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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-02-18 - Orange Coast PilotI • • Ill en ~ras es 1 • J J ·~ayne To ··De rst to · Reveal List of Cou,ntians Free Food Plan: In Fr.eedolll Awards Daughter~s fta,nsolll MONDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 18, 1974 VOL. •1, NO . .,, 2 SECTIONS, 12 PAGES Fata·I A~~ident . . . • • • Daughter's Ra~som Hearst Devises Free· Food Plan OIJl¥IO ~~NAllll!lltlKtOF ' SANTA· ANA •HEIGHTS 'KILLED ,oN CYCLE '~ · ~Blk•!~~~Jruck Sunday Night; Impact.Wrenched Door Off .. ~.--. , ...... I . . • Traffic Acc·idents Kill Three in Orange County • A rash of Orange County traffic "She apparently ~It the shoulder and a<jeidents Sunday lert three yoWlg people then overcorrectcd, shooting dia gonally d~d and six others injured. California across the roadway into the path of Highway Patrol·ottk::en reported today. the van," a CHP spc)kesman said. Dead are Yvoone Garcia, 17, of The impact of the collision flipped Corona; David ~beluk, 21 , of ' Santa the small car over uxt· rolled It down Ana He!~ aha · Paul D. ~1cMill"m, a . short em bankment. Miss Garcia was 26 of Orange. • . thrown clear but of(ic&s said she was ' _ ~bl~ already dead. Two of-the fatal i-crashes ~-·The driver of;tlie van, JOhnliie AndefS, on Ille Orange Coast. . 24, of 308 16th St. In Hwitingtoo Beach, CHP . officers said Miss Garcia was sUffered minor injuries in the crash. killed instantly when the car she was A paSsenger in the van 21·year-0ld Jeff HILLSBOROUGH (UPI) -NeWsp.per publisher Randolph A. Hearst prepared today to announce a food distribution plan ror the needy iiemanded by the terrorist group whicll kidnaped his daughter two weeks ago. A lamily spokesman said Hearst would reveal the plan, which he said would involve "~µbstantial amounts of money" but far less than the $400 million originally demanded, this afternoon. The Symbionese Liberation Army, which OOlds his l~year~ld, daughter, THOUSANDS WRITE HEARST IN SYMPATHY, Story Pogo S Patricia, demanded that the program begin by Tuesday as a "gesture of good Ialth" before opening negotiations for the release of the girl, granddaughter of the late newspaper giant William Randolph Hearst. FBI spokesman John Kelly said there was nothing new to report in the investigation of the kidnaping. He said the FBI would have oo comment on the food distribution plan, sayingJt was "of oo great interest to. us from . a.Ii investigative standpoint." Kelly said the FBI was still respecung the family's wishes in not jeopardizing the girl's safety if the SLA'-s hideout w_ere -~i~!ered. . .. "If we thought someone was in there holding a gun to her bead, we would not go In," be sald. The Hearst family has beea receiving about 600 letters a day from well- wishers, both to the family home and to the San Francisco Examiner, of which Hearst is president and editor. Jay Bosworth, a spokesman for the family, said Hearst encountered "some delay'' in working on the "details and mechanics" of the proposal because of the long holiday weekend. This morning, Hearst and Bosworth Jeft the .family's Hillsborough mansion, telling reporters they were going to San Francisco. They gave no further indication of the purpose of their trip. Hearst and his wife, catherine, were heartened by a tape recording from Patricia received during the weekend in which she said she was being well treated and her abductors were willing to accept "whatever you can come up with." :'Field Marshal Ginque" of the .SL.A said in the recording that the SLA (See HEARST, Page !) riding in went. out of control at the Cruzon, If>35 Superior' Ave., Newport lnteriiection of the San Diego and Beech, complained of poin but reluoed Newport Freeways . and was struck hospital care. broadlide by an oncoming van. · The second Orange Coast crash Officers at tbe scene said the small happened at about 9:30 p.m. at the Santa foreign oar, drJven ·by _18--year-old Ana Heights intersection of Bristol Street Deborah Beard of Corona, apparently and Santa Ana Avenue. spun out on the ra~p connt;ctirlg the Officers at the scene said Anaheluk, 1DUthboood San Diego with the 2422 S.E. Bristol st .. was fatally injured northbound Ne\@Or't Freeway. when the heavy motorcycle he was Newport's-John Wayne Tops Freedon1 Award List A.D SELLS AUTO ON FIRST DAY llbe sale wa.s ·almost as automatic u the transmission for tbe reader who placod this ad : ~69 CORTINAl auto tram, gas saver, good cond. $500. (Phone No.) The advertiser reported_thls Daily Piiot claJ1ified aa did Its job and <0ld Ille oar on U.. l1rat day. They may .not all work thtt fut, but Ibey sure work. Test It on your own '1'11.erthandise. Dial the direct line to reoults at the Dally Pilot. Phone 642-M78. • driving rammed broadside into a small ·c1ru k tha all edl t .. -~ left Film star John Wayne of Newport P1 P true t eg Y w·•~ Beach topped the list of seven area in front of him. · Police said the driv'er rJ. the true~ · citizens honored today in Valley Forge, ·Kim R. Whitehead, 19, of IM3 Serenade Pa., In the Annual Ndllonal Freedoms Foundation Awards ceremony. Terrace in 'C:Orona del Mar, was driving Wayne, 66, was given the George ··taler •the influence of alcoMl when Washington award. for the "proud and be. turned from Brstol onto Santa Ana unabashed patriotism" of his new album, A.~Siue. • "American, Why 1 Love Her." Anaheluk'• big bi'ke rammed Into the . He beada the list of some 2,000 (iBssenger side of the car and flipped honorees desiP'!ted • nationwide for it up onto two wheels, officers were awards from tne Foundation. told by witnesses. ' Other Orange Coast citations Included · Two passengero In Whitehead's car -1.<lla w_ Maxson, 2663S Saddleback are 'in fair condition today at Mercy Drive, El Toro, and La Paz iJntennediate General Hosplial.!!llb multiple. Injuries. · School In El Toro for the school They 4J'e Lucllila Smith, 21, ci 19641 publication, El Conqulsta(lor, honor Kasswood St., HWllington Beech and award for both teacher and school. Jell Gillett, no known addreos. -Festival of Arts of Laguna Beach, Whilehead Is In Orange County Jail honor awarda In commWllty programs today on the drunken driving char&• category. (See CRASHF.S, r ·1e 2) -Dr. James E. Johnson of Tustin, ;f' former assiltant Secretary ol the Navy, for bia award-winning address upholding the American system of govei'nment and free enterprise. -Rev. Dr. Robert H. Schuller, founder and ltnlor pastor of Gardeh Grove Community On1rch for his sermon "I Am Tbe American Flag." -1bree Camp Pendleton servicemen, L. Cdr. Gerald Cox, USN; Sgt. John E. Johnston, USMC ; and Hon. William G. Wagnon,. USM\, honor award for their joint Jetter "Hwnan Goals -Values fOf uvma, U· ~ Announctrnent • of ·the awards wa:s made by a.n. Harold Johnson, USA (Rot.), "-no FoundaUon president. RedplenU were aelected by on lndependenl Natlonal Awards Jury conslstln& or . 13 state supreme court justices ond Ill national representaUvts !See AWARDS, Pore!) SUCCUMBS AT 73 UCl's Ralph Ger1rd Ralph Gerard, UCI Professor, Succumbs at 73 UC Irvine emeritus profess9r Ralph W. Gerard died Sllllday at Hoag Memorial Hospital, where he had been recovering from ·heart surgery. He was 73. Dr. Gerard, a resident of Corona d•l Mar, was founding dean of the UCI graduate division. He left a position aa director of the Mental Health Research Institute laboratories at the University of Michigan to come to Irvine In 1963. He helped plan UCI's school of biological sciences. Six months after arriving at Irvine, Dr. Gerard was named professor of biological sciences and directof of special studies on Feb. I, 1964. By October, 1964 Dr. Gerard was named dean of She graduate division. He .reslgn<d that pool In JW1e, 1969 and cOnUnued as professor of biological science. He was named professor emeritus in June 1970. Dr. Gerard was internationally known for his pioneer research on the functions of the nervlous system and brain. He is al'° noted for bis work in adapting audkrvisual materials and computer systems to education. He earned both dootot of medicine and dool<J< of philooophy degrees and received .hollU'ary degrees from Brown University, the Univenlty of L<iden In the Nelherlanda and the Unlversi\y of St. Azl<lttws, Soollind. He W&S asaoclated with the University of Oilcago for 37 yean. He earned both his bocbelor and doctoral degrees !See GERARD, Po{c Ii . '. I • - About Half Of Stations Pump Today Availability of gasoline on the Orange C'.oast improved today with about half of the service stations opening to hordes of ·gas-hungry mot~rists. Fears of a gasless . Monday .as well as the now-routine dry Sunday did not materialize. Service station owners appeared willing to cut short their holiday. and to pump gas for . the local clientele. The availability of a tank of gu was no worse than usual this morning SHUTDOWNS WORSEN GAS SITUATION -Story Pogo 4 in Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Mission Viejo. ( Gas appeared tighter in San Clemente v1here long lines of cars gathered at the three open stations and In EI Toro v.•here only one of eight stations was open during the morning commut~ hour. However panic buying, interspersed with road blocks and Ostfl.ght! at some stations on Friday and Saturday. protJJ~ Gov. Ronald Reagan to . announce that rationing may have tO be imposed in California. ''In the last-few days simply becau.se we have had to consider a contingency plan,'' Reagan said, "this ha! suddenly created panic buying and panic lines ' (Sec GAS, Page Z) Oraage Coast • Weatller Those winds will dim1nish to- night, but the Orange Coast won't be all that warmer on Tuesday with high readings in the middle 60s under patches of variable clouds. INSIDE TODAY More and more, Californians are: leaMina the magic words th.at guarantee a marriage with. no waiting, no witnesses, no publicity and no tests. Story, Page 7. llHll~I 12 M•~ln 1f.17 l . M. laYd t N1tloMI .._ ... C1Uht11!1 J Otll'I,. Cwll!Y I CllHltlM 17<11 ,._.. 11 Comic• U S-'1 M-11 c .... ,....,. IJ ,,.., .. ,... ' l>Htlil Nttlc• • no.attn , .. ,, ldlttnlt "'" ' W111Mf 4 l!t'ltlrtMfl!Mfll 1 .. 11 W-ftll Mtwt 1).14 H-K-14 W•"' Mm .., Allll llllffrt 14 • • .. ~2 ~AIL~PIL_O_T ____ s _____ Monday, Ftbruary 18, 1974 • ' 'Dat1tage to Coast' Ecologist Rips O·nof re Decisio·n By CANDACE PEARSON Of Ille Diii¥ PUot Sl1tf Any state coastal commissioner \\'ho votes for the proposed compromise on the San Onofre nuclear power plant should resign, 3 leading envlronmentaltst said today. The report by planners of the state Coastal Zone Conservation Commission recommending approval of the plant is "clearly inadequate" and ''tot a 11 y inconsistent with the coastal zone act," Janet Adams, director of the California Hitl er Albu m Bri11gs $2,800 LOS ANGELES (UPI) -An unidentified Briton paid $2,800 during a weekend auction for a photo album bulging with 390 personal pictures of Germ an dictator Adolf liitler. The album, one or only three in existence, was bought by a London man who paid another $1,000 for several dozen other unmounted photos of the German fuehrer believed to have been taken by his personal photographer. Officials at the Sotheby-Parke Bernet Auction House said the winning bid was teletyped from London Sunday. 'Voice' Speaks; Man Kills Wife, Five in Family . Coastal Alliance, said today in Los Angeles. Cons truction of two J,140 megawatt reaectors thrl'e m i l cs soulh of San Clemente w!ll ca us e "irreversible, irrelrievable dan1age" to the coast, she added. J\1rs. A_!i:uns spoke at a 10 a,m. press conference at Sierra Club headquarters wilh Larry J\loss of the Sierra Club and John l\lohr, professor of marine biology from USC. Moss said the Sierra Club ts backing approval of lhe $1.3 billion project if the units arc moved across the highway off the coastal bluffs and if a better way of assuring that the plant's cooling sfstcm v.·on't harm offshore marine life is adopted. Moving the nuclear units across the highway may not take Congressional approval as originally thought, Moss S<lid today. Southern California Edison's lease of Camp Pendleton lands is signed by the Secret<1ry of the Navy, who, Moss said, could administratively grant another site within weeks. The commission's planners, who Dec. 5 recommend~ the plant be moved east of the highway, now suggest · .,jij>proval of the original site if .21 miles of sandstone bluffs are preserved for 10 years and the pov.•er companies initiate a study of t h e effects of the plant on marine organisms. GERARD ... there and was professor of physiology. He was a graduate of Rush Medical College. . Dr. Gerard was a member of the National Academy of Sci~nces and was president of the American Physiological Society. He authored seven books and was active in national and international FAYE'M'E, !\liss. (UPI) -A ~year­ old man shot and killed luS-wife-; infant science affairs. son and four family members early Among his scientific contributions was today and Injured two others after he the discovery that schizophrenia may beard a "voice" tell him to take their be caused by faulty body chemistry lives, authorities said. Jefferson C.ounty Sheriff J. P. Wallace rather than family or social environment. said Frankie Lias told authorities "a Dr. Gerard was active in the Biblical voice told him what to do" C.ommunity, serving as an Orange belore he shot the victims with a .22 County Grand Juror, as a n1cmber or caliber rl.He in the pre-<iawn hours at the board of Olildren's Hospital Orange their secluded dwelling. County, as a director . of the UCI Wallace said the victims were Mrs. Foundation, as a member of the Friends Carol Eve Lias, 18; the couple's 11-of UC I and twice as president of the month-old son, Ken; Mrs. Jimmy Ross Friends of the UCI Library. Williams, 39, mother of Mrs. Lias; Leo Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Leona McDonald, 37, common-law husband of "Frosty" Gerard of the fami1y home, Mrs. Williams; and 16-year-old Dennis 1107 Goldenrod Ave., Corona del Mar; Williams and· 11.9ear-old Miss Tony Ross, and a son·, James Wilson Gerard of brother and· sister of Mrs. Lias. New York; a stepson , Stephen Graham Two younter •relatives, 4-year-old of Big Rapids, Mich.; a stepdaughter, Lennie Ross and Fredia Ross, 19, were Jane Novick of Eugene, Ore.; four in Wldetennined condition at University grandchildren. and three sisters. Hospital in Jack.son with gunshot wou.nds Arrangements are pending at Pacific of the head. View !\1emorial Park, Corona del Mar. Wallace said all but one of the victims bad been &lot "between the eyes." One of the children died of a gunshot wound of the heart. The sheriff said authorities were called by Lias' brother, William, shortly before From Page 1 GAS ..• 6 a.m. to report the n1ultlple slayings. at service statioru;. ,, f ~all~ce hdesc~~ Li~s as a "nice If it continues, he said, there would e ow, w o to en1 Ln a ~tatement be no choice but to impose gas rationing that .~ w:!-5 told by a "voice. w_hat statewide. to ~o ~. then he quoted some btbhcal ·-Reagan issued the warning Saturday scnptur~. . . in an appearance before the California The v1_ct1?1'5 ~ere shot while they slept Neivspaper Publishers Association. at the Lias trailer home and the nearby The Automobile Club of Southern house of Mrs. Lias' parents about 2:30 California pronounced the weekend as a.m. . the v.'orst gasless weekend of the energy Wallace said there appeared to be crisis. Only one percent of the stalions no other motive for the stayings and in the Los Angeles -Orange County that Lias had not had any disagreement metropolitan area were open on Sunday, with his family. the auto club said. Lias, who has a high scoool education, was a construction \\'orker. \Vallace said Lias. ob.<;erving his 20th birthday today in Lhe Jefferson County Jail, was calm v.·hile 'a \\"a i I in g arraignment. • • ... ORANGI COAST IT DAILY PILOT ""' °''"'' C011! DAILY PILOT, with wt.lcn " eom111rio11 Ill• NIWl·P•l!'H, 11 publl'-"ICI by "'° 0••1"19• $:NII P11llll.,,lf19 Com111nr. 5'111· r1110 tdlllorl1 '" py111!1hl>d. MOl"ld•r th•oUQh' l"rlcl•r, for co111 M1111, Newparl Bttch, Hunllfl91on 81..::h/FOUii!lln V1tl1y, L1111n1 llNd!, ln<"'-151<1dl~t~ 1fld Sin Cltrnenlt/ Sin J111n C1pl1tr&1111. A 1lrtel1 r19I011•I odlllon 11 P1*U1hed S1lurd1y1 Incl S11,,.,1y1. lne prlnclptJ puobtli.hlnt pi,nt II 11 lJO Wt1I 91y SlrN l, '"''' Ml!ll, C1lltornl1. "'"· aobor+ N. W11d ,.rl!llderll 11111 Pllbl1i.t..r J 1t'i R. C.irl1y Vkt ,.,..,..,.,., trod Gorw<"tl Mtntgotr Thom11 Ko1~il fdflM Tho111._ A. Murphin1 MllWllll"9 Editor Ch1rf1t H. Looi 1'1thtr4 '· Nill Aul1l111t Mlntllfte £1llof"I Offk• Olll1 M1111: UD Wl'lt l1y S1r"1 NO'lf!IOf1 IHch: »ll i'41W$16•1 '""'"',.. 1."""' '811ch: m Fornr A....,.,. ....,,,. .... !Orl .B1K11: 1111J hKh llouln1r1 $ffl ci.n-111 MIS NOflh ,, C.m!N llNI . ,,,.,, •••• (7141 642-4121 a..Mlill .,....,.. .... 142-5671 .,_ c...111 ...... S..111 " Uf'lll llldl 4'2-44Jt .,.. Md ON""~ eom-ltlft 140.11'f """'"""' l•ti. Or•• C..t "'*tli.hN C....-nr: No _. ,..,..._ lllustrllloftt. ~I fNolMr tt ......,.......,..." !tffffl _, .. ~ •llMVt ••111 .,.,.. "''".._ " cwrrlfJlt _,....-. ...... dau ............. ,, c .... MeN. Oillf!lnH.. ~-9' CAITW t:l.41 _..,,., .., -11 ., ,, -1111Y1 lflllllarr ~ a.a IM!lll'llJ, - Fron• Page 1 CRASHE S ... and bail has been set at $2,500. The third fatality, also involving a motorcycle, happened at about 1 p.m. Sunday in Anaheim. Police there said McMillen lost control of his bike at the intersection of Loara f and Minerva Streets and rammed headon into a big sedan driven by Daniel Ninburg, 45, or Anaheim. McMillen was killed instantly ln the crash, officers said. Firi1tg Squad • Executes Tivo TEHRAN. Iran (AP) -A £iring squad at da\vn today executt.d two r.iarxi!lt anarchists \Yho headed a plot to kidnap the Shah of Iran, Empress Farah and Crown Prince Reza, the a rm y announced . The two men, lraj Golsorkhl and Karamat Daneshian, admitted at their military trial that they planned to kidnap the ruler,· his wife and his OOii' ind kill them if the government did not release political prisoners. The palr refused to ask for royal clemency. The shah commut1...>d the d e a t h sentences of three other plotlers to life Itnpri9Ctnment. Seven other membel'I of the group rttelved prison \erms ranging from two to fiv~ years. .. • UPI Tt1tPhOlll Ptittittg the Bug to 1t' orf~ fuel, it was n1orc econo1nical to disc his fields with his Volkswagen than his tractor. • From Page I AWA RD S ••• of civic, educational, patriotic, and \'eterans organizations. The jury Includes Adrian PelleUer of Laguna Beach. 1'he panel noted t~ot,W~yne'• winning ·recOl'I! Is Ills ftrst a!buln . They described it as "a sensitive reflection pf a man in love with his country," Accompanied by chorus nnd orchestra, Wayne narrates 10 tributes to America that arc "strRiCht out afflr1nations ot this country and h<'r pt'Oplc." Ohher "'inners of the top 40 awards included Earl llamncr, Jr., or Burbank, creator of "The WaltollS.'' and Gordon Sinclair of Toronto, Canada for his record, •·woo Helped? The Americans Did." The Freedom Leadership Award wenl to \vorld heavyweight boxing cbampion George Foreman of Hayward for a published article on oppoMunities offered by the American system. A second National Recognition Award \\'as presented to Joy Eilers of Granada Hills for USO perfor1nance& at home and abroad, public presentations ot Lincoln v.Tilings and service to institutionalized persons. Farmer Bill Peters has one "bug" in his field in in Red Bluff, Calif., that he's not anxious to get rid of. Peters found that with the rising cost of ~~~"----~-~~~~~~~~~~~~- For 15 years. the fow1dation has presented awards · "for constructive \\'Ords and deeds which support America, suggest solutions to basic problema besetting the nation, contribute to responsible citizenship and inspire love of country." Judge Overrules Parents: Deformed Baby Treated PORTLAND. l\1aine (AP) -"Some people are calling us monsters because of this and others are very sympathetic," says the father of a severely malformed baby that has undergone court-0rdered surgery his p.arCJ'.lts refused to approve. "I disagree with the judge's ruling. I feel that we · as parents should be listened to," said Sgt. Robert B. T. Houle of \Vestbrook, ar Air Force recruiter. His lO-day-0\d son -who has not Priest in Italy H eld in Attacks On Scl1oolhovs " BARI, Italytf(AP ) -A priest was charged with '·violent lewdness and obscene acts" against a dozen pupils at a boy's school, the police said today. The · police said the priest injected a narrotic of some kind into the necks of the boys, rendering them_ helpless so he could indulge in lewd acts with them. The priest was identified. as the Rev. Nicola Bucciarelli, 48, director of the JI.lost Holy Mary of the High Seas school at nearby Mola on Jtaly's south Adriatic coast. The police charged his assistant, Albino Vergatti, 2Q, a law student, with "maltreatments and violence.'' The arrests fol.lowed reports to the police by teachers and relatives who said lhe boys had bruises and needle marks on their necks. The police quoted. one boy as saying he would wake up at night, feel a needle stinging him in the neck and fall back asleep. Coll' Gunned Down By Police Copte r LUEDENSCHEID, \Vest G er ma n y (AP) - A cow that lowered its horns lo\vard a grounded police helicopter was shot to death with machine guns as a "vicious'' animal, police said. The cow escaped from a slaughter house and was tracked Sunday to a u·ooded area by five police cars and the helicopter. The helicopter landed, the CO\V lowered its horns and the pollce opened fire. The carcass \Vas taken to the slaughter house. been . I . conscious since ~ birth. Feb. 9 -was reported in fair conditioo today at the Maine 1'1edical Center. The surgery was performed Thursday. Doctors say the . baby -whose left side is deformed,' including having. no left eye or ear canal -is unable to - take food by mouth and may never gain consciousness. And the child's doctor testified at a court hearing Thursday that surgery probably would not be of any benefit. But Superior Court Judge David G. Roberts ruled the infant has a "right to life" and ordered life-sust.aining surgery. A first operation was performed shortly after the judge issued his order. It involved implanting a food tube into the infant's stomach. Another operation. planned ~ for this week, is intended to permit the baby to take food by mouth. Navy Lt. James Fryer, attorney for the baby's parents, said an appeal 0£ the court ruling to the l\1aine· Supreme Cour't iS being considered. But he said a decision by the parents is being delayed \10til aft.er the second operation. "I Wlderstand the second operation is a high risk one. The decision to appeal may· well be moot" if the baby dies, he said. The matter was taken to court by the hospital · becailse the situation ·JX>sed •·a highty difficult moral dilemma," said John Mitchell, hospital attorney. He said the medical center is considering financing the Supre111e Court appeal to gain a definitive ruling on the matter. 40 Roimded Up On Vice Charges MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Vice squ<id officers arrested 40 women along Collins A venue on prostitutioo charges in a weekend crackdown on street walkers. • The women, ranging in age from 18 to 27, were charged with soliciting undercover officers who were cruising l\1iami Beach's main thoroughfare in response to complaints from motel operators and tourists. Motel manager Vince Mottola said street walkers start flooding a strip of motels along northern Collins Avenue as soon as the su.n sets. "It happens every night as soon as it gets dark,'' ~fottola said. Rebel~ A1nbus h Ji1eko11g Co nvoy PllNO~I l~ENH, Cambodi3 (A P) - ll ebcl gunners ambushed a J\fekong f{i\ er couvoy today and blew up one amn1unition barge carrying 700 tons of nn'!rnunition. port officials saicl. A second bar~c 1vas also hit and set afire, but the crew put uut the blaze. Tlll'Y said one person was killed and four 11·crc 1vounded. The ainbush came a_s \he IO-vessel conv.oy was steaming up the 1\tc~ong River 26--2~ miles s::iutheast of Phnom Penh: I UPI T•l"'llttg 011cl1! This workman appears to be dealing a "head crushing" blow to the Frankenstein 1nonster in Newport, Ore., but he's only putting up the mon- ster as part of billboard. Now if he had a stake, and it were Dracula ... Frorn Page 1 HE ARS1' ... \\'ould "accept a sincere effort on your part." The Rev. Cecil \Villiams, pastor of Glide Memorial Church, said Sunday night that neither he nor members of five le!tist groups named by the SLA to oversee the food distribution program had been consulted about the Hearst proposal. Hov.:evcr, he said he believes the falJ1ilY is acting in "good faith." One coalition member, Popeye Jackson of ·the United Prisoners Union, said his group didn't support the Hearst family, nor his daughter, nor the SL.A. He sa1d the UPU \\'as only involved to help give av.•ay the food . Dennis Banks of the American IndJan !\[ovement said he wasn't happy that J\.1iss Hearst was kldnaped but he was glad to be an intermediary. New left activist J erTy Rubin warned the SLA in a leUj!r published in Hearst's San Francisco Examiner that killing J\.1iss Hearst "v.·iJI set off a right-wirlg - crackdovm" in the United States. He urged the kidnapecs not to harm the girl. "If you kill Patricia Hearst you will be outraging human beings everywhere," wrote Rubin, a leader of the Ylpples and one of the Chicago Seven riot conspiracy defendants. "You will set . off a rightwing crackdown -find 1he SLA ! -T~at will endanger the very people that you say you are fighting for. You \\'ill destroy the moral credibility of the left." l\fan Drowns in Canal MECCA (UPll -A Los Angeles man who ignored "no swimming" sigm along the All-American Canal drowned SWlday v.·hen he became too tired to clhnb back up the canal's slooping cement banks. San Bernardino County Sherllf's Deputies said the body of Kenneth Coleman, 24, v.·as swept downstream by the strong current and has not been recovered. Gusoli11e Bath Foils Assault SAN JOSE (UPI) -Robert Link, 27, was pumping gas for a long line of cars when a motorist with four \\·omen passengers tried to cut into the head of 1he line. Link told police that when be continued \\'orking on the car at the pumps, the male driver punched him and the four women joined the attack. The attendant said he spraytd gasoline on the at.tackers, who lblO jwnped into their car and 1pid off. Ms. Mainte11an~e Worker \11"1 Tft..itill 'THEY WON'T BE SORRY' Maintenance Worker Scot t <• Fountai 11 Valley flus No V11ifo rm for New Employ~ ...... By CANDACE. PEARS.ON The biggest problem FOWltain Valley's newest maintenance "man" has run into Is that the city didn't have 1111y uniforms to flt her . But Diane Scott is making do with jeans and blouses as she goes on her daily rounds of reading and repairing meterS for the city water department un111 her specially-ordered ovetaUs are delivered. · """ .. 'J'll.e first woman in a job that has now beenre:fltleCf 1,-m _al_n le n ti nCe worker," she says she reaJJi~ the city Is "tesllng me to see if J can hold my own as well as a man can. "They're nol going to be sorry for hlrlng me,'' she adds , with the same determination that cused her to earn a black , belt ln karate w~en she was 15: Now 2.1, wt.th 3 foOr·year-old son .to support. she says a "woman should have the · same chance to do a job as a man does if she can perform," But she applied · for her job "'"ith Fountain Valley Jess out o[ principle than o[ a Jove for working outside, • for working wllh her head and her hands. She worked a:i a receptionist for a computer company in Anaheim. but "you see the· same four walls everyday, lh,e same people everyday." Now she ls rending waler.JDeters, learning how to handle water main lines and vnlye!, ~Uil!Yitrr-wm-er1!1str1bUtlon and chemic<\! treatment in school. fhd dlscoverliig the tools to use to handle any water-related emergency. Evr.ntually, like all 'ma Int en u n c e workers. she will be O(J c.all 24 hours a day. 1 After two months, said Ms. $t40lt, her ~workers "seem to accept me." She · has a few more problema in the field when peOple or e\leh •JllOllce stare at her as she works or dr ives a-city pick-up truck. "They look at me like l stolE! It." M But she's determined to do well. When she started learning karate;.••out of mere self preservation" beca~ ~ was 12-years-old and lived U ~~ from school in Washington, D.C. She's never had to use It bu~ys it's to "relaxing to know I ha~ it." That confidence and being the ~vlng example of t)le •doge "like 1D91her lil.e daughter," help her1now. ,,; ' For years, Rer mother w:. s one of the few women wallpa.per·hangers and took a young Diane with her A the .1ob In a ba~si nctte. "She was very aood" · her daughter 1ay1 proudly. ' Diane's friends ask her how she can 1 •l•nd getting dirty and wearing "grubby clothes," but she doean1t see ll u a challenge to )!er femlnlt~. •· • • • ~ )1 1 s DAILY PILOT Stornay ~ 7 Years • ID Mission Viejo Saddleb3ck-a Fortress Under (Editor's Note -Thi.s is the first· of a two-part series on Saddleback College. Created by the electorate seven years ago, the school district that covers nearly half of the land in Orange County, was launched amid great hopes for its future.) By JAN WORTH Of IJHI Dalt~ Pll9J Si.If A new junior college for the south county was approved by voters on Valentine's Day, 1967. Son1e people liked to predict lhe new two-year school, Saddleback College, would berome "lhe Sweetheart of Orange C.Ounty." But in the seven years !lnce, much of the heart seems to have gone out of Saddleback's romance with its taxpayel'3. The 1ast year has been in many ways the stormiest of all : Three trustees -all charter members of the board -have announced their resignations Jn the last six months, one of them after he pleaded guilty in Orange County Superior Court to bookmalng. As you drive onto campus, you are greeted by a large sign. NOTICE. THE FOILOWING ARE PROIUBITED ON CAMPUS: Then come! a long list of activities. They range from "Unauthorized Bicycle Riding" to "Use of Golfing Equipment" 10 "Firing of Weapons." . What you don't find out from the sign, planted at the entrance to SOO SWUlY hilltop acres in Mission Viejo, ls that you are at Sa.ddleba.ck College. The cheerless sign seems . to fit the atmosphere that hangs over the troubled school. Specific problems Include: The school's president, Dr. Fred Bremer, was censured by the Orange Cowity Grand Jury last summer for. writing a letter lobbying for tiigh density ~stal · development which would have hiked the value of choice beachfront property owned by board preoldent John Lund. Bremer said his justificaton for the letter was that development in the Capistrano Beac.h area would have boosted the district's tax base "without a dversely affecting the environment." The Grand Jury challenged that conclusion. Bremer said he "assumed Lund had a vested interest" behlnd his request for the lobbying letter, but. said he didn't discuss the request because he believed Lund had the best interests of the district at heart. Lund later apologiied to the board for his request, saying "l didn't think it wu that big a deal." He said he had provided most of the wording or the letter, but neither he n o r Bremer discu.ssed it with the other board members. Possibly the most serious problem facing Saddleback now is the threatened de-annexation of the Tw;tin Unified School District portion of U,. Saddleback district. Some 8,300 Twitin residents ha v e signed petitions to get out or the college district and into the more Convenient Rancho Santiago (Santa Ana) district. Leaders of that movement have complained of driving dist an c e, inadequate facilities and curriculum and rigid administrative attitude and policies. RancOO Santiago officials b a v e endorsed the move. But for Saddleback, the p r o s p e c t carries serious consequences: Joss of 17 percenl of its student body and 2S percent of Its assessed valuation. At a recent candidates forum, six competitors for the seat of Trustee Michael Collins, resigning to give mofe time to his law firm, firmly said "no" when asked If they are satisfied with the school's present administration. 11te :seventh candidate did not attend. .. SADDLEBACK COLLEGE HAS ONE PERMANENT BUILDING ON 200-ACRE VIEJO CAMPUS Ten Others Are Slated to Follow the $3.2 Million James 8. Utt Memorial libra ry shaped Saddleback College and created its current public relations crisis with the community has to take in two crucial aspects of the school's past. First. the school's original board of trustees, four of whom will serve on the board, were basically conservative Republicans, backers of U.S. Rep. John Schmitz and the late U.S. Rep. James Utt for whom the school's first permanent building, its library, is named. Second, these trustees took power at Saddleback when campus unrest, from Boston to Berkeley, w3s at its peak. The situation was disturbing not only to ~rvative RepublK:ans. Upset by the Wlprecedented activism of 'many of their own children, even liberal parents were stupified by demonstrations on various campuses,· use of marijuana and L.5D, and a seeming breakdown of a peaceable academic atmosphere. From the beginning, the Sa.ddleback board pledged to keep such unrest off the new campus. The attitude with which the trustees opened the school was described by Rep. Utt in his speech at the dedication of the permanent campus in 1971. "Shape up or ship out may be an arbitrary pronouncement," he said, ''but for Vietnam draft evaders I'd consider that controversia!Snd say 'no.' " ''If he sPoke on child raising," Collins continued, "I'd say yes." Later, when students came to a board meeting to protest the speakers'policy , Collins said angrily, "Campuses are not maintained as a forum for free speech. Our job here is to educate." Trustee Donna Berry said she felt controversial meant "anything with at least two sides." She said she would op- pose even Sen, BalT)' Goldwater coming to campus if an equally "'rominent liberal politician were not on the same plaUorm. The result of the confusion has been that over the years, few speakers of any kind have appeared on campus. 'These two policies epitomized the atmosphere that gave Saddleback its image among prospective students as a paranoid, humorless fortress against liberal encroachment. Some say the campus' first permanent building, the $3.2 million library. indeed looks like a fortress. Original plans for this building were windowless -and it was ooly at the last minute that trustees asked for a change. The school's policies prod ced periodic Verba.I clashes on the caippus which Everybody is afraid <'Ji everybody else." Whether or not that was true, the image seemed to persist. Last year, disturbed by the imminent rr.ove by some of his constituents to begin the drive to de-annex Tustin from the Saddleback district, Tustin Trustee Hans Vogel told his fellow trustees the school "has a police state image." Usually, blame for these negative views comes right back on the school's administration and board. From the beginning, the school had its pick of administrators and instructors. The first '1:l teachers were selected from 1,500 applications. Searching for a su~~endent, the board waded through 57 applications from all over the country. In' an unexpected last minute decision,~ the board selected Jack Roper from its own backyard. Roper, then 35, an administrator in the County Department of Education, had been assigned as a ronsultant to the infant college and its first bbard in late 1966. He accepted a "$25,000 contcact in August, 1967. According to one trustee, Roper was hired because the trustees' first choice turned the offer down. , • Hans Vogel said the board offered a contract to Dr. Julio Bortolazzo, a Harvard graduate and then superinterxient . of the San Ma.teo· Junior College D.istriot. Saddleback College District Trustee Bans Vogel told his fellow trustees the school 'has a police state imqe.' · Bortolazzo reportedly liked the offer but said hus district would not release it is far more preferable to anarchy, which is the onJy alternative. "This board of education considers education at the taxpayers' expense a privilege and not a right," he concluded. To set the tone, trustees began in the summer of 1968 to institute school policies which they felt would help the school avoid the pitfalls of "permissive'' campuses elsewhere. A strict dress code, banning "unusuallr, long or bizarre hair styles or beards ' for men was written. Students were required to wear shirt!. Bare feet and cutoff shorts were banned. Suggested attire, strange-sounding at the flamboyant height of the hippie era, included slacks and sport jackets for men and sport dresses, flats, and "stylish and groomed hairdos" for women. perpetuated its image. him a year early from a two-year ~ In 1969, 23-year-0Id Tustin student contract. Lindahl King was suspended for a "We felt we had to make a decision violation of the hair code. quickly and since Jack knew all about He decided to fight it. With the help the district, we felt he was the only of the American Civil Liberties Union. one we wanted," Vogel said. King filed a suit in the U.S. District So Roper took a leave of absence Court. In late 1969, the court ruled from the c o u n t Y Department of in his favor and. issued an injunction Education. But he did not stay long to the school that he be readmitted. enoogh to see the school open in the The case was appealed. In July 1971, fall of 1968. the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals After a series of disagreements with overturned the lower court and allowed the board which ended in budget cuts the dress code to stand. on areas Roper felt were crucial, he But a few days later, apparently tired resigned in J1.1ne, 1988. of community pressure, bad press and The cuts were in programs of· the lengthy court process, the trustees community ·crafts and fine arts, and abolished the code. Roper recommendations for a full-time In 1ate 1971, a UC Irvine student, personnel director and dean of evening Joyce Treble, ·was kicked off the school. Saddleback campus for distributing a With less than three months before survey without a d m i n i s t r a t i v e opening, the board of trustees found permission. them.selves without a superintendent. The survey asked questions designed Instead of another time-consuming to determine Saddleback's image among nationwide search, they promoted Dr. its students. Fred Brerm!r, then dean of instruction, thent -partly because he took a firm stand against can1pu.s radicalism; and J:hey had confidence in his administrative abilities -already test, iri a year with the district. A former Nebraska pu hlic school superintendent and dean of liberal arts flt Santa Ana College, Bremer h<1d been one of the 57 applicants for the superintendent's job iu 1967. lie was not anwng the top three, but wa s hired as the school's dean of instruction on Roper's recommendation. Bremer is still president and the direction of the school has, for all· practical purposes, remained unchanged as well. But with the recent resignations of . three charter trustees -Collins~ Alyn Brannon. and Hans \toge!, the district may be at a h1rning poi nt. Brlinnon, '13. resigned in January after pleacting guilty iu Orange County Superior Court to bookmaking. A forn1er dairyn1an, he was charged in connection with a $25,000·a-week gambling ring in the Harbor Area . His resignation followed C<lnsiderable behind- the·scenes pressure " from fel\o.,.,· board members and th e community. Perhaps the most i a t e r est i n g resignation of a ll. in long range terms, is that of Vogel , the school's first board of trustees president. Formerly editor of the conservative Republican periodical, "The Observer," and now an administrator for the Tustin Unified School District, Vogel has been a vociferous spokesman through the years. Once one of Bremer's staunchest supporters, he has locked horns with Bremer repeatedly over the last year. Vogel reportedly has stated privately he believes it is time for Bremer, too, to~ resign. . Vogel changed_his attitude "about the school's administration in part because of feedback from the dissident Tustin group -his constituents. Listening to their complaints, he said he has begun to see things need to be changed. But with v.·hat he sees as the deterioration of his rapport with Bremer, Vogel said he feels his effectiveness as a board member has ended. Siege The pending departure o! these three trustees -all colorful In their own way -marks the end of an era. After they ar"e gone next June, only Patrick Backus of Dana Point, an elementary school principal, will be left of the original fiv e trustees. The board now has seven trustees. 11 \\'as expanded from five in 1971 when wieveu population growth in the area made the Saddleback Valley trustee area much larger than the others. The board after the May and June · elections will thus have the following complexion: -Backus, thi' only remaining charter me1nber. -John Lund, appointed in 1971 and re-elected once since, whose position on the board has been somewhat clouded by his involvement in the lobbying letter situation with Bremer. -Dr. Ji1n Marshall of Laguna Hills and DO'nna Berry of Mission Viejo, who have served on the board just oVer a year since they were appointed to fill the two new trustee area posts. -Three new trustees, two to be from Tustin and one from Irvine or El Toro. Thus. in six months district affairs will be in the hands of a board of trustees who are both new at their jobs and faced with ·a series of serious challenges. When the school opened, its motto was "\Ve've Got the Green, Let's Give Them the Gold." A de-annexation effort Is threatening the green -money to support further growth. Whether the school and its basically inexperienced new board will be able to weather that storm, restore Saddleback's image and still produce the original goal -the "gold'' of higher education -remains to be seen. ' How do You. start a college? The fi11at part of the series Tuesday will examine Saddleback's beginnings in the early 60s and how its founders decided it should be a new district over protests from both Orange Coast College and the state. Also a look at the diltrtct's tax history and academic gro1oth. D1ltf Plltl Stiff Pho!o In their campeigns for the March S election to replace Collins, 32, most of them have stressed the school should be at a turning point and needs: new dlttcllon. Jn addition, the board of trustees passed a stringent pollcv on campus speakers. They ~fled that every "controversial" campus speaker must be balanced on the same program with an equally well-known s p e a k e r representing an opposite point of view. Miss Treble told the boa.rd that of to Roper's spot. lhe 300 repHes she had collected before The original board members said CAMPUS RULES SAY FEET ARE MADE FOR WALKING being ejected, 250 respondents called Bremer was an attractive leader to Ecology Doesn't Include Bikes On t he Quiet, Hilltop Site Saddleba.ck "repressive." lr===============================::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==-:;-"The atmosphere here 1.s shocking," Any atlemp( 10 understand wbat has But the meaning of ''controversial" has never been spelled out. Trustee O>Hlns said 00< time, "ff Dr. Benjamin Spock came here to speak on amnesty she said. "It's like a prison camp. ,. • BORN IN AN ERA OF CAMPUS UNREST, SADDLEBACK MAKES ITS MESSAGE CLEAR Fir<! Boo rd of Trutl••• Vowod In 1967 To Kffp Troublo Aw1y From tho Infant School . .. ,. .. :.: ... ... ... .. • • ... '· ""'f\ot!!CI on 1 firm found11tion 01 C JI,;~ l'V ~q bv ~'O'l'<Y.!.' E. ~em:in ~ f11;lor~d· dr.11 with a Rid 81lloon poclr1t. mooe ~·,•u1 •'!.''~ '"' u~. '\ "'"'" hv Co• :i ~, .. 1,;11 ,;i1 rt.n• "70n Hcrbo.s Corio tf,o dauqhiei of Or. i nd Mr1. J1y Fi•lds, onet\,j\ Hcrbour V1ff"' S.Cl«I!. ,., f;"" i.ei-cTron of Son..q fi01ence Ei~n.:in\ 1(,.11. Cu1•om·wttr. oo-d 5-m-~ I\ 'lO"' O' The Red Sd'oon Lid THE RED BALLOON LTD.:,..:!l I' ASH!OI' ISl ... NO ~Bite~ ....... l()wN • COUN f'I~ en. 1114\ !Y-tSH OiUf'ITIN01()N KAA90Ull. llU! .... ltM ' } 4 DAIL V '1LOI -.,, Ftbnwy 18. 1'174 Just •• Maria Callas , Cancels Slio·w . Copter DlVe~ at White Hollse ' "" ~ " "''' . wUh Tom orphine :s..;: MONDAY, BY GEORGE' All a<r<>Ss our nation today, we are observing the birthday of The Father of Our Country, George Washington. Ah, indeed, the holiday takes all forms. Some v.•il\ celebrate by not going to school. Others will honor Washington by sitting in their car, in a long line. and finally Jelling some gas station attendant, ''I cannot tell a lie. I only have a quarter of a tank left. . A few may bake a cherry pie. Several others may hoist a glass with a cherry in ii. Well, no matter how you do it, you are observing \Vashington's Birthday, not keeping it. • AND THE REASON you are observing ls that George Washington. cherry tree chopper, truth teller, s u r v e y o r , geptleman Virglnian, rebel , Constitution framer, coin tosser, commander and chief of the Conlinental :\rmies. river forger, British whipper and f i rs t President of the United States, was not lx>rn on this day. That's right. Not bom today. Since I cannot tell a lie, the truth in the matter is that George Washington was bom on Feb. 22, 1732, in a place called \Vestmoreland County. Virginia . He was not born Feb. 18, which is today. Therefore we are all celebrating his birthday on his non-birthday. This happem because some time back, some shakers-and -movers had a brilliant notion about shifting holidays about upon the calendar. NO MATIER WHAT Ii"» holiday - Annistice Day, Lincoln 's Birthday, . Prune Pickers Day, Nat.:onaJ Noodle Day -no matter. Th:? idea was to jigger it around so you could make a three-day ""·eekend out of it. Ne\·er mind historical signi!icanet> or the tacts about when something re.ally happened. Shift that day arouod so it fail5 on a Monday and you end ~ with a three-day vacation. So to celebrate the birth of a man who was reyuted to have never told a lie, we make liars out of ourselves by pret~ing he was born today instead of when he really was. NOW GET 11flS. In order to get this three-day holiday thing, we even lied when we didn't have to . If we'd just gone ahead and relebrated Washington's .Birthday when it really happened on Feb. 22, that would have been this Friday. NEW YORK (AP) -came~le Hall was already flllln1 wjth eleaantly dre!!ed opera lovers when the last -m Jn·ute aMouncement was made: Marla Callas had a respiratory infection and could not appear. The cOncert, which sold out the 2.800-seat hall wtth tickets priced up to $100, was put of! for two week.s . The cancellation came just 40 minutes before curtain t i m e Sunday. 11 wa.' to have been Miss Callas' Cirs1 New York singing appearance since 1965. B.C. Avalanche Kills One Skier, Injures 6 Others VALEMOUNT, B.C. (UPI ) -A mile· wide avalanche thundered down a remote rocky mountain· onto a -.gro,up of skier.s Sunday, killing a Montrt.'.11 man and Injuring six other persons. . Royal Canadian Mounted Police said 40 holidaying skiers, airlifted to the mountain by helicopter, were on the slope on 8,000-foot Mica Mountain when the upper layer o! snow fractured near lhe top of the 3.000 Coot ski slope. The skiers were split into groups of 10, each with a guide and all equipped with radio locators. police said. ''.Luckily most or the skiers happened lo be at the outer edges of the avalanche," said an officer who esti- mated the slide was a mile in width, HoweVer, he added, one group was in the middle of the slope directly in the path of the slide. · Geoffrey B. Taylor of Montreal, a member of that group, was buried under several feet of snow. Fellow skiers using the radio locators found his body about :20 minutes lateF . LA Area Youth Dies in Shootout CUDAHY (UPI) -A )'llUllg 111111 armed with a rifie after a family disp\lte shot it out with sheriff's deputies iJ'I and out of his house and was finally killed when he refused to put. down his weapon. AUthorities said Sunday that Charles Johnson, 2D, fired a burst when deputies arrived and fired a stc0nd burst throu1h a window after running inside his house. 1be officers returned J o h n s o n ' s continuing gwUire and, as the young man bounded outside [iring a last burst, he was shot and killed. ' WASHINGTON IAP) -'lbe federal government today ljro~ crlmlnul cb.ar1e1 against an · A.rmy prtvate wbo flew a helicopter onto lhe While House grouods early SUDC11y Ind turned him over'° the Army tor ''f urth e r proceedln11 with Ole mUltlry."" WASHINGTON (UPI) -A ioldler who flunked out of flying school Is being held for mental study arter be stole a helicopter and flew it str1lght at the White House, crash-lending ln a hall qr Secret S.rvlce bucbhot early Swtd1y morning.· Preildonl Nixon and all of his family were O\tf o Washington for Ure wee kend. The ~dler. ldenilfied as Pfc. Robert K. Prestoq, 20, of Panama City, Fla., got a cOmpllment from Dan L. Sewell, a combit • decor.&ted Maryland State Policeman who f611owed hls, two-hour aerial joyride and watched helplessly as the Huey. helicopter roared in just above the 12-foot-high steel fence and came to fest 100 yards from the President's home. "He 's a helluva pilot," said Sewell . "I'd say '1te had quite an accomplishment." PRES1'0N WAS to be amill!lled todoy on charges of "unlawful entry" into forbidden White House air space. He Solzlienitsyn' s Last USSR Essay Strikes at Lies We cduld have called Friday a holiday and still ended up with a three day celebration. We can't even tell the truth when it's easier. Well, .the old excuse for putting these three-day holidays together was so that families and folks could take to the highways, enjoy freedom, breathe real air and rest and relax bumper-to-bumper somewhere. Protest Closings in East Worsen Gasless Holiday TIIA'.J' WAS HOW it started. Of course,. now you don't have any gasoline to go do all that celebrating with. So the old excuse for lying about when holidays are is a lie in itself now. You have lo \\'Ondcr v,ihat the new excuse will be. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Mvery of 1he !h1y Pila! I\ !pJ!"Ofl!eed Mond1-r"noty !I ,.,,... do "OI -'°"' -°" $ )(I P m '911 lnCI \QJI' aJ0r ""M bl' tltoug/11 I<> )OU. Calls ar•llO.,.utWO I001un. Sl!Uldly ltld S.. ...... y I! \'OU 0o ••<II fe<;to.._ l(>Ut COl)y b'I 9 1 m s.1uro;iv ore'"' suno.v. call and• coov "'II Oii b<-ouo'-IO IOU C.lil ltfl tlktn unlll 10 1 m T el~P'>a""!s Masi 0.lf'9!! Oxmiv Ne11 Sin C!tn'e~e. C.11tstr1nQ 6'<.ic" Sin Ju.n C.11t1Traroo, 01n1 Pooni Sov!~ L1QUf11 LIQun1 r119""1 By United Pre~ International A random survey conducted(. early today by the Aulomobile Club of New York showed that most of the city's gas stations had closed for the holiday and that lines were Jong despite the ahsence of a rush hour. Pete Hahn, AAA spokesman, said that 85 percent of the stat ions checked we re closed with lines ranging from three blocks to a' mile long at those that v.·ere open. License plates showed a mixture of odd and even numbers, Hahn added. In Virginia's tidewater a re a . organizers of a shutdown said the protest action was 50 to 80 percent effective. THE PROSPECT of widespread station shutdowns, called to protest government regulations of fuel. prices and customer services, made the long \\1ashington's birthday holiday one of the worst week ends for motorists in need of gasoline since President Nixon asked dealers to limit sales on Saturday and Sundays. Gasoline deRlers in \Vashington and Oregon called off their threatened pumpout Sunday after regional energy officials agreed to negotiate a controversial eig ht·Point proposal wit& federal officia ls in \Vashington, D.°' Dealers had said if no agreenlent y,•ere reached by midnight Sunday, they would sell out all gasoline on hand. However, after 12 hours of negotiations With regional energy officials, spokesmen for both sides announced tentative agreement on a plan which would have to be approved on the national level. THE GOVERNMENT'S pennv-a-gallon gasoline price increase, which affects more than half the dealers in the country, was received poorly by most service station organizations. Tilomas Anderson, executive director of the PeMsylvania Service Stat.ion Dealecs Assn. said the 5,300 -member group felt the markup was not enough . Plans for a statewide shutdown next weekend will continue, he said. Anderson said his organization "knows of 300 dealers in Pennsylvania who have gone by the wayside since October" because of profit looses, and there "are probably another 400 to 500 we don 't know about." Winter Felt • Ill Rockies I Te1nperat11res Ab1iormally Higli Elsewliere • in U.S . Cnlifor11in Wind 11111!1 ol 1b0ut 20 mlle1 •n hour l1nnl'd ltlrouqll S Ou I he • n 1"1lllo•nl1 loday. cl••rln; tr.e ski11 1nd ~-Ina 1 .... ri-returt~s mo1!1y in tilt rilgh 60s. 11 w•• onty 11\e t1llen11 or 11 wllld syste-m that b•ovvl>t cold. n~rli"trly w!nd gu1t1 wl!lpj)lng throOJOh Tht ••ti Sund1y, hawtvtt. TIM N1llona1 W••tller se.-..lc1 11ld the .. 1Mv condlllom WOUICI be 0111 of the 1re1 by T..u<11y. V•loclllt• of 10 lo JO mlles 11n hOV• -• recwdtd Sunday in !he Los Angeles liuln 1nd U!'I to l!O rnptl In lhe rnovnreln1. Scantrt<I ,,_r, 1IM1 tell In tlll moun1aini. Coastal Wrnther Clt1r toerr. llfhl vlf'lablt wind• 11l9ht 11111 rnrl'llno llotn"• bfcomlng nortl'tWftlll"lv 10 to 1t kno11 !n 1!1@r· nonn• lollly ~lld f11Mdev. Hlt h ta- """· C:-t1I """"'l!Ut'lll rl"ltt 11'1M" 4l 10 "· • IN911d f9m0ef'lflll'ft ,..,_. from ~ Iv "· Willll" tfft'l,_,l!Uf! !$. Sun, Moo• • .Tides MONDAY S«Ofld hlOtl ,.,, '·""'· 1t S«IDllll low 1:&l .1.111. ..., TU•IDAY 1:72 t .rn S.S 2;111.rn. I.I t 1tt '"·'"· t,l J:l7 o.rn. ..., 1:11 a.II\. S.lt 6:.t0_1.111, l :lt a.rn. kit ):o&S •·""'· • o.rAHOMAI WlAlH!I ~ll V!(I I OllC A~l 10 lAM, 151 1 -lt-74 ''""' "'""e1•c.o \. \ ~ ;.,.-f::::;,;fl~[,: 1 o• ""a'''" IOWU1 ""'"IAIUlll ' ur+wl 1111t101<x •~1 e IJ.S. S11mmar11 1-~tufhl I t~ t11i. ef .... in~ lo 1111 C9tll•ll •NI MIUthlr" Jtocldtt llodey, but In ollltr o..rt1 o! ow n.-lton l9rn1M1r1tur11 roM 1bow l'tOI'"""' -aotllt llVlll. L.ll'lllff. w.,... -· 1111 with ' 11W;htt of -lt't I 11• llout r•IOlll -.itifM INI !he Nl'M l"'*'n ""II t~ ,., 29.11 • .., ........ o .... bllt urlv rnonilne r11dln(l1 cont!nued rnfld, holdln(I In tht Sh 11 l1r norltl II Kent•I Ind Ml1tourl. Fair •kl" 11111 11\114 '9mptr1ture1 prn1!1t<1 Ill 1111 Jwtfll•st. ltMt Otllo v111orv ,,,. 1111 SOUftnriiftt. Temper•t11re1 " Hltll Lew l"co " " " ' .. " 37 2J .05 31 11 .ot " n .31 .31 . ,. " " .... " II 7t .'6 " " ·21 -)0 •• 1l .01· .. " " ~ " " ..7J 51 " ~ .. " " x .. " . " .. " " .. " " 0 ,ti) ,17 " " .... :tf u .u ~ . " ~ " u Is under psychiatric observation at Walter Reed Army Medical llosplt~I. where. occ<lrding to one soldI~ present. he was brought in "laughlnit like hell." According to Army officialll:, Preston stole an unarmed Ulf13 helicopter similar to ones used In Vletlfarn from Ft. Meade, Md., where he worked as a hellcopttr repairman afJ& being unable toi complete the final scctlon of the flying course at Ft. Wolters, Tex. He he1ded tor Wa shington at 12:30 a.m. EDT Sunday at speeds ranging betweeti 80 and 120 miles an hour, buzzing traffic, along the highways and at one · point clipping the radio aerial off a police car. Two Maryland state troopers in helicopters followed as lhe chopper, at heights ranging from hundteds of feet to car-top levels. zlgzagged along the Baltimore-Washington Parkway . He ditched one of the police heUcopters in what SeweJI called "an old dog-fight tactic" and · bu zzed into Washington wlthollt running lights a'nd below radar scanner levels. • SEWELL SAID he \1115 in "constant aggravation trying to keep an eye on him and to know where the hell he was going." The chopper "'ound up at the Ellipse -a park across the street frorrl the White lioose. "He then turned on all his lights and hovered fl\'t minutes at the Washington Monument grounds seven feet off the ground," said State trooper William Clark. Sewell said the chopper than started moving toward the White House. "Froru my indications, his lntentlon was to Oy the alrcra!t directly into the White House,~ he said . The <::hopper was brought up short but both Sewell and secret service spokesman Jack Warner said the craft "appeared to land on its 'Own ." Sewell landed between the plane and the White House "as an extra precaution" and saw bullet holes the size of half-dollars that were punched by the shotgun pellet!. "FROM WHAT I've heard," said one soldier shooting pool at the 66lst Transportation ~ COmpany's r~reatlon room, "he was upset about flunking oul of flight school and was going 10 the White House to see the President." Maj . John Northridge, hi! commanding officer, said "any reason we would give would be an unfounrled guess ." "He has above average int~lllgence and gave no indication of a mental problem.'.' o.~fiJ:ials said. They said there was no ~tion of alcohol or drug abuse and Preston had no record or disciplinary action. tJl"I T1I ...... DAREDEVIL PILOT Pfc. Robert K. Preston Nixo11 Lawyer to Pursue Agne1v TriJJ Tc1b Put at $250 ,000; Protection Encls . Leal{ of Tape 111£ ormation f'rom 'Yi re Ser\ ices BALTlritORE. JI.Id. -Fortn('r Vice THANK GEORGE! ll'All reconditioned - ready to sew *First come, first served - limit of one per customer •• OTHER USED MACHINES S19.95 AND S29.95 * Assured supply of at least 2 machines in each price catf!gory per store, per day -Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday •. ••• SAVEs15 ' 88 * 6 buill·in stitches : 3 stretch plus bl indsti tch, fashion an d . zig-zag sti tches *Self-threading t;ake·up lever eliminates eyelet threading REG.164:95 Carrying case or cabinet extra Regifter now for your choice of ,1lx winter sewing courses, Including dr111m1king, ttilorint and nwing kniu. . . Speci1ll 2 knit 11wing cour111 $23.96 with $3.95 t1>etbook included, Regul1rly $14.50 11chl . SINGER Sewing Centers and participating Approved Dealers For store nearest you , s,ee the yellow pages under SEWING MACHINES. Sln&•T has a tlber~l trade·ln polity. ~lso, a Credit Plan 11 avai11ble 11 Slnatr StwinJ Ctn1en: ind m11ny App'rowd Oealen. •A. Tradtmark of THE SINGER COMPANY 4 Copyd&ht C 1974 THE SINGER COMPANY. All !tights RtMr11td Thr-ou1ho11t 1h1 WorW, a I p a w' 0 r G s to it it w w ,. K ~ A 3 r a •p h d 0 I Captain Succumbs In Sinking SANDY HOOK, N.J. (Ul'l) -'lbt crew and passengers aboard a sinking fishing boat forced the captain into a life preserver Sunday when he appanntly wanted lo go down witn the 51-foot charter craft. The capWn <tied despilll eff()ri$ to save him but the oUler 11 persons aboard were rescued. Leonard Salkin, a Maplewood, N.J., marina operator who aided iJl the rescue, said Capt. Herman Grothucs, 67, "told Ol)C or the survivors be just didn't \Vant Fatt&llJt Clrc11• by Bil Keane ''What I ~ I temper'ture did President N ixon should set it at for meatloaf?" 1oy we to live. They all put life --------------------- preservers on but he fought (IN SHORT ... ) Ei~ht Injured in Fiery it off. Finally the maw forced . Bus Freeway Collision Hearst Continues ' To Get .Letters • IJILLSBOROUGH !AP) - ;,I feel sick in my heart to th.inJt that money or the laclc of it would take such a lovely treasure from )1)0," wrote Manuel F. Q)sta Jr. to the anguished parents of kidnaped ne\vspaper heiress Patricia Hearst. "I send this contribution with my heart," added COsta, one of the thousands who have sent letters of sup(Xlrt and mooey . lo the Randolph A. Hearsts. FUNDS QUERIED Edwin ?'berg "My heart aches for you. 1 am praying for the sole Leg1°sJatOI'S return of Patty," wrote Marjorie Ogden, a retired, FROM SAN QUENTIN State disabled Army nurse -l'rison came this mell$age: Qtien·ed receives a small Socia I "We, the inmates of San Security check each month. Quentin, would like to offer "Perhaps I am one included • you our sympathies, hopes and On E in the 'poor people' group prayers in behall of your xpenses referred to by tbe Symbionese daughter's pl!ght. Continue to ' Monday, Ftbruary 18, l<i74 OAILV PILOT IS Two Trapped ' Sailors Re scued \from Oeean Cave HALF MOON BAY (AP) - Two Navy sailors, w h o planned a carefree weekend of surting, instead spent 24 hours trapped by heavy sea5 and jagged ledges ·inside a half-submerged sea cave. Kenneth Muller and Donald Brinkman, both 18 fro m Warren, ?i.lich., v.•ere rescued Sunday and reported in good blacked out Sunday but was revived and remained with the hu nger strike. e Pn!J lnerense LOS ANGELES (UPI\ Pacific South\\1est Airline•' station agt>Jlts have agreed to a two-year labor contract which £ivcs the pay increase ( J of from 5.3 percent to 9.S State percent. '---------~ PS,.\ board chairman J. condition at Chope Community Hospital in nearby San Mateo. Floyd Andrews said Saturday the increases were "as far as \\'e can go in the face of fuel allocation problems . , . fuel price increases and overaU boosts in operation cost .. " Liberation Anny. These have faith lri God and know SACRAMENTO (AP) people do oot understand that ours along with others' Foor Sacrame~lo legislators e llends C!\'PA freedom or the USA .. I would prayers are with you in your The pair told1 authori ties they planned to go surfing Saturday with a f r i e n d , seaman Kevin Travis, along a lonely beach five miles south of here when they spotted the cave. OOl accept food, money or time of need." -Tyfone C. collected $23,580 in expenses • p t LOS ANGELES (lfPI) Vets rotes bl.sh it on hin1 and one of the passengers held him." LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fire swept through an out~­ aervice rapid transit bus after a freeway collision with two cars in which eight persons were Injured, authorities say. anything for someone's life.'' Frend!, president, Men 's last year from funds intended C-0n1ptOI\ ne\vspaper pu 1 er ldentl!ied as Ma gda 1 en a Advisory C'.ounell. mainly for colleagues who Jive LOS ANGELES (UPI) Charles \V. Aydelotte was Arrieta, 20, aod Oscar THE TERRORIST Sym· R. Herrero of New Y-Ork away from home, say the Nearly -One dozen disabled named to succeed Fred The. Leonia, N.J ., captain, who skippered the Zephyr II. was pronounced dead on Anieza, 22, 1:oth of Bellflower. lbionese Liberation Anny City, wrote, "I would never state controller's records. veterans pushed their sit-in \Veybrct as president of the R<ported fn serious condition has demanded as a "good will accept a -ny from Mr. protest into the seventh day California Newsruper Publish· : arrival at the John F . th th II -•-~-· The "h-amento Union said today m· the 11th floor federal A ·at· urm· " tll" 86lh at the hospital was Francisca gesture" at e ear_, Hearst or any other person ~1 ers ssoc1 ion ., .... Roman, 23, Paramcnmt. supply $700 worth of food to in such a tragic situati-0n. It Sunday the 1966 expense·fund suite of U.S. Sen. Alan annual convention. h 1 Kennedy International Airport Medical Center in New York. A passenger, Peter Thompson, 32, Gt' Edgewater, w as reported in critical condition at the Long !leach, N.Y .. The bus driver, woo was not injured. was forced to the rear of the 00s by flames fueled by gasoline from ene of the cars, firemen at the scene said Sunday night. The driver escaped through an emergency exit. The aecldent on the needy Californians before they is highly immoral to acceyt law does not differentia te Cranston. A Veteran s Avdelottc pub\is es t 1 e .~ .. ~ • -h ll 1· •-th o! ·Administration doctor said the Co ·mp Lo-n-1leraldillmerican_ sou1.11uuwaa .....,."IS Be a c wi nego 1a""' e Young money, food or any type between legislators who Freew the City f • le •• ood thr h · I men were conducting a hunger and C a 11 • E n t e r pr i s e ay near o womans re a.xo. g s · oug v to enc e • represent area:: of Sacramento Commerce tied up traffic for "My name is Tommy. 1 am extortion, etc. y_sing threats County and those who have strike ori fruit juice and water. nb~wspapekrsl . a group of . tl5 hospital. aOOut an hour as officers 9 years old," said one letter. against an innocent young girl The physician said an ex· 1 wee Y c omm u n 1 Y closed all southbound lanes "I know yow you feel. I feel to get money is p I a in to travel to the capital to f\.1arine, -0ne of the half-dozen pub 1 i c ations based in of the freeway. -sorry for you. So I decided ~i':'sa:n:::i~ty~.'-' _...;;.......;;..;;; ___ _:a:::tt:::end~;;"::;":;i;;on;:s::. =====;;m:;•;:n:::in:::w;;h:;e:;:e:;tch;:a;:i;:rs;:,=b=r=ie=fl=y=B=e=l=lfl=o=w::cr=.:::====;: e 8200,000 Heist SOMERSET, Mass. (UPI) Police today w e r e investigating all possible leads in the $200.000 robbery of an armored truck Saturday night, _but.have made m.artests. -· Tiie police said the robbery, carried out by three men who overpowered a driver and guard of International Protective Service Inc ., appeared similar to two ~previous holdups involving the same firm. But t h e y emphasized they coold make no actual link. e 300 Rebels Die MANILA (UPll -Moslem rebels have taken over a network of World War II tunnels near · Jolo Town and ace holding a number d civilian hostages in apparent preparation for a long siege, Rear Adm . Romulo E.spaldon said today. Espaldon, chief of the Sulu Frmtler Command in the Southern Phi 11 ppi ne s, estimated goverrunent forces had killed about 300 rebels in I I days of fighting in Jolo. Firemen reported pulling at least six persops from the wreckage of. the two cars. A Spokesman at County-USC l'\1edica\ Center said ~W-O of the-()CcuP,ants were fi(ipitalized in c-r I t i C a I condition and ttle was lit serious condition. The critically injured were Woman Booked In Ki1ling A Southern California Rapid · -·---,.= Transit District spokesman said the driver told him two cars in front of him had ooUkled and that the bus then hil them. The bus had finished its runs for Jhe day and was returning to the .SCRTD"°ga· rag~ at the time of the mis- hap. Youtli Dies l1i Suicide Auto Crash SACR,'.MENTO (AP) -A teen-ager committed suicide LOS ANGELES (UPf) today by driving his high· A young Los Angeles woman pDWered !ipOr1.5: car into the has been booked on suspicion side of a concrete stadium, of murder following t h e the Sacramento C o u n t y shooting death Sunday of an Coroner's Office reported. older man she once accused Philip Alva, 17, ordered his of rape. , girl friend out of the car, The dead man was identified then roared 150 yards across as Alvin K. Jackson, 32. a parking lot Into the eilde Police said the Yo u n g of. Hughes Stadiwn on the woman. Roberta Ray, told them that when she realized Sacramento City C o 11 e g e " was Ja-•·---at the ~l camNK, the .tuoner's office • 1\'lxon Gain• • ~· .. ~. said.~ door 'of her mothe<'s home, PRfNCETON. N.J. (AP) -she grabbed her mother's lnvestlgalonl said the ycuth Public approval of Presidrot pistol and shot one bullet Nixon's performance in office through the door. apparently kei;t hls foot on -· t·~ poi'nts lo 28 -·• · k , the accelerator ol his '19'73 .......... "" .,.... ... ~.. She said J a c s on s Chevrolet Corvette until the in early February, according appearance. 'frightened her crash, because there were no to the latest Gallup poll . because she was alone. skid marks to indicate a last- The percentage of those Mi!S Ray had previously minute aUempt at bral!;ing. disapproving of the filed a police complaint Alva, ahlghschoolstudent, President's conduct of his against Jackson, charging him had acquin!d his driver's office decreased five points with rape and ma Ii c i o us license only a mooth bet-Ore, to 59 pel'C'Cflt, the lowest mischief. investigators said. disapproval figure in more --------------------- tban two mooths. e 1\'eUJ Cabinet SAIGON (UPI) -President Nguyen Van Th.leu named a new 19-member cabinet today, with all its members friendly to the government and only five new faces. An expected drastic government s h a k e u p to oombat inflation and government corruption failed to materialize. ! e Julie Bette.- INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPH -Julie Nixon Eisenhower was malting such good progress loday that doctbrs at Indiana University Hospital said if President Nixon made a surprise visi·t to see his younger daughter she might be well enough to leave with him. ' Mrs. Eisenhower, 2.5, underwent emergency SW'gery Thursday I« removal of a bleeding ovarian cy.9l. A team ,of four Indiana University doctors examined her for 15 minutes Sund ay , and ddCribed her Ollldltion 8' "very well," upgrading her froln satisfactory. e Debt Canceled NEW· DELlll (UPI) -The United States and India today signed en accord that wiped out India's 13.2 billion debl .Io the United SWtes. The debt, a major initant to Indo-U .s. relaUoos, was a product o! U.S. ecooomlc assistance to India over tlfe past lwo decades. The money, which has existed only on the account books <X the lndtan and Am-OTicM governments, amOUIU t<> ebout ~ pert<!flt of aU India's monetary currency. '.II 1• ' . . 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BUENA PARK $10 S, lttch loule•trd, $01111• of Lincoln .l•tn"" 826·0381 ORANGE 122 E•tt lttltll• "'''"'"'· W1 11 01 Tutti" "''"-"' 139".:Z441 COSTA MESA 2JDD Httbor l ou1t •trd , H1 1bo1 Ctnl t r 549·3368 WESTMINSTIR 11s1 w1e1m1n1111 "''""'· We1tmin11e1 c,;,,, 8~·3387 HUNTINGTON BEACH l lSIS Mtin '""'· Mtin St.'' lttcl'! Bl•d. 842·1451 LONG BEACH 4101 Allantic 1011l•••1d. corl'l1 1 ot Ctrton 426-8874 ENCINO 110:11 Vtl'l l ura lowt1••1d, W••t ol lt,l bO• 986-6330 1 CONVlNllNT \.OCATIONS IN OllliANGl COUNTY, lONG 9 £ACH I ENCINO • *Not ovoiloble ot our new Encino Spo. I I J l • • • •• -. e:-DMI.~ PROT ·EDITORIAL PAGE .• l . . ff.ow Much Disclos·ure? YES, SENATOR. I DID NOTICE THAT TOP SECRET PAPERS FROM KISSINGER'S OFFICE WERE MYSTERIOUSLY .. . ~ ~ ... . . ... Pusqe of California's strict ftnandal dlsclooure llW\·Which ·went Into effect Jan. 1, baa led, among bther -!hind.. to i:"estanatlons ol local officials ln severar areaa. . 11Ut attempts to water down the law to make It more pelatable are raising understandable questions ln Sacra· -M It now standa, the law requires most elected 'and "9me appointed offlclals to report business Inter- -valued at more than ,1,000 and other sources of In· come, loans or gifts al>Ove '250. · ·11 Is designed, of course, to pln~lnt and ·discourage what might become excessive financial Influence on pub- llc.offlclals. ' But a s!milar conflict-of-interest law now Is being cballHJged in the Nevada courts on grounds It Is an UD· Cl>Dstitutional violation of .the 'right of privacy. And If attorneys were exempt from the dlsclMure rules, other public officials might well resent a law re- quiring them to Identify their sources of business ·tn· come. ' To a layman, It would seem that what Is Important Is who Is paying the lawyer or other public official, rath· er than how much. The dilemma might be solved by re- quiring disclosure of gross business income along with ldentifka\jon of clients served, but without specifying how much each paid. And It just may. be that a profes- sional or businessman who has clients he · feels he must not Identify will have to forego public office. M~ney Isn't Everything SHOWING UP ON MY DESK. So Calllornla legislators are struggling with an ' amendment that would allow attorneys, physicians and ·.certain olbflo. business and professional men who hold public Qfflce to reveal only their gross earnings, without Identifying Individual clients as sources of income. Veanwhlle In Britain, at least some of the rules for the upcoming general election already are well estab- lished. BUT SINCE I DON'T CONDONE MILITARY SPYING ON CIVILIAN AGENCIES .••• I CONCLUDED THATTHE GOOD FAIRY MUST HAVE LEFT THEM THERE. ' I, I I ' · Tiie amendment bill, originated by Sen. George Moecone (D-8an Francisco) and backed by Assembly s-J<er Bob Moretti (D-Van Nuys), squeaked through ·tJie,AJseinbly last week and waa returned to the Senate aftei . opponents unsuccessfully sought a reconsldera· ·tlon ·of the vote. They see the maneuver .-creating a "giant loop- hole" In the original le~ation. But proponents Insist the amendment ls essentjal to protect-the basic bill from rejection u UDCOCl5titutlonat and hint Ibis may be what the opposition Is angling for. · Iii the case of phyaiclans, the dlsclooure of Income n<elved from individual patients conceivably could ·cause problems. But the number of physicians holding public office Is negligible. Attorneys, however, come by the st0re In public of- fices at all levels and the Identity of the individuals or fll'IDS Ibey serve could be of vital concern to the elec· !orate. In the first place, and perhaps most tmportan~ Prime Minister Edward Heath must take bis crisis to the voters. Depending upon their-decision, be will step down or carry on with renewed confidence of public backing. During the campaign, which lasts only 17 days, the two principal parties, Conservative and Labor, are al· lowed five 10.minute telecasts each and all other politi· cal commercials are banned from both radio and tele- vision.. Each candidate for Parliament has ·a campaign spending limit of about $3,000, depending on the size of his constituency. But, as evidenced in a recent city council election in Portland, Maine, It Isn't necessarily the biggest spend- er who gets the most votes. In that race, a candidate with the unlikely name of Popklns Askarian outs~nt all his opponents combined. He spent $10. They didn't spend anything. Popkins lost. ~~r.. ~~~Y-Vital· British Election Issue Sacramento Fight May Reach the Ballot •:.um rBllS .... •xpr-. by I I & People tn • nation where ...._ .-la equaled witb · c.t.faHlle• •as ~ virtues. 1'Je ~hidinM Britbh weekly, ..,._ Ec:mlomist," d.ists these as the ""'"" n!ll election Issue&:" hyper· ,...,, .. : heavy imemployment: and ""°"""" Ibo nde " -tllroagbout ~ 11im;llldl In the mine<s' llrikt. -'*'" ·~llllty la l<ft open -such llil1-.. elfecb wW be f•tt even II ~·1 ·pemment Is reilum<d. .... It .a · -· Jll"5pOd es....tlnc ...,...,, In• tllll coontry associat<d with h eledlon fl' Georg• S. McGovern ln ilm. In. times pa.t, Britain ..,., a : bd· fl· ·bellwether In transaUantlc ~:. 1 eomervatlvo w liberal swing lll<te -lbal poos!bli!y ....... · ·Wli!Jetlbla .0 'Ioocer can be oomklerel ~ Iller'< are ""°""' common poims . lo -oober l'<fiectlon on what may "":...e..i here. : JNnATION Is ..-rlt In boll! Brila!n ·• ·Amerlcl, In Britain much won<. tabor's Conlnintation with b 0 t h ; ,,..._ IOI Industry Is present In -Britain and America In Britain " . ~ mor:e: .. oailnous. Increasing ~ for ·...,laJ beoefilS are present tn.l!oCb Brilaln and America,,in America just now emerging m"' _scale greaUy exceeding past benefita In the form of pensk>m, heahh care, welfare. ..Dear Gloomy Gus IJ a student I find that, while In- dependent thinking nllgbi 1et one 1 B grade, echoing the teacher's beliefs will surely earn an A - a great system for turning out "yes men" and blind disdpl<1. -V.R.G. O.-r Ow Cllb U:H"' .. ............ W, ...... ,. -.. ., _...,, nAld ... ~ fll fllt> -•••r . .._. ,_ ,.. -hi Oltefl!Y 8""' ~ Plllt. -The State Lotte-ry · Lure If 54 state assemblymen have their way, the State fl Cali!omla will get Into the gambling business. Tbo9e birds recemly voted for a proposed. Coostitutiooal Amendment that would alltborize a state-nm lottery. If the m...,.... Is adopted by the State Senate (an even bet ) ml is signed by Gov. Reagan, it will be m next November's ballot. Assemblyman Leon Ralph CD-Watts), -( RUS WALTON J from income taxes on the winnings. States now running lotteries find that participation and revenues fall off drastically after tJie first year; afttt the "newness" wears off. 'Ibus, the state must seek innovations to stlmulace continued ticket sales. 1bis <OW1lry ha5 readied nothing lik• the coofrontation between .the gowmmeot and the m!pm In Britain, illegally on strike 1o paralyie the na!lon and crystalllu the issues whldi Inflation ha5 bniugbt. But the new militancY. or wpniud labo< In Ill demands this yeor in this nalJon's majoio lndullrles Is wid<ly noted, and AFJ..CIO ha5 oeiud the moment 1o lead the campatsn for the impeachment or Pr<sident NllWll, whose policies, as well as morals, 1t abhors. Patience ls Overrated authored 1he amendment. He predicts that a state lottery would gross a:bout $340 million a year, with one-half of that going to government. In most or the eight states that now operate such lotteries, 45 percent o! the gross goes to prizes, 15 percent goes t o administrative costs, aM 40 percent goes to government. 'IF THE LOTl'ERY RalJill and bis colleagues envision goes lot' 50 cents a ticket, as is the case in other lottery states, a $340 millim gross would mean se.les of at least 680 million tickets each year. That would average 49 tickets -$24.50 -for evey adult Californian (age 18 and over). 1'le New Ham(l5hire lottery startl!d out with quarterly dntwings. As. sales dropped, that was stepped up to monthly aOO. then to weekly winners. Some states now have daily drawjngs and even "second-chance" sweepstakes to give- klsers an extra shot at wiming. New York has gone in for off.track betting on dog and horse f°aces in addition to -the state lottery. In Britain, the Issue can be capsulated ln1o the question: who nms the government, the llllklm er the el<Ctal Parliament? And there ts more than just a trace fl that ts.ue In the pres<nl aaie " affaln 1>et*een <be un1on:1 and u.e White Houle. TlloughlS al Laree: "Patience" is a passive attitude, and overrated in itself (as Ambrose Bierce ddined ii: "A ~ !onn o! despair, disguised u a virtue" -unless it is transformed lnto "creaUve patience," whidi is iweparing and developing ooeself while waiting for the tide to tW11. • • • 'Walching tho oscillations or society, one cannot help regarding coose"atives as children trying to run down on an THE UNIONS In America are ID the eoca!alor that Is going up, and liberals ......., fl an all..ut campalgn 1o win .., children trying to nm up an such an overwhelming majority in escala!Ot-that Is going down -both Congress lbat neither the Pr<sident nor equally, and att.mately, the captives bis policies ... aurvlve tbe !alt two or an operatkin they neither comprehend years o! bis elected term. 'lb<n there ,... control. would be an .;plSWer to Ule question • • • or v.1ildi t.... ls th• IDO!'O powerful. To <mbrace religion as a last r<SOrt THE '1KINDLY LEFr," as It ls called is more an lnsult than a tribute to In Britain, would be mad< to -vall , the Deity: thooe who cease being atheists ..--in foxholes are more CXlllcemed with in such dedalve strength that even the · anJmal self-preservation than w 1 th most geoerous fl Nixon's fbca1 and spiritual self realization. monetary pollc!es will not be comld•red • • • • enoug!i. That Issue would probably rise There Is hardly anyone wllo will not anyway, and It Is a llwne ll>at It tell you that he beli•ves In ha5 becume Involved in tbe ocandals "freedom" -and hardly anyoo• who will· of Watergate. not use this doctrine: to repres3 you On< 1esoon sur<1y can be 1<omed from if h< =· Britain. All-out confrontation on bread· • • • and-butter Wu.es can lead to civil Tbo9e who are deceived twice in the breakdown, and we need no better ' same way have engaged in complicity illustratkin fl this than the vinl<ll« with their betrayer. ol the recent tndepeode:ol truckers' strike • • • In Ibis country. !l's peculiar that the people wllo --~~~~~~-.." ~YDNEY J. HARRI~ imagine thielMelves literate enough to use the word "inchoate" almost always use it wrongly. • • • To ~ "rich," at bot to~ meam to be satisfied; and nobody who Is not sallsfi<d ii really rich, except in the grossest sense. • • • • A sound aphorism . to keep in mind during the "energy crisis" is G. .K Chesterton's observation: "An adventure improperly understood is a nuisance; but a nuisance properly understood can be an adventure." • • • It ts thinp that clon't happen that stay fixed in Ume -like a 10\•cn' . rendezvou,, that never took place, the promise of wbJch fadet in memory bul nev... wholly loses its potentiality in the mind • • • • '!be city Is where peopl• soowl at you and u.sually mean it; the oountry Is wher• they llllile at you and usually don't mean it. • • • You're: not a genuine HceJebrity" until you have a publicity agent lo keep you In the public eye, and a penonal agent 1o keep you out fl IL Alister McAllster (D-San Jose ), was one « the 26 assemblymen who !ought the lotlery Idea. "What we are really doing is putting government in the bwsiness of swindling its citlzens." >1'.cAllster wu right-on! Government has no business trafficking with lotteries, or gambling of any sort. 'Ibe proper functkm of. government is to govern well, not 1o be a party lo immorality or to promote get-rich-quick schemes. Some leglslaton and sate olllclals see the l!Xtery u a quiet way to get some easy tu money ; easier than raising taxes at a time when citu.ena rebel against lncruaed tautioft. EIGHT STATES ""' run lotterl<1 : Connecticut, Maryland, MasucbUltttl, Mldilgan, New Hampsbit<, New ,....,, New York and Pennsylvania. Ollio bas one In the oven. Since the lotterlel lint started (In N.H. in l!IM) they hive f"ll!d about 11.2 billion. Approximately CJDeobatf or that, .. estimated .. mUUon. bas gooe lnlo llate -Tb< Nlel mail< ._y from the loClary at two ends, goln( ID and coadal oat: from the "lake" " Ille lottery -l8d PROPONENTS contend !hat a state. nm lottery cuts Into the Illicit gambllnt; 00..lness: "if you can't 5"lp the gambling, why not get in on the action and grab a part o! th• tab?" So far, state lotteries have not madf. a deot in iliegal gambling .sctlvitles. In some cues, they hive lel'Ved io Increase Illicit op<ratlons ; _.taDr among the pooi;. and the younc. 1b<tr appelities whetted by the publldly tn big winnings l8d easy rldlel, many have tak<n to g1mblln( -_, in lbt state-run -but in the ~ 125 cents 1 chll ) nwnben rtckdl. Somo states are oow C01•k9eriac ••f'EdJN ln1o the numben pmo lo ... II • that part or the loot. ASSEMBLYMAN Ray S • • h y t R • Blythe), hailed the lot1tty a '* - palnlm form fl taxation''. 1ly - tortured ...... ~ wtiy ..., -""' a loll.try? Thero ii I lot .,_ ,._. mooer ......i -lnunanl. ""'-· Why not c:llanp the ... lltllllll'1 dome to ""'· <bop -ol ..... -Ioli> cubby boleo. -· a S ' I II therollDlallld ........ -•• leut • lu lake Dom Ille .... .., Or, perblpl 111lene allilll • .. -" -holltll• ... _ .... In the hallwoyl! 1'blU " all 11111 --· ... pebtlmtnadw.1 • r...,.i __ _..._..., wrtle tit .... I I el' I Chappaquiddick Questions Could Haunt Kennedy Race 'W"8111N(lTON"-Wben ~. Edward M. · ~ ns asked over CBS's "Face the N•tion" .about his oonduct just after Ii.. t• ~ulddlck lragedy, his ~ ·.l'll[ICIO'e pr«:IS<ly followed a ~ stralqy v.1ilch ct.eply ....... niany Dm1-. ""1itlc:. pOl!UdlllS, taeludl.ns IOnle ~ K<nnedy jiitmns. ' .~ H aoarcely .em.· concttvable, tbt ' ·-,_..,.. pro- dueed lbO f1rst ·:;:r"= oftr aiibd ~ CN1 national tiiie+tna <lurlnc ·tho nearly five yeors ..... -· Xem1<dy r<Spond<d, .,. ~~ .... -decld<d loog .... lw 'i'e the queCloaer, Marlin F. President Nixon's handling ol Watergate, despite the vast dlssimilarlties, and risks similar comequences. Kemedy must, they say, explain Chappaquiddick. and again apologize !or it. Al ltake Is a deeper lsaue : w.,..eated ....... by many Democrats about the lncr<asingly probable Kennedy candidacy Io r President In 1976. At the beart ol both the disput• over Kennedy's pollUcal tactics and this unease 11 the fact that Kennedy never ha5 been aubj<Ctal lo probing =s- <XaminalJon about what happened ·at and af'Jer Cha_.,tdcllck. Th< lllue wu not raised . by Republlcana durlne Kennedy's 1979· Senate ·r • e 1 e c II o •· campo!p. Intervt.