HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-03-15 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON,' MAR.CH l_l;, 1974 I ~ . . .
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Fuel Price
Hike Hinted
-Exporters
VIENNA (UPI) -With the possible
lifting of the Arab oil boycott against the
United. States looming in tne background,
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) will recommend
Saturday 1hat the price of crude oil be
Increased April I, OPEC officiab said
today.
'Ibey also said they believed an
announcement easing the Arab oil
embargo against the United States ~·ould
be made in Vienna over the weekend.
In Beirut, the Arab press reported
today that Arab oil ministers postponed
CLASHES FLARE AT GOLAN
_HEIGHTS. Story, P•ge 4
FUEL CRISIS ON LY
THE BEGINNING? Pogo 12
anoouncement of a decision on lifting the
oil embargo again!! the United States
UDUl Sunday in an attempt to reach
·unanJmlty on the issue.
Tbe semi-official Cairo newspaper Al
Ahram •id In a report from its
corrmpondent who rovered Wedne!day'•
oil mJnllier1 coofereoce in 6le Libyan
capital of Tlipoll: •
"'Ille mlnlst.n adjourned until SWlday
to allow lbe oil mlaist.n of Syria and
Liby• to OOlllUll their govemmenll In the
lqM lhol their next meeting iD Vle!na
will ...... lllllllimoul -00 lifllnll
the emblr1Ce."
Prtlll commentators sakl the nine
meonben of the Oraanmtion of Arab 011
ElporUDg Countries (OAPEC) who must
make tbe decision were anxious to avoid (Sef OIL, Page ZI .
MARTHA'S REPORT
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Priee Hike Loolns
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When Arab~ Allow
Oil Flow to U.S •
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Fuel Bija~k
2 Gunmen Take 8,500 Gallons
. PASADENA (AP) -Two armed men made off with 8,500 gal·
Ions or gasoline today after hijacking a lanker truck and kidnaping
its driver, police said.
The driver was kidnaped while attempting to deliver a load or
fuel to a service station in the predawn hours, said police Lt. Jack
Garrett.
Garrett said the two unidentified men bound, gagged and
blindfolded driver Kenneth M. Harbour, 50, and took him away
by car. He was left unharmed at a residential Jntersection in nearb)'
Glendale, Garrett said.
Harbour freed himself afld called police, who found the truck
-empty-in the area about 45 minutes later.
$2 Million Pot Cache
Found in Wrecked Truck
AUSTIN , Tex. (UPI) The
Department oC Public Safety feels it
mlgbt have stumbled onto a major
mistake by a well·financed ring of
marijuana operators who are going to be
hurt by the loss of a '2 million shipment.
Wilson E. Speir, director of the
department, e!timated the value of the
marijuana at $1 million when It was
found , but spokesman Jim Robinson said
'11lursday that later estimates put it at
well over $2 mllllon. 1
· stale troopers stumbled onto the
marijuana in an overturned refrigerated
truck Wednesday. 'Ibey found it when
they ope!ied the truck and found the
U.000 pounds pf neat bales behind crates
of Mexican pineapple1 and cabbaees.
"It looks like W.. b a very good
quality mar!jwma, that's what the .
(narcotics) agents aay," Rcblnaon said.
"'Ille loss ol that inuch Is bound lo hurt
llO!l1ebodyrealbad.
Re said it was easily the largest
marijuana haul in the state's history.
Officen spent rriuch oC Wednetday
hiding in -the buahes, where U,.y ...,Jd
keep im eye on the truck in case anyone
came to ca.am it. Finally, about noon. a
W,.e<Rr .m .. a ori lhe scene and'"bekan
hoOOn( up to Ille truck. The officer>
deoct!1de<I en ...,.. upon the startled
driver.
Kidnapers Hunted
DANVILLE, TII. (AP) -Po~
searched today for two men who escaped
wilb en estimated l&,000 Thunday 111.,.
holdinf tbe wilt and mother-in-law of a
K-Mart deportmeot store manager
hostage In his home. Authorities said !he
ramom wu pajd within 15 minutes after
llbbert E. Laroon, lbe monager. ...,.ved
a lele~ call II Ibo l!On.
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The driver said a "well-dressed man
approached him and asked him to get his
truck out of a ditch. The drivr S"'i-l he
was hired on a oo-questions-asked basis.
Down the road from the overturned
truck, investigators found an abandoned
shed with the remains of a fresh
campfire nearby. •
"There is a Pdssibility that the truck
was going down that fuad to the shed,"
Robinson said. "Obvtouslv, we're poinct
to be trying to find fhe owner of the land.
"Thls is obviously a well-organized
crime ring. It could involve a great many
people. And it was just ooe of those
things you happen onto."
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' Baby . Boy Dies
On Hot Gra ting
ENID, Okl a. (A P) -A baby boy died
in hi.s home as his mol'i>er slept when his
stroller became !rapped o:i the grating of
a floor furnace, police reported.
Jason R. Darnrtin, '3 1,iomonth-old son o!
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Damron, was found
deal Thursday afterooon.
Police u ld the wheels of Jason's
stroller apparently became \\'edged In the
grate situated lo the floor obove the
tunlace. 'Ille heat melted the plastic
wheels and plastic seat. droppinc the
baby onto the hot grating.
Wharf Site Burned
MONTEREY (UPI) -The Anaslllala
Fish Market -a landmark oo okt
Fisherman's Wharf htre-was gu~ted by
fire ThW'lday night. Damage wu
..um.t.doteio,ooo.
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Risks Seen
To County
·By Ci·itic
By WIU.IAM SCHREIBER
Of ... oai1, l"Ntt ,..,,
The Orange County S h e r i f f ' s
Deparlment was sharply critic ized
Thursday for allegedly failing to bring jts
minorily v.·ork force up to par.
The charges v.·ere lev~led by County
Affirmative Action Coordinator Ramon
Curiel during initial budget deliberations
for next fiscal year.
Curiel said the department is not only
running the risk of losing federal grant
money but al90 may be investigated by
the Justice Department and Equal
Employment Opporlunities Commission.
"I Ylould say that they are at least
subject to a cutoff In federal runds If
progress is not seen." Curiel told the
gathering or I a w officers and county
budget experts studying the Sheriff's
requests for the coming year. S'nenrr James Musick is asking for
$14.S million next year -up from a total
of 112.8 million last year.
~\fuch of the increase ioold go towMd
hiring 99 new people in he department.
of which more than 50 .... ·ould staff a
maj:ir addition to !he overcrowded
county jail.
The jail facilities became a topic of
discussion at the budget meeting as an
outgrowth of personnel and minority
hiring needs.
Sheriff's Capt. William Wallace, wOO is
(See CHARGES, Page %)
Oraage C.ut
Weather .
Fog and low clouds night and
morning OOurs with mostly SW'Uly
afternoons Saturday. SI i g ht I y
cooler. Lows in the low 50s ~
night. HigM Sat~rday 74 to TT.
INSlllE T ODAY
Staff Writt>r Tom McCann
reviews a New Orleam jau
album in todat1'1 Weektndn'.
The record was produced b~ a
UC lrvi.ne E.'nalUh proJeuor and
recorded in London.
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ll'i11te1· W 01ade 1•lamf
Timberline Lodge in ri.·tount Hood, Oregon, is cov·
erec\ with snow up to' its third floor . .Heavy snow-
fall tias brought over 300 inches of snow to the
··'
area. 1'hc depth is the second highest recorded
snowfall sinte 1956.
.Fro11& Page l Tltis Relucta11t Streaker OIL ...
any split in ranks.
There \Vere indications that even if
Libya and Syria refuse to go along \\'ith a
decision to lift the embargo, the seven
. Couldn't -Win Eitl1er Way
-. other Arab nations.plal\ned to eo throu2h By The Associated Preas ~·hen he refused to streak. Then he was
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with it. It wasn't J8-year-0ld Richard Farrellcd's struckk. again when others thought he was
The'-Arab oil embargo agaimt the day for streaking, even if he had want strea 1ng.
r to. In fact, it jll!t wasn't his day . It went like this :
United States was imposed becau~ ° First, the youth said he was struck Farrell said he was hitchhiking in Des
U;S. suWort ol Israel durini the 197:I J\.folncs , Iowa Thursday when be met two
Middle Eut war.' men who asked him to streak -nm In
Ai the Saturday meeting or the world's L l S k • the nude.
oil esporting countries, ministers will ega trea f,Jtg He said he refi.!Sed and the men
review the prices o! crude, which have jumped out of the car and beat him into
tripled in five months , pushing up 0 / A d unconsciousness. He awoke, nude except
gasoline prices in some countries by f'J, t te g _elt U for his shoes, a T-shirt and a floppy hat
more than 100 percent. he had not had· before. -
OPEC's 12 meolbel'I, who produce 8$ l M Groggy, he went up on a viaduct and
percent ol world 011 export•, decided 1n At Coun ci eet shortly r•n afoul or two other men in.
Geneva Jan. 9 to freeze crude oil prices car who objected to his lack of clothing.
until Apr11 1. He said he y,•as beaten again, and these Iran's fina~ minister, Jams h Id CUPERTINO fAP I -A councilman assailants took his floppy hat with them.
Amouzegar said that if by then tile wants lo legalize streaking In "such By this time, patrolman Afarshall
industrialized nations of lhe West had places as to offend the few~ and delight Irwin arrived, gave him a blanket to
failed to take steys tp curb inflation and UJe greatest number·" but it would cost ward ()ff the chill and sent him to a
oil conipany,prp(its, the exporters \\·ould $50 for a license to streak COlllJllercially. hospital. He was treated for mouth cuts,
again increase the price of crude. Legalization of streaking -the art or a chlpped tooth and cuts and bruises.
"These conditions have not been met.'' dashing aroWld in the nude -has been Meanwhile, the fad that began on
an OPEC official said. proposed for t.his city of 23.000 by a college campuses and spread among
BecauSe of this, OPEC's economic longue-fn.dleek resolution introduced by _students hardhats and then on to other
comnti.wtoq, ~Ins lo ~ Vl~nna U»I ... Council\,nan James Jae~ and set for 7}11atklnl!"~tinued unabated .
\veek..., _dcqded to.~ recomlllend;... t o ~ncD ~ Monday night. ·-;. -in Hooolulu three young men wearing
membtirs that crude oil prlces be :-"?'b"I; J}nibieni must be exposed down · only ski ma ;ks streaked through the
increased Aptil l. OPFiC officials said. to its bare· essentials." said Jackson atudk> of televisiOn station KIT V
Of the organization's 12 members · Thursday. "I! our council would act Thursday while the local live news show
represented on the commission, only decisively, we can strip away all wa5 being presented. Saudi ~ Arabia opposed the !MVC. the pretenses and meet the needs or our 'I'he men yelled, "Streak! Streak!
officials said. citizens:" Streak!" as they darted across t.he news
OPEC's members are. Abu Dhabi, Jackson's reslution rends in part: se t. They were seen from the chest up on
Algeria , Ecuador, Indonesia , Iran, Iraq, "\Vhcreas, this event is most orten televls.ion sets throughout Hawaii.
Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi characterized by per90l1S rapidly running The streakers escaped in a truck.
Arabia and V~nezu.ela. through public places with only teraiis Streaking also was reported among
On Sunday 1n Vienna, Aflb members sh~ and goose.bumps. American soldiers in South Korea.
or the organiJ.aUon. plus Egypt .... •snd '!:Resolved: Streaking Within the city Three nude men dashed from a bar a
SY!i', .are ldaeduled . to cooll~ talkl •. -limits 'shall• ht petfo~mcd only between few . miles from the demilitarized zone
adJoumed in '.J'rlpoh \V.ednesday, . Oii 10 p.m. and' &.-a.m. ;:_ except on Md JI lieutenant was seized by military
lilting ~ oil ezti_bargo against tbe United especially dark nights and only In such police for streaking inside the compound
States. places as to offend the fewest and deligbt of the, 8th Army headquarters in Seoul.
the greatest number." • Streaking bas befuddJed officials of the
Court Declares
Datk l:l orse 0 K
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.JACKSONVILLE. N.C. IUPfl -A
Marine, ~hareed last month with failing
to equip hls horse with lights to ride to
work on the streets before dawn has been
foWld innocent in Onslow County District
Court.
Cpl. Edward Lay, 20, was given a
traffic ticket Thursday for "operating a
horse on a public street during bours of
darkness when the horse was not
equipped with headlights or tail lights."
~rd~ to ttie proposed. ordinance. Soviet Youth ltnrustry .
streaking in ust bt at a "dignified walk'' • "\Ve can't WMierstand what's the
unless it is raining or the temperature reason for it," Victor Danilenko said
falls below 4-0 degrees. Thursday while visiting with Missouri
A permit from the city clerk, payment Gov. Christopher S. Bond Jn Jefferson.
of a $50 fee for commercial streaking Danilenko, professor of po 11 t i c a I
and permission from a physician would ~cience al Moscow State University, said
be-required before a streak in the city Soviet students heard . about streaking
Jiinits. • and were as 'COnfused as he was as to the
Politicians y,·ould be permitted to motive.
streak without paying any fee, the In Las Vegas, comedian Sammy Shore
resolution savs. streaked across the stage Thursday
The city aitomey would be inst.ructOO during singer Connie SI.evens' show
to draw up a tist of approvOO streaking berore 650 persons at a large hotel. .
sites in lhe city which already has had "I was depressed and the streak idea
streaks through department stores, kind of came over me by surprise," said
bowling alleys. the local college and a Shore, who preceded ~1iss Ste\•ens on
Att.orney Edward G. Balley, as part of
the defense, displayed a cartoon drav.·lng ..
of a horse with "radial steel hooves ,"
headlight& and tum signals and e\'en an
emission control device.
h1cDonald's drive-in testaurant. stage.
Frot1t Page l
'SAUCERS' HIS SPECIALTY
DAILY PILOT . •
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ike to be.
"They usually contact people who are
ss:arl'd to death ," said Fox. "Yet there
are plenty of others who are prepared to
act ill a rational maMer if contacted."
lie said television programs like "Star
Trek" and "One Step Beyond" have done
a Jot to prepare people to accept lhe fac\
()( life on ot.her planets and to help them
understand how these contacts might be
n1ade.
But lhe greatest source of Information,
according to Fox. is lhe Bible.
"I believe in 9od as a supreme being,
as a crealive foret!, '' said Fox. "To say
}'C a~ the only lift fonns Jn the w1ivene
is to limit God.''
He said If one Is to believe In the Bible
n.teral1y, in the ascension of Christ, for
es.ample, one must project his awareness
to the poSsibility ot life on other planets
. and u.e1r visitation 10 ellrth. This is a • poin\ he ,,......,. In the Iecims he Cl•,.
10 groups in the ~a.
''The whole thing l! tied to the
destruct.ion of Atlanlls rtfcrred to in the
Bible as the Oood." he said. "t.lanklnd
was wiped clean oo this planet nnd so
Ct'rtaln pteple came and guided us ."
ffe said they came to give mfl1 on thl!i!
backward planet n morality and Jl
. :liplrllu1f basis for llfe which they had "r.Nl' adtlo,cd.
: 'Tb< earth repr...,ni. • type .I pmlal
· mloey. a -piece where we are conOntd ao
that we ~an't interfere with tile higher
tchtine of thin~s.'' he snid. "Until we
show a splrltual and 'Q~ral appniclatlon
• • •
of higher life cooctpts v.·e'll be forced to
remain here." ·
"After all. the commandment v.·e
violate most often is 'thou shalt not kill'.
No one \vants us out there traipsing
ftround causing trouble."
Fox said he believes that beings from
outer. spaoe will leave us alone to work
otll our Own evolutionar')' process as long
as we,.re 'not hurting others in the
universe.
. "Until we grow up and join the
universal brotherhood they will continue
to check up oo us,'' be added.
\Vhat does he tell skeptics?
"l have two philosophies. one from
Shakespeare and I.he other from Shaw:
Ooe 11 that there are more things in
heaven and on earth than dreamtd of in
our philosophies and the other Is that
some see things as thy are and y,·onder
why; 1 see things that aren't and ask
why not."
"Why ohould we llmlt 01u11elve•
becau!t we encounter something beyond
comprt~slon? lf , we'd listened to
skeplics and neaative inn~s we
wooldn't have advanced this rar,'' Fox
oboorYed.
F9x Did he thinks It'• l'l\3011 ~ on
eonh to ·liave u clo$cd mlr1d. and to
ridicule. othqs who look 1 toward the
future. •
"\!emeber," he "!Id, "If you bad told
;>e0pla 7C year1 ago that wt'd have. a
m1'n on the moon VI this century, they
would have I.brown you into the nut
house." •
GAO Probe
'
Agne'Y:'s Staff
Fundi~g Q~et:ied
WASHINGTON (AP) -The General
Accoqntihg Ofrlce says that using
goverlunent fuq;ls to provide office ~pace
and services 'for former Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew ii legally proper but
queM.ioned the \12 or -a pre1iidential fWld
lo pay the salaries of his staff.
Compt.roUer General Elmer Sia'att, in a
-lttter released today li~ Rep. John E.
-10-Calif.), reooinmended that
CoQgres.s in the futur.e spell out more
clearly exactJy what a vice president ¥tho
resigns ls entitled to In the Vf'ay of
government services.
At issue is the money spent for
Agnew's staff and office apace a1nce he
resigned Oct. 10 afte:r plead.lng no oontest
to a charge of income Lax .evuion.
The staff ls helping Agnew sort through
vice presidential papen.
Staats said that since "we cannot say
that the use of Mr. Agnew's staff ~ not
to some degree official Jn purpose,. we
must conclude that the expenditurea ~(for
office space and government se.rVices I
are legally proper.''
But he que:stioned t.he payment of
sal¥ies of 6,gnew'1 remainlng staff from
a dlscretk>n.ary fimd establl.shed for
President Nixon by C.OOgress.
Staats said that Congress did not spell
out clearly what the discretionary food
was to be used for but "we doubt that the
Congress inlended that the appropriation
~ook! be available for the purpOse of
continuing staff a!!:!.sfahoe • dtuing the
period of lime here involved:''
Staats said, however, he could oot rule
Lines Recall 3,500
CHICAGO (UPI) -Trans World
Alrlln~ a!UlOWlCed Thursday that it
started recalling some of the 3,500 cabin
iittendants and ground employes laid off
last year due to the tuel shortages.
United Air Unes \Vednesday announced a
similar recall of 650 attendants beg~
In April. -----
Bill Studied
01i Kidnaping
SACRAMENTO ( U P I )
Legislation posting a $100,000
reward for the arrest a n d
conviction of persons inYOlved in a
political kklnaping In which the
victim was killed has been in~
duced In the Senate.
Sen. H. L. Richardson of Arcadia ,
a Republican candidate for the U.S.
Senate, said his measure (SB1861),
introduced Thursday , was
prompted by the Patricia Hearst
kldnaping.
"This bill should flush · out from
under ·the rock.,i some of the
revolutionaries who are spreading
violence and death. and Wltold
grief, \\'ith their guerrilla tactics of
political kidnapings,'' Richardson
said.
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one v.·ay or the other the use of the
presidential food because ol a "lack of
any clear Jeaislallve istory" on the
subject.
ltioss asked Staats to rule on the
legality ol using government funds to
staff a 1ransltional office for Agnew.
Staal.! said "ii ill expected" that the
staff services and facllilles provided for
Agnew "will not be cootiDued beyond the
first part 'of April.
, ··we recommend that the eoncress
remove all doubts for the future by
enacting appropriate I e g ~I a.ti_ on
concerning the use of 1ppropr1at1ons
made for 'spe<:ial ual5tance to the
Prt'!ident · and for the use of space by a
former vice president and his prior staff
following his resignation during his term
Released
of office," Staats said. I •
Agnew loat Secret Service prot~lon
Feb. 17. alter MAia questlO!l<d tbL
legalit:t of providing such protection and
Staat.s said that he could find no legal
jll.\tiflcatioo for tl
Count Luigi Rossi di ~fonte
lera, the kidnaped heir to the
?i·tartini and Rossi vermouth
fortune has been released
afU!i: si)ending four months in
a barn near Trevigllo_. He was
found by customs ~otiee . 1n·
v,estigating anQther k.idnapmg.
• }
CHARGES LEVELED · •.. , •;;,
in charge of 'the county's jail, said
condiliom are so bad now that 30me
parts or rhe Jail Y.'OO't be approved by
state corrections officials this year.
He aaid the jail now bas more than 850
inmates and only 760 beds available. The
number in jail swells to more than 900 on
the W<ekemb.
"Our medical area already doesn't
comply with the state standards ~ th.is
will be indicaled among other things Ul
the correctkxls report," Wallace said.
Sheriff Musick said the construction
work on a fourth floor of the jail building
is near completion but it ~l be staffed
tOdotfny gOod. ---
The ex~slon \\'OU.Id S\\1!11 the county
jail's capcicity to more than 1,100 and
y,·ould include addi.Uona to medical
personnel and coolcing facilities .
Wallace said about 35 of the new
employes be is seekillg would be armed
deputies and the remainder would consl<ll
of cookl, nurteS and other ~1
needed to maintain the jail and iL!
inmates.
[)\><ussion of the growing nU1J1ber of
inmiltes broke dovm into ._ ~cal
d e b a t e , during which County
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas
said the money could better be used to
build park!.
"U all the programs we have to divert
these people into useful activities aren1t
working then maybe we should stop
them," he 5'id.
Wallace told the panel thal a great
majority d. the prisoners now-In jail are
"hard cases" and they are the ones wm
are taking space.
He said of the 50,000 people booked last
year, 34 percent were out in eight hours,
another 62 percent within two da)'I and a
total of 80 percent ol all prisoners were
out tn five days.
1be remiining 20 percent fill all
" ' avallabl• jail space Ind are herd """
criminals who would not be rehabilitated
if they had the chance," Wallace said.
\Vallace said the a\•erage jail inmate
today is under 25 years of age and "far
niore violently militant" than those fi ve
or 10 years ago.
. During the discussion of addllional
hiring of minori,ties and women, Curiel
said Mu!ick's record "is the poorest of
any department in the county."
He said the Department now has 2-1
women (19 Anglos, two black and three
Mexican • American) and 359 men (343
Anglo, two black and 14 J\.1exican-
Amerlcan).
__ Musick......countei:ed_CWiel's argument!
by saying his office has been thwarted by
Thomas' office in it! efforts to hire a
man responfilble for nothing other than
seeking out qualified minorities.
Funds for that man were frozen .
itusick said, and he can only take what
applicants are sent to him by the county
personnel office.
He said soo·,people applied for a half
dozen Ol)Cnings last time around. of
y,·hich 107 passed the w r i t t e n
esamination. Two were black, one of
whom failed the oral esam and 1he other
was arrested on outstanding warrant
charges.
If A1usick's entire budget package Is
approved by the Board of Supervisors
tttis summer, it would add ty,·o cent! lo
the county tax rate and also provide up
to $350,000 to increase patrol service in ·
the south C0W1ty.
Book Store Robbetl
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Young man
with a pistol escaped with '650 from the
lx>okstore Thursday at San Diego State.
Students waiting In lines nearby were
unaware of ~he holdup.
See This Anemblege Of l
Henredon's Folio Eleven Coll ection :
Insp ired From 17th & 18th C entury
French end Chinese Styles. These
Ouhtendin9 Pieces Fit Beeutifully
Into Almost Any Decor. ·
Henredon j-<~
NEWPORT I EACH e
1m WES1'CLl'.FF OR,. 642·~
LAGUNA BEACH e
WEIKDAYS I. SATUR AYS 9:00 to 5:30
NIWl'ORT I. TORRANCE OPEN FlilDAYS 'TIL 9
345 NOln"H COAST lr\YY,, .-1
TORRANCE e
2300 HAWTHORNE 6LVU.
10pen Sunday 12·S:30) mt2'1'1
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Friday, Marcti 15, Jq74 s DAIL V PILOT 3
At Your
Service ·Governor Hopefuls on Coast
·,
A Sulldi1, We+t1111j •1'*11 .,..... .
Ol IM DaU, Pllol
Coe a problem1 Tl!n
Pat Vunn. Pat
l'i.,trola Dealer Wauted
DEAR PAT: \\'ill you please try 10
locate an individual or company that
<!ea ls in antique recording machines ~ I
have a Victrola. the first console mod el
made by the Victor Talking Ma chine
Company many years ago. Now that l've
dec ided to sell it. I want to make sure I
know the true value and deal v.•ith a
r eputable buyer.
---P.K,. San Juan C1pl1tr1no
The RCA Corp. advises you to contact
Bob Pln!On, Coantry fttuslc Foundallon,
700 Jllh Ave. S., Nashville, TellD. J7Z03.
Pl.Ison ts a naUonally recogntied upttt
and consultant for the Ubrary ol
Congress in lhe field of a ntique records
and recording machines. Strut him a pic-
ture and lull descr iption o( yoiar Victrola,
including aerial numbers. Requ~t an
t'Stimate and refertoce w a rell.able sales
source.
Coml119 llp: C11.,lnmate1?
DEAR PAT : A friend told me Y:e may
be able to use cyclamate sweeteners
again if the govemment gives the okay.
If this is true, what kind of a procedure
'is Involved in checking out a previously
banned food additive? L.lt., Laguna Beach
The Ursl step toward p o s s I b I e
reinstatement ef cyclamates will tnvolve
two extensive st'udle~ of the 16-volume
pe1111on for reapproval submitted by Ab-
bott Laboratories. Following evaluation
--of-tbe laboratory's data by an FDA·
a1signed team of toxlcllogists. nutr,t
tklnists and chemists, the pelition then
will be referred to the Food Protection
Committee of the Nalionat Academy of
Sciences for its e\'a\uaUon.
Spro11t Dolls Lost
D~AR PAT: One .of your recent col·
umns gave information on how one might
get the Green Giant Sprout dolls. l
ordered two last November and l.bey've
not arrived. I didn't keep the address, so
I'm hoping you can help me or tell me .
where I might write. The dolls I or~red
were for my grandchildren too, just like
the othe r reader who asked your
assistance.
1\1.D., Fountain Valley
The problem wilh the "Sprout" dolls Is
that they are made out of plastic -
which Is in very sbort supply. You will be
contacted by Green Giant personall y wtth
apologies for the delayed dolls, since
orden th rough Dec. 4 bave bet.n filled
and a ~rnlxup must have occurred ill your
case. Green Giant expected t;;,000 dolls
last Weck, but Still ts running lt,IM
behind. If readers wish to Inquire about
specific orders, they can write to Green
Gian t Company, Promotional Services
' Dept., ~~Sueur, l'itinn. 56058.
Bookle t Rntes Die ts
DEAR PAT: I've been studying most
of the currently publis~ed diet books,
trying to ~hoose the be.st one to follow.
?ity doctor says go ahead and diet, bul
not to go overboard.on any fads. It seems
that every die t I've read aboul is con·
demoed by some and ·prti ised by others.
Has anyon e ever evalulited all the
popular diets in an objective ma.Mer so
the average person can make a wise
choice?
C.N., Irvine
A new paperback book, "Consamer
Guide -Rating lhe Diets," by Theodore
Berland may help untangle your diet
dil emma. All of tbe popular diets are
tu mmarited and then criUcb:ecl, lbe
cri Uclsm rebutted, and the pn:ic and tom
evaluated. Popular welgbl cootrol groups
also are dlsa15sed along wltb belta\ior
modification programs.
Comp11sa 111p Pro!Jlem•
DEAR PAT: t. neticed a recent
reference in your column to Compusamp
Distributing Center's current business
problems. Last 'year I .,sent Panel-Pak IO
completed questionnaires and $15 to
cover postage /or 10 sets of free samples.
Some of the' women received thelr
packages, but T never received mine, nor
did I gel the glfl !or anding in the ques-
tionnllires. Do yW ·1:1ave any rurther y.~
on this' company's opwalion?
S.D., San Clemente
1 11 seems to be goln1 frOm bad to ''"one,
even though Compasamp's last big pr.-
motJo'n "'·as at lht tod of Dtc:ember. The
fir m now has announced tt 1111 ao mun
'!of rolfUllng pendl11g or new compllJatl
iD"·oJvlni refund1 tr dtUvery If prod.-.
Comp1i1&1mp re~ Ml* t • !tflnance and rnetr tu tll'ftl _,
13mpll1g btistatu, ~? I' I _. ee•
plaint• on 1 f\rst-11-ftrst-oat ....... TM
Oxna rd , Calif. ComPftlmp offke ca• Dt
longer be reaclltd 1ad co11:11pNlllb sltoald
be directed to llele9 Tayler, Cem.·
pusamp lnc.. c.o . Ceater, Marcus
l.11du!llrial Par~, P.O. Box S 0 011 ,
Smilhtol\ll, N.\'. 11717. ~ Hn t Pant.I·
Pak complaint b10dltd by At ~our
Service "'' ne:arly lwn yeart agO Ind at
1h1t time It was dt lenolntd there a ~
actul Jft len T•.Yk>r, j111t • .. 11ber ''
CUStoller JtrVlee rt~ •
•
GOP's Woes
• Disclaiined
By Flournoy
B)' JOUN \'AL TERZA °' ... Otlly ,. .. ''•"
State Controller and gubernatorial
candldate Houston Flournoy predfcted
'Mlunday that the oil companies will be
made the goats of the state campaigns
this year, '1and nolhiog that they do will
be COMidered right.''
In an informal appearance before
scores af Republican women in Laguna
Niguel during the foggy afternoon the
former Pomona area college professors
turned-politician also said t h a t
Californians will not be swayed by a
~mocratlc campaign w;ing G 0 P
problems jn Washington .
"They're smart enough to realize that
the stale races have nolhin& to do with
the goings on at the federal 'ievel and
they will make the ri3ht choice if given
good candidates, good issues and a good
campaign," tle said.
Flournoy was one of two Republican
candidates for governor stumping in the
county through the day, U . Gov. Ed
Reinecke made a simil ar appearance in
Laguna Hills.
. Flournoy, whose opinion on o i I
compani!?S in the stat!? has been one of
praise rather than damnation, al so raised
a moderate stance in · the conflicts
be.tween the need £or a c l c a n
environrntnt and the production of
Ef'IOllgh ellef'gy.
He said he advoca ted 1 "systems
approach" to addressing the energy ?
shortage problems, rather t'han attacking
one single proble m such as auto
emissions.
11We all were so alarmed about smog
that we forced devit'e! on auto engines
that cut gasoline mileage. Now, sUddenly
\\'e have a fuel shortage," he said as his
audience chut kled .
1be control)er's appearance · at a
membership lea of the Republican
\\'omen's Club also was laced \\'ith
partisan jabs against Secretary of State
and Democratic candidate &imund G.
Brown Jr, and San Francisco ~1ayor
Joseph Alioto.
"I call him J unior Brown, because
ttlat's exactly v.'bat he is," Flournoy said
l\fayor Alioto's problems in settling the
crippling municipal employes' strike in
San~Francisco have proved prime ft>dder
for Flournoy as well.
"I predict the same sort of
performance from the man or any ot he r
Democrat if the governorship goes lo
them," he 'Said. l
He warned the dozens of South Coast
Vt'Omen assembled at a private res idence
that they should disregard "rhe pundits
of gloom" and to continue their strong
support of the party in California.
He admitted, h ow e v e r , that
campaigning as a Republican for state
office is "an uph ill fight."
"With only 36 percent of t h e
registration, each time we come out
we're battling like crazy to swing enough
votes to our side," he adfied.
Hot 'Str ea k
' . .__
Gools F.i~me n ·
RIVERSIDE (UPI) -Tw6 ·
firemen fbave been stispended for
streaking a firem,et's bowling
tournament. ~ •
Howard 7.aricki, 2.\, ol the
Riverside d e p ar t mle nl , was
suspended for 96 wofking hours
without · pay' for dat'ng na ked
across the lanes at Southern
P.liforn ia Firemen's ow I in g
League competition saturday, the
Department said,
He was accompanied by another
naked smoe eater no~ tidentified,
from tlie Downey Fire Deparbnent,
nalred sinoke ealer no! 'identilied,
$1$penSiori1 it was ~. , r/
SPEA KS IN NIGUEL
Houston Flournoy
Pendletor1 's
Mari11 es Get
Fr iday Pay?
.. -
She r i ff's
Si te Bac ked
For Coast
Ed Ren1ecke
Ass ails
News Medi a
Lt. liov. F.d Ht>inecke has resumt'd his
gubernatorial ca1npaif,!:n \\'ilh a ringin).!
South Orange County should have a attack on thr l:>cnlOCratic party and a
sheriff's substation 1f only because or lbc f<'" S\.\'ipes at the fX'\\'S media.
gasoline crisis, Supervisor Ro n a Id Hr1nr('ke !i>poke Thursday night to a
Caspers said this "·eek. crov.·d of about 250 at a meetin~ oC the Hepubhl·an Club al U;.isurc \\'orld in
The F'if!h District supervisor, •·OOse Laguna ll il!!i>. lft? \.\'as i11terrup1ed by
jllrtsd\c1 ion Ctl\'rrs virtually all of the ap1llaus(• six tin1cs durin g his 12-minuh:
sOuth county, got lu s fellow board spee-ch.
mcnlh<'rs to go alon,i.: \\i\h a feasibility The lit•utcnant !!0\('rnor looked tired
study of substation fa c1 htil's son1t'whcrc but spokl' t'Onf1dl•ntly of jun1ping bal'k u1 to his can1p11fgn. lie had romplt'll'<l \\.\'O in the boon1ing Saddlcback Valll'y. d.11 ys of tie dele<.'tor tests ea rller
The substation concept is alrelldy u~1 T•lff~oio Thursdav in Sacran1t·n10 in C'OOnection
under study by various county agencies CAMPAIG NS ON COAST \\'itl1 lhe-11'1' investigation.
but the study Caspers wa nts in the next Reinecke it Leisure World In nn apparent referenct• to \\'nterga!('.
two weeks will be a coordinated effort by Rl•ine<::kt• said he had been "a victim of
County Adminis trallvc Officer Rober t the nl'ws ... Hut he sakl \\'atcrgatc would serve to pull the Hcpublican party
Thomas and Sheriff James Musick. J'adI.ati·Oll R,·l l C" together in fighting a common problem.
Caspers said the biggest immediat e \ "Let's not cowC'r do.,.,•n because of
savings of putting nian experimental headlines 1 some<1nl' v.·ants lo \.\'rile
substation would be in mileage. gasoline FalJ.: lO LO\•'CSl l'rit1e1z1ng the Pres ident," he said. o T Hl'in('('ke fie.,.,· to this Orange County and "''ear and tear on patrol cars. Rrpubl i{'an st ronghold after the ,.,.,.o six-
Caspcrs claims. among other things. Le J , D I hour lie detector srs,1;101lS .,.,·ith FBI
that the sta1ion ~·ould : \'C I l l · CC'3 ( e af:f'nts. ll<· s:11d ro1nr1r1ion or hi:'
-Eli1ninatc about 500,IXKl 1nilcs nf tcst1monv on his rolt• in the ITT
driving nqw done by officers ix-1 .... ·cen SACRA1'.IF.l\'TO (l:PI \ -Le\'e]i; or ca111paigi1 contributions contro\'ersy "frlt.
their beats and the Snnla Ana station . radioac!Lvlty in the air O\'l'r California good." Ill' also said he \1·ould like to seed
By th e Associated Press during 1973 we re the tov,.est since the his 12-hour inlcrvir"' v.·Jth agenl'> ma l'
The ~tarine Corps. crackin~ dO\\ll on -Conser\'C about 4o.ooo gallons of state's measurement prof;(ra1n bC'gan 111 public by special \\latcrgate prosecutor
ff gasoline a year. 1960. health department officials rrported U.'On Ja\\·orski. Leathernecks in vol ved in crimes o h od R·m· -kc d""'" loud .·oppla""" wo'oh -Put the police closer tot c prilnary l ay. " ...... '"" .... .._ base. is trying another tactic In addition h h h 1.,.,·"g c~l'"-•g,, lcho·e·r or the strong defenses of big busi ness and the area they serve rat er t an as 1nuc as , .. rv 1111\.'.1
lo discharge-the con trolled pay day. dl'partment's rad iollctivity rontrol unit. oil ind ustry, He defended the oil depletion 25 miles away, od d h Ibo h th ·1 By or4ering 26,000 men and women at said none or the levels retorded Joist year allo\\·ance a sai c ug t " e 01
d I -Save an undetermined amount of industry.has done a darn fi ne job." Camp Pendleton to be pai on y on were high enough to crootc any health gasoline due to the far t that as many as concern. He also received a round of applause
Fridays, Brig. Gen. Robert Nichols 82 percent of the deputies \\'ho covrr the The low levels. he sald. consisted of whe n he said he favored capital
expects fewer problems in neighboring south county li\'C there as .,.,·rll. only "background '' r<1dlation that con1es punishmt-'111. "I'm all for it." he declared.
Oceanside. Caspers said about 00 pcrcenl of lhc from the earth a11d cosmic rays in the Heinecke altt1ckcd stri kes by pub lic
A computer study under ~·ay since last atmosphl'rc. cmployes and said. '"If thoSt' people don·'t
J.000 nnnu::il juvenile arrests in the south 1;oldl:><:r~ said !he.re were no significant want to work , let's mo\·e them out and August shov.•s that most of the crime counti· also re<1uire lhc 1iarl'nls to make ' I I · " Th I involving Marines in Oceanside takes diffrrl'n~es in ai r samples taken c osc lo put son1eone e sc 1n. c commcn was f 1l al least one trip to Santa Ana to confer the tv.o nuclear pov.·er plants :it an apparent reft•rencc to the labor
place on payday nights which e Oil v.·ith officers. Humboldt Bay and San Ono f r e . situation in San Francisco 11.•herc public l\looday, Tuesdays or \Vrdnesdays. As · f 0 much as S'lS0,000 Ooated nightJ.y into the "It may be nothing 1nore than a fi shing "Actually, the average month I y cmployes ha\'C been on str ike or l
four bkx:ks in which topless bars. mass e:cpedition but 11 seems lo me il's aboul radioactive lc\'c\s at nuclea r po.,.,·er days.
sage parlors and X-rated movie houses as positi ve a bet as going fishing u1 your planfs ha\·e been son1c1•lhat Jo.,.,•er than in Reinecke schedull'<I a 11.·alking tour
.. ~.1 bathtub," Ciispe rs said. 1he state as a whole," he said. ll nd two more spceclles today . abow N. :··~~--'~---'~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~· The st udy showed , says t\ichols in an
interview today. that ''when pa y day
occurs on a Thursday or a Friday.
in va riably .,.,.e ha ve much Jess of a
disci pline problem in Oceanside." He
said the men take their cash and are off
to bigger cities and reso rt areas farth er
away. A cut • rate ticket plan allows
marines to go reasonably to Los Angeles,
San Diego and Las Vegas.
"So far , I have had no large numbers
of marines deta ined in those cities." the
commanding officer of the world 's
largest J\.1arine base.
''l think those large cities have a
capacity to absorb and provide outlets to
meet the broad social needs of different
categories ol people."
Nichols said he spent t~·o payday
nights disguised as an on:tinary ~1arinc
on liberty in Oceanside's "tenderloin "
district and ''one COllld get the feeling in
walking around that this is a sin city -
~1arines were e\bov.' to elbow in bars."
Since August a total of 858 men from
Camp Pendl eton have been arrested by
Oceans ide police on charges ranging
from murder. rape and a robbery to
being drunk and disorderly.
The statistics compiled for Gen.
Nichols show 35 percent of all persons
booked by Oceanside police were r-.tarines
from his base.
Since August, more than 900 have been
stripped of their uniforms b y
administrative d i s c h a r g e s afte r
conviction by civil ian authorities or by
courts-martial for conviction on military
charges.
The city of 50.000 residents arrested six
persons on murder charges since August
-three ol them l\farines; 58 persons on
rape charges -21 of them ~1arines; 96
persons on assault charges -58 of them
h1arlnes, In all categories. the bookings
were l,~3 civilians arx1 858 Marines.
; ~ ..
INDIAN 119
. ~ HAWTHORN !1~9 STEER
'.'\l~!// Lots ol color, hardy evergreen shrub. low maintenance
POTTING SOIL Indoor ptanls, house
strawberries. Reg. 79'
3 bags 1 OO
Top dress vour lawn & mulch
ycur garden now!
plants. vegetables & 49c
....::.-:.:::..........:=========~
Sµ*1day's · Pilot t~ ·Report
l:lo.i~ Others View County • PIGGY BACKS
DI CONDRA
$14?~,
-AmOltg erings edilors predict will be
"SundaY'• Best.., in th~ Dally Pilot are
Jhese : I :
-.,_ 'dT!iERs · 1!£E 115--0rang<
COua ty, ~ th& sutliect or magailDe
lp"llcles, ' Jios almost achi e ve d
"atalel>ooi" ·Iii' 'nlt!on&l politics. The
Page. he just wants pCl\\'er. Sperling says
he (\Vallace) is cracking the whip and
·watching from his \\'heelchair as such
political heavy~·eights as President
Nil'on and Sen. F..d\\'ard Kennedy jump .
MAJIR I AG E , AME R I CAN
STYLE-Pat Loud, who laid t h e
groundvr-ork for her own divorce while
television aud.Jtnets watched { t h e
(
1 f ) educatJooal televtskm series ' ' A n Sanda~ Best :...S"4., r:.111~~.t~ ;:;;
-• "vtry, very good marrlage" in the cover • county Is about to gel nallooal 1uention story she wrote exclusively for lhls
agaht , this time from Al>oclaled! ~ we<k'1 Family Week)y.
feature wrlttr Kay Bartlet whole BELFAST TODA Y-St. Patrick would
abllysis will be carded in the A Sectlon • wonder 'II the atmosphere that prevall!I
ol S\Jndall'• Daill' ;1'11ot. 'In Notlhorn ls1ilttd .Jllls St. Palrlck';
WAL1"CE'S WANTS-Gov. George Day-fear, amid rUbblc and wrec kage.
Wallace. doesn't w~l to be Prelidenl or AIMlelated Prm correspondent Hugh
e-w."M Vk:e President. AccordJ'1g to Mulligan find! AOmc rtbulldlng and 11
colunl.st Golfrey SperUng J r. who 1 e tmall degree or hope, however, in Ill
oolumn wtll oppur Sunday on !he Op-«! •iluetlon as he de!Crlbct B<Uast today.
I
•
• CREEPING
CHARLIES
• WANDERING
JEWS
Exira large house plarils.
Use in'hanging baskets or pots. I /_ PRICE Reg.
7
"
95
/ 2 SALE. s399
• for Solcial Otclllions ....... , . • • . M»lt
OfS.111 ••• PAITllS. m:.
ASIAIOUTO.
l'Wl1' llUITAI. SlllVlCE
•
• N£W HOME OWNERS
ASIC ABOUT OUR
LAHDSCN'E SERVICl
•
leg.
5.98
•
1
4 DAil V PllOT
....... /9\.
CO.•iing ,~,
•.. ·~ .•. ,.,
}: '\~ "1.~;, wlda .... ~. ">'"· To• · . hln~ t'?. \;t,,
: _Getting Lost
In the Fog
FRIDAY FtlZZIES DEPr.-FEAR and
di.sn.af strikes many a heart along this
best.a! au poUible coasts Mien the
• -..
Frid.,-, March 15, l'i'74
Ai.~liner Erupts • Ill Fla~es; Toll High
Fisher111an Finds Son
•
Horr~r-stricken Father Hooks Body of Boy, 6.
' lo\illl10R, Ohio (AP) -Slepllen E. Malenda wenl
fishing in Mentor Lqoons, '°' he has for the past sev~
eral dayt on the ura:ln& of family members, to 1et his
mind olf his &-y'l"f-<lld aon, Timothy, who disappeared
Jan. 25. ·
"Ive been casUng there for tM past two or three
week.11" Maltnda sa.Jd. "I oever hooked anything -
maybe some tree stumps."
Tburaday hJa hook loWld Timothy's body in the
, water. '
"I llarted hollering and ..,..mine. I left the rod
there and went to 1et help."
Mentor police were called to remove.the body from
the water. The body wu lakeo I<> the Cuyallop Cowlty
coroner's olOce for examination.
AN Alll'OPSV waa ICheduled tattt today:
Malenda'1 home ii about. 2CI yards from the la-
goms. Hundm:b of volunteen and police and fishermen
searched the swampy atta for aeveral days after Tlm-
othi' disappeared, aod dlven l<UCbed the walen ol
Many _lnjur~
In Tehran
I Runway Fire
,...,.wi...-
TEHRAN -A Danlllll c:hmWr airliner
earrykie .. Peno-bunt into flames
during ita takeoff N1 at Mehrabas
alzport today, tilling or lnjurln( most of
iU-en. Aaoodated Pr'8I ftported that air·
port olflclals Mid 21 poraonl """'
-· United rr-put the death lolal 1117. Many ...... Injured crltlcally,
-~ forecaster takes to the airways
on a~ li,i:e this and Intones:
• 11\e'I IOrecast calls for early morning ~....,.,B log along lhe coast. .. "
"WHEN I FIRST hooked on, I bad a Ceeling," said
Malenda, hls voM:e heavy with JOrrow. "I aaid, 'Oh
the lagoon. ,
'Ille boy's cousin, James Viocent, 31, who lives
nearby, said Malenda went filhinl "beca.Wle J told him
be oughl lo be doilll! the thlnp be .....Uy does I<> tal<e
bis mind off the boy."
u llamea -1Jsvuib the twin-<Oglne Caravelle owned by Sterling Airways ol
~ ... Clashes Rage
At Heights
For 4th Day
•
Whf:n that happem, milk t.ruck drivers,
comn'llters. mailmen, n e w s p a p e r
carrteia..and roadside joggers all cringe
inlilllQo.
• my God ! What have I got? Tlmmy?' J pulled him up
and saw his face. There wu blood on IL
'IblfuSly you ll!teli .to 1c>me ol these
lo~, l""''d end ' ui> fiSUJ'inB that
fog eGIMI f..~ like an •ven blanket. aetU!ai tn 'a ll\1llorm layer ol fuzz all
aver, our 1Xl81tllne.
FOG, OF COURSE, ll more fickle than
lhal hi oor region. It luru in pocket..
Gfla. dUek where you least ezpect it.
'lbioli-out Where it doesn't matter. Fog ls
one~ Motbet" Nature's trickier stunts.
°'Ill ol my fell!>w taboren In the Vinef»dl of newspapering .cast an eye to
the sty·early today and declared, ''Thb
foe Is okay. It matches my mood for a
Friday.''
Could be. But then on the other hand,
you have to look at the brighter aide of
foggy days. For example Cog: ,.
-Gives you aomethlng different to
b!u1lte than just plain smog.
Beirut Bares
Oil Embargo
Hijack Plot
From Wlre Servlees
. BE!Rlfr -Arab guen111a IUSpecta
arrested at Beirut Airport were planning
to hijack a Royal Dutch Alrlines (KLM1 i.-je\ and use it and tbe passengeni
as hostages to stop the lifting of the . oil
embargo agaJnst the United Slates,
judjciary sources said today.
'Ibe 90W'Ce9 sakl the ail: men, aJTeSted
late Thursday, told investigators they
.IN SHORT ..• -COVERS UP GllUTLY places along
the oooilal landlcapei like Prornintory
Point In Newport,•h Main Beach 1
ooostniclion job In Loima. the oU wells p~ to oorii.,.;.i..,. thelBoelni 747 to
in Hlllltlngtoo Beach, or the bltlboorda the PersW, GuH oil state of Abu Dhabi
and oudle danc:<r signs in 0..la Mesa. and hold It and the passe111erw I<>
-Sk>ws down most of tbe traffic so put preaure on Arab oil ministers to
lllal moal ol the CTUheo are Jusl lmler-continue the boycott .
benders. 'Ibe oiJ-rnin.i.stera are scheduled . 1o
· -Causes all the door-to-door salesmen review the embargo in a meeting
to get lost. , Wedneoday In Vienna.
-Mam it qulet·tmd JI08«fu1 to,.., e '"'I ..., S can bear Old Mao Sea do his rumble, ·.., •••lt9fl' ON'JI ~ and WASHING TON-Secretary ol S ta t e
So tt!•t pu~: much of 8 toock: 00 Hen_g ~· K~lnger bas a~ for
fog. I! It does all those things, It can'I be . ,"'.218'~ earher th~ week ,Q~ an bad. • ~ thil 1egklmacy of ·w-.n Eomipean
Some people complain a Jot a about gov~ts. ·
getting lost in these mists of the KISSUlger made Uw; rare admlsskln oC
morning. But contemplating it, 1 figure error Thursday dunng an une1~ed
more gets Jost in the mists of time. aPpeClrance at the State Department's
dail1_oe'ff briefmc, .
NOW YOU TAKE Daughtor, !or
was, she made a habit of
g dling down to the comer
oC lrce candy Wllil
y me to find her. O:mting
home with sticky flngen for my favorite
chair. Putting on her Sunday Belt dress
to go grab Dog's lall I<> Bel pulled
lhr®gb mud puddles. Collecting calS,
fish and assorted snails. Leaving a trail
of cookie Cltlmbs into her bedroom.
Drawing little, tiny perfect circles with
pen, peilci! or crayon on all the w.US.
Wasblni out my pipe in the kitchen sink
so It would be .mce and clean. Scratching
a lot wbell company came. RefWiing to
eat her peu and carrots.
In.·· an:-tdd.rsi to about I S O
<:<mgressioilal wives MOf!day, Kissinger
cootended Ulat sblce World \\'ar I, ';there
have been very rarely fully legiUmate
governments in any European country"
and that Western Europe represerQ "the
biggest problem" facing U.S. foreign
policy. e Reforms Atlaeked
WASHINGTON -Sen. John 0. Pastore
(D-R.I.), said today the .-aerious
defect in Pmident. Nlxoo.'1 campaign
refor:m proposals WU his oppoakion to
public fiMndDg.
"Pub!lc Cunds for the publ!c campaigns
of public officials make good seme if we
want I<> end political payola " Pastore
INDEED, AIL THESE tblnp ,..,.am .'
lose to Father Tlme. ·-"
said. •
'He called the Waterpte acandaJs
are ''<oo<IOSive po:ool that llle pi-.-
,E)'llem ol private flllAllcin& brteds
oorruption."
Happy Birthday)'-Daul!bter.
BROTHER, SISTER
TW0-1'IME LOSERS
WOODFORD, England (UPI) -Keith
Law, 2.S, courted his girlfriend for seven
years The romance ended on the first
night of their honeymoon, when the bride
announced she was running away with
Law's brother·in-law, Law told a court
Thursday.
Law and his sister, Violet. were given
conditional discharges after being
accused oC assaulting each other's
spouses.
Law and his sister said they were suing
the runaways for divorce. •
e Redd Foxx Relettts?'
NEW YORK -Comedian Redd FOiz:
says he will return to the television
series "Sanford and Soo" if NBC
corrects conditions that forced him to
leave,
Foxx met with network executives this
week and said Thursday he was "very
pleased with what I heard." He bad
complained that the show's depiction ol
black life was inaccurate. e L11ing C:ha1"9e Dettled
W ASlllNGTON -J8'e Jacoboen. the
first J>eZ'S9lt indicted In a federaJ
investigati9n of rnUt pr o d u c e r i '
conlributions to President Nixon's re-
election, pleaded lmocenl today I<> a
charge ol lying I<> the Walergate grand
jlJl1'.
UPI T .......
Latin Tour
Mrs. Pat Nixon represents
United States at presidential
inaugural in Brasilia of Gen.
Ernesto Geisel.
Police Seeking
Kidnapers Wlio
' 'Let Boy, 6, Go
PIEDMONT, Calif. (AP) -Pl>llce
were searching today for the abdoctors
of a young boy who freed their captive
after about 12 hours when they
apparently gave up cm demands to collet't
$100,000 ransom.
"The kldnapers made several calls
throughout t!l>e day i. lbe parenlS'
home," Police Chief Donald Asher said
'Jlnnday night after 6-year-old Robbie
IUcharil's n!lease. "They first asked ror
1100,000. They Indicated they -.Id tal<e
1.,. aa time .-ent on during bie day. Bui
there wu no ransom paid.''
Police said !hey were not searching
'for anybody specific now" and said they
plamed to question the boy thoroug'illy
alter be had gotten some re<t.'
ASHER SAID Robbie was kidoaped
Thursday morriing as he waJked. alone to
the school in ~edmont, a wealthy suburb
across the bay from San Francisco. He
was kept ln an automobile trunk
throughoul the ordeal with his mouth and
eyes taped, and his hands and feet
olhackled.
Asher said the boy wu set free from a
garage tn neighboring Oakland. His
abductors removed the tape a n d
handcuffs, but told Robbie to keep hill
eyes shut.
The boy walked to a service station
and identified hhmelf. Station attendants
teelphoned police who reunited the
youngster with bis parents.
Sections of West S~ormy
' .
(
Light Snoiv Falls in Montana, Minnesota
Uf'l WIAMI f0te(.U1 •
""'' of ~ Ullfonllt ,...... -.. -w !NdeftfnlOOl'I, lllt tkltl """' II .....,.: '""""'.,._ _.
........ ,,..... .....
UGfNO---""'\
---~·~"'°"'"' .t:w
II tHched lfl!o 1"9 90i Ill Tllotit.nd
P11m1 Mid '""' S1>rlnos rteordtCI " Tl!l.W1<111.
V.S. S11namaru
s.-•nd r1l11 COVlfM 1 'lllllt 11,..tch
DI Ille Wnt fl'Om the PKltlc NOttllwft!
to !!'It lftttnnount1ln tttlon ••rl"f' lllllay.
l,'9111 lftOW citified ecr•1 MrttM11t
Motit1M Into l'IOrth<tm ~l\MWl1, t1.1!t1
or -Dtl!M '""' nortti PKlfk co.1111 lfllft. Mii.ii......, N*11k1 1 .. 1 It lewt n Mk~n.
, ......... HYltorltli wtf'I _,fd ....
,,,,...,.... Mol\llNh II t~ '#11M11 1wlr'ltd lltht tnOW 1r110 Grin-. the
N....,._. W9ffl'llr $ervk1 -Md of t11!1 ....-.ui Of 0 ......... atorm 111 Norttl ~· ll'IO Mlnllhot1.
t~torn\• ~ 1 cr 1a1 toUlhtn'I Tt••'-The T111t1 ~mtlll °' PWl!cl ""ttti Mid lltll !tit el n et pint "°"' bl"' r•Pl*f Kl11ttvl1i.. Tn.,
clltrWtlllf """"· Hf9tl "lllllh I°" l!ttO\tlfl the ......... ,..... ,_,
IWft!lll -.,._.., trOll"!' .,..,_ ~
Mot..,. r.i111o ~ ltrwtl """' • 11 .... fWI of Wll•.
Twin Failure .
Dims Soviet
M~rs Hopes
MOSOOW (UPI) -Western experts
said today the SOviet Union's failure to
place • working lRJtnunent capsule on
Mars has set back Russia's explor~tlon
of the Red.planet by at least two years.
"I'm very dJsappointed,"1one Western
source said. "We an had high. hopes or
getting some good data from 1his
mission."
The Soviets saki Tburlday their Mars 6
spacecnlt landed an lnstrument capeule
'on !ll pl-two clays earlier, hlll the
probe 1 radio went dead jU5t before
toochlng down.
Passengm and crewmen scrambled
from emergency chutes .. the naming
plane came to a hall The plane was
reported "completely burned out" by the
fire which otart<d In the Jail -ion and
qulddy apnad jbrough the cabin.
AIRPORT OFFICIALS oak! Ibey
thought the fire might have been toucbed
off bf a fiult irftlie Caravelle's'hydraull~
sys1em.
1be alrbne said the p·rr!IJCUS
lnclud<d 49 Danes, tw . ol them tour
guides, 31 Swedes, four West Germans,
two Norwegians and a Frenctunan.
Ander Hel:stral'Kl, manager of the
company, saJd In Copenhagen that all
four ot the Caravelle's crew members
eseaped but that the pilot. capt. L. K.
Joe rgensed, wu one of the Injured. He
said be did not know the cause ol the
fire.
' AIRPORT officials said the plane ......
on a flight Crom Singapore and New Delhi
through Tehran ,I<> Rome.
It WU tbe aecond. disaster to h!t
Sterling, one of Eorope'a largeot charter
oompanlea n.m by Put« E-EIJlf
Krogager, nickrCamed '"lbe FI y l D g
Priest." • THE RUSSIANS said an accompan:Jng Anoth r-·"· --~ by Sterl' Mars 7 spacecraft tried last Solwday I<> "' ~ ·•-~·= ing
land I but 1-• cn'3bed on March 14, 1m, at Dubai, a C8jlOll •. an equ r·-·-killini all 112 pmcm lboard. Tbat plane breakdown caused the package I<> miss ,,_,_ r......... f the planet by 810 miles. wu ret........ to ........... --&en rom
It was the second twin failure in a little _Ceyrgi, - -more than two years for the trouble-Anden Helstrand, . manager . olL the
plarued Soviet space program. a>mpany, 1ave a>nOtctlng details ;trcm
Ta.w said the Man & capsule managed headquarters in Ciopeobagen. /
heCore Ila Cailure i. relay dala Indicating
water vapor -essential for life -
existed Jn greater amounts in the
Martian a~ than reported by
19'11 space probes.
"1111S REAU.Y cripples the
program," a Western expert said. "It
will be at least a couple ol years before
they can altempl llOIJlethlnli like thb
again."
He said the Soviela stlll coold ~ some
sdenUfic data and carry out. surface
photography and mapping from Mars 5
and 7 spaceo"aft now in. orbit around
Mars.
The expert said, however, detailed
inlonnation on the atmospllere of Mars,
.!Rll"face teny>erature during the Martian
day and.other physical tnfonnation would
be unobtainable.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
•
-··"····-..... ,... ....... .,l:JO ........ Clll --..., ............ ,. Ollt ...._1111111ai..-. I \ •
~-,.,,,,.,"""""' ......... ~_., ""' • • ._ S.U.,., • I """ llunJlo(, al _. 1 OOPf' .... ~-,.,...Call .............. to ..... ,...,,....,
' Moelar.,.e ~Al9M ................ ~----Wlll'l'l'wll••..., ................. ,, .. ,, .... U20
By United Press lnlenlalloaal
Syrian-...1 Israeli-· forces -fought
artillery and mortar battles aloo.K t h e
central sector of the Golan Helghls
cease-fire line for the fourth oomecutlve
day today and the lsreall dllef o1 Ital!
warned that Syria may start a new war
il there Is no agreement on separation of
their forces.
1be border situation remained teme
because ol the Cigbtpig, som< ol !t heavy.
The Israeli-Syrian situ8tkxl W a s
w0l"3ened by Syria's reported penecution
of 500 Jews living in Syria and charges
the Damascus government ''inspired'' the
slaying o( four Jewish WometL
IN AN EFFORT to defuse the
aituatlon, Israeli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban and U.S. Secretary of State Henry
A. Kissinger called a meeting in
Washlngloo today IO get indirect b1lOp
separaUoo. talks with Syria underway. An
Israeli official said that after the meeting "It may be that jhe sllUalloo will
cballge. But so far there's na date yet
for the atart ol the Washingtoo talks.
Today's clashes began when ·~be
enemy !!tarted ""lllneering worli aimed
at fortilylni Its frooiline positions," a
Syrian communique said. It said artillary
and mortars were used in the fighting. It
made DO mention ol Syrian IOS>es, wt
said a number ol Israeli armored cars,
engineering equipment and an
alIUJlunition ~ were destroyed by
Syrian fire.
IN SIMILAR a.ASHES Tbunday, the
Israelis !Uffered direct blls on their
military "CXlllcentrations, an ammunition
c1epo1 a a ll18dme ""' emplacement,
the Syrians said. Two Lsraeli tanks also
were destroyed and a DWllhe< ol lsraelb
Injured.
The Israeli military command said
lhal In the Tbunday fil!hling three ol Its
soldiers were wOOnded, the f i rs t
casualties reported since Israel put its
troops on alert 11 days ago for a poll!lible
Syrian offensive aimed at recapturing
ten11ory lost I<> Israel In the October
war.
Rock and Roll link D
'
Fill ~with the Micln. htSDecial :Ju, tilc~ . , . ,
Crvucltl'I l 8TllCIOI
~=--=Vllwn•He.-, . liMen..• .
•J&-7000
Av1ll1bl• on Blue Th~mb R9ciorilt
.
ndAmpexTapes.
"Specially Priced Today thru Sunday, March I ?th
llllMA PUii -............ ,, ......................... ,
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Fatal CruJa : . • •
'Pilot Outside
• •• •
Takeoff Pattern'
BISHOP (UPI) -A plane
that uashed Into a national
fortst ridge. killing 38 pertons,
.includlnl the cast and crew of
,tfle 11Primal Man" television
series, may have been outside
the regu]ar takeoff pattern,
federal investigators
speculated today.
"I don't think he (the pilot\
should have been over there,"
an unidentified investigator
from the Federal Aviation
Administration was quoted as
saying in today's Los Angeles
Times.
'The FAA, Ch•il Aeronautics
Board and National
Transportation Safety Board
all sent Investigators to the
scene.
A TWIN-ENGINED Convair
440 belonging to Sierra Pacific
Airlines, but chartered to the
film crew, slammed into a
7 ,000.Coot high ridge in the
ln)'o National Forest leu than
Cive minutes after1 takeoff
from Bishop Wednesday night.
The plane exploded an d
"looked like a giant napalm
bomb going oft." said hriff
Floyd Barton, who ~aw the
fireball from eight miles away
tn the valley Ooor.
"Planes taking off from
here normally circle our radk>
beacon a number. of miootes
until they reach 16,000 feet -
a safe altitude to Cf06&: the
Sierras," !aid Sherif rs Lt.
David \Valzer.
"\Ve think the pilot w;s
d9ing that when he crashed
. . . there \\'a~ n.o radio
message before the crash. \\'e
don't know \\tlether he just
Oe'A· into the · mountain or
exi:wrienced a po"'er failurf'.''
Those who saw t h e
"'reckage. smashed into small
pi~ on sagebrush-dotted
P Ridge, said the Convair
may ha\·e failed to clear the
ridge by as little as 40 feet.
•
U,.1 Tt...,..1•
Try It On
Vice President Gerald
Ford pulls on jacket
presented to hin1 by the
1-lugh O'Brian Youth
Fo undation Leadership
Seminar on Govern-
ment th is week in
\Vash.ington. Students
attended se1ni nar to
~~~~r~~~~~~tand ing of
rrld.ay, Match 15. l<J74 DAIL'( PILOT S
San Francisco's Strike Endin1g
SAN FRANCISCO ( UPll -mfflln& this aftemoon. The
A tentative settlement wu full ll·member City Board of
reached early today in the SupervllOtl will meet at the
nJne-day strike by 15.000 city same 11~ to , consider the
w..-kers tbalhalled municipal pecf •Iireod to fy 115 negoiat·
transit, poured millions or 1ng team, 8-1.
gallons of raw sewage into the "This Is a h i s t o r i c
bay and shut down the Port " oeculon," a tired but beaming
San Francisco. A1ayor Joseph L. A I i o t o
Terms \li'ere not disclosed announced after 11-tX>Urs of
pending ratification. ""straight bargaining .
Union Wokesmen said picket "It is the first t i me
lines would ~ u~ unti! a meJllbe rs of tt1e Board of
members h 1 p ratification Supervisors have met \\"ilh
mechanics and othel'! to cross
in order to get the buses and
street cars rolling if rntiriC'a-
tion rom~." said WliOfl treas-
urer Kathy Bums.
The C"ity's latest reported
proposal had been a $9.5
million elan that included .'l.
pay rliise alld a dental plan.
The union originally &JUghl
raises of $80 a month plus a
fuJly.paid dental plan or .about
a $16 million package.
Alioto . seekine the ··\\1e're not going to arrest
Democratic nomination ror pickets,'' the mayor saJd,
go\·ernor. had drawn eriticism noting that others yobo create
for hls handling or the strike that sbut down the nev.· B:ty "r:impant inrtatloo" are also
Artn Rapid Transit system's not arrested. lie said in01uion
San Francisco leg as well as "'as the basic cause· of the
the city public transit . dispute.
Rrpu.blll'nn Go\'. Ito n a Id --~
Reagan said Alioto ~}()U]d
ha\•e ordered the strikers back ~
to wock and fired them If they _, SIR WALTERS
<tid not return. ...,. t:CH't'lotoko<ON.f
Wo.h n' w-Hoircuu t..
Arraigning
Scl1ed11led
city employes and t h e i r
representat ives to talk about
terms and conditions o f
employes.''
Tl~fOTllY T "' 0 ~I E Y ,
inU?rnational ,·ice president of
the Service E:mploye s
'Divine Crecitio11'
Refere11ces Nixed '
....., 1hci1 I.ii In plac. nollinlll't'.
. 2052 Newport Blvd. '----n
In Sl1qoting International. praised Alioto SACRA'°'fENTO {UPll -
ror his efforts as a n11 .. >dia1or in Advocates of teaching the
the dispute. . 'theories or divine creation in
llOLLY\VOOD (lJPl l -The Twomey. ho"·evl'r. was c..11ifoniia schools ha v C'
manager o( the Ivar Theater critiral of the SUjX'r\'isors . suffert'd another setback .
"'as ordered to appc"nr for "Ths strike "ould havr Ix-en
edn settled 1hrec d:n. s a•o ;r it On a 7-2 vote Thursday, thr arraignment next \\' esday ... ~-i . • State Board of Education following a shooting incidt'nl uappen"" m pn vatc industry.'' he said. decided 10 change a portion <l 1hls week in the dressing room h · r k "Ele<.1cd people oflrn think l e science l r a mew or ·
of stripper Liz Renay. like kings... he said a 11 d handbook to delete n re ferent'C'
Police said 1nanager Phil attackecl the supervisors for of the Bible and insert
Teri. 39. ·had a fistfight not allO\li'lng the city workei;s n~ntion of the J)arwinian
\\'edncsday nif,rtlt "'ilh ?<.-liss the same ri~ht to strike as throry of evolu tion.
Renay's boyfriend 'A'hcn thr those in the private secior. Four years ago, the board
man insi.$fcd on en!ering her Superior Judge Claylon Horn \'oted to include mention of the
dressing room after h c r had ordered police lo remove divine creation in school
performance. the pickets before 7 a.m. The textbooks. but last yen r they
thrC<' paragraphs in t hr
hnndbook , \\'hich is used by
Cul ifomia teachers to plnn and
de\'i!lop sci coce curriculutn.
"Phi!060phic and religious
con..,1der1111ons ix•rt.1ining to
the origin . n1ranini.:. and
\'nlues or lif{' ;1rr not 1~·ithln
thl' ·realrn (If sc1encl', ht!c:1usc
thry cannot bf' :u1alyze.:t or
1neasurrd by th<' J>rcsent
· methods of l)(•ienc.e." one or
lhe nc\\· paragraphs said.
No 'Pill'
For Dogs
SACRAMENTO (UPI! -A
bill de:signed to encourage dog
owners to have their dogs
fitted with birth co n l r o I
de\•ices was approved
Thursday by thq f"ssembty on
a 6~% \'ote and sent to the
Senate.
A~10NG TitE DEAD. all of
'\\'horn "'Orked for \\'olPE'r
Productions. \Vas Denn is
A72.3rella. \\'riter and director
of the "Primal "fan'' series.
wtt ich dran1atizrs the
e\'olution of !he primiti,·c
ancestors or modern men . His
fiance, Irene Bundv. died "·ith
D T '--· Teri allegedly produced a agreement came about three decided to reject the idea BURLINGA~IE (UPI l eep Ill•Oa t .2S-caliber pistol and fired on<' hours t>frore that deadline. when it came time to actu:illy Sign in front of !he H~·att
.shot at the boyfriend, Donald '"The picket lines \\' i 11 change the books. HouSi:' here ; ''SI re a k er s
~tcLeod, 36. The shot mis9l'd . remain up but we will allow 1'ie latest move changt"d repant. Your end is in sight.'' Not Obsce ne 1--------------------
The bill by Assemblyman
Willie L. Brown Jr. ID-San
Francisco), 'A"OUld grant half-
price licenses for dogs fitted
with "puppy plugs." Similar
reductions in licenfe fees
already apply to spayed or
neutered dogs. ~·
"Puppy plugs" are internal
birth control devices for dogs
__ d_eveloped recently Qy _ the
University of California al
Davis,
ttin1. ·
Ano!hcr victim '"as Janos
Prohaska. an actor. acrobat
and stuntman \Yho made a
specialty or playing animals
and t6ok leading roles in the
series. He 'A'as a regular in the
"Planet of the Apes" movies
and \\'.Us best known for his
po.rtrayal of a eo:mic. cookie·
moocJ!_ing.Pe_ar in the old Andy
Williams television series. His
son Robert was also aboard.
Says Court
ONTAR IO (UPI ) -The
manager or an adult 1hea1er
\Vas Cleared Thursday Of
obscenity charges for showing
the sex movie "Deep Throat ,"
in what was beiie\•ed to be the
first state court decision
declaring the film not obscene .
A l\tunicipal Court Jury of
eight women and four men
said the movie <lid not violate
state obscenity laws.
Lawn and garden
shop savings.
'
-1 i
Now 2 tor s7
Reg. 4.99. Save 2.98
Be!gion lndico,
Shade Azoleo.
2 Go!. Size
Now 2 tor sg
Reg. S.99, So~ 2.98 on
these 5 gal. si1e plants,
While Birch, Cuoonio
Tree. ltolion Cypress.
lovendor Stor,
Spreading Juniper
Ortho book on
'All Abollt
V9g1et1bl••'. How
to grow, cultivate
and prepare
vegetables. 2.15
•
Sale
2?9
each
Reg. 3.99
7" planted hanging
I baskets. Sove l .00
on your c~o•Ce ol
bego111os. coleus,
perun10:;. ond other
\colorful plon1~
Your choice of vegetables in 2" pols.
Choose from several varieties of peppers
and tomatoes, squash, '
egg plan~ cantaloupe. 10 for 99• '
Kellogg's Nitrohumus }Of.
plonlitlg ond 1~on'91oiitiiCq, •
50 lb. bog. 1.S9
~ton'• Gnmulch
Ol.lldoor planHnj m:.: ~ .'t •
2 (1,1, fl . bog.,2.-19
JCellogg'1 To,,,., or90f •C ~ 1
hum11s n'IOterlol for !~ 1oe;i
dre1sJng. 2 cu. fl bo;. J .19
• '
!
JCPenney
We know what you're looking for .
. FASHION ISLAND, Newport B1111ch Only
'
' ..
'
20 aftall cars from Chevrolet,
17 of lflelll priced Uftda SJ,000.
SVEGAS.
FROM52380*
The lowcrt priced 4'qtlnda Cit mldc
inAmcria.
That wou ld be the Vega
Notchback Coupe. And Vega
has more tha n just its low
price going for it. Results of
recen t Chevrolet fuel economy
tests show an average of 29.8
miles per gallon for Vega at a
steady speed of 55 miles per
hour, the maximum federnl
speed. Jn simulated suburban
city driving (average speed 24
mph with 1.6 stops per mi le),
Vega averaged 26.5 mpg. En·
gineers conducted the tests at
our Proving Ground. Cars
were Veg a H atchbacks
eq uipped with stRndard en-
gine and transmjssion and
popular options. I n all tests,
cars Carried the weight of t\VO
p assen gers. Of course the
mileage you'll get depends on
how and where you drive. #
12NOVAS.
FROM 52647*
t ·doon,J-doon,md Chny'l lowcll ptkcd ........
Nova was a sensible car \vhen
it \Vas first introduced, and
it's even more Rensible tod11y.
Low priced, uncomplicated,
solid-,vith the room you
want pl us the economy you
need. Choice of thrifty 6-cyl-
inder engine or efficient VB, a
dozen different models in all.
Need lots of load space? Look
in t o the Nova H atchback.
v·:ith the big back door and
the six·foot floor.
OIEVROLET
3CAMAROS. I
FRQMS2890*
lolfN kloidnt '1t the lowest pricad CM
j" k1 dill.
True. At $2890, the 6-cylinder
Camaro Sport Coupe is the
lowest pri~d car in its class,
and it's a mi ghty good-looking,
good-drivin g car for the
money. Sensibly sporty, w ith
p lenty of t raditional Chev·
rolet value built in. C;tn1aro
is also available in VB models,
including the luxurious 'fype
LT wh ich has, among other
tl1ings, an especially nice
interior.
Camaro 6 Sport C<Jwpe
MAKES SENSE FORAMERICA
••
'
•
' .
-'
4 DAILY PILOT Friday, M1rtll 15, ·l'f74
ears
Men'e Dreu· Shirts s~ · '. •
Were 13.99
Perma-Presr• shirrs in shOrt
& long sleeve. Solid colors.
In sizes 14~ to 16\,-2.
lo 17
or 1.49 e1ch .--. Men's Banlon
Acrylic Knit Socks
3rr!l
Wide variety of colors.
One size fies JO ro 13.
Men'e Fubion Sport Shirts
Shorr and long sleeved
shirts in solid co·Iors .
Perma-Presr• fabric of
polyester aild cotton. In
sizes s.M.L-XL
.
Men's Cotton
Flannel Pajamas
Re,:ular
13.W 297
• Cotton flannel jn pat-
ter'ns, and prints. Sizes
M., L., and XL
.. Sat.. Mar.17
. 8:30!.M.
to5:30P.M.
.
1 ·":n.e below 'litted
0
liems will'be a~nou.nced over the . ' ' ' 1 pu.blic address system every l~ minutes.
8:30 A.M. to 9:30 A.M.
Men's Short Sleeve Sport Shirts SOC
in colors. Sizes S., ~{., ,_ __
47c Panry Hose in fashion 4 33c
colors and size £or
$3.99-59.99 Assonmenr of 1 OOc
Family Shoe~-· ---~VII/Pr
As50nmenc ·of Boy's 2Sc
Underwear, T-shirts, briefs_
· each
9:30 A.M. to 10:30 A.M.
S3.97 to $6 Men's Pants 99
in 29 to 32-in. wa.ist sizeL• -~ c
Yardage Remnants in l
50lids and pattern,.< ----~~c
per inch
99c co Sl.69 Cra.fcsman 47c
:Mi and ~-i n. Dr. Socketi.__:: · each
Children's Out-of-Package 20c
Underweu'-------each
10:30 A.M. to 11 :30 A.M.
S4.98 Women's Shifcs 99c
in Assorted colors and styles.....,
Gigantic SClec!ion of Boy·s ... ,0 Socks in sizes 7 to I 1---~ ~r
99c to S4 50% Off
Bare Root Roses Re1ular Price•
).{en's and Women's Sufl8iasse~3ro~l
11 :30 A.M. to 12:30. P.M.
Polyescer Filled Pillows. 0 •s
in Standard or King sizc~for
Children's Socks in 5c
Assorted colors and siz~ pr
512.95 7-Pc. Cookware Set ']11
In avocado color only __
Selection of 45 RPM Record• JO
in JO Different Recording~
'"
12:30 P.M. to 1 :30 P.M.
$5 .99 to $39.99 Sere~~. Many
. si1es and sryles. (A~;·irrso~ .OtT
Repl•r Price•
. 50c Viewmaster Scenes
14 frames, varie1y of subjcc1s. }c
Limi!ed Quantitie ea.
SS.99 Craf1s man Tool Bno_x __ ,,c499
All metal constructio
90c 10 S 1.99 Out-Of-Package
11-icn's U nderwear. soc
Broken sizes ____ ~
e:1c:h
1 :30 P.M. to 2:30 P.M.
S2.49-S8.98 Assorted C~!ains.4 7r~
S 1.99 Craftsman Mi-in Drive 3·3c
Spark Plug Sockc~---
50c Skein Yarn Buys in
several colors to choose4 I}
fro 1kein1
99cContour Bra lnlacc 2 }49 of embroidered cups_ (or
SAYE $80! I
Studio Group with
Muaic Center Unit
·R,FUlar $.279 S359.95 ;
Two 3)-in. wide lounges wich
polyurc1h1nc foam maccrcsscs
and founda1ions. Green or
yellow.
S..fl'E $70!
Space-Saving
Duplex Bed Outfit
'199
Unir ronsisrs of brd wich two
38x74.inch innersprin3 mar.
1rnses, four ~stcn.3tttn and
80ld s:olor floral prinr quihcJ
cover1.
2:30 P.M. to 3:30 P.M.
Was 55.99 P~io Stone 288 Door Mac. 14~24-in. size_
Sl.49Warer.~ndidon~r-79c
Were st.49 Twin Fitted 'sheers ~}59
IOO?f cotton ~rcale. __ _
3:30 P.M. to 4:30 P.M.
S'5 to S7.'56 Men's }97 Casual Belts in S to XL sizes_
'50c Gold Zodiac Design Ile
Glassware ______ _
52.79 co 54 .'50
Children's Paja mas }39-250 in colors, sizes. ___ _
Were Sl.9'5 Twin Ficred Sheers "I 39 1001/f co[ton muslin in'whice-1.
4:30 P.M. to 5:30 P.M.
52.99 to 58.30 D ecorator }88
Pillows in solids and prints_ e.a.
52 .99 Women's Nylo~ Shorts }67 in broken sizes and colors_,
54 .99, 12-Jn. Companion 2"4
Adjustable -Wrench~--~-_
52 .~0 Boy'.s Ski Pajamas ]
in sttipcs. Sizes 8 to 14~-~~°'7
SAYE $3 io $10!
Durable Bean ,
Bag Chair
Rq:ular
Sl9.95 1688
Long wearing vinyl, in as10rted
colors.
S3.t9~ Sr. Stan BagCh.Ur.21.11
S49.95 Sr. Bean BaA Chair. S9.U
FREE LINING
Wilh your puichase of our
luxurious Antique Satin
"Metropolitan", Available'
in 49 co19rs.
Frtt Ettl .. tn
CUSTOM DRAPERY DEPT.
SEARS, COSTA MESA
P~e 540.SJSS
Men's Penna-Preet11'
JelllJ.8 or Slacks . t
Re,ular
$9 to 113 697
S1retcb knir fabric jC"ans and
• slacks in Oare leg sty Jin~. Trim
rtgulif styliog. Sizes -:\0 tO 42-
waisr. Nor all sizes in all srylcs.
SAVE $35!
"Traveller" Suits
4988
Knit suirs of IOOr,f polyester
in a wide range of pauerns or
solids. RC"gular 1nd long Mtts.
Men'• F1.1ntUltai1111
Flame Retardant Blanket Sleeper
Taddler Size1
JT 10 4T Juvenile Size1 .
5 10 6
Cozy warm modacr~·Jic fleece.
Skid-resisran1 plasric soleson fet't.
In ;1ssor1cd colors.
297 397
SENSATIONAL I
~ASIDONCLEARANCE
fubul ous buy.on our regular 25 % to
scock of fashion 1cems. Not f"
all sizes and colors. Come 60 nt.
early for besr seleccion. -10 OFF
Regular Prices
Bigger Girls
Nightwear V~ues
R~,.ul•r s2.99 3 \s5
io s.i. w for
)'our cho ice or St}'le~ and
colors. Nor all sizca; in all
s1yles. Sizts ' 10 I~.
Women's Dress or
Casual Shoes
1
Re,ular 2' $3 86. 9'J ro Sl3 p,.,
ChooJe fl:11s, low ~els in a
,.,.ide choice or colors and
s1yles. Come early .for bcs1 se-
lection.
Double Knit
Yardtlf!e in · \
Solid Colors .\
·'
Sean
Price I J.
Choose from m1nyso fd colors
•• in plain s1i1ch fabric. Handy .)8
10 61)..in .... ·idchs. '
' ·, S..f~E $7 lo 113!'~olorful "
Prwt Bedspread. \
R ... 11%.98 597 ' to Sl8.98
Your choke o( 1win ot full size
bedspreads in floral and prio1s.
•
• •
Bqys' Perina.Pr
Sport Shirts
' ' '
Low Low Price 9 7 !. ' !
Shorr sleeves. In solids and'
stripes. Sizes 6 10 12. :
•'
Boy's Penna-Prest '•
Denim J elllJ.8 j
s .. n
Price }9 ~
Snirdy dcnim .400 nylon, w,;
conon. Sitts 8 10 11. Regula1
slim; Circle "S" quali1 y.
·Boy's Nylon Crew NL-ck Jackf1s
Sizcs81ol8 11.i1 . t'
4_:;-~ '~" Winnie·The-Poo ® 11, l'~ '-4(~ :,, ··~ "' " auw...·. ~~" ·.
If Perr1:c1 7~ ., .,.
Would Be 84.97 ' r
-to·SS.29· -1 -1,,0 ~"' '-. ,. ' . (., · .._:) (";J ~lachi~ washable m00ad;1i~
I .. jersey. Aame rerardan1. Tod
, .1, ...._, dlers' ii;ripper1 fas1ener. size
~ I 10 -i: Juveni les' pullovcn. i
sizes 3 10 8.
Junior Pant Suits ~
S, Jwro •3 ,·;i' R,.ular 9oe
,:;;,Vf"'-P'= r,-"'-"* 813.~ 7 f . ' .
~ Easy going panr suits in todays feminine and
sporty styles. Machine washable. Polyesrer
,.nd acrylic. In plain and plaid designs. In
· sizes 5 to 13. · ·
Sears Quality
.Pality Hose
Semi.sheer mesh knir. Rei,;.
lorccd 1oc ind nude heel lo
fashion shades.
1Adie1 llc>1Ury Dept.
Women's ,Fashion
Sandal Assortment
Re,.ul1r f"Vlc
53.5(1 to S6.99 77Pr.
Gigan1ic scleclion of summet
sa ndals in many lovel~· colors
and styles. Broken sizes. ii
CUT 11.98!
Decl«Sboeo For
' ' The Whole Family ;
Were ·
13.W Pr.
' ·2 Pn~~
I I,
''
• •
" •'
"B ,u
cont
quar
S9.
. • ·~ ~;
Sturdr cotton duck uppers. ~
lon11;·we1ring soles. Si~cs to fit J f
1he Whole family •.• women's. J
chili:trc:n's, big boys' and inco'• 'J
up to size 10. I.! . •'·
•
Prices Slashed od" t "
Carpet Remnani. '1
. 30% 1070%~;.
.. ··' Former Prices ~ 1
Choose shags, multi-levels and . j
plushes. All arc drastically re-. •
dKed. ~ ~ I
I
'
Hurry In tor
Beat Selection S~UTH ·c~AST PLAZA -~NLY
3333 South Bristol St., Costa Mesa ~:~~•-s..W., . .,.rch fl oNLr...:1:,0 A.M. ro 1:30 P.M.
· ;HUR
Al"!u\,,0, •
• " . ' • I
• -I
•
. '
. .
,
' . (·r.-.1
·~ .
4'.lh. Acrylic Filled
Sleeping Bag
SAYE 50%! 997
Regular $19:99
Couo~ outershell. couon flan-
DcLlining, Bluc:,_.l()x74-_i~Lh
size:.
514.)0 Spinning and Spincasr
fishing Rod 7.25
Console COLOR TV
wilh25" Diag.
Measure Picture
SAY£ •IOO! ~.,..~~~· 42988
Automanc 1in1 lock, auioma11c
frequency con1rol. f\leJirer-
r;,inc-"n sryl_e cabil\Ct. #-lj ~-I.
1/2 PRICE S.4LE!
R~e Hoods
ReFul" 826. 75 50 %
10 SI 14.95 OFF
3 or 6-blade squirrel or cage
mo1or1 . Whi1e, copperrone,
avocado and brushed chrome.
iO, 36 or 41·inches.
Hurry in
:uaifis. Y alue !
on Champion
Spark Plugs .
•
s.,,. Low, 5 7c
Low Price ea.
Time !O changi-spark plugs for
Champion performance.
Resistor plugs __ 87c ea.
Sl2.99Wheel AJignmenc,3.99
' .
:icon trolled-heat
Electric Fondue Set\
SAYE $6! 999
Re,ular SIS.99
•
"Burner-with-a-Brain" gives you automatically co~trolled heat. Red, yellow, green colors. IYz·
quart size.
S9.99 complete wine lci"--------4.98
•
't
Chain Link
Gate Values
50%orr
Repilar Low Prices
C.neellalion• and Sample•
Assor!ed heights and wid1hs.
Some single, some sets-all re·
Juced!
S4.99·S40 Remnants of Chain
link fence Fabric, 50% OFF
Sears Comfo.-table
Duplex Bed '
i4f!150,9S! ·•129 e,:u ar ·
$179.95 •
Two 3.l.:in. wide, 147 coil ma1.
1resses with qu.ihed floral print
covers.
Contemporary Styl
Sofa Sleeper
!:1115.95 'l.89
l.o~·"'"'1"A Vrcrra• !Olefin
Fiberl owr. Reversible poly.
ester wrapped polyu.rethtnc
fc.m tnt C\ISbtoftl. Caren.
•
•
~·
·Craftsman 1/4-in •
Electric Drill
CUT50%! 747
W•s Sl4.99
Double insulated l /~·HP. fur
medium-duty .,.·or.L:.. UL hs1ed •.
111;0 .
Salt.Saving "60E"
Water Softener
SAVE$45: 23'995 Re,ul»r szs.a. •15
li5t's up 10 -1or;: less sail per
re_l:t'nt•rJnon 1hJn any comp;i-
r..ible 'A'Jft'r xifll'rn.'r we sell.
I ;.f'lj.
~ 10.-l'J Tri-Chlorine T~bleis. 7 .49
C;u1t1d~ Chlonnt• __ I I .49
Discontinued Cabinet Hardware
W•tt 29< to 12.29 50 ~ A11orted Knob•. Pul11, Hiagr1 0
'for I01chen Cabinet1 OFF
Formrr Prices
S2.l4, 6-Pc. Screwdriver Set
Nickrl plareJ C.lf00n steel bl.ides .
. Rus1.resu1.in1 rL011c hanJles.11111•> 66C
·-
SET
Exterior Oil Base
Home Paint ' SAVE 50% 2 $599 lttllular S5.991al. J[als.
Pro1cction for all properly pre·
pared su rfaces. Dries ro a me-
dium Kloss. White, tome colors.
S·1.99 gal. Redwood s1ain, 1. 97
AIJ.GJass l 0-Gallon
Aquarium Kit
with Top
SAVE $8!
R eFu lar S28.98 1999
Electric 7 /8
Adding Machine
SAVE $17! 5·997
Reiular $76.99
Adds." sub1racts, muhiplies.
lists 1 columns, 1otals 8 .. Willi
ribbon. tape~and duu cover.
Colonial-style
Bunk Bed Ensemble
~~.!40,151 •129
Sl69.85
Twin or Full Size
Innerspring Sets
SAYE 50%! t79
Re,:ul•r 1159.90
Comfonab~ innerspril'l,q mar.
tress.,. 'ilO coils in full site.
3<,0 coils in twin.
•
... h !J. 1974
•
Stock Number w .... llr m
'5002 569.9\ Delux 9" DJ:ick :ind White TV
·1168 1 \-19.9\ 18" Portable Colo r TV
4188 1 \)9:9\ 19'' Portable Color ·rv
4196 4·19.9~ 19" Delux Por1:iblc Color 1001/[ SoliJ Srate TV
41 10\ 199.9'5 18" Table ~todcl Color TV
2 130 109.9\ F~{/li.M Stereo 8 track Player
207 1 29.95 f~t/ li.~i Digital Clock Radio
J 4JO 99.9\ li.M /F~{ Casseflt: RccorJt·r
JI&H 299.9\ Console Stereo, Contcmpor:r.r~· Style '58
3122') 2\9.9\ Spanish S1ylc S1er1::0
\I J) 1~9.9\ 19" Black anJ While Por1~blt·
\017 99.9\ 12" Ul.ack anJ 'X1hi1c TV
\!OJ 'l<J.9\ 19" 131:1.(k anJ 'X1h11t• TV
\OJ? 119.9 5 16" Purrablc Ul.1ck :1.nJ Whnc-
-i\U\ 1')1).9') Consolt· Color TV
1018 ~·19.9'> Por1:1.blc Color T\' 11 "
-1il8 ·ltJ9.1)~ 11" Con~ilt·Ht' Lol•lr v.·/bJ.))l"
1))61 \69.9\ .!'>" Lon"<1le Culor TV
•I \(>0 699.9'> Oe!ux Console Color .2')"
-1192 -169.95 19" Color w/rt·mo!c con1rol
-1728 j79.95 Walnut S1ylt· Opti,l(lln Orµn w/bench
8\00 1795.00 Elcc!ronic Orx:an Mt·d S1yle
BJOO 1449.00 .. Gal:ixy .. Electronic Org.an
WASHER-DRYER VALUES 1
Elec1ric Dr)'Ct (whi1e)
Gas Dryer (whi!e)
Gas Dryer (.11;0JJ I
/i.u1oma1ic Washer (,':olJ I
Au1oma1ic Washer (whirel
.Au1oma1ic Washt:r I avocado I
Elec1ric Dryer (avoca<lol
Au1om;1tic Washer (v.·hite)
Gas Dryer (whi1e)
Lady Kenmore Washer and Gas Dryer (whiu:l p-.. ir
Gas Dryer (whitl"I
Electric Dryer (avoc:r.do>
/i.u1oma1ic Washer (\\•h11c 1
Electric Dryer lwhi1cl
li.utom:r.ric Washer (gold I
li.uto ma1ic Washer (gold I
Gas Dryer (gold) '
Electric Dryer (white)'•
REG.
109,95
1~9.9')
1 9~.9'5
1<• 1.HH
199.9~
111.9~
16'1.9'>
ljl).9')
1(19.9'5
,,j9,90
169.9)
20·1.9'>
199.9'>
I \9.9~
2 14.9')
26·1.9~
124.9~
1-19.9')
SA LE
89.88
199.88
164.95
229.88
189.88
224.88
144.88
219.88
149.95
519.95
159.95
164,88
169.88
129.88
129.88
249.8S
209.88
124.95
REFRIGERATOR VALUES 1
REG. SALE
7.7 Cu.. Ft.-(Whiicl 149.9') 129.95
i."I Cu. F1.-(Whi!el · 1 -19.9~ I 04.88
I '>.2 Cu. F1. -(White I 199.9~ 269.88
15.2 Cu. F1.-(Whue) 299.9') 279.88
17. L Cu. Ft. Side-By-Side (White) ~99.9') 349.88
19.I Cu. Ft. Side-By-Side (Whirel \79.9') 339.88
16.6 Cu. Fr. w/ice maker (Copper) 3)9.9'> 99.88
19.1 Cu. Ft. wfice maker & water spout-(White} 469.9~ 389.95
21.4 Cu. Fr. w/ice maker-Side-By-Side-(Gold) 604.9') 529.88
19.1 Cu. Ft. w/ice makcr-(Gold) 47~.9') 424.88
8.'5 Cu. Fr.-(White) J 74 .9l 139.88
· t 5.2 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(G0td) ' >l4.9\ 299.88
19 Cu. Ft .. w/ice maker-(Gold ) \\4.9\ 479.88
19. l Cu. Ft. w/ice make r & water spout-( Avocado\ 47-1.95 399.S8
I ').2 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(/i.vocadol \\-1.9\ 309.88
I '> Cu. ft. -Side·By.Side-(Copperl 384.9\ 354.S8
17.1 Cu. Fi. w/ice maker-( Avocado) J94.')\ 349.88
~.9 Cu. Ft. Undercoun1er-(CopperJ 149.9\ 129.95
I 1.7 Cu. Ft.-(White1 Ji 9.9'5 149.95
17 Cu. Ft.-Top Freeter-(Coppct) 299.9'5 279.95
FREEZER VALUES 1
REG. SALE
19.6 Cu. Ft. Upright Frosrles~ 299.9 \ 279.95
15.8 Cu. Ft.-Uprigh1-Au1omatic Defrost 199.9\ 189.95
15.3 Cu. Ft. Upright-Frosdess · ; , 289.9\ 269.95
15.3 Cu. Ft. Upright-Fros1kss · l \9.9) 229.88
AIR CONDITIONERS
REG. SALE
8000 B.T.U.-3 speed-169.9) 139.95
14000 B.T.U. Au1o(rhermostac lJ9.9) 283.00
11000 B.T.U. Auto{Thermos1at 2(9.9) 199.95
11000 B.T.U. Auto(Thermostat 179.9\ 169.95
6000 B'.T.U. 3 speed 189.9\ 129.88
28000 B.T.U. Auto{Thermostat 4J9.9l 299.88
lpooo B.T.U. Au1o(fherrnostat 319.9\ 229.8S
S,\VE
20.00
60.00
\0.00
15.0U
10.0U
20.00
10.00
20.00
20.00
120.00
I0.00
40.0U
lO.QO
10.00
8\.00
1\.00
1\.00
2\.00
SAVE
20.00,
4\.00
J0.00
:?0.00
\0.00
40.00
240.00
BO.OU
7).00
\0.00
J\.OU
\\.00
7\.00
9\.00
4\.00
J0.00
4\.00
~0.00
J0.00
20.00
SAVE
20.00
10.00
20.00
J0.00
SAVE
30.00
\6.00
80.00
110.00
60.00
140.00
90.00
VACULH.1 CLEANl.RS SEWING MACHINE BUYS
6110
6103
1703/9708
Hand V.cuum
Electric Broom
Ponable Sewing Machine
Rea. SJ4.9l
Reg. Sl9.9l
Reg. $329.95
s.i .. s9.8B
s.1 •. s 10.95
Sale-S229.9l
0 '
Now
149.00
229.00
299.00
:169.00
239.00
69.00
14.95
69.00
229.00
189.00
109.00
69.00
69.00
79.00
299.00
199.00
429.00
449.00
499.00
369.00
279.00
1395.00
995.00
AMT.
I
l
I
I
I
I
I
l
I
I
\
I
2
I,
l
AMT.
l
l
l
I
I
I
I
I
2
AMT.
I
2
2
2
AMT.
2
I
2
' l
I
I
I
,
i------------------------------------------------------1
URRY! EVENT ENDS !f•J'~RDAY NIGHT -MARCH 161 This c~~po~Ys1:~1~~~ ~~~~~~Jicee· ! ' s N Ph 0 d '. Th I I ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER •. orry, 0 one r ers on ese terns I See the Famous ICEE BEAR Saturda~, March 16 I
~"' 4floUI Seoh Co-lliena Credit Plaru l _________ _, _____ :_o~~~~~~r~:~~:~~~:-~~·-----------:. _____ j
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAG~
More Public Beach
The old strand that once beld the Capistrano Beacb
Club bu exi.oled in limbo lor 'years -the subject ol
fears from beach lovers that someday those wbo claim
ownership mlgbt try to develop II .
And for just as long1 government agencies have
sought ways to obtain tbe scenic •!rand for public use.
Now the County or Orange end State of California
have begun to make headway. The county in recent
weeks oblained more than $300,0QO in federal grant
funds to apply to the purchase of four acres of the
beach south of Doheny State Park. ·
State officials-are bintine at attempts t9 buy the
rest, and the ultimate bope ls that two pieces could be
blended with an expansion of Doheny, an extremely
busy an~ attractive public recreation faclllty.
Ironically, it is the very grouP of residents worried
about tho beach that bolds the key to its future.
A vocal and effective ar,onp recentJy killed one
Doheny expansion plll\ by the ftate. A new one is, in
the works and appears to have much m(rU.
Whal is needed now Is a splrlt o( cooperation be-
tween citizens and government agencies to see that the
beach area is used in the most beneficial manner.
Homeowners' Ri g hts
ln a split vote last week, Orange County super-
visors ruled against Lagunita property owners who
sought permission to restore a fence that has outlined
the limits of their properties on Victoria Beach for
some 25 years.
The fence has washed away several times in high
tides and previously has been replaced without question.
But in the interim, public opinion and legal rulings
regarding beach access rights have changed.
f!,900 to the county every year in ~roperty taxes.
They also say they fear that, without aome form of
fence, the pubUc eventually will be enUUed to claim
their beacb property by prescriptive righ ts, from unol>
structed trespassin~.
County planmng commissioners recommended a
compromise by suggesting the homeowners settle for
low wood pilings, connected wi th a single strand of chain
to mark their boundaries, instead of a chain link fence.
But the supervisors, followin g healed debate, ruled
against any fence.
This is a sticky problem that will continue to come
ur, along much of our coast. But one thing seems iairJy
c ear. U the homeowners are obligeO to lf'ermit public
use of property on which they pay taxes, compensation
for their investment is in order -not confiscation.
Loss for Laguna
When Police LI. Robert McMurray walked out the
door of the Laguna Beach police station today, he
walked into retirement.
That retirement after 21 years of service to the
community is a loss of great experience and character
not easily replaced or matched.
Over the years, McMurray has collected many cita-
tions and commendations for his work, some of it for
dogged police investigation, and some -for courage be-
yond the call of duty -like the time ' he personally
walked up and disarmed a crazed gunman holding a
squad of policemen at bay. .
Part of McMurray 's style and approach to law en·
foreement has been his belief that the job required co-
operation, not coercion. He has said that police work is "
90 percent public relations. ·
•
The homeo wners, whose title to their properties
extends to mean high tide line. insist they are entitled to quiet enjoyment of their beach by virtue of paying
That type of philosophy. while not unique to police
work, is unique to good policemen. And that is what
"Mac" Mclr1urray is, a good cop who has served his town
well. s 'You say this was their iust attempt at streaking?'
Secret of
Successful
Revolution
~YnNEY J.HARRI~
Tboagbil 1& Large:
'Ibe only truly successful revolulioo.
is ooe in which the new revolutionary
leaders do not reel forced to be as
repreS!live as the regime they overth~ew.
(By this standard, only the American
Revolut~reci.sely because it was
self·limitali/iimay be considered a suc-
cess.) ~~ •• • •
Oistrult any philosophy lhat pretenda ·
to enunciate an "ultimate trutb"-for
it is the essence of ultimate truths
that they cannot be
verbalized without
being diatorted 11nd
misunderstood.
• • •
When a bad thing
isn't working, It is
from an exccs.s, and
you need less t'Jf it:
'A-~ a good thin g
isn 't working (such
as the democrati c process), it is from a
deficiency, and you need more or it.
• • •
How can one be "true to another"
before one has recognized where !he
truest part of oneself resides?
• • •
People v•ho travel lo go "sight-seeing"
are usually more exotic sights than
any they sec.
' •
The most significant aspect of the
20th century, overto1vering all other
changes. is that for the first time it
is no longer a white Christian rnan·s
~·orld. • • •
If capitalism has failed, it is not
so much in the economic area, where
~tarx predicted It would, as in the
educaUooaJ area, where hfontesquieu
feared it might. (Both the defenden
and the detractors of the system seem
Was .Julie's Pay a Business Expense?
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
.Presi4ential lnc~me Tax Questions
Odd that a \\'Oman standing ln line
with two small children to see The
Exorcist-should become upset by
strf'!:akers flying -by. Isn 't that a
conflict of moral values?
J.A.
Gl-'r' OUJ ....... Ire lllllMI"" ... ~ ....... ___ ,.,, nflld ...
-" ,... ---leM -"' ,..... .. .-.W 0-.. D11Y l"li.t.
almost equally ignorant of its merits
and its defects .)
• • •
Chauvinism or every sort 'is merely
a way in which individuals feel free
to cloak themselves with a cOllectlve
sense of superiority that they would
be ashamed to assert individually.
• • •
Goethe e1pressed at an early age
what most of us never Jearn until It
is too ' late to make any dlfferenct:
"We are never further from our wishes
than when we imagine that we possess
what we have desired."
• • •
\\'hen a national poll of dramatic
critics asked me to name the greatest
American playwright, I a n s w e re d .
"Eugene O'Neill, alas"-taking a leaf
lrom Andre Gide who when asked to
name the greatest French poet, replied,
"Victor Hugo, alas,"
• • •
WASHINGTON -c.onlidenUal White
House documents show that President
Nixon, contrary to the statements put out
In his name, has-liken an intense
personal interest in wangling every
possible tax deducUon be could get away
v.ith.
He even inquired in 1969 about deducJ,-
ing his payments to his .daughter .Julie
as a business expense. ~e wanted to
count money he ~'31
cootributing ~ her
support as salary for
her work as a \\'hite
House tour guide.
Yet the lVhite House
had already put out
publicity that she
was a ''volunteer ...
The President also wanted a :.ax
break for using the den at his San
Clemente estate for an office. He asked
what tax write-offs were available, too,
for pemtltting others to use his
Calllorols and Florida houses.
He thought he should be pennitted to
charge off wedding gifts. funeral sprays
and similar item.s, because he felt these
1,1·ere "business expenses" for a politi·
cian. hfost of his entertaining, he also
contended, should be deductible. "He
wants to be sure," inltntcted aide John
Ehrlichman in a t'Ollfidential memo.
"that his business deductions include all
allowable items."
nns DIFFERS from the picture the
White House has tried to portray of a
President too busy, to bother with the
details of his tax returns. Press
(JACK. ANDERSON)
spokesman Gerald Warren has implied
Nixon was so preoccupied \\'itb the
presidency lhat he left the preparation 'of
his returns entirely to his lawyers.·
The implication was that his lawyers
'A'ere really to blame for claiming the
conlroversial -and probabi.y illegal -
$576,000 tax deduction for the gift of the
Ni.ton papera to tbe government.
OOCUl\1ENTS now in the hands of the
Joint Congressional Committee o n
Internal Revenue Tuali.on, however.
prove that the President was not at all
removed from the preparation ol his
returns. On the contrary, he pulled every
possible string to increase his tax de-
ductions.
Ehrllctnnan relayed the President 's
wishes to Edward A1organ, the White
House aide vrho handled the President's
taxes. For e1ample, an Ehrlichman
memo, dated June: 16, 1972, asked
~Jorgan:
"The Pusident proposes to persona]ly
pay Julie for her work in Ule White
House this swnmer and deduct it as a
business e1pense. Would you please
determine whether he can properly do
this ... "
MORGAN took the problem up with the
Internal Revenue Service's Deputy Qlief
Counsel Roger Barth who served as
political impresario for JuUe and Tricia
Nixon d!lrlng the 1968 campaign and is
now the Nix~ man inside the lRS.
Barth responded a month later with a
memo. carefully stamped "Confidential,"
advising: "J..egally we mi ght justify
deduction all a business expense for a
salary paid to Julie a! a tour guide this
summer. HO"A-ever, for th: following reasons, I MOST strongly recomrnenCI
that this should not be done :
"(A) The amount involved is rather
small;
"fB) This is always a factual question
which could be raised on audit of whether
she is neceaary· to the ta1payer's
'bwriness';
"(C) In addition to federal withlmlding
data which would get into the files at the
JRS, information would have to be given
to the (state) tax authorities and to the
Social Sec\lrity people. There are too
many entities Involved for this to be kept
confidential;
"(0) The newspapen have made much
of the fact that she has been acting as a
'volunteer.' I think the ria.k ol expo&ure
of a busines.'I deduction attempt is too
great ... "
BARm advised instead that the Presi·
dmt sbouid "make a gUt at the end of
the summer to Julie. Although it would
not be deduct ible to him, it would be ta.J.
free to ber."
Tile President apparentl y heeded this
advice, for the White HouJe press office
tells us that the President never put Julie
on salary.
In another memo, Ehrlichman asked
Morgan: "The President Intends to use
the San Clemente home for olficlal visits,
and he intends to use his den as an of..
flee for presidential activities. What
wrlte,oifs .are available to him?"
Barth was also approached on this
quesUoo. He advised that "a deduction
"Aoold be permitted for depreciation and
maintenance expenses."
EHRIJCHMAN also wanted lo know
about ''the tax ~equences of permit-
ting others to use the Florida and
California houses... Barth responded :
"We would have to establish the buslnes!
purpose for the Presldaot with regard lo
each~ invited to use the homes.
On the question of deductions for wed..
ding gifts, funeral sprays and the like,
Ehrllchman noted: "The President holds
the view that a public man does very
little of a personal nature. Vfrtually all or
his entertainment and activtty Is related to Jul 'business'.,,
Agreed Barth: "I personally agree
with the idea that much of the
President's expense is related to hi s
'business.' As with the business use ol hiS
residence, a careful system must be
established for keeping track of busines~
expenses .••
"SMALL GIFJ'S by the President,
which are related to his 'business,• v.'OUld
be deductible ... Note, ho\!tever. that \4'C
must give thought to distinguishing
between actJvities and gifts related to
'being a President' and those related to
running for reelection."
Richard Nixon, as we now know. took
every available legal deduction and at
least one $576,000 writ.e-<>ff v.rhose legality
ia questionable.
People who regard themM!\ves as the
most chaste also imagine that tbeY are
the best judges of obscenity; which
is like a teetotaler pronouncing on the
comparative quality of wines.
• • •
Societies "'rebel against tyra nny, but
when they are not instructed in what
to do v.i th their freedom , tlley rebel
An Island of Calm • Ill the Crisis
against liberty as well. SNICKERS GAP, Va. -God gave me
• • • a little piece ol primitive Arnet ka here in
Americans who are fond of pointing ouL JI.~ Blue Ridge IMounta.ina ~ Mr.
that \\'C 'A'ere bom as a "rei>ublic" and~~mon, the energy czar, lS belpmg me
not a ''democracy" are be.Ing as willfully keep It.
pt>tuse about word! u the bureaucrat The bottom has fallen out of the
who i.n!i.sted that a ''small businessman" recreaUonal real estate lnal'ket and the
must be under 5-loot-t. bleased day is thus
extended for the en-
(rucHARD WILSO~ Washington.
In the nature of tl\lngs, however, the
time will come when the local people wU1
take care of their own and there will be
enough gas for those rightfully entitled to
it by birth and place of abode. 1be others
can just stay away. Manv native Virgifl..
ians in this area !cit that way about
outsiders long before the gas shortage.
bathrooms, kitchen and laundry. The old
log house sland.s on Its blllslde bone-cllllt,
ing cold where once it was oozy with
wood-burning stoves, supplied w i t ~
spring water and consuming the energy
. expended by its occupants in carryioli
pails and splitting v.'OOd .
RVs Are Energy Savers
jo)'lllent in privacy
of a place on earth
which is not greaUy
changed since it u•as
.... originally surveyed
by George Wasil·
tngton.
conservationists, owing to the v.ise
decision of the NaUoo.al Park Service to
move the Appalachian trail elsewbert>,
Trail bike treks where walking was in-
tended have thus been e1ctuded from the
private propert y of residents on this
particular side or the mountain.
It has fortunately not come to the at·
tentlon of 1\1.r. Simon that thia area bas
been forgotten ln the allocation of
available gasoline BUpplies. Once you
have arrived here, you may not be able
to return to the city because drougbt bas
struck the loCal gas ltatiom in nearby
Round Hill and Purcellville. It Is just as
well, though very distressing to
carpenters, masons, and other anlrsans
who cannot get enough gas to carry them
to v.·ork at housing projects nearer
A GREAT DEAL or anxiety Is felt that
nearby Berryville, the ancestral seat Of
the Byn! family, Is dying and the g••
shoriage wUI not help prolong the ure of
the town. But BerTyville iJ being by-
passed anyw1y by a four.Jane parkway.
The attrition of small business had al·
ready begun and the managers of the
supermarket make sounds as It it will be
Spring is coming and the old house wUt
thaw, copperheads will stir in the ancient '
stooe walls, deer v.'ill come to nibble new
growth on the shrubbery, ground hog•
will cavort over and Wlder the rocks and
the dogwood will bloom. Then the old
house will be hooked up to II! roodel'lJ
conveniences again In the hopeful pros-
pect that, before another winter comes. '
lo.tr. Simon will have fomd a way td
restore the American dream of million~
of Be<."ODd home ownera. :
To the Editor:
A recent reader labeled recreational
vehicles the "real gas hogs" and your
headline writer labeled the ~1ailbox col·
umn accordingly. Leis look at facts in·
stead of \vild oomments o( the dri v1•r of
a small car. '. ~1ANV RV'~ gel In excess of JO nlpl(,
so·m~thing that most med ium slif'd cars
do not: I own a motorhome and driv(' n
medium-sit.id sedan. The motorhome
gets better mileage at SS mph. They both
ore '73 models.
i• Ibo lady rutly JnterC1ted in energy
3t1VIDI? If IO ahe ihould get • motor
home. Look at lh<to facts :
Wh• our fa mily la away from home in
our RV, ft: "
-Use one-rourth the electricity u.te<I at
home
-Use onMhtlh the gas used at ho1ne
-Ute o'ne-tenth the water 11!Cd Al borne
f P' YOO are going lo sin.gJc. one group
out ror abuse please look at all the facts.
l\'ll.l.tAM F. l.OIVANCE
6•• Neetfs
To the Edllor:
Re )'(M{r edltorinJ comment on gos suii.
• I I/
( MAILBOX )
Ltll9" 1,..,... ~tl'f '"' wtlc-"'""•lly
wrlttri MMMllll CMYWY ni.lr -'''" Ill * w1A11 ....... Tiii r1thl .. ClfMllM• llftltt .. flt .. Kl 1r 1N'"(l11t1 lllNll Is ,_.,..,, All lltttrt ftlVll l!t-
cludt 111n11'1•• 11M1 riM lll119 .,.,...., lliul ~,,..., M wl!hhlld "' tMWtl 11 tl;ltffellM'l'I ,.._ II IHlr.til. , .. ,,.., WIQ llOt Mi Hllll11N111,
lions: Drivers don't need staagertd
servlct atation business houn.
1bey do need 110tions that oett gu In
lhe afternoon inatelld of mornlnp, lbr
U-who go lo work loo early lo gtt ....
LEONARD JOHNSON
6 .. Clllealr11
To the Editor;
Cllvalry Is oot dead In Huntington
Beath!
I wish to publicly express my thanU to
the gracious gentleman who puahe<I my
car through the long line of waiting cars
Ce.bout JO) when I ran out of gas, In llne.
Jn this gu1)4nlc-.str1cken Ume 1uch
courtesy Is ex~plary.
H.A. TlfltASHER
The real esblle
fever his subsided
with the declinlng'level of. available gas~
line, and so there is no longer as great a
risk that the urban yearning for second
homes in the mowitains will upset the
balance of nature.
WE HA VE been saved. even, from the
-PUNCH
Hft annoys m11 when thly come in just to us. the spittoon. H
,
the next to close up. ~
'lbeee signs are discouraging to small
town boooters, but they are perhaps
short·sighted In falling to see that J>l'Oll·
ress may leave behind Islands of calm
and contentment -.1hich wtll more than
ever attract those who Wish to get out of
the way ot modem improvement.
A survey of the devr:loplng se<."ODd-
home recreational are.as. which Is ooe of
tbe phonomena: of the limes, IU&leltl It
might be better just to have a -In one of the pleasant small eommunltlct already long .. tablillhtd.
The Impracticality of modem Im-
provement Is a ~1ell known irony. but
never more painfully rtallztd than In ex-
amining a very old dwelling whk:h has
been rtbuUt to crtate nn oaslll or c:omtort
and cheer detp In a wtldcmcsa. \Vlthout
these lmprovementa and as It was ln the
r11.i place, without rollance on ~roulht·ln
energy, the dwelling """1d be Uva61e in any kind of crisis.
TO SAVE OIL, the baseboord helti!ll
so expensively lnllllltQ has bffri dJacon-
nected. the wtl~-eupplled waler 1)'1lem
lw """' cut orr so It wlD not ri.... and
bunt the plpo1 In the l'UMlngty cootr1ved
OIANM COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robm N. W•ed, Poblillur
Thoma. Kuvil, Editor
Barbare Krtibich
.Edltorilll l'O{IC Editor
"nw: tditortal ,...., ol 1hr: u.il,y
'Pilot :.eeks to lnrorm and llltnull.te'
rndrn by pt'nelltiJ'C on this Plll"e
dlwne•Commentuy'on toplcw of ln-
tft'fft by S)"J'ld~ted colwnnlsls and
evtoooltts, by provjdina a forum '°" l"elldfrs> viirwl' Mid by prneftt.1 .. thl9
newipaper· t oPirrionl and SOOu on
'turnnt ~ The edttorltJ (ISHnJons
ot IM D'1b' Pilot aoptU' only Ill th•
editorial eoluma al the 110p 0( the
pqe:. Oplnlollg t11prtllllitrl b)' the col--
um.ntsu and e•rtoonlst• •od let!"'
, wrlWI ue thtlr crwn and r11 ~
JMnt or their m.. boJ 1.hc D&iJy 'Pt .. _ ... ,_
Friday, March 15, 1974
. • " .
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Distriet A ttornefl Race
BAKERSFIEID (AP) -
Retl(<d Kem Couqty Superior
O>tlrt Judge Nennn P. Mein,
72, dJed here 'lburtday. He
retired In 1985 alter 17 yeara
Oil the bend!.
Hulsy, Hicks Trade Digs
CHARLESTON, W. V a .
(AP) -Dr. I. E. Baff, CS. a heart specialist who made a
crusade o! getting black-lung
benefita for ooal miners, died
'lburaday of a heart. attack.
SCOTI'SDALE, Ariz. (AP)
-Private services were be.Id
Thursday for Ber b er t
Bloomberg, 75,·a former radio
staUon execulive and vice
presklent of Merv Griffin
Associates until moving here
two years ago. He died or
heart failure here Tuesday.
By O.C. BlJ!ll'INGS Of-..,.,,...., ....
William Hllisy cl Mission
Viejo, who is challenging in-
cWnllent District Att""10Y
Cecil Hicks in this year's
election, claims Hlckl nnanc--
ed his enUre 1110 campaign
with dooa-
tioos from
attorneys.
Hulsey says
that's a con-.
ruct o! in-
'teres t. ·
Hi c ks
count-
ers that
Hu'lsy's MUUY
claim is "complelely In·
accurate" and, further, that
Hulsy "lacks any qualifica-
tions" for the DA 's job.
"There exists an inherent
conflict of interest in the
practice of attorneys ~--------------~
ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. !AP)
-JOllh L Horne, 86, former
pub1i!her and owner or the
Rocky Mount Telegram. died
today at his home. Home
served as a director of The
Associated Press from 1937 to
1950.
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -A
Requiem "'8• was said Tues--
day at Blessed Sacran1ent
Catholic Church for Charlle
Crafts, 78, a retired
entertalner who was once a
vaudeville partner of Jack
Haley. Crafts died of a stroke
last \\'eek.
Combining Lawmen
Urged by Musick
INOW OPEN I I I
I America's Award-Winnin9 I
I Car Wash I I I
NEW YORK (UPI) -
Funeral services for Mrs.
Helen Carey, 49, wife of Rep.
Hugh Carey (()..N.Y.), were
held Monday at St. Saviour's
Chw-ch in Brooklyn. Mfs.
C.arey died Friday night oC
cancer at Lenox ~II Hospital.
Decith Not lees
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
OI' tllt Dally PIM! l l•ff
SANT A ANA -Retiring
Orange County Sheriff James
ri.1usick said Thursday he
strongly favo rs combining the
!unctions of oounty marshal
with the Sheriff's Department.
During initial hearings on
his 1974-75 budget requests,
Musick said the combination
would eliminate much duplica-
tion of effort.
"Now that I'm leaving I can
IAUll'A.MM say I see M valid reason ....... 11-C. l1ilm1M. U6' Plrtl Aw., Cost1 .,.,,
Mtu. Dalt of cle1th, M1rch 1l, 1914, the tWO should be separate,"
SVrvlvtd by 1bt1r, Ivy Wiison, C01t1 · Musick 'd Nona; QrlNl.f\IPflt'W, Or. ArThur How1rct, sat ·
a.1tio.1 cou11n, e11Hn Sch11>1>: co1or..:1o. Musick will leave his post at
Gra...,slde 11rvlces were 'helcl IOdl'f, the nd f thi afle 1"rlc11v. l PM, P1c111c view M1mor111 e o s year r serv-1"1r1t. P1ci11c view Mor1~11"l". 01r~•or1. ing for more than 25 years II <OX (!;~ M. Cox.. R"lclent of Stn Sheriff. _
Cltmtntt; det. of clt•lh, ~rch 13. 1974. Tile ...,.._ibiJity Of combining $~rvived rw wife, Doromy; ~ren11. Mr. r--
1ncl Mrs. Cl't'de c. eox., s.n11 11ro.r1i the !wictions was broa<iled
brottllr. ~ .. yton c. COK. •1urblnk1 *'"'" two weeks ago by Su..,.....,;.,,.r Mn-Chlrt" S. T1wt. S.nte .Biro.re. _. • ..,..,.
$1trVl<11, 5'tvnl1y, J PM, Peclflc View Ralph Diedrich after the board
c11epe1. 1111wmtnt. Pacific view Mtmor111 • accepted the r"""cmntion of Plrk. Plciflc View MOrt111ry, Oll'9dor1J. ""''e•-
'atlt'f t.111,1 klnk:,~~",e1: ,,.,1 ~c11ni or longtime County M a r s b a I
, ... .,, vo1., . ..,. ~ '""" """' '" Dillard Willtirsoo. iwL surYl'led iw hlnblncl, John. of fhl ,..,·-tly CO""ty marshals llomel dlilght91", K1rtn HIYml!l. Founl1ln .....W.l CH • ....
v111W1 _,, 01m1 1t1n1111d, Hvnll'natot1 9el'Ve as bailiffs and proces.s-
1111eh1· two bnlthtft;, Gl'flord Andnw. f the un"et'pal c.merlHo; Lvll AndrllW, Cove, °"90!l; servers or m l .is~. M11c1rec1 Woollton. Clrtsbld. c1111,; courts while sheriffs deputies
four grlnclchlklren. $trVlcts, $elurd1y, I per!OnD the same functions in PIM. Smlfhl Chapel. 1nttrment, GOod
s.t\l9hlrcl Cemetfly. SmllM MorlUIN, superior court. DlrtctOrs. MASOM C.ounty Administrative Of. v1m1 Ctcll ,,.,. __ Aoe .011 31 . .,..,r fleer Robert 'Miomas said the
....io.nt of L1911M BelCh. O.lt ol de1t1>,
Mlrdl 14. ,,,., s...rv1v.a b'f husbl'lcl· Legislature tried several years
Wl1!11m E. Mitani '-Ml!'IS, Edwin 0., of ago to combine fhe offices Arlll'lllrn1 I!. Gllblrt Mason, of FUlrnorti
11 ...... NtU NQ'f'tt. T1x111 tau r around the Stale, but bowed to
gr1Nkhllcln111 -•• nltu1 • n cl al b lobby' ts l'!IPhews. Slrvk:H, S.!~rclav, M1rch 16. 11 a Strong appe Y IS
"1M. $hefftr Legune BPch Chapel. for the marshals to keep them El'llombrnlnt, W"ttntnsrw M 1 mo' I• I p..n;. Shlffltl" LIQU"I l111ch .MOrlUIN, separate.
D!r1etor1. Musick said the single
• . '
AllUCKU & SON
WISTCLIFP MOllTU.UY
427 E. I 7rh St, Co~a Mesa
646--4888 -·-IALTZ·IERGRON
FUNlllAL HOMI
Corona del Mar
Costa Meso -·-
673-9450
646-2424
BILLllOADWAY
MoaTUAllY
l 10 Broadway, Cosro Meso
548-3433 -·-DILDAY llOTHERS
MOITUAIY
1791 I lleoch Blvd.
Hunring1on Beoch 842-n71
244 Redondo Ava.
Long ·Beoch (213) 438-11<45 -·-~COllMICK LAGUNA
IEACH MOllTUAIY
1795 loguno Canyon Rd.
494.9415 -·-McCOIMICK
MISSION MOllTU.UY
28832 Comino Copbrrono
Son Juon (opittrono
495-1776 -·-PACIFIC VIEW
MEMOllAL PAIK
Mortuary
Chopel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Ne""J)Orl Seoch, California
. 644-2700 -·-PHKPAMILY
COLONIAi. PUNllAL
HOMI
7801 Boho Ave., Wes1mi1111er
. 89:J.lt2$ -·-SMITHS' lMllTU.UY
627 Moi11 St.
H~n1ing1on Beach
536-6.139
* For
Weekender
Advertising
Phone
642 -4321
*
department, if it is created,
should be run by the sheriff as
it is in most other areas where
the offlres have been com-
bined.
"The sheriff's office is
already dOing a great many
things as an officer of , the
courts and if we combined the
workload the system wou1d
run more efficiently," Musick
said.
He noted that in some cases,
a sheriff 's 'deputy and a
marshal have shown up to
serve warrants on the same
person at the same time.
h-1usick said the combination
wou1d have a gbod side-effect
as well.
"H these court officers ate
St. Pat's
Parade Set
Saturday
SANTA ANA -Green will
be the dominant color 'at the
St. Patrick's Day "Parade to
begin oo nooo Saturday at the
intersection o( Broadway and
Civic Center Drive here.
Grand marshal ol t h e
parade will be newscaster
Jerry Doophy of KNXT. Lt.
Gov. Ed Reinecke and San
Francisco M.a).'OI' Joseph Alioto
are scheduled to aetve as hon-
orary ~ marshals.
Particlpallng In the parade
will be the nnd U.S. Anny
Band, the 15th Air Force Band,
ten school bands and 13 drill
teams as well as noats, girl
scout troops and antique cars.
The parade will proceed
from Civic Center Drtve IOU.th
on Broedny to 5th Strett.
eaat.'two blocks to Maio Street •
and north on Main Stftet patl
th1:1 reviewing stand at Main
al"l 11th Street.
The parade will e,.r at tilt
ln1...-ion of Mein ood lllh
Stre<I.
..
.\' ,
'MORE EFFICIENT'
Sheiiff Musick
I Elec:want • Automatic I I Computerized I
I un1en GASOLINE I
I I
I I
I I
I t I
I ~ I
I ,. •. I ~THE AUTO WASH 'i. . I 4200 Birth (at Dove) ,._~ I I Ntwpo rt Beach 833-0660 0. I
1-I
I I
I Bring This Ad lor a I
I FREE HOT WAX I
all lawmen, we would in effect I ( 1.00 Value) I
h a v e a mini-substation I · -. . I..:... I ev~re there is a court,'' 0,. Dolf, ~•111\1 I: Ha cqs M~d ~--------------~
. '
TREES
ARE FOREVER. • •
We built our mortuary within the sacred
grounds of beautiful Westmin ster Memorial
Park. The broad lawns and
towering trees promote
a feel ing of peace and
tra nquility. Contact us
tod a y regarding our
special plan for the new
Garden of Medi.talion .
Westminster
ilemnrial lfark
Mortuary • Cemetery
Everything in bnc IJcaUliful Pl«.c"
Cemetery• Mausoleum • Funeral Home
Chapels • Columbarium • Crematory
Veterans Lawn • Flower Shop
1'801 BEACH BLVO.
· WESTMINSTfR
(2t3) 01-6577 171') 19:1-2Qt
(71') Al-1725
•
Fr1diy, March lS, 1974 CAIL Y PILOT 9
BIRTHDAY SALE
Birdcage wlndchlmes
Reg. 2.69
Now 199
Now 59sa
Fruit-filled
Ro'bart1or\,'1
marmalade
Reg .. 69 • .89
Now
211°0
Oriental smoked oyslers
Reg .. 57
Now 211°0
Colorful plnataa 1Aeg. 2.99
N 244
FREE DRAWING
FOR EXOTIC PRIZES .
Drop your name. address and
phone number in prize box at your
local Pier 1. March 15·22. You need
not be present to win. Must be 18
years of age . No purchase
necessary.
Bota Skin Wine Bag
••9·. 4.99
Now 288
H1nd-craltad onyx che11 aet
l eg. 39.99
Now28.88
Director's chair
in vivid colors
Now
1988
Hand-woven wt llow nymph chair
• ..,. 24.ff
Now 19.99
I
2710HAAIOllLVD. c., ....... ,,.,_
COSJ AMHA
540.7ll7
SOf L KATELU AVL
'ANAH!IM
772-Z472
I H4 SO. COAST HWY.
LAGUHAllUCH
4944101
CITY SHOPPING CIHTIR
OUNGI
6ll.ott5 ... "°"rs.: Mofl, thN s,1. 10.9 p.m. Sun, t 0..6 p.m •
.• •
_.
.• • ··-
"
,
.
'
• ,
.!1e )AJLY ,!LOT
t.
' . .
Fairview.. Seouts . Do Best
' : By All'rmlli' It. VINSEL
'... Of .. ~ ......... I · "On Jtv Honor I Will Do
"'· Mu Btat .. /'
•
•
•
• • 2 Coast •
Residents
• I { 1• Coast Winnen Illt.ett
s~1woz Achievets Honored
' ·~ ..... Boy 8-10.111
111111 fa A08erlet)
Aid U.S. Top :· rated high school ~ ~pull and Keltb p.,..a "111'""· LOa Amlgoo
seniors in die Orange Qiast Busrek l>y l!lllbon l!igh School. High School in Foun!ain Valley . :=~r! i:tot =cm~: San Clemente High School ·has selected Joe Glordimo,
27th an n u a I Achievement hu ~-Linda Brtiwer ' Janice Barket and Davki,
Awards program. KathleeG · J • c k so n and Sams. • 1 Sir Robert Steph·enson ' r: , Smyth Baden--.11 (1861·
· ; 1941) and Jae.tie Shannon, a
~ : redheaded widow who can talk 1
: like Tugboat Annie when '~ neeeoeary, wotjld gel aklng
:: famously .
.• Baden-Powell in 1908 found·
·· ed the Boy ScoutJ and later
;:~FA~rwi]
' the Girl Guides which evolved
• into the Girl Scouts.
Two Orange County
resldenQ: are among the four
Calllorplans named aa VISIT
U.S.A. ambassadors by
Langhorne Walhbum,
AulMJnt Secreta.ry of
Commerce for Tourism.
Carol DeKey1er of
The student. will compete! in Kathlelo 1*rrF•· , In Weetmlmter, Adriane
a ~I ,.ml·lll)81 judging Leslie Zane, Christopher Brown, Susan Oeochc•r and
on March %7. First pri'!' !'ml; -., ()II.., and Eric Thoma! ~ have been
..-.., al tilt aeml·llnals will Lucba will ~eoent ·Dena chooen by LAI Quinta High
eam a minimum cash award Hills Hilb lchociJ. School and John wtite, Teresa ot mo and advance to the . ~ Cu.lbert90fl, Robin Shennis
area finals . .~In Irv~L High and G.ail Chri-h b1y
Second,"' third and fourth """"lllUI ' ......,., • u r • Westminster High Sc o o . ~ );tan Howat and ROOiJI l!uck, Nancy Pllrter placo student. in eaeh lletd Jolm H8*h:bave been cholen. and &ic Ressler will ,..,,....
will win ltOO, 115 and ISO ,,,. ~ta fn1m F..-in -Laguna Beaeh lUgh
spe<tively. Valley lllgh u'lchool will be School and Leo Marlin and
1:: A, TE GO R JES ARE Tlmotlly .J.tmday, Retooc<a L)'lda Mc.\lillen will oompete ·---"--' -~-n ~-Webber, ~ Bootelle .and for Mission Viejo ffi&1l School.
The old British eoldler and
nobleman might lje ..toimd<d
but pleasanUy surprised to tee
how h~ 65-year-old
SCOUTING POPULAR ACTIVITY FOR FAIRVIEW HOSPITAL YOUNGSTERS
Boy, Girl ind SN Scouts Do Th1lr Stuff for Udy Scoutmaster
Huntington Beach ,
Disneyland 's 1974 .Ambassadnr
to the World, and -Owles S.
Thomas of Corona de! Mar,
former Secretary of the Navy
as well as former president or
Trarfs World Airlines, and the
Irvine Company, wUI travel at
their own expense to invite the
people of the world lo vi.sit the
United States. • .
1be other Californians nam· ·
«I were entertainer Art
Linkletter of Beverly HU.ls and
Herbert L. Lucas of Los
Angeles. pr esident of
Carnation International.
