future ."
Parker said all the recommendations
will be reviewed by the committee. He
saidi in addition, the panel plans to
conduct public forums sometime in the
future to get more input.
Parker said the Consurrier Committee
will then formulate recommendations to
be presented to the hospital's Long
Range Planning Committee for possible
incorporation In hospital poUcies.
Veteran Pilot
William Buxton
Dies in Idaho
Orange Olost fileods who knew Vel<ftn
flier Wiliam Buxton during his 30 y0ars
here have been saddened to learn ol. his
death of cancer in Idaho, where he
moved three years ago. ·
A Pilot throughoUt his career, Mt. BUx-
ton was 61 and had flown for petroleum
companies, ih addition to flight, scenes
in the movie "Tora, Tor.:, Tora," the
Japanese-tJ.S. production about Pearl
Harbor.
BurW in the family plot at
Rialto followed fwieral services in
Hagerman, Iowa , where he lived with
hit. wife Pat, while he leaves family
members and lriend.s in the Harbor
Area and Laguna Beod!.
The family suggests memorial contri·
butioos IQ lhe American eane..r Society.
Daniel Hulette
F1meral Rites
Slated Friday
Graveside services will be held Friday
for long time Newport Beach resident
Daniel T. Hulette who died !\·Ionday
or a heart attack.
l\1r. Hulette, who was 47 at the time
or his death, was known to his friends
as "Bud" and bad lived in the Harbor
area for more than 20 years.
He worked at a variety of occupations
and served at one time on the San
Clemente Police Department. He was
also a movie stunt man and skippered
several yachts from Newport Beach.
Mr. Hulette leaves his wife, Edith;
a daughter, Liza Karges, and his moth-
er. brother an<I sister v.•ho all live in
Huntington Beach.
Services· will be conducted at 2 p.m.
at Pacific View Memorial Park. Baltz·
Bergeron Funeral'Home, Corona del Mar
is handling the arrangements.
From PIJfle 1 . ..
GOLDWYN •••
was an independent In thoupt and
action. He remained independent through
the stormy years which saw him rise
from a $3-a-week glovemak.er i o
multimillionaire In the movie llldtistry
wblch he helped found.
He betame Interested In movlHnaldns
when he dropped Into a nickelodeon
on Broadway to watch a tlve-mlnute
t'Omedy ml.
He talked his brother-In-law, Jeue
L. Lasky, Into fonnlng a movie
production company with capital of
120,000. Goldwyn and Lasky 1ent a young
friend , Cecil B. DeMille, then a
playwright, to Hollywl)od to talce
advanJage of y6ar-n>und sunshine .
Foor yeen la(er the fledgling company
became the 12$ mlllion famous Ph1yel'8"
Lasky Corp. 'lhll company lalcr became
Paramount plctum.
Child Kill.
.
Suspect
T a:pe"Heard ·
•
By TOM BARLEY
Of trl1 OMIY Plfltt, llllf
A cape recording that authorities allege
contains highly Incriminating statements
made by the impri$0ned derendant will
be played-back today In lhe 0ranie
County Superior Coor! lrlal of •CCUled
child killer Larry Wayne Cobb.
Judge H. Warren Knight today
overruled vigorous objections by defense
attorney Robert Brodie and decided that
lhe tape, reoorded in the Oronge
Police Department headquarters last
April 18, Is admissible and can be
beard by the jury.
Orange police said they roeorded a
convenatlon between Cobb, 22, and his
paraJllOUr, S.ndy Roelcwood, then 17,
and turned the tape qver to district
attorney's Investigators for possible use
in his trial.
The tape will be played back while
1ifiss Rock\vood, mother of the allegedly
murdered child, listens from the witness
stand.
Investigators said she listened to the
tape early today before being transferred
from qer· .county jail cell to the
courtroom and she agreed it was an
accurate depiction of the April 28
conversation.
Miss Rockwood testified I a s t
Wednesday that Cobb told her when
she returned home from work late April
11 that Todd, 3, was dead.
She told lhe jury that she did not
at first believe him despite what she
said was a Jong history of beatings •
in relationship between Cobb and her ;;on.
But then, she testified., she was shown
the beaten body of the little boy in
his crib anrl was later ordered by C.Obb
to remain on the Living room couch
for the next 24 hours.
Testifying that she \Vas "very much
afra.ld" of Cobb at that point, Miss
Rockwood said she was ordered to drive
him to a remote construction site in
the Anaheim area where he buried the
cardboard box containing the little boy's
body in a sewer line.
She said she again acted on Cobb's
instructions and notified Orange police
that her little boy was missing.
Police asslsted by concerned neighbors
and many volWlteers scoured the Orange
area for fi ve days before alleged
statements by Miss Rockwood and Cobb
led them to the Anaheim area and
the discovery of the child's body.
Miss RocRood, who is serving a
one-year jail term on accessory charges,
also testified that her son was beaten
and humiliated by Cobb th roughout the
couple's two-year relationship.
She testified tflat silt bad finall y
decided to permanently end ' h e r
relation.ship with C.Obb shortly before
Todd died and that she and her son
were to move the next day to an
apartment she rented in ·the Orange
area.
It is alleged that less than 24 hours
before that planned move Cobb inflicted
fatal injuri es on the child while he
and Todd were alone in the home.
From Pflf#e 1
CLOSED •..
of building. and the traffic problem. "
iteanwhile, Stewart said, "I'm very
concerned about the building -the
overcrowding and overbuilding."
Stewart said he think.! the size of
duplexes should be cut back.
The Santa Ana inte rmediate school
administrator said he has no position
on the proposed Fifth Avenue bypass
in Corona deJ Mar.
"I'd have to study all the alternatives
to provide good traffic now through
the city. Ingram said he's basically
agai nst it but th inks it might be
necessary "as a last resort."
EtnfJargo otf1
Oil Countries
.,,
~I . I J
To Meet Feb. 14
WASHINGTON (A P) -Seoreiary of
State Hcru·y A. Kissinger sal(l today
that the lifting of the Arab oil embargo
"\\'ill be recommended by 'several oil-
producing countries" at a meeting in
Tripoli Feb, 14. ·
Kissinger aaid he la "quite op timistic",
that the embargo will be lifted. He
made his remarks to newsmen foUowing
a closed door meeting with the House
Ways and Means Committee.
But DamaSC\15 radio today quoted
Kuv.·ait's foreign minister as saying his
country "would not reconsider liftlng
the oil embargo on the United States
unless Washington provides guarantees
that Jsrael will withdraw from all
OC<'Upled territory."