-. fl Kennedy during Illa rare television appearanc<o ha .. dodged tbe unComforlable lllbjecl. ( EVANS·NOVAK) any questions about the accident with 1 ckta!led and precls< explanation, thereby drawing a vivid contrast with Mr. Nixon's ·aeu~ve obfulclUon on Wat<gate. l\enedy listened 1o th< advice, nodded, but ......,..S neither agreemeol nor dlsagreemenL In fad, his cllaagreejlient ... m<c1 dear oo Sonday an.r Nolan uk<d why 11< 1ook IOve!l days, "sp<nt with polltlcal advllen and.lawyers and speechwrlten" to make a televtli!d ,...pclllO lo the lrag1ld.y. Kennedy limply chooe not lo -tha l[U<ltloa' by • saying, Im than accuratety: "!' .. responded .., the QUOSli0111 rtf Qiappaqulddlct.'' lie add<d that "there'• • full ~-" phJa the tranocrlpt ol the lnquell; thal "I've by 15 minutes or more of ""'&b qU<llloning • ..,. television. SUcb an examinalJon could !or the !lnl Ume probe 1pporenl mntrad!Cliono I n Kennedy'• own venionl o! the ICddent and ... k h11 own Interp'<tatloal of his conduct. . Bui then la no lncllnatlon now !or Kmiecty 1o r....,..i any dlflermUy In the !-. lhaD lie did Sunday. A publlsbed report tbil Kennedy ' will commill!on a new boot 1o reveal ..,told !adl a-a..~ ii wl>olly Inaccurate. He pl... i. aay notlJing more. What mak<I this ao qUeatloaable la wldeiprad fOeltnc amooa Democratic poliUclana that, coatrary . lo !po feeling o! Kennedy'• ilin<r citcle, voters who nonnall)'. would be Kemedy Democnla are leaning aplnll him on ethical """""'· In• porl!cular, blc city party organlzatiOlll who .,.... 'the backbone _.. co-'P<d In the .- special ........,., eltclioo la Penaoylvanla -x.......,.. did 11111. Kennecl1 WU not Pl-"" IO ODiiie lnla the -. and 1111 ·--- " • !aped ---for ...._ WU poUlaly doelm<d_ Adllnl 1o tho ---the ~ .. wklooproad --wllll J.C-.1 poUtlctlb' Inept ldc'Jtl Mt tblit the Jt7t OOINDldlB .. K•n r ,., Ill' the ....... Tiie Dlleyl ... hi• may barllor -mllll•incl Isl .. not .-lo ...-1J -I llJ. ..... c... DAILY PILOT .llokrl,N. Jroool, r.•Molllt -. ,,__ .. ma, ...... '111111, II tltlo _,, ...... lllr .... •n a cm • rlr o t Oftnl. J lb'I ... ••ju MllZ''b 18110' I ............. _. l"' N< hal J'!fll ...... Ir o • D 128* ; :;_, lit IJS lW Ml ... ... .. ......... -_..,II• Isa fl ••I 11 ...... I .. -.. " ,, 1 ~ ... -. ...... , ---· I I lflC .... _Mi_J $ ,, ... I f i · iflloli ol'"lbe -Globe, 1o the bfl}l~a 1• e.zpJa.aatlOD'I d , 0 11 F '111I1"11 ; · lllld Ibo ,_ public -:e:·. " lbe ......... !nquol,t. .. -~~to-. .a uqis.no. Clle ... lnV• llella>, Kemedy and hit cjooell advilen have c o .n c: 1 u d e d that Olappoqukldlck la • bum!ni ... Cll1ly with K<flll0d1.Jiaterl wbo -1d - him -Y· 'Ibey bellove II bu becDne a cirod laiao· lhat can aately be handlecl "' referrinl questionel'I 1o tbe written record. aocepted tht -lbllity"; that lt'I up 1o tho peop1o to juclp him. KINNBDY received no more --tlonl SUnday on Olappoqalddlck Illa lloulenanlS - Iba! u a fWl.lledctd -idenU1l candldala, be mleJll well be ba!t'lged or put Kbllledy Mtiooll-cempalgna now !ear Catbollc mldd1&<:lau voters might ck!ect from tbe tb1n1 Kennedy. It la no aecret that ~ ll1<hard J. Daley fl Qdcap and Pbllaclelph!a county --<:amlel dearly ...,., Sen. • a.r..,.r_ .fdltorfol ,,... Ullor . . . 19 IUNT D a• ( ..... ~ .... _.......,. ->" -tho f i ' '• ..... 'drde. t1Q -" ' '/ ONE SAVVY Democ:tallc ....,.uve1 ID ltnjJonant advloer 1o both JFK ana llFK. bu dlaa.,....i st.........iy. He nceotly "'led Kennedy lo .....,...s lo v -) li<n'y M. Jacbcll. . TRIS MOOD ii typified by the !acl that both Jlclaon and 5"'. Wa lter I I . ·-' • • • . . '· • .. . - •• " • t . ' ! ; DMI.Y PD.GT EDITORIAL PAGE ; _.. How Much Disclosure? Plssage of California's strict tinanclal disclooure law,.Wblcb went into effect Jan. 1, has led, among other • lhinl!t.. to resignations of local offlcia!J in several areas. 11ut attempts to water down the law to make It mor:e palatable are raising understandable questions in Sacra- lllllllo. M It now stands, the law requires most elected ·anc1 '9m• appointed olflda!J to report business inter-eots val.ued at more than $1 ,000 and other sources of in· come, loans or gifts at>Ove $250. '11 ts designed, of course, to pinl'"int and discourage 'llllat·mlgbt become escessive finanetal Influence on pub- Jlc.offidals. . · But a similar conllict-of·interest law now Is being cballeoged in the Nevada courts on grounds it is an un- conslltuUonal violation of .the right of privacy. And If attorneys were exempt from the disclosure rules, other public officla!J might well resent a law re· quiring them to identify their sources of business in· come. To a layman, It would seem that what is important is who is paying the lawyer or other public official, rath· er than bow much. The dilemma might be solved by re- quiring disclosure of gross business Income along with !denUfication of clients served, but without specifying how mucb each paid. And it just may be that a profe., stonal or businessman who has clients he · feels be must not Identify wl11 have to forego public office. Money Isn't Everything I So California legislators are struggling with an amendment that would allow attorneys, phy•icians and certain other business and professional men who hold public 9ffice to reveal only their gross earnings, without Identifying individual clients as sources of income. Meanwhile in BriWn, at least some of the rules for the upcoming general election already are well estab- lished. BUT SINCE I DON'T CONDONE MILITARY SPYING ON CIVILIAN AGENCIES ••• , I CONCLUDED THATTHE GOOD FAIRY MUST HAVE LEFT THEM THERE. ' I, I : · 'l1>e amendment bill, originated by Sen. George Moet0ni (D-San Francisco) and backed by Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti (D-Van Nuys), squeaked through tbe,AJsembly last week and was returned to the Senate alter opponents unsuccessfully sought a reconsidera· •lion.of the vote. They see the maneuver as creating a "giant Ioop- l!ole" in the original le~lation. But proponents insist the amendment is essential to protect.the basic bill from rejection as uneonstituUonal and hint this may be what the opposiUon is angling for. . m the case of physicians, the disclosure of il!eome received from individual patients conceivably could cauae pPOhlems. But the number of physicians holding public·office is negligible. Attorneys, however, come .l>Y the score in publlc of· fices at all levels and the idenliiy of the individuals or flfTD! they serve could be of vital concern to the elec· to rate. In the first place, and perhaps most important, Prime Minister Edward Heath must take his crisis to the voters. Depending upon their decision, he will step down or carry on with renewed confidence of public backing. During the campaign, which last.. only 17 days, the two principal parties, Conservative and Labor, are al· lowed five 10-minute telecasts eacb and all other politi· cal commercials are banned from both radio and tele- vision. Each candidate for Parliament has ·a campaign spending limit of about $3,000, depending on the size of his constituency . But, as evidenced in a recent city council election in Portland, Maine, it isn't necessarily the biggest spend· er who gets the most votes. In that race, a candidate with the unlikely name of Popldns Askarian outs~! all his opponents combined. He spent $10. They didn't spend anything. Popkins lost. Sacramento Fight May Reach the Ballot· British Election Issue· ··W~GTON. -'Ille ~ -ol .lhe lol'lha>millc -~ .... -anytllJng usually beard Jo lhe .. erti1own rllOloric o1 American . Jl!llllca_ 1!Qs -be polcl alt<!Kion • ·-ol. lbe inleclioqo nature ol pnWb1 . .,...,_ In die Atlantic ~ty. 'l!>eY are spelling ~ In . 'lettors ··llial hi&!> In .Brlt•ln It 'l'i'llDe Mll)llter just now emerging oo. & scale greatly ex«<ding post benefits In the fDml of pemiom, heahh care, welfare. Dear :...Gloomy Gus As a sludent I find that, while In- dependent 1hinking migbl get one a B grade, echoing ~ teacher's belieb will surely earo Ill A -a great system for turning out "yes men" and blind disciples. -V.R.G. • ....,., 9vt ClfllllMll'll -......... "' rNMn IN e. "" __..,..., ,..._. ... ......... tlle ........ , ....... ,_ "' _.... t. GIMMY Gn. DM1Y Hit. The-State Lottery· Lure U M state assemblymen have their way, the State ol California will get Into the gambling business. 1booe binls re<elilly voted !or a proposed Constitutional Amendment that would aatborize a state-nm Jotteey. If the measure is adopted by the State Senate (an even bet) and is signed by Gov. Reagan, it will be oo next November's ballot. Assemblyman Leoo Ralph (D-Watts), ( RUS WALTON J from income taxes on the winnings. States now running lotteries find that participation and revenues fall off drastically after the fir9t year ; after the "newness" wears off. 'Ibu.1, the state must seek innovations t.o stimulate rontinued ticket sales. ~·· aowtm11ent ti I ftOt 11fftnned. s.a,e1b1nJ Ute ·• 15 .,m..i1nnattonrote .. -..1. which ~ m.., that 'Ibis country has readied nothing like the confrontation be t w e e n the government and ·the mipers In Britain, illegally on strike to paralyze the nation and <r)"talllze the Issues whldl Inflation has IJrou&l>t. But the new militancy of organized labor In Its demands this year In this natim.11 major tndu!ttles is widely noted, and AFL-C!O has oelud the moment lo lead the campaign for the lmpeadiment of President Nixon, whose policies, as well as morals, it abhors. Patience ls Overrated authored 1he amendment. He predlds that a state lottery would gross about $340 million a year, with one-half of that going to government. In most of the eight states that now operate such lotteries, 4$ percent of the gross goes to prizes, 15 percent goes t o administrative co.sts, and 40 percent goes to government. IF THE wn'ERY Ralph and his oolleagues envision goe3 for SO cents a ,ticket, as ls the case in other lottery states, a $340 mllllcu gross would mean sales of at least 680 million tickets each year. 'lbat would average 49 tickets -$24.50 -for evey adult Californian (age 18 and over). The New Hampshire lottery started out with quart erly drawings. As. sales dropped, that was stepped up to l110llthly and then to weekly winners. Some states now have da ily drawings and even "second-dumce" sweepstakes t.o give losers. an extra shot at winning. New -vorK" has gone in for off·track betting on dog and horse n.ces in addition to ithe state lottery . ...... -.Id ·double In five yean and mulllply by 11 . in die 70-yeor spill! of ... ...._ llfedme. ~suar l'EAllS .are espresoed by ..-.... polJJll< In a nation where . ""'!"!"' -.. equated w i t h ....-·.as pa~ virtues. '!be -Nllvtly-IDclinM British weekly, ""Ille Eccliombt," lists diese as the -"tlfte real electlon l.mueJ:" hyper- f61ina; heavy unemployment ; and .-.. lhe ntle ol !cn:e throlll!boot '!l;ila!n. .. lmplldt In the miners' llrike. 'llio .-bllty la left open that sud! bina-. ett.ds wW be Iott even if llWlb'• pvemment ls reitumed. ... . lo .a 'ruinous, prmped ueeedlng ...,..... lft,thls country ...ooated with a.. -ol George S. McGovern In '1m In. rune. paJt, Britain was .,·}Ind. ol -bellweth.,. In transadantic ~; a conservaUve or liberal swing l!iOft liidicat.d that pooslbl!ty h..-e. ·Wbl!etthls llO 'Joneer can be CllllSldered ""1ld. !bore .,. Ol10U&ll common point.s . lo come sober reflection on what may be """"' h..-e. ' lNnATION Is present In bott1 Britain •11111, Am<rlai, In Britain mud! worse. Labor's coofrontatioo with b 0 t h : ,,.,_ and industry is present In 1:iDitl Britain and America, in Britain mUcb more .. onilnous. Increasing -for 'soc:ial benefits ... pl'OIOD! la -Brilaln and America, in America In Britain, the Issue can be capsulated Into the question: who runs the government, the unions or the elected Parliament! And there is more than just a trace ol that Issue in the present state al affairs between the unlom and the Whit< Home. Tlloughto al Large: "Patience" ls a passive attitude, and overrated in itseU (as Ambrose Bierce defined it: "A minor fonn of despair, disguised as a virtue" -unless it is transformed into "creative patience," whidl Is preparing and developing ooeseU while waiting for the Ude to tum • • •• Watching the oscillations of society, one cannot help regarding conservatives 'a,t..J'.hildren trying to run down oo an THE VNJONS In America are In the e.catator that Is going up, and liberals course ot an all-out campaign to win a.s ~en trying to nm up an such an overwhelming majority in esca)alor that I! going down -both O>ngress lhat neither the President nor equally, and alternately, the captives his policies can aurvive the Wt two of an operatioo. they neither comprehend years of his elected lerm. 'lben there nor control. would be an answer to the question • • • of which force is the more powerful. To emtrace religion as a last resort THE ~'KINDLY LEFT," as It 11 called ls more an insult than a tribute to the Deity : those who cease being atheists in Britain, would be made to prevail , 1n foxholes are more concerned with in such decisive strength that even the · anlmal self.preservation than w i t h moot genenJUS ol Nixon's !!seal and spiritual self-realization. monetary policies will not be considered • • • enough. '!bat Issue would probably rise 'lbere is hardly anyone who will not anyway, and 11 is a abame that it teli you that ho believes In has become Involved In the scandals "freedom" -and hardly anyone who will· of Watergate. oot use this doctrine to repress you One lesson surely can be learned from if he can. Britain. All-out confrontaUon on bread-• • • and.IJutt<r Issue> can lead lo civil Those who are deceived twice In the breakdown, aml we need no better ' same way have engaged in complicity illustration ol Ibis than the violence with their betrayer. ot the recent independent truckm' strike • • • In Ibis COllll1ry. It's peculiar that the people who , imagine ~ves literate enou'gh to use the word "inchoate" almost always use it wrongly. · • • • To be "rich," at bottom. means to be satisfied; and nobody who is not satisfied Is really rich, except In the grossest sense. • • • A .....i aphorism to keep In mind during the "energy crisis" is G. .K Cbestertoo's observation: "An adventure improperly understood is a nuisance; but a nbisance properly WKl.erstood can be an adventure." • • • It I! things that don't happen that stay fiaed In time -like a lovers' rendezvous that never took place, the promise of which fades in memory but never wholly loots its potenUality In the mind . • • • 1'be dty is where people soowl at you and usually mean it; the C0W1try Is where they amile at you and usually don't mean it. • • • You're not a genuine "celebrity" until you have a publicity agent to keep you In the public eye, and a Jlli"Onal agent to keep you wt ol lt. · Alister MeAllster (D-San Jose), was one of the 2' assemblymen who fought the lottery idea. "What we are really doing is putting government in the business of swindling its citizens." McAlister wu right~! Government ha,, no business trafficking with lotteries, or gambling ot any sort. The proper function of government is to govern well, not to be a party to immorality or to promote get·rich-quick schemes. Some legislators and state olficiaJs see the lottery as a quick way to get some easy tax money; easier than raising taxes at a time when citizens rebel against increased taxaUon. EIGHT STATES now nm lotteries : Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, NeW Hampshii:e, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania. Ohio has one ln the oven. Since the lotteries first started (in N.!L In 1964) they have grossed about 11.2 billion. Approximately one-hall of that, an estimated !500 million, bas gone into state treasuries. The states make money from the lottery at two ends, going In and coming ollt: from the "take" of the lottery gross and PROPONENTS contend that a stat<- run lottery cuts Into the Illicit gambling business: "If you can't stop the gambling, why not. get in ori the action and grab a part of the take?'' So far , state lotteries have not made a dent in illegal gambling activities. In some cases, they have served to increase illicit operations; especially among the poor and the yooog. 1belr appetities whetted by the publicity oo big winnJngs and easy riches, many have taken to gambling -not In the state-run lotteries but in the dieaper (25 cents a chit) numbers rackets. Some states are now considering expansk>n into the numbers game to get in on that part of the loot . ASSEMBLYMAN Ray See I e y ( R • Blythe), hailed the lottery as ''the most painless fonn of taxation". By such tortured reasoning, why stop with just a lottery? There is a lot more "easy" money around -lmmoi'al, but easy. Why not change the lights on Babylon's dome to red, chop some of. those offices into cubby holes, imtall a madame In the rotunda and get a "cut" or at least a tax take from the "girls"? Or, perhaps roulette tables in the lobbies of state buildings aM crap table3 in the hallways? Think ol all that easy mmey, that painless taxation! Forget about morals and virtue. And, writ~ off future generations. _Chappaquiddick Questions Could Haunt Kennedy Race WASIUN(lTON-Wben Sen. Edward M. President Nixon's handling o1 Watergate, · ~ was asked over CBS's "Face despite the vast d1ssimilariUes, and rlsla the N1tion" about his conduct just aft<r similar COM<quences. Kemedy must, . "'•-•n they say, explain Chappaquiddick and Iha 1• ~...,....ulddlck tragedy, his again apologize for it. At Ilaire Is a ~ · ..._.,. predseiy followed a de.per isoue: dee!HOated ,._. by ~ strategy •:hid> deeply many Democrats about the increasingly .iam. many Dem-· ..-:.~ ~Udans, probable Kennedy candJdacy Io r ....,_ President In 1176. ~ .n ~; At the heart ol both the dispute over -..... .,_.. Kennedy's polltlcal tidies and this r.--unease Js the fad that Kennedy never 1lDol,i. It .,..,,.1y has been .ibjectod to probing cros>-""i". con<tlvable, examination about what happened at Ille ,_,am pro-and after Olappoquiddlck. 'Ille 111UO wu d U1' ed the fir II not raised by RepubUcana d~ F = - . Kennedy's 1'1t Senato reelection ail1lll Keapecly on n a Ii o n a 1 C&l1ll'lliD-lntervl....,.. ol Kellftedy Rlriia1na dmlnc . the naarty flv. years during hil rare ttlwislon appeannce1 ..... -· Kennedy mponded, baii..ce®'.1'~:...,, ~: 1111>~ ~ i,t aad bl.t aldos clodded long ago, adviser& haft con c 1 u de d that by' idir~ ·tile queotlontt, Martin F. Chawaquiddlek Is o i<1mfng issue <nly .*-1 o1.:the &flea jJ!obe, to the with Kamedy-llatera wbo ---.... r.. t• •·•pl•·•& t Ion t ol him onyway, They believe It bu become · ' ODd tile ,_ public • dead isoUt that can aafety be handled the ........ ........ "" re!enina questlooera lo the wrttteo ( EVANS·NOVAK) any questions about the accident with • detailed and preclae explanaUon, thereby drawing a vivid conlrut with Mr. Nlson's self<lestructive obfuscation on W olepte. flenedy listened lo th< ll!vloe, nOdded, · but expr<SSed neither agreement nor d!sagreemenL In fact, his dlaagreement .... med clear oo SUnctay alter Nolan isked why he took seven days, "apent with political advisers and tawyera and speechwriten" to make a televt...i responae to the traglll\Y. Kennedy tlmply chose not to ..-the questloq' by , saying, lts1 than occurotely: "l'v>-responded· oo the questlt111 Cll Olol'l"'qulddlck." He added ~i .. ~ •• fU11 ~" plus the = ol the inqueot; that '1'Vo the nitp0mlblllty"1 that ii'• up lo the people lo Jude• him. knoe!IJ-to--·ell . qy-1Mw!"7. DNNBDY received na more ONE SAVVY DomocnUc operattve -<l'l'ltlcn Sunday on ,_ IUN1' D • (JIN'""'-11 .., 1-Unt ac!v1a..-to both JFK ;.;;! OiappiqGlddlck His ileutmanto CIOlll'edl! _, 'oall-l:.-.,Y· ollkef Cllllllde Iha RFK, hu cllsqre<d stttnuomly.' Ho ;that u • fUIJ.lledctd pr<sicltnUal e ) -. ._ drcle, llU smacks of ~ tllied ~ to r..,.i to caadidatt, be mi&hl well be berroged \ by 15 minutes or more of tough questioning over television. SUch an examination could for the flJ'lt tlme probe apparent contnididlons I n Kerutedy's own versions of the accident and seek his own lnterpretaUons of his conduct. ' But there Is no Inclination now f<J< Kemedy to reipond any diHerenUy In the future •than he did Sunday. A publ!sbed report that Kennedy · will commlaalon • new boolt lo reveal untold lacla about Oioppaqulddlct is wholly lnaccurat<. He plans to ssy oothing more. Mondale campaigned in the recent special congressional election i n Pennsylvania while Kennedy . did not. Kennedy was not pressed to come into the diltrlct, and his eleventh-hour offer cl a taped endorsement for televisiOn WU politely declined. Adding to the Internal' tension tnside the party I! widespread agreement with Jack.Ion 's poiltlcally Inept admiS1ioo that the 1976 nomination Is Kemedy11 for the asklne. 'Ille Daley• and Camiels may barboo some ml!givlngs but are not about to openly _.. Kermedy. OUHICOAST' DAILY PILOT Wbat -this so questionable is wlcl•l!Pre"'1 feellng •mane Democratic pollUciana that, -ary, lo the feeling o1 Kennody'a Inner circle, voten who nonnally. would be Kemedy Democrats are leanlnc aglinat him on ethical ,rounc1s. In· putlcUlar. big city party ' organlsaU... wbo were the backbone ol ~ Kemedy 110tlonal.campalpls"10W _ fear -Catbolie "'1cldle-claa voten llliibt delecl · from the third Kmnecly. II Is no .-cn1 tbol lll1W R1cbard J. Daley ol adcaao 111111 PbUadelphla county lelldet -camJel clearlf Jftler Sen. l'-y )l Jadtlon. TIDI Mooo Is lyplfled by the fact that both Jacbon and Sen. Walter ' • I . Robtrl N. Wtrcl, Pvblilhrt Tlloma.s KHlrll, (dltor Barbom Krribkh Editorial Pagt Editor Monday, February 18, 1974 f Thus, at this early stage, they wonder whether he can be elected. Overall, Kennedy's first major nationally televised performance since 1970 received high praise f r o m Democratic poliUclans : his physical appearance excellent, his answen crisp and undentaled. Bili Nolan's question almost surely ls the forerunner of continued probing if he runs for President. In that case, Democrats l:Jtlieve Kennedy must rome up with something better than hls non.response of last Sunday. ,,,. <dltorial .... o(• the Oal1y Pilot aetlrt: to Worm ud 1tlm'lll&te reader• by prttentlns on thll PtCe diverse commtntary on topics ot ln-- tettst by 'l)'ndicattd columnllt1 and ~artoonlsta, by provk1lnr a fon.im tor rtaden' vltwt: and by prt11enlln1r this news_pti>tr'a opinions and ~ on •current· topic.. The t!dltorlal o~ of the Daily Pilot •PPtlr only tn the ~ltorlal column at the top of the Piaf, Optnklnl upl'eQf!d by the o:>I· umnlats •nd cartoonllll and Jetter writers art thtlr own and ro fll4w ..... ment ot threlr Ww1 by DaUy Pl1ot lhOWd bt lnltrftd. ' ' ,, MuuJ .. f, r !l'bruary lo, 19/4 DAILY PILOT T -~-!.:•n~C:=os~ta~M~e~•·~----· ---·-_· -·---'-,.,xorcis~---'T-he,...y..,.._ .... 1•1-na-ve -Se~re Dealers Will r.rest Mileage Puzzled Couples Marry and No One K1wws " " .. • I' ",. ,., ,,. ' . .. . - By CARL tARSTENSEN Of .,. Dally P~f tttff Because mosl cars are driven by average people and oot BClenUflc or lcchnical eq)lipment, a small group · ol Costa Mesa new car dealers is .. 111ng out Tuesday lo challenge lhe findings or the E n v i ronmental Protection Agency's published findings on the gas mileage of 1974 autos. T h e s e m 1 lewer·gallon ngures !or U.S. cars and most imports, have ilcoo (I) re- peatedly queolloned, (2) prov· en to be in error in tome cases, and (3) don 't seem to be compatible with what aver· age drivers seemed to be get- ting from their cars, the deal- ers contend. CONSEQUENTLY, THE Costa Mesa dealers a re challenging the figures with a drive from Costa Mesa to San Diego and return. It's not designed to conserve fuel or cut any corners but just to adhere to standard speed LIVE FROM THE STREETS OF ORANGE COUNTY Httr minute to minule tclion •s il t-.ppcns in.your city. Re9ency MonilOf•dio/Sctn· ntn 1cek the live btnsmitsions of yow police 111d firemen 11 work . F1scintlin9 li9hts Rish IS the rtdio slopt to hett •n •clive ii9n•I, then continues the setrch to brins you the •clion • , , •ulomtlic t lly. Push buttoft con· trol let1 you pinpoint 1ny c:om~ bin1lion ol ch1nnel1 you w1nl to heir.Tune in to your fire dt- p.rtmenl, police, Civil Defense, bu1int11 tnd m1ririe b•nds. There's• Rt9ency model for S.e them live •nd in •diort todty. .,_\. ~~t11- • , , m1ker of the "'orld's fint ll1nsi1tor r•dio. BOLSA COMMUNICATIONS CENTER ID4151o1M-W• .... lhr 839-0610 '-'lttl ....... ., ............... C,.,...toOr.,.~ limits for freeway and city Wiving. Connell Chevrolet, Jolwon & Son Uncoln-~1 er cur y, Miracle Mazda and University Oldsmobile wili commit two cars to the test, and the results will be available and com- psred with EP/\ figures. . "It i!n't oul intent to show that •car x· gets belier mile- age than car' Y," said John Connell, "but to point Cllll only that the EPA figures set ror each car are .tncorrect." • ENTERED ARE a-Mazda rotary engine sedan nnd sta- tion wagoo., Chevrolet C.s.pr!Ce and Moote Carlo, Continental and fullsize Mercury, the Toronado and another full-size Oldsmobile. Now that owners .and dealers alike are faced wlth the fuel dilemma, these figure s as published, whether true or questionable, have a forceful impact on everyone, the dealers noted. "Most everyo·ne is dissatisfied: that the govern- ment saw fit to publish the EPA figures in the manner they did," Connell s a i d • "These figures were from tests taken specifically for the measurement of air pollution and certainly not indicative of gas mileage," Connell said. "You just don't drive a car the same way to test both air pollution and g a s mileage." THE EIGHT cars will leave at 10 a.m. from Art's Shell service, comer of Harbor and Adams. Participants w i I I lunch cit the l.slandia Hotel and return. Miles per gallon will be indivi~ualiy comP1>ted and the dealers themselves CHALLENGES EPA John Connell will be participating with an observer in the car picked at random from the . com· munity. The mileage figures are to be published upon completion. OCC Gets PTA Grant The California state PT A has awarded Orange Coast College t w o scholarships tolailng $300 fer !he 1974-7> school year. 'Ibe scholarships will be given to second-year OCC occupational education students. One, worth $150, will go to an inhalation therapy or radiologic technology student. The other will be awarded to a Student majoring in nursery school education . Color portrait Priest ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - The Rev. William O'Malley, S,J,, who appeared In and acted as an adviser to the film 11The Exorcist.," says he finds public reaction to the movie "very oJd." (Related story, Page 16). "l don't understand and doo't know what the answer is, but the film seems to be fulliiling some kind ol need," he said Ill an interview. T H E CONTROVERSIAL movie deals with the demonic possession of a young girl and opened to tum-away crowd! in Buffalo last week, u It has in cities around the coun- try. . "People are reportedly pas,. ing out or becoming ill and yet no one became Ill or fainJ,ed when the media gave reports on the war in Vietnam, where thousanM of men were killed, or Blalra, Bangladesh, or mass killings on our streets like what recently happened on the West Coast," Father O'Malley added. "I think we have developed a tolerance for evi1." SAN DIEGO (UPI ) -Of· f\cials here hate to talk about ii, but Ille llgurts plainly show the secret's out about what may be lhe biggest bargain around In these inOation· weary times. In San Diego lhey eali it the "secret" marriage. In other places, it's "tainted" marriage. Under the law, it ha.s oo real name. BUT WHATEVER you call it more and more Califor-ru'aM are )earning the magic words that guarantee a mar· rlage with oo · waiting, no witnesses, no publicity and no tests. • Seems lnJlllY older couples 81TiYed in C81lfornia from other states only to l1nd lhe stale didn't recognize their I on g~tandlng common.law relatlooshlps. WITHOUT A VALID mar- riage, all kinds or legal pro-blems developed. So, presto, the secret mar- riage, a <.-eremony so secret that it takes a court order Going the sec,.et ,.oute can sa1'e most couples about $50 for tests. But before you rush in to sign up, here's why the s.tate agrees to keep your mamage a secret. for the neighbors to find out You have to swear to a you'd lived all those years mlnisteT that you have been without a license. living together as man and But instead of older couples, wife and want to legalize the licensing officials here say a situatloo. growing flood of youth in search or a bargain marriage AND THAT'S just what has developed. teru (about 16 each) and no check or the bride for lm- mwtity to Gennan measlles (up "' $30). And on top ol Iha~ the license fee is $5 instead of the usual $6. ls San Diego County, secret marriageo In the last hall of 1972 totaled 56. A year later, the sea-et. was out and lhe total jumped to 623. Now, about 125 a month ..,, record-Jn Ac•pulco ed nnd lhe figures keep climb-Lady Bird Johnson is ign. vacationing at home of "We think in tenm of the fonner Mexican Presi· otrspring ol these marriages," dent Miguel Aleman said Wolford Weiner, chief of Valdes in Acapulco. the county's business division ,!;::========""' which governs issuance ol COllELLUSE licmses. "SINCE THERE'S no re-i:J I f!i I quirement that the couple be y Peet A ,.orbM tested for syphilis, and the c::...w ':Z.-1 .. ~ o...., bride for immunity to rubella, • some innocent children wUJ Mn '74 .... H•tcllbec.k be brough t lnto the world SU4D ,.511 MONTH diseased. That's what burns these Californians are doing Going the secret route can us up." Phlt Ttx & l ie. On Aw. Crwllt !4 Mo. O.E.l . -whether they're "living in save most couples about $50 Co1D1ty Public Health Direc- sin" or not. for tests plus th e in· ·tor Dr. J. B'. Askew puts it And that's just.what annoys conveniences of some of the even stronger. CONNELL CHRIOLIT 2121 HA.1101 ILYD. COSTA MUA 546·1200 the state. taw's other requirements. "t think ttiis is bypa~mgl'==K=I==s==L=I=K=. E==r=o= MANY PEOPLE who have In 1m the ~· lalure the intent of the original law, D seen the film, and even some adopted t be · wn UNDER THE "seer<:!!" la\V, perhaps this matter should go Y who haven't, reel they are &talute, and for very no health certifi cates are bark before the Legislature," ASK AND possessed by the devil and,.;:de~!iru~·~1e:::;reasons:;:;;~·==========="~eeded====·=ni=a=t=m==eans;;;;;=no;;;;;b=lood==he=sa==id=.==========;;;;;;;;;===='1"" are coming to priests for help, 11 he said. ,,.. ... -. "That is hard to WKierstand. The film makes it amply clear that you have to v t·s 1 t p s ychiatrists, psychologists and medical doctors before the church would e v e n remotely consider touching the thing with an exorcism." Father O'Malley said he doesn't think everyone should see the film. PENALJO'S GLAMOUR SANDAL Our sensational slip of o sandal. All bare sophistication. Soft a s Soring. With · the flirt of an ankle strap.The love Knot. Assorted soring color's in leather or ootent. 24'.00 Sorry, no ma il or phone orders. of . your child, 1.49. Wome n's Shoes. 35 Truly professional portraits. Select from several poses. • Large 5 x 7" size photo ..• 1.49 each • Set of 4 wallet size ...... 1.49 set ..-----------------, Two children - lhe lteasury BUENA PARK ...... °' ..... ...,t1M11ue,.......,11,., ORANGE c..,..,. ... ._..9'..o.,._ 0,..1 ... ,.....,'-""Jll .. ,' p11otogra1p11ed together ••• 2.98. Full color portraits in a site s•it1•le for fre111in9 ... perfect for 9ift1. All portr1its ••livere• to yo• 11 our store tiy Treas1ry associateJ. PHOTOGRAPHY HOURS Tues., Wed .. Tt\urs., Fri. and Sat., . Feb. 19, 20. 21, 22 & 23 10:00 am to 1 pm and 2 pm 1915:00 SANTAANA ''",._ ........... ,.. ... c ... 0,..1 ... ,... .... ...,,~ .. , ' • THE BROADWAY l\N.AHEll;\ ~IEWPOP.T 444 N. Eo.o::lod (7 t•I ~35·8121 47 !=oV.o" i1'and 171 4) b-44·1i12 ORANGE MALL OF Qt.> l\NGt HUNTING TCN BEACH 1171 Edrqe. fwerue (714) 8112-lJll CERRITOS SCOLO\ Ceqifos Mall !2t l) 860-0411 ..,-~v 'I H J~i)"V IOA.M. to6 PM. SUNDAY 11 ~ to SP.M. ·--· --- • • FROM Fashion Island Newport Beach • l ' . . STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR • ' " I • Lo1v Speed Cited ,, I~~~ THE County Traffic Deatl1s Decrease Dall~ Pllol 51~!1 P~G!D Si1t9i'!tJ for Sen ls , Blake J ordan , 3. of 1'u~tin. the 1974 Easter Seal child for Orange County, i" su1·- roundcd by the l .enno11 Sisters -fron1 left, Peggy_. Janet, Diane an d Kathy - who ·join him in heading-the current campaign in the co unty fron1 1\1arC"h I through April 14. Deotli /\'ot.ices l>eatl• Notices caJUtELL l\ell Bte>•llway Ch1pel. ln!e1n1tnt, t!arlJOr Or>tll.s Correll. t7 Te,.race. Newporr ll:e~I Mcmorl ll Par~. Bell Brc1aw.iy Beien; 11~11 ot !lea!/l, Februar y 11, Mortu.sry, Directors. 191,. Survived by dalJljnler, L<1t.1lse Ounn, KOS TAL Wh(ltler; son. Norm.Sn ..._\urray. Mi ~>ion Mile• A. li!Mlal. 11'9 Colga!f' Or .. Cll'<l<'I llielo; shr 1,1ralldtr.11dren: e'ev('n ~'liar-N-esCI. Oal" ol dearn, February I~. grandchlldren. Ser,,!cl'S vending ar Bell 191,. S.rvoces pel'Kln1<J .ir Bell Broaaw.iv Broaoway Morluarv. 1Acrlu1ry. FLANAGAN ICAEUTZICAMP Waller J. Flan19an. A9f"" 11; rf'Slrlen r W!llial'l l(rt11ll~amo Jr. ~%1 CliH Or .. ot Cosll Me•a Oate of death. Feoruari Nl!wr><>rl Beath. Diii or de<il/l, Feoru,.ry 17, 197'. Su•vlvO<I l>Y wfle, Cecell1. 16, JJ74. Survived by w!le. Helen F .; ol 1111! /lome; mrff son•, Or. Paul 'IO!lq. Bruce and Clifl li!reu1lk1mp. Fl1na11an. Cosla Meur Walle• J, Ne•1por1 Beacn; 11a11gnier. ''°'"· Rot.er! Flanagan Jr., Mel!e>n, Mauacusens; ISe.,..roy) Kongle. Huntington · Bearh; Frink F111n1111an. M 11 'I> I 1o n 1" a, momtr, Mrs. -Ma~ S.. li!reu1~1mp, M11n,.chusells; brother. Fr c de r ! ck Aius11 ; lwo t>ro!ne•s. Charles. ct Chui" Flanag,.n. Flo,;da; 1wtlve 11r~ndcni1dren. VIJte. Me-, o! A1u,1 ; !hre~ ~il1~<s, Rosary. trmf~h!. Monday, 8 PM, Smlrtis Mr~. L11ur<1 llCld~n, Ma·nro~o~; Ml~s Chapel. Re<Jue•m Mas.., Tuesa~y. 10 AM, Lynne ICttull kamp, Aiuw; Mrs. John sr. John Jhe Blli:i-1is1 C1thollc cnu•ch. R. on, Newporl Beach; ftunr, M1•. (0111 Me~& ln!e1menr. Pacific View Hugo Schulte. (lrlst>.Jd. Gr Ives Ide Memorial Perk. Smolh• Mortuary , service" Tuesd!lv, 2 PM. Pecl!lc Vle.v OlrtclOfS. M&mcrl1I P•rk. Pecilit View Moriuary. GEAYAtS Olrtc!G••· Photo Co11test Scl1e{luled ORANGE -A photography contest for jtu1ior and senior high school !udents sponsored by the Orange County Public Library's Young Adu 1 t Services Department g e 1 s under way Feb. ::15. Ollver N. Gervais. Age Sii. at 9~2J LA UDADIO l • Lun• Ave .. Fountain V•lley. Dale Anh!Ony Lludaooo. Ase •S, o• 1712• TEENAGERS are asked to Ry WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 "" DtUr l'll•t Sl~I SANTA ANA -Orange County's vehicle death and ac· cident rates have taken a noticeable dip so far this year and some law enforcement of- UC lrvirie Bulleti1is Available Summer session bulletins and applications for summer school 1974 are currently available at UC Irvine. New course offerings in several areas will be available, including art . writing, marine ecologj and government and politics. T\\'0-.SIX-WEEK sesstons are scheduled. One hundred courses will be offered in the first session, June 17 through July 24. Sixty courses are offered in the second session, July 25 through August 30 . Dean Richard Baisden also a11I1ounced a change in the fee schedule. This year fee s wiU be based on the number of units taken, rather than a fl at charge. A $10 fee \Yill be required to apply. Hegistration, upon acceptance, is S20 a unit for the first eight and $17.50 for each unit ~ver eigl}t. _ ·"'By enrolling in bot h sessions, a st udent may take the equivalent of a full quarter of academic work . A nonnal unit load for each session is two four-unit courses. ol l!fll/l, February 15, 191•. Surv,_,.rl l• Lime. F<>unllin Valley. Oa1e cf I I k d h' bf wole, Yve11e ; three sons. Henry. 11e11h, February 1s, 197•. survived by s 1oot -on b ac an w lie Summer s e s s j on bulle-Eoiw1rd and Carl Gtrvth; d1111;1nter, wl~. Mllry; lhree d•uvhler•. Mr. Jet/I film only -an interior scene ti' 'th II I' . Clalrt De C!Nx; Jix 9r1!>dctttldr~. W"t~lns. June end Joyce laud11dlo; lwo llS Wl app Ca IOOS are Rourv, TutJday, 7:]0 Pr ... Peel< Fu•1tly IOl>S. Jlm and Jonn; molher, Romaldft of what they feel portrays available from the Summer ficials are giving the new 5> rnile-an·hour speed llm1t much ol the credit. During the same early-year period in 1973, there were 25 traffic deaths on county free- ways and streets. So far this year, there have been 20 -a drop or 20 pert.-ent. If the same trend holds up for the rest d the year, there will be 50 more people walking around alive than a year ago when 246 died in Orange Coun· ty. Deputy County C o r o n e r James Blsener said there is no doubt in his mind the new speed limit is the biggest fac- tor in the reduction. Bisener said his office doesn't keep running totals of injury accidents In the county, but he said he is sure the number will be down con- siderably al year's end. Highway Patrol officials, who have noted recent in· creases in speed "cheaters", still share Bisener's 9ptimis over the new limits. But CHP Officer Donald Anderson said another big contributor to the lower death and accident rates is the gasoline shortage. Anderson also gives credit to recent crackdowns by the CHP on drunken drivers. Anderson said there has been a decline of nearly 25 percent statewide in highway deat~ since the new law went into effect Through the en;d of last week, 306 people had died on the road compared to 405 dur· ing· the same peMod a year ago. ''I guess you cou]d say there are at least 99 persons alive today that otherwise might not have been,'' Anderson said. BAIUlS "•.::t..:-•111 "* '*" •t'"'..., ~SMfltNdl AltOtNrt 4tS.o401 '42·11Sl H1r1's th• perfect wri to make: • 1our monl)' oc aeaultlu dO "trlpl1-duty": 1 YOll "'II .. 1111,1111 t -c•u11 :...... Iii• ~ullb Ind -U. • bllni ... your f1lltw -· 2. y~ .lit .. ,_....., wiUI • Mb,io}'ti1I '"11111 DfL JOIN" ~nnt 1-ll~n. If this sounds lmposslb11 ••• can today for th1 l)'e-openlnr story of Hoar Memorial Hosplttl's HFour Flexible Plans for GIYlnt'-You wl\I be in for .a pleasant $UJPrisd Tehp••c (714) 645 1600 -106 AR for Tbomu Stadlinpr HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL · Naw.po.rf l eath, CA 92fib0 JOIB N•wport Bob!1v1rd TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIGHTS NBC 0 9·00 -"!! Ifs Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium." The trials and trib~lledati~ns1 ~{, •hi?::~: tour through Europe are detai in Sh e 1969 movie with Suzanne Pleschette, Jan Mc an and Mildred Natwick. ABC D 9·00 -uThe Ten Comman dments." Charllon Hesion parts the Red Sea in the co nclud- ing episode of Cecil B .DeMllle's 1957 b1bdltcal deP/;° with -Yul Brynner, Anne Baxter and E war · Robinson. CBS 11 11.30 _"Adam'• Rib." The origi~al 1949 movie which inspired this season's short-liv~~ f series. Spencer Tracf, Katharine Hepburn an u Y Holliday play the pnncipal roles. TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening FURUARY 11 ""IJO(J)@(l)9Cil!IJ -(I) Courtship ti £dclll'1 fak D lmrty Hlllblllill G) Dtmils till M1t111c. OJ I DtH111 ti Jtnlrll ti!) Elldllc Co'"'"'' 11: Diii Wllto11'1 T9ft TaBI &JTil!Hst.o&tt L-00 fJ(l)ll)l!llClilGJ. -IHJ~(a<i)l- ..... 1111 Kopn'•""'" Thi L11cy3iew Thi fll11tsto111 Nl1hl l1lllfy Sl11Jllt111tlltl Mlffa MtwM: IC) (ZW) .....W. TIN- " (mus) '67-!Ms Pr.,leJ. m MtdrellOfrt Lldp (ESP"d ltxer ' l:JO (i) Dt11tf'1 Clltkt 0 Movt1: (t) (90) "'"""' .. tlll ftr Slfl ti tM S." 1'1rt I (sd·li) '69-lfo1 Thl11nts, L)'ftll lofinr. Dkk YaA "Y'e Mt11 Crifflft Sllft Th1t Clrl (JJ HIPll'• tltJlll . Zoo111! 1:30 lrtewheelln1 lrlSll pott who drlnat: ind b11wls Ills way 1lon1 tilt Americ1n leclu1e ci1wll Anthony Hopkins. 81111• Whitelaw ind Su11n Cl11k 1111. Cl Nnotm LISS ,.., .. !i) M!ruilit9 ValdllSlllW ffi Movie: (Zhr) "It'• A Cnll fff~ Iii(" (mus) '4~rls Day. m PAT BOONE & HARVEY * KORMAN VISIT MERV! m M111 lrff1l11 Sbow ID n1 IGld One• a:>Nowll t:OO IJ 11111 (l)J(IJ -· '"' ,,,. findl 1 way to be1t tht hith pfkt ol ste1ks: 1et them from M111 Jane's new bo)'lrltnd who O'#nS • melt m1r\ll. 0 9 00 m "IC -· ""'" (C) TniJ _ .. ,, h'• TM,Jd•1. Tllil Mint h 1tl111111" (com) '69 _...., Suzanne flt1hl'ttt. l1n McSh1111, Mildred Natwick. An Arnerlt1n 1irl vlslUn1 [uropt 11111 for her attrac- tiYe tour auldt. (1) TIM lo141 Olltt Cok>nl•I Funeral Home. Requiem M,,,,. lauaadfo; brolhtr, ll:otrerT. cl Chlt'"~k--.1 Al.. f-lh · I I Sessi ~· ·--~'.lldntid.1'1.-->0-AM.--l-l<>fM,,.;.+f-Mlnl , ~sy-OMv;-Ora,,~etvh'.n.-lbll'av. .c~ d1otn0St''""re-o etr-OC8 -Oil:> v111ece~.-.i~oo~1m11 4680, ~~,,:~:\n H~~1~~v61r:::3o~ •. Fam11v Coton1a1 ~~:."•Ychari~~M·s,;;~~varJ111;1~f1':1.' '81:ri public lib~ary. Computer Science Building, • LM11 (uy • Cll•f'lll Scllfel (£) De11rt Thellr1 m Uttlt t11ul1 o IHI m !IJ llC .,..., -(C} (Ztir) '1\t Tu C.•.-••Ab" ConcL (rtl) 'S7~hllltofl Huton, Yul Brynner, Anni kit., [dw1rd G. Robinson. Ctcil 8. Dt- MUlt's •Pie fi!m specUcl1 of tti. story ol Moses and tlla uodus fl'Gm [apt. ®J M~il: (C) (2h1) "Mr S.Ht Chlflll" (dr•) '70 -P•UJ Dub, A! frtem1n Jr. t HOLLIE eroadway Mcflu11rv. Oirecl~rs. Creativity will be rewarded UC Irvine. Paul A. Halli~. Age 73, of 1•3 2hl MANTHEY . . . I -=============;! . THE St., (Gltft Me,ll. OMe ol delllh. Ffl>rYa•y M111>el Gull~ner Manm .. y. 20S62 Go~hauk Apr1J 5 \Vhen grand, reg1ona , r 1' 191• Surv ye(! b fe L ill . lane, !1unlon11ron ee11ch. Date ol det lh, d I I . . HEP.TUNE SOCIETY d~ughlet, Paula' John'>O~, ;';u"ion V:lei~'.1 Fr.bru .. rv 15. 197~. ~Ufvived l>V llu•bll'ld, an 0C8 prlZ.C WlflflerS ~re Ohl Oro!ntr; j,,,~ !/Siers; I WO Fred S. Man!)l~y , grandd,.UQhler. J .... nne nnnOUOCed. The grand pri ze gr1Mchlldren. s~rvicn, Tue.aay, 10 AM Anne HayCl!"n. d~UQlllN·ln-l1w, Vivian _ . . . -===========::;'; Man1ney; one t>rolhN and Jhree 11~1er•. Wlnner will receive a $50 gift cornp1111 C:rtm.all011 StrYklll t' i.ervlce•. \Vednesday, February 7(1, 11 . . will! din1ml11illo11 11 111 !"M. cn11pe1 or the C~imes, 1n11le-certificate from J. C. Penney The 019nllied s1mp11 A111,.,..11ve I P•r~ Cemetery. BalT:·Ber-geron Funeral ;i t The City Shopping Center To The Co1llr Involved Mortuiry EE Rolltr l •IMI I() Ortrl A111l101 1:eol mom• ... l"Owll111 lor h111rs C• Movie: (C) (2hr) "ffulldlb1ek ti Notte D11111" (dra) 'S7--Anlhony t:lO 1119 (j)) ())DI c • '1 A DJ lt Wiid World ti Ani11111s d1)1lm1 dr1m1 strill to wort! 1or 1 What's Mr Utttl ltsl·lllkln1 prod11ctr •ho prnm1M1 ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLlff MORTUARY 417 E, I 7rh Sr, Co~to Mesa 646-4888 ! Home, Cos11 Mesa. D>rtc!ors. Fwn•r•I C:tmettry S't'1ltm MILLER in Orange T"'-'O re"ional 2< H •-1 71< ''' 7431 i:ve•~11 J. Miller. Abe 69; resl4rnt . . · b -1~,;;,,;;;°";',,:::-;~;";,,,;;,;·:;;;~·~;!L!~~~~~'•~·~·~·~"~""'~~~-3-~l~~~~"~'~O.~•~.<~>•~M~o~u~~~~~~I .JF Hunrlnoton !'le11C'll. oaie or <Main. \\"tnners will be awarded S2:> l .Ce1>ruary 17. 1~7,. Survived by 1wo 'fl rl'f' l f 'f ' :!llUQh!ers. Mrs. Arlene San.Sers, St11nton; gl Ce J ICa CS fO!ll IV 3Jn inn. Gin1 tollobri1H11. AN Dick ciu1ts his role on tM r love LllCJ' Dick Ills tr'll"n writs. Pit H1trln1ton ~I ~:~ el Jt1nrril II~ t• Aiwnlimi -·-Ma•y Lau Hrl'ne•h. 1naePe11 den c e . Photo Se rvice of Santa An a C~ll!ornl1 ; •on, James H. Miller, . , BALTZ-BERGERON Hunlin11jM Oeach; l>ro!Mtr. Lawi1 Miiier, and B1!J 1homas Cameras of FU NERAL HOME Escon~iau; s·~ gra~i:!chlldr1n. Mr. Ml!lfr Laguna Beach Each branch w~s 8 mtrn~r ol Huntln111on Btath · • Corona del Mor 673-9450 "Elk1 l odge 1959. GraveJldt servic", \\'inner Wilt receive a $10 cash Tue..i11~. 2 P~\. Good Sh"'herd Cemetery. d Cosla Mesa 646-24:?4 Sml1/ls Mcr1U1rv, Qlrectors. awar . -·-BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY ' I I 0 B1oadwoy, (o~to Mesa 546.3433 -·-DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARY I 79 I I Beo<h Blvd. Hunl•ng1on lleocti 842-777 \ :?44 Redondo A~e. long Beach (213/ 436·1145 -·-McCORMICK LAG.UNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Laguna Canyon '1d. ..:949415 -·-McCORMICK MISSION MORTUARY 2883:? Coni•nn Copor•nno Son Juan Co;;i"rro~o ~'15-1 776 ' -·-PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK (ernei.-•y 3500 Por .1,c \ ... w Di 1vP Newport Beochc (<Jl.!~1• ,., 644 2700 -·-PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 780 I Boho A .. e W,,.,.,,., '"' av3 :.s::is -·-SMITHS' MORTUARY b27 Mn nS• Hun1111gton 1)..-:i(h 536-6539 ,, Deat1is Else u:h ere NE\V YORK (API -llcll'n Byrne L\ppn1ann. 76. \\·ife of rrtirL'<I political \rriter \Valtcr 1.ipnmann, died Saturd.::iy. A Rrd Cross worker in France during \\1orld \Var I. :\!rs. Lippn1ann "''as n a t i o n a t director of the \1oluntary Nurse Aiclc C-Orps during \Vorld \Var IL SPRI NGF IELD, i\1ass. (AP) -John Garand, 86, inventor of the l\fl rifle. died Saturday. Garand. \rho never received payment for the \II because he gave the rights to lhc gnl"ernmcnt rather t h 61 n selling thein to p r i v a t c business. inventl'CI the rifle in !938. DALLAS (UPI ) -Charlrs Hoss Bick, 53. 1vho v.•rote the trle\"ision comrncrCJals that ur_gL'<l An1cricans lo •·sec lhe l' S.A. in vour Chevrole1." killed himsClf some ti n1 e during the weekend. Bick was an as si s t ant r:·ofc~snr of advertising at Southern ~·l ct h o d ist Ln1vcrs1 ty. . DEADLINE FOR entries is i\larch 29. The student's name, address. telephone number, and school should be printed on the back of each photo. Entries (limit is five per student\ should be taken to the nearest local branch of Orange County P u b I i c Librar\'. or mailed t o : Carol Ann \Vitten. Young Adult Serriccs Coordinator. Orange County Public Library, 431 City Dri\·e South, Orange 92668. Students are advised lo keep their negatives. Photographs tha l are entered in t.hc contest \\'ill be on display in local branches during N a ti on a I Library \Veck April 21-27. Musetnn Will Close SAY:TA ANA -Officials !.I 1hc Bo1\crs ~ .. tuscu1n here have nnnounced that the museun1 1rill be elosed through March 5 10 allov.• for the completion of :i nc11• \\•ing. The ~350.000 project will add 12,000 square fee t of classroon1, exhihit and storage space to 1f?c museu m. whidl has not been enlarged since it opened in J9:J6, officinls said. . · .TH,E;~TORE 1'.H~T BROUGHT LOWER PRICES . . ·.. TO THE BEACH AREA · I PHARMACY WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE • , , ANYTIME -CHECK THESE SUPER SALE SPECIALS-51199, lttt. ' 011r It••· Prk• 1 BARNES-HIND WE.TI!NG Sol11tion. 201 ....•••..••.• 1.99 l.b9 AL PHA-KERI Ba th Oil, 801 •••. , ••.••••••••••••••• 3.15 1.99 REVLON MILIC PLUS fi " Sh111'1pooJ, 1201 ·····-··-··· l .15 1.99 NEET LOTION Oe-pilafo•y, 401 ...... , .•.. , .••.••.. 1.09 89c hi• l'rrct 1.29 2.29 2.39- 69c 2700 .E. Coast Hi~hwav. at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar - AMPI.£ PARKINGi IM 11:£Alt Ho.in -t :lO • t :OO DaUf CJ.ntl S•ltd_,.. •d H .. fffyt i . 644~7575 • • • I I - CHURCH OR FUNERAL ESTABLISHMENT? Fun eral services may be held in any church or one o f our mortuary chaprls. If a church service is desired, we are familiar wich procedures and rituals of many denominations, and are fully ' equipped and prepared to serve in any church designated . • - ~-.-· ....... .... '--'"~.-. ..,,. -·-~·· _,._ .. _ J llestminster .falemnrinl Jnrk Mortuary • Cemetery "Everything in· One Beaucitul Place" cemetery • Mausoleum • Funeral Home Chapels • Columbarlum • Ctematorv Veterans Lawn• Flower' Shop -~l'801 BEACHBLV9. WESTMINSTER (213) 01-6577 (71') 993.2,21 (71') 531-1725 • b111tr1W1 (I) Dr1111tt U Hien• : Wa&hlnstctn Stallfrt Tall V1rlftJ I (J)) lltllly CoWsbort Sii• 10:001J C9 (I)) CIJ Mtllllc1I Ce11t1r • (I PrlrMr A111• Or. Joe Gan non, POSin1 as 1 psycti.- Comtdy tit, 11lns 1dmitt1nt1 ID 1 m1nl1I f.i} nie1 Stooitl homt to try ta provt tll1t the n11-1,,. ~Jonathan Wlnlm Siew ll11nt palitnl c1r1 tlltrt uused 1111 J Hoi•n's Ktroei 411111 ol •n old lritnd ol Ills. Jrt-1nn1 Pctttt ljesls. • PDllCI SUrpon Michatl Ansari i m JUUIS IS I COnsff\ICfion 1n11ntef m Nns •host rt!usal to return to 1 smu1· Nlffrt Callery rlln,_ mob If ads to sirbotaat ln Mplt1 CollldM 8 ttllp Thy Ntithbtr . Dr1111 ~ NN Trtiiurt Hr11t , lnll111atloA1t Ya~ Minion S Movlt: IC) (Zhr) lO:IO I Twlllatit ltM lclnlaflt Lace" (sutp) '60--Doris Co11eilbatiDll Day, R11 H11f1son • .lohn G1vin. 1111 Cosby W!hil ll111dom · . TIMltrl In Allelk.t llWltt11td TY Mule.al ~Te Ttll Ult TMll fftbt SM Ltn1 Cid .... 1rict Is J!tbt · ""'""" "'"' n:eo i 0 0 III m Ql --c (I)) Naslrviltlt l1htsic (j) Qgi flJ @ Cl) • JIMlmJ' Dtan SllW Tl11Wrt Z1111 , Holi,wood Show hny Masu Thi lhoLll Gana · MO'rle: (C) "Aphid All flap" (1dv) '52-Errol Flynn. l:OOIJl9 ([)l (l)C1ft1111ok • The lllMluiofl: l11pouiblt 1m1tl r1nchus band to1tthe1, thre1t· Motlt: •u""'' th• Cun" (d11) enin1 1 r1n1• war 10 they Cf!I 'Sl-Rlch1rd Contt. p1ess t1111r ri1t1ts will! 1111 l1r1e Im ™•I r..., r1nthtrL ThtY und lot • piofes· iJfl9d HltcMitd Pmt11b slon1l 1unm1n who comu to Doc111. ( ()))Thi "°'*fl brln&ina his wife ind dturhter. 11:30 IJ lllll CIJI (I) Cl! "'' li<'olo: D Bill BIXBY IS "lf1•'• w (cmn) '49---K.ath1rin1 * THE MAGICIAN Hepburn. Spencer T1acr, Judy Holl- ~· B ID CillJi leT~•M•1lci 1ft o @@@lm Jthlll!J' C.hOI Wll•n • 70una 'liilne11 lid d!SIP· WIJRI Nawton Is l!U!tl hOIL Pflll In qutst ol 1 jade 111tu1 O Mowil: .. llwaldM" (d11) 'SS-- stolen from hl11r1ndt1!h1r, his sl1-J1p1ne11 c11t. ler 111!1 Al)lllony Blake lo ht lp. D @ (]) m Wide World Df M,.. 9 Mlril: (C) (211r) •first to tlfJ "Only A Scream Aw1'(' G11y fl1M'' (dra) '67-Ch•d £v1rtlt, Coj!ln1 ind H1yle1 Mills star. Gtne HKkm1n, Cl1udt Aki111. 0 @ (]) m Tiii Roolit1 A for· 1?:00 00 Olle Step t.,ofMI mtr cop, who left !ht force ~ecauSI m Mowh: "tl111dl1 I Dnld'° (rom) h1 was u111b!e la perform his dulit ''6 -Dorothy McGui1e, Robert unMr 1trus, Is 111 up bJ hoodlum Youn1. I~ 1~-t1111b~-me f« 1 mulder. l:•==~~::,,.. ... 1~5 6 M9'1ht: (C) "TIN I Don't Care Mwlt: (lht) "'1lll Glw Men-Cir!" (mui) ·s3-MllJ:I Giynor. lltllywtolll TY llllttrt "Poet l :IO IJ ...... : IC) ~lack Ttm1911r E" (dr1) '50--11111 W1m1n. 1m1" An orial111I dr1m• 1bout 1 (hor) '&4-4!1tther Su1s.. Tuesday· DAYTIME MOVIES 1:11 0 (C) "1\t s.cm "" " """ Fila" (com) '~hul ""'"""" ., (C) ...... d -,.,,.. (wa) '52-Jert Chandltl. 9 (C) .i~ ltiflls• (WIS) '15 -Audie Murphy, Mlch1tl Dlnt1. •JOO IC>"H11111oftht ..... ,.... J:OO ~f') "K" "lih-.... (d-) ,12_ {dra) 'S9-Robl rt Hotb. " iv ... •• tvls Ptt11ey, Git Youna. 10:00 (J) (C) "Th1 lirll" Conti. (SUSI) 9 (C) '1119 SilkllllH htlttf" ·n..:.Rod T1ylor, Tippl HtdrtA. (d"i1) '19--Cllfl Robertson. a "rort Vt111tt1Ct" (111¥) '53 -J:.JO B (t) "l latMrina " [I....., ~ Alta Ma11no, kelth Llrstn. 1 (!ll) '63-Rotk Hudson. 11:11 ... ..,._. ,...,.. (dt1) '41-Allnl al(!) (C) °'Ttft Uttil lnllll111r" Udd Donna Rttd . ..,,. ,,,...,1 (m15} '66-Huah O'Brl1n. ~ Dt~ (com) •40-Matlllt Raye.I '. Jll CI) S.111e 1s lOAM llstiin1 U.'00 m""' M'Cllillot.t 0.IM" (com} I ca (j)J ''Conltultll" (mys) '57- 1--J' bHtn()' fof!dt. lJM_8.a DIMis O'K11f1..J1111e ~-----;t-"'I Nearly .Everyon.e Listens to Landers 1 --~- ' t • QUEENIE By Phil lnterlancli • . . 01' ... ,.., ...... a,.,:~-. ......... ,,, .. w •• w ,.,.,._.... ·:u they eve~ make me .... of anything around heft' Id llke you to be my czarina ... " L.M. B•yd Brighter l(ids Look Mediocre Good·looking kids generally get pretty good gr;:1des. Bad·looking kids generally gel pretty bad grades. Buf ihe best grades-of a:u generally go to those mediocre-looking kkis ,who w ear gt.asses. No, that's not my notion. It's what , the schol.aslic survey IQkers say they found out recently. The sailor or old let out line in lengths equal to the distance between his hands outstretched to full ·arm's length on either side of his body. That was the orielnal Jlnear measurement now known a~ the fathom. And it varied-considerably with "lHe ... slie·s~f"the sailofs. Or so . says our Language man. TAIT()() Average tattoo lakes 20 mlnu~s. Amool recent Inventions ~ at the U,S. Patent Office Is i dpret package that coughs. When completely grown up, a tnan lr'f9:3-Umes-heavier-than-ht.-wu--at blrth. Or should be, at any rate. A woman, thQugb1 ii only 17.3 times heavier than· she was· at birth. Normally. Am asked v.·ho dreamed up the term "punch drufit " to describe that ailment among som e profes.sional box~s. One Dr. H. S. Martland was the fellow. In tm. Was no such phrase in the medical books before then. CATNAPPERS The three most famous calnappers in world hi.story were Thomas Edison, Winston Churchill and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt. Edison inlermittently dozed on his workbench. Churchill dropped off from time to time in desk cha(r. And Mrs. Roosevelt napped practically everywhere. Ia .fact, once after Norman Thomas de livered to a large Madl.aon Square Gardeo audience an introduction of Mrs. Roosevelt as the featured speaker. he then had to shake her awake on stage so she could take the pocii~m. The typical mother is said to receive $14.83 worth of gifts oo f\.fother's Day. The typical father only gets $1J.84 worth of gifls on Father's Day. Or so r e port the statllttcal experts: Is that equitable'? Q. •·t claim wood is stronger than steel." A. Pound for pound, it is. Q. "One out of every ho\9 many babies is born pre- maturely?" one, A. One out of every 16, about. Q. "What's a piggyback diamond?" _ ~· Two small stones mounttd so closely they look like .......... • • Mo"1iay, FMI'\' 18, 1974 OAILV PILOT 9' He ~reeds -".lraynor PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE ~--=~ c==-~-l-~-=~,,,,_~,,,,,.,~-1,....,,,,,,,,."""'...,.,.."""'"""",,,:;:::-,,CTITIOUS •utlNStt-,ICTITIOUl IUSINISt IT.&TCMfNT 0111 &IANDOMM"" )IAMl.$TATf.-INT NAMI ITATIMINT 0111 USI 0111 Quits PUBIJO NO'l'!CE V mnpires For Study BORLINOTON, Vi. (APl - Dr. /loy Horst'1 reloun:h lab protlably should l>e 1• a ,dla4y castle ~lllr filled wltli spiders and cobwebs. M~ 111, he's 'got·str va111plrflilt1 thor.. Such creatUrel thlt IO l<!reeehtng Into the· nlahl In their hunt for btoo1hiorm11ly aren't found In -\he anow· Chief Justice Resig11s . P'rom Wire Services ll•1er J. Tr1y1Mir, former chief Jlllllce of the Callfomla Supreme Court, ha1 resigned aa chairman ol the rl•tlonat New1 Council to accept a ·vlsltlna proferiorshlp at Cam· brl4ge Unlve~ly In England. TraYTWirr 7C, will be auc· ce<ded OJ1 April I by Stuley H. l!'llld1~70,.,..lll'ed chief Judge of the New York State Court or Appeals.. ', The National New• Council , a foundatloo-supported watch· November, \Vere found at the home of Paul L. Barclay, 50. arrested on 1usplcion o,f receiving stolen property , autharltjes said. • A daughter was born to Prime Minister and htrs. Michael Manley of Ji1mlaca. M9ther and baby Natasha were r epor ted well, a·n d authoriltes said It was the flrSt child born to a Jamaican prime minister while ln office. • • '"' lo!fciw!119 "'~· .,, clOlnt Tilt loltowl119 ,,,_ 11 «111'9 111uh1t1 'ICTITIOUS IUllHISt HAMI IMl11t11 It~ •II Tiit !ll!!>tlnl:I Jlt_[_llOlll M111 ftMI ........ SOUTH COllST Pt.AtA A.SSOCl.&TSS, F'EO£RATEO TA X S!lt\IJClf.' lthl tr.. Utt of 11\t tlct!l!o111 tnollllflb llflM 131! Fairview ROlld, COtll Mtu. R.Oidil"l'u'I ltllt, Ht,1nll119ron &etch_, '164' CeJflRA\.. X·RAV, 11 11100 Mtlfl ti'"' C .. llotnll Rotlfrf EU01119 HM, 1'$41 lt1Xkl11ld Suht lot, H1Jntl119~ lltKh, C•lli, "6.f6 Htrold T, Stvorurom, t36 R1v1r Ltrtt, •tunt!ntlon 1)1~ch, f1•4t T~• tjt1ltl0111 buthlltf 11•.,,.. reftrttid l.1nf, S•nl• Anf, C.111, t~7" Tlllt b1.11111111 It 11tl119 tond'Kted DY to •DoYt w11 llltd In O••llft CIM.IM't 1 Vtrolll(• P S.Ot••lror11, 93' Rlvtr •n lnc1lvlC1u•L • on l"tb•t.11ry 1, 1t11., ..i l•M· S•l'lll Ant, Cillf, fll06 RObfrl E. Hoe 1. GCOl'9* A, l(rmpotlch, M.0 .. "'2T~ Nt-lllt R11th Stj•rtl•om, 100 Sc110l 1 Th!1 11111-nl 111111 wl!h !I'll CllJl'IV K1nworttl Clrcl1, H1111tlt1tMn 81wl'I, CA. Pitt•, PenlllWll I, 20 Cllll'llY Lene, Cllrlo. of Or•llfl County Ot1 O~, It. i. Jolin W. LN, M.0.~ 20l'q2 Prll'ICtlOl'I HtwllOfl 911eh, C•lll. fl..0 1t73. "f' ~ Clr<lt. HunllnQIOl'I 8-.ch, CA. .' HttlfY T. S.rttrom, 19U Vlclorl1 llllMtt 3. Rtymona C. Ol•Otl. M.O.. NO Ori...-, $&Alt An1, C1JU. t1l'Ol Pu!)ll111td Dr•ntlt Cotti Ot!ly Pilot. HHt*10f, LOl'lll 9ettl'I. CA. YVOl'lnt dtC. Se;tr11rom, lt11 Vltlorle J•nu•ry tt. "'Id Ftbl'Utry 4. 11, U, I. Fr1nlo. It, Lew, M,O .. '1'21 $hlf"ry O•lve, S1nt1 AM. C11Ut. '110. 1911 J11 •1.t Clrdf, Hunll1191on ltteh, CA. I Hirokl T. Statr11rom, Jr., 112' J. IUcllllrd A. H()U9hton, M,0., 111'.U ) RIYlfr• OrlYt. S1n11 An&. c111t. 91706 PUDIJC NOTICE Ml l\Of'CI Pltce. Cost& M•'•· CA. J11n•ltt E. ~;itrSlrom. 1119 Rlvter1 '· T.H. Gtn. M,O .• lua.A CtrllWt't --------~ Httirv T. Seotr1tro(\l '-1 Trustee FICTITIOUS IUSINESS Ttih buslntU WIS cOnclll(ttd by I 1 IOI' Andrt• deC. Se9e,11rom (Gr•ntl, HAMe STATIM!NT q-ral Plltfllt•lhlp. 1914 Vlctorl• Or'1vt, $11111 An1.-CtUI. Tiit •onowlno Pt•IOll I! dolno t>llSlntn FRAN!( R. LAW, M.O. t2104 n 1 M•ntttt·P•rll'" Htnrv T, $f9ttllrom 11 TrutlN GLANTZ lilfAl TY SERVICE, ,,~ CENTRAL X·ltAY «ir Tortn HtntV S"er11rom, 1914 M1Cl10•K•r St,. COtl• MtH. (11, ll-'1,l6 PuoUshed Orano• Cu11 01ny Pliot, VICIOl'lt Orlv~. Sente An•. Calll, '171M ..... Id • OI t 1,70 MICI ll'eDrultY 11. 11 tS, •ncl M1rdl 4, Hanrv T. S19er1trom 1s Trutltt uvo•• • •n 1• .-.i•.cer 1 1 ' d\ol4 tor Anton O•~ld S191r1trom. 1914 !'" Cotti Mt1•. Ctl. t16U ' • VlctOl'll Drive, S1nl1 Arwi, Cell!, tl?IM Th ' bl.ltlnttl It COllClllC!td DY fn -- H1rold T. S19fr1lr!Wn, Jr. 11 Tt111t" lncllvldt.1•1. PUBLIC NOTICE covered regions' or Vemiont. ( , ftZ'QPLE )' , Horst brought tliem • trom r&. Melllco to hilJ! •o\Udy aome "---~----""' Eureka broedcast executive tor sus1n J11n1111 Stae""""· 11tt oon11d 11. 011nu ltlvltrt Otlve, s1n11 Ana, c1HI, '11ll6 Thlt 1t111ment w11 llleCI w1111 tt>tl-------------Nelftoa Ste Ward WaS Herold T. Segert>lrom, Jr. ••Tri•-'" Co1mh Clttk ol Or1ntt c;oun1y on FICTITIOUS IUSIN!SS unanimously re·elected presi· for TModc1e W•tter S9'Qtr1trom. l12t J1nu1ry )G, 1t7•. NAME STAT&MlllNT Rlvltr• orrve. S•nl• Ana, C•lll. t2/'04 1'·111H The fotlowlnt1 per~on 11 Cloll'lf ~t1n111 dent of the State Board or Harold T. Sf9trslro"'· Jr, •• Tr"'''" P ... blhl\4d 011n1• (O•il O•Uv Piiot It: of the questions WOci.ted c , with human k1~,pioblem1. BORST, Afi 8.1 .iOcJate professor of ana1omy, at the University of li!rWt Collea• or Medlc!J>e, IJiyl vamp!Je bats have an e'Xlremely efllclent kldneY 1yitem. So efficient that !hey can ahed excess. water' abOut as fast as they'drlnk blooil. •• Vamplto bats irelaJi about an ounce, have a one-foot wingspan itnd drink only 1blood for sustenance. ~ · t "" 1 Hc>r'&l says ·that vampire bats rJlrely attack human beings but in the wilds feed from livestock and olher warmblooded animals. 'Vhen it's dinner time, the bat lands on an unsuspecting tcow, makes a small bite thtough the skin ·and quickly sucks up as much · its an ounce of blood. ! Education. tor StHv Ellttn ~erslrom, 112' Febru••Y •· 11. la, 1S, lt7• 3711-1• INTERMEO. m1 C111lp1 st .• of ....._ lllvler1 Olive, S1nll Ant, Cllllf, rtl'N NtwPOTt llt•ch, CaU!ornlt t26'0 dog .,..,n ·t~curacy and Dr. John Ford of San Diego 1-111rold T. seo1r11rom. Jr. 111 T'""'" PUBLIC NOTICE Wllll•m E. Firw, ''" C•t•IO• falme11, '.Said that Tnl,ynor tor Sinelra Phvlll• ~tr1trom, lllt'•----,,,.-.,-----===-=--I St., N~t lltlKll. C1lllornl1 tu4oO d l ~ \VaS unaniRJOUS)y re-eJeCted as Atvler1 Oflvt. S•nl• An•, Calll. 9110d 1-STATl!MINT o~ AIANPOHMEHT Thia bu1ln111 b tOl'\dll(ltd trt 1n resigne lD '8tcept 8 ViSJting the bo rd' Vi "d l at Andrtt Grin!, 1611 111100. 6oulev1r<1, OF USI! lnd!v!dunl. prof--~ .. , In legal sclen-es a s ce prest en 8•1b09, C•lll. OF FICTITIOUS 8USINl!:SS NAME Wlllllm e. Farber ......... J: .. lf .. a meeting in Oakland. Toren Henry St91fllrom. 1 t 'l I Tht followlnt ptrton1 hi~ tbllndOl'lfd This 1111emtnl Wiii f!ltd wllh !M It C&mbrldae for the 1974-75 Vlctorl1 Orlve, S1nla An1. Call!. tllll6 tht 111e ot tht t1ctl!lo1ts bu1lnen name Counlv Ctar~ ol Orange County on 8C&demJC year. He Will con· * Toren H•nrv Sto•r•lrom 11 Culloclllfl lltOOEl'l'ER BUSINESS CENTER. LTD .. Ft0tu11y U, 1971. •L. T f 'lm k h ade lor Anion Oavld Staer11~, ltll ti mt Pacific Orlvt, Corona Cltl Mtr, tlnue wllh vie council In an WO I ma ers w O m v1ctor11 Drive. S•nt• An1. c1111. t27°' c1111. t262J, PubU1hfd Or•nat Co111 0111, Pilot, .dVSiroy Cll.\."City. a fOOVie Suggesting th a t SU11n Je11ri1ll• $'9t'rtlrom. • ·112' TIMI llctl!lou1 bul!nel) nlmt tt19rr~ FtbtUlll'V 11, lS,. lll'ICI March •• ll, .. SI b Slrh lt!vl1r1 Ori~, Stnl• Ant, Ctllf. '17" lo •bov1 w•1 llled In Or11191 COllftly It?• JSS.7I I • r aD 8. an m ay not Su11n Jtantllt S191r1trom a I on Mirth 11, 1971. ' have acted alone in the Cullodlan for T"-'<lorl W 11 I I It \. E. 0. lilocltlltr, ~n1 P1clfk Orlw, And OO\v11:U>e winner of the assassi·natJO' n of Sen. Robert Sl!9•r11ram, 1119 Rlvl•r• or1v1, Stnt• cor011• 1:111 Mar. C•llt. ft-•1 ~-k f mil I d An.1, C1Uf, t270fl ,, Jol\n F. &111\afl, Suitt 700. m . aa Y '-IV\.: er a Y ea er F. Kennedy filed a $3.75 Susan Jea111111 Slgtrstrom If Newport Ctr. Or., NtwPOrt Bt•cn. Ctlll. FICTITIOUS 10$\Nlll of tomorrow COmpetltlon at Cutlodian for S•llY Eiieen kgtrstrom, Ttils b"'1lnt11 wti cOl\dU(I" bV , NAMI STATIMINT million libel suit against a lU9 Rivi••• 011v1, S•nt1 Ane, Calif. Limited p 411,..,.1110, Ttic 1011ow1119 "'~'°"• •rt doll'IO Oak Creek High School • • • reviewer. n10t. s1o-i: e. o. Rodetttr hu11nes1 11: Miss Susan Jetntlle S191r•lrom a 1 by H1rrv c. scnr1y P & F ILOG $EltV1C!S. 611 Hemll· · · · The revie\ver, autllor Robert cuttodl1n tor S11'1dr1 P 11., 1t11 Ftl•I h:ln. cc,11 Mes•, ca1. n1.21 NO, it W8S mustachioesJ John Seg~r31rom, 1179 Rlvltrl Drlvt. &1nt1 Put1tl•hfd Orlrtat Cotal OlllV PllQI Paul EOw1rO Becklund, 6U HemUton, W 18 165 ds rt B. Kaiser, wrote in Show Ana, c1111. 92706 Febru•rY •· 11, 11, 2J, 1114 381•71 cc111 M111, Cat. '2617 agner, • poun 'spo s M . I st De be h t "'"'''d Anion Morlartv, list Hewpa.rt ---"••II Gr""'POl'I· 10115 LI Al11"'111. dl t f the h 1 agazme a cem rt a F 11 vu c 1 12,2, e or o 8 c o o the film presented an "almost '°fe~::;d, cr:~11 M•~,0~!~11.f.1262~ o 3 s PUBLIC NOTICE T~n t!i~1n,:$ ~t·con'di..ctec1 by • otner111 newspaper, ch8mpion hair vrcior111 ortv1, s.n•• Ana, caur. ---1>11rtners111p. miler and guard on the entirely fraudulent case." ttlM FICT1T1ou1 •us•Ness P1u1 &Kkt..,ne1 Th ' II Se Donald Euoent Morltr!Y, 20l5 Vlctorl• MAME STATEMENT T~l1 ttlltrntnt w•t llltd with I~ basketball team at the e ffiOYJe, ca ed 11The C· Orlv~. Santa Ana, Calll. rt7°' T~e tot1owln11 perions •rt doln11 County Clerk of Or1n111 County on PIO. Wisconsin school. ond Gun," was coproduced This bu•lnes1 11 concl1H;leC1 by 11 o•n•r•I butlneu ou: r111ry 13, '""' Tb b p0rtner5nlp JIRO INVESTMENT COMPANY, JCl'l l'-ll4'6 He wa.. the first male to in 1972 by eodore Charac Hen'•v T. s~trttr!Wn 1Clno1 Road, Newparr 1\1111:11. CA. t'IUO PuDH•hed or,fl!I• co.:nt 01111y Piiot, Wm• "e award In the 25 years and Gerald Alcan. This 1t11temenl Wll$ ~UeO· whh !he Jol'ln Orlll LM, JCl'l l(lng1 ltOICI, ~ebnl•rv II. 1S. ariel M1rct1 '· 11, WI County Clfrk of Ortngt COt.lnly ori Newpa.rl &.•ch, CA t'l~ 197l SH·71 of competition there. The vie-* Janu•rv 30, 1911. iuuy 8uck11v L11, m Kl119i RHCI, --·-- llOIOC: NtwPOfl 8ffCll. CA '2660 PUBLIC NOTICE tory make1 him eligible to These are hard times for LATHAM " wATIUNJ. Atty•. T1111 bu11n111 it cotld11C1ei:t by a 11•n•r•1, ------------ oompete for a $1 ,500 state Mr Lo MJlb k sss s111tt1 Flowtr Str"' P•rlntrthlp. 1· s. yce an • LOI Angel••· Ctlllonilt tllll 8tlly ll.l(klty LM l'ICTITIOUS IUJIN'l!SS scholarship and· a $5.000 na-A judge says she'll have 1'.Jl1W T111i l11111m1n1 was 1Utd wnh 1111 NAME STATIMINT ' I ho! hi Publlshtd O•arY;it Ca.JI Dally PUot County Cltrk of Dr•no• Countv on Thi lollowlno p1ri.on Is dOl"G t11J•ln11s ·- PUBLIC NOTICE tiona SC ars p. to mOVe' OUt Of her apartment, Febiuerw 4, 11. 11, 15, 191l )11·1• J11nu11rv )0, lt7•. i c''!J.' ~~ SINCE THE "ma] a • • a ••room -perat1"ve on Filth f)l14i . IM'!°EiiLY. INTERIOR DESIGN, an! c n . ---... vv PUBLIC NOTICE Pt.1bllJMd Or1111t Cotti O&lly Piiot.. 311 81y11dt Or., N•wporf 811c11. C1U1. double its weight at feeding, Vice Presid""t Gerald Ford Avenue, in New York City. F•t>r~•'Y 1, 11. 11. 2s. '''' l4t·71 '2690 h h ~· Mr M'lba k 'cd her OU$ au JNISS Normt J11n F11nm a. R1lph VlllCtnl w le makes it quite difticu1l said his ideas don't always s. I n marr1 FICTITI I PUBLIC NOTICE Fonlo. 147 81vwood Drive. Ntwport I 0 .. b l be ' t ·u· ' h b d ""-~ N'tME STATIMIHT l!l'toctl, Ctlll. t'.1660 . o y, u1e a gins o make his wife Betty ecstatic. tTU 10natre US an iuvmas, Th• 1onowln1 perlOn I• 1101na t11.11ln111 p1cT1T1ous 1us1NESS This bu11,.,.,1 11 conducted bY an urinate almost ,as soon as it Last month, Ford invited an in·vestment broker, in is: NAMI STATIMl!NT ine1iv•Ou•I Se I ber 9 2 bu b the TJl:AOITIONAL WOOD PRODUCTS, Tilt !altowlno per1on la doing buslntU N~lllt J Fon10 startJ eating '.l'bis ~~itl. to the entire Dick ._Cavett TV p em I 7 , t y 19~ .P11e1n11a Aven~, eu1101111 "l!I", ••: Thli lt•l•m~t wts llltd wlth th• separate and shed~Warer-rrOm ..l.-., .... ;.~ their Wa·"-~·n following Julu.Jhev...senrirated; 'C~ll•.M•••· CllllfOffll~.~'26 -OAVl!:'S . C.-,RPET INSTALLATION C~ftl~ Cltfk ol Ot&fllll ~c-iy on :)IJVW w .,. ... '&..., J -, II W' -' '.. L1rrv Ed"';•'.~ OJtCSlll. _327 21st Sir"!, ~ SERV(t£;' 2•10 'FIOl'ldt ' St.;' No7 I'; Flbf'UtrV 1i;-1t74 blood SO QUiCko/ keep§ the home, After two days of living She remained in 1fle flat, but Aptrlmtnl 'F , Ct11!1 M111, Calltornlo Hunllnt1ton 9ttch, Ct. 12UI · P·J14IJ bat at flying trim throlighout with hundreds Of feel, ·of cable', Milbank is SUing for dl\IOtce ;~~27 I I tof\dud-.i by In • David Ll"<ll•Y Ffnn1rl'l. 2610 FlctlCl1 pybij1hl0 Drll'IQI Cot st Dally i-llef,. his feeding. Stacks of technical gear and and he says he's spld it. lncllY~Wl~~I neu 1 ~~U. No. -,, . Hun!lnifon lttth, Ctllf. ~:,":uary \I, 15, Incl Mlrdl ..... ,. Tb I ba I J st. M I Go led Larry Edward Olto~n Thl1 buslntll Is <onClucltd bY '~'1--------~----e vamp re t, . n a small anny of TV techni-U ice • anue mez ru Thlt s1artmen1 w1s int11 w1111 •~• lndlvlll~•I. , addition, can ~te m c:ians, he llld "Betty looked in 1tate SupreJQe c.ourt that co111'1ty ctn or or1ng1 cou'"" 011 Dlvtcf unc1 .. ., ,1_,n PUBIJC NOTICE "'--.!. -··...i. --~ ... --i.1 ....._£1. the sa} ___ , to Mrs J•llUl"f 30, 1t1<L P4'llR Thl1 1111-1 Wiii fll1!9 wl,., t11e1l-------------Wll'ICl9 as uwi.;u W~itO*w:i-.1a1 at me, ~ her bead and e, ._ __ J • O•llr ·n• County Cftotk of Or•• c-" --.. ICTITIOOI lllllNlll ,_ .~ .. ~.. -other d 'Well ..... Mllbank's d .. 1-was in .-..A Pt.1bfl•hM Or11!11111t,.c,-.,·.,, J111111rv 1111, .,,.. • .. ITAT•M•NT u1 ~ \l.IUll: as· Ml , , .,._ wasn't one aw., 15"""" Pt0rv•rv " 11. 11, t74 ... ,41111 Th• follewl1t11 Pfl'IOM •rt dol'fll mammals, Horlt uts. ol Ford's better ideas.' " faith. He told her to be out PUBLIC NOTICE p..,!)11&tMcJ 0••"9• coast · D•llY Piiat M l Mu ••: ''Thi!: is c)oae1v allied to • in 6 days. '--...,.-,, FtbrUtry <L 11, 11, :U, 1t14 :SS2·7• Nl!:Wf'OlltT HOT $PlltlNGS, ,. T 1-NOTICI TO Cl•DITCUIS ~fWJ'Ol'f... Av.., ~ lttcll. Cll. problems in.huinans,i sudl as Gov. Ronafd Reagan ls the 10115110• cooiT 0, TN• PUBLIC NOTICE "Amolct "· loYI•, Utt·• l'ordtl&m. -tait-Tetention--problems · -of-Fut~armers-of-Ameriea!s sTATl-Of''i:Al.:lf"Ol:Nh\-fOI 0ist1-Mnr.c11;-nur-. many persons with high blood first "Horx>rary State Star, • TMI COUNTY o~ 01.ANOE Slfl·1..U Otnltl TOtltno, 43' Pro1pac1, NtwPOri M t "'· A·7UC1 HOTICe TO CllteDfTORS Siio~. Cit. tH6CI pressure. We use 1ari 'ahimal Reporter," eanes E•l•I• of CALVIN ELMORE DENHAM, SUPllltlOI COUlltT 0~ TMI Tlll1 !wllnts• (1 cotllludltd Ir( 1 g-rll h tbi bo' be he He WU --"'"" the award JR. Dtc.astd. ITATI! Of CALtl'OlltNIA POllt p1rtn11rshlp, tuC as S to. C'IUR .-~'""'" NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN to tlMI THl!i COUNTY 01' OlltANGS Arnold fl, loYlt abparently ii 1facM with at Sacramento by state FFA cr..:!llors DI '"' •bow n•l'f*I ftetdtnl Mt. A 7U1J This llattm.nt WIS llltd wlfll fht Similar Probl.ntl. yet does President Peter Gt.co-•-• or Of All '""' ... p&r'IOlll hiving CllllllS llQtlnst E•ltlt of ROBERT l E l AN 0 CounlV Cltrk of Dr•ntt County Ol'I muu the 1111d Cltctdenl art requlrM to llle IERNAROY, OICtls.td. Ftbru1ry l,, lt14. extremely wetJ.". Ferndale. 11\tm, with flit n1c1, .. rv YQuchtr1. In NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo 11\t l'.at"'7 HORST HAS bet~ one or few persons succelsful in breeding vampire' .bats in caplivlty, and says , l t ' s because he keeps l ;1. r g e colonies con ducive for breeding. Although bt9 present ~olony is down to lix bats, he has kept 25 to 30 at one lime. l{orst says r~um ttJem 181\'t much of a problem, even though they'll drink only fresh blood, "We have an arrangement with local slaughter houses," he said. "We can go over and gel buckets of blood when lh~ slaughter ~s. We paclcage and refrig~rate it, ai,d store about a week's supply at a time. n--de Ille offlct of 1111 clerk o1 tl'll •bow crtclllor1 of Ille •boYtl nlmlll dtcteltnl Pub!l9~ Or11191 Coesl 01l1y Pltc1, naagan ma a . gesture at 1nt1tltd coun, or to Pffl•nt thtm. with 111a1 111 Ptr$0n1 h•vtne cl11m1 1a111nst Ftl!ruiry 11, 2s. 11nc1 M•rch "' n , the newsmen COV ring th MIAMI, Fla, (AP) -tllt nKIHl~fV VOUC:hlrt. to I h.""' UICI Otte.Mnt ,,, rtqvlrtcf to Ille 197• S!O.?I e e Two vho bbed Undlf'11VMCI 11 '321 PrlroCllll, HunllflgtOl'I 111'm, with th.I ntceuary vouch•rs, ln•l-------------trlef ceremonies in his office men \ ro a Be1ch. c1111. 12617, which 11 1111 plac• ""' office ot tll• c!•rk of 1111 11>ow PUBLIC NOTICE and asked, fei'"''"'.. alarm , legless pauper of his only of MIMss of 1111 urid11rslgnld In •H 1n1111111 tourt. or to prestnl 111em. w1111,, ____________ ~ .. ~.. · · bull m1t11<"1 pertolnlno to lht -t1t•t1 of tht nttts11ry vouclltr1: to ! h ei "YOU mean J become Ofle of {>OSSeSSJOll, a cigar • 111ld dtc'lelenl, within krur monlh1 1tt1r uncllnl'n.d 11 1St10 8t•ch 8~1tYlrd, l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISI "·-•." have been sent to prison. rhe first put1nca!lon of 11111 notice. Wflfmlnutr, Celltornl• nm, wtdcll 11 ... '!!AMI STATaMaNT urau Oiied J1nu11ry 22, 1t14, 11\t place of bu1ln1u of 1111 11T1dtrsl1nff The ""'owing ptl'SOllS •rt dofno * A six·member jury OLLIE AUDRIE DENHAM In Ill m1111r1 ptrl•lnlno to 1111 111111' by1Jn1s1 11: Near the end Of an address found John K. Ott and Admlnl1tr1trht of lilt E11111 of Mid dtcfdtnf, wllhln , montlls ifltr JOY'S, t5126 Ott Pr.c!o, 01n1 wtlarl. of the 1bove n11rntd dactOtnt tllt llr11 pubUtallon of thh notkt. OJna Point, C11Jf. t162t to a Republic1111 fund raising Raymond E. M 0 r g an ICAlltL A. VAN MOLT Oaltd J.,, .... r ... 22. 1'71. 'John J1rnn Shimko. 1001 w. "··--ln • m1iJty Of assault w:ith 19021 Shoreview Clrclt GLORIA H. 8ERNARO'I' MttArlhur llvCI., &tnt• Ant, Ctllt. uiiu~ West Orange, N.J., &'l"" Kuntlngt""' ••tell,·Callf. 9U41 Allmlnbtr1trl• o1 tllt 1:Jt1t1 '1107 1 s 1 1001 w lonner US Atty Gen Elli.I intent to commit robbery. {114) 142 .. 893 of 11141 tbcvt named llKl'denl Allee LOii It h mko, • . ' • • AllwnlY for Allmlnlllr1tr1x ANTON DUMHAlltT M1i;Arthll' 81vd., S1nt1 Anl, C1tlf, RICblrdlOD WAS interrupted by The two Were charged Publlshld Oranot Coast O•lly Piiot, 1Jt20 l11Ch a .. 1tv1rd ~1!11 a guest who rose tO bl,s feet With a July 13 attack 00 January 29, anCI Ftbru1ry 4, 11 , 11, Wt1l,.,i111t_,., Cellfontll '2"1 Tiiis bu1lnt11 Is cOlld..,etfd by t general J P 1f1ol J06.14 Ttl• ttWISt p1r!n1rshlp. and said "( "Ink ~• OU"'t erry et er S 0 n , 51 , -----,c--,....,---,...---I • I d I" '' Jotin J, Shimko , UI ~..,... 15"' A lorMY Dt' A 111 "''"' ' • This 1t1ttment w11 !!ltd with !ht to shut up... confined to a tvheelchalr PUBLIC NOTICE Publ/shfd Or11"19e Coast Dilly Pilot, County Clerk of Or1nge COlln!y on There Was Silence' then Sinr.e he Jost both )egS. ---cc== :ccc~==c,---·IJ~nuarv 21• and FtbrUlrY l , ll, II, February ll, lt74. FICTITIOUS lllSINESS ltTt )l)t·71 1'414tl ethers or the approximately Circb.it Judge Dan Satin NAME STATEMENT Pu~ll$1\t!;! Ortl'.'O• Co•tl 01lly ~11111, 500 ..,.esent turned 00 the sentetri:ed Ott to fiVe years Tiie !llnowlno persons are dctng PUBUe NOTICE Ftbru•ry 11, 15, 1nd M1rc11 4, 11, ""' b<.lsiness as: --·-------c~c=----l 191t 522·14 critic. in prison and Morgan to OESIGN/3, 712 w. 20tll St .• Ccsta FICTITIOUS •USINESS •s·t do t a year in the county Meie. ce1. 72611 NAME STATEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE ' I VIII., ge )'OUr money Imperial Crown Produch,...,,h'"s'i • Tiii lllllawlnt perscn 11 doing business,-------------back and go home," they yell-stockade. c1Ufornl1 tofl)Or•llon, 182 W. •v .. es 1· Cos!• Meu, <'.ti. '1621 . 8USINESS PROPERTIES, 1711(1 Sky I IMS ed at him . Tiiis 11U1lne1• I• conducttd by t Park lou!evarCI, lrvlnt, C•llfornll t'1701 SUflea1011t COUIT OF THS ":=c=:::===="'=:=:=:=:=:=::'I o p0rall STA.Tl OF CALIFOlltNIA POllt The man was ushered out 1--,_____ c r on L c. Smull, M6 VII Lido N0<d, THE COUNTY Of OIAHG• PUBLIC NOTICE lm~erla1 ·~rawn PradU"tts. Inc. Newport 8each, C1lltornl4 12660 No. A·7ff27 amid shouts Of "Throw him Zoran V1a.incvk. Pre1!danl Tnlt business Ii conlludfd by 1n NOTICE OF HE"RINO 0, POTITJOM out'" Tnls statement was IUtd with Ille lndlvlduel " "OUR BATS 'II ' ] d • k FICTITIOUS IUSIN!SS County Clerk "' Or.inot Coun1y en· L 'C Smull FOllt TRANSl'EI Of: PROfl'llTY WI on y r1n The audience then rose and NAMI STATEMENT January 30, 197,, This si11lmenl Wll I/ltd with th TITLI TO WKtcN WAS IM fresh blOOd and won't tOUCh Th11 lollowtng Pll'.lotl Is dal'ng business F·Ul.U 0~ DECEDENT IUT Hl!LD IY NIM applauded Richardson. 1s: P11bllthtd Drtrt<;t Coa1! DtflY Pflol 5ountv f~''1~974 of Or<Jnge Counly IN TltOST CUI.) fll'ONll Codt). any that's been frozen or has • s.o.v. EXCLUSIVE 1'26 No. c .• Ffbru•rY •. 11, 18, 15. )974 351·11 an1tary , . F-301,l Estate ol WILLIAM LANCON HORTQH. additJVeS in jt So yotl F. the Iowa SI., Casta Mts.1, C11lf, 12626 ~ p U ·ned O C 1 O II Pll I DectlSld. fr.sh Slur( l·n· a ·--. sl1'de Stolen paintings valued at Scoll Stephen Oe Vries, 162~ No. c .. PUBLIC NOTICE Jen~:,; 26, ;~~ll'Feb~!~ry :. v,1, f.: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that ~ ~· 000 taken from the low11 SI .. co111 Mts11. caur, 9'2626 1914 30S.14 Jo Ann Horton. ti ExtclllTI• of flit Add 'It L 'f B d p O Box 1875 New 't · t the" d h "'"'°' • This b~1ln1u 11 conoucttd by 1n ---estate of thl ebo...-n•med dec.clent, ress mai o . 1• • · oy , · · ' · 1 in o 1r cage an w en Montecito beachfront home o( 1ne11v1dua1. FlcT1T1ous 1us1N1ss Ila• 111,d htreir. 1 petition ior an ordtr ",Ort B,each, 92660. you come back the next day, w Id 'Atrll Board Scott De Vrl•• NAME $TATlMEHT PUBLIC NOTICE l•Dn1ferrl1111 1(111 •nd poUl1S!Ol'I ol Ille r . Trans Of nes This tlat1m1n1 w•s tiled wltb tllt The followlnO perso11t •r• doing pre>P1rl'I' 01scrlbKI 11: ~~~~~~~ii;i~~~~~~i;;~~~~~~i;;~~~~~L~l~h~e~l~U~tl:e~c~n~·~u:e:r:s~h:a:ve cleaned Olainnan John J . Mitchell County Cl•r~ 01 oranoe counfY on buslvM•~',o",', ,,,,.,,.,0 se•vice, ,,.,, 1ci-.1t041 An ... natvllMd tour _ nflMntM 141151 JCPenney AUTO CENTER WHEEL ALIGNMENT e ADJUST CAMBER • ADJUST CASTER .. e ADJUST TOE.IN e ADJUST TORSION BARS • e SET CENnR POINT STEERING ·e PROLONG TIRE LIFE UP TO 50 % 995*. 'MOST AMERICAN CARS USE YOUR PENNEY CHARGE CARD JCPenney ' OUt the bowl · f Ftbru~rY 5, 1971, "" .. " '" v• l'ICTITIOUS SUSINl:SS lnl•resl In IN. lollowl1'19 dt$trlbed . . ---Were recovered J'Om a man P-l12tt G1lnsPOfl C!rcte, lrvlnt, Ca. 92705 NAMI! STATIMENT properly In Riverside CounlV, C•lllornft: PUBIJC NOTICE Who allegedly tried to sell Pt.1blltM.d Ora1191 Coast Dally Piiot, Victor Frencl1 Jonet, l9C2 G1lnsporl The rollowlflll ptrtont are dOlllO The Soutll· 4 1cre1 ol !hi NOl'lh und F~ru1ry II, 18, :is, anCI Mtrch 4, Clrtlt, Irvine, Ca. 92705 butlntll•~· t ~crti of the Wttl v. of tllt Nortllwtsl lhem to ercover agents. IJ7• '16·11 June Valerlt Janes, '902 G~lntport Sp O .• TS A NO l EI 5 ORE v. o1 !ht SouLlrwlf11 V.: tnCI !ht FICTITIOUS &USINl!SS Th • f S tak last ---Clrcl•, Irvine, Co. ~l705 INTERNATIONAL, '301 M.tcArttlur Saulh 6 •trf1 ot the Nori~ 10 •trll NAMI STATEMENT e pam mg • en PUBLIC NOTICE This busll!fss !s condllcled by an Soultv•rd, Newport fttacn, C•lltornla of the E15t 1,., of 1111 Northwest The ronowinu P•r10111 11r1 doing lni:llv!Cluel. 91Ml y, of the Sculhwt$1 \lo ol $tctlon buslrt!.s e~: PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS Victor F Jcnts w11i11m p Abbelt SS eeaccn 0JV, 1, Townsl'llp J Sau!h, Ran~ 5 west. Su~t~NJ:A,~~·~:n11n~:~ ~:~~.s~~:: -SU"ERIOR COU•T •• TH• NAME STATEMENT C~~:y s~a!:e;~en!1 w~~;in:!ed Co~~~ I~ N~.,:,r~ 9~.ch. 0':ii~f:,~1a .~~662Emer~llJ !·~·~Jiv:~ -·llllrO (1/3) '""rttl ....... .. Tiit lolto..-lng 1>9rson Is doing bu1lness J!!n~6tY 30, 1971, , I , ,... -J ••-· ITATI 01" CALll'OlltNtA. 11: -· F )llSt Bay, L119un1 8e1ch, C1lllornle t'J6S1. In lilt al ow ng Pffe• _, proper., n Frenk It. l1w, M. O .. m,,1 Sherry COUNTY Of OaANQE S T E AM 9 R; I T e CA R p E T PutJllshtd Orartae Cea st Oal!y . Pitel Thl1 bull MIS !1 coriducle<l DY a l!mlttd Los Anqe1ei; County, C1Ulorn!a: l Clrtt. Huntlnotcn ltach. Ca. M8 Nt. A·11191 CLEANERS, 2077 Wttlace, Apl. '· Coll• Ftbru•rv I, ll, \I, lS, 1914 JSll J' p11rtnershlp. The Norll'lu1l 1 1/10 Itel of DI T.H. Gan, M.O., \JM A C1r1w1v CITATION Mew, C•I. t'J627 ----' Wiiiiam J>. Ablloll 2~, and all of lots 29, lO •nd Jl, Ort.,., Cofl• Mtso. Call!. In 1111 Mllltr ol 1111 Gu•rdlanslll11 ltobl:rt Otv!d 8f!erschmln, :10'7 PUBLIC NOTICE Tiiis st11t1ment was flied wlllt !ti• Hotel Traci os per "'IP recorcltd lo';:,"~:!':t1.cC~:~::;1~.o., 160 HTilildl, ~'rt Ett•i. of TlltDY LE!-'IOTTOMS ~~~ce, Apt. 1, Cost• ,,,esa, ca. ;~n~' ~~Vt of Or•ng• c~nly Ot1 Janu· l~ec!r':s~ 1!1i~~~;.,,,~o,0f"(1:e:::1u1~ ltlCherCI A. HoUC[hlan, M.O., 1704 Thi PtOPi. of ltlt Sll'-of C11llloml1 This bt.1Slntts 11 conCl1,11;ltO bV on SLi-·74041 1'11111 Also Known •s 11t-137Y, lot A""'" Minon:• Pitt. toslt Mii& C1Hf. To JudY Schmid! ICl!loms lncllyldutl. STATEMENT 01' WITNDlltAWAL PubUslled OrtAQI Calli Dally Piiot, SlrHt, l as Anotht, Ctlllllml• Thi! butlntll 11 conducted by I 01ner1l P11n11Hnl 10 tilt ltw you 1r1 htrtbY Robert p 9tlerschmlll l'ROM l'ARTN~ltSHIP OPEllATIMO January 21, ind February 1, 11, U. kl Jowllh Kllflt<Horton Ind Wlllllm Lin· PlrlMrshlp. e1t" •ncf ,.qutrtCI lo •Plltflr btlort Thi~ sl11tmen1 W<H ll!td with the UNOER FICTITIOUS IUllHESS NAME 1•11 110-74 don Nortan, Jrs.., 111 Truslff1 Undtr tht 1'r1nk R Ltw, M.0. 1111 ludllt ol th!• court. IOC:1lld 111 co11nty Cltrk ol Orange couniv Ol'I Tht /allowing person 1111i withdrawn Trust Agr"rntnt •~-cuttd OY' Ml1t11 Kutil P1rln•r-Mlnlt'r Ctnlrel X·Jtey l:Ollrlhoust, 100 Civic Ctnltr Ortve Wtsl, FtbrU•ry ll, 1974 1s, 1-r11 parlntr from !he P1rtn1r1hlp PUBLIC NOTICE Horton, r1lertnet to wlllch 11 m.tclt for Tlllt tlaftn'llfll w11 llled wll~ 1111 ln IM City of S1nl11 AIW, Cou"ty of F·JIW apt1r1tlno 11na11r 1111 fictitious t1u1ln1s1 luMhtr p11r"cular1, tnd th•I lhl ti"'• COllnly Cltrk Of Or•noe COUl'llY Ol'I Orll'IQt, $1~11 ot C1llfornl1, ti !ht Pubtlshld Orange (00!$1 Oallv Pllol, n11'!11 of FRANK'S ltAOIATOR SERVICE. PICTITIOUS •USINISS 1;' fl"Z. ol hht;rl~7~llt r~ has ~n l'.iit,111ry 5. 1'7•. 1 .., Courtroom Dt l>tp1rtmtnl No. 3 on F<!brul'Y It, 2S, emf Marth 4, n , 1*341 6Hcit 80111ev11rd, t1untlnolon Btach, N" 1 ST'TEMINT ~he or rio::; of O ~ t No :&·~al~ . f:· 1 ,,.,.rch It, lt7'. ti 10:00 O'clock •.m .. 1974 Slf 1, C1llfornf1. ,.M .. cou .,.11r n · Pt.li:tlllhld Or1ng1 Coest Dally PllOt. then •"<I lh•r• h) J.l'IOw t1t.111, !I any, · Tiit llclltlous tlut!n•ss nemi sttlement Tiii tollowtng peri.on 1t doing business cOllft, ti JOO Civic Cent.r Orlvt Wtst, In l'ebru•ry II, 11, 2li, 1nO M••ch 4, why: UB for tilt p•rtneril'llp waa 11!•0 en al: Ille Clly of S<1nta Ant, CtUlornlt. 1974 . ,...,,, l•VOMt and Trov lotlom1 or some P LIC NOTICE Stf!ftmbfr 21, 1971 In t~• County 01 GUARDIAN HOME MAINTENANCE, 0111111 F1bru11 I 8. 1916 ~r wlleb1t p1rt11n lhould nol bf Ortngot. l9.s41 Rockllncl Lint, Huntlnoton 8tath, WILLIAM E. St JOHN appolnftd Gu1rdl1n Cl! !ht P"ri.on 1111d I UG7 Full n&rnt and 11dOr~u or 1111 Ptr•on t'J~ Countv Clef\ tlltlt o1 s1IO minor , SUl'EltlOllt COURT OF THE wlthOrtWlllll : Rolltrl E•nt Noe, ltS.l Roc~l1nd HOlltTON ANO l'OOT£ PICTITIOUI IUSINISI 1eccordl1"19 lo '"" wrlfltd p.etttlon ""' STAT& OF CALIFORNIA l'Olt Mlthatl Mlchatli, P.O. eox lfJl ltne, HuntrnotOl'I ltec:h '26-U UJI Wll""9r. a1\fd., Sutt• 16ff NAMI ITA1'1MINT Ille, IO which rt!Htn(I 11 m&de tor THE COUNT'I' OF OlltANc;I 6uHllt&d City, Arhonl 16430 This ~•Inell 11 ,btlnQ Condll(ltd by ~M ~i;r::•:u.C•::·...,. PUBLIC NOTICE • Thi follow!., -~M ,,, dolno lllr1h1r parllcultr1. Nt. A·75MI Mlchetl Mlth•tls tn lndlvlcf..,•I. • t-11,' 1 '•' -•• ..... 01ltd DK. 21, 1tn. NOTICE OF Nl!AlltlNG OF PITITIOH p,nu1 RObtrt E. NOi .. .,.,. .... Ol'l ··~ ...... bl.ltlc-~·N•;.: l NI!: NT Al e LE CTRIC Wll,.l.lAM E, ST JOHN TO lEASl Rl!Al PlltOi-EttTY FDR Pubtlll*! Oreng• C0~$1 Oallv P!lot, Thl1 Slllll't'ltnl flltd with lht COllnty F:;bflslMl<l11 O~:ng:s. ~;11 OlllV =· Vl!HICLES 1N41 BtlCll ft 1 v d , , County Cltrk Incl Clltl'k THI! lt-X i-l 0 a A T I 0 N AND J•nu11ry 1t, •nd Ftbru•ry ,, .U~, Clef'k of Orlfllll ,County Ol'I DK. 19, OC'O'C":..CC'C..::C' ..::c.,:;.:,:. __ _;,..._ 'I '16'1 of "'' suwlor Courl Ill PlltODUCTION OF OIL, OAS ANO 1'11 JOF14 1971 -H11nt1nglon -.ch k lltllon Th• Sllll GI C1lllornl1, !n i nd OTHEllt HYDlltOCAllONS -,, P.Jl30t PUBLIC NOTICE Howar11 DtYIO Sul>rllc • l6JJ'1 1 tor 1111 C01Jntv 111 Or1ng1. Et!•I• 01 NELLIE G. HARPSTER. PUBUC NOTICE Publl1hit0 or1n91 Cot1! Otlly Pllot.1-------------lrt., Huntll'IQIOl'I &etch, CiL, t2l•J SONINININS & AlltMSTIONG aho kl'IOWll IS NELLIE GORDON J111'1u11rv 21, end Ftbl'u1rv 4, 11 , 11, NOTICE TO ClltlDITOlltl OOnllO Zant SOrrimert, Ull V•res 5'0 N...,.;t Ctnler Drlvt HAR PSTER, 0110 kllOWl'I 11 NELLIE --121' l12·74 Nt. A•N17 Cir .. ltuntlneton 8t•Cll.,Ct1. NtwPll'f IMdl. Ctllfwfll• ""° GORDON DOWN.> HARPSTER, o.c .. std. • '"' SOPtllO• COU•t OP Ttll This bu•ln•11 11 eOflductM by • 11m1IM cno .,....,,. NOTICE 1s HE!.!E8Y GIVEN 111~1 SUPE11011: <.OuRT OF THE PUBUC NOTICE STATI o' CALlllDIWIA P•rlntrs~l'!.:..r0 0 Subnlck P\lbll•htd Or•no• CIMtl Oalty PUol, BANK OF AN.ERICA, • NlllOl'lll Trusl STATE OF CAL1•011tHIA FOllt l'Ollt THI! COUNTY o~ OllAN•• -1 f l•m nt' WIS flllt{I with th• Ftbruarv 11. 2S. •ncf M•rth '· 11, 1nd Stvll\Q~ A1socl1110fl, ns E•tculor TNE COUNTY 01' OlltANCiE NOTICI: o~ PUILIC KEA•IN• E1t1te Ill FRANCES ll u TT e It '"1 • 1 1 1t74 601 ·11 ol Ille 11bovt.,,11'1\e11 Hllte ht! filed Nt. A•71HS EGGERT ltc known , FRANCES (OllnfY Ct1rk of Or•no• ·Cou111Y Oii hll't'in • ,.1111or tor .M ,..,.,_ •vlhO•bl"' NOTICI OF N~AlltlHO Of! fllTITION Notice t1 ht...i>y ,1...-n 11111 • Pt.1tillc . I s JanutrY 30. 1t?4. PUBIJC NOTICE "' "' -· He•rlf'IO will be held by the CllY M, EOGEIT • Olct1Mcf. , ,.,1147 BANK OF AMEltlCA NATIONAL TRUST fOI l'IOIATE 01' Will AND FOa COllntll 01 Sin Jt.1in Capltll'll'IO Otl Nollet I• hlrltlV Olvltl'I lo Cffllltor1 p I ll hid Or c I 0111 Piiot ANO SAVINGS: AlSoCIATION. • i l1TI•11ts TESTAMENTAltY 11141 2Sltl d•f ol F1brll1ry. ''''· •I of the 11>o...-ll•n'llO Ol<:tftl'lt ltltt Ill up I lll'IO•u 1":t' y .. 1 l'ICTITIOOS IUSINl!SS E•teutor. to 11111 ·••I PfOP'rl'I' In Est11e of WILLA.RO c. THOMPSON. 7:00 P.M. In lhe Clty Councll Chtmbtt•. 119rt0n1 flevlng clalnu 191111111 lhl Mid l'tbru•rv 4. \I, lt, ' 4 t NAME STATEMENT !I'll County of Kl11111, Stai.-of Celllornla. 0t(e1Md. ):loQO PastO M•ltnlo, rtl•ll...-11 !hi lltttdtnl 1r1 TtQIJlrlcf 19 lllt !:him• _P_UB_ LIC NOTICE Tht lollowlno per1on1 .,. Ooll'IQ' lo Mobil OU Corpurttlon tor -!hi NOTICE 1$ HERE&Y GIVEN th.at follOwlng · .., w!th thl nKtltll'Y YOVChlo. tn ""' bt.111"411 111: e•Plor1ll011 llld prodU(flOI\ 01 oil, , •• JEAN N. THOMPSON "'•• lllfd "'"•In OltOIHANCE HO. 2lif: AN 01101· ol'llCt ol !hi Clerk ol '"' •boft tnlltt.d 11~--------=---I HAMPTONS·WIST, 15lt w. Clc:t•~ Incl olhlr hydroctrtlon subtllnctJ In•. 