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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-02-26 - Orange Coast PilotI 't .. ,• . cl- • r1 t DAILY PILOT Silence ol Kidnapers * * * 10' * * * ' ·Talaes Toll on Hears ts ' . TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 26, 1974 VOL O, NO. S1, I llCTIONI, JI,' PAOll -- • • • ·1 ~j ., ... • • • • • • • • • • 0 Newport Oil Executive Cheats Death Coacli' s Drunk Rap Dismissed Drunken driving tbarges In Orange County •rwinsl Loo Anl"Jes Rama bead football coadi Cll1ld< Knox have been dlsmlsied tn West Orange County Municipal Court. Koox Instead pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of reckless driving growing out of the incident in March of Jut year wbe.n be was arrested by Westminster police while attempting to negotiate a freeway offramp. The Rams head coach paid a rine of $120, according to court reconis. I rate Gasoline Customer Sets O iv11 Car Afire SAN FERNANDO (UPI) -Aoolfo Robles, who felt a burning resentment at the fuel shortage , no longer has to warry about getUng gasoline for his car. He set it afire at a closed-down service station. Police said that ~. 54, drove tm 1967 Cougar into a Mobil station that was shut down for Jack of gasoline. He had some gasoline with him however, about a gallon or so, and put it in the car himself. The problem, said Sgt. Dave Hom, was that Robles did not put the gasoline in the car's tank, but splashed it about inside, stepped back and tossed in a match. The car was blazing merrily, Horn said when he arrivN in response to a f~e alarm. Robles Identilled himsell as the· owner and said he set the car ablaze In frustration over lhe gasoline !bortage, the policeman said. Horn said that a check showed Robles hod not· finlsbed paying fer the ~uto, and so wu not the sole owner. He was booked for ar.1011 on tbe tD1paid-for portion of the car. Bandits Take J ewels l(almhach Quits His Law Firm By L. PETER KRIEG 01 11tt ~If P'lllf Sll ff Herbert ~w. Kalmbach of Newport Beach annoUJlCed today be has resigned from the Jaw rum be formed in 1967. Meanwhile in San Francisoo, it was announced that tbe Califomla Supreme Court will comlder possible disciplinary action agalnat Kalmblch. Kalmbach pleaded guilty Mooday to federal dlarges of illegal campaign practices. He could draw a maximum sentence ol two years in prison and a $10,000 fine for one felony and one year and a ,1,000 fme for the other misdemeanor charge. The Newport attorney who told Senate Watergate Committee his family and his prof...,lon "mean everything to me" withdrew from the film ol Kalmbach, ileMarco, Knapp and Cllllllngworth 10 days ago. Kalmbach, wbo pleaded guilty to two charges Involved In the Watergate investigatioo, may leave the J a w profession altogether and may go Into the field of r.,i estate ln...tments. Kalmbactf was unavailable f o r comment today but his long~lme private secretary Ann Harvey said, "whatever he does be wlll be tbe sole practitioner." In a prepar..t statement, Kalmbach said: "Herbert W. Kalmbach, senior partner and founder of · Kalmbach, DeMaroo, Knapp and Cbillingworth, bu withdrawn from the !inn effective Feb. u to pursue penooal business Interests a n d lnvertments. "Following Mr. K a I m b a c b 's resignation, the firm bu be e n "'°'8anlzed .. DoManlo, Barger and Beral." 'Illa! was the entire text of the statement. James Knapp lert the finn several years ago. Sherwood Chillliigworth, president of A.dorada Corporation of lo.9 FRESNO (AP) -Two bt.idlts stole Angeles, left at the end of last year. 1100,000 worth of jewelry from the borne In 1967, Kalmbach fulfilled one of of a Fresno jeweler and hb wife, his life's ambitions when tie set up aberiff's dep1tles sai<I, Monday. The Kalmbach, DeMln:o, Knapp & robbers, armed with a handgun, bound ~ and gagged Albert and Doris Edmonds In the llOlt I~ Jelra, Kalmbtlch after prying~ a aide doQr to ,Illa·· roomed the natton and the wwld, entey &tnday n!Aoflliillu!CI. ~ (See JWMBACll,-l'lpJ) . . . Ration Plans . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Angeles County became .the first ct>lnl)I ill the state today to adopt an emergency "gasoline marketinc" plan buod oo license ·plate numben. (See otoey Page U.) ~·-•· The board of "1pervison voted ~ IQ put Los Angel'" CGJnty ........,,~ on a gasoline distribution plan announced Mooday by <IOv. llM&kl Reagan. It can be impoled In any,Qf the ~tata'• ,58 counties wbere It la requested. II prolllbl)' wtU take eltect hOtt.FrlilAJ. • • • • , ,.·. - . ~ ll .. • ~ust tike the Old Days De11Y 'lief Staff 1"11 ... Veteran pilot Frank Pine, 56, vice president of Tallmantz. Aviation , had to make emergency land· ing in his old JN4D "Jenny" biplane near Estancia High School in Costa Mesa Monday when it threw a rod in the engine shortly after takeoff from Orange County Airport. Pine, 2004 Vista Caudal, Newport Beach, Just picked a spot and set her down the way the old barnstorming pilots always did. The aborted flight to Piru, Calif., ended with mechanics removing the wings to tow the old Curtiss biplane back to the airport. Fired Mesa Police Officer Suing the Cit y A Costa Mesa police officer who was fired by his captain after allegedly being absent from ·duty _for six days has demanded his reinstatement in Orange Cotmty Superior Court action taken against the city. Harry L. Bowen, 46, of Costa Mesa, additionally demands $200,000 i n damages ftr what he claims was unlawful dismillal Jut Aug •. U by capt. E. IL Glllll!OW. Glaagow and Pollco Qilel Roger Neth ""'Ibo oamed as defendants In Bowen'• lawsuiL Bowen states that be should have -given leave of ab<ence and lime to recover from medical problems and that the city violated Its own civic codes wben ~Jed. that request and fir..t him. He abo asks the court to order the city to compensate him for loot pay of fl,700 If be Is rtblred at bis former (Set FlllED, Pip II • ~ ~ Kidnaper Silence Takes Toll on Hearst Parents SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The lack described by their ehiklren as "just ot comnnm.ication from the kidnapers dried out, but hoping," maintained their of Patricia Hearst is taking its toll silence at the family estate in suburban on the emotions of her parents. Hillsborough . They notified lhe press For the first time since negotiations they would have no further state1nents by tape recording and televised news "until there is a major development." cooference got started, the Symbionese The Hearst !amily is receiving some Ubeiatlon Anny has gooe more than eoo tetten a day from well-wishers three days without responding to offering support. Donations to the family publiaber Randolph A. Heant'I efforts and Its food distrlbutioo project, called to win bla-daugbfer's rtleMe. --"Poople In< Neod " ha.. paaoed the Heant and bis wile Catherine, •100,000 mark. ' Reds Test Warheads WASll!NGTON (AP) -The Soviet Union fl.red the third in a series of muUpte warhead tem in the Pacific oo Saturday, tbe l'<!ntagon ,.id Monday. The SSX18 ooared from Tyuratam in central RIWla about 5,000 mil~, and ·t1toppec1 in the Pacific about 400 miles north ol Midway bland. The food giveaway originally scheduled to mume today was postpo11ed lDllll TbW'!Clay to give .organizers more time to make arrangements and prevent the disorder and violence that erupted on the fll'll day of the program. Frustrated crowds saw food scattered In all di-and fights broke out Friday oo the first d•y, when tlllcks arrived late at dlstributioo paints. The SLA, a tiny terrorist sect which (See HEARST, Pa1e I) • Slams Door. . 1. On Gunman; Shot Misses A Union 011 Company vice president escaped injury late Monday when he answered the door or his Newport Beach home, met a man aiming a pistol at him and slammed the door on the gun, causing it to fire past his bead. Edward Kepdal~ >4, of 2629 Vista Oranda in , the Bluffs, t .... ld police he felt the muzzle blast and s~ock wave or the slug whipping past his temple. Nothing in the oil company executive'11 recent activities or career work could be tied to the case which police have listed as assault with intent to commit murder. "'The probable motive is robbery," said Detective sam Amburgey, noting that a woman was beaten under similar circumstances on the other side of the Bluffs 10 days ago . Kendall, who said be ans\vered the door about 8:45 p.m., said he bel,i.eves he obtalned a good description of the gunman. He was reportedly a diminutive Latin (See CW.SE CALL, Page ZI Moslem Rebels Out MANII.A, Philippines (AP) Government forces have retaken the last two Moslem rebel strongholds near Jolo, in the aouth Philippines, the military command announced today . The command announced lhe recapture of Bud Datu Hill, nearly two miles from the town of Jolo, and said the "Maoist ' rebels" used it as a sanctuary after l Ibey failed to win control of Jo lo · tHe capital of tbe Su!u archipelago, . in a batUe earlier this month. I OrPf e • • Weather Some low cloudiness or fog is expected for the morning houn \Vcdnesday; but otherv.ise sunny and cooler. Highs in the mid-.605 at the beaches rising to 70 inland. Overnight lows. mostly 35-46. ' INSIDE TOD,\ Y Jim Croce, Who wai killed laat Stptembtr in o plaflt CTalh, lllts-~!b•nu topping !lie ""' --- tion's sllles charts and fs a great postltumow succtJs. Storr/, Page 20. • ' . ( ' ( _2 DAILY PILOT s T,....y, Fob<""' 26, 1974 No GNP Growth? Petroleum Panel Sees Rationing NEW YORK (AP) -The National Petroleum Council today predicted the nation will have to institute some form ot mandatory gasoline ritloning unless federal allocation measures prove more effective. 'Ille council al>O said In a report that unless ttetroletBn lmportl are increased substantially before the end of the year. the real Gross National Product could not grow beyond present levels and unemployment would bi! about 6 pe<ttnl. The unemployment rate rose from t:s Groc ery Costs .(limb by 1.8% wAsHINGTON (UPI) -Spurred ~r a second slnlght month of nslng farm prices, the -of a typical lamlly food groc<ry buket jumped $30, or 1.8 percent, in January to a record aooual rate of $1,680, a government report showed today. The increaae pushed the figure past the previous r<e<>nt of $1.653 .. t last August When the cost increased by $27, or 1.6 percent. The January figure of $1,680 was S305. or 22 pen:ent, above a year earlier. Further increases are expected. Funeral Today For Mesa Tot Killed by Car Private family funeral services were !ichedUled today for a Costa Afesa boy killed Saturday when be accidentally rode hi.I bicycle into a car afler his molhe< called him home for dlnnor. Seth Ward Wynne, 5, or 467 Magnolia St., died at Hoag A1emolial Hospital about 8 p.m., less than two hours aft.er the accident neer bia home. He suffered a compound fracture of the leg and internal bleeding or the stomach as a result of colliding with the car driven by John Shigaki, 41, of m Magnolia st., just a {ew houses away. "It slv>ok Ul!I all up because no one thought he wasu't going to make it," said Traffic Officer PhH McConnick. 0£ficer McCormick said the boy was called home for dinner and rode out suddenly between two parked cars, slamming into Shigaki's slow-moving car. Graveside rites for the boy were scheduled for 11 a.m. at Paclfic View 1tfemorla1 Park, Corona de\ Mar, with Baltz-Bergeron Funeral. Home officiatio.8. Survivon: include bis 1not.her, Lisa Wynn<, plus a brother, Dje Wynne. Police 'Harvest' ' Marijuana Patch A newspaper carrier with a goo:t eye dbcovered a garden of' about 15 marijuana plants in a vacant Huntington Beach field Monday, police said. The greenery was growing on open land at LeGrand Lane and Heil Avenue. next door . to a large apartment : .. complex, police said. Police said they couJdn't trace the ownership ol ttie plants discovered by • the J~yeer-old carrier Monday night. So ~·.they uprookd the illegal gr:"' and lltored ·-' l1 In a pollce locker. '· percent In O.C.mber to u ID January, the largest monthly increase in four years. The councll , an advisory panel to the Interior Department compo~ of oil indU!try e1ecutive5, concluded that additional reductions in fuel imge, Including gasoline. will be required to baiaoce demand with oupply. In the report lilied "Shorl·Term JJ,S. Petrolewn Outlook -A Reappraisal," the council's committee on emergency REAGAN OKAYS ODO-EVEN PLAN. Slory, Pago 12 preparedness sajd Jhe shortage due to the Arab oil em&rgo could be met in the first tbree months of the year. But It said its study concluded that demand for petroleum products ID the second quarter ci the year mu.st be reduced "by a 1uh..!!tantlaDy higher amount -over 400,000 barrels per day -than is oow planned by the-Federal Energy ornoe ... Average U.S. daily consumption Is estimated at more than 18 million barrels a day. And the report noted, "Experience does not indicate that all FEO measure1 are fully IUCCeSSful. For enmple, the motor «asOtine reduction reported for January ~Y the FED was ooly about two-thirds of the roductloo targeted by that office." On possible gasoline raUonlng, the report said that "if federal .. alktcations programs cannot both r e d u c e consumption and satisfy oomurners, the additional mandatory actions will be required." It said these should include greater use of odd-even purchase p l a n s , staggered selling hours for service stations and a requirement t h a t .motorists cannot buy ga1 unless lhe.ir tank is half empty. If these measures are not successful in reducing inconvenience and ir public compliance does not i m p r o v c substantially, "The nalloo will have no alternative but to institute some system of mandatory raticlling," the report said. ln his ne't\-s con£erence Monday night, President Nixon .!a.id there is "A much beuer than even cbance" that the nation can avoid ratklning. He said conservation measures undertaken by the American pubUc were reoponslble for the optlmlstic outlook. F..-Pagel KALMBACH. •• successlully !Ollclllng, by his _.own accotmt, millions of doUan for the Nixon presidential campolgns of 1968 and 1\172. As ooe of Nbcoo'o closest penonal aidel!I, the. 52--year-old Kalmbach received VIP treatment during his fundralslng forays, often staying at U.S. embassies when traveling abroad. Then came Watergate and disclosure! of Kalmbacb's role in the scanadal. Now Ka!mbacb'1 prosperous and fulfilling world Is In a st· :nbles. He faces a possible . sentence of three years in iri.son and f ll,000 in floes. after · pleading guilty to illegal campolgn practices, including offering a n ambassadot>bip for a $100,000 political donation. Kalmbach'• biggest pmonaJ triaI In the montbo since the curtain lifted on the Watergate drama perhaps haa been its devastaUng effect oo bia reputaUoo and his family. That family consl!ts of his wife, Barbara Helen, whom Kalmbach met while the two were undergraduates at the University of Soothem Callfomia. They have been married for 26 years. The couple have two sons and a daughter. Kalmbach's reputation was once described by a friend: "U we were playing poker on lhe telephone and I said I had three nines and he said be had three teru, I would believe him." **•*'**' - t I t • • ~ -· • Uf'I T"""°"' When You've Got It, Flaunt It The owner or this 1964 Rolls Royce Phantom V obviously is proud of the rarity of his car. Of 502 rnanufa'ctured, this is one of the few in the United States, garaged in Houston. It's the same model as the one used by the queen of England. Gypsies Swindled After Europ €-Trip, Stra11ded TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) - A hand of almost 100 gypsies , after a trip halfway round the world from Europe in hopes of getting into the United States, v.·as swindled by Mexican s m u g g 1 e r s , abandoned on the U.S. border and jailed. A group of 67 was held by the U.S. Im.migration Service here today and "about 30 more" were being held in Phoenix, according to Wil liam Selzer, assistant chief Border Patrol agent. Ivan Gorg Knova lov, mustachioed leader of the gypsies, said most of the band were bom in Yugoslavia, but they have spent recent years wandering through Italy, Holland and Belgiwn. They decided to come to the United states he said, "because it is every man's' dream to come to America and make lots of money." 'Ibey flew Irom Holland to Mootreal, Emergency Slips For Gas Adopted NEWPORT, Ore. '(AP) -'!be City Council ol this ooestal Oregoo town bas legislated against panic buying ol gasoline. '!be council Monday adopted an ordinance permitting people to gel gas ln an emergency, with autborizatioo slips banded out by city police. u motorists are assured tlley can gel gas when they really need i~ they will stop towing elf their tanks, the oouncil reasoned. Gas authoriJation slips will be given -no questions asked -in cases of critical acddeotal Injury, Immediate peril to life or property and deaths of close famlly members. Viet POW Release he said, and from there to Mexico City, and then made their way more than 1,000 miles northward to the Arizona border. En route, he said , they met a band of Mexican smugglers, who offerOO to get them over the border into the UnitOO States , for a price. The gypsies paid the .smugglers about $8,500, they said , but the smugglers robbed them of their belongings and dwnped them on the border near Nogales Saturday night They were trekking northward toward Phoenix when the border patrol rounded them up Sunday. Selzer said it was the largest group of illegal immigrants from Europe ever detained in Arizona, which gets a Sizable traffic in illegal aliens from Latin America but is far from the usual ports of entry for visaless Europeam. A hearing wtn be held March 12 Into whether the gypsies will be allO!red to stay or be deported. Freda Flamingo Flies the Coop POOLE, England (AP) -An exetsS rJ. wind and woofug won freedom for a flighty flamingo named Freda. Keeper Brian Pettit of the Poole 700 erplained today that mating flamingos tend to leap up and down ID a oort of. love dance, and Freda on Monday leapt hig)ier than ""'"' be<:a""" she was the object of three male admiren. At that moineot, a gust ol wind whisked her over the seven-foot fence aroond the zoo's flamingo paddock , something she could never have done by herseU, Pettit said. Freda was spotted on a south coast cliff 10 miles away. Pettit went looking for her but without success. He said he fears that after a life in captivity, she will never be able to fend for herself in the world outside. From Page J HEARST ..• snatched the 2:0-year--old granddaughter of \\1i.Jliam Randolph Heant from her Ber!eley apartment Feb. 4, threatened Thursday to "break off negctiation.s" if its demands \\'ere not immediately met Self-styled "Field Marl!lhal Cinque" of the SLA gave Hearst 24 hours to add $4 million of his own funds to the $2 million food giveaway financed by the publisher and the Hearst Foundation as a first step toward Patricia's release. Hearst announced Friday the demand was "far beyond my financial capability ," but the Hearst corporation said it wOuld provide the money after the girl 'A'as freed . l\leanwbile, two members ol the Symbionese Liberation Anny pleaded innocent Monday to the murder of Oakland·s black school superintendent last November. Jooepb Remlm, 'rl. and Russell Little. 26, were arraigned on charges ol killing superintendent Marcus Footer with cyanide bullets . Their p r e l i m i n a r y hearing wu set for April 1. The tv.•o 'We re taken aen:ms San Francisco Bay from San Quentin to the Oakland court.house with handcuffs on their wrists and irons on their legs, but Municipal J udge Stafford P. Buckley ordered the bonds removed. From Page J CLOSE CALL • • • male who said not a word during the confrontation and shooting, which sent a small~lber bullet through an interior wall. Kendall said alter he slammed the door and caused the automatic pistol to fire that he beard the gunman nmning away down the street. His wife, Amolboyd Kendall, was in the residence at the tlme of the incident, but was not near where the shot was fired , according to Investigators. Inves tigators couJd not Jmmedlately tie the Monday night bcklen1• into one IO days ago in wtlll'h a wc::1an was beaten and robbed ol about (800 worth of household furnishings by a pair of men who broke into her home. • .Pop e Claim s Priests Too ' 'Worldly' VATlOAN CITY (UPI) -Pope Paul I has voic'ed concern that Roman Catholic 1 priests may ba il)dulglng ID temPG<•I I wealth and lat .. nlght pleasures. In ao annual addms to R<one' Lenten preachers, the ponUff Monday ·~ prlesta to be poor and pure, Jeove ~al reform to ctvll authorities and re!ram · from "acrid'' cr1Uclsm of the\r own church. He also elaborated on his prepared text, saying tnat some priests think too much about cars and bank acco.unts and spend too mu ch time at night outside their homes. "There are students In o u r ecclesiastica l college who now have the keys to their residences because they ro out (late ) at night," Pope P~ul said extemporaneously. "\Vhere do they go in these hours?" He added: "Woe if our priests want to be rich . We must not IJe like a priest who in hls advancing age makes hhMelf a balance sheet such as I came to Rome without a penny. Now l have a house, an automobile, items of value and a bank account. No, this is not good business." In his prepared remarks the Pope answerOO criticism made during a conference of the Rome clergy Feb. 12-15 in which some speakers called for social refonn, accused the church of .identilyJngf wilb the Establishment and asked It to distrioote Its wealth to the poor. In bis speech, Pope Paul did not refer to the wealth of the church but asked priests to refrain from personal enrichment. "Be truly detached from money and from economic advantages Lhat may result to your advantage from religious activity by mMns of skillful and undue maneuvers," he said. "Learn to be stem w/·1h you'rselves to retain transparent puri y of b<:-havior. both inward and outward. without yielding to inconsistent and perhaps fatal permissiveness, of which there is so much talk tod ay," the Pope said. Pope Paul said the cle rgy conference on "The Ills or Rome" "'as right in sLreSsing the responsibility of Chri.9lians in the cause of justice and charity. But he said "our charitable and social commitment should not be to the disadvantage of our properly religious activity ... " From Page J FIRED ... aalary of $1,100 a month. Bowen, who joined the C.Osta J\1'esa force in 1957, is described as suffering from anxiety neul'05i,, and alcohol dependency in physicians' statemen ts attached to his lawsuit. It ls also recommended in those statements that he reeeive boopital treatment that will allow him to withdraw from alcohol and that he join the Alcoholics Anonymous program. PAIR DRI NK UP BOOTY; NA BBED BERLIN (UPI) -West Berlin police said they had no trouble arresting tv.-·o young men who broke Into a bar in the city's French sector during the night. The burglars drank four bottles of schnapps between them. It rendered then1 in such condiUon that they were unable to make a getaway when they heard a police patrol car pull up at the bar. SAIGON (UPI) -Viel Cong and Salgllll negotiators reached an 11th hour agreement today to free all remaining Vietnamese prisoners cl. war by March 6, a government milrtary spokesman said. A 190-minute, face -to -face disrussion between chief m i 11 t a r y negotiators broke a deadlock that Ulreatened to keep more thao 1,000 POWS in prisoo lndelinitely. +.1 •emnu :; •a:::. OVER THE RIVER and THROUGH THE WOODS -,. '--------"""'."~ • OUNM COAST ST ' r If<" I , DAILY PILOT fM °""ff C-1 W.IL 'I' 'ILOT, wllll .... ic. 111 ~-the N ... ,..._, 19 _,..._. ~ .. or.. p.tt """"""" ~. a.., ,... ""'""' ... ~llMll, ~ ~ ,rlllef, fw eoti. Mt.-, H..,.n IMdto Hunll"81'0!! l •K1'1f,_lllll \111i.,., LtelN 1.-dt. lrvlnlo/'9Mlelledt * '-' ,......,..., a.n hr111 c_,,1111'....... A 6IMM F'llitMI .. "., " ..... llltlell .. ,.,,.,,. ....,, ...,..,...,... Tiie ,..IN:"91 """4WllM lllolnt II el Al w .. t .. , •r,..i, c..it Mtwo. c.11twM, f'lil#. Indian Hunters 1,300-mile Trip Ends for 2 Boys For lll.ree more .montll.s Placenti a Ave. will be tom up to widen Ill.a street. At times Pl acentia Avenue will be closed and access will be available by way of Babcock St., coming from ttie back way. 1, ... -" , I - 1 I I \•t I ' j . 11.:~ ' ,., " ... ,,. OJ f'"' I ' ,,, ... '"' t •. "" le\ert N. We..! , ... IMll .... l'vtlll,,,., Jer. .. l . C11tl•r ¥ke Prtil~ IM ~el ~ 'fll•flll•I Kff'til """ l'N1t"f A. Mwplil'"' ~lllll• ChatfH H. l••• IUr.h,N ·p, Ni ll -.......... >il .......... 1 ... -0..-"'-1: *31 W.1 .., • ..,.... ,...,.,.. ._,., ma...__., ....,.......,.. ......... a.di: nt ...,.., ,.,_ ............ eKtll "'"t IMdl ...,....,,. lef\ ~I .. Mol1l'I f l (alft!nf ... , · Ttil•ll••• 1n•1 "''""''' ClalfW .AI09111 t I '41·1171 ,.,.. c-.. 1 ,.,,._ ....., • ~ a.a 492-4420 "-... .._.. C-'f C.111,,_1 ... _, .. , c~ ""' °'...-c-1 -.i11111111111 ~: ... -,...... lltvttrtllilM. HAVRE, Moot. (AP) -Two young Wisconsin brothers set off from home with Ind.loo beaddressea, a tom tom, a homemade spear, bow and arrows and about 60 cents. Douglas and William Mqan, 19 and 9, ol Milwaul<ee told their pannts In a note· they were heading for Indian country to find ao Indian tribe which wooid adopt them. '!be bo)'!, ...., of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Plonka, climbed aboard an Amtrak train without tickets s..nday !llOl!ll!!i_•nd~tr•veled to MiJ!leapolls, UDhlndered by oonductOra. • At ·MinneapoU.. they chlnpl trains, -llelting OD a. Bllilngtoa Northorn passenger train en l'O'l~} ~' Seattle, Wash. They overshot Sioux Indian eotatry In South Dakota, their a p p.a r e n V desllnaUoo, and wound up Instead at Havre, Blackfeet Indian territory. brothers -their mother is remarried -were given over to juvenile authorities to await the 1,30().miJe trip home. Mrs. Plonka told newsmen In 1'-1ilwaukee after talking with tbe boys by telephoo< Iha! wheo they realized tJiey bad "kind of passed up Wounded !<nee" In Sooth Dakota the · decided to head Ior caiifomia. ' · " She said lhe yowigsten appareoUy decided on California becau,,e Indians are seen on television progrutl3 that originate there. Mrs. Plonka said the bo)'! bad read ·Mark Twain's "Tom Sawyer" and a hook abouf ao Indian boy who learned to survive in the wilds. Offi<iab here said the young eirploren kept a journal . describing the trip "lo M i!WSO!a" and the )ourtH!y on a "Minassota to CeaUe" train. fl.frs . Plonka said Grant offered to take the boys "under hi! wing" and bring them home toda y. We h_ope you will be patieffl wltll. constru ction as tl\e resu lts will cert ai nly be wortl\ all ttie trouble. -' If yov aren't adventuresome, give us a call , and we 'II bri ng ~amples to your home. 19th ST. 17th ST. I t--_,.,·=--- e--~A -16th ~T. ---+-- 18thST. • ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES IN ·cosTAMISA SINCI lff7 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 ' . "' .. , ..... "' --... .....,.,............ ..... ... _, .. • ....... """ wllMvl tf«1'1 -~f/f~-r. ...,... .... ......,. ..v at com MtM, Qi....,...., ~11111 "' (........ b .61 -'fl"L ... 1N11 U.1t INfttllly1 111111..,... ......... ~· Th eir We5tward journey ended here Monday after Burlin!lton N o r I h e r n conductor Lee M. Grant of Havre noticed -the boys jumping over • tent peg in a domed Jll'ssenser car and asked them v.·htte tlieir parents were. \Vhat awaits them when they return? ''They alrtady ~w," Mrs. Plonka said. "TheysaJd to me, 'I auppoee we 're going to get a spanking.' And I said, 'Well, do you -)'OU sboold 1et a pal on the back?' " ,, Mon .·Tllun. f .. '''°' M. 9 IO 9: Sot. '130 .. 5 IN The trulb came out and the Morpn ., I l ' . ' • 'YOU BUY ONE AND BEFORE LONG HAVE 10' Whippet Fancier Carol Kilbride Holds Freckles Fa1nily Affair Wlii.ppets Race at Lake Forest By \VllltA!'\f SCllRE'~ER Of tllt Dall1 P'llel 5 .. lf They hit top speed almost the instant they burst from the starting gate. stretching out into a full stride that can cover 18 feet or more. They flash across the 200-yard grass track at almost blinding speed _for a · .. living creature -45 miles an hour or faster. They aren't horses or cheetahs but •. whippets -small dogs "·eighing no more than 30 pounds. f\fembers of the Southern California Whippet Association have beeen bringing their dogs on recent weekends to practice metts on the grass around.tbc.. founlain marking Lake Forest 'n the ~-ddletl'ack Valley. The dogs t}J<'y train race all over CaJifomia. entire family invol\'cd in a \Vholesome acti\'ily," he added. At the Lake Forest practice site, there are as many kids as dogs and some find morl' pleasu re hunting tadpoles in a nearby bog than helping mom and dad train the family dog . The members of Papin's club -now 60 families strong -rome from all wa1ks of life. There are gas station owners. lawyers. construction workers , doctors . pcl shop owners and a telephone lineman . Though many come from the Orange Coast. the as.sociation has members 'A'ho brave gas-tight times to come for ·~·eekend practice from homes in Chino and Pomona. They all sha re one interest -\\"hippets and !he way they run. .. ll gets to be like an addiclion," said pretty, blond Carol Kilbride, whose "'hole family participates in dog racing and handling. "\'Gu buy one or t"·o. then t"·o more and before long you ha\•e ten.'' the Papin's pride and joy is a dog named Hurricane Samson of \Vindy Glen - ··sam" for short. Papin said he is a sure champion and has already started \Vinning. "\\'e practice \\'ith the1n to _make surr they know how to behave 1n a race situation and to get the n1 used to the starting box." said Orin Papin. an El Toro kennel 0"11cr and president of the whippet association. "These arc great ways lo get Use of E11ergy At Saddleback Cut by 3 Percent Saddlcback College has cut energy usage by three percent since a program of reduced air oooditioning and room lighting began last mooth. Supt, Fred Bremer told the Saddleback boanl ol ~ Monday night the lighting and cooling reductions were made following guidelines of the San Diego Gas and Electric Company. The dogs bear exotic formal names like Hurricane Jennifer of \Vindy Glen , "Jenny" for short and Dazzling Daphne, "Daffy'' for short. The whippets are bortf and bred as hunters. The speed in races is really ifi'jdental. That hunting instinct carries right into the racing. The taltered Jure they chase is a rabbit sk.i n. So keen is tt\eir inbred hunting desire that some dogs latch onto the rabbit-skin lure at the end of a race and refuse to let go -even when suspended in the air. the skin is gripped bct\\.'e<:>n their teeth. Yet the people \\'ho lo\'e \\1hippets, like Papin and his association men1bers. say they arc the gentlest anin1als in the world. He noted exterior lighting along the campus entrance road is now turned off al 11 :30 p.m. and sai dcampus offi. clals have agref'd to turn off air con· ditioning t'Om pletely in a pcl\\'er eme r· ··These dogs arc so afrectionatc. my sistcr·ln-\aw's \\•hippct actually sleeps under the covers "'ith htr,·· said club ---------·-member Phil Kilbride. gency. " WHIPPETS BURST FROM ST AR TING BOX IN EL TORO K1nn1I Owner Don P1pin H1lp1 l>og1 c;.1 FHl of Stort " 5 DAILYIPJLDI 3 . .. Reorganization at Fairview .; , . SOOds of Chang·e Sow1i in Forni of Stcite Legislation ' ' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ;./ThiTcl In a Seri<.•) Sweeping changes have q u 1 e t I y occurred within the walls 'and wards that once were California's \)'&rehouses r~ wailld 'lwes 1Uld Imperfect people l~'a 1.....nughtened Ume. ·A ·MYohJUOMry reorganization has beent accotnpU.Shed ln only 2~~ years at Cos1.I Mesa'a Fairview State Hospital ror ~ menially relanled. The "llfawlln& farili1y at 250t Harbor B.IYd. opened 11 years ago and fun~:Jns as a self-<:ontained community in its own right. Yel it has remained largely isolated from the overall Orange Co as 't community in many ways. both by its miles of chain link fence and . occasionally, a deep m~t of misunderstandings: ' Some· of these grew and were perpetuated inside t h e walls and "·ire , fence. . • Seeds of major ' change 'A'ere SO\vn in 1969. by the Lanterman Mental Relardation Services Act. a romplicated· sounding piece of legislation really quite simple in spirit : '· ... to meet tlie nee<ls of each re- !arded person. regardless of age o;· degree o.f l1undicap a11d at each stuge of liis life's dcrelop111ent ." Internal conflicts and fricti ons - particularly in pa51 hosp i t a I adn1inis1rations -have stood in the way of full attaiJ11ncnt of this gval. So beginning in 1970, ... five-man :c;tate task force sat do"'" to 'A"Ork an..i turned ., . ' ' ' UPIT ....... FAIRVIEW 15VEARS OF SERVICE MANY CHANGES WROUGHT WJ.THJN .THESE WALLS DEALING WITH TREATMENT OF RETARDED Costa Mesa's Fairview State Hospital Overcomes Internal Conflicts, Discards Old Styles !he classical clinical hospital concept upside do\\'n and threw the old orga nizational charts and traditional chains of authority out the windO\\'. ' 0\\lc have eliminated the old line organization o( the mental hospital , on the clinical side," says Dr. Anthon y N. Toto, Fairview's medical director and one of the architects of the new systen1. The plan is a mpdel for clinical operations at all state hospitals for the mentally retarded and. in expanded scope, for t.ho6e facilities designed to treat the state's mentally ill There is a major disUnclion between the two afflictions. A preliminary Fairview study report by Behavior Sciences Education Center , of Azusa, in 1971) spelled out in words what many at that lilne knew and said: -The social climate is not geared to enoourage innovation, pride in achievement, or personal and career development. -The presence of 'sacred cows' is v.•idespread and there are many of them. -Hostilities exist, teamwork is oflen discouraged , spec i a I intra-hospital empires resist needed change, and in some departmool.!'l even talk of change~ is forbidden. Today, changes have romc, after a 2~Z-year process. Some sleps streamlining treatment (or Fairview's ·retarded residents -centered in 10 specific programs -"·ould have been unthinkable a decade ago. Regulation white 'A"as then the uni[orm of the day . 1vtrile employes voted five years ago 10 \Vear whatever is colorful and coinfortable. State-trained psychiatric -technicians tl'Tsl and college-graduated registered nurses (RNs) \Vere also engaged in a cold war over professional capabilities and delegation of aulhority within the wards. Certain department heads devoted to their own pet techniques and treatment processes built empires of authority. Oiange has come: -Department heads now have been eliminated. -Perhaps a third of the cumbersome middle management structure has been cut out.. resulting in better Jines of ron1munication. -Lowe!'" echelon employes wlm deal directly with patients are encouraged lo play a greater role in their treatment. -They even in itiate ne"' concepts in the therapeutic process based on their daily obs ervations, because they know the petients and thei r problems and personalities best. -Many among Fairvie"··s I , 7 l 4 retarded residents get treatment as a result, actually tailored to the individual. that was unavailable before. -A massive; detailed record·keeping system ·to map goals for. and progress of. individual patients by six-month _2 Donors Take Exception ' , , To Claims by P1·eside11t . ., BOSTON ( APJ -Tu·o n1en who President Nixon said took !he same kind of tax deduction he did for personal papers contributed to the governn1ent or public agencies took issue \\'ith the chief executive today. One of them, Jerome B. \Viesner, said he never got any ded~ction at all for donating papers to the National • .\rchh1cs. Nixon, in his news conference 1'1onday night, said that W_iesner, John Kenneth Galbraith, former Vice President Hubert IL Hwnphrey and the late President Lyndon B. Johnson were among those "who made deductions such as I made Jn this particular case." Plea Bar gaini1ig W oulcl Be Easier l1i Asse1nbly Bill 1 SACRA.~tEi\'TO tUPJ) - A bill making it easier to use plea bargaining in felony cases has been passed by the Assembly despite objections by a Republtcan lawmaker who cited the ca!'le o( former VicM> ... sidenL Spiro I . Agne)!, Assemblyman John Briggs ( R • Fullerton), pointed to Agnew's case and said Monday that "plea bargaining ought to be eliminated entirely.'' "There are some Democrats and Republicans 'A'ho thought the Vice President got away with murder'' when he used the plea bargaining process. Briggs said. ''\Ve shouldn't make It easier for people to cop out. \\'e ought to be going the other way." Tlie bill (SB!l38J by Sen. IV. Craig Biddle (R·Rlvenide). ¥1'8!'1 returned to the Senate for concurrence ln Assembly amendments on a 56-13 vote. Nixon referred to a federal tHx d"educ· lion of $576.000 he took for ll":e donation of vice-presidential papers to the National Archives. Such deductions have been ruled out and there have been allegations that Nixon's donation of the papers did not come until after the cutoff date. Wiesner. president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said he contributed his papers from PRESIDENT, SEES GOOD YEAR FOR GOP, Page 4 NIXON DISPUTES SHAH OF IRAN COMMENTS, Page 12 1961·1964 when he \\'as a presidential science adviser. But he said he has never taken any ta:< dcductio11s for the gift. ··t don't know \Vhere the President got hi s information, but he·s \vrong." Wiesner said. ' Galbraith, Har vard econ o m i c s professor and former ambassador to India . said he took a $4.500 tax deduction in 1966 for private correspondence with a "wide variety of people from John Steinbeck to Adlai Stevenson. "In 1966, I gave my persOnal correspondence and manuscripts to the Kennedy-Library at their reque-sr.Th"ese were valued , as t recall, by appraisers selected by the library at exactly $4,500/' Galbraith .said in a statement issued from Switzerland. where he is resting and writing. "Being 1966. that deduction required ·no re juggling of !he date to make it legal," he added . Humphrey said earlier that · he took federal tax deductions of $199.153 on Ille donation of his vice presidential papen to the ~flnnesota HfstoMcal Society . lie said the contributions Involved the year1 1969 to 1972. periods ~.as been initiated. -An Office of Prograrn fie\'icw evaluates the 10 trca lment progra1ns annually, to detennine !heir success and initiate any advisable nc1\' changes in thcnl . Disbanding the old departn1cnts and giving therapeutic personnel more freedom in \\'orking \\'ith patients appears to be having noticeable effect in staff morale. produclivily and patient progress. "Now, three times as many of our residents are enrolled in the Fairvie\v School program,'' notes Dr. Jrving Stone, the hospitars romn1unity I i a is on representative. •·Everyone is important and some of their roles are 'blurred.' " adds Dr. Toto, "·ho finds the ne\v staff flexibpily at the hospital stirs up the former tendency to stagnate through the strict departmental specialization. ''Before, each pl'ofessional pc:-son had 'a chu nk· of a patient," he explaiiis. "Often. as a result he \\1as doing his o"'n thing and the individual patien-t was losing oul" This problem is defined les.s formally by f>sychologist Dr. Bernat Herskovets, director of the hospital's Behavior MocHficiation Program. "Someone would get a sore fanny from sitting around his office and he'd think : 'There·s a nice little kid over on such· and-such a ward. T think I'll go t.ry to leach him to talk.' " So M itcli For Conventio1is 1'-fACON, Ga. (AP) -It was \\'in one. lose ooe for the Richmond County Correctional Institution of Augusta . The warden permitted the president and vice president of the institution's nl'\\'lY chartered chap ter of the Junior Chamber or Commerce 10 attend the state Jaycee ronvenlion here under guard. Scott ~1cPhcrson, the inmate president, returned. Edward N. Glover, 24, a probalion violator and car thief, the chapter vice president, attended a drug·abuse seminar at the convention Saturday night and hasn ·1 been seen since, says the warden. Heroi11 Valued At $7.8 MiJlion Seized i11 Bro11x · NE\V YORK (UPI) -Two men "'ere arrested and 26 pounds of heroin with a street ·sale value of $7.8 million u·cre seized in a raid on a Bronx "ct.itting 'mill." -Jn 'vhat wns described as the ~third largest drug raid in the city's history, special city narrotics prosecutor Frank Rogers said federal and city narcotics agents found the heroin i\1onday night bPhind a n1agnelically operated false closet ip a Brt,1x apartffient. The apartment \Vas described as a "Heroin culling mill " where the drug wa.s diluted with mannilc for sale to <:i.st ribulors. The heroin. in plastic bags. along with scales. four guns. several bags of mannlte, surgical face masks and other paraphernalia, was displayed al a news t'OO(eren~ after the raid. . . • Now, patients on each ward are exposed to a packaged set of progran1s incoti>Orated lo treat their individual difficulties. One(', the system required that a n1edical doctor head each department \\'ilhin the old state hospital structure. shuffling papers and handing down edicts from the front office on how things should be run. "\Ye',,e got a broad representation of the disciplines in our program directors now," says Dr. Toto. "And the new method allows many more peop1c to advance upward.'' The spre3d of professionals in charge of the 10 more • flexible units - answerable directly to the chief for sucCes.ses and failures -includes two medical doctnrs, three poycbologlsts and five other sPecialists. They arc each backed up by a program assistant plus a nursing coordinator. Dr. Toto notes that two of the latter aides began careers as rank-arid-fil e psychiatric technicians. This once 'i\0ould have been impossible. A major breakthrough for female staff members appears to have resu1ted under the new hospital structure, with four women among the 10 program di~tors. "Somebodf asked me about that," says Dr. Toto, with a flicker of a grin. "J just looked around for the best man for the job," he explains. "And in some cases it was a woman." Antiwar Semina1· O~vernment Land Defended WASHINGTON (UPI) -An aide to Rep. Ron DellunlS (D-Calif.) has defended the right of antiwar activists Jane Fonda Md Tom Hayden to use govenunent property for a series of seminars. l\.1ichael Duberstein, 0 e 11 u nl s ' legis~ative analyst, said f\:londay the six seminars conducted by the two in the past three weeks were legitimate uses for meeting rooms in the Capitol co mplex. He said the rooms are public facilities, "and all taxpayers have a right to use them ." Over the weekend, Reps. Bill Dickinson IR·Ala.) and Trent Lott, (R·Miss.) slrcngly protested the use of government property by Fonda and Hayden. branding their opinions as • · Co n1 rn u n is t· propnganda" encouraged by a "small accommodating liberal faction i~ I congress. Fonda and I layclen have been in 'rashington since Jan. 27 , ti.~ date of the first anniversary of the Vietnam peace accord,. to protest continuiag U.S. support and funding of the Thieu regimo In Sooth Vietnam. Duberstein said thc1 \Vere representing a group called lht Indochina Peace Campaign (lPC) at which they are national staff members. After a series of meetings with about 48 lawmakers in the Hopse and Senate, F oiida and'! 1-Iaydea mOved to tba se minars for legislative staff memtien to discuss "var1~ legislative strat.egi to end !he continuing American fund of the Thieu regime.'' Duberstein said. The first sessioo was held in a Ho Judiciary Commtitee mci!tlng room "·hi!e later seminars ,.,.ere condutt in rooms of the llousc DistricU Columbia Committee. Duberstein sai all !'ICS.Sk>T\S' wett conducted nner hoors between 6 nnd 8 p.m .• nnd were aUdd by some staffers -rcpro.scnting Republican and Dcmocrntic ofrlccl I ers. / ----, ' .1 ·- 4 DAILY PILOT Get Service With a Smile GASOUNE AILEY DEPr. -"The reason Orange Coast motoM!ts ha\"e so much u.uble getting gasoline U-days is b<uuse they ladt courtesy and re- spect," one of my ,1<'3teriroot cobor1> observed just the other day. "What's """"8y ard respect got to do with thjt gas shortage," you ask. "Well,'' he replied, "when was the last tlroe you sent your gas station attendant a Ch'istmas card? Or a get , well card?" Then he went on to expand upon the theme. • Ul"I Tt~Cllt Moplaead Reutaima? Presldent Hopeful GOP 'Slaughter~ .. At Polls' Ni:xed ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Presjdent Nixon hall ·advised nervous Repubtlcans to look to the fam!U&r themes cl peace and prooperity, • an antidote to Wtll<rple In die November elections. Deopite lllunqllmc polls and setbacks in two opectaI elocllcn, the Preaident said at his Moilday night news con!......., he 1IUnb "It will be a good year !or thooo candidates l'1lo stand for the admlnlstnttlon. " ...... SO FAR, HOWEVER, the poli lical omem point the other y,·ay. Democrats have taken over Republican House seats in the first two elecxlons of 1974, 11105t ( J . . NEWS .ANALYSIS reoeotly with the upset victory of Rlcbard. Vanderveen in the J\.tictUgan d lstrict that has been represent<d by Vice President Gerald R. Ford . campaign in wlllch Nl..in won landllide \ ....,Jectloo two yean 1110 -belore the Watergal<l llC8lldala brolte. -, ' ' , ' I THE PRESIDENT did not clirodtly . ...... the political lmpoct cl Wll«'plf, advising simply 1hat R e p u b) I c 1 n ' ClllldidA!es be patlmt and ,...., Oii the other Issues. VarderVeut made wwraate, tile broader q.-ion al Nlzon'a leadenhlp, and a call for the resignation or impeodunent "' !he Presldenl mojor points in his Mld!lgan campaign. '!llat upset has led to indlcMloc11 that some Republ icans may break with the admlnlstration in an el.fort to avoid , Watergate fallout st tile polll nen fall. · Nixon 21ald he want! deserving Republicans ''° win, and suggftled that they lool1 to pollUcal hlatory and the Democratic upset ol t&la. . "We oonlldently expected 10 .gain in the House," he recalled. President Harry S Truman was far down In the public oplnloo polio; Rep.lbllean Thomae E. Dewey was heavily favored to wtn the White l!ou>e." "Motorisb along our coastline have jmt failed to J'OO>gnlze the civic Jeadenhip st8'lus that has now visited upon gas station attendants. People just cortinue to treat them like plain, ordinary cititens. "WHY, I'VE WATCHED my fellow ,,,_.. sit 1her< in those long lines, honking, pounding on steering ~1leels, slamming doors ard di-Ing vile ephhets and expietives at the man Ytith the gas nozzle. Ringo Starr said Monday he would not rule oul a not say when. if e\'er, the group would sing to- reunion of the Beatles. The Liverpool foursome are gether. From left to right in this 1968 photo: Faul A new Gallup poll glvei t h e Demoo'atlc Party a twcrfu.one lead in CQflgreSSional election strength. The count was 58 percent Democratic, 29 percent Republican, 13 p e r c e n t undecided. That would point to a landslide Democratic victory if the election were held now, NIXON, WHOSE own poll ralinis are at a low ebb now, stiggelled another parallel in !he 1948 "'"-"' sen. J.W. Fulbright, (!).Mk.), that Truman resign the presidency. _c_l_o_se_to_·_se_t_U_in,,.;g:_th_e_ir_b_u_si_n_es_s_af_fa_aii_~rs_._R_i_n.:;,g..:.o_w_o_u_l_d __ ~_lc_c_ar_tn_e.::.y.:_, ..:.J..:.ohn Lennon, Ringo, George Harrison. A3 Nixon noted at the news coriference, the election y-1' young, 6ie balloting months away. He sa id GOP prospects 'n'ill improve. "U we're going to eliminate this gasoline !it<lr1age, !hat kind of conduct has to go." "You think \\'C should change our approach to 1he gas pumfl islands ? 11 I asked. · ·001~ Londo1i Officials Won 't Give Food for Masterpiece Ver1neer Ranso111 "\\'hat my advk'e to 1he call:lidates very simply would be is this : It is that nine months .before an election . no one can predict what can happen in this com.try. " •.. We proc<eded to campaip against J\.1 r. Truman," Nixon said. "He \fas the issue. \\'e took a b&d licking in !he Congress in 1948." 8 Youths KilleCI 111 Wild Joyride "Definitely," my fri end replied. "\Vhat motorists in aur area need is ·A Short r• O>urse in O>urtcsy to Those \Vith Gas." SO then tie eipanded on that. "FIRST, An'ER VOU 'VE been sweating out that Jon g line for 50 minutes, when you linally get <to the pump, you do oot verbally flay the a«eodant, demand a t.ank!u1 of premium and complain that your gas man is shuffling' about too slowly. "Instead, you ask him how are his wife and kJds? You inqu ire into his healtb. You tell him how nice it '21 been walling, just to g .. an opportunity to say 'Good Morning' to him . "Yoo ask him wt kind of gas he has today. No matter \\ilat he says, regular. low-lead, premium a.t 66 cents a gaIJon . No matter. You tell him that will be lovely-it's just \\'hat you v.·anted. "FOLKS MUST REMEMBER !hat gas station attendants want to be loved too. Show him YOU care. LONDON (AP ) -. A top officia l of the I..oodon mwl..!cipal goven1ment said ,foday that it would nnt meet a tclephonc!.I demand for $1.15 mill ion wo11h oi food to ransom .file Vermeer painting stolen lrom a .suburban m~um. A TELEPHONE caller with a West Indian accem. told a newspaper P.,Jonday aight that !he 171h century Dutch masterpiece "The Guitar Player" would be destroyed un1ess food worth hau a million pounds -$1.15 mill iion - is distributed ¥litfl in 14 days to the pC>Or on the Ca ribbean island of Grenada. Ill tyd Harrington, deputy leader of the Greate!" LoOOon Council, said : "IC anyooe "'·ants to talk, they have to approach us directly al !he council. But l am not. offering half a million -to <inyone. We haven't got it. We are operating on a shoestring. \Ve arc not being bla ckmailed into any situation." The value of the painting, one of Jess than 30 by Jan Vermeer that are kno"'ll to exi~I, has been est imated as high as $4.4 million, but it ls believed that it was not insu red. It >n'as stolen Satui'Cl.ay night from Ken .... •ood House in suburban Hampstea d. Scotland Yard said it was treating the ransom demand as authentic and believed the Patricia Hearst kidnaping inspired the art theft. Delectives pointed out that the theft occurred shortly after television films showed food distribution in California in response to the demands of l\1iss Hearst's kidropers , t h e Symbionese Libe ration Army. TllE F'RMIE of the Vermeer was fowid Monday in bushes half a 1nile from Kenv.·ood llouse. One corner had been broken off and the glass smashed . raising fears that the painti ng Itself could have been damaged. "Be sure you pull up right next to the pump with your gas cap on the right side. Save him steps. Leap out and flip your own cover and take off your own cap. "Offer to do the pumping yoorsell so he can relax. Always address him as Sir, or Madam, as the case ma¥ be. Newswoman Conwsts GI ''If you are going to wash your windshiekl, take care not to get into the attendant's way. And be sure yo1..1 bring your own paper towels aOO cleaner, Pay-,ln Loud Manner "AND FOR GOOONESS sake, don't check yo ur oil there on the gas islands. You'll hold up all tile other motorists .seeking the favors of your attendant. Cbeck your oil at home. "Above all , remember to be calm, composed and smiling if, '!''hen you gd to the rront o1. the line, your fMendly attendant plants the 'Out or Gas' sign right in front ol you. "Smile, and say, 'Sir, could I poosibly have an appointment to come in tomom>w at an hour cmvenien t to you?' " How deti~t!ul it was that my friend took all this time to teach u.5 how to get along In a gasless. changing world , where new civic leadership has emerged at the pumps. Trouble is, I'm ju.5t not sure Vie're ready for it. WASHINGTON (AP) -Once again, veteran neWS\\'Oman Sarah McClendon made her point loud and .clear. And it wasn 't lost on President Nixon . Miss McClendon has sparked acerbic exchanges at news conferences v.•it h every president since Dwight D . Eisenhower. During Nixon's session with the press Monday, the President sa id he >n'a.S recognizing her becau.5e "you have the loudest vo.ice." Tile reporter, who represents a number of newspapers and radio staliotlfi in Texas and elsewhere, then told Nlxon some of his associates "aren't gi ving you the right infonnation." l\tiss McClendon contended t h a t \'eteran.s going to college under the GI Bill aren't getting their benefit checks on time. Ni :ton began responding: "\Veil, this is a question 'i''hich you very properly bring to the attention or the na tion . It is a question that has already been brought to my attention." \Vhen the ne\\'S'>l'Oman interrupted . Nixon asked if he might rlllish his answer. He reported that the head of the Veterans Administration. Donald Johnson, \YaS aware of the problem. .. "In a loud voice .• ~liss !11cClendon retorted: "He is thC vw man I am talking about who is -'not giving ynu the correct informatio11 ." Ni~on commented: ''\Veil. if he isn't listening to this program, I will report to him just what · you said." That drew laughter. After Nixon tu rned as it to recognize another questioner. he pivoted back to Miss McClendon and said: "He may have heard even though he >n'asn 't listening to the President." Cold Grips East Coast Northerly · Winds Pu.sh Te1nperntur~s Be4oiv Freez ing ' I ~"" 11'1 wt41Mlt t010<4l1 II Su11, Moon. Tfde• TUISOAY S~Oll<I fflOh 12 :~ •·"-· l,t iKOfld low 6!01 p.m. l.l Wl:OHISDAY Fir t hlOh 1Jlf p.ln, 3,0 F l~ IO'N 1~1' 'a.lfl. l',t kc:OllCI low 6:311 p.m. l,1 s..,, 111-7:25 1.m. '"' t:ir 11.m. MtOll 111 ... t :JI 1.m. Sttl tl:2t p,m, S. Callfol"ltfa · Cool 1tt (r901 th•Ol.IQ.h SO\mlttn C11ttom11 toa•v '' • no.,.. ot ctrv pusr.td below·l•ffzlng f1mpe,1l11•11 1011111 15 ft • 1~ cenrr1I FIOrld1. Ovt•nlght, '"' m••cvrv dipped to Ille l~ns wtl: lnlo Geo.111•. Snow lrv,.re1 .iorta Ille ATl•n!lc Coast t•om M"rYl•nd to soullltrn New €ngl"nd 1nd lnlilnd lh•OUQh lht 4P11t t•chltn1. taJttl'n Penn1y1v1nlt tnd souThe,n New York wero 111 lh•t •emt ll\ed ol 1 wlnte, 1lorm f111t 1WIPI fffrough Ille N~ll'lelll MOnd•y. Cold·w~v' tondltlons l!ff\lllltd ln North C1rotln1 Clu,lno IM nl9ht. Rain fll!h'IQ 11ot1g the arntr1I •nd !IOl'1hern PKlllc Coe1t w11 txOOC:ltd !O movt t1sr, turning ro JMW OYtt' ltw norlhlm Rocklt 1. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE ilehVlfy ~ Iii< 0.ly Pdol is gua<.,leed _,,.ftlay: 11 JW • 1t1 b¥t Jt11 .., .,. 5::1 ..... ul 1111 ,.., "" .. W W"'ltl It I•· Cats 1r1 IUI llMI 1:)1 , .• S,at,rUy d SlfMJ: II 1• le Jiii rltllTe JNI c.,, ., I ta. $it11&1y, • I IJI, SlllUJ. tll M I c"' 11111 .. fWWl~I II JOI. tlb in UlH llllil lt a.m. leleplmres 11111 .... """ ......... uz.4321 llortlntttt IWllll!llt• kXil "' "'"""" . . . . . II~ 1220 I.all ae.lt. t~tr-loci, i. 1111 ta;nr-. a. '91l 11<1• i••· 1..,. Ill'" .. 192-ll!i • The telephone caller told the news editor of The Guardian : "l am the one who took ·the Vermeer. \Ve hav~ the picture at Highgate (a suburb in north London). We are from Grmada. We \\'ant half a million pounds u.-orth of food for the people of Grenada, the poor people. We want it wtthin 14 days. If we don't get the food. we will destroy tile picture. There will be mo re raids." The thle""" broke through a barred, shult<red win~ at Kenwood House with a sledgehammer after padlocking tile front doors from the outside to delay any attempt by the gua rds to chase them. Guards said the raid took le.63 than a. minute. GRENADA, AN 1'land group with more than 100,000 people, gaJDed independence from Britain earlier .tflfs month amid oon.siderable turmoil . 'Some o1 the Grenadans fied to other islands. saying they fearOO persccutlon by Prime Minister Eric Galry's secret police. ''\Vhat will affect the election in this year. 1974. is what always affects elections -peace and prosperity," Nixon said. Those were central ·themes of the Divorced Meii Get Alimony? ALBANY, N. Y. (UPI) -The New York State Senate 1'1onday passed a measure that y,"OUJ.d give a divorced man a right to sue his fortn er 'i'l fe for alimony. The bill. lA-i'lich now goes to the state 's ~. was approved 55-3. It.s sponsor. Sen. Albert B. Lewis of Brooklyn, said. giving a man the right to sue for alimony was "a move to women's lib -toward equality ol lreatment." People miles, that is. .., • Into Creek TORONTO, Ont. (UPI) -Eight reen- agen joyriding in a atolen station wagon were killed lale Monday when the vehicle went o!l the road 2.5 miles west of here a1Xi pl""ied do'Ml a !~foot embankment Into 1 ere.le. Halton regional police said only one youth, Scott Patridge, 15, survived the accident. He Y.'3.S hospitaliu.d with head and shoulder injuries. Police said a tenth youth had been in the car when the joyride began but left his hitnds after a switch in dri\•ers. Before the fatal plunge into the aeek police said . the car was being drlveri around a field near the highway. The car, a 1973 Chevrolet earUer had been reported stolen from a dealer in neamy C>akville, Ont. .. Toling l~e l:iUs con be Your conln'butlon lo !ho oner~ifuo. t;on. And With over 2,087 bus stops ond 19 routes se<v;c;ng 22 of the 26 cities in Orange County, toking the bus con be convenient. · And cheap. One quorterdoes.it . .Na matter how far you fror inlor:iOl'I ~ b~s schedul:: 1~ ,,,.,7; to ~;;:-J 11126 E. Wosh lngton Pwe., Sonto A~. Col if. 92701, or coll I 1~41547·6©1. go. Transfers ore free and children unde rl2 r1de fre9 when oc· D companied by a fore paying passenger: . I No""'•---=='----------- We'll also get you there ;n comfort. w;1h new buses. ~nyl I • • bucke t sel 01ks1 pockogebrocks,hodnd 1 air conditioning. L I Addreu I .. oo ove< ll)Jr us sc e u es and you'll see wnot we mea n. Timetables that scan easily, Ge nera l ~·· I • information. And on overall route mo p. J c Zip i "1Y'-------'--1 Next time toke .the bus. ...,...__..--.,...~ - - _ - -- - _ D!... • • • ~ 1 TUMd1y, Ftbrvary 2b, 1974 DAJLY PILOJ ji $17.5 Million Actot'-s Son Dies Suit Beginning "• . , -ious by bis wife, N>n, ma tl1e floor ol his W"51 HollyWaod home. • television ..,.... du!1ng lhe early I-and In Ille !Um, "The Sc:remUng Elilglel. .. T•N•~•1C1' ;tife4fonlie Jiit ........ c...._...,..,,,... .. J4 , .... Against Hughes A "'1erlfl'1 ilpolceGnan said -· 40, w .. pronounced deld en anivat 11 UCLA -Center here Iller !Ire .-ettorts to, revive him we re Wlll.lCicessful. Robinoon appeared to bave died fl natural c au s e .$ , allllougb the eract cause ol death was tmk:nown, the spokesman oald .. But the younger Robinson's .a-to follow his lamed father into the a c t i o n profession floundered durtng the 1Jlid.l9509. He was convicted several tinle.s for drunteoness and drunk diiv· Ing In the 1950s and llllOi!. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Trial begins today tn a libel 'suit brought by a former:' top Mide to Howard ll u g h es labeled as dishon<st by the bUlion&ire recluse in a news conference two years ago. Robert Maheu has asked !or $11.S mUllon &om Hughes, who in the January, 1972, news conference .said of Maheu he was 0 a no good dishonest son of a bitch and he stole me blind." Pretrial maneuvering in the the two-year-<>ld action filled shelves full of legal ·records including depositions detailing alleged political machinations by Hughes. charges o! cash payoffs to prominent politJdans, revelations about the Inside -kings or the m y s t e rt o u s billionaire's empire and denials of wrongdoing by those named in other depositions. THE TRIAL is expected to thrash out these issues in open court. One such argument centers on Maheu's sworn statement that he personally handed Sli0.000 in cash, from Hughes, lo then Vice President Hubert II. Humphrey,. in a limousine in fronl or a hotel here during lfumphrey's 1968 campaign for the presidency. Humphrey, now a Democratic senator for Minnesota, has denied tbe &tory. Attomeys !or Huglles tried Monday to have the trial postponed again because of "the mountains cX prejudicial poblicty in the Jast few weeks and months . . . omte ol it generated by (Maheu) and some by individuals involved in the Watergate investigation." "There ought to be a cooling Off period ." ,said the drlef Hughes aUorney, N o r b e rt Sdllel. U.S. District Judge Harry Two Bodies Identified Pregerson denied the motion "without prejudice," meaning Hughes' lawyers can make the · same request again, and they are expected to do "°' MAHEU, a lonner FBI agent, began working for Hughes in 1966, and eventually was running the empire d. Hugbes gambling ca s In o s, mt.ls, real eslate and «her operation! in Nevada. When Ctifford I r v I n g announced his phQny biography, Hughes, in oro.r to expose it, came as close to making a public eppearance uP• T•._... as he has since he went into N Ch seclusion 20 years ago. He at11e o119e . ... -.:. R~ision Of ERA ',,SA~ (AP) -attempt lo l'OIC!nd ~ CallfOmia's ratification 1' the l<e d'e r a I EquBl iUlht& Amendment for women was introduced-In the legiolature Monday. 1be author, Assemblyman FlOfd Wakefield ( R ·South Gate). saia· "I am thoroughly convine<d that 'the nuijority ol the womin In Ca!U9"1'ia· are not in favor of the ERA." HE APPEARED In several Second 10% Pay Raise For Solons? SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The salaries ol Calllornla's. 120 legislators would be raised ,t' the legal maJ.imum rate In · bis autobiography, the -Robll)llOll wrote ol his son's drinking escapades: "Whatever agonies of spirit !Ol'Cl!d him tnto these belwivlor pattemtl are matched now by my own agonies as I remember them. '!be lather was worldng on the book shortly be!oro his death at age 19 in January 1973. The -Robinson and his first wife. act~ Frances llobinson. had a daughter, Francesca, In 1955. The OQUple was divorced in 1955. He divorced his second wife, New York actress Elaine M. one, after two· years of marriage in 196.5. called a news conference and Samille Diane 1'"riesen spoke by tel.ephone with a changed her n a m e select group of reporters in Monday to Dyan Can· Los Angeles who had known .non, one she has used him before be n a on the screen for years. Tbe Calllomia legi>lature vuted rati fi c ation tn November, 1972. ot s percent a year IX> $23,040 .---------~r recluse. Miss Cannon, 35, is It was durin& the nee the former wife of that he W83 asked about Mahe_u, resporiding that _a_ct_o_r_c_a_rf;._G_r_a_nt_._. __ Maheu was fll'ed because. he was dishonest. A film of the news conference is erpected to be shown at the trial. Jail Term Compl,et,ed By Z'Berg At last count, 31, slates had ratified it. It needs 38 before becoming par\ of tl1e U.S. ~itution. Wakefield's bill would place a proposition on the November ballot asking w b e t h e r Co gress shoold be r.qU<Sted reject California'• tificalion. nen year under a b 111 lntmluced Monday In the Sl!iiate. 'lbe measure was offered by Sen. Anthony C. Bellenson (0.Beverly Hills). Both Assemblymao a n d State Senaton currently receive $19,200 &.Mually which will go up 10 pereent to $21,120 beginning Dec. 2. Under the bill, lawmakers wou1d benefit Don Koll'S from another 10 perceiit raise, to $23,IKO, just a few days 2 INDICTE'l) ON TAX RAP LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Comedian "Brother Dave" Gardner and his wife i1ndred were indicted by a federal grand jury l\londay tor a ll ege d I y failing to file income tax retum.s in 1967 on a oombined income of more Utan $l30,000. Police Nab Suspect In Rapings SACRAMENTO (UPI! later on Jan. 1, 11715. Veteran AMemblyman Edwin At>miii;o~ti'on LeglTITiors---.a ;-red'"- L. Z'beri spent a litUe .,.r --:i -'• comtltutionally limited t o nine hours in County Jail last salary increases of no more Saturday to ""''~ bis A ced than S percent a year. VAN NUYS (UPI) -A 25-..,1tenoe !or drunkel drlving,DDOUll Bellenson'• bill plus the year-old man, whom police jail records showed today. December raise, which was suspect is the ' ' V a 11 e y Z'be<g dlecked into the jail Don Koll Co. or Newport voted in 1972, woold mean Rapist," was arrested in at 6:58 a.m. and was released Beach has announced it has a ,,total salary hike of 20 ccmecHon with the rape of at 4: 15 p.m. On Jan. 11 and acquired l2.S acres 0 f percent in four yean equalling at least 17 san Fernando 11, the Sacrameoto Democrat property adJa<ent to 1 ts th& legal limit of s pereent Va11ey women, police disclosed served ell but 10 hours of Garden Grove bus in e 1 a a year. Monday. the 48-boe.lf sentence. corp.plex and P 11 n 1 t 0 "It is my belief that we James Edwards Hughes. o( Jailer Fred Reese said construd: multi -tenant should go up 5 percent a Van Nuys, was being held Z'berg, 47, was released industrial and commercial year," said Beilenson in an Spiral Sllt!ed Whole or ilalf COUNCILMAN-COSTA MESA Good llodlnhip 1s ....... Ming thtM fiMf'I .,,._ w critl1 follows......_.. Wll hrdcM tM11 .._ ..... at1d the ~•s of for.sight, 1ofMJ ...... ,. .... , -wiai1t91'ISS to ,...... .. ci..w,. wMft Mded. His .. ~, n eo..c-..,., Mayor, Yk• Mayor. ,..,.... c......nMoMr lllMI oHwr ....-sH1Wltt.1 Is ttie but •ridetlee of his abitity. (omtio;11ee to Re-e'e<:t. Will 'Jordo.,-V~ Red6nc). d'OlrnJI\ 1500 Acbn~ Gwo Mew> • HAMS "So Good •• , It Will "Haunt" You 'tll lt'1 Go°'" WE. WILL SHIP YOUR PURCHASE ANYWHERE IN CALIFORNIA FOR $200 ONLY oo 9USJ>iclon ol kidnaping and Saturday a little short of the buildings whicll will nearly interview. rape. He was arrested r•m .. inina 10 hours for the double -.. .,.; ...... of •"'-_. 'Ibe salary paid legislators • •-te 5erft: whl H-'• .,,.. ~,_ -·--pro'-' ----:~· ism' addition~ •~a ~-y .. ~ -· Saturday O<lllVellleoce of tl1e jail ,...... w...,. ~ u• e ............. ..._,., .. _ Police ·said be matched a because feeding time was 1be p:operty purcha:le, in in tu.free per diem While • We r--.. ad SW, ,,_ C...,. c ... -"• draw'"" of the starting. Reese said il Z'beri wbldl J(oll ,... _,_, In -· Ille of a slate-• '""_... ..,_ ~ .. .---until ,.,.._ ~~ car oil __.. ·~ • 1.,••* ~ _. w.... "V"''-· 0 """•" made by a was k..,. in jail · dlMer by . Coldwell Ban•er ~ • -"""""""" ~, ~-,_... ~ • -~1 _..._ ll'Wft'll~ -v..n • c.t..tia1 A Spszl...., , -'"-artistfrom.._..._. period was over, be woold o.nmerdal B-"-·· Co., ~ ~-..---~-·· J7IOLC..-,C-..,.,__,,_ ··• ,........ ~·..--·~-·-... benelits one! -!or -givm by the victims. bave served more time wltW wm made from Sbozl Brm. .i....-ca"""' and · ~:......:... 1 11** w .. flf • e..... ......... '!be victims were normally bis""""""" required. tor 1111n than ~.ooo. ~:=:!!:lll!!!":!""'~-.-----~-_J~!,,....,...,...,...,;;,,,,,;;,...,...,...,...,...,!!!!12!!12!!!!!!!s.,.",. ... ...,""'!!!!!!•!!!!· "'!!!1!!11o11!!!!,."'!!!!"!!A!!!!'!!!!'",.''!!!!• ... ...,,. ............ •.~ !Ol'Cl!d into their own cars In -.ncing Z'be<g IX> jail Gai'den Grove B u s I n e 1 •r- and driven to various locations tast mcn1b, Mlricipat Court Coqlu, ~ ~,jl(IO in the San Fernando Valley Judge Haven Courtney gave Sq. ft. of irkUtrial buildings ' ' md then .-.ulled. t>Olice him a ~ pe<iod in wbldl, ""' a li«re ... on t;;ar1le<l SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -said. lo serve the oentence. The G!'Qve ~vd. '1 the ,Ganl!n Police inspectors have Hu~ "-as being held 4Xlay period ended Monday Grove Freeway, is mdre than identified two young Swiss Monday in lieu of $10,000 bond. midnight. 90 perce!lt leased. women whose raped and ----'--·-------'-------- stra.nglcd bodies ¥.-ere found last November in Carson. a l.A>S Angeles County indu.strial - suburb. The victims were Annarosa Hertner and Susame Moore, boih ·24. 'Ibey vanished from San FrallCi!co between Nov. 17 and -· 19 and their bodies were frond lying in a Canoo street Nov. 23. Alerted ¥i'hen Emsc Hertner reported to the S w i s s Coosulate !bat his daughrer was missing. Inspectors Rudy Nieto and Bill Bigarani found two yOWlg Swiss men who had known the women and they made a positive identification of the bodies. Hn'stht ptrfed:WIY to mut your money or HCUrltlu do "trip1•4uty": . - 1 YMI "411 .. lll!pi11 I fMll c-:-.1M .... 11' 1!111..U· • lltll'I .f ,_, lllleW •11. , • . -. FROM THE NEW RATES ON LAGUNA FEDERAL'S NEW TERM . . ' SAVINGS CERTIFICATES' AND ALL PASSBOOK ACCOUNTS! RATE MINIM.UM IU!Lll FOR YIELDS 71fi% $1,000 4 YEARS 7.79 3 term c:atificate 6%% ' $1,000 2%YEARS 6.98 3 tenn certificate 6~% $1,000 1 ... 6.72 3 ' . -c-~ -~ " . 533 $1,000 90D A-YS 5.92 3 term cc:rtlfkate . And most popular of a/I-the convenient PASSBOOK ACCOUNT for daily needs! ' 5~ % day-in, day-out interest yields 5.3 9 % per annum " ·~ timn matu:rttytram"term etrtilc:lteaU111lb·n lltb;ect to red9c1icm to csnra ii-boot rue from date rA ;.'NP\ plus an additional three monthl' ialtml forfeiture. HOME OPf'lb!: 260 Ocean Avenue, Lquna Bca<b, Cati!omia 926S1 Telephone: 49~75·41 •LAGUNA NIGUEi.A l Monarch Bay Platt • SAN CLEMENTE: 601 North El Camh.o Real• LAGUNA RIUS: 2~038 Callo de LI Pl.Ila • LAD ELSIJllO!l£1600 Wmt Orihim AV<llut -• • MIRAMONl'E'S BARE NATURAL • •• Step into the sunsliine in our lxn little sonclol. The Csca. lii;l>t ond lively. Cool ard comfortable. It's yotn in v.liite, bone, red or rot'( leather ••• o$ well as other e.ci'liig Sping cxikn,.7-10 Narow IMJ; 5-10 Mecit.m IB).21.00. tNill ord phone on:lei. invilad. Women's Shoes, 3S TH'E BROADWAY • ·' /oNNf'M NEWPOl<f HJNTlGTC"11EAOt OIWIGtMALLOfOAANGE • CSUIJl(S .. 44-IN. Ei.dd(114) ~ls.&121 47Fofull~f114)644·111l m1 ~;..._,.(7141892.·liJI 2.XON. T1AtinS~ectl71 4)998-1111 50:>1 • .,.~Mol(ZIJ)MOoMt . ' SHCf IOA.M. tot.XIP M. ~y n«ol,04 Fn!AY.-sAn.IR.MY IOA.M. to6P.M. Sl.N>AY 12 f\()()11 ~SPJl • ~-- '. • \ ,, " ' • ... , .. w 1:1 .• "' . -" 'rf ,, ' ' ' ,, " ' v " ' " "' . ... ,, 01 01 "' , .. - • I I DAD.Y PILOT EDITORiAL PAGE ., -~ 'Smog Control Powers. Exactly one month from 'today, Orange County supervisors ~ race a decision of crttlcal Importance to all Oran.ge Countians in the event of a future smog emergency. . · They will be asked to adopt new state.mandated pPllution regulations that would give air pollutlori con- trol district officer William Filcllen sweeping power over business, industry, commerce and the lives of in· dividual people lf the smog gets to a critical point. If the supervisors are truly concerned with keeping local government in the hand! of local ol!lclals, it be- hooves them-to-do the job themselves. • • But perhaps of-greater importance is the fact that the rules handed down from the state invest almoot totalitarian emergency power in the hands of one . man -a man who has not even been. elected to his office. The county should adopt Its own rules, based on the state regulations. But serious attention should be given to a system of checks and balances Whereby the air pollution control officer Is directl~ answerable to an elected body. His decisions could have a drastic impact on the life and economy of the county. It is no personal criticism of Fitchen, but the scope of his powers -particularly in the event of a severe pollution attack -calls for monitoring by an elected body, which probably. ureans the-Board or Supervisors. . .. Going Up .... Again At midnight Friday, for the third time in five years, U.S. p<isW rates will go up. As has become the unlortunate custom, the increase will add two cents to first class mail costs, instead of the penny-at-a-time boosts that used to be considered ade- quate. Regular letters will cost 10 cents instead of 8 cents; postcards will jump .from 6 cents to 8 cents; airmail let- ters will cost 13 cents instead of 11 cents and postcards sent by air will go from 9 cents to 11 cents. The 2--cent rate hlkes also will apply to overseas mail. The Po!tal Service notes that leftover stamps WI be updated by simply adding enough postage Ill cover the new rate. But It warns against using up 11-cent air- mail stamps for regular letters. They'll just go by air and the recipient will be charged two cents extra post. age. The new HJ.cent letter rate is exactly double the 1963 rate. For the historically mind~, letters could be malled in th~ U.S. for a mere 2 cents from 1919 to 1932; then it was Scents until 19~8 and 4 cents until 1963 ... and up ... and up. No improvements in service .are promised for the new · charges. They're necessary, we're advised1 just to keep up with rising costs. Unwarranted Demand Orange County supervisors have wisely closed the books on a bid by county school Supt. Robert Peterson to set up his department as an mdependent taxing agency. Peterson claims such a separation would end the duplication of effort that now exists in budgeting and employment and would make bis job a lot easier. Uolortunately, Peterson has not shown the kind of leadership that merits such a move. His administrations of school functions and em'{>loyes has been stiarply criti- cized by other county officials and the Grand Jury. The very nature of the separation bid smacked o( empire-building since Peterson blatantly tried to side step his own board of education to get the matter pushed through. "" The actimf°is now tabled indefinitely and should not be res~rrect~-until the Department of Education can demonstrate better operation and more constructive -leadership. .. ' ' REV. w.gu.L-Y Ci9Llti\.11L't' EXORCl~l'' PL~~SE W~IT -... - ' The Sau·d Family: A-Tale From the Arabian Nights RIYADH -All the "'Orld is v.'3.tching Riydah, the remote desert capital of Saudi Arabia, whose robed rulers are making decisions that couJd break the economic power ol the West. How much they charge for oil could determine whether the great industrial nations of the West will be drained of capital and plunged into depr!Sslon. flow the Saudis invest their oil billions could also thro\V the world's monetary system into turmoil. 'Ibis tremendous power suddenly has be<n Cbrust upon <he Saudis by the oil ~is and the price squeeze. A3 a~ Mer of Ule world's largest petroleUm reserves, King Faisal could end 1he oil squeeze virtually with a snap oi hi.s royal fingers. For he can market enough oil lo break tile, ~k . . . of the Arab embargo or the price fix. A PIOUS, brooding, hawk-like lillU", the King is answerable ooly to the royal family and the religious hierarchy. He also listens to his ministers; particularly Sbeikh Ahmed Zaki Yarnani, the polished, Harvard-.educated oil minister. I flew to Riyadh to team more about UUs strange land, which has emerged overnight from a backward desert kingdom to the workl's No. I petroleum power. 1be story of its rise is like a tale from the Arabian Nights. At the tum of the century, Riyadh was a small desert rtown of baked, mud.tmck houses and shops. It was ruled by the unpopular Emir Ajlan Rashid, Whooe family had chased tile rival Saud family into exile tn Kuwait. IN JANUARY 1902, 21-year<>ld Abdul Aziz ibn Saud announced to his father : ''You will either see me victorious or oot at all.'~ Then he stole off .across . -· Conflict ~f-futer~~i i~w ·· ' . . .... _ . \' t .. Sparks a . Political Flap These Republicans! They have a knack of grabbing the short end of the stick here in Babylon. Take the recent flap over the Moscone conflict of interest law. That's the act, authored by State Senator George MoSC9fle (0-San Francisco) that requires all state and many local public officials to disclose their per- sonal fm ances and oot.side sources of in- come. It is a neces- sary and basically sound statute. One of its sections has raised a storm. It requires office- holders to list any source of outside in- come in excess of $250 a year. Some of- ficeholders, mainly doctors and lawyers, contend that to comply \\1ould be to vio- late patient-client confidentiality. Nevada C.Ounty's Board of Supervisors has challenged the-constitutionality of the law. That case is now being heard in Superior Court there by Judge Harold Thompson. Moscone recently introduced SB 1340 to ame.nd the law and prevent violation of confidentiality. The lawyers in the Nevada County case have agreed that the judge should consider the am<ndment before he makes lils decision. MOSCONE'S SB 1340 sailed through the Senate, 33-0. But, It ran into a stone-faced bloc of Republicans in the Assembly. The bill squeaked through, •t·31, v.ithout a single Republican "Ase.'' Senator Moscone and A s s e m b 1 y Speaker Bob Moretti jumped on llliL Dear GI001nv ' Gus How come It COok a national speed " limit and .• hdera1 law to enforce C.lilomla's tong-standing 5.1 mpll speed lilllll lw trailer-trucks? -DIOGENES '71 .- ..., .. .,.. •llllltltftlll ..,. ,...,... -........... Nfttd Jiit ......... .s....--.... ............. ~iee. ( RUS WALTON J They charged Republicans were a bunch of bad guys trying to gun down l'Ol'lflict of interests la'Vr'S. Further, they charged the GOP lawmakers were trying to keep the issue clouded so the courts would find the law wioonstitutional. ThJse charges sent Assemblyman Bob Burke CR-Huntington Beach) into a low, screaming orbit. "It's just not so! All we were trying to do was make the Democrats live up to their own bill. "They passed it. They said il was what they wanted. They basked in the shadow of Watergate and took all the credit for the Moscone bill last year. Now they're trying to sneak back and get off the hook. "If the Jaw is found uocmstttutional, if it is thrown out, the Republican caucus will move right away for new legislation -the toughest bill that would be con.strued. artStltutionaJ." BURKE was one of 14 Republicans who voted agaiost M06Cme's cooflict d interest bill (SB 716) last year. He said be thought it was "a farce." "I felt they had oo in<entim or tulfilling all or its requiree;nnts and, you see, I wu right. M a matter of fact, Moscooe kept saying thal OOclln and lawyers woold be emnpted. That made secood..:tas. citizen! out of other officeholders; busioeS'!men. fur Instance, they have to cooiply wittl the law rigbl dowo to Ole letler. · "Heck, SB I~ (tile water-down 8Jll8ldmmt) WOUid help me. "* a bl.Wnessman I would oot have to li8t alt m my customen. "It'• the tactic they aro uslng and their statements lo the -that are objoollonable IO me: playing pollUcs with an Important .issue. Those 811)'1. are trying to paint them.;.Jves as, Clie oofy ones with integrity. You knbw : that all Democrata .are bonellt and ··all Republicans .... - "ON AN Individual basis, am here In California, that just ain't IO. Look at two cl their gubomalorial "81ldldalo! -Moretu and (""yor Jooepfl) Alioto. A& fw as I'm oooCemed they're short on inttgrity." the bleak, reddish-brown desert with a band d. 40 followers . They slipped into Riyadh on a cold, moonless evening and hid through the night, drinking coffee, eating dates and praying to Allah. Next morning, they attacked the emir as he emerged from his mud f....-.... with his bodyguartls. He tried to scramble back into the for.tress through. a rtrap door in the tiuge wooden gate. One of Saud's fighters hurled a dagger, which thOOded into the gate a few inches from the emir. Other attackers raced to the gate -and grabbed ·the emir's feet before they disappeared through •the trap door. THERE WAS a brief tug-Of.war between the attackers oo the outside a.rd the bodyguards on the inside belore the emir was pulled through. Meanwhile, Saud's men clambered over the high mud-brick walls on palm ladders. Although they were outnwr.bered t"''O lo one by tho bodyguards, Ibey won the short, ijerce batUe and killed Che emir whom Chey found cowering In bis private, one-room mosque . The fortress still stands In downtown Riya<IJ:, a I t h o u g h t h e desert thunderstorms are slowly washing It away. My hosts proOOJy pointed oot Che .blade of the dagge< still lmbedded in itt.e great wooden gate. And dJ.e mud walls are still splotched with the blood of tile emir and his bodyguards. The fiette Saud subjugated the desert tribes, drove oot the TUrks and fmalfy, in 1932, fo\llded modem Sa\Xli Arabia. He also fathered more than 40 sons. The third son, Falsal Ibo Saud, !ought at bis father's side in some of the later desert battles. F AlllAL is an expert horseman and has killed enemies in close combat. He is a stern Moslem, who rules bis people from the ~oran and judges them by -the laws of Islam. ReligiOl.li polict! still stop women In the st-s cl Riyadh and order them to lengthen tbeir skirts and a thief may risk having his band cllopped off. The king still rules like a tribal chief, holding weekly Thtm;cfay morning majlis cerenl<Xlles at which any male in the kingdom can present a grievance. Desert sheikh! and lowly henlsrnen alike awear_ before him ao:l address him, man to man, a:i "Faisal." THE KING is austere, frugal, hard working. He has a strong sense of honor and loyalty. He is fien:ely anti· Communisl and anU-Zimlst. Despite U.S. aid to Israel, he also remains pro-- American. He cut off oil lo Ille United Slates, partly to bolster his influence in the Arab world,, par;ly lo remind tbe United States oot , to Jake him for granted. But at Arab summit conferences, he argues !or moderation. His representatives have also quietly encouraged the other oil producers to ease the Arab oil embargo and <o hold down prire;. The king is deeply concerned about the enormous price hike and fully reallzes what it is dolne IO the world eronomy. He is reluctant, however. to be tile first 10 break the oil cartel. to 1HE d~vout Faisal, Oil is Saudi Arabia's "bounty from Allah." He is determined to use it to build up his eotmt.ry, particularly 10 broaden its industrial and economic base. Already, modem glass<lnd<>meret• buildings have risen alongside the c:astellated mud waJh d Riyadh. Cadillacs and Mercedes roll over six-lane roa~ where camels and dookeys also plod. And gasoline, mote plentiful than drinking water, seils for 13 cents a galloo. Has Nixon Forgotten the Sileiat MajOrity? Conservative R~publicans Worried WASlllNGTON -Although the re<:<nt meeting between President Nixon and 21 conservative House RepubUcans opened with applause for Mr. Nixon and ended with handshakes, these ameniti es were merely veneer for seethiilg anti-Nixon sentiment by the en· tire conservative J Republican esta~ lishment. In fact, the 9().min· ute Cabinet Room session with the in· fonnal Steering Group of hard-line conservatives in the House never did come to real grips with what one cooservative labeled "the Nixon sellout" of their position oo issue after issue. That sellout, conservaUVes agree, has its source in Watergate and the conviction that the Presiderit's new budget is designed to appease the main force of his enemy: liberals of both parties. REP. EDWARD Derwlnsk! d Illinois, leader ot t!