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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-03-07 - Orange Coast Pilot7 I• BOPerrent More rain fell on paJU of.the Orance Coast\ Thursday night and today and more is expected tonight .• And the weatherman· say,i there is a 40 percent chance of showers Saturday. The Los Angeles Weather Bureau's forecast also warned of Sea Scoured For2 Fliers From El Toro A search continued today over a wide area of the Pacific·for a Maripe F4 Ph~ntom jet fighter out of Bl Toro Marine C.Orps Air Station which crashed Thursday op a routine training flight. U .S. Marine Corps officials identified the pjlot as Lt. Michael C. Blazanian, 26, of Des ·~!dines, Iowa. Only crewman aboard was Rada~ Intercept Officer Lt. Robert D"rrell Johnston, 24, who resides at the El Toro base. Coast Guard helicopters are searching Yfaters west·$0Uthwest of Santa Barbara Island and WfSt .W north of Santa Catalina and 5aJi. Clemente island. Cause o! the crash WhS not im- tbediately determined, but the pilot of a second Phantom jet ••id be tho\,Jght he saw · Mlnething fall from the pJane *'1lY before it went down. The crash occurred about 40 miles off shore aouth.west of Santa Barbara Island during stormy· weather. . The original search was joined bY ·'aircraft from the Pl Mutu >Jr S~tlon, but ofhc1als tbere • said they had discontin&led the aearch. ~ Blasanin is survived by MS widow Janet and ,Lt. JohnstoA loves his widow Sllirley. • Uts>• m .p.h. wind tonight. The Oraoa~ County; Harbor Patrol said st.Qrm warninMt are up from north ot ..Mo.l)te.rey .to Point Con· ceP.tion, and small caft warn· ings have been posted-from Point Conception to the Mexican border. , .Tbe patrol said that the sea is swelling from four to eight feet and is up to 10 feet in outer northern waters. From Point Conception to the Mexican border, the wind is 15 to 30 knots witJl gusts up to 35 lf;not.9. In Newport Harbor, .65 inches of rain fell in 24 hours, .brinlinc the season total to 8.3 inc}\es, <:ompared with a season total of 7.20incbes at this time last year. No rain was· recorded in Hunt- ington Beaeb during the night, but .14 inches was recorded at the Laguna Niguel fire station. : The weather bureau reported that showers •ho"'ld decrease late topight·and Sattwday. It will be a litUe cooler tonight. Medics, Law · Ta~gle Over I • Body of·Man NEW YORK (UPI> -A man critically wounded 1n a shooting died early today and doctors at Jacobi Hospital removed his kid- neys for possible transplant, ig-• noring a demand that an putopsy be performed first because the victlfn was murdered. A apo.kesman at Jacobi Hospital said the patient, Danny SUJ.sona, 23, died at G:«t'a.m. and the operation te req)OV~ the or- gans beg .. lmmecliat.iy. The physici•ns satd they bad the family's permissloa. By RUDI NtED~Kl ou .. o.uyP1i.t54.lllf J • , Uri veiled • l,Of>O Layoffs ~t Dougl~;· ~oi_.e Expected ' • II)' KA TRY Cl.ANCY Oftlle DMI' f'ttec9'" Public Access Stressed SAN FRANCISCO <UPl> The state's proposed "Constitu- tion" for protecting California's 1,000-mile coastline from further . assault by bulldozers and de· velopers was unveiled today by the California Coastal Zone Conservation Com mission. 'The 300-page plan for keeping undeveloped stretches of the state's PaCific s horeline open to the public and preserving it!i natural condition spells out com- mission policies on matters from public recreation to coast.al energy plants. But it makes no recommenda- tions on how the policies should be carried out or by which gov- ernment agencies. Proposals for funding coastal preservation and improvements range from c:>!· fshore oil drilling to statewide bond issues to taxes on hotel rooms and real estate transac- tions. Those recommendations will grow from statewide beanngs before the final versioo of the plan is turned over to the 1976 Legislature for further beari,ogs and passage of laws. "The essence of the plan," ~d the commission ... ls that the coast should be treated not as or~ dinary r eal estate but as a unique place where conservation and special kinds of development should have priority." Highest priority is giyen to public recreation. "Public recreation shodld have the highest priority in suitable <See COAST, ~age AZ) ~r:·:a :as~' w ... atber Showers decreasing tonight and Saturday, ac· cording to the \feather service. Highs Saturday mostly 60 to 65. Chance of showers 40 percent Salur· · day. INSIDE TOD~ Y It has been said that today's high tchool. and college jazz nuuician.f. are betttr than the pro/essional ptayef's o/ 39 flears .ago. Orange Comt.au• dWRc•$ will~ Cl cbartce to jud~ for themsdv~• .at Ille 1th Oro• Coast cou••Jazz · Euemble Fertivol. See paQe • · ·Clo/ todoil'• Week~ • ..... ~ At.,._ .... IW At ,..,._.. a...i ....... ., .............. "" ~ ·!:..._.. ...... , ~ OMt =c:i-t' .::: ~ <• E,,.,.,. ~ 0'1• .. ,. Cl _... ..... MMk• Al MtftMU • .._.....-.,.. M ...... ,, ..-.. 4Ut-11 a ....... 11 ca.+.e ............ (I &4 --~ •• &4 • ........ .., C.1 ... MURRAY , Ky. <AP> - William L. Calley Jr. ~ays he was aboc;k4'&'1 to dl~ver that the flrst perion he 1cn1.c:1 as a aoldier was an unarmed woman. •'When I killed my first Com- munist -it w•s a she," Calley t4td an audlence of M>me %,000 iJuray State Unlverslty atu• dlll¢s Thursday n\gbt. "She was na& armed. I r ealized the Com-~st.s do come in human form, Md it shocked m e.•• In his first appearance u a col- 1 e g e lecturer, Ca~ also . destribed his t.rainloi U.. an· . U-Communlst Ideals he said he grew up with. He said they eandi· tioned his actions in Vietoam. • • "I was not in VlitAam tAt analyse the war to detennlne. what was right and wntsa. n th.,. 'former lieutenant said. "I was sent to Vietnam lo destroy communism. I was elven 7 Bodies Found = ~Grisly Mystery. Near Solutioll SEATTLE. Wash. (UPI) -The remains of seven women Police may be close to solving have been found at two sites the grisly mystery of what hap-within 10 miles of each other. pened to several young women . ~olice are.looking for a man who who disappeared from the Seat·'._·,· calls himself "Ted," who ap· tie area and from neighboring parently enticed his victims by Northwest slates within the past asking for their help. year. The latest breaks in tlie case came Thursday with the iden- tification of the remains of two Strachan's Case Out? WASHINGTON <AP) - The government moved to- day to dismiss Watergate cove r .up c o n s piracy charges a g ainst Gordon Strachan, a principal aide to H.R . Haldeman when he was White House chief of staff. "We do not believe that the interests of justice lie in the continued prosecu- tion of Strachan," special prosecutor Henry S. Ruth said in a motion filed in U.S. District Court. Strachan had been charged with conspiracy to obstruct justice, obstruc- tion of justice and lying to the Watergate gr and jury. He faced a maximumm of 15 y e ars in pris on and $20,000 fines if convicted. Fro• Page A 1: DOUGLAS~ • • conUnuing .. A sp0kesman for the National Aeronautics a nd Space Ad-· ministration in Houston con- firmed Thursday afternoon that NASA satellite launchings at Cape Canaveral, where McDon- nell Douglas employs 200 JAM workers to assist with launch preparations. He also said the strike could af- fect the joint U .S.-Soviet space linkup, scheduled for mid-July. but not unless the walkout con- tinues past June. McDonneJJ Douglas officials exf)lained the second stage of the Saturn rocket which launches the American Apollo spaceship is manufactured by the company's Huntington Beach plant, but the one being used for that mission already has been completed and sent to Cape Canaveral. The delay could be caused in June, however, because the IAM workers at the Cape are needed then to help with fueling of the giant spacecraft. The 1,000 workers laid off in Long Beach are members of the United Auto and Aerospace Workers, who recently signed a new company contract rather than join the JAM on the picket lines. OR ANGE COAST s DAILY PILOT •Ro ber t N. w~ Pr"ldonl •nd P\ib401h•1< Jack R. Curtev Vk • Pr"IOtl'I •nd C..l'or•I Mt~Qlltf' Thom ,1c; Keevll E n1tor Olarles H. Loos Richard P. Nall A .. ~t•nl 'NnoQ nqf.O<IOt> Offices CMlalO\n a JJll'lv• tflaY\trfft Hew-1 .... .. ) ' 'I N•Wl>0'1 bo<H"'*rd ~_... .. a<,. llhr.-1reS1'ttl -lnql ..... a\11 I 111>#.t< .. _ltYMd .,.~~:~::~~~~~';::•J ...... TtltpfMtne (714l '42-4J21 CIHSUIH Adv•rtlslr19 '42·5'71 ~ V•ll•• ,.,.,.0111<• 511-6310 r,.,..,...c ...... ni. 4tS-o630 ,.,_-. 0r ..... ~· c .............. .. ..... 1220 '-'''•'"· .. ,. Ot•.-.. '~·" 1'11911\111 ... c:.n.t•.., lff-tster-..illV\1••1-""41eroAI .... tt .............. ,,.. .. " ............. .. , .. ,.•vc•• w1l11<e111 Nlftl•I p•rlflt"I"" ol C#"""'-'-'· t.ctfllf ct .. • ....... ,..., •t C." M•u, <.111~ ..... ,._"Ylc.,,,.,i, •-111,. .., ........ ........,., ....... ,_. ..... _..,. ~ .. more wotnen. One victim was identj.fi~ as Ro)>erta Kathleen Parks, Laf a yet~. Calif. Miss arks, a S·foot-7 coed from Oregon State, left her re· sidence hall May 6 to take a walk on the campus at Corvallis. Thal was the last time s he was seen alive. Earlier .in the day, the remains of Linda Ann Healey, 21 , the first of the young women to vanish, were identified. Miss Healey, Seattle. disappeared from her apartment near the University of Washington. Jan. 31. Polite said the remains of both women were uncovered in the Mt. Taylor a rea near North Bend, Wash. The remains of two · other women were also found al the site. One of the women has been identified as Brenda Carol Ball, 22. who last was seen about 2 a.m. June 1, near a south King County tavern. Two other missing women were identified from skulls found last Septe mber near Issaquah in a wooded area about 10 miles from the more recently dis· covered site. They were Mrs. Janice Ott, 23, and Denise Naslund, 18, both of whom vanis hed from Lake Sam- mamsih State Park east of here Julyl4 . The remains of another body found in the same area have yet to be identified. In the cases ot several of the m,issing women, police have said they apparently were enticed by an abductor who asked for help. A young man known only as "Ted" asked several women at the Lake Sammamsih State Park to help him put his sailboat a\c)p his auto the day-Mrs. Ott and Miss Naslund disappeared. Fro•P~Al CO~AST ..• areas -of the coast. and legal rtghts of the public to have ac- cess to publicly owned tidelands should be vigorously enforced," · the draft says. "Public use of coastal lands and waters should be consistent with natural re- source protection." The draft does not rule out coas tal e nergy pla nts but declares that "energy installa- tions allowed must be subject to stringent environmental stan· dards." It also declares that publie ac- . cess to the coast should be pro- vided and that "coastal develop- ments that serve the public, such as campgrounds, resorts, hotels and motels, a nd rental housing, should have priority over coastal developments that are essential- ly private, such as typical re- sidential developments." The plan also declares that public trans it should receive priority over roadway construe· lion in urban areas "to reduce the need for coastal parking Jots and major highway progrrum to conserve energy and to improve coastal air quality." The draft says conflicting de- velopments should be "chan- neled to the inland parts or coastal cities and to other inland areas" and that coastal a griculture lands "should be kept in agriculture." The commission also calls for the preservation of wetlands and coastal streams. "Coastal marshes and other weUands, many of which have been filled a nd diked In ~at years, should be protected from f urtber destruction and restored where possible. "Free flowing coast.al strums s hould be protected beca.._. tMy · are necessary for tbe mJaratory fish caught by commercial aod sport fishermen and becauae they s upply 11nd for coutal beaches." The plan say• development ln ar.eu subject to beach or cliff erosion, landslides, earthquake" Ot" noodint( sbould be permitted "only if adequate en-'neerina ean reduce tho hatardl to accfp- table levels." • an MUI rifle to klll Communists. I dido 't now wbo tM eswmy wu. I didn't ltllOW 1bW waa an enemy, 0 he said. 'In the auditorium. a iip ban,. ing fTom t~e ba)coay Ukedl "Why! .. , •11 can•t anawe.r tbe qMt~" Calley said, acknowledglrif.tht ~an with a nod. "U \he 1overn- ment could tell ine why I was there lo beein with .. I might be Poster Art c. able to •nawet some cl ~our the tulc force to which he was as- quaUcma." . 1igned was to seek out and C.U.1 :i.:0qnvlaecl :J.o·..,.)fll de.troy the 48th North Vlet-ror them or at.lliUtMvret· · aam•W'-14"1· · namae etvl lens• at M1 Lal *'.' · ".U~aa .... _. · .the)' hid i• A. fed#al ....-utJ&et th'-: tbaded "Callef Uld. .,,._ lD· .. Joni.fa~ ~· Ud Callt)'. ftW ~ Ir• prison. The A'h4:I ba•eppeaJMt Ulterullngs. He-said tliat at My Lal his rnel(" had been coadltloned to believe that a stro01 Communist for~ was there and t.bal the mission ot • FromPageAJ LION SURGERY ... park.Sand, even though it intends lo open another preserve in Japan, there are still too m any lions. • In fact, there is a nationwide surplus of lions. Lions which used to command between $250 and • $500 aren't worth anything now. Zoos can't give them away, ac· cording to Quinn . There comes a point when you have too many and you have to start a program of birth con· trol," he explains. Lions anrage four cubs per lit· ter and throw litters twice a year, advancing the lion population by quantum leaps if left unchecked . Out of all the males at Lion Country only a handful may be doing the actual breeding, but it will be necessary to vasect.omize all of them to ensure birth con- This poster still graced the lobby of Costa Mesa's main post office this week. but if you •re waiting for a 'Photo of President Gerald Ford to be hung in your local post office. forget it. Postal regulations were changed Monday to pro- hi bit photos of incumbent or former presidents or postmasters generalfroindisplay in past office lobbies, cor- The zoologist says he would be quite ·happy with half as many hons at the Irvine preserve. "A park is only so large and you can maintain only so many lions. Truck Stolen At Work Site trol. · Lions who have received "the treatment" are ear-tagged for identification. It is doubtful that their mates will look for it. As zoologist Quinn explains it, the male lions -as far .as they are concerned -lose nothing • not even their pride. . ridors. or elevators. Las Vegas Shakes Ag~in.~in Testing A hunt is under way today for a stolen pickup truck and tools . valued at more than $1,200, taken from a paving construction site in Irvine overnight Thursday. Wendell Max Tonkinson, of the Sully Miller Construction Com· pany, told police the loss in· eluded scores of tools being used on a job in the immediate vicinity. Castro Frees 3AmericanS MIAMI (UPI) -Three Americans jailed in Cuba for more than a year on narcotics charges have been quietly freed in what may be a Fidel Castro bid for d elente, the Miami Herald reported today. MERCURY, Nev. (AP) -The nation's second announced un· derground nuclear test in a week rumbled far beneath the barren Nevada desert today, causing on· ly minor shaking in Las Vegas, Jtbout 00 miles away. The weapons-related test was conducte'd at 8 a.m. PDT 2,000 feet below Yucca Flat at the Nevada Test Site, northwest of ,Las Vegas. An an~ at a Las Vegas radio station said a studio microphone suspended from its card jiggled slightly from the shock wave generated • by tbe massive explosion. Dave Jackson, a spokesman for the Energy Research and Developmen t Administration <ERDA>, said there. was no radiation leak. "Everything is normal," be s aid. The s h o t , code·narned "Cabri ll o," had a yield of bet ween 20.000 and 200,000 tons of TNT but the payload likely was in ihe upper reache&1 of tha\ range s ince it was announced beforehand. ERDA does not an- nounce all of its nuclear tests. The test came one week after the first announced underground Finnigan's . Owner Gets Probation A Costa Mesa oigbt club owner ' accused on arrest of poqesaioo of narcotics, marijuana and dU\gerous drugs bu been placed on two years idformal probaUon after pleading guilty to Nduced charies. Orange County SuperioT Court Judfe Walter Charam.u Ql'dtred the probation t~rm !or Sylv•ter John Grove, 37, Santa Ana. after he watv~d the 1chedDled jury trial and pleaded 1wltf to amended ~harg•• o1--. ampbetarnlne1. : . Grove, who operates '" flo· olcan'• Rainbow. 17M ~· Ave .• Coat~ Mes~ wu.~ alter ooljc• aearctiect .... miM1 laat ay JS arid found drugfwhioh lDCliided , b11bilb, cocaine and IDarU""9a. · Judae CharamH Nchicecl the atatua of Oro••'• cOIM.eUOD to that of a mlademeuor. \ test of the year, also at desolate Yucca Flat. That lest was de- layed two days due to adverse weather. ~Today's test was conducted by the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory at Livermore, Calif .• operated by the University of Cal,fornia for ERDA. The underground t4$t was the ~ announced since the United States ended atmospiieric testing nearly 13 years ago .. Investigators said that in addi· tion to the tools, the thieves stole a pickup truck belonging to employe Gilbert Gomez. Police said the theft occurred during a period of heavy rain es . Gomez slept in his motor home, which had been parked near the truck at 2818 Barranca Road and that he heard nothing because of the downpour. h identified the trio as Roger W. Sanderson, 29, Euclid, Ohio; David G. Libksn 28, Streator, Ill .• and Robert Guy Da vis, 36, Palo Alto. The Herald described the re- lease as a "low key affair," not announced officially in either Washington or Havana. 7eJ"""' ~~, 'l1te~ . 1 Sketchbook by ·Heritage Inspires your individuality, your flair for the dramatic, your longing for ttie lovelier things in life. When is a collection of furniture not a collection? When each design has an independence. a flair, and an individuality all its own. When it can stand alone or become part of a total look. ' cx~·w@ ir ~@rrwft@®. ' . . . .~ . . Got a probl'°n1 ? Then write pg,,, Dwin. Pot wt/I c&At ,,.d tope . .,et thtt ' l onswcri and ac· 1 • I I : Frtd!y. March 7, 1175 DAil. Y PU-9,T C9ry'• Oil Attaek. 1., <l • M~· ney,_'Taints'· ) . . lion !PU. need 10! solvt inequities fn , ooyernm1n1 on : butineJa. Moil: die ten ~port Pushed~ \ ' . .. ' . U.S . O/f1 e1al$ '" ' ' n • JIOUr QUt.Sfioll$ I~ PO'f DullnfJlti Your Service .I 'Orange Coa1 t' Dally Pilot. P.O. Boz 1561), Co&ta _M11ta. CA i261i. l11oludt IJOtl.T tle/e_plione 11.uniber. , • ' . s,. w11:u:.or'Sc1111f.:11!ft · ot .. QailltMflllllllff ,• ' Tbre~ of OfanJe Counf.>'•a, five supirvraors 1ald '!:'1~~tJiey .stronglx.. favor 'bW ai new • cdnuoefclal Jet•airJ>o · mi tamR ' P l\dl~~Onl/1,1 •9tl~•rn s,i>Jllego Cou~ty, " , , . Supervtsoi:s 'Ralph t>i~ch, T.a..-•aa •-·•-·ted• Laurence SchtnJt and Ralph ·--y7 ~· Cla't:k told members ot the .• 1>EAR PATi Ast.'ai;~)a~ive . Or1m1e·counfy _Ch"mberofCom•. newcom er t.q Sou~hern mei:tett1-at8majorftewairPQrt · c,aI.ifornifl, l !d liii to find oul if on E~ sprawling base is the this ii.tale rec.u.la' s u4 tax pre· CQ1'nty'& onlx lona-range tope.-ror· pirat1on etP:e,,lp.; ~•hi). cypt W<f a\'iation. • '<>f \lfli.ltea l~c~&.: 'd J UJt to I· \Only Super1vi~r r Thomas • see'? "'. · ~ . ~ ~ ,, ,.. ~ :.Riley,, a reUrett Mari,ne Corps l· · ·.,GT ·Mb:sJonV~ geoe.ral ; remain,ed on· The Tu P~reri ' Ad re· ,tpMmijtal 8bou.t' ttse Ot the' &utates persOni. who, ror-a fee, 4..;Marine.tr_aini!lg base bi civilian assfst with or pre.pare lnCoflle or commerc&.P:I a1rci'aft. fr1ncblse tai 'returd for others. Sup.1.~rvlkor :Rober,t Battin The preparer sbou.ld ¥: able lo didn n attend thi"lunchtime &boW:-you proof of ftglstration "'Meet 'Your Supervisors" panel and 4)ondlnr i~lued by'•tbe dis~ussio~iqS~nt~Ana. Department of C9n.sumer. f· SJl'.~e his 1@ppo1ntmettt to the fairs. · · boaro, 'Rilef'~ has consistently !'1 held to._ ·the ·belief· that it will be cOst_of S, JMOld~gj _ _, extremely difficult, if not im- "' 1>9¥ibljtl to, convince the Marines DIJAR PAT-: My 11.),eaf-otd to (~t,lj~ of thousands of acres for daughter tells me she ti as' been use~ an airPort. SACRA.ll!ENTO (AP) -,.. Federal plans 'for new orfshore oil d rilling should be h alted because many fed.eraJ Officials ,. are "taiilted" by oil industry money •. Califor:'nia 's chiet oi l lease orficial says. Kenneth Cory, state controller and chairman of the.State Lands Commission, made the remarks in an interview Thursday. ''We have · rederal agencies whose personnel are economical· ly involved in the industry they're supposed to be i!eaJi,r.!g with, and as a result their d'e· clsions are tainted,'' Cory said. · · ' ·~ :-' 1,,1,.,,...,... "J have no evidence of criminal Th~ IJ;!lf!! as :ft . ,, . l . acts. bu1 there it. Lo, and we 'r• ftf. i ~ • ~ ·getting the shaft every time we. Ur. Ray ":J::'J'Ji'!"'~"111l\·Zion·Hospltal fii ' an Fran't . tumaround ,"Coryadded. CJSeo b~ fJ at W· looting you:in the eyll', a doctor,, H 'd h 1 · '. \ can _tell. if you have a bean-attack "risk lactor." 14've at. e sa1 t e atest example of left.Hi n.trmat,·t~l,llle tli"e eye ai tjglit-· ·Ws 'Ji,' kJi;clor''' what he said was a pattern of ar.~ Cll'clin.j,.me cohaea_~ •,:r:... ~. · ·. _ conflict of interest was revealed . \. _ ,. j ...... , . . 1 Tuesday in Wa.sbibgt.on, D.C. in a i l , · . ' General Accounting Office re-.... • ) ... port that 42 hig h-ranki ng R. ' · ' !' _}_ employes of the U!S. Geological ... Uf'IT•~ RAPS OIL INTERESTS .. , Controller"eory ·'! ~~~~~~~~~~~ • • ' smoking r;igaretle$ regularly for Tb ~' superv'isors' remarks se~etal .months , now. J can't were prpmpted by questions forbid her ro continue but in ad· frotr. ihe aU~i~nc~ and a panel or ditipn to the health hazard in· ,chamber ·Q•fic'era concerned volved I 'd like sonle fi'gures ,00 ··about overcrowding at the exist- how much moneY .-s moking costs ing OtangfOounty Airport. " e stta,ining 'P.ru er ~:;:n~~~:;~~;~~l{ies wit,h Gory, ~ho is chier ot the board ' Sanitation Workers Get AFL-CIOBid i F·i·le"d· 0-n ··Ca·r .. Fi"rm wh1chco•trolsoildrltlingin•l•l• Waters.. was critical plans or the • over a period or'years. ''I sti);I ~lieve civilians are a G.D.,DanaPoint hi'Jhell authority than the llow abeut some Idea ot what M,vine5 and P endleton is the on- else one could buy for the money ly potential chilnce for a new. spent on cigarettes? GASP airport servln'g Orange County," <Group Against Smoking PolJu:-said SuWvi~.r Ralph Diedrich. tion) provides the following in· "People l!of'kipg abo\l( any form1lion, which you may want other sites are "just kidding to pass along to your daughter. themselves,'' Diedrich said. 'rbe Hesse State Ins urance ··~The Pendli!:top idea has a lastitute calculates that if a chanceotsucc~~s." . person smokes 20 cig~rettes a Supervisors ·schmit and ctarlc day, he or she wilJ have lost one also saw Pendleton as the best television s.et in five years, a alternative airpott site, but they small.car ln 10 years, one round-'Stressed the impo'rtance of keep· the· world trip for two ln20years. "ing t)le e);istlilg c.ount.Y jetport in service. 1 . ,.holograph Phou11d • • ' , DEAR PAT: ·Last June l sent Department of lnt~rior to grant·· ~ l' . r! .. ~w exploratocy drilling permits . LOS ANGELJ:& <AP> -A tern· i,~i>er~ane'nt: injunction. It also·-1n federal ~aters: · . • • Poraq res train!ng ·or~er has I i:>_roh,ibits ·des truc~io~ o! the After Cory · became State ~n iseued a'ga1nst the Tweo-firm s re~9rds or di.ss1pat1on or Lands Commission chairm an An AFL-CIO local "'ent t~ t1etb C¢ht'"!-ry Motor car CoJ:11., corporate-(und,s or m~~ey held b! Jan. 6, the commission halted for court Thursday in a bid to wres whi;Cb ~l~1med it· was on the the com p ~ny s fug1t1 v_e pres1· review previously granted representation rights for sanita ve.r.ge of. ~arkett n~1 a three-dent, G. Eh zc;t~eth earrn1chael. permission for a resumption of tion district workers from th, w~eeled. auto that .~®.Id get 70 The .Se~ur1t~es .. and Exchange exp'loratory drilling in state Orange County Employes As-. miles lo \~e g~lJon . ": · ~m1ss1~n f1leCI {I fraud . com-waters, which are within three sociation. l The order signed ThUrsday•by plaint against Mrs . Carmichael miles of shore S uperior Co urt Judge J.I I U .S. ;District Court Judge E. Wednesday, chargit\g that she · \Valt~r. Steiner will be asked at~ Avery <'.;l"ary prohibits the rirm received more money rrom in· ''The GAO report illuminates a hearing March 18 to order th~ and its officers rrom violating re-vestors than was t\Ulled over to coruiistent pattern of beha\'ior county to stop deducting meml gistration and anttfraud pro-the company ; TJ!e SEC also which I identified in a Jegislati\'e. bership dues for the OCEA rrol?J visions or federal ·Securities law· asked the District ~rt to name eontinittee report last summer of the chec ks of workers employe<t;; pending a March 24 hearing on a · a receiver for the lJank accounts the USGS acting to the benerit of by the county's many sanitatior:( of Mrs. Carmichael and com-the giant, multinational oil cor-districts. , pany tr eas urer Sa mu e l po~ations,"Cory_said. Lav.•yer s for the s ui n ~ Eiler Larsen ·Scbli!!mao, 62, l)r Los Angeles. American Federation or State) A Dallas grand jury Monday "this is not s imply an isolated County a nd ri.1 unicipal EmployesJ "Orange Couq~y Airport is go. ing to be the only one for a long wttile," Schmit said. "I think Pendleton is the waY' to go, but until then, improving Orange County is our only option.'' indic t ed Mrs . Carmichael transgressionby a singlebureau. Local 373 , AFL·CIO, further de{ 'R p rted F • Schlis m an, and five othe; It must be seen as permeating mand that workers be allow'ed t~ e O · r,n,e Calirornia r es idents on grand ,the entire rederal e nergy hold a secret ballot to determinei Eiler Larsen, the Laguna theft charges. Twentieth Century establishment presided over by \\•ho shall represent them wheni Beach Greeter , is reported ''do-recently moved its corporate of· ~::r,~t~-~~ oC the Interior Rogers the current OCEA contract ex .I Clark said. Orange County must undergo some changes and additions to make it more conve· nient, but that "Pendleton is the best choice for an international site.'' ing just (ine"·at Beverly Mador lli~c_e~s_to~D~•~ll~•~·~· ---------------------'p:..i_res_i_nc.N_o.:v.:e.::m.::b:.e:.r.:1::9.::75::· ____ • Conv a l escent Hos pital in Capistrano Beach. · $21.95 to Aristocraft Restoration of Greeley, Colo., to have a 42· year-old family photograph pre- served in an "Old Fashioned De Coupage." I know Arist.ocraft re- ceived the inquiry I wrote asking aboul th·e delay because I re· ceived '8 return r eceipt from my certified letter. The sentimental value of the original photograph is more important to me than the missing money. . "The land down "there belonis to 1be taxpayers and should be used to the taxpayers' best in· terest," Clark said. Larsen, who will be B5 March . 27, returned to the nursing home three weeks ago' after a pro- longed stay at Long Beach Veterans Hospital. He was hospitalized with an acute kidney infection. ; -; T.C., Costa Mesa A record$ -mlxup caused a de- lay. but yOur decoupaged photo oow bas be~n rn ailed to you. I ..,, . Beuer L a te T han ••• , DEAR PAT: l'm hoping, with your hetp, that I Jll8Y1 be able to get the picnic basket advertised by "Kent Gallery'' by·this sum- m'er. r ordered it last July, enclosing payment and two emp· ty packs of Kent cigarettes, as re· quested. How about it? .LF ., Fountain Valley You've got it -better late than .never. "If the Marines could take lwo Jima and Ok~nawa and then give them back. then we should be atile to get Pendleton where they have never s hed any blood," Clark said. Two•Jets C~Jlide PLEASANT PllAINS, Ark. (UPI ) -Two A~v~ jets rrom Millington Naval Air Stat.ion at Memphis collided ~~ily over norUteast Arkarisas, killing one or the pilots, the Ark'ansas: State Police said. ~ . J ud ge's F i l ing Fee R eturn App eal e d By TOM BARLEY their fundS and found Judge Todd • • CMIMo.11,,.11 .. su" ·· in full accord with them. Three or eighl mUnicipal court County lawyers are expected judges who last month won a to argue at the appellate panel ~all claims court action for a--hearing that a r ecent opinion by refundoftheirl914electionfillng the California Attorne y .fees were advised Thursday that General's orfic~ reOects the feel- the decision has been appealed to i.ng that fi'li.og fees should only be Grange County Superior Court. reflln~,cl if there is evidence lo Narhed as defendants in the is-show that they were paid under sue {hat wUl'· now go before a proiesti. tht.et-judge appelJ.ate panel in . Noprotestappears tohaVebeeo th~ hi,her court ·a re Santl J\na made by any of the eightjudge~·at Munic1Pal Court Judges Pi.ul .. th~timethefeeswerepaid. Mait" and Eugene Laoghauser • , Larsen was the AJt, Colony's gr eeter for a> 30-year period beginning in 1942. He stood on the corner or LZ1guna Avenue and South Coast Jlighway a nd boomed greetings to passersby. JIJness forced him to give up greeting three years ago. Streakers Are Back Sl:JLLWATER, Okla. (APl -Dozens of naked 'men and wom en have rfl. vived last ye~r·s college rad o f streakin1g at Oklahoma State. ~-.. Thousands of exuberant college stmlent:;, and other ' observers jamlned'L a six· bl ock ·s .t'retc b Or .Washin g to n-1.Street -known;11~propriatel)/, ·as "'The. Strlp': -'(hursday 'nid\t aod ear)y (oday to celebrate the begin9i0g or the. week-long SJ'.:!.ri ng break. 1 , : ' Despite a co1d front that sent temperature's plum- meting to an over.night low · . of 37. a co~ple o( dozen young people doas.hed( naked through the crowds, some in groups as large as six or eight. -and We~t O'ra·nge ~o unty ~ R , · aid R Mun (clpal Court ludge•.W. on· -~ ', eag'n'n'~ Patrick McCray. "' , a, , Lawyers working under the · , . • . :., , , ' direction of County Counsel · -. 1 • • • , • • •, .:" • Adrian ,Jl:uyp,r .. ld'll ls~his .ii~.: t 1:mnn· •· • 'p•t J'kt Jmmed1ate Intention to file. ap-. U O JD 'I U peals in the actions involving the ; otherfivejuges. · • ... -, .. ·" . ! . • Each judge wo.n hl8 argtiment Amopg Jeature&. readers pro-.. that lb.,$346.05 he paid in election babl)!,,.Will rate "Sdnday's Best" · · ' • ,,. · .... filingYees JaS't ·year should be re-arie ih·ese, wliicb Daiiy Pl:lot · ,tA ~$ BEST,; funded Jn a ~Jin« bf:ed down edltorl· ar~ pre.ptrin ~ay for ·~ ~,':'. .... ·~ • .. ' -~-., .... • • by ff.arbor Munie pa <;our~ tb•ttpc!Oln,~S:!N~k~:. ; . wt ~ prrces goint ·up. Judge KOl>ert,c. Todd. JACKIE 'SMOmrlAIN .,_ Tlijo • Sehodu,.,. ~vqu Section. ;.-r;.f.!r~~ll~!.~l;~~;~1~~~ ~ol<hllllh~,ti.a.i(tslh\e<ltdbe~ 0 1'Atl.'IS.TO PINES -"-For•' abandplJ,ed '181\~May when tl\e · 'dioliftt~ln , "1 F•trview Stat; • .. llibn just a brief lawit 1!