1'he minister, Sheik Sa bah at Ahmed,
was oonunenting on President Nixon's
announcement Wednesday night in his
State of the Union address that the
Arabs soon will reconsider the oil cutoff,
the broascas t said.
Jt \Y3S the firs~ reaction from the
Arabs to Nixon's announcement which
\\'as generally thought to refer to the ..
EDISON TELLS INDUSTRY
OF NEW RULES -P•go 14
PRESIDENT SEES NO
74 RECESSION, P•go 22
---~ meeting set for Feb. 14 in Tripo~ Libya.
Kissinger said he put before the
conunUtee "our plans for the energy
conference and our general expectations
in the energy field, the situation in the
i1iddle East and we had a very useful
and very constructive discussion aboUt
trade matters."
AJked to clarify President Nixon'•
reference in the State of the Union
message Wednesday night abOut a
meeting to discuss the lifting of the
oil embargo, Kissinger said:
''The President pointed out that in
his personal correspo nd ence .with friendly
leaders in the A1iddle East he had been
assured that a conference would be
called with a view of ending the
c1nbargo."
Frot11 P .. e 1
CHIEF •..
relations, ll>urtemarcbe aaid W~ay.
The city manager said he erpect>
the department's public affairs office
to grow under Cibbarelli 's command.
QuesUoned whlthor tbare , l.s aqy
difference between the c on t t~-e n c e
m~liooed by Nixon and the one
pre viously scheduled In Tripoli, Klsain,er
said that he undentood lhat "ihls will
be the principal item on the agenda at that' conference."
While Nbl:oo said it w•s a new
dcv.._elopruent, government oULclals said
be lnight have been referring to the
scheduled Tripoli meeUng announced
earlier.
The :Wh ite House provided a o
darificlllon todO)'. AJked wbetber the
President referred to the Tripoli meetJng
or some other sellion, an official ;then
said ooI.Y. "we're not ln a PQlition to say.'• ~ , . . •
In his -state .. -Of t!l• Unliln adclms
Wedneadoy night, Ni.On Hid the Arab
meeting ;,is an encouraging sign,'' but
at the.· same time asked Coogrea.. to,
approve ' Admlnistratk>n meas urea· to
reduce dependence on fOreign oil. ..._
"frrespective of the possibility · ,of
restorltlg the flow or !rtiddle East:.,on ..
vie must act now to ensnre that :we
arc never agalri dependent on foreign
sources of supply for our energy needa,"
00 said in a separate message.
Columnist
Says Tapes
Back Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Summaries
of a March 21, 1973 tap<>ncorded
meeting between Presklent Nixon and
John Dean, his former counsel, support
Nixon's contention he did not know about
the Watergate coverup until then ,
columnist Jack Ander!IOn said toda y.
Anderson soid sources wilb acces! to
the secret summaries told him the tapes
refute Dean's sworn testimony that
Nixon kniw ol the coverup as early
.. Sept. 15, 1972.
But, wrote Anderson, "In view of
the erued 11 minutea of the vital June
-~----------~ NIXON SEEKS TO PR~
COMMAND. An•lyal1, P ... 4
NIXON ATTORNEY QUESTIONS
ARCHIVES APPRAISER, Pogo S
"There's a lot of good things in ·t,be 20. 1972. tape: it is possible that the
police field to sell ," he said, '4and E:<t's Whlte House Bumataries don't disclose the one to sell them."
C'bbar I be the whole story."
1 e li gan as a Newport Beach CAnderSon's column airiars reeUlarly patrolman, became the de~t's · , first community relations officer and on the Dally Pilot edit.or! page.)
moved up to patrol sergea nt. "This is going to lake you by Surprise,"
He then became a juvenile deteetil•e, Dean is reported to have told the
was appointed lieutenant in 1972 and President ?\1arch 21 when he allegedly
currently se rves as adjutant to Newport told Nixon of Whlte House aides,
Beach Chief B. James Glavas. including himself, "'ho were involved
Glavas said he is "extremely happy in the coverup.
Ed's been given this opportunity. I'm "Oh, John. you ha\\e no problem,"
also very cognitant we've lost a very Nixon sakl, accordin~ to the summaries.
valuable man. Our enthusiasm outweighs ''Yes. I have,'' Dean illegedly replied.
the feeling of Joss." Dean then evaded Nixon 's question
Glavas praised Cibbarelli's rapid as to whether his chief aide, H.R.
progress and his dedication in the Haldeman, \\-'SS involved, Anderson
department and expressed confidence reported, and they went on to dlaam
that the new chief wil! be able to "the possible guilt or Jeb S1*Mt
overcome "whatever disabilities" his Magruder, Frederick LaRue, G. Gordon
relative youth ma y bring. Liddy, E. Howard Hunt and other
"We have a more and more youth Watergate figures ."
oriented society." said Glavas, who is Nixon told Dean rai~g •1 million
more than twice Cibbarelli's age, "and to pay for "the costs of Watergate ",
maybe thi:; is a sign of the limes.'' according to the colwnnist, "wUJ be
A Marine Corps veteran, CibbarelJi no problem." But Nixon eventually ruled
was born in the Bronx in New York out paying th e defendants to keep silent.
City. While in Newport Beach, he Asked by Dean about g rant l n g
received a bachelors degree in political executive clemency, Nixon is reported
science at Cal State Long Beach. to have said, "That's out. We can't
He Is now working on a masters offer clemency to anybody ,"
degree in public administration at USC The 1ummarles also show, Anderson
and said . \Vednesday he doesn 't plan s8id, that Nixon told Dean in reference
to glve that up. "It will probably. take to his aides who were implicated :
a few years now,'' he said, smiling, "Everybody has to go to the Graod
"since I can only go part time." Jury." :;.c_~--~-'-~~~~~-......................................................................................................................................................................................
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•
•
• •
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL:. 67, N0.·31, 4'SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1974 c TEN .CENTS
Bistall Coaches Huddle lf p lor Strike
By JOHN ZALLER
Of. .. ...... 'lilt Stiff
Women -at 8JI six H•rbol: Area middle -. lilday rel\ued to do any
more, after.achool coochlng unlll they
are given pay raises retlbact.ive to Sep-
t.mber 11'12.
A !lplkesman for the 11 ltrlklng
--lhe "dee'"'" to withhold servioeo is based 00 the principle tliat
_..., ooadles ooghl to be given the
&BJPe.JM!lf as men coaches."