~ ~~. me ••~•rc;;;;;;;;i' ____________ ;;;;;;i __ ,,
liberal arts, and science andll
mathematics. J'
~ • movements are being appUed
: • today.
Scouting is a real com·
munity activity at the big
facility on Harbor Boulevard
in Coota Mesa, with several
hundred handicarpped
members.
JACKIE, a voluble recrea-
. · ,uonaI therapist with a
multitude of Interests, is in
· charge of Boy ,Scouts, Girl
Scouts and Sea Scouts al THEY ARE general l y
among a higher 16\.<el or men-
tally and phSslcally retarded
patients, who often compete
a g a I n st noo-handicapped
Scouts in outaida events.
• Fairview State Hospital.
;., "Don't try t.o make a story
about me," she order s
adtlflUU)tly. The story of
Scouting at Fairview is not
., about her but she b a major
part of It.
Her Sea Scoot Ship 1:17 led
by Del Mar District. Skipper
' • ,
PSAw.lts to de .. the ilr.
{md de.,. up J'M8' q11esdMs
.... Ollfor11la
JW ... cm.••••ltlltl). '°"
? '?
Now that the PSA Grinningbirds are in full flight,
we thought you should get the full story. Exactly where
we go. when we go, how often, and how much
it's going to cost. Despite required cutbacks, we still •
have more California flights than any other airtine and
nobody has lower fares. To prove it, here's our entire
~ tchedule -flights, fare&, the wbrks. Compliite and uncut
So you can Cut out and fly some place.
... ,. ,.
" •
=NEWAND
1174PSA
,,..__TE~oVr4Nr>st'-\f~, ... ,_,*,,,
.~ 'PSA FROM LONG BEACH TO: ) . -~ LEAVE ARRIVE _J
'
, SAN FRANCISCO $20.25 \
7:15am 8:10am Non·stop Ex:Sun ·\ .I 8:30 am 9:25 am Non·stop Sun ~
'; 10:30am 11:25am Non-stop ExSun
1.. 12:45 pm 1 :40 pm Non-stop, Sun
1 5:45 pm 6:40 pm Non-stop Daily ) 1 6:50 pm 7:~5 pm Non-stop Fri & Sun
I -, '> SACRAMENTO $23.00
I 7:15 am 8:55 am One-stop Ex Sun
: 8:30 am 10:15 am One-stop Sun
' 12:45 pm 2:50 pm Via SF Sun ,
) 5:45 pm 7:35 pm Via SF Daily ·~
,_,-.., A • ' I ... PSA GIVE:S VCJJ ..;~ ..,_,.,,..J
r.. ,
•'
' Bob Jessen is entered in a "lt made them reel like they
weekend Rendezvous w I t tl.t were really a part of the com-
other Scouts in Newport munity, rather than a part ·of
Sele:cied rrom Corona det
Mar High School were Julia
Craig, R ob e r t Macdonald,
Stan Dom and Stephen Fry.
Representing Costa Mesa
High School will · be Macy
Finley, Gail Brower and Lee
Ann Steigerwald. Chosen from
Estancia High School were
Heten Visser, James 1.saac.s,
Cynthia Holm and' D a I e
Beach. \a hospital for the handicapped.
'Ille Boy Scout oath Jackie Sharman says she r---------~
demand! pursuit of honor and rarely needs to use a Tvgboat
excellence a nd Fairview's Annie tone on her Sea Scouts
Scouts pursue them. or deritand that the Boy Scouts Not Fair
To Men? "WE WON'T win anything
and we'll come in last," she
predicts or Ship 137 and its
loyal !hlpma~, "but we're
good at marching and we have
a lot of ftm."
"They even got me out in a
canoe today even thollgh I'm
scared of water," says Orange
County's only female Boy
Scootmaster.
Jackie Shannon sent ln her
application to the Del Mar
Dislric;t of the Boy Scouts of
America signed simply: Jack
Shannon. That walked. '
snap to, like troops on review.
SHE BELIEVES it has Bemer. ·
something to do ~th that NEWPORT HARBOR HJgh
Scout oath that says: "On My School s e I e c t e d B,ruce
Honor l Will Do My .Best," LONDON (AP) -The Stamper, Kimberly Kay ,
and the knowledge that they pill }iberated wqmen, and • Deborah Hurley and Timothy
belong may have assured that ' Hamill. ' '
"I have taken them to all there would be more Alan Fronk. June ?.loffetl
kinds oC community affairs Yi"Omen to use it. and David Greenberg will
with 'normal chiklren' " she Doctors in the World represent Huntington Beach
Say:; of the Scouts, ~t of Health Organization who High _ Sch>ol. A I s o in
whol,ll are in a hospital pro-studied Hungarian women Huntington Beach, D a v i d
gram lo correct childish found that the frequency Muhs, Laurel Evans, Theodore
behavior. of daughters so~red Hamilton and Kenneth
"The funny thing is, they imong women who had Wogensen have been chbsen
rarely act up when they are been <¥1 the pill . by Marina High School and
• r I See by Today's
Want Ads
e HUSTLE SOME ACTION
w1tll !his_pool table. It's
an Amerlcan Billiard1 5x9
slate & comei with ac-
ces&orief!.
e MAKE MUSIC, hopefuUy,
ort Ulls six piece Ludwig
drum set. It hu Zildjian
cymbals.
e ROUND 'OR OBLONG •
takt! your pick with lttis di~tte 1et. It hlls 6 rl'lalrs~.'
a \\'alnut finish and is ln
ex«llent condition.
~w~ea~nn~·~g~the:""_~uru~·~w~nn~·~"~~....!:::!::================::!...J~~ose~pb~~Tro~•e~U~._::E~Ueo~~Be~ll,~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ "I HA VE sili: brothers, three I· ., · ,
sons, two daughters and I'm
the grandmother of five," says
the former Den moj.her and
Campfire Leader who now
heads th,e three Fairview
Scout un its.
"I've always been interested
in Scouts ...
Representatives-from lociil
Scouting agencies supervise
financing and liaison for Ship
1:17, Boy Scoot Troop 360 and
Girl Scoot Troop I~ on the
Fairview grounds.
A gourmet cook in her own
kitchen, Mr" Sbannon has
taught mentally and pb)'11ieally
handicapped Fairview Clients
to prepare beef strogaooff and
. other culinary delights.
CAMPOUTS for her Scouts,
however, center around out-
~y meals, wllh the boys
making 90W'dough b r e a d ,
bacon-n-beans and other such
masculine fare.
Jackie Is a third generation
Californian from Los Angel
and at age 48, graduated from
Cal Sl5te San ~iscx> in
recreational therapy an d
hopes lo go back' yet lo study
law.
For now, the redhead who,
when necessary, can handle
See Scouts like Tugboat Annie
or Boy Scouts like a Marine
drUJ instructor is conlellt
where she is, ma'king herself
useful and baving heraell
some fun.
.. WHEN I went to work with
the notanled et Sonoma State
Hospital I realized bow im·
portant Scouting waa for
them," ane explains.
RU Ff ELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
W... TMW..t ,.._
1922 " ..... ""1.
CMN M ... -Ma.0219
'~LAST 4· DAYS!' ,
Sale-Ends Mond 18th.
. .
with ail these big-set features: ,
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SALES & SERVICE , ••
401 MAIN STREET
HUNTINGTON BEACH ·
536-7561
CHECK OUR LOW PRICE.
USE OUR LAYAWAY.
SALES ONLY .,,
"67WARNER
HUNTilrlGTON BEACH
'Mi-SS96
:s:AVE:2:s:21.:aYEEEY.~~-~-~-7-~-74-
)
•
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,, •
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•' " ... ' • ,, ..,
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I • • • I • ! 0 • l
I I l
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I
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I I
I
'I
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'
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0
a
t
' •
' •
•
Three Events Reid S~ Diego
• \ • CJ!tp Race ~~ts Visited
·i
,. Stymie4 by Fog By Prince
~
;,. By AIMON LOCKAllEY --wu over. C1ubhocle roonllon
SAN DIEGO IUPI\
were "ob oblna" over several
"'" 'lbt rJnt pelrlng In tho lt7f u-u. But wou~'lere be ~ OUp match ~
,,: n~ was ICheduled to ~t a another race! (Th h{ld. BOATING
Prince Charles arrh·ed In the
United States. g r u m b 11 n g
about finding hom e-style fog in
supposedly SUMY C31\fornl11.
with his eyes fl.Jed to a radar
screen reacting 1wlftly to
ai.•erl a PoSSlble collislon
be1v:een one of h.ls mother's
wanblps •nd a U.S. Navy
guided missile frigate.
otartlng <lgnal at ll a.m. been acbedulod). A alance ~~ Tburaday. to'R'IJ'd the weathtr mark
_, At 11 a.m. ThuJ:1da,y tho 10 showed plenty or visibility.
•,, sldppen ht the. 19 7 4 1'ie wind was still Ught, but Larchmont, N.Y., and BBi
• ~I Cup aerle1 were lh1ft.l.og. Ficker, sa\llni for New York
,. aon~wbere la the viclnlty ol. Yacht Club, and D a v-1 d
~ the llarti'18 line. So ~ mE lireo~l> race· got Howanl. YRU Grut Lakes ,. race ammlttee boal "The under way by 5:11 Ind It was were protesting each other. ~~ lltake boats hid long 1loce IOOfl obvious that the wind Resulta or the ..-otests v;ert to
"l departed the COfMllt.tee t ,OOS were bavir~ their run. have been 11MOunced today.
The ships passed "aboot 11
tug's wKhh" apart. about lS
yards. officers said later. 111!'1 were IUJllJOIOCfly o n With every sbil~ poaltioM But barring dlanges by the
statkln about a mile away.... cbana:ed from .mark to mark. protest committee, llere is the
S But at 11 Lm., 12 0000.. l .And then, bock came the fog. "·ay the abortive first day
\\'Ith a !lingle bagpiper on
the bridge playing ' ' T h f!
Bro~'T\·llairtd · ~falden." the
frigate H .~t.S. Ju p i t er .
• p.m .. 2 p.m. and S P·Dl the · Three pain of racers hed wound up:
: co m p e t I t o r s • the r11.cc a!Teady passed the leeward ...
s oommiitee and the stake boata mark the seoond time around nRST SERIES -Pickard
• were all alone -somewhere ·and crews were arutkluslv def. Kna i:p. tbre:! min. 23 ( J
: off the Long B e a c h groping for the finish line secs.: Hugh T r e h a r n e . S l 8 le
!•. breakwater, completely lost in abwt a half n'lile away. Cruising Club or Austra lia, '-----------' a blanket of thlclr. fog. Only an The race committee made a def. Ted Turner, Atlanta, Ga .• I occasional radio tr8Mmlsslon qUick decision. Finish the next 2:18: Bamev Flom, LBYC, t•arrying the heJr to the British
qr blast of a hom lei the two pairs at the leeward mark def. Bill Wldnall. Boston. t\\·o throne as navigation o(ficer. ! oommJttee and official boats and call it a race. min.; Ficker deL l~owani. :3t arri\'ed Thursday for a week
• know they were not alone in -When -the-tlme-tpllts··and -secs.: Cucchiaro ~t lT-. . ,
' this grey world. scores were finally added up, Nautical Association, d e f . ·of trrurung e-:<ercises with Uie ~ bert is the way thing!! looked Gillette. Ha¥.'a.ii :40 secs. U.S. Navy. l Bllr BY J P.M. the picture for the fin;t day or tho 1974 • ~Jhiorlth•• ~ changed. A' slight southerly Congresskml C.Up: SEt'OJ\'D SERIE§ -Ficker SACRA..\lENTQ f AP ) _ The
' breeze and a warm IW1 had def. 'l\lmer. 2:30; Kna~ def. California Board ol Education ~ di!ISlpated the fog. FOUR SKIPPERS had Flam. :59 secs.: Cuc aro has ordered all public school ~ Was there still time for a completed the frustrating day def. HO\\'ani, 1:33; Treharne
t series of fj\•e lwo boat races'! "'ith a oerlf'd. score, three def. Gillette, :15 sec s. : districts to seek and hire mor~ ~ The decision was affirmative. others stood at 1·1. four ,,;ere Pickard def. \\1idnrill, 2:30. i.romen and persons o i Within 20 minutes Uve pain or dee~iJed with two losses aDd minority backgrounds.
• Cai.49 sloops, manned by some t\.,f"I protests were oendin~. ST Afli'DL\'.GS: .. (I) Ficker, The board's 7-2 v o t e i or the I"' top mat~ Tom n.1_ .. _ _., of Lon" Beach Treh.ame : Pickard. Cucchia ro, Thursday added to l h e
;· raeers ...,.:~': i~~ring towa';d Yacht Ci~b(~ 19'1i""'winnerl tied \7lth 2--0: (5) Knapp. Ca Ii ( ornia Administrat ive J the \\-eather mark.. \\'¥ being protested in the Flam, Howard . tied 1-1; f7l Code a text saring the ~ By s p.m. the first series fi?'!lt series by Arthur Knapp, Turner, Wktnall, Gillette, 0.2. districts "y,•ill develop and
• implement an a!finnative $ action employment program"
l. W eeketul Calendar :~=.'!~nd hire women and
Dana Race Set Saturday e No OU Plot
LOS ANGELES IAPI
Dist. Atty. Joseph P. Busch
sa.ys a two-month investigaUon
by his office bas revealed no
The Balboa Yacht Club y,•111
~ launch-to 1974 edition of Us
1 popular 66 Series Saturday
, with the: sailing of the Dana
I "Polgl Rae<. The 86 iJ a !Uies
, of siz daJ races p.signed to be
' eomplded In about six hours.
II ii lnv!tatlcllal ' to yocht> riltina .-,. tlle !OR lip\ m
. (llltemallonal -llule) , UC! ~ • (Mldpt; Ocoan
.• Radntr" Fleet. ,
}f Amlher-populsr lflries con-
lo-;jltlodaJo with the second
race ol Bal(& q,rtnthian
V'acht Club;•, Angebnan Series ~
'for yachta rated tmder the
. Performance Handicap Racing
1 Fleet (PHRF) rule. Sunday's
· race will be to the Huntlngtoo
· 20-FaUJom mark and bact and
w!D be tho Ojltaide feature of
BCYC's St. Patrick 0 a y
Regatta. ·-... Nev;pori Harbor Yacht Club
•i ll lend tjJe Lebman-11
dinghies In -with tl)e St.
Patrick's Day team race!.
Tbe major y.mt1ng action is
centered at 1-Beach Yacht
Club where the 10th annual
1Qmgrtssional Cu.p match race
terles got UD4IJI ~·~ 'ftnJrs.
day, conttmmst today and
Saturday. ·,' ~ .... · ·
Los Anftl ... Loac Beadl
LONG BEACH Y ACHT
CLUB -~nal CUp,
today, Saturday:.
SEAL BEACH YACHT
CLUB -Saturday Sailon
Series No. 2.
CABRllLO BEACH YACHT
CLUB -Spring Series No. I, .
Sund "hard e\•ldence of a criminal ay.
Santa_'-lonk:a ..Bay _CQ...nspi.racy _mi the oil industry
PALOS VERDES YAClff to falsel.v create the energy
CLUB -Small Keelboat crisis in Los Angeles County."
Regatta. Saturday. Busch an noun c ~ d. the
C A L I F ORN I A YACHT conclUSioo Thursday "'-a *
CLUB Sonia Barbara page interim report pttpar<d
!!land rnee (Overton Series) !or the eotmty. Boe:<f . of
IOR, CCA. PHRF, Saturday: Supervisors. nie mvesugatwn ~1allbu race (\Valsh Series) was reque~ed by ~ he ~ COAST COR-::-~: :i11~ ~AN YACHT CLUB -jury lnvcstigatloo.
=J"Y.\~unt£'tia _ e Di'IH E,,ell ·.} ,
~ ~Serles, mulUhull, PMA, VENTURA (AP)~ ~ ~
Smday. decision oo Y.-hether ·to allOw
... DEY REY YACHT CLUB-Atlantic Richfield Co. to drill
Sunday skippers race, Sunday: tor oil in the Santa Barbara
WIJ)dy ,.fardl Ladies Regatta. Channel was postponed after
Wednesday, Pi-larch 20. the South Central Coa!ltal
Newport..BalbN cons Uva Lion Commission
::Hobie .Cats Compete
1 In San: Diego 'Race
BALBOA YACl;IT CLUB -heard testimony from an
Dana J>Qint Race (84 Series). attorney for the oil company.
!OR. MORF. Satunlay. A public meeling on the
BAHIA C 0 R 1 NTH I AN question 'A'a5 scheduled for
YACHT CLUB -Huntington March 29 in Sant.a Barbara
'-0-Fathom race (second of af~er commission chairman
Angelman Serles) Stmday; St. Tim Terry and Assistant Atty.
Patriclr.·s Day Regatta Gen. Jane Goicbman
(insklel Saturdav, &mday. questioned the Atlantic
Hobie Cattm will converge
on San Dlego 5aturday and
. Stmday to compete In the first
San Diego Clmlc Regatta on
~fission Bay. Pre-race entry
,lists indicate that more than
125 Hobie Cati ol the 12, 14
and 16-foot varletJes will make
Seminar ·
Announced
. 'Ibe Alamitos Bay Yacltt
·Club and Sea Maguine will
·aHpOOSOr a junior aalllng
seminar during Easter vaca.
tion. 'Ibe program is tc:hedul·
1 ed April 9-12 and is Gpe11. to
any junior saUor between the
.ages of IO and !I who has ac-
cea to either a ~pies sabot
or LaJer DlnihY·
Partlciponl! In tho program
must be members ol a ~ North American
Yacht Racing Union yad>t
cltn 1be -am provtclo9 I
COf1'I of lecturers and adual
sailing.
lnstructors are H e n r y
• Sprague DI, Andy Rooe, Bob
Ketteo!oren, Bob Btrtls, Nan-
:ey llargreaw. and Ken Weill.
Reg~tratlon ,,_ April I
at$ p.m. The ree, tncludll!g an
'"1otnlctlooll matenala. ii 11~
c ..............
,..,.... flft ....,, I.JIM ~
"''* "'"" .,.. """""' llow1 --... ..w.rt'f t to lt liMtt Ill ..,.... -~ ... ......, ....... ,. _,,,,
~I "'•Will-,..,... .,_ lt'9a.I .... __...._, ..... ,,._ JI II 11. ...., _,..,...,, a. s-. ..... rw. ......
~ ................ ,! ... l'l'I, ,,.
.... ... ' "~' P.11'1. tt .. -. Fir .. ,.,.,. , .......... •111 '·"'-... . '1"' ..., .......... nin '-"" r ..
..... -.......... 1?• •·'"-).J ~.... l hQ I-·"",., -· f'Jnil "'-••• , ·•• JID 11.1'1'1, •.J
Flm io. ........ lttt """ 0.1 .._ 111111 ... , .••••• 11Jt (t.m. l.t l:'"'.::. ....... '= r...:: --i:: ..... , ...
It one of the largrn Hobie
regattas of the season.
N E WP 0 R T HARBOR Richfield attorney and other
YACHT CLUB -St Patrkk's wltnessel.
Headquarters for the two-
day event wnI be the Vacation
Village Hotel. A total of lour
races will be held. The 16'! will
race in the ocean oU Mission
Bay wb,ile the l2s and 14s will
see actloo inside the bay.
Spomors of the regatta are
the Hobie Cat Msocialion,
Hobie Sports Center, Hobie
Fleet No. 4, Afission Bay
AquaUc center and Mluloo
Bay Associates.
Further lnlonnation may be
obtained by calling Kevin
Summerell, director of public
rel.a~ Coast Catamaran
t:orp., 202.6 AlcGaw Ave.,
Irvine, 979-2880.
Day ll<flaUa. Lehman-!: team
races, Saturdav. Sunday.
Su Die-co
. · SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB
Collins Serles, Cal-20,
Saturday. Sunday; Sp r i n g
Series, Star, Saturday, Sun-
day ; NAYRU Mallory Cup
eliminations. Saturday, Sun-
day ; Da.v Race, Cal-25. Sun·
day; Spring Series, uo, Sun·
day.
~fiSSION BAY YA C II T
CLUB -Lldo-14 lnvitaUon al,
Saturday, Sunday.
OCEANSIDE YACHT CLUB
-St. Patrick's Day Regatta,
Saturdav, Sunday.
CORONADO YACHT CLUB
-Spring ftegatta, Satunlay.
&mday.
Marathon Boat Races
I
Bow tq Energy Crisis
t ' • .
The American ~ Boat grnatly 1/fecta the ecooomy of
Mooctatloi lo~bt our country," Nordskog coo-tbe. -v-ctlr11 by Un ed
ellmlnotfl!I --llld u . mmd1m\ lyPe ,.....,.,.. aut· N<lrdlkog pointed out that
Ung -the tme and tbe l\Jel conaumed by racing
dUUnoe on otberi:!' .... · aD'XR.lnll to about one-millionth
Bob Nordato< of Tanana, .ol Ille dally -ol ruel u...i by
-vice p-..ldent ol APBA, the Amert""" people In
Uld mi """'°"' powerboat aene,..t.
..... ol IOV<nl ,.... -
ding -the Lon( -..
-llld tlla CatallDa a.r ..... .-... --l"llll:lllll ... tlllr ,.,..
"WS MYB ... __ . ... ___ _
rM• •ic the 11D1M1t ~ fuel
-by -.. tlc'I-... ............ ,,,. lmctb ol ,,.,
---~.., -by mllaa at boun -
apln to -ltltl -111111pllan." Noi ... aid. .. __ people
btllm! that --...., ..., all<lptbor. ,,,., do
--tbot tba ....... -~ ............. lorp_ot_ ...
••srop 1Hll small perce~
tap ol fuel ~ and
tbe "'""'" ai. ...Wd llOI be -Uy a!fOCled. IM atop llila f!na _,and ... _
would mfftr I r 1 a t I y , ' '
Noul1!q aalcl.
11ia l2lh -1 Parker
Dim l!Dduro ... hat -
... ---s .. NardlSland-to
..... """'" -ol the mil ....... of tbe --· 8mne ol the APBA
marathon ,.._ which
P"'v!oulltJ hod I minimum re-
q-t ol -hour wlll be allolled to .... aoljl hall-llour -
eBART l'ole
OAKLAND I U P I )
General Manager B.R. Stoke!!
of the Bay Arta Rapid Transit
District survived a motion to
fire him Thursday in a 7-5 vote
b\' the tran,tjt !lystem's board
of direct.ors.
He also \\'On board support
for a possible extens1on of the
special BART half~t sales
tax uritil mld-1978 if that is the
only way the system can get
the mone y it needs to keep in
operation.
ecHP Women
SACRAMENTO UPI\ - A
bill which could open the way
for women to join the all-male
Calltomia Highway Patrol was
Introduced Thursday by Sen.
Lawrence E. w a I sh (()..
Huntington Parle}.
'The blll (SBt!S9) -1d
require the patrol to conduct a
two-year study to determine
the feasiblliiy ol h a v i n I
Yi-i>men patrol state highways.
e Pair fCIRl!tl
FAIRFIELD (UPI) -Larry
Morris, secretary · of the
National Independent
Automobile Oeate.ri
A.WICl.otloo, and another man
wm sh<>t to death Thursday
in ~torris' used car lot.
Police said a young ma n
shot '-fonis, 38, and Carl Lav,
211 of Fairfield, with a .22--
collber piotol be!or• Ooelng.
There was apparently an
.......,.,..,. between the three
men oa lbe car lot belore the
ohaoting. police said.
eAppel~tetl
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Gov. R<loald~
Lns Angtlell altomey Robert.
L . Toms as state
Commt..looer o! Corporations
'lllunday.
Toms, a 38 ·ye ar~old
Rapubllcan, ...,,1.... Brian v .. Clmp, who tt11..,..r tlla
~-poat IA> nm Io r ~olStat•.
'
LIAI L( PILOT JI
Jtloney's Worth Over The Coun~er •
0 • c NASO Listings for Thursday, March 14, 1974 Ptwns ·on ars r--~ , ... _ ...... c,, ... -·~ ...... WllPllllll 1tY .. .... DI $iO 11\.'I Mlltitt Hi ll 1• Rwct 1 "' lt\'I 14 "-! AQ!(.lallOll .. 1)\4 12\-'I Mlllicror SIYI 111-~ ~ """' !'\It MW. !ieWl'14191. O..Wt. Ill 0 f~ ' i11W1 ~ ~ aoh S.. ._ .._ ""-
R he C U =~------= , .. "'t. =~~~::..'a: ~1~t=1"111 :~~
. Uri t Ost .p "'' ..:"o;: ll I".:': ::· ::. :'.\:'.!: ~ •:r; t::: ... ~ :;: I~ <!06.t tr.-11 Nw.1 ~ illb "'*" C-. fl 24 Su 1pc-H II 111' IN.I Tiie _.. ( 4111 ~ Mlllila If!· .JI :W 5" Wl'IO IJYI M U. cit i-' ._... ~· C)i Ml't UYI ~ S. lllYI -tO k Mtl't'-Hll 1'-' _/ ....,.,_.,..,n · 11• lllio MDI• 9' t ~ ~""'-M• ttYI 2'V. r .... ... ,. ,. "'°"•"' ,,14 1, ....., ""' •'-"
By SYLVIA PORTER Initial expenst, m!\f\Y of you --~l'"-... ~ ~ ~ ~4'g ~~ ~"" t:;:.. .= 1~ Wilm go Into th ' • • i! •'II MD4Jen In M'lo I~ S-Toi, "1 oil you e optlnn•-will ltmle ga5 and •••LS ,..,.. 1:1 » ..., o 11111 '"" So c.i wi 1J'h " marbtpt-to buy a -.,, car -"" • · .urtn ~. .._ ,,.. Sml"' • ._ '"" so °"'°' •1111 J111o ... ., ..,. ina c<llilptetelv ol'fllOt other •t. ~ '"' MJil °"'' n l't t' · ~ ,... 1 ... "1. this •Prlhl look out for the Y " IMrcll u.111!" .,. .,... 1 """'11"" n •• a;''' 1:m ui,,
trap..t opfkw. t~or no llllltter steps you are t11king to curb .-c..... •11 i'i" r:.11.= Ut! :: <ti:.~ t: ~~ sir':'.i! U., !;:~
Whetlier the car you buy Is your consumption. t:.,:'t: l)Yt ::"' ;~ .., Im J!..., : ::::. !1111 :;: tr~·~': ;~ ~ .. tmall or big, foreign or ... Al•• A.I• ttl't ,...., Food "" " 1w. NirMtoM ' • Siu~ &rlil' 1 ,.,,. .IA~-"'" 611 I,.., ~ ..... ttl \l """ 111'o Hirwll Ot I l l'o !ltff~ H s 916 •:i. uuu-Uc. at the lower or at TlilS WARNING CoulOO 't Mk• t11c. 1J1i11,.... ,..._ ..,.. 1i... HJ"" G 11:it. "" sir..-t.c '°11"" u the prl Al ... -.w J :!! flit.,. (t •"ii tll. HltOltl I" '1-.... SI,... (let J4\lt fl\1 upper ce ranges, o~ come at•a tnofe appropriate ...... Ptw IJt F''-' ,, 11"" """' ""'-" n b n. ,.....,. 1:.1 1:i.. •'· "'··al -·'1-ut can -...... ~ tll 1" ~..._Nt:• • t1<1 N!•h ... e n l'l 1J s-r c.o s'" ,.., Ul,Jlll .. .,u r•.,,. I.ANO~ ffiO' ...... t for }f WAI merely' Ant ,,.,,., " ) l'\llllr H 11\lt 11 HorOHr It 19\o't !'"' 0-11' JYI l lo Its _. to )'OU Alld also in· ....... '} ' ,--""' ,.,. ., "" """' s. 1n. II\• ~ llC 1'11t 11... •n>M• 50 u mat~ the '•·"'-'-e" Cir bu\IH' .... Fi.t fN 'k: r. 11 ll NW\ MG fl't ~ T ........ W ,. I' crea1e your automobile's COR· ~ .. r.... ,_ ,.,,. """" ~ J" 1r.to u\O ,. .. u c.. l • »l'f '•*"' '"11 '11 •-of ... tbe US. '-•-y -"I sel,.... .._ ,_ ~ VJ ._ Mo 0.kwd M t"t 1Y, T-' 3' Jil mmpl1uu gas. , • wu • , ..... 1 ..... ~ ~Gr~ ft:. I:.. k• :;, ,;.,.. ,;" ~= r.. l:: ~ ~r:iZ., en '!~ ';u,~ U yw 1oad the ne\\' car )'OU about $9IX) wotUJ of optional ,,,,,,. ,..,. ""' """ Gii ,_,,. ts\lo ,.111 ()(nor .w no. ,.,. Tl!N oc t \Oo ,.., Jiuy -~th op1:.. .. -• -ul~t -I t 197• d -...i ..... 11r11 tt '""' ·~ 1$\lo -.-. °""' 1."" ,,.... u ,_ • 11 1H 1 WI IVUAI ~'I t'""''" . tqU pmen on your ,-.:in .....,._. :ts'll Jt Gift llhld '"""' 26Yt OOi•·~ ~ ,,._ "''" CkMI 11\lo II
Y 0 u \\' i 11 )'ou'll do this u·ltbout any cleo.r 1'1~0• ~ :t: ~ ~ • .-.. ~~ ' ~= ~ ~= f.! ~~ ,:..., n e ar !y ·. ·•M111 1""1 •t1'<'l n o-....,.,.A 1"''""'*1"01'ti 11·. •ouble 11, u n d e r : I a n d 1 n g or the .,,..,, "' ~ """' Gold s,-o JOY. 11'" otii. Ctp 1~ t\o ue Fi.-n n II , , -ldt 9"' t¥t Gr-""" 10'!~ 11'• P10M Sr JO,,_ JI~ 1.1111 (.ofOI .. \~ t \o cost to yn-J. equipment's 1mpnct on your "'"' C»I• 11 1p., c.r__. s.. '" 1\, "-<l•• ,. .... JJY1 """"" Vt: '""' 10
If .vou bu.v f ::: c~.!1' ~~~ ::'" ~t .rig: ,; .~~ ::: f:: m! !f,. ~S:,..., ~ s!~ use 0 gas. Auto ,,~ ,,,, 10 , ... lwl EW l(M ,.,~ p ... OCOI u 11\o us ,,, L. 1Ho 11(• i~r~t a rc 1" o r course optioos generall\' 1.11rd Alo 111i ''-"-mll 11r n:i.. Jll.o P1u1 .__ 1• 1111o un.w f"ck u '" 11\· ' • hl•d W. U IHlo ~ ~Rt ll~ II P.,11• C.-II 11\lo VIQM HID J>;, '"' "ba si (' ..
hill l?~l>l.'ll;
S i\'~ OJ)·
lions, ~· o u
,,. i l 1 ra i~" l'OATI!•
the price of the cur bv one·
third or n1ore. On !Ol! Ot this
Automobile
Dealerships ..
On Deelli1 e
DETROIT (UPI l-There ore
more than 29,000 new car
dealerships in this coootry nnd
more than just a few are in
se rious trouble, bcc-ause the
energy crisis knocked the
bottom out ol the standard-size
car market.
An official of the National
Auto m obil e De aler s
Association estimates as many
as 48.cm of the 800,IXXI
employes of th ese import ed
and domestic dealershi ps have
already lost their jobs. As
many as 1,000 dealers could be
bankrupt by the end ol lhe
year. he said.
The reason, says Reed T.
Draper. c6airman of the
NADA) g'lf~t .-,latloos
committet.11 llie government
itself.
Draper said the federal
gov~ atf!f membets ol
Congrese bave "frightened the
COD.SlD'llet i D t 0 purchasing
smtller • llzed vehicles" with
the threat of gasoline
rationing.
"What r~any has me upset
i! the fact that if the energy
situation had been managed
rorrectly, we ·wouldn 't have
this mess," said Draper, co-
O~'tlel' of auto dea lerships in
Ba y City and Saginaw. r..flc-h.
'"l'he way the government has
handled the situation borders
on stupidity."
The number or dealers
selling new cars has betn
declinJflg since IM9. But so
has the nu mbe r of
manufacturers like Hudson.
Packard, Studebaker and
others !!till in . business after
World War II. The number
peaked in late 19-18 vdth 49,173
dealers ,in business on Jan. I,
1949, according to lhe trade
paper Automotive News.
The rour major U . S ,
automakers now say they have
26,057 dealers, doY.n 150 from
!his time a year ago with only
t~oni showing an increase.
General ~fotol"!I said it h:is
12,0lZ dealers, doY.'ll 50 fro m a
year ago; Ford has 6.n 3, up
39: Ouysler has 5,466, down
106; and American ,.fotors no'"
has t ,912, a drop or 33 from
last year.
Calif orn.ia
Wineries
Set Record
impro\'e the comfort or safety ::::: I: Jt'! J~ t::::i: "~ '~ '~ ~!f.~& '.;; :!~ l:~ ~=:•o!: J~ J:':
'
·enlenc 0 a a.tctwn t ttrh ,, Memo M'I • , .. Pt1 11w. u .... 1'"" v1n Siie:~ ,.,. 1•-. or con e r appear llC'e 11i111y Ml! u~ :..v. 11t11t'I c 11 ~ 111·, Pe1ro tw •'-,., v1ctoo1 SI 11 ""
per! &tM • ••• n .. U \t HIP (.o 0111 11•11 Pint;rtn ttV) JJ\~ v~ s.,, • '"• o r ormance-or com-an .. 11 " 11to. H:\:o H1 .... EL ••111 •i•·, p;_, w '" 1"" "'-' Sc. J1~ •
b• " th f-of fllll•lltH 11 111'1 -er JI l1V, PtOQt•\ W1' 1110 \IOI SftOll •'lo J•o 1nahons ereo )•our car. e.•1n CD 1 '~' Hun! M•t n v. IJ\o PS N c.r t h 10~. w .. es• '°"' n • &ellllf U n 7l Ht•ll C 10\ll II ...... ~ Ctp Wl\fl HIJ lllio 11 '• But you can very easily 11t" "'o '"' t\• Hf•te• c uv. " 4>.> 41s.11 W••""" 1 ... 1
Overbuv lkf1 I.lit • ..., >tu. •Mi '""'' 114 ,,,.. Oull~r en I• 11 v..o.n 111o ' -.J • lllbtt Co l\o JI\ • ...,.. Wtt 1(11/o 10lo 9'«,n Cl 10\'t Ul't 'NllllllJ WI ''° 10 POr mstanee say you 6Uy a e1, orm 111'h 11"' fftdl Hutt '" 10\li ...... ci:i " .,,.. w. r1111 M n-.. u: .. ' Bio Moo<; '°'"' •IY, l"l11t10 )It J ... A4yun 1$0 1W W1l<ll Pl • •'• 1974 model "~th a base price Bl•d *• 1no "'"· '""' 1.10 sy, • ...., ••rmd " :ra w. ic,c;s n" ''' 1 <HI Piii JS ll IMt'I Cr!J · AllM Ptc U~ .U1olt 'Miii.i" Fd ltloo 1t\o in the $2,00l)..$2,500 range Rnd 111oc1o °2 u"" 10, 101 102111 AM~ EQ ,... ~ 'Mn~ 1 :ra""o ,,.,,
you add only today's most =~°' o. ,;t 1t: l:r:f t 1!.,. ,:~ ::fl J:f" :ll.? l''-:::,wsi~. ,;'"' :r~
I !loo 8atl IE""' J' ,, .... lfll Al\#11 ..-11'1 ~· PllS f~ fVI Wint PllT , ... 10'• c omm o np a c e op s 11oo111 "" .. ~,,,'Ji ine•w• ,._lilt -.," &.A ~J.11.0 WIK PLl 11·.1t•. I au tomatic transmission ai r-ar....u. 1 1•:\lo Jll't •..w1o11 111i 1" •1"11 1111111 10 ,, Wood Ltir. """ 1••· . • • llf'lnltl '" 11' '"° llllrM (.p t t•; ANO E• _, ... U\11 Y*)fld S.. Ill. IJl 1 conditione r, power brakes ~-c-.. n "'i Hiit 11 So u111 w. t•'-.,,..., Di\ •1i11 1Cl'JI wrloM w ,.,.. ' · I · ' """" Ill •W ''-1.,... &CO 1\11 ' lloll..., fl ltl'I 1•"1 Yel~ f"rt H .. h n t<.'d g ~S!, the hke.). 11lese lllK-111 1111 ' Jlll'lesb IJ UV. ·-co Ill. 11 .. v-Ulh
alone "'ill raise that ca r's t:~:' s1 ~ ,t~ ~ ~7 ,r: :i , · OTC 10 Alo•t A.1:1;..,
Price to )"OU to S2 8flll.S3 Oii{l Sul~· M i. n Jo~1•" M U\ft IS\, Sloe-Volume 8tCI .,...., °"' • · • O IWI W 11'1 Jl\o lll.-.t• !ii l'd'oo 111"' Penn Lii~ Ut 1oOD ' J\o • ~ l , If vou load it ""'.lh au ttc c.tm '" 2•~ 1S"'i llf l¥tr c ,.,_ 119 R-* ~ ACMI m:-... , .... '• · , . C-M4 lot II'' I(•""'" C 14'Mo ISV. Merctfll -126.lOO 11\o II .. l'.'l:tras. though. that cars 1>r1ce ~ "' •~ Ill.," '' •" ''"' '"-on1o11e "'100 1!. 11-tt .. ·11 · IJ 600 ., 600 ()r Ill 1111t It ic.11, Sw \\'Mo UI'-~· W.AOI. ~ llVi • '• 11'1 JUffip to , ..,,. . C.11 11'5 I~ 141.lo _.. CQl>n ,.,. '"' OH tNlt -u :W it:; ''It• •t · · bu ol th · nt C-n o '1 """ Kelll! E•• n~ 16\lt T~ OtM .. ·a "' '"° . sa~ vou .v one e 'tta c f"s Cnlt 11 """ "~' o.t• ,.,. sv. ..,...... ,.,... ... ·o:io ., .o :.:: '· guzzlers selling in !he $8 ooo Dl"'P "' •u '"" lllY11 f"b ')11o H•• ,.,.,,... 111nCJ1 .. ;,oo 1s111 ,. -•· · °""<t A 11 \'t 11 l(ey a.ti l 'lo S\oio ~Jct (;p •1.100 1114 U ilt-'• range. Just the commonplace CNM °' i·... ~-n '°'"' •n1 11 HJ.lo
I. ·1· lse II ' °""" Cp ,, .... JJ\11 11¥S Ind ·~ "' NA$0 ..._ lodoly ,..,..200. op ions w1 1 ra s pnce o.1 ., '' _,.,,, tt ~ YI 11V1 11 ...,,,~ u• close ·to $9 000 · loaded Its Ork* 1t111.10t 11111 nt1o Dien"" in
' • • ltl '"' llOQotr "' " II UIW.-.0 11• • price to you easily will <'xceed g~""J-l J::;:: y ~=.,El ;~ :"" TOGTTAAL. 2nt •• J f, $1 1000. Clitrti "' Jf 21 Lllclld ~1 e s1 dUl~111 ona 01en. ' Clewoll 1 l"'i 11'11 l.IMtM I I~ OAJ ... 11 ( .. w Trlw U\OI U'°\ ~t 1tl't 10\lo I ElltC\lfl ... lf9Ct •Iii+ ~ UP 11 t
11IE '
'ast •-•rtment of iCrp av. 1..., uwin "'" ts """ t s.1 .,. .... , co 11-"• t Up 10 s """" l.M UY! 1' l.IWlff C 1\'h J1Ve J Vl<lrl• StMIOn M + t\lo Up It I alterna tive options is In itself " o ,. .... 1s 1..111 BoY 11v. uv. •II•~• .0» r.•• "" Uo 1•.o IC U 12"141\l Ll.0.-NO t 10 S0.nHHh5'n f\~• \1 Uo tSI a major buying ha zard. Here, Com"' CJ is " ~Pl 11'1t 1' •C,,.,t• o.t1or 1t:o • ~• Uo 1\•
therelore. ru"· Ctl'll Sllrv 1"4 Xlllll Lllllf"t't H Jiit J .... 1 E"'•OY Cw •<h Slo• '• tJp H 0 are some ,,.. cw Mic. n11t 10 LU OtmP 1"" ,~ 1 c.1tw1111 .:MO 11 • ,.,, up ,. 1
d·ment·•.s. CtnW"ll p 1J\!o J•I• Umtd Sir ll\lt 1J'l ' Fullff H fl .)2 l\l'J • ''• Up ll • a " Cplr A"o ll UY, Unr; fl6\t 6~ f lt 10 Corn!M•• Swt I '>, '' UP 11 \ Large~ en"ines: Th ey • 11 COlr¥1$ uv. ttv. 1..lon O!il ,,. J~. 11 Toto"" 1nr;oro ,, •· 11 uo u s
ti COM Fd 1Si\ ISft Ulclllt -lf'• .ll 12-111\Ptf r.o-1 lld -l~>• lo-UP 12..D rilo\"e your car ~·ith more ""P tnt 11t11t JJ11o • Lant w.r u ou.n1c .p1, II\•• J up ., • ,..,. Clrow '#I ll JJ:I• •IOV. n u O...rw1HI Air 1l•• OJ. Up 11.1 and can impro ve your !'l::t.fety. CPrdl' cii ., • Lonv• Fb n ..,.., o-,o-""" 1t t •• 2 up n •
but t•-_,, -mo•c to b"" and ""'"'"' ''""in~ 1n u1 1• ""~' c .u ••I • 14 Up 11 s II'".: "'"" • CrOff QI J•~ 1'1/1 L.a.n c.. JO St 11 GM>Mtotn• WI l'h • t. Uo 11 I
10 repair, Of COUrsC, :Ind they ?.:r':.o.~ ,;" 1f" :.c:r"C:n :!~ n~ 1 ~II '"LOSE~~•-II.It Oii 11.J
use more "BS. °'""" Olt s"" s"' ""'I 1111..., 1:~ s•• 1 s.1scorn 0t111 ' -1, on 11 1 ti Dini Ind 2t tt:W. Ml k kl U V, 41\li J COtn~ I.Al)<. I' 1-l.o Ofl t I Also. although an C'ight-<ylin-0..1 °'"° '" , .. ,,..,;,. c ,..... tf\., 'M11t,.r l'ldll s -.,, °" '• 0.t• Kil 11\lo 11~ #otril Frt 1'19 lllo s Au1w11~. M n • .. -II• Oii •o dcr may be rea:mm<'nded for °'"'"' w ..ii1ro n 'A ,.,.., .. tw w.:w. u 1" •Gr_,.., CMc:r i -t~ ot1 '1 "pped "th OKI$ OI !0'.11 11 Ml('(_ ICy n \:. ,,._.. 1 Oii..,,.,, loQl•I ll'"'I.-11.t 011 '·' any car eqw \VI an air-Dluti ~ -~ Mc. CMeJt u~" lol\.i • ""' """"""" 10Yr-.\lo Olt &.1 -"ditlooer. this en•m· e 1·5 not Dt•N 1nu ,..., s"" Mt0w1 E 1lo 11-o '0p1~1 °"""~ l ''t-·~ gi ., '"'""' 0.-.... C ,,_ !'W) MtMIH& , t IO """' I...,._ 1 ·-\\ • l necessa"' to operate an air-o; .... "' 11111 ''"' Mc.Ou•• 11 u~ 11 ~ """,,. • 11.-t• s • ·" Di-Hc1 '"" • ,,,,._ JI~ n u. n AslOCottC .Jt n --. OH s s conditioner properly. T h e o;.,,, !It.I '" ~ .... ,.. '" "" 11 0turti .., .to .u:w.-1 .... on s 1 . . ~.. 0oc..... • 1 ... ""'di'"' "'" sov, " ,,.,....'"°"' GOii ,...,_ \' on 1.J engine s uu rsepower rating . 01>11r Gtft 1u '• ll.~ 11 u .vi:.w '':-!: ,,.,11..,-111o a1 s •
not the number of cylinders. is ="'c... ':\~~~..,... A'.. aw::: :t =r.:..,.:· ~ :::= :t: ~ t: the key here. As a J!eneral -~
~~=li:~~~~.~°1. ';,,.'° ;~ I ' MU'ttJ AL FUNDS · 1 ai r-cooditioner on a small car.
and 30 more horscpoy,·er lo ~~~~~~~~-~~~ .......... "\"••••-'
th. . t I ,..,, Yo•--f'ol-boOIOI U:t:s1s.21 'PGwlll •u•n,._...,,,, •Ol•M run tS eqwpm en on a orger 1ow1"' '' • th1 ot 0n .. 1 e •m •m Janta H ti1' 11: .. s.t..: EQ .;,, ,: .. car Did 111111 l'I~"" orl· Dlll•TFUS •• ,. J"-'I !lfl'I 1.10 1.n SifKO G ... , 7.11 • , cu Oii Muilltl t-!i Fd I0.7' n.r• ......... $111 J.ft ._61 !itollt• 1.0 I.fl Au t omat1c transmission : r~ .. :r, ~"°" !... fd .......... , .... ,, -... n'" .. ,n.•n.e la!OO•lll P"Dt:
Th• • t k d · · ·· .., ~ · 1 ~ IMI lnw 14..J11'.JI is equ1pmen ma es r1v1ng · ~ ""1111:m 1.to r.11 Q.-i: 111 "_. !i.n uw '"" u .11
a lot easier. it can oft<'n pay Minh "J91~ e~C::.'t:it: &:: :? 'lU 2~:: l::11 1lliri!1 !or itself by preventinir the "°"' cw •.IN ...., £1111,. ...... J-'7 "'' °"'' ic1 ._ .. '"°Slid LI" •.s1 4.il
, , ti """" lnr; l l l 115 IAl o..t «1 "'4 5.ff MCUllllTT FOS: ~·ear 1nfhcted by an 1 in-....,,,. '"' 1:St •.J2 ..... •!,•! 1,. ,M ~·, s.,1 20.11n.os &iu1:r 1.w J•
d"J( bu nd • AdYlvr 111 •61 ",., ,., .,_ t.1110.U '""'" 1.11 'll 1 erent yer a part of its AllM F4 ,: .. .;11 c;wi11 F 11.se u_.. Ql!.1 SJ 1.11 1.11 u11,, " .,.. 1:oi.
cost will be returned at trade-!:~n: •• •ft 1~:~ '~fl ~"l: F t: ti' ~ .. s. ~~ :~ 1:;•f:,,•o,';,°'i.,.
tn time. But you'll pay more in •GE "" .:n .. ., ,o~~ ~ ~itliil ic~t',' t~ flf ~S.: 1}f~1i·Jt
repair bills and use more gas ~:::_~ ~~ U:~ ~Pr.:: tc:\ Ufi 1us ~" ,-,,, '·" s-1,., io:,, 11:11
than a skilled drive r with a Z:Bf~ ::= J:: ~-· i n iii 1.0 e .. 111: 1tft =:il'.&L.On.:1t'i~ manual transmi.,sion ...,,, °"" 1.11 •.• F~U 1l~ 'lit L.11111 ....... _., •• s us '"-".,, ,.,, 1.11
• • IWo ElltY '-" J n : 1rsw I.ti •.10 Air-conditioner : Th e ad· AM l!llltltUI . ~"! ·.~ .. • •,· .. •1 .. ., Cp U• IS.II 16,SS Flt! Fd '·" •.so P"UIUK· ~ ••• ~ "",,IS t4•br 111 Lii vantages a r e self-evide rit (.lplll . , " 1~ 0'!B.~~~TY "9$rdl 1u 1 u.u l.lol• L. .:n J.11 "cul I · h ' 111corn L• 111 -.... ' Ufl '"'" 1 .. 1 ._" P1C1 Fo 1 .. ._,. part1 ar y m t e South and lftvitrn '·'' .:n ~~ ..., •.u uiw: c. .. n 1..)1 SHultlON "°'' . mer h but I SOK• , 11 1 ,, --· ""' ""' LOOMlf AclOr< "·" '° 71 1n sum anyw ere-a r ShK• ,·1, 1;. c:ontr1 •M ... MTLn, 1fqffl 11.os1Lt.:1 conditioners use a significant ...,,, Grt~ s: .. .,,.. a-,. ,UK 1·!.! ... c.. ow u .1•1t.1• '"°""' •. ,s 10.M "'" 111!1~ t .. SO" I ,.,, ... MutliM 14.0) 14,0;J Sii DIM M.Jt l<t.JI amowt of extra gas and need ...,,, •nw.t s:io 1:111 ~=• 1tn 1u.t 'f:i~•••:.., 1 si• Fci t.to J."6
repairs !airly olten. This is b\• ::::::~-•,·!? •, !", ,,_. u:is 1'.'11 Am e.n I,., ,:;: "C::-~ '"~'!..°'j .s • ...,. ·•• ,. Purllll tMll,jl ...., M tMIO.M f1' ' far the single most expensi\•e ::g~~ !.I...., , i.n ,.11 Lltll'ltri 10:0111.01 ~",";1 1.» 1::~
option most people buy and it Gr•tll '·" ,_ ... ~=a .. tl.IJtlM =&.· t .HIO.U v ...... ,. J.SI •• JI _,. beg the lneorn 1 OJ 1 It ll'lllOOlllAMS· • Sm1111 fl tA t .'I
tc11Uo3 10 el 0 I: OplJOnS ~wr" 1o:n 11:10 f"ln Oyn iM "°" r ... r-; ~~ ,•.n,, • .. 8 It.Gr 10, ... 10."'
I SoKtr 'ts •M Fl hid "oo , 00 • GonF 11.J6 11.10 00. • 1 F'nd h•¥ I.fl I.st f": lllC ~ti .;11 MtH F IP.Of '1.lS Sows! I"" J.10 1M Vinyl roof· You may lhink w• H111 111s u . .u v...1 1 ,., , "':\" ••c:;:_ ,, ... s... •~• o s.•s &.n · Allron l l1 1 tf"d v 1· i Ot ·"' ·~· Sovr In II.OJ n .01 this ·is beautiful, lx1t its prac· :-::• F .:.-1:i0 J111:st • 1 111 1 ::g l~fi U:~ ~1'1!0 ~-:; :·~
tical advantage s are zero . A MOUc»tTOM: ·~vl!si,•",'os , .. MFO 11.1t n.io STATI! •No' 0111•:
bl k k f"und A •.•J t to K • ·""' MCO ll.'9 U.01 Cotft JO •.Sl •.tt ac one ma es<a car hotter, ,._, 1 7,11 ,-11 c.r, '" Fd 1.11•, 1.a M111e, tw 1.12 1m °'""'" •.M s.tt
rl tt• •the ffect f ti t d Slot• } " '"' MOIPI I. t.• Mlll~r 10.00 10.00 Proqr• t 10 S 1• o se 1ng t o n e ""' s.c• ,-" 1·" SI«-" 1.n '·''Mid """ •.'3 1.l'I si Fr Gt 4._. ,-._. v.·indov.'s and increasing the llL.C Gt11 l0:.0 11:lt 1'1 Mutll 7.a 1.12 Mc111, Fd t .s110.• s1 f"r inc 1:,.. •)• ..,,_ to c ll'OIUM GltOUll': • MSll f'o 1J.• 1J,q ~!lite !oar 11.1• •2 ~ gasoline consumption o( an &f\'t'I( .:01 ,:s; 100 flld IO.ll .... Ml~ 8ftG t ,(I) •.'II ~1EAOMAN f"OJ.
a if.eooditiooed car. Alao ex. :::: r:; lir tr ~no :~ tg :,. t: :::: ::;: ~"'1~ ff, l:~ ~"·····e tor~··· .. _ I0.1Sl0.H 21 f"wld "" LU~. 4,)1 .... 1nwu I.XI .... ,,......~ y .. ,.... ..... ....."" l.tl S.ts ... Gr ,. .. 4.36 _,, Iii •JI t .Q Oc1111 '·" .,,. 9Gillcblt 4.M •.• l'OUNot:CS Ml.II Stlfl llM II."' STl!IN lllOl f"OS :.•. lie« F41! t .'110.lll OAIOUll': MW Tr' I.II I.fl S..111< 11.'1 1~ nus IS A sman sampling ... _ J.(I) J.Jl °'"°' •.IS S.lO -lndu '·" '·'· Opotl ·~ ' l!il'Mm tt.0111..05 lft(lll'tl 11.Q "·"' MAf 51., f"Dt: !.lock IJ.n I but it makes the point-50 CAL'ttlll '"iffi'I f" MUii .... , ... Mane ....., t.11 SIS GAOUll': •
•·hen ,_, go out •• buy yoor ""'' N 1 1is1 "SitlKH •.1i ,,,. flofld ~ '·" i.1• Gr •"' ... '·! ,.,.. w C4'I Fd I .St 11.'1 f"-.q F" W tM Oi widn J.SI l.tS Inc..., I.It t ncy,· car. shop for option!! loo: Ol-w SM :ur J ... '"""KUM Prt'I Slk •.Jt •.• SrNolu ... 1 '· H.llwd t • 10..lt HOIJll': lllC:Ofl'I •Al S It TKl'lnl •. Jt r. Put tog~ll"".er a personal list NY V9fl io:,, i1 rs OHTC '"'° •.» St«11 Sr .,,, 1.«1 s..rw, F 1..1110,JO CG f"llf'd tO 1o'u o.111 St l :J• 1 .. 1 Cit9tll 6.11 '·" flfl'llll C 1." l .1J of \\'hat you W8f'lt and need c.p Trin ,:11 10:.. Fr 1"'""' 1.a 1.11 Jolt:• ENO LF: ,,.,. c. '·" •·1 Cenl ~ U •1 ll n IJS C'W S .... I0 .. 1 Equ.jly ' U.tl 0 .61 1r•"1 fq 10.0l II before you go lo the lihO\\'· uw.1 '"" •• ,;. 1.11111111: ..,,, •.n Grwtti t.tJ 10.11 '"-I( ••s 11: room. and doo 't permit )"OUT· QIAfUlll"°' .... (.Ip l.1' '·" ,_ ''·" , .. ,1 *"CG 1 ,. J. 'UNOI' It! (!Ill' J .. I," ~ U.O, 11.• l'Otft Cl 4 n 1 self to be dazzled by the over-..,,.r • 1.n 1.s:i ,.. L.tt:q to.a 11.21 NE.A Mt Liil '·" 1.111111H •'n 1: .. M, 1·1• ,. .. Fil Ml• t.'1 .,., "'-" c-s.n ,,Jt UrHI-1.n '· '\\'helming array of Improve-llM ,-o .oo .... ~-"'° Neu-1111 1.n 1.u u•10H SE1tv1ct: • EQ\' Gr 101 r:61 OIWN11'1 NooWlon 1f.J.IU10 oOAOUr ,•
SACRA.i\fENTO (UPIJ .. -rk on what's a··ai"lablc. on ""° °'"' '°' 110 '""-= J.n "'s '--w1e1 11.J1 n .M 1i. 1 , , 01ent11 you eee. Do your hotne· EQ1, Pr J.o J.Ot c-'"' '·" "• ""'' 11.tt 1'·11 &r"' .. .., ''ff
.. v • c;,,.,,, i 1t ,·" 1'*"'' 11.n11.J1 Nk1111:1 n .1'11.1, UPt , t 1 Califom.la wtnerles crushed a costs and on g•• consumpti"on 1ncom .:11 1:11 P11et " .,. frll'1 '"" 11.,, 11,f1 we u"•
rd "48 mfilf r ...., Soe<I 1.tl 1.M ~ S,,. .... an... 1,4 ,, .. UNI !HOS rtco "" on Ions o in adVance and you're certain Ytnlllf" 1.• 1.a ts. P ..,. ••• o Ntll Id '°'" 10.t1 Aco ·~ 1.,, grapes during 1~3 12 CHASE ~ Si< '-61 UJ OM Will U,'1 !Ml &nll r \) 1.f 1" -a lo snlle money. MKtOM: '"'"' •.n '·" °"""""" l'O: 0>n1 \l'f'• ., n 10.1 percent Increase o\ler U1e \\'hen ~-,·ng _,1..._ "" f"llCI '°" 1.11 lff Gtl'-•no 11.11 "·" ., .. "'•"' •.1.,1 10... eon1 1iw: •.u 10.I , , '"""'-'I ,.,,l!I ,oc;o, uc f"rOft CP 4.lf , OU.rd JJ, 113,tl 1'111 &. 1,,) lncorn 11.S411 · previous high ol 2.21 mllhoo ,.1re you ......,.i'" one that runs Slltr BJ 7..tJ 1 u, MILTON o11t111: o°'cT~ "•'•i .!·,", Sc11111: ... ,;,, I ·• I tl71 S t t ~ ... V Sc:rKI J ... .,,1 ._ •.o •.•s )f( ... • •v. 'ol•llOO s.•1 •.Mo ons SC1-n 1 a e on regular fu•' which all but a °""' Fd 1.s.1 '°·" °'""'"' ,.,, •.ll p,,...,. '·°" '·"' us1.A c.. •.01 •·°' Agriculture m "als r ported ~ °'" MNO '"°'' lntorn .... 1.H P1u1 ,_,, •.JD .... us GYIS •. ti •• 0 ici e. very fe\v models do. 1.111rty •.1• ·1.111 tt.11 Gth .... ,,.. ..,._,, •.JD •.n u,u,.-P"uHos: • •
today A ·oid ,....,rA--z ·~-t dd t M111111 J." ·" "''' L.• •·" &..Jt ~-Mt 2.11 2.21 Aoe• " .... ,,~ " • . \! vt-~MJU3 ll"KI 8 0 Sc."'-F 7.IS I .ts HlclDt 6J I •11 S.0 "" L'1 a.I FOid , ... 1,1 Chnraeter1ted by record conlplex.ity ••• ·•···· f"•tead sc1111 SP 1.01 '·" Hwrt• 1.•' 1.u -""'" r-40 •.ll .. n: com ~111. ''"°' 11 . to •••••• nd t' ued cuou ""IUV.X" '"" TMA .... ,,H 1.lt HOtll.f t'.1t ll.M • I.ti llJ \IAL.UI Lift• '°' nnage cru.Micu a eon 1n for durablllty And be sure all COl.Ofti~ ,.....,., a. 1.•1 ,,,, 'tL~••"' GP: v11 """ , " ·~ hl•h prices the t~3 grape . . FUNDS! 1...,. Or I.SI ''''/ PU ~.'" u.os ... V•l Ill( f..'3 'I .,. · "' )'Our optioos art l[\$tallcd by i:._. •.1os 10.1.r Ill( &; 1t.w 11.11 ~., J.io t n 1.t" i': '·" ,. ~1,'! ~~a900 ~ay ldhathve the factory when )"OU buv;. F:0:,'' 1::ri ,!·~ :::5 """' i.~~ 1.~ 1.if:"',-d ''.!! tit .,.v._~~ J.1' 1· • ~ .... , u~ ~t ever s.a e I t •-·•·IJ 1. ~ 1 GrWW1 "" .. n 1~ , .. 1,n lPI,. SI 10.2111.a SI.NOE. .. ; '•
Callr . Cro nd' U 1oc~ a er uaut a 10n can uo;; cost y. •flCOM ,.., •.:n •n 'ft"'" Jt.fl 10.rs "'" ,,. 1.1~ ... '" .. " , s.1 'S orn1a p a ves "' DON'T w A.!tlE moncv 011 .....,,,"" ,,. 1.• '""''ft G 1.0 a.a 'to..11.1 Fo; vs ~ r.01 r. Reporting Servi • ~ti H n " '""' c. A u.io u... '°'11'1 E" ··" 1... *<• J.1111 ' 'Jbt crop ~:.. aid l~A bJying IOffie 0\'etequJ_ppod CQr f : . TM , :::: r:::: ::t: t: ~ ~ ~: lffi = M; }:: ..... s •II:" a dealer nUi)' have 1n 1toc k "1 '" 11' '"" ~ 10t1utc1P1...., •.11 111::i ""f:"P 1•1 ·1 ltn total of 2.48, million tons Wa lt until ex1ctly the car )~ ~ !1! ::i: I" · · :tl '<'~ ':::! 't,. ~r:,: °" .:= ~ti compattd la 1972 1 poor mW1 want ean be shipped to your COmP &. ,_. ,_,, · 1.• '"' ";P~· lllOWl:t wenst .. Ltt ,.I
ot 1 . .s milUoa toru:. dealer. e\'en tho\lah that may ~c..:: t~ ~i 1t; t-: ii= ':·:,:.: i'= ~;:a:Q
The low tonnage tn 1972 be months. 'o...., ~·"11~:.' J11~": ... ::;: ~ 1;~1:;;: ri":"• .
retultcd In high price! or - -"'"' ; •·11 •, NO ).tt s.n "'.,o ,Cl •".,. ".Jltt,Jlf "' • ., • ., s.1, ··n ~... a·· .. ..... ... .. , • •13.'i. IO per ton, comparul to , 'j·" u... 1.at '· ~~'•"• '•"• 10.• ,1. llMM I tM3 ,.L._ °""' ·"' ... ... If.MIO.I ~ • ' . ' IO,Ull ,,,,.w n "' . You can '-IJU'rne c... ... ,, J.,. WK1 •.11t '·" ,..,, .. ,,. · • o.i! 'I "G ape pr! U od t '• •• l.21 , , V11 11'4t J.Jt IJ:S Clolwr 10.M tt_ It. 1 ' r ccs coo nu a DAILY PILOT •.•1 t.41 '"" .,, •.s1 4,,. E.1111111 ,., '· tt: their high levels 85 tbc record ""--~U:•-1 •• •ct.~ ,_0 1111 ~il !1·= 1 1·1 .._ '
Cl'Ulb cauted only •bout a t5 ~d Ads 1 Efi!' ·~ ... §"" 110 '·" 'ft(°"' Ta t:--~ .,.__ lw F t '°'" "I UI J ~ "' '""'t •t) .4) ;
,., .. .. -l\1ftlIC 642 • .... 71 "' T ··~ = . "~· .... . I·" .. ..: -'-for I -~•es·· ·•· '"' -" "·'! •.~ • """' " • ...... Id .-~ ~ IOrltfbt • '·' """ 111 .u""-"' 1.Gi 1 -. .• •. M'Vlm .. ' • :• . ::
•
'
1% OAILY PILOT Friday, March 15, iq74
Raw Materials Next
Gas C~isis ]'fr'st. tlie Beginni1ig , iii U.5.? :·t· ·' :i , . •• ~ By Goe -Pl' ...
:: Maybe the oil embargo is
~being lifted llld maybe In a
few weeks the atmosphere of
• ,panic at the fillinl st>Uons will
vanish, but theres a lot else to
worry about. ,
ol a iong·lulinll era of ground ·of many •
eoonomie; tnstabUity in the country.
lndustri«I world tblt could A highly pla°'"' Washington
lead lo highly unpleasanl expert says that six of the JS•
consequences. metals most. essential to
The energy tro~les the • American economic health ue·
industrial nations have been In short supply and m..ut be
experienc!ng cannot all. by more than 50 p e r c e n•t
any means, be laid at the door . ........~ In n:~ 10 VPAl'Ct
o( the Arab embargo. But oil •mt"'.,..... aJ>Ou,.;r ... -.
ls only one aspect of a that ~iU tie the case in nlne or ' '
If olJ were the onl)" major
concem, there might be an
excuse to relax and breathe
easy. The oil crisis, in fact.
may have been just a taste of
µungs to oome.
THERE'S A prosped ahead (NEWS AN~YSIS)
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;J develo,Ping a rt d "'Orrisome LA. LINES picture.
them .
The United Nat.ionl is about to bold a eession on the whole
picture ot raw material! and
that could; quicken an urge to
make big nations dance the
little natiOOs• tune. ' Jh the olfmg are signs of 531 1 M~NTH another crunch, this one in ls tllere new crisis ahead?
TI LIPHON I COM,ANY raw materials. On top of t~t.
U'l"T......_
4.ppof"te d
•
8 3/4 Pereettt
First National
Ups Prime Rate
rate, 1aid tbe boost take!!
effect on MOOitay. lt will have
DO immediate impact. M
oormunet loans er nutgages. FINAHCE
NEW YORK (AP) -Fim
Natlooal City Bani<, t he
nation's second I a r g e • t
commercial bank, anoounced
today that it was rai!ing its
prime lending rate on big
busln ... loans from 8\0 lo 8"'
percent.
CI tlbanll'a announcement '--------"" followed by one day the news
Citibank'• decision to
increase the mtntm u m
bom>wing fee lt chargea· WI
moot credit·worihY corporate
customers brings IU prime
into line wilh the rate charged
by most of ·t.be nation's other
commercial banks.
tllat the 1111tlon's mqoey auppiy
-0< cash plui checking
"""""11 depooltl -had
r<glst«ed ooe ol Its largest
gains OD rea>rd.
His Gadget
Helps Put
Sock s On
Ten Hour I
Work Day I
Adopted
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -
nie State Industrial Welfare
Cotnmisslon btt.S adopted a
regulation permitting a no-.
1
·
overtime work day of 10 hours
for employes in 11 industri~ j
and three occupatoM.
'lbe S-1 vote 'lburaday by '
commission members came
after more t h a o 100
demonstrators protested the
regulation. 'lbe commission
later voted to hold another
meeting Apnl 24 to determine
wbether to hear frooi tbe
protesters.
'Ille new regulation would
hot apply to workers with
', OJ CALIF. there are likely to be
,,,.n:M •1 11:.-HU•. c.m 11111n1 enormous food problerris in the
The eonccmed experts of the
Club ol Rome, an mtematlonal
study grolip, ·think so. Their
February '.'Salzburg state-
m~nt" had this to·say:
Charles J. Dibona, ·for#'
mer top White House
aide on energy, ~as
been named exe~utive .
vice president of the
American Petroleum
Institute; a trade or·.
ganization representing
the major' oil firms.
The bank, which geoerally
acts as a leader in announcing
changes in the key interest
The figure.s re J ea s e d
Thunday by the Federal
a.serve Bank of New Yor11:
caused rates in the money
market, Where bank! and
· coii>oratlons, raise funds to
shoot upwant.
union contracts with eight· WARREN, Mich. (AP ) -hour days.
"It's really simple. kind• or The indu s tries and
crazy actually," says Joseph occupations permitted to use
Scianimanico of his invention. the oo-overtime day area ;
·"t'm fl1rnr!sed at the Interest manufacturing, p e r s on a I
--· years ahead.
COllELLEASE
LEASING [i]
The performance CJf the
OPEC -Organization or
Petroleum Exporting
Countries -in squeezing the
0 THE FACT is that the
undustrial societies operate
wastefully and s t i m u I a t e Auto and Camper V acatwns
·~ossible-Witfi Care
M-,.. service, prore s sional,
peoplebavetakehinit." technical, clerical , .. powerful n a t I o n s has
generated excited thinking in
s o · c a 11 e d "developing"
countriea._lbey -~at raw
material i! JX>Wer.
u n n e cessary conswnptlon.
Furthermore, man lacks the
will to coexist peacefully on
this smalL-and-;--v.uµterable -.
planet~ World IOCiety ls tom
asunder by growing a n d
Scianimanico's ZS.inch-Jong me ch a n i ca I , p u b I i c
inventlm ls simple. It helps housekeeping, laundry. linen
Re.QP.!e ™'on their socks. _sup£!¥. dry cleaning _ ~
;;We take ro-mUch for dyeing, .mercant11e ,
.: .-
Piii* Tf.11 & lie. Oii Al!Pr. Crtdll :U Mel, O.E.L.
CONNILL CHIYIOLIT
2121 HAllOl ILYD.
COSTA Ml5A 546·1200
..
WILL THERE be more intolerabte •dispariUes in llving
"OPECs?'1 the "p oo r" • standards and oPPOrtUmtics ..•
countries are becomi n g .Hundreds of millions of men
acutely ' aware of th e. i r and v.-'OIDeD Jive. marginal lives
potential. Metals and miner-ls •.• Nature is pillag~ aJI d
vital to the Western wor:Id's poisoned for the i:lenefJt of1he
ecooomlc beallh Ile under the· few ...
SAC MENTO (UPI)
granted, we . never gave any
thought to my father's socks,"
said Sclani:man.ico, 42, a drill bea>rning .too late to book "I think if you plan carefully press operator for Bendix
D e s p I t e energy crisis choice reservations for other you Cm still take your Corp.
uncertainties, California travel trips. vacation by car," concludes He said his father bas hip
· authorities say you don't have ''Vacation travel by car is state En erg Y toordinator trouble and "he could do
to ·abandon all .plans this by no means impossible," says Wesley Bruer. everything else but he couldn't
suinmer for that automobile Mjke Masintcr, the chief He suggests higbway-boond. put on his socks." D I 'In tall or camper vacation. gasoline watchdog for the vacationers double up witt;i "I spent one whole weekend Ong as S S But even the lifting of the Automobile Club of Soutbem other families w b en eve r •'-=-•.:-bou · h · ,· ' Califoinia. possible."''1beymightwind up just u1w.1Uug a t tt," e Araboil embargowoo'tputan baviilg 1 lot more fun a •Jot said. "My knees were red ·' 11;::;:1 immediate end to g•• THE EXPERTS offer these cheaper and use a lot leSI from trying to simulate the
· Dm.IV!llY N . £1 ~:.... D' shortages. tips for tomeone venturing on gasoline," he says. movements you make putting ' ew. Li:U;go oors a highway vacalion: Bruer says fuel supplliis on a sock. Finally Monday ' 111,...,...,) um:E KEY is t.o be SU~f -Restrict driving to would become more pleotlfUI. morning .•• J cou1d see a
careful," declares Tim Bel11; o daylight hours. with a lifting of the Arab oil picture ln my mind." *SILVER COf the C atl I f 0 r n i a State -Keep oil the road on 'embargo, but it would be at Sclanimanico says he is INllO!ll-LONG BEACH (AP) in midair, <!Busing the .Door lo Auto-Ue Associatioo. I weeke!)d.1, especially Sundays. least two months before, lhe .applying tor a patent oo his *GOLD COINS McDonnell DolJ&las Corp-. h$ buckle under loss of cabin Increasing numbers o -Stay oo 'l''ell • traveled effect,, become noticeable at Sock. Fixture, which has been
· announced it will ~Uy pressure and damaging the Californians apparently arc thorooghfares unlesJ there are gasoline pumps. -tested by area ho s p i t a I
c:AU. o1t ftlTI install a fOolproof sa(ety aircraft's control lines running succumbing to fears of empty assurances or ad e q u'A t e patients.
: ' · • ~~4 sJ:.~~~ device on all OC10s now In · gasoline tanks and hurrying to gasoline. EVEN '111EN, he cautions, 'lbe invention consists of an
,-------:1 se ·ce to insure cargo doors='-hen-eath. ·~~~_pJan othet...ty.pes_or...v_acations,_c._When-dtjving-over-kmg. -supp1ies-will-bc! 3-io10-percem -iHu.ifltnom sa>ot>With tWOIOOl' ·· l'"'i.111RTrC01N":"coMiANv-, are JOcked While iri Dlgbl. ~ Jotin C. -1rr T £ e· n d I n e. mainly air or trairi trips, stretches between citl.es, don't less than last year. · handles attached. Put ling foot
· I W Dower Dr ..
5~" 25
. 'I The plan an n 6 u n c e d iresldent of Mc Donne I l group tours and cruises. Jet the tank get much below A survey of travel agencies in sock is dooe by stretching ~1.:~:n1~~~~S T0:
92"° 11 'lbunday comes in the wake Douglas', alrcraft, diviskln, It adds up this dilemma for half tuU. , indicated that many pacKage the sock-or a nylon stocking
ol a Tilrklsh Airlines DCtO said DC10s now in service those who must tr.ap out their -Be mindful of I o· c a J tours are beginning to fill up, -<¥Ver the scoop. 'lbe toes go J .,_ I crash near Paris March 3; in have four aafety devices on summer vacations now: It's gas 0 I in e p u r c b a s i· n g as are hotel accommodations, into the sock, the scoop is
:1 Mihu 11 which 346 persons died. cargo doors ~ inspection by too early to .tell with any restrlctims. (So far, gasoline particularly to can a d·a, drawn over the heel and on
,f' Cltr Ziel 1 P r el i m i n a r y studies a crew member is listed in reliability what the gasoline rationing plans tmplemented Mexico, Alaska and Hawaii.' goes the sock, without the
t indicated the Turkish plane's recommended. ,pre t J i g h t outlook will be in the moo~ in several states specifically West Coast steam.mip cruises wearer ever bavjng to bend
. ~~~--i_ c-~----~J ,_:•.::ft~bu:;. =lk::..:ca=rgo:.'!:...:<IOo::.::r~s:::•;::P_ara!ed_..c;:i:, ...:..::and::.::.::th.::ree.::.· .:.oc:oupa...:..:._c_tiOns.:: • ...:.·---~ahe_ad __ a_nd __ i_t _is _ _;q_uic_kl....;.y eJempt out4-st.ate drivers). likewise ari booking full: over.
•
tr ansportalion, amusement
and r e cre a tion and
broadcasting. , ,
Some five million Califomia
workers would be covered by
the law.
'The protes!.ers .s h o u l e d :
"IWC is not for you and me -
they take orders from the big
companies."
Healtli Spas
Make Mo ve
Jack La.Lanne's EW'OpCSn
Health Spas has mo v c·d
COflX)l'ate offices from Salt
Lake City to Newport Center's
Financial Plaza, according to
company president Frederick
Daberkow.
An Irvine Company press
relea'se-pubUshed by the-Daily
Pilot erroneowly r e ported
that the spas were owned arid
operated b y Health
Industries, lnc. The spas are
only SO percent owned by
Health Industries, and 50
percent by Arlan Marshall and
Carmen Baratta. Both men
operate the concren .
'" .. ' .. ,.
' Complete .Mi(l .. day American Stock List
. .
"
•
W·i-d·•
• dlillllCfl
b•iw.en
llvln~ 1r111
You don't
hll!'.JOUr
· llllg"bor
Excluslvel Only 11 C1nyon Sands, Palm Springs.
NO SHARED WAlLS IN
LIVING AREAS ..
Enjoy a/llfl/e-famlly prlva<;y ... over100 families pQi
6 ten nis courts, heate<i swimming and JacUZ?I
pools, saunas, putting green, cabana. No
initiation fee, no dues. Lovely landscaping,
no exterior maintenance.
Private, walled patio. 2-<:ar garage with
electric a utomatic door opener, floor-t<><:elll ng
wood-burning fi replace, 11 ft. cathedral
ceiling. 3 sparkling models newly furnished
by w. & J. Sloane.
BUY NOW ... IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
3 bedlOOms (or 2 llldilen), 2\i baths.,
2 bedr1)01119, '2,bllhl.
3 exciting ~ plMIL •
$39,500 up.
-...-: iA:rnfac ·cAnyon sAn'bs
\111.US
• -an Idea whose Ume has come ~mfk COmm"""'"-ltome bulldint •rm at ttwy.111, neit to Gent '1~ Hotel
$7!0 mlHlon Amfac, Inc. (NYSE). "300 E. f'lllm 'Canyol\ Dr., l'lllm Sprinp
Jilt. ~All 119h"fllll'WI· Oltkfl""""" lno. (114) 328·2185 1-----~ .... ---=--=-=-~---...:.---------,-----------------------------------
Elegant. 1 .. tory desert designs
!"Ith colorful ~le roofs,
...... l ill
i PALM-i f LMlt c.c. -
1'
•
•
Vof. Net ust ChQ.
StdMl!l•I QI JI S •.• SIMDIPr .•2 S J"' ... Sid P•Clflc 1 JV. •••
Std Pr I.Id wts J 2.,,.,-'• StdThom .o 2 U -'h Stqe C .10 1 17\,;-~ SI~ .60.t 3 1~ V. Sl~SvL .40 1 1i. •.•
Sl•ltwlm Ins 11 IS-I\ , . , Stee1met In 3 ,,.._ V. Slelbtr Ind • 9 l'lll-~ Stepan C .Ji 1 I~+ .'I• Slerll~ Elt-1 I\~-.,.. Sier EJ:t .10 S 2'4 •.• SlfO°I Prt!C. jit J J ... Sit"~ 4 10'11+ '.\
St1lo511o9 ·'° s 17'!0-~-5TP QI .10d 12 l~+ t'o
Slrutll Well\ 78 6l._ ~ Summll Oro 10 I ,., Suniolr .u6 2 S'I\-~ ~ CUJ .ts s S'l(o-'to ~ '" .11 15 ·~· v. Sul) S\lrgc:al I 't'h-V. ~.~ 1~ 1~~~ s ,n,1110, QI 1 3~ •.•
SJnte•C.-411 154 ~"-5'/KO ep .20 ue 21v. + v. S~ttm Ef>9 11 2"" ••• -TT-T t< hn <>Pel' 1 614 •,, TKhnl T"•pe 16 I 'TK Sl'm QI l I •.• T1'1irtfe• 51 6 l6'h+ ~ Tel••OI wts a 1'+-V. Tenneco wls 't •1-, .• T1nsor (.orp s 3 , ••
T .. 1dyM In 3 ~ t4 TuoroP wts • u"'-~~ l •• Intl Co 190 "lii+ \'•· T~PLpl 6,56 l30D Si -1~ Teet•r Crp 10 3\4+ I'• TFl lncorp 1 3 •.• Thlw.U Ind 10 314 f" \'o
Tlmpte .10d 3 '"° ... TMCMI .'ltd • l lh + Vil Toll.he I"' .:IO l Pl •.• To~ G ,20 11 7""-~-Tol.•1 "-tro! 111 1~ V. TotllPpf .10 I :ZO.,.._"" Town& Clry 2 l .,. Tt•cor lnc:p I •1' •.•
Tr..,wlrt0 16 -Iii •· • T~tldwy 4k I ,.,. , ••
TrlstMot .2• 1 ,.,._ "'-T!Jb Mx .t.lb J 2 J.16-1·16 T11"co Corp tl l~ \lo TWJn Fair 16 6111+ V.
--<IV-VIP QI .a I 'l'-'-~ One Mt .Sid I• tM ... Ur!Mbl .01b 1 3\lo-1·16 Uri Brend wt t l tAi •• , VII FOOds In S1 ?J,;, ,, • Vici Niii °' 23 '14+ \1<1 UldNI pf .10 JS 10l'I f" \:'•
US8ncr .6'111 • 3 t:l\I> ,., USFlner .211 6'0 l !'o ••• US U oRwt 1 ,_ •.• US Redlum 1 l~ V. US Rvbr .60 2 7"9+ ~~
\JOl!lek CM~ 1S U4-"'• Ufllty 8u 6 1Slh-V. UnlvR11 J i -v.
ut•ll Sor . • 13'-+ o,;; UVllldwts 11 11-• ~~ ' ____.,,_
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'"'"'""' 0. 11 JI.\ •.• v.MIOilt In 1 '"'+ l• Vitwlt• Inc 1 !Yo-"' \llllOll tncor J 3 ••• Vlntaoe Ent I Slit-V.. VLN"C..:.-;, 2 , .. _.~ ·-W.C~\.-2111 4 h •·• Wldotll~. HI 6 2~+ VO w.lnoc:oOll 3611· ......
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Wylf L.lltlrl ' • • W,fWI_, Intl I' t"-" W!"O 1111( .M 13 11\• .. t--ac-n-Y.itt lndlrt 11 l•tt
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•
Thursday~a
,Closing Pri~s . ' .
•
• NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
•
, Miit~ • 1974 OAll..Y PJLOT
Year's High-Low s
Appear Ever y Saturday
Trading Active
On Oil Reports
the Amcrlcnn Exchnnge gained Jn stepped-
e Dollar Declh1e .
LONDON IUPIJ -The U.S.
dollar conhnued a decline
Thursday against the Brit1*
pound that has brought it to
the lov;est level~ in f.ondOn
since la.st NO\'ember.
The pound opened at 12.3561.
gaining nearly 1.2.1 cents 011
the dollar ·Since Wednesday:s
close or trading. •
The dollar was slightfy
~lronger, howev er, in other
European mar ket!. •
J4 DAILY PILOT .
Traveling
Enriches
Stowaway
From Wlre Serv:lcn
When 15-yMN>kl S t e v e
Ven! got home w Ca>1ro
Valley after stowing away
aboard a Pan American
Airways 747 flight to Lood<Jll
Ott Reeks
Marrtaae of acwr Ryan
O'Neal a n d actiwl
Le I g h Taylor-Young,
whose romance flow·
ered when they starred
on television's "Pey·
ton Place" ended this
week aft.er seven yean.
Miss Taylor-Young In·
!Uated the acUon.
I
••
•
Daughrer, Com11ne P-revail
SEArn.E (AP) -A lalber llean~ tbe .I. Ill-
• foll<d In hit """'1Dd "kid-· 1«ney'1 -. la -II
napln(' attempt to take bil considerina fling c ii • r I e •
daughter from a religious aplml Tod Pltriclo. a 4'-;reor·
commune llYI he'll go · bll' old San Dlelo · -•
way and let bll daughter go spedaliul in iiolploc ,......
hers. recover c la l I d r • I fnlm
''I've tried t wlce,'' Curt rellgioul O'D""U"".
lid JIJ tiJ If.~ Gunl ......
Be MqUllted of • tkl-
-11-.. 111 Hew Yort
.......... -l/'ial ...
almllar -.. In Colorado in
Ila)'.
~l>i.Wlle,lfem1el. ta, J>1R;ick .were ~
-.i fa .. Aupol attempt
.. -!lie Cramptoo'• ..,._, •Katloy, from the
•
'
last mooth, his father said the ======---------------$380 he had to pay for th••·
Cramptoo, s p e a k I • I by Patriclr: -tul A.,...i I!<
telepbooe from bll, home In "deprocramniod" -,,...
Redondo lleach. said Thurs-pie from tbe -of ....... day. "f think· my obligation IUCb u the ailld!"' ol God.
has to end aometlme ID let me Seattle's Love Family, and the
lead a normal Jile ." Divine Llcbl -· whld! II Love hmflJ commune.
'return flight would be "a lot of
allowances.!'
But Steve revealed that he
"so1d an exclusive story oo the
filghl to a London newspaper
"for 1200, and a television sta-
tion paid him 1100 for his story
and promised to send another
$100 soon.
He said be al9o has an
agreement with Pan American
( PEOPLE ·)
'tl}at \£ they do not charge him
fqr the fl ight, he won't reveal
how he got away with It. • Pmldent Nlxtn: issued his
annual SL Patrick's Day
message, declaring that "Irish
wit and warmth , grace and
. chanp, have enriched our
' literature, OU!' music. and, of
· 'tvllrse, our poll fies."
• · ·'Ibe statement to mark the
• lrisb-American holiday Sun·
•• ctAy . said Irish immigrants
: "have added immeasurably to
: the tei:ture of American life." • : ·:Actress Uada Lovelace, star
: ol· the movie "Deep 'I1lroat",
· was arraigned in Lat Vegas
and ordered to appear for
: preliminary hearing July 25 on
charges of poosessing drugs.
: .• fdbs Lovelace spoke bI]enY
with reporters, posed for
-: photographen and granted a
; brief television interview'. She
· wu dressed in ·sheer beige
-· ensemble-~with a wide-brim~ -
med hat.
The actress waS arrested at
a· "Strip" hotel Jan. 31 along
with Hollywood producer·
director Winter•
Ciarges ha"' dropped
against him.
C.Uterlne Hein wife of
newspaper ei:eculiv Raadelpb
1feant, wu ~ppointed to a
18-year tenn oo the University
of Califomla Board of Regents
.by Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Mrs. Hearst , whose
daUgbter; h1rida1 W85 kid·
i1-J last mooth by a ter-
rorilt group, slkl, :·rn be hap-
py to serve" wtieO told ol b<r
reeppointmeot.
' ~ . * .. , The CalifomJa S ·U pr e m e
C6urt . 'affirmed !he first·
degree murder C(ltvk:itJoa of
Booker Hillary, 39, Wbo WU
charged in the 1982 sdaor
slaying of a llanlord girl' but
diangod his death aentence to
a life term.
.• Tbe court bued •Its
modlllcatloo o1 sem.nce 00 ils
11111 ·ru11ng holdil!e tht"death
penalty llDOOllOlltut-1. II re-
j.e c te d Hillery's contentlon
that his coovtctlon should be
rivened because> he was
deoled' a lair trial In King
eounty as' t.be result of
pretrial publicity.
• llalpb Davt1 of Salt Lake
City found the pol of gold al
the end of the ralnbow.
1be 28-year-old m a c h I n e
operator was awakened by
tclephooe call Informing him
he won $100,000 in t h e
Massadnaetu slate lotlery.
Davis "worts the gra-veyard
shift at a paper company.
"I thought t was &till
dreaming," said Davis.
Bay State olficlals said
Davis will collect $10,000 a
year for the next 10 years for
winning second prize.
* Three youngsters suing the
governor or Coonectlcut for
equal educational op-
portunitiC!, found they must
also sue their falbcrs.
Barnaby Horton, D a n I e I
Barnhart and Peter Grant all
· are sons of School board mem·
: bers in Canton, Conn.
: The boys charge in their suit
: against Gov. nom11 J .
: Meskill that the state's prac-
: tice of granting financia1 aid
• to towns regardless of local
resources discrjminates
againsl M>mt commun!Ues.
UT'S BE FRDlT
u )'OU ha\o'e TW!W netghbon
Of Jmow of anyone moving
to our area, pk&IM! tell ut
so that Y.'C rrll,)' ntend a
friendly \!."Clcome and help.
thtm to become acqualnt<'d
In their new 1urrou.ndlnp,
SI. cast Vlslllr .,....., --
Hartl' Vlslllr
..Wl74
UICEI
VDITIES ••
New d.Ugns in whit• lid
gold trimmed b9autin.
Nicely tiniahed, quality
hmdware, one piece
cultured marble top.
(Aha, the faucet is extra.)
or walnut 6niah.
-Faucet is extra. -
20"xl7" .. · .28"
23"x17" .... 3i•
MORE
WINt-:JE.RS
_Pullmans_or Vanities ._._~ Tltcty _ _scty..,"9. h.a..ya tbU.SLdlsplaY-. __
and the best prices •• Look around, 'see If It isn't so. .
•
LAICEB 2 DIWEI vun:t
Anotbornlcetwlol.-
drawenlmtedd ol Ibo
cabinet door. White
~and gold, one piece
top. Faucet la extra.
:ZS.19.
67 00
EW1llE mm
1997 .
••
I.Alm VICTOllAI SDIULATED
WALL MUBl.E . WW. WllET VICTOBIAI CUllH SBEJ.F !'ta'::..-::;-~. VUITY w._,,,101>oioiv1n Looblibtboreo1
Too nlee to put In Ibo Very lgncy, titlor a matching thlnga. Now McCoy (Hay. tboy lin
bath. hang Ibo whole . queen (no-U I only had anothas In Lobwood). But •
thln9 ln Ibo HTfnq room remarb horo.) In whlta head to match Ibo on• ..._,t apl!t Oka Ibo
(and·yourmother;in;,~. --or walnut finiaho ----JI haYe, Pd hem OIJ9 --..,.,,.ufl;-So buy it,comn
law wW commit you.) FauCet is extra. complete brain. with brackets.
31 llCI
UltUISIED '
P1IWID . ·~ ~.
911
.
FOLDllC m
ENCLOSUBE
" 25 ~OSEOUT "l::·· f;}.....1: .. ~.·~":7':<:~·:•~· . . ... '• '•' ,., .. ~ ' . . .. 2488
And rou 9ot Ibo lop at thla price.
(I abould hope oo or jt would be
crmy trying to waab up). The fClllCel
is extra. I just put it in ao the thinv '
would look nice.
I~ I ~ I
CAlllET
• .
... ~ •..
Nifty plastic panela that fold up lib
an accor~ You v•t the aluminum
frame cmd troclr and .•• bingo ...
a ahow•room for~
3STYLES 26'''
A. Calc!=lg•n ROCKWELL LAWN The kit includ .. the wat.rproof Now you can ... which la your
5418 Lanai best profile. S.. the back of your Lon •-h EDGER & TRIMMER colorful panela. tlae mouldinqa. and I.ow lloya. lligb Staodmd. and Eloft9Gled. (la tbla 9ood? A month
ago we couldn't vet anything to .. u
bul the Uttle one holer on the hill.)
g -ac head for atylin9 (or worryln9 about th• promiH the tub wa:U won't peel
Nana Bi~cbonhach BLACK & DECKER and crumble like paint and plaal••· that thin apol). Good maka.
9300 Ma~n A••nue ROTARY MOWER Duraateol.
W•1tminater l-----------------t-------~=::----------1-1 Edward J. c... STANLEY
7752 Bhln• Dri•• TOOL KIT Hunlington Beach
lraa Etomac!i · TURTLE CAR
19781. Eataury Lana WASH GUN Huntington Beach
Elanor• MQ:ltroianni ~
16551 Tripp Circle ROCKWELL•
HuntingtoD 8-h TABLE SAW
Bevorly ~Foll SS DRAWER
6352 N'"lllo 8-ad PARTS CABINET Wntmh•ll'f •
•
REWARD --•iooa-·t 9"ttin9 tho boolr. Wo'l!payabucklorrnrr
...tllod-,_t ol a M19bbo<hood
-..1n our moo. And $50 u-.
!!ill a c!"ivlctloe on -raacal who d-a b.adlo or n!o... Callcolloct·
.(7141 fA2.$2$ I, -"Catalov" to Ille _.,tor.
(Jiii;i),.."""a"'M"'
~~ .......
'
•
CAF
EllOSSED
TllE
5 97
CTN.
The real atull wh•r• the ahinlt 1tays
in and U.. color lasts clear thru.
About 45 eq. fL lo the carton, Hank. ...
•
You -them pour It In tho
alopped•up alnk on TV.
(What rou cloo"t -•tho
9UY under thoalnk pullnv •
tho plug.) Ju' lddcllnv· M .......
1
'
·SROWEB
BEU
4~.
. ' w._,_wblch-attbo
-al tldo 'IJlfliDg • .ea-·n abowlng thlli In bopea our toa ...,_
read ri9bL (Evw'-..,,._ -
yourl-.1n·-.wrounda?).
n-D-IOL
I
TOILET
TRIMS
1:
~----,Got them in all i:olom. and~
Waabablo TinyL Juwt aticlr tbom oa
a plain aeat Olld ~really I-ib
aome1hin9. (It loob lilco J.C7 OD Ibo
f9Cjialer h•re.)
• I I •. '
.
i IEW
PDIED
11111 Jon sun
1900
We eo1d out one week wflhtut an
ad, whara goiDv to be; p ID now?
Colom. wm6nNe (cmd 1.-t ....,. .. ._,
I ,....
.
1
'·~
17
•
.. •
June Smith uses a mag11ifying glass
to insure pre.cision cutting j of) paper
' for designs such as those on lamp base.
Decoupage and patchwork will be on
dis pl.ay_tom.orro.'ll".. i nJ.i.Y_o_ij_S.q.u.ar_e
Corona del Mar.· } .
'
' .
. '
BEA ANDERSON, Editor'
,rld•y, Mardi IJ,. lf74 I'-lJ
' '
•
Little \~der the buzzing gadget
atrprised the seamstress.
Marilyn Chloe Schindler is used to the
\\'bir oC her sewing machirMYas she turns
"strips of flippies" Into patchwork
dresses.
But-the hwn of the microphone at her
first one-woman fashion show last month
at the Airportcr" Inn symbolized OOw
much her business had ampUfie<I.
She was modesUy surprised at bow
•
..
;-'\ ,
sophisticited her apron d~ looked on
the runway. properly accessorized "'ilh
opaque stockings to match, k~rchief and
clogs.
!\1rs. Schindler, who 'uses her middle
name P1'9-fess.i_onally, believes patch.,..·ork,
will be "'part of our fabric for years to
came" depending on how it_'ll handled.
"ln the la.St 10 yem, quilt-look
-rashions ~ve changed from prairie in-
T
• •
•
• •
. . Like _,Fine Painting , Not Pasted Picture
Paper, Proves Patience
•
Perennia ·I "
fluence to 30llleUiing more elegant," she
said.
"The European peasant dress is a
great daytime length. Colored hose make...
Y.'Omen look taller so anyone can wear a
dirndl.
"Fol'.' a ·more dressy appearance. puffy
sleeve styles are copied f r o m
Czechostovakian festival clothes.
"Lines must be simple or else you ruin
the patchwork e£fect."
Piecing a pastel bridesmaid dress in
her sun~appled studio. l\1rs. Schindler
carries on a tradition of ·folk art.
Her grandfather. a baker, used to
make 2·foot gin,gcrbread ooy,·boys and
Spanish ladies for Christmas.
She still remembers the hand-em-
broidercd, palchwork silk robe she
received at age 7 from her grandmother.
~ler OY.'ll interest in sewing tumt'd com-
Tnerclal when her daughters and their
friends wanted special fonnals and
lamented "those grim, one-time-0nly
bridesmaid dreSses" cluttering t h e
clor.el.
ltlrs. Schindler'$ designs convert to
1 ,aundresses or hostess: skirts that can be
"'·om whenever the fahcy strikes
-ctermitely not for women who have to
wear what everyone else does.
•
,.
"Patch.,·ork is so colorfuJ and
distinctive that everyone notices. It's fun
to feel special,'' she ~id. ·
"CUstom sewing usually brings to mind
a figure problem but my idea is to dress
people to make lhem happy."
· The seamstress loves to visit the
lnn&>ruck museum of crafts Ylhenever
her family goes to Europe.
"This arl\li'Ol'k is appreciated forever
because it's made by loving bands al
home -carved beams and walls, ISUt-
ter molds and spinning wheels.
"Those -people must have been SOOY.'ed
in fw age1," she quipped,
"The quilts that have held up best over
the· yean ftrt the ones glwn to brides
and aaftd for special occasions.
"Everyday quiltJ were rtlade from us-.
eel fabric lo begjn with and disappeared
&brou&b ~ wear."
Friends hell> Mrs. sctiindler keep
patchfl'Wk alive by finding and piecing
unusual !abrko and ribbons ac<Ol'diil( to
hue. •
Ker pretent uslstant, ,.f-arla nne
S....gll la lludying for her muten degree In _..,.., at UC!.
"Ole r..-8*ld me wtiy t cul uP
.perfectly llOOll mo1«lal. ooly to llart
over," Mrs. 8cblndler recalled . "I kntw
she wouldt,l't flt into this business."'
Stories by CAROL f\IOORE
Of ,.._ OWiy ,ijM Steff
Av0idlng decoupage because of all the
tedious layers ol varnishing?
June Smith says beauty of the finish<.'({
product reall); depends O}_l coloring skill.
sharp eyes, proper tools, desire and
patience.
"If you don't have patience, decoupage
will teach yoo," adds th& Corona del ~far
instructor WOO wrote about the tortoise
shell finishing technique In the Time-Life
craJt book series.
DAILY PILOT
PHOTOS BY
RICHARD KOEHLER
She is a founder of lhc national guild
"'hich \\'ill 1ncet in \\ ashington , D.C. nesl
mon1h in hoPf'S of con\'incing thl·
Smithsonian Ins titution II) accept modern
det.'0Up;.1 gc as an art.
Technically. det.wpage means 1>3per
culling.
Tile carrfully feathert.'(f clippings ma~
\1·incl up undl'r varoish. outside glass or
cerarnics. on niirrors. inside glass er
incorporalcd "'ilh mother-<1f·pc!ll"i.
Or thl-p.'tpcr designs 1nay be cm.bossed
11·ith prl'SSur1• or pin pricking fron1
behind for added cfi1nension. Ev•n 1nort•
complicated vl'rsions arc poupe habiller
{dressed dolls• and ribbon decoupage.
The ll'Chniciuc started in lht.• 111t11
century "'hen paint ed fun1iturc y.•as in
vogue. As indi\'idual artist's tin1c bc<:an1c
too cspensive. dl'sign!I were copied 011
paper and affixed to the \1·o0d.
Then. as now. 1he criterion 01
perfection is that the finished product.
look more like a fine painting than il
pasted pictW'e.
"Oriental landscapes, C'hcrubs or
intricate f Io r a Is are frequen t mot if:;
because old engravings lend thcmscl\'l':O.
to hand coloring," .\!rs. S1nith explained
She doesn't carry plaqul?li in her shor
because she "'ants custo1ners to do fi111•
things correc1ly so they can be proud o
them .
But she does stock ornamental boxes
purse forn1s and gift items because "yov
can't \\.·ork 11,-0 months on everything.'
Part cf her Time-Life assignn1cnl ~·as
to de\•elop decoupage ·projects fo:·
beginners from at-home supplies : gift
v.Tap. \\<Ill paper, s_.."'?'ay-painted juic1:
cans ~d trays.
The most popular item was tennis ball
cans decorated and wei~hled to serve as
holders for long brusht-s. rulers and
office supplies.
J\.frs. Smith prefers to y.·ork on
furniture and glass lamp bases. She often
tr~cks dov.11 rare piCC<'s for students.
some of whom. come fro1n Las Vegas
y.•hlJrc she virtually intro du cc d
dcro0page.
.'.'Always keep your first project to
show divergence of style or extent of
expertise." she advi~ct .
Expertly maneuve ring Ille surgical
scissors under the magnifyi ng gt~. she
further recommended decoupage as a
sat.isfyjng way for people to get involved
with Oh: .
"When 1you c~ a design or painting
to ad, you already kno~· it's artislically
compatible. After you'\'e cu t and re-
arranged it, you hare an original!"
\Vhen she isn't pouncing solvent or
sponge-paint ing a background. Mrs. S\nith
likes to revive such o!hcr lost arts as
tinsel painting and quilling ~finely rolled
paper coils).
Her main objective is to givl' all arts
plenty of exposure. for people's daily
pleasure and national prestige .
Patchwork he1 been a steady ward robe
for Raggedy Ann. But u1ually apron
dreue1 , 1uch 111 the one mod eled
by Su e Hewitt, are one-of-a-kind
noveltie1 thet make women feel 1pecial,
1ay1 de1ign e r Marilyn Chlo e.
. •
> • •
Fashlo~s
Shipshape
Down to the Sea in
Fashions. depicted by
· (left to right) Patricia
Moore and Janis Park-
er, ts the theme ch0&en
for XI Mu Zeta Chap-
. ter, Beta Sigma Phi
benefit A luncheon
1 and fashion show will
:. · be presented at 11 a.m. ~ ' ' Saturday, March 23, in
!: · lhe Balboa Pavilion and ~ · proceeds will aid the
;: . City Of Hope and Cys-
!__. tic Fibrosis research ,
~ and treatment centers.
O:• J 1 •' ·•· :;;
. •
. ' "
" 1
' . . • •
.
Spea~ing Engagements Filled Honors
Bestowed
MOW Woman tbooe Wbo --• olfeie4 la 1 b~io.ll>Pe le'"";: Girl -<Jounoil al 0...
0 doytlme --al • .,.... .,.,., lllr<b lit, .......... out -Mrs, !lOh1 .,. Will open Two W<JOJell who view the
Mr mmun,tiDa IMdt borne Womt?l'• Movement d Jn.
.. tor a membetllllP ca«ee at enecUve and unfair, •W
8 p.m. n....tay, Mlrdl 21, •preaent tbelr opinions on the
tor the HunUncton Belch _...,, w ..... at 1:111 p.m.
-, ~ -'l'bund17, llardll,mll:OCE-
the Part lleW'jllltt Spa. • • Colml)' --• Boue1 Nl9ht ..,..._ w111 be MOl1 and 0rupCoutmldent111Jdthe
ol Unlftnlly Women. TV, 0.-IO. •
Mrs, Pb y II la Z I ck ii Midge Deeter, llllhor ol
,.Wdent al the l100P. which "Tbe Ne.. Chutity" and
ii open to ... men ho!dlag I literary edllor ~-J
bachelon dearee from an Review World, r..;,nne
approv~col.legeortutlveraity. Goldberr. C04Utbor ''Purr,
Membars abo will attend Baby, Pun"' and natJoaal
the P<itarmm:e al •• ,.,.., chllrmlll and ~-"'
'while and Jiii Seven Dnrfl" the l'ullycat Loque. will
Ill S p.m. -,, Mlrtll M, II O'hll""I oo bow thoJ become
the Fountain Valley o:memed about u. aeptlw
Q•Mn11ty'lbeal«, Inn.-al.the-.
YWCA Lecture '
-.Gl-U.year ·w111 be
-and ...... ""Inf I
dimer meetlne al lbe Nawporl
Harbor Bu1Jne11 IDd
PnlleMU Wemen't Oub llt
1 p.m. Frldly, llllrdl lit, la .. _ v-~Club.
Tbe --will --numben ~ .. _.... -·· Hom•m•k•rs
~ eooblc will be
~ .., lllJ Tai lo<
lllPP1 -air .. al ,_.
1a1n Valley.
Mrs. llobert Thin', student
!lower lbow judge I o r
California Garden Oubl, Inc.,
will tpealc cm Dower llralllln&
for the Y-Womeo's Club of~
San~ AM-Sou~1 Oranre
01unty YWCA al l :llO a.m
Thursday, Man:i1 21, II the
YWCA.
1be ...... wl1I bollD al Ill
a.m. wtib a pcOa: •inrtwm
Author Jim 9-r will lllk at noon Friday, 1lla<b :a, la about "Turn the~ Out," Ibo ..,.. Ulle 11 his book, lbe Q1111numl7 Clnllr.
Hospital
• Tbe Aulllary ol -o.t °"1mullffJ.llolpilll ....
elided Mis. Artlmr BrW M prlaidmt. .
Ot1rer . olllom are Ibo
-· Lelmd ....... Yb ~: P.A. -..rd 11¥1
Jack~ -1<1:
and l"imm. Perrin,
dmnnm ot NJGl 5Jrf0 ·,
.. •
-be addreuel the UC! Tbe spealr« will W.. her
Medical F1cult7 Wms. -and lmowtllf4e In fine
Memben wUI meet II noon foods and wins. lier lnlemls
Wednelday, Muth :Ill, In the lie In both -and
Bahia Oorlnlhlln Yacht tlub. 11011them Olin& culllne, u her
Tbe----11-• pill -~-1ath<r~.anc1-11er
dent al the or-. ~ll' ' mother .....,..b 5 •• • lillla1callloclllJandiwu •
-a1 the ia Joequln Energy Crl111 GueUe.
Membership
'lllO orpnlallonaJ .-.,
of 1new-U.Olalbe
Woman's 01111 al ~
Beach will be Cllled II 7::111
p.m. 'l'bundl1/ llmdr ..!!:,~
the -. al' 'Jin. -:-~
s~. ....,__, Tbepvupll..._._ '° l!IM: the. .. ;t.. ...
-al adhf, ,..._
--porllculatly ,
Ill Ill -. --per lnvel Qty al Colla 11.. u
wrUen, )lclw.. llld travel rec I pl e n I 1 al JOCOIDltlon
lllm~ ·-' Fred SOrAM!, Colla -Sele ' c11y ._ ..,.._ a I
Melbodlll Women plaque cm bftlalf al Ille city loc I wtll~ ... rummace -.. 'eubiandb:tt cooperation
' 4•1t Fri--Ibo -~ lnln I a.m. lo , p.m. . al the Girl Scout
day, -lit, la 'lbom--..
lflU, Colla II-• ""r:.''..i Mn. xm Cre.n. '
Perenb Anonymous s.. J-c.patrlllO hltheve
_,_ lo< 11"'1 --to A - _ .. , ,....., _....,allil*l'll>dltoGJrl l -""""'1m<>Ulo I aelf· .. -
belp --lo< -and -youlll -~ """ looe thelr cool for day ...... '!nil owndcbt .
wllb their cllUlnD. hll -....,.w llnoe 1910. 1b•
opened la the lrvlne area. 0:--plld lo< air•.
Tbe -.-·aolnMtheon-.. m1u .. and hive all.-1 the
dlyl al 7: p.m. ..., ~--•·· I Abldlal Sam Lu I her an uae al their •w••••~ .. pee ·
tburd>, El Toro. !;lame ......i on 1 variety J· vohmt<er jobs dwg the ,_lumnee pu1 a1x yeen, Mn. Doaold J.
New olDcerw were named by . Howland al Coot• Mesa wu
the 8oulbem Orll!P County cited lo< her -1ttllude
AJnm••• tbapter-oL Alpba ---'lill'--to-
Omknll PL ... ~ 'l'Utoc olllco la Jime w1l1 be "" ill .. . (llldlO. preolilent ' Jan. liio -.. nc;strar ~ -pr-ll Sally and..,... ---
So,yder and KIJ llmlman, bU ""''"••!!"' ~ on 1ecnlllrl•.. and p h y n ii iield trtpa *"' ..... •\b lits.
ean.r,--.r. -~~with
ABW .. Brownies. Ja-ii~I and
' CadeltOI, .....u.... ',vlth all
A -clllpler o1 the Na---a· ,.._, B...U-Women'• I -....-i Mn. A:;ci.t1o11.,_ been or..,U.. 111an1ey 111e6'1or e o1
ed In the -area. llld -Uoatoa llooln. ...... has
--snGallffl11, 11v~lnCIYi!!"a1~ Jiit :r-, COdy ,llocn, and ~ • I
Mdnl -and Ann : ~ cled1Cateri1 vokll-fe<
EaPlrl. ' the 1'111 nloe yean, llhe has
•., -I procb:t oales chairmm
andlnlner.' ··. . -·Mn.~ and
Mr1. Howland are motlxn of
three Girl SooW, and Mrs.
McGeorge has a ""' In Boy
Scout& "
Family ·Reunions .Guilt-edged Ct1t ............
ORANGE COUNTY
ANTl~~-!_~~-l~
CAN YOU
C9MPARE THE
TOP BRlNDS OF
MICROWAVE
OVENS
0 .AM.AHA
0 G.E.
0 LITTON
0 SHARP
MICROWAVE COOKING SCHOOL '
TOMORROW -SAT.; MARCH 16
11 A.M. 'TIL 3 l'.M.
•
14VAll£
• 6967 WARNER
HUNTINGTON BEACH 142·SSH
-
~ I
,. ..l~ '-\ e ,. • New i. Benn"" . Ad•ntto -
' ('.
Comtort In CCfdUIOY "1th loather slng
arms. chrome frame and cushk>ns ~n
orange or dar1c brown corduroy.
MaSlereharge 4 BankAmeric8rd.
. On~'79.00
,.
~
Every time j reed I -11Jro ,.... I , ..,. to mJRlf, • .,,_. PM' .._ mn
"1111 .. oqlil to .... Siie jolt -
aomeone • tell Itel' te de tt." S. I'm
lelllq)'IO.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1be I'll' wllo
lllld he wantod I "wild! pig" lnlleld al
I a \Vll<bdog becauoe be hid beonl !bet
pip ,..... -than clop. hid to be
putting ,.. on. I'm aurprised 1"" r.n for
IL
!Dftlna~.-areaand
-ID 1-1 · tolll 1b11 the best ·
protection agalnol Jll'ftlen II I bukil&
q .
What did the 11111' tll.lok Illa mwt pig
-ild drl If be -a burglar! Pict up
the phone and i:aD the polkeT If I were a
prowler ID! heard a pig illnklnc I'd
break la for !Aft, And I'd ...... the
silver. Plri: cbopl are """" ~.
-Oil MeOONNELL ·•
DEAll 0: Al olaldo( plf mIOl lhalre ... -_. ..... ~
do(. 'll'hal -me II, lrew .. 1" --•pi(?
• Fashions reflect .the
mood of springahd
ear1Y summer .
-.
in fresh new co~.
aoft new beltings ' .
and' pleatings.
Knott'• Berry Fsm er.... ........ ,..,
thit ld~l1.25 .-ch
.... Is it time for' your yard to
undergo a face lift?
' HCIPP!i yard$ make · people,
happier.
Color Specialists 544-6913
STATE LICENSED CONTR,&.CTOR
here In our new coHection
' '
Ofl!N OM..Y tO•I
F•OAY UNTIL I
SUNOAY 12 TO 5
of pant suits a dresses.
ftit1 DOCll'l/IAff NOM ~IO f.2211d ltMI • (213) 13~ltl$
ON llftfllLY ,_U.I 1244 w.1tNre IMS.• (213) 274-0813 SHOPNOWl'OROREATEST SELECTIONS!
WOMllf1 WIA• .......
Mii I . <eMI Nwf. ._ ... _ -
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:..'"..:°'::''.'.-' ..:"::'::"::_' _:15::·_:1:_:~7:._4:._ _______ DAIL V PILOT 17
Jqck' s 1:1ouse Built 'With Some Laugh$ ENGLISH RIDING
LESSONS
How A•!NlobW et tM
U.kl FOREST
SAODlf CLUI
837-9818
By JO OLSON
Of 11111 OMll' l'I ... Slfft
It's always a surprise to
meet columnists in person, or
hear them speak after reading
their words for y e a r s .
Sotnehow they take getting
used to.
Such was the case when
Jack Smith made a return
appearance for Queen of
Hearts C.1tild in Laguna
Beach ..
The Los Angeles Times
co.lwnnist, quieter than one
imagines from his writing,
talked mainly about his house
in Baja California.
First he told the audience
of primarily women that he
bad made a ·real sacrifice to
· come to the lecture.
He had gotten up very early,
he explaioed,to siphon gas out
of his wife's car before she
got out or bed.
"( had planned on giving
the same talk as last year."
Smith said. ''I figured no one
'>''ould remember. But then I
was as ked to talk about Baja
California."
Smith's life somehow
seemed familiar after reading
his column every day, because
he puts .. QJUCh of his
persooal life in his writlng.
HARD TO TALK
He mentioned his focizys to
the journalism classes at
UCLA in mdking the point
that "it's hard to make a
talk."
The saving grace of the
Queen of Hearts lectures, he
commented, is that no ~e
has to e~luate the talk as
students do at UCLA,
After he Jpe&ks at UCLA,
the professors send him copies
of the students' remarks about
his talk, • ' '
One stOOent desctibed ·him
as a "bewildered. eagle," be
said, and another accused him ·
of being .dressed t 9. o
conservatively. Still anottier
said his shoes were "vanilla
ice cream shoes." He had
tried to be sporty for his
campus 1appearance, he sakl.
but acknowledged he, was
''sporty in the w .r o n g
generation."
··You can see the risks in
trying to make .Ii Lalk," he
said, "'ith a touch ol J o.inn.v His wife suggested they
Carson hllfllor. drive to Ensenada and check
Then, he told the whole tale out Gomez's land. ' ' I
of meeting his Bala Calilomi3 ~·ondercd then if I really knew
landlord, Gomez, maklng tho her." Smilh snilled .
deal tQ have .a house built They drove tQ: Ensenada,
on Gomez's ~and suffering \i.'COt the' 18 miles further to
through the bliikling of the the area where the land was.
house. and Smith deLiberately tried
SEU.ING PEBBLES to get them lost. They came
A colleague at The Times, to a house, went to lthe door
knowing he \\'U a "Baja ~d asked where they coold
buff," told him about a <teal ilnd Gomez. A man appeared
he had going with a man {n)m the .. back of the .~se
nimed Gomez.. They were and said, l am Gomez.
iielling all the pebbles from". l'ATEFVL TURN
a ,f!aja beadt and mlriing~ · .. ,You cnn see how fateful Pile~can coppe~. • that thing \i.'8S. I thougtlt l
Gomez, he ~d. leased was gelling us Jost," Smith land and bullt houses.. 'd
Smith told bis wire about S&J • ·1 d. that · h d The next morning they went 1 at mner nig t an with , G<imez to loOk at the forgot it. '
Several weeks later, tfl.ey Jwo hou$es ·he had already
went to the Iildio Date bullt and the remaining land.
Festival ~ round thar i~ "Finally 1 ·readlcd the pl;cc
looked "a litUe blank',' because vrhere I wanted to be. I looked
they were-e two weeks early. at my wife. Gonlez backed
"I foul)(I. out one thing." off because he knew some
Smith said. "A woman who sorr of chenristry was taking
is packed for the weekend place."
~'OO't go b6me.". Smith ;said Gomez's onJy
J•ck Smith
commen( v.•as ... \'ou hke the
lot."
They went to Gomez's store
to have breakfast cooked by
his wife. There \\'as oo sales
ta lk, just the breakfast of
burritos stuffed with n1cat and
bcan.'I, lobster salad and beer.
After breakfast. ralli a!Jout
the property resumed.
. According to the l'Olun11tist,
it wen~ something like this:
Smith : ~'\Vhere docs the
''l'ater come from 'f''
· CQmez : "The ,reser\·oir."
WATER FRO~! GOD
Sinitb: "\Vhere ·does !he
M'ater in the restrvoir con1c
from?''
1 Gomez : "The tnick."
Smith: ."Where does the
water in the truck con1e
from?"
Gon1ez: "The \i.'ell. ''
Smith: "\Vhere does the
"'ater in the "'ell come from ?"
Gomez : "TilC \\'ater in the
\\'ell comes frorn God."
"I found then that Co.mez
is .an elusive, ch a r n1 i n g ,
exasperating n1aa .'' Smith
commented.
1'he columnist went home
to draw the plans for his
house .. mailed thcn1 to Gomez
for . revision by a ~·lexicnn
architect so they \\'OUld rit
the "codes," and got them
back several months later.
"They Io o k e d fnn;iJli:1r.''I ~;;;;,;;;;;,;;;::;;;;~~
s.hith Said. ile had nor pu1 I~
in any arches, ;ind the new
set was resplendent \\'ilh
arches.
On another trip to Baja
Califorriia. they "'ent \1 ith
Gomci to look at the 101 ag11111.
and Gon1ez took then1 to thl•
\ITOng lo l. On a latt•r tr1J1
!hey f o u n d , that !he
Joundations of the house had
been put in 1J1e rniddle of
the road .
1
emon'S
:-,PORTS\\ EAR
"The road has !he !x>Sl Nowporl IU(ll 111-.. lttll'lll
vie\\'," Gomez sHid, ex1)lain ing
that he had det·idt'<I to n10\·e ------------'
the road.
After con1p!etion of !ht•
house. there st i l 1 1r <' r 1·
problems to be solved . such
as hot water in the toilet.
a dead rrog in lhc reservoi r.
mice in the house, nat 1lres
and a ruptured g11s tank in
the car.
Alwa ys resoh·ed 11·i!h tht•
help of Gomez. the problc 1ns •'
\\'ere dismiss{'d by thl' :\l cxii.::1n
\\'Ith one of ll·:o r1nli" ..,.r~. Smith said : "Gloria a Dio.~··
or "\Vould you like to try
a llttLe tequila '?"
fun trip on
a 9al. of 9as
Every Fri., Sot. and Sun.
enioy free family
en tertainment in the
Hunt ingt6n Center Moll
Beach & Edinger off the
Son Diego. Fwy.
Now leoluring
F.V. School Oisl.
or! exhibit.
Prices Effective March 16th & March 17th, 1974
,Closeout
Body suits
Ch0iceof :>
fabrics, corors
and styles .
Save 15'
Kingsford Charcoal
..
10-1,. Bag
84c
1 Reg. 99'
HAVE A
COFFEE
BREAK
fniov creamy delicioul
cherry chee1e coke ond cof·
fee. Cofeleria.
I
'
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Womens Sandals
2/5.00
Save 1.10
Professional Golf Balls
Titleist and other
famous names
11.88
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Men's nylon
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Ideal for sports.
Save 25%
Brushed Chino Boots
Keei> in ~lep with our bru1hed thino booh. We
hove thil moc toe fovori•e '" b1u1hed 1pli1
leather, trepe ~oled
Men's High Boot-Reg. 15.99
NOW 11.99
' ).
, SANTA ANA
Motor Cross
The bike with the rac•H in mind. 20" hi .ri~er with
racing nu1t1ber ot1d cro~ibor.
59.99
RCA 8-Track
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Ploys 4 -c honnel ·quad tapes and 2
channel stereo tapes.
(YZD400)
49.88
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If you don t have a charge
1ust sec how last we can
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BUENA PARK
Beach at Orangethorpe
ORANGE
City Or. at Garden Grove Blvd .
Open Daily 9:30 to t:30 p.m. Sunday 10 to 7 '
3900 so. Bristol . No. of So. Co.ast Plata
open 10.9 p,m. Daily Sunday 10 to & Open 10·9 p.m. Daily Sunday 10 to 6
I
I • • ' I
• I
-
J8 DAILY PILOT Fr14.lt, Marth 15, 1974
Mar~~a., Millikan Batt.le for Berth
. . I .
• Ill Finals
• ' I j ~ I ,. •• , vOOngs c2s.1)
In Rematch
Against Rams
-" -Lakers Face
Warriors;
Laver Wins
INGLEWOOD -Important. Crucial.
Critical. 1be words are wxlenlalements
when usl'd to describe this weekend's
National Basketball A SJi o c I a t I o n
doubleheader showdown belwecn. the Los
Angeles Lakers and Goklen State
Warriors.
After playing nearly an entire season,
the meetings here tonight and In Oakland
Saturday night should detkle the.
champion!hip of the Pacific Division.
Altho<Jih the Lakers hold a """1!M1C
lead going Into tonight , a sweep by either
side could well decide the title.
111e La.ken, idle Thursday night, got a
half.game extra breathing room when
the New York Knicks defeated the
Wan1ors 107-95 at Oak1and. ' -efMeer Aoltla...,..,
SAO PAuµ>, Brazil -Top<eeded Rod
Laver ot Corona del Mar advanced to the
qllll'l<r·final1 of the Sao Paulo Copper-
Supr Unloo 1'nnl> toomamenl by
beotinr New Zealand's Oony Pann 1.2,
S.2 n.u.day,
e Del"p•eir Ill
NEW YORK -Former heavyweight
baring champion Jack Dempeey, 71, was
admilted to a local hoaplial Thunday. l'h" hoopllal refuled to say why
Dempsey Wat . admitted or give his
condltlon. although a spol<esWoman did say, "He's doing just fine ...
• ,...,., .c.1feei· ·
PALM SPRINGS (AP) -lleMy Doyle '
doubled home Mickey Riven with the
wlnnlll( NI la the· bottom of the ninth
innklg Thul"9day, eiiablfng the California
Angels to shade the Cleveland Indians 7·
6:
Cleveland third baseman J a.c k .
•Brohamer, a former Huntington Beach
--•Jfigh star, was hitleu-in two trips to the -
~ate.
., .... s .. rp
• VERO BEACH -Don Sutton may
liave the Inside track as the Los Angeles llod8<'> openlag'day pitcher !or the t1in1
straight year, but Tommy Jolm Is
throwing himself into coo"°tlon for the
A}Xil 5 a§lgnment agairlst San Diego.
Left.hander John, who was l&-7 fOr the
Dodgers last aeason, lnrled n,. hlU-
inllinp Tbunday .. Los An..ie. blanked '
Sf. Loo!ls, s.-0, ar Vero Beacli,
....... . ' e F•.,..rites Roll
, LANDOVER, Md, -Led by top.aecded
Ille Nastase, seven or the eight seeded
players 8dvanced to the quarterfinals of
tile· $00,000 World Championship Tennis
tournament at the Capital Centre
Thunday.
· 'Nastase destroyed Georges Goven of
France, 6-2, 6-2.
Cliff Drysdale deleoU!d Hai Reid , &.2, g.
I; Tony Roche ouated Sher..00 Stewart,
1!2, 1-l, and Yugoslavia's Nikki Pilic
edged Patrice Dominguez of France, 4-&,
1-3, w.
In other maldies, Tom Ol<ker downed
Hans Pllhmann of West Germany, H , g.
3; Marty Rie&en topped Alllln Stone, &.!,
H; aod Tom Gorman pusU!d Phil Den~
of Austral!", lh'I, U ; &.!. • c_...,, Leu ,
AMES, Iowa -After ooe day, the «th
National ~ o II e g I a I e Wrestling
ChampkJDShips have a s t r o D g
r-.blance to the Big Elghl Coolerence
and Big Ten Con!......,. meets. '
Big Eight champloo Oklahoma Slate Is
the early team leader w!tb 20 Points,
followed by Jowa 17, two-time defending
cbamplon Iowa Stale 1611 and Mlch!gan
15.
e Koreans Wi•
The South Korean women's' national
voleyball team opt!rled a United States
tour with an easy three-game vtdory
over a Southern California women's team
'Jbursday night at Cal State (Fullertoo).
1'le Korean team woo a.11.lhree games
by the same 15-4 score.
Rowland Resigns
As Swim Coach
At Santa Barbara
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Rick
Rowland , roach of waler polo and swim-
ming for nine years at UC.Santa
Barbara, resigned under fire Thursdll)'.
His water polo team demanded thal )lie
quit. His top swimmer left the t.eam. to
protest hls actions.
, A school spokesman said 28 of the fl
water polo players signed a pet.Ilion ask·
ing Rowland to resign. ''They felt
Rowland was having problems relating to
them. They said he wu too nwch oa1 of
toUch with them," the spokesman tald.
The aJS~tanl l'OOch for diving ""1gned
previoosly, after RoV..land dropped a
~vt:r' from the team for practlclni ~-
1ng a lunch hour. The team's top mm-
mer then quit the team in protest.
Rowland 's water Polo team finished the
mson 18-10, second ln the-PaciO; Coa!!t.
Athl1etic AtloclaUon. The swimming
team wu fourth In the PCAA meet.
Bowland will 1tay at the Wllvenily 11
an Jnttructor.
•
~
By llOGBR CAJIUON • Of .. ..,,..,..... •
LOS ANGELES-Marina Hip School'1 •
Vl);IDp n>ll into the llnal w1<l'"MI ol CIF '
f.A bllbtball playoll actiGa tm1&ht at
Ille Loi A..,ie. Sportl AMla with I 7:30
-wllb tile _..1---· U..1-Bead!Mllllran -Al atUe II 1 ll<r'1I In the llnall Satur·
day night ..-the wlmer ol tmqbt'• i
Verbum Doi.sum. -that -the I -~llibn tlll.
It's a rematch for coach Jim stepbens' ·
Vlldnp, wllo have mode it to the enis ,
wltb Vidortes over Kennedy, Pacific and
c:r..c.ota Valley in playolf con¢11ion.
Each of the Vikinp' CIF , ... have '
dU!>laycd pola>I OllH1\8ll 11iows with
OI~-to LA '-'"' .-,,_ I Tlb SM 0.... ~ -"' 19 H.n. I",...
Wll'. ,.,..... norlll tfl .... ,..... .. ,.....,. M. ~
e.rmr1 "'""· fllnlotf. LMt (w.tl .. s.rt. ..,_r• ........
Malt Pork< (Kennedy), Greg Bunch
(Pacilic) and Brad Holland (crescenta
Valley) padng the att.cks. ,
'Ibis time 1t:1 1.7 Jell Mclluab wl>o-11
' Ute indlWl1aJ to watch u Mllilbn tries
to· ariaae a -tournament Iola lo ,,,.,...,
.... 'Ibe game matcbet two a1milar tempos
rih neither team considered a l"'i»ud-
gun oolfil
Miiiikan lilies to go to Mcffugb at the
poll while Marina's offense is 1DQl'e of ~
outllde attack with !'fllllhasll on IJ!llllng
any ol. the five ltaJ1en: open. for a BQlid shot. •
Boj> J:.ooM (H ) ancbon the Marina
qulatel, which feahres oulllde powet'
from Kath Koeller and Byron KDllct, re.
boundinC from Bill Flc:k and the
~ of soplJom>re guard Rich '
Branning •
In addllioo the Yikes have W Blovin
Londriraf nod,y on the sldel m.. in case
me ol the front line gets Into foul trou-
ble.
Stephens says his Marina team is ih
top physical shape with Kosick recovered
from a charley horse.
UCLA'S ANDRE M<CARTER ILEFT PHOTO ) AND BILL WALTON SCORE AGAINST DAYTON IN TRIPLE OVERTIME VICTORY THURSDAY.
"We're both pretty evenly matched and
.,. it'll be a good ball game," says Stephens.
"Millikan is playing_ we!Lbut it'.s still __ _
very similar to the problems ii presenU!d
MichiganCoach UCLA. Five Got a Reprieve
Calls Players · · , .
in Deeember." '
Millitan's defell9! revolves around'
man-to-man .eoverage while Stepbels
says bis Vi.kings will o>ntinue to defeme ,
the opposition with their ....... delmle.
Only three teams among Marllll'•
sparkling U.I reconl have soor'cd...,. 60
polals and 14 victims were unable to pos1 •
liO polats.
Miracle Men
TUSCALOOOA, Ala. (AP) -"They are
miracle men," sakl Coach JohMy Orr of
Michigan. "\Ve were not supposed to win
five games lhis year."
Orr's Wolverines, riding a 36-point out-
burst by Campy Russell, fashioned the
biggest Athletic Assoclallon baskelball
tournament with a 77-& victory over
heavily favored Notre Dame, the nation's
No. 3 power. ·
'"Ibat was our third game in six days,
all under pressure and on the road," said
Orr, whose team lost a 20-point first-half
lead before rallying late for the victor,y.
"I thought WC might tire out," he said.
"I just hope we have one more good
game left."
1be one good game Orr is seeking will
be played here Saturday when the '
Wolverines tangle with 8th-ranked Mar-
quette !or Ille NCAA Mideast regional u.
tie and a berth oppo5ite the ~fidwcsl
champion in Greensboro, N.C .. one week
from Saturday in ttie national semifinals.
Marquette, which in eight previous a~
pearances has failed to move beyond
regional competition, earned its berth in
Saturday's regional finals with a 69-61
triumph over No. 6 Vanderbilt , which
wiped out a 12-point deficit but never led.
e Woll1'1ttk Rolls
RALEIGH, N.C. -Providence coach
Dave Gavitt says be will be surprised if
North Carolina State doesn 't \\'in over
~ Pit1sburgh in the National Collegiate
Athletic Association Eastern Regionals
basketball finals Saturday.
But N. C. State will have to be careruJ,
Gavitt said after his team Jost to the
natioo's l<lp<aai<ed Wollpack, 92-78,
Thursday niglil.
.In the other 1emlflna-l game,
Pittsburgh c1e1 .. 1a1 Furman. 81-78,
bellind the 34-polDt scorkle performance
by Bill KnlglJL
However, the man of the hour was
State's David 'lbompeoo. who scored 40
point! in leading the Wollpack to It! 25th
consecutive victory and 27·1 record.
e LoubtllUe l/pset
TULSA -Oral Roberts' coach Ken
Trickey says bis Titans' 96-93 . victory
over 18th-ranked Louisville was lucky
and he looks at Saturday's NCAA
Midwest Regklnal championship
basketball game and adds, "Kao.sas
scares me to death. 11
Kamas w11 beb!nd much « the game
but pulled ahead, '5UI, wittt 4;04 left to
play. They .-.Uy uoed a stall llJd
thegameendod~.
Louisville_, the Miuow1 Va I I e y
Conf-dlampion, Wal trailinC Oral
Roberts (9H3) 1'11en llamy Brown, a
fJ'eShman guard, !Ulrted lnto the air wllh
four seoond.s remaining f()(' what he
thought would be the winning goal.
But 8-loot4 Gree McJlou&ald bloc1'ed
the ball cleanly and the 11tans nddcd two
extra point.I when frahman Anthooy
Roberta ant '"'° free throws bccall!e of a Loulavllle foul at the buzzer.
And Made the Most of It ·, Millikan!s totals in the 6M3 Joa to
Martm ls.die moot scored on the Marina
defendm.
TUCSON (AP) -"I told my playen a
couple of times that I thoo!iht we'd had a
reprieve, so let's make the most of it.".
John Wooden's UCLA Bruins were slow
reacting to his mes.sage, but finally took •
adventage of their renewed ure in ttie
third overtime Thursd ay night !or a 111-
100 victory over gutsy Dayton in the
Opening round of the NCAA Western
regional playoffs.
The triumph, UCLA's 37th straight in
NCAA playolr competition, put it in
Saturday's re g i on a I championship
against San Francisco, a 64-61 vidor over
New Mexico in Thursday's second con-
, test.