119tlll011 IOf P10~1t ot wm llncl HANCE OF THE CITY COUNCI L OF COi.iii. or to °"""' ""'"' wllh lllt 'IC'TITIDUS-IUSINISS fronl; Ntwllor1 •811chj Ctllf. 91660 .SCtotcftl'IC;t Wiii' 11'\t ltrmt anCI conall1oru !er L»uance Of Lllltr1 T11t1mtnt1ry THE CITY OF $AN JU/IN CAPI· nectJSl•V YOllttlltfl to !ht uMtnJ111'11d NAMI STAHMINl' • . il'r1nk A. WOOC11l1. 1 II W. Otttnlront, OI !I'll ~.O Mtmortndum of Oii lo lllt Pfflllontr rtttrtnct to Which $TR4NO -,.OOPTIN G av AEll'E,ltENCE 11 lhl ofilct oi L. Ol!lAN ,.l!fTY Thi followin9 plf'IOA I• cloll'\f bllsllllu N"'1IOl'I INtll. CtlU. ""° end G11 Lftll •ncl Oii and Gas lt1tM1 IJ med• tor furth•r p1rtlcul•r1. ~nd THE lt7' UNJFOltM F•RE COOE 1$0,, ttts Wllthlrt llYll, ~o. *· '"""Y 1•: John E. Aki!! .. 11S E. 16th Slrltl. r•ltrtA(I to Whit/\ 11 !!Wiit for lt.1rlhe 11111 lilt llmt Ind piece of htlltlflll Nolll!t It Nttl'llt 111• flit! at 11111 Hllli, Ctllforn!11 '°'It. which It t11t pllct MAIUHALL SAIL RIPAIR, m New Yort, N.Y. c1rt1c ... lal"t. Ind thtt lht li1'!141 and Pl•tt !ht ••mt ,,.. *" "' for Fftrutry tlrne Ind plt(t, •'1 l11ftrt1hld ,...ons °" blnlntJt DI N "'""',..,..,... In ti! Ttrmlnil WllV Unll 13, Cotll Mtt•. 1t•rt Ptltr ltbot•ntl, Ull w. of hllrlflO !hi '~"" h~s betn set ,,, 197•. 11 t:OO "·"'·• !fl the courtroom 1rt lnvn..i to 1ttlnd stlcf Publlt m11ttr1 Ptrtaln!ng to "" ultlt of t•I-' C•lllornla tt•27 ,, <k11nfron1, NtwPOrt lttell. Ctlll. t'l.W.0 lor M•t(h l, 191t, et 9:00 a."'.. In of °'91rtrne111 No. 3 ol st!cf court. Htltll'lf 11'\0 111 l'lltrO In !ever of OtcMl~I, wlttd~ ft.Ur n\Olllhs 1fllf Ill• ,.,.._rWll H, Mllltr, lt7J Wtlltct Wt'fflt si.w1rt. 1s11 w. 0e .. n1ron1. tN courtroom el °'°8Ml'fltfll No. l ot 100 Clvlt C1n11r Orlvt Wt11, In or 111 OOPOtfllen to 11td Unlfoffll f:lt"t tlrtl pulllc1tl1111 .i ltlls notlc .. Avt '"'· Ii, COlll Mttl, C1Mlorn11 N..,.porl 111ch, C1llf, '2660 ol 11td cour1, 11 700 Civic Ctnltf !hi Clly ot S1n11 Ant. Cfll!orrile. COdf, eltht' or"UY or by wrltttn 01ttd P.e!\, ,. 1'14. ~ '1•17, ltObtrt t4. Kurisu. 1511 w. GcNnlront. Orlvt Wtsl, In tht Clh' ol S.1111 Ant, O•ffll Ftbruary t, 197 , ci:immUn1c~t!en ta ltw Clly Counc11. OEOltCJl ~. MILL, Thl1 bul1MM It CGl'ld!Ktff by 111 Ht'<'l"POff IHch, C•UI. 91660 Ctllforn!•. WILLIAM E. SI JOHN For lurlhtr P1rtlCt.1lltlt •II _lntttt,led 6•tc"tor ot fht WU! lndlVldl.111. -Thi• llu1lnt1t II condU(lttlbv • a1ner1I Dalld l!tbruery t, lfTt. Ccwn:v 'lti•' ii••ton1 art !nv!lld to cell t i ttw ol M10 d~t Mlt1hlll H. Mllltr perlMrllllO. WILLIAM i . 'St JO~N SHYO•a, O'Nl!IL. HANCOCK & off!c• o1 lllt City Clerk Whtrt • l)t1•N Ptf'TY. 110. Tlllt 1ttlltl'l'llnl w11 flied with the Frank A. WOCdtll Ccwnty Ckltk ASNWOllTH ln:°""elhll'I r19al'llll'IG fllls matttr It "" Wfhlllrt l lYf., !ft, tOt FASHION ISLAND COll"ty (ltrk of Or•1191 Countt on TlllJ 11•1tm1nt Wtl 111.t with 1111 OOOD, POT111 AliiD llADISM 11U Pair Ofkt A""ftUt on 11~ &nd av1ll1bl1 1o1 P\ltillc lt¥e.r1' ""'" CMlttnl• tlUl "911n,1try s. lf14. Coi.1n1v Cttrk of Or•ntt COlll'llY on ISM VtfllU'11 ...... Sull•"6J Sl!tll'l'I .... ~•11111'1·1 1.111Ltornl• tlO>O lnlpt(ll~n. AlfofntY ... ••Kiri., l'JIHI Jtlll.llfY 30. 1f14. · snorm•~ D•ks, C•!lfO!'fllt ••413 Ttl: CU)) .. 2·21'4 011111: February 71 1t74. *• OC " N. EWPORT BEACH •ullfltMO OI'~ Cotti Ot!ty Piiot. ,..i11t1 Anwt11y1 lw S1tc11,.,IMllOllW A1torn1v1 ,.,., •e:lllOM• CllV' Cl•k ,.ubll•llld Ortnot C011t o.ny l'llali flt'brW!ry 11. 11, 2S. ani:I M1r(ll " P\lbHIMO Ol'lt!Qt COfl•I Oa!l't P11ol Put1ll11'1tC1 Orange COlttf Diiiy Pllot. Publl•MO O••nH Co.lit! D•lfY Pllol, Pul>lhhtcl Or•no. CHI! Ottly P!IOI. Ftbrv.try 11, I.. JS. &lld Mlf(h " 1.-------------------------•1'71 · 4W4 '•WWry I. 11. 11, H. lt'I• JN.14 Flbrt.1try \1, IL lt1A "9·14 "•t1ru11ry 11, 12, lt. ltl• S00-74 "lbr'Vary 11. It. ffM 4t1 ·7• 197' ....,., ,, ' .. I .. r . . • \ 1(1 DAIL V PICOT Monday, Februilry 18, 1974 Stocliton Not Fazed By Snead's Needling LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Sam Snead, thn1 6l·y1r,1r"ld n1arvel from a1101her era of golf, 1'1ruck up a brief (.'OOVCrsatlon with Dave Stockton. as they stood on the 18th lei.! in the finnl round of the Lo.s Angeles Open golf touma nlent . "He's a great needler," Stockton relati."'CI Sunday .• "fle'd just made a birdie on the 17111 to get within ooe stroke and he says, 'you knO\\. Jn 19'}() J birdied the last ty,·o holes to beat (Ren) Jlogan. • "It kind of startled me.•· Stock ton continued. "! didn't know what to say. •(:~~. that's great, Sam? I'm proud of \1)U.' " • But ii didn't sta rtle hlrn enough. Stockton procc;<Jed to birdie the final hole for a last round 69 and -with. :i 276 lotal -a 111.·o-:itroke victorv over the incredible Snead and youthful John Mahaffey, tied at 278. Each matched P<•r 71 in the final round over U1e 7,028-yard Riviera Country Club course . Redhalrl'd 1'om \Yatson was in the four-1nan fight for the lead until he made a pair of double bogeys on the back nine He f1111si\'\.'<l wilh a 72-2.80 and fourth alone. UPI TtltPhOID Johnny Miller, Ule U.S. Open diampion and a three-tlme winner this season, went over par for the first tirn\ this year. His 73-281 put him in fifth place and stopped his string at 23 consecutive rounds in which he 'd shot par or better. And he wasn't the only one of the stars to have their troubles in the chill , windy weather. Tom Weiskopf, tied for the 'lead after 54 holes, blew to a 76 and 283. Jack Nicklaus struggled to a 75--185. U!e Trevino had 72-287. Arnold Palmer wa! far, far back with 76-291. Stockton, 33. now the wir.ner ol seven titles in his 10 years on the pro tour, was paired with Snead in the final round and noted that the gallery heavily favored the old man who was the tour 's leading money winner in 1938. "Everybody who's over 25 was pulling for Snead," he said. "But I don't mind that. It's like 1970 when I beat Arnold fot the PGA. We played together in the last round. Everylx>dy was for Arnold. "I kind of enjoy il I've got my ow'n little game I play. I like to see how many I can steal from them.'' Stockton, long noted as one ol the premier scramblers on the toor , made the most of his specialty. He needed on1y 28 )'.1µtts in his final round, twice one-putting for par and once chippin g in for birdie. But it as a key second shot on the final bole -Stockton called it "the greatest shot of my li fe" -that nailed it down. He was just one stroke in front when he surveyed the situation. "I had 247 yards, dead agaiMt the wind, to the pin. I had a downhill lie in the rough. The ball was about eight inches below my feet. There was out of bounds on the left and all those people on the right. "I '~hlt lta";'three wood. Ii ... bit .:about 20 feet in front of the green and ran on up about 12 feet from the cup. It's got to be the greatest shot of my life. I wasn't even worried about the putt." He made it for the birdie that clinched the $30,000 first prize. Snead and Mahaffey each claimed $13,875 from the 1'>tal purse ol $150,000. Leadln; 1cC1Tn •lld· money..,..lnn!nos S11n<1tv In 11\t $1S0.000 LDS Arlgtl'I Opfll goll lovrn.emrnt: O•ve sroctlon, SJ0.000 Stm S..etd. l1J,37S John Mahaffty, Sl],17$ Tom Wat10n, l 7.060 JQl'lnnv Miiier, st.lSD Tom IC!lt. 1$..«IO A·CralQ Stadler, Tom Wel1kcot, U.1100 Oave HUI, M.'l37 Forrest F'titer, M,237 Jact NlcklfUI, $3.,so Berl Y•n~. tl.ASO c,;...,, Llt1l1r, u.,so Bud All!n, SU50 Jim Wleeher1, t2.l2S G•c•a~ Archer, 52.3~ Al GelM•a•r, (2.3'lS I •nny '"'~~ln~. t• '\?5 L~ Travino, $'1,'.nj ""~" ~·~•!II. $~ 3'" l•••V "'"~r<t .,,65~ """ 51111. 11.~ "''''C• !l'"vlln, 51 4'~ ,....,~ r-~""'''' "'U ·~~n ••rnh• <' '.1?5 ...... "~~· ., ...,, 614-71..ff-21• 7J.41~11-211 70-M-6'·71-271 •n~n-290 n-66-11-n-211 69-71 -7)-70-21!2 11~9.1u-m 71-Jl~S-111-113 72-66·13-n--21• n-67-10-7'-78' 66-IJ..11-7S-115 n-10..19-7._'85 11._19.n.n--n1 ff.n .n .1 .... n• n-61-1J..n-111 71.77.11).7-7117 T'l-10.n-n-:io1 7 ....... l'l'l_,...__,., 69-77·71-71-'"7 "·"·''·''-""' Jt.•• ... ···-~·· n._19.n.n-:io~ ........... .,_-~ "1'1\.'~ ..... ._ ..... SAM SNEAD LEAPS INTO AIR AFTER MISSING AN EAGLE PUTT. 1M1-n-16-790 n-n-n-n-m 73·71..17·79-290 12·71-Y.79-290 7.Hi9· 7•-11-290 10-11-1,.1 ..... m Draft Tac tic Is Be11eficial To Petty's Win DA\'TON:\ BEACl-1. Fla. 1 • .\P) -It was Richard Pctly's kind of doy. Th.:it could be any day Y.'hen therP.'s stock car racing and Rich<1rd is winning. lie drove off v. 1th \he S36.6{l(I first pri ze Sunday ·in t!1c richest stock cor race ever run . the S275.000 Daytona 500, and ran his career v.•innings above $1.5 million. \Vho carl'd if it \\'as shortened to 450 miles as a gesture lo the ene rgy crisis? It didn't prr,·enl 9;),(IO~ !X'Ople from ge~ting lo Daytona International Speedway, alm~t as rnany as l<ist year's record 103.00il. If the Daytona 5flU didn'! quite produce a record croy,•d, it did have a r1..>rord 59 lead charges and a rerord 53 laps under yellow caution flags. "There were so many lead changes because of the caution flags," Pett y said. "The l!Ji2 raCt" \\'as probably just as competiii\·e or mo-re so ... That's y,1hcn he \\'On hi~ third Daytona 500. His fourth v.·a:: last year. This time he became the first to v.·in back to back. ""1inning the first onr \\·as great.'' Petty said. ''\Vinn ing the next threc times \\"as greater. Five times is e\·en greater." Sa11· Diego Meet Decker Smashes Mark; J ohrison Ties Record SAN orEGO -Pi g-tailed, 93-~d /llary Decker of Garden Grove, helped by a pacer for a quar!er mile, smashed her O\\'ll pending indoor mark for the_ 880 by more than four seconds at 2:02.4 at the San Diego indoor track and field games Sunday night. I\liss Decker also set an 800-meter mark or 2:01.8. "I can just psfch up before a race no1v. but a couple of years ago I used to get real nervous ," said Miss Decker, 1vhile signing an autograph for an ad- mirer. fo.leanv;·h.i le, former San Clemente resident Patty Johnson tied her own 00-yard indoor hurdles record and Tony \\'al drop sizzled lo a record-shattering indoor time of 3:55 in the mile run. The 23-year-old fo.1rs. Johnson, who holds ty,·o other world track marks, broke on top and won easily in 7.4, l_ving the indoor record she shares with Karen Balzer of East Germany. "I still run for fun." Waldrop said <ifter his record performance. "The pressure of trying for the Olympics is not worth it. I tried in 1972. Never again. of the world's best by breaking four minutes five straight times, the first time that's eve r been done on the boards, and by Sunday night's milestone race that eclipsed the re"""1 ol 3:56.4 sliared by O'Hara and Jim Ryun. After tracking Lany Rose through a ):59.6 hall mile, Waldrop took the lead, passed three quarters in 2:S9, and turned on the peed for a 56-second final 44-0. Wilson Waigwa of Kenya finished second in 3:57.2. "I was th.inking ctbference race next more worried about "mused . "I am kind traveling ... I had elf spikes. ahead to the week and was that," Waldrop or tired from the wrong kind "Then near the end, t was thin.king , 'Oh no, I'm just going to m1ss it.' " Francie Larrieu cut more than a half minute off the indoor records In the seldom-run women's 3,000 meters and two-mile, clocking 9:02.4 at the metric distance on the way to a 9:39.4. "I had no wannup for the race," noted the 21-year-old Miss Larrieu, who al.so holds indoor marks at 1,500 meters and one mile. ''The outdoor rerord is a definite possibil ity." SPLASHING TO VICTORY -Fountain Valley's Shirley Babashoff steams toward victory in the 800-meter freestyle in Sunday's international swim UP'IT.._... meet at Paris. Miss Babashoff won the 800-meter free in 8:53.3 and also captured the 100-free and was second in the 200-meter individual medley. UCLA Plavers " Seek Changes In Offense LOS ANGELES (AP ) -·UCLA coadi John Wooden says he still thinks his tS..3 Bruins can Wiri tbe 'NC'AA ba,Sketfian ~ ... champion.ship if they play t~eir game and reduce their turnovers, but some of his players have asked the coach to alter the team's offense. "In my crpinion it was the turnovers that \\'ere directly responsible for our defeats" Wooden said by telephone Sun- day after his team had_lost to .Qregon Saturday and Oregon State Friday. "We had an tnordinate number ... Man y times iturnovers are the result of defense, but in this case many were just poor judgment on our ·part. "We were dribbling so much in a crowd. That meant some of our players were going a lit.Uc individual. We had blind passes by some experienced players. "That's the type of thing I feel "'e have to cut down on but I definitely feel we will ." Some Bruins players, ho~ever, felt the team was hurt in Oregon by refinements· Wooden introduced last week to get more movement into the offense. The innovations dea lt mainly with player movement away from the ball, Wooden said. Center Bill Walton and Wooden discussed the player's ideas for an hour on the plane ride home . . . "Defense certainly isn't our problem," said one player. "And it's not that we don't care either. Our problem is the offense. Something just isn 't working. We've lost ,two in a row and we haven't scored very much . We'd better do something to help us win." "We 're supposed to get the bB.11 in o Bill," said senior guard Greg Lee. "But we're also supposed to be a five-man offense. The :trouble i.s, the other guys aren't getting open when Bill is· double teamed." Wooden den ied the iMovations hurt and said he thought he'd stick with them. "I don't think the changes I made had a fair chance ·to work ," he said. "l wasn't displeased with them. I was disappointed with our execution." Wooden also remarked 1tlat he wouldn't panic because his team had not been humiliated and could have won all three games that it lost this year. "There are always several teams that can wtn the NCAA championships, but 1 think we're one of. rthem. We are in a little bit of a slump, but I'm confident that we'll come back." He said tie still expected the toughest competition for rthe Pac-8 title and the NCAA playoll berth from 13ih·ranked Southern Cal . The Trojans are 18-3 and . Ul'd with the Bruins for the Pac-8 lead at 7·2. "We beat them by ·a comfortable margin earlier but that was on our home noor but we know they'll be ,tougher over th ere," he said. The Bruins and Trojans meet once more in conference play in March. Sports in Brief Soccer Tragedy: 48 Die CAIRO -~ Egyptian govtpUilent took steps today to reduce the crowds at soccer ma tches after 48 persons were killed and 47 others injlll'ed when a stadium fenl'i! gave way Sunday. The government said in the future tickets will be .sold for only BO percent of the seats available, and aU matcbes will be televised and broadcast live.- Sunday's tragedy occurred at the Zamalek Sporting ChJb stadiwn, which has seats for 40,000, and persons present estimated the crowd at 60,000 to 90,000. Officials said a preli mi nar y investigation shoY.ted pressure from the overflow crowd in the third~lass stands collapsed an Iron fence between the stands and the playing field and also ' part of the concrete walls of the stands. The casualties were either pinned under the failing barriers or trampled beneath the crowd that poured onto the playing field. Moot of the dead suffocated, post· mortems showed. Moot ol the Injured had broken bones or deep cuts, hospital physicians said. The match, between Dukla for Prague and Zamalek, was cancelled. It was for the benefit of victims of the October war, and the local papers sald it raised about $30,000. e Babdshoft Win• PARIS -Americans Rick Colella Shirley 'Babashoff and ti,felissa Beloi.u; won races Sunday in the second day of an international !Wimming meet which attracted participants from 14 COlllltries. Colell a, of Seattle, won the l(M}.meter breaststroke with a time of one minute,· 5. 7 seconds. He also finished third in Aaron to Miss Opening Series ATLANTA -The chalnnan of the board of the Atlanta Braves has announced that slugger Hank Aaron wl.U be available only as a pinch-hltter in the team's season-opening series at Cincimati April 4·7. Aaron, who recently celebrated his 40th birthday, needs only one home run to lie the all-time record of 714 !et by tile immortal Babe Ruth. Bill Bartholomay made the an- nouncement Saturday, saying, "It ls unprecedented to speculate on an opening lineup at this early date, but Braves fan s deserve to know our plans ." He said Aaron's first start would come in the home opener on April 8 when Atlanta opens an 11-game home stand against the Los Angeles Dodgers, who will be followed into Atlanta by the Cincinnati Red! and San Diego Padres. "Hank will be available as a pinch hitter for the road gam es ln Cincinnati and part-time play U required by manager F.ddie Mat.hew!," s a i d Bartholomay. • Ill. Cairo " ... the 1.Soo.meter IT'eestyle and lllinl in the 200-meter individual medley. Miss Babashoff, of Fountain Valley, won the women's 80Ckneter freestyle in 8:5.1.3 and al3o won the 100-mder freestyle. She finl!ibed 8eCOIXI in the 20()..meter individual medley. Miss Belote, elf Sprin8fleld, Va., captured the 100:..meter bacbtroke and placed fourth In the 21JO.Jlle!6 medley. e Coach Re•ign• MORGANTOWN . W. Va. -llese< wllh problems and berated for the record the Mountaineers have produced, Sonny Moran has resigned as West Virginia University 's head basketball ooadl. ,,In order for WVU to return to national prominence, full cooperation and understanding is needed from the admihistratlon, alumni,· students, news media and fans," Moran said Sunday in a statement announctns b l s resignation effective July I. e Huge Crowd ST. LOUIS -The largest crowd ever to attend a college hockey game, 1S,S48, turned out Sunday night to watch St. Loois University skate to an 8-3 victory over Ohio State. Previously, the c:ollegiate hocby attendance record was 15,003, at the Na tional Collegiate Athletic Association championships last March in the Boston Gardens. e Indoor Mark WARSAW -Henryk Szordykowskl o1 Poland set a world indoor record for the 1,000 meters Sunda y, running the distance in 2:20.0 in a meet he.re , the Polish news agency PAP reported. SzordykowskJ's time is four-tenths of a secood faster than the listed world Indoor record of 2:20.4, set by 'l'om Von Ruden of the United States ln lflL e Champ Repeats FALUN, Sweden -De f e nd i ng champion Ulrich Wehling elf East ~Y won the gold medal ol tile Nord.Jc combined in the World Non1ie SkJ Oiampionshlps today, narrowly ahead of compatriot Guenter Deckert and Stefan Hula of Poland, according to unofficial results. eMann Wina NAPLES, F1a .. -Carol Mann, winner of the $38,000 Naples Women's Golf Cl~ic, says she is playing better oow than she has bt a long lime. Ml!s Mann, 33, Of Towson, Md., left her competition far behind Sunday a! she fired a three-under par 69 to capture the Sf.hole event with a final 209. The second-place finisher, Murie Breer of N8-'hvllle1• Tenn., was siz strokes back. e Record Falls SOFIA ·,Bulgaria -Alfons Brldenbach ol Belglwn established a worid record ror the lndoor 400-me«!r n11 Sunday, winning the event In 45.1 -at the International Student& Indoor tnict champlooshlps. \\'hat does that leave for 1he future? ''Coming back and \\'inning the sixth onl' next year," v.·as the ready. ansy,·er ol th.is tall. lean driver and race car builde r from Randlen1an, N.C., y,:ho is fo/loy,·ing his the footsteps of his fathtr, Lee Petty, dominant figure in stock cars in the 1940s and 1950s. "And after tonight I have even Jess desire to turn pro." \\'aldrop finished second in last year's NCAA mile bul still was relatively unknown entering this indoor season. Lakers Snake-bitten, Says Sharman "Nothing ever really got established until there was 150 mil~ to go.'' Petty said in analyzing hi! latest triumph . Then, he said, he and Donnie Allison got together in a dr1tft, t11at technique of follo>Ain& a ft•\\' fL~I tlllhlnd !hr car ahead. Drivers have Cuuud It i.ncrl':is.:s lhe spe<d or bOlh cars. ''Nobody t•lse seemed satisfied tQ run together," J>e1ty sa id. "We were satisfied to Jet one lead four or five laps and then pick up about half a second a lap and get 1way !n>rn the crov..·d." l " -· Bu~ he 's established himself as one SC Tops Dodgers IJ)S ANr.F:t.ES -A last·lnning thro"'*l1~ .{'rror hy th(' Los Angelas flodgcrs hflt'<I the Southern California Trojans to n 2·1 exhibition baseball victory Sunday before 2~,106 fa'ns at Dodger Stadium. . t;SC's Jeff Reinke was the wiMing pllchf'.r after allowing only one hit in the five-inning sl{uggle. I ' INGLEWOOD (AP, -Lekers coadi Biii Sharman described his squad as "snake-bitten" after SUnday's 113-110 National Basketball Astoclatlon loM I<> the Atlanta Hawk.,. "We seem to be missing key passes in close games tilong with free throws and easy !hc1ls we lhould make," Sharman said Sunday night. "l have th• reeling tltis team Is sna ke-bitten lately. But Atlanta -.OOWed ~at qulcltness, especially Jn (Lou) Hud!on, who made six very dlff)cuh mou..11 • It was Hud>on and Oashy Pell! Maravicb who led the Hawks to tbe win, combining for 87 po~. . Hudsoo hU 35 and MaraYich 32. Gall Goodrich loo Los AneeJ,. •llh n 3~Polnt effort. The vle1ory was the lourth straight by the Rawl<s ov.,. the I.Aken and the seventh in the team's last eight meetlng.s. Los Angel'" went ooe game behind th• Golden Sblte w.m .... , who defeated Ollcago, In the NBA 's Pacific Division. • • lt ill the sllrth Loken loM In elgllt games. . • It looked like the Laken wett going to overtake tile Hawks lo tile r.unh quarter, cOmtng wlthln a point nt 1()9..108 \vllh 18 seconds left to play. Maravlch then 5ank two free 1hrows to answer • Jim Prlco jump shot and Elmore Smllh went to the line for two for Los Angel... Bui Maravlch w., fooled again with one oeoond on Ille clock and put bod! lhol! through to ..., up tile win. Ills -lni domlnat«1 the !ourth quaf'ler .. he sank foor d' rtve rleJd goals early In Ule period and hit Ille lut six for 14 polllla ol Alilru't U1'Qlnt effort In tile flnal frame. ' As he, Okker Tr iumph BOLOGNA , Italy -Arthur Ashe beat Mark Cox ol Great Britain, 6-4, HI to win the Astor Cup tennis tou rnament Sunday. ' • ' I • l• ·-' 11..UI J Checking Coast Area Prep Tennis Outl·ook · 'flte prep tennis reason gets for the fledgling Chargers, unde.r way shortly along the while b8ck1ng him up are (>range Cout an1a and the Steve Trejo, Karl Mwit and u.sual powers-c:ont.inue to be Scott Murphy in the Nq. 2 ~ teams to beat for league throUgb 4 singles spots. laurels. ~ doubles lineup Is not Newport Harbor (Sunset detennlned, but it's expected League) Corona de! Mar to come from among Montyt 1irvlne League) MlsJon Viejo . Whitfield , Jeff Peterson, Doog for his defending CIF 2'-A power Newpo11 llarbor tt's tl!tlnls champions. But aft.er another m.auer. ' early practices he feels it'll For coach Pa~ Wilson's be a little bit better than Sail«s it figures to~ another that. baMer year with f I v e With four returning players lettermen and a standQut from last year's CIF titlists, transfer b o I s t e r i n g the and the cream of a record peluls program. t~ut of underclass ho , The Sailors finished second Ashe, oeeded tltlrd In the World Championship Tennis event, breezed through the first set on the strength of I ...l'"liff~ a strong service and tight defense. ' . ' Floyd, Scott McCarthy, Jim (Crefiview League) and Anderson and Kevin White University and Laguna Beaclt · \\'ahl thinks the Arti!Jts ..till ln the CJF for the second enjoy another success f u I straight year in 1973 an d In season. addition to tbe retumilU{ stars, The seventh-seeded Cox, however, came back strongly in the second set. He was on the verge of tylng the matcll , holding • 5-3 edge In games and leading 40-0 on his service, but Ashe came back to pull the game out. Ashe then held service to draw even at S.-5, broke Cox's· service .to move ahead and helti his own to close out the match and e-am the $10,000· first prize. • Nastue Falls TORONTO After One senior graces the Wilson has seven junk>rs to Six varsity lettermen form Laguna Beach roster, doubl es call on from a ?l~ junior the nucleus of coach Jim specialist Howie Pearsol . He'll ·t In ttie Orange I.eel!"• are Estancia '1le area tearm to belt. J--r's •-•-e Le ague h vars1 y team. .... ,... u \'111 be playing wit a new partner senior .Corona d e l Mar contender at Estancia High. this year, and although Wahl Tony Stockham (a Coadi Dennis Trout's' Sea .' Seniors Tony Sawaya, Doug has several candidates to transfer from the S a n Here:s a capsule look al each d. pie area's 15 teams : · .Rove and Don Porter are choose from, he hasn 't made Bern a rd In o area) and )9ngs are narrow favorit~ backed up by sophomores Ed sopllomore Sieve Marosl are Over Lo! Alamitos, Eslanda 0!0-"-art R dd G In and a final decisio n on the pairing considered the best indi viduals and.· F.di--ht' the race for· oll,;UW z, u w up as yet. (he •·. ~·1 •-• Le ,.1 Mark Sawaya . on the team, which includes K:8gue rv .. ..,. ag;ue tn e Up from the junior varsity In singles, San Marino senior lettermen Cody Small, "Ith 80phomote Da?l Gerken to assist the mono gr a m transfer Scott Thomas, a Mark ·Jones and peter P'clng "e att•ck 1·un1or, and r et u r ning • • ai w t -· wlnners are juniors Scott Perkins. Othet leadlhg p I ayers letterman Steve Spaulding are · Heaton and Alan Margol. Ui the Depth ha s been a key factor Include: fr .. M ... an Jlm Curley bat ·ng for No. l spot. "'?' .. " , • Other possible v a r I l t Y Returning singles regulars these past seven years as 8!1d three-year I e t t e r rn a n Starters include sophomores R 1 n d y M c c 1 u n g a n d Newpor1 has not lost a single s~ior JoJm Gulick~ -Albert Nelwan and J e ff pho p ul Dodd I leaa"e match and ¥.'On three AOO. flgunng lo aid Ute Sea Phillips. so more a are a so ,_ he s.· flni bed King~ varsity are Jim Rpss, . Estancia finished 12_2 in available. CIF ti tles. T 1\ors s Jab. callne, Midlael Dale, 1.973 but losses to Corona de! Newcomers in the Laguna second In CIF the other four George Glll"ette , Bob Mar' and Edi!On knocked the Beach picture include fresh-times. Sunday's performance, Tom Okker may (l)[)gkier making Toronto his second home. "I've always done well PRESIDENT'S CUP FINALISTS -Mrs. Burt (Inez) Stansbury, ti!lt, helps Mrs. here," said tbe 29-year-old Jack (Gwennie) Sayers hold the Santa Ana Country Club trophy. Mn;. Sayers de· Gustafson, Ron McNamara, . Eagles out of the title and men Robert Cunard and Todd Sophomore letterman-Rick Jordan otterbeln, peter playoff compeUUon. TOOmt.on, sophomore Clyde Whittwer ls joined by juniors Robbins, Bryant_ Shoemaker Jenner says his team's best GG!111~~nandandCynjuntbiaiorsAshDougl;••. Mark Roy , Bill Badham, Brad Dutchman after defeating top-__ re_a_te_d_M_r_s_. _s_ta_n_s_b:.:u.cry:..:,_2_._u,_p,:...:.to:....eg.:.a1:.:·nc..::th.:.e:..c.:.o:..v.:.e:.:te:.:d:.:g~o:.:l:.f ::.•wc..::ar:.:d:.:. ___ _.: ___ _ seeded Jlie Nastase of and Bob Spooner. asset is overall balance and 1iM;;' -""' Bauman, Rick Lada , John Nisbet. Walker Smith and Romania, 6-3 , M , in the $50,000 Toronto Int..ma\ional tennis toumament. Okker, who won I as t swnmer's Canadian Open in Toronto and plAM to return to this year's tournament in August, also is oo. ( lre negotiating list of the Toronto franchise in the fledgling , World ~am.T~ je~gye .• . He opened qwc~y againSI · Nastase Swiday, breaking his first two services to lead 4--0. On both occasions, Nastase double-faulted the game pQint away. Okker's backhand w a s outstanding in the cootest and kept the workl's ~ranked eiayer oU balance. He put ti great deal of t~pln on both his backhand a n d forehand shots. "I was hitting a lot oP. good backhands," said Okker. who received. $10,000 for his 55 minutes of work In dl$osing of Nastase. The win also gave him 160 points and second place in the Red grouping of (he W o r I d Otampiornhip 'tennis standings. Nastase has 292 points. e Connor• Wins BIRMINGHAM, Ala. ;,o ta Mesa experience and be feels his Marina Duncan Strauss. t.. • , team has a realistic shot at Balance a n d experience Seven varsity leittennen dot 'the UUe that Corona de) Mar makes coach ·B1·11 Keller's Newport opens up play the scene at Costa Mesa High Is f Tuesday against i n v a d l n g avored to annex. Marina Vikintf!I a aolid Sunset where coedt D!ck OUren . .-Pflos Verdes High, which considers his temb C<ew >till Fountain Valle11 League teMis , entry as ttte Wilson says is the nation's In a building !lage. Fbuntaln Valley HI g h '·• Yikes ~rd for the u~ No. I prep tertnis power !hi:! Anteat~rs Spik-ers The only senior In the campaign. year tennis program is bolstered Senl Fr··• s · viu:sity program is santa ~ bf sli. Varsity lettermen with ors ... .,.. ween e Y, Included in Palos Verdes' R_ely on Freshmen . Vallei' High tramfer Jlm Juniof ~en Murad pacing the Randy Hamasitki, M ark setup Is Billy Mart In , Maggiano, ~ , was t b e B~ attack. Monson, Stu Cook and BUI considered the best prep latter'! N"o. -3 -player as-a ~-"Seniors Mike D'Anna and ~e~ ~~-j~i9~ ~Y. Ji!Jl ~c~~ play-t?r. J.11 the· nation. . Don't look for llie UC Irvine track and field team to win ari NCAA championship this season. But don't sell It shorj, either. Negative thinking? Hardly. !l's purely a._ca.se_of !Qgjstics and coaches Bill Toomey and Len Ml Iler have .the situation well in hand. "We're basically a freshman oriented team ," Toomey says. "This gives us a chance to work with these kids for four years and I think they can · all improve a great deal." Toomey is also keeping an eye peeled in the direction of Ult soviet Union and three potential world-cla ss stars as members of the 1974 team but prefers to await further developments before making comment along this line. s~. . ~ Laslcko are joined by as the returnlilg monogram Son, tre~te . . this is our first full sea.!On from I t ' te .. Jdhfol'a Sn the program ar~ junlOfs' 'Bill ~ Herarrch and .. w;ef~m thf:. JUniOr varsity A new ~ch takes over and ~Y as year s am Mike Mulryan, Matt HarriS, Kevi~ sereno. to help out will be junior 9C!ttool , :r'~ie:-0~ir:1i e~n~~~ w,:~ ~ look for as a successful Mark Gen51er, Mark Krikorian . o~. j~lors who may help Jeff Kuyper along· w 1th :: 8 new i:!: ~= contributor. He'll run the and Larry Browmon. 111 _the ~arsity scheme a:e Tom seniors Mike Kerr, Boyd t~e~;eaters will b e sprints through the 880.'' Sophomores who lettered oo SUneb~r., Chip D o,r man ' Hawkins and ·Cralg Witcher. ~~e f!l1{s ~~isse!::. str........,. In the >IJO through Mike Pierce Is another the varsity In 1973 Include DB!ll)r , D Agostino, Kev In Sophomore """ketball playe< In tamis, the school's switdt the"'t'~mile. Field events transfer student who will be Derek ·Wex:ner am Job n Ha9ea.and K.C. Fockler. Rich BranntnT could also be from the Crestview League a~-' ~--"Jes are the weakest eligible. A.ccording to his Marzollno. Cdacli.Keith Helmick ls al.so a .. ~-.... f-tor in. the Marina to the Orange isn't too~much ·~ ~-a>ach he has the potential hollW!L:_Urat__a l!i!l:-91 ~-· .. "' right now although there are to nm 1,51 for the 880 and D-.--BUls . -soi!liomoies can w.;.. their attack-on<e-'the'-basketball cl a blessilli~i:Qi:_all!to~ se\'eral outs I and l n g in-4:'11 for the mile. With a full squad retumit)g waY·mfO the varslty picture. sea!On is completed. the Tritons no longer compee dividual s on band. David Green, the yowtg from last ......,, coedt Jeff Tl\e: !lopb< are DBITen Chu Mis lo Vl f in a ~A loop, lltey'ro Into Here's Toomey's capsule man from New Zealand, ran 0!.9tn la looking with guarded and Muio Zita. , • a e o one « the to\igl)est !-A tem1s rundown on the team: 1 :50.9 last .summer in Canada. optimism toward the upcoAr FOU:htain' Valley's.· major A team that has . been four leagues in the CIF, ,and have Pat d'Addea, a jun!O'f col· ''This is a big change foe Ing temib 9e8:JOn at ~ strength. ls -in doubles where years in the maklng takes the defending CIF . ch a,m p Ion lese transfer from Phoenix, him,'' an understanding HUls. . Herdrtcb' and Las!Clto . may coorts for MissiOn Vie]o HiJi!h Laguna Beach and Up<M!lng has recorded 9.8 for the 100 Toomey says. "It's a new en-Reallsti~lly, ti>; seco~· team Up .to .form one of the this season. Coidt Bill Smith U n iversity ,as prime and 21.5 fur the 220. virooment and Uiere lo ~ year Dolphins aren t e<peeted "~•est tandems , In the feels It will lbe the beot team competition.· , ' David Williams, a transfe< tel ·~ to threal<n defending CIF :-,.,. the ocho6I bas ""er fielded . New coach JlrBllk Wyratlt f E st Los A I ling row long It will take Irvme Leaglte "M~ of the pl&yers •-ve rom a n g e e s 1or him to adjust ,, I ·~ champlQn Laguna Beach or · . , . · .. on1 Ud will have a oomblnatkln of College, b&s never completed Ralph Staun.:n-. , , He 1, s two .oth<r ,top ~ams for the Huntlnfiton 8~8"11 come throqgh 1!1e . J><Ogram returning ve t e r a ns and ~i~a ~a: !fi=~~t~ developed tremendously under tiUe, but Dana Hills bas the Six., vanity letterman, a :::. w~~d~1a~~ Y~~! newcomers to work 1fkh. tltlS. year. Len (Miller)," Toomey says. m a1n Powe r t o p r o v.e solid' ti-ans flr and a pair of should be ·-g the top 51 .. ' From the Vf.llieram, the top "He neYer ran under. 4:28 troublesome to any contender. 'promistng.freshmen make the .......... .. rel.urneElS tife Gary Hamro, Rick Martin, a freshman before but could. get uoder A tentat!v• otartlng lineup tennb· picture at Huntington teams In. the county, and I Jeff Easley aDd Eric Udke, from Upland, Is being groom· 4:2 this year." shoandwsunlsenlo<TonPhll Hutdtlnsonat the Beach-•~-" al~ ...... t feel It will' be !>eiween us while' the newoomets include ed as an intermediate hurdler j "'""""•• ~.... ~· and Foothill In the Crestview J o•-•-' f the • . I I Jimmy Connors' ability to come through with the right shot wheo it .... -as need~ m®t enabled him to beat Sandy Mayers and win t h e B i r m Ingham lntemational indoor t e n n I s tournament Sunday. But it isn't hard to conceive a possible NCAA college divisloo cbampM:>nship if two or three rJ. the USSR athel tes enrolls and is eligible for com- petition right away. but will be used as a utility Ron Slkafoose, another N l andor ... !.~1 "" ...,,.-.,,_ year It figures to , even League." ory ~· """' rqm freshman from Upland u 1 .. h. 0· • ... ._es ~ ,...,, better;-t -· -~:~.side, __!_a. r bar a man in the sprints. "He has His besf marks are· so.7"for occupied Jut leMOD. coadl: Tom Harlow's Ollen 'I'he bUllr""cithe-Dtablos M<O<•-&• ..--~ an exciting potential and is the 440 and 1:..,,_.7 for the Junior Mark Bas returns have a ipa.ir of itaodouts in squad are seniors, bf ginning a very strol]g youngster," his 880 N and is penciled In for No. .eactt 'grade claalflcatton to with the· .top two s1n,1es ~niversit11 The top-seeded C o n n o r s • co-ranked number ooe in the country with Stan Smith and fiance ol Chri! Evert of "·onicn's tennis fame , put d<>"'.ll Mayer, the defending tournament champion, '7-5, 6-3. • Mut er• Fln•I LAKE WORTH, Fla. - Australia's Frank Sedgman was to take on TOl'ben Ulrich or Denmark today In the finals o! the $10,000 TeM!s Grand ~tasters tournament. Assistant coach Len ~filler adds: "Rather than recruit for events, we are trying to get the best athletes aVai\able regardless of the event. We already have a dozen very outstanding distance runners lined up for next year, "()Jr primary goal is to win the NCAA championship. If we do that, our dual meet record is not going to be Im- portant. "We are recruiting a quan- i1ty of quality athletes but ~fl~ ~le, the son of the Preston Campbell, BllOther !1n:~~ ":; t! ~~ call uJ::,n, Pl"! _ti>: possibility players, Bill Walker and Dan ~~.,,.the ~n:::~ .!: UC Santa Barbara chanc~Uor, fr~an from Marina High teams are yet to be decided. ~c:"ea f.o:r distaff member F~g Whitaker, l:he · teafn•s for that reason I feel we'll v.·ill run unattached this with a best mark ol 1:58.0. Among the cootenders foi' c....u. Mik 'Co d most Improyed . player last be stronger and a contender season but will have three "We feel be bes great potezr those places are seniors Dave Da.;io;:;._.,,.,!JA . · eretu wen ando season, will ·be switched from ln the league this year," says seasons remaining as a tial," the O:iach says. H•••I ~ar"-Brown .. M ~e u.atina m, 88 pl · st I th N Univel'91J..~ HI.th tennis coach -• .,. ~ """ juruors Quinn Gunnarson and aymg "I! es to • o. ·1 .,, ... hururoclerk ·Grout ,_ a f--•--· J. elf Ra_lkes. "He's lndlcallve ruchlrd. ,Falr, 'junior ~ ' Joe Sclienks.· , . doubles ·silot 'when) he will Gary Sise~ · . P '~u.nlCLl• f th birth f th K ........__ Lee SI. J • be n\ed. with t He baS ample reason to feel with best marks ol "49.0 In ° • · 0 e program oct, ...,,._,__ Softlxtmore Sttve Jones Is tea ,an as ye that nd •• 0 . th 88 here al UC!. He never ran and freshmen H1111ter Penon, con;idired the No. I s•·_,_ unnamed partller. way, · · ~He 44cOarnae to1 'us-· wtmth aecast' track in his life until he came Nick Pappas and , Kane ~t. player. Mate Chris ~l!; Sophomore Tim Fu 11 .e r , Five, regulars · return from out In the fall John junl Ed ·Ber d I a team. ·Which notched a 1~ on his foot and Is just now · · rounds out the sophomore or · . ry . an sen ors BUI Hein. "Here's a con=t.· , . Paul 1\rttte, Cr-alg.-Wellien, record In .the varsity last getting In shape. He's a very E1Hson sea""1 lnd the key players •---Individual ," Toomey youngster who has r.un 1:58 . Frei en John Campbell Eric Briiwn and Dan ..,....,.-o in the Ba:> after a high school Six returning lettermen, 8J1d John Vanderrlet are also McCarthy ' are all first-liners, from a junlor varsity team saJ!~es Shirley. "He's an carffr d. never getting under which includes three All·Irvine ava.Hable~ along with Redondo although their uacl playing wl:tlch won the Orange league outstanding team member, the two minutes. He has the League standouts, _highlight High transfer Mike :Brff, a positions .. have not bee n are alao avalla)J1e. potential to run under 4,20 the F.disell lllgh leDitla picture junl<Jf.· . det..nnlned as yet; Topping the squad Hst are for the mile. II u coa<;l1 nm, M a D g ' s . J brothers John and B r a d Sedgman, w00 I:! top-eeeded, f)Usted Vic Seixas, Sunday 6-1, 6-3. Second-seeded Ulrich sur- vived a two-hour struggle to defeat Pancho Segura, H, Bradley Key Performer Doog Knapp. "He'• one of Otargers prep for upcoming Lofuna Beiteh Ne...port Harbor Faltermeir, who are ranked the stronker cross country play. . O>acli Art Wahl thouitit this Time changes m&Oy things, among tho top 20 !&-year-old• kids. He can get under 4:12 Mlllll says bb team's major might .be a rebuilding year but for perennial ten n Is in SOUthem Califo,rnla in some for the mile this season." strength ll aingles, but . two ranking's. .,.,_,_ to the field e-.S, of his all4'!11"" aoes will be Ad d I tionally, sopbomor• 6-1, 7.0. • Bollr Sedgrlian and Ulrich are 4:>-years-old, the minimwn age in this event for past tainis champiom. · For Gaucho s Spikers and freshmen Rod Brown (Tustin ) and Tim Mann (San Clemente!. • -,._ seeing duty In doubles. p c H k Kent Aden and Mlllor• Kor. Toomey continued : Gary -Elmore and Glenn ro age OC ey Vieira return at the Ne. 13 Greg Ruzicka, a freslwnan Ruud will cunblne on doubles ' and 4 singles positions, where triple jumper from Corona del and may be one of the thev wap;ed a duel last year. Mar High. ,He's done 4:8 feet tougbegt 111 league. H111 .... NtltltMtl AUK11t1111 Amt11n1 .~~'=~ As.ct•ntn For depth tber~'s fimlOr and Toomey loob . for hlm Mang's reasoning for saying · •at'"' c ... m.11c• ~ 1. ,et. GI Ste\'e Antti , the No. 1 junior In doubles action, Seixas and Newport lleaCh'& Hugh Si..wart edged Ulrich and Tom Brown, 11-9, while Sedgman AA/I Segura <oppled Gardner Mulloy and Frank Parker, 10. (. The 1974 track and field 9eason at Saddleback College figures to be a good one-as far as individuals go. M$1Ul will also, nm the 1440 and bolll relays. . to edi~ SO feet ln the future.. the OJargers' singles play is "1111111~ o•'ll:1" ,er. 01 ~=-~~~ 36 14 ~ -WI varsity player last year. · Earl Jones,' a senior, ls blct the· bright spot lies in the 1111to11 41 11 .101 -cero1 n• " a ·512 3 Westnaln~ter and h.ad • maPc ov~· ~9 .feet fact his first four sill81es N.,. vcn. '7 " .m • ~=• r f~ ~ · :~~ ~!Yi Westmlrulter High tenn,lr Anteaters Coach Duane C a i n ' s Gauchos don't figure to win too many meets-basically because of a lack o! depth. But some top Individual efforts probably will make ii an in· teresting season. The best of the Gauchos ...J.! soJiiomore Glenn Biadley, H t Lo I w00 scored 33 points In a . OS yo a double dual meet with Victor . ,, Valier and ColiW of \Ile •Gery Wlieelock will take the · Deseif last-wet\t . · '' · • mound for coach Gary Adams' He'll usttalty--oompetc in the UC Irvine baseball team 100, 220 long jump. triple against Loyola T u e s d a y jump and high jump-and if afteM)()OO In the opening home that isn't enough Cain says game o! the 1974 season with he'll ancOOr both relays. gsie tlma at 2:30. Bradley has clocked 9.9 and "Wheelock was the winner 22.5 in the sprints and has Jin the season opener a week bests of 21-11 in lhe longojump, ago at UCLA and Is the leam's 45-1 In the triple and 6--0 In Iea<llng slugger with tllree the high jump. hbnle nw ID two games The jumping events prob- !!i'cllldlng one as designated ably will be. Saddleback's trl·rt er al Cal State strongest events with Bradley (Northrtdge) Sntunlay. - -Wheelock was U-4 last year with a 2.70 e.r.a. lncluded In hi:! '11cWrtes were regional playoff victories over Puget Sqund and Cal Stale (Northr\dge) alontl with a win over, Eutem llllnols In the natkJnals. . P rep Socce r Foimt1l11 V1t1ty 2, H\.lnttllffon 9Hc:ll • FV tcoth'IO! Merit Wfnnlii:IMJI. Merit MonllOll, l:dlllfl 2, S1nl1 An• 0 •d110fl .c«lno: o..... IMllM, JI'" ·-~ \ The ·only other runner of note iS .freshman Mike Bejach of Foothill, the Gauchos' premier hurdler. : Saddleltack probably will score well in the weight events with sophomores Tim Dooley and Oan Pahnka retuhllng. Dooley Is the lop sbotputter (43--0) while Pahnka Is best ' In the discus (144--0) and \jay~Jil!J.(14S:jl). "', I, l.Lll" I ' A'riOOler polnt·geftetr 1igures 1 to be Mike Levlsee (Alham- bra), who has pole-vaulted 14- 0. S1Hl1Hdr Trecll k...,. Fri, Fell. 21 -MltllOtl Con~ f'tol•'I'• et Cllrv1 , l=rl .. Mlrch I -Sin DI• cc•. """ M1rctl I -Cltrvi• Fri .. Maren IS -ll lllYtnlctt• • Fri., Mlrc!'I 21 -ll Mlr1 Cotti. F'1., Mlrcti 1t -If l1n llmtu·d!no• Frkie'I', -Vfll S -loulhwtltM"n 1Ad Ch1ll1, 11 C1!1ltey•. _ lh!ln., April II -Soutl'ltrn Cal rtll,I •I U C lrvlnl Fri., APrll lt -1"1 1ofn1r Ind o'rllll• monl 11 Orottmont•. Fri., April ~· -II Mt, Sin Antonio "~'''· T11t1 .• AP!'\1 30 -Ml11lon Conltrl!Kt prtllmt It Cll•ul. l'rt., M11 > -Mlttlon (Ofl""enc. f1n111 11 Cllru1. • Wtd .. M•'I' I -~rn Cll 111'tllm1 11 Cllllfrf F'1 . ..S11., MIY 11).11 -W.s1 Coe1t l"lllYll 11 Fn11no. l'rl .. M1y II -$0\lft'lffn Cll "NII 11 Cflllf'l-y. prr1., Mey _U -s11i. chfl~p$ ,, llklf'tlle+O. • dinoM-1 Minon CO!tlerena meet. a year ago. , players include seniors Bob ~~r.=piwa ~ ~ :m· 'Y~ 0,,11; .,.., Dh'lll«I C'Oach Jim Casper ls placl!Ji Two freshman 'high 'jumpers • D&Sola (all-league), Jon Eis· 1 • t:l'llfr•• 01 ... 11111 sin Antonio ~ ~; ::: 11 a lot of the uon!'· hopes upon have had liljury pfoble'ms. ·ler, Leroy. Schie~ and sopho· i~~1~ :: ~ :~ I v. ~:.~ ~· Il :m l!v. the .shoulders ol 30phomote GeorgPhU,lipshusoa'redS.Sl/4 more curt Ensign. l'lou11on :z:i "° ,)6! uv. san orego 21 37 .•22 11 Mark Jo•---n. I . L t and Cl•vtllnd • 21 .. ."3 UVI s ...... , .• G•mft llU~J n ·ll)e high .jump lapd vaulted Sophorn<i'e Curt ynot w11ttn1 ct11ttl"tM• v1ro1n11 111. kitntuckv 111 Johnson was named the 14 feet. Jwilor Tom Mohr, two M.._, Dl'tlllt11 1 11n Olego ltt, C1ro11n1 123 MU••'*" · 45 11 .131 1m111ne n. Denver n ll)Ost. va luable player on tht "lie 'had an Opetatlon and alternates from last year, ch1c!fr' ..-21 .u1 2 • Tod1'" 8-e varsity last year as ;: I :doo.'t.know haw: k>rtg1lt will . ~uld fonn the other doubles ~~~ · ~ ~l ·~ ~~ ciro1ine"'.:;hD1vu11111 freshman, the first time the take him to get back." team, but" they'll be t>ushed · ,ttlnc Dt'tltflft • , w. 1. T '""· o• oa. • 1,, • • b ~--· Da 'd Kim Gol6trl 11,tt :n 21 ·"' lot.ton • • • M 1., u• honor was ever given a . Kel,ly t>qaohue' aid &--10 1" Y di ~IV>· ..... ~ vi 1..o1 ri• » ,. ~ 1 ~.'11"~""" : l: 1~ ~ ri: l~l freshman in Westminster ~~~er.~i1-~ ''1.·~~ .• ~it.J ~~~'.':' !-·tefl, i,~it..~• .~~ lt ~ lr!liS;li<l:l .. ~\~~~::;·,g ives . El raro • ,., 01""' ~-1,1,1$r1 14 lr11J .a ='ff:' -pth 1 Robert Goto is 1 freshman Coac:h Mark Neibel has bis 0ttro1t 111. 'h1ect.1p1111 101 vi11COU• u' n , 11' '"' 114 Casper some de , a ong wttb pol aulte f Lo 11 H" h Gol<lln 5111• 1•· cr.ic•1111 105 w"' Dl'll..._ Jim Jones. Both a r e e v r rom we 1g goal set on building for the Mll••vk" "· New Y0tk .. 1"P111eot1p1111 ,. n · ' n in 111 School in La Habra with a future with this season's El c1p1111 "· totton '' cr.1ceto tt 11 11 n 1" 110 co n s id ere d ca p ab I e best of 14·10. Toro feMls team, and he !:=:: 11~i. ~'r~1:. no ~1ti~1' Pi : 11 ~ l~ l:: performers. but the question ftiike Sabatino did 14-« In has one IOlhi player to build :=•,~tti::!:i 1: W~ f~ : 11 = t~ l~ It Westminster Is whether the high school at Notre Dame around. ftN'f'• .. """ "lltllMltlft 11 ~ s ,. 1" 2ll Lioos can pick up enough High but had oral surgery 'J'bat player, jUnlOr Mark ·No""'" athMllltll cinrornf• .~~. ~ tt isi tSfo points from these three to near the~ond of the season. • Fredericks, is presently bead--~~'f. 'c.~\ '· 11• carry It to COMl!tent victories. Judd l!in!ey lrom Laguna and-shoulders above b 1 s B. -· k th 11 "":r. • Tw~• 1 Casper's seeking additional Beach High is ltte lone weight teammates In playing ability, 88 e 8 •11t1 •• t t'=;!: '•"""" depth nnd it may be provided man or note. according to Nelbel, and will 1 Ni ''""\~~ •• ,_ by forel'fll exchanf(e student be the team's top asset. 0uquunec:1~1:_:~ MiltrMt 11 N• von •ll•ndtr• Sedal Silva of Ollli, JeU Fredericks wll1 play No. 1 0ttror1 79. x1~1er. er.10 1' xri='"!: :11, t:i!'*'" Gaylord and Erle Blllitzer. fr~ii;:===========-===11i~·;·; .... ;;:;·~··;';··~·;·;'";";';d;;;;;;;;;;a\;;;;;:~~~~;:;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~;;;;:;;~;;;;;;;;;:;·~~--1 !f's ... 1R, .. w .... A_LT~RS LEASE A '74 260Z DOH YOUR CAR 111u·aoUOH? WE <:;ollege <;;,olf · OoNe11 Wttl {ft) {tit CHm M Mwitt11t1• S.lcllff CC GUIOl"d 101 721 cttf. eut111' 7', ..0. l"Mll tGI IO Cltf, Krtll'llr "' ,,1, ' '""' \Cl 11 Oft, l rewn ti, S.I. l..tf IG It de!. S!llw II, t-0. ' Wtllt ICI 1' dff. ,..,.,., It. t.J, DllOI' !GI lJ de!. con.n t7, H . ~ LOW+~~.~!.!. MO. sr:~J1",: MILAol? CAN HELP W•th "' w .. .Wrtlltt for ~;~~·~='ii~'•· ~::,5,1'!.~~~L~t~~~N A THE. ,f~!H!.UOR .J ... HOP c-.-MMtn 540·"41' ""--· ., ...... .,.. ..... I • ' , J% 0AllY P/LOI Mondi11, Ftbruary 18, i q74 Some Events Canceled Midwinter Racers'Battle Elements llyALMONLOCIWIEY Herrlsbaft,,SMYC. Oon!motlon, Alcumbrac and Don Qapp, CBYC; (41 Ellen, (5) Gold Bricker,_Bruce Riddle Award To Keefe ... ..., """' Seal Be~cb Yacbt Club Butler, NHYC: •(2) Solutl$hkl, Gordon Hunttt, Barefoot SC: Oiandler, BYC. , On I · weekend when most ISLANDER·36 ( 8 )-( 1 ) Keith Dln9moor, BYC: (3) Syn (5) G""' Slime, David TEMPEST (9) -(1) Pere-... . Southlanden were. parking in tnvi ctus, llugh La m s on , Sys. lloward Stevens, VYC. James, MBYC. grlne, Tom Gates, SCCYC; Robert C. Keefe, executl~ lines and ftght~ for gasoline LBYC; (2) Defiant, Sheldon Cal-27 (6)-(8) Firecracker, Del Rey Yacht Club (2) Screaming Yellow 1.onk· vlce presid_ent and gener -or staying home -Golison, SI BYC: (3) Scorpio,. e ete-!..,,, LBYC : (2) Flair, P.CAT (10)-(J ) Aquarlu.<, er, Ken Wein, ABYC: (31 manager ol Barient Compony, Southern California's· sailing Bob and Don Reeves, LSF. Charles Brwiner, LBYC. Nonn Marchment, CY C; (2) Sleinter, Odin Brallian, BC-..;Jias been _awarded lhe Jamt1s BOATING enthus!Mts were ftgbtlng tt NEWPORT·30 ( 6 )_-( t ) C OJ\ ONA00.25 (12\-(l) Plcante, Mikes a t t e r 1 e e , YC. E. Riddle Memorial award ror ooi over bay and ocean Sabra nt, Sco!t Birnberg, Seeadl.,., Rod Ogilvy, ABYC; SDYC: (3 ) Miss Chr~. Warren STAI\ (9).:..(1) Rots, Evan ndl '---------" """""' ln>m Newport Beach SMYC; (2) Sea Chase, Chet (21 Mirage, Dan Wilson, Mliler, KHYC. Dailey. SFYC; (2) Tenaciolls. achievement In ootslll ng to ~farina dcl Rey for coveted and William Gall, SJ BYC. ABYC; (31 L.ois, John Shelley, OR CATS (4)-(1)· Jmi Loa , Dick Slayter, SDYC; (3) tie .management. blt.s of hardware ln the ISLANDER-30 ( 7) - ( l ) SI BYC: (4) Sea Lyon, Tom Vic Stem, SI BYC. among, Diablo, Erwin Bauer, Barient ls the producer or Scfithern California Yachting Atalanta, Robert Schilling, Lyon, ABYC. PC (9)-(1) First Fiddle, SCCYC; S o 1 u ti on , Bob sophisticated sailboat winches Association's 45th annual ?\tld-LSF; (2) Windfall, L ee SANTANA·27 (7)-(Jl AIOha Hilyard Brown, SM Y C:; Bellamy, Cove. and SUsan, AWARD WINNER' and other hardware at san winter Regatta. Newfield, CYC. JI, Susan Reed , $SOC; (2J Slipstick, Ray J e r cc k 1 , Charles Peterson, St . ..FYC. Robert c. KMf• Carlos, Cali(. It is a subsidiary • And some of them got MORF·f. (17)-(1) El Tigre, Aventura, Ronald Wood , St PMYC ; (3) Blue Chip, Bob King Harbor Yacbt ctab-of Narco Scientific Industries. • mighty wet for their troubles Ed Lorence, LAY C; ( 2 J BYC. Fayon, CYC. VENTURE·24 ( 5 ) -(\t ) Keefe Is a well known Cup Dates Announced I. as they battled strong winds Merrydown, Bill Lapworth, CAlr29 (17)-(1) Wes terly ERICSON 2·32 (6) -(I) Killer, Tom Dalton, SFVSC ; Y"Chtsman in both northern r up to 25 knots on Sunday. LAYC: (31 The Spirit, Gordon 11 . Ray Corbett, CBYC; m Pretty Lady, Bob Ki ng , (2) Veracity, How a rd Bermuda Race .;;d Southern· California. He • t In ·Newport Harbor, final Larson, SI BYC: (4) Pop Nus, Orange Blosso m. r-.1 1 k e PJ\1YC; (2) Maia, VII , Dave Williams, SBYRC. joined Barlent in 1963 '8S a races for small classes were Pete Kent, LBYC; ( 5 ) Kinney, PMYC: (3) Malahini, Champlin, Kl!Y,C. CAlr26 (2)-(1) Whisper, I cancelled when the boats Bacchanal, George Kaneko , Ed Zimmerman, CBYC: (4) CAL-28 (7)-(1) "Victara, Jerry Rowley, SBYRC. Data Issued sales representative, was NEW YORK (AP ) -Datea or pr e liminary and observation trials to choose the defender of the America's Cup have been changed to allow boat owners m o re preparation time, Donnld B. Kipp, conunodore of the New York Yacht C!ub, has an- I led l.k t · PMYC ) promoted to vice president of topp oYer 1 e enplns, . Gremlin It, Hasty Arnold Jim Brown, PMYC; (2 ) Puff, THUNDERBffiD (7) -(1 marketing in · 1988 8 0 d dumping crews in the chilly MORF·B (7)-(1) Spook, P!\1YC·, (51 rv Runner. Oris· Glen Tho, .-.., SM-VC. Bravo, Joseph Ofria, WYC; flarman Hawklns, chairman . .d t d Carl 0 -WYC ( 2 ) · ~· WYC executive vice pres1 en _an waters. ix:rgan, ; coll an\'f Griggs ABYC. California Yalbt·'Club Cindy Lou, Don Ross,. . of the 'Bennuda Race Sm8ll• boats such as the Straight Arrow, Gene Bricker, Little Ships Flee t TORNADO (29t""r"(!} Duck SANTANA·22 (6)-(1) Troll, ""' . t f th C I . general manager in 1970. . Lasers, sailing on breezy MPYC. PlffiF·A (23 )-(1) Stiletto, Hawk, Rick Taflor, CBYC: Rob. Kastner, &CCYC ; (2) '"""'rnmit ee 0 e ru smg He is an officer of St. Alamitos bay were a I s o NEWPORT·20 (7)-(1) Irish Don Ingalls, Ventura YC; (2) (2) Sokitum, Har vey and Wishbone, Malty Friedman, Club of America, e<rsponsor Francis Yacht ·Club o[ San capsized by the dozen, but Wake, Mike Stanford, CBYC; Bushwacker, Robert O'Brien, Stewart, WYC: (3) Merl yn. SBYRC. with the Royal Bermuda YC Francisco and a member of ·skippers manay:d to right (2 ) Aeto.s, Ch,ris Karatzas, Sunset Aquatic YC ; ( 3 ) ·Sean Holl and , MYC ; (4) Blood SNIPE (16)-(1) Jeff of the biennial ~an race • New York Yacht Club. lie The new dates of the them and keep sailing. King SBYRC. L B'll Roh VYC Vessel , Bob Harvey, CBYC ; Lenhart, MBYC; (2) Tom from Newport R.I.,-that starts is the owner and skipper of Harbor Yacht Club cancelled CATALINA-22 ( 12 ) -( 1) umaran, 1 rs, · (S) Screaming Yelloi,r Zonfter, Nute, MBYC; (3) T om on Friday, June 2l, has issued the 39.foot sloop Shillegah. In preliminary trials are June oounced. "-rm· al ra""' or the Snipe Pelican, Bill Boerner, CYBC·, PHRF·B (l4)-(l ) Chiripa. ML hi' MBYC (4) St ·d· 1973 he managed the SeQuo ia 24·29 and observation races 1o1rc "" Bruce Bennett, ABYC; (2) Tim Taylor, CBYC. c aug In, ; ' eve the circular cootaining con J· will be cOndu cted July lJ..24• ClaSJ when winds gusted over (2 ) Topwop, Domini c Geria, Rocking Chair, Willis Boyd, SOLING (19)-(1) Woomera, K1otz, LGYC. tions for the event. Syndicate which successfully .25 knots and no rescue boats SI BYC; (3 ) Back dr a ft , ABYC; (3) Force ?, Ted Ken Young, CYC ; (2) Filet, CAlr20 (7)-(1) Itchy Foot, New provisions outlining defended the Australi~n· There is no change In the were available. Lawrence Sa1.1mur, Sl BYC; Bill Logan, SDYC; (3) Osiris Rich Busch, SBYRC; (2) e J e ctr on i c aids now American Challenge , Tro_pby, scheduj e for final tr i a Is --Mid •~ dr (I ) Love Is, Al Hom, Fresno Zellmer, CBYC. d'bl t N t boom · 'bl the w1'th the new-iDtemational sb:· starting August 15 and running 11rc: Wuners ew a PHRF·C (l8)-(I) Mar-V· .Jl, Ted Truesdell, NHYC; (4) ln cre 1 e, Pee oo e , penn1ss1 e are among record 1,108 boats in 74 YC. Le Le B let! Co YC Ump, David Sharpnack, RYC; KHYC changes over previous years. meter St. Francis V. u~til a defender is selected. classes, counting the 10 power Alamitos Bay Ya cht Club s, s ar · • r ; ,---'------'---------· __ ---------''---'---'--------------"---------boats tn the predicted Jog FlNN (19) _ (l'I Sunburst, (2) Snoopy, Dick Roberts, Sl race. Thert were l,098 saJling Henry Sprague II, NHYC; BYC; (3) Dubhe, Walter craft participating at the 14 (2) Bush Boat, John McCl!ne, Richards, SI BYC. yacht clubs. NHYC ; (3) Mr. Togs Wild, PHRF (without spinnakers) Competition at all of the Ron Dougherty, SDYC; (4) (8)-(1) Koria, O'Melveney clubs except Los Angeles No name, John Weiss. ABYC. and Franck, LAYC; (2) Vol· Yacht Club ended Sunday. 470 (27) -(1) No name. Au·Vent, End e r I e and LAYC . will host the ocean Dave Ullman , BYC; ( 2 ) Petingill. LSF; tDetermina· - I boa ky Lord tion, Terry Mahew, LSF. racing end large c ass ts .Shantih, Zar and , RANGER 2 6 (41 (I) in the fin"al race of a three PMYC; (3) Torch JI , Jim · -da~series today. Grubbs, CYC: (4) French Pegasus, Jerry Montgomery, lors from the ni ne Conn 1· J . L · k CDYC. ec1on, im in s ey, DAY SAILER (6) -(l) Newport Harbor based clubs WYC· (51 On Top ea~-r ' ' , ..,. True Love 11 , Allen Beaufait, ·brought home their share of Ford NHYC h8rdwilre as can be seen from cAf...20 (J9), _ (l ) Brisk SFVSC ; (2) Little Joe, Chuck the Jist of .trophy winners at Fouinier, SFVSC": (3) I II, Paul Merrill Jr., ABYC ; Invictus, Ben NafllS, SSA . all clubs listed be ow: (2) Hatch's , Yatch, Mike Ne""wporf'Harbor and Hatch, unattached; (3) Sian, Cabrlllo Beach Yacht Club Lido Ille Yacht Clubs Sid Exley, ABYC: ( 4 I GEARY·l6 (10)-(1 ) Misty, _.SENIOR SABOT (23)-(1) Harass, Dick Lineberger. Chris Hamilton, SBYC ; (2) 1DOn Krebs, MBYC; (2l Peggy ABYC; (5) Superstar, Dave Something ·Else, Bill Roberts, Brown,. MBYC ; (3) Jeff Jones, . Crockett, ABYC. CBYC; (3) Imp, Milt Peeples, ·ABYC:. (4) Don Hodges, JNTERNATIONAL-14 (I 9 ) SMYC. .ABYC; (5) Mike Qkey, MBYC. _ (1) Vorpal Blade. Bai rd MULTIHULL ARBITRARY ' SABOT A ,(30)-(1) Mark Bardarson, C.Or YC, Seattle; (7) -Beowulf V, Steve 'Rastello, BYC; (2 l Brad (2 F Tim M · St Oashew, CBYC; Aquarius, , ) . ox, ur1son, . lr---,·:>'~C!ier-AIU'.C; (3L Skip -FYG:-(-3)-tac!Jalot 111,,-Steve AleLKorzk>ff. CBYC._ -- aitlianer, SDYC; 141 Ardy Toschi, Inverness YC ; (I) MERCURY (I 6 ) -( I ) ~ 1i.adow,' SDYC; (5) J a n Cachalot, Pete Szasz, Toyon Outasite, Austin-L y s igh t, 'Ftarico,· VYC. Pt YC CBYC: (2) Lwn a Bean , John ' SABOT B (30)-(11 Lee 5-0-s. (231 _ (I) Lemon Grether, VYC: (31 Ti I t, ~Hope, .'SDYC: (2) Molly Douche, Jeff Brauch, LAYC; George Patterson, CBYC: (4) •1 'O'.Hdra,. NHYC; (3 ) Mike \Z) White Lightning, Mark Duet, Ll-0yd Greeno, CBYC; {Collihs, SDYC; 141 John Jotz, St. FYC; (3) Tango, P. (SJ Splinters, Ted Lindley, 'Shallden. LBYC; (5) David Shaoy·Tajot, St. F. YC ; (4 ) Anaca pa YC. IK.Thn, ');DYC. Zenith, S. Sjostedt, CBYC; (5) SMALL BOAT ARBITRARY • .. i SABtr' C (30~(1) Charles The World Is Flat, Alan John-(9J-(1) Mother, Jeff Arthur, '1\'iJ\i\WI, DPYC; (2) Colleen · son. OB YC. CBYC: (2) Peanut , Don ¥aoi<J;1 SDYC: 131 Jennifer LASER (outside) (66) -,(I). ,Elling, PVYC: (3 ) Shukai, ·~1 .-;SDYC; (4) J ane Freeway Salute. Rick · Kern, D.C. McAllister, SI BYC. lllilcMUlln, DPYC; (5) John WYC: (2 ) Alpha Compiler, ALPHA CAT ( 7 ) -(I ) iX'uller, DPYC. ·Jeff McDennaid, ABYC ; (3) .Nervana .Banana, G!fry Scott, l: WILDFIRE (S)-(1) T y Trask Master, Chris Boome , SBSC; (2) Mala, Bruce Wo<Xl., Btadl, BYC; (2) Flint Smith, St. FYC; .(4) V'ir g in 1sBSC. 11=--jlBY"'-i:C<'.~MAN·lZ (IO)-(I) Bill Canlak>upe, S. Jeppison, sr-c 0 R ONAD0-15 (20)-(J) (FYC); (5) No name, John 1Bail Out, Dennis Parker, iS;1mes, NHYC: (2) Pat Allen, Ber:trandt, St. FYC. "Westlake YC: (2) Green :..NHYC; (3) Jim Tyler, BYC. LASER (inside) (27 ) -)1) •l\1achine, Jim Ho Ider , Bahia Corinthian and Kurt Schmidt, LIYC; (2) ·Westlake YC; (3) Sugar Plum , Balboa Yacht Clubs James Buckingham. NHYC: .saIOONERS ( 6 ) -( I ·) (3 ) Mark Gaudio, NYC : (41 f~,i llyron .CIJambe<laln, St Shum k opvr (5) . ~· .; {2):tie1between Escape, eve a er. l....,; -, 11 ,,_ Jeff Merrill . ABYC. · ,IJ ~·-H,a•t~.bjci.,:-S~~~ NATIONAL (71 -(I) ~d ; ,11,. •• Ellerman, ABYC; . (2) Gary ' '. ~!,, : l?.W . =f ~~ ~~iJ'5fiir -IIJ' Oruck ,. .,...; · ' • Bebcock, ABYC; (2) • Bill 'G ; o•C, and Debra, McCord , BYC: (3) G i b Rldianl Raul!, SSSC. I ABYC ( I Pet (}ffsl1ore "· R~ce Series ' . Set Soon LUDERS-16 (5)-(1) Sllibul, Marshal' ; 4 c B. lµJig, NHYC; (2) Angel, Jefferson, MBYC; Harr Y California Yacht CI u b' s LoWse Fundenburg, NHYC. Wood , ABYC. popular Overton Series for IO.Meter (3)-(J) Sinus, B. LIOO-IIB (36) -Ii) Da le und Fislier A 1 YC Berkihiser, A"BYC; (2) John offshore racers gets er 1-----'""'i)ES~~9 co (8). _ (l)__ Lounsberry, ABYC; (3) Ray Way March 2 with the·sMling lnoplred, Bill·Stern, VYC: (2) Treppa, SCRA: (4) Gary or the Malibu '\"l'ltns-Bay race Rebel, Ray Wiegand, S.SSC; Winteroude,1 ABYC; (5) l\iack out o( Marina ~I Rey. (J~Envoy. D. Anabel, SBYRC. Mills, ABYC. The o,_noo,Series aOllllally PCX:: (8)-(1) Antigua, B. Long Beach Yacht Clab dra\\'S entries from San Di~o • C: (2) Ran~m, CAlr25 113\-(l I \1eloz. Jae YC: (3) Boruta, Slede. CBYC: (2J A'Te. to ·larina dcl Rey and is • LJYC. Patricio and De 1 ch amps , one of the series which 22 (10)-(1) Non CBYC; (3) .Aquarius, N.L. qualifies entrants for the Barter, NHYC: Field NYC. Southern California O c e an (2).Ego, Jeff Farwell, NHYC:' __ E_x_c_A_LI_B_UR_--'._(9'--) ---'(_ll __ Ra_c_ing-"'-Cha-m_pi_OJUJ_hi_P_· --1 (3) Ba nana s , Larry1· SUtherland, NHYC. RHODES · 33 (8) -(I) Mbtreos, Bill Taylor, BYC: (2) Verdi, A. Clayes, NNSA ; (S) Maruja, Bob Kettenhorer, BYC. ... ilmltlngton Harbour Yacht Clab MONTGOl\IERY-12 (9)-(1) Vani s h i n g Point, R. Arm strong, VYC ; (2) Bladtjaclt, J . Annstrong, VYC; (S) Dart Bank, J. Mootpnery,_ BYC. WINDSURFER (121-(11 MR .1 Sdtweitzer, MYC: (2) Hoyle Sdlweitur, MYC: (3) -.J!'iaflt, Sea Scouts; (4) ~§wotedt. Leeway SC. Jr. (7 )-(1 ) Hal Brown, MBYC: ( r '!\me, <llris Rabb, IDIYC. Gll05'1'·13A (12 )-(1) No nome, Mark Rhodes, VYC: (2.) No name, Dan Larsen, PVYC; (S) Ectoplasm. Rod Wood, VYC: (4) UFO, Daryl Bowman, Sea Scouts. Gl!06'1' t3B (ll)-11) Mike Ultle, .IDIYC; (2) ll on Vlllheel, CYC; (3) Dudley w-. PVSA: LONG BEACH ARENA NOW;:THRU FEB.24 'SHOW HOURS• WEEKDAYS,5·10,3QPM SATURDAYS, 12 NOON TO 10:30 PM SUNDAYS, 12 NOON TO 7 PM WINAllD SABOT (18H ll · Mod< rotklnan. KHYC; (2) Bnan Folkman, Kl!YC; (Jl M11re Gallowa)I, KllYC; 14) Pec.r DrunJn, WL YC; (5) T. -A"DUlfS $?.00 • CHUDR(N UNDI!• 11. St.00 ~• U>tDEl6 flfl -. A t'Glendole FederoJ;Me offer you th ey do .. 1hat me'ons 4.yeors or more. 7\¥,% in terest.on ·accounl's.as,'sma ll as $1,000. If thdt;seems like forever, relax! We've . Just '$1 000. That mcions s~vers~morl got Umpfeeri dl~·er ways Id sa.ve. TheYfall· pay •eoough t~ save wi ~h u s~o~ now earn th e top dollar ,ti'.,nd with a Passbook A'c'toontJor some allroclive 7~% rich.guys hod to invest instance, you con earn big.without ha.vi'ng to • $10,000, $20,000, even $)00,000 t_o earn. tie your money up al all. "; One thing to remember, ~--------, Ri ch man's interest for .though. If you wont to earn like 1@110~ ordinary, everyday savers-it's ·:a rich inveslor, you hove .to be Bl 7'6 al Glendale Federal right now. ·:.· wjlling to tie your money up like i Come get your sha:e. ')' ' '" A"""°'''''°" SI 000 ..,,,.;,,,.,,,, ll""''""'ud '"' fo.,,. ..,.a,./Br fedetol t~ulc>hO<> a 1ub•lor11iol .N•••1• penol•J~,. "<l"'''•d lot "ti' ..,thd•a•ali., ' . CiLENlr4LE FEDERAL More offite.5 to M1rv• you •hon ooy orh•r fede1al Sav1119t ond loon Auoc•o11on on the norl()l't Owr SI 8 b1llloo in'ou.ctli. --------------------"'""'"""'°"" f.am•lyol f1noneiol Se1v•t•" Costa Mesa Branch : 2300 Harbor Boul ey_ard (Harbor Center) 642-4711 • Fullerton llranch: 320 North Harbor Boulevard· 526·8331 N ewport Beach Broncb : 500 Newport Center Drive (Newport Financial Center) 644 .5300 Sonia Ano Branch : 51 Fash ion Squore Jacross from Desmonds) 541 -3314 • •• ,, ... .. ... ..... '"' .,. "' "''""1 , .. ,II UIOlll r.• no •1 .... , .. ,.,.~ ,. I ' ·~ ... \ • 1 .. j l j l j • I Cre .it T .ey Deserve· . ·e : i1!J511'0MAS D. EUAS . ~ California Focu· W~b·1~e more credlL So say the advertising placards some ~kl have placed on the backs of buses in several widely scattered portions of Southern calilomla. But despite a new state law '('eQuiring lenders to atop discriminating i.galnst women in extending credit, homemakers and career women alike still have a far tougher time borrowing money than men with•slmnar financial cr"llenllals. 1be1 ~W' ·1:1.~. which . took effect Jan. t, ror,f the ,llrst time alloWll married wo~;· ' (~whatever they contribute to a . ii'..S.~ community property as colla . loans. It also 98ys single Ued to exactly the same i!e men. "Wltm a male lending officer seea a woman apply !or a loan, he'll tend to look at her dlllerently than a man. '11'lis kind of discri mination will only be ended when there are more women in top management posit~ ln banks." Some of the Southla nd's major banks now have afflnnatlve action programs designed to place a substantial number of women and minorities· in executive positions. So Harris speculates that the "invidlous'1, dlxrlmination he now observes may dlm1n.i$h. But Harris and Ms. Ashman agree that if major changes come, they probably won't result from !ear or penalties under the new credit law. The maximum a lender could be forced to pay if be Should Jose a lawsuit cha11lng dlscrlmtiiauon Is $500. Even that penalty c a n only be assessed if the offense is "willful." penalty allowed), vory r..,. ·~ 1wm be able to sue." "/" ' I . ' On the other side, Harris ., dllmt lenders will be "In a bind" during the interim before the second law takel erlect next year . "1be lender has to make some IOl't or determination as to how rql!dl ol the community property tho .w1ft contributed.'" he laid. "That put. the lending o!llcers In a bad position, lbl<:o not many of them are lawyers." POLICIES REMAIN A3 a n!su1t, it seems JikJY'r 1most banb and finan<e -~~ ......... change their existing poll~ 'lb I li!JI , large extent, at least for aw '!-.if: · Those policies were sucdncUy by Loo Angei.. J. Morgan, a member ol committee o! the Leglsla Committee on Legal Equality:, E DOE .;~. 't yet had any impact in m e• easier for women."' aays Judlth·'ABlft\Wi,, the deputy heading state Atty. 'Gfp,;e Evelle J, Yoonger's ta.k lon:e Oil women's rlgbt3. "'Ibis will take time and will be very dUllcult . to enforce." "You'd have a very tough time proving wUlful discrimination," Harris said. "Most of it ls subtle." "Cr(({itors don't care if yoii're the • .. ' .,1' i.qq4a 77aa .i. _ ..... _ ..• .- A fairdeal ' .. \ t , . for women wou/dw. :11·-• ~ ...... . be giving th~;n · .·. ' credit in their own na~e. ~ ·' ~ . .. ' ~ ':·.·:.;, ... ..~. COOPERATIVE So lar, she says, banks have been more cooperative than department stores or small loan companies. "Most of our complaints in Soutreln California have been about department stores and finan~mpanies which may not be aware there is a new law t .. Ms. Ashman reported in an inteMew. But even the banks haven't made many changes,. nor are they expected to until t ,be beginning ol nut year. At thiJ time, another new law will become effe:ctive, giving married women exactly . the ·same authority that their busban¢r. ~:!e always bad to ~ oomm~~perty as loan collateral. Even·~;· c red It discrimJnaUon agaimt1 :~ probably won't end, says Henry • s, a top staff att6rney Jor ~ First Western Bank and a inember of YOl1nger's women's rights task force. DISCRIMINATION "The discrimination is sometimes more invidious than direct," he said. FEW SUE Added Ms. Ashm an, "This law seems to specifically prohibit class actions and since there's no provision for recovery of attorney's fees (which probably would be much higher than the maximum richest woman ln the world. You'll never convince a department stott. They'll still want your husband's signature before extending credit." So while the Southland's women may well "deserve more credit," u the bus placards contend, it's clear they're not getting it yet and they probably won't very soon. .e BEA ANDERSON, Editor IMrMM!y, l".twum 11. 1'14 ..... IS * La,~:· ~r~tGs , " :t\1:1 < · ,, ;~(e;J;aied . 1t'1 I , .... I •• '\"I!,• I to the Family ' I . "" ~ ,J~) I ,lj f .;4 0 , •• •1 ~-·· "!.' ~ • of1·'~rtqts1~husbanc!',-wlves,.olderi why~·th~1w.M..;.a~n~$or'.~·i~~",. in-.'..,.decided1 Wllich comes frrst. It's usually pe.0•2J e'~,·~~ 1 m.l'Do rs ,, t a·x es., divorce J"4ille , she wy;-%..·1~w 4~. ·pretty · 'ai'" ~pnannul.i,t-J.,";"'' ..,.tes; · ~~~la~~'\><~; ''no"rfal!jt · 'She' ~. -swhetll•:r the poolUon or · By LAURIE · KASP.1!11. O! ~ Oeltl '''":Sttff l Famllnlaw hll more 1elusive1 ID-Ulw1~ ~ ' thm .~,woukl think. • .. ·The relaUoos COID<l'inlo;probalet c!Vll . coorti when dilSolutloa lan't the question and evm the' c:r1mlnaJ courts. · Thtre'a hanlly any Held ol .Jaw that cloesll't lrolate lo the family, accon!lng to Shella Sonenshlne, an attorney teaching lamlly law at the Irvine UDivenilY School ol Law. CertalolJI the c:anpany -·s death all-' bis lamlly. Wbo geta wbat, lncludlog Clle iDber!tance taxes! Janlt the' family touched If a ,falher and -""' In bllSi-together but -wants to get out! Or, U' I wile lets lnjural In ID automobile accident, could lhe sue her husband II he WU the driver ol the car! '!be family Is questioned wllen I 'IS- year-okl ls truant or rum away from home. But they are just 11 Involved when the youth Is arrested and charged with a theft or druc use wllk:b threatens future plons . "All these 1 thlnp we never thought ol in terms of family law," erplalned Mn. Sooemhlne. Traditionally , family law bas been thought ol • Involving only dlvor<e and oommunity property. But her coune presents 1 quick survey .~w ·• ~and aome · •..--.'f">~11\~ · •' , Sou could have changed crtmillll!:laW.'.' J !'., , ,i ·. Now all one .~eedsm"!t. '•~rreconcilable w.1 ws. But~ .th~, the laws Since abe -~·t ~ftlid·1a case book di Ulemedirenc:esal breakclwblcbi: .l~Jed·,rrlato 8:! might ~never have been " m: •~ ma ce hadn't been t' ed covering all • tl>ele •lhlnp, she simply And rather. tban...clivoree, It Is call~ Y , ques ion . d' I . by llOclt ty,: had the cues .copied I« dlstrlbutloo """ ution. . to her lluclents who lndUde aeveral "Society·cbanges and changes the law GE~TION TIIEMES school teachers, a "retired garbologist," arxl law changes and changes 90Ciety. -Each 'dfJiauon, she said, seems to an iodmtrial security man, 1 police In my years , with the law, I haven't have its.~me., In_ the beginning of department e m p 1 o y e e , mDltruction · ·, compmiy owner IDli ,a fonnenengtneer now ln<llW'ket management1and•looking Into lhe•practlc:e ol law. nIIST .a.ABS F« -ol ·the students, ·thla lamlly . law dell is µ,etr first ·experience as a law lludent It Is also Mn. Sonenshlne'• flnt u a te.mer. Tocelher, they began the course with a basic questliln: whal Is the lllate's Involvement with the !amlly? Mn. Sonelllhlne 11111ested religious belief, "What God bas brought tOgether, Jet no man ·put asUnder,!' has ; been the bigesl force In tbll. . Bur llOclologlcal · !actors ai.. al!ect law. In the past, the extended rampy and the feudal c:ooc:ept ol pa30lng on the name and property.were Important. But these factors have changed and the laws have clisnced. · Mn. Sonedlhlne recalled . discussing Assigned Risk Insurance a Handicap By AWSON DE ERR assigned risk Insurance · can be a that I have no chance of escaping," • ot -. DMlr ':"' ,..,. (lnanclal hardship on many people, can she uterted. , Young people with medk:al irobleIM, "''"-a marriage and may cause some "Every year OW" insurance Is canceled unable to afford ·~assiined rlU medical" to drive without lnsurance. and we have to s~gn up with another auto ~ce premfmM, are driyiri& \ RATU DETERMINED company, at higher rates. Then, the uninsured. . "Why can't insurance premlwns be next year we are cancelled again." A."""'· driver, wjth, more tban ·30 ... oed ' ... """' drlvUir record rather ' SLIGHT INCREASE YHn without a moving .violation· and ·~-bitrary I ~I"' ked Be I onl one parking Ud<et must-poy 'fhft -·IA ar •~ · 15 ver Y She cited that when •"'small monthly ../calls "hlpway iobbery" premliimo Corey, o11anlser ol the meeting. lna.ose" In Insurance premiums was for We ' A peUt ma1 epileptic, she talked o1 announced by her husband's employer Rehahullated phylically handicapped tbe hanlshlp of m111y ol 113lgned risk It meant an average ol &'1 cents !or penons who' drive with hand coatn>ll, inluran«, seeklnc ' 'the same others on the plan and more than 117 ..., ~ with high premiuma coaslderaUon ,any·l"Od•drlver gets." dollan !or her. altlloulh many experts feel they are , N«lnc that she md be bet1" off "Insurance ntes ,sliiiiid be based on Iller an .... than the avtn1• pertCJll. ' ..... poroled ltlOll or -Olle convicted driving records, ~~lll!l>el." 1 These· were ..... ol the aimmentl ol a felony ~clrlvUir c:harce, Ille• Joe Reyno~, ~~·,coordinator, made .....,uy at a mtttlng In Ooota called her l!"IOlllU "b!i!IW11y ivbbery 1" Loe Angeles Unified' Scliool District, who MeA lo dllCllll' "llllcned risk medical" and added Ille -· .enienced· to~bijh bu. wwkid_ with niany handicapped lnsuranco~a•cLtbe........,._lt•~ ~mlmnafcrllfe. -.-from eduCatlonally bandJ. on ~ who must. carry It. . ''If I '"llad--COllVlctod ol dNl!k oa!IPOd• 'tbni!ilh quaclraplegics -noted 'Invited lo the meeting w •re driving, when my· llcenat was.reissued , thet labeling is.:,a dangerous pracUC<!. represehlaUves from t\le DepartrpenJ o1 'I would< hav., been put on wlgne(J "Labeling '6lrieone ph ys I ca I I y Motor Vehl<lu, the ·Ooota ·Mela Polle• rlak f« throe to· five years,. clependlna handicapped and doing nothing much Department, LA Unllled ScOOols 1,drlnr · Oil the lnsilrtr. ' after that .Is dangerous. A pi\y~cal ·e.Jucatlon pl'Oll'OIDI, neuroloJbl Dr. "But • because I am a controled dilabllitY Is hard to measure and there Barbara · Jl!lml, an Amtrl<:On CIVIi <eplleptk, I am oa asalaMd rlak. for ~ be ...,. evaluaUon than just -LI b.e rt te s Unlaol' ~er .and > Ufe., I am •not quamllnc with i a aet J!IMlnc an a label." •l!ll'•lllllUves !ram • "'"'"1; i.oltll• t1ine period Oii ml....i rltJr ·alter a 'NollJlC that his program trained more .-.,tlonl. • " penan bas 0._...i;.111n oantrol .or tban.l,IOO 'ban41oapped per..cs to drive Priinllo ,for •tbe-meollntl ---tlllt-tt;rebabllltated .. Wbil · I • object · lo· ls -lut<yo1r, ReJnoldl ISlttled he bU seen I• .. ~·-- rank dlscrlmlnallon. . "Of course, ~ance rompanles have a right to exc!ude anyone they like, but the .pb · lcally handicapped have a right to · uded. U there is a "'KUI•· tion , the handicappedlahould seek · t." pant said that these to a person recovering , the diabetic, and the t e d paraplegic (and the group was that a uni d be prestrtted to the lectsla oeeklng funding !or a leglslaUve stuely of lnsuranoe practices. ''As rar as we know there are not any staUs~o showing that these people are poor insurance risks." Also suggested was a feasibility study on persons with handicaps uniting to form their own IMuranqt !lrm. · To be contacted ll,Cllln are health organizations and associations statewide. "It Is not Just an Individual problem," Mn. C&roy lsse<ted. "I'm not the only one who has to pay tllese high premlms . II we all work tocether, lllA)'be we can re90lve the probleJn." ... industrialization, there was opposition to minimum wages and unions. But as the country became! more lnduatriallzed, In- terest ln the industrial worker grew. The , 1954 Supreme Court. decision against segregation of education followed by student prote.sts and decisions allowing them to wear long hair and Jeans ushered In the current emphasis on individual rights. "All famili es are individual ," Mrs. Sonenshtne saki. But th.en too, -mt noted, the families are made up of individuals · so laws relating to them do affect and maybe change the family. Because of a change in the voting age, "people become adult$ ai th.e age of 111 rather than 21." This, ahe said, might be a bad sltuaUon for . the unemployed student became "daddy doesn't have to pay for him anymore." . It mti!ht also be a problem II In a divorce agreement before the law . clianged, the husband said he would support a child ''through his minority." Altbougll the mother' may have tboupt this wo~d . be to the age of 21, the father might now decide it i! 18.. WOMEN'S RIGHTS ' Another area of current interest which affects the ·family U that of women's rip ls. "Whatever laws we have aUecting women, they affect men also '"-lhe told . ' her class. "lt'1 not that · ~ to be one aided." She explained the law seen women as "analogous " on the one hand and "on . r hand we're evil like a tempa-es:i. ,; • There have been changes,( however The law glvlnf men and ~uil management ol community p~ will go Into effect In 19'15. other 1a...S.pi.atec· w'omen against d1scrlmlnati9n and tiavo expanded their rights. "All I want ls for me and my ,ta:mn; to have the rlgbt to dct ·wbat we ·1w111~ and not to bave IClclety' tell.· me who:' I can or ayi't do because 1I~m a .wama:i or a Jew or whatever," lhe said. But Mrs. ----:ree1 t1te man gets the best ol lxtth manjag" and divorce. ' · TradiUonaUy, ahe explained, wllen , man and woman marry, they '-nl• one and "that one ls DWL" She sa1d the woman ~ told to live In the shado\r of man and take care of him and his home. When dlvortc:d, h!>w .. er, she Is tol;I the opposite. With the new divorce laws. women are given only limited allmorr and told to support themaelves. , · Because this law bas ' th • attorney predicted, "socl«y few decades, will havt to \ .~ - • • ., • ' ~ . ~" UAILY .. llUI Monday, ,.~ruary ltl, 1~74 Can't -Sleep? Maybe You'r'e Just Tongue-tied • DEAR ANN LANDERS : t 'm sure you are aware that a (?'eat many people au!ter from buomnia, the tortured state ol oot being able to sle<p. Are yoo wllllng to help them? art shuL - '4• ,t4#tl.tM ' , .... , .. Olfice \llhouJd know that Mauritius IS a country. Anoher operator says, "l can't locate a Prince Edward> !>land in Brltlsh Columbia." When I told her I wasn't The toogue fs one o( the s!J'ooieol musclf.I in the body. Jt is also one o( the moot ten.oe. Think about your own tongue at this very moment. You can relax it, can't )'OU_? Also, your eyes can actually be &taring, even tho~h covered wilh closed eyelids. The eyeballs are often tetue, even wtien lhe eyes \Vhen you want to rest, or sleep, pracUce rclai:lng your t.ongue and your eyes. Keep your toosue away from the roof of your mouth , or your teeth. Concentrate on .relaxing your eyes. It might take diligent pr11~. but even· tually you will be able io do it and sleep wlll come. Try it, A.Jut. -SWEET SLUMBER DEAR SWEET' l did and I darned near fell 1sleep at lhe typewriter. It works? It works! Thank you! DEAR ANN I.ANDERS: 1 would like to comment on the letter from the woma n who was shocked when she told a New EQgl_ander she came from Iowa and the lady replied, ",We pronounce It Idaho back East." employed by the pootal, telephone and telegraph industries are just as ignorant. I go to the Post Office with a letter addressed to Port Louis, Maurttut and get asked, "What country is Mauritius' in?" A person who works in ihe Poot Recently, I sent a letter to Pago Pago, American Samoa. The letter came back fa< addlUonal PQ61age. The idiot in the Poet Offlct dkbl't know we own American s:amoa a n d It requires no extra postage. It'& the same wllh telephone operators. I place a call to !Wr!Uton, Bermuda, and the Operator says, "We don't have a statf: called Bennllda. You must mean Berumuda, Florida." " surpri!ed1 since it happens . to ~ a C&nadian province, she replied, Oh, really?" A New OrlellN telegraph employe asked a friend of mine, "What part of Africa ls Manitoba In?" ·What can be done about such lg· i\orance? -JAMESTOWN, N.D. DEAR JAMES: Tbe only known cure ' for Ignorance ts education. A great -many people who are Firm's Help Given Harbor Area Girls Club is one of more than 100 Orange County agen· cies to benefit f r o m Rockwell International corporate and employe gifts. Visiting a club cooking class is Gerry Colson, a graphics co- ordinator for the firm's electronics group. . - \ Horoscope Li bra: Accent On Creativity TUESDAY FEBRUARY 19 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Friends may be well-meaning and promises could flow like water. However, it is best to be discriminating. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Results follow s i n c e r e, dedicated efforts -you will hit the mark. Know it and accept responsibility. Don 't run away from task, assignment or opportunity. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): SPRING CLEAt-IING SPECIAL I WATCHU CUANlD, ADJUITID & SERVICED $1oso ~ 6 CMMMr Mtdtll Mlth"Y """"' crnorrs SPORTSWEAR Good lunar aspect n o w coincides with journey, study, ability to perceive future trend. Broaden horiwns. Get rid of burden Which is not your own. Finish task. High- light personal philosophy. -·CANGl!:R,(June 21.Juty 22): 1--::::==========::::::::;;=::::::==::::::;:;::;::;:::;:::;:;;;::;:::::-~:'Eo~~~ 1a~:!oc~ 1tiA'I s·p·R· -, NG-· f 'A-·s···R ., c·s serves Your best interests. ..-l/V LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent public relation.!. Win r your way. Avoid forcing , chiding, makingd em ands. 11-· ~-n.--• ___ J Sn•M ,I Wait and see; being patient "''"" W Ue.ul tunUi \Ml~ I afKs Fill February Agendas now serves your b a s i c purpose. Gather information. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Concentrate on basic issues. Leave frivolity to others. , Social contacts are fine, but those who waste your time Avril Rayon/Polyester 44"/45" ~W ide.. DRESS PRINTS Polyester/Avril Rayon 45" Wide ORT The Newport Beach chapter of Women's American ORT has scheduled. a box lunch auction In the home of Mrs. Bernard Lieberman Wednejlday, Feb. 20, at noon. Partlei)IMts are asked to take a decorated box lunch for the auction. BPW "Senator Fis h face , ' ' a recent retiree to Leisure World with the real name or Eltoore Vincent, will speak to the Laguna Beach Business and Professional Women's Club during their Bosses Night Thursday, Feb. 21, in the County Saturday, Feb. 23, at 7 p. m. in-the Le Baron-Hotel, Buena Park. New officers are Helen Kurijac, president; Jean J\fau\din Fisher and Betty Vien, vice presidents; Sylvia Guillory and Jacquie Jessie, secretaries, and Jane Gerber, treasurer. Accountants Hotel Laguna. Fashion Show "Fishface" performed as a A spring fashion show, television character actor and luncheon and card party will come d i an before his be presented by the El Camino retirement and since then has Real Woman's Club Thursda y, been active on the stage at Feb. 21, at noon. Orange County Chapter of the ' American Society o f Women Accountants will meet at 6:30 p.rn. Thuraday, Feb. 21, in -the Jolly-Roger, Anaheim. Laguna..l!lol.!J.ton PlaJ'l>o""'~· __ _ W.C. Hayhurat, CPA will speak on ''Re porting Contlngent Liabilities." Philharmonic Co.sta Mesa resident and pianist Jotm Oddo will present a musical program o f selections of Bach, Chopin and Mozart for the regu1ar meeting of the Mesa Verde Philhar~ monic Committee Thursday, Feb. 21, in the home ol Mrs. Oscar Oevidenoe. en Mary ng For Rites Mr. and Mr•. Leo Gogerty of Newport Beach h a v e amounced the engagement of her daughter, Jana Mergenthaler to Stephen J. Stoltz. The betrothed, both students at Golden West C.Ollege, are planning to marry July 6 aboard the Queen Mary. The future bride ls a graduate of Newport Harbor ffi&h School and her fianc e is a graduate of Costa Mesa USC Mothers USC Intersorority ltfothers' Council will hear Christy Fox. columnist, speak on "Toda y's YQUng Woman A Professional and Her Role in Society" Thursday, Feb. 21, in the Town and Gown on campus at 10 a.m. Demo Women Congressman Richard T. Hanna will be the keynote speaker during the annual installation dinner of the Democratic \\'omen of Orange "6chool. He is the son , W. Stoltz of Costa -'· JANA MERGENTHALER ·t~, FREE DRAPERIES tN$fA&I• fMC.LuotMG HA.RDWARE- OHI MMX>W-W TO 11 O'"J:9,M Wmt EACH SO YDS •. OF CARPET ANQ PAD IHSTALLED! • MmlJ ~. & Colen .. ci.oow Ft• • DISCOUNTS OH WOYlH WOODS, UNOL1UM & W.t.1.LPAPER I WALTERS DRAPERIES & CARPETING ' l .,. ·~·· .... o.ty-6734743 14 ears in If arbor Area . . " I CFWC A membership tea for the Orange District, Caliiomia Federation of Wo.men 's Clubs is scheduled for Friday, Feb. 22, at 1 p.m. in the Placentia Round Table clubhouse. Autograph Tea To announce publication of "Ne"rpcjrt Bay : A Pioneer llistory" by Ellen K. Lee, the Newport Be a ch Jlistorical Society will have an autograph tea at Mariners Library on Saturday, Feb. 23, from 1 to 4 p.m., and the author ; will be honO:red at a coffee March 5, in the home of Chancellor and Mrs. Daniel Aldrich. ABW South Shore Baptist Church's chapter of t h e American Baptist Women will meet for a tea h~oring scholarship winners Sat .. Feb. 23, from 2 to ~ p.m, in Fellowship 1-lall . A de1nonstration on the care of LOSE FAT STARTING TODAY house plants also will presented. be should not be given free r~in. Nurses' Meet The fourth annual Tri· Association Sy m po s iu m sponsored by the Orange County, HarboJI , Area and Southern C aJi.fornia Associations o f lndu!ltrial Nurses h as been planned Saturday, Feb. 23. in the Airport Marina Hotel, Los Angeles. Hold yourselL.high aD<i._vat.ue_ your assets. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ): Check details. Obtain valid hint from Virgo message. Accent is on ere at iv i ty, change, dealings with ~pposite sex. Strive to understand your own emotions. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Discussions could r e v o 1 v e around ultimate goal, residence, property. Geminl, KNlTQUE .PRINfS 100% Rayon SOLID 44"/45" Wide BITTCHER WEAVES ALL GUARANTEED WASHABLE VALUES TO $1 .49 YARD Volunteers Lois Welch, president of the Orange --County Council of Hospital Volunteers, will lead a delegation to the California Hospital Association convention for v o 1 u n t e e r leaders scheduled Feb. 20-22 in the St. Francis Hotel, San Franci!ICO. Virgo persons seem to be j_.:__ __ j!ll!!li!!i!~~-:.._, involved. Reech agreement about e s c r o w , investment, paymen1&-an-Lcollections--. Clever associate may be "too smart" for present project. ~1eans seek simplicity, not complicated procedures. Mrs. George Romney, vice chairman of the National Center for Voluntary Action, will be guest speake!'. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22- De<:. 21 ): Accent is on how you develop ideas. 1bose who flatte r you may have ulterior motives. Avoid trying to be too many persons to too many people. ,, OR REMODEL It All Together For Fun. PopularUy, Conlldence John Robert Powers 1chooJ1 of personal lft19r0v.ment fOf •"'1 w~ ORANGE -:3 Town & Co try-547-8228 THfHK 01'". • • ELECTROLYSIS AS PERMANENTLY ARatEO BROWS. ~ INTRIGUING WIOOW1s PEAK. THE END OF UNWANTED FACIAL. HAIR. 1'HEff LET OUft LICENSED TECHNICIAN SHOW YOU HOW SAFE ANO EASY IT is, $~ IN OUR BEAUTY SALOH0 STRIPES PIA/OS CHECKS Great selections of new spring paslels in mach· ine wa~able Polyester/Rayon blends. 44"/45" Wide FAMOUS "TREVIRA" KnlT/ Yarn Dyed Coordinate MACHINE WASHABLE POLYESTER 60"/62" Wide 26~. 111111 1111 C\earance . Bright, sprightly knit designs. on, soft heather backgrounds, ma'tchmate tweed efUcts and shad.ow plaids 1n pastels and dark tones. Pres ti gic;>us 1:'R~IRA knits in ~n exce'lleqt range of styles are also in- cluded 1n this fine group of Polyesters, Acrylics' and Blended knits. GUARANTEED MACHINE WASHABLE * 58"/68" WIDE SAVE TO $3.48 YARD* VALUES TO $6.98 YARD 2 yards ~7 " I I ' I ~ I 1 I 'j~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiiiiiiii&l ..... liF~~ a ·HOUSE-oFfjj8RfCS ~ • alway• /int quality fabric.' ": . . l --.,.,., ........ _..._.41-IHt , tt::$ES,4 =~.~~. • ......... ~ •••• , ................ -1Jt.1l41 • 11 1 /i•C...--....., . .-._....._ ........ ..,.._,,74011 . . -' \ • • " JbjeV, l]jjtl?E: DIO '¢<J Ge1 "!Mo IJAM6 'GYPSY' F~OM? TUMBLEWEEDS by Wm . F. Brown and Mel Casson ld€U.. tl'f>l llllltH r / IVA~ BOllN • IT WAS OB~IO!IS I WAS GOING TO 8€ A BtAU11FUL. W()l<All OF lloYST£~'( ! ll®.COLJLQI reu. w11 IT'S A NIC~~AMf FOi? •. 6€11.T~uo~r by Tom K. Ryan l HOW COME YOU NoVeR ~Afl ANY f)LJFFS, ~O'BA WCK? i;RAYl1Y. '\ MUTT AND JEFF MUTT, WILL YOU LOVE ME JUST AS MUCH \FI DYE .MY HAIR RED? FIGMENTS " j ixx:ra< H.,fJHDESS ' l'SltHWlGY • I lol'MJW': l!oOc . ~ 0 NANCY • AW, SHE'S .JUST A GROUCH AND A BORE YOU'RE WRONe--- TO ME SHE 'S A BARREL OF FUN TODAY'S CIOSSIDID PUZZLI ACROSS 1 Deni made by use 5 Overprecise 50 Region 51 Russian 1ulers· Var. 54 Lunatic person 58 Right to 9 Ankles enter 14 Cavity 62 Musical 15 Give an dlrecllon edge 10 63 Not 16 Willow restra ined twig 64 Vu lger 17 Olls1ers people 19 Fern 66 Eddie reproducti~e organ 20 Furnishing Americar1 track style ace l--l---.11 ron i!lllT--67 Female copper workers 23 Firm· PrellK 25 Assign lo 26 Tapered seam 28 Seesaw 32 Baseball term: 2 words 37 Weslern u S. cily 38 Water trot en solid 39 Young sa!mon 41 Ll!lrge number 42 01 a color 45 Coordlna!ed ouuas 48 Breathed vibrantly .. 17 lO " 2 Jl 34 JI ., .. ~ " " " " .. • • " ., oamo 68 0111 herb 69 Prophetle signs 70 Russian "l'llly" 7 1 Views DOWN 1 Radiates 2 Desire wrongfully 3 Miss Faye 4 LPs S Greek letter 8 ebard'e companion 7 ···-- lube 8 Feat 9 "Nowl lay me .. down ·-center -----'' ---SS-Mat----- 10 Ambitious o!lspring person 36 Opera 11 Spanish heroine rivers 40 1 erminatlon: 12 Spanish Abbr. painter 43 Crattsman 13 Resent-44 Min(mizes ments 46 01)e ----- 18 Give day:Oieting medical regimen aid 47 Fruit 22 Sailor's 49 German direction article 24 Spheres 52 Age 27 Naturally g~ 9~~· gentle nisinr girt 29 Price 56 Give 30 Cry of consent revelry 57 Prlces paid 31 Decays 58 Sinoing 3 A .1 vo ice 2 dius 5 59 Ruin 33 Llkeneu: 60 Breakwater !'Jretix 6 1 Province o( 34 Famed 'Greece divorce 65 Corpulent I KNOW ITS UP HERE SoMl::PLACE! SEE WHAT I MEAN? JUDGE PARKER by Al Smith NoW, WHAT WERE YOU6AYING, MARTHA? by Dale Hale MAA6"RET1 THIS 15 5AM DRIVER! MY OFFICE S ... 10 THAT lHE JUDGE IS TRYING TO REACH ME! MISS PEACH l WA{Jr YOL.t TO Tl•• Me W~A.,. YDIA i HINK • OF Mi. ' vou 10 et Hun IF i DID. DICK TRACY 1. WON1T "e H~ll'T. Tf.I.• Mt. OKAY. '101.A'R!: -+'T'tA'tP, A.N.._ AND HAVJ A Vf.~V, Vf:fY ANNOYIMG .... SAME CA~GORY .... 5 TME "LEFT·MANDED MON KEV WRENCH "? DOOLEY'S WORLD DID GOORG6 1 WASHIN61()N REALLY 'Tll!?DW A SILV&R I OO•LAR )CROSS I 111' DElAWAAE? ! ....:~ Dr. SMOCK GORDO YOU LIKE. ~Ell.JG A toNeR, 8Ub Ra"""35' OCW1T • YOV M ISS· FEM ININE COMPANVf 1----1; 1 ! l • MOON MULLINS 1.·18 .. , OOST J((CJ, OOG'r HAsr /./e'f/31< HEARO .,,,,_,_ THE FA1E OF MY i:::-1HGe:Rt.JA1L.S· ARE! GOING 1b S"fAR,-Gft'OWlNG L..IKf: wee.PS.' • TOW,A.Ro ,A. lJNION WE. OAREN1T J.UN6t:, SINGLENESS 1s, EL.EME:NTAR'{. SPIOER · 15RIDE- (;T!e.OOM5? AN!MAL-CRACKER.~S~- m A 11AP 65510~ QJ TtlE eFFEcr C*' COSIJIC FOfi'CES, 'THE~ TC>llle 'm!WSCEND!WTAL. Hlel>ITAtlO~ ll)QllKSllOP. by Charles M. Schulz '' I by Harold Le Doux I'D LIKE TO 5EE YOt.I A5 SOON A5 POS51flLE, SAM! WHERE ARE YOU? I'M HAVING LUNCH WliH A68EY SPENCER! I CN-1 5E iHeRE IN AM MOUR! by Roger Bradfield YOU SELDOM SEb A ~IS!Vf<V BOOI( fUNQI LIKE 1HAT by George Lemont Pouoi...e M~. wA;f"K•N'S GliiL.A1"1N ~A.1'10N •.. OH, ANP e.R l"'G H&:R A SCRA1"C~ING POS"f" I by Gus Arriola A,SHORT l 00" MEANS ONE LO/./& PLUNGE, OOWN DARK CAHAL ALIM!iN- TARY,f by Ferd Johnson by Mell 2-lll "Here't the money, Henry. You're forever leaving your wallet on &be dreuer -It's a good thing T'm not that forgetful." t 'M NOT H LJll:T YtT .... WIL.L. YOlA.. 010..Y RlFIA .. ,tOM INTegguMI~ ~MILi l '4M ~P!AKIN5? ! CERTAIN PAOF'ESSIONAL PEOPlE. MA.VE T'OOLS MADE TO TMEIR OQOER. TMEY COMSl0!:'1 TMEMSELVES MIGM-PRICED ARTISTS.• I NOW by Chester Gould l'VE BEEN BUVING /lllEAT FROM ONE OF ~EM "'ARTISTS"' FO YEARS. ' I DENNI S TH E MENACE , ' 1 • f~ • \ • • • ' . • .. , . J 8 DAILY PILOT Momi», February 18, 1974 < i:ops in Pops The Phenomenon of 'The Exorcist'. By Tbe Associated Press Billboard's hot record hits for the week ending Feb. 23 as they appear in next week's ls.sue of Billboard Magazine. TOP SINGLES 1. THE WAY WE WERE -Barbra Streisand, Columbia 2. SEASONS IN THE SUN -Terry Jacks, Bell 3. UNTIL YOU COME BACK TO ME That's What I'm Gonna Do -Aretha Franklin, Atlantic I . SPIDERS AND SNAKES -Jim Stafford, MGM I . LOVES' THEME -'Live Unlimited Orchestra, 2 O t h Century 6. JUNGLE BOd;IE - Kool and The Gang, f>e..Lite 7. BOOGIE DOWN -Eddie Kendri.cks, Motown 8. ROCK . ON -David Essex, C.Olumbia 9. YOU'RE SIXTEEN - Ringo, Apple 10. LET ME BE THERE -Olivia Newton-John, MCA TOP LPS 1. BOB DYLAN -Planet Waves , Asylum 2. JOHN DENVER Greatest Hits, RCA 3. LOVE UNLIMITED Under the Influence ·or, 2oth Century 4. JONI MITCHELL - Court And Spark, Asylum 5. JIM CROCE -You Don't Mess Around With Jim, ABC 6. ELTON JOHN -Goodhye Yellow Brick Road, MCA 7. CARLY SIMON -Hot- cakes. Elektra 8. YES -Tales From Topograohic OceanS, Atlantic 9. PAUL McCARTNEY AND~WINGS .-c Baqd On,the Run, Apple - 10. CHARLIK RICH' Behind-Closed Doors, Colum-. By RICIJA.RD WOl\SN()P some patrons do not remain Chrilll1" Scltliict MOllllol' S1tvl~t Flip Wilson is virtually seated very long. For the guaranteed a laugh when he story of a ltfear-old girl bla EASY LISTENING says, "The devil made me possessed by the devil, and do it " After 11 of elforts to exorcise the ev'1I I. LAST TIME I SAW HIM . a , everyone _ Diana Ross, M·.•· wn thinks he ha s a little of the presence, fan tum the "'""' devil in him. Or maybe 1 i;trongest stoJnach. "It's like 2. LOVE'S THEME -1.<>ve lot. It is no~ 80 fi!nny, but th!• •vm" night," said Hunter Unlimited Orchestra, JO th undeniably engrossing, when Kaplan, an usher at ihe Century a person becomes possessed Westwood Theater in Los 3. LOVE SONG -Anne entirely by satan. A!1geles, as he surveyed the ~furray, capitol Satanic possession is the distress around him: uThe 4. J SHALL SING subject of The Exorcist, a men faint an4 the women Ill ~~ vomit." Garfunkel, Columbia new m luat promises to 5. THE WAY WE WERE rival the box office success "The Exorcist"Js crammed -Barbrh Streis.ind, Columbia of "Love Story," "The Sound with $Cenes of physical and of Music," and ••The sexual violence, accompanied 6. I LOVE -Tom T. Hall, Godfather." Only three weeks ·by some of the foulest Mercury after release, to decidedly language ever heard on the IN MODERN GUISE, the 7. SEASONS IN THE SUN mixed reviews , "The screen, but shock value alone Faust legend was a smash -Terry Jacks, Bell Exorcist" had collected $5 cannot explain Its appeal. success as a movie 8. LIFE rs A SONG WORTII million in rental fees for Bruce CQok of The National Rosem;iry's Baby, based on SINGING -Johnny Mathis Warner Communications Inc. Observer or I ere d this the novel of that name, told "A MERICA•~• GRAFFITI" Columbia ' Warner Chairman Ted Ashley additional exp I an at j 0 n : o~ a young woman who gave "PETE 'N TILLIE" fPGI 9. DARK LADY _ Cher reports that the studio is "Modern psychology may birth to. a cloven·hoofed infant, "CINDRELLA LIBERTY" (RI MCA ' getting as much as 85 percent have done much to revise · h:r husbaf!d having mated her And IO, MY SWEET LADY of a theater's gross receipts conscious thinking on ... (the with Satan in return for a "VANISHING POINT" IRI Cliff De Young, MCA as a rental fee, as against nature of God. man, good, Broadway hit. "Sl:RPICO" tRI '~-... 30-35 percent for an average and evil), but ingrained deep ~s this . preoccupation with Ana COUNTRY SINGLES film. in all of us is the medieval evtl morbid . and alarming, or "ILAC K BELT JONES" fRI L ANOTIIER Lo NE Ly No one will ever accuse version of the co.smos in which merely a display of religious "JEREM IAH JOHNSON" IPGJ SONG -Tammy Wynette "The Exorcist" of being God and the devil are locked 1_Ja~ta~v~iJsmi£? ~N~o~on~e~c:an~~s~ay~~fo~rr~~~~~~~~;~~~-~~·~,.~~~~;;;~~ Columbia ' average. Long Jines wait for in struggle over the soul of sure. Jn any event, a Roman "THE THIEF WHO CAME TO DINNER" 2. DADDY, WHAT IF _ hours outside the theaters man.'' Bobby Bare, RCA where it is being shown. C.Onsider, if you will, the 3 I'M ST Ti ckets available for $3 at Faust phenomenon. Johann . ILL LOVING YOU the box off1'ce are so)d by F Joe St I Do aust was a learned German -ampey, t scalpers for as muclt as $10. ~ 4. THERE WON'T :BY octor of the 16th century who ANYMO aveled widely, performed RCA RE -Charlie Rich, -;:O:N:C:E::::I:N:SI=D=E=th=e=th=ea=t=er~, =m=a~g~ic~a~I ~!e~a~ls~, ~an~d~di~ed~un~d~e:r 1 5. A LOVE SONG -Anne I Muray Capitol. 6. THAT'S THE WAY LOVE GOES -Johnny Rodriguez Mercury . ' 7. WORLD OF M A K E BELIEVE -Bill Anderson MCA ' 8. SWEET MAGNOL IA BLOSSOM -Billy "Crash" Craddock, ABC 9. I LOVE YOU, I LOVE YOU -David Houston and lJt.Q .:!feremia Johnson" Barbra. M,eqdrell,,. Columbia _. ,.J'aJl<1)'iJ1lon9· T~c"".icolor~,· .. Tl-eman who became a legend Tl-e film destined to be a classic! ~l w .. ,,., 1101. - Aw .. ~,, Communletllo•• Co"'9"ft1 W ... ..._4 IO. THERE'S . A .. HiNi<Y .,. · TONK ANGEL -Conway HELD OVER ! -4"' BIG WEEK! Twitty. MCA. co .. ,M ... •119-•1•1 ---- NOW SHOWING ELLEN BURSTYN · MfX VON SlrfYj/ ·LEE J COBB K~TYWINN JACK MacGOWRAN JASON MI LLER.;r,.,.,~ .. ,, t«rutl'< L11\JDA BLAIR .. Re3on. P1cx!•J(dbyWILLINv1 PETER BlATTY .. . . . ,., •••• y 91 •lLtrao!\ St, $1S·l$26 s ... Ot.1• '•••••1 ., ...... ~wnl (kJ 962·2411 H••-•"'· I ... ;::a.., Sll·l211 .... ~····· ' s. .• 1 G••"" Gt•••, ...... Sl4·6fl!. M.\JOI STUDIO l'IMIW n»tGHI' • IM •ADOlflON .10 OW lllMIUI '90GIAM uu. neum '°' RA-MINW P1.UIMl$tfo!OANOOllT'f _ .. , ... _l•l kl•'fl , .. , ......... ~. ' 6 H••k• 81• .. 111.1112 w.i.ar OlllCM'.-war d ... SUPER DAD* 101 SON OF fLUllEI IO) u ........... . •.. , .,._ 577.2211 totll1 tRlfOID Jl•IMIAH JOHNSON (N) ' Olin . 111.N 0'111.U JM!l' WHO_~·. T.9 }l!HNt_lJ!'t ..._ .... lmltl.Ntfl ..... .. ,.,,...,, ... ltl'll•l-S4S·lll) • ~ I • • , . . . . .. •l " ·--"'THI ,,_n -~1'41 l~t. , ... l:ll.1:11 t:OP.M. ~"'"~" ~OEL i'MRS~ALl·1c,.,,1,1brWILLINv1 PETER BLATTY ~':d' s.ft t11oi • ,.,.0.,.~--llL . . I -Cijlil.....--r I • S.nOitto Frwv. at L1P11 Turnoff Miuion Vi1Jo • 830·6990 ,.C FOUNTAIN VALLEY "Cl CINEMA I e THEATRE TWO e e TUES • WED. • THUR •• FRI. 7.9 .1 1 SAT. • SU,...• Mo" ,t-:~"'~1~-3;;;;i··~-,-~·--1~1~"!" .......... ...; e LAST WHK • • INOS 1/11 I, • • DAILY SHOWINGS from 11 :30 A.M. ~~~;~~« •rem .~rne1 Bro~""° A \'i.arntr Co..,mun1catK)l)I ComP'\l~y o 1R j """"'"" ... .;:::. ·~-.. , --· w r"' t-=.: ..,,......., .... ,, ••. ~--~ .... ·-·~ ------°"""'"• 4tl ·•·~· J. A'ASCN-- CftlAIOTS Of GODS? JO) 1'1111 • QM UJnl'OC9 JO! KIDD (l'qJ Good Deed Pe le make the scene Sundays HARBOR ol ADAMS, COSTA MESA.~ PHONE ~~6'1102 \ CONTINUOUS DAILY TUES . wrn -THUR . FRI 11 :45-2:00-4:20 6:50-9:20 -11 :50 SAT -SUN -MON 9:20 -11 :45 -2:00 4:20-6:50,9:20-11 :50 in t~ l1tjlijijll1ll HELD 2nd OVER _wnK 2nd TOP ATTRACTION ROBER T MITCHUM "THE FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" e ilil: Sl~llEN •lJllS PLUS BLACK BELT ...... ijjja.O (A) ENDS TUES. · feb. 19 • IOSEPH E. LEVJNE _ .. GEORGE C. SCQTI;, •MIKE NICHOLS "~ THE DAYi\'I', DOLPHIN #3 .. l .-WlD.·THUR .• fRI. 7·9-11 SAf •• SUN.-MON. 1.3.5.7.9.11 #4 TU, .. WID.·THUA..FRt. 6-8-10 e ~----s:::A:,:T,;;.·S:,:U:,:N~.-MON. 2-4-6-8-1 O • • • • • • • • • e Robert THEATRE ONE e Re_dfonl TUES.·W~~:i1HUR.·FRJ. • · SAT .. SUN.-MON. e • : . j:j.!remi~~ ;.;.-,s, .~o~·~,n~so~n~.~~.I ~· ~~----....J· "A ROMANTIC, STYLISH AND n•x • • THOROUGHLY ENJOYABLE MOVIE" REED • • ·T14IATlll TWO. THE WAY STREISAND 8REDFORD lOGETHERI WE .. WER~ TUIS.·WIO .. THUl.•Pll. 7110·9 115 • • • •. •:·~·T~·~···u~·~·....,~··~··~2~··~·"·2~··:l·~ .. :;·•::•:.1~~11i10.::;:•·~··a-~'J.'~··~·-...J • • •••••••••••••••• • • • I ·: :· :l .- " ' 'Good Times' Debuts Strong ' ' NEW YORK (AP) \t-'Ille (ABC); "Kojak" and Million Dollar Man" (ABC); premiere episode of CBS' new "Hawkins" (CBS); • • o ea n "Mary Tyler P.1oore" (CBS); "Good T lmes" series Martln11 and "Columba" (both "ABC Sunday Movie;" "Can· · d NBC)·, "Country Mu s I c ·,'' non" (CBS)·, "ABC Monday rcg1stere sLrong in national "Thursday Movie" a n d Movie" and "Good Times" TV ratings last We.!k, ac-"MJl.1le/' tall CBS); "Six (CBS). _/ cording to A. C. Nielsen ra lings 1-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:-I made pub Uc today. I The ratings for the week ending Feb. IO sho wed that the series, dealing with a poor bl ack family in Chicago, was the nation's 20th most popular show out or 61 shows rated. CBS' perennlel winner, "All in the Family," topped the list. ABC's "Six Mj\IJon Dollar Man.'' which beeame a weekly series last month, was ranked in 15th place. The "hfaude" series on CBS, which has lagged slightly behind ABC's new "Happy Days" series on Tuesday nights. for the past three weeks, topped that show last week by only a slig ht margin. The nation's 20 lo~rated TV Ill a life slyle. " h's lhe be•uly of love, th e joy of freedom. ~ ll's lhe besl·selling book. ll's Neil Di.1mond. It's.a motion pktuSY. l.~·~."'1J~.·W:it!f!J. ··""'TG'elialril~rettrirm-"··- Jonathan Livingston Seagull ,_...,_., RicMrd l ull ~.t.cwl Pt>olo&••plo,.1970 • Muu•ll M~n•on a ....... w...• c.i.. bJ 0.1.... ",, ..... 01111l l'lc-···· ....... 0 programs , last week, in order CO·HIT ,of the ranking, were: ''All In The Family," "The "Banq The Drum Slowly" Waltons". ;ind "flnwaii Five-S!AGULL AT 7 &: I 0:30 O" (all CBS); "Sanford Ancl DRUM 8:55 Son" ( N B C ) ; "M-A-S.H," Daily lxcopt Sunday "Sonny and Cher" (both Sunday Molino• From 2 P.M. CBS); "Marcus \Ve I by ''!-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'.:__ Steve Special HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Steve Allen will host ABC's \V ide World of Entertainment comedy s p e c l a I , "The Unofficial Mi!s Llls Vegas Showgirl Pageant," 3' spool of beauty contests. .. ' ... 2 Dliney Hlh "SUl"l!I. DAD" !OJ l·•i:U·l :lO p.m. "SON 01' FLUlllR" (0) l :U ... :20-t:SO '·"'• . .#"'.'> fOU N f AIN \t All f 'I' .,,f..rffa-#'_..,. D ~(\~~.-..;;.,Q H111ry Ptft41 ''THI! SIRl"l'NT" !RI 4:H-l:ot '·"'· W1lltr M1tti111 ''THE LAUOHIHO POLIC:l:MAN" .. , LIVI CONCERTI "SMOKEY JOE" "" "AIRCASRE" MONDAY & TUISDAY ONLY 7:JD l 1D:DD EACH HITE •l\O "led HOit'' 111 LOtldor!" ....,, __ ,_ .... LI D 0 N1wroor BEACH lNTl.AN('f TO llOO l~lf 6 ,, IJ~O EXCLUSIVE! His Story 11 lncrfflblel NOW PLAYING GOLDEN GLOBE WINNER I! BEST ACTRESS Nt Wtf)llilttto u::M sn:.r 1 MARSHA MASON JAMES CAAN MATLW-.IAT.a-. IVISt, , .... '"THE DAY OF THE DOLPHIN' TAKES OFF LIKE A BLAZING FOREST FIRE, WITH A THRILL A _ MINUTE. THERE IS STILL MAGIC IN THE MOVIES:' -Rix R11d, Npw Yotk 01i/y N1w1 11'111 BIO WEEKI Jooqiil E.1-"'ine ....... George C. Scott in a Mike Nichols film "The Dayof the Dolphin": WllKDAYS 1:aa f 1JI l_____..w.lliEICDAYS M;:.10 SAT/SUN/MON, SATISUNITUIS. 1 ·4·1-1 ·1• 1 ·4-1·1 ·11 I D.!.!YUN_ONLl'_ - "(hltlw'I Lind" 11"0 ) Sllltwllm.._.:•s p.m. ~ . ' LAST 4 DA.TS CW"'oody: ~ cAllert'"" 'Keaton "Sle~" 1,.- -., ... ,,,,..,.,.. .-ML.-., ... ,,.. .. , ... .... • A Fill 'PIPPi FOii THE WHOLE FAllLY! .iongstocking ~·;~ -IHGER Nll.SS!JN ., "'Pffl"' PlUS OUI lfOULAI IVININO JllRfOl.MANCIS •ll•~JJIU~ That old college try. It can kill you. "' 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I ,. L y ·p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 t; •.L, l'ILOT t_ 7 ~emwnh •.•• ~ ~14 AutCll'l'Ob~ -. . . ~ -m The 81111111 Matkttplact on the Crans• Coasl Mobole Ho<-> •Qr $vloo • • • rn -l.t9 ,.,.._.1 ....... S1S • ~ '°°'' ' MoilllC (Qllopnienf 000 . 'M ·~" ......•• 100. 790 '•nonliol ..••.••.. 100 -m ~ '°' $.ole. -• -' •• 100 . ,,, l~ & kuwt ' •..•• ,,~_,,. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS '"' -i ~ ... , .. ISO · 9'" Rtol 1110 .. G-<al •.... ISO • 194 ~ . , .• XIO·M Mert~ .... ' -.. '°° · 84ll You Can Sell It , Find It . [ 642 • 5678 ] Trade It With a Want Ad Qiw J;all Service Fast Credit Approval k"°°11 olld ln11<uc1'°" . . ~7S · S9C1 S..vit,11 ond t.oow1 , , 600 • o9' ''"""'°'°'""" . . 91~ -~o J -ERRORS. Advertisers should check their ads dally & repart errors immediately. The DAILY Pl LOT Htumes liability for tho first Incorrect lnaertlon only. ~~ Houses for Sal• General FOR THE PERFECTIONIST -$147,500 ~h1onths NE\V. Luxurious -Lovely! Beamed vaulted ceilings. soft-neutral colors & fine appointments in this 5 BR home. Prof. land- scaped. Part ti1ne occupied by Palm Springs couple. Superb Big Canyon C.C. value . WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. 2111 San. Joaquin Hill s Rd. NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 General Gene ral HONEYMOON LOTTA HOUSE COTIAGE LOTTA VIEW \Vith great potential for nn 1 1 extra inrome unit ou this great R-2 location !n Corona ASSUME FHA LOAN del !\.lar. Val'ant aud General BEAUTIFUL TREES BEAUTIFUL HOME FIVE BEDROOM ·EXECUTIVE HOME ·r11i11 lo1'ely l101ul' i~ a :;.9neral Genera l NO DOWN VA 4 BEDROOM, 2 BATH -Mesa Verde home . t ireai location! lose to shopping and schools. l~arge added Ianni con1plclc Y:ith firep lace & rootn for pool table etc. Submit your offer on this one! CALL 546-5880. l)f•uutlful c.-:an111lr· nf !ht• HARD TO FIND skillful Ull•ndin'.• ol Ht\·hJt1••·· . iurt· and uatur<': t:v('rvthui~ IN TOWN LIVING \\11th real tountry at1nos; from rhr rt"r ti 11 gr phere. Oood S bedroom home on large 135 bedroon1s rn thl' frU"rn11l ttin· deep Jot. Close to Newpo rt Back Bay. tlard-ln~ roh111 spell.; h1·a1·10111l lh · \\'ood floors. Double garage and srreened !ng, All r•I lh1s on ll hu~t' . , > · d I •33 '00 · h · bl ti·l·c·llhiuli 'f! 1u1. 1'·o1· rurih .. r p.il10. J ri ce on y ,,, ,;, \VJt a_ssuma. e infor1n111ion plraSt· {' 11 I I 63..ir;. Joan , payable SilB5 per mo. 1nclud 1ng 54~ ... 9191. everything. Call for complete details 546-5880. 6;1~ HERITAGE ' • REALTORS Wa,l.k.,e.t~.l~B_IJ .,;. ~...,......,.......,.._~o,.,..",..Ev ........ · """"'I General General SPANISH 2 STORY + POOL REDUCED TO $33, 900!! Bcsr 1•ou11t;1in VaH1•y !rit'H- tion. Enjoy l·ar'<!frec liv1nL: + unu.~u~d floor plnn. l lu~e li\'in~ nXJni. Ful'l111Ll rli111• Sr aeinus ki!rlic•n 11 ith p11~s 1hn1 p11tlo. lluge bcd1-001nfi. $cpar111c balconies. \Vulk to schools. C(1m1nuni!y ~·l. JI.lust ~C<'! Call n (1 11· '. 842·25..':\5. _Jj.arbo1· CUSTOM HOME Magnificent 01ai11 channel vie\\'. 6 Bdrm., 5 bath hon1c \Vith forn1at'd ining frp. 55 Ft. lot, 4 c~u· ga ra i;c, pier & slip. $575,000 WATERFRONT LOT You can build the house of yo ur dreams on 1his 57.5 ft. lot on the n1ain cha11nel. $400,000 o"'"""'""""'°BE•~· BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ~ 34I°Bays;de Dr., Su;te I , N.B. 675-6161 move-in condition. Ca J I This IX'autiful hon1e h11s 673--8550. l'Vt'rylhi11g the value \\'iSt• -'==== ~ Genera l G•neral LIOO ISLAND ESTATE New on J.he niai·kct, tin 3 lots: 5 bdrms., ti b:1ths: 2 wet bnrs: triµlc garag-c. The ultimate In luxury. shopper 1s looking for: Ex- cellent L"Ondition, ;::real loca- tion and a fan tastic pril'e! 1 You ca•1 assun1e the rx· isling 5:1~ <;<. .FHA loan 11·ith $162/mo 11ayn1c>nts or let · u~ <irrangt• nl•1v financing for vou. For fu1·ther in- forn1Ution p!cas~ ca 11 :i4J-'J49l ,.me.~ARBOR . j"' .W.aJ~.~.t~Jee I s· Bedroom + 3,000 Sq. Ft. ·1 COMP' ANY REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 Beac:h-$66,500! 12' x 52' MOBILE lfon1e Ocean view, 5 S!f11· Adult Ne\\'port Beach Park. No pets. $6500. 6-16-flOlS ~ cE~v~e~"~'"~·~'·-----­LO\/ do1111 ait<1uo1es Sl!l!l mo . total payn1ents. 7+"' FH1\. ·l bedmon1s + pntio roorn. F\•11 pl1ce $28,MJ. Ce.II Afil'I. S4~.fi010. For Owili~ Aa ACTION C•ll A DA ILY rlLOT .AD·YISOI 642-5671 NEED fast sale on excellent vacant hon1e. Features big fainily area 1\·ith fh•eph1.Ct". l..rul;e yard. Lcl111 pri~ $3.1,500. 847-6010 ;\gt __ NEl'.:D fa~t sale on excellent vacant hon1e. Fea1ures big fan1ily .'U'\.'a 11 i\h fircplal'C. l..ru:ge yard, l..o1v prict> S3.500. S-17.6()10. i\J:t. WESTCLIFF 4 BR. 3 BA, fan1.01:m .. nr_ I l\.1itrint·r~ S<'hnol. $67.000, Prin. only. 5.SJ.;.736 161f,.1 4!''6 CORONA DEL MAR Attenlion Bldri;! 2 Prinll' H.-1 OcC'an .'Ir Bay View Lots. $110,000. 9~0631 or 644-4510 5.77 Acres Ocean View Lncu ted on Pnt'ifle Co as 1 Iii\'\' • l\lnlibu . Owner Wilt cari·y flnuncing for builder. de1'l'lopl"r. $59,950 PARENT'S DELIGHT Near Co rona del Mar Hi gh School. This 3 bcdroon1, 3 bath Spanish Villa is a great buy for $53,900. See it this weekend .. Immediate FULL PRIC,E occ ttp ancyc. • .. 2211 Newpou., 11.. . . . GRUBB . & ELLIS . CO • 64~~8gi1i ~R~E;A;L~TO~R~S;..,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,'7~>~70I0,..1 Sun/Eves. 552-7605 Herrel, McKenna & Co. Realtool ' \'."e nre pi'\•sently intcrvll'\\"· ln-:t real eslnle liccnsce!I fol' 1Kisitlons 1\·ilhln our CC'rona de\ i\h1r offlee. Plea:!:e 1u;k for John. 2846 J::. Pncillc Coast Hip:h11·<1y, Coronri cle: "'tar. 640..S-18 I. BUY ME VA I'n1 I\ cute 3BR dollhouSt' 11•!th 111arble fireplace & double garRge In Eastslde C~tlt ~1esa. T hnve a great haC'kyard with play nr.-11. & lrees. Only $34.950. N111k11\•n VA. C!lll Prestige J1on1es. fi45--0646 General General - associated BROKF~S -RF Al. TORCi 107~ W 8c:ilhru: 671 )61\l MACNAB IRVINE HARBOR VIEW HILLS SPECIAL Sunny 3 bedroom + fam ily room design- ed for family livin g. Lovely new landsca p- ed yard . Quiet street. Quick possession. $76,900. Helen Hartley, 642-8235. (H28) DOVER SHORES -VIEW Elegant 4 ·bedroom featuring his & hers bath, pool, family room, clrcular dining & a smashing day & night VIEW. $147,500 . ~lartha Macnab. 642·8235. (H21 ) UPPER BAY VIEW 3 bedroom Bluffs condominium -single level -quiet rhaim & decor. $65,000. Helen Wood. 644·6200 . (H22) "' I ' I " ' • • ' , . ' .. • J8 DAILY PILOT Monda1, Fobn1ary 18, 1974 Newport ii.;d\ A Ul'iiil()UI: liVMI: CALL ME · l'M DAHLIA! The Deluxe Du· plex! Near-new three bedroo1n, three bath home complete with family room, two Ii.re- places, all electric built in kitchen and shag carpeting. 2 Bedroom income unit has unique charm plus g uest room s. South ol the high- way in Corona del ~tar. I'm Dahlia on Dahlia al $110,000 . UNIQUE HOMES Realtor1, 67~ 2443 E . Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar General General ti. /1«4ttle Sd ~ . REALTORs' . A RARE FIND!!! Hard lo believe, but TRUE. A TRIPLEX in CdM on l 1h lots and fully rented. A real MUST SEE property. Priced belo\v most du- plexes. Don't delay. call no\v. Just reduced and owner n1ust sell! Only $95,500 . A listing of Bud Austin. CALL 644·7270 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar BIRTHDAY SPECIAL An excerpt from George Washington's letter ol Oct. J 2(h, 1778, to his stepson •.. "a mo1nent's reflection must convince you of two things -first, that lands are of P.e~n:ia· nent value; that there is scarcely a poss1bil1ty of their fallin g in price ..• secondly, that our paper currency is (Juctuati~g ..•. a~d, that no human foresight can, wtth precision, te.11 how low it may go" ....• REAL ESTATE JS still the safest investment. We have many good investments ... here are two sugges- tions: BLUFFS "E" PLAN 2200 Sq. ft., with S BR. & lamdy rm .. Lovely courtyard entry. Balcony off the dining rm. & patio of! the family rm. Freshly· decor. $74,900. PRIVATE WORLD .. in Cameo Shores. Ocean & ~anyon view ~ Jge. pool. 3 Bdrms., formal dining rm. & fam1· ly rm. + separate guest suite, $159,000 Capistraf'O 8 each BY owner, cl.arming j BR, 2 BA, open beamed ceilings bltns, shag cpt. hlost de· alrable Palisades area. \Valk to beach. h1ust SC'e, $39,500. 26721 Laa Palmas, Capis· trano Bch. 496-459'1. Corona d1I Mar Corona del Mar llachelor Pad With Pool On a genet'OUS GOx!OO lot in 1valk-to-private commun· lty beach Corona J.l igh· IMds, a wel '. dc{'oruted 2 Br, 2 Ba hon1e with formal dining, spucioui; mu ster suite, rear yard 1vith pa'.lo l2 0U 5 R .JJ sun deck and large free ri1 fonn pool. $69.500. CALL 644-72JJ YEAR el8 1;G;•;n;•;•;•;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i • !:. 1. :: PENINSULA POINT GOOD BUYS LET YOUR CHILDREN ENJOY lile at the 3 BDRMS .. l ·ba., Nol'lh of Costa Mesa 'G" R<itcd Home (Great for .FamiHesJ Enjoy you reves. in front or lhe fire or w<Ilch TV in Ute HUNTI!'!llGTON HAR.BOUR Fan1-rm. of lhis lovely 3 · REALTY BR, l % ba ho1ue, loc. in 11e1ver area l\J:. Lake l''orC'st. 17214 COAST H\VY. Price is nice at $34,!IOO. 714: 846-lJM & 213: 59'l-2845 Tolle Realtors & 1\si;oc. ~ 830-3773~LEVEL, 4BR, 21 Huntington Beach fireplaces. 18x24 family rm, 1 '-"-"'-'-"'-.;....-----1 18x18 master bedroon1. 16911. Price Reduced r a;l'!iold Cll'de. $70.500. ()\vner/ agl, 846-1245 $1000. 3 Rd rn1s., 2 baths: profess. 2 Bdrm. + Pool Jndscpd. Many extras. By O\\'ner. 8'16-3267 $23,995 I . 2 l:kl1111 condo.. dcslra bl el;;;';;•;;' n;;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ground level floor plan1 1'Ai11 years nc\\', Freshly Painted COLLEGE PARK \1·i.th 1aste~u!IY panelea and ELEGANCE 1n1rrorcd living t'OOn1, plush . . RIVIERA REAL TY Exclusive Homeslte1 SOU1'11 l.J\(iUNA, C081I Royall·. slopin1i1 downhlll 50x IOO u. lot, looking dov.•n on Aliso Bc11ich'. AJl.king $35,(M)J. LAGUNA BEACll EllS>' to build on; izood acceiu: .. ter- rific Not·th & SouUi VIC"'5· $18,950. "" SOUTH L.ACUNA. fanlllliro .. bench & pier views, lots ol whirr. \Valer. Lgc .. lcvt>l IC!t, e11sy to Uuild on. A:iking $37,500. Jfl l •. +\CUN/\ BEACl-1. tct't•. \: So. <.'Oilst vic\11; off Al l!l Vu;· ta \\lny. Sloping dO.\vnhlll lot. St7•950· · c 1·rs NlCJ-1 BEACH !!El I-• Jevl"I tor. overlooking !hr. clty. Asking $11,500. •ll.~ ~ ' . . 499.2100 GRAND OPENING Newport Bay Towen 1 ! 2 BEDROOM CONDOMINIUM !IOM'ES Bdyfronl lfomes Boat Sll1~ f'ull Security Hlghrlle StM'l .I: C011crete con:ltnl.cUon Private &kon!cs 2 garage i;pace.1 per unil Roof lOP sundedt Unusual Opp0rtWtlly to Pur- ch fise Baytront Proper.y in Ne\vport Beach. 310 FernA1ldo Rd., N.D. 675-8551 SUPER. CLOSE TO BEACH Con1plctuly ren1odeled 3 bedroon1 2 bnth horn~. Plali ahead for a arent wunimer in Newport Beach. Cali 646-7711 Open.Eves. cataHna sunset Walker & Lee You'll love the beautif1:1l ~~=~·~·~·;;·~·~"='~';';::=~I panor!'mlc ,;cw trorn this deluxe 3 bdrm, 2 bath FOURPLEX hoinc! \Vam1 vibrant d~oor with high bcaml"<I cel ling, Balboa Prn1n. Good tux fireplact>, dinln('" 11 re a . s~lter. $125,000 Conten1porary k.itc_hen t~i>-LIDO ISLE pliances. !\laster suite & ltv-Serenely prlvitte, superbly ing room ~th !~ave lar_i:e built. Sculptured generously vie\\' balt'Onics. $a9,500 Call into -4,t's rustic setting. 494-8003 Striking dbl. frplc. 3 FUii (~L.J 1920 S. Coast llwy., L.B. OCEANFRONT CONDOMINIUMS 10 Luxury Residences 1000 sq. ft. to 3CKKI sq. ft $44,!lil> to $185,000 OPEN HOUSE garagt.>S. 4 BR., 4 ba .• family rm. & poolrm. On 90 r1. lot. $165,IXX) LIDO REALTY • I \7; I'" I ,,1, \ II *673·7300* NEWPORT SHORES Doll house 3 & fll.m .. $44 ,900 Sunny 3 BR, 2·sly ...• $44,900 Lge. lot: 4 BR. 3 ba •• $48,500 A·F'rame, 3 BR ...... $52,900 Decorator's 4 BR ... $53,900 On the 1\•:t1er. 4 Bdrrns., you 011•n land; ~·il1 beach. Only 2 blocks to ocean or bay on pres· Coast Hwy. R·2 lot. Nev.•ly 1L decor. A good buy! WE CAN HELP vou auv, tigious Peninsula Point. 5 Bedrooms, 37:.: * * * * * * * SElL. oA TRADE A HOME Baths, billiard room, ,vet bar, separate family FRESHLY d ecorated, \1·allpapl'red dining area, Tu'O-Story llvmg room \Vllh shag carpets .~ custom c~~edral ceilings, forrf!al dl"RIX'S. oversized pantry d1rung .and . .sunken family area near schools walking room With fl.replace and wet • ' H ,·, 1 bar. A great 4 bdrm., 2~ u1s1ancl' to . u n 11 g 0 n bath home with lots of ex· Center, S1v11nmLOg ~I nnd tras including central air. n1any park areas. Pnce re. $50 000 dure<f 11000. Now $j()() below 'cA· LL 552 7500 10 AM :TO 4 PM DAILY 496 Cliff Dr, Laguna Bch 494.5572, Realtor tn1dt', N.S .. , , ..... $79,500 \Ve ha\"C rentals $325 Up. CAYWOOD REALTY n1arkct value. Call today ~ * SU-1290 * ANYPLACE IN THE NATION $119 500 CALL 540.1151 charming cottage on R·2 I ~;;;:::::;;;;~.;;;~;;,i;;~;;,;;;!:::.1 room. ' · ' lot; plenty of room to build. I• FRONT Owner will carry T.D. General General OCeAN MORGAN REAL TY An unusual hon1e on a BIG _-.:84.c.:.1..:.:.309s VISION $36,950 Laguna Hills 2 Story Bavfront I PRIVATE DOCK CONDOMINIUM MAY NOT BE DUPLICA~· 673--6642 675-6459 ove1"1Sizcd lot. •ln quiet cul· * Balboa Bay Properties * ED again in Newport Beach. Rare opporturu-SPYGLASS HILL ~~·~c; e r Iso1~~,':~vc~~1;f~~ RE~TY RF.AL'1'9RS ty to Jive on the oceanfront fo~ less ~ban Ca talina vieiv, giant tot. pool. area! {4 King size bl'!';) Univ. Park Center, lrvme -SAY AVE. NEWPORT SHORES $100,000. Top floor \vith sensationa l v1e\v, landscaped, beaut . dee .. 4 Fcaruring a chi 1 d r e n · s e red hill Pool. " Bdrn1. 3 bu. 2 (epic's w/lhcrupe uti c pool. &14-T.i25 $199,000. AS.SU'l\1E 1¥.io/o WAN 3 BR., 2 BA. CondO. garage. $27,900. CAPRI Realty Lido Isle 4 Uni ts-$75,000 Newly redec. 3 BR., 2 security building, subterranean garage, ele-BR. 3 bas, 2 frplcs, By wing! Glass garden kitchen, ''Don't Dream OCEANFRONT ba. Enlarged liv. rm. Ab-t o\•.'ner. 64<kl736. · views, tree~studctcd t'Elar lot. T -·.I_ ~ 11 N'fty duplex l>Olu te sUper·sbarp cond. zaB~~room, 2 balh . -. '' $7 1,000 DUPLEX by owner, ~tlafn\. 'Ifug'c' nfaRng llrcp!ace! Big 00 ·..uftCJ SO Ft. Nord Corner SmaShing Contfmpon.uy 4506 sq. fl. · 4 Bdin1s. ~ . 9iti~ ,155000' 6·75-7060 Walk to beach. $48,500. 2 Bedroom, 1 bath, $69.,500 ing separate 2 BR house fa1nily arc a 1v1.un~que Come see this lovely 3 br. o;i · & 1 BR gahlge apt. open detorator (.'tirpct, 1n-uoor 1;,. bath home in N. Tustin BURR \\'1-HTE REALTOR '64 __ 2_·_7_4_9_1. ______ 1 CALL 540-1151 Sun. ~-6. 718 Orchid. laundry. No down t.o area.Large double yard. 2901 NE\\'PORT. N'PT BCH Sundl"Ck $179,500 MESA VERDE I BALBOA PENIN. LUXURIOUS H.V.H. 4 Bf veterans or assumc O\\rner s ShO\.\'S like a model. Only 657-46.10 or 640-1066 loan interest government $29,900. Submit your down SINGLE LEVEL Golf Course Drive by & see beaut. ERITAGE & r. rm, pool, reduced to loan payable $193 per 100. payment or assume 51,.4 • BLUFFS "LINDA" . . ht t h d t ct S93,500 inc. land & tennis BKR 962-5511 F~llA IORn. 8J8....6255 Open REALTOR 675-4562 11th Green is rig a ome un er cons ru ., membership. 644-2975 "°'""==-~~~~:: 3 BR, 2 ba, corncT lot, deep your back door. 3 BR. 21 corner I Street & Balboa REA' ·:rORS CORONA Del Mal' duple< .. $30,.950-No Down G .I. Even;ngs. LIDO ISLE-$65 000 0 ;1e •l'phng, privaie pat;.. ba. home w/pool. 3 Car Blvd. Call us Jor details. I. best location, by owner, call Spacious 4 lxlrm. 2 bath ' ht ight consider lease option. gar •74 500 5"8800 673-7420 \!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; &14-7701 ! home \.\oi.lh family-droom. · ch t 1. $69,500. I].. . . ~ RE. ALTO.RS . I] I BuHt-ms dW>wa<bOI', ;,;,,g Walker & Lee Here ;, "'"' anre 0 ""' CORBIN-MARTIN NEW 5 BR. Spec1acular vu. area. EnCl()S('d pat i o . on Lido & enjoy prestige 2 503 Hazel, $125,000. Open Beautifully landscaped . Jus1 •t•l t •1~'' by the sea. Your O\.\'TI ~tinl REALTORS 644-766 General daily, 10-1, Bldr, 6Ta-ll39 2 miles lo the beach! Call Castle. Just steps lo the * BAYSHORES * 4 Local Offices to Serve You Genera l Costa Mesa 962-5566. BY O\VNER • On super beach. Vacant & th 1 e owner New \isling! Approx. 2500 E HOME ] greenbelt 1vfbike Ir ia I , will even carry the oan. MOBIL SALESPEOPLE ( TARBElL I a\.\·ard·\.\'inning Appaloosa. Herbert llawkins Rcaltol'!I ~I-fl., 4 BR & fam. rin,. General "House Of Glass" 2 Min. To ,Beach Pool FOR SALE· 963-5681 Steps 10 beach. $130.000 Inc. SILVERCRE5T N:0%~~. e:~~~;'~~~ ~~g~~e:y ~en~ o~~~~ . ~ ' ~,;~th~~~n~e!~~~~-~'. -FANTASTIC 8t1Y :'~"ft~h~r. ~ar~11),n ~!~~ - -p =r-u: MOBILE HOME-. ALIZED TRAINING. A con· from the ocean. F {l ll r . Wl.S..M!iU~~ . beaut. lndscp'd., in area of Back door to beach walk. CAYWOOD REAL TY 3 Br. 001 nome Z)' x 53' 2 BD 2 BA, carp., genial office in the best l.lcdrooms, three ha I h s' more expensive homes. " br + bay vu. !'\ow $10,000 .. &12·6033 * GUEST QUARTERS draped, bit-ins., re~g.. Corona de! Mar location. A family room and living 9017 Adants, H.B. __ Mas1cr plan. comm. $56,000. less lJurry• Open Sun 1--~..,-.'C.,OO:..:C:::::-0-=--I G ene ral washer & elec. dryer, wired top commission plan and room \.\'ilh fir r. P 1 ace . 5:'.>1·3916. 1 Spm·. 425 V1a Lido Nortl.· PALATIAL 4 BR. One of a kind pool home on for 220 air cond .. kitch. superior bonus plan. There Locnted on a cul de sac TRIPLEX TURTLE ROCK BROA0.6 ""'"":..':.:'::."::.·------Plush, lorrn'nl decor. Dlnln:: TiiAT'S RIGHT! 2 minute large Jot in quiet cul-de-sac. clock, storage shed, land-are ample parking facilities lot near the Marina Vic\\' Only $59,500. .r.·tOOR model townhouse. Mission Viet' 0 & fa1nlly rrn11. 3 Car -:;.ir11r,e. walk to beach -Bright Jias separate guest quarters scapcd patio. Three yrs. old for your customers and con· P~rk. Dr_ivc by 1853 Park Best Hunt ington ·Beach Joca· CQJTIP upgraded, wallpaper,1:.::::;::;:::_::.::::!::____ Comer, vie v.• lot. $198,500. cheery living room. SI'ONE for in.Jal'!•s or ?? NO DO\\'N • like nu. l..o"alcd in new sislent advertising support. Vista Circle, then call 1. d crp1g & drps, OOvd patio, Only $'"50 Down ---GEMrt'---REPLACE d. . TO VETS I d I d I k ! n> no•··y "2 l""n lion. E.xtra large ul' rooms. beaut Id•.• pd, nev•I' l•"v-" -" FI 1n1ng room · ow own o a u t p . a11·ay ro ., For your confidential ap· /".,~ ... -.. ~ .............. ,... ....... 1 ~2J z Bdrm + 3 Bedm1 ...... ~ Brand new 3 bedroom, 2 -huge family room -others. Hurry! \Von't last! St. One-half bl. from club-pointment. Call: o\i•n<'r"s unit ii·ith firi.>place. in. Occur 411. 3BR, famnn, ba ho 1 120-F Tustin Ave., I'/ B. MAGNIFICENT K1TCHEN $31,500. house. $15.495. Call EVES. ~BR~&ATHS , , 2c gar. J>l1-1n No. 3. Pvt. th me on a r g e REALTORS f424623 outside eating bar. GAS 213-694·4690, 697-TI52. _John.Allard,_Manager 2-Srory. Step-down Jiving nn. A t'1'al steal.. 832·7614 or 8.U.2438. ~';mi~~~l~ ~/:~ f~~ d~ EASTBLUFF Condo, by -B.B.Q~ -F-JRERJNG 1 --BaCl<Bay Custom CAN BE SEEN AT: 644--7270 with cozy frplc., family r1n. ITAUtJQj•mt1i.:!z:!!:' UNrYERSITY PARK , dishwasher. cathedral ceil· owner, X·Plan. Formal D.R. Beautiful cleark wattchr Immaculate large 3 bed CRESTMONT & fenced yard. -·:..-'--:!~!!!Chancellor hocne. SBR, 2 12 ing. Rear Jiving rm, 3 Br, 2~ Ba, F.R., paUo. POOL.BoCity P~1~ert t ~ room cusiom home 0~ ESTATES, ALL FOi{ $49,laO 962-4471 ( ::::.} 546·810l BA. Across lro1n pool, ten· fireplace. 3-car garage. Split level. incl. rec. tacil. fence. al g_ai c · ? a estate size let. ~iany bltn l051 Sile Dr., BreP. Central RIVIERA REALTY nis cts, greenbelt, corner . Trailer access. Full price, $6i,OOO. 832·5888. 6#0533. down take &!vantage JUSl B 149 Broad\.\•ay, c:~t --Bv 01\rner. $.i6,500. CALL SJ8 500 Qill 586-9210 · N~••'P()RT SHORES by listed. 963-£16'i. ~a~~~·!!~~c&1~~wg~:~ ~~m.a~p.) fror:!t s":s~ * 642~7007 * REPOSSESSIONS C\LL 5.52-9610. ( ' . ] o~. 2 BR, 2 BA, F .R. appt to see -only sn.ooo. CONTACT RAY, PK. ~1GR. FOR SALE BY OY.'NER For information and location RED CARPET REALTOR TARllLL. larger lot, $•15,000. J\fomln't"S THE REAL E5TATERS FOUR BEDROOM MESA VERDE Ontu~21 $10l'~2seaho7wmg;·~·0~!~·~!!n l\.tes<i Verde sleeper: 4 Bdrm of these FHA ,I',,. VA homes, O\VNER'S In Ohio!·l\.1ust Sell ~ 547-4311 or .eves &12-5836 I I. 1 / contact . 1 y_r. new 2 sty view home. NE\ ho . H LONELY 3 BR 2 Bath, rg. iv. nn. am. 4 Br + 2 Ba. VA terms V HRr r View ome, din. nn .. lndry rm. Covered KASABIAN or assume 7% Joan. 962-4495 Portofino. Fantastic view, Charming but vacant 3 BR! palio, shake roof, dbl. gar. Real Estate 962_6644 1 ~==""''°oclc.La=~P='az"'..:M;:·ccV.c. ~ Open Sal & Sun I-5. 640-tl.61 IT'S TRUE JUST OFF THE Modem kitchen, carpeting, concrete dr. Fresh paint & Laguna Beach WVELY 4 BR home wf2 BAYCREST owner 4 Br, 2~ TER' 123 500 t 0 t 1 drapes, priva te patio, tree-Immaculate inside & oot! SELLING pat•·"'· 11 en"IO""'''· for sale Ba r R 2 rp a·-·-e \\'A · ' a shaded street. near \Vest· \Valk to ever-vthing! $13.900. Th F• L"f " ' -5 :sl•·'-·,·174.°"'. o•o =.-,-.. 1797 Orange, CM 642-lm price! $1.275 T 0 TA L •;? e 1ne I e by owncr/agt. $ 4 0 .500 ·1 ..:'-"-.'.C'""-!o.:::'=:N..:~=='c:..._ OO\VN! Stylish kit chen New cliff shopping. \Viii sell or Call 714-54&-2457 Your Horne? Tl 1 It f 0 Com p. upgraded in every YOUR HOME appliances. Breakfast bar. trade at S39.500. Submit PANORAMIC Catalina view. Cash in 24. hours for your ie most e11:q_u ~ e. 0 r· respect. Call 586-1592 aft Newport Heights SUNKEN your terms!! C!!l! &15-8~00. By owner. 5 BR. 4 BA, -equity. No hidden costs/ ange Countr hv~ng 111 to be 6 AT THE BEACH ~'1:~~$'i{'K,~· p I T ! 9 offlCES & GR()N/NG· US! spacious 2-story, xlnt cond, delays. No obligations. 15 fou nd at this pnvare r~sor1 pm, Open 1.5, LIKE NEW SHAG I In the coveted single fan1ily Push-button gas firep!ace! v. E. ·~O\tllnl & Co. ~~hce~~~y·~a~. $58.~. ~RAsiH~lARreR.~AL TY. ~~I ~eu~c~g~:~ t~ei!;! cr~og;~~~t. v~;;~. 3 b~i~ Newport Heights ASSUME VA LOAN residential area South of the Ankle-deep ca r Pe I in g · R....i r.-. ~ _. bdrms. & access to pnv. dsh1vsr, range, air cond & 500 Bern a rd in o Ave., l·llvy in Corona de! Mar. Private patio. Community l ~r§~~;;;;;:;~;;;;;:;; NO\V REDUCED TO $5;.i,500 842-7411 Eves: 968-1178 tennis c:ourts, lhe pool & trp\c, +1ile entry, all. gar Ntv.'port Beach, Califomla You can assu111c the Ii,./~ VA An approximately zmo sq. POOL! One year new! Total' By owner 4 BR. den & !ge the beach, Condominium. ,&~pa~te:l'~""~V;;,":.:·..:83<>-:;:::c:;129=1--l living at Jlg beet, In· Joan 11·i1h paynu:nt.~ of ft. 3 BR 3 BA ho1ne 1vilh down $1,275. Take ad· lam rm. Master Br & den WA.L.K TO BEACH $88000 Newport -Beach doo r fou tdo o r living. $21)1/mo or you can buy family room-& huge mai;ter vantage! Ca.II now 963-6767. upstrs. Open I-5 Sat & Sun. ONL y $19,950 ' · ~ f\.lodern country kitchen ~·~~thi~~ ;(~S ~<~r :~:s,j b~:n o~~~d~ne hlock from ~[.OPEN UL i . IT'S FUN TO BE NteE1~ Great. for year round living g.~21~~g67~364 BR , Ts~;ry 'C~~~~~I c~~~j~~~· ~~ .,,,/"rO /an PENINSULA ~7:l~ing r ~lass com== hr 1'1esa \7erd~· 11ith 1 year 11106oa0500n .be yours .for only & close to the village 3 2 BA on huge corner """ts dl'ps Df\V And REAL ESTA'JE BUNGALOW garden rm, 2 lovely br, 2 old shag and ~-ro~c lu -' yr old Bavarian style 3 l~v.;:1 assum~ 7% In at $275 mo: ~=~Y:-tUms. ' · II"\ be., qualify carpeting & cverythiru.: 10<.:at11ln. lit't\l'r Call for Details · home with open beam cetl-Bkr 548-771.J.; eves 557-4617 SCOTT REAL TY 1190 Glenneyre St. R·2 NEAR d ra P e s , de Ii g ht f u I Hurry & t:all :H5-!H!ll. 644-72ll lngs thru-out, 3 br 2 ba CONDO, hfesa Verde Villa, ~7533 494.g.173 549-0316 WATER OWNER neighborhood, SS J '5 0 0 . Wa"l~~.~'~'.Lee '... I ' '• ,_E,,..-,,,-BBaho•c-a~":'et~i;:•-Ylon""--1.,..-.e ;:e~m~:t~~~'".:;' ~~ ~·~ ~'i;,i.,"";..~';':' ow NE R I'. oo o a,. 4 Bedrms •. + Pool • ANXIOUS OwPA~O~A;; Lndry facilities. $36,500. Bdrm 2 Ba l ao•umoble V .. \ l•·,n. Sbal'p Fantastic family home Ill f .> (2'") 451 -aftel' 6pm ol' SHARP 3 , • pv ,,.. "' Hiii 4 1 Price just reduced or 3ru View of bay ~an & harhor ~ ~ ti "e Verde 'By n.~anai ..... 4 hr + fam rm Lagunn . s. a r g e ti·m· • Own•I' driving to • ' -· anylime v..-eekends. pa o. "' sa · '""-""'2 b ·~ 2'Z70 552 9503 bednns, Big Pool. Great .. " lights. Brilnd new 4 bdnn., -RE·D-UC-ED_$4.000-.-1 FIXER DUPLEX aw'h'.'.'awgaen. tF~e~~~~.'e,c~:= ._...~ owner. ~ + a. ;l()u-i or -~ school dist. All this + 7% ~~~dQto ~~\. t~W:rkthi~ 2 ba.: plush carpel! thruout. v ,.. •.ru• $23,50'.l. Supei' starter home EAS"I'SIDE TriP.lex. H:ome + BEAOI GIANT! 4 BR assumabll' VA Joan. Can't 2 Frplcs., 2 balconies, & By O'>l.'ner for qui1.:k sale. I Best peninsula location! R·3 hoi:n.es are for ¥Ou! Ex· close to beach. ,\ real cutie., cottages on quiet st. $45,000. den + 3 ba.. $48,950. 9682 last 646-77U Price at $47,950 again.~t the best In many extras! 3 BR. 2· 13A hon1c in Jot-Private financing. 01vn· qu1s1tely set on view bluff. Call 847-6010. Agt. I 64~1407 /545-4287. Scotstoun. 968-8273 Bkr. · anything on market in this See u torhcy! $79,00) I paddocks room for area. Owner will help Cli ffhavczi. HJl.XJ Cliff Dri\"f'. er 11ill trade on home or flOO ~· • Call t finance. Add one uni ! . CALL ~ '46•1414 Ne\\'IJ(>li Bt!ui.:h. S59.5!)0. incon1e . Orange, LA or tenn~s courts. or Completely remodclcrl Jn. 9!~ ~ Open house dail.v. 5~8··1192 San Diego Co~ Asking details. ETI $@~.{flM-~-CtfQ." Walker I! Lee side A choice in""sirncnt .....,., or eves 6~2·1l:l:!. S.'15,000 · Bl"ing hammer & PETE BARR .. J,..J \:) U at this price. Call 646-Till i£ALTV· VIE\V ocean fron1 baleony. paint brush!! Call 6.\~R<IOO. REALTOR •••L 11'"'1 Nt•r N'wpor1 P••t Ortic• This Slud;o "'.'" '"' 1;,"C·· g (Ff(IS&GKWING·.DNUS! --That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle +-MON, BAY-TE_R_~ place and l'OZY l'O!l\"Cl'Sfltion \'. ~:. l~Ol'l'U.nJ & Co. 642·5200 ------1''"' ~CLAY 1• ,Ou.AK A finely detailed 2 bdrm. Oceanside pit. Steal at S:!l,500. C,\LL M.al•:......-..... ~ home, recently built for the Walker & lee SAN MALO NOW? Agt. IM?.6(110. I QReorro~ ll'tttfl of th.• preN!'llt ownt!r. Completely llAL ,,,.,, General General CLOSE TO four xrombled word• be.. wood paneled, oak Ors., 60' beach frontage. San Malo I ;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I A GAS STATION law to form four alrnple words. huge formal dining rm. & BACK YARD L A R G E Is a priv bch communl\31 11 Well , 3 tong blocks; highly family rrn. l...ge. outdoor Jlv. ENOUGH FOR POOL ANO So. of Oceanside w/tennis upgraded, immac. Bfuffs I p U D X E L Ing area. FuD ocean view! TEl'jNIS COURT. Lot 70 x crts conforming Fr en ch rondo. TrinR model wtth 3 $145,000 170 with sirle drive for boat Normand>' arctiliecture. bclnns., 21-i baths, formal j 11 j j2 I TURNER ASSOC. and camper. Lovely 5 BR, $175,IXMJ dining area. Convenient to _ . . . . ll05 N. Coast llwy., Laguna extra large family room, RealOltoARLE• S D 1 U 213 NN 1 48C01~1BOO shopping &. recreation. Back 494-1 In 3 bath, new all modem C: F. "(:;\;5 1;criy I M A C H S 11 Iii.RAND NEW ~~~; ... C.:;.:;~ .,fa a i.:~k'. 1.s'-e"'n'-"C"l•,;;m,;o•c;n,;ol•;;..... ___ 1 E II I I I l I. OPEN SAT/SUN 168.500. -DUPLEX IF YOU WOULD CHOOS Realtors 64M020 ~====::::~ 1 / 4 BR * MONACO PERFECTO * A home of conservative elegance situated 4 Bdrm-No Down G.I. .. 1oa5 Oro $.G&,000 HVH, 2 BR + den/3 BR Low W~~~. P~rBi ~c~BR. in very desirable B~s loca tion with 4 bed-LoV<l.v Eastside Costa l.1esa I W E C I T I ! Th II 1248 l\1omlngalde $82,950 Sale loc, steps to park, pool, Tu'O car gara .. i C II o , On a .ch•tterbox: ey ca SPAC 67'1219 tchl Prof lndscp decor rooms and two v ews. . a u s now. ·1 '"''room. Has 2 both&. L... TRAN ~ · .L.~ b~ ~· .. ~ .: SHIELDS f"orced-air heating. Dining 1t I I' I j him "the Westernef," JJe\.llUSe deep ... _, •• c ..... , '"1Ull IJl GOURMETS ATTENTION ""'"· ,m,;cncy kitchen. • . . . • he comes into a room shoo1-ALMOST FINISHED -gas BBQ. $05,500 Fee. By REAL ESTA TE• · J b d h 'th Large used brick fin!plact. $43,750 Fully inl:uJallld. 2 ;o0wn:.::.:c.64::,:.:H033.;::;:;,,~=~--See this spacious e room ome v.•1 Enclosed front courtyllJ'd . r,--L-:O-:G-T:--:E;:-;B;---, 1 ing from --. z.,, BR, 2 ba. ~le, wnlk In EASTBLUFF 318 THALIA ~ou.nnet kitchen-large lot-many custom S:l2.500. Call ~l 720. A Compl•t• th• "diudd• quoted ~~h:g =~f11:~~ f~ Lusk 3 BR, tam rm, 2 bll., LAGUNA BEAC1l 494-8003 eat.or es. $86,500. { L.J I I I' I I "' by liHiny ,,.. the miulnQ' words Oro st' Owner 494-4288 full lnsula.tlon, prof lndscpd, University Ptrk mRnEl L_.L...L. -'-· -L. -L. -'· 3 bel ' many )t"lra.s, with view. 806 4 LIVE LIKE A DUKE , ~ you d•v•lop romitopNo. f:M. 6 LAGUNA Lot1,,., Terrific Aleppo, 644-J.848, U-Nl·VSRSlTY Park, Fa11tastic Bayshores with 182 !oot prime bay ocean' vu, l'IOft'buuddble at -Chenctllor Home, 58R., r&.m frontage. 4 bedrooms, 4'AI baths, la rge dock, A PRINT NUMBERED lETTfRS JN thhl llme, all 6 tor $12,CKXI. lt.V. Hms 5 br. Fam nn, rm, 2 Iii ha, acrosa from U ... THESE SOUA!t.ES Ter111s Huibel R . E. d.111 mt, 3 ha, Ira: lot. Npt pool, tenn1' couru., arte:n pool! 4 car garage. Of.fered at $495,009. POOL + bonus roo1n + I I • I I 833-uSs or 400-1731 tchls. $19,950. own t r , belt, cor. Jot, new I)' family room + tonnal ·() UNSCRAM8lE LETTERS TO I TRADE Lrg wtll·locattd ;833-~;;3894~==,...,.,....,....,..-decorated, b)' owner, $56,500 DIAL 644-1766 dinlr:<,t. Op<>n "t "\ r c.11 se , ;.=...!iG~!LT~A:!:NSW~~[~R----1.. -'"-'--'--1-.1.--' duplex for Ea1ldde C.M. BEACH HOUSE best area, principles onbi, caU 21).. 2142 San Joaquin Hiiis Rd., N.B. Bri,;:ht t bea ut I f u \ *' prop. Npt. Place Realty steps to ocean. $50,to>. 4 2 2-419 2, all 5:30 A COLDWELL BANKER co. fhmf;ngton "'""''"· Call SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFJCATION BOO m-ml Owner Call 675-244l!. n<-=0010 l!. .................................................. ~_~A~<i~·~to~""~·~M~7~-<lO~ID~.----~~~~~~:'._~~~~~~::__:::_:::::::::::.::::.:.:_:_::.:.:__:_.:.::__f ___ _.:::;:.:::::::...-~ ' •, ; " t ' n IY • [ ]~ Mobile Homes For Sale 125 MOBILE HOME • FOR SALE: 0 SILVERCREST MOBILE HOME 20' x 53', 2 BO 2 B> carp., draped, hll·lnJ., refrlg., washer & elect. dcytr, wired fOr 220 tllr cond., kitch. elock, 11torai-e Med, land- scaped patio. Thrl'C y'rs. old • like nu. Ux:11ted 111 Mw adu1t pk. awny from noi!ly St. Onti-h11U bl. trom club- house. $15,49-5. Call EVES. Zll·G\!4-4690, 61!"7152. CAN BE SEEN AT: CR.EST MONT ESTATES 1051 Site Dr .. Brea. (Central A vc. across from Brea Comnt. Hosp.) Lot #46, CONTACT RAY, PK. MGR., for showing. 12' x 52' h1obilc Ho1nc Ocean view, 5 Star adult Newport Beach Park. No pets $6500. 646-801R Evenings MOBILE llon1c, 10 x 50 ft. Adults. Near bea<:h-poot, jacuzzi, Club Ho 11 s e . 536-7236 ' NEW cus101n bh beauty in adult park an the hny. $18,500. 67:>--0Tl,'( WATERFRONT Cahana. Adults only. $13,000. CRIJ 548--0553 or 675-1996. Re\! Ettat1, 0oaM~ Commercial Property 158 .. ~ln_c_o_m..;•_;.P,;.ro"p°"o;;,r,;.IY:_._.:1,;.66; I Mor t91ges, Houses Unfurn. 305 Houses Unfurn. 305 TownhouH Unlum. ~35 Apt. Unfum. Monday, February 18. 11174 36 Apt. Unfurn. DAIL V PILOT Apt. Unfur!'1. San Clemenle 19 365 Reduced! Price ls -lowered to $61 .500 on lhia well located Casta Mesa 4-J)lex ... close to till l!bops and jobir. About 8.5 Hnie:s {Cl'O$S makes lhll; a very saleuble invei.tment. Tr<nt DHd1 2601---------j,;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~;;;;j!::C~o,'Cro~n~1=d:•:I :Mo=·=--L19un1 Be•ch Newport Beach' 2ND TRUST DEEDS SEAWIND FANT/l,$1'JC, O=n View. 2 BA. 3 br lownho.-o in TM To borrow on yoor Rt-al N T S I Brand nu lrg cUJtom 2 br, llluff$, Avail.· Mru-ch J.st. Estate, Invest for good ext 0 PYCJ ass 2 Bn. Lt-g deck ovtrlookins: Call aft 6 pnl, or wkndli, yield, or »ell cx.i!Hng note. VIEW Boat Canyon. Lease. Gas 1 _•_>J..<_11_0_. ------ Call us Signal Mortg&gt! Co. ulil pd. 497~2630 345 (TI4) 556--0106 3 Bedroom, 2 bath hon1e, "L"a:.:.g"u"n'-a"H'°"'n"'i,"------I Duplexe1 Furn. W 1 S · fireplacti, formul dining, • 9th treet lO'JI., SACRIFICE on solld 1st sel/--c.:lean.ing ovc·n. Enjoy NEW 4 BR home, cpts, drpis, 1 _B_1_lbo_1_P_•_n_in_1_u_11 __ _ Good strip C'1nler on 300' x TD, 4~ years $13,000 a.t 8% private oontmunity tennis & dishwshr, fncd In yd . Ball>oa Penlnsula NEWLY redccorntt-d a.nd carpeted. 1~ &. 2 Rr, f'.P. Carugr. oatio. Yrly lea1>e. Only $300 1110. Ne!Son RoblnSQn, Rltr, 200 Main at Balboa e 6'r'.>-3120 e Capistrano Beach E~st Bluff e DELUXE e *NOW AVAILABLE* 3 BR, 2 BA apl 1or lease. Rra11d Now Gur()en Apta Incld s1mc. roaster suite, dln Xlnt &111 Clt1nentc Area rm & (ibl uart1~""· Auto door 2 BR. :? B.A. $19$ opener ava11. Pool & J~etreu. 3 SH, 2 BA , \Vlth d~hwsr uon at't>tt. Pb: 64-1·8004. & f.ireplacc. $250. e m1 e All opts. huvc private patio!!, SGS AmlgQs Wuy, NB many other lt'atures. Seti Managed by al s.~ Camino De Los 280' conter lot. Room ft')r Int., PIJYS $164 mo., 642·3573. swimming pool in th is $335.rno. S4o..5000 ext. 482 2""'~rtc'rd~15whrui"cl~~v.ut1fat~O an adclitionul. 12,000' of Im-I --'-'-'-''-'-"----'---1 pre!ltlgious area a bo v ~ wkdas before 4, 673--0216 "' .., U6 provements:. OWC large TD Houses Furnished 30Q Corona dcl Mar. $495 pet' wknds Pets. Nr, ocean. 675-8531 \\IILWAfl \VAL TE:RS C.P. M111·es, Just south of San OCEAN V\V. Ne1v 3 br, t bl\, Huntington Beach Clc-n1ente Genera.I Ho!lpltaJ. Wtna, crpt/drp!i , wash/dryr. ";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! use 1'.:strl:'lle Olf•rl\mp at low rate or interest.. Of· month -lease. 644-4687. 2 nd San Clemente 1ered f 300 3 BR, ha. co o, cpts, or$ ,000. · General CUTE CO'ITAGE· 2 BR, d:rps; gar., pool. $265. ~&J-'2'-.1"1"'55~·~~~---• **493-0I'11 •• Corona del Mar t!':J>A~~:~:T 2 ~eoJll\1. be-ncl!side apt, B • I S frplc. Nr. Big Corona. $275. C.pri Realty 644-7525 rlSfO treet $U5 -UTIL Pd. Bachelor 4 mo's rental. Kingaard RE. Laguna Niguel \\!ell built three-year ol~ apt. Prlv. patio, LAGUNA. 642·2222 11i r-cand It ion l?d 6.300' $160 UTIL PQ. 1 BR, 3 °'c"'osc:t=a=M~e-sa_____ THE SHORES hulldtng on 31,630' ""V..-.1 blks becich. Lagun{l. SPACIOUS, 1nodem 2 BR du· pll':X <'On1Pletely furn, ex· ~'t'Jll llne.1s. Gardener, pool, lvely view. $170, No last. 496-7245 \\•lmds. ,.. ~ $175 REDEC 1 BR wig""' Attractive ocean view deck, lot -hetwe .. en Slln Die'"'o -"'•COUNTRY Retr et1t • ,ml pet Corona del Mar 111;\v 4 BR, easy 1nalnt. Duplexes Unfurn o.nd CdM freeways -t.'Ur· · · Channer~ 2 BR hsc. Quiet Beanled ceilings. Sclf-clea.n • rently set up for food pro-S215 • 2 BR, frplc. c~rpol't, neighborhood, st>eludcd at oven, Cp1/drps Security Balboa Peninsula 350 cessi ng, retailing and coffee 1 blk beach, Bal. Peninsula. end of cul-de--sac. Lrg fncd ' be h "50 . I $250 2 BR trplc Carport 2 ·i 1 gate. Near ac , ,,... inc .1 ----------$hOp, Uelow replacement . -• · · ' yard. Pets ok. ch• ( rcn , __ l'Olt at S22S,OOO. prtv. patio, Coronn de! ,_1ar. ok, Want reliable 00111)\<: w/ UJJe or pool, tennis courts. 3 BR 2 BA, nr nu Bayuvnt NU-VIEW RENTALS at least 1 child. S200/MO. 23682 Sidney Bay 49~769. !rplc, closed gar, WI DI 673-4030 ar ill)4.,3248. Cftll Marla, 646-1482 wkdayM 4 BR, 2 BA. Liv. rm & ~~: ~~~: ~r./l-smo. be1vaJ'. 1 BR house, CM, S1 l5. 2 aft 4 , Sat/Sun all day. Din area. Frplc, bit-ins, 673--0886 alt 6 & wkends. BR, $140. Wal k t6 watct', 3 BR, 2 BA. FIR, DIR, crpls/drps, patio, Z.ca.r gar, 1 Br house, HB,$125. 2 BR L/R, New G r e en b r ook \Vork shop. View. lnunac. Huntington Beach $140. Bachelor unitg, Npt home. 992 Carnation, Cl\IJ. $360 1st, last & deposit. Ca11 675-0771 ~2544 2 BR + DEN. ~ ba, crpts, Bch, Lag. Bch, $115. Agt.1-~=-~-~---AVAILABLE now, new 3 BR drps, washer, d I' ye r' Fee. 979-8430 * 3 BR, 3 BA Townhouse. 2 lxt near ocean w/vie\v, cls.h\\o'Sl', fenced yd, dhl. car Balboa Penin1oula $350/1110 • less on lease. $350 pol'l. t.'lany extras. 5~2651 Pool, garage. 833·1653/ BrokCr 493-36ll aft 12., 45• Bayrront pier, fioat. 5 833"8974. 1=o="---~---"-'-"= l~"-"~~B~-.h--- Br, 4 Ba, winter ar yrly, liURRY! 2 BR, 2 sty, $ZlO ~port Beach Newport eac NEW 2 Br split Irv, w/\11 crptg & drps, 3 blks · fron1 ~ach. 319 ilellotrope, Cd?-.1. Call 557-6543 blwn 8 & 5 for details ri1on-Fr i. S:,95/nio. RUSTIC 2 br ho1ne. Close 10 bench,~. !!hops. Fireplace, yard, carpet, stove & refrig. $300. n10. Ph. 675-30.SS eves & weekends. NE\V 2 story 3 BR duplex unit 11•. lots or space, s1orage, prl\!fl<'Y K: ('harnt. Lease $360. 833-1141 or &l&-6075. l BR Apt v.·ith gar across from park and tennis - beam ceilings bu i I t -in s . $200/nio. agent. 644-7211. 2 BR, 1 BA. cal'pt.'lS, drapes, fireplace. Pool. $225/MO. 675-0562 (t1.rp., pool, frpl c.. ll'.arage, 2 Ult. Bltn.s, n 0 \v I Y $200 Pr-r n10li lh. dCL'Ol'atcd, encl gnrages. STUDIO apt. with poo l, -on UCautilul landscaping. L.rg the beach, Sl40 r.·Io. play are11, a Child's drearn. RE:A!.,TOB. 833-9293 Close tv shopping & scJtl.s. t:h1lt1:re11 wel1..'0111e. 11-12-7:!31; Santa Ana 11 nu &us 1>'17-7J31. BHANU NEw APTS • 2 & Now Renting •••• 3 l:S l' Ur o o 1n, .Fi.rcphu:cs, NEW 1·2 & 3 BR's. Park-like patios or sundt:cks. S:t:el !iel" settlngs. H.cc, room. Pool. 1111). to $300. per mo. Play ai-e~1s. Patios & tot Children accepted. f'~ir~t & lots, Gus & \Vatt•r Pd. Shag, L.i.~l nioulhs 1-Cnl. Cull W:::\pes ,'i,: :SO 10~·1h! 536--0817 t.1anu.gt>r Starting at $169 + dep, 2 Br, ..:al'pls, drapes, Blt·uis, Newhope Mead~w1 carporLs, l I.Ilk 10 st·h Apt1. shopping & freeway, 1 child 517 S. Ne\vhope, S.r\. ok NO f=>t::TS. Call M6-37Sti 554.2600 I or 545-0760 6TJ-203S Appliances available. • TENNIS BUFFS ACROSS st from ocean, ---""'"-'=----1Homefinders 547-9641 nearly nu dlX upper, 4BR. Costa Mesa 1 Bn house, s115 u1i! pd. Only steps ·10 tenni.<> court, 3BA, frplc, bean1 ceils, . . Xlnl Adult Condos. 2 BR, \V ALK to Beach, schools & 2 BA $165 nw. 3 BR 2 golf. 1, 2 & 3 BR's. 1'~.l'plc's, BA, '$185 n1o. 631 ' S. covered garage. l-.1,gr s Apt Falrvie1v, Sanla Ana. Call Avail. 410 21st St. !·Ill. 836-4206 Agent 2 BR, I BA Duplex .. Nt>wly Go/1-0558 painted. Fully carpcotcd. ~w=A"L"'K"""=i °'O"""B"E~A~C=H~ Sunset Beach S22:>1n10. 675-675--1. ·c1 S1\•in1ming pool from NE\V crpts, drps, yrly $450. avail STUDENT & Sim:les! I BR. 2 BR,Sl50, gar, ki s/pets. 3 tiedroom, (or 2 & den). approx March 15, eves & ~1obile home, $115. Agt. 1'~ce. 97S-8430 formal dining, fireplace, sell wkends, 644-5133 Successor to Homefinders 547·9641 NEAR ne1v, comp I et e I Y ('leaning oven, beautiful Can· I-'=='-'-""='----~C_o_s_ta_M_e_•_• ____ _ COL\VF.LL Properties, Inc. rcrurb., executi ve t Y Pc yon view/night lights. Im· Duplexes, - 8 U 'ts Houses Unfurn. 305 home, 3 Br, $295. 642-2755 mediately available. Located Furn. or Unfurn. 355 nl ----------!WON'T Last 2 BR Duplex, high on the hills of l~arbor i ----------1 QO/o Spendable General $150. Gar & kids OK. View Hills. $495 per month. Eight freshly painted units. -'----------Homefinders 547~9641 641·<1687. 1\vo buildings. No vacan· $ LANDLORDS $ 4 BR. 2 ba, all bHns. Fned 3 Bdrnl • 2 Ba. near ~an, cics. 12'Y,1 down with 10')~ We Need Your Listings yd, gar, crptldn>s. S325 rnu. feed lhe ducks on the 1.;ash spendable. One block So l-lelp Us · We'll l-lclp You 54~·7645. channel, inside patio, Newport Beach LRG 2 Br, 2 Ba, nu cpts & drps. $250 mo yrly or $210 nto til Jw1e. 548-4802 10 major shopping. Perfect Save time & Dollars . . . 1 ~~--------com1n. pool, tenn i s , Orange County location. Full $ ALA RENTALS $ LRG 2 br home, cpt s, stave, clubhouse, quiet one·way Price J·usl $116,000! Take Newpcrt & Bay, CM 642-8383 refrig, fncd yd, gar. Adults. str1..>et outside view, steps Apt<. Fu':,'.'_· ---3-6~ PINECREEK 'ce$1C'8:0'5.,;6:,73-~l827"7,"6~13-0~26cc-7~-to the blue pacific.· Lease advantage. Call t 0 d a Y ALA RENTALS 10UPLEX for single rent. $350 1no, 64&-7767, 642-3850, Balboa Peninsula LIVES UP 833·3305. &<6-4172 $35 WEEK & UP TO ITS NAME INVE:SmrNT DIVISION wE Sl'ftlA.llIUN_stitvKt crpL~. dt·ps, kit, yd, util. ~==·~==~~~o ~~-lilj-11!;-!I~ Imn1ae. 242 Flo\ver (rear). HARBOR VIEW HILLS e Sleeping Rooms Over 500 tall trees and JU ~ ~ ! f '. • f-lousekeeping Rooms tre .0 t fall [ '. I tfU ~~;::.· :0~;~·~n ::":~. •Jt-in<. 'fn~~~k n1!1 Mr::;:;; • 0"B"A~soAAf~N ~~~i'~:.~l~~~,:~~i~~r 1.J. -· NEW-IT, BAY,C.M. 641•8383 2 car garage. s...,·1m pool. club, 547-1345, 558-3003 1U5 Matn~treet bedroont apartment. Frcn1 r"' f 675·8740 $170. Furiiiture avaih:ible. 1 & 2 Br, Crpts, drps, Bllns, ELEGANT nu 2 Br, loft , garage. 308 16Lh St. 536-216:> frp!c, hlrins, inc I ras h or 847-3957 n1ashe1'. \\'/O, bucked into --NEAR BEACH 1-Iunt. Harbour Si\6-1414 or Brand nt.'1V 2, 3 & 4 llr, cpt1 cc84~1Ml-=5'-'1t _______ 1 drps, blfns, gar. 221 16th Apts., ol' 51-118th St. 847-3957 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 COMFY 2 BR w/cpts & drps, e11cl. gar., 2 7 18 Balboa Peninsula Florida. Avail 3/1. Call ,....,. 960-13:::9 2 BR, 1 ~ii BA, stv/reu q:; only, bak_'Qny, enel r,.;e d $14~2 BR. C~ts, drps, stove, patio, $150 mo, inquire at gar. Poo l. 17361 J(eel_son lll' apt c. :\15 I'.:. Bay. Cali Beach & S~ater. K1~s 01· 673-1521 or 548-ml pct ok. 8<12--0389, 842-4504 EXTRA J, . 2 Br, 2 Ba, de-Corona del Mar luxe poolside apt. Nr. beach. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\ $175. 2320 Florida. 536-5882 Dl:.'LUXE 1 BH. apt, $lli0, .... "' Industrial Property 168 NEXT TO YWC/i.. 3500 SQ: FT. TILT-UP In Santa Ana. Zoned high Good area -of Santa An.l. rise. ln financial & civic u Years old. $37,500. Ov.•ner center. 7bx125. $15,txx:l Dwn. \Viii carry 1st trust.deed. ON the very best part al the coast. 1 blk to marvelous bch, 29,500 SQ 1'~ conimercial property on main blvd in Carlsbad a t $2.98 fJCr SQ r r. Les.' 6'111 it co mm ission unnecessary, Channing old reconditioned 2 Br, house on property. 2-100' business St. frontage. Owner (213) 446-4431 $71).bills pd. Sip & shower, Kids ok., S2GS/mo. No ce. HBR VU $575. nio. New 2 Office open 9:00 to 6:00. 2:\00 "" "· sip, sho...,•er & shave. Agent ·842-4421 . sty 3 or 4 Br, 31h Ba, Costa Mesa F . . Rd Co , -f D R bo airview ., sla n1esa. '9().BACl-1 on water foc ·guy-. Huntington.-·beach •• · arp. rm,.·' " ~~s rnJ, ,..,.$30 W~EK'& UP ·• 'Phone: 515-2300. • MOBILE Hms-1 Br. $125. util Pool & tennis. 640-1127; pd., 2 BR, furn $130. Avl. 3 Br Condo, 10 blks from. c-~~·72~-'-~---~-• Stu"dio &· 1 Hf{ A:pts. El ·Puerto ·Mesa t•rpts, drps, d1\v, gar, Mu1·Uy n;-e1 v Park area, 847-7974 V..,. -11~rr6 FOR Renl 2 Br, apt 3ll ~ Alab~ma ,160 . n10. I~unt 2 • BR. To\vn11ousb, frplc, Blttt:' ·'5::1Q..49:>1. from $250. I ·BH., trom Sl!l5 Laguna Beach Pool, ·"1°ennis: ' contiliental BUDGET 2 br $150 nr all . beach, sngl sty, dbl gar, BRAND New, beautifully • TV & Maid Service Avail. 2 BR A t U I CLEAN l\te 2 Br $155, $300. Also [Qr sa I e. landscaped, 4BR, 2~:: ha, • Phane Service • Htd. Pool P '• n urn -~--------1 breakfast. Separate fam.ily ·OLDE SPANISH section, Close to shopping t"P $60.000. Roy McC•rdle Realtor Quintard Rlty 642-2991 1810 Newport Blvd. CM garage. 213-762-1942 w/pool, tennis, pr iv I, • Childl-en & Pet Section $170. All Util Paid NICE 2 Br $195 lots trees \VALK to \Vater, 1 Br hse, Ne\vport Schoo!s, $ 4 9 5 , 2376 Newport Blvd., CM No Children, No Pets Charn1ing 2 Bil. wtit, olde1 ~&!!f!!in!!e!!bc!!!!ac!!l!!<.!!&l!!4-!!!!!26ll!!J!!!!!!!~[ Spanish lll'Chitecture, w/tile1 '! NEWPORT BE~ACH Prime Bayfront Sitr For boat repair & sales ~ill Grundy Rltr. _ 67:->--6161 Condominiums for salt 160 NEWPORT CREST· Owner 7 plan 1v / vie"'" Vae & lntercm sys. $7000 under bldrs p1i ce; Lease $;17'5/mo. 642-5~7 B\' Ownrr, 2 br, crpt / drps, bltns. Xln't eond. ~ El Arroyo. li.B. 842-7002. Duplexes/Units sale DUPLEX OLD CDM 3 Br owner's unit $84,900 162 833-0780 (BKRl RON DUPLEXES HTG BCH New 2&3 Br dlx heh units. 15th &' Acacia, open dRlly l ·5. 536-<10'12. eve {7141 539-6779 Income Property 166 • Constant lncomp •.•• Mep.ns peace of mind . Tbis lovely fourplex shows great 1 pride of O\\'tlership . In a .. 5 Star ***** rental location. $85.0CXJ. See it today! Call Th\ Real Estate Fair 83't<.6133 or 53'-2551 9 NE\V DUPLEXES · DANA POINT FABULOUS OCEAN VIEWS $68.950 to $73.950 $48,950 non-view Fmm ${j()l)O dawn Office open Fri-Sun at 33861 Copper Lantern Phone 831-2701 Wkdays call buiider,642-4905 548-7729 fncd , child /pet. garag-e. $12i 2 BR, $140. 3 BR, 6<14-4186 S<lS-9755 or &15-3967 Pool & Reereation NU Paint 3 Br 2 Ba S275 S200. Kids/pets. Agt. Fee. L·~o~C~A-T~l ~0~N-,~Q~U~l~E~-T~. HOLi DAY PLAZA-1959 Maple Ave, C.~. I C'o"z''y' c4 b& FDRk2idsba/"!'.3 1 2'5· gar. 979-8430 CLEAN 1000 sq ft. 3 BR, DELUXB Spacious l BR APT MGR-2 BR apt in ex· FOR Sale -8000 sq. 1· new r "' $27" M th N 3 BR 2B 2 BA, ~alk to ~ll services f t $150 ~1 A I h J · Tilt-up building an 20,000 fp l, appli 's, fncd, 2-car. :i. on· . ew . A, .,330 per mo. PM 673-1417 urn ap · . •"'-'. ntp e c ange or man & 11•1 fe to sq. fl. af land. 15% down COME See Us!-\VE Can Help 2 car ga~ .. Bltns, d?1vnto1vn <# parking. Adults, no pets. manage small Easts1de apt _ Seller to provide 970 , 25 U area. Ct11ldren/pels OK. NE\V HV 3 Br, 2 Ba, tam 1965 Pomona Ave, C.M. complex Yr. financing. ALA Rentals 642-8383 Red Ca rpet Rltrs. 536-8830, rn1, crpts, dt'ps, 2 car gar, *SUS CASITAS* · \Vri.te Gassified ad No. !00 rv.nl te n· privl $<l00/mo Dally Pilot, P.O. Bax 1560 W. H. DAUM & STAFF , 3 BR , BA Old C 2 BR, $185. Washer/dryer, .-~v • 11 15 • • L' . b-~ Bach I . "··t M C I'! 92626 roo f. Walled courtyard en-Costa Mesa tryway. Elevated liv. rm.,1----------1 n1assive beam cell's, big arched \vindow w/occan WHAT view. Bath has colored skylight. Loe. close to beach :..:: sho pping. ~ $290 MONTll . Includes a'.11 utilities MISSION REAL TY 494-0731 • Call a.16-3107 * _ 13,~.--Orona fenced vm. Tot OK. tM-J-6918 or &1u.1ti89 ext 3:36. ~· urrus L-u e ors & '-"~a esa, a 1 . ~ H 1'-d' S47 9641 1 Bdrm's, Exceptionally 2 & DEN All t/ FOR SA~ -16,~. sq. ft. 3 BR view _ ne1v _ Laguna ome in ers • NE\V exec 4 br, 3ba v.•/ nice. 2llu f\.ev.'port Bl, 0 1 · nev.' ('rp 2 BR alder view apt. on YOU GET IS new T1lt~p building on _ $300. IMM,\CULATE 3 Bdr m, ram 180 degree vu, tennis &pool, ?rp.s, bltns" tr~lc, pvt pati~. Cliff Dr. S260 nto. 40,COO sq. ft. or land . ~w 3 BR J(lds & pets 01{ ... rm, cplS, drps, bltns. $275. $575/mo. Eves & wkn.d s • 2 BR. Furn. -$165 • ~~=~ 2--h~~~~g'ar.~~~~\~ --_Cal!ii3fi-9®1_ -A•-L YOU'·LL down._-Seller .to provide l395. RED CPT RLTR, 893-1351. =-==179=1.=====~-...J. child Ok. No pets: Nr. pool & rec rm. Adults. Mesa Verde L long term financing. 3 BR Bayfront -Slip -$425. BLUFFS TO\VNHOUSE . Spa· !~~~,t7 Ctr. Ph. 5404484 or 642_1155. ----------1 W. 11. DAUM & St'AFF 2 BR, DR Shorecliffs -$500. 3BR, 2BA. bltins, fpl , Nr. ciaus 4 Br., 21h Ba. ..,....,......,... HOME ATMOSPHERE-Dix 2 * Call "l .. 3107 * BeaC'h .~ Talbert. $250.~10. R 'DEC J · bl LGE •·-1 B / J 1 BDRM, crpts, sto v e , " 4 BR Portorino -$475. 842-£094 . J:; " poo, view, sc s. ~w.u r w poo, & 3 br, Rental Ole, 3095 7 4 BR Harborview -~:?:!. $495. Call ta see, 714-494·3~73 nr. Harbor shop'g. No pets. refrig., 1encld. c1a>'po1 rt & Mace Ave. 546-1034. L I I S I 1 0 SPYGLASS $ 000 5 BDRM Glenmar, $351). mo. $155 mo Call btwn 9 & stor age, aua ry ac1 . $135. O s or 1 • 4 BR -l, · Children & pets \\'elcome. 5 BR, Fan1 Rpt, Din Rm, 6, 675-2833 Agt. 67:'.>-5800 mo. Ava.ii 2/24. 54<HU87 eve Newport Beach LOTS OF LOTS /rS\ !st & last. 842-£691 BKR 2 frplc's, 1,1,·etbar, 3 car gar, & wknd LAGUNA BEACH I . comm. pool. Newport &his. 1 BR, lg. $165. Ideal !or ba· SPACIOUS 2 BR 1 * 2 WEEKS FREE * THE rv1ne $550/MO. 833-3894 cilelor. Adults. 19:>::: Churcn, a P V d I Oceanview. hillside, acreage 54.S-~33. w/patio, 1¥: BA, incl. ista e Mesa for devclapment . Site for •RG Hi\RBOR VIEW HOME-4 i ~=o-"=-~~--~ garage, .£.side, no pets, no · ( lk bo h & ~ BR. 1866 Port Carlow. Near ATTR. 1 br, Patio, utils. bild $250 I ADULT GARDEN HOr-.1ES 5 units v.•a to ac = ,,_ ,. 3 BR., 2 baths, a 1c .... $280 di ''°" 26 2 c ren. , no se. JRVJNE AVE AT MESA d 0 wntown). Commercial, -2 BR 1 b h •300 club house. Call 644-6146 or A t, no pets. .,w.1. 5 642-5818 aft. 6 . , a tn ouse •..• ., "AJ 1295 0 oo. •212 M · /d ·1 J builrlnb'" PRICED RIGHT! 3 BR 2 b •· •3~ -~=-==-~-~-~ ~r~•~""~'~·~~-· ~~·--·----c==--=--~=· I ove in w epos1 s,on Y R d C R I ~--...___rr-·· at.ii> ...•.••... ,.,'"" N"E VPORT H 2 -LARGE l BR apt S1.l5. 1 RR. $1M 2 Br. $220 NEED ••• VISTA DEL LAGO e arpet, ea tors _ ltfAUOf!S ~ 2 BR .. den, 2 Ba ......... $400 \ eights-Neat IBR Trailet' for I't'.l1t, in.ature E:ldPrly \VOman. Laumrv, Day &. Kiirh t Security, Pool, 497·1761 3 BR, bonus rn1, 2 ba •• $425 BR, 1 BA, lovely fncd yard, per.;ons only, no children, Quiet. Nr. markets. im Jacuzzi, Rec. Bldg. Luxury lakeside adult Jiving, Successor Ta 3 BR, rant. rm., 2 ba, . · $,150 frplc, 2 car gar. Ref's, Wlr no pets, 646-18QIJ Wallace, Apt B, CM. w/exercise rni, billiards, comfort and pr ivacy, 188X305'. ~fira Loma area. 257o down, owner will carry lsl TO .. Full Price. $12,500. Rllr 646-4837. Mountain, Desert Re1ort 174 LAKE ARROY/HEAD Great for year round living & close to the village. 3 yr ala Havarian style 3 level home with open beam ceilings thru~ut, 3' br 2 ba + completely finished basement klr playrm or workshop. Lndry fa c . $36,500. (213) 451-3898 after 6pn1 or anytime weekends. 10 Acres of Desert Land Near Palm Springs. Will Sacrifice for Quick Sale $9500. 675-1260 Real E1tato Wanted 114 COL\VELL Properties, Inc. 4 BR, fan1. rrn, 2~~ ba. · $475 pd. $300/mo. 548-2928 LGE FURN 2 BR. Bltns 548-6518 color TV. Ea. Apt. has affordable ~ntals, security, 4 BR, FR, 21h ba, furn·· $495 $375 4 Br, l{arbor High sch, 1v/w, beam ceiling. Adlts, li\<IMACULATE 2 Br, 2 Ba, dishwasher, rcfrig, shag cpl boiitin;;, ~1vimming • .tennis 'l1ob 'l 1rllll, 2201 I-lolly Lane. 645--0337 no pets. $185. 642-~to 1000 sq. ft. 6 mo old. Lght & prt patio or deck. handball, ~saunas and (213) 62&-5477 e TltOPICAL POOL e priv patio, dbl elec gar. 545-4855. Yachl Club. · 'encies, I , NE\V Hbr Vu $475. mo. 3 2 BR. 1w·111shed. \Vater $225 ma. Adults, no pets. PARK NEWPORT 2, 2 & !Jen from 175, wi th HoUHI * Aptl. Br, 2 Ba, Club, pool, tennis. & gas paid. 548-ll68 645-3363 APARTMENTS everythmg you need an 640-1327; 586-5724 LARGE Bacbelo•·, $125/n•o. BRAND NE\V Extra large apartn1ent to be. - - -1q.ruhor * 145 0111 * Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedroonts '" • 4 BR, 3 BA Townhouse. Healed Pool. Adults, . no 2 BR, 2 BA adult apts. and 'f ownhouses 43JW.11lhCOSTAMESA lst \Vestern Bank Bldg. $395/mo-less on lease. Pool, pels. Call ti-J:>-8945. $225-$250. (Newport to Bay Fr. $1.9<l.50 Open 9.6 Daily $120 · CUTE furn Bach, all University Park, Irvine gar. 833•16531833-8974. ~L-ag_u_n_a~B~.-.-c~h----I to Fullerton) 125 Melody Ln. Spa Pools Tennis util pd. E/side. Days 552-7000 Nights Newport Heights 67S-6900. Across from Fashian Island· $150 -UN1'~URN Duplex, gar, ''l:::::::!:::!i:i:=::i=::i=::i:::!~ I EFFIC. apts from .$50 wk l BR w/ pool, nr Harbor at Jambo~e an San Joaqum child & pet ok. I• 1 or 3 br, drps, crpt, gar, ar $170 mo. Pool, maid, shop'g. No pels. $140. Call 1-li.Us Road. $185 . 2 BR hause iv/yard, 2 BR. 2 Ba ........... , 5325 ad!ts, no pets/ $250-$300. ph. ldry, Village Inn btwn 9 & 6, 675-2833 Agt. (714) 644-1900 bring family! E /side. 2 BR, 2 ba, a/c •• , , •••. S273 2.'j(}l E. 16th SL 645-1048 eves. or $170 1no. Pool, maid, or 675-5800 $195 · 3 BR hause, 2 BA, 3 BR., 1% ba ......... $275 San Cleme.nte , ph. ldry, Village Inn SPACIOUS New 3 BR, 1% yard. \Viii consider ki ds & 3 BR, 1 lh baths • •• . . . S300 494-9436. Ba, patia, frplc, pool - pets. 3 BR, 2 baths , ......... S·l50 FOR Jse San Clemente 5 Newport Beach walking distance ta shop'g. $225_ • 3 BR house •. gar, yard. 4 Brt, 2% baths .... $.\00/4JO Br, 4 Ba, fantastic custom $325/MO. 646-4067 .. Children ok. E/s1de. 5 B-R 2" b $365 b ill h " $35 PER Wk & u 1 b CLEAN 2 BR t d WE f.IAVE MANY, ?llANY .. /2 a .......... u ouse on gou course p r, , crps, rps, MORE'·'· CALL 552·7500 panoran1a ocean · view 2 br & bach's, color tv, stove & retri,g-. No children 492-7743 maid setv, pool. TIIE or pets. 706 j ames St. Apt LANDLORDS FREE VISION DARLING Cape Cod 3 Br MESA, 415 N. Newpcrt B. 842-9820 2 BR., 1 ba., Channelfrnt ....•...••••. $300 3 BR, 2 ba. Newly decor , .••...••• -.$JOO Lido 2 Bt', 1 ba onl ...• $300 associated MESA VERDE EAST AND ·ADAMS AVE. COSTA MESA 540-1800 THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. MlNUTES TO NPT. BCH. Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $157 Adults, No Pets. 1561 f\.1esa Dr. (5 blks fron1 Ne\vport Blvd.) ... 546-9860 LANDLORDS! & den. Carpeted, etc. Bl, NB 64&.9681. NEW 2 BR, utils pd., • Beach side. Refs. $295. BAOI. Steps to ocean. $120 children welcome, no pets, Apts., DROKER~-AEALTORS 2025 W Balbaa 671-Jlili) \Ve Specialize in Newpor: • red hi 11 498-0378 or (213)654-3097 mo. + SJS extra for 3 Sum• cpts, drps, patio, Mgr. 1960 1.,...,...,, ..................... 1 _F_u_r_n_._._r_u_n_f_u_r_n_. _3_7001 Beach e Corona de! Mar • mer mo's. No pets. Call Wallace Apt 6, 642-7364 1; - 4 UNIT APT. BLOG. WE BUY HOMES & ~a. Our Rental, Ser· REALTY HF'..ALTORS WALK to Beach! 2 BR 4• btwn 9 & 6, 675-2833 Agt. 2 B 1 ba & 3 b l% SPACIOUS New apts, close Fountain Valley Great rental area & good CASH IN 5 DAYS vl~e _is FREE to You. Try Univ Park Center Irvin 675-5800 r, ,.r r, to beach, lrplc's , bltns,1-------~---1 investmt. Co.!la Mesa. Four Nu-View! . ' e plex, $190. Kids/pets ok. ~'="'7-~=----1 ba, bltn ran&"'• drps, crpt. swiming pool. 1 BR, $l!t."1, 2 BR units. Inc. $7,740 yr. FREE ESTIMATES NU-VIEW RENTALS Ne1v. 2 BR., 1 ba.; l·blk. to ocean. pool, clubrm, carport. 2212 2 BR, 2 BA Studio, $265 .... - - - , ·Try-JO% down. $65,000 _ OPEN EVERYDAY & EVE. 673_4030 or.., ~94_3248 TIJRTLE ROCK Broadmoor, Homefinders 547-9641 ~e~ v~e1;·sio. ba., bay College Ave. 646--6032. Yearly. 675-4911 Bkr. I CUT OUT Wesley N. Taylor Co. Hunt Beach/Fount Valle)' :-c=cc...,,-~'--'7~0'1 Plan 4. 2·Sty. 4 bdrtns .. Santa Ana Ask for Mike LRG 2 Br, 1¥.i ba studi~, LUXURY Water/r'1•1t Apts. I FOR 1 · REALTORS 536-8836 842·5541 Bkr. 3 BR, 1 yr. new, 2 BA, 2 ~~ baths: family rm., 2 1----------JONES REALTY 6T.Hi210 shag bltns, pool, etc. Uhl Via Lida/Sli:is Avo:il. J . H'll Rd bllns, sell-cleaning oven, frplcs., shag carp, Near NEW Bradford Pl 3 Br, 2 pd $180 1978 Ma p I e 1 B 2 Ba 2 B 2 B SUNDANC• 2ll1 San oaquin 1 s · fam. rm . w/frlpc + beaut. park. Close to all schools. DYNAMlC lg. oceanfront 3 · .. · · r, · or r, a, I Ne\vport &ach 644-4910 Ba, conv. to frwy & indust. 645-5647 fireplace, balcony. J375 to I SE + INCOME pool. Clase ta So. Cst Plaza. $D450AVPer month complex, Pool. S 2 7 5. BR, 2 BA. yrly. $400. Avail Sl30·l BR. Quiet. Garage $550/MO, , 833 ... 9234 Live fn a sumptuous·one HOU Inquire 2Th1 Juniper, Apt ID D. CARLSON 552.--7717 3/1 Day 646-7103, Nite avail $25 extra. Adults only , EA.::i"TBLU1''f 2 BR 2'h BA I or two bedroom air con-I Aa5!'!~~e o~e~~li~R~a~ ~ln•nclll ~A~·~S~A~E!~~====l·R;;:E~A~L~T~O~R~":;~8~3~3-~92~93~1 $290. mo. 4 br, 2 ba, frpl c, G73-25S6 673 Center St, No. D. 2 story. Crpts, a'rps, fpt, ditioned =with BR h /1 BR t Balboa lsl1nd Nr. S.C. Plaza. 1010 W. NEWPaRT TOWERS 548-1749, 642-5013 gar .. Avail <l./l $315 mo. Pet wall-t.,wal"'••~- ouse Awlro 3 ap · on 2 BR CONDO,, s2~ mo.'""· .Alton. 00'3-1103/67" ~1s 8th floor bayfront 2 BR 2 ba I ~,.. -•-I E 'd 1 d "" "'"' ""' J-~u ' • 2 BR. $155. Stove, refrig, Oh .. &10-0:.'92. lng,Ar->-'-l't\7\1 •• .......i asts1 e. more o Business 'OWNER'S Ix 3 br, 2 ba. 2 BR CONDO .• $225 mo. lse. 642-8931, 646-8316 cpts, drps, oool Adults, 00 UIQflQI•....., -1 WUUl.I'" choose from. Invest wiseCallyl 0 I ., ~o ~$4251ag,yrdrjyP.'·.~~cl58, lndry. gar. 3 BRA l-IOr-.tE .. $315 nio. J~·c. Condominiums 320 DEL u x E OCEAN.,'RONT . ~ts. ** ,.;.,_ ......,.. REN'l_' or lease .. Adults only. panel!~ llvlng room, -Free counseling. ppor unt Y '" ·~ Unfurn. ...~ .,...,....,,,..,,-. Snac·aus ba"ifo'""' ' ~""' I I --~ I~ :::::=:=-:::-:;:::::::;=:_li;f.'ji;;;:;"i,;;;;;;;;~;==-::: R ~·cu n"•LTY --.RENTAI..S..2 & ... 3.J3R.--.1~ ~ • __ J . ~ .......... warmcoor-n·wa Prestige Homes 645-ll&l6 _ . Balboa Peninsul -rt a_~ --------·~ A Sand & Sea Rlty. fi= o-1970POMllNA A~. Pool, !pl, Viita de! LI o. $450, incl. kitchen full Of '"lit ·ins _. -2 HOUSES on R·3 lat/walk BOfffl Water Route * 551·2000 * Costa Mesa !'1""""00\N crpts, drps, rcf.ng. dshv.·shr. util. Call eves (:.!13) 984-053.s, (alnclud' d: ...... ~.::.\ ta surf in H.B. $35,950, Own your ow·n botlJe WRter BAY Vu, 2 BR, din rm.I ~~~~~~~.,..,..,. ----------San Clemente New apts. $175 up. 9'm-50'J9 1,1,•knds 675-5853. I 1ng 1.:.1iwa:J111a,_ I Cream puff C-2 duplex + route, wUJ train U qualifialled. thick shag, drps, gar, yrd, WALNtrr SQUARE: Alpine RENT/LEASE. 3 BR, 2 BA San Cl<.'tnente Resident Hotel QUlET 2 BR nr Back Bay. STEPS to beach, lrg mod Meet and mingle With beauty shop, Eastside C.M. Best Orange Ca. area av . !rpl, % blk to bay, 1 bl k Condo. Cozy 3' BR, 2bas, condo. Over 1500' Completely $79,50 Per Nionth No lease. No pels. S215.lsl 2 BR, bean\ ceil, lrplc, all I n<ighborsat 3 blg ~m-1 $39,950. Agt, 642-9666. _ Will adjust route. size 10 to bch. $325. Yrly. 963-5353 shag, drapes, patio, lir re-done inside & out . Quiet • Secure & last 642-431.5, 494-0027 bltns, S275. Nc\vpott crest m~n pools, jacuZzj, bi~ CLOSE TO BEACHI. ~r~uo.~ ~~:tia1E':nliml1300•·ted: BAYFRONT pri. beach, dlx cod.nhd, hpool, cabl1c275 TV • ~i:prypi~ng\,.nebik. B~~sid~ Furn·util. Y.'alking distance 2BR To,vnhse, patio, sundk. 3 BR, 3 BA, $450 yrly. 1· ~ Brand Nrv,.· Deluxe 3 &,.4 Sllv~~ Springs Wllter, 96C lge 2 BR ($500) or 3 BR IS WS r. storage. 'n10. CM. &6:-2345 to everything. $180. Adlt, no pets. 2S52 &12·3<190. • I andl roomlleybas, I Air~, I ~~r c~.u~~OOo.351f~Rth ~~~ N. Bat(~:) =i 1'~~. ~~ ~~~ 6~~l'B"°~~~7:;0::--1.-0N'"e-w~3~B~,-. "'2~B-n, 2 STORY, 3 Br. 2 ~ Ba, SAN ~~~~CNTE 0~~ ~B~~ cpts drps, 0uY1~~~ik ~~bcii~t ~ 1 ques~bybabbli~~ I H.B. Call Builder, 847 .. '\9!57 240 Corona dol Mar Uni.v. Pk. Gold shag cr1lts, all c 1 e ct· stave/relrig, c:11·ns gar E s·d 1 yr-rnd Nice S,125 (I ) Everylhl Jnclud' -Mo to L .. n crpls, drps, dbl gar, v.•ater e 114 DEL !\{Aft, S.C. e o 1 • • • l e, no pc s. ,,,1 '""'.,, · ,ng N'.Jing Ul'll DANA POINT ney l\tnum. S42S/mo. 1 c ase· paid. $275. Ca.1!'"548-1995. $l65. 644-1.103 " -~. rent schedule is deSlgned 1 F I $ 77 500 00 1 Td. L RUS'J'IC 2 hr home. Oose matching drps, Lrg patio, Apt. Unfurn. 365 LRG 3 hr, 1" bo. "hil'"' ADU. LTS 2BR. l ~'J ba, nt>\vly I w1~~, lnm'1nd. ourp ex • ' st oa ns to beach & shOps. ~-pin-, Owner: 644-8813 or 533-6.'"i;'iO. ~!untington Beach n .... " _., d "',_ F I $ 97 500 00 '"" -General ok. $175 per mo. 753 pruntt:u, crpts, rps, gar, ourp ex • , . , , yard, carpet, stave & re.trig. Laguna Beach Shttlimar. 646-1572 eves. ~!~\·~Aqu.J3 et, $200, avail 3/15, I UnfurnlsHd ?,'"" I Fourplex ... $112,000.00 UP TO 90% $300. mo. Ph. 673-3085 evei1--------4 BR, CONDO $240, I BR ltl ~......Jl I I 170 Webb Realty 831 -2170 8"•% INTEREST & weekends. $175 -UTIL PD 2 Br, pert :c-ci'""-r_n..;•0_·c.9fi8."'-'8"-Xi-'3__ J\pt w 1 gur across ,CHRlSTIAi~S Apt. 2 BR. l\.f, 1·2 • J-3BR, 2 BA. Cnndo. •II 1 ra• • 74 from park 11.nd tennis -ba, gar, ranf!:c, carpts, clrps r... S1111rtty farnltbltl 1 HOUSE + 6 UNITS 2nd TD Loans1 3 Br, 2 Ba, frplc & gar. turn, priv, patio, So. Tustin •·-am ccl't""' bull! in s $165 "'°l23-Walk-in closets. Ne:1v cpts., I I I $350. aft 5 or weekends, Laguna . . ...... •-o -. . l)'IJ" L dl'pS, appl. Nr 17th & Tustin ••.• , .... I ro• New units at 26.17 Elden, 6i3--0744, 712 Larkspur. $225 -2 BR Nenr Ocnch. DLX condo, 2 BR, 2 BA, $200/mo. !lgt)nt G44-7nI. De na Point & Harbor High, M&-'i838 $117 .. 50. CM . 1st U!ler w/'JJXJ% write -Beautiful view Sntl pct ok a.ir, pvt. entrnnce & patio, Balboa Island ott. Call Builder 646-4414. Low1tt r1t1s Oranne Co. NEW Seyglass Hill home 1-· d · 1 1 b & OELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA .... , 2 BR up(ler, wnlk to beach, ,. • Magn"'"-·t vu, 4 BR, 21; "'" -.UTIL P -Quaint heA. th c u i::ec. ~te. " $27S · cl Utl y J A U TRIPLEX N CM .hOps Sattler Mt9 Co =~• n 2 a h r --• --• 1 A" Jt ,... ""'10 VERY Attrac 1 Br up""r. tv.efin vi"w, Jrnl", •Ju>' rm, · in JI. r y, va . • ., nr , • • ba 19 Tiburon lJay. r, 1g en .. ~ yiuu, rt-es, uU s, "" .,......... , ,..~ .,.,. '" .,. .. ' 411 2, • .,1 ""' ~al fnvcstment. 10% On. 642·2171 54$.0611 ' ConYon. 615-7192. Yrly. No pets. Wtr pd. syn deck, $275. Thompson • ~ -il"l'N Y£AGER REAllt'Y 5561171 Servfna-R&rbor area 24 yn. NEW cuatam duplex 4 Br S325 _ 2 Br. Frplc. Obi gl\r, Townhouse Unfum. 335 Crpts, drps, 11 t v I re t . M~agen1ent Corp. 493..(,1\41 , DL..'<.E Spru1iSh 3 br, 2 ba, fpl. SAVE TitOSE APPLE 2 Bi., & 3 Br 2 Ba unllA, yad. view. Chilfi/pel. 673-1503. NICE 2 BR. ocea n view bllns, D\V, nr !·Im~ !losp, 1 SanniatlftfwJ tollfook~ 1 PEELINGS •n4 boll in $MONEY$ c1 ... to heh. ll<aut 64H174 $375 -4 BR bltn•. frplc, Huntington Beach 331 E. &yfront. 2 Br, split dee!\$ SJ95 Jo $220. 25081 Adults. 1265 mo. &J.-05.'IG. .. ... ~ lO wan. aluminum Jill.nll Rnd Pots. Ftmdlna.Asslstancc.forwotth tjiARMING-2 BR house, dbl gar. child/p<!t welcJ --....,.------1 lcwl, f~lc, pier for 004t. I.a Crcslti': Owner 44.'i Oak, 2 Bit oldt!r view apt. on ~tom Mill~' They will brlghlen Jhe whll• pro,JecJo. Startups· priVacy. $2115 mo. '118 Orchid NU.VIEW RENTALS CLOSE TO BEACH II Spect. v ew, aVl>ll Mor. I. Lnguna 4!J.J,.6848. CIUJ Dr. $260. mo. Coll I Par" ,,.,,. 71 , metal to a "like--Tiew'' CoruitnlCtion -Business • Open Sun W. MB-4957. 673-4030 or 494-3248 Brnnd New Deluxe 3\\& 4 673-6000/615-3331 /673-47GG 2 WEEKS Free Rent. 3 RR 8.~!!001.. "-r1Nne: ~ • oondHlon. Have Mall~'to Real Estate. Minimum Clasaifit..IC! ads aeU big Items, VlEWA VlE\\1. Beaut 38R RR, 3 BA, dbl gar}I. oil 1 BR. sha.i:t" crµt .. fitv, ref, & 2 Bil. split level, patio SP ACI0US Lido I~Je Bay 1202.Moddsopen daBy act!? Use a. D 1y . not $50.000. 1 · sma.11 itema or any il&m. 3 B , fml dl11, fAm nn, bltns. Close to recreat\on elcc:. pd, $175. Yrly. cpts/drps. tndry & gur. front. with priv. beach. 3 10a.m. Omltied Ad. CB.II 642-5618. TI4-fli6-4D6 Just call 642-661&1 sundk. $300. 968-1029 . & achls. 51418th St. 847-3957 673·3253 24.521 Alta Vit1ta. 496-4920. Bit. 2 hAii, S.'iOO. 67:,.'ffi~i. - - -;c;..=c _____ _,_:_::::.:..;.:::::..;.:::=-=-"""'-~ , " DAllV PILOT """'" l'um. ot U""'rn. 370 H'"'tl~ton laffch FROM $170 Come live w1th ua at the Environment Apts. l, A 2 BR, shag cpt1, d r p a , lhopplna center. Leu than 1 mUt from beach, Plivalc pa.Ho It beaut. lndscp. Healed pool & rtt rm. No children or pets. 9 6 3 2 Hamilton Ave., llB 962-4500 DELUXE adult pool I Ide garden bun&alow, nr ocean, trpl, lr; patio, 6 poola, sauna. tennis. 846--0259. Also 1 Br. From Sl35. Laguna Niguel *BRANO NEW* l & 2 BR, 2 BA. From SllkS Untum. Furn I s he d units Avail. CROWN VALLEY Apll. San Diego f'rwy or Coa$l Hwy to lllilhunt. 23734 Hillb\lnt, Lag. NJ.guel. (714) 831-0730. ~ewport Beach LIVE ON THE BEACH Heated Pool. Security. Adults No Pets. Le11se. UNF. l & 2 Br St!l)..$260 FURN. Bachelor $195 LAS BRISAS APTS 5015 Rlvtr Ave, NB Cell 642-2566 PENlN Point 1 br, utll. paid. $190. yearly. 673-7719 or 548-96~ Shown eves. Santi An• CHOICE LAKEFRONT LOCATIONS VERSAtLLES ON THE LAKE Al South O:lul Plaza. Pool. -Acapulco Aqua Bar & Jacuzzi. Spectacular 8 Acre Lake w/Towering Fountains · % Million Dollar Clubhouse, Gym, Sauna. Total Security. AOUL TS-SINGLES 1, 2 & 3 Beproom• ~fr'om'$115' ~r· mo. 3700 Plaza Dr. ... Mondly, Ftbruary 18, 1974 ent•t ----------qi> Wanted, Femalo 702 Hol p Wa nted, MiF 710 Ho p Carpet S.rviCf ~MCiean n9 antod, Mi~ 710 Halp W antod-;-MiF 710 MISSION VIEJO OFFICES CLOSE TO HOME AU amtnitlrs & utU. lncl <00 Sq. n . & UP. 27'9'J2 Cam.loo Capistrano. Aveey Plll'kwl.,Y & SO F'rvi')'. 131°1600 -)[j] * Olben-.ardo 6 Sou * R 0 USES 1 TTING .....trl..le PERSONNEL manqtt, ap Cupe.I "1H. .lnltall&Uon It )'OU're IW&)'. P•t care-plant ~ tee~ perm. p;WUon Person•1• 530 repairl . 963-2639. c=are-perHtonal ~ ln Or. CoWl11 aree.. Exptt. Cement, Concrete m . aw own car. la Ill pbaMS ot ~I ADMIN1STRA11VE e he. Rert. N.8. Incl. tnllnlne, uJary OOll At CEMENT: Patio, drlva. &reL Vn9.. Phone: IK-8131. control, btnetlta, etc. Lut DIVORCED-man '8, •tlltd walb-Repair•. saw & Income Tax 5 yrs w/maJor retailer. 4' personable, non drinker remove. Free nL 544-8998. ----------SU~Nlstng 400 employees. Al I or 1moker would lilce to CEl\IENT &:· Block Work. lncomt Tax Service Xltn. refer. Cn4> 644--ml. 1ncet co1npartlonabl0e la~!.~~ Walts, patlol, ridewalka, 23pey:at,.. 1o1r•~~~. ~C),~r.,..N!pENTln ._!'.·,E~ ~ N.B. area. Write a.uu~ etc By hr or job 646-6915 •IN IV..: r ;w J•..... -.. "" ........ ad No. 64, Dally Pilot, P. o. co~CRETE Pat~. 4IXl ~ (714) 67$-6676 •truction, desires tmplmt ln !!2," 26 1560, Co.ta Mesa, C&Uf. ft or mot'l'! 65c .... r sq fl. For Appolntment H.B. or Npt. area. ti-1/have ~"" ,..... $1200. mo draw asaln•t U'°"CE='=N~s=rn=-~s=p=m=JTU=AL=1~sr= I Don. 642-8514. INCOME lax Pre Par f' d . comm or aal. Write: P.O. • Contractor Pert0n or •m. but, Fait Bo 637 H Jn "-h Spiritual readings 10 a.m. ~rvlce. 8 4 2 -4 o 5 3 or x • uni gton DC'&C • Help Ylanted1 M & F 710 -10 p.m. Advice on all I 0842-0'.!!:!!:160~------I, i5Cai"il:c'. ::p;;;:;;;;;';s;<;;;:-A;im.I AAMES matteN, 312 N. El Camino QUAUTY & Integrity n =-: • EXEC. Personal Sec'y. Adm. BOAT BUILDERS Real, San Clemente, for work. Remod. addlt, move Masonry Asst. Xlnt Skills, RdJ. 1£1 "" NV~A 49z..91.16 walls, etc. Fair prices. Ex· ---~-----GROWING quality aallboat appt. Call 4:1-..u.>'I, · -rt de111-& planning. SLUMJ>m'ONE, block wall11, yra w/ prev. emp. in Bev. builder has the fullowWt THE ATH 0 AT I NG r-~.. 170 Hills. n4: 64.5-7315 or "' Eves. Ken, 642-1 . brick planters, expertly in-"''>"'NIE. O""nln .. for mature, Positions G .. ~·· 1.,::.;,o='-'o='-"'=-='-~-wo-vwl message. .--Lav.• flm1 to rent attractive 1...,.,..., JACK Taulane, re pa. Ir, stalled. Speclally prtced. 1,o=;c:;'-0==.,_-,...,,,,.1 re•ponslble tndlvlduals: office withs e c re tar I a J fi()..00 YR. group. From the remod, add. Uc. B·l 269072 Bob: 6'5-C930. NEED help at home'!' We BUREAU Of Flnllh carpenters, 2 )'I'll exp. space, tneludlng telephone privacy of J.°G. telephone. My Way Co. 642-4700. I 'P"°a'l'"n-,;tl'"n~9-;&~----have aklts, nurses , Boat plumber, l yr exp. Eu· 111nsv.,ering, recept ion P.O. Box 7 • C.G. ~-4622. E leclrlcel p h I ho us ekpra, ('OC!lpalUons. eJ,ncmen, 2 yrs exper. •orvkes, com pie" library, 21 hn. aper 11!9 "9 Home m • k.,' Upjohn EMPLOYMENT 642-8961 conference room privileges PROBLEM Pregnancy . 1 ;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~~=;;;;;;;;;;;j,j54~7~~~k·~~:,;,~; EE PER SECY IB!\1 copier, too? Call Confident, sympathetic ELECTRICIAN, lie., old *Willard Painting UNENCUMBERED fem . BOOKK .. 833--0730. pregnancy co un s e 11 n g' joAnyb<p, la~w. "~~ .... any Jobe. pracUcal nune will V.'Ork AGENCY for men's • women's elothlna NEWPORT CENTER Abortion & adoptions ref. '"" ....,...."'°" Contractor•* aa companion, chautteur store. Full lime. l girl ., APCARE 6t2-+lJ6 ELECTRIClA.N ·License No. RESlDENTlAL etc. Rell. 99S-.0668. office. Bkkp'g exp. nee. thru 2 ROOM office wilh fantastic 2331~. SmaU jobs, ma.int & & COlofMERCIAL trial balann!. lJte lyping. view of Ne11-port Harbor &: LIFE or DEATii: Let our repairs. 548-5203. Flnest Craftsmen Jobs Wa nttd, M & F 704 Apply ln Penon Catalina. 565 sq. tt. $425 babies live. for a1te1rnat1veEs Drywall ..•••. Wallpapering GETAWAY DRIVER Duties would include driving company owned ex~. auto• &: ats!stina: fn shlpplna & l't'celvlng dt>pt. Musi hive 1 noroUih kJiowledge o l Orange Co. are• It L.A. fnt'l Airport + valid Calif. drivers lie. le gOOd drivll11l re<..