>e Steering Group, told us after the ....,ion that the President was" politely W3J'11ed he "could not placat~ bis liberal critics with this new deficit budget 111d program." "He is capitulating to the wrong people at the wrong time on the wrong issues," Derwinski said. "There is st.ill a silent majority but the President forgot that fact." The reason Derwinski went to the White House with the ideological hard core of Republican conservatives was to sU££eo the President's back again.rt liberal programs which, in earlier Nixon yeors, would have be<n automatteally vetoed. Their m..,.ge: Mr. Presidml, don't umlerestima~ conservauve votes in the House in deciding 'whetbe< to 11<to; "' promise yoo tilt same backing to SW1lain vetoes this year as last. nJE CONSERVATIVES fear that Mr. Nixon wlll be frll!litenM 00( of. vetoes because of h.ls dangerously ,...ken<d polJUcat position. What's mort, this retreat would come on top of b:iJ new deficit budgol (nearly 110 bllllon in the red). bis medical care program, bis public service employment ~gram arid, most Important, bis ...twn to a liberallJed, family assistance cash pay- rponis plan. I • - ( EVANS·NOVAK J For all the amenities at the White House, the conservatives received DO commitments on four specific t.srues. 'Ibey asked the President, first, t~ solicit Republican backing for an anti- busing constitutional amendment. Mr. Nlion's reply posed a dubious theois : 'My four appointee& to the Supreme Court are tbe best guarantee on tbe busing issue. 1be other three issues, each a flaming red flag to conservatism: long-term federal subsidies for mass transit operating oosts ; the proposed legal eervices corporation; a pending llemocraUC<!(IOl1SOred bill backed by environmentalists which would establish federal limit.s oo. uncontrolled use of lands. THE PRESIDENT listened respectfully, indicating sympathy but a v o i d i n g cornmibne!lt. Moreover, several felt he peroonally had nol begun to count nooes on forthoomlng House votes, because of Impeachment distractions. More important, the cooservatives £ell that in his political agony Mr. Nixon has given up defending against vast spending programs likely to be enacted by the Democratic Congress. They see him using the threat of recession as an obvious pretext for federal pmlll>' priming. The session broke up without overt ill-feeling : no blows struck. no harsh criticisms uttered. But .as an effort to tweak the Presideol's coosdence on what conservatives regard as h!S si:rrender of principle, iL proved, in the words of a participant. only that "he has thrown in the sponge and he doesn't even care." No News Not Necessarily Good News lt was In 1984 that President Hickory ( J. Dockering, with overwhelming public ART HOPPE support, nuruned throui!1 Congress a . bill b,ls ~ bad long yearned . for. "Henceforth/'" sakl the new , law, '----------- •"the media shall dis- seminate only good news.'' AmericanJ h a d grown up on ._ of wan, riots, corrup- tl'on. -ages and crWs. They w e r e sick and tired of It. "WhY con't the po· pen print goocf news for a change?" tbq lncnlsl'1gly com- plained. · • "This ·lfilslatlon," said the President cmtideritly, "will put an ond lo the cm;. tbe media ·m cons1an11y otin1nC up." . OF OOVllSE, the ellecla on the media W!l'e -.·Wllll -- on m 1Ubjec11 • Delfodll Feotlvals and N.., Hope for Apbls Sullems, circulation plummeted. On telovJslon, the Six O'Clock Nows' rallngs nooedlved. "Wdl, lllon!'a pod nows tonliht!" said a &loomY H.V. Kaltenbom IV for opencn. This was followed by 29 mlnW.. ol recorded lllllllc. But tbal -• 1111&11 price .... ~ for die euphoric died on Iha ~ People rm/ went about tlielr daily lives with uncreased brow! and stnlgbt- f b o u Ider s, unworr ie d and unapprehemlve. True, there was an upsurge that winter of colds, caugbt by citizens unp""8red with wnbrelliu « galosbes f o r rainstorms and bliuanis. BUI the public ...,. realized 1bat when papers omllled tbe dally Corecall, Ille weather 'illOUld be Inclement. • , AND it .., qreod t11o1 lhe damage «> Y!R'lloooe. Fla, mI&l-I have been leoo bod ·die ... ~ -forewarned '"iiinieoDe Elvira. BuLl!!ll ..... agrted lo onlJ by tile aurvtvoll since the reot 'of the country wu, naturally, not lnfonned d the event. HOW LONG. the najlon would have remained joyous and car<lree wilt never be known. For Ille President had ltriousb' tlldert11hnalfd the Ingenuity cl tbe Amelican preaa. It was The New York Happy Times that -Clie brtakthrough whicti ttlitored the ll6lini circulation cl tile Dltloa'• nenpapen~ "Good nenl" began tta biltoric leed , story. '"I'll!' ootbrealt of bubonic plagu• In the Midwest Is nol expected to prove fatal to more than one r three Ameri· cans." In hardly any Ume It all, Am<ricens were properly well i n f o r m e d again-properly well inConned, properly worried and properly apprehemive. OlAMM.~T DAILY PILOT Jlobert N. Weed, Publllhff ThomtU K«vii, Editor Barbam Kreibich Editorial Page Editor Tho <ditmUI ,-of tho Dolly PD9t -ie!eb to Jnfonn IDd. 11Umulate. -. by """"""" .. tht. -divene i~ntaly~ '°Pict Of m. '""" by ..-...i «>lwnnitt• and cartoonllta, by ~ a loru.m for --·-.""' by-...ttii. ntWIPIPtr'I ODI*'-IDd ideas on cumnt -The edttoriai -of the' Dl.llY PUot •jpear only tn the editorial mlumn at the top ot the -· Oplnloo& .. ,. ... d by tbe col-. wnnista and eutDcl'Ultll and lettirr writftl ut their own and M ftldone.. -· ol .... tr v1 ........... DoUy Pllol -ld bt ~ Monday, February 25, 1974 . ' - ' I ... ' . \ • T - We'd like to make things easier for you. That's why we've co111bined our most u~eful services in one checking account. The All-in-One Checking Plan. You pay a flat fee of only $2 a month. No fluctuating charges. No minimum balance. Write all th&ch~cks you want. 2. 6. 1. •• You can also have it include a summary of your savings accounts and other information if you wish. You can telf at a glance where you stand. 7. BankAmericard~ No filling out separate-11pplicatidl'lslor~~'!t~services. '-=~·-_ 4_ 0 ___ ~ J. 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It lists your checks in _ ~~-,,..,.~~~ o~~\effi~\ \\..\ · .. · numerical order-even indicates those checks ~~.,_" . ~nX•e{ ·'8'\.'¢. ; ,. ~ '..),,. •• which haven't come in yet. ·---::'"'' , --. ,. · ':\\\e~\{n~~~.v,.,., · :,~ . . . . .,...... ""' . · ·Cl'\ · · -,,._ ~ "'fl "'~"'-' 't. . __._ ....... ___ --. ' . . , .• ___ .,.,...~·;:l·, . :·'" .. ' _ <i. f>\~'£,V..\ ., , . -,,r ;~~,": ._ .. _.,. .. ,. ~fW~4~Rt~~ ' ft.~ t ..,,.'~: I _. 1 . .t'fb,.,'.:,•~;r·, '>!•JI:~~ h, 23 on-0 1 , . .u • . ~ ·• ,., ' ~ ;.:r..._~. .··~· .M't •>t >" ~ t • • ' ' ' t ... "'' ........ • """ .. . . ·~ . ... t ct " t 9oo'>A . ,~ · ~ of f QRll\"' • ·\'>\1.1.ll~l·\. c~\f:,,, .. t ,0.\1.l.ll~ b .. ' .... _.'. . i. ' ... , ' -' • 1.-:· ..-;:> --~ ' ' -' " ·\ --- . I 1 • --• .. . .... • .. 8 DAILY PILOT Taxes Needed for Transit 'Up t.o the -,,Diers' Say District· Manager Fiel.ding bale "'"ldar D<twort. I rubber-tired tn..11 bus Ibo! will be '11lal CUT!dor net-t woold be "led" roll-auided in ._ opeclal • ._ 1ane. by a saturation sysl"11 ol fixed route That technology wt!! COit almost .., By WILLIAM SCBREIBEI\ , SANTA ANA,--In all lll<llhood. Or,.. and Dlal·a-Rlde buses uUllzing a fleet mucb as the rapid-rail syst'1!1, Fielding · County wUJ neYer get an elaborate mass of 1,500 or more vehicles. said, unless pl"O\'i.$ions are made for !.~~~~~-~·~·~"~"'~~~-~~·~""~·~""~"~"' ~"'~"·~·~·~·~~~~ rapid lranolt 1yslom In the Mure uni,.. Fieldlng said the ""'t figure ls ao It on the new freewa}'I ""' beln& built Its ~eoll' add another peney ln w.s. hl&h bocaule be WtJll on the llllUJllllllon. or In the planning otages. Big Baby to every buying dollar. that Ille enUre con1dor oyslem """Id ..,,.,. would be Dlal .. -R1c1e. buses that And e"" il they do -the consist ol some kind ol rapld-raU lranott wculd pick up passengers at their aalee lax, the transll .l)'llem they buy teclmology lil<o tho BART l)'Slom In doorst.p and then swing onto the will probably be notlslng Hke the onea the san Francisco Bay area. freeways ·where they would pick up envisioned in Buck Rogers or the "We had lo assume the most e1pensive the · guidance raU for a quick trip into futuristic Disneyland monorail. system would be bUllt m we Woo.ldn't busineas ceot«I like Santa Ana and Tbo5e are the frank ob&ervations o1 go """' our eslll\I.., Jlke they did Lot ~ Orange Col.llty Tratuit District GeoeraJ up there In the Bly hea," 'Fleidln& Regular .._ -.,, .. umatoc1 soo Manager G.J. "Pete" Fltlclinc, who ts aald. , ol them~ wUl a),. ha .. 1 place either c:harJed wllb the responsi'bUl!y ol BART haa COii D01rly 13 billion ID feeding the oorridoro or provtdin( local clellJPllnl and lmplementmc rapid tramil far -llllft !ban lbreo times Ila ortginal transit oervtco, FleldlnJ aald. In the county. eotlmatod COIL U taxplyen authorhed the addilional Fielding, an amiable, sm>oUHaltlng But Fielding ODDcedes the uoe ol rapid-tax this November, Fielding said tho New 1.ealand native who now lives in rail cars will be at,lctly Jim.ited in first attp would be an immediate South Laguna, said he \will push bard Orange County -perllapo llmlled only expans1oo ol the Dial-a-Ride system into to get the tax .increase oo this to one line through the central county arees that have expressed an interest Novembes"• bellol. from 'San Clemente to Los Angeles. In IL "This should strictly be up to the "l have very real doubts that rapld-raU btcluded on that 1151 are the Orange people," Fielding said. "Either they wallt transit is suitable for Southern Calilornia Coast communities ol Founla1n Valley, It and want to pay for It or wlll be In any utenslve mode," Fielding said. Huntington Beach, Mlsolon Viejo, O>ota oontenl with' keeping what wa have and "A blgl>denslty areo could be well M..., and EI Toro. putting up wllh tralnc cong.,tlon." served by such a corridor but 1 th1nk Then wculd follow expan:sion of th( · Fielding said "what we have" now it wUl be a mlnimal part of the whole Park-n·Ride program where motorists is a limited but growing !)'6tem of system." · park at a county lot and pick up a fixed-route buses and Di a 1-A -R Ide FleldlnJ said pricing the l)'Stem as bus to ride in Los Angeleo or el..where. coaches that still have a long way to lhoogb all rlgbta ol way aod conetruclion Fielding said a full satuniUoo bus go to adequately serve the county. bad to be done for a rail l)'Stem gives oystem could be reality In about five "Any plan we oome up with ts no him tremendoua nextbllily In choosing years 11 the money ts avaUable. damn good without a source of funding," the ultimate technology that wlll be All during the iii!Ual phases, the rapid Irv. rded 'ts first tti ho said. "ll't.J!J.Y§. given the -1e tiled. rail link would be In the planning stages. Lion Country Safari in me reco ! .&·· the beginnings of a reasonable plan He said, for example, that the central "Since it would have to be elevated raffe birth recently with the anival of:~• t~~nng and the "'51 is up to tbem." · spine corridor. wbich runs along the in some places and depr....00 In others. tyke born to 14 foot tall Linda. The y, un-The sales ia. Fielding has in mind old Pacific Electric line and then oo it would probably be 10 or IS years named, stood 5·9 at bu1h and weighed 120 pounds. wa3 suggested by the transit cmtnct's through the Saddleback Valley, will av.~y yet,'' Fielding said. _ _ _ _ ~ -consultant. Alan M. Voorbees.---....ud ~ probably-nev.er iee much in -the way -Fielding said-the--i-n c rem en t a·l LA=Rl<lll ... ,..,,,,...,,""'""'""'"'°""''"":llllB .. .,...,""' A!sociates. of u I t r a -f u t u r I a t i c passenger construction of the system would make Such a lax would ra ise an estimated conveyances. it less likely to falt and would gi"1! $66.6 million per year and nearly $1 Fielding said it vdll most I i k e I Y Los Angeles and San · Diego Counties Deaths Elsewhere billion over the 15 year implementatioo be an electric-powered train looking time to catch up and build thel.r own period of the rapid lransit corridor plan much like tbme already on the tracks. transit links to tie into Orange Couoty's. now favored by the OCTD. "By using Ibo t.ocbnology ol regular Both Los Angeles and San Diego have r.2'.JC•a•••••••••••••u••EI 1be ainidor plan, whicll will face trains, we won't have to go into a already woo approval for a ballot NEW YORK (AP) public bear1np )larch 4 and 18, could lot <l opace-age controls · and so forth,:' measure on the one-cent sa1.. tu coot more than $:1 billion to build and he said. "That stuff is all well and increase this yeer but Fielding said Winthrop W. Aldlrcb, 88, fonner hoanl dlainn.an o1 the Q\ase National Bank and fp r m e r United States ambassador to the Cowt of St. James, died MOl-.lay. Aldrich. an uncle of former New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, served as ambassador in Loodon during President Eis c nh ow er' s operate over the same lS-)'<01' period. · good lo< a moon shot but I think .,. their corridor plamlng Is lagging behind. NEW ORLEANS (AP) -The sys1esn Fielding and b 11 wlll rely on more t..ted kinds of railroad u Orange Coutnlam ref,.. to hil<e Farnt Aa ... te, 42, ttumiiete< consultants have In mind would coot systems." the ta..,., Fielding said there Is enough am leader of the Dukes of bet_, $860 million aod II _billion 1be remaining anns o1 the corridor money available from federal mUers Dixieland wOO played New ootright to build. That figure Could system, if they are left Without rapid rail to at least work toward a saturatloo Orleans jazz, died Monday increaae il new llnta are added lo the ll'anei~ will most likely be served by bu> system sometime .in the tutur.. g~:€:~fl~ * * * * * * ;;,;~B~R~. ~U~IS~,~,-and-iiiii!B~L·o~~w~!i!E!i!R!'iii"il ~~eidt radio show in Park, -N-Ride System SCISSOR STYLES Death Notices HOW TO DO THEM STEP IY STEP ls.K J. Fi.1c!~.1I;,"~~o1 seo1 "'"* STANFORD ·(A:P) -Delea Drive, YorM LlnOa, 0.11 of dMtr., .Cberta.gtoD Faruwwdt, 71, Febr_,.ry lS, IP14-Survlv.d bV Wtnls. _,_ ---.lh-at Stanf~ Mr . .net Mn. Jtclt C. Fletel*' Jr.; ......... ~ o;:lill;I..._., l&U Ok d f C Anyone can cate tor a Brust'! & Blower !'!air style. or our aye Or oun ty ol~er cu•I coaxing, fuss-free. lull functional SCISSOR STYLES wtiictt are as easy to do as Just sh.ampool Our lamp cuts. finger 1umble cuts. cur1ing iron cuts, wasl'l towel dry, p.1t11"n•1 vr•ndP9rwltt. Mr. •nd Mra. Unlv......,'s ~~ Resear<:b JKIO: c. flftchef' Sf'.. Cml• Mu.11 T;;l&OHJ .['UUU ::i;i:,r:.•1cosT~"'t:.~"Mr. Toti ~:',1.~ ImUtute, died Sattrday at the SANTA ANA. -Starting S..111•. Gr•....,. 9WVtC'ft. W9dnttNr. Stanford Medical Center of sometime in 1975, thousands FtDrUArv 21, l PM. P1otlfk vi-14..-I 1• t y ~ Mtmorl•l P•rk. P•clllc v iew MortUArv. cancer, ""11:: u n v er s of Orange Qxmtians w1 .. COin· orr«lor$. o•AY • reported Monday. mute daily to l.m Angeles johs J1~1 Gm. Jte.1<1m1 of srrtcuw . N--,-'II be able•-park their cars York 0.'9 or dnlh. Fl'Drv•rt :t:J, 1f1~. V.1 "' su.~i .. .,;1 bv auot1•1l E1>11 J .. n l •vlor. ,,"" ·•""'G~. Del. (AP) near home and leave driving o! L9Qll'll 811tll: o.n S1nto41, N1w n I LllYU.n · 1 \.nl York: iQl'I, J1mn R. Gr•r· S•n J-• _ Tho Rev. William "--ry to the Orange County Transit .. s11ri. Nflll• Gordon, SCol .i·\11; Merion n.i:;:u Black. of New Yorki 11~ 11r11nc1ct111o•en. •iead, .. , seventh b\...tvw.. of District. scr~lces 11nct lnMrmenl wlU ~ Mid •• .N ''""'t" 1n ~-vn. SMfler L•vun• e..en the Episcopal Diocese of District directors h a V e Monu1r1. Forw~::~f~~eciors. Delaware, died M 0 n day , approved the expenditlD'C of ~eal Aldln L1nc1gr1n. m H. Eudld, f '--~ !tacit th 111' mill' sin•• A.II•. 011a of d11111. Fl'Drv••v apparently o a JJCCU L a . more an . " ion -:fa~:f! •. s:;::;~ R~vw~~ ~"01:: -• most of U l.n, ~al funds J Grffflbe!"D Prlv•tt urvlc ... ••tti• •' AUGUSTA ,. Ga. (AP) -~ to ·build the county's first l tro«on f11111111 Home, Cosl• ~' 6" • ..-.c-.t p-1..·N·R.ide f6cui\)'. Olrectora. MAHI'• I • Iadu H. PiUI, 09, pr~ _.. I a terminal area. boanl buses brusti ·n fluff cuts or simple wash. and wear cuts are SCIS- SORED. all take<afe.cl Yourself sryhls. Good for any. aoe. and get an express ride into any tiair. No teuing, no rollers. no pins, no POLLUTING downtown Los Angeles. HAIR SPRAYS. Al.SO: Included in lhe cost will MO SET PllM•tmn WAYIS. YOU MAT HIYB. W4"1' be a nomtnal price f(ll' the TO SIT TOUI H•• AGAIN. land, which is surplus stat. JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING property left over a It er Hu~"--h f·"-~on freeway coostructlon. lll"Xft. U1R11T 'The bulk of the money to '"4 ...... JOSH. .....,.11\'d. 968-3535 819-3863 build the facility will come IA.M. .. IDP.M.:w.&s...ttelPM. from Urban Mas.s Transit!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! Administration coffers andl: that agency must approve the low bid before work can get tmder way. Try Saturday's News Quiz ' ' Serious about Lomng \\eight? Medical I Weight Reduction Lindora's unique program is a safe and practical method for the entire family to lose weight and learn how to !"•intain proper weight ... under the st rict supervision of Medical Doctors. -Call for -in/ormatiort Monday thru Friday 8 A.M. to 6 P.f<!. SAN BERNARDIND LONG BEACH SHERMAN OAKS 8811-4781 426-6549 789-7103 A"ow~M Mtd1Cll 8100. NEWPORT BEACH 145-3740 PK• Prol1 ... 1or>1I Bldg. WOODLAND HILLS 347-5647 W11111r.VICIOfY M1d1e1I Bldg. COSTA MESA 557-1893 Mt11 V1rd1 "'ofU&lonll Bl!lg. E. LOii& BEACH 517-0378 Lot""°" M.oicll C1nllr GARDEN GROVE 534-2051 "u• P1oi.t11on• 8tcl11. . KB Proll•aional 8169. WEST COYINA 962-3438 MIJOn 8100 • POMONA 623-1855 Po..,on1v1111v Mtd•e.i Ct"tt• HAWTHORNE 679-9236 H1 .. 11101ne Med<C1I C1n11r PASADENA 796-2114 Croc:k1r 811111 BIOg . FULLERTON 170-9501 SUllll Col:r:; Ml(fic1I 81 . CERRITOS 924-5741 C..fl10S .f.•o•nlll0111I •1c19, GrlDln·Vo11 0~1 Pror1s1lon1I Bid;. SANTA MONICA 828-4513 '''"111111 M1d1c11 Bldg;. MISSION HILLS 385-1138 Ml11Jo" M•d•<:•' auto. ORANGE 538-2395 t,.,,,,,.c"'"'"''" Prot11110111I Btdg. LA HABRA B94-1029 Hlllt• .. t M.otc1l llllS;. RIYERSIOE 787-8250 Mlodoc al Squ&rl c.enrudt' ""91\e<'. R .. tdent of L-m• of Paine Q)llege since 19'ft. 1be bid accepted for Hiii,· craf9 of 11Mtr.. Febru•rv 19• •1•· _..1i.--.1' __ ... died ~ al ' --...4'-~.-facili'ly was 5......,fvecr bV .S.ughter, J1nlc1 ~ma& WIQllC'. .,_,... __ ._ Mllll:l WJnll'l"tlOl'tom, of El Mon!ff IOfl, C_,. -I.a. his :Ci,.. dfloe -'4...~ n~ t.:.d.-than E. Miiier, Gv111m1la ; ... .-. BIJ9UI. ~ grar>dcnlldren. Prlval• servlc" '"' ' ~y "'""'-', "' antktpa , "'but still three ln"""1wnl _,.. held. SMffer L..-~ &mfi.__ llNCll Mortwrv. 01re.:tor,. ~ .............. ,,l lower than tbe highest Fielding aald the prlce1;::~~~~§§§§§§~~~~~~~;,;;;;;,;;;;;~;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::~;;,;;;;~ increaae WU related lo higher fuel, tabor and molerials costi In other acllom, the transit dlrect«s: Lindora MEDICAL CLINIC MOSES _. ....... . John o. MOffi. A1>1 •1; res1c1en1 of NEW YORK {AP) of nine offers received. Loi; ;.~1.... 0111 of de11n, Flbrwrv Pull 80 7l 191' Survived by wilt, M1r11 ; son, l\larpret Leedl tur t • 'Jbe COO tract will go to the oiv10 W. M~; mDlhl•, M•rv E. h'~~--end t .. o-t ,. me La Habra fitrm ol Goodm•• -Accepted I bid ol $38,DI by Lewis and Sweasy lne. of · Paramount to build a temponry bua parltlng and servicing center in the Garden Grove city yard pending OO!l.'!truction of the new OCTD facility m Harbor Boulevanl in Garden Grove. Mole's: two 5Js•en, Mad~ O•nlelt •net i.;,,,..._.. -.. LI v~ Ouc.lworth. Vlt.lltffon, w...--. Pul'tzer n...:.~-....;,__ died nd "-01'(, , AM 10 11 AM. Strvlcn. Widnes-I riwc: ""•R;t.• Peloquin a '""rco. oay, 11 AM, both at P•cifle View Cll•Pll. Sunday_ at her home here ""--new facility, to be lntermenl, Pacific VI~ Memor11I P•rlt. trok She was J Ill:: smiths MortVArv. 01r..:ttn. follow!f1g a s e. . located at the junction of the Ealh~I Vul. ...-:sT52: ruid.nt of the widow of Ralph Puhtzer, Sant.a Ana and Riverside satr•mfllfo. D•t• o1 dl11r.. Flbru.rv publisher of the New York F-ways, wlll provide 13. 1911. survlv..:t br w1ft, Vlvl1n: Id '" mother, H1lll1 ""'' cl1uol'l1tr, Tina \!{or · parking for at lea.st 1,(KK) CBl'S. V~I; lour bl'Olh111, Cllfl, Pllll!h>. H.nrv al'ld Oavld Vnl; 111 .... tlti.rs. Ethtl Orange~ly Rapid Ralr>t, Gladys 801t!ng •nd M1rv Gir!~lpl'I. TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -Dr. Transit G. n er al S~rvit .. , Tl'l\lrsd1v. IO::JO "'111. P11k F1mllv co1on1ar Funer•! Hom•. George A. Van Biesbroect, 94., Manager G. , " ete" Fielding an astronom« recognlzed foe said the driven wlll then ent.r work with twin s t a r ' , -Approved the prlnclpal of billboard advertising a n d authorif.ed 15 full-sized billboardJ bearing an OCTD legend and up to 50 smaller "candidate poster" sized sigm AlllUCIW &·SON WHTCLIFF MOllTIIAllT 427 E. I 7rh St., C.O"a Me)Q . ..,,... .. -·-IALTZ-SEaGlllON FUNlllAL HOMI (OJona dtl Mor Cosio Me5o -·- 673·94.SO 6-46-2-424 BELL llOADWAT MOllTUAllT I I 0 Sroodwoy. Costa Mesa 548-3433 -·-DILDAY uonmts MOITUAllT 179 11 Beach Blvd. Huiitington Beach 842.ml 244 Redondo Ave. lof19 Beocl'I (213) 438-1145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY I /9!, lOQ••nn (0<1von Rd. 49,; 9.: l!J -·-McCORMICK MISSION MORTUARY 78832 Camino Cop•\1•0"0 Sor1 Jvon Cop1~1ro"o 49~·1776 -·-'ACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK CetNtery Mor11.10tY ci.o,...1 3.SOO Poc.il1c View Drive Newport Beor:h. Ccr!olorn1a 644-1700 asteroids and atrnel3, died Saturday. Krown 1..-his publislled catalogues ol dod>le stars. Blesbroeclt dlscoveml 11 asteroids and two comets, both of which bear his name. Reappoinbnent around the county. SACRAMENTO CUP!) _\;=::::::=~===°k=ll==z===; Gov. Ronald Reagan reappointed Edward E. Kerr, l:JlRL'S PITI'SBURGH (AP) _ E. a naval officer for 30 years and a professor of naval .....,..... MMtflll Da,1d Proctor, 79· retired science at UC Berkeley. to "" c:.c. chairman of the board of Gulf !he board or the California ~';..-"::. · Oil Corp., died Su 0 d a Y · ~faritime Academy. KerT. 54, ......... _., .. -. Proctor retired in 1959 after is 8 Piedmont Republican. '42·1712 a ~year career with Gulf. 1 _~'..:.~'.""."_'.~;;;~~~:=:::=:::=::;=.;;;=;::;=;::;=;::;=;::;=;::;;= ---if ftiE-tfEw"PoifEiltiH"--1 NEW YORK (UPI) Charlolle SIDier Zaltlberl 49, ro-author ol the --musical 41Raisin, n died of cancer Sunday at S I o a n - Kettering Institute foe CBncor Research. OXFORD. Ohio (AP) - Mrs. ~farion Boyd Havtgblll"lt, an author and wife of l\Uami University, hist.orJcal rC'5earc her \\.alter Havighll.Nit, died SWldav. She wrote { books. inciUdlng "Murder lo the Stacks" and "Strange Island," and coauthon!d tlfte others will! herluti>ond. BLOOMINGTON, DI. (AP) PUBLIC AUCTION of AUTHENTIC HAND MA~E ·PERSIAN RUGS ' and OLD PERSIAN COPPER .ptretMty fine telect'-n'.t..., 200,.,.. •fl ..W wUh cMifl-. ef ... thtntkity .... _ Adlai 11oma 11111, 11, I ' romier P r • s I d • 0 t 11111 A FINE SELECTION OF SiLIC RUGS I chairman of State Fann , ... 1 ....... it.m) .. Mutual Auto lnolnt>CO OI., I died Friday. His .... Fhirard, ER INN I ,HK FAMIL y :;s, Is now State Fann NEWPORT I COLONIAL fUNlllAL president and presldeol ol lbe 1107 Jam"°'" Rood I -·- NOMI U.S. Omnber ol Olmmen::o. Newport llHch, GO!ilomlo 7801 Boha Ave w .. !•m.n~tf'!' THE AUOK>N: SUN., MARCH 3rd at 2 p.m. 1 1 &9J.35>l lXH!lllJOfj1 f!!OM 12 ,,..,,. ~ 1~----=-.--111--11PTVN1.-soc1nr • -~,_,CASH, CHECK. cuDIT CAIDS. I MOl..,1Al.Y ~ CNfl'lllilll 5-kM I $MITHI' OU -............ "... I . AucollNTlllNATIONAl (PIY) LTD. I 6'21 Motn $1. Tiii ~ ,..,.,. ,.,,.,..... DAILY PILOT CARRIERS The Daily Pilot is proud of its corps of young 11ales people who deliver the ne"·spaper to your door. These young carriers are the cream of the communit.y. Each month the besl of them are s~lccted for listing on the Honor Roll. Each carrier listed here has obtained at least four new custon;iers. during th~ past month, has had no more than one customer complaint for the month and must have paid his or her bill for newspapers bought "wholesale'' within the proper lime. Numeral in front or star ( •) preeeding name indicates the number of consecutive ·months that carrier has been on the Honor Roll. • • .... -_,.,.. ............ MlreW .... ......... --· --"""''""' --2· ...... 2• IJdstl c..t 2" ... °""' 1· -°""' 1· ,,..,_ rs.Me.Jr. 2"--z•a .... ...... J ...... ...... J.1 '"'-lllhc•W.r \ -CARRIERS OF THE MONTH Mike Zelazo, Costa Mesa Russ Jenklns,·Corona del Mar 4• Jofll Lectfkold . ............ 4' Maritp ~•590w s· Mill1 Lloio 5• O•l'fd L•McNif11"' 1 • o ... Mtttatr s· M-4 Torn• s• c;_.,w_.. s• ••""",.., Of44• ,. loyS....M9i• , .. ....., ...... 1• btt ,,_,.IM rScott...,...., 7• S....Hll 10• ,., ...... 12•1 .. ...a...lch ll'.fndS-hn ))"4if'Oftf S..Chn )t• ......, .,...,_,. ... -- Cerritn of__lllo ~_..Mike Ztln.o .... R1tr JIMhn. l!!lff It .!!lo toot of Mr._Olld Mro. W~t Ielo10 of 2879 Mtodo"1, Cosio Mete-Ht'• o ntt' ... r of Ille Wrllttlor" o c-'ly boMfil orgonl1otloo, and hk11 baskolboll and botfbol. Ht Wldt all lyptt .t lliodtlt aocl It olso W ..... o ,....-tOYl"'ls occouol with -y •-d from his -·iltlf'ftry buolMts. ltls"ltlo._..t Mr .... ~Robori Jonltlns.of-1.2.l.I S-y.-C-o dol Mor, llk .. - IMll" ,...,., Hf1 ... .Wll!t} Ht,......., M•td.; '"'""' -r f0< o 10-doy siding trip lo Yoll, Colo. Ho olto hn botllJhl his OWll lolcyclt Wiiii MMf MYtd tip -Ills roole pr<>fils. H.intiflQIO't &eocft T• ~':"! . .:=:,-.;:::"' I 14001 VINfURA llYD., SHllMAN OAKS 91403 I L---•364!39 ___ · __ _.,:...1_•_,.._ .. _.,.... __ ._"_ .... _•--"-'-' ... ! _ ------~~~".;.'.~ _.:: .:..· ___ .J IL-------------....0--------):--. ------------- I • ' \ ~i • I l ... l;.'~d .. y, ··~b1 u ... , OAIL i PILO r 9 ' Vniverritg. Workshop Women Gird Against Rapes General's Brother Murder of~Rape Victim Admitted EAST LANSING, MI c h . (UPI) -There were 20 '4'011len in the small room. Gatherod In a circle, they ocrcanv!d at the top of tl1eir I · in unl.9on. "W! women. lllOll of ll\<lln college age, """' practl<ing Women's CrLsis Cen ter . • "We're jus trying to teach people how to break holds and t.ero Ui OD crucial pressure points. lt's ,more of an awareness thing." v.wking women and _mate attitudes. Sues Film melhods to fend olf raplsb. Tl!ERE WERE o t he r '!be conference, organized by a ooaliUon of women's groops seeking to revamp Michigan's llS.year .. ld rope statute, was the first in a series -that will include a March 22 meeting in Ann Arbor. wor.,....... -•· TREY WERE taught ~ -..-OD ""'!<" responses to make a fist, ma~e most IO rape, .tlie proble1111 of effective use of t he t r finumadt and how to box an attacker's ears. It was all port of a self· defen&e workshop • at a conference on '"11le Politics ol Rape,'' held at Michigan Stale University. 11We're not trying to teach anybody judo or the martial arts," said instructor Kathy Q>stello of the Ann Arbor 'CAN'T SA. Y NO'-RIGGS TO WOMEN ~r~ r i~,,~.-,'2.' ,1 .. \\\ ' . . ·~ • .... aa ., ··· .... • . . •••• • • • • • • • • :.i· . .a··· An $8.57 saving .. , that's the report of one of ou.r Capital <?Iub members who used her card to take four friends to ~honer and the movies• a 10% discount at a member restaurant P!us $1 off'on each movie ticket. It adds up! And there are liter- ally hundreds of other savings our mem~ers take advan~age of including financial services, entertainments, excursions, a~d evi;n car rentals and hotel accommodations out of town. All you have to do .is save $1000 or more at ~estem F~deral. You not only earn the highest rate no~ available on ~nsured savings you a're a member of our Capital Club and eligible for all the myriad benefits the Club provides: Join the Club•·.• save money while you save money. • . ' HupEv~nf'iiiiiilli;n SAVINGS _ WESTEVI tBeverly Hillt/Larcbmont/Del Amo financial Center/La Habra FuhionSquue/ Main Of&ci Sb.th & N~;:;-:0., Ceni:;n.'...--City/City of Orange/Corona del·Mar/Scill Beach/ ' "' JDllewood/USC OfBce/Hollywoocl·Vermont ---coaOMA-DEL ·MAR 274-4 E. Coast Hwy., Jim Park, Manager, Telephone• ( 714) 644·7 255 • • -- • PUBLIC NOTICE 111•-0C JOHNSON, llANNON, WOHLWEND & JOHNSTON HA,UtY A. OLIVAR, Atty. , ... Aw. If h Sllrt. Sr.. &J$ a.ps AntfiH, C1llfol'lll1 toN1 PuDll.t1ed Or•"'il• Cotll oany FtD. 12, It, 26, and M1rcl'I 5. 1t1' PUBIJC NOTICE Pilot, ... ,. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS. IUSINISS PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU$ IUSINE'S$ NA.Ml! ITATl!MolNT NUU PUBLIC NOTICE Tiit 1011owlnv pe!'i.oM ire doing 11u.iness 11: OELTA LIQUOR, N)3 Adlm1 Avt., PICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS Hlll'lllN11ton &ffCl'I, C1I. '2'46 NAM• STATl!MINT C1tlwrl111 E. McN1mtr1. 1"'2 The followl119 per10n b doi119 "'""' S..Clltf Line, HIJ!lflngton keel!. c11. 11: MlchMI J. McNemer .. 1"'2 Poclllc TIELOHIC INDUSTRIES, INC., t12l2 COllll'1 Hwy,, H1.N11fngton IMctl, Ctl. L~unt Canyon lloed, Lftunt kecll, Jollll J. McNernere, '3oU Tout1n. C1Htom11 92652 • FOllftttln v11i.11, c11. TelonlcAlltlr. Inc.. • C11tf0fnl1 Tl'lll bvllness ii CondllCltd IW. ,.,,..,, COl"l)Or'lllon, 21212 '-"slllfll Cenyon ROid, pe,nntnhlp Le111111 IM(l'I, C1Utoml1 '26$1 John J, McNtm1r1 Thll buMneu II ~ucttd Dy I Thll •tlltmtnl WIS flied wlllt 1'tlt c0111«1llon. counlY Cllf'k ot Oflllil! Cwnty on TELOfUCAL TAIA:, INC. Fetlruery 6, 1'7•. Signed bY' Oori.kl J. lint., JOHNSON, llANNON, Pr"llltnf WONLWINO & JOHNSTON ThJ. 1t1Nmlrll Wll flied wllt! t!1t HANRY A. Ol.l~All, Alty'. CounlY Clt!'k of Ortnot County on ltot A ..... If ~ llen SI., !US Ftt1ru1rv 14. 1'1•. LM MttlH. C1llfortl4t ttM7 11M« 1115-0C l'IU•I ~ PlllU Publl1Nd °"""" CO.II OIHY Piiot, Publllhtd Otlf'ltl Co.st Dally Piiot, Ftbru11rv It, 2&, Mt4 Maircfl 5. lt, FebtUMY 12, It, 26 and Mlrclt S. ,,,, 606-7• ,,,, .. ,.,, PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI autUllSS NAME STATIMINT NAMI ITATIMINT Tiit followln• penon ,, dolll9 eini ... TM followlno ,,... .... I• dol11111 but!""' '" H : TRENOMASTER COMMODIT Y LAGUNA SUN TOPS, 213t2 UIVna FOflEC.ASTS, "°° C11nPW Dr .• $Iii!• .. • • C•nvan RIS., L1oun1 l!la1ch. c1111. 'l'USl :Ml, Newport ea.ch, C.llf. n..o Artlwr J, Htl..,., Jr .. 21)12 Llolll'lt KMIMll'I A111111•l Zinke, 16tl ,,.... : : Cl!'tVIWI Rd., L~Unl ~ffClt, C&ll!. ri651 Dr., No. G-5 Cost1 Miii, C1Ufomla I •. This buslrte11 II conduc:tld by an Tl'll1 bl.Ill'*" II conclvcttd by .., lndlvldual. ll"ldlvld111t. I ' Arllt\11" J. Helse-r, Jr. KenMftl A. Zlnkt This statement wa' 111..:1 wlll'I IM Tiiis 11a1emen1 w11 fllld wlltl tM COIJl'llY Clffk of Orlll(ll COUllfY "" CO\lft!Y' Clerk of Orlnot c°"'""' on ' Ftl)r'U•ry ''· ltt•. Jlrt\ll'°Y l l, lt74. j 1 Filla l'JllM PWllJMd Or1noe Coa't Dally Piiot, .P1,1btl1Md ()t'engt Cot!t 0.lty Piiot, Fthtvarv 11. 2&, 1nd Maren 5, ll, Fetiruery s. 12. lt u 111' ,,,.,, 1•1•. 607·14 • • PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SUl"IERIOlt cou•T 011!· THI S\.1"·1.... STATE OF CALIFOltNIA. l'Oa SUl"llUOR COUll:T 01' THE THI. COUNTY 01" ORANOI STATE OP' CALll'OlllNIA l'OR N•, A·7'Ull THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE NOTICI! Clfl HIARIN• Qt' PITfTIOfl Ht. A•mtl FOlt PROIATI O" WIL.L ANO P01t NOTICE °" Hl.AIUfllO 0" ,.l!TITIOH LITTERS TES:tAMlfllTARY l'OI. PROl!IATlf OI' WILL A.ND ,Oil Esl111t of DELMA "" !tfl'H. Otc11Md. LITTl!RS TISTAMINTAltY NOTICE LS HE"E&Y GIVEN lf'l•I Estele of CLAltEHCE E:, READ, G,\l!llt tELLE ALMA GOOOERIDGE flt• Decea9'cl. fff'ld l'lfttln 1 petltlorl lor ,,..._ .. ol NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN tri.t wm I nd f« llW'!l'ICt of ·Lttllr• HOWAltD J, IA.l(ER ""' !!ltd ""91n l"ltll'ltflttrv IO The Ptflllone, P't+wen(t • pttltlon fur _Probti. or Wiii lfld for hi wtllcl'I I• !MCM '°' ~ plf'!lallll'I. 11Mlln¢11 of llttlf'I T"l1ii'lenllry to llld ll'lt t lM I[""" Ind l)IM;t of hH!'ll'IQ tM pelltl-r, Allf'tn<» fo wtdttl I• tn. WIM hi• bHn Mt for Maren mldt Jot l\rrlhlf' p.11!1culaTt. 111"d tt'lat S. "''· 11 t :ao 1.m.. I" the c-""-" the. lll'M tnd ltlace of l'IMrln; tl'lf ol 0.-•l~I No. 3 of .. Id teun. NIM ""' been "' f(lr M1n:fl s, 197•. ,, 100 Civic Ct11M't' on... w .. 1. In ., t :OO a.m.. In '"' cwrll'OOM Ill IM Cit( of Sain.-Alii'>,,.~lfOl'n!•. ~rt-I No. l o1 Mid court, .. 0.1.d FttirU'try lS. 1t74, l'OO (lytc Ctl'lttr Otlw Wfff, ,.., IM WILLIAM •• SI JOHN, Clly of s.n11 ,,.,.,, Ct 1ttomlt. County ci.r~ D1tt'd Ft'tl. ll. lt7•. DONALD P', OOOOWUh WILLIAM E. St JOttH, TRINT O. ANDllSON COll'li1V Clfl'k A1""'9ft lit Uw •0•1ttT M. D1v1n ... '""'" Miii ,,,...,, llMnl JN nes l.OtM l•ACM llYO. l• A...._ Ctll..,,.14 tW14 • '· l,ONO UACM, CALl,OtlMIA MMt T1I; C2l)) ~1 011) 427..... ay1 T ...... O, A..,,... Jr. AttontlY tori ,ITITIOMllt Art'""' ,.,; "'"Mfltr .------------------------------------------------,,-------_:re_·'---------f'\illlltlltd Ol't1'191 Co-ll 0.lly '!lot ,~l'ht(I Or•ntt CMSI 0.11y ~2!., --------------' FtDrw•l'Y It, 20, 1't. lt74 6Gol•l' FeDr"\"fy lt, :0, ,,, lt7t ...,..Jl -. -.. ... ' ' • J: • .. ~ = \ J 0 DAILY PILOT Tue$day, Februar~ 26, 1974 • La911na, H11nti1agto11 Sammy Davis Jr. Hospita~ized , f • r • .. I • . . I · Two Shows Break Records MIAMI (A.Pl -Entertainer Sammy Ilevls Jr. was listed ln sat181actory '9')ditkln today In a Miami ho~tal with what was dlagnose4 as "a mlld digestive a~tem disorder.'' ~ Records, they sly, are made to be broken -and two community theaters along the · Orange Coast have written n~w att(!tldance records into their books this season . The LagWla Moulton Playhouse, in the midst or Intermission Tom Titus San C I e m e n t e Q>rnmunity ~ater where yet another county premiere is in the works. It's a British comedy- ffil'ce enJitleclsloopJy "Eh t'.'._ Richard Andersen is di r-ecti ng the a nti · establishment play by Henry Livings, which opens Mardi. ENTERTAINMENT Doctors at Mt S I n a I Hoopital ssaid Davis was undorgoing furth.,. tests and "would probably remain in the h»pital-for some time." ' Earlier, a spokesman had said that the' entertainer would be released after a day or two. its 50th -anniv ersary season, For the record, Alex Koba has announced that its recent directed "Life With Father" production of "Life With at Laguna with his wife Jean Father" was the 'best attended sharing the spotlight with Bill smw ln the theater's ·history. Oard en in the title role. "Mrs. Seems the magic that Gibbons' Boys" at Huntington propelled tbat play t o Beach was staged by James Broadway's all·time longevity E. Smith and spotlighted lor a non-musical attraction Joanne Wolco tt in the leading more than 30 years ago is still assignment. working. * A1so setting a new box office SPEAKING OF the Laguna standard was "~trs. Gibbons' Pl ayhouse, rehearsals are well Boys'1 at the Huntington under way for the season's Beach Playhouse. w h i c h fourth production at t h e booked s e v e r a l extra Moulton facility, the Orange performances into its five-County premiere of the bitter weekend engagement. Unlike romedy "And Miss Reardon "Father." this comedy wasn't Drinks a Little ." a household word - in fact. · The play comes from Paul the Himtington run was its l Zindel whose drama "The first in Orange County. . p IK .... Clooit n..t"!I LIDO NEWPORT BEACH lNTlANC:f TO ltDO !Sll : BALBOA •II ll)SO EXCLUSIVE! • .., ... lld. fl MaM ' ~Ph~ ·~~HI .0~9' .•!4l His Story Is Incredible! • • • •• = ~. _._ • Plu• "WESTWO RLD" SHAKESPEARE LIVES ! The lard's most popular comedy in a bright, bold production directed by Dan Sullivan (of New York's Lincoln Center). ON STAGE -Tues. thru Sun., 8:00 p.m. "THE TAMING OF THE SHREW" ~ ... ~~ Jo uth Coas t Reperto r5J --"'"' TA...0 1M rAllS" -"'""""'" -•C:-111 HARBOR Al AOIMS · COST! MESA · 979-4141 "DIE OF THE YEAR'S e 10 BEST FILMS ." --fT~1~7· • • • • • • '°5£Pti E. LEVINE - • 1---GEORGE C. SCOIT. • •MIKE NICHOLS'"" THE DAY i\'fi DOLPHIN • [PG1 #3 Mon. Tues. Thur1. Fri. 7·9'-11 • • • • • • • • • Sat. Sun. 1·3·5·7-9-11 H4 Mon. Tues. Wed, Thurs. Fri. 6-8-10 e ·~~~~s.•.1..Su-."•·•2.-•.·•···•·•'o;;;.·~~~~~~"""• =~ • .:lJeremiah • JOlinson" ·: 1, Mon. lhru Fri. 7·9·11 Sat sun. 1-3·5· 7·9·11. • • 6 Academy .Norn>. lndudl"9 h•I ActreH lorbra Streisand hit S...V 21 for a three -weekend engagement at the Qabrillo Davis, 48, was taken to the Effects or Gamma Rays on Man·ln-the-Moon ~farigold.$" Wits staged so splendidly at Laguna last season. Guest diteCtor for the production is Marthena . Randall, who mounted "The Gingerbread Lady" and "Nighl or the Iguana" at the Costa Mesa _Civic Playhouse..,. in recent seasons. Playhouse, 202 Aveni d a1-;iiiiiii!imiiiiii!ii!!!!iii!!!iii Cabrillo, 'San Clemente. '11\el• cast is dominated by new faces, 'headed by Harvey Dabling. in the role created by Dustin Hoffman on Broadway_~ ~ _ ----'-' The three sisters w h o dominate the show will be played by Joanne Black, Juli e Garvin and Betsy Hewett - all well known actresses on the Laguna stage. "1'-fiss Reardon" will open on March 12 for three weeks of Tuesday- through-SalJJrday production at the playhouse , 606 ~a Canyon Road, Laguna Biach, with reservations taken at 494- 0743. * ANOTHER CAST announcement comes from the ·~· . ••7l·••··, m• !~!,; ""' r=S-f, COllOH.t. OEL MAR . SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT Co.HIT ... ,..... .,...Hoffw . "MIDNIGHT . COWBOY" '?ARIS" at 7 • 10:55 "COWIOY" al 9: 15 . ..., __ 5-lcty Mcltilee .. 2 p .M. Leslie Heide is cast as Dabling's employer, w i t·ti Sherry Bauman playing his fiancee. John McGuire is the ousted worker he replaces-. while Beverly Sparks plays the company p e r s onnel manager and Gil J6rdan_is the clergyma n who cpairs the local air pa11ution cont.rOJ committee. "Eh?" will be presented Thursdays through Sundays in late March and early April at the playhouse, which is taking advance reservations at 492-0465. 2 Academy ... ·· Award Nominations · MAILON llllANDO-~ . ... - •••• Directw Starts TOMORROW· ONE WEEK ONLY ORANGE COUNTY COSTA MESA U.A. (714-5IO-OS9'1 FOUNTAIN VALLEY Fountain V1tley #I GARDEN GROVE Hiway 39 ~In (714-IJ9.1500) --1714-5J4.62!2! GARDlN GROVE Groft 014-537.uoot . LAGUNA Niruel 1714-512$3) lt/'ESTMINSTER Cinema West #3 Ul .. 892-449JJ LOS ANGELES COUNTY LONG IEACH U.A. Cinema (437·125n . LONG IEACH Pt1u'(429JOl2) AlSO PLAYIJ+G AT OTHER THU.TR£$ fHROUGHOOT SOUTHERN CAlffORNIA. ....---...... ACADEMY AWARD -~ ~· Ai.UEO NITISTS tlesents S1M lllSTll llll:QWBI 111t11• 111a FRNfKLlft J.SCHMFNER him '"'"" ~ ........ 2 DkMY Mlb "SUPER DAD" (0) 1"4:.u..1110 '·"'· "SON 01" f:LIJllllElt" (01 t:u.t:lt-t:SO p.m. Ct11tl11111U1 Ttd•Y l"l'Oll'I 2:00 "FUNNY CAR SUMMER" ,/':) fOUNTAIN \/AlllY .,.f.r{,)-~.-L>. D ~~:::;~,":~v1• All $Mii I.Of Til l i:MI 4 ACAO. NOMINATIONS "5.A~E. J~E-lUO_E~ Ull 1~31>-SrDS-l:tO l A.CAO. NOMINATIONS "PAP'ER MOON" {RI ll21M:S5-11i34 .... -... ... CINFDDMF 2D .. . .. ~·.:..-:...•'.__,!.r...,..,.,.. _,,, .. ,_,,,,. CINFDDMF 21 ,'.~ .. ;:•',_.!:!. ."-''"-' ~, ....... -'I ' " .. ". "AMERICAN GRAFITTI" STADIUM I . ' ....... 1111= !.!.Iii.. ·-· "LAST TANGO IN PARIS" IX} "MIDNIGHT COWBOY" {R) -'I -••• STADIUM 2"' ' _.,1u1•.1_.1.~i.r 4~ • -.. ' -..... STADIUM •3 :::." '~ll..'..;p_J -'I " -.... STADIUM '! -~~ . ' ..<11,illll'LLH.!.I u.!o:.l'_J .~DEL " " ''CINDERELLA LllE,RTY" .,,. "VANISHING POINT" "51R,ICO" fR) """ "IAN& THI DRUM SLOWLY" "PAPll MOON" IPGI "" "SAVI THI Tlflll" WEDNESDAY NIGHT* Make Wednesday night yOYr night to ea! out. At Del Taco, Wednesday night is Taco Night. You get three taatyOftl · Tacos fo r just 99c. Thia Wednesday, drive thru tor a famlly aize meal you won't forget. At prlcn you'll find hard to beat. NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA TUSTIN 1"1 Hiii ..., ._ ......... lriltol (,olllodnl 4tfl Street -41 .. c:._ ............ HUNTINGTON IEACH SIS' :W..., ... s,. •• ,_ .... ...,_.......,_ Hy,.,.Hllf, JrreveNnt • . • " ................ ....... , .. "Tiie .lcu:a ..... ,.., COSTA MESA 1151 ...... ......... 2nd TOP ATT!IACTION Stev• McQueen & llWAlll TWIN CIMUUt E OWAROS CINEMA VIEJ ..... ~I •'' ""' & • •• ~ .. " ~ i,, • 1« ·--Ille! • ..,, Art.-THE WESTBROOK --llONMUUT ON WUl .... INI AWL t llQ, SO.. Of Ul:Olfll .... N'Y. SIRBSAlllD &REDFORD TOGETHERI THE WAY WE I • SiREISAND ·'" ... ,.' TWO-• a REDFORD THE WAY i----1=-ie -10GEIHEiif-tlE-WERE • • • • • • • •,_,, __ _ • • WERE Plus • GEORGE c. sea FAYE DUNAWAY "OKLAHOMA CRUDE''. fl'OI Mon. TUM. Wed. 11'lurs. ,ti, 7:10, 9:11 • ... 9un, 12:49, 2:.45. 4:41. 7:10, 9:20, 11:25 . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . • • - • \ I hoopilal M•nday a ft er local television statlon. l s A spokesman for Ml Sinai experi<11clng chest P a n llosPltal said Davis w a • before appearing as 8 guest resting in a private room and on the Phil Dooahue Show, was Jn good spirit,,. sd!OOuloo to be 1aped a~,_::=,.:;...:::__;--'----- ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION MARSHA MASON BEST ACTRESS AH UNfOfCTEO lOYf STOii' l MAR SHA MASON JAMES CAAN MATS. WIO, SAT, & SUN. ~7,.M. MANN THEATRES ..... ,,,. 1•11 .. ,, , ... 7111, .. , .. llUHI II, ~U, 1:11, 1•Jt l lM•l11 ...... ,.,.1 ol Kflotl 121 -4010 10 ACAOIMY NOMINAflpHSI rAUl ~ e IOlll'I' lllK* THI STING IHI CAllY TllATMINT ... , ... °"91l• '·-·· ., • ..... -.11s..1 KZ·2411 i ACADIMT NOMINATIONSI --THI WT DfTAIL "' PlmY MAIDS AU IN A IOW Ill 5 AC.UUIY NQlllllMnotnl AMERICAN GUFFm tl'GJ TAKE THE MONIY AND RUN llGJ s,..191111•1• '"""' fUNNY CAI SUMMll 111 P\US • r.&111. frllWJUN WINNING (l'G) ~N ....... AND 00&.DCN wasr ... 192-44tS • NOMINATID FOR e 7 ACADIMY AWAllDS loclllil111 Besi lct11 JACK LEMMON rn-1 • Bert Soppalllllf lct1r JACK GIFFORD e (Tl .... I . Best Supiortilll lctrm TA T\JM O'NEAL, MADLYN KAHN 1-1 ,_ ...,._, ..... ~·~ SeeTMM Two Hits n:ul .. ..... . ........... .. -·"'1•'11'"11~""'""' ............ .... ... _ .... ....-_ e PllllCftlll JOO< LEMM:l'-1 .. ~-fr'; ..... ..,., ••• ,, ... ..,..,. .. • • • • • • • • -.~ .. . "SIWE 1liE TIGER" • e STARTS FRtOAY #2 e e f' milii ''"'-'tSTARRING e fZl . ~"'" TIMOTHY BOTIOMS e P-< · • ~ JOHN HOUSEMAN e ·~·---~: e "A TOUCH 'OF CLASS"'°'°""'"""'' e ......... ~ ... • --.l.-- • -- • TV IDGHLI(~:r:TS A~C fJ 6:30 -"Psycho ." Ono o(,Alfr·e-1 ~llci1· c~<:k s finest . su spense thriller~ stars Ant ho ny. Pt:'r· kins, Vera Miles. John Guvin 1111<1 Juncl LciGh in ber unforgettable "death in the '!ho .... ·er" scene. . •• CBS €J 9:30 -"~1 an,hunter" An ~ ~~;;ir1ne re· • . ,..,,,. , .. ~ 'f·' i.;; .. , .. ' -~ By P iii lnt5a11di --. I • 1 t~rns ho1ne ,f1·on1 China it1 ltl?:l nn tl is en!isled tci l aJd the-search for a gang of h ~nlt ,rohtu~r~. ,~,., O H1oward , Gary Loek\vood. Strl:i nic Po\\'~r;, .'.'tH\' son. l . . " I ' ' i ( \ TV · DAIL Y Tuesday Evening FEBRUARY 25 1:30 ifJCiJ@@~~6]$ "'" 6 couf{sb:p of Edd:e's Fatlle1 • B~verl' UU:b111its D1nnis the /Aenact 1 Dream of Jeannie I Electric Compan1 .·n • 1•.1 I' J " il•' S I u n I rr~ 1, Mi~ t:') , (.;) \.J) ' C!~: J ' I-Iv".•:: L. 1 •• l :i ... v:n:. [i'~·•J I j " • I] Den Wilton's Town Talk . Thre• 5100111 I &:oo E>tli;J(;1j@:'lma!):ifl 11ev1s (3J(JglW(])fij@(~fljl_) News I 0 Hon:nr1 I L&)ttcs•n's Heroes l~;n1,~ <•nJ trr1.,;, J 1 '' 1 !1•1 ~·:-;,_·1 (1 "! 11~.i~l,;I'1.t( b '··' • B .ftt• Luty !:how fD The Fllntslcn!t IE Night G1l1t1J Q'l El Pob1t Com:altl Q' Mov;c: (Ci (2~r) "Cincinniti K.d" (dra) '65-St~ve McQueen. tD Hoda;epnd::e Ltd;:e Q)..S,.Ml-R1ctr -- •:30 00 Dtaler's thoke 0 Movie: (90) "h~llu" (~USP) '60-Anthony Perkins, Jantl le:i;h. Yer• Miles, klhn Gavin. A g1 tl 1un nine away 111i1ti S10,000 is !arced to sptnd • nlgtit as the w1e 2ue;t ~t 1 lonely molt! 1un by 1 d•Slurbcd youn1 man. 0 Dick Van Dyke 0g) Merv C1ilM..$1low m ThatCl'1 . (-(~ ll<i~,'''"" "'"" • Uwini: Easy • M1111do Utino · Dnert l !\t1tre Q) little R1sca1s 7:DO ! (}_1 B ID rte,,;s h'•:l111 f11r OoUars Mov;e: (C) (Ziii) "Mur iar,t o! m Gtr-~.1ou ::c us . 0111E .. ~ QUt:~t:s c:~ t~!:~~\'! n} I :-1 C1;1f.1 ~~:w ~ 1;:) C,•·:r.511~1 t:J l~l!O~I. ':'!11 O!~ I, n t..J r;.~~ I A Youns Stcill:oli11" (~raJ 'ti ~ ~ichard ~enj3mir. [li1abe1h A~~.ley 10 00 Slf1n to Adventure ! MWha:·s IJy Une? I lo\'f l~cy ldod Squ~d I@ I Oreafi'I el J~annlt bmerald1 @ Dr11net lock'Bo~t ((if, (IL•) Hee llaw U) U P1!mnr Am or EI!) Us~ y 13 Po1icia al Three sttoze s I • I t l'fl .. ,.\' '> ' • ) {/' .. . ' _______ _.. 1 l1t 1 !111· 'ill~''.1 <11 .>i.· l~uHr''· !Jut he decided ttl\ r.1 :· ,. 1!1\n •1•t11·e 11ut into a hostile and I' ' ' ~· l!J' , ' ' -._ u L-''-< ·;1,i11l"'1t t';,. s1•11•r1•·•: b:n s alr1•;1rl\' had invl"ntcd an 1•f[1·1 ·111 :1• d ·, nl1>\'1·1· tor wnn;l·n. But 'this ladv subscriber •.1 11.'\. l•l1·n:· rJ·) ~u"h Lh>1g. Shl" c1;1ims ·that genius ~~ __:· ~ h'JI\ Jn (uni ;i\ !1u1.1;,n hnir 11·ill become a multi· 1·1111t.·1;.;111• 10 ;, 111»111·r r1f rno1n cn·s !)on't doOOt it. By con- ! ·:-1 'J; · ! '":.11\5 rrn101 ,. 1t lrt 111 h;11ry girls. gro1v it on ., ,, ' r: '\' . . . ' 11 ' budget do11blcs I 1 \1'<11:; '1'1J 1•:n or ·::.1111:1 Claus. ind .. once of· ~"13!! ct1t'·,1·,;·rl ··the aet of gossip- ~::i: :il> .. •Jl o.ii.:':1 neighbor." Didn't 1vork. 1'..s te> v.·hat make or ;_iu\o Peter •·.__ '!; ij.r lvt-s· ln .. (:o!u1nbo." am now .J1>1•~,11.·<l lJy <.1 1·el iable source it 's a ~1 .,. ,n 1 -,1 put t1.1gc1her 11·i1 h car parts ;, <;rt• ... -,11( n1.iiu.~ i .... 1,rt: lt'! l\J:U !!lil(h .. :r::;l;::<ll f1'[{'l\d~: 'J'\i('re \VJS , 1. 1'!' 111.,,·1~]"1 Sl:'\.'\'n-niulhs of the men in the ' ·1 :.•\ \l'••''.;· f\1,1-!hi<dS of the nl('tl V.'C'rC Ulld('r I_ :"!?"' ih.~ '.\('\'!!' 20 !lll'll 0\°Cr age 30. !{OIV .. • 1flo11e11's lt'orth Sc1les Tax Table Not So Accui·ate By SYLV IA PORTEil (Seco11d of eiglit columi~s) You may be cheating you1·~ self if you use Ult' ofdcial !RS lablc~ of acceptable sale5 tax deductions which you \Yill find in your official Forzn 1040 instructions-for these IRS tables ur<~ far !:iehind the realities of the inflation of recent years. Each year. your ltentized deduction for local sales tax has risen in im rY.>rtanc<> a;; states. cities an:i toca!i:ics hove kept rai sing ~les tax fate~. Thii: t he tallies do refl rc.t, for the interest charged in 1973 on your loan. you 1nus1 have paid !hat interest in 1973 You cannot deduct the interest lf the insurance company simply added the interest to the loan total. because that is not considered· a payment for tax purposes. fo~or instance, say you borrowrd $5.000 in 1973 and your insurance company merely added the interest due each period to your loan so that as of Dec 31 , 1973, you owed th c con\pany ~50. You can't IJke tliC $250 as an itemized interest dcducUon for 1973 because you didn't pay the f o r I R S interest in '73. '£ii."e th c To make up for th is. here ace r-pt -is an RIA su~ges1ion :1 b\c d{•r\u('-assu1ning you diqn't pa y your :i<ir.s :1n11 • 1973 interest and assun1ing t i o 11 ~; an-you'll itcn1ize your deductions nually to PORTER in 1974, send your insurance sliow the inc1 ·c11scd ~n\es lax company a check for the $250 rates. H•Jt the tab!P ::: rlo not vt•t int erest you 01vcd in 1973 and tak~ into account thfll )·ou any interest you O\VC in Hl74 1nay ha\'C paid t\1·ice as 1nuch l;cfore the end or 197-t This for a suit in 1973 a~ you 11·on't help you for '73. buJ 11·ou!d have paid for the i1 1vill be a n111jor tax ,,;aver ident ical suit in 1971 :.:ind !hat for 1974. You arc not barrc<l ~·our allo1vablc sa les tax from dedueling 197;; plu:; 197~ t!e{!uction ~hould be hi~her interes t as an item i zed -.iusL bccausc....of that. noLl.D _deduction en your....197.4....rc.tilrn mcnlion s3!cs tax rate h!kcs. THE AOVAN1'AGE of taking your deduction (rom the offici3J tc:bles is that it protects you fron1 having to nrovc the details of your .::al\·S !~ix paymerts if your return is cxan1incd. But iu 1·iew of \!l73's ranipant lnrtation, urges t ~c l{escarch lnsti!ute pf Anieric9. take the trc:ili!f' 10 figure out ho\v much '·"u paid in sa\ss tax_cs. 1£ the totaj_ is sirrnificanth· hi ~h er th:in the t~ll!es al101v , claim the higher de'.iuction-even though this could lead to an cxan1ination of your return 1vhich would require you to back up your hitther estimate. IF YOU PREMATURELY \\'ilhdre\v a term deposit and thereby forfeited a certain amount of previously earned interest on your bank account. you \verc &ivcn a rough deal fer 1973. 'The bank<; 1rere \viH· ing to report to IRS only the net interest you rc::och•e(l on . ~1y, a .four year t.cnn dcno~11 "OU n1ade at 7 oer'~ent on .)<1'1. 2. 1973, and· preniaturely \\'ithdre\•,r on Dec. 1. 1973. But the Treasury instf'ad requires the bank to repo rt ID IRS and to you the depositor. that you received the entire 7 percent interest that was credited to you before you pre mature I y V.'ithdrcw. forfeited ~everal months' interest and were cut do\11n to the bank's regular interest level or. say, 5 per- cent. -.. DAJL 'f P1L01 l j Ove r The Counter • , 1. ""'::t! eo1111111ny·~ 1111+, or tJ1<.i~c~f!i~ over ai;e 60 in Japan ! 1 (_ .;. ;.: •tied. Ci\J·1en <:1)eial club. l'rctly r, ·: nr ( u.1 Jt:tr"~~. !~It r:u•·: ;'l.\uch co111pu!sory r .l.1 .'\tT .h .. i"· 1·01111.; at <iJ;tC' ()5 1 take ror granted that you \von't cverlook your iten1ized deductions for interest on your h01r.e mortgage. But you may forget to include in your it::mized interest deduction the fi nance charges you pay when ycu use )our various credit cards and charge accnun!s. The ch<1 rges you p-iy on retail store revo\\'ing <'0·1a··~p if"· coon!s ;ind b'.ln1' cred it cards ~ire d<'duclib\c as inlt'res,. Jr 19;3, the JBS aded In lhc \isl of c1cductiLlc :ntcrest (·hnrges tl·e finance chari:.res on oil credit rards and the 9rC'payrncnt charges for prcpayn1ent by .'.l retail customer under a rcta!l instah11ent contract. AND YOU MUST reoort !hat Cntire amount as intefest incon1e on your 1973 return. If you i t e m i z e your deductions, you can dl.'<iuct the 011 21 4 Oii l~.1 Oii 14 l O!t lJ. Oil 11.8 OU 10& Ott IQ.~ Oii 10.0 Off ,,I Oii '·' OU < •.< OK ·•I .otf I.I Oii B.1 011 1,4 ..... @II t .O forfeited interest as an ll"" _____________ .,;;.. ____ I""•"'!' .. itemized deduction. Bul if you I , •·I iake the standard deduct;on, MUTUAL FUND S 'il you are stuck 1vith payin~, income tax on the entire 7 1.----------------------...i percent interest credited to N•w York -Fo1. OO!f9C. "116 ,.114 Tru Sfl 14 . ., 1•.J.t Rtwrv F (oo 1.oo W ednesday DAYTIME MOVIES I t:OO 9 (C) ":.:v r.:~~ G~1hry~ {com) '~J -J~n~ All)~. ;1, I ~·~ N1vt n, @ "Tht !;~;an~~ C.i~.h 'ii("~ifofl . llitlc:" (m~;J '4,l-L~~ .. ,~ llc.no!~. I Q:I)' (C) "i~~ CJ;Ji!i:n" Cenci. (31.'v) "tiJ-,;:-T n:. ''I ;'\~·P 1 .• n 1:30 0 (C) "Red C•rters" (m11s\ '$4- -ftosemalJ Clooney, Guy Mitchell,' J,,) lAl (C) "ir~nre l. Jalm11y" (r•us) I '66-(l~is +-rt~lcy. Dorr.i°' ~~w:ias. (\91 (Cl 0':1ce:~,~" 1 '~;l) {'::! -lO:DO (I) "D•B Intruder" (d1a) '65 - Lasli1 Nielsen, Gilbert G1ecn. 8 ''TrtlMlil cl t.lonh Ctis\0°' (tdv) '497-1llenn L1ng~n. ll:lOIJ "II Ca1r.e from Cu~~r Si::ce'' (ICi·fi) '53 -Rich~1~ C~llSr.n "J11n1te Woman" (~dv) ,,,.,.,__fvrl)'fl Anktts. 12:00 m "Personal Ptcptrlf" {Ulm) '31 -Je1n Hallow, Rebert la1b r. l!tiiartl \/ . .; ,' !L .. 1) I nto. : -) Ill (C) ""<y~;_,:•;.s \:\all(" (:av) •1;1-Mo:.1~·., r, • .:;!:\ f ft ( ":l ' -; ~ ' (Gl-it ·~,,. .: ;J '-'· "'. ... ·:··~ ::s .. :·; (19 ·~" ·-· ~:soi.idC t.!." (WtS) '5S-.1.1!i~ l...rek KOCE, CllANNEL ;o Orange Cowity's UJIF television station, KOCF.·1'\I. has scheduled the following special prog:r1101s 1oct.iy !)c1:1iled lisUngs or Channel SO's prograsns are .cnrrit..'ti ln thl' Driily Pilot's TV Weck each Sunday. t I .. • rrn 1 • •! n111 1,-.1tt• ~!· 1rl Tl'. '·~!'1'\. nio'"-J 11·hl':.i t.:iH. His coat of ,r 1"1\·f)ri•r:rl~ tl•s spears \\'ei;;hed almost but •i-.·lo: t-..1.:h. A Cihlic<il scholar 1old me that. \, II'\ h;1• n!:1nv r".n 1•.er<' in it1 lh • ,,, 1'1 r•;·r.z li: :tho\~'. l't,1\lr :! that :!70. coinpany des cribed Iilr\Tll ('(i°\l>J'HOL (' I:" l' \ ,'. ~ ~r. b·" r 1: p· r• ! .·r Iii"'~ r·:r·rl•'" 11!-in r.:ac!!f't' birth con trol be- t."l t 11·::in1 : ri· ll\!J:'t' chi1drl'n at. all. \Vithin \ 1 ~· 1 !l1i1·d ~-•!t it c·ou11lc has a thild, anyway. · r.i~1 )!.., \ /1 • :; 1y thl•\' 11·<1nt children later. "' f·'1' Oi l'V<'f) r:ur 0£ those partiCUlar •I ''··' ~he.id rf s'·hcdulc. "' ',•, "1 ll+•' l S. Pl ~1 {~!P ... ~tonpcd p.'.l\nting its cars r '1•• • d ·"' "'f'•r: \ 1-;-.r; lr•r·k !(1 ~1;'1rl P<tinting then1 red, 1• 'all• ;.ntl h'1:' r!:t>ir ac:'.;d, 11• r:.t(' dropp(>{] off rernark· ;•r,h (' J .. ~'' riJ! 11;ilf !11,' 1·t 1 i.,r11~ (ill Olll their 01vn federal ;,1'•11 '" I ,11 •1:1(."1 ~o . '· /.'{1;1r! P.(). n11.i; 1875. New· ,.r .r• • , .. -.,~ ..... "'S''"J)LQ ·' _.__ .... ~. --u l:l..-l. ···~·~ ' ••.• :-.l.\..J.~ :-,. '... :\ ~ .\SSOCI.'\'Pl ll:'\' ,\:'\' D SU llSI DIARY CONSOLIDATED STATE ~IF.NT Or "CO .\D!TION f("t11H)('lll'."d f •I ~. > ! ! ' • l ,-,.,.1"' --r-lt-:-J.+-.,i---rr- ' •,;11t~, 1}•\;•I ">1 l )p1 1·1ir1n1 ~11! 1.''''· ; ''; l'•i1~,·1Ps.,1. ~·> 1:(··11 r·: .. t a1 ~· ll''••1'•· ! ' '11,•l•l!' l ~· .: ...... 11:.llo• •• : t.:.t.11• ·111J 1••1111 .,.~.i nd I 1111.p•lll·n1 '\,•t J•,· l !"111~• J_o,1'1 H.1r.k ~;t,J1·~~ l '••. p.1• • •11 ; ;.1 I i 1!1tl;1] ~ 1 I!\;'.~ i1nrl Lo :411 I !l: \ti ;.llH'l l "1q1n.-.1l1•1ll :-;,., .11H1;11 \ l!t•)!('!". ,- 1 )l'IH.-. H!j ,!-\,11 111 )(" , \l'('IJ.Ulll ~ I i'11 r .\~l'.U ·' ~ :, 0$1:!.7.'>~ 1:1i .'llliU:7Z:i-- I I (l.1,i;f.:l I ~1.1.:l'.\7 : 1:1:1 'i'.~ 1 121.il!I 1,11112.21;;. l.:121.l!Oll 1117 .~3."1 J' I 1!).787 2.002.0lK "\."1:.Jl2f!,3.)() --=-------= ---: l.1,\ r.1 L:Tt:•:l\ ;nKi >.'1T'.t'l\HOtD fl.RS' r'<-1011'V }>HI!! \ "11•11-.. 1\f'\\ '11 i >l:,, l ,1:;1\ 1:- \1 • I ii fl• ••·r I , ',• lh.•t l ,ii ::, 1r.·r:~ 1"1 d• r .11. \1.::1, l.0.111 Haak .~!,!" •11 •I I Ii ·u -,.. I~•' •'I I !',!,11111 •tf'llJ ll•'""I'' \', 11~1 \I.LI \IUl,.!'111•.S.\\IJ ~''"'1\TI I •,l(S' l:;tjL:IT\' \ • $1!17,61:.?.!!ii l!i.l!61.30Q I ~.000.000 :i.t93.678 L~.~ ;!, IGr..434 R7l. l•IO <?!il>,286 R.li?O.J.i ! TF ''OlJ BORRO\VEO on ~'our life insurance policies last year. heed this warnin g: to take an itemized deduction Fowin; li • Ii~! o! Dr•••I E a:ao a:ao 1r.1e1 Fnd :I0,1110.IS Rtvtre F S.1>!l l.4~ yoo--even t.hougb you never bid •nd ar.ktd p.i. DREYFUS GRP Ivy FUf'(I 11:1 .•1 J • .i Stitt EQ 1.12 t.ss rccel.ved the part of the cer. on Mu!!,11! Oryt Fii 10 . .io n .40 J P Gwt11 1.11 t.u SaqlU1r t.<M 1.u Fyfld~ ~ QUOl9CI by EqlJ Fd 3.SS J.IQ Janus Fcl 1•.99 t•.tlt S(UOOIEI ,OS: interest that you had to forfeit the NASO 1.-.:. Ory Lv 14.0b n .41 JH1n oth l .76 7.Js lntr tnv u.1s 1•.11 Mlll'ICll/ Sp lfl(rn l.ll J.90 JHan 519 1.10 9.31 8111rK U.67 1•.U under the banking r u I es Fab•~ry , I ,,,, 3rd ~nt 9.79 10.ll Jollnr.1n ll.21 21.21 Com . ,,l'O t.10 be f B 11 AH €&E_M11 3 Ol J 03 l(EYSTONE: Spec1I 24.:16 2•.36 cause o you r premature Adm c.w l .ti 4.33 E1o1t Gr f 33 a·ro C\l'lt e-1 11.1•1•&1 Sbd 1..tw "·"' 4.,, \\'ifhdrawa) or !he deposit. It Allm l!'!c l.43 3.1. EATON & , • Cusl 91 19,2S 21:10 SECURITY FDS: A.dm lfli 7.SS 1.21 HOW•Jto: C111ot 84 l.H '·°" EQUlty J,(1 J,1' seems an unnecessarily cruel A<tvl!oe• 4.1• 4.M B•!n Fd B.82 q.'4 C.us1 K1 •·• 1.~ 111vell &.» •·'° Aetn.a fd 7.16 7.Sl (;Wiii F 108111.16 Cust 1(2 S.24 '5.14 Ullr• F 6.01 6.S9 Slap al lhC taxpayer. Ae!na in 0 .22 14.•I locme S.tt 6.S. Cust 51 19.2111.10 SELECTED P'DS : • Afuture S.21 1.21 !;flt(I! F 1.12 7.78 Cu5t SJ •.)D 10.19 Am Sllr I.OS 1.0i AGE Fd 4,SI • . .O Ste!( fd 10.90 11." CU'>t SJ 6.12 7.41 Opp Fd l.O&. 8,06 Al!ila!e t .8910.63 EOIE Sp 11.U 17.U Cusl 5'4 )'~ 1.91 Spl Sl\rs IJ.3112.JS ,-Wec hu11ic 'Shortcige' Plagues U.S. Driver Alph:a Fd 10.9'111.'3 Eore1 GI 10.9111.91 "APQllll --). •:111 ~"'ir>e!F ,'·'~ 1~·!j Amcap F 4.41 (.19 Ellun Tri ll.11 ... Piiiars 3.11 J.•O n1ry 1.6 1 . Am Birth 9.12 10.19 E~<J J.n 3.S? Knlckr S.S'I 6.46 SHAREHLD Gll P : Am Dvrs I.JS 9,13 Ener~v 11.U 11." Kn~r Giii 7.14 7.'1 Cam\! J.SS J.llS :~Ht~?RE\~ '· 91 ~::1\~R: i:!? ::~ t~:~E~: 1l~ 1::n !~e:::.Fc1 ;:!i ~~ C!plal 6.34 6.'13 FIDELITY LEX GROUP: Lll<J•I L 6."' 1,0.C lotom 1.79 8.91 GROUP: (.p Ledr U 6! 16.01 Pace Fd 7.18 7,81 tnvMm 7.48 1.17 Bf'ld c1et1 I.II 9.61 Grwtll S.82 636 SHEARS.ON FDS: . ~!::~ . ::t~ ~:r. ~/~! ::~; !O.n l~~~.~iv '~:r: '1:i': rr:::~~ l~:~ ~~:~ ~ 1':,\~ ~:~ ::t 5;,~Set !:~ ::: ~'i"/s•~~el:861s~n''l?e1an ,::: l~:~ Capi tol News Service SACRAME!\TTO There just aren't enough qualified n1echanics lo go around. One automclJilc dealer 11'aS \l'iUing to offer a man $24.000 a vear if the would S\Yitch jobs to his ager.cy -but 1he mechanic said he wa s happy doing \~hat he 'vas doing on a piece-...,·ork basis. ONE PROBLEJ\1 will get v.·orse, not better, as owners Ttvo Coiuity Firn1s Get U.S. Bids Government con l r acts hold onfo cars longer in the face of the energy crisis and tight money. Statistics show there are 100 n1illion cars and lr~1c k-; 01! !he road today 1vith but 80.000 mechanics to 'vork on the1n. This is not enough. So. car dealers. repair shops and service stations hire the men they can find or1ly to lace the wrath of consumer advocates who sav the custon1er is being "riPped off " by sloppy and incompetent \Vork, It's a vicious circle. As a result, co n sumer advoc:ites are pushing for legislation requiring licensing of mechanics while the repair people are pushing just as hard in the oUier direction . Some places in California all it 'takes is a pair or levis and a pair of vise-.grip pliers and a man is in business as a mechanic. Am ln"1t •.•1 4.91 esw• '·°' ... op °" 11 °'11 o.c s1oe Fa 6.91 1.5* Am Mui 1.1' 8.9l E11er't 11 ,SJ 12 . .0 MutJ11! IJ°46 13."6 SIOMA ,UNOS ~ A!'!'INt Gr 2.11 1.ll Fund 1',11 !$,(9 LORO Ale·' . Clo s,t\r 6.2. 6.14 AN.CHOR Pl.ltl1!'! •. '210.:JO AllU11 661116 Inv •.1110.\l GltOUP: Siltem F J.00 l .93 Am But f'IO 3'u Tr'! 1.15 l ,tl Grwtn · 6.19 7u .T•e<1d 'Xl.t>-111.st B!'!!lcleb 9:&110'15 veniur 6.M 112 IOCom l.00 I.~/ FINANCIAL lu!llern 991 lO'IO SmUn B t 16 ~.16 Rewrv 10.0'l 11.06 PROGRAM$: Luth!'! tn 9'34 10'11 SB l&G< 10.JI 10.ll Spe<tr •.04 (.4J Fi11 Ovn J.91 J.t? MA.SS CO: . So GenF 10.'IO 11.'8 Ff'ld 1!'!11 6.IJ 1.38 Fin Ind J.89 J.99 Freem 1.6S 8.J8 Sw\\ ln\I 6 IS 1,:JO Wa N•U 10.IS 11.'8 Fin loc 6.08 6,08 lndp F l.ll l.t2 s .. Inv G I.II 6.0'l AU•on 3.21 Vent M.I' F 10.JS 11 7g So~r !n 10.61 11.67 Aud•• F 6.2l .:ao J ' 4 1 l . '1 MASS FNQ..: ' SOM:lr~ J.9J • )1 AXIE 11tl'd va 104'1143 MlT 10411 11 ,1 ~6P 1"0 s.n sn HOUGHTON: FIRST ' MIG 11)16 1116 STATE BNO GltP: Full<! A 4.ll 4.1! INVE STORS· MIO u'n 11 90 Com Fct •.16 •.66 Fund a 6.'U l.\.t Disc fd •. ,, S45 MFO 11'59 n'•t 0111'1Hlf l.10 s.u Slock S.ll 6.ll Gtth Fii •is i40 MCO 1i91 , l'tO<JtS • 38 '79 '"' '·< J.-'·'' < O,. ,· M · •.11 SI Fr Gr 4·~6 ,'...t, ~ x .,, M;om . .,. ,I~ l!e\ Iv 1.16 1.16 • ' , 8 .. 0 .. BLC Gin '.'le Hl.91 SlO(~ F 1,30 1.00 M.ltner t .•l 9.43 r rn; ·"" ·"" B~bson 10.2110.11 hi Munix1.'JO 7.«:IMld 1.m 4.10 s.u State Sir 40.3140.n Bayrot S.90 .,S Flm 8er 193 19J Monv F<:t 914 9'9 STEAOMAN FOS: l!a1rk 'l' S •9 b,00 FORUM 'GRciUP:' MSB Fd til ril Am Ind 7.19 l.19 Beac11 HI l.'IO 1.90 100 Ff'ld t,91 9.t2 Mil BnG l .M ,.41 A.$~0 Fct . \,16 1.16 Bea<On 9.88 9.llS 101 Ff'ld 8 24 B.24 MIF Fd I SI ·•,, 1n~1 1.11 1.n Bet•\nr l .t(I ),1l Cotum 1:10 1.19 MlF Gro 1:86 ,:11 s'rt'1-r: ltOE6·WcJ:12 Bond\lk • 40 •.81 11 Fund S.19 S.19 M\iOm 91 (1J Ill · ~1 Fdn t 40 10.71 Fein Gr l.M 4.24 Mu()m in (Jl (I) Bal~nc 11.~ 11.9l Bro""" !tl !11 FOUNOEltS Mui Sllrs 16.'116.ll C.P•U 1.1'6 I .Sii Brohm 9.87 9.17 GROUP; Mull 7ri 1.11 1.ll Stock 11.\.t lt.i.I CALVIH FUNDS: Grwth 4.6• S.13 N1t lf'ldu 9.•S •.•S Sf.!-w~:ouPs '1 .. , . .J.L,',' . ,""• '33.~31 .. J~t91T\< . , .lj.3:412.,3'!' tlA:j .. S.E.C..f~:......... lf!tom a·os .::~ ''" 1.1 1 . F M ua .J~ 9.1~ Sa11nc 1.96 1.10 . · Div Snr 3,71 J.S2 F Spe,cU 9,QI 9.,1 Bond St 411' 1.ll lm7:1\ !·~ 1-'6 N•IW'll 9,JJ 10.!1 Fou•!>Q F 8.(;11 $.44 Dtvld!'! 3.SO l.83 ~._« n F ,· .. t .61 NY Ven 10.Jfl 11.34 l'RANl<UN Pret Stt 602 6 y ;,urvey · 9.IO CG Fund I.IS ,,SI GROUP: 1ncom 4:64 s'.01 Syncro G 6,11 b . .S C•P Trln t.'ll 10,14 DNTC 7,76 1.96 SllKk Sr •. 48 1.08 TtlnPI G I.It 1.)7 Cenl SM 17.1113.30 Gwtll s.. 6.J1 6.tl Grw!h *·" 6.•• Tran Cap 1.41 8.11 01al Inv 8.11 t ,J1 fr l!'!tm 1.91 2.10 ~IEW ENG LI': lt1vl Eq 9.10 10.U CHANNING vs Gv s ,,1tt 10.n Equity 15.64 11.00 f '1Clllf H 10,3110.JI FUN05: U!Hltle 434 (/6 Grw!h ••s 900 iotn CG 7.61 1.86 Am er 1.11 '1.29 Rts C•P s:n 6:.lt locom 1.a'.'9 16:1a iof!' Cl •.OJ .1 (7 Salncct 9.Sl 10.U Rl Eq\y J.rJ .1.~ Sid<:' U ,lO U.l3 Vno llt<t 1,88 8.61 Bnd Fd 9.(M 9.81 F•I Ll€q 9)410.ll 'lEI. Mt tSlt 116 Vnlfun<t 6.ll I.lb £11111 Gr 6.61 I.~ FdMI dP fie a:1a .. , .. C"'t 4:11 4:11 UNION ~ERVICE Eql~ Pr t.1' J.00 FUNDS INCP 'ffu•N111 l,IJ 1.8,l GROUP. fnd Am 6.IJ 7_J6 GROUP: -.~wlQn 11 $1 11.91 Ntll Inv 6.SI I.II totaling $79..l!ll for clcctrcnic _supplies...b~ been uw:irded._ B~-~~TTty leaders lo two Orange Co u n t y s.'.ly l.1ccns1ne: is not t"fie~ nns11 e:· companies by the Defense b.v 1tseU. It won't transfer Supply Agency 's D e r c n s c unqualified . poorlr trained Electronics SUpply Center in men . i~to eo:mpetent st'rvicc Dayton. Ohio. tcchn1c1ans. Controls 111ust be The Internationa l Ci .. cu i1 backetl up with adequate (,rwtn •.78 4,68 Com"1 I 2) 8."9 'lw ~<\ 1'.l4 n 61 U!'! C1pt 8.11 9,04 lncom 6.bll 1.21 ln"4)K 1 M 8.lS 'lew _y.o1ct 10,82 11.83 Whln81 11.4$ U,,1 -s~o · 1..0 r-75 1 1'1<tunr 10 . .r11 t:46''Jtt hlaif-lr'l!"11."l'\IHl-TEO FUNOS·- Venlur I II 8.•J Pilot ).JO I '18 -.e\l lvlr 14,'2 1'.9? Al:lum 6.l J 6.a.l CHI.SE G.!11ewy 111 l.96 J-~ 7,t(l I 56 Bnct Fd l ,61 1,(1 BOSTON: GE S·S p 18 \Q J Nto( Id IQ,«) 10.'10 (l)nl 'lW t ,11 ~.u fn(I Bo• I '8 I. H Gen Se~ 6.JI 6.}7 Jne Will 14~· 14.I' Cont I!'!{ ,,n 9, .. Fron Cp '-61 S.QI (;lh Fl.m l ll l &! :>PPCNMM • !ncom 11 ,81 11.~ SllTt Bl l.1" 1.9? Grth 111<1 11,'8 11,4& Op Alm •-».: O.•• S<.1eroc; $ ... •,,I SP!CI S.69 671.llO Gu.!!td r.t.9112 QI Op Flld 6.3" •.'1 Va'ngod 51} ,,la Chem Fd 1,17 ~61 HAMILTON ORP: Oil T""' 6.0l! 664 USA!\ Cl 1 . .i l.41 C:NA MNG FDS: Fu'1d 381 (,lJ )TC Sec t .68 IC.11 US Gv!S '.'"" 10,11 Technology Corp., 1 5 4 t traini~g program.s to produce Superior Ave .. Ccstn Mesa, qualified mechanics. Llbf!y 4.\9 S.01 Grw111 ,.JJ 6.30 P1r<1ml 6.90 1.41 USLIFE FUNDS: M.lnl\I l l~ J ,.IJ 11\Com 6.ll 6 QI 1>1111 Ille~ 6.1' •. 11 Ai>e• F 4.lJ 4.IJ St~U\ F l./Jil 115 H1•1 Gtn '·n ,,)1 ?<J••us F 4 n 4.10 Bii Fod l.U l ,ll -Mw~-u~••-•ww-•~'~ 1~oas named recipient. of a $5 1,l}t(I award to supply the govern1nent \\'ilh 880 digital · miCi·ocircuJrs wlllch 1vill be -nrndaced it the firm's plant- in Costa Mesh. A n3.45l ll\Vllrd 1vcnt to University Sound. Alt~c Sound Products Dlvtsion of Allee Corp., 1515 &. ~·lanchcster Ave., ~naheim, J or 3 13 loudspeakers. Thi! Derense Elect.tonics Supply Center procures . mooages-an<l-!-tt-p·t}-1 ~e ! common electron ic parts ust:d by th e. arn1ed services an:l various o the r govcm1nent . agencies. ,. • TMR A 6.Sl 1.13 t-W11~9 I 20 1.11 Penll Sq 6.11 6 11 YALUE LINI! FOS: COLOHl .. k Ht-dot! 61111 .,, Pf\111 Fii S.1$ t . .11 \111 L,.. ),U j ,'3 FUNDS: Hl>•liQO! t 6, 1.as "LGlllM OP: \l•I In< '·" 4.7S conver t.lli 10.2l HOr1te 16.6111.91 Pil f.~"' 11.01 Le v Gtll •·29 6.18 Eq11U1 2.M J.IS lmprl Cp 171 .... O,p 11 J,1' i.~ V•l Spc 1.91 3.11 l'ulld t.9' 10,11 Imp C.r 6,l1 6.91 lrn;om f,11 t-SI! "ANCE Gr•th . S.38 },fill l!'!C Am 11.S01J.'6 Pll<J f!I J,1) 1,19 SANDERS: ln<om t."' 10.ll l!'!C Bo\! Iii'! •. :!'I Pl...e SI 10.1110.U lnvei! '·" 1,01 V1nt1.1r ,2.tt J.lt t"d t'Am 1~1 J~ 1>1"' t-. 1.t) v~ Olm 6.'U 1.$1 Co!um G 11,2111,21 lflleOI"' l,61 •.3S PIONElll F01 ~I b,.i 6.,. COMMONWL TH Ill tnvtl! 19.tot 71.IS Pion e" 6.6' 7 )I) Vndrll!I J,I, ''°' TRUST: "'"''" G 1.11 t.11 Pion FO HtM 11 tb V•n9ril I.TA 1,)l A,_ B l,O'I 1,11 lfW CO A U,1111.)1) P!Otlf 11 10.U 11 }1 V~!'!f '°"' {ti !il C I·'' 1,$J l"v (l.ulll 6IO 4.to "!........, t,)(11016 V••i.d I lll l .•1 Comp Q.r •.OJ 6.5' Inv !ndlc 1,11 •.. PLI c.1to 10,,, 11.,s v1~n! Gr 4_•$ •·'> Data Tcchoology COl]. of COmo Co ·•.JI l .19 Inv Fi.o\ 10.ll 11.11 'll1Cl ltOWI: wan tor 6.e.3 'ts •· A· '---COmp &ti •-OS I 7' IN..,1$T Grw111 11c111 01 Wa•" Mu H JO 11 l~ .~nta na, INl.'i announ~cd eomp Fd ..... 1,M COUNSEL intom •.'l"I ,,,1 W011 l11QtQ 101010.10 earninos for the nine -·nths COncrd I'! l·•2 C•oafn '0 •. ,. Nw , •• II •l" u WIELLINCTOH o "·"' COni. Inv .1 .II Clo•t Iv l 61 l ,tJ Nw HOf I.SO 1.50 GR04.1Pt tndcd Jan 26 iv<'re ,~5 16000 0>s1n <JW s.s1 •.01 C:..1>•• sn ,,.,,1. "'o f'<!I ,,,. •·• E101or 1t 4 21,. • ' ConMt In 6.11 t,tl IN..,lSf GJtOUP: Pto•dl J,11 4.16 1 ... 11 I lllt lt1 Oil !i<lleS of $12,078,000, I Cori1•'fuC 115911 11 10S c.tn !SI ~ .. Otll"ltl Cic t ,Jl 1.11 MOl'q!\ IOJI n .11 This represents a 19~ ~::: °'~ ~1: t!! :g~"~o ~.~~ ~;~ :'u1H~ "93 •·1• ~~1, ;~~;~;~-percent-tricreese-ovtr---las Della• 3 xi ,·.., Mut1.1a1_ 1 ,. 1 ss wtltll'I 1~" 11,10 OJVo'dQ 6 S'I ,. ~·OC • ,, \:°"""'' ,Q:lffl)I Wltroln r ,.II yrnr's ~arnlnas of'S173 ooo and 00•,0","•''RE StllH:' •.o •.~ Eq,,,,., 1.11 1.u ..!!,M1 •,... u .11 I\' : : VI< P<1y 'Ii '·" "'''! U.S9 , •.• , ..... .... 111 ),OI ~ Z9 percent increase 1n sales 0«•1• •u '°'° inv lilt \ •.l> 4,t) Gr .. 1 ,,,110,11 w,.''14 GI' •,·!! !·~' h . , OflwFtltl,l•I S I· I~ l'"l•t ~ __ ,,_..) over t c prior y e a r s 0t11.t. f '·'° •.t'I c;. .. 1n '·ls '·'-111,,.\\ i is t'.o i 1"1t' • ... lt.S>I '9 "" 00() tW'V•Qfl $1 l} JI l) l!'!Com 4. l ' is "!Slll F ; "' ,,._. ••c-41~ • " .v.n..r. , Or rct Co J,,, •.» l 1'1 u1 .1.04 vovro t.1110.01 l.:\H'ltv•U.o!t. • Datn Firm Ear1iirigs Up "• I ' • .-- , ~ 12 DMLV PILOT Gold Hits New High Of $1 81 LONDON (1\P} -The price vf gold soorc:t to $JCJ .50 an ouncf' lodn.v nmid widespread reports Arab oil produ~rs n·cre C'arrring out 1fhclr thrr.at lo change their d o 11 a r holdinRs. The doll11r slun1pcd further Jn Euroi>can cicchangcs <iftcr ~londay's brief respite. It fell tv.·o pfennigs in Frankrurt. IY.'O S\viss ccntinies in Zurich and 3 1 ~ ~~rench centimes In Paris. GOLD ROSE S5 lo hit the s11;:, psycholoitical b11rricr at !he opening in London and 1ht.>n Jumped $2.2:1 further to Sl77.2.'i an ounce al the fixing. It hnd closed :'\lond;1y at $170 in London and $169 in Zuricil. Dealers said 1hey could see no end to 1he u1>surge that h<ls cnrril'd gold up $7.25 since 1\tonday and 569.75 since the start of lhe year. London dealers reported much of Monday's demand for gold appeared to be coming from Middle East dealers. 'rhey so.Id trading was not heavy at the stan , but demand was persistent and little or the metal ""'as offered for sale. Foreign exchange traders reported large buying orders for West Gennan marks and Swiss Cranes from the ~liddle East. They said there was one order last Friday for the purchase or $1 billion worth of Swiss francs and t\\·o individual orders for like ~mounts ol marks. TllE DOLLAR dropped six pfennigs and six S w i s s centimes Friday under the battering of deals of that size. The dollar dropped three cenlin1es in Paris today .. opening at 4.88 fran cs. CONNELLEASE 1~-~ [i] LEASING r nr Foctory A1tthriwd C~t Leosl11t De.Mio • New '74 Yet41 Hotchbcick S68.0 .. ,. MONTH Plul Ta• .. LI<. On ApPf, Cr~ll l~ Mo. O.E.L. CONNELL CHRlOLlT 2111 HAllOI IL VO, COSTA MESA 546°1200 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ,_... .. 1DOendower) *SILVER COi IN 1500IAGS *GOLD COINS CALI. 0111 WllllTE (213) 1714) 271-0674 541-7796 ll18ERTY colN-cOMPANYl I 133 Dover Dr .• Sult• 25 I I Newport 8~11ch, Ca. 92660 I I RUSH DETAILS TO: I l N•rM f I Addr.11. : I Clly l ip I l !.."~~!.-I l • • •• ( . UPI T .. •pllol• ... - • 'Shorter Lines' Nixon ,Says Gas Ci~isis Ove1·come WASHINGTON (AP) Preslden l Nixon has do"'ngraded the energy crisis: to a "serious problem" and predicted shorter g a s o I i n e lines for Americans by spring and an end to the Arab oil em bargo. While clling improved odds against gasoline rationing, Nixn pledged 10 ve to the emergency energy bill now before Congress if it comes In hin1 con~ng the propc~I oil-pr ice rollb:ick. Because progress "'ill 00 made in the moven1ent IO\vard pc3ce, he said. the oil- producing nation s ' · \V i 11 conclull<' tsnt they sh~·.1ld nl~VP on the embargo front." Nhcon also disputed a clahn by the Shah of Iran that the United States is getting as much oil now as it did bcrore the Arab embarco. .. \\1c are gell ing substt.nli:il · ly less from the oil pro-jucln:; countries in th<' ~Jidcast than \VC \Vere before the c1nbargo," Nixon said. "That is why \\'C arc, of course, \lcty anxious to get the embargo 1ifted <tS soon as possible." FINANCE NY R(.ltiou Pltui Go es Into EHect Dy The Assoeialed Press Car Sales Aided By Prediction DETROIT I UP I ) l)resldent Nixon's predlt't.bl 1ha1 gasoline rat l on,Jnc probably can be avoided could sp:1rk an ups....i ng In auto salts, which ll'ete olf a whopping 86.8 per=t in mid· J."'ebruary. ll was the sharpest y~ year drop since the -iW4 mcdels v.·ere Introduced in September. Americans have either stayed away lrom the dealers' st-owroorns or have ordt>.red gas.-sa"ing s m 11 l I models because they "·ere not sure '>''he-tiler !here \VOUld be an)' ga30lb>e. DESPITE THE g I o o m y sales figureJ released Monday, just hours before t h e Buuad Ti111es · SUCll A 1ilEASURE \1:oold increase the fuel shortage and require "rationing all over lhe coUntry," Nixon declared in his nationally broadcast news conference Monday night. E:irl icr i\1 o n d a \' fr>de r n l energy ch ief \1-lilliam·E. Simon A ntandatory gasoline rationing plan \l'ent into effect in New York today as motorists faced the end-of-the· 1nonth fuel crunch and the prospect of higher prices al the pumps in the next few days. l'resident's televised new" conferen ce. auto mo t f.v e executlvts maintained their optimism of a sales surge by -spring. Sheep graze undisturbed at a closed gas station near the Olyn1pic Stadium in Rome during I taly's Sunday and holiday ban on pleasure driving. St arting l\·larch 10 cars will be allowed on the road alternate Sundays, depending on odd-even license plates. ~l e also sai d the administration \vould bring innauon under control by increasing food anti f u e I s uppli es rathe r than controlling prices, and again VO\\'Cd to keep the economy fro m sinking into recession this year. • said the Shah's rernarks "arc both irresponsible and reckless." Sf~ION SA10 th.at for the Shah's allegations. ma d e during a weekend television inter.•iC'I', to be tn1e several 1nillion barrels of oil \vouJd have to be sn1uggled into the United States every day. Station owntrs in !he New York metropolitan area said the plan seemed to be \VOrking -unlike a voluntary progran1 in ef£ect earlier. For General Motors, the industry giant that h a s trimmed n1ore than _ 50,000 .... -arkers from its payrolls since December. the slump \\'as an even bigger 47 .5 percent drop. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Bakers Ask Export C11rh On Wheat WASHINGTON (AP\ -The American Bakers Association began today a "Save oor Bread" campaign to drum up congressinnal sup port f o r curbs on U.S. wheat CKµOrls until the ne'>'' harvest is ready next summer. Robert J. \Vagcr. association presi den t, told a Capitol llill rally the country .,.,.·ill run out of \\•heal soon if exports are allowed to remain unchec ked. "Unless act ion is ta ken. American consumers race !he gri1n prospect of a bread shortage t_his sprin g, and our indusfry may go over the brink into economic ruin ... \\lager sa id in a S1ate1nent. Bak('rS pre\'iously h ad trarnrd bi·ead priC"es could climb to Sl a lo.1.f by spring if the gra in dr:.i in continues. Expart sales in Lhc United States arc handled by pri vate companies \\'hich arc free to sell to forei gn custon1ers. radio p ager ---·---$17.00 amrnth tota cost d •• no eposaton credit approval ORANGE COUNTY RADIOTELEPHONE SERVICE I'< 835·3305 Cal,ifor11ia Counties Pt.tack W. \\'orden, G1iJ vice president (or marketing, ho'\\·ever, said. "with the beginning ol the spring ..ilinc sea-'O!I and used car vaJues returning to near normal levels for !hi! time of }ftr, as wel I as a reparted increase in dealer lfhowroom activity, v.•c can realistically look; forward to further st rengthen ing in the marketplace." Reacly for Ratio1ii11g· At se\'eral points in the news conference . Nixon referred to the fuel shortage not as a crisis. but as a problem. ''I'd suggest that's not onl,\· impossible but ridiculous." Simon said~ Asked about S i mo n 's rcmarks;-Nixon said "I would not say that the Shah was irresponsible and reckless. However, his information, 1 think, is different from ours and v.•e have good reason to know what \re are getting." 11THE LINES are nonexis- tent today." said one dealer in the Borough in the Bron.'<. \Vest Virginia coo.I miners "'ho said they couldn't get enough gas to drive to work continued a strike that marted P.1ooday. idling sever a I thousand workers. LOS ANGELES (AP J -By Friday, Cali£ornians in snme counUes may be limited to buying gasoline only on days corresponding to the numbers on their license plates. The stale-de sig ned emergency "gasoline mar· keting'' plan \\'as .1nnou11ced i\1onda y by Ciov. ·Ronald Rea- gan. ,\·ho said it could be im- posed in any of lhe 58 co un ties '>''here il is requested begin· ning F'ritlny. Los Angeles supervisors \.viii impose lire plan beginning Friday. Deta ils of the plan were· expected to be made kno\111 today but Ed\vin '.\teese III. the governor's executive assistant. said they might ool be released until \\'ednesday. REAGAN SAID he felt California v.·as not yet at a stage "'here rationing v.•as needed and he urged newsmen at a ne~·s conference to "please, please don't use the \\'Ord 'rationing.' This plan is not ra tioni ng but sin1p1y marketing. \\lhen \\'C first announ ced that v.•c had ::i contingency plan in abeyance and used the \\"Ord. it provoked panit: buying. "So instead or rl ri'vin g around until 'they needed gas. SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL! WATCHES CLEANED, ADJUSTED ' SERVICED s10so Aulfmlllc & C•l~•r Mff•l1 Jlitltllr Hither people started buying C\'bry time they passed a station. which produced a sort of rolling storage ." RE1\G . .\N SA ID the plan \VOUJd permit OV.'Oers o[ C3rS v.·ith even-numbered license plates fo· buy gasoline on e\·en-numbt"rf'd days and those 1\•ith odd-numbe;ecl Jic(:ns.! pla tes to buy gasoline on odd· nwitbcred days. E v c r yo n e \\'OUld be pcrntitted to bu.v on the 31st of a 1nonth and out~f-state drivers could buy at any time. Californians v.·ith personalized plates containing no numbers v.·ould be treated as zeroes, or even , under Reagan's plan. He said the mandatory plan would encourage dealers lo r~main open on Sundays. in apparent co n f I i ct with President NL"<on ·s rcqUt>S! lo clo~e On Sundays. He said the President's request '·"'a s made before there \\·ere an~· othc.r progra rns such as this .. , Nader Hits Oil Firn1 s Fo1· Prices ''Looking to the future T -believe v.·e can say no"' that \\'hile the crisis · has been passed, !be problem remains," he said. "tt is a se rious problem. but ii is one that can be dealt with ... " The President ga,·e no date y,·hcn he thought the embargo \rould ·be lilted. but he said he belie ves it is in tbe best intcres!S or the Arab nations to brgin U.S. oil shipments again. I-ff: SAJD Secretarv of State Henry A. Kissinger;s ~fiddle Ea st trip to get a troop disengagement on the Syrian front \\'ill have a positive effect in getting the embargo lifted . "By the same token, if the embargo is not lifted , it will naturally slo,,· d ,, ,.,, n t h " efforts that \\·e are mak ing on the peace front ," Nixon said. Cata111ara11 ' Sales Sail Coast Catamaran Corp. o( Irvine has announced sales for the year ended Nov. 30 of $7.f>96.965 as cemf)<lred \\'ilh sales ol ~.499.710 in the prior year. Ne1 income for th e yC'ar \\'as $250.~8, equivalent to 30 cents per share as comoared \\'ilh net income of ~361 ,8~9. t--quivalent to 42 cenl.~ per share in the prior yc;ir. Oil cornpanies. acting on orders from Cr0v. A r c h A. ~toore Jr.. be~an distributing an extra half million gallons of gasoline to the P.leOo\\•ell County area which h:'ls been hardest hit. But 'lhe miners said service stations l\·eren 't open long enough for them lo stock up. NE\\1 YORK was the sixth state 10 impose a mandatory, alternate-day sales program. The voltmtary \'ef'Sion of I~ odd-even system introduced by Oregon started Feb. 11 but failed <o fnd the long Jines. Drivers and dealers now arc subject to fi nes of $25 to 12,500 for riolarions of the sales system. AN0'111ER SIGN pointed out by indu!try analysts "'a! a 9 percent increase in new car sales in the first 20 day! of February O\'er the same perk>d a mooth ago. Dealers sold 339.437 cars in the Feb. 1·20 period. compared with 311.423 in the first 20 days ol January. Ouy~e< Corp. showed a drop of 22.8 percent from a year ago whllc American hfotOl'S Corp., with its heavy dependence on small cars. ~ho.,,-ed another gain, thi.5 time a modest 4.7 percent for ils best shoy,·i,1g (0< the mjd. February period in 11 years. Complete Mid-day American Stock List Vo!. Ne! Vol. !I~'' Vol. Nttt I Vol . Ntt \lol, Ntot .\11:11. Nit ----~------~ ~ •-~ Plnc·':t' 1 11 ..... Flbrtbd Wll 1l S\l'r .•. Jetronlt lllO 10 J ..• Pil'9Gd .a • 1~ ,,, hWflOt All. 1 ' · •.. AAV Co .1S 1 S\'a + v. ...... ritr ' l"' • ·• Fldttco .12d J lt~1 • . • .k>rw!Prll .20 1 20'h+ l'o Ptltrltk Poll: 50 t~'I+ \li Si....,• I" .11 I tO .. -\Ii ""V Ptlrol l 1\'a+ V.. Cltrols O.v ' ,.._,_ 1't F11mw1 Ill(. S •~~ ... --« K--Pt-E .Jed ' ,, ..... Vt Slerr.ui C» • I '"'• ~ Acmt ~ml '' 11,~ .. 'h Co!s11Cv .20d 1 UV.+ ':O FlllrD! .Oltl 11 S'lo-\'a K•h•lfl ,OSc:I 70 1V.+ \'lo !'Ml ~ldtr J n:w.-\lo Si91Ml1U ill 6 St.+ 'ii A.clion ll'ld'l.1 I ~ ... Ctil~IQI\ In n 1~-,, .. Fln<I e .10 , lllo• "'" it.1 .... Inc , 1\1+ \'o PMrTll .J09 Ill , ... \If 51 .... 111111 .so • 1 \\IASJ-TINGTON (UPl t =:ii~ 1~ ! _·;; ~~=~ I~'~!~-;~=~ ~ ,:~.·i,r; :::::~~ ~ ,~+.~ ~..:: ~ r".·._ ~=:-1.;-: : ~.::: Ral h ' d .d lod h .... o Fl .ISll 1 J~ .. ~·. ""1Mpl ,..,, no •1'11-•i. F11 Rlty In.. 2 )~.... Ke•-.. n ,, ..... PwftlE• 1.15 ' llt'o+ .... Sittlll 1 1h-"" p ; '.)er sai ay t e .,.,lllK•lnc 1 ,,,, ... eens.c .O'fb • 4~o-\'t F1t\/Mt...od 11 n~~.,.. K9'!'1•11d .JO n 6(0•"" PttlCOfl'I ·"° 1 , .. ,,.. 5olltl'Dll .M n Av.+"" n1ainr oil COm""dlliC" \\'ere Allil l'lll .!*' 1J 7 ~"' ""''U•Y Sl 1 ]Vo-\'t 111\l•MtWIS 1 "" l(ll•mO .Ub 11 J1'i.+7·M ptl'll'llC .1Qb " •... Sotlll!'ldctl I ,.,._,.., 1v t'' !I Al•-MFr 11 6h• \o CeflwUI Com 1 I''•• lo't Fhc,,.rf'tSI 1 1'4 •.. IUlleMn Pl' 1 1~• .... P9rtlc;('arp S N--"-Sortll'll .059 I t>A , •• attempting lo kill ~n1a\ler Alrwk k .10 J 1,,. ... grui;eo:1ioi 2 '"'• '-'-Ft1 .. orld .JO J ,,,._\~ l<in .t.n;c. 11 h+ i.i; """ITt1 .wci -t0 7'1> ••• SC.t:dpf 1..s 1 is....· ... Alnk1 Alrl J 6 ... mpH .trll> 6S 4V.-.... Al C.pi1•1 10 tV.-\lo l(h1)yllld ,$0 \ H·l\• "' ""°"'"• SU J tllll •.• S.CE• t.• r110D U\4 •.. • competition at both .,.,·holesale A.1co1.:.111d l s1-.-\-. '"'ear& 'JI\ ... F1111t ... 1011 s •"--"" 1(1.er-.i111nc1 "1v.-\lo Pio Ple tk , lYl+YI SCE.dpf1.1t rJGD is .•.. I I .1 1 1 t ti ot.l ~neo WI 1 ,.,._ '" o.1c1."" • llo •.. F1U1<1 JOn ~ J 11•··-v. l(Jllcw."' Tor 1 1111t ..• Pl°""' T111 1 • -.,.. $o RoY ... w 11 OVI• ~ al'l( re :u eves 3 1C A11~11J.lr11 21 ,~ • ..., ~': ... ·~ ~ ;~_·;,; ~'°",!..-:" 11 •1'•"" 1(-Tet int 1 .......... PlnDMo .• , JJ""-,,., S.Ct• 1nc1 11 '""•'\lo ('X.lll't'JSC of the American Al~A1rp11 2 JO ... ,,., _ , .. _ ' '"• ••. Klllwlsl(.10 • .,,.._,,., Pfnw.., . .o • Jl\it-Vio s..irmwi1n u ,.... ... r~· Alln l i,. Ml l 7 ... + Y. 9 ,,..,. 1'.lo Fe•S~ .3' l t:ii. .•. --4. L-PHW1Va .56 1 64+ "" SiAUI-.• 1 I UV., ••. consumer. AlllM Artl\I )0 l -v. Cialll'l'NI ) LI t 1"'1 F•Hnlllo .IO II '""• !'t u ""' lfl , 11Mt-.... PIUICP Atn 2 ... •. • Std Orwdl ' 1" ••• Alt..-nll QI t •"-Ml'lml i 1Vll ··· FrltndFl'flS 2 ,..,_ .... Ul•"rlbdlo t ·~-I.It PIK•Ol.)O 4 ttl9-\lo SCC1Mel1tQI 121 6\11+ '4 A group of FiC la\ryers 411K(.oWI 7 V1+ ..... Orclel(.1' I I _,,. FrigllrOl'li( 11 11''>• .... U•tSllrNrl n5 •• ~ PIMt l(llMt l 1 •.• Sl.MDIP>-.tt , ,...,_,.. ha I d b "k' Amco 1...x1 1 • . . . CL Flncl QI 7 J~:.-'!• Fronller Air 10 µ,, . .. Lt Me<.-.» 1 •Vo ... Plll'llronk 2 11Yf.--" sc l"l'oduct 1 1 .1\.'j ••. I ,.e recommence re .. ing AmHeu Wis is 10"-... . c11rkiOll .1• J 1~ ... '" FrontAlr ws l 1\'t--.,.. Undmk Ld 1 l'N ... A ,.,. Rub.,, 2 211. • .... 5tdT1'1Dm .• 1 U\.11+ \~ ! ' up parts f e'ght b' firms •CnMtgwi • v. ... CM• CMl7 1 1~-"" ----oG-urewa S11 to 11,1,+ '"' P1rmRr.t1111 s, .. " sc .... c .20 2 .,._VJ Scfu·oJe,.:i JEWELERS 113 E. 17tlt St., Co1t1. Mehl - 645-6141 (Ntxl lo llulldlr• IEll'llltrlllfl'I) c I 1g . A.mFll!l .l!id 1 n'llt ... CMl!n .. .is 104 '""'•" ~•111ln .Ja ' 9\:.-•lo LIPolnt•.10 1 ' ... PMllMt..t1 I ,_ • Stt lllK IMI s 3~· .... Kader said the F'TC ain1 '>''ilS AmGM"d .24 t nv. .. ''• eottMlt .~ ~ 14"'• v. Gl•lllld .JO 1 ,, ... v. LlrRll.Jold 21 t -v. PwitOl'OllPl'd 1 1'11• .... Stt111ll'lllw 1 ..,,,..1." '· Am ln!I P'!( I 3\.'i Collen t-latld 6 H'o-\~ G.arhrl ,2, J llXo-\..i LCA CO .41 21 IVt + .,. PlllY<l'llO SI I 71-.-V. · S1trU11t £1• . l l\4o , , •. · to incrc:.sc co1npclilion and Atnhru .2w. • •:ii. ... ~~~·-~ 2~ ~~ ·•· Gt"lluUdrs 1 ,.., ..• lCACo.t1 2 1:i.:.+""' Pwi•r,.,.•Qi ltiO ·~•-1'> s11r1Pl'.c:». 1 ,~ .••• · ·d th ( "tho ( ·• AmMl9 .1911 9 1'\.lo ••• ,._, T O.n 0111 .40 11 11'!.+ .\4t U!Gr•nC .ll 2 10'.'z ... Pot~r lristt 2 ' .,. SIM"ndlnl 167 ll'llt• \'to sa1 a \l'I u 1 . consumer Am Mot 11111 s ''"' . .. ._1• .JO • 11t G.nEd Ser" s 1 -"' l•• Aon1 .2• 10 1~. "" Pl'•l•llOll .1t 1 1~ t ~ STP QI .10d · 1 4" ••• prices or gaSo)ine and O(hCr APlllrol.10 1 lJ -•,; i::C,oml .N : 1'"' ··· GnHouw-'1('o ... ltl1uATK 2 4 .•. Pl'.ttllm1 1 llloo•Vll Si.io~ ·I T~+Vll A p,K .OSb 6 l . • eoi:1M'i°!.:::·21 J ~: ~ Gen lnltl•lor I n·. . . . U 1ll•F .~ 1! 5\!o •• ,.. Pl'•U Rd .u l ,,,.. . . • Suiqwn c. . 1. , .... \~ fuels ~·ill soar. Am R!l ."60d 2 11-0 .•. Gn R•-<h u J -t~ U!Wlt&F .:lfl 1 1~-.