'i)!O 8!'tloo meons that after s<hool
--· --
sports progmns for an estimated 1,200
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa s<hool
. girla will be ,balled lndeflnltely,
'lbe women ·will continue to · teach
physical education classes during the
·regular acbool· daJ. however. : Earller lhla WNk, olllclals of 1)le
Newport.Mesa Unllled School lllatrict
ll1llOUDc<d lhat hourly compeosaUOD to
women coaching alter ocbool ·IP"rll
woold be 'roughly doubled to briilg it
into line with whif med coaches ~earn.
-... _ ..
.,
Uf!I T ........
Elld of t he Line · •
~~,;M1M'•tr~g~--~g~w•1
Cll' foqowing a higb.gpeed clwe in downtown .Ml8Qli -• . -.
Thre e Persons Butchered
At Mortuary in Oakland
OAKLAND (UPI) -Three penons
were found stabbed. slashed and haclted ,
to deolb todly in the visiting rooms
and chapel of a mortµary . The murders.
Jactung apparent m.ltive. hlpP<ned two
'nigbls ,after four pencm were shot to
death at random in San Francilo> aCl'OM
the bey. (!!elated stories. Pig .. I, 1.l
1be latest victims, all white, were
Clarence Bryant, aboilt 70, a caretaker;
his wife, ·Doris, and Michael Moore ,
24, a mortician trainee.
SO muc1;1 · blood was scattered about
that police said it was difficult to
determine, without an autopsy, exactly
bow the victims were kiUed. · •
Indicating lhlt Moire put up a sln!ggle.
Bryant's, body was in a small sitting
room and Mn. Bryant's in a hallway.
Televlllon sell were playing both in
an upstairs apartmeot of the Bryants
and tn a downstairs sitting room where
Moore ' apparenUy was doing homework.
fer mortician scbool oourses.
· The bodi .. were discovered by another
employe ·when he came to work. at
7 a.m., and police believed the kiUings·
occurred -lly before midnight. The
circumstances strongly suggested that
more than one issailant was involved.
Deputy Police Chief Tom Donahue,
having seen a wallet on one of the
victims, tentatively ruled out robbery Moqfe, a 200-pouoder •. was foqrld
between pews In the chapel. The pews
were beavy and had been moVed around,
• as . a miOtlve. There ·was no sign of
foroed entry" 11ie ooly clue, Donahue said, wu
a broft!t·bOtlle of embalming fluid found
oo ·JM; sidewalk. outside. ' .
Cor y . Qe'(lies 1'id:
" .
To ·Write~in: '·
' .. \ . ~ .. Sartin fo r GOP · . . I
SACRAME·NTO (UPI)
Aaaemblyman Ken Cory (D-Oarden
Grove), denied today he "bankroQed"
a write-in Republican opponent two year.J
ago to weaken support for his main
opp0nent'. llowenr, Cory ll&id he ope D l y
advocated that write-ln oon(endcr James
Sirtin ol. Anaheim was a "better
candWte ' by> . far" than FiiDerton
attefaey Wllll• DlmMmeyer, hit maht
""...... 11111 binlod Iha! ..,,ir;ll!ltora
-clonal.. to Sartin'• C8-1ID' i.-dol.~···· .. · 1'he A~ Bulletin r ~ 'p o r t e,d w_, that the 0r111ge County
'Grand Jury was lnvestigallng charges
tho!· Cory moy have helped linmk:e
Sartin'• candldlq. • '
.. , dClo"t -what they coald be'
investlpdl!c,'' Cory told UPI.
The ~ Slid he did urge
cllluaa to oupport Sal'tlil ~. with
_,_ IDil --If lbej wen •••ae!Je!I with Cory's .......i.
1'ad I don\t th1nk thin'• any Jaw a.-. u.t;• Cory llldecl.
He l8ld ho ..... ol. no conlribullou
from llfl · .-..... cheat nor bla ~ 1111\'woii! to~ lllrtin"I' ............ \•
~w )Ill lled a fta.llllD .. _ 11111 a1lullnr .... bod ... ..,.
,_ ID lllllm" .OlrJ ~ Jo _.,..,..Ip.
·i
He iaJd several, boliles of embalming
fluid wel'e1 .mluing frOm the' 'bOd
preparation ; area, aild tliat soiiiebod:
must hlye dJ'OP!1"'1 a . bottle, He bid
no•ldea ·as ·to why -wool!! want
to lake embalml\11 flai!I. •.· " ' ,. The . ~·JI, . ......,. . ., 1 bmy --•~!!...•1-• -...:..L1~_ ... ...1i~:O-~ ............... "!""""'"' 1rea, aild poH£0 q~llooed neip!Jorl lloplna to find
-·Who be8rd noll<s at the Ume of tile iiloylngs. . ·
,The l1lllnlers occurred ·altout 11 hours
alter four penons -.. Shot to· dfath
at sepahte loc:allono in San F~clsco.
In ~ cues, lbe ldJlen were belltw,d
to hm been two blacl: men..' ' .
' '
Civil Big!i1Js ·
~iA~dipd
,ATLANTA (UPlj· .1 A• federll
Judie l!>ifay anr....i lliO GeotRJa
Poorer Co. I'! pox almost '2.1
million to blacl:a ,bt 'aid were
-of job ~lloo, the Justice iloplrtmenl Nici.
,,,. deporlnleDt 181d It .......
ol. th! larpot llltb • ..._
ever •1"mk<I ID 1 ~ d'rfl rilhts Cllf. • I l f
Federal Judp ._, 0. Smllb
Sipld I ~...-liy the
Jlllllie De '• Qvll llllldi
lllvi119'iua ~ of a U.S. Circuit 1)111;1 GI
............ &i<fflaloedi .11111 , ll'il!ll Iba llfl ••. .
. . 1 I
That ~Y raise was made retroactive
to September 1973.
HoWever, Lincoln School coach Dody
Andenoo. speakJiii for the wooien
coaches, •id that "we have always been
asking for rllaOs retrooctive to 1972 and
we're still asking for that." ·
Dr. Norman Loots, deputy superln·
tendel1I of the Newport·M ... ,.iioo1 djs.
trict, said he was "surprised" at the
women's announcement.
"I talked to them ye1terday and every-
thing was fine . I don't know what hap.
pened," Loats said.
Mrs. Anderson explained that the 14 women coechea met· Wednesday night
to discuss whether or not to accept the
district offer of retroactive pey through
Septem)>er 1973.
"We all agreed that we have a right to
, retroactive pay through 1972, and we're
going to keep asking for it," Mrs. An-
derson said.
She said the demand is based on fed-
eral anti..<fiscrtminalion legislation that
went into effect in September 1972.
"The.district has been putting out state-
ments that we're happy with what we
have. But that's simply not true," she
said.