'Ibe title ·game will be a repeat of last
year's regional championships in whidl
the Bruins took a 64-39 victory over San
F~t en route to their seventh
straight NCAA crown.
Dayton, down 17 points at one time late
in the first half, clawed its way back to a
three-point lead with less than two
minutes to go in regular timf:.
Dayton's senior forward Mike
Sylveoter, who had a gamHtigh 36 point!
and guard llooaid Smith led the Flyers'
Jacksonville Open
Remarkable Sand Play
Gives Mahaffey Lead
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -~olm
?ifahaffey a baby-faced 25-year-old but
one of•the most intense competitors on
the pro goU tour, spent the last two
weeks at home in Houston, practicing a
little but J!lOSllY fuming and fussing.
Beca.119e he had a inild case of the Ou ,
his doctor advised against competing, but
John "'anted to get back at it.
"I like tbe competition out here." he
said. "Molt of my friends are out here -
Hubert G~ Tom Watson, Ben
Cten.sbaw.''
So he ceiebnated .. bis .return to
competIUOO. 'lbur9day with a fOUMHlder-
par 88 and a tie with big Lalroo Harris
!or the first round lead 'in the $150,000
Greater Jacbi>nville 'Open go I I
tournament.
"ft !eels good to be baclt playing
again," said Mabatfey, who u s e d
some remarkable sand pla~• -he was in
lour bunken and played those lour holes
one under par -to take his share of the
lead. •
He and Harris, a &-fool-4 veteran or 10
yean on the tour, shared a onc-ehot
advantage over Iieooard Thomp!Jon, the
easy.png winner of tile Jadde Gl-
twmament three weeks: ago. and
longshol SleOe Spraytied at 69.
'l1ley -the ont; .... in the bulky lleld ol Ill Ible to get Iato the b on the Dea-Comtry Cl1lb coano, l•k<-
dolted, plnMludded la,wt that P!a!<d
....., longer tllan Ito T,119 11"1• 11eca ...
of the dllll temperatuno and a awtY.
tricky, swirling wind.
Arnold Palmer birdied three holes in a
row oit one stretch, Md a 70 and was
jwt two strokes ofI the paoe. •·
"Considering the conditions," lhe 44·
year.old Palmer said, "it wasn't a bad
score. 001 II could liave been a IOI
better." '
Tommy Aaron. Hubert
Weaver, South African
North and Nate Starks.
Australian Bruce Cr.ampton bad a 71,
Tom Weiskopf matcbecf par 72 and Lee
Trevino struggled in with a 75 after
shoofing 40 on the front nine. Jack
Mcklaus and U.S. Open champion Jobmy
Miller are not competing.
Mahalley, """'111 in the Los Angeles
Open and third in another event, bad won
$35,000 alrendy this ......, belore
dropping oil the /JlfJr a couple of -ks
ago.
"l thoo&l>t about maybe trying lo play
last week in Mlazpi," be aald, "but my
doctor told me l took! play there and
come home sick or stay home another
wee~ and then plaf< here.
"I think I made the right~-• uam.x", cause evel';'one stxit 17 million WKler par last
week. ,
"I feel good now,' t...b.it the ball re'.al
aolid and I putted gooc[ I feel lommate
to be as many UDder par as I am."
Ilia sand sholi did it !or .him. ,
He was in I o u r bunker and made aie
bogey. lie explad<d out to lour feet to
save par on another one, rMdbed a
gre<mldo buobr II lwo on the pot $
lourtll hole and pl up lllld down !or •
binl1e lllld 1-I .)'Ord eqilolion Ibo!
for birdie on the next one.
He ala birdied two more par $ boles
and dropped a :!$.fool putt for bis last
birdie.
Harris dldn~ hav. a bogey. He twice
stroked inm about a foot from the cup,
made IWO IO.loot birdie putt. theft
ocrambled home. He missed the green on
three of the lul lour hoie. be played but
~U!d to 11\'ll par on ·all of liem,
twice savtna from six feet.
)
charge, bittlog 14 poinb eech in r<gular
seeood.tiall play. Ji
''1be shootlDI or their guanm was
outstanding," Wooden said. ' ' And
Sylvester's 9hootlng was about the best
I've· seen. 1
"We were trying to set (Bill) Walton
back on Sylvelter ~ be came un-
derneath but tbey seemed to sense that
and made adjmtmenta m their own."
Flyers coech Don Dmoher, in his sinh
NCAA playolb in 10 yean, called bis
team's play "tbe1guttle!lt I've ever seen
by any team we've ever bad.
"I thought we had a chance becall9e we are such a good outside shooting team,"
Donoher said. "I doo't think anybody can
take the b6ll to the basket against
UCLA."
In the eod, ii was Brulm IUpCntar
Walton, a th(ee-time All·Amerlcan, who
made the difference.
·with UCLA forwards Keith Wilkes
and Dave Meyers oo the bench after foul-
ing out, Walt.on went to work, scoring
rive points in the third overtime, M well
as playing intJm!dallng defense.
He finished with rl points and 19 re-
bounds, while Meyera:, a ~7 junior, led
UCLA with 21 point!.
San Franclsoo and New Mexico played
a SIOR>)' game, in what San Fraocloco
coach Bob Gaillard called a contest "no
one really woo but aomebody bad to
lose."
"We definitely got a few more inside
1sbots than them aod that W8! It" ' ' Gaillard !1111.
New MexJco's Nonn Ellenberger said
the hall-hour wail during ·the three
overtimes played by UCLA and Dayton
caused bis Lobao to play tight la the lint
ball, and "we never dkl map out of. iL"
Both coadleo named San Francisco
reserve forward Howant llmilb u tbe
key player In the Dons' trtumiib-
Smitlt, a IH sophomore, WM the
game's high ooorer with I8 pO(ots, 14 ol
them la tbe -baI!.
u -.. Cn·n MM1• f.,11 U CdM 411 N LM Al.,fltlol '1
• Or.... Sf " lttt!Cllo Al..nllw .,~ '1 MlriN 9 61 Miiiikan
'' COl'llOIOll " K11.tl1 (oil $7 7• Tust111 1n ,...,,._, SI
Sf lflgltwoOd 7t 112 IC1t.ll1 '5 1' Sa"t• Molllu a 14 Menll Viii• S1 17 V.,.lct '1 J2 El A•ncho ,, .. '° V'"tw• J2 IS Lak.-'9 . P°"'IY 60 1S La HllM'I 41
S1 San Glbrlel -51. 4 El ~MIO j', n Eic,(eli.lor •t '° L-rl 1J W1rr'" 6S If An1Mlm 52 M SI. Anlllorly S7 ff Lo.1r1 ~ 14 IEI llllricllo 11 f1 NIWllOl'I 4' 1' Artelll 6J 155 Hunllriaton 13
1' wn-" " wn1mr,.11tr '5 • 1' c~ 4 ff S1n11 A.111 4' $1 Joni.,. ti 1l WHl ... n " IS Lakr#llOcl SI li LMrl .it
60 Lil Paly 55 61 Al!llMlm .U
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Trojans Gain
Sunday's Sepris .
On 82-70 Win
sr. LOUIS (AP) -Fllleen!Manked
Southern California, led by junior l'Jlrd ·
Gus Williama, grabbed an early lead and
withstood a ragged second half to jolt un-1
derdog Southern Methodi!t, 82-70, in the
Collegiate Qxnmissionen Assocl.aUon 1 basketball tournament Thunday night. •
Wtlliaim scored 27 points as the Tro-J
jans, Pacific • 8 ""1llenlll. advanced Into
Sunday's semlflnal!: agalnSt the wlmer of
tooight.'s Kansas Stat&-Bradrey game. 1 In 1lwnday night's opening encounter,·
'l'oledo used a paUent Offense and deadly 1 freethrow lhoollng to upset Arizona Slate
81·74. • I
TOiedo, 19-1, will face the wirmer of !
tonight's game, matching Indiana a n d I
Tenneseee, in SUnday's second/
Rtnlllnals.
W1Illams, bitting nine ol 13 -In theJ lint hall, propelled USC, :z:l.4, to a 33-11
command over SMU in the first 9~.
minutes. 'j
With the Trojans substituting Jlberally ,1
SMU lrimmed the deficit to 44-33 al
halftlme but lagged by 70-52 midway in
the!CCOO<thall. I
Southern Cal then registered just one
field goal during the fmal seven minutes,
bi& still -lls--p • Goes U Sopbomore Ira 'l'erTeil ICOl'ed 18 ol bis nee p II polall· during the llnt II mioolee for
, SMU lllld teammate Ooear Roon bit all ~
BALTIMORE -'l1lo priC<! o1. Hant , ol bb points ID the """"1 ball.
Aanln'I ..,...., ... record-kine home 'nle looo •pped I ltrlng of eight .to-
--ball u .. _... ... e19e Is """'• up 1ori5 !or the Mllllangs, who cloocd with
.... • .. ~-~-. ' 0 -• • 11-12 record
Julio Goma1ei, a Ba It Im 0 Te •11 WIS lm~ with Terrell," use ~di= h'J:·: =:. ... di Boll Bdyd ·~!edged. "Al you ns and propoood ta.kinll II on tour to bll could -· wt cooldn t sustain an~hinl
native Puerto RJ<.'O and otlter Llt1n when .~ tried to let everyone In the ·
American nations. I pme.
"Uthe bell goes directly to the Hall of · w:'t]~~.~~~ \r,1~='1 •. 't.~"r~
Fame, or Is put on exhibit in anotMr m•"" " ""lte " ci.r• •· e?"'l"
Americao city," G<milez Wei, "• lot ol. ~=~~:,:rrr~ .... r TJ-1..:\. ~ '.'
Amertcam COii drive ....,. and lake a · "•""m """"" c , .t ~· • )ook at it." wtt\.iJ"!i.tt, TPll!l. r'ottl ·1riiil! s.if~tl~ SMU • 7 .. .,.,
I 1'
' .. • • M> ' N
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L
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c
. . •
• •
Frld11, March 15, 1974
•
Pressure ls .All Relative,
.Says Former Sea Kings Star
Prerident'• Cup Wimaers
Irvine Coast Country Club women's goUers finished
their president's cup com~tition last week with
Dottie Fleer (second lrom ngbt), the winner. Others
•
in picture include Gloria DaRos, semifinalist win·
ner, Pat Clarkson, Mrs. Fleer and Kay Jennison.
Blakeley
Sparks
Rustlers
Standout Mile Field Barons Top
Eyes HB Meet Record Huntington
By CRAIG SHEFF
Of lllt DMIY l"I... st""
Golden West College showed
wby it's one o£ the better hit-
ting JC baseball teams in the
state 'nwrsday. -The ---itUSue'~rs"°,-.,w=--care=
averaging over seven runs a
game this season, bombarded
visiling Los Angeles City Col-
lege by a score of 13-4, setting
up Saturday's crucial Southern
California Confereoe.e Wt with
Cypress.
Coach Fred Hoover's
Rustlers won their third
maight circuit game and;
their llth game In 11 outings
with a bitting attack that
featured a home run, three
triples and a pair of doubles.
The l:pmer-a tw~nm 390-
foot smash by Gordon
Blakeley-came in the fifth in-
ning when the Rustlers scored
10 runs off Cubs pitcher Joe
Guzman. Blakeley 41so had a
double and two singles for the
day. .
A twtrrun triple by Rod
Bl'O'Wtl and a triple and double
by Mlke Sanchez al90 came in
the fifth inning.
Blakeley extended his hit-
ting streak to eight games
while teammate Gary North
.... blanked In foor trips -
ending his nine-game skein.
1be win WI! abo the
Rustlers' ninth in a row in
t'OJlference play over the last
two seasons.
·,
By STEVE BRAND
Of .... o.tly Pit.I ltmff •
If prognmkln over the
years is any indicator, the
mile~ in Saturd ay 's
Southern Counties track and
field meet at Hunlington
Beach High <OOld be a sizzler.
With a field that 1ncludes -nve--sub 4:20 milers;-even
Curtis Beck's year-old record
ol 4:09.l could be threatened.
1bat's a far cry from the
4:23.5 run by Muir High's Alex
Whittle to win the first Daily
Pilot mile in 1964.
Athletes like Westmioster's
Mlke Solomon, (4:14.3)'Soulh
Torrance's Decker Underwood.
14:13.8) and El Cajon's Terry
Cotton (4:10.1) chci!>Ped away
at the record until Beck steJ>
ped in last year. •
The new breed or
challengers dipped dose to
that 4:09.1 last year.
Given tile best dlance in the
first of two large schools sec-
tions of the mile is Sllnlly
Hills' Andy cmront who sped
to a 4: 12.2 In. 1973.
A smooth runner with blaz-
ing finishing speed, CliHord to
figures to stay back and wait
unW the rest ol the field tires,
then take control.
With Marina ffiih's Gary
Blume in the field, however,
that isn't likely to be too easy .
Blume, a 4:28.3 miler, is able
to set a good pace and hold it,
as evidenced by a 9 :03.6 in
the two mile.
\
C1tffonl, the entire field is
solid,
Royal lllgh's duo of Scolt
Blackbum, 4:18.0, and Tim
Gollnick, 4: 19.5, will race
.agalmt the ljkes of F~thi~l's )Matt Bell, 4:18.8, Troys Mike
Durham, 4:23.9, and Arcadia
Hlgb's Eric Taborek, 4:20.
-c.osia Mesa tracklanrwill
remember Gollnick since he
ran for the Afustangs lasl
season be.fore transfering t.o
Royal lllgh in Simi.
Some of the Orange Coast.
area l!ltandouts looking for an
upset are Colin McCoooell of
Edison in the fll'st race and
Mike Messinger of Corona del
Mar and Newport Harbor's
Etik E.!cher In the S«OOd
race.
There will be two sections of
the mile In the small schools
dlvisloo and while a record is
unlikely, the .second section
features a duel. between. Mater
Dei's BiJI St. John and San
Clemente's Teny Huddleston.
The runner from the four
races with the fastest time
will be presented with an in-
dividual trophy and his school
"'ill be aJlowed to display a
perpetual troptiy for a year.
Area Swim
Summaries
V•t\I..., 0-Hiiis C14l ft2) •ni• DI l'Mdt•v rel•Y-1. D•n.1 Hllll Time: 1·u2 :IOO ir.e-1. Mce•rt (II) 2. Bfflr.,ld
(BJ 1 Bruc• IOI T!mt: l:.ff.$
200 1NI0-1. Gencti CB) 1. Totd•I (01 l.
MllOIC:h fO) TlrM: 2: U.I 50 lrN-1. H9fldrlck {I ) 2. KU!>C• tB) l. Bruce fD) Timm: tl.t
' Nine, 5-0
A -magterful pi tc hing
perlormance by sophomore
left-hander ruck WoolaM. led
Fountain Valley to a 5-0 vic-
tory over HWltingt.on Beach in
· non·league baseball-a c t i o n
Thursday on the loser's dia·
mond.
Woolard struck out 13 bat-
ters, gave up just two bits,
and was particularly tough in
'lhc clutch for Fountain Valley.
HW'ltington Beach loaded the
baaes in the third inning with
one out, but Woolard struck
out the next two batters, and
whiffed aootber after Hwi-
tingtoo Beach loaded the bases
with two oUt in the following
inning.
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•
Wiim a -m -right out Uld ,.,., "l
hope I don't hive tO UM that l'l)'," it tends to
. dollate tile ..., or that player.
'!'bus, wbeo USC basketball ""'ch Bob Boyd
Aid jull that about his two I-man guards,
former Conma del Mar standout CUey Jones
and M.v S&fford1 you seneed there were
IOnlO feellnp hurt.
.. , undentoOd. what be meant,'' said Jones,
1Mllq In tile lt<!amlng SC lock& room Satur-
day n!Pt alter the Trojans were blitzed by
Ila.A for the Pac-a title and right to >dvance
In NCAA pi.,.
"I'd AY the wne thing. He meant be hoped
bll two boot guards, Dan Anderson and Gus
STEVE
BRAND
Wllli.a..ms, could play ,lhe cntlre game. They
are the two best, so it just makes seme."
Jones, an All.CIF guard for the Sea Kings,
came oU a leg Injury to join the team in time
!0< Pac-I play,
He got into tile game Saturday night, ool-
lectlng two asSlsts arxl a peir Or rebowxis. He
didn't take a shot.
He was asked about the pressure.
"It's all relative.'' says Jones. "In high
.school the C1F playorfs are the biggest thing.
Here making Lhe NCAA playoUs is most im·
portant. I don't; think you can say one is any
more vital · than the other, If just depeods
upon v.11ere you are and when.''
Jones was the last one to get dressed. He
appeaml to be !Daking ln all the experiences.
1be thrill of playing for the Pac-3 title, the
shoe.Ir: or falling hopelessly behind early and
the silence of the locker room.
Speaking in hushed tones and cboosing his
words carefully, Jones tried to put everything
in perspective. I
"We "'00. 22 games and are going to the
Cornmb:slontr't Tourney," be Akl:"It 's just
too bad ' the one bac\ pme ol the year came
now. J don't tbink. 1t would bappfn th1t way
again but this time It b_.,j. I
"It's jU1t ioo bad."
You aet the lmPf'Sllon JOllel ls determined
to be par\ ol the team which eventually 1tops
tbe UCLA Pac.& championship streak.
He baa put to memory the feelings he en-
dured alter belntl squashed by the Bruins in
1 1974. That's all put now. Jone1 isn 't looking
back, not with three more years to try 10 tum
things aiwnd. • * • . Go"1 things ""' happeoing al UC f(vin•
concerning the Meet ol Champions fack meet a week from Sunday.
For starters, there are nine entries who
have run 9.3 or fiuter ln tbe 100, led by San
Diego State's Steve Williams. who Ued 1hc
workt 100 mark ol 1.1 lut year. !
Ex-USC and Jamaican star Don Quarric
(9.2), Willie Deckard (9.2), Jim Kemp (9.!>
and.Idaho State staodout Carl. Lawson (9.31
top the list of early enlries.
UCI bead coach' BUI Toomey reports entries
are flowing In and with Cal, the Pacific Coast
Club, Cal lntemaUonal and the Striders on
which to build a base, the meet should be
out.standing. • • • Protests by Fountain Valley H1gh that San·
..ta Ana was using an Wegal1 socce.r player
were investigated by SalnLs officials a1'l ap-
parently proven false.
"1Wo rderees who saw' our game against
Santa Ana commented that they had seen one
of Santa Ana 's play en competing in a Sunday
league, which is IUegal," e1plains Barons
coach Bob RathmaM.
"The CJF l!ked the school to investigate
and that's '4'here It ended."
"\Ve were aware there was a complaint,"
says Tom Byrnes ol the ClF. "W9 requested
Santa Ana school officials to sl\JdS' the situa·
lion and report to us . Their lnvest igatkln IUm·
ed up nothing, JO the case was dropped."
It was a nasty ending to the season and
may cause changes in leagues next sea.son ir
the Ill-feeling rontinues. ..according to
Rathmam.
JC, Prep TennV, Bush, Aide
To Speak
At GWC
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Pro Baseball
'
Sl>elly, W. 6..i; oet. Gr1dQ.Aqu1110 6·2.
•·I. ,.,,,;o..(;1vlwd lW! IOll 0-I, o-6; IOS! 2
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P1!i.o CEI -t-(1, ..0. -" N•lw1~Pllllll'"' <E> <1.-1. ~.Ol•1wr,
'4; lld. L!flll·Pllmer M . McVlcker·S...,.1r1 IE> won ..o. '4.
UCLA track and field coach
Jim Bush will be the featured
speaker st Saturday morning's
spike clinic at Golden West
College.
Bush, a former Newport
~res resident. will discuss
the sprints and relays Crom s.
10 :30 with UCLA asslsta.nt
coach Tom Tellez talking
about the shot put and discus
from 10 :30 to noon.
• The clinic is part of an in-
service training serie!I for
teocbers and coaches and is
sponsored by Cal Lutheran
College. Anyone interested in
hearing Dush a n d Tellez is
welcome , free of ciiarge, says
Golden West track coach Tom
Noon.
Pro Scores
DAILY PILOT J 9
Area Girl s
Athletic
Results --"" Flollltrlu\ ftf. OCC. 15-11 IW. • OCC Ofof. Fllllerllfl, lM , '""·
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Lim"' (GI ._ Fill« IL). Time: 1',1.
100 ,..__,, SCllllilfll (VI l. 'l'•lft COi
). Ftrr•U 4. M<1ll• (Y). ThM: 21.J,
.SO orMtl-1, FlorY IYJ J, M0tti 101 1
Mul1e !VI t. Mc:0-11 IG). Time.
ll.O.
100 Ir" rtltf-1, Goldlfl w .. 1. Time:
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Olrft IWll'ftll'I"'
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• Time: Jilt.1,
JOO ••-1. •r1dltf CD\ ?. Ferrey (DI
no ttllrd. Tl""' 2: ... S. SO Ir-I, C1ro IOI 2. Chrl1lla11H11 ill
l . 0 . Fer•tf fOI. Tl,,,.: 1t.5.
100 Ind, mtdley-1. H•ll 10) l . Palmtr
CO) 1 JolwllOft Cl.I. Tlmt: 1:n .1. 50 flv-1. Pell'MI' IGI I, PDllOO 10) no
ltllrd •. Tl"": J2.t. ' iO t>tc-..-1. H•U 10) J, Atlmmn CO) J.
Cl>rl\ll•-11.), TlrM: n.t . 100 ltN-1. Auuell COi 1. Dud11 CL! l.
F_,r1y 101. Time: 1:10.1. iO IW""ll-1. 8rldl1 yCOI L M1Yer (LI J. Sllv• (G). TlrM: lt.I.
100 ''" rt11.,....1. Or•not C••·· l lmtl l:ff.t.
Ori ... CMtl Ull llJI 111111 fiMlllCI
200 niedln rtll f-1. Or•11t• CMI!.
Time: 1:1',l.
10lll lre+-1. l rldlt"Y IOI 2. Ftrrn IOIJ • • l'OO lre+-1. Slll'lff!Ofll Ill 2. 8rldlly
101 1 Terrlt CS!. Tlnw~ 1:45.t . iO lrN-1. IOWll' {SI 2. C•ro tOI J,
HUit ll l. Time: 1t,1.
100 Ind. mtO ......... I. Hiii CO) 2. N-ell
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T1rrl1 ISi. Tl"": J1.t.
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100 fr-I. tower Cll 2. llu111ll COi l.
Ferr1v 101. TltN: 1:04.0.
SO t>r-1111-1. HUii II ) t. lrldleT COi l. 5fltr~ !SI. T1me: :M,0. I
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Gltfl S111ltl'Mll'
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Senior, ~I'll. llKll '9, N...,., 16 '(
51n!or l--H! •. IMKll 11 , N•WJIOl'I $
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Junior 2-N•WJIOl'l 11, HI•· lffcll l'
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" Satunlay's game at Cypres.
(i--0) matches· two-heayY hi~
ling teams. Hoover is ex-
pected to send right-hander
Pat Espinoza to the mound to
face the Chargers.
In another JC game ThlJrs..
day, Saddl<l>ock (3-12) drop-
ped its 12th game in a row,·
fa!Jlng to San Dl'!IO CC, lU,
at San Dl'!IO State College ..
Others rating a solid chance
""' HWl!ington Beach's Bob
Angel, who ran 4:20.5 at this
meet a year ago; Buena
Park'! 4:19.6 miler, Armando
Cendejas; Pacifica's Mik e
Graves, with a best of 4:24.4,
and San Diego's Kirk Pfeiffer,
a 9:17 2--niller.
In the second race, while
there is no one standout like
dlYl-1. A•tll•ff (I ) 1. OunlOP (I ) l. Gr•nt iOJ 100 llV-1. Tosdet (0 ) 2. Ml101<ll COJ J, OHr1• Cll Tln111: .ff.I
100 lr--1. GerlCll CI J 2. Nt!Mlll (81 l.
'111K• 10) Tlm1: ~.I
500 ltH-1. a.rtr•nd (8) 2. Cook CDl, 1 Otnmtn (0 ) Tl,,,.: S:ol(l.J
100 bKk-1. NtllClfl CBI 1. Sot"'-' (0 ) 3. McC11"fln (DI Tlmt: !:OS.I
Pacific Motor.lmDOrts, 1557 W. Uncoln Aw.., Anaheim
Another C1ual11Y dealer docs for PEllMot.
Steve Williams had three
Int. !or the looq Gauchos,
smashing a homer in tile third
inning. Brian Hester and Scott
Tolbert had run-scoring
sqles for Saddleback.
o.ldtn ""' llJI
Horii!. )f.rf """"" .. Blflt.aey, II
Pei.nan. p-lb
MHls.' rt K--.,, ct
NClllMl'ld. cf.If
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LllASI A '74 MOZ
LOW AS $136 MO. t TAlC 0,R,I..
COSTA MESA DATSUN
1141 MAllOI ILQ. C.M,
54M410
•
Mesa Hosts
Bike Stars
1t1ike Bast, the United States
short~k motorcy<le cham-
ploo. will lead a young
American teem into battle
with a ltmludd«l European
~lnatbree-dayiD
tematmal -beginning tonlibt al 0raqe Coonty Fair-
grounda In Costa Mesa.
Racing toolght and Saturday
evening begiN at 8: 15 with
Sunday 's final rouod starting
iat 2:15.
· Bast, a 21.year-old two-time
national chaml>ioo from Van
Nuys, will also have team cap-
tain Sonny Nutter, Scott
Autrey, brother Steve Ba.t,
Blll Cody, Mlke OJmlo and lt-
C"°~<Kll~t;;u~ ~
team. .
The European c:oolingent
will be beaded by two former
fiMr.time wor}d 1 p e e d w a y
diamptons, Ivan Mauger and
Barry Brial ol New Zeala>d .
100 br"•l-1. ~ndrl(b (I) 2, Jove• 10) 1 Dunlop CSJ Time: 1:11.4
olCIO ffw.-1. Br.. Tlmt: l :'3.0 ·--D•u NUii (IS) lnl 11111
200 nwdllY rel•y-1. 111" Tlmt:
2:07.1 :lOCI "'-l. Htn'°" Cl ) t. C1rclello (Ol 1 H....,,... (DI Time; 2:Cll.1
lOCI l<MI0-1. l•nb (Bl 2. Meeerl1n IOI
J. Coaotr tDI Time: 1:10.1 50 ,,__,, Cerd911o CO! 2. Perry (I I J.
WoolleY 11) Time: 7i.5 50 fly-1. r...,., Ill 2. McC1r1111 CO) J. A..,.. CBI Tl"": 29.t 11111 tr--1. Cmrdlllo IOI 2. Woolt'I' II) 1 ...,_ CBI TllM: !t.I
50 M<k-1. -~·l 2. c-1011 Adzl•ff Cl lllM: JU lO "'"""-'· 111 t .l •nlu 111 i. "T'*'1Plmn IOI "Time : ll..O 200 ,,_ ""11-1, lrw Tl"": t:JJ.7
DOii YOIM CM IDU IOUGH? WE ":.:. = MILMll? CAN HELP
THE CARBURETOR SHOP
lMt--wt.. ......... ....... --............ ....
' ' • I
-h•lt--hal<*l<dthe g"'"'tl -fllmly. And he's done l because of Ptugeat's reputaHon sh:e
1889 for qualtJ cars ... Ptugeot's dis.sic
European hs ...... to Z4 mies per
galon! .. and bocause-Jsthe r:::r.tl'I sportsar4c.e
OnP<ugeotyou'I-
Comln4 Soon •••
'
Pcutt:ot Dit:St:l. THI!! rtl!!XT CM.
' •
I
•
-•
'
. .. • • •
• :o DAILY PILOT FrldaJ: 11.vd! 15, 1974
Theriot
Newport Harbor H I g h ' 1
BriaJI 'lberlol sped to a 9.9 In
the 100 and 411.I In the 440 to
lead the ~rl past
Weetmlnster Thur ad a y ar-
temooa, 7M-& at Westmlnster.
bl&hlightlng Orange Co a • t
area track and field .
The win was the second
stratght In Sunset League
competition for N e w p o r t
Harilor which is a solid
favorite to capture the dual
meet tille .
Kevin Eaton raced to I.be
fastest 880 time In the area
,I.his year, 1:56.3, a,, he beat
teamma\e Jon Cook In a race
at the tape. OJok clocked
1:56.5.
Diablos hurdler \V l l b e r
Greeory raced to a 14. 7 in the
120 high hurdles and Eaton
doubled with a 50. 7 1n the 440
in other top mnrk.'I.
La~a Beach's Doug Case
set a School record with a 6-
,,. in he high jump as be and
Eric Hulst led the Artists past
Valencia. Hulst doubled with n
4:21.4 mile and 9:24.8 2·mlle.
Estanda's St.eve Ad ams
·tu.med 1n a fine 15.0 and 2.0.0
hurdles double but it wasn't
enough u Corooa del J\far
sped past the Eagl,., 73-M.
..
Clocks
PONTIAC GAS
SAYER
INGINI TUNI
~·-• tar er -·i-. eDAYE aosse
PONTIAC .... ......., ......
COITA MIA F 1•6·1111
'I
•
49.6
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I I J
l.r I
Golden West Nixes Rumor: . . I .
Stricklin Remains as Coach
' Tbe rumor about Oici &trJcklin mlpln1 or
btlog f1t<!d as the Goldeo West Coll•ge
~11 coach _is untrue, says R111Utt1
athJeUc director FN:d Owens.
... tend ol June 23-30 for the nm ...... 1 na,
tiooat outdoor racquetball champioaslttpa.
The tve:al , involving both 1in8les ~ doubles In tcven dlvlsk>ns, will be htkl at
wlth some ol the oalloo's top racqud.ba
players competing.
'"lbere'1 ab&olutaly nothlng to It," aaya
Owftls, who daiml the l')l.mOI' WU started by
an asslstant coach. at a riv al JC. 1be national indoor champion!btps are
scheduled t.,.,.o weeks earlier in San Otego. "Rldlard Is an ou11tandinl coach, he j!J:!lt
hu to get out and Set the troopa," 18.)'S
"Owtna.
There will be five division.1 for men and two
IOI' \\'Ollll'tl.,, SA)'S Wall.act.
strlckll.t1'1 Jf1S-7t team posted a JO-It . * • •
A pair of rormer Golden West standouts
had spark.ling efforts 1n conlerence meets
last weekeod.
CRAIG
SllEFF
Gymnast Gene J!ihnsoo, who Prewed •I
Westmimter, was 1.hlrd in the rings event in
the Pacific.a meet while compe<lng for
Washington State. Johnson eamed a trip to
the NCAA meet at Poon State the end ol this
month.
i<oonl, losing the !Ina! 10 games.
Stricklin'• eight·year record ol 94-139 (40.3 pUcent) ranks best ln the area. OCC'I Herb
Livsey is 56-M (4& percent) in rive ye.ars while
SaddJeback's Roy Stevens is 58--113 (33.9 per·
cent) 1n six seasons.
He's the sean::I GWC gymnast to reach vie
nationals in t¥•O seasons. Glenn Seymour
gained the NCAA meet in the sidehorse" last
year for ue Berkele)'. but tailed to qualify
Otis season.
Another ex·Rusiler-Kevin Wi\Uama-quali ...
lied for the NCAA swlm meet March 2840 a:
Belmont Plaza pool with fine .. perforrnaoces
in Lhe breaststroke events for the University
ol Alabama.
Stevens, by the way, took nmnerup honors
in bal)(illng for the Mission Conference coach of..Jbe . ..Ye@r recently. 'l'l}e circuit ooa<;bes
voted ruverside CC's Bill Mulligan the NG. l
honor.
He won the 100 (S8.8) and was second in the
200 (1:09.2).
* * * A touch O/Class has been ll\lded to Ute OCC
baseball scene. They're Lisa, Gentry and
Kathy Uhlom who serve as the Pirates' ba:
girls at all home games. • * Wallace • bas
Alantitos
Racing
Entries
~
THE STEEL
BELTED
RADIAL
00,00D lli.. ... ,.USI
MA11MUMit.,.•1Mll ---_ ..... _
taft to ll't AU t..-S
OOtt SWIDlUMD
IHC.
Ill w. IM s..... c..w.. 646-llJJ
l
* tentatively set the
I '
•
Los Alalllltos
Race Results ,I
Ln Al•""IM llenll•
CIMr, Tr•ck "••' Tlllll'Wly, MM"UI l4, 1t74
.. IJllT Ill.Cl' -OM ""It. P1ce.
Cl1lmlf11. AU llOl'I· PIKM UQ)O, Fit H .. ,,.., (Hon) . 1.60 3,60 1.IO;
Olck'I 011.mll'lll IMllllf) 2,IO 1 . .0
ilclMV ·-(~_.-1 1 • .0 Tl..,. -1.t7 1/J.
AIM raced -8r1v1t1, &cor>ll flt ll11
0., Oniv SOii. I'm A PllYtlO'I· Orbit
M~n.
·$cr1tw.d -CllUCk F1rr. Jw T~l111e. IZ IJ1cl1 -Z•PrM H11t11tr lll'J I·
D/C'lr'1 Dlltflln", P11d S2' •••
l•COND llACI! -Ont mllt. Pict~
M1lcl1A1. CondllkintG. S ..ar oldl & 11n-
clff. P.11ru 1160G. Sllad)'dlli'"Yl,1A
(Acktrm.111
smllW C111 ICobtl)
l! ..... llCI (~)
TllNI -t.OJ.
'-00 'l,IO 2...0
1 . .0 2.IO '·"'
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N1pol-, Olll'f!1nl1 OvldleS" Froirtv
Baseball
' ' '" ' '
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For11J. HI W1v Doll.
Scrllchtd Kllllrtuck lllf"'l\I
Am'9o Cllltl.
THlllD llACE -OM 111llt. P.tee.
Cl1lmlllg. All ."1tl· Pllf'M SlllOG. The
H11nt1 A9d! Wlp.
Fire• BOii.
tSc111nl:1)
O.nclV Bov TIH !Wint) All IC .... ed Up tThorntonl
"'° 4.'° ....
Time -1.01 •IS.
Alto ractd -O. Boo, Flit "''" Bonn!e1 Mb1ll1, $11adyd1l1 }!1a, YOllll)
Gllrtl'°". Scr1lc"-1 -Del1nd0 IC.kl. F11't
Cr1111.
FOUllTM II.Kl: -OM 111llt. '•Ct. llJmlno. AU_ag_PurM 1111M.
Mlncl\t'I llO)I -r 10,..,..,..,1 ,,,00 '·'° •-«I
5lllkn Bomlltr (Colem•nl 17.00 f .IO Scot!Y'• Coll (GUlllln) 4.'°
Tlmt -2.0, 4/S.
AllO rKfd -Corntll, $1or"'1' 0..
ll•11Ct. T1mmv $1111•. S 1mp1 o •·
Prlmr-, $uncltrllre. •
ctFTH II.ACE -Ont mllt. P.tet. CandlllOllld !C0·2). S Ve It olcl1 &
undft". P'ur11 SJllCID. Tiit ANht!,,..
Sr90-f111 LI-. Chlb. ~, BO'/' COaomef) •.10 l.40 Z.IO
Lumbtf" By1 llYI !Wlll11m1l 4.00 J,.,
lolul T111 (Aiolbl11) ' J-"J
TI..,. -2.0J ~$.
AlllO rK<ld -AllllVI Wl,.O, lltll\OOl'I
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Oecltlon.
SIXTH llACS -Ont milt. l"act
Cl1lmln;. AH ~ PIH'll U.00.
Pot•ni.te Pkk
CAublnl 12.eo '·'° J.O'l Oe11w1r1 N CMlllOIJ 1.00 1.t'C MIK Pill All' (\111111 KIY l 4.0';
Aho rtad -Mlkvon H1rll101.
M.,.ry .. Ruler, Sc1"'11111r, Rhyltlm C ••
Franll. 6t&dt1. is E•ld• -l·Pll1nl1tt "lck a 1. 01llw1r1 N,, "•hi llM.5'.
SEVIHTtl llAC• -OM mlle. Plt1'.
COlldlllOlled CCD-ll. AU llltt. "ur1•
SMOO. :n111 O...t11111rcl llCNPllng Clllb c. L0119 a .. ch.
MIY Toni (Wllll~ml)
Fr115t Aeporl {Billlt Y)
10.00 S.70 4.C~
l.'° 2.lt"
·;~~ \~.:'." 1 ... Aho rac9d -P1clnc Sh• ter, Lin-coln, Miio Fros!, B;. a,, h 11, Brown
fli rt.
EIGHTH II.AC• -Ont , PKI
Cl1Jmlng hlnclklp. All t. "11rs.:
$l3CIO. TM (yprni .
Mont1111 !Orll!Wn"l
P1I M'er Fllte fV1ll1ncllng,J\lml
n.oo •..IO J.Jl
Wlnlll' E•pr111 lGUIJll11l
Time -2.03 2/S.
AIM raced -H1lcyon H1r!l1ge.
J1111'1 Aack11, Pr1lrL1 Byrd, WIV Allll
H1I.
IS E~IC:ll -).M ... 11111 & 1·1"111 MYt•' ,lilt, Paid i.M.$0.
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ADDITION
'·
EXHIBIT
J
''
.... ,
-----·J8Tlil ·----P••-S-
~---.,,,---,--r,---· ( -:•• 1·;:1 ...... , .... : ..... ~\·",)• .• • .• I 1Cl &•:;1••lt ·U·~·· ,1
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' ) 1, • . ~ .J'lllluc NOTICE
• •
I Fn~ M""' IS, 1974 '.Ii; • ,
t PUBLIC +i\1tJ" ~ Zl
fiun1e None•
CIVIC
CENTER
DISTRICT
~....,&£ coA-s-r
CO~L.&&ir.
•
•
,
1 ' ...,..~tM• .... , __
'"4l U· ~
EXHIBIT A
\
,
_ .. ,.,,
..,i ......
°""u" .. Jv...,.,.
""""' &.COWH
•
-
' .
•
.,.
,
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•
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.. • • I •
' \ , I
' e2 "' ....... -I
i"'flfftrootniilrJr""'"'Steif ie
"· Jtl. B oyd
·How 'M airz y In Illin pis
Hit 'Hair'
Doats' Inspired SULLIVAN. m. (UPI ) -
Streakers may be taking tile
• blush out of nudity on college
~Mllt'Ort'br1rt'~elf!81a'i!tiiJ~lM''t•E'nr·c11m!'!l!lll@'"'~~. na1 -nr-'ttftr"tnrta
from kindergarten one day, saying. "Cowey tweet and Eastern Illinois town, a flash
aowzy ty,•eet and liddle sharksy doisters." Fasclnating, of flesh b still a fighting issue.
said Milton. He promptly put down on paper a few slurred . f the phrases of his own. And the eventual upshot was t943's Plans for production °
nifty ·nOnsense song "t-.1airzy Doats." rock musical "Hair," at the
Sullivan Little Theater on the
Q. "\Vas the famous marriage of Square March 16-31, drew a
PFISCilla and John Alden a happy flood of angry letters from one?" A. to.lust have been. Priscilla had some townspeople protesting
11 children, did all her own housework, l the show's "nudity, obscenity,
left nQ record of complaint. p r o f a n i t y and sexual
·."i" iJ l Ir~· :!fl;/t~~./:Aif.t. . ·· .1.,;,.fJ, 1 ~1--J;.)f~·1""t.r"_;r.~· · .. ~_ !·~-"~P -fi
' ''f.' '!,' -·; .. 1.• •-·, li
She bakes the potting soil before
• .she puts her house plants In it. this
lady. About half an hour in a 180 degree-oven. Kitts fungi,
perversion."
¥ ~ il}J;. ..• ,\~·~·1:: .• .:;:. ! .1i" ti ~ .t.~\f'~'. ,. _ _,.,..,,-'''IA,~»(' :•:;di,;) 1U1 'ln ,,
TllE rttUSJCAL IN the late .......,..v\~ ... ,.J.'.~.~$.J~f~ ,~,;,,s ..
1960s enjoyed record runs in &.;.3..;·l.;.S_,:o., ... -.'.;.•.,·•-'"• .... --~-.__,_,,_•_w_ •• _'O......__.:..._"' ____ _,,
she claims.
Three out of four \\'Carers of contacts lenses are be-
tWeen t2 ana 25 years old.
New York, 1..-0s Angeles,
Chicago, London and Paris. It "SQmetimes I-feel my whole life has be~ an eighteen·
ent minute •ap." inchJdes ·a ·30·.seoond segm C:::: • in which the players stand ~-------------------
Wonder '
.
Leavin g
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Rock music star~1 ,s t e vie
WBR&!fi45s'&j)!ans
the United States ~ move to
Africa where he hoi>;s to work
with charities helping un-
derprivileged ~ h i I d r e n ,
particularly the blind.
Wonder, Who Is b 11 n d
himself, said Thursday he
already made contacts with
people in Ghaita who are try-
ing to atTange for him to Jive
there.
TO HELP CHILDREN
Stevi. Wondor
Frolics, i
You Bet ,
PALO> ALTO (UPI) !-
Proud parents, interest6d
'relatives , watet+l
teachers and h a p p Y
students were persent for
the Senior Frolics of
"And now, ladies and
gentlemen," the tJ11l!lter of
ceremonies said.
But before he could
nnlsh his introduction, six
naked girls and six naked
boys streaked across lhe
st.age and out to waiting
cars. ,
Flash bulbs popped, and
the audience gave a stand·
tng ovation.
Dead Girl Wrote 1 . .
. ' nude on a dlmly lit i.1age.
THE BLACK performer told
a ne~s conference ·t~ al ·
althouih he is concerned about
so.me political problems in the
United States, that is not what
mOtivated his decision to
Jea\!e. ·Of Heri Torment INDIANS
No American of Indian ancestry shoukt forget it was
not the white man , but the red man who rirst domesticated,
cultivated, and routinely fanned about four-sevenths a!I
the varklus produce our agriculture turns 'Out .. today. Start
• with tobacco. List corn, too. And try potalQes, bea,ns, pea-
' nuts, tomatoes , pumpkins, chocolate, cotton, rubber.1
One·out of every nine expectant fathers develops preg-
nancy symptoms. Nausea, vomiting, appetite changes, ab-
dominal pain, indigestion. heartburn, so on. Or so con-
tends a profe~or of psychiatry In Birmingham, England.
· Interesting, if true. I
< ,, ..
FAT MAN . .
This husband dietOO to lose 60 pounds. His wife in-
sisted on it. Too bad. He'd been a fairly easygoing sort
when heavy, but turned into an angry thin man. First, he
• accused her of stealing money. Then, of stepping out on
him. Finally, he slapped her around some, and she di-
vorced him . So he gave up the diet, regained . the 60
pounds, and now associates say he's a gentle soul again.
In analyzing his case, the medica'l experts contend 1 he
proves some men must stay overweight to keep tl'leir
,. men~I balance.
)
The more stories you read to ypur toddler in pre-
school days, the . more likely said Chlld will get good.
grades later on. You think , that's obvious? Maybe. But
now the resea'rchers say they've verified the old notion.
\ .. ' . Men dream about women less frequently than they
dream about other men. Odd, but true, according to a
study of 10,000 dreams by Dr. Calvin S. Hall of Western
Reserve University. Also, his findings indicate approxi-
mately 43 percent of all dream characters seem at first
to be strangers, then tum into familiar characters m dis-
guise. I
!4.ddress mail to L. M. B01Jd, P. 0. Box 1815, New-
port Beach 92660.
·i
"
The Rev. James Fox, pastor
of the SuJllvan First Church of
God, urged his congregation
and other cillzens in this town
of 4,000 to protest the· pro-
duction with a letter writing
campaign directed at theater
owner quy S. Little.
"OUR LETl'ERS say we are
concerned citizens of Sullivan
and surrounding communities,
Strongly protesting the prD-
duction of 'Hair' on the
grounds of its nudity, obsceni-
ty. profanity, praise of drugs
and sexual perversion," Mr.
Fox said. "We are proJesting
on moral grounds."
JI.fr. Fox, three ministers
and a group of citizens. took
out a full page advertisement
in a loc81 paper decrying Lit·
tie and the production.
"Now we are banded
together in two weeks of
prayer, asking God to in-
tervene and. prevent the prD-
duction," he said.
110 Years? "This is not to say that I
don't h~ve a great lov~ befe
that will"'l>e. with me always,"
the 23-year-old Wonder said. 1863-Letter Delivered •'But . 1 want" to .:o. to work \FRESNO -(AP) -Claudia
helping the children over Hudiburgh feared groWiog up,
only in death, so be it: for I
shall find it.''
ROY AL OAK, Mich. (UPI)
-Everybody complalns about
the slowness ol the mail -but
110 years?
"Friend Erilllne," began a
leUer delivered last month to
Teresa Collins and the senior
citizens home s~ nuu here.
"I now sit down to answer
your kind lefter, which written
Sept. 16, 1863. Jt came in due
time ... "
as Emline's, but how some
postmaster would know
that . . . "
lhere." '16nnented over her !allure to Th e s i nger-composer-in-THERE HAD BEEN ln·
strumentalist said he wltl find happiness, u n c e rt a in creasing signs of Insecurity -
leave for Africa within two "what to do with my time." dropping out of high school
POS'DtASTER WALTER T. years and probably eonduCt a Claudia died Feb. 17, less and into drugs, running off to
Asht.On or Royal Oak theorized nationwide performing tour than a month before her 18th Phoenix briefly with a
the mi slaid missive strayed be(ore then to.raise money for birthday, her announce· d carnival barker.
into a crack or crev ice, 1vhere the people of Africa . deadline to "figure out where ''Boredom has a way of
it remained until the post of· I'm going, what I want to do." making ~ything seem like an
flee was torn down ·or exciting adventure," she
remodeled. Someone m u s t "I'VE BEARD OF the great SHE HAD LAID in a coma wroh;.
have found it and dropped it needs •in· that part of the for 12 days after swallowing· Boredom led to · brooding
into a mailbox for de-livery -'ft'Orld, the African oountries," about her future:
110 years late. Wonder said, noting he heard seconal capsules. There were "I'm sitting in my room
SO BEGAN TIIE waylaid The letter chats about in-of one portion of A.frica in notes for her mother and once again, trying to find out
letter from a. wounded Civil nuenz.a virus, which ap-which 70 percent of the peOple sister, and there we.re essays my place in this mixed-up
War private, Horace H . parently swept the Detroit ·are blind because of a disease Claudia J>eMed which help ex-fu'.Clety. I'm feeling terribly
Prindle.of Blnnngham, Mich., . area about that time, mutual carried by rues. ' plitin her tangled thoughts . depressed. I don't know what I
as he recuperated ln 8 friends , and the Civil War. "l believe that you have to "I don't k:oow what to do or want out of life and it bothers
Nashville, Tenn. hospital from ''You have learned all about give unselfishly ... you can \\iiere to go," Claudia wrote in me. I watch the minutes tick.
a bullet wound received in the great b at t \ e of sing about things and talk her last essay. "AU I know Is by on the clock and say to
Lbokout Valley. He was Chickamauga," it said. "We about things, but if your ac-that I will not give up my myself, 'quit wasting time '."
writing to a lady friend. had a very large battle week tions don't speak 1<¥Jder than · dream. Somewhere, there Bui it does no good. for I don 't
The letter was certified as ~o today in the Lookout your words, you're nothing," must be "happiness and I will know \\'hat to do w.ith my
BUT Ll1TLE who founded genuine by A1ice Dallingen, 'falley." he 3dded. find it. And if happiness exists time."
-central Illinois'
1
only -mmmer-chiet-ot-the Burton-Historicall~=::;:~~~~~:::::::=::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;::;;::::::::::::::::;::::::::::1 stock theater 18 years ago. Collt;ction. at the . Detroit I 1
said the contracts are signed Pubhc ~brary. Prindle, it
and the show will go on. . seems, hv~ through the war
" 'Hair' is a very positive, and was discharged in 1864.
very religious, prolove, an-His swee~rt's last name
tiwar, antipollution rock was not ·ava:dahle.
musical,'' LitUe said. ''There "I have absolutely no ex-
are no words in it that can't planation," Miss Collins said.
be found in lhc Sullivan Public "Wt once bad a resident here
Library. · whose last name was the sauie
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Tiur.rerylond ... noturer Partner. for every bloomin' thihg
' l
PLANT=OR
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IT'S SPRING
FrarTil wn .. ;
ROSE GUARD"
~
' '•
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nip of Irish Whiskey
this weekend, · ·
FUCHSIAS
A shade garden spectacular in up-
right or hanging basket v.arieties.
Jewel ·like blossoms in com-
binallons of red, pink, purple
pastells and white in both single
and ~ouble blossoms.
The 3 in I product that
does It all lar r0ses!
• fffds Roses
with blllllttd.
ltr1illltf
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We'll understand.
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Seagram Distilers
Company
RS.Al lontl •JOU-bllCk IO the ..td'lno.1 whldllyOll MonRy.
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KILLS
SLUGS and SNAllS
E11tremely entottive on h•rd·
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th•I do !iO n11teh dan1111e to
1•rden1 and lawns ..
USI DlllCTL Y ON DiCHONDIA
Wiii not hurn or horm
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0.t RESULTS with Corry'•
BEST ol th e BAITS /
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Now you can patch up bare
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HYBRID TIFGREEN
BERMUDA SOD 5
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and other
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inste!S Jrfnln a..tinft. • Controls ,....,MlllRI" 'more than,·
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1 full years guaran1ee on
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SALE PRICES THRU MARCH 21st \
AOWflflSINO "-""fMfNl tO THf 10\ ANOlllS hMl\ ....... .......... .,.
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Arts·/ Dlning Out
Entertainment DAil Y PILOT
Friday, Mardi 15, 1q74 23
Mis,siori to_ Celebrate Swallows' Return
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of *t Dfil" P'llM Slaff '
San Juan Capistrano residents and the
thousands of visitors to the mission com-
munity will have a two-day head start
this weekend to launch the annual · a
de las Gok>ndrinas in honor o{ the arrival
of the swallows.
And when the flocks of tiny birds ar-
rive sometime TuesdJY, St. Joseph's
Day, the revelers still/can celebrate the
legendary event during the remainder
of the week.
' Beauty contests, religious proces.sions,
dancing, beard contests and a-parade
finale will highlight the • Fiesta As·
sociation's annual celebration.
THE KICKOFF for the community fete
\\'Ill take pla,ce Swxlay nOon at a fashion
, show and icoronation featuring con-
testants for Miss San Juan Capistrano at
El Adobe. •
Costume co~tests \\'ill take place
through P.t~y in the downtown area,
followed by the major observances on
Tuesday.
The mission bells toll in j the morning
hours when the first flocks are sighted..
AT ABOUT THE same t i me ,
youngsters from the Old &iission School
will begin dressing in perk>d costume.
Later in the day: at l p.m. th~ feast of
St. Joseph will be celebrated along the
pathways of the mission: Dancing to live
Mariachi music and coronation or the
king and queen of the pageant are among ·
the highlights steeped in local tradition.
At 5 p.m. the community's oontestants
in the beard-growing contests wUI match
• whiskers in an annual competition at the
downtown m.inipark.
Wednesday's special event at 5 p.m.
(See MISSION, Page II)
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01Ur P'!let Still PhOll
PLACID COURTYARD OF SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO MISSION AWAITS SWALLOWS ANO ANNUA L FESTIVITIES
The Blls Stops at Saddleback
A ho11 ling biizzard forct's a bus out or
Kansa" City to stop in :1 remote small
lo"TI for tht' night.
In the litlle roadside inn. comedy Un·
fold s and ron1:1net.' blooms in !he time-
honorL'<.I \\°ilha1n ln~e play ··Bus Stop .. on
s!al!'c lonight and Saturday at Sadd lcback
Col!rgc.
The 8 p.m. pfotluction ft•aturcs Sad·
dlcback lcach<•r and former San JUan
l'apistr;ino 1nayor Jim Thorpe as the
small to11'll sheriff.
1'i1UCJI OF THE comedy centers on t11·0
of the stranded travelers-Bo, a ·'.'>-lontana
cowboy whose idl'a of oourling is to kid-
nap his girl. and Cherie. the un.,..•illing at>.
jcct of his affc<.1ion.
The role of the pretty yow1g nigh tclub
singer -played in the mo1 ic version of
··sus Stop" l>y !\larityn !\tonruc-is playt.'CI
in the Saddleback production by Priscilla
Lesher of illission Viejo.
Bo ts pla yed by !\lik l' l...ev1sce of lr1·ine.
with Les llcide of Dana Point as his
sidekick and Chuck Kehoe of Tusti n as
Dr. Ge rald Layman. an e'<-college pnr.
fessor.
Al.SO CAST I~ the production are Bel·
te Killion of Lab'11na lfil ls as Grat_'e
Hoylard. O\\'Jlcr of 1b.c small·lo\\'ll .Siner
and ~~lary Jo Bald«t1 of In.oine as tbe
teenagcd \\"aitress. The bus driver. Carl.
is played by Cliff \\.alters of Laguna
J';iguel.
As a counterpoint 10 the rna in
rornancc. the conflict between selfishness
and Jove is umP,lific:d in the relationships
a1nong the addilional travc]C'rs and local
residents.
Director tor the Saddlcback production.
\1•hich t;ikcs place each evening in
Building I{ is Jtrry i\tcCollor·h.
Tickets. as $1 are available by calling
831·9700 or -195-4950. ext. -13. Any unsold
tickets 1vi ll be available at the door.
The story, "''hich tak es place in the
1950s. 1rill be marked by au thentic
nostalgia props -including bobby sox.
pc!riod rock and roll tunes, nev,.spapcrs
from Kansas City, ~lo., and 19:i03
magazinCB.
\ Costumes and choregraphy on the 1lr~
"BUS STOP" SCENE:· CHUCK KEHOE, BETTE KILLION , MARY JO BALDWIN, MIKE LEVIS~E AND PRISCILLA LESHER
duction 's one song, .. 0 Black Magic,"
.. were done by Saddleback drama coach
Bonnle Cofiblll. Director ~tcC\Jl!och said
the set wlfi use a real range and icebox
in the cafe arrangement. "lf'i a very
practical set," he not ed.
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Makes Toe-tickling 1Jazz· Album ,Expatriot • Ill
i BJ TOM McCANN 01 ... ....,PW.._..
'Calilomia Condor Records has l'°t
d,\;d another foe.lidding album.
.ful the only thing the new ooe has in conwnon with lut year's ''Old Scratdr
Band'' ls Lbat lt was tetOida:d on the same ".eml-prol .. lonal" Jape deck aod
pn>duced OUI of the hip pocket of
Colin Bell, Ille UC lntne llllttant pro1 ....
sor who. IUl"ely, mmt be the l'nOlt one-
man operation In the edire rec«ding in-
duslry.
Bell's newts! ali..n Is "Sarqmy Rim·
lngtod/New Orlun1 MlJlfc.'l II featurel
an American clarinltbt who, eipatriat.ed
to London. bu ICUld be can quit l'8cbing
(·
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music on the side and make a rulllilne
living just m11tint! music In the pubs and
dance joints of England.;s swinging old
capilOI ~.
("In London," ezplalns ucr1 Dr. BeU,
"Jan fins like Disieland for •'hat it i.~
today-oot for an1 klla-etanding tradi-
tiom « for its 'revlvaP or ·comeback'
vaJua. London's buli:lzauen and others
of the lunch crowd actuaUy 1alher at
pla"" like Ule pub called The Two
Brewen to dance to Sammy'a nu&iic and
that al his peers. '1)
1be \\'Ol'ldem1ent or such a state of a(·
lairs 9hlna clearly \htOUlih Ule bright •
notes RbningtAlo (~ Rimm·
lngtGn) ud his lido .,., have put in10
Bell's album.
I
Any New Orleans j;:izz freak Y.ho hap·
pens to hear e\len ooe-any onc-<J( the
dozen cuts oo the 1002-playing album is
going to have to be impressed "Ith the
relenttess drive Ind perfect rhythm Rim-
ington and his British friends sustain,
particularly since the side men lncludc
no percussionists at all.
THERE ARE only four sidemen on 1hc
album and Ille one who deserve~ most of
the credit for that beat that hammer~
away as steady as a metronome is Allan
llltchie, the,. banjo player.
P.1ickey Ashman supplement.! the
rhythm beat on atring bass. bu! more
often bo\li"S lht _!~~s o( his bass to llc&b
out a mellow llVIMj that gives the Rim-
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ington offerings more .. humao voice"
qualily lha11 is usualJy found In m11Sic
dominated by the clarinet.
Andre\\' Finch on plano and Jim
l1ollnes as trumpet man fan onty t'l't'O
cuts or the album-.. Onct.> in a Lifetime"
and "I Can't Bein to Tell You'°) round
out the combo. • •
As alread)' mentioned. Rimlngton gets
a mellO\\' sound from both his clarinet
and the alto .Sax. operating the clarinet
bolh In high and low registers \\·ith a skill
lh;ll \\'ould have mnde bis mentor, the
Int • (ieorge Ley.·is, proud.
'rhe Jackel blurb on the nlbum makes il
clrar that lthnlngton \\'llS careful in his
selection oJ tunes both to (lV01d com-
parison Y.ith his teacher and also to a\'old
\ •
the stercol)'P,C tunes of Di:<ieland Jazz.
The bluri goes on \d say .lbat
clarinetist 1Rimington achle\-es h I 1
particular brand of jau without resorting
tn the honking. squealing and wailing
that many artists seem l() ~ i1I lieu of
the lure of the "old standby" titles.
Riminglon makes It oo bis own. And he
makes it. as one-man f'tC(f'ding com-
pany lkll readily paints out, \toilhOut lbt
aid of a bus1oad of lechnlcians and balf a
million dollars \\'Orth of m1croph0ncs1 n1t:<ers and quadri·ple~ input~.
There are tZ tunes on the albu1n:
·~Allct Blue GoY.11.'' "Jlccausc of You."
''Them There Eyes." "I \Valked Into lhc
Garden." "1 \Van t )'ou: I Need You."
··0ncc In a Liretln'll!:." "I can't fk'gin
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Only 4 Bits
Bay Folks 1
I B~ownBag
TCIQ.Opera
SAN F'llA:XCISCO <UPI I -Opera fdr
lunch. Thal's the larcst musical portion
being served by ll?C San 1-'rancisco Opcr11
-and so far audien ces nre caring it up.
By rhe fourth of 14 "Brov.'n Bag
Operas" scheduled through the sprint .
the !.()()().seat vclerans auditorium y.·a~
sold out to a lunchtin1e crO\\'d \\'hich paiip
50 cents'\o Sl'C a -lf>.min ute performanat-
.~tost of the audience -"''hich range\I
fron1 a 2·year-old "·ho occnsionally CO!l)-
peled y.·ith the singers to eldC'rly
pensioners gelling opera at a price they
could afford -brought lunches and ate
them dur ing the shO\\', (
FOR THOSE \\'HO d1dri't. bag3 rcri:
taining a sandwich and a s1na\I box IX
raisins "·ere on sale for a dollar. • :
Kurt Herbert Adler. general director or
San fran{'isco Opera . s.-iid the ··idea is to
take opera to people y.•hile the}' are
relaxing and enjoying lhcmseh·es" and(()
give young local singers some perfonrl-
ing experience. •
He said ··nroY.11 Bag Opera" \\'a.A
similiar to progran\S conducted for manf
~ars in Europe. especially at fft
festi1•als. and that he decided 10 go ahe~d
following the success of lunchli"*
chamber 1nusic concerts in l\fil\\'&ukee
~ind illinneapolis. ,
The singers ordinarily perform for
other programs of the Sa n Francisco
Opera. The}' receive · their regular
salaries plus a p('rformancc fee . I ;
"IT'S /l.1A11'1..Y for the experience at;
out of good Y.ill .'' said Martha ,\hmro1 Brown Bag coordinator. ..They spe04I
many long hours in rehearsal witho
any compensation."
Programs include rarely perform«t
one-act operas -such as l\lozart°s "Ttie
hnpresario" and l\fenolli's · 'The
Telephone" -excerpts centered around
themes such as ]Ol'e or wealth, and
sessions dealing with the oostuming.
makeup and other backstage aspccts ol
opera .
.. Ifs loo early to tell what is the most
popular," ~tiss ;.~1unro said. "But the au-
dience for our 'operatic love-In,' love
scene Oucts dofie in a concert format
without any staging, really loved it. \Ve
\\·ere a little surprised but perhaps the
sirilplcr it is. the more people like it."
The progra1ns were designed to be
"casual, easy to diges t opera" which
\\'OUld appeal to those who might not
othcru·ise see opera , she added .
'THE AUDIENCf:S ha,·e also be<-n a
surprise to ~liss ~tunro -both in their
dil'el"Sity and the distan.ces they've come.
·'J really e:ii:pectl'd that in the beginning
v;e'd see nothing but old sccrc1aries from
the government offices uround civic
center." she said. "But there haYe been
fairly equal numbers or men and v:omen.
\Ve've had lawy•rs from Ille financilll
district. \\'Omen from the suburbs and
school groups from out of tOY.11."
The Civic Center was selected for the
first 14 performances because il s p..1ucity
of good shops or restaurnnts leaves
\\'Orkers in the area Y.'ith little to do at
lunch -and because vc t e r ans
audilorium is right nl!:-:t door to the war
memorial opera hou se.
BUT TllE NEXT series 0 r
performances y.·jlJ be stagl'd in· parks
around IOY.71.
.. \re·re firm ing up dates for a series or
free. all outdoor performances in June,
July and August." she said.
The coslc; of the current series y.·ere
paid by a donation. but Atiss ~\lunro said
sol«M>ut concerts actually showed a small
prollt.
"At this point. .,...e·rc hoping it will
snov;ball to tbc point u•here v.·e can have
our ov.il roster or artists. obtain our ou•n
rehearsal spate and J)Qrfonn ycar-
round.
"\Ve've proven that no matter what
iormat you put opera in. people love it
enough to come." •
London
to Tell You."' "Somelhing·s Going to
Give ~le AY.ay," "\Vhcn Jesus Comes."
"'Ibree Uttle \Vords," .. llis Eye is on the
Spuro"•" and "~tardi Gras."
FOW' of. them \\-Cre recorded in a living
l'OOnl wbict.--belie\'e it or not---tumed
out to have better accoustlcs than the
rebeanal hall used for the rest of the
recording sessions.
Or. Bell Invites buyers ol the •Tbum to
decide which cuts are which.
The album can be ordert'd by mail
from Calilomiti COodor llecords, Boie
4364, t~e CA 92664. or by phone at
(7 14) 552-7493 !Background music played •
on the answering device's tape 15--v.hat
elso-Stlrrun,y lt\mlngton tootling out
!\'cw Orleans ja1i \\ilh his clarinet}. ..
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ol.den West Stages Dramatic ~wap Meet
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CHAMPAGNE SUPPER
. AND ,
' ··ART AUCTION
OoM, .Picasso, Miro, Tomab,
Kvller, Amen, 8t099,
and many, many others
ttro'lid.d b~,
rHE GRAttHIC A.RT ~llER/ES INC. OF LOS ANGflfS
A superb work ot orr will be oworded
Oi o door prize.
FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 1974
BALBOA PA Vil/ON
Preview and Coclctails 6:30
Supper 7,30
Auel ion 8:30
' .. PRICEr $7.50 Per'"9hion
(RtllfM1liotu limit.d to 200}
Mofl ,.J«YQfQi ,.,
Or""ll' C-1 Uniforian U.........,.d 0-h
1259 V".ctofto Sttfft
Coda Mesa, CrMik.nio 92626
fw Fwffter w-tian toll:
642.4819 M 545.8107
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-: .--..: 4 -••
K11 nlt'tt lriugl'r-lu1ppJ1 u11nMl11gf'rtt •hoot it 11ul rt.,r11 dn11! '
Tltl• S"turdn11II'•11n11r turn! I/ring I/fl Ur r11m1•rn nnd •ltJMt ..,.
g11n11/ing1•r11, 1111r f a1rn ,1/ ttrttfioll, riur ll•PPll l'rt1ttpttlor
~ 11 'hi/llf'•" nr I hr rt1lirf' fnrm!
11-,,'11/rr r111r l'hriln l>n.1 C'nrrl"t ,1/arrh 16!
/'/,l 'S! THIS trR&KJ.:.\°/J ...
RaZZr.1aTaZZ & IRIS~ JaZ~
Jr•11/tboord ,1/u1lrt1l .llad11f'tl1i.' Na::lr fJa::lt f}lxltlfllffl ,
1'hr Ori.1lnMI t'or ~I. P11fritk'1 I>•)'
HOOSIOR HOT S~oTs M1cKe'r Fi~~ Stien¥
Sot-Jlarrh II .')11n-,lfortll Ii
KRDTT'S m:nnY FARM '
ltUftll l'Mrk, t'n • OIM!n Unily ill IO 11.m. • ( 111) S'.!l·l 7Tii '
.
'n>e)'•re havtnc a swap meet from "Tbe IDdlan Wanll the
a( Goklea West College, Run· Bronx." At far left, below,
Ungton Beach , lhis weekffld Trish Landa.u and Bruce
and next. But,lt's 1 swap meet Jerlclau rehearse for the play ln drama and the UUe Is used
to d<scrlbe the mixed bag of "The Birdbalh." In the lhird
plays that will be presented. photo, Shelly Golden ~ prepar·
,Jo., lna: for bet aolo role la Ute • Alt the plays are ul one act play, •'Before Breakfast," and all are directed by students. nie plays present which will lit staged in both shows. new material, some of it writ· AdmWlon to one show Is $1
ten by sttxlents. with an Associated Student
lo tonlght's show the follow-card, fl.SO for those without a
lng plays will be presented : card. To set two shows, the "Birdbath," "Indian Wants charge is $1.50 with a student th4 Broru:," ' ' B e f o r e ,.. card and $2, without.
Breakfast." ''The Gift," and.1 1;========1
"The Qlairs." Saturday night
the pla~s will be "Monkey's
Paw ,'' ''Augustus, 1 '
"Enrybody Has 0 n e , ' •
"&Jore Breakfast, 11 • • B I g
Deal," and ''Tomb lt May
Concern." I
TbOse !hows will b e
repeated FrJday and Saturdayt
Marcb 22 and 2!.
In lhe photo at left , Will
Walker, Don Shagam and
Harvey Hand, are ln a scene
in the l1f.UijijB1ll
--· •11MOWWHITI
~ ~ Ice
skating
everyday.
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MISA YHDI
SHOPPIN• Cl!jTH
...,.,., & ..... c ....... ...
Tel. 11141 t7t .... O ·
CAULIFLOWER
29 c llG ' HEADS ..... _.,_
I • I --·-BELL PEP"RS I oc ,_
-645-0032
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AN EVENING OF CLASmCAL GUITAR
• SATURDAY, ~ 23, 8:00 P.M.
'Angel, RCA. and recOrdinl artist
Manuel
Lopez
Ramos
Finl in a series or four Internationally acclaimed
clauical and Oamenco IUitarist& and lutenists will perform works by 'Bach, Wels1, Granadol, Cutelnuovo-Tedesco, Duarte and otben. ''Tbi1
mU5lclan is of the race oi the great." llicbel
Louvet, Le Guide du Concert. Paris.
0J?li/'l'A BEACH !UGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM ~ERAL ADM_ISSION $3.75, SERIES $14.
• 'ncket.s now on sale at The Guitar Shoppe, 1027 N.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, or at any Mutual or
Liberty agency. You may place yow"order by mall
or telephone. Please call The Guitar Shoppe (714)
497·2110 for more information.
642-4321 Direct or Col~ect
to subscribe to the Dally Piiot
YOUlt Hometown Community Newspaper
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-FROM Fash ion Island
' Newport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR"
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DAILY PILOT 21$
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Museum on Film ' George Sandwi<:hes Good Food
..
Bowe rs Of fers Art Film Series
The critically acclaimed film concert series "!.1useum
Without Walls" will begin at 2 p,m, Sund•y, April 21, at Bo.t'::u~a~.00ie~ ~: :;,·;e~~ s~:inure color mo-\
, I I ,
At Three O,range County Sit~s
I
lion picture1 is the first in the series of 11 films which will
be oUered in five weekly programs.
' THI! flLM SERIES also ~u be o!lered on Wednesd~y
·and Thursday evenings beginning at 8 p.m. April 24 and 25.
The series was produced by Universal Studio's Education
and Visual Arts departineni under the art supervision or in·
temalionally known art blstorian Dougl.., Cooper.
~parked by a growing national interest in the 'arts, the
series has created a unique art museum on film. \Vhile trans-
portation and insurance costs make it difficult for the con·
ventlonal museum to display a large ,number of great works
the medi.Um of film creates a musef without such limita-
tions.
• Ti:tE METROPOLITA~ MUSEUM or Art in New York and
the Los Angeles County A!useum ·of Art joined with private
collectors and museums both here and abroad to give pro-
duction teams access to their great works of art.
In the first film or the series viewers will see Picaiso
at worho in his studios in A1ougins and Cannes. The artist.him·
self displays some paintings from a ~roup of 500 not yet
shown to the public. .
French (ilm djrector Lucien Clergue photOgraphed and
helmed "Picasso: \Var. Peace and Love" Visiting 22 museums,
seven galleries and 11 private collections to give viewers a
deeper perspective on the artist's work than ever before. cov·
ering Picasso1s output from Guemica to two years before his
death. •
"Goya," a 55-minute 1notion picture featuring the Span-
ish artist's major works in 1.-Iadrid's Prado Museum, will be
screened with the Picasso film.
HIGHLIGHTS OF GOYA'S work include portraits of rov·
ally and friends. etchin~, the bullfight sequences. the frescoes
at the cathedral at Salagossa and the Church of St. Anthony.
and the "black paintings" from the walls of his own house.
Oth~r films in the series are "Giotto and the Pre-Renais·
sance." "The Cubist Epoch." "Crete and A1ycenae," "The Im ·
pressioniSts." "Kinetic Art in Paris," "Le Corbusier." "Ger·
manv-Dada." "The Art G,onservator" and 11The Greek Tem-
ple.''
The Bowers Museum will offer the five two-hour pro-
grams in sequence, with admission for adults $2.50 and for
students with current identification $1.50. Series ticket pri ces
are SlO for adults ·and !6 -for t;tudents. Call the Bowers
h-1useum 8344024 !or program and ticket infonnation .
Philadelphia looms large in our coun-
try's early history. And Americans
everywhett take pride in the "Cradle of
Liberty'' with its familiar annals of the
ConUnenlal Congress, Jndl'pendence llall
and the Liberty Bell. er focusing Of) this parlicular legacy.
thoUgh, many people may have overtook·
ed another contribution Philadelphia baa
made to our daily li\ies. While it has no
bearing'oo personal tfeedom. it does pro-
vide an appreciable measure of pleasure.
This happens to be a couple ol
sandwiches.
ruE fJRST IS an to.spired concoction
knoY..11 as !be hoagie. It is a kind of
Degv;ood IBu.mpstead) sandwich calling
for a large but rompatible quantity of in-
gredients. The other is a steak sanch~'ich
l\ilSS IO N ...
I From Page !3 I
will be a children's pct contest at the
same park. Critters generally include
snnkes, chickens. dogs, cats . goats and
horses -many decked oot in costumes
to match their masters.
Thursday's romi.eUtlon focll'ieS on
storefront decoration and oo March 22,
"Sheriff' Al Jimenez "'ill launch his an·
nual roundup or un-costumed citizens Jn
San Juan.
THE '"OFFENDERS" had belier c:t·
pect a short stay in the downlO\.\'n
hoosegow and a nominal fine for their
release.
Parades. bfeakfasts. and a hnal salute
to the Fiesta Association president arc on
tap for the final weekend of the festival.
The major parade leading along
Camino Capistrano from the mission to
Del Obispo Road st.arts at l p.m. Marcil
24. The woman·s club breakfast precedes
the parade from 7 to 11 a.m. at the
downtown c\ubhquse:.
The president's salute dinner dance j
open to all revelers stfrts.at 7 p.m. the
same day at El Adm, Sunday's activities i~c\ude n trail ride
ror horsemen who ·wi I savor the scenery
or Rfiltcho Mission iejo.
rfje life .;ie~e [ TEMPLE GARDENS
556-0556
FRENCH CUISINE I
Open 1 o~v• . I I :lo. •.m.-11 :00 p.rn.
LUNCH e DINNER
COCKTAILS
3800 S. Piiz• Drive
South _Coast VIiiage
!l·di ~cent fo So. Coe1f Pl.•1•1
.?/de ~'rot?llJ';fr' .~Jtftt.t1•tt11I
ENTERTAINMENT · ~ ' . I . ·"''
NIGH'TlY
SUNDAY
IRUNCH
Aho o" Su"'d•v
JAMAICAN
STEEL IANO /1
J{J / (.J r;z,.y:.~y1'/le,,
• ./1;1~1·1•l .'!41'rtc!l {/7.J~q777
Open 7 Duys
W ... hrs: ll:JO A.M. t.11 P.M.
Fri. -s.t. 1 l:JO A.M. t. 12:30 COCKTAILS
~: 4:00-12 MIDNIGHT
909l E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911
MICllSll
f AMILY MEXICAN REST AlJRANT
"OUR MEAU ARE
lf ·TRIP TO MEXICO."
• COC'KT AlLS •
lt6 &. t'?fH ST .• •llLLC:kEN SQ. COSTA MB$<"\ • (714) 64S·1f)6
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ctJINas:B Res tm1ra11t
RICKS HA
COCKY.AIL
LOUNGE
~-~•!\.'JI•
Featuring E . ..:oti c
Troplcnl Drinks
Luncheon & Dinner Daily
I SCIO ADAMS (9' H11d11w l
COSTA MESA
540.1 937 540-1923
Afld, I• hfdefl G,..•
12201 llOOICHUIST
IAt a.p..11) 'll·7020
' LUNC HEON SE RVED DAILY
From 11 :00 A.M.
Dl t'-IN~R SERVED UNTIL 8:00 P.M
Monday and Friday
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#1 FASHION ISLANO
NEWrORT CEl'jTER
644·2200
prepared in a way ~'holly native to
Philadelphia. I
Neither or these taste treaLS llas been
wtknown In Orange County heretofore.
But familiarity ls growing along \\ilh a
chain of food establishments hereabouls
known as George's. In these spots it's
both a house specialty and obsession to
sen-e the bona fide hoagies and steak
aandwtchcs native to Philadelphia .
1be name ol these restaurants sterns
from owner George Madi.a.mer, \\'ho bas
just opened his thlrd location in Santa
Ana. Goorge was bom and raised in
Philadelphia bul came to canrornia
several years ago with a determination
to spread the good \\'Ord on hoogics and
steak sandwichc.1.
In addition to the new Santa Ana edi·
lion at 5th and Euclid Streets, there are
l'ol'O Gorge's in ~ta l\tcsa at 507 W. 19th
St. and 1518 Baker St. All three plares.
'ol"hich hul'e both dine in and take oot
facilities. are open dail~·. 11 a.m. to 9
p.m .. l\1pnday through Saturday .
NO\\' BACKING UP George in the ex·
panded operation is the Ill'\\' general
manager. Roxann Henderson. one or the
area's most savvy fema le restaurateurs.
A 21}.ycar veteran in lhc buMQ..ess. Rox·
ann was most recently in manlrgement
positions at !he l\1itfa r..fe x: i c a n
restaurants and Howard 's Hacienda prior
to taking her present post.
The origin of the hoa~ic -and the
derivation of the name -goes back lo
\\'orld \Var II and !he IIB !ian "·orlonen
building shil)!I oo !log Island near lhl'
Philadelphia Nav~' Yard . As a large and
easily portable feast , it immediately
gained popularity with its potential for
occasional snacking through long "·ork.ing
hours.
In the accurate recreation ·or the
Philadelphia original served· at George's.
you'll receive a stacked afrair consisting
of substantial quantities of ham. bologna.
salami. cheese. lelluce, tomato, onioios
and a special dressing, all served 'On a
French roll . It co1ncs in three sizes -
regul nr, super µ.nd giant -[or. rcspec·
lively, $1.29, $1.79 and $2.49.
George's also ha\'C five variations on
the basic hoagie. Olfercd in the sa1nc
496-5773
Out 'n About
Norman Stanley
s~. ~at pretty nlllCh the ~me
prices. art cheese, ham . shnmp.
clam a tuna.
OITl'O TJlE ~·real" Philadelphia steak
sand'ol1ch wherein tt.'flder and thin sliec1i
of steak are fried on a grill "'ith
Bermuda onions and St'r\'t.'d on a Frtnch
roll. Variations on this sand"ich nre
cheese. bell pepper. n1ushroon1, steak
ho.1gic a~ sauce steak.
Depending on your appcnte. select the
sandwich of the right size :ind you'rl'
guaranteed a [ult 1ncal-in·itsclf -for
lunch Qr dinner. But you C:tll, if you \\'ish.
augment your sand11•ich meal 1vith one of
the a la carte selections like French
fries. ~t1do salad or lossl..'CI green salad.
' Georiie·s should be especially appealing
to families \.\'ith a number of s1nall but
hungry stomachs to satisfy.
TllE lt:L.Ai"\O SCOTT SllO\\" -"'ith
Bounty -110\\' apjl('aring :it Del \\'ebh·s
:\cwporler Inn rigurcs to IX' one of the
;irea·s top t.1ltenainm cnl bets throui:h
,\prll 27. That"s the scheduled closing
nighl for I.his fine aggregation currently
on tap, .~londay through Saturday. 8:30
p.m. ! to I :30 a.ni .. in the Ncwpone.r·s
Lido Lounge.
Unlike Englebert llumperdink. Leland
Stanford Scott II rs name ill not con-
trived. And judging by critical acclaim
and audience reaction toward this yoong
singe r-composer's indi vidualized style of
music. his talent isn't cootrivcd either.
Scott's vocal abilities have the capacity
to engage an audience's e1no1ions at all
Je\'cls. This steins frotn his sc lcctjon of
conte mporary rock music t'Ombincf v.'i!h
a 1nclodic b::1rilone voiCe. '
499-2626
harn1on1ca. piano. guit:tr. trumpet and
sings a "·ide variety of fa1niliar roc\.:
songs. All wilh equal case and coni·
pctence,
SCOTI' llAS a('h1cvcd !Otnething othe r
contemporary Pn tertnincrs should direct
their cnergil'S tov.·ard ·-a style that
scpar.nes him fron1 other performers
and Uwt has 1he brooid<'SI public appeal
Bom in Oakland. Sroll is a n1ember of
one of the statc"s 1nost pro1n inent
families. llis grandfather \\aS n.1:1med
artcr Governor l.elund S1.<1nrord. the
rullroad tycoon and a close family friend .
Scott says no one in hi s family wanted
hini to bct..'Omc a musician or performer.
lie persisted. lfis nrs\ musical in·
srrumcnt was a plastic ukulele thal he
boughl \.\"ilh moocy earned rrom a Cub
Scoot ric.,.;spaµcr drh·c.
HE PRACTICED continually ;ind 9000
pl"ogre~d to the guitar. llis talents
earned hi1n a p:-in ·timc job at one of San
Francisco's mo!>1 popular nightclubs. the
Off·Broad\.\•ay. TI1ere he later performed
opposite Lenny Bruce for many months.
A bad automobile accident served as a
turning point and opened a Tie\\. racel in
Scott 's carrer. \\'hile recouperaling in
Palm Springs. he began >ATiting songs
\\·hich Jed to a ll\'0-year songwriter .. s con·
tract \\"ith t.fCA
Scott's show is ably biacked by a
dynamic group called Bounty. Ridwrd
Freeman plays lead gui tar. Richard
Garcia entertains on the organ and
doubles on the trun1pet. Ed Haver ty
takes care of the ocrcussioo in. .. truments.
and ti-like Smart p·lays bass when he's not
sliding the valve trombone.
THEY'UGIU.T-DtFNllNT '""""""'-'· YtllT FASCIHATIHG, utflqullNTUTAIHMIHT
FACI LITIES FOR PRI VATE P.4,RTIES
IN THE NEW
GARDEN COURT
l•"Y Fii. -5 to 7
SEAFOOD
Sr'l:CIAL CATCH
y...,.,. Sell~ Wi<e Sole, H'llOul,
A9<I s.._, "'"" ~. D<ffll5 Pf>l••Ofll.~
E•"YSAT.-5ta 7
PllMI l•
DIHHEll
NOW: ENTERTAINMENT 7 MITES
lrande lrondoR Duo, Tue.-Saf.
Marsh Shi!nibtott
Su•. & Mon.
32102 COAST HWY.
Ill Crewfl Y•lle:Y "•r'kw1y)
LAGUNA NIGUEL
We invite you lo dlsco-ver
our authentic New Orleans Creole food
14J12 Del Prada Hour•-_. .
kt11l1 be1in @ 4:00 rx1 Dani Polnl
Oinntr 1erved from S:J-0 Pto.t fAc:ro11 fram lrook1ht. Wine'")')
tCI01ed Monday•I Phone: 714-41J.lt11
Watch For
PLANTATION BREAKFAST
Com ing Soon
Sundays 10 :30 A.M. to 2 P .M.
'
LELAND SCOTT SHOW WITH BOUNTY
Sllowtliwts: 9:30 P·"'· ..t 11 :JO p.m.
Ni9htly for dancing •nd entert•inm ent
It 's •II h•ppenint •t
1107 Jamboree Road, Ncwpon Beach
(714) 644· 1700
s4so ·-s1 ... w..
NEW
IN NEWPORT
THE FASHION ISLAND
VELVET TURTLE
, Join Us Sunday'
From 11.00 •.m.
For Our Full Service
SUNDAY BRUNCH
Every Entree Feature' ...
HOME BAKED ASSORTED ROLLS
FRESH FRUITS -CHAMPAGNE
& FRESHLY SQUEEZED JUICES
I EGGS BENEDICT . OMELETIE CARUSO
FILET MIGNON OSCAR AND
OTHER GREAT BRUNCH SELECTIONS '
0,.EN DAILY 11 :00 ,.,M.
Lunch Served to 5 p.m.
Dinner Served From 5:00 pm.
LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT
59 Fashion lsl•nd
Newport Center Drive We,t
NEWPORT
BEACH
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,18 DAILY PILO I .. Frldil)', March 15, 1974
Rollo May Plans 1· . . , I
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Chapman Lectur~
Dr. Rollo May, N!nown<d
rYcboanalyat and author, will
fpeak al I p.m, Sunday In
(,'hapman College's Memorial
!fall Auditorium, 333 N.
1..,.ll St., Orange.
Bl'OU8hl to the campus by
fte college,'21 current Artist-
Lecture Serles which features
the theme 11'llle Future1" May
will address the audience· on
the subject ol "The Future of
HumanlsUc Psychology."
May has written humerous
books and arUcles. Among his
books are "Art of Counseling,"
"The Meaning ol Anxiety,"
'1Man's Search for Himself,"
"Psychology and • the Human
Dilemma" and "Love and \Vilt... 1
His journal articles Include
"Historical Roots ot Modem
An•lety The o r lel!I.''
"Psychotherapy. Religion, and
tbe Development of Selfhood"
8nd "'lbe Nature of Creativi-
ty."
May currently resides in
New York where he Ls a prac-
ticing psycboanalyst. He holds
prof811IOllll polillolil• with the
William Al.... W h It e
Jlllltlll,t d ~lair)', p,y.
~I. 1¥"1 · PsychoaDalysis
~"!''York Academy of
PSYCHOANALYST
Ori Rollo Miy
tyrlYale University, Princeton
University, New School 1or .,..
Social Research and Ntw NPW FU.lUllN• · 1
l DAVID & LAURIE York University. He Is ,a ''--· ••Ir., Yec•t.
feUOw of the National Councll · foll! • led • StwMrd. D•N•
cantonese Faed
••there or
lokti.o-
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
OR!oii J.'560
SllDAY BRllCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
I ' ~N~Urr PACIUTIU
•
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,,.. I P.M.
U.Clle•• •
11·•
ll7 PACIPIC COAST HWY.
HUNTtN•TON llACH
536-2.555 of Religion in Higher F.dUCI· ,..., , ..,. ht.
!Ion and the A m ' r'l'c a )J ''!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Psychological ABlcicia"'-1. 1-
'kets for May's 16cture ~ 1 i. !or adults and f2 for •!!l'l~""'!! ... !!!!1!!11111!!1111!1 Fils and IOIY·bi' ........ ed TH1--·F10MTHI ST tb..ugh the Coileg<'s Cultural n...,. Events ornce, en<> 11UB21, ~COME WIST! 1o
,. ..1. 300 ~·~~a.re.,.---._
C}i~r '.Play~~
He,llls been a vlslHng lec-
ture/ wilb Harvard Unlversi-
..... ,..., .......... ..
hi TueSday Concert-·'
LUNCH &·DI ... DAIL'Y ' ' ;~;~~~ .. 548~·-3301 .... 72 ~~;;. ~l. .• <;"Ir"'• ClJamber Players
will ililear ln concert at 1:15
p.m. "'he.day in Olapman
C.U.'1 Memortll 'Roll Audlii.riwn, 333 No. Gluselt
8t.,,Qrange. • I
The Otam6er Pilfers ~re
proleulonal IT\usldaN who
are members of the Chapman
faculty. The group was fonned
IJj' pianist Noiman Thompoon
la 111'1 to , brtpg additional
diomber mualc performance
to °"""' County. Jobljng the 111l1tant
jll-d llllllc, ore Dntd
Maqettl, violin, lnltructor ol.
llllllic; Dr. l'l'bomu llall, -· ..-.i. pror.,.... .. _, and Robert -.
vloloacello, Instructor 0 r
m,.lc.
OIAN .. eovtm"S ;,.
at••at IT. PADDY-r-
• DAY CILDIATION
TWO llG DAYS
Sot., Morch 16
Sun., Merch 17
Continent1t Cuisine
Cockt1l11
S1:nnng ·
Lunehton and Dinner
Alondo11 through Satutdaw
C!~sed Sundays
We •r• loc•ttd next tQ
the May Co. in South
Co1lt Plata
JJJJ s .......
140°3140
SP01J'l'IR SILOOI
W1terl'ront Fl'l'Ol'tce of
Old wt.Im, Sdo"
.... -<lit lllppm
ENTERTAINMENT
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l'nlgr !or the0 evenlq ut
eludes Beethoven'• ''Trio !or
Vlollil, CeDo,lllld PlfDO In D maJor, ~ 70, no ... :· Zoltan
KDd81y's "Duo for VIOiin and
cello tw.-7 '' and Brahm11
PARTY ORDERS 9 , ii ..., . . Z574Ho"'°"~Ceft.... .... j 4,
• ..... }.J::'1'-. ' '
"....,Kt !or Violin, Vlola,1'iii;;;;;Oiiiiii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0iii0jiiiiiii0iii0iii0. ;i;( :;;;;;--~ill Cello, and Pjaoo in A ma1or,111"
0pua·1&." 1 · : ·-0 d Is New Today
Ad.mission to the pt:rform-
:~ab1~ a~1: ~~~~ ,C::
the College's Culwral Eveqts
Office, (7H) 13W121, .. t: Ill.
' TOUINIDOS C?F
Rt·li•• iht "6oo4 Clef D•v1"
with Cyr•11o's t'•w/Old
NICKELODEON
Dt1teh1g I fnftrftinm•nt
Nlghtly In T~e Lo1111ge
CONTINENTAL CUISINE
AT THI! l'ASHtoH ISLAND HIDEWAY
Dl1111•r e Mo11.-Stt. e lu11ch e Mon.·Fri.
l•1qu.tt •f •fllfi., e ,,,., .... P'trfl••
" -· _c-..... ..,,...,,__ ........ •
"UT MIGNONr •
S•u'• Mtd•itt
Tepp.d with l11r111ite
'
r - - -·~chin;; cw7m";° I
I J'1r' Orient8I Cocktail Loooge , I
A'.MOH• JO
SILICT
DIHHll INTlllS
VINA
HAIMER
DUO
Entert1hli11t
J.IM •oa Featurtna Trop1p.1 Drinks I tmlC!!l . 'TOR Miu:s i
. PREPARED WITH I 1\' ff-lo PARTICULAR CARE' I
0"9H DAILY 11 AM · Mt• PM CLOllD MOllDAT
ml .. -ii "!-~ · 1t-·1
f~...lc PBONE •• ;_.64S-SS50 I
I '·'"<, -.'.H t BAST ·l7TH .... COSTAMllSAI 1..---~----~.~-.; .
,t?..3~ M~ile.; .. ;· ~0YeDI ..
•
offers PAST and HOT PIZZA, 1>e1moea1oyourdoort
DELIVERY HOURS
S·lD P.M. SUN •• THUR: e S.12 P.M. FRI •. & SAT.
410 · E. 17th St.
,COSTA MESA .
646-7136
"Eating out"
~ nee
Dining 8t the N
not ,
dinirig!
Is a totally pteasu ble experience. Excellent
cuisine, ranging rom our superb Reck of Lamb
to Salmon S in· 5alaa Verde,
painstakingly od by our Eumpeon·
trained chefs. A wine ltst of dlltinction to
oomptamtnl yourenlrM. And, In an I
•'"-'-GI oontlnentat ot-llnmltch9d for......, enjoyment
Dining i• Tiie Marine Restaurant at
~,DuWta-.
1t07Jlm--. m~BolCll/714·1144·1700
ALIO, THI UllO LOUNGE/THE WINE CEllAll/-lllTllO/lHE CHELSEA BAA
........ 11111aO.,llM
COll'ID IW • CAllAH
ST. PADDY'S DAY BRUNCH
11o•,...·--17 .... , .... ~"
1712 Placentia -Cotta Mosa -548-9203
Donel"' Hitefy To
llUY&
'"' 0000 OUYJ --THI
M01 ·
MEADOWLARK
COUNTRY CLUB
ORANGE COUNTY'S
TOP , ENTERTAINMENT
JOE 1 LIGGINS
The Origln•l "Honeyclrippers"'
BACK AT THE
t.ARK ROOM
with
WIWE JACKSON
Wldn1sdoy thru Sunday
'
l111qu1t F1cilltle• ~P to '450 P1opl1 . ' 1671% aU.HAM AYINUI IAt W.,.,1
ttUNTIN•TON llACH 17141 i4•·1116 IJIJJ Sjz.Jt14
In Sunday's Family Weekly:
1 •• t ~
·Plii Loud Wrlies on Lpt'e and Dl~ori;e:
Marriage, American Style
''Wha''" the mailer with w, 4'nywa:Y? Why ,ore 10
many peopk 10 di.Jsalis~tl wilh their marr&Oge,s? Why
. do tlfe .noeet 1/ do's.' oj our yol/Jh lu~n inlo the outragtd
1/ u.J,n. 'ti'' of middk age?" _q.
Pat Loud achieved fame in the educational·tele·
vision series, "An American Family." The ·Louds
broke up as the cameras rolled. And millions of
American s and Europeans observed the disinte-
gration of her marriage.
In a coyer story written especially for Family
Weekly magazine, Ms. Loud probes the causes for
the failure of her own "very, vary good marriage"
and poses some thoulh\·prOYOking qu~ions
about the reasons why more than 36 percent of
U.S. marriages end in diVOfC8,
• STARS TIU FIAIS -Just to i:irove 1~dt "start" ore
hurmn, 100, seven of tMt eniertoi"1T1ent world's be~t known
cetebrllies reveal t~ir Inner~! leors.
• .ITH 'S~' -Television actor David
· Hortman shores l~anl facts ond prO(edures he leort1ed
about c'hildbirth while filming the TV spec.iol, "Birth ol'ld a.~ .. :· I -
All Coming Sunday With The
I DAILY PILOT I
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TV DAILY lOG
7:•
Friday
Ev.ni1111
llMICHlf
SoturJay
Morni1111
KOiCE TELEVISION LOG
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WHAT TO D01
.·
' ' . Nikola~ Danc~rs at· UCI J;onigh.t
MARCii U.11
DANCE CONCEIIT -Nlkolail Daoce 'l'be.oltt, spOoaod by
UCI Committee !or Arts, will perform in !be Fine Arts VI~
lqe at I p.m. Friday and Saturday, Mattb 15 and ll. TlcUta
at $3.~. avallable from Comm!Uee for Arts, UC ltvlne.
F• lulormatlon call Fine Arts Box Ollice (nt) ~17.
MARCH 15-ll '
DRAMA WORKSllOP -"1be CUrve" by Tantred Dorst1 di-
1'!Cled by junior druna major Jonathan Greenman, and
"Chamber lluJlc" by Arthur Koplt, dlrect<d by joDior drama
'major Reoee Stoddard, ii s]>Oll!Ol'td by UC! School ol Fine
Arta. Performances take place at I p.m. Friday aod Satur-
day, March 15 and 11, In !be Fine Arts Studio Tbe.oltt, UC
Jnlne. Admiloloo 11 ~ cents.
MARCH II
CllOLU.E CONCERT -Irvine Muter Chorale will per-
lorm with !be San Difeo Youth Symphony at I p.m. Friday,
Man:b 15, and t p.m. Sunday, March 17, at Phillips Hall ,
SUia Ana College, 17th and Brlatol Streets, Santa Ana. l'rl>-
gr1111: ''Stabat Mat«" by Francis Poulenc and "Oliohester
Palarnl... nctets, whlcb are not included in the Master
Olorale sea900 tickets, $2.50 for adults and $1 for students.
No reserved aeating. Information, MS-6049.
MARC81H4
ORANGE SHOW -The National Orange Show will take
place· March 14-24 in San Bernardino, from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
-keods and from ,_ Ill mhln!Clll -Mtays. General ad·
mlssloo, fl.50 and -....... u. '/5 ......
llAllCll 11
DAGIJERll£0TYPB DAX,_t-Kllott'I Bony F1m1 •noual
pllola contest for ..,.....,. bd profeuloaoil wilh Knott's
tbeme and modda. ' MAROI .II ,
CHORAL OONCBRT -"ltalieliaches t..iderbuch" by Hugo
Wolf will be performed by slt pro(essiooal •lnc«t aetom·
panied by pianist Laureoce Gordon. s)JOllSOn!d by UC! Scl>ool
of Fine Arts. Fine Arts V'lllqe 0oncett Hall, UC Irvin<.
I p.m. Satunlay, March I~ .
llARCll ..
LOS ANGELES PlllLBAllMONJc; -· 'n!e Oranie ~ty
Pbilbarmonlc Society pretetlla the llslo PhllbarmonJc Orcbe,.
'tra 1n cooetrt, wlUI p...nm Jens Harald BraWe, at 1;30 p.m.
Saturday, March 11, in the crawtird Hall, Ortull• <:out
UC Irvine. lnlonnatlon, llM41L
MARQl17
PIANO CONCERT -Program by llicbael Sanden, UC!
lecturer in music. Sponsortd by School CJ.' Fine Arts. It takes
place 8 p.m. Sunday, March 17, in the Fir.:e Arta VIiiage Con·
cert Hall.
MARCii IO
DANCE LECl'URE -Alwin Nikolai! will brlng his Nlltolais
Dance Theater to Orange Coet O>llege for a master modern
IN THE GALLERIES
OCC Exhibit,s Gren Vilppu Paintings
OCC ART GALLERY -Ol'ange Coast College, 2701 Fair·
view Road , Costa Mesa. Paintings by Glen VUppu , fonnef"
ly of· Otis Art Institute and the Los Angeles Art Center.
Hows: Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
UCLA -Wright Art Galleries. Africa., Art in Motion, fea.
....., turing more than 200 worts of African sculpture, fiber, iron,
Ivory, belds, {Ra.Ski, furniture and costumes through March
17. Admlsskm, $1.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE LIBRARY -157t4 Golden West
Collec,e, Huntington Be&dJ. Paintings and dra'lrings by stu-
dents al Tom llawtlas and Paul Donaldson, throqb April 15.
lloun: lllonday through Friday, II a.m .. 3 p.m. Wednesday,
7-9 p.m. lloun: MF•Y through 'n!ursday, 7:30 a.m..to
.p.m.; Friday, 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m. and Sunday, 1·5 p.m.
.NEWPORT HARBOR .ART . MUSEUM -2211 W. Balboa
Blvd., ~ewport Beach. Paintings, drawings and prints by
Peter Bodnar, Czechoslovakian-born but raised in Flint,
Mich., will be oo exhibit March 20-April 21. Newspace Post-
Object elhibitioo. will take place through April 21. New.
space, fonnerly Orange County-based artists' gallery, ii now
localed in Loo Angeles. Three artists will participate in !be
elhibltim by offering performances Bradley Smith, 7:30
p.m.-March 22; Margaret Wilson, 7:30 p.m. April 2, Bar-
bara Smith, 7:30 p.m. April 9. Videotapes of the perlonn-...C. and other videotapes may be ...., throughout !be ex-
hibition. Hours: Tuesday Uwougb Sunday from nooo to 4
p.m. and Fridays, from 6 to I p.m. '
NEWPORT HARBOR ART ~IUSIMI -22ll W. Balboa aw.,
Newport Beach. Exhibition of one of America'• molt im-
portant New York Abstract Eqnssionist painters, Mart
Rothko. In the Entrance Gallery, Robert Inrin'1 tr' Disc,
a gift of Mr. and Mrs. John Kelley ol Lquna Beach. lloun:
Tuesday through Sunday, fnim noon lo 4 p.m. and Fridays,
6-9 p.m. Ftee docent tours, Tlxlrsdays from noon to 4 p.m.
Closes March 20.
UC IRVINE -Art Ga Uery, F'me Arts Vlllace, UC Irvine.
Piece constructed especlllly for !be Art Gallery by Loo
Angeles artist Larry Bell, former UC! faculty member.
Hours: Tuesday-Friday, noon-4 p.m. and Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
NEWPORT SCHOOL Oi' PHOTOGRAPHY -37211 Cam(lWI
Drive, Newport Beach. "Silent Ec;hoes," an exhibit of 54'
prints by Dr. Dooald L. Huntsman, photographer and a.-.
tor, is on exhibit through ·~tarch !~April 15. Hours: Wedaes-
day 10 a.m . .f p.m. and Saturdays. 1-5 p.m.
EYE'S ART GALLERIES -1<16 S .c.o.tJlwy., Laguna
Beach. Ship paintings on wood by Frank llikul, through
March; "Jazz Singer" 1eries by George Michaud on allibit
at the South Coast Vllllge gallery, Santa Ana .
MARINERS SAVINGS AND LOAN -1515 Westdifl Drive.
Newport Beaob:. Oils ot Orange Coast view* by W~
Winloo Smith ol Newport Beech through March.
TlicW:t, Mi1tth 15, llf74 DAILY PILOT f7
• •
'
. '
-..., 111 p.m. ~y1h .. -Sllldio I on campus. A lecture.otmonstraUon will take ,place at 7:30 p.m.
Wrdoelllay lo •Ille Newpart )larbor Art Museum High School
Alldltorlum, 00 llld lrfiJ\e ~ Noo(llli lleaclL Ad·
mlalonfree.
~ \ JIAROI ll·lt
BAat'S llmTBDAY -UCU4 ee6tAK P• llllrillt1' ._.lir'tfl.
day with a music festival. ~ cwatl ~ -with
harps cblnliltlGlpci& AnU., ....... -.· hi: SM.50. MAJICIUS
SUR.RE.UJl'I' n:LM NIGllT -: •!(Ia a.. 1+•" (tlt8)
Lllls BoMel _. &alv .... Dall~ surrealiatlc fihn U. ".luliet
ol &he·Spirlla''• '*'), l'~i'• •·· liWle m. •Nut• wom-
1111 aJ>IW'llldlial -.. e. -. IMe ~ al a p.m. in !be FOlUlll, OCC .,._, 2'111 FAirview RoM. C--..
llllA RCll a.a<
TWO CONCE&Ti -t-. IMoe -Cberole will 9tt'
sent two Saa Dif9t Me.a COllCf:rU a'ilh tJae Su Oie11 Yowth
, Symphooy al I p.m. SaWrday. llarcll 23. at Ille c:.u.ge
Avenue BipUs&-<hwcll md ..,aiD at f p.ra. ~, Matth
24, at the San UU Rey Missiml near OceaoUde. Lou Caln·
plaUa will -and the _..,. •-DI -· Ille Sym· pbooy ill a Verdi ov..-wre and !be C>orale and ~y
performing "Stabal Mal<r" 1>J! f'raods """1m< aad .. C!ti.
chester Psalma" by 1-ard Jlemsl<in. For fllrlller inlonn-
atk>o. write MJ lrvloe Muter Cl»raJe P .0. Box -074. ImDe,
Ca. 92164 or call ino MMD49.
-· -S'49't''"J _
' .. • ~ !,;.1'-'-' -·-·
.-------1
' ... IU.Y TWO "ATT" , .. ., ...,...:11 .... ,,. ,,..,,,,,..,,.
a.acru euia. • a&.v.r '" ........ , ..... u ----0 ·~ ~·-·~ .. ''4lllf ... '"'L.o~D ..,;...-r~. ~· ":.;-;;;(.,.
ti W 15• TU 1119
NLO OVEIT
,.,._ ?OfCWC!a awww••W .-1 ww....-P1IM::t5
S.1/51111 l»>l:-.JdO+ll:ll
•11LL Y TWO HATS" ...
"ELECTRA GLIDE IN 8LUE" (I)
.. IUSTING" ...
"WKR.E'S POl'tl'A" (&t
"JEREMIAH JOHNSON" (PG)
·~ .,.he TNll' Who C-l• DIMer"'
-.osEIDON ADVl.NURE* (G) ...
'1ft1'1\JNI f llCTOlt"'
. 'BLAZING SADDLES'. •
IS A TERRIFIC MOVIE ..
IT' WILL MAK!: YOU
LAUGH UNTIL YOU'RE
BLJJE IN TIIE FACE."
j GENE SH.t.LIT, NBC· TV
"'BLAZING SADDLES'
KEEPS AUDIENCES
BOWLING. FOR SHEER
MERRIMENT
·1 CAN'T RECOMMEND
A BETTER MOVIE."
KA THl.EE'tl <.AJttlOU.. --"f'M a.ly ....
" 'BLAZING SADDLES'
IS THE FIRST
REALLY FUNNY
WESTERN EVER MADE
... A TURNING POINT
IN CINEMA HISTORY."
" 'BLAZING SADDLEs'
IS LIKE LENNY BRUCE
DOING TIM McCOY."
10
ACADIMY
•f1~s·rs
A COMEDY RIOT. IF '
~··~ SHOWING TOGETHER ~
.' AWAlD, .NOMINATIQ,N
BEST PlcTuRE ~.:' .
El.1.l!'H llST ACTllSS • •uR1mt •
WIWAM • llST DlllCTOI • FRtEDKIH
..
MON., 'NU., WI ... ri.u.s. , ....... ~ ...... ,_., ,,_..,,..... ..
·fi26-11iM
SATUllDAY AND SUNDAY
9&20 •·"'· • 11 :•S-2:00-4:~:50
•••• 9 :20 -11 :50 •• :. • ••• ........ ••• 1:
: ~r ~ . ..•. 911••• ... 1: ~-,.~~~~lo•••;.-;,•:; ----··-•• -••'91..
(PG)
'
--------
Y 'RE LOOKING FOii UUGlllU,.
• . DON'T MISS m
Mii lreelu .... """'" ...... .,
fM f.,....i.tt M,....,I Cl• 1d5ft
11.wethe ~ ....
··-~-EW·"1
WINNER 5
ACADIMTAW
-INAT!ONS ....
LIV ULl.MAH IN
IMGMAR BERGMAN'S
CRIES 'ANO
WH15PER5
ll*'" LlLVI!'« -GEORGE C SCOTT.
•MIKE NICl«Jl.S ,.,,.
l!ll'nlE DAYA IXXJ'H\'N •ws ACTUAL I" FACT P:iNf>ING5
THE
&llATm
lDVlN1lll
OFESCAPEI
•
.I
!.
•
•
• •
'
•
• I
j
• I
!
•
* Frida~. Marci\ 15, 1q74
South Coast Repertory-
An Energetic Nine Years
Intermission
Tom Titus
1l's been nine full years nov.·
1ince South Coast Repertory
established I t s performing
company on th e Orange Coast
-but It seems much longer
when those yean1 a r c
measured in terms of arllstlc
impact
Looking back, as we are
Fc1n1dy T wrr1 Cinema
M~<'1 •4~T·
l "''' • o'I , 0
• l
CINEMA I
Robert Redl0<d
"JEREMIAH
I JOHNSON"
plus
'THE TlllEF WHO
CAME TO DINNER"
and
Do.etll' # slud
IPGI
--· "DON'T LO<*. NOW" ·Ill
m•
~nne WOodward
, Summer
Wishes, Winter
Dreams
... ,, ,,., i;;;;.iJ
Mf ... ,,., J.IJ, wt \!!!:!
...... $ ..... .__
''SAYI THI TI•ll"
.... ,,7 ... ,. ........... ,, .... ,
prone to do eaeh March 12
(the date in 1965 when lhe Sc-
rond Step Theater mounted its
first production ), we marvel
both at the prestigious steps
SCR has taken ond the sheer
volume of productions it has
mounted on the slages of its
two theaters -86 In nine
years. an average of nearly IO
per season.
Not all 86 of these offer ings
ha v e b ee n 'superior
achicvemenll of the quality,
say. of SCJt 's current al·
t~action. "The Taming of the
Shrew," but virtually all have
been instilled with the essen·
lial ingredient ..which has
perpetuated the company's
success -energy. At South
Coast Repertory, you put all
you\'e got into a show, and
then sonie.
NOW! TWO Of TNI lfST PIOUllS NOW!
Of THI YW ON ONE
PROGIAM
8 ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINAllONS!
I MARS HA MASON WILL NO DOUBT
G;:T T11;: n;~s'f ACTRESS oscAn! \
CO·STA RRING JAMES CAAN
·Dick Strout
Channel 13
Cinc.Wclla I l:ia •1 IRI CO.OR IY OOU)((~/PANAVISION" ~
A~D-
1,IV ULLMAN
IN
BEST PtCTUAE·BEST OIAECTOR
BEST SCREEN PLAY-JIEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
BEST COSTUME DESMlN
rm:,,_ 1 ,.m.-11 .00 MAnN11 WID. 1 P.M.
Centl'"'*11 SAT, & IUN. 2 P,M,
•
"LAST TANGO
IN PARIS"
(X) ----Geo. 59111 • Ruth Gordon
"WHERE'S POPPA"
(R)
HELD OVER!
OSC:AI HOMIHEE
SHOWCASE
7 Academy
Award
Nominattons
Joell~
• "Save The Tiger"
, •r•& , .... O'Nttil
"Paper Moon" lrGI
-·· -·---.-------·~ -
•• 11• • Olll\tl ,...._,_ ~=· ---='.::-:::: -.. ~-!~~
NOMINATIONS
'INCLUDING:
'
.,
·iltr
BEST PICTURE ;._
~Llll!l.l lXWI~-· ~
HELD OVER 3rd •IG WEEK
COSTA Mt SA U.A.lll•W~ LONG IU.CH u.• c-iu112'11
GAllOOI GllO'Vt c.i-!)Hill '6IXll lOMC ICAOI Sl•t~\fJI 11111 ~llOt:H GllOft H•••Y :t9°''"i..171lU.Ulll flllSSIOfol VICJOCtn.,...v.,iof11'0)6'flOI
l OPIG IEACH Lo~Allct1 O"'' In ~~ 'i:: SCAI. ltACH llay!lll ~II ,OllHTl!M V.ULIY ,_,,,,, V~le-1 e 1 1n1.llJ.I~
' W(SlMIMSl(ll C•MIT" Wo•• • J 1111 ftl '4'1ll
ALSO l"l.AYl pijG AT OTHClt JH(Allll$ THllOOCHOV1 SOUTHCllPt CAllfOftNIA.
WINNER OF 2
ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS!
~oanne Woodward
. Best Actress
·(· BEST ACTRESS \ of the year' · · N1w Yor.t film Crilics Circk r •
SYLVIA SIDNEY
Best Supporting Actress
Summer Wishes,
Winter Dreams
' .. A Hn1iti¥e, touching 1.nd
be1outiful movie ....
.. A pcrson1ol triumph £or
j01.nne Woodw1ord." -····----c:-
ORIGINAi
AND
.UNCUT
BEST ACTRESS :~~.~.
BEST DIRECTOR
WILLIAM FRIED!IN
Elli'-! lll~·~\AX \ S11XJil,/·lliJC(]B · KITTYW1NN ·10: Mi.«W/JIN
~ll[R.,,.,... UI llAA'1• .. o,;,,,i,~AlmR!lfJlY~t...alMARSIWL
,.,.~i,,Wl.LV\\l IBEI fVITY..,~•""' "'""""' 1.<0 ,in.c.--c-, -..:.=·-·
•
Perlormaftte Sc:Hchtles
MON.TUES-WED-THUR S
z,oo-4, 30.1 :00.9,30
FRIDAY
2:00.4:20.6 ,S0-9:20-1 I :SO
SATURDAY & SUNDA Y
9:20 AM -11 :45.2:00.4120
6:50-9120-11 :SO
'Rain' in Hunt~on-
j'Jtala"'
• Opening ionlght for a tive-
weekend tun is ttus revival of
the Sadie Thompson drama at
ttfie Hu ntington Beach
Playhoo!e, 2110 Main Sl. Hun·
tington Beach. Performances
Fridays and Saturdays at 8:))
through April 13. Reservations
l<U4%1.
111\e Apple ·Tree"
1be C.OSta Mesa C i v i c
Plafbouse will unveil this
musica l tri1ogy Saturday !or a
three-weekend run at ,the
Community Center auditorium
on the Orange County
Faira:l'OW'lds. Curtain at 8:30
Fridays and Saturda ys
lhrou&h ~farch 30. Reser\'a·
''Mu ., ~ lllb<U"
Sebasilan's Wet n Inn er • Playhouse Is presentln& this
m~Jcal drama Wednesdays
thtough SUndays at I : 4 0
folio'A'lng dinner at I 4 0
Avenida Pico. San Oemente.
Restrvalions 492.9950,
"And l\1151 Rtardoa Drfnkl 1
Utt.le''
A high-voltage c o m e d ,y •
drama is being presented at
t h e Lag un a Mou lt on
Playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon
Road, LagWUl B ea c h ,
Tuesdays lhroogh Saturdays
until April 90 with an 1:30 cur·
taln. Reservations 494~43.
lions :>56-$300. ~----------.
4th
llG GEORGE C. SCOTfin
WEEK a MIKE NICHOLS r.lm
THE DAY,\\', DOLPHIN &.
2od feMwo ... loth 1'11-~
"CHARIOTS OF THE GODS"
.C 'f .. r," 'f, <I'll Uh ....... _,,_
·-... llJltol
"_ ... ,_
c....-.•fl•-'141
·ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS FOR
BEST ACTOR
JACK
NICHOLSON
'
llST SUPPORTING ACTOR
RANDY QUAID
llST SCREENPLAY
ROlfRT ~!VNE . ..;::
. JACK
·NICHOLSO
.TUE LA~T
DETAii,
OllL l IT 80111 THEATRES, SKOtilD fU.TUltl
Miii ~Y .•.
"PttnTY MAIOS
All IN A IOW"
S110W STM11 AT llllSI
MO & HD
r111.1ns, "31. HI, Bl, J,~. !,JI
ORANGE COUNTY EXCLUSI VE!
Few Motion Pictures can boast
the ex citement. action a'nd
ad\'enturc or "~lcQ !"
·Also-
] ACADEMY NOMINATIONS
~Qt J~tr <U~n11.t
rvu1 "°'" 7 ,,M, CONTIN. SUN. 2 P.M.
• \,
MOVIE RAT1NOS
FDR~AND
YOUNO PEDPl£
,,. .. i.c-"' lt'lf ,.,.,. .... ..,.,,.
,.,..,,. MM N _...,fl _.,.,_,.,.......,., .........
All ,,,, MltlllTTUt
Gtilinl ......... .,..
--------------------
.•.....................••••.
~.a~-~----o ...... i -........ -..... ---
.. ACtf'IC TH•ATR•a DRIV•·IN
IU ... RIWAPMUT8
HAlll•OR 81.YD.Drlff·IR· s-.. MMt a Mes..,,.
111.• ............ 1o .. ,...
OltANDa Drltt·lfl 1 & I
fri.S.i.1 hfl .• ,..,. i.•"" ,.,_,, .. ,_..,..1 ......... 11 ....
F•rnlly Fun!
Profll1I •-.•ln1 Q11ef'el
MOH..fti. Ol'lfl '°'I PJIL JIU
IAf, il MIN. Of9I wt PA •
SNOW AT IUM • UMilt 11 ,..
l "'cN A ... ••• , 9f ·~· U l..t010
10 ACADIMY NOMINAnoNll '
WA fll'MIWll I _, --
, THI STING !NI
CAllY TllATMINT ""
··~ °"'~· ,, ..... "' •-""'tt 1k .I
162.2411
a ACADIMY NOMltMTIOHSt ---THI I.AST DITAIL 111
HfTTT MAIDI ALL .. a ·aow 1-i
.. ..... ......
• S..el ....... ~ ._, ..... .
, .... 112
IS ACAOlMY WINHOSI
'°SllDON ADVINTUll 1'91
""'I lll WAN Q.111
IAD MAN'S llVll IN!
lift<•"'"· . -ote1•-!1J.f21)
S ACADlMY I
AMlltcAN GU.FflTI "'
......... tll .... ·-· ~-MS.JJIJ
• ACAOIMT lllClfMfU.ftOlrilll
THI WAT WI WIU !NI "'"'·----' IUTillfLlll An flll N! •
I
l
• '
'
\ ..
• • , . " • •.
'
•
. ,:
f • .
•
• •
•
..
,
I
, Friday, Mlrch 16. 1974 ..... vi 29
by Roger lroclfleld
I .
•
,• ..
MIXED SINGLES
MUTT AND JEFF
SIR, '>'DU HAVE
MY CAR FIXED
THIS INST.ANT!
FIGMENTS
llW.P Ibo
lATlle~ U 'CALLtP ·oorrAG11ea' G~PS~. Oil
'MAIL A&u'!
JEFF, I HAO />N
ACCIDENT ! GO GET
1l.e MAN FROM THC
BODY SHOP!
by T oin K. Ryan
'
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by &nie Bushniiller
DOOLEY'S WORLD
MY MfAAT YEARNS 11> flENI ltl<J SAY
OllOSE THREE I &.muWORoS.
Dr. SMOCK
MISS CR•l!!SW , "fl'U..
M5. "fMIJ "flilorH-QJP
VOU &i-Vll!!R SGG~e-"fi..Y
P1 C,-U~lii YOORSSL.F
M.A"RU!'.P 'rO A
POC'f'OR ~
" GORDO
WHA-r
WOUt.O
CAlff00/>11.S-fS
DO II'
TllEY
llA/J OJT
OF Z:s
TO POICTRAV ~P!
:J-6
MOON MULLINS
' HI,
BeAUTIFUL·-
IS HARTBURN
IN?
IT RAISES
THE Bl.POD
PRESSURE'
AND BRINGS
ON ULCERS
FROM NOW ON,
TRY NOT TO GET
ANGRY ABOUT
ANYTHING
ER··· BY THE'
WAY4 ··l SPILLED
INK ON THE" RUG
'
.-TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZLB
ACROSS
1 More
palnlul
6 Seafood
10 Cougars
14 AllhOWilh
15 Game
played In
cnukkers
.,. • 18 In a series
\,
17 Foreign
officer
19 Lateral
.. rt ' 20 Give
••1 21 Crabby
person :. 23 &Jblroplcal
hit .
25 Cratty
. -,/. . person -4 ! 28 Soap
Ingredient
"Pub produel
29.Sllght
• ~
" • .. cot oration
31 Headpiece
33 Etluaty •( 34 Mortimer .. --·· ... 315 Bralda ol
• Mir ~ ... 40 Calls tor
42 Seer•!
walchlr1
44 Srn1ll
• CIU<:k
1. -'5 W1ter
• • contalne1' ,. t <7 Purport r• 49 Edlble •
I . '"" ... t: 60 Bird's
'
....
52 SHr up
53 Cuming
54 Paftofa
c1rcle
57 --Vegas
59 Joins
closely
6t Nuts
64 Purauer
67 "lt'a
• clear to
me":2
words 68 Able to
make
Ye1terd~y'1 Puule Solv•d.
'
again 6 Auditor. look
70 Study Abbr. 39 V!olent blow
printed 7 Pl11011: 41 Conmit an
rn11ttar Slang oflense
71 Bacc:henare 8 0 111ent 43 Comfort in
cry 9 Get a Joan dlatresa
72 Ben 10 "····or 46 River ol
•••••· · · Charge?" Egypt
Scotlisn-11 "Tti,--48 Show
mountain Tempest" gratitude
73 Thrall character again
74 Leases 12 Right now 51 Container
75 G.,._.llecled 13 Stockholm· 54 Burning
DOWN
1 Wa&h
down the
deck a
2 "Alaar': 2 ·w-3 Meet
dl1Ma:2 _.,
4 Ralte 11'19
aplrll• of
5SHkl
11llel
er 55 EJCtends
18 Lovers 1 upward
22 Door sign 58 Unsoiled
24 Nol filling 58 Man's name
27 Street 80 Consumed
urchin 62 Engllah
28 Singer ···· moril;
Kir1'. 63 Ma*i. for 30 One one ~~Ing~ B5 Mor.a'V
32 Fuel wrong • •
35 Fabric 66' Abae~of
37 Aplthelic motion
38 Cuming 69 Legal matt•
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
(H. LOSING llff PAllENCE
Wl'TH 'rbU.5lR ! WE HAVE
IO 6010 SCHOOL!! .
~~~~~~~--=
COME DOWN F~OM "ffiEl?E
Rl6HT NOW. AND LET'S
60 TO SCHOOL!!!!
JUDGE PARKER -
l CAN'T
I D!CIDEO THAT I WANT GET THE
THAT f lFT'f GRAND BEFORE MONEY
I AGREE TO CONFESS TO THE UNTIL l
ACCIDENTAL l"!LLING OF GET OIJT
THAT BOWDEN DAME! OF HERE,
MISS PEA~H
f'M
DfP2ES51iD. '
Wf.l..L,
~PltlNG
I~ GOMIN ...
1 YOiA'L.L..
~ 'MEllt UP. i~
DICK TRACY . '
LEFT"f!
,_,,
M.V SISTER'S DEPOSITED TH!
JNHERITANCf IN MY NAME! I
C.\N'T A.SK HER TO MAKE THE
DROP FOR ME! SHE eELll\IES
THAT I 'M INNOCENT!
by Harald Le Doux
t TALKED TO THE I DON'T T~K TO
WARDEN THIS MORNING! NOBODY UN'TlL MY
HE 5A10 THE 0.A.'S WIFE MS THE FIFTY
COMING TO SEE ME! GRAND IN C-'5H!
HE MA'f AL$0 WANT
TO T.o..u< TO 'fOU!
by Mell
..
~ow T>ln s~OULD
'ErTAINl..Y C.HEE~
I ~p THf TIZ'il~,
'UT MOW
A80WT Ml!? , ....... _
•
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by Gus Arriola
by Ferd-Johnson
HS ~IP ii-Iii
~IC WORD.
•
by Roger BOiia
"r , J. 1HINI:'. • '
11, -' SIQ.IJ Br.!'. . . '·
AA~GQIE
' TO 1416 I llEADI ,
' . I
' J.IS
"I can'l say I'm too much for oper1 bul I simply love 1ettinf
dressed for it.'' II'
DENNIS THE MENACE
. . ..
, ' ' ' I
' ~J
l-6
'IT SERVES ME RIGHT FOR lEAVIN' MY OOYl)IS AA:Xl>JO · •
WHERE PfOPlE COULO STEP ON THEM .. ./llJH, /olrH.? •
I
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•
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•
' ARGENTINIAN AND HIS CLASSICAL GUITAR
Manuel L0:pe2 Ramos Will Perform Works of Bach
'
1Classical Guitar
Begins Series
• A classical guitarist will
perform at 8 p.m. Saturday,
March 23, in the Laguna
B each High School
Auditorium, first in a series of
guitar concerts.
Manuel Lopez Ramos. in·
ternationally a c c I a i m e d
Argentian classiclll guitarist,
will perform works by Bach
WeiM, Granados, Castelnuovo-
Tedesco, Duarte and others.
OTHER PERFORMERS in
the setjeS are Jutenisf,guftarlst
Frederick Noad_who wiil ac-
~ lfayderi Blanchard, a1 fonrid ••lollt lrith the Roger
Wagner Olorale and a music
professor at Mt. San Antonio
College; flamenco guitarist
Gino D' Auria and the classical
guitar duo or Cost.ero-Beltran.
Series tickets are $14 while
individual eveQ,t tickets '>''iii be
$3.75. All ticke'ts ru'e general
admission with the ' exception
that advance tirket series
holdtrs will receive preferred
seating in a special section.
Tickets are now on sale at the
Guitar Shop, um N\ CoaSt
HWY·· Laguna Bea~, ~1utual
and Liberty .ticket . agencies.
ln!onnation, 497-2110.
Alexander Previews
John Alexander, director The Concert Preview, which
conductor ol lhe Irvine A1aster is free to the public, and the Chorale, will present a Concert Preview at 10:30 a.m.. roncert are SPonso.red by the
Saturday in Edwards Cinema Oi'ange County Philharmonic
Cent.er Harbor and Adams Society. Boule~ds. Costa Mes8.. 1 Mendi Rodan will conduct
The 29-year-old graduate of and Jens Harald Bratlie will
Oberlin Conservatory of Music be featured as pianist.
will discuss the concert of the )The program inc I u d es
Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra. estival Overture "Hjalarjod "
taking place that evening at b Elvend Groven and Le
8:30 P·~· . in . Crawford Hall, Cimetiere Marin, Opus 20 by
UC Ir.vine. Fartein Valen.
Noone else
can us
~ youcan.
(~Us.Please.)
Nobody'else in.the world can give us
what you can. A pint of your blood.
And your gift has never been more inr
portant. Because blood from healthy donors,
who freely donate their
blood, is 10 times /eS1l likely
to cause infectious hepa-
titis in the recipient than is
blood from many commer-
cial sources. Think about
that.
The need is urgent,
and continuous. ·
Help us. Join us.
Today.
\
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KPFK Looks at Notther-n Ireland
Former Los Angeles Mayor
Sam Y orly has got to ot.oy In
town now.
He starts a "Netkly radio
program Saturday oo XGBS.
H11 7·JO a.m. once-a-week pro-~
gram will intersperse music
with interviews_ of prominent
people in the news.
casting S(':hedule. St art in g "Eyewitness News'' for IOme
April J, he'll do ''The ~fichael time. · 1
·Jackson $4Wlw" from 7 to 7:30 Barbara Burns Is in cbar&e
a:m .. MoaCiay through Friday of promotion for KBTH (Kil·
on , Cbanoel 7. ~feanwnlle, FM). She tetls me that •Jim
conum.:licator Mr. Blackwell 'Pewtei-:S-sbow on-&may
is doing his own thing before nights (6-8 p.m.) is the site for
Channel 9's c.ameras lhree reliving K1'~WB's Fab Forty
day:r per week while com-H.its of the 50s ..and &Os. Each
in the trisb iJpublic. J11Unicit0t Elliot ~finlz has Sunday Jim , selects 7.o "oldies
KABC Talkradio'1. Mi<;hael bP.en featured on KABC.TV's but goodies" for replay. Yorty bu decided to atart
oil big -Gov. llonold a.as ..
Will be bill llr9t gUett Satur·
day. Phone calla are tnviled.
Jackson i& adding another•p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;-"hour" to his daily broad-' I ,-~~~~~~~~~~~..:_~-I I
troop withdrawll f r o m
northeni Ireland, tbe role ol
the Brifish trade tmkm and
the attitudes toward the North
Newport's Unique New Suj>per Club
•
LISTENER • SUPPORTED
KPFK (9017 FM). la ex-
amining the political situation
In Nort h ern· Ireland
throughout .. the month Of
·,March. Time. of'th( broadcasts
, vary from a pJn.·10:30 pm.,
with announcements ---made
alter the kPFK evening news
·at 6:45 p.m.
KPFK v ~laced the • lri!k .
struggle tn historical' a'.nd
cultural perspective during -a
major program series on the
subject in May, 1972.
The new program series airs
on Wl'dnesday and Thursda
nights and featuret material
recorded in Great Britain. It is
rourxied out with two listener
phone-in shows which took
place with leading English and
Irish SPokesman. •
AMONG THE SUBJECl'S lo
be discussed are the position
of the British govennnent, the
growing Irish demand for
'~ .. "" "'" .......
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BATH
SWAGS
REG. '14.99
SAVE 54.00!
'°lb. Bog
STEIR
MANURE ....... ..,.._ .... ,,_ --·-· , •(...._... .... .....,...,.. ........ -''"'· IK.39c 49:' . ...
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CONCREn ··w, ... ,_,..._,_, .... ·<-............ _.... .. ~-.-...i-.,...h ... ....,.. .... • "'"'*'*"'"~""'•·l~tt.icl.
RIG.99· C
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Winner of !he
$llowflilt Award!
THE
WAY •
WE
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'
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Cuddtfl.o•Twist sings
•·A 'little Platform is
the Cat's Meow"
"I Bared My SOie
~~1 ... 1
to a low Heel!"
DAILY 10.99
NOW SHOWING AT THE
NEAR YOU
FASHION ISLAND, N9WP041 Beach
SOUTH COAST PlAZA. Costa.Mesa
FASHION SQUARE. Sanla Ana •
HUNTINGTON CENTER. Hunlington Beach
~·<' ~.,
...... ~· ...
' '
'
INTERNATIONAL-CUISINE
Feo1~ Delicacies From Ecttt & Well . ........... ,,...,,_,,
Lll'lth COly 11:3010 )
' Contir.eNd Sunday Br.ah 1 l:<IJ to 3
Coc~1oil • E.rer'&ive W11111 8ool;
Ni!#fy Dancilf!I & Entertainment
l 'r'TOf' UCO'lDIMG G1ours
h.y loe. ·.'JI [}inh 5() furlhl! ~ ol rKjil
&.,.,.Wed · Be~ Ocn;;,,q . Two~ B or-.:l 10
~-~ • JoaNigh1~...;.h Dove Pi~e Set
Ms&...,. Frl.....,,. .._.. 4 .. 7
hlMt SWs Sl.04 Non d' ... "'"
JAIMll GllFO ON ~.co CMHTAI
1100 W. Coast Highway
Hewpor!leodi Rts.645-2671
:
.. __:•
. ' . . ..1 .. Si""'°i""8 r ' Delto .. >-, •
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~VA.AGE '• iSING .. •UYIR Cluo~ DJSP~SER KITCHEN F•uc11 ~!.G..~!!_A_!IR ... " ... ·'-'...,. __ · • ...., ... ., ...... _i.t._,_ ...... • ....,_ ....... ""'......... • f9tlinll<•---· -)!lot _,._ -....... _..&.................... .......,._........ ' .a.. .... -.. ==-,--2"""4,:;:;:-95 11~.i-1-4 .. ii s 179
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i' Special Piucliase!
DOOR
MIRRORS
I
'
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. CHAIR ................ _......~ ......... .., .. ..,. ...... -· .....................
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IMMEDIATE DE LIVERY ,........ ........ _ ~----------............ ______ _.... ·· ¥-~-~ BRllll.llEW . . .
.·1'974 · E . A . $
. .
II.STOCK IOW iUPER DISCOUNTED ~AS MU(IJ AS ... ' . .
MRY BRAND NEW . . $
'74 Firebircl and Trans-am
II STOCK NOW SUPER DISCOUNTED AS MUCH AS ...
.
(2F37Y41 03135)
(2U87Y4N 120218)
OFF
MFG.
SUGGESTED
WINDOW STICKER
PR la
OFF
MFG.
SUGGESTED
WINDOW STICKER
PRKE..