-ord. for Apft Cont1tcl C•ro Smith 644-5800 Avco f'lnanclal Servlre Equal. OppQr. Emple>yer per mo. includes utilities, to ABORTION ca I LlF G•rdening Arouatlcal Ceilings INTERIOR boat cleaning:. 1 oooY< South Coa.st ·Vlllage, CM janitor scl"\•ice, carpeting line 551-00ZZ, 24 hrs. ---~-----Please Call For Estimate Personal touch. Husb, & 0 55G-8276 ELECTRONICS & lots of free parking. BEST MASSAGE IN N.B. GARDENER of 22 yrs. exp. *644.-2199 640-1136* wife team. Rate on alie 1 -~==''-'i'C:=.-.c--I SILICON ESTATE REALTY 640-1120 3400 Irvine Ave., Suite 103B. who is college trained in State Uc. No. 281038 ol boat . 642.~-. BOYS & GIRLS 0 8 AM M W-• 1~1 Horticulture & proud of his -'UJ Now•pa""r carrier.;, •11in. OFFICE SPACE F 0 R pen , on, "'-'• • ., .-- RENT. Costa Mesa, Harbor Ann. 557~. Qualily work, seeka 4-5 PAPERHANG I NG &. age .10 yrs. for Ne1vpr111 GENERAL at Adam'. Be.utlful P , & CARD RF.A Eu additional ma.int . jobs 1.1r HelpW•nted,M&F710 Beach, Newport liPi~:t:r.s .f.: · * AL .. t ' · 1 · .11. cleanups. Geo-e Hampton painting. 21 >Tl Harbor 1 c t ~~1~';ial, ~:~ss J:1~!:k~r'. a~1;'j~1~~\1~~.'sW-3~Bcach ,c•c=-540'!l-,C20=-cl5~•~·,,...•-,.---I :i..~(s furn. No.183281. ADVERTISING FREE ~~~~;~e~~~~~A~lo~0~~.:;, A RAPIDLY GR0\VING & Lee Bldg. Call Gene Hill, EUROPEAN Ga rd en er. CLASSlFIEO SALES DAILY PILOT. Cnll 642-4321 INTEGRATED CIRCUIT 557--0136 or~-r.1ASSAGEIBA'I1l Maintenance-Landscaping. PROF. wallcovering, state Telephone solicitor wanted & leave 11ppllcatlon. MANUFACTURER HAS C A touch of class. Complete Tree Reinoval. very lie. No. 279514. Insur, aU wl classified sales exper. Broi'ler & Saulo Man IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Af.!PUS Drive Office. privacy. • 645'0860. reasonable. 642-5329 eves. types paper. 714/842-4386. Above avg salary & comm. ON 2ND &. 3RD SHI1'""I'S airport area. 600 ft. at $27-0 I ~F-0-R~T-U~N-E~T=E~L~L~l~N-G~ PROF . t ho t k Lucrative terr. Xln't oppor. 4 Days-40 hrs. Penn. Stt FOR! per mo. See us for your COMPLETE GARDENING · pain er, nes wor • Chef, El Niguel Country airport office space nc~s. palm, cards. etc. SlS-7492 SERV. rea.s.,lnt/ext, •tree estimate. ~~m~narp w'~~~"; s sr:ie; Club, 23700 Oubhouse Dr. * PROCESS OPRS •1 u LL AN REALTY,3400 S,.,,.ciallze Newport, CM, Irv. RefJ. 548-2759, 642-J913. N" I " •-"'~~ ~rsonallty for inside sales. ..:LR::guo;on:::•,.::,•,,gu;:;•:;·=-~=~ We need .,......pie to fabr1cu.te Irvine. 540-2960 Business&. res . .....,-v.JUiJ INT/EXT PAINTING 1 ~-aid ;,.,., paid vac. Al ro. ACCOUNTANTS BUSBOYS OR GIRLS IC"• in w•ler lab. DESK space ilvatlable $50 Lott Ind fCU'ld f.10\V & EDGE. CLEANUPS Free Est Jim 675-35.59. benefits. Apply, PETITE AUBERGE mo. Will provide furniture NE\V LAW~t~RINKLERS PAINTER. highly qualified, Call Jack McMullen Sr. Accnt $f2 K RESTAURA.'lT, 3!WX1 s . * TEST OPRS at SS mo. Answering service efficlent,v..'Ould like YoUl' Classified f.1anager Full ball or wax. Know data Plua Or., Santa Ana \\le ncffi people to test linear available. 17875 Beach Blvd. Found (free ads) SSO THAT Time of Year Again'!' business. Reas. 642.-3158 Orange County process .. credit & collection.• :::556--0556:::,,::::;',· ==~~,.--circuits on computerized Huntington Beach. 642-4321 . Gen. Lawn & Garden ~. PAINTING & Carp en 1 r Y Evening News . 'Ci.ERK TYPIST for dlspers-equipment. OFF7CE space avail., heart FOUND, Cat, l\arls Jr,. at Clean-ups S4S.1893 eves: repalt'. F)lr reaa. rates ' & 537-?SlO ment section In trust dept, ·of Corona · de! Mar. Ideal Bristol & Birch, NB. Blonde PROFESSIONAL Gardening est. ·542-1152 anytime. T A $l 2 K good at figures. It. tvpin!!. * MAT'L HANDLER for CPA, Engineer. etc. $200 & .... ·hite (Looks like ~torris J service. Call 646-92.19 tor PAINTING, Neat, Quick, A FUN PLACE ax cent ALSO need RECEPTIONIST Exper. helpful, but trainees to $300 per mo. C~ about 6 mos. 557.Slll. EstiiJnate. Rearonable. S 1 eve __ • 2 Yrs exper. National firm. swtchbrd, It. clericll,i duties accepted. 675-27ll. FND: Yng. Bassett Hound, EXPER. Gardener. Know 644-6.510 TO WORK Degree neceu. incld'g typing. .Financial Apply In Person OFFICE space avail. for brown & white Vic. Mesa hov.'. Maint. Trinunlng & ~~=------,.. Ofianlzat1on located tn NB. 7:182 Bolt• Ave attorney at Jaw? 12Xl6 ft. Verde, Nr. golf course cleanup. 968-3486. *Wallpaper Hang•r * :Ji~ R. t $l7K Xlnt working conditions &. Westminster attorney's office, recept. & 549--0992 Garden Maint/Lndscp C. Rebko 646-2449 n nu nn Accnt CPA Co. benetl18, PH: 644-4360 c-~ual Op~r. .,_plover rm. for piv. secretary. FND! 4 mo. old feinale s;; .., .., 1 yr recent exper. EDP on CLERKrrYPIST. ""I ..... r~u• ~ S250 mo. Call 675-2711. Bassett Hound. Fnd Mesa Clnup, Sprklr rep. 646-&i52 Platter, Patch, Repair rvt '"""~~~~~~!!!!!!!I L b "Z G I " l. ~ se ce. NEW ro in Irvine looking 1 · ELECTRONICS 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB Verde · 541}-9155 awncare Y a S for• J.pt t'-· •• --l·JI ··time ECllNIC! M /_, /-'-o.o ~i PA):CH, PLASTERING-' • · • --·nd ••-r ANS 545 sqJt. &: .up. 541-5032 FND:.... 1 """'~....rut.lw>d ~-uoW 0 w. cvge .....,.uw;' ~,..,., All type. s. Free t?stimale• ~~ l;'iimiipiiliioyiieei;.i;Pi;hii.ii\ii•kiikiil;i556-4ii;;i;l7;i0 d Will I ~··• -~: i-• Coit Accnt $12K No exper. re<( . tra n. ... n1nle cat: Very alfect onate General Strvlce1. Call -~ _ ~ 17-34. ~ l)lQ. sWtln& -_ Business Rlnt1I '445 vt~. 21st St., CM.-548:-1560 etumbing · Now Hlrlftg Superviaoryexper: +degree: COOK·S ,· Salary "+many beriefits. BLl{: malt> shai:gy rock-a-RAINDROPS still falling-on ~~~-=--~----n -s o··vs WAITERS Now Interviewing. Anny poo. Choke!" chain, vie. of. your head? We can heJp L.R. OTIS PLUMBING nU B BUSBOYS Opportunities, 6 4 5-116 3' Paularino school. 54&-0729 with standard 'or custom Remodels & Repairs. Water Asst Contrlr $20K Experif'nced Only Cosla Mesa. S•nt• Ana NeXt to South Coast Plaia ~ 714-5~ .......--............ R~ ..... ---~•400"" Coldwell,Banker ROOMS $3). a wk up, with .111111.......!!EALTOR~ kitchen $30 wk up apts. ~ 548-9755 or 645-3967. 1,.:;;=o=.=oo-=-~1--,,=25 Prime Retail Spece V•utlon Rent• S " 1200 Square fet avail. in the UVE in the all new Dana Point Harbor at t h e beautiful MARINA INN Motel, 3(90'2 Del Obispo St. (496-2353), Kitchen, EtflcienciM & Apartments. Heated pool, direct dial pOOnes, television, sauna bath, la u n d r y facilities, meeting room, close to San Oemente .l Lagwla Beach. Come play in our sport- fishing, shopping & restatt· rants. $50 \11eek &: Up. Bring this ad & receive S5 off on first week's rent. highly sucressful Ralph's Center at 17th & Tustin in Costa ~Iesa. Fully a.ir-condi· tione<I, with reasonable rent. Call: i\1r. Limburg. COLDWELL-BANKER REAL TORS 833-0700 NEWPORT SHORES 600 to 1600 Sq. fl . spaces, avail. immedialely~ 62nd & PJclfic Coast Hwy., Newport Beach. for offire use, bar· ber shop or any business. Rents very reasonable; month to n1onth or lease. K/TAN f ...._. gutter work in galvanized, heaters, disposals, furnaces, AYS & NIGHTS Degree, strong exper. Jn ln E I $12K BL em. '-"1huahua. copper, or stainless steel dshwashrs. 64~263 MIC & 0 manu.(. co. Budget &: ll1laly· Call for appo tment ng nffr to vie. FV .. SJl·8203· PACIFIC HEATING CO. BIA. Complete Phunblng sis exper. S42-tl:i'15 . ME or EE degree. 1-5 yn Lost SSS 494-9745 Mon-Fri Service. Lie. 272694. COOKS experience. WESTCLIFF LOST male cat, looks like ~t(\STER HANDYMAN PLUMBING REPAIR Of u. $900 Counter Help, p /t lme Personnt-1 APency Bluepoint Siamese, b ll t F'ences, paOos, Cer tile, for· No job too small NIGHTS c mt1nager Over 71. Call Steve, Bob wlwhlte nose & white feet. mica, cabinets, suspended ** 64Z-3l28 ** EDP exper. ln auto agency. Burns Re9taurant, ~2030. (Mark III Cent~\ cethngs, roofing & Move. Apply 3-5 Daily 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Ans to Bandit. 3rd Island ~874!t. Television Repair DELIVERY Help, full or l --='°54"2-'=8836==~-· I H. Harbour . Needs 1S1 E. Coast Hwy. p/time. ~tale or fem. for ENGINEERING medication. 84&-8104 PLUhlBlNG, ELECTRICAL, COLOR TV repair. Expert, 8ff h Bkkpr $750 local advertising promotion CONSTRUCTION LOST MALE Old English CAH.PENTRY. No job too reasonable service. Free Newport c Contract, payroll, lite lyp\ng. program. Good knOwledae of small. F &. B Home Repair, E '1· mat• o . BERT area helpful Your ... ,,.n No exper. req"d. Will train. Sheepdog, area 5th & l:i42-l403. GALLEMORE TV 968-7IS3. Equal Dppor. Employer · Ages 17-34. $326 mo. starting Orange Jn Huntington Beach ~~~'.!;"~...'..:~....:=~~ I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""""""" transp. Above avg earnings. salary + many btnefits. While &-gray, w/ blue CEN.'Lliome__Jtepalrs & 'File APT MGR·2 BR unfurn apt Auditor $13K Paid dally. Pick your own Now Interviewing, Army eyes, please call 536-2549 Maintenance. Quality work. ln exchange for man & wile EDP know'\. Outside & In--hrs .9am-.8pm. Aoply 315 Opportunities, 6 4 5-1 1 6 J, or 6i5-4062 Reliable. Reasonable. Call c to manar, small Eastside temnl audit exper. 3rd St. Swte E. Hunt. Bch. Costa Mesa. Ray 492--0i01. CERAMI TILE ~EW .tc 1 ===~==--=~ LOST black Lab. puppy. 7 remodel. Free est. Sm jot-.s apt comp ex. EXEC SECY $700 mos. Vic. c.M. Heartbroken "THINGS'' by Moose. Gen'I welcome. 536-2426. Virrite Classified ad No. 100 DENTAL ASST ' family. Generous reward. Carpentry, Repaln, Plum· R I Da.lly Pilot, P .O. Box 1500 fee Paid. Field s.a I e ft 642-6163. bing. El e c. Remodeling 00 ing Costa Mesa, Calif.92626 Busy doctor needs help! Lite coordinator of leading fim1 642-5613 exper & typing needed, + seeks highly enel"'f(etic lndlv. LOST; s1nall blk. & white · ROOF for less, repairs, APT. manager wanted. Long SALES (patient related attltudt-! j wlgood skills & able to furry Llasa Apso female. SMALL-REPAIRS Electric, shingles, rock, comp fret Beach. Opportunlty for Jason Best Agency compile sales reports . , , 675-4050 '' ~~: ~:~'.· Jl!~.r. 846-1296 ~~ng~v;~ntry, Reas. ~~~I~~ 16116 3 ~ouu:~ ro~ m=~nce~ Tech S.lt!I $15K 17400 Brookhurst, f . Vly. ~~j~agnd~~fit ~t~l~~I n ~: _ _ repair. IO units. (714) Comouler exper. Prove n Suite 213 963-6775 bonus & paid dt-ntal. Also HOUSE in Laguna Bench, -M'"'llMllfl Cl Ille \VHITE cat. 2/10. Vlc. of H•uling Top Soil 960-2508 or (213) 433-5424. track tte. Fee Jobs. Call Sally H--. 2 br, 2 ba. Nr bch & cily. -"-·• • Gothard & Warner. H.B. Dental Atilit•nt "'•" ....... ~ C 1 w• Call 642-0844, 494-9907. A 1 T b n ard Call MOVING' Loe: turn * QUALITY * APT, ?i-1anager for 5 unit ~. oasta Personnel 601 Dover Dr .. Suite 3 84~~19~2. 0 y. ew · · al · or beachskle apt. Responsible Pet1odontlsl needs exper. Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd. Rentals to Sh•rt 430 1 ~=N-E_1_v_PO_R_T_B_E_A_rn __ 1.,:"=0"'"-,,~~-~~-gen. hauling. 32 Ft. furn. * MUlCJ!Je .,!?! SOIL * person, contact David D. Sales Rep $12K t/tlme asst. Expanded CM MOVE your ofc or shop to LOST -r..ly pet cat is miss-van. 543-1.862 557-2736 ...,.,...,"""' Carlson, 833-9'.?93. Degree. Computer exper. In duties oppor. H.B. area. EXPER l.'Ouple v.·antcd for IMMED fem rm mate to lhare w/Sftme on Balboa Island 675-Till or 546-7360 Ext 40. MALE 34 will Share 2 br apt w/same. Costa ~1esa. Call~ WANTED-MATURE male to shr 4 Br hse & util. Close IQ beach, HB. $105. 962-8£,68. G•r1ges for Rent 435 MINI WAREHOUSES STORAGE No r-.1ove-in or Move-out charges, From $7 .50 per month. Hamilton &. N~wlanrl St., HB ALLSPACE 960-1970 ST 0 RAGE single garage. Safe, mclosed. S25 mo. Any type storage. 185 ~J ?-.1ar, CM >48--0919 G'ARAGE FOR RENT 918 Palm St., HB Call 5.16-4618 SINGLE garage for renl, $25/month. rn E. 22nd st. ot $25/MO. 9x20 new secure. 2033 Anaheim St. CM . No. 1 See. then call 642-5013 OOUBLE gange EISide C.M. tor storage only. $30. mo. 644-4423. fie• Rental -WlO SQ. ft. Ide e 1 loc. dfrectly behlnd Red Onion Rest., nr. O.C. all'JlOrl. a prestigious corner on No. ing. \Vht.. frindly, blue eyes, SKIPLOADER & dump truck APT Mgr-Retired or cpl. 12 sales &: serv. (714l 962-6671. housekttping in lrg home. Coast Hwy in Lag. Beach. recent operation. Mesa Ver· work. Concrete, asph&lt, DENTAL Rece t · b do th! 1 bl . de Sehl. area. 557·'"63. b . ""lliO •. "' .-units, CM. Write : Grove. 1 P · in a usy every ng, pre era e Util pd. 520-840 sq. ft. 45c ~~~~~~~~,.~~~j~M~W~·~·n~··:r.re:al<lng!:~·f-1:~~-~· )INM 922 9th St.Mah. Bch,90266 ofc w/good fringe benefits. lh•e OUf. Ref. 548-9575. sq. ft. Realonomir:s, 6T:i-67CO HAULING no & up. Moving, -'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmm ;iiii.iiii'"'i;ii0..iiii ... iii;iiiii!Advert. Siies $10K 1 yr dental exper nee. Some F/C B kk $700 FOR Lease, Retail Store, Gar, Oeanup. Big fiat bed • ASSEMBLY DEPT Aggressive w/proven track Sau. H.B. 846-3540. Fee Pa=. t!:~~ variety. 23x40 in shopping center, IMtructlon Jf 1• l &. Van. Anything 642-4032 Job W•nted. Male 700 • record. Orange Co. terr. DENTAL-Orthodontic Asst. \\'ann lriendly co-workers. 333 East 17th St, Costa . MOVING, Delivery, Hauling. COSTA Me,. !Me.. de! MANAGER ~lc,A!;k!:o, .. Age 21}.40. Ex-Art oriented co. AJso Fee Mesa, $275, 673'-0140, Have a large StepVan. • r-·· O"I-~. Jobs. Call Conlrol CarMt 675-0707, 645-2450. Reas. & Reliable 646-1346 marl lad seeks part-time Chem. S.le1 $12K DI~RIBUTOR TRAINEE E I OFF1CE on Newport Blvd. Schools & LOCAL Ing & •-ulln jobs, such as yard work, odd 2 y II h I t 2 f.lanaglng fa c i I i l I es 1~fu:~:~t N~e~~ • t t ' 575 mov '"' g jobs, trips for you to the Background in wood, metal, rs co ege c em 11 ry. . • • · · · avail on lease. Part. furn, ins rue 1on1 by student. Large truck. grocery or drug store, riveting &. drlJlin<> yrs Indus. aales exper. Andrews, Texas, expanding FULL or part t!nie expe:r carpeted, alr/cond., prk'g. You ARE NEEDED AS A H.eas. Barry. 539-943l:! or run n 1 n g errands or C•ll Sid Hoffm•n district in C<_ista 1'!esa. NO ~pt1ir plumber. 207 62nd Approx. 1000 sq. f I . 534-1846. exp. nee., will train. Work St N.B. 642-6:263 $250ln10. Warehouse alli(} T I A t miscellaneous tasks, alter Newport Personnel Agency Sal•• Trne $10K plan. Discrlbe in mutual avail. Ideal for contraCfor. rave g 0 YARD, garage clean-ups, school or on weekends. Ca.JI 642-3870 agreement. Call 556-6147. GENERAL OFFICE Call 54S-2616 remove trees, dirt, ivy, 545-4240. 1 :=:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=i:=iZI Degree In Ille sclence11 + ~---------1 Family type ofllee seeks con- d84r1 12666v e wa Y s, stumps. MOTEL-Hotel manager Ii 2 yrs out11lde exper. Driver~Kennelmen genial type \ndlv. w/prod. RETAIL shop:i: avail at 1 miniature mall in "Cannery E11rn \Vhile You Learn -· would like employment. ASSEMBLERS Neat & penonable. Penn. control exper. or will train Village" S110 to SlSO. 425 Commissions HAULlNG & YARD Good ref's & keeps bu11iness position. Xln"t r r Inge if you have v.'Orked wl 30th St NB 673-9606 DAY & E\'ENINC CLAS.SES CLEAN-UP up. Npt Sch, CM or La&una benefit!. Must have valid Kanlex. Must have good · · · or e CAPRI TRAVEL Call 963-26ll area. 645-1791 or 64&-3632. For e I e c tro-mechanlcal Calif. drivers lie. & good typing skllls. Start $450. Call &12-1960 ACADEl\1Y • Housecleaning CHRI~IAN male !I e f' k devices. Exper. in PRODUCTION driving record. Apply at U>ls Jae, 54Q..ro55, COW!tal OLDER office on Harbo r 613 N. EUCLID ANAHEif.l employment w/same. 27 mechanlca1 assembly ot 20612 Laguna Canyon Rd, Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 O Blvd. for rent.. 1000 sq. fl . small parls prefd. Laguna. I Harbor Blvd, CM S225 month. 548-5455. * 99l-09SO * JEFF'S Cleaning Service. ~~d FJ~ Gr:::i1r:r P.11~. STACO SWITCH, INC. Prod. Planner $l 2K Heif Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 I d t . I R 1 450 Residential & Commercial. Box !BT!, Costa Mesa. ll39 Baker, Costa ~1esa Aerospace valves exper. Sm.ll~----~iiiiiiiiiiliiiii~iiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiii~ n us r1a enta Floors, carpets, windows, 549-3041 mabhs. 11 I ~and R.,,.n JGC'l. etc. Serving Harbor Area. Job W•nted, Fem•le 702 Equal Oppor. Employer NOW LEASING Huntington Beach NEWM-1 940 Sq. FL & UP llamillo'I .II: Ne11•land S1. ffG-1970 NE\V BLDG M·l, 23 Units. 1250 Sq. Ft. Sl761flt0. . .~ 64&"'384 PRINTER-OPERATOR, $10K wn.L do housecleaning. Ex-also proolreadlng wants ASSI'. MANAGER -Shop Mgr Appliance Repair & Parts ' APPLIANCE serv. \Vasher/ d rye r ,dsh1vshr/disposals. All n1akcs. Reas. 646-5848. C•rpent er per & dependable. Work by job ln or near Costa. Mesa. Shari> gal to assist manager Contr11ct shop, piece work .the day. 6:i1).-09'74 6'12-3479. · in very active womans exper. necess. Hous•·woRK $2·.50 hr bot i q u e. Must have "' EXP In dental ins. bkkp part rt d .__ bl to Newport Beach Or Cost a or full lime. expe ence an uc a e M 646-S469 take charR:e of t u 11 Ass t Prod $IOO esaarea. · (TI4)846-8435after Spm responsibllltles.Xlnl A l!t rore~an ln punch&: SEEK & FIND'' Periodic Con1t'IS B O N E Y y · W P 0 N S B Y C 0 fol D M R opportunlly for the right ss person lntet'Hled ln a drill press ihop. perm., full time ~IUon. If you que.Jlfy, call for an appointment. TIIE LOOK 644-6500 * ATIRACTIVE GIRLS· All .P.osltlons Listed EXECmYES-MANAGERS "JOB OPPORTUNITIES" $15M·S75M Range SAU.ltU.Nr•OTIAILI Ar• Yoo.1 Un•rnploytd Now-Ar• You S•tkln9 A Ch1n9t -Worri•d Aboo.1t Yoo.tr Ag.--Tir•d of l roktn Proml11•- Und•cid•d A1 To A Proptr C .. wrt• •f Action- ARE YOU VNOl:P; ,AIU? lf 'Y•1 C•R A••"' Th F•llawfitt C9"9f•rl .. , 11 Tile Afflrmotl••• W•'ll Ukt A• lllttnfft With Yo• -Avail Now: Furn or Unru1·n. 50c per sq. fl. 833·9643. ~ RARE chance lor l or 2 execz. & sec. to share ocean view suJte In Union bank bldg Newport Center. Below Front Office, crpts, large ~ar doors. Anaheim & 1" er min al \\lay, C.1\1. Da.ys 646-5033, eves 646--0681 INDUSTRIAL Space '~or least>. IWO sq. ft. 10 5,000 ~ ft , -Newport-Mella attfl, 645-3940. 4001 BIRCH, NB 3600 SQ. FT. 541-5032 Rent1li Wanted 460 CARPENTRY -all lypea • guarn. qua!. specialize In re-n1odeling. Free esl. local ref. 497.2915 bef. 10 aft. 6 pm.-- AU. Types Big &: Small * Sm . plumbing jobs * 536·1648 EXCELLENT CARPENTRY GENERAL REPAIR TELEPHONE 675-5211 W O L K F L 0 ft1 P 0 N E A E 0 0 A P P E O D Y L J. ~ H j)_P l R L N l F R 0 K LANLPNS 100AS8 Vi10 M. DEMO SERVICE IN £00D .smru:s.__~A RT TIME, GOOD PAY. 645-24.44 AVON ENJOY MEETING PEOPLE & MAKING MONEY'!' Become an AVON representative 4 do both. At Both Offices IN COSTA MESA IF Y"OUILANSWERS ARE tRUTHFUL -WE CAN HELP YOU A. Do you h1vt •fron9 voc1tlon1I drivt 1 I. Do yo1o1 htvt good n1liv• lnttlllgtntt1 C Do yo11 fttl •11ffici111tty motlv1l1d to 1chlt vt7 0. Do you h1111 !ht t bility to mtk• dt tl1lon1 cost. 6f4-9440 NJ-:ED house or apt. Expert SHARE 3 BR hie, So. Sanra r-iu'J)('ntPr \\"ill exchange 1-e· Ana w/2 females. $75/nio. 11air ren1odenng tor all or et.. + Mkp'g. 557·9269 aft•~I!!!(/. ~f rent. N.B. arc11 . 7 pm. tli ''11. BAYFRONT OFFICES ~=c:.__ ___ _ PrHtlie area. 740,560, 330 IQ. tt. 3700 Newport Blvd. N.BL Phone 67$-1220 RARE chance for l or 2 execs. Ir: aec. lo shr ocean view 1uJte ln Un\on Bank AnnourtCement1 )~ 500 CUSTO~f Woodwork, remod., paneling & repair. Vince Lenholf. 53&-8475. JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery Drl Shampoo, (.SOU Retardants), Degreasers &. all color brighteners & 10 minute bleach for while cnrpett. Save your money l;ly savlni: me extra trlpa. ==·Cent.er. Below TRANSLATIONS Will clean living rm., dining OFC Suite, 100 ft, SUit.able Avanti translation wvlce; nn., &. hall $1.S. Any nn. for doc;tor. Hunt In&' ton tor business, legal pa~rs. S7.50, couch $10. ChRlr $5. Garden& 84&-1323. pr.tent, etc. From Spanish, 15 )TS. exp. ta whtl.t coutita • eq ft $95 Mo. Jlalla.n, Portuguese, French. not method. I do work * M&-2130 * _:Cal~l~(:1!~4~1 ~64~:>4~81~3·~"'!'~ I' i.!ifl\l'lt~3ll~. ~Good~~":2'~· ~531~--0~IO~Lt SUBLEJ' 611 or part, 650 i Mea. Cleanlll\, S • r v I c e . 911-n. Nr. Airport. J'um uto Tr1nsportat l~n 525 =/•tam~: sr,'7':f,~ or unlu:rn. ISJ.33.lO. RIDE or rlden • 1 ta v f' ""'""" ll UIO BE81' DAY.. -Vf<jo 6 AM, 1-' Carpet CIHnl"' nm an ad! lloo't dola,. 3 PM. SA Fwy. 5th a Floor Care & Windows "'11-!odg MHm. Spring. -· Dutch Main!. S.rv. !137-ISl8 • R AFRLEPEO K OCY H AIR R HE OENPPWCSCKEACHETIYL p !WttlP P LEPL H WSKYAFA FlN LL E Y ALLAttKENFNOH IMl.nlctiOfl•: Thto hhtclcn ~:llT\tl li\tt.J Nlo11 1ppt1r. fo,-..·ud. b.ckwird. up, down, or d11,0M1ly In tllc pvr.lle. ~Ind etch hidden nlfllc and bo11 It In as shown: ~ eONELLY rAVE POHSllROOKS ,, COMAS SO~ F1NLA V WEST1'11Al r D'AltREST HALUY WHIPPLI ~ f.NCKE PER-.INE WOU: .. TOf!IOftOWl £apCil• GH1 8 , To ordtt 1ny or 111 nr ihe t~p•twfed "Seek & Find" books. numbtrl 2 throuah 6, iend so «db ror e1eh. m1kln1 chtck~ piyablt to "Setk 1. FllMI." S1:1r-Tclttrtm Syndlc1tt. Addl"HI "llm in can o{ thb MWIPlpcr. ' ~. . ... Ruo your own bu•-•, 2706 Harrbor Blvd. schedule Your own working houn & we'll help you b!JUd )'OUr sales territory. Call: 50-1041. BABYSITTER , lite housekeeper, Tues thru Fri, 1 to 4:30 pm, 2 boys 9 & 6. Costa. Mesa. 54().(187. BEAtmCIAN needed with folfowlng, xlnt w o r k I n I cond., + comm.. Top location at the Newporter Inn Beaut.)' Salon, ~ BEAUTY OPJ::RATOR Cuarantee + Commlu.ion San Juan Capistrano 493-5572, 492-2566 (!\IU. BEAtn'Y OPER ATOR. followln& pro!, ""Top ...... +comm. • 546-331ll Co<ta M,.. BEAUTY Opmtor. No f o llowlns neces1 . O>mm/l\IUMM. 645-1~. Suite 207 Call 556-1100 IN ANAHEIM 600 North Euell!! can 11u120 E. Art yo11 rttdy to 11t • tttllltlc cttt•' obltetl~t1 F, If you wtrt tonwlnctd thtt help ,..., 1111ll1bl1 would yo11 •cc•pt It, wltho1o1t dtlty? YOU SHOULD KNOW e Tht h•tt1r jobt t rt not td•1rti1•d e Th;td p1rty proftt•lontl inOut nct I• 1om•tlm•1 "•t•1- ""' e G1Hin9 tht right door1 optn, tf th• right l1•tl ,,, q1o1lrt 1 1.chniq1o11. •I b t tuti11t pcu1tlont tr• filttd thrtugh ••••1111111 lnttr• ,.;.\,,,, _,. Mt•• rttUPllt mtlling, i1 11ot t tot•I tntw•r. SEND RESUMI OR CALL TODAY -FOll- ·NO COST EXECUTIVE INTERVIEW EXEOIJTIYE SERVICES, llC. -HOME OPPICE - (7141 547-tw . Al N. M.tln St. San ta Ana ISECUIUTY' IANK IU llDING SUITE 1011 ·-"°' CDIWtlnl ..me... ""' tll """ of • I ( GENERAL OFFICE $500 To statt, Good benefits, hapP)' eo-woricen & new otttcea! lJte bkkpng exper, uret'd. Jo'°" S.11 Aeonc y 17400 Brookhunt, F. V!y, Suite2U ~ GIRL FRIDAY _ Very sharp YoUO« indlv. needed for marketlna: services de_pt. of raridly crowina nilboat mfr. I you type 60+ on IBM Exe<:. are good w/figures, & enjoy pressure &. variety the fu~ is exce l len t . Bkamd In merchandising or paste-up helpful, but good ofc skills, maturity & respo n albll\ty most important. To $500 ? Call Ann. 642-8961 Westsall Corporation Monday1 F,rbnJiry 18, }q74 30 {logs DAILY PILOT 21 ~54 1 p Want..i, M & I' 710 p Wanled, M&F 710 Halp .Wan!ed, M&F 710 Holp Wonted, M&F 710 _Ma_c_h_lno_ry_,_ ____ 14 Sec?rtlng 1-.;.;,;;No:-exrnp:Ee~RliEENNCC;E-·1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' SECY./RECEPT. R.E. G Tf DITCH Wfl'CH trenching SKlS K2, three's, 205 cm • PUPPY WORLD • NEC ESSARY Real Estate Assoc. Secretarial pC>ll!Uon in •ctlv• UR EN 1y moehlne, M~ u hp, reblt w/blnding• soo. 00011. )'oodlN I! OSI R<':allor't1 oflice. Be1tutiful engl~. 496-6323. Ro8emont1, Red Stuff, flt Oiihuahuu, Thll' • TRA~ ~ENTIOH ~~~h:1;~1~ otflce ln New,r: Cenier. NEEDED Miacell•neoua 111 ~f·x~·64~i1.rtow lOm ~:if'Te~~S1.~!i~: CB lnd .. ~ or So CaUt. lmmedbte opportunity for Coogeni&ell ':' ~l maoir'f' ---------!~~~~:!!::~'---Cockapoo, JaP¥nt1e Span., -..,........ • -.. or exper aate1 assoc-P'flOM • · ce I BUfff Store, Restaur•nt, Labs . Dachshund. 100 MIX·' bu inunedlate openfna• tor ........ poJ!Uou requiring good Bar ' 32 MU5t havt exper. 00 IBM tn.1neta in d 1 1 p lay , iatel. Red Carpet Realtors, telephone voice, SH i: l8M FOUR • • I ED PUPS! t Stud Service 029 or 129 A/o.r Univac 1no. m••ke"-••·tt1butlon •-with over C)l offices nation· ~ bllltl 1 M t be M~t Bre<.td!li . Open Ewt: Indlvtduw.l we are seek1n£ ~U ~. 6 00:: wide can otter the profe. c..Jiec. a e · Ull Good, used furniture &: LOST. ]..EASE, m/sell rest. 531·5021 Swine Shift mu11t be able to handle locatlont to open 'in bn· llonal arowth & advance-~~t'. ':xpe':fc~ce Sat~:: KEYPUNCH OPRS appUnnces or will stll f..>!'. ,YC_>U fixtures, 11tainles1 " t ~ e 1 SOINAUZER pups, llbotl. cornpleit 4 non standard mediate future. Many pcwt. ment opportunjtiff YoU''t'e sentiaJ, but helpful. Prcft:!r MASTERS AUCTION potg & (J8Jl5, dl;hwshr setup, stud serv1(..>e. grooming. joba, ~uirin~ an ability doni now open for tun time look1nJ tor + an xlnt com· local ~aident. For lntervu 2075~ Newport, CM 64t>-86SG 2· ref, pie counter, etc. Saga Terms. sn-8182 or 522--8366 to ?'Cl judgement & m&ke pmnanent JXOPle. mission 1tructurl!. Canta.ct call Mrs. Duhl. 839-0974 aft. 6 Sunday Motel Coffee Sh<ip, 1650 S. a.ft 5. dectsiol'lil w/min. of super· * XLNT 'I'RAiNlNG PRO.. Thomu E. Mancini, man· We&loy N. TaylQr Co.644-49lO VOLT Behind Tony's Bldw:. Mat'l. Harbor. Anaheim. Do not 'A~m=E~.D-A_L_E_P_u_p_s_·_A_K_C_-1 vision. GRAM. eooer. 640-8672. Instant Person nel JUSl' serviced • used Elna call or disturb motel off. Flintkote Ch. Sh<e/Show We offer a starting salary commenaun.te w/exper. Xln't bencfita &. outstanding working condlUons. WORK ALSO AVAlL FOR •~-Ten1porary Service sewing machine, all at· COMMERCIAL Ice maker Qlty/lluge Bone/Calnt Pet. I{ 1 G ff ... s c H 0 0 L & SECRETARY 34848 Campus Dr., suite Ul6 tnch1nents, & CttmS. Good for sale $200 837-5561 Pr/Pty COLLEGE sruDENTS Newport Beach 546-474.1 cond. fro. E\fand new Davis 675--0100 AKC lri!lh ~tter pups xlnt COMPANY BENEFITS Equal Oppor. Empl oyer Clas!llc rt ·rennls rac~et TV Radlo HiF L Pedigree. shots, wormed FOR PERSONAL lmmedi~te opening for indlv. ~: ~~ri4~. ;t1~n ~r:~~ _s;.,'t:.:•.:.r.:."°:...._' ___ __:8:.:36;: cl,,:75,::·c,'::c45-::,.:1Mo:,:.:<~~-~~-I PINH Apply INTERVIEW CALL: w/good typing "'ills. 70.75 W T GRANT CO 6 -PUREBRED Collie. Mal<. Betwn a.12 MOft..F rl SJ4..2591 w.p.m. accurately. No sh p.m. ZENITH:. RCA .t SYLVANIA No papers. 3 yrs. Loves Or PHONC: --~C~~~ll~T~ue~s,~O~n~l~--'·::~;;;.;;~~:1 required. • • 0 DECORATOR has terrific televisions & stereos. Priced children. $20. 847-2967. 54M220 216 N E EDS buy, 275 yrds 2 tone light less than tht' discounters , ext 9•""'5pm For Appl Contnl1 gold nylon plush carpet, 27S 'A·iU1 3 yr picture tube. 1 Horses For Evenq1wknd intcrvwa;, Real E state Sales Carol Smith Salespers0T1, f/time yrds 90ft lime tone, English yr parts & servi('t!, 19" & 856 AMF VOIT I ·---------1 MANAGEMENT 644-5800 Appliance Salesm an Pub mirrors, 6 4 2-2 2 5 5, larger color sets 11 re 3% yr. old BUCKSKIN Quar- GIRL FRIDAY NOTE DEPT. . . One of the nation's largest Avco Financial Service Part·Tlme 548-4654 delivered & sel·up . All tcr horse. Gren broke. New 1 girl oHice. Mfg & We presently have a position residential resale companies Equal Oppor. Employer Waitresses, F /tim e FOR SALE -Child's "'itker models in stock & on Gelding. Very gentle $300. marketing, Is this YOU? 3801 So. H•rbor Blvd. open for an assistant note is aeeklng a manager for Auto Mechanic chair, 25 inch Co1np, Shirley display. Cash 90 Plan or 1 c54=8-~9=836~•~"~· ~'~· ---- Good typ~t & Ambitious, S•nt• An• head. N~atncsc; & accuracy our Newport Beach office. SECRETARY-SH & type FC Pnrt·Time Temple doll . Terry I.fie, terms to 36 months. Ca.II ~~~~~~~~~!I PersoMble, Re 11 ab1 e, is a must & only person w/ Liberal co mp e n sa ti on Sasha, otht"rs . all t::ood. for our prices on any model ; Compete.nt. Eager to learn Eqtlal Oppor. £mplo)'er m/J prevlou.s ex~r .. need apply. allowances & benefits. Sue· bookkeeper Salary open zt3 Paid holid;:iys, paid vaca· 545-2368. ABC Color TV, 190 4 G I II~ I &. confident of ability to -· -. -Please Contact c:essful candidate should Ocean Ave. Laguna Beach lions, liberal benefils. Fine Brookhurst or 9021 Atlanta, ....,.Boats~ reach the top! Potential Greg Newland have a college degree or _·.,.•94-~780,15'0===-===~ rC"tircmttnt plan. DRAPES, \VOVEN WOODS, lluntington Beach. 968--3329 . more hn,portant than ex· LABU~CRS 1714) 8'° ·= equlvalent,plus proven sue-SECURITY GUARDS GRANTS PLAZA CARPETS, UPHOLSTERY 962 5559 perlence. Will train right R£ B•nk of ~ic• cess in the residential resale Many openings in o.C. area. Co11tact Perooruwl Ofc Free Es 1 • 1' r ai n e dl l -'0::.'.;::;.-~'---==~= Boats, Generil girl. Interviews ~M :'only. SOONewp.lrtCenterDr mar~et. Send res~e in Full & part time. Retired 9811 Adams Ave Decorators. 5 48-89 41, RICE 'S TV SERVICE 17935 Sky Park, Sulte F, WAREHOUSEMEN Newport Beach cont.idenee t<? Classified ad p re f er r ed. p 1 easant Huntington Beach 1/621-4769 (formerly in PAntr:v S Cntr) BOAT resins. laminating & Irvine. (Near Redhill & Equal Oppor Employer No. 91, Daily Pilot P.O. conditions. Start $2. hr. Call 2 G 0 0 D Y E A R * TV Specials * finish, ·'$6.95 pel' gallon. ?.fain). SHIP/REC CLKS · Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. before 11 am. {714)546-9558. Equal Oppor. Employer "Suburbanite" Nylon snow USC'd & Color TV sets· \Vhllr Plastics Plus? 2706 Harbor, G irl Friday $700 NURSE, part time RN, 9263i. Security Services Co. WHO \VANTS TO \VORK? tires. sz 8.55 x 14". $25.00 they last!! Co!or from S65 Costa Mesa, Z56--0900. Fee Paid. Irvine co. needs llpm-7am, Mon & Tues. REAL EST:ATE SERVICE Sta. Man. 1st DRI VE A CAB! each or best offer 646-2393 up, B & W fron1 $35 up. For .:::::::::..;:o:::o..:::..;::::::..._-1 ~ t · kill N h VO'T H h Co aft 6 PM & \\'klends. service call : Bo p 906 ~....,.. yp1ng s s. o s . ~ untlngton B ~a c n-SALESMEN Class. Top wages + comm. CHOOSE your hours, \\"ork ats, ower Also Fee JoQs. Call Elly Instant Personnel valescent Hospital, 847·3515. Why not work in the hottl t Apply Ray C'.arey Chevron for yourself, be your own COMPLETE HAM SfATIOS ~2 ~anorAve., ~~6003 ,71 22. I/O Sear"'-', Cutty ~r ~Ym;n~n ~~eon~ Temporary Service NURSE to supervise 3-ll area • HuntinP,on Beach . Station, 6M S. Coast Hwy., boss. Men or \vomen. Can Exciter 2 KW Line a r ,,1~~~~"-"'"'"--'-~--'--~ <v.> 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 shift. · Need Relief also. Fountain VaJlcy. Let us Laguna Beach. be slightly handicapped. receiver, Tower, be a m . RCA 250 Watt s I e r e o , cabin. 225hp OMC. lo hrs, ey, 3400 Irvine Blvd, N.B. Newport Beach 54&-4741 Apply 1445 Superk>r Ave, train you. Call Phil Mc· SERVICE station he 1 p Neat -Clean Appea.rance. $700. 548-1487 contemp. cab., 9 yrs. old, sips 4. canvass, head. Xln't GIRLS (21 to help & cook Equal Oppor. Employer l.;iioi;c;i466""F1"'"agsiiiihiilpioiiRdii'iiNiiB .... -IJN~am~eef>;. '-VJLL~~.\~G=E~RE=AL= wanted. Days. Browns Vts., retired. Age 25 to 70. BARGAIN at $1700 Total. very goocl,r.'Ol'Mi. Sony _tape colnd. Am~.kst~~whl on 62' sailing yawl. Skin div· 1 • ESTATE, 963-4567. Newport Center Shell, 990 Supplen1ent your income. Irvine Coast C.C. Golf deck67~5~~·~~· mikes. tr r, surge r . . ~~r;;:~logua:. cruise. Call 1:.IQUOR STORE ·CLERK, NURSES REAL ESTATE E. Coast Hwy, Newport. Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a Membership for sale. Call etc. es. . 22' Cluis, $650. 32' PC $800. nights, 6 days a wk. Apply: Mo N KATELLA REALTY i s day. Apply in person, 586-6075.~ CURTIS Mathes stereo 63' Motor Yacht $85,000. GUARDS 2072 S.E. Bristol, N.B. lNr. rtan ur1e1 looking tor a few, good, ,.,, SHEET METAL Yl"JJow Cab Co .. 186 E. 16th CRAFTSMAN 10 .. Radial C:Or:t-~le. beaut. \\·a ln ut 16' Outrigger, $250. Call O.C. wrport. Registry fulltime licencees to staff ,.,, LAY -OUT MEN St., Cos ta Mesa. saw. New 1973. $285 includes finish. SJSO. 64&-5536 ~"'=6-4-"'990::::,· =~=~-- Tustin Office Building LOT MAN Costa Mesa it's new SOUTH COAST ,., SHEAR OPRS YOUNG lady over 18, metal stand. 716 w. 16th l'!'!!~~!llll'!!;;!llil~~ 24' FIBERGLASS Lehman DAY & NJGl-IT SHIFTS, 40 for new car dealership Ia taking applications for office. Call: Bill Rogers at ,.,, BRAKE OPRS pleasant personality, sales St, CM 642-3188. l ~ ~ $8,550. CAii 546-4990. HOUR WEEK, UNIFORM (lnlpOl'llJ Ask for Mr. Maul RN's, LVN's, Prac., Aides, 557-5311. ability helpful, full or part ANTIQUE steam radiators, \ Pm lftd ~ l 'L, FURNISHED. BENEFJTS. at 28402 Marg u erite Live-ins. M&F, 548-9361 .or SALES "'WELDERS ti me. Dana Point. 496-1234. circa 1887. Rococo design,. ~ 31 IT. Chris Craft twin XLNT WORKING CONDS. Parkwa,y, Mission Viejo 833-2365. 657 W. 19th, Suite We need 3 sharp gals, looking V MACHINE OPRS l ~A!s!k!l!or!Lan~!"!!0~'~J!im~.~~ I b~ras~·~·~!i~lti~n~g:•·~T~o~S~3~0.~P~hl. ~~~~~~-~~~I screw. Sll,500. Excellent FOR LOCAL INTERVIEW (use Avery Pky. exit) D, CM for a Juli time .i,>ermanent Job shop exper. desired. Top _968-0601 condition. Call: 494-9727 CALL (213) 283-66:.3 AN y I ~~~~~~~~~-I ~ ... ~'!""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~! position in BOullque sa1es ":ag:es. Xln't benefits. ! ]~· MOVlNG! Antique brushed Pets, ~nerf!I 850 '70 BALBOA, 20', Seagull DAY, ANY'l'IME. Machlnlst Asst. $5 hr NURSES \.\'ith very. active shop .. 3 K. C. Holloway, Inc. lllerchandiM V white hand carved king * •-'ty p 1·Food * engine with trailer, $3000, Secretary $600 RN-LVN-AIDE fl & pt time now av:uJ. 16680 Armstrong, Irvine _ head board $100. 531-1317. ~curl e ..:.646-::..:5632='-· -------I U. S. GUARDS Ex. Sec'y lo pres. $750 11.7 & other shifts. Top pvt Call fo r appt. Call 557.4040 1 . Beef by 27c lb. Co tt. ch n--S " 909 701 SQ_ ATLANTIC, F/C Bkkpr, Constr to $700 duty pay. Immed. pay for THE LOOK 644-GSOO ::::::::::::::::::1 CARP~ Layer, nstp.ll ation, 15c lb. ·All Kennel supplies :-:::::::.";:,•_::;:"'::"----~~I MONTEREY PARK Secretary lo $700 floor duty. Co 1;1n t y wd SALES MANAGER •A __ n_t_iq.._ues ______ a_OO_ ~:rs, !°~.or mrne. Call 547·3~77, 1418 Wilshire, S.A. HOBIE 16, like new, Lime An eql}al opportWlity lnven. Control Clerk $430 lntervws, Mon-Fri 9-5 . Exper for furniture store SCRAM LETS Cats 852 ee \l:ith or without n .. c ~emID.gY~r ='" -~/Bkk:pr lo $700 Lescoulie Nurses Registry, Steacbr -~ition Good SJ'ltllK R01ftU 3 Piece ~set w/ ~Un, ll 833-2000 days HANDYMAN dui ~e&Mle1 Slseo ~~ . 3.51--HQSPital -i;«f1---N:B. satarY.~Aleft. ~~sslve' 'Ii · ,'1\f! ~ 1'm.. . -... .--~Jead ~~~.h. pill~s. SIAMESE SEALPQINT 6f3.::f91 ~~eq . ' . To Yt_'OTk al Orange Co. le Sid Hollman {Lobby Park Lido Bldg) responsible person.'! Refer. CL ANSWE-RS ••J ~ K1ttens S:!O -ft4io.2a38 rr Iclt~~:,n~~Porpl~~~! Per=~~!. .. y·: 642-9955~=Gs ·sCallALES64,S-G75alsU .oo.rver547-19U,83part. ERK .JR. '·~ , "~. E~~~~:2 _speed, ,in Q~s.~ -,ea. t .,;, ~~~~~ft\fo~~~~ ., ,..,,..-T II Duplex -Chasm-Twice-542-4208 'f1Mn, gjde tie~ - $500 .per mo. Must be able 133 Dover Dr., N.6. * e ·~ tin;ie eves. setting s a I es Desire high school grad w/ Goblet _ 11IB i.IP . . DOBIE AKC fem. 12 wks--soafs--·s1t••1t/'DOCRT -910 · to work Sats & Suns. '42-3170 '*Credit Checker appointments, $3.00 hr + min. 1 yr continous local On a c~atterbox: They call WASHER. Dryer, P;;t1.nll~gs. blk/rust. Oiampion lines.1~..c...._c'c...-"~-"-·----1 675-3819. * Safe Deposit bonus, call 6-9pm, 552-9286, industrial exper. Co. paid him "the Westerner," be-~;:!· 641:.'1~ 0:~~~~e,s ears cropped 497-2156. DOCK for power boat. Up Exper. onry need apply. 551-2318 med & life ins. Modern cause he comes into a room ' Any dsly is the SEST DAY to to 28'. S50 per mo. Mo. HEALTH CLUB INSTRUCTOR MAIL CLERK Security Pacific Bank a/cond !Dci~iri'Can shooting from THE LIP. Mi~ehaneoua run an ad! Don't delay. . to mo. ok. 64&-7505. 18622 M~~.:;;'ur Blvd SECRETARY Electronics Antique Show & Sole Wonted 820 ~ ~iPlOlOCJlhR-.:nJ3 Immediate opening for indiv. to wo rk in mail room Equal Oppor. Employer San Clemente Inn 285 Fairview Rd Costa Mesa SINGLE closed mouth any sorting & delivering mail. ORDER DESK Immediate Opening for indiv. For Apf t Contact To $600 to start-Employer w¥ has xln'.t secreta:r:iaI Major Orange Co. apt C S -'th Pays Fu-Typing, + phones sk1l~s & en)Oys i,yorking complex has immJ!'(liate iro ml & math ability/Prefer ex· wtfigures. 1''ront office ap-Super G irl Friday requirement for health club 644-5800 ' per. Fee Jobs Also. pearance. Needed for l gal ore. Exper. tnstructor. PT'efer candidate A\·co 1''inancia.I Service Jason Best A-ency in all phases of book· w/coaching &. instructing ........ ppor. mp oyer 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly. keeping; payroll, typing & Equal Oppor. Employer Mfr Feb. 22. 13, 24, 1974 ·size Compo Dionne Quin- Fri, Sat 12 to 9 tupl('t, good condition. Old Sun 12 to 6 Southern Pacific diners PUBLIC INVITED chimes from the 1920's. General Admission $1,25 545-2368. Applionces 802 SILVER COINS A CONVENIENT s.IOPPINQ AND SEWING GUIDE FOR THE GAL ON THE GO, . Eq""' 0 E I r.v For Art Contact · 11 · Ca ro Smith 642 ~" exper. in a aquatic sports Suite 213 963-6775 -~':•·;.;:,""~""""' =--,----swin1ming & r c la t e d MAN wanted Ii:> learn the ~5800 TELEPHONERS, male or Paying 200% over face KENMORE washer, 8 cyl. value. Call 962-3646 bef Sam S~. Westinghouse e I e e & aft 6pm. . for •n 1d In Women's Wor1d dryer, 5 cyl. $50. Kenmore activities. Must have office supply business. Sales PICTURE Framer in Avco Financial Service fem. for local Cha.mber of necessary certificate. In or business bkgrnd. BEA<lt Laguna needs person to cut Equal Oppor. Employer c 0 mm er c e advertising addition candidate must be ST AT I 0 NE RS• 1Ml1 mats, glass, fit-neat &-promotion. Pick your own able ta provide instruction I iNii""'°"ii;i~~· ~Coo<a~~M~e~sa.ii.iiim I O::aceura~~te~54:0-~1:688~~~~p~m~ ... 11---;::;:;::;:;:-;::;---1 hrs. shift from 10am·3pm to residents in the proper SECRETARY or from 3pm to 8pm. $2 me of all health clubs &: MANAGER PRESSMAN per hr + daily bonus. conditioning room Fantastic oppor. for exper, Exper. not necess. We will e q u i p m en t . Conduct person! Manage o w n. Good opportunity to learn train. Calling is from our Physical Fitness Classes branch! Xln't Qlary It ad· the ad b' .,..,,.,,, "" h ofc. Apply 315 3rd St, Suite washer. 3 cyl. S 6 5. WANTED TO BUY: USED C1ll Miry Beth 642-5671, ext. 330 Guaranteed. & d e I i v e r y FOLDlliG CHAIRS, FOR 54H672 CL~ E~~· 55,_9676 * 8°Part Wardrobe Spring's Newwst! KITCHEN AID. p 0 r tab 1 e I -------~--1 dishwasher, conver~ih!\!' 1o PRIVATE party wants sterl· pennanent. Best 1nor\l·l ing silverware damaged or made, perl. cond. GE Elect not, paying $30. L . B . range, dbl oven, xlnt corn!, 494--5661. ~ 'I I I t t t I Expe•. -u'--~ ••ll.250 •-Lt, ~,..,ing •<>, s ... or exercse programs. vancemen po en a • ·~ .. 11~ .,. 100. Send resume to E. HUJll. Bch. Ins t-r u ct or will also w/large corp. Employer 1850 Multilith. Oassilied ad No. 46, c/o iiii.iiiiiiioii;iii'-;;;;;;iiiiiiii Rent Washersf Orye rs maintain all related PJaysFee-n~FAeeJob. For Aprt. Contact oany Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, TEMP~O'S BRAND NEW PEAVEY f. ~ndlpment 1 & apparatus. ason uwst gency Ca·o Smith Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. $2. ~SJ{~ m*a.int. Standard P.A. $400. 2 Shure ,.; . ...,. comp ete resume & 17400 Brookhunt, F. vty. ; •• 5800 P85 Mies $50 ea. AJso Sonic ' salary requirement in con ti· Suite m 963-6775 -S · ly k • D I A J b I MUST SE"LL! Frigidaire I Bass head. $75. Call dence 10 C.1assified ad No. Avco Financial Service ecreta_ ' Mar eting •a Q Imperial washer & electric 557-8151 aft. 5 44 c/o Daily Pilot. P.O. Box ME;PJCAL TECHNICIAN Equal 0ppor. Employer F:di;,~;~~xf~ :.e ) • • . dryer. 64.2.-8ll9 TRUTONE Electric • Acou.s· 1560: Cost& :r.fcsa, Calli. No exper. req'd. Will train. ing w/engineers. Good sh TEMPO !! ._., . Building Materials 806 tic with Gibson Amp, $80, · 92626. Ages 17-34. $326 mo. starting PROOF OPERATOR-& typing skills will land 0 ('I'S a u wY unique also Univox "Dove" Accous-I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I salary + many benefits. Fee Paid. Beautiful modern this outstanding oppor. Start & time saving opportunity • Surplus . Building tic, $125 w/case, 646·2913. HOSTESS Now intf!T'Viewing. Army bank ' seeks indiv. w/NCR ·$600. Also Fee Jobs. Call for skilled . . . . . rt.fATERIAL • 10".IO's of NEW SIGMA ACOUSTIC GUITAR Apply In person be~ Opportunities, 6 4 5 -1 16 3, exper. Salary to $450. Also ·Coastal Personnel Agency, KEYPUNCH ITEMS? Doors, lu!'lber, p\y.. +hardshell case. $150. 6 • 9:30 & ll:30 am. Alley West Costa Mesa. Fee Jobi. Call Sally Hart, 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM SECRETARIES ~vorxl. .. alum sheeting, mold· mos . old. 557--8151 aft. 5. l~[jll;j ·1----1-2lifi-W~ 0 c e a n f ·r_QJt t, _MEN'S SPA , 540-6055, Coastal Pet90Nlel 540-ro55. ~ want dignified & 1ng, w~ndows, etc. • , •• Newport Beach. 675-ln4 F/time M .. .,., ....... u-sod. -AgeftC')';-2790 Harbor Blvd, Sl:."CR.ETARY. Girl Friday. stimulatil~ Jong .or -short BUILDERS SURP-b-US FEN_DER bas,,!:;nan9904 w/amp fj .·: •' ...,....... '""" CM t · t ! . braui. Call "'°"'"' aft. 6 •. '". • H 0 U SEKEEPER/COMPA· Salary & commission. Apf>iy Must be sharp & able to erm assignmen s • C\\' 2500 So. Main, S.A. pm Any reas offer .•· NION, live in lovely run. Mon thru Fri. See Personnel PROOF operator & teller make decisions ·& work days, couple v.·iek.s ?r few Mon thru Sat 10·5 · · · · >.la·- CdM. Care for senile lady Manager. pos. open. Security Pacific alone. Real Estate License months · you decide. Now TI4: 546-1037 Office Furniture/ &_working_ge{lt. Xln 't refs. Balboti Bay Club Bank, Laguna Nigue l helpf\ll. Varied duties. Nr. you can····· Furniture 810 Equip. 824 SJSOmo. Aft 3:30,675-5623. ...,,1 weoa 11, NB Brancih. Exp. J!n?f. Ask for o.c. Airport. \Vrit e, APPLY BY PHONE --'--'-------'-I t ·.,;~ HOUSEKEEP!:R, f /t ime . u.£. • 5 ~wy., Lorri Baker' 4~5Cl Equal Classified Ad No. 31, Daily Call 540-4450 & Let us kno\\' NE\V WATER BED, frame, OKS. $15 up Exec swvl chrs Mature person. Appl)', Mesa Ml!cf'ARY Opportunity Employer ' Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa what your skills are. No headboard & heater $200. $15/25 Sec chrs $8124. Verde C.Onv Hosp, 66) · L!CE . • ~ l\fesa. Ca. 92626. need to come in rcrsonally · Water bed & frame SlO. Pierce 867 W. 19, CM Center3St, CM~. I No exper, req d. Will . QUALITY *Sec'ys BookkH.-r until we have the 'just right' 675-60701 493-5245 ask for 642-3408 . . Ages 17·34. $326 mo .. startint ' r--s spot for YoU' L'nd * HOUSEKEEP , live-in; salary +.~ benef~ U z Re.in~ers Agency NE'IER A FEE AT TEMP<>. 1 a . P i1nos/Org1ns °""" room, 1V. Some Eng. Now Interviewing, Army CONTROL 4020 Birch Street Tempo T porary H Ip LIKE new dining room table ..;.;.....;...;._._ ___ ..c..;:.;:1 2·cb.lld .. H.B. \g.12-8113 Opportunities. 6 4 5-11631, . Suite 104, NB 833·811l(J em e & chairs. Very re as · • PIANOS H 0 U S EKEEPER/Babysit-Costa Mesa. ANALYST Diel A Job 83~55 TRAVEL AGENCY -n1ng· ~· 1845 Monrovia, • ORGANS Tee, p/time, 1 child. Call No ChaP'ftA To. Y-· pace 29• C.M. TO . •--for exp'd sales agent. Call I -~so=F~A"""'~~~---I~-' I Sfs.:2158 att. 4pm. • NCR ' nnrDI R Established 1965 Betty or Millie. & LOVESEAT Open N · t1 ti 9 HOUSEKEEPER o W _.. Ufl.M Harbor Travel 675-13ll Custom made. Usually Sat· 'til S· Sun 12 5 , ay O•J\• 1 ed' . . f . SECRITTARY: 20 hr. wk, home. 968-7910 • • • • • er, 3-5 da;'S per wk. Refs. Newport Beach firm needs mm iate opening or m· $75. S-H & typing necessary, TRUCK DRIVER Rentals from $5 Own trans. 615-7888. CdM. experienced NCR 3 95 dlvid~ with 2 or m~re Hunt. l'larbour. \'.'ritP. No exper. req'd. Will tratn. CORNER sleep set, new, lnst•llmtnt Loan ,Clrk operator !or 4/R I: A/P. years m mechanic~ eng1n· Classified ad No. 59. Daily Ages 17·34. $326 mo. starting blue-green plaid-tv.1n bed, Mln typlna Wremmt 50 eerlng or related field .. Al Pilot, p 0 Box 1560, Costa salary + many benefits. ~W_a_sh_•_c._e_t~c._833=-9~11~0 __ Fee Paid. Must have ~: · Som ""r--• ed least 2 years In fonnule.ting Mesa ea 92627 Now inteJVieU.rin"". Army COMPLEI'E Houseful of ln installment loan & credit wpm. e .... -u~ uca-specificaUons tor raw ma· · · · .. M'-b verllying. Accura.te typing. lion in accounting would be terlals, production assem· SECRETARY/EXEC Opportunities_. 64 5 -1163, furn . & access. 64.5-1440, Salary to $450. Allio Fee desirable. Xln't benefits. biles and final products for Good shorthand & typing. -Al-cCo.o::s:::ta""'M::•::sa::·~-·.-~-Sam-Gpm. Aft 6 5.57·95.'30. Jobs. Call Sally Hart, Ple•H C•ll <,'Omumers. Base materials tractive unique office for TYPIST. P /tin1e aneinoons. J ewelry 81$ 540;-605.5, Coastal Personnel 9:Jo.m-12 Noon in plastics, steel springs and one girl. Paid tmurance &-Must be exper. on IBM Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, 644-3Sl9 ~.Must have know· profit sharing. 9-5pm. Nr. elec. Vartous ofc duties . Br idal Set .65 Ct. CM ledge -of testing devices, ''°'F=•;shlm!==l~;•;nd=. ,;:640-0930,;_;o,·=:._:83:1;,-;;"°';:':='=!t,05=•m::,:o. ===.:..,,~14;5::00.=Pv~t;,;:pt~Y=· ,,::548-1!5$,;;:=:o THE IRVINE CO. measuring equipment andt· Accountant lo $1.0l< Field Mgr PR/Serv/School . Bus Adm degree $15K Prod Mgr Mach Shop to $WC QC £Jectro Mech. to P>K Teleprocessing, 360 BAL Programmer to $l.2K Equal Oppor . Employer. Newspaper Can'len • , _ YJi &_!ilRLS 10 yf!I & Older Dai~ Pilot Has Rout.1 Open . Coplstrono Bea ch Dane Point S.n Juan C•plstr..-.. CALL MR: LOWDER 492-4420 NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY TRAINEE POSITIONS ~ec. Secy'/O(c mgr. $800+ Sec'y/Lile tna. exp $800+ Consumer Lend. Proce11 to $600 NOW OPEN capable of reading and in· terpreting blueprints. Me- chaniCa.l drawini:r helprul. Good company benefits and working conditions. Send resume \vilh salacy history and requiren1ents 10; Pt"rsonnel Department PRIMARK PRODUCT CO. P.O. Box 1996 Santa. Ana. CaHf. 92704 an equal opportunity employer m/( REAL ESTATE I Pey For All , • ., Your ADVERTISINGI You have )IOUl' own private desk & phone, S a m e location 18 yrs. New or f:Xp'd rea.1 e!ltate sales people wdoomcl Call for tntcrvtew. ~TAR GA'ZER'i<¥~ Al lU By Ct.A Y R. POLLAN Aft MJ..t. l! ~ Y°"r Doily Adi..-ily Gi;ir:le M SffT l~~k:.n. A;.,~ " Accorrling ti:> th• Stor1, V ,' @t@ · To develop messoge for Tuesdoy, OCT. 11 · read woi:dscormponding to numbers 41.tSJ:1.55 of your Zodia<: birth sig", 1·67·70' 1 h•~• 31 CQOptrottv. 61 A 2 Yo...'.,. 32 Wgy 62 W0tk 3 Pftipl,. lJ For 63 s.. "or 21 A You'll J.t If 6' OI ' S Find JS Rt.-d\ 65 CQt\9Clen!iOu 12.15-18-32 ~ . 6 '" 36 You'111 '6 You J8-8.(.89 -:• 7 A J7A 67N"' a 11 38 lucky 68 Th9 'A¥Ol\Qblt 39 A.-.d 69 Oppo.lt• 10 PfOPI• AO Golfl 10 COM«tJon II Your Al ~ 71Svo: 12Costr ""42Md. 72&.gin 13A 430,-73>.dmll'ff'I J.( Fo~"°"'tlng ""4.( Oo>l'r 74 Soc:loblt 15 ~ ~F\/1-7511 160utv "6Yw 76Anoln 17 High .fr Beg i1 for 18Your .(8A11tt1tlolol 78,.,,., ·19 Pl-'49 T ol""t 79 Molt 20To SOlobOrotory 80.r, 21 Ooh! Sl u.. 81 EnJO'i'"'*"f 22 lndll'led. 52 Folhbd:il• 82 YOAJr 9445 • Piano& & Grands ALL MAJOR BRANDS N<w Spinc1' from .... 1595 SIZ£S 2-10 Ui;ed from ............. $95 I. __ "1'fl" -"ffT..,,,,.:. Play<t'S " .......... 1895 "'I Ill,..; ... Ult.iii.., Grands " .. • .. ·· $395 JUSJ' ONE MAIN PART NO DEALERS PLEASE for each _ zip-front dress, e Organs jumper, tunics. pants, cape, ALL MAJOR BRANDS shorts! Whip up this clever \llurlitzer \V/rhy \Ne\\') $499 wardrobe and save money. Thonlas (Used) .. S195 Note removable collars 'n' Lowrey \V rsvm INt?\v) $2695 ties, too. e FREE e Printed Pattern 9 44 5 : 0 L sons Child's Sl7.eS 2, 4, 6, 8. 10. rg a n es Size 6 dress '% yard SO.inch. FULLERTON MUSIC SEVENTY·MVE CENTS 18191 Euclirl. Fot1ntain Valley tor e&.eh pattern -add 25 557-4836 cents tor each pattern for 122 N. 1.:-.rb'>r. li'ullerton Air Mail and Special Hand· 871-1805 ling: oTherwise thir:d-class FREE ORGAN LESSONS as long as you like! Adult! welcome to attend TueSo1ay night at 7:30 PM. We want everyone to learn to play the organ! Tom Dieterich • in chnrge 642·28.'51. Coast l\:tusic, Newport Blvd. at Harbor, CM. deUvery will take three week& c.I' more. Send to Marian Martin, the DAILY PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., 232 West .18th St.. New York, N.\ 10011. Pr in I N~ ADDltE88 \Vlth ZIP, 8IDl and STYLE NtlMllEL SEE MORE Quick PIANOS.-ORGANS Fuhlons and choo,. °"' New & Used. Crel'lt selection. palttm free from our ~ ~Ill prl O Spring.S:uJrun« Catalog. All -..uml""', v~ ces. pen stZH1 Only 50c Eves. & SUodays. The best INsTANT $EWrNG BOOK dents Are nlways at gew today wear tomorrow. Typist ffiM Ex/C.O. $5."iO+ Circuit A.s:sembly Corpora· 1 Gal Ofc, It binm.C to $550 Uon bai tmmedlate openlnes Martne lh'dwr Sa.lea $3 I'll' for: ·; W.E. Lachmmyer 1ll60 Newport Blvtl. CM 646-3921 or Evo. '7MSn 23T«t SlBorfV'JI' 131'7"" 2A HOClP)' ~ Clreuk!tt AA ~ 25 P.~ 55 ~ 85 fo'11r W•llichs Music City $1. ' -SOlllh-cooi, ~2830 INSTANT FASH I 0 N BOOK -H'undttds o ( , CALL TRISH HOPKINS Production Tr ...... .. .IEIUU WHITl'EMORE ---'-W ~d 418&11'lh$t.(&t~)CM r-·~~n&wnl lait!I D4 ~ 641-Mlt =tt -bly a.,.. • a iA ..,. • ~ 3169 Rte! mD Av, Cmta Mesa ~ CLASS SELUl -642-567! Eqtlal Oppor. EmphJ7<r 26 Peff..:1 56 H.1111 86 Llk1 lr 27 Derr 57 """°"I 11YoY 21To 580r u~ 79 WQ)'t 59 -la.lront Ill Vem- 30 "'' '° ~ 90 °t':"" ~®Good ®""-()N'~ Sp0011nt -no 1a.-ta~. SJ. • Don't lfve yr> ttie ship! SKI'S, I011 D)cm. _Rogcmg. Have M>meth!ng y00 want t<'I ool l60c:m, J~umanlc& ll~, $ell? Cb1sslfied t11d1 do it Near new. Best 0 t f t r • Wtll • call NOW 642-5678. 67>-09m ' ; i Spring news! ·It has that smart sport look he likes! Cables on a diagonal add a slimming, dramatic accent to front of this handsome cardigan. Knit o[ worsted- weight synthetic. Pattern 73TI ; directions. Men's Sizes 38-44 incl. SEVENTY-f'TVE CENTS . for each pattern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air Mail and Special Han- dling; otherwise third·clus delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks, the DAD..Y PILOT, 105, Needlec:raft Dept., Boic 163, Old 01e1sea Station, Ne"'· 'Yor-k, N.Y. lOOU. Print Name. Addttts, Zip. Patient Number, N EE D L ECRAFT '72! Qochet, knit, etc. FrN directions, 50c. I fn!llant M•trame Boot. Basic, fancy lm>tS, pat· r tP,rns. Sl.00. I Imrta•t Ovt"Jtel Boot -• l.i-arn by pictures! Pat· terns. $1.00. ())mJ)ietf! IMtul Glft 8oot 1 -more than 100 gifts - $1.00. Con1plelt1 Afallan Beolt 11.00. 18 .JUfy R11J Boob • SOc. Book or 11 Prtle At,c:fuim. sac. Quilt Book J -16 pattmia. sac. M ISlllfllll:U QuUt Bo.-I -sac. ~" , .. ,....,_., unac - l5 btautttut patttt111.Sk. I f' • Monday, F .. ruarY 18, 1974•-----~-------,...-~---~---~~--------=-------_,=_,--,---;.,......,..----ii;,;r.;r::; -~..-,----,-= !!!!!!!!~~~~·m~=='.'.~'.'.:=~~~~u~to~•~· ~lm~po~rt~o~d[::J9~70~Autos, tmportOd' 970 Autos, Imported 91i Autos, lhed 9?0 Autoo, OMll ffii 4uto1, Used HO Auto1, Died "" [ T-l/rti] ROYAL Sporuman Oodte DATSUN MERCEDES IENZ TOYOTA CADILLAC 1 CORVEllE 'FORD OLDSMOllLI L.. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~:ii~ / I Window) van. ·n b I u e 'l-".".".".".".-::--:::::=--1 ----------1---..:.;::..;:_;::..:.;;,:_ __ I ::::::-::-:'.'-~::-~--:-/--------- I auto, V-8, < "als, 11:7", WILL BUY YOUR 50 USED Hard to Got 1913 CADILLAC Eldorodo. '13 CORVETTE. Afr, P/B, •ro !"ORD Galaxi• 4 dr. Sal" 6 - Compers, Salo/Roni 920 IY.B. PS/PB, a I <-con d. DATSUN, TOYOTA Fully load<d. B1aek on PIS, P/W, AM/FM '"''"'" Sedan. aulo. irans., air OLDSMOBILE '61 NIMROO :,!_~ .~~~ "~~ai':\"J!: OR VOLKSWAGEN : MERCEDES MODELS , Black. Must .. 11. Excellent ~~ ','"tlte1pc1',· .JI' up'~ cOod., pwr "'" & very GMC TRUCKS FO NCJf ~~LL NOW IN STOCK a>nd., dtr (;ooGWW). 16995· -~~ ~ w cloart. (4.IMSE) l91S call 5 Pop.up camper "al'"' otove, 41,000 mL 1.1,650. Call o. .... P~ ~~ ggLLA R. CALL ON DISPlA Y fl9'l.4444. IS mpg. 997·!000. M0-3100 or 494-1503 Dir. HONDA CAR lee ho" heater, 1lnk, add-979-2880 •v . '69 M a. 281&. SR!'s, Corolla's, C °'on a '68 CADILLAC SEDAN OE DODGE U UNIVERSITY OLDS •·room, sletope six, ample 1969 FORD Van, customiz.ed KENT ALLEN• M0-0442. .....~ ert'tdttl •• tuln rlo Wf.&Ol\I, < S t • n d a rd le VILLE. Fa c 1 0 r y air , ____ ;c..;:_.;. ____ 1 JAYE N llon&t!· Excellent <.'Ondltio interior, rhrome wheel!!, '72 DATSUN 240 z. air, mttR ........ tom eatuo;t te r, Automal\cl),. Celle~ CT'I, r 28!!0 Harbor Blvd. $600. 968-2495.• wide ti.rel. S300 &: take ovtr whla, AM /FM radio, can AM/FM, alr cond., handled and m.1uty others to clK'IOle ~d~~'opf~Lui;:'~y 1968 CORONET 9 pus. JAV£LJN . 1 erv1cem&n O>eta Meea 540-M l9T3 c AL 1 F 0 RN I A 8. payments Will trade for 7 aft 6, wittl care (502A0X l. from. equipment throuahout. A w:::f."· Auto, air, ndk>, tcan&ferred • rnuat Rll • un-PINTO overhead Camper, si., 6 96Ul516 551-mf .12 Volvo 1 .. ~, "k• WE'LL DEAL weu maintained car. Take rac , new Urtt A brakes. wual '73, t.spd., va, 360 :_:1 ITU;. u new, _.. today Goldtn bronze. New Blue 18 •-/otr ----------1 Iota ol xtras, call 493-:>:ara '69 DODGE VAN X·lOO '66 DATSUN, blown rod • •-'" · nd 10.,.. couvant .... e . (ZLK96ll eng. mpg, ,,_,., · ov ..... ve,. m co . ~ 11_ ;:>h , Son,, __ , Book $1000. 1 owner, 53 yr ., .... """" TQS Cycln 8lk11 TRADESMAN, $1300 or best Best o!Jer. HC~). ••;J"" lllOfl • MU...,.,.n old exec. WU1 aell for $700. J~~~~~------PIN s-; 925 ou.,. 646-3850. 841.9134 ~\i~ ... · ~~.Blvd., Hu •oned "' m.p.g on MAVERICK ten '71 CHEV. Van, xln't cond. 1969 "510" 2CKXl eng. 5-spd. '73 TR-6. Like new, priced _, trip. 673-7865 or 642·21n. 1--..:.:;.:..:..;..::.;.:.;...:;,.;.: __ ORANGE ~~·.,·!~';,~,Yr wa!T. $2900. '1"'1300"': ~.":'!'!';. o n ... l·•·klnd lo' ~ulck sale! (149GVQl. 494-1503 o' 540-3100 CAMAl!lO FALCON CLEAN . low mil,age, 1910 ~ -~~~ House of Imports ONE 'YE'AR Maver/CK. Original owner. '72 PINTO Aul om a t t c transmluion, factory air condlUonµig, rad'<>. heater, lupage ftci. COUNTY '65 !"ORD v~. llody In gd. Fl T 523.7250 WARRANTY '73 LT CAMARO. Speclal Z28 lll60 !"ORD FALCON 4 door CALL' 64:1-069'1 SUZUKl·BU-LTACO •AhM•pe.,. 14PM50.642o' !°"11's' oil". A '73 TOY.OTA package. Midnl&ht blue 1125 II CURV ~~:..£!~'!:~~~--I;;:::;---;;;;-;;::::--;;;-::;; NOW OPEN CORONA SEOANS metalllc, Spollen, w Id• • ea 4"' ·-MER I NEW 74' ~ FIAT 850 Sport. 'TI, '°" ovals, q\liek & oharp. Rick, ~, s Autos Want.cl 961 & hard top, lo ml, all adult Ml11Jon va.10 lmpot11 Several nice ones to choose 839-4441. FORD 1595901 $2677 ' STREET & DIRT mi, xlnt cond. 552-8814. le:ttur1ng from all equi~ with auto-~CAMAR0~""""-=10~.-alr-c-,-P=l"'S.,.-a-uto ---------- Reffy for oe11o•ry r~~~~~~::Er~10 1_,_11:::500=· _______ MERCE~Es BENZ :.:d?0~· /!t~~ =z?prt~ :1~ ~~.RJ:u.t~~. ~e x0~ MAVERICKS '73 MERCURY Marquis Brou.g,uun 4 dr. Tne 1inesl equipment includil"lg auto. temp air, full power, 6 way power seats, AM-FM stereo radio, landau tap and much mote (116GlN) ~ Take advantage of this trimndous buy klda,y. Johnson & Son Lincoln Mercury 2 6 2 6 '71 PINTO l00% Flnonclng, .A.C. !"OR ALL FOREIGN CARS JAGUAR FIAT the "°'1 of a new l974. 551-9494 days. See at 4341 2255 HARBOR BLVD., C.M. Call or com in to see SEE TiiEM NOW DRIVE Birch St NB (HARBOR AT WILSON ) e us. l9'12 JAGUAR XJG Sedan Con1plete Sales & Service ONE ... Bl'Y ·oNE . l, • ..::=:..::'-· .!.' .:.;:;.__ ___ _ 646-2428 646-4655 Be•ulilul black with tan Visit Us Soon At CHE.VIOLET * '73 YAMAHA 100 leather interior, & very 28701 Margueri te Parkway Parting, pipe, & tank, many clean with only 18,000 miles. Mission Viejo ~1700 "12 CHEV MONTE CARLO extras. Super fast, depend ., $7200 {847HDZ) c a 11 . lUSE AVERY PWY. EXIT) ECONOMICAL. Sale & super lmmac. $400 673-2918. 54(1..3100 or 494-7503 Auth. attractive. Uke new and "7J.AT 3 Yamaha 125 MX, 3100 W. Coos< Hwy., N.B. 1-=D:::I''=' =--~=~-JIM SLEMONS equipped with automatic In Rickman frame-porting 642-9405 '64 XKE, no hood. $500. New IMPORTS trans., radio, he ate r , !r ~~fr~.;:~~~ WE NEEDLYAOUCR I c:~:::;:,:.,m.::,:.::..,,.wh_ec~l-• _&_•~Ire_•_· 7.Ph_' MERCEDES BENZ ___ TR;.:.:;l:..:U:..:M=;P_;H..::...:...' -1!<;,~~ .';;'. Im" . .:r"ti' '73 OSSA 250 « Pioneer CADIL '67 JAG Roadster. Lo miles AUTHORIZED '67 TRIUMPll Spitfire. xlnt Asking $2575. JohMon & SI. Jegai. 245 mi's. eosi Sh~. clean late model cars. xlnt concl. AM/FM, wire SALES & SERVICE cond. 40M, 28 mpg. $695. ~a'.!:oo~~co~~ercu;]e ~~ suso, Se ll s100. call Dick, Paid tor or Not. wills, Make ofter. 646-1006. Jim Slemons 673-346.5 54f>-5630 546-l9l4 ext 11. Ask For Chuck Trapp V ..:::"-"=''------- ,72 suzu 0 kl TM400, K & N .. 1 r"iiu;;':;ed:C;'.ar;::;M(;anii'iag-;::•rir;;·:\l--__:J~E:!:N~S~E~N~-I Imports OLKSWAGEN Brand New '74 Kon;s frame Lwro, x\nt l I (We'"' top bnycr tor any WILL BUY YOUR MONTE CARLO cond. Many xtras. $500. JENSEN used Mercedes Benz.) 64>-J.244. 640-2390 . INTERCEPTOR 1301 Quail GAS SAVER Sacrllke. Mu" sell. Only '73 Suzuki 380, $900. Plea.!ie Large Selectio n Ne~rt9300Beach PAID FOR OP. NOT. WILL $38f5 all ~~~ -c : immediate Delivery ENTER FROM MacARTilUR PAY TOP OOLl..AR. CALL Howard Chevrolet 847-9734 TOP CASH $$$ FULL SERVICE ' ,;KE~NT:..:._"AL~LE!O:'.N,_, ~54,,0-044~=:2:..· -I M d 90 YAMAHA ·n. bored to . 1973 450 SL Coe Road•tr. • · eeAl'thur an Jamboree 100. Good oond.itlon. $200 or paid lor used AMC or Jeeps DEPARTMENT Beaut. butter yellow. Llke ONE must go; n VW, super Newport Beach L-;;111 new . Am·Fm 'fl tapes. cond. $1457. Continental, 833-0555 ,z~ti~~fe~~~~!44·8749 ~;: lftlI:ff/•], .. ~ $11,800. ~ooo~~g A: '}:U~~~ 1 ·~n~M=o~NTE=o.=CARLO"'=~~.-au-to AMC/JEEP Priv. party. 833-9643, 140 Hood. ~2991 trans., pwr. str .. air cond., & under 18,000 m i I e s MOBILE HOME 1969 Harbor Blvd. C.M. OPEL VW SQUAREBACK '10, toe. \7J40FO) 11975 ca 11 FOR SALE: WE U'o.•y air, auto, R & H, rebll 540-3100 or 494-:_7503 Dlr. SILVERCREST uv 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. eng 2000 ml. Best offer. IMPORTED AlITOS 642·9405 '70 OPEL GT, 45,00) miles. 838-l35S '73 MONTE Carlo, AM/FM MOBILE HOME BEST PRICES PAIDI New clutch. shockA, brakes s track stereo. air & full 20' x 53', 2 BO 2 BA, carp., Dean Lewis Imports MAZDA ~!~n..JJ:l· Call morn-':!u~ s~fa':nba'!'~~':. ~~· 6 4 4 - 2 2 5 9; draped, bll·ins., re!rlg., 11:66 Hi::.rbor C.M. S46-930C l----------I..:::====-----Xlnt cond. ~1266 eves :~hm & ~t~z~r, k';~ -CASH FOR SEE THE ALL NEW PEUGEOT '63 vw Kombi van, xlnt ·7o Chevy Impala clock, storage shed , land· YOUR CAR RX4 cond, $650 A!~ a~~s.ra~~ ~l i:t oeaped patio. Three yn. old 54&-Til70 IMMEDIATE NEW PEUGEOT 673-4249 offer. 545-0623. -like nu. Loi::ated in new Oean VW wanted by College DEALER BAJA Bug, clean, loaded adult pk. away from noisy boy '69-'TI DELIVERY w/i,:tras. Must see. Call '69 Caprice 4 dr. Air, power St. One-hall bl. from el"i> 645-5961 '73 DEMO ctr•RAN"E Complete Sales and Service. 646-6265. windows & M!al, $800. Call hOWle. $15;fj5. CaJJ. EVEs. AOt f rt d -970 Qt '1 "'50 coliipacfs' Ori dlsp1ay. • -'1"968""'vw"'--B-U-G-.-S-UNR--OO~--l -~831>.~l546'='=~---= 213·694.01690, 6~7·7152. Os, mpo e PERFECT CONDl TION.r ~9 CHEVY Townsman, P IS CAN BE .$1'-.E~ AT: BENT'"'Y , 'Now lN PROGRESS · PACllMFIPCORMTO,STOR SW50 . . ""'"38 P11a, 4~-eonditipn. Ile" CRESTMONT ""' SAVE $$$ 0 1"' ,.;.,,;:!7 '&8 l/W rebu.ill en 1 in e , 10:""''='=~;.,...-,--'-.,,~ ESTATES 1955 R Type Bentley, xlnt PEUGEOT /SUBARU brakes, new MICHEUN x '70 CHEVY Impala. PIS, '70 MAVERICK 6 cylinder ellifne, automatic transmlsalon, factory air conditioning, radio a n d heater. (63.5AVN) $1877 '70 MAVERICK 6 cylinder engine, automatic transmlssk>n, radio, heater, 43,0CXI mllea. (298HPDJ. $1777 ·- ~u L.W W VOLVO Harbor, Costa Mes a, S4(H6JO '73 COMET 2 OR Company owned &: maintained l.i.ke new in our service de"pt Equipped with automatic transmission, air cond. power stl!ering, radlo, heater, etc . Comfortable, safe a n d economical. ( ~7 8 H 0 E ). $3275. Johnson & S o n Lincoln Mercury, 2 6 2 6 Harbor, Costa Me a a, 540-6630. I ll>Oed traNmilllon, and heater. (322(..'0Z) $1677 '71 PINTO radio 4 speed transmia&ion , radio, healer, custom exterior, 39,000 mlle1. (618CCF). $1777 . ·;of41l L.W -VOLVO 1966 Harbor, C.M. &l&-9303 PLYMOUTH '73 MERCURY ATLAS MAR9UIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 19n FORD Brougham. Foro Moto< s,.,. Chryslor/Plymouth Hat Car. Has every acces· Ope Dall & Sun 'tll 10 PM COUNTRY SEDAN n y . 50ry you couid imagine. 2929 Harbor Blvd., 10 Passenger Dual Shows oulstanding care. It's Costa Mesa Facing Rear Seats priced ridiculously low. }'or 54L1934 400 cid, V8 Engine detalls call Brad at 54().5630. U- Crulse-0-Matic Transmission Johnson &. Son '72 PLYMOU111 Oust I! r . AM Radio 2S.l6 Harbor Blvd. Unw:ually clean, only 15,000 Power Steering Costa .r.1esa miles, V8, alr cond., power Power Brakes, Disc Front 'TI MARQUIS BROUGHAM steering, power brake 1, Air Conditioning CPE IMMACULATE being radlo, heater, land.au top Tinted WlndshJeld ottered at a reduced price. (956EXXl. Ex c e 11 en I Wheel Coven Thia car has been carefully economy and performance. Trailer To>A·lng Package maintained. Equipped with $2,875. See and drive today! While Sidewall Tires full power, 1ac1ory air, Johnson & Son, Llncoln Dark Green. License 792 ELT Landau roof, etc. (1J6CXV). Mercury, 2626 Ha rb or, $1395 $2215. Johruion & So n Costa Mesa, 54~. Lincoln ·Mercury, 2 6 2 6 c.n="o"u:::s"'1E=R:c.:::::..:=_'-,_-a1-s1 See at DAILY PIIm' Em-Harbor, Costa Me s a , econouw.; .. 1 .. .,ee nlU'w ....... Lot, . 330 "'"" .,....,.... cyl. engine, auto. trans., ........., ...--.....-.,,..,..__,, .-_ mag wheels. Xlnt ffnlnctng \'leit Bay SI., Costa Mesa. ,64 MERCURY $150'*' 831-Z0.10 Dir. l\1onday lhl'ougt1 f'r1day. -"=""-"'"------I CaU 61U-4311, a&k (or ·tifnr. <I dr. Needs lun!?-\IP.· ~. ;'87 B.amtcudtt, Very clea.n1 • Green1n.an. • ="°"'=*'=""'~';::·36:c'':.:'.,,*::,.:·-.,..-reasonable oUcr. Call Mon, J 972 FORD '63 MERC. Pis, P/b, aulo, ~;i;:i fit aft 5, !2U) Air, Runs great. $350. or .=::..;:;::.:. _____ _ 1051 Slte Dr., Brea. (Central cond, pvt party. 673~9 -ij~-1557 w. Llncatn Ave., tin(s, clean. $ll50. 642-1011. P/B, 8!:' ..:!~~ cond.. Ave. across from Brea alt 6 pm. · .==::::: An aheim 5J3.8220 ..............,_ ~mm. Ho•p.) Loi •46 BMW ~ / , PORSCHE VOLVO 1968 CHEVY Wagon, 9 pass. 10 p Dual CONTACT RAY. PK. J\1GR., Perfect cond . $795. or trade. assenger for showing. j.;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;J2001 E. First St., Sania A::a '74 VOLVO'S 640-49'24 after 5 pm ~~. ~:" ~! COUNTRY SEDAN hest ouer. 675-3849 PONTIAC '68 MERCURY wag, fix ii """""u ~"" '70 PONTIAC 12 x 52' MOBILE Home • • 558-7811 1971 914-6 BLACK HERE NOW '58 CHEVY. Stick. Good Cruise-0-Matic Transmission MUST NG Ocean view . 5 Star Adult AUTll. DOU• fOI i'.., ,73 MAZDA RX 2 Eng: 2.5 w/2,000 mi, fact transportation car, $75. Power Steering A ' Newport Beach Park. No BAVARIAN '. ~ mags, Koni shocks,.F. sway Immettiale Del ivery • ~54S--'-"8854=·-------IPower Brakes, Disc Front ! pets. $6500, 6 46-8 018 M 0 i ' bar, Mich. VR-185 tires. On All "-fodels Air Conditioner MUSTANG' ' Evening•. 08 '• ~-. . lronSml'5ion, radio, 642-0104 alt 7 pm wk d•Y'· ·BUY or LEASE CONTINENTAL Tinted Wlnmhleld 1967 FASTBACK I Motor Homes . ler, vinyl lop. 17.0C(l PORSCHE 'Tl, black on AM·FM Stereo Radio Low mileage, mech dceilent. I S•le/ Rent 940 m.ties.~ I m m a c u I ate . black, 5 spd, mag whls, ~ tra· '73 M:A.RK IV Wheel Covers New paint. Mags & Mickey I e SHARE WIN!\EBAGO • ' ~ 1 · $2877 xtras,'"64a-548J ' w;U ~~ ~~ll-~e-=~~ ~u:;I! R~l Rack -M:1~! u.,;· ap~";;: GRAND PRIX A u t o ma t I c tran&miukm, laclor)" air conditioning, power steering, p o we r brakes, radio, healer, vinyl d l!JillEU) lo mil•age xlnl cond many -••:nL He. •vy Du"• S"'penslon Th "~ Air .__,_ Own 20o/o Int ·· fully equip, 1974 BMW's '64 C, Int & ext near perfect, terlor · and all the luxury White Sidewall Tires Make oiler. 646-6055. I ~:;~ni:C!~;::ir:i:\)~;~ ARE, HERE NO\V ,~.. f.Oll lWJi& ~~~werfsW,~750c~,1 ~~~ 1966 Har7oo3'v· c0.MLVO 646-9303 ~::~~.~.~~~1·~~~ ~~~~ c:i~~~31ow Paint ·~~~ITT~~0~T~~ ~~; 41\ l•i.:a 1 .Call 6'14·5462 M-F 9-5 FREE " '.. ,:.;lOYOJA 833-3904 .. loMF:". back on lease and we must $IS9S shocks, power steering ·& '-f41l _,. ~n?.'J°2~ ~~I ~omepe 0~~ Ith locking gas caph . ·, ·~~~~ l~ed:~:~· ~~j 4 speed, air. corld., fact . war-~ :u1a!t Mo.~. bargain. See 3t DAILY PILOT Em· =j~·etc~~ o!~~ ' YOLYQ · ' ' w every, car pure ase 1966 H bO C ti1 546 9303 racing seats, many extras. ranty. $133.61 per mo . lor Johnson & Son ployee Parking Lot, 330 642-TI96 <WI. 1$1771 Io mi'g, ;5500. <Wjl\, trade -·-ar r, · · 7 36 'mo•. l800 ,·, lotal down 2626 H ho Bl d ' I · · M R 673-7537 Eves aft pm. ar r v · \Vest Bay St., Costa Mesa, •12 ST ba 1~ lla•ho•, C.M. ,.;,9303 or prop or an Y t n g . 5 yr. or 50,000 mile warranty * .. ule 74 otary * "7=7::C:,=:=,:=""'"----1 pymt. Includi ng tax & Costa Mesa Monday through Friday. MU . Fast ck, auto, """ • • '1'f<1" 548-3681 aft 3 pm. available on all new 1974 . $n MONTH PORSCHE xln '71 0:ur. air, -'h-'·ee~n-''""''-"83"'1--'2040'-"_Dl='·---t '70 CONTINENTAL 4 DOOR 642-4321, ask for hlrs. tac air. R & H, p/1, xlnt '68 fl9NTIAC StaUon wagm{ e DALE'S Motor . H 0 me . & '73 BMWs. 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE ~12 or i6~5158 pvt pty, Autos, Used 990 factory air conditioning, Greenman. ~· Nu tires. Pri. Ply. F.quipped with automatic Rentals =~-~-~-~---,,...."°1597=o:·==~~=~. transmlsslOfl, factory ll1r CALL h1R FRY 842 6666 AMC power seat. Extra clean, Air full t xi I k 4 '73 23"·26' M.H. & Minis 1~· I Will accept trade-ins TOYOTA AM/FM stereo radio, 6 way FORD 1970 LTD 4 dr. h.t. 14 MUSTANG II Chia 4 con d It Ion Ing' power Ftte miles 9 til 9, 8J8..-0000 · · ~ · M · · B · h S..finest In luxury equipdment. con<1' • ll195pwr., sPvtetto, p t"y cyl, air, auto, 900 mi. Pvt steering, power b r a I! a , -unt e"C ......,. 962-0656. ...,, clean. Prtee ...iueed ,.,.,,.c_Moto,home, Superlo,, .....,_.. ... -'14-JGYG'l'-AS '72 JEEP CJS _aod__llrht• to .u~ ·-~~1 ;::::::=:..::;::=,::=:i6'ho';;;;:7,f.i';;;w;;;et;;:;;;:-l •o·l91S-A Sale and excellent Li1eume, Open Road & K..A.. • (288HSHJ $2475 Johmon &: ;= . 67 lo mi. auto w/widl! tires, · Bart~ B of A/MC acpt. MAZDA LEASE or BUY 4 whl. drive, unconditional Son Lincoln Mercury 2626 72•GRAN Tonno Sta. Wag. vin. top pis, disc. r&h. family & utility ca r . 639-2981. 2'40'l Mt1:~erlte. I:'arkway New Models • New Colors warranty. Only 16,000 miles. Harbor Blvd., Cost& 'M!!sa Mags. Am-F'mndSlettol 2 '4 Op/01, 5.16-l!ilS a.tt. 5. =) J:=:. lc2 s5r6 RENT THE BEST. .73 Mission VIC JO _ (600FZU J · SID-5630 p/b, Air _CO , . H-~-r~- Executlve 25 All ex•-~ 831·ro«l e 49>4949 at 586-6.ll7.. '69 MACH I;all extras, nice ,..!;'~ Bl\ld., ..,.,.ta Mesa .... <&b 1972 MARK IV , every xtra, d pain--. I 6 ~-. ' USE AVERY PWY EXIT ~'-"-1;. __ , I II '10 MAVERICK auto trans con ·• new t. 1 75.1,.:=:='-------Free miles. 979-9056 5-8pm. · 17331 Beach BL 842.fi666 D l ... -.y IU\;0.1 car. mus &e , • ·• c6"7S-31'-""72C:.,,-~~=~-l ·67 TEMP~ eng. rebuilt 11111,. • Make ofter, 5.57-9349 air., economical 6 cyl. A _ ~f~ 8.~o~!st~~~rer 24· ORANgEn~~~NTY'S '?oP~1?c~· ~t m:t~~· ~~~~ -WA fWiA 1969HA1t~~.i!!,'645·7770 COUGAR ~in at s1495 831-3)4(1 OLDSMOBILE ~=·H~ ~~ll~1 552-8292 .,. ofler. 557-9185 JOJOTA '63 FORD "-v. New top '73 FlREBlRO 350. ll,500 0 '68 JAVELIN. Healthy, hap-7l CO 7 .....,.., '71 TORONAOO VB, full ml Air Cl Trallers,-'lravel --945 / MERCEDE'S BENZ PY car. 1 owner. Cood ' UGAR XR reblt eng. Xlnt transpo!"la· power, fact 0 r y air e<> ~ p'h •6t,;;91A., ea n. APACHI E tent trailer. w/ add·11·room . New cond. $350 or oiler, CaJI 646-5277 ' !966 Harbor, C.M. &fG-9303 mllettge. $850. or best offer. S~ = ~n~:ry usra-r~ Hon, S350. Pvt pty 963-4692 conditioning, 6 v"ay pt1,.·er .,..,4'UU. : ,,,.. .~w;:c·c__ WE 'LL sell Your prestige MB '73 TOYOTA Corona \vagon. 645-6IT4. appreciate its performance '71 FORD, Wag, 7 pass, load· seat. AM FM stereo, landau T-BIRD for you! Exclusive Orange Air cond, am/fm, immac. ~=-o=:..B~U-l~C~K~---and handling excell ence. ed, 36,IXX> ml, xlnt cond, top, tilt wheel, full! luxury Coast area buyers ~·altin"g. cond , 12,000 mi. $3000. Ph . Economy with s a 1 et y. bst Ottr. 644-1238 Priv pty. e <Ju 1 PP ed . Unb91.levably .69 THUNDERBIRD Call 831 ~·0 (A th d I ) °'2 8298 pnced at $2,475. {926KEJ l. Auto Service, P1rt1 949 1974 BMW' -,......, 0 · ea er · c'~"'0-'='-'=-~-~~-1 .69 BUICK Electra 2 OR. Equipped with . a-ulomatlc '66 FORD LTD. Xlnt buy for Johmon & Son, Lincoln Excep t Io n a 11 y cletn, -S MBZ '69 280 SL. AT AIT, •70 TOYOTA Corona Deluxe C All t 1 transmission, radio, heater, $250. Prl. party. Mercury 2626 Harbor Costa luxuriously equip~ with * * $25. EACJ~ 1t * In stock ready for Immediate AIC, Invest in n classic! 4 dr Sedan. slick, Xlnt Po~: Delux~'1n~~ior.A {S power stee1rtng, Pow e.r ___ * __ 646-_4_!150 __ *_~ Mesa, 54o-563o ' fulld "°"""H' fhaacdlo?y air 3 spd & 4 spd transniission delivery. Excellent savings $7850. Or best offer. 846-5673 condition. $1195. 673-2319 brakes, a c t o r Y n1r Vacancies cost money! Renl con .. etc. as the best (both floo r sti ckl on rem;Lining 1973 models. .70 118 280 SE 5 .•. 1 MPG on frwy. Must sell conditioning. Landau too '61 Olds Station Wgn. R &. of care. Sale Price $1675. '55 Dodge P U fenders & ~ril l &\LES.SERVICE-LEASING · '. · upci" t'Oix · ·73 Celica, beaut. cond . Lan-due lo death ln family. f701EOJ), Sale price $2695. your house. apt., stor<> H, air cond. · C oo d Johnson & Son, Lincoln allO PU frame & wheels OVERSEAS DEUVERY 8;1~~~ ~ir~ials. Can tl'adc ;9~~13~~· $3300. Call, Ill Private party. $1200 or best Johnson & Son Lincoln ~:~~ir~~· ~ a Daily PUo1 economical trans. $195. Mercury, 2628 Harbor, Bed 1rom chevy 1..;T PU ROY CARVER Inc otter. 64~927 aft 5 PM. Mercury, 2626 Har bor, ~~~~---~= firm, 979-86XI. Costa Mesa. 540-fi6:"sU. $25. each ' • Autos, fllew 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, N'ew 980 Costa Mesa, 540-56:ll. Autos, New 990 Autos, New 980 Autos, New flO 492-0963after6 PM ROLLS ROYCE BMW i~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~iiii~~~;;~~~~;;;;~;;~~::;;;:;:~;;:;::;;;;~;:~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;; l~~~~~~~~~~I 234 E. 17th St. j I Costa ti1esa • 546-4444 lj ~ J '74's Are Here! Immediate Delivery! Save On Remaining '731 I ;4.;:.n;;.1;;.Jq;;;.••o.:sc./ C:.:I •;:.;•.:;• ;.:.;":___.c.9;:.;:531 c REVIER BMW '21 MODEL-T Roadster, J ag Sales e Service e Leasing rear end, Pontiac 400 eng 208 \V. lsc. S.A. 83;>.3171 & trans. Need:i: to be fin· Closed Sundays lshed. Make offer. 646-2305. ·73 B~fW 3.0 CSA Magnifi· cen1 Verona \Vilh ebony Recre•tlonel leather inrcrior. \Viii trade Vehicles 956 • Can lease-. 831-2040 Auth. · Dir. 4 WHEEL DRIVE JEEP LEASE a ne\V BAVARIA $1100. OR OFFER 1 'th 4 ed . & e &15-2793 e Wl spc , air, l----=-='-'-'"'-"'---1 sunroof) SLlJ mo. + tax DUNE BUGGY, reblt engine, for Jli mo!;. O.E.L. (0.A.C.) good cond, new tires. Ph. (No. 0672'2) 831-2040 Auth. 644-6503. Dir. ,, • '60 RancheiO • cyl, A11to Tr•n•, 1v1'i1U1 $499 '69 FIREBIRO P.S., Redlo, H11ler, Auto CZ8A149) '68 TOYOTA STATION WAGON ()(CKd•I $599 I '69 FORD GALAXIE 500 (pt, !STIC#IOOA) . $799 '57 FORD PICKUP $399 '69 FQRD • er. VI. iMoto Tt11111. ,.,...,., s1-ino (IU. 'l'llfl $699 NEW CAR DEPT. e 4 ,Cyl, 0/M C•nt, l"I• • '1" Wbffl .... ~ e flllll Cell ltrl111Mlen e •l....clM Air ""-ltr e a.att Seib e Ob< DnrM Brill .. ........ 0•'21 • 0••1 W/S Wl"'9" 52523 $69.13 NO DOWN I PIR MO. 12'91.lJ I• !I'll lol1I C:1•PI prlct Incl. 11• & '11 Uc: fffJ. Olfarred pYmt. prlc:1 11 SJJll.21 lncludlllf tu I. '1• lk. '"' ' 111 c1rrylng C/llrtU fOr' • monll'll °" APl'AOVAI. of "°""' crtclll. ANNUA.1. Pl!ltCENT ... OE AATI! Jt~. ORDER YOURS TODAY • WORKING MAN'S GAS SAVER LEASES '74 YECiA Htcllbla. '74 NOYA turbotiYdr•rMtk;, r•· Auto tr-. • cyl fn9, dlo, c1rP1ll110, wtlllt Power 11eerl11t win .. ..... MONTH s71 ..... MONTH s75 '74 M•llb• Cl•ulc '74 CA.MARO ~r 1tffrlnQ, PO-.r Power steering, Powtr 111i.c br1k11, uo dli.c br1tn, J50 VI, t11rtlohydr•m1llc, VI, t11rbollydr1mtllc1 w!IHI CO\llf't, belled Whffl COvtl'S, be:llto wlllltwell• l I n tad wlllltw•lls, llnlld gl•••· ,. • ., • l"IR MOHTM 191--,. .. MONTH s99 '74 MONTI Corio VI, radl1I Wllltaw1Us, 1Vrboh)'lfr11n1tlc, pow. If' 1tur111111, power dllc llr•tu. tinted gl1s .. f"lllltMOHTM. '74 CHlY. Pk••it V. ton. 6 cyl '"VIM, 2 SPlfd tr-mlUlOl'I. ...MONTH s79 OON"T UNDIRSTAND L'iSING7 PHONI: 147·6017 M Mlftftt 0,.. •M L ..... Ordtr ..,,.,.. T••r ... OtWlll "''"*" ........ WI Wll ai.r YMlr ll'rlltnt C•r H Trlldr _ All Cl'ldll M1at a1 APflf"IO. l"ln TIX • I NEW TRUCK DEPT. • VI TM P'ltk~ • , •• ,..,.. f"kll.., ... • I l"t, aw o•••.'s2890 NO DOWN s79~IMO. UIO .. JO 11 Ille 10111 CIM llftce ltld, l•X I. '11 lie. 1-. Ceflf'recl pt'fl'll. prfCI 11 Ulll.• lnclllCIJl'l\I )Ill .. '14 II(, 1-I. Ill Clf'rylnf m.11111 for • lnOnll'll on ... ,,. .. OVAL flf roitr cfldJI, ANNUAL l"l!llCl!NTAOI ltATI 11.1".. ORDER YOURS TODAY . ~ . . -. . . Priced For Quick Sale 123 IMl'AU. Cusr.• Cew,. •.•. SJJtt Jl1 IMl'AU. C•tt•• Ce•,. •.•. SJ2tt 321 IMPALA C111te111 c, .. ,. .... S:t2tt SJ IMPALA C111teM Ce1,. , ••• Sl:ttt 16 IMPALA C11tf9"' Ce11,e ••.• $JJtt * EXAMP[E 1973 IMPALA CUSTOM COUPE * NO DOWN '' • • ' . San Cleme nte Today's Final ·Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stocks • OL. 67, NO. 49, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGEli ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Clemente Seeks Remedy to City's Gas Pains By JOHN VALTERZA 1' Of Ille Dall, ,, .. , ll•fl San Clemente Public Safety Director Cllllord Murray and chamber o f commerce officials will meet Tuesday nleht with the city's ga90line dealen in an effort to iron out the serious lo&! fuel crisis. Murray S'1id today that be and his staff ha ve developed contingency maps for six ol the stations which have become t..ffic trouble spots, but if every station wre opened at once, it would require • 1rs 7 Local Winnet•s at 1east seven police oflk:ers to keep drivers under corrtrol. _ Tuesday's· session will be an attempt to seek a system of cooperaUon between the dealers to assure a steady supply of gasoline to local motorists who are being caught up In the panic buying in recent weeks. i "We've had excellent cooperation from the dea1ers already, and lhey are very willing to work out a system that would be to everyone's advantage," lifurray said. Wayne ·Honored For -~.Patriotisin Film star John Wayne of Newport Beach topped the list of seven area citizens honored today in Valley Forge, Pa., in the Annual National Freedoms Foundation Awards ceremony. Wayne, 66, was -given the George Washington award for the "proud and una~~ patriotism" o( his new albwn, •·American, Why I Love Her." He heads the list of some 2,000 honorees designated nationwide fo r Calf Corraled In Clement.e, Se11t to Jail awards from the Foundation. other Orange Coast citations inclUded: • -Leila W. Masson, 2S63S Saddleback Drive, El Toro, and l'..a Paz lntennediate School in El Toro for the school publication, El Conquistador, honor award for both teacher and school. -Festival of Arts of Laguna Beach, honor award! in community programs category. ~nr. J@llles ~· l._otwon ·o1 Tustin, former assistant secm.uy of the-Navy, fw bis awsrd-winlling addrea upholding the Ameriean IJllem ol . _.,,,,,... and free enterprise. ' . -Rev. Dr. Robert H. Schuller, founder and senlor pastor 9f Garden Grove Community Church for bis sermon "! Am 1be American Flag." -Three Camp Pendleton servicemen, L. Cdr. Gerald C<>x, USN; Sgt. John E. Johnston, USMC; and Hoo. William G. Some guests at San Clemente ~~gnon, US~, honor award for their _city-jail~claim-they-wer-e-fr:amed-_JOt~e~ls-Values- and still odleni -the four-legged for Living. · · variety waiting for the dog catcher Announcement of the awards was _ go "arf'' and "meow " made by Gen. Harold Johnson, USA ThL.latest~ boftver j..S-(Bet..)~tLpresident weiit "mo0... ' Reclp1ents w~re selected by an The creature was b 0 0 k e d independent National Awards Jury urda night al trol comistlng of 13 state supreme court Sat Y-ter pa men · jUStrceS"arnr-29 riational repre!entatives Craig Steckler and Steve Hawley of civic, educational, patriotic, and discovered a b{oken feoce on the ve•----org·-'--"ons. Visbeel< Randt In hilts inland ol =~u ~" ' the city. CeUle were filtering 1be jury includes Adrian Pelletier of Laguna Beach. through oolo a street. The panel noted that Wayne's wlnolng Nearby, the officers noticed 3 record is his first albwn. They described four~-old calf alone and being it -as .. a -sens.111verenectioo of a man miked by coyotes. lo 'th hi " To keep ttw; yoongster from in ve w1 s country. becomlng a meal for Ille wild dogs, A<companted by chorus and orebestra, Wayne narrates 10· tributes lo America the officers brought it to the station that are "straight out afflnnatiom of and called ranch owner Roy thl • Visbeek. He claimed the animal ., country and her people.' a short time later. Ohher winners of the top 40 awards But not before it had left its included Earl Hamner, Jr., of Burbank, creator of "'Ibe Waltons," and Gordon mark at civic center. Sinclair of Toronto, Canada for his Jail trustil!s cleaned up the mess. record, "Who Helped? The Americans Did." Man y Stations ., The Freedom Leadership AWlrd weot I<> world heavyweight boxing champion George Foreman of Hayward for a publlsbtd article-on opportunities olfered by the American system. Jteopen Pumps; No Dry Holid~y . A second NaUonal Recognition Award was presented to Joy Eilers of Granada Hilll for USO perlonnan<e1 ot home and abroad, public prueotatlons of Lincoln writings Ind senire to institutionalized persons. Availability of guollne on the Orange For 1• years, the foundation his Coast improved today ..yith about half presented awards "for constructive o( the service statlon! opening to hordes words and deeds which support America, "' '"··-moto~~-IUllesl solullom to basic problems .. gas-.. _,,., ouu. • besellillg the 'tlon tribute lo ,Fears of a &~less Monday as. ~11 ___mpomlble _dtll.f:,,ip 'arwt~nspire love as-lhe-noW'rouWtedry-sunday-dld !IOI of country." JP8teria1ize. service sta~ owners appeared willlng to cut short their bollday and to pump gas. for the local ~fentele. ' The availability ol a tank of gu .;as no worse than usual ~ morning ~ SHUTDOWNS WORSEN GAS SITUATION -Story Pago 4 Ii Huotinaton Beacb, Costa Mesa, N'C"l"'rt Beach, Laguna Beacb and ~,_Viejo. ;,Gu aweared tighter In San Clemente _,. Ions 1Ines ol can rathenMI at the three ,open 'Matlonll and· Jn El T11n1 ""1ere only one ol eight ilattona 1'li ..,... durin( the morning commuter hour. l!owever i>anlc buying, lnlUSperled with road blocks ond flstfl"1t.s at. some llatlonl on Friday and Saturday, fllVll1llled Gov. Ronald Reapn I<> (See GAS, Pap I) I AD SELLS AUTO ON F{RST DA Y ' The sale wu almoet u ·automatic. u the trlmllDlsllnn-1or the reader •llO placed tbJa: ad: • '89 CORTINA. auto 'trans, Pl;•vt<, """'.cond. liOIJ. (~.No.) The ~ .reported . this Daily Pilot clalllled id did. lb ·~ and sold the csr on the llnt day. They may not oil wort that w~ but Ibey aun ·worit. Teat It oo your own merchandlae. Dtal tho dlrecl Une to .-lb at Ille Dolly Pllol. Phoae MMm. '• ~'We have plans to redefine trafric Jar.es at the six most troublesome statklos and to set up a traffic flow that would keep the long lines from causing undue hazards," he added. In all cases, statklns serving freeway · traffic hive been affected most by the long lines. Often, statlOQ managers have been asked to shut off signs in an effort to avoid luring large numbers cf freeway motorists. "We hive fOWld !hit a lot of the CG"!J' . .U -View people·wbo nre waitipg in line are there only for a few gallons to top out their tanks," Murray said. In many cases in receci weeks, police report growing hostility among moior'- ist.s waiting for service, and arrests have taken place. Tuesday's session is scheduled f9r 7:30 p.m. in council chambers and if a solution is worked out, MWTay said a master scHedule would be announced fw motorists. The impetus for the master schedule came from cha mber directors who early last week expressed alarm that in recent weeks residents have found gasoline impo~ible to obtain, even on weekdays: Several directors larriented t h e pressure placed on local supplies from freeway motorists who often form the 1najority of drivers waiting in line for service. They viewed it as a drain on supplies which should serve local .residents. . ..,~ .......... Viewed from Marguerite Parkway in Mission Viejo, Saddleback College's two ~rmanent buildings, the · finished li brary and unfirushed math-science center form a sharp pro!ile against the sky. A twl).part series detailing the problems of tbe seven-year-old community college, its bisl<>ry and future begins on Page 3 today. Marine 's Wife Flunks . Course ; Xhrne in-O~ange-(;ount-y-Husband ShOt Traffic Accidents Kill -·. A rash of Orange County traffic accidents Sooday left three young people dead and six others injured, California Highway Patrol officers reported today. Dead are Yvoone Garcia, 17, of Corooa; David Anaheiuk, 21, of Santa Ana Heights and Paul D .. McMillen, 26, of Orange. Two of the fatal crashes occurred on the Orange Coast. CHP officers said Miss Garcia was killed Instantly when the car she was riding in went out of control at the intersed.im of the San Diego and Newport Freeways and was struck broadside by an oncoming van. Officers at tile scene 'said the sma II foreign car, driven by 18-year-old Deborah Beard of Corona, apparently spun out on the ramp. conneC!lng tm. southbound San DiegQ with th e northbound Newport Freeway. "She apparenUy hit the shoulder and then overcorrected, shooting diagonally across the roadway into the path of the van," a CHP spokesman. said. Tne impact of the collision flipped the small car over ad rolled It down a short embankment. Miss Garcia was thrown clear but officers said she was probably· already dead. The driver of the van, Johnnie Anders, 24. of 308 16th St. In Huntington Beach, suffered minor injuries in the o-ash. A passenger in the van, 2l·year-old Jeff Crown, 1535 Superior Ave., Newport Beach. complained of pain but refused hospital care. ,. The second Orange Coast crash happened at about 9:zo·p.m. at the Santa Ana Heights Intersection of Bristol Street and Santa Ana Avenue. Officers at the scene saki Anabeluk, 2422 S.E. Bristol St., was fatally Injured when the heavy motorcycle he wu (See CRASH~, "':-:e %) A Cam1 .. Pendleton Marine giving his lYife flrellnM instruction over the weekend was shot In the knee when his mate fired the weapon while the --safety was off,. Pulice laid William Daly Hines, 22, suffered a single wound beJbw his kneecap &aturday night as he was showing hls wile how to use a .2%-caliber rifle for protection wtiile be was away frolll home . Officers said the resident of 111 Alameda Lane, Apartment 6, ha¢ed the weapon to. his wile, but forgot to activate the safety. OffiCen sakl Hii>es asked his wife to cock the weapon. She did so and then j>ulled the trigger. After emergency treatment at San Clemente General Hospital Hines was transferred to the Naval Hospital at Camp Peodleton for further treatment. . Police said the incident was clearly an accident. San Juan Growth Key Issue But Question of Electio 1i Slate Draws Most Fir e . By PAMELA HALLAN • Of 1111 ..nn..._11··~- Growth .... the major issue tossed from one candidate lo anolhe< during a weekend spea~en' lofum In San Juan ~-Bot I major side jgue -whether 0< not three candldltes are running 11 a ilate -drew the only 6ealed -The mettia«, held Saturday at San Juan MobUe Estates, marked the first Ume Ill more tllan two 'Weeks tl\at oil 10 c:andldates for city COIJllCil have appeared 1111 the .. .,. lllage. Seveu candid~ ...... lnVited to speak at the ame 'place -week earlier. Tbree olhen -Johlf Sweeney' Douglas Nab, ...i ... Heckldler, wllo have been ...,,,...i ol nmntng as a slate because . of ""' eocioreem"1t by_ the Alliance of. Romeownen -were not Invlled. The lawe ol Ille slate, bli3ugbl up by ClllllldM Jlobtrt Roark,', ... hotly • • • denied by Sweeney at the weekend ~esslm:- "I am not part of a slate/' said Sweeney. 0 l'm independent. 1 don't care wbat anybody says. I'm Independent." 