1be amount o! money in dispute is
relatively small, according to Mrs. An·
denon.
"All it really amounts to is one staff.
ing unit per school year," she says.
1'That comes to $6.13 per year to be
divided among two or three teachers .
"So you can see "'·e're not in this for
the money. It's the principle,'' she said.
Loats said the district is '"legally r~
stricted " from paying the women retro-
aclively to 1972 unless it is ordered to do
so by the Fair Employment Practices
Commission (FEPC).
The women have filed a complaint with
the FEPC, but no verdict has yet been
rendered.
Loats said that no decision has been
made on how to handle the striking
coaches.
Airport to Get Backing
Businessmen Start Public R elations Prog ram
By L. PETER KRIEG or .. DtiilY PHii s• ·
A group of Orange County businessmen
have launched a $100,000 f~aising
campaign designed to financo a public
re18tions effort on behalf Of Orange
County Airport.
More than 200 persons attended a
kickoff luncheon 'Wednesday noon at the
Airporter Inn spol190red by t h e
Community Airport Council. They beard
a raft of speakers, iDcluding Airport
Director ~ Bresn~an, m a k e
pitches for their support.
Bresnahan reiterated his predi.:tion
that the airport will have 14 shut down
if the county doesn't get a waiver oext
month from new state noise standards .
. The State Department ,of Aeronautics
will conduct a hearing on the variance
request Feb. 19-21 in Santa Ana.
Bresnahan also confirmed in an
intervie)Y after the meeting that the
California Public Utilities Commission
(PUC)\ is investigating on go in g
complamts about the lack of parking
and other facilities at the airport.
Martin LeVan, executive director of
the CAC, told the audience the PUC
was suing the airport because of
inadequate facilities. .
"That was a misquote ," Bresnahan
said. "But I did have a PUC investigator
in my office not long ago."
He said he doesn't know what acJion
the PUC may be contemplating, if any.
. Mi ssed Runway
Bresnahan's ominou! forecast of a
closed-down air facility was eballenged
immediately after the luncheon by Mrs.
Jean MoJTis, a member of the Newport
Beach-based Airport Action AssociaUoo
that is suing the airport for $150 million .
"They are not going to shut down
the airport, you and I know that,"
Mrs. Morris sa id. "And we are not
trying to make them close down.
"All we want is the establishment
(See AIRPORT, Page %1
Pan Am Jet Crash Kills
Film ·Pioneer
Sam · G'Oldwy11
Dead ~at 91 ~ · · ,
... . ... ~91 !boaid Samoa Flight
llOLL}'WOOD (UPI) -· S1mtlel am-qi lbl Jut ol. lllJQywood's fa ~ ... moviemWri, 41fd
lilday. He WU fl. '
Goldwy1f clled during the nlgl\I at his
home where he bad been miler the
care of a nurse.
A family spokesman said be died
"quietly in his sleep."
Fie was reJeued earlier this month
from St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica
where 1be bad been under treatment
for an undisclosed ailment · for several
weekJ. I
Goldwyn who helped found lhiee
studioi -' MGM, Pal'llDOtlllt and
Goldwyn Studloo -was lncapocltaled
for lbe put ball-dozen years, lbe result
of a st.rote. ,
ID November, \970, Goldwyil turned
control of bis motion picture empire
over to bis wife, Frances. Be was then
88 and ailing.
Medlcal staterr..ents attached to the
petition indicated he had suffered from
cerebral thrombosis and a r 1 e r i a I
sclerosis since March of 1968.
At that time, the va1ue or" his estate
wa1 put al 119.7 million and his yearly
income at lli0.000. Mrs. Goldwyn had
.-..crlnd'"'tlng
• Ul"l'T ....... • ,'11 '
·, ·MOlfl.E PIONEElf. DEAD' "
.S.muol GoldWJll, 91 .
been active in her hu.sblnd's ·~
since 1934..
,From the time he struck out on ·his
own at the age of 11, miking his way
from the ghetto where he was born
in Warsaw, Poland, to America, Goldwyn
(See GOLDWYN, Page %)
Coart ·w He a r Tapes
~ .
" .. . . ...
Of .. Accwed Tot Killer •
By TOM BARLEY Miss Rockwood testified I a s t
"\ Of ... DlllY '"" st.tt • Wednesday that Cobb told her when
A tape ncordiilg that authorities allege she returned home from work late April
contains highly lncrtmlnotlng statements II that Todd, 3, was dead.
made b the 1 ......... def.... 1 will She told the jury that she did not 1 m .. -·-.. .,on al first believe him desplle what she
be played back today In lbe Orance said was a Jcini bistory of beatinp
Qiunty SupeitQr Court trial "of ICCUled m relatioqahlp l>etween Cobb and her
c;bild killer Larry Wayne Cobb. • -·
Judie H. Warren • Knlgbt, today But then, she testified, she was shown
overrule!I "-objectlons·br·defenoe .the. ~le!t body of the little boy . in
attorney. Bo'beri -. -liid dotlded tl!at his dlb anc1 was 'later ordered by Cobb ~ to remAln on the living room couch ,
the lipe, r_.ied In the °""'e for the next 21 boiirs. • •
Pollee ; Deportmenl holdquarters '1u1 Testifying . thal she was "very much
April II. Is ldml•lble and can be afraid" of Cobb at that point, Min
heard by 1be Jury. · Rockwood said ihe was ordered to drive
Orqe. poJl<o, 11ld Ibey recorded a him to a remote COOJtructlon lite in
conveh111an .between Cobb, 2Z, and. bis !be". Anaheim area whele he buried the
para-, ~ Rocnood, t"!l'.J!J caiilboon1 bol aontainl"* the little boy's
IDd &urned the tape over to ~ fx>ct in..1,"aeter line. t ~~'df ~. ton for poaib!• -Sile aid llie again acted on Cobb's • Jrlll. ,. ln1tructlo111 and notified Orange police
· The llpe. wlD.be played blck while thal her litUe boy. was ~· JIJll. llDcl:'wlllDd; inotlier ol. lbe allqoilly Police 1111ated by.concerned nelpbora
• ..-ddld, 0-fl'Om lbe w~ and many vobmteers scoured the Oranie
. -. ... :-~' area for five dayo before alleged • · ,........, oaRI Ibo 11stenM lo . . statements by Miss Rockwood IDd'Cobb
,.,_. l<)Uy ~ belDI tr lad lbem lo lbe Anal\11\11 ..... ~ l'lllf . b:ar <llllDIJ JIU cell lo .. ,lbe diacovery ol lbe chll4'1 body.