••11'>' state c"•ro;n)o. court <le<lared it Hosp)' al • P'-'ed camlllfl'OWICI ~Nim Sprtn•o and the tratli ._. :.S:" · • . al has iielun to take abapot-MOW.i ~, -.. to 1 .... tolf""~.cqo.1t1t,t10111 . :J ~ s~~nhon 1.named for-t.be'"' 1 .ez:s a~~ess ~amp!""" Th• elllfll J~1•1,aJready aaa ., ·r · ' ·• hlJdartl plcnlckma -or 1us1 vi ... paid 1h•lr f!lit!g lee foe the June wl tire ,i eam ln her eye lor Ille lq. Wt wrlter_Jo OlsQp • priaanr prior to t.b .. 4lah-court's project, is featur~ln a progress ·=J\~JUse to 1et b.llh on the· I ~ Th _,_. 1. . r•~rt tin a pl'I> ~ Ith( ••· th Tt -• p dee srvn. ey tVU9-ao 100 1n ~Ced last mOnt by Artriut 1L ~ a av~ age, 1mall claims court to recover Vinsel, Dally ,Piiot NII writer. RO!'INJll 'S BACK -Former Oil Fo--•-' River' · YOU Section. . f C1Ulornt1.11Gov. Ronald RMPf1 UUI • ~ h11 har~.~ laded from the RVa ROLL ON -Roe~ PoPlicftf.a"fne. Now~·, wrlllai . ' VICKSBURG Miia. (AP) - ' 01nc11r. uy 01l roulln1 the Ml .. lidlppl River. after a barce..accl~ de.nt •pread aownatream •• mu91 u tOO mll•• and WOiken · probably can1 tecoverm .. tollL . .. . ~ · wblele owners ~rtf\l'e lher t•• ··~ column, knd tt Will a,e • ada'pt to the gio,.llH ctloll iod, carried n the Sunday DililYi'fYi In a s pecial Chrlauan SclO..ce l>ellnntni this weekend. Ht Monitor New1 $ervtce Hllture, lbptc ll fall' trade laWI. He'• readers can 11t tlpt on Mir to · .,...._ Uiem. O• lh1 Edi\Orl*l 1elect the <l1ht ono ~IMl:Y.'"1~.• ,..... { .,,. '\ ... .. .. ' ,\ ' ·FIESTA RED PANSIES AND PRIMROSES REG. 69' qt. " SUH EXTRA .. AZALEAS HD& PURl'LE LARGE REG. 2.49 SJ4' 'I 49~. REG. ,,. qt. AVAIL.A.ILE OMLY AT GREIN HA YEN HOLLAND ORCHID CAMELIAS Wll grow M p«tial Mlft or IMde wftll btMIM flowirr1 oll Y"'° ~ • fteds Roses with b1t1nc1d fertilizer • Kills f\phids 1nd other sucllina Insects •Controls .. '.J ,• ' . •. ' " '· 1 l • i • ' ' : • • ' • : • Triple ActiDn FEros ROSES more thin C KUS ntSIC!S 240;·-· I ~:~s3~:;· I $4.49 HOUSE PLANT DEPT. I . BOSTON 1/2 PRICE 1' FERM ' SEE OUR Yt PR1C! s399 i TABLE. MANY -E I ASSOll,TED HOUSI! PLANTS. GAZAM IAS . _ ..... ' . ' 1 .... $1.tl $3"....-. l I I . Af• CWLVPM.OT eturns, rOUd FN• Wire Sttv&eea Paaa Foxe, who roeelved ~ad publlcit.Y u a friend WObv D. aflllt <D-Ark.) lo her native AfaeJ)tina. With tbe excepUon rl a few p•oto1rapber1 and repartera c~ by hv ex-husband, hardly •Olle at the airport knew wbo 5'•w•. 'Wben a photographer asked t she bad been dolnl l.alely. wblpped out a magallne and P dly PoiJ\ted to made photo- graphs or herself. . ) O.c. Kerner, ~e aillna forlner federal judee and Illinois gov· eC"DOr, won release alter serving seven montha of a three-year sen· tepee for bribery and tax e'(~on. The eight-member U.S. Parole Board granted Kerner im· mediate release after reviewing medical reports showing he is in need of surgery for a lung tumor. The Board of Prisons ar· ranged to Cree him from federal prison at Lexington, Ky. * A Florida court of appeals sent Mrs. Jackie Gleason's appeal for. ( __ P_EO_P_LE~) temporary alimony back to a lower court in Fort Lauderdale. Mrs. Beverly GleaMD filed for divorce last December, and now charges her entertainer husband has cut off her credit privileges at Inve rrary in Lauderhill, Fla., where they both live. T~e~ reportedly occupy op· pos1te ends or Gleason 's mansion. * Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. will dip into his own political cam· paign fund to pay the postage costs of returning more than 150 gifts he has received since his election Nov. 5. There is no estimate yet on how much that will cost beeause the 36-year-old Democrat's staff is just preparing to mail some of the items back to the senders. "Since mos t of the gifts are or a • personal nature, the governor felt it only appropriate that the cost be paid through his own political fund as opposed to the state absorbing the cost or the postage," said Liew Werner, a Br own spokesman. * If a congressman marries his secretary, then keeps her on the payroll, is he breaking the federal antinepotism law? No, but he can't raise her salary. Rep. John ff. Rousselot ( R- Calif.), who earns a yearly salary or $42,500. married his secretary last November and has kept her on lhe job at $20,000 a year. "She earns every dollar she's paid,'' the congressm an s aid. The House Ethics Committee told Rousselot he could not raise his wife's salary, "and I will not." the 47-year-old con- gressman said. • President Ford told fellow alumni o r the University of Michigan that he wants to go back to Michigan, but "I would like to do it in 1981. '' It was the second tJine within a week that the President has taken the opportunity to state publicly that he has in mind run- ning for another term in the White House in 1976. Ford, who was graduated Crom Michigan in 1935, spent a nostalgic evening at an annual congres sional dinner of the University or Michigan Club of Washington. WASHINGTON <UPI> -Near- ))' St0.000 workers IOI( tlaelr Jobs ID February b .. t tit• Un· .mploymetnt rai. bel4 atead;y at &.2 pvcat last month bee•Ult a sunllar number of people entlre· l)' dropped out of lhe labot-force. Ute L•bor Department said to- Ct ~ number of Jobs supported by tbe troubled econo~ Clropped • to 84 million, back lo the level ol Mayl973. • Employment baa dropf>ed 2.4 million since Sept~mbtt, 1914, a figure which tbe Bureau ol Labor Statistics described as .. the largest five-month cutback re· corded in the postwar period." 1be 8.2 perceat \&Demplo)'me.l rate. uncbaa1ei from .January, reflected a total ot 7.6 million peraon.a out of work. · The 1tead1 rate 1eemld to IUP- port Pretid.anl Ford'• ec:IODOmic advisers, ~ predicted, the un- employment rate woukl.J)eu at near 8.5 pereent this year. 11'e unemployment rate had Jumped a full percentace point la January and aome economists hav. predicted a top over t per· cent. 1be last time there was no chance in the unemployment rate -wbic~ baa been rising steadily since the end ol 1973 -~aa in May. qd .June 1974 •hen tbe· rate •WM tteadj at 5.2 flt'· cent In both montba. Althoqh tbt number ~ Jobi& deereued 1htrply in hbnwy, th• unemployment rate re· malned the same*.-580.000 people, maioly women and teen· qers, left ,th• labor f~. no -..Jonaer actlvely •,,,ektnawork. Since laat A'11u1t, the Labor Department aaid that four out of five persons loeln1 their jobs had been .&ctlm• ol ••yotts. About 55 pefcent o/. the 1.5 tnUUon work era now }lnemployed were persons ~o bad been lald olf in recent months. The lareest cutbacb occurred in the flve major metals and ·Tax Shift · For .Ailing Fund Eyed From Wire Services WASRINOTON' -Warning that innation and recession are plunging the Social Security system into deficit, an advisory council urged Congre:;s today to . pump $7 billion in general tax revenues into the program next year. The council, composed of 13 promhi~nt private citizens._ said ( INSHORT J - the addition or general funds would free payroll contributions into tbe Medicare hospitalization fund to meet rising benefit pay- ments to more than 30 million re· tlrees in 1976. The proposal ran into im· mediate opposition from Caspar W. Weinberge r, secretary of· health, education and welfare. Crash Fatal to 12 MUNICH, West Germany -A Justice Arrives ¥ commuter train slammed into a crowded bus during the morning rush hour today after the cross· ing gate was raised prematurely. Police said at least 12 Police prepare to board runaway freighter Atlantean and arrest its skipper Brian Erb after trekking across ice of Gulf of St. Lawrence from icebreaker (rear). Five More Bodies I Found in Rubble TEL AVIV <AP > -Five more bodies were found today in the wreckage of a hotel attacked by Arab tettorisls aod police said more victims of the guerrilla raid might be buried In the rub· ble. · The discovery brings to 19 the number of dead officially report- ed in the attack Wednesday night and Israelt counterattack Thurs- day, including seven guerrillas. The bodies discovered today were those or a German, a Dutch- born Israeli teen·ager, a Swiss man and woman and a Somali, police said. ISRAELI OFFICIALS charged the r aid was an attempt to c\ls- cred it Egypt a nd sabotage Secretary of State Henry A. Ki ss· inger's new peace mission. Kissinger was due in Egypt tonight after a brief stop in Brussels to discuss the Cyprus situation and U.S. relations with Greece with his Greek coun· terpart, Dimitrio~Bitsios. Kissinger arrived in Brussels Crom London after 45 minutes of talks with British Prime Minister Harold Wilson. A communique isau~ in London said they dis- cussed world problems in general a nd the Middle East in particular, bu~ gave no details. THE SEMIOFFICIAL Cairo newspaper AJ Abram said Egyp- tian Preside.nt Anwar Sadat would tell Kissinger the Palesti- nian terrorist attack in Tel Aviv on Wednesday night proved the necessity of "defusing all re- asons for explosion in the area." However, Al Abram said Sadat told it he was "optimistic'' that Kissinger would arrange an agreement for another Israeli troop withdrawal in the Sinai Desert to be followed by a similar accord for . the Syrian front. D.tly Piiot Dtllvery Is Gucwont"4 Monday·Fnday· II you do not have your paper by 5:30 p.m.. call before 7 p.m. and your copy will be de- livered. Saturdey and Sunday; If you do not receive yo1>< copy by 9 am. Sah.Jt· day. or 8 a.m. Sund1y. call before 10 a.m and your copy will be deHvered. Clrcll•tl09 Teleph1111 Moll Of-anoe County Area& •42-4JJI NOOl't...,.ll Hunhnoton B91Ch. and Weslmin&ter ........ Mt-Int Sal\ Clemente, Capistral'\O Beach. Sin Juan Caplatrano, 01111 Point, South Laguna. t..guna Nlgu191 ........•. 4tWHO schoolchildren and adults were kiUed and many others werein- jured. The crash derailed the electric locomotive and two of the seven cars. Fi"" Indicted BALTIMORE, Md. -A federal grand jury has indicted· the Singer Co. and four men, in· eluding the head of the Maryland Finance Committee to re-elect the president, on charges they il- legally channeled a $10,000 cor- porate contribution to the Nixon- Agnew campaign. The grand jury, in a nine·count indictment Thursday, charged the sewing mac hine company secr etly donated the money through Annapolis banker J _ Walter Jones Jr. as part of a con- spiracy to gain inOuence with Spiro Agnew when he was vice president. School Rebuffed . ST. LOUIS, Mo. -Voters r e- jected a tax increase of 66 cents. for the third tlme and because or it, this clty's school children may have w do without music pro- grams and hiiP school athletics. The proble1n is, the s~hool board faces a $9 million deficit. lnquirg Attaeked CHICAG 0 -Federal in- vestigators have used coercion and other abuses in its probe of drug use at Playboy Enterprises, the American Civil Liberties Union contends. The ACLU is asking Atty. Gen. Edward H. Levi to investigate "gross abuses of civil liberties'' in the case. T 01·nado fi,i jures F 011r 500 Homes Witlwut Power in Missouri S&fUMi. ..... .. Rockford, Ill. police are en1aaed in massive search for Joseph Dld lcr, 15-year· .» old son o f Rockford alderman. who dltappeared Tueaday whlle dellverlhl -"·, .newspapers. • • I .. ·metal ualna lndu1trle:s and in tex· tiles, apJ>&r I and nibber and plastic products. The FebrUary drop in manufattvring Jobs pulled that tota\ down to 18.3 mJUku1, the low~st level 1lnce 19SS. 1be number of maD\dactur- ing jobs decreased bY. 42$,000. Another trouble 1lgn on the economy was tho lncreue In the durat\on of unemployment, ris· ins to U .7· weeks ln February. This average duration of un· e mployment was one week higher than tn J anuaey and two weeks higher than in Dec~inber. "This pattern is typical during business downturns, u i.Qcreues -. . In the duration of unemploymesu alway• las those In the overall level and rate or une•ploy· ment, ·. · the degartment•1 bureau of labor statistic• aald. , The clvlllan labor force, wbJc:b had been slowly expandlna, sud· denly dropped by 580,000 ln February to 91.5 million. The ·bureau soid most of this unusual· ly large decline ocCW'l'ed among adult women. Employment peaked lpst Oc· tober at 86.4 million jobs, but since then has fallen back to 84 million Jobs, the same level u in May, 1973. • c._ndid Cam~r•t 15 Laid Off for Marijuana SEATTLE (UPI) -The Boeing . Co. has fired 15 · employ es for selling and smoking marijuana on company premises. , The Post-Intelligencer reported that a sound recording movie camera was used to collect evidence agai~t t.tte ·grass smokers, butBoeingofficialsdeniedthis. . The source, who regularly deals wiUl Boeing manage- ment, said the camera was hidden in a restroom wall locker at the Kent plant. The source a lso said Boeinl _ security officials intercepted a bag of marijuana sent by one employe to another via company inter-plant mail. Boeing announced the firings of the 15 and susp_ensions of a number of pthers for selling, buying and using mari- juana on the job. · The actual number suspended was not reported. The firm's management cited posted company rules against possession or consumption of alcohol or dru»S while on company property. If Aid Passes Cambodia Chances 50-50, Says Ford From Wire Services ·WASHINGTON -President Ford says $222 million in a.id may prevent a Communist takeover in Cambodia and perhaps allow negotiations. If Congress re· fuses, Americans would feel "a deep sense of shame" over the bloodbath that would come with t.he insurgent t roops. The President asks only for money. He told a news con- ference Thursday, "All American forces have come home. They will not go back." · FORD GAVE the Cambodian regime headed by Marshal Lon Nol a '50-50 chance of survival even with the aid. He said the money might allow Phnom Penh to last until summer, when the rainy season would make it easier to transport sup~lies. If the insurgents cannot wil') by then, talks mieht follow. Liberal congressional senti· ment supported Lon Nol 's re- moval and said that might be the price of additional aid. Ford did not agree, but he would not com- mit himself to Lon Nol. .. We will support any negotia- tions and accept any outcome that tbe parties the~elves will agree to," he said. ''As rar as the United States is concemed, the personalities involved will not themselves constitute obstacles of any kind to a settlement." IN PHNOM• PENH, a 1,000- man government task force ran into heavy r esistance in a desperate campaign lo drive re- bel gun n ers from the swamplands around Phnom Penh ·s battered airport. Field officers reported fierce rifie and mortar clashes between the three· battalion task force and insurgents harassing the U.S. airlift to the besieged Cambodian capital. The .officers said the f'iahting slowed the government drlve against rebel r ocket and artillery positions threatening ·Pochen- tong Airport, the capital's only source of supply. The Communist-Jed guerrillas kept up a steady rocket and artillery barrage today against P hnom Penh and the city's nearby airport. One rocket crashed into the capital's m ain m arketplace. Military sources reported light casualties. The round-the-clock airlift, which was halted briefly Thurs- day because of intense shelling, went on today with civilian pilots dodeing rebel rounds at the airport. Social workers in Phnom Penh began distributing the .first or 20.000 tons Qf airlifted rice to civilians today following reports the governmeQt was stockpiling the food solely for the military .. Aid Given To ShnJ,.i1i CHICAGO (UPI> - Emogene Slayden, a shut: in born with only one limb, will get her housekeeper back, thanks ta Illinois At· torney General William J. Scott and a federal judge. U .S . District Court Judge James Q. Parsonli Thursday ordered the tl- 1 in o is Department of Public Aid to resume pay- ments or $200 a month to Miss Slayden, who lost the vital services or her houseke.eper when the mone'y was cut off last week. Miss Slayden, 53, is four feet tall and weighs 75 pounds. She was bom with no arms and only one leg and has llve'C! alone 1n her West Frankfort home. · CoulJly Girl Tells Sex Inducements TYLER, Teic. (UPl) -An trial. <The girl formerly lived ln Anati.eim teenager aaJd between Necoedoches. Tex.) · May artd July last year she visited the trailer houee owned by Kattie Te1Umony continues today and Mae Harritt Muter eveey ntsht both prosecution and defense at· and each nJaht Mrs. Miller· tn. torneye tald th.ey hoped to con· duced her to enaaae uuexual ln· cl ud e th el r preaeotatlona terCOW'1e wlth •1~u1totnera. •1 f sometime today. ~r "reward, !he aald, ~ame Mrs. Miller and Alln Key o1 Hot In the form of drink• and Sprinis, Ark., are chafled with claarettea. ~ut .aJlo wu alao al· three count.I of whlt• llnery tor lowed ,to write ch~kJ on Mrs. alleaedly taklnl clrl• aoroH Miller a bank account whenever atate llnH for-pr~Ut\IUon Mr abe wanted to. Miller ls alao cbarftd wtih o:: Tqen. sometime in the f!11ddle atrucUon or juatlce *•UH of•l· of July, she said Mrs. Miiier taid leged tbreat1 made aiairilt the lhe was taktn1 the 17·yel.r-old ilrJ alrl to . Little Rock, Ark., to Other youn1 atrlt a11o tesuned engage tn prostltuUon. The 1lrl ror the protec:utlo.n 'lb.Ul"IUy an4 said lf she refused to JO, Mrs. they said tbey became part o1 MiUer would have tiled forgery Mra. Miller•1 stable In much the cb1,r1ea against her. · • same manner H the Anaheim 1 We were told it wu slUy to ftrl. One otber 11r1 aald Kn. ilve ~way au when you could iilllJer alao threatened to cbarJ: atll It." lh• 1lrl Hid 'J'burtday in her with f Qrl•r>' uni-aM m th• ~.,...!' .... , ~>'.or Mt?· ~!f.'S the trip to Llltle llock. ' \ • . Tapes Help Al.ftlwrities Solve Killings .cf J.ACof Nth, Ga. <AP) -A feder•l Jud&e says sum· year, except by court officials and members of m 11 o e tape • ..-corded diary of 1la.lA prison · the 1rand Jury Owens said r:=o~~::~:,=~ ::e~eth~:~tf!:vJded to K The~ became the subj~t of a controversy after K owl 28 .. d '"--·. ftOWJes s sleath when Ow~ns 9rdered the tapes n ea, • .. a .._n formally chareect wlth taken (roan one of KaowJ~s· attorneys who then h:tlJ •l~~~ngs in P1ortda, Georgia anct.Ofito whel\ petitlorted, as executor o~ his cUent·~ will, for wu •·~ and kUled' Dec. 18 du.ring_ ah escape at-custody of the tapes. • t~pt near Atlanta. The 5th t: .s. Circuit Court of Appeals instead urned the ta~s o.ver to the grand jury in Georgia for a <let~rmlnatlon. AnER HIS DEATH, HE w M linked ~lotely to aev~n other killings throogb th~ 1ummaries pro- vided law Qfti~ers on the basJa of the tape~. · '"U be cluerl bed goinJ to -XVZ CJfy, • then we sent a summary of that portion of the tapes to .. XYZ City'." bid t:.S. District Court Ju~ge Wilbur D. °"'ellS a( .M acqn. $BOR1LY AFTbWA,D, ALTIIORITIES in Ely, Nev.: Marlboroush. Conn.; Bowline Green, Va., and KnoxvUle, Ga. e.nnounced that they were cJosiq ~he boQ.ks o~ local sla~ings because of In· formatfo" contaJned m the summariP.l'. KnowJes was arrested No\'. 17 at a roadblock just south of Atlanta after allegedly kidnaping and killing 1l Florida highway patrolman and a Delaware businessman. Douglas County, Ga. Sheriff Earl Lee, who had 1111 TAPES THEMS~LVF.S ltAVB not been Kno,.·Jes in custody when he was tilled, told the aired slnee they were selzea 6y a l!.J::, marshal last Geor,la Bureau of Jn\'esligation that Knowles ~ hragged to him of killing 18 persons. Owehs said Jn an interview that the summaries all w,re sent out last January, at his order, after the tapes had been handed o\'er to a federal grand JUJ'l for tnvestlgat\ve purposes. F(J~ft A e ilo• · Referee has recommended disciplinary action by Nebraska Bar against G. Bradford Cook, former Securities and Exchange Commission chairman. A complaint says Cook was guilty of perjury on own ad- mission he lied in Robert Ve~co inquiry. ~orno Stars Coeds Eam as They Learn I · NEW YORK CAP) -Coeds il>rraine Alraune and An- na Livia Plurabella have lucrative part-time jobs off. campus. They are pornographic movie stars. "If my dad found out, I'd probably be thrown out of the house,'' said Lorraine, 20, a student at Manhattan's School of Visual Arts. 0 MY FAMILY COULDN'T TAKE if," agreed Anna a ~-yea~-old ~nglish native doing graduate work at Colu~­b1a University. Lorraine Alraune and Anna Livia PlurabeJla are both stage names. But Anna says5he likes the work. "I enjoyed being filmed. l'Q1 an exhibitionist and I'm very vain,_ and I loved it. I li~e pornography." Lorra.me, a Queens resident. plays the lead in a soon- to-be released hard-core porn fli ck, "Sometimes in Sarah's Eyes,~· in which she explQres the heroine's sex fantasies. Anna 1s cast as her roommate. FOR FOVR DAYS BEFORE the cameras, Lorraine gotSl,000. Anna got$300fortwodays work. The studehts got their positions through an ad in the Columbia school pa~ which said the producer was look- ing ~or .. good-looking, liberated" women for parts in his movie. · The producer got three dozen responses, interviewed 12, screen-tested two, and decided on Anna -After a nude inspection. "I had no idea BObbie could learn so much so fast, and still ~joy it. Mini-Skool is doing a gftat job for Bobtiit .•• and for me. I Fnday, March 7. 1875 DAIL v P11.or A#-. · Your Treasury pharmacist knows how irpportant your prescription is to you. T~at's why he Qlls it as quickly and a$ efficienHy as he can. That's why he cans upon his years of experi- ence to · fill it accurately. That's why he uses only the f res he st of drugs. Bring your next prescription to The Treasu y and d~scover the . conveni - ence o having it filled wh~le y_ou shop the in ny other· wonderful depart- ments. · ~ · IUMl PAii: BHc at Orangelhorpe •Open weelU2lYI 9:30 o .30 Sondays 10 to 8. OIA•t Caty Or. at wden GrOYe Blvd.•~ ~CS&ys 10 to 0 SondlYS 10 to S SAHTA AMA: 3QOO • BrlltOl-No, of So. CoUt Plua •Open WMkdays 9.30 to 9 Salurdeys 9:30 to 7. Sondayt 10 lo 8. I .. ( ' .. .. I • ... " ' ' . 1' . • . , \• II 'J '"l. ., Orange County supervisors hav~ received a . massive report drafted over the past seven month.$ • that purports to tell why the cost of bousinc ta skyrocieting and how it can be slowed down. The 1.25-page study, prepared by an ad hoc com· ml~tee of business, labor and government represen- tatives sanctioned by the board, directly and indirect· ly lays mqch of the blame for high housing costs on government. · Supervisors have heard again and again of many ol the elements contained in the report. But it is a useful attempt to round up all the problems, especial· ly those relative to costs generated by government de- mands and tees. Some of the conclusions and recommendations for streamlining government involvement in coa.- structioo make sense. A review of building codes to see if modem technoJogy may have made some costly requirements outdated also would be in order. One HCtion of the report makes it clear that cer-~ain costs are attributable to the housing industry itself, resulting f tom the practice of loading homes with amenities to mike them more salable. A sound. livable'home can be b\lilt without such· s~lling itetns llS year-round air conditioning, built-in dishwashers. extra bathrooms, expensive carpeting and drapes and fancy light fixtures. Many amenities can be added later by owners as finances permit. Perhaps the construction industry will have to learn, as the automakers did, that today's J>Ublic is quite willing to do without some of the extras that had become articles of faith in the trade, in order to ease pocketbook strain. The era of the really reasonably priced· family home probably wilJ never return, but a combined ef· _:___ __ ,_._..-~TT . - fort of government and the builders could Ugbten ~e· bdrden. ' . · And there would be fringe benefits too, for it has been well establiJhed that owner-occupied homes con- tribute to the stability of any community. Open Government Legislation to extend California's 1968 Public Records Act moved forward last week with approval by the Assembly Com1J1ittee on Governmental Organization of a measure introduced by As· semblyman Leon Ralph CD-Los Angeles). The committee. at thei;ame time; killed a similar and wider ranging bill by Robert McLennan (R- Downey). However, it is exP!cted that amendments to stiffen the Ralph bill will be introduced on the As- sembly floor. Essentially, ~ bills o~n financial records of the Legislature and members' expense accounts and extend the l~ pc~-which requires disclosure of an but a few speciqed documents. Exemptions granted to the governor's office and.the courts also would be removed. One issue i~ the question of' retroa<;tivity. The Ralph bill woulll cover only records dating from December, l974t McLennan's measure specified no cutoff date. The~gument bere"1s whether legislators should be subj ed to RQlaible embarrassment by disclosure of d uments 1hat formerly were not public. . While the bill approved by the Assembly commit· tee may not satj.s!y proponents 'CJf completely open state records, itls at least a step toward making all branches of stale government accountable to the public whose m~ey is being spent. I 'Some of them JJie quite easily trained!' Quake Safety Rule Rips off Taxpayer T e rror in t he Vi llage• California property owners are standing in danger of ·having .their pockets picked of millions of tax dol I ars needlessly. Thousands of other Californians may be deprived of op- portunities for job training and e ducatio'nal advancement because one legislator is standing like a mule at the crossroads. That member is Assembly · man Leroy Greene who rules as chairman of the Assembly E d u c a · lion Committee. He holds this post not because of any special qualifications in the field of education, being a civil engineer by profession, but mere- ly by reason of political selection. Probably because he is an engineer be has taken an in· ordinate position with respect to the s tate's earthquake safety laws. The laws, commonly re- ferred to as the Field Act, were initially adopted following the 1932 Long Beach earthquake which witnessed the collapse of some schools.· The fact the failures resulted from alleged chicanery or contractors omit· ting cement in the concrete bas been overlooked in the zeal to enact excessive structural r e· quirements. AS WRITTEN, the raw was in· tended to apply only to schools housing children. The junior col· leges of 'he day, peopled by teenagers and financed by local taxpayers were included. It did not then or now apply to state col· leJes or universities. The reason • adVanced was that students there were older and such stringent" standards of protection were not ( EARL WAT ERS ) needed. More in truth would be the reason that including the col· Jeges would cost the state, rather than local property owners, money . , The original law applied only ·to buildings constructed subse- quent to its enactment. As time went by educators, seeing a way to get new buildings, prevailed upon t~e lawmakers to extend its provisions to all schools regard· less of when they were erected. As a result many a sound build- ing has be.en razed simply because it had a tile roof or easily removed facades which con· stitu\ed an earthquake hazard. It has been a rip off of the tax· payers. MOST OF THE grade and high schools · have by now be~ brought into conformance but there remain the two-year col- leges. There are 100 of these in the state, financed largely by local property taxes. Together they have an enrollment of one m i l li'O n . M o s t h a v e been established since 1932 but the others, which are numerous, are in serious trouble. They either must raise the dough from property owners to rebuild or discontinue classes and activities. In Sacramento, citizens are facing the expense of razing a football stadium which has stood near SO years and re· • building, at today's cost, a lesser arena. The situation is dupllcat· e.t elsewhere but because they· serve four-year schools the Rose D ear Gloo~y Gus I note by a TV com· mercial that it is a breach of etiquette to use the same credit cani to pay for din- ing out that one uses to buy fertilizer. Does this mean it no longer is acceptable to buy toilet paper with the groceries and pay for all with the same check? c.v. ~ .. ow ~~-·"9nll .... .., ....,.._. ..... _aaarllynftett .. ....... ~ ..... ,...~ ,_... .. o......,Ga, Dlllry ... ..... Bowl, Colisdum, Stanford and Berkeley are not afCected even though they are older than Sacramento's • rN RECOG ITION of the in- consistency o the law, which ex- empts four ear colleges but clamps down on the two year schools, Sen r Peter Behr has authored SB 6 which would re· move comm ity colleees from the Field Act It is this bill upon which Gfeen has taken his ada· mantstand. Apparently frightened by Greene, comm unity college trustees met in Sacramento and took a neutral stand on the Behr bill but urge:! exemption for off. campus leased facilities, saying without such exclusion they will have to close the doors on thousands seeking job training in rented bui~dings . This ra· tionalizatioo between leased classrooms and campus build· ings is too spetious to Wlderstand but then so i$ that between the two-and four-year colleges. It re- mains there i~ no good reason for the Field act applying to colleges and only the ltubbornness of one legislator blipcks a reasonable approach wh~h would save pro· pei:Ly owners tnillions. Cambodian Bloodbath WASHING'l'ON -As the fight- ing over Cambodia approaches the showdown stage, according to classified cables from the U.S. embassy, Communist forces have turned upon the civilian population with a sudden savagery. The cables describe a blood· bath in the countryside. Villages hav e been destroyed, a nd the inhabitants ''have been ruth- lessly ~xecuted by knifing or burning." Even small children have been brutalized. "The enemy appears to have shifted some of the focus ol hi& at· tacks from the battlefield to the vm.-e," amb-ssador John Gun- ther Dean has reported in a grim message to the State Depart· ment. " ... Ignoring static (gov· emment) defensive military positions, the enemy bas coocen· trated their attacks on villages, directing their fire at villagers.'' VILLAGERS who resist Com- munist overtures, says Dean, are declared the "main enemy," wjth Buddhist monks next and government troops third. "This is not an isolated phenomena," (sic) claims Dean, "but rather seems to be in· dicatlve or a new enemy strategy to inflict even more suffering on the civilian population of Cam· bodia." The classified cables refer to the opposing forces by their French initials. Government troops are called FANK, and Communist guerrillas are iden· tified as KC . (JACK ANDERSON ) demonstrate that FANK is una· ble to give protection· .... "Military authorities ... in· dicate that the enemy has con· centrated on areas where there \bas been an active effort to put the viilagers back into agricultural production, or where there is a strong gov-· ernment:-Supported village militia." TUE CABLES report that ''in some 'areas, village militia forces have been fairly effective a-=ainst ertemy attacks because the village men sometimes stay an~ fight until their families have had a chance to flee to safety." The cables also contend that "in spite of lack of protection I which exposes villagers to daily attacks, and in spite of the 1pany hardships of being a refugee on the· (government) side. most re· fugees intimate that they would rather be poor and suffering but have their freedom than live un· der the stifling regime of the KC. "This is borne out by thousands of refugees that have fled from KC-controlled areas compared to the aJmost negligi· ble number of refugees who, in spite of the imperfectiooS and fauJt of the (government), have moved from government·beld territory to the KC side." Footnote: In past columns, we · have quoted earlier, secret em- bassy cables that criticized the Cambod-tn · government's "haphazard, out-of·channel and ill·coordinatep conduct of military operations." One.secret dispatch .described the Cambo- dian SlrOJll m'iln, Lon Nol, as "a sick man; both physically and ~entally.'' 