EVERY BRAND NEW 1974 EVERY BR AND NEW 1974
·: RA D. , ILLE . . T All . A
. . llS18CK S . · . II STOCK s
HOW SUPER DISCOUNTED . NOW SUPER DI S C~T ED
AS MUCH AS 12P•7Y•C10cw'7} OFF -·-·TID -WST1CUIPllCI AS MUCH AS (2L57R4C1065591 ' OFF MfG.SUGOE5T£DWIHDOWSTICIBPltcl . ' . . ....____... _____ __.
( I . .
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•
• • 3% DAILY Pl~Ot. Frldv, !br<h lS, 1974
I
1
Otapinan Honors
16 Coast Students
BachelOr cr .,Af1, desre<J
from Olapman COiiege ln
Orange have been awarded to
Jt. students from •too· Orange
Coast area. PUBLIC NO'nCE
Sandra M. Wachtler of1----------
' ('1 > ~
lPVllJC NOTICI I'
PUBLIC N<mCE
.. .
,.__ NOT.Cl OI' f'USLIC fALI
""'-vna del Mar graduated o.. M•rm :io. 1t14, ., •:• A.M. et•''•---:=:-:-:::--:::;;::;-:::-::;-;--Ith . · hJ N..,..pOrl C1n1..-Otl.,., S\1111 lJU.1-
W a mlJOr ID Story, N-~I IH<ll, C1Hfllnol1, lllONALD S. 11v:1:1 a C tl ar .. J:'«#
Costa Mesa graduates l\'ert ~~~· T~:.'~ i~o· Nii .,. '1Yi
Craig. Falconer, p h 11 i ca l s-$' ~-r;:· ~"'1~ .....!M;; JI'~ P:'.t!: •.,.'I', t
education· Arthlll' 'France .-..uit 11111W t"9 eor--.t. w01 •II•' fHi~~,.fJ y Hi' 1.1.fT p&ycbolo~· and ~ r I a~ =t\!= !f ~':.fll:r':.~ :mr·~rfljl: r::~o•o=-mt-1 ; ' w1rr"'''" of tltt., II~ °" l'NfCNfto OOltOTHIA M H •EltO N.J fllif n Kendall economics a n d t1bl111Y In .c:corll-. ""'"' ktl911 t»1 " i •lltl• "" Pr " ·ot 'Niii w "'' . ' TIM C1llfomlll C-rd•I C-. tM oilldl end fw ·~ of• Llltlwt ~ss admJnlstfaUon. '°'~"' ct1111..-.1: .., ,,,., 111 ls-;:::;:,-m.r-. t All ~~.~lo tm• =~~ Galen~ of Huntington 'rlt~!I •nd olW rlol!h .. ltl9 ,..,_, Ind tMI llN ... ~1f ' r.tt . ., »--~ I A.t '-'-Of l'nOl'I!-. •II rb ""m'llla. ...,,. In Jaf'll "" 1 tl'own ;tin!:''• ~ rtce V~ 1im B.A, with a IH'OO•••a. mttttllh \IMll w _,_, :.:,. 'N"'r,;:·•, "., .,.iJ""' °""' 11 vie mat..-1"... -A'al -'--· llnl ......... hi!N tot .... ,.,, olMt' C.nltl' " WMI, !fl 111it' City • ,. .. rn· 1a ~ .,..,..., ... • lnl'fl'ltory. •If li'ltCllMY. ..,rp"*"• AM. c11""111•. Econom'-and b u 8 1 n e 8 , 1oo11. 111" •M °"""' ""'"'""' 01111o11 INrdl 11, 1'7
aUJ S•lcl "" 11 1or ,... "'""""' of OOllt•· vnul~.,\ ''""°*,., adminlstiaUon was the major 11-•lid lr#flll u~ ,.,_,.,.. ,. fN DAVID b~Lt•• T••"-•• AllD
aibject of Roger Larson and s':~~IY1.:~~~·,.~ told 1n wMI• or ~ ~~Y
Jerome Livingston both of p,4rT. Hjlar11t1v or (011.c11vt1v. • • 11~., nn" '"'"' m , • 0119d: Mfrdl 14. 1'74 •,..,..,.; 11. c.i1,_..1 .,,... lrvme. Other Irvine graduates llOJotALO s. 1ucic11t T111 •"'' ,.
w e r e J • B k · Tt""'9 '"' "'"*"" o yc .f roo s , .,,11111,,,,... 0r1,... co-M D111v '""'' ~• °'.._ c .... o.u., •tt~, communications, and Martbl M•rd 1.s;·m• f»1• Mll'Cll J. rr. "'' • ~
Frouian, art . .; , PUBUC NOl'ICE
From La&uni. Beach, Gan· ' · ' · !!"JBUC NO'ne& .
Gua.l ........ inl graduated i n . NOTICI To COflffaACTCMli CAUIN• '" ••ot
phy -..1 1• ed 1,_ nd M Jo 5d1ool Dl•lrlcl1 CO.•I Clltnl'IWn\TJ "''"' 011!fl(I s ca uca ivu a a r 110 o.11111111: v AJ'--J nA • 1111 Joto. .01A -ln'°"""llon •141, SllkorltrtCI• for '1111"!blfl01 H"!lng, .,.._
IJl:I ~ ay n.nsom ' n 111111ne 11111 Air Cond!t1on1na1 Ind Ei.ctrle.,11 i:oo ,.fl\,, 1n111 N y et A,..tl. ,,,,,, economics and buai.ness 11111 N1.''11e ~ itrt1n1 01Mr11 c-tfudi. c-tfKI: :kOO ""'"" M1I ll•Y •
dminis tio -j • ...-1 1'74. a lra n. .,1 ~PtKe 111 ekf 1t*'9!.,t:\Oftlc• ot •u~11n11 Aotl:'lt, Cent """"""tty Collt0• Larry Woodrut.f of Laguna Olllrlct ~mlrti.lt•~ llAA!lno. IWO Adl!N Avl!NN ~hi WM. °""'" c-1)'.
Hills graduated ,Jiith a major fMf",lct 1.-lfka._ Nitnt: '"""' •-'...,"'c-tr.=::111net All~~ in h lA•Ary tailitt coMiliino of: Mlftllrnltle. •1'111 klll!UI lfll -· • ~.... • MllllC '1u11cuno Mc:llllon 11 Urilt '""' LIWlry • Alldlo-Ylwtl Julldlfll
'lbe three Missk>n Vi~jo ,, ~:,'-~i,111 1,. 911 ,111: Otflc. °' a-.,.. atn~ " Ardlllldz Wllll•111 1.. graduates were Ro n a I d Pw•lr• ANC1tl•'"· M1cArtt11,1r llulft•l'll ,, F•ll ll09d. c.,.... 1111 ""''· c.111orn11.
Brown e c 0 n 0 m I c 5 and NOTICI! " HEREBY OIV!N t!lll ""·~ ... , ...... -.. ~~~ ,s'~":: ' Counl)' Clllfornl1 kllnf b'f Ind fl'lfOlllll lb Ocl¥fl'l\ nf ' ._.,,,.,,.., busine8s administration; Mn. 1o 11 "'D111r1ct" OI' "OWflotr", wm rteeln up to, 11u1 not +.1.,. IM'I ~ 1t10v1
Eileen Hasegawa , sociology; '111~1';.;,.!i':;ICI .:;i.:n.1or or""...!~°' .:.r.:..:. ':,.~1~:0: :!1:.Mct ••
and Anne Holt, social science. au0c0ntr.c:1 WOl'k •nd '"'*' pr1« to bid• on 111t f'rl"" ttnttKt: """*"' wn. H•tl119,·Y"ll""'-""' Air C.....,llllMlnt. w.t'k lftd,l.,r~I WWII. • .. ~lllOrt rif Dim •for 1111 IUbecnlrid pOrtlON el fill "9rk .-! ..,...
1 torldltlon tor bidding •1-I 11 111«19d tov Olilrkl " wci;nalvt lllddtr,,_. to •«Vtl
2 A ~ d I "**'!ltl(:t --· fw. ,,.. I~ bill '#ltfil fill ,,._ 0-lt lnidllfl Ppo1nte eonvK'ler'llllCMd ..., 111ei6f,,,1ct, c.11lollld ,,, ....,. ..... ,,.. ,.. .. ~
Pdlf'td Of 11'-d. ~ _,_ .. _,,, .... ---... -... 'tl'-SACRAMENTO (UPI) -1" fW1'bk11me.i1.,111hlblttt\d ·~ •-" ..,,, ~l *'""''
Gov. Ronald Rea has 8 VWl=n::: Air ~roii: w:. ='!.'I=~' CltllifMt ft!Ult ..,.._
I led E G gan J>'" 1t Ft.ndltbi: li:ftl"f.W If t:.... by Oltlrkf H ~ .....,, fo -"• po n me.st . De Ia Ossa tu0canirtct .,,WIMll,• '°' .... bid •-h ~111 111e Olaffkt •••ldwd *Uk.,.. of Hillsborough and Robert W. tr•C90fl· ,c.t!t~ w .,..111111 bldt wm n111 • ~ """' 1111w111. llllHn
Draln of , . fO( t1M. Pliml o.i....i CO!l•tnlttlon (Ol'llncf win IN llDtlflld ef Dlltncl ..+tcltll
e Pacific Pahsades IO.lbConlrectorf •nd .~ tHct '""°""'' i lllY• prior '911111 erienlne. to three-year terms on the 11c11 111111 be ...c:.iwtc1 111 "" ptK• 1111n1r11«1 •beW. •nd t!Mll • ..,.. •nd
, pu.Mldy rllO lloud II IJll e.llOvl-tltlld tk'M Ind Pl-· state Co m m Is s 1 o n for Tiier• will w 1 NW.• 111..-i1 ,..,i...,. for ..tti tit • t1111 '*""'*'" to Economic Development 11>e """'" ... t11e rthll'll In .-i Cllllllll\oll °"'1111" flw 1s1 ..,.. .nw 1111 DM ....ino • 11119. lkl 11oc11mMlt wt "91 ...... "-1111 ofl'lct of ,...Ardllfocl. Gov.emor aJao reappointed EICll 1111111 """' ~Ind 111 ,.....iw to "" c.itrttt OocvnMnh, Jerry Fine ol '--Angeles Eldl b6d tllltl M ·~"' .. ill)' ,... Mall'llY """"9d .., Jn IN Cllltl'1ct UD • Doeunwib 11'111 W 1111 Ill! of ~ MllClnlr.dora. Paul C. Ely Jr. of Menlo T111 01s11t1q ,_,_ "-,~to retect .riv ., '" Oldl "' • wtln •nv
Park and Robert Smith of 1~:=: :t='='.::d •;.:, N ':i::.i:W:':.":" ~ ot •1•'1 .. .,.. •tiff
San Diego to four-year terms. ""'~ g:i;;•i:'~ ... ...,.. ,,..., • ..,,.. ,... "' "'' diem ...,.. 1n
PUBLIC NOTICE ttie lotllllY In wfilldt 11111 ...-I• to W. ""'"''""'.., llClt cnn or IYPI el WOt11:· !!Min llftdld To txtcllte 11'11 contrllCI, and "' •• shown lltflln. ------------1 Ally dlulllc1tlln "" 1111klptlld 111d ll1!9d ""H M ,..., II .IN wrrtril _,.
. • tm r1IM fOr 'mt 1P91lcllbll trldt 11'MI c11 .. lf/cetton In tltlet ""'"" "" ~ llsl9d NOTICI TO c••DITOltS Tr.oes COUl\d/1 • ., •nY ,. ... ll•Md ire not CUM" .. , or lrl rtvlHd ..,, llbor ...... SUPl•IDI COUllT 01' THI rn1n11 <CIUl'illl~llll ~ llN ., COMl!Vcikln II~ llJOI ,..,.,. tfltll 11141 ~
$TATI DI' C.t.1.ll'OltNlA l'Oll tld«ld I pttl.., 1111 Jltl'ld r..... . . 'i TH• COUNTY 01' ORA.NOi APP~Hl~I A~ ..... ,... .. 1111 ~ lf.l.MIW c.M .... k A·l'IMi 1m.sc.ooWnln1D~et ..,.,, .. "'*-· ' '
E1l1te of CA.ltL F. WOLCOTT, 11 t-'qulh•)dhft'KIWf'iW ·~~1.U..t ""lllOYlnt '''""'*' In WIY I~ ~Md. lklbtt OCCU(llltfOfl to '!!!"!_·~~ IN 'f!'l"lk'IDll f'lnl "'""'~'~•=-'.flt , NOTICE 15 HEllEIY OIVEJot to ,... 1 ct11li1G1hl •ll1~t'1"l'i~"'9',ntll' .. .,.....,,. ~· , ..... U 9dlton of IN lllovt "'lllld dl'Ctdlnl Ofl !hi CefltrK!.V 1 ,,_, ' '-··' 9 ' '
ltlll 111 OOll'Ml'lt N Vfflt tl1lm1 IOI Intl tlle ConlrlClor mer 111 ,.. .... ,.. '9 ITleQ CQ'I~ ti ..... •1llCW!" ,,..,.,.., •
Mkl dtc9dtnl ire rtq1Jtrt11 to 1111 thlm, ContrK!w 1fld ...-.,i1nc1Wt """ 1l10 COfllPl'I Miit lltlllll 1m .. In tM
with ,... ~...,. YllUCl!ln. 111 1111 olflcl tmP1ovnw11 Df '""""lea. Df ""' cltrk of !ht 1b0¥t .min.Ill court, or l'or lnJonn.llon relallwt '9 1_..tletllll1t tllfldlr.tl, eontKt DI,.,_. et In.
lo ~M'<ll lfltm, wlll\ the nttffllt"V <1usfrlel 1'•tlon1, IMI Fr•~. Clllfornl•, or Olvltloft of AJl!lfll)ll<llllll'
'IOl.ldlltl, lo thl un<1 ... 1l11ntd 11 1111 ottl« Sl•nolfds br1nch oHkl$.
' of htr lttor"nl'f, 1'H0MAS L LOllO, ZlS21 Ill" ..... ,I!'"""'• -'ftk11111 " fltlllf • P•-mt V1i.ncl1, Sulit 11:1. L111un1 TllAOI 09; OCCUP.t.1'tolf N.., 1...-1 ....... VK1lllll
HUis. C11!fornl1 '2153, wt1!d1 11 "'• pl1c1 OfJWIM-e ......... ,
.jol' bulll'llU ol 1111under1l91'11d111111 ..... ,. 01'1111&1 II ................................ P .n
ltn P111'11!nl"L,lo ti. ,Sllhl of w!d a.c... Group 12 ................................ 1.Ji
691\1, within r t!IOl\llll •fllr 1111 first Gf'ClllP ti ..................... 7.76
< pilllljklllon of !Ills l!Gtlce. Group 14 ................................ 1.11
1 0.t.d Merell 13, 1'74.. Gl'CllJP IS ................................ It.I» E1'HEL I . WOLCOTT Gl"ClllP f4 ................................. It.If
EkKUll'iX ol'1fll Wiii of Gn11111 11 ., .•..•••...•.... , .......... \ ••• 1.2'
1111 lbo\1 n1!"'<1 dll(ld"'I Ofoup fl , .................. , ... , ... ,., •• l.«I
, THOMAS L l.OltD Group n ............................ , .. , 1.$0 j *21 Pl ..... V•lelld• c.,,....,.1 Sfflfo 11) ClfPl!lltr ................................... 17.tlli
UIVH Nllb,Cll--•tM.0 TltOI• pow.-Slw ~"' · .............. J.1s 'T•h tn4J .,,,._ Pft;lllmiflc N111 ... or ,,_ SllJlrr ..•... 7.JO
AtlwMy 9'r ••IClll'rlk Pfr. Drlv• FWlft'\lll ........... , ......... , 1.1t •ublltftld Of'1J111t C011t Dellr Pilot, Pll• Or'IW Min : ...... , .................. 7.11 ""-'1:11 IS, 22, %9, AOrll S. 1t1• '11·74 t-i ._.1 Ct~! Miiion (M""°'sll•, ""9"'"11•
T err1no 11\11 nMsilc OORIJIOllll«t,
EPl*Y DIM<! T•I ................. ""' 6.a C-t ""--l'lotlllll Ind Tnnnt1119
Mldllltl OPll"lor" .................... " 6.61
PUBLIC NOTICE
$U,llll01t ~Jfn.T 01' 'THI STAT•°' CALl,OltNIA l'OR Curb . Gu""' ""-ctllflt o,.,.tOI' .......... ~
THI COW:.TY ~OUN•• ct.ry. S/mll•r ,.,,. If
MOTi<• 0, H•f1t1M• Of' f'STITION SC...., 0.•tor , ..... , .... ,.,/, ......... , 6.2'
l'CHt ••o•An OF WILL AlllO POil Grlllllhig Mlctl~ OpiNtor LllTT•llS T•ST~INTAltT IA/I i)'Mf) ............. ,, ........... ,,,, 6.JI,
&1t11t of ELIZAB!!TH E. COVt.SOJot, J•(klOll \llWltory t.
lllCI k.-11 EllZABETH EDGIJotGTON Sfrnll1r TWOOI &crM O,..,ltcr .......... f.:M , c'l.icr~~· ~~'rrie1Y GIVEN 11111 =l~fnt °""'"' ................ l.:16
LEROY A. GRASER ha• 111111 llereln I •• I I w-•• • tllflllon for Pl'OlllN ot Wiii a/Id tor nlo•t lll l'OI\ ... ,.., ................ .-.J
ls111anc• of Lefler• Tnl1rn1nterv to 1111 Slruc11..,11 lnlfl Wortltf" •...•.... .-........ 1.71 Pfllll_, reltor.,,ca lo wntcri 11 made for Orn1"*11•1 lren WOfker , ••••...••...•...• I.rt rurtMr ptrllc1.111rs, 1/ld l1'11t lhe !Im. •NI ,lnCI Erector ............................ l.'4 Dlkt (If heiring Tl" 'I"" hll !Mell Ml I.I ...... ! '
I !or April 2, 197', 11 :00 1,m., In 1ht ~Tl Rik.,., Lvi.-, cou ruoom ot O.~rlrnllftl No. l ot "Id ,. 1 ••.,, cowt, 11 7tw) C!Y!c C1nllr Of'lvt WMI, lft 1 roner ···" .. · · · ·· · ..... · ...... • .. · • "'
Ills City cf Senl• Ana, C11lfoml•. A1pllal• si-ltr ··········•···•··········· S.74' D1!9d M1rch 12, 1'1,. Conc:rtll Cllltr . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .... .... . S.115
WILLIAM I!. JI JOHN, C0!1C...te S(r11C1l119
Counll Clerk TT for rOolllh 1trlkt off .................... J."'5 ~1~U:~~ Pl~.~~l!k lit Ory Pltkk'19 of COl\Cttl1 ..... •• .. .• .. . . . • . 5."'5,
Hllflllftll"' =. c1•1. HiM1 IC11!9-, Pot-. lfe. ..... ., ........... S."5
Tth ln4) ...... JiH111 L•bor ... <Gtnlr-' ., An_.,.,.., ,.ih1-Conlfrvctlol\ ............................. $.kl
Publl•hld Or111111 Coe11 0.!1v •11~, Mlltr111 Ho-n •. . .•. .. .. •• .... .. . .. •• .. '·"" Mlrcll U. IS, 21, 1'7' tf7· 4 Ml•tr·Tl"UCk Ch\lllmln .................... 5.64
Optt-11or of Pneunwtlc ., PUBLIC NOTICE Ellctrlc Too41, VIW1t11111 .MIChlntt . • . . • . J.tSf ----~~=-----IPIPt Lt'fi!r .....••..•••..•... , ............ f.US IT•1• Pipe Ul.,_.1 ltdl'VP Min ...... , . .. . .. . .. S.t35
1f·MI T•t'ftlltl1, 9•rko, WKltr
NOTICI! 1'0 c•!OITO•S OP •Ut.IC Ind S!mlll• Ty.,. " .......... "". ... . . • J.tss T•ANS,lill AND 01' INflNTIDN 1'0 'Nlnclclli<i' Clelntr ............................ J,MJ TltANSl'I• ALCOHOLIC •lfVlllAOI l!tch'IC:lfl111
LICl'Nta(S) ISICI.. 41t1"117 U.C.C. G-11 l'ortrn111 , ....................... ,. 111.U
• ~r./1'le~~) ~=~BY GIVEJot lo ,,. l"orl!Nll .................................... 10,"6
Crtodltort of Wllll1rn 1tr....il111mp, Jr, Jul)ofor.,,..n ... , .............. , ............. '·" Socl1I S&c:utllY Joto. ~1-1700. Tr•1111ttor C•blt 'l>llcer ................. ;' ........... '·"
•nd Llctnll•• "'"°" Mlnnt 1<1<11'111$ 11 C.bl• spllC•r lor"'11n .• , ................. IO.t•
no1Pl1ct11111.1n 11141 CllY of Cotti M-. 'Jou•nevnwn wlrtmen .•• : .... ., ......... , ... fM Countv ol Or1noti. Stale of C1lllorn!4' JOllrnl'frn&n flcll"lcl11t ..................... f.«I '2617, 1n11 •bulk transfer, b 1bol.it to tit CWJllltd .... Cler •••. , ................. , ... ,, f.-40 rn16' lo ll:lchl1~ H. At>bCIH, SOC"!ll S.Curl• e1idlf'1.I Iv Joto. SS6·S)·7S3t, Tr1niff:ret Ind fntltftOo ... .. t d T11n1!erf'e. wr.ow ""'il'lft t IO<lrt•• II Gl11lw ········•••······•·,,•··•·•·••·"•'"• .... ,
]03f, Judi!ll L,,flt, In till CflY of AMntl::r.• Countv ol O!'ange, St.ie of C1lllor 1 Llthlftl na<M. Llllltr .....• ., ......... , .... ,.,., .. , ..• ,,., lt.1J 1'~t OrOl)eflY !1 dfferltlfd In ff-r11 11: Plhltwll f.l~ ''~,1ne';~~r:1"~ "!,' f~ Bruin· ..................................... "·"
0•111 Ind 1ocllf'd It 2101 Plklfltll In Ills lt\Ollt, lwlfll ''"' .......................... 7.f) City ol COSll Mltl, COll!'ll'J' Of On• Slll<I ._,ltl't ............................ ,. Ll•
S111t of Cel!foml•. 1fld tr1ntllr flll SfMet rotk ltptr .................... , ....... t.11
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llct11t11l: On-51tl lflt Jotur'l'lblr 41D-3'2ltj ,.,. T ...... 1 • ,_ lltlled 10 ortml~ loc119d 11 210 P'turnblr ..................................... au :11:::1: 1f:i 1~1 pr~ M~ 1"t: '!..:: SIMmtilMt • , ., • , ••. ., ., • , " ,, , ., • ", .. ., • , ., t.'2 CounlY ol Or•not. t 11l1 of C11r=::111I. LllCI bllmw ............................... l.U
Thll !Pie •mount 0( IM'ChlM p.tCI OI' U!l!J.tY ~M ~n ..................... I.If tonsldtrl!lon 1n connection with .. 1<1 tJlllllt" PlilM ~n ................ 7.t4 , tr11n1!er cf Mid 1te1n1• lor Hce11111) •nd S-l lfll'll'! dr1ln DIPll•wer ................ :is 111d bu1l~e1•t .lneludl119 mt tst!m1!td '"·A/C a. ltlft!Wllforl flttw , ....... , ......... e.U Ytn':r.ri· lt 1 ... IUl!'I Of w.2CID.t», w~ICl'I , .... ,~. ' con~~"J~/olt°:~?r Amount: U 0001 Pllt1.r · ... · ••• ·''" ·'" ·" · ••• •• ·' '" · •• •" ''·'" Protftluorv nottt, 10 tit r9Placid w Pl11l1r lft'llltf" ............................ '·"'
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·OUR. IBT
VAWE
This 1~1MACULATE 3 be<lnn
home ls Ideal for the COU.jlle
-or f.amily. lookfnr for ~
quality, You will love the
BIG FAMILY ROOM. plush
ahag carpets, d e cora I o r
waUpapers 2 big baths,
detached double aaraa:e, 2 Pl4k>t. · cn.cldlns fireplace aaa private rro.. entry w\th
a GA& LIGtrr! ll's tuper
clean and located rlaht ln
the heart or Costa Mtu..
$.12,500 TAKES !Tl!
•
COATS
&·
' WALLAcm;,
REAL TORS:
T 54• 4l~I'°'""' Evon{ftfs)
LAGUNA NIGUEL
-Four bli bedrooma 2 batbll + a ·j>aol on 1/3 acre Iota of
trees llld privacy. Near
¥beach and gulf club. 'J% ..VA 1oan aasumable $48,000.·Call
646-77ll.
.··
BAYCREST
DECORATOR'S HOME
Elegance k Jlvablllty con1·
bined in ·this 3,200 sq. ft.
home. ·4 Bdnna., 4 baths;
formal dlnlng + sep. family
rm. Secluded up11talrs m~tr.
suite wiUi ad,Jotning den or
11tudy. · Not leased lund.
Reduced to $US,OOO.
C. F. Clolesworthy
RQltors 640-0020
-~ ..;-·t.-1t~ ....... 1,..altlj
EASTIWFf
NICELY DECORATED with
new carpets. 4 bedroom!
& family, full amenitle1
lhruout • SuMy patio, con-
venient to schools. $78,000.
640-1120
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
Advertisers may place
thtlr ads by telephone
8:00 a.m. to 5':30 p.m,
Monday thru Friday
8 to noon Saturday
COSTA M!:SAOFFICE 330 w. Bly
6'2·5678
NEWPORT BEACH
3333 Newport Blvd.
642-5678
HUNTINGTON BEACH
17875 Beach Blvd.
•
,
TRIPLEX-WALK TO EVERTIHING' W~ TO CORONA DEL MAR llEM'iHEs,
W fLK TO shopping.>:W ALK TO schools. On
large 45' lot and shows spe ndable income. A
'· teal buy at ''95,500. CALL lo.: 'appolnlll)ent.'
CALi.. 644-1270 • ' i + 2828 E. Coast Highway. Corona ffl Mor
EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE -$UO,OOO','
Waterfront beauty! Colorful.& meticulously
maintained 5 BR homew/FR, lge DR &i 4~
baths. Wide lot, Pier & SUp. Call to see. , \
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO.
2111 S.n J00quln Hlll1 Rood
NEWPORT CENTIR, N.B.,6"4~10
Genlral ,;
BACK BAY .
BEAUTY
Lido J&le
LIDO waterfront 3 Bdrm. a. Jge. family rm .1 or 5 bdrma., 1!11J1 6 bath&. uao Nord. 5peco
tacular view! Waterfront living rm. with
step.down wet bar. Pier & fioal. '275,000. *** .. * -WATER FRONT LOT ON LIDO.NO.RD
30' x 105'. Magnificent view! '1SS,OOO
BILL GIUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayoldo D<,. SUlto 1, N.I. '75o6161
-FPR . SALE ·~ O~GINAL OWNa ·MES~ YER" • SHOWN IY ""'1:·
' ' 545-7291 .
THREE GIRLS
r General
D~ED AND
STYLED FOR
A FAMILY
B!AUTlfrUL-3~
In Tho Bluffs
Ol'ENTIL 8. rrs FUN JOBE ~ICE/ "FRANCESCA" • nice faro •
BEDROOM & DEN
Thil iieautllul home bu 3 bedrros, den + ttreptllCe1t) bf.ti!' aparldjng h e a t e d
swimming pool, water
softner, alr conditioned It
gu.BBQ. Enclosed gazebo.
Comer lot. Room tor trailer or camper. Many extras, too
numerous to mention .
Thia won't lut at $44.JKX).
Call now 522-2856 • 1 · Uy"'"'• in super Joe. Bring ma1t1 .. ~ah~~::::::
-new carpeting; consider
PANORAMIC
OCEAN VIEW
leiu;e or L/option. OUered
at $69,500. Walker&lee •Ill llTAT• • 540-1220 •
LAGUNA BEACH
222 Fottst Ave.
.. '8:4-9466
rsm CLEMENTE
3C5 N. El camtno Real
' 492-4420
NOR'IH COUNTY
·dial free 5(().1220
Roducod $4900
.OwneT must sell t h I a
belWtlfUl 2-story in Irvine. Immacu1ate condition with 3
baths. 4 bedrooms. Dlnilw
room, built ins, dishwasher.
Fam.Uy rm, fireplace. Air-
conditioning. $49,!lXl. Ca,1.1
540-IT.ll
Very private home on 113
acre in mistic hills Laguna
Beach 3 bedrooms, 2 baU.,
nice 'decks new carpets A
drapes 1$l O.nlage on prop, Oose to achoola. C a 11
646-77ll.
"TRINA" • bl-level, aJighlly
li ved in, all fresh & clean.
Lease· or LI option. Ottered
at $69i500,
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7'62
$1500 TOT. DN •
GIANT · 2 Story exec type
a.rea. C&ntina k i t c h e n I
Huge indoor laWMiry·sewing Walker e Lee , room. 'P8'""" master and
EASTSIDE C.M.
3 BEDROOM
Qui.et & Crispy cleen on
mqrdfioent h a rdwood
fioors, delightful year in
great nelghbotMod. $36,ta>.
Call 64&-7171.
CLASSIPIED
DEADLINES
' Deadline 'tor copy a kW.
Is 5:30 p.m. the d"" be-
fore publication, except tor Sunday A Monda)t
Editions when deadline
ii Saturday, 12 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: Advertilen
should check their adl
dally & report errors
Immediately. THE
DAll.Y PILOT auumes
liability tor the ftnt ln-corrttt l.nlertlon. ool)'.
CANCElLATIOMS :
Whtn killlns an.Id bo
sure tct Malce a H:C'Ofd
of the KILL NUMBER given m by )'OUt ad u... . .. ftCe~pt o( )'OUI'
oahit911&!loli. Thil kW number m'uat be pre.
sented by the advmiler
1n cue of a dltpute.
CAN~TION 'OR CORRECnON OP· NEW
AJ> BEFORE RUNNING:
Ev«y effort ii ftllde to
kill or correct a new ad
that hu been ordered,
but we cannot iruaran-
tee to do so until the ad
hu appeared in l h e
paper.
DIME-A·UNE ADS:
Th<oe. Ida aro 1trk:Uy cash In advance by mall or at any one ot our of.
Nct1. MO J>hont ... n. pet411ne: 3 p.m. Friday, CO.ta M.,. olllce 12 noon -Ill branch ot-
1\c<L
THE DAILY PILOI' ,..
-tl1o rilbt .lo -slfl'i·A<ll~ -.. ,.._ 'f\lot any adwrtloon1'n~ and to cbanp Jta ntea
• ·--without l!"lor botko.
CLASilPllD
MAtLINe ADOlllSS •. o. ... wo. .
•. OrotaM ...
9:l626
295.'i. Harbor Blvd
FOREVER
OCEAN VIEW
Shafp clean 3 ·bedroom 2
bathe on key lot, room for
pool 113 acre easy Can!
yard epoUess In every way
Laguna Beach $71,500 Call
646-77ll.
· BROADWA \' •
. -Costa Me111
•••~ ittAtt vartl.ty, craclding brick fireplac e . Sweeping
1laircaae to "'HUGE, ~ HUGE" (approx '5'xl3')
..,COUNTRY LIVING double bonus-recreation
A way of life oot found room with glass wall to Spark]lng pool accent$ this ~often in Newport Beach. large sundeck. B RA N D great family style home.
Large country estate wltb NEW CARPET. Ju 1 t Assume total payment 1 stables and ieom.ls, swim-repoae~J?r. VA. $38,500. $252. 7% VA loan. Call
ming pOo1 and 5 bedroom T.O~T· , ~!';I.. cloa1n&: c{>it 847...fiOlO, A&t.
baciel:lda. Uving in a IP'8nd and .$362 per mo. pays ....... _ lf cl bl ._._ manor. Panoramic view ot1 ~t Loads of pr:ilen-.1.WTI· Your So U 111W
Back Ba)' and h 111 s • t1aJ \\'1th your love and a stereo. Sell them wttb ·
$375,000. care! Better RUSH on th1! a Daily Pilot Oassl6ed Ad '
• one Bltr 96i-5511. ~ · aJ;ld ·"8': the money tor · a · PETE BARRETT
-RE ... LTOR.:.._
642,5200
• . ....... ! Call 64U618 T""'. I Go-••· Gtnoral -~~.=~.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! ~ ... Cold\-ltl Banlce~
El\stalde ())eta. Mesa. Ptt-~ , ll£~~ BfPl(ERAGE COhtPNl't' feet starter -home. eom.ii
lol. J bodrooms. 1, l\Blh. BUICDE ' :CHOICE ' · "
Great livl.ni' area.. WW selJ, Outstanding VftW location ·for aP.4rtments .
V( .. Call now &16-77ll. or condominiUlllJ. Choice Laguna Loc•tioa.
---· ~ ~ $1_25,000. • -· . .-'!_ _, ..
Well bWlt 2 bedroom ol4@r
home. HanfwoOd floors, car•
pets, drapes, dble ranee t workshop and r u e 111
room abo~ prage, 15'
AI••Y '" e..,. --· Walker & lile . $.'5,~Sm•ll Homts ;;;;;;;;;'2'';'~'~'~';';";;;;;:;, with man,,y extru on one
lot $37,500. HARBOll VIEW
.TURTLEROCK IRO.DMOOR
Four bedrooms, 2~ baths,'31:ar garage, and
room to store a. boat. Lar~e ll,onus room pluo
• iamUy room, torm~I dinlna Toom provides
complete famlly-llymg. t@,900. -Roy McCardlo Realtor Spacious 5 b\lnn. """8ded
1810 Newport Blvd .. C~t.. hon~. In mint «ini:lltionl
54&-n29 • Dtru too numerous • to menUon -come, seel $91,500
• -lncludl"' 1he laall· • Call: m.31163 1148-0llS Country l!nglisli
Mf.950 associated
I\~ Fl/ Lf~'<-1.t'
; ... ' . ''
an arlstocn.Uc hOnle tit·
uated 1tell!J away tram tbe
ocean. Sxtenalve ute Of
al..,, heavy lhakt, ""'Ill
WOOd trim and natural bridt ;:.1'i,. ~":J:'~ l-!'IO!!"!'A:'!Tll!l!!Ul!'!!FF!!!'Sl!!!I•
briek fireplace in faml1)' Vactnt but -11 _,_.
!1J!1111. O!un""Englllbdecor 1 BR A den !11U4 homo!
""'1out. Ll,.. lot. OolY N..., °""'' l!l'l!pl, 'bltlnl, 111% ..,.,,, Bkr 962-5511. encl patio, dock + Its 11ip;
-b1IYI lhll fAntao!lc S.Uer wants lncom• F"l>· home tn lulhly 1-l'ldlClll'!d • Orance or ~" Diep
-· !top ,(amflf ·°""1'"'· ~ ftl.loo. • room b 1oecw 1191W"· Submlt·..,.,,w1ralle11 Call
Ml~ Aft· , !4»8!00. • I S l!drm t .....,., llulmum
pr1...,.-1ot. -t In and V. E. l'°"urd & ~ out. Steal at $44,950. Call w .._ ........
q i, M7-«ll0
HIGH ON A HILL IN COttONA DEL MAR
See lhll dramatic 4 bedroom home, cathedral
ceilings, well decorated, 3 car garage. Peet
a view from ~unusual corner locatJoa.
Offered for only ,500. • • • • SW&IPIN!l OCIAN YllW -'
CAM.O SHORES ' · -Elegant 4 bedroom, 5 beth home with custo111
detailing lhtougout. Enter tbrouah beautl-
flll seclilded court with fOUl\laln and pool.
Fea~s: wood noon, lat&• l'OOllll, IJ'Mt
kitchen. '2611,-000. r • llST NEWPORT HllGHTS IUY
A truly aeJtghl.ful 3 bedroom with extra large ~room. Ori best street. Only 4 y98J'I
uw; 1 vuy nicely decoralell, beaullfull7
latldtcllped, to see means to bUl'· '65,000.
DIAL 644-1746
2161 Son Joaquin Hlll1 ~ .. N.B.
A COLDWELL BANKER CO.
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Frid.iy, ,..th 1 OAJL V PILOT
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•1 al . Gen.r•I
THE YlW GRANADA
ral !;G;....,;;;;;";;S;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;•;"";';•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j S~o:!:n:!:5 MARVELOUS MONACO .
OPEN DAILY 10 TO 5 2 BR and den in HA'rixir Vlt\\!•Homes-benu-. ' GAS SAVER TOWNHOMES ''"'"''d by Nol•• RHI &tete, Inc. tiful carl>ets & .4r~s. gnmt. landscaping. NEWPORT BEACH 1 owner n1ay earl')' 200 T.D.·$66,900. Expansive white water view from each unit, · · ' 3, <4 & 5 ,BORM~. overlooking Monarch Bay, in luxurious Medit. BRAND NEW DUPLEX
$49,900 TO $64,500 design. Priced Crom $68,15-0: 2 BR., 2~ ba., in C.D.M. South of higliway. 3 BR's. eapi.
St>&cioo.s & el~ant. lelAUre to 3 BR. + fam. rm., 2'h ba.: patios. Pool, fl(eplace. ~ing room, over 1500 sq. ft. of
Nice 4 bodroon1 fa mily home just repainted inside & ou t. plus ne\\' drapes. 1h block to
grade school plus \Va1king distance to all
shoppillg in El Toro. J UST $36,950.
11\fln& I nU1c Lash\omble rec. facU. inclusive. So. Coast Hwy. to CrOwn trQutifully planned living. Great tax deduc·
Irvine planned commWti()' Valley Pkwy. in Laguna Niguel. tion. $120,000. DAVID BOURKE REALTOR of Eu.!llbluff. All mnl111en-for further Information ull: 496-6551 DUPLEX ONE BL'-CK TO OCEAN! '"" ,,.,_ can B4rbara W~ight ,,The RealEstaters 546-9950 • ,u SEE MODE LS TODAY \~!!!!!!!"l""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""l!""'""!'l!!I!!!! .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!! 673-8550 ·
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1•5. 300 JASMINE 833 Ami ... way 1Jam......,\~c;..,.~=ro~l=====~G!•n:•:•:•:I =====~~===~=~~~~==·-==::-===================;/ Just reduced ,6,600 -6eautitul 2 bdfm. & Rd. 10 Eastblull Dr., to Marl r
den home. + 2 bdrm. unit with ocean view, Vista. to Dontlnp. to + guest bdr1n . & bath. Lge. enclosed patio .~J~ ~~tk>n ~1133 separates these units. All of this• & a 40 It. ·
co~er lot, just steps·to "Big Corona". Owner
transferred & anxious -asking $117,900.
CAMEO · SHORES
Large 4 bdrm .. 21h baths. with exceptionally
~utiful ~I. Hu~e living rm. Th.is is lowest
priced home in this exclusive, private-beach
area. $109,500.
WANTED
' INYESTORS
A Ul'oiil()UI: tl()MI: $2';900 R·2
CALL ME, l'M IN LAGUNA -And one of the ~A!~f h r;1~1g!E~"Jt'Jl"E
better buys. Fantastic view ! 3 bedroom, 2 bath COUNTRY 1-IOME! N ilty
charmer!1Beam ceilings, brick fireplace, nifty kitchen. Dining area with
deck. I'm cozy, so call me ! $69,500. utility room . Ffln1ily size
bedrooms. NEAT COUN·
UNIQUE HOMES Realtor1, 675-6000 TRY 110?.fE CLOSE TO
2443 E. Co.st Hwy., Corona del Mar BEACH! 58x140 R-2 lot. ''!"!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!""!!!!'l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. j $28,900. Curious. Ca. I I I': 96:>-6761. Gener•I General
e e e JUST LISTED e e e
Six pride-of-ownership units. Walk to
Fashion Island. Abundant storage, attractive
ldscpg, carpeting, fireplaces. Owners unit
has bltin TV, sundeck, shutters, crptd baths.
Shown by appointment. $159,500.
e e e. IRVINE TE~RACE e e e
Everyone. says, ''l'rn lovely," but no one
has boUght me. I'm completely refurbished
and waiting for a family who wants 4BR,
lam rm & pool. "Near the Park''. Asking
$87,500. 1'.1ight consider lease/option with
· $5.000. down & $700. mo.
2000 SEADRIFT-OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5
BETTY A. GRUBB, REAL TOR
644-0818
General Gen.rat
Home & income on ~:2 acre.
beautiful land, Ortega HY.'Y.
10 P.fln. trom Elsinore. An
xlnt investment for only
$44.000. P.fight exchange. CAil 101· more details.
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THERE IS SOMETHING NEW . . . ' ,. •
UNDER· JHE SOUTH·ERN 'CALIF. SUN
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TH.I BER& CO .• REAL TORS
"IS ·NOW VALLEY REAL TY . (
A nationally-known corporate. real estate organization
is now operating under the southern California sun. The
name is Valley Realty, and it is now operating the 10
offices of Colwell Properties that southern Californians
know so well. Now Valley Realty will have all these new
bene'fits: · · ·
• Berg Enterprises, with the 10 fonner Colwell offices in Orange
County, in addition has 26 other offices located throughout
California. , •
': · \4 BE~OOMS l · . ·s24,9oo· ~PARK:UNG
CLEAN
Custam Features
Ready-Made Price
\Vrap yoorselt in the wanntb
of rich wood •:alls, antique
glass, and ankle deep shag
eq .. rpcting, thro u g hout .
Con,•enience ranch kitchen,
large bedroo ms . N(l
111ah11.enancc rear yard "ith
i<prinklered planten>.. Call
546-2313 for many more
details. Price $S9, 900 .
54&-2313.
e Valley Realty people are . licensed profe5sional real estate
agents who know how to sc;reen prospects for you ... how to
move your home fast ••. how to get top dollar for your home. If
you·re lool<lng for .a home. this professionalism fiilds it fast, at
the right price.
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Park setung o t con·
dominium.s. Close to shop-
ping and community s11.im·
ming pool. Good spac.-e for
thal active family with ac-
ces.sibillty to beach and bike
trail. Call 546-2313 for
details.
OPEN TIL II • IT'S FUN ro 8E NICE!
[II ~
Vau!1cd ceilings 3 lnrge bed·
roon1s. 2 baths on a large
lot. Cul-de-sac. Near South
Coast Pln1,a close to parks
.~ schools a must to ser.
Call 6-16-7711.
Walker &Lee lllAL lllAfl
MACNAB
IRVINE
·FINER HOMES
'• FUNCTIONAL FLOOR PLAN
Spacious 4 bedroom home close to shop-
ping, schools & recreational facilities. Ex-
cellently priced at $69,500. Cookie Allison
642-8235. (Ml!)
HARO TO COME BY
Big Canyon "Deauville" condominium.
Upgraded carpeting-4 large bedrooms--
over 3400 sq. ft. pool sized yard. $1311.500.
Tom Queen 644-0200. (Ml2)
OLO CORONA DEL MAR
Exquisite 2 bedroom home on R-2 lot.
Move-in ready. Great investment potential .
$64.900. Joyce·Edlund 642-8235. (Ml3)
125' BAY FRONT ·' ",
Fa~ilitiesJ_frlarge power boat. Dtlcorator's
.3 "Ndtoom. family room. formal dining
room:-S bath home. Quiet. private area-
owner's inUµ\d business . necessitates im-
mediate safe. $16.3,500. OPEN SAT. & SUN.
1:5 p.m. •41 BALBOA COVES. (M14) •
. BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY RANCH STYLE
Extra large lot w/all the niceties of North
Tu stin + convenience or a \Vbeelchair
bo'me. 4>is Miller 642-11235. (MlS)
ONE OF EASTIILUFFS FINEST VIEWS
4 bedroom home ,v/ne'v custom drapes &
carpetin~. \Valled inner courtyal'Jf & foun·
ta.ins. $96,500. Tom Queen 644-62oo. ~Ml6)
TWO ON A LOT ,;
2' separate homes on large corner lot both
w /view of Ocean. Custom 2 bedroom, 2
ba th, large family room--& 3 bedroom. 2
bath. 5-car ~arage. Pool. Corona de! Mar
Are•. $174,500, Harriet Perry· 642-8235.
(M17)
(Irvine I ---,cm •• ., I
• IOI Oowr °"" 142•12U '"'_..-1_
Ol'EN Tit 9 • tr'S FUN 10 BE NICE/
THE REAl
ESTATE RS
4 BEDROOMS
3105 Lincoln Way, CM
Formal dining r o o m ..
Separate living + fam rm.
Lgc kitchen .. c\ec hltns .. New
cpts/drps. Sprinklers front
,'( rf'ar, shake roof, palio,
$43,500.
646-3928 Eves: ~543
Lachenmyer
Re.iltor
WHERE?
YES-WHERE CAN
YOU FIND A
3 &lrni.. 2 Ba.. hon1e \\ ith
shag carpet, dining ~a,
Dbl. Gar. ;t11d fcnL't'd yard?
Btighr an1! clettn 1u11I \'a-
e:jnt. Right here in Cos la
(\leisa.
ONLY $30,950
PACIFIC
REAL ESTATE
642-0200
LAGUNA HIW
Super sharp uj1graded 4 bed·
rooms :J baths. Great f~m·
Uy mon1. n•ith (irepla<:<". Ex-
quisUc landi;c;ipe .. 2-100 sq.
rt. t lose IO all tihOJ)ping &
lrw~. ~cculive Ji\·ing. Call
616-7711.
Walker &Lee RtAl tlf,.tl
DUPLEX
Headquarters!!!
Have w • got 'un1! Here's
a pi1 .. sharp 2 story super
\llllue on oversizerl cor. lot!
Roomy myner'1 unit -walk
to aJ~ st.opg : &: schools!
Priced fight al" $49,9!;0. •
• tenm; OKJ 1 cau 645-8400.
9 (lfgS & (JiQN.M; ·.1)11 LG! I v.~·~...!.Co.I
I-luge family room with
C81hedral beam eeUlnp.
Lovely I~ attll .• Super
enl ert.llinment home tJ oh·
80-l!barp. Only 44,900. Call now 847-.6010 a¢.
1970 Ux52" Fleetwood mobile
home. Ocean view 5 Star
oduJt Newport Beach Park.
• Valley Realty advertises heavily ... every week, )Nherever
the prospecls are _. . _. so ·a.steady flow· of serious buyers see
your • listing every day! Berg Enterp.&ises also offers a
natio~wide referral service.
• Valley Realty handles all the details quickly. accurately ... with
no red tape to bother you•
• Valley Realty, a division of Berg Enterp(ises. Inc. is a
publicly-held, publicly-traded corporal,ion with activities in real
estate, insurance, mortgage banking and broker.age .... and.it is
government-regulated. Your assurance of reliability and
satisfaction.
• Exclusive one year warranty. As ·a BUYER when buying from
VALLEY REAL TY. under the American Home Shield Plan,
you are issued a : onecyear. warr~nty covering . heating.
plumbing· and electrical systems , plu s all built-in appliances.
As a SELLER , this warranty covers you shortly after listing
your home and puts it on ttle "SOLD" list first. BUYERS and
SELLERS are both covered under . the American Home
Shield Warranty. ·
To sell or buy real estate, call
* ORANGE COUNTY OFFICES *
Costa Mesa· 646-0555 or 549· I 910 Or••· 637·9 I 0 I
CALL US FOR A FREE ESTIMATE OF VALUE
PlaCetllla • 52M772
C-Dtl Mar· 675-7225
G .... Gro••·539·1162
LaH•o-179·3800
H•linglw leoc:h • 963-4543
Mission Vlejo/Sodlleback • 516-0222
................ 639·1501 .
Otllilt-c• .... Lec1"sn,
•COKord•C........,..•o..m.•..._•ftaus f
• ...,..,. • L..f.t•th • U...w• • Pllmml• • S..
LortMo • S.·a-• W ...... Cteak • c-.til • c ... ,.... s.. ...... s....cw..
0 B (' /" ~ ,. ... <' " ..
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A .Berg Enterprise-American Stock Exchange Company
Operating 3G Wholly Owned Offices
Thru-out California
Speciali1in9 in Re•idential commercial, indu1trial and inve•tment properties.
r
* '* * * Men! Women! Secure your future . '
Join the profession ~here there are no layoffs-no ceiling to your earnings.
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' I \\'t:TRAIX l'~.l"TO Sl"l"<'ESS! l·:X~t:Klt::\l't:D OK :\O'r •
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No pe1s $6200. &1&-80181_'.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:==========!.J eventnas.
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llAILY ftU>T
CleNlflo<I Mo
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!:"IUN l ..... ' HouMI Furn
IMlllALO IAY RECZN'l:,l:.ll«:EU.ATION n.r. .,. ..,.,-. ocan Sava P2». ftUldc 4 Br, 2 =:::,_..,.,..,_, a.-..... ~ WID whit m.tr . .wa. A t>nn.t:k: cathechl ~ , Ari ........ Patentl•I s1Q5..U'r~L .. PU., Nice Bach s BR. 2 BA. "ft 1harp. Lee = .~~i.!1:1 r~~.'1!';...'°'"mf·:t ' ~ ~ qttcull\ltt.I . Delert l{ol'Slrincs -lt1obU home Jand -Sl~P6~11· ~~~r. ::;;;Uynn. l~I. IMS uq~1~1;
tamOy nn. on ~ liewl. o« San O&eao n..v •IA laJ'4. ~ a comer o1 t' $V ~ • _ KBlk". Crom clubhoUse _ $4:,500. Roo1n. Y~ patio, So. Eu~. c.~1. locaUon. ~ CD .... b.di, .. Pu Rd,_ call C\ 11 c II: Mtfsni,eect major •rtertn, Call ~. , 1....a.1una. A\'llll now! mo ~lo. Qi.JI
..... mtatt • tbe poola. Hlmpmn <n•> ~ llAND NIWI cmly it mi from Frf'sno-UXHITJL PO. 1 BR hou~. I Lorry S..5880
Jl'll:;RALD • •y L..._. Hlha HOME + INCOME! Custom S bedroom, 3 CSavil dty 11.mJll ln the p11lh Near Lancaster and Edwards AFB. Great blk l1eal'~ \\'tst Nei••port. :-.rt>N <lf:I ~Jar tract, 3 -~ bath. M i ·1 •-... I ol (l'O'Wth. Wlth 29';;i dn, Potential Hotel &it._,,pp1. 10 acres $100,000. $300-NJCEL y ~"urn 2 BR. 2 bedrooms. 2 bathl. av.II Stm&tk!MJ ~· co&onlal. LRQ 5BR, SBA. 1*r-b-que us ve -..ump ,...__, fl.rep ace1 ptusb • ownt.r wUI carry at J14t;t;. ~ lrsMc, l I.ilk btllch, April l!ith . Relt'reOC('I a!:,".,"':"~ i:&~s;:'~awt. ~?J~f: F!:U;":11~~~Co~· Call today lo. dolallod Call 64&-0555. NU:V[IW RENTALS ::.:''lh/"~:•.:;"'n:,'!~~1
_,,.,,, lfflln(. L.ofuna Mwuol lo help p1y 1'1Yl Pr!Jne BEACH locaUpn. brochun. • • • Near MOJ!.VE-BARON VALLEY-appx. 5 .,,,.._ or -""""' >16-4141 = =· ~· lloon • .:::==..:.:;==---.AJklng •118,500. TRY A TRADE. MAGIC CARPET REALTY actts $19,000. Call 646-06M. fJOO. 1 Br ...... CM .1 .. ' ' BR. 2 BA. '" "'"''· o.... t 1atbl· cell a., S-bdrma., * * * • (n4) l'l'9-44CI P-•bl E clU !Jr hoo»e near NB fol'\\')' sized gar, \\'Ork bt'ncb, patkl prty. tnft.ct..~i;;· Ip. OPEN HOUSE &lnlkY" ll G• & W1$ CO -.. MSOrn-x ng investment tor for· $125. Blcillor unit Balboa + lg. ex1ra ferk.'ed 161 for
MON.
• •y = -IO ' pen 231111 ""-• , •t .. V•STM:(INT> ~D sighted investor. Approx .. 10 acres on Fort 111'. A&t lee. 91\l-S430 gard•n. Family onl•. "'«
-••RR. cJol ~-M. i..w.. N•--• 80 Tej n• -000 Call "0
' -An aur ......... _._ ,._..
11
._..,_. ~. JI 1'f aete. 196 00 .rw, ..-, · 646-(>MS. IMlbo.t Penin sula iHO"'"l4Q; or M8-82.ll
·• -v new can. D~ontbllf .... '---,--v SA .. •~ .._ __ A-.-..,..-'"•80 , , • · temporary lllcm t neait ·-_ ... ..., .__,.. .,.,.,.,.. ... ., • ....., ...... ~ ~· .... ..., r.• i BR. 2 BA. famll)' l'ln
3·_, IQ.-tt. 4 ~ .. ~ ~i°:': ~ w':il!!!!;?;'.:;~r::,~;;;:~~r:~'.I Actts. SfOO P"" acre. 20 ' 'CALL US FOR AifflEE ESTIMATE OF VALUE 45 BAYt~RONT. Pil"r. Ooat, "'/h1>'c. xtra !gt' encl yrl. batha, formal ~ rm, ~tiPAc.. ....-.1.....i.i ... -Newport leech ~··~ IMch Acrft, $4:1> OW .. cre. 30 • 2' 5, BR. 4 i.slith. Winter or Gardener A " .. ter pd. '&
lamtly .... ............ ..... ..,,. ........ ;;,;,~-;.;;;;: ~.,...,. """ ,,., • .,... .. .. .,, .. ,,,_ ~f\LLEY , .... ,. m.:mo s kl " "2 5 . m •. Jacunt • .....,.,... outdoor ......, din. nn. .,__ea YH Woll•'t LOVELY...,,.'"....,.,..,. _4aft l600 ,per .. .., '~ ~ t • Co,...,. d•I Mir •21JJ>12-1"'°' ........, ltvinc I a neep'"--·· I"_ .. _ ~· t'!OITltr lot, beautiful Acres w/cabl~ll.SOO. 1.56 ~ ' 3 BR. 2 BA F/R Dllt
view. $129,51 -....,. .. _, w ... ~. nn. I 'A..it.4n Walt 'TU S•wr view. 159.950 AcrN w/e1btn I corn! t j Huntl-ton •-1~ who,'~.N~ C:,~_!tlonn br o..!!,>, MoMfR'cH BAY ~ = di~ : , To •-,. GORGEOUS condo. ...., m.ooo . ...,,.. A....,,.,.... ..• _ <n .. ~ ~·~ ~·
Thia 4 bdrm., s bal.b $lie.Dish deytr lncL A home b' -r "' taculAr "'"°' ot ba,y • proptrtln, lncludia& lann REAT TY BEALi TM-~I 4BR, JBA, &r:>--0m . aty~ home hu • paneled iradoor Uvic· 198:m. Conertfble!! 6§.l564 Act· ~'I onp:,Z = ~\~e~! .l.J• ~ sq1
11 l'~11wj .. ~'!'!u~~· Th°"IMA~CULA==~TE=l~BR~.-,~BA-.1
Wnily nn., ..,,, In moo" u•RION MILNE So • -•1 for Jhe 1n11 lJllO l;ando lBR. 2BA. 200 ' · ·-· -· ""-1· 11 r1o bdrm ' awfn ,_ •uy .... ated ft to bea~b. $52.SOO by Acre •• Inc. SS8881. A lhfg Ent•rp,ise·Atnerlc•n Stock-£lch•no• Com~ny ()y,11er n ~ .,, ..... ., am Y m1, cov. P8 .
Guarded .. • 1.,,mmlncpriv. ~ ltlAL ESTATE prion; of the 1ummft' to -· _.. 1 p I L ' 8 h GM BBQ. Gardener. SJZ5. club SU0.000 QI S. Ctlut Hwy buy a pmfltable .twnmer-ownirr, -...... Cemetery ncom• roptrty 66 aguna •ac Avail. -t/15. ~7 after 6.
• 1Agw\a lkacb eMS58 :~~:111 ~rtyloca, Call,_.. Newport He!fht' -Lets/Cryftl • 15' 10 UNITS I ;_ I[• 12 BR home ~1th lenitic Sti\1! gas 2 br 4-plex $150.
Lido l1le ~ HIGH ON A . oc't'an "' purk ''iew on CliU _gill', kids ok . l BR doo.1.'11. 2 BR up <fu.. • HILL 2 .LOTS ocean 'w. Paci11c $120 .... 900 tlr,$IOO. f:\'C:'IR36-9001 Homefinder1 547·9641
SUPER LIDO HOMIS plex, only 6 doors to lht' A cuatorn bit.. one ot a kind ~ 1-lemorial Park. $190. • , ,,__ .. _._
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• btach. Now only $7'9,900. howle, v.itb 3 bdnns., den 5-'5-UIS -: 10 unit brted &: butttr &J>t.!1. Business lido Isl• Kids pets Ok 2 Br Sl50. 1 e.-.
.......-• --r ~ lt)i'k r,>own. a: ltu'· yery beautlf\llly All 2 bedroom. Prime ~rt I 200 $Ia>. util pd. 3 Br, fllO. Al;I
1
Call &u-7211 dt"<;Cnled: a mutt see! Commercl•I \\'estmlnater Io cat l o n . "'t'I"" un ty BEA UT. 4 BR Nord bay ~··~ee~m.&~~•~:JtJ~----< 204 Via Ithaca $81,000. • Pro.....tv ,. 158 Al·rou lrom 1 hopping f~nt, ,Pit'r • slip .• $1400. mo NF.\\' dlxe 2 story. l br, 2 ha, Ultra~ lam.lly home. OPEN ;SAT/SUN. 1·5 ~ · center & schools. Returns MEN WOM N 'rly. a-16-0075 or a-l&-0076 di.JI g11r. (Unv. ta 5hppna.
OPEN SAT/~N. 1·5 • BR. den, din area, b!at • m "CATALINA 'NEWPORT llACH 9.6 on loveittment, lfOllS in· • E Hous.1 Unfurn. 305 s.:uo. 833-!HlJ.
3133 IONN rm. 2ll 1tti.~.L\C ~me ·Ba~t Sitt' d':~'ei.t~~PI'· yr, Call to-Do You Nffd Extra General 2~B~R~.""'",= .. ~,-.-Se-p-.-,.-,'
ror t& f~ that la bln. a.ES For boat~ & salt's · -r----llx-on1e Or Want To carport, nt>w cpl & m,i.., *·~j e~12: ~ 2:~:~r.s. ~ ,a ... !!!lf! ... ~:r.;.."""·NC.111!1.,,,, l.isi~*'~ !'B1r1 :::::;·M:·~:~ :::.::!~$ f~~~5~F1-~1
Joe.n, $55,950 BK. Clmtom built. tt'n ftttplace. Dining room. · ~-••-=~ ANNUAL f fiit MOUSll ~ana Point REDWOOD & GLASS monthlnew! dretlm kitchen. Covt'red Condomlni"""'-10UNITSCOSTAMESA uts 1---------<
0..1.,,.,i by John ~-· $119.SOO parlo, Sprinltlen lront • ~~~~~~~'.:: ' for .. 1. • 160 t Sopar•I• Hou .. , BUSIN£SSI L ouni. 1'!MACULATE 3 BR, 2 BA
FAIA. Locatt'd on ntate "d rear. Paneled garap -,, .. Ith ~ • WE The "Al\l....,...Rt'nted" ~ MIWPOIT 'IAY,C.M. 642•1lll ~~!tto ~:::m1~ker~ I
med grounds. Priv. driw I: p..t.Hl...M..•-Rcattn :~:::::' ~~::S· a= OPEJ'l ffou9e"Sa.l ·A SUn 1-5 BWWERS In Carµiff Situated on M 160 Sq F't t OPPORTUNITY Pool, Siaurni, Bach S1'42. util comp I et e pr Iva c y. ""~U¥HWIS •7 U3 CaUe Empalme, SC By Tbt St'a. Thll beaut. Land Income '$19 axi' yr. \ 1111. enclOi<..od i:u.r Spaniih founto1ln \/•lley
Pamramk: ~,.of Laguna FEAll'CFIS $75,900. Call 5'&0-1721. Sharp J yr old, l BR. 2 BA. new~ unit ~'.Ope;n Sul n-ti,tm . ' .. fu111. 1------'----I ~ Pe•".cflcl•~I ... N$11!!:!f' 3336 Via Udo fir;MJl.23 ( TAABaL.] din ara and ilni rtJll n1ir-& • IOcean ~. full y Wnle-y N. •J'•ylor Co SHOW Oldo·r 2 llr $1·10. Brin;: fanl" 2 sn ... Gl1ean1lc ru1npw1 ..... .,_. rared cloeet doOls, beautiful landJCaped, decks off eo.>ery ,o-~.<rnRS ' Jl('t.s tlO\\. Rm .. AU hltns, 2 t.•ar &ar&IC•»I $L~-·LIDO COTI"AGE room, ~ BR, 1 dt'n in ea. ·2lll .. ~·~ . · I K'"" .----vlinr.-. fruit trees.. Room for unit. All eltt. Frlcl<Unre . '-" ~uln Wlls Rd. C"i) ':' l3r Slij. rn('tl, ir:ar, 11.~·1n1 poo · auii ok. 1269 I
Th.ls i bdrm. home ii a 2 Bdrma., farnl.lY rm .. 2 ~ boat lrlr-$:18.850. applna. Auto Pl'1lif door Nev.-port. ce,ittr 64-1-4910 MARCH 22-24 c11ld or pel. mo. No f tt. Ag!, 842·4tll
dellaht to ahow. Near tennis ;?s~ Almost completed. _ 4A ll••ltor1 492·2100 ~· $46,500 per unit or 9 NEW l>UPLEXES-llnIT)' 2 hr, fnt:d ror pets, Huntington Beach :
Cts., pool, sauna· le jacuni. · 2955 Harbor Blvd. BEAUI'i ShO&dltiS 4 BR.. 2 J9'.t.CO'.t ror "'.fl91e bklg. Take DANA POINT FRI., 5 PM TIL 9 PM N11t lk·h S\90. I
Priv. beach. Owners TRIPLEX GRAND OPENING ba. OCean View on· ~t Frftway S to Blrmlnahan1, FABULOUS QCEAN VIE\\'S SAT 10AMTIL9PM Super i:ll'1111, sharp 4 Br, BE THE FIRST ~500 Olttler home . Penthouse 6. 2 •tudio apt.I. comw 201 '"\fl.a Monte C1J tov.·ard OO!aa It tum ._,,900 to •sn,950 SUN.10AMTIL6PM $260. ~ev; bhw shag Uu'\l to live in brand nev.·1 _. Newport Bay Towers ~~ .... go. right on Sornel'ltf 10 1!24 & $41l.950 non-view out, bu1ll ·ln! hu1;e yd. Taman&ck T 0 w n h 0 u 1 e
'vision Vic Stuart 3 BR, 2 ba. ea. SO Ft. on l le 2 BEDROOM -~·"• 182&. Ph:Jfta 19-4'11& or From $6000 down Hone ~~I 4 Br, J ba $350. ovt'rlooking ell"&"ant pool It
RMlty • 494-7531 sandy$160000 beach. Leuehold. CONDOMINIUM HOMES San 'Juan. 0.pl'.sttano 'M--6971. 4 Plt'Xtt. 1'14.!M-195.950 8U$S.IN.E$TShoEMaXHnl8YITS Gar re for Kids &. pets clubhouse, mR, w/w shat. ' · Bayfront Homes Office open f'ri..8Un t frplc. drps bltln1 pr l polio
Bohinc! Gu•rdocl Gatn LIDO CLASSIC Boal Sllpo IN THl!(l'.>lUNTRY SUPER U UNITS 33lJJJI ~um.~ $ LANOLOROS $ sa;s' nmt ,,; 1,.,., ht m0 Magnificent ocean 1e moun·· . Full Security Hi&:hrbe . BY TIJE SEA 1ilt'se three 4-plexn are Phone 831-2701 Plus FrH Saturd1y FEE fo'R.EE. eau us Today. tree.~pvt ply, 963-4074 '
lain view, tennis a: rec Dramatic Grecian home. & Stttl le concrete coMtnaction E l iian.~ ,~· Br, 2 Ba, 1oc:,.ated In a nlte Anaheim WkdayS call builder. &12-4905 Bu1lnn1 Building $ALA RENTALS$ 968...mn
-nter ra .. lllt'-s a-a all al~wn-. like iarden. High Privatt' Balconies w\th t.amUy room tonna1 area Very low vacancy fac OS <-I 'N 1~~"'=-~~,.=· ---..... ... ~ '" ce1l 1 4 BR. de din nn d'·'--' tor. Park-nke loti w-m'. CL E TO BEACH -m n1r ev.·rort & Buy, 642-8383 LEASE OP ION $1,0IO yours \\'1th thi1 exquisite 3 '' • n. • • 'garqe space• per unit. , ...... ,., . le muter suite-, bedroom home with large A must to see. $159,500 , ,., Roof top IUndeck den i. 3 C'Af' pane. Greet mine ·pools .l M.ndt play Bntnd New Deluxe 3 lo: 4 Dllntyland Hot•I 3 BR. 2 BA townhOuse. Bii· prt t
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Richly led Unusual Opportunity t 0 rear y'ard, 041-IUte lot Only ~a. All 2BR l.SA units. BR Duplex. 3 Ba. Dbl gar lfl.S, rung~. Ovt'n, refrig, iwb'! er:·
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dlnh~~m. Purehut' Ba.Ytront Property 2 miles from Dana )lartna Cross 9Chedulcd Income ea. $80,000. 514 18th St. HB. Conv.ntion Center Walk to !!hopping. Nf'v.• c6r.
P'antily room, Jjreplace. in Newp:irt Beach. in erttn'C'aplltrano Valley. ~r $21,000. per yr. Wllh Call Bui~r. 847-39S7 loot An3hetm Con". Ct.) pet & lilt'. Cheaper lha.11
Roman tub. Gu BBQ pit, 1,.,...,====~iiiii 310 Fernando Rd., NB. Only $51 •. 'with B 3/8% llYA:t dn. owner will can')' at lndu1tr-iel Property 161 (714) 774-1632 renl. S2301mo. A1k tor
lots of deddna:-OUice, -~=~':.;7"'s.15.:;;cS:.;I~=-financ~: Call tOO-,y Jim• 8%%. Bottle W•t•r Route Dale, 963-6746.
workshop I: private bt'ach BAYfll-IT ~J<=el:o"""o:=,;;ino;.•;;,>,o49G'M5lc;'~~~ MAGJC CARPET REALTY FOR SALE • 16,00> sq. ft. SJ\VE YOUR DOV.'N PA\'. parking. $84,900. Ca 11 nun BEACH DUPLEX RE:oucEo 15(1'.l). Immediate <TI41 8'19--444.l new Tilt-up building on 1:~'()9: !:,~tt:.~~ °';! al W.11thCOSTAMEl4 l?!JENT 111hile tfnllng. $50.
494-BJJOJ, VIA LIDO SDUO ' .. ":'!'"'. ~-2. ~auu"ru12 u""n11' OCcupancy. By °"11ff, will p~ISprilnp.nd 2 BR, 2 BA . 00
40'(0) sq.Seflll. ol,land. ~w S2.'iCK.I. down. S ILVER LANDLORDS FREEi mo, I't'lund on PUJ't"hase 3
'"" ->< • ., ...... oc "'o"""""" •---I o~u •tam 1uan, ee a , Best S. end wn -t'r o provoue SP Bdm1 pr. '-·· 2 .. ,
( )
onl oldl y· _ ........ ..,.... U4o'•..., • Ion t n nc1 RINGS \\'ATErt c1111 put 1 •NDLORDS! ' ' ...,.., car. nr .
TAA8ElL. Y one Yt'f!IJ' Inf! nn. 2 BA, V'lotw lot. k>cation. ~.950. li'l4 ) gu enn na ng. )'OU on a route Ln Ora~t' ...,.. Be11eh I Yorklov.·n. S2i'5 .
• '--buy at $95,000. au•-·"--h»-.ocli38-=,l&l0:::::;·:_,.,~---I W . .., DAUM & STA.FT ,.._. 1 . .,__ 962-4"""
1 L4J1e duplex with nice ..,.....w; .... ~ ,.., * eap ~3107 ............ n Y 1 1u..:flt area earning \re Speclall.ze ln Nt'v.·por:r-~-·~·------~. private beach. 3 Bdrms., 2 ~ patio. <n4)4!i13..%1.'l8. Duplexes/Unlh ~S $l500. per rno. Potential Bee.ch e Corona del ni-tar e 3 ,Bdtm. 2 Ba. hltns, w/dl')'
_ ~~ , baths+ deck 11p l 3 bdrnu:. VYJC~ OPEN SUN. 1·5 N"' 4 BR Ule · 0 162 FUR Salt' • 8(0) sq. ft. new ~limited. \\·e 11.>ill tni.ln the l Laguna. Our Rental Ser. book--up, cpts, \" ler\CW )'d.
l9'l> $. Cod Hwi1 Laguna
& 2 batbs dawn. Carpeted; RlAiivJrc. Viev.lpoint, Ocean Vtew ' l'Ut-uf Mdilii.pn :K>,IXXI sq. fli:bf man. 964 N. Balli.via, vice i1 FREE to You! Try sm. pet ok. Jo'rplf'. SJIO 1110..
blt·inl: frplcs.: etc. Ter-XJnt ~. Cpt. Lrg lot. eY NEW' DUPLEX ~11:r, 101and·~~:zn · Orange 111<11SJ2-6j(}I Nu·Vit-w! inn Guilder, 11.B. 1m,
rif:lcbayvletr.$19'5,DOO.Xlnt EStM owner $63,900 33lm caue ~pro yr. Atrro PARTS-NAPA 11.·ill NU.VIEW RENTALS m.~o,·~-----
SUN
... tenn11. App't. IJ9)y. Agent ,._.
117
•0210 Borttro 831.o&n. 3 BR, 2 BA House + 2 W" A~';;' .. •• ""'sr-·~""'""' open a perts store tor you. 673-4030 or 494-3248 3BR. 2BA. fam nn, luxu"" 6134911 6TS-8549 V... or BR 21,S BA Apt Frplc' .n . UIQ • -JU~ Y need bu •:1 l • • • • Santi Ana ga;s, patlo't, ~·s, e~: * Call s.£1107 * ou . Illness o r DELUXE 3 BR 2 BA home, 1..'I'pls, drp!!, blUn, Jou
... wlrid & sa.11. Thl1 duPlt'X, .....,...2001..:..::::"tnlO Ne"-He'·hlo. lots for •·re 170 •,.u1omat1ve know-how. 50';1> Townhou!t' Rec feat ion ot xtl'M $350 507-6773 aft
Sch • '
on a breeze 1¥t-ept knoll in BY owner 3 BR. make offer .. .-. 15 -1nancing avallalMe. C.all center ..,.,· 1 H~/ th. .llam Dana Point, offen you BAYFllllllT ... rv --------. ' Call Builder. &46-441• -211--74~ or write A. 64~0 . ........ mon m="R"'=m~.~bl=t1.-.~.~h,~--.'
monthty ~renting ... ftll!llll uuriu. Upper ~ck lay 2'722W. Pendlt"ton$25M. Income Property 166 LAKE ARROWHEAD Yates Box 15426 Lo• •. . . . . ·-: ~~a: to them~! ·t 42' v ia. Llcld" NOrd Execlltfve Home ~ ~. "=' ~iJoM. Hillside Lot. Vicinity Qiuntry Angeles !nll5. 8-lboa Peninsula s:m pa~; It~~~~ Sh~~
salllng & entt:rtalnltw. Each Custom!~ and family rm, Good' invntment S97-19!l> 11 UNn'S ~· $Ill). SW-26'29 even-•Liquor Store $25M mo 60' IMMAC bayft. 4 Br. 4 be. "'963-<l"-"~746=-~=~---1
=emea:n ~w;:!~~ M=C:~~ e1:e~e:;_ :_~~~~:'c~ewr:: South Lap• EASTSIDE WATERFRON1, Dln)'On eFtoatlng dinner hse ~1. cd!.r':ruoo~tA~i ~~area 2BR $150. uu1
$64 5CKl 1 gpect. Mt11t see to apprec. gar, enclosed ~ar yard, BY, O\\<ner', ama.11 2 BR, fr. Lake lot. $1po Dn/$100 mo, •Boat Mfg, 1 mill gr Apr 1. S825 Yrly. By appl. HorMfinder1 547·9641 •.AIJ· .1 Prln. oril.v. kl.bi •itt lot. P.lany builtln glc patio, ocean view, llhag ~!~1!tti!'~talnM~~~~= Owner'\VIJI carry. 536-0321 •Machine Shops Owner. 673-34-19. 2 BR new $2'.5 Pool
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,... 1 _ -$225,000 luxury le•-·· <Iii<. $38,500. '196-8696. lo Ne.,,... m .... 8 units bnchoo, Forms, HOLLAND BUSINES LUXURY LEASE Air/.,;..,, A .. lo; o ... :
v'1kff £' Ov.'tttn·Broker $71,000 Tustin -.ilh fireplaces. all y.ith Grovet llO 5 • 0-O 60 8 SAL&S &t)....4170 10th 11 Bay. Shov.·n by nppt 96l-6767 or S.17--oJS. R"'AL mATE 6'2-2l1Xl cENruRY 21 su-1m ...... & buUMM.IO<XI"" ,, "' Owne RARE I"" 2 "'' I'!!'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"" ONE of Orang~ Countj's fine over $1900. per mo. jU!lt ~fONEY maker for 511.le
0
y. r ~ 1
Br $170. Yrd ruil Glenne)'l't' St. OOZES OlAR~I! hOmes. Tustin Jt!PJ, pvt $196,500. w.µ 11UL1Ullilned. ~~·a=da&Oi.~~ 2~1. Catering trlr, ean mount o~ Coron. del M•r ~ncd,Jdsd and pe_547 9641
4*'9473 Sti-0316 laWSOri DUPLEX 2 B~BEACH =., ~1~.3t.i.': Tak!•e advutqe l833-33Jx;~I &'!'BPf!frult. Drip Irrigation ~~~~.' Atake ofr . 2 hr townhouse mo 2 :; c:ts~~. Nr ~ach
4,CMXI Sq. ft. of spacious CouJd be 4BR w/modific. f1l tm. (TIJ)642..1584 , , ·• l'!lta . B e au t )' 2 br super apt S350 $110 ~.. ..-• 0....-nen 3 BR-2BA w/frpl. ment w/"filme c e 11 a r. , !ylltem. ·St7S.CXXI. '4 '' YRS b 3 br. v>ew Laguna S3Z I ehikl & ..... ~. lneld ...,,:,
OCEANFRONT elqanl.."e. Z..Sty. liV. rm., 4 • Huge trellis, covd patlo $1 • · 35 ACRES a\-ocado & ci~. Salon. 6 Statkms. S12.CXK>. 3 B~. Nl!wport .' view $425 mo. 96.1-337'9
bdrms., din. nn., 3 car • 2BR w/vit:v.·. Brand new ;' 'Vt'll, driR in1gation. Joins fuM· ..rea. A Sand & Sea 3 br. Harbor \flew $4'15 Bike to beach 2 Br houac
garage. -15 Fl lot. Like new. e Adjacent to small parlr; I ~ ·~=---•::ii' new \\1ild Animal Park ty. m.8800. 2 br. FR DR. Shorecliffa $495 $110. l Br $2'15. Slnglt' or CONDOMINIUMS $152,000 J. C...y Rlty 64&7414 --. flll 1170,000. Call Doug Prieot. Monor to L .. n 240 ' br. ca'"'° lll<hlands 1575 tamllles. ,,.. ree "™""· bocuGll'tlaweoaJ .. •Ask for DIO< WHITE e · · HOUSE Stout & Alloc., 747·5.550 Call 61":>-7225 Near Beach·2 Br $200. iar
--548-!933 + RMI Est••• 1st TD Loans app'I '""' ok. Gracious 1500 to 3000 sq. ft.
residences. Directly on HeiJr
!er Park, Divers CO\.'e &
Pacific Ocean.
3416 Via Udo ST".,....&562 Mobile t...,,_ 2 ·UNITS ExcfMw 112 :;au...,.,c-•""' mw.ur:ar • ......-Homefinder1 547-9641 i>:~T H~~~~ For We 125 New Triplex. :r BR, 2 BA ·-.-UP TO 90% 1•.t"'J VALLEY 3BR, I be, pr, fenced yrd,
FANTASTIC BUY :W TUSTIN AVE. MOBILE ~1 +Two 2 BR. ' BA Apb. 8" % INTEREST blti,,., '"'''· av•il oow S240
Back door to beach walk' SBR, bm <m,l BA, new all "~ Patio. Frplc. Yanl. ~undry PROPERTY ·OWNERS "' REALTY mo, Coll ""-'"' · .OPEN HOUSE w/ """"'"""' wlj. 4 BR mod kit, oov petlo. Lot 70' x FOR SALE: ' room...,..... 646-4414 2nd TD Loans i.,,-,..1-•• ===-'---
DAILY 10 AM to 4 PM + ba.y vu. Low tax ea & 110' Jg. )'d .. nn. forolymplc SILVERCREST 6 UNITS ln !owl" l'ftWen-Have )'OU a Real Estate :"':-::'~:':,,:g,:~~--:-:~-:::1~=~:=:;;:;;:;;;;;:::! MOBILE HOME :1 problem? \Ve specialize in
49' Cllff Drive r::m:y garden palio. Now pool. $66,500. 17-J.6676. Ual area on Ba Ibo a' II exch11.na:ing all tvpes of Low•st r•t•• Ot•ng• Co. $10,000 less. HWT)'l Open ~ "4~ 20' x 53', 2 Bl> 2 B> carp., Penimula Point. $1200 per property. Consult "';ith us. S•ttler M'-. Ca. SEA WIND 2 BR. 2 Bn .•... ••·•·•• S.1Zl L .. unoBa•ch SW>.1·5.425VlaLldoNord, ..._. ?-_,,,, dnP'd, ~Mm., r.tdg., mo loc. $138,000. qw.,..., BARRETT .REALTY 6422171 ·• 2 BR.2Ba.,ilco ...... SJ8> 4M-5Sn RHltor• ,,,.741.. _, ~ wuher~elect.dfyer,wlred 548-9696 • ,545.061} Next To Spy11lass 3 BR, l'l """" ...... l300
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_ Vord• 11e1++ ? p 2211 air OQnd., kflOh, HOUSE + 6 UNITS '42-4353 Se.vlng Hubor are• 2' yn. VIEW " 3 BR, 2 bath• .... , $.1101450
('! clock, Aorage shed, land-N i Maney Wanted 250 4 ER .. 1% bathM • ••••• S300
OPE
N ~N. lr' EXl'RAsharplg.3BR,28A, ·SLEEPING BEAUI'Y IC&Ped~.Thl"t'eyi-..old ~.~:~t~~EI~~~ TRADE6Unlts~kfor --l Bedroom, 2 bath home. 4BR,2balhs ••••...••• mo ~ 1% uawnable loan. Call IN 11lE BWFFS • like nu. Located in new off Call Bulld 6*-44l4 ()cange Count)' U fl I t 11 lSI' TD LOAN, 65".4 OF fireplace. form.al dining, 4 BR. 24; balhs •....••• $450 25'5 KIL WAY 357~. e Fee land e ~tnll a.Ir adult pk. a......, from noisy · er · &l6-3701 plSt' Ive~ VALUE. 1~ INTEREST. i"iell-clea.ning oven. Enjoy CALL 552·7500
UNBEUEVABLE VIEW of N;;.:.~=:::...~.~.-,-ch~--e Karastan cpt1 • Cltm dilJI St. One-half bl. from clut>. BY owner, Hoo~ + 2 Units. RHI E1tate Wanted 114 832-4387 pri\'Blt' community tt'nnis &:
CQUtllne from this custom j.;.:.:•;;:.~,,.;;;;;:;;___ • Deli&htful Rcludt'd patio house. m:.496. Call EVES. 5 Blks from beach. Groa Mortgagu, '"""immlng pool in this VJSIQN
bl.L redwood paneled con-e Super upgraded • Extru ~. 697·715.2. mo. $37l.. Price $38,0X>. PY.T. PARTY WANTS TO Trutt Deeds 260 Pttlltigioua area a hove
""""°"""2Bk.l«:onvert. OPEN $AT/SUN. 14 •Only 10% down CAN BE SEEN AT: Sl&-6006 BlN HOME DIRECT Corona 1~1 ""' S495 ,.... • d h"ll
den home. Wkl• <Xpanoe ol 1100 $ANDALWOOO J. c...,, Rlty 646-7111 CR•STMONT 7 UNITS • NEW >1WM PVT Pl'Y :;JS.3962. XLNT '""· local ..... """' n>oofh -...... l\i4...too. re I
glaAI OJ*1I entire bout' to Exchaaive ~ Shorts • A5lt for DIO< WHITE • ~. ESTATES OCEAN v1-i. HOUSE wanted. Pvt pty wi11 equity, discounted 10 yte ld BIG CORONA has a new ~.!!!. ~...t..~:: 4 BR., 3 ~s be.~. family MS-1933 1051 Site Dr., Bfta. (C-erltral ~'". ~'E-... ~""""'for local ovtt 1$%. Bkr. 642·7491. chalet 4 BR or l BR, both R~LTY REALron.r; livina ;,;•Sm.500 •-,,._, rm., lonnal dining rm., 2 Ai.'!!. acrou from Brea Brand llPllllkma" new 7 wUt ,..~ • ..., •• .,....,...._, v.·/lrplcs loUI of open beams Un1i.•. Park Center, Irvine
SHI
. ELDS trpl.e1. Priv .. rear yard with NEWPORT SHORES O>mm. Heap.) Lot •46. apt. Recttatlon r oom, OaMified W tell big items, Put :your bUdpt. b8clr on & 11tained "'OOd, views oll:l'i~~!!\'"""'"'"'~~;;,,j sparkling poOI. $154,500. We 1peda.lhe in Newport a>NTACr RAY, PK: MGR., breath taklne ocean view. una.ll items or any item. the track .. , Sell Idle Items Spyglas11 & Fallhlon Island, 2 BR. Condo •••••• $2.15/~10. REAL mA TE Vlalon Vic Stwrt 9ma proputla • call UI for ~. Spanish 2 •I 0 f' y I ...... •Just call &t2.-S678! with a low-colt Dahy Pilot $450 & s.'.60. 644-417>1. 3 BR. liome ..•••• S2!'rin.10.
R .. lty 494-7531 ID see • l9Q; CR!mWOOO, g X 3 2 dt'l'Kl'Wnd parking, 200% lgt -2 STORY 2 BR, 11A ba nr -I BR. Home •..•.. $300/1\10.
318 TilAUA "4IM-8003 A-Frame, walk to beach, w/00 pop-out room. 1 BR. UAer de~reciation. 8oom1nl Fashion l.slJU)d, wlk 10' all 3 BR. Home •••.•• S315ft.,IO,
HOME & INCOME ~ ACRE pool&, etc. 3 BR. $49,500 tull ea. JOrced aJr i.eat, new commwuty. $199,500 .fu.ll ·C.liQ "'() ..5\ "\.. ,( -f) "C. ih:aQ. e stores, $235 per mo. S100 l BR. Home ••••.. smn.10
Walk to bMcb on tree lined Pool • Paddie Temdl • Ill-CAYWOOD REAL TY crpt1 I: drpt, bltm, BX21 price all two bedroclGIS;. • \:)\!::t J.'"U ~).. ~ pq• \J clean, 2lJ...~1153 0 r 3 BR. ltome S425n.10. 1!'::n.~ ll:l~ ~ ~m..~81\, 3 car """ * -•290 * =.:'.,.~~ -~NVfsnCaJll 183:1-33111'... . That /n1riguing Word Game with a Chuc~/• 7ft0.!ITT2 R*";~~ •. ~A*L TY*
, d' vi HAlllOll VIEW I ----...... C\AV .. .......... cozy CO'I'TAGEiJ_ BR. fpl, formal tn nn, H "&' nn HOP-SKIP~UMP 1910 1Jx52' Fltttwood mobile • _ • ' 1~1 btks lo bcH. ~~1:> 100. BRAND Nt\V 4 BR -+ four
w/trplc. Beautifully HOMES 3 muter bdnnl., Vii b&lhl home. Ocean view 5 Star , O~eGl"ro~ ~tt•n ol the HAL PINCHIN 1"00n\. + Formal D\nlna: =: ~ ~:: R~ TY aM1IO frpilc, family room that wol ::it ~$621()~~ • w ;:''1or~01~""P't''!:o,=· • • ,. ~ Rl?altor • 61"'4392 Available April 1st $395 pr =1:~~· P~~~l ': ~~et~ of1
1: ~ ~· lBR. 2 full bll +2BR, 11'4 K l 8 R E ,C ,. r, 00s!11~E~~~~. ;Ju'io~ i ~~~~~~t : ~~~t;1~~11g.
apt OYer '3 car s•r !ii l"e&r. = •lmple. •500· FIU<lu..Y Pk-3 BR, '.2 bl.. be., $62,500, C.oata Meaa,. I . . "u r, nr ~)Of)g, $l&i, fan1-m1. 2 r111lcs, nlany e>;· ~f:.~Oon.Mpodbuyat 110 WtYON ~~Re:~v. ~·~~~al~~'. ~~~iii ~'!!:e"J:"' -J, J I J JI 2~~~2:.1ge JM1Uo,cpts,31r;t.~15;15r~2l~ar adull
3 BR holw,--daflt-. 11th PALATIAL• IR. H.8. 8C7-mo TRrPLEX. Ocean • Vu . ~ drp11, stm:e. 1 Blk Beath. pool, 1Jni\'rt1hy P a rk . ~b!!..500.~~ Plmft. tDnnaJ decor. Dinilll ~ + ~ !Mi~: f.3:;:· r~.P:JiHc J:: IR Tl UIB SI I }j ~. ~une Uth. SJZ. s..m fl("r ino. Ph: 5.i2-0.)79.
11 RIM v..w. Call ltM!IOO • Wally nna. 3 Car..,... ... m ...... 10 ,tie.ch. 493--8001 -• • • -. Y • Lagun1 Snch
...... ,. ....... BY -3BR/2BA eon., view lo< ma,,oo. ---·-Lillo 3 Uttlo DRAMATI C new la"'e 3 Br -==.,.-===~I -Harb VB ..... GEM WATDmtOllT CUona. f 0 I ' ... """· .,._, Aduli 1155-UTIL PD. Lit Baell, Ol'£N HOUSE Prol doe. llld oowI. C.... m.r .!;;, ..
1
a • .. · 111A10. $lHw6,650Hlacltat B p E R • i lanUIY prel. No yan1. <;1 ll'pk. l)l'lvate patio, view. • to rec. facll'• I: llem.. Sehl: • n.tln Aw., N.B. _. . .._. • I I I I On drunlts1 It's nol tru. thal i;·ernlt'al. fira-1615 Sl£S..UTIL PD. t + Extra t.!:~~ .. ~~ 169,$00.t::>Ql::l•0-041 4 , REALTORS flO...CD _ • • • hedoesnothlngbutdrink;he room. Yard• Patio, So.
bdrm .EWI: .....m °"" XOUR OWM Na. ri J .,.tiol · •lso -. ,..r NEW lair 2 BR. 1 be., w1 frplc L.aauna. ~ 3 -...:.r::= CONDO, ,..,._ r BR. i a:=.;~· ~."";:..., I • -z=-j 3 r•nlt I C U T S A C I view, _w...,.,., ' 122>2 BR. _.. betch.
Int-. A .. ""'1"W ba, -..... lndrY. """ -.... -. -. 3......... I I I r r 0 500 Pol"""" be•utUul vi.w. Small ~ place tn Lllsuna 1: priced tor frpl., dbl._pr. Alol. MUOO. wtlh Fftnldhl "°"" °"'" £...,. een ~pine _ . _ _ _ c-.,..,. ""• chvc\I. _,..d Ok. qu~•le. 144,750. BU'. 675-&I» .a con 1 1 de red . ' 5'31 ~ fw ....aa 150 RetK ~ -.oo '°" ~~,! ""'.,.NZ'?.,-.,_d l'' BR. 2 BA, bllris, crpls, Sl!Q..2bl. 8.R. 2 BA •• f'ri>.lc, all
J011S SANTA ANA OPEN HOUSE ·'Bt O.."ller Wtlh'nrn.r, N.8 66a38 ~ ~ A91*1 a"'9fmm. starts •t 1 · ' drp1, 2 blklJ to bellch. 310 Ina. VI~. No. Enrt.
Arch BMch Hei(ftlta SAl I: Sun 1-5. .2 2 0 t Ownn' ' 5 AC area. • Palma. -...nn • PRINT NUMetllfO t£TTERS IN Ii r I' I~ I' I lri•. SJ75. yriy ltt. 67)..53j9 ~lsny Olher!I Avatl .. blP
L.quM Beach lM-0301 \\'tndwanl ~-,,.Im: DISTINGUISHED R • r bo r eabin. utll, : 4-11. ~ f THE3£ ¥?Y1'RfS • _ • • • • (Mt• Meu NU·VI IW RINTALS
• Bft. 3 BA. P'R. .i. bu', ..,.2Jn View Moirttp 48R, ,... Yuen v.-r. lllO. e UNKIAMelE ABOVE 1t11 e~s. I I I I I I ~l"' <1r 4&4-32 2400 sq. f\, Ne.·ly dee. 8AJOlEST owner 4 Br, 1% i-lni A drpl. Tie lllll'J, COME to OMtt, M-. Swap 10 Gfl ANSWER hJ11 2 ~ dupltx f2(:(1. B_ home, \'ti)' c:IOlt ~
Ltl. ..11o. ! 111.tGO o.mr. Ba. r.lt. 2 ,.. ---· -..., ""' -.,. 1or ""' """"' . . . . ll'ncd .,. ,.,,,;, 4 ts -.n A -on CllH Dr. 491--16'!1 5ll!i 17~11!q. -· 8IHm WncL WS.llG Bltr. ICll/IJM LITS Al•wor1 In CIM11lcotloft '°' Ho_....,., 'S.7-9641 ;JiOr" , .. ,. Plll. £\<>
\ I
' •
Ftldl)', M1rch 15, 1~74
nl-.. Unlurn. urn. iii !!Pi_. U Apt. ,.,,,.., -4iiO
I. Ho •11 llRlum. JOS Unfurn. , . 320 Huntl~ ...... Dona Pwlm ~""'"! ._.. . Jlowporl .....
s Bl\ ' ,,. ......... lle<ch 2 !!!.""' !'wrll....... CLOSE TO BllACHll LGE. ' BR. !250. -PAIK NIWPOIT bib kl bNch A """' I yr Brand N"" Deluxe ! A C l80. Both _,, dee. ~ UNDEI I ~~ .,,;1~ BAYFRONT-BR. 3 BA. dbl .... all Utll.. Call Evn.-1142 • EW M APAITMENTS
49MOC3 BOAT SLIPS bllnl. a-to """"tlonCLE-''N , lurnlohed . N CiM'I; . on..__ .._ I · AVAILABLE A och1o. 5141'lh St. IC7-"91>7 wild-., u.. .. !um, ulll Spoclout Apts. ..,. -r
FOR LEASE: 4 BR J ba New 2 bedtoom wtoeean A $150-2 BR. Bll·hu, erpll, pd, Cable TV, f96-t535. • I iR, I .Nth IAVNt)" ap&l'tlne!nt OW. !~...:..,_ ~ M~Ulna, near Bay VlewL !ittllft buUdlne d%'PI. !!!.~· pe.tio~~ Huntl1Wt9n IMch e 2 'BR, 2 bath 1'. ~lnil ~-~~ttt~. El>! '!;~----~"""•"'~~·---w/pool. '685/mo.' Tom • lau.~, laclL ~ .. • A = e • BR I •-~ n ,....i,OllO •-w • "L-Hiii Queen 64MJOO. 1M211 l Infant ok. No pell. I IR. flSS.fllS . • • -'" IW!mmfns poola, T bled '""= ' .,,._ att 5,:1(1 PY. NEW DECOR. Prlv arqo. PIN•CRlllC• ... e ljootod Pool leollla "°""'· plu. Rllleo OI
S Br, 2 Ba, Woond, 2 ''" · loanlsh .., A@«nl to la e lovely blcyclo traUo "'"""· •buf· ..,. Hld pool, 1-11c&p00, N-rt BHch = 8;;;,,,l!"'; .':r"& ~~vr:s ~. ...... 2 blla to S':o, Frwy. n•board. '""'""· ,"""" '"
-No pell. S2l$. mo. 11<!•llY ComPM.Y 2 Br 2 Ba aar -"·-•· OI •·-o~ ·~ '1m1' ' • • A new 188 110,. Wmmh> '""" mtSO moothb'; abo I N "W~T VIL' 'GE 83G-2210 after 5. '42.a235 644-6200 ' • · uu.i:i "' ..,.. ""•" • ·~ man •hop 1ng t ud J.bedroom plaN and 1: r-v" ..,.. ocet.n. Newport S ho r e 1 , Keelwn Ln, HB. 78t8 Over 500 lall b'eft and 10 . 1 Blk 1 Go'·'~ W ""eoit'r. ,__ town bou.L .. IPC·
BEAUT NEW 3BRl'.lBA tried l!!!! ... !l!!!..., ... "'""""'°'"' I Adult CDI no pea net. 2B ~ Mlb wattrlall.I 0 ......,, est · • ._., ...,
LOE. Room, Jll'fY home,
pre~ area. llunL Bob.,
call' alt 5 PM M6-T3ll
yd, A/C, K1d1 OK .sm. mo Huntington bMch IM $~/Mo. 21s.n 'cec1at'. ~Ba~~· pddoN""·t...~ -.~. ftLIJdne lttdnr fOr tege. 4 mllea to the beach. ~-~.!..~ privat. ~~ lease. 5rS2-9367 e.vtt. 615--tm • · · ...-• )'OU!' apacloua new \: or 2-or -.vn•a, carpcuna ......
L 1.UXUllIOUS Spac. 2 Bil, mature nian, no petl. $150. bedroom Carbnent • ;(lorn WE WELCOME CIDt.OREN pertt4-S);bterranean Pant·
Will have jWJt a fev.• l &: 2
Bdrm apQ available on a
f Ir I t-<X>rnt, flnt...ervtd
-&llHrd 405
~un• Nituel •'ab. rec area. Perfect for S.nt• An• Htlghts 1168-6925 SlTO. Eurnlture a~llabie. HERMOSA VISTA lfl&' with ei.v~~ OpUooal
4 BR 2 be. 11v1 ...... nn &: dinl"" cpl. or 2 sngls. $270. LRG 2bt .,.~ duplex for ADULT Garden AIJt. 1 Br, OUlot open 9:00 to 6:00. 2300 aaT• maid aervk!e. J~t j10l'UI oJ
bull. Referencn a.beotutcly LOVELY, prt,·ate room In
required. Adult.I only. :&:: on BalJxli. Penn. for
.. ~ ... """ "173. · .. ..., -... 1urn $1'5/mo., poOI. Nr lake Falniew Rd Colla Meaa ·~·~· Fuhkin bland srJambcfte area tam. rm. frple blt/ln1, ~ rent, all bltln11, crpt1, .... .,., park. lD35 12th St 538-THT na..~. 0:...01:2300., · RenlaJ ofe,, lS.A and Su Jr .. nn(ll HIU1 Road. $165 & UP dee,..... .. -rd Incl ft>r ms. mo.. 6'1>-2833 epta/drps, 1 en e e d &: L Nin I pvt rar call 556-11& or ' ' ..-........ ..,..,. · 15'25 ... L, ... _ w --.-
•prinkltn, 2 car fat, lm· a9una .ue 5"0-i154,'avail April ht aft 5 Ii wke~ ONE STANDS OUT! , "'°""'"" nt, H.B. Tr::.(~~ ~ room for Rnior ~ Ollta Mea area. m"""•"· S300 1", "'" • TRADE YOUR HOME •-ts. Pwn. 360 L~-llMch d~. 499-2544 1 -··'-' •~ i M -,... You.,can look a lot, but you CHILDREN FllntWled • -· Tennis courts Oe&tOnJ, 100>, or n1o1Wnenance u""" ..... ..,, -EFFIC aphl from $5() wtc won't find an)'lhlnl to oom·
Newport llHch ''°"' to """"""'· lchool.. B•!bN l1l1nd ... 1110 mo. Pool, maid, pare with the ~· ... beach & tennil. 3 oondo llh. lldry rnn.-•--tlon nOOC' pla.n.'i WI 2. 3 • 4 BR. SPECi.Ai.. YEARLY. % BR. ~ • ....._.,. .&.llU pearance, areat a l
ind perenh '°v• the •• ,,.. _ .... •p.srt·
ment1•t81nbu r y c .......
volleyt...11, eiant recreation hide. (with cratta: room, v ... 11on .11ont111 425 * :ttWEllKS FRll'*
Ylsla del Mesa billlardl, olaYer piano), lfl ________ ,
ADULT GARDEN HOMES acrn of rUadc atmolpbtrt. , AVAILABLE SOON $43,cm to $57.000 w/95% 1 Bath. w.\\'. Patio, Frple, · Cat rarden apartment
NeiN 3 or 4 bedroom ftna.ncln& avail. Modele: open Gar., Privacy. Over 30, BEACON RINTALS 3 ~ • apacW>ul en-ffiVINE~VE.. AT MESA Huie private padol. UVE In the all ...,. Dana Mo\<e ln w/depo1U1 only Point Hartxr af t be Portotlno Model -Harbor El Niif\le l Terr. on Crown Empl. 615--89 or 673--2191 Laguna Beach t!M-9491 tertalninl aftu, 2 bi.tbs,
View Homes. ~75/n"IO. -·Valley Prkwy near El YRLY., 1 BR on Bay. Cory, N.wnart leffh ftlnunln&: pools. Youn for e Cblldttn 6 &, ypuna:er
1 BR. $1.80 2 Br. $22> MOVE QUJCO..Y! beautiful MARINA INN
Day Ir: Night Steurlty, Pool, Fwy Molel 34902 Del Ob9po St.
tlloJ lease w/opUon to buy. Niguel Rd. quiet, $100., Avail 4/1. ~ $220. I bedroom apt. a 11 0 e State llcen&ed pre .tchJ
eanne Newman 642-8235. LINGO REAL ESTATE 615-8164 eves. cozy lJdo hie batch. apt. available. e Cl'llldrens play area
Jacu z z I , Ree. Blcf&:. NetA'J)Ol't • at Baker St. ( 4 I 6 - 2 3 5 3 ) , Kftchen,
w/exerelee nn, bUl.lard1, 557.0075 Efticlendes & Apartmenta. l~ns). 31100 °""' Hwy .. ,._ Ponlnsula flttplaoe, <arpet. -"'· THE VENDOME • Larse 2 • ' BR ••'-'· LUXURIOUS VIEW South Laguna ~1397 Bay •w, Just tt. to beach. e 2 adull tu". centers
color TV. F..a. Apt. ha.I Heated ,POOi, direct dJaJ
dishwasher, refrl&, ~cpl Mones. telev1aion, sauna
& POOL HOME ' ...... ~~ n~I~~""""" $1S WEEK I UP ~ uW. inc. Ye a r I>'. IMS Anaheim Ave, CM • Easy aceeu to most em·
.._, __ DC<M;.11 ............... • S2uplna: Romm Ret1ponslble adults only. ployrilent 1treaA
• pvt r!_ti_?......_ or de e k. loiiiiOiiiiiOiiiiiiOiiOiiOiii I beth, ia and i )' facllltle1, ..._._... meetJna room, dom to San
4 bedrooms, family room I: OPEN SAT /SUN p M. • llou.tekHplna: Room.1 Eves. 4 wknda 673-f.70f COAST APTs. • Nr. shopping & fN')'J. LA MANCHA API'S. BUS SERVICE TO DOOR Clemente I: Lacuna Beach. Chme pl&)' In o u r
1portftahlna:, D>ppina l
iesraun.ni.. $60 v.ftlr: A Up. Brim: lbii"' ad A 'fteelve SS oil <ll tint week's rent.
dlnfnsAlrooml h . Put,tlnx 31432 W11t N'ln1. e Ocean VJew ~ ~PER Wk A up 1 br, FROMS19\S.lo'2t!.' e fl'qm$16S.,. ~ ••• Lu._x~~pta.G.oscl:"'w1rto green. t e amenlt es or · B'LBft' NN 2 br a. bacb'•1 __ ~1or tv. * NOW RINTING * PARIC NIWPORT ..,..., "" -" "" Bir Canyon. Lola Miller Practieally new 3 bdrm., 2 "" _.. ma.Id poOI nl:E I BANBURY CROSS Pd. Adults only or family
64U235. IM19l be.th ~· with huge 10ii Main Slfttt MESA. :tr'N. Nawiiott Bl. NEW 2 BR, 2 BA .KIUle CNearBeaeh Blvd&: Warner) AP.Al.TMINn v.•/teen. Blt·lnl Inc I .
covered patio opening onto m.t740 • NB 6&S681. . ~ 1ap11. Patb, encloaed &llr-lGifil VIEw' POINT LANE ~lor ~l or 2 Bedrooms dshwhr. Shag Crpta:, Small
VALLEY VIEW 7th green. El Ntpd. SJ.15, 3 BR &: Conv. den, lrp~e. 2 DYN•~c · ,,. 2:__ __ ..__, 3 q:n. 125 Melody Ln. OPEN e 1 •2 •~• • and Townhoulel pet ok. Pool. Gu BBQ. l.aJ'Ee 2-story 4 bedroo 3 Or may haW! option to ...._ -: ui.._.lW.N, DAU.Y 12 TO 6 p.m. "' ~ Fr: $19i00 Open U Dally -1, 2 &: 3 BR Studio. bai"h home near comm~ty purchase at $45,150 BA. Virw of Ocean I. Bay. BR, 2 84. )'i'ly. $400. Avall I . .. Spa Pool• Term.ls Prlv. Patloa
lJDO ISLE 2 BR. I b&.,
Av&il. July, suoo. Aue.
$13ll., 213 -793--0Ul O>Uect POOi• 1. teMll. $575/mo. BAY & 8£A.CH $390/MO. Yrty. 6*-8211. or 311 Da)i.. M&:-718S Nite II :• Acrou trom l~asbion Island $1fi0 to $250 peT Mo. r::i E:dlund 642·823$. REALTY 675-3000 c6:::~V: Mir ~~... • I f ~: I :' I tt~ ON IEACHf ~tut.~~onSanJoaqum m~i},C.M.
Newport -h o LY -2 Bed · -- -: ~-.,, ' 1714) 644-lfOO !!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! WANTED, ma-mole lo
Rlnt1t11o Shere 430
W.acnab-lrvme N ...... room nice· San aemertte Reilident Hold • 2 BR UMlm. !'r. $245 &hare beau oondo pi CDNOO. The mun. 3 BR, ly_ furnished. BulJt.tra: • $79.50.~r Month AGT. ~ Co\."tftd PirktJ:W. Ltlr1e BAYWOOD THE EXCITING rm I. tun~+ LR, 'Or, tit 1·•'4Ull5::""::,.,.,"'..,°',.m,.'"""!'44:1~200: I ~i,'!"'-~: l\T3'1~1.310 ==~~w?a: ~ Fun>u~,.~~~""" NEWL v DECORATED ~a11on ~!'Wiii' ""' to ~f.!~T:,~:::~.. .~~5M~~. ~ .... ~~""' 1unt.
pi 3 Br, 2% Ba, $325. 2 ar head1. S'Nlo CevL-MI .. I HAUTIPUL HUNTINGTON 2 BR. 2 BA odull op!A now Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $151 MOTHER with 12 yr old
gar, pool, Putt Udo. C ~--~ .IMINT .GROUNDS • CIR avail from $281. 5alet Offl<e Ad ulto, No Peta. daughter ..-. lo find IAYFROHT CONDO s.aums or &&lort oat• ,..... \ fHOTlt • lO Mlmltet to Ocea.n.i · • PA C opea 9 am to 5:30 pm dally, l561 Meaa Or. woman to k>cate 1.: share 2
S.n Juin Cepittreno • .U4 DEL MAR, s.c. e Cole to bu.a 11.ne ol •tores. 711 OCEAN Ave., H.B. = ~ o ~'$a!! J at (5 bUtl ftom~ Blvd.) BR apt in N.B. or C.M. Call •--t .r.11 • II ATl'RACl'IVE 1 BR. walk to Gu Heat I; Stove. Water. (tt4) S...1487 ., 08.· Jeri, 646-23tJ aajs.
-• p ~ve ' 2 BR. 1 child O.K. Sorey"' WHERE ILSE CAN badllL-. Adulto. Avall (larap. R<c RM. LotmdrY Ofc.o0pen 10 om-6pm.jially quln Hilb Rd., NB. *CASA VICTORIA* OCEANFRONT ' Apt, ~ B 2 B pets. pX). mo. Key at 3m now $115.1 Avail AfJk lll. Room incl~. Alr/ciom i: WJ1J..JA.M WALTERS 00. 3 BR/2 BA and 2 BR/2 BA, 1, 2 l 3 br, furn &: unf. Newport. with •traJabt 2!I ff
Elegant, Efe'a.aot. Ai:Jqant, ~a:° 5.. Carolina: ~79118 YOU GIT A ~ lluc:\k) 1 BR. $1.85. ~~·, Poot Adultl, no =·In d=:t:w epts, ~ P 1j• (P1~ ~ old bachelor,. M/f, non-
Av&il. April 15th. 2.BDRM. $175 ti im • >n-·& .. ':'t!Ph Oondo' e 1 el. 525 Vt~~:· at 0ea1rlx.r smoker, ''156. 645-nl4 ,
$600 per mo Yeorly. T--Unlum. 335 fA.ULOUS FURN. Apt. Unfum. 365 Hoclende de -UNDER NEW ~ ' ~lm ""· rs;· CM. 642-1970 """""
C•ll 142.poo Huntington •--..a.. JR. I ,BDRM. l'OR 160 W. Wll.., No. 1 C.M. MANAGEMENT ~ . up. 516-838
' cHC'unt~lng""'t"on"--,llH~c~h--ROOMMATE wanted. 2b'
NtWHarbor VJew,$575/mo, ~· la .... W.IMP WALK TO •SHOP, 17th le 2 Blt.-Bltns, newly LARGE Deluxe 3 br 2 ba hle:$90.'mo. + uW. 0.ta 2 sty,3or4Br,3~ba.:l600 I M MAC. lBR, 12BA, $133 RENT Tultin. Like new condo, decorated.' encl prages. :J>lc,bltns,d1hWlhr:bee.m: DELUXE adult poolside ~i5:Jo:!eu°!7 ~eR:.; ;Ii.~~·:~~ =r.~·~:J.,g~i ~~~rLN. 2,:;:u~~ftu':'~ ~tt."pvt~,"~ :ie~ut~.~eh"fkt~!"te~ Noce~~~.M~=adit~ ~enlrt~·6'~~: T.;lor.· n :
bonua riri tor tep. apt or 2pm.. · • Mo., )Tl)t. 6'13-&TI9 dbl tnCI g&r $300. up. AGT ao1e to lhopplng ol IChla. Ho5p. $275 mo. Ca 1 l u.una, tenna. 846-0259. NEED roommates, new
I.a m ity e n ~nL. 2 BR ·~~~ ml 10 $170 PER IMJ. Corona tiel Mar &tl-3255, 6(2...Tm. OPEI'f 01tldren'wel.e0rne. 80-0480; 642--0596. Alto1 Br.From~. house nr beh, 1 level boys, .~l:'.. ~nt, 640-1500 beacli. Cpt.s, drps, 1~ BA. 1 ... DAILY 1741 ~1ln (l'(e"llV ll no ans 84?·7331. SE.ACUFF MANOR API'S Laguna ... ch lleveJ rtru. $1:.o, &M-4.174
D&h.Wlhr, 2 ear gar, $250 Ten aaft at open space,% Orlearu& Apt.a. 2 BR., 1\2 BA STUDIO. ROOMMATES wa nted.
HORSE RANOI, 1ra: prden mo. f73.3419 aJl 4. tennll eta., ;i1nt recreation BACHELOR :. atllrth aide 2BR + 1ana.1 1. deck, . $221.-NEW Pool. Ask jibout OW' db-• *-BRAND NEW * Fem., New 3 BR. 2 be.th
or am1 farm. 518 acre, wlk New 2 Story, m r 1 ~ Ba, center with pool, aaunu. al bleh~. Co beach, owrlooklnl( JIOOI, & patio, e 2 BR. 1% BA count plan. 15Zi Plaoentia 1 a: 2 ·BR. 2 BA. From O>ndo. 847..(1347, 830040.
to ln1qe JllduatriU. Parle, lhlli I; drps G at eratt. roo m , volleybt.11, park ud ~mo. erpts, drpa, blUn 1~. e Bltu + DW . Aw., N.B ... MS-S2. Sl.9'Unfarn.Fu r nt1be d HOUSE to lhr, 3BR, 2SA, ~ a.ck &,y, Sou.th Nnr bCh ti50 ~art~. jacuzzii player piano Ir incl. util. !~--'-even-pr, Eutllde, 1 h\Jc: bbm e Wd Bar ~ SHARP 2 BEDROOM units Aft'!I:~ · ~ to beach, $85 rm,1HB
CoUt Plaza, Ora n re ' · · mon. Adultl onl)'. lnp and .... ~...... 17th. all utU, Milts, oo pell, e EncJoeed Garage sundeck frpl lh CROWN, VALLEY Apts. area, 536-0092
,Cou!>lybl A1rport. 38R, 2BA, ~ Pum. MS UNFURNISHED APl'. 548-7061.or b1J.9326. e U Bkicb to beach plianoe'., ~':'° 1ag'hlk. San Diea:o Frwy or c.out Wanted Mature Strala:hl
' Um, w/w ctpl, 2 car..,, L. NEWPORT VILLAGE I BR -2% Ba· Brand new -MARTINIQUE APTS. •Well: to 'Tillll'ket Adlll. no pe(S, pref slrb, Hwy to Hlllbnrsl. 231l4 male to 1hd Br hae & •tiL
-. -· ... _ loland N 1500 ... ft. D.R. .11rep1 .... ' • ! BR. .. _ ~·-•. l<lila• Pers 0 .1(. 1285 yrly 64&-ll«i Hlllh>ln~ Lag. NI""". er to ...... UB ~M -BEAUT. Nwpt Sbores home. Baker st. at ewport Fwy. lush carpeta:. huge doeei.. • -.. •w~ .. RH!tqr • 536-8836 ' (n4) 831-0730 ~ .......... ~ sq ft <f br 3 ba.' lam mJDIO._ $lSO per FD o • $375 )eue 673-8574 Blrchelon. Priv. p at lo I • T•u•o•cx -·•·•AR"."', San Clemente . G•r ... for ltttlt 435 rm,,,..,,.; pool;..,._,_ Wlni.r.,'Qulet "'""""mu. (714) 557-0075 l'ool. Nr. -· Adulll only. ~·~ ~--· Newport llHch -··'---'=-=1
blb ocean. v A-• ~~ No pets'. 6'1>3613. NEW 2BR, t be, bUln ranee im Sabta Ana Aw.1.~·-~:-2 BR. pool, 2 pvt pa.tlot, NEW GARDEN API'S. 2 er, -MINI WARIHOUSIS ~ A ...,,I ""'· drpo. ob? dbl Mar. 213 .....,.., ealhedral ""'"'' ....... I 2 Both, 1195' 3 Br, 2 Both STORAG"E ~ mo. IAe °"" ., Newport Bloch --------(pr, "' -3215 • ..., NEW BUILDING level .. N~ pell., Oilld OK. dohwhr, lrpl<, sz;o. Call nw.• No ~-·--u---· ,.mllla. -3310. LOW f'EEKLY RATllS -.-• s:m. o.,,. 1213>511&-1'61 ext .....,., ~· --· I . FURN OR UNFURN 4 BR, 2 BA upper. View Eocvtlve Suftn: toVELY 2 Bit Ir nm. ear '17' a: Up. DELUXE 1 br. 287, or eves (213)47J.Qll "SP=AIJJIJ-==u-s,_N_EW--2BR.--2BA-. '-"ll&l'W!•· iiwn $7.50 per
Eutl>lu!t • BR. 2% Ba. ,.. ~~·-'!z;..,'!th ,S1;,..t~11· -u--rt Blvd. AU utll. pl, S3SO. • Crpr;dr{lo, bl1n1 • ""'"· SP•crous 2 BR ~-1159. child oK. ~-1 1oc. M~ • monto. lYi:i. prdener, 1'Jl>I Ule. Yrly ;~ -n.J). u•-,_ n.....--. Clll nf..S31 '7'1CN frplc, pool. 1975 Pomona d~ only PoOJ. ~ Rm Alli ,._ • Ha.milldti' lo Newland St., HB l1e~ Furn $700. or wdum Cftte Mtte 2 BR bit 1_ .-.-._ Ave., CM. 645-8891, Mgr. A,..,A~ •• ;.._. • Pers ok. 114,.,.70_~,,!_t1~~25~ Marfposa. ~' ALLSPACl
HARBOR VIEW HOME -General STUDIOS & 1 BR'S ~ R. E. 673-M45 IN QUIET "8Unri COMPLEX. nr Beach & Slater. MZ-0389; an• "'ne -GARAGE-FOR RENT
!090. mo. 644-0238. Duploxoa Unfum. 350 142-2111 -•,"awid2 ~{e,;;;e .... 2 BEDR""" 2 BATH M~t iiit-1' .. 1son ~ 5 ~1 .~ '" BK fl0.1'70
~:-i ~.:::--ol ~ : ~Euk::a' lBR. 2000 !!Cl ft, exeeutt~ 2 ALL EXTRAS & Garage. B42-4sot NEW F~IL)' ~PTS. 0. 918c:Sial~J1B
'lncld. Call 6*-6146 or Newport BMch-Unfurn • Full Kitchen •lory apt,~ Corona tl~I Mar Adults, no pets. $190. 2 BR. for lease. All electric. Grand "'-...i..flHJ 644-1295. Walk to ocean, 3 BR 2 BA., e Heated Pool $41ti. 673-7961. 2126 11wriD St. 545-5800 Dehwshr, Bltnl. Shag crpt, -r:-11 • • ~ OOUBLE GARAGE
SPYGLASS vlew In HVH. 4 n~. 2 yrs. neW! Upper e Laundry Facilities Coate MeM Dene Nlnt drp1, prlv. patio w/yard NEW 1·2 Ii 3 BR'a. Park·llke IJ'Ulla. 550 11q ft, Sterqe only. duplex S350 yrly, e TV Ir: aid aiJ Nr. Hunllnglon Harbour setttnp, Rec. room. Ppol, $ .. 45 22bd It, C.M. ~
BR, 2 llOI')'. catallna. to m serv av , SPACIOUS 28R, 28A. avail $:1111. Adults only, no pets. Play areaa. Patiol I; tot f.I Ortic• Rental . 440 Mount Baldy ~Avail. 3 BR. 2 BA. • $275 mo. 10 •Phone Service 3= •=.ro::'i.1~~ now, xtra Ira SBR, 2BA, Avail S.l. 8t6-438), • lots. Gu I: Water J.>cl. Shag, tir-'0165.ht. 0 ~ n"IO. l'ftltal. $30 WllK I UP carpeted, brick a.Ck bw, d/aptavail-M~1~b~~· WALK TO BEACH = !t~'dep
stand new bea u tlfllll v e Studktol1 BR Aptl. Walk to ~ Sl.85. 351 draw!--.. ,!,......,'.:i'"-~·,· 1 A 2 Br, cpt/drps, gar, N.wA..w Meak1
At OakiW>od Garden Apltl· ~ ,. ,. m&t'lls u.iu' to 900' ottlce space or
G~EAT RECREATION: iwim· Im al I .. man uf&Cturina:. ' e TV • M"' •-•-Avail Victoria Apt L Alter 4 ...,. r--• uaaCOOJ' .. ._.. o bltnl. 125" 1Wl St. No pets • .,.,""'9 -.,. laMIC'ped 4 Br bouM, • ..... ...,..,, .. .._..., · all <18¥ Wttkeodl. .,... ~ &: ocean. (;ance A pleue. ~1230 or 847-3957 517 S. Newhope, S.A. ming, sauna•. health clubl, UndefKIVWlill &ahWe avail.
~= F~ b: ~ : =~~I-~ '"J'llE VICTORIAN" 2 Br, 1 <arport. ~'"'. , NEAR BEACH 554-2'00
644 Si88 2376 Newport Blvd., CM \i ba, w/au. a.:tulta. ept, lBR' ... ~ flan Brull. New Deluxe 2 &: 3 Aptl.,
blRIUd11. tennis, pro & pro Very nice J a e a t I o n .
lhOP. golf driving range, party $300/mo. rent or leaae.
room .. ell:. , 49f..5392
3337 Newport Blvd NB 54&-97$ or &1S-a7 dtps, bltlril, fncd yd w/ _.-~;:).... ..................... Br, cfpt/ drpr, bltnl, ar. Furn. or Unfum, 370 3~-i aS .. ,._ ,'"1"'"1~· .. *SUSCASITAS* e':~""~'!:'-F'~uW. ~~:;,;::o~ ~~~ .~; ~:'&J--co.on. d11 ;.,.,
enc1. back )V'd. m. n'°. THE Furnished Bachelor'• 1. 1 2 BR. i BA. single scy toll caU collect -....:m. .
FUN ACTIVTTJES: Full·time I::-=-------
direcior, tree Sunday brunch. DESK ..-c:e 'vU.able $5G
BBC's, trips, parties, and 11w. WW &U'Ovide Jurnlture
moral at $3 mo. AnlWtt1a8 8tt'Vlce
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS: availaole. rim Beach Blvd.
646-1341 WALK JO BEACH B<lrms. Exe<ptlonally nke. prden wt1', Iha& cpto, PANORAMIC O..an Vkw/: PARK WEST
NE\Y Harbor Vu, $450/mo. 2110 Nf:'<lr'port Bl, CM. drpl, tnt'd patio, beam. cell, bra 3 BR, 2 ~-27' liv ""-'.APTS .... -Singles. 1 & 2 Oedrooms. Hr.wfJn&'OQ Bel.Ch. &12-4321
Fum. & unfufn.. With an !he eJ11tas. Models ol)en 10 to 7. PIUME OFFICE IPllCfi 1or
3 BR. lrt>'c, 2 BA. pool, From either ot these gor-STUDIO apt turn. t room & =n ~~ Ad&ta ~~ bhn kitchen 2 Unit blda. 1 • ' • ~
terutll privl. 640·1327 , reous, private duplex apts. bath. Pel'llOl'I over 40 & " . • yr old. $290/rno. Adults. F•mlly Ap.trt11~1
586-5724, 64().1500 ext. 1466. W/W crpll, drpf;, bltns, sober. $115. mo %191 Harb:lr l.oJt 1A.(>t~ Ji~ 493-7557 2 BR. 1 Bath now available
Sorry, no pets OI' children. lease. 40e per 9q ti up to 1700
sq ft. Can rent all or part.
215 Rivenkle Ave, N.B.
6f5.-1366 WESTCLJFF AREA trplc'1&agarage. (AetOSlfromKMart) reb1; ~ u,22s. LUXURlOUS apaclou1 , from$225.0nCulvttDrive,2 BR. Townhoute, frple,
<lBR/3BA, lrg tam. Jtjfeh.. 4 BR,~ BA •. $395/MO BEAtIT F1JRN 1 Br loll ol • e No petsgar. eutom. 2 BR, 2 B4 apt, for just Oft San Diego Frwy. t.rom $S. 1 BR, fmm $19a. Newport l eech/North 111' l 1110. FREE RENT *
Near schools Ir: shopping. 301 35th St, Newport ,bl:tlns, pool, walk to abop.. 393 Hamilton, ~ d1acrfnllnatin& eauphi:, ... S311>. 3883 Parkview Ln 552-9200 Poot, tennis, continental 11.,1,,. •nd 16111 us.<i~so Deluxe 1 &c 2 rm. offices
Ui(lrno. 6*-2989 4 BR, 2 BA . , $395/MO ping, ml from beh Sl.50. mo. 2 BR t Ground floor Ea.rt mo. 493--4742, ,49&-llU 2 BR w/alr, w-w shag, encl. bre~kfasl. Separate family adj. All'porter Hotel & .Rest.
NU Itarbor VU 4 Br/2 tple 304 E. &.lboa Blvd. 931 W.191h St. MS--0492 side 8l.M. 1 blk Irvine, 2 lest Bluff ~sit& ':!id~~-zm-7172 ~t:in·be~ca:c ~~pplng N~!?:~~!:,th 833-32'J3 9 To Noon
we lb a r, VU. Comm C fl '42--2IOO l BR, 1paclot11 6 unit bldg, blU Bua SUV. No cblldren, l pool/tennis. $ 5 5 O Imo . • Hke new, gar. $160. Adults, no pell. Ref. req. Phone LRG 2 BR. 2 b&i frplc. 2 Laguna IMch .a.-.. AlllPORT AREA • UXI ft.
Eves/wknds &M-1191 no pets 2220 Elden CM ..... 1190 alt -Stall carport. $28& .. mo. Call rv••• . lBR pt f dulrs fully partttlbned, l n e I .
• (I BR) home. '-il'J' t. CoroM del Mar ""1512.a" 6. ' ' ~ ~· 6'4--0079 Furn. or Unf"rn. 370 a ' or a ' Yer)' ,,,....,._, till"-•• ».;....;,.c.;....;""'-.;...;."'---1 ·-::;c:::;:.;:.:_".:;.,~-~~1 2 • 3 BDRM APTS. lrpl SOUTH LAGUNA " quiet, clo,. lhoppil\i, pool, Jan•~~ 6 u ~. SSlO./
Shores, yrly lee, from 3°BR 2BA bit.ins frplc L'RG 2 br. Adults. Pool, W:t bar dlaposai dw f ~ fountain Vallty . 546-MQ5 Mo. MULLAN REALTY, CAYWOOD REALTY 548-1200 . .beam 'u 2 • laund, clOlle to shop ctr &: ba ~· drpa 'enct.' rar U\-e In an ultra fashionable 2 Fount11n Valley S.~n"t•=A""n-.-----1 3400 Irvine, 54G-2980.
\VESTCLIFT 4 BR. 3 ... °"""' vuvt. he h"' ' 1 "'1 bus. 1941 Pomono. 64"'1521 . ....,, 'm11''" •• 5 pm' LUXURIOUS BR, 2 BA Aot """"°""""' BAYFRONT OPFICES
Refs., Adults, no pell, $450. S400mo, "6T;N3XJ LGE F1JRN 2 BR., Bltlns NEWLY DECX>RATED ti ' rar w the e . a~ to the CHOICE Prestige area. 740,550, 33) , U<U., pr, P a.e pr V, -~ ........ 2 BR, 2\.S BA dbl I Paille So r---,
639-4538 LARGE 3 Br nr. shop'g &: w/w, beam celling. Adlts, no 2 BR w/gar, $150. Wtr pd. autonta c opener, burglar "''ater, )'OU can IP a pebble CUT OUT sq. ft. 3700 Newport Blvd.,
HARBOR View Honie by be&Ch, $360/mo. pe ts. $18S. ~. isn Orange Ave "A'': Call ~l!:~:,,wt&oo AM~ ~f~~u:! 8~~ :!:: pe~~iace. , POii I LAKEFRONT N.B. Pbone m-1D>. ;.r~:m~ :;.~.nn, Thlnks:-e:~ =o ' oo":.:.Ps'iz°:88.:. = 1~21~5,=Garoen ~~~r ~:. :.s. ms. ~755 i;;rmsest H\\1' I •u•DAllCI I VELOCRSAA TILOLNS ~~ ~ ~:~
Newport Heighh need, make a Ust. then Rll Mesa., 979-18.12 Apll. Frple, D/W, prlv. I ES from bch. 600· IQ n. 55e.
thole Items with a Daily 1 A 2 BR Tra.llen for rent patio. $17(>.$195. Nr. Irvine Huntington IMfh New duplex 2 Br 2 Ba frple LIVI M 1 •'•Ga a ' c56&'1Bl.=~=~====
N.B. 4 or 5 BR, 2 BA. lge )'d, Piiot Claalitled Ad!' Call turn. Adults, no pets., lnchutrial area. 557·2841. CLEAN, quid 2 BR. nrl.y patio, Cl'1lts & drpg, manY I Gl'llD ... _ ... , ON THE LAKE NEW OCEAN VIEW ores.
hi-beams, patio, frplc, bltlll. 60-56'78. &t&-1800 MESA Verde 2 BR, 2 BA, new bldg. Wtr/a:u pd, ehlld builtlns, adult& only, no pets = .:*' I ... A.t South Coast Plaza. cat Hwy, H.B. 1700 l/f•lcr.
SJ:jl), mo. &IG-l5l4 Apt1. Furn. 360 Apts. Furn. 360 bhns, epts. drpt, encl gar. ok, DO pel8. $160 Ir: $165. Callyrly·l,e21Jase) ~;~I util,ltiea , ... • ... ....... , Pool • Acapulco Aqua Bar ~zmvm. l.Jom Eltates, S.n Ju•n Coplstreno 1175. lSll6 B Caraway Dr. 842-1602. --· ..... !Ill-..,_ & Jaotml. Specta<Ular 8 ""~"==--,,.-,.--,~1
Cost• MeM Cott• Mes• Call 963o4J36 a ol 4 BR.~ bltlns, 2 BR Ocean from. apt. adults panelltd INtng ""'· Acre Lake W/rO'Ntrlnc 2«I) WEST Coe.at Hwy,
·l BR, 2 BA, nearly new
house, In be.It SM JW'ln
a1-e11.. Cloe to ell 11ehools.
shOpplnQ: &: beftch. Cptl, gar·
bage dlsp, bltln stove. $300.,
493-lOOI.
2 BR. 1ar, earprt. bltns,
Jake, p()Ol, Adll8, $250 be.
Avail April 10th. Villsa:e
San J uan. U i , 833-8190.
NE\\! home, 3 BR 2 ba.
blt/lns, trplc, ocean \'U,
$290/mo. OJ-J(Q) e\'e,
Sant• Ana
lBRJl'itBA. dbl pr. FA ht.
$265 mo, ~t & lltl>ll -t HO
ckoe.nlry dep. 541-Ym
We1tmlnt .. r
315
0-rol
• I
COSTA MESA
AMBASSADOR INN
$32.50
BRAND NEW
Weekly Rate for Single Apartment
Special Move-In Rate * ra:Lh1•....... * A., C1 .... e••f * ,.,.. ....... * ....... ' ..,.,.. ............. . ........ .... ......... ,,. . ..... ........ ............... • ....... n..,, ..... ....... ,... ......... ....
Water Fall1-La,......,..Fountalns
Stay A Day, Week, Month or Whatever
DAILY IATES FROM $9.00
• I H '1 p :: IR f1 I ~ [1
I 11 ' j .. 'v' I ·, I ~ I '
6 ~ '> . li 111
MESA Vetdo Como 2 Br, I petlo, <arpol1, crpta, -· ~ng _ Beach. 1350 "'1· 1----.... 1 Fottnlalhs • \; Million Doll., 'Cl'Cll! from Stollfed Shirt.
Ba, ..... D/W ... tlo, ~· ...., tao, from -· ~--.... A lldllNI Ml of Wll n "'"~·-~'"'· Sauna, ~ UP. Util Incl.
l;-0211Sm dog ok. . ::New 2 BR, 1 blk :v.,. , ...... Mt ..,..,. I Total """'ADUL. TS ore SUite, lOl) ft, SUllable
2 BR. new cpt, range, prfv. to lbopplna: 1; trwy, 1 chtld Miil Ind -It wttll a.chttor, t, 2 I J Br' 1• for doelor. II u n t I n & t o n :,~ ~~1·::l.u1::, = ~~11& per mo i:,:~~ le~. I;::~-: I '.Uoo•·;._ ..... '"°D,· ~~~· :!.';"!ir,;.. 911)'.