'"W""*'lawwwonin 11111 llie qreed It -Ill, Mia -wood, Who . iJ aervlDg I
-· dopktlan ol. the April ,. ..... ,.., jail tenn 00 acceuory .......... coo•wllticln. !See TAPES, Page I)
' •• •
PAGO PAGO, American Samoa (UPI)
-A Pan Amerlean World Airways IJoe.
Ing 7lYI with IOI persons aboard CiaiJ>,d
in a violent thunderstorm 1,000 feet short
of the runway today and burst into
flames, burning to death most of those
aboard when they were trapped in the
wreckage.
Witnesses said 91 persons died, most
burned to death when trapped inside
lbe Darning wreckage. . <>I the 10
survivors, several were not -expected
to live.
The Federal Aviation Ad.ministration
ordered the airport, on the Island of
Tuluila midway between Hawail and
New 1.ealand, cloaed following the crash.
Dr. Peter F. Veales, medical director
at the p"ago Pago Medical Center, said
"most of the dead fried In the plane."'
Veales said the survivors were three
It'll be Thick
For Next Few
Days on Coast
The fog that blanke\ed the Orange
Coast tOday is likely to return for the
next feW mornings, according to the
U. S. Weather Service.
Forecasts call for continuation of the
coastal fog ·that partially closed Orange
County Airport and had fog , horns
blowing from Seal Beach to San
Clemente today.
But weathermen said they etpect tbe
morning fog to become high cloudiness
through the weekend.
The fog apperenlly, presented few
problems, although poh ce in Huntington
Beach reported a fatal traffic accident
Wednesday night and two injury
accidents early this morning which they
attributed to the poor visibility.
A spokesman for the Orange C.Ounty
Airport tower. said no planes landed
at the facility during the morning,
although a few were allowei to take
off.
The heaviest ..concentration of fog
seemed to be between Newport Beach
and Long Beach, aithough Harbor
Department spokesmen in Dana Harbor
reported occasionally heavy fog there.
DOG FOOD STOLEN
BY DOG CATCHER
CHICO (UPI) -Wiiiiam J. Hahn ,
a Butte County dog catcher. has been
flned~S125 and given a suspended 30-day
jail sentence for stealing $1.49 worth
of dog food from the Chico pclU!d.
Hahn, who admllled the theft, also
wu placed on one-year probation. He
was arrested by police Jan. ti aher
be wos allegedly seen taking eight
pounds of dog-!~ from ,the pollnd.
.
v.·omen and seven meh and that eight
were in serious or worse condition with
bums over 50 percent of their body.
Two survivors were in fair conditlQn
and able to walk about.
"We all tried to get out and jammed
the exits," one of the two male survivors
said. "I managed to get out over a
wing bu t most of· those aboard did
not."
The pilot. Capt. Leroy Peterson or San
Francisco, radioed the Pago Pago control
tower shortly before the crash at 12:5Z
a.m. (3:52 a.m. PDT) that he was en.
countering violent thunder squalls and
one of these was in progress when the
plane hit 1,000 feet short of the runway.
The aircraft was flight 806 from
Auckland, N.Z. to Honolulu, where most
of the crew lived, with an intermediate
stop at ·Pago Pago. ManY of the
passengers were scheduled to make
COMecting flights for the mainland when
th~ plane was scheduled to arrive in
Honolulu at 6:35 p.m. (9:35 a.m. PDT.).
In San Francisco, Pan American
identified the cockpit crew as Petersen,
of Salt Lake City; Richard V. Caines,
Half Moon Bay, Calif.; James S. Phillips,
Sonoma, Calif., and Gery W. Green,
Seattle.
A temporary morgue was set up at
the Pago Pago Airport which was greatly
enlarged by the Navy during World
War U. However, the wreckage of tha
plane was still blazing-hot hours after
the crash and most of the bodies were
still inside the wreckage.
A Pan American Boeing 707 crashed
July 23 shortly after takeoff from
Papeete, Tahiti, killing all 79 passengers
and crew members aboard.
Pan American said 49 of the
passengers had been scheduled to
disembark at Pago Pago and that the
other 42 were en route to Honolulu and
Los Angeles.
Ol'aage Ceut
Weather
Mostly cloudy skies are on the
agenda' Friday, with cooler temper-
1 atures along the coast. ffi&hs at
the beaches 56, rising to 66 in-
land. Overnight lows in Ute 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
CalifONlia paid $863,221 01
survivor a1id retirement bene-
fit.I last year for 116 fon1ier
legUlator.s a1td state officials.
SCOfl', Paye 11. .. I ,
•
'•·'
t Thul"$da.y, Janull) l l , 1974
E11akrgo otn
Oil Countries
.·To Meet .Feb. ·14
\\'ASlllNGTON (AP 1 -Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissiilgcr :wld today
that the lifting of the Arab oil embargo
""'ill be recommended by several oil·
producing countries" at a meeting in
·rrlpoli Feb. 14.
Kiss inger said he ls "quite optiml.stic''
that the e1nbargo will be IUtcd. He
made h.is remarks to newsmen following
a closed door meeting v.·ith the House
Ways and Means Committee. I Bul Dam""'115 radio loday quoted
' i Columnist
! Says Tapes
'
1 Back Ni xo11
, \\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -Summaries ~f a 1'1arch 21, 1973 tape-recorded
meeting between President Nixon and
John Dean, his former counsel, support 1 Nixon's contention he did not know about
the Watergate coverup until then.
colwnnlst Jack Anderson said today.
Anderson said sources with access to
!he secret summaries told him the tapes
refute Dean's sworn testimony that
Nixon knew of the coverup as early
as Sept. 151 1971.
Bui , wrote Anderson. "In view of
the erised 18 minutes or the vital Jun e -NIXON SEEKS TO PROVE
COMMAND. Anoly1i1, Pege 4
NIXON ATTORNEY QUESTIONS
ARCHIVES APPRAISER, P-S .
20, 1972 tape, it is possible that the
While House summaries don't disclose
the whol e story."
(Anderson's column appears regularly
on the Dail}' Pilot editorial page.)
"This is going to take you by surprise, ..
Dean is reported to have told the
President hfarch 21 when he allegedly
told Nixon of White House aides,
including himself, who were involved
in the coverup.
"Ob, John, you have no problem,"
1 Nixon aakl, according to the summaries.
I "Yes, I have," Dean allegedly replied.
Dean then evaded Nixon's question
as to whether his chie! aide, H.R.