-11o Pl'•I c.or11 11 ~t .... sw llld .40 1 1>•1o-\4o Am RetGrl! Jl 4 Ci:>mtld l 10"1 ··• Gtn R•10Ur • 1~•• lo Unco!n Am 1 2 ...... PA11M111 .14 ! tt -y. s.,...alloy C11 I lVll •.• Nader. the consumer ;id-Am 5'11•' '~ 1 s,,.. ... eom11 Equip n n~..-'-Gel!Qt inc • 4 -"' Lktv<ts flee 2 ,....,_VII Pl'nR111 .• J ,,,, .,.. s.,...1 •• c. .~ 111 J2Vt + ,. '·oc"lc conte,ided that the Am T•t .Old XI .,,. + ""' ~c,,',,1,·~ 10 ',',Y1-~ Glint F .,.;q 11 ''"' • "" lodqtS .OSb 1 ,,.. ... Pl'"11.1tv '°' 1 ,~.. .. . sv11em En9 , '"' •.. . " • Am T'aillllQ l1 4'1>• \lo '·""' ·"" 1 ~. + '" Gi.tll!Y! ."4!),o 231 12"•-'It 1.Mwt!Jl .t U J•,:,-\lo ll'rol•r In! t I If ... + '.'o -TT-hig oil concerns arc nnl ~MtCCo .fJ4 ·~ 16''1.• r. ~~60'i1 ! 1~)~. ;~ ~·."'.-rio~ ,s ~+ v. UGenSir.62 s ,,,.. .•. Pl'oct1.t1b • 12~.--1~ T•chn °"'' 2 S'ilt· .•. I AAQlo c .1111 • ,.,, ... .. __ -' ' '' ..... ..c:li.,.,. ..... l.O<ICmt I.Cle 1 11 ..• Pl'URlf .mo 1 2'1> •. . TK Sym"' 10 1Vll+ .... irnµorting all th e oil lht:V can MthclnytllCI 7l S\.-v • ....,.,, .. ,,,,~ G1enGe .lOll 4 sv,-v. LT\ICO..t' 60 1~-·~ Pl'ur:!Bld .2' 10 '"-~ T•/OnRn .O'O s n 1't-llt """ lh l h.. I A 0 lnCl Inc: ll l , . . Coml!GI" .la 2 J'/.o '· • Glot. Seu " /I S -\lo -""' M-PSA Inc ws J '"'I • y, T•lllll• SI 1 11*-VII '-":•.cause ev can ge 1g1er l A.Qult•llll!.10 '' ~. 1.r.. Ca"""'°'• 11110-v. G101ow•B .l4 J I'll• •Jo Mlcl'fld\' in 1 , •.. Pun11G1si. 1 ,..,_,~ T•-CDro s 1 -1~ ~rices in EUrnp!' . .J:innn an:! ,",',,'~,.',~ •, ,,"'•1·'6 =Ft! ~ ~\io-i; Gloucnt•E J IO"•• 11 • .+MHorr Ad 21 ,.,_,." --ao--TeN'llu.wts " •v.-v. 1· ,. .. ..., ,,. __ ,..., ,._ Glo~r tnco J '"' •.. Mf,nqe S1•1 l 1~ ... Outblcor 10 12 + \~ T-• (.Drp 1 l'lolo ... elsc11·here in the world .t.r11c p1 ·• 1 • -'• ...... ,....,i...., 19 ~-·~ c.o10n ,.,,.., 10 71l'~-'• Mtnsnr ·'° • 1 .. 1~ --« R-Ttr.oy,,. In r 11t.-.... · M'-l..IGt.:ll S 13\'t-h COii~.,... QI 10 1""• 1' GoOdrlthWI 4 l\t+ \"O INrinduQB ll'JJ S -\, it.llt,,...E• 1 11 • V. TtlOroP..tt :t 1'\~--N!ld('r sa id on lhe NBc:rv Armtc En1 1 ••· ... eon1 M11te•1 1 n, ... GorRupp .!IO 1 1w. ... M11••Con1r1 ' '""• '" R•fl9tf a 1 ,, .u .,..., T•• '"" Cll s.i 11 .1, Tod Sh A•mifl Caro 11 101,o• "• Co<* E1 .«I l 11-..• °"' Gouldlnc WI s ~\~ ..• Mf,l'V\al tf'ICI 1 •1o1i ... R111bur9 .IO 6 11"'-v. Tllotol'r Miit 2 4\11 + .,.. a~'. 01v thnt there \\'as Ar~E1ec1 s ,~, .. v. ~~-•n .20d •, ir!:-"' c;,,1,. •. 11 10 llo''<t \•, M.111111e1.40 1 Sh • \'t ~1tro P1<'-t • s~ ... Tio-111n0 s 1~v. ArulldlQI S• J e '-"' Intl , ........ '" Gr•?MI 10k l , •. , ... W~ll .JO 1 11 -·~ RIYPT"tt .«> ' '"". \~ Tln'llt• .IOd I "'• \.'t ··a contr i ved r{'Ja!~onship Awmt••QI 11 u -·~ c.oreu111nc • 1J -i.; "'1Atn lllCI Jl)H MCCulkflOI u s~-. •.. R 111""'"1 , • • v. Tn1nioOa11 6 J~loo betv.·een supply and d<:tn<:nd ::!'i!rt~ ~ l~:·.:~ ~~;: ! s.~ ... t:..~8J.'.~: ~ 1~~. :~ M<lfltvo .xz • s ... ::~~~:.!: 1; ~'"'~~ l=~~ .~ ~~ lo keep the domestic price ..ulcoMtt.-t 2 2~. 111 <:ouvnM WI 1 71> ··· Grffl'Wnn~ 1 J4 ... =:.,~c;:: lJ 1~v,.·v,; Ri!R•~M l """•""' Toltl"*ol 141 '"'•S-M r .1 and h , All ~8 77 I~• 'lo Cr1ig torp l J~ ··· GREIT 1.10 I t • l't ~lion!.. 1 2'\to .•• RK.rlonC1a 211 2"'4• 'lolo TO\MPpl'.70 114 14114-t t"t 0 OJ gas lgh. ' ~11 .. ;r WI~ 2 1... .•. (l~al.i¥Ot ~ s S"'·-.... Gr•VflC .20d 1 ''" .•. Med9n<• .11 l ,~ .. Yo R-1 fell 1 1'111 + .... T_ .. , .20 • ~+ ,,.. 11piii,_,_,_,_,_;;;;;;;:;,_,_,_iiil Mtlr• on •" ~.-,'-'· •1l, ",:O• '.I. C,,assTtl.to 2 UV.+ Vt MtdlloGn .u 1 l!I?, +lit lhlr19Tr .1Z .1 4\" ,., .. !rec:orr,...0 · u '""' ... · 1co110ensedl STATEMENTOF CONDITION a!Oecember31. 1973 ASSETS Gash . U.S. Gov'! Obligat ions ans ot her Secunf 1es . . . $ 3,892.497 Loa ns on Real Estate Contracts on Sale of Real Estare Loans lo Fac1l11a1e Sale of Real Esiate Real Estale Ownea (Net} Real Estale Purchased !or lnvesfmenf F"edera t Home Loan Bank Slack .... , ... Office Premises and Equipment fNet) _ ....... , Other Assets , . , .. -. 63.781 .206 ! 76.311 330.170 101 .539 I .328.746 620,700 t .069.497 ? 090,878 TOTAL AS SETS . ___ , ..... f?? 391 544 LIABILITIES. CAPITAL and RESERVE Savings Accounts .......... $54.806, 11 O Advances from Federal Home Loan Bank ............ . 6.816.125 Notes Payable -Bank 3.000.000 Other Lib1l1f1es .. 2.247.8S2 Deferred Income •§~,a§~ TOT AL LIABILITIES .$67.339.052 CAPITA L AND RESERVE S Reg ulatory Reserves . 144,000 Guarantee Stock. Reserves and Surplus 5.908.492 TOTAL CAPITAL AND RESERVES .............. ,,$ 6,05?,492 TOTAL LIABfLITIES CAPITAL AND RESERVES $73.391 ,544 ~o.notCll)lll 01!11flolOI ~ell '" I~/' :~Oii'! ltni'rtcoolll1l~l'l"••lllMll'lllCll IY~Jtlllf(ll!IOQU«! CONVEN IENT LOCATJONS Newport BGach. Bayside Center 102.4 Bayside Drive r11 •r e,•2-4000 Seal Beach. Leisure Wor ld 13820 Seal Beach Boulevard 1213)598-7262 .. Los Angeles OppcsHe Mount Sinai Hospital 8747 Beverly Boule\lard [213)657-414 1 Laguna Beact'I ITo Open Mid;Year) • SILVER PURCHASED THROUGH KEOGH PLAN 962·4579 •.• , ·-· • ,.~ .... ~. '" .,. "''•<-"' ' ••. ,. _,,,,~ ' ,,,,,_ ·-' , .• ,, ·-·--' ,,, ,_ A"Vceorp I l~·y.; CTon A.G l•Sv.-\t GSCEn .OSb • l'lo ... Ml!frocw-f"' 1 ~'It :::·.~ .. GJ;·~ I 1~.~ TrisW;..'.ii 4 1~\;; A-o .14 1 ~\ , • , CrowMH .«I '' I i i'>-IJo G<.wlr1hC .«l 2 6V. + V. Mltl'tGtfl Q 11 lVt • . . A.,,, N .IO .11 10'~ •• , ~ U-. · AVXc.oriitn s u cr-r .20Q t 1Vo ••• GuuMt,,,.,s • ~ .•. MlchSw .1'0 11 • _.,.. AepMows .1' t '°"' ... Ul'CD .• l mo •.. --a ---Crnt .. on • 11 -"' Gull R1pFtl ' • . . . Mldl.nd' Gii 10 ~ • . . R•PM1• wts t r.+ ,,.. Uflloro Fe.I.. . 2 11'1+ Vo e.o,.. ~ I t .. Yo CSE CO :AC11 4 12~-\loo Gull So .~ I 11\t+ V. Ml:fo Ettrll JO t)llt., l'I .fhlllNlt lnll_10...n___,,._,, Ur!lcftGI .M • 1 , .t ... -t· 14 8Ml'!)ft .J.!d J IS -'-" t'.Mblt C. .20 1 .fftot ..... Gl.tll11ft11 ld I 11'4"' \~ Mii On.,.-a; 10 1Wo-V. At!Kcott.oe U JIVt-t '-Ullt-ll .IO IS t .. : 8'flgorP~ 4 1o.i.+W Curtl1M.m 1 '11\+V.. -M M-Mltt R.,.21:11 10 16 .•. -....... Oil Sol 7~-~ UlltMl .Sld llj\lt .•• , Blonli.ter LI 7 11 -'Ill ~ 0--Hallcratt H l JVt MllK•flTctf • 1~.Ji,-~ R91H'llntl A 11 It'. ... UflAllll .01b ••••.••. 8'flner I .Ol 2 3:,,.. . . • ~-Ct• t l 'h-Yo Hall!Nool .40 '. I'll. . . • MMlttN:'&f,'f 11 24%t 1'to ... II• AtlD< , s ,..,_ ~ Ulllr"lllf WI JI ll'o · ,. • "'"""'" 111 l 1'111-t •.r.. .... 1. DK In t 2fVt-V. 1"11mp1 0 SI<. 2 4 Ill · ' 6 t ~. · · Re~ Hrto n; ·S t\.li · Ufl FOOds lft 4'I . 1 . , •• a.,,,.....,. . .a 2 6 . .. o.t• Pl'odtt 17 nit-.... Hanov Pl.., 10 fl,\ MNm QI I ,.,.. ··· RltQI Pl'ud 10 31Ao~ .(\ Ur!Nl11 Wl'IO •' I )·1't VII l ::::~iiiiiiii:i:i:~:~1 ::111 SI! .?1 1 P\ . .. 0.yMn .11» tll'9 lt"'1o-""' t::•mlll IOI 10 11!'111 Miiiy (p wb 14 1SV. + Yt Rltlllord In I t \\ + Ill Uldl'lt J)f ,10 J 10\lo + \'t e.~,~~~ ~ ~"'·;~ 8::~~· ll 1it:1v., ~t'~1t ,i ,;~ =.~·~.!A · ~ ~ .. ~ ::~:°"J.:. ; :" ::: ~~ . .:· r~~;·~ 8eU Incl .QI ' 1li'• Clelt• torp l 1\.\-Vll tQ ..... t~ 16 1\', Mult!Am.10 •• ' +Vi Rl .. •M•• o ''' USFUt.r .10 S e-.-14 mobile phone --·--place U receive telephone call• In par car • aollceaH ---·--- No C•pit11 lt1••1'1rloit1 Mot1th to Moflt+i A:o~tol l11i1 iOJl,\NGI COUli'!Y,_ 11.\UIOl llli'HONE SiflVtCf '" Dl"-'Std.., 1 11~-l<o 0.!111Fd .U 11\i+1111 fofflfll(eln 3 l.._1' MWA . .00 l SVt-\'t FUl,1 Con1'll 1 16 _·;~ USLRll .Od ' 4 1S'lo ... 8'rQ El11lll I l''• .. OnTIEl,mcl 6"' "'•'lo i.ellMt .•'ld 16 t''•• h -M M-'llWOllM .llo JI'\\+\\ USN11 Rott • 2 'J .... • .. &.•9 RI .Jkl • •'Mo · ~-. t>t,o lndust l 'l>-1·1· Her Mel ... 4 IV.-\lo NllXO ll'leh l l'/i-1,\ ltlt11rF11 .24 11~. "" us Jltdlltlft ' 10 .. 8e'9'fl llt• l lh . . . Dlt:Ao,. llld 2 l.\to . •. HIQhl"CI (Ap tJ 1~'& t t'o M•ll ""11111 6 1>.;-Vo floblno l.ld j 4 _ "° US ~!lllr' ,.., I ~ i,; Bern1om1o1 11 1~~· ·~ CtserP't!,tS ·11 16V.+ 'Jo Hi"SMr .171! 1"6 11 •1'1> N1UIC.l..,.y n •1'1 ··• RotllntKh. '' MV.+1\lo Unll'41Ciot'I I Hi.-v. Bert•• (.Drp 13 •V.-\(, OHi.rt Jwl I ~ '.. MIHlllWI ». • n.... ... NII PM~ s ll'-•• \i ~In lf'ICIU , I~" Urll!Y &ly> 1 l<l\11'+· v. °''""'c .to s ... . .. Dl"ltlao Q ' l\,'t-\II HotnOIA JO . 1 sit.. ill NtlSll"" .7ttll 1 ,~ .. \,\ "°'Ii"" .11(1,o I '" ... Uni~,. • '~ •. ee .. r11 £111 • l\o '·. Oi..-n«ld M I ""'-\\ HDll'!()ll .!O l .. • 1 ~ Hel•ner .~ I ....... \r. ---,..II ti , Uni""'' QI . • s ••• 81c Pt" JI 17 1'1'J-1Ao Olll•rd$1 ,41) l ,. ...... HosMl9 .52d '11 -VII --· .OS ' ,,.., "'"-' Ctp I 16\t -'Yi Urlilld ~t s u ·· •. 1119 \I S\lplr 6 4'1,-1,\ Ol•ll"I COl'll ' l\'t-"" Hos(IMl9 WI 1 ~1·1• Nttill• l..eM l 7"' • •• ltofl"" 11llnl 10 4\lt .. , UIMI '°" .40 U 14 • , 81nluM .aGt 2 1'Vll . . • DD,.,. Jlretro SO 41!0-"-Noso Mf/flll II 1 -~ NENuoc: .Old I ~~l\t RGUl'l"M C. !I 4 Ii UV thd 'Ml \&> !Hli • _., a ;oOyNrnc IUl't•'t OrlllfNll"' 1 lti•"" HOtlliw.lld ,,, ........ Ne•ldrNri S '""'"" Aow.n ,14 lS11111+"" --"IV-· 81...ird In U t • .... Ore•UI .lOd 2 11\41-"'-Ho!MV1 .• J1 1 Jl,lr,-VII NowMe1 Ar S 1' -\Iii Aoy .. An\lr ! I'll+ V. V1ll1y Mtn 2 4"" llh•ttl•d ..t 10 ~\ol-16 0ri¥Ot•H•r I 1'Al ,., MoustO.JOd 'Cl •SV.•n• Mewpirt R t P-' .,. ltclyllF ~ t 1 V.iPIMC ·'° 1 H+·~ llodin,t,p .411 14 1\\-.... °'' Fair .411 l ,_ • . • Howen ll'ldu Ill 11/o .. • ,.. .. Pr .no 1• 116-.... RSC lt•f Ill( I 1• .. ' V•l'PW ·'' • l •i.to+ .... Boftac.• CO J S •. , Ouioll•P .H l 1'-+ \lo Mvtlt!IA 1.10 2 » .. \lo HYTl,,_ AO l lot~+ \\ Mu ll'IOl.ll I l\4o ··• Vah• U,_ t ·)Vo • •.• &one.mt• s llto+\9 ~..::,1rc tJ s ... Mllllellll1.JO 2l1 ... N1'9FprS .lt 1 1 ~~"''i•' 2"' ;::.·vto110orn .21 '·!""·"· eo-trr~ 117 IPll•l:io. ....... II l(SI "-~"' Hvbf.Al'-1 1'1'\.'J/ ... HJI 1-.& I '" ... ..->J ..... fltO!fl , .. t.6 • eo-c .10 1 6>,r,. Vt --c I -Hvd _.,,, .IO 1 .. • v. NO Atn llo11 • 10'.lo-... .... • I • Yffl'llt'M'I ,... ' •• • •• lrad"-1 6~•1.t ES~tM.IO 1 to.. ... · ~IOd • •v.-14 NeCM!Olts '~l·M St.*=:J •· ... "'""•iftl' •:ty,.m'" IYl'Kll flld I "'• YI &rttl"-.12 t0 I'-+ -Hvtft.ol .IJ 2 llVll +. .. HNGMtll Wf IS II~'-flbt If ~· 0i<t0 Vllllftt Gift! I •. : .,. llrMltf om I 12~ •• .' ~AO¥SI 1 JI\ Mwrttl lnc;p 1 1'-,., .HutlHl'Ollt 1 tYI ... CMlll .70 · . \lo V~ lllCOr 'IO ..... llrll(toll ~ n" ... £cl,,.... c. s 11'1! HftN~Sk II u~ .. v.· JWmtcOllG I 16'h-'1" ' J . .. .... =" c:.-. 11 ~· .... Ir-Ell .Q J I~+ ,._ £dllltl'tOI ~ 2t tJ • --0 O>-... I ,,... ... • M I 'N!.t ' 8retat0Wll I •"--14o '£dli Cllrpln I • '\,\ -.f "-m ~ ) .__. :11 » 1~-Clllitpl!,' S -.+'" er .... c .*> • ""'. Vo Erlrtft<tl .•• ' .... ICM ftl .Jld I 14'11+ .... ""' .2'1 10 n .. .... ,,., 1 M llrll'WrlCOWI 2 •~ .. : El"~n 2 It~ .,. IMCMlt<ll 4 11'1o+ YI · C Olrpl 11 ~+ ~ Min •J J,._.'\t -WW-:. llr"""FPf.40 I S ••• El .... M .10d 4 J +\lo l""llOl.llld l JYl•l·\6' 141 ll'IOUltl 4 -~ ·1.1 1111: I• ,J -+ "'° Wtlltll(•otl M4 J1•M'41;M. BTU Enalfrol 'IO ,._. \lo Et.cl Al'9tt 17 11t-V. JfnPet•l lf"lll I ~-\lo OfterlC. ·'°' 6 1"'+ .. 111u... ,,_. 1 · m .. ~ ·11 '16 ....... fklll':ly(f,Oli 1 lJ\11+ '4 £19cln .07d 1 t~V. rnptr()m 7J .. -!t'll' OOlllel. ... IKIO l61h•I\\ ....... Ml :·: Witl 1 • 17"" ' llir"'/llt .60 I f\i+"' E1ettr11•1 2 1*-141 lnt.lru!TI tll 1..,_\41 . ~ f'Nd I 1'i+ h ·1.os 2 11\11--.. "',"1.,1'.to .. I 11•:.' :::. lklltft·Gti M 2'Vo .. " Elot\tH Sii 11 J t \lo lnlf9Rti 1• 1\'t-V. IOl"6.. S 1~-YI wry ft&'" J ttY1 .. :t: l - , .. I( ,,..,-;;f'c-,-" -· ~~·~ .J.~ J r:-~ ::ei. ,1.,.\~ .. ~ ~~ : ~+.~ 1:::.~·10 : 1m~·~ ::.r'~'. .. " ,·1 ·i1,~t·:~: C..blKom J 1~YI t'ro 1""""1r 1 1\'t ... 1111 ~ 10 S,.+ Ito rl'ldtf .!fO l 1114 ·•• ~ Cl f1).14+l•lt .... 1Ptc, '' • 1' C.lctor . 1$9 l ""'• \\ ~., Mft ' 4\;, .. • lnttSw•t.Cltd Oii lr11t .190 S1'1 ••• """'" .Hb 1 ,.,. . •• ....., TM\\ lft .. 141 . C..I Olmttr 13 t'I> • . • e.. •• Olrlm , J'li • . . 11.11010 p~ + 1 OUTll Alrllfl 16 '~"' ei .,, I '' • Wf'lltCtlll .M 2 JI) I c;..r,..rt ftp 26 S"° •.• (v.fllA .100 4 f\i ,., lflWl"llho!O 1 2.:...+ Vo _. l'--l-' .,, ""'ltlfltl.'9 ' U '·~ j ~Clllb Ill fl\ ... EllKlN .U ;t t~V. lftlthff'I' QI 26 ,., •.•• PA-F tl'ld\lll U '-+ \'f J.i* Si S\.\-\olf Wl'llt.11.tri. " \il't 1·~· C,..ln .300' I 101/J •• , __.,._ lnV\IQFla S i_._\t PG~".1'°4 I UYt-~ =tell ': ; ,=-·)' 'Mchll1I 1 'jt\t141' ""E'Gtii J J\lo .•• "•11 llldutt • '"'• l\ rn .. OvAt.IO 1 2314 ... PQ!Es,fl\4 l 15~\t , •• ,, I 41)'1 IMllCOI. • 'I . I c... Sup on ! 51111., " ~::r, A 2 '""-.,. t''°'' 1 •• , 1•-• PGE~!Yt 1 1' -·~ ..., · ... Wllffl!N 4ll ·~·" g: I ' ... •• °' '~ • I "' "'-"'tSt..,·" ! 1, ... =1"~ ~ -I 1• ,,. ~ lltl ,,._,,., .... , 1 I .,, lnv!tN 1ho 1 l"•" l"fCHO • .-' "" •·• _ T•--O's~~_,,,_,,,_ ,,.,..,,.. 'fVI ... ,.,,,,.'* ',.... ... '"•"11r..JJC1 I" -w. N< , '"" ... ~$«.11• 'I'• .... ",lr'm".-:~: 4 . • ~ rw, ~ Cf 1) s11-"' ~lrll'll • .•Oi 11 JI."+ -tr¥1n 1ildv.!1 • .,, JllllOm lrw:r s 1\4 ..... ""170 ·u t • • .~ • C.01111 "'' • J~-t Vil '°llc:toll S... I ... -\lo 1111-· -0 t•• .,. lltlOlll(,1-1! Ill· ,,, .,. ' WUI l~A 1 ••" ·-·-I ~··,.. .. .~, .. ·¥ ...... _ .. _ ....... lld .t-, '" ·: -· ... , •. --• ,.. 1 ... ...,....,. 17 ~ .,. IT I..~ 10 J .,. • ..., ··-ilMft" ~ I !ft.f. -•--' ••• lln .l:ld IH 1tlol+ \.If 11'~,S. 'J •¥1 ~I-,.,..l'ltttlJ 2 I~'" ltlt•l!MI ; ... 1 -"• --·-835 3305 r"w .to I a\4-'4 io.dMrtMI J IS .Hnmwy• 1 ,,...._.,._ '8tf..,.,,. S 1"-1' SNlttltt.M I flt,.-t,. Y•1"1..,. 11 1Ao+ -..· . • Ille .a. tJI ~-.~ l<fld ---1' ~ Jttntl• Jto It ~-,.l...., JO l ·~ .,. 51'1W1 Oil(ll I IM .. \;, tll'lritlfl 1M II '""' *• ......................... '· ' , .. ' .. ' . • , • • .. ' .. ·' ., .. .. Monday's eto~ing Prices •EW YORK IU.,l -r. ..... prlct• G!I tht N1w York S Kit ••cMt: "'' clo.t, I . 1 ... ~ -• . . • Frbn;Jry J, l«.174 s DAILY PILOT NEW YORK STQCK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturaay ' ' --· Blu~hip Stocks Off; Trading Light • r • I ....... .. " lutsda)', ftOru1ry 26, 1974 Morton Downev ' o/ Wants to Warble Q: Uri Geller, tbe lmtU .... 111 maml ud -ltr of ESP ls J:te for ttil? Or lt be a clever fakerT Md Uve )'Oii ev:Z. met llim face to l•ett ..... Gtrtntde Bnc&t. St. Louil. A~ Ve!, we-interviewe& Geller on a 'l!V program tn which Uri conducted a personal experiment. He asked me, in the privacy of my office, 10 sketch a picture. Seal it in an envelope. Then seal that envelope in another enve. lope. rugbt in' Cront o( the cameras, with the envelopes concealed In my pocket, Uri instruct~ me to concentrate on the picture. He "read my mind," theft drew sketches reasonably close to ours-the Smith Brothers. About h.is beilti real or fake, several British scientists are trying to make a detenninalion. Dr. J. P. Cbillon, lecturer ~ metallurgy at cam~ bridge University: "Uri is either the cleverest magician of the century or he has something new. There is· no half. way house." .. ' VOWS HE'LL STAY Jud119 Rlti.r, 74 .. . -' Uquor Store Flap High Court Nixes .Porno Bid WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. SUpr-eme ·Court -ha I rejected Ohio"• bid to pr....-ve a Uqoor control regulation aimed at ·stopping the sale ol pomograpby aloog with ··booze. ··-·--- -· It wu "a eeilure OllJO A1TY. Gtn. WWilm ol maltrial buod llO!ely on J. Brown acknowledged that the pe~ predilections ol the oelloft "wot mono than the liquor control agents:" the Ubly not a proper method lower court said, adding that of enforcemenl" - the Department ol LI"""" B¢ Blwn argued-that .COntrOI nad· eS(al>li;J;ea'·n.l-·ageiils -··t leasflieable The justices M o n d a Y standards. to issue a citajlon. a,!flrmed 7 to 2 the ruling ------·-...,...---'.'---...:... ___ _ of a three-judge federal court that the regulatk>n was an \mCOO.Stitutional infringement on the rights of a liquor ):!,etmit holder as enforced by the state. THE THREE-JUDGE court enjoined the enforcement of tbe regulation uni°" the HURRY-UP I HAIRDOS: CUT, BLOW 'NGO! r question ol -ty 1s IJrst Judge Ritter :=:7!:. "!' ::= We stiow -~ to care ior '"°"' step by step. Our curt coaxing SOSSOR STYLES are all fuss--free and functional and are easy to·do as Just st\Bmpool In- cluded ate lamp cut&, ·finger tUft)Ple outs. curling Iron cuts, blower cuts, wast\ towel dry, brust\ 'n fluff cuts or si mple wasti and wear cuts. Ttiey are all SCIS-- SORED. take<are-of._rsell styles. Good for any · age. any t\air, NO teasing, no rollers, no pins. NO POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS. ALSO ND SET PER· MANENT WAVES. YOU MAY NEVER WANT TO SET YOU.A HAIR AGAIN . N Q 'Ille case arose in a series .ol uitting of actions taken again st ·--· .... ····---~ge;~~;;·s.~ ea'.;~ .JQSEPH'S..SCISSQR S'P<LING·-- ,, ,,.·,,, NEWPORT_ HARBOR KIWANIS NDATION "PRESENTS .. -TRAYEL AND ADVENTURE SERIES fridoy, -I, 1974 l :OOp.m. ORANGE COAST Cot.LEG£ AUDITORIUM 2701 f~RVIEW ROAD, COSTA !ltSA . . . . . . AlllNHUIWD ·~tCO, fASCINATINO 1'0\oVJ.IS Of INDEf'ENOfNCE" · Another ·professor;· ·-John Taylor .. ·of-··Klng's-·College,· London says: "\Ve may even end up proving his (Geller's) powers' are not unique . But if he will agree to cooperate, he may 'help us make most important discoveries about the human mind." vote Or No Columbus Huntinaton Beach f· .. ·-on -In late · 1969, liqoor control "" """"'-A... JOI N. ~ ....._ • agents seized a number ol 968-3535 879-3863 On Sapi.mber I~, 1810, Mt•ico w11i plurlgtd 11110 a f;.,y oiwl Dlood-rhirsty r....olr -011 il'll-~uggle for Ire.do"' ogol11s1 it.. l"'Plocoble, <rwl OM! dom!~ng rulii ol Spoi11, A "George WCllMnglOll" ol hL1 COUllll"f ·-~ oi tile t ltc1<lfyl11g lorc:e bellind rtie-1;be11111lo11. H. wot fother Miguel Hldal"°, on lntel!.auol vllloge prl_,1 who II ,_,.cj today o. °'"' ol Mtxlco'1 91'.ci!al '--· Tl.e Hidolgo R...oll, Ol ii ia k-. ope"9d wldil 1ht llood'90!ft of pe<11-up holrt'd, ~ ..... ond opp"estion. and proc~ the '""'11 COUtltry iftto the Wor ol 1~ whic" lOIHld el-11 .,._... This srcwy of llow ond ...,_. 11\e re\IOll look ploce it vMcfly portroyed DI 0 ll'IOvlf19, compejlillf plcl~ In film (trod ~kHt·ogailltl IM-hDl:k.-0, of ~liclkk!g·K9f'tl and loKlnating, chorinl119 ploces and p.ople; hi 'an oreo Hidol'l'I ¥1tlt.d i., IOOJ<itts. Th. lo.oms of Gua~IOOIO, 50ft Mg.... de Ailerde, ~ Ouetet0to, ~•ico Cly. Guodoiajora al'ld Monionllla, ti. llO-nt Acapulco, ore COYefed by the ~ ol 11.i1 production. Thit 1ather 1111c:onv.nrional ltl•l!d of !TO"<tl. te<h nicol petiKf1an ond hlitoricaL '•MJOrth pro'l'ide o progrom of pol1it111ar laKirlation. We'd print the mentalists's photograph excepting for one minor mishap. The cameraman permitted Geller to touch the camera, which not only exposed every negative but -and to this I attest -broke the camera! Q: Is It true Bing Crosby 11 dytog of eaacer? I bope not.-Mrs. K. Johnson, Ballimore, , A: Everyone's prayers are with Bing, hoping his heal th problems are resolved. His medics and surgeons diagnosed the operation they perfonned to remove a por· tion of his left lung and agreed it had oothing to do with cancer. Preliminary study indicated a rare fungus infec- tion , not a malignancy. Q: I never read anything anymore about' the great Irish tenor, Piforton Downey. Is be alive? - F. Regan, Phoeni%, Ariz. A: Very much so. Although a million aire, he still has an itch to do another hitch as an entertainer. While' sunning recently in Palm Beach, he asked the Jerry Grant Agency if they had an open week in which he could play the Condominium Circuit -hedge-hopping ~ dozens of the Florida high rises, doing two shows a ~ Q: You'll have to go back to World War I to dig up the answer to m.y question. Wbo wrote 0 Wou.ld You Ratlter Be a Colonel wltb an Eagle on Your Shoulder or a Private "'Ith a Chicken on Your Knee?" -:-Arnie R. (a swinging great-grandratber), Waterbury, Conn. A: Sidney D. l\1itchell wrote the words to -Archie Gottler·s music. POSTSCRIPTS FRO~f J\1ARIL YN. To Pat Fong, Shreve. port, La.: Radio's ori ginal Amos 'n Andy were white ... To Alvin 1\1. Whitmer, Columbus, Ohio : Hal Holbrook, though no longer doing a TV series or road-showing "Mark 'l\Vain,"'' will be-seen· frequently in TV dramatic-plays. We don't know what plans he has for personal appear· ances, however .•. To S.C.M., North Adams, Mass.: Larry Hooper left the Well: sh>w to undergo open-heart surgery ..• To Mrs. G. E. Barile, Keokuk, Iowa: Kathy Grant was an actress before she wed ~Bing Crosby .She becitme a nurse many years later . . . To Mrs. M. L. Samuels New Castle, Pa.: Hedda Bopper's only book of memoirs' was "From Under My Hat" ... To S. HanCQCk, Long Beach. Cal.: You're slightly confused. Baddy Rkh is in fairly good health. l( was Gene Krupa who died of leukemia ... To Mrs. Gladys Hawkins, Chicago : Paul Lynde is neither manied oor has he a "grown" son. Send your qW!stions to Hy Gardner, "Glad You Asked That,'' care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. Marilyn and Hy Gardner will an- swer as many questio1is as they can in their colunui, but the volume of mail makes personal replies im- possible. ___________________ ......,_ __ Sex Psychopath Freed ,by Judge ST. LOUIS, Mo. !UPI) - SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) magazines frorii Peto's store 0,..lhly'IA.M. .. IOP.M:•s.t.s.tte5P.M. -Willis w. Ritter says he1_:a1te~~r~dee~i~dln~g_.!t~be'!Y'_W~e~re~·~~~~~~!i!!'!!!'!!~~~~~~~~~~~~l l plans to slay on as Utah's chief federal judge a '"long, long time" even though 800 or the state's lawyers want him removed. "I'll tell you when I'm going to quit," said the peppery 74- year·old jurist. "When they take me off that bench feet first." THE . UTAH . BAR Association relea sed a secret poll in which attorneys voted 814-234 to ask Congress for removal of the grandfather clause, which allows·rutter to continue as chief ·judge of Utah's U.S . District Court despite his age. "Well, 111 tell you what," the silver-haired Ritter said of the vote, "I'm going to be around here for a long, long time. "I am doing what 1 want ta: do and there is not a ... thing anyone can do about that." RITTER, WHO \i:orked as a common laborer to earn degrees from the University of Utah, the University of Ctucaga and Harvard, began his stormy career on the bench in 1949. replacing 92- year-oJd Tillman D. Johnson. In LCICJUlla Beach -March 5 JON". BRAND ,for COUNCIL • Endorsed by: • Village Laguna • Arch Beach Heights Homeowners Assn. • Canyon Acres Homeowners Assn . •·Laguna Beach Civic league .. SEASON flOC:fTS !Good lar arty 11x odniiu!Oftl) ADULT .............. '12.SO (5'ntl• ... ml"'-t•._, .... '2.SO) 5_1\IDENT ..........•. • 5.00 (5'"911 ... rtti~ • ........ ·~ .00) . SIA.SON TICKm AYAMAILI AT1 Nilwport Hort.r iow-t. CJlolb, ... 1501, .......... IMch. 92663 646-2163 Al ~orgit Hordwore. 2205 W. Balboa Blvd .. Newport 'Beoth or a'"f inembt< of ,.,_ N-oOrl' Hcwbot kiwonh 011b .• IS ~aE NCH Sltlt ·PER ~ Businessman Lawrence J{. A doctor at the hospital put Lucas on an outpatient status in August but Schaaf ordered him r ec onfined , later permitting him to. visit his family on weekends. • f ~~~s,~~~e!or~o th;~I~~ months ago after being legally judged a criminal sexual psychopath. was ordered freed by St. Loois County Circuit Court Judge George E • Schaaf, who put Lucas on five- year probation. LUCAS, 41 , WAS confined to the state hospital after being arrested last April and charged with se xual offenses in volving five young girls. A[ter a hearing last August at ,,·hich teen-aged g i r Is testified to having be e n induced by Lucas into having sexual activities, lAJcas was ordered committed to the hospital. SCHAAF SAID he made his order for release a f t e r c onsulting with three psychiatrists. He put Lucas on probation providing th at Lucas continue psychiatric treatment during the probation period . In 1971 Lucas' wife, Sally. "'as murdered in a case that involved I a w enforcement authorities from Missowi to Florida. Anthony Paul Damico was convicted in the e&e and sentenced to life in prison in July, I972. For less tta1 $1. PIUS tax, When you clal di ect wlttlGUt 0pe1 ator asllstance. you can talk to anywhere wlttlkl catlfCI 1111a far 6 mllmtes, or NeW vortc 'for 4 m1nUteS. <And rat181tlber: lt'S later In the daY bade EaSt.l These low Dial Direct rates are in elf~! between 11 at nigh! and 8 in the morning. And, if you 1alk longer, exlra minutes are at the low· est rates too. Dial Direct rates do not apply on pe1son, collect, credit card, hotel guest calls, calls charged to another number, or calls over 40 miles placed from coin phones •. •• The same low Dial Direct rates do apply on Operator-assisled stati<?n calls placed from communilies where· long distance calls cannot be dialed direct @Pacific Telephone would you believer~----::=~ 2511niles 'to a gallon LONG BEACH .(1RPORT • SEAL BEACH (Lel1ure WOfld) "" This. represents Airport Service'saverage-fuel efficiency •. :. to carry a passenger from anywhere on our system to LA. International Airport. •• .. ORAN°clE CO. AIRPORT "LAGUNA HIUS MISSION VIEJO " t< .. v . ' '··· Whether by ·Choice pr necessity most Americans today are looking for ways to coneerve gasoline. UM Airport Serrlce on your next trip to the AlrporL .. > --- • ·((Q -1 • • .. • 1 - ' , , ' Turbon1, cloches turn fashion clock blck 40 pors • Floppy bows: new-<ild tri m ... . .. '6 0od Old Days' Recaptured Tent jackets and coats from the '40's Nostalgia's -fa-shionable From the Wire Services To get your mind off the grim economic outlook, try concentrating on spring f~shions, 1974 . They are a ren1inder of another recession ... and of the prosperity that followed. Recalling Holly\vood's golden era when n1ovie queens set style trends, designers in couture capitals around the world seem bent on recapturipg \,he glarpour. 'The soft, feminine look of the '20's and '30s is captured in Grecian draping, plunging necklines and flowing skirts. , _ Completing the scene are hat .pins, long beads and pearls, short waved hair, white powder and turbans. Wbile glamour and elegance were projected on the silver screen, economizing was uppermost in most Americans' minds. Home-Bewn garments were a must, and one of the hottest fabric items was floral print flour sacks. Puerto Rico 's first excursion into international high fa shion features Flotirbag Fashions in novelty sportswear. Back from the '20s are Paris favortteS, caftans, togas and kimonos. Dior, who earned notoriety in the '40s with ·his midi classic, apparenUy favors the line again, because be "reinb:oduced" It· both in New York and Paris. with the same crepe de chine floral print frock. . The mid calf· afternoon dress ·or ·tea gown Is an important look. Also popular are shirtdresses with short, puffed sleeves and f;lopping bow>. More· new-old trends borrowed fro. mthe '30s and '40s include the severe man-tailor_ed iuit in gray flan- ne~ pink stripes and glen plaid. Also making comebacks are ostrich boas, silk car· nations on lapels, tent coats, dropped or padded shoulders, pillbox and cloche hats. Some designers were daring enough to bring back beaded gowns, cardigans and mufflers from the '50s So, now it shouldn't be too long before the younger fashion fans get their wish -the revival of the '60s: mini . . - • ' Sequins, beading trim '50s loo k I eo ' .. , llEA ANDERSON, Ed itor TveM11y, F'Pntlr'y lt, 1914 PIH lJ ., '1' ' ,, Flourr sack t portswear novel ' Food for Thought: Serve Heaping Measu·re of Ec>mpassion . . ' . I • ' • ~ I DEAR ANN LANDERS: Will )'0<1 this and Jnoist that lie 8" ......... ? Is damage, report It to your dad a~· didn't expect' such a h.,!ltl&-...swet l pl.... shed aome ~ 00 glulionyl My bu1boac1 11111 1 sit -.Y ml watdl e once. Then you'll be off the hook ud out of YOU, Ann Landers _ DIS. Ill II sn emotional illness, a case o( oUr !IOll e9I biimiilf inlo, Ml IWlf P.., !JI tlle di>ar. -APPO!Nl'ED arrest«I 'developmelil, or what? It's polholl<. Wbal can we dot -N.D. DEAR m"'nPOINTED ._ I •~ Our adull IOll has a PllD, llul be PARl!lNTS •• ' ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: Every °""' ~ ' : _,, ~ Is like 8 dllld when he gets around Dl!AR N.D.1 OI _. ,_ •'I. In a while you blow i~ and you •cer,tainly :roa down, bat m .. 1 build!,.. ore a.t I food. He limply cannot control his ••tloo•I prolllem1 .,. • _,.. _. }Mt montli. 'l'oday, I lllOd my fM!.ef•s My lather Is blaming me kc the fell on your lace "11<!1 you r.spooded Gf competeal repairmen. It's 1111 '* 1 at>t><llle. 'ro walch hlm-<!8t 11 sidteoing. IJIJlll 1~. u4 Bfl .-, t11ere ·car to run errams ior my mod>er. damage and I ~ave beoo U>ld that I to lbewholetla' about tile widow in her to the teusib with leglUmato reqo•ll ·ae hunchel over a heaping plate aod II _, ,.. ca ill. Yea _.., In ~ can' use lbe car all)'1T1(ft. Mom has !Os called the maintenance rnon . to Ito 1111 -..... .,.. fw ll<bl l ~·els • .. -portions Into his nlOUth bow,.or, lie.,... --toWonl 1 .ported. Ibo car 8 lakM my side and she and Dad are in her apartment building ......al mn..~ ,.,,,..... :iu; such'7aP.clty you'd ll'dnk someone bis wife. _ -pirklllg lat. When I returned _I ·• fisJ>ting over It. He says there is no a day to "Cix Otis '.' and "Ox that." was trying to take It away from him. ll1llt -wnmu most W1ddl Mm notlc<d die ri8bt rear fonder had three lnSuraflao to cover this type 9( acddenl. The repairmen were <XMWinced that the Got tl!ose wedding bell blues over He gorges hlmseU until there Isn't eat .,.... orta than yoa, ..t Ille caa'I · big dmls aod there Wel'C oome bad Do you think he Is being fair to me!-old girl WJS breaking things so she costs ... guost list ..• what to weor a morsel of aey(lllng left In sight. He do ~In&, -bis g1-, ellber. """'lcl1'1 on die passe<>ger'a~.-.No MIDDLETOWN, N.Y. could geHomeonc to talk to. . . , and oOter details? AM Landenl's musl devour rmry roll, •every pat. ol--Wh•• ,,_ ,.. 1et1 riidy to llelp_cars were near me when I parked or DEAR MID.: Since this ts your (Int You 30id she was just lonesome and completely new "The Bride's Guide" bu~cr, every . ol\ve. 1£ someone leaves blmttlf, be wW, 1nd ..t 01e dly IOODel'. whco f retQ:med. -ortense, and there ls some question u added , "The building has oo obligatlon ,fill help. For a copy, 3eod 8 doller bill, ooaielbJng h• says, "I'll finish it." I feel sorry for all of yea. !'In ·~ ·~e wtiethet.. the car w~s 10 when the accident occumd, l bellue to provide compsnloosrup !or lonely plus a long, sell-addressed, slrunped .,,. And he dOes , bit wbile lll my ~ or il 1t your dad should glv•S•IUlD91~tllante. '!'1!1211' ·'.' . _ velope (16 e<nts poo!Age) to Ann Landen, 1 -there ""* be !Orne 1met DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am II i-a hii>Penecl the nialt before al my (athet'I Frorn .. ,. on, check the car rr... r ,..liu !Mlbody gives a damn about P.O. Box 3346, 222 w. Bank Dr .. Oiica&!', conflict. Why dOesn'I his Wife urderstand old and ~vod my mivw'a I1<moe job locotloo. • all Ides be(ore you ,Ket !JI. U lbere onybody el,. these days, but I certainly UI. 606M. ' ' • " . - I: --~ ---., -' -. ·-• I - • -- • ' - . . . ~ (' JG UAIL Y PI LOT Tutsday, February 26, 1974 Nuclear Power: Decision Rests· With _Public By JO OLSON Of ttit DtllY l'ilOt Stiff 'Ibc dcc1.sion to have nuclear power" plants must rest with the public, the Sierra Club believes. Nuclear power is a clean source oC energy which will ultimately release the United States from its dependence on !orelj:n oil, tile SOOlliem caJifornia Edison stresses. '!be nuclear pov;er industry has not gone through enough tests to guarantee-there will not be a nuclear accident. a "concerned" private citizen states. These three points of view were expressed during a panel on the pros and cons of nudear power as an energy :iCllll'Ce for Orange County. sponsored by the Newport- Costa · Mesa Branch of the American Association o f University 'Vomen. Presenting the Sierra Club's point or view was Sidney Moglewer, chairman of the national energy po 11 c y committee. The Edison Ca. ~·as represented by Byron Sa bol, and s~aking for himself ·was Jack Slovak, owner of Enviro.sphcre Co. of Corona del Mar. NUCLEAR DEPENDENCE ';The Sierra CJub is deeply roocerned about the question of the fe as ibil i t y of dependence on nuclear pc>wer a,s plamed by President Nixon and "~ utility companies in America," Moglewcr said. Flowers Showered "The community is being .forum for public hearings," In 1970, he said, the E<\isoii asked to a cc e p I the Mll81....,. stressed. Co. used 80 perctnt ._tura1 consequences of a nuclear OFFSHORE SITING gas and 20 percent oil, but accident without a sound basis He nid the Siem Club "'ilhin one and a ball years, for the risks involved.'' plans to intensify Its activity these figures wilt be reversed. Moit~·er pointed out that in the ooclear safety area. With the construction of t\VO there are ·;too few" ouclear The club advocates, f 0 r 1140 megawatt facilltieS, 2S reacwrs in operation for example, location of plants milllm barrels of low-sulpOOr adequate testing and that "no away from population centers, f I il ·u be ed annual! h. · I f " ·-' 1·1 op~=• offshore 51'Ung ue 0 wi sav y, mac 1ne is ree rom error. anQ ,----sabol said. •le listed risks the Sierra d reactors. The is.s' Club believes are inherent in A recent club resolution comm ion aeproval I · f calls for "develop-I of had several conditions1 Sabo. I nuc ear generation o power: "'"'" ed It bstant 1 trea\th hazards, errors 1n-the adequate national policies to _not , · preserves SU ia · f t f I __ -·..1. .....-gy .. =." portions oJ the bluffs, allows transportatK111 o spen ue , ""'u ~ ..-. -public access to the beach waste diSJX)S3.l, fuel reprocess-"W~ are not doing things and places discharge mtlts ing plants and nucleitt safe· right in the ruiclear area." further away from nearby guards. Sabol first reviewed recent kelp beds. These, he believes, are the events in the nuclear field, responsibility of the federai saying that the C o a s t a I government .and the states. Commission had just granted "There must be a competen.t a pemrit for ari expansion MARINE STUDY A marine study commission will study the iealilCall<f a reliability group will b e formed within the company to report lo the Public UtiUUes Co. "One of lhe advantages of San Ooolre pertains to the environment," Sabol comment. ed. J'Fuel consumption is a definite asset. It uses 2.4 pounds d uranium vs. 81SOO tons of cool. - There also is a poten tial of by·!"""IUCts from \ h e nuclear plant, Sabol added. Neptwnum, which is used in pacemakers, is one. "I'm not here to say nuclear power doesn't have its problems," be stressed. Aoo.ther advantage to nuclear power is the Potential development of other nuclear systems, such as breeder react.or. the fast "A fusion reactor uaes hydrogen u a basic product," Sabol explained. "This we can get from sea water. B'lt this I~ turther down the road." Two of tile pniblelfls not ful· ly tested are n!liabiflty ol the emergency ewe CQOlin__g system and the need for a good me..., of disposing of radiOactive waste~ MODEL PLANNED Sabol admitted there is no guarantee that the emergency core cooling system (which cools the nuclear mass in case of emergency) will operate 100 times out of 100, bu~ said · that within 15 mQOths a model will be developod lo clear llJ> I the ques\IOD. I He aaJd the At«nic Energy I Commission is now at work oo the "ultimate w a• t e disposal system." Tbe wast. will be burled II' ab8ndoned salt mfues In double 1talnles1 steel vaulls, which will be monitored. RlgllLJtow, he ,.kl. ISan Onolre's waste is being stored in Illinois by a private finn. Slovait_lntroduoed.himseltu a "concerned citizen." He Wd. Ile Is always a.nmed at the j technical inlonnation given in discussions of nuclear power. :1 "How do you evaluate it?" ~ he asked. ·' He drew an analogy with the design and testing ol an airplane. 'I T ~ip Slides Into Oblivion Ail airplanes are put · lbrough rigorous tesls beton1 ) production, he said. "'Ibe I nuclear power industry has: I not gone through test. enough to guarantee we won't have an accident." · By ERMA BOMBECK We have just been on vacation and retumed with a tgtal of 610 slides 9f our trip. I cannot tell you how invaluable these 610 slides have been to us. I can walk on a crowded bus solid with bodies and announce, "I have 610 slides to sho.w" and within seconds I have my choice of any seat on the bus. In the middle of being mugged I can say to my assailant, "J have 610 slides to show you when you are finished," and he will drop Your Horoscope my handbag and disappe.ar faster than I can say, "Turn off the Jights." J would make a conservative claim that if I took these 610 -slides to a war no one would sOOw up, Actually, it was by sheer chance that we stumbled on to this secret weapon that could be an answer to over· population. We invited a group of our dearest friends over one evening for dinner and after eo:ffee my husband said, "Speaking of antelope, we have some really great shots of antelope that we took on AT WIT'S END our vacation. Get the lights. Erma." Before I could reach the switch one guest said his malaria was returning, his wife feigned false labor (she wasn't even pre!:nant ), an· other oouple decided to try a· trial separation begirming at that moment, and one .,.,.oman thought she heard her mother He charged that the Edloon calling. (Her mother had been Co. ha.! only made aude tests dead for eight years.) My hus--00 the emergency core cooling band and l both concurred, system. "They have ne ver "WM needs friends?" tested the total s y s te m • .1 We invited our minister to They've tested the parts," he the house figuring he was a said. "After 20 years of fooling man of God and welcomed around they're going to start suffering, but when w e testing." mentioned our 610 slides, he Slovak, a fonner AEC confessed he had arways been ernploye, said he had asked afraid of the (lark, especially the commission why tests ~' when the only light was that weren't made. "They were too . of a slide pror'ector, and left. · ~1..-y told ....... " · v;expenstve, uae ...... ,., As we saw hitn to the door Slovak suggested Americans 1 my husband obcerved, "Who \um to solar energy. Citing I needs a minister who has it a $300 million appropriation in for antelope?" by Congress to study solar We didn't tell mother abo.ut power, be said, ~·The energy tile slides unUI she was settled Crisis finally got w ot1 ·our I comfortably in a deep chair. tails to do something. ~ "Now we have a treat for "Five to 10 years ago we you," we said. "We are going should ·have looked into other to contribute to your systems." t knowledge of the antelope." ): Scorpio: Be Thorough She fought desperately to,-,-----:-:-:-== get out of the chair and said, RUffELL'S "I gave at the office." So, who needs a mother'! My husband doused the UPHOLSTERY WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 27 Pisces can appear to be daydreaming but if you try to take advantage o I appearances you rould be in ror a rude awakening. By SYDNEY OMARR Accent now is on friends and wishes. The two, however, may not go together. Key is to get rid of losing proposition. Hanging on to past would be an error. Know it and act like you IJmow it. affairs enter . picture .. Study proposed agreement, contract. Aquarius, Leo and another Scorpio could be involved. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 I: Be ready lot lights and began to .show the "'-y" w.- slides. I watched 386 slides n. lest of antelope nunps before 1 1922 ....._ "'"'· slipped quietly out of the l~::c:°'~'"~ll~-~~·~·~•~M~n:•:~ room. So, ..,,.ho n e e d s marriage? possible change of scenery. I-;;:;:-:-·-:::;;;;;;;;;;::--;-:;:;: Member of opposite sex could! ®% .,......~ 'ft play paramount role; Basic oatil ~~ ~ ~ FRANCIS- '\.,ORR J: To raise funds .fo r the Santa Arra Y,\VCA, the YW-Women's; Club will present a llincheon and fashion shOw 'at 11 Lni . Frtday, Marcb 1. in !he Ai.rporter Inn. Shower of Flowers is the theme which will be carrjed out in decorations col· lected by Mrs. Philip B. No rman (left) and Mrs. Tom Andrews. ARIES (~larch 21·April 19): Emphasis is on · process of selection. Refine and define -let others know what you need and expect. Be specific. Pay and collect. Deal with one v.•ho v.·orks behind the scenes. Be discreet. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Set sights on goal. A cc e n t ambitions. CI ea r a "'a Y emotional debris. ll1aintain i nde pendent s la nee. Professional superior wants to know if you can handle addition a I responsibility. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22 I: work. specific issues are involved. Keep appointments 1 concerned with health. ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19).: Accen t creativity, -individual style, dealings with persons who have "ytl\Dlg 3 Full Suvi<o Lecatlon1 fn Huntington Bo.ch PRESCRIPTIONS e CM'" Ac<:IVfth e Otll'flf'll9 Lit us ,.i111 YMI' ~I ,...-rlptllM .,rffFINE !'ATl(>NIHY . n.a·w,...,.. 1nvtt111w .......... = .. ••• Food Stamps Cut Disaster Pred icteCI longer eligible for t h e nutritional program. for which they would have been eligible would have provided $10 "'Orth of food purchasing poy,·er each month. TAURUS !April 20-May 20): Take initiative. tel older individual know that you do have life of your own to live. Be independent. not arrogant. Be understanding, creative and see in light of reality. Study Aries message. GEMINI May 21-June 20): You are able now to open areas previously restricted. There is light as well as proverbial heat -Capricorn person could play significant role. Emphas,Lze ability to separate fact from illusion. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Good lunar aspect n o w coincides w i t h long.range plans, ability to communicate. Study distribution process. CI ear away deadwood. Express yourselr in direct manner. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: What appears a difficult situation can actually be easily resolved. Key is versatility. Don't feel you l1UJSt adhere to only one method. Test, experiment. A.sk questions. Display intellectual curiosity. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Emphasis is on joint efforts, cooperation with mate, part· ner. Bo thorough v.·here legal ideas." Purchase of luzury ~ J,,., Am•• ... item could be on agenda. You l\ N1w P.t.P••s ~ By CAM, e11M; are due for surprise ---of ~I · Dr•"""' ,.,.,.., pleasant variety. Don't fight 111 5"' sll'wt ...... :. UWtos L.U.c ...,.._ progre'S.S. r Go With tide aDd MwnKntM '.Mll'toHr •· MWill .Jiil l.tlitl •tw•T 11,·lfll you succeed. l '"'"-.' • H•mlltM K>-Oa , •••• , Ill IU . CHYllllll ,, .... AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb.I ~~-~~~·~'~-:'.~~~~~~;;;;;;;:~;;;;!!!~~ 18): Stick to what Is solid:l- familiar. Wandering too far .-------------------...., afield might prove costly or embarrassing. Check values. Home, property, place of residence may be involved. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Short journeys, v i s i t s , neighbors and relatives are emphasized, more so than usual. Get feet on ground. Find out what it is you really \\>1illt to do. . PRE•INYENTOR · SALE state Senate Democratic Leader George M o s c o n e charged the Nino and Reagan Administrations with ''eon· triving to bring nutr1tional di-er'' to hundreds of thou· sands of Qilifomians no long· er eligible for federal food stamps. . "The Secretary has absolutely failed to give aiiy reason, criteria or explanation for his ruling. That ruling cuts off 286,000 aged, 14,000 blind and 216,000 disabled persons from the program. Those are the half million persons who receive social securit y benefits. They, like the rest ol. us, fa~ a difficult time in buying enough nutritional food each month." "Jl.·ow they are faced with the same 28 percent increase in meat prices, higher costs for virtually every item in I ,the marketplace and they are I------------------------------- cut off from ·eligibility fo r Senator Moscone, Olairman of the Senate Subcommittee 1'on Nutrition and Human food stamps. I""'•• "Our aged, blind and Entire fw eeds, challenged Secretary Health, Eduation a n d Welfare Caspar Weinberger to \.explain exactly vthy 500,000 potential food stamp recipients in Cnlifornia are no Senator Moscone estimated that the food stamp and donated commodities program Peering Around disabled -whose inromes are fixed -are the first to suffer in our inflationary spiral. They have been condemned to a diet of tea and toast -if they can afford that." Senator Moscone noted that the subcommittee has begun a study of the , bad effects of the cutoff of SST recipients. California is one of five states that was able to drop the food stamps for social security "'""'"'"lllll"'"""'""'""'"""""°"' ... °"""""""'Rl""'lll::.tCl!IJID-"'l recipients In the recent switch w from state to fed era l L A U R A HECKROTl'E, daughter of 11-taj. and Mrs. Robert Heckrotte of Huntington Beach. was among time since their graduation SI years ago in the Laguna Beach home of Zola Patrick Slaughter. administration. Senator ~1oscone's subcommittee findings will be reported to a Congressional CommitU>e \l:hich is. itself, deliberating the situation. f 12 young won1en making their delxlt to society during the las Duenas Debi..;tante Ball in Los Angeles. Arriv ing from Burke, S. D. was Katherine l\1iller Jury and driving from Long Beach to join them was Iris Cra,vford. Th c cla5.5Tllatos graduated•------------• I THREE fonner elassn111te$ were reunited for the first fron1 All Saints Episcopal School, Sioux Falls. · Mair Slaves, Go Free! tu ,...... ..... ,....,.,.. • ..., "' lllryen. ........... • • .... ef ..... Be ... .., ..... flte Cetf09 C•dy ......t ....... tMk. Let ........... .,., wfttl ,..,. ICltW ...,ti ... ..., p. ,.. ,,..._ _, fNek•• o., s.., c• ....., .... ...... -....... ,., ......... o..111 '*' .. , .... ..., ...... ..... ....... •• , ... ,_ w .... Nt ,.. ............ '" • ., ...., ........... ,.., k.ir ... , .. TM ..,.,., polwlW tW ~....., ..... ef Mtt Ht ffl ..... ,, t• ,...., •• ttl .. • ce• .._ •· We .. ..._ wyllats. A Httle Wt IMMt tH1 ... ftfY -JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING -tll64 ............ HllllllfffN .............. )334 JOI "· ...... llYd., _,..... -"'· ln-116,J MOW .o1 YOUI CONftflNDtCI ••• O"N DA.ILT ,,. .. I A.M. i. 10 P..lol.>--SAT. & SllHOAT, f lo 5 P.M t , ' SILVER BARS lllYtt' H1• IU-O'ltf 1~ hi Vlhlt Dlll'fnt TIM Piii 6 Monltl .. I Contldtr1rlll Corpor1te '"''" Or lmrntclllll D•Hv1ry LI lNTIJICO~flNINTAL INVlSTMIH'T COMPANY • H..,.,. '°"'"'' on .... ~Ii. n!• ·1-~"',.-',"/.iMTctil-i:tn•...--·I ,N..,_rt lttcfl. (I, 644·?410 CHEESE OF THE WEEK CITATION SWISS Re<JUlar ' $2.59 u.. 20 ~E. ~$439 OFF w .6.. Lb._ offer ~ Feb. 26 thrll March 3rd • 1Mt h .... ef.tt. ..... ._ ...... of ffle c._.. •ktn trocM. CftciHoR wt.el Swhl I• ... -..._ oW fw ''1 d wcsy-llt .... wtleelt. ,..._ ... from ... ty-. lt Is~ cwed ..... ,.., ... -. ,,.,_ .......... ----............... ..., ..... io ..... r .... -,....,. ff m~k~r1 w~rrm~. SPRING INVENTORY % off 3 BIG DAYS Feb. 26, _27, 28 Odds 'M Ends FINAL CLEARANCE $150o iiL 2 for '25.0.0 - G . cf OFONIO 5outh-oast lau,_.'..._'.--~•-l-'-..illl~;:_:_::_ ~ ............ COSTAMESA ... ~:;-,:;:::::.., -~~' , ..... "' .... ; • • -· ' -• I l -i- .. --. ~. ' • ~--. ---=.-,,, -.'!~--~ --- • . -. • • -• 'Tue~. Ftbruary 26, 1974 DAILY PILOT J,7 by Wm. F. lrown and Mel CCllSOll ... 1 • UA~~ TO l/Vt 1111rn 111 by Tom K. Ryan 0 COl\SE 1ll1S FATAL CHARM 9Y Vv!l/CH OS fX011C 6Y'PS'< l\OMEN ENCHAN1"1l>U FoflflGN OOYSJ Dr. SMOCK ..-, ' J • ' MUTT AND JEFF . ' -: by Al Smith 1' DON'T HAVETOGOI WOULD YOU MINP TAKING-THAT HAT OUT-= OF THE WINPOW'? " CICERO, WHY DIDN'T ' You GOTO SCHOOL? WILL veer WEAR IT·-·OR SHALL I SEND IT? PEANUTS by Emie Bushmihr .JUST TAKE IT OUT OF THE WINPOW·-IT ANNOY!f ME TDDAT'S CIDSSIDBD PVZZLI I ACROSS 1 Fomw ...... ........ l!I Brain ..... 10 Gr•y wolf 14 Arab prlnc .. 15 Boy'• nlckr\arne 16 In a line 17 Hotel eq>IOyts 18 Cltyonthl Oki 1D Principal 20 Kind ol bullet 22 MMi:e~ btilMIYe 24 Stl.mble 28 Hallowed :l1 Mlmmlze 31 Become .... 32 P0'1enll 33-..., ... 3S Comec:H.,. Bob""' 47 EnOce 61 Redeem . 52 Proce..ion owtk:-M Repute M Pf"IJ>OaHloft &9 lnfonMllOn 61Me~ f,O< a1n1ng 62 Flexible ... .., co<d &3 One thlt II adored 6' Ant • 66 Low ;rMif 39 Enclosed: 2 digit• 11 Praying words 88 Salmrnandtr figure 4'0 Eni<>Yable 67 Ctuetmeo 12 Capital of experience: Idaho 2 words DOWN 13 Poaaeued .. 2 0.CN&ed 1 Retelned 2 Ptnian poet 3Soaoo!I ol Latvia ~ &Udlng 5 Avowa 6 ArllUclat tanguege 7 Waler- "'°"Jed c:.rWn: 21 Retarding; "3 Assigned bp Muaicat wfll abbr. 44 Fruit 23 Fastened 46 T9r11POt-•lth rape _, 25 Make by flllhlon Pleat~ ~7 To ~ea 27 Lirge knife 48 Bugle can: 28 Mr. Var. Jamlnos "49 lrcny, e.g. 29 -:-le&M 50 Craft 30 :~y 5.1 Place~ a JUDGE PARKER HMISS .PEACH. MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS L'l\.£1 "I ;i-oer CJ>l.1'1" seeM TO Ml>i'E Ffl!ElolDS ! ~ 191\-IAT? by Charles M. Schulz by Harold Le Doux H! W"'1 IN TH! "'1lJAf.D fORCES, STATIONED IN VIETNAM! WAAEMAA THEN Dt5COVERED THAT MR&. eo"HDEH W/45 6!EIM6 ..... OTH!R .~! THAT'6 HOT Hl6 STORY NOW! HE CLAIMS THAT "t'OU INSISTED HE PLEAD GUILTY! by Mell '""'""'' 8 Tlnkera ··-to 34 Boundary l"Ml WIY markeri: 55 Ttwne: Bflt. Music 35 .courn .~ Stove YI+! -·• 1116 Dl'C -WI PIO n<f fTOllY ~ 1)4A'f C-• 9 Lib9raled 10 El!Pf•• -~-~.-.- • -' 36 Engllah CQn1>artmert compoaer 57 CHquea 37 12 montha 80 High In pitch ,. ,_ • l ' I f ! ' • DICK lRACY • \ "1KA ... NII'#.-, lfl!T'H, WHO, IYIJNTJMI fMI IAW A COPY ~'T ... OP'VfN'f,' WINT lllt~ltlc; ANll PWNCMIP rf ..•• "KEENO.·T\11-GlnAl" A• ME LOOl<tD 25 Vl!ARS A"'· ,','' ....... ~-1' by Chester Gould .. WSt..i...:r;M N01" s ut:tis: OF MY JtOl.I! M6Rf5- A"f "mii MOM&, .. rr .. by GeorC)e ~mont 1111 _,,,,,,_ l by Gus Arriola ~sM­ by Ferd Johnson ··,AN!> T~E El£CTJ>IC . TfPEWl>lTER $0%.' THE GIRLS -- 'fl 1·26 . ''Olli dear, just wbetl yea (etl you're begtuillg to Jolt Uke -Ing yoa're banded a mapzlae ftlltd witll glamorous falbloa ~11 ~ look at." DENNIS iHE MENACE i---• • • .. - ,, I)>. ' T,....,., r'°"~'Y 26, 1974 hamer's Crusa,d~--Wfu Second Base Jo,b . • . I 1' .. '' ,r, -0 1r t ~ tot out ot a ,.~ th \'ff: ' ~ Qc'\ t'd Int\~ ~ bMf.m"' J I t k fln'1\'\nllflt l'rn 1~ ~ bM1 trith n1y P'lll\~;>-... Wnll 1hJ1 ... "'' O!"'OI!¥ ~ tl'O~ ~~ '~ ~I .~1$. the Trlbt's 1'<111"'1 bi:lt tnf>tld<-r 61\bo :..i M )i;s ptf':ti'lf\&l ."":'.~1(-ki •in bid;, the! $e\'~M#~ ~- Rn • f..~~ H'9\rt~ ~ )Ii~. T ,'\: •. hl:\'f M tiif> in UJ'lff('Jl'ft'j un111 1~~ N.: ~ a1 Hi Cttbeu f'Stld ~tond.a,y 11 man\gcr ~ 'Aspromonte welcomed 3l pitdlen.,;~d C'ftchen., plus a few olher u.rly arrivals. "~tr problf'm last year," Brohamer ~ailed 1973 when he became one of JIWtl' lndlans pla,ying teC'OcM1 base, "was eolng lnro sprlllg training knowing I b>d • job. '"l'h1i year ••ill be diffettnt. No one has the jd> sewed up. There are four ci: fivt guys who ha\'e a chance, and l j~ ftiel 1 'm going 10 win it." Brobamtr \\"aS a longshot candidate In 1972, his rookie year, and wound up the regular second baseman after an outstanding spring training. He batted only .2.13 during the season, but caplW'ed everyone 's fancy with his aggressive style of play, at bat and afield. Last season he slumped to a .220 batting average, and drove ln only 29 ruru;. He Hnished the seaMm m06tly on the bench, or sharing the position ~·ith Tom Ragland and John J.o.A·enstein . "I guess l just wasn't prepared mentally," he now confides. hJ fell deep In my mind thlt tven if I got off to a slow stait, I wouldn't be taken out of the lineup. l found out different. "Thia year, l know if I don't do it right oU the bat, l'lt be silting on Ille bench. But l'n1 aware of everyone "''ho "·UJ be dbwn here, and the only one vlho can ou1htt MC; l! Lowenstein." Although Lowemtein "'iii be thiwn into the second ba9e battle, Brohamcr's strongest challenge is expected to come from Angel 11ennoso, who played shortsrop brleny with the Montreal E1poo. "I played against Bermoso,'' Brohamer said, "and I fed J'm every bit as good. l know 1 can oulhtt him.0 The other diallengm will be RoQlaoo. who batted .257 in 57 games wH"h !lie Tribe last year, and newcomer Dwain Anderson who has played with the Oakland A's, St. Loul.s Cardinals and Snn Diego Padres. "A lot of people told me 1 v.·as:n't as aggressive In 1973 as I was In 1m:" Brobamer charges, "but that won1t be.· !he case this year. In the fin! six• or seven games I went ~or-15 Md one of our coa'Chcs told me to wait !Ollgl!r In the baiter's box. "I panicked. If I'd hsvo stayed wlth1 It -atlacldng the ball !lite I did in 1972 -I'd have come out of II. That's\ the \\'ay 1·11 be lhia year." 1 Meanwhile, the popular Ultle lnlielder j known as •;Hammer" knows he bas his work cut out. Olson Raps Poll Bane Signs Coaclting Joh, Pen Exchanged Wilkes Unnoticed Twins Pact; Sa vs UCLA Coach Lakers .Play • t..tt.' .._,\;~.ES tAP) -Cnacb. Jabn. '4Sue if I "1\S Keith Wilkes, I'd begin Woodt!r:i .-.~ wtl:y cht stills ol to wonder a bit," the UCLA coach UCL< """"""<! Keidl 1l"iikos -said ol bi.< senior forward. "He made uonoti<t<! !>I< 1-~ d a.I .SIR It o1 !8 shots, inclu<ling 14 o1 15 against (Li:q; Beadi + ,... --his WaSiiogtm. and bad 17 rebounds." wbcW ~'!. rMQC>•ioa <ban 1"lU1d gtadly trade situatioos. -('.....,._,, ~.,; Src<lwn CalifGmia_ lie feels bis 2b2 team,. ineligjl>le for mea::W"...ie.. "25.. iD. a 1IW'd. •s4Mie1ic p&aeil!OO play because of NCAA pro. at ~~ mettillg al the Southern bac:ion. sbould be in the top five . They Cshl<n>o Basi>cdloll Wrio1rs. ano nmked !Jlli in the AP poll. ~ la! aft ~ · · tbt 1l'Oft "n"s diffio.i.lt for me to understand," ol ~ .. "iian••~Tlowtllidge Olson said of the polls that rank UCLA apm:; w~ sc.e as "as fine No. 3. '"I personally believe we deserve a.c: a?!'J' kl w:a:d 1~ r'n!!I" tad at l'SC." a great deal more than we've been The. 'Tro)a5.. who moved up from given... . l!:b u.t lOdl iD dlt As9eci.aled PreM Olsoo said ~dies around the J>C¥ poll ._ lheir ...im. i..t.r than agree lhar this Long Beach team "' ~ team J'l'ie b.:I at use .. said Boyd better than. preVIOUS years Y.'hen the ~ .-. ·---1· • t9ers were m the top five. ~ UU ~ -~ •T • Bqyd said his high-low· pool offense 1-Beadl -.... fonmd Clifton !lressing passing and movement i.< Pmdmel'. ,..ho sa:nd. 26 po1ot_s largely responsible for the TrojaM' Saturday .as &be eers w1appe:I up their success this season. USC is tied with fifth OJf'IWl('Jll\"e Pacific co.a Athletic UCLA for the Pacific-& lead both 9-2 As9Pic ;,rw., cbampitcwflip. was named in the conference and 20-3 o~erall by lhe wTitm as +m!venlly player ol UCLA aoo use play Cal and su;,,ord the ftd.. in -the Bay Area tllis weekend then 'll"oodeo said be bat no penonal "beef" meet Mareh 9 at the Spor<s Arena. over the -DI didnl mean lo "My sales p~d! to the team early demean Pmdater. in the seatm was pass 20 times before shooting. 1bey did it just to oblige Two Halos Unsigned F'inl baseman Mlle Epslein and infielder W"UlSUll'I Uenas were the only lmigned playen as the California Angels got ready to leave fu< spring !raining al Holtville. Epoteio .... due to talk with gel1el'lll manage< Harry Dalton today, the Angels said. . . lnterf erettce me but aflet' awhile they realized they could pas. the ball and get it back ... Boyd said the offense b re d <togetherness m the team, an offense that "does ·more than shows in the scorebook." The ~scor-.iioo"""·k mows tbe Trojans making 51 pen:enl ol tlleir "1ots, mostly ,from within 15 feet as the passing and running create high.percentage opportunity. Gary Carter. Montreal Expos catching prospec~ manages to exercise his bubble gum blowing talent while warming up with a pitcher dur- ing opening baseball drills Monday at Daytona Beach, Fla. Carter prepped al Sunny Hills High in FullerU>n. ORLANDO, Fla. F or m e r Westminster High pitcher Eddie Bane signed a 1974 professional baseball conitact with the Minnesota Tu•ills Monday, ,..P.rtedly for under f20,000. Bane, who signed last year off the Arizona State University campus for a SSS,000 bonus arxl recorded an ().5 -Sie990n;-oould be-farmed out to a minor league team. His -contract docs not guarantee him a full major league season. e LA Faces B11ffalo BUFF ALO -His team bas won three games in a row, but coach Bill Sharman knows the Los Angeles Lakcrs can"t afford to relax. 1be Lakers open a t~ame trip aga~ Buffalo ·tonight trailing Golden State by l lf.i: games in the Pacific Division of the National Basketball Association with 17 games left to play. It'll be on radio {KFI) at 6 o'clock. Los Angeles beat Chicago, 100-00, Sunday night far its third victory in three nights and Shannan s a I d afterwards that from now on, the Lakers must play every game like it was the sp-enth ga~ o( the cbampiomhip finals. The Lakers play Milwaukee Wednesda y nighl e NFL Expansion? AflAMJ BEACH -National Football League owners, with the 1975 Super Bowl site decided and the list of possible expansion cities cut to five, were to itake a bard look kday at upcoming negotiations with .the P I a y e r s Association.. 'I11e 26 owners opened their winter meeting Monday by reaffirming New Orleans as the site for Super Bo\vl IX, either in the Louisiana Superdome under construction or at Tulane Stadium, and by cutting the 24-city Ii& of possible expansion ciLies to Honolulu, 1.1emphis, Pbomix, Seattle and Tampa. e Dodgers Off LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles Dodgers left !or their Vero Beach. Fla. spring training site today with lhree roster players yet to come to terms \ltith tt'8! National League team. Outfielder Von Joshua signed his 1974 contract· Aionday but pitchers Don Sutton and Al Downing and catcher Joe 1''erguson have oot agreed to new pacts. Sutton, a holdout last year. is repartedly seeking $100.000 but will be in Vero Beach to negotiate while Ferguson will ~rt late because he is reoovering from a virus, the Dodgers said. · Pitcher ~like hlarshall is unsigned, but the hurler acquired from Montreal for Will ie Davis has agreed to terms and will sign his contract when he reports. Marshall is teaching at Michigan Staie and will Ml show UJ> for spring training Wltil mid·March, the team said. e Indiana Rolls BLOOMINGTON,· Ind. -Led by freshman center Kent Benson's 19 points and 12 rebounds, Indiana survived a second half comeback by 1.fichigan State and beat the Spartans 91-35 to remain atop the Big Ten basketball standings. The ~ers, ranked No. 10 in the nation, raised their conference record to 11-1 and eliminated the tH Spartans from any hopes for the conference ch;unpionship. e Vand11 Triumphs OXFORD, Miss. -Vand erb i It 1 s Conunodotes rode tt.e 26-point shooting of Jeff Fownes and a first half surge to dcleat Mississippi, 84-68, Monday night and preserve their ctumces for lhe Southeastern Conference b a s k e t b a 11 champioruhip. ~fourth-ranked Commodores remain in a tic for the conference lead with Alabama , which defeated Georgia, 9&-74. Coaches and sportowrlters have been known to second guess each other but there's one coach and one sportswriter who are the exception to that rule. 'Ibat's because they are -or be js -the same person. Ray Plutko, SS.year-old former Dally Pilot sports staff writer, is now the head basketball coach at Notre Dame High in Rlvel"5ide and hl5 11taol are playing El 'l'llnl 1onlgbt at Mission ·Viejo Higll in the first round of lbe CIF • playoffs. EX·HUNTINGTON BEACH HIGH STANDOUT JACK BROHAMER. Rooting Superstars Rote-A Familiar Name , . ' But in a Different Mold ROTONDA, Fla. {AP) -They're having to break out a new mold for t.he sp:irts superstar, and throw away all the old ones. Kyle Rote Jr. doesn't drive a block· long limousine nor entertain friends in an apartment of mirrors with a llama rug. He never owned a mink coat. He never had a business agent to negotiate $100,000-plus contracts. He looks like just another snub-nosed kid next door, looking forward to his first shave. He is clean-cut. modest anct mild-mannered. You have · to strain to pry a few words out of him. When the Y..'Ords come, they are measured. Fame and fortune hold a low rung on his scale of values. He has no desire to be a great sports hero, fascinating millions. Money and titles are not that important. He'd like to be a minister of some sort -at least an example to others. '1An athlete has a greater ministry ihan a preacher," says Kyle, who OJrrenlly is studying theology in a seminary. MA!nly, during this particular period, Kyle :is showing some of the world's grealest athletes how to be a champion. He is making a runaway of the 1974 Superstar competition. a unique , intriguing yet highly co m me r c i a 1 promotion aimed primarily at selling condominiums and television space. player v.ith the Dallas Tornado who might h~ virtually unknown if he didn't have the name of a famous football father, sy.·cpt three of his first four events and finished second in the .other J\.fonday for an almost insurmountable lead · in the t"·o-day, 10-sport test of superstar. He won the tennis. s~·imming and bowling competiton and finished second in1goll liehind Dick Anderson, the All-Pro safety ol the Super Bowl ctiampion Miami Dolptuns. Ile skipped the weightl ifting won by Franco Harris o{ the Pittsburgh Steelers ln a battle of muscle with fellow footballer player Simp60+1. Others jusl went through the mot.ions. After five events, graded on a scale of 11>-7+2·1 for the top finishers , Rote had a total of 37 points. Anderson was second wth 14 and pole vaulter Bob Seagren third with 11. Hanis and tennis ace Stan Smith were tied at 10, followed by CirlclnnaO's Pele Rose, Most Valuable Player in the National League, and Jim Ma.\iillian of the Buffalo B r a v e s basketball team, 8 each; shot putter Brian Oldfield and Simpson, 7 : basketball's John Havlicek of the Boston Celtics, 4, followed by the two foreigners , skier Schranz, 2. and speed.skater Schenk, I. Piutko swapped the pen for a piece or chalk and a blackboard six years ago and has since served as athletic WHITE WA SH CM..l lllfll WMITI director and coacl! for Marian High of Imperial Beach and Notre Dame. Plutto combined his coad!ing ability and sportswriter's imaginat~ to get the basketball program rekindled at Notre Dame High. He got some local doctors to kick in the dough lO outfit the team with blazers. He got a small school (600 studenrs) with a small budget to buy the paint. 'Illen he mrulted three players and an usisllu>t coodl to paint the gym and -the lloon .... a tm>month chore. Notre Deme bad struggled through a dismal 7·19 season B. P. (Bel<ft Pluiko). But a new coodl and a lmh coal of paint created a fresh outlook at the JitUe parochial insUtution. The learn responded wi th a 21.C ~ and most of tbe home games drew · capacity turnouts to the 9 O O • s e a t gymnasium. Plutko admil!I that coaching bas been his ftnt love from childhood. "I had a v.ttkend job at a netA'Spaper while J was in school and before I graduated. they offered me a fulllime position, he tells. "At that time there was a SJrplus ol leachers and f couldn't fmd the coaching job' 1 wanted so l V."tnt into joumalism." Plutm still keep! his finger on the keyboard, however, working weekends at the Ontario Daily Report. "It's my hobby and through it I can cover events like the California 500 or an SC.UCLA game," he adds. He also feels that having been on both aid .. of the fence has helped gain 1'Jblidty for his teams. "I ltnow what information to give and when to call neMpapers and that helps the wrllcr and US," he points out. Plutko never wrttes about his own teams and he never tries to .eo::nl guess the sportswriter:s wt» do cover his charges. He is in the happy position ol having his cake and eating It, too. And thal'5 frosting oo the cake these days. Again.st all odds, he is shaming such celebrated figures as football's 0. J . Simpson, baseball's Pete R o s e , basketball'& John Havlicek and funner Olympic ,;andoOts Holland's Ard Sd1enk and Austria's Karl Scllranz in Jests ol versatility and skill .. Young Rote, 23, an obscure soccer Emerson Downs 1Richey In La Costa Tournament · L...,.. bV ewnts 1., the llrtt 1 llve 1por11 t11 lhlll 1'74 S~llr COlfl!M:llllOll: Teilnh: Kvt• R°" Jr., 10 oolnts: Jim Mc:Mllltltfl, 11 Ptte 11.-. 4: Johll H1vllcP, 21 Kiri kllr•nt I. Doll; Dldt AllOtnon. 101 Rott. 7; 511,, Smllll. SwlorimlF!D: Rote, 10: BOI> SNgrtn, 7; Ander&00, 4; Smith, 'f: H1vllctll. 1, Wtl9tllllltl1111: Fr•"'° H1rrls, 10; 0. J . Slmp&00, 1; "-Uret'I. •1 ROM, 2: McMltli1.,, I. e-til'!GI: Rot~. 10: 8rl1n Otdfltld, 1; Smith, •1 Stl\enk, ii S.Chrani, I. Total ool11l1: Role 37; .Ar>d«tM 14, Stlif'et'I Jl, H1rr!1 IOI $mlth lC, RDH f, NKM"lltn 8, Qldlleld ~ 1. S mpi.o11 7, H1¥1leek 4. Scht41n& 2, 5chf!lk I. ' LA COSTA -Newport Beam's Roy Emeraoo surprl!<OO temperamental Cliff Richey · In three sets Moodlly In the first round ol a '50,000 W o r I d Olampionship Tennis foumament, 6-3, 6-7. lhl. . t Tom Leonard upset W l m b I e d o n d!amplon Jan KOOes ol Czec::hos1ovakia, (1.6. M. 6-4 in an earlier match. In other matcheo, Gerald Baltriclc o1 Britain beet Paul Gerken, f.2, f.7, 7·S; Roger Taylor of Britain defeated Haroon Rahim ol P~ldstan, 3-6, 7", IH. e Ellert Ad ll•nee• Crippled Cager Averages 21 Points Richey, one of the leading monel(. wlnners on the WCT tour, senecf erratk:e.11)' aOO was initated by several lineamen'• calls. After one deci.<lon in the eighth game ol !he third l!d, the Texan 81,lilily slammed ·a ball out of lhe st..itum. Emerson, playing only his secmd c:ompot!Uvo singles matdl in fOUl' moolbs, broke service In Iha! game Md oerved out the matd!. CHICAGO -Chris Evert advanced to the ~ round ol the pro women's tenois dri:q/t ltoumameot Monday by deleattog Pam Teeguardeo, w, M. Joining Ml.!! Evert In the -round """' Marina NavraWcva ol Ciedioolo. vatia, "1!o cl<leai.d &... Slap f.2, u , f.I, and KrlSQI Pl(oon • &-0, 7~ wtoncr over Terry llollada.Y. COLUMBUS. Ohio {API -Dennis V05S bas a left clubfoot, a chipped right kn<ecap and walks with a limp. Despite !hose handicap<. the Port Clinton lfigh School junior averaged more than 21 points ln 18 regular season basketball gall"'5 lhls season. "Jle's just a fantasUc story. l'\'C' never _, lll\)'1hlng like him." said Dave Link. Port CllntOn's 10-year cbaching veteran. "He never says anything about hls handicap< and glveJ you 150 pcr001t all ol the Ome," Unk .. id. 'l1le road tolfard high Jdiool stardom hu been lonrtt for the f.foot·2 11, 170- pcmtl v!'"' tfi>n the DOl'llllt yOt11gst<.r. • It started wilh six operations before he 1A'8S a teenager. His coach said Voss Js a pure slmter and the Michigan nallve achlcvcd that label with endless hours of practice in his driveway at home. "l decided l.o do something about it when I didn't make the tlgllth grade team," Voss recalled via telephone. ... "So 1 just shot !he ball for a !orig time at home," hr said. 11 l had three basketballs: I •oold I'll two in a clothes dryer to keep lhe+n wann while I shot with lhe third 011<." His effort.I pa id olf. Be made the Slerling Heights, Mich.. reoerve learn last year, and be •-as a varsity starter "At first, I would get hit in practice rll!ht away this seas>n wllh Port Clinton. and haw to slt down and rub It . unUl \'oss scored more than 30 points three the pain left. I didn't ltno.,. I! was times and surpassed 20 points six other chipped until 8 couple of ....a ago," times In an If.game ......_ "The mo"' pressure on him , the heller the grllty player said. he lit .. It," his coach said. "I've seen "NOW I have Ice tr<atmeo!f before three players guarding Dennis and he'll a game and whirlpool treatments fall away from the basket, let ny .. nd allet'ward. It doesn'I burl anymore," swish the ball. he said. • "lie still has o problem when he VOOll doesn't consld.,. h 111! s •I( com'" dOvm on hiJ left root. Ht" juat haiillcaPl>ed. He prelerrlo''"1"1k-11bou g ... do•~ m a pile on the Ooor when the pencinnancos ol other Port Clinton It happens ." Link said. players. Voes said be chipped his kneecap a "MJI leammatol are really unoe!Osh ," couple of yean ago 1\'hile playing the he said. "'Ibey 1ooi out for me more game. -tbh llloy bave to.".. · t • - Fellow Austnllan Oweo Daviclaoo heat Y-laYlan Zeljiro Franulovlc 6-.l, M, aoo Boro Jovanovic fared no better· than countryman Franulovtc, losing to Dictt Stoctloo. W, f.I. Palrlcto Comejo of Chile deleated Roy Barth, f.2, !hi. ' e Ashe Breezes BARCELONA1 Spain -Artltur .\&he heal Colin Dibley ol Australia, M , 7-6, and-Vladlml~k-ol-Giecho81ovakl defeated Juan Ignacio Mun1Anola of Spotn, w, V.C In tie final two matches cl the _.inc round ol a fSQ,000 World Oiamplonlhlp Teruils t o u r n a m e n t l+londl1ll!CIL l Cage Rankings 1 _, __ _ What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEM IEC Thl.s weekend marks the end of the Canadian honker goose hunting season in Southern C&Jl!ornia. After Sunday, hunters will only be allowed to shoot snow geese. The goose population arewW~land Is al Its highest point, reports John Osterkamp or Newpoli Beach and Brawley. Hunters working the fietp, "with decoys and employing patience are bagging their honkers with Utile effort. OSterkamp added that duck hunting is a bit on the slo\v side for most public and private shooting areas on the south portion ol the sea. .. New flights of sprig and widgeon have moved into parts or SO.them Calilomia and hunters report an Increased bag or both specie d. ducks. Most of lbose clubs who shoot on a regular basis have seen an increase In the duck population during the past week. Cold wcalber, and finally, freezing temperatures In northern states have forced the late migrating ducks to seek warmer conditions. The remainder of t he waterfowl season should reward scatlergunners with gocxl duck hunting. Unattached hunters can still take advantage of open water at Big Bear and Baldwin lakes in the San Bernardino mountains, but should eicpect to face rreezing weather with strong winds. Big diving ducks are now rafting up on the twq large lakes and hunters constructing blinds on points are getting in some good pass shooting. Other lakes in Southern California who offer hunt- ers a ch a n ce. at some good shooting are : Vall,. Henshaw, Cuyamaca, Irvine, and the San Diego Lakes. Shooting at Wister and the Kem National Wildlife refuge has been on the slow side with hunters averaging just over a duck and/or goose per gun. Most of the ducks being downed are either sprig, teal or spoonies, with the bulk of the geese being snows. Reservations lines are loog at both the popular state operated shooting areas. but most hunters are finding a spot to shoot prior to sunrise. Dur k llunllng h1 Jtle xlr o Good llunlers returning from below the border report some good shooting. Hunting along lbe riven. on lak.ts and around potholes bas bttn consistent for llmlls of big ducks. Geese are also being taken In good .numbers farther dov.-n on the mainland slde. The season in Mexico will run \\'ell into l\larcb. and bunting should reach its peak In February . al which time waterfo\\·I start making their retum trip to Canada. There are a few In- dividuals offering package hunts lo Mexico and firll Umers should check wilh Mexican officials to make sure that they are legal and have all tbe right papers and permita. Trout Providing Best A~tion Fresh water angling Ls a bit on the slow side, but trout fisbermen are doing gooa on those lakes stocked regularly. Most every lake in Southern California has some sort of stocking pro- gram in affect currently. but those wilh heavy weekly plants are attracting the most angler.i. Ba!s fishing Is rated as very slow in-most Soulhland lakes as cold water and lack of good bass fjshermen has been respon· si ble for very fe"'' l::irgemouths being checked in at the docks. Look for bass fishing to pick up dur ing Lhc first part of Febru- ary . whrn some of the lakes in San Diego open up. Bass fisherman should concentrate on deep \\'lltcr struc· lures and employ spinner baits and .,..·orms, both ""'orked very slow. if they \\·an t to entice bass to strike. Bass are difficult to get to take any Jure during winter months and most lures have to be brought in front of their noses .in order to get them the least bit interested. For this reason, anglers should wort a productive spot a number of tbnes prior to givi!ig up on it and moving on. A few large rainbow trout are still being caught near Willow Beach. but for the most part action In the big fish section of the river is slow. Bass, BOllitO lllUlng . A rontlna<d good bite lrom baH and bonito Is blgllllgbllng the coastal salt water flsblng picture. Dana Wharf party boa l1 are returning to the docks wtlb good catches of surface and bottom feeders. As Jong as ocean temperatures slay \\'here they are, anglers can expttt mL1ed fishing on boals runn ing out of all tbe landings along tbe South Coast. Long range fishing out or San Diego Is consistent for good catches of yeUowtail, "itb an occasional trip retuming "'Ith yeHowfln luna and waboo in the llsh bolds. Load! are llgbt and moderate sea1 are ma.kln1 for \lery comfortable fishing trtps. Tbe fuel crtslJ bas not cat down on the number of trips beln1 ran or. scheduled, 11 all the landing• tn San Diego report that ample fuel ls avaUable to provide Soulhlanders with lhelr cbolce of party 00.ll and flsh!Dg trlpi. Complete Basketball Playoff Schediile Seven Orange Coasl area basketball teams brace for the CIF playoffs. "'hich begin tonight in 3-A, 2-A nnd 1-A circles. San Clemente's Tritoos play ~ to Workman in 2-A competition and El Toro High's Chargers play Riverside 's Notre Dame High at Missioo \'iejo High in 1-A ho5t11ilies. Friday, the first round of the 4-A. along \11i th continued actlon in the other division!, begins. Friday's play involving area quintets in 4-A will be at Fountain Valley, Huntington Gymnastics ' DOH YOUI CAK IDLE IOUOH? 1 , TuKday, Frbru01ry 26, 1974 DAI LY PILOT llJ El To:r-o, Titans Duel .... Final Poll : HB, Vikes 3rd, 4th Ora~geLoop Stars Named * SC Faces Workman '!be final CIF 4·A baskt<ball pOtl finds only one change fron1 tast wee k as the top seven teams finlshed out the regular season with a pair or last-week. victories. League champion El Dorado and runnerup San Clemente don1inated the official All-Orange League basketball team ·as chosen by the Daily Pilot. Trito11s Have Height Ed ge In P layoff THE STEEL BELTED RAql~Lj- a ,DOl ....... PlUlt IWlllUll ..... .. """'"'-· 1..,...,,Rio.M ...... -'°"'"'can • CIF Foes Each Have 14-10 Marks By ROGER CARLSON Of Hie DMl"t PH•I Stiff The Orange Coast area's HWlUngtoo Beach and Marina finished No. 3 and No. 4 with their glossy 23-2 and 25-1 season records. HunUngton Beadt's on I y losses were to h1arlna by tv.·o Polnts and Katella by ooe point. h1arina's setback was at Huntington Beach. The final poll reflects the toughness of the CIF with !iix different teams accorded 100 points or more. Long time observer are un· able to recall a poll with so many teams receiving heavy support. In addition the first four teams were accorded first place votes by the 20-memQer panel. Other Orange Coast area tearM accorded honors Include f'ountain Valley ( 1 t th in the 4-A) and t:I Toro ll2Ul in lhe l·A /. •·• PositiOll, Tnm, lltttnl r111. J p,,11>' VtrOt~ 11~1) Id 1 lll'tllurn Del (1J·11 1 7~ ]. ~tunli119lon 8t1cll 12J 21 l/J •· M;irln• <2S·ll 14' s. (re•cenla V•ll•Y 122·3) 107 6. P1•&0efla !71·•1 100 J_l':.cltk Ut.31 _72 1. Torranc• (2'.1--tl 53 9. Compton Ol·Sl tt,, 10. Buenl (2-111 O!ll1r1: SarT!1 ll1rber1 f1Nl 111 FGUnl•l(I .ll1H1y 111·11 t ; V.-n1ur1 111- 71 7; lniy 119-5) 31 Lowell (11·6) 1. •• 1. San Gfib'11l C2ll·H 200 2. MornlnvMde U'll 110 1. Klllltl (22·') IP 4. G1111SM C2:Ml 131 S. l"!lltwOOd {21·7) IJO 6. P1lm Sprint• (20·$! •~ 1. Cam1'1Uo C:I0--6l 76 e. Pararnounl (21141 •• t . S.nlt•!JO Ot·Sl ' ,." 10. SI. Monie.I (211-51 Olhlrrl' LOI AllOI lllol) 10: S1nt11 M1rl1 OU/ t: Collon (16ol) ,.1 Nor!ll 11:!~•$10! 16·7) '1 Tu$1!n ( 1 .. 1: Eo;igewocd (II.a> I. ,.. I. ACll>Url !11·1! ltl 7.. Walnut C2~1J l tJ l. Cl!'frllo• !2•·21 162 '· H1mu (lt-51 •31 S. AlUMI (21 ... ) 91 6. llr1wt1y (11-·0 •I 1. El Dorado (1M l 76 I. L1wnd1le 113-91 I• 9. M1yf1lr OMJ ,.20 10. 8~ (2Ml Ot her-= Yuc1lpe (11-SJ 11: SIMI c11r1 (1'"41) 1'; ""Jr;' O•lt l\MI 11; Ttfn911 Cir, 11~12 11 LI C1n&e11 (16-9) 2; Sin Mlrlno II ) I. •·• 1. Et1!f'IO!'t 2. BIO 811r !. WMMNI Chr1'111n 4. P1so ll:Cdft S. C1rpint1rl.1 a. 8..nnll'ID 7. Bii'-01'90 I. Al11oellder'o t. P111dlnl Poly 10. Tff!ICll.IPI 11. BlMlocl 12. El Toro 13. E""'"1n11 14. Notr. 011ne {Rl....,.,ic») 15. K..-rt V•HtY 16. RlY.,llde Chrlsl!1n 17. MlrY Stir ot 1t1e Se1. El Dorado, league champion for the second sea- son in a row. had three players selected, two of then1 first team selections. The sante held trtle for San Cle- mente, which finished a ga1ne behind Sonora after losing in the final game of the season .. Jim Deweese. an all·purpose 64 forward, was selected player of the year after leading Sonora to 13 straight league wins after an opening game loss to San Clemente. The aggressive senior was at his best in the clutch. as evidenced by a 3l·point scorin g nig ht in a critical re1natch win over San Cle111ente. San Clemente's Bob Yoder and Dan Dodd were fi rst teaJn picks. and center Ted Kalata a second- ter choi ce atter pacing San Clemente to the best ba ketball 111a rk in the school 's history (18-6). And El Dorado's Nash Rivera was nan1cd league coach of the yea r fo r capturing 13 wins in a row after losing the league opener at San Cle1nente.· Other Orange Coast area cagers selected included Laguna's Beach's Dave Kiesselbach, J.Jniversity's Paul Si1non and Kevan Peck of Dana Hills. All·Or1n9e Le1gue First Team Ployer, School Bob Yoder, San Clement e Kevin Jfeenan. El Dorado Bob Hook. Sonora Jin1 De\Vecse. El Dorado Dan Dodd, San Cle111ente Ht. 6-2 6·2 6·3 6·4 6·~ Class Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr Avg. 16.1 16.'7 16.1 17 .!i 11 .5 Second Team Paul Simon, Uni versitv 6·2 Dave Kiesselbach, LagUna Beach 6· I Sr. Sr. Sr. Sr. Jr. 14.3 15.6 10.5 15.3 14.5 Ted Ka Iota. Sa.n Clemente 6-7 Kevan Peck, Dana Hills 6·7 Tyrone Branyan. El Dorado 6·5 Mu stangs ·Nailed, 5-3 Tustin High's n.llers nailed the Costa Mesa Mustangs, 5-3, l\1onday afternoon in non- Jeague baseball at Tustin. l~clief pllcher l\1ark Nail came in ~·nh the bases loaded and two out and got the last l\1csa batter on strikes to preserve the lead after Steve Bernhardt's double and lwo walks had put coach Jim Hagey's A-fesa crew within striking distance. 1\Jstin's Scott Denny had a solo homer in the fifth inning. Net Results na·ve Bernhardt had the only other ei:tra base hit for Costa Mesa, doubling in a ru11 in the second inning to give l\fesa a brief 2-2 tie before the hosts came back to lake the lead in the bot101n of The th ird frame. C111t.1 Mff/' T111tln Cffll MINI Ill ··'""" , 0 0 0 lc•ni .., '""""* • I I 0 I 0 1 1 2 1 0 0 0 • 0 0 2 ! •• ' .. 11 1 2 0 2 • ' 1 I o 1 t 1A 11 ' 2 .... ll 110010 0 -1111 21001111-1 1 1 Ofl ,\~(.I CIJUN Tl fl ADlffT IL l PHO.~ l SlllVIC£ ,.,c Chevrolet Caprice Clas.sic. Why settle for something else? In a time of turned-back thermostats and lowered speed limits, some say we must also tom· our backli on elegance, lower" our taste, and settle for something else. _ Why settle for anytliing else when you can settle into a Caprice? If your needs include spaciousness and your pre!erence dictates class, Caprice should· make sense for you. Caprice, the uppermost Chevrolet,is a distinguished car, soft and comfortable to-sit..inr smooth and quiet on the road. Why settle for something else when you can enjoy the Caprice Classic at yo ur local Chevrolet dealei"s 1 .. - • \ . . .. ' . ... • • • 20 DAil Y PILOT Tu.t$dl)', February 2&, 1974 \f ' Dive1· Guilt}r Croce · Star Alter Death d11ege Groups PUBUC NDnCB •IC'fiTM>V• IUll••U lllAMI IT.t.T .... NT , .. ,.. ...... ,.,40'! ....... WtlMl9 I I l ' • ' • • In Fraud· SAN DIECO CAP! -One of lhe diV<rs who tried to recover treasure from the mmken liner Andrea Doria last year has pleaded guilty to cllarges of ID.!klng ! a I s c statements ln an oorelated Incident. O!ristopher J. De Lucchi, 22, of San Diego was charged in an alleged plot to dcCraud the federal govemneol Prosecutors contended that while De Lucchi was a Navy petty o!!icer here. he took •t.370.71 worth ol electrical equiJSllent after obtaining-it with government requisitions. e .tlarti11 Plea LOS ANGELES CAP) Dean Marl.in Jr., 2'l-year-0ld son of the entertainer, pleaded innocent Monday to a charge or illegal possession 0 f firearms. Known as ''Dino,'' young Martin was ordered to appear for trial April 23. He was LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jim Qooo ""' killed in a plane crash last September at the ·age ol 30 before many people koow his name. fie now has two albums topping t h e nation's sales charts, a ~elevision special about to be released and two nominations for the music industry 's highest award, the Grammy. His Jl"'1llu"'°"' success Is the sour<e ol grief, anger and pain to the men who worked lO nurture his career, record producers Tommy West and Terry Cashman. . "IT MAKES l\IE reel very helpless,'' says West, who was Croce's closest friend since colrege days when Ibey sang together in glee club. "It's like a guy in the Olympics making a perfect dive and just before he hits the water, .the camera stops." Cashman and West encouraged Croce to record his biggest hits, "You Don't Mess Around With Jim" and ''Bad. Bad Leroy Brown." Cashman and West \Vere here to see the finished product of a 90--minute TV ( J . special in which lh<!y appear. s la le -The show, "A Tribute to Jim .....__ ___ _ UPI T"9pMN SUCCESS -NOW Singer Jim Croce Croce," will be aired on 120 stations across the nation via syndication in March. THE SllOW HAS extensive colD• lllm ol the mustachio<d. craril'.faeed, gm~Umoroct croc.. 'lhtre .... lllm$ ol him. performing, telling joke:1 and romping in Che f!I"" with his wife, Ingrid, and Ulelr now !,-year-old 1101L The family shols are hea:tbttalrers - scenes of a ~ lather showing his son how to smell a flower. Croce's death ts barely ~ in the sh:>w, arw:t Cashman and West agree that morbidity ;,, not what bas made Croce a star now. "People are just beP>ning to see -what Jim was all abcut," says West. .. The recordo he made showed about 20 pemnt of what be was." THE REOORIJS represe""'1 a struggle oo Croce's part. to re:fme a style of his own. Foe yean, he had been "just a folkie," say ht,, producers. His first record album in the fo]k vein was a flop and diminished his a:riidence. ''He lost his will to work; he moved back to Pennsylvania and withdrew," recalls West. For a ·time, Croce worked as a truck driver. In 1970, ea.bman and West introduced Q'OCe fo_a_ Yt>Ul1t guilari51 Maury Muejheisen, and togelhe< they recorded some tapes. "We both knew when we heard the tapes that Jimmy di>cov•red bow to make hbnself soi.ind wlque," says Csshman. "Working w Ith NAME in the NEWS Ma'"Y he f<uid new conls and began writing about wb$t be wu." !lllJEUIEISl!N WAS the guitarist 00 the . reocri that pu\ Croce In the top .10· - "You Don't Mess Ammd Wtth J. .. un . His career began to take off. "We knoew a week before he died that Jim was going ito 00 a gigantic star," says Cashman. "The third album was gri:!at. TV started to Wlderstand. v.