'Backward' P,eopl"e ,, . 4r~ ·Mere Skill,ed ' . SYDNEY BARRIS ·~ ;., vironment and every social formation are equally conducive to technical progrtll$. Nor is there good reason to believe that technical progress malt.es people any less fierce, narrow, selfish, envious, or best1al. The young American wbo 1uns Travel Can Kill Good • ine "F ANK has not shown the ability to protect villages from Communist attack," Dean re· ports tersely. • · ... KC, by keeping refugees off farmland and non- productive, continues to de· moralize their spirit." his super-charged citt· along the road is just ~s ''primitive" ~ any aborigine he ma, look down ~ upon: ,be could not~ a car tog~tMr 1 or create • meUMxt for convetHng oil into··g&~. or dev~ alfd *t,,.te a compllcat. It s urely was a day of infamy for the American winebibber. At that infamous recent triaJ in Bordeaux, where it was revealed that a lot of Languedoc wine was being sold as the famous vin· tages of Bordeaux. there was testimony that a vat of extremely inferior wine had been found in one cellar labeled: ''SaJea- ble as Beaujolais n to Americana." / It was also r e-~~ vealed at that trial that the q;· wine people have a certain unwritten scale of gullibility . So m e na · tionalities will taJce more baloney about the product than otl)ers. American.a-are rtttrt there at the top of the I i1t. Another bit of testimony: "'Wines which w.ere very far from recallinl aoy charac· tertstJcs of Burf undJ• became, miraculous y, PhilDY · Montrachet.a or Meonaultl <both hilhly·Hlumed, and blJhJy. priced, vinta1e11, destined for the American market." In fact, lb situation may real· ly be worse than tltat. A c can be made that, even whm their provenance i1 Impeccable, French winet 1te clOM to un· drtnllable by th• Umc thoy get to tbl1 '°"nlry. • CHARLES McCABE f PRECISELY this case was made SO{Jle years b~ by DO less distinguished a chap th~n the English novelis t Evelyn Waueh, who spent no small part of his considerable income on French reds,. He was entertaining bis friend Anne Frem anUe at a l\Jnch at his suite in the Plaza Hotel in New York City, which he was vis· iting. The lunch was cavia r , which Waugh ate at every meal, including breakfast. The caviar was followed by braised beef and a bottleot California cabemet. "French wines thoUld not be drunk laere," w •ueb ta.Id natiy. "They ere lr01en eA route. and shaken, and arrive undrinkable. The local brew 11 Pe'rfectly ac· cept.able. ·• With hls u1111l devaita~ con. cision, Waufli put lti ease agatnst Fr•dl ~· at u.eJ e ln t.bil cou..aiy. We are told. lad it Is true, that wln ls a liVfril th1n,. Whea It 11 ahlpped after the harvnt. usually ln autumn or winter, the hold of a ship croulna the North Atlantic Is one of the coldest rooms In Christendom. llOW MUCH life can there be In a wine whi~h ls treated sof OICI common serite wlU supply the answer. Win is not supposed to be subjecte to violent motion. What could more violent than the tossing f a transatlantic vessel durin a atorm at Na? There is terrible amount or junk spoke and written about French wi in this country. There has e n sprung a cottage industry of perts. wbo tell you the .. right•• wine to buy, and whether yo will be' expelled lrom the cl b if you drink a Moselle with he steak. The truth that French wine consumed in ranee and French wine consu ed fu this Country are totally ifferent products, one!ar infe r to the other. Any wine critic o fails to point out thjs fact, a incessantly, should be drumm out ol the corps. French wi here and Fr~n.ch wine there re almoet as dif • ferent at the anguaees.-pO«en in each country 1 ~ . OUR INTELLIGENCE sources point out that terror has been used by both sides in Cam· bodia. Government !(oops have been accused in the put ol uil.Y atrocities. But the reports from the CambocUan hinterland have seldom been more horrifying. One cable, telling ol an aseault FOR ANY~NE who has bad the 1o0ct fortune to driik th~ Win• o(: MO'fton at their. j)Unt ol trol mott of tbe lancl faru on1ln, u I have, IDd t&e m~s-nefd more people. ~ • tonune to drink the same wlne in are seen by the refufeel u a New York rutaw-ant, as I eoemy puni1bmtn& inflkttd on have, the whole matter is tbem tor reJectln C tolf .. &O academic. Jbe New York pro-come over tot.be C side. or t9 duct, alter Its physical humllla· , eeaae cooperaUn1 Wkb UM lion, simply Isn't in thcume ball Phnom Penh tide. park. 0 Jlat.ber than trylna to capture · Fw their quality, the Mipped .W~and fMeiblJ move them wines are outraaeously onl"· toK trolledtn-rttGry,ther• priced. \ . tuieea 1 tbat the KC wants to ed b1ghwaY "system. "' "Ad\lanced" an~ '"backward" people ate 'not td -t>e divided na- tion a 1' )' or :C'1ltura1ly or technologically, but personally- into.tb(jse whO redognize our uni· • ty as a specles U4 tbt Deed to preserve ti by cc,p~. and thos~ who imattne that pow~r confers ' superldrlty •ncJ slngutarify. Tbi1 b4d always been the real divi1ton of maQkind; the rest ls illus\~ \ . 1 • ,, SAN DIEGO CAP) -The cr,ewmltn aboard one of· two Amedc&\l tuna boats still held by ;Ecuador were beaten, kicked and/rodded with· bayonets th a wll h•lf-hour melee. the· American Tuoaboat Asaoclation reports. AUOTOS' IACK :J'OGEntlR? At least one man and pOSSibty M•yor Joe •f'CI Arig1IM two are badly hurt. ~ t>oat also • I . ' { • I J Ali~t~ .~lick ~~~::-~~ 'Eggethe:f.(?_)· ATA (;eurat Jllanager August • Fe1antro tciUu~ the boat• the •tuend ~l~io Los Ancei.1-basecl.Neptuoe, be-4~1, ~.II ing belclin the Ecuadorian port of · sanoas' · . :. . . SAN FB.ANCIScO <UPI) -2 SLA,n4"' l•t:Hetftf, Mayer Joseph Alibto and bis .. OAtLAND (JJPI) -TWo wil,e~ Angelina, attended the ~eQ\~S of the ~rrorlst Sym-· ballet together ThursdaY night in ~10'*8 l,.lberatron Anny were . theit first date since Mrs. Alioto mdlctW 'l'burway '<>n cbaraes of sued ioend the 33-year marriage. attem~ Jail escape and as· The couple attended "the saultonpoliceolflcen. American Ballet Theater's open- Elevee witnesses whb were In ing at the Opera Hous~ and the victnlty of the abortive stayed on for the cast party. Mrs. escape of Russell Little and Alioto sued her husband for dls- Josepb Remiro testified before solution of tbe marrtage F~b. 26 the indictments were handed and the mayor moved in with bis down. · -,..-aughter, Angela Veronese. Sl)e Awaiting trial on murder later obtairtedacourt.rulinathat charge's, tbe pair overpowered ordered Alioto to stay away from · two jailers in the Alameda Coun-their home in Presidio Terrace. ty Courthouse on tbe weekend. During the struggle, a pencil was ALIOTO SAID almost im- plunged int.o. tbe throat of jailer mediately after . the divorce Lawrence Franks, just missing papers were filed that he would his jugular vein. . try to win his wife back. He said S •-S he would stay with his daughter toeK Ole Bafied until "Angelina gets over this." , ALHAMBRA (AP) -Vinnell Mrs. Alioto's att.ol'bey, Lucille ·Corp., which recentlY. landed a ·Athearn, said, then there wasn't $77 million contrail to thil\ "a chance" of the couple getting : Saudi Arabian soldiers, has back together. However, she J>arred a Lebanese businessman hirited Wednesday that might not from a proposed group of major be the case. She sai<tMrs. Alioto investors in the firm. · told her not to go ahead with The proposed stock sale to the "things," possibly meaning · businessm,an was canceled "t.o further court proceedings. avoid any turther publicity and misunders tanding," said the firm's president, John Hamill. Ezo11erated In Death LOS ANGELES CAP> -A Whittier man has been exonerat- ed in the death of his transient cousin who was found with his throat cut outside a Skid Row hotel last weekend~ Anthony Barrios Mireles, 36, of suburban Whittier . was released by police Thursday after officers said they had verified an alibi he gave accounting for bis whereabouts at the time 31-year- old Bennie Pasillas was slain. Kldnaper Co11victed · PASADENA <UPH -BillyJoe Booker, 28, Lubbock, Tex., was convicted Thursday of kidnaping and killing a Monrovia wo~n and her infant daughter, bashing their heaas in with a 17-pound rock. . A Superior Court jury raced the task today or deciding whether to sentence Booker to the death penalty. The seven-woman, five-man jury found Booker guilty of kid- napiog and killing Audrey Lee Gaines, 25, and h~r 14-tnontb old daughter Heather last August. The coroner's office said Mrs. Gaines had been raped. ReufardSet For Return Of Remains LOS GATOS (AP) -A reward has been offered for information leading to the return of the re· mains of a young piol\eer mother and her newborn baby stolen from a 112-year-old grave in a re- mote mountain cemetery. The Santa Clara County · sheriff's bffice said Thursday that a $590 reward has been pOst- ed by a donor who wished to re- main anonyrpous. HE SAID the reward would be paid for injorinatlon leading to the return of the coffin and re- mains of Gemima Ricketts Evans and her innutt child. Mrs. Eviuts died in childbirth on Nov ... 18, 18$2 .• A hiker discovered the empty grave at Oak Hill Cemetery in San Jose durlng U\e weekend. The tombstone had been re- movecl and propped against a . tree. · . ~ MCll:AMJ:NTO (UPI) -Spurred by a plea for C-1ifornia." lndfvichlal freedoft\. theAsMlnbb'Te.ursday passed Burke was. Jolned by Assemblym.en Alil).er aod tent to the SeNM a ~enial 'measure McAlbter <D-San Jose), a M«moa aRd forlhertaw le«aUliaa homosex~b JlDd certalb ~·unnatural pro!e.asor. and iruce Nestande tR·Anaheiml, who • •cts•• between consentini adUlts lo private. que$6oned the possible effeds of .the bill-on . '-1 dontt need the-g~vetnment to tell ~·tao-.y t.o . chlld~en. . Uve my Uf e or exprep IDY. sexuality.'' As· "It would encourage juveniles to engage in ae1nb}yman John V~ell~ (D-San Jose), said homosexual acts," s~d McAlister, adding that the dutinf a .tO-minute impasSfoo.i!IO debate. l.e£islation raised a serious question over whether · • ' pUbh4 golicitation for cWTent Ulegal sex acts woqld , Only.tlu'ee lawmakers ~•out a1ainst Uie bill. remalnagainstthelaw. •uemblyman Robert Burk• <R.-Huotlngton leMb), said tf the legislation beea•e law it would Supporters insisted that the bill in no way wquld be '-lurtbet step ''tow~jhe •1eneration.1he de-relax.the criminal actioos'for "unnatural sex acts" merill1ation0fovsociefy." <;:e>mnptted by force-or involving minora. But Aue~bly'anan John Miller <D·Oak1and), Specifically, the bill would eliminate criminal chai.rmaa of the Judiciary Committee, inmted that penalties for acts of oral copulation and sodorny ".U we are dOiDg here frankly is legitimatizing between consenting adults in private. It woul(l also what goes on. in 90 percent of the bedrooms in repeal misdemeanor penalties for adultery. I DAILY Pit.OT N'tA cauz <O'Pl> -Ttte S'oatbern Pacific .Railroad Thursday a.sk6cl for a new trial in the cue of a $3 million dam.,es award to a 19-year-ild youth permane•tlY paralyzed alter b dived into the San Loreozo River An affidavit, filed by SP attorneys in Santa Cruz County Superior Court, . said Stephen A. Joseph. 21. bad warned Robert G. Lostrltt.o, formerly ol San Jose. not to Jump bec8bse the water wa~ shallow. In bis affidavit, Joseph 1aid be w u standing beneath the trestle in water that only came up t.o bis knees and that be and some companions yelled to Lostritto not lo jump. On any RCA XL-100 color se~ you choose, you receive a "Consumer Rebate Check" d1rec1 from RCA. $15 for any RCA XL-100 color portable ••• $20 for any RCA XL-100 color table model and $25 for any RCA XL-100 color console. More It's easy! I XL-100 means ... lhal no matter what size RCA you buy, you gel: • A 100% solid stale chassis ... no chassis lubes to burn oul • The Super AocuColor black matrix picture lube ... RCA's be•ll •Automatic Fine Tuning _ . .. maintains cot'tecl picture signal~n ""' - ea<:h channel • Plug-in modules . • control most set lunclion1 _,,...--_ ~>---· _,. ~· ·'-... ;;..-; : . it ii isn't RCA 1 itisn't x~100 Cath-back off•~ brough\ to you by RCA Distributing Corporation, Loa Angele• Conaumer rebate progrem valld only il'I the following counties: Imperial, C.., Loa Angeles, Ca .. On1nge, Ce., Rlverafde, Ca .. Sen BernerdlM1 Ca.. Santa Barbar., Ca .• San Diego, Ca., Ventura, Ca., and Clirk, Nev. Alter you've picked out the RCA XL-100 set you want, after you've made your best deal, then your dealer will mail in your "Consumer Rebate Coupon" to RCA. RCA will send you, direct, a cash-back check based upon the type of set .. AYAILAILI HOW AT1HISIPAATICtPATIH• llCA DEAi.iRS .. ' COSTA ME~ DAVls.IROWM •U E. 17tll St. r ,. l • \ . DANA·POINT DIWIY'$TV 211 hi Mar MILLS T.Y. J4135Coad~. .v lAGUMA BEAOt tilU.EH'S COAST 213 3 LotlM C-roe rd.: 0 'J '--! l ll •.J :t ~ ti 'II •I l 11 tr. ., Cl : I II .., i Lt " fl . ~) {I (j c4 ,. .. • ... . ·' I 0 ,, ., •I . ·~ ·'J 0 I' .. II /ol .. ·-. } ' •l •ll " '" .J ,, ,, ,, ., ,, 11 . . , II . I >I •I u ., . •' ,, " fl I, ~1 Cl It '• ~ • Jr , ' • OAILYPILOT ~rlday, March 7, t9'76 Politi~al Notes Badham; B11rke Rated 'Zero' By O.C. HUSTINGS OfU..O•llY ... letSUH Cadlllac is Assemblyman Robert Badham <R-Ne'Yport Beach). It's not exactly a surprise, but * • • two Orange Coast assemblymen-STATE SENATOR Dennis have received. big faheroratings Carpenter CR -Newport Beach) fro~ th~ liberal .Southern has introduced SB 542requ.lrfnf Ca h for n.• a A. 11) e Tl cans for the slate .Department of Motor Democratic Action <ADA). . Vehicles to affix on request a de~ Mesa Teacher Loses Bid For Old Job You ~uessed it, the low men tn cal or marking 00 the dri\?er's the ratang game are Republicans license of any person who intends Robert Badham or Newport to donate all or part of his body BeachandRoberlBurkeofHunt-for scientific or medical ingto~ Beach \ . . purposes under California's Rating legislators on what .at Uniform An.atomic al Gift Act. says were 20 to 25 key votes m 1974, the Southern California ADA gave Democrats overall a 78 percent score in the state Senate and 77 percent in the As· sembly. • * THE LEAGUE of Women Voters, serving Huntington Beach and Seal Beach, has an- nounced four meetings next week to study local board.5 and com- missions. SANTA ANA-A Co6ta Mesa . teacher's bid for reinstatement to the Orange Unified School Dis- trict post she lost after just one semester bas been rejected in Orange County Superior Court. . Judge Lester Van Tatenhove. ruled against Madeline Melka. 930 Goldenrod Drive, and reject- ed her arg,ument that she had a one-year contract with the dis- trict. Republicans got a 25 percent liberal rating in the Senate and 23 percent in the Assembly. It was the lowest liberal rating for the Legislature since 1971, the Meetings scheduled are : -Tuesday, 12:20 J>-m. to 2:30 p.m., at the home of Catherine Weise, 16302 Wishingwell Ave., Huntington Beach. ADA said. . Ms. Melka contended that the district violated state taw last Dee. 30 when s he w~ released and not allowed to continue her teaching of remedial reading at El Modena High School and San· tiago Junior High School. . Legislators were rated on whether their votes agreed with the ADA 's position on such issues as collective bargaining, illegal searches, farm labor, business taxes, sex discrimination and marijuana. * • * STATE legislators are lower- ing their sights somewhat in choosini their taxpayer-leased autos, a review or Assembly and Senate records indicates. The law makers seem to be leaning toward so-caJled intermediate- sized cars that are comfortable but not ostentatious. -Wednesday, 9 :30 a.m. to noon, at the home of Virginia Whipple, 16991 Courtney Lane, Huntington Harbour. -Wednesday, 8 p.m . to 10 p. m ., at the home or Ann Morel and, 6262 Brimhall Lane. Huntington Beach. -Thurs-1ay. 9: 30 a.m. to noon, at the home of Cathy Manulkin.· 9961 Kings Canyon Drive, Hunt- ington Beach. 'Dear Abby' In Anaheim · Fewer Cadillacs and Lincoln Continentals are among the cars ordered by legislators this year, but, also, there are no genuine compact cars. * • * THE REDHILL Club, a newly formed Young Repu~lican Club, will conduct its monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday at the Don Jose Restaurant in Tustin. ANAHEIM-Abigail Van Buren, better known as "Dear Abby," will address California psychologists during their con- vention Sunday a t the Dis- neyland Hotel. AmO'flg those ordering Cadillacs this year is state Senator James Whetmore CR· Buena Park). Keeping his 1973 Republicans or individuals in- terested in the GOP are invited. · T.he age Ii m it for a young nepublican is 41. Sue Burbeck, 832-0551, has ad- ditional details. The convention is the first joint meeting of the California State Psychological Association and the California Association of School Psychologists and Psychometrists. Transit Board, OCC Sign Pact For the Record SANTA ANA -Orange County Transit District directors have agreed to sign a pre-paid fare con- tract with Orange Coast College that could cost the student body as much as $19,fiOO a semester. • Db•olaaloas Of Marriage • E ............ "1r ... rfJ Slftllll. M••llyl\ Jo•A and Boyd ()Dugl.S H.t,,_.,, Robert A •Ad M.try- SuUivM, P•tric•• C. •nd TlmotllY J . c;.yler. J..Ootll Lee ""° Thornn AA--o-ns. Ger•l<llM M. &Ad Charles 0 . s.nltll, Gl.tdys Junnette and L..eoMrd l.ff Howlett, 01-AA.I ri• and R•IP" C. Merritt, Kenneth B. and Stt•rron L 5edcJwick, P•ul Rlcll.trd and GweMtl\ 1r- L1v11\9ston. C•therlne .Jo Ntt1 """ JOfll\WriC)llt c;.,i1tnecllt, Rudy L . .tnd Sl't•ron L.. Mo11eri.tt, Oouol•s 11111. andJuditllC. Corr.ti Const•AU G. al\d Seven>C.. O•rll, 'Robert Gordon and Kristi Kay Mandln.t, Vernell• G. and Anthony J. McNeil. LoreM. •nd Robert F. Bll"9f. a.rnet L. •nd Kenneth 0. H.1111. Beverley S •Ad Ollie K. Death Notices 8-lllAOef'. ~ E. and CMryt L ICOll>. Gary Allen •Ad Sa11dr• Ol«yt O.vh. Loul .. AM and Edward Victor Trurnl>ull, Mldlael Gordon alld Ul\da C..il DllM, M.trtlWI Sus•n el\d A. J . CollOnA, Lil\d.t L. at!d St•nley J. EAgl«ll•rd, C•tllerlne A. •nd Fr-ICkH. M<O.n1e4. J-t Lorr•lne •nd Dennis Sleptien Koontr. MarilyA Elle«n •Ad EOW,ud Frod ... ick Mender. Jam~ •nd Durrell K•ve Gomer, Lilla end Jon tt.q,es, Theodore W•ll•r a11d SharOA Al- P•nlc<te, Bonnie L. •nd Rocto Ari· INll\y Corlee. P•lrici• ll1Ue and John Edward Pattll. F••ACiS Rus..11 al\d Mary Strieter, Ven•• L. •nd w 1111am A. Be•CI•. Lul•Y·Ann H. •nd J•ck Norman Orum, Robyn M. •nd Joseoll A. Scott, Francirs A. and Jo~epll A. CaPCIS, K•yrene and Roger SanOov•I, O..lo Allen •nd Bewrty .J.tne The pact is similar to others the transit agency has City approved with UC Irvine, the Ciiy of Santa Ana and several private industries. · It calls for payment by the Associated Stude.rits of Orange Coast College (ASOCC> <?f $6.50 per stu- dent bus rider. District officials have estimated a total of 2,000 to 3 000 students at the Costa Mesa college will sign up.' They will purchase the ride .tickets from ASOCC, which will turn the money over to the transit district. The fee of $6.50 per semester was computed on district estimates of up to 450 student bus riders per school day. Depending on the number of students who choose to buy the pre-paid fares, the district will make between $13,000 and $19,500 per semester. Chess Meet Set -----------Colllard, George R•ndall and ~ MOLINA NICOL.AS SUCRE MOLINA, resident of FOW1Ui11 v .. 11ey, ea. O..te Of dNth Milich 6th. 1'1S. Survlv9d by llis wife C•llll«en ; d•11911ter1, l(alhlHO L. 81•cll, L11t1• Molin• eAd Monie• MOlin.t; -gr•ndson, Clifford CMvlA Bl•ck. brotllors. P•ul, Louis and ~-1 MollN ; sisters. EJeN Molln.t. ROY L. Nie1o. MeCll• R•mos, ~rl• S.U.rer, IWl!el Ar•nw. Rowry Frid.rt, ~rcll 7tll, 1 ·JO PM, Pull F•rnlly Coloni a l FuAer•t Horne In wutmlnster, Ca . Man S..turd.ty, ~rcll Ith •t 1.00 AM. St. B.trllef'a's Cathohc Churcll In S.tnt• An.a, Ca. The family req ... '" doAallons to your ta VOi' if• ell.tr lty. ClltUMLT HOWARD CRUMLY, re.ictent of L•9U"" HlllS, C. Servku ar•pendift!I. P•oloc lillew Mernorl•I P•rlt Morl11My,N-p0rt Beath, C.. , AAlltVOLO Ol.IVE AARVOLO, rui!Mm of Cost• ~. c.. Dato Of dHtll Muell 6111, 1'7S Survl,..d by lier sons, Rlc,...rd of Coftnectlcut and Oon.tld of Newpo<t Buell. C..; eaughter. Slllrlee Se....,rson of Surfside, C..; sister. Irene Lo~r of Cost.I Mesa; e lgllt 91'and<hlldren .Ind t-91'Ht-V•ndchlldron. ~rvlcPS <Mii b• lleld MoAday t 1 00 AM, Bell 6"Ndw•Y Ch.tpel Interment, ~trose AllMY. Bell Broadway MOr111¥y O.rec· ton. IALTZ .. DGHOH FUNHALHOME Coono de4 Mat bl 1 q•so C~o Mev.> 646 2424 llUllOADWAY MOITUAaY I IO~. (06fO M~ 642-'~HSO McCOIMJC• MOnuAIY ~B&oc:h ~.9-4 1S Sari Nori C~fOl\O ~17lb PACIFtC 'llW MEMOllAL PAIK C-tery M ot'"Y (hop.I J'JOO Po-loe v.-o.;,,., N-por! ~ h ( cM.,.,,.., M4 27...xJ PIH PAMJLT COLONIAL JUNllAL HOMI 79)1 8nlY1 """ w .. ~m.n;• .... a-11 l '} SMITHS' MOITUAIY ti'JJ Mo-n St IVwin1100' hoch S36-oSlq Alltll R . t ' . B.t1>y1on,L .... onandHeAryT. egaslra aon ts now Richard Hiatt at Marina. Registration should be completed by March 14. Roth, Ir-M.trleMd Donald Boland Open for the SeCOnd an• Hermes. AnM M. •nd Cll.trles J. C t · Va" Sick lo, 51\lrtey J. a11d Nor11al 0. • n U a) 0 r a fl g e 0 Un Y Pwt•''°"· .1oanwo1raAd Rove,.Kent Scholastic Chess Tourna-eovi.. uwrenu J . al\d Barb«• E. Pai ....... LI-. A. al\d Rol•Ad ment, Mar ch 22 and 24 at W•tson,0e_. .. ,.s.anow1111.tmE. Man·na High School in The entry fee is $1, which includes lunch, a subsc ription to the Orange Knight chess magazine and a year's member s hip in the Orange ~oul}tY Ch~ss Association. Hi9"fltld. Oi-R. and Thom.ti A. 01ac.Row1tundM.tr1oe. Huntington Beach. O.drt~~n. Joyce Y. •nd D•rrtll 0. r · h be Weber, Robert Mic11 ... 1 ..,,d c..ro1 In ormat1on as en -:::y"o.n. S-Sr• Arlene •nd Autir.y di St rib Ute d 3 t 3 _f ea Coffman. R•rmond K . ..,,d C•11wr1,. schools and questions ~~dlnO, Cl.tr• Rae and Russell m ay be directed to Mic~UI W••ner. Forrest S. Jr. at1d J•ne c. l..oll!OOl\y, 0.lc L. •nd Srurley A. CMroll, Joy Ashton •nd Tll-~ <•n BuCk""••. Clifford Mel11ln alld 5ll9rrt A•e 0.110 J•ne Vlvl•n al\d L•rry U. Gol~~. P•11teti.an4 P•trlc1tJ. Llltle, Crady L • ..,.d LAurol G. Hflt'r'°'" V•nesS.t A. •nd AOAaldJ. BIOt. Et•lne Molson Piper alld Newell Whitney Cary, Wlll1.1rn L • .tnd Janice f(, Mo, 01-S . .1114 llooer w. Oel\l\Cy, l!Mr11• H. and Er man K. Mor<)en. S.l\dra M, .tnd E119ene R Alldtr SOI\, Kt VI IHI\ A. Md Pllf 11111 It. Be..,. ridge, Wilfred Gordon~ Rulll Ot,her Deatm SUMMIT. N.J . (AP >- MlcbaeJ Lewis, 44, only son or the late Nobel 1 Prize-winning author Sinclair Lewis and the late journalist Dorothy Thompson. died Thurs· day or undisclosed . causes. Lewis, an actor, JivedinNewYork. URBANA, Ill. (AP) - Lucien W. White, 60, University of Illinois pro- fessor and librarian, died Thursday. He headed the larsest at.ate unlvel'Uty library and was a consul· tant to libraries throughout the co-untry. L.A. CALLS 6~ EACH ......... ....,......0..., .... ,...,.._ c......, Of c .. - nu -~ c--7 I 4t 979-123 , CITY OF IRVINE PUBLIC TENtiS LESSONS ADULTS. Jl'a.. ~ .. ADVAHCID 10 Leuofts._, SIG. * ...... 0.. C4* of Hew ... Prof.su.d e..str.ctloa Video Tt1pe ~ay T...a1wu~1 ............... w.. ...... .._. ........ 2 .At n. City Cwl QI 111 J I IRVINE TOWN CEMTER Call for Info: 557.0211 SERVICE SALES ESTAILISHED 1925 FACT'C>aY AUTHC>alHD SHYICf MAGNAVOX SONY RCA PHONE 494.7573 · · General JET-AIR9 m ' ••·Ply Corlstruction mt>ual Tread Design •Long Mileage Duragen•Tread Rubber 6050-13 E78-14 F7S-14/15 s19ss s2oss s21ss Size e 50-13 tubeless black wall. Size E 78-14 tubeless blackwall. F78-14/ 15 tubeless blackwall. plus $1. 7e Fed Ex. Tax plus S2.24 Fed. Ex Tax plu~ S2.41. S2.42 Fed. Ex. Tax 078-14/15 H7S-14/15 ' s22ss s25e~ G78-14/15 tubeless btackwall. Size H78-14/15 tubeless blackwall, plus $2.55, S2.63 F-ed Ex Tax plus $2.77, $2.82 Fed Ex. Tax WHITEWALLS ONLY $2 TO $5 MOBE PER TIRE. ·\ RAIN o-tECK. Should our 1upply ol '°"'' ••rH er tints rvn >horl du11119 lhos t'4nl, we 111111 llOflor arty ordors ptacod now lor Muro del1'4ry of the •d .. rtt1td '"1~. J ............................. _.._ _____ ~~~~ .. \' USED TIRES ·1 STEEL BEL TED RADIAL BLEMS BR78-13 DR78-l 4 545 G·70XIS ,555 JR78-IS YOUR CHOICE llG SELECTIOH OF REAL IAIGAIHS! FREE \ ! INST ALLA f.tOH ~ ' .................. f SN 0 W CHAINS ALL SIZES PASSENGER MOTOR HOMES TRUCK LR78-IS --------· PLUS $2 28 to $3 60 F.E T. Each· Tire -Depending on Size .. Don Swedlund Inc. ' ALL MAKE CARS& MOTOR HOMES WHEEL .. BALANCE HIGH SPEED SALE DELCO BAnERY , r I l I • ' . . . I . . j I Fl h4 8' nj d c r c ll ii d tJ a c e c 0 " h \I c a r n t ( a ~ I l ~ f 1 I I \ 1 t ,. , 1 t '}' > Wai r-s>orted that Amith men remain clean shaven until they marry, but then arow beq4-. Client asks It they ever grow jUJt muitaeb11. No, mustactles once were hlghly faabl~•.ble among the mllitary officers of Northern Europe. So were uniform buttons for that matter. Out ot disrespect if not de: testaUon of those old soldiers, Amish men C111tamartly wear neither mustaches nor but· tom. Q. "'HOW MANY railroads did the finan- cier J. P . MoTaan eith~r own or dominate be/ore he died?" A. Exactly 28, it's said. . DID OUR Language man say there's no rhyme Cot "purple"? Tut tut. A client submits: "A dainty 'hie' into a 'hanky of purple ... Won't ruin you socially, but a 'burp'll." Ah, my Aunt Min, t SAN SALVAOOll It's commonly claimed that Christopher Columbus first set foot this side of the Atlan- tic on the island of San Salvador. In fact, a . ma~le eross there commemorates the no· lion. Hardly any of the islanders believe it, .. however. They say no sailor in his right mind !· would have tried such a landing there. . • ~ SAYS HERE no farmland in the country f .costs ~ much as that of New J ersey. At •, ~bout $2,099 per acre. Interesting, if true. ,. Surprise·d to hear it, though. Thought ~ Hawaii's farmland was the costliest. ,. .. ~ PENSION : A veteran's widow loses her pension if she remarries, you knew that. But were you SACRAMENTO (UPI> -State Income tax re· funds will b• halted in nine days unless the ~gisl•ture immediately enacta a blll augmenting funds to pay for renter tax credits, state Con· troller Kenneth Cory says. "Th~ current budget includes only $45 million in the general fund to cover renter tax credits and that will be exhaust- ed by MM'Ch U," Cory said Thursday. "'BECAUSE THE pre· sence or absence of a renters tux credit affects every income tax refund, those refunds must be held up until there is as- s urance of adequate funding for the renter credits," he added. Cory noted that As- semblyman Dan ~ Boatwright, <D · Conc6rd), introduced legislation CAB923) to <'Orrect the situation . 1 The bill was approved 75-0 by the Assembly, and wassenttotheSenate. ''Immediate action is required because Californians are filing their state income lax re- turns much earlier than in previous years and are exhausting the available renters tax credit appropriation at an accelerated r ate," Cory said. -I AN OBJECT LESSON ON INFLATION Lovelady With Toilet Paper Roll Dal ty Pi lot SUI f l'Mee Toi let Paper Cost Booat Hits Schoobl "It's not of much •ilp,llficance until you don't have lt,' az1nned Clyde Lov•lady, LBiUJ1& Beach Unified Scbdol Dlatrict bll$lness 'manager, u be produced a bulkY brown envelope. ''I'd like to read you some statistics about lbl1 Utile Jewel," Lovelady continued, removing a roll of toilet paper from the en- velope. and dlsplaylng tt to those at this wetk 's board of lrusteea meeting. A lot of people lauahed. ''In 19741 a 96-roll case cost $12.97. That's about 14 cents a rqll," Lovelady said. ''This yea~. we're paying $23.20 a case, or about 24 cents a roll. "That's a 79 percent increase," Lo,velady hid. At each board meeting, Lov· elady presents a "gem of the week" to illustrate some of the skyrocketing costs being faced by the school district. "We use about 60 cases a year,'i Lovelad1 added. Waldie Replaced SACRAMENTO (UPI) Berkeley attorney Carol Bros- nahan was named this week to replace former Rep. Jerome Waldie on the new Fair Cam- paign Political Practices Com· mission. Mrs. Brosnahan, who characterized herself as "not a particularly political person," was appointed by state Con- troller Kenneth Cory. OAILVP1LOT 41 A South L•111aa woman hat auec! i..er nelsbbora and Avco Deyelopment Cojrpora- Uoo for a total of $40,000 ·1n damafet wttb the compla\nt that addi· tional construction to the nearby home ta hnpalr- ing ber oce~1:' vlew. Platntlff Evelyn Wllktnaon names Daniel and Grace J . Kelly ancf Avco aa defendants in her Oranse County Superior Court lawsuit. Het1 lawyer plans to &eek a restraining order that ·would halt construction of a parapet around tls'e K~llyhome. Mrs. Wilkinson, 32672 Azores Road, South Laguna, claims that the completed addition could well force her to sell her home al a considerable loss. She states that Avco approved the plans. PUBLIC NOTICE ·~11 SUf'lfUOR COUAT 0, TM• ST ATI 01' CALI l'OR NIA l"Olt THECOUNTVO,ORANG5 Mo.A·JMU NOTICE 01' HIEAAING 0, l'IETITION l'OR ORDEA Af'l'OIN- TING TAUITllll 0, TIUTAMIEN- TAAV TRUST TO FILL VACANCY AnlEA DECLINATION Of' PIAION DISIONATID IN WI LI. E"•te of ANNA RATAJIK, O.cuse<t. • aware that she can reclaim said pension if ~ she divorces her second husband or if he "' dies? Indeed. Am told a whole batch of such ·) women, ignorant oI this little wrinkle of the ; law, have failed to get that money flowing ~ again. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IMt VIRGINIA WICKSTROM hH flied herein • JMllllOn for •n Order ~nt· 1119 tllt petitioner, Vlrgl"I• Wi<kS~ lnoslH In pl.Ce of S.curlty P•clfk ~ 11~1 S.nk wllicll l\H decllned to act le>< the purPOH of c•rrylng out the terms of the Trust refer•nce tow/\icllis m~ tor lurthl'r parlicul•rs, and lhllt IN Ii,.,. •nd pl~ ol 11Ufift9 tlw U11W BOATWRIGHT'$ bill .---------------------------------------------1114\ ~"wt for Muell 24, 1'7S. M 9:00 provides an extra $60 am .lnlnecourtroomolO.l*'tnwnt , , DID YOU REAUZE an opal is about " eight percent water? IT'S NOT ENOUGH to say elevators are 'the world's largest mass transit system. ~ Mu.st say, too, that elevators carry four times i as many passengers as all other types or ., public transportation put together. When you ~ ask the experts to name the one individual • who has had the greatest influence on ~ worldwide architecture, most say Elisha ~ Graves Otis, who invented the elevator in the ~ 1850s. Without his cunning contribution, there !