Haldeman, was involved, Anderson
reported, and they went on to discuss
';the possible guilt of Jeb Stuart
Magruder, Frederick La.Rue, G. Gordon
Liddy, E. HoWard Hunt and other
Wat ergate figures."
Nixon told Deen rnisin~ $1 million
to pay for "the costs of Watergate .. ,
according to the columnist, "will be
no problem." But Nixon eventually ruled
out paying the defendants to keep silenl.
Asked by Dean about g r a n t i n g
executive clemency, Nlr.on is reported
to have said, "That's out. \Ve can't
offer clemency to anybody."
The summaries also show, Anderson
said, that Nixon told Deao in reference
to his ·aides who \Vere implicated:
. "Everybody has to go to the Gra.iKI
, Jury."
From Pagel
TAPES ...
also testified that her son was beaten
and humiliated by Cobb throughout the
C'ouple's t\\•o-year relationship.
She testified that she had finally
decided to permanently end he r
relationship \\'ilh Cobb shortl y before
Todd died and 1hat she and her son
were to move the next day to an
apartment she renled in the Orange
~area.
It is alleged that less than 24 hours
·before that planned move Cobb inflicted
fatal injuries on the child while he
and Todd were aJone in the home.
'
OU.M•I COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
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Ku·Nalt1s foreign 1nlnlster as saying hi"s
cnunJry "would not reconsider llrting
ti1e oil emb&rgo on thi! United St:ites
unless \Vashlngton prov ides guarantees
ti~at Israel \\'ill \Vilhdraw fro1n all
ocrupied territory."
11he minister, Sheik Sabah al Ahmed,
\l-R!: commenting on President Ni.Ion's
announcement \Vedncsday night in his
State of the Union address that tile
Arabs soon \o\'ill reconsider the oil cutoff,
th~ broascast said.
It was the first reaction frbm the
Arabs to Nixon's announcement whlch
was generally thought to refer to the ----· .. EDISON TELLS INDUSTRY
OF NEW RULE S -Pege 14
PR ES IDENT SEES NO
'74 RECESSION, Pege 22
meeting set for Feb. 14 in Tripoli, Libya.
Kissinger said he put before the
committee ''our plans for the energy
corference and our geuera\ cxpecta1ions
in the energy field, the situation in the
f\1 iddle East and we had a very useful
and very constructive discussion aOOut
trnde matters."
Asked to clarify President Nixon's
reference in the State of the Union
mc-s.~ge Wednesday night about a
meetin g to discuss the lifting of lhe
oil embargo, Kissinger said:
"The President pointed oul that in
his personal correspondence with friendly
Jeaders in the Middle Ea.st he had been
wured that a o:mference would be
called with a view of end ing the
e1nbargo."
Questioned whether there is any
difference between the c o n f e r e n c e
Mf'nlioned by Nixon and the one
previously scheduled in Tripoli, Kiss inger
~aid that he understood that "this will
be the principal ilem on the agenda
at that con!eren-::c."
While Nixon said it was a new
rlevelopment, government officials said
hi! might have been referring to the
scheduled Tripoli meeting announced
earlier.
The White House provided n o
clarification today. Asked whether the
President referred to the Tripoli meeting
or aome other "session, an o!ficla1 there
said only "we're not in a rosition to
say."
Jn his State or the Union address
Wednesday night, Nixon said the Arab
meeting "is an encouraging sign," but
at the same time asked Congress to
approve Administration measures to
reduce dependence on foreign oil.
"Irrespective of the possibility of
restoring the flow of Middle East oil,
Y/e mu st act now to ensure that we
are never again dependent on foreign
sour• or supply for our energy needs1"
h<-said in a separate message.
Daniel Httlette
Funeral Rites
Slated Friday
Graveside services will be held Friday
for long time Newport Beach resident
Daniel T. Hulette who died Alonday
of a heart attack.
~Ir. Hulette, who was 47 at the time
of his death, was known to his friend s
as "Bud" and had lived in the Harbor
area for more than 20 years.
He \\'Orked at a variety of occupations
and ser ved at one time on the San
Clemente Police Department. He was
al so a movie stunt man and skippered
several yachts from Newport Beach.
J\1r. Hulette leaves his wife, Editll ;
a daughter, Liza Kargcs. and his moth-
er, brother an d sister v.·ho all live in
Hun tington Beach.
Services will be conducted al 2 p.m.
at Pacific View Afemorial Park. Baltz-
Bergeron Funeral Home, Corona del Mar
is handling the arrangements.
Oakland Star
Re ggie Ja ckson
Sued i ii Cou1tt)'
Oakland Athletics· slu gger Reggie
Jackson and his club ha ve been sued
for $300,000 by five Orange County tans
who claim the colorful outfielder did
a little slugging ott the diamond.
John B. Christensen. Gordon C. Schick,
Robert ~f. Kling, John B. Oberto and
Scott Rumsey claim in their Superior
Court act ion that Jackson leaped into
the stands at Anaheim Stadium last
Aug. 3, threw them all to the ground
and then kicked and bea t them.
Noting reports that Jackson·s explosion
was triggered by fa ns hurling debris
onto lhe field -the A's won the game
2 to I -the five plaintiffs deny that
they were involved In such actions and
that Jack90n11 attack was unp rovoked.
Also na n1ed in lhe lawsuit as a
subsidiary deCendant is Charles O.
Flnlty, the club owner.
Mansion Rel ocated?
SACRAMENTO CAP) -California's
ntw governor'• mansion would be in
downtown Scaramento rather than out
In suburban Cannlchatl under leglal allon
senl to lhe Senal• •Wedneoday by a
44-25 AslClllbly YOle.
}
'l'ONIGllT
O&\NGE OOUN1'Y FAIR IOAllD -
!ltguler ....U.,, a Fa!< DrlYt, 7:11
p.rn.
•
'
Hospital Needs Aired
Hoag R eviewing Paramedics , Adrriission s.
Insurance program1, such u thl Health
Mlintenance Organtution (HMO) now
und er study.
•
Parter oald an Ille ......,,,,,m1atlan•
will be reviewed by lbt commmee. He
Niel, In addition, lhe •panel plan& to
conducl public ~I -eti!)I• In the
luluro to 1et more lnpul • "STICKS AND BONES" -South Coasl
Repertory 'llleater, thru Sun 8 p.m.
"COURAGE FOR THE FUTURE" -
Dr. Rollo A1ay, first of aeries or lectures
on Americ~ Values · in TranalUon
spoll!Ol'ed by UC! Sludent Al!alrs
Committee. UCf $cience Lecture Hall,
8 p.m. Ticket information 833-5588.