·hat he was all about." A Croce ballad, "Time In arrested Jan. 16 by Treasury Department agents who said he had eight machine guns and an anti·tank gun. A spokesman says the weapons were part of. a hobbyist rolleetion. New Dump Site _Hunted .. e Priso11 Deatf1 , SUSANVILLE (AP) -Two inmates are being held for questioning in the f a t a 1 stabbing of ooe man and injuries to three others in a dormitory fight at the state prisoo at Susanville. Prison Supt. Harold Watts did not release the names of the suspect.!. He identified the dead man as Randy Bishop, 26, who was serving a six- montJHo..lS-year term for a San Bernardino C o u n t y burglary and parole violation. e Oil Ballot SACRAMENTO (UPI) Senate Leeder James R. Mills I has until June 't1 to submit I enoug1I signatures to qua!ily for the November ballot a I ~ proposed initiative placing lhe l1f, oil industry under s .tat e '1f regulatioo. Seoietary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. Monday set the deadline fw the San Diego De~al to produce the required 3 2 5 1 S 0 4 voter signaWres. " I - I :i; I r • e Bus Reeord LOS ANGELES CAP). Last Sunday's !km! bus fare attracted 369,165 riders, the SOUthem California Rapid Traosit District reports. 1be di.strict, which operates no;t heavily in !As Angeles County but also runs in adjoining Orange. Riverside and San Bernardino coonlies_, has oifered ll}e bargain rate to attract more ~ eKnowland -OAKLAND (AP) -FWJeral services for fonner U.S. Sen. William F. Kn).2.;wla nd , publisher and president o! the Oakland Tribune, will be at 10 a.m. Thursday in the First Congregational O:turch i n Oakland. The body of the influential consiervative Republican, an apparent suicide, was fowid Saturday near the edge of the Russian ruver behind his vac.alion home at J\fonte Rio, 75 mi1es north of S a n Francisoo. e Forgery Plea SAN DIEGO (AP) -The fonner directoP of a rehabilitation project tor ex- convicts has been Sentenced to a year in jail after pleading guilty to forgery. Robert McKinney, 3 7 , admitted forging names on government an ti poverty dlecks and project JOVF. time cards. He said he used the money .as an emergency fund f« ex.-conviclS. evA Prote•t LOS ANGELES CUPll A group of veterans protesting heal th scrvices provided -by the Veterans Administration J\1onday won the support of a unaon local representing g'""""""'1 cmployes. For Lethal Waste Matter By TIIOMAS D. EUAS It was little noted when an old stone quarry n e a r Riversi de was closed last yea r to the dumping that had gone on there for years. But some Southern Califontians may have good cause to remember the occasion. The Stringfellow Q u a r r y north of Riverside was one of just seven Class 1 dumpsites in the Southland - siteS where industrial wastes and pesticides .so pois:onoos they cmoot be put in ordinary landfills and sewers o r through ocean outfalls come to rest. INDUSTRIES IN the region produce between 500,000 and a million galloos per day of such wastes, including cyanide and various heavy metals. The first area to feel the impact of the quarry's clos~ has been the high desert country between Victorville and Twentynine Palms, Five dry Jakes there have now been singled out by the Santa Ana IUver Watershed Pl~ Agency and the state Division ci Mines and Geology as ·possibilities for future sites. More than one new dump '\\i.ll probably be n ee ded eveotually, because several of the other Class I sites in Southern California also are nearing capacity. THE PALOS VERDES Peninsula site operated by the Los Angeles County Sanitation District has but one year to go before it is filled, while the two Class 1 dumps in San Diego County, both near Chula Vista, also are almost full. In slightly better shape are the Mission Canyon a n d Calabasas landfills the !As Angeles County d i s t r i c t operates in the Santa Monica Mowrtains and one in the Simi Valley run by Ventura COunty. What happens when these sites are filled? "IF THERE ARE no new sites aixt we doo't provide a means !or industry to dis-pose rL. Its wast.es, we're asking for a lot of illicit, unoontroUed dumping.'"" said Dmald Harriger, c h i e I engineer for the Santa Ana River planning agency. "When t he Stringellow Quarry was closed. there was a lot of roadside dumping by truckers. The.5e WlStes then find their way into the groundw.W supply and can seriously pollute It.'' WhUe much of Soutbem C31ifornia's water su pp ly comes from outside t h e region , many aras still depend heavily on Underground supplies for drinking water. So illegal dumping could create a health hazard. zones v.'here most mines are located would provide leaks and Ule open quarries available are not big enough." The report adds that some old mines shouldn't even be considered b e c a u s e of potential future profits to be reaped from them if Uley are reopened by new mining technijlues. THIS LED THE geologists SOUTHERN CAUFORNIA FOCUS ID recommend the high desert, Gray said. "We're oot trying t.o push .something off on the de~ert," Gray added. "In fact, I own land in VicUJrville myself. But we're all in this together and we can't have these wastes dumped in odd places." ln fact, the dumping could not be imposed on the desert easily. Any such dumping '\liould require permission from either the Lahontan or the Colorado River regional water quality control hoanls. And the federal Bureau of Land Management already h a s tentative plans for preservation of some of the dry Jakes mentioned a s possibilities. ALSO , LEADING conservationists say they're considering wbethe!' t h e y should take an actlve role in opposing the new dump sites. The Sierra Club bas taken no position on the issue, but its oesen~-COifimiUee met this mmth to discuss it. "It's safe to say we'll be looking at th;. situation with skepticism," said Larry Moss, lhe dub's Southern Calilornia representative. The dub already sects to push industries into recycling their most toxic w a s t e products and Chis drive may be accelerated. Retiring , William E. l\liller, 59, Who ran for vice presi- dent on Barry Gold· water's 1964 l\cket, is retiring from public office. He's stepping down from his post a s chairman of tile Niag- ara Frontier Transit Authority. Blast in Nevada's Desert May Sway _Vegas Buil,dings YUCCA FLAT, Nev. (UPI) -The Atomic Ene rg y Commission will detonate an underground nuclear explosion Wednesday which may sway high rise buildings in Las Vegas. Two mills, two mines and a club in Beatty, Nev. will be evacuated just before the explosion ocairs at 10 a .rn. POT, the AEC said Monday. The nuclear device will be lowered 2,103 feet down a vertical shaft at the test site, about (K) miles north of Las Vegas. The explosion witl be In the 20 to 200 kiloton range, the AEC said, indicating a maximum power equal to 200,000 too! ol TNT. e 1nror• rfcked NEW YORK (UPI) Moving rapidly at laSt, jury picking in the Mitchell-Stans obstruction of justice trial reached a point today that could bring swearing in or the comp l et ed panel Wednesday. However, there was no way lo predict whether the pace would continue at the rate set Mooday, when II out ol 17 persons qtreSlioned were ac<:epted as qualllied juror P(OOpecll. The defendants, f o r me r Attorney General Jolm N. Mitchell and former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans, spent the entire session Monday out of the coortroom. e Guilty Plea ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) Frederic W. "Bill" Procter, 51, heir to the Procter & Gamble Trust, has pleaded guilty in federal court to two counts of possession o f marijuana. U.S. District Judge Richard Duncan Monday ordered a (IN SHORT ... ) of Appeals Mooday, arguing for a reversal of a ruling by District Judge Gerhard A. G.,.ll, who refused to order Nixon to yield the tapes. eGold Heist RENO, Nev. (UPI) -Six men wh> allegedly stole more than a ha1f million dollars in gold from the nation 's second largest mine were arraigned here on charges of conspiracy to violate federal regulations. U.S. magistrate Rt1.%ell Pike of Reoo Monday set bail at $5,000 each for ~f a r v i n Rassmussen, 43, Paul NDrtioe, 6t, and Samuel Gallegos, 29. Released on their ow n recognizance by U.S. magistrate Jack Ames of presentence investigation and Elko, Nev. were Don a.-1 d aJlowed Procter to remain Copen, 23, David Snowberger, free under $15,000 bond. 29, and William Bennett, 29. Procter. who liv~• I n e Exet!lltlon retlrement at Cape Canaveral, was arrested last fall in a ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) roundup of 15 persons. -A Communi st group claims it executed the wealthy ~ • Deaths Drop year-Old uncle of the governor ol Guerrero state.after bolding WASHINGTON (AP) -The him for a month . federal traffic safety director A letter signed by the 23rd reports that deaths on the of September Co m m u n l s t nation's ttighways w e r e League said Re y m u nd o reduced by 23 percent In Soberanis Otero was shot "!or January, the lint month ol being a bourgeo;,,." the natklnal mandatory SS--'------- miles an hour speed limit. _DJ-. Ja111<S l>. Gregory, administrator of the National Jligbway Traffic s a r e t y Administration, said Monday there w~ 853 !ewer deatbl oo the road 11111 month than In January a year ago. ' ANIMAlogic1$'.,..,.,. Dr. Marc Stretten. :i spokflllllWl foe Loc.11 11161 of the American i·edcratlon of GcMJniment Employes, said -"--'•-,,,..,..IW!-wupported the -aim• ABANDON ED ~n~'ES and depleted st.one quarries have ~Hy been the best sites for Class I dumping. Federal En v·1 ronmental Protection Agency regulaliOns • 11 ow construction of dams to keep lhe wastes from escaping llbove ground, but each slte mum have a nn1.ural barrier "'"'8th it to keep Poi>oos out of Ute grow\d water. e T•pe• Solfflht WASHINGTON (UPI) Conliouq lb seven-month oltemjlt to get President Nixon's Lapes, lhe Seoate Watergate comm!ttte says ol the prt)1.<11WS. • ~ e Nete Dlreetor r SACR,AMt:NTO !UPI) - GOv. Rona.Id Reagan has b -named Anthony L. Palum bo, Sacramento. e i t c u t 1 v e dlrectl>r ol the new Office of CrimJnol Justk>e Planning. Pafwnbo, 44, a Republican , bu .,... a opodal assistant to the Go ....... =~ • "In making our study we considered old mines, pits and quarries," said .CJUfton ll. Gray. the stale'• c h I er geologlsl for S o u t h e r n CallfonUa. "But the fault ·--- • Ibey "would prove o r immense, perllapg decisive, value in determining the extent ol malfeasance In lhe e1ecutive branch." The commlttte llled • 40- -brief in lhe U.S. Court a Bottle," was u.ted as the ••i l'IA SPAAV, :rM tJ .. '""· ~ tNtl\-C•ttfrorftl• O.'lid It. Tka. lM ...... nt Wll\> C.,._ cM1 Mal', C1UIOl"fll theme ot • 1V movie. ---Convene Petit de4 VII... M# Awnldl 0. P'll~ lllllll .. ,111, C1Hftrl'lll Personal appeorance dale• incre....i. one n!ch~ c1oAlng • eo1lege date in Lou;,,Jano, •he decided to Ry the 75 miles to Te1as fur the nelt !!how For ........, >!Ill unknown, the light plane he rode slld off the runway and crashed Into a tree. Dead lrlside the plane with Croce w"' the !rtend who changed his career, guitarist Muelhelsen. CASHMAN AND West are running out ol untelea8ed Croce material, and the third Croce album is probably lhe last. 'Ibey have begm producing other artists -Mary Traven Dion -one. ol Dloo and Ute BelmCllits; and a singer named Henry Gro!s. They've ai.o started perionnlng. One ol the toughest last obligations they will fulfill for Cfoce is attending t h e Grammy awards ceremony Saturday. "If we win a: Grammy, It's going to be hard mt to have Jimmy there," says Cashman "It's going to hnrt not to be able to say, 'Thank you, Jimmy.' " GordOn Liddy Ousted From Wire Services c.onvicted Watergate conspiralor G. Gordon Uddy was disbarred from practice before the U.S. Supreme Court following a parallel action taken in New York State. The court suspended Liddy on Nov. 19, and gave him an oppor1wlity to a r g u e agaiml disbarment bu! he did oot file any papers. Liddy was admitted to the New YOFk Bar in 1957. He was disbaJTed there after Tlllt biltl-11 cllllducttct ll't' 1 Otflttll ptrtntrtlllP • PAI.II Ml Vt11t 1k1 Pti.tl I . 4fl VIHI Thll 1t1~t w11 flltd Vt I 111 fll9 Slgnups ror lnfonnal grou.p c;o;in,., clerk ot 0r111Dt coun1, Dfl Ftllrvtl'V "' lt71 ' d1scussioos at Golden West AltllllUCM, ... VALLI .. \ ~n ~=-'I~-Beach lltrlATRA. Ah'I• • VJUef[e nu'""''9""' Of s-1• lll"llf llrwll have be and will continue ~i:c ......... c•1o11n1e "'1• '"• tit h .~ ]• f'llbl!Hltiil Or111119 CHtl 0.11Y Piiot, roug o.ll.."U •· Flllnlet'I U, lt, 26 Ind INrcll 5, The groups, called 1'1'' -*·1f •1 £:~plorat lons In PUBIJCNOTICE \AlllUl-tl • ,ICTITM>US •UllNll l ~---'catloos", are or, to student5 faculty, st.af and MAMI ST~TIMINT cornmm'.ity members at no ,.;M fell~ "'"" 11 dol,. 1Mn1,.... ~· t.1., _........,. wi'll ~·" c~,.0~~11f'=f~~~g; .. ~= ,uc wee..,, ~-..... vi.10. c1111. "''s from ~ 2,Sedthfoug~~! M= ~~~I. ':s ~ Dt., 31, and will be I by s~ Thh tMJntu 1. CGl'l!Ntltct "" .,. trained in leadership and lndlvkl~rv L. JtftMft ~ Thlt tl1IVl'otfll Wll fl ltd 'Wltll ttoe The sessloriS which wilt" be ceunw Cllt't ., °"'""' C-IY .,. ' ftGn11ry 6. lt14 of_fef'ed both day and eveningand, P\!Olkfttd or,.. CCJ111 O.ll'f "fir!~ wtll run about two hours F•llnMrv 11, "' ,., and Marci! s. wlll be limited to 1$ persons. 1t1' '""1• lntocested per.sons ma~ ~i~ PUBUC NonCE up in the a>Uege act1vit1es.1 __________ _ office. • 11• ••--t o( MOTICW TO ClllOITOAI 1bere are '·"''=" ypes suP1•101t cou•r o' TMI groups to choose fr 0 m STAT• OP CA ''°INIA ' POlt TMI COUNTY OP OltANO• acoordlng to a spokesman Ne. A-1101 from the college. The flf'Sl E1tal• of GEORGE. D. STE,HENS. . ~-I _,,.., DK••Md. group IS \I.JI:: persona ... v..... NOTICE II HEltEIY GIVIN "' group · and will give the IM c:r.cii1or1 o1 llM 111ow nelMll ' dtc9Cltnl ttlll •II l>'l'tO'll rwvlng c:L1tm1 individual a chaoce to become ~1rr11 llM u1c1 ~I •r• requlract I1'M>re aware of his or her ~~~. '::"';IN w:ic:• 1~ ~: inner feelings and experiences. ot ttit 'a._.... M1H1tec1 court. or to The secood type of group :UC-;:! •. ":'"'ttit ....,~'r'onact--:-~..: will e 1 p I o re relationships o111u °' fltf .. ior,...., JOHN o. peop1 P I HOLLAND. ll7 W.11 -"*"Ill\ Jtraef, between C. eop e may Wllmlftlllon. Calltornla .ta744, wllldl choose differ:ent groups on ,the1 ~~rr.:1~! 1~ ~~~ ~.in: basis of their se1 or marita to tlN ttl•ta ot wld dKtdtr!I, wlllllfl status fovr mon1r.1 111w tti. 11,..1 PllO!lc111on • ot 11111 natkt. 1be third group will deal 011.ci J11111o1rv ,1, lt7•. Wl'lh devet..nina an accurate RACHEL H. STEPHENS. "'>" .. "" E•aclllrb ot 1111 win picture of wbef'e each per300 of IM I bo ... named dtC .... l!f in the groop is in his present :;"~!.· ::'t.;',:~""' ' stage of life. A realistic w11m11111e11. c1hf. ,.,,.. , bU" T•1 UUI .u-n:n outlook on tbe person s a tty "'*-' 1ior 1..c111r1• .1~1.. • &.:-I t will Pvbll:lllld (Kangt C:llMt Dill)' Pllol. to ugu;;nrune w.;, U ure FebnHrv s. 1i. It ,2'. 1t1• '17·7• be worked out. PUBLIC NOTICE Board Filled disciplinary proceeding> were PUBLIC NOTICE instituted by the Asoociation.l---;;;:;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;---1--:.:==::..:=:::,::=,--of the Bar of the City of ''cT11'tOUs •"'1N•SS ''CT1Tto111 au11N••• N,t.MI 11'AJIM•NT • NA.Ml ITATIMINT New York. His Watergate TIM fol*-lftll ~ 1• 001n9 IMl111u TM 1o11ow1,,. per-11 dol1'41 ...,.i- b u r g J ar y c 0 n vi ct i 0 n II' TlltE CITY, 19!0 N~ a 1\ld .. u : 1'Hi I UltGEll. "'°' W••I (oa1! automatically disbars him in Cos11 Mftl. C1Uf. 92'21 • Hwy N_,.,t INcll. c.111 .. 'late CO .. ~. TL,...lt.-UI Inc:., !C.lifof'l'lil eorp) ltSO _ J-A, M11Col1, *"' iU'l'tl' ....... w i.:o ~ 1111111 .. C•I• Mt:Y, C•llf. nt2i' ~ INCi!. C11LI. * Tl'lll bl.nl,.,... 1• ~ lrf • Tiii• llull!Mtl It c:ancll.lttlcl .-, ~ c:orpor111... lndl...iw.1 J\.ln. Theodore Barti1 joined Tl,.....R·U• inc:. J0t.sin A Mltcol• many other s u b u r b a n JoM H. Hampton. Pl'ffldant Tiit• ,,.,_; w1• tllld w101 t11t Tllb 11111ment w11 filad wllfl tlll COl.mh' Cll,_ fllf Oflf'IClti Cilunty at1 housewives in waiting In long,_,,., c1ertt of °'""""' ,_,,., "" FeCHWl'l' 1• 1t1"- lines for gasoline in Ned.ia fftr\ltil'l' 1" 1"4 Plls» ' 'nm 1 PvblllPlld Ol'l"OI Coll! Otll'f ,L1DI, ,ubllll'lld Or•flfl COid OtllY Pllfii, Pa. F.c>f11o1rv lt. 26 and Marcll 5. 12, fJ~ It, 2'-..-.cl Mltdl 5in.,i "I guess we ·all ha'li:e to 1•1• m-1' PUBLIC NOTICE sacrifice together," said fttrs PUBLIC NOTICE ( ) 1 ___ :.:::::.:.:.::.:..:.:0T:K""'•=T=o~c=ONTOACT==""~ .. :;;-,------- PEOPLE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN NI tlll lrvlne Unlflllll $t;tlOOll Olttrkl 91' 0rl"91 COlll'lly, CaUfO!"Jlil , Kliftll try afMI lllrOUVl'I l~~IMI .. -_ ..... ~ ~ ... ·-wl~ Sactlon 1m.2 of "" L.IDOI'. c•. IMrlO't' -·-..... .. ...... '----------ratas In eac:l'I c:an H:lr bids Ourlftll 11)• yMr, 1'1"-1 win "... "It"'""' B · lhe wif ol ............... In ac:COf'd.ln<;I wiltl Tiie c:odt raqvl,_1, waoa r1 es " an urtis, e I ll~Ol'e Fac:llitlas Pla"'111"1Q Offic:I of !IN abOW!lltntd dlltfkl klc:ll.il II l..ol Sand ClftY'Oll -rt!• preSl"dent of t h e Avmu.. Eai1 1rv1111. eantornMo. ,,. DU • Tiii Dbtf"lc:I lh<lll fllrll'llr lj)l(lfy llltil Tiie prn1Hlng rllt of WllJll bl pol "" products group of the Sun Oil Hdl 1o11 Sl1.. \ Co, SIX aASIC TltAOIS UM"""'"' .... 0...... C-"tl CAltPENTl•S * H11llll I. Wtlll,t: 1« Pll'" l'lour-5/1/n Sen Hubert H. Hampbroy Ptn11on: •x per 11our-s11m ' v1c1llon. $1vl111J1; Holida'f; 1'Dc f>ll' llOl.lr-5/lm says he will nm for re-election Foreman: R.c11-not leta tnan 60c: P9I' 11our mer• ~ 1t1t llo!lrTY ,.,. or ""' in 1976, adding that his health l'llOf*t Carpenter cllulllc:ttlan -"1llcll Ill l'I• F"llOOMlllllllY', _. clwdll'lll "Pnwmatlc N•H• °' '-' l l•P'W·" lllm is good following deep X-ray Ci rpeJ1ter 17.os treatment foi a tumor. ~lftlller '·'' When asked at a news MUlwrlglll 7.tS conference whether he ~':.:1rower 51w C>Ji«•tor ~::: intended to rufl for the Senate Pn""'91k; Nell..-or Pawor S!1pltr 1.Jt -1 Cl.MINT MASONI again, the 62--year-vid fonner Al1oc:at1on1: asc ,..... tloul"-Sllln vice president and Minnesota M"nr. a. watter•: • per 11oUt-J111n d P .. 11on: '1.20 per hOUr-S/1/73 D e m o c r a t a n s w e re Vtc:•tlon: 10c: per r.-~11111 emphatkally: "You know it' Fortni•l'I: Whtn """"or mor1 c.met11 M-•t• tmlllO'l'ld ot1 1 !Ob· ont &Mii"' • tmp6oy«I IS • Fortn'llfl •Ml lllMI ractlwt riot llU "*1 40C per ....,, Yessiree!" mor• tMol'I me l'lllllrly r•I• If 111411 lllclh•" Ctmtnl M1-C11Nlflc:lt1o11 • -wlllch IN Ms rapomlblllty. Lt. Gov. ·Lester Maddu ,_, M•"" JOUfftf'flT'lllri stood in a plush new Atlanta ~=: =:::. ''°''inl a. Trowt1lt111 Mtc:fllnt o.-ior bole! and · made the big Grtfllllftll MKhlnt <>Pw•-l•H i.,p111 IRON WOltKIEltl s11m ... » ... .. , u announoement that surprised HMUh .. Well•t~ 6lc w Mur-tl lWn nobody -he will nm. for Ptn11on: 11VK w 11ovr-t11wn vau11on: &k per 11our--.i1wn his second term as governor For11Nn: 1tac:tlY11 net 1111 lfllri 1)C w 11our more f!Mn t11t llM'f'f rate of Illa Of Georgia. hlQl'lt51 cl•tlllc:ltlon O'f'W ~ M IN• ~llon. l/l"7t Maddox pl1!:Sellted b.IJmelf R•lnlorclftll iron WOrller a1s as a ..,....,1ist candidate and s1rvci.,,-11 Iron Work... '·'' ........... Omlmlftlal 1...,, Worker 1.11 said he would Joolt for support Fent• Erackll'" LU that crossed political, racial ~lt.:~tll•r•: '5c Pll' ._. .5.f\tn and social lines. P11111on: 11 .u per 11o11r-snrn He 1-a._ • .,L·i-1 officlall Vacatlatl: :asc pw MM.rr-411/Jl ~ l.IJIC vwu Y Fortm1n: Nol lea tllln * pw llour mor. lllln WW llourlJ ..,... tilt of trlt a n Dou I\ c e d gubernatorial "IOllti' c.l•uH1cA11on O'l'tf' .,,1c:11 n. IN• IMOmll'P.. 111111 candidate in the Aug. 13 Atplll1t t1:1ker, Lutem&n • 1rorier u.ns Pruna. ry A•pMll ~eltr S.745 • 11\llK!Vmoblla M•n s.ass . __ ·I" * Ctrnenl Dumpar ion 1 yo, or lll'9fl' ml-tr • fltndHfl!I bull{ Clmtnll 5.1.SJ President Habib Boargalba conc:r111 C«1 c1111" $.KS conc:relt llw Min s.tu of Tunisia ended a month of 0ru1tr 6.tts medical t r e a t m en t and :.:C:~':'~ o.n.r-11 or Con•tr11e11on !;~ recuperation In Switzerland Pipe L1vr1 &ac:kuP Man s.m and n •-k to ""·...I-Trend'llftl Mldllne, Htnd ~llld l.1$5 ew ""'c •ua~. underground L.tbortr, 1nc1ucn1111 c.1"°" •tttoww s.11s Tunisia's "Supreme Fight· :~=T~~O.MolNlllll 1·"' er'' went to Geneva Jan. 19, K1111t1 a. wttttrt: 1sc:,,.. l'lfNf-7t1m • ·-k -n-signing an Pantlon: ti.SO per l\Ol,lt-11111' ... ..,. •i.c::&" V1c:1lloi\. HOildl'f ,llndl .aot Plf'.lloUt" agreement with Libyan leader fortmlnl iOC: Pl' llOl.lr ovtr "" ,,,, " tlla ,...,,.., JMkf '"'"-...,.,. ltl1 Moammar Khadafy to unite t!IPOf'rl•lon. 111111 their countries. GrtlVll 1 ,,,. r -" =: ~:~ · The Ja-government G,,,. • ._. Groui:i • LN agency that arrange. things T•AMJT••• for Em--r Hiroblt.o 111• A11oc:111ont: uc,,.. t1our-1111m r-... H•lltl a. Witt.,.; 1k I*" l'lfNf reluctant for the monardl to P•loft: ..SC Pl!' ,_,. .~·t ~ U .. tt....a ro .. o-... ......,_..,,-... V1c:1tlon • Holldl'I' F\ll'ld: ti.GO Pl!' hour .. .,1 1.1., WIQI ~ ~""""' 'onll'lfn: IOI: Pl!' flOl.ll" more lfllfl !flt ltl(lll•t T11m."1" dllllflaitbl l'IW ~ -ol lhe uncertalncy of PrHldeal "' "-.!"....,, _ Ntnn't future, tho: mass· Di!.,... t>l'Vtti1c11 or com1>1111110n"' v1111ct1t or1 •nm ci.rcuJatJon. mapzine Sbukan 2 axlft tlnCIWdll Ill vttlkle1 lftl ltlan 6 fallll SUI •--1..1 _ _. a •xltt ---,--•M l\Ol:llUI .ao;t-K>U. I llftl f/11 ~ t.91 A 'Prlter for the maguine or•vw of lOld Oii ,.,.,., Tnick .. UI .. Id .. "lm-••t" olf'-"-' Driver ol Tr•1111t-Ml11 flVCk llndtl'. ) ,.,., 1.>1 .,.,.. .... , . ICUU. Mvw, of Tr•n11loM.l11 Tl'ld • l ~ or mort 6.M <I the JmtwwLaJ HOUMlhokf Qvfnpcftt1 Trvclt. llu !Mn 6\'I .,..., wtlw ""91 .. ,, '"1"'4 Outnpc:ret. Truck, 6\.i jldt, .. !ti' •vlf a. ovw ut Agency, who was not f!0rt 1.rt1 0t1Wr :r..a1 Identified by name, told him: w•r;r ~::11 , "" •1Nixon could very well • be a ..... er mn -"" lmpeAchecf . .tJnt{J this question ~ .... l(WWl'tf ,;, diem .... II __,ell 1 IJOttilflt .. ., If ..... t-::.1 bas beft'I 1eliled, the Imperial ,_.._ TN ~ '°'~ '"' ...,""" ~ _.. bl ,, ._, ...... ........,., "-·-~-•~ ,_ not u•.iu to My ..... ,.,_"" ctwr'ICI ot1 fl'lls lbl 111'111M""el1111 tw!INl,,_11119 r•I., lJUl.lillCIJQtU. a w."Y • . OOV!.ltMIHI IO.l.ltD mah I Atd1ml -the ....., ' .. ly·.lll'lft M. Jl:11dt ~ _, Aflh,twlf t•• "•t:u••• ' emperar11 viltt." Plllllt.,,... or.,.. c..tt o.1ty ""°'' '*"'f'f "' lf'ill Mlf'dl s. 1w&. .., .. ,, 1 .\ T -PUBLIC NOTICE YIHV• lo ·KMICI( ......... C...Dl'M ....,.. IMc;tt. ca. ..... Ttl1 O'MJ ....... • ......,. • Law ----F__., I. 11. 1t, Iii. lt74 PUBLIC NCmCE 6 4 2 -.s 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 C-.eneral Ge'nerel Gen ... 11 DAil V PICOT %1 G•neral * Balboa lay Properties * G.neral General BAY AVE. I NEWPORT SHORES 4 Units-f/5,000 Newly redec. 3 BR.. 2 OCEANFRONT ba. Enlarged liv. rm. Ab- BARGAl N DUPLEX ·EXC ELLENT INVESTMENT -ONE LOT, off East Bristol (Palisades Rd.) opposite OC Airport industrial area. Zoned C-C. Lot size 50x135. Fantastic buy, just listed at $32,700. Hurry, C111'54G-1151 Nifty duplex solute super sharp cond. $155 000 _,7060 Walk to beach. $48,500. ' ··~ 642·7491. . MESA VERDE Coron• dtl Mar Golf CourH Dupltx ASSU MABLE VA 7°/o LOAN OU TSTAND ING HOM E -in beautiful Costa Mesa. 3 Bedroom~ family room and over~ sized bonus room. Shake roof. fireplace, al! the. extras. Full price $39,950. Loan of $32,200 can be assumed by anyone. No big loan fees, $278. per month pays all. Those are the facst -you better see it!;,For details call 540-1151 lllh Green ls r!g~t at Ocean side of Hwy., your back door. 3 br. 3 close to shops. 2 & 1. ba. home w/pool. S Car Just reduced to $63,500. gar. $74,500. ~00. 673-7•20. General ERITAGE REALTORS General Gen<:1 rat REALTORS 4 Local OffJc11 to Serve You G en~ral A UJlojl()UI'. lifMI'. EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE -$250,000 Waterfront beauty! Colorful & meticulously maintained 5 BR home w/FR, Ige DR & 4'h baths. Approx. 4500'. Wide lot. Pier/slip. CA LL ME -l'M DARLING! Really! Yel- low 'n white, board 'n batten, 3 bedrms, plus a cozy den, pegged floors, brick fireplaces, beamed ceilings. I'm in Stiorecliffs.near the ocean, surrounded by trees, patios, a rose garden and circular driveway. Really dar- ling. And to top it off, my owner has reduced my price by $12,000 to $98,500. (Boo hoo, for me. Ya hoo for you.) UNIQUE HOMES, Realtors, 675-6000 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar , WESLEY N. TA:YLOR CO. Ge neral G 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road .:.;==------1-•-""-'1 - 1------ ;N;E~W;P~O;R~T~C;E;N~TE;R~,~N;·~B~. !!!!!!!!!!!!..:64:4:49~1~0~1 ·~~'."".'~~~~ "!! ' ROSY FUTURE General Gt ne ral Small sophlstJcated home in ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Old Corona del ~fa r, done with a feel for tomorrow. 2 bedroon1 areas wilh built· ins featured ln master suite to 8.dd to your space. In· door-0\ftdoor Jiving room with a· great lofty feeling. Call ·quickly to sec this fascinating property. 673-8550. SALESPEOPLE NEW or experienced men or women. We offer PERSON· ALIZED TRAINING. A con- genial office ln the best Corona del ~ar location. A top commission plan and superior bonus plan. There are ample parking facilities for your CW1tomen and con- sistent advertising support. For your confidential a~ pointment. Call: John Allard, Ma1119tr 644-n10 j ' ' 7_ 1hm1lll -r -:;,,•1/;,-, ;.r ' -" Need 6 Bedrooins? Only $37 .950 b\lYs this classic older home In fantastic neighborl~. This home Js spacio1.!5, warm, and loaded with cham. Use your VA loan with no down payment. 83&-6256 Open evenings. Walker&Lee HALF ACRE ESTATE FIVE BEDROOM 4.% BATHS This is a beautiful home In a beauliful setting. 5,000 sq. ft. of luxurious fa mily Jiving with two family rooms, form.al dining room, beautiful pool, and many other feat~res that only a custom built home can offer. For further information please call 545-9491. Walker &Lee •I A~ llTATI 4 In Mesa Verde $44,750 Better than nC\v. 3 Bdnns., 2 lge. baths & family rn1. home. Cathedral ceil. & stone frplc. in living nn. Lge. lot. 10~;, Do\vn. Lo- Cflted in city of Irvine. 165 ACRES . at Lake Arrowhead. Close to oountry club. Gent· ly rolling \Vooded .area. Only $500 per acre. TIAI • Great "U" Street location. Quiet and nice!! 1750 sq. ft. of tamlly Ii ving. 0 n l y ·$46,950. Shpke roof. Lots of patio space. One o! the NEW LISTING only homC!I 1n this price range In Mesa Verde. Call Beautiful Back Bay SpQnish for an appt. to inspect. type home. 3 Oversized bd- COATS I. rms, 21h bn, Sep. llving nn +-dining rm. Professionally & decorated. Detached gar. WALLACE Heavy shake roof. X1n't OPEN nL 11 • "'S FUN 10 BE NICE! PENINSULA BUNGALOW Price reduction on this R2 property owner will help with financing. 2· bed + completely remodeled Add an extra unit. Plan ahead for summer livln~ i n Newport. Call 646-1711. . Walker & lee ltlAl llT.lll GOING LIKE HOTCAKES! Men Verde V i lla ASSUMABLE . 7112 °/o VA LOAN See this imn1aculate 5 bedroom, 3 bath home with formal diJ1it1g roo1n and spacious family roon1. 1\ll this and a corner location 100! $52,500. CALL 1>44·7270 2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mir wt CAN HEL.P YOU I UY. lll.L, Oft TRADE A HOM! AHYPLACE fH TMI NATION HARBOR VIEW SACRIFICE.i- Delightiul 5 bedroom, 3 bath plus large fam- ily room. Formal dining, decorator drapes & 'vallpaper. 3 car garage. Priced by out-of· stale owner at $74,000. GRUBB & ELLIS CD. REALTORS General 3· Br. Pool Home GUEST QUARTERS One of a kind pool hotne on large lot in quiet cul-de-sac. Has seflara1e guest quarter~ for in-la\l<'S or~? NO 00\\'N TO VETS -lo\v do11·n lo others. Hurry! \Von't last! $31,500. Back Bay Custom 675-7080 General CALIFORNIA RANCH STYLE 4 BR · 2 BATHS $31,500 FULL PRICE This 3~ year old home 11 a real value on todays market. This home oUcn carpets, drapes, gas built· ins, dlsh\\•asher, fireplace, double garage, and many other features. Transferred owner must go end will sell with no dn terms. lo Vets . For further infonnaUon please c a I I 54:-.-fl491. Immaculate. large 3 bc:.I· rooo1 custom home on estate size let. ~'lany blln 1 feature::;, 2 frplc's, 3 car ~p.r. & much more! Call no\v 1or appt to sec . only sn .ooo. "-'-, Walker-&Lee V'l 'iu°'2l ~ ... ~ .... ~ ... ~I CORONA DEL MAR Custcm built 2 Bedroom and den, 2 Bath, quality features throughout. Steps to ocean. On 45 ft. Jot. Excellent financing available, $99,500. ESTATE REALTY 640-1120 DUPLEX One of the lowest priced, So. of lbe Hwy.; on R-2 lot; nice yard & patio with BBQ. One block ,to all "'°l'L_ Good In-al $73,,..,. . HARBOR VEIERANS •I A\. llTATI TIME FOR Cj)UICK .CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT REAL TORS linC'All A'.~~TlME --!514<46>-44141-(0po,n Evenings) 646-3928 or Evt. 646-4543 Immaculate 2 Br. Home \vi.th community pool. show!l like a model -ne~r lived I;::;:;:;;:;;:;:;:;;:;:;: In -absolutely like new.\ 1 Seeing l! believing. $24,900! Call 54&-2313. No money down seller will pay your cost. Big bedrooms 2 baths on a large lot. Why pay high rent. Eastside of Col!lta Mesa. Call n o \'I 646-7711. • CLASSIFIED AD CAU 642-5678 TIME FOR QUICK CASH I T·HROUGHA DAILY PILOT WANT AD WE HONOR Master Charge and THE DIREel LINE 642-5678 1 Story Condo Lachenmyer; Re altor I OPEN TIL ... rrs FUN ro BE HICEf Immediate Sale Eastside Costa Mesa Beautirul estate home. 5 Bedrooms, 4 b a t h s . Beautiful pool. Many trees. Lots of extras. Pr i c e reduced from $107 ,(XK) to $'l5,1Xll. $27,500 Immaculate 3 br. oondomin-l ;~ii;ii;ii;:iiiiii;ii;ii;ii;;; Eastside DoH House u1111"'"•· THE REAL ,,, "'',111 ',~1111. ESTATERS JUST LISTED $36,950. Roy McC ardl• Realtor 1810 Newport Blvd. CM l4i-m9 Walker &lee •IAl ltlATI !um with gourmet kitchen, private enclosed patio, 2 car glll'8.ge. Red tile roof. community p:>ol, traUer parking space. Assume FHA loan nss. per mo. includes principal, interest, taxes and insurance. Call ~2313. Ol'fN TIL II • rT"S FUN 10 BE NICE/ Perfect starter Home. 2 Bed· room. beautiful drapes and carpeting. Extra modern kitchen. Step down conver- sation area around pictur- esque fireplace. Room for garden or orchard. We tri barded at Tri-Harbor. Owner says sell now, thls lovely 4 bedroom 2 bath house. Very sharp with two I ~""""'~~~"'l'~~~~ ! 400l171 FOR All C.M. AIEJS FIXER DUPLEX Best peninsula location! R+3 J .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ lot • Private fiqancing. Own· er will trade on home or Cozy . Beach. ~mern~0'"(!!~· '.t,lci~~ Cotta9e 1112 ~lks 155.IXll . Bring hammer & to Beach paint brush!! Call 645-8400. 9 Cffl§&GRQWMi-,Q!'!t§I $28,000!!! I V.~}=~u..J 2 Duplexes $34,950 Each Adjoining bldgs on extra deep lot. Large 2 bdrm apts. Excellent rental area. Only 10% down. 1797 Oru.nge, CM 642-1771 CATALINA VIEW Owner must sell go~us 4 BR. 3 BA. fam. rm., huge bonus rm., jacuzzi, no m alntcnance landscaping. Outalde llghll &: waler on tlrnen. Busy executlw'1 pl"-fhouae. Su.per custom de<:or. Priced for quick u.le. $69,900. Call Prest I & e Homes 645-6646. BUY ME VA LONELY 3 BR Cho.rming but vacant 3 BR! Modem kitchen, carpeting, drapes, priv-ate patio, tree· shaded street, near \Vest- cliff shopping. Will sell or trade at $39,500. Sub111it your terms!! Call 645-8'100. . ' v. £. Jlowanl & C.o. .... ..__ 1.aCJuna Ni9uel Outltandlng VA buy for Q\11)' $42.950. 3 big bedrooms 2 be.tbs. Canyon views. Lovel,y patio & BBQ near beach It tennis courts. call ug lo s~·. 646-mt. I'm a cute lBR dol1houw with marble fireplace Ir double 111"111!" In Eastslde °"'14 M .... 1 h• .. • .... , Walker & Lee baclcyard with play area & 11J••1. ,,, .. r, trees, concrete driveways "-I,.;;;~~~~~~~~;;. sprtntdcni. Onl)' $34,950. Call ~ PrHtlge Homes, 645-6646. MOTIVATED to-sell & ready to move. LolA of glass. Pool. D:ecntlvt amt.. Call "nOWI. Ag<. 84HOIO. 5 BRAND new unftt. Only $19,9!0. Showl pd Income. 'nlele won't lut. Call qt "80l0 now. Selllnc anythlnc with a Dally Pilot ClaKlll<d Ad .. • aimple matter • : • Jll.'1 calf 60--5618! CLAIM YOUR .100 A MONTH FOR 12 MO'S Luxury No-Malnt . Townhomea BEACHWAl..K !HUNTINGTON SEACLIFFl (714) SM 65$7 patios, one is off the private master suite, large fenced yard, and a fireplace for those cool winter nights. Hardwood floors and a heavy shake roof. This one will + sell fast. Call Red carpet, Realtors for an appointment to see this one -· Patio Dinin9 In Costa Mesa Wrought Iron inside and out Mediterranean style living with 3 bedrooms on R-2 Jot. OK for 2nd unit. $32,950 cell 64&-nTI. OPEN Tfl. 'O • IT"S FUN 70 BE NICE! I THE REAL ESTATERS PENINSULA PT. 3 BR., 2 baths, beautiful cood. 2 Patio&; dbl. car gar. Qulclr: posgess. $77,500. Olll: 673-3'63 ~ """"· associated BROKE RS-AEALTQqS ~r 1 • W Salboe 1>7 1 16tl '!£. 15 UNITS * 1 w.iu 2 Bdm1t1:. Unfurn. BStN. Carports. Ne a_c ~pplng. LMn a v a 11 . $1111,500. --GEMM-- MACNAB ,IRVINE GALAXY DRIVE 4 bedroom, family room, view + garden room. Lime-greens & yellows prevail. $189,500-fee land. Amy Gaston 642-8235. (J49) "MOUNTA IN CHALET" Steps from beach -4 bedroom -'family room -den -exclusive Shorecliffs - $160,000. Beverly Morphy 642-8235. (JSO) "SUMMER'S COMING" Stunning trl-le vel townhouse -3 bedrooms -view of Jetty & Main Channel -steps to private beach. $133,000. Polly Johnston/ Beverly Morphy 642~. (J51 ) DOV~R SHORE S -VI EW Atrium -pool -jacuu.i -4 bedrooms, family room, Jiving /dining -wet bar. ~LS0.000. Larry D¥er 642-3235. (J52) .,. [Irvine \ 1o1 .... i.-1rv1nt """Yeo..,.., IOI Dover Otlve "42·t 2Sl 114A M•tArthur M<&•UOO • - • • • • • ' . ~2~2'--D~A~IL~Y_P~l=LD~T~~~~~~~T~und;;;:;;~~·~F•=b~r~=ry:..::.26=·~1=91.:.4 °!!!!!~ j,:G;";"°;r;•;';;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:;;G;•;no;r;•;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _G_•~no~rh1!1::::::::::::::::::::::::r;~~;~~~::_:::_-~i~oJ1}~Mo~~;,::::::::::.11H~..,:=:,r...,:::::1o~n:-;B~o~1;cC""~"Tj~lr~v"-lno;;;~~~~~~~,;;;r.:•=w=po=rl:.•1=N~<~h:-~~~~Now:::::po=rl=i~:':t:-~~111= ]~ SwimminCJ Pool Price Reduced ~ ft•Jr"'t!.:i: 1/a BLOCK TO Yo1 Wouldn't JL[-~--m;.-;m~~, tile~!~~~ EMERALD BAY-FABULOUS VIEW Superbly built S bedroom S bath home with secluded yard. Hardwood floors, quiet street. Tennis. beach. $124,900. LIDO 2 BEDROOM $72,500 Sn1all charn1cr perfect for couple, close to shopping, tennis, beach, panelled den. Se- cluded patio. PRICE REDUCED-HURRY! Private beaches and boating facilities avail- able for your use. Jmmacltlate 2 bedroom hon1e with lovely patio. $56,500 DIAL 644-1766 2161 San Joaquin Hills Rd ., N.B. * TUSTIN * & $1000. U°:'~1~ru,:::;.,!ui~ GAS STATION Wait 'Tll Summer,, Private Beach 2 Bdrm. + Pool .,..,,.,,-2 d 1r1>tc'1, wei bor, one w.,. and ~I block 10 To Buy A ;omm•rclal Property Uke lo entertain -la:e 4 bdrm home, 2~ bath&, with tone fireplace In tam. rm -Beautifully IMdJcaped yard, Pool w/JaC\W, Cov- 'l'i!d pnUo, flniplt, 2 ca- banas & 14 blth. Just llsttd ., $55.950. * Huntington Beach * What m.,. could a p<non $2" 995 huge patio Prof. indlq>tl, beach the other way. 2 C ertlbl II wantt How about a ch&rm· ~, auto. Jprinklen, Many b!droom l~plAct Oft'V ••• 1~. wt:ll decarsted 2 BR t Bdnn condo., desirable upgrades ~ extru. Owntr home wtlh unit So why weit for the lnllntf' T BEACH 2 BA home on a ~neroua ground level Ck>or plan. 1% occupied 6 mos. SUPER above the double c • r f)rlets of t!'le swnmt'r t NEWPOR 60 x 100 ft. lot in Corona dtl ~an ne\Y, FttshlY Painted CLE/Jll. St.25,CO'.l. Open Kie, ts:lll'l&e. Call now 64&-Tln. buy a profitable •umrnci.: Pr.tme bay'tront alte ~tar. The entert.a.lnen with tutetull,y panelea and S!lt A SUD., Noon tit 6. $64,500. \vlnter rental property. Cal for boat repalr & sales dN!am. Only s;:J,500. Call m.irrottd livina: room, plush ~Southall TetTace. OPB/T/Lt•"s11JN10EIEN1C11 us abOUt this \veil locatec Sill Crundy Rltr. liia-6161 644-'721J. \Vallpapered dlnlng area, A BEAUTY on au per ~{ \ ~ 3 BR do1\'n, 2 BR u:> du-Condomlnlumt 5hag carpets &: euitom areenbell, 2~ yrs. prestla:e ll!J,l :f~!ll plex, only 6 door11 to Uu for 11le 160 ::r·~ea~v:i::~~. ,V:~~ 4xc~~~l~:-'~A~elfv.~:$i@fj}A ~c~~: only $79,aoo. Ulstance to ll u n t Ing ton fant. rm., form . din . , _ Cnll 6~4-Tztl NE:\\IPORT Crest-VI~ 3 Br, 151 - Center, $\vlmming pool and be8\ltitully I ands caped, 3 Ba, all bltn.s. $7000 under Glen ?i.tar area -4 bdrm, ~RBOR VIEW HIU.S rnan,y park areas. Price re-1tudlo dArkroom, great FOURPLEX bldr. Owner. Lease 2 balh -i m mac u )Sit" duced $1000. NO\\' S500 below Investment, $57,500. 551....3916 Balboa ~-nl•i. Good tax $450/mo. 642-.3490 /.Jn NILEL llAILE Y f,, ASSUCIATES ndl l N Ca · Eleganl 4 Br. 1' Fant rrrt. k 1 Call ,.., tjra~:.nBI ki~hen.'r.~~at $30,000 in-xtr11s ine pool. ntar et 1'47~095 today Laguna S.1ch shelter. $125,000 Ouplex1s/Unlt1 fireplace, fenc«I Y•rd $90,500 Inc land. 644-:MS JUST LISTED LIDO ISLE 1110 162 $39 ~ 00 SEO..UDED PVT BEAOI Serenely private, superbly Lar-5 Bedroom ..:=-------I ;,C.'' THOMAS Ocean view, 186 Shoreclill 4 Bdrm-$3495 Down In thfo beaut1ful Crown Polnt built. Sculptured a;eneroualy 3 Bath h.-~ loc tlo EX 4 Br $225,000. 615-3539 Bldr Inunaculate! \Vlth forced air section of North l...aguna: into it'• n.istic sett!nK ome in•""""' a n, DUPL REALTOR heat. Kitchen built lna. 2 this lovely home, designed Slrikina dbl. frplc. l F'uli Newport Beach. f?ctrn large OLD COM Costa Mesa b.rl.lhs. Rear living rm. fire-nround garden patio, has 3 gar~es. 4 BR., 4 ha.., family~roonftwood1· Uruquek Mfelxl-3 Br owner's unit 224 W. Cs t liwy Ml!-5527 I c • Lo specious ~--t-llvi"" famihy rm. & poolrm. On can u~i roe . re--e.u 900 A COLDWELL BANKER CO. Newport Beach Eve. 565613 * EASTS·IDE * ~fa~~r=~· •pr::~· r~j & d1ning ~~··\\ith sto~-: 9J ft lot $1~000 place. CUstom built kitchen. ~' l!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!', Xlnt loc.: 3 BR., l~ baths. prire S3'1.950. Call 842-669l. frplc. \Varm family rm. off · ' ' Covered patio. -Huge 833-0780 {BKR) RON Genera l General dining rm · sun Por c h · ch kitch t.ge fenced back yard with. side NEW DUPLEX CMOU ..... -~~~21. ' ('~AAR~L.J 2c':r~arage~ihdoo~o=~: entrance for boat, trR.Iler'\ COLLEGE PARK-POOL HOME POOL SEASON JUST AROUND THE COR- NER! Beautiful 3 bedroom, 2 bath featuring an outstanding Palos Verde stone fireplace, remodeled kitchen \vith new flooring and tile counter tops . Home centers around very pri- vate pool area with many fruit trees, block \Vall , and covered patio. Walk to all schools a nd shopping. CALL 546-5880 . M --er. Prtvare-yfmt, room for ere. Room for Olympic size 3 QR, 2 BA !louse. +: 2 other•ln-laW pool . An t>l<rtllent· piece of pool, Volley ball. Sprinklerb BR, 21 ~ BA Apl. Frplc's, , V'illa wt>ll located property 2 + DEN front & back. Perfect home gar's, pa_tkl's, yard's, etc. rl _ _. ~ ~ and yard for children. Ne1\'· Ne1vport Helght11. 1 2 bedroom hon1e tor 16111 Bcnc·h Sh·d., H B P .._"""a t .,.,.,,<NV, SURROUNDED port Harbor High School Call Builder, 646-4414 yow· in-I•~-' "Plu•" n, ~Ill· . ~ · =:=$'. District & \Voodl~ Eleni. DUPLEXES HTG BCH 3 bedroom home with cus I SPANISH h t t ~ . BY PARK 1 blk. to ne\\' Boy s Club. · BURR \VHITE REr\LTOR arc es, Pans ga-Below ~larket Price at Ne\v 2&3 Br d!Jc bch units. tom drapes and carpet& · 12901 NE\\lPORT N'PT BOl lore, brick patioli, concrete \Vhat a neat location!? A SGS,"~ wt'th 20~0 00,,11 (lf 15th & Acacia, open dally 1-5. \VALNUT PANELING · 67~4630 or' 64{).0IGG drive1vay, lront court )'ard, pal'k on two Kl.des and nn _... 1' " 53G-+KJ22 (TI41 539-6779 patio's shake roof -3 car shake roof, glock wall fenc~ 4•4·5671 4ff-1100 outlook to t"t:lling hills and will consider a 2itd, Call ~--·-""'------ garage. all One year old -MESA VERDE low inaint. back yd., cov-1 · cily llghls. And on the In-Owner 646-5602. 2t@4 Tustin Income Property 166 I TOTAL DOWN $6,600, act •1 BDfu\ol, Goll t.'Our:>e home. eted patios, play area. dog side, a beatilifully upgraded Ave .. Newport Beach. now ~767. ~ living nn \Y/frplc, run, \Vl'Ollght Iron fences, 3 WOODEN•••• home with Kttrastan carpet, 14 UNITS 1 OPf.NTILi• IT-SFUNTOBENl(;E/ di1ungrn1 , kitchen ba.rl.lequc Br, 1% ba. fam & din rms .... wonderland. "New" old professional decoration and CORNER LOT Close to new Montclair NEWPORT BEACH-BACK BAY THE REAL ESTATERS gan1e im with v.et bar1 11·aUpaper & .n~o1-e. Beaut1·. retaining the elegance ol 8 avtulable. A '?P valul' &t Newport Beach corner lot, units in high rental demand ~ & eating ru:ca. Detached Frplc, dsb/wsh, panellin~, hideaii·ay. Renlodeled, yet mOS;t every possible option Build your own plan on this Plaza. Pride ol ownership $45,-..Cheer!ul and sunny thruout. Fea- wring 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heavy shake roof end front kitchen. Lovely decorating in- cluding beautiful built in book shelves. Good cul~e-sac location. Only steps to Back Bay. Just listed, CALL 546-Sl80. ~frig &. frpl c. Lovely patios fully kept. $43,500. By own-I b"""ne era. 2 , "'e. '--'rms. only $68,900 Jo~· app-x 4.~ ~. It. R-l. area. Shows ex c e 11 en t _1 I & g~ens. tloJa:;t~l· Bdrn1 9624141 .r .. ~ '"'I:; #A> C ll 6447 ·U '" vw ·--. I d -bUJlc mcludes o1llt'.e area. er. -& a study, \\ith a majestic a -• Asking $ 2 8' 0 0 0. Call spendable. Wll tra e do'.'11 -vie11· of tlie Pa'c1f:le·&-1vithin em 646-0555. or consld{'r any reasonable Private Beach & ~'i~.bOO or tratie S40.uou Better Than New \valking distanCC' or lhe '"rnlll. Ortem:l for $170,000. Launch ! '-'ll.WiY for'! O~•iner, ;j-i:J-~. beneh. Seeluc!ed behind ~ ' • /rS\ Cnll Coli\·ell 646--<.655. * r.tESA VERDE * Lo\·C'ly upgraded home with I f BoU1 are yours \\'iU1 this nia.rblc entry and no wa.i: shrul)s & geraniums .. SGl.500 I • • · BALBOA TRIPLEX Peninsuln J hdrn1, jusl 1: 1 By 01\Tler. Tn:imac. 4 BR., ~· ... ~~~~~~ IH£ . -§"" HERITAGE 546-5880 Open Eves. REALTORS' G1n1r1I General elinJa J!J/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Custom Home On Lagoon Gracious 5 Bdrm., 41h bath home with well planned dining rm., family rm., dinette, & huge master suite. Lovely gardens with \Vin ding stair to second floor. Pier & slip. $297,500. 70 Linda Isle Drive Prime 45' lagoon lot · $150,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 B•yslde Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 67$.4161 block to the buy & ocean. 'J. ha .. lge. hv. i·m., lrpl., ilooi·. Pa~~ lhn.t bar. Blil.i! I ..A{JJ. GRAND OPENING BERG One-J Bcdroon1, one· 2 firepla,,..... C:hf'l's kil "hon. 01 cupboard. s & closets. 4:'.e. Brick fireplace. Bike fo "1'1~ Newport Bay Towers .J... roon1 . orlC'-ul room \\'ilh 2 biiths. Den · I fnn1. rn1 ., lndry. n11. Lois Sunken lub in ~tBR. Bltns. ·~ H ~ bed 1 bed .. " ... ' -be h 4 Bedrms l ba.th REAL ESTA'JI! & 2 BE ROO .=---=. Balboa Pcnlris a you own Separate ut ilit y rm with L'OV'd. patio; cu~crete dnve, pJ~aie club av a; 1 ab I e: II'\ Iii CO.N~"'Mli'lll~'\l !IOM•IES ":... the land. New carpel~ & storage. Massive patio And shake roof. Jo resh J'.!81nt. $38,500. llOO GI St ...,..., _,_.____----...........,... • dra!>('s. Jncoll'K' $915. month. undercover boat storage \Valk lo everything. enneyre · Baylront ~lonlcs -'"lEAl.T~s~ Offered at $129,000. Call $74 950 Call 541rl720. · •\ssumable 1st at 51h•/o. Rad Carpet, Realtors 494-9473 549-0316 Boat Slips ... ~ ... """'"'· ' · $43,900 ~2457 536 8836 'Laguna Charmer Full Security flighrise Successor T? '"'1"'U.W ( TARIEl.L ] GI OR CONY LOAN Very private 2 bedroom S1~l & concre~e construction COLWEr:.L Properties, Inc. OTHER UNITS $5.5,500 E-Side by owner. 4 DiSTR'"'SI home with an abundance Private Balconies . ONE LOOK ~ ' Br, den & lge lam rm. ~ • or greenery. Secluded brick 2 garage spaces per unLl. and yo·· will !mow· why Depending upon wbat you M--Br • d trs MOVE IN FAST! • -~ !lo w Hool top sundeck ' · .• want to aceompllah, aome ..... er ~ en ups . °' g .. uen pa • arm U"""Uni Opportunity to this ls the best buy ln l'""'S fJ f units will be .._tter vpen 1-~ Sat & Sun ;a.1;:1 Big "Franciscan Fountain" v I bra n t decor with ~ hue Ba f t Pro Baycrest. One look. Thal'• f'.,... h the N 2955 Harbor Blvd., C.M. I YOU WANT A i HOME? 2000 · SQUARE FEET? I Aliso l:i7~0':1Jti. just blocKs to beac..1. No fireplace, plush carpeting, re Y ron perty all it takes. Authentic 2 story or you t an ° rs. otlfy qualifying. Just assume ~·t hed ceillng with exposed in Newport Beach. C I ·ru f url IBR 2\~ us of your ttqulrements in I MESA VERDE ms. \Valk to the beach! • 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. 0 oni e;o.t nr: elthc1· p u r ch Rs Ing or 5BR or 4 & den, crpt lhrUoul. 71h(1li FHA loan and $289 675-8551 ~~. mellow. den wired sellln~/el<changlng. Ca 1 l 1 .Palos Verde stone, big per mo. pays everything! $52.500. Call ~8003 _ bnck fpl, 1nvltlng Uvrm S46-0555 I trec!i, cul-Oe-sac, xi cond. i'learly ne1v Wush t.:Xt.'t.: [ NEWPORT SHORES iv/marble fpl. .st unn Ing · • ~~o-~~ $45,~._540-8589 horne loaded \vith model TARIEl.L.J Dvl! uuuse :s ~< iuin _. ~;.i,:NO dlnrm w/bltin buffet, 4\ extras. Transferred owner · ··BR " , .. """ uncrowded kit-wAg eating ""ARP 3 Bdnn 2 Ba P'" :;wu1y ., . ,..:.~y · · · · .... ,~ G => • • ·c Li;A~l1'G 'lU1vt• Bk ~ space. enerous stor,.<>e. n..1 I patio. l>lcsa Verde. By 96.,~..,11 1 •• i· Wl.!i.Al!ill'9..us.~ i\-r i·anle,:S UH •...... s49,500 One look .. that's allh '" U"·-r ""'" '-""'" """"" --u•• tnc '~H!t'r. I ""rm·., BERG ...... , ~"° uu " takes. OPEN & SH 0 \Y N 'Thi..-home is better than l!OUSE ofllot zoned -for For A Lucky Family 1920 S. C.oast l-h\-y, Laguna you u~1 land: iv11l professionally 10 to 5 daily. ~JJJ. nl'W, only 11a years 11e1.,,. 1nu1uple ol.dg \,1 :,1ue ol Beach H'ad(','N.S ......... s79,500 $'~'~ ••-Ant•'gua \Vay --'/ (~ "=:. Sprinkle:s front and rear, Harbor $32,t:m'. &t>-74()) Country living on huge eor-VA AND LEASE \\·e have rent11!i1 .. Ul5 Up. A;_•OMJ-.uAO • ~ park like yard. I.Arge lll'r lot wiU1 personality plus. ON S CAYWOOD REAL TY &IZ..74M 646-llU ~. redv.'Ood covered patio, 3 Dana Point 3 Patios, magnificent land-OPTI BUYER * ~1290 * llAUOt5 TWO STORY 4 BEDROOM? baths and much niorc. Only scaping, custom tbruout. A · We have an exceptional 2 Story Bavfront Sun:cS!Or to $49,500. If it isn't what you OCEAN HARBOR steal at $37,900. inventory of right priced 3 THE BLUFFS PRIVATE DbcK COL\VEU.. Propcrtleii;, Inc. "·ant then don't call Red VIEW I' & 4 bedroom and family Beautiful Dolores inodel ; 4 Bdnn 3 ba 2 •-I , PRIDE 4 PLEX Carpet, Realtors 546--8640 room homes. Avail for charming 2 bdrm., 2 l,i • • . ...., CS G_or_~_r_a_1 ______ 1 G~•="":::c.r~1~l~~~~~- EASTERN MOBILE HOME POOL -VIEW 15,000 sq ft lot $25,000 lmmed occupancy in b.-1.ths; 2 walled patios with w I t h,e rape u t 1 c pool . 565 OOO Bkr. (714) ~7414 t6Z.447] (:::) 54 .. llOJ Laguna & Laguna Niguel. lots o( privacy. Overlooks $199,000 • • Lge. home with e x e c . entertainment center outside; Joe. In Corona del ~tar·..-best area. Ollered at $71,000 Red Carpet, Realtors a lovely greenbelt. Many Ontu True pride of ownt>rship in El Toro BEAUTIFUL 497-1761 extras. !.lay we show you , ~ this very 1harp 4 plex. Per-this? 21 feet rtnral area. Nl'!ar shops "G !toted Home I POOL HOME NORTH LAGUNA MORGAN REAL TY ~ & frec•·•yo. Anum•hl• {G1-eat for Families) Enjoy 4 large bedrms, huge fam 3 &inns., 2 baths; 673.6642 675-6459 . 81~<;r FHA loan -or -$15,000 your eves. in front o( the I'm., cozy !pie, immaculate, rentQdeled, \vilh soarin~ flown to nc\v 8';.,. 'iii loan - FOR SALE: CHARM SILVERCREST CALIFORNIA MOBILE HOME NEWPORT HEIGHTS LIVING 20' x 53' 2 BD 2 BA, carp., 1 Large 3 BR., 2 ba .. fan1i!y ure or \1·atch TV in the \Vllh many other cxtta!i. ope;:i beam cell's. & 11,'00d DlSTJNCTJVE J~R. 2BA, 2 BURR WHITE REALTOR $·111 f)C'r mo. All 2 bednxnn i-·am-rm. of this lovely 3 U'>'·ner ll'ans. Easy tenns. decks. Choice Norlh end blocks from ~lar1ncr1 Park, 2901 NE\1/PORT. N'PT BCH unit~. J::xtra storage. SCC' to 2 STORY · 4 BR $31,500 FULL PRICE Everything from the white picket fence to the bca11tllul shag carpeting spells back east charm blended ~1th Calilomia sunshine. All ol this nestled on a huge lot with room to park )'Ol.lr boat or camper. All of this plus anyone can lake over the exi!'lting GI loan. Belter hUJ'T)' and call Ma-9491. PRESTIGE WITH POO L · ST:!PS TO GOLF COURSE Custom '1 bedroom localed in prirr:.e location Manicured yard. Atrlunt entry. Huge Living room. Fan1ily banquet a r e a . Gourmets kitchen. Eloquent pool • Hurry call 842-2535 OPfNTn.f . rrs FUN 70 SE NfCEI COSTA MESA FOUR·PLEX draped, Dlt·ins.. re!rig.. rn1. N!.\\'IY d~'Or., 1v lrr.f'. \Vasher & elec. dryer, wired lol. ~ F 1rst time offered. tor 220 air cond., kitch. $40.950 clock. ·storage shed. land-CORBIN-MARTIN "'oed patio. Three yn. old _R_E=A=L=T~O_R~S=,....,,1\44-"""'7~66~2 • like nu. Lo~ated ln new - •dull pk. away from ,,.;., SEE AN lr,BUY ~:~e: ~re~ nr~~~ i~cs~ ru · cgooT~ ~2E9:L TY 1 :ri-" at1S~~· Reduced to ~:C~n1~~:t's r:Or~~:pc~ 6i5-4630 or 640-0166 ~S·mcnn faslt mll=!~I· !'rice is nice at $34,000. sa.7533 :1 TURNER ASSOC tan1 rn1. inside laund, l-l:V. Hms 5 br. Fam im. ~. 'lolle FU:altors & Assoc . ._._ , 1105 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna bunkcn tub. in master balh, din rm, 3 ba, l.rg lot. Np! I • • 58ti-8;iOO BRAND-NEW 494-1177 complete fLrcalarn1 system. schlll. $77,950. Owner . ---·--. v II e Paint , inside & out bttin stereo speakers thru-833-3894 ' 1 t-ountain a 1Y • Brand new carpeting "A WORLD Sl'OPPER!" out, by ov.·flC'r, pnnc only, Newport Heights rt . .One-half bl. from club-Just look one time. You can~!· house. $15,495. Call EVES. help but v.<UJt, this laq:e 21 3-694-4690, 697-n52. three bedroom Mesa Verde CAN BE SEEN AT: gem. Shai' carpets, mirrors. CRESTMONT 2 fireplaces, decorator ESTATES drapes, large co~·red patio, 1051 Site Dr .. Bre:-: Central a la~ room. It ~sn't Ave. across trom Brea slop even room for a pool, Comn1. Hosp.) Lot •46. boat yard etc. HUJTY before C0:\1'r\CT RAY, PK. l>fGR. Its gone. Only $45,450. Call fC>r ~ho1,·ing. Red Carpet, R e a I to r s 546-8640. ORCHID Drive by 20212 Orchid St. in Santa Ana Heights. It's a 3 bedroom family home. large 60xl35 lo!. Ownl'r lives out of tQ\vn and is an.'<ious to sell. F'ull price $30,950 ·w~=E=s=Tc=L~l=F=F-- 4 BR, 3 BA. fam. nn .. nr. flilariners School. $67,000. Prln. only. 551-5736 1646-f.456 lNVESTitEN'T opportunity. Assume FrlA 71!1% -mo. payments $199. Total. Full price only $28,900. Low cash outl11y. Call agt. 847-6010. PRIDE OF You Don't Have to Use Gas •• , ••• to enjoy Clubhouse activities and pool side parties. They Are only a short walk fron1 the door of this 4 bedroom TOV.'Jlhouse. I n c I u d i TI g spacious master s u i t e , formal dining, private pa1io, air cond., elec gar. door openel'. ·10 !;~ tb.i:> oeau1y, call The Re.ill E1tat1 Fair 536-2551 or 839-6133 BY OWNER. 4BR,lBA , Fam: rm. frplc. NE\V plush cpl. 1950 sq. ft, Pool size yd. WALK to all shops. t'rincipals only $43,9'JO. 963-2187 Huntington S.1ch : OWNERSHIP 22~1 ll. I · DU·PLEX DREAM HOME 2 bedrooms and patio each. $34,500 • 11 Even a sundeck on the Immaculate 3 bedrm, 2 bath i;ar~es overlooking the golf home. l\-1odern bltns, plush Sun/Eves. course. Ca il Red .Carpet. crptg. deluxe fam rm. 646-5855 Realtors for an appointment Sparkling clean. Manicured 546-S640 ONLY $4..5,900. yard. Terms flexible -see Balboa Island and believe. Call 545--8424 S , y• :SOUthLO, ttealtor:>. weeptng leW D1'1AC Duplex, 2 Br home. LEASE.OPTION Lovely courtyttrrl entrance to separate 1 Br ant, idl'al J BR, 2 BA Townhouse. $11DJ e 4 or J and a den 4 BR., den, fam. rm. v•/wel v.·eek~Rys 640·8TI2, Sat & 9 NE\V DUPLEXES- • !! baths, fireplace bar., beams, trpl .. unique Sun &\4-142'2. Excitin9 View DANA POINT iw 1g1: comer Jot w/block bit-in kitch. Approx. 2300 SINGLE L VE lent"C, vacant $33,900. sq. ft. Entire grounds E L Of bay, ocean &: harbor FABULOUS OCEAN VIEWS BRASHEAR REAL TY sprillldered &-walled. BLUFFS "LINDA'' lights. Brand new 4 bdrm., S68.!W to $73,950 Best Buy -$67,500 3 BR, 2 ba, comer klt, deep 2 ba.: plush carpets thruciut. $48,950 non-view 842.-7411 ~flSSION REALTY 494-0731 pile c:rpl~, private pal!O. 2 Frplcs. 2 balconies, & pFm $6000 down OWNER TRANSFERRED OPEN THURSDAY l>1ight coo:nder leue option. the best in many extru! 4 exe&. $91,~$95,950 GOOD Buy $69 500 See it today' $79 000 Office open Fri-Sun at • • • • • • 9:30 to 11 :30 AM CORBIN MARTIN · ' 33861 Copper Lantern 4BR, 1800 sq ft. Only $35,900. SN i., s. d , A I B -CA·LL I!\. ,4,·2414 Phone 831·2'itl1 Spacious livrm &: dinnn, · a n a," re 1 ay REAL TORS 644-7662 9.:,' Wk.days call builder, 642-49Cli like new crpt thruout, sep Quaint 3 + D + OR. 2 Lots -'~· ,._ laundry rm, cozy brick fpl at ocean. Entire home hand-,.._ AILr 4 UNIT APT. BLDG. 30• covd patkl. Nr schools made. Vacant. 2 FP. Artist's Nt•r Nt!:",Lley 1 Offl ~reat rental area & gocxJ & shopping. This 'A-'tln't last, haven. $159,500. •r 1 ct 1nveatmt. CostR MeM. Four call today. BKR. 847-3584 QUINTARD RLTY 642-2991 BIG CANYON S•n Ju1n C1pi1tr1no Z BR unlr s. Inc. $7,740 yr. OPEN SAT/SUN -Try 10"'"" down. $65.0CK> VACANT WALi< TO BEACH &: shopping. Price reduced to $19, 750. Must sell thi1L beautiful 1 story SUrfslde Condo. SCOTT REAL TY 536-7533 Beaut 3 BR home, right $23,950. CONDOMINIUM Wttley N. Taylor Co BRAND NEW 011 10th fairway. Ju5t listed Vlcv.', retired country living, REALTORS ' 4 BR at $!49,500. Open Dally. San. Juan Capo. ZBR, plus 2111 San Joaquin Hill!! Rrl . 1015 Oro $56,950 ll Rue Verte. CaU 675-6900 patio, swimming pool, & Newport Beach 644--4910 1248 ~1orningskle $82,950 * BAYSHORES * laundry available. TRANSPAC 67S.1219 Bayshore or: Approx. '600 Call Henry Wall Realtor 6 UNITS - 4 BR, 3 BA, FR, wet bar. So81 · 11 1" ~-."Rh &1· •• !•000m. 1rm1. 31: ~~i:..~.'35 BEACH SPANISH 2400 en. ft. N~'ly dee. el"J 0 Ut<llC . .a.>V, nc. 1 Id 3 bl k L ~-64 900 "-·-mooring &. 28 ft. dle11el ycaro · oc s to beach! g. patio, $ , vwur. sports Usher. Marilyn Early [ -~ Tiny view ol Blue ParUlc. OWNER $4,000 dn assumable 494--55n CAYWOOD REALTY ............ l ~ Gorgrous l .story . 6 unlr VA Joan. Sharo Oceanaire L1guna Niguel G4Z-fi033 548-l290 apartml'nt Spanll'h motif. 4 br + fam rm + 2 ba. Ze-ro \'Reaney. Barg a In 552-!:ffi03. I BY owner 5 BR&: den. beach WESTCLlrF nrea walk to beach 10 .... 'Tl \•alue nt O~L\' 4 liR. Condo. $2600. total ..-ide Niguel Shores, 2 ~ !'hops. 3 BR., 21,2 BA, Mobile Homes $115.000! Try lO'iO down. On. to auume T% loan. new. Guarded commun1t.y. Townhouse, frpl c, clubhouse For Salt 125 Fnntnslic apprwinlion area. ~273 Eves., Bkr., Rec. center w /I en n 1 s & pool, $-19,500. Call today 83.1-3305. Lido Isle clubhouse, $52•500· Lease SILVERCREST ' • H . H bo courts, pool. etc, walk lO ALSO l BR. 21-ii BA To'.'·n· MOBILE HOME 1NYJ:STM11~,~I ~~t1ngton ar ur beach. $79.500. 496-8122 house. 1.rplc, pool & FOR SALE : I ,.. • Option. 646-t23l or 645-0030 MOBILE HOME _ --;--:-- HH ' LIDO ISLE-$65,000 Newport Heights ill' x 53', 2 BO ,2 BJ carp .• '\ ' 4 Bedroom =~" e~!:;.~:....;'-!r!i1""E"A;:STSIDE TRl!!!!P!!!L~E~X~I Here Is your cha.nee to ltve .,,... All 2 BR thbalt•h e:<cceptional :t br1" d2 Joe. $97.500, 673-3942 ' Down. Assume IBA loan. • amoo High ans •Fireplace new shag Just listed , a top money horn~. Huge y_<1.rd ,11ith poo. J, Corona de.t Mar ·-·--1 carpeting &: '"""i"t. Next niaker in an excellent \vest· I -~· grac10us spacious en crtrun-C HI hi door to large ahopp1ng i-;ide location. All 2 BR units Ing lll't!.a. brig-h~ sunny kit-ameo 9 ands center. Cheaper than rent. backing to a gol f course. chen Wlth step.in breakfast TI.ie private beaches and the Ask for Dale, 963-6746 $605 monthly in conie could ~r. Lots of bookshelves in , unsurpassed view ot the evt'n be inorc. Only $61.500. library alcovf'. A must see ocean from this home are CALL 644-7211 today • call 6'i'3·8550 for jusl tl\'O fJf the surprises in BEACH CONDO $24,500 Full Price and fully tw-nished. 0 11 l y $2500 dov.•n payment. \\lhy rent? Cnll on Udo &: enjoy prestige Bargain for 220 air cond.. kitch. • 1 BA units by the sea. Your own Mini clock, storage shed, land-w/prlvate patios & yards. Casile. Just steps to the Probably the least expensive scaped' patio. Three yn. old 10% . down f Ina n c in J': beach. Vacant &: the owner 4 bedroom home In Newport • like nu. Located in new available. $51,000. AIM 3 Appl. store for you. Beautiful l'On- 1: ~i · •rs "" ro " •re"~ ~~~1~1 3 :::m ;:,~e 1~~~ I • • .. , pnlio. F..:l<cellcnt landscap- ln.it. $1'1,0CXJ. House Of Glass , 1 8' Wall PRIVATE -8' "'~II 1111 around a 1-IOUSE 0 l" GLASS Dean Garden1 CENTER ATRIU~I . vaulted celllngs. floor to celling fireplace large open living aretll-super prtvale hou~ or glass $S,400 total down. Be curloUll call ~. Ol'!N rlt. t • Jn AIN R) 8E NiClJ ' ' Henel, McKema & Co. Realtas GT.,.7225 ---llAlfOl:S SUc(·cssor To COLWELi. ProP4?rties, Inc. See The Ocean! /Jn Nll.f I. hMI I Y ~ 1i'JSUl IAI rs ~.c=:==========~ CASH 24 HOURS For Your Home No hidden costs, delays. No obligations, 15 J'l:'S exp~ BRASHEAR REAL TY 1142-7411 REPOSSESSIONS l-"or lnform11tion and locnt:on al 1;1ese io.iIA & V/1. honies, will even carry the loan. Beach with fresh paint in· adu1t pk. away from noisy more to chOOIC trom . tnve!JI Herbert Hawkinl haltors side and out, with a sewing St. Qne..haU bl. from club-1vi11Cly -Free counseling. 963-5681 roon1 for mom, pool ii~d house. $15,495. Ca.JI EVES. Call Pre1Uge H o ni e s . yard for kids and gar.1,e 213-694-4690, 697-7152. 64f>.6646. FANTASTIC BUY 11'0rk.11hop for dad. lt can't CAN BE SEEN AT: co=VIN=G=ro=N~4--pl-ex-.-,-.-co-mc Back door to beach walk. Ja~I nt only ~45,900. C:1tl CRESTMONT • S76S. mo, Priced below Mkt. 1721·1 t'O:\ST lf\\ \', ~ 4 br + bey vu . Now $10,(0) ~-72U QUJCK . ESTATES Patt!90n Investment co .. 714: 846-138~ f.r. 213; 592-28W ~~·. ~~lao~~ SUN~: 1051 Site Dr., Brea. (ctnlral =846-0o:,:,,:.'c::f':,:·=~---- O\VNER, lyr. custm 3 BR 6T~7414. Ave. across from Brta COVINGTON 4-plex, lllCOITle casual elcganct. Water view Comm. Hosp.) Lot •46. $i65. mo. J>rcl<'d below Mkl. $9l,(O). Cll3) ~-:>206. M i!:~ion Viejo CONTACT RAY. PK. MGR., Only 10'; Down. Pattison KASABIAN lrv;no 3 BR + den, 2 ha. upgraded -F ON·-for showing lnvortment Co., 846--0182. ~!!',i!~!::~~~d ;:;;~~;;::==~;;;;;;;,I lot, J blk from perk & new 5 1' BAY R T SACRIFICE . 8'x23' Kenoklll lndu1trlol Property 161 ' conl.:tct - Real Estate 962-6644 elementry achl. Lattice pa· On Unda. By fdlPl. Huie Traller aruiched 8'" 1 7 ·1 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;j LA PALMA kl $40 ~ Ope S cu' l . lam 11 y home cablni Mu.t be moved 1• ~~~a~~Be~~~nd~ Lovtly 4 bdnn, 2 bath AIR i-s:"Pix>ne' Jo~ d~C:; Q/wiu~ ~~r~. $1695, ~Newport Blvd: 3500 SQ. FT. TILT..\JP $45.000. Tom Miller, JUtr. CONDITIONED, spic and 830-~,;.552"'=4~=-~-~-~7ln · · Coct& Mesa, Space 35, See ~e~~d ot137Sanl001a n..~:. 642--4811 11pan home. O\vner trll1l5" :'. · manager · • · v wRm" tel'Tt'd North. Only 4 bdm1 v ~~O:, ~r ."! c3 1 :. :et; EM'TBLlIFF O:mdo, by FOR Sale By Owner 196.'\ Rm cM1: htdtrull tRftocj. HEACH GIANT! 4 BR + den -+ 3 ba. $48,95(1. 9682 Sco~1oun. 968-8273 Bkr. Jutta few words . in the right plac~ ••• Dolly Piiot· Cloulflod Adi Dlohhe ~irect llno 642-5678 In The Jta.nch undrr $50,000. owner, X·Plt•n. Formal D.R. Oarlon lBR, turn 'UxSQ oy c •r e 11ltor CALL 552 •7500 Com p. lond11<:•fl'd & beaut. 3 Br. 2'.I Ba, F.R., pAtlO. w/lllxl8 expando l\'Haugo 1810 Newport 81..t, CM decorated. Ch!ntt 586-1592. ~plH level, incl. rec. fa.ell. 642.5192 6 .. •M1• ' 548-n29 N Be h 161.000. 832.0SSS, 644·0533. • ~~" · I VISION owporl IC ... ON 12' x ra· Mobil• Homo Oco>n l 2±&_ --0-CEANFR._O_N_T__ WATERFR T viet\., 5 Star s.dult Nev.•port FOR Sale • 8000 sq. ft. new CONDOS Rene.!'! Pnrl:. No pets $3SOO. Tllt·uri buUdlng on 20,000 • red hl'jj DUPLEX 1 old 1~. 11 3 B "l"OIS • .• •q. «. of land, 15% down yr w uuol II P· r \:< J""(. r.ve .. \\:fl • Sl!Uer to provtde 9% 2:i I 1r,oo Sq. f:. rf \\"OOd. ~lats Own/Aft 673-1729:~4 \VATERFRONT CaOO.nn. yr. financing. ' ~EALT\' RE:ALTORS 1 .'· C!.'Ulit~. I, C'tll' ''>ll't r,(>. BAYCRE.ST owner .fl Br, 2~ Adults only. S13,tXXI. 1 W.1~. DAUM &i: STA.FT I Univ. Park Centrr, Irvlne I Ore 0! ll !'-iud. $l94,000. na F R ' fp • "·II ••• _ _. 6~-1-* 0 ·11 •u 'IO'I * _..,,...,. ... ,...,....,...,....,, '94..00t5 RcaltO"'. DO.>, • • • • ASsum vu '1'l!H,l.);.i or •r ;i,,.,. \A .........., At.MOST r IN IS 11ilf"., 11ARBOR VU, aal• or ,,.,. 5 % \0, l'I"~· ~4 1~'3ll-FLEtTW000:-lt100, 6·2 Bdrm• w/poot. EUUJde $43,750 F'ully Insulated, 2 ;lion, by owntr, $69,lOO BEAOI ff01JS!:· beit .,..., 2191 llAtbor S1»1ce 2,-Colta CM near lllh St. IJOll,000/ I R I JileP.• to ot'ti:a.n. $50,CKKI. Mes.'l. 3 Bdrm, 1 \\ Bath Duplex BR. 2 be . tn>Ic, walk n , fam nn, din rm, c M 0 .. --~11 -... , nr/-~Ide ~-closl!l, ik;yll1btt, b tam lo ulll ""'· pool, polloo, ··~ -··~~. 1 Br compt 111, A peliol -·~MUlor ~· ..w.-· ceUln~. loll of 1b>rqe. lD25 polio cvn, nicely tndscpd, Pilot Owil1ed Ad! Call film Mablle Home on S.,., d - Oro St., Owntt 49M219 6«)..1327 or se&-Snt so..5678 Now! i !TH100 Pilot OultDtd. 60-WJ'I. , I • -.-..&. -----_, _ _ , . . ~~~'"tr~'.'.":"--;:;"TltT::'.".:'::'.:'07:l:'.:::'""-1"11T::~~::'.'."---,l:".""'T.17r"~:"OT:7::::~--.,Tllt!dly177-".-,~Ftllru,..llY,,:.,2.;.;~~·~lf~7-4_°""''7T...,-:--~~OA~l~LV'--Pl~LO~T'--'~r l..iu.11'tal P ...,.!'!Y I'! Bualntu l .:.;;;;;:;~~nfu::.;.;•n.~-=t :..:;::::...;:;"';;:"::.:'"::.:·--=::i~:;;~...;:;~:;;:.._...:::i:::~:..:..;:;.;.:~--= ;.,;,;,.;....;;,;.;.;.;,;.;.;.;__...:;36:: I Apt. Unfur n. \pt• .. FOR SALE • lfl,(O) sq, tt:1~;~;;;;;rlun;;;;;11;;Y;;;;;200;;,;1 General COita Met. Co1t1 Mtsa ~iutoft V11]0 -. Furn. or Unfvl"ft. 370 -Tllt·up bulldlng on I' Costa Mou 41>,oo;> aq. tti ol land. Low e liquor Stor• $.25M mo lt Haa J BR, SAnl A "· E. Side . Ef'flC. aplt trom ~ wk LCE 28R. 1tudlo, 1 11 ba, 2 BR. 2 BA, cplfl, d.rpl, it· ~ •• :_ ~lM!':.-1~ ... provide • MFG. Net •s1M '73 'Ibat Cttt1ln C.M .. llU cpta. nW.y paJ.nttd, FOR lie San Clemente 5 OC' srro mo. Pool, maid, P'lllO, 111.r. dlw, bllln range ll'lt-hrd gar. /\Vl\11 lmm"'1, 1-... • .. , lui.anc .. ,. • SOn\elhln• 2 """J"' -"• -mo Br{ t Ba, fa.nt1l1Uc cuttom It:. ldrv · vn1...... Inn O'"'n •·r-• alr ~,1 _.7 ~~ 1 W.H. DAUM •· ST"-• Flower Shob,Nwpt Be l " .... ' _..,, +"'" ' bu lt ~. -•t -·--· 1 ' ....,..., '" • ...., ... -....... "'; • nr Dt:at IU'ea,, ~""""'°Wt mt. "' n.r.-" E\'l'!ryono \Vant• 548--W · ,..,..se on •"" ...,........, 9C36. shos>~na~,· '",,am, '"', .. a1•dl1 "•20"", 1·-...:...-------1WHAJ YOU * Call 546-.n.0'7 * • SEW·M•il rder lttmf C.AJ.J.. it a Brand New home-. puoram& oceu v I e w ="'~"""~-=....,=--,--ctiildr.. , .,. Newport &each LOto for Sala \70 HOLLAND BUSINESS with a view, a prl"te "'y THIS! 3 BR. 2 BA. $235. 492-7143 BAO!. full kit. °""' ln. 2293 1· am, CM, &<&-348S 645-tl70 te:nnls court & •~immtng JJ11.0o, pr, kids ok. N.l'\\'LY d ed 2 BR Utll. pald. No pell. Adults. * 2 WE EKS FREE* 1 .en.-ocean view, zoned SAL.ES 54G-050I pool Just itcps away. Or Homeflnders 547·9641 home. w/e~ yard " ;.,m~o.,,4,,,!ll-~7~4~13,.,...=,,......,.,.,. 2 BR, d1hwhr, stovt1, ttfr'la;, Vista del Mesa R-4 Pa.lllade1 Capl•trano Mo 1 __ call lt a hbCW')' 2 Bedroom EASTSlDE. New 3 BR. 2 c·-No amoke/dlink. SUS Uti1. paid. F\lrn. &Pt. ~i· 1.\1 utll's pd. Pool. GET IS Beftch. Will take 8-10 unilt M Y to ~n 240 &: den (or 3 bedroom) home BA, DuplC"X, Bltns, D/W, Ji;;;tt~1 $225. 494-7919 Older employed gentleman BBQ Gar. Sml ctilldren Ol' ADULT CARDEN HOMES tp $50,000. o:Flndla,y Real'. 1 t TD l with forme.I dining room, Shag, ·Yard, Quiet $275 S. J . Ciel•trano . only, no1Hmoker 494--m'r. ~i..s1J~i an~~ ~~~~~ ~~~~J~ 'tor. 24627 Del Prado Dana s oa "" flreplaco, IWNl'l' carpets • -n uan -Nawporl B .. ch ONLY. I un. 1180 2 Dr. S220 ALL YOU'LL Pctnt, -5. • • d<ape.•t or call It th• one 1 ••<'{ 1'HfSI 2 Br $195 Gar-VACANT 2 BR 2 8 D ·-Nl hi ··-·r11 ~1 UP TO go" or ti. Kind with a side ya.rd e, fncu ti lot.' _ t. • NEW 4BR draJ)f!.'11, crpts, S35 PER Wk &: ttP 1 br. now, , A. &.Y • g ~-u y, ..--...... ~.":TlTN : BUILDE RS S"•% INTEREST lnrp enoueh to •tore yoor H"!_•fi"J'r• ":,7 ~,1 bltlrua, f;p\c, comm. pool, 2 br &: bach's, color tv, 10101w 1cpts1 & ,Pain~_· \1Valklng Jw'i'"o·.o'r'c•~'. rnRi','·blll'~rdl<!•,-• ._.ta de C.M., 2 BR Jlsc .,~ motor home, boo.f or ,.. ... , .... ~ .,.. •7!!.,-nr mariM m-t'T4S or mAid snrv, pool THE Jjf o 110pp1ng "' t ieaten. '" !DO.:" "' Lot 63 X 215 to an &uey. 2nd TD Loan•, cnmpi'r! J..ocated high on ••3 BR.·$225 Odds ok). ~81 • !\G:SA. 415 N. Ne"1>0rt Adu1t11: only plf'('lse. s11a mo. color TV. r:ia. Apt. hait NEED ••• VISTA ~ned for multiple unltl. tl'' the hill above Corona Del t.rg fncd yrd, quiet area, Bl, NH 646·9681 . SouU.CO, Renllors 54.5--8424 d lsh~·ashcr, rcfrig, s~ eel rnn, only., 6&-571•1 l Mar In Ne~por1 Bcl\ch. ·newel' i.:phi. 3 BR 2 ba bit/bu;, ocean DYNAi\tfC lg. oceanfront 3 * NOW RENTJNG * & prt patio or dee · OCEAN ~farina Imp--,. owest retes Ore"~• Co. Cbie to FaJOhlon Island, The ~·~Jl; &fG.9666 vSew' new home ltarbor BR 2 BA ~ly s~ A""'I Now 2 BR, 2 BA ndull opts. S.1~1MS. I •v•<~ S ttl Mt c beach & 1tlepi; to tcnnllli • · ' • • ~ · · ....u, y"" otA. Write Clu•ltied Ad • er I · e . twlmmlng & Jae<:uti. Cati 1.J•na Point Lane Jlome11 $290. After 6 311 _Day 6Mi-n03, Niie Patlo!I k t'ncl. gar. l.25 No, 93. Dally Pilot, P.O. '42·2171 JU.0611 It your l'll'X me. For --·----p.m . eall_499-3020 613-2.'>86 ~Ielody Ln. $~$250. }~or Box 1560, Co.Ila fifeKa, Cullt. Strving Harbor area 24 yrs. Ieue. Call 7 AVAIL now-new 3 br, 2~\ CondomlniYMI VIE\Y or Bay.$13.5/mo. ti! l"f'SttVatlontt. ~- 1-BR. l ba. Furn. \'early, incl, ulll. Nr. ho'l.y ...... $275 3 BR, 2 ba. DEL LAGO 92626. LOANS available, any type, ba, . f.p., close to achls, Unfurn 320 June 15. 1 BR. Call Bt\\'n 1 BR & LOFT APTS. Pool. N.B. VIEW LOT for IBle. anywhert'. any size. $50,000 AlA. l.ENTAlS =777 S2:l> mo 1 & e • • 9 & 6, 675-2833, 6T.>-5800 Jacuzzi. Rents incl ; all utll, Ne\\·ly dceor ....... , •• •. ~ Udo 2 Sr, 1 ba uni. , •• S300 4 BR Wlf apt, Yrly .... $400 SSS,000, No. 3 Bumlna: Tree, up. Mr. Taylor (707)255-4111(1 • Costa Mesa refrlg, encl. garage. $190 Big Can.von. (213) m 7477 or M w od .. WKW.f!f IM SllVICI 2 BR House, lgc yd, $265. Apt Unfum 365 to $225, No Pets. 393 (213)-823-6766 oney ant 2$0 mo. pets ok. Call betwn ' ' Hamilton. &15-4411 f 211 MOUSIS !_ok_lp~49-1:44'l4 ~~ Vhagerde,:eau~io2 pooB~, B1lbo1 lsl•nd 1 & 2 BR ""/drps, crpls, associated Luxury lakeside adult liVing, comfon. and pr iva cy. affordable renlals . ..ecurily, boating. l\\•lnlming, tenni . hnndball, gym, sawlllS and 1 YaC'hl Cub. Efficlencll's, I, Ranches, f•rn11, 1 _G~'°"="''-----:.l:IO lST TD LOAN. ~ or VALUE. 10'/0 INTEREST. 832-4.187 40 ACRE RANCH Mortgages, ASSU~tE PAYMENTS Trust n. ... _ .. , 260 UQUIDATION ..,.....,.. TRUST BENEFICIARY ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; NEEDS l!ELP SS4tiO ortginal price may be picked up by nlaking 3 back 2ND TRUST DEEDS To borrow on your Rt-al E11atc, invest for good yiC'ld, or sell extstlllg note. Call us Signal ~1ortgage Co. {714) 556--0106 · PA¥n1enta of $69.00. \vlth 11 ho.lance of $7025.00 at 7o/c Int. with 156 additional payments. In A m e r I en s fastest gt'0.,.,1nl)': slnlr. just ~;;!!!!!!f!!~!!! off U.S. Highway 66. Gently, ' rolling land ~ar llolbrook, Arizona. and adjacent to the Petrified Forest, Palnted 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Desert and natk>nal parks. • Call Collect for Llnda • (6021 994-5995 -·Housn·Furnnhtd -300 RHI E1t1te General Exchango 112 --------Sl.26--UTlL Pd Nice Bach, PROPERTY OWN!RS Have you a Real Estate problem'!' \\'e 11peclnllic In exchani(ln& all t.Ypes of property. Consult \\ith us. BARRETT REAL TY 642"4353 full kit, lrg priv. deck, So. Laguna. $160-UTIL Pd 1 Br, bltns, yard. 2 blks beach, Laguna. $250-2 Br, frplc, sml pct, 1 blk beach, Corona clel M:ir. NU·VIEW RENTALS I '.'!'~~~'l"""""'""~""'-673-4030 or 494-3248 40' CUsroM Sport Fisher. l BR house, O f, $115. 2 $38,000 Value for trust deeds BR, $140. Walk to water, or improved property. Call I Br hJus.c, HB, Sl2S. 2 1'.fr. Wells, Bkr, &i2-53l0 ; BR $140, Bachelor uni1s, 6-124603. Npt Bch, Lag, Bch, $115. RHI Estala Wonted 114 Agt. F .. m!43o. SELLIN('; VOIJR 40\1~'.' Try our NO CO~™ISSION Sf"letn. A nat fee ol only $595. payable Ill close of sale will ei''e you full professk>na1 guidance lrom start to finish. \\'e are licensed, exne-rlenced Rrok~n that fee l it is time for a change! Get full details by phoning 518-5566 ANYTIME. WE BUY HOMES CASH IN 5 DAYS FREE ESTIMATES OPEN EVERYDAY 4 EVE. HWll Beach/Fount Valley S36 -142-5541 'Bkr. CorDM del Mar NEW 2 BR, 2 BA. dish\\'ashcr~ frplc. washer. dryer. Newly furnished. Ocean view. Ocean side h\\)'. $400. 5-17--09'33 \\•kdaya or 496-1981. APR t • June 15. 2 BR, 1 ~'2 ba., Lg patio. l hlk beach. S30CI mo. :~ 3 0 J Sca\-;rw. Eves 673--5820 CUTE COTTAGE--2 BR trplc. Nr. Big Corona. S2T'.,_ 4 mo's rental. Kingaanl RE. 642·2222 Coit• Mata STUDENT &: rine:les! 1 Br. Mobile-Home. SllS .. Util od. Homefinder1 547-9641 j'!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!ll!!!l!P \ 2 BR., l BA. w'11r, dryer. PVT. PARTY \VANTS TO BUY H0rt1E D I RECT FROM JlVf PTY 539--3962. HOUSE wanted. Pvt ply "'111 pay all cash for local property. 640-«m. --------- Waterbed. Gardener. $250 mo. 646-0919 Huntl""°" 8tach QUJET COUPLE 1BR4-plex, $125. Pel Ok. Homalindars .147-9641 Irvine l ~--~---.:1~1 .•~1, April h i ID 5'pt, 15 F'Um. 4 BR., 21,S ba. Wfi Includin& gardener. .February thru August Buslneu Opportunity 200 * TV /Stereo Repair ?.1u11t Sell! .... $5,00) * Fast Food Take-out Good location . . . . SS,900 * Auto BOOy It. Paint Well Estab. . ., S30.CKXI Furn 3 BR. 2\; ba. $325 Per month lncl. gardener [" I I · 11 I 111 I I'! Id. ' I I --· I 11·11 l11r * Auto sale111 &: leasing n--k Bldg 50 To 80 Can mo. S25,0XI ht Western ao.u • * J e\;cli"'/ Store lJnlveralty Park, Jrvlne Sal" & repair 140,000 Days SS2·7000 Nights RIVIERA REAL TY """"'""'""'""'""'"""' 149 Bro"rlway, C.ti1. Lilt.ifta Ba•eh * 642·7007 * Bottle Water Routt Own your own bollle waltt 1 BR attrac fum boule, $170. S&Jarit-d man, no pets, 49HI10 route, "-'til train if qualified. tfou1e1 Unfum. Best Oren11:e Co. & L.A. 305 Areas avail. Will adjust Gener•I roule size to tit your needll. ..;...;...; _______ _ j Jf1 ~·L LITTLE mansion, 3 BR, Adu1t1.' $215 ~ • ·1 ----------stove, dshw51', inc. gar, -----_... tretc, Dana Harbor, U>U. · DELUXE 2BR apt Including \\'11.lk to shopping. Far ... MOil a IAY, C.M. '42·W . NICE 1 Br gar w1it $165 uUI pd, iotv & refr. Eside. GARAGE 2 br dplx $175 fenced for pet. See no\\•'. CUTE Little 2 hr $195 stv, C & D, gnr, iunl pe.L HOMEY ~ br $225 ava\lnble gar, lncd, yd . Kids k pct. NU Paint 3 b1· 2 ba $275 bltns. 2 cnr, kid~/pct. MANY LARGER & SMAU.ER . CAIL US!! ALA Rental• 642-1383 S LANDLORDS $ We Need Your Listing~ So Help·ua...-We'll-tlclp -'.{ou Se.\'e time & Dollars ... SALA RENTALS $ Newport & Bay, Of 642-8383 2 BR · View Balconies $400 J BR • vicv.· • Laguna · $300. 3 BR -Kida &: pets OK -1395 J BR -Baylront -Slip 1425 3 BR. C.d.M. $425 2 BR -DR Shoreclitfs - """ 4 BR -Portoflno -$4~ 4 BR • Harbor View · $515 4 BR -on golf course $64-0 . 3 BR Cameo Hlgh\Rnds • s.575 4 BR -SPYGLASS -$1,000 67?>-7225 4~. 499-1331. Huntington 8Hch boat dock. on Grand Canal, 1nature minded persons . Hunttngtun bHCn l.Jttlc Balboa Island, yrly $15().$165. mo. 646-1481 · f I pet AV AIL. March 1st. 3 BR S350 per mo, 6~ .s!!,ldren 01n1 Point $za..3 Br, 2 ~. P • . condo. All appl, pool fac, ~•r"..J'pe!'t~'·c'0~wn~•!,r~·~""'w'!!_•--i '.::::::'.:::::7":'.::--'.:-'.'.'.':---: palio, play fields, tentus, $215. mo, 968-87ll. 801.n'H SEA JBR 3BA, tpl, DELUXE 2 13R, 2 BA, wl p001, nr mr1et Ad a .m ~ beam ceil's, spiral stairs, 0<·ean view, frplc, din rm, &. lirkhl!ll. ~10 or 's.e· "'.Ill NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba. condo. bay view patio, gar. 325~11 sun deck, $275. Thonipson l~lp you niove. tiJ!HXI~. Patio, carpeted gar. $275. Sapphire, 6i5-8871. OPEN r-.tana1ement Corp. '19J-0141. ~:.!-082'-J 536-1685 or 551-0727 SAT & SUN. 1 BR gorden npt. z patios, C~~d 3 &;:_f S:itn 51:~ Huntington Harbour 337 E. Bayfront. 2 Br, spill gar. $163. Oldrr lady, crp • rpa, .. ., c, level, frplc, pier for boat \\'Orking cpl. '196--1883 l'\'e, oven & range, dshwhr. NEW Condo· 2 BR 1 ba S""'ct. view avail rt-far. 1. East Bluff }"auo Jandscpd fncd yd ' • • .,.. • U' ',., m 1•7.,_,, ''h•p-" 2 Story. Pool, nr. harbor, 613-6900/675-3331/673-4766 11Y .,..iJ,, 0 • ,,.,,., " boat storage, $225. mo., Call · para! i.n. 846-327'2. collecl, all 6, or all day Balboa Pen1n1ul1 \VALK to_ Shopping! 1 BR 4--wknds. 213 322-4427 2BR ns beach yearly lease plcx,.$~. Uar, pet ok. Townhouse Unfurn. ll5 $250. ' ' Homeflnderr-547~9641 --· ----675=1084 3 BR, 1 in Oa, crpt, drps, Huntington Beach LAROE 1 Br apt. 1 blk bltlnB, frplc. Nr Warner & to Bay or ocean $195 mo. Newland. !213J 634-27U. 2BR. 1 1i: ba, frplc, pools, utll lnc. ST:>-4600 da\'S 'J'"'XAS SIZ"'' 4 BR ' BA wllAher/dryer, refrig, child C d I M . ';". . -"'· .' • ok, $2'25, 846-7856 eves " orona t ar $:165. Pauo, gar, bnng !am. weekends Homefindtrl 547·9641 --2 BR. 1 BA, carpets, drapes, ~~--------13 BDR!<.1, 1\~ Ba Adults only, fireplace. Pool. Irvine Hwitington Bay 962-2951 $225/~10. 675-0;62 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l,~bt~wn~J0.~!2~o~r}!960-~ml~;_· ~ * 2 BR .. bit-ins, pool * \Ve presently have a fine Duplexes F um. 345 $215 · Lease e DELUXE e 3 BR, 2 BA (lpt tor lease. Incld apac. master suite, din rm &: dbl pre.JI'". Auto door opeher avali . Pool-& Rr!etta· uon area. Ph: 644-8064. • $297 • 865 Amigos Way, NB ifanaged by \\1Ll.JA1\.f \VALTERS CO. Huntington Beach UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT selection of 2, 3 & 4 SEMPLE R. E, 67J..&145 bedroom rentaJs from $280 Newport Beach APT N Bch 1 Br 2 BR. Bltns, n e w l Y •~ "= mo as well as -1 h r • . • nu decorated, encl garages. w ~· " 4 . k tc en, sunroom, pnv gar, B tllul I d · • -resales in the area. \Ve are BR, 2 BA upper. View 644-2292 ~tr Allen eau an sca~1ng. ....a here to solve YOUR bouslng of bay. Nr 44lh St. Avail. . · , play area. a c~lld s dream. needs· immcd. $350/mo, 675-1911 CdM ptece & quiet. 2 BR, Close to shopping & 11ehls. · Bier 1 bath. Private garage. Children welcome. 842-0.l80: r-ll11~·-1\.11i1. Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Adults. ~40. If no ans 847·7331. -'--------$175-1 BR, bltns, crpts, drps, avail. int med. 705*,~ Marigold. 642-9918 e\'es. Corona dtl Mir ---·1: l'11ll11 r LUXURY ,duplex. 2 Story. 2 BR VIE\V APT. New crpts, .2,000 . sq ft. 3_ BR. .2 i,; & drps. $275/~to. • ba, IJv rm, din rm, fam * 675-4048 * Lst \Vestern Bank Bldg. University Park, 1rvine Days 552-7000 Nl9hts rm, bit.ins, 2 blks from heh, 2 car gar, sundeck, Avtil. Costa Mesa now. 67J...7967. LARGE 3 Br nr. shop'g & 2 BR. 2 Ba ......... , •• $325 beach, $360/mo. i BR, 2 ba, &IC •.• , ,,. , $275 83.l-ll44, 646-6075 3 Bft., 1 ~ ba. · • · · •. • • $275 Newport S.•ch 3 HH, 1~:i balhs •••••• $300 ----------1 J BH, 2 baths · •• .• $375/450 2 BR. 2 ba, garage. Cl05e ,. A 4 BR., 1 % baths •. • .•• S300 to «ean. Ne~rt Shores. 4 • $220.-NEW e 2 BR, 1% BA • Bllns + OW e Wet Bar e Enclosed Garage • 12 Blocks to beach e Walk to market e Kids & Peta O.K. Realtor 536-8836 WALK TO BEACH 1 &: 2 Br·Cpts, drps, Bltns, garage. 308 16th St. No his Please. 53&-2165 or 847-3957 4 Bil. 21Aa baths •.•• $-1001450 No petJ. IR $225. mo. 2l!B HDUlea* Apts. 4 BR., 3 bath> ........ 1425 Codar. 67?>-1393. PINECREEK * Ml•Ol1t * CALL 552-7500 Apts. Furn. 360 LIVES UP WALK to Beach, schools &: rolf. 1, ,2 & 3 BR'1. Frplc's, covered garage. Mgr's Apt Avail. 410 21st St. HB. 6«-0558. "9'43sw.11thCOITAMllA VISION il.'i;;;. Peninsula TO ITS NAME • LOVELY 3 BR, 1~) ba $80 •• $140. · furn bachelors. $110 & up • fu111 1 BR'S. $140 · J..a:. 1 BR, unf. 1 child OK. Nr. OCC. $165. • 2BR unf, 1 ~ • d h.11 PJ WEEK & UP Over 500 tall trffs and JO Condo., Nr. shop & schls, re J e Sleepln& Room. streams · with . waterfall& co r. Golden We5t & • H ..... '"" lino create a relaxing setting tor Warner, $240 mo, 842-4222 o"'"""'eep-. ma ,_ 1 • -•·-... ·-1 alt 6 REALTY REALTORS e Ocean View Apts your spacwllll new • or .-mo ..... _, O'tU'""'l'IJ" p~ BFl.OKERS-REA LTO~S l OlS W Balhan ft1J J6tJ P ARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedrooni.s and TO\\•nhouses Fr. St9-l.50 Open 9-6 Daily [ Spa Pools Tt:!nnl~ AC't'Os~ from Fashion llllllr.rl at J amboree-on San Joaquin I Hills Road. I 1714) 644-1900 2, 2 &. Den fron1 $1T.i, \\•ith everything ;)OO 11et?d ;.111 a1i.'lttment to ht'. MESA VERDE EAST AND ADAMS AVE. COSTA MESA 540-1800 EASTBLUr1'~ 2 BR, 2t,..i BA. 2 Story. Crpts, drps, frplc, gnr. Avail 4 1. S315/mo. THE F.XCmNG Pet ok. 833-9703, eves PALM MESA APTS . 640--0292 l\tlNUTES TO NPT. BCll. * EASTBWFF 2 BR. Bach, 1 & 2 BR. f.rom Sl.57 Adults, No l'elS. Pool. 1-l'J>lc. Adulls. S265. 1561 A1esa Di·. 848 MllGOS WAY (5 blks from Ne\\•port Blvd.l 497-1997 &W-.()900 546-9860 DUPLEX, 3BR, 2BA. nl l * CASA VlCTORlA * bltns, blk to bch. XI lg. yr-md. Nice $325 { 1 1 1, 2 & 3 br, furn & uni. 827-2382. Sec011V. gates1 , tcrptsN. d~, • poo. ec. o pe ..... .2 BR upper, walk to beach, 525 Victoria St at l:larbor $275. Incl Ut111, Yrly. Avail CM. 642-89'10 411, 213-447-9443 Huntington Beach OLJ{E Spani.'lh 3 br, 2 ba, tpl, bltns, OW, nr Hoag Hosp. DELUXE adult p o o I s id r! Adult.!!. $265 mo.· 642-0596. garden bungalow, nr ocean, OCEANFRONT l BR, frplc, frpl, 1rg patio, 6 pools. bltins, crpts, drps, yrly sauna, tennis. 846-0259. lease. Call 6~1536. Also 1 Br. 1''rom $135. · ON THE BAY 3BR, 2BA, Laguna Niguel _ fpl , d/\l', close to * BR•ND NEW* everything. $425. 673-5n9. ""' 1 &: 2 BR, 2 BA. From Newport Helpht1 $195 unturn. 1-· u r n I s be d units Avail. SPACIOUS 2 Br, smartly CROWN VALLEY Apll. dt>COrated , frplc, cpts, dqlf;, San Diego Frwy or Coast patio, enclosed pr, storage. Hwy to HiUhurgt. 23734 Quiet bldg. Adul!.s no pets. HUUwrst, Lag. Niguel. $1!KI mo. 64Z-..'781 (Il4) 83l-0730. San Clemente S1nt• An1 --------! NEW garden apts. 2 BR, 2 BA. $195.; 3 BR, 2 BA dsh\vsr, trplc. $250. See at 686 Crunino De Los h1ares, south ot San Oemente Hospital, 493--0141. ON OCEAN 1500 aq ft 2 BR. 2 BA, quiet, luxurious, AJC. Adults, no pets. Eves 492-2131 NEW 2 BR, 2 BA, laund., patio deck, gar., cpts, drps. $195 mo. 496-2828 alt 6PM Santi Ana CHOICE LAKEFRONT 1 LOCATIONS ,: VERSAILLES ci~ At South Coast Plaza. ON THE LAKE 1 ba. Univ. Park Center; irvlnt: BALBOA INN ~ ~me~'w_~/:. NEAR BEACH J;·. 3 BR, unf, gar, pet 105 Main Street Ottlce open 9:00 10 6:00. 2300 Brand n@w 2, 3 &: 4 Br, cpt Now Renting •••• m.87411 F-'-'ew Rd Costa M"a 1 drps, bltns, gar. 221 18th Pool • Acapulco Aqua Bar & Jacuul. Spectacular 8 Acre · Lake w/Towerina Fountalr.s • J,i MlJUon Dollar Clubhouse, Gym, Sauna, Total Security. ADULTS-SINGLES NICE. :t-BR CONDO •• $220 mo. Ill<!. iu..rvi ·• · or 514 18th St 847-3957 NEW 1·2 &: 3 BR's. Park-like FROJ\.t $195 • 2, 3 & 4 BR 2 BR CONDO , • l<!'.l5 mo. Jse. l DOOR to Beach·2 BR, Phone: 56-2300. """="""..-'-:; . .-""',.--,--: iiettings. Rec, room. Pool. houaes. Families OK. 3 BR HOME .• $315 mo. J;e. winter $.175, yearly $22:;. 2 BR, $165. Qi>ts, drpe, LARGE 1 BR. S~ il Play areas. Patios &: tot WE HAVE MANY, MANY RANCH REALTY ~ · bltns. Sngl •ly, beam coll. rdriJ<, 1125//Bemo. Avl Mar lots. Gu & Watu Pd. Shao, MORE! • C . t Be h Nu paint. Selected pet ok. l . "\Varner ach Blvd. drapes & so forth! LANDLORDS FREE * 551·2000 * .~Pts rano ac 646-9243 or 646-8882. Ma. 847-44<0 Starting at $169 + d'J>. Balboa Island OWNER'S mod. 3 Br. 2 Ba, frplc, laundry, gar. Reduced to $395. yrly ST~; &t(>.43(11 S.lboa Penin1ul1 ""''""'""'"""""'""'""'""""[NEW 2BR. 2BA furn apt. 1 BR. ~·I pool nr Harbor $149-2 BR. CrptJ, drps, stove, Ntwhope Meadows nr. the beach. $225. mo. sho , N iJ $140 Call gar. Pool. 17361 KeelllOl'l nr Aptt LEASE w/ Option to Buy. TREASURE REAL TY Pg. 0 pe · · Beach &: Slater. Kids or ' ., .. , ... , ~ '--'-' ., BA N 2 btwn 9 & 6, 675--2833 Agt. t k o_,., ,._,, oA" A""' 517 S. Newhope, S.A . ' ...... erocK .. ~· .. 0· 493-1141 492-3145 Eves. or 6T~5800 pe 0 · ~. O'l-.Jll't 554-2600 plan. Beautiful. \Vet bar, 1 EXTRA lg: .2 Br, 2 Ba, many exU'll.s: Priced to Costa Meu 2 BR, 1 Vi BA deluxe poolside apt Nr We1tmin1ttr lease fast at $300/MU. . ADULTS ONLY $165 beach. $160. 2320 Fiorida: toJ.~. Unbelievably Beautiful 610 Joann, Apt c 548-9573 536-!&2 · ADULT. 2 BR, quiet, pool, TURTLE MCK 4 BR 3 VAL D'ISLRJ:: Garden Apll. LRG 2 Br ll,i ba tud " 2~B~D~R~--.-Or ___ b_l _ bltns, super clean, Sl.50. No BAY Vu, 2 BR, din rm, 1 BA 2-sty 3-car gar. cPts. Adults • no pets. Flowers bltN!I' pool et~ utli · •''""· · apt. tns peta. 893-0419 thick is~i drpsba.gar,1 ~ drp's, ~. very 'clean. evel')"'•here. Stream &: ~ $180. ' 1978 • !\fa·p 1 e. :~tsg846..f!YJ6\\'~.~· $165. "A~p-,-,,-, ------- frp\, b.~ • .,~k y~ ,?:, "'" .. ., nr. scius. ~ SJJ.:.:167 ail a waterfaU, 45' pool. Rec. Rm. 66-5647 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 to be ....-.. 11Y· ~. , Sauna. Sgls 1-2 Bdrm. ' L419un1 Beech BAYFROJ\'T prl. beach, dlx LagUIWI 8aKh !o'urn-Unfurn from $142. NEW 2 BR, utils pd., ;;.;;z="'-'-"""'---- lge_ 2 BR. $500) or 3 BR SE rr· 2000 Parsons children welcome, no pets, NEW deluxe Townhouse, 2 Balboa Island $600) duplex. Yrly or mo. $1~/UTIL Pd, small but 642_8670 · ' cpts, drps, patio, Mgr. 1960 Br + den, wet bar, ocean BE the first: remodeled, to mo Dock Avail 6'll-fl640 nice 1 Br, yard & patio. · Wallace Apt 6, SU-7364 view, wlk to beach, 1 yr. . . . S2'l5-l BK near beach, $30 WEEK & UP NEW Redec 2 BR adults lease, $400 per mo + sunny 2 BR, furn or unfum. Corona del Mar beautlful view, sml pet ok. e Studio&: 1 BR Apts. no Pets SlOO G~ & wit-cleaning. New Deluxe 1 BR sep gar. Yrly. $275. 