•wouldn't be m any buildings over five or six stories tall. . ~ Addresa mail to L.M. Boyd. f'.O. Boz 1560, ,, Costa Mesa 92626. Copyrigh1 1975 L.M.. Boyd. • .,. arch 15 Set f· f or 'Jurying' ollege Outlines (lasses " 48-page booklet sc ribin g spring sses and prog rams of· Olred at Saddleback COilege is being mailed s we~k to 86,000 homes • the 365-squarc mile trict. n calendar formal. publication contains a eneral'acheduJe of aU cJirses and a list or all =ended day, off- pus, weekend and -day college classes. pecial programs for men, veterans and school students who uld like to begin their lege education early also highlighted. esidenls who haven't elved a schedule by l Monday should call college's Office of munlty Information Services, 831 ·9700 or ·4950. pring quarter classes Sil!AprU 7. . 1 This year , artists wishing to be juried for exhibition s pace must provide proof or re· sidence. Along with it. three pieces o( artists' work must be submitted between 7 a .m. and 10 a.m . the day of judging. Jurying will take place between 10 a .m . and 3 p.m . after which the artists may pick up their work. Artists seeking ex- hibition in more than one media, must present three works in each media. Res idential boun- daries for eligible artists include area in zip codes 92660, 92661 . 92662, 92651, 92652, 92677. 92629. 92672, 92624 and 92625. The festival normally has about 180 exhibitors of which about a quarter are newly juried each year. The festival, one of three art exhibitions dur· ine the su mmer in Laguna Beach, will run from July 11 through Aug. 24 . UC Pact 1. mt' I Ji on lO be s h 1' fled from No. 3 of salo court, •I 700 Civic Center Or1¥t W•sl, In Ille City of Sant• AN, the general fund to the c.totornl•. 1 . t O.ted ~rcll 3, 197S persona income ax to w1u1AM11.suoHN, cover the balance of county Cl•rk renter tax credits. YIRGINIAW1Cll$TAOM 1"'20CH"•I,. Clr<lt HIMll..,t'" Beacll, C•lll•nli• '2 .. ''There would be no re· ,..t1u.ner1"Pr•Per . Venue IOSS to the State," Pub4l\Md Orenoe Coest 0.ll'f Pllof, Cory s aid. "The 1974-75 budget a nticipated $105 million for r ente r t ax credits but the budget act signed by Gov. <Ronald) Reagan actual· ly appr.opriated only $45 million for: that purpose." Brothel Request Rejected FALLON, Nev. (AP) -The Churchill County Commission has turned down a G ardnerville man's application to run a house of prostitution. B. Arthur Wade, a con· tractor, sought licensing to operate the brothel at Trinity Corner , an established truck-stop 32 miles west of here. THE COMMISSION indicated th at whil e Wade passed extensive background checks, the location of the house was too isolated to allow for adequate supervision. Wade, we aring cowboy garb and turquoise jewelry. said he would try to find another loca- tion for the brothe l, which would be known as the "Tiger Tail Ranch." WADE WAS THE first person to come before the commission under an ordinance drafted aner Churchill County voters in the Nov. 5 election ap- proved overturning a county ordinance ban· ning prosti~ulion. It is believed to be the only county in the Unit.ed States fh which spectlic voter approval bas been given for such activity. 'lheGreat 961-3 329 or 96~5590 on these SYLVANIA _____...... GT·MATIC .. D MODELS FIRST true self.adjusting color Mt These Sylqnla modela fealure a clant 25" dlac. picture with Dark·ute r" 50 picturt tube, our aharpeat color pictwe ever; GT-Matic JI color twiin11y1tem, automatically helpt correct color for you; and Touch-Tune'" 1\inins -letl you awitch channel.a with the puah of a button. Remote tunln1 control optional extra. YOUR CHOICE.ONLY $69995 Early American atyle Model CL4433 ·~avls ;! brow n~ ~OSTA MIU-MAllOI AHA 411 .... s. .......... Slirwt .,..., •·• Ww*f '"' 646·1614 a TOIOoSAtoUIACI VALUT ., ......... ...... _ .. ...... Deir•··~"' IJ7•JIJO Mlrcn •. 7. u. 1t1s 1 .... u PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT ~ 1011-1119 ~rson Is dolllO bul>- neuu: THE PLANT WORKS, 18S The M•\ler·s Circle, Cost• Mesa, Calif. 92•,. Su1o•n ~ry Tancreoi, 18S Tiie Mesttr's Clrcle, Cosla Mes.a. C•ltl. ,,.,. This bW~s 1s conducted by .,, ,,.. dtVtOU•I ' Sus.n M••Y T •n<rech Tiiis ''"'•,,,.nt wu filed with 1119 C:-.ty O.rll of Or•naie County on W..r. ~. 1t7S. ,41S2' Putlllshl'O Orao~ Coast 0•11'f !'\tot M•rcll 7, 14, 21, 28, 197S 74'HS PUBLIC NOTICE 8 "4J.ft NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUPERIOR COURT Of' THE STATE Of CALIFO•NtA FOR THE COUNTY 0, ORANGE No. A·l10J4 EH11t ol NATHAN RALPH STUCKE y. Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Ille cre<11tors ol llle above named o..c~nt llW1 •II perW>nS h•vlng Claims _.mt tn. said «HctMnl ••e required 10 ''"' ll'le<'n, .,.,th Ille Mc.ss.ry vou<:hen. In the othct ol the clerk of Ille above en- titled court. or to prt5"nl lllem, wi lll the rwuss.ary voucr.trs. to the undenlgned •• lhl' Olt•Ct of hi\ attorney, THOMAS L. LORD, 23S21 Pneo Ot V1lencl•, Suitt 213. U1guna Hills. C11lilorno• 92•Sl. wlllCll IS lhe pl•et ol buSllWSS QI the ~r)1QfltO 1n all mane" pertatn· 1"9 lO lllt t s1<111e 01 !Hiid oecr.i.nt, wtlllln tour months •Her lhe first publlcallon ollll•s nohce 0.tt<I ~rcll 4, 197S ROGER MONTGOMERY STUCKEY E •t<UlOr of the W•ll ot lhe •bovt n•mtO M<tdtnt THOMAS L. LOAD UU1 f'IHOcM V4111l11cl1, SultU1J UtUN Hills, CA 'u" Tel: 1114) Sll·Ji.G AltOtMY lor E uculor Put>ltsheO Orange C04SI Daily P11ot M .. cn 7, I•, 11, 28, 197S 7~7S PUBLIC NOTICE ,ICTITIOUS SUSI NESS MAME STATEMENT ~ lollowlnQ person I~ oolrlQ buSI· """ ·~ SUNWEST REALTORS, 16168 S.~ Blvd., Suite 1•t. Huntington a.eel\, Calitorn1 a 92u I RonalO L. Hungate. 14U2 VI• Sant. Crur, Monton Y•t10. Calllorn1am1s Tiiis buso~s os conoucteo by an 1n 01v10 .... 1 Ronald l ~ungate This \lalemtnt .,.,. llled wttn "" County Clerk ol Or•nge County on l"tbr~ry II 197; 1"41170 Published Or11n~ Coul Oally Pilot, Fell. 21, 21,.nd~r. 7, u . 1'H 5n-7! PVBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINHS • NAME UATl!MIENT Tiie following per1o0n Is clofllQ llUll• lllHH' HOME PROTECTION SERVICES, MC 81rcll St., Irvine, C•lifor"l•'270S Sy Elllott. 3411 Biren SI., lrtllR. Cttlfoml• '270S Tiiis business It coflduc t•d by "' ln- llh'IOU•I. Sy Etllolt Tiiis tt•t•me"t wes fll9Ct wllft ttw C.OUnW Clerk of Or•ngt CouMy on l'Hr~•y 10, "IS. ~ Pulllllollff Ortllge CMSt Dally Pltot. ~14,Jt,2t,llflOllWr.7,1t7S SO.H PUBLIC NOTICE • Mn' f'ICTITIO!IS IUSINISS NAMISU1'1MIU11' The IOliewl"9 pt,_ It .......... Mtlff MIN\.ITE ICING, 1ttl 8 Vlli.g. W#Y S..,lt AN, Ctllfof"lllt .,1'15 LINOCOT, INC.,• CilUfonlt - OO<•I-. 12ll 8 Vill•ge W•f, Sowle• ltttll. C..tllorn<t t110S Tiiis lilllnt,..n I~ tondUC:l.O .,., • ~ 119f •llCN\. l l NOCOT. IHC. JO .. NJ COTE, Pr"I.,.,.,. "'" ''"'~ -· tlld ....... CllltfltY ,,.,.. •• or-.. Colln'Y .. hb. II.",~. A•1 UOAN, DAVIDSON, 091UMMY & OA•A&TT,INC. ..... "' ...... . .... MICA,,_ .... . .......... ldcll,C.tlffflll•tt ... "'llllVIN or....-CNtl o.llY ...... ...... 1 Mtl"Cll J, I&, ti, ft, tt7' ,._1S I THE OWNER OF a -eoostruc· tlon company which specJaliJed in rehabilitating old bujldinp ap.. proacbed bis local pernment seetln( business. He -as in· a~t~ on the procedW"et, was to4f how much to bid to-. acer- tain Job -and •.as then awarded the contract. •When the owner was paid for hls •ork, the officials who bad h~lped him get t~e contract uked for the ','commission" they said they were· entiUed ·to re- Swallows -eye View I • ceive. 'rhe owper complied, thinking ti¥& wa's ·the way gov- D11tyl'ti.t""'4e1trP•trk110'0..-t1 emment l!ontracts were handled. After he had paid the ·"com· mission,, in cash, I)• wasteft with a loss for the completed project. Although assured be would make out better on the next job, th.at contract left him unable to pay bis creditors. When he went to an This is what swall9ws will see when they fly into San Juan Capistrano March 19 on their way to Old Mission. View of San Juan, looking north from Forster Canyon dump, has changed since early Franciscans describ«MI it as a "very pleasant green valley full of willows,· alders and live oak." ------------------------------------------accountant for advice, be was Managing. Irvine Coast Park Described as Big Nightmare By DOUG FRITZSCHE OttMO•llY PlloCSt.ff The area m anager for state parks along the Orange Coast believes that ad ministering the proposed Irvine Coast P ark could be a nightmare. In an interview, Alan Hibsch, who manages Bolsa Chica and Huntington p arks and likely woulq manage the Irvine Coast park, said the boundaries pro· posed for the 1,345·acre park would make it ha rd to ad- minister. AS PROPOSED, THE park Takes Dull Out Chemistl-y Course Made Interesting By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI OfCIM O•llY ,.ilot They've told you how to get rid of it on TV, but ladies, do you ac-t u a 11 y know what causes "bathtub ring?" Is all aspirin really alike? Why does your laundry detergent re-. move tha t s h a m eful "ring around the collar?" THE ANSWERS TO these and other questions will be discussed in a new Saddteback College chemistry class this spring semester. To be taught by instructor M~k Bishop the Saddleback cours!! ~ called "The Magic of Everyday Chemistry., and is not just for women but for anyone who has been put off by the thought that chemistry is dull, dry, abstract, and difficult. ~ O•lly l'tlet St.lff ,.lloM MAKING IT EXCITING Saddleback'• Bishop would be J.>Urch ased by the state for $7.6 million. It would encom· pass 3.5 miles of beach and bluffs from Corona del Mar to Laguna Beach and ;all of Moro Canyon from the coA*t to the San Joaquin Hillsridge. The sale is presently tied up in a lawsuit filed by Irvine fortune heiress Joa n Irvine Smith in West Virginia. The transaction has been stalled until the matter is settled. "I'm not looking forward to operating that park, Hibsch said. Recounting a conversation on the park with his maintenance superintendent, Hibsch said, "H~ told me, 'This reminds me of a deal a partner and I had on a gold · mine. He got the gold and I got thesbart." On the park said, he said, "the Irvine CQmpany is going to make all the.gold and th.e taxpayers are going to get tbe sn.fL" IRVINE COMPANY property. bordering the narrow strip of beach would rise in value, he said. But the narrow strip would be inconvenient for beachgoers. As proposed, two central park- ing lots would be incorporated in the transaction. "That would mean anyone go- ing to the beach would have to walk about two miles," Hibsch said. Additionally, he said, the strip of beach is so narrow that four· wheel-drive vehicles used to p:ltcol the beach could not drive along the sand at high tide. The strip of land aloog the top of the bluffs, he said, is also so narrow that crews would have difficulty patrolling the area. told that, because of insufficient resources, he waf, out of busi· ness. Incredible? No. These are true stories, part of the record, and told to me by a spollesman for the National Association of Accoun- tants, whose members have been· \ glvlng free, confidential advice to minority businesstnen since 199. -MINO•ITY CITIZENS make up 17 percent of the na· tion's P91>ulation but oWll onl}' 3~ per~nt ot the country's more than 8 million am all businesses. -The Small Business Ad·• ministration reports the loss rate on loans to minority businessmen is almost aix times higher than that on loans to non-minority businessmen. .-Since 1961, when the SBA started making Economic Op· portunity loans to minority busi- nessmen, the annual cumulative loss rate climbed steadily until 1972, when it reached 33.2 per- cent. It then dropped in 1973 for the fU'St time. but in 1974, the rate started to rise again and hit 32..95 percent. This means that the SBA estimates it has lost 32.95 percent of all the money it has loaned to minority businessmen since 1967 -a loss of $178.4 mllJ.ion out of the total $535.6 million the SBA has loaned. -Jn contrast, the SBA reports it has loaned $7 .S billion to non· minority small businessmen since 1952 -on which its estimat- ed cumulative loss rate is 5.8 per· cent, .or~ million. WHY THIS discou.raging re- cord for lender and borrower Over The Counter MASO Ultings , allke? According to a NAA aurJ , vey, the.re are three key reasons: • (1) Responsible for more , failures than any other $gle ' f acior are poor .m'1!late0ieut techniques -partlc\lie.rl$ tl\e,1 lack of accurate recotd keepin'g. "Most minority busiJ\es.sR)ISl do not have an accurate· picture of f\I their cash now. how muc:bJn<*.Y , they have tied up in 1 inventoty, ~~ what their true cps ts are," says 1 ;, William M. Young, Jr., the ~, NAA's exe~utive director.·'. .. Their primary concel'1} is to keep their heads above water, •1 just cover expenses." • .JJ. (2) Minority businessmen face • greater odds than others Jn rais- ing capital because conv~tional lending sources shy awa)l from • shoestring operations. And those who do not' qualifY( for SBA loans must depend on their families and friends for help. Also, says Young, "Some go broke because they .don't charge enough. Others charge too much and can't meet the competition." ( 3 ) • M any n) in o ri fY. e n · • treprene~g hold do~ {Ull-time, jobs-on night and overnight shift~· while they attempt to g'et started and th\ls they are unable to run" their ~sinesses properly. This·. heavy demand on {heir time and energy takes a high toll. · THE N'AA HAS a network of more than 1,000 volunteers from coast to coast to provide free counseling to minority groups on~ 'just about every aspect of a busi- ness. If you think you can use this. help, write the NAA at 919 3rd' Ave., N.Y., N.Y., 10022, or call .(212) 759-~44. I • Bishop says he hopes to make the afternoon a nd evening class interesting by relating chemistry to everyday things and everyday people -and that includes such basics as the cause or bathtub ring. HE SAYS STUDENTS wi ll learn how hard 3nd sort water af- fects their wash , the secrets behind laundry detergents, how · antacids work, and spend three weeks discussing t he energy crisis a nd alternatives to petroleum. .. It• s been suigested that aldeh1des be given to alcoholics t.o make them sick and avoid drink ing. It 's somewhat speculative but it's 81\ eumple of how chemJstry miglft be used to combat ffcob()l.ism." Bishop says. Similar problems, he said, would exist in Moro Canyon. IC homes are built along the top of the canyon ridge, he said, e fire. in the canyon would force firefighters to cobcentrate their efforts on saving the homes rathez: than the park. • . MUTtJAL FUNDS .. ~ . Jn many areas. Bishop says, ther e as cons id e r able con· troversy and those enrolled in the class will be invited to debate the pros and cons or cyclamates. nucl ear e ner gy, chemic al methods or birth control and other issues. "We want to show both sides of ·things and won't take a position one way or another. especially on nuclear energy. We want to teach . people to think for themselves but will give them the proper foundation," he says. JN THE UNIT on or ganic chemistry, tbe instructor will also talk a bout the "aldehyde syndrome" and its potential cure for alcoholism. "Researchers have discovered that It's the aJdehydes which are formed when people have overin· dulsed that makes them &ick and vomiL No Salary Rmses THE ~AME HOLDS true for the treatment of schizophrenia which is believed by some scien· Usts to be chemical rather than ,Psychological in origin. Some methods o( chemical treatment for mental illness will be dis· cussed. · In his effort to remove the element of doubt Crom tbe study of chemistry, the instructor plans to give only one test and the ques- tions from · that test will come from assigned homework. So if the studeJlt does his homework, there's a chance he will get 100 on hts test. That stlll won 't give him an "A," tho1,1gh, because that grade must be earned by doing a special pro- ject, Bishop says. EVEN THOUGH s uch a pragmatic approach to cbem\stry should prove enter- tal.nlng, Bishop said students will &et u tood a survey ol chemi!try as that ~ally taught in a 1ur· veyeoune. But the m aJor goaJ is to SAN DIEGO <U PI) -ActJni educate the average eltben to City Manaaer Mike Graham •make ldeBce-orfent.ed d«lalom Ws w~k submatuxt o 1'75-76; lntod1y'1 world. SbouJdbewotry bodJet that doeB not aUow ltw about nuclear power plants? any pay raises for city employes ..• What•tthe most effectJve and ln· Graham aald the city can.not aJve opaisfft way to wu b clothes? r&Jsa unle11 It mak cuta lo ShouJd he avoid foods wft.b ad· aome prouams. dltJves? ' \ A buffer zone, Hibsch said, is needed between tbe residential property and the state park land. At least 30 feet would be needed along the bluff tops, he said", and a greenbelt along the ridgetop bordering Moro Canyon should separate hom~s from thatarea. me.scu SAID ·parking should be provided along the bluffs to ' provide access to the beach. · "Let's face it, we have some large fammes who would want to carry playpens and things. There are older people who want to use the beach . People in wheelchairs. It is unreasonable: to expect them to walk two miles.~· Lifeguartb· · LONDON (tJPl> -Fifty' Uf eguards, hired by BrlUab swimmint pools tnlf'1' could not swim, 55 were found "morally unsuitable" and 2'1 attacked people, sot drunk or took druas whfle ob duty. Those 1taU1Uc1 were con· leined ln a report publlabed! by the Institute of Ba•b Management to •arn ~mpf oytrs about U.. 1C1't Ot people they take on 'M pabUc awimmlng pools. • . "Wo 1et quite a ltt ol un· duliablea, '' the re~ la.Id. . . , . \ ( c II ii 1 t ii ii a tJ I'. (I } ( •• ·' •• ·' .I •• ·' •• ·' ·' ·' ·' .. •• ·' ·' ·' , ·' ' • l ' • ; ·a~alI Stampede. , - Faulty Products on Rise By MILTON MOSKOl\1TZ General Motors recenUy re- called a ll or its 1974 Coidillacs. li.J . Hetnz wtinl into the marketplac~ to recall all of its packages of bu by cereals. Philco-Ford recalled some 10,60!) black-and.white porta-ble television !H~ts. . AND.IN TJIE lllrgest rec~ll 10 the hl&tory or the television industry, J apan's Matsushita asked for the return of more than 300,00Q color sets to cor· reel high radiation levels. ·rhe 1-1 a.tsushita recaJJ wus ordered by the Food and Drug Administration. The sets arc SST Flight B(d Facing Big Battle WASHINGTON <UPI) - Faced with a recommenda- tion for roreign supersonic transport operations in the United Stales, the force s that killed the American SSf pro- gram began work Wednesday to block the foreign nights and keep (he U.S. program from returning lo life. Congressional sources said several bills might b(' in· troduced during the next wee k to prevent British Airways and Air F'rance from starting Concorde SST &ervice next year linking Lon- don and Paris with New York and Washington. A MAJOR TOPIC under discussion at the present, soi.Jrces said. is whether those bills should attempt to ban all SST nights or whether they :(&o uld require only. that sdpersonic passenger jets ~eel the s:i me noise and )i?llution stand ards requir(-d or subsonic jetlin ers. Jn e ither case. passage of such legislation would represent a m ajor obstacle to inauguration of Concorde fli ghts linking the United States a nd Europe. The Anglo-French Concorde is noisier and dirtier than sub- sonic jets like the 707 and the DCB. 1 The Federal Aviation Ad- ministra.tion recommended Tuesday . allowing British Airways and Air France each ).o fl y two Concordcs a day in· to New York and one a day in- to W$1shington: Wells Fargo In Newport Well!> Fargo Bank's6lrd Of· fice in Southern Cali rorni a 'will open for business March (13, at 660 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Vi ce pre s ident and ,m a n ager is Wallace E . Minter. Assistant m3nager is ,Stephen T. Wille. MARKET Money Tree ~.,,,-,=--"-"" so.I under four iffe reftt brand names -Panasonic. J,.c. Penney and Penncrt?$l <ln J .C. Pet:iney stores) and Bradford • (ln W. T. Gradt stores> •• What's going on here? Wel1 , · we ~m to be into the •f.e ol. lht recau. And it seems th.a\ thlngs are aolna .to get worse, not better. 1 The au,thorlly'!for th.is bad news fore<:as( Is not Ralph N.ader but a J>R:Stlgious in· du t Y·backed research OC· gan1 tlon, the Conference Boac Take rom t he Con- ference Boar . whose studies are highly respected in the business world, you are going to have to live in this doubtful environme nt where nearly any product you buy is sub- ject to recall to correct defi- ciencies. E. PATRICK l\1cGuire, a project director at the Con- ference Board, has just com- pl eted an analysis 'Of the re- call stampede. llis statistics are chilling. Jn 1974, as many as 25 per- cent of the nation's 500 largest cons um er goods manufac· turers were involved in recall C'ampaigns. lt's estimated that at least 25 million pro- duct units will be recalled every year throughout the rest of this decade. The number or prOOucts r e- called is expected to grow. The number of com panies in- volved in recall campaigns is expected to grow. What's behind this messy sit'uation? McGuire cites several factors. One is the in- creasing number or damage· suits filed In the courts, with consumers al leging faulty product performance. A second reason is the step- ped·up policing of products, policing carried out br gov- ernment agencies, consumer activists and individuals. THE RESULT, according to McG uire, is a climate of fear within companies. Many manufacturers are now in· itiating recalls even before actual injuries or consumer complaints are J'.~ported. For more a nd more <:ompan_ies. McGuire says, th'e watchword is : ''When in <Joubt -recall." lt's virtually impossible for consumers to spot derects in advance of buying, How can the buyer or a J .C. Penney TV set tell that it may be emit· ting radiation fi ve lo 25 times the limits allowed by federal st anda rds? l"low is a mother to know t hat He inz baby cereals' have been packed \\'ilh metal particles? McGuir·e a nd the Con· fcrenee Board do not address these questions. They're wor· ried that massive recalls might drive small and medium·size companies into bankruptcy. Firs t things first. HIGHLIGHTS NYSE Index AS E Index Dow Jones Ind S&P 500 Stocks INDEXES 44 .20 77.41 761.81 83.69 up up up up 0.42 0.52 8 .99 0 .79 • '· •' .- ,. " •' ' ' ·' • " N""' 't' nrlc s ...... ., ..... ., .. · •t4'"'4 A•<'rlt•• Sal•• -' VolaiM• /' ' Nftl' t't1rk 15 ~ ..... ""'""' Softy '°'" Fluor Corp Coe• C.01• a Sowl,,.rn Co P•mi<I• t..c: R.,a.-r S1s1.., R•m.all Inns Krf\~ !I S Sl<I Oil Ind Ho"'•'<I Jnr1 E~•~• Pf ocl Col\lmfli• PO( .toll R£f!l~ld w.,.. .......... 1(11u1..,.., .. a f, .°'?; .,~ . " ......... ·;··,;. -.. ... . ' • • . ~ -~ -·· . ' ' 'Jbar~•Y"J Cloe~ :Pricee NEW ' ) • YORK ,,,.,_ ' " STOCK "j ,,,, N O,t.i Y Pl T • EXCHANGE ' Year'• lllgh..Lowt Appear Every Sa1urday • I Dart Sales LOS ANGELES (A P> -Dart Jo dustries Jn c. Wednesday reported re· cord sales and earnings ror the year ended Dec. 31. Earnings total $61 .3 million. or $2.SI! n share. compared with $62.3 miUloa , or $2.69 •share, 1n tm. Sales rose to $1 .21 billion from $993 million. General Foods 1'100ESTO <AP) -Gener11 Foodt Corp. has al'.lnounced it will build a plant here to 1u1ment llJ li"f of Post bre1kfatl cereals oow produced ln BattleCrttk, Mich. Const.ruction on 1 20-acre 1lte MIJ•· cent to the compa.ny'1 ca11rornJ1 V•1et1ble COJJctnlr1tes plant wlll be1ln tl\ta 1prtn •• 11\d General Manaln-W. J), ko1Un1. I Enjoy smoklng longer without si;noking more . ... ; ' .. That'~ the Sacatoga·idea. · . More puffs than 100's. Tailored longer and slimmer than I 00' s, so you enjoy extra smoking time, ·extra smoking pleasure, .without smoking more cigarettes. Priced no more than 100's. And Saratoga 120's are rich, full-flavor cigarettes made from a fine blend of tobaccos. More than just a new brand. Saratoga l 20's are a whole new idea in smoklng pleasure. Because now you can enjoy smoking longer without smoking more. Look for them in the new 120 mm qush-prqofbox. Regular and Menthol. I , 1. ... # • 17 mo:·raC1 .1 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Oetermrned That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. • ' .. • , .. t I . . \ • . .. . / "Getting more without paying more. That,s a pretty radical idc&." , ' fdftor'• Note . Thi• t~ ftnol ortict. in. o two·port series on cbonqes gqitig on in Americon public achooU. 1t dt•cnbea the ntw fundamentCll tchoob which t mphanu the Three lbOllddi.tciplint. By TERRY RYAN l 'MICMllttl l'rtta Wftlw Across the country a new kind ot "new" school is beginning to appear: the old school. ~egu~ two years ago in California, basics schools or fun. damental schools now are of-fer~ as a lternatives by a small but rncre~sin~ number of public school districts. They exist because pare)nts have asked for them. . · The basics schools are just what they say they are: the three Rs, report cards and discipline. The e~phasi~ is on teaching educational skills; hom ework is required and cbectred. They Ust achlevement, manners and moral tralnln& among thelr goals: hono.r rolls, dress codes and l!Jli.ng up quietly fOC' class. . • There are no moFe than a dozen basics schools. opened or planned, but tlley laacorporat.E! trends that may have'broad im· ·pllcaUons for American schOols: what is tau,bt and who makes that deciSlon. Similar protrams ahee~ are bein,g olfer~ as alternaUves'wlthio new, mult1ap- proach schools in .$Ome other dis· tricts. • . REVERSAL . Most of.the basics ac})()Ols are in suburb{ln school dlstticts often ones that went furthest with the "open" ~ducation of recent years. In spirit apd pratflce they stand•in oppo&ition. • ' "When we teach children about the westward movement in American history. we don't have BEA ANDERSON, Editor . .. Success Translated them spend two weeks building a covered wafon;' Wallace Clark, principal of tbe Hoovet' Elemen-tary Scbf<>l ln Palo AJto,aid. Thia •~hqol Is Palo Alto's "more structured" school. Parents had asked for a three Rs school. Its prioriUes are stat· ed succlbctly: "The majority of the school day will be devoted to the teaching of r~ading, writi,og, lan1uage and spelling , arith~edc." s m~ learning goals are s out tor each grade at. the bel nu\ng of the ~hool year. Tbete are rtgular tests, weekly reports to paren~ ariH quarterly report cards, graded A to F. Rales for Hbover pupils are laid down in two pages of stan- . dards. Thq are to line up quickly and quietly before class, eat at assigned tables in tbe lunch room and say 'good morning to the prin- cipal and other adplt.s. Thete is no corporal pvrriahment, but children do stay after school if assignments are' dl\ssed or rules broken. · "Children want to know .how far they can· ..io and ~ they work withio .ftiese boundari~, · · said Cla'rk. "The' want Wknow where they are. It isn't a mean thin, to do." SC>me oflhe basics schools add the word "strict" in defining their discipline standar~ and in- clude 'patriotism on their lists of go~ls. To many educators, they are signs ·or a reactionary response. To many basics schools advocates, they are signs _ ' .. J ... ... 'f ~4 upon . In many tchool ~ av1Uable for those parents a1str•ds, parents ~ rtce.ivo • who want them and those ~"6C?_~!hoob DOW.._ .. ~en . noteS bout edu~t1ori'alj)~ • cb11drcn who need them. iWt~ o 1>la1u1ed by t~ UJl~d Of repott ca~·-'Uh ~ittrkta~ Call(GtOta, tol9J!ado. ~~ for ~gUsll. math and · P¥ENTS' REQUEST M'~fjn~ and Ndfth CU~ il!limng. • ~Uy. the basics school~ No one ii saying they •e ~ CIM.f;~ES • • • ~xii\' bailgely because of one of wa\te Of the future, bul thete pro.. rui.. snAy be 'cJl~gjng, .m-.V educatlon 11 recent innovations. ba~ wUJ be more. ~ ~ucat101) Jeadeu ~aiO. ~o,< are ln school ·districts that Ea~ 't'eek1 about three doien ~ I UUnk tbere bas ~ am 19. ~~Y b~d established "open" schptlj aal1)in1atrators and,~d •re"8in$ pressure f('Otp society altern,tlve .schools. These dis· nu•bers tr• th~ghou& the at l1r• for an educational pro· trict.s now are being asked by ooon il~-.fQbn Manbd.~1 defm.ed as a(ll}evement;• tgpie ,arents t o provide an P.tt:.i eni~1 'Scuol '" ·~rtWheel~headofthe · •rnatjveattbe otherendofthe P~ •• one ~ Che .fiftt badt· au oJ ~hooJ Systems In the neetrum. They don't have much to-~~·J ••~•· •• ·, -_. 4l1 <lrlce of Educltlon. 'ch~. ·•tr-4l=P-e:S:c~~~.s~~~~~ •, ~·.tiaaic~ sc~ also IJ\JlY "Wh e n you begin to offer quiet and cootrol,h tts pUblica '!•18ft:s ~jlutt lft Par.ental tt· allernatives~you open the door to tions.s,y~ It has a d"'ss code tor-'! · t e~_uJ19llonal de· w~atever alte rna tives people pup& ancl teachers and calls ~ ~r.!'i' 1 ex.alil],,_almost ex· think t}lei would like," said itaelf a 14Schoolforleaming." , c iv~ tecause. paten~ wtnt Harold Santf!F. superintendent of There art w•lfing lists at all or ~ c.laoot boards a~ lobbied (or schools in P alo Alto. "If they the basics s~hools and tt\e them. At the very le~t, some have educational soundness. teachers, almoatuniverJally, are parents are ~o lbnger,conlent to then you must t reat people voldn\ee.rs ft6m1~ther schools in -leave the dec1slons. enu.rely fn the equally ... theirdistrid.i. l&arshalljs ~Y far haods ohchool prefessaon a,ls. The back-to-basics schools the 1*,.st\ •nd the only ()f\e that there. are"oo open classrooms ~rnuld not l~k all that unusual in ext~belt1tti4e(ghth·gtade. ot'team ~aehine in the basics some sect1?ns or. the country. Basia scllooJs may be impor· s"'°°ls~ but, appearances aside. P~lo Alto 1s a hberaJ! upper- t.aot for rftJ9o_s ~yond their they are not totally a throwback middle cl~ss commuruty near nurn~r, Qo,alfscing in them to McGuffey's Reader a nd San Francisco. ''Even our 'more said M~Y. ~lu~ators, are trend~ ~ygdne days. They tend to_,tress st~uctured' school, it would be Cha\ t!