2BR UPPER, range, O\ten, BEAOI. 1 & 2 BR. From M ' . VIII I ~ ·=-1 Sent• ~ c84J..:183<""'"""'' ===~~ $106. W-11146 NEW APTS. WALK TO .3005 Mace Ave .. 546-1034 :=:--• Air. 11l!ll Baaclt, llnl& Bl:h.
r>lne, <tpfS 4 """· No S150 to s;3S. EXTRAS. 1111°"0 •N _ _. N .. 1 to -Cooll Plua f617 WESTCLIFf-NB
pets. $150. 1168-1455 or 548-53&-2579. NEW 3 BR. 2 bal.h, 1 st)' , ... II-. I 714'5511111 S.lS sq.ft. 6 up. 5(],.6fJJ.2
1129. I BR Aol 5m1ll pet A kld1 Condo., ~ drpo, Ewvllh! lnlidag 9' Apts., Apt1
' BR, 2 BA, Trlplax. patio, ok, 117'. 1912 Newman, No. I ............... , Furn. or Unlvm. 370 Fum. or Unfum. m 1ar, <alhedral cell. Ya rel. A. H.B. 812-9195. Newport llMch' .,.. • ._ -:.::.~:;.;;;,:;;.;.:;_;:;.;:,!,_...:.._::.:;~:...::;.::;:.:::.=::::1
$225/mo. 61M414 2 BR SUS. J bl .. ....,. ocean Coote Melo Coote Melo
SBR l ll bo, 4'Plex. ttr OOC, encl.-· !deal lorlor 2 2~BR ~~ 11 llL 11•1• .... , -:===============d $190 mo, r.UI ~t, ref1, aduUI. MS-m retiruce Avl Apt 1 •1111 ,,_ tlJL •
$«.l:iOI, 3llRl2BA lower, blUn gas SIUISI ~ ,··:; lllzl1az• 1 va•sta Del' ~ago ---
2 BDRM, .... """· --· .,,.. • -$1'0. WESTCUFF I ... lit bo 21.'1 .... In•
A -·· $1S5. 151 Sballmar, No pers llllM1S2. -· 179 llldlord IA 90 ~12 DD1AC lllll, ir -h. ,.. '2111/,..,_ ;........, ..... tm ~ A1tnc. 2BR • .......,.,Ao1F,«117th81. per.,._C~".\pr11L Bl~ eodad pr, no llB, ..af I BR. °"" -· ""· "'' ..... < SPAC. I BR, 2 bo .. "1>!c, -Ja.t.. IW ... "°"
DELUXE 1 Bl\, Br. Qtben1 patio. ~. dl")'tt hook~ ~t. "° pelt Wd to 1 =-==~ 11111111-j Succ"1ful people in t he know
"'"'· l'fo pets. Sl · ~ E. up. hlt--tns. •· •• ~. )200. 8'P5o0285.. • live here! Costa Me1•'s newe1t, 211tSt.MMm.S BACHELOR c,adahsonl)r. 3iiiliiiA townhouae, ,Wims. I A, It A j t~·-pl
coLOiitUL 2 BR. 11IO .. bit· No -Ullll Weatdl!l are>-Ad ..... $3;0. ,'#:r~ 1111 Sun I "'"'Y au '"""''" ........ n, ,.do, pr. Adtdlll, no «. '"" 90-11S5 nu-. J'M.112. 1rS W:E. W:E. LAKE
p!ltl.1ll021atMWIZI 6-1 PARK Lido 4 "'6· J Bl\ 2 1111.lllillllllllfllllllJ -1.Lll ... tlnll-
Alt>..., la .... DAY.. !Ml ~ ~ -· ...... ..... 10&11. :.:::::::::::::::::::::':'':":'·:·::·:·:'=·=·=·=-===I nmaa-4'! O.'tdl!!,y •• , ~~a.!20 ---
.SUndcJnc.e
( )lf'. l\lt[. \.' f'l.\ll
•
r
l
I
l
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I
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J
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A
" i --·~-....... 440
11t MOlllli PUE ..-0: mo., cenrr.J.Jy lon.tiecl.
115 lq. ft.
l'ffiVPaRT 'PL l\CE
... REALTY . . ' ''
' .... _.If i30 p;;;;i (lNO ~ S50 C-iP"= i '"' F~y, M"ch 15, 1974 DAILY PIL-01 37 , ;:a.......... • ,M· f no Ho e w..,led, m& ~710rialpWented;MaF110 HOie W1ni0fd, Ma, 7f~-
ENDIG'f cRms SPECIAL mo: ""'* YI<. Adamo 6 CDfDn' 6 lllod:' -. 1=== AAA£MBLY, 1:36-3PW, •3 CASHIER AUTOMOTIVE EXECUTIVES
ENDS Tf.aS WEEK SAVE --Uth w.u:," """ -.ncs. ii. c11,y, • ''"" """ Mail. E••"-••10"""''~ :CUSTOMER $15,000 to $75,000 20 . l\o't haw. IJpfda.lil'td 54f'.1031 . • • etc. o.y br. !'Job. ~J.5. * WI nl '•IM&nt ffwlawi!e; inrd. Start i2 cubler WMled, Nt>\\'J)Ort SMd _,, ....... or --" ro~,y
"l'lipmont to -·hi i... CEMENT: Piiiil, 'drivn. C!!'f~ * br. Studio 12, l!.O Bol<u St, o.i.un 113.\-ID> SERVICE ·---~ 1Ulatlon ln )'Ollf attic lfff. FOUND: 1"V black Lab, .,'RlkJ.Raptjn. •w 1 ~l'.Ol'fruu.. CM ~ CentraJ T~phone for con.f:identil&J NO (.'OST
"1th no muu or tua.We11 fem. Vic Mama • OoW!I remoYe. het .t. Mt4ll. • CX>MllERClAL AS'iE'.MBLY WORK · Rfpf.Jr/In1Wfa1'c:rl CASHIER ~~U:trv1f:te~V1cES,
•ve )'OU up to~ of YoW' Red Lazw, HB. ID-TIS Contractw PWlll cnrtamen No Ex~denqt Netded Mlnln1wn 2 y Ct\ r 1 tx-INC. =~~*ts I: )IOU'll bt 10 FOUND ~ __..__. ~ Wallpeptrtnc * mam * ' pemnce, Good Allll')', n.pkl No..,,· acctplln{{ &pplll!itUons S88 N. Mai.n, :>an1a Arnt
cooler Ln au.met. i_ -~"' PALOMBO Owtr Ch Uc Pl A~~U CtUlnp Aat.tanl ~ adv ~-emcnl. f);celltnt for pr.mi., full Onie pc»oilkH1. (714) ••7.••••
lo""rPe estlmales. B ot A I type c.l.. Vic. NPt Beh. No.191101. SpecilJhe ti, adci eue ..... J\)t Qttnv.LI!: "'-'~ ,..._,,_ G ~ncifila, plus Now In-I' 11 .~iul .. 1'"" ~•• -~ fl.1C. ADAMS lNSULAnON f1M19;) remod, alter, Qua!. worii;, *Ml-5775 -11"* •&;,;b•• !wUUUlct · · ' Fr)• tC~\\1nE:. A
0
R 11 Y Qi> :Ull~M ~~ 'bo~a~ A\'.... ~~('(' for c.uwult~ kn'k:e
MOD!RN . OFFICE CO. 642-9810. Uc. No. 290&13. JWnd A1ember BJlB, 962-1961. .<. \State Uc, No. XJ.OOS r Jo)IJ.I i ~. N~=iY ~= ponunltlff, su..llli. 0.tl' tpveeri"8-A eJl).r)l~~10t::~1~ ~ot an oiler tJI eni11loy1nt!nl
F'UU)' 1..TP(d/drpd, ~. IRISH SETl'ER fmi.ale JACK Taulanr, padoi, re. In 'tht Box, 385 E . 11th Sl, ~lt."4. 1..vnt•i·t. t ~ X PE I? IE NC EL> Mlt.li
3 DesQ, Chat.r. A: recep... *PALM•& CARO 962-GlS mod, Md. Uc. S.l )3tl(J12, PAPERHANGING I Coll& Milla. C1.n1ro..I TelephOnc 1\pEly In J'('l'lif'.IO / Hu!ldcr, ~11.gc1 up lO $5.0Q
33.11 Hei.'pOlt Blvd., N.B.
tmlat fUrnlture •t ool.Y READER * FOUND M)r Way Co. M.2-4'1tl.1. palnUng, %1 )'rt Harbor AlTENO colle~ on OW' Jt,ep.t1;lr/ln11tnlltlion O SMONO'S t.lc1lt'n1..ung on exp, hN I.IP W
StZ. per mo. Al 1860C Speclnl Ne.dil)O $1, wt ad. ,lrlahSetter lfectr1ceJ ~1'.fum.No.18J281. tiuw, with t ullio n Afln tn1um 2 yt1•r1 :i"J.~~n 01 11111lllc11nt.
N"'POt't Blvd. CM. '132Z \Ve&tmlnltu Ave ., D>-8129 aia!.ltam.~. durtni,; duty cxpc.-rkrw:e. Good aa.Jary, - -
Call Agent 6t&-39:I Wntmlniler. 893-9854 09tn SMA.U. tan ~ dot: ~ClAN Uc 0 Id P1tfoa hoin. 9th lnfunlrv dlv. l'ort ntpid ad v an e c rp.,t' n t . NEWPORT JO:XI• llarn1uet Cll' caterii1;; ,.,...,~~!!!!"""'""'""'""'"l -'T_dc;cflY='·c_ ______ :!~jtftJecl~ Jn jobs, new ~bf. atfY ):>bt. Lewta Wasb Call i\m\y Exce.llcnt bene.t\11, plUA. •J F h i I 1 nd i.:u'ls, ov,·r t l, c11JJ ~>I0-7500 1• -.,,.,..,...,.. ana. .Anyplace. Q..Tft!l9, PATIO O>vtn, Planterw, <>ppor!un1tea '645-ll63 Now l.ntervl~irQ;;:. Altll\' , •1 on I • 11~11 for ca t1.1r11~ ~~~~E~I~ '1'HE A~~ATINC RABBIT-very tame ELEC11UC1AN -Uceme t~.ni~~ ~: AUTO SALESMEN ~n~r~~~·· 643-11 Gl, t:quttl Oppor. E111plo)·~·r F:\SH1C l·uttl·1·. -Nu cxpcr
,IOO to 3200 '<I ft • 50-00 YR. group, From the Vic . Corona del Mar No. 2'.S!lm:, Small jobl Coner. OnJy Qualify-worJ<: Need tor one of Orange DATA PROCESSING lll.'C .. !"vine ai"il . .Uk Jur
air oond, carpt, dl'pl, wet bar privacy of )'OW' t~t.=· 6'J3..1Sll mablt a ft'Paln;. ~ ' Fa.Ir ~•Ptnonal Attn Counly'a leadtnc ~ CEl?Al\tl~'T. ~xptor. i\l 11. I e REP1\flt I ~t11"1" . .,.W.Jt»-1. ---
21'992 Camioo CaP.1'lf'!U'O P.O. Box 143, G.G. FOUND: Siamese kitten. Vic. Ga lftf Km. OwDlr.Contr. Evts A Dealen. New or Uied car ~1~~~~=~1 : e ,~·rii: n S.'O~ ~linln111n1 3 ye 11 r s e:\· j i•t.MJ\Lr~ PltUUU(..'l'ION
SO lr"l\y,l~?;_Parh·ay :U hn. Penn. ,';°'11~in; , Plradi.e Gardtnin:C p~:.:;up:;_"°Rwl :!:n11~L=~~n1; ~~~r~-~~l 7~~-::~;cc~e~~Uu~~uic~ ;~~~~;nc 4'0pc~!~~rl~~~1;:
831-1600 -LICENSED SPUUTUALIST Lott SSS Speiclallx Ru~ ' ' --r mt, Yt<e will traiA. Alk for 111h·1uK"Cn1ent, ex c e 11 c n t \·t>i")' t1U1J1.I ""l»'""''IJ:: ro1KJ, ---=..:::::....___ Splrilualllt readi.np JO a..m. I Landlcape. rilonthly PATCH Pt..ASl'ERING Andy CLERICAL hrfll.'t1tli, plus. ri<ow in· new i,. .. u1t. 1\VV~Y 111 :,,\...,
* Deluxe Offices * . 10 p.m. ad\1ce on all Maintenance. Soc1nkkT Ail l;ypea. FrH ntimatet DAVE ROSS tm~. Aa&lgnments. Top lt'rvie11ii_na. Call AltAIY Ov-I ,\d\(l.ll""<l l'Ul' ... ,y;ull:, Jllou matten, 312 N. El c....mino RAN ft'om titt Huntlngtoo Repair, Call 6G-l6t9 Call 54Q.U25 PONTIAC SSS. Long or shoM 1ern1 p:1rtwdU~•. tH.>-116.1, Ch>ta 1
1u1'Vt·ay, L'otl111 ,\,._a11..
Real, SM Clemente, for e:lt~~rs~·redsre>'~ EUROPEAN Gardener . Pluml:Mftl ~HartorBlvd. Nc~E~'°'~-l\h.'5a . 1 ~-FR-6NT0E5K--
For 1.eA!le, 384 sq. Ft. comm/
businesa. Cl oflicel plus ~
~ption &l'f'a &: storage}. Ad-
jacent lo Orange Co 1.1 n t y
""-· Call 546-8801
F1Jll SERVICE
·" .... • ,. -,., .. '"~' -.-.' '•·.' c .. 11 Mo How.Hd
b4 '.J
appt. Call ~mt. &9138. Ir fka col.tar 'name '81 Maintenance -1..anc\lc:lp{Qe. Costa l\.1esa . ~T. TE~1ro"T<'!~~ 11i~1:;> UATA1~;~;isws1xc I Lcatlil~ .llotl'i, 11µ111·'l1tn1 "
PREGNANT! ''Trtble''. ~ 19001 Tree removal. Very L.R. 011.SPLUMBING AVON --• · •. Jyn1·11 :~n1. U pcr. 111
Caring, confldentla.I counsel· ())vtntry Lane. H .B . ttaaonable. &d-6329 eves. Rtmod'ls 4 Rep&ln. Water A..\tBITIOUS? ENTHUSIAS-a.En,n: -TYPIST :\11 n I _~1 \Im J Y l' n r 5 lkJtcl uu•LllUI!<: & <M.W NClt
ing & J'@feJT&I. Abor1ion. Ch 11 d re n a nx I 0 u 1 . !{ATE TO MOW?T?? heatert, dl.lpoMlll, fmnaoee, TIC' y would C.ood typing skllla ,\ ei.:pencncc. Clt1an l'('('Qrd " (._:111 6·11-l'•W, l'ii.:t .>JU, l::qUlll
adoption&: keept.n;. REWARD! Call the Pro! d9hwuhrs. 60-6263 MIC • porf~t ~ R make a koov.·led~e ol Real F~lllte rnust. Good saJar), 11w~·k 1 \)ltP.ll' l:.niino)~·r
APCARE 6Gl44l8 Ra I 8/A. Complete Plumblng \'Ort epf"ellenlll-dol'un1enb req'd Ex ll :idv1t11centcnl ex c e 11 l' n t --
V''SECTOMY
noo,Vhl· REWARD. fOI' rrtu.rn or ~•~~. ~ ... ~! . .E!!'1,1.,be Service. Llc. 212l94. 'b''',· You canh~ ""'1 your o"'" Escro11i· or LMn pl"OC"t$Kini( h e n (' f i t i1 ,' 'p1.1U1. Nw· i-~uu., c,·1111~c 1· ilookke\ll·~r. te, male German-.. ........... n.a;n. vw-u••· usneu,ac ... ,,ueyourown ,l!:Loondi !lbur 8 ente n r U1tcrv1l'lliinii:. Cu.U AlL\I\' 1 1111~ 111\~· r11c1 u111t:
ContldenUal ln for ma t i on Shepherd. Lost Vlc. Irvine ".li"an1aa:uchl Garden Service Roofing houn & 1nake the nllllit ol a tw.-lpful. F.xcel. 11 a I a r Y , 011portuniti~s. G -1 ;, _ 1 1 ti J , 1., .. ., .. ui.,, ''"n •.• ,.oc111 1u· ...
counseling le referral. &: t1w·er. C.M. Rlaht par ea.ta li.1na I: Newport Bch ~al eRrning opportunity. benf'fil' progmms. Cv.stu l\.tcsa. µlc;l.SC i,c111.I t-cliu1nu ti<
APCARE, lncorp. A Non· tip nops, 10 yrs old Ir: m~t &1~ after 4P].f ROOF" for leu, repa.lr'I, DI.II ~·W-7011. \VESTLANDS BANI\: . . "'"'"'.> ••·•1ull'l ••lc111& l1J
Prolit Agency., 642-4436. have medication. :;cs.5478 YARD aeanuP1. Garage ~!~'~"· t:J':: lf i t'r n-1-&'!J-2Sl l IJl::CUIU\TOI(, tc1nu1.· 11 n11uc1 f;.·1l·1v 11111cu1 Lu. 11.11
BEST MASSAGE IN N.B. REWARD: Golden R.etriever Cleanups I: Ute Jlauling. 5'l·338Bf830.S020. BAKERS An Equal Opply E.inployc>r foll u\\lili,;. t..:un1n1. 1rurk. VI.Il l' :'.ll. -'Ll'l"'11 1.k•u1:11
3400 Irvine Ave., Suite 1038. male .l..r. ' -_........_. i-~ R•uonable •~ -Cl •"RK rt ti lrl f' I Call ii4rilO'lO, TON \'. :i.t~l'J. Ope 8 lat Pit Wed Fri. ""'5· ~., ........ ...,, ""'& • _...,u, S I /Al Ion •"-' Pl' Ill" g r ' DELf t.1AN '-''-I -, /l.u Ph1)1ll'.: C'&.llll ylcue. n "--0539 on, • , ruaty golden halr. Very EXPER Gardener Know ew "I terat I day. Sam-noon, call ani, for 1 • '"·~llt.'r. ' ppl)' n -.-. --_
Ann. 561 · lrlendly. Name•· Bue k' · how. Maint. Trtminmg It "SEWING": both'""" •ulti,· HELPER 11,ppt. 556--6392 ~n;on afler ~n1, ~. \v., r .Ut..l, tu111· llt·p1.·nd11u1t' nt·I~
OFFICES AVAILABLE
DANNY Harris, Marlene 537-mo cleani.tp. 988-3486.' ah''""-. _ .. _ ... _ ........ ~ ..... tt-CO~!PANION Const H~·y, Nc~·port Bch. t•r hJ r lclln•Mldl~ .~ CflOUll'(
Ar I oa, Dotten Hoffer, LOST 81 ck Med Mille' ...-... ... ....... JV--.,.,,. ' ' "'Mtf'd for _A-tr:....John ~'il~n. ••l'•I'· ricpw1.,;, ..-11:k·UJ1 .v
On "Del MAR" heart of San Robert While , Den!M! Drot.e , Kb • -! .l..r. !2_ Lewncere lty ''2 Gels'' malie-rtal cuitom flt tee Ttl'-~"01nan. Private rm & ~rd DELIVERY ~··· ... ~. I ut'h\Cry, l'lc. ti4b-J.....,._.., eem
1
Ide
1
_,, .u. ...... ...,,.... -· ........ to M 1~~ r1712 WaJnut H.B. •. No S:w~rf 1n •xchange for rook1nK ~ , . .u.n, nl!t."<K."I, In --· ------
6101
ene. a for ac-cau !)15.-5.wu, urgent. "Bruno". Call Anytime, ow ~e 60-9907 ~ Hee dutie8. Outiide d11.y job or 11.u . .,1-.\. W'\!a !or ~1orumi,: GELCOATERS ==· ~:!,ke'!.!' a ~re e? ATTRACTIVE, lwi loYUle 673-0062 or 536-66t. Gerden Mafnt/Lndscp Telev1slon Rep•lr Necessary schl ok. Balboa Penn. t...A i 1m1·s 11u10 route. Al>-Exper. only. ~ Shilt ToJf i
Reasonable to permanent gal to meet buslnes! or pro-I..OSI' German sh e p " rd Cl.nup, Sprltlr rep. 646-6852 COLOR kwot rates. Gu.at m!lt 673--01"9 prox. 2 h1'1 per mornlng, 11i·agci.
tooan". feuional man. P.O. Box Ptl.PPY• 5 mo. old. No collar. Gonoral •--1-rl< -Apply In Person COOK EXPER ~relt·r adult "'/l'C011. car. j MacGr-or Yacht Corp l 1093. Santa Ana v River & 5lst St N -· ... -·· rt"P WO on spot. , • ~22:1. Jk:r IUO, s.17-8979 ~ -. Doss Jones Really 492.-4412 LIFE or DEAnI: Let our Hi:u
76
• .B. --Golden Rule, 53l·1707 , Het~·l-cn 10,:30 ,& 2 P:'.1 Al~ food St-r.·k~ \\'orker11. DEuVt:i?YMJu"-W•\.VfEU --'.li::ll __i::!act>t1Ua,_l.:~I __ !
OFFICE SPACe--babte11 li~. For altematlves Vo I um fl tnetettlaf:·books. l"o. ls.423. FAR WES' , •. $£RV-ICES BC'\l'rly :\IRnur Con\'. llos11. ~·ith \'an. ~lust be reliable. Gen I Ofc. P/t. .12 hr
MISSION VIEJO to ABORTION -" !JFE IR9t SETI'ER. w/.Uver maaa.zinet:. newspaJ>ttS, TU• B37-800J. • :;1:MA.1:11 • r"<t' Yw1..11:usu rrl.· Jui.Ri ,...... choe.k chain, 8mo's old, fem. catalortJes; At. brochures, c. · I ·I llOUl"'ll 1·er Uti)'
a:Kl Sq. ft. & UP LINE 541-5622, 24 hn. Lrust &een Iris St, CdM. fiyera, clreulal"I, forms, Den~• A11istant WESTCLIFF
CHOICE l.OCATION 6""1IEIJ644-'l!rrl log•h. etc. i:..,out, <:Om· CERAMIC TILE NEW & 1672 Reynolds " COST P.,rlodonu.. ..... expo,, 28362 1'11""'"''''" P<~·-·. al -Ilion • -•teup Call -~-1 ~-t S Jo'·· I tJJn J•cr.ow111l'I ''"Clll') -•-• ""' I LRG. yellow striped male ...,.. • ,...... · ,.,., ......... · r '""" Cl · .ni "" I e ~1 . Expand c d -
• AvaU.1i'J~j=tcly. LMtmdF...r cat w/flea col. Vfc 21) blk, Debbie, tn4) 4964769 -or welcome. 536-2426. Santa Ana ACCOUNTANT i1utit:1 oppor. H.B. area. 1~~1arK 111 l.t.'.1111."11 ! =;:;--;,,,::.;,:..:.::::;....~~ . Cedar st. Npt. Sb:fta, N.B. Don. cn.t> 7'l4-SID. Top Soll MATERIAL t71-11 962-6671. l i:..a!:.1::!.c'-. ,:,.A.
1
'13,000 SQ. ft. In classic Vie-&t&-1821/673-9570 CAPTAINS CAR CARE Equal Oppor. Employer l.JEPE."lDABLE v.ooma.n for
torian office bldg, downtown Found (frH eds) 550 LOST on 3nl while poodle, HJ~ •waxin(oull L wuhlngPlclc u·,11!: E:STIMA TOR large family lO babysit 4 yr Gt:NBR.\L office re«'plillnisl Santa Ana. Individual of. long hair, beige spot fn mid-00 Farrw:'I:: .. BOOKKEEPER. f~ charge, -uld all day & othe1·s aftt.'1' Jor conll'&CIGr,· Some book-
1
fices, 500 to 1500 sq. ti. FOUND: Male Samoyed pup die of back. MaJe, Pleue very. appl, call ttrona;. Pollt all journals! ~fulll-dlvllllon A!\!Jo;;\ liGll'fl 11Chool, plus lite housekee~ keeping sal&cy 0 Pc n · '
Lease any or all !t{lllC'e 111 lemalc lrish Setter pup, call 9fi8..4942, "5-1791 or &«i--3632 thru trial Balance. Prefer Orange County fo.lobile honic ing, wet!k days only. lte.lli. & -~-l4W I
2Sc per ft. A\lall . .t\pril 1. '74. male Irish Setter, mixed PLUMBING, ELECTRICAL. r.on1c slatemcnl exp. El n1anufRch1rer ~ks Jr. Cnst 0111·11 tra11.1. necc8sru')'. So. GIJU. FRI DAY, n1ust be 1
I, 1'1Wlt see 10 nppreciaic. T er r t er s ; Ger man LOST Mutt·Te~er, approx 6 CARPENTRY. No job too Toro urea. llilr f~rcy Al'l'OUnt.ant . t.Inlerl11I E1tli· llunt. Bch area. !lb'l--0960 alt 1~1.iablc, attle to sell, know i 542-l9Zt. Shepherds. Call 540--0583 1:n old,~~-small. F a B Home Repair 71~2-!662 ' 1uu.1or. Degree and/or pl'c-6P~I only. general oltice & book· •
IOFFICE SP C,M. or 536-2:;13 H.B. 8•.. '. 642-1403. ' BOOKKEEPER F /C vious cxpcrlence requlrc>d. Ketipwg, 4~
l
RENT. Costa ~fcEsa. n~°oo~ FND: Blk Lab ma le 1-:~
6
~~~~~ V~~: "THINGS" by NOON. Gen'! £."<per., mature. Salary rom-Re!ipotllllblllrle1' Inc I u de Ulct.aphone Typist GOu· · OOuRsE -,-,.,-.b-anle-·. I
at Adams. Beautilul modern Rl'triever. Vic. Placentia &: Beach 4M-81C8 Carpentry, Repalrl, P1Um-Job Wanttd Ma.. 700 men 1 u ra t e w /exp er . Proc,tuct C011tin~ u well .._, Ute exper. & average typing lnuned opcru1~ t:all Alon· : •air music, janitorial, Class lilh St. C.M. Please Iden· bin&:. E 1 e e • Remodel1n& • 5..'7·1883, Beach Area.. auditing actual useai.-e anri sk1ll8 11i·ill 11uallfy you fot· r 11, . Ol.'twn :i am·J: JO µ111,
I
. A Walker & Lee Bldg Call tlfy by <.'Ollar & habit.a. SIAMESE1~ cRat. Ma I e . &U-aill BOOKKEEPER. CPA firm, cOlll. Submit rellun1e and thl1 exciting job. Will tr.iin &J·l-7120 .
. 557--0136 or M6-582S. . ' 644-0186 need no t'e\ll·ard. Sea ~·nl. ewsnl. Vic. •HANDY 1'1AN. Let me be MOTEL-Hotel man ager FIC tbru T/B, pennancnt. sall1ry requll'l!menti. to: on dlctaphone. --~G-U_A_R~D~S--l "B"°y~1ie'n~e$$~oiR~an""t"'1=1 ::...._44~s-I FEMALE boxer w/cropped ~E~moral~~d ~Bay~.~Cai~f~9'7~-~-~I your extra pair of hands. would like employment. Salary $650. to S100. Phone GOLDEN WEST J11on bt1t Agency f"uU & 111 111nl'. ltcUreJ -er-' ears. White rulf around Odd jots wllimUed. Call Xlnt id's It kftPI buslneu Airs. Ke1lln.. &IO-OOSO. 17400 Brookhun1, f . V1y. sonnet ~·1."1cvinl'. openings 1
lndu1trial & Comm1 n<ek. Vi< • o! Slater A I~ Don 9f32.S>l8 =a.N~~ "! ~ . MOBILE HOMES SUH• 213 !>;3.;;775 In •mm<d. •"•· .~1 """'•· ~S~I~ ~:el;~ "'~;;-.,;\;;°=-4~-H-n.,.••_· .,.-B-c~h · "iiii..,ii-iiiiiii~i14'iill HO~~~!i~CE Job Wanted, fenM .. 701 N~~!~ ~~~S min. INC. ,.~.ISHAWASHER , ~~·.~~·~~ t!t~~nff~ ,:"~~:
Main thorouibfare. FQ.UND: Beegle fema le • I Electrical. Real. 549-1004 aa:e JO yrs. Jot Newµcn l 1308 E. \\'llkeham ..,..,.,. ppLy in per~on .,ruvel'!iAI f'l'Ol l'Ction Scrvk-e
28752 Milrguerlte Prj<wy. w/pup-Poodle f e male, Schoot1 &. S7S H.ullng DEPENDABLE woman 10 Beach, Ne.,.,·port llrn;.1:•• i Santa, Ana, Calif. 9'!i05 Dick Church'• Rest. ..u.s !\o. lhu·oor Blvd.
13:1·1400 ''1iite Poodle mal~ ~· jj~l~n~1l~r~uct~lon;;;•;.;;;;;;;i~il~~'F,;~~i~~~~ relJevt companion or prac-Newport Penin."lula Cont.II.ct Altenlion: 111111')' Holm1·w 1~ 'l6'.JilNUTN'Shop""''fXlrt Bl, C. l\t. Santa Ana I fc>male O>llle. Call~. LOCAL tnOYln&. & hauling tical. ~ am lo·~: am. N.r, llyde, Circuiatlon Dept. ~ lem, 2am shJlt, ~1u~l~p~~r.n1ploycr
801 WESTCLIFF,.. N;B. C.Pif. or 536-2513 lLB.7' . by s1Udtr1t. t.arge truck. Nominal f~. No unoke or DAILY PIWT. Call 642-021 Eq1lnl Oppt>rtunlty Employer no t>xp 11ec, 25-15, apply 1> 1-1 ANDY AI AN, retired
Prestige loc., 30' front on st. FOUND GermaJ::4 Sll:Jrthair WANT TO Rea1. BalTy. 531·1235 or drink. 1ilu1t be near bus & leave appllt.'&lioo. K'1 Dt>-Nul», 3005 So Bristol prcf'rd., "'rite CIM!:llied ad
Sult. Sli)n'.!8 -olCK, 1950 t;q female vicinity Hai'bcr & 539-9438. lralllp. 4M-m"J. CARETAKER Couple, Uve COUNTER HElP, P /llme 1,0, 11u, Uauy .t'Uo1, 1~.u. Bux
ft al J&-. air ronrl~ Plenty ~t Co!ta Mesa YARD, garage clean-ups, NEED help at home! We in, for Clubhouse. Apt .. + Ovc.r21.CAllStevc. DRIVER-HELPER IJti0,l.Ar.!1a .1ll'su,L'u~26:4ti.
prlq:, cpl.!I, dl'J>ll, 548-9586. WORK remove tree•. dirt, 'ivy, have atdel, nurses, salary, N.B. 646-lnl Boh Burm Restaurant to drl\'c wmpany car .,..ilh llEAD c6oK, FffU.IE
RETAIL STORE FOR FOUND black puppy, DlOltly d r Ive ways, 1 t umps. ho u I ekpn, com.paniona. 6'14-2030 President to L.A. froni :11ature. l .. onv. l-lo~p1lal
LEASE wfupM&lnr oflices. shepherd. Vicinity Wilson & 847~2!166. · Home ma k" r 1 Upjohn CASH R COUNTR Corona dt>I Alar ...... ,. In Utll IH~-IAAJ8
2900 I N ff bo -""" IN A .,7 _ IE s 'i·Westem M.C . ..., SQ I. ear. Npt Bell · ar r, K-Mart _.,;..g k>t, GET RID OF UNSlGIITLY '" _.._ that CtU1 play Bass &. Vocal plant during dny. 1.tURt hnve
Post Otfice $600. mo . C.M, 54~ TRASll & DEBRIS $12 1'1ED10AL AU14tanl ;;;;;i.' needed. 6'12-8361 been llct"n."lecl ~ ynr. (Calli Help U1 Build
642.-.953> FOUND: Boxer, Red lawn TRAVEL LOAD. COlLEGE STlJ.. have Mrved intemlbfp, Ex-ale o~: te-male, lull lime COUPLE. Work full thne, ~c req'dJ. MU5l Uve in &.•utiful Crulslne
JOIN Barclay's Bank at w/whHe markings, Brown DENT 548-6428 eel refs., de1lre ~back ca•luers In aeH service manage 62 unit apt CQ8\· CV.'port area. Star1ing rate Sailboats
Brookhunt & S. D. Fwy lthr roUar. Vie Hamilton nr , MOVING! Loe.:. tum. or oflice but can do troot oto., ' ltaUon. Starting Wary plex, Costa ~1K!l. Salary &: $3. pe r hr. 11i·lth IOme
Stores Ir. olilCts. •F1nlsheti Harbor. 548-6418. AGENCY 6'13-.2469 S2.00 per hr. w/regular comiortable new 2 BR, 2 BA oven.ime. Call Mr. Pratt, Nct.'tlt.'<l: by 4125n4 . Agt 846-3166 FOUND Se gen. ha~, 32 Ft. furn. EXECUTIVE SECRETARY ea.med lnc:rraies. 1.lln. age apt. ·Sorry no pell or week Wlyll, 21.1 _ 537-1600. Exper. 1''ln1sh Carpenters
FOR Lease-RetaU store about 4 I~ mo.!~~f= van.* S6l-273G seek ing challenclng poal· lB Y"'· M115t be bondable &: children. 615-4<\U . Do not reply unless this is \V/&t lea.at
1
yn exper. ln
2lx42 in shopping -nt•,', 16th & Po st CM MOVING, Hauling. Exper. r S-H no -.Ing .,._ neat 1n appearance Ir: en.lo)' the kind ol job you want and boot l'~ntry & a L'OO<.'E'rn l '-" OlOrla ., ' • Why N t cau Reliable, ~tile. Free ion, • .,,... .... Vioridng w/publlc. For In-will •tick IU. aboU t Ulelr future. Drop b)
J:l3 E. 17th St. Cl\!. s:rr.s. 832-51)l6. 0 t -~" Varied exp., Mature, """'· t . ~-11 J' CROSSING GUARD '"' .. ,.,.,.,ew, •Jon th'u '. 673-0loiO, ST.>-0707, 645-2450 n: · _.,...,.._ rets., ca.II 131-21B5 erview ...,. ego, Mon-DRUG & C 0 S ~(ET I C "
""" OOG:k found 3Sth St., N.B. PACIFIC SKIPLOAI>ER •dump •-·ck Fri., <213> !l.'S-0431 . CLERK, Exp'd. p A:R K '1 nW'll, !I am-a pn1. ' ~ & 600 ., ft ofc'•, $95 & Bfac Cock-A-Foo. Has ~· PRAC11CAL Nuno will """' L!DO !'HAR! WESTSAIL CORP
Sm CM " 800 I ~ -•1•• F•mal Ph ••rl<. Concme, "'l>halt, •--~,. •-·~ one, In ~• The City OJ Jn"ne is MACY 64>-1"'° • ' .....,, · · 1uso sq. I. '"... .....,.. ..... e. · -""~~ ..._.1r1 .. ~ .... ..,.. 1~ ..,...,.. 1~ ti · lot apt Mr Grant M·l 1hop. O.f $112. 646-2130 542-5.'l89. ... ..... '6 .............. ~ imr7110. home, call a.n,yt:ime, 892--JUB ( 1) cAsHIER preAen y accept Ing sp. • . ' 16~ Placentia Ave.
FOR leue alley store. Ad· l'"ND: pure bred Afghan TRAVEL SCHOOL Houaec1Mn1ft1 Help Wanted, M&F 710 (2) PUMP ISLAND ~;!:~ ~po11~'0'\icf; \\'hy ~~~O~Ei'!T oon-Costa Me1a .I ~ ... ~!.t~.• ... t.40Pi.'er&:"Alley creamy blond w/dark ea.rs JI OUSECLEANING: ATTENDANTS elementary ac:OOol children tacti~ linm that have no ---------•I• v •·~'-& 1n;e vie. LTA Military SW E . llth, Santa Ana th 0 r Q.u I h , ~!able, ACTIVE couple to ~ l8 Or Over. cmM Mfely nt benvily openlnga ot filled the . HOSPITAL
lndu1trlal Rental 450 bue. Female 551~1. 543·6596 R.ea.'IOMble. OWn .'"trans. =Beach m:itel. Call Apply ln Pel'llOn tGra~eled ~~~~t1k>nl-lion yesterday. Let or:: ADMITTING
FOUND in Laguna Niguel 6'5--0'l:ZJ. . Mobil• Car Wash ua 11 att ,,.,~... rom our profeMional lien SUPERVISOR
young black female Lab. For Qualification lnterV\V AMBITlOUS! Opportunity 1701 Tua 8 : l~run-4 :30pm,. w/t!me1 find the right .'!.i: to ~ 1 •
NOW LEASING
Hu•ll"Olon llffch
NEW M-1
~·/collar. Call
4
95--0464 or WILL do general for J coupln, 25.ftfyrs who tin Aw., C.i\I. '"'.arymg al individual k>cA· meet ,-., n,:::;: ,.._,, l ::sl>Pl-1 Sh.Ht, Mon thni
Limited Enroiln1ent bousecleaning S3 hr wani to··-up to~ -llon.J. $2 29 per hr w/all .... <--.:w.. .......,. Fri. Pacifica JlogpttaJ llwi-
49S-271'8 3 aas.'les per y,•eek Re I ere n c ~ 8. Debble; mo. pAfi-f.tt1'IE.~"CAi"i OIL DRIPPINGS J,. RO 1'1 J)l?C(.'$8, ...quipment 1u"rn1shed = Penonnel Agency, tington Beactl. 842--0611, ext
f'ND: Black & grey, lgC Morning Classe8 Begin 5.JS..243), 639--'123. YOUR Atrro can b e by The Cly Of Irvine. Ap-Cb '2'00 H.arbor Blvd, l ;;i2li;4ii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I
female dog, very hairy. A1arch 19th HOUSEKEEPER Mon. Tues ................ iiliiiiiii;;io;• I removed from concrete by ply at Ir...ine Police Dept..1...=:::1'---~-----1 • MO Sq. Ft. & l!P
HamUton & Newland St.
H0-1979
= Canyon, Ca 11 . Niie a asscs Begin or Wed. onb'. x 1 n t . ANCllNT MARINER ahop~~~ld ~..°.:1:! mo n 19002 Zee St, Irvine. For In· AJE?,~ OF PETROLEUP.1 April 30th rererences1~ own transp.' NEEDS ....,....., ~~·· Uae tonnatlon contact Cindy ...... ~ i.pplJcd to the
f'OUND: ~fed. black dog, Accredited By NATI'S 894-1249 an 6. DAY straight from the bottle Pollni:. 556-5238. threads or lingemall polish
HOSTESS, P/TIME
Must be 71 or over. Apply
Delaney'• Re1taurant
24fn.'l El Tnm Rd
Laguna llills Nl=\Y BLDG At-l. 12 Unit!. rem. part Lab. Vic. of Established 1963 and Jet •tand · · . then hose and ~lue bottles will keep
Front Office, crpl.!I, large Gi!J..5511 Re~/Comm'I. • 557~42~tc. Apply 1n Pe.non S-5 Pl.1 money short~ by abopplng run an ad! Don't delay. . a Dally Pilot Ctusltled Ad
1250Sq.Ft.S176,220-3 ph. 1.rvlne & %3rd St. C.M. • J ~~~Se0rvice , KITCHEN HELP away residue. End >W AnydayiitheBES7DAY to the Ids from 111:icking. Try
rear dool'!I. Anahelm &: FND: Black rabbit with 2601 W. Coo.11t Hwy., N.B. ~-~r_ t Oasslfied Daily Pilot Claulfled Ads kl buy, .sell or re n 1 HOUSEKEEPER "·nnlcd 7
Terminal Way, C.M. Dayt ~·hlte nose on Raleigh 1n EXCEU.ENT Houledea.Qine no.a. Q'Ur'""'0 • 642-5678. c;'°"'::c':;thi'ii;'ng".-:--.-==; chil<lt't'n ~Ion 1hru Fri, 9..6.
646-5033, '"'" 646-0681. N.B. , by day. Own transp. S2:I Appnntlu Baker Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W1ntad, M&F 710 Hr1~lp~W~1~n~tadiiiii, ~M~&~Fiiiii~~S95=w~•:· -~~woo~. :;:;;I * NEW UNITS * Sl&-9'l88 pu dl,y. 836-0&l8. Or JourMyman Beker
MESA INDUSTRIAL PARK FND: Male S eal p o int Housecleaning, daily, hiahJy Salary Open. Apply, Sextant
9500 Sq. ft. Life lndua. unit. Siamese, nuetered. VI c. I jr:c9 ~t mm! ended;..!"J~Aref. Call Restaurant, 630 Ne~-port
Front ofc1. Crpta. ample E~n. Fountain Valley.•""*-......... ~ a er pm. o.JO"~. Center Dr., N.B.
po.ricing. m \V. 17th St, ~Cannot"='~"'":::":.•::.· "640-8068:::-'"'°"' __ Liiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~· ;;;;;;;;::.iiii:1 1~n~c:!...,.~~T~u~--::--:-:-Auembly
0:.1a Pile-s11. 642·9.197. •LOSI a pet! Look in our ~ SATURDAY
NEED pound. C.A.C. on Edilan, B1by1lttlng ·~ T•x Service
INDUSTRIAL SPACE? H.B. (next t0 Hw;nane. penonal or bul1neu 600 sq ft to 2tD> sq ft or Socletj) SJ&.2511 · MATURE, dependable, fene-2l Years Harbor Atta
prime rental1 on P lacentia FND: Blk male Afgban Vic: ed yd, my home. Rell, Good (714) 6~76
Av, C.M. avail aow. American St CM. lunches. 545-1061. F'or Appolnbntnt
JtD.JohnAOn BKR. &J&.8362 fi42...Xl2 Carpt1nter locome R.Puona~e lax ~P· * COSTA MESA * Jo"'ND: 1ilvl'r crou wftur-CARPENTRY • 811 b1* . ~ ho!M. Mike KeUy
UOO • 1300. 1750 -2500 sq It quolse stone w1ehain Vic. iuam. qJal. speclaJll.e in>1..,:=;=c_,-----
lndul!trial unit•. SEE • CM. 6.'fi-1138 art 5. re-mode.ling. Free ('tit. IOCft.I J•nftorlal
ROBERT NATTR&SS . FND: Young Tab~at, Vic. rel. 497.2945 bef. 10 att.1-co-.--~J---.-orlal--.---"ce
Realtor-COllta htesn-919-6571 "-'•·1 ~-t Ofll 6 ·~~ ~•• ~" ~· ~ ~91"'23 pm. Floon-Wall•wtndows
S"I'ORAGE Space 15x30 wtth ' ~=~_,::••::..:~:;:,---CUSTOM Woodwork remod office 1""10. 217 Avocado SI, I FoUND F r..i~t. . • .. Scott Pa,ne f13..ll66 Colla. M~. fi45..671t : em. u_,, Setter, paneling & repair. Vinet L1nd1C•I Vic. Avocado St., Coroqa Lenhoff, 536-8475. ;;J... '!II
Rentals Wentect 460 1.-"de:o:f..:Mdr=;,.· !'oi;."'-"~=1·--'-EXPERT CARPENTRY """-..;.;..-'---'---f'ND: 315 German Shrtha!r GENER.AL REPAIR ''LANDSCAPING''
WANTED to lcue! npptox Pulnter, F;;J Vie. $.Olast Rea800Rble Rat~ 64$-19'19 For A Unique A~
Z'IOO 1q ft biding, w/ fenced Plaza. m.2563. GENERAL CARPENTRY Style ln Landlft"apln". Color-
yrd, klr Ml i\tanolacturlng. FOUND Bl Ptlodl ~--'~ Welding & m~chlnc11, call ack fl puppy. CUSTf)i\I f'JNIS.1 1 "''ORK l!IClPin&: It Pe._.... Design. 71~11\X).
/
Vic ~later It Edwarda, H.B. ·Small jobl OK ~'-4858 CQotact
_ 841~"· ear~ S.n11<• Gr""""-o.-. R~NstBLE Contractor FOUND BaMett H.=;;etn• ,..., ....ms =.-~ ~~ C.M. ~•:...,Vic.;,,~ A JOHN'S Carpet l Uphobllry 2123 Newport llhd.
INTERYIEWS
(1:00 AM -4 PMI
TRAINEES
START $2.34/HR.
2NO &: JRD SHIFI'S
Fut IP'O'Nlni semiconductor mra. co. ha• aeveml Im-
mediate openlnp for ~
dlvldul\ls to 11.'nrk in mlcro-
el1tClronlc assembly. \\'ork
wtll ln\'Olve using ll mlcro-
ocopo.
EXCELLENT BENEFfT
PROGRAM
Sunno..-.: • ....,.,.....,., Ori s b a m po o. t.&oll COit• Mete
FEMALE 1'\oh Setter, vie: R-.....1. Degre...,. ''""!'""'"""l!!!!I ____ , 160 DAY SALARY REIVEW 19th le. Placentia, Q.t all ('Qlbr brigbtenert A. JOI:'. 17 WK SALARY REVIJ;WS
551-1349. mlnute blf'•Ch lor 'lt'hi1fl ,ilnthlgL~ EXCEL WORK FAOUTY lfll MALE tan coknd puppy. tru')JC:ll. Save )'OUl' money P.per ... ntf,. Uf'E, DENl'AL.•
Vic· Shalimar ,.,_.. by ,...,. ma mra !rips. MEDICAL INS.
.. S30 atm ~---"'\""" WW clean~ rm., d1alnl PROF. wallcowrlas. llatt JULY PAID VACATION 1 ,F;O~u'='11"'0"°.="",-n"g-.-."" •. """. hill S\5, ,,,.,. ""· ,... No. :mst_,! .• ~ ..... au co. DONIJS PLAN .. PALM&CARDR~DER• $7~. touch SlO~Chalr $S. l5 ttpea pe.per. ,.._...,_. 8 PAID HOLIDAYS
ad w/ftdudJon. timt Betich mul~. Vie. 18th It )'nr. ~-11 what L'Ouft!a not PROF. ptiater, bonni work, SICK PAY Pl.AN
Blvd., Stanton. 527-3«16. Santa Ana, C.M. 60-8323. mothod. I do work m,..at. 1"1-lnl/ext, free eatimt.te. APPLY tN ftr'el!'ll"I~
FORTUNE TiLLINO f'OUND: Slam.,. cat '"" Good ref. 5.n-OJOL I«~. 548-:1759, 6'Mlll. ·~-.,
"-idlo & Ml ... I. San • DIBERNARDO. SOl1a . NEA'WIT. "'''"'"· •most WESTERN DIGrT'' palm, tardl. t>lc. ~·3406 _,Cl:::om::,:::c;:;n;:tc,_::492"'632:::,:'=---· !Carpel Ala, llllllallatlon. A 9Xpertile 'flPbllcation, Int· ""'
MASSAGE/f!Anl MED. aim fum. bm/bUr. ropaln. 1163-16.19. Ext. CAii milll. CORPORATION
......
Personal•
A toUCh or cl.all, c:ompleto doil:. Victoria Beocb area. Cement, Concrete INT/EXT PAINTING
prtv1u •. ')'. Mfl""'O!lfiO, _.:<D'-'7--'UITl~·:,,-~-~--I Ora Cb. 67rNfi5t 3128 RED llIU. Att.
MASSAGE" SAUNA nm. Brattl<l. CllNCIWl'E -Ill) .. All ... NEWl"ORT B&AQI, CALIF.
Call Sbevtt, 1163-tifT 992-IS50 ft ur mote ~ ptt 911 ft. * W•ilpeper "-':.:'~ (IRVINE IND. OOMPLE.X)
SS39 Adl'lmll A\'t., 11nl,I( lkh., _ _,Call=.::ll<::W::;O.::S.::A,.;6"PMc:•:;.__ Don, f4HS]4. C. Reblco ll£O lflU.. A RAKER ST8.
ELECTRONIC
TECHNICIANS
Junior & Senior
CUT YOUR COMMUTING
COSTS!!
Beckman Instruments bas two
Orang~ County Locations
FULLERTON
2500 N. Harbor Blvd.
AND
IRVINE
Jamboree Blvd. at Cam pus Dr.
We can provide steady employm ent and
challenging positions in addition to a
"Blue Chip" benellts package.
Come on in and di$cuss opportuniliea
with us.
BECKMAN
INnRUMENTS
INC.
Equal Oppor\unily Employer
EXECUTIVES-MAIAGERS
"JOB OPPORTUNITIES"
$15M·S75M Ronge
SALAllU.HIGOTIAILI
Ar• Yo., U11tmploytd No-Att You Ste~i"9 A Cheng•
-Worried About Your A9-T;,,11 of 110••11 Promi111-
Uncloticlod At To A Pr oper Coura• of A,t ioit--
All E YOU UNDtP. PA IU?
If YM C• A .. ..,. n. '-ll•wl., Cet .. 0t1", I• TM
Afflr-""9, We'd I.Ao As ''""''--Wit" Yo•
IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL
, -WI CAN HELP YOU
A. Do yov "•-• tlro119 votolio11ot clri•o1
I , Oo yow ht•t 9ood n•lih int•tlit•11et?
C Do 't-vu fttl u1fli11i•nll., 11101iv1t1d lo oth/e,11
0, Do you ht"• the obility lo ll'l••• decltlon•
E. Ari yvu rtoG~ to t•I • rtotit tle ctretr objoct1'•1 7
F. If you ,,.,,. co11,:11ctd th•I h1lp .... , 1woilobl1 ... ou!d
yow ttt tpl lt, ""l!houl dtley1
YOU SHOULD KNOW e The bottor lobt ••• not •cl-.,1;,,9 e Third p01'ty profo,1io11t t i11fl1111110 h 1ometi111t1 ntttt·
tt ty e G1tth1t th• rithl door• opon, el t ht r:t ht 1,-..,1 I••
qwlre1 lttl111IC1wt . ;.
• Erecull-• poaltlo111 •• f;lftcl throvth •••tuli•• l11lt l• .,;,.,,
4 M111 tttwl!'l• m•lll111. ii nvt t l•t1I on•••r.
SEND RESUME olt CALL TOOAY
-FOR-
NO COST EXECUTIVE INTERVIEW
UEOlllYE SERVIOES. llC.
-HOME 01',,CE -
cn41 547-Ku
UI N. M.ln St. Sant• Ano
I
I
./
~K LICENSED ~ Bua wznc. Driven. Irvine area. 4 hr
b ftdarlY couple A iuanwteed. Xlnt wqea, s srown ctrts m modem employer, ~
Konarch 8a¥ home. !9 euy WQUOR STORE (.U:Jq< boon.. llam..&pm weekdayg; San Otmtnte, full or pl1rt
J)>rno6pm Sat or SUn to do time, <'"pet' pref I: ref n!'Q.
comp I e I e hou1't.k~lng, 4!1'1,3717 Mgr ~'111'. only.
laund.f')'. help thOPPll'IJ I: planning l dlnni!r meal dal· LlQUOR clerk, full time.
ly, !Val: wttb 'piurned melll Steady, re 11 ab I e. ex·
fer &in or day oft Pref perientl'd 4!1+-3517
"""'1' ..,., • .., ""'""" •r 1 ""'u""TE°"· ""1"'N111DUST"""'R .. IA"'L""" wtlh gJ"OW'lt t&mily -': own
transpof'l.Uon Ot' easy hwl
t11p. Rees req. G-1009 ·
HOUSEKEEPER/ KELLY $ERVICES
•
• •
MATURE l'tlld .., .. &<"' fo< RECEPl'IONIST, no exp. llC:UlllTY Ofl ... Cllt ,11 s WOMEN -llr ~ ·--11/Dfyws Mii(IR& UNIQUE: °"" ~111~~~~ ~~a:o ~·.::1~:~·~·"• TY T =:e.~'t.:.:~ ~,p-Q9.~~·~ ~uw:,:-;:::
10 am answer A proon1 hrs ovtrtl.me. Mon thru , ~ ~ lpm er Wkerldt Bui~ Meterieli • ,.... w, CDPI*'·
MATtlllE ·~-......, to< mall. lm-UIJO 'Olun. """' 12.z. so;.-. IEllJ • ..~ , ' _,.. ...;, """°!·; ...,,..., "°""'l•><'P~ work. 7 · 3 RECEPT • SECTY SEWING M8da. o.n, aper. .,, • YARI> .,... -Ol!Tlim. e ~JuiWIM 11"""' ~~ 11:
llh!fl. ~'ul ~time. Part Ume., M.D.'1 ofc., call tor IPQNv;-ear. 1'0P PAY! ~ ..... ~ Yard~~t..:.~ 1~-10'.\rt Of NE\\' = b1ift11 iet,
M";;."c:.;.1•:;,..., • boclc '46-0l31 , S to 9 PM AoolJ< In penon. IOI W. Ulll lfol,dod l"""""lotely bud w r It r "J , Own ;.;:ia;S~.;;;;-:.;; lumber, p"' .... clooeto.
offlce. Exp. Pl"'f. Matutt. REGISTERE·D ~;:rp Alort Gi;I * Socr91.,-• trw~ton. ~ tnln """ ,...,t!1tlq, mold· ~ ~ ~ ~·7l;,. 9 "' 6 Mon/Frl For '"""""1od ofe. "'°"'· * Typlah,' ~~BM.'·eoitl .J:. llUltDIRS SURPLUS .,;...... •1>! u ~ MOLDERS,.IX~ER. NURSES -,~::~Yacht * ~ Cloi'b ' ::; Man v:.w::· ~ . :::.:ji:.Y~ ~-=::,.,::...=;: HPM.
For fa1t IJ"OWinl tiberll:lalt lfi,11 fi'l.aqtoUa. CJ4 Exce!Jftt MlnllCJ. 'Lone. Ir-lll!!ll wfndOw ~ W.'l\ 'J!: ~·t • · BUNK bid*, tA bed, IMllle
boo.t co. Apply In per.on at. ' ahort 1tttn:t tern~ p-train cu.tor. ~ 6 c...,...... , t111rm~tab4.e . .-•ctaa1n. •ll' CllPP'r M-O>cp., lSJB lll!OJJ Soi..·~ ..... ...... ..... -Varied • ·1111.,. On ' S1ioo 353$ E fMo ' .... Ctroe _, ~-
E. Occldenlal St. Sa'Jria Needed for our 'new lal teent, ~~ ~t ettlni work. Weekly ·Pf,)"-1 Hwy~ :_ T' . '""'~!'!! '\ .. wttb Ice' inaktr, eofl:ee" ~
~OOK .
fllll charg~~or house & oook·
lfli for fnmlly or 3, Live out
but avail to live In on oc--
caa\on. S day wk. muat
drive. ei.:p! req, $500 per mo. 67":>-2692
Ana. spec woril:tnc ..,...,,.. ~~· check. No Fftll. Apply fu CANON l''"X 3Smm SLR end tahlell. All xlnl COb:t. M:i~: ~e~~~'.!irwn:: M~~e:~~~~~~: i .. =ICU ,r.~l=G= = °1~4~ 1!:'°~ St.: swCe 3.o __ j I ~·· eanOO ieu; BEDE,.. ~A Com"" the Kelly Girl way, Weekly w bllcaHon. A -u..u care. rut op-~ts Ot ""'-""'"1:ll, Newport Beach 833-1"1! a.. • , l(lac Sile. ~· t"'•
paychecks. Kelly Clrls ~27 °(114)po&12-S3&t &e port.unity to upgrade )'OW' <548-8684 ,. (Bank ol eaw: Bkl(.) + V BELL A-Howell, auto load, atilt ~· .. ~) ~·
HOUSEKEEPER 1or man &
1l fr old clri. J..7 PPtf 5 days
wk, In Sall Clemente, near
OUr Lady Of Fatima School.
498-1388 AM or 492--6660 PM.
H 0 U S EKEEPER/Babyslt·
ter. Mon thru Fri, 7 to 4:30,
.own transp. N.B. Rers req.
644-5447 aft 4 or wknda.
needed immediately Ior· · profeulonal skills. movtie pro~ used once .J~ .-<.Worn. _... · · ' MOTELAtald,wllltrain.Ap. STAT TYPIST • -$50.548-ltn"•' , • ~. l tJIU&JJy home. * Lite lndu1trlal ply In pe~ °t~ Mea 0~:r1' U::~'i!te~~Jn An lmmed. operililc W an 4 ~YP~ M~ call, Aid · alO Fumitvre Ill "'13),~,:Mlll~""'=. ,..-:==-=:;;:;I
A11embler1 · Inn. ln'> tla r, Medical • SUrgf.cal • OR : indivual .w/1t1dstf.cal back· ~"' We lmuraoc!-a-U~ . 'BDRM. SET, Blonde, did * & Clerks NEWPORT ~di ~tomey ICU· CCU· OB. ~be~~~ 547"6t3Tforaesw}tntment 1 JCl~LETI SINGLE Bed tir'-' ~B;on~l:a:t!z.t.*'£ KELLY SERVICES :;.",,..!':'."....-bef 1,::,7· New acute foclllty located In poolllon ,..., accunte In-3 MEN needed ID -.3 ANSWE. IS -. box n • ma• _ _. Oood cood.,'$1f"
NOTE COLLECTION Lai\l!l& Hllla. Outstagdinj; p1.1.t Into com.paten. m~io.!ibO-'· •o.uldD ,t 1~2 drewn,. tiz. ii41f-6289. •
CALL TODAY & BIWNG CLERK beildits Ir working con-For Appt..Conlact work/OD fr5..&l5t Mon B-12 · 1 ~ • • SIMMONS true value
Mortgage Co. or LOILD dltiom await those ~ carol Smttb, &K-5800 ll--lftll . , JUdcer-Boftt'-Probe"' IC'IN:_\'iS.[ZE bed JZ. matdltilr box •'sprina: I:
1401 Dove St. Service exp. helpful. Small terected in provirllng ex· Avto ~ Service UllMILL1U cactus _ BURPS I Dttiler w/tnlmtr_. chest cf matt. SpoUeu. &G-.2412.
Newport Beech 133-1441 ofc, full time. Salary open. cellent prolea&ional care. Equal Oppot. Employtt-."'"lSsiiWs"' . • l On dl'unali: lt'I not true dra.WW'S ~· Fan: $15. Hl·fl O..r-S.le 1 ~12 Ca11 for appt, 644--8827 that he doff nothing bu( e&¥!! $15. 50-76.» '\ ~ ~
B•nk of Co.Ill. Bl-'-ApplyS3d11P-11ebackOept SOIL tecbnldan. exper In . drink: hi o!>o BURPS. , MUL'tt 'Colored & ' wbtte RUMM 'GE • • • E · ....,. NURSES . ~ neld testlng. Evw, Golf· ' 11riped 8' ,IQfa, ~ cond 5' ... _,. .-., INSPECTOR n.....i man le McO>nnlck, (n4l PACKAGER$ &n7.TE SAL&flne 'alltiqu~ Walnut N·-2 BR lam'po Sat, March 19th, JM pm. ''"""""""'""""'""""'"" fl.1orgnn Nunes .... a.slry. 0 ,.,,1_, fr quail~ funrlture dishes .,.......,~ • Marina Hl&h School. S(ll'lna-For electronics firm in O.C. i 'l\1ACJflNISTS RN'1, LVN'a, Pn!.cs, f'loor C ity ff spital ,,.,.,... llU! Cl'y1tais, copper A collectors 557-2833 dale Ir: ~· Beneftt ~=or.•rteoooT r ~:.c~ STOP! duty paid wkly. 657 w. 19th ommun 0 SUBSTITUTE ltem1, clothl!s. Frl I: Sat on ' * WYE.SEAT le lt()fa, Chil~ Jiosp1tal ol Orange
conds le bcnctlts. Applicant St., Suite D; C.Af. 548-9361· un..EN' n" ly. JM. 937 Emerald Bay, CUJtommade. Vet')' gd. quaJ. C.OWlty. ·
ply SAE dv or 833-2365. 23561 Paseo de VaJeocla CAFETERIA W9RKI!~ RU I Laeuna Beach. never uaed, usu.ally run , . C .,,
may ap at A anc· L k furth Laaw1a Hills Short hn, 2 to, 3 hd'u need· l . MOVING SALE 98S-7910 1 l' 'FAMILY an.ge .-.e:
, b'!..,P~~~80 Airway 00 no er NURSING, Rt' (714)\837·2121 ed. $2.50 hr. In Colt• Meal;· NEEDED · Anuaue clOct* ~ted. 1 L.W;-SOY Recliner •• dark ·="~ak=ldD&Lan:iW::
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
.Full Time Pol.ltlons
M•lnten•nce .
\Ve ha.tie pennanen& job 3·11 &/or 11·1 ahllt, 2 da)'fl Take San Diego• Freeway Newport ~~·,Corona del dock A Watch Cllnic. 1 G>kl ~ _xlnt eond, bWw.(Unlveralty pa s.k.)
openings with plenty at jj~~W'~&°ll S:~~d~~~; To El V~roE~d~U, :!!a~~~~~~= ht .l 2nd St1tta ~1957 N~vd, Of · U....-Jt Tub chair, "'~~-='°-""""""_,.=-I ~rti~if;.n ~ ~~~ H.B. 847-3515. F.qujll Oppor, Employer Diatrict, 18157 Placentia Aw, VOLT ANTIQUE M• .. ~ Bed, D~~ET ~l'Wlld DIN. Rm. ~ ~~
NURSES Akle1, 7-3 &. ~U CM1 I ,... . ...I".., ~_._ .... .., .... ' batlL. vanity, ,nu.._.,.., ~ company paid pensk>n ' RESTAURANT HELP. Male ntf•nt Personnel Solid Oak, s;D>, w/2 I~. 'r'J'' ~~El· lamps wtdter, dkR: by·;m.. & J•nltorl•l
Ught Malntenance Work
Dllhw•1her1, Cooks
Rocopt., ~· Aldao
plarl, medical and Ille ~~~ Ex:-arr~.o ~~ &. female . .Part Ume days. TELEP1tONE LINEMAN Temporary Service M+-aQI' , . ~i:al= top. 6 dews.~. curtabls96S-6W. ~~i:.:u::1~ ho~ H0&pltal, 18811 Fk>rlda St., Apply at Burger King, 2115 WIREMAN 3848 Campus Dr., SUlte 1(16 ~lancee . 102 "D-f.....:.._ r!_. .........___ :10 .am to 5 pm. •
H B. S4T-3515 Harbor Costa Mesa. Minimum 2 Ye• r • ex· Newport Beach 5t&-4741 · ""'.~""!"' .. _.. : ... ~-. io.m Sat ~ 1918 &n-
l'el..lent v.·a,ges. · . ' IL SA ES perience. Good lllllary, rapid Equal Oppor. Employer · SAVE flME, ciiest,"2 'bite atndl; J\dbrd, i:iago Dr Nl'.I ~hidlni" 25" caJIS4fl.5690
ConVll18$Ci?nt &
Resjdentlill. Care Facility.
1 edl .,1......, 1 NURSES Aide, exp. pref. full RETA . L · advancement.excellent 1 MONEY A ENERGY! Sealy Sleep set, SlOO Syt 1a'eo1or TV"~ :chini.~~ n'.:~";e~tC: time, shifts 7-3:30, 11-1:30. P/tlme. Alon-Fri ll·2pm. Sat benelltl, piUI. Now tn-WAITRESS want.eel .21-3> to• , 1 5t6-8634 ~ ahd~ktall tabJe.
for the following: Beverly Manor U62 Vla 9:»4:J)pm. Apply in tervtewing. ARMY ~ v.uk40bn/v;eet'cl.a)>ltor'~UNLAPS~-SOFAbOO,,kingsz brown& . .
Estmda Lquna Hlll8 ~~~wli°rtN:.8-tionen, portunltiel, 645-1.163. CoMa prtvare pj.ftib:y Club Callr ~ 81~( ·~ White plaid. Roll a'nns. $150. 70l':. :;:~~~~~ 16th ". $L ..,. . ' TURRET LATHES NURSES Aides, nil shift!'. • Meta. $.57S7 Wed-Sat. Samples 1 • 979-l46t1aft Gpm llth Starts at 10
TRACER LATHES ~~~~e &.N ~· 1445 RN-LVN TELEPHONE OPR t WAREHOUSE t>tJNIAP APPUANCE ro. SIX RliOY.S of furniture for . Jane'1 An •. ENGINE LATHES upo • . . • LEAD MAN · l8IS N..._ BtV)I., CM . si!e. 645-2349 betwn. !J.Uatn GARAGE Sal -·~ n TOOL & CUnER omCE Manager, ao. NURSES AIDES Antmmed.openln&foranln· Mall order'''"firm.-~ ~ * MS.778Q * ~. 'or ·4:»ll:OOpm. . ~-~·~.
GRINDERS ~rle~~ ~~:P~i::~ S=t:e!:p ~l;:~11~i-::!: = w/:m~t:~b,Pg ~ne:r:u~blepe~ t.ruST Sell! Apt.'11zi \do l'fEW 7' Hide-a·bed in per· w= H.B. sdn. Mon.
HONES preferred. SupervWon of 11 Design your own work-wk. dl11tance calls &: 'relieve ~ a: t '""~~ho~:: ~ ntri.!,. SeMn&.... mad>,..Jne . .lect ~ .. ~7,..;... $110. =--'=='"""". ~---,,,,..-: GRINDERS people, xlnt ·benefits, 4 da)' Good oppor. to broedell your receptkmlst. SUPfl'Yllory ltion within ..-Vl!ll,.._.,, new..a · ,..,.. "'· ~ • ......,., ... · TWO 1amlly garage ~-A
PROD. MACH IN E week, · contact o t f I c e nursing skills at new places For Appt. Cbntact monthi. ~ to work water-IOftener . &: a pew. 1. ~ ,VJrtue Dinette Set: little bit of everything. SAT.
manager. 646-7133 w/new faces. Carol Smith, 644-6809 xtra houri '&:"SAT u need-~ter .dls~ler. 5'8-l443': 'Sf41 .. call after 2:30, . -·. 8 to . ..fi. 220-U Balboa Circle,
OPEl!S. PART-TIME BEST NURSES ·Avco Flnanclol = cd~ future for the right W. C.Ut J:(twoy, No. 9, N " 968-9190 ' <.·"c:'"'c:';,· &:II""'. =o-i=~-
~ PERSOONEl.
SERYICES~
{MWll read mies and Statistical educational tele-Call 956-3430 F.qual Oppor. ' yer peraOn, 'flthe rlabt attltude., W~ &'dryer combo, JVmYTffrnG Koes. AJm06t GARAGE SALE
blueprlntsJ phone aurvey. Penn., 10.3 TEtEPHONE LINEMAN Mail ~ Jo. Starerelt -mo .• old, l~~e n ea· >riew incl plaills lamps 'PiC-W Topaz, Bal, l•· 104: Sat I
SEE OUR
SUNDAY LISTING
CALL TRISH HOPKINS
JERRI WlflITEfl.fORE
APPLY pm, our ofc CdM 67>1089. &\LES Represent,atlve n...-n.,......t.1'1' Products, P. O. Box 11123,. Frlai4aire ~u"' l ,yr oJ • tutti odds. 493-6295. '7 · .SUn=-~=~-~-I
PERSONNEL DE°"" FANTASTIC . ".uu:.uun.L, Santa .Ana, Calif. 92711. Must aell. All ·Avoclido am. ' ,.... ND , f ..... PART time openinp with • Minimum ~. ye1ra Call~7108. OOUQ-J,?;plecesectional,10 OODS~E $,some Um.,
8-5 P1'f, Monday thru Friday growing . bu&lnesi, fun , ATMOSPHERE ~· GoOO · aalary, W-'»li'IMUSE Clrl · -SERVEL IU refric .top ft., ....tn~ hardwood 1raine Seturday. 313 E. 17\h PSact, · After 5 PM telephone cheerful 581-;l879 TIME LIFE BOOKS ii now npkl a d v a n c e rn en t, .,-1-,.·-l I I 't I . ~-~ GE • $100 49+-M42. Apt .J., C.M. . ' Plant Supt. ~-"T"-i'"T.="==--1 hl..ln .. aix .......,.le to 'work U 1 bene"t& p I u 8 v er, U tll e , ~Q;I', ••"·• ., ~ A ,, __ -P•ste-Up Artist .... ~,. .,,.~.. exee en u ' • permabent m studentl top range 26" X 3)'' New SOFA,. coH .. table, din rm SAT &: &m. 1~. pp ........ ._
at (TIE4)A546-R3131 F/tbne includln& Sata. Exper. in our young industrial of· Now intet:Vlewtnc· A.1Uf' ~ 5 da)'I 6·30· $60 ~ ' tah'e w/'J chairs. Cood iron gal.el, accordlan, m1lc. 0488 £.17th St. (at Irvine) Of
L or will train. Co. benefits. fk:e, Penn partfthne & lull Opportunities, 6 4 5-116 , AM to 3 Pli with ovefttme ·R.EFruaC'n "!roll. ..,.. E cond. llll--"983 433 Calle Fueblo, SC
avail. Start a $2.'5 per Colla Mesa. SUS br to start. Interview :i £.&""' ---------• ---
SIEGLER Apply,~ Penn)'ftRver, 1545 hr with roqm for: •d· · TELEPHONE SALES to 5 PM Window n-i-. ~.~ ~79"""1Bnal. $50.;.;...~th • UZ>?LWY.LWWJJZ?ZW
Sult• 22A 642-1470
Newport mvd., CM. vancement. For penona1 fn. • . ......"'6'"'• ...... te. ~ . ter u.rM • __ " , J=~;!'~~ p:; PASJ'E-UP srtt.st to MJrk on terview, 'cau Don B:J.l.8098. I '=ti:S ~ ~ c:: ~ D Airport Loop Dr'i REBLT washer, dry'~rt; • • · · • '
matnt exper rcqulred. 'Full T weekly shopper pewapaper. SALES Representative for1 wigu & Comm,. For dctall• dlt\f'inh. $50,,lr ~~l ~ 1time pition. Start $5.25. mo. ransport Must be exper. 893-0000 Mk ·Storer catiie TV in 81.n L. 'A. TIMES WHO WANTS TO WORK" '. pr. ~er '
leup.CallMr.1itcAllUiler. Dynamics forMn.Zarlt. Juan Capistrano a r ea .I ·5'CM)30l ••. DRJYt..ACABl · ~-RE".t:JllGl~
MS-2.'m. l c-... PBX OPERATOR Salary + comm. Clll' fur!l. Cu06SE )'OUl' -bOura.. ~ _'c0mblnatlon'.""'1Dt ~ 1 • ~ , A CCIH'WNl!NT.~ ANO
· ANITORIAL Service now 3 31 W. -..rstrom Telephone ~ Serv.· .F\111 Co. benetita. Equal CJP-1
1 A,N s w ERIN a · ~s e r-v. tot~ be yoilrt OM& p . can ~1-11 ~. --ct. · .awtNC GUU FOA'ntl! 1
taktna appllc.!1.tions for full S•nt• Ana Doc ton exchange, Fuhion port~ly ~loyet ror ln·I telephone operatcr, d a y bou. Meo « \YOlneG. ·()ft KENMORE ..... .I: GU • , ~' GAL Of" iHE GO. ,... -..~
time experienced penonnel. 1ilaoo, N.B. Exper. only. teme.w shlft. ~'?"" ~· LaJole ~ aUgbtly '. 11.ancllceipped. Dryer $125; paranteed Ii..· , . •. · , •
"557..mB. ~:-1pl•~~fty All llhifU open. Tbp pa,y I: SALES: Outskte Rel> ror m-Om · Nat. Clean Appevance.j dfftittred. 54f--"12,i . , ... ,-•'' For •n ~tin W~·~':.f.Ww
IJOURNEYMAN cab 1 net I'.::::::'.'.'."::'"::::::'.:' benefits. Call lG-4, Mon-Fri kM:al Printer. Full llne of , .vta., retln!d. Age 25 1o 70 f 2:l cu F-1' Bh.t&-JUbllo . 71 330 ,1 maker or exhibit builder, only, 544-1069. printing&. Osha Slgr°is TELLERS ·Supplement )'OlJl' income: upright f:reezft' 1100n --c,11 Ml'Y a.th . 642-56 , ext •.
64IHll98 Exi>or. only Med applJ<. ·Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a •• 7 -• · y....-. N'"'-LO: · I A....._ "--!• full time poolllon & ..,,,..1 ---..-----PHONE -SOLICITOR SEAMSl'RESS. toeavy duty sKurlty P .. lflc day. ApplJ< In """""' .~~•• wv. , ~-· . ,..,,~.n ~OI' ; ; ::C~ :f ~~!!1!~ ~ Machinist Ant. $5 hr Part or Full-Tlme sewing machi1'e, ..m train, N•tlonal I.Ink Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. l.6Ul 73 PHilL'O 18 cu.,.lt. lroat·
(714) 89f.13U between lOam Indus. Engineer $13K Salary + Good Comm. cell CaUfom.la KOKO Mat~, 550 Newport Center ot St., Costa Mesa. ~ =r~·5i>'9JJ1•
,..,.•.," .... noon,...,to< .... appt.iiiiiiiiiiii~l~~ta5;~ ~;.e1· ~~ ::i:i;ur~ 66-2'118 1Dam·3pm (Fashion hi~) WOMEN coun1e lor a eD-Hel Wanted · M &·F.ilrlO
r· Payroll Clerk Cmpt7.d. $575 Call Mrll. Millef, Wei!kda.ys I SECRETARY Newp>rt ~ .., ~ .. ajipy ~t . p ' . , •;' .
Clerk Typist ' to $600 540-6679 11 m-3 F.qual ~· !:-__._L:.... tableWa?e,. m l·n i KEYPUNCHERS
KELLY SERVICES
Dental Fmt Office to $600 ' 1 pm Orange Counties leading daia ~ ?""'!-"' ..... ''" ~~$..Car M2•a21 Di..r: .. ~
Secretary/In1uf, , to $575 proenslng center need.I a N!C. 9634il6t104'b ,.., .. -.... '"'fr:.._. ·L· . General offl~ $450 PLASTICS -Injection mold· s k I I I e d, person a b I e TElfO'S Help' Wanted, M&F f10 ,_ __ ,_,_-._ '
Exec. Sec'y/Mktng to SlOO Ing setup m.an. Exper w/all secretary who is motivated .. , cail Jeannie Sisco IUIJe(..1s of l!ljeotJon t00ldlng and able to '\t'Ofk closely
& SJd Hottman • 3 Van Dom niachlnes. w/management. Sh req'd. o· ·~ 'A 1 bl 129 Oporotors NEWPORT Apply In penon. Wo "" a div-qf 1a • • 0 • ------• INCA PLASTICS INC. Safoguard. N.Y.S.E. co. Ex· -Need 10 Operaton. Register PIJ'MfW19'1 Agency 32972 Calle Perfec.1o eellent benefits includire TEMPO cilen a ~unique
Now for special nsslgn-133 Do'tlr Dr.,.N.B. San Juan Capistrano profit sharing. Please send Ir. time aavlng ~I)'
mAllents. rtxceUvallcnt e1arnlnp.
1
,...,...,,,,;"',;;2;,-;;31;;,70,;,..!!!!!!!!• I :;:An';':eq~u~al::op:'.:':po~r=. •~m~p~t,..~, ~fi~ 1& to' •mcl a r Yp ,...O for skilled , ..• , 3 shnlS a ab e. Come <1 .... ,. .. "'n 5 · • · · KEYPUNCH In Today! p LU 11.t BERS/WELDERS,· Box 577 Costa Mesa., Calil. I T RIIS
KELLY GIRL MAJOR INSURANCE clllllom experience only, con-1 '.!!9'l627!!!!~· ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!P I S C~!_~ BROKER Needs I o ca I tlnUOUB employment, apply 1 ~ Who · want uq...ucu A
multiple line salesman&. ac-Wiiiard Boat Works, 1300 SECRETARY sdmulatfu&: long er abort
1401 Dove St., Suite 340 count exec. who is ag. Logan Ave, Costa Mesa. Executive Secretary tor nCw term us!lmrl~nts • few
gresslve, able & eager to In1ne office. Must be nuent days, couple weeks''nr few
develope commerieal ac-R I Es A in speaking reading &: writ· month!! • you declde! Now
counts. Full benefils, Send H tat9 ASOC. 'inc Spanish' & English. Also you cal), 1 • • • • f
NeWport Beach 833-1441
(Bank of eant BJd&.J
KEYPUNCH OPR
resume to P.O.· Box 21.'ra, Rea Carpet'• FllAhlon l1land must be fast & accurate in APPLY BY PHONI
Attn: .?tlss. Ro be rt s, office In Newpm:tBeach has !;Yping·le shorthand, cai)able Call 540-4450 le Let'us know
Newport Bench, 92663. inunedl!lte opP911unlty for at cqanlzlng filing systems, what .your skills are. No
MALE Hairdresser., Xlnt new or exper Sales assoc'-meJntainlng charts & graphs need to come in perwnally ·
location & working cond. iatea. Red Cll.rpet Realtor-., and making tra\•el arrange-until we hllve the 'ju&t rjpt'
Min. I year ex per on al9 ol Guarantee + c 0 m m with over :JO oftJces natltin· men ts. Personnel experience ·spot for YoU! •
()jg, Day shift. 54Ml19 wide can oUcr the profes. helpful. Call Mr. Dixon, NEVER A FEE AT TEltlPO.
· s1ona1 gro"'·th &: •dvantt-979-3800. T-.. T.....,...., Help 1-~or Appt. Contact MANAGER TR Ar NEE ment opportunities you'tt Car.I Smith look'"" fo• + a• xlnt -•n· SECRETARY Bookkeeper, • ~-----=--=----
"~AIL Na"-Wide~.,., ·~ ' -644-SIOO n.r:o~ .....,,. ...,, mluk>n structure. Olntact opening for well organized TRAINEES of fmpor1 Stores Retail exp ~-Mble I n d I v I d u a I Avco }"inancial Service &: or college pref, oot req. Thoma& E. Mancini, man-ai-p;ble of working m:
Equal Oppor. Emplo)<er CAU for Interview between 9 a~. 640-8:i?2, dc»enllY in l girl office i ""~~~~~~'l""" I &: 6, ~13.'\7 situation. A.1nt skills, ia-
KITCHEN HELP -=oM7.G°"M"7oiT'-.T"R"A"l"°N"'E"'E-duding S/H, "°""""'"" ;; DAYS A Y.'EEK So ~-~ b •-·-etc. Property managerneat
Immediate openings for
"''Omen on &II iliifts as
, trainees. Ac.O!!iO« aper.
machine opttatoia abo.
Clean, Ute work"ShUt bonus
,...mlwn palil• 'for ftiaht work. Oppor. f 0 ,. ad-
vancement A xll't frtrwe
Apply In PenKKl ' ""'"'""'" '•·"ty• am itllN3, or Real Estate oofti...-.um aggressive, five figUre In-'-"f>'" The Rusty Pellc.n come. Call Mr. Campbell.at desirable. Salary corn·
2735 \\'. Co:u~I ll"'Y·· N.B. ~90Xl ;.i::'J:s.wi~rience
SEEK & FIND" Hebrew Calendar
TAMMUZ I VAYZES IECDMR
SEZU~TEBSS ITVLHTCNE
S E U N E 11 E T I F l I V S L S I K L
R 8 M A B T E N A I Y V S 8 I S I D U
11 T M V R K T l' N A S N A S A T S A E
RIC A L E N IJ A RI R A T l N 8 N L MT
A I TSWSJIUKOltEECAltE IH
~
D T A N M T A 11 E: E 8 T H T E T M N A
0 Y H A £ 11 A S T f H I A T E E K U R
ANCV11 7.U~ll USSN I NBHTE
0 S A II II M II Z M L l D A A Z U E A T
IRH S ITLIEUULS l\'01)TB
R 8 R E I M N N L 0 S 8 8 T K A E 8 ff
T E P fl II 8 U L H S E S A E R I S £ D
T S E C 0 T E Z V M A T ~ T E I E T A
To Ohfn' •ny °' .a of tt. ellpandcd ••&cQ A Find" boob,
•mbenl l throujh 7. wnd SO Cfftll '"' Qeh, mtkini chtfkJ
..,.. ... 10 ''s..k A Find ... St_... Tdtpm Syodiclte. Mcttew ........ _ ............ .
-==~==:::1 SECRETARY • Min. or 5 years Lile Insur-
REAL ESTATE aooe experience tor VP tn
benefit!!. . •
hi Shltt 1AM·3:31FM ""' Shltt s,_._
SALESPEOPLE home office marketin1 dlvlaloo. 4 day work ....t. 3"' Sbll! -TAM ~~ Work In lbe: hottnt .,... of
Jtwitington Bffch I: FoWt--
taln Valley with a company
lhnt offers a full career pro-
gran1. 4 Off{ceJI to choulle
from. Cidl Jerry Gllle.iple,
VILLAGE REAL ESTATI::,
96'.l-2-156.
REAL ESTATE
SALESMAN
aaJary to $750, Ca 11 lMtNment:a ~ Ufe Insurance.I 9.tblldiar)o ar
541-64.11 for appolntmnet Calllamia l.njecdon
*S.C'yo, Bookk-1 Moldlnc ComP"'J
· Have too many to list 1 Apply JIS BrtaB
U.1 Reinders Agency Calta. M-
4020 Birch St, Suite 104 . im f.j,"' 83~ TYPIST-PART-TIMI
No Cha T y Xlnl opportunltf tor mnture, t'f9 ° OU re11ponKible "'Offitln w/prov. Active offll>e on Const llwy ,EstablU.htd 1~ nt sldlbi, .~. a--cy • tn Lagunn BeRch wilh a I :-.,.--'~,.--,...,.c..,.--7'-,--~·----· • • backlog of htl.Ytrs _ 8190 op-Put your budgel back CJ' a loQch oe:s. ljOun
port1U1i•y for big comml• the track, .. Sell kl~q tlerm U4 !~.: ~ ,,OAlllfied
1:lon1 In Con 1men::lal i: In· ~ffiN~~~ ~~DaSl)'C"P.O.
vcstment propcrtltt. 1~, ' GuM~:'':...".!,5soc. !:l!IJ!W-.Mr.,111 ~W-.MAP71J
REAL ESTATE
MORE CUENTS A BUYERS
than our J:lftHnl ma can
handle. It wtll be • eur
mut111l benefit to a.,.
medlatel)ll. Contact
DOLORES McDOllOUGU.
Valley RnUy. Pboee
637..im
THI SAN PIANCISCAlll llSTAUIWrf
h Now Acc1pt;19 Appftutloo1 F...:
LUNCH COOKS DINNB COOIS
IROILll COOKS A"" ............... Colo .....
lot ...... Mu II; .... ....., t ......S,....
1617W ................ ...
WF.IE · EXPANDING_
' . . '' E•cellent permanent employment oppor-
tuniUes. Instruments & electronlc ·control' llUIIIUfactuftn. . .
* Small ~pu,y atmosphen> with big co. . * On the job training & advancement
opportunity. . . . * Convenient location, near ·
beach •
' ' . , Ccilt U1 fJ .,
Wage Ratw &. Job ~eicitpilons.:
' .. * Sa~ Morning interviews on March 18th * Week.days B AM-5 PM or by appolllbnent' (Ask for Diane) ' •• * M.,,.tacturing Engineers * Produclkin ·Foremaa ..
' * Prod.uctlon 'T~ims * P.n>e1uclfoii'Assemb1-1 ~' • -p ~ * Stock Clerit (Typlngnq'd) · * ProdDClioD Welder (Class 'A-TlgJ . . . . \ . * ProclacllaD Helpero (Train .. ) * Production Coll WIQden * Circuit Board Assemblers * It Solderers
• . '
.,
Excellent company bepeftts -inclnding
!1oii4't1.P•ioo, v~ bolidaya. Pl'itkm,
sick -. oducltlonal n>imllurHmenL •
' . ·•Ro• l1•ntriea, In.
's..-1c11--a11on Dhlllon
IM4 Whlltlor An .. Ceot• MoN, C• '207
P'HONI 60-Mli
' Equal Opportullity EmplOyor ..
'
"Create a colorful, country '
look with thl4 atatwi set.
NEW! .Aid color and
• ,
' .
H
v
'.
D
F
I
G
"
•
s
(
• . •• ~-~~:iiillli;:"::J'!~~~i!!!~~c:!!!(~~~!!!~C:::::!~f!i~!!:::::::::1F~! .. ~yj,~M1~~!•:1~5,~1=9=74:::::::::::!~~~~~0fAl~LV~Pl!l:OT:j~ : ......_,Deck• O r1lten, Tr..-· 5 Truck• f6 V1n1 963 1 Autos, lm_ported Y1v
WDWIG ...,__ i>oublt •· .. ~ -END de er 1*b'tnc MtCSed FOR the atr\ll.ll car A. Ille '71 CHEY1 1' ltO\'AL. Sfl(N1~1nan OOll~c 1 BENTLEY lllAS1llS FURNIJUlll AUCTION . * * * TONm 7'*1 ·PM *'* 1tr , IMl' LISTING: Lil Seta, •elffl, BR. 1ttl, ~ cbeola, recllnen, hilt.I-bed, roct-
..., C<llf11 tables,. milk glaa !bl w/4, lc:,e
Cl'Ulll lbL llet OIVIJIS, cbOll freezer, bar ~hi, pool table, gatelt11 drop leaf lbl., J88Cl< '••u ar-Alr/cond., llovel, refrlp., Wllbo ~-dryen, dlshwuber, rue •• -. Gone ,...,. Tho Wind Lamp, all types 'of. 11111p11,
:_~n.p cut, ttat, on. crnb:its1~ 'r9dk>, 5 fw $ea SoolUa. M'ust .CO ~lghl low COil io.1nc, .12,, 1 (l\"Uldo\\'I Val\., 19TI, HluP.
"-awr USll. F'alr.cond. chuiiieii ~ cd ocm comodate 3.1' Trimaran. t3 & 15' trailers. ~Oun· PICKUP ftulo., V·tt. I IK.'ftls, 12!'" I BD."1'LE\' ·ro, S-2, !led, hn·
Be9t otter. 5M-m2. ~ -.S. Aft I~ all da,Y tlJ....t3:2...U ptt Sale1, 20J6 llubor, CHEYENNE \\ H., PS/PH, ftb•, l'Uthn, n1:1c., Jtl. hnd, r11c:1 tdr,
GUITAR Martin D-35 1 wl/mdr...-1 · ...... Spwl A Ski 911 1 ~C..=tn~M~,...=-----IJ1.p(' f1 ·k, 11'11C:°' "'his, \\Ide S'("Jl'O. Firm 4~ Rrn 12 atl1nc W/CtUle, $5DD 1 -OLD ~· Ptuuun .. Trailer ~I ,.. Ton, V..S. 11uio., 1111i•r. 111111 .. I O\'tll tl rf'll, li,\ffl nit , $2.~' ~~ · '
646-9019 *''elll· '61 SEA FlJ1'E TrUluJI 140 up in Adult Park. Ci.'t. I.NCI... CA~1PER TOP. \\t"i l Con11~u\)' t'!\I', IJ Dli.,,'. ~ ". ==---~=~---1
me RIECE Ludwtc mrrl[ -...... !fl 1/0, 1Atilon TraUcr. 11 h. Recenlly painted It Coft111n1lr1~r&.1n1u1y;\l t'ft~. 10 :...m·~ AUDI
aet, Cikij&an symboll $150' . 'f • . U.850. 5«M>UD .carpeted. S8SO or off.er. l~I. \\'f'tktnd ~nit• I Autos Wantea 968
PH:' 9D-4'19.1 ' e . ' BOSTON Wllll .1i"'R I'lft A\QIU. March ll. G46-'4G9 pa~ lhl'\J Sun. · '72 AUDI 4DQQR , u-2 TIMM .. ao trl ••• , •• ,....,.... • T llt u QI u7 SAVE WE NEED YOUR omc. PumhwO/ • ..-r, = np '°""""' mtr. •• rs, I IY , ,.
•••"--Neorly ._ $31!1Xi. &16-4844 • "' -CADILLAC 100 Gl -,.,.. • .,. ro gocid hOme ' Doben:nan BOSTON "'1fALER,. 13'.4;" TR A I L F. R' GXiO, <..'OM• Sharp, clet1n late 111odel cars
DU '15 up Ex«: nM ~ •nWt. ~Me doe. )'ald I: 1972 41 h{> J~. Xlni plclcly enck>ie(t. tlbl' de.ion, Pllld for or Not
:~ m.dellen, color • BW TV1, tooll:irol!s' of
. =c, hardware, bikes, Iota ot. bric-l'brac It
I '15/.lT. Secy cbn '8124.. .chlldl dQi. Hu all lhotl. cond. AU xnas. ~7 -~tuke orter. 51&-7gB Mk r or Clluck Trn11p
, Plefte 867 W. 19, CMJ 546-1009. Auto S.rvtc•, Parts 949 Vff'll <;nr 1i1unn~~r
' llC-3408 ' I\ SIAMESE kil1en. All col-~ ~~~-~ ~r1 ... G --~ " I I Iii ""' CAMAllO ,..... 321, ·····RS CADILLAC • • ....9:!ftma~:!: ~1125', ~u' ... ., Eh't<>-.. . ..-ery cu e. aulo, Nreds motor "w k. Snn Di~ f l"\\y . u1 A\'tl'Y IUlR •--• A·-"-~' W h B bf «w -~ ,.,.~;:=,;:~=..:::..;:'0'-----Pio\',\'., l.;-ll;n1ia Nii.:ul•L .. _ H---~ ltvd r-vuu ... ....,.,.e, e onor A l Muter. ~culator SR~3> Nu1t. BerMl'd male 2 yn to lolooir done out of car. $500 495.0IOO ll·t-0800 • ,....,..... • dJarce. HellUI 111bject to preule. . $Ulll oa1y ISO &1>-1229. "J,i.., home only. !Inn. """"91. c..tw Me•• 5•0·9100
MASTERS AUCTION · ANSAFO.'IE. ..... ...... .... • · 540-0!'1 1 ------~"-'1 ':l~ .. sJ'J:~ ~ 5 ~ ~ '73 GMC ~ Ton Pickup =·'Pedkt ~ar.:ler. GER.14AN °Ship~ adult Hot A.Ir BaUoon Club Now CAU...S. Nick I: Verne, 207~~ Newport BWd., Costa Mesa · 64&-l464 fe~ 16 a C'fiOd home. fonnine So. Cali!. New lsl 642-37til
(Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'ls.) Pi-/°""1m 126 Call 5l9--0lll · c1 ... equip. °"''· Prof"'·'~~~~~~~~
Costa Mesa** 646-8686 •" Ji ~NOS 7' CUte, i..~ble, cockapoo all training. tnll &1>-"'3. I :1 lf;::;i 1;;;;5;~~~~~~fijiij;;;;;n;::=:;:;~~~~1 '-""' abot1. Ii neutered, I mo old, CMnf*'S. Sale/Rent f2..9 l. Al.d:Hfw5*L!!J .,.,!!" Jate •ft M .... u........ ill • ORGANS "'2-•"6 WE ..... the new .,. King 0 l·~-..-.~ol...__ ..... ____ -'-"al 0,.. ~ '1ff f Ir-~-,,,...,........,,.,..-, I The Rorld Cimpen in •tock Antiques/Classics 9s3
"' ~VI'• Am, Calendar StMw.'I Present Sat: 'tH 5: I Sun. <1U ,... ... s..... ~ ~· ~~ .!!::·H!i .. ":'1""--'"-";;;...:===-_:.;:.:
St " THE .......... '--$5 J;iiiiiiiiii.'i-,----,iiijiji'~·~r\i;i:I ~mper ~. -~~. 2l MODEL-T Ro<U1'tor, Jag • " mesa P..farch i;a~ llUIR O>sta Meu., 646-4002 rear end, Pnntlac·400 en:::. & ~~'~·.=:::;! ~ ORAJIGE COUNTY 1912 DATSUN camper, used '"""· N<'Cds to be no;shed I pndfttQa Gulld, Otlldren'• e Pl..,.. I Gr•ndt Pet1i, Generlit , t l50 little Uke new. 2ll4 Con-$1500. &16-23ffi.
uosp1tai, 0ranae County. aunnUE ALL MAJOR BRANDS tinertai, ~Mesa Arter G ENGL1s11 Cih eo·. parndc ---·-Ml.. · *Security P .. Prod,* eves ot SWide.y car, 3 cir \\'/n1l'ler. diesel. ·~~un:it 11\l<ft. Antique•. New Splooll trom •••• $.~ Beef 28o if>. tl.&tt. Ch. 20c ~g. furniture, etc. Used~ ...... ,, ..... ~ lb. D.H.L's $2.50. lO/more TENT top, 2 dble bed:i !Ike $3,IXK>. 516-00W, 5'!6-0076 MOVING East, everythlng SHOW & SALE Playen " ••••.••.•. S89i> $2. 547-3971 1418 E. neW. ~ trail5 '>''ell. $450., ~ODEL T-tour!~ MXL'\n,
must &O 'incl. kitch. alnk., 4 Grands •.•••..•.• S395 \\'lhl! Ire 8"' •· 494-8566, Rm 305 ' L'On1pl. re~on.'<I. S.1,000. t·all
BR home. li\Jmlture, pool •t n•w le Baron Hot•I .No
0
DEALERS PLEASE n-1
' ,•~ l54 '69, +; T. C.amperSpec. 2gll8 c:oUoct, 'fl.), -'608
table, Clll', trener, wuher NEXT DOOR TO KNOTTS rpns -... • tankll, auto, air PB/PS Recreation.-1 .a: dryer, oD palnttnrs, Houn: 1·10 pm Sun: 12-6 pm A.LL MAJOR BRANDS e PUPPY1WORLO e , Slp1 4, $:00), .646--5632 Vehicles
aunens, TV'a. radlo1, * MarcL lS 1,17 \\urlltzer w/rhy INewJ ~Chlhuahwu Tiny Poodl .. Cyclos, llll<n, ~h. n:uch matt, 2932 IP • v-ThOmu .... (Used)···· Sl9a Amer. Esidmo. Pit Bulls: Scooters 925 '&1 SCOUT 4 x 4 rollbar,
;Reclwooa. (Mela Verde), CRESCENT AT-BEACH La.\Tey w/tVm (New) $2695 Bull TeITier St. Bernard hubs cloth lop ne~· radials
C.Jt 551-51'15 ' BUENA PARK e FREE e ( Cockapoo J~pe.nese Span' LATE "13 Yan1ahn 250 J'l.tX, reblt run11i11~ Kear, 2.t nipg'.
GAJtAGE Sale: Plants;~pots., \VITH AD_ •t 2$ ·ch Orpn LfflOftl · Lat-. ~hllhund. 100 !'1-mC: ver;y ,rJean & defCndable. $1585. ~lick., ~114.\.
ma·crame , antique •' ea FULLERTON MUSIC ED PUPS!! Stud~ $al. +T.O.P. or · 5G-48Z1 4-WhHI Drive 961 ~ -= hair m!!~e!i ~ .18191 Euclkt, Fountain Valley MO!lt Bteedl. Open Eves. ~·~tt'="S,'-P,;:M.::,._~=-~~,1---------''-
, , 100-11 lb t.m of can-WAREHOUSE SALE 557..aM 53.1-6021. ·n HONDA cb lOO, k> mi, '74 '72 f'ORD Bro~ complete jft~ Wax, much m 0 re . 122 N. H11rtim', Fullerton AFGJIAN. 1 % yr old. 11 llc-$225., Yamaha 80· on .. Stmppe" rom~ri1ion pk).:.
66-4432, 279 ut-:-1. Pt. MusRit makchanl,'•roomFumlltureOOOI) oq 171-1• !_~eflJ!~ ftn:l good ~-·~c"~M..Both In xlnl f-,\'t'ry roncei\•able xlru..
" .. "........ • , , .... ,..,. .,.....,. y-•tact l4'M, cuuu. _... " us1 set'. A b s u I u 1 e I y
OI. Sat. only ft. 2D' tall, jam packed·w/ 521·1666 * '6S J5 H 0 ND A im111ac. Trade SlfXXI eq. ror JMHi 115 fumlture. Appliances, ... an-PIANOS -ORGANS IX>G OBEDIENCE CLASS Scrambler. $195. * · 6 6 1notor L')'cle, !Im.all boal. or i-~~~------tiquea. Yoo name it, we New il URd. Great .electkin. TO Start Wed April 3rd SUZUIO TC 250. Scrambler ? & T.0 .P. No credn
956
C~,-0~1 ;tjOO_ Au1on1111i.·.
\'S. po\\Ct' lllet"ritij(, IM\••r
hl"llkl'i, 11ulio, heater, 11.010
n1lil,.-s. Like 111'•\. t:~ ... 'N'LiN 1.
"NOW"
$3377
TOP DOLLAR PAID
IMMEDIATELY
f"Ort :\lJ. io'OHEili:\ l'.\H:i
Ctili tl r L'fl1u.. rn 10 ~· u~.
NEWPORT ··
IMPORTS
l lOO \\". Cc....!!1 Ill\')' .. ~.ll
641.MQS
.\ u t o 111 n r i " l1'fln.~n1iifllon .
11 h• l'tlll(lhloolui;, rAdio,
hl'l•h'r, 1·!1\}] IOIJ, l:J.lktl
1nU••:f. l~'OJ-'TG l.
$4777
~w.ltwi& W TOYOTA
'72 AUDI
4 DOOR
Att l•IOll'l llC' t r nn s·
n1 I i. !> I u n , :\O,<XlO
rn!t1•,, l n1n111('uh1lr
cundlti1ui. 1 7•1~ELV !
SPECIAL
N9w •73 8averla1
at HUGE SAVINGS! Ovi'!RsrocKED ha~re It! Thurs, Fri, Sat, Competitive pr:I~ ,Open 1n the Ncwportjlrvine $225"0r beBt offer. 5J6-&ll9'1. nec.'t's!!i. Dnys 556-fi626. Evi'S
All Jmelry ;ti Pri~ 10 am-6 . No rea.s. oUer Eves. A &mday•· The best C.all 546-49'l8 area. TRWMPR xb Hurricane & 11.:knr!!l 962-<12&.l
C. M. Jtwelry • 646-7741 EZ Tennt. Ask for deals are al...vays at: ..-.__ 3 I """"' -1 9 G ;-·• "'T f'lR &O\\INf.O U....-• R.C. Glass, 617 w. Valtncia, w•chs Music City PUPPY, 'female, 9 wk!. Blk f;;JIA.'l:, cy . "'1UU nu es, l 9 I N TERNATIONAL V•ns !63 .~~ ""!-11....us 111 Fullerton. (Euclid&. Ri~r-1 till\. Mother AKC Ca1rne cherry, 494-3452 Pete $2000 Scout, V-8, air, wide whl!'!, ,I I Bl\l\V'11;
Id -·-·) ,_,"""""' ' South oa...t Plua S«t-......,. T-..1-Fa"-~•re ll' '71 SUZUKI. '"" ~tX W.D. hard top, low miles, .72 DODG~ v , 1 Autos, Imported 970 ·;q nYl -lo ntilL'I
HILi' • D~AI' CHILD • e ~· .... :1 • ...,.~. '°"" fo~~t ~ICI.· 831~14 Fast )otg of ~ ultrn cuslom interior • good tires, ;111g "'hl'cls.v~~'~rsl~·l-d ~!:,?~: 1 '71 2800 CSA . liWI rooJ .,. ~ COAST MUSIC = trick S350 83J..:l36l 0 Mti..sllp diff. locking hubs, slrif)f'(I, Orih-in11l ol\·ner. Toii l---------· '72 3,0 CSA, lo i'nllt"8
I , CX>&IPLETE Ham Stiltlon. . .. . Seti!~ies, ~· ]970 'NoRToN Com mando, Sl!fia., call 646-0057 ronrlil ion. $2,(i."i(l Order any Model 'G6 llIDO Tl I 4 5peed
DohAte your dlJ(ards to Linear amp, recel'ver . N~!!:~.~-Harbor' call . ts/'8.tl-'l340me, ' e""' brand new, make otr, Trucks 962 83.l.-2819 552-7!XKI T.IacrocKER . TH.RIFT Tower, rotor, beam. Owers UJOIUI PICINI ..... 1,,~.,.. TUlt1n A CM .69 CH~' Vnn !Kl, fl cyl CAR IN EUROPE 5 yr. or 50,CXXI '11lle Wfl.rranly
p' a:· claim """"'·deduc-11 meten, AM & •kJe,band. 64Z--2851 WHITE Afghan. Male. All see at .,.,... ve., · 'T.I ~no COURlER aVBi1ahle ,., nll new J~ f150 Aft 6 call D ... Yamilba Plano& •-n-..o.. .,...,.. eo..'tann' ;;s;;;c.: -·'-' b-~u stick. C".ood f{ll.'f m1'11 g, Vrl'c Itinera ry Plannlni.:-.::;· 1or charity. · er pm ~-., oi: ""'•~"' papen, reg:i11l. ix.,.,\ offer. ~ '•~ su,wu, no 7,000 nil, auto trnns, niag 1 $17:"i0 2191 H rbo AU ilct1.11Js or Eurorl!'an 197~ & '1.1 UM\V 's. • ~1487 • Featuring Kohler • & Call 963-fl62S by tires, hvy abks runs '''his, 5 ~w un;s, timed c ea.n. · · · 3 i;-,
DJ E. i9th St., C.P.t NYLON Carpet SpeciaJs..The Campbell I: al8o Everett AKC ....... xlnt $165 or otr 968-6736 glltSll, R & JI. Paneled Sp. 19· Ci\i 5-1S-5300· EU,~R,;A\'l'u''ro OPEN SUNDAYS
i'.'ft.EE PICK·UP! 615-G966 Shores. 133 yuds of 2 tone Pianos H d .:,_ •12 Y·AMAHA, 12.1. Excel canipcr w/ dual inside '69 V1\N. 1-Urd li cy1 button I
VINTAGE Drexel Dlnfn&: browa Iha& ca,rpet. 170 PRIVATE PARTY WM'TS oun ·•,..... cond., Pt1.ust sell. $375. or lighti; &. cabovcr storage . luck int. n111~ good cond. 673 4550 lscmoLeeac:k. I
Mt ., w/buftet. S250. J.ra yar41; of 2 tone, ~laOOn TO BUY PIANO TOR pvt patty, Tl.f.892-~3 best oUer., 673-7573 aft 12 cabinet. '74 lngs. Private !!uper ··ln. Sl900. rl36-l3.ll. • 7 V""ll I~
"hr\lled couch, $20, Steamer pluah. (LINEN DRAPERY C.ASH. AKC Reg. fem. min . l.969 HONDA CL-350, s.u>. JNirty . $28.ill. &.'<.' at Ui E. 1969 FORD F..ronolil\of• \Vin· H11y Lidu Bld;:., Sui1l' 102 ~ '
Thmk .$15, Dresser & nite .SPEclAL). Pub mirrors'. * 547·MG * Schnauzer 3 tnrllf., mots, Flrm. Needs '4'0l'k. Olli ·=',.."~h,..Sr~··-C_•_i._____ 00..v Vl'l n. x1nl ronit, new 3100 :-lc\\·po11.. /\c"porl lklilch ~ t'.X:: ~ $5. 2 Arm chain 642-22fU or MS-4654 BALDWIN PIANO. Xlnt con-\\'Ol"med, non-shed 4S-5507. Lal'l)' 646-8896i 646-ll-47. '1l . f'ord ~' T. P.U. 4 ~·hi lil't.'!l, $\ZX). &t:>-:!Xi7
SlO ell. ~ boob lOc 18 CU Fl' Frtptaire ~ dltlon. $595, AFGHAN female, 2% years 25tJ But.TA""' ....L.• --·• drive, ha.s camper !!hell. ·n CllEV. VAN 20. 350 V8. ALFA ROMEO tJ402 M!l1l!l!<!rlto 11'Mkway
Mlssitln Viejo
JSml -~ coffee tbl white, LcwJy _old. ~· ' , ~Ym Plano eJec or aft 5 'Pm 531-6217. :!' =·4~. rued. aell., 67J..6478 Sll"!--0541. !Childs desk $3, 19" 1V tree up Ir. down ti Call 536-4920 ~·.· ~ otd. $50.00 Bef5pm 5.31)....JS&J ....v, cr-.ue ... "' .... Exe. cond. Best offer., P.tust p/~. p/b. 2'1,00J mi. Call
·57 ALFA Roffi00. needs
83].))t() • 4!&49-19 '
u... ~ ~·.~';" Af,ab0 f•:,y ~. •t -'t· pedal, W/'fNIIY i-olla. P1aya GREET PYRENDES. AKC. . • '13=•ro=Y'°OT"'A"""'1;,,..,~"on.,..,P"'~"•,.."-P '73 ooOG"=E~31=•"v~ .. ~.-.-" .. ,..· .USB AVl."tl.Y P\VV EX IT.
~-._ . • !~ ~ c nz-. . • wen. $595. &tt-7fM • 6 mo, male & female. f250· H~~DA;~ new ~tSkfg Truck, h~lux, $2650, aft $3300. x1n1 cond. trans, sell or lrndc for I !'!!~'!"'!!!!'!"' ... .,.,.. ... ~J n10torcycle. G-IG-7!1p \\IE'LL ~II your pre11Hgc ~ • -• 1 S. t-MaCh In ea. 586-2366 SiX);Otret.r &'5.~ • a ng 4pm, &6-3447 00(}-1887 l·vc~.
I.S .. ~·~;.~n~··1g,~1:,pc~~a~" ···~ .... ,..·~-"'" ".; HorMt '. , 156 '6'7 HONDA 31ll• See to '6i GA!C "'/camper shoU V· '74 Cht."Vy Van" ~i T ..
, 1 -Jn!\\' fnr you! Exchudvt•
·--....... _'/ .... .,.. 1111"" ___ "--~ • 1912 JIU!.AU&...r.. 111twl ng . •n .,,.,., · ap-6, 3 spd, crawl th.ru boot. UNDf.~P. \\'ARRAi'lTI". A11»lt ~ "'!:-'" r -". '""''"' '-n:umman ~.e. _J;.~ 5 • ~-.s.•-. ~ SADDLE nu · uSed ,_...., precia~ -· $9j() &15-lriU sell ....... I"" Sl"l492
1\l.Jo'A '72 Sp,vtk'r. xl111 Orio~·· Co.isl hf'f'll buyers
<."ond, roags. fn1 , l"'t ply, 11·uiting. Call 11,11-20-IO IAulh.
"""'~ ~ to balt:tll, F..da'er sso· Newc pttJr1Pom? " ......... Can~ ffe'eford'Bn.nd Hand ~:··r ' M~7046 ~"'''-"~=---=~ -.·-·.,.·-~'--,·"··~~~~~-= Uftg\lard your gu with our table S35 282 Del ?itar ~f · . . · . t~ · •74 llONOA ~125. lmmnc. Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Au tos, New
$;llXXJ. fi.W'r-12-1~ tlcnlcr ~.
Autos, New 980 •IPbon .--loaded · • . •-~1"" r__._ l30 ed p.XLl350 a.<ldng $?.\!). ·~ , ''tlJlkiuard". Send check 548-5123 _,,.....,' .::% ~! · Used 1taddle xlnt. cond. Under l(:atf'zfrity. $550. Ca:ll
di money order to Bailey -4 BURNER, StoYe, grill &: GOLF clubs; Haig' tntra Hereford Brand hand tooled 4~. • •
l( a I\ t n e , 11 o 2 Ea st OW"en, $15. Ladies 3. JPd bike irons, WU eon Staff .,.i>oils, Iii Iver conchol! $'.91. CaJJ '72 Y AJ'l.fAliA 115 Enduro. GOO
Wuhington, Santa Ana, SJ5, efect br6om., '$2, 12 J'ei''d. $50, xlnt co n d. 592-2188 or 592-3148. ml. -Calif 927(11_. Clear glass ulad plates, ,50c Skis-220 Head DI{. Xlni ADORABLE POny • ~~.Arab, Call 962-0M7
KENMORE washer It elec ea ~-~es., $1, .Milch' c.i:id. Best °"er. 536-241». Enelilh trained, J~m,Ps. 1971 HONDA 750
-... --. llQOs~-~-· • ......., new, &YOC , --.:OD_.. . 1 In ......... · , • ._.sf ~e. FreU .I 6000 mile11. 546-4449 S 'O."' for ··~both·. <>•.o;.~ coneoe .. a.o.,. allt riter. X-11m. 1adiel l\Od.l~·twl• ~ ~~~.~m~ ~-""'· mask, lhfl, l•Jtl Moltlle Homos 935 ·~ ~ ~~ '=: ....m,. P.icturo ."5, stab' =·mlot:. boatlna_ ..u. -~.;..,."1:;' w1 tr. ~MOBILE HOME .~.=:,~rr.': ~ ~~"~~-Sm_:" ' ·· · · s1~~r:t~~sT
61S--736! ~ .. I • -\ Wanted ,. . (20 WOSda • mem-riaht M.nc[ loets,1 CllM'81 .. 900 MOBILE HOME ~Sell! G.u fireplace, 0 .~U.S. COINS * 1 545-3056 22' Mini Home Boa.t sleeps 20' x-S..', 2 BD 2 B~~ earp., titnlk·1'eda.~0:=: Si~les &: CollectiOhl \VANTEO 1° ~der,i\I;° 41)55 ~·'·~ ,1.ow ' ~· =&·e~~r~~~ daw~ f>eil, bar 1,t ool 1, Top S Paid. 962.0709~ ~~7 • J ~· r .. lUdlm trailer for 220 air conll., kllch. '.Si!r1-H.l · le thru $1. ~7689 ~,.......,, Tll. . clock, stor'ttge ahed, lnnd·
DRAPES.1 WOVEN Wooos *WANTED* • TV, R•cRo, HIFI, *BOATS WANTED* • scaped patio. Three·yn. old l'.l"D~ UPYOl.STERY' U&ed teletypes; Working.()r Stereo 136 Sail or power/tax ad-·like nu. Localed in new • ..,.--._,,E' l T 1 d vantage. Boy S c out'. adult pk. away Jrom noisy "f,,e 1 •.i. ra ne not. 646-4113. Pvt. Pcy. ZEN""'°' RCA• SYLVANIA '""'"A"""' · · · "" ........ R .. W I cl b-DtOataton. a 4 8 -8 9 41 ' SILVER cone . tele~ I: rtereos. Priced -~""· '· .::.1. ...,...,.,...., , rom u
lJ821.:(l&9 · PAYING TOP 'DU_. Jess than the d!Scounters Boats/Ma_ rtM :1 .. house. S15,49S. Call EVES. ' PERSIAN • ,...,_., E I 904 213-694-1GOO, 697-1152. Fil'E .QUALITY . ~ , with 3 yr pkture tube 1 yr qu P· CAN BE SEEN AT:
. '· , ·~ RUGS-\VAN'TED to buy re8.90Mble parts &: service. 19•· &: CREST MONT Akhavi Orlelital Rug•. pair , black vinyl stretch ~ lui:er , color . sell a r e ~ T ~· Two 18 ~ S A S U~~(li;)=Blvd bootl 11lie a, 546-23SO _ ~In 1:-it:C-u~ ! }~~.~~ ~~. ~ lD.Jt 'sifeED;., a1!. (Centrnl
ovnan -<>ut pf State-WAff'.J' lo bu y-1 ead • dlsplay. Cuh 90 Ptan or 1~ gal. '.J'ri Bow Tank $100'. Aw.. aO"OSi from .Brea ~ nmlt ieft. Brand Reuonable. .. term. to 36 months. ean for Gilge1, 1ntake1· I.: overflow. C»mm. HO!ip.) Lot #46 ~-7.eb:lth color' 1V water Mfi-2390 our prices on any nlOdel. BIA approved. ~un OONTACT RA Yo PK. n·IGR., bed~me,tApedecic;pbwer l,JGHTTABLE le ABC Color TV, 1904616' Ellfin boat w/trlr. ~""~~-'°"~--""'~"--~~~• ....... etc. 53&-9976. VACUUM PLATE BURNER Brookhurst or !ml Atlanta, ELGIN .t 18 H.P. Evinntde '68 UNJV. 21J'x57' 2BR/2BA,
OiJ:tAGE sale: Rbbfnwood * 8704.564 * Hunttnirton Beach. 96S-3329 (Ukt: new) $31>. each d962en_~f.' aqll pk. 96f1..5925/
ti. 5172 McFadden. Ave. WANTED: Gas Or)'en, work· or 9G2-55.59. "644"'5111~.c....--~~~--_
H.B. SaL Makh 16 91.rO to 4ig or not. Rea.'i0f\8ble. Allf·nf Stereo/ ~ trk, Uke TRAILER for Z.2-l ft boat 1
' 2 ~. . ' · &t6-!iM8 factory lnslallatlon In ~· _,.Old American Tandum,
nti. Jn t I n5a ......i... COINS 'M ~before. $4.25 foi Car dc.ilen charp yo\ot,_,looll"·",e<f."0-' ,o '°"c-'-.r,_,lc;,100Ci-. 494-<ll!S=-~o... Y. pa ' V'-'6· $45995•i this week $200 ln-1; • . 1
St'ucapes, Ia n ~c at>e•, $1. $1.75 for Halves. ' stall~ wUJ{ Jensen sPJm: Want«lt S'. c,l ariy· Fathom
abstracta, etc. Co m m . 64&-'1227 SS mo Marine 5'8-9650, 1953 Meyer
536-5811 8.A.SEBAlJ.. Cants -*d . {J S A stereo Place, Com Mese.
SEVER AL ne Ip b or a An"/ quantity"a1U Pa)' caab. 1?9 E. 17th st, C.~1.. '66 MB. 230, Pis. p/b, good
(Seville) 10-5, 'Fri & Sat. 206 Via Dijon NB 6'15-888? 645-utl mileage, 2 new tires.
2Ml1 Vla Lara Millllon Vie-NEED Fender Malib9 sl.Qtu • S. Bri&LOI (2 blkll N. al ' m-3129 •
'jo, for young man. D YOU lUiow South Coast Plaza). SHIPS beU, Salem clock 'il
.Dchln&' 165. Renoir of one call 55&-1762! 1 55&--0al barometer. mounted' on
, ~ S'l5, Bradbury Oil WANTED S'MJDJO EASl..t l;OA-IPLETE Itam Station. teak. Xlnt1 cond-m-o2Sf.
, $ISO.--~. -~=-ereolo!', , MUKt be wooden • ' lJnear amp rec e Ive r • Boats. Power. ..J06
., •• vv ~ Call 646-33t8 Tower, rotor, beam. 0>ven1 ----------~-
••• l'ORT•n•~ ~·-TV, 11 meten, AM A 111de b&nd. ·~T ·~ lBJOB -· top .u ~ .........-WANTED: 1'llreed CUtt1na: $T.,0. Aft.er 6pm call Ray ' ~ ..._ ' .. ~n" i Sllll. K1na bed $9l dbl bed machine up to 2''. 548-l48'7 Uer &: ntras. Mint Cdld.
Ill\ All -.... ~ --.~ ....
tablo,, """ l3B. -Doullio Co-Bed • YRS Old, 23". RCk' °""" llMts, s.n 909 LATE ..-J CJ: "°"""" ·-~· .Comole, .... lib, $1 S O ,J""='"""'-'--'--~ Nfr'k'. $ldO. stmmans twn Reuonable, 546-t2S.1 6f4-0567 '· *' INTEREST in Ertclcsoa
bid )(0. (714) ~ af't2r 'Jf.l Ton. Lea 1ban 4 mo'• 8Jrln. old. Noni> &allL Equipped
LGqa: Twin Sealy Q , STAR. GA .. E~f1¥.• ';111: radftg, aut&'pllot, etc. bolt 1:s,rln1, A;~; ., '1' 117.ll!O. N.B. 640-1005 ~.. ~ CUTI.POU.A~ JM.lwkndl ml , tnmw, ot 1..~. ..., Ml-' k -. 1. M .=c-~==;;,· ~~-~ s.-. _, 1: M.o..t. 1 ..,. "-°""1......,.-""' v ~4' Klepper Tradewind Fold-
~,..\ill!. Aroerl can
~ 5x9 SllR, A .:--
• llll'"I-. -..... k --~ ~ .. ~ .. ,. tlii• $/a"' ... SaJ!boat. Beam 4'4"~&Lil -~ To dlwlcip -oee for Saturdoy, ""'""'""'~ :rs~-=:~to~ = :...~~~ $375. Phone
IYw Jiit 61 .......
1 Doop 32 ._. 62 """" J~ J,JV.., tl~
BOAT TRAILER FOR LIDO
1'-GOODCONDITION
MOtor. Homes
S•lo/Renl MO
BARGAIN '
HUNTERS
If you're klaking for a great
bargain In a.o RV klok no
further. \Ve have a beautiful
1913 Di!ICO\-erer 22 foot
Motor Borne. Thii l~ry
coach is on a Olevrol t
Motor Home ChaWs with
full coll lpring suspen.cikln
kr thal great ride .
Comeletely self contained
including bathroom • n d
kitchen. Bunk4 for 4 plus a
klngme bed. This otra
aharp coach tbal bas been
perfectly maintained and
even ·bas dual air con-
diUonen1 1,10 a:enerator and
many l)'IOJ'C J: u 1 lo,~
{M.t\U'el. WOWh tNel' $l7,800
New Uris \&led, loo' mlk?age
unit cap be )'QIU'!I for only
$9995. ~lie. 263l10KI
'~ ,......... "'°"'
)tM. l5T...... YJ-• "'""' J6 'l'Oll'W 7 A '11"-....-rMM
• c-• °"' 61:... . ' lfOI' 11 I. •
$115. Sl8--9Cs7. lllDJ Beach 'Bl., Y.'esuniP!l\(!I'
lD' OU'mJOOEI\ Sall 1!o<!1. -=.c=.k----~~2~=I =a';o~£Ql:""'· + lll!IT~L~ * ·--"t4locl .· 10"'-·~ ~ '°"' DK." !lf'i: '"" ~.... ''~ 12""" A..4 n '-"" !)""--'--1JT.., I l•Lift ........... Mc:liilt-
<JC.. "t:--.. _ l&h ... 1,A ,,,.._ " "'-... 111'0 •w.. n~ ILIP,:~~ ~=-.. ;~/\Je : ........ 21~ ~ .,~ n s. "-tl.,..... ll\!::;.. 1~ .... !!:-.:'.:.. '!:~Yll 'HM• ;;::""' aa !b"-'. ~ E....... "'"' 11 I.'-'
RANGER 33 • ~t ..__ All f>n.W ·~26' l\01'1, 18-~ iaw 21' MNU'a. -V:an ~ .. iiorraeft'. F'tdb eqpdi. "Fully equipped, air, ~ry
_ aft 5 or -.... clean." Now aeq!ptloa: late
BrA 26 lla1': II. xlnt model «1111tgnmenb. ~..a..NUf eqllfppld,. '8.ZO. Ollie'• M.ll. R.entalJ
~ s.n.a. Af9, f3a.-Olleltl
"IO B,Wl<!A. JI' -'l 1173 27' W IN NE BA G 0 tnClflt wtrh trallf'I', alla. motorhome, ~ ~. '-d • ...._ • rim. Winter rallttt. 962A581. ...
"I! HOBIE 14', -· -REN1; ro,.•n ""1>1-r II' ltln'l coud. -... 8, ~ r.lts
Calllll54C10 -
SATURDAY SERVICE
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
OUR COMPLETE
SERVICE DEPARTMENT
IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS ON
SATURDAYS 8:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.
NOW IN 1974 ... SERVICE
MEANS MORE THAN EVER BEFOR E!
• BOB VLI SS. JOHN LARSON. CHARLES WOODWARD and
the Finest Mechanics anywhere are here to serve yo u1 •
WE ARE THE ONLY LINCOLN ;\IJ:ERCURY
DEALER IN ORA NGE COUNTY TO RECEIVE
THE DISTINGUISHED SERVICE VJARD
FROM FORD MOTOR COJVIPANY!
Ml V . UR\
ila.--t ~$ " .. E~ -~· .. ,.,.,..... Ti.' -"-"' 2626 Harbor llvd. of Cars liARliAIN • i' -· • 11avo •=,..•,.. _, 1° Costa Mesa pom, xtra -""""· 119 ..UT Otlllll<-l Mis tlo ll
-· -... ••111. ...u . ..u llOW -!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
•
980
• i
' ..
l
I·
I
I
' ~AILY PILOT Friday, March 15, 1974 ~IAiiiii;~~!·~~!~~~!'!!!l~:::Jt~~~A~u~tos~.~l~m~e!~rtid~==~n~ofA~~~o~!;:Ji1mpo~~n~Od~:J9~7~0 ['!~too!!;:,~lm~PM~rl~od~:J9~~~u~too!!;:.Jm!!!e~~:J970~P.A~~~.=l§miporfocl~~::::::!9~~A.ll~t~..,~~'!!e'~"°"~=.:J~~~A.ll~tos~,;J!~!!!~:::!~~tos!!;:,~m~•~•!rtod~:::1970!!j
IMW DATSUN FIAT MAZDA MERCIDES IENZ SAAi 'TOYOTA VOWWACHN VOLVO
'72 240Z ·~./!tTc1"~·~•r"'~:l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9l-!si'Bol:uiis1iiiDl 1 _____ ·13 TOYOTA HAllOUR '70 YOLfll ORANG• COUNTY'S
OLDaST
&·
ofr. Bet noon & alt 5pm • ' • MER~~ES Dl'K MILLERS HILUX PICKUP '
LIKE NEW ooi-5981 NEW '74 ON . DISPJ.A Y 1 ANNUAL • •pd .. m .. whls .. •pecl•I VW STATION WAGON 4 speed, air conct:rlonini. red 'TI, FIAT J.2.t Spider conv. 5 .. It Urea & paint. tQMC11U l.'O\'tr, ,
wi\h black interior, (No. 210) spd. AM/1'~M radio, 28MPG ROTARY MAZDA •n MERCIDES BENZ 12.000 11ict. ml., Detroit mlr· Folt. Au tom a t ic lrflnlmiMlon,;
\. k nd -~ prl ti S3200 499-J685 1 ro~. \Veckend isule "price ' _ .. lo •• 1 -•· "' ' ~• ,.. '"' -==~~~~-$68 LUXURY 4.5 SEDAN EXECUTIVE good'"'" S"oday. i'f5431V). SELECTION • PRICE ·~ · •d1"• roo "'~· •
1974 IMW's
Son. $5695 JAGUAR mo Beato tho'"'"· moro 11111,. SALE PRICE 9\JALITY • SERVICE l!STAVOI.
'72 JAGUAR Xl6. • r.: ~~~··~~1&';,,.".;:~1;. CAR $3395 •·n Buos !1 .. -.., $2177
tn ltock ready tor immediate
delivery. Excellent aavln.:s
<II remaining 1973 modela.
SALESSER\flCE-LEA,slNG
OVEMEAS DELlVtRY
~'·" Allen 1' ; ., f Old ,mobile
'-· J Cadillac
ROY CARVER, Inc. San Diego Frwy. '' Av<ry
ROU.S ROYCE Blt1W Pkwy., Laguna Niguel.
234 E. 17th St. 49s.ol00 831-
C..ta .,,,. • ,....,... '74 DATSUN 610.
'74'1' Are Here! 2 dr. hdtp., auto., fact. al~,
IM1a1•1te Dellveryl tinted glass, xlnt' cond ., S... On Rema ... '73t 3.1.000 a1..1. ml. \V~end
CREVIER IMW l~~:,'. good thru SW>day.
Sain e Servtce e Leulng SALE PRICE ' aw. ta~ s.A. • 8J>.31n $3B95 °""" Sllnda>a CAPRI ~ Allen
1 . I • I Oldsmobile
'~' Cadillac
36 mo. O.E.L. clasidc llnff, arla1ocratlc L£ :7271 BBUUGGSS (7 te .__} . (M .
Jll)wer windowii, power seat, from two; $8495. Could ar· · •'70 BUGS (9 to choose) :
Automatic. air condltl0l1ing, beauty and sa fety, choo5c SA (5 to choose} fi'1 · •
(~~Y~~lo. Low nllle is . MIRACLE ~; (!~~::fiof0~4~~~'.e SAVE! SAVE! Other make quality YI.YD :
$7777 l'l\f'S on sa.le 966 H bo C flt 646-9.103 :, l'!!I MAZD,A .. '73 FORD ~ TON San DlegG Frwy. at A\ft'ry CAPRI, DATSUN, COMET 1 ar r, · ·
.. ft .. PICKUP • SAAB'S Pkwy., LRg""a Nlg11el. VEGA, OPEL, TOYOTA '74 VOLVO , '
JllOHlrtwlh'& 4 on, the !Joor, 'Junior 495-0800 ,31.0SOO
.,,PW.VOLLVflli&O• :-"'"'"' ~~rJ2832~;~Mfrrou . e SUBARU'S ~=~~~~
• • • e RENAULT'S '73 TOYOTA
°""' H -f I CORONA SEDANS 1966 ""'"°'· c.M. 646-~ • ouse o mports LOADED Several nice ones to choo6e '13 -XJ-6 Sedan, low ml, 523-7250 from all equjpPed with nuto-
Burgundy w/Blk Interior, MERCEDES .ENZ EXEC. CARS FOR LEASE. Sun roob. Ml-FM radio. malic, fa.:t-y air eond,
Below Book. 6,000 mi -----...,---! " 1 f h I al dlo I A· 11 ~-~ '·"I 557-3673 • aioose from 4 fully equip-vu1y roo s, mag w ee s, r ra , e c. P• "'""" vc ow
Now OPEN pcd low nilleage 450 SE conditioning. the cost of a new 1974.
36 rt.I J $215 78 SEE TIIEM NO\V , . DRIVE J¢~;65~8 C:~. k~·us~vi=: Ml11lon Vl1(0-Imports OEL
0 !as;.ax Llc.peSc1:i SAVE! SAVE! ·ONE ... BrY ONE . -.
$1500. 548-5.157 fe:i.turing No. 00416. Take your car ih
Over TO iltS sa\'ers
('()ME & Sl-IOP
WEEK0 END
SPECIALS
'66 VW Fastb•ck $1295
(No. 302)
'64 VW But ..... $99S
!No. 243)
'61 VW Bug ..... $995
(No. 16'1)
Bost Dul Anywhorol
LEASEi OR IUY
OVE~~ ~L~tERY i
SPECIAl.JSTS •
DEAN LEWIS
VOLVO
. . •
'65 VW Compor . $1695 · , (No. ~SI 1966 Harbor, C.~1. 646-9.103 , '12 CAPRI. &d c on d ,
AM/FM, Decor ~. 4
'Pd. $HOO. Days 979-7765/Eves 494-2697.