67:Xi239. $3~~ING 2 Br, frple, e TV & Maid Service Avall. pd. l14' E . :i>fu St., CM. Townhouse, ocean view, \\ik Corona dtl Mar SEAWIND cruld/pet, 3 Arch Bay. e Phone SeNk• _Hid. pool 543-0U'l or 646-4095 to beach, S300 mo + $:S1!>-LARUE 3 Br, :l Ba, e Qilldren & Pet Section · cleaning on lease. 53&-2803 I, 2 & 3 Bedrooms from $176 par mo. 3700 Plaza Dr. Sent• An• Next to South Coast Plaza 714-556-0411 Rooms ROOMS $20 ~?:: up kitchen S30 .,,,.k up 548-9755, 645-3967. 400 with apt. $75. furnl&hed. Linens, use o! rhnno. N.wport Beach. Cal 6-12-3436 LUXURIOUS pvt Costa hfesa, maid servi~. no smokers, 54g.n97, R00!\1 for rent. Adult. $80 mo. furnished. Laundry &. kitchen privileges. ~ Apt1., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Fountain Valley N.xt To Spy11•-• trplc, dbl gar, yard,~tio. 2376 Newport Blvd CM 2 BR. small yard, manicd 2 BR, ocean vi-", wall ~ ~..,. NU·VIEW RENTALS 54Hi"5 or ~7 . couple only. Pet OK. Sl60 ,.,. •v ~ -VIEW 673-4030 ot 494-3248 mo. Call alt. 5 PM, 642-(857 wall cpl., drps, kit. tum. n ... °"'. -v .-- -i 3 Bedroom, 2 bath hOm" PORTUGUESE Charmer , *5US CASITAS* E/S!DE AUrac I BR, fi'plc, ~"e:~J~94.'?.4'1' ~~ CUT OUT Eam St300. per mo. Polen· lla.J willmlted. Silver Sprinltl Water, 9&C N. Batavia, Oranp. fireplace, formal dining, BR, dining room, frplc, Furnished Bachelor's & beam ~11 · crptg. Adults DELUXE view. 2 & 3 BR, I POR I ' seU-cleanlng oven. Enjoy hardwood floors, fenced yd. 1.Bdrm's. ExcepUonally only. Util pc!. S170. 642-1960 Lease $24{}-SlOO. South end 2 BR. Townhou!'C, frvk·. LANDL.ORDSI pn·val• communlty tennlJ l 2 bl., to beacn. $ill. mo mcc. 2ll0 Newport Bl, CM $180-3 BR. 2 BA nr. South 494-3.183 or 4>1-2339 trom S250. l . BR, tro~ $195. SUJIDAllC• • .... ~ Coa 1 Pl F mlly 4-I Pool. tenn111, continenta l I I We Specialize ln Newport twlmmlng pool in Uilii ..,....._..l LGE turn 1 Br w/ pool, 6 aza. a P ex. OLDER 2 £R apt. Best view breakfast. Separate famlr)' LJw In a~ ane Beach e .Corona del Mf,r e , prestigious area above AVAIL. 3-1. Super 1 BR nr. Harbor &hof'g. No pets. No pets. ~9272 In Laauna on OiU Dr. scctJOn. Clo5e to shopping 1 or~ •~oom ·" _ 1 &: Laguna. Our Rmtal Ser. C.orona de.I Mar, $495 per cottage w/carpott. $165. $155. mo. Cal btwn 9 & 2 BR. $15.5. Stow, refrii, Yearly. 675-t()\8 &: fine beach. 644--2611 ~~I.QI! • ~ vice is FREE to You! Try month -leue. 644-4687. Broker ~3611 ti, 675-2833 Agt. 673-5800 cpts, drps, pool. Adults, no Masa Vtrdt ,.,..,.. ~•• 14 YRS e~tab. Beauty Salon. e TROPICAL l'OOL e 00~~ wal' .._ -"" 000 c M. Nu-View! COZY Cipe Cod Style 2 bdr, Lai·-• Hlllt pets. * * U'W"°'10J Selling anything with a Daily 1 r .. ..,. .,..,.....1 1n•l 5.32-6501 6 Stallons. ,w, . . NU-VIEW RENTALS 1 bath --· --2 Br. 11< Ba, I p I .. I LG. 2 BR, llfiO, Crpts, """· HOME ATMOSPHERE·Db 2 Pilot o ... ifiod Ad l• a lng,di111J8111.m!Y"1flll. t.,;~=·=· ;;A::::San=d=&=Se==a=Rl==ty=-. ..:6'T.!='40.10====-°'=="4tf.32==41 ~~ar 1 be•c'!.,~1 aho~~· 3 BR, 2 BA_ ~lnlHllwn, ~:iru&'ca~· ~~ nr schls, k:lda OK. No pets. &: J br. Rmtal Ofc, 3(l9IS simple matter ... Just 1 pantllld llvlng r~m, 1 1• rep ace, ...... t"'.na• ·1 New worlct,··-. ... -Ja, "fifuT'ru~~·na,--f.i;;l~m.~11~78~=====,.:.,.:;:Ma~co~A2;w~. ~-~1034~·==~,::c~al~I ;:;642-56~~111~1~===== . 1 1 warmcolaraccn-is. re:frl~ratct end fence a crptl, drps, 2 car gar, use BEAUT FURN 1 Br Jot.a --a ldtdwl full d tUft.1ns yards. $290 Mo. 4 1 8 of pool, compl me.int, of blUns, DOOi, walk to I (5-11.,._, &+an+•• I ' Trucks Narcluus -Ph '7rm 830-9002. shopping, m£ from bch $150 "-"' ..,.IWIEll, ,. SEEK & FIND' D p V 8 B R P L A T F 0 R B P T 0 ~f R UO I OREBOTLEROV R MVTO NDKC I EPD P ERTAAE R URB ,.. u v u Kjr R u c K s] ~1 c R E o N D r.1 VP.tf'ELUKNK I PEEERFUP\J O R 8 0 T P U P N C 0 L \' E A T ~t R P S E M I T R A I L E 1 U A F V A E E R 1 RE EFESTOPAO P I C KLTEU SFMULTISROPLATTPKLM TREL I ARTDNAROTCA RTP ' CBEENAIDLA I FORTNNAT AEOF I MUA TU !BT5KEFNA R 8 LT & 8 MS R-P MS 0 TA L N KN TUYSTEBESTAKERCKNAT MULVOPREACHOTS tTCUM ... nlni• and w .. kends. La9una Ni9ual "'°931·wAl'°l9thunl\tmSt ••• l,,~92/MO. C.Uil-0 $1 '1t.. .( -/) -C ~a, " I MHI and mingle with COZY, Rustic So. of Hwy. · · J'tO"VI • \:)~ J.."'Qt.I ~~ ~ P</" V I ~al3Dtgswlm-I 1 BR, beaut. garden, no 4 BR, 2 tms. apacioua unlurn LRG. 2 BR close to Th / • W J G 'th Ch Lf ~.........., '-ml ~ pet or chlld. 673-4169. horn•. Avail now lhru July shopplng, •dUfts, no pets. af nftiguing Ora ame WI a UC• e llanJ ,......, ,..._.., NEW SpY&las• Hill Mme, Lst., $350. Call Inquire 179 1.4 Rochester ------Etli~tl ~., CIAY L POUAN I ~roanE, I M ... Ulcenl vu, 4 BR, 2~i LINGO REAL ESTAtt (rearl. Ri ,.N,. lat. ~· -0 •eorranoe lett•r1 of th• ,._ t..--.iftt ...__.._ ba, 19 Tiburon Bay. ~ LGE F'URN 2 BR. Bltns four xrombi.d WOfdt ~ 1....-""J .,....•'1111 YIAIMl. I N~. 2 .:ai..Baru~r~ ~eort &Mch w~, ~am m~ts, low lo form four Jlrnpl• wordL I =.:.-:= im1mo. 6'13-292> all 6,30. HARBOR v1Ew HILLS 1 Br ir.. tum. $165. Adil•. "r 1 _,,R,....,.o_L"TA ...... MrE..,...-1I 11 =.)W .. ~. I Co1t1 Mesa 4BRBRAN2BDA "'"'1495M°"r""°mo Ch!Murchal fo!~o~~k>n. 1993 1• I I I' j .~ .... • • pe •• • ~ I u.11n1 .... lllll't• I 3 BR. 2 Ba, crpVdrps, .. c1 ~· 54~r1rnr'1~1enn1s llflO .. u<>NICELY tum ••••• tr•• sn1. iiar. pri, patto. LrE ynl. ub, -• 1 • 2 Br tr.u.n. Adults. l•1rtly fllrala~lfl I No ,.,.1... no p e 1,. 5 BR. Fam Rm, Din Rm, 66-ml m w. wu..,,,01 ~ ..... 1l,,....I"·~T...-R_E,,_11 Jj I z1rt•11t1 tr•• $235/mo. 67J..3690. 2 ttplc'1, ~tbe.r, 3 ear aar, Dana l'olnt I' .I' I I 1- 3 BR, ' BA, F/R, D/R. comm. pool. Newport.Sch!a. • ---·--t min. -. : J I.JR. New Oreenbrook $550/MO. ~ 1 BR.. SPANISH VIlJ.A w/ home. 992 Carnat!On, CM. NEW """ 4 br, 3 ba w/ courlylJd, privacy. $150. No ~-~----ii ' m-0'171 L!ll d ..... YU, tennla. pool, P•ts. 646-1231, 84!>0930. • T I R p N • • 1 BR howJe, fill util pd. $ 5 7 5 /m o. E v e • Huntlnaton a.ich I I I' I' If you esk: her her ege, she 2 BR, $150, pr, ktdl/petl. le w\cndl, 644-1791. L. tells you it's her business-191nna.-.s:.... era-1 ' All· F.., 9'IHUO llAR.BOR VIEW HOME-4 I BR. $15$.$1'5 and sh.'s been in ·buslneu o ...... w,. '> ·I 2 DR. cri>lidrpo qul<l, priv. BR. 2 BA. r .... Rn\. Frplc. NEW DECOR. Prl,, p.rag•. I H 0 T B R E 1--. ,... lust, riarlll '> ..... 11ouut1kl111: T h~ hl~d\·n n;\Jn•" il~11·J bdo"'' •ritea1 •0~•111, $180. 54&.-1«>5.~1 CAii 644-6\46 or 644-1295. Adult Complex. 2 ml, So. ~..,..-r-r--nr-ir-1 0 Complete tht c.huclde quot•d Pwk. Phone; 714-~ .. ~tlo, cDle cNiiy. _No l>ftU· Water A Gardener tncld. Lndry rm. Newer Spanish J l Aatosm Ille Saun~ bA'l.llifll, ur. dt!11 n. 01 dla~on•ll}' IJ\ lh" pu11k. lll11d t..:h EW H rboT Vl M of San DI•~ F~ 17301 I I I I' I b f II h ... d 1""" U...t..t. nrwn M.llu • DR hOme nr SO. Cit Plau. N a ew OMCO .~ • y 1 l11g in-' • rn1-ng wor ' QK., R1UU1U ..,...... _, hlJ1knna1nt1ndl-o\hh1 i••IO\\ll: ~' "t T K I Ln HB 84 7843 '--'-.-L.-L.-L.-'-'-~-f 3b low 10 . ST''' ~ mornn. Avtdl. Mar 1tt. Modrl. 2 BR +Oen. ennl1 ee 9:ln , · you ~!op rom st1p Na. • • a.m. 101TL£R PICK tlP ' " ' .. Heritage Rea1ton. S40-1151 a-Pool. privls. ~/mo. BACHELOR Apt, I mlle - - -Wu~~ISTOP ~i~T.~~R.\I i~~~OR A~D TllAILEll. : N1CE 1 BR unrum home ""-"2696 evta, 61Wlel de.yl. from beach, au k \\'I'll Cr 8· NINT NUMaERlO r 11 p I' r I' I' I' I \VHEN BOllJNG-E~ PANEL St.MITll.Alli.Fl \'Ai"' =. East.llde, CM. Walk \~ *; 4. Bit. 3 BA Townhou.w. ~t • 1Ut, SlOO, \.tTteRs IN §QUAB[S • L . _ . . . . ALUMINU M POTS add a 10 u1dc' 11nr :~'°0;1t~i;1.•,11:11andtd "Stt.k & Find" book: sUff:!. $1:/:;~!:il, _=!'&:~~4. Pool, "L'~•:'.1:'.u'-'n"'•'l!J_liiii'n~c:;:h:-----1 ~-fOlj j ~f I I \ \ f l1-----i-;k.iii11o<0''-,;:t-°'.'°"'m d~im,~~t----t ninnhtP l 1luouih 6'. ~n4.l SD tt111~ 101 t:t.eh . 111akl'lt1 chttk~ Sell ·loneer needed ltem1 3 BR. 2 Ba. Beaut Yr11 -• • -• but no ltmi~r needed lttms P'~'bl• t" "S..k ~ .flnu." St,,·l•ltJnn1 Syndkllc. Ad<im• wlth ':" o.lly Pilot au.~ 1..,..' 1425. • BEACON RENTALS\ SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN 'CLASSIFICATION 700 ~~-~~ --!':\'. • Dall) Piiot !~<1~11~•~_1,,_r_;"-•-•_f_th_k_n_••-'~"~"~"~'·..----------'"Ad""l_&O-llS'll."'--'"'"""-----6154303 Laguna Bet.c:h~1 ·~-----~"'----------------------~ ...... _...AU 642--56'1S. ' . • • •• • • ~· ! I I t I _J .. - l -. T...ia,1, Fol>Mrt 26.1974 A Real Estate Career! Meet Interesting People Grow In '74 • Licensing Prepaiation for Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers In Six Weeks • Oaj on:vening Cla~se-s • Broker Exam Testing • Reimbursement of tuition costs by leading brokers • • Schools ·and Instructions Learn Computer e SERVICING • TROUBLE SHOOTING e PROGRAMMl.NG a.ASSES STARTING SOON DAY Oil EVENINGS 1 \ This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow. Newport Air Associates Flight School & Flying Club LEARN TO FLY ssso ,_,.. ......... , * FAA APPROVED * - For further infonn•ti°" "91tdin9 pl•cement of •dvertt1ln9 in tht Daily Pilot Schools •ncl Instruction Directory CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325 "But, Mommy, everyone goes to Yamaha Music School." -~--..... p....,..t • 530 I used to worry about everythJna. Nol ....,,........ Not aiooe I dtsoovered the secret of llvlna:. li you are a wonier &Jld want to c~. let me help )'OU. CaJJ><t>-4844 LICENSED SPJRJTUALIST Spiritual readings 10 Lm. -IO p.m. Advice on Ill matterll 3U N. El Camino Rea.I, :;an Clemente, tor a.ppL Call 49)-9(Gl, 492--9136. ~'THE ATH DATINt:; GAME" 50-60 YR. &rOUP· From the privacy ol your telephone. r .u. i:iOx 74.>, u.G . ~. 24 ""'· NE\V Shaklee dealer need eustonlers. i'ull llne of health & cleM. p rod . 1'16-5078 WOULD like to meet retired person for Jishl.Q&: lripg. .share expense, Ca 11.1 , 0J'C¥0n. 6f6....950..t ' PROBLEM Pre gnan c y . .ConJJdent, s y m pa th e tic For Information -Brpchure Fru Guest Lecture Newport, 325 No. (Old) Newport Blvd. J Free Brochure I Course Includes: pregnancy co un Ke Ii n &', ' 35 Hours fli9ht time i1 Cessna ISO's with ~ & adoptiool64~36 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON »PROVED FOR VETERANS PHONE OR WRITE 20 hour~ dual instructio". Club m•mbership. $8.00 SPECIAL UFE or DEAnt: Let our l M.onth's free dues. lndividu1I instruction, babies uve. For attemallvea t~ilored tc YOUR ability. If you have a child between the ages of to ABORTION call Lll'E IS AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT four and eight, come see us. Music is too ..i~~ .,,. ..... , 24 nn. LOWEST UTES IN ORANGE COUNTY important to leave out of a chlld's life. BEST MASSAGE tN N.B. 6 3 5.2 7 7 0 L11rn to fly now - -•nd Mve fun I J400 Irvine Ave .. SUite 103li. Y h M • s h I Upen 8 AM, Mon, Wed, Fri., ACADEMY REAL ESTATE * Fly Mexico & Cariado ama a USIC c 00 Ann. 557-= Real Estate Education Since 1964 * Special Rates for Commercial or • t'ALM & uutD l~AI ·Ltt CONTRACTING & CONTROL DATA INSTITUTE Instrument Students. 109 E. !Ith, COSTA MESA ao w/reductlon. Jim! Beach INSURANCE SCHOOLS 1780 West Uncoln, Anaheim NOW PHONE 642 1844 lllvd., Stanton. 5'7·:11116 For Complete 0.1111• Coll • . MAsSAG~/BA1'H GI-Mailer Charge & B of A 979-1155 A tou'" ol clau. Complete -=::=::::=:::::=::::::::::::::::::::;1 ~======::=:::=::::==::=:::::::=:::=::::===:::=:::=i ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~11~P~··~ .. ;.,~~~·~·~6<>tl!00~·~·~.:::::::::::::1 " im ---------------, P ---ii FORTUNE TELLING ~.. JAPAN KARATE FED. EBRONIX "'"'"· '"""" ·"· ,,,..,,,, I .Ill 1,1 1 I 325 No. (OLD) Newport Blvd., •5 TUTORING I ll Across From Hoag Hospital Want just a job or 111111111 • N.B. Niles 642-8387, Day• S51·3683 CLINIC [ Uol.,. J~ 1 ruund (1 rH AdlJ S)tJ YOU A E .,. c I ' II I I 11 SPECIAL n xc• tng oreer ',,,. LSAT & GRE Call PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL I . I[ RATES today to see if you qualify for I PREP COURSES I TO GROUPS a position in the FOR LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION AIR TRAVEL INDUSTRY. II TEST AND GRAD HCORD EXAM I KAAA1B Day or evening classes can 11 w:,<re~~STING 1 Prepare you for a position as I •1NSTRUcr10N av su1J. MATTER EXPERTS •INDIVIDUAL ANALYSIS • R • A I •TEST TAKING TECHNIQUES eservat1ons gent ·1 •POST-TESTING (Slmulotod LSAT-GRE) I • Ticket Agent ''"'""' s..t1,. ........ •"·" ' • Air Freight Agent I by 11 • Travel Agent • Tour Escort 1 I I 1 TEST PREPARATION INSTITUTE ITPll Tuitiontinancingalsoavailable. ii Main Office I I S I 17301 Beach Boulevard, Suite No.9 I Pacific Travel choo '11 Huntington Beach , Colllo .. io 92647 1. 610 East 17th Street, Santa Ana Phone: !7141 842 -4464 Founded In Orange County in 1960 by Dan Ivan. Director Japan champion Fumio Demura. Chief Instructor of Newport Gary Hallenbeck. NO CONTRACTS NO GIMMICKS 543-6655 II Los Angelo• Area:e(2Jll 636-7452 I :1 Sen Diego Area: (7141 298.1417 ..I Approv\l(I for Veterans' Training In beach area Hven yeor1 \!=::::::::-=-==-==--======-:-=-==: ~ -~ - - - --- -l-iiiiiii-ii·i---- £.xperience BeJl :JeacherJ The MTI /acuity draws up· on over I 00 yrs of accumu- lated business and leaching experience to make each class more than just another text-book course in the fields of: Accounting-Bookkeeping Data Processing Secretarial-Clerical Business Administration DGy Giid E,nf119 CIOl1ft Flt!G11cl119 Giid Plac•111e•t Assl1to11ee .ApproY•d for YeterOM MTJ Business College 2100 NORTH MAIN STREET SANTA ANA, CAllFORNIA 92706 Phone 541-2673 PRIVATE TUTORING IN YOUR HOME Basic Subjects . Reading, Spelling, Mathemaiics Also Instruction in Study Skills And Homework Assignments All Ages ........................ All Grades HOME TUTORING SERVICES P .0 . BOX SOJS IRVINE, CALIF. 92664 PHONE 5S7·1041 or S52-8340 J:Jance :J.orming-al lhe !JnJlilule o/ lhe --4-rlJ Creative Dance Ballet Jazz Dance Exercise MODERN CHILDREN, TEENS AND ADULTS FREE BUS SERVICE FREE LESSON WITH THIS COUPON CALL NOW, • READING -MATH SPELLING FOUND: brown 1:: blade :;n~p. JlUx pup ... male cock· a-poo or poodle, white \VJUtn ears. Very shaggy + male iray cock-a·poo ..... , ui. ......... i..... .. , ....... \! 11:..:1, _ v~ry 1nttlted, 842-2480 .to'l'i'D: Wire tamed glaMC& Vic. LHlie CdM beaco i.u.. H. tX)VNO:-~-ke~-;n-kC"y ciuun, w/meda1Hon.. "56--067' 'f-1<~.o-, -to-p~o·f a ba))y·~-.u'oll~.~.; -1l.llvy ulue & white chcclc ~V¥:-l&li.b.icn.lalaDd ti4-Hill.J ¥oUND: Sianlfte:-MajeC at. DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Charge) fixed, uea collar. i:;_ Wlaon, Your Child WHI Receive <:.M. >41l-JOOS Gu1ranteecl 1-to-1 Instruction .F'OU~l>-;--YOUO&-~doi:-.-Vlc-. At EBRONIX-Where Readi"I of Gothard A Slater, Hnli: 11 Enjoy•bte Beach. "1-10.Uatter.S poi . FNO: 4 mo. okl-tenuu~ 979 1626 l:i&isett Hound. tnd Mesa 2750 Horbor Suite 7B C.M. -_!'.•rd• • 5"1-910; "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiii:iiiii:iiii:jlL_oo~t---~-..:::55.S • LOsr niale cat, looks like ST. ANDREW'S KINDERGARTEN & PRE-SCHOOL • Individual attention • Small Class Room e Enriched Curriculum • Christian Nurture Fill R09l.trotion1 Avoilablt .!? St Andm(s Presbyterian Church 600 St. Andrews Rd., N•wport Beach * * 646-4646 * * * * 646-7147 * * li.luepoinl Siamese, but 'w/white nose & white feel Ans to HandiL 3rd Island H. Harbour. Nal!!CU niedlc4ltion. 841Hll04. M~D. Si black Lab. While oa chest. l'"lea co ll a r . "Colonel". Left car accident at Pomona It Wil.8on, C.M., I Sal, Reward, 546-MlJ. n SIAMESE &: \i Burme111e cat. M. Altered. Dec.lawed lronl paws. Oilldren upset. llarbor View H o m e 1 . 6#-71JU LOST ; Scott Terrier, blk. fem. 1 yr. old. vie. 1rvine ;\ vc. & Linda Ln. Call Anytime, REWA RD . tip-J?lMi/ 494-«lliO REW ARD, LOST MALE Oki ~Ii.sh Sheepdog, atta 5th .Ii: Orange In -Huntington Beach White A g ray , w/blue eyes. please call SJ&..2549 or 6T>4062. FM-white Samo=yej/c...,,~Sp~lu-I w/chokee.r cbaln. Aleo fm part Irish Setter/Af&han w/lcather collar. Back Ba1 'area 557-2951 GERMANshe'--.-Jlll-P-.-ans.--to "H.ocky" vie. Jeffrey It. Walnut, J.nr. REW AR 0 5..11-1819 ---·=-;-,,.-----..., LOST black Lab. puppy. 7 1noa, Vic. C.M. Heartbroken family. Generous n:ward. 64Ul63. Guest t-fome 41S I Pentals to Share 430 Garages for Rent 435 Office Rental BuslMU Rental 445 Industrial Rent1I NEW concept In living for \\IORKING mother \Vi I h I MINI WAREHOUSES omCE space avail. for ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===;;;.;;; FIRST MONTH I NEWPORT SHORES senior cu1zC'ns, see to children ~·ould hkc to share STORAGE attorney nt lav.•. lixlG Ft. MISSION VIEJO Wo.are .. , r.oo to 1600 Sq. ft. IJ>ftcel, NOW LEASING LOST, Blk male cat, neu- lt~lW.-V.ic. Npt, Htl. Blue 450 collar. Oilld's peL ~ aft. 6. LOST: Male Doxie 1n K-Mart Shoppina Center. Black &: tan. 64i~ appreciate, 642-9278 expenses in my home in '.'l'o ~Iove-in 01' Move~ut attorney's office, recpt. & OFFICES .rKC~ avail. immediately! 62nd & Huntlnttoft h.ach SD.fl-private room in pvt. !\lesa Verde 1vlt~ same. chargi:i;. r·rnnl s7.50 per rns·:r t:_· ~6~1 CLOSE TO HOME Prestige oUice apace in Ne"-·· p 1clflc Coaat Hwy., Newport 1NEW M-I hom e fe..r elderly ~ust be r~pons1ble nnd inon!h. port Bch. 9~ sq. ft. avail. Beach. Fe :-office use, bar· BOun.XcroER.~pedmael~.:...Fawn color, ambulatory lady. 556-li'lG high-m!nded. Large yard to llanHlton & i\'t>wland St. HB * 1 MO. FREE RENT * All amenities & util. Incl lmmed. $410. ber shop or any business. 941) Sq. 1''1, &: UP ..... V•e1tion Rentals 425 ~:~Ji~ a~ sh~re.hat~ri ALLSPACE ' Del~e . 1 & 2 rm . offices 71992 ~~i~t.C:PYs~ano. ~o':,1:, to ~th !::.~:!~le; ""H"am"il"to"Ho."',.'.,rm,.'w,.l"an"d"S"t.,,.lrG46--ll ' 646-'2$'"!!!~!! Ruth 546-4478. 960.1970 a~. Au-porter Hotel & Rest. Avery Parkway k SD Frwy. : LIVE tn the all ne\Y .Dana YOUNG }-emale desires GARAGE for renl. Suitable 833-3223 9 To Noon 831 .. 1600 > 1 6754050 '' NE\V BLDG M-l, 12 Units. I a... Ml ..... JGif'I Point Harbor al th(' male travel executive type for storage. &12·9405. Lo-. • ~ beauU!ul MARINA INN roommate to sh r rent for cated at 3100 \Vest Coast OFFICE space avail., heart 3337 Newport Blvd .. N.B. -111=-tCI..• 1250 Sq. F't. $17G, 2'10-3 ph. J~~~!!!~iiiii~iiiii~I '!otel, 34902 Del Obisnn St. classy narty penthouse, Hwy., Newport Beach. of Corona~ del l\tar. Ideal 601 r Dr S II 3 Front OUice, crpts, largel1 ,_ I I " ,~ 640-1856 for CPA, ,Engineer, etc. $200 RARE chance for 1 or 2 ... wer '• U e rear doors. Anaheim & 'auyl tt "I ( 4 9 6-2 3 5 3 I • Kitchen, "7~~-=-~--SINGLE encl gar. $20/ mo. To $300 Per mo. execs. & sec. to shr ocean NE\VPORT BEACH ·re 1• min u 1 \\lay, c.M.1--"---''---- Elficlc.ncles & Apartments. J\.fALE or Femi:tle \\.'anted 2 mos. in advanC<?. 260 CAIL 6Ta-ml view suite in Unkin Bank FOR Lease, Retail Store, 0ay1 646-5033, eves 646-0681 BABYSITrING M.W.F. tn =· i::~t sa~ to share furn 3 BR house, Orange Ave. Apt B. See bldg Ni!!wport Center. Below 2lx40 in shopping centl!!r, QUAINT O LD BLOG ~ ~ t;;e~ hr dill Al.I bath, laundry facllili~. ~~ch in Lagun a. ·mgr. BAYFRONT OFFICES cost. 644-9440. 333M Eas~17lh673St~Oeo.140t& with ~t. 3650, ~· tt.' ~ 673--0103. e d. -"•• -m, cl-· to San FEMALE roommate wanted Pres•1-..... , 740' 330 PRO~•tONAL SUITE "'-• .., .... , • pot••"·' unlun•ted, b "~04006 •vu """" WANTE0.2 F•-•le• Io I H Bch Re I $70 C II Ufi" .... "' • ' ' "~ 67"'.....,,.. <'A" ... ,.,. ........... 3ABYSl1T!NG-m horn I Oernente It Laguna Beach. share for:ri 3 aR"' hoLL..e nr ~~ · n · a gq. ft. 3700 Newpo Blvd. Xlnt F.V. loc&Uot\ 4 ixam ,,..,,.,..,,, V"W'<l'hN· Cannery Village 642--620C · Y e oi· Come pl&)' in our spor1 · & be h 4~ 0073 N.B. Phone 675-1220 rooms, lab, pvt oUlce, OFnCE on Newport Blvd. ReaJtoi.-. ' f:~tePlease call 536-1768 tlahlng, lhopplng &: restau. ocean ac .. -. . DOUBLE garage E/Slde NE\.VPORT Beach Attorney NEWPORT C·ENTER recept room, A/C, 645-6358 avail toedn l';_~e,:....:_.an.prlttu~, M-1, tree standlne, i8IXl sr -:-,.::-:-=n·"to ____ _ ranta. $50 week&: Up. Bring SHARE all nC\\· a p 1 C.M. for storage only. will share Suite. CoTTIRlete 2 ROOM o!fJce with [antastlc Business Rental 445 carpe • fl.Ir ""'"'"" f· ft + loft + addltlonn' .... r this ad A: f"t'Ctlve SS oU on \V~lminster area. Avail $30. mo. 644·442'3. libr"-"", 3 . 1\.1, COntr. view of N•"-~ u·~r A ~prox. 1000 ICZ· f · ~ u-~ av·'Jable !Gr --~----- -J ........... lU"UU O!JlER 01•--..... r-/mo. w·-~·-· .... I JIU'll IU • • ftPF.NTRY • au h..... first wetk"• nnt. no\\'. S70. 894·5112 afr 5. SINGLE ~ge for rent, Recept. rma. Wetrt CIUf Dr. Cat·'Jna. h!t:c -.... •A<1e Ul."I: v• ,.. ... .. ,........, tu ~t B 673...s882 ".-'t:"'" ~~~"!""!ll"."'~""~ I 1 ..t.... ..A,, Ao4.A iu --s )• ..,..., -t. H·~ Blvd, ,.._.....,, avail. IdeaJ for contractor. X.:!-' '' -.:.·rn., ~.W. specialize l R00l>li\1ATE ~·anted. 1 BR. Balboa, ., mo. amp e P•A6• 1r1u"'"•o'" or per mo. includes uttlltiec~ ..... u ·uua-uni"" ,.._,, ... o ....... 0 ,,~ ~,.. ,_ Rent•ls to se,.r. 430 large Jiving area. Nr. So. 645-5714 545--2568 janitor service .• .:.. ..... u .... Mesa S2'25 per month. 32' ....,.. .,_.._ · · ;-~··s"be=I 1· ~· ·-~-• ~-t••e, 1000 .... ft Am-1e BLDG. w\lh furn1·1u-•trl"'· · ""'"6'1'1 • 0 aJ. .z. Coast Plaza :J~5--J609 SJ'ORAGE Gllhlgf: for Rent. CAMPUS Dnvf: 0 ff Ice , & Iota of tree parking. uvu ~ ""' t-" '" ~-eeal!Mtl :'I 2 BR."2 ba. :sludk> apt. Nr. NIG:'E furn apt, Pri'Vrii, 1959 P.faple Ave, No. 5 airport area. 600 ft. at $270 ESTATE REALTY 640-Jt3J O&rkftia'. Utllltic1 Paid . [>Ing tanks ~or lease or sell ·;;;·· ;;;· ==-=c--.,- Hartor It Adams. c.r.f. $90. i\1ature ·1..acly Nr Beach & Costa Mesa per mo. See WI for your EXEC ~/494-5104 tMks. 492-1.ltl. :oro,: \IOOdwork, remoc. mo 979-5897 ai;ri:rt office S""'ce needs · Suite lncJding recept. n..,..,.~L = avail at Ind I I •50 ~Ung & 'Wlr. Vince ' \farner; H.B., E\'Cll 842·2017 Office Rent1J 440 ,..... ' rm phone• -pt. .ervice ni;:,• u1tr11 'Centi • • ..,. rt ti S"' Ohofl '¥" \\'ANTED-MATURE male to M LLAN REALTY, 3400 ' • ... ,,.. · ml ture I th "Cannery ~uto 1 r•napo I on a.-.c • ~ • • llhr 4 Br hie 1: utU. Close PLUSH Ellstbluff Condo. to -Irvine. ~2960 ~~~ii. In Ze":: E:ec·~ VUlage" $ll0 to $180. 425 ' --T>PLY IRON-ON TAPE TO 1--~:_ __ _w'o~· be~•ch;:;;, ~H~B~. ll~OO~. -~~· eire, female. Bike trails, 300 sq ft~· CM DESK space •v11J.r.t1le $50 computer 1YPlng. Mon' .. '"• 30th St, N.B. ~ or N-COtSTnduAi!J!iSAUnl'· Had car -1 from San '"'ROUSER POCKE1'S when !"""'·etc. Stli 6#-lliJ WU! "rovld turn! uoq 642--1960 .... u-.i .. · r--U'OtJSl"n are ,_ This wtU ..,..tQOOlllll.le to Iha re * 64&-Zl30 * mo.. P t; ture New r1i'Cltige otnce bid&. 1105LMO, J'h! .. ~~van .Juan Canlatrano to tit• "tlti!Otta 'ht-~·-and 3 BR hooie on ilOJEOOlile., G1r1ge1-for·k1nr ·435 UOO SQ It kleal loc directly t ~-"'Ttilkw No~ rwy,-R 1E11l,-~-u· Ile 1 .... ..,...,, :Ardiit ~, Ni=-"ltucn F~ ot I 67$.-7613 behind. Red oruon Rest ., &vailable.'11875BeachBlvd. ""'Tounta.lri VaJley. ~ ran't-corner or Palm t.. a ' " ~wpojf hoes. 11·1 a bfeeae •••. .ell your CLEAN Caragt for rent, nr. O.C. airport . Avail. Huntington Beach. &42--4_32'1 OFC Suite, 100 ft . Suitable Edgewater. Bl\Jbol. 673-1440 IOr: PER SQ. FT. Beach. WorklntfPM'-r1•1 :irf. ~~cewi':t "'"11 ..tilt oaoe, -Dally El>51Skl• Co51a Mesa Now. f'Um or Unluni. 45 1617 WESTCLIFF~ll tor doctor. Hnntl~gton Sell ldl.-IJems with 1 llally 3600 •ii «101 Birch,NB I AM "' S C4t n O.Dy Pllol Claalllttl Ad. :1.,· &G..1671 lo< tu! mullL M&-2514 or 6'&-1837 cents <q ft. 83.1-9643. 545 oq.ft l up. M1-Ml2 Oanl•na. 848-1323-•Pilot Claaatffed od. 642-567! U.wngartlntt $41-1032 ~. 642-!1678. .. ··- • , ' I r- ' " ~ •• -., ~ ey -k. ~ D. 5id 5th on y, all -art ' lor, • ..... In All ~ ·I • • . - CEMENT le Block WQfk, Walla. patios. aldewalks, etc. By hr. or job. 646-6915. CONCRETE Patios, 400 sq ft· or 1nore 65c per sq ft. Don, &~4. Child Caro ontr.1dor JACK 'taulane, re pa tr .1 rcmod . add. Lie. B-1 2'907:. My Wny a.. 642-4703. El1cfrlc1I ELECI'RICJAN, Uc., jobs, new jQbl, any Aoypiace. 1!36'.-7'89 0 l.d jobs. ELEt7R!ClAN • Llcenae No. 23311JJ. Small jobs, malnt & repair" 548-SlOO. Gardening Paradise Gardenlna: Specialize Restoration . & Landscape. Monthly 1.-taintenaru:e ..& Sp_rit:i_kl er Repair. Call 642-8649 EUROPEAN Ca rd en er . l.falntenance -Landscaping. Tree Removal. V e r y reasonable. 642-5329 eves. MOW & EDGE. CLEANUPS NEW LAW::i:aRlNK~RS - . -- CERAMIC TILE NE\V & EXPER. Gardener. Know how. Malnt. Trimming & cleanup. 968-3486. ttmodel. Free est. Sm jot.s e BAR MAIO, Attractive. f.,,.,..,.,.;,.;.,..,..,..,..., welcome. 536--2126. $2.25 hr to start. Apply lfi64 DRAPERY Mfg needs Lewnc1re by "2 G1l1" ?>.tow/edge 642-9907 Gener1I Services Top Soll Newport Bhrd, C.M. experienced overlock & BEAlITICIAN needed with . .....blind stitch...opera!ors. Good following. ,qrit work i n g wages. Beach Oraperie!:, rond. + comm., Top 900 W. 17th St., Costa Mesa location at the Newporter DRUG & C 0 S M E TIC IM Beauty Sa.Ion. 644--0340. CLERK. E:Xp'd. p A R K - * QUAUTY * * MULQI & TOP SOIL * 5tJ6.<;930 MASTER HANOYMAN C11blnets , ceramic tile, I tonnica, suspended ceilfna:s, . fences, patloa, roofing • 1 ~iiiiiiiiiiiii ~M~O~RE-=°!~5~@'-',87=~~·~~~-I l[IJJ PLUMBING, ELECTRICAL, Job Wonted, Miio 700 LIDO PllAR.MACY &ti-JS80 I Help Us Build for apt, Mr Grant. / Beautiful Cruising ELECTRONIC S1ilbo1ts TECH Needed' Background d.igital & ana1og Exper. Finish Carpenters circuitry. Diversified work w/at least 1 yrs exper. in _..--·. . .-SECRETARY TO THE PR£S1DENT Thls position hY. ~ned bec&use or lhe move of our plant from LOs A.ruceles 10 Orange Co. The lncumbent ~relJuy Jg not able to move trom her preatnt fttsl- dence to lhi1 area. Plua Products ii one of tbe natton1 lcad t na mAnulacturer• of fo o d supplements. We wW becJn operaUons in our aparkllna new plant In lrvlne (ntar Jamboree Rd & Main St) on ~·larcll l llh. Tltl!I position calls tor an lndlvldunl who is gracious. thoughtful & cUiclent 1n rleallng w/othens & who has top s..>cretarlal llkills. P°"ition req'!!o good typing & sh skills, pleasant phone perwnatity \\'Llhe desire to f:,'l°O". \V/coinputer oriented firm. Good fringe benefits &: nice working conds. Send Reswne Or Applf St1nd1rd Memories, Inc A Sub.sldiary of Applied Magnetic11, Corp. 2221 S. Anne St. Santa Ana Equal Oppor, Employer SEC/STENO Sharp, Professional gal skilled in dictation, typing & c ompo1i tion o1 correspondence. Knowledge of gen'! ofc Procedures b~l setting up & maintaining files. Xln't oppor. in sale& dept. of ni.pldly growing Costa Mesa engineering co. CARPENTRY. No job too small. F &. B Home Repair, 6-12-1403. Baxter~ Street d ting -boat carpentry & a concern ~~ains~r::~l!11tion~ tes nbout their future. Drop by INSURANCE CO. needs RN's $65 mo. Pli.Y diUerential Advft-......1 .,., __ ,..,..., Inc. for an interview, 1.1on thru sales agents & mg mt .,_._ for advertised 3-U, 11-7 Paul Dosier Assoc. • Contact Evelyn for NOW HIRING ..,..._""" n.u..::u..... Th 9 -trainees. Salary to ~ + N.,,.., ... '6 sh'ft 7 3-interview appt. 556-7075 • "THINGS'· by ~·oose. Gen'l Carpentry, Repalrs, Plum- bing. E I e c . Remodeling &12-5613. HOJ.fE Repair Servi ce. El e ctric , Plun1bing, Carpentry. Reas. SG-1004, eves. SECRETARJAL.IBl\t Exec .• Phone, dictation on your letterhead. 549-1004. H1ullng YARD. a:arage ttmove trees, d r ivewa ys, tw7-2666. clean-upa, dirt, lvy, s tum·p1. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 1231 Victoria St, CM un, am·Jpm. N t s. OR RN'S -3, U: 64&-7165 WESTSAIL CORI'. ~no exper. neceuary. ew peds ICU RN'S 3-11, 11-7. Equal Oppor. Employer 1638 Pl1c1ntl.1 Ave. Exp. only. ' Mo.,le -Tiger -Print -HOSTESS & lnsuronco 5ocrot1ry s d d I b k MISSION Bother _ LONG 1ThfE ELECTRONICS Cotti Moll a e ac TECHNICIANS Exper. personal line• rating, COMMUNITY U you ask her her age, she BOOKKEEPER N 'd Will .__. typing & gen'l insurance tells you its her business • o exper. req · ualll. HELP! Woman writer/poet d ti 644--42.81 c • and sh•'• been In buslneu .. Ages 17·34· $326 mo. starting needs volunteer typ~t. Ph. ~:.:· .. -. ommun1ty HOSPITAL a LONG TIME. 4647 MKArthur Blvd. salary + many benefits. 830-2627 _., J• ''"'" w . 27802 Ptttrta Real, Mission • -,--=,--"""'=-~~~1 Newpo.rt Be.1ch Now intetviewlng. Army . H • I VI . e.-4400 831 2300 Job W1nt9CI, Fem.111 702 ~~~:.•· 6 4 5-116 3, ~~~!i:Ki'rrtfc:i nee:~ 0Spll8 ~P';y bet. 9 6 4. -Xlnt INDEf. NDENT R.E. Agt BEAUTICIAN Mens stylist, I 8J0.26Z7 benefits 6 work In g w/15 yr exp ln aaJea & con· attrac. usist, rec p t , Electronic Assemblers pa gn. ~ RN'.s for ICU.o:!u, special conditions. An E qua I atruction, deiltts emplmt m manicure, etc, 646-6255; Soldering req'd. ~0a3· shilt. HOSPITAL ·-· · _,, i:ursi.ng unit, medical/1urgi-. Opportunity employer. H.B. or Npt. area. M/have ~1145 Pal Electronics. 6 3 91 Cal Door. $1200. mo draw .. -.inst s·""E'-A:::.:UTl:,,.C!AN=~. ~Ll~ce---,.~. We 1 t pi inst er A v e , N · . A1so immediate openings for ~2:VN, 3-11 1• Full tl~e SECY./RECEPT. R;E. Secretarial position in active Realtor's office. Beautiful ottlce In Newport Center. 1 Cona:ental atafl or mature penonnel. A tr.mt offlct position r.qulrlnc ' 0 0 d telephone voice, SH I: JBM Exec. abilltles. Must be able to -Sa!U!dnys. R.E. ' experience not t&-, aential, but helpful. Preler ' locll resident. For intervu eall Mrs • .Duhl. We1ley"N. Taylor Co.64f..4910 ?.tOVING, DELIVERY & HAULING, Have a big walk In van, Reas + reliable, 645-1346 Q6<W I~ w tmlnster 894-3301 'eW ·oit . tcChniclam. ~:attics, x nt """' & ("Offim or saJ. Write: P.O. Assist owner 3 nlibts & es Employ, __ ,·· \ Beautifu1 c ommunity ....,,"'fits, c&ll Mr .Snyder Box 637, HwtUniton Beach, Sal Call 645-5.170. ,, ... , hospital nested in r .. _, .... ;&ti;i02-.i241iii0iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;Oi] SECRETARY Cal. Booltlteeper, experienced, Covnsollor Saddleback ll!MNE PERSQNNB. Hilb, minutes m.;;;'°th; RESPONSlBLE ltud e n t part time, mostly aceounts Due to growth of our rCD\lll"'CCl\M""C•.-V ocean In a smog-free RENTAL AGENT Posl.tlon PART-TIME LOCAL moving & hauling by student. Large tntck. Reas. Bany. 531·1235 or 539-9438. desires part-time of fi ce rca:Jvable. Mr. Sbaw, 1600 business we are looking tor c .1 ~l\..U ~'"""' atmosphere available. California Real Hours 9am-lpm Sb SO '\\'Ork In Costa Mesa. Can W. O>ast Hwy, Newport an ambitious Ind Iv . ommun1 y Excellent salary & benefits ~unlU.;enaew!thneeesasryen=,· w.p.m. Typlng 'a> w.p.m. type and take llhotthand. Beach. &e9262. w/employment agency or Account~t to $1SK await the career-minded vwv•• ~ w; w~· Typ•--~ Mktg <ec/S/11 $700 -company. SU ~· exper, "'" "~" • · BCX>KKEEPER. CPA firm, personnel exper. Call Jean H "t I · individbal interested i n resume to Ungo Real dlctaphone needed. MOVING? Local turn . or NEED help a t homef We F/C thru 'tJB. permanent. Brown, 540-6(65, Coastal ospt a Prod Mgr Mach Shop to $24K providing the finest of Estate, 111 o Glenne--, Apply in Penonn;el Dept have aides, nur ses, Salary $650. to $700. Phone Personnel Agency, 2790 QC Electro•Mecb. to S20K medical care. LagunaBe b 494-8086 ,.~ Mon thru Fri s.;11 am · ren. hauling. 32 Ft. tum. van. 548--1862 567-2736 house-, cmnponlom. Mn Kellin -Harbor Blvd., C.M. I edlat 0 I F Ofc Mgr/Exec. Secy $800+ Tnke San Diego Fwy, !OUth . ac . ' PACIFIC MUTUAL H547o ~ma1Ce r1 Upjobn BO. vs '& GIRLS mm e penngs or: Sec'y/Life ins. ~p $600+ to the EI Torn Rd. tum-ott. SKIPLOADER It dump truck work. Concrete, asphalt, -.., Awing, brealdna:. Ml>-UlO. BOO~EPER will do Newspaper carriers, min. • ~::~i C.1rpenter1 Con~~~nding to $600 2lS61 ~ &J~~enda ~need 3'-sharp g a 1 a • 700 ~= i!'!: Dr penona.l/bulineu accountB age 10 yrs. for Ne,vpott No exper. req'd. Will train. EnginHr Securities Clerk to S600 · looking . for a· full time Equal Oppor. Employer at home or 9-J outside. Beach, Newport Helt:l":I!! .~ Ages 17-34. ~mo. starting Must have boiler lie. Typist IBM Ex/G.O. ~~ NURSES permanent po1ltlon t n 644-1074 Neo,yport Peninsula Contact salary + many benefits. &: rt:frigeratlon exper. Maintenance Man _,., Botique salet wltb very SECRETARIAL, pJl'\ -~ HoUMCINnlng Mr Hyd Circul tlo De t Now interviewing, Anny Diet Aki• 1 Gal Ofc. It bkpng to $5.iO Mo~an N~ea Registry. active ahop. 3 D & pt time pos. avail. in Proartllivt . EXP. typlrt &: pn. oWce. 0 ,;..y Pel.LOT .~.1 ~.2 ~f~ Opportunities, 64 5-116 3, D!ete"c lmowled•• req'd, Clerk Typist $425 RNfyS, LVN s, Pracs, Floor now avail. Call for appt., Lag. B ch Architectural RESPONS. Bondable •'Oman Desire prr employ. Local ~ · ....., vo •'So},IJ. Costa Mesa. u Marine Hrdwr Sales $3 hr du paid wkly. 657 W. 19th THE LOOK &W-6500 Firm 49H351. wW do housecle~ ror rel 49f-T760 9-5. & leave appllcaU011. ~~'---"="--------M1lnten.1nce Mechanic St Suite D CM 548-9361 :;.,:;==~~=~ du! ~.. for ~ER. <log e r oomlnc E rl --• CALL TRISH HOPKINS •833-2365 ' . . SAWYER Home needt SECURITY CLERK •6 ... '!· ~~· ~~: "'-fs TYPING done in my home. &1111tant. • Full t Im e . xpe en ... '1:U JERRI WHITTEMORE or ma t ure•· woman for '" vwn ...... .,. no:-CLERK This highly important poai· m43a alt 7PM. Wed·Fri: ~: ~io~~~ )'n. Pennane~s· Please apply in New hospital nestled in 488S IE. 17th St. (at lrvi64':)14CM70 NURSES AIDES • all s)ifts. ~~~p~-3~ p ~ili: lion la immediately avail- .. ...... 1me Sat Sun person, ~ pm, weekdays, beautiful Laguna Hills of-u te 224 I." M-"·rn con va I e , c en t able for the person who we!- .... ..,... • · LADY wishes .. ~t. work LI t e t Y PI n g , I oo d 2724 E. Coast Hwy, CdM. fering outstanding working -•-•-•-h-':"'. pltal. "'' .-~. ;iiiiiiiii6i;. iiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii HOUSECLEANING done by 1 i..~· ~ handwl'iUng. Prefer exper. F/C B dlti & ben fit _,,~.,.........._ v.~ lJ"lVVW\IU comes responsibility & has experienced lady. Fut and Mote rnotel, in exchange in inventory or production KKPR $900 con ons e s. SECRETARY good knowledge of secur· very etfident and thorough. for roo1n, 492-1558. control. Financial stm.t1, construction Apply dally ~Ion-Fri LEGAL SECRETARY OFFICE SALES GIRL lties. Beautiful location &: 4 hour minimum $4. hour. EXEC. Sec. 11 )TS uper background Split Feel Also Personnel Office Needed Lor N.B. law firm. No exper. neceu. Apply in b1endly co-worken. Ca 11 Call Ruth 54&M18. Shorthand llO, typing, 60. STACO SWITCH, INC. Fee Jobs (714) 837·2121 8'3'>5, 5 day11. Call 540-54<W peraon, Good opponunlty to learn Coaotal Personnel Ageney, Dedlcat9d CINnlng P.R. C21J> 790-5351 alt 5pm. 1139 Baker, Costa Mesa WESTCLIFF Take San Diego Freeway for appt. KIRK JEWELERS the ad biz. Typing 75, sh 54().6055, 2790 Harbor Blvd .. * WE DO EVERYTHING * Help W1nted, M & F 710 Equal 0549-304lppor Emp'-·er Personnel Agency To El Toro Rd. TurnoU, LIQUOR Clerk/stock boy 37 Huntington Ctr, H.B. 100. Send reaume to =C=·=M=. =--~---I 2839 ""3 CMBI'k III Center) Via Estrada. needed for new liquor & Classified ad No. 46, c/o SEWING, your home, your Refs. Free est. 646-I ACCOUNTING CLERK:f!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![!!l!!!![!!l!!!!"!"!!!!!!!!!! 1651 E. Edlnger, S.A. ·Equal Oppor. Employer wine shop. Irvine area, Call ORntOOONTIC ASSISTANT Dail y Pilot, P.O. Box l560, machine, p/tlme. E Z. HOUSEWORK $2.50 hr I Nat'l Sailboat Mfg. has CLERICAL 542-8836 tii3-9586 tor appt. Part time posltion avail. in C:OSta Mesa, CalU. 92626.' Apply 8562 Hamilton Ave, Newport Beach Or Co 11 a openln& tor A I Pa ya b 1 e Im.med. Allignments. Top H'ele W1:,nttd, M & P 710 Help W1nttd, M&F 710 LVN MEDICATIONS Newport Beach office. Some Hunt. Bch .. or call 960-2577• Mesa area. 846-St69. clerk. 1.-llg exp. _ n e c . m . Long or short term. ~;:i-~·iiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii~iiii~-jj;ijiiii~~~iiiiiiiiii / Full ti 11 7 RN orthodontic exp. .n e c . *Sec'y, F /C Bkkpr 962-4581. HOUSEWORK. Tues-Wed. & Relocating to Irvine In Call 540-4450. me, pm-am, -642-6443 Combo to $1000 SHAMPOO Teclmidan, 2ood Fri. every other week open. April. Apply 940 W. 17th NEVER A FEE AT· TEMPO ICU 3pm·llpm, RN staU .::.:::..::=------LU Reinders Agency pay, fine salon. l'rot West· sz; dty. 5U-?195 St, C.M. TEMPO Temporary Help · EIECUTIYES-IAIAllERS ~:fi1:1"Cai1°;~ r':1~e~ PART time-Join CopperCra.ft 4020 Birch Street cliff, N.B. 642-6587. HOUSEWORK b:y the day F.qual Opper. Empklyer COLLEGE STUDENTS dept, ctl4) ~1. Stanton debt cha!!ers oppor. club, Suite 104, NB 8::13-8190 -'--"'--'-=TAC,.CO:=''=s°'ELL~-- • own transp, Fut· call ACCOUNTS PAYABLE Wknd & eve. Stock Control ''JOB OPPORTUNITIES'' Hospital mo Kate I la 3 eves wkly, local, car No Ch.1rge To You Days. Pref. male lt\Xlent 147-2216 NaUonal builder Io c i. t t d Jobs µ, O.C. area tor nea't, ' . . Stanton.· ' =~s. bo~!ut.to q~~~ ==-=Es::o••==b:;:lls;::h:,;e::.d.::1::965::,..-=-w/nlght claMeS. G ood JAPANESE lady wishes to Irvine lnd area. Cons exp. resp>~. individuals. Some LVN, PM Shift product. Call Betty 645-2873 SECRE"I'ARY. General oUice starting salary. No exper. do houlework. Need a req. Penn. poliUoo. Call require pleaaant outdoor $15M•$75M RallC)t Conv. Hosp. &IM698 or Kay 962-5674 w/emphasis cin shipping&: nee. 818 Ocean Ave., ffntc. transportatkm. 54()..1332 tor detaill/•ppt, M z: • • work. Start $2/hr. Call 111vo iclng. ~fust be good Sch. ~"l80I). Income Tu AHThociEN'Tn!~~RIN. E-R =~~·)eo~· IALA•IU.Nl•OTIAILI ~..:..hinl, • .,st Asst. ~~~ p~red. tlrei:;1y11'~e ~~ ~::: .. · l'=~d~~~ To~~~ro:~~ t:~ """' At• Yo• Un•mployed No-Ar• You Stek1119 A Ch•nt • ~"" ofl1IN ,.....~...... _,, • Y'..,_. Income TIX Service NEEt>S COUPLE to manaee small -W•rtled Abeut Your At-Tired of lroken Promiie.-Ex. Sec'y to pres. S75() at Saddle k Lane g. Leather Gypsy In Laguna zolicltor to eaftl top pey. penona1 or bul1ness DAY kitchen help h:>tel. Bay front apt, furn Undecid•d Ai To A Proper c., .. ,1, of Action-F/C Bkkpr, Constr to $700 Monday thru Fl'!. after 61 "Nlguel tor inter appnt. Leads furn. Call wkdys S.5, 23 Yenn Hllrbor Area NIGHT BUSBOYS + ~. 613-1440. Gen'! Otc/R.E. $550 PM. Exper only. 58&-5300. 495-5763. fl l 542-4707. (714) 6-u7·6. ' ARE YOU VNDI::._ PAI D? File Clerk $500 •-• Apply In Penon 3-5 PM CUSTOMER II y,. C• A-TN..._, .. c_ ...... lo TN Payroll Clerk' $625 For APPOlntment 2607 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. Atn, ..... N , We'tl LA• A• l!tMnlew With Ye• R~ptionlst/Anaheim $500 lronl!!f APT. Mar-R>lired Indlv. or SERVICE IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL Gen'! Ole/Santa Ana l500 ••PROFESSIONAL** cpl. U unlll. Writ" Grove, CLERK -WE CAN HELP YOU ~~'::';,mCl~~· adm flOO ** IRONING ** ~9th St. Manh. Bch, Cali 'Jeannie Sisco $600 CALL 645-U75 ' Thia job requ1rea touch. ·A. o. v•u he w• 1tf'ott9 v•c•t.1011•1 ddv•7 & Sid Hoilman ' ASST. MANAGER. operation ot the ten key J, De you h••• 9oocl n•tlve i11telli9e11e17 T L1nd1c1pl~ Sharp pl to Ull9t manqer actdlns ml.drlnt and l& a C D•~"' feel 11,ffloltntly motl .. •t•d to t ch!eve 7 NEWPOR in very active womans ret:Ponalble job' preparing: D. Do you hovo th• tltllitv to m•k• d•ci1ion1 Personnel Afency ~.?..!.~ q u e 'anc1Mw:t _ .. ,have blacklog rtporta. part I E. Ar• you , •• c1., to •• t . r •• 111tlc c., •• , obi•ctlve ) 133 Dover Or., N.B. ~"""'.ence be ....,e to number fllel, lhlpplng F. If you wet• eonvincod thot h•lp w•1 ovaUable woulcl 642.-3870 LANDSCAPING: Sprinklers, 1 1 lawns, rototlllinK, e tc . reuon. 5.1M982/673-<m2. Pointing & Paporhlnthll take chaqe of tu 11 ttatus I report•, change you •ccept if, wlth•u• dtl•y 1 re a po n sl b llitles. -X1nt anten, bookiria reporU opportunity for 1he rlat>t etcv If ·YoU ht,,. had YOU SHOULD KNOW penon tnteretted in • aecoW'ltlnc experience Uds e Th• bott•r iob1 ''° 11ot tcl vortl10tl Ptm'I.. tun time »Oi;ltion. w 0 u 1 d b t au t tab 1 t e Thlrcl p1rty proft11lo11•I lnfluenc• h 1ometlmo1 n•c•t· * Wiiiard Palntlnt ~If ywlntmqualent.lly, coif ""' an bldclroun<I. oome If ah t ""' ,.~~ * tnh'il· Excellent frtnct e 6•ttln9 th• rl91d doer• op•tt, •t the ti9~t level r•· -""8ifTIT...,_.. LOOK Mt m> benditl wtlh a 1table ,q11lr•• tioc.h11lque. RESID~C'OMMERCIAL ASSISTANT Indonellancook, compan)'. Apply • b 1c.utl•• potitlo111 •re fllli4 tflro\lth erecuti•• lnt•r· ' ---,._-..,_ . put ot Ml ~tlme. Phone · "J•w•. ., 11rR1 """~'""'" ~ -~D.ICEON. lit'"M•11 reiume mellln9, ls not• tot•l en1w1r. °"'T'cotitttcai ~.g:.1'¢la ASSIST. MGR 82 ·;;J;it apt ELECTRONICS, Pl-Call For Dtlrpatt complex ln CM. WU.Otn<:e *'42-J775 640-11~ • leulor .. p; Hus-·lt. ·INC. State Lie. No. ISIOIS ::/.~ ~~~~· .. ~=-1>1.Ymnt 185;12 Von Karman for o Br "a ... ·"'t. Irvine, C.aHI., 9:11164 PAINTINC. lftttt/dter. 25 ...!l ,,....-UO\..! t!' ·-cqu&1-o--p port u n t ty ~ .. ~ ~~~-A~~RVICI CASHIER an emptoY<r m/f INT/EXT PAIN= ~& Pl!X OPERATOR DELIVERY men, over :13 niee," -_ !Ul!lflD ~ S;OO AM to YI!· Pft'_!l!,J.iihn•. Early SEND RESUME OR CALL TOOAY • -FOR- NO COST EXl!CUTIVE INTERVIEW . EIECllflYE SERYICES,1 1110. ' -HOME OFl'lc:'E - (714) 547-962S Ill N. Ma in St. -S.nt1 Ano flteURITY IANK IUILDING SUIT! 7021 *wan,.,., H .... r * j :_.r»;....,.,;;,. • ~·J:r.: trn"'~/: C:··.;; C. l!ebfto 6*~ Men:l!!y -, +':J!boltu!E;•!:.· _!tl42-4!00!?;:!!!;· ___ !it!I!!! ,.,. «! °"" ot '· . ·-l • • • -I --·~ --- MAN wanted full time in R en t a l :yard. Neat appe~. wlth very neat hand writing. Own transp .. Will train right man. Apply 1930 N"'l>On Blv.d, C.M. 9 am to Noon. Mon, Wed, Fri., QIL DRIPPINGS FR 0 M YOUR AUTO can be rcmOved rrom concrete by applying a co m n1 o n hoUBehold de-greaser. Uae otralght trom the bottle and let gtand ... then hose ~t\Y residue. End your money shortage by shOpp\J'li; the Daily PUot Oassitled Ad~ 842-5678. . Don't .ivr·up llif lhlp! ''Llst"lt tn claulned, Ship to Shore ~t>I S1MS13 . -. CANCll (.-.)JUHfJ ~1u<h in;,.,,_,... ~n-1• ··-..-~ --._..__._, ' - ) • . .... --- • T1.1tsd11y, frbruary 26, 1974 ;"j~t~p~~~~~&!J7~1,!!!!!!!ill!!i!! Furniture 110 TV, Radio, HIFI, i :B:.:"=::''~· .:St:::;.n ___ ..:.::.:. TRUoi:: DRIVER • • a s ?i1US1' sell all my kwdy Stereo 136 SABOT, atua ~r v.'OOd. 9j(I Autot; Used -·-990 lrand New '74 11.;.u;.;toto;;..W=•n_t..i=--.:."';;; 1·;,;Aulot:::.:~·~l:.:;m::!~=.:.:rt::td:-~'11:.: Autot, lmport9d WE NEED YOUR MAZDA TOYOTA · No ~ptr. ffil'd. \VIII ll"ain. '".:::::'.I Jurn. 6 pc. br nn 1et ZENFrll, RCA .l SYLVANIA F\tn to learn wllb &:. fun A;t11117·St $33i n10. 1ltirtlni:: -(queen) cotor TV, tnd Ii. televis.lonl & stt.rtO&. Prk.'td to aaU. $150. !9Hfls:5 salary + many bene.flli. coff tb!•· Den furn! nauaf\., lea than ~ 8Mt1, sn-10ock1 910 Sharp, clean late modt1 can. • • ONE YEAR MONTI CARLO CADILLAC Now tntcrviewtng. Anny Appll•neff 802 lamps, mlmlr, ve vet aota with 3 yr-picture tube ll.;..;=;;..;:....o.r=·;;.;..c..;...;.;.;.1 PaJ4l for or Not .. - OpportWllties. 6 4 5. 1 l 6 3 , KEN?iiORE Yla.sher" .l gas & lovfleat I: chr. All Uk1 yr panl & lt"Mce. 19"' & FOR poMr bolt up ro 28' At.k For Cluck Tripp 7 4 Rotwy WCICJOll S72.29 mo. WARRANTY SacJillct-Mu>t .. u. Only 7S TOYOTA S3B95 Col!:la Mesa. drytr... tio!b for $ 1 2 ~. nu. ~1 laricr coiol:' ~ a r f: front mooring $50 rno. It up Uied Car t.fll.llBgft' Guaranteed . & delivered. 1 DOUBLE Bed complete, «ldlvered It. -.1.up. All to 19' side mooring $1.50 CORONA ' SEDANS Howard Chevrolet ~ nice OOff to chooM MacArthur tnd J•mborte 54fr.8672 . 1 triple drnacr, 2 11quaro mode.la in 1tock It °"}~t"I'~-~~~~-~~~~ Great tnlry level position nlJtht stands. reuonable dh:play. Cub 90 PlaD or for I.he brli:rht btglnner. O.E. Side by side 19.7 cu prlf!C!l, 645--5743 terms to 36 months. Call ~54&,!';":~1 ~~=i ~t ~ Jfr !j~~~ ~i:; Gara9e Sale 112 ~ ~1 ~~\~:~ ( TfMIPWtltkllt l[Jtt) TYPIST IAliAcLE MAZDA !>om aU equl~ with auio. N.wport Beach made, fa :t·'")' atr OOnd, 833..QS5S radio, etc. AU priced beiow•l---.,;::_~::...pal..,-a -the coat ot a new m•. '70 o.evy Im Agency, 2790 Harbor Bl\'d, ,:"'"al<'°'·;o~r._,S295:;o:-~833-8'158"°"""''--,-,. 16" PORTABLE COWR TV, Bl"Ookhunt or 9021 AUanta,l'j;iOijiiiiiiiijjijiiij CM CE 12 l'U fl \1chite right playlii good, n1U11t aacrlfl(,-t l~unU~n Beath. 96&-33291r."ft:.nArl £(.}lent 928 TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS Call or come In. to see ~· SEE THEM NOW , , • DRlVE Air, auto, radio, vinyl top, ONE : • • Bt "i ONE new tlrts. $10l> or belt • ' • oUer. 560623. URGENTLY NEE DED · FOUR KEYPUNCH OPRS VO LT Instant Personnel T~mporary Service 34848 C&n1pus Dr., SUlte 106 Newport Beach 546-4141 Equal Oppor. Employer \VAITRESS hand door rcCrigerator, good $150. 217 E. 2l~t St., C.P.1. or 962--5559 ...._ --.!:.:...::.'~;::. :.;.;;;;o;c...:.::: l'OndiHon. $50. ~tS-9m. anylime. FAl\'TASTJC STEREO SALE 8 !-"'T. Bed Camper Sbtll BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '64 CHEV., Excel rwinlna cond. Dl&mOnd tuck uphOls, mna whll, Offer 642--5700 ~PLIANCE IS\:rV. \Vasher/ d ryer/dsh1vshrldisposals. AU 1l]akes. Reas. &46-58-i8. Rent Was hers/Dryers $2. \Vk. Full mnlnt. * 639-1202 * Elec Dryer $15. \Vasher $20. Refrig. $);). 5-18-1394 8 ft 6 Pl.it \VESTINGHOUSE. '73 Har· Vl'St Gold, 11 t'U ft, $150., &4&-2311, or 642·3607 eve's Building Materials 806 • Surplus. Building ~fATERIAL • 1000's or NE\\1 ITEMS! Doors, lumber'", ply. \vood, alum sheeting, mold· ing, \V!ndows, etc. Mlic•ll•neovs I ll Sansui 210 Receiver, 2·12" $.<iO. firm. 3-way speakers & Glenburn * S43·3691 * magl)etic tu rntable . PAINTINGS, un 1r11 n1 e d j COO'\Plete with sh u re Cycles, Bike•, ' ' 21!!0 Harbor Blvd. _ _.;,C::.;H;..:.R;..:,Y;;_S::.;L::.;ER_.:..._1 Q)(;;ta Mesa 645-STOO I ---;:=='"'=~=:=:I TRIUMPH >'<lR ,.1,, 1966 ch " . NEWPORT IMPORTS : t)utch oil painting, lran1ed cartridge. Llst over SSOO. Scooters 915 Jnpancae sllk ~ c rel' n., Now $297. Use your lncomtil-~-'-'-----';;;;.1 ex p t!n 11 Ive Can 11 dian tllX retum cht>ck & get free ORANGE toboggan, $35, custom made headpbooes $24.95 value. COUNTY • • !--=~:::..;;,;__ Newport runs good, """'1t 3100 w. ~~JY·· N.B. . _;=c_ _____ =._ 1i9 TR. CT-6 plus. Good overhaul, best ofter~ TOP CASH SSS SEE THE ALL NEW ~Exe<!I MPG, $1600. COMET daybed oover & bolsters, U.S.A. STEREO, 119 East 125' Met11ten-anean tt<pl• mh, °"" Mesa 645-24<2, SUZUKI BULTACO dresser min'Ol', $85, Antique 3721 South Bristol, 2 blks • paid for used A'MC or Jeeps RX4 VOLKSWAGEN 1963 MERCURY Cbmet Sia IMMEDIATE wan. $50. It runa! 123% j~lers cabinet, lighted, No. of So. O>asl Plaza, NEW 74•5 $45, 2 new 4x5 quatily area 506--0420 FRIENDLY ~'i rugs, $25 & $.10, •"'"'"' =R"1"c"'E"·s_TV_S~E~R~v-1c~E~ STREET & DIRT cash, 493-M36 (formerly in Pantry S Cntr) Ready for De livery AMC /JEEP 1969 Harlxlr Bl\'d. I BUY!! Good, used furniture & appliances or will sell f..>r vou MASTERS AUCTION 20751h Newport, Cl\t 646-8686 839-0974 or 54f>.3050 aft. 6 or Sunday Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'I. * TV Specia l• * 100% Financing , O.A.C. Used & Color TV sets . \Vhile 2255 HARBOR BLVD .. C.M. they last!! C.o!or from $65 (HARBOR AT \\'IL.SON> up, B & W from $35 up. For 646-?.428 646-4655 service call: 250 CC Yan1aha, real C.?.1 . Autos, Imported 970 AUDI 3'1&0002 or 51!Hi003 clean, 1973 Model, take. over 1375 Logan Ave., CM payments. 493-5375 aft 4PM. '72 AUDI, LS, 4 dr, auto, MUST SEU. l\'I a g n av ox '70 Suiukl T 250. 6 spd. Xlnt sun roof, low. miles, Sell below Blue Book or track home entertainment Center. running cond. $325/best or. Am·P'm stereo, e<>lor 'J'V & fer. 64z.0172 for pt'Operty, dn. pynit on ho lc'-""':.C:0=0...,----1 House Boat or car., C Dlr., P nograph. Meditt. style. H ONDA X R. 7 5 19 7 3 536-5824 WILL BUY YOUR 25th St~Newport Beach. DELIVERY GAS SAVER CONTINENTAL '73 DEMO CLEARANCE PAID FOR OP. NOT. WJLL,\ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 · PAY TOP DOLLAR. CALL , 1973 KENT AU.EN, 540-0442. ,66 vw Bug R bit LINCOLN trans, front ~d cl~an. R:~ CONTINENT ~L well. Gd mileage. $600. 4 Dr. To\\<near. Xln t cond. ~7761 Fully equipped. Lthr intrr, '70 V.W. Bus, re-blt eng, oil cooler, AM-FM, sun roof, Konis, new C.V. joints, $1850. 673-4645. vinyl roof, a~ control, 6 way pwr -seats, am/(nl rad. w/stereo tape. Will selt for $54!6. Contact Personnel Manager, For Mexican food & cocklail~. exp. only. 6t2-8274 \VATTER, dining tuom exp. Apply in person •lotel Laguna 425 S. Coast llwy WANTED!!! MEN 18-30 SHAKLEE Cu st o mers, \VE OO~ER TRAINING TN 2500 So. 1.Iain, S.A. selling oul at co 11 t, BUILDERS SURPLUS $299. Call 548--6.168 N.B. aft "'/carrier. Private party. -='--"'=-------___ ....:::::C:!'.0--- 6 pm. Call eves ~7 '71 AUDI. Sunroof, 4 spd, NEW' Sansul QRX 6500 '73 HARLEY Sportster, Just air oond. Make offer . call tuner.amp. 2 yr PIL war. like .new, only 3,IXXl miles, ~55;c7:.;-1:.:«o:l'-. ------ * Mazda 74 ,Rotary * $77 MONTH '70 SQBK. new paint, brak~. Bi lbo• B1y Club very Clean, 25 mpg, Sl.850. 12Zl W. Coast Hwy, N.B. GAS SAVER! ~9193 Electronics, Nuclear Power, Aton thru Sat 10.S proteinized hair products, Aviation, Mechanics . 714 : 546-103'1 facial lotions, c re a n1 s, '62 Van Great '63 eng. Runs. FORD AdminislrB.tion AND MUOI Furniture I 810 masques, refreshner etc, MORE. 493-6436 New $750. Sac. $450. firm. Sacnhce, $1895, 545-1318 BMW 36 l\10NTHS OPEN U!ASE \Viii accept trade-in11 CALL ~IR. FRY 842-6666 Needs minor trans. work.1---------1 $120/offer. 968-31'1'0. ALONG \VJTii! ! GENUINE Drifh11ood BW'li!iD ""'E~CO;:RA::::.,TO=R,-H~a-s~t-,m-·~1lc <TI4) 640--0874 or (TI4) l~speed men1 bike. $80 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;.;;;;;;;;;;:; 648-9068, eves. ( 213 l e 673-2757 after 5 e • Hunt. Beach VOLKSWAGEN 1972 Dun• '69 TORINO ~ 36,000 ~iles, $950. A u t o m a t t c transmission, .=::::;::::,.,===---! po'A-er steer Ing . air ~pld Advanccn1enl IArt Collector's) Tiered oak buy 200. yrds Gin.c~r Sark Good Pay·$326.10 a month &. myrtle Y:d. tbl, satin nylon short shag CJlrptt. 3lXl 762-6713 -AUTll. D£iliifo1 to !tart. varnish $125. Redwd pict'lb"e yrds 2 tone creamy saturn, FOR SALE· Packard Ikll 21 ·• Color TV Beautiful \Valnut cabinet with sliding doors. Nttd.s repair v.·ork on lWler. $50. 548-8778 . Mobile Homes 935 BAVARIAN MAZDA VOLVO oond.llioning, radio & heflter Jntere11ted! 1bl, oil fin .. antique height pub mirrors, 548·4654, MOBILE HOME FOR SALE : IOI --~-~-~-l (ZSU555) 00 YOURSELF' A FAVOR S250. Fireplace tiered coffee 642-22.» '74 VOLVO'S HERE NOW $795 U. S. NAVY lbl. rare cherry \\·d, varnish INVENTORY CI ea ran c e, brand nu 8·digit, 4 function \\'c;ght 8 oz. approx size of dollar bill 1,-i inch thick. $29.95 640-8000 SILVERCREST MOBILE HOME 642--4272 o r 646-5636 fin. $225. Low height, rcd\\·d coffee tbl, oil fin. $275. 17331 Beach Bl. 8-12..f.61i6 '72 · R.."l\·2, 2 dr, AhI·E'M, t.lich. radia ls, l\lr, R&l~. Orig. own. $2450. ~128 FRIENDLY~' \VHO \\'ANTS TO \\°ORK? "King of the Tiered ?i1yrtle-., 20' x 53', 2 BD 2 BA, carp., DRNE A CAB! ,,.d tbl" resin fin. $400. Tues. I 1 11 "'~ped. b1t.;ru;., roMg .. CHOOSE your hours, work thru \\'ed. only. 986 \Vest for yourself, be your ov.'ll 11th St., Costa Mesa, oU DRAPES, WOVEN WOODS, F,.,. to You washer & elE!f't. dryer, wired CARPETS, UPHOtsrERY . . for 220 alr cond., kitch. F r e e E g t , T r a l n e d 3 L · 2 T' $2.00 clock, stru:age shed, land· 1974 BMW's ARE HERE NO\V MERCEDES BENZ boss. Men or \\'Omen. Can Placentia. be slightly handicapped. ~c~o~'="'==--~-Decorators. S 4 8 -8 9 4 1 , ••t•nat•'••'•me•s'•••I scaped paU1>. Three yrs, old Neat -Clean Appearance. MP LET E. L I KE V STANDARD-SIZE SALEM t/Gn-4769 • like nu. Located In new adult pk. away from noisy GERMAN Shepherd, spayed. &. One-half bl. from club- 31,l yrs ol(I. Affectionate, house. $15,495. Call EVES. good with children. Needs 213-6944600, 697· 7152. $AVE Order your car for oven;eas delivery now! 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY ts., retired. Age 25 to 7o. MAPLE BED. I nc I u des Supplement your income. head and footboards, frame, Drive a cab 6 hrs or more n 12" PORTABLE Color TV, $160, King bed $98, dbl bed $68, All near new, Pool table, fair, $98, 842--0400 "~" r;Jat:i;, ·innerspring 00..'C and ~· Apply in nerson, mattress. First $125 takes 5 yr. or 50,000 mile warranty ava!lable on all new Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th it. See at 75.5 w. 18th, Apt St., Costa l\1esa. 60, Costa Mesa. 64~0 FIREWOOD! Sea so ne d, aromatic, mounlain pine. Delivered & stacked. $-15 & $80. 494-5469. loving home with room to CAN BE SEEN AT: run. 96>-3822. CRESTMONT 1974 & '73 ffil.1\V's, ·n Olds station wagon Vista Cruiser, 1 owner. low miles, sacrifice sale (375BTC). '74 VOLVO '70 MAVERICX, air, AUto, lo mileage, by O'l\1\er, $1795, 642-6697. WIU. teach tir. n1nnicurisl J uliette method for a f...e. Looking fur exper Juliette to \\'O rk In Juliette manicuring fihop in Nev.'])Ort Be a ch t213) 657-6627. ALL wood dinin'l'. set, 4 hi· back chairs, S75. • 645-2834 * * l.Avf'seat & sofa. Never used. Very gd. qual. Custom 1nade. t.;sualty hn1. 968-7910. A COHY!NIENT SHOf'PtNC AN SEWING GUIDE FOR THE GAL. ON THE CO. For •n 1d In Woman•• \l\lorld Coll Mary Beth 642-5678, oxt. 330 Fashion PLUS! Plnow Qnic;het BRAND 1ie1v Davis Cla!!Sic II Tennis racket with cover , 5 mediu1n wip • used once. S45. 8.JG.-1677 after 6 pm. ?!'IOVING: Dlb bed, oolor TV, Danish modern din. set. 138 E. 18th CA1 548-44&5 NEED good home wxlots of ESTATES love.• Male J?ame/Boxer, 1051 Site Or., Brea. (Central Male sn1. mL'Ced breed. t.ve. a cross from Brea 968-31'1'0. Comm. Hosp.) Lo t #46 A.KC BEAGLE, fen1 ale, 3 CONTACT RAY, PK. l\IGR., years, needs yard. '"'lo;;;r,:.'=;h;;o"c;";:;,ng":.=-c""""-,--- .838--9348 eves. 3BR, 2BA, 20x52, furn in AFFECTIONATE puppies, 6 a quiet family park. 17261 wits, sml w/long hair needs Gothard, Sp 56. 1-1.B. 1\ft loving home, 5.16-763.> 6 eve. 847-7330 E::I ~402 1'1arguerite Park\\•ay 1.Iission Viejo 831·IDID e 495.4949 USE AVERY P\\'Y EXIT. '73 J\1G l\1idget, low mileage, likf' nc\\', A.i\1/flt (Ser No. 69211. '73 TR·6. ljke RC\\', priced for quick 1i8.let (7~9GVQl. Btst Deal Anywhertl LEASE OR BUY All Mocltlt 1 DEAN LEWIS VOLVO ·n GALAXY 2 dr, loaded super clean, low miles. Air $1400 4~72. . JEEP ·39 CJ5, rull roll cage, Buick V6 many ex1ras. • 545-t853 * BRONZE \\"are for sale 12 House of Imports 523-7250 " place setting never used FREE to the right home. Motor Homes ORANGE COUNTY'S- $175 or bst/oU. 846-5078 German Shorthair Pointer. Sale/Rent 946 OLDEST • 826-4367 * NOW OPEN 1966 Harbor. c.M. ..._.,ml----oM7.E=R'°""'c='u~R~Y,.,.__­ Autot, Ustd 990 1~~-~;..:;..:.;c.;..__I BALBOA Bay Club single \\'Oman's membership. * 646--3589 * • SHARE WlNf\"EBAGO • & Mi Jon v ' 11~1 Own 20% Int • ru11y equip. tt lejo Imports ,... llld Supplill Use 10 weeks per year. Con-MERc''E'otunEnSg BENZ . sider only responsible party. Call 644-!H62 M·F 9-5. & '64 QiEVY SU Sport .66 '64 ~IBRCURY 4 dr. Needll (bevy Impala,~ Must~. tWle-up. $l!iO tirm. (Atlck shift) reasonable * 54J...369l * prlces, 6"5-5743. 1972 P.fERC MX Villa«ft' AMC Loaded •1th ........ ia.t cond. $2700/ofr. 6C-m2 Pots, Go-•I 850 •DALE'S !:!nottorals Ho me 1974 BMW's FIAT CARPET Layer, Installation, n,.., Con1plete Sale! & Serv\ce Repairs, yours or mine. Call *·Security Pet Prod.* '73 23-26' 1\1.H. & -r.Unis in stock ready for immediate Vl1it Us Soon At '71 HORNET MUL TILI'fH 1250 • Rebuilt. Like brand new · n 2S0. Call 545-2500 att 6 p.m. MERC '72 MarqW., 4-dr., all xtras, lo mi, AMIFM ste r eo, pvt. pty . $3195. 64<1-&1&3. Dean, 6-12-7101. Beef 28c lb. Cott. ch. 20c Free miles 9 til 9, 8J8....0!m delivery. Exrellent savings 28701 Marguerite Park\vay SPORTABOUT MiscaRaneout lb. D.H.L.'s $2.50. 10/more RENT ine '73 Explorer 24' on l'C1nainlng 1973 models. ?!fission Viejo 495--1700 WAGON Wanted 820 $2. 54.7-3977 1418 E . sleeps 8, !o"'l'Sl rates SALES-SERVlCE·LEASING (USE AVERY PWY. EXIT) MUSTANG _ _.:;;;.;.:;;:.. ___ ....;:.::;: \Vllsl)ire, SA 552·8292 OVERSEAS DELIVERY JIM SLEMONS Automatic transmission, air Roy CARVER I <OOdlHonh>g, rad ; o &.1------'-'--I PRIVATE party \Van ls H.Al\IS'l'ERS (pair) Blonde. FOR rent 27' sips 10, self I nc. IMPORTS heater. (17683ttl '74 l\fUSfANG II Chia 4 :i;te rling si l verware long haired. 2 new cages, CODI. loaded \\'/'Ctras, ROLLS ROYCE B:i.t\V MERCEDES BENZ $1695 ryl, air, atito, 900 mJ. Pvt damaged or not, paylllll: $30. (1 habit tra.111$20 548-3877 540-7796 or :HS-4037 234 E. 11th St. party. Wlll take 11mall L.B. 494-5661. Dog1 854 Auto Service, Parts 949 Costa 1.fesa • 546-4444 AUTHORIZED spol1s car In trade . Of~~=i:urnlturtf 124 •PUPPY WORLD• JEEP; 6 cyl, ou per '74's Are Here! J\:Si'::;:: AMC>JU•' ~,;.tang Grando. ....:::!::.:?::~---.::.::.; Oillluahuas, Tiny Poodles, Hurricane eng, noo. Call Immediate 0.livaryl ,.....,.._~.0'"7770 Airoond , R&Jt. vinyl top, ,METAL Fil.trig cab In et Amer. Eskimo, Pit Bulls, 6§-8388, 657 Beach St., Seve On Remeining 'n1 lmPol'l'S . , . -oval tires. Perfect oond. w/locl<. Adjustable typing B"ll Terrier, St. Beman!, c .... M.... CREVIER BMW (We're top buyer for any CADILLAC $2300. 2952 century Pl., table, both like new, $75 C.OCkapoo, Japanese Span., used Men.~s Bau.I C.M. 540--4481 for both or sell separately. Labs. Dachshund. 100 MJX.1 l§J Sales e Ser:yice e Leasing l.10! Quail -----~ ........ MUSTANG V8 air 545-1318. ED PUPS!! Stud Service r':1. 208 ~ LW'W • • cond, l\lost Breeds. Open Eves: AutollvWI .-r \V.Cl1s~.A. d SJ5..3ln Newport Beach 72 ~cAO SEO. DEV. P/S, P /B, auto. tran!I., OKS. $15 up Exec S\\'VI chrs 5.11 5027 Sun ays 833-9300 4 Dr. In xln't cond. Lo mi's. vinyl top .. 1 O'Nt'ler. 1'tml 11ee S15/25 Sec chrs $8/24.. . e;: 9 Sl '73 BMW 3.0 CSA Gleaming ENTER FROM MacAJtTI!UR 1.fany xtras. Vltiyl top, to appreciate. Call :>40-5173 Pierce 867 \V. 19, Cl\1 STUD service • need a fem. Antiques/Clinics Verona "·ith Ebony interior .66 ?itERCEDi;oe PIB. P/S, leather uphol, tilt whl, aft. 5 p.m. 642-3408 Cocker span. for nly regist. 831-2MO Dir. ~ ......, a/cond dim te ,_, l=.,--;-~----Male cocker span. 847-6574 '48 PLY ooupe, fla thead 6, mileage, 2 new tires. • a con ... ..,., 67 lo ml. auto w/wide tire11, Pianos/Organs 826 eves. comp!. orig. Good nlpg. Bl\f\V 2002· '13 beige, 4 spd, 600. or oHer 499-3729 stereo rad. w/~ape, 6 way vln. top p/s, disc. r&h. _ _.:.;:...;,.::...,;.: __ ..;:;;.: Make reas offer 645-!>176 air • cond. su.nrl, radials, '64·220S. New rehlt cng, leath P\\'T . seat&. \Vill sell for 536-1515 alt. 5 . • PIANOS AIREDALE Pups · AKC • · · · AM·fM stereo radio & tape $4700. Contact Penonnell;'ll8~;,,1;cu"'ST;iAN~;:--.,.,,,--,- Flintkotc Ch. Sire/ShO\\' Trucks 962 deck. 10,500 mi. $5750. Call inl. XI oond. 22m. per gal. Manager, G , air, all11D., • ORGANS Qltyl•luge Bone/Calm Pet. Dave. Days 919-2880. $l695 or ofr. 548-2349 Balboa B1y Club good gas,61o7,,mlles. 837-5561 Pr/Pty '73 FORD COURIER '58 hfB 300SL Rdstr. Xlnt. 1221 W. Coast Hwy, NB * .r!"l675 * ENGLISH Sp R 1 NG ER 7,000 m!, auto trans, ,mag DATSUN Condition, \Viii trad e _.... ---. ---...-'67 MUSTANG. 6 cyl, Radio Open Nights 'Iii 9 Sa t: 'Iii 5:30, Sun. 12-5 Rentals from $5 puppies. Show & pet. Shots. whls, ::i new th-es, hnted S.11-2040 Dir. ~..-.....-heater. Top oondltlon. $150'. AKC Call: B32-4l92 glass, R & ll. P~oeled 240Z · '73 brown. 4 spd, air OPEL 72 CADILLAC Need PU truck. 492-83l'1 · camper wt dual inside cond. AM/FM r ad lo GOLD •&; GREAT PYRENEES, AKC ligh!Ji & cabover storage w/pwr, antenna, spec tuned CP!: DeVille, 2 Dr. Xln't Mustane F-utback pups, only 2 left, $350. ea. cabinet. '74 tags. Private exh, mags, rad j a I s, '69 OPEL GT, 4.l,000 mile11 cond. Many xtru. Vlny1 top '15,000 ml Clean but needs • Pianos & Grands 586-2366 party. &6-5813: f;46.791S alt f/spoiler, 1&r 0 v-ride s . Xlnt MPG leath@r uphol, tilt .whl'. engine work $450. 49'-2956 ALL MAJOR BRANDS BOXER pupa, AKC. shots, 5 PM. 7 ,4 0 0 mi. S 5 3 5 0. 645'ill91 " :f;:t·,.d~·~ ... ~~ OLDSMOBILE New Spinets from •••• SS95 10 wks, Show/Pet. REPO'D '73 Ford F-250 Dave 979-2880 days. PEUGEOT ~ seats. W'tll sell tor ~r from ............ $95 846--9496 Ranger, xlnt oond. P/S, WILL BUY YOUR . Sf100. Contact Pet'I01U>l?l Sales .~ G:i.~';' .'.' :::::::::: :: ENAKGCLI7SH kSpr;1~'" &sparuh"eb Pta/nBk, •At~c,NoAwrrta, k',·""ng. blued I DATSUN, TOYOTA NEW PEUGEOT Man~IL'-· n-Cl b OOMLOCSMTROBCILKES NO DEALERS PLEASE w s, iver w te. ' .... 1 s, OR VOLKSWAGEN PW uv.-1HY U U .. ,./ e Organs Champion lines 494-6841 •"•'•;ngg o r_$d2995e n' (TIC<a>~·'7-4•119r.: PAID FOR OR NOT. \VILL DEALER 1221 W. Coast Hwy. NB HONDA C4RS BEAUT. AKC Doberman .. _lwn .... " • • ..... --UN / ... n n 'I".> ,, ALL MAJOR BRANDS P"pp;es. For pet or show. ~ lG-5 ~~~ ~l'.u:~~.tALL Complete Sal .. and -· 30,000 nU, Sell for under IVERSITY OLDS "'( t-flld. ~ \Vurlitzer \V /rhy fNew) $499 May see by appt. 54g...7300 '50 CHEVY Pickup. '56 6 50 oonipa.ctg on displa.y. '71 ELDORADO Con v t . 2850 111.rbor Blvd. I "'°"'" .... \Used> .... $195 ST Be -~ . ri cyl ong. H. D. truck 4-<pero 1970 240Z, a/o, ma•" PACIFIC MOTOR 30,000 mJ, S.11 lo runder C»sta Meta ~9640 ' Add bright color and Lowrey \\'/svm (Nl'1v) $2695 · . rnmu puppies, pc · trans. 12 volt systen1 sell am/fm, tuned exhalLo;t, lo IMP TS whol saJ Bl Book •l charn1 \\"ilh qulc:k crochet e FREE e mark:1!1gs. f\-1.ale & fem. Call or trade for Dune buggy mileage, musl sell, 673-3654. OR tra~ 10:, pro:rty or oo: PLYMOUTH I 9411 10-18 12Y,.22y, ,,,, 11f,...i .... 11Tr..'i' ... Side p!Pats s"·ing out !he skirt of a Jong.Jo~ df'('SS with a pretty crorhetcd cape that's. Jl('l'fect for spring occaiuons, pil~rilfiant buttC'i'Uy and Organ Lessons 54.5-7758 aft ::ipm oil road or s1reet any oond. '71 240 z . M88s. air, etc. PEUGEOT /SUBARU pymt oa Howie Boat or car.1-----';..::.;;_.;;__I daisy nlOtils accent this FULLERTON MUSIC PUREBRED SA MO y ED or Baja Bug call 642-7944. Xlnt mech. 32 M mi. Ask 1557 W. J.JncoLn Ave.,. Dlr., 53&-0824 1972 ~ giftworthy pair. Crochet of 18191 EuclirltFountaln Valley puppiell. Male $7S, Female '73 TOYOTA Hl·Lux Pickup for Frank, 495-6525 Anaheim ~ BY OWNER 16$ C to &. ....... _ l\'CIShable, ~ynlhetie \VOrsled. 557-4836 $50. 6 \\'ks. old. 00-7450 3 mo old w/5800 miles'. '73 240'l, air, AM/FM, map.. ~RSCNE 1966 0.evy Imoala very UI m u.,....,.. Pattern 70'.Jl: directions. L1" 122 N. H11.rbor. Fullerton MIN. SCHNAUZER. PUPS. color matched fiberglass make offer. r:v aood oond. New bead' psin;1 3 Stat Station Wqoq square uud 14" r 0 u n d 7l AKC reg, cha.mp. sired, shell , bkl seats, 3 spd auto [ * 495-0120 * · le valw grind, etc. manv 400 cld, V8 engine pUlov.'l't. 8 ~llOS Avail. Ma.rch 1st. 644·2432. trans, 24MPG, $ 3 2 5 o , FIAT '62 ~ OC'pe, lBO> S.· hdtp hundred• Jt11t 1pent on it, Torquerute 'I'ranlm111k>Q SEVENTY·l'TYE et:?\"TS FREE ORGAN LESSONS as Hors et 856 833-8758 . cabriolet. new pamt, ene call aft 'l. 644-1615 Parle Power Stetrtng .for each pa1tern • add 2S Jong as you like! Ad,ults ;.:.;:~:,:.. ____ _;;::: '73 DODGE PUT t & trans ~. Good ml. Newport Power Brflkes, Disc Front cents for each pattern for \velcome to attend Tuesday DAUGHTER "rill sh a re w/extd cab, 2 bkt c:a~ '73 FIAT 128 WAGON S48-"l240 \, • •73 CADILLAC EtOorado. Air Conditioner Air Mail and Special Han· night flt 7:30 PM. 'Ve "'ant horse stabled at S.J .C. xtra. Ul n1i. Sell or trade. 4 cyl, 4 Jpd, radio, roof '69 912, NEW tbft, konis, w/all -extras. Real Nice. AM Rautio filing; othCf'\\'ise thlrd·tlass everyone to learn to play $3.5/rno. 493-6866 after 6 ~8-3681 aft 3 pm. ra.ck, gas economy all the sharp, $5<m or belt otter Will trade for equity Vinyl Split Set.ts dclivery v.ill take three the organ! Tom Dieterich pm. ,_ FORD V 1 T "''llY here. (679HSY). 833-2161 9-5, 4 9 9-2 4 6 9 In ~.-• area , __ p.....,. Electronic Ignjtlon '"''ks -,,,.-•--• I . .,A 'M>t. ,,..__ '" an. .~ au\o, ' ...... ,,.weekend• ..,.. ..,..,., '"'Y"'""' """' Col ~ u• "· ~'"' o • 1n charge .... 2."°"1. UJ,ll.'11 R&li, air cond. $2850. ji L--· pd (%13) ~. Ll or -.... 11e11tnut i tetallic ~VWr,B~~· \~~rro?~ l\fusic, Newport Blvd. al ~ $8-2'144 lltJ• ::::~· 4 1 • •• J;~ mi ae: ,71 CAD COUPE De Ville, cense 333EOJ Of>pl., Box 163, Old Chel~a Harbor, CM. j .,C 1960 GMC V..O \i! ton pick·up ... ,...... , record. \J\o. 540-3218 full ~· A/C, nu tires. $1695 Station, New York. N.Y. PIA OS 0 G'NS . w/camper shf'll. Xlnt = AMfFM, mint COhd, $3500 See at DAILY PILOT Eni· SEVD'TT·m "f: Ct:XTS JOOU. Print Kaine. Addre!i!>, N !" -G R " . oonditJon. a57-49ll 13600 Beach_ Bl., Westminster_ pOblRSO!Et eng.,'ST,~. trtnerl~ re,.-, days 833-27C evea 60-0610. pk>ye Parking Lot., Atonday .tor each pattern -add 2'5 Zip, Pattern Nuntbf>r. ew ""U!llXI. real IM!lect10n. 8ofttl,-General 900 Vi ns 963 892-6651 63S-2500 ..,,llOO./Otf .... ~ ........ " Priv pty. thru Friday. Call &Q.4321 -•ta for each ""ltCt'll t"r NEEDLECRAFT '12'. Competitive prices. Open ~ ""' _.-i..-'68 ~UPE IleVill Full ••k for Mn G ' w • ~ 0 -" Stmd Th "" JAGUAR-'62 9 ... , sunroof, """ -. ~ •. y ' ,..n ..... Printed Pat1rm !1111: Half Sites ]21':1. ll\:. l6l...i. 181~. 2[11,2, 2212. 1.li~JI('§' 10. 12, 14, 16, 18. Crochet direclions. J'leue Slalf' l>ro-10" Si1.1·. Air Afall and Special li:1l'M.I· d~~!· ~· etc. f'ree deal~· are alw::.s~t: e st BOAT l'Clins, laminating le '69 FORD Super Van, custom -~•u• Joeded, ~ clean. Xlnt ATLAS Unc. otherwise third-ilass un;uuns, illl!..'.. WU _L t..J finish,, $6.95, per gallon. Int, reblt eng, leaving lltate & brakel. Good ln1T1'Ptll'" cond. 11499., 6'+-0515 or cJeUver.y wUI ta~ thtte ln!!Wtt ~••crame Book. a icns Music City ~~!!us. ,;:.tl~~bor, mU1t sell, $2400, 673-7009. VU· ROADSTER. ·n.. 7,000 tat.IM. $4.285.1 &ft 5. 6'f..7*.. . . -"' or more. 5'nd to Bask, fancy Jtnou, pat-SOtith Cbut Plaza ~2830 ~ -'T.l-OODCE van, $2500 or ~r~'."' bt!trt otter. 19'13 91' 2.0. B1aci< mno, '1J c.rv:-AliO\ute!Y pert.Ct. Cllrnlor/Piy-th Milian Muttn. the OAILY 'j~·OOc:irochet Boolt: -* YAOIT WAXING * Best OUer. Perfect cond. ~ xtrU, 3,00> miles, By An extru. Sli~ h' quiclc Open o.ily A. SUn 'tU 10 PM ~~est"2.J:tt~. I·~~~ Learn by pictures! Pflt· TV, Radio, HiFI, ~1 ~:0m8~'0Ul't.ua'r::.thes:: • 644-4417 aft SPM * JENSEN owner: $6300. rail 8f7-10T3 ..ie. Pvt :Ph'· M415~ 2929 karb:>r BtVd., Ytx1<. N.l lOOll. P rint tems. $1.00. .....:S;::l•::.rt0:::_ ___ .::;'3! material• used. m-1451 Autot W1nttd 968 JENSEN TOYOTA CA~ARO • 640>t~ Ml9 ... 34 :.~~':SERT~\~ -~~~·:a;1x,0'~:0~ SACRIFICE ! 1 WANTED: lTBoattrailer. WEB\JY tNTERCEPtOR toVllTA "" , ~MORE nu ,· ~k $1.00. . Moving, mull. se:UJ Brand ' Min. ~~5· IMPORTED At.TI'OS Large SelectJon '74. \: rv1 .... _:~.t£;;r1"°1. 327J;?U:.ot«COii~~ ~ ... o~. 000ii&id<010 .. ~. -~ 60 ·~~ ~ . O>niple!e Al .... Book • new Peavey standaro PA. * BEST PRICES, PAIOI o!•Colort .......,.. .,. ~··--·--Fashlou and ~sc l1ne $LOO. + 2 new ..mies. $400. Call Boats,. Power 906 Dean Lewis Im~ Imrn~tt ~tvtry S.1t Deal Anywhere I maa: wheela. Xlnt 1lnandnc partmt ltte &om 0"' 11 ""' 11q llook• · 50c. MT-3J5t. ir•• H·-c M ·'· -f\ILL ~'!IS:f LEASE OR TRADE ·~.~~ •,'!;.)/•· ~oocy"&'ll=-·=:ll!O::.='D::lr=:·=,.,...=--·I Sp(!ng•SWnmot C.talog. All .... of " rn .. "''"'"" 14' INTERN AT I 0 N AL --• ' ' ' -~ DEPARl\_,.. ,.. an, N =u· •.. " -PONTIAC s.t~! OnlY 50c, SOc:. ZEN"mt & G.E portable 1'V1 wttraller, $1200 22' CHRIS WE v.wld like to buy )'OUI' All Moclell' i"99-~2;:494~;n;-;;;;;;, ;;:;;;1.-.:l--.,:_:::.;~:::::::. __ j INSTANT SEWING· BOOl\ Quilt Book t • 16 pstlcms. w/Vltf". Sl5 each. Silver-CR.AJ>'""l', needs work, S500. old can, pie~ call thlr Dr•tt LEWIS KEEP THE OOM'OM OF '"" b....tl • -·1 A ......,-todq, wear tolnOJTO'Y." 00.:. tone 8t<'rco console w/Al\t/ 1.6' SNIPE, "'/traJlet $800 number ~1onday • Frld&Y tA ' ROUND \fASTE BASKE:I'S 1v cvn ac MCJt lll\I. uto., fl. l'l111euin. Quilt Book s • FM radi0125. 12.li,i ·25th St., 1 w cc ~fly s ~4 6-4 9 9 0: 8am-Gpm for lmmed A. tree. "lean by pleclnc a pal)M' air cond. lNSTANT JI" AS I! J d r: 50e. N. B. ..ttJce • 6Q-.2Sl)J BSA pickup, ~7-3007. TOYOTA !)].ate in the bottom ot the 683~ After G p.n1. DOOK ... Jlunctreds o f Qullt• for Ttld•f'• lJVh'll .. A.'t/fl.1 1tett0 &-track tape. IT MERLINE. All flC\.--t!MI, CASli 1'-UR bukat1 Tllrn Idle items Into '68 ~. Tf~I'. PS/PB, ~ lada. $l 15 btautilul pa.Items. S0c. Plus ttpea.. Sl~ Ca 11 Newly ala.ued. Xlnt coDd, YOUR CAR 3100 Wi Cl>Ml JIW)',, N.S. cnlh wtth A Oii:UyPUot AM.{F1d, A/C, W.,O, 1J--~~~~~~----~~~~~---•t!..!6T.l~·:!2~7>!.7 ,!!&l!!!l•;!:r,!5~,GI.!____ $39;. 54H298 5*-7010 · Mi-M 19116 1..-. c.M. 616-!l.116 Ca.u1l1ed Ad, MW51L - • -- ' • i • • --- 7 • • 7 • ' . . ' San ~lemente • ~apistrano Today~s Final N.Y. Stoeks • • ' • . ...... "" ..... : '\ .. " VOL 67, NO. 57, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ' TEN CE~S J ~~~~~~~~~~·~-"~_.;.:....,.......;__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,--~~~~~~~~~~~~ TUESDAY, FEBRUAitY 26, 1974 Rattlesnake -Peril· Feared on South By JOHN VALTERZA Of fllt o.tty l'lltot Staff A leading snake and flrst·aid expert from the South Q>ast today said that major construction, warm weather and the breeding cycle have blended to create ~ a aerious ratUesnake problem for ' residents oeer open spaces. Bobby Scruggs, the San Clemente Police Department's emergency medical technician and trainer, predicted that residents would llnd snakea "where they never thought to llnd tholn before." Scruggs, who keeps a tall; ol snake Pointing out tbt near tragedy laat Incidents in the late-winter and early weekend when t.yOIM>ld David Barton spring, said that already this """"'" of San Juan~ nearly died from a baby ratUer-was found and deotroyed the effects of repeated bites from a in a sdlool yard. Three adult makes ·baby rattler and a reaction later to already have been killed Jn hilly antiveuom, Scrugp said parmt5 !lhould residential areas of San Clemente. be eopeclally cen!IUI with their children. "It Is the baby ratUer that creoles "The boy Jut -welkond waa bitten the greottst problem and the deadliest by a baby raWer and the tiny anakes bite," he oaid. are far more dangerous than the adulta," '!be infant snakes are born live wt th Sciuggs-aaid. ~~ _ -.JL.l!!!!...Jlooe oLYenom-and a set ol • iDstincts different from more caut.iou,1 adult anakes. "When a Utile one bites it gives no warning, because its rattles aren't developed yet, and Instead of striking tnce and then waiting -like an adult does -the baby bites repeatedly with oo letup," be said. Such wu the case with the Barton boy last Sunday when he picked up a baby diamoodback and the viper bit him at least thr<e times oo the hand. The youngster -near death from an aJlergic react;on to the horse serum used to OOlllteract the venom -was flown by poUce helicopter to Lo6 Angeles County • USC Afedical Center where specialists took over the tre. tment. Today, aides said David was still in ..nou.. condition but !bowing definite aigm of Improvement. The biting Incident, Scrugg. said, caused concerned resident.s -especially parents -to call him for information . -i · ii Co,ast 1 ~ ..:.,. ~tl ' : 1'"" ~ on the rattlesnake peril. 1 .. I tell them all that lt Uley llve in areas near "1ktemess to make sure their garage doors are closed. Wann concrete wlth shelter b the most likely area to find the snakes, and the reptiles share a hatred with dogs and cats. "Jf .a resident hears his dog barking outside, he shouldn't tell it to shut up, but investigate, instead. Often a 1 (S.. SNAKES, P~1e :1 •.' 11 "1.,:·"' ~-1 ·Board Asks I .Gas Ration Grocery Costs Climb by 1.8% -·WASffiNGTOl'f (UPf) :_Spurred by a second straight month of rising farm prices, the cost of a typical family food grocery basket jwnped $00, or I.I percent, in January to a record annual rate of $1,680, a government report showed t1lday. . ' '( ' ~ Badham-Seeks Separate I In County · By WILLIAM SCHREIBER ot .,.. o.llr ,,... ltMf Orange Quity supervlson t1lday laundted an allout attack co tho gasoline shortage by asking Gov. Ronald Roagan to declare a state of emergency here and imPoSe mandatory ruel management throughout the county. · The board voted 3-1 to declare the emergency wh1ch would not go into effect until Reagan acts. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, who said he wanted another week to study the action, was the lone -opposition vote. Supervisor David Baker was absent from ' the meeting. The boan! action consisted of adoption of a res>lution drafted by Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuyper stating that "the lllortage of gasoline ~ created a , 'condition of diaa.ster" in Onnge County. 1 San Juan Backs · State Preserve Bond Proposal San Juan Capistrano city muncilm"1 voted Ullllllmously Monday to eodorse the sfate beach, part<, ...,....liooal, and historical _facil!Ues bond act which will be on the Jtllle ballot. Regretting that the measure comes .. me year too early" to prtJStrve any ol San Juan's historic adobes, the council voted to use the fund> for park development along the DOf1h end of Camino Capistrano. "Unklrtunate.ly we don't have a apeclfic plan for bis1orical pnooervaUm," aaid Cooncilman Jim Tl>oli>e-He added that he believes such a program may be Jn the worka In the coming year. If the bond measure pasoes. the city will receive approximately 157,000. The funds had been earmarked for bicycle traits, but the cooncll voted to develop Long Park instead. 'nle action came late in the meeting during council remarka iMtead of at the designated Ume on the age'lda. Earlier in the meeting, Councilman Edward Chernak addressed himself to the problem ol preservation ol bis1oric parts of the city. "It's a worthy endeavor, but we don't tmve a program for salvaging adobes." aaid Olermak. "I think it WOll!d be appropriate to establish a allllllllAioa and set criteria for this type o1 sltuatlaa. We have been tacklnt! In the pall" 'l'hor!IO pointed out that In the clliull polley plan, provision Is made for bistorlc f.......-vatlon and the comcll has said Jn principle" it is coounllted to ouch a program. "l ooly hope It (lmplemmtatlon) comes early in the general plan." The cooncll thts week received aeveral postcards and letters from people who want the city to aave the adobet. Executive Kidnaped BUENOS AmES (UPI) -Gllerrillas kldnaped a Swift meat packing eaecutive responsible for dismissing -12 workers , according to a communique -to newspapen .today. The Pe op I e 's Revolutionary Army (ERP) lasald It abduded Antonio Vallocdi , 15, Saturday from his -tn -· IBll mUes noctb ... ol -Alrea. The lncrea.se pushed the figur< past the pttYious rec<Wd ol lt.153 set last August when the cost Increased by IZ'7, or I.I percenl The Januory figure ol ll.180 waa '305~ or 22 percmt, above a year earlier. Further increases are expected. Resignation Announced By Kalmbach By I. PETER Kllll:G °' .. DMN f'Mlt '"" Herbert W. Kalmbach ol Newport a.,dt •-·• ladlJ' be boa mll!l*I fni!n tile law firm be formed 11! 11167. -..mue In Siii Fraslcilco, ti Wlll announced that the CalilAlmla Supreme Court will consider possible dlaclplinary action against Kalmbach. Kalmbach pleaded guilty Monday to . · fedtral charg.. of illegal campaign practices .. Be could draw 1 maximum oentence ol l1lo years In . prilon and • 110,000 fine for 'oOe fe)ony and cmie year and a 11,000 fme for the other mbdemeaoor charge. The i'fewport attorney wbo told Senale Watergate c.mmitlee his · family and his profession ''mean everything to me" withdrew from tl)e fibn .of Kalmbach, DeMarco, Knapp and Cllillingwortb 10 daya ago. Kalmbac)I, who pleaded guilty to hw charges Involved In the Wotergate investigation, may leave the I a w profession altogether and lll"Y g<> Into the field of real estate Investments. Kalmbach was unavailable f o r comment today but bis long·Ume private secretary Ann Harvey said, "whatever be does be will be the sole practiUoner." In a prepared statement, Kalmbach said : "Herbert W. Kalmbach, senior partner (S.. KALMBACH, Pase l) Court Postpones Murder Hearing Of Clemente Man A prellmlnary bearlna Into homicide charges against San Clemente realtor Chari .. Jacbon Hinckley Jr. has been continued ·unlll Wednesday morning In South Orange County Municipal Court. The 53-year-old mldent ol 237 Via Socorro, waa armted Jan. 19 aller police found the body of lllnckley's IOll·in-law lying Jn the doorway of the home ·In San Clemente's Shoreclllls colony. Hinckley was booked on JniUal charges ol murder and was re1eaaea on his own reoognJunce ohorUy alterwanls. The cootlnuance waa granted Mooday. Police say Ronald Lawrence Shirley, 21, of Yorba Unda, was stabbed twice Jn the abdominal area during an altercation In the Hlnckley home. DetectlWI said a dispute between Sllllley and his wile appar<ntly sparked Ibo altercatlilJ. The vlctlm rtpO<tedly had bnJl<en bil •I:! Into the roaidence a few moments beforo beln& llaln. Ration 'Plans LOS ANGELES (AP) -Loo Mplet °'9nty became the first councy, Jn the stato today to adopt an emergency "&uollne mark•tin&" plan based on license plate numbera. (See sl4rY Page II.) The boanl of aupervilon voted 4.o to put Loo Angeles Comity midenla on a gaaollne distribution plan announced Monday by Gov. Ronald Reagan. It can be bnpooed Jn any of the atato'• II counu11 wbue It II requaled. It probably wlll take effect here Friday. ,. r -. ----. ' OC Coastal Commission lut u :ke .014 Dafl• Veteran pilot Frank Pine, 56, vice president of Tallmantz Aviation, had to make emergency land· ing in his old JN4D "Jenny" biplane near Estancia High School in Costa Mesa Monday when it threw a rod in the engine shortly after takeoff from Orange County Airport. Pine, 2004 Vista Caudal, Newport Beach, just picked a spot and set her down the way the old barmtorming pilots always did. The aborted flight to Piro, Calif., ended with mechanics removing the wings to tow the old Curtiss biplane back to the airport. Boys Try to Join Indians Brothers, 9 and 10, Journe y West by 'Supe r Chief' HAVRE,. Moo( (AP) -Two young Wi!comin brothe!z set off from home with Jndlan bea+!resses, a tom tom, a homemade spear, bow and arrows and about llCI cents. Jlouilu and William Morgan, 10, and 9, of Milwaukee told their parents In a note they were beading for Indian coontry to find an Indian tribe which would adopt them. ·decided 1111 Ca!Uomia becl\use Indians are seen on television programs that originate ~e. Mrs. Plonka said tbe boys bad ttad Mart Twaln's 0 Tom Sawyer" and a book about an Indian boy who learned to survive in the wilds. Offlciab hett said the young explorers kept a journal, describing the trip "to Mlnassota" and the journey on a 11Minauota to CeaUe" train. Mrs. Plonka said Grant offered to take the boys "under his wing" and brln1rthem home today. What awlllts them when they return? '"Ibey already know," Mn. Plonka said. "'Ibey said to me, 'l auppoM: we're ~g to get a sponklng.' And I said, Well, do you suppose you should get a pat_ on the back?' " The boys, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Plooka, climbed aboard an Amtrak train without tickets Sunday morning and traveled to Minneapolis, Wlhlndered by condUCIDrs. At Minneapolis tbey cbanied trains, getting on a Blrington Northern passenger train en fO'J~ ~ • J Seattle, Wish. They ovenhot Sioux Indian country Elderly Cle1nente _Co:iiple Badly ;Hurt in Colli~ion in South Dakota, their a p P a r en I An elderlY San Clemente -mJe destlnaUoo, and wound up Instead II -r Ila~ Blackfeet 1DdJ11nerrJtory. suffered major Injuries Monday In a 'lbelr westward journey ended hero head-on' coUlslon with another car on Monday after Burlington N o r t h er n a side lltt<t near their home. oooductor Loe M. Grant of Havro noticed . Police said William E. Forrefter, 78, the boya JU111plne over a tent pea In . . •.. a ~ed paSOen(tt 'W and -111em ·and bil wife, ·Dewey; 15, were tlt!own where their par<all ..... e: • tl!n>u8h the windshield of their car.from The truth come OUt and the Mortar> thel Im~ bcothets -.itelr l1)0ther Is remarried The lO :lO a.m. misl>ap occurred a • -wete gtvOn over to Juvenile authorlttes few feet from the couplt'a home at to .await the 1,31JO,mlle..trlp.hom•. lZ2 E. Mariposa as their cu turned Mrs Plonka ,told · newomen ' In onto Avenlda de la Estrellt. lllllw~ukee alter tandng wl\h th) boys The• drlv.r or the second car, h-)ftar· bJ leJe!lhone _.t-"'"'1 they fW1zed old Mlchatl Edward Joiu-or 2SI01 Ibey · bad "kind ol paaaed up Wounded · Vta del Rey, San Juan cap14trano, Knei" Jn South DUDta, th<: ~ lllffered &pPlronllY minor cut& and to bead for Callf«nla. -brU!ael, po1tc:e 1tlO. Sbe aa!d tbe ~a~ Jle aod the eldtrly couple wm ~ :r ,. . . to San Clemente General Hospital for • treatment. Ahles there said Mr. and Mes. F01Tester were imiiltted for treatment ol major cuts, b<Olses and abrastoas. Their condition -cleocrlbed as satiJlacloey. · San Clemente traffic olflcer Will Stockdale said lnveottptlon w a s continuing Into the ca-for the crash. · He said he planned to make an lnlUal Jntarvlew today with the elder!ycouple. 'Mn. FOl'l'eSter WU a\ 'tht wlletl, he said. Johnobn, olftcers 1&id, told police that he was. beading In the oouthbouftd lane when the collision occurred and that he did nol remember evtn oeelng the ether """ .,. I Zone Panel Says Move Impractical By CANDACE PEARSON Of .... Dally pt ... SI.rt Assemblyman Robert Badham 'CR· ~wport Beach) bas Introduced a bill which would establish a separate coula! oommlsaion 10< Orange County. · '!be measure was tanned lnpracllcal today by the c!ialrman ol Ibo .....,,. 8"itb <:-. lleJ!M.al 1Allle Conlel'Vlltlon Oommisalon, which also covers Loo Angele. County. It would take a mlnlmwn of six monlJ\s and considerable expense to sPut the commission now and begin a new staff and get new offices for a second panel, Dr. Donald Bright e:rplalned. Bright also said Badham's blll, AB 3219, is a return to local, not regional government. "It is clear, I think, that home rule hasn't been responsive . "That's what brought Proposition 20 around." added Bright, referring to the 1m coastal zone act which eotablished the oommisslooa. Reacl1ed Jn Sacramenh>, Badham said t1lday he Introduced the bill Monday partly at the Ul'lllnl! of Orange County Supervisor Ronald Caspers, who Is a member of the South Coast commission. Badham said the South Co as I commission is too overburdened with handling the backlog ol coostructioo pennit appllcaUons to adequately handle their planning taaka. "If the LA-Orange County commission comes up having the leaal Input to the stat11 commission," he saJd, "we're going to take a second seat again." The regional oommlssiOns are helping draft a coastal master plan due in the legislature by 1976. Badham said Ills bill Is designed to "make the whole intent of the initiative W<rk more effectively. Orange Cotmty bas different problems from Lo6 Angeles." ft would splH the cumnt IZ..membe< oommi#ion, with its seven Los Ange]es and five Orange County memben, in two, and create two commlssionll of 13 members each. The mechanics anm't all written into the bill, he IUI, but prosumabJY the · c:un-ent Orange County ~ would !See BADUAM, Page I) Oru•e C.ut • • Welldler Some low clouiliness or log Is expected for the mon>il\I boun Wedne>day, but otherwise aunny and cooler. lligbs Jn Ibo -at Ibo beaches rising to '19 Inland. Ovemicbt lows mootly 3>f6. INSIDE TODA 11" Jim Croce, IDho ,.., klU<d "'51 September In a plaM cnuh, has two albums topping tht no- tion'• 1Glt1 chart! ad U a great po.t4humo1'B 1ucceu. Storv, PaQe 20. 