-GUli beve broad implica-basic phonics as a me~® 6f. mid~~e '?f t.he road somephice ti:ont -~ elemen~ary and secon· teaching reading. AIL of them. else, ,said Santee dary4Mf~cat1on. t Jlo1tever. have r e adin i Man)' educator s have greeted . Tbela is ttrobt 'acce_,t on de·r ~i'alists to help children, bav· •e basics schools with less than hn.ed -ac itte.m i c goals ·and ... mirdifficufties. ' 041right glee. The concern they m~a~ured •chievement in the ' Although· obviously coovinoed· express is that the basics schOQls, baSlCS schools . The o pen ~ey have a better idea, people and the back -to-bas ics move· class room often was construed to involved in the basics schools are ment itself. might slgnal a return mean that children should be not now urging them for ever to a type of education th.o.t they free fr?m such req1;1irements. yone. The argument most fre reel stifled enthusiasm and Testing for achievement was quently heard is that they should limited learning. -· .. . English I By ALLISON DEERR Spok~n without having to ask. What's Costa Mesa, to acquire ~glish Of ttlt D1ll1 Plltl Stitt this word? . skills. I Success is a telative thing. To the students in one Costa Mesa adult education class. it was: Following dir~ctions in the cookbook. "The first time I made a Boston Cream Pie, l had to translate word for word with the dictionary. It took two hours."' l• Answering all of the doctor's questions, in English. Reading the newspaper. Every Tuesday morning, a dozen or so students meet in the First Southern Baptist Church. • i Children often attend class with their mothers who are leaming English af d istrict-sponsore'Q.c/ass. f \: l . ' House. The instructor is Martha Blair. a bilingual teacher at Pomona Elementary School. "'Initially , we started the classe$ tb help the parents of the children in the bilingual pro· gram. Now, we have some stu- dents from as far away as Santa Ana. Their friends have told them about us," Mrs. Blair said. NEW SKILLS Jn many of the families, the children were learning to speak • and write English at school and the f a the r s needed these skills for employment. The mothers, however, often were isolated. But ul\til they moved to the Costa Mesa area, many func· tioned well 'in their native tongue. •'There were those who spoke Spanish, too, so we didn't learn English." Also, there were no courses of· fe red at times when the women. many with children at h<>me. • could take advantageofthern.. Families w~re encouraging. One student explained that her children kept saying, "Why don't you go to school, too, Mom?" . The setting is. relaxed. very social. "For awhile, every9oe was br· 1n g ing a sa mple of their specialties for the break and we traded recipes.'' Mrs. Blaif\said. ··we had to stop. I was gaining too much weight." Along with Engli6h instf'uction. the course offer~ ideas on health, nutrition and consumer issues. and even a UtUe math. ' Top priority ·is being· able t,o communicate bettet, to get along in the com r;nuolty, the)"said. EMBARRASSED Consuelo, who bas been in United States 24 years, adplitfed that she never tried another pro- gram, because she didn't spe_ak. English and was embarrassed ··about not knowing~.~· Within the course sponsored free by the Newport-Mesa school 1 day. -TRUE BELIEVER DEAR TRUE,· BeTe'1 )'OUt" letter -and oa day «eiqlleMH. Tllat I09ad 1• bear lil .,.._ of wornea blowlllc a.t.aet. <P.S. Whenever I hear tlaal plarase ••aae91p_loyed boaewtves•• I .. It !be cet11a1. Many wemeta 1W0dt as bard IN tlte llouse u Odieii CIO OUT. Maybe harder.) .. DEAR ANN LANDERS• ~r nephew, a physician, was rec.at· ty married to a youn• w0m1tt who has a PhD in blstory. How ahould this couple be .clciresaed? We feel thal Dr. and Mrs. John Smith la incorrect .ince the woman Is not 1etttne ~ r • copltton for the UUe SM hu •' T ', MA~A BOOR FIELDS CLASS QUESTION " district, the women are less shy. "l think it's because we have more than a teacher-parent or li!acher-s\udent r elationship ... Mrs. BlairUid. ''We're friatds. ''Al)d U\'y have become.a part o he school. helping with potlu ~ ers and cbsturQes for program . hey even belp<teAch the ~hi~dr e n authentic folk" dances.' One stUdent is Mrs. Blair's ,ide In-Pomona's . bilingual pro- ~ram for kindergarten. She is us· 1ng her newly ac.quil'ed skills to work with Anglo and Spanish· speaking youngsters. ·'The most important thing," the women agr~d. "is not to be dependent on everyone else " Said one. who had to take so meone along to translate in the past, "I can do it alone noY.·." Consuelo. who triumphantly described hel". doctor ·s visit. beamed with pride "A whole hour. and I ctid n't ha\'e any pro- blems ·· Other aC'complishmnements \\ere being able to answer the phone. and understand; writing a note to the children's teachers. "ithout having to be translated firs t; and being able to cook anything from an English· language cook book. ··And when the children come home with new\\ ords. now, I can help. too" Ann Landers ge~ted / physician trained in neurology end psycb<Mogy -one who w.ould take the time to ®._ex · haustive tests and find d.lt il'the bfperactivity is phya.icaJ or ptyoh!>logica I. · ._.:.~ysici~ wbo·tac~t.~e; &i lJl&J~T refuse to teke "!M!\tifne eet to tbe root oC the ·Dlobl ofteni>Te1¢be dr\Jgs wbttb can lead> to dependence or e\'4n d th • if the ct\Ud has a hHrt 4)'sfUftc- dOlh 1 am. not a doc:t9ri but tnY friend's S·year-o)d Is hyper and the first doctor1put him on a cer· tain drug. ltis mother got n second opinion from a speclalil'lt. He s aid corittnutna on tha t . . drug could have been disastrous. Please pri nt my le tter. NORTHPORT R'EADER DEAR N.R.: Thank you for re· ttlforcbac m)' original counsel: ~·Ge' another medical oplnlon.'0 lt'S' exe.Jlent bealtb insurance and could spell tk different~ between Ufe and death. What's prudish? What's OK'? If you aren't aure, you need some .help. It's avai,able in the booklet. ··Nec~n& and Petting =-What Art the Limits?" Mail your ~ quest t.o Ann La nders. P.O. Box 1400, Elgtn. 111. 60120, encloslna se cef\tS ll\ coln and a long. stamped, self-addressed envelope .. ~-,/ •• ~ r 82 DAILY PILOT ·' :Crowd Drawn ·· Art will be in the spotlight Saturday, March 8 , when Mariners Auxiliary of F lorence Critten- ton Services hosts a show and auction .io the Costa Mesa Coun. try Club. Previewing will begin at 7 p.m. and the a uction at 8 :30 p.m . Making an early choice is Mrs. Edward Van Rensselaer. .. Rite Dates Told LESLIE FELHEIM · DEBORAH LATIMER SUSAN FORNEY The engaaement of Leslie Felheim to Carl Randall Stevens ot Costa Mesa has been announced by her parents, the Frank R. Felbelms of Palos Verdes Estates. An Aug. 2 wedding is planned ia St. Lawrence Church, Redondo Beach. Miss Felbeim is a eraduate of Palos· Verdes Hleh School and is a senior at the University of Southern California where she affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega. Her fiance, son of the Carl R. Stevenses of Costa Mesa, is a graduate of ~tancia High School and use .. where he was a member of Delta Sigma Phi and Trojan Knights. He now is active in t he Orange Coast YMCA and Seafaring Masonic Lodge. .. * * . Mr. and Mrs. James Latimer of Laguna Beach have announced the engagement of their daughter, Deborah Latimer to Dale M. Kleen. A wedding in Congregational Church, Laguna Beach is being planned for April 27. Miss Latimer. is a graduate of Laguna Beach High School and Orange Coast CoJlege. Her nance, son of the Dale E . Kleens of Escondido, g raduated from Escondido High School and Pasadena City College . Wedding~~· and Engagements To avoid disappointment, prospective ·brides are reminded to have their wedding stories w ith black and white glossy photographs to the Daily Pilot P-;ople Department one week before the wedding. Pictures received aft er that time, will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperativ\ that the story. also accom- panied by a black and white glossy pic- ture, be submitted s ix weeks or more before the wedding date; otherwise it will not be published. · To help fill requirements on b~th wed: ding and engagement stories. for ms are available in all OaUy Pilot offices. Fur- ther questions will be answered by People Department staff members at 642·4321. '---------------------~ SIGH Uf' MOW! New Testing Humane * * * · A June 14 wedding tn the Community Church Congresational, Corona del Mar, is being planned by Susan Leigh Forney and Christophe r Yould. Their engagement has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard D.- Forney o( Corona del Mar. COSTA MESA TENNIS O.UB Recji1tration for Tennis CIUHc· ~ .... 't,J~~ As'i~AMCID~o~~ . '"-9,.'!:.!1:::::'~.... . If a woman discovers she bas a lump in her breast, she usually enters surgery without knowing what. the final outcome will be. The decision to remove her breast is made in a matter o( minutes while she's un- conscious in the operating room. ~ Not only is such anxiety unnecessary1 it is Gemini, Stress Study, Potential . SATURDAY.MAllCllS ' By SYDNEY OMAU ARJES <March 21-April 19):"Acceot is on knowing difference between desire and necessity. You may be seeing through rose· colored glasses. Someone may be nattering you. • TAt;R US· (A pril 20-May 20):. Responsibility, pressure and prestige· are emphasized. The past "catches up" and this includes promises, commit0>ents. ' GE~ll NI <May 21-June 20): Empha~is is. on study, distance, pe'rception of potential .~ You will be completing a project, setting sight on major goal. CANCER <June 21.July 22>: Creative· / forces dominate. You will not be satisfied with mechanical procedures. Now you sell· express -and it is all the way or nothing. LEO <July 23·Aug. 22): Emphasis i1·4ti· , "-coopera tion. joint efforts, a Im.king Wleb oii& - who has your best interests at heart. Your intuition is sharply booed. - VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Look beyond the immediate. HighUght versatility. One who puts on facade of happiness may ac· tt:ally confide problem. · LIBRA !Sept. ·2a-Oct. 22): Your heart opens-you are ready for love. Means you're going to break through restrictions: Happiness replaces depression. SCOR PIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Emphasis is on frankness. specifi cs, details. The pasf plays sjgnificant role in your future. Lessons learned can now be constructively applied. SAGl17Allivs <Nov. 22-Dec. 2u: Ac: cent on neighbors, persons who express their ideas and complaints. You may find yourself in middle of spirited discussion. CA P RICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Money" situation deserves your careful scrutiny. Don't take situations or individuals for granted. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lunar cy· cle emphasizes personality. fresh starts and greater independence. You have chance now if aet your own way. PISCl!S (Feb. 19-Man:h 20): You finish task which has kept you indoors, confined. subject to' rules of group or institution. Burden ls litted. UP WITH PEOPLE! · CONCEIT SUM., MAIL 9~:00 P.M. MARINA HIGtf SCHOOL 4~:.,·:":... YWeo T .. l..,,try · more expensrve as well. Jo'our Medical ColleJe o( Wisconsin doctors report in • the Modern Medicine magazine that it is possible to determine if a. breast lump is cancerous in advance of surgery and without hospitalization. His pare nts are the Rod Youlds, also of Corona del Mar. • T_. lcil Modlillff . ~ _.... .. R99istratlon ~ Mon.. . They claim that doin'g the t~ts in this manner does not increase the threat fn?m breast cancer or compromjse the quality of medical care. It does, however, decrease the patient's,con~ern about mastectomy. It also avoids t he pOssibility of un- necessary sufgery bec~e of the quick de· cision that ipust be maC:le when pie biopsy oCthe lump is made during surgery. And it gives the surgeon time ta plan the treatment course and to discuss r ecom- mendations with ihe patient and her family as to the type of sur~ery \ 'PO$sible treat- ment alternatives and'prognos~. Ors. Edward C. 'Saltzstein, Robert W. Mann. Thomas Y. Chua and Jerome J . DeCosse based their cooclusions on a study they made of women who came to them with breast masses. They discovered thah physician examination and X-rays enab)ed them to divide these patients into "sus· picious" and "not suspicious" groups. They then use'd a needle to extract tissue from the lump. IC their rindings were SUS· picious.'the patients were sent to a hospital, as a n outpatient for a biopsy. Jn some cases, the mass was found to b~ benicn and no further treatment was. neceshcy. • r, : Only thote women who needed surgery • wer·e ~ml~d to the ~pital aild those • ~b• w~t lttfQr canw 5\ll'&ery were aware~ .. ~ OC the &ype pr operation they were to un· \ ,dergE>'. • ' I ' The doc&Qrs found that patients who were· biopSied in the old INl.nner bad hospital bµJs that were l~ iilnes higher ·than those H1 tbis study. The avva~ength of hospital stay WJU reduce ct. f ... ~.3 to i 7 days. 9 Miss Forn ey and her fia nce are graduates of Cor ona del Mar High School and he is an alumnus or Orange Coast College. Merell I OMa af9· CUL aao JUMIPERo-Ph. 557-0~· • fUFFRL'S UPHOLSTERY w...y .. w_. .... .... 1922 H.tter llYd. C....W.-141-025' 1L A ~morrs SPORTSWEAR 1 1 ,, I ' I ~ \ I ' { : I ' , ! I ! I I j : t : •• J • I ' t I I . I • OPENHOUSE ~ \Vm. Roberts Jewelers ;J of Nc\vpo11 0 = ~ ~ ~· 0 • we· w ill present t fte larg est collection of orig inal cre ative dea.ign• b y W i lli am Rob e rts a vailable for y our inspection ·Saturday & Sunday 10-5:30 UDO VILLAGE 34.2 4 VIA OPORTO, NEWPORT BEACH OPEN HOUSE SA.EE · §~ ALDEN'S? . I • • • We don't ordfnartly conduct "aa,ea'' because we trY to be competitive. always. In oon)UnCtion with· Lee's,. we are offettng our first sale ih years. , The finest cspe1s· in the world from the world's largest C$'pet maker are on sale for ~ ONE-.WE!K ONU~ at Alden's. Lee·~ has loaned us giant samples to assist you in i'MkJ~ Yollr ~ ~·-com~ in and see us. If you can't make our regular hours. call us. and we 'll arrange to be here .. . ' .. ( I RAPERY SALE· ALSOGOIMG ON MOW .. • 'l '·Mora .. p IJyJOOLSON ' • OttMO.lly ... let ... " I What e ver happened to rn<>l";llity? This. was the basic question asked in the seventh annual seminar series sponsored by the Women Associates of UCI In· terfaith Foundation. Rabbi Bergman saJd he was .. uncomfortable with today's topic. The title of the lecture· seems to pr~uppose that men re· sist moral standards. I would be hard J>Ut to accept that at face value." · SJNATDOOR . Jn the last meeting, themed He said that although "sin Resistance to Ethical Standards, graz':s at the door, you may rule the consensus, by a panel of o~e~. at. You can be the master oI clergy, was that morality has not sin. . .. gone. It is just hididg under the ~n JUxtapos1taon, he added that guise of personal freedom "san depends on what society you · live in." Traditionally, the rank • This tbeme came up again and and file members of society have again as the four ministers been inclined to follow the moral spoke. Love for fellow man a standards, whatevertheywere. subduing or the ego, a reeling of community in a vast and varied .. The average group think! it's land and an attitude of hope were doing right. No group in history recommended a s res cue has said its conquest was wrong. Hitler-was venerated as a god. measures for morality. Societies have an inborn tenden •. Panelists were Al Ostroff, cy to assume what they are doing ·director of the Church or Jesus is right." Christ of Latter-day S(lints stu-The Rev. Fruhling note<J that dent center; Bill McLaughlin, in some parts of South America. 'direcfor or thie o1tiversity children are taught to steal Catholic ministries; Larry because .it is the only way they Fruhling, pastor of the Lutheran can survi~e.. . ... Church or the Master, Corona del "Man can only measure Mar, and Rabbi Bob Bergman, himself by other men. He falls dean of Israel Academy, Irvine. short of God's standards." Moderator was Keith Nelson, People tend to say ''I want to UCI history professor. do it my way," he stated. "To re- • Friday, Mlf'Ch 7, 1975 CAIL V PILOT IJ3 . ,, solve this, we have to agree on what we all will do. This becomes the moral standard for the com· munlty. If we're all ruled by 'I', we try to break that because we want more than others. · "This desire," the-minister said, "is synonymous with what C.S. Lewis called a 'cardinal sin.· Th~ proud rich man wants more not to worry about whet we are to eat and drink, on one hand. but on t.M other, we jail people ror not providing, he illustrated. ''Can we turn the other cheek when innocent people are being ) 'The average group thinks it's doing right. No group in history· ,· ever said it conquest was wrong. ·hurt?" · Also, he questioned the h\junc- tiO(l to "give to everyone who asks. I don't know about your second and third class mail . ~ . ·~ he said. Hitler was veneraged as a god.' · than someone else. PUNISHMENT. FEAR "The deterrent to wrongdoing MORE EXAMPLES always has been fear of divine "We don't need more canon punishment and censure by lawyers. We need more saints man." who have lived Christian lives Cto He cited as an example two serve as models>." road signs in Nebraska calling Ostroff referred first to the for motorists to stop litteriJ\g. Garden of Eden, where Adam One said "$500 fine tor littering" and Eve were given "a great de· and the other said ••Help keep al oflreedom." imperso n a l , large a nd .diversified. "Different value systems conflict with each other.'' But in contrast, he admitted optimism. ··1 see seeds of hope beginning lo s prout in various places. There are new breezes in religious thought, new doors beginning to open." America beautiful." Their ''simple sin" led lo One appealed to fear and the mortaUty, he said. mGH PRICE other to goodness. The first, ob-''Immorality comes from go-· Father McLaughlin reminded viously, would have more effect, ing against the basic law of love t~e .r~bbi that "~e .have ~hosen to he said. for one another." l!ve m a plurahsllc society. We The Rev. McLaughlin said that . Nelson summed the talks with hke tog~ to th~ SUJ?ermarket. :Sul love of God and love of neighbor a question about the pluralistic · we cant do •.t without a pr~ce. now are linked. "You cannot love society the clergy had described. ~:~'t ~~~~~~~\1,e:~d pluralis m God without 1 oving your "Is it doing a worse job than you neighbor. Now, our neighbor is notmally would expect? Are we H.e suggested that the only way everyone in the world." . very effective in making it the pluralistic society can be re. There are conflicts with the work?" duced is with small groups, such gospel which churches have not Bergman said this pluralistic as clubs at a large university. made clear, he charged. We are .society has grown too teehnical, The Rev. Fruh lin~ said he sees : a swing. away from permissive- ness to a m ore strictly controlled :.OCtt'l.Y ... But hopefully. we will avoid Victorian attitudes." .. We h !lve made a god of freedom," added the Rev. Ed Al- hm. "ho introduced the panel. .. Privatism is the Am erican here:.y. We must heed the call of God to be a people." The discussion, in conclusion, turned to morality on a more personal level. One member of the audience asked. '''¥\'h at can 'we do?'' Work together in groups was the answer. Optimistically, a woman r e· minded the group that there are many people in the world busily engaged in helping their fellow man. "Maybe a new kind or zealot is developing," sa ia .lPabbi Bergman. V Prices Effective March 8th & 9th, 1975 · AR Girts' dresses, Big girls' -Rttle girf s' T odcller slzts Lots of styles and colors to choose from. All easy care blends. Hurry in while selections are best. 1&97 leg. 26.'7. Test and Tune kit. Includes dwelHach. timing light & more. Save 10.00~~ 99¢ for Today's Special lakecl Meat Loaf 1trved with mushroom pvy, whipped potatoes, ve11t1bt., roll ind butt .... J ( Save 4.50 13.05 17.H lfCJ. Armstrong place & press tile · many patterns to choose from 45 pc. to a box. Brighten your home with indoor plants. Huge selection to choose from. 77, Plant hanger. Macrame. Special buy. Save 203 5.99 Reg. 7.98. Men's denim jean. 100% cotton o,. potyester blend. Machin washable. Asst. sizes to choose from. ..,_. PAii: Beach at ~thorpe •Open weekdaya 9:30 to 9:30. Sundays 1Oto6. Oti.Me•Clty Or. atQardenGtoveBlvd. •OptnweekdaYI 10to9. Sundays 10to6 .. SANTA AMA:.3900'So. lirist~o. of So. Cont Pim • Open weekdays 9:30 to 9. Saturdays 9:SO to 7. SUndays 10 to 6 ., Save 77¢ Reg. 2.99. Girl's print t·shirt. Machine wash. Save 29¢ 1.00 Reg. 1.29. Women's pantihose. Nude heel. 100% nylon. Fashion· able shades. Short. average, tall. ~ 123 4S6 189 0 g WOO(lltl SJ«l'mt c.-..•c... ................. CHARGE IT ..., with your JCPenney Charge Card. II you don 1 have a charge. iust see how fast we can \.open up YQur new account. ~ DAILY PILOT By CRAIG SHEFF OI tM O.llr "llMM.alt UC Irvuie and UC Riverside are expected to reach the rmals ot the NCAA Division II western regional basketball tournament. but the two long·lime rivals figure to have their bands f\Jll tonight in opening round action at UCI. Riverside, the CCAA champion and the No. 1 seed in the-tourney, takes on F ar Western winner UC Davis at 7 o'clock with VCJ's An· ,' teaters and Puget Sound battling at9. Pairings S~apeUp For NCAA KANSAS CITY <AP> Using a new format to pick perhaps its strongest field ever, the National Collegiate Athletic Association announced a 32-team major col· lege basketball tournament Thursday that includes Indiana, VCLA, Louisville, Kentucky, Marquette and Alabama. The NCAA tournament. which annually decides the best col· legiate team in the country, begins March 15 with 16 first· round games. Included ;u-e two probable matchups ot teams in the Top 10: No .. 7 Alabama vs. No. S. Marquette in the Mideast and No. 6 Kentucky vs. No. 9 Arizona State in the West. . The NCI\.(\ picked its 32-team field Thursday, compllmentine 16 conterence champions who ualify automatically with 16 at- 1arge teams. Using a formula ., at allows the selection of a ~econd team from a conference for the first time, the NCAA ex- • tended invitations to seven con· .. lerences to send two teams to-its .tournament. . .., Among the schoo\s accepting bids Thursday were Kentucky .-and Alabama from the ·Southeastern Conference and UCLA and Oregon State from the Pacific 8. Other teams accepting the NCAA 's call were independents Cincinnati, Creighton, Notre Dame, Marquette andUtahState, along with New Mexico State as the second team from the Mis· souri Valley Conference. Top-ranked and undefeated In- diana, 28·0, runaway winner of • the Big 10, heads a list of teams that had already qualified for the NCAA. The others are Louisville, Penn, Montana, San Diego State, Arizona State and Nevada-Las Vegas. In all. 17 specific teams were firm as of Thursday. NCAA PAIRINGS EAST REGIONAL. The w"'"er ot tne E•st Co•U Conffffl'te n. lhe .,.,~ of tne New York·COfl,.Cl•Cul OtviS10<> ot 1"" E•stCo.st Athlel1< Conference IECACI. TIW winner ot th" -•kend's Allo1nhc Coast C-· ~rence Tournament vs New Me1<1C.O Slate, lG-e. Tiie winner ot tnt' Southern Conft"ren<e lourna menl Vl lhe Ne• Engt•nd Oivosoon winner ol ow E CAC. P....,. 23 •. winner of '"" Ivy Le.agw. v'> th<> ~<OflO inv•I~ team from IN Bog E1Qr>f le1lher "4-,,.,, Mis-.rt, 18-7,0< K~l SIAle, 11·81 MIDEAST REGIOflAL Tiie w1nne• ot tne m•d·A,.,.nc..-Conte•ence v) trw whw•r of tt>e Southern 01vo>'°" of IM E C.t.C. ' , .. ~::. '::::n:~ri~:. 0~~!~~~~~1~..:.r:.~ -lie 713. 1no ...... n-c. winner ot lhe 819 r .... vs. ,,,. • ~ond tnvtl.O t••m trom ow Wt.\t~rn Athl~lt< Conference le1tller Te .. •s·Et P•'>O 19 S or ,Ar1zon•. 70.Sl. Tlllt ... nner of the Ohio V;olltv ConftrMce Tou•,._nl YS 111e Mtond 1nvHeo lrom ttw PatlliC I leit!Wr UCL.A, 22·3, <>< Or~ Sl•tt, • 18 ti. " MIDWEST REGIC*AL. ) Tiie • ....,., of llWI Sovtll-sl Conference •S C1n· <t.-Cl21·S. ! t.ouhvllle, 27·3, winner ol the M1~wur1 """'' ~e. vs '""winner of tne New York Metro -01vlMclftofllW EC.AC • TM M<Ond 1nv11eo •••m from IM AlfllnhC. (o.lSI GOf\lerenc.e vs Cre1Ql\10fl, 20.S • l\Mre 0.,.,., 18-1, vs Ille Wonnt'r of the S.11 E•Qlll , <:onf.,ence le11'1*r IC.•nHs. 1<.anwt Stdtt or Mis- '-"''· WEST ltEGIONAL Ari10fl• State. 21·3. wlnn<>r oi tne Westnn Atl\tellc. Conte~e. "s Ille SPCond 1nv1teo team from ti. S0..11WHtern Conference le•ther l<en IUCll1'0f Al....,.,..) Nev..o..i...s Ve11M. 22-4, ••nnrr of the Wu t Co.lst Att\Mtlc Conlertnce. vs Sdtl Oteoo St•tt, •~·II, ,._,esenwt1ve ol tht P•llhc Co.ls! Allltetic ""~'°"· Ti. wl~ ot the P•t•fic. I (UCLA or Oreoon St!lfl ""·ti. ~ond Invited ttam lrom IM 819 10 /1f1.,._ Mlc.~n. M1nnei.ot• or Pvrduel / ~..-.. 10-6. win Mr of ll>e Bill !.l<v ConlNenc:~ ·o UCM!Swte,21·i Ducks Join IT Field NEW YORK <AP> Prin· ceton. Southern Illinois, Oral Roberts and Oregon are in and a Jot of other basketball teams are looking to join them in the 38th National Invitation Tournament. Pete Carlesimo. Fordham's athletic director and the chairman of the NJT's selection committee. announced Ole first lour invitees Thursday. Earlier, the NCAA issued at-large bids lo itt 32-team event. Although the NCAA took some clubs the NIT would have Uked, iocludlnr Notre Dame, which always is a big attraction in New York, Carlesimo's committee still has a 1troo1 field to choose from tor 111 March l.S-23 ev~t. the oldest tourney ln the nation. The Ort!gon Oucu, for u.arn- plt. have a 17-8 reccwd and is led b)' Ron ~. one of the ouutand- 1 n r 1uafd1I io the nation. South rn lllJnoil, 18-8, boasts 6- foot·ll center Joe Meriwealbct, avtra1lna 20., point.a arul 11.4 re- bluada per 'Je aod amcma..U.. nilJon's most nldfd bfa men. l>raJ Rober has the best re- • cord al .t.M· lour 1nvilee., J.t.7. The winners clash Saturday night at 9 for the reeional crown and a top to the Evansville. Ind. naUonals pext week. UCI ruid Riverside~ favored primarily because of previous wins over their opposition. The Anteaters handed Puget Sound an 83-67 setback al Crawford Hall in early January. And Riverside's Highlanders toppled Davis. 62-58, in the La Jolla tournament. But both Puget Sound and Davis have improved since those losses. ~ .. Puget Sound's Loggers have woo 12 ol their last 14 games ~nd Davis Is ,,.-orking on a 10-&ame wlnninr at.-eak which began rightafterthe Riverside loss. So lt figures to be a wide open tournament. The Anteaters are one ot the better shootmg teams In Division IJ wifh a si.s percent average from the field. And they'U pro· bably need to maintain that figure to t~rn back the tall Log. gers. Center Dave Baker (6-8) and FORMER MARINA HIGH STANDOUT MARK FORD. Ex-Marina Star UC Davis' Ford Pressure Player: By HOWARD L. llANDV Of II\• D•••v Pilot St•lf .Mark Ford thrives on pressure and the NCAA Western Regional basketball tournament at UC Irvine this weeke nd may see the L'C Davis sophomore by way of Marina High, coming through with anot h er outstanding performance. At least, that's the opinion of the Davis Aggies coach. Bob Hamilton. "He's a real competitor." Hamilton s ays by way of in troduction. ''He's a fine de· fensive player as welJ as an out· standing scorer. We're real hap- py to have him." Ford open ed the 1974·75 eampai~n before 15,000 people at /\lbuquerque against the University of New Mexico and had his best scoring night of the campaign-29. He is also the only player in UC Davis history to play and start as a freshman. "We had a lot of injuries last year and we brought hlm up to f'ill in. lie was a starter part or the time." Ford is averaging 14.5 points per game as a sophomore and has 139 rebounds tn 25 games. He's third on the team in scoring average and second in rebound· ing. He's hitting 52 percent of hl$ shots from the' field. "He M!ff well 'Ind bas o lot of· asalsta," Hamilton adds. :flft had a fine coac• n h.tg.h scJi>Of ana learned the fun<famenlals of the game well. ··we recruited him but he also came here be~auS'e of the academic program. lie wants to enter veterinary medicine and is. a biological science major with a 3.9 grade poirrt average." The Aggies will be ,using the fast break and a pressing def~se when they open against t:C Riverside tonight, the defending regional title holder. Davis won the Far Western C0-nference and the overall season record of 15·11 is mislead· iJlg. ··we played eight Division I teams during the year and that's where most of our losses came," Hamilton says Included in the list of foes for Davis are the University of New Mexico. New Mexico State, Arizona University. the Universi· ty of California, Fresno Stale and San Jose Slate. The Aggies de· feated San Jose Slate but lost to the others. .. UC Davis mwts UC Riverside . at 7 o'clock tonlght with host UC Irvine facing Puget Soufld at 9. Gridder Dies NEWBERRY, S.C. -Billy Oou1las, il frethman football pl~ylr at Newberry CoU-• who WC.e Ms bac~ln • aprlftl tcri m · maae Tu.dday, died '11nnday ln aCOlumb~ bos~tt.al. Hewu lt. · •Tim Evans, t.6 junior Brant Gibler and 6~S freshman .flick WaJker. Th opening game will feature former Marina High standout Mark Ford, He's a 6·5 sophomore starter for Davis and ls averag forward Jerry Mnas (6-6) gear the UCJ attack\ Maras leads the team in scoring with a 18.4 averaee and is also the leadlna rebounder. Baker is hitting at a 14.9 clip per outing. And guards Kevln Davis, Rich Mraule and Nate JQnes aloni: with forward Steve Cleveland are all good shooters, each aver11ging over 50 percent. Tlrt says he's happy with the ing 14 .4 per game. The Aggies wa~ his team has been playing • also have two other gOOd ones in and practicine of late.' but he . 6·8 center Don Dowline and 6-4 adds that the Anteaters wlll nff<l Mark Olson, the team's leading a top t1tf ort to beat Puget Sound. scoret" lth a 16.8 average. "'\\'cft·e going lo have to play aood defense and play with in. Puget Sound counters with ~ tensity. There lsn 't a team in the Lall starting lineup that includes tournament that can 'l win. U we 7·0 Curt Peterson, 6·6 freshman ~layweUwecanwinit,"saysTift · :; Sports in Brie I.aguna's Muther Joins 500 Field ONTARIO -Joe Leonard, a two-time U.S. Auto Club driving champion who hasn't raced since a crash last year, failed to pass a physical Thursday and was ruled out of the California 500 Sunday. Leonard, who suffered a com· pound fracture and a crushed ankle when he hit the wall in the California 500 a year ago, had been picked to drive the backup Foyt·Coyote of pole-sitter A.J. Foyt. Rick Muther of Laguna Beach was named lo Foyt's No. 2 car in Leonard's place. Foyt maintained his hold as the fastest driver on the track when he clocked the swiftest time of the day Thursday in final t ests before Sunday's race . Foyt, who has the pole position with a speed of 196.549 miles per hour on -(he 21h-mile Ontario Motor Speedway o1aJ, ~cruised around at 192.814 in fuel tes&s . Muther had Ute ninth best speed of the day, runajng a number of laps around the 185 mile per hour mark. Co~r:tney Leads ORLANDO, Fla. -Veteran tourist Chuck Courtney, last a wi_nner in 1969, established the lead Thursday with a solid, six· . under.par 66 in the first round of the $200,000 Citrus Open golf tournament. "That's as good as I've ever played." said the 12·year tour re· gular, who held a one-stroke ad· vantage over Mark Hayes and Pat Fitzsimons, upset winner iJl the Los Angeles Open just two weeks ago. U.S. Open champion Hale Irwin who hasn't finished lower than sixth in his last three starts -headed a large group at 68, four·under-par and just t.wo behind the leader. Also al that fi~ure were Australian veteran Bruce Crampton , former Masters champion George Archer, long· hitting Jim Dent, Larry Hinson. Rik Massengale and Mike R~asor. Tlto•J)~-Slaarp" . . . . GREENSBORO, N.C. -David Thompson's 38 points, including four free throws in ~e ~st is seconds, sealt~.