JENSEN MERCEDES BENZ trade:
San Diego y,.,_ al Avery --------Fl"T Jim Slemons
Pkwy., Laguntt Nbtuel. Con1plete Sales & Service lmpOrts
OVER 50 NEW CARS
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
'" i 1 \I', \ ,,,,,.;-
'69 Det1un Wagon $1395 '72 Wagon, fuel injected, ;
(No.. ll65J auto, AM-FTtf, etc .. 14,500 '
! mi. Musl sell.. lmmac., : ,
$200. OVER. bi ~ o o k -: DATSUN 11\tMEDIATE DELIVER~'! fj: '. 11',,, :' , r ,I \(11 613-8760 ' ; 49s.ol00 83l-0800 1NTi~~~R Visit U1 Soon At ""' Qoail
"10 '40Z.AJr, map, AMJf)l . WILL IUY YOUR Large Seteetlon 28701 Marguerite Parkway Nev.-['flrt Beach Do'ck M'ollor Motors '71 TOYOTA MK II tuned ex ha u • t . Xlnt DATSUN, TOYOTA ot Colors Mls!!lon Viejo 495-1700 833-9300 HARDTOP
HARBOUR
vw
Aut01, u..cl 990 : .
o.nlition.. Mwst aell. OR VOLKSWAGEN Immediate Delivery tUSE 'AVERY P\VY. EXIT) ENTERFROP.IMncARTHUR New & Used I1nports Only 31,982 milesl
833-0llSl ~. 6'13-3BS4 eves. PAID FOR OR NOT. \\'ILL 1'"'ULL SERV1CE M-B '73, 450SL, Beaut. But-OPEL Frost blue with color keyed UNIVERSAL
'1U' DATSUN Wagon 510. PAY TOP OOLLAR. CALL 1DEPARTMENT ler Yellow, all extras.1-------.;..... 120 W. Warner at So. ?italn black cloth interior. Fac-
Mqs, header. A AI .FM KENT ALLEN, 540-0442. rAi;_rr~ ~~430rig owner, '1'1 OPEL 2 dr., 1900 Series, Santa Ana 557-2132 tory air cond., bucket seats, 18711 •--~ Bl "'2 u35 AUTO SALES
2026 HAHOI 'ILVD. : ~~· .Prlv. Pt:y FIAT O'tV"'\IVIN "'~u Al\t/FM radio, ne1v \Vhlte 09-n • -._
WE'LL ~II your prestige MB :~~ge~·: i:~~~: v.·alL<1, etc. Truly a fine <..'Om· HUNTINGTON BEACH COSTA MESA
2«I Z •n. Perfect eond. Red. for you! Exclusive Orange ,65 OPEL. n-..nd bl 27 Open Sunday1 binalion of quality and cron-e E-Z TERMS
Radlal tltts. Low ml. Ori&. FIAT '71 SPYDER eoa.t nrea b"Y'" wal..... • · -~ a e, omy. !99SDSMJ . MOVING MUST SELL e NEW IN STATE1. OK !
...... $3150. -·· 3100 w. C>ln•I ~wy .. N.B. Call 831-»tO Dir. ~l<\lliiso ""== Hon-1 ---s=u~B~A~R~U~--$2395 '67 YW BUG. n.bu ..... good • NEW ON JOB? • OK :
D13 DATSUN 610 St at Rd.&1 tr.,1 5 'updk ·• mag. bewhls., 60-9405 '71 MB 250. Auto trans., air, a p, EUG. EOT · ~ ~ cond. $950. !lr best offer. e BANKRUPTCY? • OK :
Waaon, COO miles, $3700 or o m" c new, aut. lo miles, Mich. X's, & . Ir.A£. 673-6317 anytune. e DIVORCED1 " OK ;
belt o&r. 615-4Sll6 canary yellow. Weekend MAZDA SUperb. SAVE 831-:KWO Dir. 1---,------~~a l
-DATSUN.,_ ~"t -"' aaloprlcegoodthruSUnday. --------NEW' PEUGEOT SAAB SUBARU '2 __ ...._ '65 v.w. B"g· cleao, reboil! e PAY DAY ' :. --~· ~~. (129DSNl. NEW ·n MB 2lll SE 3·5 Lwmry RENAULT -·-P YMENTS OK Muat aell. aft 6 pm. SALE PRICE SEE THE ALL , c.oupe. lo, kl, mJleti & priced f!f engine. excellent oondiOon, A _ ;-11411-3626 53295 RX4 1o ,.;u 831-2111() Dir. DEALER FRONT WHEEL DRIVE · ne1tew b5rak ... S!SO. 64&-0016 '64 FORD
, tlEADQUARTERS a r · Galaxl•
.61 DATSUN w.,,,. 24 mpg, IMMEDIATE 'GO MERCEDES, ZllS, xlot Complote Sal" and Sel'Vlce. Dick Miller Motors '74 TOYOTA ·~ vw BUG 4 tl . Mochanlca s-ial (RBG3Z!) ! Jew bWe klok. '125, ht $558. cond, $1500 or best otter. 50 con1pacta on display. New & Used Imports c;, ..--
'"""· 49! 8522 DELIVERY 511Hi985 PACIFIC M.OTOR trow. warner" So. Main B D I An~ I Good '°!''"";,,,, ;;, ,;:: S4!00 !
'71 DATSUN truclc, Xlnt. '73 DEMO CLEARANCE 197() 2!ll S, a.lo., power, air, IMPORTS Santa Ana 557-2132 HI ea . ore 551-1539 '62 VENTURA
oond. ""' -rodlo, alr, Am·Fm. Mid Bl"e Book. LEASE OR DE '66 VW B,,., rebll .,,.. R""' · UKE4lll
$18115, r-. Pt. "9Ul'IT Call 644-4410 PEUGEOT/SUBARU TOYOTA All Modelil good.,'!"" sell. 1100. $l88 '18 DATiillN TNo:k for Ille, . '66"" Dl ... 1. no odd or oven LISI IV. Linooln Ave., orur LEWIS 5014611. wlstra ·~ bid otter San~ l'l'Wy. at Avery fuel problems. Make otter. Anaheim 533-8Zll . Iser t11ft 1,,.,,.,..B"'u"'s'.-0Fu•1"1_'"_"""'...,....'"'·-po-rt"I * • • Pl<wY .. Laguna N11'11<1. Call ·~ ~= O '72 Lande-• hol i = u '63 DODGE DART
-tor al<. 4t~ 831.QBDO 1008 :;;;;;.:·p/b, 22 mpg, __ P_R_S_C_H_E __ 4 WID. 11.IXll 8e1'.":1 .. roll "'6'"73--064.,;",;.·;c';':','_ .. _·~~~·~',.."_"_·1 6cyl. A/T,$f iaH <K!E9'191
V ... ID. ~30 '72 Fl~T l50 SPIDER 50,IXKJ miles. Muat seU. PORSCHE •72, 911T, Coope bars, spare tanks, radio, TOYOTA . '60 V\V SWU'OOt. Rehlt eng.
* • ~ ........... ~ A-• -,,,.,. mil $2500 644-008'7 healer, snow tires: Ukc new. R ' · ,. ...,....... "" uru)" '"-'•""" es, · · • Mags, 5 spd, am/fm stereo, W k d ll 1966 H. bo C l\f 646-!il;\IJ un;; excellent. $425. Best Haft. WMr J'OU have Must seU, baby on the way! U'a a breeze. ••. eell YoW' xlnt cond, Koni supsension, ee en 51 e price thru ar r, · · O!f<:.r 646-3$48.
ou'*'°"8! 8ell It tut with 644--0264 Sat. day. ~1-1240 Items with ease, U!le Dally Kelly green on tan, pVl pty, Sunday. (302GNJJ. ''11: CELICA ST .. auto. trans, 1968 v\v Bug, good cond, 2
'64 MALIBU
V-8, A/T (Y:;E309).
$188 • ~·PSot "•atfted Ad! evenings &: Sun.• 642-5678 for fut results. $8JOO. 714-552-8712 art 5 SALE PRICE air, landau Vlnyl top & new tires reblt en g
Aiii91; -· llO AwOI, Now 980 ""A-~'"' .. -,""N"o~w~--°'9=10 Autos, Now 9IO •n 9U"T $6900. 5 SPD, $3495 mag•. 831"20111 Dfr. 963->l58. " ' ••
... ,.
• •
MILEAGEC
I '-r~r. F
, ~·1. • rom. . 1
' -.
Johnson & Son
Lincoln-Mercury
<
'
A 4-cylinder Capri put to the; test.
MILIAGI RESULT . •
•
CAPRI 32.4.,.
'
4.qlindeiCapri
I.
February 19.1974: ln a 379 mile h.ig~way test through ~rizona an~
California, 1upcrvi.tod by General EnV1ronmcnt1 Co~ra_lion, a .Capn
with a 1tandard 4-qlindcr engine and 4-specd traru.rruss1on dc!1vcrcd
the kind of gu mileage you'd like to get. Broken 1n the eqwvalcnt
of 6,000 miles,· the Capri was driven by, a non-professional driver,
never a~ng 50 mph. You yoU™lf nught have. averaged less,. or
b that matter, morel Beca\llC mileage varies according to maintenance.' equip-
ment, total weight, driving habita and road c.onditi~. And no two dnvcn, ot
even can, are aac:tly the same,
EXCELLENT SELECTION -
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Sllll' IN TODAY AT OIJ!'IM.fAGE IEADQUARTBIS ANO
SUWHATKINDOfMll.fAriEYOUCANGfll
'
Costa Mesa 540-5630
'
LEATHER SEATS, A/C, TRIUMPH '62 BUG, sonroof, new.,,. &
AM/FM, EX COND. FRAN brakes, good transp Best of-
'69 DODGE POLARA
2 Dr H.T.
540--0995 or 675-&07.'" fer. 554-2853 aft 5. Air cond. llTIACP)
·10 9UE A MOVING MUST SELL · pp. group, xa.s, ,'60 TR3 ;rRIU!rlPH. ff.eblt '66 VW BUS. 2,000 mi. on stabar AM/FAI s~eroo, ·Best good nd ~OM reblt. eng., by prOferlii. VW * $488
offer -f96..3065 Cve. eng. co -_..,.,,. or .fuecqanic. $85(1. 846-4106 '68 CHEVY IMPALA !
'58 POitsci'l E eabi'futct. San Diego Frwy. at tvery best offer;G73-63l7 ahytime. •72 vw dune .......... 36,(0) mi V·8, Air 2 dr. H.T. (YSY404) •
Xlnt cond. bestofrer Pkwy., Laguna Nigue . '71 1TR SIJ'AG 4 speed, ~ · ..._.,-. $488 '
497-2901 495-0800 831-0800 chrllme w~ whls ... only ..,..,.,,,. ·~1 493 ~38 * ~
'72 911S TARGA loaded, air, 1972 TOYOTA Corona 4 dr. 4 ~i~ ~l~j' & XLNT. mo '~ Bug, Clean, xlnt '68 PONTIAC LEMANS
lo m;i.. & can ' lease ...r. alr. oow ""' radial ""'.,"o~L°"K"'s"w=A"""'G"'E"'h"'" rond, xtru, See .. ... V-8 AIT PS <YXK083) j 831-:»10 Dir. ' • tfres. Honestly xlnt. 26 to 2'J preciat~ aft 5, 492-3536 $488
'68 912. X1nt cond. Low mpj'. 493-S>4. '66 VW BUG. Must sell. Mov-* miles, 33 mpg, $4800. CaJI The fastest draw in the West * •n V.W. $1995 ing, $750. '69 TOYOTA
586-8.i98. • .. a Dally Pilot Ousified Will Trade, 49~2474 Call 675-M78. 4 speed CYYB245)
~-m~-~~~ ~~-~ ~ ,
'67 MUSTANG
V.S, ~o. 1ram .. roOo. t.oreo, power
.i6flling & ...-:,.,; top. (VN>187)
s999
'73 VENTURA c ......... 'l ills,n.t
fc.oronkol 6 c)'4 erwjr.e, OJIO. Itek,
pow9I ll~ red;) & heal •• !866tf'V1
$2699
EcoftooorlU11hcyl q .s-. ...-tlOOV-'OIMI p,t•n! ftrll>M. l<JIO._., •-
-· ll<J<J< '''"'"".a ..,,_ft ~na -~di Iron! i re.• ()oOloo 'l'Olll'S tOdl'f'
'73 DATSUN
"CICUP
wirli P~, Vahey ~ Skell, 4 ~
rode & "'6o1er. !97511 T}
$2899
'70 MAVERICK
IDOOI
~6cyl~.~ ~. .mo, & heott1. (l868XGj
s1799
'69 FIAT
IOAOSTH
4 cyl eo?ne, 4 i.peed. & b...t~1 ~
(2SIKG.'I)
' s1299
'70 MALIBU .
.,, ... outo. lf()f'!!;., redo. '*""" po-.
~ power braW:i, tu:l..,1 ~" oor
t«O•OOtWq. & w¥ ~ {896ASM)
s1499
•
* '556-7573
AMC " 1· ·69-AM-B-.-W-gn-. -V-ery_good_ j
' cone.I. Gas save'r. Michelin · tires. $950. GT:>-&ai.
BUICK
ATLAS
Chrysler/Plymouth
'72 BUICK
ESTATE WAGON Vs, automatic, radio, ~ater, .
power steering, power '
brakes. ·power windows,
white wall tires, air coo-i
d.itioning. (95333.J) '
$2195
Open Daily & Sun. 'til 10 PM ~
2929 Harbor Blvd., 1
Costa Mesa
546·1?34 ; ·-WAREHOUSE SALE
'
All ~malniug brand new 73
Buicks being oUered at \
prices substantially under '
dealers i nvoice, get one j
new, don't be sorry later, ' • 'i
TERRY BUICK
5th & Walnut
Hunt. Belt. 53s.6588 J
'73 E~ECTRA
225 LIMITED "
4 Door. Vinyl top, vinyl in-1
terior, dual comfort front I seats, full power, factofy
a.ir conditioning, AM/FM
radio, low miles. Impeccable
conditlon. (1551fl'QJ.
$3999
MUST sacrifice Now! •72 I
Bulck La Sabre CUst. 4 dr :
hrdlp, Vinyl foP, tilt 9'-bJ, I
radial Urn, ale. am/fm
stereo, 350 V·8, ( 17 MPG
Gal !twy driving) p/dJlk!
brks. pis, g 0 0 d ror
carpools & families, wry
clean, inio. n4-581:02Jl
'65 DODGE DART GT, 6 cyl ,
$350. Call 842--ll27 after 6: 30 P~f.
'65 SUlCK LASebrtt, new
tlret, brks, bll.nery Ir U-
t'mM: ms. 646-088.l.
'&t BUICK Electra 225, fUll
PQ'A'tr, includlna air, make
otter, ~2193
'68
•
.
'1968 I
'62 B ·'· ;oria :64 •m :1>e1t
• l
. .
'
)
•
full.Y
:n
Tu.'\;
lop
Fl<fj
'and 'ped
'po
Low
~
,H
'74
De ...
•k
All
pl
po ...
·"'
q
mn
Ful
wh
po
\
Fndlly, March lS, lq7:C4'---,=-,..,.....,--DAILY PILOT -II
~~ m-~ m-~ ~-~ ~~~ m~~ ~
CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHEVROLET ·'
'&I ... .._ -; ~'11·~~-~-·:,.:-~l1..,s.a:(!1o~ MUST Sl!LL 71 CHEV CAMARO '~ .J... "IJL -.-..1 'GI Camaro R$. OMn. Tur-Au.tocu1 tlc, air rond., vU,yl ·, c" • ~ alt, till he4itr, mMlt tee .. ow drl\'t 1~ w/blk. vinyl top. 371 top. Lk.-. 6200:'1.'M . (;God 1hru
UT0 'DC 171 air ~ wtio!I. AMlnl -or/' to ·-·· "°" nk<. V • f -•· PIS. p·•B 311)17'. ,,..." • cteerl.w: po7,'; ,,.. ...,.;,;..-,,...... -(,...,..) $1 415 JOllN!<>N • ~. ac. -· ' ' ' $2695 ~ ~ beafv rpoJ ~ • ._. cndlo cantroi. SON UNCOL."' AtERCURY. !fndo....~ ::: rack. (GIAJ.A). ~· l"'li ttianll=ft ... Ddlea. )m. "511! Hl•-·Bl\'d., Cooia O<ho< ext.-u. BIU<boo'I Sl17>. BILL BARRY "llr' ,, P'iill.bk. t I). Mesa 5t0-6638. BHt re,.:. otter tokei. cau PONTIAC
l'. '12 £L CAMINO. VS, ••to, orl•lnal ..,,., '63\U21.
f $'111 leu than 17,000 ml, 1-.wn.r, .,..._ 2000 Eu! lM SI. Al S.A. FN~ lUre new. S2'1"4 (71<1) NOVA 1910, 36,0» miles, Pho™" ~1000 Sanla Anll
548-5.'D> aft 5 pm. cle-an, good cond, n1wi:t iJell '68 CltEV\' Malibu, new
ECON • tr a.nap, '66 Chev Ulla vocek, $1400/ be!llt otter. brakes , .t: tires, $ 100.
Impala. convert, auto, l."Ood "&l"'''-·"""='-''"-'-'&l4-«3>!0"'-"'""--G«H1Ui6 or ~ aner 3
... . ' , :.
, -nabber, 14 plates $195, pnl on \1:kdayv Anytime
&t-a-;1319 'Tl NOVA. 2 dr, PS, V-8, std. I _;w'-'kn<b=o..· ------trans, di:"< interior, Low n1i., '12 CHEVY MALIBU Coupe. t8+ l\IPC, Exl'f'J. cond., 'TI MONTE CARLO Landau.
Air. •~rp1 16 MPG. Priv. SD>O/offcr ~1-;K>U f\lll po\\·er. tuU fac. equip &
party. $21JXI, 968-406.l ~~~----~ k> nUle!. 831~~ Dir.
Autot: 9IO Autos ... ew 1tiii Autos, New 9IO
. •. J .. ' "' •, ~ ..... , "'~-----
• ~~ • -CAMAIO
U66 l!Ntor, c.>1. 646-9:3« , llY OWNl!R
't:I BUIQ( s,.ciai w...., v. 61 CAMARO RS
6 x1nt _,,__ ~ Factary Air
! · au. •llilffJ, .,._., Tinted Clasa
'Tl OU:."V ?atONTE CARLO
u.NDAU ECONOMJCAL. Safe & aunctlvt. Llkc new
and ,quipped )".llh
automattc tJilnL, ridio.
healer, factory alr rond, full
pcM't'r, c.rc. (Q310Wl. ASk·
I~ Dm Johnilon & Son
Llll(.'(lln '}fercury, 2 6 2 6
llarbor, Costa ~le s a . ........,, I
Brand New '74
MONTE CARLO
t.Jnllled offiert ONLY
$3599
Str. No. 03181
Howard Chevrolet
f\lacAn.hur and JRn1boree
NC\vport Bl'ach -S.. To Apprec1ate
·~ CR.maro "R.$. All c:<lrus --------
1.ncl. P IS, Pt ll, oJr. uuto.
radio, vtn)'l top, etc. ?.lui>I
llt'IJ. 96.1-1121.
'73 MONTE CARLO
lif~t sell; bl.by on the wo.y -
full po"'·er, full fu.c equi1>.
1!164 CHEVELLE wai,'On. At.l/f-,.1 stcrro, a I r .
Runs "-ell , Jookl pxl ~ Sal. du.y. $1-12IO
$300/~t otr 646-5623 e\'tnings & Sun.
151 '73 CHEVROLET
MALIBU'S •
I f~oononll<·11I VS cni;:jf'IC!(, flil ..
lOt')' alr (,'Otl(lllionlng, nu10-
n1Hlic tr:uwn\~lo•lS. f.xl•\l'I' ~t~rtng, po\\·er rUsc brakes,
ATLAS .
Chrysler/Plymouth
'71 MONTE
CARLO
Ult "''hetl. rarllo, h1•111cr, vs. automatic, radio, IK"SIC'r,
Cabriolel lops, "·hlrt' 11 Id c
1
)JOI\ er 111ttlini:. p o " "1·
\\'Ril lil'CI. 6,00J to 8,00() br11k<.'S, JI0"'"1•r \\ lrdJ\l.1i,
nult.'11. 11·h111.': 1\'8.ll tJIX'S. lih' ('flll·
TAKE YOUR Cll ICE
1
J 11 lonh~. v l'n)'I 11 011.
$3299 i 57llCX YI
$1795 llA• ~C I o 1"'·n Dail)• & SI.J n. ·iii 10 P~1 a.oo i.INt ..,.._ Sl> 11a1·tx1r Ulvd., .... ...... , I ~HI ;\IC'S<I ' 546-1934
Autos, N•w 9'0 _ Autos, New ------~ 9IO Autos, Ne• 980 Autos, New
:Orf& OWMT, 8J&... \~1 Radio
.&4 BUJO<, Skylark, nttd-Auto. Tram. ;mtnor..b!'Ue work. $150. 01 ."o"'·er Steering
• bett otter. S&-036il ~-er Brakes · Disc Front
CADILLAC -'k>ctric "''""""'
ORANGE COAST VEGA HEADQUARTERS ·
fach. ' ~ ~mole
• 71 EL DORADO .. ooc1. Grain Stetring \\'heel ~yt top, leather Interior, Xlnl. Tire:" ~
·fUll pov.-er, factory air ron-Spa1..11 Sa\er Spare ! didoninci powtr door lock!, ...1~ Only 10,000 nli/yr
At.1/fM radio ~ial lh"ft llus car Is a very clean
:Exc'tllent c'o n di t 10 n: 1un:1ooh1c ""Uh a black vinyl
(498EOJ) top. Bluebook wholesale ' $3999 Sl175. Best r<!as. oUer takes.
' '73 CADILLAC
' LIMOUSINE
CnJJ 0\1.'tK'r 963-1121.
MUST SELL
'68 Camttro RS. aean. Tur·
qoobc w/blk. vinyl top. 327
V·8, fu~. a.ir, PIS, P/B,
uuto. tn 111s.. radio. po\\·er
\\'illdo\\'ll, console & nlally
other extras. Bluebook $1175
• Be!lt rca11. offer IRkes. Call
Original owner 96J.UZI.. i Everything but the
1
• . Chau_.lfeui'! See To Appreci•te
Fully limousme eqpt. SR\'(' '68 Camaro RS. A11 extras
: thousand&! Sold Ile\\'. for incl. p , J, P IB, air, auto, I
· $16.000. !Ser. 63901. \\eek· radio, "inyl lop, etc. l'i1ust
. end sale price thru Sun. sell. $3-ll21.
'73 CAt.tARO LT with Z28
pak. P/S, P/B. cat! 645--6957
af~r 8 pm. 8-·~ Alle n
Oldsmobile
Cudillac '69 .. CAt.tARO, Z.28 Fl\l
gtel'f!O, headers, mags, must
San Diego ~'Y· Al A\'ery sell, $1600. 61:>-5722
, Pkwy., Lagw\11. Niguel. '68 CA."ARO, extras +tape
495-0800 831-0800 deck. $815. Call after 5 Pt.t, :n COUPE DE VILLE ·"'&1,:..:·'·"'1933~. =~~~=
Only 17.000 mllcs! '71 CAMARO, air, auto. P/S,
Tuxedo black \v/blnck vinyl very clean. at mpg, $2100.
top/black lea1tw.>r lntl'rlor. 499-2494
Full power, Jactory air, llH l-~======--
wheel, AM /CM "'""" CHEVROLET
power door locks. Abso---------1Iutely stun ning. . Vo g u.c 1973 CilEVELl.iE p/ll, p/b,
Premium tires. (853EXL l. air, am/fm, $S'775. call aft
6pnl 494-5920
'70
PLYMOUTH
Gr-. 1 *•
(ffXt:ll
$1349
'6' FIREBIRD
P.S.. Radlo, HNlttr,
Avto !18R7.ftJ
'$999
'67 CHEVY
CAPRICE
CPE
(UIN111)
'72 CHEVY·
CUSTOM CPE
VI, A~ 'Tr-. Po• . .,. s1'f,~N~} cona.
$1899
'61 CHEVY
CUSTOM CPE
Ill, .llU'lo Trl<K,
Po-$11ttln9. Air
(;arid, IYIPJOll
S899
'67 CHEVY
STATION
WAGON
\II, AUIO Ttiinl, Air
Cond. Po-· Sl"1"1rocr,
(•4HOLI
S699
'73
CORVETTE
VI, Aulo Ttam, Pow.
er 51ffrlnlt%~1~ COriO. IS!k '!...,.I
S5999
'72 CHEVY I
·Ton Furniture v.n
L-MliffVe lf76J51C l
$2999
NEW CAR DEPT.
e 4 Cyl, 0/H Ctm. E119.
• '1" WMti l.IH e '°.ii Cltll s..1.-~lfell
• lllMllllll Air HHW
NO DOWN
e •YCUI .._.,
e Olk°""' lrM•
• ....... Dai.JI e DMI WfS WI""
74
'7195 Per Mo.
$2691.IS i1 th, fol•[ c.&1h pric1 i"cl. f•• I '74 lie. fee1. 01f1•·
rid pymt. pric.• i1 Sl4S1.60 i"cluJi"t l•ir I '74 tic. f111 I 111
c•rryi"') ch1r9e1 for 41 mo"t+i' o" APPROVA L of you• cr1dit.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.79 '4 .
ORDER YOURS TODAY
WORKING MAN'S
GAS SAVER LEASES
'74 Mallb11 Clcruk
Po-llNrlng, POW9f'
llllC. brffti, .ua VI, 1u,_'f'dr11n<1llc,
WllHI CO•t rl, i.Ued
""'INWlllS llni.11
QllW..
Pit. MONTH s99
'74 NOVA
11.11to '"'"'' • cyt eno. Pow..-11fffl119
PER MOHTH ~15
'74 CAMAIO
Pow1r 1!"rl11Q, PO,...•
OIK brl~ti. liO
VI, lurbOllYllrtrNllc. vm.tl cov1r1, belltd
wl'lllewtll1, 1+11lld
gLI .. ,
PIER MONTH s99
'74 MONTI Ccni• 17· CHIV. l"lckuf VI, r9dl1I '""ltew-'h, llll'boh"t'll••lf1'11e. ~ 1r 1letf1ft0, ~ V. ton, • C'ti tMh1t, t
dl1C bl'Hts, tl!Md 1peed ltlr1$rnlui.r>. ,,_
Piil MONTH 199 'IR MONTH s79
DON'T UNDflSTAND l1ASING1
PHONf: 147·6011
)I Meflltl 0... l llf LHM, OrHr Ttwl Tllllay
"' Dlwft ... ,,_ ••• ,..
We Win •vy Tour """ ... ' Clf ... Tn.dt
AH Crftll Mint If APlltl'lllll. pfvi T•ir
Autos, Imported ' 970 970Autos, New
l9i CADllJ.AC stfiAN DE
' VII.LE. Ex~Uent. Looks
, and runs beautifully. Equip.
ped with full power, 6 \\'BY
pottr seat, AMfFM radio.
Low mileage. fSRMll.1)
$m JOHNSON & SON LIN·
C'OLN MERCURY, 2&$
Harbor: Blvd., Costa Mesa
540-0600.
'71 COUPE OE VILLE
Vinyl top, leather lnlerior,
J.Ull power, factory air con-
ditioning, Ult \l.'hcel, A~1t
FM stereo plus 8 lrack tape
pla.yer, po\\'er door lock!,
twilight sentinel. pQwer
trunk lock. EldOrado Strip-
ing. t848GIU\.
$3699
'71 ELDORADO
Convertible. Chestnut lire-
m~. saddle lea!J1er interior.
Full power, factory air, till
, whee.I, Ml/Fi'lof stereo,
pov{er door locks. cruise
' control. Totally equipped.
Low miles. (677HZY/.
'68 CADllLAC SEDAN DE
VILLE Luxuriously equipped
with Jactory air cond. full
·power, landau top. A \vell
, maintained car. (ZLK967).
$U75. Tall:e advantage t~
• day. Johnson & Son, Lincoln
Mercury, D Harbor,
·Costa Mesa , ~.
'74 COUPE DE VILLE
CABRIOLET
Demo. Ftremlst laquer ex-
terior, full po"·er. factory
air cOndf~. lilt wheel,
A?iltn.l stereo radio "'/tape
player, JIO"'·er door k>cks,
power trunk lock. tv.illghl
sentinel, steel radial "'hite
,\\'all tires.'1~69).
. . '~, ,, i ' . • "'"°"¥' t -. ... , ~ . =.r~.:: .. c.
7J SEDAN DE VILLE
Vinyl top. le: 'her interior,
fUll J>O"'el', factory air, tlll
\\'heel, AM/FM stereo, 8
track tape player, IJO"''l!I'
door locks. auto. cniile con-
trol.. ExceptJonal C'Oflll.ilion.
(m!DD).
$54"
'Tl CAO Coupt: DeVille, =.~·Xln't,'00(). " a=: Aft !pm/
c11y1c
"
WfGA/ /AVEA
J/JOGEO BY THE ENVIRONM{NTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
READY FOR IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY ·
' •
UNIVERSITY
~ SALES and SERVICE
2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9640
'
NEW TRUCK DEPT.
74
• \~ 1 ... ~k••' • I"'· II .. • 'l"flHe ~ldlM' I•• • 6 Cyl,
52890
$829~ER MO. NO DOWN
$) 104.SO ii th1 tot•I Ct 1h price i"d. f t lf • '74 lie. f111. D1f1r·
rid PY"''· ptic• i1 Sl'11l .S2 iftcludi"9 I•• l '74 lie. f••1 I 111
c1rryi"t ch1r9 11 for 41 mo"th1 on "PPROVAL of yo11r 1u1dit.
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.79 , •.
OROER YOURS TODAY
NO KIDDING •••
WE MEAN IT!!!
ILISI IA~( 'OUR ,IC. Gr i n' nr• 'IJ UMCGl• 01 "!~CURI
I. P&CI TOUR IJCS
'LISUrSGll Will Kl 'OU 10
nu !MANOS OH CONflNfNTAI. .tJ•L!f1U ANO TOU'U
II LIVI NG IN LUJIUIT OH WA•tlCH
THERE'S MORE!!
WHEN YOU lllE AOVlllTIGE or GUSllFSON'S
FABULOUS OFFER YOU WIU ALSO RECEIVE. : .
e fRll CAR RINTAI..
e HAWAIIAN Lii
• MAI TAI AT THE OUTRIGGER CLUB
e HONOl,ULU AIRPO•T tt"NSPORTATION
e (ONTINlNTA&. aRIAK,AST
~ ........ ~··-· ·-· ... ,. _, .. , .. ............... Ii '"',. '"' .. ~;::·~:!:. ':l:~:...~ .. *··· , .. .. .... ·"A I"" .... , ..... -.... . ...... ,., ........ , .. ""' , ... ,. ,_ ....... """
""" ''• "' •• '•j rU JH ... •. •"I'• ......... -.......... M ................. .... ., ..... , ...... u.," .. , ..... -· .............. ., .. , .. 0 ..... , .... ,~... ' ,N .. ............. , ..................... ..
,:.:~ :.·::.:::.~. ... ~ !::!~ .. .. ,. ·'. .,,,, .. .~.... ... . ...... -................ .
I
• •
l
I
I
I •
• '
. I I
I !
I
,.., Allen " . '\ : j Oldsmobile
L_ Cadillac
The Uttle Olds
BIG GAS SA VER
740MEGA
6CYLINDER
ECONOMY
ORDER TOD,t. Y .
52977 IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY ·
•
ATW
°'·t."~
CORONlf. 500
STAlM)N
WAGON
~74G.M.C.
.-ickup
Truck
[511596)
HONDA CAR HEADQUARTERS FOR
. ORANGE COUNTY
Good Selection for Immediate Delivery •
~~~y STAKE • S.. ..li;_7.7 .
UFT. (75312M) ~ ....
. -.
BRAND NEW f97 A .
TORONADO . .
•
ABSOLUTELY
LOADED .
Includes AIR BAG SQ,fety System (721782) .,
BRAND NEW 197 4
98 -REGENCY
LUXURY-LOOKS-SAVINGS (235507)
ABSOLUTELY
LOADED
OFF MFG. WINDOW STKJ<ER .PRICE
·:. :.'ttl'•t;:_,,, Now! _ The•• Sawlngs · '
1~·''·-..:"' :~~ Wo1·~1 \.last Much -Longer
BRAND
NEW
$
MFG. WINDOW
STICKER PRICE
SPEC!~ OF TliE •= 1969 CADILLAC EL DORADO $1477 ~~~;,;:~~~ . · ~i:'.:~:1~:· s7400 Our Special Price .
'69 PONT. WAG.
• f
• ·•• ' PRICES ARE: g1GHT!
PLENR o· . 5AS OH
. ~NYC ~ER ,
Wl\GONS WAGONS
52999
173 NALA6PAS$, $2999 ll.7S'1or._...._,..... ...... VII lr«J. !J"IP.S.,P.ILOllO ..•
oir. ioof rod. MVFM. ITdi ~.'74 JOb lbflt G£I •
172 VEGA WAGON • ~~rodo.25.8'2'2~
r-Q, l77Bn
.•12
·12 CHEV. KINGSWOOD ESTATE
6pm1,.. Rcxk, oir cord.PS,, P.8 .. OIAO.
Thit it 0 ric1 "'· j99CIFVZ)
52399
52499
52499
172 OLDIYl$TACRUISER . $3299 9 pens. Rod. oir, AM%M ff«>. tilt ..+l, elK. wirdowt.. Pows
dooi 1otU. ~. P .S.., P.8. ---~ C41. fl6608W)
172 FORD GUN TORINO 9 PASS. VB. o.to., P .S.. P.L oir conci, k.qQC»91 rocl s..n rit.. llallCl..I
52699 '
CHEV.KIHGSWOOD 9 PASS. $2699 B.c. ~ ,_ rftt, Lcn:ioe l'Od. oir, P.S.. P .B., tat whtel.
VII""" ... ~ S.,.. ""'· p411.Jo(H) .
TRIDS 22 TRU<XS 22 TRIDS 22 TO CHOOSE
Thtst prices en owgr ~-They can't bt replaced 9f theH figures . , , 1 • ; •
174 CHEff112 TOH , $2799 • &,M1·~ 0wc:ir... ,.., b.niper. va. roc$o. l ~. roo. W(7!. New lires. '74 • WCI>f l:.ioWAialer5cosl new. (49169R)
•73
•73
FORD ¥• TOH CUSTOM
VB. o..to .. P.S., n:do. 14.llXJIT'iln.
Bet111r 1oo1i i.e. !3747tNI
I 7 3 GMC >{4 TOH CUSTOM CAI Heowy day~ P.S., P .B.. roc:Sa.· <Uo~_. va Vup. IJ 1119'4 • •
173 ~~.~.~~DRIVE
Choite of n!iber. (96717N)
172
1 71
CHJ:'lY •/,TOH PICKUP
17,(XXl ;,i;, 1.1-rew. l/8.1o6o, ou!OO'lllit.
N<e. (360181..)
'I• TOH PICKUP P.S .. P.B .. Olio., oir cord, VB. fork
Ricj'll price, /1096rJ...)
FORD l/4 TOH PICKUP
H.0. ~l'f. :N.ocn.-. V& P.S., au10.
Weekerd ~ [ll7845GJ
I 7 0 FORD 1/2 TOH PICKUP P.S .• Olio., redo. oir aitf ~ XLT cwom cob.
N<e. fli8VCE)
'72
1 71
1 71
CHEVY I TOH.YAM
IW, P.5 .. ~ VII. 20.0'.Xlmi. Reol rKe. ~ MIQ(.(lJO&lM) .'!(
CHM •/• TOH VAN
P.S.. c.10 .. icdo, vs._ cuSklrll inferior. l>oo. ['3M1U
CHEVY II HOYA COUPE
Snd VI. l IP!'td ~
t>ke. !J•XlOI
52999
52999
TRADE
54399
52499
52299
52399
5 1799
52099
.52599
52799
52499
5 1499
52599
5 1799
COllELL
(I ¥ROLD
z
~OST ··uoR BLVD.
. 546'-IJOI
•
.I I .
l
I t
f
• " I
I
I
! • '
l!
'1
'
·1
I
! .
I
I ., •• I
I
! .. ' !
•
:1 '· l •' ·I
:1
I ' I !
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t
·~
f"rk1<11y, M•ch l5, }q74 DAILY PILOT 43
"A"-ut;.;..,.:o..U:;;Nd=----"O.:.: Autos, UHd ~ Autos, Used 990 Autos, 990 Autos, sed 990
PLYMOUTH PLYMOUTH PON'nAC PONTIAC T·BIRD
UNCOLN ATLAS
Im PL 'tMOUTH
CUSTOM SUllURllAN ATLAS STATION WAGONS
J to1ch1111 from Chrysler/Plymouth
AH "l"i,... w11h, • BRAND NEW X!,=....,.._ '74 SATEL.Lm
l'l>wu ,......, COUPE --AM radkJ9 Au l om a t I c transmi•ion,
Air condl~ tinted windshield, deluxe ~·er rear wtnilow wheel covers. Y.'hite "'llll
Oth('_r eKtras on .,me Ures, btnnper guards front
Pri<'f'd at or belO\I• and rear. ( Rt. 2 1 • G 4 G •
\\thOleM!e Bluebook !02830/.
1974 p..,tfoc Grond Prix
flw•cr WllldO'tl'IJ, air (.'01'1(1.,
\ lnyl tup, renlOle ntlm)n.
No. 2282. Good thru l/17/74.
$4H5
BILL IARRY
PONTIAC
2QXI East 1st St. at S.A. ~
Phone 568-1000 Santi Ana
• 7 0 FIREBIRO
70 GRANO PRIX
Automatic. alr con-
dltloolni;, tilt \\'hffl,
pmwr stcerinb A
bt'aket. vinyl top.
(11126)
$199S
~so Harbor Blvd.
Ca5ta l\tesa
At 1',11.ir Drll'e
5<6-801T
I ~ ~ $2795 Automatic, air con-t ....... lo $17"" dltlontng, power "!@~~!!!!!!!~ See 111 DAIL 'i PILOT Em· ()pC-n Dally &: Sun. 'UJ 10 P?it !l«'rlni;. I a n d a u == = ployc Parking Loi, P.1ondlly 2929 llarbor Blvd., r (154BHM)
through Friday, 3.10 \Ve51 Costa M~ roo ' 1974 PontlK Flr1blrd
' Bay Slret!t, Cotilll Z..1l'M. 546-1934 $1995 t"utly f8('10l'y equipped. AUii>
f>.12-02l. Ask for ?iln1. Crecn-1,,,,.,,.,==-=;;--:="""' n1a1lc. No. 6442.
'72 Pl.\'&tOtrlll Ouster . _man __ .==--:;;=--'68 VAl.JANT 2DR, 6c)·I, rib 2-ISO Harbor Blvd. $3395 ~~1':s~1t~~. c~f:u'~; !:':15·~ AT LAS ~!a!.uJ~ ~Ow~,nk~ Costa ~fC'sa Prkt-,ICOOd thru 3 17 7-t.
· Al t'alr Dri\'e BILL BARRY '74 PINTO 1973 Chrl"ler/Plymouth """''"•· powor bra •'' PO..., C -"6-llll!
ATLAS
Chrysltr/Plyn(oulh
'57 T·llRD
CONVERTIBLE
V8 eqine, 4 cpeed
lt'IH\Smisslon, fJO\\'Cr wir>
do11'li, po11i<er seat. {HSC278)
$2195
Open Dally A· Sun. 'Iii 10 PM
2929 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa ltlesn
546-1934
'61 T-BIRD. Very rella ble-,
~\.\'Ot'r c'llr. £xL'f'ptional
engtoc oond!Hon. l'Ull powr.
$250. ~8-5148 C\'eS j.
11i·eekends.
·~ T-BIRD, lair condition
$150.
2.0DO MIL•s •61 PLYMOUTH ra•M>. h.ater. landau 1op. Chrysler/Plymouth n11A PONTIAC • LINCOLN (965EXX). E>celleot •72 PLYMOUTH 1--------e.maUce, Hatch-CONTINENT~ VIP ~a~ ~~'111~ '68 PONTIAC Sta. \Vagon, • .. 2<m East 1st Sl. at S.A. J.'•""Y !----V_E_G_A ___ I
, ndlo, heater, 4~· Towncar. Xln t, cand. Au.klmalic, radio, heater, Johnt0n & Son, Lincoln . DUSTER !quip~ v.·lth automatic, ~~~~~I Pho™' 5.JS.1000 &mtu /\n:t !
al tires. (550-viny( :::ppc~ Ubr int!!'j, ~~r steertng, white v.'811 Mercury, 2626 11 8 rb 0 r. 6 cylinder, auto m 11 t I c factory air mnd., power '61 PO~'TtAC staUon M.gOn. RAMBLER '72 VEGA GT h.atchbk, air, 1
KKE) . 6 way p~ seals C::i~ tires, atr.~lt'<:!,~· vinyl Costa Mesa. 541)...Q6JO. ~mission~ radk>, heat•r, steering, pov.v brakes, Av~,!., cl~:,, 'io""m'i. ~~ .. ~~·i--------i ~~·~rel. tond, 2i l.IPC. SPECIAL rad. w/tterep taPe. \Vill top. <fP"'M'"802lUIJC).IJ. .63 Valiant wag. l.:m mi's. white wan llrn. (891ELVJ . radio, heat~. etc. Vf!ry ~1 ...... ,,.._._.. ,:~.;:..:-::::::, ____ _
sell for ~. OJntaot $6~5 on reblt ens & new parts. '$1995 ~red(~~-E~L~l\~n~ '13 Grand Prix. 12,<m ml. '69 RMfBLER 6. good ga.'i 1971 VEGA CIUll hllek. $600 I.:
2480 Harbor Wvd. Personoel Manager, Open Daily & SUJJ. 'tll lO Pltt Miking 1540, 548-9583. Open Dally It Sun. "t0 10 Pt.I llnd gale lam.lly and utiJ\ty $500. ,t· 1.akc--o..'Cr-pymts. economy. S 9 !l 5 · Call Take Oi.·er Payments. Call
Costa ?itesa B1lbo1 81y Club 2929 Harbor Blvd., 2929 Harlxir Blvd., car. Johrulon & Son, 2626 Call 612-8233 548-45-1:1. ~702 art 6pm
At Fair Drive-1221 W. Coast Hwy, N.B. C'olllll ltfClffl Buy a new '74? Your oldt>r Costa t.1tu lllV'lxir, Co1tn /\t e !i 8 , * '62 Sil! \\'gn 19 n1pg, 2nd '72 VEGA IJT lifllchbflck
$<(MIO!? 546·1934 n1oclcl car Is in big demand 546•1934 5:KKJ6.10. • .. a De.Uy Pilot Claulfled O\l'llCI'. Dependable. s:n:>. xlnt L,lrld. Al\t >l track MERCURY , . . &II lt fast 11·ith a :-c:--rr----~-,...---,,.,.----~ j Alf. 642 .. 567!. Cnll 673--0MG * stereo, lo nii. a.t&-2389
~~~~~1 ---------rAutos, Mew 980 Autos. New 9IO Autos. N.w 980 Autos, New 9IO Autos, New HO Autos, New 9IO Autos, New = GOOD SELECTION of LOW
1m FORD MILEAGE .,, 1o1,ERcuRv
t COUNTRY SEOAN ~~~ =~HAll5;
WAGON new condition. Prices start vt entfne ... at S39'7S CS13814} Johnson .l ~matlc transmission Soo Lincoln Me:rcury, J626 f POwtt steering 1-larbor Blvd., Costa '-ksa
• Power brakes , 540-5630.
A1tl ritdlo \ trans, a/cona.. Saddle root tt Air ·cindl&nq =CAP""'RI~~2~d -~ .. ,, ~-~-. -.~ ...
f'Gftt rear l\'indow De:co1' group, Onl1 1,(0)
, $1795 · nii's. $@J0 Pvt p ty •
.., See at DAlL):' PILOT Em· • 6T;>-7l0), )-'
f ~ $'~ Lot, /\Ionday '72 MARQUIS t.dr all xtru
through ""triday, 330 \Vest xlnt cond, to milfs, am/~
Bay sireet. Costa '-tesa. ,atueo, pvt,pty, $3.100, call &C-4321, Ask ror Mrs. Green-644-M&l. eves & 547-9'177
man. days I
'71 FORD PINTO MUSTANG"' "
4 speed transmission, radio,
If, ~ter, 'custom exterior. c=z1. !~ . . $1577
'70 MUSfANC l\.ta1:·h--I..-3:>t
eng. 2 bbl .. M"""'"...,...·
Like new $1800. '642:5638.'
OLDSMOBILE
i~ ~tauu i~ . -TOYOTA
•n t0R0?1ADO ) vs,, 'run ..
power, factor,y Air CO~
dltiotting, 6 way power seat,
AM·N Stl!n!O, landau'top,
tilt wheel, ftill4ux...y equip. .,.
pc!d. Unbelievably priced at
$2475. (926KEJ)'. JOhnson &
. I ~. 196& Harbor, c.,.f. (i46.930J
'1,2 GAL~I E 500
HUOTOt! COUPE
Son, Uncoln llofercury, 2626
Harbor. Costa M e. s a , 540-$30 .•
Sales • :5fo:'vtce OLOSMOBILE
GMC TRUCK4
HONDA CARS
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J, Vinyl lop, vinyl' lnlerior, fac-
~ tory air condttlonlng, a!JlO.
t .,._tic, ~r 11,ee~. pow.
• .bm,ke/, ra~, f;heater, white Wall Um. (9ll.DUXl.
$1995 UNIVERSlll..OLDS
Costa :.:..,~fi1o,..;
'70 OLDS 88, 2 dr, V""8, air,
xlnt cond, full gas tank.
67f§'8 aft 5.
1 1967 OLDS. Best· bffer. 2355
•llJ \Oro -. 2 dr. s. El Camino J\eal, San
Vi.Q. tp, fact air, a/c, full ~c~l•~m~•n~l•~·~-,,,.,_~~•-m~. ~~
pwr. Xln't c<>nd. $1>00. '64 C\ll'LASS",.JOO<' body, ·=63H'116~'2'·-,-,,__,.,.,..== runs 'good, liw or oUer. ::
'Tl Ln> 4dr, blue w/whlte 548-37S5
vinyl HJT, JW.'1' dsk brks, PINTO
P/S, AM/Fl.I oteuo, __ ....;;...;.;_:..;_,,t--.,..,....-<11• radials. IM&-j>42 aft 6PM ' ·n PINTO. R/H, nu trans, 1912 lµVERIQ<, 2200 mi'a. z ttrPG, Orig owru-. Low
Xlnt cond. • Avail 3131. ml'g. $1740. 645--8513 or $23915."' 83S-mt~ eve or 114&-&&? • -
wkftftlh. •' ~·12"""P:::IN:;ITO~R~U~N~AB,:,"l',,-.,4-,-..pd,
·62 FORD. Gcod trans.POI" alr-cond, dlx lnt. Best oUer.
tatlon. $175 or best oiler. n4--511&8782 alt 6
-i'Caflc=,:!97°'·'°'59'17o=. -,.--,'°"',,.-;i,12iPO;;INTO;;;:;c,=.O,;:bc;:.. -::...,,oo·C::,,;::,c:-::: •.
'64 FOllD SXIO"ur best offer, radials, AJC, $1595. ,Finn.,
needs bodJ' work, 842.-.8295 Phone 1 -493--1837
'67 FORD 9 ,..., wqon. A PLYMO•nH & P /S & B. 15 miles gal. )'I"
$450 Cuh 64>-MJG .
'69 FORD Falrlane, """ 'ATLAS good, needs tome rep~.
$450. !16>-m;· Chryslor/P,ly.-lh
'72' FORD: ·Coontl'y Se d • n Open Delly &: Sun. 'til 10 PM
Sta. Wain. Xlnt cond. air 2929 Harlxir Blvd.,
$2995. 4!»-9814 . Costa MN
196i FORD <;ALAJ<IE, xlnt 546•1934 -
2n1. hl, $225. or best ofter, -========;-I 511-5142. p
M2"'"' DirectwColLMt .. ...__ ...... ...,.-..... -~......._
'69 FORD Cu11Gm.$odon SfJ99 1lNlll W1 ,.,, .
···~··················· '6J ~ -·-· 51199 SAVI .
**'*******~····~······ '69 ~~ ... ~~ ... 51399
*****•***************** '70 ~' w.,. · 51399
•
We'll TAl~OR to fit your speci·al
AUIOMOllYE NEEDS •. Stai! Bf .IBIS WEEKEND . .
'
{101660) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
AIR CONDITIONING.
AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING
& BRAKES. RADIO, ETC.
I
BRAID ... , ·1974 MALIBU STATIOI WAGOI
'
STICK VEGA
BRANO NEW
1974 VEGA
HATOlBACK
4 IP99d transmission,
tinted glass. white
lldo ...U fl* doluxo--llUl'"il· (1V77A4U274046J
IMMEDIATE$.
DELIVERY
(448070)
Air Conditioning, Au lomatic Transmission.
Power Brakes. AM Radio, etc.
Power Steering,
GREATEST
SELECTION
OF ALL NEW.
VEGAS
and
LUV TRUCKS _
BRAND
MEW '74 VEGA
IMMEOIA n DB.IVHY
.. .
C214885X802J
'
. " ' .,,
2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1200
I ' '
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:,
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' . ... ...
fORD
• •
FORD LTD 4 D(. Pillared HD Top
LOADED!
· FULL PRICE
'2995
• J,
ELIMINATE:THE MIDDLEMAN
ViSIT OUR-VOL't,JME ·
I I . LEASE & DJ.U,Y ~ENT~L ~ '.
1 D~PAR1'.MENT r
•
• ~xa!~ l97f P;INTO RUNABOUT .
• . .'-\~ • .. lncludeJ 2l00cc •119i111, mirror
$56 tl 36 MONTHS ::::"& ..:,.M.:;:•;,:;.::!:;
OPEN END woll "'"'• occ~t ~· t".11ed gloH · + & o" 11ondord fo,;1ory ~· lo
•T & l rnlln (0$0IC EIC) • •
lnch~s all vinyt bucket seats, disc
brakes, front & rear ~ guard.,
AM radio, 2300 CC economy 4 cyl.
engirte, mirror group, tinted gloss,
body moul,d i ngs & more l
(S..#-4Rl IY137789). lomileJ. •
'
•
. .
FORD '14 MU$TANG lJ
• 2·t+-2 AUlOMA_TIC. · ... .,·"-~
ONLY ~3:295 • -.
lncluljoi "" p;lo ,..,..,, ~ Mb!
MOt1, tochomettor, 2.3 litr., 4 cyl •
ang ., whilewolls, select shift
CaUIS-0 -MATIC, power steering,
front & rear bumper guards, AM
radio, t inted gloss, body side
moulding & morel lo miles.
(S..-.#<f03Y170952)
3006 cyl. eng .. H.O. shodU,51 00GVW
pockoge, plus oll 1tond. fod. equipment.
(Stk. #T883) (S.'" #F10IRT6012S)
1974 '
MAVERICK
2DOORSEDAN
LOADED I
AIR CONll{TIOND
&AUTOMATIC
lncludei 6 er.I· engine,
ouromotlc, Se acl·aire air
conclttoning. poww ,...,ing, ·
"""' & --_.,b, whitewall tires, AM radio,
I
.
ONLY .
'2995,: . .. ••lartor d.cor group, tint.d '
glou. trim~ and ...,,..1 Lo
m;i... (Sot-. #4K91l13.15251 FULL~I~!'
TAKE YOUR OWN
-"MINI ECONOMY RUN".
F'REE!
Now, !King ultro modem ~tic equi~t, _Theoc:liCte R~ns Ford"offeri JO"'
accurate mileage tests on CS11 FOn:t ProdUct of sunuloted spffds of J0..~ . .50 Ond
60 MPH , inch.Kling on infro..red e•houst gos onolysij" in just minutes!
BE OUR .GUE.Sf! .
Know your car's true ml'"9• fr)t•ntial without spending a penny.
'' ·r THIS OffER GOOD THRU MARCii 22, 197 4
CALL FOR APPOINlMENT-.TODIY ..
Take your own ''Mini . ~ -_ • · . • · _..,guest~,
Mow, using ultra modern diCICJllOstic equipment, Theodore Robins .,Fprcl offers you accurate mileage tests on· •Y Ford P~ qt
simulated speeds of l0·.40-~0 ·and 60 MPH., including an infr!f:!ld' exhaulf 'gas 'a:1?1ylis in just minutes! _ · .-, · t
·:~ _ KNOW YDUJt<:Alr.S TRUE MILEAGEl!OTENJIAL WITH.(Jtn' $PfJtDI~ A.ftNN)'. '.fhis offer goc>d thru f'!arch22, 1974. ~'
CCilll for a11ointment toclav 642-001 0 --
'10 MERCURY MONTEGO·
Rod'IO, heotet", ovtomolk ~
po.-1tHring, poWll' ~air.
(8941SY)
,.
$1514 ..... ,._.
ovi-lic lrOMlftlnioft.
(IM7~71 •
'11 CHEVROLETMALIBU '66 CADILLAC $EQAN · , · , '66. MUSTANG . . :.: """'·""""·-.._.....: . ) . $188 21
"-•. T. ·~· """"· ""'°""'.'k ............... $"19 14 poweriteenng.~~H,Cllr, 4 ,VRJ. (207DQK)
'11 MERCURY COUGAR
f-oriio. t.eater, olllomofic ~skin.
power 51Mring, powwr broltat.
f(B41BSW) '$22t4
· · '11 CH~VRO~Et MALIJQ \,. ~[
....... """"· P/S. . • ' I ~2'2 power brob.. VRJ. °". . ..,
(lllCPM) I .~ •
' , , .. , · ••• ·':1.2. FORD LTD , ~" ..
2 0-ha<dtop. FM•°"•·"'°'"· $241 4 power i lfft'ing, P/B, Ol.iomotic lronif!linion, '
oir VRJ. (244ELU } • ,
'12 FORD LTD BROM.
2 DocH-hcwdtop, rodio, h.oter, AT,
power llMring, poWll' brokff, ~/G.
~ 'f)lit bench MOit. (368EAE) s2574
'13 PLYMOUTH Satellile '
Wiring Plu111 foclorywormnty.
looOed wilh eqvipt., 318 V-8 engiftl,
(927GNM)
2Dr. H.T. AM/FM. heoter, oir,
outo. tr0Mnti1iion. FO""' 1teering.
. power brokes. VlJ. (864GN)
(
$ 014
DfVIUI,, ...... .._._.,......._ Sl88 Oii', po<wef llHfll'tl. powt" b.olift,
~wi(idow._ poww*lh. (THSQJO)
'69 FORD GAWIE
'°"'· rodio. '-oter. oul · lronsminirlil power''""""'· (llXAb91 I $888
'12 GRAN TORINO BROM.
FM ro<5o, heoter, oil'. automatic troMMiuion,
power sle.ring, poWll' brakn. YR.I. (930DJY)
I 01HEIS 10 CHOOSE flOM $1188
'12 FORD GAWIE 500
R.H., outomatic tronsminion.
power "Mritig, ~ brokM,
..myl root. olr. (O.S7ELV} $1914
· '69 CHEVROLET IMPALA .
..... heotir. outomch llO'llmiliion,
fX""e< 1tffring, •inyl ~.
(YlX398) $1314
'12 FORB 2 DR.. H.T.
..,.,, ... """'· ... ..i. ; • l $2 2 l 4 autoftltie~iion,_~
,,_. brONn. .... ltiUft TJ
Rado.'-ler, ·-· (XETG&)
aaoo, t.otet". . .......
(ZlH706l
'69 DATSUN -'
•
I
'11 PINTO COUPE
~=" $141 4
'lOTOYOTA 4Dl.MAIKll
, Rod;o, heOI..,, 'oulomotic: lr-..Uiion
(l<.lf'6BAGE)
I 'lOTOYOTA
MARK II
Rcdo,._..,.,cMO!lllltlc~air. •
(4l11QO)
· '12 HORNET
lodio, i...o.w. ovtOlllOfic ~
,_.~·°"'· (6.JIEGil)·
' •
$147 4
$1914
$1 914
oir conditioning.~~ t~I . ·v' •
;68VWBU& •
'10 FORD MU$TANG . .
•cdo.~r. , Sl 58 !:;:."',,,;..1,... .. 1 .
. '10 FORD MAVERICK" .
:t.':..'h.'"· •. . . ' $158 .
($49HFI)
'11 FORD MUSTANG MACH I .............. "............ $AVE '-s...,;ng, '-~ Auloitootic trom~inion. (794GOS)
'11 FORD MUSTAiG BOSS 351
IOSSJ51
AM/fM. "°"°· ........ ' ..... ,.,... ....... ,.,_.brolin, (41ICJI)
!!It. -·
t
$AV
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San Clemente -
~~trano
VOL 67, NO. 74, 5 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES
ED IT'ION
.. . .
. • --Today's-Ffilal
N.Y. Stoeks·
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MAR<:;H IS, 1974 • T£N CENTS
San; "-~._ Pilot Tells IJFO Sightings
. lly P.uca.A llALLAN °' ... Dllty ,., ....,
·,Frod For helltfts In ,flyfng sancers,
became aeelng to llelleYtnc. ·
He hU boots .. them. plotul.., and
baa ,.......Uy _, them-lhrouPout a
1eqtlly career 11 an aviator.
And lie e<pedl to ... them' qoln.
Foi;.,wbo Jlv<1 In San Juan Captatrano,
bu been a pllol for US years, the fint
sevm wltb .h Navy and the tut nine
wt1h a ma~' oxnmercial airline.
'
His interest in UFOs beaan daring the
early 505 when the ftrst sightings were
puhllcized. .
"Natural curloltty ROI me Into this,"
said Fox. "But I have alway1 beUeved
that there are more life forms In the
19\lverse than us down here on earth."
lie began bis atlll!y by pttparlng a
thesis oo the valldlty of UFO reports,
taking a poo!Uve approadL He followed
lhrougb with intensive r e s e a r c h •
acquiring slides and material from the
Aerial P hen om eno n Research
Organhatlon and other sources.
He alao used his own eyes.
"I've frtquently made sightings while
flying,'' said Fo1. "I see the extra·
terrestrial vehicles in their higher state,
not oec:esaartly the ir physical state."
He aa.!d most flying saucers can
function on. several djmensional levels
and camoufla&e their appearance.
..The ones I see resemble clouds," he
explained. "Most have electro-magnetic
propulsion systems. Thia causes a clom-
like effect around them."
Fox has his OY!'n vlcl\•s on why beings
from other planets are observing us.
"One prime reason ls our primitive and
adolescent use ol nuclear weapons and
ene'IY soorces," he Sllld. ··All that
testing we did In the atmosphere ca~
a number of conditions we don't
appreciate.''
He believes the sightings ffiat took
(See SAUCERS, P•1e tJ
S,heriff's Departme,nt Hit
. .
On Minority Joh Charge
~VY l'lllt ltaff ...... Crude Oil
AIRLINE PILOT SAID HE FREQUENTLY SIGHTED UFOS
Fred Fox Believes Wt Are Monitored by Alien Beings Price Hike
Growth Committee Sets Forecast
Attendance Boundaries )'IENNA· (UPI) -With the poulble
llNnl of the ~~lllll'<Olt 11•1!* Ille UlilteCI States in. Ille bac:kin>obd,
the Organlzatloo of etroleum ElQ1orllntl
Countries (OPEC) will recoinmenil
5,aluzdoy lbet tho ~ce of crude ,eil bo iao!realed April 1, OPEC of!icials said
today.
'!be Clpiltrano Unified S c h o o I
"lliatrict'1 new grow1h planning advt.ry
CJlllDllliUee late this week settled on a
rtDnmeotaUon oo attend ance
bculdaries for the new Del Obispo
~tary School. .
"And FrM Flood, president of the panel,
a&Jd. that the group believes that the new
campus built beside Marco Forster
JUpiar High School will assure adeq~te
nqmbers of elementary classrooms for
~ Point as well as San Juan
Cipist<ano when It opens next fall.
'Ille advt.ory group plans a special •m and VIJblic bearing on the
ri-co mmendations at district
htl!dquarters TUesday at 7:30 p.m. Once
ttiir bearings condude, Ute formal
recommeodation will be sent on to
tnllteeS. :1be atteoo.ance areas for Del Obispo as
pioposed by the advisory panel include
Jtie valley area along Del Obispo Road
bbrn Pacific Coast Highway to Los Rios
sireet in San Juan.
· :Flood qid the proposed dividing line on
the Dana Point side would be between
th& Dana Knolls and Thunderbird c:OIOoie1. Oiildren living in Thunderbird
WJ>Wd cootinue attending c~ at
\ ..;.,;. .,J .
Ridllrd H<:mY Dana-.,.. Sd>ool.
Flood •tUI Ille IJWP'I -l!ld -projectlaos ID Dam•r.mt l!ld
Sin Juan -lhat w!>m all .mools are
operating 1n the fall, there •tiJ1 • .....w be
room for JOO to 11111 additional stialeots.
'Ille adYisory group, which was
dlarged with monitoring and pi:ojectlng
pupil grow1h and M!rYeylng afteo<!;ince
areas bas contemplated no changes for
att•l!Cf.,... areas for• lleVelllb and eighth
graders next -year. Current projects, however, lnclude an
lntenaive study ol 'attenclaoce areas as
they .mt at the bigb -I level
1be goal II> to ... t a better bo1ance In
student PoPUiatkm at Daoa llilll and
San Clemente lligb &:boo!.
Trustees have been ~med 1n recent
months at the suddm crowding at the
new Dana HUis . campus and ·the lower
San Clemente enrollment.
The projected total populatloo at Dana
Hills this .fall could readl Z.100 students,
while the .sum at San Clemente 'f_ill be in
the area at 1,700 pupils.
Decisions oo the bigb -enrollment
disparity will come forth from the,
committee later this moatb. or in ~ly
April, Flood said today. • · -
They also said they believed an
announamlellt easing the Arab oil
embargo against the United St;ates would
be made in Vienna over ttie weekend.
In Beirut, the Arab press reported
today lhat Arab oil ministers postponed
CLASH!S FLARE •AT GOLAN
HEIGHTS. Stoey, Pago 4 .
FUEL CRISIS ONLY
THE BEGINNING? Pago 12
armoamcement of. a decision on Ii ftlng the
· oil embargo against the United States
until Sanday in ap attempt to reach
wianimlty on the issue.
The aemi~fficial Cairo newspaper Al
Abram aald in a report from its
cor respondent who covered Wednesday'•
oil ministers cmfereoce in tne Libyan
capital of Tripoli:
"The ministers adjourned until Sunday
to allow the ott ministers of Syria and
Libya to oonsult their governments in the
hope that their next meeting in Vienna
"
Losing Streak
· will issue a unaniJoous decision on liftinu
the embargo."
Press commentators said the nine
, members of the Ori:ani:r.ation of Arab on
E<porlinf Countries (OAPECI who must
make the declsioo were anxious to avoid
any split In ranks. Y outli in Buff Beaten Twice 1bere were. indications that even if
.. Llbya and Syria refuse to go aloog with a
!See OIL, Page !I
• By Tiie Auodal<d l'r<ll
It wasn't 18·year-old Richard Farrell's
4ljr for streaking, even if he had wanted
tO:In fact, it just wasn't·hls day.
· Flnt 1 the youth said he wU struck
when he refµsed to streak. Then he was
lllt'iick qaln when others thought be wu
it,.aklng. · ti went like th~:
Fanell said be. was hitchhiking in Des
~-. Iowa Thursday when he met two
men who asked him to streak -nm in
them.de.
He said be re!U>ed and the men
jumped oot of the car and heat him Into
DDC001Ciousrless. He awoke, nude except
for bis shoes, a T.birt and a floppy hat
be'. bid not bad befoi<.
. Gl'OCI)', he wenHip on a vilduct and
llllortly ran afoul of two 'olbe!" men in a
car who objected to hil lade of dothlng.
I • > , . '
1 Robert M: Q.li · r I
'
Succumbs at· 56
Robert M. Cos, an imuranoe qent ud
San Clemente area resident for tho put
'"',_.,died wedoolda1. lie ... 11.
Mr. Co<, a rosident of Sii BoCll de! caaan. i.a ... bls ..-. ~; llll
pami11. Mr. and Mn. Clyde "°" at
Santa Barbar&; • bntflo!r, Clayton Coz o(
-· and a -· Mn. Charles TaPort of Sonia -· • semcet wW be held .,at S p.m.
SaturdaJ In Padllc View llimarlal Park
dlapol with barial. al\efWll* In Ibo
w1af pert.
1 I
He said he was beats again, and -
assailants took bls floppy bat with -.
By this time, pr.trolman M1""8"
Irwin arrived, gave him a blanket to
ward off the cbill and -llim \o ·a
hospital He was treated lot mouth cab,
a~ tooth and cuts and -
Meanwhile, the f1d , \bat ltegan on
college campuses and spread a.-c
students, hardbata and ·lheo on to oilier
nations continued unabated.
HoOolulu, three YOlBIS men wearing
(>Illy akt masks atreabil througb the itudio of televlllon stailon KIT.V
ThUl"lday while the local live news Dw
was bein& presented.
The men yelfed, "streak! Sttealtl
Streak!" 11 they darted ACl'Oll lbe leWI
set. Tiiey .... -from the -llP ... -.. u.nupoat Bn'lil. • ' -Tllo meu.n _..,...·111 a tnc:t.r '· ~·--~·j.1wtrio -In &aalli--~.
'111Lioe----,, """' lllUeo -Ibo delllUtorbild• .
and i. lloutawd ... -by~(.
polloe lor •"'*flll -Ibo ·-o( the ltfl·$1D1 )leadquulen In . -~-ileladdled atftdall:.t the .;:
-Yooithllmlltr7. "W'• can't mdfntalll whit'& the -
-for U." -~ Dlnllenllo ui61
'!lmoloy wllilo wllilfal wW1 -• -
. .,.._
GoY. Chrilloplw s. -In J&ll..-.....
_....., ,..,_ ol P 0 11 t 1 ca I Count Luigi Rossi dJ Monte-
ldence at -State Unlwnlly. Aid
'
Soriot allidoi•ta been! atiout --!era, the kidnlPed" belr to the
and were • ...-., he wu u to Ibo Mar1iD1 and liossi vermouth
-fortllee, bu been relased
1111'11 V-. 011 "'"Sammy.-.. ofter opeadui~r months In lllriatecl ..,_ the 111Ce 'l'mnday a barn Dear glio. Ho was
durlng aiapr Coanla -· -fOUDd by CllllolDI police In·
(llaa ll'DAll. .... IJ notlcallnJ aaotllor kldnapl•i·
I .
-t. -' ..
Fuel Hija~k
2 Gunmen Take 8,500 Gallons
PASADENA (AP) -Two armed men made off with 8,5-00 gal-
lons of gasoUne today after hijacking a lanker truck and kidnaping
its driver, police said.
The driver was kidnaped while attempting to deliver a load of
fuel to a service station in the predawn hours, said police Ll Jack
Garrott.
Garrett said the ty,·o unidentified men bound, gagged and
blindfolded driver Kenneth hf. Harbour, 50, and took him away
by car. He was left unharmed at a residential intersection in nearby
GJ~ Garrett said. · "''Barbour freed hlmseU and called police, who found the truck
-empty -in the irea about 45 minutes later.
$2 Millinn Pot Cache
Found in Wrecked Truck
AUSl'IN, Tex. (UPI! - T h e
Department of Public Safety feels it
might have stumbled oato a major
mi.stake by a well·flnaoced ring of
marijuana aperaton who are going to be
hurt by the loss of a $2 million shipment.
Wilson E. Spelr, director of the
department, estimated the value of the
marijuana ai $1 million when It was
round, but spokesman Jim Roblnq said
nnzrsday that later estimates put it at
well over S2 'million.
State troopers stumbled onto the
marijuana in an overturned refrigerated
truck Wednesday. n.ty round it when
they opened the truck and found the
12,0od pounds of neat bales behlod crates
or Mexican plneipples and cabbages.
"It looks like Ulla is a very good
quality marijuana, that's wliat the
(narcotics) agents say," Robinson said.
'"Ibe loss of that much is bound to hurt
>Ol!lebodyrealbad.
He said it WM easily the largest
marijuana bauJ ln the state's history.
Officers spent much of Wednesday
hiding In the bushes, where they could
keep an eye on the truck in case anyone
came to claim it. Finally, about noon, a
wrecker 41Tived on the scene and began
hooking up to the truck. The officers
descended en masse upon the startled
driver.
The driver said a "well-dressed man
approached him and asked him to get his
truck out of a ditch. The drive · si:iid he
was hired on a no.question5·&.1ked basis.
Down the road from ·the overturned
truck , Investigators found an abandoned
shed with the remains of a fresh
campfire nearby.
"There is a possibility that the truck
was going down that road to the shed,"
Robinson said. "Obviouslv, we're ,1Zoinq:
to be trying to find the owner of the land .
"'111is ls obviously a well~rganlz.ed
crime ring. It could involve a great many
people. And It was just one of. time
thillg.' you happen onto."
Nuclear Power Expansion
Of $8 ·Trillion Forecast
WASlllNGTON (AP) -The Atomi c
Energy ClJmmissioo eovisiom a vast. S8
trillion breeder nuclear power industry
by the year 3)31, and says It wooid pose
no signficiant hazan1 to tt,_ environment
or the public's health.
'!be AEC also forecast Thursday that
sucb an Industry -designed as a maj0<
MARTHA.'S REPORT
• SAID 'UNFOUNDED'
' NEW YORK (AP) -Martha Mitchell
lw filed a mtoolng -report over
the telepbOno for her daughter after
heinf told tho girl wa1 Jn .her father'•
custody, polJce ,..,,.nd. ·
Potlce bm 111<1 'llllraday night the
esll'11111!ed wife at -Att7. Gen. ·John
N. Mltchell ala!-o(!JdjlJ at the
Sacred Hean coment ln Gl!<mridl,
Conn. told her the IJ.)'UMlld llrl, also
named Martha, wu on apring vacaOoo in
her father's custody.
Police In Greenwich called the reoort
"unfounded" and Nld tho girl has beon
picked up at the ICbool for ~
W!0 kerAI by M.itcbell's cbluffu.
I
fON.'e against energy Shortages -coukS
yield vast economic benefits to the
nation, beginning In the late 1900's when
breeder reactors are expected to achieve
initial commen:ializalion.
For example, the AEC Said. a saving of
up to $50 billion -in terms of 1974
dollars -coukl be achieved in the cost of
generating electricity between the late
1980's and the year 20M it the breeder
Industry js steadily built as enf.isioned.
1bat rs, the commission erplalned,
generating <"Olla -W Othenri¥! rise
steadily il the nation -lnued to depend
IOlely on conventional non~reeder
nuclear power plants and on plants
fueled by cool and other fossil !..to.
The Cueta needed for such preocnt.<lay
plants •~ steadily becomlng tc1rcer In
economic.al recoverable quantities, the
AEC said.
In contrast, breeder reactors woold
create. roore nuclear fuel than t b e 1
""""11111<!.
'Ibey have been des"a"lbed by the Nil<on
adminlst.ratiae u offering America 's
best pment bet for c:ombeitlng energy
:!l!ortag<1 In the decides immediately
ahead.
1be AEC 11id It tnvbiooa 400 br...sm
In operatloo by the tum ol Ibo .-ury
(See NIJCLEAll, ""•• II
1 , ,
Risks Seen
To County
By Ciaitic
By WULIAM S"11REIBER
Qt .. O.lly .... ., llMt
The Orange County S h e r I f { ' s
Department was sharply c r It l c Ii e d
Thursday for allegedly falling to bring lb
minority work force up to par.
The charges were leveled by County
Affinnative Action Coordinator Rmmn
Curiel during lnltlal budget delil,leraUons
for oext fllcaJ year,
OJriel Mid the dePertment is not only
runnlng the risk of rosing federal grant
money but al!O may be Investigated by
the Just.lee Department and Equal
Employment OppQrtunltie:1 Commission.
"I wouJd say that they are at least
subject to a cutoff in federal funds if
progress is not seen," CUrlel told the
gathering o{ I a w o!fioen and QOUnty
budget experts studying the Sheriff's
requests for the coming year.
Snerilf James ~Iuslck is asking for
$14.5 million next year -up from a total
of $1.2.a million last year.
1~iuch of the increase v.·ould go toward
hiring 99 new people in the department,
of which more ·than 50 would staff a
major addition to the overcrowded
oounty jail .
The jail facilities became a topic of
discussion al the budget meeting as an
outgrowth of personnel and minority
hlring needs.
Sheriff's Capt . William Wallace. who Is
ln charge of the county's jail, said
conditions are so bad now that some
parts of t'be jail won't be approved by
state corrections officials this year.
l!e said the jail now has more than 850
inmates and only 760 beds available. The
number in jail swells to more than 900 on
the weekends.
"Our medical area already doesn't
comply wilh the state standards and this
will be indicated among other things in
Uk! corrections report," \\lallace said.
Sberirf Musick said the construction
work on a fourth floor of the jail building
is near completion but it nwst be staffed
to do any good.
'I'ne expan sion would swell the county
jai11s capacity to more than 1,100 and
\\'Ollld include additions to medical
personnel and cooking facilities.
\VaUacc said about 35 of the new
(See CHARGES,.Page !)
Oraage
WeadH•r
Fog and low doudl night and
morning hours with mostly sunny
afternoons Saturday. SI i g ht t y
cooler. Lon in the Jow 50s to-
ntgbl Highs Saturday 71 to 77.
INSIDE TODi\ Y
Staff Wlii.r Tom McCann
ttrtiew1 a""'Nn; Orltans jazz
album in toda y's \Veekender.
The record W<ll prodru:ed bl/ a
UC Irvine i'nglish professor and
recorded fn LoMdon..
!
I
J DAILY PILDT SC
,., ... , ... 1 •
SAUCERs : ..
place Jut 5eptemhet """' precipitated
b)' an accldeol In a toi>«<ret projoct In
! T••• e lhot ctuaesl J:OilatmJealii&e. ~.
.. 11'nley'ro concerned that our misuse of
atomic energy will endanger other life
fonns and they are alio concerned about
us aa a civilization alt! thts planet' 1n the .
sdlerne of things. They're watchtnB us so
we won 't blow our planet apart."
Fox. said he never has been contacted
by a be!>& rom another planet bUt he'd
like to be. ..
"They usually contact people who are
scared to deat.h," said Fox. "Vet there
are plenty of others who are prepared to
act in a rational manner If contacted."
He said televisk>n programs like "Star
Trek" and "One Step Beyond" have done
a lot to prepare people to accepl lhe fact
•· of llfe cm other planets and to help them
understand how Utese coruacts migh t be
maile.
But the greatest source or information,
according to Fox, Js the Bible.
"l believe in God as a supreme being,
• · as a <.Teative !orce," said Fox. "To say
we are the only Ille Corms In the universe
is 1o limit God ... Winter Wonderland
He said If ooe la lo believe in the Bible
litll'ally, in the ucension of Christ, for
eumple, one must project hi1 awareness
~ to the po6Siblllty of life on otber planets
Timberline Lodge in Mount f{ood, Oregon, is cov-
ered with &ndw up to its third floor. Heavy snow-
!all has broug~t over 300 inches o! snow to the
area. The depth is the second higest since 1956.
~ and their visitation to earth. "nlt1 ls a " ' point be stresses in the lectures be gives
to groups in the area. ~ "Tile whole thing Is tied to the
.. destruction Of AUantis referred to in the
Bible as the Dood," be said. "Mankind
was wiped. clean on lhis planet and '°
certain people came and guided 111."
Cycling Streaker
Motors Across
Coastal Campus
$100,000 Care Facility
'
• He said they came to give men on thia
badward planel a morality and a
spiritual basl.a for life which tbey bad
' already .achl<ved.
Approved by UC lr~e
"The earth representa a type or pmal A motorcycle rider, wearing Qllly a ski
colony, a place where we are confined so mask, streaked aC1"06S the Corona del
that we can't interfere with the h1gber Mar High School campus today just a.s
si>eme or thlnp," he aid. ".UnUI we classes let out for a break at 10 a.m.
1 show a splrtlual and merel •PIX<Clatlon Corona del Meo High School Prlnclpal
of .higher life concepts we'll be forted to Dennis Evans said hlJ 1taff believes they
remain .here." . tno,v lYle identity of the streaker and if
• "After all the commandment we they're right, he'll be suspended.
violate mo.t Otten ls 'thou ihalt· Jd.'..kill'. " Evans kicked a youth out of adwlol for
No one wants ua out there tr'aTpsing -five days Monday after he wa.s ca11&ht
around callling trouble." S!reaklng.
Foa aald he bellevea Ill.at beings from Newpor\ Harbor High School olfidals
outer space will leavt us alone to work have declihed to disclose what dllclplinei
,. as we're not hurting others tn the achoo! who were caught strea.klDg the I ;. out Olll'•own eYOluUonary process 11 Jong they impoaed m four girls from their
univera. Corona del . Mar High c a m p u 1
"UDW we 11"'1' up and join the Wednesday.
universal brotherbOod they will cootinue Tbe • girls cavorted acroa school
to check up oo 111," be added. grounds end Into a waiting car but achoo!
What does be 1ell lkepUcs! o(licials (ollowecl them back to their
"I, have two • plolloaophies, ..,. from, Jpne.campus and e>cOrted UM:m Into the
Sbatespeire and the other rrom Shaw: principal'• om~.
One ia that there are more thlnga in . Three boys who streaked the Harbor
heaven and oo earth than dreamed ol in High campus Monday were not caught.
. -.... pbUoopplJja and the .other Is that -
IOIDe He ~~ u t11J are and wonder :~ ~ ....... ~ 'l\"1• -~ and ~· .Lftgal Streaki1ig ·-war allioM -•·I n'"1t .~.....ivei ,._ ·•· • -·• Oocoililter:...,_.,.,.,.i;;ond ·:a. h-A d compr<llenslool .>lf . we'd ~' to --un. t e gen a
lkeplict and '111...,.. 1nn....,.. we
=~-ha"': ~v-tthts rar,~,Fox At iCi'Juncil Meet . -. .
Sandy Johnston
Captures Capo._ -Speech Laurels
..... -.
CUPERTINO (AP) -A councilman
wants to legalize streaking in "such
places aa to offend the fewest and delight
... the greatest nwnber," but It ~would (:OSt
• •• $SpJor..i.' ti~ to ~eak oom,mercially.
·-. Leplizatm.or streaklnl! -the art-of
• ·d><bing" around hi the nude -bas been
prOpased fl:W this city of 23,000 by a
1oogu .. 1n-t reoolutloo lnlrodu<od by
Councilman James Jacbon and set for s.iixly Johoslm, a • oenior al San couricil actioo lljOQday night.
Clemente HIP Sdi>ol, has won the ''1lls probl"1l lTlusl be exposed down
student speakers' c6ntest spomortd by to fts bare essenilals,'' aald Jackson
the Capistrano Lions Club. Tbunday. "If our council would act
1 She ii the dlughter of Mr. and Mrs. decisively, we can strip away all
Luis Johnston of San Clemente and plans pretenses and meet the needs of our
to attend Saddleback•Cbllege next fall to citizens."
major ln'business administration. -Jackion's reslution re1ads in part:
1 Rllllftel'l-'Up in the contest were Stephen 'ltWbeftas, this event Is most often
1 Waddington and John Murphy, also of chracteriUd by persons rapidly l'llllning
"
San Clemente High. through public places with only tennis
This year's toplc was "Ecology -It's shoe! and goose bumps.
Price." Contestants were judged by Mn. "Resolved: Streaking within the city
Helen Ayres, William BaUtgate and Dr. limits shall be performed only between
Olarles .Buck. 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. -except on
Miss Johnston will now compete in a especially dark night,, and only in such
zone coolest against Winnen from other places /ts to offend the fewest and delight
Lions Clubs in the South Coast Zone ol · the greatest number."
lhe Lions District. According to the proposed ordinance,
Top prize in the Calilornia-Nevada strealtln:g mun be at a "dignified wal}t"
student SP.Cakers' contest is $.1,000 in unless. lt is raining or the temperature
scholarships and awards. falls below 40 degrees,
A permit from the city clerk, payment
DAILY PILOT
ol a $50 fee for commercial streaking
and permission from a phyaicl•n woukl
be required before a streak In lhe city
limits.
Paliticians would be permitted to
streak without paying any fee, the
resolution says.
The city attorney would be instructed
to draw up, a 11st of approved streaking
sites In lhe city which already. has bad
. streaks through departmenl stores,
bowling alleys\ the local college and a
1'-tcDooaJd's drive-in restaW'ant.
.FroMP .. el 1
' . STREAK. • •
bt!ore 650 persons at a lar11:e hotel.
A new $100,000 drild care facility for
UC Irvine was approved Thursday by the
campus planning committee.
'lbe decision · is significant because a
group of parenls wtiOse cbildren attended
the existing facility, '"lbe Barn
Preschool," had filed a complaint about
Its conditions with the CalHomia Board
of Regents.
The complaint was scheduled to come
before the Regents today In their
meeUng1 in San Francisco.
Drama Program
To Be Featured •
At PTA Affair
A drama program will be fealured at
t the Tuesday meeting or the Mored
"'*r Parent-Teacher Association.
''-'1fie Way Out Cinder!lla," a musical
comedy dl1'Cled ~f . drama teacher Ima
wactmnh;wtn bel>r.oented by llludenla
after the 7: 15 p.ril, businea• ineeting in
the school cafeteria. • .
DUring the businesS portion · of tM
evening a ,..,,.r1 will be. pv<(ll by the,
nominating comnUttee ·on inew PT~
officers.
After the perrormance members and
guests will be blvited to peruse the
displays which will be .. 1 up around thO room. •
· c Diuilays will include : student CQ\U\Cil,
adviJed by Laura ~1acDonald ;
photography, taught by Paule Neeve;
yearbook. also taught by N e e v e ;
newspaper, taught by Jetn Flstenden ~
graphic arts, taught by Dave Wilson.
student.a will be on hand to erplain
what they have learned and to answ«
quest:kins about the displays.
Hospitality chairmen for the evening
wlll be Betty Morain and Sandy Cox.
.FromP .. el
NUCLEAR • • •
and 550 by the year ~-
Tile commission made all these
forecasts in a draft environmental
statement covering the e n v J.s I on e d
Impact of the creation of a vast new
ouctear power industry utilizi.qg reactors
of the breeder type. known tedinJcally as
''liquid met»!ueled breeder reactors.''
The statement \\'as ordered by a
federal court last June as an lndirect
outgrowth of a s u 1 t 'file<! against the
AEC by an environmentalist g r o u p.
Environmentalists have long opposed the
breeder program.
Sununing up the findings or' a four-
volume, 2 , 2 o O • p a g e environmental-
impect report, Thomas A. Nemzek,
d1rector of the AEC's division of reactor
research and development, told a news
conference.:
"The main oonclusioo .•. is that a fully
developed breeder economy -which
would greaUy augment our energy
reAOur~ -would not have a signilicant .
adverse environmental Impact and would
meet envlronmenlal quality ~ public
safely standards:''
The AEC report aald breeder "8Clcn
wouJd release even smaller quanUlies o!
radioactive materials to the atmosphere
than do convenUooal nuclur plants .
•
•
"I was depressed and the ltreak Idea
kind of came over me by surpr.lae," aa.kl
Shore. who preceded M1Sll Stevena on
ilage.
.Fre•P .. el
OIL ..•
Larry Agran, the parent who filed the
complaint in February, said the parenta
are saUsfied with the decision.
The new !adllty Is scheduled to open in
October and will be built close to, the
present school -in an old barn .on a
farm behind Verano Place grad.Uate
student apartments.
"In the meantime, the parents
advisory board will be working with the
administraUon to reduce the remaining
health hazards at the Barn," Agran said.
About 40 preschoolers from. two and a
half to fi ve years old attend the school.
The parents' complaint poipt~ out that
the facility, once the off'~e 'ol architect
William Pereira, did not have indoor
running water, adequate toilet !aclllties
aod acces..lble emergency medicil care.
They alao complaiaed of lbe dirt road
leading up•to It, which in rainy weather
becomes oimost impassable to heavy
vehicles 1ikh as fire f!llgini&,
The poreni. poy 1611. to $115 a month
for childcare at the center, which
provides 85 percent of the cost to nm tbe
school.
The rest comes from s t u d e n t ,
government allocations of fees paid by
all students. .
Lines Recall 3,500
CHICAGO (UPI) -Trans World
Airlines announced Thursday that it
8larted recalling !IOme.. of the 3,500 cabin
attendants and ground employes laid olf •
last year due to the fuel sOOrtages.
United Air Lines Wednesday announced a
similar recall of 650 attendants beginning
In April. •
• .....
•
·-•
• ,
·--.... " ... ~ A~~~~~ ~taft
:~~~ding · Q·U..eried ·
WASIDNGTON (APl -The General
,AC<lOWll)ng O!fi~ aaya thal. using
• gpvernmeol ~ ID provide off tee IP""'
and aervlceti r,. tonner Vice Pftaldent
Spiro T. Agnew II legally proper but
quesUooed the )>se o1 e praldentlal fwld
to pay the aalaliea ol hla ataU.
~~EbnerS<aau,lna
Jett« releaaod IOOay by Rep. Jobn JJ:.
M-(D.cal~.). -that
Collgrea In the future IJlOll out more
cle,uly euctly.what a vlco pnllldeol who
....lgna 11 entlUed to In the way of
government terTlces.
At Iuue II the .-y lpMI !or
Agnew's stall and olllco spooe .-be
resigned Oct. IO after pleading no coolell
to a charge pl Jncorile ta:i evasion.
'!be staff II helping A-IOrl through
vice praldenllal papen.
Staata aald that aince 0 we cannot aay
lbat the uie of Mr. Agnew's atall II no1
to some degree olfldal 1n purpoee, we
nuist conclude that the upendltures (!or
office space aod govermneat aervices)
are legally proper."
But he quntlooed the payrneot ol
sal.atjes of Agnew'• remalning staff from
a discr<llooary fund eatabll.lbed !or
Prnideol Nixon by Congreu.
Staai. aaJd that Coog.-did not spell
ou~ clearly what the dlacrollonary fwld
was to be Wied for but "we doubt that tbe
Congress lnleaded that the •pproprl•llon
woold be available for the J>UIJIOle of
cootlnuing staff .al!!ltance durlq the
period ol time here 1n ... 1vod."
Staats aakl, however, be CIOUld oot rule
ooe way or the other the ,._ of the
presidential fuod becauoe of'• "lack of
any clear Jec.lalative' h.iatory" on tbe
subject.
Moss asked Staats to rule on the
legality of using government funds to
stair a transitional office for Agnew.
Staats said "it· ii expected" that Ute
stair services and facilities provided for
Asnew "wlll oot be oontln)led beyond the
first part·or April.
"We .~mend that ' the Qqress
Bill Studied
' On Kid1iaping
.i. SACRAMENTO (U P l ).:J ·-
c.eg!llaUon postlni a JJ/lU,llllO
J reward •-.. far~ Ule atresi and
oonvldio'O cit pertOn. Involved In a
polilical kldnaplng In which the
victim w .. killed ha. been inlro-
ducoct In the Senate.
, Sen._ H. I. RI~ ol Attadla,
' a Rep~ candidate ror .the u.~.
Senate, aald hla meeoure ($Biii[),
introduced Th \l r-s day , waa
prompted by the Patricia Hearst
kidnapllig.
"'l'hb bllj lhould Dust( out from
ww:l.er~ the .rocks IOIDe of the
revolutlmariea who are irpreading
violence and death, and -Id
grie!, with their guerrilla tactics of
political lddnapinga," Rlchanl!on
said.
rtmove au doubta for t111 ruture by I
enaetlnl appropiate le I Le I 1 t lo n
concemlng lhe ,. o( approprialloM ;
Dllde f(lr •opecla( paJstance lo the
Pretldent' and for. the me or space by a ~
lonner vice president and his prk>r sta!f
following his rnlgnatlon during bis term
ol oHice," Staai. Aid. I
.F ..... P .. el
:CHARGES .•••
employ.. be la seeking would be armed '
deputJea and the' remainder would ceosllt
of. cooks, nurses and other penomel
neodod to maintain the jall and Ii.
lnmate1.
DJscuuion ol the pvw!ng number of .
lnmateo broke down Into a phll-1Ucal .
d e b. le • during whlch 'County .
AdminiatraUve Offlcer Robert Thomas
aald the meoey oould better be used to ,
build ileru.
"If all the programa ~e have to divert i
theae people lnlo uaelul acllvllleo aren't
wortlng then maybe we llhoulcl stop
them," he said. '
WBllace told lhe panel lllal a great
maj«ity ol the pri>onen now In Jall are
"bard caaes" and they are the OQel who
... taking tpOCe.
He said ol the 50,000 people hooked Jail
year, 34 percent were out in etaht boun,
another a percent· within two day1 and 8
total of 80 percent ol all prlaooera were
out In five days.
1be remaining 20 percent nu all
available jail space and are hard core
criminab who would not be rehabllltated
if they bad the chance," Wallace said.
Willa~ said the average jail Inmate
today ts under 15 year1 o! age and "far mOre violenUy militant" 1han those five
or 10 years ago.
. During" the dlllCUSllon of addllional
hiriqg of minorities and women, Curtel
Said A1uslck'a rerord "is the poorest of
any ~partrnent in the county."
He said the Department now bas 24
women (19 Anglos, two black and three
Merican • American) and 359 men (343
Anglo, two . black and 14 Me:a:ican-
American).
Muafck countered Curiel's arguments
by saY!ng his office has been thwarted by 1
'lbomas' office in lt.s efforta to hire a man i'espomible tot nothing other tbaD :
,..king out qualified mioorilles. ·
Funds for that man were frozen, 1
Miiiick said, and he can only lake what
applicants are oent to him by the county I
personnel office. .
He said 500 people applied for a half
dozen openings last time around, of ·
which 107 passed the w r It ten ~
eiaminaUon. Two ftre black, one ot i
whom !ailed the oral ewn and the other I
was aJTested on outstanding warrant ,
charges.
I! Musick'• entire budget package Is
approved by the Board of Supervisors
this summer, it would add two cents to
the county tax rate and alao provide up '
to $3S0,000 to increase patrol service In
the south county.
See This Assemblage Of'
IHenredon's Folio Eleven Collectio~ I·
nspired From 17th & 18th Century
French and Chinese Styles. These
· Outstanding Pieces Fit Beautifully
Into Almost Any Decor.
'
Coal M~es Operate decision to lirt the embar10, the seven
oftler Arab nations plumed to llO UtrouJl)I
with IL DR£XEL-HERITA6E-HENREDON-WOODMA1Ut. ICAMSTAN
·•
CHARLESTON, W. Va. (AP) -AU but
a handlW or U>e ,..,.,.. "'"' mJnea 1n aoutllem Welt Virginia wtre bad< In
operalloo IOOay, mor\ing Ibo ll!d of a
2ll·w.ek atrtke over gasollno allocatlona.
Tbe w .. 1 Vlrllala Co a I Auoclatlon
-lllal • lo • ....-of llie
"""' 27,000 mlnen Idled by the -k
lttippege were bad< at their jollo, l<avlng
about 4,000 1UD out o( w0rk.
The Anb on er.ut:cso qalDlt thl:
Unlted S11tea wn lmpoood becauaa or
U.S, ._rt of• Israel durina tho 1973
Middjt Eat ""'. At Iha 8alUrdoy mteUnc ol lhe world's
olLpportlng countrt .. , mlnlateta wltl
~ Ille prlclO of cnido, which bave
tripled In five -lba. pushing up
gasoline prlw In IOllll ro11111rles bY mor. than I 00 tercenl.
,• .
WEIKDAYS a SATURDAYS f:OO le S:lO
NIWPORT & TORRANCI °'IN PIUDAYS 'TIL 9
NEWPORT l!ACH e
lm WU'l'aDT'DR.. M2-DO
LA&UNA HACH e
3411 NORTH COAST HWY~
TORllANCE e
23< llAW'l'!'iORNE BLVD.
(()pan -12 .. :30) 3111-1271 •
•
--~·· .. -
I
l
Today's
Closing Pr.ices
-
' I •
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
'
SC DA!LY PILOT 13
Year's High-Lows
Appear Every Salurday
•
NEW YORK (UPI) -lli:;1ng 1nooey ntnrket ratea
and llnGtring unn:rtAint y O\'er "·ht:1her the 011 cn\bargo is ,
about to end look ~tock prices narrowly lo'Aer In tnOOerate.
trading on the ~e\v York Stock ~xchangc toda y. '
1'1lnutes before the close. the Dow Jonrs industrial
average was J.17 points lower at 889.39. The bluN"hlp indi -
cator had fallen more than six points in the opt•n1ng hour.
Gainers outnumbered losers hv abOttt " ~veo-l<rfive
margin, among the more than 1.756 stocks trndt>d
Sales at the close totaled approx1m~lt·ly 14,500,000
shares, against 19,TJ0 ,000 traded Thursday.
Prices on the American ~:xchange fell In l\ght trading
Thursday.
J j DAILY PILOT
,Traveling ·
Enriches
Stowaway
l'rom Wlre Servlcea
When J5-year-<1ld S l e v e
Venl got home to Castro
Valley aft.er stowing away
aboard a Pan American
A.lrways 747 flight to London
Fr!,day, Mareh lS, 1974
O.Reeks
Marriage of 1ctor Ryan
O'NOll a n d 1ctrw
Leig h Taylor-Young,
whose romance now-
ered when the,l'. starred
on television 1 "Pey-
ton Place" ended this
week after seven years.
Miss Taylor-Young in-
itiated the action.
•
Daughter, Comuue ·Pre;vail
SEA'JTLE (APl -A lather Meanwhllo, the U.S. at·
lolled In hll aecood "kid-torney's olllce in 8elllle la
'nlplnc" attempt to take biJ coodderinl filing c b • r g es
dlttgbler fN>m a 1'Ugloua againat Ted Palrlcl<, a 44-yur·
CCJl"l'mUDI 11)'1 he'll 10 bit okl ·,SU DiecO 11\M. whG
way and let hll dlugltler II" spedA1liet In helping .,....11
hers. recover c b I t d r e a from
"I've tried t wict " CUrt religious communes. . . ' Crampton, a p e I kl n g by Patrick oald last August be
led by the l+.)'W'Old Guru
)labonj JI.
He WU acqJ~ of a ~
aa1>1*i1 c:l>llrp In New York
and 11 lo oland trial '"1 a
almllar charge In Colorado In
Mly.
•
Minilter
Streaked
CAMPBELL (UPI) -
Slx -mmpod tm>u"'1 a l'TA meetJnc 11
• locll bl(!> -durtnc • 9peech to .,.,.,, .. by the
11... Gonion McLean ol
the Youth for Clu1st
Dlurcil.
A........,.. aald Ii•
boys and gtrls dalhod
8Cl'OIS the room and out-
side to • waltlog getaway
car.
last month, bis father said the' ~~~~~~~~~~---------.!!!!!!!!~~ 13811 he had lo pay for the··
return night would be "a lot or
teteiMione from hiJ home in 11deprogrammed" young ~
Redoodo Beach, Lid 111un· pie from tbe coolrnl or groups
day. "l thlnk my obllgallon ouch 11 the Children of God.
bas lo end anmellme lo let me SeatUe's LOYe Family, and the
lead 1 nonnal Ufe." DI-Llpt Mlaloo. wbidl b
CrampCon, bb wife, Henrie!·
ta, and Patrick were suc-
ceulul In an Aucust attempt
to rmiove · the Crampton's
diopter, K.alhy. from the
LOYe hmll1 commune.
allowances."
But Steve revealt'd that he
sold an exclusive story on the
flight to a London newspaper
for $200, and a television sta·
tlon pa.kt him $100 for his story
and promised to send another
flOO soon.
He said he also has an
agreement with Pan American
( PEOPLE )
that if they do not charge him
for the flight, he won't reveal
how he got away with it.
• Prelident Nixon issued his
annual SL Patrick's Day
message, declaring that "Irish
wit and warmth, grace and
charm, ·have enriched our
11terature, our music, and , of
·course, our politics."
· The statement to mark the
Irish-American holiday Stm·
day said Irish Immigrants
· "have added immeasurably to
the texture of American J.ife."
* ,; Actress Und a Lovelact, star
• of the movie "Deep Ttwoat",
was arraigned in Las Vegas
and ordered to appear for
preliminary hearing July 25 on
. charges of pos!Jes.sing drugs.
Miss Lovelace spoke brieny
with reporters, posed for
photographers and granted a
: brief television interview. She
· was dressed in sheer beige
: ensemble with a wide-brim·
med hat.
: 1be actress was arrested at
a· "Strip" hotel Jan. 31 along
with Hollywood p r o d u c e r -
director David W I n t e r s
Charges have lieen dropped
against him.
* Catherine Hean t, wUe of
newspaper executive Randolph
Heant, was rea;ppolnted to a
l~year tenn oo the University
of CaJUomia Board of Regents
by Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Mrs. Hearst, whose
, daughter, Patricia, was kkl·
naped last month by a ter·
rorist group , said, "I'll be hap-
py to serve" when told of her
reappointment . • The California S u p r e m e
Court affirmed the first·
degree murder coovk:tlon of
Booker Hlllary, 39, who was
charged in the 1962 scissor
slaying of a Hanford girl but
t:banged his death sentence to
a life term.
The court based I t s
modif1Cation of 9e11tence on its
)972 ruling boldlng the death
penalty unconstitutional. It re-
'"J'.e c t e d Hillery's contention
~that bis conviction should be
tt:versed because he was
denied a fair trial in King
Col.Dlty as the result of
pretrial publicity.
* ' ' Ralpll Davis of Salt Lake
City roUnd the pol of gold at
the end cl the rainbow.
1be 28-year-old m a c h i n e
operator was awakened by a
lclepbooe <all informing him
~e won $100,000 In t h e fdassaehuseill state lotlery .
.:Davis works the graveyard
ihlft at a paper company.
''I thought I was still
dreaming," said Davis.
Bay State officials said
Davis will collect $10,<XKI a
year for the neit 10 years for
winning se<:<>M prize. • Three yomgsters suing the
govmior of COnnectkut !or
equal educational op-
p>rtunities, found Ibey must
abo ... their lathen.
Baruhy Bortoa, D a a I e I
BanUn and Pet.er Gran t all
are IOOI of school bo&rd mem·
bml in c.nton, Conn.
The bays charge In their suit
agaimt Gov. nom.. J .
Meskill tha t Cbe state's prac-
ti<e of granting !lnandal aid
to towns reg>rdl.,. of local
re to u r c e: • dilcrtminates
against aome communltles.
lD'SBE~Y
JI. yoa haw new n.tchbon
or know or anyone: moYlng
to our area, plcue tell us
so that "''C may extend a
rrlcndty wcltom@ and help
them to become acquatntfd
tn the:lr new surroundings.
Se. Cast fisltlr 4M-ll1' _,..
llDr Yislt«
MMl74
'
WCEB
VUITIES ••
New designs in white and
9old trimm•d beauti ...
Nic:•ly liniah.d. quality
hardware. one piec:•
cul!ur•d marble top.
(Aha. the faucet ia extra.)
or wc.lnut tiniah.
Faucet ia extra.
20"xl7' .... 2800
23"xl 7". ' .. 3 700
MORE
WINNE.'RS
You kn-w• plclcad 200
winners from 4»Uf c:atal09
distribution Jilt' and Ure'•
IOlbe more who came in.
lound llMtir addr-. and
dalmod lhl goody.
..
Pullmans or Vanities ••• They say we have,the be.•t·display
and the best prices •• Look aroµnd, see if it isn't so.
WCEB 2 DBAWEB
VAiin
Another nice twlat. two
c1raw ... 1na1oad of tho
cabln1t door. White
and 9old. one piece
top. Fauc•t I. •xtra.
"'"·
6700
MEWllllE
TUBm
1997
••
LDCEB
WALL W'""lllE-:r
And to comp&.te tn.·
Mt. a matching cabinet.
Too nice to put in lb.
batb. hang tho whole
thing In tho li'flag room
(and your mother-in·
law will commit 7ou.)
VICTOllAN
VANITY
Very fancy. &tlot a
·queen (no smart
nmarb her•.) In whit.
or walnut tiniah.
Fcmc:•t is •xtra.
··ncrom
WALL
CABINET
We....,, lo be big In
matching thinp. Now
il I oaly had another
head to match the on•
J haTe, I'd haY• one
c:oaiploto brabl.
19°0 87°0 ·· .39 00
38 lllCI
DIFllllSllED
P1JLLllAN·
SIM1JLATED
·MAIBLE
SHELF
Loob like the real
McCoy (Hey. they UTe
In Labwood). But
doesn't split like the
atWf. So buy it, com"
with brack•ta.
911
FOLDlllG
TUB
ENCLOSURE
25~0SEOUT ~~.-~2411
'
And JOU gel """"' al tbla pric1.
(I ahould hope ao os 11 would be
crasy trying to waah up). The faucet
ii •xtra, J just put it in so Ille thing
would look nice.
TBBEE
MJlllQI
MEDIClllE
CABllt.-'f 2677
Nifty plaatic panola that !old up lib
cm acc:ordian. You get the aluminum
frame and track and .•• bingo •.•
ti ahower room for ch.up.
lDUB CHOICE
TOILETS
5700
3STYLES
TOILET
TllMS
1:
Th• real 1tu.H where th• thine ataya
in and the color lasts clear thru.
About 4S 14. ft lo the carton, Hcmk.
We dldn"t im-wbkh -at Ibo
time of thia writing,• we're
ahowlng thla In hopw our tea locnM
read ri9hl. (Enr ... anyone read
your tortune in eoit .. 9rouadl?),
Got them In all colon. and pa11.r...
Waahablo >rinyl. Juat aticli thomon
a plain Hat and It really loob llko
aomelhing, (It loob llb 1.41 oil the
reQialer Mre.)
~ ····-·-
·.,:
!"!-~.-:j
..=;~:~:i:~~
You_U..._ltfntlio
atopped-up Rak oa. TV.
(What you doG1-la tho
guy und0< tho oink pulllng..
tho plug.) Ju" ldddlng. ~ -
n-D-BOL
Au--,..._ wltll
...., luah. (la thla tho
one wbere lM 9\IY in the
---tho-·~lo<llil-1).
...
PlllED .._n
JOU SBl'l'S
·1900
We sold out one we.ft widaouf en
ad. what'•~ to he.spin now?
Colod. .......... (ad I aald
.....,,.~,
I
(
I
{
I
17 7
s
0
The
Depa
Thur minor
The
Alf
Curiel
for ne
Curi
E
A
In
today
CL
• .. . • ' .
(
•
Lag1111a _ Beaeti Toda)''s Flnal
N.Y. Stoeks ED I TIO~
'
'
VOL 67, NO. 74, 5 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C~UFORNIA FRIDAY, MARC H 15, 1974 TEN CENTS
•
San Juan Pilot Tells l!FO Sightings
~ Plllt ltaff ,...
AIRLINE PILOT SAID HE FREQUENTLY SIGHTED UFOS
Fred Fox Believes Wt Are Monitored by Alien Beings
Sheriff's Office Rapped
On Hiring of Minorities
By WIWAMI SCHREIBER or .. o.ur ,..., lhlff
The Orange County s h e r l f f ' s
Department was shArply c r I t i c l 1 e d
Thursday for allegedly falling to bring its
minority work force up to par.
The charges were leveled by COunty
Affirmative AcUon Coordinator Ramon
Q.U'iel during initial budget deliberations
for next fiscal year.
CUriel said the department iJ not only
nmning the risk of losing federal grant
money but also may be investigated by
the Justice Department and Equal
Eglployment Opportunities Commission.
"I would say that they are at least
subject to a cutoff in federal funds if
progress is not seen," Curiel told tbe
ga.tbering ol I a w officers and county
budget eip.m studying the Sherill's
reque$ for the coming year. SnetKf James Musick i.9 ukinf for
$14.5 mtUion next year - up from a total
of $12.I million fast year.
Much of the increase would go toward
hiring 99 new people in the department,
of which more than 50 would staff a
major addition to the overcrowded
county jail. 'Ole jail lacililies became a topic or
diScussion at the budget meetitlg aa an
outgrowth ol personnel and mlnority
hiring needs.
Sheriff's Capt. William Wallace, who is
in charge of the county's jail, said
conditions are so bad now that .90me
parts of t!Je jail won't be approved by
(See CHARGES, Pqe Z)
Exporting N(ltions Hint
~t Higher Fuel Prices
VIENNA (UPI) -With the possible
lifting of the Arab oll boycott against the
United States looming in ttie background,
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries {OPEC) will recommend
Satiarday that the price of crude oil be
increased April I, OPEC officials said
today.
1bey also said they believed an
announcement easing the Arab oil
eml}argo against the United States would
be.made in Vienna over the weekend.
In B<irut, the Arab press reported
today that Arab oil minister• postponed
CLASHES FLARE AT GOLAN
HEIGHTS. Story, Pago 4
FUEL CRISIS ONLY
THE BEGINNING? Pogo 12
announcement of a deci.sioa on lifting the
oil. embargo against the United States
UDtil Sunday i,n an attempt to reach
uoanuruty on the issue.
The semi-official Cairo newspaper Al
Ahram said in a re:port from its
correspondent who covered Wednesday'.1
oit ministers cooiemice in 1be Libyan
JIARTHA'S REPORT
SAID 'UNFOUNDED'
l'jEW"VORK CAP) -Mar1ho Mltcbell ),?&s filed a missing persons report o..,
Oie telephone !or her daupter alter
bell>« told the girl wos in her lather's
custody, police ~
Pollce litre ,.id tllunday nlPt the
estranged ..Ue of !.,._. Atty. Gal. Jolla
N. Mitdiell claimed ollldals at the
Sacred Hwl canvtnt ID Gn.emridl.
Coon. told her the is.,..,...ld prl, allO
named Mortha. wu ao\ ~vocation In
her father's cus&ody.
Nice In G,...wldl called the report
"unfounded" 11111 said d.! girl hu -
picked up ot the 1C11oo1 "" • ....,..,
w<ebnds by lllldloll'1 -·
,,
capital of Tripoli:
"The ministers adjourned until Swuiay
to allow the oil ministers of Syria and
Libya to consu1t their governinents in the
hopA that their next meeting in Vienna
will issue a unanimous decision on liftina:
the embar~o."
Press commeotators saKi the nine
members of the On!;anizatioo of Arab Oil
Exporting Countries (OAPEC) wbo must
(See OIL, Page Z)
Concert Carded
By Saddleback
Band in Laguna
The Saddleback Cone&• concert bani!
and chamber orcbeslra will join !°"""
Sunday to give a free cooces1 at the
Laguna Beach ffigh ScboOJ Audltoriwn.
The 3 p.n!. performance ,also will
feature 1bereu Smith, a aen.itr violinist
at Mlsaion Viejo ffigh School and a
Soddleboct -llnogb the high ldloollloaon-. ~ She will enroll at Slddlebect as a f\&11-Ume _t _loll.
The -ii dlrecfed by lllanle La-.
11111 the chamber -a .., Peter
Fournier
-imlh. who --a -"' the Pacific Palilodeo Symphooy
On:hestra:lllll the Or-.~ y-
Pbilbannoaic Orc::beltr1, is 1tudJtnl wltb
Mn. Sbanlo Rolland of llilllan Viejo.
llbe will pei b m • the -In Vivaldi Vlolin Concc1o Op. 3 No ...
Olber plea -the -orcbettra inetade "'Zarel St u ck e , • •
"Dlnca tram ltenry VTIJ," and
"StnfoaJetll. n
'lbe -baml wtll pretenl
''Flltlvo," ''Llehltod, '' ''DI•· .tbne1191», ''
"Timpot," ,......,. lllrUyn Sonlplo al
Ille tympani, 11111 -lnln .. ,, ..
~ SlarJ."
I
By P~IWLAN
Of ... ...., .........
Fred Fox believes ln flying saucers,
because seeing ls believing.
He ha.1 books 'On them, pictures, and -:
has personally ,... them throughout a
lengthy career u an aviator.
And he expecb to tee them again.
Fox, who lives In San Juan C8pistrano,
bu been a pilot for 11 yean, the first
aeven witb the Navy and the last nine
with a major commercial alrllne.
iHls 1nter..i lo UFOs began during the
early 50I when the first sightings were
publlcW!d.
"Natural curiosity got me ioio this."
sakl Fox. "But I have always believed
that there are more life forms In the
wlivene th~ us down here on earth."
He bq;an his study by preparing a
tbeals on the validity of UFO reports.
taking a positive approach. He. followed
through with intensive r e s e a r c h ,
acquiring slides and material from the
Aerial P h e no m e n o n Research
Organization and other :KMJrC'fS,
He also U5ed his own eyes.
"l\·e frequently made slghlings v.·hlle
flying." said Fox. "I see the extra·
terrestrial vehicles in their higher state,
not neceM&rily their physical state."
He said most 0Ylnl saucers can
function on several dlmensiona.I levels
and camouflage their appearanCt!.
"'The ones J see resemble clouds." he
explained . "~lost have electro-n1agnctic
1 propulsion systems. Tiils causes a cloud·
like effect around them."
Fo.z has his ov.11 views on why beings
from other planets are observing us.
"Orie prime reason is our p~mitlve and
adolescent use ol nuclear weapons and
energy 90UtCes." he said . "All that
testing we did in the atmosphere caused
a number of conditions we don't
appreciate."
He believes the sightings that took
tSte SAUCERS, Page ZJ
Laguna Trustees Order
'· Tax Override Election
Air Cleared
On Laguna
Police Unit
Laguna Beach Police Clliel Frank
Scbopen aded today' to quash what he
called rmnorr lit d misinformation.
cireulallne al>oul bll d • p a, r I m • 11.l ' 1
rdotk>nsblp with the Orqe County
!ntelllgmce unll
Sdiopen said the department has
reapplied for membership In t h e
intelligence organization after belng
removed from a probationary status with
the group and not admitted t 0
memberahlp.
'Ibe Orange County Intelligence Unit
collects and maintains i n f o r m a t I o n
relating to area-wide criminal activity.
Membership enUtles police agencies
access to unit files .
I
A letter advising the department ol the
intelligence unit's actim stated that wiit
member.dlip was cmoemed about the
local Laguna political inlluenoes and
access to the secret files.
"1be negative vote shou1d not be
vlewedl&S an act .of expulsion or as an
indlctmenl of the Laguna Beach Police
Department," Schopen said, reading
from a letter sent by the intelligence
\llit.
~1:M JUST GOING TO. TAKE IT EASY FOR AWHILE"
Lt. Robert McMurr1y Retiring After 21 YHrl on Force
The police dtlel denied reports that the
actiOo was a direct result ol the
de&truction of a videotape made ol a
protest rally following the arrests of two
Laguna bookshop o p e r a t o r s on
pornography charges in December.
That tape was ordered destroyed by
Mayor Roy Holm.
21-year Laguna Police
Vet McMurray Retiring
Schopen said that while the tape"s
destruction wu not the cause of the unit
action, be admitted it may have
contributed to the "ooncern" voiced by
intelligence unit over Lag\D'la's political
.lnfluences m. tbe deparftnent.
The l:h!el said he r<gretted having to
make any statement on the department's
rela~ip with the intelligence group
but said t h a t rumors within he
community were "detrimental to the
pride ol the department."
Unfair to Males
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) - A bill
banning the sale· of beer to everyone
under 21 years old was rejected by the
Oklahoma Senate 'llnlr3day. PresenUy,
aa 11-year<>ld &irl can buy bees" in the
Ute OOt boys must wait uotil they are %1. •
By JACK CHAPPELL
or 111e o.11~ ,/let 11111
"'Brandishing two loaded pistols at
1t"Unned bystanders, a burly Los
Angelts nian (wearing a tit1 badge
and twin holsttrs ovtr a blue jump
suit) lllreaU!ned to shoot sevtrat
Laguna Beaclt polictme:n before being
disarmed by a soft-talking veteran
officer.
"Polict Lt. Robtrt Mc~furray was
credittd wieh taking tht guns away
from the apporenUu di.!tuTbed mail
•.. McMurray, lalking in a calm voice
w a l k e d slowly up to the SUS·
pect and removed tht guns . ·~ The
man immediattly btgan to struggle
when his pistols were taken and had
to be subdued by stveral policemen!'
-Daily Pilot, Aug, 13, 1971
.. l~ell, l thought, here goes my
retirement.
"lt sure would be bad to get shot after
all the9e years,'' Lt. MfMurray said
Fuel Bija~k
2 Gunmen Take 8,500 Gallons
PASAIJJ:NA (AP) -or... armed men made oil with 8.500 gal-
IOllS or paoline !Odly al!er bljaclting a tunr truck and kidnaping
Ill driver, DOlke ¥Jd.
The drtver wu kldnaped while altempUng to deliver a load ol
fuel to a Mrvlce Ntlon in lbe predawn houn, said police Ll Jack
Garrell.
Gamtt said !be lwo unldentllled men bound, gagged and
bJlndfolded dri'Nr Kenneth M. Harbour, llO, ~nd took him away
by car. He wu left unlwmed at a ruldtntlal lblel'!ectlon In nearby
Glendale Garrett Sli d.
H&iiioi'U !reed himself and <1lled pollee, who lound the lruck
-empty-ID 1be aru abotll 46 mbtulel la!er.
recalling thal particular episode in 1'1is 21
years of Laguna police work.
Lt. ~1c.\1.urray. who everyone calls
"~lac," leaves the station house today on
the way to retiremenl.
··rm just going to take it easy for
awhile." :VtcMurray said. He and his wife
Mary Jane plan on some cross~ntry
traveling.
\1.1hen h1ctlifurray joined the force in
1953. dep.a rtment411patrolmen v.·orked six
days a week for $200 a month salary. The
force 'nad just gotten radios in its patrol
cars.
Over the years, McMW'ray has been
acting chief twice while the city was
between police chiefs. 1Ie's been a
motorcycle patrolman, voork:ed narcotia
and murders.
He was commended for cracking a
nar~tics ring working from a downtown
supermarket, and for solving a murder
that involved questiooing 600 persons and
pinning the murderer with tv.·o partial
fmgerprints.
"It took us 33 days, every day to come
up with him," Mc1.furray said .
"I guess I've v.·orked cvery phase of
police work there is."
"The, wont part is the hours. Your
family suffers. You work odd hours and
holidays.
"I thlnk the wives should gel a pat on
the back for all the stuff they go
through," he. said.
NoW 55, P.tc~turray M!s three cbndren
and four grandchildren.
"I always had good rapport with all the
kids in school. I always got aloQ(I: well
with everybody .
"T1tars what makes a polieeman, If a
policeman can work with people and talk
with people and not get them au riled up,
ht's gOl the job beat.
"E•OTJ'body who "1arl.t on this job ls
badge hapPY and l don't care how much
lraintng they 1et. 1.3 yeers go on, you
!Seo R&'llRING, 1'P t)
•
'Richest'
District
Needs Cash
A sctxiol tax override election was
ordered Thursday by the Laguna Beach
Unified School District ~rd cf trustees.
The election would ~hie the district
to add $80 to the amount it now costs to
educate one student for a year.
That cost, r1gured on what educators
call Average Daily Attendance !ADA)
amounted to $1,182 f r the Laguna
District during fiscal 1973-74. lhe highest
(lCl$t per student in Orange Coun:v unified
districts.
1lJC ta.z override amounts to a 24-cent
levy per $100 assessed valuation. Under
exisUng law. the tax rate would
automatically drop 31 cents next year. If
the override passes, the rate y,i ll only
drop about eig'ot cents.
The trustees ordered the election In the
face of severe increases in ADA costs.
Those costs include innalion increases in
materials aiid supplies but are primarily
due to teacher demands for salary
increases.
The school board approved an increase
in teacher pay of two percent to start
April I, an increase of three percent July
1 and an additional two percent if "new
monies" become available tc the distrid.
The oven1de election was Called to
enable the district to retain this year's
program, school authorities said.
\Vithout the additional funds. .90me
$319,000 would be cut from ~ schools'
present "level of education" according to
Dr. Donald Woodington, d Is tr I ct
superintendent.
Even with t h e addllon3.l monJes
provided should the override receive
majority approval In the June 4 election,
the schools will have to pare $129,000 In
programs. Woodington said.
The Laguna school finance picture is
con1plicat.ed by the application la!t ·year
of senate bill 90, primarily designed to
close the gap between "rich" school
districts and "poor" school districts
Laguna is rated a rich district..
Simply stated• the amount Laguna
schools spent per ADA was fixed at the
fiscal 1973-74 level and the district only
allowed to increase AD/. _ .~ing 3
percent this year to cope with inflation.
The average district is allowed to spend
6 percent more and poor districts seven
more. The effect is to level c u t the
(Ste OVERRIDE, Page %)
Oruge 4:oast
Weather
Fog and low clouds night and
morning hours with J'llOltly SWUJy
afternoons Saturday. SI i g ht I y
cooler. Lows in the low 50s to-
night. Highs Saturday 74 lo n.
INSIDE TOD/\ V
Staff \Vriter Tom A.lcCann
reviews a New Orlea1u ;au
albuni Ui today'a \Vttkender.
The record 1DG.! productd b~ a pc Irvine E'ngU.h professor and
recorded in l..ot1do11.
"' 'I'-~1 I Ml\tltt Jt, .. • ....... 11 M4tlfllll ,.... ,,
L..M. ..... , ... ,. .. el ..... '
c~1 I. 11 •"''"''"" U.H Cl"61flttl JI, 44 S1MI ~"1er II ~ '9 ..,.,. ,..,.
(.,.._... Jt Iha: 1Mrtl9tl 11·11
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t
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LB ' frldl,, M1rch lS, 1974
Rele•sed
Count Lui~ 'Rossi di Monte-
lera. the k1dnaped heir to the
1'1artinl and Rossi vermouth
fortune, has been released
after spending four months in
a barn near Treviglio. He was
fo und by customs police in·
vestigating another kidnaping.
From Pa11e I
·uc1 ChiJd ·
'•
. ' • .. ! .
A J>eW •100,ooe <'blld '""' facility for
: .11~°'"1\'~• ~~ved 'l'Mii:oday by lhe ::.Ta.t=i,,":;.:~F~iuse a
,:.lllO'Jll Gl.)ilZlill(,1-chl!<lr<n ·~llended S tbe· e'LUY'~~llty, "The Barn
-~~'.bad 111«1 a complabit abou1
':· ~. wllh_lhe Calllom!a Board
ol Reg .. ts. • -.
'lllO. OCHnPiabit wu scheduled ID come '~ . !i)t Rell"l)la laday ill their
.;l!ll!Oting1n San Frlnclaco.
' tarry Agran, the -who flied the complaint in February, 1ald lbe parents
are satisfied with tbe declllca.
. '·'!be new lactli1Y ls scheduled lo open In ~ and will be built clooe lo lhe
):ft!ent school -1n an old barn on a
farm behind Verano Place graduate
stodent apartments.
"In the meantime , the parents
advisory board will be working with the
administration to reduce the remaining
health hazards at the Dam," Agran said .
. About 40 preschoolers from two and a
half to five years old attend the school.
, RETIRING .•.. >
The parents' complaint pointed out that
1 the facility, once the o£fice of architect
William Pereira, did not have indoor
running water, adequate toilet facUltles
and accessible emergency medical care.
·if'iley alao romplalned of the dirt road
leadina up to it, which in rainy weather Jieeome3 almost ;mpaaable ID heovy
1, ' ~ •
start using your ~e ol. humct and
~ mellow oul
"Nobody iJ perfect. Policemen make
mistakes just .. like anybody else," vehicles such as tire engines. ~
McMurr.ay said. •
He recalled .the· time a Laguna
patrolman gave a stranded moWrtM a
._ push to start hls car. Later a license
plate check showed the car had been
Tile J>lll1!!lbi pay '60 lo $11S a month
(~ childcare at the center, whlch
provides 8S percent of the cost to run the
school.
~ rest comes from atudent
stolen. . ·
1. He said he felt Jhe public respect and ~=~· aDoi:al\""" ol , ... paid by
trust which used to mark 1 a w
, enforcement was returning,
t ''The pendulum ls swlil.glng back. What
,, · ..
·It Just ·wasn't with all those riots and people calling us
<t pigs, it's coming back now. People are
t asking more help ,from pollcemep than
f they used to," be sakt. , ,
}. He said 90 percent oi a policeman's
. . .
This Boy's Day . ' ' work was public relations. For Streaking "Years ago we used to take home more
( people than we ever booked for dnmk/'
he said. ' ii, 'l1le AlleJoted PR.
• •
Pylice Ollef Fr.ani: SchopeQ gOt, his ll wasn't 11-yeaN>ld Richard Farrell's
start on \h<. La g\J\1"· force tlJu>ugb day loutr.,king,eveo ll bo .bad -Md
McMurray. They'd known each other locln fact, h j1lst wun't his day .
back in IIUnol! where McMurray was an First, the youth aatd be wu llruct
officer before. when be refUled to streak. 1ben he was
"We wru miss him m:l his genial style, struck again when otben thought be wu
his publlc relations with~munlty. Jreokl!!i. (
ni.o .. ~IDg.I onif ~ •· '-"' m. .... . r -e.t· lb9lttil ~. -, '•"""' ........ . ~IJ ~to pickac•eer l'd.iUft\>lclc • ;im.U Aid11e wu hltchhlklni In Des ·
die san\e -career. tt was gratuylng. I met :-:· Molnl!I, loWa Tbul'lday wbe:n be met two
a lot ol people made a Jot of frienda and men who ui<ed him lo liroll; -lllD In
worked with ' a lot .Pf nice ~ i\JYs," ~ ~al h -•·~ • .-. M M said · He ~ e n:lliolRIU and .ullC men
1 ~ !JIT•Y · • ' · j~ oat ol the car and beat him lnlD
1 •• • untomclousnea. He awoke, nude ex~
Baby Boy Dies l: :!:i ~= =-' noppy bat
Grogy, be went up cm a viaduct and
Qn '.Hnt Gratin' g shortl)I ran .oloul o1 two otber men In a V ~ Cit who ~ lo hJa Jadt O( clothing.
• . • ~llld he"wu beliten again~ and these
ENrn:Okia. (AP) -A baby boy dled as.sallanbi look ilia floppy hat with them.
ill ilia home as bis moillef slept when his By • Ws time, patrolman Marshall
stroller became trapped on the grating of .Irwin arrived\ gave him a blanket to
a noor turnace, police ~· ward off the chill and sent him to a
Jason R . .Damron~. ~month-Old son of ho&~tal. He..wai treated for mouth cuts, a otilpped tooth and cuts ~ bruises.
)fr. and Mn. Rayl>amron, was foui'td Meanwhile , the fad that began on
deat '11wudey afternoon. college campuses and spread among
Police sakl ::the wheels of Jum's students, hardhats and then on to other
stroller apparenUy ~ wedged in the nations continued unabated.
grate situated In the noor above ~e . If! Hjlolulu, three young men wearing
furnace. The heat m~lted Yle plastic · only ski masks streaked lhrough the
wheels and plutlc se_at, drOpping the studio ·~of 'television staUon KIT V
baby_ onto_~ hot grating. Thursday while the local live news show
Lines Recall '3,500
CHICAGO (UPI) -Trans World
Airlines annotmeed Thursday that it
started recalling some of the 3.500 cabin
attendants and ground 'employes laJd off
last year due to the fuel shortages.
United Air Lines Wednesday announced a
similar recall of 650 altendants beginning
in April. f 1:
OIAM61 COAST ..
DAILY PILOT
was being presented.
The men yelled, "Streak! Streak!
Streak!" as they darted acl'OSI the news
·set They were setn from the chest up on
television sets throughout Hawaii.
The streakers escaped in a truck.
Streaking also was reported among
American soldlers in South Korea.
'lllrei nude men dashed from a bar a ~'few mifes fro1n ·the demilitariied zone
and a lieutenant was seized by military
poliCfi for streaking Inside the compound oJ the 8th Anny headquarter& In Seool.
• Streaking has beluddled officials of lhe
SOv:iet Youth lllinlstry.
We ".can't understand what's the
reason for U," Victor Danilenko said
·. Thurlday while visiting with M~i ,.... Ort"" C..~t DAILY l"ILOT, wtlft wftldl
hi ~ fM ,...,..,.,.,.., ...... ~ .....
tll9 OrMOI c .. 11 Pvlll:dl;ne ~. s.,.
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tl-.dl, ln<IM11olddltMdl .... S... c...,,.,,111
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Tiie "'lfK"lpoii ~Mt lltnl 11 ti ut Wnl
l l V a1,..1, COl!t Mew, C•lltt<11i., ..,.,.,
~ Gov. Christopher S. Bond in Jefferson.
•
lob.rt N. WtH
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Mtill111 Mltlrttu P.O. a.1 K4, t2•1t --C.fl MAI~':.~"'°"' .._, 9"dl1 nu ....,.,..
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•
Danilenko, professor of po 11 t I c a I
~science at Moscow State U'niversity, said
Soviet students heard about streaking
and were as confu.sed as he was as to the
motive. ' '
ln Las Vegas, comedian Sammy Shore
streaked acro1S the stage Thursday
during singer . CoMie Stevena' show
before 6&0 persons at a large hotel.
Court Declares
Dark Horse OK
JACKSONVILLE. N.C. (UPI) -A
Marine, charted last month with lolling
to equlp ilia horse with illhl• ID ride to
work on tbe atretts before dawn hu been
found Innocent In Onslow County Dlslrlct
C.Ort •
Cpl. Edward Lay, 20, wu given •
lrolllc Ucl<ot 1buraday lor "opmtJnc 1
hone on 1 public -durln1 llOun of
darkness •hen ibe hone .... not
equipped with beoclltihll or iall IJihto." ~ Edwml (). llolley, .. Plr1 of
thtl -· dllg1oytd I -dmriq of I hone wlUi ''rodJal -I booY•," beldllthll ond lam llipoll 11111 even on __ .., ...
'
u .. t T•....,._lf
Stri·ke Settled?
'!'ired after several marathon bargaining sessions, San Francisco
Mayor J oseph Alioto and Board ol Supervisors President Diane ·Fein·
stein nieet the press to announce a tentative agreement in the nine-
day-old strike by 15,000 city workers. (See story, Page 5.)
EromP..,,el
SAUCERS ...
place last September were precipitated
by an accident in a top-secret project in
Tenn~ that caused radiation leakage.
"Tiley're concerned that our misuse of
atomJc energy w:ill endanger other life
forms ~ they are also concerned about
us as a civllliation and this pl~et in the
schemt ollhlngs. "nley're watching us so
we won't blow our planet-apart.1'
Fox !aid be never has l>Mn ·contacted
by a being from another planet but he'd
ll~e' to be.
"1bey usually 0X1tact people who are
scared to death," sa1d Fox. "Yet there
are plenty of others who are prepared to
act in a ratlonal manner if OXltacted."
He aaid televislon programa like "Star
Trek" and "One Step Beyond" have done
a lot to prepare people to accept the fact
of llfe m other planets m:l to help them
undenland bow these oootacla might be ...... 11ilt .. .,,-....,,. ol inlonnaUoo, ......nor lo Fox, Is the Blble.
i•1 believe in God aa a supreme being,
aa a creative force ,'' Mlcl,!or. ''To say
we are the only life fonna ID the Wlivene
Is to lbhlt God ...
He said if one is to believe in the Bibi~
literally, in the ascenaton ol a.ila1, for
ex.ample, one must project bis awareneu
lo the paalblliJy ol lile <iii other planell
and their vllilalloo lo earth. Thia la •
point he sire..., In tho lectures be gives
to groups in the area.
"The ·whole thing is tied to the
destruction of Atiantis referred to in the
Blble as the Oood," he said. "Mankind
was wiped clean on this , planet and so
certain people came and guided us."
He said they came to give men on this
backward planet a morality and a
spiritual ~sis for lifF: which they had
already acltieved.
"The earth represents a type of penal
colony, a place where we are confined so
that we can't interfere with the higher
scheme of tbingS," he said. "Until we
show a spiritual and moral appreciation
of higher life concepts we'll be forced to
remain here."
"After all, the commandment we
violate most often is 'thou shalt not kill'.
No one wants us out there traipsing
around causing trouble."
Fox said he believes that beings from
outer space will leave us aklqe lo work
out our own evolutionary process as long
as we're not hurt.ing others In the
universe.
"Until we grow up and Join the
universal brotherhood they will OOntinue
to cbecJ(up on us," tie added.
W~t does be tell skeptics?
"l have two philosophies, one from
Shakespeare and the other from Shaw :
One is that there are more things in
heaven and on earth than dreamed of in
our philosophies and the other is that
some see things as thy are and wonder
why; 1 see things that aN!n't and ask
why not."
"Why should we limit ourselves
because we encounter something beyond
com!l'ehension? If we'd listened to
skeptics and negative influences we
wouldn't have advanced th.l.s far," Fox
observed.