1 " L. -" " • • 11 tl•ll .. " 11 • ;'l DAILY PILOT SC Tursday, Frbnlory 26, 1974 a .. Crosses Line .U.S. Jews Held By Egypt Arniy From Wlre Servlett A b<Woad or 26 American Jewish vtsitors went astray near the Suez Canal fJult today and was taken into custody by the F.t!Jlptian anny, Ille Israel! military coounaod reported. A military communique said Ole Americans, fWld raiser! from the United Jewish Appeal , would be freed as part ol lhe Israeli-EgyptiaJl dl.oeogagement pact. / Egyptian and lsratll anny officers were reported In contaa tllrough United NatioM pea<e-keeplng forces lo release the bus. "We have oo d<tails·of what happened but we have received word that everyme .is safe," a spokeswoman for Ille IJ'llll,P said at Tel Aviv. The Incident occurt<d In lhe Mr\Wn secta< ol the canal where Israeli and ~tlan forces are peacefully ~aging under the pact Wtlrked out by Secretary of Slate Henry A. r ... :-· .~'""er. ·, A .ml'utary canmunlque oaJd lhe fllld. (.aisers, all men, had been toortng the ,SIMI -• battlefield in lhe October- #war -when their big btue civilian bus "mistakenly crossed into an area cootrolled by the Egyptians east o1 Ismailia." Also aboard the bm were lsraell official& and military escort officers. The zone east ol the Suez canal oppQSite lhe -Arab city of Isrnallla bu been held by E1!)11l's 2Dd Anny since Ille opening of the Oclober war. 'Ibe milit.ary command said Israel immediately infonned: Ule f o r w a r d command post mannOO by Israeli, Egyptian and U. N. officers in the cease- fire zone, and asked for the Americans lo be freed,. The re<ft.iest was lodged under the Kissinger agreement, which proYides !or Cal State Courses 1 May Be Offered I At Saddlehack Twenty.five upper division "'""""' of Cal State Fullerton may be olfered on the Saddlebaek C.ollege campus this summer as part ol Fullerton's ateoded campus program. Saddleback t r u s t e e s unanlmo111ly 1 endorsed the concept Monday night and Saddleback officials will be meeting fril!t Fullerton spokesmen IO work oul details of the plan. A similar plan bll$ also been endorsed by Golden Weot College. A Fullertoo spokeoman said counes ro be be offered 'would be determined by what Fullertoo faeulty members want lo teach and wbat Saddleback chose from ll!at list. Tuition ol $30 per Wlil would be charged, the spokesman said. The term of six to eight weeks would provide !ull upper division credit, he said. No advan ce application to Fullerton or matriculation fee would be required. Registration probably would lake place at the first class meeting. 1be Fullerton spokesman said catalogs on the Saddleback course offerings will be published by mid-April. ' PA.IR DRINK UP BOOTY,NA.BBED • .. • .. ' " •• " _.., ·~ n:< BERLIN (UPI) -West Berlin police said they had no trouble arresting tw o young men who broke into a bar in the city's French sector during the night. The burglars drank four bollles ol schnapps between them. It rendered them in such condition that they were unable to make a getaway when they heard a police patrol car pull up at the bar. OU.Mal COAST IC DAILY PILOT 1'M 0-.. C.1! DAILY l"ILOT, wftll wtlldl llf ~ ffle '"""·~•I. II Ptilltllslltill by lfllo er...,_ C11111! 1"111>11111'"9 ~-~ ,. ............. pUblllohld, MerMNy "'....,,. Frl(lr/', fw Centi MRll, HIWl!Drl llffdl, """""''-' ••ldtlll'-•111 v,1,..,, ~ k«fl. lrvlfte/Stddi.Nct IN St" C*'-!.J s.n Jwn c.,111r-. A tlroti. rt111oNI ldlll• It fll*lilllltO SltwftVt ...., SlllllftYl- TIM Jll''°'C ..... pUilllfhlr!t Jlltftl It 11 bO Well ••f SlrMt, C..t ._, tlll""'le, ta». J.elNrt N, We.4 ll'rni1Mt11 ...,. l'lillt!lllllW Jfllll l . C1o1rl•Y Vk9 "-~Hiii Genwet ~ 1-..,..,, K""il ·-n-•• A. Mwptil"• #.Mlelrll Etltter Qe1IH H. IA" l lcll1r4 r. N,11 "-'""'t ......... h"'" ._Cl••••• OMce JOI Nri El C•111l11e le•I, t267Z °"--c. ......... , DIW• ...,ltrMt """"'"' ._,.l Im ~ ...,,.,,.,, ........... 9M<ll; 11171 •tlldl ltlvkov•"' LAoeuN llldl: m l"ore:11 .,_ 'hl'lf' sr l71f) 642-4111 " T1~ A"•t' h1 WJ.U71 S. 1::;:':. ~.::.~as •w '-""1it. ~ Or-.. c.-. P'Wfllllr.t ~. • ..... ..... lllwt...ttoria, ............ ., ....,,.._.," ""'"' i-. •• ,.~ ""'*" ~ ""' ............ ....,_ ...... -....... ,. .... Ct.ft Miu a. a • .......-.. ..,. terrtet a.ti ,,.. ........ ti.If ,..,.,.lf'I .u_,. -... """"""'· l return of stray civi lians and soldeirs on the Suez front, the command said. Israel hu returned 99 pMillen lo Egypt Wider Ille agreemen~ Tbe Jewish fund ralaen: were the nm Westerners or outsiders of. any nationality known to have fallen into military hands en an October war front. Meonwhile, Kissinger spent longer ll1an expected with Br!llsh leaders loday, then flew to Dama9CUS to tackle "the key problem in Ille MXklle East rtghl now." "I hope we can begin progiees towards geltlng peace talks &tarted betwem Syria and Israel," Kisa.inger said before boarding his special U.S. Air Force jelllner. "! consider ll1is Ille key problem in tb.e Middle East right now." In Jerusalem , Foreign Minlslor Abbo Eben said Israel sincerely w&nts to separate its forees from Syria along the lines of its disengagement agreement with Egypt The· Syrian government was keeping public interest in Kissinger's ntission at a low key. Damascus' state-nm newspapers carrled no word on the vi.sit -and Damascus radio mentioned it briefly for the first time early today. Kissinger made an ovemight stop in lAndoo en route to his fourth -and most difficuJt -misston to the Middle East in as many months. Front Page I KALMBACH. • • and founder of Kalmbach, De,._Iarco, Knapp and Chillingworth, has withdrawn from the finn effective Feb. 15 to pursue personal business interests a n d investments. "Following Mr. Kal m bacb's resignation , the finn bas been reorganiied as DeMan:o, Barger and Beral." That was 1be enliro text or 1be statement. James Knapp left Ille finn several years ago. Sherwood Qiillingworllt, presideol of Adorada Corporation or Los Angeles, left at Ille did of last year. In 1967, Kalmbach lullilled ... o! his life's ambitions when be· set up Kalmbach, lleMara>, K D a p p & Chilllngworth. ln the next few years, Kalmbach roamed Ille nation and lbe world, succeafully lolidting, by bis own aCC01.D1t, millions of do11ars for the Nlxon presidential campaigm of 1968 and 1m. As one of Nilan's eloeest peraonal aides, the 51-ye&.M)ld Kalmbach received VIP treatment during his fundralsing forays, often ataying at U.S. embassies when travellng abroad. Then came Watergate and disclosures ol Kalmbach's role in Ille scanadal. Now Kalntbach's prosperom and fulfilling world ·is In a st-nbles. He faces a possible sentence of three years in prison and 111 ,lll!O in fines, after pleading guilly to UlegaJ campaign practices, including offering a n ambassadorship for a 1100,lll!O polllical dona lion. Kalmbach's biggest personal trial in the month.s since the curtain lirted on th e Wa(ergate dra ma perhaps has been its devastating effect on his reputation and his famil y. That family consists of bis wife, Barbara Helen, whom Kalmbach met while the two were undergraduates at the University of Southern california. They have been married for 26 years. The couple have two sons and a daughter. Kalmbach's reputaUon was o D c e described by a friend : "If we were playing Poker on the telephone and I said I had three nines and he said he had three ten.s, I would believe him." Fliglity Freda Flamingo Flips, Finds Freedom POOLE, England (AP) -An excess of wind and wooing won freedom for a flighty flamingo named Freda Keeper Brian Pettit o! the Poole mo explained today that mating flamingos tend to leap up and down in a sort of love dance, and Freda on 1.fonday leapt highe' Utan usual because she ~'as the object of three male admirers. At that moment. a gmt of wind whis ked her over the seven-foot fence around the zoo's flamingo paddock, something she could never have done by herself, Pettit said . Jo'reda was spotted on a south coast cliff 10 miles away. PetUt went loolcing for her but witholll :rucc.ss. He said be fem that after a lile in captivity, .she "'ill never be able to fend for berse1I in Ille world outside. Viet POW Release SAIGON (UP!) -Viet Cong and Saigon negollator. reached an lllh bour agreement today lo free 'all remaining Vietnamese prtsooers ol war by March 6. a government mJlitary spokesman aald. A JSO.mlnule, face -to-f ace dilCUSSlon betw... chief m 111 t a r y neioil'ilors broke a deadlock ll!at lh,...tened to keep more than l,lll!O rows in prison indelinltely. • I · ' ·~ ... - Going Vp San Juan's , School 'Site ' '1 Plan Nixed A propooed agreement thol would hove involved the clly ol San Juan Capistrano In obtaining a school site to serve ()ftega lligbway developments was defeated Monday.-• Mayor Roy Byrnes, Councilman Josh Gammell, and C.Ouncilman James 'lborpr voted against a draft of a three-part y agreement \Vhlch slates that thrcl' developers -Standard-Pacific, \VoodSid(' Homes and Le.adership Hou.sing Systems -"'CM.dd pay carrying cost for 18 mopths on a school Site to serve the San Juan Creek Valley. I The council later voted unanimously to drop opposition to the developers' ' tract maps at this time if they conclude ' the_.lagreement with the Capistrano i Unifi«! School District. The city had denied the maps on the grounds that a s~l site must be provided. ~ The two 14-story Rossmoor Towers under construc- tion in Laguna Hills Leisure World are moving ahead on schedule for }ujy completion. The $17 million project, with 311 ~ondominJum units, "is desi~ed to offer medical care for its residents, in· eluding 24-hour on call iiursing service. and ad· vanced alarm systems. Oti)ecting to the city's part in the agreement, Thorpe s!lid, "We're acting as a catalyst in getting the developers and the school district together . We have no power to solve the problems of the schools . l don't see why v•e should be a part of this agreement." Qiuncilman James We at h c rs disagreed. He said. that when a ·city denies a tract because there ts no school, the city is involved . I Four Sites to Be Studied Coach's Drunk Rap Dismissed Mayor Byrnes said he feared setting a precedent that might not be good for the future. For Capo Civic Drunken driving charges in Orange County against Los Angeles Rams bead football coach Chuck Knox have been dismissed in West Orange County Municipal COurt. "I can't see that it's bad if the city gets what it needs for its citizens," said Weathers. City Attorney James Okazaki added that the agreement wouJd not be binding on the city i! any part of it fell through. The actual terms of the agreement involved only the school district and the deveJoper. A detailed analysis or four prospective civic center sites in San Juan Caplstrano will be prepared and turned. over to the new city council. The sites to be studied are the Williams-Vermeulen property or! Aguacate, the San Juan Creek Road and La Novia area, the Los Rios area from Ito's to Dunnivin's impound yard, and Ille Zaengleln property east ol the ·San Diego Freeway, south of · Gonado Road. Councilman Edward C h er m a k suggested Ille first ll1ree and Coundlman James Weathers suggested Ille tut. Because of his interest ln Ille Zaenglein parcel, Heathers moved Monday ll!al lhe oouncll bid on II acres of adjacent l&nd being offered for sale by Ille atale as surplus property. The auggesUon was delealed 4-1. Oiennak said be did not prnpooe Ille Zaengleln property because it had poor aocess and a ci vie center use was not compatible with nearby dovel_.m proposals. Councilman Jim Thorpe oaJd Ille oouncll must lint determine Ille soope of the dvic center. He said perhaps Ille cily should again oo"'1der purchasing From Pflfle I BAD HAM • • ' • resign and be reappcinted to the new commi.ssion. Seven new members would be appointed. SU: of the commissioners would be "public" mem bers, not representing any government body, and seven wou1d be elected officials. The current balance is ha!! and hair. Badham said be didn't have any specific cost estimates of the change, but estimated it would be "roughly double" present budgets. He added the commission needs more p I an n e r s , whettier or· not his bill succeeds. The bill will be beard id committee in March or ApMI. It will probably go to the ~mbly panel on planning and tand use first, Badham .:ciid. Bright :said the original decision to tie the two counties was based on common transportation, intensity o! development and air polluUoo problems. Both counties are in one alr basin and are similar geographically, be added. From Page J SNAKES • • • dog wi ll bark constantly if he sees a snake," Scruggs related. If a res k:lent kills a snake, he must realize that a severed rattlesnake head is still capable of biting for many minutes after death is apparent. "Never kill a rattlesnake and toss it or its ltead into a capyon where a kid could step on it. Bury the whole ll!ing, instead. If someone is bitten by any snake, Scruggs recommends a slntple, but immedJate treatme11t. "Unlesa a victim lJ !ar fM>m help, cutting the skin and aueking the venom ahouJdn't be done," he saki. Instead, bands -cl04h o. leather -should be lied above and below Ille bile -just light enough lo squeeze a finger beneath the wrapping. Tourniquets ll!at would shut off blood circulatlon should not be placed oo a bile viclim, he added. Tramport to a hospital should be lmm<dlale. Local bospltsls, he added, have lncreaoed ll!elr supply of anllvenom in ...,..I days after Swtday'a Incident Anyone wtlb an)l'<1l!_..at all Is welcome lo call ScrtJ8p during daytlme hours at Ille San Clempile department. The number If 192-5101 . I' I the golf course ( Juan Hills) and some property along with it. "Our citizens might want to go fll'St cabin and lie in Ille historical aspects of our city," said 1borpe, "Then I think we !hluld opt for the Loo RJos area. We'd probably need a bond lssu ' £lid a com- plete package lo pi-esent lo lhe public.'' . Mayor Byrnes had sugg .. led looking lnlo Ille site ol Ille Misalon Drive-In Theater. But Ille atalf foond ll!at ii Is Lied lo • long-term lease. 1be stall's !Jl.deplh studies of the four moot promising sites will Include Ille soope ol servlc.s ll!at could be offend on each piece ol land. But the oouncll admitted Illa! new city cooncilmen might WMI lo look at enlirtly different sites. Laguna Burglar, 19, Sentenced To Six Months A six-month Orange a.m1y Jill tmn haa been ord<red ln SUperior Court for Ille only adult memb<r ol a teenage burglary ring ll!at broke Into 34 bomes in Ille Laguna Beach and El Toro areas. Judge James Turner ordered Ille jail !elltence and three years probation for CJnne J. Martngola, 19, cl 676 Glenneyre St., Laguna Beac!T, after Ille defendant plead<d guilty lo burglary charges. Maringola wu one of four young men arrested by Laguna Beach pollce wbo Jinked the group to a wa'{e of break·ins that cost Laguna and El To r o homeowners property valued at more than $1.500. Police said they grabbed f..faringola last Oct. 24 as he fled from a home at 2854 Chateau Way. Juvenile court action was taken against a 17-year~ld El Toro youth and twn young Lagunans, ages 15 and 16. Knox instead pleaded gullly lo a reduced charge of reckleM driving growing out of the incident in March of last year when he was arrested by Westminster police while attempting to negotiate a freeway offramp. , The Rams head coach paid a fine of fl20, according to court records. San Clemente's Candidates Tall~ At Meet Tonight San Cl:emente.'1 11 candidatee for city council will appear iJl a town-hall forum ton ight at the community clubhouse. The jointly spoosored' event will begin at 7:30. Sponsorship or lbe traditional meeting where candidates make p r e p a r e d stalemellla and field questions rrom Ille ~ audience is from the Sot.Ith Coast Jaycees l..eegue ol Women Voters , lhe American Association 9f University Women and tile Capistrnno Unified Council ol Pl'As. San Juan Capistrano resident Robert DaVies •ill .serve as moderator of the San Clemente forum. Each candldale will appear I n alphabetical order to deliver a statement with a four minule lime limll. After the statement.. e o n c I u d e , written quesUons from the audience will be directed lo the candidates. Officer Kills Agent HOUSl'ON, Tex. (AP) An undercover narcotics officer was shot and killed early today by a uniformed city policeman answering a dlsturl>aoce call, Houston police said. City Planner Dave Smith told the council that the school district should act on the agreement during Mar ch. Wben agreement ls reached; the council may want to ratify ii. He added that the developers do not want to close their escrows on the land until ttM:,.ir maps can be approved. The scOOol site in question i.; a IO-acre parcel on the north side of San J uan Creek Road near the intersection of La Navia. Dog Owner Sued After Bike Fall A San Clemente 'man V.·ho states hls skull .was fractured when he was thrown from his bicycle during a road race April 1& has sued the owner of the dog allegedly responsible for his fall fo r $700,lll!O. Jon S. Norris names John De Jardine as defendan t tn his Orange County Superior Court action and Identifies De Jardine as the owner of the white Samoyed de:; that caused him to swerve and fall on El Lazo Road. Norris states the fractured skull and other severe injuries will leave him with pennanen t disability and a need for prolonged and eipemive medical treatment. Hijacker Sent !\fail PHILADELPIUA (APJ -In lettm pootmarked Ille same day he allegedly killed two men during a hijack att.empt and committed suicide, Samuel Joseph Byck sald be believed that t h c govenunent was unrespomive t o the needs of moist Americans, the Philadelphia lnquirer said today. The paper quoted Byck as saying he v;ould rather die than live in a controlled society. OVER THE RIVER and THROUGH THE WOODS - • For ttiree more monttis Placentia Ave. will be torn up to widen ttie street. At times Placentia Avenue will be cJosed and access will 'be· available by way of Babcock St., coming from th.e back way. We tiope you will be patient with construction as ttie results wili certainly be worth all the trouble. . . If you arenl adlienluresome. give us a call, and we 'll bring ~amples to your home. 191'1 ST. - -1 18thST. 17thST. ! -~ 166.1 • .... -l'IAIBlnA 16th .ST. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES IN ConA- SINCI ltJ7 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTAMISA 646-4838 -..-9 to s,:io; M. t to 91 Sat. 9,30 to s ' ' \ • • I ~ , ' \ • I I l I l ' Tuesday's Closing Prices I ' ' T ' ' __ , NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE - • Year's High-Lows Appear Every Saturday Kissinge1· Trips I Buoy' Investors NEW YORK (UPI) -Stock.o scored a broad advance on the New York Stoc:L&irhanli• Tuesday Trading ~•• mod- erate A fe\v minutes be:!ore the close the Dow Jones mdustr1al <1.verage had risen 6 41 points lo 857 79 Ea rlier in the scs 1100 the index was obout four po1n1:1 lower reflecting dis- appointment that President Nixon did not give assuran~ ln his news conference ltlonday the Arab 011 embargo \\-'Ould end soon gained m hghl trading on the American Ex I , - j 1 ' . I l.~ Lo ... i..I l"llUI jijfscfay, FtbrUary :.!b, J.~14 .Morton Downev el Wants to W arb·l,e Q: Uri GeUet', tM lsneU mentlil tnarvel ud muter of ESP, it be for real? Or ls be a clever faktr? A.ad Uve yoa evtr met b1m face to face? -Gertrude 811DC1e, St. Louil. A: Yes, we interviewed Geller on a TV program in which Uri conducted a personal experiment. He asked me, in the privacy of my orfice, to sketch 8 picture. Seal it tn an envelope. Then seal lhal envelope in another enve- lope. . Right In front ol the cameras, with the envelopes concealed in my. pocket, Uri instrucled me to concentrate on the picture. He "read my mind," tbm_ _drew ~ketches reasonably close to ours-the Smith Brotbei:-s: . . About his being re.al or fake, several British scientists are trying to make a detennination, Says Dr. J. P. Chilton, lecturer in metallurgy at Cam· UPIT ... __.. VOWS HE'LL STAY Judge Ritter, 74 .. ... ' I "lo" • .. ....... Liquor Store Flap ~ High Court Nixes Porno Bid WASHINGTON !AP) -The -· It w .. "a seiiUre ORIO A1TY. Gen. William U.S. SUpreme Court h a a o1 'malerlal based solely on J, -acbowledged that rejected Ohio's bid ID -" the persooal predilections ol the sebln "was more than a Uqoor control regulation the liquor control agents," the likely not a proper melh<>d aimed at stoP!>ini the sale lower court said, adding that ol enlorcement." ol pornography along with the Department of Liquor e.rt Brown arwued that booze. Control. had establlsbed oo agent& should at least be able The justices M on d a Y standards. in issue a citatloo. alfinned 7 ID % the ruling --~~· ~;;;;;;;;~;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ol a three-judge lederat court • ~"'=a1:r1n~ HURRY-UP, HAIRDOS: on the rights ol a liquor cur.BIJOIATIN GO• penn!t holder as enlorced b1 --1 ~ '.WI-· • the state. we ~ow YoU !)ow to care for 1"8fn step by step. Our curt coa>Cing SCISSOR STYLES are all fuss·free and THE THREE-JUDGE court functional and are easy to do as just ~mpoo! In-- enjoined the enforcement of eluded are lamp cuts, lifl99r tumtHe culs, curling iron • ·~· . ' 15thS1111 I N~PO~; • HARBOR KIWANIS FOUNDATION 'PRESENTS TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE SERIES Friday, Mat<h 1, 1974 1:00 p.m. ORANGE-COAST COlLEGE AUOtTOlllJM 2701 FAIRVIEW ROAD. COSTA MESA • ·('Glad You Asked Thctt') Judge Ritter Not Q1tltting -Vote or No the regulation wiless the cuts. blower cuts, was~ towel dry, brush ·n fluff culs question of obscenity is first or simple wasti and wear cuts. Ttiey are all SCIS- detennined in an adversary SORED, take-car&<>f·vourself styles. Good for any hearing before a competent age. any i,air, NO teasing, no rollers. no pins. NO lribunal. POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS. ALSO NO SET PER- AUDI HUllLUD "MEXICO. 'ASCINATINO TOWNS a' INOEPfNDENCf .. ' t bridge University: "Uri is either the cleverest magician of the century or be has something new. There is no hall· way house." Another professor, John Taylor of King's College, London says: "We may even end up proving his (GeUer'a) powers' are ·not unique. But if he will agree to cooperate. be may help .., make most important disaweries about the human mind." We'd print the mentalists's photograph_ exeepllng !or one minor mishap. The cameraman penrutted GeUer to touch the camera, which not only eiposed every negative but -and to this I attest -broke the camera! Q, II ll true Blag Crosby Is dying of cancer? I bope not.--Mn. K. Johnson, Baltbnore. ~ A: -Everyone's prayers are with Bing, hoping his heaJth problems are resolved. His medics and surgeons diagnosed the operation they perfonned to remove a por· tion of his lert lung and agreed it had nothing to do with cancer. Preliminary study i..r,ldicated a rare fungus infec· tion, not a malignancy. . Q: t never read anythlng anymore about the great Irish tenor, ~1orton Dowaey. Is he alive.? -F. Regan, Phoenix, Artz. A: Very much so. Although a millionaire, he still has an itch to do another hitch as an entertainer. While sunning recently in Palm Beach, he asked the Jerry Grant Age.ncy if they had an optin week in which he could play the Condominium Circuit -hedge-hoooing between dozens of the Florida high ri ses, doing two shows a night Q: You'll bave to go back to Wor1d War I to dlfl up the anawer to my question. Who wrote "WouJd Yoa Rather Be a Colonel with an Eagle on Your Shoulder or a Private wttb a Chicken on Your Knee?" -Arnie IL (a swinging great.-grandfatber), Waterbury, Conn. . A: Sidney D. Mitchell wrote the .Ylords to Archie Gottler's music. POs'fscRIPTS FRO:'lf l\1ARILYN. To Pat Fong, Shreve- port, La.: Radio's originaJ Amos 'n Andy \Vere white ... To Alvin M. Whitmer, Columbus, Ohio: Hal Holbrook, though no longer doing a TV series or road-showing "Mark Twain," will be seen frequently in TV dramatic plays. We don't know what plans he has for personal appear- ances, however ... To S.C.M., North Adams, Mass.: Larry Hooper lert the Welk show to undergo open-heart surgery •.. To Mrs. G. E. Barbe, Keokuk, Iowa: KaU., Grant was an actress before she wed Bing Crosby .She became a nurse many years later . . . To Mrs. M. L. Samuels New Castle, Pa.: Hedd a Hopper's only book of memoirS was "From Under 1'-ty Hat" ... ,Ta S. Hancoct, U>ng Beach, Cal.: You're slightly confused. Boddy. Rich is in fairly good health. It was Gene Krupa who died of leukemia .. , .'l'o Mrs. Gladys Hawkins. Chicago: Paul Lynde is neither married nor has he a "grown" son. The case arose in a .. rt.. SME\N~ONUT D WH~y~~a~?~ MAY NEVER WANT TO of act.kn; taken agai n st ,... ~e i:i:";: ~ JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING Columbus. · Huntinaton 8-h Fulenon In late 1969, liquor codrol t564 tr..... ... . JOI N. .....,. .... agents seized a number o1 968-3535 879-3863 SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) magazines from Peta's store O,..hitflA.M.teltPJtt.e.W.S.ttelP.M. -Willis W. Ritter says be1_:a~fte~r_..'.dec~l~dffi~g_!lhe~y:.._w~.~ ere_IJ~~~~~~iiiitiiiii!'~~~~~~~~~~~~ plans to stay on as Utah's chief federaJ judge a "long, long time" • even though 800 or the sta te's lawyers want him removed. i'l'll tell you when I'm going - to quit." said tbe peppery 74- year-old jurist. "\Vhen they take me orf that bench feet first." THE . UTAH . BAR Association released a secret pQU in which attorneys voted 814-234 to ask Congress for removal of the grandfather clause, which allows· Ritter to continue as chief judge of Utah's U.S. District Co u :-~ despite his age. "Well , I'll tell you wha t."! !he silver·halred Ritter saidj of the vote. "I'm goil'~ to be around here for a long, long time. "l am doing what I want lo do and there is not a ... thing anyone can do about that." RITrER, WHO worked as a common laborer to earn degrees from the University of Utah, lhe University of Chicago and Harvard, began his stormy career on the bench in 1~. re~lacing 92- year-old Tillman D. Johnson. , In Laguna Beach -M~rch 5 ~O~-BRAND ·for COUNCIL • Endorsed by: • Village Laguna • Arch Beach Heights Homeowners Assn. • Canyon Acres Homeowners Assn. • Lagur:ia Beach Civic League Pl s.ptemb.r it 1810. Moic.o woi pl~ Into o R.ty ollll ~lty r"'°'I -on l""-llfruggi. IOI' lrMdoftt OQ<ll"llf !tit. lmploc.obl•, cruel Olld do1nh1ffring n.i. pf Spain. A ."Georg. Wo1hing1on .. of h!1 tOl.'ntry -gtd 05 thi electrlfyi11g lon;e behind rlMt llb.rotlon. H• wOi fotlMtr ~lt.,.i HidollJOo Oii ll'll•llK1110I YlllQ9" ~;.,,who i1 ·-red •ocloy 01 OM of Me•i<o't gttalnf N 1001. l"-Hidolgo 11..-o~. oi ~ i1 k,,_, Opt!...d wld. tlMt llood.go1 .. of pelll·vp hatred. aulfering and opprenfon, o!>d preclpilated the ltl'llir• coun1ry into the War al l~ndence which lo11ed .i-n yeon, Thl1 llory ~I ha# Cllld whe1e 1he rlM:lll tool: ploce 11 viYidly portroy.d os o 1110Ylng. co.ling pi(t11re in film ond norr011on OIJO•n$1 tlMt bock-drop o! lwta1h-1olilng tcti\es ond lo1t+na1ln9, charming ploce1 and J*>PI• in "on Ol"eo seldom Yi1~ed \irf !Ollf/$11. The IOWAI ol G...oM!jllCl!O. Son Miguel ·"-Allende, Mort!la,, O.....t10•0. Me~ico Ci!<,. Gvodolororo and Mo11ioNlla. Ille llOXfllll Acopvlto. ore cov.rl!ld by the·KOPe ol 1fti1 prodll(Tion. Tlll1 tetl\ef lllKOl!Yllntlbilol bletld of tra...t, te<hnicol petfeoioe ond hillot"kol. r-.ch poa-.;oe o poogrol'll of pottlc11IOI'" loic:il'Olion. SEASON TIOC:fTS (Good for onJ" 1i• odmi1Wftl) ADUlf ••••..•...•. , , •12.SO (Sh••• ... ..w..-• .., •··• '2.50) ~ ............ '5.00 ,~ ..................... •J.00) SlASON nar'5 AVAii.AM.i.AT: "-Pl" ........., IGwwnh Clult, ... 1501, ....,.. ... 926f.3 "'6-JIU Al f orgit Hord-•. 2'10.S W. &olboo Mwt. ~ 8Mtii O( o..y metT>bot• ol lfte Newport Harbor 1Clwon11 d...b. - Settd your questio1u to Hy Gardner. "Glad You Asked That," care of this newspaper, P.0: Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. ltfarityn and Hy Gardner will an.- swer as many questio1u as they can in their column, but the volume of mail makes personal replies im- possible. Sex Psychopath Freed ,by Judge IS BEFO NCH SA.M. ' ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP[) - Businessman Lawrence H. Lucas, confined to Fulton Slate HospitaJ more than six months ago after being legally judged a criminal sexual psychopath. was ordered freed by St.· Louis County Circuit Court Judge George E . Schaaf, who put Lucas on five-- year probation. A doclor at the hospital put Lucas on an outpatient status in August but Schaaf ordered him rec on lined , later permitting him IQ visit his family on weekends . For less ttm $1, p1u5 tax, When you dlal dlreet wlttlOUt Operator asslStance. you can talk to anywhere within c:aDfOi-nta far & m11 .. tes. or NeW York for 411111 .. tes. <And re111e1nbeC lt'S later In tllEi daY bade EaSt.) LUCAS, 41, WAS confined to the state hospita1 after being arrested last April and charged with sexual offenses involving five young girls. After a hearing last August at wbid!. teen-aged g i r I s testified to having b e e n induced by Lucas iato having sexual adivitles, Lucas was ordered conunitted lo the hospital. SCHAAF SAID he made his order for release after con s u It i n g with three psychiatrists. He put Lucas on probation providing that Lucas continue psvchiatric treatment during the probation period. In 1971 Lucas' wife. Sally. was murdered in a case that involved I a w enforcement authorities from Missouri to Florida. Anthony Paul Damico y,•as convicted in the case and sentenced 'to life in prison in July, 1972. These low Dial Direct rates are ,in effect between 11 at night and 8 in the moming. And, if you talk longer, extra minutes are at the low· esl rales too. Dial Direct rates do not apply on person, collect, credit card, hotel guest calls, calls charged to another ~umber, or calls over 40 miles placed from com phones. • would you believe~------~-:=J 2511niles "lo•gallon This represents Airport Service's average fuel efficiency ••• to carry a passeng!tr from anywhere on our system to L.A. International Airport. Whether by choice or necesstty most American s loday are looking for ways to conserve gasoline. Use Airport Service on your next trip to the Airport. FROM 12 lr.ips daily lrom Orange Cou ~ty Airport $4 00 FOR INFORMATION SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT • OR CALL (714~ 776-9210 • (CHILDREN S· 11 HALF FARE) CONVl!NIENT -ECONOMICAL -RELIABLE • .. The same low Dial Direct rates do apply on Operalor-assisted station calls placed from communities where long dislance calls cannot be dialed direct @ Pacific Telephone LONG BEACH AtRPORT • sO>L eEACH (LaJsure·world) ·• ORANGE CO. AIRPORT LAGUNA HILLS MtSSION VIEJO ((Q I ' '" ·="'=--~ . i_i.•. ' ( ;:;:~ ~ -~ ~ ~----... AIRPORT SERVICE INC. IUl11DIAlllY OP' CHllOMALLOY .-Mtfl1CAN COftP. 1571 WEST KATELLA SUITE M ANAHEtM, CALIFORNIA 918Q2 • I .I I • I I ·' I Laguna Beaeh Teday's Fl••J N.Y. Stoeks . EDITION ---- • :VOL. 67, NO. 57, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFQRNIA TUESDAY, F£8RU>IRY 26, 1974 TEN CENTS i Pianne~s Blast (3-2 I Moratorium by -Council By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL I Of tllt Dilly Pnet ll•ff A deepening rift between the Laguna Beach City COWlcil and Uie planning commission exposed Itself today 1n the wake ol a commission vote ·Monday night condemning the recently imposed development moratorium on h1gb density property. The unexpected motion by Oxnmissioner John McDowell lD'ging the council to rescind the ordinance adopt..i last week cleared the commisaion in a 3-2 split ballot. Dissenting vole• wete cat by Cliairman Roger Lanphear and ,, .. CanJlidn te Hits-8 late Of Realtors By JACK CHAPPELL Of .... o.lly ,llOt ... " City Coµncil candidate M a r g e r y Bentley criticized formation o( a "realty board slate" of candidates Monday and charged realtors were attempting to take over Laguoa Beach. Mrs. Bentley said she believed the realty board was acting in "self-serving and selfish" manner in its opposition to the City CoWlCU'.s muJU-reiidentlal zone moratorium. It was c:onflict over that moratorium which spawn«! declarations or wrtt .. 1n caroidates Real!« Paul Stuart and bank o(ficial Fran Haller. They have joined with candidate Wayne Baglin to form a three-peraon election slate. "AH this seems to back up my particular feeliop. • • tbat tbe reallY board ii teared ~ Uie -'• ol Laguna Beach choooe to _-rye Laguna Beecll a. an Art Colony It will eliminate htmdreds ol reallors' Jobs" Mrs. Bentley said. Mrs. Bentley contacted the Dally Pilot Monday after readlng about the write-in candidates' declarations, and angrily denounced both the write-in/B:1glin slate and the presentation made by the realty board in protest of the council urgency moratorium for the city's m u I t i - residential zones. "High density for realtors means high profits," Mrs. Bentley said. Mrs. Bentley's comments were denied today by Stuart. Baglln and Mrs. Haller. Don Ward, President of. the Laguna Beach Boord or Realtors, said while the board did support Baglin and the two write-in candidate!: but bad removed it.self f~ the actual cam_paign after a comnuttee headed by Ridiard Willetts was fonned to support the three council hopefuls. Willett:IJ, a one-time announced candi- date, pulled out or tbe r:u , and did not file official papers. Ward said the committee would "do ' 'hatever they think necessary " to support its candidates. Ward said the board was not "tryiing (See BENTLEY, Page Z) * * * Com.missioner Sally Bellerue. McDowell revealed the a I r e ad y prepared motion late in the meeting. It was not an agenda item and was unknown 1o other com.mi.cWonen and the city planning stall. In addition to re::ommeoding the moratoriwn be lifted, the mot.ion asks that the council direct the planning commisskln to wx!ertake an f:mergency study of the city's icrling ordinances and possible coo!licts with tbe Geoeral Plan. McDowell, In urging the commission adopt tile motion, -l'ie planning PAGEANT DIRECTOR DIES Frederick Schw1nkovaky I .ag.1da Artist Schwankovsky Rite s Slated Funeral services will be held In Cypress Wedne!day for long·time Laguna Beach artl!t Fredirick John Schwankovsky, the director w h o resurrected the Pageant of the Masten following World War IL Mr. Schwankovsky died at h i s Gatbe.rville home Feb. 14 at the age or 89. The lamous Joe Rosenthal photograph "Flag Raising oo Iwo Jlma" opened the 1946 "living pictures" show foltowing four years of Pageant.less summers tn the Art Colony because ol tbe war. Schwankovsky dir<cted the show for only one year. Mr. Schwankovaky, and his wife Nellie Mae, moved to Laguna Beach in 19'l3 and purchased the Art Colony's original art gallery. Later, they moved the gallery to property on the comer of Graceland Drive and Wilson Street where (See ARTIST, Pqe I) I Laguna Council Hopefuls , Assail Realty Moratorium With election day a week away, the LaguAa Beach City Council candidates' race began bolling today wiU> lour hopefuls blasting the Board of Realtors stand on a recenUy imposed development moratorium. The r<alty board, led by president Don Ward, claimed last week that the city council~imposed moratorium would •trip flS million from the ~ million valuation of property in the city. The development moratorium applies to multi-unit residential units in the R;Z (duplex), R-3 (high density) and commercial zones. ...-- separate rebutlals to the ,..ally board's stance critlcal al the council came from candldato Jon S. Brand 1nd a threo- member slate COmpooed al BeU> Leeda, Ted Sparkuhl and Mll'g<ry BenUey. "I've been walklng and talking to 1'<9ple. . .Ibey want 1 alow down in development and Uiey ckm't !eel that lt is going to make their land less vaJuabfe," Brand said. "In !act, many havo ,.\d II there are !ewer people ii wlll make the land more valuable .. l haven't met one penoo who leela land values ere going iO 10 down In Laguna Beach," he .. 1d. Brand also look "'°'' 1t the "reel e>tate slate" oC write-In canclklales l"ran Haller and Paul Stuart. Tiley have joined -, t up with c~dldate Wayne Baglin In protesting the new development standards. "The realtors' slate shouJd have attended the regular forums, answered the questions asked by the newspapers and civic group (and) taken part in the democratic process ," he said. Stuart an1 Mrs. Haller announced . their candidacies Monday. Backen of the slate, Brand claimed, 0 see this town as a piece of merc:handise, M>methlng to market and sell. They want more development, high rise, more shope, more tourists." . . 'Ibo Leed!!-Spatlruhl·BenUey atatoment branded the realty board comments .. acare tactics." "The realty board would be wile w join land developers In · seeldn( ._..,. fields' because Lagunan.s art detormined to prevent any and every effort made W change us inlo 1 h!ih density plastic tourut trap,• the trio declJlnid. "Whereas tholl.!anda or people live In La111ne Belch becau"' they choot!e w "'1)oy arUul, gracious Uvtnc, not atatua nor asseaed property values, blmdreds Iii new realtora m speeula,Ung In Laguna end for me ..-CllllJ - to make money tbrougb lllelr ~ and dealfnl ol bight)' valuallle PICll*I?; -blgher density yieJdo ~ !lloll~ Uie Ila-IOJd, • body must be tensiUvt-to all elements In the community, including boll! residents and busiDeumen. &ntacted today, Mayor Roy Holm saJd he was "astonished and disaPPolnt..i" with the action. "I'd think Jack (McDowell) (l)U)d hive ' raised tbe matter with me. but be never di!CU.<Sed the urgency ordinance with me," said Holm. · Holm nol<d that In July t h • commlssioo rejected new standard! that woold !rave lowered allowed dena!ty In the R·2 (medium density residential) zone. "I was di!appolnt..i by that," Holm said. 'lbe urgency ordinance, Holm said, ''has been on 1he mincb of each coundlman for at least alx month$." Lanphear saki the motion w a s "polltlcal" and will add lo the already existing "tug of war between the pllnn>ig commhslon and the city CCllJDCi]. .. 1.anpbeor said tbe three~,. wbo IUppOrted the motion (Leny Campbell, Michael May and McDo,..ll). • shouJd leave policy decisions to the city oouncil and atick with "the important items. .. "We keep studying thlngo, cxintlnulng th!ngs," said Lanphear. 111*:au.se ol that the COllRCll Is having to do things we don't do." Mri. 'Bellerue, who strongly objected to McDowell's motion, sakl th e .commisson shou1d leave policy decisions to the city coW!cll. "There is· a •Plit between the planning commission and the city council. And h's becauae aome membei-:. are oot in step wlU> !he council," she said. "I WU absolutoly stunned by the thing," said Mrs. Bellerue. ''It• a obviously something to do with the campaign." She referred w nut week'• city oo.mcil election in which incumbents Carl John.n\ Md Phyllis Sweeney are .seeklng to retain ofHce. Both supported the urgency ordinance. Mrs. Bellerue also ootcd that the moratorium was needed to slow down the increa""1 pace al growth in the high density zones. 1be urgency ordinance, . in effect for the nen four months, doubles the land required for units on R-2 zoned property. 'Ille ordinance triples the land required for units In the R-3 thigh demlty ""ldentlall and conunercial zooea. I County Asking Governori, Coastal Zone Badham Seeking Separate Panel 111 CANDACll PtiRSON Of .. Dlffr ,.... ...., ~ -·llodllam (11-' NeW]iort'·leodal ilol -a .bltf: which would establish I -al<I CIDlllal commissioo for Orange County. 1be measure was tenned impractical today by the chairman or the e>istlni Sooth c.ost Regional Zo.1e Qmservation O:nnmissioo., .which also covers Loi Angeles County. It would take a minimum of sil monthl and considerable eipe!I!<! to split tilt com:mbsion now .. and· ·begin a new s.taff- and get new offices for a second panel, Dr. Donald Bright explained. Bright also said Badham'• bm, AB 3219, Is a re turn to local, not regional government. "It js clear, I think, that home rule basn't beeo respanoivo. "That's wbat bnlugbt Proposition ~ around," added Bright, referring to the 1m coastal ·zone act which established the commissions. Reached in Sacramento, Badbam said today he Introduced tbe bill Monday partly at tbe urging ol Orange County Supervisor Ronald Caspers, who Is a member of the South Coast commiMion. Badbam said the South Co a s t commission is too overburdened with Resignation Announced By Kalmbach By L l'ttER ltRIEG Of llllt Dellr f'IM Swtf Herbert W. Kalmbach ol Newport Beach announced today be bas mlgned from the law firm be lormed In 00. Meanwhile in San Frandso:>, Jt was announced-that the camom1a Supreme Court will consider possible disciplinary action against Kalmbach. Kalmbach ple4ct.d guilty Monday w federal charges ol illegal campaign practices. He could draw a rnaiimum sentence oC two yeara In prison and a $10,000 fine for one lelony and one year and a $1,000 fme for the other miBdemeanor charge. The Newport attorney who !<>Id Senate (See KALMBACH, P1ge I) Grocer y Cost s Climb by 1.8% WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Spurred by 1 second straight month or rising tann prices, the cost of a typical family lood grocery basltel jumped $30, or I.I percent, In January to a record amual rate of $1,680, a government report -today. • The lncreue pushed the figoni :::'~=·:'~"~ lomuedJ>sr err, ar J.t-eer-. The .J.., flguro oC Sl,111111 .... 11115, Cir· II perceot, ""'"° a '!Mf ear1ie!'. Further lncruses are ~. . Hayakawa's Plan To __ Run· on GOP Ticket Rejected SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -'The Call!ornia Supreme Coult refmed today to change eleclJcn laWI to allow educator s. I. Hayakawa w nm !er the U.S. Senate aa a Republican. Hayakawa waa formerly registered as a Democrat but changed to the RepubUcan party Aug. 30. He then 30ught to Ille as a GOP candldato for the Senate but was denied certification because of a section ol the state Elections Code which prohlbils certifying a candklatt if he has been a member ol another political perty wltbin tbe pi<vioul 12 lllOllths. Plants, Statue Owners Sought After Arrests Laguna Belch detectlVOI W e r I atlempting today to trace,....,.... of plants ml gardm otatuarr J'!COvenod In the amsl al two Coota Meoa men Indian Dnn:ters MoMay. 1,300-mil.e-Trip Ends for 2 Boys Gene L. Heinrich, 21, and Donald A. N06er, 24, both lilting an address o1 HAVRE, Mont. (AP) -Two young 145 11th St., Costa Messa were 1!91 W!Joonsin brothen set o(f from borne for ancaignment at Laguna Niguel with lndla!I headdmses, I tom tom, Municipal Court today. a homemade spear, bow and am>ws and 1bout ID ceot.s. Det. Caroll Bwh said be anticipated Douglu and William Morgan, 10, and the two would lace reduced charges 9, oC Milwaukee told their 'parento In ol petty tbeft (plan!s) • I nol8 they W9't beading for llidlln 'They had beeo booked !or all<ged country to find 111 Indian tribe whlcll burglary and grand tbeft following their would adopt them. arrest at 2:50 a .m. Monday wheu The boys, -ol Mr. and Mn. Patrolman Louie Gluhak lpOtted their 1-a.rd Pioolta, . climbed ll>olrd m late model ..O.U cruillng a north Laguna Amtrak train . wltllout ticlteb Sunday residential area. • moming and tr1YO!td to Mlnneapotls, Det. Bush said It aweared 90me ol unhindered ·by condudors. brothers -their mother is remarried ..:.. 'lfere gtven over to juvenile iuthOrities to await the 1,30!).mUe trip home. Mrs. Plonia told newsmen I n Milwaukee-alter talking with 'the boys by lelepbone that when Ibey ruli1.ed thel bad "kind ol passed up Wounded Knee'' In SO.Ui Dekota, u... . decided to head for Calliornil. She said the youngsters apparently decided on CallfomJ• beauoe Indians ani JeeD on televlSloli programs that originate there. Mrs. Plonka aakl the liOya had read Mart Twain's "Tom Sal')'er" and a -abou\ IR lndi8ll boy wbo learned Mandatory Fuel ,Curlls ' Proposed By WILUAM SCHREmER Of Ille DlllY ...... S'-ff Oiange County supervi!ors _, l•llllcho<! an all'®! •!tack.on the guollne l!hortace by aking Gov. Rqoald lleapa W docllre I lltate al emergency bore llld impose mandatory !uel management \hroUghout the iloimty. . . '""'11e board voted :1-1 w declart tbe emergency which would not go into effect until Reagan acts. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, who said he wanted another week to study the acliOQ, was the .lone opposition vote. Supervisor David Baker was absent lrom the meeting. The .board action consisted ol adoption of ·a mofulloo dfafted"by orange County Coonse! Adrian Kuyper stating that "the shortage ol gasoline bas created a condition of disaster'' In orarige County. The board asked Reagan to lnstltuto a gu management system based on Jicenle plato numbera and to prohibit sales to drivers wboet!" tanb are half full. • The syatem Is based m one Introduced by the stai. or Oregon where drivers with even numbered. plates wou1d set gas on even numbertd calendar days and those with odd numbered plates on odd numbered days. Supervisors Robert Battin, Ralph Clark and Ronald Caspers were strongly in favor of taking the action immediately because they said the crisis has indeed grown to emergency proportion. 'I( cannot see bow we t°Ould worsen thlnp by declaring thi:J emergency because the lines at gas stations should be half what they are now," Battin said. Caspefs noted that quick, decisive action by the board would be an Indicator to oounty cities of just how serious the board feels the pnlblem Is. Clark, a service station owner, said be dellnllely feels more comfortable going. to the cities alter taking firm •!'llor< Diedrich'• opposiUon stemmed from (See EMERGEN'cY, l'qe I) Oraage • Weldller Some k>w cloudiDeu or fog ll expect..i !or the mcrning hours Wednesday, bllt otbir\viae SUMy and cooler. lligbs In tbe mid-GOs at the beaches risin&' IO '111 fuland. Overnight lows mostly 35-1$. the """""red property may hive come At Mlmetpolia the)' chang<d tralna, from Lagma's lamous Pyne Cutle, '110 gettlq m a Burllngioll N«1llern w survtvo io tbe wilds. .. )NSmE TODA 'Y Jim CToct, who toa.t kjUt<f lost S<ptember In a.plan< C1'41h, has two albums topping tM no- -i1cm·1~"'1ale1· -ckartl-nd -ii a great posthum0ua: IVCCt:S.S. S~, High llrive, once considered as a poulble flMSOllCU train .. J'O';' '. Seattle, Pmldentlal estate. Wub. , • One of the pleco.s ol statuary wu They ......i>ot S!oui Indian muntry a gatd<n w1teriall' ml bltdllath, Del. In South Dakola, their 1 p p are n t ikdh satd. d-, and wound up fmlead 11 Ile said dtlactiVOI ... rchlnc the men'• Havre, Blacldeet lndllli tmttarl'· lpt\ltment ..a found OUier p11111a and 'Jbetr wemrird journey mded &on pllDters •Jll!l!'IPllY"takal .from a OOsta Monday 11\er Burl!ngtm North•~• 11-.a -,and I= an •Pl-oond1lclll< Lee M.. Grant al Havre notlc!!! compferlldnc I~ tbt '°11 JulllplD( ovtr a -po( _!ft Del. -Aid be -not bQleve a domed ,._,.. car and ..-1llilD Uie two ...., are·noponslble !or a wave ""*" lllelr pereotl wn. " . · Olficiali here said the young explorm kt\)! • Joarnal, describing the-trip "lo MlnasooCa" and the journey Oil • 11Mln•aota to Ce.a.Ue" train. Mrs. l'loob said Grant offered to -the-boya 'under his wing" and bring tbem liorn< today. • What ttal!s them when they retunl! ''~ already know." Mrs. Ploota aid,, 1"1bef saJd to me •1 stzppo1e we're ..... IO pl a ~.' And I said, 'Well, do ~ ........., ~ should Cd a lilt CD tlat blcl?1 -,,--ol pllnt t6elta -~ LoliUna and ' 'Ille ~ ....... and 1be Mq17 IUmMntiDC commmdUa ---------------··------.. - -·---. ---• -- Page '20. ' II •• ... " 11 • • " 11·1J .. " .. . ' ;t OAJLV PILO I LB Tutsday, f'tbriwy 26, ltJ74 Pope .Claims P1·iests Too 'Worldly' VATICAN· CIT:\' (UPI\ -!'ope l'aul has voiced concern that Roman Catholic priests may be indul ging in tempor;il wealth and late-night pleasures. In Wl annual address to Rome Lcnten - pr<acbers, the pontlfl Monday asked pr~s to be poor and pure, leave social reform to civil aulhorities and re£rain from "acrid" criticism of t.bclr own church . He also elaborated on his prepartd text, saying that some priests think too much about cars and bank accounts and spend too much Ume.atnightoutslde their homes. "'lbe.re are students in o u r ecclesiastical college who now have the keys to their residences because they ro out (late)· at night,., Pope Paul said extemporaneously. "~re do they go in these hours?" He added : "Woe if out" priest& want to be rich . We must not be like a priest who Jn his advancing age makes himself a baJance sheet such as I came to Rome without a penny. Now I have a house, an automobile, items of value and a bank aceount. No, this is not good business." In bis prepared remarka the Pope answered criticism made during a conference of the Rome clergy Feb. 12-1~ in· which some speakers called for social reform, accused the church of identifying with the Establishment and asked it to distribute its wealth to tbe poor. Jn his speech, Pope Paul did nol refer to the wealth of the church but asked priests to refrain from personal enrichment. "Be truly detached from money and from economic advantages that may result to your ad vantage from religious activity by means of skillful and undue maneuvers," he said. "Learn to be stem with yourselves to retain transparent purity of behavior. both inward and outward. without yielding to inconsistent and perhaps fatal permissiveness, of which there is so much talk today," the Pope said .. Pope Paul said the clergy conference on "The Ills of Rome" was right in stressing the responsibility of Christians in the cause of justice and charity. But he said "our charitable and social conunitment should not be to the disadvantage of our properly religious activity ... " Irate Gasoline ' Customer Sets Ow1i Car Afire . SAN FERNANDO (UPI) -Adolfo Robles, '!ho felt a burning resentment at_. the , fuel _shq~ge, no .. )_~n~.r Jhl1as to worry about getting gasoline for ·s car. He set it afire at a closed-doY.n service station. Police said that Robles, 54, drove his 1967 C.ougar into a Mobil station that was shut down for lack of gasoline. He had some· gasoline with him however. about a gallon or so, and put it in the car itimself. The problem, said Sgt. Dave Hom, was that Robles did not put the gasoline in the car's tank, but splashed it about inside, stepped back and tossed in a match. The car was blazing merrily, Hom said, when he arrived in response to a fire alarm . Robles identified himself as the owner and said he se t the car ablaze in frustration over the gasoline shortage, the policeman said. Hom said that a check sOOwed Robles had not finished paying for the auto, and oo '\\'as not the sole owner. He was booked for arson on the unpaid-for portion of the car. OIAN&I COAST U DAILY PILOT r.,. ~ C0.11 DAILY PILOT, wt#! wt.lcti 11 annbl""' nte H-PttH, la llUblfllhed '-1 "'' Or•-Co.11 Pllbll1P1'"9 C..mpeny. $t$». rtlt W!tiflnl ••• llublll'*I, Morw:l•v ltlf'OUll'I Fr!My, f'llr '°''• Maa, H-l'O•I Suell, Huritlngton • t.Ncil/Fou""'" v11i.v. u,-•••ch, lrvln.fs.ctdltt»ck •NI S.n (11,,..nll/ Si n Ju•n C'1~1.ir1...,. A 1;111111 •t'il ioNI "'ltlotl I~ pWIJsh«I $alimlll'I· 11'd Sundt\'I, t"-ptlrl(lt:19I pWll1lllng llNl'll II If 130 W11t ... ., "'"'· C•I• M .... Clllforl'lll , mu. !\ob.rt N. W1M PrnlclMI lolld Ptltl!!•~et J1tlf It C11,l•y Vice l'm11191!1 11'111 Gat>er•I M~ Thom•• K11 .. a Edl!Or Th"''' A. M111phi"• MlnlGl"'I ltll!Or Ch1rf11 H. L.01 Rich1ttl '· Hill Allftll~I Mlo"'ltlne Editor• __ .,.... 222 For11t A •1l'lu1 #1ilh19 AGCr111: ,.o .•• , '''· t2•s2 ---ce.11 Mn1: DI Wnl 81•(ll1"1af NIWpOrt hi<l!t Utl NIWPOrl loukYl'9 H~n!""9tvl'I 8eldl: IJtTJ 8ffl;tl ~...-1'11 "'"' c~i.1 * Norl!I 11 c1mt.io ,. .. , ,.,.,.. ... (7141 64.M)Jl a..af!M ·~ ... ,.,,,, i..,... .._. A• D+c .. ...,., , ••• , •••• 4t4ot4" ~.... ltn, Ori.... C:0.11 ,lolbllalri"" ~"'· ""° ,_ 1ter1tt, lll111tr11.,., .,....... lftltl9' ., ~.._,. ..... _, llt ~ Wlfl'IOlll .. &II ,.,. 11'111 ... fl ..,,.,..,., -· .-<llN .. " ... Mid .. C"'I MIM, Calltttrtl., ~'-loll .., urrlw UM ,_,.,.l•I W "'Wll SJ.IS """llllYI ll'llllflr'f' ...,.,..,'-"'" --,.. D•llY '"" lllff ,..... . . Goitag lfp Bus Crottes Line ' U .s.· Jews H·eld By Egypt Army from Wire 5en1.,. A busload ol 28 Amei:lcan Jewish visitors went astrt.y near the_ Sum Crutal front IOday and was takm .into cuslOdy by the Ei)'Pllan, army,, tbe lsraeli mUltary command reporteil: A mUitary communique said tbe Americans; fund raisers from the United Jewish Appeal, later were freed as part of the Israeli-Egyptian disengagement pact Cal State Courses May Be Offered At Saddleback Egyptian apd Israeli army orficers were reported in contact through United Nations peace-keeping forces to release the bus. "We bav~ no details of what bappened but-we have r8ceJv.ed word that everyQne is safe," a spokeswoman' for lhe group said at Tel Aviv. The incident occurred in the northern sector of the caflal \o,rhere Israeli and Egyptian forces are p e a c e f u 1 l y disengaging under the pact worked out by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. . A military communique said the fund raisers, all men, hadDeeii 't(Hil'ioltthe Slnal -a battlefield in the oCiober war -when their big blue civilian bllll "mistakenly cro!iSed Into an <.,.., conlrolled by the Egyptians ..;Ii of Jsmailia.'' Also aboard the bus were Israeli officials and military escort officers. The two 14-story Rossmoor Towers under construc- tion in Laguna Hills Leisure World are movlng ahead °" schedule for July completion. The $1.7 million project. with 311 condominium units, is desi~ned lo offer medical care for its residents, in· eluding 24-hour -0n call nursing service and ad- vanced alarm systems. Twenty-five upper dlvlslon c:nunes ol Cal State Fullerton may be offered on lbe Saddlebaclt COiiege campus tbls summer as part d. Fullerton's enended campus program. Saddleback t r u s t e e s unanimously endorsed tbe ooocepl Monday night and Saddleback offldals will be moetlng witb Fullertoo spokeanm to -k out detaib The zone east of the Suez Canal opposite the war·scarred Arab city of Ismailia has been Held by Egypt's 2nd Army since the opening of the October war. The military command said Israel immediately infonned the for w a r d command post manned by ]srflieli . Egyptian and U.N. officers in .. the cease- fire zone, and asked for the /.mericans l(idnaper Silence Takes Toll on Hearst Parents Laguna Burglar, 19· -Sentenced . ' To Six Months of the plan. · A similar plan bas abo been endoned by Goldm West COiiege. A Fullerton spokeomu said ...,... to be be olJend -would1>e~determlned b1-'111iarFullerton- faculty members want to teach and what' Saddlebaclt cbooe from tbal list. Tuition ol $30 per unit would be charged, tbe spokesman said. The torm of six to eight weeks would provide full upper dMsion credit, he said. lo be freed . . . The request was 1odged under the Kissinger agreement, which prov.ides for return of stray civilia.i.s and soldeirs on the Suez front, the command said. Israel has returned 99 prisooers to Egypt under the agreement. SAN FRANC!SCO (UPI) -The lack of communication from the kidnapers of Patricia Hearst is taking its toll on the emotions of her parents. For the first time since negotiations by tape recording and televised news conference got started, the Symbionese Liberation Anny has gone more than three days without responding to publisher Randolph A. Hearst's efforts to win hb daughter's release. Hearst and his .wife Catherine, described by their children as "just dried out, but hoping," maintained their silence at the family estate in suburban HiJJsborough. 'Ibey notified the press they wouJd have no further statements "until there is a major development." 'The Hearst family is receiving some 600 'letters a day from well-wishers offering support. Donations to the family and its food dtstributioo project, called "People in Need," have passed the $100,000 mark. The food giveaway originally scheduled From Pagel KALMBACH. • • Watergate Committee his. family _and his profession "mean everything to me" withdre\v from the film of Kalmbach, J)eMarco, Knapp and ChilHngworth 10 days ago. Kalmbach, who pleaded guilty to lwo charges involved in the Watergate investigation, may leave the law profession aJtogether and may go into the field of real estate investments. Kalmbach was unavailable for comment today but his long-time private secretary Ann Harvey said, "whatever he does he will be the sole practitioner."_ From Pagel ARTIST • • • it sti!J stands. Mr. Schwankovsky headed the art department at Manual Arts High School in Los Angeles and was p>nsidered by many long-time Art Colony residents as one of the original commuters to "the city." He retired from teaching in 1950. He was the founder of the Society of Western Artists based in Fresno and held memberships in the Art Student League of New York, the Southwest Arts Association and the Retired Teachers Association. Mr. Schwankovsky is survived by two daughters, Elizabeth Duncan of Malibu : Carolyn Knute of Solana Beach and a son, Robin Schwankovsky of Miranda ; a sister Tbeoclora of Portland, Ore., and numerous granddaughter.:. to resume today was postponed until Thursday to give organizers more time to make arrangements and prevent the disorder and violence that erupted on the first day of the program. Frustrated CTO\\'ds saw food scattered in all directions and fights broke out Friday on the first day, when trucks arrived late at distribution points. Laguna Expects $500 to $1,000 Cafeteria Loss A six-inontb Orange County Jail term bas been--ordered in Superior C'.ourt for the only_ adult member of a teenage burglary ring that broke. into 34 homes in the Laguna Beach and El Toro areas. Judge James Turner ordered the jail sentence and three years pro\>ltion for Orme J. Maringola, 19, of 676 Glenneyre St., Laguna Beach, alter tbe defendant pleaded guilty lo burglary charges. Maringola was one of four young men No advance application to Fullerton or matrtculalloo fee would be required. Regi!tratlon probably would take place al tbe fi)'9t clw meeting. The Fullerton spokeoman said catalogs on lhe Saddleback course offerings will be publlsbeQ by mid-April. FroatPqeJ • BENTLEY ••• arrested by Laguna Beach police who to tate over anytblng." linked the group to a wave of break-ins Stuart called Mrs. Bentley's oommeflts ridiculom. that oost Laguna and El To r 0 "The actual truth of the matter ·js homeown!rs property valued at more that we are concerned about saving Wben tb booka 1-~ cafelen·a than $1,500. Laguna Beach from a take over by e are c ~. unqualified people," Stuart said . He ti · tb La Bea~ -~Is Police said thev grabbed 11.faringola opera ODS ID e guna u• ~ ' listed Mrs. Bentley in lbe "unqualified will show a $500 to $1,000 lcm for last Oct. 24 as he fled from a home people.,, the 1973 calendar year. at 2854 Cbateau Way. Juveolle .court "I am not a ru.lty board candidate, The deficit is oot.hing new. It's been action was taken against a 17-year-old I primarily bec<l?M interested in nmning El Toro youth and two yoW1g Lagunans, becau.e I was lncmsed by a aimment the rule for years. made by Carl Jomson (Incumbent Cl d Lo lad 'd ages 15 and 16. B~iness Manager y e ve Y sa1 councilman) !hst the power of the vote the year's los.! is due to whopping oC the councilmen is the most important increases in tile price ol food and seat in UU.. city of Laguna Beach and employes' salary bikes. C h' D k I felt it was my duty as a citizen oac s run · 1o 1ry anc1 oorrect !bat. He listed the following price lncreaseso "The realty board b acting In a hot dogs, 75 percent; french fries, 24 protective pc:mtioo against the arbitrary percent; ground beef, 3'.I pe!'C<flt and Rap Dismissed decisions °' lhe City QJuncll to take b~rl= ~=~· pay has increased-' away the rights· of ·the people.'' Stuart . tb b said. 7.5 percent during e past year, e Drunken driving charges in Biglin said he had accepted the said. Orange County against Los Angeles overtures of a bU3ines3men's group and For a profit to show .. either sales Rams head football coach Chuck he felt there was no preconceived must go up or expenses do'WTI," sai.d )\nox have been dismissed in West organization. Lovelady. Figuring that the latter ts o\ange County Municipal Court. "It wcis flattering tha t whc:i a group unlikely, school officials now are working Knox instead pleaded guilty to of individuals felt desperate and were on ways to get more people to eat a reduced charge of reckless Jookirig for an alternative, they came lunch at school cafeterias. driving growing out of the incident to me," be said. One idea being explored by a newly in March of last year when Baglin said be and lhe two write-In formed Food Services C.ommittee is to be was arrested by Westminster candidates supported by the realty spice up the relatively drab interior police while attempting to negotiate board's committee were "distinct1y at the Lagooa Beach High School a freeway offramp. different." cafeteria -the largest school-operated The Rams head coach paid a He suggested Mn. Bentley was making eatery. fine of S120, according to court "pelitical hay" with her charges. Lovelady oontends that a more records. Mrs. Haller declined to comment prior The Jewish fund raisers were the first Westerners · or outsiders of any nationality known to have fallen into military hands co an October \\'ar fron t. Philanthropist Grace M. Steele Last Rites Held Memorial Services were held for Grace Messner Steele at St. 1M~k Presbyterian Churcb In Newport Beach Monday. She died Friday in Palm Springs. Mrs. Steele. 91, was the widow of Harry G. Steele, an. ele.ctrical industrialist. In 1963 l\.frs. Steele established the Harry .G Sletle Foundation. which is a founder of the Los Angeles County and Pasadeaa Art Museums and the Mark Taper Forum in Los Angeles. 'lbe foundation made grants to Pomona, Occidental, Scripps and Milb Colleges and founded the Harry G. Steele Laboratory of Electrical Sciences at Cal Tech. Mrs. Steele leaves foot children, Mrs. Virginia Steele Soott of Pasadena; Mrs. Nick B. Williams Sr. of Laguna Beech;- Richard Steele; Mrs. A. A. Burnand IJJ of Newport Beacb. nine grandchil- dren, and 13 great.grandchildren. Community Center Talk Set Tonight A round table dlscu!!slon on tbe need for a community center and civic auditorium in Laguna Beach will be beld by tbe Coordinating Council al 7: 30 tonight at city hall. Representatives of civic associations In Laguna and lhe Saddleback Valley will join Orange County officials in discussing the need for the center. Possible locations and funding for the center also will be reviewed. attractive cafeteria will bring in more to press time. custotnersand,hence,morerevenue. 1~:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::;-The committee also is studying new I food selections, bettfr packaging of a la carte items and a breakfast program featuring specials like a "football players breakfast" or "surfer's break- fast .. " The committee is working under Ute direction of Dr. Maxine Schade, a nutrition expert ff9m Orange Coast College. Lovelady noted that 9Chool cafeterias usually have been operated as a service to students and staff and, at best. break even when the biJoks are baJanced. A few financial adjustments still must be made in the cafeteria balance sheet for 1973 operatioos, Lovelady said. He predicted the Joos will fall between $500 and $1,000. Last year, tbe cafeteria lost $300, he said. From Pagel OVER THE RIVER and THROUGH THE W00DS - For ttiree more montt)s Placentia Ave. will be torn up to widen tt\e street. At times Placentia Avenue will be closed and access will be available by way of Babcock St., coming from tt)e back way. · / We hope you will be patient wilt\ construction as tt)e results will certainly be wort~ all t~e trouble. If you aren 't adventuresome, give us a call, and we 'll bring ~amples to your home. ALDEN _'S CARPETS• DRAPES Funeral services will be held at the Church of Our Father, Forest Lawn, in Cypress at 9 a.m. Wednesday. ,..BADHAM Fr~m Pagel • • • 19th ST. EMERGENCY ... the fact that the acUon was so sudden. "Obviously we have a problem but other than taking an emtTgency stance there Is no plan to solve it," he said. Diedrich said before any action should be taken the oounty should bave stand· by provisiom to handle emergency v~hlcles and motorists In trouble among other things. • He asked for a -k'1 study by county officials before any action was taken. After the board vote, D I e d r I c b commented to newsmen that the action by his fellow supervison w -s reminl~nt of "run away horses" and sometbing like tbe panlc buying going on at" the punips. --, • the statro commlssionz" he &aid, ''We're going to lake a secona seat again." The regional commlasions are belplng draft a coostal mastor plan due In tbe legislature by f976. Badbam said his hUl fs deslgned lo "make Ute whole intent of the Initiative work more effectively. Orange County bas different problems from Los Angeles.'' It would split the cumnt lZ-member oommisslon, with Ifs seven Loe Angelea and five Orange County memben, In two, and create two commlsilons of 13 members each. The mechanlcs aren't all WTltlen Into tbo bUl, be said, but presumably the curr<nt Orange County membm would mlgn and be reappointed to tbe new commlsskm. Seven new memben would be appointed. -1 < -> . 181hST. 17th ST. I ~ 1M3 .,_ _ PlACEHTIA 16th ST. ' IN COSTAMISA SIHcl 1957 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838- Mon,.'lhun. t 19 S•JOi M. f le 91 Sat. 9,30 to S .. . ( ..._ __ I ' • r I I I . I \ I I 7 , • Sadillehaek EDITION TOday's Final' l N.Y. Stecks '(OL. 67, NO. 57, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUA'RY 26, 1974 TEN CENTS ~ ... Kalmbach Resig-ns From Newport Law Firm By L. PETER KRIEG Of tt1e o.lty f"li.t Stiff Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport lleOch IUll10ll!lCed today he has resigned from the law firm he formed In 1967. 1'-1eanwhile In San Francisco, it was announced that the Cal![omla Supreme Court will consider possible disciplinary action against Kalmbach. Kalmbach pleaded guilty Mooday ID Going llp fedual charges of illegal campaign practices, He could draw a maximum sentence of_ two years ln prison and a $10,000 fine for one felony and me year and a $1,000 nne for the other misdemeanor charge. · The Newport attorney who !Did Senate Watergate COnimittee his family and his profes,,ion "mean everything t.o me" withdrew from the film or Kalmbach, Delolarco, Knapp and Cblllingworth 10 days ago. Kalmbach. who pleaded guilty to two charges involved in the Watergate. investigation, maY. leave the I a w profession ajtogether and .may £9 into the field of real estate investments. Kalmbach was unavailable f o r comment today but his long-time private secretan Ann Harvey said, "whatever he does be will be the sole practitioner." The iwo 14-story ll<>esmi>or Towers Ullller conatruc- 1 tion In Laguna Hills Leisure World .are moving · ahead on schedule for JUly c<>mpleti<in. The $17 milli;j, project. with 311 condoDlilllum Units, l.s . dwened to ofter medical ure. forrlls'Tlsidenls, ln- cludlog 24-hour on call nu(SIJlg service· and ad- vanced alarm systems. _ . t . . •• z •• rr•• ,,....., , I n dian Bunters 1,300-111iile Trip Ends for 2 Boys HAVRE, Moot. -(AP) -Two yoong Wisconsin brothers set orr from home with lndian headdresses. a tom tom, a homemade spear, bow and arrows and about 60 l"'flts. Douglas and William Morgan , 10, land 9. ol M"tlwaukee told their pareott: in a note they were heading for I"1ian country ID find an Indian tribe which woold adopt them. The boys. 800.'!I or Pifr. and ~trs. Leooard Plonka, cltmbed aboanl an Amtcak train with<Nt tickets Sunday JnQmlng and traveled to Minneapolis, unhindered by oonduc!Drs. At Mirmeapolis they changed trains, getting on a Burlington Northern passenger train en J'O'.<' '. Seattle, Wash. They overshot Sloux Indian country In South Dakota. their apparent destination, and wound up imtead at Ravre, B1ackfeet IDdian territory. 1beir westward journey. ended here Monday alter Burlington N o r t h e r n conduct.or Lee M. Grant of Havre noticed the boy1 jumping over a tent peg in a domed passenger car and asked them f bere their parents were. 1be truth came out and the Morgan brothers -their mother Is remarried -were given oyer to juvenile authorities to await the l,3GO-mlle trip home. · Mrs. Plonka told newsmen i n Milwauk.. al1er talking wtth the boys by te!<pbone that when they realized they had "kind of passed up Woonded Knee" in South De.kola, ttie. · decided to head !or Calilomla. Sh• said the young.tors appareotly decided on California because Indians are seen on television programs that originate there. Mrs. Plonka said th• boys had read Mark TWain's "Tom Sawyer" and a book about an 'Indian boy who learned to survive in· the wilds. Officiills ~here salCI the yoong explorers kept a journal, d..crlblng the trip "to Minassota" and the journey on a "Minassota to CeaUe" train. Mrs. PlODka said Grant offered to take the boys •'under . his wing" and bring them home today. What a1t'aita: them when they return? "They already know," Mrs. Plonka , said. "'Ibey said to me, 'I SUWC)le we're going ID get a opanklng.' And l said, ·wen; do ,... suppose yon abould get a pat on the back?' " Irvine Council to : Hear -Edison Pa~t on Parks :A liceilse a~ent between the city tJI Irvine and Soo!lhem Calilomia F.dlson OJmpony which woold provide park mes on 4S acres of Edison euement will be pmented ID the Irvine City Council tonlgh~ • "'l'hn>n>posal;'lor • linear parcel Wider ~wer ltnes paralleling b.e A T & S F r8llroad tracks ~ween Harvard Avenue and Jd!tty Road, requires Edison ID: ' -Remove exlatlng cltru& ~ and cleon ol! weeds. -:;!n•!Jlll !enc~ and grade a 10-loot p11n fO(_ a oomblned bike lrall and patrol •ad access road. · The city. would be required ID: ~ay EdlllOn $50 per ecre per• )'e31' (f2,28S) !or pork uses or tile easement. -Install alte amcnltlea !or park -· . -Plant tr.et and other landsoaplng oiid Install entrance bon1en to prohibit unauthorized motor vehicles. '. In . a staU report ID the council, city poblic 'worb official1 said they eovl11on the \It• to Include mt slopl with picnic tables, drinking !oontalns, a tot lot, bor3e ahoe pttdl area , and a pnleo plot. In other council , business tonight, the J!)Ullcll ls eipecled to; --Oi•e firial approval lo the city aeal and authorize peymeot or lt,100 !or design COits. -Authorlr.e awanllng a c:onlracl for widening JeUrey Road to four lanes between Walnot Avenue and Barranca Road. -Dlscusi a possible joint powen agreement with Unlvenlty High Schodl fut' bleacher aeat1 and nlghl ltghllnC !or high 9Ch0ol 1ports eventll.. . -consider appointing a transportation eommlttee and direct the pobllc works clepattrnent to rocommend appc<prlate l'""1lnc and clertcal lllPl'Ol'l--C.O•Oler outhorlzinf .-,llGO to devolop a traffic analyals program. • . .. --, ' , D91b' 'lftl Staff "'°"' 'WOULD REPRESENT ·ALL' C1ndid1te 0.vid Lowe Stockbroker · Seeks Irvine Council Seat By GEORGE LElDAL Of n.. U!r Pllet•ll•" Stockbroker ~David A: Lo'vc of the Racquet Club Is seeking a city council ~at in Irvine "'not just as a candidate h'om the northern part of the ity but as aa candidate who seeks representation for all parts of the city." LoWe, 35, of 4171 Salacia Drive, is em- ployed by Dean Witter and Company In Newpqrt Beach. He is one of 15 seeking election 1o five Irvine City Council seats, Yaii:li 5. ~ - - ~ graduate of the University of Florida with a bacbe1or of sCtence degree in commurilc;ations, Lowe did . graduate wcrk 1t the New Ycrk Inslltutc of Finance. ' Lowe said~ jol't1CIN< of the city l\ave D\l)tl (iOlelltlal !tr fJltwo grew\b due ~J~e ·~ ol 1 Otle~ 'l"'C0 t.'le ,.,.....,te 'l'OY! he would like to see tow. IM'J>Oili the ' village concept or cit.\' planning .. nd ~vo,.. providing areenbelt, park ·or · r open ·.spa.,.. u •a buffer betw ... vi qes. He oontends thal the total number of, peq>le who ult\mltoly Uvl! In IJ\olne (See LO'llE,·Pop ll -~--- • Jn a prepared statement, Kalmbach said : "Herbert W. Kalmbach, senior partner and lowider of Kalmbach, DeMarco, Knapp and Chilllngworth, has withdrawn from the firm effective Feb. 15 ID porsue pel'!Onal business interests a n d investments. "Following Mr. Kai m b a ch' s resignation, the firm has b e e. n reorganl.zed as Mtarco, Barger and Chillingworth . ~ Bera!." Jn the next few years, Kalmbach . That was the entire text of the roamed the nation and the world, ~ statement. .successJully soliciting, by his O.Wll1 James Knapp left the finn several account . millions of dollars for the Nixon 1 years ago. Shenl'ood Chllling\vorth, presidential ca mpaigns of 1968 and 1972. I president of Adoi'ada Corporation of Los At. one of Nixonts closest personal 1 Angeles, left at the end or last year. aides, the 52-year-old Kalmbach received his life's ambitions when be set up forays. often staying at U.S. embassies Kalmbach, DeMarco, Knapp & '!''hen traveling abroad. ' In 1967, Kalmbach fulfilled one of VIP treatment during hi s fund-raisingJ F u el Curbs Asked l l . County Urges Emergency Status By WJLUAM SClll\ZJBER ot ftle DlllJ' f'w.t Stiff Orange County supervisors todax. launched an all-out attack on the gasoline shortage by asking Gov. Ronald Reagan to declare a state of emergency here and impose mandatory fuel management throughout the county. The board voted 3-1 to declare the emergency which would not go into effect, until Reagan acts. ' Sl!pervisor Ralph Diedrich, who said Expert Sees Snake Problem Along Coast By JOHN VALTERZA Of .. Dllb' Pllllt lllfl A leading make and f"'*'8id expert from the South Coast today gaid that major -~ wann weather and the Ir~ eyde hav~ !>!ended ID create a aeriool ra'ltleinah prciblem !or residenls rieer open spaces. Bobby Scroggs, the San Clemente Police Department's emergency medical technician and trainer, predicted that residents wouJd·find snakes "where they never thought ID find them before." Pointing out the near tragedy last weekend when S:year-otd David Barton of San Juan Capistrano nearly died from the eUects . ol repeated bites from a baby rattler and a reaction later ID anUveoom, Scrugp said parents should be especially careful with their children. '1The boy last weekend was bitten by a baby rattler and the tiny snakes are far more dangerous than the adults," Scroggs said. Scroggs, who keeps a tall7 or snake incidents in the late-winter and early ~. said that already this season a baby rattler was found am. destroyed in a smoo1 yard. 1bree adult snakes already have been killed in hilly residential areas of San Clemente. "II Is the baby rattler that creates the greatest problem and the deadliest bite," he said. The infant snakes are born live with a full do6e of venom and a set of inmncts different from more cautious adult snakes. "When a litUe one bites it gives no warning, because its rattles aren't developed yet, and instead of striking once and then waiting -like an adult - does -the baby bites repeatedly with DO letup," be said. Such was the case with the Barton boy last Sunday when be picked up a baby diilmoodback an<f the viper bit him at least three times on the hand. The yoongster -near death from an allergic -reaction to the boiu serum used to counteract the venom -was .flown by police helicopter ID Los Angeles County -USC Medical Center where specialists took over the t,te. tment. Today, aides said David ·was still In serious ooOOition but showing definite signs of improvement. The biting Incident, Scruggs said, caused oonceriled residents -especially . parents -to call him !or informatioo on the rattlesnake peril. "I tell them ·all that if they live in areu near wilderness to make aW'e thelt garage doon are closed. Warm concrete with shelter b the moat -Jikely area to find the-anaket,-- and the reptiles share ·a hatred with (See SN~, Page. : ' he wanted another week to study the action, was the lone opposition vote .• Supervisor David Baker was absent from the meeting. The board actibn consisted of adoption of a resolution drafted by Orange Cotmty Counsel Adrian Kuyper"Stating that "the shortage or gasoline has created a condition of disaster" In Orange County. The board asked Reagan to institute a gas management sYstem based on license plate numben and to prohibit Grocery Costs Climb. by 1.8% · ' WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Spurred by a second straight month of rising fann prices, the cost of a typical fam ily food grocery basket jlDDped $3Cl, or 1.8 percent, in January to a record annual rate of $1,680, a government report lhowl!d lodllY· . ' . . The lncreaae pushed the figure post the· .... ---of"tl,'53 11<1 'last Au&usl ~hen the COii riici eaod by C'/, ar t.t!jlii'Cl!M. 'The Jamiary figUre ol ll,680 was !305, nr :12 percen~ abo>e a year earlier. Further increases are expected. Hayakawa's Plan. To Run on GOP Ticket Rejected SAN FRANCISCO (lf.'l) -The Cal![omia Supreme Court re!U!ed today ID change election laws ID allow educator S. I. Hayakawa to nm for the U.S. Senate as a Replblican. · Hayakawa was formerly regiateTed as a Democrat but changed ID the Repobllcan party Aug. 30. He then sought to file as a GOP candidate for the Senate but was denied certification because of a section of the state Elections Code which prohibits ~rtifying a candidate if he has been a member ol another political party within the previous 12 months. Hayakawa, as a candidate, and David T. Daze, as a registered Republican voter, filed suit to overturn this section of the 1aw, pointing out thlit the former president of San Franctsco State would be a Republican for more than a year ir he were elected to office in November, 11174. Dau contended his right ID vote for the Republican of his choice was violated. The court split 4-3 on the Issue, with Justices Mathew 0. Tobriner, Stanley Mook and Raymond L. Sullivan saying they would have granted the writ to Hayakawa. Moslem Rebels Out MANILA, • Philippines (AP) Government rorces have retaken the last two Motlem rebel strongholds near Jolo, in the south Philippines, the military command announced today. The command announced the recapture of Bud Datu .. Hill, nearly \Y.'O miles· from the tDwo of Jolo, '!nd said the "Maoist rebels" ~ it as a sanctuary ahtt they !ail<d to .. win control of Jolo;-tb< capital of the Sulu archipelago, In a battle earlier this mooih. JA .R ation OK~d. LOS ANGE~.e~! -Looi ~lei. OJunty be<lime tho lirsl county In , the state today ID lclopt •an emerpncy "paoline markcting'"plan baaed on • Uceme plate·number1. (See ~ J>Ne ti.) The boftd ol ....,._ """"" ,.. to_, put . Loo Angeles CGunty residents on •· gaaolblo dlstrillatfon Plan ~ ~ by Gov. Ronald Reagan. lt can lie lmpooed In "'1'911lle ·alale'1 58 ....,tlea wbere It ia requested. It 1lftllot1ily • -......... Friday. - sales to drivers whose tanks are half lull. The system is based on one introduced by the state of Qregon where drivers with even nwnbered plates would get ga.s on even numbered calendar days and tOOse with odd numbered plate1 on odd numbered days. ' Supervisors Robert Battin, Ralph Clark I and Ronald Caspers were-strongly in favor of taking the action immediately (See EMERGENCY, P11e I) ; I Badham Seeks Separate Coast Board By CANDACE PEAR80N Of t1Mi DlllY Plllt Stiff Assemblyman Robert Badbam (R· Newport Beach) has lntrocluc<d • bill which would establish a se"'1'ato coastal commlsston for Orange Coulity, The measure was termed lmpracticaf today by the chairman of the exllltlng South Coasl Regional Zo.ie Comervation Comrriission, which also mvers Los ·An&eJes C<>unty. It would take a minimum ol six months anil considerable expense lo split the cornmi..asion •now and begin a new staff and get new ot'6ces for a second panel, Dr. Donald Bright nplained. Brtght also said Badham's bill,' AB :D!9, ls a retorn to local, not regiooal government. "It is clear, I think, that home rule hasn't been responsive. "That's what Jrought Proposition :ZO around," added Bright, referring to the lm coastal 1.00e act which established tbe comntissiorui. . Reached in Sacramento, Badbam iaid today be Introduced the bill Mooday partly at the urging of Orange County Supervisor Ronald Cupers, who is a member of the South Coast commission. Badbam said the South C o a s t comniission is too overburdened with handling the backlog of construction permit ·applications to adequately handle their planning tasks. "If the LA-Orange County commission comes up having the least input to the statf' commission," he said, "we're going to take a second seat again .'' The regional commissions are helping draft a coastal master plan due in the legislature by 11176. Badham said his bill Is designed ID "make the whole intent of the irUtialive work more effectively. Orange County baa different problems: from Los Angeles." It \t.'00.ld split the current 12-member commission, with tt.s seven Los An&eles and five Orange County memben, in two, and create two commissions or (See BADHAM, P11• I) I ,. Oraage • Weatlaer Some low clowl!neas or log Is expected for the morning hounl Wednesday, but otherwise sunny and cooler. lllgha In the mid-ala al the beaches risioi ID 70 inland. Overnight lows moatly 3>-46. INSIDE TODA. Y Jim Croct, who wa.t kflltd Jost Stptember iti a J)laM CNlll, has two albutm toppitig Che ~ tion'1 tale1 chartl dnd ii a. great postl&umo»& •ucc•u. Storti. Page 20. L M. .... " _ .. .. (.itfMll• ,, . Mllt\111 f'lttMt " -.,. NltlMtl ,._ C, • , ....... " Ol'•IWI C'"'1 • , __ " l'll'ril ,..,.... " Dtlttl htk" • ,_ 1•H •••""1•1 ~"" • It.ft ,._,.... 