1be lleed to Impro ve admlasion prooec1ur. and the -!or paramedics In Newjiott lladf Tlltsday were laid
beCore a special Roat Memorial Hospital
panel thal ls studying ways tbe h~pital
can Improve ils relations \vit h the
com1nunlty.
lloopltal Administrator Scott S. Parker
was reluctant to discuss the input the
from personnel directors of the Harbor
Area's largest employers, however.
"It looks like the federal government
will require something like th11 Jn the
future and they Just wanted to know
about it," Parker said.
He sald he told them that the Jlospi tlll
"really hasn'l oddrened llsel! to thla,
but we wlll ln the future."
Parker said lhe Co\llum•r CommlU ..
~·lit then formulate recommendaUons to
be pruenled io the hoapllal's Long
Ranae Planning Commltlet for possible
incorporeUon in bolpltAJ pollcles. '
I
UCl LECTURES -"The Financial
Woman," Rm. 174 Computer Science
Bldg., 7-9:30 p.m, "Scientific Medlclne
for the LoYlQAll: 'lbe NUYOUI Syslem,"
Freshman Lecture Hall, Medlcal Surge
ll Bldg., 7-10 p.m.
"We are taking this committee 3erious-
ly and I'm afraid these people \\ill think
we're trying to make thls a public
relations ripoff If we release information
about the dJscussions:• Parker said.
Nixon's Ex-aide '. ) .
FRIDAY, FEB. l
"NIGIIT WATCH" -Costa Mesa Clv1c
Playhouse, Fri. and Sat. 8:30 p.m.
Parker, however, did coo!lnn that
the panel beard complaints about
admission procedures and anesthesiolo-
gists during the noontime session.
Other sourCes told the Daily Pilot
that the admission desk was the subject
of most criticism.
Funeral Servi~es Today
For Murray M~·Chotiner .
OCC LE CT U It E -"'!be Baja
California Story," Lloyd lifason Smiill
lecturer. Science Hall . 7:30 p.m.
FRIDAY NIG HT FILMS "Dealh
in Venice," OCC Forum, 7 p.m. Ad(n..
IL I
BASKETBALL -OCC al Pierce
College, 8 p.m. Santa Ana Valley at
Costa Mesa, 8 p.m. Estancia at Corona
de! Mar. 8 p.m. Newport Harbor at
Westminster, 8 p.m.
UCl DRAMA WORKSHOP -Fine Art
Studio Theatre, Fri. and Sat. 8 p.m.
Admission 75 c;elits.
Jl'ronoP.,,el
AIRPORT ...
or absolute limitations on tfle number
of flights and on the hours of operations
as there are now," she said.
"But Bob Clifford (president of Air
California) juSt said in there that there
v.·as a 35 percent increase in passengers
this January compared with a year
ago . If that keeps up you know they
arc going to ask for even more flights,"
she said. •
Clifford, ui helping to rally support
for the CAC, also pointed out that
Orange County had the seventh larlest
relall sales In the U.S. lasl year . and
is ·currently ninth among the nation's
counties in popularity.
"To say Orange County can live
without air transportation is ridiculous,"
Cllllord said.
Another apeaker, Thomu W o 1 f I ,
president or the Irvine Industrial
Complex, made the direct appeaL for
money. ,
"While the comments were generally
favorable, the personnel people said they
felt the check-in procedures should be
a li tt le less callous and a little more
homey." the source said.
.. They have a tendency to run people
throug h like cattle, it's a litUe cold,"
he said.
Parkei' confirmed that he has met
wit h City Manager Robert L. Wynn
on a possible paramedic program .
'Vynn sakl he has done some
preliminary studies of a paramedic
program 1imilar to those now in
operation in neighboring cities such as
Hunllngton Beach and Irvine.
"But. l'm going a lltUe stow," Wynn
said, pointing out that the city is served
by two private ambula.Dce companies.
He said there II a possibility of getting
into a paramedic program in cooperation
with the private companies.
"It's P.felty darn expensive," Wynn
pointed out. But he quickly added, "It's
hard to talk about dollars when there
are lives at stake."
Discussion of anesthesiologists aros e
from complaints that patients weren 't
getting to meet these doctors.
"Patients are saying they don't even
know who the anesthesiologist is,"
sources said. "And they are supposed
lo meet Ulem at least once."
Parker also said considerable tim e
was spent reviewing federal health
Pen~gon Snoop
Probe Announced
By Senate Unit
He said membership in the' council
will ..,.l at least !50, but he pushed IVASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Senate
"founding memberships," whlcb cost Armed Services committee agreed tpday
between $500 and $5,000 each. to invfstigBte the funneling· of NatlOnal '''There are many businesses relying on that airport. And it will not serve Security Council documents to Adm.
us lf it is in Ontario or anywhere Thomas H. Moorer, chairman of the
else," Wolff said . Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Sup,erviaor Ronald W. Caspers, who Commltlee members said Secretary
recently proposed shifting the bulk of or State Henry A. Kissinger, who also
commercial airport openUoos to Ontario. serves as head or the National Security wu in the audieoce, ~ wJth two
other supervisors, Ralph Diedrich and Council, and Moorer would be called
Robert Ballin. Caapen made no to lesUly.
comment. No date has beeo set for the bearing
.Bresnahan said he Is opllmislic lhal bul it will pn>bably begin nest week .
Orange County will gel !ta waiver, bul Chainmln John C. Stennis (0.Misa.),
he pointed oUt this Js the fll'St application has alttady completed IODle initial work.
lhat will be heard and there is no Oelense Secretary James Schlesinger
precedent. exonerated ~foorer after conducting bis
"\Ve must prove to this hearing own investigation. Moorer also wu re-
Funeral Dtrangements are pending
today In Washington D. C. for l\1urray
M. Chotine r, long time friend and
political adviser to President Nixon. who
died there Wednesday.
An autopsy perfoimed by Dr. James
L. Luke, medical eiaminer for lhe
District ol Columbia, showed lhal the
former Newport Beach resident died
11 the r<SU!t o! a large blood clol
l!Jel developed following BD euto accident
last Week In McLeen, Va. .
Clotiner' broke hJJ leg and aulfered
I CXIDCUlcing in A t(lll!D between his
car and • truck.
News of the •tlomey'1 death came
in an announcement from the white . . . HOUie which quoled Nlmn 11 aylDg
he was "profoundly sadde{ied" bi the
ION o! hJJ friend. . "FO~ more thin a quarte r of a century
be was an ally In political batUes;
a valued counselor .and a trusted
'colleague. But above all, Murrl.y
Chotlner was my friend," Nlxpn &aid.