OIL ...
make the decision we.re anxious to avoid
all)' oplit In ronkl. -
$2 Million Haul
Of Marijua1ia
Found in Texas
AUSTIN, Tex. <UPI ) -The
Department of Public Safety feels it
mJght have stumbled onto a major
mistake by a well-financed ring of
marijuana operators who are going to be
hurt by the ioss of a $2 million shipment.
Wllsoii E. Speir, director of the
department. estimated the value of the
marijuana at $1 million when It was
foWld, but spokesman Jim Robinson said
Thursday that later estimates put it at
well over $2 million.
SU.le troopers stumbled onto the
marijuana in an overtumed refrigerated
truck Wednesday. They found it when
they opened the truck and found ihe
12,000 pounds or neat bales behind crates
of Mexican pineapples and cabbages.
"It looks like this Is a very good
quality marijuana, that's what the
(narcotics) ag~ts sey," Robinson said.
"The loss of that much is bound to hurt
somebody real bad.
He said It was easily the largest
marijuana haul in the state's history.
Officers spent much of Wednesday
hiding In the bushes, where they could
keep an eye on the truck in case anYone
came to claim it. Finally, about noon, a
wrecker arrived on the scene and began
hooking up to the truck. The officers
descended en masse upon the startled.
driver.
Tbe driver said a "well-dressed man
approached him and asked him to get his
truck out of a ditd'l. The driver said he
was hired on a no-questions-asked basis.
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f8 'l'rilllon ·-. ' •
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AEC Envisions ' . ·~ • • f . '
Atom Industry
WASHINGTON (API -The AJomlc
&rtergy Commission envl!lons a Yllt, SS
trillion bra1dei' nuclear pawer lndu!lry
by the year 203>, and says It would Pote
'no signflciant har.ard to th. environment
or the public's health.
The AEC also forecast Thursday that
such an Industry -designed u a mojor
IO!<e against energy sbortag., -could
yield vast eoooomlc beoellla lo the
nation, beg!nnlng in the !ale llllO'• when
breeder reactors are upected to achltve
initial commercialization.
For example, the AEC said, a saving of
up lo $IO billloo -ill terms of 1974
dollan -could be achieved in the COit of
generating electrlclty between the late
19«>11 and the year 2020 if the breeder
industry is steadily built as envisioned.
That ii, the cornmi.saion explaloed,
generating colil would otherwbe rise
steadlly if the nation oooUnued. to depend
solely on coovenUonal ~-breeder
nuclear power plants and on plants
fueled by coal Ind other r...u !uela.
The fuels needed for such pr<aent-day
plants are steadily becoming tcarcer in
ecooomical recoverable quantities, the
AEC uld.
In contrast; breeder reaCton would
create more nuclear fuel than the y consumed. ,
They have been deacrlbed by the N-
admlnlatiation u offering America's
best preoent bet for comboWq eoergy
shortages ill the decades lmmedlately
ahead. '
The AEC said it eovisklM 400 breeders
in 1 oPft'aUon by the ,tum of the century
and SSO by the year :mi.
The commission made all these
forecasts in a draft envlronmental
statement covfl'inl the e D V i 8 i 0 De d
Impact of the icreatlon of a vast new
nuclear power Industry uUUzing reactors
of the breeder type, known technically as
"liquid metal-fueled brel'der reactors ."
The statement' was ordered by a
federal court last June as an indlrect
outgrowth of. a s u l t f11ed against the
AEC by an envirorunentalist g r o u p.
Environmeatalists have long opposed the
breed~ program.
Summing up the findings of a fow-·
\'Olwne, 2, 2 0 0 ·page environmental-
impact report, 'IbJolas A. Nemzek,
director of the AEC's division of reactor
research and development, told a news
conlerpice: : .t
Erom,..._el
OVERRIDE. • •
amounts all distri¢s spend per student.
Under SB\M), the restricted spending
for ADA in Laguna would meen a 31-
cent levy decrease next year in the school
tax rate from the 1973-7t level.
So while school costs are going up due
to inflation, Laguna is prevented by law
from mee1ing those cosb without the
override, Woodington sakl.
The action by the board wu 1.aken
after several study sessions on the ICbool
financial situation.
" "The main oonclusion .. .Is that a tu11y
developed breeder economy -which
woukl greatly auaroeat · our energy
rMIUl'Ct.S -would;not'bive a significant
advene environmeotal impact and would
meet envitQmnental quallly and public
safety standards."
The AEC report aaJd breeder reecton
would ~eue even amaUer quantltles of
nd.loactive materiabl to the atmosphere
than do cx:mveotimal nuclear plants.
hemlP .. el
CHARGES ...
at.ate comctions oHielall this year.
He said the jail now bas ·more than 850
Inmates ml only 790 beds available. The
number in jail swells to more than IOO on
theweekeoda.
"Our medJ.cal lrf:a already c1oesn't
comply wtth the alate sWldards Ind this
will be Indicated among other thing• In
the cornctions report," waUace aald .
Sbertff Mualcl< aald the COl1lir1lcl10n wort oo a fourth Dool ol the jail bulldillg
is near completion but it must be stalled
lo do any good.
'Jbe apADsion would swell the counJy
jail's capacily lo more than 1,100 and
would Include addltlooa lo medical
personnel and cooking laclliu ...
'Wallace said about 35 of tbe' new
employes be la ~ would be armed
deputies and the remolnder would conalsl
ol cooks, mttleS and other penomel
needed lo mainlAin the jail 11111 Ila
inmates.
biscuuion of the growing number of
lrunates broke down into a philosophical
d e b a t e , ' .during which Cowity
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas
said the money couJd better be used to
build parks.
"If all tbe programs we have to divert
these people into useful actlviliu aren't
working then maybe we should stop
them," he said.
Wallace told the panel that a great
majority of the prisoners now in jail are
· "hard cues" and they are the ooes who
are taking space.
He said of the 50,IXX> people booked last
year, 34 percent were out In eight hours,
another 82 percent within two days and a
total of 80 percent of all prisoners were Out in five days.
'lbe remaining 20 percent fill all
available jail space and are hard core
criminals who Would not be rehabilitated
if they had the chance," Wallace said.
Wallace said the averare jail Inmate
today is under 25 years o a~ and "far
more violenUy 'militant" than those five
or 10 years ago. .
During the dlocusalon ol add!Uonal
hiring of minorities and women, Curiel
sald Musick'• record "is the poorest of
any department in the cotmty."
He said the Department now has 24
women (19 Anglos, two black and three
Melican -American) and 359 men (343
AngSo, tYt'O black and 14 Mexican-
Amertcan).
See This Assemblage Of'
Henredon's Folio Eleven Collectio~ I·
Inspired From 17th & 18th Century
French end Chinese Styles. These
Out.tending Pieces Fit Beautifully
Into Almost Any Decor.
Henredon t--r-
'l'htte wre indications that even U
Ubya Ind Syria rtluse lo go aloog with 1
declslon to lift the embarlo, tbt 1even
ot!ltr Arab ntllona planned ID ao ll1n>uch'
wtll1 It.
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREook--WOOi>MARK-ICAllASYAN
1bt Allb oil embo,... apllllt Iba
Unli<d Slota WU tmpooed be<aOIO ol
U.S. _.of lsntl ....... Ille Im
Mldlle !est war.
Al lhl Sllurday mceUng of Ibo world's
oil -rllni countrleo, milllllen will rm.. the prtcea of crude, whldl bovt
tripled In nvo monlha, J>Ulldlll up
g110llne J)!icea In ...,. countries bV
..... than 100 pm:cnt.
'
WEEKDAYS & SATURDAYS MO le WO
NIWPORT & TORRANCI Ol'IN PlllOA YI 'TIL t
NEWPORT IEACH e
1777 WES1t:LDT DR. '°'2lllO
LA&UNA IEACH e
345 NOR111 COAST HWY..._
1
TORRANCE e
236'9 HAW?HORNE BLVD.
!Open s.-, U4:JOI 3'111-1211
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EDITION
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VOL 67, NO. 74, S SECTIONS, 52 PAGES -. -
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Today's Flaal
N.Y. Stocks-·
TEN CENTS
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-'San. Juan /!ilot Tells .ol C!l!O Si-/JBtings
-I By PAMELA ·llALLAN
Of .. MIY ,_ tt8ff
'Fred Fox believt! in flying saucen,
beauoe ~ Is believing.
lie has boob on them, plctur.., and
hu penonally seen them throughout a
lengthy career as an aviator.
And be expects io aee them again.
Fox, who lives ln San Juan Capistrano,
bas been a pilot for 11 yean, the first
seven with the Navy and the last nine
with a major commerdal airline.
Nixon
His lnf<ft!t In UFOs began durln& the
early 50s when the fint sightings were
publicized.
"Natural curklslty got me Into this,"
sakl Fox. "But f have alw•JS believed
that there are mere life forms to tbe
unlvene than us dOwn bert on earth. 0
He began his otudy by' orei>aring a
tbesb on the ~ldl\y of uro· ...... rta.
tal<lng a pooltl,. approadl. lie followed
through with Jutemlve r es e arc h ..
acqulrin& allde:s and materlal from the-. -. . " -•.
Aerial P b e n o m e n o D Research
Orgaoizalkil'I and other IOUrcet.
He also uood his O"'l eyes.
"'I've frequently made sightings while
ftytng," sakl FoL "J see the extra·
terrestri&l vehJdes lo their blgher state,
DOI -..Ily their phyllcai state."
He aald IDOlt Oyfng 11ooen can
functkln ·m tewral dimenatonal levels
and camouflage, their appearance.
"The ones 1 aee resemble clouds." he
~plained. "MOit have electro-magnetic -
propulsion systems. This causes a cloud·
like erfect around them."
Fox has his O\YTI viev.·s on why beings
rrom other planets are observing us .
"One prime reason is our primilive and
adolescent use of nuclear weapons and
energy S>urces." he said. "All that
testing we did in the allllOlphere caused
a number or conditions we don't
appreciate."
He believes the sightings that took
(See SAUCERS, Page Zl
.
W ... , . . '.:: 1· --on -Surrender
-. . . . -.
Tapes to HohSe Panel
AIRLINE PILOT SAID HE FREQUENTLY SIGHTED UFOS
Fred Fox Believes We Are Monitored by Alien Beings
S.heriff' s Office Rapped
On Hiring of Minorities
. .. -I
..;.. , • ,/>_ • -t
By WILLIAM 8CllUlllER discmslon at the biidget meeting u an °' .. Deltf '""" ..,. outgrowth of personnel and minority
The Orange County S h e r i fl ' s birio( .-is. .
Qi'partment was sharply c r I t I c I z e d Sberlfl's Capt. Wil¥:£•m •""""· wbo Is 'l'f1Ursd"1·1or allegedly falling to bring Its ,.. ·•·-ol the , ·;-T, j:,·1, said ~ty wo,k force up to par. -.......... .. t.;...._ 1 condition.. are so !lad now .ithat some )f'he .charges were leveled by C.ounty ruirts of t'ite ;~it wO:i•t be approved by Affirmative Action Coordinator' Ramon ,... T"' Ciriel during initial budget deliberations state corrections oilictals this )'ear. rtr_ nat fiscal year. lie said the jail now has incn than 850
.£urie) said the department is not only irunates and only 760. beds avaUablt. The
nmniDg the risk of losing federal grant number in jail swell•to more Uaan too on
money but alao may be investigated by the weekends. • "Our medicai area a•-·,;,, doesn't tba Justice! Department and Equal "_, Employinent Opportunities Commission. "'mply with the stale standordl and this
u1 lfOUld say that they are at least will be indicated-among other things in
subject to a cutoff In federal funds il tho correctiool report," Wallace said.
... gress is not seen," Curiel told the Sherlfl Maslct said the coutruction
pthering ol I a w olllcen and aJWliy work on a fourth floor ol the jail building
bUdget expert.a studying the Sheriff's is near completion but it mmt be stalled
reg~ for lhe coming year. to do uy good.
·briff James Musick is asking for 1be expansion would swell tbe 9)UlltY
f«-5 niUlion next year -up from a total jail's capacity to more than 1,100 and
o(: $12.8 million last year. would include additions to medic.al
Much of the increase v.·ould go toward per900Del and cooklng facilities.
biiing 99 new people in the department, Wallace said about 35 of the new
of -which more than 50 would staff a employes be is seeking would be armed ~jor addition to the overcrowded. deputies and the remainder would consist
~nty jail. · of cooks, nurses and other personnel The jail facilities became a topic of (See CHARGES, Page Z)
Irvine Schools Plan
•
J ..
Earlier Start Monday
• School starting times in the Irvine
Unified School District will be 30 minutes
.artier beginnlng Mooday, tru..tees
decided this v.·eek..
'!be eotire di.strict operatloo, Including
bus sctiedules and release times, will be
affected by the declsloo.
If a atudent now catches a bus at 9
a.m., for example, ht must catdl H at
l ::IO a.m. •lartini Mooday. ~ dwlge is a return to the scbedule
In effect pdor to January 11.
Only trustee Norman Gimberg opposed
the switdl to the original startini time.
He lrguai that 'the dlstrlot &boWd
remain on the exi.stlng limelsble until ;t
mates a permuent dedsion on bow to
handle Daylight Saving Time """t Y<M
However, Supertatendent Stan C.Orey
coovlncod a majority ol lrulleel that tbe
• current scbeduJe presents a hardship 1o
many te,cbers and students Who have
altemm>. actlvities di>rupted by late ..--.
Crude Oil
Price Hike
Forecast
VIENNA (UPI) -With the poalble
li!tlng ol the ~~It agala!ll~
Uniled Sialel ""'!Pill ln'tl,le l»clil!.m.I,
the Organization of Petnoleum Exportln&
Countries (OPEC) wm r«ommend
Saturday that the price of crude oil be increUed Apil 1, OPEC officials oald
today.
'Ibey also said they believed an
armouocement ea.sing the Arab oil
embargo against the United States would
be made in Vienna over the weekend.
In Beirut, the Arab press reported l
today that Arab oil mlni.sters postponed
CLASHES FLARE AT GOLAN
HEIGHTS. Story, P• 4
FUil CRISIS ONLY
THE BEGINNING? Pogo 12
announcement ol a decision on lifting the
oil embargo against the United States
WlW Sunday in ao attempt to reach
Wtanimity oo tbe is.sue.
The semi-official Cairo newspaper Al
Abram said ln a report from its
correspondent who covered Wednesday 's
oU ministera conference in rbe Libyan
capital of Tripoli: 1
"The ministers adjourned'until SWldaY
to ailow the oil ministers of Syria and
Libya to consult their goverrunents in the
hope that their next meeting in Vienna
(See Oil., Page Z)'
Streakers Hit
Posh Eatery
Three young men who waiters
said "looked like football players"
streaked through Newport Beach's
Stu!t Shirt Restaurant, 2241 W •
Coa!t Highway, about 11 p.m.
Thursday.
"'Ibey ran through the cocktail
lounge yelling, 'cbers surprise!' "
said an employe.
He said the nude men ran al'Ollld
the bar a couple of times and out
lhe door, apparently into a waiting
car.
Fuel. ~i~~k
2 Gunmen Take 8,500 Gallons
PASADENA (AP) -Two armed men made o!! with 8,500 gal·
Ions o! gasoline today after hijacking a tanker truck .and kidnaplng
its driver, police said. 1 The driver was kidnaped while ittemptmg to deliver a· load o(
fuel to a service staUon In the predawn hours, said pollce Lt. -Jack
Garrett. · • · · " -.:
Garrett sild the tw~ unidentilied men bound, gagged and
blind.folded driver Kenneth M. Harbour, 50, aDd took lifrn awaY
by.cJ_r. ~e was left unharmed at a residential inte~on in' nearby f~saia-u ;.~id -ilo't1Et. ~· l•p4 lff ....
-empty-in the aia about 45 minutes l•ter.
$100,000· Care Facility
•
App~oved by UC Irvine
A new 111111,000 dlild care facilily for
UC lrvlne was approved Thursday by the
camp111 plannln( oommlt ....
The doclsloo Is significant bee.lust a
l!O•P of porenls '"-dllk!M attended
the niotlnc fadlily, '"lbe Barn
Pre:tcbool," bad filed a compWnt about
lls coodltlom with the Calllomia Board
ol R<genis.
The complaint waa acheduled to come
before the Regents today In their
meeiing In San Franclxo,
Lury Agra!\, the parent who llled the
complaint in February, said the parents
are sati.slied with tbt decision.
'!be .... facillly Is adloduied to open In
October and wm bi built c1..e to the
presel'lt IC:bool ·-in an ~ barn on a
farm behind Verano Place graduate
aludellt apartments.
"In the meantime, the paren!s
advisory board wW be work!ni with the
admlnlstntion to. reduce the rem.ainipg
health hazards at the Barn," Agran Aid.
About 48 preschoolers from tWQ.. ~ a
half to fiv!' yean old attend the achooL
The pamns' "'mplalnt pointed out tl>!t
the facility, once the ofll<e ol architect
William Pereira, did DOI bave lnd09r
running water, adequate 'toilet facllltles
and accaslble emergencyimedical care.
They alao compl~ned ol _the dirt rood
leadln& up to It. wblch In nlny freatber
--;mpuaabfe to heavy
vehicles ouch .. fire engines.
'!be Pl!"Dia pay l*J to fll5 a month
for cbUdcare at the . center, which
provida • pereeqt of the OO!t to run the
ochool. •
The rut comes from 1 t u d e n t
llOVemmeDt alloc:ationa o/ f ... paid by
all 1tudeota. .
'One for Road'
Leans to -Trouble
For'Coitnty You-tli
-'ll!m',tc 1!9'n!&lly nothing Wl'9t. wlth
Jiavlng a drink in the etecutlves' bar
~n. yo;u qll in the . ffices of Industrial
and. commercial coocems In the-Irvine
area. ~P~trol~n Dennis ~fcNe'.ely a~ed
someone who did today, bowever,
because tt wu 3 1.m. (after hounl he was 17 (under-age) and the Plant at Z323
E. Mam St., was closed.
The Sanls Ana lllgh School "·dor ""' booked Into ~e Oounly Juvenile ll>ll
on a dlar(e ol burglary and lack ol
parental control ·
Plant security petrol oU'.ce.r Shawna
Caldwell laid ahe called p o I i c e
Immodlately after hearing the raUllng
ol -. and Ice cube>.
Oftk!er McNeely met the IUlpKt com.-
Ing out with a smile on hiJ face and the
boss' business card In his pocket. • ·At that point, -moved starting t1mea IO minute& abead (later) so that
atudenta wouldn't hive to walk to achoo!
Iii the duk as a rault oC ihe new
natiooal ,... 'romd Dayllghl Saving
Time. ·Honver, !""""" ffcided that the sun
ii ""' comlag up early ~ to n!turn
to the old adlodule In effect before
la1J01Jr1 H.
Raci.ng 'World Se1:9ies' .o~ -~~~~t
-.
YMCA Tiny Tot
Program Offered
OpGap lllll are avallablr In the Tiny
Tot -ol the Wllebocl< Valley
yMCA ... -'"""3 to 5, 5-tODI IN ICbeduled from t to 11
a.m. -lloadaJ and w_, a1 the Y at JllJJ Oraap Avt., &l Toro.
Ar1I and crafla, -· -· -· 111111 -actl•ltlol .,,, Incl-In tbe
prHdlool -am.~ r.r the
-llDJ 11111 lorm bellnl -15. -~...,--b)I Caflllll 1111 y a\ -
•
•
BJ llUDI Nl&Dll&•.sa ... ..., ......... Sqabl'\i...... tbt -.... lhnlolll ..... bock ~ "~: -""' f/5.pound frame • -polltlon oatbt abo....,."oathe ----..,,. -.......... drll off 1111
-dprllle llld flnltted his movie emnera. He wu apprehensive.
'I'-Clll/oml•• nn llloodJ land on
their -tart
He --nod -~ llil boy&, ,_., Plecb and Edwanl Janean
... thin lo IJiht wltb them. After all
they ...,.., -lo -the plpldn
wit.Ii tbtlr --1111 -olde ol ~
TIU WU 1111 md -eomlO( up
tblll ---And .-. Ille -ol --r*'loatbo-
•
'lbe. "world sehies" begins tonight and
nmr. tbn>up Sunday In Costa Mesa. It
wUl be beld In a stadium at the Orange
Couoty FailJl'OUll'fs wbidl looks like It
lbnnlt bocauae oomebody left the
opr1nlllen on too long.
But the l,000 or 10 fans who are e&IJ«!ed tonigbt mu'I Interested In
football. 'Ibey ,,;Ji be comlng tor the
wwld series ol spe<dway motoreycle
111Ciog.
It's ailed USA vs. tbe World and for
pd reuon. 1lle best rac:m from EnaJand, Aaatralla. New z e I 11 D d •
Scolland and Polaod ·wlll be there to -up on the Amertcon ...,....__
And Twtggy, a re1ln!d crtmlnal polke
-· "' In C6llfonlla rtpl -to -the cradl Pollsb teom and to
........ tblllp .. ''Dotldna .... -· ..
..,,. --the liist u.., anY l'lllllb r-. ba,. -in the llnlte.:I
.
Kowalskl-bopes .;i, boij can adjU!t
quicllly enough to clemonsttate to local
raclfll I.au why Polilh riden are curren~,r· t1iO best In the world:
~ Pl«h, at 21, Is almdy tsbbed,by
ant .. ftfi to t>e the -woria'• .......... .-He ..., tl!t •Potlsh
clan• • lil 'lrl ltn ml 'might ha•• ...... die -Id Cl'OWll In his .... COll1lry Jut Seploraber ...,. ~ not for a .,..., In
his !Mt rldi. .
Pl«ll wa Imocked oll while In the lead
and --befn in the champ!onsbtp nmoll U the ref.,.. badn1 ..-a
""""· lnllOod ....,llrymon J • rz y s-tiel became -Id dlampioo. ··"·-"--aial<hel ... Ille -....... 1llo Slal Oor.-dub tor ""1c:ll
-rtde Ill Poland. ~ qaI.-...
not • -11• u Pl«!I. be ls !!ila llACEllS, ..... l
' "
HasNotlm1g
To Conceal,
He h1sist s
CHICAGO (UPI ) -Saying he ha!
nothing to hide, President Nixon refused
today to give m lo demands by the House
Judiciary CommiUee for U tapes It
Wtf'll for ill inquiry into whether
grounds exist for impeaching him.
ln ,a question-afld..amwer a e s s I o n
before the Ex'X."llti~es· Club of Chicago,
Nixon aaid giving the House committee
aJ1· 1t demanded could lead to"1. delay or
months "and perhaps years" before the
impeachment questio:i is resolved.
To applause, he repeated his St.ate of
lhe Union declaration, "One year or
Watergate Is enough."
The President also salL he had no in·
tention of resigning because he is not
guilty of Watergate charglil and a resig-
nation would weaken the presidency and
"would forever change rur fonn of
government.''
, "I will not be a party to the destruc-
tion or the presidency of the United
Stales," Nixon said.
He contended that if he resigned now
under fire, future presidr~ts could be
forced from offi~ if they become un-
popular or on unsubstantiated charges
brought against them.
Nixon said presidential advisers v.·ould
be reduced to "'a group of eunuchs" if
they felt their confidential conversatioM
with the chief executive could possibly be
made public, holding them to public
criticism if their advice was wrong.
He said Thomas Jefferson waged the
same battle to preserve t h e
confidentiality of the office.
Hwxtreds of demonstrators, both for
and against Nixon, waged a noisy verbal
battle of chants, songs and blaring music
outside the hotel where Nixon spoke.
The pickets challenged eacti other with
banners reading "Throw the Bum out''
and "God I.Aves Nixon'' and tried to
out.shout each other with chants 06
"Impeach Nixon" and "We Wan t Nixon.~
Nixon's voice quavered at times as he
leaned into the microphone in the
crowded ballroom fielding the questions
of some of the most prominent
bmines:!men in the Midwest.
Rep. Peter W. Rodino (D-N.J.),
chairman or the judiciary committee,
backed by the senior Republican on the
(See NIXON, Page Zl
•
or .. ge €:out
Weather
Fog and k>w cloUdi night and
morning l»un with mostly sunny
afternoons Saturday. s I i g ht I y
cooler. Lows in the low 50s to-
nighL Higbl Saturday 74 to 77.
INSIDE TODA.V
Staff Writer Tom McCann
retritw.s a New Orleans jau
a.lbuJt~ fn todaV-1 \V ttkendtr •
Tht record uw produced b11 a
uc~l rvint E.'ngltlh proftuor and
recorde'd in London.
(
I
1 I % DAIL t PILOT JS
'nairj Gift: -
= .t\Degatioq~
Reiterated:
I,
KANSAS CITY (AP) Federal
lnvestlgators !'la.Ye received t.esUD'iony
that-thet Clalnr tendl to supp;it an
alfegilion that offlclala o! lhe rialion'1
largest dairy oooperatlve Ull!UCCel8fully
tried to pay POO.IXKI to Nixon hmd-ralser
Herbert L Kalmbach of Newport Beach .
'Ibey allege the money was to be u,,ed
to klD a government aotJ·lrust suit
agaimt the cooperative.
Kalmbadi, in Newport Beach, has
declined commmt on the allegatk>n on
grOunds that he is currently discussing
the matter in detail wlth Watergate
pn>ben.
Meanwhile in K a n s a ~ City, 'Bob
•
• Winter Wonderland
• • ' -•
SAUCERS
l:
•••
. • -~ -
place !Nt Seplember wore pceclj>ilated
b1ao ~ino~p)eii1A
-Tenneoiee '!Mt ca-...ai.tlot(Miibce.
"'lbey're coocemed th8t our misuse or
atom.Jc energy will endanger otber life
fomu and they are a1IO concerued about
us as a civilization and thii Planel ln the
scheme of things, 'lbey're. watching us IO
we won 't blow our planet apart."
Fox aald he never has ~n contacted
by a being from another jilancl but he'd
like lo be.
"'Ibey usually conlact people who are
scared lo death," said Fox. "Yet there
are plenty .of others who are prepared to
act 1n a rational manner if contacted."
He said televtslon programs like "star
Trek" and "One Step Beyood" have done
a kK to prepare people to accept the fact
of JUe on other planets and to help them
undentaod bow tbese coolacla might be
made.
But tbe greatest aource of Information,
accordJng to Foz:, Is the Bible.
TWO RICHARDS MEET
Moyor D1!1y With Nixon
A. Ully, form er pollUcal treesuttr ol the
co-op, the AsM>Ciated Mil k Producers
Toe.. has testified that he overheard
other top CCH>fi officials discussing a
S300,000 f~· · half from the milk
producers and half from two other huge
dairy l'O-<lps that· also faced antitrust
lrOIJbles. ~ ··•
Timberline Lodge in Mount llood, Oregon, is cov-
ered With sbow up io its third DoO~. Heavy snow-
fall has brought over 300 inches of snow to the
area. The depth is the second hi ghest since 1956.
1'I believe in God as a aupreme being,
as a crea¥ve force," said FOL "To.say
we are the only life forms 1n the universe
is to limi' God."
He sa.ld ilf one ls to believe in the Bible
literally, iii the ascensiori of Christ, for
example, 6"e must project Ills awareness
to the Po&Siblllty of life on other planets
and lhe.ir visitaUon lo earth. Thia ls a
point be stresses In the lectures be gives
to groups ln the area.
From Pagel
NIXON .•. Lilly a1so hu tea1mec1. that the a>op's
general manager, .Geroge L. Mebren.
said <he ,wanted to 1pe.ik to Kabnbach •
about lhe money. •nd that Lilly helped co· n' cert Car lied arrange a telephone C'O n v er I at Ion a FromPogel
panel, Rep. Edward Hutl'hinson of
lttichigan, insisted . 'this week that the
House has an unchallengeable right t.o
materiaJs from White House files in
fulfilling its consUtutional role or
det.ennining whether Nixon coounitted
"bigb crimes and misdemeanors."
between the two. · ·
1nvesliptorc•re 11e11eved to hove • B'y#· · .. sa· ·ddleb-a·c: ·k · , te1epbooe minpqy'·recon1 m ai Call
RACERS ON COAST . • •
between MeblWl and ICalmbacb• oaiAprll • .. -extremely consistent and al!O of world
4, 1112. .• ·-~ Ba·:~.\_.,~ :n La.g. iina' championship caliber.
'Ibll iJ the -date .. on which M!hren 1£U ., · One .reasop the Polish riders are so
• algned 3> checks, with payees left blank, ' good LS because t h e y have more
totaling $150,000. . 1be Saddleback eonege oonctrt band opportunity. lo practice than riders from
It has been chaf1l'd in liearsay and chamber on:llestra will join force.. other naUoos, say Piech and Janean.
tettimony that O>Op' OUlcials waited to Sund to nl f Both work in the machine hp of a get word from Kalmbldl about wblch· ay 51ve a ree concert at• Jbe large tractor factory in their hometO'Wil
' dummy polltlcal committees tflefr nioney Laguna Beach Hlih School Auditorlll!Jl. of Oonow, but are allowtd to lalo! thre<
· should be funneled through but that 'Ibe 3 p.m. perfonnance alao ·will afternoons off a week to practice at the
Kalmbech backed out of the deal and feature 'Ibereaa Smlth, a aenlor violinist local track.
said be didn't want the money. 'Ibe at •Mission Viejo High School and a ~ 1factory has its own speedway
checks that Mehn!n algoed April 4: were ~addleback student through, the W,W club and the •bikes, made i n
' later vokled and were never paid. achoo! honors program. Czechoslovakia, are supplied to them
Investigators for the Senate Watergate Sbe will enroll at Sadd1eback as a fu11-free of charge, as are mechanics to take
committee and the Watergate 1peclal Ume atudent next fall. care of them. •
pl"OltCl.ltioo are invsatlpting i be 1be balJd ii directed to' Monte LaBonte KowaJski says the riden get a
poalbillty that the ao blank cbeCb for and the chamber orchestra by Peter Il).inimwn of six hours practice eac'n
' $5,000 each were Intended as payment fo Foumier. ,. .....,i, tn add 'tlon to·~ ctl lhe t Presklent Nixoo's . campe.jgn · v I a Mil!i_Smitb, who .bas been l"Jnember.of · 1
1o1n: pra ce Y ge Kalmbach the P.aclfic Palisades S Y m P h o n Y running wtekly events in Russia.
llW1iJ>t i.. Monil, farmer ...o.wr of Orchlllra and· lhe Orange: County Young Czechoslovakia, G<rmany and in their ·tho~ Ml111 . -· e<>op, ·•teoufted 1'!iilblrmooic llrdialra, ta stud)1nl .. w!th ~T~i, -bas a ....... ,... school publlcly this wee!< that e<>op prM!deat .,Mn. Sllaroor.l!ollan!i of Million .Viejo. , . -• ..,...~-'·
John Battertroc1t>·'11kl..1·blm Kalmbach ·'' . She.-.wiD ,,_r0rm as , 'the-< ioloi41•• in ilnd there are 15 to 18 rnacbines in each v· aJd1 ~~~.,,,__.. n.. ·J u., . dub. Not all of ,...,. are hrind<iew but had ogreed to moloe•*9·111KltrulhullJ~go " .......__,..,.... ""''1"'1 thett Is no probi;;;;,'t"itett•·• a i'lde <lit a away'" for a P00,000 paymmt,·hol 11tat" ·Other· pl.cu from lhe dlamber • .,. Kalmbach changed bil mind because of orchestra include "Zwel s t u c k e , • • machine," insists K~Lski.
bad publicity owr ~Mmtn.1Mntioa'1 "Daocel from Henry VIII," and Jn fact, spee<;tway raCUlg has ~me a b8!!dlltti-Jl( the l'!l' lll!lllrUlt cut. "Sinfonietla." •• · . • -. national lpOI'! m Poland. Rarely is there
Morril-re l6iit 1Ut11ert>rGjjt ~ .... 'Ille._.~ will ~re, e n t Y race whit'n falls to draw less Chia.to;~ 11.Jl'l2, one~'l!fter ~~.'~Ylil ," ''Div •• 1lmento," 15,fl?> spectatorl ~ the
Melu;C .i,..,i thl:lll checU Cllltlnn !'°ililfll~" -. Marilyn S.mple at . ~· fll.J(attowtce, IS often ~--~"d ' -"'"-~ hu ~~1~ --·tym"""'" and~'ecti. f~·-"W t -mled to,ta,1111,000 <ilp@lty Muc:~ . .,...t~•i-~rlJcl~ ~ ... ~~-Swld~ Sto~' Kl Oil.! ~1'.... es • ~'Ibere Ii O:i\sidetlible induCimtflt for ~·g "'""'!"'l 1'!'" r W•• I C" e 11'.• • ridenm'win:IJldffiOllO ',i&fr.:iJV.passOO
an "PJ'Ol'lunl~:\9!•1!'8~)lie denlol Uiid<I) -~ • ·1 out foe points won d.J;g"niiidicS both
oath.-~· : • ~ · ., F: .. ~-p l at home and abroad. ~ · ... ::. !·.. ·~~re• age --
'We TIP'. Week CHARGES •.. From Pagel
on, ... . P I ' d needed U>.malnlaln the Jail and Ila
Kowalski says Polish speedway racers
are allowed to travel freely and.,that
Polish fans like to tee foreign riders at
thetr own track.!.
Kowalski, v.•ho c o n d u c t s his
conversations with other members of the
international team in Gennan because
nooe of the Poles speaks Engl~. stopped
this interview in mid-sentence as a crowd
or riders Involved in Thursday's practice
rushed lo one of the turns.
A solitary alcohol burning engine
droned around the track, never v.•avering
in tone, runn ing flat-out even in the
comers, showering the curious with a
stream of grit.
Even before he got to the crashwall
Kowalski knew who It was. "Piech," he
annoW'lced wirn a proud smile. whO else
could go flat out througb the corners?
And there was Zenon Piech on an old
war-horse borrowed from ex·world
champ Barry Briggs, whipping it through
the turns, shooting oU the crasbwall like
a billiard ball-Poli.sh polisb all the way.
A different, v.·ell·runing machine was
all be apparently needed. And if Jancarz
can get the hang of things by the tilne
the first race ts flagged off. the Polish
joke wfll be oo 1be 1an wbo dares i.u·ooe.
0 'lbe whole thing ls tied to the
destruction of AUantis nofem!d to in lhe
Bible as the Oood,n be said. "Mankind
was wiped clean on this planet and so
certain peop~ came ~d.gu.i~~ ~·"
He said they came tO give men on this
backward planet a moranty' and a
spiritual basis for life which they had
already achieved.
"The e,vth represents a type of penal
colony, a place where we are confined so
that we can't interfere , with the higher
scheme of things," he said. "UnW we
show a spiritual and moral appreciation
of higher Ute concepts we'll be forced lo
remain here."
"After all, the commandment we
violate most often is 'thou shaJt not kill'.
No one wants us out lhere traipsing
around causing trouble."
Bill· Studied
01i KUI1iaping
SACRAMENTO ( U P I )
Legislation po81ing a ltll0.000
rewara for the arrest a n d
conviction of perDLS Involved. in a
J>Oiltical kidnaplng In which the
A number of Democrats on Uie
committee, and some Republicans, sakl
they were ready to subpoena '" tapes if Nixon refuses to furnish t.h e m
voluntarily.
Nixon said the White House hu turned
over "several caseloads" of docuinents
lo the Judiciary committee, with
information ranging from the price of
hamburger to import quotas.
He said the committee was asking for
42 more tape recordings, m o r e
documenui and "an index of every
document in the Whi te llousc over the.
past five years."
He said that to subm it to this would be
to grant a "fishing license" to go through
aJI presidential files "to (ind out whether
there is a poMibility some aclion might
have been taken that might be an
impeachable off~."
Nixon declared he had no intention of
doing that because he said It would
weaken the presidency.
Mucli at Steak
111 lrishParade
Saddlehack Council ~~':';:;.:,~,.ha. been Intro.
sen. H. L. ruchardson of Arcadia , P At the end .of the Mission Viejo SL
To Meet Tonl"ghl a Republican candidate for the U.S. atrick's Day Parade Sunday, a lucky winner will take home a side of beef Senate, said his ~sure (SBl86l), given away by rhe El Toro High School
The Saddleback Recreation Council, introduced Thurs d a Y' was Music Boosters.
formed to help solve vandalism problem prompted by the Patricia Heant Other prizes offered In the fund.raising
and work for free recreatloO, will have kidnaping. project for the El Toro m u s i c
its second meeting at 8 o'clock tonight at "This bill should flush out from department include a round trip for t"'-o .
lhe Los All I t edi under the rocks some of the sos a erm ate School to San Francisco and gift certificates to library. • revolutiooarles who are spreading · I nd d th and kl Buffums, Daisy Patch, Fly Trap and the ,, The council includes s t u d en t s , VJO ence a ee • unto Wet Seal. ,
ltill Wue a tmanimous deds.ioo on 1Jftin2 educators, and concerned parents and grief, with their guerrilla tactics of Funds raised in the contest will go
the em .... -... ct"~~. More m' fo rmation may be political kkinapina11:," Richardson
-roe aµne :: Jnallies. ~ . ·: t.·
_ .... :,_, :-r ... DUow:iotr of the growing oUmber of In "Sadilieback inmate_s ~·e doWn Into a philoeophlcal
ii •
--d-e b a t e • during whJch County
It's "We Tum In ·Pusbera Weet'"-fn-ttte ~ Ad~trative Officer RQ_bert .Thomaa
Saddfeback V<tl\e:r, )!y 1pn>cfamattoo of aaid:.the -mooe .<Ould betteJ; be used to,
tbe Orange Cl'ot!itJ. f!ii~ qi SupervlsorJ. bui!i[ parks. · '• •
Tbe week wU • detlared by Fifth .... "U ,all the programs we have to divert
District ~ Ronald Cupers fO these people into useful actlvities aren't IJ>Oll!lht lbe~ abuae progauts of Ille -~•-••• ,~. ,...,, .. ,... ·•-Rancho Vie)O .ni.n~.Women's Club and WUlll.Wg ~ ~oa.ybe we :mM!'~.
the Miuloo Viejo EIH' Wfge.' -' t~," be said: ..
Both service groups parttclpa1" .in tile -: -~a<e told the panel lh<jt a g"'!t
"We TIP'. drug conllor effoil"'which Ria !!fl! the prt9oners oow ht Jail.are
offers reward!! froni $Ibo to '"$500 to • cases" and they are the ones·wbo
~ ... (tvlng iJ!.fonnattori leadtDC't'!~ ..• ~~ ~~g.space.
arrest· aOO conviction of dOpe dealers._ He saii:l o{ the 50_,000 peqpJe booked Jast.
"As a father of five," Cl\flpers flili',1 year, 34 percent were out In.eight hours,
have a very personal concern about thf!,, another 6'2 percent within two days." and a.
J>!'Ohlem . If the tip _of some concerned total of 80 percent.of all pril!IOOers wefe ·
ciU:.e1t •• wou1d lead to the arrest ·_of even. out in five days .•.
one dape dealer In our area It WOUid · .. The remaining 20 percent !ill all
make Ulii entire effort .worthwhile ." available jail space and are hard core
More information about the "We TIP'' . climinils who would not be rehabilitated
program-?>: ·be obta~ by calling lf they hid the ~." Wallace said. 1\1~. Jact R~ieds of ~e Junior Worn-\\'allal:e said the average jail inmate
ens Oub r Bil! ~ ol the Elb todly Is under 25 yean of age and "far
Lodge. more vitilently militant" than those five
·--.. COAST , •
DAILY PILOT
TPll °''"" C-1 DAIL'f 'ILOT, w1111 ""left
" CllmblMil "'9 ,.....,,..u, It M 1h1l'ltd ll'r
IM Or .... CNJt 'lllHIWlllll c.m,.tnr. 5-·
,. .. eitnllnt .... ~. Meftd1y ""Wll'I
l'tlllt'/. IW C•I• • M-. ftftPOrl ltldl,
M""'llofftli lff«ll/~111" V1llly, L-Ollnll
l llKh, lnlfttl'-dlllt!Mdl llW Stn Ci.m.Mt/
.... ""!" c:.......... ~ •lfltlt "'8IOll1t
•ll!IM It M IW*I S.lllrCS.n 1N1 S-n,
""' "111t1--I llltlbll6'11!1f Nill It ti Jllll Wtll ''' ,,,..., c .. 11 ,,.,, .. , c.u..,"11, JUH.
llt1lt1rt H. W111'
,, .. 111111 .... ,.....lttllr
J,, .. II. c.,f'fo.,
Vic:, ,,....,. 11111 ~ MINtff'
or 10 yeafs agO.
Durin( the diSCUMion of additional
J}iri.ng Of. muioritles and women, Curiel
said Mus!~'s record "is the poorest of
any department in tho county.'
He said the Department now has 24
women (19 Anglos. two black and three
Mexican • American) and 359 men (34:3
Anglo, two black\ and 14: Mexican·
American). ·
Nixon's Soviet ' . " risi~ Prepared
' '
By K!-ssin.ger
CHICAGO (AP) -Secr'eiary of Stai.
llcnry A. Kilsinger win 1leCin talkl in
~ )(liidl 2$ .. pn!lllrltions lo<
Preftdent •Nl-'t visit to Ille SOvlet
Union lai<r tn Ille yw, Wbl1" !louse
omcillh ltllOllllced here today .
..-'lbe. l!JQOf,81deil1eflL made jointly here
and In the Soviet capilal, .. Id Kils1nier'1
cHeculltona: alto wouJ dccwer ''a review of
bilateral relationt and lnt<matlontl
mil ..... of-mutut• ~."
• ~r hid uid in WMltlnflon he
would be leovlns for Moocow Matdt 24.
lllJ trip Is in ae<onl wlt!I an --
iwelltd darilll -ForoJp -I• ~ A. Gromywo~ -vilM 111 ,,.,hfn,...
Ftb. 4,
I I
N11.0n it In Chlca10 to lddresa •
buslneseman'a gathering.
I
...... v .u.o;113 _. toward band unifcnns. The prizes wUI be
Press commeotaton said the nine obtained by calling Dennis Smith at 837· said. distributed at tre ~tission Viejo IM
members of the Oraanizatioii of Arab Oil 19116. • all th rad d Eipi:irting C.Owitries (OAPEC) who must 1....:=:.......------------'=="==========='-_:~e~r~e~pa~~·~a~wa~r~s~ce:'.r~emo~n'.:y:.. _
inake the cJedsion were anxious ·to avoid
any spUt in ranks. · •
There were indications · tbat even if
Uby~ and Syria refuse to go along with a·
decision io lift the embargo, the seven
otber Arab nations planned' to ao throuah
wftb IL .
The Arab oil embargo agaimt the'.
United Statei was imposed because of
U.S. support of Israel durina: the 1973
' ~fiddle East war. ·
At the Saturday meeting of the world's'
oil exporting t'OUlltries, ministers will
review the prices of'crude, which have
tripled in five months, pushing up
gfSOline prices in some COW'ltrie1 by
mote than 100 percent.·
'OPEC's 12 members, who produce 85
percent of world oil exports, decided in
Geneva Jan. 9 to freeze crude oll prices
unW April 1.
Iran's finance minister, Jams b Id
Amouzegar said that if by then the
industrialized nations of the West had
failed to take steps to curb inflation and
oil company profits, the exporters would
again increase the price of crude.
"These conditions have not been.met."
an OPEC official said.
Because of this, OPEC's economic
cornmbsioa, meeting in Vienna tbls
week, decided to recommend t o
members that crude oil prices ~be
increased April I, OPEC officials said.
Of the organizaUon's 12 members
represented on the conunisslon, only
Saudi Arabia opposed the move the
offlciaJ.s said. '
OPEC's members are Abu Dhabi.
Algeria, F.cuador, Indonesia, tran, traq.
Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi
Arabia and Veneruela. • /
On Swlday in Vienna, Arab membe"'
of lhe organiuUon, plus f.cypt and
Syrts. ani ldleduled lo cooUttue ta!kl.
adjourned in TrlJ>Oll Wedne9day, on
lifting the oil embargo aplnst Ille unJted
Slates.
. Arnholt Smith Sued
P!fOENIX, Arii. !AP) -C. Arnholt
Smilb. u -!tied SU D I e go
bt1t tFR'llD, wu nllMd ~ ln a
1$.I million IOtlt IUod by .,IJN: ~ley N-. llattk. ,,,. ·~· .i JD ·v.s. D1tril Cowl tn -
tltat SniJth,' formtr ~d of I ~ti
-llltim! ~ 1111 UJtllett_(lltet Holding ~.. failed to pay a Wrlft of
ahort·tmn notes lasued In 11'13 ror
amounil ranging from '350,0llO lo J:2
million.
-
. ~ See This Assemblage Of
Henredon's Folio Eleven Collection '
Inspired from 17th & I 8th• Century
French and Chinese Styles . These
Outstanding Pieces Fit Beautifully
Into Almost Any Decor.
Henredon re~
D~EXEL-HERITA6E--HENREDON-WOODMARK-KAMSlAH
• ,
WllKDAYS I SATURDAYS MO le Jc:ICI
NIWPORT I TORRANCE OPIN PRIOAYI 'TIL t
NEWPORT BEACH e
lm WESTCLDT DR .. 64.2-:n50
LA6UNA BEACH e
~ NORTH COAST HWY.L ... -6Mt
TORRANCE e
23649 HAwntORNE BLVD-
((tptn SundR.y 12-~:30) 378-.1279
•
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U.DLY P ROT-:..iDrmm AL PAGE
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Motives
• • l
.lo .... • • •
A prOpolll to 1c.11 fOI' 111 eleCtioa •en increasing • ._ at' the SaddleljOck Valley Unified School Oiatrtct
wu turned don by dlati1ct truate. last not -and _.,... .
. AP!>arently no one llnllt&IY ~ ~ tu over-
ride ~except teacbori, wllo iDillt 0.... the increase
'troU!d be needed lo uswe fuodJ for their 15 percent
propooed raise. "
M Trustee Dennis Smith pointed out lo teachers'
repi:-entaUvea, their motives fdr backing a lax h.1.k.e
ml&J>I be·queatloned by aome voters as tranaparent.
The Saddlebact dlJtricl alreidy bas the highest
l!Cbool properly tu In Orange· County -$5.94 on $100
assessed valuation. It probably is true, as teachers'
spokesman Jim Wehan said, peop[e are being well re-
paid for their l&rge investment -with good education
!or their cbUdren.
But dafNt of a tax eleCtloD eeul4 bring ·many nega-
Uve efiecls. II Is better to wait-JIDfll cbaJlces of ap-
proval are Improved.
A Good Start
The new Irvine City Council appears lo be off to
a promising start with the unanimous selection of Coun-
cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor as new mayor.
Since formation of the city two years ago, ~1rs.
Pryor has worked hard and contributed well to the coun-
cil, and has shown she is vitally concerned with the
city's welfare.
Also promising is the good geographical balance
on the new council and the good mix of personal taJ·
ents and civic involvement represented.
Questioned ,
complex, the question of whether to develop the city's
own fire and police departments, and whether to seek
a federal grant for a comprehensive transit system.
A jarring note u the council begins Its new year,
however, was the surprise candidacy for State Treasurer
of Councllman Henry Quigley. announced just three
<!.,a after bis reelection. If Quigley planned to seek a
st.ste poll he owed It. to the city and his many support·
era to make that aim known in advance of the councll
ampaign.
Sensible Comproniise
Irvine school trustees acquitted themselves well
when they were thrust into the uncomfortable role or
mediating between parents and their children on the
question of open campus.
Students, who have been working through admin·
lstntlve channels for more than a year to win the right
to leave campus at lunch, insisted that they are old
enough to be lreated like adults. After all, they argued,
many of them are nearly voting age.
Parents, on the other band, said that unsupervised
high school students have a marked tendency to get into
trouble. They predicted an increase in crime and drug
use If open campus was allowed.
The school board moved into this volatile situation
with a statesma n-like compromjse. Juniors and seniors.
trustees decided, could leave campus for lunch on a trial
basis. If the ·idea worked. it might be extt>ndcd to lower
classmen. If it failed . no one would have the privi lege.
I
Among the items facing the panel in the near fu-
ture are decisions on major developments such as \Vood·
bridge Village and the second phase of the industrial
The compromise. originally sug gested by Supt. Stan
Corey, was a good one because it recogni zed the lo ng
struggle by students for open campus. yet took into ac-
count the fears of parents that younger students aren't
ready f or it. Now it is simply a matter of seelng bow the
trial period works oul. SB 'You say this was their IJISt attempt at streaking?'
Secret of
Successful
Revolution
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
1'eupt1 at Large:
· 11>t only truly s~ful revolution
is one in which the new revolutionary
leader$ do not ~ for~ to he as
repressive as the regime they overthrew.
(By this standard, only the American
Revolution-precisely because it was
self·llmiled--may be considered a sue--cess.) .:r • • •
Distrust anr philosophy that pretend:I
to enunciate an "ultimate truth"-for.
it is the essence o( ulUmate truths
that they cannot be
verbalized without
'1>eing distorted and
misunderstood.
• • •
When I bad lhing
isn't working, it is
from an excess. and
you need less of it:
v.ilen a good thing
isn't \\-1lrking (such ~ as the democraUc process). it is from a
deficiency, and you need more of it.
• • • ~ -' How can one be "true to another"
before ooe has recogniz.td where the
_.dest part o( onesell resides?
• • • .....,,_ __ le who travel to go "sight-seeing"
ually more exotic sights than
ey see. • • • .
The most significant aspect of the
' 20th century, overtowerlng all other
changes. is that for the first time it
is no longer a while Christian man's
y/orld . • • •
U capitalism has failed , it is not
so much in the economic area, where
~tan predicted it would, as in the
educatiooal aru, where Montesquieu
feared il might. (Both the de!•nden
and the detractors of the system teem
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Odd that a woman standing tn line
v.1.th two small children 10 see The
Exorcist should become upset by
streakers nying by. Isn't that a
conflict of moral values?
J.A.
or_, •111 ~· .,.. _...,._, llr ,_.. ....... ..c .... r1ty ,....., ..
'l'llWS ..i ... ....,.11tr. SI"' rMr ...
_.... .. si..r °'"" l>tltr Plllf.
almost equally ignorant of Its merits
and its defects.)
• • •
Chauvinism of every sort ts merely
a way in which hxlividuals feel frte
to cloak themselves with a collective
sense or su periority that they would
be ashamed to assert individually.
• • •
Goethe expressed at an early age
what most of us never learn until It
is too late to make any dlffertnce:
"We are never further Crom our w1.shet
than when we imagine that we possess
what we have desired."
• • •
\\'hen a national poll or dramatic
critics asked me 10 name the greatest
American playwright, I a n s w e r e d .
"Eugene O'Neill, alas"-taking a leaf
from Andre Gide v.·ho when asked to
name the greatest French poet, replied,
"Victor Hugo, alM,"
• • •
People v.·ho regard themselves as the
most chaste also imagine that tbey are
the blest judges of obscenity; which
is like a teetotaler pronouncing on the
comparative quality of wines.
• • • • Socielies rebel against tyranny, but
when they are not instructed Jn wha t
to do with their freedom, they rebel
against liberty as well.
• • •
Americans who are fond or pointing -out
that y,·e were born as a "republic" and
not a "democracy'' are being as v.•illfuJly
obtuse about words as the bureaucrat
who insisted that a "small buslnusman"
must be Wlder 5-foot...f.
RVs Are Energ y Save rs
To tbc Editor :
A recent reader tabtlell recreaitonat
\'ehiclet the "real i" hop" Jnd your headline writer labeled the MaUbox col-
umn accordingly. Lets look at fact& ln·
stead of wild comments of the driver of
a small car.
[ ..... _MAIL __ B_ox ___ J
Lin.rs """' ,.....,. .,. .... _. Nlinn•llr
wrlltn tllwMI ffllW\' tllelr _..,.. lrl • ..,,t
., ltU. Tiit rltftt .. ~ lltltn .. '" -~ <H' .. 11'11 ... I• II ... ft ,...,,. ... All ltlttrt -•I Ill-.._,. II~ .... -1111111 ......... llut Mll'ltl
11MY 11t WllllMlll 9111 ,_t 11 Mllfkfftt ,_ It
-*· ..... ,... ....... lie """''"'"·
MANY RV'1 get In excess of 10 mpg.
something tbal ITIOlt medium sized cars
do not.• I own a mo to rho me and drive a
medium·slicd sedan. 11\e motorhome
gets better mil eage at 55 mph. They both "'° '71 DIOdeJs.. tlono: Driven clon"l n«d lllggered
Is Uio 1a11J ,.Uy ialorelled In .,..,, eertil'" alllion bulJoeM bouts.
savtor1 II 11, abt -It! a -ftoy do -atatlool it>at aell pa Ill
-· ~ 1t -ladl: tilt ._ inltead ol JDlllDlnp, fer
:.,.. • family ii ---la . -.. ....... lo -k too '""" to It!
o1tr RV ''" . ii'--U., one-fourth tile eleclticity uad at LEONARD JOHNSON
borne
-Use one-sll:th the e•• used at hOme
-Uae-lh lllo waltr uJOd al home
IF YOU are pina to singl e OM group
out for abu&e pleue look at all the facts.
WILLIAM F. LOWANC.E
Gu Neeb
To Ult Edl14r:
Jle ,..ir tdJtoriAl com-I 1111 pa Ill•
• '
To lht Editor: .
Qllvalry is DOI dead In Huntlnfllon
Beacb!
I wbh to J)llblicly uprw my thanka to
lllt sracloua ... ~..... wbo pulhfd my
car lll"""'1 lht. lonl line al walllnf con
(about 10) when I ran GUI of pa, In line.
In Ulla 1u-pan!Mtrlcken llmt IUCh
toUrtesy Is eaemplary.
ILA. TllRASllER
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Was Jtalie's Pay a Busine ss Expe1ase?
Presidential Income Tax Questions
WASAINGTON -Confidential White
Jiouse documents Sho\Y that President
Nixon. contrary to the statements put out
in his name. has taken an intens~
personal interest in wangling every
posslble tax deduction he rould get ay,·ay
v.·ilh.
He even inquired in 1969 about deduct-
ing his payments to his daughter Julie
as a business expense. He v.·antl'd to
count money he v.·as
contributing to her
support as 511Jary for
her work as a \\'hite
J.Jousc tour guide.
Yet the \Vhite House
had already put aut
publicity that she
v.·as a •·volunteer."
'fhe President also wanted a :ax
break for us ing the den al his San
Clemente estate for an office. He asked
what tax write-offs were available, too.
for pennitting others to use. his
Califom1a and Florida house!.
He thought he should be pennitted to
charge off v.'edding gifts, funeral sprays
and similar items, because he felt these
y,·ere "business ezpenses" lor a politi-
cian. ~lost of his entertaining. he also
contended. should be deductible. "He
\\'ants lo be sure." instructed aide John
Ehrlichman in a confidential memo.
''that his business deduct ions include all
allowable items."
THIS DIFFERS from the picture the
White House has tried to portray of a
President too busy to botht'r v.•ith the
details of his tax returns. Press
spokesman Gerald \\'arren has im-plied
Nixon v.as so preocrupil'd y,·ith the
presidency that he left the preparation of
his relums cntlrely to his lav.·yers.
The implication was that bis la""'Yers
""·ere really to blame for claiming {he
rontroversial -and pr!Wably illegal -
$576,000 tax deduction for the gift of the
Nixon papers to the government.
DOCU~IEf\'T'S now in the hands of the
Joint Congressional Committee o n
Internal Revenue ThxaUon. hc:n\'ever.
prove that the President was not at all
removed from the preparation of his
returns. On the contrary, he pulled every
possible string to increase his tax d~
duct ions.
Ehrlichman relayed the President 's
\vishes to E.d\\'8rd f\lorgan. the White
ffouse aide who tiandled the President's
taxes. For example, an Ehrlichman
memo. dated June 16, tm. asked
~!organ:
·'The President proposes to personally
pay Julie for her work in the Y.'hlte
House this summer and deduct it as a
busineM expen.,e. Would you please
d~tenni~e whether be can properly do
this .. •.
t.IORGA.N took the problem up with the
lnte.mal Revenue Service's Deputy Chief
Counsel Roger Barth who served as
political impresario for Julie. and Tricia
Nixon during the 1968 campaign and is
no"'· the Nixon man inside the IRS.
Barth responded a month later Y.ith 11
n1cmo. carefully stamped "Confidential."
ad\'ising : ''Legally y,•e mig ht justify
dedu ction as a husine~ expense for a
salary paid to Julie as a tour guide this
summer. llo\l'C\'Cr, for th: follov.infl'.
reasons. I "!OST strongly recommend
that this should not be done :
"IA) The amount involved is rather
small;
"tB) This is always a factual question
v.·hich could be raised on audit oC whether
she is neceaary to the taxpayer's
'business';
"(C) In addition to federal withholding
data y,·hich v.·ou\d get. Into the files at the
IRS, information v•ould have to be given
to the tstate) tax authorities and to the
Social Security people. There are too
many entities involved for this to be kept
confidential; ·
"(0) The ne-·spapers have made much
of !he fact that she has been acting as a
'volunteer.' I think the risk of e1posure
of a business deduction attempt Is too
great •.. "
BAR111 advised instead that the Presi-
dent should "make a gift at the end of
the summer to Julie. Although it would
not be deductible to him, it wou.IH be lax·
free to her."
The President apparently heeded this
advice. for the White Hou!e press office
tells us that the President never put Julie
on salary.
ln another memo, Ehrlichman asked
"torgan: "The President intend!: to use
the San Clemente house for official visits,
and he intends to use his den as an of·
fice for presiden tial acti vities. What
"'°Tite--0frs are available to him?"
Barth "'°·as a\90 approached on this
queslioo. He advised that •·a deduction
v.·oold be pennitlt'd for depreciation and
maintenance expenses.''
EllRLICll~1AN also wnntl'rt to know
about "the tax ronsequcncts of permit-
ting others to use the Florida and.
CaU fomla houses.'' Barth responded:
"We would have to estab\igh the business
purpose for the Pr~idellt with regard to
each person in\'ited to use the homes.
On lhe question of ded uctions for wed-
ding glft.s, funeral sprays and the like,
Ehrlichman noled : ''The President holds
the view that a public man does very
little of a personal na lure. Virtually all of
hls entertainment and activity ls related
to his 'business'.''
Agreed Barth: "! personally agree
\l'ith the idea that much of the
President's expense is related to his
'business.' As with the business use of his
residence. a careful system mu st be
established for keeping track of bwiin~
expenses ...
"S~tA.LL GIFTS by the President·
v.·hich are related to his 'business,' would
be deductibl e ... Note. hoy,•ever. that 1,·c
must give thought to distinguishin~
between activities and gifts related to
'being a President' and those related to
running for reelection."
Richard Nixon, as we nov.· know. took
every available legal deduction and at
least one $576.000 write-off "'°'hose legality
is questionable .
An Island of Calm • Ill the Crisis
SNICKERS GAP. Va. -God gave me
a little pieci! of primitive Ame1 ica here in
the Blue Ridge ~lountairui and ~1r.
Simon, the energy cz.ar, is helping me
keep it.
The bottom has fallen out or the
recreational real estate market and the
blessed day is thus
ezteoded ror the en-
joyment in privacy
of a place on earth
v.·hich is not greatly
changed since il \V!'IS
originally surveyed
by George Wash·
ingtoo.
The real eslAte
fever has subsided
with the declining level of available gaso-
line, and so there is no longer as great 1l
risk that the urban yearning ror second
homes in the mountains will upset the
balance of nature.
WE HAVE been saved, even, from the
PUNCH ,
=-
(rucHARD WILSO~
ronservationists. ov.·ing to the y,·ise
decision of the National Park Service to
move the Appalachian trail elsewher~.
Trail bike treks where walking v.·as in·
tended have thus been excluded from the
private property of residents on this
particular side of the mountain.
It has fortunately not come to the at·
tention or ~tr. Simon that this area has
been forgotten in the allocation of
available gasoline supplies. Once you
have arrived here. )1lU may not be able
10 return to the city because drought has
struck the local gas staUons in nearby
Round llill and Purcellvtlle. It Ls just as
well, though very distressing to
carpenters, masons, and other artisans
. who caMot get enough gas to carry them
to work at housing projects nearer
,.
~annoys me when they co ms in just to use the spittoon ...
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\\/ ashington.
In the nature of things. ho v.·ever, the
time will come wheo the local people v.·ill
take care of !heir own and there will be
enough gas for those rightfully entitled to
It by birth and place of abodt:. The others
can just stay a\~·ay. Manv native Virgin-
ians in this area felt that y.·ay about
outsiders long before the gas shortage.
A GREAT DEA.L of an1iety is felt that
nearby Berryville, the ancestral seat of
the Byrd famil y, Is dying and the gas
shortage will not help prolong the life of
the town. But Berryville Is being by·
passed anyway by a four-lane park9'·ay.
The attrition or small business h!ld al·
ready begun and the managen of the
supe.nnarket make sounds as if it y,·\11 be
the next to close up.
'M>ese signs are discouraging to smnll
toy,·n boosters, but they arc perhaps
short-sighted Jn failing to roe 1hat pro,:t·
ress may leave behind islands or e11lm
and contentment y,•hlch y,•i\I more thnn
ever anract those y,•ho wis h to get out or
the v.·ay of modem Improvement.
A survey or the developing sC<.'Ond·
home recreational arens. which is one of
the pbenomtna or the tlm6, suggests It
might be better just to hove A house in
one of the pleasant small communit1ts
already long established.
The Impracticality or modem Im·
provemenl Ill a "·en knov.1'1 irony, but
never more painfully realized than In O'I·
aminlng a very old dv.tlllng v.·hlch ha
been rebuilt to create an oasis of comfort
and cheer deep in a ~o'lldemess. "'lthout
these lmprove.mcnts and as It "u '6 the
first place, without reliance on brought-in
energy. the dwellin& y,ould be Uva61e lD
any kind or ms.ls.
TO SAVE OIL, ll!e baseboard hooting
90 txpen~lvl)ly Installed has been dllCOn·
ncctcd, tht wc\14Uppllf?d "'°ott.r &)'Item
has beecl cut off so ii. will nol fl't:t'Ul ard
hurst the pipes in the cunninG.IY oontri\'ed
bathrooms, kitchen and laundry. The old
log house stands on 113 hillside bone-chill~
ing ('Old y.•here once it was cozy with
"'°'OOd-buming stoves. supplied w i t h
spring v.·nter and consuming !he energy
expended by its oceupants in carrying
pails and splitting y,•ood .
Spring is coming and the old house will
thaY.', copperheads "''ill ~tit in the ancient
stone walls. deer v.·ill :)me to nibbl e new
grov.1 h on the shrubbery. ground hogs
v.·UI cavort over and under the rocks afl4
the dogy,•OCJd y,·ill bloom. Then lhe old
house will be hooked up lo Its modern
cooveniences again in the hopeful pros-
pect that, before another winter comes.
~Ir. Simon will have found a ""'flY to
restore the American dream of million !>
of second home ov.11ers.
'
OIAN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robm N. \Vted, P.WU1hcr
Tho'"°' Kett~U. Editor
Barbara Kf'eiblch
Edlrorlot P09• Edlt<w
The tdhorl•l ,Pl8f' ol' lhe O.ily
Pdot !.etk.t 10 lnrom .net 1llmula1•
l"t'Mtm ~ ~s;en1vw on thl.!1 paa:e
dl\'trwt•Mn1tnllU')·'oo topi~ of lflo
ltt.!lt b)l l)'tl(llc•ttd l'.'Olwnn.IS'11 and
cartOOl'lltts, by provldinx " forum lot
rHckn' vk:T.·1 and by prtamt\nc: !hi•
nfwspal)C1''1 oPlnMJnt and klta.s on
airrtnt topics. Theo ~itorlal oplntot.
of ~ t>a.lly Plklt apptar only tn th.
tdil!orial colu,,in at ttle top 0( the
pqe, Opinions ~QM ti)' the col·
umrrlsta and cartoonlata •nd ltttf't'
'ATltn an ~ir own and no ~
mtnl of l!ltir VI"" by 'the Dlllf
Pilot thou.kl be IRlwnd.
Friday. March 15, 1974
I
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' 4-lb. Acrylic Filled
Sleeping Bag
SAYE 500/o! 997
Regular $19.99
Cono~ ou1er.>hell corcon nan·
nt:I lining. lilue •. ~Ox74.inc h
51Zl.'.
5 1·1.50 Spinning,!nd Spincasr
Firing Rods :E. 7.~5
Console COLOR TV
with 25" Diag.
Measure Picture
SAYE 1100!
R.,ulif 42988 SS29.95 ·
Au1om11 ic tirit lock, automatic
frequency control. f.leJi1er-
rant'an ~rylt' cabinet. #-'3).1.
l
Craftsman 1/4-in.
Electric Drill
CVT50%! 747
Was !14.99
Double insulatt'd 1/5-"HP. For
medium-du1y work. UL Jis1ed.
#llJO.
Salt-Saving "60E"
Water Softener
SA~El45! 23'995 Re(l:ul1r
S:?IJ.1.95
USE"s up 10 ..jQ~ less salt per
regeneration than any compa·
rable water softener we sdL
#l-i..,3. ,_ ... · '·,!'-S 10.49 Tn.(hlorinc Tablcu. 7,49
•·,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,...._._._._._._..f-_. ... _. ... .__.._.__.~cu~•~n;;;d~~C;;;h~lo~';~,,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;;l.;;;49;._--l
1/2 PRICE SALE!
Range Hoods
R.,.1 .. s26.•s50%
to Sll4.95 OFF
3 or 6.blade squirrel or case
motors. White, copperrofte,
avocado anJ brushed chrome.
30, 36 or 41·inches.
Hurry in
Terrific JI alue !
on Champion
Spark Plugs
'
Sean; Low, 5 7c Low Price ea.
Time to chan~ spark plugs for
Champion pt•rformance.
Resistor plu,1:5 __ 87c f!a.
511.99 Wheel A.lignmcnt, 3.99
~;..:.~ . .
'(Controlled-heat
Electric Fondue Set . .
SAJIE $6! 999
t Re~ular s·15.99
... :: .. Bur~er-with·a-Brain" gives you automaticall y
,,! Control.led heat. Red, yellow, green colors. 1 Vi-
quart size.
S9.99 complete wine ki 4.98
Ch.ain Link
Gate Values
50%oFF r Reiwlar Low Prices
1 Caael"llatlon• and Sampl"•
... l"-:J::.l-D Assorted hei,i;:h1s and wid1hs.
Some single, some sers-a.11 re-
Juced!
S4.99·S40 Remnants of Chain
Llnk Fence Fabric. 50% OFF
Sears Comfoftable
Duplex Bed '
1tf'!'10,95! '$]29 e(l:u ar ·
$179.95
Two 3J.in. wide, 147 coil mat-
iresses wi1h quilted flo ral print
covers. '
Contemporary Styl
Sofa Sleeper
*4,!1.i,,35.95 "89
$%2,.50 ~Jc
• •
Lon,;.w'earin,; Yecrra• !Olefin
Fibtr/ cover. R~ersible poly·
<Ster wrapped polyurethane
(oam seal cushions. Cas1ers.
Discontinued Cabinet Hardware .
"·~tt 29r to 12.29 50 ~ A•1ortf!d Knohll, Pulls, Hinges 0
for Kitchen Cabinets OFF
Former Prices
$2.14, 6-Pc. Screwdriver Set
Nickel plateJ carhop. steel blaJes.
Rusi.resistant plas1ic handles.#-1 1-119 66 C
--
·-,<"
SET
Exterior Oil Base
Houee.Paint
~'!.'l!ll',;' 2 '599
S5.'.'9J1l. plA.
Pror«rion for all piyperly pre·
pared surfaces. Dries ro a me-
dium gloss. White, some colors.
54.99 gal.Redwood srain, l.97
All-Glass 10-Gallon
Aqnarium Kit
with Top
SAYE $8! 1999
Re,ul1r $28.98
Electric 7 /8
Adding Machine
SAYE $17! 5·997
Regular $76.99
Adds; subtracts, multiplies.
Lists 7 columns, torals 8 .. With
ribbon. tapc·and dust cover.
Colonial-style
Bunk Bed Ensemble
i'!~,.!40.15! $}29
8169.85
Twin or Full Size
Innerspring Sets
S4fE 50"!c! t79
R-lor 1159.90
Com(onable ionenpriAA mat•
tress ••• 110 coal• 1n full ti.ze.
.l60 coils in rwin.
Stock Number w .... Item
5002 569.95 Dehu: 9" Black aod White TV
4168 1 349.95 18" Ponable Color TV
4 1881 339.95 19" Ponable Color TV
4196 449.95 19" betux Ponable Color 100% Solid State 1V
411 03 299.95 18" Table Model Coktr TV ~
2 130 109.95 FM/ AM Stereo 8 track Player
207 1 29.95 ·FM/AM Digital Clotk Radio
3430 99.95 AM/FM Casse(te Rtcorder
J l6·H 299.95 Console Stereo, Contemporary Style 58
-~ 122 ') 219.95 Spanish Style Stereo
5 J.\j 149.95 19" Black and White POr rablc
')01 7 99.95 12" Black and White TV
5103 99.95 19" Black and White TV
)039 .f 19.95 • 16" Portable Black a~d Whi1e
4JO~ 459.95 Console Color TV:
402 8 249.95 Pon:able Color .TV 12"
432 8 499.95 21" Consolette Color w/base
43561 569.95 25" Console Color TV
4360 699.95 Delux Console Color 25'' I
4192 469.9) 19" Color w/retn<Xe coarrol,
4728 379.9) Walnut Style Opo,an Orpn w/bench
8500 1795.0D Electronic Orpn Med Style
8300 1449:00 "Galaxy" Electr0nic Orpn
WASHER -DRYE R '.A c jF S'
----Electric Dryer (white)
Gas Dryer (white)
Gas Dryer (gold>
Automatic Washer (gold)
Automatic Washer (white)·
Auromaric Washer (avocado)
Electric Dryer (avocado)
Automatic Washer (white)
Gas D,Yer <WhitCl
Lady Kenmore Washer and Gas Dryet (white) pair
Gas Dryer (white)
'Electric'bfyer (avocado>
Automatic Was her (white ) '"
EleCtric'Dryer (white)
Automatic Washer (gold)
AUromatic Washer (gold)
Gas Dryer (gold) '
Electric Dryer (whiter·
REG.
109.95
259.95
194.95
264.88
199.95
244.95
164.9)
239.95
169.95
639.90
169.95
204.95
199.95
139.95
214.95
264.95
224.95
149.95
SALE
89.11
199.11
' 164.95 . 229.11
189.11
22.c-.11
144.88
219.88
1!'9;95 .
519.95
159.95
:.r2::a8 l 9:88--
129.88
129.88
249.88
209.88
124.95
REFRIGERATOR VALUES'
7.7 Cu. ft.-(White)
7.7 Cu. Ft.-(White)-
l'S .2·Cu. Fc.-(White)
l'S .2 Cu. Ft.-(White)
17 .l Cu. Ft, Side.By.Side (White~ "
19.1 Cu. Ft. Side.By.Side (White)
16.6 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker (Copper)
19.l Cu. Ft. w/ice maker&: water spout-(White)
21.4 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-Side-By-~ide-(GQI~).
19.1 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(Gold)
8.5 Cu. Ft.-(White )
15.2 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(G01d)
19 Cu. Fc .. w/ice maker-(Goldl .
19. l Cu. Ft. w/ice maker & water spou1-(Avocado)
15.2 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(Avocado)
15 Cu. Ft.-Side-By.Side-(Copper)
17.l Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(Avocado)
5.9 Cu. Ft. Undercounter-(Copper).
11.7 Cu. Ft.-(White)
17 Cu. Fc.-Top Free~er-(Copper)
REG.
149.95
149.9)
299.95
299.95
399.95
379.95
339.95
469.95
604.95
474.95
174.95
3)4.95
554.9)
A74 .95
354.95·
384.95
394.95
.149.95
179.95
299.95
SALE
129.95
104.88
269.88
279.88
.349.88
339.88
99.88
389.95
529.88
424.88.
139.88
299.88
479.88
399.88
309.88
354.88
349.88
129.95
149.95
279.95
FREEZER VALUES'
REG. SALE
19.6 Cu. Fr. Upright Frosdess 299.95 279.95
15.8 Cu. Ft.-Uprighr-Automatic Defrost 199.95 "' 189.95
15.3 Cu. Fr. Upright~Frosdep 289.95 269.95
15.3 Cu. Ft. Uprighr-Frosdess· ·219.95 .229.88
AIR CONDITIONERS
8000 B.T.U.-3 speed-
14000 B.T.U. Auto{Thermostat
11000 B.T.U. Auto{I'hermostac
11000 B.T.U. Auto(rhermoscar
6000 B.T.U. 3 speed
28000 B.T.U. Auto(Thermostat
10000 B.T.U. Auto(fherm01rtr
Hand Vacuu.m
El«tric Broom
'
Ponable Sewing Machine
REG.
169.95
339,95
279.95
279.95
189.95
439.95
319.95
1 Re1-114.9)
.... Sl9.9)
Re1-029.95
• SALE
139.95
283.00
199.9~
169.95
129.11
299.11
229.11
s.:i9.as
Sole-I 10.95
SaJe.1229.95
.. .,
"
SAVE
20.0D
60.0D
30.00
35.0D
IO.OD
20.00
20.00
20.po
20:00· -
120.0D
10.0o
40'.oo
300D .
I0.00
85.0D .
1).00
15 .0D
2).0D
SAVE
20.00
45.0D
30.0D
20.0D
·so.OD
40.00
240.0D
80.0D
71.QO .
lO.OD
35.0D
55'.00
75.00
95.0D
45.00
JO.DO
4).0D
20.00
30.0D
20.00
SAVE
20.00
JO.OD
20.00
30.00
SAVE
30.00
56.00
80.00
110.00
60.00
140.00
90.00
DAlt.1' t '•
Now
•4:eg 229.
299.00
369.00
239'90
69.00
14.95
69.00
229.00
189.to
109.00
•69,00
6:~:00
79.00
·299.00
19'9.oo
4'29.00
449lel)
499110 l .. 369;00
.: 21,:00
.
1395.00
995:00
AMT.
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1
3
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. i------------------------------7-----------------------,
HURRY! EVENT ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT --MARCH 161 ' SPECIAL ICEE DISCOUNT I
1 • I This Coupon Is Good for a Sc Discount on any 1cee· 1
' Sorry, No Phone Orders .on These Items I See 1he~•~u: :~c:=;~an:h 1s !
Atlc Abo{d Sean Con11enient Credit Plana I . in our Store from 12 P.M. to 4 .M. ' I
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Huntington Beaeh
Fountain ·Valley
·VOL· 67, NO. 74, 5 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES
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Today's Final
N.Y. Stooks
FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1974 TEN CENTS
Huntington Fire Victims Need Food, Shelter
By HILARY KAYE
Oi' .. .,.., ..........
·The Moore dllktren aat in their
r<latives' bome'lllunday nighl, clad ooly
in their uucle'a T· !llrtl. Their own
clothing -the only clolbes Ibey owned
~ fire gutl<d their llunlinglm Beach -w-.y night -was at the
~at with their aunt, Mrs.
Borblra Hill . "
-i!'I took It all to be clean<d," Mt1.·mu
el]>laiood loclly, "since It's all Ibey have
to put OD tbetr blcb. And the three boys
., ... -tbe niCbl ol the fire, and
don't even have .lboel to wear."
1be Love Y-N<Jchbor Now (LYNN)
Cei1l<!r it e........., Beach bu olfered
to .-dlnace help for the bomelesa
family.
11\11 Mn. HID llOl'I that finding clothes
for Mn. MarUyn MG= and her four
-'!'lY llOl be Oll)I.
"1be whole family is very tall, and the
boys are exceptionally thin," she
explained.
For example. does anyone haVe clothes
for a 13-year<Qld boy who is six.foot..goe,
and weighs 130 pounds? Or aiie 11 shoes
lot the young man?
Dave, the 13-year-okt. wears size »M
pants, and medium shirts. His younger
brother Glen, 10, is alao tall and slim.
and wears boys 14 slim pants, size 14
shirts and site 7 shoes.
Su..an, 17, is six·foot~e. with a 24-inch
waist. Her shoe size is 7 and one-hall,
llalJOW.
Julie, 12. b flve-foot·ten, wears a
woman's size 14 or 11. lier shoe size is
II\.
Mn. Moore ts flve-foot-eleYen. and
wean a alie 16 dress. Her 5lX>e size is 9
medium.
Not only are the family members
without clothing but their new furniture
and everything else went up in smoke.
Their two-story toy,·~ at 9793
Cornwall Drive was gutted by names
\\'ednesday nlghL
They are staying with the llills , In th'
same Huntington Continentals tract their
home w~ in. but accommodations arc
tight . to say the least. There arc six Hill
d!ildren in addition to the five ~loorcs.
"Marilyn is trying to rent a place here
in the same tract. so the kids can go to
the same schools:· t.trs. H.ill said. "But it
isn 't easy to find ."
t.ln. t.1oore, a divorcee. rectives some
mooey from v.·eUare, and also recently
got a part-time .)Ob at a nearby
restaurant.
Anyone who ran provide clothing.
furn iture or anything else for the family
may contact the Lynn ~nter, :it aJ&-0614
or call Mrs. Hill at 962-6294.
Nixon Clings to Tapes
De1nonstrawrs Chnnt Outside Chicago Speech
CHICAGO (UPI\ -Saying he has
nothing to hide, President Nixon refused
today to give 1n to demands by the House
Judiciary CommiUce for 42 tapes it
wants for its inquiry into whether
grounds exist for impeaching him.
Jn a question-and-answer s e s s i o n
before the Exxutives' Club of Chicago,
Nixon said giving the House committee
all it demanded could lead to a delay of
months "and perhaps yean·• before the
impeachment question is resolved.
To applau.w, be repeated his State of
the Unk>n declaration, "One year of
Watergate ls enough."
The President also said he had no in·
tenlion of resigning because be is not
guilty or Watergate charges and a resig-
nation would weaken the presidency and
"would forever change cur form of
government.''
"I will not be a party to the dcstruc·
lion of the presidency of the United
States," Nixon said.
lfe contended that if he resi gned now
under fire, future presidr-t! could be
forced from offi~ if they become un·
popular or on unsubstantiated charges
brought against them.
Nixon said presidentib.l advisers v:ould
be rcdoced t.o "a group of eunuchs" ir
they felt their confidential conversations
with the chief exl'<!utive could possibly be
made public. holding them to publ ic
crlt iclsm if their advice v.·as wrong.
He said Thomas Jefferson waged the
Golf Clubs,
Oil Wells
Raeers Rev Up
' . . STUDENT DAVID BIGGS HELPS DEDICATE NATURE CENTER
Finding., Windmill for School Project Wasn't So E11y
' Nature Center Si~ated
:.·,
~n School's Playground
' ' ~ than two years ago, the far end of from the ~ back into a meandering
Westmont School's· playground was only slream. ~ by cats that spent their days Individual areas of forest, desert, bills,
~g into the many gopher holes that and meadows make up the rest of the
d4iltted the empty field. in Westminster. Nature ,Cefiter -.but these are still in the
.a\xlay, the land is a full·fledged Nature beginning iStages. ~ -. the work of Wtstmont's staff "Everybody felt for years that it w~uld a¥ 'children. A towering windmill stands be a good!idea lo build a nature cent~","
tct""Olle side, quietly pumping the water said Bartilra Flynn, a Westmont teacher
., responsible for much of the Center. ''But
'leachers Score ·' ~;, As Trustees Nix
Minimum Salary
Teachers have won one point -sort of
-In lbelr jolul with the Huntington
Beach Union High School District bOOget.
;Trustees failed to pass a. motion which
woUkl have called for teachers' salaries
to be a minimum 55 percent of the
district's tolal spending.
'Iba! figure was requesl<d by the
Dlslrlot F.ducaton' A39oclation (DEA), blli refuted by the administration, which
--50 percent. kl then the board Tuesday agreed to oDollier motion out of principle.
"'Well strive toward reveraillg the
trmd of teamer salaries percentage as it
~tes to Ille total budge~" it rad.
·'Ille DEA bad complain<d tllal the
·-and dia1rid j>enlontqe had beta apiralllng oownwanl bi -years
and lboold be dllDg<d.
'"Ille dlltrlct recommendation I I
aaacu-ting," a DEA rmpoue read. "Not oaSJ do they wilh IO emtinlle , an
ual«tunale --they wblt to agptvate it. 'Jbe pm:mtage bu ne•er
~as low as 50 percml"
'I'll< board vottd '-1, with Ralph Bluer
the loo< DO vole, 00 the -1-
'ltle -llemlned lrom an orlilDal DEA ualyoil of the dlltrlct budget.
Aollotant S.perln-Robert M-then ,.-!be lll&ly1il ond
DEA mpoaded a --"'-lay. .,.,,_ tool< .. -.. ., ol the
olha' DEA --dea1lni with• Mlar'leo, ll1lllllMn ol .......,. and
t-....imlnlltraW ratloo but lllld
tbe7 -llud7 Ibo ,_t.
no one really got it going wrtil the
summer of 1972."
Different companies doriated ltema to
the school -such as the windmill from
Bob McCalla, trees from the William
Lyons Co., and a plastic liner for the
pond from Pacific Lining Co.
With all this help, and the teacher"
and students' enthusiasm, the project
grew .teadily until It was ready olfldal·
ly to be dedical<d Thur.;day moroint.
OpenV>g ceremonies were designed by
lbe Nature Center·Commlttee -a group
or students under the direction of Mrs.
Flynn. Perhaps indicating this student
run effort, the highlight of the ceremony
was the christening of the windmill -
with a water balloon.
Although things are shaping up in the
transformed playground, the school hit
several snags along the wa1.
For we UUng, finding a windmlll in
today's modem .world is not easy, Mrs.
Flynn eiplaioed. •~
No one knew where they could bUy a
windmill, or even a used one, she
remarbd.
"FiDally, ooe pemit from the school
was vilUin& Okl.ahcwN, and found a uaed
wiDdmlJl to bring beck." abe said. '1'Ibe -
woman planned to rent 1 van to tote the -..al, but wbon Bob Mccatla, a Santa
Ana biM :1rm1n. bem'd that, be decided
to tlnd 111 -and clanlle It. 1be man
isn't tw'eD lrwohed In our ICbool."
Now lbll tbe -wlndmlU ts finnlJ bi place, .... the dtlle .... t .,., ..
are taking fonD, tbe acbaol will bold
-In the -.r and teach the
-the ---Ibey wouldn~ teare eloewblro ID the city.
Wharf Site Burned
llON'l'll!IEv (UPI) -.,,,. ... Illa
FUii lllrlrot -a landmark ao old ,_.a Whuf --ptted by lire 'l'llllndaJ nJchL Dlmqe WU -""°·"'·
•
•
'World Series' in Cost.ii Mesa
Top Agenda
By TERRY COVILLE
Of llM ~ .... ,."-f ,,.,,
Two golf courses, a beach club and a
cluster of oil wells will be the subjects of
public hearings J\.1onday night before the
Huntington Beach City Coun<:il.
Jn four separate actions, councilmen
\\ill be asked to rezone as recreational
open space (RO~):
-The 95.6-acre Meadowlark Golf
Course.
-The 137.5-acre Seacliff Country Club.
-A 5.7-acre cluster ol. active oil wells
located within the boundaries of the
Seacliff Country C1ub.
-The Huntington Harbour Beach Club.
AJI four areas are CWTently mned for
residential development wh.ich meaM
homes could be bu.Ht on them, but the
city OOpes to destroy that opportwlity by
tagging them vt"ith the more restrictive
ROS zone.
The ROS wne -it allows ooly
recreation-0riented uses w a s
established as a legal zoning tool less
than a year ago in Huntington Beach.
Monday night's hearint .. scheduled
during the 7 p.m. council session In
council chambers represent the city's
first test of the new fonn of land use.
Protests are expected from the owners
of the two golf courses and pos.!ibly from
the beach club operators. They fought
the plan before the planning commission,
but lost Feb. 20 when the four
commissioners present unanimously
agreed to rez.ooe the properties.
1.feadowlark was up for sale to a
housing developer a yea r ago, ooe
circumstance whlch prompted the city to
deve)op an ROS zone as a measure to
preserve open space.
The owners of ~1eadowlark ,
represented by the Santa Ana law firm ol.
Jacobs, Jacobs, Nelson and Witmer,
contend the remning will cut lhe market
value of their property.
'Ibe city is currenUy negotiating with
Meadowlark owners for purchase of the
Warner A venue goU course in order to
keep it open space and u.5ed. for
recreation.
Attorney Robert Jacobs charges tbe
city may be violating the state
Constitution by using its power (through
zoning) ·to undercut the vaJue of the
(Ste HEARINGS, P: re !)
..
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI or ... OllllY ttllltf 11att
Squinting Into the afternoon IW1
through hls 1we~ck: sunglasses
''Twiggy" Kowalski eUed bJJ 275-pound
frame into a more comfortable position
on the bleachers as be "spied" on the
opposing team.
The coach took a deep drag off his
American cigarette and finger(.-d his
movie camera. He was apprehensive.
These Californians were bloody good on
their home turf.
He was concerned abQut sending his
boys, Zenon Piech and tdward Jancarz
out there to fight wilh them . After all
they weren't about to pass the pigskin
with their buddies Crom the sou.th side of
Olicago.
Thls was the world series coming up
this weekend. And gk>rioski, the honor of
Poland wu riding on the outcome
The ""·orld sehies" begins lonight and
nm-i through Sunday in Costa 1'1esa. It
will be held in a stadium at the Orange
County Fal.rgrou.nds which looks like it
shrank because sol1)ebody left the
sprinklers on too long.
But the 8,000 or so fans who are
expected tonight aren't interested in
football. They will be comJng for the
v;orld series of speedway motorcycle
racing.
It's called USA vs. the World and for
good reason. The best racers from
England, Australia, New Z e a I a n d ,
ScoUand and Poland will be there to gang
up oo the American superstars.
And Twiggy, a retired criminal police
officer, is in California right now lo
manage the crack Poli.sh team and to
oversee things so "nothing goes wrong."
The series marks the first time any
Poli.sh racers have been in the Vnitej
States and lhe fU"St Ume they are racing
on a ''mlnl-O'ack," which is essentially a
converted hone parade track.
"'l'bis track ii very, very short."
commented Twiggy, whose real name is
Bernard. "In Poland our tracks are
rrom 3llO to 400 meters and the surface Is
black cinders. ll will take some time for
the boys to get UJed to it."
Costa Mesa's racetrack is , at 180
meters, the shortest in the world. Its dirt
surface bas coosider8Dly more grip and
the difficulty of adjustment was clearly
apparent when Piech and Janean roared
Fuel Dijaek
2 Gunmen Take 8,500 G~1is
PASADENA (AP) -Two armed men made oCI. with 8;500 gal·
Ions of gasoline today ~ hijacking a tanker truck and kldnaping its driver, police said. The driver "" kldnaped while attempting to cleltver a load of
fUel to a service station la the predawn houn, aid police Lt. Jack
GarTetl
Garrett said the two unldenUfied men bound, gagged and
blindfolded driver Kenneth M. Harbour, :SO, and took him away
by car. He was left unbanned at a resldentlal lat.rsoctlon In nearby
Glellclale, Garrell Aid.
Harbour freed himself and called police, who !ound lhe truck
-emp\y-ln the area about 45 minutu later.
COACHES POLISH RIDERS
Bernard 'Twiggy' Kowalski
out for practice Thursday,
Compared to Poland this "'as like
riding arotmd in their living room.
Kowalski's boys clearly had trouble
findiiig the proper line through the turns
and lhe fact that Plech's bike was
stuttering didn't help er~ the frown::i
from their races.
Kowalski hopes 'his 1 boys can adjust
quickly enough to demonstrate to local
racing fan s why Polish riders are
currently the best In the "·orld.
Zenon Plet:h, at 21. is already tabbed by
some observers to be the next "'Clrld's
champion. He won the Po 11 s lr
chan1pionship in 1972 and might have
"'on the world crown in hrs o"n country
last September ¥.'ere it not for a craS':l in
his last ride.
Piech was knocked orr while in the lead
and would have been in the championship
runoff If the referee hadn't refused a
rerun. Instead countryman J e r z y
Szczakiel became world champion.
Jancarz. 26, Is a veteran of countless
(S.. RACERS, Page Ii
Baby Boy Dies
On Hot G.rating
ENID, Okla. (AP! -A baby boy died
ln .his home as his mof'ncr sit.pt when his
stroll~r became trapped o: the ~raUng of
a Door rumact, police reported.
Jason R. Damron, 3141-month-ctd 900 of
Air. and Mrs. Rly Dsmron, was found
deat 'Illunday aflemoon .
Police ll1d tbe wheels of J&IOn'I
stroller apparently befamc ~·edJltd li'I the
grate .situated In the noor a'bove the
furnace. Thi beat mel~ the plaatic
-I• and p(asUc ...,1, drOl'l'inl the
baby onto the hot grating,
' '
sa me battle to preser\'e the
confidentiality of the office.
Hundreds of demonstrators. both for
and again.st Nixon . waged a noisy verbal
battle of chants, songs and blaring music
outside the hotel where Ni&l spoke.
The pickets challenged each other with
banners reading .. Throw the Bum out"
and "C'rOd Loves Nixon " and tried to
outshout each Q.lher will\. cham:i: or
"Impeach Nixon" and "We \\'ant Nixon."
!See NIXON, Page: 2)
'
Sheriff's Role
In Minorities
Hiring Lashed
By WIWA!\1 ~CllREIBER Of ... o.lty , .. ,, ll•H
The Orange C.Ounty Sh' r i r r's
Department was sharply c r it I e I zed
Thursday for allegedly failing to bring Its
minority work force up to par.
The charges were leveled by County
AfUrmalive Action Coordinator Ramon
Curiel during inilial budget deliberation~
for next fiscal year.
Curiel said the department is not only
running the risk of losing federal grant
money but also may be investigated bJ
the Justice Department and Equal
Employment Opportunities Commission.
"I would say that they are at least
subject to a cutoff in federal funds if
progress is not seen:• Curiel told the
gathering of I aw officers and county
budget experts studying the Sheriff's
requests for lhe coming year.
Snerilf James ~1usick is asking for
$14 .5 million next year -up from a total
of $12.8 mill ion last year.
~tuch of the increase "'ould go taward
hiring 99 new people in the department,
of which more than 50 "·ould staff a
major additio n to the overcrowded
county jail.
The jail facilities became a topic of
discussion at the budget meeting as an
outgrowth of personnel and minority
hiring needs.
Sheriffs Capt. \\'i\liam Wallace, who is
in charge of the county's jail, said
condilions are so bad now that 110me
parts of rne jail won't be approved by
state corrections officials this year.
He said the jail now has mo~ than 850
inmates and only 760 beds available. 11MI
number in jail swells to more than 900 on
the \\'cekends.
"Our medical area already doesn't
comply with the state standard! and this
"·ill be indicated among other things in
(See CHARGES, Page !}
Orange Coast
Weather
f'og and low clouds night and
morning hours with mostly sunny
afternoons Saturday. S 11 g h t I y
cooler. Lo\\·s in the low 50s to-
night. Highs Saturday 74 to Tl.
INSIUE TOD/\ l'
St4/f \Vriter Tom AfcCan11
revietp.s Cl New Orleans jazz
alb11tn. i1t todtiy'1 \Veekend.er.
The record wo1 produced by a UC Irvine E.'11ghsl1 pro/euor and
recorded oi London . -Al Y-..-...ai 1 """ltf JI, •· • ... tlllf 11 MtllHI ft••t lt
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•
' •
2 DAILY PILOT • Friday, March 15, )q741
~ -
Acd0tt Expected
..
Ar~hs to; __ §tudy .. -... ... ... . .. .
Oil Price::;Hikes
VIENNA (UPI) -\\'Ith the possible
lilling of th& Afab oil boycott against the
United States looming in the background;.
I.he Organization of Petroleum Exportlng
Countries (OPEC) will recommend
Saturday that the pril'e or l'rude oil be
increast'd April I, OPEC officials said
today. . I They also said they believed an
aMOWlcement ca!ling the Arab oil
embargo against the Uni ted States ~·ould
be made in Vienna over the weekend.
In Beirut, the Arab press reportOO
today that Aral> oil ministers postponed
;uu1ouncemcnt of a dl'<:ision on lilting the •
oil embargo against lhe United States.
Wltil Sunday In an attempt to reach
unanimity on the issue.
The semi-official Cairo newspaper Al
Ahram said In a report from its
corresponden t who covered \\'ednesday'i
Sclwols Seek
Federal A icl
For Programs
• Jf~~ring Slated
• •
For Valley W~fe
In Mm·der Case
Ruth Ann Nance, 33, charged In the
slaying of her husband, David Martin
Nance. 35, will fa ce a preliminary
bearing In West Orange Coun ty
~Junlcipal Court on March 21.
The Fowttain Va!ley y,·oman was
arraigned earlier this week. v;hen she
entered an innocent plea to the charges.
Her OOil·was set at $25,000 but she was
scheduled to have a ball review today to
determ ine whether the 11:mowtt should be
changed. She remalrn in custody in
Or8/lge County Jail.
The mother cl four is accused er
murdering her husband, an architectural
enginier, on March 7. •
Police dise<1ve red his body lyjog_in a
bcdnxnn of the hom e, at 8568 Trinity
Rive r Circle. after they received a phone
call fn)m an .. uhidcntified person
reporting the cri me.
Police rushed Nance to Fountain
Valley Comm un ity Hospital. He wrutdead
on arri.vJll. Police report he was slain
with a single bullet to the head from a .38
calibre re\•olver.
OlAN&l COAST "'
DAILY PILOT
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l'lricl•Y, loo< Collt Mt5'0, N""POrt lle1()1.
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fM pr,..c:llHI Plll>tl"'•Plll Pl•hl lo ti JlO Wt>t
ltt 5trffl, C11!• MHt. C1hlor11l1, flf.26,
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• • . .
Oil mlnisters coaference lD b Libya n
capital ol Tripoli:
'''lbe &ninlsten adjourood UDlll Sunday
to allow the Oil fninisten of Syria and
Llbya io coruiult their government. Jn the
hope lhil· their next meeting 'in Vienna
will ls.sue a unanimous decision on liftini
the embargo."
Press_ commentators said the nine
members al the Or<anizlltlon al Arab Oil
Exporting C<>tmtrles (OAPEC) who must
mate the decision were anxioUS to a\•oid
any spllt In ranks.
There were Indications that even if
Libya and Syria refuse to go along with a
decision to lift the embergo, the seven
ottier Arab nations planned to eo throuah
witb it. Tbe Arab oil embargo agaimt the
United States was imposed because of
U.S. support or Israel dur1n2 the 1973
Middle East \\'ar.
At the Saturday m~ting of the y.•orld's
oil exporting countries, ministers \\!ill
review the prices of crude, which have
tripled in five months, pushing up
gasoline priets in some counl(ies hY
more ttlan 100 percent. ;
OPEO's 12 members, who produce 85
percent of y.·orld oil export s, declded in
Geneva Jan. 9 to freeze cn1de oil prices
CLASHES FLARE AT GOLAN
HEIGHTS. Story, Pave 4
FUEL CRISIS ONLY
THE BEGINNING? Paga 12
t:JIARGES ... ..
ilk cOrreclions report," Wallace said.
Sheriff Musick said the construction
work on a fourth noor of the jail building
Is near completion but lt 11lll!t be staffed
to a. any good.
The expansion '\\'OUld swell the county
jail's capacity to more than 1,100 and
would include addiUoM to medical
persoonel and cooking faclliUes.
Wallace said about ~ of the new
employes he Is seeking would be armed
deputies and the remainder would comist
of cooks, nurses and other personnel
needed to maintain the jail and its
inmates.
Discussion. ol the growing number of
inmates broke down into a "philosophical
d e b a t e , during which CountY
:a.dministrative Officer Robert Thomas
~sald ;lhe money could better be used to ·0uilttarks.
"If all the programs we have to di vert
ttlese people into useful activities aren 't
\vorkin g then maybe \VC sbou!d stop
them." he said.
From Page 1
NIXON ...
Nixon's ,·oice quavered at limes as he
leaned into tbe 1nicrophone in the
cro\t·ded ballroom fielding the quesUons
or some of the mosl prominent
businessmen in the Midwest.
Rep. Peter W. Rodino (0..N.J.),
chairman or the judiciary committee,
backed by the senior Republican on the
panel. Rep. Edward Hutchinson or
Michigan. insisted th is y.·eek that the
House has an unchallengeable right to
materials . from \\'bit e House fil es in
fulfilling its constitutlonal role of
detennining whether Nixon committed
"high crimes and mi.sdemeanors."
A number of Democrats on the
committee, and some Republicans, said
they were ready to subpoena t:ie tapes if
1'1iion rcfll!CS to furnish t tie in
\'Oluntarily.
Court :Declares
Dark Horse OK
JACKSONVILLE . N.C. (UPI) -A ~farioo, charged last month wi1h failing
to equip his ho1'8e with lights to ride to
work on the street! before dawn has bct'n
found innocen t In Onslow County Dlslrict
Court.
Cp.1. Edward' Liiy, 20. was glven a
traffic ticket Thm'aday for "optratillg a
horse on a public 11rooc. during houri or
dar)me!ll when the horse was n9t
<quipped wllh headllghl• or tall l)ghtl.''
, Attor~ey Edward O. ,llalley, as pt<l of
(he dmn1t, displayed • cartoon draw1nt:
of a horse with "radial steel hooves "
headlights and tum 11Jgnat1 and even ~n
emission control dtvtce.
OlllY Pllof Sttll f'tllfe
Bicycle
Licensing
On Monday
Huntington Beach resident! can license
rneir bicycles by mall starting ~1onday.
City residents will be r' · to license
their t-·~wheelcrs bi' fillin1 out an ap-
pUcaUon and mailing ii with a $1 check
or money order lo the police department.
Previously. residents-had 10 take thei r
bicycles to the police station 10 get the
license required by local laY.'.
Fonn.s can be obi.lined at loca l
libraries, the city parks and recreation
department at 1706 Orange Ave. and the
police station at 2IXKl Main St.
After the completed fonn is filed Yi'ilh
the police, lhe bicyc le owner will roceive
a license decal by return mail.
Police, who estimate there are 100.000
bicycles in Huntington Beach, hope thr
new system will make il more convenient
for more owners to get licenses.
POLISH CYCLE RACERS JANCARZ (LEFT) AND PLECH KILL TIME BETWEEN RUNS
At County F•lrground1 in Coit• Meu, A World Series on• Short Course '
Ucenses are necessary to g c t
irul!rance on bicycles and are helprut in
gelling a bike back if it is stolen or I05l.
police said.
Residents with questions about the nev•
system can call tile licensing un.it at 536-
5931 from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. starting
Monday. From Page 1
RACERS ...
~IARTHA'S REPORT
SAID 'UNFOUNDED'
NEW YORK {APl -Martha Mitchell
has filed a missing persons report ove r
the telephone for her daughter after
being told the girl was in her father's
custody, police reported.
Police here said Thursday night the
estranged wife of former Atty. Gen. John
N. ~1itchell claimed officials at the
Sacred Heart convent in Greenwich,
Conn. told her the 13-yeaMld Jl1rl. abo
named t.1artba, was on spring vacaUon In
hedather"a custody.
FretaP .. eI
HEARINGS • : .
property it~wants to bt1y.
OIOdals from the Huntington Beach
ComP,..iny al~ have protested the
rc:ron)ng of their Scacllff complex.
though they have not announced any
plans to tum the golf course into a
housing Im.Cl ..
(
Testimony on Dairy Gift
Claimed .by U.S. Prohers
Bicycle riders cited for t r a f f i c
violations while without licemes arc
given a specific time-period in which to
buy one.
Court Date Set
For Westminster
Wife in Slaying
Barbara Sherry Bradley, 40, y.·IJl
appear in West Orange County Municipal
Court on March 20 for a preliminary
hearing on charges of murdering her
husband, Donald Loren Bradley.
Mrs. Bradley entered a plea of
innocent to the murder charges at her
arraignment on Tuesday, and had her
bail set at $2.5,000. She Is still in custody
in Orange County Jail.
Bradley, 45, owner of a trenching
service, was shot three times last
Saturday night in the couple's home, at
8471 Heil SL ln Westminster, according to
police.
He suffered wounds in the ann, chest
and head, and wa.s taken to HWltington
Interrommunity Hospi tal, where he died
tv.·o days later.
Police report ?i.Irs. Bradley phoned
tbem following the shooting, and was
originally booked on assault with intent
lo commit murder. The charge was
changed to murder when Bradley 45,
died. '
Book Store Robbed
. See This Assemblage O;\'
Henredon'S Folio Eleven Collectio~ I•
Inspired From 17th & 18th Century
French and Chinese Styles. These
Outstanding Pieces Fit Beautifully ;
DREXEL-HERITAGG-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASl'AN
WEEKDAYS & SATURDAYS t:OO to 5:30
NEWPORT & TORRANCE OPEN FRIOAYS 'TIL 9
Into Almost Any Decor.
..
Henredon l-'~..,._
NEWPORT BEACH e
lm \VESTCUFF DR., 642°2050
LAGUNA BEACH e
345 NORnJ COAST HWY . ._
41tq.65,5l
TORRANCE e
23649 RA WTHORNE BLVD.
(Open Sund&,)' 12-5:30) 373-1279
\ '
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DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
• -Politics
Tbe decision of Huntington Beach Union !!!:b
School Dlslrtct truatees to solve perplexlnJ leaal laauu
about lood service conlrac\$ before granting ••Y price
lncrea.ses at lour high schools is to be •pplauded -
but perhaps only with one hind.
Caution Is nearly alwaiys advisable. But in this case
the tnaU!es' action -In part motiv1ttd by proper lln•n·
till qu..Uons -may also have been influenced by a
concern for political images.
Although the delay will save students from spend-
ing more money !or now -the discussion by trustees
somehow turned too much to admlnlstrative issues and
away from people issues.
OpinJoru; of students, who are being sandwiched
between the board and caterers. were ignored. A few
students wanted, but weren't allowed, to speak.
And while Board President George Logan's criti·
cisms of food contract {>nctices may prove to be valid ,
his technlques of publ1cizing them aren't. Angry, ac-
cusatory letters can do little more than stir up an emo.
lional climate of controversy when such is sues need
clear, rational exanUnation.
A Gro'\\ing Need
Fountain Valley has 13 small neighborhood parks.
several youth group baseball and softball diamonds. a
number of school playgrounds and easy access to Orange
County's Mile Square Regional Park -all designed
with mainly the young in n1ind .
'fhe older citizens must compete for use of lhe
limited outdoor raciUlies or do wilhout.
or People
other governmental agencies.
But the city still is young and its officlaJs. rerog·
nltlni lts growth needs, have made plans lO develop
55 acres of fl:tile Square Park, Including construction
of a senior cititens-cultural arts center. But they need
help. As usual, the stumbling bloek is money.
Tbe clty has asked the Orange County Board of
Supervisors for $390,000 in human services revenue·
sharing funds to start the senior citizens' progran1 .
The request warrants ta\'orable action.
Unification 'l'hreal
Apparently the harmony briefly seen among the five
\\'est Orange County school di stricts seeking un i!ica·
lion was an illusion.
Objections to the five-way plan recently raised by
Ocean View and \\'estminster School Dislr1 cts are proof
that unification is still further away than tnany like to
admit. One of their objections was that they were not
fully consulted.
It appears certain lhat only a plan approved by
all distncts will succeed in getting on the No\•e1nbcr
ballot. If only one district objects, the proposa l is in
serious jeopardy.
Further, the f.Iuntinglon Beach Union l ligh Schoo l
District -\\'hose support is essential to sut cess -has
said it will not support a plan. that is not approved by
all dislricls.
Bea.ring this in n1ind . the district." n1ust Insure lh<it
each one of the1n i!i fullv involved in the current 1ncet·
ings. and that earh objection is adequately rcsol\'ed.
Jn addition. the city has only one community center
with meeting roon1s fo r educational and social events.
for regular locally ba sed t•ounseling by county and
ti.tan y co1nprnm ise!i have al readv been made al this
stage. But Lhe distriC'ls n1u~t rerogn.ize that to :;-oJ \·e thr
few connicts left. 1nore rompron1 ises wilJ have to be
1nade. H 'You say this WB S their first Bttempt at streaking?'
Secret of
Successful
Revolution
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Thoughts at Larg':
The only truly successful rerolution
is one in \\'hich the new rc·•olu1ion.ary
leaders do not feel forced to he as
re pressive as the regime they overlhrc\v.
(By this standard, only the American
Revolution-precisely because it "'·as
self-limited-may be considered a suc-
cess.) • • •
...._ Distrust any philosO'phy that pretends
to enunciate an ,;ultimate truth"-for
it is the essence of ultimate truths
that they cannot be
verbalized \\'ithout
heing distorted <Jnd
in is understood.
• • •
\1lhen a bad thing
isn't .. ~:orklng, it 1s
fron1 an excess, anJ
you need less r:if it:
\vhen a good thing
isn't \\'Ork1ng lsuch
as the democratic proctss), it is froin a
deficiency, and you need mor<! of it.
• • •
How can one be "true to another"
before one has recognized v.·hcre the
truest part of ooeself resides?
• • •
People ·who travel to go "sight-seeing''
are usually more exotic sights than
any they see. • •
The most significant aspect of the
20th century, overtO\\'ering all othe r
changes. is that for the first time it
ls oo longer a white Christian man's
.,..,or\d. . ' .
If capitalism has failed , it is not
so much in the economic area. \\·here
Marx predicted it v.:ould. as in the
educational area, where ~1ontesquieu
feared it might. (Both the defenders
and the detractors of the system seem
·-
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
Odd that a "'"Oman standing in line
\rith t\\'O small children to see The
Exorcist should beconle upse1 hy
st rea kers Oying by. Isn't that a
conflict of 1noral \•alucs?
• I.A.
Gloomy G111 (elMlttllt1 1rt submlltMI lrf
tNOt" Ind .. Ml MCtuarlty r1Flecl llte
Vlewl 11 "'-..-.Hr. 5tlld n¥1' ,..,
ff9VI ,. G-r Gu•. D1ilr l"li.t,
almost equally ignorant of its merits
and its defects.\
' .
Chauvinism of every sort is merely
a way in which individuals feel free
to cloa k themse\\'es \\'ith a collective
sense of superiority !hat they v:ould
00 ashamed to assert indiviqually. . . ,
Goethe expressed at an early age
what most of us never learn until it
is too late to make any difference:
"We are never further from our wishe1
than when we imagine that \\'e possess
\\'hat \\'e have desired." . . ,
\\'lien a national poll of dramat ic
critics asked me to name the greatest
American playwright, I an s we red .
"Eugene O'Neill, alas"-taking a leaf
from Andre Gide who v.·hen asked to
name the greatest French poet, repli ed.
"Victor Hugo, alas."
• •
People v.·ho regard themselves as the
most chaste also im3g\ne that they are
the best judges of •obscenity : Y,.hlch
is like a teetotaler pronouncing on the
comparati ve quality ""f wines. . ' .
Socielies re~ agalru;t tyranny. but
when the v are not instructed in what
to do with their freedom , they rebel
agai nst liberty as well .
• • •
Americans who are fond of pointing out
that .,...e ...,·ere born as a "republic" and
not a "democracy" are being as "'i llfully
obtuse about ~·ords as the bureaucrat
v.·ho insisted that a "small businessman"
must be under >foot-4.
RVs Are Energy Savers
To the Editor:
A recent reader la11eled recreational
vehicles the "real gas hogs" and your
headline writer labeled the Mallbox col·
umn accordingly. IA?t!t look at facts in-
stead of wild comments of the drive r 111
a small car.
J\1AN\' nv·s gel in excess of 10 mpg,
son1cthlng tbal most mOOlum sized cars
do not. I own a motorhome and drive a
medium-sb:cd sedan. The motorbome
cets better mileage at SS mph. They both •r• '73 moc1e11.
:II Ille lady really interulcd In tne'i)'
savina! U ao ahe abould aot • motor
home. Looi< at these law:
:whoa our lamlly Is awai &om home In
oW-RV we:
-Use one-four1h the eledrlclty used ltt
home
-Use one-~ixth the. gas used At home
-Ute one-tenth the 1A·ater used ill home
1F \'OU are going to ~Ingle one r,oup
out ror abuse please look at all the. acts.
WILLIAM F. l.OWANCE
G••Need •
To tba Editor:
Re your editorial comment on gas ala-•
( ____ MAIL_B_ox __ J
1.11i.r• 1,.m ruliera ••• -ic-. N-•11~ Wl'ltttl l"Ollld COll .... r ltlotlr MllWfft In M .,.,,,, w lttt., T"-rit~I "' n.lellftH lltttrl It tit l•K•
., .. llNfl.tlt Httl It AMl'Vtd. All i.tlt ... 11\Yll lflo
Clllft i.l1111lu,. 11141 m.iN""' Hdms. IM.lt 1111ntt
mt J .. wflt!ll.id M '""'" If IMlfldl lll rM-It
''"""'· '""'"' Wiii .... " .ubll~.
tm: Driven don't need staggered
strYlce atatioo bminess hollll.
, 'dley do need llatloos that aell gas In
tlie afternoon lnslead ol momJn&•, !or tboM who go to 1''ork too early t.o get
_gas.
LEONARD JOHNSON
Ga• Chl.,alr11
To the Editor:
Chivalry is not dead lo Huntlneton
Beach!
I wish to publicly e1presa my !hanks to
fhe gracious gtnUemM wbo pushl'd my
car through tho long Uno of waltlna can
{about 10) when J ran out or gfll, in line.
Jn thll gas·panle-stricken lime aucb
courtesy Is exemplary.
!LA. THRASHEH •
ll'as Jaalie's Pay u Busi11ess Expense?
Presidential Income Tax
\VASHJNGTON -Confidential \\'hite
l!ouse documenls show that President
Nixon. contrary to the slatC?ments 1)ul out
in his name. has taken an intense
personal int('rest in y,·angling every
posslblc tax deduction he could get ay,·ay
\\it h .
lie even inquired in 1969 about deduct-
ing his payments to his daughter J ulie
:1s a business expense. He wanted 10
count money he \vas
contributing to hrr
support as salary fQr
her work as a \\'hitc
lfouse tour '!llide.
Yet the \\'hi te House
had ;already put out
publicity thet she
\17ls a "1·olunteer."
The President also u-anled a :~x
break: for using the den at his San
Clemente es tate for an ofrice. •te asked
what tax write-offs were availa ble, too.
for permitting others to use his
California and Florida houses.
He thought he should be pennitted to
charge off \\'edding gifts. funeral sprays
and si1nilar itC?rru;;, because he felt the<>c
\1erC? "business expenses" for a po liti-
cian. ~Iosl of his entertaining. he also
coolended. should be dedu ctible. "He
\\·ants to be sure," instructed aide Jo'hn
Ehrlictunan in a confidential memo.
"that his business deductions include all
ailov.·a ble items.''
TIUS DIFFERS from the picture the
\Vhite Hoose has tried to p::1rtray of a
President too busy to bother v.·ith the
details of his tax retums. Press
!<:]lOke~rnan (:trald \\'arrcn has implied
Nixon "'as so JM'l'OC't·upicd 11ith lh<'
presidency that he left UK· prcpar:1tion of
hi:-rl'lums entirely to his lawyers.
The implica tion v.as lhat his lawyers
1\'Cr(' rl·ally to blame for cla iming the
1,:ontrovcrs1al -and pro bably illeRal -
S576,000 tax deduction for !he gift of the
Nixon papers to the governmetJt.
OOCUri1ENTS now in the hands of the
J oint Congressional Committee on
Internal Revenue T11:icat.ion. however.
provf' that !he President was not at all
removed from the preparation ol his
returns. On the contrary, he pulled e\·cry
possible string to increase? his tax de-
duction s.
~:hrlichman relayed the President's
\\'ishcs lo Ed\\'ard il1organ. the \\1hitc
House aide who handled the President's
taxes. For cxa1nplc. an Ehr!ichman
memo. dated June? 16. 1972. asked
1\1organ :
"The l'rcsidC?nt proposes lo personally
p.iy Julie fo r her \\'Ofk in the \llhi!c
lfouse this summer and deduct it as a
husi ness expense. \Vould you please
d~termi~e v.·hct her he can properly do
this ...
~tORGAN took the problem up v..ith the
Intemul Revenue Service's Deputy Chief
Counsel Roger Barth \\'ho served as
politica l imprc!!ario for Julie and Tricia
Nixon during the 1968 cam paign and is
no;\' th e Nixon mnn inside the IRS.
Barth responded a month later v.·llh a
mf'1no. carefully .<;lampt'd •·Confidcntinl."
ad\'isin~: "U<~ally l\C might justify
dl'duction as a business expense for a
sal;1ry p.'lid to J uli e ns a tour guide th is
summt'r. llov.·c\·er. fo r Ur follov.·ini:i
rc·ason..;. I ~10ST strongly rceonl~nd
that !his should not be done:
.. ,A ~ The <imount involved is rat~r
sma ll:
"i BJ This is always a factual question
v.hich could be raised on audit of whether
she is necessary to the taxpayer's
'busir11.'SS':
"ICJ In addit ion to federal v.·ilhholdlng
data y,·hich y,·ould get into the files at the
JRS. information v.·ou!d have to be gl\'Cfl
to the (state) tax autho ritiC5and to the
Social Security people. There arc too
many enti ties in volved for this to be kept
coofidentlal ;
"(0 ) The ne\\'spape rs have made much
of the fac t that she has been acting as a
'\'O!unteer.' I think the risk of exposure
of a business ded uction attempt is too
great . , . "
BARTII advised 1nstend th:n the Pre ... 1·
dent should "mak e a g1fl at the end of
the summer to Julie. Al!hour,h it 'vould
not be deductible lo him. it \\'Ould be t.ax-
free to her."
The President apparl'fllly hc«led this
advice. for the \Vhi1e liouse press orfile
tells ll.! that the President never put Julie
on salary.
Jn another memo, Ehrlichman asked
ilforgan: "The President intends to use
the San Clemente house for official visits,
and he intends l-0 use hls dt-~. 11.s .1n al.-
fl ee fnr presidential 11cth·1til'~. Whul
\\'rile-offs arc a\•ailablc to him:"
Harth \.\'as also approached on this
que"'tion. He ad vi~C'd that "a deduction
\\Ollld be pcrm1lll'd for d1•prN:ia1ion an<i
maintenance t>Xpl'llSt'S "
Ell RLICll~IAN also 11·anlt:tl lo kno1~
about .. lhe lax cortsl'<llll'llL'CS of pern1it·
ling others to use the Florida anc:
California houSt.·s:· Uar1 h responded .
"Yt'e ~·ould have to establish the businc!I.~
purpose for the President ~·ith regard to
each person i.n\'ited to use the homes.
On the question of dedu ction.'J for \\-oo.
ding gifts. funern l sprays and the like.
Ehrlichman note<I : "The President bold·
the \'iew that a public m11n docs very
lilllc of a persooal nature. Virtually all n:
his entCf'tainrnent and activit y is relatci.:.
to his 'business·."
Agreed llarth: "I personally agrei·
y,·ith the idl'<I that n\uch of tho·
President's cxpc n!<:c is rclaled to h1!>
'buslness. · As with the busirK'8S use of hi~
residence. a careful system must be
C'Slablished for keeping track of busint:lfi
~x pcnses ...
"S~fALL GIFTS by the President.
\\'h.ich are related to his 'business.' \\'Ould
be deductible ... Note, ho\\'e\·rr. lhal \\'t'
must give thought to dislinguish1ni.:
between acli\'itics and gi fts rf'lated to
'being a President' and those related to
running for reelection."
Richard Nixon, as v.·e now knov.". took
every available l<'ga! deductio n and at
least one $576.000 .,.,Tite-0ff Y.'hosc Jegn lity
i!I quest iona ble.
An Island of Calm • Ill the Crisis
SNICKERS GAP, ·va. -God gave me
a little piec e of prim iti\•e Ame1 .ca here in
the Blue Jtidge .).fountains and ~Ir.
Simon, the energy Cza r, is helpi ng me
keep it.
The bottom has fallen out of the
recreational real estate market and the
blessed day is thus
extended for the en-
joyment in privacy
of a place on earlh
\\'hich is not greatly
changed since it n·as
originally surveyed
by George \Vasil·
ington.
The rC?al est11te
fever has subsided
with the declining level or available gaso-
line. and so there is no longer as great a
risk that the urban yearning for second
homes in the mountains will upset the
balance of nature.
YiE HA\'E been saved, even, rro1n the
PUNCH
(rucHARD WILSO~
conservationists. O\\'ing to the wise
decision of the Na lional Park Service to
move the Appalachian trail else\l·hcrl'!.
trail bike treks where walklng was in-
tcndt.'<i have thus been excluded from the
private property of residents on this
particular side of the mountain.
It has fort una tely not come to the at·
tenl ion of ~Ir. Simon that this area has
hcen forgotten in the allocation of
a.\'ailable gasoline supplies . Once you
have arrived here. you may not he able
lo return to the city beca use drought has
,;1n.1ck 1hc local gas stations in nearby
Hound llilt and Purcellville. It is just as
1\·cll. thoug h very distressing I o
carpent ers. mason~. and, other artisans
v.·ho cannol get enough gas to carry them
to y,·ork at housing project.A nearer
"It annoys ms wl1tJ.n thtJy come in just to use ihtJ spittoon.''
\\'ashington.
In the natu re of th ings , ho11.·cve r. the
time \\'ill come v.·hcn the local people \\'ill
take ca re? of thei r 0111\ and there Y.111 be
enough gas for those right fully entitled to
it by hirth and place of abode. 1'he 01hers
can jusl stay a11·ay. ~1an\' nati\'e Virgin·
ians in this area f< ll that way aboul
outsiders Jong before the gas shortage.
A GREAT OEAL of anx iety is felt that
nea rby Berr}'\•ille, the ancestral seat of
1he Byrd fam ily. ls dying and the gas
shortage ~·ill not hel p prolong the life of
the tov.11. But Berryville is being by·
pa'ised anyv.·ay by a four-lane parkv.·ay .
The attrition of small busin<'.'!.S had al·
ready begun and the managers of 1hc
supermarket make sounds as if it v.·UI be
the next to close up.
These signs nrc discouraging to small
IOY.TI roosters. bu t lh1'Y arc perhtip!\
short-sighted in f11ilin1? lo .see Iha! prog·
rl'SS may lea ve behind Islands of ctihn
and cont ent1nen1 \1·hl{:h v.·ill 1nore than
ever 11 ttract those 11·ho v.·is h to get out of
lhc \\.'OIY of 1nodem Im provement.
A SUl'\'CY of the dc\'cloplng sccond-
home rccrcallonal areas. \\'hich is one of
!he phenomena of the limes. suggesL'!. it
might be better just to ha\'e a house 1n
one or the plca'i:int small communltil'S
already Ion~ established.
The impractlcalll\' or modem im·
pro \·emenl Is a .,..ef! lotoY.'11 Irony, bul
ne1·cr more painfully r(.lalizcd than In tx·
amining a \Cry old d11.cll1ng which h;,1~
betn re-bull! to create an oa~i~ of comfort
and chee r dee p In a. \\'ildemcss. \\'lthout
these improvements and as It \\·as In lhc
fln:t place, .,i,·itbou1 reBMce on brought·in
energy. !he dwelli ng would be Uvable In
any kind of crisi~.
TQ SAVE OIL. tile bo"'boord helling
so expensively lnsl :tllcd hos ~n dlscon·
nccted, the \\ell-supplied wa1cr syatcm
has been cut off so It will not freeze and
burst tbc pipes ln the cunningly conlrt\'td
bathrooms. kitchen and laundry. The old
log house stands on Its hillside bone-chill-
ing cold \\'here once it 1\·ns cozy v.·ith
v.·ood·burning sloves. supplied \Vi th
spring v.·nter an d consuming the energy
expended by its occu pant s in ca rrylnf
pails and split ting wood.
Spring is comtni;: and the old house \\ill
!hay,·, copperhead<> y,·iJJ !>lir in thl' ancient
stone v.·alls. deer \\'111 ome to nibble nc .... ·
growth on the shrubbery. ~round hog~
v.ill cavort over a.nd unde r the rocks and
the dogwood .... 111 bloom. Then the old
house \\·ill be hooked up to lls modem
C'Ofl\'eniences agau1 in the hopeful pf'08..
pect !hat. before another v.-inter com~.
.\tr, Simon \\ill ha\'c found A way to
restore the American drcnm of millions
of second home oy,ncr.1 .
I
OIAfrt&I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Vred, P1d>liiher
Thomas Kt t t;il, EtJ!lor
Ba rba ra Kre ibich
Elh1 orkil Page Edito r
Th<' tdllor1AI p.tl~ or lhe D•lly
P1~ M:<-ks lo 1nfonn and 'Umulll!t
~a<len: by p~~m11ni:: on Tiu~ Pl'Jft
d1vtrM: coriim~m11ry on rnpl~ of \n-
l"f'(>ll by syndic111M l."Qlumnls!s 11ond
c•rtoonbis, hy pr,l'l.'l{'ltf!a A fM""11m tor
rcadtn' ''~• arwl by p~llf"'K th i•
n~·apaPtt ' optnion!I Md id<>L• on
current 1opia The l'ffil()l('l&l oplnlOf\I
o( tM O.lly Pilot 11,ppcar only \n the
td.itorl&l C!Olumn at fb~ rop or the
pa,a:t. Opinion$ f:Kprt'll!IOO by the ro1.
umn1sts and c1noonl1i!A •nd letlt r
Y.Tilm ttt \Mir own and no ('l'l(tl)c'll~·
mf'nt of their vlt'I>• by lhr Di..11!'
Pilot shauld he inf«ml.
Friday, March 15, 1974
-
, .,.,~1. rAarch lS, 1974 OAI L1 t-T
·:
•
:, , , ..
4-lb. Acrylic Filled
Sleeping Bag
SAYE 50%! 991
Regular $19.99
Con~ outershelJ, COUOR nan•
nt:I lining. Blue, 30x74.inch
size.
514.SO Spinnins and Spincasr
fishing Rod 7 .25
Comole COLOR TV
with 25" Diag.
Meaaure Picture
SAVE IJOO! ~~~5' 42988
Automatic ti.lr ~k. automatic
frequency conrroJ, 11.fediter·
r:.inean style cabintt. #-13,4.
Craftsman 1/4-in.
Electric Drill
CUT50%! 747
Wat $14.99
Double insulated l/5·HP. For
medium-duty work. UL listed.
#1130.
Salt-Saving "60E"
Water Softener
SAVEl4~! 23'995 Re,.ular
5284.95 .
u~s up to -IO'K less sale ~r
re~ra1ion than any compa·
nble wa1er JOireMr we stlL
#J.f 13.
SIOA9Tn.ChlorineTabkcs. 7.49
Urtridge Chlorine __ J J,49
Stock Namber
5002
41681
4 1881
4 196
41103
2130
2071
3430
31643
31225
l l33
l 01 7
llOJ
l039
·130l
4028
4328
43561
4360
4 192
4728
8l00
Wm
S69.95
349.95
339.95
449.95
299.95
109.95
29.95
99.95
299.9l
2l9.95
149.9l
99.9l
99.95.
I tern
DcluX 9" Black and White TV
18" Poruble Color TV
19" Portable Colo1 TV
· 19" belux Pomble Color I 00% Solid State TV
18" Table Model Color TV
FM/AM Stereo 8 track Player
FM/ AM Digi1al Clock Radio
AM/FM Cassette Recorder
Console Stereo, Contemporary Scyle 58
Spanish S1yle Stereo
19" Black and White Portable.
12" Black and White TV
19" Black and White TV
16" Ponable 81.Kk and White
Console Color TV ·
Ponable Color TV 12"
21" Consolette Color w{bale
• •
25" Console Color TV
Delux Console Color 25" '
19" Color w/remote conaol;
·-• '
8300 .. ~:
.119.95
4l9.9l
,249.9l
499.9l
569.95
699.9l
469.95
379.9l
179l.OO
' 1449.00
Walnut Soyle Oprigaa o..pn w/bench
Electronic Orpn Med Style
··~aJaxy" Electronic Organ
1/2 PRICE SALE! Di•continueil Cabinet Hardware
Range Hoods ..,,,..29,1012.29 50~
50 nf. A1torted Knob1. Pull1, Hln1es 'l'l
Re,ular S26.i5 -10 for KJ1chC'n C•binel1 t.IOFF
lo $11495 ! · Former Prices · OFF Electric Dryer (white)
WASHER -DRYER VALUES'
-
3 or 6-blade squirrel or cage $2.14,. 6-Pc. Screwdriver Set Gas Dryer (whi(e)
morors. WhirC', copperrone, NM:kel plarcd carbon sreel blades. 66 Gas Dryer (gold )
avocado and brushed chrome. Ru1t·rMis1an1 plasric handles.#~l-'19 C Automatic Washer (gold)
JO, 36 or 42-inches. SET Automatic Washer (white)
Now
••t.00
229.00
299.00
569.00
2$9.oO
69.00
l•.95
69.00
229;0!1
189.00
109:00
69:00 J
69.00
79:00
2".00
199.00
•29.90
~9.00
499.00
569.00
279.00
1395.00
995.00
AMT.
1
.1
l
1
l
I Hal'T)' in Aut~ic Wa:s~r (avocado) +-!o------------------+-------------------; Electric Dryer (ivocado) i, Auromariis.: W,µher (w~le) .. .
REG.
109.9l
259.9l
t94.9l
264.88
199.95
244.95
164.9l
' 239.9l
169.9l
639.90
169.95
204.9l
SALE
89.88
199.88
164.95
229.88
189.88
224.88
144.88
219.88
149.95
519.95
159.95
164.88
SAVE
20.00
60.00
30.00
3l.OO
10.00
20.po
20.llo
20.00
20.00
120.00
10.00
1
l
'
~
' f
l ' • ,
'
fiE1i./k. Yahu!! Gas Dryer (whit~) , , ·
on Champion Exterior Oil Base I:idy Kefunore Washer and Gas Dryer (•hioel pair
Spark l'luga . a· . House Paint ~~7~:;:c,do>
Sean Lo.... 5 7 c S..4J'E 5~ 2 $599 Automatic Washer (white)
Reicul1r I ·EfttnJlnrYer 'c.,;tiire) ~ ')
Low Price ea. ,!! S5.99Jil. p I. . Automatic.Washer (gold)
Time to change spark plugs for
Champion performance.
Rnistor plu~ 87e ea.
Sl2.99 Wheel A_lignment, 3.99
m. ..... -•fff Protection for all properly pre-Automatic Washer (gold)
._ ,._ pattd surfaces. Dries to a me· Ga.s Dryer (gold) •
dium gloss. Whire,some colors. Electric Dryer (whicet· --. 54.99 gal. Redwood sra.in, l .97
• -_, .. . 199.95
139.9l
2 14.95
264.95
224.9l
149.?l
. ·1"'.aa----
129.88
129.88
~49.88
209.88
124,95
.,, REFRIGERATOR VALUES'
::r(:ontrolled-heat
Electric Fondue Set
._... SAYE $6! 999
Resular 115.99
'n,:'Burner-wi1h-a-Brain .. gives you aucomat.ically
"'controlled heat. Red, yellow, green colors. I Yi· quart size.
S9.99 com~efe wine ki~-------4.98
Chain I.ink
Gate Values
50%brr
Re,ular Low Prices
C.aeellaliont •nd S•mplet
Assor1C'd heighu ind wid1hs.
Some single, some sets-all ~·
duced!