·a 91-'5 vlctOQ>. for North Catolioa State ove:r Virginia Thursday night, climax· ing an incredible first round of the Atlantic CoasL Conference basketball tournament. The three favored teams aH won but only arter all-out slrug. gles. North Carolina, trailing by eight points with 50 seconds to KINGSl!VnE; GORING INJURED INGLEWOOD -Center Butch Goring of the Lo$ Angeles Kings underwent surgery for ' facial Injury early today following the Los Angeles Kinas' game with the New York Islanders. A nursing supervisor at Cen- tury City Hospital said Goring, the Kiogs leading goal scorer "ith 27. would "probably not play hockey for a little while." Goring suffered severe lacera- tions under his eye when he fell on the heel of the skate of the lslandets · Dennis Potvin. He wus laken to the hospital for X·raya. The Islanders and Kings tied 2·2 tlhen New Yofk's Jude Drotdn's slammed home a re· bound shot with 2:21 left..ln the fourth period. • play, went on to ouUasl Wake Forest, 101-100, in overtime and Clemson slipped past Duke, 78·76. No \lisas MEXICO CITY -The Mex- ican government decided not lo grant visas to the South African Davis Cup tennis team lo protest the African nation's apartheid policy, the foreign ministry -an· nounced early today. ··The government has resolved to deny the entry visas ·of the particlpan't players of the South African team and as a con~­ quence has denied autborizatiop for· the celebration of the games," a ministry statement said. The elimination Davis Cup round between Mexico and South Alfi ca has been scbequled lo take · place in Mexico City April 4-6. Stockton Outlasted By Laver ·· HARTFORD, Conn. <AP) - Age prev-tiled over youth io the opening r.ound of World Cup ten· nis, giviflg Auslhlia a 1·0 edge over the United Stales entering tonight's two singles matches. Australia earned the lead of the sixth annual tournament when CQN>na del Mar resident Rod Lave{ pulled his opening round match gut of the fire Thursday night in a nip-and-tuck battle with America's young Dick Stockton . The 36-year·old Laver, a late entry into the $55,000 tournament al the Hartford Civic Center , lost the first set lo Stockton, 5·7, then won6·4, 7·6. C:ech-. Advance LONDON -Caechoslovakians Jan Kodes and JiO. Hrebec ad· nnced' lo the semi-fmals of the $60,000 international tennis tournament al London's Royal A.IPert Hall on Thursday. Kodes downed ~dtiaoo Panat- ta of Italy, 6·3, 6·4. Hr e bec whipped Hans ' Pobmann of West Germany 6-0, 6·2. Hrebec will meet Brian Fairlie of ·New Zealand, who beat Yugoslavia's Nikki Pilic 6·3, 6-4. Kodes' opponent will be Britan 'li Mark Cox, who had little trouble trouncing Zelj ko Franulovic of Yugoslavia 6-3, 6-0. Glsbert TriNJtlPlu SHREVEPORT, La. Second·seeded Juan Gisbert of Spain slipped past shaky Ernie Ewert of A\ISlralia, 7-6, 7-5 Thurs.day in a second-round match in the $15,000 Shreveport International tennis tournament. In anoth er second-round match, Dick Bc)hrnatedt outlast- ed George Hardle, 6·2, 2·6, 7-6. Also in the second round, fourth-seeded W ojtck Slbak of Poland bested Bob Kreiss..,16-4. 6·3 , Evert Wins BOSTON----Chris Evert rolled lo an easy 6-0, 6-3 victory over Julie Heldman Thursday hight in UI• U.S. women's indoor tennis .. e&amplonshlps. Everttaces Evonne Goolagons toni&ht; • in • nearly nowl~ss two-minute ·· routine in the short program 'l'huraday to vtrtually clinch the ladles' tiUe. Kath Malmbeta of Rockford, m.. WU Jn •ttond place. The final ladles' competl· tion. the tree-skatlns, was schtdulcd tonight. The maln A mertcan hope, Gordon McKelten Jr. of Lake PtacSd , N.Y., tell on a triple loop ,f\JmP and placed a~enth ln tht .went. He woa ftfth In the fmal standln.ss . The Highlaoders' top two players are 6·\ junior Larry Reynolds and 13·5 junior Reggie Mims. Riverside.is blddingforits · third straight trip to the na- tionals. 4 STEVE CLEVELAND Faces Puget Sound Trojans . '. Donrin~te. Swindest •• LOS ANGE'CES CAP) - Defending conference champion Southern Cal is taking up where it l'ft. off al the P~c·8 swim meet. Scott B.r,own set a conference record in 1: 53.33 in the 200-yard individual medley and the Tro· jans took the first four J>laces tn the event Thursday to take 'lbe lead after one day of th~ cham- pionships. Dave Hannula, Mark etu.tfield and Bruce Kocsis folrowed Brown in the 200·yard individual medley. Washington Look three first places among the Cive events to score 164 points for the day and • finish in second place in team standings, but the Trojans used their depth to score heavily in the runner-up spots to take their lead. UCLA was third with 76, Stan~ ford fourth with 74. Other scores were California, 56, Oregon 44. and Oregon State, 25 . Washington State was not en- tered. Washington's Robin Backhaus set a Pac·8 record o( 4:25.97 in the 500-y ard freestyle. The championships continue through Saturday at East Los Angeles CQ!lege. • I • • • I • ::.t;;;: ~o~~w.'~~~ ~GdM, 6~1 Tabs Marina ·Fiv'-' -. ... .. NewPort Harbor fligh. h' broke open a tit· game 1 Mater Dei HIJ with. three runs in_ the Tbask~tbaU ""'coach Jerry flft.h and twQ in the slx.\h ard1e . anu T~oy , Hjgn" to recoid a. 6-l win oVer cage mentor Bill ?p!otris Corona del Mar· High ar~ a couple or go~ oq Thursday afternoon in . the outside looking ~n as .the fouith ~annual U1eCIF4·.Aquarterr1.nalJ Ne wp<irl·Me sa baseball gets unde.r way Fnday tournament. an~ Soliday at Lang .'Iha.win puts Newport . Be~eb Ar a. . in fbe finals or the ~th d a sho.t at tpurney slated ror Salur· ga1nlng a quarterfinals Gay 'attemoon at 1. at a ·berth., hut-loal out In the site to ... b~ determined. secon~ round -Mater :tbe vtctorious Sailors ~t lo f..ong B~ach Poly v<ill meet the .\\fl~r o~ QdTroytoMaHna. . . tQ<lay"s Costa ... 'Mesa· r~ .And both, say Marina t'~tanc~•~ gATne .;rOr the '"has a gOOd shot at step. 4<>wn-. -.-_. • ping U/~ .No . 3 ranked • N~wpor f"s~ci(ir• J.a<krabbit~ of Long , "llarhoefe.r held C~ona Beach. P.oly -Sa(';lrday • dt:l 'Mar to two elltgles plghl , 1n the ! o clock and, 11 bl •w • the . Jilgbtcav. a .~u .. ..,, ~~... .,., 1far.die, sideli.ned by a l :tf.oTh:d~i~·~.?Sl~ped disc, ~ay~ th•' rol,ep f lb . lbl.rd .. ~'M"arina shq¥1d ~in;/.\: -..; . o e •. 85-6.Z MorJis declined J'!' . Newpor t c'lltne11r1111J'. Dame· a winner because bi<kt6~')ot·ibe.ce>r<li~-;~~ 4idn'\ ha v~ Poly \bebotto~ot-i-nrµnc: scouted. Qut he's im· • . The Sailor,}hen .tabk a presadwifh Marina. 4·l advant~~~~tll:tb~ "I wa's ver.f impressed tun.s \).n tft.·q i 1!th . with the diseipJine that )Jarho'1'er Jed ~'rf wtth.a Marina-she.wed," says sfngle ~ Scot~ on a Morris. And 'Ri,ch Bran. double ~Y Bob ~anln. ; ning is probably the ~ Sorce th.en. doubJ:.ejl home Hanley and· Ridt · ' Dostal plated Sorce \vfih ~A Golf asingle. • . rea The Sailo rs put .. lhe ---'-------- \!ERRY TARDIE Tlib• Merino, 65-62 finest guard in the CIF . He showed me a com· plete player. "He penetrated well, hit the open man. hit the outside shot and played great defense. He's the most complete player I have seen this year, besides being a n out- standing young man. 1 had a chance to talk to him after ou r game and he's really a fine kid." CJ!ime away--wjth ~WO \,' s~· cc ·c·. more tame• in the •ixth', ; • • \• j:._,. ~~n Chris MOore ·sil)gled. , • .., ..,.._,,, took,aeCOnd ~·•·fassed l'i · y· '· ball ·'1td $Cor o Doug 1 • •• ·Kanen's sing. e·. ·Kanen r 'JF/ ' b F' took second oli ·an infield "' p n . Y.· I .!J.O te out" and was 1'ingled ', V . home by Bruce Dickinson. ~ · l"••,.r1 "''''""It) .. ' to.luti.c:ll.ts · 1 1 OlttliMofl, ptl I (I 81-tte,( l • ="" i 'o Y;lf ' I Sorce, lo 1 1 Oosl.W,'.lll ! 0 S\•••, l 0 '""". ~ ··~ Mooff.~ ct .. •.'1 1 o lt-,pll ' 1 I llNr,_lfr, 11 1 I Smflll,91'1 1 0 foMllS •, 11 •, c ...... doll Mt/ 11) ••• • • ' . • • • • • ' ' : I • • . " ' :o . ., . ' • • • • • • .. ~· .. "! 0 . Johntoll, SS ,{A I 1 J ,.X>IWI-. rl, .Jot 0 0 ..i.1\,rl I f 0 G<illflfSS. ( • !. 1 0 0 fr1>nkU11,<1 • ,._1 1 o, o Grtelty,n ~ > O • Pl-i•t; Ill ,,) 1 o 0 Metl..,nroof\. ltl . · l o 0 o Mutplly, lb ~ 1 a 8el>'1111•, lb 1 0 Q Mlfler.p . ._1 0 0 fvc•,r.pll 'I o 1 Jo!fls 11 \f l Seo••.., 1111>1ost. • • • ' • : . ' • ' • . , ~ ~ '""" 00"1 eoo a-1 J o ttewPOrt 001 031 ,._. • 2 • Rock (iod . . . • Fishing ., ' ; Fr'lday, March 7, 1175 OAIL Y Plt.O'T" }rciis-is Fagans Re'ients; W~l~ in.ActionCoach Writers Five .. Tonight Pro Scores • the last survivor of the "What wOutd you do ir Civil. War. And Craig someone threftened to ShMf's eyesight is so burn dov.•n your garage'! poor that be thinks the ') figured that it was a basketball is a tennis t ype of social work-50rt. ba\1 if it's farther than l o( a help the h4n · three feet Crom hirt). dicapped type project. ''Then there, is ll.oger Lord knows, they need Carlson.· His physical help or some kind," conditioning tortures t.tae Fagans says . imagination. fl e's so out \Vi th Godshall t'Ou· or shape he has to take firmed as the only ringer time out while chaniing on the Daily Pilot squad from street clothes into th e C l f ' re m a ins practicegear. favored, especially in "And I have two guys \'ie"' or what happened on the team who are at Thursday's writets' equalfy-pathetic. Ed workout. 8 "The Bug'' Burgart They decided that the hustles but he's only Cirst three men to hit Cree 4-71r1andhasnoeffective thro"'S w.ould p la y shooting range. together ag;;iinst the re· "·DBve Romano, tht.> maining three scribes. spagh~tti cook from Sici-Aller three hours they ly, should play for the slill couldn't come up . physically handicapped. with a team, however. I hear they've lured and drills were halted. L'ewport principal Chuck White, team captain Godshall out for their b y his o"'n vole . squad. threatened to quit w~in "If Godshall can even players refused to give hit a free throw he'll be him the ball. But when their high scorer." they all said that would Fagans '11as asked why be fine. he decided ,lo he finally took the job. stay. UJ' DtlGO f"W'f . tMST . ......... IMST. 'ACIAC COAS'r HWY. Ma ...... ,.,.L I 0 A.M. to f P.M. Stt.IOA.M.to6P.M. S-12P~M'.I P.M. CALL MpW .:C,. 14 HOUI" SICl llrOIT '642·8331 . ! ft DAILY PILOT Friday, March 7. 18~ . iris The Rich Get Rielie~: Tennis ~hle~ -• R~~~ Results Area Cage Fntt1re Bnght ::::g:::- fo, ....... rd Jeff Krohnfeldt C¥M""u10-1Nel1M11•_.,, • ._ J BY ED BURG AU Fountain Vulley, Estan· I TENNIS ~ tt l It> UCI $11t1ltt Oftllt °'"~ P11e1.st.1t • cia, Huntington Beach You don. t find the and Marjna • ..... • Peatnl st averaged 11 · Avlt111<l1ucaeis'°""m"'M M . 6-0centerLarryHalland · "e £t't"*'ol~'~-..M.a:M. pOihts; Contreras 14. The ~ n•t$1 +.1 .. 1 guards Albert Nelwan d ...... wi1MMN~•e11t1•11:;:.._i...,.: ~ti IT) Ott MorM 4 ... , ._l, 1·~ ITI Ott .... <lleftd ... ,, ... 1 varsity ba s ketball · ' coaches at Fountain Fo .... cafft "allev yaUey, Estancia, Hunt-Fountain Valley (66-4) ing.ton _Beach a~d -Its junior varsity Manna highs complain-finished 23·1 while the ing about a turnover in sophomores were 20·3 talent tbls year. and the •freshmen 23-0. and Gary Confer all average sprea was ~v. 09.-, starred The fresltmen, 12·2 in C.11do11·'~" eta> •• w..1tt11 (T) IHI lllCt ._7, 1·S,6-1 "'IT> dltl. Fbcf\~ M . 7·S lltoftlT)Ottf ~ .. ,.ton .. 1, .. 1 .,.,.te IT>del -~m ... 1 .... \ Doll.,... ""swll-!itoO.ton t Tl det Morw-~MllO .. l, 7 .. --.s&.1p IT> ... ln<e·FIKl\ef' ,M ... nwn.f',.111• CT) clet. Peltr)C)lt- .Wrodetll4-',"-4,•·1. That's because their lightweig ht prog rams compiled ao unbelieva· hie 252-32 r ecord this season. That's an .887 winning perce ntage. Two teams-the Estan- cia and Fountain Valley fres hm e n -had un- defeated seasons. Six were unbeaten in league. And eight won circuit titles. 0r .... eo.,1co14) ........ , • ..._ S1~IH Wr'911t l8) o.tl 81•r• •·1. • • Oone1-IO I def Cti.sney .. 1 .. 1 1tetl.-r9 101 del SillH\der\.6-l.M ~Slvr IB)del Hellww"'l•o,M • ..O. DoUOlft Cvtlen Moe 101 ~I HG099S-Mll4KM, ... 8 oyv•n·8 r u\H .. \~I 181 def An- *1"SOt>-P•1m._J, 2 •. 1·S. Meed•·P•·~ 101 def. WrtQl\I· Addl11910n ........... . K•roly Peteo 18 1 Clef. Ho~t· Mattllen •·•.• •·•·l SWIMMING S.ut1wr11 C•lltarnl• lttl•r• <At P•.-• Celtt .. I .00 Mecsi.y Rel•y I. $eeldleb.Kk <Rt•t"••o, Pf\11Po11, Ho ie, 0e11y 1 Fountain Valley 's •:12 S; '2. Fvllerlon, 3. PU Olde<wl, •. Bar 0 n s w 0 n 1 ea g u e Ventvr•. S. °'"'O-Coo t 4'48 J. 100 Free Relay-I. llenlura l'S1 O; CrOWOS in the junior 2.LAv11111y,l.Ba1ters11e1d,•.Go1c»n vars ity and freshmen ~~I:.~·~; S. P•WO«ln•, •. Or""l)e 200 8 .,11.rf1., R•1..,. 1. Fulw•M r.anks. The~r sophomores ,.~l: 1. P•wcl•n•. l. Seod1eoac1c tied for hrst. Overall, 2·03.7. •. Ml. SAC. S llenlure, 6. LA they were 66-4 V•lley, 7, Oranot CO•\I 2.09.3, 10. • . Goldl!n Wu l 2 23 1 200 Medley Reidy I Fvllertoo !'01 2. 2. Sa<kllel>.st k '2 G4 7, 3 LA V,.k!y. A, \lentur•. S. Oren(le Coast 2: 13.'I, 10 Gokle11WesI 1 1'1 l E stancia was 64 -6, Huntington Beach 64-8 and Marina 58·14. JOO e..o R•lay-1. Ve111u,. 2: 14.S; 2 i : IS.S; 4. LA Veno. s. 6•ktrshe1<1, i.. Golden W.st 7 .'23.J. The four vars ity basketball coaches- Fountain Valley 's Dave Brown, Estancia's Deve Carlisl e, Huntington Beach's Elmer Combs and Marina's Jim Stephens-credit youth leagues and junior high programs for their pro- grams' success. 100 BrtH I Rel•y 1. Fvllerton ;r·n.s. 1. Ytnlure, 3 P•~. • Ml. SltC, s. Or~ Coestl :i..o; 6 Gokk>n Wnll.117;7 S.Odltb.Klt.'2:111 400 Frt R•••r I Vt nlvr• 4 01 I; 2. 'Seddk!bil<k4.02.t , l . P•WdeM,• Ml. SAC. S. 0rM99 Coe~•· IJ I,•. Go1c1en We\l• 11 •. Tot.I le•m \COf'e1: 1. Ventura tJ, 1. $a0Cllebit<1< 1•. J. I' 11ller1on n. •. Or1t9 C.0.H. P•s"'9111 '8, "-Ml. SAC Sol, ). I.A V•llty ••, I Goloen Wutu. 8ASKETBAI I I "ardtt1 ••••Ui• V•l ltr l4U CU) ... .,.. .... ~ Wtlh•tm CO F 16) Verdvgo U011•rd 111 I F 12> Houk Jot<..._. (., c "l 8.tuH ~rb tol G IOI Tomasek Ke~s tu G Cl I Ondl( Fovr1t"" V•ll•Y s corln9 $ul>S: s-11 2, Pnvm •· Westminster· hn50ft 2. c .. "$1 .. Hoalll.me , ..... MarfM Utt C4SICMC.Mtw Bon 1101 F cu Fl.if\trs M<f,,.1-t Ill F (1) o..tzel xhne.~ Ill c t271 M<C.oank ll S<••u<tSlff t 14) G Ill O.Sw H.lre CIO) G Ill 5ftow .,..,.,..scor,ngs..b: Riiey" Hallhtnt; ,, l'I. , .....__.. 1411 (lJ) H .. tlitgMR 'I. s~ 1101 F 111 Ca-'I ff/ Williams 11•1 F (ISi JCIMl>IOll ICnoa Ill c (OJ J«lt.-. : Burn1>l\Ot C. l lOIYw-.. ' ~., n> c. '" vi-s • Ne ..,POrl .. erbor icorono •ub: ,. Mi<OoNk17 : Halflome New~ HertiM, 2'-17 J SM O.......W 12.JI In) Uo-. .. Kii • 0.111\lrom I IOI F 1101 CMhon Dotnt<"'"' (1) f (6) S-IOcl< Furst l•I c U I C-•Y Ctlh9'n 121 C. tSI ICOffselb.llcll KUlll nl C. <OI Stein SMOeme11tescorl119svb· Ell<'lbel. ... ,,,,me: Sen O.mente. 14-11. 0....Hllls WI l .. )Mhs19ftV',.le • 0.Y (11 F 111 Gllrutll Vinson ISi F C1 I Heoets HicktnMI <101 c to> Ser1e r •IWSt.,di Ill G 181!.proul ~M)l'I 11) C. 18)WOC>dllfid91t »1ssio11Vielo scorl119sub: Maurer8. H•lll1me: Cane Hills. 21·7. _,.,.,.,. \'ar•ity OeuHllh Ul IUIMlui..vi.ie ~.rnonlO) F 12)~ Ander-. 121 F lOIJof\nsoft Smyth COi C "' Goroe~ Rcwwk IOI c. (O) Toeu .... Ftlded1l C. 121 ~rn S<Of'lnv Wbs-Oa"" HtllS, Be<lll•I 1. Mou ton v,.fO, P11nt 1, RowllO 1, ~lo1. Helt11rne· MrSS>Ofl Vie to 16-. ' ManM IJ:al 11)) Cesta Mew Cole 111 ~ 10 Hele G<a~ 181 ~ 141 8.arr • O~men 121 C ISi Ev-•• ,.,.rt, (9) c .. , $""''" ~' Or-1mlll (, 1010.t"> Mart,... n oron9 s11bs. Hvnl~r 1. non 1. H.,.lt•"'41 Nl.trin•. a e t e11Ate111 Yall•y C4 S I (lO) Wttll'ftlMl!tr :' 8t"'°'9 1141 F (81 M.tOll'f ! .Jody 8lss1n (II F IOI Gen•~· -rtOOU (4) C (4 I 8':dl'I ~ &J~ 1•> C. 111 RodriOUl!t ~ ci..no C•> G n I P<JOtllO ~ Fo1Mtlal" V•llev s.cori1'19 w o Jill ,th~~ ... 1. ,, H.11111~: FovnlCt1n V•llo . ~ 10 "'. N~ ll21 IS.I Hunt111qton 19 Herrell 101 F ( ICI K Rurr-s •· Grey~ll (6) F 161 Howitll ~ oison ru c 161 w110U< 0J e.!o« <•> G ( 1•1 B. Burro~ ~ 5"Mlre (II G 161 Bon-II ~ HuntlnotOA 8eKh scorino s..M: P~lmterll,MIOfl4 HAllllrne: Hvnt1nqton 8~ac11, :J().6 ~o·--tn> 1101 LatunaBeKll • Po.,1 161 F 141 Know4ton •Ed~~ 121 F 17 I Pau1-.on •aoq~nnu 141 c. 401 R-""°" • t..1r\Ofl 10) (, IOI v......,.,. •~'"°""IOI c, CO> Cotl1t'Ml., ~~«I> M:Ort"9 Jllb MIMI.In •. : l'f•lfllmt:~O.-fl\e,6-4 .College GoH Ge ..... W.st US> (ti LA H•"'9r At ..V... ........ S.eclltl GC • Rollin~ IH 1 llO~I Mar9•l0n'1, •2. ' 8t-IGl7oOtl ~117.•0. Says Brown: "There is quite an interest in basketball in Fountain Valley and we have good recreation programs." Says Carlisle: "The middle school s - TeWinkle and Rea junior highs-have been feed- ing us. We help them when they need us and they help us." Says Combs: .. The Boys Club, r ecreation departments and junior high prog ram s have several teams. All our kids come in with good backgrounds and high in· terest rates." Says Stephens: ··w e have an eighth grade in· termediate basketball tournament and recrea- tion leagues. They all take an inlerest at an early age.'' Pride a nd tradition also play a big role in the four s c hools' s uccess., The varsities were 70-29 this year. Two schools-' Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach-won league championships. Marina finished second; Estancia was third. ··success breeds suc· cess," s ays Brown. ''Go- in g to the playoffs always helps and having games like Marina helps too." <Fountain Valley has been to the playoffs four straight years.> Says Combs, who has coached eig ht league llllisls, "Once you get an established program go- ing. all the younger kids get involved . And we can be very selective." Prid e. Tradition. Selectiveness. Talent. All were involved in suc- cessful years for the four s chool s. H e re is a breakdown on this year's lightweight teams at The JVs started four s opholllores and one junior. And Brown says all will play varsity ball next year. The starters were 6·2 junior forward Jon Holland, 6·6 center Scott Tingey, 6-2 forward Bo Boxold and guards Georg e Barrios and Scott Ford. The sophomores, who won the Santa Ana s ophomore tourney, featured a 6·8 center in John Kramer and a 6-3 forward in Bill Carroll, the MVP at Santa Ana. The frosh, who beat Marina and Huntington Beach en route to their unbeaten season, were led by 6-0 center Roger Holmes who Brown said had such games as 34 points and 25 rebounds. They a lso had a good forward in 6-3 Chris Mack. Estancia Estancia (64-6)-The Eagles could have the program of the future. The junior varsity was 22-2, the sophomores were 19-4 a nd the powerful f reshmen were 23-0. · A balanced team, the JVs were undefeated in league play and won the Fountain Val ley JV tourney. Stewart Van Horn, a 6-2 forward, 6-0 The ~ophornores, who leaeue, had some big c.£::::"~.5·r!c~!!.m .. ,,....._ 1 h . games like their 84""27 Al.lil\il'-1 ... 1 •• a so won t e1r league win over Kateila. Cary lllorllb<lro-i..rr• 111 •• .1,.,.. with a 13·1 mark, were ~u .... ,~.3·•,1-1. Jed by 5-6 guard Scott Burt, a 6-1 center and .. ~.!!"_:.!~iLt•"i~!!-_ forwards Mike Gifford -~"" -··-Hays who averaged ~s. and Mark Settles were in ...:S'°1G1c1e1'Js-e=r, .. ~.H 6 · 1 for w a rd K e v in double figures. 011.1111o 1e> cte1 Z«ll •·l , .. ,. Corbett. 05) and 6-3 ~~l11~1~'~tttl:.,2. center Rick Spence no>. Mari•a w 11c,_ 1G1~1c..1io .. 3, 1.., But the frosh drew the W•llin CGl•!._~!_ ... z.M,H,M. Marina (58 -14) -headlines. Says Carlisle, Despite not winning a Pono·Wil<ber 1c' ci.t Cl'o;uio-"I ld 't b . ed C>lV•li.H,7•. t---------== wou n e surpns league title, the Vikes 05••1t·~rqvei 1c1 .,,., ~ if our freshmen beat the still did well. The JVs ~R'!~.~~~~~·1111 IG> oer ~110- sophomores." The were 2 3 . 2, the .,., .... 3.H .7• freshmen started a front sophomores l8·8 and the . vus1TY line of 6-4 Doug Jardine, freshmen 17.4. u1-~~!! K• .. "• 6·21h Jim Price and 6-2 The junior varsity only Pouo IE> a.1. W•tcten"'-4, oet. Mike Camp. Price, a 1 t t F t . v 11 GI«•• .... def. Johnson •·1, <let. os o oun am a ey-N1bilrlltf''°4. center, averaged 23 twice-a nd its 6.4 \f.t Rv0e0 ... cE1io..t6-4,won6-1.- points. The usual victory junior cente('. Mike '°!;~~~i t•ed ,.1,won6·1,.,..••. marginwas28. Bub~er, broke the JV -:\~~mce1won .. 1,won~­ scoring record He sank •1.•on .. 2. Ooublff Bamtiagto• 387 points for a 15.9 1.vnoct·Rvvd (El def. Avday-t.acob average. . 6-0, •·I, del.1.IOf\lller·Adem0-0,._2. Huntington Beach P s1uoer1-D.Ren111El sp111 .. 2.H, (64 8 ) Th . . The sophomores also _n.,.3,6·•. . -e JUnlOr varsi-h d d b k . JUNIOR VARSITY 3 a a recor rea er m Edi .... ,121\lal <•YJ>K•teu. ly, 21· overall, and the 6-0 guard Kerry Ross, s.1111" sophomores (23·1) won h d . KlniCE>del eord1>·?.1os11o~ Cl·rcut't t1"tles .w1"th lA -O w o score 345 pomts. H .oe1 1.vonH.1,a.1 McM11tenM. .. The freshm en were BurQeSi IEI won .. 3. won .... -marks. The freshmen k d b 5 d &-0.won .. o. <20-4) were second with a spar e Y · 11 guar cam~" tE> "'°" .. 2. t1ec1 7.1. ""°" 12·2 record. J er f Gr ah am who '~::"te'i ios1 H. iost u . _.. .. o. Jim Spowart, a 6_3 averaged 14 points and _,,..._ OollMn f d d broke the SChOOI mark of Henipton·O . Lynott IE) def. orwar • sparke the free throws by convert-Gr•umM1-caw1110 .. o. 6-•. d~' wttt· JVs and Spowart figures i·ng 87. R1'ck M1'elke, a 5-9 ~oey•·1 ... 1. t be f h R R•nn-c;.lld{IM< (El 1~1 3•. ?-6. o a starter or t e guard. broke the assist -••.•·1 varsity next year. Says record with 90. E•~?1W1~;:, ... , JV coach George_.....,.,=,,,,, Clemens, "Spowart is a 65 percent shooter from the floor. is aggressive and is quick and strong." Spowart averaged 20 points and 12 rebounds. The sophomores were led by 6-1 fres hman center Tom Pestolesi and 5-10 guard Gary Con- treras, a cousin of former Oilers stars Mike and Raul Contreras: Coed Badminton 0r"'9t Co.st llt> 14) S.11 .. .._.. .. b••-~r 15·7, ,>2. M11<ttl OOvl>lfl Broou-Htrnandez (GI ~. 'W¥· Glll'r~Y·J•nwu IO I won 1~. IS... r'OCk·Nistnde IS-4, l>l. Cvmm tn9s·Rvsuv•11• (0 1 _,, Jord11n-C. Smllf\ IG) def. Szot· IS-•, IS-l 51\yd~r IS-S, IS-10. Meyers-G•udenll CO)"'°"' 1S.0. IS-4. McDonalCl·J. Smtlf\ IG) _,, br tort.,.. V•nC1«-'l·Xlloe111er 10) lost 0:3, 0 1bble-Sf\ouse (G) Cl~I. Str•v•· 14-IS,9-IS. How•ro IS-9 IS·4 T11<ker·Oav1CI IOI won IS·ll, IS-1. M•rt;nu'.01o°men IG l won by !Mten1-C1s1llH 101 losl I-IS, 11-IS. torl,.f. G1bson-C.s1llas 10 1 won IS-&. IS-7. WMn•n's Sl"91U JMeUIOlwon 11·•.•·11,3-1. C..ucltnlt 10) won 11·•, I 1-7. Ru"avage (0 1 won11·1, 11 7 Sclloelll•r IOI won .. 11. IH,J..0 Davld (O)won 11·1,9·11, 11·4 C.SlllH 101won11.J, 11.10 C.n111es 101 won• 11, 11·7. 1--0. • Cheslak 101won1·1, 1 M . Mell''""''" G""rnsey COi won IS-0. IS·I. Cummings (0 1 won ls-4. IS-2. Meyers (0) won IS-4, IS.I. VMldtrA• IOJ won 1S·l2 12·15 IS-7 IS-1. ' ' " Tucke< (0 ) won is ... IS-S. G•b~n (0 ) 10\18·15, 11·1S. 5'eni 10 1 WOf'I IS·l. IS·•. Wa""n'1 Ooullles J.n~s·C:..vdenti COlwon 1s-11, IS-8. .,.uswv•oe·CMslak 101 lost 1:i.1s. IS-10, 13-U Scf\oelll11r-Oav1C1 (0 ) WOii IS-S, 2·),. 15-1 C.U.l•S·CilSlllH (0 ) lost 4·U, IS.., 1-U. Mt11'1 Ooubifl G«t.--r<vmml1'19S IOI -IS-I, IS-S. Me~"*V•neltrAe (0) _., IS.3. l.S-0 Saen1-G1t>son 10 > won IS-I, 17·1S. IS-11 Gokle11 West (11) (J) I.A Vellrf Mj .. dOOublH Sanotrs·Mei1• (GI dl!I. l.~re1. J C Standings SOUTH COAST CON FE ft ENCE W L GB Ml S.n Anlonlo 1 O Or""Ot Co•'I I 0 -SM1 01!!90 Mew I 0 Cerritos 1 I • , Fullerlon O 1 1 Santa And o 7 ,,,, Tllvr\dey's Score• CerrilOS6, S•nl• Ana ~ 111 Inning\) Mt . Safi AntonK> d i OrenQe C:O.SI, 1»$ll)Oned, rain. $e1u..-•r"I G•'"n 'Or11199 C.O.st •t Mt. ~n Anlonk> S.nta An• 111 Cerrllos Sall Ole9o Mtu el F ullerlllf'I 121 Women'sS11t1IH Sanders IGl oet. B•rller 11·1, 11-t J . Sm1t11 IGI Gel. Snyeltr 11·1. 11·1. Brooks (GI del. M1sf\ld• 11· I, 11-1. Shous. CGI <HI. C.rnera I t·l, IM. C. Sm1111 . (GI -n by lortelt. Ba9ger 11.11 won by torleit. Men'sSlfttles ~j1a (GI Gel. Leonuel IS.I, 1S.10. Hernenoe1 CC.I oef. Ol•n 1-1s, IS.S, IS-•. Warro<k IV)del Jordan 15·10, IS-11. M<OonalO IGI def. Szot IS-I, IS-II. 01bble IGI def. Streve 1a.1s. IS.S. Zenler (VI def. Nunez n .10, 15-4. Wome11's Oo11llles s.tnders-J. Smith tGI <Hf. 8.tr1<er· l'fi~10• 1S.7, IS-3. Broolt.s·Sf\ou~e <G> Oef. Snyder· Howaro IS-•. IS-I. 01ornen-Mvlf\erln tGI del. Blair· CM.wr• IS-1, IS.J. Matt's DouMM Hern•lldeZ·MeJ1• (GI def. a.an. t..tonitrel, 1S-S, IS-4. J ordan-Mc Oon•lct IGi dl!I. W•rrOck·Stot IJ..IS, rs.s. IS-II. !.lreva·Zenler IV) del. Olbtlle-l'funei .. 1S, IS·l1, 1~11. Basketball Louosv•llelJ. D•rron•7 T ulse 91. Or•I Roberts 8J Houston 106, ·~HI N•ll 91 TOUltNAMENTS AtlMtl< C.HI C:O. ........ Ftrsl ft.-d North C•ro11,,. 101, W•k• Fores! 100 OT (lt!m~ 18, Ovke 1t. N C•rolin• SI. 91, Vlt91nid8S S..nwr11 Ctnltrltfl<e Cllemple1u11l11 Furmt1n1Ko, Wm. & MIJry 5S • NCAADlw.111 Gre•l lAflfl ftegiOfl S.mili.,ls W11tenber9 l1, Hiram 49 Morl~llll 1 }, A llllglleny 67 ECAC SEMI FINALS New Engl•n• Division Elo'lon Co I 1>8, Co11M<ltcul '.>I HOiy Cros' ~2. Providence SS MHropolll•n Oh•ls1011 '.>l Jonn'~ N v lit, ~Ion Hall 64 MulgerHO. SI. Peter's.N J.~ U.S. AND FOREIGN CARS Let CGI 11 c»I, Stsnero 87 o 0. Ma~n CGI 91 *' KrontMro "°·Ml. Glllord IG> 1' def GObb 91, • o f'Wterw.IG>ttdet Morrls 90.'"4. • ••• •• .1 ••• • ... 1 ..... ••• fllase][ l t j At Koll/Irvine Center, we're ottering 90% financing on our 4,000·8,000 square foot industrial condominiums. It may never be so easy to buy an industrial building again. This offer is only good.for a limited time . 33 Individual units of Phase lfl are ready for immediate occupancy. Koll/Irvine Center is located In Irvine Industrial Complex, the nation's largest 1naster-planned industrial area. near Orange County Airport and the Intersection of the San Of ego and Newport Freeways. Your neighbors wlll Include 400 major industrlal flrme and more than 1,000 commercial support services Visit our on-site sates office, look at our models. or call Dan Curtis at (714) 979·9205 or (213) 680-9415. LA. CALLS 6c EACH' -..r...,.._.o.., 1'111 f...,.._C __ Of C- JfU-... L C•'"~ , .. i . ly ALMON LOCKAllV • ,. in tills year•s COnareaalonat eup mafc) ii,c:ln; Oluslc •t Long Beach you.can 'Jilat abou pa1 your money and take your choice as tar as ]'lcklq a wio-• •s concer~ed. • The lO·man lineup wW include some of the top oiateb·racing aklppeta ln ·the world -lncludini ~ecelebriUesformlastyear'sA.rnerlca·scup. : MOST CIA>SELY WATCHED wlll be the Performance of Ted Hood, Ute Boston salhnaker •bo •kJppered the 12-meter Courqeoua to victory over the .Australian challenger Southern Cron and ~~nnJs Conner, Hood's starting helmsnia:i on ~ageous and a former COogressional Cup win-~ from San Dieao. ti.: Instead. of ~barlng the bellJi honars, Hood and onner will be on separ•te bo~ts in tbe :CiOIUEtt.Hlonal Cup. In one race they wlll aeetbead-~ bead. each deternlli>ed to grind the other clown. :.,~~d boptng to aalva1e some semblance or re-~e against botb H.ood . and· Conner wlll be :nm -~Y. the ·Australian skipper of Southern Cross ::trJ>otbeyvlct!mfzed at NewP<>rt. R.t. ~ Conner is tP.e ooly one of t.he trio with • ss,l~al Cup expetjen~e plus the,.advantage 'hpndllng a CAl-40 -a craft tbatis alto&etb«f dif. rent UJ.an a J2-meter. 'Conner was the '~essional Cup wln.oet,'·in 1973 -a fact that pr°' • bly •alned rum a berth OD the America's Cup 12 ~rs. ~:..... . . ' ;t: .: HOOD, "1{0SE SAILS have graced every Tdn· ~I 12·m~r 1n 12-meter competition, has abou{ 1ll e a~Ung tbp Twelves in America'• Cup com- tion, but lt14 was \he first year be emerged as a er. . ~ The quiet Bostonian has won about eveiy other "1?Jajor yachting '!Wud \n the world at one time or ~er -tnosUy ln boats he designed .himself with ~Us from his own loft, He wu selected Yachtsman ~the y~r by Martini & Rossi in 197•. : Both Hood aod Conner will come to this year's j:ongresaional Cup fresh (if that is the word) from ~ Southern Ocean Racing Conference off F1orida :where they have been competing with each other in :rugg~ offshore· races since late January. ~. And of course, there are others bid<llna for the ~5 Cong ClJ'p. .. :: BILL &VCHAN OF Seattle, is a former world *•' champion· (tw£ce> and was the backup Jjelrqsman for Gerry Driscoll on Intrepid in the 1974 ~erica 's Cup. ~7.... Steve Cucciaro of MIT Nautical AssOciaUon, 1\Plu the 1973 Prince ol Wal~ Bowl wi.Qoer for match tacinJ, was ty.'ice named All-Amertcan in col- feg'4lte sailing and was Commonwealth Cup ebam-'{>iOd in 197 f . :· From the host Long Beach Yacht Club will ~e Barney Flam, ·veteran Congressional Cup Jiotflpetitor,, who will have his wife Evelyn and his ~Steve aboard as crew. ·!·. Graham Hall, Lilnhniont Yacht Club brings a ~list of sailing credits dating back to bis student <ays at the Mercbam Marine Academy'. He was a ¥allory Cup winner North American champion in .\9E8 and urn and was crewed on 12·meters in :fJnerica 's CUp competitiOD. . '• BENNY MITCHELL OF Marina del Rey is the eungest skipper on the roster. He is a hot col· iate sailor from USC ~ last year's winner of Douglas Cup. Ul'IT ....... • CONG CUP QUEEN-For the first time in the 11-year history of the event the Long Beach Yacht Club has named a "queen" or hostess to gr eet the skippers and crews of famed Congressional Cup match racing series which starts next Thursday. Perched on the cabin of one of the Cal+40 sloops is Suzi Matya who will reign during the three-day compegtion. · South Shore OKs Entries Proposal South Shore Sailing ; by filing with tbe race Club has added a new committee a single team wrinkle to its }{t-Point entry in addition to the Series for PHRF boats usual individual entries. with the proposal that Team scores will be skippers may fil~ entries the total of the overall as a team. isix best races. Team 1 members are n9t re-ANY THREE PHRF quired to belong to the boats participatlng in the' sam.e class <A or B) oc to series may form a tea1' the same yacht club. A yacht may belong io only one team . St. Pat's Day Race ~a~ch 115 Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club is seeking en- tries for its annual St. Patrick's Day Regatta March 15·16. The regatta js open to any monobull class with three or more starters. There will be three races on Saturday start·. ing at noon, and two on Sunday w~th the first start at 1p.m.1 Signed entries must be filed at BCYC by 10 a.m. Saturday, Marc h 15. Races will be over inside courses. i Frid!)', Metch 7. 