"While some recoil from the libel
'polillclan' Murray wu rlgbUy proud
of it because he WU I profeu:ional
who had the respect and ll!ilmlnttion
o! Im. wllo -keel 'with him," the
Presldent added.
1be two men hid been auocllted
polltically alnce 1948 when Cbotiner
handled public relations In rraon•a first
campolgn lo( a.isr-.
Cbotiner participated in e v e r y
successful Nixon campaign except hi~
re-election to the vice presidency in
1956 because of a b~t retirement from
poUUcs followlna a Senate invatiplion
ol alleged influence peddling. The
investigation was dropped shortly· efter
it WIS t>etun.
In spite of the success that his bare·
knuckles campaign tactics had for Nixon,
Chotiner's own .attempts ror public office
were unsuccessful. He ran for the
California Assembly In 1938 and the
House of Representatives in 1960, losing
both times.
Chotiller had not lived Jn Newport
since 1 divorce more than three years
ago, allhough he vacetioned at the
Balboa Bay Club.
He had lived in Washington since 1968
where he served the While House In
several capacities before eotna: into
prlvale law practice In the cepllal.
Chollntr was Injured Jan. Z3 when
examiner that there is a dire need appointed as chairtnan of the joint chiefs M "l C ' S l
for the airport -a need thal oulweighs afler the "leak" was discovered. al ampa1gn e
lhc inconvenience to the homeowners,·· The funneling ·or the highly sensitive NEW YORK (UPI) _ The National
he said. documents was uncovered by the Whl te .... p .d kl "The burden will &e.on .Orange County House "Plumbers" unit, an lntelllgen<:e committee on 1.ue rtSJ ency. see ng
t<i prove its case," he saltl. team secretly set up by President Nixon President Nixon's l m Pe a chm en t •
"\Ile can be quite sure that Newpo rt in July, 1971. announced Wednesday It will launch a
Beach will argue every claim that we l\ioorer said he received some mail campaign with the hope of re.achlng
make in our application," Bresnahan documents but said they were useless six million voters wt thin 45 days. An
said. to hlm because he already bad the initial mailing of 500,000 letters be.Ian
"The hearing examiner will not be information. He blamed the funneling this week, according to Charles L. Mee
knowledgeable with airport problems so or documents on overzealous Jr., chalnnan of the commJttee foUnded
.
his car collided with a truck ne'r . the
home of Sen. Edward Kennedy (I).
Mass.), who called an· a"luhlanpe.
He setmed to be teedverlng from
his injuries and told a reporter Saturday,
"'!be doctors lhlnk I'm OK ... I hope lo
go home by Tuesday."
He is survived by Nancy , hi.s 'wife
of two years, two daughters and a
son.
•
Grove Hoiisewife
Held in Stabbing .
Death of Husband
A·Garden Grove ho111ewile ii in Orange
Couply Jail loday · alltr police accused
her of stabbing her 50-year~ld husband
to dealh wllh ~ kllchen lmlie ·wednesday
night while her young son watched.
Lois E. Cannou. 4.1, was arrested at
the family home al 12841 Dungan Lane .
after police discovered the woman's
b111-. Albert, sprawled In the klld!en
· bleedlDI Imm multiple stab wwndl.
A Garden Orove Fin Department
moue oquad rushed Cannou to Palm
Harbor Hoopllal wbere he dled an hour
later, police said.
Investigators at the scene found a
bloody, eipl·lncb kllchen knife and uid
quatloning ol Mrs. Cannou led lo hef
arrest on suspicion ol murder.
Police said the only witness to the
1murder wu Mn. Cannou'• ~1d
son by a form er marriage. The child
has been pjaced in protective custody
at the Alber! Sitton-tlome~or children,
police said.
Mrs. Cannou is being held in lieu
or $250.000 bail. Police said she will
be amlgned Friday or early ne1.t week.
Vietnam Vessels
Sail to Islands
SAIGON (AP) -Three S ou l b
Vietnamese ships with 150 troopi
steamed today toward the Spratly
Islands, also claimed by lhe ChlneH.
China recefltly took another jsJand
chain, the Paracels. in a South China
Sea naval and ground ballle wllh Soulh
Vietnamese forcea.
MllltarY sources In Saljon said the south Vietnameae move toward the
Spratlys wu a oontlnu!ng .. •how of
Ille !lag'' lo back Saigon's clalm lo
the ialands. 1be •rta may contain oil
depoolta. \\·e won't know what to expect," he subordinates. in September.
said. -~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaammiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ii~~~~~~~~~-iiiii "It v.·e're going to win, we're going ~
io have a rot of help irom differen t in-IH·S TOR_E MICRO·,WA VE DEMOHSTRA TIOH by a HOME ECOHO~IST dividuals " ~ said
Bresnahan aaid he "can't see how Safu...._ "'-'-2 12 HI 5 P M lhe request will be dtnled because the ' ..... , ....... • noon • •
state will soon be faced with similar
requests from Los Angeles and San
~'rancisco airports.
"And if they deny their claims, they'll
close down the entire airport system
in !he Uni ted states," Bresnahan said.
A partial __budget ror the CAC includes
more than '32,000 In salaries. 116,000
for displays, $2,000 for airport signs
and $15,000 for brochures, poaterl and
ca1r.paign mailings,
FrotnPqe 1
GOLDWYN ••.
was an Independe nt In lhou&ht and
action. He remained lndependenl lhmugh
the stonny years wh ich aaw him rise
from a ~a-week gtovemtker to
mulllmillionalre In the movie lnduslry
which he helped found.
He became interested ln movie-ma.king
when he dropped Into a nickelodeon
on Broadway to watch 1 flve--mlnute
comedy reel .
He talked hla brolher-ln·law, J..,.
L. Luky, into Iormina a movie
production comptny wllh capllal o!
'20,000. Goldwyn and Lasky 1enl 1 young
friend, Cecil B, DeMllle, then a
playwrlpt, to Hollywood to take
ldventa1e o! year-round llllllblne.
Four Y""' liter the !ledillnt compony became the 125 mllllon lamaul Pll)'tn-
Luky Corp. 1blo -Iller became
Paramouol plcturta.
PORTABLE
MICROWAvE OYEN
;
'
Sl'ICw.
PllCI
'399'5
[8LITTON
Litton Microwave Ovens
NHod~ knOWI 'r°" about mlcrowev1 cooking thll'I uttan. Nobodt.
'~ci:': :; ~ -- -• '!. '' ;. ·-. -. I "'· •
52599 5
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WITH Al'l'llOYI D
tR•DIT
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