1 Sweeney denied knowledge of specific material being cfroulated urging votes- lor him, Nash, and Heckscher and said be welcomed endorsement by any group as long " Its members believed In the same things he did. During his fonnal remarks Sweer.cy outlined tile growth Issue which he said ls ile moot important in the campaign. "The hillside ordinance WIS debated and passed," he said. "It prevents large-- scale' gl>Uging Ind grading of the bill• so they. ltf not clertro)'l!d, so _,le resources won't be deplet.d. I support ~,. -~ - He said the bettle lines were drawn the flrlt limo the 10 apok• .torether wbe8 -llid they auppocted the hillllde ........... atlll ...... ha d ..-.vlllonl abo\11 It. 'He .,W the • ordinance is the key to the new general Ian-which ...-.-a"]ltO)eCled populiliOO of 80,000 down to 42,000. He admitted the plan Is not peT!ect, but said problems "could be Ironed oui as we go along." He said growth can't be stopped, but rapid growth places .a burden on public services, partlcularly 00 schools. Taking much the same Viewpoint oo the general plan was Douglas Nash, who, Uke S~y. is a member of the planning c:ommlssioc. Nash said be became involved when be saw ropld l?OWlh taking pla<e In his part ol town. lie Aid be Is Interested Iµ ~ , the .~ity ol projects, lower ~. '. ;tiodina n higher ardlitectural ~ ollo said he is ,oppooec! to.raiild srOw.th and haa spoken out hi fa-ol tlie blllilde ordinlnce. "PopWeUoo tna 51154 S4 percent belwOlll Aprtj d '7J and April of '73," be said. "It hos --anotbe< 32 (See c.tNDIDtlTE8, Page II Odd·even gasoline rationing also was tosSed out for discussion · a model for such a program is not that far away. Spokesmen for Cainp P e n d I e t o n announced late la~t \veek that the base '''ould be pl aced on the system startin r Tuesday. It will affect a base population of 40,000 persons. Limits on the amount of fuel a motori st can purchase at tbe base's statiom also \vere decreased from $4 to $3. • ire Ecologist Cautions ; Coast Panel • By CANDACE PEARSON ot "'-o.11r r 11et 111tt Any state coastal commissioner '\\'ho votes 1or the proposed compromise on the San Onofre nuclear power plant should resigr{, a leading environmentalist said today. The report by planners of the state Coastal 1.one COOservation Commission recommending approval of the plant is "clearly inadequate" and •'tot a 11 y inconsistent "'.ith the coastal zone act," Janet Adams, director of the caiilornia Coastal Alliance, said today in Loi Angeles. Construction of two l..,140 megawatt reaectors three m fl es south of sa:n Clemente will c a u s e "irreversible, irretrievable damage" to the coast, she added. Mrs. Adams spoke at a 10 a.m. press conference at Sierra Club headquarters with Larry Moss of the Sierra Club and John Mohr, professOl" of marine biology from USC. Moss said the Sierra Club is backing approval of tbe 11 .3 blllion proi,·c"",1iitmil~~­the-unita-are-movede1crosntie-bt£; off the coastal bluffs and if a better way of assuring that the· plant's cooling system won't hann offshore marine life .ts adopted. -·. .. . . ............ . Moving the nuclear units across the highway may not take eon·gressional approval as originally thought, Moss said today. Southern California F.dison's lease of Camp Pendleton land! Is signed by the Secretary of the"Navy,. who,.Mosrsaid, could administratively grant another site within weeks. The commission's planners, who Dec. S recommended the plant be moved east of the b..ighway, now suggest approval of the original site if .21 miles of sandstone bluffs are_ preserved for 10 years and the power companies initiate a study of t h e effects of the plant on marine organisms. Also, planners recommend t h a t underwater discharge not be ailowed within ·1,00 feet of shore to protect kelp beds and that a public accessway across the. state beach be open during construction. The state commission will recoo..sider its Dec. 5 dental ol the project at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Santa Barbara (See ONOFRE, Page :?) .. Cea.st ' Weldlaer Those wmas~ will diminish ~ night , but the Orange Coast won't be all that warmer on Tuesday with high readings in the middle 60s under patches of variable clouds . INSIDE TODA l' i\fort and more, Californian~ are Lea..,.tUng the magic WOTds that guarantee a n&arriage with no waiting, no witnesus, no pubJicity and _no test$. StorJj, Pagt 1. ' , j 2 DAILY PILOT SC Monday, February 18, 197'4 r ~~~~~~~-'---~~...c::.:.::::~:.:::;c...:.:c.:..:.:.; f'romP .. el CANDIDATES MEET. • • percent the last nine montbs. '''e have Pn opportunity today to put the brakes on rapid i;rowUt." . Yvon Heckschor took the same stand cm rapid growth. He said the town has grown 400 percent since 1966 when he first 1noved here. The new general plan calls tor an ultimate population of 42,000 which is a little over another 400 percent. "If that's not enough to satisfy developers, what is?" he asked. l~e pointed out that the hillside ordinance limits growth but does not confiscate property. "It does restrict cutting and rilling and tends to require lower density. It is not excesgively restrictive." Heckschcr also spoke out !or more citizen involvement apd proposed taking the city council to other public meetings on a regular basis to meet with the people. Taking a different viewpoint was candidate Robert Roark Who said his main cooctrn with the general plan is its economic feasibility. He said the new plan calls for 20 to 30 percent open space. "The only wa·• to get land is to buy it back," he said. "What will it cost to buy ~2,000 acres at $10,000 an acre? Are we talking about economic realities?" Roark said lhe only differences between him and the three "slate" candidates are his views on constitutional law (the Petalwna decision, a C{)Urt case which said it was unconstitutional to limit population), the general plan 's economic feasibility, and the desirability of machine politics in San Juan. Taking a middle position on growth was Edward Chermark, the only incumbent in the race. Chermak said he was being forced to take a stand · on the general plan, yet \yas reluctant to do so. "In my 10 years of experience nothing has been cut and dried." he said. "What is adequate today isn't next year. It's difficult to make a determination to please the majority." He said he wouJd view with an open mind all aspects of the plan before he comes to a decision. He added that no prospective councilman should adopt a hard-and-fast program that will be·· good 10 to 50 years hence because times change. "I'm not opposed to the general plan, but everything has to be implemented and the only . way to do It is through the tax dollar." Mrs. Judy Beggs, the only woman in the race, said she believes the hillside ordinance to too restrictive and the growth-limiting elements of the new general plan might be unconstitutional. "If development is limited on the hillsides, 'vherc will people be placed? In the flood plain where they will be w85bed to sea?" • She said she would like to Sctl the ~city get away from cluster·type • development and return to' more single- family dWl?llinp. Atr.s. Beggs aaid she entered the raco beca\l6e she believed tu dolJars were being spent frivolously and be<aUS< • priorities should be given mo..e thought Jn terms of practicality. She cited the Del OblsPO brtdge proJecl as an example of lack of planning because the wide.nl'd street wJU be c:omplelcd long before the bridge and at this time no plans have .been ~ade to extend the nearby railroad crossing lo the width of the street. Former COWlCilman Tony Forster qUestioned whether the new council will know how to limit growth. He said more building was done in the city during the last t\\'O years than in the previous 200 years. He said he agrees v.•ith the intent or the hillside ordinance, but was concerned w i t h its implementation. Answering a charge that he is a large landowner. For.>ter said • ;, owns two lots upon which his house is built. "Other candidates have more VE' · :d interests here than I do," he said. Forster, who said he is "Joi1g on . heritage " (his family has been here since 1845), was the only candidate to discuss historical preservallon. 1 f elected, Forster said, he would suppo rt the formation of a cuJtural heritage rommission to preserve historical sites in San Juan Capistrano. All councilmen, however, said they would support the preservation of Los Rios Street. Kenneth Vise 1imited his rerr.-:-ks to ooe subject, the hillside ordinanee . He said he didn't want to see the entire proposed 42,000 population loaded into- the valley, and for that reason he opposes the ne\v general plan. "Spread it' through the vohole city, not just on the flatl ands," he said. Re questioned whether the hillsideS were even buildable. He also pointed out that if open space is removed from the assesSe<I valuation rolls, taxpayers would have to make up for the loss. Gerald Horton said when he mov ed to san Juan he sensed a movement to make the town a "little Los Angeles." He said he isn't against growth, but he is against "ram rodding" things through the council. ''I w'ould propose to ~give everything a test," he said. "Do we need it. can \\'e afford .It how much will it 'r~y cost, how are we going to finance it, and what is the priority -do it now or later?" He said his years as a deputy sheriff gave him experience in community relations and decision-making and he pledged to reflect the public interest. John Gibson limited his remarks to his experience. He said he is retired and has time to use his experience in making right decisions. "There are many issues. All I can say is 1'11 use my best judgment and experience over 45 years to make sound business judgments for San Juan Capistrano," he said. ~Declining Birth Rate ; Pleases Capo Di.strict The Capistrano Unified School District may have a pupil housing crisis in ----~O'theO'.--iimackin"=.' g, but administrators today sai ey are encourag y an apparent plunging birth rate within its 158 square miles. projects are those catering to older couples whose children are already gro\\n. Condominiums and townhouses, he said, JX>SC fe\\'er growth problems for the district than single-family tracts, v.•here households often include st\'eral children. . ~ Director of Administrative Services Joseph Wimer said the declining birth rate and the increasing number of childless couples moving to the south county are contributing to the lower-than~ average figures. Mission Viejo, "'here housing is Jess erpensive than the immediate coast, has the Jtighest figure of children per household -93 dlildren per dwelling, Wimer said. In San Clemente, '!11ere:the percentage of retirees is greater, the figure is .38 children per house. Wimer said that every community in the district has figures which are well beJow those evident in the 1950s when cities in the state averaged l.5 children per home. Wimer in re(;ent months has stre~ed that despite 1nassive gro\\'th in the district, many of the ne\Y residential OIAffl COAST DAILY PILOT 1M ~ C09JI DAIL V PILOT, wltll wllldl Is c.,,,.INd !Pit Nn.·P•n .. Is pUbl!&htd 11W IM Ot ..... C"tl Pllt!Utll"'8 Compeny, StPit ''"' llllflloN .,. PllOllshtrd, Mondty lllrwgfl Fr~t,, lw CO.II Mtu, Ntwpor! 111~, Hunt1noto11 811e111l"ovn111n v111e.,., ~ ~ 1rv1rtt/lt4dl4'blCk ll'd 5•~ c:i • .._111 San Jutn C.11lt1rt1M1. A 11"91• "'lllOllll Miiiion h P\IOlftlMlt llt~t.,_ • ..., ~ur>d•Y .. T'-prlnCl,.I "*tltfllnt Pltnl II 11 l)ll Wtsl 91y Snwt, CWtt Mftl, C.trle"'ll, f2Ull. Rob•rt N. Wt.d fr"loll..,I 11'111 Publii.11..- Jtck •· Cvrlty \'kt P'rnld111t 11'111 G-t l No.MW Thom•• KttYil EtH" Tho"''' A. Mu•phine MtMtlno Editor Ch•rl•• H. Looi Rlch1rd '· Nill A$1!Jltnl Mllltl~ EOllO<I ... Cle1111t• OfflM JOii North El C1m i110 Rt•I, 92612 --Co•t• M...,; UD w .. 1 t•r StrMt H..,..,,, IMCll: am N ...... -~.,_ ~lnt!Oll ... di: 11VS •MCJt ~1'111 ......,,.. hid!: m ,.,.., "- Ttl.,.._ (7141 '42w4J21 a..,.. .,,... .... 442·1471 ._C.....,.A• De••••• ,,, ...... 492-4420 ~t, t'1J, OI'•..,.-c.o.u . ""6ftltlirll .. ~. r . Ho MWl •IOf'lft, lllu11t1tlllll, ,...,. I fflltlttr " Ml1ftrl1-fl IW'tlfl f!Wr bt -,...,..llCtd wflf\ollt '"'"' "" .... ,.. trf ~ ·-· !~001 4 .~ ,_1.,. ,.., 11 C.tt ""'91, ..,. ......... ~.ilot! IW urrflff GM "*lltll'l'I fN m1J1 ~.IJ mot111tlrJ mlflfWY .... "'!""' UM "'tlll'llY. ' Wimer predicted that the current concern over pupil housing in Mission Viejo and Laguna Niguel wi ll probably continue, because it is in those areas where most of the single·faml l y construction is proposed. The ·district--iate-last year succeeded in winning voter approval for a $25 million bond issue and already half that amount has been committed for new schools. Mission Viejo is destiried for a new elementary campus and eventually a high school. Laguna Niguel will have a ne\Y elen1entary campus and a junior high school. San Juan Capistrano will have a ne\Y t:lementary campus this fall and negotiations arc under way for a site for yet another one. From Pagel O'NOFRE ... County Building, 123 E. Anapam u St. The project needs eight votes for approval. At least four of the 12 commissioners have said they will vote no or have reservations about lhe current staff recommendations. The commission agreed Jan. 9 to rehear the application after being urged to by-numerous state legislators.- chambers of commerce, boards of supervisors and city councils. Dale Secord of the Orange County Environmental Coalition, an opponent of the project, said the commission bowed to political pr~ssure. Cow Gunned Down By Police Copter LUEDENSCHEID, West Germany <AP) - A cqw that lowered its horns toward a groWJded police heli09pter was shot to death with machine: guns as a "vicious" animal, pollce sAid. The cow tscaped from a slaughter house and was tracked SLUlday to a wooded area by five police cars and the helicopter. The helicopter landed, the cow lowered lls homa and the POllct opened fire. The carcass was taken to the slaughter house. , • . . . Da1iglater's Ra11so111 Hearst Devises Free Food Plan HILLSBOROUGH (UPI) -Newspaper publisher Randolph A. earst prepared today to announce a food distribution plan for the needy demanded by the terrorist group which kidncfped his daughter two weeks ago. A family spokesman said liearst would reveal the plan, which he said would Involve "substantial amounts of nloney" but far less than the $400 · million originally demanded, this afternoon. The Symblonese Liberation Army, which 00,lds his l&.year-old daughter, THOUSANDS WRITE HEARST IN SYMPATHY, Story Pago S Patricia, d~manded that the progra1n begi n by Tuesday as a "gesture of good faith" before opening negotiations for the release of the girl, granddaughter of the Jate newspaper giant \Villiam Randolph ltearst. , nor his daughter, nor the SL.A. He said the UPU ·was ouly involved. to help give away the ro0<1. Dennis Banks or the American Indian Movement said he wasn't happf that ~Uss Jl earst was kidnaped but he y,·as glad to be an interml'diury .. N<>w lert activist Jerry llubin '"nmed the SLA in a letter publlsht..'<I in Hearst's Sari Francisco Examiner that killing 1'1iss l!earst "will set off a rlght·\\'ing crackdown" in the United States. He urged the kidnapcrs not to hann the girl. DAVID ANAHELUK OF SANTA ANA HEIGHTS KILLED ON CYCLE Bike Rammed Truck Sunday Night; Impact Wrenched Doo r Off 1'~81 spokesman John Kelly said there was nothing new to report in the investigation of the kidnaping. He said the FBI would have no comment on the food distribution plan, saying it Y.'as "of ~ great interest to us from an investigative standpoint." "If you kill Patricia J-learst you will be outraging human beings everywhere,'' \Vrote Rubin, a leader of the Yippies and one of the Chicago Seven riot conspiracy defendants. "You \\'ill set off a righty,•ing crackdoy,·n -find the S1'\ ! ....:. That will endanger the very people that you say you are fighting for. You wi ll destroy the moral credibility of the lefl." T·wo Patriotic Odor Problem To Be Aired At Serra Meet 'Ille South East Regional Reclamation Authority (Serra ) will have special guests at their monthly meeting Tuesday -two representatives or a Dana Point mobile home park beset by a nagging odor problem. Mrs. Joan Jefke, representing scores -·of ri!sidem; Of th€ nana POlnt ·Marine ... Mobile Home Estaies, will be on ~and to find out what Serra will do to control odors which assertedly come from the recently enlarged waste-treatment plant purchased from the city of San Juan Capistrano. DirectOrs of Serra, a brotherhood of six separate waste-treatment agencies in the vaUey -will meet at 2 p.m. in san Juan council chambers. Residents of the park besieged by strong odors first took their gripe to the San Juan City council, which still has control of the plant. They won a pledge of a thorough investigation into the odor problem. "The problem has eased somewhat." Brs. Jer ke said, "but l'n1 still interested in knowing what caused the problem and what measures wiU be taken to make sure it won't happen again." ri.1rs. Jerke added that the nearby Dana Poin t Sanitary District plant no longer has a large vinyl dome over its tanks -installed to curb odors as well. She also seeks infonnatiOn on "'hen that dome will be replaced. "We still have to burn our scented candles," she said. Other items on the agenda for the monthly session will include a board selection from a list of 20 alternate plans to dis(XlSC of treated waste from the Serra plant. Consultants have recommended one ocean outfall or one inland re:lamation project as the best ideas. Carididat,es Vie l 1i San Clement£ San Clemente's 11 candidates for three city council seats have been invited to a Thursday night potluck dinner sponsored by the community's historical society. . The event ".'ill begin at 6:30 p.m. 1n the commuruty clubhouse and is open to the society's members and guests. "This will be an informa l event to give members a chance to meet the candidates for office in this imJX>rtant election," said spokeswoman Mrs. Henry Read. .. She added thnt the society's concern for preservation of local landmarks \\'ould probably be a prime topic for discussion. Frona Page 1 CRASHES ... driving rammed broadside into a sma ll pickup truck that allegedly turned 1cft in front of him. Police said the driv('r of the truck, Kim R. Whitehead, 19, of 1543 Serenade Terrace in Corona del Mar, was driving wtder the influence of alcohql when he turned lrom Brstol onto Santa Ana Avenue. Anaheluk's big bike rammed into the passenger side of the car and ilipPed 1t up onto two wheels, officers were told by witn~ .• fyo ~ers in Wtittetie<td'.s car are in fair condition today at 1'-teicy General Hospital with multiple injuries. They are Lucinda Smith, 21, o( 19841 Kesswood St., Huntington Bead:! and Jeff Gillett, no known address. Whitehead . Is in Orange County Jail today on the dnmken driving charge and bail has been set at $2,SOO. Officers Elected For Toastmasters The South C.oast's new Toastmasters Club has elected its first state of officers, accordin-' to organizer"' Scotty Smith. Dennis' Erdman has been selected president. Olhers on the list include Marvin Neff, educational vice president; Ray Marquard , administrative vice president; Larry Wohlfarth. secretary; James Beeby, treasurer. and Duane .SChmitten, sergeant·at-anns. The group meets each ti.tonday at 7 p.m. in Carrow's Restaurant, and spokesmen said anyone interested in joining the organization is welcome to any meeting. Gifted Youngsters • Progra1n Discussed The direcctor or a central-county school for gifted youngsters will discuss his specialty Tuesday in a program at Dana High School sponsored by the Parent:s-A"ssoclatlon for GUtea ·Children (PAG). Dr. Donald 1'1eyer, director of Edgewood Private School in Tustin, will examine motivation o( gifted students and youngsters with learning disabilities . during th~ 7:30 p.m. session. Parents throughout the Capistrano Unified School .District are welcome to the event in the school's Porthole Theater. I fteDy said-Uie FBI was still respecting the famil y's wishes in not jeopardi1Jng the girl's safety if the SLA's hideout were discovered. "lf we thought someone \vas in there holding a gun to her head, we would not go in," he said. The Hearst family has been receiving about 600 letters a day from well- wishers, both to the family home and to the San Francisco Examiner, of which I learst. is president and editor. Jay Bosworth, a spokesman for the family, said Hearst encountered "some delay" in working on the "details and mechanics" of t1;1e proposal becaµse of . the long IJ91Jday weekend. :• This morn!flg,, JtearJt, ,aPd .. ~\vorth left the fa_mily's Hillsborough mansion; t.elling reporters they · were going to San Francisco. They gave no further indication of the purpose of their trip. Hearst and his wife, Catherine, y,•ere heartened by a tape recording from Patricia received during the weekend in which she said she was being well treated and her atxiuctors y,·ere willin g to accept ""tiateve r you can come · up \Vilh." "Field ?-.tarshal Cinque" or the SLA said in the recording that the SL.A \\.'ould •·accept a sincere effort on your part." The Rev. Cecil .WiJliams, pastor of Glide Memorial Church, said ·Sunday night that neither he nor members of five leftist groups named by the SLA to oversee the food distribution program had been consulted about the Hearst proposal. However, he said he believes the family is acting· in "good faith." One coalition member, Popeye Jackson of the United Prisoners Union, said his group didn't support the Hearst family, From Page 1 GAS ... announce that rationing may have to be imposed in California. "In the last few days simply because we have had to consider a contingency plan," Reagan said, "this has suddenly created panic buying and panic lines at service stations." If it continues, he said, there would be no choice but to impose gas rationing statewide. Reagan issued the warning Saturday in an appearance before the California Newspaper Publishers Association. The Automobile Club of Southern California pronounced the weekend as the worst gasless weekend of the energy crisis. Only one percent of the stations in the Los Angeles • Orange County metroJX>lltan area were open on Sunday, the auto club said. Music Prograrns Ort Soutli Coast Tv.1> patriotic music programs are being plaru1ed for this week and next by yow1g n1usicians in the capistrano Unified School District. The nrst concert is set for \Vednesday at 7'.30 p.m. in the San Clem~e High Sc:hool gymnasiu1n where musicians from schools in the southcm portion or the school system will perform. A "5Ct'Ond free ~ncert performed.-by youngster3 jn. the nort,herly p.i'rt of thti d·istrlCt \\;'jJ\'be -~era·· at "Dana:"itills Higll School Feb. 27 at 7:30 p.n1. District f\'lusic Chairman Cyril Gallick said the traditional patriotic programs "climax a period of concentration in the great American traditions that are reemphas.ized by the birthdays of ' Presidents \Vashington and Lincoln." Gallick said that this year marks the first in district history ...,,·here two programs have been set for high school gyms. making it possible for oiore parents to attend. Ahsertlee Vore.s- Being Offered Vot('rs in the South Coast cities of San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano who \\•ill not be in toY.TI for the f\.1arch 5 elections have until Feb. 26 to cast their ab.scntee ballots. City clerks or each community issued the reminder today and said tha t their offices can furnish the ballots and the voter can make his choices on the spot. A private polling booth will be furnished and the ballot will be sealed and processed with the regular ones on election night, officials said. I( voters can not use that service mailed requests for the ballots can ~ processed at civic centers as well. !\'Ian Drowns in Canal ?-.i~CCA (UPI) - A Los Angeles man who ignored "no swimming" signs along the All-American Canal droy,md Sunday when he became too tired to cllmh back up the canal's sloping cement banks. San Bernardino County Sheriff's Deputies sa id the body of Kenneth Coleman, 24. was swept downstream by the strong current and has not been recovered . Little League Signnps Set at Clemente IIigh o..--- S i gnu p s for boys qualilled to play in the San Clemente Little League late this spring wilt be hcl:I at San Clemente High School Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. League spokesman Kirk Munroe said that any youngster born between Aug. I, 1961, and July 31, t966, ls eligible for the prqgram this year. All boys must live within the city limits of San Clemente and must bring a birth certificate and flO registration tee to the signups. The fee covers the costs of uniforms, insurance and a color team plrturt, he said. Atwater Man Dies PISMO BEACH (AP) -M Atwater man, Joseph Ronald Dias, 29, was killed when his rour·whctl .drive vehicle fllpped While cresting a aand dun<. h<re, the Highway Patrol aays. The vehicle <Ame to rest 6 feet below the crest of the dune . '~ PuUing the Bug· to Work Farmer Bill Peters bas one "b~g" in his field in In Red Bluff, Calif., that ho's not anxious to get rid of. Peters found tha.t with the risi.ng cost of fuel1.lt was more economical to disc his fields with his Volkswagen than his tractor. 7 I I \ 7 .. I I . . .. . ... . . • • .. ... . . Lag111-1a Beaeh- EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ' VOL. 67, NO. 49, 2 SE.cTtONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1974 TEN CENTS .. •• • • • ~oas aso 1ne ~rISIS _as1n· 7 Local Winners W ay-ne Honored- • • • For Patriotism ' Film star John \Vayne of Newport Beach topped the list of seven area citizena honored today in Valley Forge, Pa., Jn the Annual Nalional Freedoms Foundation Awards ceremony. Wayne, 66, 'was given the George Washington award for ·the "proud and unabashed patriotism" of his new album, "American; Why I Love Her." - He beads the liBt qi some 2,000 bonorees designated natioowide lor awards from ·the Foundation. Other Orange Coan citations Included: -Leila W. Maxson, 26635 Saddleback Drive, El Toro, and La Paz Intermediate School In El Toro for the school publication, El Conquistador, honor ay,•ard -for both teacher and ·schooJ. · Police Seize Concord Man :After. Fighf ~: ·:...FesffV81 of Arts or Laguna Beach, honor awards in community programs Laguna Beach police arrested a 2~ year~ld Concord man following a bar rOOm fight which injun · the bar 'manager and later involved two Laguna ·patrolmen Sunday night. category. ...'...Or. James E. Johnson or Tustin, fonner assistant Secretary of the Navy, for his award-winning address upholding the American system of government and free enterprise. . -. Fear Fades Of .Empty Holiday Availability or gasoline on the Orange Coast imp roved today with about half of the service s~tions opening to hordes of gas·hungry motorists. Fears of a gasless ~\fonday as well as the now-routine dry Sunday did not materialize. Service· station owners appeared willing to cut short their holiday and to pump gas !or the local clientele. ~ The availability of a tank of gas was no worse than usual this morning SHUTDOWNS WORSEN GAS s1TuATION :..::~s1;;~ P~ue· 4 • iii ·Huntingtori -acach, COsta Mesa, Newport Beach, 1..aguna Beach ~and Mission Viejo. Christopher 0 . Nichols was booked for alleged assault on a police olfi<e{, assault with a deadly weapon, aoCI ·resisting a.rnst. -Rev. Dr. Robert H. Schuller, founder and seriior pastor ot Garden Grove Community Chun:b !or his sermon "! LAGUNA BEACH HIGH SCHOOL BAND ROUNDS TURN ON FOREST AVENUE SATURDAY Annual Patriots oa-'j' Par•d• Drew Some 200 Entries, Thousands of Spectators Despite Gasless Weekend Gas appeared tighter in San Clemente v1here long lines' of cars gathered at the three open stations and in El Toro where only one of eight stations was open during the morning commuter hour. However panic buying, interspersed with road blocks and fistfights at some stations on Friday and Saturday, prompted Gov. Rooald Reagan lo announce that rationing may._bave to F1eur de Lis manager Stan Garnette was taken to South CoMt CommUDily Hospital after being hit Jn the lace with a glass. Neither cl tbe policemen were Injured. NicholJ r<ceiv.d a cut thumb. Patrolman Michael Davis and llorm Jlfandel rupollded lo the report of a Ogjrt aJJhe bar, 1169 S. Coast Highway and arrived after Garnette was injured. They reportedly found N i c h o I s ~crouched ln the front seat of a vehlcle parked near the bar and ordered him out. Sgt. David Ayers s a i d that rui the man exited the vehicle. he held a beer bottle by the neck in a meriacing fashion. The policemen ordered him to drop It and he did. During queftloning al the scene, he repor1edly struck Officer Biandei with his rm and during a f 0 Ii 0 w I D g altercation, both clficora ...,.. struck u they att<mpled lo subdue the man, , Sgt. Aytrs said. Sound Equipment Burglarized . at 01urch in Laguna St. Mary's Episoopal Church of Laguna Beach was burglart7.ed of sou n d equipment valued at $5,330 over the weekend. The theft was discovered early Sonday morning and was reported to Laguna Beach police by Rev. Baird Coffin, assiltlng rector. Police Sgt David Avers said a north choreh window had been forced open, 'a door bad been J!!jed open and a cabinet contalriing the equipment was pried open. The burglary was one or four reported over the weekend to police. Marsha L: Mayer, an Indian jewelry sales represntative from 'New ~1cxico. reported thelt ol $6.200 In fndlan jewelry and semi·preclous stones from her car. (See CHURCH, Page II Am 1be American Flag." -Three Camp Pendleton servicemen, L. Cdr. Gerald Co>, USN;-Sgt.-.Jolm1-&..-~--·-.;o R Johnston, USMC ; and Hon. William G. llr8e . ...I.' a. ce8 _ _a_p Wagnon,-USNR,-honor--aword-for-!helr -- Joint letter "Human Goals -Values ....,........ · -· tor UviaJ.:' . -Of lmpers· onatin· g · Announcement of the awards was made by Cen. Harold Johnson, USA 1Ret.), Freedoms Foundation preside nt. Laguna ·Offi"cer Recipients were selected ' by an independent National Awards Jury consistiilg of 13 state supreme court justices and 29 natkinal representatives of civic, educational, patriotic, and veterans organir.ations. The jury includes Adrian Pelletier of Laguna Beach_ The panel noted that Wayne's wiruling record is his ram album. They described it as "a sensitive reOection of a man in love with his oountry .'' Accompanied by chorus and orchestra, Wayne narrates 10 tributes to America that are "straight out affirmations of this country and her people." Ollher wirmen of the top 40 awards included Earl Hamner, Jr., of Burbank, creator of "The Waltons," and Gordon Sinclair of Toronto, canada for his record, "Who Helped? The Americans Did." The Freedom Leadership Award went to world heav)"\4.·eight boxing champion George Foreman of Hayward for a published article on opportunities offered by the American system. ·-A second National Recognition Award ' (See AWAllDS, Page II A 4~year~ld Mission Viejo nurse was arrested by Laguna Beach police Sunday night arter a resident reported being accosted by an intoxicated man who said -he-was-a police-officer;-:: - Police booked Peter N. Dellsite of 24622 Laders Drive ror alleged drunk driving and impersonating a police officer. Delelsite was released on bond today. Sgt. David Ayers, s a i d a Grandview Street resident called and told police a man wearing a dark blue jacket with a white star on the front had come to the door, and identified himself as a Los Angeles policeman. A Laguna Beach policeman was sent to the area, Rnd upon arriving observed Dcllsite driving away with the lights to the vehicle off, Sgt. Avers said. He said that as a patrolman stopped tl).e car and approached it, he was told "Everything is all right, I'm a police officer."· _... - Laguna Beach police reported that Oeilsite is a registered nurse at a Mission Viejo hospital. Superi,isors w ·Hear Lag-u-na Fence 4ppeal The nagging issue of a· fence on Victoria Beach In South Laguna will be resurrected Wednesday in an appeal before the Orange C.ounty Board of Supervisors. The city of Laguna Beach will ask .Mid connected by a single strand of heavy chains hung with a few "Keep Out"· signs. ------~-~be!XiiNI ove um a con roverslal At the planning . commission meeting, tht.: co mpromise met with threats of lawsuits and appeals, the first or which Ina r1a 1 m ~fonn of Laguna Beach's action next week. 3 Die, 6 Injured :!'!;.! ::1 ::re:~:;~;;:. In Three County destroyed chaln-llnk fcnoe to • , replaced ~th-a more aUraotlve banier. The Lagunlla -Alooclatlon Traf fie Accidents -.i. 1or penn1sa1m 1o replace tht A rull cl Orange 0ouoty traffic acclderU Smday left three young people dead aod ol• OChers Injured, California Highway J:atrol olflcen reported today. Dead are Yvonne Garc~a, 17, of Cerone: David Analleluk, 21, ol Santa Ana Heights and Paul D. McM!llen, 28, of Orange. ' Two of the lalal crashes occurred on the Orange Colli. CHP olllcen said Mias Garcia W8ll killed Instantly wl)Oll the ca.r she was riding In went <M cl ccntrol at the lnlenectlpa ol the San Diego and Newport Fr~waya and WM llruck broodside by an oocomlll( •an. Olficon Ill the ocene aold the 1mall ICl'Olp cor, &iV111 by 11-,_,..,ld (llee CllASllE8, Pop !l -. fence, wblcb ...., ela1m marb the lwnfary of beacll land they OWD and pay '"""" on. The fence, which extended out onto the sand for JOO feet, met with stir! oppooltion lrOm Laguna Beach officials and other residents of the area. 'Ibey claim the fence encroaches on the mean hlgb tide line that marks lhe-beglnnlna of public dol\)•ln. The Lagunlta people claim the line changes so much nobody real!)' kqows where II 11. . Planninl commissioners Vllled s-2 ,,In .Januacy to let the V.plta residents tear cloWn 25 iee\ el the , lace llill standing and ~ the ·entire lenath with a -bonier. Tbe -fence wu to be a aeries ot woodeo plllap ..... ltllo tllo aand • . If supervison overturn the planners' decision, the ball will be banded back lo the Lligunita .homeowners. Their only alternative would be court action. AD SELLS AUTO . ON FIRST DAY The sale was almost as automatic as the transmission for the reader who placid this ad: '69 CORTINA, auto tr:n1s, gas saver, good cond. $5llO. (Phone No.) The advertiser reported this Daily Pllol classified ad did IU Job .and sold lhe car on the first day. They may not all work that ln4 . but they_ sure work. Test It on your own merchandise. Dial the dlrecl lli1e to resulis at the Dally Pllol. Phont.aa.sm. D9ftJ ftlttt Staff ....... PAPIER2MACHE STATUE OF LIBERTY WON THEME AWARD Laguna Beach Element1ry Students Pull Parade Winner • be Imposed in California. "In the last· few days simply because we have had to consider a conttngeocy plan," Reagan said , "this has suddenly created panic buying and panic llnes ·at service stations." If it continues, he said, there would be no choice but to impose gas rationing sta tewide. Reagan issued the warning Saturday in an appearance before the California Newspaper Publishers Association. The Aut<1mobile Club of Southern California pronounced the weehnd as the worst gasless weekend of the energy crisis. Only one percent of the atatiODI in the Los Angeles • Orange Coullly metropolitan area were open on Simday, the auto club said. Laguna Boy, 7, Hurt iii Crasli.; Faci11g Cliarges? A 7-year~ld Laguna Beach boy was injured Saturday when his runaway tri cycle collided with a car at Holly Street and Monterey Drive. Police reported the child was riding southbound .on HoJly and entered the intersection at Monterey. Motorist Charles R. Morrale, 50, of 246 Fairview, saw the child, and swerved his Caf to avoid an accident. As he did so, the child also swerved and hit the side of Morrale's car. Aides at. South Coast Community Hospital said the child was i n satisfactory condition after treatment for a broken leg suffered in the mishap. Laguna Beach · police declined to release the name of the small actident .victim as the.re is !he possibility charges could be filed ngt'.linst him. Laguna Elementary Wins Two-Award~at-ParadP----1-oraa11,-11---"' The combined student bodies ol Laguna Beach elementary schools walked of! with the Grand ' Marshal's award and the theme·awards in the Eighth Annual LagW1ll Beach Patriols Day Parade satunlay. Tbousaod! crowded the route of march as more than 200 entrants marched Jn lbe Art COiony parade. Mayfair High School band ol Lakewood took first place in the senior high school band category. Corona dcl . ~tar was second. The sweepslake award was won by N'ewport'Harbo~ High School. Dale Junior High School ·band "on fillt place In the junior high school bond •category-lollgwed by, Sierra Vista of ·Covlna and Soulh Weet' Junlot High ol San Diqo. • !Newport Harbor lligh.scbaDl:clrill tcam • "won rll'st place in the seil.ior drill team categories lolldwed by' Mayfair !Ugh School ol LakeWood. ' In the Doat calegocy, ·the · Laguna Beach Board or Realtors 'finished first followed by Freedoms Foundation of Valley Forge, Orange County Chapter and the US .Navy, In the antique auto category, Arthur Blanding of the Laguna Beach Card•n Club won (irst place. Atarching units Included first place winner CUb Scout Pack 701 ol Laguna Beach, second place San Clemente YMCA and third place Laguna Beach Girls Scouls. Locke lll&h ScboOI ol Los Angeles took ftrst · ~lace Iii the color guard ca!egoty with !ta Junior Navy ROTC nwchlDI iulll ile<obd' pliCO ,.., -5an Clemen~ lli!lh Sd>ool Junior Navy ROTC followed by the : W-'l Marines As8oclatlon . ofl Ill' Torn, • • f Weltdler Those winds wiU diminish to- night, but the Orange Coast won't be alt that warmer on Tuesday with high readings in the middle 60s under patches of variable clouds. INSIDE TODAY Afore and more, Californians are leandng lilt tn.agic wortl.t tl1at guarautte o marriage with no walti11g, no witne11e11 no publicity oiid 110 tests. Story. Page 7. - • OAILY PIL01 LB U'I T.._.... Ouch! This workman appears to be dealing a "head crushin~" blow to the Frankenstein monster in Newport, Ore., but he's only putting up the mon. ster as part of billboard. Now if he had a stake, and it were --Dracula .... Marine's Wife · Flu1iks Course ; Husband Sliot A Camp Pendleton Marine giving his Wife fireanns instruction over the weekend was shot· in the knee when bis mate fired the Y.'eapon \\'hile the safety was off. Police said William Daly Hines, 2%, IUffered a olngle wound below his kneecap "'Saturday night as he v!'as ,.OOwing his '"Wiie bow ill use a .Zl-caliber ,;.tle fOt pro"teclioo while he was away trom home. ' Officers said the resident of 111 ~ Lane, Apartment 6. banded the weapon to his wife, but forgot to acti,..te the safely. 1 Officers said Hines asked his wife Jo cock lbe weapon. She did so and then pulled the trigger. After emergency tttatment at san Qemente General Hoopital Hines was tramlem:d to the Naval Hospital at Camp Pendleton for furthe r treatment. r Police said the in cident \Vas clearly an accidenL Gifted Youngs ters Progr a n1 Disc usse d The direcctor or a central-oot.mty 1ehool for gifted youngsters vl'll! discuss his specialty Tuesday in a progra!'!l at Dana High Sd!ool sponsored by tile .Parents AS&>Ciation for Gifted CbJldreo (PAG ). Dr. Donald ~leyer, director o f F.dgewood Private School in Tustin . .m examine motivation of gifted studena and yoong..ters with learning disabillue! during the 7:30 p.m. ~ion. Pareno Jbrouibout the Capistrano t:ni!ied Sdlool J>istrict are welrome to the eYeot in lf>e school 's Porthole Theater. OIAN•I CO.A.IT \.t DAILY PILOT n. Or.._ C-t DAI\. 't '°ILOT, _.., ..,.litft II ~ 11'19 N-..Pf-. b .. I ..... DV me 0•11•• c .. 11 'ublWllr'lf c~"'· ~ ,.,. """;;.. ••• Pooblla'-l. ~, ""'~ Frio.r. fllr c..i. Mn.., N-., .......... .............., • &.9'tl'r~1'11 -Y1"'1', \.f9Vft1 -..m, lrwlMJs..cNIMKJr. Miiii Ian c......,,,, S., J-C'6Phtr-A 1'"91e •19 -1 •1tton .. """' ................. .,. ... s....o.,.. t,.. prlrt(lpotl MIWI ... """' 11 •t UC W...t a.r S1'1'91t,. °"" MtM, C..llrwnle., ~ k•._rt N. W • .d ,. .. lllMt .... hlll"""' J•ck a. C11tlrt vie. ,,.!Hftt .,.. ~.r ~ T111m11 kt1•il ··-'"'-" A. MurJhiu 111\.t""ifll l'tlllw c~.,,., H. L•.. Rlch1r.J '· N.u ,...,,.,,.. ............. Edrtwt ---222 f•r•1t A•11111• Mtilf"f Mtftt M ! ,.o ........ •2•12 --a.-. ....... :. ~::r~ .....,...., 1.-cti: ».» N a ele:SN """""""" hecll. 1111J ll4d'I ........ .. .. 0-..:., Ntr1'1 l l ~ ... , , ........ f 714 J .. J ... 111 C:W Allhw PI t S MWl71 ~-.....Al D.., I 0 1 , ........... .... C.,,_,, 1'11. qr-..... c..t ii:I A ?:•4 °""'*"""· ... .... ....-. ........ .. __ .. , _,.., .,. ................ ...... ""' • •• I Wf"'4llt ..... ...... .......... ..,,.... ...... . ..... ~ ......... ., .. c.-.... ~ .............. _.,.., ... ..-W1 .. 1N11 U.,IJ .......... , ...... .... __ ' Monday, Ftbr\111')' 18, 1974 'Damage to C°'"t' Ecologist Rips Onofre Decision By CANDACE PEARSON OI' Ill• O.lty 1"1111 11111 Any fitate coastal com1nissionC'r \\'ho votes for the proposed cornprornise on the San Onofre nuclear power plant should resign , a Jeadlng environmentalist said tod ay. The report by planners of the state Coastal Zone Conservation O>mmission recommending approval or the plant is "clearly inadequate" {Ind '' tot a 11 y inconsistent with the coastal zone act," Janet Adams, direct.or of the Califomia Coastal Alllance1 said today In Los Angeles. Conslruction of two 1,140 megawatt reaectors three m 11 e s south of San Clemente will cause "irreversible, irretrievable damage" to the coast, she added. · Mrs. Adams spoke at a IO a.m. press conference at Sierra Club headquarters \Vith Larry Mos.s of the Sierra Club and JOhn Mohr, professor of marine biology from USC. Moss said the Sierra Club is backing approval of the $1.3 billion project if the wiits are moved across the highway off the coastal bluffs and if a better way of assuring that the plant's cooling system won't hann offshore marine life is adopt.em Moving the nuclear units across the highway may not take Congressional approval as originally thought, Moss said today. Southern California Edison's lease of Camp Pendleton lands is signed by the Secretary of the Navy. who, fl.1oss said, could ad1ninistratively grant another site within week!. The commission's planners, who Dec. 5 recommended_ the plant be moved east of the hlghway , now suggest approval o( the original site if .21 miles of sandstone bluffs are preserved for 10 years and the power companies iniliate a study of t h e effects of the plant on marine organisms. Also, planners recommend t h a t undenvater discharge not be allowed within 1,00 feet of shore to protect kelp beds and that a public accessway acrw the stale beach 11< open during con,,truction. The state commission will reconsider its Dec. 5 denial of the p~ject at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Santa Barbara County Building, 123 E. Anapamu St. The project needs eight votes 'for approval. At least four of the 12 commissioners have said they will vote no or have reservations about the current staff recommeOdaUons. The commission agreed Jan. 9 to rehear the application after being urged to by numerous state legislators, chamben of commerce, boards of supervisors and city councils. Dale Se<or<l of lbe Orange County Envirorunental Coalition, an opponent of the project; said the commission bowed to political pressure. . SALESMAN BERKOWITZ SHOWS OFF ELECTRIC-BIKE 50 Miles on ThrM Cents a Day Worth of Electricity New Cycle Burns Juice ••. ., -Hearst Set To Tell of Food Plans HILLSBOROUGH CUP!) -Newspaper publisher Randolph A. Hearst prepared today to announce a food distribution plan for the needy demanded by the terrorist group which kidnapcd his daughter two weeks ago. A family spokesman said Jlearst would reveal the plan, which he said would Involve "substantial amounts of money°' but far teSs than the $400 million originally demanded, this afternoon. The Symbi.onese Liberation Anny, which bolds his li>year-old daug!>ler, THOUSANDS WRITE HEARST IN SYMPATHY, Story Page 5 Patricia, demanded that the program begin by Tuesday as a .. gesture of good faith" be£ore opening ne~ations for the release of the girl, granddaughter of the late ney,•spaper giant WIO!am Randolph Hehrst. FBI spokesn1an John Kelly sakl lh<'te \\'as nothing new to report in the investigation of the kidnaping. He said the FBI would have no comment on the food di!lribution plan, saying it y,•as "of no great interest to us from an investigative standpoint.'' Kelly said the FBI was still respecting the family 's wishes in not jeopardiling the girl's safety if t he SLA's hideout were discovered. "If we thought someone was In there holding a gun to her head, we would not go in," he said . r sen.rice station. and the frantic search for an oJ)en But Not Liquid Variety Judge Overrules Parents: B~~~~y~~AJ!i The Heara:t famlly has been receiving about 600 letters 1 day from well- .,,,ishers, both to the family borne and to the San Francisco Examiner, of which Hearst is president and editor. • An ele<;tric plus and three cents a :: ..... . -~ _'-"<.,.. ~.day. in electri'city char&es will let you So ~ \~,e ,...Huntin~n . _Beach distributors. ~-~a ew type o f tran.spo~tion -the electric motoreycle. Jay Bosworth. a spokesman for· the (amily,,said H'e~~~.·:~~ ,, delay " .in working on the "detalls arid mechanics'' of the proposa1 became_ of Defor1!1ed Baby Treated forget all ahoul hi~h .g~~ prices The little bike comes in two-wheCI and three-Wheel models. priced at $499 and $699. Thirty miles per hour is the top speed. although the speedome~r lls1' the powe r in volts, not miles per hour. the long holiday weekend. · PORTLAND, 1'.1aine (AP) -"Some people are calling us moosters because of this and others are very sympathetic," says the father of a severely malformed baby tbat has undergone court«dered surgery his parents refused to approve. "I disagree with the judg~·~ ruling. I reel that we as · ~ts ~d be listened to ," sa id Sgt. fubert B. T. Houle or \Vestbrook , a1 Air Force recruit.er. His llklay-old aon -who bas not heal oonsdous··•ince . ' birth, Feb. 9 -w ... reported in lair cmditioa today at the Ma!Qe Medical Center.· The Sllfgery was performed Thursday. Doclor> oay the baby -wbooe lef t sl<le i.s dt£ormed, including having no left eye or ear canal -i3 unable to take food by mouth and may never gain consciousness. And the clulcl"s doctor test!Jied al a court bearing Thursday that surgery probably would not be of any 1>enem. But Superior Court Judge David G. Roberts ·ruled tile infant has a "right to Ille" and onlered Ille-sustaining surgery. A first operalioo was perlormed shortly after the judge issued bis order. It involved ·implanting a food tube into the infant's stomach. 'Voice' ·Speaks; -Man Kills Wife, Five in Family FAYETrE, Mis.>. (VPI ) -A 20-year· old man shot and killed h~ wile, infant WAl aDd four family members early :oday and illjured two others after he beard a "voice" tell him to take their Lves.. authori ties said. Jefluson County Sheriff J. P. Walla"' wd Frankie Lias told authorities "a Bfblical \'Oice told h'.'Tl \lo'hat to do'' before he shot the victims with a .22 caliber rifle in the pre-<iaY.11 hours at their secluded dwelling. \fallare said the victims y,·ere ?\lrs . Carol E\'e Lias. 18: the couple's II · mon1h-Otd soo. Ken : \Ir.!=. J1mmv Ross \l.'ilhams. 39. moth<'r of \lrs. Li.is ; Leo \lcDonald. 3i, common-law husband of ~!rs. \\'Uhams : and JS..year-0ld Dennis \\'illiams and 17·y£'ar-old ~liss Tony ROEis, b!'Olher and sister of ~trs. Lias. h ·o younter relativ('s. 4-year-old Lennie Ross and Fredia Ross-:-19, were L1 undetennJned condition at University ~I06pital in Jackson \\.'ith gimshot ~1Junds of the> head. Wallace said all but one of the victims bad been shot ''between the eyes." One of the children died ol a gunshot wOUDd of the h<ar1 . The sherifJ said authorities were called by Li.as' brother. William , 8hortly before 6 a.m. to report the multiple slayings. Wallace described Lias as a "nice Cello"''." \\ilo told them in a atatemenl that he was told by a "voice what to do" and "then he quoted 50mo biblical Scrtptw-e," The victims were shot while they slept at the Liu' trailer home and the nearby house o1 Mrs. LW' pareni. about 2:30 a.m. \\'allace said thett appeared to be no ocher motive for the slaylnga and that Liao had not bad any dloagreemenl w"1! bll family. Uas, who has a high scoool edllClllon, was a construction worker. wan..,. oald LiM, obotrvln( his llltb birthday today In tile Jefferson County JaU, W&1 ca1m while awaiting arraJgnment. ... Another operatioo, planned for this week, is int.ended to permit tbe baby to take food by mouth. Navy Lt. JameS Fryer, attorney for the baby's pam1t.., said an apj>eal of t.he court ruling to the Maine Supreme Court is being romi<lered. But he oaid a decision by Ille parents is being delayed until after the second operation. "I understand the second operation is a high risk one. The decision to appeal may well be ,,_ .. if the baby dies, he said. The matter was taken to oourt by the bospital because the situation pooed "a highly difficult moral dilemma," said John Mitchell , hospital attorney. He said the medical cent.er is considering fmancing the Supreme Court appeal to gain a definitive ruling on the matter. From Page l CRASHES ••• Deborah Beard of Corona, apparently Spun Qut OD the !'afD~ ~lcting the southbound San Diego wi th the northboond Newport F're<way. "She apparently hit the shoulder and then overcorrected, shooting diagonally CJCl'Ol.'IS the roadway into the path of the van," a CHP spokesman said. The impact of the collision flipped the small car over Uld rolled it down a short embankment. ?\liss Garcia was thrown clear but officers said she was probably already dead. The driver or the van, Johnnie Anders, 24, of 308 16th St. In Huntington Beach , suffered minor injuries in the crash. A passenger in the van, 21-year-old Jeff Cruzon, 1535 Superior Ave., Newport Beach, complained of pain but refused hospital care. The second Orange Coast crash happened at about 9::J p.m. at the Santa Ana Height& lnter3ectlon of Bristcl Street and Santa Ana Avenue. 1 Officers at the scene said Anabeluk, 2422 S.E. Bristol SL, was fatally Injured y,·hen the heavy motorcycle he was driving rammed broadside into a small pickup truck that allegedly turned left in front of him. Police said the driver of the truck, Kim R. \Vhitehead , 19, of 1S43 Serenade Terrace in Corona del Mar, was driving under the influence of alcoho l when he turned from Brstol onto Santa Ana Avenue. Anaheluk 's big bike rammed into the passenger side of the car and flipped it~up onto two-wheels. officers were told by witncsse1. Two passeugen in Whitehead 's car arc In fair condlOon today at Mercy General Hospital with multiple injuries. They are Lucinda Smith, 21, d. 001 Kesswood St., Hunlingtoo Beach and Jeff Glllelt, DO known addrea. Whitehead b In Orange County Jail today on the drunken driving charge and bail has been set at $2,500. Cow Gunned Down ' By Police Copter LUEDENSCHEID, West G. rm In y (AP ) -A COW that lowered tt.t . horns toward a lf'()WMled police helicopter wa8 shot to dUth wtth machine guns •• a ''vicious" animll, police aald. ' The cow ..,.peo1 lrom a olslJCh~r -and --lllmday to • wooded area by five po11<e ano and the helltoptM. The bellcop4er landed, the ""' ......... lt.t homl and the pollC<! opened flre. The CltC8U war taken to the alaughW -· • •I Calf Corraled In Clemente, Sent to Jail Some guests at San ·Clemente city jail claim they were framed and still others -the four -legged variety "·aiting for the dog catcher -go "arf" and "meow-." The latest one, however, just went "lllOO." The creature )\'~ b o Q k e d Saturday night after patrolmen Craig Steckler and ·steve H8wley disroo.rered a broken fence on the Visbeek Ranch in hills inland of the city. CaUle were filtering through onto a street. Nearby, the officers not.iced a four-day-old Call alone and being stalked by coyotes. To keep the yoongster from becoming a meal for the. wild dogs, the officers brought it.to the station and called ranch owner Roy Visbeek. He claimed the animal a short time later. But not before it bad left its mark at civic cent.er. Jail trusties cleaned up the mes3. From Pagel AWARDS .•. was presented to Joy Eiler& of Granada Hills for USO performances at home and abroad, public presentations of Lincoln writing! and service t o institutionalized persons. The motorcycle nms on a 24 volt motor and requires a:. eighl·hJUr charge before it is able to run for 50 miles . 'The only maintenance r e q u l r e d , according to distributors of the bike, is to cheek the water level or the battery about once a week. Phil Berkowitz, a salesman at the newly opened Continental E I e c tr i c Vehicles, at 18641 Beach Blvd. in Huntingtcn Beach, explained that the motorcy cle is not a "bike rider's bike." ';It's primarily a girl's bike ;' or a shopper's bike." Berkowib aaid. "Since the top speed is 30 miles per hour and you can only go 50 miles without recharging, it is best suited to short trips -such as to school, to \\'Ork, shopping or visiting." Continental Electric Vehicles opened last week, offering curious shoppers their first look at the new bike and free rides in the parking lot. Connie Gray, 26, of Huntington Beach, said her first ride on the bike was ''beautiful." "You don't have to worry about shifting. or any11ting," Miss Gray commented. "This could start a major revOlution.'' ~1iss Gray, \\'ho ha5 been Sl"OUting around for transportation-to and from work, said she is Considering buying an electric bike. TilC motorcycles are sent to Huntington Beach from the Burbank assembly plant. Howard Subnick. co-owner of the franchise, said that the bikes have been produced for the past two years, but that all have been shipped back east until this month . Subnick, along with Don So~crs. has lhe first franchlse in the county. Sommers explained that the reason electric vehicles have not mushroomed into a thriving business before this is that there wu no way to make a magnetic pole m°"!( big Onoogb to do This morning. Hearst and Bosv.·orth left the family's Hillsborough mansion, telling reporters they were going to San Francisco. They gave no further indication of the purpose of their trip. Hearst and hi s wife, Catherine, were heartened by a tape recording from Patricia received during the weekend in which she said she was being v.·ell treated and her abductors were willing to accept "whatever you can come up with." "Field Marshal Cinque" of the SI.A said In the reconllni that the SI.A v.·ould "accept a sinctre effort on your part.'' The Rev. Ce<:il Willia.ms, ~tor of Glide Pi1emorial Church, said Sunday night that neither be nor members of five leftist groups napied bY the SLA to oversee the food distribution program had been OOOIU!ted about th< Hearst proposal: However, he said he believes the family is acting in "good faith." One coalition member, Popeye Jackson __Qf the United Prisoners Union, said his grouPilJi!ii't support the HW!t family, nor bis daughter, nor the SLA. He said th< UPU was only Involved to help give away the food. DermU Banks of the American Indian Movement said he wasn't happy that fl.1~s Hearst was kld.naped but he wu glad to be an intermediary. New left activist Jerry Rubin warned the SLA in a leUer published in Hearst's San Francisco Examiner that killing hliss Hearst "will set off a right·v.'ing crackdown" in the United States. He urged the kidnapers not to harm the girl. "If you kW Patricia Hearst you v.111 be outraging human beings everywhere," wrote Rubin , a leader of the Yippies and one of the Chicago Seven riot con.!Piracy defendants. "You wlll set off a rightwing crackdown -find the SL.A! -That will endanger the very people that you say you are figbUng for. You will destroy lbe moral credibility ol the left." For 15 years, the foupdation has pre.sented awards "for constructive words and deeds which support America, suggest solutions to basic problems besetting the nation, contribufe to responsible citizemhlp and inspire love of country." the job. P . f G ld "They"ve never had a m-this big rice 0 0 From Pqe l nor this efficient before," Sommers ~i~. t\ . "They're also working on an electrie-\-:r-U car but the trouble Iller' b that tile p range is only 120 miles on a single charge and that's mt far enough." $2 an Ounce To Record $151 CHURCH ... Entry was made by breaking the vehicle's windwing window, police said . David Shurtllf1 of 324 Loma TerTace told police that an lndian rug, jewelry -and-other valuables worth $115 were stolen from his home. Police said the residence was left unlocked. Louis Vlllatobo9 of 403 El Bosque told officers that '550 In propeJ:!y lncludl~'g a camera and .a .diamond 3Dd emerald ring wu taken from his home. Mafia OpPonent Speaking at UCI Two Patriotic Music Programs On So iiiUCoas Two pati1otlc music programs ·are belni plann<d for thll week and next by young muslclano In the C.plslrano Unified School Dislrlcl. The 11ra1 concert ls aet for WedneldeY at 7:30 p.m. In !he San Clem<OI<! High School gymnasium where mtiolciana from Sd!oois in the IQUthem pOrtlon of the school syatem will perform, An Italian an:hli.ct "1>o quit his A second free cmcert performed by practice to organ!Je Sicilian vtllageno yow1gstero In the northerly part ol the against the Mafia will tell how he did district will be held at l)apa Hills High it Tueoday evening at UC Irvine. School Ftb. 11 at 7:30 p.m. Danilo Dold wtll _,. through an -Olstrlct Music Cllaltman Cyril Gllllclt interprtter at 7:30 o'clock In the 11kl the ·traditional patriotic """'""'s Interfaith 1.ourt1e. Irvine Town Center, "clhnu a period ol concen<rotlon In 4101 C.mpua Drfve. • • the "9t Am~ trodltionl tblt are 11'or 21 years, Dolcl bu bdped Sl<lllan ' reempll.ui* ' by • 111e "blr111dlyt or· pevanta eolve houllnc probleml and j J'r-t.t WNlllnltotl ~ IJnclnln." to improve .,,-tcullllM 11111 edllatloa Gillltk•lald ,tllaflllls ,._, 1111.U Iha -1 llral 'In dlilrict blllOry W1len two Tbe fm 1ect11re Is jolnUy apo...-.d ~ have hem set for blllh school by the Unlvtnolty Jnltrlalth Fotllldotloo BYI"'• makl111 It polllble for more and the Friends of Danilo Dole!. parenll to. attend. i LONDON (AP ) -The price of gold ·jumped 12 an owice tod ay to a record f l51 in Loltdon and ' Zurieh on the strength of reports that the Common Ma rket government! "~ about to raise the official Price or their-gold holdings . The American dollar eased sllgfltly at the opening ol Etlropean ~foreign uchoJ>ieo. ' The rloe In the IOld price -meant an Increase of '33.50 an ounce alnoe ~-lint or" the rear. ' outers reporftd active demand for the metal due to the meotlng In Bnl!Seil of the linan<O mlnlsitta cl the · nine common Market natl«ia. Widely publlahed rtpc>l"U oald the m!nlaten wtre ready to raise the'value of .the gold bllttresalnc their naUonal Cltfftlldeo. It lJ pegged ot '41.22 an ' ounco, and lbere wu DO lndicailon ol the new price !he mlnllllen might eet. Allhoupi ~y WIS the first time !he price of gold topped f lSO In the big London and Zurich marteta. It bu beeti above that level aeveral Um.. aince Jan. 25 In the smaller Paris marke~ where special exchange controls keep the prtce higher than elsewhere. ' ( 17 7 I 'I I ·r I 17 7 " I t I I . • • I • Today's Final Saddle aek N.Y. Stocks . EDITION . VOL. 67, NO. 49, 2 SECTIONS, 22· PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALll'ORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1974 TEN CENTS • CdM Freeway Resurrection Sought by County By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ill* IMllY 'Jlet lllff .. -A delegatloo ol Orange COunty 'legislators and public o[flclals will j(?trney to Sacramento Wednesday to i&.ke an appeal on behalf of the Corona de1 Mar Freeway. ~ "This will be our final pitch," said J~~k .Hammett, mayor of Costa Mesa. ije is coordinating the appearance of the officials belore the staO> lllghway Oommisslon. Hammett said tOOay Uicy would present sc:me new argwnt!flts which they hope will sway the commission to give the freeway a top construction priority . As II is oow, the short freeway linking> the San Diego Freeway with MacArthur Boulevard remains withdrawn from the constructioo schedule because o f lnadequa"' ltlllding. The presentation on the freeway will involve Hammett. state Sen. Dennis carpenter (R*Ne•wport Beach), As.ie'mblyman Robert B\U'ke, ( R • Huntingtoo Beach), Ass em b I y man Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach) and county Road. Commisslmer T e d McCooville. Hammett said the ...,,ubllc hearing on the freeway also may be attended by Gene Robens, manager or South Coast Plaza, aixl Dr. Arnold Be<ionan, president ol Beckman lnstrumenis. "I will be carrying with me a telegram from the Orange C.ounty Board of Supervisors Which urges that the fteeway be made 'the top priority for Orange County," the Costa Mesa mayor added. "And we will make the presentation with the suj)port and good wiahes ol Mayors Donald Mcinnis of Newport Beach and John Burton of Irvine." The involvement of the various local governments in Wednesday's public hearing is calculated to demonstrate to the Highway Co!'unl8Slon that Orange County is 1mited ill lt.s d .. ire-to get the freeway built. "We want them to know that unlike freeways elsewhere, the C-Orona del Mar Freeway is one freeway · wblch all the commuruu., It passes through actually want," Hammett said. . Part of the presentation will be devoted to new data wh.ich purport! to show that , al though the county has contributed slgnilicanlly to state freev.•ay funds through gasoline tax revenues, it bas oot received Its fai r share of freeway mues in return. An energy crisis induced drop in gasoline tax revenues was blamed by state officials last month for the lowered priortty of the Corona de! Mar Freeway. • Bidding oo the fi rst section of the project was called off when It became known that a sharp drop in gas tax revenues v.·ould mean a s1ash in the state free\.\·ay budget of about $2 billion. The state Division ol ·Highways subsequently issued an administrative order for the completion of freeways already undef construction b e f o r e beginning constructlon of new freeways. The C.orona del A1ar Freeway does not fit the priority category although some v.•ork has been completed on the Newport ~""reeu•ay interchange and the Bear Street offram p in north_ Costa ~1esa. Gas Stations Open • Coast Motorist,s Given Reprieve Campus View Viewed from Marguerite Parkway in Mission Viejo, Saddleback College's two permanent buildings, the finished library and unfinished math-science center form a sharp profile against the sky. A two-part Availability of gasoline on the Orange Coast improved today with about half of the service stations opening to lxlrdes of g~·hungry tn(>torists. . -:.... ..,,.. Fears Of a gasless "Mi>Ddiy-. oS .w.e11 -' ;.at the now=-rOutJ'De dry Swlday -did ' not materialize. Service station owners appeared willing to cut short their holiday and to pump gas for the local clientele. The availability of a tank of gas was no worse than usual this morning in Huntlngton Beach, C.Osta Mesa, hlF PHlt Sr.ti' .....,. Newport Beach, Lagwia Beach and Mission Viejo. series detailing the problems of the seven·year-old community college, its history and future begins on Page·3 today. Gas appeared tighter in San Clemente Airport Reque.sts W ~iver_:_ Public Hearings on Noise Scheduled for Tuesday \•1here long lines of cars gathered at plan," Reagan said, "this has suddenly the three open staliofls and in El Toro ·created panic buying and panic lines vl'here only one of eight stations was at service stations." . . open-ducing the moming·ct>mmuter"'hour: < -'If .t[ 'coiltinites, he ... sa'.ld.( there -would , "" .... ,,,lip!'f.ev~r ,Pjllli~ b~Y\n$o.~ i!ite'~-,be l1j) •. clld 9\ce bµ! to .ill!~-~!'; ~attm!iDJ. statew1 e. ~ SHUTDOWNS WORSEN Reagan issued the warning Saturday .GAS SITUATION _ Story P•gti 4 in an appearance before the California Newspaper Publishers As.9ociaUon. with road blocks and fistfights at some The Automobile Club. of Southern stations on Friday and Saturday, California pronounced the weekend as prompted Gov. Ronald Reagan to the worst gasleu weekend of the energy announce that rationing may have to crisis. Only one percent of the stations be imposed in California. In the Los Angeles -Oradge County "In the last few days simply because metropolitan area were open on Sunday, we have bad to consider a contingency the auto club said. Other Cou11tia11s Cited Newport's John Wayne Given .Patriotism Award Film star John Wayne of Newix>rt Community Church for his sermon "1 Orange County Airport olficials will tn.ake a-fonnal plea for a waiver from t.alifornia 's new noise s t a n d a r d s boginnlng Tuesday at what is expected to be a three-day public hearing in Santa Ana. 70 decibels of noise over rtsidentiaJ areas. state, will appear at the bearing and contend-th.-jernoise bareqen more - of a far reaching effect. _,_C!L,Wpped tbe-liJL oL.seven__area._Am_The American _Flag..'.' The noise linUts, promulgated by the State Department of Transportation's Division of Aeronautics, stipulate that jet takeoffs cannot create more than In its application for a variance,. Orange County Airport officials say 110 _Jiomes below the Oigbt path regularly are subjected to noise levels higher than 70 decibels. Newport Beach city official•, who . forced the bearing when they brought court action against the county and Aiii>Ort officials say they a r e reasonably confident the var!.,.,. will be granted but they claim the county will 'have to guy those 110 impacted homes or shut down tbe airport if it isn't. . Traffic Accidents Kill That claim was labeled "a bunch of garbage" by Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis . "When Bresnahan (Airport Director Bob Bresnahan) runs around saying he might have to shut down the airport ( that's straight baloney," Mcinnis said. Three in Orange County ' & rash or Orange County traffic " a~ldents Sunday left three young people dead and six others injured, California ffilbway Patrol officers reported today. Dead are Yvonne Garcia, 17, of Corl>oa: David Anaheluk, 21 , ol Santa Ana Heights and Paul D. McMruen , 26 ol Orange. ~o of the fatal crashes occurred od the Orange Coast. CHP officers said Miss Garcia was ~!Ded illstantly when the car she was ricjlng in went out of control at the iQiersection of the San Diego and l'ltfliort Freeways and waa struck ~Ide by an oncoming van. _,.Qf_flcefs at the s~ne said the small f~ign car, driven by. Ill-year-old ... • • • Thole winds will diminish to- olgbt, but the Oraoge Cout woo'! be all that wanner on Tue8day with high readings In the middle 60s wider patches of variable ci<>uds. ~ INSIDE TODAY 1 ~fort and mort, Coliforniam nre 1 learni)lg tJte magic words ll1at uuarcmtlt a marriagt with no waiti11Qt' no witnesiesJ no publictiu and no le1ta. Storu, Poge .1. ... ,.... 1t t t,.. M, .. ,. 1 C.....,_111 J Cl11tH1M 1Ht l(Mlld 11 c,,.....,._ 11 --I ........... ,... . ~·llfimll-'"'' .. ..,... 1• ... ......... ,. • Deborah Beard of Corona, apparently spun out on the ~ritp connt cting the soutbbound San Diego with t be ooMhbound Newport Freeway. "She apparenUy bit the shoulder and then overeorrected, shooting diagonally across the roadway Into the palb ol the van," a CHP spokesman said. The impact of the collision flipped the small car over c.nd rolJed it down a abort embankment. Miss Garcia' was thrown clear but officers said She was probably already dead. 'lbe driver o( the van, Johnnie Andera, 24, of 308 16th St. In Huntington Beach, suffered minor injuries in the crash. (See CRASllES, -·-:e I) El Toro Pool To Be Weiglied By County Panel A propo0al !or a "lllll0,000 swimming pool !or the new El Toro High School will be presented to the Orange County Harbcir!J, Beaches, and P a r k s Comift!Saion Tuesday. II the propoMI is approved . by the commission end the county Board of Su~rs, the county would provide $50,000 from local service area ltlllds and 1100,000 !or land and the l<htlc>I dis- trict. The local total ol !300,000 would be matched by federal revenue 1h111·!1J1 ' !tlllds. The school district would I a k e responsibility !or poc>I maintenance and staffing the facility al an eatlmaled 15,000 per year. •ccordinl to El Toro lllgh Scheol prlnclpll Bob -· He termed the Umlnir of the pn>jecl "ideal," since the facll1ty ,Clll be built • (Seo POOL, P11e I) ' He sakl Newport, Beach also is not trying to force the county to buy the impacted residences. 11We are just hoping the hearing board will set forth the necessary conditions to bring the airport into line," the mayor said. He said those specific conditions will be oullined by Councjlman Milan Dostal and City Attorney Demls O'Neil during the course of the hearing. "We are hoping to get a complete understanding that we do have a problem," Mclnnis said. Mcinnis said ii bearing officer Robert Neher rules that the variance Isn't warranted, there are alterriatives to closing the airport. "It would require some fast action. It might even result In cutbacks or flights," Mcinnis said. "It might even · have the effect of making it mandatory for all users of the airport to observe proper takeoff. procedures." . 'tiJe order Of pr~entatiOM at the , hearings was .decided at a special cooference conducted by Neher last week. The. ·Stale Board of AeronauUC! will appear !!rat, followed by the County, the · Community Airport Council -a pro-airpcirt group -and the city of Newport Beach. AD SELLS AUTO .. ON FIRST DAY The sale was atmost as automatic as the trarnimission for the reader who placed this· ad: '99 . COkTlNA1 auto tr.ins, . gas saver, good condo $500. (Phone No.) · The advertiser , reported this Daily Pilot clusllled ad did lt.s Job and sold ~ car on the flm day.' They may not all work Illa! WI, but Ibey """ wort. Test It on your own merdlandlae. Dial the -line to mulll at the Dally Pilo~ Pbone IC-M'la. SUCCUMBS AT 73 UCl 's Rolph Genrd Ralpli. Gerard, UCI Professor, Succumbs a,t '73 UC Irvine emeritus profes.w" Ralph W. Gerard died Sunday at Hoag Memorial Hospita1, where be bad been recovering from heart surgery. He wa.s 73. Dr. Gerard, a resident of Corona elf! Mar, was founding dean of the UCI graduate division. He left a position as director ol the Mental Health Research lnsUtute laboratories al the University of Michigan to come to Irvine In 1963. He helped plan UCl's !dml ol biological sciences. . Six months aiter arriving at Irvine, Dr. Gerar4 was named professor ol biological sciences and dltector of special studies oo Feb. I, 1964. By October, 1964 Dr. Gerard was named' dean of the graduate divis!OO. He resigned that post In June, 1969 and cootinued u professor of biological .science. He was named professor emeritlm in June 1970. Dr. Gerard was lnlernatiooally known for bis plooeer research on tho l\lncllons ol the nervious system and brain. He is alto noted for his wort in adapting audio-visual materials -and computer systems to education. . • He oamed both doctor of medicine and doctor ol pllllosophy degro<S and <feeelved bcmorary degrees from Brown University, the University of Leid<n· in Ille Neille¥ and· the University ol St. Andrews, Scotland.· · He waa asoociated with' the University of Ollcago ror· 117 yeon. He earned both his bachelor and docta'al d- there and wu pn>lossor Of phyalology. He waa a IP'aduate ol Rusb llledlcal COOege. ·-· llr. Gtrard was a mem• ,of the Natlanal Acoden\)r ol Sdencol and waa (Seo GEIWID, Pa11 I) • citizen.! honored today in Valley Forge, -Three Camp Pendleton servicemen, Pa., In the Annual Natlonal Freedoms L. Cdr. G<raid Cox, USN; Sgt. John E, Foundation Awards ceremony. Johnston, USMC; and Hon. William G. Wayne, 66, was &iven the George Wagnon, USNR, honor award for their Washington award for the "proud and joint letter "Hwnan Goals -Values unabashed patriotism" of his new album, for Living." "American, Why I Love Her." Announcement of the awards was He beads the lisl of some 2,000 made by Gen. Harold Johnson, USA ~ de.signaled nationwide for (Ret.), Freedoms Foundation president. awards from the Foundation. Recipients were selected by an Other Orange Coast citations included: inde~dent National Awards J u r y -Leila W. Maxson 26635 Saddleback conststing of 13 sta~e supreme court Drive, El Toro and La Paz Intermediate justices and 29 national representatives School in Ei Toro for the school of civic, educational, patriotic1 and publication. El Conquistador honor veterans organizations. award for botli teacher and scb001. -" The jury includes Adrian Pelletier of -Festival of Arts of Laguna Beach, Lagima Beach. , . . honor awards in community programs The pane~ "?led that Wayne s wi~1ng category record is his first album. They descnbed · . it as "a sensitive reflection of a man -Dr. Ja~es E. Johnson of Tustin, in love with hls oountry." form~r assLStant ~retary of the NayY, Accompanied by chorus and orcbestra1 for biJ award-winning address upholding Wayne narrates IO tributes to America the American ~stem of government that are "straight out affinnations of and free enterprise. this country and her people." -Rev. Dr. Robert H. Schuller, founder Obher winners of the top 40 awards and senior pastor of Garden Grove (See AWARDS, Page%) Council Candidate Myers Opposes Irvine High Rise By GEORGE LEDIAL or t"4 o.11r Pht 11111 Housing is one ot the main concerns in the city· ol Irvine and council candidate Hazel Myers vows to oppose subsidies, high density or high rise development. "Subsidized housing would mean a tax rate increase," the aeronautical engineer said. "It would al!O lower the value or surrounding property ... I will work against subsidized housing," Mr.s. Myers pledged. The s2.year old engineer prefers to retain her profeS!lonal title. "J'm not working now. but please don't ·call me a hOusewi{e, whatever you do." She and her llwhband, G<ne, a retired branch manager for McDonnell Dou~laa Corporation live al 15431 Corra1ne Way, the Ranch. Despite her <JtlPC"itlon to bousing subsidies, ~1rs. ?ityers said she favor1 provision of moderate coat houslnJ ,_. UC Irvine and the lnduotrlal complex. The following are other i,...... Mrs. Myers sees as Important: -Provision ol a civic center to ..,,iac. the prtOent coWICil cbamben w!lich !Ulfer ln>m nol.!e "certainly oot conducive to the dimity of """"""'' · See MYERS, Pap 11 ' • •, •• • Laguna Bills ~Expansion U11de1· Fire Residents Face T·ax Hike Vote . ' ' - By CANDACE PEARSON Of tM Olih' l"lltl ...... Any sta te coastal commissioner "''ho \'OlCS for the proposed compromise on the San 6nofre nuclear power plant should resign, a leading environme.ntalist said today. The report by planners of the stale Coastal Zone Conservation Commission recommending approval of the plant is "clearly inadequate" and '..!.to la 11 y inconsistent with the coastal wne act ," Janet Adams, director of the C8lllomia Coastal Alliance, said today in 1As Angeles. Construction of two 1,140 megawatt reaectors lhree ·m i I es s0uth of San Clemente will c a u s e "irreversible, irretrievable damage" to the coast, she added. O•llV ,llot Stall ,,..,. - Homeowners In South Laguna 1111ls will make a choice on lhelr ballots March 5 on a 25-cent t.ax increase that would help develop a 2 . a· a c r e neighborhood park and raise ~Y for street sweeping and malnteqanc•o. The p~posal. plectd on the baIIOI at the request of the homeowners association asks th.at the tax rate of Orange ~ty service Area 8, \\.'hich Includes South Laguna Hills. be raised from 24.9 cents pe.~ $100 assessed H-earst Ready On Food Plan For 'Ransom' valuation to 50 .cents per $100. The homeowners group estimates the Increase vrould cost the a v e r a g e homeowner $10 to $18 a year. Of the 2$-ocn't lncreaee, 10 cents would he used "' boost the ser111ce lrea budget and pay for Increased costs ~f street sweeplng, park mainlenance and the local su.mmtr recreation yrw:ram cancelled last year due to lack o funds. Spokesmen ror the homeowners say they fee.r that unJess the tax rate ls increased, street sweeping might be cut in June. The other 15 cents would be used to develop Mackenzie Park, a 2.Pracre site at the corner or Mackenzie street and Pike Road and to buy and develop other -parks in the area. The Mackenzie site, already Owned by the county, would be develo~ to Include a chlldren's play area, two tennis courts, picnic benches and a large open playfleld. Cost to develop It, Including landscaping, "oold be about $90,000. · WINS Cl t lZ!NSHIP AWAR D Senior L•ut1 Miits Viejo Se 1iior W ir is Soropti1ni st Club '7 4 A·ivard fl.frs. Adams spoke at a 10 a.m. ,press conference at Sierra Club headquarters with Larry Moss of the Sierra Club and John ~1ohr, professor of marine biology from use. Moss said the Sierra Club is backing approval of the $1 .3 billion project lf the units are moved across the highway off the coast.al bluffs and if a better way of assuring that the plant's cooling system "'on't hann offshore marine life Is adoptecl. SALESMAN BERKOWITZ SHOWS OFF ELECTRIC BIKE 50 Miles on Three Cents a Day Wo rth of Electricity HILLSBOROUGH (UPI) -Newspaper publisher Randolph A. Hearst prepared today to announce a food distribution plan for the needy demanded .by the terror~! group which kidnaped his daughter two weeks ago. The south Laguna Hills service area ha" the lowest tax rate in· the Saddle back Valley. The rate wM originally 40 cents per $100 assessed valuation. \Vhen a surplus built up ln the service area fund, county supervisors lowered the rate to its Laura Ellen l\-11les, a graduating senior at Mission Viejo High School. hes been chosen as winner of the Saddleback Valley Soroplimist Club 1974 Youth Citizenship Award. Moving the nuclear units across the highway may not take Congressional approval as originally thought, Moss said today. Southern California Edison's lease of Camp Pendleton lands is signed by the Secretary of the Navy, who, Moss said, New Cycle Burns Juice But Not Liquid Variety coold adminJstratively grant-another site .,By HILARY KAYE witffin weeks. 01 "" o•i1Y ,11n1 s1111 ·TtJe commission's planne~. who Doc,. An electric plug and three cents a 5 reeonunended the plant tie · ·moved day in elCctricity chargCs Will let yeu east or the highway , now suggest forget all , about high gasoline prices approval of the original site if .21 miles and the frantic search for an open of sandstone bluffs are preserved for service station. JO years and the power companies initiate So claim the Huntington Beach a study of th e effects of the plant distributors of a new type o f on. marine organisms. transportation -the electric motoccycle. Also, plannen recommend that The liitle bike comes in twcrwheel underwater discharge not be allowed and three-wheel models, priced at $499 within 1,00 feel of shore to protect and $699. Thirty miles per hour is the kelp beds and that a public accessway top speed, although the speedometer lists across the state beach be open during the po\\·er in volts, not miles per hour. construction. The motorcycle runs on a 24 volt The state commission \\'ill r;ecoosider motor and requires t . eight·h:.ur charge its Dec. 5 denial of the project at before it is able to run for SO miles. 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Santa Barbara The only maintenance r equired , County Building, 123 E. Anapa1nu St. according to distributors of the bike, 1be project needs eight ·votes-for is to check the water level or the approval. At least four of the 12 bat te ry about once a week. • commissioners have said they will vote Phil Berkowitz, a salesman at the no or have reservations about the current newly opened Continental E 1 e ctr i. c staff recommendations. · Vehicles at 18641 Be~ch Blvd. 111 ,,. 1be com.mjssion agreed Jan. 9 to Huntingt'on Beach, expi3ined that the u rehear the application after being urged. motorcycle is not a "bike rider's bike." ; to by numerous state legi.s_lators, "It's primarily a girl's bike, or a , chambers of commerce. boards of shopper's bike," Berko,vili said. "Since 111 .supervisors and city councils. the top speed is 30 miles per hour Dale Secord of-the-Orarige--Gounty~an-onlMo-50-miles-withou 1 Envirorunental Coalition, an apponent of recharging, it is best suited to short the project, said the commission bowed trips -such as lo school, to \\"Ork, to political pressure. shopping or visiting." Continental Electric Vehicles opened From Page 1 AWARDS •.• included Earl Hamner, Jr., of Burbank, creator or "The Waltons," and Gordon Sinclair of Toronto, Canada for his record, "Who Helped? The Americans Did." The Freedom Leadership Award went to world heavyweight boxing champion George Foreman of Hayward for a publi!hed article on opportunities offered by the American system. A second Natlonal Recognition Award was presented to Joy Ellers of Granada Hills for USO performances at home and abroad, public presentations of I.J.ncoln writings and service to institutionalized persons. + For 15 years, the foundat ion has presented awards 1'for constructive words and deeds which support America, suggest solutions to basic problems besetting the nation, contribute to responsible citizenship and inspire Jove of country.'' OU.NGI COAST " DAILY PILOT 'nle OrllllY't CM&I DAILY PILOT, wll'tl w~lcl! Is combll!M lt'le N• .. ·'r•H, II pUb!I~ by w... ar.. c .. .i 'llbtllhll'O C1HT111tn'1'. S.PI· r•ft •1tlMI• arr ~bMll, MO!ld•'I' throi,ioh friff1, fDr Coll• .tM.-, NCWPOrt l!l"dl. ffwltlrll-l t'Kflff'ounl•ln V•l!ty, L•9Ullf ""°"' lrvlM/...,.1""8 ...cl S•n ct-tn!V * ,_. ~,,__ A 1111911 ,..,i..r .. lllM lit po.tblli'*' S..IU ... YI ..,.... Slif'N\'I. fM ,_.1r1c..,.r pUblhfllnO pl•flt 11 fl l)f wtit .. l' •tl'Mf, C•l• MtM, (l hfttflll, f"211. Rallrrt N. w •• 4 I • P'r .. IHl>I •fld lt\!MbMr J rc6i R. C11rl1y 'llrtf P'l'tfillrlll ft O-rtl Mtl\l9ft" Tlio111•• l(,, .. a Edi IOI Thall'l t t A. Murpl\int "'-nttlfto E"l9r Cfrt•ftr1 H. ltt1 IU1l<tr14 '· Nr tl A•lll1111 M ..... 11'11 h ltllr. -c..•· ,.,...! ,. w.tl ••r ..... ............ ""°"t J:W ,.....,,.,. ltvltYIN Wlt1111t ltKl'li m "'''"' ,._ H\lntl1'1f-llNCI\: 11fPi llllCh IOUltv9'« Un ClftMftlf': JOJ Nor111 (I Cf""I"'° llul T .. 1 .. 1•• fn4, Hl-4121 Cl•IW U oe11••1 6-Ca..1671 • ._ Ch " ... Al °'"""'""'"•*'"'"'' T•I rt r11 4fJ-441t (MltrTtlllll 1111. ~ CtMI "'*ltl>lr!I (Aoll'lflMly • Nt ,.._ 1"""-lllustr11i.., ~I '_,.., ., .._.,~ lltnM _., .. ~ ....,. Hltdll ...... ....... . .,......., """"' ....... U. ,..,.,_ ..W it C:Wt Mftt, ~. .......... _. ttnltr GM --.rfl ""' IMll ta.ti fMllft'llYI flltRI ..... *'" ............ flltllllNt. last week, offering curious shoppers their first look at the new bike and free rides in the parking lot. Connie Gray, 26. of Huntington Beach, said her first ride on the bike \VBS ''beautiful." "You don"t have to \\"Orry about Fro111 Page l MYERS ... our city government." -Establishment of an Irvine post office lo replace service to Irvine residents now handled by post offices i11 Tustin, Santa Ana and Newport Beach. -Preservation of the city's prime agricultura l land. In view of the food shortage. "it ,~·ould se<!m very unwise lo convert agricultural land into commercial developments.'' -Establishment of a city police department. -Consideration of some form of public transportalion such as rapid transit during peak commuter hours with regu lar bus service during the day to shopping centers. -Conti nued balanced development controlled to avoid over population'' . as is the case resulting in dismal blight in sornc of our surrounding co1nmunities." · A native of Dennison , Iowa, Mrs. 1'1yer, holds a baclielor of science degree from the University of Iowa. California-residents for 29 years, the ~tyers came to Irvine from Tustin three and a hall years ago. Mrs. Myers was first chalrn1an or the city housing advisory committee and was appointed to the code of ethiw commit.- lee. She is a member of ? ·vorld Ar· !airs Council and the Saddleback Valley Republlcan \Vomen's C1ub Federated. Ediso11 ()f ficials Speak 011 Crisis The energy crisis will he the topic of the S.ddleback Area Coordinating Coondl me.ting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday In the Ptoplos Federal S.vlng> and Loan cxmunwity room, El Toro . Repre,.,,tatlvea of Southern call!oml• Edla® Company Will addrw thne 1ssu .. : -cost of providing electric oervtces, need for the San Onofre nuclear statJon, and way1 citizens can help . Ron Blake, El Toro District Manager for Southern Callfoml• E<lloon, and Bud Jackley. arta manager, are slated to attend. shl.