1975 Weekend Calendar Spring ·Gold Cup · Regatta on Coast Nineteen classes of sailboats ALAMlTOS BAY YACHT are scheduled for starting CLUB -Turnbuckle Tlghtener signals Saturday and Sunday in Regatta. centerboards and Newport Harbor Yacht Club's PHRF Saturday, Sunday. . annual Spring Gold Cup Regatta. LOS ANGELES YAClrr CLUB Eight classes of small boats -Santa Barbara Island race will compete on courses inside <2nd Whitney Series> Saturday; the bay and 11 classes are Oil Island race (2nd Little scheduled for outside starts. Whitney> Saturday; OU JsJanct On inside courses three races race (2nd Harris Series) Satur· are 1cheduled Saturday, the first day. starting at 11 :30 a.m. off the CABRILLO BEACH YAC1IT NHYC mooring basin and two on CLUB -One-of-a· kind Multihull Sunday. Classes scheduled to regatta, today, Saturday, Sun· race on inside courses are dav. ' Lido-14 A and B, Lehman-12, SANTAMONICABAY Laser A and B, and Sabot A, B WINDJAMMERS YACHT and C. Classes will be started at CLUB -Catalina to Port race, three-minute intervals. No class handicap, Saturday. will be given a start with less • NEWPORT-BALBOA than five entries. NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT ON OUTSIDE courses two-. CLUB -Spring Gold Cup Regal· races are scheduled Saturday ta, all classes, Saturday, Sunday. and one on Sunday starting at noon each day. However . the performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts will s ail only one race eacy day. Quality Chief At Cal Boats DAILY PILOT BOATING Sundance-16 On Display At Boat Show. The Sundance-16, a unique jet powered family craft with a Datsun engine is being shown tor the first lime at the Western Na. tional Boat and Marine Show at the Anaheim Convention Center Saturday. Outside classes listed are Etchells-22. Soling, Star, Rhodes-33, 470. Shields, Tern· ~st, Finn, PHRF, Luders-16 and Quarter Ton. In other areas, Los Angeles Harbor Yacht Club will send a fleet of ocean racing boats away Saturday on the Santa Barbara Island r ace, the second feature of the Whitney Series. Al so scheduled for starts are the Little Whitney CMORF) yachts in the Oil Island Race and the PHRF yachts over the same course in Harris Series. The new boat has incorporated J effrey P. Reade, 28, hu been · a jet system and Datsun engine named quality control manager with a balanced hull that is said for Cal Boats, a division of to consume but one·fifth of the Jensen Marine. He formerly held. gasoline of some of its VS coun- various manufacturing posts terparts. with the firm. Also on display is the open hull SOUTHERN California Yacht· ing Association calendar: LOS ANGELES-LONG BEACH In his new duties, Reade will be 19-foot power boat in wtu.ch 29- responsible for inspecting and year-old Mike Reagan, son of the approving Cal's complete line of former California governor, will · sailboats. Cal manufactures nine attempt to traverse the 2,250 different models ranging in size miles of ocean between here and from 20 to 46 feet. Honolulu in May. A native Californian, Reade Show hours are noon to 10 :30 has an extensive sailing back-p .m. Saturdays, noon to 7:30 p.m.. ground that has made him well Sundays, and 3 to 10 p .m. schooled in the demands the sea weekdays. Admission is $2 for can make on a boat, according to adults, Sl for children 6-12, and Russ Hardt, general manager. children under six free. '· Ahnapolls Yacht Club is sending Tony Parker, 'fbo coached the Na val Academy sailing team and 'iyon the North American Yacht Racing Union's ~ee·qu,arter ton championship l~t year. In 1067 be sailed aboard American Ea le in America's Cup · competition. Coastal Weather LIFETIME POWER 49' CHEMICAL SPECIALS! : Tenth and final entrant is Mio.hael Thompson :nom the Great Lakes Yacht Racing Union, Bayview Yacht Club. He was the Richardson Cup winner <match racing) in 1974 and is a seasoned ·campaigner in the SORC. lncre,utno c1011dlness w ltl'I ~rc1te to 11e1vy showers tOc11y llnd S.turdo $ovtllflrly wlt1os 20 to 2S knots with ousts to JS knol~ tOd•Y. Htghs IOday 51 1062. . . ~~ Hydropl~nes Set ·~For Race Events Coast•• temper1111rts wlll r~ ~twun Sl &nd •i. lnl1nd tem· per•luru •Ill r•noe betwttn 48 Mid S9. The water temper•1urt 1'•11bt56. Sun, Mflml, Tides FltlDAY Se<ond,..gl'I 1:10p,rn. 39 Elfven events have beee' scheduled for the · unlimited hydroplanes in ; 1975, offering total ·~ u r s e s o f a l m o s t ,$400,000. The season for the big powerboat racers .,opens May 18 with the • ' SATURDAY Champion Spark l>lug Ftrstiow • 1.21 •.m. 1.t R tt i M . Flntl\IQll 7 .2S pm. SO ega an annes.<oMfoi-2.2opm . .02 Stadium. Miami, Fla. Se<onct111on· suNoAV7 p.m. •.t The final event will be FlrsllOw 2·os II m. 1' the Desert Thunderboat Flnt l'llg" •.:o• • "'· s' S.Cond low 2. S 1 p.m. .() 2 Reg at ta on Lake Se<ono11111 e:os P "'· o Pleasant near Phoenix Sunrlse•7:•sa.m.,sett&.~p.m. , • Moon rlMs l:S1 •.m., HI~ 2:JOp.m • A~z. Sept. 14. ..,, CHECKER BATIERY 11 ll>t a.11.,1 F ••h wi.,1, Tho o,,1, .. 1 P..-cti..u.11 O.ru. Hw Car, h w,11 Bo R•plou4 At No 0...90 lJ,.on P1eu·nt•1•0ft Of l M- Gvtwon'" C•t1tf1cot• • S.d.e Po•I & .. teut\ r or l .. • Model G.M. Catt N<>-t.. S•0<L. 29~. Eo•r T • fft1111t, Ru1ttMt Te ...... a. ..... 011 ••• s-1> St•• E vet pt 1 .. 1 No c;,.w.1,.... ...... 1i1, Or ... , ... OllAlln ClllCIEI fAI llLTS ·'•'" AITl-FIHZE ,,..,,.,. llCOVEIY SYSTEM Eety To Anec:i.,J Hot,.. p,,,_ t,.. Lou Of 4,,. .... Fi"" wi....c .. i.tt. Fr-o...i..e1...,. 1'' All• r,.,,_,, lllllllOSTl T 11c. • tnTll Will 1.69 "'"'' ..... o-•• .., A..4 F .. it<> C.. O.E.M. 1z• Sop.c:1f1~1.,,1 ........ .. ... 160". 1eo-. 1929 f':rldey, March 7.1175 COIO·FlEI CODITEI TOP •ATEllAl Cut it to your custom d"ign• with adaaora or knife. A.mlable in oak. wablut. marble. and many more dHigna. 30""1de. U yow t .. th are DECDUnfE PLASTIC PU ELS 2x4 1 97 2x6 297 •. An l.nexpeaalft WQY to dec:onrte any pent of your houe.Two.U... wonaoutfrom 997 cottbag too many nail•. either buy tiu. aaw D-95 °" ... a dentiaL llUCD ru•11c BA••EI "1f I had a hammer. l' d !lClllllDU In th• mondn'. fd kcmtlMr lD th• ••.•• (who eYer told blm lM could llhlg?). 6 97 797. 897 20 OS. 28 OS. 32 OS. STll10 TAPES .~"x12· 397 497 U St~..-.. tool.a. J wooder lf ow. Dowe abeot lt? .•. , .•• 1011111.S 29! Two m.. ando Ao. pttce ••• and yoo're •Ull alttl1l9 theN? . s.·. aa&.ep? Merl» .... d better DOt ........ Tlµ VICK WAS ARRESTED WEDNESDAY in Great Neck, Long Island by Nass~u County police after, hey received a teletype message from Chicago authorities.· Authorities said he has the same name, fingerprints and Social Seeurity number as the man a witness said shot to death Tommie Lee Lasbeley, 21, at a South Side bus stop on Nov. 16, 1950. Travick, a cook in a Loop hotel, disappeared after the shooting and a murder warrant was issued. Detectives John Kennedy and Francis Kehoe re· cently came across the Lasheley case in an un- solved me and decided to try their luck. DOUGLAS FIB THE VOICE SAID, .. l'M Chauncey." Kennedy hung up and SM>tihld' Great.Neck police. Tr,vick, 63~ was a.rr;ested alld charged with beinc a fugitive frorn justice. He later was ordered held without bail in the Nassau County jail. In Great Neck, Travick's lriel'lds said they were shocked and his lawnr,· Samuel Marlow, said pollce had the wrong man. "He doesn't understand this thing," Marlow said. "He told me that pe has. never so much as struck another fellow.'' As far as iould be determined, TravicJc bad lived WE WILLJ .. DO GOTTIAT SHOP PLYWOOD . Hey folb ••. tla1a baa eYn got me excited (the last time I got nclt9d waa when Geocv• chopped down the cherrr W.). You fu•t go price th!. atuff at the other placH and yoG11 be excit.d too. 1112 IOUCI IEIWOOI 33~.Fr. Bough cut for effect. You Y4'' 1112 PllE SIEl.lllC TU lower priced ••raloa. but Just th• ticket for thOH utility ahelna ln the gmage. %" . 497 %" ... ·597 %" ... 797 13' LIN. FT. get all the laat!Qg q'll4lltt .. of redwood for no extra charge. 1112 PllE BOAIDS No. 2 ... 33' 1.1n.n Clear 73' Lin.Ft. Her.'• the good ••• and the gooder. I by 12'• that ant •trcdgbt and eagedy awc:rlting yow purchGN (that ~unda weircQ. llllWOODS The llh1ff to UM for fine ca.bln.ay cuad fumlture.. Four Jdnd. to cboo.. from. Mahogany. . 84 C Sq. Ft. ~~ ........ 1 -Sq.Ft. . 144 \V~ut .. .. . . Sq.Ft. 2x4 2x6 2x8 2xl0 2xl2 4x4 4x6 4x8 4x10 4xl2 ILACI l IECIEI JICSIW 81.ICI i IECIEI CllCllll SIW l112PECD CEIAI I always want to call her Peggy Cedar. but they won't let me. Mak .. great wall paneling. 23~.Fr. IOUClASFll Any relation to Douglas Flrbcmb? UMd to lo" those plea where he'd walk on fencea. s.t.ng from cbcmdeUera. a· 10' 12· 14· 1s· 18' 20' p• 1• 151 112 2" p 2" 112 1• P rs r rr r fl. 2" 3-4• 4'4 p 5" .3" 3• 451 531 ,. r .,. 3" 451 5• &• 1" 811 9" ri 2" :t-4• · lfA sn s- 3" 4• 5• r .,. 111 r 4n S-.,. 18 fl 1P 11• &" .,. ,. 1 O" 12" 13" 15" 112 r 1r 1~ 14" 1r 17" 1111. COICIETI •II TH£ COOK COUNTY STATE'S attorney's omce bael the case under ~visement Thursday and had yet tq decide whether to seek extradition. . •'Jllght now, we're tryloa to find the original wlt· nesses and tbat's bard after 25years," a spokesman said. , • He said a decision probably would l>e made late today or Monday. Without the. witnesses, it was doubtful the state would proccied, be Indicated. PUBLIC NOTICE O•OINANCC NO. JS.II · PUBLIC NOTI€E Alt O•Ot'-•Nce Otr THI! CITY NOTIUOfl COUNCIL O' THIE CITY 01' COSTA , MA•SMAL,$ALll MaSA, CAUl'OltNIA. r••ZONIJHa c.r.. ""• Gould. f'M111t1n vs. CERTAIN UNINCOllf'ORATED TU· SIMiey st. Gould, Oef~t-DfM IUTO•Y AO.IOI NINO THll-CITY 41' • i' M>UNDA•Y NOM COUNTY •• TO lly virtue Of •n e111K11tlon IDUM C!'I CITY f'Dlt·MD. JMu.ry tS, 1'7l l>y tM ,.lillr c::ourt. THE CITY COUNqL OF THE CITY County ol LOS An911u $ .. t ••• OP: COSTA MESA DOES HEREBY C.Hfomll' 11p0n a J~.:.t 111'-"<I: ORDAIN AS FOi.LOWS: DeGembe< IS, 1'10, h1 f•vor bf Wol SECTION 1: P11nuent to Section Ame ~Id, H )Uelgf'llent credl!o.I•) '-SIS9, Cellfornl• Gowrnment Code, IN .no ~Inst Stanley "JI, .Gc?11ld, u lllllt· 10Howl119 de5CrlMCI Ul'llnc0tPGraled re-ment Clebtorlsl, 11"°*ln9 e net ~ a1 pr-ty 111 hereby placed •ncl ,,.. Of $1,304.oo ectu•llY 11.-Oft ~ Jydg- clllde<l lll\lle PDR·MD ione, 1owlt: ment on the ci.11 ol tht lisu~•Clf feta Or•nCJ• Co11111y Assenor Pucel exec\ltlon, 1 II•'-,ltllfed upcln all Ille Number 115-031-11. riCJflt, title .no lnlfftst Of Mid JudQnllnt SllCTION a. This Ordlnanet .,..., dH!tor(S) in the PfO(Nl'ty In lbe c-ty !Mt• efftd and oe In full f«et lflir1Y o1 Orange, Stat-=Oll CtllfOml-. Clts<rlbtG IJOl ~ ffom IM!d efttr Its PffMOI, ~fol~: 1· .->Cl Pf'iot lo the fllplr•tlon Of ,,,_ TMt ll0'1lon Clf L,.ot 103 Of ~ (IS) Nl'S 1rom the PHHOll thereof, Ht'911t1, 111 ... City Of COsla MeM, 5Nll ti. PUbUShtd once In lhe 0r-. c-,ty Of Oran~. S1•t• of Cellfomle. CoHI D•llY Piiot, • MWSpa(lff of ..... ""PS recorded In BOOll 4, Page. general drcule11on, prlnltd and of M1ac.i1~ Meps, In Ille offic;.e oc publlsNcl 111 the cu, Of ~ta Mtse, 1t1e GouJ!ty Recor_, of wld GM.wlty, toge!,.._ wl"' the nemn of "" mtm-dtKrillecl ea follows: &eolnnlno et • ~of the CJly Council votl119 for end POlftt Oii .,_ Souti.e5terly llM Of s.a~ ~nstlheMme. 1..ot•m Ifft Sout11easteny fl"Oftl ti. PASSED ANO ADOPTED this «II · Wutuly corner of· UIO Lot; O.y OI Merell, 1'7S. NoflheaJterty parallel •tn lht Rol>er1 M. Wilson 11lerly llne of said LOI, 14S.OI Mayor of the Ht; Uwnce Soulheaster1, perali.t w1111 CJlyofCosi.Mes. ~stef'ly llfte Of Mid Loi, 50..J ATTEST: Ht0IO• POlnl In. line Wllkh is 330'-\ El'"" P Phinney ""'"ert)o of tM paralJel with tllll CJty 0.'11 of the tl'INiiler1y line of said Lot: U...-. CJty o1 Costa Mew lleeswrtv. lll'f! of s.\ld Lot; "-<e STATE OF CAt.IFOllHIA I ter!y alonCJ. se'ld per11ll lint COUNTY OF ORANGE l SS 165.ot Ifft to tl>e Southwester1, llN 01 CITY OP: COSTA MESA I id Lot; 1t1ence Northwut.r1y aiont I. EILEEN P. Pt11NNEY. CltyOtr11 SoutllwenerlJ line 50.3 feet lo lht .tnCI u-offklo Cltrk of the Clly <:ouncll Int of'Mglnnlng, •nd commonly of the Clly or Cos~ Mese, llffeby n .as: 221 C.brlllo SI., Cosle Me.-. tft'tlfy 11111 Ille IOove •lld toregol11g llornle. Ordlnen<e No. 7S.t3 "" lntroduc;edand NOT I GE IS HEREiY GIVEN lhelCM consle1trod section by s.cllon et• .... Friday, Y'll 11, 1'7S, at 2:00 o'clock gul., metllnv of s.tld Clly Councll hefd p.m. at Ore119e County H...- on ttw 11\11 Clay oK Febl'\iary, 1975, ano c;lpal <:our1, ~1 JemborM 81\ld .• lherHtler P"Md end adopted as a Oty of Newport BHch. Collnty ol wnole ttt • reguler mHlln9 of uid Oly '"9f, Stale ol C.lllornla, I will s.ll 11 Counctr held on the 411'1 Clay of March, public •~tlon to the lllCJhtsl ~.for 197S. l>ylhe foll-Ing roll call YOte: c,as11 In lawful money of Ille Unlit<! AYES: Council Members: Wll50n, Slatn, ell tM rlQttt, llll• end lnte,.st 01 Plnllrey, Raciti u14 J\ldOmenl debtodsl kl the -NOES: Council Members: Noflt dt:Krllled proper1y, or'° much thereof ABSENT: Council Members: ~rnaybenec;.eu.rytoutlsfyMIClu H•fTWTMI\. HerUog ecutioll, witll KCNICS lnleresl -IN WITNESS.WHEREOF, I 1111 .. costs. I ller4tllfllo wt my ~ end afflaed the O.ted Merell 3, 197S Seal Of \lie City of Cosl• Mew lf'tls Siii DMslotl: HMi- 0.y of M.lr<h, 1'7S. 0on E. RllH lSEALI Marshal, Oran9e Counly fllHflP. PlllNMJ 8yE ..... M.EIOer.De1111ly Clty Clerk and n-otfkoo .IAMIES I'. aUKH Clerk OI tM City Council unt a.~ ....... ol tl'le Oty of Cost. Me~ ........,. C:.IMtfwi•ttMl AP~•OVEO AS TO P:O•M: ..wMHf.sAtWMr CITY ATT09lNEY'S 0Fr1ce PWll.,_ ()l'Mge Coul Vil•IY Pie.. •r,;!,1!d~no-cont O.lly Pilot, Merclt7, t4,21, 1t7) n1-1} M.lrch 1, 1'7S 112-7S PUBLIC NOTICE ·PUBLIC NOTICE v m SYNOf'SISOP' TME AHNUALSTATEMENTOF C:.ltnl•I h1wt"-.e ~"'" C:.literllia •H N••,.ort cowr °"""'• .._...,. Beacll, C:.liferftla '2 ... Y_eu ElldH DtcetlWer at, 1f74 . • ro111lldmilled15set1 CPa~2. llM22) "9,l30,30I Total llM>lllUes (Pl(te J, llM 731 11>, 111,•23 Spe(l .. surplusllllds IP•Qel, llMt•> " · • C;lpl11I pald·up1Guaran111 CapJi.11 S1alutory Deposit ( Pag413, llM 2SAI ~oss p.tld-ln and con1rlt>uteG surpl\15 IPa913, llneh A) Unass19ftee1 funds (surplus I 1Pa91J, llnet68) Surplus n re1;11n:ls pohcyllOIOtrt IP1ge3, lln-21> tncomafo<'~ytu <Pacie n ,flnt11 Dlsblwwme111s for111e Yt•r 1,000,bon 3.1'11.615 )()4,730 ,(PIQf 12, Line 19) lt.619, .... w. Nreby urtlly tllal lNt..,.. I~ -Ill«..._. Wllh !tit Annu• Sotate!Mflt foe' \lie yNr 41ftded OlcemlMr Jlr \'1'4, .... 1.0 h .111141tM<.e Com mlflll-rof Ule SIM.• of Calffonb, ....... -to,.._ , . '4.E.Hllllt,..._ Y.~ *"if l~Ht ....... ,j , tw\I • ~lsfttdOt•-Coffto.tll'l'PllGt, rdll. ... $.6.7. ., .. ,. ·PUBOCHQTICE ( ' .. 'Sea Gml' Director Sees Trend STUART DUCKWORT!i1 TERRI CIRANNA, MIKE PAUL, JOAN MORRIS (KNf:ELING) By JACKIE HYM~ Oltlte O•lly PllotSt.tf John Ferzacca believes Chek- hov's "The Sea Gull" may fit into a thea~ical trend-a return to . the realistic. dramas of the past. ' ''In a sense, ~e <Chekhov) is writing the kind of plays people . are going to see ... They all deal with three-dimensional charac- ters that are involved in a situa- tion. I think that's the kind of characters people long to iden- til~ with," he said. • Ferzacca tited recent revivaJs of such plais as Arthur Miller's ··All My Sans'' and Te.nnessee Williams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof" as other examples of the trend toward paatcl~ics. •°Tbeater1s moved. into an ex- periment with torm rather than substancEL Instead of creating characters that people can iden- tify with, we're experimenting with tectmlque. ~ I • "We're going back to plays that re.ally have passion. We're going back to a time when theater dealt with situations that·- we c-n pJoject into our own lives." Ferzacca said:· IJe.\s directing "~The Sea Gull'' in ar) Orange Coast Colle~e-pro- .. ( 7th OCC ·Jazz Festival: 'Better Than the Pros' ··A lot or college musicians are . better t han the pros were 30 years ago. A lot of pros have said it on this campus."' So says Dr . Charles Rutherford, whose longtime goal has been;mproving tbe quality of college and high school musi· cian.shlp. Orange Coast audiences will have a chance to see how well he's succeeded at the seventh an- nual Orange Coast College Jazz Ensemble Festival, March 20, 21 and 22 on the college campus in Costa Mesa. "I think it (the festival> has had a lot to do with upgrading our programs," said Dr. Rutherford, who founded the festival and who also serves as band director for occ. "I've always been a jazz man. I've been involved in jaiz for years'" he said. Dr. Rutherford doesn't claim full credit for improvements in local.jazz playing, however. He attributed much of it to im- proved teaching methods "plus they've had a chance to listen to a lot of pros." Professional jazz musicians play a part.jn the OCC program. Such noted players and ar- rangers as Kim Richmond and Alf Clausen-who are among the judges for t his year's festival have conducted workshops at the college. Each or this year's seven judges will he lp select the best high school band from among 55 competitors from as far away as Washington and Nevada. Criteria for judging include precision and blend of playing, • interpretation and phras- ing, suitability and originality of arrangements and musicianship of soloists. Among c_ollege players, only soloists will be given awards. No best band will be..chosen. The festival began in a com- paratively small way, with 15 bands. Since then, the number has more than tripled and, if time and space were available, could be even further expanded from a waiting list of32schools. The two days allotted·to hlgh school bands <a third is set aside for colleges> were booked up by last November. The event, directed by Dr. Rutherford. is coordinated by Virginia Woltz, a professional musician who comes to OCC for six months each year to handle scheduling, publicity and other arrangements for the festival. Most of the youthful players will go on to careers in other fields, bdt for a handful of the best it may be possible to earn a living in jazz. . Already, some OCC students earn money playing club jobs and occasional television shows. "I tell you it's hard," Dr. Rutherford said. "I wouldn't want to go on record as saying the future is bright but it isn't bright in anything you get into." At left, musician Woody Herman. Below, OCC's Charles Rutherford duclion which will be presented March 12 through 15 in the col· lege auditorium at 8 p.m. Ad· mission is free. "The Sea Gull" is about an un- successful young writer caught in a triangle of love and jealousy involving a successful older writer, a famous actress and an aspfring young actress. "This play deals with common, ordinary people trapped in com- mon, ordinary situations that we are all trapped in ," Ferzacca said. ·-rve always admired the play.· I 've always wanted to do Chekhov," he said. The cast of "The Sea Gull" in· . eludes Terri Clranna, i former student at the Royal Academy in London, and Mike Paul, a pro- ducer, scriptwriter and actor from Great Britain. Other pl~yers include Steve Diet z and J oa n Morris of Newport Beach, Joan Dillon and Donna Gunnell of Huntington Beach and Mike McGraw, Muean Aljabiry, John Pum- merville, Stuart Duckworth, San- dy Simpson and Danny Brown, all or Costa Mesa. Sets and lighting are designed by Jeff Koppe of Costa Mesa. .. The jazz group Superaax wlll play at OCC Here Are OCC Jazz -Festival Highlights: Concerts by Woody Herman and Supersax and performances by local bands will highlight this year 's Orange Coast College Jazz Ensemble Festival. All events are open to the public. Supersax will play at 8:30 p.m. Marc h 21 in the c9llege auditorium. Admission is $4. Woody Herman and his band will give a concert at 8:30 p.,m. March 22, also in the auditorium. Admission is S4. Local school bands will begin playing March 20 at 8:40 a.m . First will be Heinz Kaiser Elementary . followed by Westminster High (9 a .m.>. Edison High (9: 20 a.m.) and Los Amigos High (10 a .m.). At 10:40 a.m ., Horace Ensian ·Middle School will plat, followed by Ett~cia Hiah (ll a.m.), Seal Beach Elementary l1 p.m .), Costa Mesa HJgh (3:40 p.m .} and Corona del Mar High <4:20 p.rn.) Out.of-the-are• bands also •ill pla)'Tl\urlday and Friday. Local collue aroup1 playing . <>n Saturday, March 22, will ~ Saddleback Co)teae (9:20 a.m.). Gold4n West Colleae (9:40 a.m .) and Orange Coast College (1:20. p.m.>. The awurds program wlll be at 7:30 p.m. Morch 22. J A1 right, OCC director John Ferzacca OAILVPILOT At left, Mike Paul and Joan Morris In tender scene from "The Sea Gull" ~ Dally Pli.t SUllf ...... MIKE MAUREAS, VIOLINIST AND CONDUCTOR Classie Players : • "We don't want to challenge the world. We do . not want to make a dent in the music world. The man who drives home frQm J,..os Angeles. he doesn't want to go somewhere and hear people protesting. He wants to be en· t~rtained. And that's what we're about." Mike Maureas, violinist and conductor, was explain- ing the philosophy behind the Huntington Beach Cha{ll~· Players, a group or aboUt n nwsi(..ians which he formed last July. "lt,s people 1'e k~ew from tbe commun.ity •.. J'tfl tryin& to get away teom Otis audition thing _where )'Ou scare the people half to death. lt's an open society,., he said. "The basic philosophy ac- tU:Glly is to take our group to the audience ratber than weitinc for the 11.udience to come to us:' Ma ureas said. .arouP hi! pt.Yed primartlv in He pointed Qut that the churches. which have a re- • ady-made audie.nce. The players are now aiming at a concert series of tlleir own possibly next fa ll. " The players meet every Sunday and rehearse for abOut two and a half hours. Their repe.rtoire includes mu.sic by Corelli, Bach, Vivaldi and others · .. 'We're playing baroque and classical music at this period and we're hoping as the group progresses.to go in· to aomelhin1 more modern," P.laW'eas said. Myone interested in join· in& the group can contact · Cbrtstlne Brown at 968-2180 or. 536-6207. Upcoming perCorma(lcet include playing at a fund·· dlmng ceremony tor the new Huntington Beach Library on March 15 and gtYing an Easter concert nt the Fir t. ftaptiat Church of Santa Ana l Ma.rd\ 30. • • I • I . . I I ' . . ::~ ... . . ~ ••• : l :I· ,,,. " DAILVPILOT .. ,. ~ •. . ' t .... ,.. ... . .. . . --...... ~ ......... _ Ftld , Mwch 7, 1175 I Wed Pair . ' In 'No Sex' What tbe husband a.nd wife teams or Allred Lunt. and Lynne Fontanne or Hume Crooyn and Jessica Ta$ldy were to the Broadway stage, David and Betsy Paul are to the La1una Moulton Playhouse. The Pauls have been part or the Orange Coast theater scene for upwffds of 40 years, appearing on many local stages but known 1 particularly for their work at Laguna at the Moulton and its predecestor on Ocean · Avenue, the old Laguna PlayhOuse. Among their tandem accompliShmenls are such productions as "A Man for All Seasons." "Dear Liar," .. The Man Who Came to Dinner" and the memorable "Long Day's Journey Into Night " David and Betsy take the stage again Tuesday at the Moulton, along with a com- pany of Laguna favorites directed by Hap Graham, for' the comedy "No Sex, Please, We're British " Betsy ha~ the role of a bank manai"er's mother "'ho arrives for an unscheduled visit and from "'hom her son tries comically to shield a collection of mistakenly mailed pornography. David plays an executive or the bank whose presence adds to the funny desperation. It's doubtful that either or the Pauls could tell you orr the top or their heads which number play "No Sex" represents for them at Laguna -but there have been a goodly number over the last 40 years. And there pro· bably will be many more. "No Sex Please, We're British" will run Tuesdays through Saturdays until March 29. Reservations may be made by calling the box office at 494 -0743 after 1 p.m. every day except' Sunday and Monday. BETSY AND DAVID'PAUL New Studio ·in Lagun·a When sculptor Harold 'L. Pastorius, Jr. opened ·his new studio this month in Laguna Beach, he of. rered visitors an op- portunity to see the evolu- tion of a sculptor. Pastorius di s played 80 of his \11ork s. ranging from small columns of stainless steel (his early pieces) t o the recent .. Fluid ." a sophisticated structure executed in a ton of Cor-Ten steel. One of Pastorius' characteristics as a the muriel st evens show miurfet •t ... •n• bk" the myst•ry out of mou••••· the 1lgh• out of llOufft••· the doklrum1 out of dinner ..• •h•I'• .......... .,.. cooks wlttl Ioele. NOW! N-Tlmea 10 to 10:IO •·"'- I ... 1 to 7:30 p.m. Ma,., through Frtday sculptor is his consistent handling of his chosen material. The result is that the pature of metal is an integral part of his work . Pastorius has been a professional artist for 15 years but says he found his special medium six years ago when he began working with architec- tural sc ulpture. Since then he has shown his work in West Coast muse um s including those in Pasadena, Oakland, Downey, Laguna Beach and San Diego. I The new studio is located at 2137 Laguna Canyon Road. An add.i· tional sculpture by Pastorius can be viewed in front of the Laguna Beach Museum of Art, on Coast Highway. Additional information is available by calling 494-9354 . SCULPTOR-At left, artist Harold L. Pastorius. At right, "Fluid," a 121/z-foot- h i g h, one-ton ·sculpture. Borgains on Fine Crystal. Sterling Silver. Porcelafns. Oriental Objects d'Art. Paintings, Jewelry, Antiques. Bronzes, Furniture. Select Indian Turquoise ... Sl.000.000 INVENTORY From £,tatn. Courts, Out-fJf·Pawrr, RanA.ruptc:in VlSITORSf Co•ean4•ee what fun an AUCTION can Hf FREE ADMISSION! ... across the street from seven of the Southland's most elegant waterfront r-estaurant1! HOURS I Inspection & Private Sales 10-S DAILY 1-S SATURDAY A SUNDAY Cbed Wednnd1y a. Thur5day . AIJCnONSHELDf.VEllY FRIDAY, M11JllDAY. 81JWDAY .. a P .M. ., • ' ' USE YOUR BANKAMERICARD. MASTER CHARGE. PERSONAL CHECK OR CASH .2541W-Co.-HIP-Newpon .. ..,11 •. Cal~tMM ' (714)645-Uee r • • ' '.Jungles' Orcbesis, a group of advanced dancer;s .. at Corona del Mar High School, will present "Jungles," a darice production, March 13 and 14 at 8 p .m . in the school's little theater. Ad· • ' • • first row,· Lisa Long, Kim Lynamt Jina Broughton,'Martha Romero,'Laura Royster. Second row, .Lisa Foster, llOrrie' McQU!re, Gayle t,lass. Below, soloist Laura Royster. mission is $1.50 adults, $1 students. Above, 1• . ' .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~....;.~~ EXCITING · COLLEGE BASKETBALL NCAA WESTERN REGIONAL IASKETIAll l'LAYOFFS - .. "11 - r; "'\ . • i .,. C~TDIVISION .• 1 UCl'S' CRAWFORD HALL ~·· . . I , 'If '. Pl:IDAT·SATWDAY,MA&CH7&J ·,. . . TWO GA.MIS U.CH HIGHI' A"T 7 P.M. & t ~.J.i'l\.. ll --l...-J ' UCI IRVINE U.OFPUGETSOUND UC RIVERSIDE UC DAVIS AU TICIBS s.2.50 PM HIGHT TOUIMAMEN1' TICl:rT $4.00 TICKET LOCATIONS: UCI CRAWFORD HA.LL ASSOCIATED S1VDIKf OFRCE-UCI FOl IMFOIMATIOH: IJJ-6931 · • , . f,idly. Mweh 1, 1175 DAILY PILOT Q At UCI: ·Beethoven. aJld r. ~Peanuts' Times/Places I TONIGlfl', MAJICH 7 UCJ -SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA -s· p m tooiJht a'nd Saturday at UC Jrvlne Fine A~ ~.llage Theater. Works by BeethQvel), ,Franck and Stravinsky. Information 833>6417 $2 adults 'I student&. , · • '•YOU'RE A GOOD MAN CIL\RUE BROWN' - A musical about the ··PeanUts•• can&, 8 p;Jn. UCI UtlleTheater. 7S cents. i '~~ SEX; PLEASE: WE'RE BRITISH' -1·~6 i,dy, 8:30 p.m ., Laguna Moulton Playhouse ~ ag~n.a Canyon Rd., Laguna Beach: ' : Reservations 491 -0743. Runs for three weeks. BOYS lN THE BAND -c0medy drama al the . Golden West College Theater in Huntington Beach. 8 p.m. tonight and Saturday, repeated. March 13, 14 and 15. $1.SOadults, $2 stµdents . ROGER WAGNER CHORAl:.E -8 p.m. al : Plummer Auditorium, Chapman a nd Lemon Streets, Fullerton. $3.50 adults, $2 s tudents. "THE BALD SOPRANO• -Play by Eugene Ionesco, through Saturday at University High School in Irvine: 8·p.m. in the little theater. 75 cents adults, 50 cents students. :FACULTY RECITAL -Soprano Nancy : Bramlage, mus ic by Mozart, Debussy, Barber. : 8:30 p.m., Cal Stale long Beach Little Theater. : 6101 E. 7th. SL Information (213) 498-4540. AJlults $2, students $1. · . 'NO, NO, NANETTE' -Students £rom Mission : Yiejo, Marywood, Orange, Servile and Anaheim : Hig.b Schools. 8 p.m. tonight and Saturday, 7 :30 'p.m. Sunday in Marywood's auditorium, 2811 ; Villa Real Dr., Orange. Reservations 637 -1450. •$2.So. ANTIQUE SllOW Through Sunday at the Anaheim Convention Cent er , 800 W. Katella. More than $3 million worth or items (or display and sale. 1to10 p.m . today and Saturday, noon to · 6p.m. Sunday,. ··TARTUFFE' -Moliere's classic comedy, . through l\f arch 30. South Coast Repertory, 1827 , Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Jnformation 646-1363. $3.25 to $5.25. ' • 'UNDER PAPA'S PICTURE' -Comedy al Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse, 140 Avenida Pico. San Clemente. Reservations 492·9950. ' "MAN OF LA MANCllA' -Long Beach Civic Light Oper'a Co .. Long Beach. Jn£ormation (213 1 432· 7926. Through March 16. AWAKENING Nightly for d•ncing •nd •n+ert•inment It's •II h•ppening •t 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach (714) 644·1700 STEAK ' DINNER SJ .95 . Mondays Steak 'N Mushrooms Tuesdays Steak-a-bob Teriyaki W edne&days Brochette of Beef fJtt( Sir/°'71 MMU11 Snved ana Sk~r ivflh Oni01t1 , Crttn Pqptr1. Al111hroon11 Thutadays ' Steak 'N Peppers . "Eieefslhk 'r DN'lner s(lecials are s&rved with eris I) 'Qfffl'I salad. choice ol dre"ing. hot garlic bread. trench Ines or rice pilaff ... Dinn.er by candlelight "a..uw .,..,,., rtUC1D ••• ".,_2.25 .. 3.75 · -£~fST£4~, ~ Restaurants ~ .:.~TOMIUCH. 1174...,,. A......e4Mltl • ' ................ .__...._C""!t I ............. ..on. 14'1 ............... J .. 7141. ...... ar.CM•-·~ ''SUPERB STEAKS'' • ·MARCEL MARCEAU -The w.orld's greatest mime, throulth March 16 at the Shubert Tbe11le11, '2020 Avenue or the Start, Century City. Inform a· 'tlon (213) »S-9000: $3to$9. . ' . ~ ' :WESTERN MATIONAL ,BOAT SHOW - 1 ; Anaheim Con"fen\lon Q,nter, .through Sund1y. : South Exhibitloo Hall. $2 adults, $1 children, un- : der 1ix free. . 1 'BAREFOOT JN TUE PAJlK' -Neil Simon , comedy throu&h' March 16, PAPA Repertqry Company at Ttie Pl11yhouse, 172 N. Glassell St., Orange. 8 p .m . Jnlormation~ 639-1840. $1.75 to $5.50. . SATURDAY,MARCH8 SONGS OF AM ERICA -The Golden West College Community Chorale, conducted by Dr. J. Spencer Cornwall, retired director of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. In the GWC College .Center, 8 p.m . $1.50. BOBBY VINTON -7:30 _p.m., Santa Monica Civic Auditorium. Tickets at the door, Wallichs, Mutual, Ticketron. $4.50to$6.50 KJTE FEStlVAL -At Ocean Beach, San Oiego (begins at 4741 Santa P.1onica Ave.) 2 p.m. Judg- ing for small est, largest, most original kites. In· formation (714) 223-1175. ,/f/////1• SPRING HORSE SlfOW -8 a .m. to dusk, Fullerton Recreational Riders Arena, Euclid StreeL and Laguna Road, Fullerton. Through Sunday. Free spectator admission. SAND CASTING CONTEST -9:30 a.m., part or final weekend or Uaguna Beach Winter Festival. Sand to be shaped like animals. In Main Beach Park. SUNDAY,MARCH9 ·°TWO BY TWO' -OriginaJ plays by Rena and 'Stan Waxm an. 8 p.m ., Chapman College Memorial Hall Auditorium. 333 N. Glassel! !:,t., Orange. lnformation6..13-8821, ext. 309. $2 to $4 . "ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS' -Internal portrait of UCI, campus Fine Arts Little Theater. Room 161 , Humariities Hall, 8 p.m. VOICE CONCERT -Debbie Struble. UCI 1-~int Arts Village Concert l:laJI. 8 p.m. LEONTYNE PRICE -Arias by Handel and Mozart and sorlgs by Shubert, Tchaikovsky and others. 8 p.m . in the L.os Angeles Mu sic Center Presents rr,.. °'""""" "GENO" lf<Oft!N""""°"~ ,. _ _,! MICiKnY TUESDAY & WIDNISD.4.Y 'TIMMORGOM ;.,. . "-' Tltwr., Fri., Sot. COCKTAILS• DAMCIMG Extensive Dinner Menu JERRY LAMBUTH Mow Appearing At B.J.'s RESTAURANT Tops In Jood • CodctaHs • ERtertahwnent 3291 MIRALOMA A VE- AHAHEIM 993-0975 llighest Quality Native Mexican Foods Wee~ Doy\: I t;lO Olfl. to 11 P."' Fri. ond Sot. 11:)(1 o.ITI. 