1•11 ==:-· " , ..... _ " 11•11 -.. .,..,_ .. ·-• 11 ........ .. ---· ..... ,,.,, ... .._ " ---•• • • l • ) • . ... . ._ ~ ...... -.. . . . .... ; . ,, 2 OAILY PllOl IS Tt1tsday, ~tbruary 26, 19~4 -~~~~~"--~~...:::.:.~ ~ Parents Aid Scl1ool Plan hi Irvine \\'hen Irvine school trustees sit do\vn to allocate mone-'y for new prog rams they will be able t-0 act with the assurance that they really know wh4t the eommunity_want.s. They will know because lh<y took the troubl e to ask. Over the past 11 months, the dl!trict has made a systematic effort to ~raw more than 2,000 members of the school community into a program o f formulating district goals. This has lncluded an aver age or 56 parents at eadl of the district '5 seven scllools plm an estimated 14,000 students. "It would have beeli easy for UJ as educators to assume from the st.art that we knew what was best for the commooity," says Raymond Edman , ~ty superintendent of the district. "But we took the longer route because we wanted to be sure that we really are being responsive to things people want for their acbools/' F.dman says. The community aentiment, a s -expresaed in several doz.en workahop !tnee'tings, has been crystalized Into a 'It.ring of formal goal statements. Eacfi. g93} ~then ~n assigned a numerical -priority that corresponds to the level· of coocem. el.pressed by citizens about It at the workshop meetingJ. Most of the basic goals are not unexpected, E:dman says. The top priority in the district , for example, easily outpolled all others in the statist:jcal rating system, reads as follows: "There is a need for a cOncentrated cl°fort in the teaching of basic skills including continuous evaluation or reading and math programs as well as emphasis in written and oral oommunicatlon, with a ppr op r i ate mediation where needed." ~ F..dman admits that ii this was all the goal statements said -that the district ought to teach basic reading and math -they might not be. worth much. But they tell much more. The second ltighest priority, acrording to the community survey, is "recognition and appreciation of individual student needs." Edman interprets this as a n endorsement of the district's innovative programs for indJvldualizatioo o f instruction. Also high on the list are community concerns about sichool d:scipline and school-home communications. "Thls is a clear iodi.cation that the district needs to pay more attenUon in these areas," F.dman says. Another unexpected mutt of the survey was a discovery that students are highly concerned about such matters as "drinking fOWltains, lockers, and bike racks. \\'hile most parents indicated their top concerns were academic ones, the majority o( students said thelr top priority of school improvement 'A-'Ollld be to furnish more "supplies and equipment.'' Edmao says the district is in the process or setting up formal machinery to deal with top concerns listed in the community surveys. Each goal will be assigned to a specific individual or group of educators, with the greatest attention given to the areas of greatest community concern. "We took the trouble to find out what the community wants, and we're determined that the report we got isn't going to be left on the shell to gather dust/' Edman says. A formal report on how the staff int.ends to implement the g o a l s statements will be presented t J trustees within the next month, Edman says. Officer Kills Agent HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) A n under.cover narcotics officer was she>t and killed early today by a uniformed city policeman answering a disturbance call, Houston police said. OAAN61 COAST " DAILY PILOT Tfllt Or.,_ C0.11 DAILY l'ILOT, Wllfl ""'lefl II awntl!l!W lloe N1 ... l',.•u, Ii P\ltlllllled by t"9 Of"•"" COMI Pvblltlllftl Comptny, 1.,.. r111 «llllO!lt ••• M !l1'*1. Morod&y fl'l•ouotl fr~. Mr C1>1l1 M111, N1w,:iorl •ffd'I. Hllllt1~ •Ht"''-t1ln V1!1fr, l ........ lhl<fl. lrvlMl5..,,.ll'tN<ll Md Sin Clefrlenltl J.I" J-C1(>1ttr1no. A tl"l!ll rf9k>NI tdillon h ll'*lttl'led htvrt11n -s-•n- ll\e ptlrlc.!11tl OWllMlflO jtllnl II 11 lJI) \lr"I lty SI...,, Colli M-. C•lllOr~ .. , t'MM. Rob1rl N, W11d rr111$M! IN l'11~1'hfl' J1cli: It . C11rlt y Y'lop l'l"Ulll ... t Ind Gto<ltr•! Mtf\IW Tiio1111t Kt1wil i dl!Gr TtlofPI•• A. M11rttloiino MIN9""8 f fllw Ch1rf11 H. loot Ricloi1 rd '· NtU AMffilWll Mlf\lf"'9 IWl!w1 o ..... C9'1t M"': Ill W•,'!:.'J St""1 ,...,,.,..., •..cfl: JUI H llUt.~f•f L....-hlldlr m "-' ... ..._ """''°"* 1..0.1 UJ11 SMdl ..... '"1rt1 .... ~l .,..."!l llC-...lt.al "'•,.••• tn•J w..011 nwer.A .-..11 t 1 ..u•11 s.a ••A1•;10111a1 f'g'a r•tMat ~ ...,.. 0... '-' ....... .. c-, ............ _, .... .. ......... ....., ///II,..,, .. ...... ..., .... 9 , ...... ..., .... ........ ....,... __ . =~==-:...=a:: __. ., ,:I', ~ -· ....., • Dt111' I'll., Slttt l'Mt9 ltist Like Old Days Bus Crosses Une U.S. Jews Held I By Egypt Army . I Frem Wlre Ser\1CM A busload of 28 American Jev.·lsh visU.ors \\'ent astray near· the SUez Canal front today and was taken Into custod y by the Egyptian anny, -the 15raell military oommand reported. A mDltary Oommunl'que said the Americans, fund raisers from the United Jewish Appeal, later were freed as part of the lsraeli·Egyptian disengagement pact. EgypUan and Israeli army officers were reported in contact through ·united Nations peace-keeping forces to release the bus. .. We have no details of what happened but we have received \\'Ord that everyOne is safe," a spokeswoman (or the group said at Tel Aviv. The incident occurred in the northern sector of the canal where Israeli and E&Yptian forces are p e a c e f u 11 y disengaging Wlder the pact worked out by Secretary of State Henry A. for the first ti1ne early tod ay, Kissinger n1adc an ovt.rnl~t stop i11 London en route 10 hil:i fourth -and 1nost difficult -n1iss1on to the r.1iddle East lonrlany m·onths. Veteran pilot Frank Pine, 56, vice president of !alh_nan~z Aviation, ·had to make emergency land· 1n.g in his old. JN4D "Jenny" biplane near Estancia Hi gh School 1n Costa Mesa A1onday when it threw a ·rod in the en~ine -shortly after takeoff from Oran ge County Airport, Pine, 2004. Vista Caudal, Newport Beach, just picked a spot and set her down the way the old barnstorming pilots always did. The aborted flight to Piru, Calif., ended with mechanics rc1noving the wings to. tow the old Curtiss biplane back to the airport. Kissinger. A military communique said the fund raisers, all men. had been touring the Sinai - a battlefield In the October _war -when their b!g blue civilian bus "mistakenly crossed into an area controlled by the Egyptian! east of Fro111 "Page 1 LOWE. • • is less important than the way the city Is planned. Lowe opposes subsidized housing and favors designation or locations for •·either apartment or cluster housing projects.,, He believ~ "it is the c i t y 's responsibility lo protec~ the investments and property values . of c u r re n t homeo"'ners." The following is a summary of Lowe's view on other issues: -J.~avors townhouse and cluster housing solutions to the spiraUing costs · of homes in Irvine. -Considers annexation of areas to the north of the present city boundaries to be important; city development of those properties will impact present residents. -Questions the need to spend so much !or political campaigns. -Favors expansion of transit systems to serve north lrvine homes, and supports long range plans klr commuter transit systems such as a monorail. -Urges coordination with school officials to see that schools are provided ·before new homes are completed. -Supports expanded fire and polioe protection as the city grows. Lowe and his v.·ile, Jackie, have t\\·o children, Richard, 12, and daughter, Kele, 9. The Lowes have lived in Irvine for tv.·o and a half years. A Navy veteran, Lov•e served on the original city environmental qua l i t y advisory committee . From Page J, SNAKES • • • dogs and cats. ' "If a res ident bears his dog barking outside, he shouldn't tell it to shut up, but investigate, instead. Often a dog will bark constantly if he sees a snake," Scruggs related. If a resident kills a snake, he must realize that a severed rattlesnake head is still capable of biting for many minutes after death is apparent. "Never kill a rattlesnake and toss it or its head into a canyon "'here 11 kid could step on it. Bury the whole thing, instead. If someone is bitten by any snake. Scruggs recommends a simple, but i1nmed iate treatmen t. "Unless a victim is 'far from help, cutting the skin and sucking lhe venom shouldn't be done," he said. Instead, bands - cloth or leather -should be tied above and below th e bite -just tight enough to squeeze a finger beneath the wrapping. Tourniquets that would shut off blood circulation should not be placed on a bite victin1 , he added. Transport to a hospital should be immediate. Loca l hospitals, he added , have increased thei r supply of an tivenom in recent days after Sunday's incident. Anyone \'1 ilh any ques tions at all is \'.·eJcome lo call Scruggs during day lime hours at the San Clemente department. The number if 492-5 101. From Pa9e 1 BAD HAM • • • 13 nlfmbers each. The mechani cs aren't ttll wrltlcn Into the bill , he said, but presumably tile current Orange County members would resi gn and be reappointed to the new commission. Seven new members would be appointed. Six: or the commissioners woµld be "pu blic" member!, nol representing any governmeot body, And seven would be electtd officials. The cumnt balance ~ half and hall. Badh1m 51id he didn't ha ve any 1pedflc cost estimates of the change, but csllmated it would be "roughly doubl•"' pn!"11t budgets. lie added the commission .~s more p I an n er•, whfthcr or not his bill succe<'ds . Ismailla." Auto Theft Suspect Eludes Police Dragnet Also aboard the bus were Jsraell officials and mUitary escort officers. 'Ibe zone east 'of the Suez Canal opposite the war-scarred Arab city of Ismailia bas been held by Egypt's 2nd Army since the opening of the October war. 'Ille military command said Israel Immediately infonned the forward eommand post manned by Israeli , Egyptian and U.N. offiCers in the ceare- fire zone, and asked !or the /..mericans to be freed. PAGEANT DIRECTOR DIES Frtderlck Schwankovsky Laguna Artist Sch,va1ikovsky Rites Wednesday A car theft suspect "''ho was pursued by vehicle and foot from Irvine to Costa l\fesa Monday-including a foot chase through a cabbage patch with his victim cl~-·bchind -finally escaped from police. The man, who was chased by bis victim and a co-worker, apparently slipped out of the Grecnbrook housing development at the easterly comer of Sunflower Avenue and Bear Street. A task force of officers from eoSta Mesa, Irvine, Santa Ana, a pair of California Highway Patrol officers and the Costa Mesa Police Helicopter Eagle I crew combined efforts in the manhunt lasting about five hours. They checked !l>me 325 homes in the new La.rwln Realty Company tract man in lhe tract following the long investigation, according to Lt. Charles Bozza. A few neighbors had earlier seen the man in . the tract following the long chase by car and foot but he disappeared before they learned he was hunted. '.'Somebody said they saw him and he looked pretty tired," remarked Lt. Bozza . He said police were surprised during the foot patrol and house-to-house search of the Greenwood tract to find that many people had left home without locking their doors . Leo B. Stradley. of Fullerton, initiated the pursuit about 9 a.m., when he walked out of Domino Industries. 17672 Arm- strong Ave ., lnrine, to go to his van. He said he heard the engine start sa w a hand closing the door and ii From Page 1 EMERGENCY ... because they said the crisis has indeed grown to emergency proportion . "I cannot see bow we could worsen things by declaring th!: emergency because the Jines at gas stati-Ons should be half what lhey are now " Battin said. . ' Caspers noted that quick, deci sive action by the board would be an indicator to county citi es or just how serious the board feels the problem is. Clark, a service station owner. said he definitely feels more comfortable going to the cities after taking finn action. Diedrtch's opposition stemmed from the fact that the action was so sudden. "ObvlouslY" we have a problem but other than taking an emergency stance there, ii no plan to solve it ," he said . Dledr!ch said before any action should be taken the county should have stand· by provisions to handle emergency vehicles and motorists in trouble among other tltings . He as ked for a wee k's study by county oCficials before any action was taken. Coacli' s Drunl~ Rap Dismissed Dn1nken driving charges In Orange County against L<>s Angeles Rams head football coach Chuck Knox have been dismissed in West 'Orange County Municipal Court. Knox iMtoad pleaded guilty to a reduced charge or reckless driving growing out of the Incident In March of last year when he was arrested by Westminster police while attempting to negotiate a freeway offramp. The RAms head coach paid a fine of l120, according to court re<ordt. drove away, so he and his boss gave chase in a second velticle up and down several streets. The suspect finally abandoned the van in the South Coast Village plaza parking area and fled across the cabbage patch with Stradley and ltis boss ln bot pursuit. Police said they got a good description of the van thief because they were close on his heels. The request was lodged under the Kissinger agreement, which provides for return of stray civllia.i.s and soldeirs on the Suez front, the command said. Jsrael has returned 99 prtsonss to Egypt under the agreement. The Jewish fund raisers were the Funeral services will be held in first Westerners or outsiders of any Cypress \Vednesday for long-time Laguna They a~ lb< chase when he vaulted a wall lnto the Greenwood. tract and called police, fearing their quarry mig ht have been armed. nationality kno\\11 to have fallen into Beach artist Freder ic k John military hands on an October war froot. Schwankovsky, the director w h o Cal State Courses _May Be Offered At Saddlehack ""MeanWhile, Kissinger spent longer than resurrected the Pageant of the !\tasters exilected with British leaders k>day, then following World War 11. flew to Damascus to tackle "the key !\tr. Schwan kovsky died at hi s problem in the Middle East right now." Garber ville horne f eb. 14 at the age "I hope we can begin progress towards of 89. getting peace talks started bet"·een Syria The fa mous Joe Hosenthal photograph and Israel." Kissinger said before "flag Raising on l~·o Jima" opened ~arding bis special U-.S. Air Force the 1946 "living pictures'' sho\v following jeUiner. "I consider this the key problem four years of Pageantless summers 111 in the Middle East right now." the Art Colony because of the war. In Jerusalem, Foreign Minister Abba Schwankovsk y directed the show for only Eban said Israel sincerely wants to one year. separate its forces from Syria along Mr. Schwankovs ky, and his wife Nellie Twenty-five upper division courses of the lines of its disengagement agreement '-1ae. moved to Laguna Bench in 19'23 Cal State Fullerton may be olfered on \1dth Egypt. and purchased the Art Co lony's origi na l the Saddleback College campus this The Syrian government was keeping art gallery. Later, they 1noved 1hc summer as part of Fullerton's extended public interest in Kissinger's mission gallery to properly on the comer of campus progtam. at a low key. Damascus' state-run Graceland Drive and \\'ilson St reet where Sadd1ebaci; trustees unanimow;Jy new spapers carried no word on the visit It still stands. endorsed ~ concept Monday night and and Damascus radio mentioned it brieny ~1r. Sehwankovsky headed the art Saddleback: officials will be meeting with department at fllanual Arts fligh Schoo~ Fullerton spokesmen to work out details in Los Angeles and "'as considered by of the plan. 3 M S iJ many long-time Art Colony residents A .similar plan has also been endorsed Ore 8 OrS as one of the original commuters to by Golden West College. A Fullerton · ''the · city." He retired fron1 teaching spakesman said courses to be be offered F d • T nk in 1950· woukl be determined by what Fullerton 0Ull Ill 8 fle "'·as the founder of the Socielv faculty members want to teach and of Western Ar1 ists based in Fresno and what Saddleback ~--from that l"ist. NORFOLK v (UPI) -. held membershi ps in the Art Student ~-'a. -•uehn<Hes •-fN Y k h Tuition of ~'ln per wiit would be --~ u::ague o 1 cw or . t e Southwes t """' of three crewmen were found early Art A 1'at· d h 11 , charged, the spokesman said. The tenn s ssoc ion an t e chred of six to eight weeks would provide today in an aviation fuel tank on the Teachers Association. full upper division credit, he said. aircraft carrier Independence, bringing Mr. Schwankovsky is survived by two No advance application to Fullerton to four the number of victims in an daughters, Elizabeth Duncan of f\.1alibu : tr, I t' f Id •-ulred accident 11.fonday. Carolyn Knute of Solana Beach and or ma 1cu a 100 ee wou 1..1';: req · a son , Robin Schwankovsky of Miranda: Registration probably would take place The three were overcome by gasoline a sister Theodora of Portland, Ore., at the first class meeting. fumes while trying to rescue a shipmate and numerous granddaugh ter:. The Fullerton spokesinan said catalogs who slipped and fell into the tank, a Funeral se rv ices will be held at the on the Saddleback course offerings will Navy sPokesman said. The other txidy Church of Our Father. Forest Lawn 1 _tie_•_p_ub_l_is_hed_b..cy_m_id_-A_p_r_il __ · ______ w_as_r_eco_ve_red __ M:::o_nda__::y_n:::l:::gh:::t:::. ____ __:::ln:..:Cypress at 9 a.m. \Vedncsday. ' OVER THE RIVER and ' THROUGH THE WOODS For three more months Placentia Ave. will be torn up to widen th e stre,et. At times Placentia Avenue will be closed and access will tie available by way of Babcock St., coming from t'1e back way. We tiope you will be patient with construction as the results wili certainly be wortti all ihe trouble. If you aren't adventuresome, give us a call, and we 'll bring ~amples to your home. . 19th ST. - ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES -1 18thST. . 17thST.I IN COSTA MISA SINCI 1957 -~ 1663 1--PlMJHTIA -16th ST. 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MlSA 646-4~38 . -' Mon.-Thvrs. ~ le S1IO; M . t le 91 Sat. 9'30 10 s . -• f , ' .. - .. • • .. Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valle * .VOL 67, NO. 57, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ---~. ... J • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUA'RY 26, 1974 Today's FJaal N.Y. Stoeks ~I TEN CENTS ">~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....;..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~: ' 1 .Badham Seeks Separate Coastal Panel for OC 1 By CANDACE PEARSON Of tflt Dallr P'lltl Iliff Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach) has introduced a bill which would establish a separate coastal .oommission for Orange Cowity. 4 'Ibe measure was termed impractical today by the chairman of the emting South Coast Regional Zo.ie Conservation Commission, which also coven Los Angeles County. lt.would take a minimum of six months and considerabl~ expense to split the commlasion now and begin 1 new staff and get new offtcts for a second panel, Dr. l;!inal~ Bright esplained. Brill! alao aald Badham'• bill, .\!! 3219, ls a return to local, not regional government. "It la clear, I think, tl'.at boqie rule hasn't been responsive. "That'• wbat brought Proposition 20 around," added Brlgh~ referring to the 1972 coastal zone a.ct which established the commis.!i.om. Reached in Sacramento, Badham said today he introduced the bill Monday partly at the urging of Orange County Supuvtaor Ronald Caspers, wbo )s a memher of the South Coast commlssloo. Bad.ham~ said the South -·""'o'"'a~s-I commission is too overburdened with handling !be backlog of comtruclioo permit applications to adequately band.le Uielr planning tasks. "If the LA-Orange County commission comes up having the least input to the stat,. commission," he said, "we're golng to take a second seat again.,. The regional commissions are helping draft .-coastal master plan due 1n tbe legislature by 1976. Badham said his ·bill Is designed to "maie tne whole lhteiit Of -1hi initiative work more effectively. Orange Cotmty has different problems from Loo Angeles." It would split the current IZ-member commission, with ii.! seven Las Angeles and five Orange County members, in two, and create two commissitfnS of 13 members each. 1be mechanics aren't all ll'Titten into the bill, he_ said, but presumably the current Orange County members would resign and be reappointed to the new commission. Seven new members would be appolnled. Sir or the commissioners would be "public'' members, not representing any government body, and seven would be elected officials. The current balance is hall and half. Badham said he didn't have any specific cost estimates of the change, . but estimated it would be "roughly double" present budgets. He added the commission needs more p I a n n e r s , whether or not his bill succeeds. The bill will be heard in committee in March or April . It will probably go to the Assembly panel on planning and land use first, Badham :'Id.id. Bright said the original decision to· tie the two CO\O"IUes was based on common transpe>rtation, intensity of development and air pollution problems. Both counties are in one air basin and are similar geographically, he added. I ~Ottll _mer enc· In Huntington Council Okays Animal C·ontrols Asks Reagan For Fuel Managing By Wll.LIAM SCllRZIBER Of tfle Dellr PKtt Slt ll Dog and cat owners will !ace several oew, tougher restrictions in Huntingtoo Beach this year. City OOlllCilmen gave their prelimlnary approval Monda y night to changes in a 13-pea:e animal control ordinance whlcb : -Establishes • 110 mandatory cal liceme, Gilly the -lllCb la... in the state. --Requtres doi ..,..,. te clean up their pets' dog dirt when on public property or aomebody else's property. -Raises the annual doi lit<OSe from 17 to 110. -Eslablishes a 120 city permit for cot br<eding. Anyone who sells kittens for profit needs one. -Puts cats under the same leash tares dogs. According to the ordinance the)' aren't allowed off their property except on the end of a leash no more than si1 feet in length. FBI Recovers Valle y M a11' s Coin Colle ction Undercover FBI agents :"ITeSted three tnen in Minneapolis Monday when · the susp{!cts attempted to sell a collectk>n or rare coins valued at $40,000 stolen earlier this month from a Fountain Valley home. One of the three arrested, Lonnie Nickerson, 22, allegedly burglarized !be home of Jack Glowe Feb. 11 with a runaway juvenile. Folintain Valley Police said that, after the b\uglary, Nickerson, of MIMeapolis, and another Minneapolis fr leod, Ronald Anderson, 25, took the col ncollection, leaving the runaway behind, and left town. Police said Information oblalned from lhe juvenile, who wu arrested a week and a half ago, enabled the FBI to track down the two suspects in Minneapolis. , Undercover FBI agent s arranged to purchase the stolen coins from the two 1 suspects, in addition to a third man, Mark Enquist, 18. The three "(ere then arrested on suspicion of interstate tr&IUt'er of stolen property. Local police said today 90 percent ol the coll~Uon -ancient Greek and Roman Q>tns -was recovered. Coach's Drunk ·Rap Dismissed Drunkeo drlvinl charges In Onu1ge Counly against Loo Angeles Rams head football coach Chuck Knox bave been dlsmlsled ln'West Oran ... County Municipal Court. Knox Instead pleaded iuJ!ty to a rt!duced charge of reckless driving growing out ol the lncldmt In March of last yeer when ·he was ·amstecl by Wntminster police while It tempting to negollala a freeway offramp. The Rams head eooch paid a fine of fll>, according to court rconi.. • Dennis Smith, director of California Animal Cmtro1. the city's official dog catcher, says the leash law does not mean h.is agency intend! to catch cats. "It's impossible," he saMi today. "The only call we pick -up are ones already caught by citizens. In the summer they give us up le JOO a day." Orange County supervisors today launched an all-out attack on the gasoline shortage by asking Gov. Ronald Reagan to declare a st.ate of emergency here and impose mandatory fuel management throughout the county. The board voted 3-1 to declare the emergency which would not go into effect uDlll JloiPn' atta. • . Smlth aaid the leaah 1a... merely ~ldeo CAC wltll" Iha 1epl :piwor to ailtnil call whm, -"'>'· ~ bid already been prohibited by onll~ from nnming free, but had DOI been tied to the same leash law ae dogs. . Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, who said _ he 'Want,i inother week to . study the acUao, wu the lone oppos1~ vote. 'lbe cat license, the Ont aucb attempt to collar cats ln Orange Ooonty, bas been the aource ol coostderable public debate, but it wu euily approved by COW'lcilmen Monday. All ol the lawa wlll need final approval from the council next Monday nlghl In order to avoid the need for an emergency ordinance, councilmen also approYed a shift in the. start of dog and cat licensing from April l to April 5. This provides for the required !O<lay waiUng period after the expectad fmal approval, Mardi f, If the startlng date had been left April 1, the new cootrols would have been plSled under an emergency dause to become effective, and that requires six of. the seven councilmen to vote yes. Such an emergency clause might have failed Monday because Al Coen was abseo~ and Tad Bartlelt said he would oppose tbe cat license. l\loslem Rebels Out MANILA, Philippines (AP) Government forces have retaken the last two Moalem rebel strongholds near Jolo, In the aouth Pblllppines, !be military command announced today. The commaJ>d announced the !'Wlr.tur• of Bud Datu Hill, ·nearly_ two mi es from the town of Jolo, and said the "Maoist .rebell" UM!d it as a sanctuary after they failed to win control of Jolo, the capital o( the Sulu archipelago, in a battle earUer this month. .,.., ...... '''" ""'' $EEKS. NO. 2-Sl'OT Supervisor Bottin Battin Running For Lieutenant Governor Post 0rllll"' Qlunty SuperviSOI' Robert Battnl of. Santa Ana alUIOUll<od Way he will run for lieutenant governor· on the Democratic ticket. Battin, a lawyer, told newsmen be OOd considered a number of options in arriving at the decision includ· ing possible tries for the posts o{ secre- tary ol state, attorney generaJ, controller and assembly. The First District. supervi- sor \\'OUld retain his sur~rviscriaJ seat If defeated in the J\Dle primary where he faces compttition from a number of candidates' including state Sen. Mervyn Dymally. During his yean1 on the board of supervisors, including one tenn as chairman, BatUn bas been in the midst of many controvc -sles. He was a bitter opponent o f incorporalion for the city of Irvine and a foe of the 1114ated land swap of Upper Newport Bay property between the Irvine Company and the county. He was a prime mover in an abortive effort by supervisors to change the assessed valuation on ·President Nixon's San Clemente estate. He Is still fighting (See BATTIN, Page Z) • • Hopeful Assaib .Just • 8upervtsor David Baker Wis absent from the meeting. The board action consisted of adoption of a resolution draltad by Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuyper stating that "the obortage of gaaollne has created a coodiUon of disaster'' in Orange County. The board asked Reagan to institute a gas managemmt system based on license plate numbers and to prohibit sales to drivers whose tanb are half lull. The system is based on one introduced by the state of Oregon where driven with even numbered plates would get ga.s on even numbered caJendar days and those with odd numbered plates on odd numbered days. Supervisors Robl!rt Battin, Ralph Clark and Ronald C8spen were strongly in favor of taking the action immediately because they said the crisis bas indeed grown to emergency proportion. "I cannot see how we could v.'Orse.n things by declaring thb emergency because the lines at gas stations should be half what they are now," Battin said. Caspen noted that quick. decisive action by the board wou1d be an indicator to county cities of just how serio~ the board feeb the problem ia. Clark, a service station owner, said he definitely feels more comfortable going to the cities after taking firm actioo. Dledrlcb's opposition stemmed from the fact that the action was so sudden. "Obviously we have a problem but other than· taking an emergency sumce there is no plan to solve it," he said. Diedrich said. before any action should be taken ·the eotmty sbould bave stand· by provisions to handle emergency (See EMERGENCY, Pa1e !) Boykin Blasts Incumbent Founlain Valley City Council candidate questions with his request for a review lune Boylc1n publicly attacted the wtiog of police department altitudes. He cited ncord of incunibenl Ed ·Just MOnday allegations of barusment of innocent •ICbL cltlaells, _poor response limes to crimes lust . .....,..i each of her flV,J and apathy. charces, whk:b he said ...... taken oat Noisy boos and hllleS gre<!led Clarence of coatext and }otingly added be could've Casper. an Orange County planning come up wlth at least "a dozen more" mmmiMkmer wbo una1ocessfully ran for over the post etgbt yea,., council two yeon ago, when bc fin! ''Illa two clulltd politely at a empbaoised his affiliation w I t h canillditeo nlgtit ~sponiOrad by the Supervtaor Robor1 Battin. • F011Dtaln Valley Cbambet' of Commerce · CUper tnontloned federal re,..ue at Fow!laln Valley High School. lbarlDg llmds the eotmty disperses and Eadl qi the nine candklates for w~ "U Fountain Valley wants help eleCtlcio te lhe CQUllCU March &, incllldii!i ' lflllni' this 'Jnoney, they .better 1tar1 the thrft lncumbent1, 1polte before aboU\ coming to mO." 70 people at the liogtby aesslon. At other Umes several people giggled 'Ibo •venln& ..... a mitture ol durlJtc Casper's remarks, as when he II a.-1 calla lot refonn. Mr. Ballin Is cooperaUve with ma and Mrs. Boykin charged that Just's record didn't liv~up to bis campaign pledges. Mrs. Boykin .. Id I jl:!t voted again.<! forming the cily youth commission, tilad a $1,500 espel1Se account Jut year, voted to keep a freeway route in tha city and for a drive-in theater in the industrial area, while promising to do otherwise .. JUll said he wantad· the youth panel to be an advisory bod)', not an appointed commiaaion. He felt lhe mostly traveling expenses were Justified, said the freew•y vute was In 1971 before new information iodicated a dl!fur<nl r0ute b possible and thought a driv .. in could bave been beneficial. • ~roml 1 e1, Uats of aaid ot Battin: "We get along together. ._ __________ _, .. , te .lobD Kally drew many -wbat I ... 8111 to.'' Another candidate's night wlll !ah place at I p.m. Thunday · If the Greenbrook Clubhouse, 18221 Sani. Adela (See BOYKIN, Page l) ' I ' .. . ~ .. • 1 \ .. ,, . LA Ration OK!'d LOS ANGELES (AP) -Loo Angeles Coimty became the first county in the state today to adopt an emergency "ga.soliDe marketing" plan based on license plate·numbers. (See story Page 12,) The board of supervisors V<>Jed 4-0 to put Los Angeles County residents on a gasoline distribution plan an nOWlCed Monday by Gov. Ronald Reagan. It can be imposed in any of the state's 58 counties where it is requested. It probably will take effect here Friday. No GNP Growth Petroleum Council Says U.S. to N~ed Rationing . NEW YORK (AP) -Tbe National Petroleum Council 1oday predicted the natlcll. Wiii have to -.. .,. fonn of mandatory gasoline ~ationing unles& federal a1l9cation 'measures prove .more el£ecUve. The council also said in a report that unless petroleum Imports are increased substantially before the end of the year, the real Groos National Product could not grow beyond present levels and wtemployment w:uld hit about six percent. The unemployment f'¥e. rose from 4.8 percent in December ~.2 in January, the largest monthly increase in four years. 'Ibe council, ~visory panel to the Interior Departmeflt comJX)!ed of oil industry e~ecutives, concluded that additional reductions in fuel mage, including gasoline, will be required to balance demand with supply. School Facility 'Lights Out' Pro g ram Okayed "Lights out" schedules have been adopted for tennis and biaketball courts at high schools in the Huntington Beach Union High School District to conserve energy. Turning oil night Ughls up to four days a week at a few schoob is part o1 !be district's effort to reduce .its power consumption by 15 percent. Southern California F.clisoo <i!ficiills ,.,,.,..tly asked the district to cUt back five percent more. "It will be extremely difficult for us," Assistant Superintendent Robert Martin said. The five district schools have increased ·their power usage in the last year because or extended day sessions and construction projects m three of the campuses, be explained. Martin said he and Edison officials would m<et with the district to help fmd methods of reduction. The llgltls out plan waa developed by district officials and members · ol the local recreation and p a r k 1 departmenls. Night lights will be on daily from 6:30 p.m. to 1:30 p.m. at only one bJgb school, Huntington Beach because of heavy school and oommunitY use. At Westminlter High, court llghta will be off Saturday and Sunday, with playing allowed during the week from 1:30 p.ro. lo l :!IO p.m. - Frtday, Saturday and Sunday win be dark at Fountain Valley High, with night· hours the regular, 1:30 p.m. to t :!IO p.m. the ~t of the week. At both Marina High and Edlson-lllgh In H1mtington Beach, night playing will take place onll three Dlghts a week. At Marina, the open day1 are iJOiifay, Wedoeaday . and Saturday. At Edison, they are 'l\Rsday, ThW1doy and Sunday • I In the report til\ed "Short-Term U.S. Petroleum Outlook -A ReappraisaJ, .. the council's commlttee on emergency preparedness aaJd !be. sbortage due to the Arab oil embargo could be met in the first three months of the year. But It said its study concluded that demand for petroleum products in the se<OOd quarter ol the year must be REAGAN OKAYS ODD-EVEN PLAN. Story, Page 12 reduced "by a substanttally hightr amount - over 400,000 baJTe.ls per day -than is now planned by the Federal Energy Office." Average U.S. dally conswnption is estimated at more than 18 million barrels a day. I And the report noted, "Exf>erjence does not indicate that all FEO measures ant fully successful. For example the motor gasoline reduction reported f~r January by the FEO was only about two-thirds o( the reduction targeted by that office." On possible gasoline rationing, the report said that "if federal aJlocatiom programs cannot both r e d u c e COMUlllption and satisfy consumers, the additional mandatory actions will be required." a It said these should include greater use of odd-even purchase p I a n s , staggered selling .;pours for service stations and a requirement t h a t motorists cannot buy gas unless their tan.t ts baa empty. U these measures are not successful Jn reducing lnconvenience and. if public compliance does not i m pr o v e substantially, "The nation will have no alternative but to .institute . some system of mandatory rationing," the report said. . Oraage Cout • Weailler Some low . cloudiness or fog is expected for the morning houn Wednesday, but otherwise sunny and cooler. lliibs In the ~ at the beaches rising to 70 inland. Oveniiibl Iowa mostly 35-46. INSIDE TODAY Jim Croce, who ..., kill<d last Sepkmbtr m • plone Ct'0$/1, ha..! two album# topping the tia.. tion't toles charts and ii o gra4' posth.umou.t 'ucceu .. StoTt1, Page 20. L. M. -.,. .. , .. _ •• tmt11i.. . .... Clwlk1 " , __ " ---• . .....,..,, .... • .. ..,. ....... , " .:..,•:::....., n.11 " --ll _.._.. -II M111tu.1 ,. .... .. N•lilMI Nlwt t. • °'"" C•t1'J • . .,..,"' ...... .. -· , .. ,, ..... _, .. '"'' , ....... .. --" w-• ..,..., '""" 1•1• W.,lt lftWI •• ' • • I \ ~ -... ·l'f· '• '' % OAILY PILOT H ·Meet F Oun fain Valley Hopefuls F ..... r .. e i -ope Clair BOYKIN • :-. --.... ~- Circle. The other cmlidate. and thtlr atatementt were : Priests Too About 201400 regl$tered vottrs wtll be eUglble to co.it ballots March S in Pountain Valley's ci!y couttcil elec· tlon. VoftTs will choose lhree of tUne cm&di.dates for :ieat.s oii lhe five-tnetn· bttr govtrnina body. Cou11cil tnem· ber1 serve /ou.,..yeor ter1t1 s. TM Daily Pilot today presents tlle first in a series of profiles of the candidates. Three questio1is were posed by the Daily Pilot lo alt 001tdldate.!: -ivhat do vou btli.tve are the rMjor issues iii rhl.s ca111paign? -A.re you sat isfied wlV1 tM city 's ·present industriak:omtnercial·reiiden• tial balance? I' -What are your qualificaticms·for tile city council? F0Uowft1g is what three of &ht catul idates said. The views of the other six will be pre~nted Wednes- day and Thursday. JUNE S. BOYKIN, 3S, of 16269 San Gabriel St., is a medical assistant and Hearsts A ~ait .Kid11aping ·Mess~ge SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -'!be lack of communication from the kidnapers ol Patricia Hearst Is taking its toll on the emotions of her parents. For the first time since negotiations by tape_ recording and televised news conference got started, the Symbionese Liberation Anny has gone more th.an three days without responding to publisher Randolph A. Hearst's efforts to win his daughter's release. Hearst and his wife Catherine, described by their children as "just dried out, but hoping," maintained their silence at the family ' est.ate in suburban Hillsborough. They notified the press they w'ould have no further statements "Wltil there is a major development." The Hearst family is receiving some 600 letters a da y from "'·ell -wishers offering support. Donations to the fam ily . and its food distribution project, called "People in Need," have ~ the $100,000 mark. The food giveaway originally scheduled to resume today was po6tponed until Thursday to give organizers more time to make arrangements and prevent the disorder and violence that erupted on the first day of the program. Frustrated crowds saw food scattered in all directions and fights broke out Friday on the first day, when trucks arrived late at distribution points. The SLA, a tiny terrorist sect which matched the 21).year-old granddaughter of William Randolph Hearst from _ her Berkeley apartment Feb. 4, threatened -·-··-ThllfSC!ay to "break off negotiations" if its deqiands were not immediately ) .. m et ·---·---~ ... Sell·styled "Field Marshal Cinqire" of the SLA gave Hearst 2'4 hours to add S4 million of his own funds to the $2 million food giveaway financed by the publisher and the Hearst Foundation as a first step toward Patricia's release. Hearst announced Friday the demand was "far beyond my financial capability," but the Hearst corporation said it would provide the money after the: girl was freed. From Pagel EMERGENCY •.• vehicles and motorists in trouble among other things. He asked for a week's study by county officials before any action was taken. After the board vote, DI e d rich commented to ne~·smen that the action by his fell ow supervisors tv a s reminiscent of "run a""·ay horses" and something like the panic buying going on at lhe pumps. OIANel COAST •• DAILY PILOT Tl!• Ot'•~ CNll DAILY P'ILOT wl"' wll\.cfl 11 cOl'nbl...,,.""" N.-l'ru1, II pvl)lfVttd bf !'It Or1rioe C11111 P11tlll1hi11Q Co~11y, '-" r1t. "°Uioot\1 lrt P11l>ll1Md, MON11y lhl'OllVfl Frkl1r. lor (Olll Mtsl, Ntwport &.1ci'I. Huntll'llllon 8111ell/1'°""11rn v1111y, l••- -...cto, lnlM!SMldltllldi; 11111 kn C~tef lt11 J11111 C1p111r1no. A 1lnot1 retloMI "''~" " P\lbtl•Md S..tullll'fl sM' S\ll'ICllV$.- T"9 prln<!pjlt P<*lhltillll p.11~! II ti U1 Wftl ••r ''""'· C0\11 ~. ea111011111, t1'a. .. AoDtr+ N. Wttd l'rt1'1den1 1NI 1'11111~« J1c:k l . Cw1l1v .. , " ' . Viti ltrnltl..,1 •NI Gtt1trt l M~ Tli-•• Ktt¥1!° IEll!tt Tiiom11 A. #llwqJ1i110 M•Mtlftt fl•IOt Otrltt H. L••• l icli•r' r. Ni ll ........... ""'"""" fllltft TtrTV Ct•rlllt Wttf °''""" C-lr lllW Hwr ......... OMc. 17175 l11ck a.vi-"•"" M1lli11t A44'011 : P.O. 111 790, 92641 -Offt<., L"'111'11 •111C1tt m ,o,.,., """"' (0111 Mt11 1 DI w,:;~:;r $1•11'1 N....,.ot! lll<l'll ml &o.11 .... trl U11 (i.mtM•l JDS N91''91 El C1tt11M • ..., , .. .,.... 17141 '4Jo4J21 c .... 1w .M....,...t.f MJ·1•11 ,.,_ H.,tll Or ..... C-"f C-..-iti.. -•ue C..,.rlfltt, lt1:t, CW.llf'I C•H ~li.to"'9 ~ft,, Nt -1tiorlt1. llhlltrt l'-. ........ --., •""""""'*"' JttrtM f!Mr .. ~ wlrnovt 1P«NI W. "'~•llft "' ....,.,.11'11 .--. ~ fi..M ....... •Iii ,, Cotlt Mt:M. ~i.. ~1111 111¥ Qf'f'.., a.t.1 ,,_.,_", ...... pJt -lfllrl fl'lllltll'f .. ..,INf_.. lt'5 _...,.,. L,.;;...:;:.;;..;;;;;.,_;._ __ ... ( .. \- a homemaker, .has 1erved two terms as pmlden1 ol the Fountoin Valley Park.1 and ReCree· lion CorrurUsslon and has been on the city Plaooing :Jmmls· sion for 1wo years. Active In scooting, file al10 Is a mem· btr l')f the Santa Ana Rlver ~1udy com- m.Uiee a· ' the city human environment 0Y.;1H Coniiiilt!ee. She, her hus"1nd Edward. and their two childrtn h.1\ lived ln F'ountain Valley for 10 ··c:.rs . 1MUee:: "I belle\'e the major issues in this campaign are all related to the--mponsiveness of a member of city COUDcil to· the electorate. Most important are the questions of strong local government as opposed to regional government. I believe that good city representaUon bu the ultimate Impact on the lives of the citizena due to the ·very fact that city officials are the most' easily and readlly acceasible to lhe residents.'' Baboce: "l am not satisfied with the city's current industrial, commercial, residential balance because there Ls not a balance. Our industrial area Ls still SO.plus percent vacant and our projected &!Ow_!h in t_!!at area Is lagging behind oommerciaT and residential grov.1h. ·• QuWlcaUon~: ''f\oty qualifications. of course, are the six-year period as a member of U. parks and recreatkln and planning c:ommlssion1. I believe d"'"11 this 'lnlemllllp' I have plnc<I vilua&le ln!lght Into what Is .-ry fer ellectlv• rt-"'11Atloo and publlc service." CLARENCE CASPER, !3, of 9700 La Capilla Ave., 1raduated from UC Berkeley and has a certlfleate ln plaMlng from UC r: lrvlne where he has I • done th.lee years po&t graduate work. A member of the UC "Project 21" study team on land use and open space, he surrently serves as an Oranie County planning comm! .. sioner. He and his wile, Kay, have one daughter and have Jived in the city for sit years. Iuaes: "We lack planned programs to bring ln outside revenues to shore up our very weak tax base. Making OCJ.l' Mlle Square rtcreatlonal complex a tact instead of having two years of. grand promises which, to date, have not resulted even In the turning of one· spade full of dirt." Balance : "l am satisfied with our city's industrial-«>mmercial·residential balance as envisioned by our present master zoning ·plan. HO\\'ever, I am terribly concerned with the complete lack of concem in developing and promoting our hldustrtal att:a. Of even more concern Is lhe dlsjolnlod pattam of our eIJstlna 1<attered commercial areas." QuUntloal: 0 1 am currently an Orange County planning commlssioner for our supervisor's district, lhe heart of which Is .Fountain Valley. Having a degree tn business administration· flnanco with thrte years post gradual• YJOrk at UCI in urban planning leading to a masters degree in govemn1ental management qualities me tor city council.'' HERBERT L. GARSON, 68, of 182888 Broollhunl St., gradualed from law school ln 1926, but nevc· practiced. An executive with Bar· ker Bros. furniture store from 1947 IO 1959, he is a r.lem- ber ol lhe \·etarans \ ol F<>r<lgn Wars, the ~· r American Legion, ~ the Ella Club, past president of lhe · Fountain Plaza Jnc. ·. t'OOdominlums and a oAlls "'~ former member of Klwan: and Rotary clubs. He and his wife have tYiO sons He is retired. Carson did oot answer the questions, but said he would accept no campaign contributions and made this statement: "I believe in conserving the environment and open employment \\1th no restrictions of residential occupation." -Al. Hollllldon, llteumb<nt: Sl1cl he b proud ol low-ootl clly ..m.... an officient Jl).year-bjldgel, completion of nine new neighborhood. parks , beginning the · Mlle Square recreational complex and wants to Vt'Ork for better rapid transit routes and a broader tax base for schools. -George SCOtt, incumbent: S a J d holding lhe line on laxes go hand·in·hand with Industrial development. He added he wants to work with property owners to see how they want the city to belp and said seven more dty ~rks are master planned for completion by 1977. -Herbert Gar.on: Al 68, he said he is the oldest ca1xiidate and offers "no platitudes and no panaceas." He is against fluoridation, wants m o re technical vocation training for youth. -David G<>uld: The city's problems ol balancing lndustrical, commercial and residential development and r~reatlonal needs are foremost. He wants l.> set dead- lines for completiOI) of the recreation complex and consider ecology and enfr· gy while pl&Ming. -Roger Stanton: Keef.Ing Fountain Valley a single fami y residential co,nmWllty with a total identity is important, as is allowing enough signs and other commercial amenities to enc6urage small businesses. He wants a tv."O-term limit for city cow • ..:il. 'Worldly' VATICAN CITY (UP() ~ Pope Poul has voiced concern that Roman Catholic priests may be lndulgini; In temporal wealth and late·night pll!asures. In an annual address to Rome Lenten prea chers, the pontiff f\.1ooday asked priests to be p00r and pur e. !rave social reform lo civil :iorhorlties and refrain from "acrid" criticis1n of Lheir own church . He also elaborated on his prepared text, saying that some priests thlnk too much about cars and bank accounts and spend loo much time "t night outside their homes. "There are students in o u r ecclesiastical college who now have the keys to their residences bt-cause they ro out (late) at night,'' Pope Paul said extemporaneously. "\Vherc do they go in these hours?" Kalmbach Quits Law Firm Tliugs S·windle V.S.-bou1ul, Gy psy Thro1ig lie added : •:\Voe If our priests want to be rich. \Ve n1ust not be like a priest v.1ho in his adv:1ncing age n1akes J:Umself a balance sheet such as I came to Rome ,without a penny . Now I have a house, an automobile, items of value and a bank acrount . No, this is not good business.'' Jn his prepared r,emarks the Pope answered crit icism made during a conference of lhe Rome clergy Feb. 12·15 in which some speakers called for social reform, accused the church of identifying with the Establishment and asked it to distribute its wealth to the poor. By L. PETER KRIEG 01 ""' Ctllr P'llOI Stiff Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach announced today he has resigned from the Jaw linn he formed in 1967. t-.1eanwhile in San Francisco, it was announced that the California Supreme Court will consider possible disciplinary action against Kalmbach. Kalmbach pleaded guilty Monday to federal charges of illegal campaign practices. He could draw a maximum sentence oftv.·o years--in prison and a $10,CKX> fine for one felony and one year and a $1,001 fine for the other misdemeaoor charge. The Newport attorney who told Senate Watergate COmrnittee hls family and hlsprotesaion ''"rM:an everything to me" withdrep from the film of Kalmbach. DeMaroo, Knapp and Chilllngworth ·10 days ago. Kalmbach, who pleaded guilty to two cha rges involved in the Watergate investigation, may leave the 1 aw prof~ion altogether and may go into the field of real estate lnvestments. Kalmbach v.•as unavailable f o r comment today but his Jong-time private secretary Ann Harvey said, "whatc\'er he does he will be the sole practitioner." In a prepared statement, Kalmba ch said : "Herbert W. Kalmbach, senior partner * * * * * '* Kalmbach Gives Secret Contribution Accounts WASIDNGTON (AP) -Herbert W. Kal mbach of NeWport Beach, personal attorney to President Nixon, has given Watergate prose<.i.nor.s an accolDlting of about $6 million in secret 1970 and 1972 campaign contributions a n d expenditures, the Washington P o s t . reported today. The Post quoted reliable sources as saying the money came from two secret funds. One of the fwxts, nearly $2 million, was used during the 1972 Nixon campaign to finance undercover political \\"Ork , the Post said. Kalmbach pleaded guilty Monday lo two charges of illegal c a m p a i g n practices. In return for his guilty pleas and his pledge to testify against others, the government agreed not to prosecute him in the Watergate cover-up or in future political contribution cases. The Post said the undercover work financed by the secret fUnd included the campaign sabotage carried out by lawyer Donald Segretli and the investigations of politicians' private lives rondllcted by former New Y o r k policeman Ant.holly T. lnasewicz. The Post also quoted the sources as saying Kalmbach is ready to testify that H. R. Haldeman, whHe White Hoose chief of staff in 1970, organized a $4 million congressional campaign fund drive. l\.feanwhile in Washington Monday, President Nixon said he had no knowledge that Kalmbach offered an ambassadorship in Europe to a Maryland Republican In exchange for a $100,000 campaign contribution. "Ambassadorships have not been for sale. to my knowledge," Nlxon told reporters. "Ambfl;ssadorshlps cannot be purchased. I would not approve any ambassadorship unless the man or "·oman was qualified -clearly apart from any contribution." Nixon said he had begun an investigation into the matter. Olief U.S. District Judge John J . Slrica deferred seritenc.ing l\.1onday after the 54-year-old attorney pleaded gililty on the t\li'O count!. Special prooeculor !.<on ,Jaworski said Kalmbach 1A'ould not be charged with any Y.'atergate matters . In San Francisco, it was announced that the calilomia SUpreme Court will Car Makers Assailed WASHINGTON (UPI) -A studenl or monopoly power charged t.oday the auto makers have used their economic muscle to lake O\'cr and destroy mass 1rans lt in thi s country -teavtng Americans especially vulnerable to the sa,.llne 1ho11age. In l,.Umony prepared for the senate antitrust 1ubcommiflee, Bradford C. Snell called for a law reorganizing tbt HBlg 'lbrff" auto maken into a group of competing auto, !ruck and bus firms. • consider possible disciplinary action against Kalmbach. earl H. Heil, disciplinary-counsel for the California Slate Bar, said the bar rrionitors crimlnal cases in and · out of the state and in the event of a convtclion obtains certified copies of records. They are referred to the state's highest court, with a letter advising that the crimes might involve moral turpitude. '!be high court !hen can c:!loooe from a number of courses based on whether the.re is moral turpitude or a probable cause of it. Kalmbach's privilege to practice law could be suspended in the interim. Before a final ruling Is made, the lawyer involved coold petition the high court to set aside the interim suspension and get a hearing berore a final ruling is handed down. Another C8Jifomi.a attorney, Segretti, the political dirty trickster who was sentenced la st Nov. 6 to six months in prison for conspiring to di.!lMbute unlawful material to disrupt the 1972 presidential primary in Florida, ls involved in a similar action. The California tribunal has a statement from the bar that Segretti's crimes suggest probable cause of m o r a l turpitude. On Dec. l the court asked the state bar to investigate and offer support tor that position. Panel to Launch Huntington Study A panel of city officials will help the HW1tingl0n Beach League of Women Voters (LWV) laWich a ltudy of clly government Thursday. The discussion panel will include: Adil J\1ay Hardeman . urban progr a m coordinator at UCI ; Prof. paul Schmidt, urban studies at cal State. Long Beach ; Dennis C.Ourtemarcbe, Seal Beach city manager; Don Bonfa, Huntington Beach ci ty attorney: Clint Sherrod, Fountain Valley planning dlrect<>r : and lleMls Thomas, Seal Beach finance director. The LWV will meet at 9:30 a.m.; Thursday, in the Murdy Park C.Ommurtity Center, on Norma Drive, olf Golden West stttet In H\Jntlngton Beach. A salad luncheon Is included with the :;o. cent registration fe.. The public Is In vi tad. From PGfle l BATIIN ... that lmle ID court. Alio as a county 1Uptrv1.J,._ Rlitln becked the creaUon or • coni~~ ar. fain agency, a housing auht rtty and a lobbyist control ordinance. Battin aloo Is considered lhe most !rugal member of the board and I• tile only supeMsi1r who stayed within his offict budget last yea·· and founder of Kalmbach, DeMam>, Knapp and Chillingworth. has withdrawn from the firm effecti\·e Feb. 15 to pursue persoual business interests a n d investhtents. "Following Mr. Kalmbacb's resignation. the finn bas be e n reorganized as DeMarco, Barger and Beral." That was the entire · te1t of the statement. James Knapp left the finn several years ago. Sherwood t'hillingwtirth. president of Adorada Corporation of Los Angeles, left at the end of last year. ln 1967, Kalmbach fulftlled one of his life's ambitions when be set up Kalmbach, Deldarco, K n a p p & Chillin rth. gwo . In the ne1t few years, Kalmbach roamed the nation and the world, successfully soliciting, by his ov.11 account, milliom of dollars for the Nixon presidential campaigns of 1968 and 1972. ~ one of Ni:J:oo's closest per90081 aides, &he 52-year-old Kalmbach received Vii> treatment during his fund-raising forays, often staying at U.S. emba!stes when traveling abroad. Then came Watergate and disclosures of Kalmbacb's role fu the scanadal Now Kalmbach's prosperous and fulfilling world is in a st ables. He faces a possible sentence of three years in p-ison and $11 .00> in fines. arter pleading guilty to illegal campaign practices, including offering a n ambassadorship for a $100,000 political donation. Kalmbach's biggest personal trial ii;i the montm since the curtain lifted on the Watergate drama perhaps has been its devastating effect on his re~tatlon and 111.s family. That family consist& of his wife, Barbara Helen, whom Kalmbach met while the two were undergraduates at the University of -Southern California. They have been married tor 26 years. The couple bave t\lt·o sons and a daughter. Kalmbach's reputation was once described by a friend: "II we were playing poker on the telephone and I said I had three nines and he said ht had three tens, I would believe him." TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) -A band of almost 100 gypsies, alter a trip halfway round the \\'Orld from Europe in hopes ol getting into the United States, was swindled by Mexican smug g I er s, abandooed on the U.S. border and jailed' A group of fl7 was held by the U.S. Immigration Service here today and "about 30 more" were bei'ng held in Phoenix, acrording to \Yilliam Selzer, a~IJtant chief Border Patrol agent Ivan Gorg Knovalov, mustachioed leader ol the &YJ>.'ies, sakl most of the band were born in Yugosla'via. but they have spent recent years wandering through Italy, Holland and Belgium. They decided to come to the United States, he said, "because it is every man 's dream to come to America and make lots of mooey.'' They flew from Holland to ~fontreal. he said, and from there to Mexico City, and then made their way more than 1,000 miles northward to the Ariz.Olla border. En rO\,\te. he said, they met a. ~ of Mexican amugglers, who offered to ~t them over the border into the United Slates·, for -a price. The gypsies paid the smugglers about $8.500, they said, but the smugglers robbed them of their belongings and dumped them on the border near Nogales Saturday nighl 'Ibey were trekking northwirct toward Phoenix when lhe border palrol rounded them up Sunday. Selzer said it was the Jargest group of illegal immigrants from Europe ever detained in Arizona, which gets a sizable traffic in illegal alien,, from Latin America but lS' far from the usual ports of entry for visaless Ew-opeans. A hearing win be held March 12 inlO whether the f!YP'le5 will be allowed to stay or be deported. Officer Kills Agent HOUSTON, Tex. !AP) An wldercover narcotics ofHcer was shot and killed early today by a uniformed city policeman answering a disturbance call, Houston police said. In his speech , Pope Pao! did not refer to the wealth of the church but asked priests to refrain fronl personal enrichment. "Be truly dCrached from 1noney and from. economic advantages that n1ay result to your advantage from religious activity by means of skillful and undue maneuvers," he said. "Learn to be stem \\'ith yourselves to retain transparent purity or" beha\'ior, both inward and outward, without yielding to in~nsistent and perhaps fatal pennissiveness. of \\•hich there is so much talk today," the Pope said. Pope Paul said the clergy conference on "The Ills of Rome'' v.•as right in stressing the responsibility of Christians in the cause of justice and charity. But he said "our charttable and social commitment should not be to the disadvanta&e of our properly religious activity ... " The ponti{£ also warned against "the .spirit of protest, \\'hictr has becom e almost an epldcmical. antiecclesiastical form of acrid and oft en preconceived criticism, which is by now conventional and favors a demolishing opportunism that does not serve the truth or charity.·' Police 'Harvest' Mari jt1ana. Patch A newspaper carrier wilh a good e\'C discovere.d a garden of aboot ·15 marijuana plants in a vacant Huntington Beach field f\o·londay, police said. The greenery v.•as growing on open land at LeGrand Lane 11.nd H£'1 Avenue, next door . to a large apartment complex1 police said. Police said they couldn't trace the ownership of the plants discovered by the 14-yesr-old carrier Monday night. So they uprooted the illegal gr. ~s and stored it in a police locker. -------- OVER THE RIVER and THROUGH THE WOODS - For ttiree more monttis Placentia Ave. will be torn up to widen the street. At times Placentia Avenue will be closed and access will tie available by way of Babcock St., coming from ttie back way. We !lope you will be patient witti construction as the resu Its will certainty be wortti all itie trouble. If you aren't adventuresome, give us a call, and we'll bring ~mples to your ALDEN'S home. · 19111 ST. CARPETS • DRAPES IN COSTAMISA SINCI 1957 1663 Placentia Ave. COST,t. Ml~ 646-4838 Mon .• ThUl'I. f to J :SO, fri, f to f; Jal, ":IO to J .. .-·--__ IL,__-!.- • • --! • .,.,. HAIFA -0 - 0 DAMASCUS SYRIA 10 20 "'· UPI Htwunf' TARGET AREA FOR HENRY KISSINGER'S NEXT MISSION Gol•n H.ight1 Bone of Contention Between Israel, Syria Bus Strays 28AmericanJewsFreed Hy Egyptians Near Suez 1-"rom Wire Services A busload or 28 AmeriC811 Jewish visitors went astray near the Suez canal front today and was taken into CU3todY by the Egyptian army, the Lsraeli military command reported. A military oommunique said the Americans, fund raisers from the United Jewish Appeal, later were freed as part. of the lsraelJ·Egyptian disengagement pact after being held eight h<urs. Egyptian and Israeli anny officers ·were reported in contact through United Nations peace-keeping forces to release the bus. "We have no details of what happened but we have received word that everyone is safe," a spokeswoman for the group said at Tel Aviv. 1be incident occurred in the oorthern sector Of the canal where Israeli and E;mUan forces are peacefull y disengaging wider the pact v."Orked out by Seoretary of Stal< Henry A. Kissinger. A military communique said the fund raiser3, all men, had bun touring th,e Sinai -a batUefleld in the October war -when their big blue civtllan bus "m1'takenly croesed inlA> an area Hayakawa's Plan To Run on GQP Ticket Rejecteci SAN FRANCISCO <U-'J) -The Califomla Supreme Court refused today to change election laws to allow educator S. J. Hayakawa to nm for the JJ.S. Senate as a Republican. Hayakawa was formerly registered as a Democrat -Out changed to the Republican party Aug. 30. He tben sought to file as a GOP candidate for the Senate but was denied certification because of a section of tile state Elections Code which prohibits certifying a candidate if he bas been a member or another political party within the previous 12 months. Hayakawa, as a candidate, and David T. Due, as a registered Republican voter, filed suit to overturn this section of the law, pointing out thf.t the former president of San Francisco State would be a Republlcan for more than a year if be were elected to office in November, 1971. controlled by the Egyptians east of lsmailla." Also aboard the bus 1''erc Israeli officials and military escort officers. 1be zone east of the Suez , Canal oppo1ile the war-scarred Aral> city of tsmallla has been held by Egypt's 2nd Army since the opening ol the October war. 1be military command said Israel im~lately informed the f o r w a r d command post manned by lsraeli , EgypUan and U.N. officers in the cease· fire r.ooe, and asked :or the l.mericans to be freed. The request was lodged under .the Kissinger agreement, which provides for return of stray civilia!..s and soldeirs on the Suez front, the command said. Israel has returned 99 pfisoners to Egypt under the agreement 'lbe Jewish fund raisers were the first Westeroers or oUtsiders Of any naUona.lity known to · have fallen into military hands oo an October war front. l\iteanwhile, Kissinger spent longer than expected with BMtish leaden today, then flew to Damascus to tackle "the key problem in tbe Middle East right now." "I hope we can begin progress towards getting peace talks started between Syria and Israel," Kissinaer uid before boarding bis special U.S. Air Fore<! jet!lner. "I coasider this the key problem in the Middle Ea.st right now." Jn Jerusalem, Foreign Minister Abba Eban said Israel smcerely wants to separate its forces from Syria aloog the lines of its disengagement agreement with Egypt. .. Grocery Costs · Climb by 1.8% WASHINGTON .(UPI) -Spurred by a second straight month of rising fann. prices, the cost or a typical family food grocery basket jumped $30, or l.~ percent. in January to a record annual rate of $1 ,680, a government report showed today. The increase pushed the figure past the ptevious recor:I of $1,653 set last August when the cost increased by $27, or 1.6 percent. 1be January figure of $1 ,680 was S305, or 22 percent, above a year earlier. Further increases are expected. Indian Hunters 1,300-rnile Trip E1id~ for 2 Boys HAVRE, Morlt. (AP ) -Two young brothers -their mother is remarried Wisconsin brothers set off from home -were given over lo juvenile authorities with Indian headdresses, a tom tom, to await the l,300-mlle trip home. a homemade spear, bow and arro"°'s Mrs. Plonka tokl newsmen i n · and about 60 cents. Milwaukee alter talking with the boys Douglos and Willia m Morgan, JO, and by tek!pbooe t!>at when they realized 9, ol Milwaukee told their parents in they had "kind of passed up Wounded a ROie they were heading for Indian Knee" In South Dakota, t'< decided ·country to !ind an Indian tribe wblch to head for Calllornla. WOllld adopt them. She oald the youngsters apparently The boys, 80flll or Mr. and Mrs. decided Oii Calllornia becall9e Indians Leonard Plonka, climbed aboard an are seen on t.levtsioo programs that Amtrak train without. tickets Sl.llday-origlnat< there. morning and tr~veled to Minneapolis, Mrs. Plonka said the boys had read unhindered by conductors. · Mark Twaln'a "Tom Sawyer" and a At Minneapolis they cl>anired trains, boot about an Indian ·~ who learned getUng on a BID'lington Northern to survive In the wtlda. passengel t<11in en ""' · Seattle, Officials here said the )'Ollllg explorers Wash. kept a journal. describing the trip "to They ovmhot Sioux Indian country MinaS3otl" and the journey on a In South Dakota, their apparent "MJna.ssota to CeaUe'' tnln. destination, and wowKI up Instead at Mrs. Pk>nka said Grant o!fered to Havre, Blackfeet lndlsn terrttory. take the boys "under his wing" and Their westward journey ended hero bring them home today. h1onday after Burlington Nor t be r n What awaits them when they rctorn? conductor Lee M. Granl ol Havre nolloed "'Ibey already know," Mn . Plonka the boys jumping over a ten! peg In said. "They said to me, 'I suppoo< we're a OO!nea f>UIOniU<ar and wed lllem r.>lnl lb get a spanking.' And I said, where their pan!Dts were. Well, do you SUJlllO'O you should get a The truth came out and the Morpn pol Oii the back?' " ' I -------· -• ' . • Tunday, Ftbru.r~ 2b, 1'174 H DAILY PI LOT :J ----• Reorganization at Fairview Seeds of Change Sown in Forni of Stltte Legislatio11 By Af!THUR R. VINSEL (Third. in a Serie!{) Sweeping changes have q u i e t I y occurred within the: v.·alls and wards that once were California's warehouses for wasted lives and imperfect. people in a less-enlightened time. A revoluUonary reorganization has been accomplished in only 212 years at Costa Mesa's ~~airview Stale Hospital ·ror the mentally retarded. TI1e sprawllng facility at 2501 Harbor Blvd. opened 15 years ago and funr" 1ns as a self-cootained conln1unity in its own right. Yet it has remained largely isolated from the overall Orange Co a st community in many ways. both by its miles of chain link fence a n d , occasionaJJy, a deep moat or n1isunderstandings. Some of these grev.· and were perpetuated inside the v.·atls and \1'irc fenct. Seeds of major change v.•cre SO\.•:n in 1969. by the I..anler1nan !\lent.al Retardation Services Act, a complicated- sounding piece of legislation really quite simple in spirit : ", .• to 111eet t/ie 11eeds of each re-· larded perso11, regardless of age or degree of lia11d icap O'Ud al eac!i stage of liis life's de11e/opnie11t." Internal connicts and frictions - particularly in past ho sp i t 11 1 adn1inistratioos -have stood in the Y»ay Of full attainment Of this g~J. So beginning in 1970. , five-man !'l<i!C' task force sat down lo v•ork an ~ turned FAIRVIEW 15YEARS OF SERVICE the classical clinical hospital concept upside down and threw the old organiza tional chartS and traditional chains of authority out the "'indO\\'. "We have eliminaled the old line organization of the mental hospital. on the clinical side,'' says Dr. Anthony N. Toto. Fairvie"•'s medical director and one of the architects of the new system. The plan is a model for clinical operations at all state hospitals for the mentally rel.arded and. in expanded scope . for those facilities designed to treat the state's mentally ill. Ther.; is a major distinction bet\veen the two afflictions. A preliminary Fairview study report by Behavior Sciences F.ducation Cefiter, of Azusa. in 1970 spelled out in words what many at that tllne knew and said: -The social climate is not geared to encourage innovation, pride in achievement, or personal and career development. -The presence of 'sacred cows' is widespread and there are many of thenl. -Hostilities exist. team1'·ork Is often discouraged, s p e c i a I intra-hospital empires resist needed change, and in some departments even talk of chan ge ls forbidden. Today, changes have come, after a 21.2·year process. Some SteJ>Ei streamlining treatment for Fairview's retarded residents -centered 7 • • ' _ DlllY "IMI Sl.lllf ,!Iott MANY CHANGES WROUGHT WITHIN THESE WALLS DEALING WITH TREATMENT OF RETARDED Costa Me sa's Fairview State Hospital Overcomes Internal Conflicts, Discards Old Styles in 10 speciric prograins -would have periods has been initiated. been unthinkable a decade ago. -An Offi ce of Program Revic\v Regulation "'hlle \Va s then the uniform evaluates the 10 treatment progra111s of the day. \vhi lc emp!oycS voted five annually. to determine th('ir success and years ago to wear whatever is colorful initiate an y adviscible new changes in and con1fortable. them. State-trained psychiatric technicians Disbanding the old departments and (P'Ts 1 and college-graduated registered giv ing therapeutic personnel more nurses (RNsJ were also engaged in-a freedom in \\•orking 11·ith patienls cold wa r over professional capilbilities appears to be having no!iccable effect and delegation of authority \vithKl the in staff rnorale, productivity and patient wards. progress. Certain department heads devoted to "Now. three tin1es as 111any of our their own pet t.echniques and treatment residents are enrolled in the Fajrview processes built empires or authoritY. 'School progra1n," notes Dr. Irving StoJ'ic. Change has conic: the hospital's con1n1unity l i a is on -Department heaOs now have been representative. eliminated. "Everyone ·is in1J'.)Ortant and some of -Perhaps a third of Vte cwn~some. 1-1-tJeir\ rple;; .are ·~1ur.r~.~ .:· ?a,dds Br. middle management structure has been Toto. who finds the new staff flexibility cu1 out. resulting in better lines of al the hospital stirs up lhe former communication. tendency to stagnate through the strict -Lower echelon employes who deal departmental specialization. directly "'ith patients are enoouraged "Before. each professional person had to play a greater role in their treatinent. 'a chunk' of a pafient," he~e.xplains. -They even initiate new concepts in "Often. as a result he was doing his the ther:ipeutic process based on their O\\TI thing and the individual patient daily observations, because they know was losing out." the patients ·and their problems and Thi,s problem is defined less fonna\ly personalities best. by psychologist Dr. Bernat Herskovets, -Many among Fairview's I . 7 1 4 director of the hospital's Behavior retarded residents gel treatmenl 95 a l\'lodificiation Program. result, actually tailored lo the individual. "Someone \\'Ould get a .sore fanny from that was unavailable before. sitting around his officC and he'd think: -A massive, detailed record-keeping 'There's a nice little kid over on such· syslem to map goals for. and progress and-such a ward. I think I'll go try of. individual patients by six-month to teach him to talk.· " Now. patients on each \vard are exposed to a packaged set of programs incorporated to treat their individual diffi culties. Once. the system required !hat a tncdical doctor head each department 1\•ithin the old stat.e ~pita! structure, shuffling papers and handing down edicts front the front office on how things should be run. "\Vc've got a broad representation or 1hc disciplines in our prograQ'l directors now," says Dr. Toto. ''And. the new method allows many more people to advance upward.'' The spread of professionals in Charge of the JO more -flexible units - answerable directly to the chief for successes and failures -includes two . medical doctors, three psychologists and rive other specialists. They are ~ch backed up by p. program assistant plus a nurslng coordinator. Dr. Toto notes that t\VO of the laUer aides began careers as rank-a nd -fil e psychiatric technicians. This once would have been im~sible. A major breakthrough for female staff members appears to have resulted. under the new hospital struct.ure, with four "·omen among the IO program directors. "Somebody asked me about that,'' says Dr. Toto, with a fliCker of a grin. ' "I just looked. around for the best man for the job," he explains. "And in some cases it was a woman."' -" 2 Do11ors Take Exception To Claims by P1·eside11t So Mucli For Co1ive1itions f\.1AboN. Ga. ! AP) -It was win one, lose one for the Richmond County Correctional Institution of Augusta. Antiwar Semi11ar On Government Land Def end eel BOSTO.tf (AP) -Two men who President~ixon said took the same kiQd of tax deduction he did fo r personal papers contributed to the govern ment or public agencies took issue with the chief executive today. One of them, Jerome B. \Viesncr. said he. never got any deduction at all for donating papers to the National .o\rchives. The White House subsequently ac· knm1iledged that Wiesner did not claim such a tax deduction and s1id Presi· denl Nixon regrets saying he did . Deputy Press Secrclary Gerald L. \Yarren said Nixon 's inclusion of \Viesncr in a brief listing of individuals \\'ho claimed -suth 1ax-deductions was based on nc"'S accounts citing Wiesner as one who had given papers ~J the governn1ent. . Nixon, in his news conference ~1onday night, said that Wiesner, John Kenneth Galbraith , fonner Vice President Hubert H. Hun1phrey and the late President Lyndon B. Johnson were among those "who made deductions such as I made in lhis particular case." Pool Ct1e Death Suspect Seized SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Navy says a 20-year-old sailor is being held for investigation in the slaying of a shipmate who "-'as bt!aten to death with a pool cue. Ainnan Charles Goodman. 19. Or Rockford. !U.. diejf In a hospital Thursday, 11 days after he \\'as struck over the head at a North lsland Naval Air Station recreation room. A Navy spokesman said ~1onday that Fireman Victor L. Bennett of Cleveland was arrested ln the incident. Both were aewmen on the aircraft c a r r i e r Cons1'llatt0n. ) • Nixon refe rred to a federal trix derluc· lion of $576.000 he took for tl:e donation of vice presidential papers to the National Archives. Such deductions have been ruled out and there have been allegations that Nixon's donation of the papers did oot come until after the cutoff date. \Vlesner. p res i den t of !he l\1assachusett s Institute of Technology, said he contributed his papers frorn PRESIDENT, SEES GOOD YEAR FOR GOP, Page 4 NIXON DISPUTES SHAH OF IRAN COMMENTS, Page 12 1961·1964 \Vhen he \l'aS a prcsidcutial science adviser. But he said he has never taken any tax deductions [or the gift. "I don't know where the President got his infonnation , but he 's wrong," Wiesner said. · Galbraith, Harvard econ o n1 i cs professor and former ambassador to India, said he took a $4 ,500 tax deduction ln 1966 for private correspondence with a "wide variety of people from John Steinbeck to Adlai Stevenson. "In 1966, I gave my personal correspondence and manuscripts to the Kennedy Library at their request. These were valued , as I recall, by appraisers selected by the library at ex<1ctly $4.500."' Galbraith said in a staternent issued from Swilzerland, wHerc he Is resting and writing. "Being 1966, that deduction required no i'ejuggling or the date to make it legal," he added . Humphrey said ·earlier that he took federal lax ded11ctions of $199.153 on the donntlon or his vice presidential papers to the ~fumcsota HJstorlc.11 Society. lie said the contributions involved the years 1969 to 1972. , The warden permitted t h e president and vice president of the institution's newly chartered chapter of the Junior Cha1nber of Comn1erce to aHend the state J a.vcee convention here under guard . Scott ~lcPhC'rson . the inmate president. returned. Edward N. Glover. 24. a probation violator and car thit?f. the chnptcr vice 1>resident. attended a drug-abuse ~t'n1i11a r at the convention Saturday nigh1 and ha sn·1 been seen si nce. .;ays the \\'ardcn. Heroi11 Valued • - r\t $7.8 Millio11 Seized in Bronx NE\\' YORK 1 UPI) -Two men were arrested and 26 pounds of heroin with a street sale value or $7.8 million were seized In a raid on a Bronx "cutting mill." In \\'hat \Vas described as the third large51 drug raid in 1hc city's history. spc<:inl cily narcolics prosecutor Frank Roge rs said federal and cily narcotics agents found the heroin Monday -night bf.hind n 1nagnt>tically operated false closet in a Bl'(.11 i1: 11.partn.enL TI1c apartment was described as 1'I "Heroin cullinj.l'. mill " "'here the drug was diluted wlth mannill' ror snlc 10 t:l.•·tributors. The heroin. in plastic bags. nlong "'ith scales. four guns. several bags or mannlte. surgical face masks and olher paraphernalia. was dlsplo.yt>d at a ncW$ conference after the raid . \l.1ASHINGTON tU PI ) -An aide to · Rep. Ron Dellun1s (fJ.CaliC.) has defended the right or antiwar activists Jane Fonda: and Tom ~layden to use government property for a series of seminars. Michael Duberstein, De 11um s 1 legislative analyst. said J\1onday the si1 sen1inars conducted by the 11''0 in Iha ~ past three weeks were legitimate uses for 1neeting rooms in the Capitol co1nplex. !·le said the roon1s are public faci li ties, "and all taxpayers have a right to use thcn1." . 1 Ql'cr the "'cekend. Reps. Bill Dickinson 1 l~·Ala.) and Trent Lott, (R·Miss.) strongly protested the use of ~ovemment 11ropcrl,\' by F'ondn and Hayden. branding !llclr opin ions ris ··comm un is• pro1>aganda" encouraged by a "small acconlmodating liberal faction in Congress. Fonda and l·layden have been in \Vashi ngton since Jan. 27, 1: ~ date iof the first anniversary of the Vietnam peace accord, to protest continuing U•.S.j support and funding of the Thieu regiihe1 in south Vietna!11 · Duberstein said t~ey \Vere representing a group ca lled the Indochina Peace campaign tIPC ) ol • which they are national staff members. i Ahcr a series of meetings with about 48 lawmakers in the llouse and Sen(\te, Fonda and Hayden moved to _ Jhe seminars for legislative staff mem'*rs tn discuss "various legislative strategies to end the continuing American !WKifng of the Thieu ref:ime." Duberstein slild.J The first session u•as held in a ltOtJse Judiciary Commlllt-e meeting roqm, 11•hile later sctninars "·ere condu~ed in roon1s of the I louse District 1 of COiumbia Committee. Ou'>erslein .id all sessions were conducted arttr ho¥J"S, be tween 6 and 8 p.m .. and "'ere attef'lflcd by some staffers representing t,>th RopubLican •nd O.mocratlc oflicehtlcl- crs. I I i_ • • 4 DAIL V PILOT Tutsd.-y, F'tbtwlry 26, 1974 Get Service With a Smile GASOUNE ALLEY DEPT. -"The reason Orange C.00.st motorists have so much trouble getting gasoline these days is because they lack C(l(Jrtesy and re- spect," one of my waterfront cohorts observed just the other day. "What's oourtesy and respect got to do willl lhe gas shortage," you ask. "Well ,'' he replled 1 '1v.'ben was the last time you sent your g1!5 statkm atteadant a Christmas card? Or a get well ca.rd?" Then he went on to expand upon the111eme. Mophead Reunima? --• .. -... -·~,-· ,. . ... .. . ~ .... ~ ... ~ ..... . . Pre sident Hopeful GOP 'Slaughter' At Polls · Nixed • WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nixon bns advised nervous Republicans to look to the familiar themes of pt.ace and ~rity 8! tin antidote \o Watergate in the November elections. Desptte slumping polis and eetbacks in two special e1eotlms, the President said at his Monday nlg!lt news conference he thinks "It will be a good year for those candidates who stand for the administration.·· SO FAR, HOWEVER, the political omens point the other wa~ DemocratS have ta.ken over Republican House seats In the first two elections of 1974, most ( NE f'S ...tNA.LYSIS . J recently with the upset viotory of Richard Vand«:rVeen rn the fl.1ich1gan district that has been represented by Vice President Gerald R. Ford. campaign in which Nixon """ landalide ~lec:Uon two years aco -before the \\'atergate scandals brokt1. I THE .PRESIDENT did not dJnic!ly .• assess the political impact of. Wllterpte, advising simply that R e p u b 11 ca n 1 candidates be patient and fOC'UI on the other issues. I Vanderveen made \Yatergate, the broader question of Nixon's leadership. - and a ca ll for the resignation or impeachment of the President major points in his Mlclilgan campaign. That upset has led «> Indications tbat some Republicans may· break with the administration in an effort to avoid Watergate fallout at the polls nert fall. Nixon said he wants· des e rving Republicans to \.\'in, and suggested that they look to political history and the 1){'1nocratiC upset of 1943. "We confidently expected to gain in the J1ouse," he recalled. President Jiarry S Truman was fa r ~ in ,the public opinion polls: Republican Thomas E. Dewey was heavily favored to win the \\'hite I-rouse." "MM.orists along our coastline have just failed to recognize the civic Jeade<Sbip status that has now visi1ed upon gas_ station attendants. People jmt oontinUe «> treat 'them like plain, ordinary crtizens. "WHY, I'VE WATCHED my fellow motorists sit there in those tong lines. honking, pooncllng oo steering whe<ls, slamming doors and directing vile ep~ and expletives at the man with the l!l!I nozzle. Ringo Starr said Monday he would not rule out a reunion of the Beatles. The Uverpool foursome are close to settling their business affairs. Ringo would not say when. if ever, the group would Sing to- gether. From left to right in this 1968 photo: Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo, George Harrison. A new Gallup poll gives the Democratic Party a l\l'O·tO-Onl' lend in congressionil.I election strength. The COWlt was 58 percent DCmocratic. 29 percent Republican, 13 p e r c e n t undecided. That would -point 10 a landslide Democratic victory if lhe election \.\'ere held now. As Nixon noted at the news conference the election year is yOWlg;-:the balloting months away. He said GOP prospects NIXON, WHOSE own poll ratings are at a low ebb now, suggeeted 4 ~r parallel in the 1948 suggestlon ol Seo. J.\\1• Fulbright. (D-Ark.), that Truman resign Jhe presidency. "If we're going to eliminate this gaso&e shortage, that kind of conduct has to go." "You think we should change our approach to the gas pump islands?" I asked. '"Out~ Londo1i Officials Won't Give Foocl for · Mast,erpiece Ver1neer Ranson1 will lmprove. • "What my .advice to the cal11idatcs very sirhply would be is this : It -is that nine months before an electioo, no one can predict \.\'hat can happen in this country. "\Vhat will affect the election in this year. 1974 . is What always affects elect.ions -peace and prosperity," Nixon said. " •• ,\\1e proceeded to campaign a,gainst ~ .. tr. Truman," Nixon Sf.id. "He was the issue. \\'e took .a bad licking in the Coogress in 1948." 