(til)g, • or an}1hing," .1-!iSs Gray commented. "This could star{ a m~jor revolulion.·• Miss Gray, who ha s been scouting around for transportation to and from .work, said she is considering buying an electric bike. The motorcycles are sent to Huntington Beach from the Burbank assembly plant. Howard Subnick, co-owner of the franchise , said that the bikes have been produced for the past two years, but that all have been shipped back east until this month. · Subnick, along \\'ilh Don Sommers, has the first fran chise in the county. Sommers explained that the reason electric vehicles have not mushroomed into a thriving business before.-Lhis-ls that there was no way to make a magnetic pole motor big enough to do the job. "They've never had a motor. this big nor this efficient before," Sommers said. ·'They're also working on an electric car but the trouble t.her~ is that the range is only 120 miles on a single charge and that's not far enough." Mafia Oppo11e11t Speaki11 g at UCI An Italian arehilect \11\o quit his practice to organize Sicilian villagers against the Mafia will te11 how he did it Tuesday evening at UC Irvine. Danilo Dolci will speak throu gh an interpreter at 7:30 o'clock in the Interfaith Lounge, Irvine Town Center, 4201 Ca1npus Drive. For 21 years, Dolci has helped Sicilian peasants solve bowing problems and to improve agriculture and education methods. The free lecture is jointly sponsored by the University Interfaith Foundation and the Friends of Danilo Dolci. From Page 1 GE RARD ... president of the American Physiological Society. He allthored seven books and was active in national and international science affairs. Among his scientifia cootributions v.·as the discovery that schizophrenia may be caused by faulty body chemistry rather than family or social environment. Dr. Gerard was active In the Community. serving as an Orange County Grand Juror, as a member of 1hc board of Children's Hospital Orange County, as a director of the UCl FouodaUon, as a member of the Friends of UCl and twice as president of the Friend! of the UC! Library. Surviving are his widow. Mrs. Leona ~'Frosty" Gerard of the famDy home, 1107 Goldenrod Ave., Corona del Mar; and a -son, James Wilson Cera.rd of New York; a step<oo, Stophen Graham of Big Rapld.1, Mich.; a stepdaughter, Jane Novick of Eug..e. Ore.; four grandchildren , and three sisters. Arrangements aNl pending at PacUlc View ?wtemorlal Park, Corona del Mar. Quake Shakes Etna CATINA, Sicily-(UPI) -Ml Etna has endecl Us lalest eruption but a series of mild earthquakes h" bellJll shaking Europe's tallest volcano, a team of vulcanologlsts said today. Tlle new eruption, on the red mowitain side or the t0,llll%-foot vo!caoo, did not endanger any vlll.iges on the mcuntainslde, the scientist said. That area h~d been dormant sinct 17'l. ! A family spokesman said Hearst would reveal the plan, which he said would involve 0 substanUal amounts of money" but far ·less than the $400 million ori ginally demanded, this afternoon. The Symblonese Llberation Army, which holds his 1&-ye8Nlld daughter. THOUSANDS WRITE HEARST · IN SYMPATHY, ,Story p1ge 5 pre!!eDl 24.9 cents. • · But passage of the state tax-reform measure, SB 90, soon afterward froze service area rates and prohibited rate increases without an election. FrotnPageJ POOL ... Miss ~1iles , three other finalists, and their parents were honored recently at a youth award breakfast held at Jonathan's Restaurant in El Toro. The other finalists were Leo Martin. Ken Robbins, and Rebecca Taylor, all Mission Viejo Hlgh School seniors .. Patricia, demanded that the program begln1 by Tuesday ~·as ·a ~"gesture of good falth" before ppening ·negotiation! · for ·the releaae of the girl, gr.anddagght.er -at the' same time as the ·campus now - of the late · newspaper giant William under construction. Miss Miles has had leadership positions in many high school activities,· including student government, Girls Le ague , Spao.lsh · Club, ln~ernatlonal .Relatlom Club, Keyettes, Drill Team, and Junior $iateim~n Qf 'America . , · Shi! alsO" has been a member of 'l'ri·Hl· Y and campaigned in the 1972 primary Randolph Hearst. · Large parts of the commwtlty have FBI spokesman John Kelly said there no access I<> pool facilities, he pointed for ber chosen candidate. . She was cited as the DAR Good Citizen and won a variety of academic and citizenship awards. She hopes to enter law school. v.·as nothing new to report in the out even though the planned invesUgation of the kidnaping. He aaid ~unities offer recreation facilltles the FBI would have no comment on for memben and residents. the food dlstributioll plan, saying ii was '"!'bis pool could help the sdiool "of no great interest to us from an become the focal point of community \Vinning the local award : ~1tcs '.liss Miles eligible to comptt ~ ' a $1,000 regional award and ,l,500 national a"A·ard. lnvesUgative standpoint." · activity," he said. Kelly said the FBI \\·as still respecting The proposed pool would be a't-·ailable the family 's \\·ishes ·in not jeopardizing to the general public. the girl 's safety if the SLA's hideout .,a,·ere discovered. _ "If \\'e thought someone \\'as in there holding R gif! to her head, we would not go in," he said. /'"'I The Hearst family has beefl receiving abo"ut 600 letters a day from v.·ell- 'vishers, both to th~ family home andi ·to the San Francisco Ela miner, of· which llearst ls president and editor .. 1 Jay Bos\\'Orth, ti spokesman for the famil y, said Hearst encounte red "some delay" in \\1lrking on the "details and mechanics" of the proposal bee.a~ .of the long holiday weekend. This morning , Hearst and Bosworth left the family's Hillsborough mansion , telling reporters they were going to San Francisoo. It was reported they were meeting privately with offi · tis of the American Indian movement Hearst and his wtfe, Catherine, were heartened by a tape recording from Patricia received during tbe weekend in v.'hich she ~ she v.'as being well treated and beivB.b(fuctors were ·willing to accept "wt}atever you can come up with." "Field 1.larshal Cinque" of the SLA said ln the recording that the SLA would "accept a sincere effort on your part." The Rev. Cecil William!I, pastor of Glide f\1emorlel Church, said Sunday night that neither he nor members of five leftist groups named by the SLA to oversee the food distribution program had been consulted about the Hearst proposal. However, he said he believes the family is acting in "good faith." One coalttion member, Popeye Jack.!On of the United Prisoners Union, said his group didn't support the Hearst familr. nor his daughter, nor the SL.A. He said the UPU was only involved to help give away the food . , Dennis Banks of the American Indian Movement said he "'·asn'l happy that Miss Hearst was kidnaped but he waa glad I<> he an lntennecliary. From Page 1 CRASHES .•• Nurse Faces Rap Of Impersonating • La g1111a Officer Calf Corraled In Clen1e1ite, Sent to Jail A 4G-year-old Mission Viejo nurse was Son1e guests al San Clemente arrested by Laguna Beach police Sunday city jail claim they y,·ere framed night after a resident reported being and still others -the four·lcgged accosted by an intoxicated m<\n \\'ho said variety .,a,·aiting for the dog catcher he was a police officer. -go "arf" and "meow." Police bociked Peter N. Dellsite of-.__The lat.est one, however, just 24622 Laders Drive for alleged drunk went "moo." driving and tmpereonatlng a· police The creature v.«1s b o o k e d officer. Delelsite was released on bond Saturday nlght alter pa1rolmen today Craig Steckler and Steve Hawley · . · and · discovered a bro1ten fence on the Sgt. David Ayers s a 1 d a Gr v1~w Visbeek Rrulch in hill.s inland of Street resident called and told police . 1.1 . 8 man weiring a dark blue jacket the city. Cattle were t tering with a white star on the front had through onto a strc:et. . d 'd il'ed hims u Nearby. the officers noticed a come to the oor, and 1 ent 1 eu f .i ~ Id If al nd be" as a Los Angeles policeman. our ...... y-o ca ooe a. ing A Laguna Beach policeman was sent sta1ked by royot.cs. 1 lo the area, and upon arriving observed To ~eep the youngster from Dellsite driving away with the lights becommg a meal fo~ the wild d~s, to the vehicle off, Sgt. Avers said. the officers broughl it to ~he stut1on He said that as a patrolman stopped ai~ called ra~ o~ner _Roy the cat and approached it, be was \ 1sbeek. , He claimed UM! arumal told "Everything is all right, I'm a a short time later.. . police officer." But not . ~fore 1t had left its Laguna Beach police reported that mar~ at ciy1c center. . Del\site Ls a registered nurse at a Jail tru.sues cleaned up the 111ess. Mission Viejo hosplUI. Judge Overrules Parents: Deformed Baby Treated PORTLAND, Maine (AP) -"Some Court lo being considered. But he said people ar• calling WI monslel'll hecall!e a decision by the parenU Is being of this and athen are very 1ympatheUc," delayed until after the second operation. says the father of a severely malformed "I understand the second operation baby that haa Wldergone court-ordered \s a high risk one. The decision to A passenger 1n the van, 2t-year-<1ld Jeff surgery bis parents refused to appro~e. Cruzon, 1535 SUperior Ave.. Newport "I disagree with the judge's ruling. appeal may well he moot" II the baby Beach, complalnecl of pain but refuatd I feel ihat we as parents should be dies, he said. hospltaJ.-care. listened !<>," Jlid -SsL Robert Jl._T-Tfle matte~ wu Uken to -court by The second Orange Coast ·crash Houle o! Westbrook, a· Air Force the hospital because the situation pooecl happened at about 11:0 p.m. at !he Santa recruiter Ana Helghu lntereettion ·of Brist<>l ~treol His 1ik!ay-old ""' -who has not "a highly di(flcult moral dllemma," ,.id and SanU Ana Avenu.. been consdOUI since , birth, Feb. 9 John Mitchell , hoopltal WO/nty. He said Olllcers at the ..,... said Anaheluk, _ waa Nl'portecl In fair condltloo today the mecllcil center 11 considering 2122 s.E. Brislnl St., was fatally lnjurod al the Maine Mecllcal Center. The financing the supreme Court appeal "' when the heavy motorcycle he was surge!Y was pertOnnecl Thursday. gain a deflnlUve rullng on th• maller. driving rammecl broadside Inf<> a <1mall Doctora 11y the baby -whole left pickup truck Iha! allegeclly turned left side Is deformed, lnoludlng having oo in front of him. · left eye or ear canal -1s unable to Police said the drlvcr o1 the truck, toke food by mou\h and may never Kim R. Whltebead, 19, of 1$43 Serenade gain COMCfousneta. Terrace In Corooa del Mar, wq driving And the c!tltd's docto r teatlfled at wider the Influence o1· alcohol when a court hearinll 'llluraday 11\&1 1urgery he turned l~m Brstol on!<> Santa· Ana probably "°uld not b< of any benefil. Avenue. But Superior Court Judge David 0. Anaheluk's big bike rammecl Inf<> the Roberta rulecl the tnlant has a "right passenger side of the car and flipped to Ille" and ordered llfHuelalnlng It up onto two 'wheels, officers were iurgery. told by wltn......,. A (lrst operaU9n w11 performed Two pwengers In Whl!theacl's car · shortly after the Jud&• betled· bli order. are In fair condltlolt toclay at A!et<jl • n Involved bnplanllnC • food tube Into General llooplUI with mulUple Injuries. the Infant'• ilomacb. They are Lucinda Smith, 21, o! lifl! Another '_.11po .-plMxled . !or th~ Kesswoocl St., Huntlnlllon Beach and wetk, ~ Intended "' pormll the bl., Jeff GllleU, DO known aclclresa. "' Uk• food by mouth. jVhltehead Is In Orange County Jail Navy Lt. Jmn• Frytr, ~.lo~ tod•y on the dMlllken driving dlarg• the baby'• parwtll, oald an apsu,.... 0 and baU haJ been set at 12.SOO. the court nillng I<> the Maine Pl"me -· Manage~s Eyed For Bobb y So x Eiibt more managera "" needed for the El Toro Bobby Sox League, player agent Joe C.plstran .. id today. Molhtni I<> manage the teem• do not need experience, he 1tr~. only 1 doolre to be with the Jirlf and give them a chan<e to play b I. More lnlonnaUon may be obtained by ealllng C.plstnn at a:J0.4S21. Team draws· are IChecluled for Feb. 28, Minor l.Hgue, and Feb. 28, Ma )ors. Final rqllt:aUon will be 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. S.turday It Ollvewood Sdlool In El Toro. 7 ! 7 • Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valle • • ... V,OL. 1>7, NO. 49, 2 SEQTIONS, 22 - Today's Final ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ·MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1974 TEN CENTS Huntington New Police Gas Stations Open • Pact Re<i_dy By TERRY COVILLE Of "'-D<lllY ...... ,,.., If Huntington Beach Coqpcilmen sign their approval Tuesday night, \Vhat might have become a serious pay dispute \li'ith the city's 170-mcmbcr police force \\'ill be settled with little disturbance. The city administrator's office bas renegotiated a three-year police contract, signed in 1972, giving . the I aw enforcement o£ficers a booSt in insurance benefits and a seven percent pay .ipcrease in July, instead of five percent ~ called for by the old agreement. Three wee~ ago, spokesmen for the police association had t h r e a t en e d miliaot actioo. if some of their demand,, were not met. Vague clauses in the 1972 three-year agreement had spawned the rift between policemen and l h e administration, according to Mark Reid, field director' for the California League of City Employe Associations and chief negotiator for the local officers. Reid sa1d th'e ·poueraSM>ciation was upset because insurance b o n u s e s promised in ~the~ three-yea r--. contract v•eren't delivered. The hitch developed because !he contract \•:ordin11: said those benefits would be negotiated · at later dates, but the city and its policemen could not agree on the types or insurance to be offered. _. . Police officials threatened to take the city to court if they could not reach an agreement acceptable to bolh sides. In the package now offered by City Administcator Dave Rowlands, and deemed acceptable by the p o I i c e auoclaUon, the city will pr~vide: -Free medical insurance for officers (and their dependCnts) who have been on the force three or more years. After May I.-t)le _medical _co_ven•&Ll.i'JU bi extended lo personnel on the &free one or more years. - -Long-tenn disability insurance to guarantee a v.·agc for a sick or injured officeT. , -A $10,000 lerm life insurance policy. -Dental insurance coverage f o r employes ooly. -A seven percent pay boost (instead of five percent ), effective July 1. lo turn, the officers will give up the -current sick leave system whereby ij)ey are paid cash for sick leave not med. They will be partially paid, in money and compensatory time off, for 5ee POIJCE, Pqe ZI AD SELLS AUTO ON FIRST DAY The sale was almost <JS automatic as the transmission for the reader who placed this ad; '69 CORTINA. auto trar:s. ga!I 83\'er, good cond. $5011 (Phone No.) The advertiser reported this Daily Pilot classllied ad did Its job and !Old the car on the first day, They may not all work that fa!lt, but they sure ,work. Test It on your own merchandise. Dial the direct line to results at the Dally Pilot. Phone 642-56711. ,.. Coast Motori,st,s Given Reprieve Availability of gasoline on the Orange Coast improved today with about hall of the service stations opening to hordes of g~·hungry motorists. Fears of a gasless Monday· as well as the now-routine dry Sunday did not materialize. Service station owners appeared willing to cut short their holiday and to pump gas ..for the local clientele. The availability of a tank of gas was no worse than usual this morning pl8n," Reagan said, "this has .suddenly created panic lxlying and panic lines at service stations." If it continues, he said, there y;ould J>e no choice but to impose gas rationing statewide. Reagan issued the warning Saturday in an appearance before the California Ranso1n De111and Newspaper Publishers Association. The Automobile Club of Southern California pronounced the weekend as the worst gasless weekend of the energy crisis. Only one percent of the stations in the Los Angeles • Orange County 1netropolitan area v.·ere open on Sunday, th e auto club said. SHUTDOWNS WORSEN GAS SITUATION -Story P•go 4 in Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa, Newport Beach, Laguna Beach and Mis~on Viejo. Hearst Readies Plan Gas appeared tighter in San Clemente ., v1here long lines of cars gathered at the three open stations and in El Toro where only one of eight stations was open during the morning com.muter~- On Food Di,stribution Dill., 01!ii0t Sllll l"halt • SAL~MAN BERKO\'"!ITZ SH9WS OFF ELECTRIC BIKE 50 Miles On Three Cerits •Day Worth of Electricity New Cycle Burns Juice But Not Liquid Variety By IDLARY KAYE-°' ..... .,.,.,. """ Sl9M An electric plug and three cent! a day in electriciiy cliarges .(.Will, Jct ·you !orpt"all about high 8llOIJne · prices and the frantic search for an open service 1tatlon. -sliiftiiij-;-Of anything,-" Miss Gray commented. "This could start a major revoluµon." Miss Gray, wfid 1\as .. been ·scOJting arOuqd !or lnuaportaUon to and fr0m work , said she is considering buying an electric bike. So claim the Huntington Beach distributors of. a new type.. 0 r 1be motorcycles are sent to Huntington transportation....;. lbe electric motorcycle. Beach from.the Burbank assembly plant. The little bike comes in t"·o-wheel Howard Suboick, co-owner or the and three-wheel models, priced at $499 franchise, said that the bikes have been and-'699. Thirty-miles pee-hour-is ~-------produced-for;-the-pest two years; but top speed, although the sJlOe<lometer hsts \hat all have been shipped back east the power m .volts,----not~miles-per-hour. tmtil this month. 'Ihe motorey~le. runs. on a 24 volt Subnick, aloog with Don &Cmers, motor and reqwres , .. eigbt·bJUr charge has the-first franc!Wie in the county ' before it is able to nm for 50 miles. Sommers e:rp__lained. that the r~aon The .only ~ce r e q u l r ~ d • electric' vehiclea hive nOt mushroomed according to distributors of the bike, into a tbrlving business be/ this · is to cbect the water level of the tha the o.re JS battery about once a week . t . re was no w_ay to. make a Phil Berkowitz, 8 salesman at the ma~lic pole motor big enough to do newly opened C.Ontlnental EI e c t r i c th~ Job. , · , . Vehicles, at 18641 Beach Blvd. in They ve. ~ever had ~. motor this big However panic buying, interspersed \vith road blocks and fistfights at some stations on Friday and Saturday,_ prompted Gov. Ronald Reagan to announce that. rationing may have to be imposed in California. "ln tile last few days~sitnply because we have h!ld to consider a contingency · Bogus ~arines Grab 17 Rifles From Pendleton HIU.SBOROUGH (UPI) -Newspaper publisher Randolph A. Hearst prepared today to announce a food distribution plan for the needy demanded by the ten-oriSt ·grOup which kidnaped his daughter t\VO weeks ago. • A family spoke!marf.s3id Hearst wouJd- reveal the plan, which he said would in\'olve "substantial amounl~ of money" but far Jess ·than the $400 million originally demanded, this afternoon. The 'Symbionese Liberation Army, which holds his 19-year.ald daughter, THOUSANDS WRITE HEARST IN SYMPATHY, Story Pogo S Patricia, demanded that the program begin by Tue!day as a "gesture of gQOd faith" before opening negotiations OCEANSIDE (AP) -Two men Who for the release of-the girl, granddaughter posed as Marlne:s took 17 M16 rifles of the late newspaper giant William from ~ recruit barracks at lhe Camp Randolph Hearst. Pondleton M-Base, autbaritiel said. FBI spokeslllan John KelJy said there Investigators said the theft re~ was nothing new to ttport tn the Sunday 'f/8' carried out the preVlous lnve.Kiiatlon of the kidnaping: He said day by two black men dressed in utility the FBI would have bo comment on uniforms wbo identified themselves as the food distribution plan, saying It was the officer of. the~day and the sergeant "of no great interest to us from an of the gUard. investigative standpoint." A Marine spokesman said recruits in Kelly said the FBI wfl.s still respecting the banacks were told that "the rifles the farnj ly's wishes in not jeopardizing were being removed for security the gir.l's safety ,if t h e SW\ 's hideout reaaons." in· ere discovered. ~ _ , The men cut a cable which secured "I~ we thought someone was in there the rifles to a rack by-the trigger_bo.ldiDg;--a,,gun to her head, we would guards and used an unidentified vehicle not go m, he said. . . to make their escape the spokesman The Hearst family has been receivmg aaid. ' a~ut 600 letters a da~ from ¥:ell- The then was being investigated , by wishers, bot}{ ~ the fam1~y home ~d the FBI and Naval Intelligence officers. to the 8:8R F~ncisco Exanuner, of which ,Hearst is president and editor. Jay Bosworth, a spokesman for the Gasoline Bath Huntington Beach, explained that the ?,Or lh!s efficient bef~re, Sommers sai~. motorcycle is not a "bike rider's bike." They re also working on .an electnc F 'ls A l -u1rs priiffiihl)'1fgin'Sliike, or .----""r but the-1rouble ther.>--is. that_ the--oi ssau t shopper's bike," Berkowitz , said. "Since range 1S only , 120 miles on a" single family, said Hearst encountered "some delay" in working on the "details and mechanics" of the proposal because of the long holiday weekend. This morning , Hearst and Bosworth left tbe--1amily's ..llillsborougb mansion, telling reporters they were going to San Fra11<:is:c9. It was reported they v.·ere meeting privately with offi · tis of the American Indian Movement. the-top-speed-U-cOO mil .. -per hour charge and that s not far enough. SAN JOSE (UPI) -Robert L.nk and you can. o~ly go 50 !fliles without 27, was pumping gas for a l~g r.charglng, it IS best swted to short He K1'lls G1'1·J, Sell , line or cars when a DX>torist with trips . ...;... ~ .3!' ~ school, to work, four women passengers tried lo shopping or v1s1ting. cut into the head of the line Continental Electric_ Vehicles opene<i SAUGUS <UPI) -Richard T. Del Link told police that when he l~t ,week, offenng cunous ~hoppers their Antonia, wbo had apparently been continued \\-'Orking on tfie car at ft.rst !<>Ok at tf1:e new bike and free drlnkiog, fatally shot his daughter-ln·law the pumps, the male driver ndes 1~ the parking lot. . Sunday and then shot himself in the punclied him and the four women COonie Gray, 26, of Huntington Beach, head after a family argument, police joined the attack. ~lid her !,lrst ride on the bike was reported. Antmia, t2, shot lime Del The attendant said he sprayed beauUful. Antonia, 27, before killing himself, gasoline on the attackers who then "You don't have to worry about officers said. jlDllped into their car 'and sped of(. • ' I lo Beach Baptists Find Pie iii Sky Good to Eat ... A gigantic pepperoni pizza, cliliiieil to be the largest in the world, was devoured by moro than Z,000 hungry churchgoers Sonday momJng at tile Central Baptist Temple in HlDlU....,. Beech. The big piJza ..... donated by tile Stnw Hat Pizza Palace, at Warner Aveiwe and Golden West Strtot in HUDtlngton Beech, and served as a prOi!iolion glmmlck to attract teens to the church'• Sunday School Acainllng to a church o!Oclal. more than. 400 teenagm turned out and an additionaL l.!l,10 adults and children helped "'°'ume the 484-square-!oot piua. The plua was baked early Sunday morning at the pizza palace, and brought to the church in pieces, according to youth paslM liooU Meacham. The piua was then assembled at the church, and after rooming ~ices conch1dec!, the pizza was devpured. Hearst and his wife, Catherine, were heartened by a tape recording from Patricia received during the weekend in which she said she was being well treated and her abductors were Willing to accept "whatever you can come up with ." "Field Marshal Cinque" of the StA said In the recording that the SLA would "accept a sincere effort on your part." The Rev. Cecil \Villiams. pastor ot Glide Afemorial Church, sakl Sunday night that neither he nor members of five leftist groups named by the ~ SLA to o\•ersee the food distribution program had beeh consulted about· the Hearst proposal._ ttowe;v·~z:.. he said Pe believes 'the family is actlilg in "good faith." One coalition membef, Popeye Jackson of the United Prisoners Union, said his group didn't support the Hearst family, nor hiS 'daughter, nor the SLA. He said the UPU was only involved to help give away the food. New left activist Jerry Rubin warned the SLA in a letter published in Hearst's San Francisco Examiner that killing Miss Hearst "will set off a iight·wing crackdown" in the United States. He urged the kidnapers not to harm the girl. "lf you kill Patricra-Hearst you-will be outraging human beings everywhere," v.·rote :fl-ubin, a leader of the Yippies and one of the Chicago Seven riot conspiracy defendants. "You will let off a rightwing crackdown -find the SLA ! -That will endanger the ~v.er:y people that you say you are fighting for. You will destroy the moral credibility Of the left." V alley-to-Snmy Planners' Denial Of Bowling Alley An appeal of a city plann'lng commission denial of. a 52-lane bowling alley will be heard at 8 p.m. Tuesday by Fountain Valley city councilmen. The meeting \Vill be in council cham· hers in City Hall, at 10200 Slater Ave. George Miffiaki is asking the council lo. p,pprove a use permit so he--can build a bowling alley at the northwest ccorner of \Varner Avenue and Brookhurst Street. It would be adjacent to the recently approved $4 million sports and fitness center planned by George Otott, Oluck Coker and Dr. Wilfred Cohen. Ol<ltt "¢ Mimaki shared the same archite<t, Kermit Docius, in an attempt to offer a unified design for the 15.5--aae site. But then Mimaki's seven acres ran into trouble at the planning commission level w~ ooe 40--lane alley nearby was approved and .his plan was turned down. The council TUesday also will discuss the Orange-COUnty Transit District's corridor plans for rapid t r a n s i t development. Councilman At Hollinden , a member of the transit district board. \vants the council to support the plans. Oruge <:eut • Weadler Those winds will diminish to- night. but the Orange CO.st won't be all that warmer .on Tuesday with high readlng.s in the middle 00s under patcbes of vulable clouds. INSIJ)E TODAY Afore and more, Californians ore lear•1i11g the magic words tha& puaro11tte a maniaQ« with no waiti11g, no wittie1ses, 1to publicity and no tett.s. Story. Pag< 7. SNfllll It ... M. Jn• • C~I~ l c~ 11·tt ~ ti c......... 11 --I IMwiel ,... ' • . .....,.....,.....,,'*t,. ... GIANT PIZZA PUT TOGl!THlll ' AT a.PTJST CHURCW-IN HUNTINO'l:Ot« llACl:t • • P.-lng Suncl.y .$chMI With 484 .$Cjllorw '-t.ef-Glistn•tomlc O.llfht. • M .. cham reeearchcd the record on pizza, as Jiafec! in the Gulllnes; -· ;of R-, and loamed that the previous -for the lalgest pizza --titan 400 oquare feel. ' , CHUICHOOIR 1.IKIS PIZZA O.lifole Toylor, 9 = .............. , .. ,, ••'*"' If Ms ....... M · • •• • •• I ' ,\ ' - • " Man Kills Wife, Five li:i Fa1nily FAYE'M'E, ~tiss. tU Pl l - A 2Q..year- old mnn shot and killed his wife, infant son and four family members early today and injurl'd l\\'O others after he heard a "\'oicc" tell him to ta ke th eir lives. 11uthorities saki. J efferson County Sheriff J .P. \l/allace said Frankie Lias told authorities "a Biblical \'Oice told h°:"Tl "''hal to do" before he shot the victims with a .22 caliber ri ne in the pre-day.·n hours at their secluded dwelling. Wallace said the victims were f\1rs. Carol Eve Uas, 18; the couple's 11· month-old son, Ken ; Mrs. Jimmy Ross '\llllliams, 39. mother of Mrs. Lias: Leo itcDonald. 37, common-law husband of Mrs. William!; and !&-year-old Denni! \Villiams and 17-year-old Miss Tony Ross, brother and sister of Mrs. Lias. Two yoWlter relatives, 4-year-old 'Lennie Ross and Fredia Ross. 19, were in undetennined condition at University Hospital in Jackson with gunshot wounds of the head. Wallace said all buf one of ·the victims _had been shot "between the eyes." One of the chiklreo. died of. a gunshot wound of the heart. 11J.e sheriff said authorities were caJJed by Lias' brother, William, shortly before 6 a.m. to report the multiple slayings. Wallace described Lias as a "nice fellow," who told them in a statement · that he was told by a "voice what ·to do'' and "then he quoted some biblical scripture." · The victims were shot while they slept . at the Lias' trailer home and the nearby house of Mn. Lias' parents about 2:30 fl..m. . . W?llace said there appeared to be .. po at.hep .motive for the .slaying& and -that Lias had not had any disagreement With his family. . Llu, who ha.s a high scoool education, · was a construction worker. • .' Wallace sakl Lias, observing his 20th birthday today in the Jefferson County Jail, was calm while a w a i t i n g . arraignment From Page I ·roLICE ... ~ick leave already accrued. . · Policemen have also dropped their requesl for a free SMuaJ physical examination. ~ The new agreement will not become official unless the city council okays ~ll during Tuesday's 7 p.m. council , session. Councilmen have not officially "entered the salary discussions . R"owlands ...,has done all the talking for the city. . · The council meeting is set for Tuesday, 1n council chambers, because today is a holiday. Firing Squad Executes Tivo ·~ OIANGl COAST H• DAILY PILOT Tiit 0t1noe CN1! OAILY PILOT w!lfl wlllcll I• comblMd.1t11 Ht"'l·Pr._1, 11 1t1jbl!IMd by !tit OrtllOI Co11I Pubf1'111f); Co..,11o1ny, St~ ,.,,. edl11ons •r• 1111011111ff:I. Mo""'' lhl'llllllh Frlcl1y, for Colll Mt••· N...-oort ll11cll, H11nflngton llt1eh/1'-1tin V1\!rf, L.1;11111 ~ frvlnt/SIOdltbf<~ 1nd "1n c1o.,..~1.,i Sn Jlollll CtplU•lllO. A 1~11 r111oti1I ..:11111111 Is P\lbli\htd J..ltvrQy1 Irie! ~IYI. TPl9 .... fflcllltl llllblllJl!ng Pl..,1 ii 11 )lO Wtll a.y .Sh"Mt, c..11 Ma., c1n~r~11, nu., l.0~1rt N. W11d Pr•ldfftt •1'111 P'*UaMr -J,,.._ I:. C11rl1y VIU Praldenl lrMI G-ttl MtMOW Tliot1111 IC11-..il t:ofltot Tho11111 A. Murplli111 M-•1111 E~n ... 0 1rl" H. loo• . IUch11J P. Nan Aul11tlll MtnMilng E•110fl y,,,,. -c • ..;u, Wt1I 0refllol C-1\1 EOl"Or H•llltf•lw•OMce I TITS l11th l1ut1 .. 1rd M1lll11i A'lllro111 l'.O. 111 790, t2•41 -°""" UOUlll 9NCll! :m il'"-11 A~ C..!I M-: 1lO W"t ••Y Str .. t Nrwport ltKf'i: un NIWP9fl •oui.-..tfll Nf! Chmilnll~ •S Horlll It (l"'IM •Ht fel"''"° C7141 64l-4JJI ct ln.4 ....... ,..,... 64Z.1671 ~ ....... Of" ..... '-"' (ltlll!I ...... 14f.llll ~t, , 1'1J. Ort• Cttu PW!i.llMI c-i..11r. '" -1ftr1t1. •""'"''*"' .. ''°'"' .,...,.. ., ~,__,. lltrtlll .... .. ,......... wttflOwt ...i.I ... ............ ~ ....,..., ._.. ~ _,... Nlli9 el Ctttt #tM. t;mlltWM. ~.... "" torr• «.U .,..,....., _. -II II.If ll'!Olllflllr1 fl'llffttr¥ -.HMt ..... llM "-"""'· r, Mondo}, FtbrUl'1 18, 1974 Ouch! This workman appears to be dealing a "head crushing" blow to the Frankenstein n1onster in Newport, Ore., but he's only putting up the man· sler as part of billboard. Now if he had a stake, and it were Dracula ... . Price of Gold Up $2 a1i Ounce To Record $151 LONDON (AP ) -The price of gold jumped $2 an ounce today to a record· StSI in London and Zurich on the strength of report s that the Common Market governments were about to raise the official price of their gold holdings . . The Ameri can dollar eased slightly at the opening of European foreign exchanges. The rise in the gold price meant an increase of $33.50 an ounce since the first or the year. DeaJers reported active demand for the metal due to the meeting in Brussels of the finance ministers of lhe nine Common Market natletls. \Videly published reports said the ministers were ready to raise the value of the gold buttressing their national currencies. It is pegged .o.t $42.22 an ounce, and there was no indication of the new price the min isters might set. Although toda y was the first time !he price of gold topped $150 in the big London and Zurich market!, it has been above that level several times since Jan. 25 in the smaller Paris n1arket, \Vhere special ex change controls keep the price Jligher than elsewhere. Charitable Mom Finds New Home After-Eviction Susan Allen , Huntington Be a ch 's charitable divorcee With live children, is now happily relocated in another two-- bedroom apartment one block from the dwelling she was evicted from . Susan, 33, is best knO\lt'?l for her rounding up and renovating more than 100 bicycles for needy children al Christmas last year. During Ule rest of the year, she works with the many children from broken families along Keelson Lane, her own street. Her work is volunteer, however and the jobless welfare mother could not afford a rent hike from flSO to fl99. A landlord in the same area learned of SuJan'sj)Ugfit and offere<J lier a two-bedroom apartment, slightly smaller than the old one, for •1so. . Susan happily accepted since she wanted to remain in the same area and continue her work with the chUdren. Several tenants who were moving out also phoned the Love Your Neighbor Now (LYNN ) Center in Hw>tington Beach and told her their apartmenlJ would ~ yacant shortly. Their landlords, however. rerused to rent to someone with five children, according to Ann McClean, of the LYNN Center. The mother of nve Is hopln& lo secure a job with the Orange COunly Mental Health Department so she can continue h~r guidance lo the local children and •!!II support her own family. Atwater Man Die11 PISMO B&ACH •(AP ) -An Atwllel' man, Jose~h Ronald Dlao, 29, wa tilled when his loor-wbee) drive vehicle nipped while cresting a sand dune here, the ·Highway Patrol says. The veblcle came lo ·res! 6 feel below lhe crest of the dune. - Malformed Ms. Mainienan~e Worker Orild Gets Founroin Valley Has No Uniform for New _ Ernploye Operation PORTLAND. Maine (AP I. -"Some people are calling us monsters becau.<>e or this and others are very sympathetic," says the falh er of a severely malfonncd baby that has und ergone court-ordered surgery his parents re!used to approve. "I disagree with the judge's ruling. t feel that we as parent3 shoo1d be listened lo," said Sgt. Robert B. T. Houle of \Vestbrook, a· Air Force recruiter. His llklay-0ld son -who has not. been conscious since • birth, Feb. 9 -was reported in fair condiUon today at the li,laine h-fedicat Center. The surgery was perfonned Thursday. Doctors say the baby -wbo5e left side is deformed, including having no left eye or ear canal -is unable to take food by mouth pnd may never gJin conscioushess. And the child's doctor testified at a court hearing Thursday that surgery probably would not be of any benefit. But Superior Court Judge David G. Roberts rilled the infant has a "right to life" and ordered life--sustaining surgery. A first operation was performed shortly after the judge issued his· order. It involved implanting a food tube into the infant's stomach. Another opcratioo, planned for this week, is intended to permit the baby to take food by mouth. By CANDACE PEARSON Of hit D*r p ... ,,.., The biggest pn>blem Fountaln Valley's newest ma.lntenaoce "man" htts run into Is thal U.. city dldn'I have any uniforms to Ill her. --. - But Diane Scott Is makin~ do with jenns and blol.13eS as she goes on her daily rounds of reading and repairin g meters for the city water department until her specially-ordered overall! are dellver<d. The Ont woman In a job thal has now been re-tlUed ''maintenance worker," she says she reallies the city Is ''testing me to see lf I can bold my own as well u a man can. "They're not going to be sorry fer hlrlllg me," she adds, with tbe S8.llle determination that cused her to earn a black belt In karate when sbe was IS. Now 23, with a 4-yeaNlld sm to support, she says a '"WOmall should have the same chance to do a job as a man does if she can perform." But. she applled loic her job with Foµntai n Vall~y less out of principle lhan of a love for \\'orking outs ide, for working with her head and her hands. , She worked as a receptionist for a computer company in Anaheim, but "you see the same four walls everyday, the same people everyday." Now she is reading water meters, learning how to handle water main lines and valves, studying water distribution 'Tl;IEY WON'T BE SORRY' Maintenance Worker Scott and chemical treatment in school, and discovering the tools to use to bandle any water-related emergency. Eventually, like all m a i n t e n a o c e worken, she will hS,. on call 24 houri a day. After two ll\Oflttui, said f\.1s. Scott, her co-workers "Sffm to accept me." She has a few 1note problem~ in the field when people or even poli t.-C stare at her as she works or drives a city pick-Up truck. "1'hey took at n1c like I stole it." But she's determined to do \\1ell. When she started lcarnlng. iqlrale "out ot mere self preservation" ~ause she was.. 12-years-old and lived 12 blocks · from ecbool in Washington, D.C. She's never had to use It. but says it's to "re.lazing to know I have it." That confidence and being the living example of the adage, "like mother, liLe daughter /' help her now. For years her mother w a s one of the few women wallpaper har:iger1 and took a young Dlane with her on the job In a ba~ineUe. "She was very good," her daughter says proudly. Diane's friends ask her how she cun . s!filld getti ng dlrly and wearing "grubby clothes;" but--sbe doesn't see it as a challenge to her fcmlnity. . "l love my job," she says simply. She is excited about her future, but admits men have one advantage over her at \\'Ork . "They can go home, eat dinner and watch television . I have to go home. }!lake dinner, play \\'ith my son and put him to bed. And maybe find time for TV ' before I have to get up at 5 a.m." Sunday Accidents Kill 3 Navy Lt. James ~er, attorney for the baby's parents, safcf an appeal of the court ruling to the f\.,1aine Supreme Court is being -ronsidered. Bu~ he said a decision by the parents is being delayed until after the second operation. A rash of Orange County traffic broadside by an oncoming van. probably already dead. accidents Sunday left three "yoWlg people Officers at the scene said the small 'I1>c driver of the van, Johnnie Anders. 24, or 308 16th St. in Huntington Beach, suffered ml.nor tnjuries in the crash. A paSseng~r l ri thC van,. 21-yi:ar.ald Jeff Cruzon, 1535 Superior A\'e., Newport Be.a-ch, complained ot. pain· but refused hospital care. "I understand the second operation is a high risk one. The decision to appeaj.. IP~ \veU be moot" if ipe baby . dies, be said. dead and siz others injured, California foreign car, driven by 18-year-old HJghway Patrol officers reported tcM\18Y· Deborah Beard of Corona, apparently Dead are Yvonne Garcia, 17, of spun out on the ·amp conn cting the Corona ; DaVid Anaheluk, 21, of· Santa southbound San Diego "''ith t h e Ana Heights and ··paw -o. Mct.fiUen. • northboWld-l'teYl!J>Oft.Freeway. The matter was taken to court by the hospital because the situation posed "a highly difficult moral dilemma," said John 1\.1.itcbell, hospital at·torney. He said the medical center is comidering financing the Supreme Court appeal to gain a definiti~e ruling on the matter. 26, of O[ange. "She apparently" hil the shoulder and Two of the fatal crashes occurred then overoorrected. shooting diagonally The second Orange Coast crash happened at about 9::l p.m. at the Santa Ana Heights intersection of Bristol Street 'f and Santa Ana Avenue. on the Orange Coast. across the road.,.,·ay into the path of CHP officers said h-1iss Garcia was the van,'' a CHP spokesman said. killed instantly when · the car she was The impact of the ·collision flipped riding in went out of control at the the small car over ~.nd rolled il do~11 OffiCl'rs al the scene said Anaheluk. 2422 S.E. Bristol St .• was fatally injured when . the heavy motorcycle he was. driving rammed broadside into a !Jl'lall~ pickup truck that allegedly turned left -in front of him. intersection of the San Diego and. a short embankment. f\.1iss Garcia was Newport Freeways and was struck thrown clear but officers said she was U'I Ttl"'"'9 Putting the Bug to Work Police sakl the driver o( the truck. Kim R. Whitehead, 19, of 1543 serenade Terrace in Corona del Mar, was driv ing under the influence of alcohol when he turned from Brstol onto Santa Ana Avenue. Anaheluk's big bike rammed into the passenger side of the car and flipped it up onto two wheels, officers were told by witnesses. Two passengers in \Vh ilehead's car are in fair condition tod ay at P.tercy Gene ral Hospital wjth multiple injuries. They are Lucinda Smith, 21, of 19841 K"'-"'ood St., Hw>tington Beach and Jeff Gillett, no knovm address. Whit.etieati is in Orange County Jail today on the drunken driving charge and bail has been .set at $2,500. The third fa tality, also involving a mo(orcycle, happened at about 1 p.m. Sunday in Anaheim. Police there said 1'1cMillen Jost control of his bike at the intersection oC Loara and Minerva Streets and rarru:ned headon into a big sedan driven by Daniel Ninburg. 4.5, of Anaheim. McMillen was killed instantly in the crash, officers said. Acquisition Denied Farmer Bill Peters has one "bug" in his field in in Red Bluff, Calif., that he's not anxious to get rid of. Peters found that with the rising cost of fuel, it was more economical to disc his fields with his Volkswagen than his tractor. CARSON CITY (AP) -The chainTian of the Nevada Gaming Control Board has denied a report by tlle Lua Angeles Times that Nevada officials a r e investigating the acquisiUon of Bally Manufacturing CO. by U.S. Ally. Gen. William Saxbe and Teamsten President Frank Fitzsilnmol1'. ltlien FJoo-d Bard to Ste111 LOS ANGELES (AP l -"ll0s just for transportation and forgej papers. like a yo-yo." lamented an overworked The aliens, working mainly in border patrolman. "We ship them south agricultllfal enterprises, send from .$60 and they come right back up the string." to $l00 home every week or two. They The number or illegal aliens crossing the border from Mexico into the Uniled work any crop and on any machine, and because of the tenuous nature or States has skyrocketed in recent years. ffieir presence lilthlS-country,--cause Jn the Southwest alone a 1 i e n 9 little or no trouble for their employen. apprehended rose from fDMll in 1972 Border Patrol inspector Orville Lewis, lo 609,673 in 1973. In 1116'1, only 117.ooo coonlinator for lite an 11smugg11 n g were apprehended. And ihere ls no way Investigations in the San JC"-ljuln Valley, of knowing how ~y more entered said, "If we pick up so illegals it takes the c0untry and escaped detection. one phone call and !he employer can uwe expect the" number will continue have 50 or more up . here 'almost to increase as there. are more, and overnight.." more young people wlthOul-jobs In The palrOlmen .,.,..... foremen and Mexico/' says: Bob · S~etz, spokesman • even the Wegat i1ren.:·u.em.e1ves agree !or the Southw .. t RegKlll ol lite U.S. IJtal the number flowing lnlo caIUomia 's lrnmigratloa and Na1uratizaUon Service. agricultural areas "lhia pasl grooing sea- One alien crvsaed lite bo"1er 12 limes oon Is exreedina anything observed dur- and was sent back to Meile<> 12 Umes. Ing lite past 13 to 20 yean. Imnl1gratlon officialJ eattmate that the "They're righl here," said a grower. 11len population or Soullte111 calU""11a "Hell, I got 'em. I doo'l !mow how alone may range .from 100,CXIO to more many,' becau,,e 1 don't screen 'em1 but lban hall a mllllon, I'd say I IOI m•Ybe 30 percent or The Illegal aliens, aeeking employment lite WI crew." , and money lo send back lo their lamllles Julian Samora, p r o I e as o r of In Mexico, Gualemala, San Salvador•end anlltropology at the University of Noire other countrtes, crosa-llte horde. usually Dame, In hla bOok "Los Majndol: The at night by foot, automobile, truck, bus, Wetback Story,"" said, 'llJ!be two most )>oat and every coocelvable means. ~Ing ....,... for 111 e g a I They travel alOtt& In I n Io rm a I Uon •re tlie lnatlable demand "pipeline" or cousins, brothers-In-law and or p labor In lite United Slateo crew booses, FrequenUy \hey crooa with and lite tremendoua populalioo lnofsaso the aid of professional amuggleni called OCCUTTl118 In Mexico." "coyotes" who cllarge l300 oc more Samora added, "United S 1 alts f agriculture and agribusiness owe their success to two well·known factors : the don't want to pick grapes. They want some better jobs and I don 't blame explolations of cheap labor and P.ovem· them." ment subsidies." Officials of the li.S. Immigration and Enforcement and judicial officials say Naturaliiatlon Service and Mexican· new federal laws are needed to halt American activists charge th a t the -flow of Illegals..-As the law1-now-employers-use....a_variet)'_0La!Jlne.r:fuges stand employers . violate no laws. They to wrongly withhold wages from alien believe the now would be cut greaily employes on occasion. Wages are low If employers were held responsible. ranging from It lo 14 an hoor, and Attempts to legislate state or federal the ~ber ' of hours worked la sanctions against employers have failed, sometimes altered to show that the- or when they have been passed into • mlnimum wage standards have been law , have beeo blocked In legal actions met. brought by employer representative.s. Berl Corona, director or ea.a, a ooclal The House of Representatives recently service cenler for allena In Los Angelu, paMe<! a bill by Rep. Peler Rodino charges brutaUty by I m m I g r a 11 o n !D-N.J.) lo eslabllsh among other things, olflcialo· In roundln& up aliens . employer sanctions for lmowln&iy hiring "We 1et a lot of CQJnplalnlJ from illegal aliens .. The bill Is now before aliens," he said. '"!llal they are allaken a aubcommlllee of lhe Senale JudJclary down !or money. The aJrl• are asked Conunlltee. !or sexual fa'viin and complain thal Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-MUI.) they are bruiaUzed." said, "This allen work force Is a major Immlgrallon o!rlclala deny that such laclor conbibullttg 10 lite grinding charge• are accural• and corona hlmsell poverfy, hlgb unemployment and low does not clle specific cases, wagea tn lhe border areas." Economic P""urt lo b1re Ulegd Some workers belonging to lite· UQ!led allens bqan lo mounl on employers F..-m Workera Unlo1Lhave complained • In lhe Southwel\, particularly tanners, that "°"a115e of lite !lloeaf ~ tfi<y -Oit ""Dec. SI~ 1984, when""the braeero • oanool find · work and lltal lite allens pr!«ram expired w>der law, depma lite wage .structure. '1fte bracero program had allowed A San Joaquin Valley grape grower, employers lO lmpotl lortlgn W<l'kers, who did not wanl to be ldentllied, said, mootly Meljcans and aome Asians, !or "11tlt Is baloltey. I want all lite local ...... at work In whlcb " was alleRecl workers I can ge~ but lhe ,local people a shortage ol American workers wslC<I. ' l _,) ' ,, \ I I I I ' ,I ' I • • O.Hy P'~lol Sl11! 1"11010 SADDLEBACK COLLEGE HAS ONE PERMANENT BU ILDING ON 200.ACRE VIEJO CAMPUS Ten Others Are Sla ted to Follow the $3.2 Miii ion Jame1 8. Utt M1mori1I Library 7 Years of Controversy Saddle back Coll ege Ce 1iter of Seve ral Storms (Editor'& Note -T/,is is the first of a two-part se ries oii Saddleback College. Created by the electorate seven years ago, the school distTict board pledged to kl'ep such tmrest o[f the new campus. one we wanted," Vogel said. UCIProf .. Gerard Dead ai 73 ... UC Irvine emeritus professor Ralph \\'. Gerard died Sunday at Hoag Alemol"ial Hospital, where he had been recovering from heart sUrgcry. He was T.l. Dr. Gerard. a resident of Corona del ~far, was founding dean or the UCl graduate division . He left a position as direct.or of the !11t>nta1 l~ealth Research lnstilute laboratories at the Uni\'ersity of ll1ichigan to con1e to Irvine u1 1963. He helped plan UCl's school of biological sciences. Six months after arriving at Irvine, Or. Gerard was named professor of biological sc iences and director of special studies on Feb. I, 1964. By October, ]964 Dr. Gerard was named dean of !he graduate division. He resigned that post in June, 1969 and continued as professor of biological science. He v.·as named professor eme ritus in June 1970. that covers nearly half of the land in Orange Cotntty, was la1'n ch.ed amid _.j , grcat)iopes Jot it>;Jutur!.). The attitude with which the trustees opened the school was described by Rep. Utt in his speech at the dedication of the permanent campus in 1971. ~"Shape up or ship out ~may be ·an arbitr_ary pronounce ment,'' he said, "but it is far more preferable to anarchy, which is the only alterna:ive. So Roper took a leave of absence from lhe c o u n t y Department of Educ;ation. But he did not stay long enodgh to see the school open in the fall of 19&). • Dr. Gerard was internationally known for his pioneer research on ·the functions of the nervious system and brain. He is also noted for his work in adapting audio-visual materials and computer systems to education. He c'B.rncd "both -doctor of-·medicine and doctor of philosophy degrees and received . honorary degrees from Brown · Universi ty, the University of Le~den in lhe Netherlands and the University of St. Andrews, Scotland. • I t I ' .• By ~AN WQR!ll. Of flit o.ily "1111 Si.ff A new jWlior co11ege for the south county ,.,.as approved by voters CIO Valentine 's Day, 1967. Some people liked to predict !he new tw~year school. Saddleback C:Ollege, V.'Oldd become "the Sweetheart of Orange County.'' But in the seven years since, much of the heart seems to have gone out or Saddleback's romance v.·ith its taxpa yers. The last year has been in many ways the stormiest of all: Three trustees -all charter member's of the board -have announced their resignations in the last six months, one of them after he pleaded guilty in Orange C.ounty Superior Court to bookmalng. '. As you drive ont~ ca mpus, you arc greeted by a large sign. NOTICE. THE FOLLOWING ARE PROWBITED ON CAMPUS' Then comes a long list of activities. They range from "Unauthorized Bicycle Riding" to "Use of Golfing Equipment" to "Firing of Weapons." What you don't find out from the sign. planted at the entraoce to 200 sunny hilltop acres in l\lission Viejo, is th at you are at Saddleback College. The cheerless sign seems to fit the almosphere that hangs over the troubled school. Specific problems include ; The school's president, Dr. Fred Bremer, "·as censured by the Orange County Grand Jury last suffimcr for writing a letter lobbying for high density coastal development which 'WOuld have hiked the value of choice beachtront property owned by board president John Lund. Possibly the nlost seriou s problem facing Saddleback now is the threatened dc·annexation of the Tustin Unified School District portion of lhe Saddleback di strict. Some 8.300 Tustin residen L<t ha v e signed petitions to get out of the college district and into the more convenient Rancho Santiago (Santa Ana) dist.rkt. Leaders of that movement have complained of driving d is tan c e. inadequate faci lities and curriculum and rigid administrative attitude and policies. Rancho Santiago officials b a v e endorsed the move. But for Saddleback, the p r o s p e c t carries serious consequences: loss or 17 percent of its student body and 25 percent of its assessed valuation. At a recent caodldates forum. six competitors for the seat of Trustee l\1icbael Collins. resigning to give more time to his law firm. firmly said "no" when asked if they are sat isfied \rilh the school's present administration. The seventh candidate did not a~lt~end=. -~ fritlielr campaigns for the i\.1arch 5 election to replace Collins, 32, most . of them have stressed the school should be al a tumJng point and needs new direction. Any attempt to understand what has !llaped Saddleback College and cruted its current public relalions crisis with lhe community bas to take in two crucial aspects of the school's past. First, Ille school's original board o[ trustees, four of whom will serve on Ille board. were basically Cl)nsentaUve Republicans, backers of U.S. Rep. Jolrl SChmiti: ond the late U.S. Rep. James Ult for whom the "'hool's first permanent building, Its library, is named. Second, these trustees took · power , al Saddleback when campus unrest, from Uoston to Berkeley. wos at it5 peak. The sttuntion was disturbing not· only to coil.!l!rvatlv1 Republicans. Upse~y the unprecedented activism of\ m of lhelr own children,· even liberal pa · were stupifled by clemoostraUons on 'various campusee, use or marltoana and LSD, end a seeming breakdown o! a pt'10elble oe:ad.mlc atmoophere. Prom the beginning, the Saddleback ' "This board of education COMiders education at the taxpayers' ~xpense a privilege and not a right," he concluded. To set the tone, trustees began in the surruner or 1968 to institute school policies which they felt would help the school avoid the pitfalls of "permissive" campuses elsewhere. A strict dress code, banning "unusually long or bizarre hair styles or beards" for men \vas written. Students were required to wear shirts. Bare feet and cutoff shorts were banned. Suggested attire, strange-sounding at the flamboyant height of the hippie era. included slacks and sport jackets for men and :sport. dresses, Oats, and "sfylisb and groomed haiNJo.s" for womerf. In addition, tilt boarn of trustees passed a stringent poliC'' on campus . speakers. They specified that every "controversial" campus speaker must be balanced on the same program with an equally weJl·known s p e a k e r representing an opposite point or view. But the meaning of "controversial" has never been spelled out. Trustee Collins said one time , "If Dr. Benjamin Spock came here to speak on amnesty for .Vietnam draft evaders I'd consider that controversial and say 'oo.' " "If he Spoke on child raising," Collins continued, "I'd say yes." Later, when studenb came to a board meeting to protest the speakcrs'policy, Collins said angrily, "Campuses are not maintained as a fornm for free speech. Our job here is to educate.'' In 1969, 23-year~ld Tustin student ' Lindahl King v.·as susRCnded for a violation of the hair code. He decided to fight it. With the help <>f the Amer,ican Civil Liberties Union. King filed a suit In the U.S. District Court. In late 1969, the court ruled in h.is favor and issued an injunction to the school that he be readmitted. The case was appealed. In July 1971, the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the lower court and allowed the dres3 oode to stand. But a few days later, apparently tired of community pressure, bad press and the lengthy court process, the trustees abolished the code. Last year, disturbed by Ille Imminent rr.ove by some of his constituents to begin the drive to de-annex Tustin from the Saddleback district. Tustin Trustee Hans Vogel told his fellow trustees the school "has a police state image." Usually, blan1e for these negative views comes right back on the school's administra tion and board. From the beginning. th e school had its ~k of administrators a n d -instril NI. The first 'r1 teachers were selected from 1.500 applications. . Searcbing for a superintendent, the board waded through S7 af>plications from all over the country. In an tmexpected last minute decision, Ille board selected Jack Roper from !Is own baekyard. Roper, then 35, an administrator in the County Department of Education, bod been assigned as a 'Ollsultant to tile infant "'Hege and Its fll'llt bbard In late 11*. , He accepted a m.Olltl conb'act in August, 1967, According to one irustoo, Roper was hired because the trustees' first cbole< turned the offer down. . Hans Vogel .. 1d the board offered a contract to Dr. Julio Bortolall41 a Harvard g r a d u a t t aOO uien supenntendent ol tl!e S.n Mateo Junlor poilcge Dlsb'ict. Bortolazzo rePorledly Uk~ the offer but said hus dlsb'lct would not reloase him a ytar tarly from 1-two-year oontnct. "We lelt we had to make a decl1lon qulcltly and since Jack knew ail about Ille diotrlct, we !eh he was the only • After a series of disagreements with the board whicli ended in bud.get cuts on areas Roper felt were crucial, he resigned in June. 1968. The cuts v.•erc in programs of community crafts and fine arts. anc1 Roper recommendations for a full·time personnel director and dean of evening school. • He was associated with the University of Chicago for 37 years. He earned both his bachelor and doctoraJ degrees there and v.·as professor of physiology. With less than. three months before opening, the board of trustees found themselves without a superintendent. Instead of anotber time-ronsum.ing natioo.wide search, they promoted Dr. Fred Bremer, then dean of ill.5truction, to Roper's spot. The <>rigiftal board members said Bremer was an attractive leader to them r-partly because he took ia firm s!lllJI! g'l>inst cimpus radicalism': tiDtll. they bad confidence in his admlnistrattve - abilities -already test .... : in a year with the district. Bremer is still ,president and the directioo 61 Ille school has, for all practical purposes, remained WlChanged as well. But with the recenl resignations of three diarter trustees -Collins, Alyn Brannon, and Hans Vogel, the district may be at a tum.ing point. Brannon, 43, resigned in January after pleading gullty in Orange Coonty Superior Court to bookmaking. · Perha~ the most interesting resignatiOn of all, in long range terms, is that of Vogel, Ille school's first board of trustees president: Formerly editor Of the conservative Republican periodical, "The Observer," and now an administrator for the Tustin Unified School District. Vogel has been a vociferous spokesman 'through the years. Once one of Bremer's staunehest supporters, he has locked horns with Bremer repeatedly over the last year. Vogel reportedly has stated privately he believes it is time for Bremer, too, to resign. The pending departure of <these three trustees -all colorful in their own way -marks the end of an era. Alter they are gone next June, only Patrick Backus of Dana Point, an elementary school principal, will be left of the original five trustees. The board now has seven trustees. It was expanded from five in 1971 \\'hen uneven population growth in the area made the Saddleback Valley trustee area much larger than the others. How do you start a college? The f i.nal port of tlle series Tuesday will examine Saddleback's beginnings in t/1.e early '60s and how its founders decided it should. be a new district over protts s from botli Orange Coast College 01ut the sU.1te. Also a look at the district's tax llistory and ·academic gro1vth. Woman Demands Duel With Man BUENOS AIRES (UPI) A coagresswoman of Ille Salta Province Legislature has challenged ooe of her male colleagues to a duel, pre.ss reports said SUnday. tltrs. Hortensia Rodri guez Porcel. a member of the Peronist bloc supporting Gov. l\ligucl Ragone, de man de d satisfaction from a fellow Peronist Congm.-;man Aldo Ooodosio Guerra, who wants to impeach Rarone. Mrs. Porcel was not the first woman polltlclan to decide to call out anolller legislator. In Salta, 1,000 miles northm st of Buenos Aires, Teresa Mezquida challenged fellow congressman Alberto Flom to a duel In 1959, but th<y were persuadt'd to call It off. He was a graduate of Rush 1i1ledica l College. Dr. Gerard was a member of the NatiooaJ Academy of Sciences and wa s president of the American Physiological Society. He authored seven books and was active in national and -internationaJ 9C'ience affairs. Among.!¥5 scientific contributions v.·as Ille'. 411ooV1!1'}' that sdllzophrenia may be' caused by faulty body chemistry rather than family or social environment. Dr. Gerard was active in the Community, serving as an Orange Cotmty Grand Juror, as a member of the board of Cllildren's Hospital Orange County, as a director of the UCI FoundaUon, as a member of the Friends or UCI and twice aS president of the Friends of the UCf Library. Surviving are his widow, ?\1rs. Leona "Frosty" Gerard of the family borne, I 107 Goldenrod Ave., Corona del Mar: and a son, James Wilson Gerard of New York: a stepson, Stephen Graham of Big Rapids, Mich.; a stepdaughter, Jane Novick of Eugene, Ore.; four grandchildren, and three sisters. Arrangements are pending at Pacific View 1\-femorial Park, Corona de! Mar. Banglades h Viewed LAHORE, Pakistan (PI ) -The semi- olficial Pakistani newspaper 11-iusa,vat said today Pakistan will recognize the state of Bangladesh within 48 hours, perrnltting ' both nations to attend an Islamic Summit Conference whiCh starts here on Friday. Bangladesh was the former east wing of Pakistan and was lost in Pakistan's 1971 war with India. Mondiy, Febru~ty !~ l ·,, .. SUCCUMBS AT 73 UCl's Ralph Gerard Mari1i e's Wife Flu1ik s Cour se; H usba1id Sliot • • H -·-· •• l.01 :J Says Atom Power Plant ~orunaging' By CAS DACE PEARSON 01 tflt o.llY ,11•1 Sl•ll • • Any state coastal commissioner v1ho votes for the proposed compromise on the San Onofre nuclear power plant shou ld re sign, a leading cnvlronme ntalist said today. The report by planners of the stalt Coastal Zone COnservation Commission reco n11nending approval of the plant is "clearly inadequate" and '' tot a 11 y inconsistent witti the coaStal zone act ," .Janet Adams. director or the California Coas tal Alliance, said today in Los A1igeles. Construction of two 1,140 megawatt rcaeclors lhree m i I e s south of San Clemente will c au se "irreversible, irretri evable damage" to the coast , she added. ll1rs. Adams spoke at a 10 a.m. press conference at Sierra Club headquarters with Larry l\.1oss of the Sierra Club and John Mohr , professor of marine A Camp Pendleton l\.larine giving his biology from USC. wife fjrearm s instruction over the M_oss pid the Sierra Club is backing weekend was shot in the knee when approval of the $1.3 billion project if his mate fired the weapon while the the units are moved across the highway safety v.•as off. off the coastal bluffs and if a better Police said William Daly Rines, 22, way o·f assuring that the plant's coolin1g ' suffered a single v.·olUld below his f%s!~~t:fn't hann offshore marine Ii e Juleec:&p ~tuJd.ay "nj.ght as. he was . .._ M · lh Cl ,_ 'tr , · th .... ·--~ showing his wife how to use a .22-caliber· . ov1ng e nu ear uru across. e rifle for protection \Vhile he was away highway m~Y. not take Congress1on~ from home. · · · approval as or1glnally thought, Moss srud Officers said the resident of tl l toda y. . . . • Alameda Lane , Apartment 6, handed Southern Cahforn1a ~s~n·S' lease of the \Veapon to his .,..·ife, but forgot to Camp Pendleton lands 1s signed by ~ aclivate the sa fety. Secretary .or. the ~avy, who, Moss sa!d, Officers said Hines asked his wife could admtntstratively grant another si te to cock the weapon . She ctid so and within weeks: . , then pulled the trigger. The comm1ss1on s planners, who Dec. After emergency treatment at San 5 recommended the plant be moved Clemente General Hospital I-lines was east of the highway, RO\V suggest transferred . to the Na\'al lfospital at approval of the original site if .21 miles Camp Pendletdn for further treatment. of sandstone bluffs are pres_erved for Police said the incident \vas clearly JO years and the power companies initiate an accident. a study of t h e effects of the plant on marine organisms. 2 Shot in Robbery OAKLAND (UPl l -An Arab 1narket owner was shot and killed and his wire woWlded Sunday night during a robbery altempt. Police said Jamal El Abushi, 28. was killed at Johnny's Market on East 14th Street at 54th Avenue. His wife . Anna, was critically ~rOWlded in the head also by a .32 caliber pistol bullet. Hitler Albu1n Bri1igs $2,800 LOS ANGELES (UP() -An unidentified Briton paid $2,800 during a weekend auction for a photo album bulging \\'ith 390 personal pictures of G e r m a n dictator Adolf Hitler. The album, One of only three in existence. was bou.l!ht by a London nlan \vho paid another $1 ,000 for several doien other unmounted photos or the Gt>rman fuehrer believed to have been taken by his personal photographer. Officials at the Sotheby·Parke Bernet Auction House said the winning bid was teletyped from London SWlday. Also, planners reconpnend t b a t underwater discharge n<>t be allowed within 1,00 feet of shore to protect kelp beds and that a public accessway across the state beac!i be open durlnc construction. The state commission will reconsider its Dec. 5 denial of the project at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the Santa Barbara County Building, 12..1 E. Aru!.pamu ·si, The project needs eight votes for approval. At least four of the 12 commissioners have said they will vote no or have reservations about the current staff recommendations. Loss of Breast Brings $25,000 HAIFA. Israel (UPI) -A district court judge has awarded a 36-year-old woman $25,000 In damages for 1loss of a breast rem<>ved by &"OVemmcnt doctors because ol a mistaken diagnosis of cancer. Judge Avraham Bechor issued the decree Sunday following a two-week trial in \\1tlc.h a number of doctors testified that the 1970 . cancer finding had been premature. They also criticized pathologists who waited 15 months to tell the unidentified woman the amputated breast had not been malignant. ) Ar>'.he•'!d .:" • firll'I found•tio" 01 '.l··,:1·11 -1 ~.,, t!F"''-'~~c,E "l"'Jn. e ttilored drt11 with • Rtd BtU~on potk•t. rn~.J" "' .1.1 •e ·1 ,~ • •' war~ b1 €?'0~ c'- H 1~·· .. .to" l.17oc·,· (o·l.;J •'le dol19hier J ' Dr. t nd Mri. Jtv Fitldt, 0''1'~;1~ H:7b:x,. \r•ew :Xho.~. A. '"'le 1er:t'°'1 of s~· :i fi....,~t-t·~111 Kr.1:.. ell,,.,.,,'""-"'· Ort~ Sw'm·Ae.7 j, ,. ... ,,.:I, '"~""°"!St.AHO ---TOWN a COU/'O tAl' (nrlolt 1114) ~M HUN11HGtOf.I HAlllOUA 111•1M6o1tM -, -• ii' I • , 4 DAILY PILOT Monday , '"""<VY 18, 1974 .Jost ~ Coasting,~ J Maria Calla s Ca 1icels Slioir Copter Dives ai White House with Tom urphi n e j l\.fONOAY. BY GEORGE: All acrol'is our· nation today, Y.'e are observing the birthday of The Father of Our C.Owltry. George Washington. Ah. indeed, !he holiday takes all forn1s. Some will ctlebratc by not going to school. Others will honor Wastii.ng1on by sltting in their car, in a long line, and finally telling some gas station attendant, "I canoot tell a lie. I only have a quarter of a tank left. .. A few may bake a cherry pie. SeveraJ others may hoist a glass wi1h a cheJTY in it. Well, no matter how you do it, you are observing \Yashington's Birthday, not keeping it. AND THE REASON you are obser\•ing is that Goorge Washington. cherry tree ~r. truth teller. s urv eyor, gentleman Virginian, rebel. Constitution framer, coin tosser. commander and chief of the C.ontincntal ."irm ies. river forger, 'British "'hipper and f i r s t President of the United States, was not born on this day. That 's right. Not born today . Since I carmot tell a lie. the truth in the matter Is that George ·\Vashington was born on Feb. 22, 1732, in a place called'Westmoreland County, \'lrgirtia. He was not born Feb. 18, which is today. Therefore we are all celebrating his birthday on his non-birthday. This happen.s because some time back, some shakers-and-movers had a brilliant notion about 4bifting holidays about upon the calendar. NO MA 'M'ER WHAT tlti! holiday - Armistice . Day, Lincoln 's ·Birthday. Prune Pickers Day, Nat:onaJ Noodle Day -no matter. 11;.! idea was to jigger it around so you could make a three-day weekend out-of It. Never mind hlslorical significance or the facts about \\•hen something really happened. Shift that day around so it falls on a l\fonday and you end up with a three-day vacation . So to celebrate the birth or a man who was reputed to have nc\'er told a lie, we make liars out of ourselves by pretending he was born today instead of when he really v1as. KOl\' GET THIS. In order lo get this three-day holida y thi ng. \1·e e\·en Jied when we didn·t have to. If we'd just gone ahead and celebrated Washington's Birthday ""hen it relllly happened on Feb. 22. that \\·ouJd have been this Friday. \Ve could have called Friday a holiday and still ended up v;ith a lhree day celebration. We can't even tell the truth \\·hen it's easier. W~. the old excuse for pulling these three-day holidays together was so !hat families and folks could take to the highways. enjoy freedom. breathe real ::iir and rest and relax bun1pcr-to-bun1pcr somewhere. THAT WAS HO\\' it started. Of course. now you don't have any gasoline to go do all that celebrating \vith. So the old excuse for lying about when holidays are is a lie in itself now. You have lo \\·ondcr 11hat the ne11 excuse \1111 be . DAILY "LOT DELIVERY SERVICE '}·'.l·:::~·~'Y.l Mor>e1ay-Fu<11y 1t \'Oii ao "'ll n1-e v0«r n1~• 1>11 !JO I'>"' tall 1"'1 ro..• tO(ly •di 00 bo'O'-'IJhl IO rou t.1111 .,.. llkeol Mnlll /(IO 1)"1 5.11...,,.y ..., S.."31r !I Y!N oo ~ ,_,.. )'!)Ill (:OCOv by 8 I"' SMIJ'<ll~ Cll' I a'" S.J"'3l~ talT ,..., 1 c~py WI~ tie bo'ClU{IM IO \'Oii C.111 1'&11lo.., M~I~ 10 Im. ~1'1""''"9!Q'Se""n -We>!moM!e< S.... Cl-n'e C..11>•••1•~ ~~ s ... ......,, Yp.51~.,,, 01•1 "-'•.,, Sou!n llqll"IO ~·~J"I l'o•~"'I NEW YORK I AP ) -C.rnCllie Hall was already tilling with eJegantly dressed opera love.rs when the last-minute ~nnowlCement ~·as made : Marta cauaa bad a respiratory infection and could not . appear. The concert , "'hich sold out the 2.SCMHeat hall . "'ith tickets priced up to $100, "·as put off for l"'O weeks. The cancellation came just 40 mlnutts before curtain t i m e Sunday . It "'as to have been 1\.liss Callas' first New York stnging appearance since 1965. B.C. Avalancl1 e Kills One Skier, In j UI'es 6 Others \7 ALEl\.tOtif\'T. B.C. IUPI ! -A lllile· \\ide avalanche thunderC'd do"'" a rernote rocky mountain onto a group of ski('r S Sunday, killing a ).fontreJI man and ,inj uring six othC'r persons. Royal Canadian 1\.lounted Police said 40 holidaying skiC'rs. airlifted to the n1ountain by tlC'licopter. \rere {In the slope on 8.000-foot :\lica ;\Jounlain \~'hen the upper layer of sno\v fractured near the top or the 3,000 foot ski slope. The skiers were split into groups of 10, c·ach \\·ith a guide and all equipped \\·ith radio locators. police said. "Luckily n1osl or the skiers happened to be at the outer edges of !he avalanche.'' said an officer "'ho esti- mated the slide was a mile in "'idtl1. Ho"'Cver. he added. one group was in the middle of the slope directly in the pa!h or the slide. Cn>offrey B. Taylor of 1\.tontreal. a 1nen1ber of that group. was buried under se\leral feet.of snow. Fellow.skiers using . the radio loca1ors k!und his body about 2() minutes later. · • LA A1·ea Yontl1 Dies in Shootout CUDAJ·IY ~UPI ) -.-'\ young man armed \vith a rifle after a family dispute shot it out with sheriff's deputies in and out or his house and \11as finally kil!e<I '\\'hen he refused to put doY.11 his weapon. Authorities said Sunday that Charles Johnson. 20. fired a burst 11·hen deputies arri\'ed and fired a second burst lhrough a 11·indO\\' after running inside his house . The o£ficers returned J o h n s o n · s continuing gunfire. and. as the young man bounded outside firing a last burst, he was shot and killed. ·wASHINCTON IAPI -The recteral governmeDI today dropped criminal charge!! 1gaJns1 111 Army private "'M new a belJcopter oato ~ WkUe KoUM ground" etirly Stmday 1Dd tumtd hhn 01·er lo the Army for ••fu rt her proceedings "A'lth the mlUlary ." \VASHINGTON (UPI) -A soldier "'ho flunked out of flying school Is being held for mental study after he stole a helicopter and new it straight at the White House , crash-landing in a hail of Secret -Service buckshot early Sunday morning. President Nixon and all or hi s family were out or \\lashington for the 'A>eekend. nae soldier. identlfied as Pfc. Robert K. Preston. 20, of Panama City, Fla., got a compli1nen.t from Dan L. Sewell. a combat • derorated l\taryland State Policeman "'ho followed his IY.'O-hour aerial joyride and watched helplessly ·as the Huey helicopter roared in just above the 12-foot-high steel fence and came 10 rest JOO )1ards from the President's home, "He 's a helluva pilot," said Se-,1•ell. "I'd say he had quite an accomplishment." PRESTON "'AS 1o be arrailmed loclay on charges or "unlawful entry" into forbidden \\ihite House air space. •le Solzlie1iitsyn' s Last USSR Essay Strikes at Lies ~rotest Closn1gs in East W 01·sen Gasless Holiday By United Press lnte-rr.a tional A random survey conducted early today by the Automobile Club of New 'fork shov1ed that most of the city's gas stations had closed for the holiday and that lines \\'ere long despite the absence of a rush hour. Pete Hahn. AAA spokesman . said that 85 percent of the stations checked "·ere closed \l'ith lines ranging from three blocks to a mile long al those that v•ere open. License plates Sho\1·ed a mixture of odd and even nu1nbers, fl ahn added. In \1irginia's tide\vater are a. organizers of a shutdov.n said the protest action 1\•as 50 to 80 percent effective. THE PROSPECT of \11idespread station shutdo"11s, called lo protest government . regulations of fuel . prices and customer services. 1nci de the long \Vashi ngton's birthda,\I holiday one of the \\'Orst \1•eekends for motorists in need of gasoline since President r-;'ixon asked dealers lo limit sales on Saturday and Sundays. Gasoline dealers in \Vashington and Oregon called off their threatened purnpout SWlday after regional energy officials agreed to negotiate a 'controversial eight-Point proposal 'vith federal officials in \Vashington, D.C. Dealers had said if no agreement \\'ere reached by midnight Sunday. they 111X1ld sell out all gasoline on hand. Ho\\'e1'er, after 12 hours of nego tiations · 1rit h regional energy officials. spokesmen for bolh sides announced tentative agreement on a plan which \\'Ould have to be approve\:i on the national level. THE GOVE RNJ\1ENT'S pennv.a-~alJon gasoline price increase, which affects more than half the dealers In the country, \\'as received poorly by most service station organizations. Thom&! Anderson, executive director of the Pennsylvania Service Statioo Dealers Assn. said the 5,300. member group felt the markup was not enough. Plans for a statewide shutdown next weekend "'ill continue, he said. Anderson said his organiuHion "knoW! of 300 dea lers in Pennsylvania who have gone by the \\'ayside since October '' because of profit losses, and there "are probably another 400 to SOO v.·e don't know about.'' Winter Felt • Ill Rockies Temperatures Abriormally High"-Else ·wliere in, ·u.S. C•lllornla ..... -"'"' .... ......... ----'''" --... • ' H .. 11000,1 WIAIMlt •1-"ICI IOtt{A'I It 1A~ IJI l'-It-11 l 0 10'11111fJll'f'Al11UI " " IS " ' " .. j{ r. .. ~ .,, )1 : 1: :r ~ " " ·fl 40 :: ll ~ .. 7S il " " !\ ~ .. " ~ .. r. : ,. " ,, .. " " .. " " " M M .. " ll H "' ·" ·" . n ·" Is under psychiatric observation at -a park fl~ the street from the Walter Recd Anny l\ledicat •tospltal, \Vlrite House. "lte then turned on all where, according to one &0ldier present, his lights and hovered five minutes at he was brought ln "laurhin'I like hell.'' the Washington Monument grounds seven According to Anny o1fictals, Preston feet off tbe ground " said St>!< lrpoper stoic -on unanneil Uffll helkOpter William Clark, · similar to ones used In Vietnam from Sewell said the chopper than •rted Ft. ~feade, A.fd., where h6 worked as moving toward the Wltlte Houte. ''From a helicopter repalnnan after being my indications, hi,, · lotentlon w11 to· unable to complete the flnal section fly the aircraft directly lnto the White of the flying course at Ft. Wolters, House/' he said. Tel. · The <hoppu wu brought up short He headed for Washington at 12 :30 but both Sewell and secret service a.m. EDT SUnday at .speeds ronglng ~esman Jack Warner ,.Id the crall - between 80 and 120 miles an hour, 'appeared to land Oft itS· own. n Sewell bUzzing traffic along the highways and landed betwe<n tho plane and tho Whlte at one point cUpplng the radio aerial House "as an extra precaution" and off a police car. saw bullet holes the she of hall-dollars Two Maryland state troopers In that were punched by the shotr,m pellets. helicopters followed as the ehopper, at "FROM WHAT I've heard, ' aid ..,. heights ~anging !rom hundreds of feetr soldier shooting pool al the . llBlsl lo car-top levels, rigugged along the Transportation Company's recreaUon Baltimore-Washington Parkway. He room, "he was UJ>.'et about Ounking ditched one of the police helicopters out or flight school Md was going to in what Se"·ell called "an old dog-right the White House to see the President." tactic" and buzzed into Washington ~1aj. John Northridge, his oomman(Jinc 1 \Vilhout ruooing lights and below radar 0£f1cer, said "any J"(!ason we would give scarmer levels. would be an wifounded guess." . "He has above average intelllgence and gave no indication of a lTit.nllll problem," officials said. They said there "'as no indication of alcohol or drug abuse and Preston had no record of disciplinary a~lion. SEWELL SAID he "'as in "constant aggravation trying to keep an eye on him and lo know \\'here the hell he \1•as going." The chopper \\'Oltnd up at the Ellipse Nixon Lawye1· to Pursue . Leak of Tape Information . DAREDEVIL PILOT Pfc. Robert K. Preston Agneu; Trip Tcib Put at $250,000; Protection Ends ••• THANK GEORGE! 'II' All recond itioned - ready to sew "ft First come , first served - limit of one per customer <.. OTHER USED MACHINES S19.95 AND S29.95 * Assured supply of at least 2 machines in each Pfi~ category per store, per day -Monday , Tuesday, Wednesday REG.164.95 Carrying c.e or cabinet extra --- *6 bu il t-in stitches: 3 stretch plus blindstitch, faskion and ;.:ig-zag stitches •~ff.lhrea<ting take.up lever climin.ates eyelet threading Register now for your choice of six winter NWlnt cour111, lndudint Ctrtttm1klnt, leilorint end ltwlnt knits. Sptclall 2 knit Mwln; courses $23.95 with $3.95 textbook htcluded. R11Ul1rty S14.&0 NCh l .SINGER -I Sewing Centers and partlclpatlog Approved Dealers For store nearest you, see the yellow pages under SEWING MACHINES . Sinatr has a llbtral trade-In poll'Y· AIM>,• Crtdlt 'Ian Ii 1¥ii11bl1 at Sin11r S.wln1 Cen11n Md Many Approwd Dtakn. •A Tr1demarlc of TH€ SINGER COMPANY C09yrt1ht Cl 1974..JHE Sl~GER COMP A NV. Au Rllhtf R11trwd Throu1ho111 th• World. • ' ~ ., I ' . ' ' I f ~~ I J I J I I ' I < • "' " " • !"' . ,. ,, "' 'c '· ,- . ' 111 Costa Mesa Dealers Will Test · Mileage 'Exorcist' Puzzled By CARL tARSTENSEN ot ... 0•111 ,lltt-.. '" Because most cars are dHven by average people and not scientific or technical equipment, a small group. of Costa Mesa neW' car dealers 18 oettlng out Tuesday lo etiallenge the findings or the E n v i rorunental Protection Agency's published !llldings on Ute gas mlleage of 1974 auto&' The s e m 1 lefi)er-gallon ftgures for U.S. can·and most Imports, have boon (I) re- peal«Uy queotiooed, (2) prov- en to be in error in some cases, and (3) don't seem to be compatible with what aver- age driven seemed to be get- tirig from their cars, the deal- ers contend, ' CONSEQUENTLY, THE Costa ~1csa dealers a r e cha1lcnging the figures with a drive from Costa Mesa to San Di~ and return. ll's not deSigned to conserve fuel or cut any comers but just to adhere to standard speed limits !or !ree\fay and city driving. Coonell Olevrolet, Jolln.oon & Son Unooln·M er c ur y, Miracle Mazda and University Oldsmobile. will .t0mmit two cars to the le.$t and the results ' will be available and com- pared with El\/\ figures. , "It isn't ou1' lnteot to show that 1car x· aets better mile- age than ~ Y/' said John Connell, uoot ·to point ®l only that the El> 1'. figures set ror. each car are~.11 ~ ~ ENTERED ARE J Mazda rotary engine sedan and sta- tion wagoo, Chevrolet Caprice and Mono. Carlo, Continental apd fullsi2e Mercury, the Toronado and another full-size Oldsmobile. Now that .owners .and dealers alike are faced with the fuel dilemma, these figures as published, whether true or questionable, hav'e a forcflul impact on everyone, the dealers noted. "Most eve r Yone is CHALLENGES EPA John Connell will be participating with an observer in the car picked at random from the com- munity. · 'l1ie mileage figutes are to be published upon completion. OCC Gets Priest ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - The Rev. Wiiiiam O'Malley, S.J., who' appeared In and acted as an adviser to the film "'nle Exorcist.," says he finds public reaction to the movie "very oJd." (Related story, Page 16). "I don't understand and don't know what the answer ls, but the film seems to be !ulfilling some kind ol need," he said in an interview. T H E CONTROVERSIAL movie deals with the demonic possession of a young girl and opened to tum·away crowds in Buffalo last week, as It has in cities around the coun- try. "People are reportepiy pas!r ing out or becoming ill and yet no one became nr or fainted when the media gave reports on the war in Vietn am, where thousands of men were· killed, or Biafra. Bangladesh, or mass killings on our streets like what recently happened on the West Coast," FathCr O'Malley added. "I think we have developed a tolerance for evil." PT A Grant MANY PEOPLE who have .-seen the film, and even some ' DAILY PILOT They Have Seerei ' Couples Marry and No One Knows SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Of. flcials here hate to talk about It, but the figures plainly show the aecret's out abOut what may be the biggest bargain around In these lnfiatiQn· weary times. In San Diego they call it the "secret'' marriage. In other places, it's "tainted" marriage. Under the law, it has no real name. • BUT WHATEVER you call it, more and roore Califor-- nians ""' learning the magic words that guarantee a mar- riage with DO waiting, no witnesses, DO publicity and no tests. But before you rush in to sign up, here's why the .state a~ to keep your marriage a secret. You ha ve to swear to a minister that you have been living together as man and wile and want lo legalize tile situation. AND THAT'S just what these californlans are ·ooing -whether they're "living in sin" or not. · And that's just what annoys the state. In 1972 the Legislature adopted · the little-known statute, and for some very definite reasons. seems many older couples arrived in C.lilornla from other states only lo find the staO. didn't rerognlze their 1 on g-standlng common-law relationships. WITHOUT A VALID mar· riag'e, all kinds of legal ~ blems developed. So, presto, the secret mar· riage, a ceremony so &eeret that 'It takes a cour1 order Going the secret route ran sa..e most couples about $50 for tests. !qr the nelghbon lo find out you'd lived all those years without a license. But instead or older couples, licensing officials here say a growing ' flood or youth In search or a bargain marriage has developed. Going the secret route can save most couples about $50 for tests plus t h e in· conveniences of some of the law's other requirements. UNDER THE "secret" law, no health certificates are needed. That means no blood te>ls (about 16 each)' and no check of the blide IDr Jin- mwUty to German measiles (up lo !30). And M top ~f that, the license ree ~ Instead of the usual $6. Is San Diego CoWlly, secret marriages In the last hall of 1972 totaled 56. A year later, the secret was out and the total jumped to 623. Now, UPIT ....... about 125 a mooth ""' re<Ord-In Ae•puteo ed and the fi~ keep climb-Lady Bird Johnson is ign. vacationing at home of "We think in tel'lf!S of tbc fonner Mexican Presi· ol!spring or these marriages," dent Miguel Aleman said Wolford Weiner, chief of Valdes in Acapulco. the county's busin~ division,[;::==========. wtiich governs issuance or COJNELLEASE __ li::;;~E THERE'S no re-l:!j j l!\i I quirement that the couple be . tested for syphilis, and the Vo•r Fect.ry A1tflorbed ·bride for immWlity to rubella, C"9ffoa.t i:-•• holet some innocent children wi ll N .. •1• Yet• H11tcttMcl be brought into the world S&840 diseased. That's what bums ,.,. MONTM us up." County Public Health Direc- tor Dr. J. B. Askew puts it Plu• T•ll .. Lk . On Aw. Clidll 14 Mo. O.E.L.. CONNILL CHEVIOLIT 2121 HAllOI ILVD. COSTA MISA 546-1200 KIDS LIKE TO ·ASK ANDY even stronger. "I think this is bypassing!