S4.99-S40 Remnants of Chain
Link FencC' Fabric, 50% OFF
Sean Com(~ftable
Duplex Bed ·
~':NJS0.951 ·$129
1179.95 .. Two 33-in. wide, 147 coil mar-• l ~, . . tresses wi1h quilted floral pri?t covers. «
Contemporary Styl
Sofa Sleeper
r:~lS.95 . 'J.89
> " Lon.t:-w'eari1111: Vecrra COlefin -.· Fiberl cover. Reversible' poly-
es1er wrapped polyurethane
foam SC'lt cushions. Casrcrs.
All-Gia"" I 0°Gallo11
Aquarium Kit
with Top
SAYE $8!
R,..lar '28.98 1999
Electric 7 /8
Adding Machine
SAYE $17! 5·997
Re,:alar. $76.99
Adds; subtracts, multiplies.
Lists 7 columns., roWs 8 .. With
ribbon. upe""and dusr: cover.
Colonial-style
Bunk Bed EJJ&emble
ft'JJ.!40,151 '129
$169.85
--;:::;.::~ Includes tw0 bunk beds. rwo
a,;; mattresses. laddc-r and 1t\W'd
rail. ~~!I S229.85 .Col9nial-style0 Bunk
B..tS. 1179
5249.95 Spindle-style-Bunk
B..tS. 1198
F .. ntiiuni Dtpt.
Twin or Full Size
Innerspring Sets
~~ S,.(JIE 50%! •79 Replar $159.90
ComfOnab~ innenpri!'lf maf·
rress •.• 510 coas io fuU size.
360 coils in twin.
7.7 Cu. ff.-(Whirel
7.7 Cu. Ft.-(Whitel·
15.2 Cu. Ft.-(White)
15.2 Cu. Ft.-(White)
17.1 Cu. Ft. Side-By-Side <White)
19.1 Cu. Ft. Side-By-Side (White)
16.6 Cu. Ft. 9ifice maker (Copper)
19. l Cu.. Ft. w/ice maket & water spout-(Whire)
21 .4 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-Side-By.Siae ~(Gold)
19.1 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(Gold)
8.5 Cu. Fr.-(White)
15.2 Cu. Fe. w/ice maker-CGOld)
19 Cu. Ft.,w/ice maker-(Gold) .
19.1 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker & water spout-(Avocado)
15.2 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(Avocado)
-15 Cu. Ft.-Sidc-By-Side-(Copper)
17. I Cu. Ft. w/ice rri.aker-(Avocado)
5.9 Cu.. Ft. Undercounter-(Copper) ·
11 .7 Cu. Ft.-<Whitel .
17 Cu. Fr.-Top Frcezet-(Copper)
REG.
149.9l
149.9l
299.9l
299.9l
399.95
379.9l
339.9l
469.9l
604.95
474.9l
174.9l
3l4.9l
5l4.9l ·
474.95
3l4.95
384.9l
. 394.9l
149.95
179.95
299.9l
SALE
129,95
104.88
269.88
279.88
-349.88
339.aa
99.88
389.95
529,88 42t:aa·
139.88
299.88
479:88
399.88
309.88
354.lia ..
'349.88
129.95
149.95
279.95
FREEZER VALUE S'
REG. SALE
19.6 Cu. Ft. Upright Frosdess 299.9l 279.95
15.8 Cu. F1.-Uprisht-Au1omatic Defrost 199.95 119.91
15.3 Cu. FL Uprigh1-Frostless .289.9l 26'.'5
ll.3 C11.F1. Uprigh1-Frosdesa• 259.95 .219,U
AIR CONDITIONER S
REG. SALE
8000 B.T.U.-3 speed-169.95 1S9.95
14000 B.T.U. Auto(I'h.ermostat 339.9l 28S.OO
11000 B.T.U. Auro(Thermostat 279.95 199.95
:l 1000 B.T.U.-Auro,n'hermostat 279.95 169.95.
6000 B.T.U. 3 speed 189.9l 119.U
28000 B.T.U. Au10/Thermost0r • 439.9l 299.88
10000 B.T.U. Auto(Tbermdlat 319.9l 219.U
•
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6110
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1703/9708
Hand Vacuwn
Electric Broom
Poruble Sowin& Machioe
s.Je.S<}.88
So1e-S 10.9l
Sale-$229.95
40.00
30.-0&-
10.00
Sl.00
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SAVE
20.00
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30.00
20.00
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80.00
110.00
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this Couj)Oll is Good tor a Sc Discount on any ICEE· I
S N Ph 0 d Th It ONE COUPON PER CUSTOMER 1· orry, o one r ers on ese ems See t11e t=amous 1cee eeAR sa1u~, March 1s ,
AM Al>oui Seon Com>enlent Credit Plom •, ·In our Store~ 12 P.M. to 4 .. M. I
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VQL. 67, NO. 74, 5 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNll\ •
t FRIDAY, MARCH IS, 1974 N
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
TEN CENTS
Irvine's Watson Ba cks El Toro as Jetport
By L PETER DUO °' .. Dllly ........
Irvine Company Prald<nt Ra~ L.
Watooo Eld 11nnday he t h I o k a
commercial jets CllUld he allowed IO
Dtt: operalions 1t El Toro Marine a...
Wal3on's poalllon WU dltd Wedneaday
by Newport Bea<:h city ooundl candidate
John V. Baker. who's heeo campaigning
on a platform that call! for an end lo
commercial jets at Orange County
Airport.
...., .. ,.. a ¢'1 w f o r u m
--,, -... llor Elea-..,. .._ c .. llt w -J><tvately wttb
"-_. """' -lold 111e 1rn.e 0 I J _.. llllfll'l • tntennedlate.
Illa • rrld airport opentloo at El
Tor9.
"Wataea told me. •rtne, we'd go for
that.' " Baker ....
Bale.,. said jel Olghts could he
transferred to El Toro "ln a matter of
days."
• res1 en
Minorities
Sheriff's Office
Hit Over Hiring
By WllLIAM SCHREIBER
Of .. Deity , .. ltlff
'The Orange County sheriff's
Department was sharply c r I t i c i 'Z e d
1bunday for a11eged1y ralllng to bring its
minority work force up to par. ~
111e cllaraea _. leveled by County
Affirmative Action Coordinator Ramon
Curiel during Initial budget deliherali«ls
for nat flaca1 year.
Quiel said the deplrtmmt la not ool1 runnblC the risk ol losing ledel'll IJ'8lll
money but allO may be lnvesUgaltd by
the Justice Department and Equal
Employment Opportunities Commission.
"I wou1d say that they are at least
111bjed to a cutoll In federal lunda U
Jl'OgreBS ls not seen ," Curiel told the
gathering ol. I aw officers and oounty
budget experts studying the Sherill's
requests for the coming year.
Sheriff James Musick Is asking for
'If.~ million next year -up from.a total
ot Sl2.8 million last year.
Much of the increase would go toward
Glavas Says
Men Proper
At Beer Bust .
Police Chief B. James Glavas says ~e
bis rev1ewed ·Newport Beach police
conduct at the "°"alled Beryl Lane beer
bUst last month and has decided that
olficers acted correctly.
Although there were several citizen
ocrnplainb resulting from the incident in
lfbldl eight youths were arrested, G1avas
told oouncilmen earlier this week, "I am
Nt1Jf1ed the conduct of the officers was .._. ..
-Glav~ said police would continil! their
policy or arresting underaged mlnon on
grounds of lick of parenlal cootrol wheo
youtbl are fouod drinking <>< Intoxicated.
hiring 99 new people in the department;
of which more than So would Staff a
major addition to the overcrowded
county jail.·.
Tbe jail. facilities became a topic of
discussion at the budget meeting as an """'""°' ol penonoel aod minority hiring-·
Sllerill's Capt. William Wallace, who Is
in cbaree of the o:MllQI'• Jail, said
conilllic:lll are so bad dow that some p.rls ol the jail won't he approved by
state corrections officials this year.
He said the jail now bas more than 850
inmates and only 760 beds available. The
number in jail swells to more than 900 on the weekends.
"Our medical area already doesn 't
comply with the state standards and thls
will he Indicated among other things In
Uk corrections report,'' Wallace said.
Sheriff Musick said the construction
work on a fourth noor of the jail building
is near completion but it must be staffed
to do any good.
The expansion would swell the county
jail's capacity to mort than 1,100 and ·
would include additiOns to medical
personnel lnd cooking facilities.
WallaC<.. said about SS of the new
employes be is seeking would be armed
deputies and the remainder would comist
of cooks, nurses and other personnel
needed to maintain the jail and its
inmates.
Discussion of the growing number of
lnmates broke down into a philosophical
d e b a t e , during which County
Administrative Officer Robert Thomas
said the money could better be used to
build parks. ·
"If aJl lhe programs we have to di vert
.Jhese people into useful activities aren't
working then maybe we should stop
them," he said.
Wallace told the panel that a great
majority of the prisoners now in Jail are
"bard cases" and they are the ones who
are taking space.
He said ol the 50,000 people hooked last
year, 34 percent w.,.. out In elgbt boun,
another 62 percent within two days and a
(See CHARGES, Page!)
Wataon howtver 'lbursday said he does
not endo1"9e Baker's proposal lo move all
commercial jets from the eotmty airfield
.. the Marine hue.
''We b.1ve opposed commercial use of
El Toro.,Jor this reason," Watson said.
"There Is a big community out there and
simply transferring the problem ls
Improper. We feel some responsibility to
those ~pie who are very much opposed
to use of El Toro."
Pointing out that the Irvine Company
Is on record opposing both elimination of
jet Oighl.I at Oranie County Airport -
and expansion of them until Dl}l9e is
reduced -WatJon said tbert is a
pcmibility ol compromise.
·"One compromise, lf It makes seme,
would be for an intermediate airport,"
Watson sakl.. "And It potentially would
get support from residents there.
"If the total .,,_t of Di&hts al El
Toro is not expanded, that might mate
&ense,'' he said.
But be stres,,ed that It would require a
reduction ot the military night.a In order
to allow commercial operations.
Watson. an Eastbluff resident, said, "Ir
there art (ewer mllilal'Y. flights, you
could have rommerclal flights that are of
the nature ol those out of Orange County
Airport. That ls potenllally llO!llcthing
worth talking about ."
Watson also made It clear that , "lrt'
noL supporting anything. Mr. Baker
solicited my point of view. t do not
support moving Orange County Airport
to Ontaria."
\\'atson pointed out !bat commerclal
jtu make lcs5 noi&e than commercial
jet.i;: •
Baker said El Toro makes sense as a
commercial airport but be roncedcd ttM>
mltitarY woold oppose lt. He contcndtd
that 70 military bast>s. many in
Ca lifornia, share operalioos.
Jle said he doesn't think the 1mall
amount of added noise mad<-by
commercial jets .... ·oold be noticed by
residents.
0 a es
..... ....... ,...,...
PO LI SH CYCLE RACERS JANCARZ (LEFTJ AND PLECH KILL TIME BETWE I N RUNS
At County Fairgrounds In Cotti Mesa, A World Series on a Short Course .
Polish 'Invading' Coast
I t's tlte World Again.st U.S. ot Fairground Roce~
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 Ille Dilly l"Hot 51111
Squinting into the afternoon sun
through his swept-back sunglasses
''Twiggy" Kowalski eased tiis 275-pound
frame into a more comfortable position
on the bleachers f'S he "spied" on the
.opposing team.
The coach took a deep drag off his
American cigarette and fingered his
movie camera. He was apprehensive.
These Californians were bloody good on
their home turf.
He was concerned about sending his
boys, Zenon Piech and Ed.,..•ard Janean
out there to fight with them. After all
they weren't about to pass the pigskin
stutterini; didn't help erase "the frowns
from their faces.
Kowa1ski hopes 'his boys can adjust
quickly enough to demonstrate to local
ra ci ng fans why Polish riders are
currently the best In the world. · ·
Zenon Piech, at 21 , la already tabbed by
90me observers to be the next world's
champion. He won the P o I i s h
chan1pionshlp in 1972 and might have
won the wortd crown In bis own country
last September were it not for a crast in
his last ride.
Piech was knocked off while lo the lead
and would bave been in the championship
runoff if the referee hadn't refused a
rerun. Instead countryman J e r z y
Si.czakiel became world champion.
Still Says
'Notl1it1 g
To Conceal'
CHICAGO (UPI ) -Saying he has
nolhing to hide, President Nixon refused
today to give in to demands by the House
J OOiclary Committee for 42 tapes It
wants for its inquiry inlo whether
grounds exist for Impeaching him .
Jn a question·and-answer s e s s i o n
before the Ex}CUtives' Club of Chicago,
Nixon said givltlg the House committee
all it demanded could lead to a delay of
months "and perhaps yean" before the
Unpeachment question is resolved.
To applause, he repeated his State of
the Union declarat)t}r,, "One )'ear of
walergate is enough."
The President also said he had no In-
tention of resigning because he Is not
guilty of Watergate charges and a resig-
nation would weaken tbe presidency and
"Vo'Ollld forever <:hange our form of
government."
"1 will not. be a party to the destruc·
tioo of the presidency of the United
States.'' Nixon said.
He contended that if he resigned now
under fire, future preside-ts could be
forced from office if they become un-
popular or on unsubstantiated charges
brought against them.
Nixon said presidential advisers would
be rOOuced to "a group of eunuchs" If
they felt their confidential conversations
with the chief executive could possibly be
made public, holding lhem to public
(See NIXON, Page ZI
Riles to Speak .
At School Rites
Callfomia Superintendent · of Public
Instruction Wilson Riles will be the guest
speaker for dedication ceremonies of the
Roy 0 . Ande~n Elem(-' -y School in
Corona de! Mar Saturday at 3 p.m.
The new school , at 1900 Port Seabourne
Way, is the 38th school in the Newport·
?trtesa Unified School District.
other dignitaries Invited to the
ceremony are Newport Beach Mayor
Donald A. MclMls, Irvine C.ompany
Raymond president Raymond L. Wat.on
and ~tr. Andersen, who is a retlred
superintendent of the Newport Beach
Elementary School District. When olficers attempted to break up 11
party at 1924 Beryl Lane in Westctiff last
mootb, they became inVolved ln what
police described as a "melee lnvo1ving
six officers arid more than 150 javeniles."
. ,Parents of some of tbe. youtbs at one
point threatened a la-.1~ but nooe baa
been filed to date.
Cy cling Streak er
Motors Across
Cotuud Campus
' with their buddies from the south side of
: "I Chlcago.
'lbls was the world series comlng up
this weekend. And glorioski, the honor of
Poland was riding on the outcome
Jancarz, 26, is a veteran of coundess
international matches and the team
captain of the Stal Gonow club for which
both ride in Poland. Althollgh quieter and
not as spectacular as Piech, he is
extremely consistent and also of world
championship caliber.
Oruge Cout
Councilman Milan Dostal, w b o
requested an investlgaUoa of charges
that police overreacted, sakl be was
satisfied with Glavas' report.
•
Streakers Hit
Posh Eatery
'ftlree young men who waiters
111d "loolled Uke football players"
strffked through Newport Beach's
Stuft Shirt Restaurant, %241 W. C.St lliibway, about II p.m.
l'flllndo1.
"'l'bey .... through the cocktail
lolqe yelling, 'chef's surprise !' "
aid an employe.
He ukl the nude men ran around
tho· bar a coui>le of times and out
lhe door, apparently lnto a walUng
car.
A motorcycle rider, wearing only a ski
muk, atml:ed ''""' the Corona del Mar Blgh Scbool campus today just as
d.-es Jet out for a break at 10 a.m. c.r-del Mar llllh School Principal
Deools Evans Aid bis sWI -they
-... ideallty ol the lllr<aktt aod u
they'ro rfcbl, he'll he ~·
-klcbd • ,..itb out ol acllool IO< n .. daya _, alter he ... caught
streaklac. '
Newport -lllCll School officials
have decllned to --discipline they impo9'd oo lour girls from their
acllool • wflo ,..,. caught 1treakllig the
Corona del Mar ffiCb ca m p u s
W-ay.
1be girls cawrted across school
gnOmda aod lnlO a waiting car but school
officials lollowed them back to their
home compus and """1ed them lnlo the
principal'• olllce. Tiree boys who 1trealr.ed the Harbor
High.._ Moodty...,. not cauahL
The "world series" begins tonight and
nm~ through Sunday in Costa Mesa. It
will be held in a stadium at the Orange
County Fairgrounds which looks like it
shrank because somebody left the
sprinklers on too long.
But the 8,000 or so fans who are
upected tonlgh,t aren't interested In
footblll. They Will be coming tor the
world .eries ol speedway motorcycle
racing.
tt'a called USA vs. the World and for
good reason. The best racel'I from
England, Australia, New Z e a l a n d ,
Scotland and Poland will be there to gang
up on the American superstan.
And Twiggy, a reUred criminal police
olCk:er is 1n California right now to
man.a&e lht crack Polish team and to
oversee UUnga so 11nothlng goes wrong. "
The series tnarks the first time any
Polish ractra have been ln the linlted
States and the first ume they are racing
on ft "mlnl'-track," which is essentially a
·converted hone parade track.
''This track is vel')', very lhor1,"
commented Twiggy; whole real name ls
•fl •
DllW .._ Sttf'I .......
COACHES POLISH RIDERS
Bernard 'Twiggy' Kowalski
Bernard. "In Poland our tracks are
from 380 to 400 meten and the surface is
black cinders. lt will take some time for
the boys to get UJld hl it."
Costa Mesa 's racetr&ck. II , al 180
meters, t.be shortest In the world. lts dirt
surface bat considerably more grip and
the dHUculty of adjustment was clearly
apparent when Piech and Janean: roared
out for practk:e 'lllundaJ.
ComptU'ed to Poland this was like
riding •:m¥?d In their living room.
Kowalakl's boys clearly bad trouble
findllll[ the P<oper lino through the turns
and the fact that Plecb's bike na
One rea!Oll the Polish riders are so
good is because t b e y h;ivc more
opportunity to practice than riders from
other nations. say Piech and Jancarz.
Both wotk in the machine Shop of a
large tractor factory In their hometown
of Gan.ow, but are allowed to take three
afternoons olf a week to practice at the
local track.
Tbelr factory has Its own speedway
club and the bikes, made i n
Czechoelovakia, are supplied to them
free of charge\,. u are mechanics to-take
care of them.
;<:owalski says the riders get a
minimum of 1i:1 hours practice ea<.11
week in addition to the pracUce they .et
ruMing weekly events In Rus.11a.
C..ChooloVakls, Gennaoy aod in thek
home couotry.
"Every club has a speedway school
and there-are 15 to 18 machines In each
club. Not all of them are brand-new but
there ls no problem getUng a ride on a
(See RACERS, Pa .. I)
• I
Weather
Fog and low clouds night and
morning hours with mostly sunny
afternoons Saturday. s Ii g b t I y
cooler. Lows in the klw 50s to-
night. Highs Saturday 74 to 77.
INSIDE TODA\'
Staff Writer Tom JlfcCann
reviews a f:lew Orl1:a1u ;au
album in toda~11 Weekt:ndt:r.
The record 100.t product:d by a
UC Irvine !'ngli1h profesacrr and
'recorded in Londo11.
• • .
Mntff t7 .... Mllt...i ,.,. n
N1tteMI ,._ t
ll:Hl-lfltl U<H
SW""lll Ptrtff 11 SWh , ...
Situ Mlt'lle,_ 1 .. 11
T-H Tllte!W• tr. a. • w... 4 :::::...-::
,
2 OAILY PILOt N
~IARTllA'S REPORT
SA ID 'UNFOUNDED'
NEW YORK (AP) -Marth1 ~litdlell
has ~(lied a n1lssing persons report over
the telephone for her daughter after
being told the gi rl \\'as In her father'.$
custody, poHl:e reported.
Police here said 'rhursday nigh t the
estranged wife of former Atty. Gen. Jvhn
N. Mitchell . claimt.>d oHicials at the
Sacred llearl convent in Greetl\\'ich,
Conn. told her the 13-y ear..old girl, also
named Mart.ha, was on spring vacation in
her father's custody.
Oil Exporters
Hint at Hilies
After EmlJargo
1 VIENNA (UPI) -With the possible
llftlng Ot the Arab oil boycott against the
United States looming In ttle background ,
the Organization of Pctroleu1n Exporting
Countries (OPEC) v.·ill recon1mend
Saturday that the price of crude oil be
· increased April I, OPEC officials said
today.
• Tt-ey also said lhey believed an
a1mouncement easing the Anb oil
embargo against lhe United States would
be made in Vienna over the weekend.
In Beirut, the Arab press rtported
'today that Arab oil ministers postponed
announcement of~ decision on lifting tbe
CLASHES FLARE AT GOLAN
HEIGHTS. Story, P•go 4
FUEL CRISIS ONLY
THE BEGINNING? P•go 12
oil embargo against the United States
untll Sunday In an attempt to reach
unanimity on !he issue.
The semi-o!ficial Cairo newspaper . Al
Ahram said ·in a report Crom its
correspondent who covered Wednesday'a
oil ministers conference in l!be Libyan
capital or Tripoli:
• . "The ministers adjourned until Sunday
• ' to allow the oU mlnistera: of Syria and
Ubya to consult their governments in the
'hope that their next meeting lo Vienna
will issue a unanimous decision OD )iftinf
the embar£O."
Fro• Page I
RACERS .•.
Eigl1t Mo1·e
Candidate
• Forums Set
Newport Beach voters may be g~ttl ng
ll record exposure to the oandidates for
city CQW'lcil.
There have already bten t w o
candidates' forwns spon!Ort'd by civic
groups and at least eight moce arc
planned before the April 9 election.
The Women '! Civic Leagu<' will hvst
candidates Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. at
t.1ariners Ubrary. '!1le Newport Harbor
Chamber of Commerce has invited them
Wednesday mbmlng at 7:30 to the Balboa
Bay Club.
The. West Newport Improvement
Association has a forum scheduled at
7:30 p.m. tbat day at the West Newport
!Jbrary.
Thursday morning, they'll g:et up for an
8 a.m. forw1l spansored by the Newport
ltarbor-Costa t.1esa Board of Realtors at
the Balboa Bay aub.
Newport lleighls homeowners wi.11 get
their chance to hear the candidates
~larch 26 at 7: .... p.m. at Newport
Height.s Elementary School.
The campaign win move to 1-larbor
View Homes March '!1 at 7:30 p.m. for a
form at .J\oy 0 . Andersen Elemeatary
School.
The candidates v.•i\I galhcr April 3 at
7::.J p.m. for a forum sponsored by the
Orange Coast League of \Vomcn Voters
al Corona del ~1ar Elementary School.
The Balboa Island Improvement
Association is trying to find a date in the
midst of all these so island resldent.s will
get their chance to listen to campaign
claims.
In addition, several other groups are
inviting the candidates from certain
dlstricta to appear.
1bere are 11 candidates contesUng for
four seata that will be n.lled.
Newport Bound
By State Law
On Disclosures ,
City AUomey Dennis O'Neil has rultd
that Newport Beach COWlcilrnen must
obey the oew state financial disclosure
law ev'° tboua!J one Northern California
court has ruliil II uncoostltutiooai.
"We believe that the state Supreme
Court will be handing down a ruling on
the .matter within a few mooth.5," O'Neil
says.
machine," ins.isll Kowalt. r
Jn I~, speedwax racin has bedtme a
national l)iort In l'Olall<\, rely la lhere
a 1peedway race wtiich fails to drawl~
than 10,000 to 15,000 spectators and the
largest stadium, in Kattowlce, Is often
lilltd lo Its 110,000 capacity.
"f ~ ~ tht meantlme.,the law is on t JI>< bOob and Jn my opinion should be
1oUowed." O'Neil told coWlCilmen.
' •
-
T1lere Is considerable inducement for
riders to win and money is !ree.ly passed
out for points won during matches both
at home and abroad.
Kowalski says Polish speedway racers
are allowed to travel freely aOO that
Polish 18n~.1ike to see foreign riders 8J.
their oym lracka. · ....
Kowalski, who co n du cl s his
conversations \11ith other members of the
international team in German because none of the Poles speaks EngliSh, stopped
this interview in mickentence as a Cl'O\\.'d
of riders involved in Thursday's practice
rushed to one or the turns.
A solitary alcohol burning engine
droned around the track. never wavering
in tone, running nat-out even in the
comers, showering the curious with a
stream of grit.
Even before he got to the crashwal\
Kowals)d lplew who It wa~. "Piech," he
announced wit'n a proud smile. Who else
could go fiat out through the corners?
And there was Zenon Piech on an old
wat·h01se borrowed front ex.·v.·orld
champ BafT)' Briggs, whipping it through
the hll118, shooting off the crashwall like
a billiard ball-Polish polish all the way. .
A different, well-runlng machine was
all he apparently needed. And If Jancarz
can get lhe hang of things by the lime
lhe first race i! nagged off. the Polish
joke will be on the fan who dares tell one.
OIANGI COAlT '
DAILY PILOT
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M_,,ftl l!'ltor
L Peter kri11 H-1 eoOCll City l't!ler
N..,... IMdl Office
JJJ) Now,ert l1ul1•1rtl
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Councilmen aecept.ed O'Nell'1 'decision
without comment during a study session
M'onday.
/Ibe 1173 1 a w requires all city
councllmen and certain other officials to
disclose by April sources of income as
well as other possible conflicts of interest
regarding matters that may come before
them for decision.
Earlier this month a Superior Court in
Nevapa COunty ruled the I a w
uneonstilutional. 11le decision is being
appealt>d.
Reinecke Seeks
Price Controls
For Crude Oil
The controversy over federal oil price
controls continuoft today as Lt. Governor
Ed RcinE.'Ckc asked lhe Federal Energy
Office to keep price controls on crude oil
sold from California state lands.
Hi11 action came following a suit filt>d
\Vt>dnesday in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles by the Stale of California and
the cities of Newport Beach and Long
Beach, charging that federal price
controls arc costing the state $230 million
a year in lost revenue.
Reinttke protested that the remo\1al of
price cootrols v.·ouJd result in higher
prices for coiisumcrs.
Jn a compromise move, Assemblyman
Kenneth Cory (0-Garden Grovel intro.
duced a bill Thursday v.·hich he propo5Cd
v.·oukt make price controls unnecessary
YtbUe controlling inflation.
· The bill would require that any extra
rwenuc from the sale of slate tidelands
oil at energy crisis prices be used to
reduce gasoline taxes for motorists.
"The consumer would reap the benefits
of the higher market value or crtxlc oil
on·ned by the people of California. Once
this is done, the federal goverruneol v.·111
have oo justification !or imposing
controls on state-owned crude oil,'' CJry
said.
Nixon Tax Case
'To Be Shocker'
BOSl'ON (UPI) -A m<mber of tl1e
congressional committee. looking Into
President Nixon's incoine tax returns
says it& report ''will be a shocker."
Quoted in a B<Jston Globe story out of
WashlngtOn today, Rep. Jamts A Burke
1 0-~fass, l, agreed with a previoui1:
statement by Rep. Wilbur 0 . Miils (0-
Ark. t that the report would cause. mor'
trouble than Watergate tor rilxon . Mills'
statemtnt had been criticized by the
Nixon administration as a "cheap shot.••
"'J'hat report wllJ be a shocker, and
th<re'll be nothing cheap about tlli•''
Burk• said.
<
o.uv Jlllol '''" Pllol•
UCI Child "
Care Plans
App1·oved
A new Sl00,000 ctilld care laclllly for
UC Irvine was appreved Tb.uraday by tht
campus plamini: committee.
The decision is silJltftcant because a
group of parenls whose children attended
the existing !acility. ··The B a r n
Preschool," had filed a complaint about
its conditions with tbe California Board
of Regents.
The complaint was sch.eduled to come
before the Regents today in their
meeting in San Francisco.
Larry Agran. the parent who rtled the
complaint in February, said the parents
are satisfied with the decision.
THIS IS HOW A PEDESTRIAN SEES COAST HIGHWAY BRIDGE OVER UPPER BAY
Irvine Comp•ny's W•tson S1y1 His Firm Doesn't Want High Level Crossing
The new facility is scheduled to ope" in
October and will be built close to the
present school -in an old barn on a
farm behind Verano Place graduate
student apartments.
"In the meuntime, the parents
advisory board will be working with the
administration to reduce the remaining
health hazards at the Barn," Agran said. Kalmbach Siient About 40 preschoolers from two and a
half to fi\'e years old attend the school.
Probers Say Testimony
Backs Milk Alwgations
Irvine Company·
Denies Desire
For High Bridge
'I'he Irvine Company has denied that it
v.•ants a 4G-foot high Pacific Coast
Highway bridge over Newport Bay in
order to insure pleasure boat acces.1 to a
possible Back Bay marina.
The partnts' complaint pointed out that
the facility, once the olfice or architecl
William Pereira, did nol have indoor
running "'ater, adequate toilet facilities
and accessible emergency medical care.
They also complained of the dirt rood
leading up to it, which in rainy weather
becomes almost ;mpassabJe to heavy
vehicles suc,h as fire engines.
'The parents pay $60 to '115 a month
for childcare at the center, which .
provides as percent or the cost to run the ·i
school.
KANSAS CITY (AP) -Federal
investigators have received testimony
that they claim tends to auppott an
allegation ·that officials 9f the nation's
largest da iry cooperative wisuccessfully
lrled to pay $300,000 to Nixon fund-raiser
Herbert L, Kalmbach of Newport Beuc:h. , They allege the money was to be used
to kill a government anti·trust suit
agairut the cooperative.
, Kalmbach, in Newport Beach, has
declined c:omment on the allegaUon on
grounds that he is currently discussing
the maUer in detail with Watergate
probers.
Meanwhile in Kans a ! CUy, 8ob
A Lilly, former political treasl.ll"et or the
co-op, the Associated Milk Producers
Inc., has testified that he overheard
~ top co-op officials dhcus.slng a f3D01too flnl, half from the milk
proctucen Ind half from tv.'O other huge
dairy co-<lPS that also :"faced antitrust
troll~) es.
Lilly also has testified lhat ~e co--0p's
general manager, Geroge L. hfehren,
said he wanted to speak to Kalmbach
about the money, and that Lllly helped
arrange a telephone conversation
between the two.
Frotn Pagel
NIXON ...
criticism if their advice ~·as wrong.
He said Thom.as Jefferson waged the
same battle to preserve the
confidentiality of the office.
tlunclreds of demonslrators. both for
and against Nixon, v.•aged a noisy verbal
battle of chants, songs and blaring music
out.side the hole1 where Nixon spoke.
The pickets challenged each other with
banners reading "Throw the Bun1 out''
and "God Ulves Nixon" and tried to
oulshout each , other with chants of
"Impeach Nixon" and "We \Vant Nixon."
Nixon's voice quavered at times as he
leaned into the microphone in !he
crowded ballroom fielding the questions
of som~ of the most prominenl
businessmen in the ;ndv.·est.
Rep. Peter W. Rodino (0-N.J.),
chairman of the juditiary committee.
backed by the senior Republican on the
panel, Rep. Edward Hutdlinsoo or
Michigan. insisted this week that the
House has an unchallengeable right to
materials from \\bite House files in
fulfilling ils constituUooat role of
de~nnlnlng whether Nixon committed
"high crimes and misdemeanors."
A number of Democrats on the
committee, and some ~publicans, said
they were ready to subpoena t:1e tapes if
Nixon refuses to furnish t h e m
\'Oluntarily,
Nixon's Soviet
Visit Prepared
By Kissinger
CHICAGO (AP) -Secretary or State
Henry A. KWingcr will begin talks In
~foscow Marl'h 2S on preparations for
Presklent Nixon 's visit to the Soviet
Union later ln the year. White House
officials annoWlCed bere today.
The announcement. made joinUy here
and In the Soviet capital. said Klsslnger'1
discussions also ...,.oul dcov'r "a revie':'f ol
bnateral relationJ and i.ntematlonal
matters of mutual concern."
Kissinger had said tn Washington he
would be leaving for Moscow March 24.
His trip Is in accord with an agreement
reached during Soviet Foreign . Minister
Andrei A. Gromyko's visit to Washington
Feb. 4.
Nixon is in Ghieaeo lo address. a
buslncssman's gathering.
Investigators are believed to have a
telephone company record of a call
betwee:n l\1ehren and Kalmbach on April
4, t972.
That Is the date on which Mehren
signed 30 checks, ~·ith payees left ~ank,
lotaling 1150,000.
It has been charged in hearsay
testimon:; that ro-op of£icials waited to
get word from Kalmbach about which
dummy political committees their money
should be fwmeled through but thal
Kalmbach backed out or the deal and
said he didn't want the mooey. 11le
check.! that l\1ehren signed April 4 were
later voided and were never paid.
Investigators for the Senate Watergate
committee and the Watergate special
prosecution are lnvsstigating t h e
possibility lhat the 30 blank checks for
$5,000 each were intended as payment to
President Nison's campaign· vi a
Katmbach.
Dwight L. ~1onis, !ormer secretary of
the Milk Producers co-op, testified
publicly this week that co--0p president
John Butterbrodt told him Kaltnbach
had agreed to make the antitrust suit "go
away" for a $300,000 payment, but that
Kalmbach changed hls mind because of
bad publicity over the administration's
handling of the ITI antitrust case.
1t1orris swore that Butterbrodt related
this to him Apri.111, 1972, one week after
Mehren signed the 30 checks that were
never paid. Butterbrodt has deni 1.-.J
t.torris' testimony publicly but declined
an opportunity to repeat the denial under
oath.
In a letter released Wednesday • Irvine
·Company President Raymond L. Watson
states emphatically that his company
supports creation or a wildlife preserve
In the Back Bay and lhat it has no
interest In a high bridge.
"The lrvlne Company does not.
advocate a bridge designed to
acoommodale any particular size or
volume of boal traffic," Walson \\'rote .
\Vatson made his remarks in a letter
addressed to members of the Pacific
Coast ltigh'A·ay Bay Crossing Planning
Committee.
Ray Williams. a member of the
oommlUee. and President of Friends ol
Newport Bay, suggested earlier this
v.·ee:k that th elrvine Company wanted a
high bridge in order to hokl open the
optioo of bujlding a major new marina in
the Back Bay.
The Irvine Company at oc;ie point had
support from the Qrange County Board
ol Supervisors for stich a marina, but the
company ~·ithdrew the plan last spring
after it last a lawsuit opposing the
marina.
Williams c:harged, but Watson denied,
that the company still nourishes hopes
for a marina.
Executive Still Held
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -
The \\'hereabouts of· American oil
executiV_e Victor Samuelson remained a
mystery today despite payment four
days ago of a rerord $14.2 million ransom
to ~larxist guerrillas for his release.
The rest comes from s t u d e n t
government allocations of fees paid by
all students.
From Page 1
CHARGES ...
total of !Ml percent of all primers \Vere
out in live days. '
The remaining 20 percent fill all
a\'ailable jail space and are hard core
criminals who V.'Ould not be rehabUltated
if they had the chance," Wallace said.
Wallace said the average jail inmate
today is under 25 years of age and ''far
more violently militant" than those fi\o·e
or 10 years ago.
During the discu~ion of additional
hiring of minorities and woruen, Curiel
said Musick's record "is the poorest or
any department in the county."
He said the Department now has 24
v.·omen (19 Anglos. two black and three
A1exican • American) and 359 men (343
Anglo, two black and I4 1.fexican-
American).
Musick countered Curiel's arguments
by saying his office has been thwarted by
Thomas' oCfice in its effort.s to hire a
man rtsponsible for nothing other than
seeking out qualified minoritle&.
Funds for that man were frozen,
?ifusick said. and he can only take what
applicants are sent to him by the county
personner·office.
See This Assemblage O;\
Henredon's Folio Eleven Collectio~ I•
Inspired From 17th & 18th Century
French and Chinese Styles. These
Outstanding Pieces Fit Beautifully
Into Almost Any Decor.
Hem-edon f<tlo1ii.
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASlAN
WEEKDAYS & SATURDAYS 9.00 to S:30
NEWPORT & TORRANCE OPEN FRIDAYS 'TIL 9
'
NEWPORT BEACH • rm WESTCW'F DR.. M>·:lQ\IO
LAGUNA BEACH •
345 NORnt COAST HWY.,
49"-&Ml
TORRANCE •
23649 1-1._A WTHOA~ BLVD.
COJ)tn Sunda,Y 12-3:30) 378-1.279
\
. ..
I
;)
,
,
•• ,_
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Request Out of Line
•'
"
·.
' '
Newport Beecb, Long Beath 111d Ille State of Call·
fomla wenl to oowt W-y to Ogbt tlle federal
'°""""""t over oll prices.
Th• cltios and the sate want to roake tbem higher.
They'd all been enJoying an exemption from pri<e
freezes th•t allowed them to nonogoUato tbe price they
charge tho oil companies for cnide oil pumped from
sate tidelands.
But the Feder•I Energy Ofllee novoked that exemp.
Uon last mooth and ordered lbe price rolled back
from $9.30 a bm'el to $4.18 a bm'el. They went to
court to get the exemption reinstated.
If they don't win exemption, It will put somewhat
of ' dent In the clty's oil income, cutting il back from
a projected $1 05,000 to $35,000. a )W. Newport Beach '911 onH!gbth of the Income from wells' drilled Into
1ta West Newport tidelands. The private contractor,
who actually dO.s tbe pumplng, geta the resl
Somehow, there's got to be a quation ot the claim
by lbe three public agencies that they ought to be ex·
empt.
The city could use extra income, but its right to be
excluded from the rules others mwt tollow is dubious.
Teachers' Time Off
Eleven teachers in the Ne-A•port·l\1esa Unified School
District will take lime off from rlassroom duties next
year to work on a variety of educ ion projects that will
include everything from foreign travel to studying in
college.
\Vhile they do so. these teachers will be paid full
Secret of
Successful
Revolution
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
1bougbt1 11 Large:
The only truly suceessful re\•olution
is one ln v.·hich the new re\·olutionary
leaders do not feel forced to ' he as
repressive as the' regime they overthrew.
(By this standard. only the American
Revolution-precisely because it was
self-limited-may be corWdered a suc-
cess.) • • •
Distrust any philosophy that pretends
to enunciate an "ultimate truth"=for
it is the essence or ultimate truths
that they cannot he
verbalized without
being distorted and
misunderstood. ·
• • •
Wbetl a bad lhing
isn 't -working. ii is
from an excess. anti
you need le!S l)f lt:
v.·hen a good thing
isn't "·ork1ng (such
as the democratic process), il is from a
deficiency, and you need more of it.
• • •
HO\V can one be "lrue to another·•
before one has ~zed where the
truest part of oneself resides?
• • •
People \\'ho tra,•el to go "sight-seeing''
are usually more exotic sights than
any they see. • • •
The most significant aspect of the
20th century. overlowerin" all other
changes. is that for the first lime it
is no longer a while Christian man's
v.·orld. . ~ ......
lf capitalism has failed. it is not
so much in the economic area, "·here
f\ofarx predicted it ll.'Ould, as in the
eclucaUonal area, where 111ootesquieu
feared lt might. (Both the defenders
and the detractors of the system seem
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Odd that a "-oman stanril nJt" in line
\\ith t,,.o small childrC'n to see The
Exorcist should becon1e upset hy
streakers fiying by. Isn't lhn1 a
conflict of moral values?
J.A.
Gl_,y GUI ~ l rt wD..,;19" ~'
._..,,. 11111 -. • ftt<11 .. ntr r.-tlKt Ill•
VI-• 1t1 lltt --· kPMI -,.. -· I• OIMfnr ... , D1Ur f'l .. I.
almost equally ignorant of its merits
and its defects.)
• • •
ChauVinism of every &Ori is merely
a way in which individuals fee l free
to cloak themselves v.·ith a collective
sense of superiority lhat they would
be ashamed to assert individually.
• • •
Goethe expressed at an early age
\\1hat most of us never learn until it
is too late to make any difference:
'·'We are never furt her from our wishes
than when We imagine that \l.·e fX)ISess
what we have desired." . , .
When a national poll or dramalic
critics asked me to name lhe greatest
American pla)'Wright. I answered ,
"Eugene O'Neill, alas"-taking a leaf
from Andre Gide who v:hen asked to
name the greatest French poet, replied,
"Victor Hugo, a1as,"
• • •
People v.·ho regard themselves as !he
most chasle also Imagine that they are
the best judges of obscenity ; which
is like a teetotaler pronouncing on the
comp.arat.ive quality of wines.
• • •
Societies rebel against tyranny, but
when they are not instructed in wha t
to do "1th their freedom, they rebel
against liberty as well.
• • •
Americans \\'ho are fond of pointing out
that \\'e v.·ere born as a "republic" and
not a "democracy" are being as "'illfully
obtuse about words as the bureaucrat
who insisted that a "small businessman''
must be under S.foot-1.
RVs Are Energy Savers
To l e Editor:
A recent reader labeled recreational
vehicles tile "real gas hogs" and you r
headline writer labeled the Mailbox col·
umn acoordlngly. Let.s look at facts in-
!lead of wi ld rommcnts of the dri\'er of
a small car.
!\tANY RV's get in exceM of 10 mpg,
something that most medium sized cars
do not. I own a motorhome and drive a
medium-sized sedan. 'nle motorbome
gets better mileage at 55 mph. They both
•f" '13 models.
( ·MAILBOX J
l.tttt" tr.m ,.......,.. 1rt wtl-. N.,.11'11111
WtlltN M.ua. e••tr ftMlr IMl .. tn In JM WWlls
tr i.it, Tiit tlwtlf N +noMlt!IH ltllffl .. Ill -· w t llmfllti. Hoel tl r~. All ttlltn ""''" Ill• ct• 11t1111u,.. 111111 11>llM" 1Hr•t. llVI 1111M1 f!ltJ IN WllllMN M ,_.., It w ffklltl!I rM-11
_,, httlY Mii Ml '9 "'MltfltC,
' :1a die 1a11y ,..uy 1oi.r .. ted lo ~
sav11111 u IO the -l •L a motor .
homi.J.ook al U-facts:
tPis: Driven don 't need suiggered
service at.ation business hours.
'lllty do need stalfoos that oell gu lo
the alietDOOll lnatead ol momlnp, for tboee who go lo work too early to get , ...
(
; Mltft..., Wnlly II nay lrom bqme Ill
o6r RV we:
-U. one-fourth the elccbicity used at
home
-Use one-Mxth the gas used at home ,
-Ute ooe-tenUt the waler ust'd at home
W \'OU are going to single one group
out for abuse plea.se. look at all the. racts.
WILLIAM f'. LOWANCE
Gu Neell•
To ll>e Edl,.r:
/I• ~ edll•rial oommeni oo gas sta·
,,
LEONARD JOllNSO:ol
Gu Clth••lry
To the FAitor:
Chivalry b not dead in lllllllingloo
Beach!
I wish to publicly express my thinks to
!he gracious gentleman who pu.Vted 11\Y
c•r throu1h the long line of walUng cars
(about 10) when I ran out of gu, Jn line.
in this au-pantc .. trlcken time such
colU'losy Is exl!mpfary.
II.A. THRASHER
•
or nearly full salaries by the school district. The over·
all """' of this, o!Jkials, estimate, will be $100,000 to '120,000.
While some taxpayers may question why this kind
o( program ls funded at public expense, we believe the
idea of sabbaticals is a sound one.
All teachers granted sabbatical lea\•es must sub1n!t
detailed plans to show that Weir particular project wllJ
benefit the school district, and each U; required upon
return to follow through with a prcdeteruiincd series
of activities.
As beneficial as the program n1ay be. the ~abbatical
system is one item administrators "'ill ha\·c 10 co nsider
ll they look for ways to pare expenses ror the 1974-75
fl.seal ye11 . They \rjJ1 be in the position of deciding be·
t"·een the desirable11nd the essential.
Growing Response
Many Ne>A·port .Beach resldenlc; ha\'e just completed
a busy week in ll.'itness to Christianity.
The annual Christian Leadership \Veek. sponsored
by the Newport Beach Jaycee!, began. as always. with
a movi ng speech at the ~1ayor's Prayer Breakfast. It
continued with a series of breakfasts and evening Bible
di scussions.
1\s al\l.'ay s, the programs were n1el. ll.'ilh enthusi astic:
response fro1n those partic.lpating. Encouragingly. their
numbers see111 to contin ue lo grow. Even in the ra in.
so 1ne 400 persons ""ere at the tJalboa Bay Cl ub for the
Prayer Breakfast.
And wh~t's 1nor(I. if 1hey ,,·ere li~tcning there's a
reasonable hope that \\'hat they heard will ha\'e an im·
pact that could stretch out through the next 51 weeks.
N 'Yo11 say this was their rust attempt at streaking?'
lf as J11lie's Pay a Busi11ess Expe11se?
Presidential Income Tax Questions
WASHINGTON -Confidential \Vhite
l:ouse documents !!how that President
Nixon, rontrary 10 the statements put out
in his name. has taken an intense
personal interest in \\'angling e\•rry
possible tax deduction he could get a"'·:1y
\\'ith.
He even inquired in 1969 about d<'duct-
ing hfs payments to his daughter .Julie
as a business expense. He wanted to
count money he "·as
contributing to tlf'r
su pport as salary for
her work a~ a \\'hite
House tour guide
Yet the \l/ltile Hoose
had already put out
publicity that she
\\'as a •·volunteer."
The President also "'iinled a :nx
break for using the den at his San
Clemente estate for an office. He asked
v.·ha t tax write-offs v.·ere available, too.
for pennittlng others to use his
Calilomia and Florida houses .
He thought be should be permitted to
charge off wedding gifts, funeral sprays
and similar items, because he felt these
\\'ere "business expenses" for a politi-
cinn. ~1ost or his entertaining, he also
cootended, should be deductible. "l~e
"'ants lo be .sure," instructed aide John
Ettrlichman in a confidential memo,
"that his business deductiom include all
allowable items." ~
mIS DIFFERS from the picture the
White House has tried lo portray of a
President loo busy to bother v.·ith the
details of his tax returns. Press
( now Lhe Nixon m"" inside lhc IRS.
Barth responded a month later with a JACK ANDER.SON) me'!''· co.ef"llY "amped "Confldcnlial."
L _ ad\'LSLnl(: "LC'gnlly We might JUStLfy
deduc1 ion as a business expense for a
, 1 • • salary paid to Julie as a tour guide this s!~kcsn1an (.eratd \\a1Te~ has _implied summer. llo"•ever. for ltt. follo"·ing
r\1xon "as so preoccupied \\'tlh the reasons. I ~10ST strongly recommend
presidrncy that he left the prrparation t.ii that this should not be done : his rrtums entirely to his lav.·yers.
The implication was that his lav.')'crs
\\'ere really to blame for claiming the
con1ro\'crs1a l -and probably illegaJ -
SS76.000 tax deduction for the ,Ut or the
r\ixon papers to the government.
DOCUrtlE~'TS now in lhe hands of lhe
Joint Congressional Committee o n
Jntemal Revenue TaxaUon, however.
prov£' that the President v.·as not at all
removed from the preparation of his
returns. On the contrary, he pulled every
JX>SSible string to increase his tax de-
ductions.
Ehrlichman relayed the President's
\\'ishcs to F.d\\'ard ~torgan . the \\.hilc
House aide who handled the President's
taxes. For exa mple, an Ehrlichman
n1emo. dated June 16, 1972, asked
J\forg:in :
•·Tue President proposes to personally
pay Julie for her v.•ork in the \\'hite
House this summer and deduct it as "
business expcnSl'. Would you please
determine whether be can properly do
this ... "
J\IORGAN took the problem up v.ith the
Internal Revenue Service's Deputy Chief
Counsel Roger Barth v.·ho served as
political impresario for Julie and Tricia
~ixon during the 1968 campaign and is
.. ,Al Tht• amount involved is ralher
small :
"(BJ This is al11.1ays a factual question
"'hich could be raised on audit of whether
she is necesaary to the taxpayer's ·business·:
.. jCJ In addition lo federal withh'Jlding
dala ~·hich would get into the files at the
IRS, information wou1d have to be given
to the (state) tax authorities and to the
Social Security people. There are too
many entitles involved for this to be kept
confidential;
"ID) The newspapers have made much
of the fact that she has been acting as a
'volunleer.' I lhink the risk of exposure
of o business deduction attempt is too
ll'Mt •. ·"
BARTII advised in!tC'ad that the Presi-
dent should "make a gift at the end of
the summer to Julie. Althour.h it "'ould
not be deductible to him , It \\·ould be tax-
free to her."
The President apparently heeded this
advice. for the White House press office
tells us that lhe President never put Julie
on salary.
In anothe r memo, Ehrlichman asked
!\torgan : "The President intends to use
the San Clemente house for official visits ,
and he intends to use his den ns nn of..,
fice for presidential activ itict. What
"'rile-offs are available to him '..'"
Barth v.·as also approached on this
question . lie advised that "a deduction
\\·ould be permitted ror depreciation and
maintenance t•1pcnscs ··
El lRLICll~IAN nlso 1\•ant e1t lo kJlO\\'
about "the ta x l"Ons{'(1u1.·nl't'S of pcnnil•
ting others to use the Florida and
California houS('s." Barth responded :
"\\'e would ha\'c to estahlish the buainess
purpose for the President "·ith regard to
each per30n invited lo use the home9 .
On the question of deductions for wed-
ding gifts, funeral sprays and the like,
Ehrlichman noted: ''The President holds
the view that a public man does very
little Of a personal nature. Vlrtually all of
his entertainment and activity is related
to his 'business'."
Agreed BarTfi: "! pcl"SOnally agree
with the idea that much of the
President's expense is related to hi~
'business.' As with the business use of his
residence. a careful syslen1 must be
established for keeping track of business
expenses .•.
"S~IAU. GIFTS by the President.
\\·hi ch are l'('Jated to his 'busineM:.' v.·ould
be deductible ... Note, ho\\'C\'er. that \re
must give though t to distinguishing
between activilies and girts r1>lated 'er
'being a !'resident' and those related lo
running for rceleciion."
Richard Nixon , as v.·c now know, took
every al'ailable legal deduction ancl at.
least one $576.000 v.Tite-off v.'hose legality
is questionable.
An Island of Calm • Ill the Crisis
S;>;ICKERS GAP, Va. -God ga\'c me
a little piece of primitive Amei;ca here in
the Blue Ridge ~fountains and ~-Ir.
Simon, the energy czar. is helping me
keep it.
The bottom has fallen out of the
recreational real estate market and the
blessed day is thus
extended for the en-
joyment in privacy
of a place on eanh
which is not greatly
changed since it \\'tlS
originally SUl'\'eyerl
by George Wash-
ington.
The real estate
feve r bas subsided
\vith the declining level of available gaso-
line. Md so there is no longer as great a
risk that the urban yearning for se~ond
homes in the mountains will upset the
balance of nature.
"'E HAVE been saved, even, from the
PUNCH
ronscrvationists. ov.·ing to the nise
decision of the National Park Service to
move the Appalachian trail elsev.·herl'.
Trail bike treks where walking \\'as in-
tended have thus been excludi!d from lhc
pri\'ale property of residents on lhis
part1L'lllar side of the mountain .
It has fortunately not come to the at-
tention of ?ttr. Simon that this area has
been forgotten in the allocation of
avallablC' gasoline supplies. Once yo11
ha\·e arri\'ed here. you ma y not be able
to retum to the city because drought has
st ruck the local gas stations in nearby
ftound Hill and Purcellville. It is Just as
"'ell. though very distressing to
carpenters. masons, and other artisans
v.·ho cannot get enough gas to carry them
10 \\'Ork at housing projects nearer
"It annoys me when th~y come in just to use the$.p1tloon ...
j
\\·ashington.
Jn the nature of things , however, the
lime 11.·ill come when· the local people will
take care of their O\\'Jl and there will be
enough gas fo r those righlfully entitled to
it by birth and place of abode. The Milers
can just stay away. !\1anv native Virgin-
ians in U1is area f<lt that way about
outsiders long before the gas shortage.
A GREAT DEAL of anxiety is felt that
nea rby Berryville, the ancestral seal of
the Byrd family, Is dying and the gas
shortage will not help prolong the life of
the tm.n. But Berryville is being by-
passed anyway by a four-lane parkway.
The attritioq of mall b•isiness hnd al·
ready beguri and the mana~ers of the
5Upennarket make ~nds M 1f it v.·iU be
lhc next to close up.
These signs are dlscourat;1ng to small
lO"ll hoostrrs , but they arc perhaps
short-sig hted in failing to sc·e !hat prog-
re5.'i may lea\'e behind islands of calm
'nnd contenirnent \11hlch wlll nXlrc than
ever anract those v.·ho wish to get out of
the way of modem improvement.
A SUr\·ey of the dC\'tloplng Second·
home rtcreational ereos. \\hlch Is one of
the phenomena of the times. suggests it
might be better just to have a house In
one of the pleasant s1T1all communities
already long established.
The Impracticality of modem im-
provement is a "'ell knov.,, Irony, but
ne,·er more painfully realized than in ex·
nm lnlng a \'ery old d1\clling which hM
been rebuilt 10 crtate an oasis of comlort
and cht>er detp In a \\"lldemess. "'Jthou.t
these rmpro\'emcnts and as it "aa in the
flrit plact. wlthout rtltante on broughl·m
energy, !he diAelling "·ould be U,·able i.n
:\ny kind of crl.sli..
TO SAVE OIL, the boS<board h•allng
30 erpens.hely Installed has been dllCOn•
ne<!tcd. the well·supplll-d wuter S)'ttcm
ha~ been cut flff .IO It wlll oot freeze and
burs1 the pipes In tile cunnln~1)' conlrf\led
bathrooms, kitch en and laundry. The old
Jog house stands on its hillside bone-chill·
ing cold "'here once ii was cozy 1~1tth
wood-burning stoves. supplied .,.,, i t h
spring water and consuming the energy
expended by its occupants in carrying
pails and splitting v.·ood.
Spring is coming and the old hou!iie v.·11l
thaw, roppe rheads will :;tir in the ancient
stooc walls, deer will ome to nibble new
gro\\1h on lhe shrubbery, ground hogs
\\'ill ca\'Ort O\'ct and under the rocks and
the ctogv.·ood v.·ill bloom. Then the old rouse v.'ill be hooked up to its modem
COO'leniences again in the hopeful pros-
pect that , before another winter cnmes.
~ir. Simon "'ill ha\•e found a v.·ay '''
restore the Amerleao dream of million .
of second home O\\Tier.i;.
OIAH&I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robtrt N. \\1t-ed, Publishlr
ThomCf KtctriJ, Editor
Barftara Krelbich
Editorial Page Editor
Tht C'dlklriAI f)ftCe of the 0.1\y
Pi"lm 'tttkl\ to inform and ltlmu..11.te
~adm by ptt~!U1£ on this: Jll.J:'t
dh·t.-.e commentary t1n klplat of ln-
tertst by syndica1ed rt>lumni1 l1 and
cutoonilts, by pr<M(l1n11: ll ron1m ror
rcadtr1' vie-.·• 11nd by prt~tTllif1i' this
ne•'IJ>l.Ptt'• opinion• Arwt kll'U on
C'\ll1UI toplct. ~ ('dll<'tlll opinion!!
of the D&ily Pilol appear only in the
fdltoril.I column at the top ol m~
Nt-()plnW u~ by the l'Ol-
umnisu and canoonlsts 1nd letlfl"
wnttrt are ll'lclr o.·n ahd no endcn""'
mnit or ttw-lr \'IM!.11 ~ 'the Da.ily
PUot Whoukl he Inf~.
FTiday, March 15, 1074
I
I
I
••
JI 4-lb. Acrylic Filled
Sleeping Bag
S.4J'E 500/•! 997
R,..lar $19.99
Cott~ outenhell. c0tron flan·
nel lining. Blue, 30x74-i nch
size.
S 14.SO Spinning and Spi ncasr
Fishing Rod ' 7.25
Console COLOR TV
with 25" Diag.
Meaaure Picture
SAt'£ 1100! .,,.i., 42988 S529.9i.
' Auromaric tii.t lock, auroma1ic
frequency control. Medi1tt•
ranean sryle atiioeL #-13)-t. . . ...
~
"" 1l2 PRICE S.4LE! ' Range Hoods
Reiular S26.15 50 %
to 1114.95 OFF ,
3 or ().blade squirttl or Cl8e
motors. Whire, coppercone,
avocado and brusked chrome.
JO, 36 or 42-ioches.
Hunyin
Terrifk. J'alue!
on Champion
Spark P,,lugo
Sein Low, 57c••· i r Low Price
10. Time to change spark plugs rot i.1
•
.,
Champion performance.
Rrsistor plugs __ 8 7c e1.
S,12.99 Wheel ~ignmcnr, 3.99
•
Controlled-heat . .
Electric Fondue Set ' .
S.4J'E $6! 999
Regular $15.99
··surner.with·a·Brain" Bi ves you auromaticaJly
controlled heat. Red, yellow, green colors. I Y.!·
quart size.
.S9.99 complete wine ki"--------4.98
Chain Link
Gate Values
50%orr
Re~l ar Low Prices
C..acell•lion• •ad S.mple1
Assorted heiiihts and widths.
Some single, some tels-all re·
duced!
S4.99-S40 Remnan1s of Chain
link Fence F.abric. 50% OFF
Sears C~mfortable
Duplex Bed ·
tt'!I S0,95! ·$129 eJU •r '
Sl79.95
Two 3J.in. ,.,.ide. 147 coil mat·
tresses with quilted floral print
covers. ·
Contemporary Styl
Sofa Sleeper
~'\!JS,25 '189
Lo~-Wearin,t Vec tra• (Qlefm
Fibetl cover. Rncrsible pol)'·
es1er wr•pped polyure1h1ne
foam ~c cushioos. Caaccn.
Crafbman 1/4-in.
Electric Drill • cur soo;.r 741
w •• 114.99
Double insulated l/S-l-IP. For
medium-duty work. UL listed.
illl IJO.
Salt-Saving "60E"
Water Softener
SAl'E 145! 2 3·995 Re,:u l1r
8284.95
Uses up 10 -i(Y,f less salt per
regeMrarion than any compa·
nble water 50£tener we sell.
#.\4"3 •
SI0.-$9 Tn-ChlorincTablm. 7.49
Canrid&e:Chloril'M' ll.•t
Dioc ontiilued Cabinet Hardware
Were 29e lo 12.29 50 ~ Aa&0rlcd Knob1, Pul11, Hin•e• 0
for Kilchcn Cabincl1 OFF
form er P~icn
$2.14, 6°Pc. Screwdriver Set
Nickel plarcd carbon steel blades. 66 RuS[·feSISt11n1 phuric handlcs.#-i l-t19 • ~ET
--·"
Exterior Oil Base
House Paint
. SAl'E 50\1o 2 $5 Re,ol1r
85.99,:al. p is.
Protection for all properl y pre·
pared surfaces. Dries co a me·
dium,d01s. Whitc,some colors.'
S@!;lgal.Redwood suin. l.97
AJl.Gta .. I 0°Gallon
Aquarium Kit
with Top
S.4J'E $8! 1999
Replar $28.98
·comes -...ich rtfl«ror. Hush-L r pump, hearer. filter, charcoal,
,.,•ood, thermomc1er, lubing.
2nti-j:hlorinc, food and booklet.
Electric 7./8
Adding Machine
S.4J'E $171 5·997
Regular 176.99
Adds; subtracts, multipliC's.
Lists 7 columns, tqtals 8 .. With
ribbon. cape .. and duK cover.
Colonial-style
Bunk Bed Ensemble
¥.::.t!f0.151 $}29
1169.85
';-1.f?t Includes tw0 bunk beds, cwo I macutsses. ladder and guard
rail.
S229.8S . C~ial·stylt Bunk
Bed Se 1179
SZ49.9S Spindle-style Bunk
Bed Se 1191
F•r..UMN thpt.
Twin or Full Size
Innerspring Seta
•
S.4f'E SOC(qJ •79
Roplor Sl59.90
Comfomble inMl'lpriQtt mat·
trn1 ••• '10 coih ia fuU JAtt.
.l60 coib in rwiR.
Item
Delux 9" Black and White TV
1 18'' Portable Color TV
19" Ponable C<>lor TV
Stoek. Number
)002
41681·
4 1881
4196
4 ll03
2130
Were
S69.9l
349.9l
339.9l
449.9)
299.9l
109.95
29.95
99.95
299.95 .
259.95
149.9l.
99.95 .
99.95
19" belux Portable Color 100% Solid State TV
18" Table Model Color TV
2071
3430
3 1643
3 1225
5 133
lO ll
)103
l039
4JOl
4028
4J28
4J56l
4J60
4 192
4728
8500
• 11300
-119.95
459.95
249.95
499.95
569.95
699.95 .
469.95
379.95
1795.00
1449.00
FM/AM S(creo 8 ttaek Player
FM/AM Digital Cliick R~.io
AM/FM Cassette Recorder
Console Stereo, ConcerhPonry Style 58
Spanish Style Stereo
19" Black and White Portable
12" Black and White TV
19'' Black and White TV
16" Portable Blac!C and White
Console Color TV ·
PQJ"table Color TV 12"
21" Consolene Color w/base
25'' Console Color TV
Dehm Console Color 25''
19" Color w/remote control
Walnut Style Optigan Organ w/bench
Electronic Organ. Mrd Scyle
"Galu:y" Elecuonic .C>rgan
\'/ASHER DRYER VALU[S 1
• REG. ·SALE
Elecuic Dryer (white) 109.95 89.88
Gas Dryer (w hite) 259.95 199.88'
Gas Dryer (gold> 194.95 164.95
Automatic Washer (gold> 264.88 229.88
Automatic Washer (white) 199.95 189.88
Automatic Washer (avocado) 244.95 224.88
EI«tric Dryer· (avocado> 164.95 144.88
Automatic Washer (wb.ite) 239.9) 219.88
Gas Dryer (wh~ce) 169.95 149.95
Udy ICti>liiOre Was6er and Gas Dryer (white) pai r 639.9o 519.95 ·
'Gas Dryer (white) 169.95 ' 159.95
Etcrnic Dryer (avocado) 204.95 164.88
Au.tomatic Washer (white) 199.95 169.88 ·
Elttuic Dryer (white) 139.95 129.88
-Automatic Washer (gOld> 214.95 129.88
Automatic Washer (gold) 264.95 249.88
Ga.s Dryer (gold) • 224.95 209.88
Electric Dryer (whit~Y· 149.95 124.95
REFRIGERATOR VALUES'
7.7 Cu. Fr.-(White) 149.9l 129.95
7.7 Cu. Fr::.(Whire)• 149.95 · 104.88
15.2 Cu. Ft-(Whire) 29<).95 2.69.88
15.2 Cu. Fe.-(Whiu~>, 299.95 279.88
17.l ~u. Ft. Side-By-Side_(Wb.ite) 399.95 .!149.88
19.l Cu. Ft. Side-By-Side (White) 379.95 339.8&
16.6 Cu. Ft:w/ice ma,Cr <Copper) 339.95 • 99.118
19.l Cu. Ft. w/ice maker & water spout-(White) 469.95 389.95
21A Cu. Fe. w/ic.e rnaker-Side-By.Side-(Gold) 604.95 529.88
19.l Cu. Fe. w/ice maker.:.(Gold) 474.95 424.88
8.5 CU.. Fr.-(White) 114.95 139.88
15.2 Cu .. ft. w/ice maker-(G01d) ~54.95 299.88
19 Cu. Ft .. w/ice maker-(Gold) ll4.9l 479.88
19.l Cu. Ft. w/ice maker & water spout-(Av0cado) 474.9) 399.88
15.2 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker~(Avocado) 314.95 309.88
15 Cu. Ft.-Side-By-Side-(Copper) 384.95 354.Bil
17.l Cu. Ft. w/ice rriaker-(Avocado) 394.95 . 349.88
5.9' Cu. 'Fe. Uodercounter-(Copper) 149.9) 129.95
11.7 Cu. Fc.-(White) 179.9) 149.95
17 Cu. Ft.-Top Freezer-(Copper) 299.9l 279.95
'
FREEZER VAl.UES'
19.6 Cu. Ft. Upright Frosdess
15.8 Cu. Ft.-Upright-Aucomatic Dtfrost
15.3 Cu. FL Upright-Frostless <'
15.3 Cu. Ft. Uprighc-Frosdeu •
REG.
299.95
. 199.95
289.9l
•
0
259.9)
•
SALE
279.95
• 18'.95
269.95
229.811
A1R CONDITIONERS
8000 B.T.U.-3 speed-
14000 B.T.U. AutofThermostat
11 000 B.T.U. Auco(Thermostac
l 1000 B.T.U. Auto{fhermostat
6000 B.T.U. 3 speed
28000 B.T.U. Auro(Thermoscat
10000 B.T.U. Auco{fbermosra1
Hand Vacu wn
Electric Broom
Porubl< Sewi113 Machine
REG.
169.95
339.95
279.9S
279.95
•89.95
439.95
319.95
Rq.Sl4.95
Rq. $19.95
liq. $329.95
SALE
139.95
283.00
199.95
169.95
129.88
299.811
2J9.88
SAVE
20.00
60.00
30.00
3).00
10.00
20.00·
20.00
20.00
20.op
120.00
10.00
40.00
30,00
10.00
8500
15.00
1).00
2\.00
20.00
4l.OO
30.00
20.00
50.00
"40.00
240.00
80.00
7l.OO
l0.00
3l.OO
5).00
7).00
95.00
41.00
30.00
45.00
20.00
30.00
20.00
SAVE
20.00
10.00
'20.00
30.00
SAVE ·
30.00
56.00
S0.00
110.00
60.00
140.00
90.00
•
DAILY._.
Now
•• 9 .00
229.00
299.00
369.00
239.oO
69.00
14.95
69.00
229.00
189.00
1119.!IO
69.00
69)00
79•00
299.oO
199.oo
429.00
449,90 ·
499.!IO
369.00
279.00
139S.oo ?95.oo
AMT.
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3
I
2
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1
I
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2
AMT.
I
2
2
2
AMT.
2
I
2
2
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l . . i-----------------------.------------------------------1
HURRY! EVENT ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT-MARCH 161 SPECIAL ICEE DISCOUNT I
'
I This Coupon Is Good for a 5c Dlacount on any ICEE· I
Sorry, No Phone Orders on Thes~ Items · ~ I See111e~n:u,~::~Rc=°.=."March1s I
A•" .4f>out Se11n co-nlent Credit Phuu I . in our Store from 12 P.M. to 4 P.M. I I
',
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• •
Today's Flaal
N.Y. Steeks
VOL 67, NO. 74, 5 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES t ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1974 c TEN CENTS
..
Mesa Trees Win Battle With Curbs ' ' .
DM1Y ,1191 Stiff l"lllM
PLANS TO SAVE TREES
Miu Official Eldr~ge
'· Sherifrs Role
In Minorities
Hiring Lashed
By WllLIAM SCHREIBER
Of .. Dtllty l'lwt ll•ff
Tbe Orange County S he r i f f ' s
Department was sharply c r i t i c i z e d
'lbursday for alleg<dly failing to bring llJ
minority v;ork force up to par.
The charges were leveled by County
A.fflrmative Action Coordinator Ramon
Curiel during inltial 6udgel deliberatioos
for next fiscal year.
Curiel said the department is not only
' nmnlng the risk of losing federal grant
money but also may be investigated by
the Justice Department and Equal
Employment Opportunities Commission.
"I would say that they are at least
subject to a cutoff in federal funds if
progress is not ·seen," Curiel told the
gathering of I a w otfioerf and county
budget experts studying the Sheriff's
requests for the coming year.
Silerilf James Musick is asking for
$14.5 million next year -up from a total
of $12.8 million last year.
Much of the increase would go toward
hiring 99 new people in the department,
of which more than 50 would staff a
major addition to the overcrowded
cpunty jail.
·The jail facilities became a topic or
discussion at the budget meeting as an
outgrowth of personnel and minority
hiring needs.
Sheriff's CapL William Wallace , who is
in charge of the county's jail, said
conditions are so bad now that some
ptlrls of tbe jail won't be approved by
state corrections officials this year.
)le saJd the jail now has more than 850
tnmates and only 760 beds available. The
number in jail swells to more than 900 on
the weekends. •
"Our medical area already doesn't
comply with the state standards and this
will be indicated among other things in
~corrections report," Wallace said.
Sheriff Mwick said the oonstraclion
work OD a fourt h floor of the jail building ts near completion Wt it mw:t be staffed
to do any good.
. The •xpansioo would ""'" the county • jail's capacity to more lban 1,100 and
would include additions to medical ...,.-1 and cooking facllltles. •
.. Wallace. said about 3$ of the new
emplOJ<S be Is seeking would be armed
depulles and the remalndei--.Id cons~!
ot coots, nurses and other personnel -..i to mainlain the jail and its
llunaltl.
Discuuion or the growing number of
lnmata broke down b:lto a phil090phical
d e b 1 t e , durinc wtnch County
(S.. CHARGES, Pqe Z)
Streakers Hit
Posli Eatery
'ftlree young men who waJters
said "looked tike football players"
-ked through Newport Beach's
Stllft Slllrt Rmaurant, nu w.
Coast Highway, about 11 p.m.
Thllnday.
"They ran through the cockllll
lounge yelling, 'chef's surprise!' "
said an empkJ)'e.
Ht said the nude me> ran around
the bar a couple of times and oot
the door, apparently into a wilting
car.
'
Historically, a ci:ar.ttAtion between a .. Colla Mela'• populat!oo to whom living where city crews are scheduled. to begin
a m>,000 paving, Pltchin& and fixing
project on streelS, gutters, lidewalks aod
curbs.
eliminated the parD·ay tree and
maintenance problem by s I m p l y
eliminating the parkway aod pulling the
sidewalk next to the curb.
a lot oC trees. On a block "'here the trees
in front of each house are considered to
be a problC!m. such as on Presidio Drive,
all the trees y,·ilt be transplanled,
allowing for construction of a straight
Tie\\' sldey,•alk next lo lhc curb.
-and a roolAhrea--· gutter or curl> baa ._. ..uled"lo Colll
Mesa with the a_...,. ol a dty-truc:k
Aid two men witb cbaln aa•.
The trunk of the Im .,,._ u
fin.wood and the ....Uer limb& and
br..-becamemulch.
That policy saved a lot ol sidewalks,
curbs and iiutters from era -:ng but It
al>O offended that growing segment ol
lreel are more import.art than concrete.
• "'After lncenaing preservation-minded
Calta Mesans last year by calling for the
dlstruc:tk>a. o( lhamel ash trees in one
Jltichbarhood, Costa M~ ci ty ofijda\s
now are -willing to do just .Jboot any·
thlq to ....... lr<e -ln<ludlng building tbe~tklewalk around it.· •
That'• just' what will happen later this
month lh some sections ol Mesa del·Mar
l
Public Services Director J1m Eldridge
said a sw-vey of the neighborhood shov.·ed
that the roots of about 160 trees v;ere
found to be on a collision coune with city
cement and that something new ~ill be
tried In the way or saving them.
He explained that secti<N of Costa
, Mesa newer than ~lesa del Mar have . •
In ~fesa del P.lar ptans are to pluck the
trees out of the parkway aod to relocate
them In the homcowner's front yard.
The side\\'alk v.wld then be moved next
to the curb. About 160 homes arc
invo\\'ed.
Eldridge said this "'ill have the effect
of enlarging front ya rds as well as suving
13ut there are resldentinl streets in tTlC
~1esn del l\lar neighborhood \\'here
problem trees nre isolated. On those
streets city cre"s "'ill simply make the
(Sec TREES, J>age 2)
Still Claims He Has Nothi11g to Hide
President Clings to Tapes
CHICAGO (UPI ) -Saying he has
nothing to hide, PreMdent Nixon refused
today to give in Lo demands by the House
Judiciary ConuniUee for 42 tapes it
wants for its inquiry into whether
grounda exist for· Impeaching him.
In a question·and·amwer s e s s i o n
before the Ex'?CUtJves' Oub o( Oiicago,
Nixon said giving the House committee
all it demanded could lead to a delay of
montm "and perhaps yeaf's" be fore the
impeachment question is resolved.'
To applause, he repeated his Slate of
the Union declaraUon, "One year of
Watergate.is enough."
The Prelident abo sakl he had no in.
tention of resigning because he is not
guilty of Watergate charges and a resig-
naµoo would weaken the presidency and
"Would foreve r cbapge our fo.nn of
government."
"I will not be a party to the destruc-
lloo al the pnBloncy ol the United
States," Nixon Aid. .
He contended tUt U he resigned now
under fire, future presidc-:ts could be
fon:ed from office JI lbeJ become un.
popular or on UDIUbstantilled charges
briiught against them.
Nli:on said presidential advi.!ers would
· be reduced to "a group ot eunuchs" If
they felt their confldeotial eoovenalioM
with the chief· executive eould possibly be
made publlc, boldlllg them to public
criticism if their advice Wll wraag.
j'
He said Thomas J-waged the
same battle to preserve th e
confidentiality of the olflce.
Hwidreds of demcmtrators, both for
and agaimt Nixon, waged a noisy verbal
battle of chants, songs and blaring music
outside the hotel where Nison spoke.
'Ibe pickets challenged each other with
banners reading "Throw the Bum out"
Couple Return
For Dress, Roh
Store in Mesa
A young couple who selected a dress
several days ago returned to a O:ista
Mesa women's wear shop for it Thursday
also tying• up the lone clerk and robbing
the store.
Mary F. Donald, of HIDll\ngton Beach,
was alone in Johna's Sportswe.Jr, z.100
Harbor Blvd., when the pair enlered.
Sbe sakl they asked for the dress after
browsing and Wing JI she was alone.
Um -her bad< was tumed a gun-
llt. obied waa pated Into her back. nae victim banded over f80 in cash
plus $12.50 wortJi of merchandise, after
which the male bendit, about 2Z, bound
her hands and feel loooely with adheslv•
tape.
She worked free in about 10 minutes
and "1JOr1ed the robbery, describing the
ampeeta aa pleaaanl Wllil the holdup and
adding that the woman had a natural
Afro-style hairdo.
Investlplors said they fit almost
perfectly the description of a couple who
pulled a limllar holdup earlier in the day
in Wflllllmmster.
Police •ill Mn. Donald was shaken
butanil\lUnld-
Diplomat Di84!iplined .
For Beating Boy, 13
llAlJ BALVAOOll, El SI-(UPI)
-Riad Ha-;-lo the Egyptian
embealy hu been ded":.c.nona non
tp"llla by order of Pt l Arlw"O
Armando !lollna after he a-ed 1 I~
yuHld boy wllD pl<t.d on hll '°" at
achoo!. the foreiCll mlnlJlry aald.
A wl1-to the lncldenl said llabaal •CCOlllJll-hll .., to the Jesuit lcllool
In Sin -and uked him to ldenttly Ille boy ..... llad beaten him
three dlJI -· -·· .... polnled 001 a 10Ulll and the diplomat hit the
younplor, then kl<ted the boy after he
feU.
and "Cod Loves Nixon" and tried to
outshout each other with chants of
"Impeach Nixon" and "\Ve Want Nixon."
Nixon's voice quavered at times as he
leaned into the microphone in the
crowded ballrooni fielding the questions
of &Ome of the most prominent
businessmen in the Midwest.
Rep. Peter \\'. Rodino (0..N.J.),
chairman of the judiciary committee,
backed by the senior Republican on the
panel, Rep. Edward Hutchinson of
~lichigan, iruiistecl this week that the
llouse has an unchallengeable right lo
materials from White House files in
fulfilling its constitutional role of
• •
determining whether Nixon committed
"high crimes and misdemeanors."
A number of Democrats on the
committee, and some Republicans, said
they were ready 10 subpoena Ci r.tapes if
Ni1oii refuses to furnish t h e m
voluntarily.
Nixon said the \\'hite House has turned
o\·er "several caseloads" of documents
to the Jod.iciary committee, with
information ranging from the price of
han1burger to hnport quotas.
He said the committee was asking for
42 more tape recordings, more
documenls and "an index of every
(See NIXON, Page 2)
Oil Exporters
Hint at Hikes
After E1nbargo
BULLETlS
VIENNA (UPI) -SaUdJ Ar1bl1n OU
1tllnl1ter Ahmed Zall.I ·.:omanl said here
lonlgbt that the Arab 1U embargo agalmt
the United Slates woald be lifted, prob-
. ably Sunday.
VIENNA (UPI) -With. th• pooslbte
lifting of the Arab oil boycott against the
United States looming in me background,
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries (OPEC) v.'111 recommend
Saturday that the price of crude oil be
increased April I, OPEC officials said
today.
They also said they believed an
announcement easing the Arab oil
embargo against the United States would
' be made in Vienna over the "'eekend.
Otll\I' ,lift , .. " O!!'
POLISH CYCLE RACERS JANCARZ !LEFT) AND PLECH KILL TtME BETWEEN RUNS
At County Fairgrounds in Costa Mew, A World Series on a Short Course
Polish 'Invading' Coast
It's the World Again.st U.S. ut Fairground Rnces
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of !tit 0.11, P'llol Stall
Squinting into the afternoon sun
through his swept-back sunglasses
"Twiggy'' Kowalski eased his 27S..pound
frame into a more comfortable position
on the bleachers as he ''spied" on the
opposing team .
The coach took a deep drag olr his
American cigarette and fi11&ercd his
movie camera. He wa s apprehensive.
These Californians we.re bloody good on
the.ir home turf.
He was concerned about sending his
boys, Zenon Piech and Edward Janean
out there lo fight with them. After all
they weren't about to pass the pigskin
with their buddies Crom the south side or
Chicago.
1bis was the world series coming up
this weekend . And glorloski, the honor of
Poland was riding on the outcome
The "world series" begins tonight and
nm~ through Sunday in Costa Mesa. It
wtU be held In 1 stadJum at the Orange
County Fairgrounds which looks like it
shrank becaUle somebody left . the
sprinklers on too long.
But the 8,000 or so fans who are
upected .tonight aren't interest~ in
footbaD. They wilt be coming for the
world series of speedway motorcycle
racing.
It's called USA Vs. the World and for
good reason. The best racers tram
England, Australia, New Zea I and,
Scolland and Poland will be ~re to g;ing
up on the Amerieln superstars.
And Twiggy, a retired criminal pollce
afnttr, is ln C81ifomla righl DOW to
manase lbe crack Polish team IDd 10
•
.. "
Dtltr ..... ...,, .......
COACHES POLISH RIDERS
Bernard 'T wlggy' Kowalski
oversee things so •·nothing gOl'S wrt\ng."
The series marks 1he lirsl timt any
Polish mcen have been Ir. the linitej
States and the Orsi lime they ire racing
on A "mini-crack," which ts essentially a
converted hone paracl. track.
••
"This track is very, \·ery short,"
commented Twiggy. whose real name is
Bernard. "In Poland our tracks are
from 380 to 400 meters and the surface is
black cinders. It will take some time for
the boys to get used to it."
Costa Mesa's racetrack is at 180
meters, the shortest in the world. Its tlirt
surface has considerably more grip and
the difficulty or adjustment was clearly
apparent when Piech and Jancarz roared
out for practice Thursday.
Compared to Poland this was like
riding arqund in their living room.
Kowalski's boys clearly had trouble
finding the proper line through the turns
and lhe fact that Plech's bike was
stuttering didn't help erase the froWns
Crom their faces.
Kowalski hopes nis boys can adjust
quickly enough to demonstrate to local
racing fans why Pollsh rider5 are
currently the best in 1he "'Orld.
Zenon Piech, at 21. Is already tabbed by
some observers to be the next wrtrld'1
champion. He won the Po I i s h
chan1p lonship in 1972 and might have
won the wt1rld crov.1\ in his own country
last September were It not for a crasn in
his last ride.
Piech v.·as knocked off while Jn the lead
and would hnve been in the championship
runoff if the releree hadn't refused a
rerun. lnsteAd countryman J e r z y
Siczakiel bceame world champion.
Jancarz. 26, Is a veteran of counties."
international matches and tlw: team
captain or the StAI Goriow club for which
bolh rkle in Poland. Alt'f'IOugh quieter and
not n spectacular as Piech, he is
IS.. RACE88, Pto1e ZI
• '
In Beirut, the Arab press reported
today that Arab oil ministers postponed
announcement of a decision on lifting the
CLASHES FLARE AT GOLAN
HEIGHTS. Story, Pago 4
FUEL CRISIS ONLY
THE BEGINNING? Pago 12
01! embargo agairuit the United Stales
until Sunday in an attempt lo reach
unanimity on the issue.
The semi-officia l Galro newspaper Al
Ahram said in a report from ils
correspondent who covered Wednesday ·,
oil ministers conference in t'ae Libyan
capital of Tripoli:
"The ministers adjourned until Sunday
to allow the oil ministers of Syria and
Libya to consult their governments in the
hopP. that their next meeting in Vienna
v.'ill issue a unanimous decision on liftini
the embanlo."
Press commentators said the nine
members of the Oraanization of Arab Oil
.Exporting Countries (OAPEC1 who must
make the decision were anxious to avoid
any split in ranks.
There were indlcatiohs that even if
Libya and Syria refuse to go along v.·ilh a
decision to lift the embargo, the seven
(See op., Poge Z)
Orange Coast
Weather
Fog and low clouds night and
morning hours with mostly sunny
afternoons Saturday. S 1 i g ht I y
cooler, Lov."S in the low 50s to-
night. llighs Salurday 7f to 77,
INSIDE l 'ODAV
Staff \Vriter Tom i\lcCan1i
rev1eu;1 a New Orleans ;au
albunt ht today's \\feeke11der.
The record was produced by a
UC Irvine English profe11or and
recordtd in Lo11do11.
Al Ytur Servkt J ...11.... 11 L.M....... I
CaOttrlllt l. 11
CIH&ln.. Jl, 44 Ctm1<1 2' c .... ,...... 1t °""' .. ""'' t •<f•htlal l'tA I
''"""" 11·1) ... _ "
AIWI ........ , II --'
•
Me~lft JI, U. • Mll~tl ,....., ll
NtttoMI N"1 t
""'_..... U.H
Srl¥1a '"'"'' II t-U 1•·• uoca M•rl•lt n.u , ...... ~.. " , .... ,.,. 11. ,., • w .. 1119( • ~ ..... If.II w....... Jl-JI
" I
!
I I
•
I t'
I
1, Good Scout ' J"eter Dommeleers, 18, Costa
Mesa, 1s a new Eagle Scout.
,. The Orange Coast College stu·
41,1. · aent, son or Joseph and Eliza·
beth Dommeleers, 1167 El Ca-
J
1 mino Drive, is a member or
Troop 339.
,
'
-..
From Pege 1
~ ) (JIARGES .•. ., . l• Admlnlslratlve Officer Robe.rt Thomas.
~ said the money could better be med to
buUd parks.
••If ill the programs we have to divert
, lhe9t people into uselul activities aren 't
; ~ U... maybe we should stop
them/' he aaid.
Wallace told the panel that a great
majority of the prisoners now in jail are
1• 1'hard cases" and they are the ones who
are taking space. •
\ He said of the 50,000 people booked last r year' 34 percenl were out in eight. hours,
another 62 ~nt within two days Ind a
total of eo ptTCent of all prisoners were
out in five days.
t. The remaining 20 percent fill all
• available jail apace and are hard core
• crimlnals who would not be rehabilitated
• if lhey had the chance," Wallace said.
!'o Wallace said the ave.rage jail inmate
today ii under 2S y~ of age and "~ar
1 more violently militant '. than lhose five
or 10 yean llO·
During the dillCllSSiol) or addiUonal
hiring of minorities and women, Curiel
said 'MUilet's record "ls the pooresfof
any department In the counly."
Re said the department now has )4
WO-(ti AnaJol, 41iO bf ck ~ Me.-• ~ran 3.11 Ille (!43 An~1• 1 .... blltt ~ 14 "n· ~)'' ; Musick countered <'.iriel's arguments .
by saylng his otflee has been thwarte<J by
Thomas' office 1n its ef£orts to hiie. a
man •responslble for no.thing_ othet,ttlen
seeking out qualified m1norlt1es. .. ~
. Funds for that man were frozen.
Musick said, and he can only take what
applicants are sent -to him by lhe county
penonnel -0Ifice. ~.
• '. ' •
Spike Heel Shoe
Prompts Accident
In Costa Mesa
Fridiy, Mitch l~. 11. ,
Jet AirpQrt
At El Toro
By I,. PETER KRIEG --.,.Of tllt DMl't Plitt S .. lf
-"I<vbie'Coropany fusidcnl Raymotid L. ~W'1t;.;,, said Thuraday he th l n k a
CQllimmlal!Jela could be allowed to
share operaJiOns at El Toro Marine Base.
Wallon's position was cited 'Vednesday
by i'lewport Beach cily council candidaie
John V. llalier, who's been campaigning
on a ..platfpnn that call! for an end to
commercial jets at Orange County
Alrport. .
Baker told a candidates' f o r u m
audierice at Corona del Mar Elementary
SCbool that he has met privately with
\Vatson and had been told the Irvine
Company would support an intermediate-
size commercial airport operation at El
Toro.
"Watson told me, 'Fine, v.·e'd go far
that,'" Baker said,
• •
•
Dllt'f """ ., .........
UCI Child
Care Plans
Approved ~
A new 111111,000 c!llld ..,. facility lo<
UC Irvine was a~ Thuraday by the
camp111 plannlQg oocnmlttee.
The deciaiaa II alplllcanl because a
group cl parmts wbooe children altended
the elfstlng facility, "The Barn
Preschool," bad mec1 a complaint about
its coodl.-wtlh the Calllomla Boanl
ol &,..us.
'!be compjalnt WU ICbedUled lo come
before the ~ ~Y In their
meeUn1 In San Frallcll<:O. · .\
Larry Acfan, the parent ,lfho filld lM
Complalnt in tebruary, Uid' the parenta
are satisfied with the dedsloo. ·:
Baker said jel flights could be
transferred to El 'foro "in a matter of
days."
NEIGHBORS EYE REMAINS OF COMPACT CAR THAT TANGLEO WITH ,STEEL POLE
Driver Hospltall1tcl After 'IO'wout During Turn S.nt Him Into a BrHdside Sllde
11le new Caclllly !s scheduled to open In
October and will be built clooe to the
prmeot achoo! -In an old barn oo a
farm behind Verano PJaoe trwfuate
Sludeat apartmenll.
"In the meantime, the parents
adv!Jory -wlll'be wortlng with the adminlsti-aUoa to rOcluce the remaining
health lwanla 'at the Dam," Agran said.
Watson howe\'er Thursday said he does
not endorse Baker's proposal to move all
conunerclal jets from the county airfield
to the Marine base.
"We have opposed oommercial use of
El IJ'oro for this rea90l1," Wat50fl said.
"Thtre is a big oommunlty out there and
simply transferring the problem is
improper. We feel some responsibility to
those people who are very much opposed
to use of El Toro."
Pointing out that the Irvine Company
is on record opposing both eUmlnadon of
jel Diglits al Orange County Airport -
and expansion of them until · nol1e is
reduced t-Watson said the.re ls a
possibility of oompromisel
"One compromise, if It makes lltllSC,
woold be for an intermedia~ airport,"
Watson said. "And It potentially wouJd
get support from residenls there.
"If the total amount of flights at El
Toro is not expanded, that might make
sense," he·sald. ·
But he stressed that it would reQuire a
reduction ol lhe mll!tary [)Jghts In onler
to allow commerclil operations.
Watson, an Eastbluff resident, said, "U
there are fewer military flights, you
could have oommerclal flights that are of
the nature of those out of Orange <:ounty
Airport. That Is poteollaDy SOllldlllng
worth talking about."
Watson abo made It elear that, "Irr1'
nol sujlPOrting anything. Mr. Baker
soliclled my point ol view. I do foot
support . moving <lriqe G>unly Airport
to Ontarla." .
Wa...,, iiiled out lhat commere!al
eu a:iise than commercial
Cycling Streaker
Motors Across
Coasuil Campus
A motorcycle rider, wearing onJy a ski
mask, streaked acroea the Corona dcl
Mar Hiah School campus today just as
classes Iet out for a break at 10 a.m.
Qirona del Mar High School Principal
Dennis Evans said bla staff believes they
know fbe ldenUty of the streaker and If ·
they're right, he'll be suspended.
Evans kicked a yout h out of school for
five days Monday after he was caught ·
streaking.
Newport Harbor High School officials ·
have declined, to disclose what discipline
they imposed on four girls from their
school who were caught streaking the
O>rooa del Mar High c a m p u 1
Wednesday.
The ,girls cavorted amioa school
grouodll and lnln a wailing car bul school
olllciali. followed them back to their
• home CllDj)Ua'and ....nad.tbem Into the
~·1o11ce. -
Tbr-ee,bofi wflo strWced the -High c.._ Mooday were not caught.
~t:P91 P .. 11 1
'
TONIGHT
OCC LECJ'URE -"Astronomy," Joel
Levine lecturer, Rm. 16 Science Bldg. 6
and 8 p.m.
FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS -"Dealh In
Venice," OCC Forum, 7 p.m. Adm. $1.
MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY - U.S.
vs. World champi~1 Fairgrounds. Fri.
& Sat. 8:15. Sun. 2:,., ·
"TAMING OF THE SHREW" -South
O>asl Repertory Theater, tbn< Sun. a
p.m.
SA'nJRDAY, PtfARCH 11.
LIBRARY FILM -"Moa&ler of
Highgate Ponds," 2:30 p.m . ...
ESTANCIA ADOBE -State HiJlol'lcal
~k, Adams and Mesa Verde
Drive West, S.t. & Sun. l..S p.~.
"THE APPLE TREE" -Costa Mesa
Civl~ Playhouse, Fairgrounds, 8:30 p.m.
Adm. $:.50.
.. •. -
Solon Who Led
r sasa Et Toro makes RnSe as .. tll-·!Jll;Ol~ RS ••• mercllll airport but he C<JllCOded Uie ' • : " SAXAPAHAW, N.C. (UPI) -Former
I Baker Quiz Dead
millt:acy would oppose It. He contended extfemi'tY oorlsistent and al!O of world Sen. 8. Everett Jordan (D-N.C.), who led
that. 10· mUita.ry bases, many in ·ttiamp1onahip caliber. the 1964 Senate probe into activities of Califqa 1~abare operations. ' One reaaon the Pollsb riders are ad fOrmer Senate Democratic secretary
·He said be doesn't think the sma11 good is because t h e y have more Bobby Baker, died today at bis home.
amOUitt ~ oi added noise made by opportunity to practice than riders from A spokesmait fior the family said
commercial jets would be noticed by othar nations, say Piech and Janean. • Jordan had been in declining beiltb for
·residents. Both 'WOrk in the machine gp of a five tnonths. He underwent surgery
large tractor factory in their hometown several years ago for cancer.
• 1'...,..P .. el
TREES.~.
r Gono but all wed lo , ••• ••-· Jordan, a Sa>apahaw, N.C., teillle o w, are 0 .. ae uu~ millionaire, served 15 years in tbe Senate
afternoons off a week to practice at the be~ his defeat by former Rep. Nick local track. 1beir factory has Its own speedway G fianalds ln the 1972 Democratic
Mother Watches
As Son's Car
Slams Into Pole
A Costa Mesa youth was hospitalized
with head injuries 'lburaday after a
spectacular, freak auto aocldent lhat
seol his car sliding broida!de Imo a lliiht
pole In front ol his borne 11 his borrllled
mother watched.
Steven F. Splelberger. 11, of 2185
Veta.co Lane wu lllled In good ooodllloo
today al Costa Mesi Memorial Hoopltal
with a concussion and head laceraUons.
His 1960 compact sedan w a s
About to pmchoolen: from two and a
ball to five yHrs old attend the school.
The pareou' complallit pointed out lhat
the facility, orice the Omce of architect
William Pereira, did not have indoor
running water, adequate to~ faclUUes
and accessible emergeoCy medical care.
They al.oo complained of the dirt road
leadlne up to It, which In rainy weather
becomes almost tmpa11&ble io beavy
vehicles such aa Ore engines.
The parents pay !II> to llt5 a monlh
for cblldcare at the center, wl!lcb
provides 85 pertent ol lba coot to nm lbe achoo!. .
The rest comes from student
giovernment allocationa of fees paid by
all sludellts. •
From Pagel
OIL .•. demolished when il slid broadside into
1be steel pole at Vela9oo Lane and Santiago Road, caving the passenger ottter Arab nations planned to eo throu11;b
door a foot into the car. with It.
Traffic acddent investigators piecing ' The Arab oil embargo against the
together what happened were told by United states was imp:ised because of
Mrs. Jane T. Ricks, 49, of 2872 LaSalle U.S. support of Israel durini the 1973 A lha s 'clbe ed , Middle East war. ve.. t pt rger seem to take At .the Saturday meeUng of the world's
one tum rather fa.at oil exporting COWltries, ministers will
She claimed this placed"hts C3l' tn her reView Ute prices of crude, which have
oncoming lane and lhal she could not pull lripled In five monU.. pusblng up
over due to parked cars, so she guoline pncer in tome' countries hY
accelc:ated and swerv:td 1fe other way " more than~ 100 percenl
to a~o1d a ~· • OPEC's 12 members, who produce 85
Sp1elberger s mother' who w a s percent of world oil exports decided in
standing in the family 's driveway, said it Geneva Jan. 9 to freeze crude oil prices
appeared her ~ then started to make a until April l.
turn into the driveway. Iran's fmance minister Jams bid
Seeing her st.anding there, he slammed Amouiegar said that if ' by then the
on the brakes, she. told police, whereupon lndustrlallzed naUons of the West bad
the. car's right rear tire blew out and failed to take steps to curb inflation and
dismtegraled, • • oil company profits, the exportors woold.
The compect then went into its again Increase the' price of mlle, -· · · l
broadside slide, leaving 69 feet of '"These conditions have not been meL''
skidmarks before slamming into the pole an OPEC official said.
which wa.s undamaged. Because of thls, OPEC's economic
' Police said It did not appear there commission, meeting in Vienna this
would have been an accident without the week, decided to reccrnmend to
blowout and recommended no further members that crude oil prices be
action be taken on lhe case. increased April 1, OPEC officials said.
sidewalk meander.
club and the bikes, made I n primary. Cz.ecbo51.ovakia, are supplied to them (-~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,~~~~~~~~~~
1bat means that the sidewa1k would
curve at'OWKI the front yard and around
the replanted tree of each aUeded house
until it rejoins the parkway at another
point.
free of charge, as are mechanics to take
care or them.
Kowalski says the riders get a
minimum of six hours practice eadi
week in addition to the practice they get
running weekly events in Russia,
Czechoslovakia, Germany and In their
home c:ountry.
' ~ See This Assemblage Of
• A C.OSta Atesa woman was nursing her
head today after discovering a new
hazard posed by spike-heeled shoes.
Catherine M. Cooney, 22. of 1971
Wauace St., was treated at Costa Mesa
'Memorial Hospital for a bumped bead
lhortly after a midnight car collision, -
Eldridge said the program will ·be
carried out jointly between h I s
department and the U!isure Services
Department 'headed by Keith Van Holt.
BOth worked jt out w:~h homeowners
over the past two mooths and say It has
won unanimous acceptance from the
Mesa de! Mar Homeowners As90Cialion
"Every club has a speedway school
and there are 15 to 18 machines in each
club. Not all 'Of them are brand-new but
there is no problem getting a ride on a
machine," insists Kowalski.
Henredon's Folio Eleven Collection
Inspired From I.7th & 18th Century
French end Chinese Styles. These
Outstanding Pieces Fit Be'eutifully
Into Almost Any Decor.
tbeq released to go home. .:
She told police she was driving" dO:\Cln
Mtner Street toward Victoria Street when
,her spiked heel got caughl benoalh lhe
accelerator pedal of her car.
The victim said as she l\\'isted her foot
to tree it the car speeded up and began
'veering back and forth across the street
and slamm~ into a parked vehicle.
I She was not clled.
OIAllel COASI'
I DAILY PILOT
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I •
and all residents of the area. ,
, Van Hol t estimated that ooly 20 o( the
160 trees cannot be transplantt'd , either
becau.se they are too large or will die
during tra nsplant.
Horileo\l.11ers with these trees v.i ll be
given their old trees as firewood and the
·option o( choosing a replacement 15
gallon \ree or a fully g?"O\l.n parkway tree ~·hld.1 ·another homeowner doesn't want.
Any leftover parkway trees will be
taken to local parks for transplanting.
Eldridge and Van Holt said all
f¥meowners who ask for transplantation
of their parkway trees haye been advised
of tbe disadvantages. These include
•• h~ving to reroute springier lines, putting
up v.i th meuil guy wires untll the roots
take hold1 and having to trim and
tnainlain their trees.
From Page 1
NIXON ...
dQCUment in the White House over the
past five years."
He said that to submit to this would be
to grant a "fishing license'' to go through
all presidential tiles "to find out whether
there is a possibility aome actJon might
have been taken that might be an
impeachable offense.''
Nil'on declared he had no Intention of
doing that because he said it would
weaken the presidency.
With his audience rectlving hls v.·ord.s
enthuaiastlcally and a p p I a u d I n g
vigof'OO.'lly on several occasions, Nixon
also said:
-"We have broken the blck1' of the
energy crisis, although ' ' n a g g I n g
problems '' will remain.
-Predictions t h a t unemployment
would rile to u much u 10 percent by
early this ye.1r -becall9e of ~rgy
shortages and Admtnl.Uratlon economic
policies -had been shown to be orr base.
Jn fact, speedway racing has t>e.rome a
national sport in Poland. Rarely 1s there
a speedway race whldil fails to draw Jess
than 10,000 to 15,000 spectators and the
largest stadium, in Kattowice, is often
filled to its 110,000 capacity.
There is mnslderable Inducement for
riders to win and money is freely passed
out for polnts won during matches both
at home and abroad.
Kowalski says Polish speedway racers
are allowed to travel freely and that
Polish fans like to see toreign riders at
their own tracks. ·
Kowalski, who co n d u c t s his
conversations with other members of the
intemalicul team in German because
none or the Pol" speaks Engli'*1, stopped '
this Interview in mid«nt.ence ai a crowd
of riders involved in Thursday 's practice
rushed to one of the turns.
A solitary alcohol burning engine
droned around the &.rack, never wavering
in tone, running flat-out even In the
comers, showering the curious with a
stream of grlL
Even before be got to the craahwan
Kowa1ski knew who it V.'11. "Piech," he announ~ witb a proud smile. Who else
could go fiat out throulh the comm!
And Ibero -Zenoll Piech on ID old
war-hcne borrowed from ex-world
champ Barr)' Briq1, whipping ll lh-h
lbe turna. shoothla off the cruh...U like
a b!lllal\I ball-Polilh polish 1!1 the ny.
A different. well·nming machine voas
all he awattntlY needed. And if Janean
can get the hang of things by the time
the first raL" Is flagged off, the Pollsh
joke will be on the, fan v.·ho dares tell one.
Executive Still Held ' BUENOS AIRES, Arg<ntlna (AP) -
The whereabouts of American oll
executive Victor SamuellOO mnalned a
mySlery today despile payment four
days ago of a record $11.2 mlllkln ranaom
to Marxltt guerrillas JOI' hia releaae.
'I I
'
DREXEL-HeRITAGr>-HENREDON-WOODMAllK-ICARAS1AH
WllKDAYS l SATU11DAYI 9:00 to S:JO
NIWPORT & TORRANCI OPEN PRIDAYI 'TIL 9
Henredon I"'~
NEWPORT BEACH e
1 m WESTa..tJ'F DR., &O:mt
LAGUNA BEACH e
3C.51'iORTH COAST HWY., -· TORRANCE e
23649 HAWTHORNE BLVD.
(Open Sundl1 12-5,301 3'll-12'1t
'
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· Dt\RY PILOT EDl;IVBLU. PA~
Mesa Council Shuffle
<:-. M• .. 11 .. dly coUl'dl"'"n (-co1111cll· _. -with lllo lddltlm 0( • -) ... elected by !be-.-., bul the cilJ'• may0r ii t'*-llJ bickering, borplDIDa ana -lllllOD& tbe five ,..., ... l!loraially tho term of the mi10r Ir hoo years.
the lllllor drclll, it -·h-ally under-
stoo4 ,.. tp Iba' llan:h a electlon 1111& Vice Mayor
W Jordan 1'0Uld be aelected 117 bit r.uow coun·
cllmen u the nut m130r. But a rwui, llliD& ha--1
to Will Jordan 1111 bla war to the pool: be was dOleated
for rHlectlon by Norma Hertzoa. Suddeni,, all four incumbents WJe avallable for
. the job. Robert M. WU.00 thought it would be an honor
to be COila M-'• lint person to otne time terms u .
mayor. So did Alvin L. Pinkley. Jack Hammett thought
it would M: an ,honor to serve two conaecutive terms u
mayor. llomlnk: Raciti thought it would IJ!> an honor to
be elected ma1"1' arter serving only two years u a coun·
cilm1n Mn. He.nOg, new to the job completely, wu
oat of the l'UJlllillg . The .-lution was wortlly of incluoion In a diplo-
matic band-: Wilson won the mayor's position, but
for a on .. year term Instead pf two; Pinkley will pick It
up tbe second year; Hammett will se"e as vice mayor
for both of the two years.
Costa Mesa politics just shifted direction a bit.
Teachers' Time Off
Eleven teachers in the Newport-Mesa Unified School
District will take time off frotn classroom duties next
year to work on a variety of education projects that will
include everything from foreign travel to studying in
college.
of prorram ii funded at public expense, we believe the
idea of ubbaUcw Is a sound ono.
All teochers gnnted sabbatical leaves must oubmit
dlU!lld plans to show that their particular project wm
benefit the school di.strict, and each b required upon
nitum lo follow through with a predetermined aeries
of actlvlU ... >.. beneficial as the program may be, the sabbatical
l)'ltem. ii one item administrators will have to con1ider
u they look for ways to pani expenses for the 1974-75
fllcal year. They will be m the position of decidinl IJe.
tween the desirable and tbe esaential .
Worthwhile Effo rt
The Boys' Club of the Harbor Atta hu embarked
on an ambitious project or recycling new•papers. wh ich
deserves the support or· Newport Beach and Costa ~fesa
residents.
The Boys• etub project is in a sense a permanent
paper drive. Bins have been constructed £or placement
at larger apartment buildings and shopping centers in
both communities. The contents of the bins will be
picked up regularly, to be sorted, bundled and sold to
a paper company for recycling. •
Not on1y will the club's newsprint recycling projeet
help conserve a valuable natural resource, it will also
provide some employment !or about two dozen boys
sorting and bailing the papers. And funds from the
project will help expand the Boys' Club progran1 and
services in the Harbor Area.
The Boys' Club now serves so1ne 3.000 boys from
age 8 t:O 18 in the Harbor Area, and with the opening
of a third branch club at Eastbluff Park late this year.
the number will pass 4.000.
~· ..
Wbile they do so, these teachers will be paid full
, or nearly full salaries by the school district. The over·
all cost of this, officials, estimate. will be $100,000 to
$120,000.
While some taxpayers may question why this kind
U you have any leftover newspapers. don't trash
them, but take them lo your nearest Boys' Club recycl·
ing bin. You will be doing both the boys and your trash
collector a real favor. . c 'You say this was their first attempt at streaking?'
Secret of
Successful
Revolution
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
rboughll at Large:
The only truly successful revolution
~ one in which the new revohltionary
leaders do not feel forced to he as
repressive as the regime they overthrew.
!By this standard, only the American
it.evolution-precisely because it was
telf-limited-may be considered a sqc--
!<SS.) • • •
Distrust any philosophy that pretends
b enunciate an "ultimate truth"-!or
t is the essence of ultimate truth!
Mt they cannot be
1erbalized without
~ing distorted and
:nisunderstood. ·
• • •
When a bad·thing
Isn't working, it is trom an exccits. and
rou need less of it:
;1,·llen a good thing
Isn't \\'Orking (such ~s the democratic process), it is from a
jeficiency, and you need more of it.
• • •
How can one be "true to another"
.:iefore one has recognized where the
!ruest part of oneself resides?
• • •
People who travel to go "light-seeing"
are usually more exotic sights than
my they· see. • • • •
The most significant aspect of the
Wth century overtowering all other
:flanges, is ihat for the first time it
ls no longer a white Christian man's
~·orld. • • • •
If capitalism has failed, it is not
JO much in the economic area, where
~tarx predicted it would, as in the
!ducatlonal area, where Montesquieu
iea red It might. (Both th., defenders
and the detractors of the system seem
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Odd that a \\-Oman stanr!lng in line
with two small children to see 'lbe
Exorcist should become upset by
streakers flying by. Isn't that a
conflict ol moral values?
J.A.
01_., Oft e.1---an tllllMltlllll h" rNdtn ......... __.tty f"tfllct ....
"'"" Of ftle -••r. s.... ,_ ,.t _.. t. 01MMY 0.. Dllltr P'lltt.
almost equally igntrant of its merit.J
and Its defects.)
• • •
Chauvinism of every sort ls merely
.a way in which individuals feel free
to cloak themselves with a collective
sense or superiority that they would
be ashamed to assert individually.
• • •
Goethe expressed at an early age
what most of us never learn until it
is too late to make any difference:
"We are never further from our wishe9
than when we imagine that we poMess
what we have desired."
• • •
When a national . poll of dramatic
critics asked me to name the greatest
American playwright, I a n s w e re d •
"Eugene O'Neill, alas"-taking a leaf
from Andre Gide who when asked to
name the greatest French poet, replied,
"Victor Hugo, 8!,.as," • • •
People who regard themselves as the
most chaste also imagine that they are
the best judges of obscenity; wtuch
ls like a teetotaler pronouncing on the
compai'ative quality or wines.
• • •
Societies rebel against tyranny, but
when they are not Instructed in what
to do with their freedom, they rebel
against liber1y as well.
• • •
Americans who are fond of pointing out
that we \\'ere born as a "republic" and
not a "democracy'' are being as willfully
obtuse about words as the bureaucrat
who insisted that a "small tiuslnessman"
must be under >-foot-4. I
RVs Are Energy Savers
To the Edit«:
A recent reader labeled recreational
vebicle.s the "real gas hop" and your
headline writer labeled the Mailbox col·
umn accordingly. Lets look at facts in-
tte&d of \vild comments of the dri ver or
a small cnr.
MANY RV's get in excess oJ 10 mpg.
something that most medium sized cars
do not. I own a motorbome and drive a
medium-sized sedan. 'Ibe motorhome
9ets'rtter mUeage at 55 mph. They both
are ;rJ models.
11· ... lodr rulJy --lo .-qy uvinlf II ao Ibo lllould pt a llllllor boa& Looi: at.-_,
• -lamlly II away h'Olll home lo outp we:
-Uoe ..,..fourth lhc electricity used at --U1e -th Ibo ps used 11 lmlt
-UM one-tenlh the water used 1l homt!
IF \:'OtJ "" IOina to single one group
oul for abuse pfeue look at all the fac\I.
WIWAM F. I.OW ANCE
Re your edllAJlial """moot on ps 111-
'
.• • MAILBOX
tkllll: Drivers don 't need siauered
mvke stlUoa buikktl bowl.
~ need -tllat ..u ... lo
lllo ---ol lllOnllap, lot -wbo IO to wort loo eatl1 to pt .... .
LEONARD JOHNSON
o .. c •• .,.,.,,
To lhc F.dltor:
· Qllvalry .Is DOI dead lo Huntin&100
Beacht
I wilb to publicl7 esprt11 my 1bank1 to
the graclouo pnUeman wbo .,.-my
car tb!OllCh Ibo laolC line ol waltlntl can
(abcMU 10) •bell Inn oul o11u, lo line.
In thil ~lrlcten time llllCb
couMl1 ii esemplary. H.A. THJIASRER
'
Was .Julie's Pay a Busitaess Expense?
Presidential Income Tax Questions
WASHING TON -Confidential White
llouse documents show that President
,Nixon. contrary to the statements put out
in -hli name, h&s taken an intense
personal interest in wangling every
possible tax deduction he could get away
with.
He even inquired in 1969 about deduct-
ing his payments to his daughter Julie
as a business expense. He wanted to
count money be ""as
contributing to her
support as salary for
her work as a \l.'hite
House tour guide.
Yet the \Vllite House
had already put out
publicity that she
was a "volunteer."
The President also wanted a :ax
break for using the den at tus San
Clemente estate for an office. He asked
what tax write-offs Wi!re available, too.
for pennltting others to use his
Calilornla and Florida house•.
He thought be should be pennltted to
charge ofr wedding gifts, funeral sprays
and similar Items, because he felt these
were "business expenses" for a Politi-
cian. Most of his entertaining, he also
contended, should be deductible. "He
wants to be sure," instnl~ aide John
Ehrlichman in a confi<Mitial memo,
'"that his business deductions include all
allowable items."
Tjns DIFFERS from the pkture the
White Hoose haJ tried to portray of a
Pre!ident too busy to bother with the
details .of his tax returns. Press
(JACK ANDERSON)
spokesman C..ereld Warren has implied
Nixon was so preoccupied with the
presidency that he left the preparation of
his returns entirely to his ll\li')'ers.
now the Nixon man inside the JR.S.
Barth responded a month later with a
memo. carefully stamped "Confidential."
advising: "Legally v.·e might justify
deduction as a business expeMe lor a
salary paid to Julie as a tour guide this
summer. However, f o r th follov.ing
reasons. I ~10ST strongly rccommcna
that this should not be done:
"(A) The amount involved is rather
small; The implicaUon was that hi! lawyers
were really to blame for claiming the controversial -and probably illegal _ "(B) This is always a factual question
S5i6,000 tax deductk>n for the gift of the which could be raised on audit o( whether
Nixon papers to the government. she is necessary to the taxpayer's 'business';
~IENTS now in the bands or the "(C) Jn addition to federal v.·ithholding
Joint Congressional Comm1ttee on data which would get into the files at the
Internal Revenue Taxation. ho1vever. JRS , infonnation would have to be given
prove that the President was not at all to the (state) tax authorities and to the
removed from the preparation of his ·-Social Security people. There are too
returns. On the contrary, be pul1ed every many entities involved for this to be kept
possible string to increase hiJ tax d~ confidential:
ductions. "(D) The newspapers have made much
.Ehrllchman relayed the Presiden.t's of the ract that she has been acting as a
\VI.Shes to Edward lioforgari, the Wh1~ •volunteer.' I think the risk of exposure
lfouse aide wOO handled the P~dent s of a busines.o1 deduction attempt Is too
taxes. .For example, an Ebrhchman great "
memo. dated June 16, 1972, asked • · '
J\1organ : BARTi.i advised instead that the Presi-
"Thc President proposes to personally dent should "make a gift at the eod of
pay Julie for her work in the White the swnmer to Julie. Although it would
House this summer and deduct it as a not be deductible to him , it would be tax-
business expense. Would )'OU please free to her."
detemtine whether he can properly do The President apparently heeded this
this .. :· advice. for the White House prw office
!\10RGAN took the problem up v;ith the tells us that the President never put Jullc
Internal Revenue Service's Deputy Qlief on salary.
Counsel ·Roger Barth who served as In another memo, Ehrlichman asked
political impresario for Julie and Tricia h-torgan : "The President intends to use
Nixon during the 1968 campaign and is the San Clemente house for official visits,
and he intends to use his den as an of-
fice for presldentlal aclivitie!. What
\\Tile-offs are available to him'!"
Barth was also approached on this
question. He advised that "a deduction'.
'4'0Uid be permitted for depreciation and
maintenance expenses.''
EHRLICll~fA.N also \\'anted to know
about "the tax consequen<.-es of permit·
ting others to use the Florida and
caJifomia houses.'' Barth responded:
"We would have to establish the bll8lness
purpose for the President with regard to
each person invited to use the homes .
On the question of deductions for wedi
ding girts, funeral sprays and the like,
Ehrlichman noted: "The President holds
' the view that a public man does vef"r
little of a personal nature. Virtually all o(
his entertainment and activity Is related
to his 'business'."
Agreed Barth ; •·r personally agree.
with the idea that much of the
President's expense is related to his'
'business.' As with the business use or his'
residence, a careful system must be'
established for keeping track or business,
expenses ...
"SMA.U. GtrrS by the President,
which are related to hi.s 'business~· '\ltould
be deducUble _ .. 'Note, ho\'ievcr. that \\'C
must give thought to disti~guishlng
between actiYities and gifls related to
'being a President' and those related to·
running for reelection."
Richard Nixon, as ·~•e now know, took
every available legal deduction and at
least one $576,000 write-off whose legality
is questionable.
An Island of Calm in the Crisis
SNfCKERS GAP, Va. -Uod gave me
a UUle piece of primitive Ame1 ica here in
the Blue Ridge Mountains and 1t1r.
Simoo, the energy czar, is helping' me
keep II.
1be bottom has fallen out of the
11>Creallonal real estate •market and the
bl.eued day is thus .J
extended for the en-,--..._
joyment in privacy
of a place on earth
which is oot greatly
changed since It was
originally surveyed
by George Wash-
IDl!<Jn· The real est.ate
lever bas oubslded
with the declining level or available gaso-
line, and so there is no longer as great a
risk that the urban yearning for second
homes in the mOWltains will upset the
balance of nature.
WE HA VE been saved, even, from the
PUNCH
==
-. -
conservationists, owing to the wise
decision or the National Park Service to
move the Appalachian trail ebewhere.
Trail bike treks where walking was in-
tended have thus been excluded from the
private property-...o.L reti<jents on i.m,,
particular side or the mountalli.
It has fortunately not come to the at-
tention or Mr. Simon that this area bas
been forgotten ln the allocation of
available gasoline supplies. Once you
have arrived here, you may not be able
to return to the city because drought has
struck the local gas station,., in nearby
Round Hill and Purcellville. It is just as
well, though very distressing to
carpenters. mason s, and other artisans
who cnnnot get enough gas to carry them
to \\'Ork at housing projects nearer
"It annoys me when they come in just to use the spittoon. "
I
\\'asbington.
In the nature of things , however, the
time will come when the local people will
take care of their own and there will be
enough gns for those rightfully entitled to
il by birth and place of abode. The others
can jWit stay away. Manv native Virgin·
ians in this area fc It that way about
outsiders long before the gas shortage.
A GREAT DEAL of anxiety ls felt that
nearby Bereyvllle, the ancestral seat of
the Byrd family, is dying and the gas
shortage will not help prolong the llfe of
the town. But Berryville is being by-
passed anyway by a four-lane parkway.
The attrition of small business had al-
ready begun and the managers or the
supermarket make sounds as if it \\'ill be
the next to close up.
These signs are discouragi ng to small
town boosters, but they are perhaps
short-sighted In faillng to see t/ull prog·
ress may leave betund Islands of calm
and contentment \\'hich will more than
ever attract those who wish lO gel out of
the \\'ay of modem improvement.
A survey of the deveJoping second-
homc rc<:realional areas, which is one of
the phenomena of the timu..-sugge&ts it
might be better just to have I: house In
one of the pleasant small communities
already Jong established.
The impracticality of modem im·
provement is a \\'ell known Irony, but
never more painfully re::ilb:cd than In ex·
amlning a very old dwelling "hlch ha."'
bee.n rebuilt to creale an oasis of corntort
and cheer dctp In a wildcrneu. Without
thest. impro,·ement.s Jnd as It was In the
first pltace. without reliance on brought·ln
energy, the d"'clling "·ould be livable iD
any kind of crisis.
TO SAVE OIL, the bl~board healing
90 expensive!)! ln~alk-d hat been discon-
ncctl'd, the well-supplied wattr system
has bttn CtJt orr so It wlll no1 frCHe and
bun:t the plpc.s in the cunning!)• OOl!trved
bathrooms. kitchen ana-1aundry. The old
log house stands on Its hillside bone-chill-
ing cold where once it was cozy with
v.·ood·buming stoves. supplied w i t h.
spring water and consuming the energy.
expended by its occupants in carrying.
palls and splitting wood.
Spring ts coming and the old house will•
thaw , copperheads '>''ill ~tir in lhe ancient:
stone walls, deer will ame to nibble new:
growth on the shrubbery, ground. hogS:
"'ill cavort over and under the rocks and;
the dogwood will bloom . Then the old•
house Y<iU be hooked up to its modem
conveniences again in the hopeful pros·
pect that. before another wini er comes. ~1r. Simon will have found a \\'ay tO:
restore the American dream of million:i'
or second home ov.11ers.
OI ANM COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Vtttd, PublUlltr
Thomas ktttril, EditQr
Barbaro Kf'tibic h
Ediiolial Page Editor
The tditori&J Jl9#t' or 1he 0at11
Piiot Seeks to inform and s11mul1tt-
reldm by prHenting nn flus J'lllgcl'
dl\.'er-. cornmentary'oo toplt"J or ln '""'•l hy gyndk:11.ted c<Mwnnlfls and
cutoonfsts. by Pl\?Vtdi~ a forum for
ret.ders' view• and by ~Inc thla
11~..paptt's oplnlon.c Md idt-u on
cumnt topk:s, 'Tl\I'> rd1tM11ll opln'°"'
of UK' o.Jly Piiot •JJPf;•r only In !he
tditot1al. rohamn at 1~ top ot the
J*Cf:. Oplnlona ei;p~ by t~ t'Of·
umniSJS Md cutoOni!t• and letttt
writlft. ~ 1hc!tr own t.nd no~
mcnt Of !Mir Yit"n t))' 'ho DaJ.bt
PUot "lhOUld be ~
Friday. March 1~. 1974
•
4-lb. Acrylic Filled
Sleeping Bag
SAJIE 50%! 997
Regular '19.99
C~tto~ ou~nhell, canon Clan·
nt:l lining. Blue, 30a7~.inch
size. ... s 14.50 Spinning and Spincast
fishing Rod 7 .ZS
Comole COLOR TV
with 25" Diag.
Meaoure Picture
SA~EllO~I 988 Re,:ular 42 SS..'>9.95
Automatic tirir Jock, automatic
frequency control. ~lrditet•
ranean style cabinet. #-IJ54. . . . ..
~ .t. ... ll2 PRICE SALE!
,
t
Range Hoods
Rc,ul .. 826.7550%
10 8114.95 OFF
3 or 6-blade squirrel or cage
morors. While, copperrone,
avocado and brushN chroim.
)0, 36 or 41-inches.
Hunyin
• ImiJH;. y alue!
on Champion
Spark Plop
I . 576; .. Sein Low,
Lew Price
Time to change spark plupfor
Champion performance.
ResiHOr plugs 87e e•·
0 S 11.99 Wheel ~lignment, 3.99
· ntrolled-heat
Electric Fondue · Set . .
.SAYE 16! 999
Rcgullr SlS.99
. · ;. "1lumer-wirh-a-Brain"' gives you auromatically
' 'Qmtrolled hear. Red, yellow, green colors. I \.2-
cjuan size.
$9.99 complete wine ki 4.98
-
<,
--,,,,
,l "f • -<
·~·
'
"' •
'
Chain Link
Gate Values
50%oFF
Repalar Low Prices
C.1tttllatkta1 aad S.mpln
Assortt'd hcighn and widths.
Some singlt', some K'tS-aU re·
duced!
S4.99-S40 Rt'mnanrs of Chain
link ft'nct' f.ibric, 50% OFF
Sears Comfoftable
Duplex Bed ·
ft!.'Uf.!50.251 ·.•129
1179.95
Two 3J-in. wide, 147 coil mac·
tresses wrt:h quilted noraJ print
covers. ·
Contemporary Styl
Sofa Sleeper
t;fi,!JS.95 *189
l.oftlt:·ftari~ Vtttn.• !Olefin
Fibnl cover. Rnersiblc pair·
ester wrap~d polyurethane
roan WI.I cushions. Cucen.
LUNCH
99c
CraflemaD,_ 1/4-in.
Electric Drill
CUT 50o/D! 747
w .. !14.99
Double insulattd 1/5.HP. For
mrdium-ducy work. UL J.is1ed.
#1 IJO.
Salt-Saving "60E"
Water Softener
SAYE 145! 2 3'995 Re,ular
S2M.95
Uses up 10 ~~ Jess salt ptr
regenenuio n 1han any compa-
rable water sofrentr we se!L
#347 3.
SI0...19 Tn.(hkHine Tablets. T.•9
Un ridge Chlorin 11.49
Diocontinued Cabinet Hardware .
w.,. 29c lo 12.29 5 '0 ~ A110rted Knob1, Pulla, lfingea "O
for Kitchen C.bineta OFF
· Former Prices
82.14, 6-Pc. Screwdriver Set
Nickt'I plarrd carbon srcel blades.
Run-n:siuanr plasric handles.#~1.jl 9 66C
SET
q ---
Exterior Oil Bue
Houae Paint
~~;K ·~2 *5 SS.99pL pl~
Protectiotl for .U propnlr prr-
ptttd !Urf.m. Orin IO a rfle.
dium .,..._Whitt, 1omr colon.
$4.99 IPL llcdwood •uin.1.97
AD-Gtu.10.Gallon
Aquarium Kit
with Top
SAYE 18! 1999
Regullr 128.98
Comes with renector, Hush-L r pump, hrarer, filter, charcoal,
wood, thermometer, tubing,
anti<hlorine, food and bookleL
-;-;:::::-. Electric 7 /8
Adding Machine
.
S-4JIE $17! 5·997
Regular S76.99
Adds: subtracts, multiplies.
lists 7 c°'umns. torals 8. :Wi1h ribbon. upe·and dusc cower.
Twin or Full Size
Innerspring Sets
~~~ S.4.rE 50o/ol •79
a..,.11r 1159.90
Cornf~ inacnpriQll: mat·
lrn$ ••• 510 coilt;.. fud size.
360 coils in rwia.
.. -. -..
·. -
·-. O.lux 9" Bliek 10d Whiie TV .
18" Portable Color TV
Stock Number
1002
41681
41881
4196
41 103
2130
,,. ....
569.91 •
349.91
339.91
449.91
299.9)
109.9)
19" Ponal!le Color TV l.
19" beluo PomJ;le Color 100% Solid Swe TV
18" Table Model ColO< TV .
FM/AM Srereo 8 track Player .
2071 29.91 ' . FM/ AM Digicll Clock JUQ;o •.
3430
3 1643
31221
1133
1017
1103
1039
430)
4028
4328
43161
4360
4192
4728
8100
830()
, . .
Electric Dryer (white)
Gas Dryer (whire)
·Gu Dryer (gold)
Au(omatic Washer (gold)
Aummatic Washer (whi1e)
99.9S
299.91
2)9.91
149.91
99.9)
99.9)
-119.9)
4)9.91
249.9)
499.91
)69.91
699.91
469.91
379.9)
1791.00 .
1449.00
AuUJaWic W,.sher (avocado)
"El«tric Dryer (ivocado) /
Automatic Washer (w)Jitc)
Gu Dryer (white)
AM/FM Cassette Recorder
Con1alc Srcreo, ContCmporary Srylc 58
Spanish Style Stcrro
19" Black and White Ponable
12" Black and Whirc TV
I 9" Black and White TV
16" Ponable Blac~ and White
Console Color TV ·
Ponable Color TV 12"
i \" Consolette Color w/base
2 5" Console Coloc. TV
Delux Console Color 25"
19" Color w/remore coauol
"Wllnut Sryle ()pagan Orpn w/bench
Eleccrook Organ Med Style
"Golay" Eie<uoaK Orpn
REG. SALE
109.9) .....
219.91 lff.18
194.91 16'.95
264.88 J 229.18
199.91 I 189.18
244.91 22".18
164.91 . 144.18
239.9) 219.18
169.91 149.95
ud·rKenmore Washer ~d Gas Dryer (,miie) pair· 639.90 519.95
169.91 159.95 . ""Gas l>(yer (white)
Elecui< Dryer (avocado) 204.91 16'.18
Au..tomatic Wa.shCr (~hire) 199.9) 169.18
E'*tric•Dtyer (white) · 139.9) 129.11
AuumatiCJVasher (&old> 214.9) 129.11
Automatic Wa.sher (gold) 264.91 2•9.11.
Gas Dryer (gold) · 224.91 209.11
Electric Dryer (white}· 149.91 124.95
REFRIGERATC;f\ VALUi . ..;
7.7 Cu. Fr.-(Whitc)
7.7 Cu. Fr.-IWrurc>·
15.2 Cu. Fr.-(Whitc)
15.2 Cu. FL-(White)
17.1 Cu. Ft. Side.By.Side (White)
19.1 Cu. Fr. Side-By.Side (White)
16.6 Cu. Fr."w{ice maker (Copper)
19.i Cu. Fe. w/ice maker·&: Wlltft·Spout-{White)
2 1.4 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-Sidc-By.Sidc-(Gold)
19.l Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(Gold)
8 .5 Cu. Ft.-(White)
15.2 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(G01d)
19 Cu.·Fr .. w/icc maker-(Gold) .
19. t Cu. Ft. w/ice maker & warcr 1pout-(Avocado)
15.2 Cu. Ft. w/ice maker-(Avocado)
l 5 Cu. Fr.-Sidc-By-Side-(Copper)
17. I Cu. Fr. w/ice maker-(Avocado)
5,9 Cu. Fr. Undercounter-(Copper)
11 .7 Cu. FL-(White) ·
17 Cu. Fc.-Top Freezcr-(Copper)
•
REG.
149.91
149.91
299.91
299:9)
399.91
379.91
339.91
469.9) .
604.9)
474.9)
174.91
314.9)
)\4.9)
474.91
314.91
384.9)
394.91
149.91
179.91
299.91
FRFEZf R ·!ALUt.S'
--. ' REG.
19.6 Cu. Fr. Uprighc Frosdess 299.9)
15.8 Cu. FL-Upright-Auromaric Defrost 199.91
11.3 Cu . .Ft. Upriglu-Frostless 289.91
1).3 Cu. FL Upc;ghc.-Frosdet& • 219.91."
. .
8oo0 B.T.U.-3 speed-
REG.
169.9)
14000 B.T.U. Auto(fhermosrac 339.91
11000 B.T .U. Auto(I'hcrmosrar 279.91
11000 B.T .U. Auco(J'hcrmosuc 279.91
6000 B.T.U. 3 speed 189.91
28000 8 .T .U. Auto/Thermostat 439.9)
10000 B.T .U. Auto/Thermostat 319.91
SALE
129.95
104.18
269.18
279.18
.349.18
339.18
99.aa
389.95
529.aa
424.18
139.18
299.18
479.18
399.18
309.18
354.18
349.aa
129.95
149.95.
279.95
SALE
279.95
119.95
269.95
229.18
SALE
119.95
2as.oo
lff.95
lli9.95
lit.I&
29'.18
229.18
SAVE
20.00
60.00
30.00
31.00
10.00
20.00
20.00
20.00
20.00
120.00 . . o.oo ·~o.oo
30.00
10.00
8).00
n.oo
11.00
.• )1.00
SAVE
20.00
4).00
~o.oo
20.00
)0.00
40.00
240.00
80.00
71.00
10.00
3).00
11.00
71.00
91.00
4).00
"3.0.00
41.00
20.00
30.00
20.00
SAVE
20.00
10.00
20.00
30.00
SAVE
·30.0o
)6.00
80.00
110.00
60.00
140.00
90.00
I . .
OAIL ( )'.
i.....
149.00
219.00
2ff.00
S69.!"!
219.to
. 69.00
1•.95
69.00
21t.H
llt.H
~., ... ., ... .....
79.00
2".00
lff.00
429.00
449.00
4ff.OO
S69.to
279.00
1195.00
t9S.OO
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I
I
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1·
2
AMT •
1 z ·
2 .
2
AMT.
2
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2
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-------------------------------------------------------, AlJRRYI EVENT ENDS SATURDAY NIGHT-MARCH 161 SPECIAL ICEE DISCOUNT I
•, This Coupon is Good tor • 5c Dl-.nt on any ICEE" •,
1 · ONE COUPON PER CUSTOllER ..
1 See the Famous ICEE BEAR Salulday, March 18 I I · in our S1Dre from 12 P.M. ID 4 P.M. · 1 .L------------------------------------------------------J
Sorry, No Phone Orders on These Items
• •
'