8 Youths Killed 111 Wild Joyfide Into ·Creel{ "Definitely," my rricnd repliOO. ''What motorists in our area need is 'A Short Course in Courtesy to Those With Gas." SO then he expanded on that. 11FJRST, An'ER VOU'\rE been sweating out that Jong line for 50 minutes, when you finally get to the pwnp, yoo do not verbally flay the attendant, demand a tankful of premium and · complain that your gas man is shuffling about too slowly. "Instead, you ask him how ate his wife ·and kids ? You inquire into fris health. You tell him how nice it's ~n waitiig, just to get an opportwtlty to say 'Good Moining' to him. "Yoo ask him what kind or gas he has today. No matter \\'hat he says, regular, low-lead, premium at 66 cents a gallon. No matter. You tell him that will be lovely-it's just v.'hat you wanted. "FOLKS ~1UST RE~1EMBER that gas station attendants \\·ant to be loved too. Show him YOU care. LONDON" (AP) -A top official of the London municipal government said today that it would not meet a telephoned demand for $1.15 miUion worth of foocl to ransom the Venneer painting stolen from a suburban museum. A TELEPHONE caller vi'ith a West Indian accent told a n™·spapcr r.-londay night that the 17th century Dutch masterpiece "The Guitar Player'' "'ould be destroyed unless food \.\'Orth half a million pounds -$1.15 milliion - is distributed within 14 days to the · poor on the Caribbean island of Grenada. llltyd Harrington , deputy leader of the Greater LoOOon ColUlcil, said : "If anyone wants to talk, they have to approach us directly at the council. But I am not o[fering half a million to anyone. We ha\•en't got it. We are operating on .a shoestring. \Ve are not being blackmailed into any situation." The value of the painting , one or less then~30 by Jan Vermeer ,t.hat are knov.·n to exist, has been estimated as high as $4.4 million, but it is believed that it was not insured. It was stoltn Saturday night from Kenwood House in suburban Hampstead. Scotland Yard said it was treatlng the ransom demand as authentic and believed"-the Patricia Hearst kidnaping inspired the art theft Detectives pointed out that the theft occurred shortly alter television films showed food distribution in California in response to the demands of ~tiss Hearst's kidnapers, t he Symbionese Liberation Anny. THE FRA.\1E of the Vermeer u·as found Monday in bushes half a mile from Kenwood liouse. One ~mer .b.ad been broken off and the glass smashed, r~ising fears that the painting itself could hAve been damaged. "Be sure you pull up right next to the pump with your gas cap on the right side. Save him steps. Leap out and flip your ov.'n cover and take off your own cap. ·- "Offer to do the pwnping yourself so he can relax. Always address him as Sir, or Madam , as the case may be. Newswoman Con~sts GI ' "If you are going to "'·ash your windshield, take care noL to get into the atterw:l.81\l 's wa y. And be sure you bring your own paper towels and cleaner. Pay-, In Loud Manner 1· "AND FOR GOODSESS sake, don't check your oil there on the gas islands. You'll hold up all the other motorists seeking the favors · of your attendant. Clleck your oil at home. "Above all. remember to be calm. composed and smiling if. \\'hen you get to the front of the line, your friendly attendant plants the 'Out or Gas' sign right in ffOllt of you. "Smile, and say, 'Sir. could I possibly have an appointment to come in tomorrow at an hour convenient to you?' " How delightful it was that my friend took all this time to teach us how to get along in a gasles.s, changing world, where new civic leadership has emerged at the pumps . Trouble is, I'm just not sure we're ready for ii. WASHINGTON (A Pl -Once again, veteran neu·sv•oman Sarah ~1cC1endon made her point loud and clear. And it wasn't lost cm President Nixon . l\liss r..tcClendon has sparked acerbic exchanges at news conferences \\·ith every president since 0\\-1ght D . Eisenhower. During Nixon's session with the press Monday, the President said he \vas recognizing her because "you have the loudest voice." The reporter, "''ho represents a nwnbcr of newspapers and radio stations in Texas and elsewhere, then told Nixon some of his u:sociatcs "aren't giving you the right information ." Miss McClendon contended t h a t veterans going to college under the Gl Bill aren't getting their benefit checks on time . · Nixon began responding: "Well, thia is a question \vhich you very properly bring to the attention of the nation. It is a question that has already been brought to my attention.•· \\'hen the newsv.•oman interrupted, Nixon asked if he might finish hi~ answer. He reported that the head of the Veterans Administration,. Donald Johnson , Y..-as au·are of lhe problem. "In a loud voice, 1Miss McClendon retorted : ''He is the very man I am talking about who is not giving you the correct information ." Nixon commented : "Well. if he isn't listening to this program, I will report to him just what you said." That dre·v.; laughter. Afte!' Nixon turned as if to recognlze another questioner, he pivoted back to Miss McClendon and said: "He may have heard even though he wasn't listening to the President." Cold Grips East Coast Nortli erl y Winds Pusli Temperatures Below Freezi1ig Tempe ra heres Hi1h Low l"c1. Alban'( " " ... All•n•• " " ...... " " ... 811ft•lo " " ·" C"'-'1olle • " ChlC-..0 " M Clt!Cl-H " " "' Cl9Wl•M " " 0.11•• " " --~ " O."ol' " " .... ~. ' "' . .-.. " n lndl-POll• " ' , ..... " ' .~ K•MtJ (Jry • " LH \lm:•i .. " l.cMYll ri • " -· ,. " Ml•"1l ,, " MHw•ulo:M " • ~·-•PGll• " .. New Orlffn• " " N""' York " " .n Oll1t110m1 Clt'I' M " 'r.r'm,.., Wino• .. " .. " l"hll•dtlplll• " .. " ll'llotnl• " .. j .. (lls~fl " " :!: l"orfl• • Ort. M .. lltk11"'11114, v •. ~ .. ·" SI. Loul1 " " t:ll l•-t Clly " " fl Ft•11tlKO » ~ ...... " •• W•.tllfltlO!'I ,, " .J Co .. t•I We ••her .. , todtV. utht Vllrittlfe wind• -· ... ,_,.., _. _,,, wntwtr I to It krioh 11'1 .,,_, ......, •1'1111 WNl"W•Y• Hlflil IOd•'I' 11. '"""' """""•"""" ,... ''"'" .. 90 n. IN.nil ""'"°"'lhKn tl"'Ot lfOl'l'I 4 .. 1~. w ..... ttmPH••vt• ,J. ' -Uri WI olll .. 11010<.A~I C> Stoa, Moon. Tide• TUllOAY Stcono 111911 111lf 1.rn. ~.• 5t(OftCI low •101 p,m, 1.3 · WIDNl!SOAY ft!rtt 111911 t:tt p.1"t l D ~lrll low 1:l<I • m, ~ t · J«Of\d •ow ,,)(I p.m. 1,1 !"" 11,., t:n •Al-.1.tb~o."' Meorl lillMe t:JI t.m. ifft ll:tt P·""' S. Cllllforrtla Cool •i• creo1 tnrPU11ll Soli+l'ltnl c,;1;10t11I• IOll•v •J • flow °' dry i ..... oli/N (W$HOW ....... "'0Wlt~ ltOW DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE OeilV!~ ol lh! Dao~ P1~t is guaianleed _,...,,",. ......... ,... ~ ~:· ,.._ ul .. ,. "" .. 11t opt tt yw. Call .. IM Mii l::IG ••. WNJ 11111 SvndlJ: II fW .. Ml mtl'rt JW ttn fl! I llL ~.V,. • I I.Ill. $1111ry, UI _, I Ct11J wl llt .... ~\ II fW, tllt 11'1 1•11 tlli \11.g r~eitionts "'' ~ ... c..ty ........ .142-021 ltrtll•Ut lilllli!!ll• lucll .. "'""'"" . " ..... 140· 1221 $al CltMlt. Ca;slt• Ml s. .. _ .. ""' "" IJllU. tc"' llpll .. 412-"21 The telei:Mne caller told the ~·s edilol' o( The Guardian: "J am 1he one \.\tio took the Vermeer. We have the plctUre at Highgate (a suburb in north Londoo). We are from Grenada. We want hall a million pounds worth ol food tor tne people of Grenada, <he poor people. We want it within 14 days. If wo don't get the food , we will deotroy the ploture. 'lbere will be more raids." The_ tllieves broke through a barred, ohutl<r'ed window at Kenwood Hou.se with a sledgehammer after padlocldog the front doors from the outside to delay any attempt by the guards to dwe <hem. Guards said the raid took less than a minute. GRENADA, AN island group with more than 100,000 ]people. gained lnd~nce' __!rpm ~taln earlier this month amid considerable tunnoil. -Some ol the Grenadane fled to other islands, oaytng they feal'OO persecution by Prime Minloter Erle Galry's secret police. People miles, that Is. Those were central ,themes of the Divorced Me1i ~et Alim_on y? TORONTO, Ont. (UPI) -Eight leen- agers joyriding in a stolen staUm wagon were killed late Monday when the vohlclo "'ent off the road 25 miles ws of here and phmged do"'1 a ISO.foot embankment into I cr.d<. , ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -The ,Halton regional pollce said only ooe Nev.· York State Senate Monday youth, Scott Patridge, 15, ntrVtvtd the passed a measure that would give a divorced man a right--to sue-accident. l~e \.\•as hospitalized "ilh head his Conner vtife for alimony. arid shoulder injuries. Police said a tenth The bill . v.'hich now goes to the youth bad been in the car when the state's house. \.\'US approved 55-3. joyride began but left his friends after l'IS sponsor, Sen. Albert B. Lewis a S\\itch in drivers. of Brookl yn, said giving a man ~fore ~ fatal plunge into the creek, the r1ght to sue for 1:11imony was--police_~hc~ar .w_as ~ing driv.en "a move to Y.."Omen's lib_ tov.·ard around a . field near the ~1gh\.\·ay. The equality of treatment ., car. a 1973 Chevrolet, earner had been · report..i stolen from a · d .. lor in nearby Oakville, Ont. on. " Tokingfhebuscanbeyourcontributionto theenergysituo-I-- --- - - - ---I tlon. And with over 2,08. 7 bus stops and 19 roules ,serviclng 22 of for ;nformo!ion on bus schedules, send thl1 to OCTO, 2 I U26 E. W0Uirng1on Ave., Sonto Ano, Colif, 92701, or coll I the 6 cities in Orange County, toking the bus con be convenient. 17141 $47.6004. An~ cheap. One quarter does it. No matter how for you 1 _ go. Transfers ore free and children unde r 12 ride free when oc- componled by a fore paying passenger. We'll else get you there In comfort. Wltb new buses. Vinyl bucket' sects, package rocks, and air condit ioning. look over our bus schedules and you'll see what we mean. Timetobles that scan easily. Generol @+i Information. And on ove,roll route mop. Noxl time toke lh• bus. I Add'91S·------------- LC''Y'-=-------'--llp1 ___ 'L_ , • . . " . . . • ' '' I \, { l • ' -- "-~ _L • I, - , .; .. -: •, . ~ f . • ' ' • " ' ~ ~ " .. • . :. .· ,. ' ,I , ' j , • .' ' . • .. ~ " .. • ' ' ... ~ ~. . . . . . . ' - Today's Final N.Y. Stocks • . VOL. 67, NO. 57, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1974 N TEN CENTS ·: .l Badham Seeks Separate Coastal Panel for OC ' By CANDACE PEARSON or "" o.itr l"ll•t s11H Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach) has introduced a bill which would establish a separate coastal commls.sion for Orans:e County. 1be measure was tenned impractical today by the chainnan of the existing South Coast Regional Zo..1e Conservation Cbmmission, which also covers Los Angeles County. • It wouJd take a minimum of six months and considerable expense to split the commission now and begin a new staff and get new offices for a second panel, Dr. Donal<:! Bright explained. Bright also said Badbam's bill. AB 3219, ls a return to local, not regional government. "It ls clear, I think, that home rule hasn't been responsive. "That's what brought Proposition 20 around," added Bright, referring · to the 1972 coastal zone act which established the commissions. Reached in Sacramento, Badham said ........ -oun today be introductd the bill Monday partly at the urging of Orange County SuperviJOr Ronald Caspers, who is a member of the South Coast c&nrnission. Badham said the South C o a a t commission ls too overburdened with handling the backlog of construcUoo permit applications to adequately band.le U1elr planning tasks. "If ti:te LA.Orange C-ounty commission comes up having the least input to the stat,., commission," he said, "we're going to take a se<.'Olld seat again:" ~:' _ __,___. _____ '_ -City Pla ns Branch • r ' Librar y Newport Beach councilmen r'.\1onday night gave strong support to plans for a Newport center library ov~r objections of West Newport residents v.•ho said money should iristead be spent in their area for parks. Attempts by Mayor Donald A. ~1clnnis. v.·bo lives ia \!lest Newport , and Councilman John Store to water down the policy were beaten down by other councilmen. · The policy commit.I the citaul: bud&<l: · at-Imt ball of liiluni 6iiIJ uciie ta1 revenues for library constructlon. Store wanted the wording changed so that no more than 50 percent of that in<ome could go for tbe library . MclMls, who eventuaJty voted for the poijcy, wanted the policy to say the library would get "an equitable amount." "If we say 'an equitable amount,' that doesn't mean a heck of a lot," countered Councilman Carl Kymla. City library trustees have announced plans to build a 1.3 million ''branch" library in conjunction with the planned cultural center at Newport center. Trwtees are counting on a donation of land from the Irvine Company. Several resident"!, Including. library board members, appealed for the official council blesing. ·Bot Deal Offered '. . • ' I .It's atl ill wind that biows no good. Real estate ·woman Betty Boven hand.5 out hot coffee to motorists waiting for gasoline at Union Oil Slation<ill. Eastbtulf·Shopping Center. Newport Beach. Coffee drink· ers also get Bettyls business cant ''I cannol understand the philosophy of small libraries within walking distance of everylx>dy," said 1'lrs. Julie Banning, 1752 E. Oceanfroot, Balboa. "You can get the same books in the supennarket. "If you v;ant' to have books with JOme depth, you have to have a better, larger, central library," she said. Paul Balalis and Margot Skilling, officials of the West Newport Beach lmprovement Association, a r g u e d against the policy. Supervisor Bob Battin To Run For Lt. Governor "I thought the central library concept was abandoned over a year ago," Bala Us said. "West Newport went SO years wilhout a library," Nn. Skilling said, tolling councilmen tbey should wait until the resideatlal area around Newport Center gets built up and tlle people come down -like West Newport residents dkt - and demand a library. "Let the people come down and say they need a library like we did," she said. Mrs. Skilling said money v.-ouJd be better spent for parks in West Ne\vport . Mcinnis, who repeatedly said the library board d~served a committment. from councilmen, neverth eless encouraged a Watered-down version. "People have told me no way abould (S.e UBRARY, Page 21 CQa.Ch' s Drunk • Rap Dis missed Drunken driving charg.. In Orange County against Los Angel .. Rams head football coach OIUCI: ' Orange County Super. isot Robert Battni of Santa Ana knnoun : .'Cl tocla}t he will nm for lieutenant governor on the OeniocraUc ticket. Battin, a l1'wyer, toid newsmen he had considered a number of options in aniving at the decision includ- ing possible .tries for tbe posts of secre- tary of state, attorney_ ~~ coatr9Uer and auembly .. The First ~rict sw>6vi· sOr would retain his sur-,rviscrial 'seat if defeated in the Jwte primary where he faces' competition from a number of, candidates' including state ·Sen. Mervyn Dymally. During 'his yeara. on the board of supervisors. including one • term as chairman, BatUn bas been in the midst of many confrov<·-,ies .• He was a bitter op(ionent o f fbcorpOratlon for the city of Irvine and a foe of the ill-lated land swap of Upper Newport Bay proJ)erty between tbe.frvine Company and the _county. He was a prime mover in an abortive · ellart by supervisors to cbarlge tbe ' assessed valuation on Pruident rfii:on 's Son Clemento estate. He Is still flghtliig Moslem Rebels Out Knox have been dismissed In Wes\ Orange County MunlclPJll Court. lllANILA, Philippines (AP) Koox instead plcadeil guilty to Oovmunent fortes have retaken tbe a reduced charge of ...ctlw lllt two Moslem rebel strongholdl near tlriYing growing" out of the incident Jolo In the th Phili inel ,,,. " in March ol last yeer when • IOU PP • ">" militarl' command announced today. '!be ~ was arrested by Westminster~· command announced the recapture~ of police while attomptlng to negotiale Bud Datu. IUll, nearly two miles from a r,..,.ay oflrmp. tbO town ot Jolo, and said tbe "MaoiSt 'Ille Rams ""8d coach paid a r'obels" used Ii-as a sanctuary alter fin• o1 $1Jtl, according to court ~ failed to· win conlrol ol Jolo, the r~. aipi.tal ol the sulu archi pelago, in a '-------------' -batlle-.. lior tltis.month . SEEKS 1\10. 2 SPOT Supervisor Bottin . . . t&ot lsau• in court. AllO as a couo{y ,iipervisor, Bottin backed the creeUon ·of a consumer 'Bf· lain agoocy, a housliia auhkrity 111d a lollll>1$t conln>I ordinance. Battin aioo ~ considered the most frul•i member of the , board and ts the only :oiperviaor who stayed within ~t. olllce b\Jdeet lilt yea --'"-·-·· -·---4 i ~. .( • " ~ • r ... . ... • . The regional commissions are helping draft a coastal master plan due in tbe legislature by 1976. Badham said his bill ts designed to .. make the whole intent of the inltlaUve work rMre effect1vely. Orange County has different problems from Los Angeles." It would split the current 12·mem ber commission, with Us seven Los Angeles and five Orange County members, in tY.'O,· and create two commissions of 13 members each. Asks Reagan For Fuel Managing By WfLLIAM SCHR21BER Of ffle O.fty Plitt Stiff Orange Cotfity supervisors today launched an all~t attack on the gasoline shortage by asking GOv. Ronald Reagan to declare a state of emergency here and impose mandatory fue1 management throughout the county • The board voted 3-1 to -decwe-tl\e emergiency which would not go into o(l'!'t ~\il ~ acts. Supervisor Rilph Diedrich, who said he w.,ted anoth« week to study the actloll, WU the looe oppositioo ..te. &ipervilor Dl¥1d Baker was absent from the meeting. Tbe board action consisted of adoption of a resolution drafted by Orange County Counstl Adrtan·Kuyper stating that "tbe sho~e of gasoline bas created a conditiOn of disaster" in Orange County. The ~ard asked Reag81) to institute a gB:!I management system based· on license plate numbers and to prohibit sales to ·drivers whose tanks are half lull. . The system i5 based on one introduced by the state of Oregon where drivers with even numbered plates would get gas on even numbered Calendar days and those with odd Iiwnbered plates on odd numbered days. · Supervisors Robert Battin, Ralph Clark and Ronald Caopers were stroogly in favor of taking the action immediately because they said the crisis has indeed grown to emergency proporUoo. "I cmmot see how we could worsen things by declaring thl~ emergency becau.se the lines at gas stations should be half what lhey are now," Battin said. Caspers noted that quick, decisive action by the board would be an indicator to d>unty cities of Just how serious tbe board feels the problem is. Clark, a service station owner, said he definitely feels more comfortable (See EMERGENCY, Page II La guna Artist Schwankovsky Rites Wednesday Funeral ee:rvices will be held in Cypress Wednesday for long·iime Laguna Beach artist F re de r I c k John Schwankovsky. the director w h o resurrected the Pageant of the A.tasters follOwing World War n. Mr. Scbwankovsky died at h Is Garberville home Feb. 14 at the 11e of 89. Tbe flllDOUS Joe Rosenthal photograph 11Flag Raising on Iwo Jlma" opened the 1946 "living pictures"' show following four years of PaaeanUeaa summen m tbe Art Colony liecause ol tbe war. Scbwankovsky directed the show for only one year. Mr. SchwankoVlky. and hll wile Nellle Mae, moved to Laguna Beach in um and t>W'Chaseef tbe Art Coklny'a ortctnal art gaUery. Later, they moved the gallery to~ property oo the comer ol Graceland Drive and Wlllon Street where ti still stand!. Mr. Sch-vak,y headed. the art ciepartmenl ... 'M.,u.f Arts lli«h Sc)loot in Los Angeloo and -coolidered by· many long-time Art ColonJ midonts as one ol the orliiJiai <CllllllUtm to "the city.'" He ..tltod "ha> teacbin1 in tl60. ·~ .r-, .. ' . The mechanics aren't all written into the bill, he said. but presuma~y the current Orange County members would resign and be reappointed to the new comml.ssion. Seven new members would be appointed. Sii: of the com.missioners would be "public" members, not representing any government body, and seven would be elected officials. The current balance Is ball and half. Badham said he didn't have any specific · cost estimates of the change, but estimated it would be "roughly double'' present budgets. He added !he commission needs more p I a n n e r s , whe\her or pot his bill suceeeds. The bill will be hearif in commit~ In March or , April. It will probably go to the Assembly panel on planning and land use first, B8d6am :.did. Bright said the original decision to tie the two counties was based on common transportation, intens.ily of development and air pollution problems. Both ccunties are in one air basin and are similar geographically, he added. ~· .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ... 1 LA Ration OK!ld . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Los Angeles County became tbe first county In the state today to adopt an emergency "gasoline markeUng" plan based on license pllte numbers. (See story Page 12.) The board of supervisors voted 4--0 to put Los Angeles County residents on a gasoline dlsltibution plan announced Monday by Gov. Ronald Reagan. It can be imposed in any of the state's 58 counties where it is requested. It probably will take effect bere Friday. Formed in 1007 Kalmbach S_teps Down ,From Coast Lqw Firm . l " , . ' By L. PETER KllIEG dfYI ago. Df "" o.itr "1,.. ."'" Kalmbach, who pleaded guilty to two ..JierJlert Jf~ Kalm]!odi ;~wport~ ~ invBJved In the WaterJate Beach announced today. he bas migned investigation, may -leave the-raw from the law firm be formed in 1967. profei81on altogether and may go into the field of real estate investments. Meanwhile in San Franclsco, it was announced that tbe_ cau!ornta Su~reme Court wilf cono1der possible . diaclplinory action against Kalmbach. !{almbach pleaded guilty Monday to federal charges of illegal campaign practices. He could draw • muimum sentence of two years in prison and a $10,000 fine for one felony and ooe year and a •1.000 fine for t.be"'otber mls::l.emeanor charge. Kalmbach ·was unavailable for comment today-but bls-Ioog;time private secretary Ann Harvey said, "whatever be does he will be the sole practitioner." In a prepared statement,-Kilmbacb said: "Herbert W. Kalmbach, senior partner and founder of Kalmbach. op!U<o, Knapp and Chiliinporth. bas wlthdnltro from tbe firm effective Feb. 15 to pursue personal business interests a n d investments. "Following Mr. Kalmbach's resignation, the finn has be en I TJie.Newport attorney wbo told Senato Watergato Committee his family and his pi'ofession "mean everything to me" withdr.W from the film of Kalmbach, DoMar<;o, Knapp and Cbillingwarth 10 reorganized as DeMarco, Barger and Beral." + New port Council .Gives Bac ki ng To Ma rina PW.ii Dreams for a major new marina In the west Costa Mesa and west Newport Beach lowlands recei ved a boost Monday night from the Newport Beach City Council. Acting on an enthusiastic endorsement by Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis, a West Newport resident, cotmcilmen adopted a four-part plan of action after reviewing a feasibility study that says the 3,000- boat marina can be built successfully with 139 million in public funds .. "A lot of us have dreamed ·about something like this for 1 tong time. I feel we should move on this as-quickly as possible," Mcinnis said as be convinced councilmen to: -Contaot tbe U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to ask them to begin what is seen as a ten-year effort to get Congressional approval for federal funds . -Direct members of the joint harbor committee to take tbe proposal to the Orange County Harbor Commission in bopes It will SJlOl1$0I' tbe project. -Ask the planning commluion for review and recommenda.Uons. · -Begin coordinatloo with the city of Cosla Mesa. Councilmen were told that wllile tbe Corps ol Engineors «Uld be expected to contribute about $4 million of the cost for engineering ol the mouth of the barbor, the rtmainder would have a nickel boost in the harbor district laX rate and a bood issue. Councilmen took IClioo alter reYiewtng a $1Z,OllO consultant.. report prepared oyer the last 18 months. City councilmen in Costa Mesa, which aioo peld for part• of the report, ·are upected to begin deliberations oo it .nut month. 'Ilie report was drawn up by the Looc Beach rum of Maffat and Nicbol ~ • That was the entire text of the statement. James Knapp left the finn several years ago. Sherwood Chillingworth, president of Adorada Corporation of Los Angeles, left at the end of last year. fn 1967, Kalmbach fulfilled one of his life's ambitions when he set up Kalmbach, DeMarco, K n a p p Ii: Chillingworth. In the next few years, Kalmbach roamed the nation and the world, successfully soliciting, by his own account, millions or dollars for the Nixon presidential campaigns of 1968 and 1972. As one of Nixon's closest personal aides, the SZ.year-old Kalmbach received VIP treatment during bis fund·rai.!ling forays , often staying at U.S. embassies1 when traveling abroad. 1 Then came Watergate and disclosures ol Kalmbadl's role ln the SC&nadal. Now Kalmbach's prosperous and (See KALMBACH, Page II Oruge ~ut • Weather Some low cloudiness or fog is expected for the morning houn Wednesdayl buC otherwise SUMY and cooler. I!liha in tbe mid-Ms at the beaches risinc to 7tl inland. Ovemlgbt !Owl mo1tly 35-la INSIDE TODA 1' Jtm Croce, who wcs killed lcat September in a pla~ crasl1., ho.I two album.1 toPPing the na· tion'1 sale..t charts and is a great post.ltumow sucetss. Storu. Page 20. L. M. lf'lf ~~~= (eft'llCI CrMlwtnl DMnt Hetlctl ••tMrill "'" Rtt .... l-1111Mft1 f'IMMI My CMr-Mtt' ·~­AIWI L ........ n ... •H " " I •• " 11•11 " .. " , ' •l I ' .. I • ,1 • • • • • 2 OAJL.Y PILOT --- 1\To GNP Grotvth? Petroleum Pariel Sees Rationing I NEW YORK (AP) -The National Petroleum Council today predicted the n11Lion .,_,,ill have to institute .90me form ol mandatory gat01ine rationlng unless t•raJ allocation measura; prove more effective. _ . The council also said ln a reporl Hearsts Await Kid11aping Message SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The lack of communicaUon ,from the k.idnaper.1 of Palricla Hearsl Is taking Its 1011 ·on the emotions of her parents. ·, For the first time since negotiations by tape recording and televised-news '~ercnce got started, the Symblonese 'beraOon Anuy has gone more than ·,.. days wilhool responding lo publisher Randolph A. Hear>t's dlor1s to win bis daughter's release. . Hearst and bis wife tatherlne, described by their children as "just dried out, but hoping," maintained their silence at the family estate in suburban Hillsborough. They notified the press they would have no further statements Huntil there is a major development." The Hearst family is receiving aome 600 letten a day from well-wishers offering support. Donations to the family and its food distribullon project, called ••People in Need," have passed the $100,000 mark. The food giveaway originally scheduled to resume today was postponed until 'IbUJ'!day to give organizers more time .to make arrangements and prevent the disorder and violence that erupted on the first day of the program. Frustrated crowds saw food scattered In all directions and fights broke out Friday on the first day, when trucks arrived late at distribution points. r The SLA, a tiny terrorist sect which \onatched the 20-year-old granddaughter of 9JtHliam Randolph Hearst from her ~l!eley apartment Feb. 4, threatened "!'hursday to "break off negotiation.5" Jf it.s demands were not immediately ~et. •~ ~If-styled "Fieli:I Marshal Cinque" of the SLA gave Hearst 24 hours to add ~4 million of his own funds to the .. '? million -food· giveaway_ flnanced by {he publisber and the Hearst Foundation es a first Step toward Patricia's release. Hearst announced Friday the demand \f8S "far beyond my financial capability," but the Hearst corporatioo said it would provide the money after · the girl was freed. Meanwhile, two members of the Symbionese Liberation Anny pleaded innocent Monday to the murder of Oakland's black school superintendent last November. Joseph Remiro, ?:I, and Russell Little, 26 were arraigned on charges of killing su1perintcndent 11arcus Foste r with cyanide bullets. Their pr e l l m l nar y bearing was set for April t. The two were taken acrosss San Francisco Bay from San Quentin to the Oakland courthouse with handcuffs on their v.·rists and irons on their legs, but Municipal Judge Stafford P. Buckley ordered the bonds removed. James Jenner. Little's att orney , protested that the suspects had ~n moved from an adjustment center at San Quentin to the death row maximum security facility and were occasionally put in the "hole" used for rebellious inmates. "There are no lights. It's filthy . ll stinks," Jenner said. "These men have not been proved guilty. They are being treated like convicts." . The judge said the attorneys should Ci>mplain fim to prison authorities. OU.N61 COAST N that unless petro1ewn Import& are increased substantially before the end of the yea,,.. the r~al Gro&1 National Product could not grow beyond prHtnt levell and unemployment w:uld hit about sll percent. The Wlemployment rate rose from 4.8 percent in Dectmber to 5.2 in January, the largest monthly increase in four REAGAN OKAY$ ODD-EVEN ' PLAN. Story, P1go 12 years. The council. an advi.9>ry panel to Ibo lnl<!rlor Deportment composed ot oil industry executives, cooclOO.ed that additiooal reduct.ions in fuel usage, including gasolin<, will be required .10 balance demand with supply. In the report titled "Sbort·Tenn U.S. Petroleum Outlook -A Reappr.Ual," the council 's committee on-emergency preparedness said the shortage due to the Arab oil embargo could be met in the first three mooths of t.be year. But it said its study concluded that demand for petroleum products In the second quarter of the year must be reduced "by a subsfantially higher amount -over 400,000 barrels per day -than is now .planned by the Federal Energy Office." Average U.S. daily consumption is estimated at more than 18 million barrels a day. And the report noted, "Experience does not indicate that all FEO measures are fully successful. For example, the motor gasoline reduction reported for January by the FEO was only about two-thirds of the reduction targeted by that office." On possible gasoline rationing, the report said that "If federal allocations programs cannot both r e d u c e consumption and satisfy consumers, the additional mandatory actions l\'ill be required." It said these should include greater use of odd-even purchase p I a n s , staggered selling hours for service stations and a requirement t h a t J110tarists cannot buy gas unless their tank is half empty. If these measurt!!I are not successful in reducing inconvenience and if public compliance does not i m p r o v e substantially, "The nation will have no alternative but to institute some system of mandatory rationing," the report said. ln his nev."S conference Monday night, President Nixon said there is "A much better than even chance" that the nation csn avoid ,,i,tioning;·He--sai4 conservation measures undertaken by the American public were responsible for the optimistic outlook. FromPqel EMERGENCY ... going to the cities after taking firm action. Diedrich 's apposition stemmed from the fact that the action was so sudden. "Obviously we have a problem but other than taking an emergency stance there is no pla n to solve it," he said. Diedrich said before any action should be taken the county should have stand- by provisions to handle emergency vehicles and motorists in trouble among other things. He asked for a "'-cek's study by county officia ls before any action was taken . After the board vote, Died r i ch commented to newsmen ttiat the action by his fellow supervisors w a s reminiscent of "run away horses" and something like the panic buying going on at the pumps. Officer Kills Agent HOUSTON, Tex. IAP) An u!tdercover narcotics officer was shot and killed early today by a uniformed city policeman answering. a disturbance call, Houston police said. • . . -. ' . ~ .... _ ... ., . ., ... - Secret Gifts Newport C-ouncil Action Here ln brief are major 11cilonl Wien Monday by Newport Beach city counciltQeo: • •• Kal.mnach Gives UDAJIY1 ·Adopled pollcv. committlnl polllkal 1uPP!ll, and 11111>ey, iOr -of otw "brandl" library •t Nflllllll ~ . -... \ BUILDING: Elllcled' Jone propooed re.illellti.i devdoPIJlllll standards lo coiitrvl density and lncrtiu parking In older lleCllonS. Finance Account - MARINA: Voled lo aslr Anny Corpe of Eng!noers lo begin study on West Newport Harbor and asked Orange County Harbor Dlatlict Jo sponsor 139 million project after enthusiastic endorseP\ent by Mayor Donald A. MclMis. UDO ISLE: Tabled homeowners' request to renew their private lease to lslaod beaches for at least a month, pending receipt of tecal opl.nlon. BRIDGE: Reeolved proposal from Don Koll Company 10 build a pedestrian and bicycle bridge across Udo Qianne.l from Orange County Dock property to Elks Club parking Jot-at no cost to the clty. TENNIS: Heard Perks, Beacheo and Recrution CommiS&!on oulline lnlllel plans for an eight-court public tennis center somewhere 1n the clty. I Newport Oil Man Escapes Death at Gunman's Hands A Union Oil Company vice president escaped injury la te Mond ay when be answered the door of hl!s Newport Beach home, met a man aiming a pistol at him and slammed the door on lhe gun, causing it to fire past his bead. EdJYard Kendall, M, ol 2629 Vista Oranda in the Biulls,-I.Id police tie felt the murile blast' and :-':ock -wave of the slug whlpping past his temple. Nothing in the oil company executive's recent activities or career work could be tied to the case which poll.ce have listed as assault with intent to oornmit murder. "The probable motive Is robbery," said Detective Sam Amburgey, noting I.hat a woman was beaten under similar circwnstances on the other side of the Bluffs 10 days ago. Kendall, who said he answered the door about 8:45 p.m., said he believes he obtained a good description of the gwiman. He was reportedly a diminuUve Latin Councilman Asks For More Facts Jn, Arrest Ca.se male whO sa1d not a \\'Ord during the confrontation and shooting, which sent a small-caliber bullet throug,IJ an interior ""'all. Kendall said after he slammed the door and caused the automatic pistol 10 lire that be heard the gunman running away down the street. His wife. Amolboyd KendaU, was in the residence at the time of the incident, but was not near where the shot was fired , accordlng to investigators. Investigators could not immediately tie the Monday night ~,ciJen~ into one 10 days ago in which a Vt·c:::1an was bealen and robbed ol about (800 worth of household IW11iahings by a pair of men who broke into ber home. FromPqel LIBRARY ... I approve $1.3 million for a library. I don't think I am. But we have to start somewhere," Mclnnis said. Store, who pointed out the eiclse tax might be greatly Increased, urged bis wording limiting expenditures lo 50 perC<llt ol lbe tax. Store cast the lone ~"no" ,·ote oa Kymle's moUon lo adopt the policy. • WAS!ll!llGTON (AP) ·-H6~rl ,W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, personal . attorney to President Nixon, has given Watergate prosecu1ors an accounting of about $6 million in secret 1970 and 1972 campaign conlrlbutlons a n d expeoditurea, the . Wllsblngton Pos t reported loday. The Post quoted reliable sources as saying the money came from two secret funds . One of the funds, nearly $1 million, was used during the 1972 Nixon campaign to finance wtdercover political work, the Post said. Kalmbach pleaded gullty Mondo,r 10 two charges of Illegal c a m p a 1 g n practices. In return for his guilty pleas and his ·pledge to testify against others, the govenunent agreed not to prosecute him in the Watergate cover-up or in future political contribuUon cases. The Post said the undercover work financed by the secret fund included the campaign sabotage carried out by laV!:'Yer Donald ~gretti . and t h e investigations of politicians' privat~ lives conducted by former New Y o r k policeman Anthony T. Ulasewicz. The Post also quoted the 50Ul'Ci!S as saying Kalmbach is ready fo t~stUy * ·* * Office Girls Send Message To Kalmbach By L PETER KRIEG Of lf't 0.ltY Pli.t Slaff There was a telegram wailing for Herb Kalmbach when he got back lo ~imlng~, D.C., hotel l hi s Unlike most other me.ssages he's been getting lalely, It wasn't ordering him to appear 80Dlewhere or t e s t 1 f y somewhere else. 11 was from the girls et his Newport Beach office. "It says we're behind him 100 perctnt" said Ann Haryey, his private secretary Dallas A tto these post three turbulent years. Newport Beach Cowicilmen Milan rney "You can'.t ialow the mao wilhoul Dostal asked Monday for repor1s on .being proud ol him ," said Mrs. Harvey, police arrest procedures as a result N d , R her devoUon choking her words. of complaints over police handling of ame in epo rt She lied jult delivered t h e a teenage beer bust in the Westclif! aruxxmcem~ that Kalmbadl. who a area two weeks ago. DALI.AS (UPI) _ The Dallas Times . ll&Y. earli'f',~~.p1eaded guO)l to po!if\Clll Dostal emphasized that was ''not being Herald said today Ales Bickley ·was ~elili\g~'ilola!lons...ws, fetiVing lbe critical of police. I've just had a number the "dty attorney of ·a major city in prestigious New~rt Beadl and Los that H. R. Haldeman, while White llo""' chief ot staff Jn 1970, organized a $4 mJlllon congresfilorutl ca1npaign fund drive. Meanwhile in Was ruugton f\1onday, President Nlxoo said ha . ~ no knowledge that Kalmbach offe.red an ambassadorship in Europe to a .Maryland Republican in exchange for a $100,000 campaign contribullon. "Ambassadorships have not bee:n ./or sale, to my knowledge.'' Nixon told reporters. "Ambassadorships cannot be purchased. I would not approve any ambassadorship unless the 1nan or woman was qualified -clearlv apart fron\ any contribution." • Nixon said he had begun an investigation into the matter. Chier U.S. Di.strict Judge John J . Sirica deferred sentencing Monday after the 54-year-old a~tomey pleaded guilty on the two counts. Special prosectJtor Leon Ja\\'Orski said Kalmbach would not be charged with any Watergate matters. In San Francisco, it was announced that the Cali fornia Supreme Court will consider possible disciplinary action against Kalmbach. Carl H. Hell , disciplinary coWtSeI for the C8li!omla State Bar, said the' bar monitors criminal cases in and out of the slate and in the event of a conviction obtain<; certified copies ol records. They are referred to the state's highest court. with a letter advising that the crimes might involve moral turpitude. The high court then can choose from a number of coursee based on whether there is moral lW""PitUde or a ~able cause of it. Kalmbach's privilege to practice la w could be suspended in the interim, Before a final ruling is made, the laY.-yer involv ed could petition the high court to set aside the interim suspension and get n hearing berore a final ruling is handed dov.'Tl. Another California attorney, Segretti, the political di rty trickster "'ho was sentenced last Nov. 6 to six months in prison for C'Onspiring to distribute unlawful material to disrupt the 1972 presidential pri mary in Florida, is involved in a similar action. The California tribunal has a .statement from the bar that Segretti's crimes suggest probable cause of mo r a I turpitude. On Dec. ~t the court asked the state bar to investigate and offer support for that position. r Fr~Pagel KALMBACH. •• or complaints about this incident and the Southwest," who, the New York Angeles law firm that he founded seven I think I should attempt to follow them Times reported, told Delta AfrH-. a · years ago. ; fulfilling world is in a st :ibles. He up." million gallons ol. jet fuel wu a~'t;ble "The whole thing b a tragedy for faces a possible Sentence of three It wa.s also disclosed f\1onday that from a foreign source at 33 cesQ a everyOM," said Mn. Harvey, a Corona years. in prison and $11 ,000 in fines. after parents of three girls a.ssertedly injured ga11on. ~ del Mar resklent and mother ol two pleading guilty to illegal campaign in the Beryl Lane beer party have 1be T1mes reported Jan. 26 that the teenagers, who was talking to the press practices, including offering a n hired a lawyer to press civil complaints dty attomey o{fered to tell Delta where about her boss for the fint time since ambassadorship for a $100,000 political again.st police. the fuel could be found, but did not be was linked lo Wal<!rgel<! last year. donation. Nancy Bunn, a lawy~ \\ith the identify him. Bickley is city attorney "We're an proud of Mr. K. He told Kalmbach 's biggest personal trial in Newport Center firm of Son~hine and d. Dallas and the Times Herald said the truth and was willing to be held the months since lhe curtain lifted on account.able!" she said. Armstrong, said grounds for action would he confirmed the story. · the Watergate drama perhaps has been be that police allegedly u.wct excessive "I hear of these things all the time," "I st ill Utink he's the most trusting its de\/ a.stating effect on his reputation force in arresting the teen-age glrls. the Dallas newspaper quoted Bickley. man I've ever known," she said adding and his family. Mrs. Bunn saKi the suit probably would "I was talking to attorneys from Delta. her lnsigbt ilnto·how he became involved That family consislS or hi:s wife. in the scenario of one of the . m~t be filed witllin three week:: and that 1 mentioned it, thin.king they might need spectacular poli~oel SCBJldals ln his10ry. Barbara Helen, whom Kalmbacb met it would request punitive damages from it." "He's not at all cynical about people while the two were undergraduates at the city. and their motlvt!!I,,, Mrs. Harvey said . the University of Soul.hem California. The allegations stem from a teenage "And 1 know at no time did he believe They have been married for 26 years. beer party al 1924 Beryl Lane at which RanSOlll Bill Urged anything he did was improper. The couple have two sons and a eight teenagers, four or them girls, were "He didn 't go into anyt.hlng with any daughter. arrested while pollce were as.sertedly TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPJ) -A bill criminal intent,'' she said. Kalmbach's reputation v.·as o n ce seeking to break up the party. 1naking it a felony to accept any part "Anybody who's ever been involved described by a friend : Police have admitted drawing ·their of the ransom of a kidnaped person, in campajgns or politics over an "If we were playing poker on the clubs and using chemical mace. but including free food for the poor, was extended period of time w o u Id telephone and I said I had three nines they said their actions were neceMary proposed Monday by state Rep. John understand those were l«hnical things.,'' and he said he had three tens, I would to maintain .order and to overcome the C. Malloy of Miami. she said. believe him." resistance of the teenage girls who were !---......:-----·------------------------·--------- being arrested. In asking for reports on police procedures, Dostal said he had "no opinion" on whether police had acted properly or not. "I should also say that 1 do not condone teenage beer part ies," Dostal said. "But there have been serious questions raised about police handling ol the affair." OVER THE RIVER and THROUGH THE WOODS - DAllY PILOT Tiit ,CW.,.,.. C.0.11 CAIL Y PILOT, wol!I ""'lcll 1, COll'bl'*' ftlt N•wi·Ptnt. is pV&llifMid bl' ,.,. Or•ng• C011! P\ltl!lall/rlg ComP1"r. S~I· r1!1 K !lOOl'I ••• 1>11D!l1/lld, M°"ll1r !llrovglt Fr~ly, fOr C01!• Mui, Nl'Wl'Wf a1ldl,. l'i11Ml1191on 8e1d1/l"01,11>11,~ v111rr. Ltt11111 llt1clt, lrvlrl<l/SIKldltlMI<• .,,., 5111 C~111t/ Stn Jiii" C1plllr11111 ~ ••11911 r119ioll1I 911il~ fl e>«OIWIW l l t..,,.d1ya l rw:I Sll!'ICl1,..._ The prift(.,,_I Plltlllsl'llflt Pilnl is u J» Wnl h r Sit"!, COlll MM<I, C..Hlonill, t»zt. Auto Theft Suspect Eludes Police Dragnet For tl]ree more monfl]s Placentia Ave. will be torn up to widen ttie street. At times Placentia Avenue will be closed and access will be available by way of Babcock St.{comlng from tl]e back way. . . . We tiope you will be patient witti construction as the results will certainly be wortti all ih.e trouble. ALDEN'S ,,, "' •1 • • • t' ' I I •. , ' llob1rl N, w,,, · firfiid.nl 11'11 P11t111.,..,. J•c• II.. C11•l1y Yi<t P'rl"tid.ni .,,.. GtllOl't! MMltftr Tlt•m11 IC11•ll fd+tw Tito111 11 A. M11rpltl111 ...... ,..,11111 (llltor L '•t•r 1Cri19 Nf'11110rt atl(fl Ctly l:dflW N....,.,. .._. Offlu JJJJ Ntwpert l•11l1••r• Ma llln1 M41111 ' ~.O. ••• 1175, t266) °""' Oflk• Ce.Ill Mn1· »I -.. .,. Slrftl UtlllNI 811(11• :m "-' ·- "'""'''"'""" k1c11: 11111 etedl ""*"'',. _.11 C'ltnwn•t. JIU H..-111 II C.ullll'IO ... , , ...... C7141 "42-4121 Ci..HW Attv.rtw., 642·5111 ""'1'•lflll, lffJ. Orlllff C.u l'WUWlllll ~Y. Ht -1.,.ln, r111111t11-... .......... _,,.. .. ... .. "_ "'"'9111 _, .. ~Id Wl1fiWf -.CMI W> M"'4lfl '1f _,,., ,......,, I ._,.. 0.-11111 ... N iii II C.0.tt Mht, ~. ..,.,..,"°" .... ,.,,..., ...... ~l .... IMlil I.JU -•Mr1 l'NlllttY .......... GM "*'1111y, , • I A car theft suspect who was pursued by vehicle and foot from Irvine to Costa Mesa A-fonday-includi.ng a foot chase through a cabbage patch with his victim close behind -finally escoped from police. The man, who wu chased by his victim and a co-'«Qdl;er, apparently slipped out of the Greenbrook housing deveJopment at the easterly comer of Sunflower Avenue and Bear Street. A task force Of offic.rs from Costa Mesa , Irvine, Santa Ana, a pair of calilomie Hlghw1y Patn>I offlcen and the C'.osta Mesa Police Helicopter Eagle I crew combined efforts ln the mNlhtmt lasllng about live how's. They che<:ktd oome 325 homes In the new Larwin Really Company tract man in !he tract following the long lnvesllgallon, according lo U . Charles ...... A few neighbors had earlier .11een the man in . lhe !net following tltt long chase by car and foot but he disappeared before they learned he was hunled. "SorTltbody said lhey saw him and he looked pretty tired,·• remarked Lt. Bona. He said police were surprised during the foot patrol and house·to-bouse search of the Greenwood tract to find that many people had left home without locking their doors . Leo B. Stradley, of Fullerton, ln!llaled the pursuit about 9 a.m., when he walked · out of Domino Industries 17672 Ann· strong Ave., Irvine . to go to his van. lie said he heard the engine &tart, saw a hand closing the door and It drove away, so he and his boss gave chase in a second vehicle up and down several streets. The suspect finally abandoned the van ln the South Coast VIilage plaza parking area and ned acro.<11 the cabbage patch )!'Ith Stradley and his boss In hol pursuit. Police said they got o good description of . the van Ullef because they were close on his heels. They abandoned the chase wiien he vaulled a wall lnlo the Greenwood !net and called police, fearing their quarry might have bttn anned. . - If you aren't adv'enluresome,'give us a call. and we'll bring ~amples to your home. ' ' 19th ST. ' ' =1 18thST. 17th ST. I -~ > 1"3 --PIAaHT1A . 16th ST. CARPETS • DRAPES IN COSTA MISA Sl«I ltJ~ 1663 Placentia Ave. cosTA MISA ... 646-4838 -.. n.-. ' 1o s,ao: 'l'rt. ' 1o •1 s... No to s -.... .. • • . .. ' I I I ' Today's Final N.Y. Stocks I VOL. 1>7, NO. 5~. 2 SECTIONS, 21> PAGES ORANGE :COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1974 c TEN CENTS I I· ~ r • I r -·- Just Like Old Days ' Veteran pilot Frank Pine, 56, vice president of !alli:n_an~z Aviation. had t~ ma~e emergency land· 1ng m bis old JN4D "Jenny" biplane near Estancia High School in Costa Mesa Monday wJten if threw a rod in the en~ine shortly after takeoff from Orange County Airport. Pine, 2004 Vi$ta Oau!la!, - Newport Beach, just picked a spot and set her down the wn the old barnstorming pilots always did, The aborted flight to Piru, Calif., ended with mechanics 'rem·oving · the wings to toW the old Curtiss biplane back to the airport. ·'. . .., .• ' ,, , ", ~ .. 'Newport Cou11cil Super:viSor Bob Battin as Asks Reagan For Fuel Managing By WILUAM SCHR;>IBER Of ~ OlllV Plltt Slaff Orange County supervisors today launched an all.out attack on the gasoline shortage by asking Gov. Ronald Reagan to declare a state of emergency here ~nd impose mandatory fuel management throughout the county. The board voted 3-1 to declare the emergency which would not go into effect until Reagan acts. SuperviSor Ralph Diedrich, who said he wanted another week to study the action, was the Jone opposition vote. Supervisor David Baker was absent from the meeting. The board action consisted of adoption of a resolution drafted by Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuyper stating that "the shortage of gasoline has created a condition of disaster" in Orange County. The: board asked -Reagan~ to institute a gas management system based on license plate numbers and to prohibit sa1es to drivers whose tanks are baJf lulL ~ system is based on one introduced by the state of Oregon where drivers with even numbered plates would get gas on even numbered calendar days a!llj •,lboM Willi ~ n~ pl~tes .. md iiWnbel<d days, - ~Robert Battin, Ralph Clark ~"-CJ.tr--were atrmgl)'..\I in fa\lor Of taking the action immediately because they .aid the crisis bll8 indeed gro-wn to emergency proportion. "I cannot see bow we . could worsen enc ~ .. .. " •' . . ' ' "'-I I I (.;ives Backing To Marina Plan -------__ ~--.l.lL decJartn_g_!hi:l emerg!:!ICY _ T R-:-1:;'---T-G--Deeause the liiies at gas stations should ,, Dreams for a major new-marina in the west Costa Mtsa and west Newport Beach lowlands rec<!ived a boost Monday night from the Newport Beacti City Cowicil, Acting on an enthusiastic endorsement b~ Mayor Oona~d A. Mclnnis, a West Newport resident. councilmen adopted a four-part plan of action ~rter reviewing a feasibility study that says the 3,000. boat marina can be built successfully with $3'9 million in public funds. "A Jot or us have dreamed about something like this !or a long time . J feel we should move on this as quickly as possible,'' Mcinnis said as he convinced councilmen to : -Contact the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to ask them to begin what is seen as a ten-year effort to get Congressional approval for federal funds . -Direct members of the joint harbor committee to take the proposal to the Orange County Harbor Commission in hopes it will sponsor the project. -Ask the planning commission for review and recommendations. , -Begin coordination with the city of Costa Mesa. . Councilmen were told that while the Corps of Engineers could be expect~ to contribute about $4 million of the a:ist for engineering of the mouth of the harbor, the remainder would have a · nickel boost . in the harbor districl. ~X,_f!lte_.and .a bond issue. · CJouncilmen took action after reviewing a· $12t000 consultant's report prepared over the last 18 months . City councilmen in Costa Mesa, which also paid .for part of the report, are expected to begin deliberations on it next month. • Coacli ' s Dru11k ' ' Rap Dismissed Drunken driving cha.tges Jo Orange County igalnst Los An.aJes Rams head foolball coach 19ick Koox have been dlsmisse<I in West Orange County Municipal Court. Knox Instead pleaded guilty. to a reduced charge of reckless driving growing out of the incident in Maten of · last year •• when• ho was arrested by Westminster police while attempting to neaot1at. · a freeway offramp, The 1\ariis head ooacb paid a' (ine of f1201 according to court record$. •' '0 un r or Lt. overnor !':id.half what they are now," Battin Orailgl! County Supervisor Robert Bat· tin of Santa Ana announced today he will nm ror lieutenant govennor on the Demo- cratic ticket. Battin, a lawyer, told newsmen be had considered a number of options in arriv- ing at the decisloo including p05Siblc tries for the post ot aecretary of state, attorney general, controller and asseml> ly, The CFrst District S u p e r v i s o r would retain his supervisorial seat in defeated in the June primary where he faces competition from a number of candidates' including state Sen. Mervyn Dymally. During his years on the board of supervisors, including one term as chairman, Battin has been· in the midst or many controvc -sies. He was a bitter · opponent o f incorporation for the clty of Irvine ~ a foe of the ID-fated land •wap of Upper Newport Bay property between the Irvine Company and the county. He was a prime roover In an abokjve effort · !Jy· supervlsora to change . l!!e asies:Bed valuation on President Nlx~'s San ~emente estate, H<> ls 'fill figllling tha:t issue in court. · .. ~ • Alao as a ·COIDlty supervlsbr, Battin ~cked_ lbe creation of ~ CODSIJI\ler af· fairs agency, a housing •uh~ rity and-a lobby'ist eootrol ordinan-ce.- Battln also is considered the nmt frugal member of the board and is the only supervisor who stayed within his office budget last yea .. ' ' oelly Plllt Steff-......_ ' ; SEEKS Nci. 2 SPOT ~ .. · Super(i.Or Battin ' Reds· Test Warheads WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The Soviet Unloo fired , the third in a scrlea of ·mutiple warh(ad tests· in the Pacific on Saturday, the Pentagon said Monday. The SSX18 toared from Tyurataln in ceqtral Russia about i,000 miles, and dropped ·in the Pacific about 400 miles nOrlli of Midway Island . Caspers 'noted that quick, decisive action by the board would be an indicator to oounty cities of just how seriow the board feel£ the problem is. Clark, a· service station owner, said be definitely feels more comfortable going to the cities after toking ftrm action. Diedrich's opposition stemmed from the fa~ .that the action was so sudden. "Obviously we have a problem but other than taking an emergerlcy stance there Is no plan to 90Jve it," be said . Diedrich said before any action should be taken the county should have stand- by provisions to hand1e emergency vehicles and motorists in trouble among other things. He asked for a week's study by county officials "before any action was taken. After the board vote, D i e d r i c h commented to newsmen that the action by bis fellow supervisors w a s reminiscent of "run away horses" and something Uke the panic buying going on at the pumps, Moslem Rebels Out MANILA, Philippines (AP) Government forces have retaken the lut two Moslem rebel strongholds near Jolo, In ,t!ie south Philippines, the military conimand announced today. The command announced the recapture of Bud Datu IIlll, nearly two miles from the town of Joto, and said the "Maoist rebels" used ·it as a sanctuary after they failed to· win . control of Jolo, the capital· of the SUlu archipelago, in a battle earlier this month. • ~esa Sign ... L·aw Readied By 1\UDI 'NJEDZIEUIKI ot .. '*'"' .. , ... Sttft ·Costa Meoa city councilinen iMonday night held their last study ...,iOn on the JJrOl)06ed sign ordinance and declared the!Melv'" ready to al"' the """"""'1Ial law tis ftr!t readin( March f , Just wliat, kind ot ~ign -ordlDance the!<· will idOPI -en .thal date Is anybody's guess. llurini tho study -ion it ' appeared that there WU st 111 COD8!derabl6 cllsagreement am on 1 councihneft Oii key .eotlons or the ordlnenco. ' Reoolotlon Of those di'8greem<lllS will CQri!e "1 a 9e\)lJ'lte -vote on t6ch·lt<m , rat~r than the ordlnince as · a whole, Mayw Jae!< Hammett indlca\ed. One of · the more contentiow; poinls Is whether speelat regulations should be made for .. special kinds of buslnwe<. ' The· ordinance, as drafted a 11 o w s ~ Prlvilelfit to ll)OViO' theaters · and •t.tbt-l!l~·tlu!J lmpjJies more strllll!enl ·~rOpiil,llOns an-oervice station!.· "'ulo dealei;r.lll ea n w h i'l e • have req~ to bo . included under the special ,?elUlatlona ' over the obj<ctloos ,of liJoneowner representatives. 1The dllplte ...,. the auto dealcn1 Is prol1\pting members oL the council to c:omider tossing oot"lbe ontlre' sectiOn ... • dealing with ~al regulations. They are also considering a study to detennine whether the special regulations should nol' ooly._ encompass theaters, auto dealera.-11ut other. types of· businesses as well. Planner Arnold F. Hamalo who drafted tho ordinance a year ago,· 8ald at the time' 1t -....ned to be a ' gOOd Idea· to exempt !beaten becaule glilteJinc lights was, along with popcorn, pan' of the mom tradition. , " "'l)lday the section deallng wilb ..ia1 ...,.iat1om might be .. .,... bo11Ple. but a year ago tt -a <arti """"· Idea," ht iaid. ,.- . ' Comforting Hand Costa Mesa Police Officer Rob Brown reassures Keijy Jackson, 12, of 2169 Rural Lane, after her bike collided with car in market park- ing lot at 22nd Street and Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa Monday evening. Car was driven by Carol Rice, 57, of 1507 Mariners Drive. Newport Beach. Victim was treated at nearby Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital for abrasions and' bruises arid sent home. Auto Theft Suspect Eludes. " • Police Dragnet in Mesa A car theft suspect who was pursued by vehicle and foot from Irvine to Costa Mesa Monday-including a foot chase through a cabbage patch with his victim close behind -finally escoped from police. The man, who was chased by his victim and a co-worker, appilrenUy slipped out of the Greenbrook OOusing development at the easterly corner of Sunflower 4'.venue and Bear Street. A task · force of officers from Costa Mesa, Irvine, Santa Ana, a pair of California Highway Patrol officers and the Costa ·Mesa Police Helicopter Eagle 1 crew cOmblned efforts in the manhWJt lasting about five hours. · They checked some 325 ·homes in the new Larwin Realty Company tract man bl . the tract following the lon g investigation, according to Lt. Charles Bozza. A few neighbors had earlier seen the man in . the tract following the long chase by car and foot but he disappeared before they learned he was hunted. "Somebody said they sa w him ·and he looked pretty tired," remarke;d Lt. Bozza. -: He said police were. surprised during the foot patrol and house-to-house search of the Greenwood tract to find that many people ha.d left home wilhout locking their doors . Leo B. Stradley, of Fullerton, iniUa'ted the pursuit about 9 a.m., when he walked Executive Kidnapecl BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Guerrillas tidnaped a Swift meal packing executive responsible for dismissing 42 workers, according to a communique sent to • ne\!OPlgelS today. "n1t P e o p I e • s Revolutiollary Army (ERP ) said it abclucted Antonio Vallocdlia, gs . Satuiday. '!rem his home ln 11"8arlo, llO mJ\ea' northwest of Buenos Aires. • • t out or Domino lndustries. 17672 Arm- strong Ave .. Irv ine, to go to his van. He said he heard the engine start. saw a hand closing the door and it drove away, so he and his boss gave cha se in a second vehicle up and down several streets. The suspect finally abandoned the van in the South Coast Village plaza parking area and fled across the cabbage patch with Stradley and his boos in hot pursuit. • Police said they got a ·good description of the van. thief ·bee.a use _they were close on his heels. 1 They abandoned the chase_ when be 1 vaulted a wall into the Greenwood tract • and ·called police, fearing their quarry ] . mig~ have been armed. I Oruge Cout • Weiitlaer ' -. Some low cloudiness or fog is expected for the morning hours Wedaesday, but otherwise sunny and cooler. Highs in the mid-60s at the .beaches rising to 7IJ inland Overnight lows mostly :JH6, INSIDE TODAY Jim Croce , who was k'Ued last September in a plane crasl1, has two al bums toppi1ig the 11a-- tion's sales cl14rts and ts a great posthumous sztq:ess. Storv, Page 20. , , " ... ... H " " I • " 11·ll " " " I ' I l • • ~.......:D~Al:.:LY PILOT Tutsday, Ftbru1ry 26, 1~74 -,- No GNP fh'olDth"l Mesa~s Candidates PAIR DBJNK UP BOOTY, NABBED · Petroleum Panel Voters in Coit.a Afe&4 will go to tile polll March. S to teleci t100 civ coun. cnmen from • field of •i• candidates. Each of tlie CO!l<tidat.es wa& given a1i opportu1tity to oullbit ttie salient points of 11is or he r cantpaidn for the Dait11 Pilot. lfhe candidates were given tl1e opportu11it11 to subt~tit their own material or to be interviewed. Toda11 the DaflII Piiot publL!hes in- fonnatkm Ofl the last t~ree of the six candtdafes. Profiles of tl1e oeher candidates wcr~ published i\fondoy. They appear iii alpltabetical order.,. 'Will' Jordan in llio future for the development of some of the perk sites Whtch are now eii..tlna. Spending ~ lwds for sud! priority Item> reduces the need for addltlonal taxation cl all Costa M ...... Being an architect and planner by profession. J a1n exceedingly qualified to pa~ judgment m such important issues as land zoning and development. The creation of a good imnge for Costa J\tesa has been an imponant part of my philosophy , and I have faced the issue squarely by continually asking for more quality in the design of Vllfious developmcnu. -Regonal government, whether we like Jt or oot. is gradually making inroads and pre<mpting SOm<! cl 1ho local ' Run s Again ••--.iauthorities. I am adamantly against the "en.ling of th~ "closest to the people" government and \\'ill continue , if elected. to oppose any and all movement toward a regimal fonn of government. Willard T. Jordan, vice mayor ol Costa Mesa , is running for re-elect ion March 5, because be believes hi!: services are needed another lour years to rini!h oome projedB begun during his laat term ln olfice. Jordan, 60, ot 22tiQ Santa Ana Ave., submitted the following information : PERSONAL INFORMA110N: Married 32 years. Wife's name Ruth. One son, James,' 21 years old , going to Orange ' . . ·· Coast College. Raiden! of Costa Mesa 5ince iMs. Military Seriice: • -· '. . -":IJ' Anny, September 1941 through Decem- ber 1945. Own arch- ltectural practice in c:osta Mesa since ISM. ,.·J. ~-• •• • PAST AcrrvrrIES: Pre!ldenl cl the Orange County Olapt.er of the American Jnst~ute of Ardlltecls. Served two years on the California CoWlCil of the American Institute of Architects Boan! o I Directors. Member of the Costa Mesa <llamber of Commerce board of dilt!Clan, the Cc;$ta Mesa Klwan.i5 Club, and member of the Co6ta Mesa Planning CommlMlon for five years. Planning Commission chainnan for two years. Member of the United Fund boanl of directors, ·first president cl the Coota Mesa Goll Club men's section. President of lhe Orange COOJrty CoaS Association. CUllllENT AcrIVITIDI: Member of the Boys Club of the Hari>o< Area Board . of DiredorS for seven years. Member ol the state Sc:enic Highway Advisory Comm!Uee, having been appointed by Governor Reagan In 1969. CurrenUy serving Jn 11th year II c:asta Mesa city councilman, having been appointed in 1963. Served u mayor from 1966 to 1968. Serving in sixth year as vice mayor. Currently serving on several city · council committees. Among t h e m : Lia1soo with Costa Mesa Goll and COlJllry Club, liaison with Crime Prevention CornmiUee which 1 formed four years ago. P.A.D.S. (Public Agency Data Systems), Intercity Li a is on Con1mittee with Newport Beach, Irvine and Huntington Beach. CUrrently serv.ing on the Co s t a ~fesl. Freeway Committee. Actively participated in early ronnation and plann'ing for downtown redevelopment as coWlCit 1 i a I s o n . Currently a member of the Downtown Redevelopment Agency. Chairman of a committee to rewrite the industrial ordinance which has been adopted by the council. THE ISSUES: Traffic is one of the mo.st critical issues to 00 faced in the future. Widening, repatr and refurbishing of streets must continue. I fully agree lha1. a large portion of revenue sharing funds must be used fqr this purJXllSe, along with the continued construction of more (and more storm drains so streets will last looger. Using some revenue sharing fwrls for other capital expenditures, such M the purchase of property and t h e comtroction of a fire station to replace Rochester Street station is a must. Let ~ also ~ some of these funds OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT TM Orffll• CMt! DAILY ,!LOT, will! wfllcfi I• ~..... !ht Mftll.,,,11, i. pWtlllllif ~ "" Or•• c.o • ., fl'111t11 1t11'"' c"'"""""· .....,. r111 tdllklllt .,.. Ml.,,_., """"•r "'""""' Frid•~. lor Cotll M•t•. NtwjllWI t eldl, H1Jr1ll.,.IOl'I llttth/Ftunltln Vt ll9'f', l.q- tMdl, INIM/Sldd!MKll Mii ... " Cllmetlttf $•~ J"'" t10!11r1111. A •Intl• revlonlot llll+tion " ""lllW>eoi &lllH'lllYI Incl S4111dl'f'I, fl'll Pl'Ot\Ci,o.I P<llltltllinl ,11111 It 11 llf Wttl lllY StrHI, tltll M .... , CIHftl'nil, tH». Rob1rt N. W1M 11'rn lftnl 11'111 fl'Vllll- J1ck It Curl1y ~ Voe:• fl'rn 5"flt 11'1111 G""''' 111......, Th•m •• K11~a ., • -- " Editor T~11111t A. Mw1phl1111 M1111111'11 £•11w Cll•rlt• H. l1e1 lt.h1rJ P. Ni ll 1 .. n 11tm! Nltfllllltitl IEfflWt c., ...... 0..... JJO W11t l•'f' Str11f M1ill11t Acftlr111 :·,.o , ••• 11•0. •2'z' --ff....,,. -..ai: UH ff_,.,, llult¥1 ... L•OIN IMCll: 12'1 ,_, A- Hlll'llillflM I MC.II: l"IJ tMdl ~rl .. ., (~: •• '°0•111,JI """""' ""' fellf•1nr C714) M2-411t ca-rtw "'"' ...... '41·1671 Clflllf"""-''"' Or•• C..r ~ ...... ~. ... ...... ........ lllwtret• •"'"" --., ..... .,.~ 1111'.i.. ""' ....... ,,-.._. "*"' .... ................. -. 11 =.....~ c::::.:-i:.. *' c!:.: ~ .: .. -"tlfj .,,....,. U.lt IMl'lfllf'r1 t'l'lhtttr .......... ,.......,.. I , Lack of conununication with the people is e severe problem to whlch I would address m)'3elf U re~lected. I would ask that the mayor be allowed to select 4 "mayor's advisory committee" large enough to encompass all sectors of 00..lness and residential !Ue In Costa Mesa. Periodic meetings with this committee would give the mayor and a:nmcil much-needed input from the people tl1ey serve. · Mrs. Torribio Roots D~ep Mrs. Joan Torriblo, 1819 Tanager Drive, ba:s been a resident of Costa Mesa for only 14 months, but her family hal deep roots in the community, having moved here in 1948. A history and polltlcal adence major when she studied at USC, Mrs. Torribio says she is well-ac- quainted with the process of govern· ment and believes she has the ability and the desire to look for answers she doesn't immediately Mve. "I think the council polilt ol, view," Mrs. Torrlblo said in declaring ber caOO!dacy. "They (the council members) not only need a woman's point of view, but that of a n:sfdent-consumer." ~ practical point of view will be necessary to make the proper decisioos on the downtown redevelopment program which, at the moment, is only seen from the businessman's point of view, according to Mrs. Torribio. Business Interests and thooe of · the homeowners have become polarized and the two groups are in extreme competition for control of the philosophy of the city, according to Mrs. Torrib\o. Instead they o.¢tt to work tflgether for the common good, not as opponents but as a team o! businessmen and consumers, she says. The sign ordinance, which is partly responsible for the gulf separating the two camps, should soon be passed because it ts in the best interest of :the city, the COllllcil hopeful suggest.s. Mrs. Tonibio would make a ('()Up\e of changes in the document-allowing businesses to use their signs to advertise as well as locate their stores and withdrawing an exemption which allows theatm flash ing lights-but she believes the ordinance to be basically sound and ·the amortization schedule fair. However, the improvement or Costa Mesa should not stop with the removal of blighting sign,. l\fany other projects need to be tackled, among them a community center. Mrs. Torriblo believes Costa r..tesa needs a community center both to provide recreation ror senior citizens, TONIGHT "BEHIND THE HEADLlNES" -Dr. Giles T. Brown lecturer, OCC Forum, 7:J-0.9:30 p.m. UC I LECTURES -"Prolesslonal Practices in HilU.$ing Industry," Room 161 Humanities Hall, 7-9:30 p . m . "Happenings in Creative Awareness," Room 510 Unl,ersity !Ugh School, 4771 Campus Drive, If'\·ine, 7-10 p . m. "Scientific Medi cine for the Layman : ·eancer," Freshman Uxture Hall, Med. Surge I Bldg. 7-10 p.m. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 17 occ LECTURE -"Open MArTlage,''Dr. Charles Leviton lecturer, M11mage." Dr. Charles Levttc.J lecturer, ALCOHOLISM LEC'l1JRE "Alcholism, An Addictive Disease," Dr. Robert Sctvnitz lecturer, Raleigh mils HC<!pllal, 1507 E. 16th St., Ne"l'O Beaclt 1nronnatlon 64&-~707. HIGH SCHOOL BAND & ORCHESTRA FESJ:!VA~ -00C Audltortwn, All day, Wed. and Thun. U.CI LECTURES -"Fundamental1 of Animal Catt," Room 117 Steinhaus Hall, 7-10 p.m. "California: Myths and Realities," Room 171 Humaniuea HaJl1 7.10 p.m. " teemlgero .and IJl.between age 1roups, and to aerv$ u a local point for the communlly. Since Coola M-toaa .-, people tend to ldeotl/y with tllO!r lrldl rather than th~ City. - "The area over by tho falrground.s might be a good J)lace or perhaps we could expand Costa ~1esa Park for the f!Ommwtity center. We might want to include it in the redevelopnlent project. \Ve definit.ely need to study this," she s;dd. The center, Mrs. Torrlbio believes, could provide activities for all age groups without artlflctally segregating the~ AllOlher area of need is community pride. Some county .Islands \\·ithln the geographictd area of the city are shabby looking and should be improved and perhaps be made part of the city through annexation. l\1rs. Torribio, if elected, would '\li'Ol'k for a plan whereby property owners .. .,.ould be given incentives to improve their buildings without later having lo pay additional taxes for the improvements they .have made . l.<lw inco(De housin"g _ and public transportation also need a t t e n t i o n , according to Mrs. Torribio. S h e recognizes that it will be diCficu lt to pro- \'idc such t\ousing and favors investigat- ing both advantages and disadvantagts ot federal subsidies. Although bus service in the county . is good, Mrs. Torribio maintains the bus stops are. in many cases, too far away from the homes of re!idents. She thinks the city should cooperate with · the Orange County Transit District by fumlshing a neighborhood pickup service Y.'hich would take riders to the bu,, sto~. R. E. Westlake BERLIN (UPI) -Wut Berlin police said tbey had no trouhfe arruting two yOUlii men who broke hlto a bar In the clty'1 F-iector during the night. 1be burglars drank' foor bottles or oe!Jnappoi between them. It rendcced them In such condl_Lion that they were unable to make a gor.away when they heard a poUoe patrol car pull up at the bar. ·Resignation .Announced By Kalmbach By L PETER KRIEG Of tlll ~ty l"ntt Sltff Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach announced today be has resigned from the law finn be formed In 1967. Meanwhile in San Francisco, it was announced that the California Supreme Court will consider possible disciplinary action against Kalmbach. Kalmbach pleaded guilty Monday lo federal charges of illegal campaign practices. He could draw a maximum sentence or two years in prison and a s10:000 fine for one felony and ooe year and a $1,000 fine for the other misdemeanor charge. The Newport attorney wbo told Senate Watergate Committee his family and his profession "mean everything to me" withdrew from the film of Kalmbach, DeMarco, Knapp and C:hilllngworth 10 days ago . Kalmbach, who pleaded guilty to two charges involved in the Watergate investJgatJon, may leave tbe I a w profeuion altogether and may go into • the field of real estate investments. Seeks Careel• Kalmbach . µ• . unavaUable . for ~ but his long~Urne pnvate ary Ann Harvey said, "whatever Richmond E. \Vesllake. Jr. 20. is a he will be the sole practitioner." political scienG$ student who wants to prepared statement, Kalmbach make politics bis career. He would like to get it off to a good start ?\-farch "Herbert W. Kalmbach, senior partner 5 bY being elected to the Coeta Mesa and founder of Kalmbach, DeMarco, Cify Council. Knapp and Chillingwwth, has withdrawn Westlake, -0r 162S sandalwOod Sl, is from the fll'lll effective ~eb. 15 to pursue a 14-year resident of the city. He says ~rsonal business interests and Sees Rationi.ng NEW '(ORK (AP) -The NaUonal Petroleum Councll · today po'edlc!ed· tbe net.io n will have to institute some form or mandatory gasoline ratlonlng unless federal allocation measures prove more effective. The council also sal4 In a report that unless petroleum· Imports are lneteased substantially before the end of the year, the real Gross NaUonat Product could not grow beyond present levels and unemployment w:1.1Jd hit abJut six percent. The unemployment. rate rose from 4.8 percent in December to 5.2 in January, the largest monthly increase in four ' . REAGAN OKAYS ODO-EVEN PLAN. Story, Pago 12 • consumption and satisfy consumers, the additional mandatory actions will be required." Fired CosUi Mesa Police Officer Su irig tlie City A Costa Mesa police ofncer who was fired by his captain after allegedly being absent Crom duty for six days has demanded his reinstatement In Orange County Superior Court action taken against the city. Harry L. Bowen, 46,: of CQsta J..fesa, years. The council, an advisory panel additionally demands , · $200,000 in to the lnterlor Department composed ~mages for what he clnlma was .of ojl industry executives, concluded that uhlawful dismissal last Aug. 14 by Capt. additional reductions In fuel usage, E. H. Glasgow. including gasoline, will be r/quired to Glasgow and Police Chief Roger NeU}i balance demand with supply. are also named as defendants ln Bowen's lawsuit. In the report titled "Short-Tenn U.S. Bowen states that he should have Petroleum OUtlook ~· A Reappraisal," been given leave of absence and time the council's commlttee on emergency f med •-preparedness said the shortage due to to recover rom !cal prob11:ms and ·the Arab oil embargo could be met that the cJty violated Its own civic in the first three mooths of the year. codes When it denied that request and fired him. But It said JU afudy eoocluded that He also asks the court to order the demand for petrolewn products In the city to compensote him for loot pay second quarter of the yeor must be of 17,700 lf he is rehired at Ilia lonner reduced "by a substantially higher salary of $1,!'oo a m<inth. amount -over 400,000 barrels per day · Bowen, who joined the Costa Mesa -than 15 now plllltled by the Federal JOT'Ce In 1957, 15 de=il?ed u suffering Energy Office ." from anxiety -neurolls ~ .llcohol Average U.S. dally consumption 15 dependency In physicians' statement! esUmated at more than 18 million-barrels-attached to hla lawsuit. a d It Is also recommended in those ay. , . statements that JM! receive hospital ~ ~ report noted, 'Expenence doe! treatment that 'will allow him to not indicate that all FEO· measures are withdraw from alcobol and that he join fully successful. For example, the motor the Alcoholics Amn)1l10ll! program. gasoline reduction reported for January by the FEO was only about two-thirds of tbe reduction targeted by that office." On poulble gasoline raUonlng, the report said that "lf federal allocations programs CaMOt both r e d u c e Plants, Statue one of the strongest m;:estmen.ts . • attribules isanhon-.Follo.wong Mr. Kalmbach'• Fl•neral Today · resignation, the finn Jias been " Owners1 Sought After Arrests est desire to ser\'e reorganized as De..\tarco, Barger and his fellow man in the Ber al." F M T best way possible. lf That was the entire text or the or esa ot Laguna Beoch detectives w • re elected, he .would statement. attempting today to trace owners or prove th.at des'ire by ! J J _ plants and garden statuary recovered ke?eplng his council James Knapp left the !inn several Kiiicd by Car in the arre!t of two Costa Mesa men offtce open to the years ago. Shern-'OOd Chilling'olo·orth. ~londay. public one day a president of Adorada Corporation of Los Gene L. Jl~inrich. 24, and oOnald A. week. w•sTLAKI! Angeles, left at the end.of last: year. Pr'l\'ate. famil7 funeral servi~s were Noser. 24. both listing an address of Should he be elected, Westlake says In 1967, Kalmbach fulfilled one of lcheduled today (or a Costa ~tesa boy 145 lltth St ., Costa Messa were set his fir st ·motion would be to adopt th~ his life's ambitions when he set up killed Saturday when he ·accidentally for arraignment at Laguna Niguel city's pror\l\c.:>d sign ordinance without Kalmbach, DeMarco, Knapp & rode his bicycle into a car •fter his , ~1unicipal Court today. •-Ch1·11on· •worth mother called him home for dinner. any changes. "It's as close to perfeCtion e · Del. Caroll BUJh said he anticipated as is humanly possible," be remarks. In the next few years , Kalmbach Seth Ward Wynne, 5, of 467 t.1agnolia the ty.·o v•ould race reduced charges The full-time student and part-time roamed the nation and the world, St., died at Hoag l\1emorial. Hospital of ·petty theft (plants ). English and math tutor believes Costa successfully soliciting, by bJs own about 8 p.m., less than two houn after They had been booked for alleged Mesa needs more parks and more money account, millions of dollars for the Nixon the accident near his home. burglary and grand theft following their for the Leisure Services Department. presidential campaigns of 1968 and tm. He suffered a compound fractwe of arrest at 2·50 am Monda)". wh Additional park acreage '\liwld be As one of Nixon's closest personal the leg and internal bleeding of the Patrolman i....;u.ie ci1uhak spottect th~~ financed with a second bond election aides, the 52-year~Jd Kalmbach received stomach as a result of colliding with late model sedan cruising a north Laguna or with federal revenue.sharing money. VIP treatment during hit fund-raising the car driven by John Shigald, 41. residential area. Some of tl)e Leisure Services money forays, often staying at U.S. embassies ol 428 Magnolia St., Just a few houses Det. Bu.sh said it appeattd some of required could be obtained by <.i1tUng when traveling abroad. away· the recovered property may have come ba<:k the budgets of other departments. Then came Watergate and disclc;>sures "It shook us all up because no one from Laguna's famous Pyne Castle, 770 The obvious one. to Westlake. is the of Kalmbach's role in the sc.anadal. thought he wasn't going to make it," High Drive, once considered as a poe,slble city council budget. He thinks the Now Kalmbach's prosperous and said Traffic Officer Phil ~tcConnick. Presidentlal'estate. monthly $347 salary councilmen get as fulfilling world is in a st-:iblet .. He Officer Mt'Connlck said the boy was One of the pieces ol statuary wu of May is too much. faces a possible senten~ of three called home for dimer and rode ou t a garden waterfall and birdbath, Det. Increased bike lane mileage and a years In prison and $11,IXXI ln fines. after suddenly between two parked cars, Bush said. paramedics program are two other pleading guilty to illegal campaign slamming into Shlgaki's slow-moving He said detectives searching the men ·s major concerns of Westlake. Bike lanes practices. including offering an car. apartment had found other plants and would provide incentive for Costa Mesans ambassadorship for a $100,000 political Graveside rites for the boy were; planters appa!ently taken from a Costa to get Out of their cars and the donation. scheduled for II a.rw. at Pacific View Mesa bank and from an apartment paramedics give the citizens the Kalmbach's biggest personal trial in Memorial Park, Corona del Mar, with complex being landscaped. emergency health service they deserve. the months since the curtain lifted on Ba It z ·Bergeron Fwteral Home Det. Bush said he does not believe Westlake also favors switching over the Watergate drama perhaps has been officiating. the two men are responsible for a wave to a "dial 911" emergency system, which its deva.statlng effect on his reputation Sunrivors include ms 1nother, Lisa of plant thefts inundating Laguna and would place phone callers in contact _a_n_d_hi_1_1arn __ u_y_. __________ w.:.ynne_.:.' .:.p_lus_a_broth __ e..;r,_D..;1:.:·e_W...:._ynn_e..;. ___ s_u..;rr:..ound=:..ln~g co_m_m_un_Jt_i.,_. ____ _ with an emergency switchboard and from there to the appropriate emergency service. Wiltl respect to land use , Westlake '\li'ould initiate a bui1ding slowdown by rezoning high-density areas to single family and recreation uses. He maintains that this does not deny a man the use of his property but '''ould only force him to use his imagination. "If he is a good businessman he wW rind some way to ma.ke a profit. Perhaps we could give a tax benefit to lower roning. Perbaps · I.hos{!: who had their land zoned recreational would want to investigate c o m m e r c i a I recreation such as miniature golf, slides, or an archery hall ," Westlake says. OVER THE RIVER and THROUGH THE WOODS " For tl\ree more fl'IOnttis. Placentia Ave. will be torn up to widen ttia sire.at. At ttmes Placentia Avar:iua will be closed .and access will be available byway of Ba cock St., ~oming from ttie back way, · We hope you will e patient with constructio as t e re sults wl li certainly be rtt) al ttie trouble. ALDEN'S -• High on his list of priorities as city councilman is a publicity campaign y,·hich would endeavor to prove to Costa Me.sans that their city government works for them. "The cotmcil needs lo convince people that it is for the Costa ~1esan, not the Newport Beach guy \vho ov.11s a business in Costa J\.1esa," he urges.· If you aren 't adve . uresome, give us a call. and we'll bring ~am plas to your home. CARPETS • DRAPES '' Improvements are needed in the areas of mass transit.. promotion of a cultural im age, and reducing the cost o( campaigning so that lncmnbenb don't become entrenched in their offices, according to Westlake. He abo would cha"ie ·the organization of the city councll. WesUake favo rs a mayor-dominated government and recommends electing a mayor to a slx· year term. The council 3hotJld be expanded to seven members, thftt of whom would be ele<led at large and the olh<t four by dislric:ta. Each oouncllmtn would serve a rour-~ar tenn Ith no limit to the number of tenru. 'NclllO.' Ice believes In reduclni pollution and w®ld convert all city vehicles to nm on liquid , propane 1aa. To reduce energy demands IH! lavono requlrtng doe<d business establilobmenll to twn oil Jigno and other unneceuary llgllllng by ll p.m. I . -1 -~ ( 19th sr.- 18th ST. 17th st. I I . '"' ·--l'WJNTIA . · 16411 ST. ' ' • ' IN COITA MISA SKI 1957 1663, Placentia Ave. COITAMBA 646-4838 lllon.-n....._ t •• S::IOi M. 9 te t; Set. NO te S ~ • • ! T ·. ;