~=========' the' intent of the original law. perhaps this matter should gO back before the Legislature," he said. LIVE FROM THE STREETS OF dissatisfied that the govern- ment saw fit to publish the EPA figures In the manner they did," Comell '....s a I d . ''These figures were from tests taken specifically for the measurement of air pollution and certainly not indicative or gas mileage," Connell said. "You just don't drive a car the same way to test both air pollution and g a s mileage." The caJifornia State PTA wOO haven't, feel they are has awarded Orange Coast possessed by the devil and are coming to priests for help,lr===========:::::::"======================-====r College two scholarships he said. I~ PENALJO'S GLAMOUR SANDAL THE EIGHT CalJ will leave at 10 a.m. [rom Art's Shell service, comer of Harbor and Adams. Participants w i 11 lunch at the Lslandia Hotel and return. Miles per gallon totaling $300 r..-the 1974-75 ''That is haro ID understand. school year. 1be scholarships The film makes it amply clear will be given to second-year that you .have to v ls It OCC occupational education p s ychiatrists, psychologists students. and medical doctors before One, worth $150, will go to the church would e v e n an inhalation therapy or remotely consider touching the radiologic technology student. thing with an exorcism." .. 0. RA'lllG"C' '-will be mvidua11~·computec1· · ll II; and the dealer.s themselves The other will be awarded father O'Malley said he to -a Student ·''lilijOTmi,' in -~·f !hink eV<ryOiie shOUJd nursery school educa,tion. see the film. COUNTY He•r minute to minul.1 •ction •1 it h1ppt:n1 in.your city. R19rncy Monilor1dio/Sc1n- t11rs s11k the liY1 lr1n1mi11ion1 of your police •nd firemen •t worli, f•1 tin•ling li9ht1 A•sh •• tht r•dio stop1 to he•r •n •tlive ii9ntl, then continue1 the se•rch to b1in9 you the •c:tion ••• •ulom•tict lly. Pu1h bvtton con· trol let• you pinpoi nt tny com· bin•lion of ch1nntl1 you wtnt to he•r, Tune In to your fire dc- ptrtment, police, (i.,il Defense, bu1int1• •nd m~rine btnd1. There's • Regency model for Set them livt •nd in •<lion tod•y. ' .e~~~ •• , m•ker Of th• world's Finl lr•f'lsistor r•dio, BOLSA COMMUNICAllONS CENTER 1041Slolw-W........., 839-0610 Wwrlll .................. ~i.o...,.c..., __ .. ·- • --- Color portrait of your child, 1.49. Truly professional portraits. Select from several poses. ' r • Large 5 x 7" size photo ... 1 :49 each • Set of 4 wallet size ...... 1.49 set Two children photographed together . , • 2.98; F•ll color portraits in a 1i11 suit.bit for f,."'i•t .•• perfect for tiffs. All portraits •eliweml to yow at our store -by Trtasvry 111ociotes. PHOTOGRAPHY HOURS Tues .• Wed .. Tt\urs., Fri. and Sat., ~ Feb. 19, 20. 21, 22 & 23 10:00 am to 1 pm and 2 pm tC? 15:00 lhe Treasury BilEHAPARK ...... °' ...... ...,t:M .. f!M,......, ,,,_., ' ORANGE SANTA ANA c..,.,. ........... " .. ._ ntes..-...........,•c-o,.. l•t,... hilt~ It .. 6 °""' l•t,... .... .....,. I th 6 ' -·- .. ' .Qur.seDI01iQnpl.sJiR Qf o so[ldal, f)il \>are Soohisticotion. Soft a s SPl"i ng. With tne flirt of an.ankle strap. The Love Knot. AssOl'ted sOring colOl's in teat her o r, ootent. 24'.00 Sorry. no moil or phone orders_ · Women's Shoes, 3!> ·THE BROADWAY ANAHEl~A t\l~WP()Rf 4+I N. b,:l,d 1714) 53~81 21 47 Fr.nhi"" :~a~71 4) 6'14-1212 HUNTlNGTON BEACH 7777 Edinqer A'-1!1'\ie I 1 141 sqz. 33 31 CERRITOS ORANGE ,.,\ALL oi: 011 4.NGF ·2300N. l\l\t;" 5,. ..... !71 ~\ QQ~ 1111 SOO los Cerntos Moll !21Jl860-0411 SHOP I;'\// '?q 10 PM Mli' J'~~v • · · .. , ... •V ~\fl l~,'.)A'r' !O A.M. 10 6 P.M. Sll\l[).\Y 12 NOON to SP .M. --- '· FROM Fash ion Island Newpo rt Beach STEREO SOUNDS -OF THE HARBOR .. ' I l ' 8 DAIL V _P_IL_D_T ______ __:M;;.:on;;.:dc;'Y:_c•.:.F.::obc.:ru=''1:!...::l.::B,;;.:l:.:'97~4 D•lfv PIJot St•lf ,tloto Singing for Seals Blake Jordan , 3, of Tustin, the 1974 Easter Seal child for Orange County, is sur- rounded by the Le nnon Sisters -frotn left, Peggy, Janet, Diane and Kathy - who join him in heading the current campaign in the county from March l through April 14. Death Notices Death Notices CORltELL 8•11 Broadw•r cnel)i!L loterment, H.trbor Ont!te Cor....tl. 17 Ter<.tce, Newl)Ofl RM! Ml'mor a\ Par~. Ben 8roe4way lle•ch; d•I• of deatn, Ftbrv••Y IS, Morh1ary. Olrt<tors. . 1974. 51.lrvived b'I' d•uollter, Loul,. Dunn, KOSTAL Wl'll"I"; u.n. Not1nan MV<rlY, Minloo Mll1s A. 1{05ral. T.J..19 Colgate Of., Co~1a Vlt lo; six grandchlldreni tl•vtn 111e.tt· Me11. 0111 ol death, Feon1arv 16. gr1ndcl!lldren. Services pef'ldln11 a! BtlL 1074. S..-vlces pending al Bel! Broadway lnMdlNIY Mort11ary. , Morfllary. FLANAGAN K-EUT?KAMP Walter J. Fla"'9gan. AG* 11; resldel'lt Witllam Kr"-'ukamp Jr. 2961 Clilf Dr., · Of CO'!tl Mesa. O.te of dNlll, Feor111ry N1wport e.ach. Date of aee!h, F1or11ary 17, 197•. Survived by wltt, Cecelia, 16, 1971. Survlv9d by wlte, Hell!!! F,; Pl1oto Contest Scl1eduled ORANGE - A photography contest for junior and sertior high schoo.1 students sponsored by the Orange County Public . of 1111 l'lomt'; three IOMS, Dr. P•111 '°"'!• 8ru« 1!>d Cliff Kreurzkamp. Flanti;iiln, CO$fl ~sa; Wal!e-r J. Hewl)Ort B .. ch; 11a1111h1er, Mri.. Robert Fl1111111<1111 Jr., Mellon, Massacuutts; {Beverly) l(ongle, H11ntlngton Beach; Frlf'lk Flanai;ian, Mar b I 1h1 1 d, molMr, Mrs. Mary B. Krwlztamp, Mass1chusells: tltot~, Freder ic k Azuw; twp brotl'ler5. c11arles, ot Chula fl1Ng1n, Florida; rwetve gren.dchlldren, Vista ; Max, ol Azusa; three sls1ers. Mowry, tonlghr, Mond1y, ~ PM, Smiths Mr.. Laura Belden, MOl\ro~la: Ml~s ClllPfl. Requeim Ma5$. T1.19iQey, 1~ AM, L~nnl Kr""tzkemp,,, Azus11 M.r• •. Joh,n Llbr.ary'S Yoon<r · Adu f:t !l;""JOhll • 1111' Beptlst C1lt>ollc Cf'll,lt'Ch, It ... Off, .Ntwport Beachi 1unt. Mri. • ~ ' , -Law ·Speed Cited County Traffic Deaths Decrease By WIWAlll SCHREIBER Of lfll D1lty f'lltl SI.ti SANTA ANA -Orange County's vehicle death and · ac- cjdent rates have taken a noticeable dip sO far this year and some law enforcement of4 VC Irvine Bulletiu.s Available flcials are giving the new 55- mile-an-hour speed Um.it much of t!Je credit. During'.the wne early-year period in 1973, there were 25 traffic deaths on county free- ways and streets. So far this year, there have been 20 -a drop of 20 percent. If the same trend bolds up for the rest ol the year, there will be 50 more people walking around alive than a Year ago when 243 died in Orange Coun- ty. Deputy County Co r o n e r James Bjsener said there is no doubt in his mind the new speed limit is the biggest fac- Summer session bulletins tor in the reduction. and applications for summer Bisener said his office school 1974 are currently doesn't keep running totals or available at UC Irvine. injury accidents in the county, New course offerings in ~ut he sai~ he Js sure the several areas will be n~mber \\'lll be1 down con· available, including art , .::. si~rably at years end. . writing, marine e«>logy and Hi&hway Patrol offic1a.ls, government and politics. who ha~e Mted recent Jn· creases 1n speed "cbeat~rs", TWO SIX·WEEK segsions still share Bisener's optimism are scheduled. One hundred over the new limits. courses will be offered in · the But CHP Officer Donald firii. session, June 17 through Anderson said another big July 24:·~stxty courses are contributor to the lower death offered in the second session, and accident rates is the J uly 25 through Augusf 30. gasoline shortage. Dean Richard Baisden also Anderson also gives credit announced a change in the to recent crackdowns by the fee schedule. This year fees CliP on drunken drivers. will be based on the number Anderson said there has of units taken, rather than been a decline of nearly 25 a flat charge. A' $10 fee will percent statewide in highway be r'CQUired-to a pp 1 y. deaths since the new la"' 'vent Registration, upon acceptance, into effect. is $20 a unit for the first Through the end of last ·eight and $i7.50 for each unit '\'eek, 306 people had died on over eight. the road compared to 405 dur- By enrolling in b 0 th ing the same period a year sessions, a stud.e.nt. ·may take ago. ,,. . . • 'l'llE BJUU.'S , ..... ~~· T::. ...... •t,.., .. , L •• .-s .... ~ All Otllen 495.f401 642-1'1$) If this aouods imixm!Wt ••• can lod•Y for the eye.ope11lq story of HOii M1mortal Hospital'$ "Four flexlble PllM fol'GIYiftl". You wtl'I be in flit" a p1811Ul aurprisel Tal .... 111: (71•) 645rl600 ~Ill& A>klor_S_ HOAG MEMORIAL . HOSPITAL N1wport B1•c:h, CA 92660 l.OIB N~'fi'port Bou11 ~ard '°''' M1s11. lnterm1t1t, Pac1n, View Hugo !lchutte. C1rllb1d. G r a v es Id e Services Department g e t s MM'lorl•I ~rk. SmllM· Mor I u a r y, services, Tullday, 2 PM, ·P11cinc 1111 ... -d F b -.. · Dlr..etori. Memorfll Park. Patine View Mor1u11ry, Wl er Way e . ....,. GERVAIS Directors. O!lwr H. Gerv1l1. Aoe S~. of, 9,73 · LAUDADIO Le Lun• Avt., F01.1nlaln V•ll•'f· ·0 1111 Anhtonr Laudlldio. Age ,5, of 1782t ol creath, F1brv1ry JS, lt7t, Survived Lt Lime, F01.1nt1r" Valley, Oa11 ol by wile, Yvene; tllree sons, Henry, llealh, February lS, 197,, Svrvlved by Edward arnl Carl Glrvels; dl119hter, wlle, Miry; thrt-e d1u11h!ers, Mrs, Jean Claire De COl.IXI six grancrchlldrtn. Wa!klns; June and Joyce L•udadlo; two lto.\arv, TUHd1y, 7:30 PM, Peek F1mily sons, Jim and John; mo!her, Aoma!da Colonl1I Fun.er1I H°""*, ltequlem Mass, L•udadlo; brOllMr. Rotiert, of Chic1190; Wtdne.de'f, 10 AH .. Holy Spirit Mission, 1brer, Kar Otl'f, Orange, Services, loday, F01.11tlaln valley. Peek Famlly Colonial Monday. 1PM, Calvary Chapel, wi!l'I TEENAGERS are asked. to shoQt -on black and 'vhite film only -an interior scene or what they feel portrays the atomosphere of their local public library. the equivalent Of .crfitll quarter "I guess you COtLhfsay there of academiai ... Y•ork_ A noriu.al ·are at least 99 persons alive unit load [or each session is:.~1od~a~y~th~a~t~o:th~e~rw~is~e-~m~i~g~ht~·n:•:t~~~~~~~~~~~! two four-unit courses. I have been~_An_d_e_)'$on said. · PaKI l't>1ho;<ol 4(1vltl•-nl Funtr•I Home, O!reclon. Aev: Charles Smith ofl!clettng. S.!I HOLLIE l!lroadw1y MOr!uary, Olrecrors. Paul A. Hollie, Ag<! 73. of UJ ?Isl MANTHEY !I., Cosra Mesa. Date of oeatn, Fltbruary M•~J Gulldnet" Manthey. 20~1 G~l\a11k 14, 191t. survived by wife, Lu.:flle ; Lane, Hun!lnoron Beach: Dale ol cr11!h, dlvgh!er. Paula Johnson, Ml$$10fl Vleio; Febru1ry lS, 191~ Survoved by husband, -broJl>er; !wo slilors; I w 0 Frod S. Manl~y, i;ir•nddeughler, J1ann"' 1relldcl>ildren. s"'rvlces, Tuesday, 10 J.M Anne Hilyd&n; d~ugnrer.Jn-law, Vivian -==========='! M1n!lley; one broll'ler llnd thrt!! slsltrl. ,. Service~. ~'lldlltsday, February 20, 11 AM, ChllPl!I ol the Chimes, Inglewood P•rk Cemerrrv. Bal1l·Bergeron Funltfal Home, COiia Mes11. Olrtcrors. Summer s e s s i o n bulle- ti~ V.'ith applications are available from the Summer Sessions Office, ·room 4680, Computer Science Building, UC Irvine. Creativity will be rewarded April 5 \l:hen grand. regional, ;===========.I and local prize winners arc THE announced. The grand prize NEPTUNE SOCIETY winner will receive a $50 gift c.emp1111 crem.tlon SetVieti if. ·With dinemillillillM II SH cert' 1cate from J. C. Penney Th• 019n1nH SimPI• AlltmilHYe at The City Shopping Center Te Thi c1st1y lnYatvH Mortu•ry P11ner•I C111tt!j'ry svsttm ARIUCKiE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUAltT 427 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 646-.4888 MILLEll! Everett J. Miiier. Abt '9; r•Jldent OF Hun!lngton Beach. Dale af doa11h, ftbruary 17, 1974. Survlvtd by lwO 1'augh!fr~, Mr~. Arline San.oars, Stanton; Mary LOI.I Hronesh, l ndep 1 nd1ncoa, Calllornl1; Mlfl, Jamts H. Miiier, Hunll!IJ;l'fon &tach; brotntr, \.twis Mlller, E1Col1dldo: 1ix i;irallllCl'llldren. Mr. Miller was • mtmbtr ol Huntlng10f1 Be1ch 'Elks Lodge . 19~'· Gr1v1s!Qa ;ervlcn, Tutsd1y, 2 PM, Good Shtoherd C1mtt1ry. Smiths Mort1111ry, Olre<tors. in Orange. Two · regional 24 Hour S.rvke 714-646·7431 '~=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~;;;~;;,~~~~~~·~··~·~·~~~ ..... ~~HM~•~~·~"~<"W!!!"'~Q~o<~.Co!!!!!''!S!'~"~~~~~1 winners will be awarded sis1_ gi ft certificates from f\1ain Photo Service of Santa Ana and Bill Thomas Cameras of Laguna Beach. Each branch winner will receive a .$10 cash award. -·-IALTZ·llltGRON FUNERAL HOMl Corono del Mor Cosro Meso ·-·- 673.9450 6-46·2424 IELLllOMIWAT MORTUAIT 11 0 Broodwoy, C:Os10Meso 548-3433 . -·-DILDAT BROTHERS MOITUAltT 179 I I Becxh Blvd. HunTington Beoi:h 842.7771 244 Redondo Ave. long Bea<;.~ (213) 438·1 145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUAltT 1795 Laguna Col\yon Rd. 494.94 )5 -·-McCORMICK MISSION MORTUAltT 28832 Camino Capisirano Son Juan Ccpistrano 495-1776 -·-PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemelery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pocd1c View Drive Nev.-port Beoch. Cclllornio 644.2700 -·-PEEK FAMILT COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 BofsO Ave. Westminster 593.3525 -·-SMITHS' MORTUAltT 627 Moon SI. HunlmgTon Beoc; 'i 536-6539 ~·:=. • ~""""v'e".(l'thS •. -~.··. . DEADLINE FOR entries is . March 29. The student's naine, address, telephone number, I ~1 and school sboµld' be printed · Else 1 ere ~ on the back .. or each photo. ·u~ l '· Enlries (limif , is five per _.J student) should be taken to NEW YORK (AP ) -}lelen Byrne Uppmann, 76. \\'ife of retired political \\-Titer \Valter Lippmann, died Saturday. A Red Cross worker in France during \Vorld \Var I, ~1rs. LlppmaM was n ational director of the ·voluntary Nurse Aide Corps during \Vorld War II. SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) -John Garand, 86, inventor of the r..I I rifle. dil'd Saturday. Garand, who never received paymeflt for the Ml because he gave the righlS. to the government rather than selling them to private business, invented the rifle in 1938. DALLAS (UPf\ -Charles Ross Bick, 53, woo \\TOte the television commercials lhat urgeCI Americans to ''See lhe U.S.A. Jn your Chevrolet.'' killed himself s o m e t i m e during the weekend. Bick was an assistant professor of advertising at So uth ern 11ethodist University. the nearest local branch of Orange C.Ounty P u b I i c Library, or mailed to: carol Ann \Vitten , Young Adult Services Coordinator. Orange County Public Library, 431 City Drive South, Orange 92668. Students are advised to keep their negatives. Photographs that are entered in the contest 'viii be on display in local branches during N a t i o n a I Library Week April 21-27. Museun1 Will Oose SANTA ANA ·-Officials lit the Bowers Museum here have announced that the museun1 will be cl&sed througb ~~rch 5 to al\o\v for the con1pletion or a new wing. The $350,000 project wi ll add 12,000 square r e e t of classroom, exhibit and storage space to tire museum, which has not been enlarged since it opened in 1936, officials said. WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME -CHICI THUl SUrl• SALE SPICIAL~ S¥tf. ••t. , Ow •11. l'rk• 1 1Alt'l$-~INO WETI!NG Sol11tior\, 1oi , •..••. , . , , .• 1.99 1.69 ALrHA·ICERI B•th Oil, to:r .•. ''' .. '.' .,, ' •.••..... 1.2s 2.99 REVLON MILK PLUS 6" Sh1mpo o1, l2ol •• ,, ••••.••• l.25 2.99 NEET LOTI ON Depila fory1 "01 •••••••••••••••••••• 1.09 t9c , ... ,. 1.29 2.29 2.39 69c 2700 E. Coast Hi2hwav. at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar •• AMN i AlllHG IH klAl ..._. -f:JO • 6:00 hllr __ ... " .-l < 644-7575 t CHURCH OR FUNERAL ESTABLISHMENT? Funeral services may be held in any church or one of our mortuary chapels. If a church service is desired, we are familiar with procedures a11~­ rituals of many denominations, and are fully equipped and prepared to serve in any church designaced. ..,,:....._.., ·· ... -"' :;...; .. ~=.· . ..,..,.... ··---.;;;,;_; ' . ..,. .... ,.,.. llrstmtustrr :!lrmnrtnl Jnrk . Mortuary .-.:_c_e_metery "Everything in One Beauciful Place" cemetery • Mausoleum • Funeral Home Chapels • Columbarium • crematory Veterans Lawn • Flow.er Shop 14801 BEACH BLVD. WESTMINSTER (213) 431-6577 (7U) 893-2421 (714) 531-1725 ' ,. . ~ -·' TONIGHT'S TV JilGIDiIGHTS NBC O 9:00 -"If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium ." The trials and trtbulatlons ·or a quickie tour through Europe are detailed in this hilarioll! 1969 movie with Suzanne Pleschette, Jan McShane and Mildred Natwick. ABC D 9:00 -"The' Ten Commandments." Charlton Heston parts the Red Sea In the conclud· nir episode of Cecil B .DeMille's 1957 biblical-epic with :Yul Brynner, Anne Baxter and Edward G. Robinson. . CBS II \1:30 -"Adam's Rib." The original 1949 movie which inspired this season's short-lived TV series. Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn and Judy Holliday play the principal roles. TV DAl·LY LOG Monday ' Evening ffttWhffllft1 lrlsfl ,..t whe tlrlftlll end llrrwll 111$ _..,__.roa, tfll Amlfbll ltetur• clrcutl AnttionJ HopkJM, lllllt wttlte1n tM SuM11 g Cl1B atar. 1 l:IO ·-i.-ll!JMO-•--m .... : (M •tt'aAlrutf .... Ii'"(' (mUJ) '41-0orlt o.,. · 11 PAT aOoNE l HARVEY * KORMAN VISIT MERYi GI""'""''' -""'""-ll!J- '"" 11 <9 rn1 m """' "" L"" tlt141s • •If tO\.I the hi1ll price of alukt: &•l lbtlll frMI M111 JIM0S l'ttW boliriefld wl'lt twllt I ..... ......_ D@CllmltlC--: (?) (llllff .. ff lt't T""''· 'llil Mdt It ltl&I•" (com) ·g - Suz1nn1 PltsMttl. Ill\ McSliltflt, Mildrtd Nltwkk. An Amerlun alrl vi1itl111· c-. flllt tor lier tttrK· tiYe to11r 1111641. (J) "' "" --at!Z(IJ'mllC --tQ (ZIW) ..,._ T• c:...- lltllb'" Conct (rtl) '57-Qieriton Hlstoft, Y11I ltyn1*', AlwM' llmf, Edwtrd G, Roblllllft. Cedl I .. 0. Mlllt's tPlc llhn apedldt of Ult story of Moen llM ttlt aod• 1'111 (apt. ~ -= (CJ (111<) .... -Ckrti.'" (4r•) '70 -P1ltJ DuM. Al frwmtn Jr. • I _ .. _ _ ...... .... •ta ())>CIJ Diel 111 •r•• .... Dick 11111t1 tils roll M tfle "JthN dtlmt ltri1I to woR fot' I fut·te1kl111 JIOduc:er who ,,_i. D~ Ills OWll ttrlu. Ptt Hemn,tol .. -l =•MM"" Lt ......... ·-' ltlO B (QI (l}l(J) M•llul Co tu Or ... """°"" PGlillt ......... tic, 11111s ldnllttlllOI tt 1 111111t11 llolM • try t• "°" tllel till lltl• 1.~ z"' ,.. -..,. llpl'lt ,.11ttrt ure itler• allied the ~ I II .. th of Ill °" fri1t14 If hi&. .Jt. Ho11•'• Htroes · Polict 5-fl* Mlchatl AtlSlft Miii Pitt~ ,C'!b. 1ueits as • construction 1111ir\Mf 1··~ .._ wtlose relu.s1I to ,.1ur11 to • smu1· ~ _... CtDlcltl I mob le1ds to "botlft. .._ HtJ, Tlly lkl1tibcw .... TtttslN'I Hu11t , ......... '""" . :: La~" .. (~~) !:L:.:! 11'.»1== Dir, Rtt Harrison, .1611n Gtvht ... ~ WIY Kl.... n.tn .. ._... lnltc'-4 TYMllkal ~ Tt T .U die TnrUI f!'fllll lie Ln 06 If. lhw ""' • ~IM ( £,'.':.:.~:... 11.011••1!E:: • Jl•MJEltUShn ~~ Ht""""4 .,_.. ""' ..... TM ltrloul Silfll llllfk: (C) ·.-.. II ,..- i ) '52-£ml ""''· S.fl(Qj(fj)Ci)l11111fl!lt•• Th ·w-· n. l•fnillt smtll ranchers bind topthtr, thr•at· -....: .,,.._ Ill ..... (dt1) 1nin1 1 r1n11 wtr so Ibey "" --«lcl!tM ContL press th1ir ri1hts wltJt tf'Te llrp 1(1) lllill-i:.r .....i..... nnehtrs. Th~1 Hnd for I profh-1ifrt1 r- sion1I iunm111 who comts to Dodp. ([J) n. ,...,. brln1in1 his wilt •ftd d111lf'lt«. 8 BILL BIXBY IS 11"°!!tJ!'.iJ.it.~4~U::,~ * tHE MAGICIAN "'""" _, ,,..,, Ju'1 ltoll- D9CllIll 11!1h M•ll<I" la"@rnlllllll-C-Whtn a youn1 Qilnw l1d dlslP· Waynt Ktwton Is tuut Jtoft. ,.,,. 111 qutst of • · ltdt 111111e a...,..: "'I......, (dt1) '15- stolen from Ills 1r1ndf1tPHlr, hi• 11&-Ja,.ntM cut. tit •lb "nthOl'IJ Bt1k1 to htlp. a l'ffl (J) m ww. .... " ..,. : I II-: (Cl (?"l "'1..t ""..,,..,,., A !crttm lio•f' G•o tljllt" (dr1) '61-Chtd Evtrttt. ColU111 ind H•yley Miiis slit, C.111 H1ctrm111, Cl111dt »Jn1. ,.-.., O liJJ(IJ l!)T>t ·-A IM· "'-W""""...... ;. mar cop wllo left tPHI lortt Mt11U1 M•: "'Cla .. le & htl' (rem) • ' ht w1s Un1bl1 to petform Ills duties , ' -Dontlly McOu~ Roffrt •Mer stma, It st! up r., hoodl11ms Youns. to I•~ the b111111 lot 1 murd11. II a., It M&M I-·-l•DllllDT-:' ~ -1:4511-(C) "1't I 9to'I Ct!o . M .... : (2'1r) "'T1lt .._ II• trrl" (llM) •Q-Mltrl GIJllOf. (dr•) '90-11111 w,mtn. ........ 1Y Tll.m "Pott S:ll 8 ....... 1 (C) 'Wtd: TnlRf"' 11" M ot1t11111 • d111111 111out • (Ii«) ·~ttthlr S..ra. , I Tue1day 1:11 fl (CJ "'lllt -W.. " """ • I -'ifit' (eoiii) 'e-Pnl "llll!llll. . I 11\tl "lltllo II -...... -I DAYTIME MOVl£S -~1C;52.=.h= <""> '15 ~ ... M,.,llJ, Ml°"~ Colllt. l:I08(C)"ltt"'attlo _ _. s-(J)(CJ ·~ •• -..... C• l 'It (dra) '5'-Robtrt ttookl. ---ti -.. EMt Pm!ey, tl1 Tnn1. 111:91 m (CJ "T>t It ... Cond. (Ml) Ill (C) "IM ........ PttJ!.r ~Rod T11lot, TIPP' Hedrtn, (if1) ·~ flobtrtloll, 8'1"' ,.,,,_ Ct<1¥1 'SJ -JJOB(C) •A I-ti -Ritt Morino, Klltll Ltl'Hft. 1 (dri) ''3-lt~ H~son. U:IO ·-'""'° (d"I '4141"1 ID (I} (CJ "'" Ullto l .. lia" Ladd, Oolln1 Rffd. '11'1 fmMr'• (mys> '6'-Hu1h O'lrl•n. .. ,....., (com) ·~r.1~rth1 fl•Yf. 4.JO Cll St•• 11 lMM "'*""• u.o m -no M..,1t1ct11 °'"" c .... 1 I <IB Cll> "Co•f•-· <.,.> ·11-'l2-tttn11 FOlldt,.t.)'M 9atl Otnnl1 O'Kttlt, J11M lod.b1rt. ·Nearly .Everyone Listens to Landers ' • ' ' I I I ' ' • I I , I ' I 1 I I I I . ' ' , i l 1 ,, I \. ' . 1' 1 ) \ ... . ....... ' . . " . ' . " ••• Ypl. 67, NO. 49, 2 SE.CTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF"ORNIA MdNOAY, FEBRUARY 19 •. 1974 _ -.· ."" N-TEN CENTS ... , CdM Freeway Resurrection Sought by CQunt y. By RUDI NIEDZIEUIKI Of ttie DallY Plltt Stiff A delegation of Orange County leg!slaton and public olflcJal.s will journey to Sacrameoto Wedneoday to make an appeel oo behalf ol the Corooa del Mar Freeway. I "'Ibis will be our final pitch " said ' Jack Hammett, mayor of Costa° Mesa. lie is coordinating the appearance of the o!flciaL! before the •i.o..llighway. Commission. - Hammett said today they would present some new arguments which they hope will sway the commission to give county Road Co~ioner T e d the freeway a top ccmlructlon priority. McConville. Aa ~ Is now, Ille tborl fmway Unklng Hammell aald ·the public ,hearing on the San N ••• Ilneway with MlcArthur the freeway aJ.oo may be attended by &nC6V Geoe Robena, manager of South Coast ~van! remalno withdrawn. from the Plaza, and Dr. Arnold Beekman, -~edule • beeall!< o I president o1 Beekman lns1rumenls. inadeq~ale I~. . "I will be carrying with me a !Aolegram The preseotallon on the freeway will from the Orange County Boan! of involve Hammett,. state Sen. · Dennis .JJ .Supervisors which urges that the freeway Cag>enter f R ·Ne w po r_t BeaebJ, l>e. JT1ade th~ •. top priority for Orange AsmnbJyman Robert • Bilrke 1 ( R -County," the COsta Mesa mayor added. Huntington Beach), A ss em b I y ma n "And we will make the presentation Robert Badham (R·Newport Beach) and with the support and good wishes or ,. Dally Plllt Staff P""9 Mayor. Donald Mc!mis of Newport Beaeb and John. Burtoo of Irvine." The involvement of the various local governments in Wedneaday'a publlc bearing Is eakula!Aod to --to the Highway C«nmJssion that Qranc• County Is uni!Aod in Its · desire to (et the ~way built. "We want them to know that unlike freeways elsewhere, the C«ona del Mar Freeway is one freeway which all the communities it passes througti actually want," Hammett said. Part of the presentation will be devoted to new data which purports to show that, although the county bas cootribu!Aod s!gniflCllD!ly to sta!Ao freeway f\lllds through ruoUne tu revenues, it has not received its fair share of freeway miles in return. An energy crisis Induced drop in gasoline tax revenues was blamed by state officials lMt month for the lowered priority of the Corona del Mar Freeway. Bidding on the fir3t section · of the project was called off when it· became known that a sharp drop in gas tax reV$lues would mean a stash in the state freeway budget of about $2 billion. The state Division Of Highways subsequently issued an administcattve order for the completion of freeways .already under construction be Io re beginning construction of new freeways. The COrona del Mar Freeway does not' fit the priority category ·although some v.-ork has been completed on the Newi>ort 1',ree"'ay interchange and the Bear Street offramp in north Costa ~lesa. ! CdM Bacl{s ·Route ' Chamber Opposes Limits on P~_rki~g By L. PETER KRIEG Of tlM Dall'f' Plitt St.ti The Corona del Mar O:wnber of. Commerce said today it doesn't need . parking restrict.ions, the Fifth A'venue.. bypass or the profM)SCd mu1ti-level intersection or f!.facArthur BouJevard· and East Coast Higliway to solve traffic problems there. In a letter to Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. McIMis, the chamber's board of direaors .said construction of the Corona del Mar Freeway through Bonita Canyon would be enough to relieve congestion. The leller, signed by eh am b • r president Robert F. Sloessel, 18YI downtown Corona del Mar buslnoss woold be burl by a ..-iWon on C4ast Highway parking 8lld ti)' cOOilruCtiOo of a multi·1evel intercbagnge. decide Wednesday wbether to raise the freeway's priority. Harbor Area officials say they fear the current priority is so· low that it may never get built. Stoessel argued strongly against the· Fifth Avenue bypass. '"111e impact of the various noise and air pollutants which would result Crom St;hools Start Earlier No w All. public sdlools in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa will return lo normaJ school stanjng times effective Tuesday morning, sebool olfidall reminded .today. Fer the put 111x wttks all such a thoroughfare is something we believe shouJd not be borne by the business pOOple and residents of our community," he said. "Such a road\vay will not bypass our comrnhnlly but will, in fa ct, bisect it and di v.idc our residents even .. more · than does ·the present Pacific Coast Highway," he said . Airport Plans Waiver Plea Over Noise VAN RIPPED OPEN LIKE ,SARDINI CAN ·IN NIWPl?RT AC:CIOI NT iAJILY,·8""P,AY Driver FellocUo N-.otlot te HI!I on Jomborff Rood BetwMn C:oetl Hlphiray, 8'ysiatllrlve ' The inlttchaage "would tower above 111elr &torefronts and oboetre tbtir ~ lrtJat the sboppiDC pul>llc;" Sloeolel Mid, lidding that It ·would a1"' increase "noise polhition." 1.:. ... ~ "' the . liewlllrt'Moa Urlilled School Ois1rld have been reporting for <"'-30 minutea lat.r !ban usual due to th• national Da)'ltglit Saving! Time aebednle that went into effect tn January. O~ange CA>unty Airport officials will make a fonnal plea for a waiver from C&lifomla 's new noise s t a n d a rd s beginning Tuesday at what is expected to be a three-day public bearing in Santa Ana. Gro ve Ma1i Hur t W lw1i Va n Fl ips, evered i11 Half A Garden Grove man was in satisfactory condition today after his van rolled over at Jeast twice, careened off two trees, and was sliced wide open in an accident on Jamboree Road SUnday morning. Victims of t\vo other accidents in Newport Beach over the wee kend - including one in "'hich another van drove into lov.·er Nev.'JXlrt Bay -"'ere uninj ured , police said . 0£licials said Thomas F. Conway Ill, 26, suffered multiple facial lacerations, broken ribs, and bruised lungs in the 3:3S a.m. Jamboree Road accident.. Police Said Conway apparently Jost mntrol of his van as he was heading down Jamboree Road below Paellle Coast !Ilghway, No other vehicles were involved. Conway, 8631 Amy Ave., was still being held in Orange County Medical Cen!Aor today. Cause of the accident is under tnvesttgatton. In a separate incident , Richard Garcia, 26. was arrested early today on suspicion of drunk driving aft« bis small foreign car cOllided With a power pole on Placentia Avenue and Prod•Jction Place. Police listed Garcia's address as 3504 A venida de Presldcnte, San Clemente . Jn a third weekend accident, a van rolled Into Newport Bay at C Street in Balboa earlY. Sunday morning, . · The owner, Jim Reaves of Costa Mela, told police be was stopped wttlf his girlfriend about 2:30..a.m. w~ -~nly lurched uncontrollably forianl over a curb and into Ille bay. -, Jlolh vlelbru managed to ·climlb-oul before the van &ank. . ' 'AD SELLS A.UTO \ . ON ~IRST~DA.Y . The sale was almOst as auiomalic as the transmission for the reader wlio plactd· this ad: ' '89 CORTINA , auto trans, gas aaver, good cond. $50Q. (l'bone N~ l . - The advertl1er reperted this Dally Pilot elaSllfled ad did 111 job and sold the ear on the fir.It day. They may not all work that last, but fhey ~ wor1t. T .. t It on your own mOrdlandlse. Dial the dlttet line to· resulll ' at tho Dally Pilot. Phone 60-$618. ' I ,/ Newport's John Wayne NewPo rt Beach planning commissioners have r e c o m mend e d construction of tile :ntr :'Change and elimination of .~ as ways to help clear up oongestion. . Tll<y bave stroag!y recommended against the propooed bypass that woold carry lljrough traffic aloog the fonner Paellle COllst Freeway rignt;of:Way between old COrona del MM and Harbor Beginning Tueoday bowever, the ~82 times '111 be resumed, which means children must be at scliool OI' at thelr bus stopa 30 mlnutee earlier !ban the times at which tHey • liive tieOii rejiOiting for the pasl few ....U. Tops Freedo111 Award List View HlllJ. · Film star Jobn Wayne of Newport ·Beach topped the list of seven area ciW:ens honored today in Valley Forge, Pa., in the Annual National Freedoms Foundation Awards ceremony. Wayne, 66, was · given · the George Washington award for the "proud and unabashed patriotism" of his new album, "American. Why I Love Her." He heads the list of some 2,000 OOMrees designated nationwide for awards from the Foundation. 3 Die, 6 Injured In Three County Traf fie .Accidents • Newport Beach city ClOlllldlmen will , Otber Onlns• Coils! citations Included: get their flr&I official look al the entire -Leila W. Manon, 2663S Saddlebaek -~ Drive, El Toro, and La Pai Intermediate tro.uic plan when they cooduct a public School in El Toro for the sebool h~ ~~ 28~tant, the Alan M. publication, El Conquistador, booor Voorhees Co. of San Diego, said it award for both teacher and school. -Festival g[ Arts or Laguna Beach, thought the Bonita' canyon routing for the planned Corona de! Mar Freeway honor awards in oommUnity programs woukl significantly lighten downtown category· Corona del Mar traffic volume . President Joins Wallace 'Honor America Day' -Dr. James E. Johnson of Tu stin, ·But it warned that the highway through fonner assistant Secretary of the Navy, the business district would still be From Wire Services for hi s award.winning address upholding overloaded._ even if parking is banned. HUNTSVILLE, Ala. -President Nixon the American syStem .of government The Corona de! Mar ch amber , joined Al abama Gov. GeOrge C. Wallace and free enterprise. _ .... 1.._,___ id · binks the Bo · -Rev. Dr. Robert H. Schuller, founder nevei~, aa 1t t ruta · and a host of other Southern political Canyon route would do the job. fi · and senior pastor of Garden Grove "We consider this route to be a true 1gures today for aome o 1 d -s t y l e Community ·Church for his sermon "I bypasa which woold rerDO\le unwanted campaigning at an · "HonOr America Am The American Flag." and unneeded traffic from Ille street. Day" celebration. -Three Camp Pendleton servicemen, of Corona del Mar," Stoessel said. Nixon, seeking 1 frien · • fonun to L. Cdr. Gerald Cox, USN; Sgt. Jobn E, The fate of the entire Corona de! demonstrate hi popular appeal d · Jobnstan, USMC; and . HN. William G. u Free . . ~ .. bt. --Calif . 5 espi!Ao Wagnon, USNR, honor award for their ro.ar way J.S m ~ .i.1-K: orrua the Watergate ecandaJ.J, arrived in early joint letter "Human Goals -Values Highway CommiJslon ii upeeted lo afternoon af!Aor a two-hour lllgbl from ' A rash of Orange County lraffic fOr Living." Key Biscayne, Fla. aeeldentB Sunday left three yoWJg people Announcement of the awanls was p . f Gold N'mm said be found "the heart ol dead and six otherii injured, califomia made by. Gen. Harold Johnson, USA rice 0 America Is IQOd. the ebiraetec.otAmer- Higliway PalrOI olficua reported today.~ (Ret,)-;_~oms FouOdation j)resideiit. ica-la·~~" . -• Dead are Yvonne Garcia, 17, of Recipients were selected by an U . Joinin& Wallace and two Southern gov- COrooa: David Anaheluk, 21, of Santa independent National Awards Ju r y p $2 an Ounce ernon· in tbe rally, Nlson told a crowd Ana Heighl! and Paul D. Mc~iiUen, consisting or 13 state supreme court estimated·. by sponsors at 40,ooo · that 2&. or Orange. justices and 29 national representatives ''?le'n! going to continue to be a great na· Two of the fatal crashes occurred or civic, educational, patriotic, and To Record $151 lion." th veterans organizations. The President made no direct referPDce on · e Orange Coast. " CHP officers said Miss Garcia was The jury includes Adrian Pelletier or . NIXON LAWYER PURSU!S killed instantly when the car she was Laguna Beach. L9tYOON (AP) -The price of gold TAI!! LEA S riding in went out of control at the The~piilel noted that Wayne's winning jwnped $2 an ounce toda'.Y"to a recorQ K -:-..Stor.y-Page-4- intersection of the San Diego and ~cora ,!5 his fi~t album. 'J'.hey described $151 in London and Zmich on the to the Watergate IC8DdaJ. or its impact The noise llmlts, promulgated by the - State Department 0£ Transportation's Division of Aeronautics, stipulate that jet takeo.ffs cannot create more than 70 decibels of noise over residential ~ areas. In its application £or a variance, Orange Collllty Airport officials say 110 homes below the flight path regularly are subjected to noise levels higher, than 70 decibels. Newport Bead! city olfleials, hO forced the bearing when they brought court action against the county and state, will appear at the hearing and contend the jet noise has even more of a far reaching effect. Airport o£ficials say they a re reasonably confident the variance will be granted but they claim the1 Q>unty will have to guy those 110 impacted homes or shu t down the airport if it isn't. That claim was labeled "a bunch of garbage" by Newport Beach Mayor Donald A. iMclrutis. "When Bresnahan (Airport Director Bob Bresnahan) runs around saying be mlght have to shut down the airport that'• straight baloney,'' Mclnnis said. He said Newport . Beach also is not tryin( to force the eoonty to buy the lmpact..i residencel. "We are just hoping the hearing board will set forth the necessary conditions _to bring the airport into line," the mayor said. He said those specific conditions "'ill be outlined by Councilman ~1ilan Dostal and City Attorney Dennis O'Neil during the course of the hearinJ· "We are hoping to get a complete understanding that v.·e do have 1 (See NOISE, Page !l Orange Coast Newport Freeways and was struck tt as a sens1t1ve reflection ot a man s+ ...... mh I t that '"'· ,.....__,. on his presidency (See AWAJIDS, P~1~ i1 · ....... 0 repor' ·~ ~·••'l'n . w-11~ ..._.;.. ...... ~~1-~--'""'.r ~i4e,by, an C!OCOlDlnll v~an,,,~--.,.,--------....:.--Market govemments..were.-...&~-rrV.''",•"'.._....,_.....,i. _~:._.1 .... ~·-• Olfieen .at' the BCeDe aald, Ille small '"... ---•~ = •w~ foreign ear, d!iven by 11-yeeN>ld the official prlai of !heir JOld bold!DP. jet llnded. Deborah lie*" of 0oroaa. apperenlly H.fJpefuls . Set · The American c1ou.r easec1 lllcl1tl1 ''Giid 1o ... .,.11," ·won-- opun out on the ramp cooncding the a~ lhe openinc el European laril(ll lo i...-.. oouthbouod San Diego with t b e eaebaa(es Belon Ille l'loltdent ad. Wallaee -Nnport Freeway. Newport Talk The ·~ in Ille gold ~ mean1 =.-.:..,'="·~ii: "Sbe appannUy hit Ille llhoulder and Incr<ue of .., lO · l then over~. shooting diagonally an --· ., --llDOO govenior, •'ID !dld·lo -l"!ll looting aCl'OllS the roadway into the path Of The three candidates seeking the the llrst of tbe Y<I'· "'I.'::;" · · the van," a CllP spokeaman said. '!bird Dislztcl seat on the Newport Ileatera reponed ~ demand for llllCle la lllll CW!flned to a wlletl 'Ille Inipaet of the collision filpped Beaeb City Council will speak lbe melal due.to the a-Ing in Bl'llSltla chair u 1 """11 of an '""'*""'lion the small ear over UH! rolled It down Tueoday before the Women's Civic ol Ille finlne& ministers of the Dine •tlllnpt In tm wblle be wa s a short embankment. Miss Gare la waa League of Newport Harbor. Common llarket natlorui• Clllil~lor Ille D e mo c r a 11 c thrown clear but offleers said she was Pete SWeU, Ellis Glazier, and Widely pub11s¥ r<ports said the . nomination. ·: • probably already dead. Jcho McKtrren are an competing mlnlston "'"' nlldy to raise the value A 11-.tll• <nan • was The driver of the van, Jolinnle Andm, for the:\aiunCJI chair vacated by of the (Old bultmsinc their IM!tlonal a!nllOd -~1 •bell ,he ,trl<d lo ,Five "' f 308 16th SI In H""""• Beach ~-"-·· ~. I ... ..:.., in N t ,.;_. II ' ed t "" 11 thnup a-..odbloct lHdilig to an area m, o . . w,.-ton , ~unc1u..,, ,,..r '-""'a ewpor curreoc-18 pegg o .... an wbmw Pfelldenl Nbm; "u schedul«f suffered minor injuries in the crash. l!elghts,_ Clift Haven and Bay oon<e, and there wu no indl<ation of to· tpat; aulhorltlO! aakl. A pa80ellger in tbe van, 2!·year""1 Jeff Shores. 1 • tbe ne" price the mlnlsttn m1lhl wt. 1'o -. Identified 81 Dallas Duncan Crt120n, 1535 Superior • ..\ve., Newport Th! ~. which will )nelude • AWJousb today:. was.; lhe..flrit time. M<fl\'l!a, 'Ilia charpd wftb drlviq while Beach, Complained of pain but refll!ed a q-lind--period, will tbe prlcO of gol<t tOll(led •uo lri Ille , ll>lodlll1d, polioe 11id. The arrest ;, .. hospital care. begio will oolfee at 9:30 a.m. big 1-and ZUrfeb,marl:lll, It bu .-4' llllb" officers Ind s.em· nie: ~ Orqe Coal!' C!'l!h In lhe mnlll-..,,,_ room o1 ¥ ~ that Jev.I oeveral tlmel &nloa llllllL happened at allout-t :30 p.m. 01 the S1nta Mirll1ft Library, .'11115 Dover slAce /111. ~ In the smaller Paris Nlloa -"l lie nmn wu -..rry1ng Aila Heights -ol Brlelol Simi Dnve. , mW!, ..tien tpedal ~ COllll'Oll a <!lie '" .Ille · -w1ndow 'of bis (S..CRASllES, l'lpl) • k<'91111,,.teeb!PerlillDllMttere. · •ilrz ,•t . '\ " ' - . ' -' Welidier Those winds will diminish to. nigb~ but the Orange Coast won't he all that warmer Oil Tuesday with hilth readings in Ille middle 60s unaer patches of variable clouds. INSIDE . TODA 'l' Afore and more, Ca lifornians ore lear.1i11 g the nwgic uiords tltat guarantee a n1arriage witl1 110-waiting, no wit11csse~. uo publicity o"d 110 test.I. Storu. Pog• 7. 1 • T \, • • _,,,c_D_A.;.ll'-'V---'Pl.::Lc..01 ___ _.:.:.• _____ MC.on:C:day, Ftbruary 18, 1q74 Ourh! Dauglate,.,s K•IUOfl! Hearst Devises Free Food Plan lllLLSBORO UGtl (UPI) -Newspaper the Jon g holiday \.veckend . publisher Jlandolph A. llearsl prepared This morning, llcarsl and Bos v.'Orth today 10 announce a tood dist ribution left the family's Hillsborough mansion, plan for the needy demanded by the telling reporters they were going to terrorist group which kidnaped his San f<'rancisoo. It wa s reported they v.·ere daughter two weeks ago. meeting privately with Qff! · 1ls ol tbe A family spokesman said Hearst would A.mf:(icM lndian 1"1ovement. . reveal the plan , whlcn he said would Hearst and his wife, Catherine, were ·involve "substantial amounts of money" heartened by a tape recording from but far less than the $400 million ...,..Patricia received during the weekend originally demanded, this aflemoon. in which she said she was being well The Symbiooese Liberation Army, treated and her abductors were willing which bolds his 19-year~ld daughter, to accept "whatever you can come up , wilh." THOUSANDS WRITE HEARST "Field Marshal Cinque'' of the SLA IN SYMPATHY, Story Pago 5 said in the recording that the SLA Patricia, demanded that the program :'.?!~~. "accept a sincere effort on your be@:in by TuesdaY as a "gesture of .,..... • good faith" before opening negotiations 'The Rev. Cecil \Villiams, pastor of for the release of the girl, granddaughter Glide ~lemorial Church, said Sunday · U night that neither he nor members of of the late newspaper giant Wi iam five leftist groups named by the SLA Randolph Hearst. f<~BI spokesman Jolut Kelly said there to oversee the food distribution program was nothing new to report in the had been coosulted about the Jlearst investigation of the kidn api ng. He said proposal. Ho"·ever, he said he believes the FBI \\'ould have no CQmment on the family is acting in "good faith ." the food distribut ion plan, saying it \vas One coalition member, Pope ye Jackso n •·or 00 gre at interest 10 us from an of the United Prisoners Union, said hi s d group dido 't support the Hearst family, investigative stan point." nor his daughter, nor the SL.A. Ile said Kelly said the FBI was still respecting U · I ~ I ___ .the family's .'lri$he$ i(I qQt je19pardi~g the UP ""as only mvo vl;U to hep give away· the food. the girl's safety if th t; SLA's hideout Dennis Banks of the American Jndian "'ere discovered. "If Y!'e thought someone \\'as in there Movement said he wasn't happy that Miss Hearst was kidnaped but he was holding a gun to her head, we would glad to be an intermediary. not go in," he said. New left activist Jerry Rubin warned The Hearst family has ~ receiving the SLA in a letter published ln Hearst's about 600 letters a day from well· wishers. both to the family home and San Francisco Examiner that killing to the San Francisco Examiner, of wh.ich Mis,, l-Iearst "will set oU a right·win g Hearst is president and editor. crackdown" in the United States. l~e Jay Bosworth, a spokesman for the u:ged the kidnapers not to harm the f ·1 .d H t le ed " girl. DAVID ANAHELUK OF SANTA ANA HEIGHTS KILLED ON CYCLE Bike Rammed Truck Sunday Night; lm~ct Wrenched Door Off Judge Overrules Parents: Deformed Baby Treated And the child 's doctor testified at a court bearing Thursday that surgery . . . . . .Frott1 Pqe 1 CRASHES • • • ... and Santa Ana Avenue. ..... • .. • • Officers at the scene said Anahel u • · 2422 S.E. Bristo! St .. was fatally Injured wb~ the he avy motorcycle he was drlv1ng ram nu::d broad.sid e Into u s111all pickup truck that ullegedly turned left 1n trout of hiln. Police said the driver of the lru~ Kim R. \\lhitehead. 19, of 1M3 Serenadl1 Terrace in Corona de! Mar. was drlvil:if. under the influence oC alcohol wh~ be turned from Brstol onto Santa AW AV:mu~. • Anaheluk's big bike rammed into t2 passenger side of the car and iliprit it up onto· two wheels, officers were. told. by witnesses. TY.·o J:NlBSengers in Whitehead 's C4.f are In fair oondiUon today at Mercy General llo3pltal with mult)ple injurl ... They are Lucinda Smith, 21, of 19841' Kesswood St., Huntington· Beach and Je!f Gillett, no known ,address. ' Whitehead Is in Orange County .!all today on the dhlnken driving chargi and ball has been set at $2,500. The third fatality, also involving a motorcycle, happened at about 1 p.n1. Swtday in Anaheim. Police there said ~fch1illcn lost control of his bike at the intersection of Loara and Minerva Streets and rammed beadon into a big sedan drfven by Daniel Ninburg, 45, of Anaheim. McMlllen was killed instantly in the crash, officers said. Motorists Slurp Up probably would not be of any benefiL c C' I This workman appears to be dealing a "head crushin~" blow to the Frankenstein monster in Newport, Ore., but he's only putting up the mon- ster as part of billboard. Now if he had a stake, and it were Dracula . . . · ami y, sa1 ears enCQWl r some "If kill p 1r· · H t ·11 delay " in working on._ the-...!!de~-. you. _ a 1c1~ ears you w1,, mecbanics!I 01· the ·pro'nM:if 6ecause or ~ ... b&outrsgm~human~gs--ev.eryw~r~. ,..,..... · wrote Rubm, a leader of the :Y1pp1es PORTLAND. Maine (AP) -"Some people are calling us monsters because of this and others are very sympathetic," says the father of a severely malformed baby that has undergone court-ordered iW"gery.hi$ par~ refused to;approve. "I .disa{'fee with the judge's rµling. But Superior Court Judge David G. oast lTUS ~...r.µ!Jlli...~ \Ill b ha,< ·~ to Jile" and ome'::9' 1il..Su..lalrillig • . .• ------------surgery. Ava1labllity of gasolme on the Orange and one of the Chicago~ Seven riot A first operation w~ ,perforrrfed Coast improved today ·with about hal! New Cycle Burns .Juice ·But Not Liquid Variety conspiracy defendants. "You will set off a rightwing crackdown -find the SLA! -That will endanger the very people that you say you are fighting for. You will destroy the moral credibility of the left." From Pag.e 1 I feel that we as parents should be Hslened to/' said Sgt. Robert B. T. lioule of Westbrook, tr Air Force recruiter. His Hklay-0ld son -who has not been conscious since _ ~ birth, Feb. 9 -was rePorted in fair cooditioo today at the Maine Medical Center. The surgery was performed Thursday. Doctors say the baby -whose left side is deformed, including having no left eye or ear canal -is unable to ta ke food by mouth and may never ga in consciousness. sb<rtly aft.er the judge Issued his order. of lbe service staUons opening to hordes It involved implanting a food tube into of ga.!l·bungry motorists. the infant's stom~ch. . Fears of a gasless Monday as ~·ell Another operatioo, planned for thts h · · week, ls intended to permit the baby as t ~ ~w-routine. dry Sunday did not to take food by mouth. materialize. Service station owners Navy Lt. James Fryer, attorney for appeared willing to cut sb6rt their the baby's pareflls, said an appeal of holiday and to pump gas for the local the court ruling to the Maine Supreme clientele. · By mLARY KAYE Of ltle DIUy Pllol Still An electric plug and three cents a -;day in electricit y charges .will let you forget all about high gasoline prices .and !he frantic search for an ."open Service station. So claim the Huntington Beach distributors of a new type of transportation -the electric motorcycle. The little bike comes in two-wheel 'and three·wheel models, priced at $499 and $699. Thirty miles per hour is the top speed, although the speedometer lists the power in volts, not miles per hour. The motor.cycle runs on a 24 volt motor and requires r eight·h~ur charge · before it is able to run for SO miles. The only maintenance r e q u i r e d , according to distributors of the bike, is to check the water level of the battery about once a week. Phil Berkovt'itz, a salesmanCat the newty·opened Continental EI e c tr i c Vehicles, at 18641 Beach Blvd. in Huntington Beach. explained that the motorcycle is not a "bike rider's bike." "It's primarily a girl's bike, or a .shopper's bike, .. Berkowitz said. "Since Cow Gunned Do,vn By Police Copter LUEDENSCHEJD. West G e r many (AP) - A CO\Y that lowered its horns toward a grounded police helicopter was shot to death \Vith machine guns as •a "vicious" animal, police said. · 'lbe cow escaped from a slaughter house and was tracked Sunday to a wooded area by five police cars and the helicopler. The~ helicopter landed, the cow lowered its horns and· the police cipened fire. The carcass \vas taken to the slaught er house. I OIANGI COAST N DAILY PILOT Tiii Otln{le Co.II D•ILY P ILOT. w111'1 """1(11 •1 combined Ille Ntw1·Prtu, it P<tbllllltd bY ltlr Or•nv• COtll Publltlllnt Con'ljMny $tpt· r11r edlllO!'!' ••t 0Ub!l1lled, Mon1hy !111011911 Frldty, f§f Cln!J Mtl8, Nt'*""rl 8tttll, Huntlr1lton 811ch7Fouft!••n Villiy, l.iijune Beech, INlnt/$~1eO;Jt~ e'ld 5•n Cltrnel'lt/ Stn Jwn C-i>lslreno .., 1ln{llt regio...1 "'l!iCH'I II jlllO!lllltd StllltdlYI elld $ulld1ys. Tiit prW•t;.p.11 pullll1hlnt Pllnl 11 at UO Wet.I llY $1rttl, C1n!a Ml'M, C1llloml1, flUl. Robtr4 N. W11d Pr .. iditnt Ind PUOl"ntr J1ek I . Cutl tv Vk:e Pr.slden1 !Ind <;r.,.,., Mtnttw Tho"'•' ic., .. a Etitw Thol'ltt A, M1,1rphine M""'11inll Edll11t L. ,,,,, 1Cri1g Newllll!1 kldl City t&ltor H..,.,t a..c• Offkt J3Jl Ntwporl l11,1l1•1•d M1ili~9 A44 r11t: P.O. lo• 1175, •2UJ OtMr Offlc" (01t1 M.,..: U0 Wtll .. y Sllt.C ........... IHCl'll ,tJ l'Ol' .. I A- •tincilon l~l'I: lr&IS llldl 1111.olt W"f ... J.tft Cfementt. JOl ND<1h El Cernlno Ill ... Ttf.,.... f7141 M:lo4J21 0-WW ~ 641·••• """'"""'· 1tn. 0r1,,.. to.11 ll'\lllAJ.r!IM ~. ... -,,.,. .. ,, lll!illlrl"""' ..... ., IMl'ff If OMl....,tltfl'l\fflb lllnln _.., • 1'111'1'911W.. wl!"fVt ~I .... """"'-" II ~I -· ...... ~ -'•' .. II 1t co.to Miit, ~ ~le!\ k cl"fr.r ftM _.,, "" 1'1111 II.II 11*11111'1>1 lllN1119rt w.t"""'-UM -~1¥. r • the top speed is 30 miles per hour and you can onl y go 50 miles without recharging, it is best suited to short trips -such as to school, to v.·ork , shopping or visiting." Continental Electric Vehicles opened last week1 offering curious shoppers their first look at the new bike and Cree rides in the parking Jot. Connie Gray, 26, of Huntington Beach, said her first ride on the bike was "'beautiful." · ''You don't have to worry about · shi.fting, or . anything," Miss Gray CQmmented. "Th.is could start a major revolution ." Miss Gray, who has been scouting around for transportation to and from work , said she is considering buying an electric bike. The motorcycles are sent to Huntington Beach from the Burbank assem bly plant. Howard Subnlck, C»<>wner of the fr anchise, said that the bikes have been produced for th e pas t t"'O years, but that all have been shipped back east until this month. Subnick, along_ with Don Sommers, has the first franq~ise in the county. Sornn1ers ei1:pltlined that the1 reason electric vehicles have not mushroomed into a thriving business before th is is that there \Vas no \\'ay lo make a magnetic pole motor big enough to do the job. NOISE ... problem," Mcinnis said. Mcinnis said if hearmg officer Robert Neher rules that the variance isn't .... -arranted, there are alternatives to closing the airport. "It would require some fast action . It might even result in cutbacks of flights." h-1clnnis said. "It might even have the effect of making it mandatory for all users of the airport to observe pl'9per takeoff procedures." The order of presentatioM at the hearings 'vas decided at a special conference conducted by Neher last week. . The State Board of Aeronautics will appear first, followed by the County, the Community Airport Council - a pro-airport group -and the city of Newport Beacb. Rebels Ambush Meko1ig Convoy PHNOM PENH, C.mbodia (AP\ - Rebel gunners ambushed a Mekong River convoy today and blew up one ammunition barge carrying 700 tons of ammunition, port officials said. A second barge,. was also hit and set afire, but the cfew put out the blaze. From Page 1 AWARDS. •• in love \\'ith his a:iuntry ." Accompanied by chorus and orchestra, \Vayite narrates 10 tributes to America that are "straight out affirmations ot this country and her people ." Ohher 'A'irmers of the top 40 awards inclµded Earl Hamner, Jr., of Burbank, creator of "The Wal tons," and G<lrdoa Sinclair of TorOnto, Canada for his reCQrd, "\Vho Helped? The Americans Did." The Freedom Leadership.Award. went to world hea~·eight boxing champion George Foreman of Hayward for a published article on opportunities offered by the American system. A second National Recognition Award tvas presen!ed to Joy Eilers of Granada Hills for USO performances at home and l'ilbroad, public presentations of Li ncoln "'ritings and service to ins!itutionalized persons. For 15 years, the foundation has presented awards "for constructive worrls and deeds which support America, suggest solutions to basic problems besetting Ille nation, contribute to responsible citizenship and inspire Jove of rountry." Court ls being considered. But he ,.id a decision by the parents is being delayed until after the second operation. "I understand the second operation is a high risk one. 1be decision to appeal may well be moo<" ii the baby dies. he said. The matter was taken to court by the h~pit.al because the situation po.<ted. •·a highly difficult moral dilemma ," said John ~titchell, hospital attorney. He said the medical center Is considering financing the Supreme Court appea] to gain a definitive ruling on the matter. Harbor Schools Win in Parade Jlarbor Area schools, led by Newport Hartxir High School with sweepstakes honors, placed highly Saturday in" the aMual Laguna Beach Patriots ..Day Parade. Sweei>stakes honors were won by Newport Harbor High School for its combined entry. while the Tar drill tean1 took first place In the senior category. Corona de! Mar High School took second place in the senior high school band category, just behind Mayfair High School of Lakewood. Laguna Beach Elementary School's student body won both the grand marshal's prize and the theme awards in tfie eighlh aMual prade witnessed by several Uiousand. The availability of a tank of gas ~·as no worse than usual this morning SHUTDOWNS WORSEN GAS SITUATION -Story Pago 4 , in lluntington Beach. Costa ~tcsa. Ne~')lOrt Beach, Laguna Beach and 1 f.lission Viejo. Gas appeared tighter in San Clemente v;here long lines of cars gathered at the three open slations and In El Toro v.·here only one of eight stations was open during the mo ming commuler hour. However panic buying, interspersed with road blocks and fisUights at some stations on Friday and Saturday, prompted Gov. Ronald Reagan to announce that rationing may have to be imposed in California. "Jn the last few days simply because '\\·e have had to consider a contingency plan." Reagan said. "lhis has suddenfy crealed panic buying and panic lines at service stations." If it continues, he said, there \\'OUld be no choice but to impose gas rationing statev.·lde. Reagan issued the v.·aming Saturday in an appearance before the California Newspaper Publishers Association. The Automobile Club of Southern California pronounced the V.'eekend. as the worst gasless weekend of the energy crisis. Only one percent of the stations in the Los Angel es -Orarijie County metropolitan area were open on Sunday, the auto club ~id. "They've never had a motor this big nor this efficient bet ore," Sommers said. "They're also working on an electric car but the trouble !her· is that the range is only 120 miles on a single charge and that's not far enough." 'Ibey said one person was killed and four were wounded. 'The ambush came as the l~vessel convoy was steaming up the Mekoiig River 26-29 miles southeast of Phoom Penh. Ms. Maintenanee Worker o.lY Plltl ll1H '1lttl SALESMAN BERKOWITZ SHOWS OFF ELECTRIC BIKE 50 Miies on Three Cents 1 Day Worth of Electricity J Fou1itain Valley Has No Uniform for New Employe By CANDACE PEARSON Of Ill• o.llY ~lief Sllfl The biggest problem FoWltain Valley's newest maintenance "man" bas run into is lh at the city didn't have any unilorms to fit her. But Diane Scott is making do with jeans and blouse& as she goes on htr -... daily rounds of-·reading-and repairing meters for the city water department until her specially-<>rdered overalls are deliveT'Cd. The first woman in a job that has now been re-titled ••maintenance worker," she saya she realize!! the ctly Is "testing me to .see if I can hold my own as well as a man can. "They're not going w be oorry for hiring me," she adds, wttb the same determination that cused her .to earn a black belt in karate when she was 15: Now 23, with a 4-year .. ld oon to support, she says a ''Woman should ha ve the same chance to do a job as a man does lf she can perform.'' But she opplied for her job with Fountain Valley less out or princlple than of a Jove for working outtlde, for working with her head and Iler )landJ. She worked as a receptionist for a computer company In Anaheim, but·"you see the same fOur walls everyday, the aame people everyday." Now she L' reading water meters, learning how to handle water main linet and valves, stu4yini Water distribution \' and chemical treatment in school, and discovering the tools to we to handle any water-related emergency. Eventually, like all mat n ten an c e workers, she will be on call 24 hours a day. Alter two month.•, said Ms. St-ott, her co-workers "seem to aceept me." ,.She ha>_ a fe more roblema In the fi eld when people or even police stare at her as ahc works or drives a city pick-up truck. "They look at - me like I stole it." But she's determin<d w do ""II. When she started learning karate "out of mere self preservaUon" because she .... tz.years-<>ld and lived ti block.s from school In Wuhlnilon, D.C... · She's never had to u • e I~ but Ja)'I It's to "relaxing to know I have It." That confidence and being the Uvtng example of the adoge, "lll<e' mother, UI.e daught<r," h<lp her now. For years, her mother w a a one of the few women wallpaper hangera and took a young Diane with her on the Job In a basalnctte. "She was very good," her daughter 18)'1 proudly. Diane's fllends ask her how ihe can •u.nd aeulng dirty and wearing "grubby clothes,'' but she doetn't eee I' as a challenge to her femlnlty. "I love my Job," she saya 1lmply. Sbo II excited obout ber future, but admlll men have ooe advantage over her at work. "They can go home, .. t dinner and wa tch television. l have to go hOmc , DtllY Pfltt iltlf Pti.t. 'THEY WON'T BE SOllRY' Malnt1n1nce Worker Scott • I make dlMer, play with my son ancL · put him to bed. And maybe find tlmt1 for TV before I have to get up at 5 a.m." , ' . I ' . ' I l I \ • \ I l \ • • . Orange ~'!!!t Your Hometown Dally Paper " ' ' , VOL. 67, NO. '4J, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORA ~E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 197'4 c TEN CENTS I ' ·Ar-abs Serid Mysterious '_Good News' to Nixon • • WASHINGTON (UPI) -Two Arab foreign mlnlstera said this afternoon they gave · Secretary of Slate Henry A. Eissinger a message from Arab heads o! atate that should be "good news" ig l'r<&ldonl N)xon. 'll>!3'A~-\o .~Y whitlier It cooe<mcct;:a. pooslble lilt(llg ol lbe oilembargo. . • Foreiin· minister. !small. FahmJ ol Egypt aoo·Oniar Sakkal of "Siiudl Arabia R"k• ~J!'I -a<_ .u.. -~te _ ... ·-·-· --.... I Department after they oonlemd with ~inger for-an Mur. "Everything ls movlDg in the right dire<lioo.''. Fabmy '8\d. Bolh .,.. lo ,_ .Praddeot Nixm at 11 a.m. Tueoday ll·lbe· White House. -J)'ahmy said the ~from lelll)ers · o1 Egypt, ~ria, r sil1i11:..mbia and Algeria wbo . . --m Algiers contained of "a very positive decision" •t" he sa!d.J!< believed would be "goOd news lo the President." F:ahmy ref.uoed lo diselooe details of the meaaage until be can deliver it peraoaally ~ Nlllll!. '""'..... -!edged that h J • diseuoslmla today, along with a Sunday oonlerence With Fahmy, Sakkal and Syrian diplomat Sabah Kabanl, dealt with the eoaJ of a separate mUitary disengagement agreement between Israel and Syria. . "1'1e' major problem riow is to get these ta.lb a tarted," Kissinger said after today's midday conference. · In addition lo the hour·long meeting with Kissinger, Fahmy, 8akl!af and Kissinger met for two hours over a lunch that included Vice Prosident Gerald R. Fon! and senior State Oepal1ment officials. Th.e Arab oil-producing states have tied an Israeli-Syrian disengagement to a lifting of the embargo on oiJ shipments lo the United States, which they Imposed during the October war. But Kissinger said Sunday that the end of the embargo 11was not tbe principol purpooe of these m""1ngs." Fahmy said today that "Syrian-Israeli disengagement and the oil question are not necessarily connected the way you th1nk Ibey are coonected." Kissinger said theli talks were "very useful, coostructive and friendly." U. S. oficials have said Kissinger might be asked to assume a mediator '$ role in a~ging a disengagement between Jsraeli and Syrian forces, similar to the one he played in the agreement for a mutual Israeli and Egypllan pqi\!!;!ck from lhe Suez c.,,.1 on the western flank of the war front. Kissinger refused to comment on th is today. but said that "first we have lo get a ·framework established for negotiations on the question :· ·Coast Officials ·Will Go ·To Bat for CdM Route .,.., ,..., """ ................. 'Last Stand' Wednesday By RUDI 1'1EDZIEl.'lKI Of"'9DlllY ........... A delegation of Orange County legislator• and public oll!dala will journey lo Sacrameolo Wednesday lo make an appeal on heha1I ol !bf Corona ' ' DAVID ANAHELUK OF SANTA ANA HEIGHTs KILLED ON tYCLE Biko Rammed Truck Sunday Night; lmpoct WNncboil Door Off dtl Mu J:'Newa1. ""' ~....... • •, '"lllls -wln be our' liha! pild!, • said Jack llammeti, -of Coota ·Mesa. He ls . coordinatin& iho ajipearanoe of the officials before the stale Highway Commission. ., · • . • Dall)' Plltt S-.H Pllttt COSTA MESAN, .OIRLF.RIEND-IUCAPE· CRA511-WET BUT UNINJURED Van Diftt Into Newport Harbor at C Street 1nd B1y Avenue E1tly Sl.nd_1y • .· . Santa Ana Heights Man Dies in Tra-ffic Crash · Hammett said today they would present 8C{lle new arguments which they hope will sway the commission to give the freeway a top coostructioo. priority. As it is now, the short freeway linking th• SU Diego Flftway witb MacArth"1' Boulevard remains withdrawn from the Council Debates Tonight On Mesa ·Sign ·.Ordinance .... -•-· '"' . · 1be b -ion och«lule because of A rash o!. Orange Cl!\!!lly_tralfic_SJlfltr~urreo 111 l~~s r inodequate--fundio' ~-~-------•COSt>"'l'>l....--elty-councllmi!.-geMhelr~_,,,nie'35<pagri;gn·onlinancr,along-with acc.ldents Sunday Jett three yoWlg people A passengl~~i: mSuthe ~an, 2AI-year-oNewporte nie preseotatioo on the· freeway will first crack at the . pro"""..,. sign the dozens of .. h ........ es and amendments . f I Cruzon, .-. penor ve., · vol Hammell ~-1a sen llen"''• yv........ ......... && dead and six others injured •. Call om a Beaeh pl ined f · but refused tn ve • -• ,,.... ordinance tonight during a public study suggested during nearly 12 hours of . 1. ed od •com a 0 pain C.rpeoter (R·Newporl Beach), · · ·1 ·1 ~ be bli t 1· ·u · Highway Patrol of 1cers report. t ay. hospital care.. •-mblyman n.~ Burke, ( R. session in ct y counci '""am rs. pu c es unony wt re q u 1 re G 7 f ~ iwut:l-~ No action will be taken dun·ng the """"'siderable t;....... lo· evaluate, city Dead arc Yvonne arc1a, I • o The second Orange COast crash HunUiigton Beach ). A-s s em b I y man ~~lats said. ...~ Corona: David Anaheluk, 21 , of ~nta happen~ at ~bout 9:!!6 .p.m. a~ the Santa Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach) and 7 :~::aarnfhe entire evening will .\e Mayor Jack Hammett and Vice Mayor Mesa1i Rolls Van 111 Newport Bay; Occupa1its Safe A Garden~rove.-man-was. in satisfactory condition today after his van rolled over at least twice, careened off two trees, and was sliced wide open in 3ll: accidenton.Jamboree Road Sunday morning. Ana Heights alld Paul D. ~tc~hUen, Ana HeJghts intersection of Bnstol Street county Road Commissioner Ted devoted to a discussion of the documenT. Willard T. Jordan promised to have ~26. or Orange. and Santa Ana Avenue . . McCooville. aJong with amendments suggested last the sign issue decided before the March Two. of the fatal crashes octurrcd Officers a~ the scene said ~eluk, Haminett said the public hearing on week during public hearings. 5 councihnanic elect.ions. Now they admit Victims of l\\-'O other accidents in Newport Beach over the weekend - including one in which another van drove into lower Newport Bay -\•:ere uninjured, police said. on the Oran ge Coast 2422 S.E. Bristol 'St .. was fatally injured the freeway also may be attended by The public is invited to sit in on they will be hard pressed to meet the CHP officers said ~1lss Garcia was w~e~ the heavy m~rcy~le he was Crl!ne Robens, nianager ot south Coast the council deliberations, but will not self-imposed deadline. killt'd instantly when the car she was d~1v1ng rammed broadside mto a small Plaza, and Dr. Arnold Beekman, be allowed to speak for or against the Also on Tuesday night , the council riding in went out or cont~\ at the pickup truck th!tt allegedly turned left president of Beckman lnstnunents. ordinance proposaJ. will consider whether to lengthen the Officials said Thomas F. Conway III, 26, suffered mulf.tple facial lacerations, broken ribs, and bruised lungs in the 3:35 a.m. Jamboree Road accident. .intersection of the San Diego and in rront of him. "I will be carrying with me a telegram It is also unlikely any action on the lifespan of the emergency interim sign Newport Freewa)'s ~ was struck Police said the driver of the truck, from, the Orange County · Board of ordinance will be taken by councilmen ordinance, a law wh.icb bas been in broedslde by an oocolTllng van. Kim R Whitehead 19 of lMl Serenade S-upervLsors Whlclt urges that the freeway Tuesday night when they convene at effect for the past year while meetings Officers at the scene said !he small · . ' ' . . -be made the top priority for Orange 6:30 p.m.. for their regular city council on the actual sign ordinance were laking Joreign car, driven by 18-year-old Terrace m COrona del Mar, was dnvmg County/' the Costa Mesa mayor added. meeting. plaoe. Deborah Beard of Corona, apparenUy under the influence ol alcohol when "And we .-will mate the presentation Police said Conway apparenUy lost control of his van as he was heading down Jamboree Road below Pacific Coast Highway. No other vehicles were involved. ,,spun oot nn the 'amp conn._cting the he t11111111flrolll Bntol-<llllo.Sanlti Apa ilitb the support and~ wislte8 of , southbound san Di.ego w1Ut t be Avenue. . . j ;·. -. fi. •. MaJbrt Dooa1d Mcinnis of Newport northbound Newport Freeway. Anaheluk's-blg bike rammed lnlo the Bead!andJolmBurtooof!Mne." . "She apparently bit the shoulder and • . de ol the and !Ii ped 'lbe involvement of the various loeal . lhen overcorreoted, shooting diagonally passen~_••-wheels ""';,m . P govemmenls in Wednesday's public a<.TOSI the roadway into the path of it up ""':"' • .,.v 1 cer:s were beariDf.1 '8 calculMed ~ demonstrate the van " a CHP _spokesman said. told by witnesses. to tpe Jnghway Cc:mmlss100 that Orange • The .bnpact of the collision fljpped Two passengers in Whitehead's car ~unty is ~led in ils desire to get ~the small car over wd. roll.ed i~ down are in fair condition today at' Mercy the freeway built. · . ·a short embankment. l.Uss Garcla was . . "We want· them to know that unlike · thrown clear but officers said she was General llospJtal with m~ltiple inJurles. freeways elsewhere, the Corona del Mar 1 probably already dead. They are Lucinda ~ith, 21 • of 19841 Freeway is one freeway which all the The driver of the van, Johnnie Anders, K~ St., Huntington Beach and communities it passes through actually ' f z; f 3Q8 16th St in Hunllnglon Beach, Jeff Gillett, n~ l<nown address. . want," Hammett did. • o . Whitehead 1.s 1n Orange County Jail Part of the presentation will be devoted r today on the drunken drivJng charge to new data whiclt purports to show Ceaat and bail has been set a1$2,500. (See FREEWAY Pagel) -~--1 ..____The thit4 fatality, a1lo involvlpg.ra ' • . . mocorcycllo, happened at about I p.m. ~unday in Anaheim. ScliQols Start .. --"" ·~ .. · . Welither . Jo '!'llOle winds will diminish lo' nJ&hl, but the Orange Ooaat WOD'I be all lhal warmer ott Tu<oday wtlli"bilh reading& In the middle ,.,. under. patches of variable clouds. INSIDE TODAY Mote and mere, Callfarnfan1 are ~arning the magic• word! th<lt gtldronlee a marriage with tab waiting, no wi&nisscs, t~o ~~i.~ and 110 tesU. SloTJi, ' ,Pollce there said McMlllen loot control • of htS bike al the inle-'ol 'l.ioora and ldli>erva Streets and ralomed Mailon inlo' .• big . oedaa ii"-. by . Daniel Nlnburg, 45, of Anahehn. !llcMlllen ,... ldlletLinNntly In · the crash, officers oald. - Mesa Verde Residents Hear Coastal Panelist Judy Rooener, a member of Ille South Coast Rqlonal IIone.ConservaUon Com- mission from Newport Beach, will speak 'l'lltaday nllibt at a .general membership meetlng ollhe'Mesa V-·Homeownera ASIOclatlon. • The 7 p.m. meetfilg I•· scheduled ror tho Coota Mesa Country Club. Se .. ral of the sl1 candidates ntMtng in the llla:rctl 5 'City counell •lectlon ...... _.i.d lo attend and lo comment brldly .. tlW curqiolp el!oN. ' ' " ' Earlier Now All publlc ocbools in Newport Beedl and Coota M'"8 will return 19 normal -oWtlng u--~ 'l'lleslla1 morning, -I offlclala ,.minded today. For the past six weeks all 1tudent& In Ille Newport-Mesa Unified School District have been reporting for classes 30 minut.J later .than usual due. lo the national Daylight •Savings •Time_ &d)edµle tbal-< into effect in January. , Beginning Tucaday howe~er. the llO(rtlal : time! will be -resumed,..: ""1dl meant1 .clillclten must be at ldlMJI ,... at their bus llopr • 30 , m1na1.-' -uet·." tban the tim<S al -.,.,, -been "'portinS '. lor·lhe put ltw 10eeks. • ' . • County Bearing Tuesday Conway, 8631 Amy Ave., was still being beld in Orange County Medical Center today. Cause of the accident is under investigation. Airport to Make ,Plea In a separate incident, Richard Garcia. 26, was arrested early today on sUspicion of drunk driving after his sm3H foreign car collided with a power pole on Placentia Avenue and Pnxf!Jction Place. Police listed Garcia 's address as 3504 For Noise Curb Waiver Orange County Airport offi cials \\'iii make a formal. plea for a waiver from California's new noi!e stand a rd s ~l!!!!!!!g__Tue_!!l;iy al what is expected to be a lhree-<lay public hearing in 8anla Ana. 'lbe noise llmit&; promulgated by the State Department of TransporlaUon'1 D!Yiston of Aeronautics, 1tlpulale thal jet takeoffs cannot create more than 70 decibels of noise over residential ...... in its 1ppllcation for a variance, Orange Clounty Airport oll!ci.als say uo homes below the flight palh regularly are subjected lo noise levels blgber -than JO tledbe~. Newport Beaeh cily officials, who forced the hearing when they brought court action against the county and 1tate, wW appear at the hearing and contend the jct noise has even more of a far reaching effect. AlrpOrt o!fidals say they a r e reumabty confident the variioce wilJ be aranted but lhey claim the county will heve lo guy lbose 110 Impacted "°"""' or a~ut down lhe airport If It isn't • • That ctilm ..... labeled ....,tiUoich ol garbage" · by Newport B~ • ,uyor Doaald A. iMcIMis. ... ,. • "\Vhe.n Bresnahan (Airport DirCctor Bob Bresnahan) runs around saying he might have to shut down the airport that's straight baloney," Mcinnis said . He said Newport Beach ilSo is not trying to force the .county to buy the Impacted residences. "We are just hoping the bearing board will set forth the necessary conditions lo bring lhe airport inlo line," the mayor oald. He said lhooe lpeClllc conditions will be nuUlned by Councilman Milan Dostal and City Altorney Dennis O'Neil during the """"' of the hearing. "We art hoping to get a oomplete Ullderstandjng that _ we do heve a problem-;'' Mcinnis saict. ~fclnnis said if hearmg officer Robert Neher rules that the variance isn't warranted, there · are alternatives · to closing lhe airport. Avenida de Presidente. San Clemente. In a third \\·eckend accident, a van rolled into Newport 'Bay at C Street in Balboa early Sunday morning. The owner, Jim Reaves of Costa Mesa. told_ Police he was stopped with his giillriend about 2:30 a.m. when the van sud~enly lurched UllCOlltrollably forward over a curb and into the bay. Both victims managed to' climb out before lhe van sank. . AD SELLS AUTO / ON FIRST DAY The sale was almost as automatic as the traiismisslon· for the reader who placed ~Is ad : '69 CORTINA. auto trans, gas saver. good cond. $500. "lt would require some fast action. It ml~I even result in cutbacks of ./ Oight11 ' Mcllinis said. "lt might even The advertiser reported this Dilly tJ>hone No.) "' bav'' the ·effect of making It mandalory Pllol classified ad did Its job and 90ld for· all• ,uaelT of Ille airport lo observe the car n• lhe rlfs1 day. They may -taRoll procedures." -not all .r.;k lhal fMI, but they IUrt The order of presentations at the .work. Test lt on your own merc:handi~. hearinp ·-decided a1 a specllll Dial th• direct line to resulls at tho . caar-Qlllduct.,t by Neher lut Dally Pilot. PllOne 64Ull71. ~ ·'. --''--------- • > ' ·' I. • ,Z"A>AILY PILOT C Motorists Slur p Up Coast Ga s Availability of gasoline on lhe Orange Coast Improved today \\'i1h about half of the service stations opening to hordes of gas-hungry motorists. Fears of a gasless ~fondaiy as \veil as the now-routine dry Sunday did not materialize. Ser,.ice station owners appeared wilting to cut short their holiday and to pump gas ror the local clielltele. 'Ibo availability of a tank of gas was no worse than w:uaJ tlli!-morning SHUTDOWNS WORSEN GAS SITUATION -Story Pago 4 Frot1tPagel FREEWAY.~. •1hat, although the county bas contributed :aignlficantl)' to !late freeway funds through guoline tax revenues, it has not received its fair share of freeway miles in return. -' An "'energy crisis induced drop in ' gasoline tax revenues was LiaJTied by -state olficlals last month for the lower,ed priority of the Corona de! Mar Freeway. . . Bidding on the first section of the · project. wu called otf when it became ~known that a sharp drop in gas tax re'(enues would mean a slash in the stale freeway budget of about 12 billion. The State Division of Highways ., :wb&equenUy issued an administrative order for the completion of freeways already under construction b e r o r e beginning con.Wuction of new freeways. 'lbe Corona del f\.1ar Freeway does not fit the priority category although ·some work has been completed oo the " Newport Freeway interchange and the Bear Street oUramp in north Costa ·Mesa. · Chairman to Speak ' . On Bicentennial , QJsta Mesa BIC<lltennial Committee · OWnnan Don Bull will speak ·'Illunday '!<> CHART, t~ Citllens Harbor Area 8'search Team. n.e discussion set ror 7::.> a.m. at Glendale Federal Savings and Loan, 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa J\1esa, is open to the public. It will deal with bicentennial committee plans. CM DAILY PILOT TM Or9fl9'I C..•I OAU .. 't' l'ILOT. wlWI whlCft 11 ~ 1M ......... Pftu, lo l'l/llltMd W 11141 or...,. C:..11 h!llltlllriO (....,jlolonf S•llA- ni. .. 11ieftll •rw flWllt• ~v "''~""" ,.rlcl1y, Nor Celt• MMe, H""'1 tNdl, Hllfll'"""" t t9dl/l"-hllll V1!1f)I, uti- -..cJI, lrvlrle/'9llcl1MM* ....t I.iii cr.n-li/ .... Jvtft C.,...,.,._ A Mt.ell ........ .. tti.. k ,...,......_ a.fllnf1Y1 Mlf s..n..,.., 'flM "'N:~I ............ Ill II 11 UI W.I .. , Strnt, Cel.. ,..._, GIHfotn\111, ftU6. 1!:1lt1rt N. w,"" Pr•*"' •NII PWlltll« J,,. It C11rl1y Vino l"f'lllnrll 11'1111 ~•I ~ Th1m11 K11-.ll llllUMr Tii11tt11 A. M11r,lll111 -·-Ch1rlM H. l-ll:ick1r4 r. Ni ll AMlttfftt M41Mtlnl Eflt.rs c:-_ ...... !JO WHt l1y Str11t M1ill11t A4dr1•11·r.o. ••• 11•0. •2•t• --.......... tllcfl1 nu.......,.~ l..lfWN •te1:t1~ m ,._, -.-*"""""" I HCll! 11111 I HCll ....,.,,..,, 1111 ~1 as""""' 11 C-llw •Ml Tllf1 .. •• C7141 '41-4111 a .,... ..-... ,. .. , 141.u11 -. CllM'f••· ,.,,, Or...-c...t ~llllllie ~. ... -........ '""'.,..,.., .....,... fllltllr Ir .._.,IMfNM'I ........ ............... WI"*'! """' _. .... .,~ ...... . .... dMt .......... " CWtl ...... ~.Isl t ....... .,. C«riw llM _...,, -.. .......... ~"' ,.,..,"'"' ... ......................... . • Newport's Jolin Wayne Top s F1·eedon1 Award List Film star John \Yayne or Newport Beach topped the list of seven area citizens honored today in Valley FOrge. Pa., in the Annual National Freedoms Foundation A\vards ceremony. Wayne, 66, was given the George Washington award for the "proud and unabashed patriotism" of his new album, "American, Why I Love Her." He heads the list of some 2,000 honorees designated nationwide for awards from lhe Foundation. Other Orange Coast citations included : -Leila W. A-1axson, 26635 Saddleback Drive, El Toro, and La Paz lntennediate School in El Toro for the .school publication, El Conquistador, honor award for both teacher and school. -Festival or Arts of Laguna Beach. honor awards in commWlity programs category. -Dr. James E. John son of Tustin, forme r assistant Secretar:V of lhe Navy. for hi s award-winning address upholding the American system of government and free CJJterprise. -Rev. Dr. Robert H. Schuller, founder and-Senior-pastor of Garden Grove Conununitf Church for his sennon "I Arn The American Flag." -Three camp Pendletori servicemen, L. Cdr. Gerald Cox; USN : Sgt. John E. Johnston, USMC; and !IN. William G. \Yagnon, USNR, honor award for their joint letter "Human Goals -Values for Living." Announcement of the award.1 was made by Gen. Harold Johnson, USA (i!>l.l, Freedoms Foundation presld<nt. Recipients were selected by an independent Natlonal Awards Jury consisting or 13 state supreme court justices and 29 naUonal repreyentaUve.s of civic, educational, patriotic, and veterans organizations. Acquisition Denied CARSON CITY (AP) -The cltalnnan of lhe Nevada Gaming Con!rol Board has denied a report by lhe Los Angele• Times that Nevada officials are inveMigaling the acquisi.l.km or Bally Manufacturing Co. by U.S. Atty. Gen . William Saxbe and Teamsters President Frank Fllz.simmon1. I 1'hc jury includes Adrian Pelletier of Laguna Beach. The panel noted that Wayne's winning record is his first album. They described it as "a sensitive reflection af a man in love with his country." Accompanied by chorus and orchestra, \Vayne narrates IO tributes to America that are "straight out affirmations of this country and her people." ., Ohher winners of the top 40 awards included Earl Hamner, Jr., of B)lrbank, crea tor of "The WaJtons," and' Gordon Sinclair of Toronto, Canadai for his rttord, "Who Helped? The Americans Did." The Freedom Leadership Avoard went to world heavyy,·cight boxing champion George Foreman of Ha y\lt'ard for a published article on opportunities offered by the American system. A second National Recognition Award was presented to Joy Eilers of Granada Hills for USO performances at home and abroad, public presentations of Lincoln writings and service t o institutionalized persons. For 15 years, the foundation has presented-awards "for constructive words and detds which suppdrt Ametk:a, suggest solutions to basic problems besetting the nation, contribUte to responsible citizenship and tnsplre Jove of country." Gasoline Butli Foils Assault SAN JOSE (UPI) -Robert Link, 27, W3' pumping gas !or a long line of cars when a motorist with lour women passengers Jried to cut inlo the head of the line. Link told police that when ho cootinued workbli on the car al the pumps, the . maJe driver l""ched him and the lolfr women joined the atlack. The 'attendant said he sprayed gasoline on the auacl<era, who then jumped into lh<lr car and sped off. ~ .. • D!!glater'• Ra,..om ' . Hearst Devises • -Free Food--Plan , ; ' IULLS80ROUGH (UPI) -Newspaper publisher Randolph A. Hearst prepared today lo announce p food distribution plan for the needy demanded by the terrorl!t group wblcll kidiiaped bla daughter two week& ago. • . A family 5pokesman ~d lloant would ttveal the . plan, whl<ll be said WOUid involve 0 substantlal amounts of money" but far less than the f!OO mllllon originally demanded, Ibis afternoon. The Symblonese UberaUon Army, which bolds. bis 111-ye&Mld daughter, THOUSA!'IDS WRITE HEARST IN ~YMPAT't~~ry Pat!. 5 ~rvices Pending For Cycle Victim FuneraJ services were pending today for a Co5ta f\.tesa man who died Saturday, apparently of a heart attack, 't\1lile on a motorcycle outing in Baja · California. Miles A. Koslal. 62, of 2349 Colgate Drive, collapsed and died in the Mexicali area while on a roadside meal break. Officials at Bell Broadway J\1ortuary in Costa Mesa said that Mr. Kostal, a carpenter, was taken to a mortuary in Mexicali following his death. Servicc5 we<e being arranged today, along with the plans to return the body to the Harbor Area. TONIGHT Washington's birthday holiday. No meetings. TUESDAY, FEB. lJ SENIOR cmZENS c Lu B Community Recreation Center, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL - Regular meeting, City Hall, 15:30 p.m. NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular meeting, Uttle Theater, Corona del Mar High School, 7:30 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Behind the HeadJines," Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer, Forum, 7:30 p.m. UCI LECTURES -"Happenings in Creative Awareness." Room 510 University High School, 4771 campus Dr., Irvine, 7-10 p.m. "Scientific Medi- ~ !or the Layman: Cancu," Fresh- man Lecture Hall, l'itedi\AI Surge I Bldg., HO p.m. "Pro!esslooal Practices in !loosing Industry," Room 181 Human!Ues Hall, 7-9:30 p.m. ' . . • LONDON lAPl -The price of gold jumped $2 an ounce today lo a record $151 in London and 1.urich on the strength of reports that the Common Market governments were about to raise the official price of their gold holdings. The American dollar cased slightly · at the opening of European foreign exchanges . The ri se in the gold price meant an increase of S:lJ.50 nn ounce since the first of the year. Dealers reported active demand for the metal due to lhe meeting in Brussels of the finance ministers of the nine Common Market nations. Widely published report s said the ministers were ready to raise the value of the gold buttressing their nalional C1DTe11cies .. It is pegged :it .$42.22 an ounce, and there was no indication of the new price the ministers might set. AJthough today was the first time the price of gold topped $150 in the big London and Zurich markets, it has bttn abo\'e that le\'Ci several limes since Jan. 25 in the smaller Paris market. \\'he're special exchange controls keep the price higher than elsewhere. Atwater ~I an Dies PIS~10 BEACH (AP ) -An Atwater man, Joseph Ronald Dias, 29. was killed when his four·wheel drive vehicle flipped while cresting a sand dune here, the Highway Patrol says. The vehicle came to rest 6 feet below the crest of the dlUle. Ms. Mainienan~e Worker · Fountain Valley Has No Uniform for Neiv Emplo ye By CANDACE PEARSON Of lttl IMllJ ,.., St~ The biggest problem Fountain Valley's ne~·est maintenance "man" hD.1 run into is that the city didn't have any unilonrui to fit her. But Diane Scott ls making do with jeans and blou,,es as she " goes on her dally round! of reading and repairing meten for the city water~ department until her specially~rdered overall! are delivered. Th e first woman in a job that bas now been re-titled • ·~m a i n t e n a D c e worker," she aays she ~ the city Is "t..Ung me to ,.. II I-can bold my own as well .., a man can. "They're DOI 1oing to -be s«ry !or hiring me;" she adds, witb the same determination that CUIOd her I<> earn a black belt In korate when lhe waa Il. Now 23, with a 4-,...,.old oon lo aupport, the says a ''woma should have lhe aame chance lo do a Job as a man doe. lf she can perform.'' But 1ht applied !or htr job with Founlain Valley 1 ... out of prtnctple 1han of a love for workinl ou"51de, !or worklni With htr bta<I and her bandl. • • She worked as a receptlonlJI for a computer company in Anahtl.m, but "you see the aame lour walla ...,,<say, the aame peopl<I ••«Yd•7·" . Now oh• la reading water meten, lcamlns bow lo ltalld1• watet main linea and valv,., studying water cllstrlbutlon and chemlcal treabnent In !Choo!, and disooverlng the toola I<> "" lo handle any water-related emergency. Eventually, like all ma In ten anc e workers, she will be on call 24 hours a day. After two rnontM, said Ma. Scott, her c.>workers "seem to accept me." She has a rew more problems in the field when people or even police &tare at her as she · worb or dtlvei a city plck·up truck. "They look at me like l stole It." But obe'i dotennin«I I<> do well. When ohe llarted leamhli karate "out of mere self preservation" becau.Se lhe .... !J.yearffld and lived IJ blocks Imm school in Wasbinrt40, D.C. She's never had to u • e It, but says it's to ''relutng to know! have It." That confidence aod being the living erample of lhe adage, "like mother, 111 •• daughter," help her now. For years, her mother w a 1 one of the few women wallpop<r baqera and took a )'OUl11 Diane wltb her OD the job In. """lnette .. "She .... 'l"Y f'Od," ber da""ter aays proudly: Diane• I-uk her bow Iba can 1lind getting dirty and """"' "ll'llbbr clothet," but she doMl.'t ... It u a challenp "' her !emlnlty. . "I love 111)' job," lbe aays ahnplJ. She la excited about bet future. bot odmltt men have """ adVllllage over her at work. • "They can JO -· .. 1 dinner and watch television. I have to go home, • Dally '"'' hlff ,.... • 'THEY WON'T BE SORRY' Maintenance Work•r Scott -make dlnher, play with my son and 1 put him to bed. And maybe !Ind Ume !or TV before I have lo act up at 5 a.m." (