'to 17:JO Open 7 Days VIC GARCIA Forrnetly of Coeu·, Poloce -fri .• Sar. Nq-1~ COCKTAILS · 9093 E. ADANS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962'791 I Pavilion. Information (213) 626-7211. Tickets at Walllch's, Ltbcrty, Mutual agencies. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO WAIJUNG TOURS - , 1 p.m. every Sunday. Begins at El Peonsbopplna cent.er; a Cross from the Old Misalon. SO cenls Adults, 2$ cents chlldrtn. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12 °THE 'sEA GULL' -Anton Chekhov's drama, tbroUgh Saturday. Orante Coast College Auditorium, 8 p.m. Free. THURSDAY, MARCH 13 VO~AL MU~C SHOWCASE -7:30 p.m ., Newport Har r 1-ligh School, Newport Beach . Stude.nts from omona. Eastbluff and Newport Heights Elementary Schools; Rea and Lincoln Middle School ; and Costa Mesa, Estancia, and Newport Harbor High Schools. Free. ·vou CAN'T TAKE IT w1m YOU' -Sterling Holloway in classic comedy. 8 p.m. through Saturday, Santa Ana College's Phillips Hall Theater. Reservations 835-5971. S2 adults, Sl stu- dents. TllREE ONE -ACT PLAYS -At Chapman College Fellowship llall, 215 N. Grand, Orange. 8 p.m . through Saturday, ""l :30 p.m . Sunday. Includes story theater. Free. NATIONAL ORANGE SlfOW -689 South "E" St., San Bernardino. Various exhibitions and shows March 13 through 23. ln£ormation (7 14) ' 885l0201 . DANCE PROGRAM -Student-choreographed, faculty-directed works at ~al State Long Beach Little Theater, 6101 E . 7th St., Long Beach. 8 :30 p.m . Through Saturday. $1 .50·S3. 'lUNGLi:S' -Dance production by students in the Corona del fo.1ar 1-ligh School Little Theater. 8 p.m . $1 .50 adults. $1 students. Film Expo The 1975 Los Angeles International Film Expos ition wfll take place March 13 through t.tarch 26, featuring 50 new films and 34 vin- tage film s at the ABC Ente1tainment Center in Century City. Additional ihrormation. including a com- plete schedule, is available by writing 1-~ilmex, P.O. Box 1739, liollywood, Ca . 90028, or by l'alling (213 ) 556-3011 . ·~~· .. -1 MOHD A Y "'"'THURSDAY SPICIALS',. · (Friday and Saturday until 6 P.M .) dinners Include soup or salad, baked polatoor rice RED SNAPPER ..... ----2.25 MAHI MAHI _ ...... _ .. _ ...... _ .. _. _ 2.45 GRILLED SEA BASS _ ...... -... -. -2.95 TOP SIRLOIN ......... _ .. __ .... ---. 3.25 NEWYORKSTEAK ................ 3.75 LOBSTER TAIL ........ _ ........... 4.95 STEAK AND LOBSTER ......... -. -5.95 LUNCHEON ..__.,.....,_..4,,_. lQOI L CO<:Ht H.-y.oCc:ronodel M.:r-(714) b75-0'iOO 10278 Pacific Coo!.! Hwy.+uwirqon B.cxli"(213) 592·1321 Shrimp Tempura/ Steak Terivakl Combination Dinner Complete dinner including Green Tea ice cream for dessert Al wn•n~n Newport during ttws 5th annl'ltfsary 60 Fashion Island Newport Cent et ror restc"alioo~ and lnlormation. call 644·4811 NOW APPE,ARING A Return . ta the Great Moments in Horse Racing. I ,. I t t t t t t t t t t t .t ltltcsie Baritone Sherrill Milnes (above) will make his Southern California concert debut March 15 al Bridges Auditorium, 4th St. and College Way, Claremont. Reservations (714) 626-4523. Jazz pianist Barbara Carroll <below) will perform with singer Teddi King Monday al the Mark Taper Forum, Los Angeles Music Center. Reservations (213) 626-7211. .~ ·-: ' I "'t Real Cantonese Food •at her• 01 take home ST AG CHINESE CASINO 111 21,1 Pl., Newport Beaco ORiole J..95'0 0,... Dely IZ ,,._ .. lct:JCI-Fri._. s.t. W IZ:JO Tam's bacl<.. 4 tor. 1tr his January • rna1 nland debut. Tani's rich bari· '~~ ,., tone and s!age perso nality have .. VJ.~~ made 1!1m an instant SoulhErn Cal1f.).~ia success ... and the lam Re~ue the ti..;! silo'! 1n town. Two shows nightly, 7:1 0 and 10:00. r.1$1 show is a dinner ~ow. Restrva tmns (71 4) S3M132. t!l! l!!I ~ l!!I 1{8\118'' J'lll.9n!B "Mm i 226 S. Harbor Blvt'.I., Sanla Ana. Cal1torn1a 92i04 Appearing Nightly (excep1 Monday) in the EASJ·WEST LOUNGE Tommy Song Trio and Lussi " 9:00 pm to 1 :30 am DINING~ DANCINu &SALOON ED , RYU & ROSEMARY CARUSO ' TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY -t:OO P J•4. • Z:OO A.M, . I CMrinNl·r Room-KONA LANES 2699 HAiiao1t. cos'{A MW ~ 1112 1 I I .~ "Cj DAil V PILOT * Frld•r. March 7. 1873 You can thank Far West Services tor alter-. ·.Ina local 1eoar•pby. 'lbeir stunQlng new G~ : Da restau,..nt has transported a secmeQt of the • nfma,ntic Iberian peftinsuJa to NewPort Beach. : ~ elimpse gives the impression that eon· · st.ruction of this daullnt "theme" restaurant . must have utilized the talents of tb_, raaster cralbmen. of Hollywood set design. 1 The ft9bU.t . Portuiuese or Spanish grandee could take up N· · sidence and feel very much at home. · Diverse textures have never beeo In- • terwoven in areater quantity oi with more elhc- tive results. Numerous varieties of glass, wood, tile, f~ plaster, paper and metal fuse in a • taleldoscopic swirl ol innovative artistry. In a surprising number of large and opulent diniQc rooms -all at different levels -the.re isn't a table or booth that dOesn't rate as a favored location. And cozy .nlcbes are beyoDd enumeration in the low ceiling, grotto-like ceUar • -nestled beneath the soaring spaces above - that hooses the ultimate hideaway cdcktail lounge. - 1f the surroundings play a major role in in- voking Portugal and Spain, the dinner menu completes the illusion with its authentic Iberian dish~~ Can you, in fact, even name another Orange County restaurant that serves both zarzuella and paella? Paella (the word is derived from the two- eared sl<illet in which the dish is ordinarily cooked and served ) is seldom offered because its preparation is so time-consumil\g. If you have any doubts about that refer to "Julia Child's "French Chef Cookbook" and her recipe filling four fuU pages. Out 'n · ~bout Norman Stanley Still another top-notch entree appropriate to the atmosphere is Portusueea steak, $6.95. Seasoned in a marinade of wine, vermouth, lemon and garlic to enhance the flavor of the meat. this broiled steak is served on a bed of crisp potato strings, onjons and ham garnished with steamed clams, black olives and artichoke hearts. · OTHER SELECTIONS on the bill of fare in- chade petrole sole meuniere (sauteed in fresh butter and lemon with Fiorehtine artichoke bot- toms and wild rice), $5.95; lamb brochette (Bas- que style). $6.25; roast sirloin of beef, $S.95. . And : scallops Gorda Liz (simmered in fresh butter, lemon and garlic, then baked with a rich Mornay and mushroom sauce and served with wild rice and a broiled tomato), $5.95;. Catalina abalone (dipped in egg and lightly. dust- ed with bread crumbs, then sauteed in but~r with almonds), $6.95; top sirloin steak, $6.35. There's also a nightly fresh fish catch-of-the- day, price and item quoted on request. All en- trees are served with a choice of tossed Gorda Liz salad or a bowl of the day's hearty, steaming hot soup. Baked clams, Casino, $2.65, is one or two BJ?· petizers but on your first visit opt immediately for the first offering: iced bowl of shrimp, for two, $2.50; for four, S4.75; for six, $6.95. -11 lotUlntly and unqu"Uonably one ot the South Co11t'1 great showcue restaurani.; we . made it a Point to Jeam the names of those people · deserving special acknow~ement , for their contributions. First and foremoe(aµiong these is archltectArthur V•ldes. The carvJna and &lass work bn the doors ex-hibits the exceptional artistic talents of Lyle Galloway and Danel George. nesearch and de. sl1n on the coatuln~ ol service personnel wu in 1he ~•P•ble bands.of Meriam Bra.sell. Ed Bartb, assisted by natives ol PortQgal now Uvin1 In the area, executed the Htiquing and wall pal.riling. The luncheon menu offers· a tempting lineup. of sandwiches <served with in-season fresh fruit) from $2.6S to $2.95. And there's a wide selection of salads, omelettes, and hot seafood dishes, $2.6S to $3.50. Located at 900 Bayside Drive (adjacent to the Pl'omontory Point development>, Newport Beach, the ' ... rda Uz opens daily, Monday through Frida,\· .tt 11 a.m. Service gets under way on Saturday at 11:30 p a.m., on Sunday at 4 p. m. Dinner reserv at.ions 675-5111. UNCLE ' HERBERT'S ROYAL CABOOSE COUNTRY WESTERN MU~IC FRl.-SAT.-SUN. 9:00 P.M. Fine Foods And Spirits . LUHCH ROM 1-1 • DD4MH FllOM S COMIM~ M.UCH 27 -I It llUM MOVll 110 L l•oa llvd., lcAoa 675-2226 DAILY .Pu.or CLASSIFIED ADS 042•5878 ~1nutlng op.erntlons of life, along tfle Orange Co.at, ~ penned by• native son, In the DAILY PILOT PAELLA IS a casserole ba.sed on the man·- datory presence of rice, saffron, garlic and·-~ paprika. Additional spices and ingredients vary ---------------------------------------'------,-------=-----it.-.;....__...;.;;....__ Because the Gorda Llz -in every particular .. according lo the chef but the principal items you'll usually encounter are chicken, one or more kinds of seafood, sausage and at least one green vegetable. In the splendid Gorda Liz version. $6.50, you'Jl find the saffron rice along with chicken, ham, Portuguese sausage, shrimp, clams, scallops and peas. Even long-lime paella afi- cionados who might be tempted to cite the absence or some ingredient regarded as essential (this could be anythin g from rabbit, squid and snails to lobster, mussels or chorizo) should hap- pily settle for the fine dish as offered. ZarzuelJa (de mariscos, in Spanish, which transla tes literally as "musical comedy of shellfish") at the Gorda Liz is a nifty Portuguese shellfish stew blending a bouillabaisse stock , ham, shrimp, scaJJops, lobster, crab and clams. Tabbed at $6.95, it is served with a singularly complementary toasted garlic roll. NOW OPEN < Tltt )apantseA mmca11Clli11est· £,.ropranl'olyntsian & Elulua Di1ting Ezpuiblui Choo!>e your dining pleasure. Main dining room with an inh:rnallonal menu, Teppan Yaki Room, Sushi Bar, and cocktails in the Wine Cellar lounge. All this in a beautiluJ setting of gardens, bonsai trees, running brooks and· a lake. &KOTO The MoreTl'lan Japenese Restaurant •300 Von Karman Avenue. Newport Beach. (114) 752·7151 BILL U ..... DLEv-S ,.-------------.. "' ' 1 I) · · ·chines~e · Ciiism~-.· WHISKEY BJLL'S l ~ Orienlal CocktailLounge I 445 Oki Newport llYcl Mewpcri leach I l BAMBOO Featuring Tr:o~~~~. ~':'.ks. I r2? ru5 _. / _ _ ___ / I ~I f TERRACE P~~~:R~~~~k . I 07~-:w~~'7L-~· I f 1~ P_A~:!~.u~~5~~". I tf . I ' if. '-it OPEN01'1lY 111'.M-1o:30PM .-. I JOIO Let.,...._ Newport..... ~ ~I o a..oseo IK.>NOAY • • (Bayside on the ·:· I J ~ ~-I SUNDAY llUHCK-9 &.&•2:30 Im ,.. lido Peninsula) 11 'i'tf f l;f] -~w 11111st1tEEl. · : 0 : •• ~.,..., II •• Z:JO I ~ . .l.i •_t.c PH 0 NE ... 645;5550 ·I 61>5777. L ·~ .£_..:. ,-153 EAST 17TH ... COSTA MESA.J· DtHHERNIGHTLY-JAMAICAMSTllLI -------------,,,_ 5:90,.... EVHY SUMDAY ., 2 to 7 P.M • ... D.J. & THE SMITH BROTHERS11 r.ete1c1ytt.r.~· . 8:30 p.nt. to . :30 0.18. TEMPLE GARDENS . ()HNSSS Re•t•ur•Mt RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE luncheon & Dinner Daily 1111 ADAMS C.t H.W) COSTA MESA 540-1'37 540· lfll .......... GffM l't·n lurini: Eicoli•· 12101 llOOKHUln THE_ ~ • er. __ .l'nl__:1_ii<'_"'-'_1r1_,_,k_s ___ ,_,.,_a.. __ ._ .. _,_.,_ .. _,_H_• __ i• ~irporter -~nn 11H .... bMIMI..,.. anahef,. l7l•}"9·2tH """"-• ... .....,"'.., ....._ ' iTllfT!'f IR[' C* IAUOA IAY, Ill HACH ZMWI ...-.. ..... •..•. ;.,_ CJ/otel . CONGRATULATIONS TO THE . BEST Of FRIENDS tMHTl.Y TUISltAY ,..... SA,._AY 1:»1:>04.M. RICK AND STEVE LOQMIS OWMHS OF THI • Ifs Been A Gnat Ye•I KCET, Channel 28, thanks all who have supported us with memberships. Many of the programs during Membership Week, beginning Friday, March 7, will be shown only on KCET. Aft reflect the high quality made possible only through your support. If you are not now a supporter of KCET, Membership Week offers a un!que opportunity to becocne one. Your tax-deductible contribution of $15 or more will be matched by a Ford Foundation grant. This means your dollars will be doubled. SO ENJOY THE BEST OF KCET DURING IElmERSHP Wl!EK, FRIDAY THROUGH MARCH 16. FRIDAY'S HIGHLIGHTS: 7:30 Loa• ANGELES ~EWS REVIEW looks at the top local stories of the week. 9:15 MASTERPIECE .TtJ~TRE unveils a new series, "Vienna 1900, Games of Love an~ Death," baaed on stories by Arthur Schnitzler. THE ASCENT OF MAN explores the controverlY surrounding the theory of evolutlop. AND MORE EXCITEMENT IN THE NEXT 10 DAYS: ROBERT MERRILL and the late RICHARD TUCKER sing with the Boston Pops The consequences of a homemade atom bomb on NOVA James Joyce's "The Dead" on SINNERS Jean Marsh/Muppets CARTOON SPECIAL VIENNA PHILHARMONIC . • . HELLO, DALI ~ BEVERLY SILLS Alistair Cooke's AMERICA 11Double Solitaire' on HOLLYWOOD 'TELEVISION THEATRE THEATRE IN AMERJCA Nazi breeding camps -OF PURE BLOOD OLIA KORBUT * THE WAY IT WAS SPORTS DOUBLE HEADER A PfN TO IEE THE PEEPSHOW NOE~ COWARD BIOGRAPHY ·TV DAILY Friday Saturday Evening \ Li vln1 theater, hi ch seems to surface .en masse one month and submerae the next on the Orcge Coast, comes up lor air again in March with 10 producUons gcheduled to open on loeal stages within the next30days~ ' The vanguard or the parade arrives tonlihl when "The Boys in the Band" opens a two- weekend run at Golden West College. A com- parative newcomer to coastal playhouses. Mart Crowley's comedy. drama on homosex11allty bas been seen locally only once. before, at South Coast Repertory several seasons back. .. A FVNNY bundle from Britain , "No Sex , Please, We're British," bows in on Tuesday at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse with a cast of . longtime Lag una luminaries. It'll be the secpnd vers ion of the cogiedy on the boards thi$ season, fol lowing the Lido I sle Players' premiere of the show last fall. conspi c uou s by \ts absence this season, comes up next Friday when Alex Koba mounts his production o r ''Another Part of the Forest" at the Hunt- ington Beach Playhouse. The Lillian Hellman pl•y I • ii a prelude to ber more to muslc, which will be famous drama •'The reprlsed later in the Little Foxes." suson by director Pat! "The Most Happy Ta1nbelllnlatLaguna. FeUa," a musical wbtah Leaveihekiddles home hasn't be~n -.round much for "Father's Day•· tbe in the last 10 years, tak~. next offering of the Irvine up reside'nce at Seba&· Community Theater, tlan 's West Dinner which opens March 28 at Playhouse on March 18. Golden West College. This lyrical version OI This first local produc-f Sidney lfoward's .. 'Ibey tion of the play is not for Knew What They Want· the young or the prudish. ed" launches a heavy South Coast Repertory week of four local open-starts its second 10 years ings. on April S with a new play In the "oldies but called "Sabject to Fits." goodies" department are Also in the wings for an two other shows opening' April opening is a revival on Feb. 20 and 21 -"The · of Agath a Christie's Male Animal'~.at the San ·'witness r or the Clemente Community .. Prosecution" by the Lido Theater and .. Everybody Isle Players. All told, Loves Opal" at the quite a bountiful month . Westminster Community • Theater. Both are com-· edies being revived after prolonged absences from local audiences. THE FIRST of three Auditions Scheduled consecutive Orange Pacific Academy for County _premieres hits the Performing Arts the boai'ds March 22 at CPAPA ) will hold audi- the Costa 'Mesa Civic tions for the musical Playhouse when "Min· "The Fantasticks" at 10 nie's Boys!' bows in for a.m. Saturday and Sun- tbree weekends. This is day at The Playhouse, thestoryortheearlydays 172 N. Glassel! St., of the Marx Brothers, set , Orange. .. ~HIM HOIHET" Delit ._ hff.4:10.7:lS.IO:l0 -SPIKFS SANG'' 11 t.CA ... Y-TIOM$ ~TOWN" "'MAtle'WllH- Deilt AJ 2:J0.5:4M:55 "F-oREPLAY" {R) " 2 ACADEMY AWMD N\isTICfl.KnON llST,AC'lllSS A WOMAN JOHN 0.-. Mot\."""~" e 30 pm $11/Sllft/Wol 12 30 RO~i~~os UNOll THI INfLUINCI CASSAVETES DAILY: 2r00 4:IO, 7!00. 9:~ fo'On, ttvu fn io 7 om -'1 25 KATHARJNE ROM ~THE STEPIUR9 WIVFS ................ ...._.. .... _... .... ~ DAH.Y: 1 10, ~:IS, 5;15, 7110, 9:15 . SOUtH COAST PLAZA THEATRES tN4 DIEGO ,Wf. AT BRISTOL "CHINATOWN"' "OIATH WISH" "SOLDIH llUI'" IPGI -.1~0HTHIU.ltit' I so. COAST ···-_.,. "FOREPLAY"(~) PLAZA II • .., ... ua~• . • ""'* l-4:1•711 .. 1~ 549-JSS! HEY, LOOK US OVER! I t · FESTIVAL 75 is eleven special nights bf entertainment on Channel 50 to show our versatility. Like sports? We'll have plenty ..• ind drama, education, Orange CQuf\ty issues, ' world.affairs, music, art, children's shows .• Festival '75 will have it all. 'TONIGHT, Festival '76 kicks off with these great shows: At 7:30, "O range County ~eview" looks at people and places. 8:00- Tax return tips. 8 :30-lt's the Colts·Giants , 962 NFL 'Championship on "The Way It Was." 9:00-WilJiam F. Buckloy. 10:00- "The Magic of Oil Painting'' returns with the first ot a five-part KOCE-TV series featufing • Bill Alexander. OAJL y PILOT G " together Friday• Looking· B~k "Forget-Me-Not Lane," a nostalgic play about the 1940s, will be presented at 9 p.m. March 12 on KCET, Channel 28. The drama stars Joseph Maher, Astrid Ronning and Joyce Ebert. PG'. i""'t••lldf• "'°,. > llo \I • • .. • ~.,..,. j ... , ---..,i,.,.--m SOUI H COAST Pl A/A 11 _s..,,-s,_ M-•63&-ltol CMl•-·MtJA> CALL THEATRE FOR SHOWTIMES 2 Academy Award~ Best Actress-Gena Rowlands Best Director-John. Camvetes . ; .. ,_ .. ,,,_ - .. _ .... . . . -''• .. ~.-..·-.. EDWARDS BRISTOL IV """' .. ....,._ s-.1 ... Entertainment h1ppenlnga. Every Friday lnlh• DAILY P ILO~ lnth• DAI LY PILOT JIMI HENDRIX .. RAINIOW BRIDGE0 ..... "ARIZONA SLIM0 rtus .. CARMAL KNOWLEDGE" Early lirct Mati11ee Redl.tc:ed Prices Sat /Sull -til 5 p.M. lotlt CiH-1 Doors Op"' Doily 6:45 Sat /Su1t I :JO CINEMA II In newsattn ~r ... 'lbemost~ pidure eftr! G(fta wi.-1 VMEN LEIGH "= LESLIE HOWARD OLIVIA de HAVIUAND STeRl!:OPHONIC SOUND Ii'] Ill!!\. Ml!:TROCOLOA ~ ..,,, Wff6tdoys "°" I ShowillCJ Ollly-8 P"' Sat/Su11 2:00 • 8:10 p.111.. MJtGA•t'I .. Cl '1 !iO M()fl0At ,...,,,. t••OA'" •OOt. JO ~llilt()jti1' 11 >O \(J') WttO-' • "'°' K» Y\ '1 JO 1 00 , • .,,.ou ... , ....... ISlANO Al TOI' WOllO " THAT DARN CAT "' WINNIE THE Poo+4 "' PACltrlC THllATAIUo D"IYll·IN SUHR SWAP lllllTS HAA•OA •LVO. Oriw ·I" s-p ~·a.._,. s-s., I Sv~ ·I•"' to 4p"' OAANGI Drlve·lll t & 2 J",1.S1t 6 5\lf"I • tafl'I lO •OM hf~f11tS~o1t1 A.a1 .... S1t41M '•mil1 Fun! ~roftl•! •••t•I"• Celoro! PACIFIC DRIVE-INS Mon thru Tllur s OP•" 6 4 ~ f 11 Sol Sun Open 6 30 Show1 Sletl at Du•k CMdr~n 6 lhtu 11 SOf Choldt~n Undtt 6 frn' ' w ti NCllC) e tOWr IC> 'UllJ GODFATHER 'HT II ., ' ""'I fHE OUTFIT '"'' S¥..,....w Olit1Utt U TICllNI IOSS SllPFORD WIVES I(. BUSTER & BILLIE 111 "• PAINTING BY CLARK HULINGS FROM WESTERN ART EXHIBIT (BELOW) Auctions and Antiqu~ Lively Art Week Starts Tonight ART AUCTION Wurh from <;r<.1ph1 t· !\rt Galleries of Los Angt•les. reprl'senting sul'h artists a::. Pil'asso , Chugall and Dali. 8 :30 tonight a l the Balbou P<l.l.illon. Ne\\porl B L'<H:h Preceded by SlO-per-pit:rson th:impagnc ::.upµt·r Ben('f1t s Orm1gt· Cu'1sl L'nituri.rn L·nin·r~alb1 ChurC'h. J nfurm ;.i ti on 539 :J5!.ltl or 5-lJ-~il!I ANTIUl' E SHOW A~O SAl,F. Al La).!una Se;.ich M u::.c um of Art. 307 Cliff Dr .. Lagun:.i Bt•at·h. noun to H p.m . today and Sa1urd<1y, noon to6 p m Sun d;.i~ l ntormcition.49.t-6531 lt'.\C l 'LT\' A RT EXlllBfT Facultv mcm IJers from Or;rngt• County Community CollcgL'~ including Or;.illJ.!l' Coast. Golden Wc:.l und Sad· dleback :\lond ay through March 21. 1 lo 5 p m daily. Chapman College Purcell Gallery, 333 r-\ Glassell St . On.inge. Ilccept1on. 7 to 9 pm. Mon day, fret• LOCAL .\RTIST S f)·om ~t'a!-.e~1pe!-o to batik~. Sund u~ a t Sequoia Wtnl' Cl'llars. 3300 \\' Coa!-.t 1 li gll\\ ii).;-.; L'\\ port B(•ac·h 10 ~· m lo;; :JO p m 1'10\"IE TllE.\TEH UESIG.~S Dra\\ ings h) Anthon) H llt•1n .... twrgen. \\ho c·n·aU.'d many mo,·ie pal~1 ces of thL· ·20s and ·:lib Suturduy through Apri I Ii al Bower!-. Museum. 2002 N Main St., Sant;.i A n~1 V a m . to 5 p. m TuL•sd a> through Saturday. I to 5 p.m . Sunday. 7 to 10 pm Wee.I nesd;1y ;ind Thur:.da.' Frl'<: WORKS B\' BR \Dl.EY S:\llTll <iJllcr) T.JH. l535 ll :'-lonrm ta, !'\c:wpor1 Beach. Saturda,\ through \I an·h :!7 I lour.... I 1115 p m \\'1·dnC' .... day through S.1tu rd.1~ ,\RT Al C"T f O!\ \\orJ..s b.' .\rt-;i Fair crafbmen P rot•et•ds fm· Lagun<1 Beach Bo~!'-. Club. 2 30 p m Sunda.\ on tlw Ft·stn al Ground-.. Lag unci Can.' on Road. Laguna Bt•:ieh Adm 1..;-.11111 free PRl~TS H,\ Ho~:-. .\hrJtn:-, and l l'L'lll' Spl'lltt·r. at Halph Lt•1m;.in Fim• Art Pn nb . 14H2 S t'oust ll\\y. Lug un;.i lk;.ieh Through :\larc:h Iii PHOTOGRAPllS OF OESTRl'CTIO!'\ At Orange Coast Coll ege Libr;.iry. Works hy Minor Whitt'. 1:-;d,, arc.I we .... ton and others Through March 14 . Hours 7 30 <1.m. to 10 p .m . weekdays. J0a.m .tu5 p m wcl'kcnds " Very funny ... Go see it." MOW PLAYING --r·-~;a. lfcii2 • ~ . --~ . - James caan Alan Arkin Freebie and the Bean WITH VALERIE HARPER ( R) CAUTHUTlf fOI SHOWTIMIS MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND WUNOPEOPlf TIW ••cm• flf ,,... '"'""'',,to.,.,.,~ _.,.,,,, _,,... --~, .. ,.... .. ,.,,..,,, to1 , .. ,,., .,. ,.,,,.,, t"-'•,... IUll lClll U"4f' 11 ,,.,.,,., •<t .. ""''"' '"'"' ... ..,,, w-... • ·U• ® M ... UllOll II Atlllfffl , • .,. ..... ,,.q...., •• ,tt'l ....... 111 ... o w ....,•·~ .. u ... -..... o .. ·· ............. Ole' ............. <P Complete coverage of COUftl)' government and cour1a. hery day Jft .. ,. DAILY PILOT l • Plut "U.ST OF THE RH> HOT LOVEU" (R) Galleries/ Exhibits MAJOR CONTE MPORARY ARTISTS At Glt•nn Smith Gallery, 260 Newport Center Dr . .'\t'\\ port Be ach Wo rks b y Lichtenstc.·1n. Frank e nthale r ,Wa rhol and others . Through ~lan·h 19. Hours 111 a .m. to.5:30 p.m ~1onda~ through Saturda~ PllOTOG It.\ Pll\' .\!\'D SCULPTU RE Jh Gl·orge Wilhum:-, and Henry E vjenth, Cal St<i t(• Fulll'rlon fal'ully members. Saturday through April 6 at Muckenthaler Cultural Center. 12n1 W. ~I al vern. Fu lie rt on. !lours: l to 5 p. m . Tuesday through Sunday. \\'ESTER~ .\RT EXHIBIT Works hy Frt•clcrick flemington. Charles Russell, William l.l'ig h <Jnd others . Begins Saturday for thrt>C' \\'ct•ks at the dubhouse cit S an Di~go Country Estalcs (I 1 miles northccist of San Diego. off In- terstate 5 ). !) <.1 .m to 6 p.m . daily. Admission frCl' An ~~mm~ ~mm~ m ~m~u · ~rn~~l u~~rnr rn~~l ~H~f · ~m~nn m~rn ~Im~~ ~~mrnH · MlUlf ~11~11 ·um UlllJU um 1n . mrn1ij n11~1HJ · ~i ~m mi,. Mum mi· j~~i M111w~ urn·iili~ -~J1i~11~fli~; · ~ ~1m ~11~·11tw.ur1~ ~~aim~ I 1 tll:ll MUil · llhl(~lt• 'IUl1 ,I' ~7:15-9:30 SAT. I :30.3:35-6:00·1:30. I 0:45 SUM. 2.1MM:Z~6:50-,..20 ~ IJff,lol. -.:..tr.;t1 -, • ' /\•.;1o11" .... ~ '.lf1!. Buena Park • 527 2223 SHOW STARTS AT DUSK ... YOUHG flAH.Ke.NSTBH" ly Mel lroolt1 IPGI "MURDER OH THE ORIENT EXPRESS" IPGI "THE STltOHGEST.MAM IH THE WOIU>" ''THAT DARM CAT"' IGI "II S DO IT • IEES DO rr' IPGI .. HOROMIDA STU.IK' IPGI "THEt.OMGEST Yill> .. SDPICO" IRI ''THE GRUH HQ....r' "AVE FIHGERS OF bEAnt" lltJ WAll' DISNEY PJlODUCI10NS' .. . I , This needlepoint work by Dr. H. Arthur Taussig is part of a show of modern alterations of his- torical photographs, at the Orange Coast College Art Gallery through March 19. EOW~ IRSTOl C1B1A IWSTOl AT llacAlllHJR Sa. c.a.st Slqipng "-, .... BALBOA B•lboJ 81wa JI M••" Pt.on• 673·4048 OpQn 6 4S UNANlmJSt I I MAGNIFICENT.'' -Leonard Hams, CBS-TV "FASCINA1'1NG." -Gene Shallt, NBC· TV "****!" -Kathleen Carroll. N. Y. Nt'lfS "DO ANYTHING TO SEE IT!" -Vo11ue M;agaz1ne - "BREATH -TAKING FILM!" -Paul D. Zimmerman. Newsweek "REMARKABLE, SUPERIOR FILM!" -Rex Reed. N Y. News DAVID HARTMAN . DONALD SIJJIB· JACQUES MARIN. MAKO . DAVID GWIWM ., •MKT• ECKEMYR ..... ~;=%.... "':'.~~'.".~~~".J: "°"" "' }Un .. H rfC.UUI• ..... ..._ .. " /\'AURIC f .1.Vlf1l WlN ,l(IJ HIBLER HtSTOL CIMfMA IV lri•tol At MocArfflur S..tti Coost SlloppllMJ Arto 540-7444 ( TfiE BOOKMAN ) REVIEWS In the DAILY PILOT ALSO GENE WILDE« MAIGOTKIDDU "QUACK SER FORTUNE .. l ACA&IUlY AW .. ~TQl!"GI AHD l!lllO-.oM ••*' PG ''HAIOlD & MAUDI" t t FUNKY WIMKERBEAN J.EC-l! I GET A CJW.K:.6 CAAO ! GO DIRECn.t,> TO JAll ··· FIGMENTS NANCY . ~ YOU SURE HAVE A BIG MOUTH TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLB PEANUTS UNITED Feature Syndicate Yeaterc1ay·s Puul• Solved: ACROSS 1 Exuded $aP 5 Whefe Wiesbaden is 10 Greek Portico 14 Actor Edmund 15 Essetll lal oil 1 16 ThoSe against Informal 17 Chief Ouray"s followers 18 Hallan comedy characte< 20 German city 22 Concealed 23 .. _ •••. Grows in Brooklyn~ 24 Wandered 26 Much ··'. ~ltlbr, : "tr Olltribute ·, IObsely • 3111'Kindor : r rug ... C."IOsen • purtutl a& Grealer In number ~Confusion i7 16· l/2 leet: 2 wordS 38 Legal l alfair 40 Animars gait 41 Miss Lillie 42 German canal "3 Goals • .S Odd 47 Nasly 48 Shoolof disapproval ......,......,~ 49 Covers with cloltling SO Ala lower level 53 Marijuana: Slang &4 Elevate: 2 words 68 Goes beyond 61 Singer 6 Engraver 32 "She is • 7 S~er ····!" 8 Carnelfan'a 33 "Hotsy relative ·····!" 9 Tuming 3S. Length unit point 39 Female rulf · 10 Cripple 40 Mosa!C t 1 Period of pieces Ponselfe duty • 42 Possesses 62 Common 12 Aatoonu knowledge contraction 13 U.S. court 44 Flounder• 63 Goose ace • 48 Concludes genus 19 Regulus prematurely 64 Fistt 21 Obsetve 4T Live in sauce carefull)t luxury 6s Dr-• 25 Sensalion 49 Water bird •• of so f' 001b1ll 68 = din-.. stadium 61 "Ha'a 28 S.fort In 51 Cry ot In time NVtlty '°'"!th a 21 Low 52 $mo0trt-····I ~) bfMthiftt loforrnal 53 ~II hotte OOWN ~ Proof· 1 55 Clwae for a 1 GI·-tNder'a Ml'vlct ..... ITllrtl 56 utilfttt 2 Piecll of 29 80111•®• 61 8tlP off 3 }~,. 30 :~=~her 59 ~':!::' anlmafl 3 t Corday·a 60 Sc>anlelt 4 Abandoned vlclim U\lt: A* s Possesses ' 6 by 'tom latluck ••• AWO GET A MIUJOt-1 OOU.AR5 FOR QOUR MEMOIR5! · by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller "!c!'r· March 7, 1975 DOOLEY1S WORL,_D---.__......--. N01"' &~~ •M? ON&,..Y NtN•'1'Y ,:1v6 &CJC.1<5 ! MOON MULLINS ® by Charles M. Schutz by Harold Le Dome ... " .......... -. --- I I J ______ , • by Ferd Johnson ~ARSONIST MERE? you ~OTT.A BE KIDDIN'! THE GIRLS •1 ... I'm so &lad you'•e slarlcd on a f~r-day WOt"k week and can set some utra rest-now you'll have time to paint the house. rcsod the }ard, dean the pt1gC , •• " DENNIS THE MENACE J .. .. . \ • . ... -9' Michela119elo? No, it's surrealist painter Salvador Dali, creating his own version of the Sistine Chapel -in his own house. He will be KOCE Speeial Baez, Sills on ··Festivul 75, '' an ll· cartoon for children (J day period of television p.m. Thursday and 5:30 specials. will be present· p.m. March 15) and a ed by KOCE-TV, Chan-Joan Ba ez concert nel 50, today through CMarch l5at8 p.m .) March 17. A M as ters tennis The purpose will be to tournament CM arch 16 at • featured on "Hello Dali!" Monday at 9:15 p.m. on KCET. Channel 28. Festival Week receive the Almanac, Forum Fifty magazine and the viewers ' choice of Alistair Cooke 's .. America" or J acob Bronowski 's "Ascent of Man." The viewer may call the sta tion (897 ·0302 ) any evening from 6to10 p.m. during "Festival 75" to pledge a membership. The Renaiasance Pleasure FalJ'e is sponM>rtng a ~ contest for amateur and prof essionaJ photographeri who have .. captured the essence· Of tbe 16th ceMury u created at the Ptauwe Fal".'' • Platt°' will be Judied la thrte caf.41orie1. blaiiid 'Wblt.e p~. color prlnft ._3$mnl colbl' ides. k pbo~.may enter no mo~ tbaa p&oto1 orslfdeifin each eate~. • · All nta must 'be a mblimum 8 bJ 10 Jnebfl and f:t't..~~ed on pCllter Gr matte bolard. G jiffie IQ( Wt best In all cateaorJe• a $100. A-it and aeeond priJes in eaeb-~ueaory are ••net•· respeciivet1, with seuoa Pllf&es to tbiPai~ ~rtbird and fourth priza. ' ACADEM ¥ AWARD NOMI NA~I ONSI .. • • .ALllERT RNNlY "" AC'IOll •• BEST SCREDIUY .BEST~~nc ~·:· ~ ~..-'Jl..""'..:r_ ' 2 AC.ulMY .AWMO MOMINATIOMSI AlT CA.IMIY llallrt.lolno P\#IA MIUY • SOUlC~f .... DIAHANN C.AUOU. JANIS tAlL JO~IS BARRY GOLDWATER SP!AKS OUT In the DAILY PILOT ] A~= t,~Cash """°' ..._.., .... ' 740W. wa.. St. Costa ..... c.fifonU Fridly, Mlr'Cll 7, I P.11. FAEE'ADMtS. 10·3 .PM STEREO SO.UNDS OF THE HARBOR acquaint Orange County 4 :30 p .m .) will be. __ :__ _____ __._ _________ -'---------.::...-...----------------------;----~- TV viewers with the wide featured in a three-hour,.,._. .. ~..._._...,.,..._...,.,..._.,...,., ~ ........... fR~ Fashion Island Newport Beach ' variety of p rogr a ms, special. • STUDENT BALLET PROGRAM. local and PBS network. ..Festival 75" serves now being offered on the as KOCE's first cam- e o u n t y ' s p u b 1 i c paign for viewer mem- television station. bership. The support Among the special pro-group is called ·'Friends gr ams to be broadcast is of Channel Fifty." and ··Music in Our Schools." the funds will be used for a youth symphony of extension of community local school musicians ser vice program ming. that will air Thursday at· W1th a SIS contribu- 6 p.m. lion, the viewer will re- Some of the ''Festival ceive a year's subscrip- 75" programs of special tion to KOCE's monthly note , a r e Vienna ma gazine, ··Forum Philha rmonic (6 :30 p.m Fifty." Saturday. profile of With a S25 contribu- opera star Beverly Sills tion, the viewer will re- Featured 1n a presentation pf "RAGGEDY ANN and RAGGEDY ANDY" r, 2 p.m. Ir 4 p.m. -Msch 16, I 975 at .... Forum The~ 650 I 09IM Cm.yon Rd. LC19*1 leach . Featuring Gary Jonn Rasmu5sen. Kenaall R1chafdson and Shawn Daywalt (students of L11a' Zall Ballet Center). D1rec1or Caroll Stasney. Louis Frazier and Vic- tor Moreno will dance tile · Pas de Oeux · from Swan Lake ·• Also appearing w111 be Mr. ftog~r. R1ttner. mag1- c1an. 1 <6 p.m . Sunday) and a ceive a subscription to AdMl11iof $2 for A......_SI for cllikhw 9<>-minute special "Of Forum Fifty and a copy For Ticl&et lteser .. ff..s. cal Mn. llla .. 1;-496-2541 Pure Blood," on Hitler's of "The Orange County , • ..,. .... ~...,..,....,._.~..._ .... ~~ .... ~~ ....... s upe r -r ace theory <8 Almanac of His torical 1------------------.....i...--1 p.m . Monday). Oddities," by Orange Other program s in-County a uth or Jim elude the eruption of an Sleepe r . Iceland volcano (10 p.m. With a $50 or more con· Tuesday), "Grover". tribution, the viewer will NOMINATED 8 ACADEMY INCLUDING FOR AWARDS BEST PICTURE/SOUND . CINEMATOGRAPHY SUPPOmlll ACTOR "'THE Tl.AC...-Ill l :lM:~ ·"'Tl,, WITH THE TUCHY" lltJ J:ON-.l0.f:40 [ BAM•Y ] GOL 01V4TI! SPlt\kl OUT In tlte SPECIAL MATIHllS WB>. I P.M. Sl.00 COMTIH. SAT/SUM. 2 P.M. -AMl>- CAHDICE IERGEH PETER STRAUSS . '" "SOLDIER BLUE" ' ,elW.POltT . 673-8350 ......... 1 ,..... ¥.A-s...z...-. DOIOTllT CIWCOlH PAVILIO"-MAT 13 Un JUME 21 The hilarioua comedy star ROBERT MORSE i'fl 36th Annual Season OPENING tvtAY13 A Tradition of the/Jest in Muslca/Theater HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS W~THOUT REALLY DYING Br011tlwaf'11 Trl1tle·Crown Mu11ical Pulitzer Tony N.Y. Orama Prize Award Critics' Award M111ir a.d L1rira l>r Book h FRANK LOESSER ABE BURROWS, JACK WEINSTOCK Dir~rte<1 .,, 1H WlLLIE GILBERT MR. MORSE AMllAllSOIC THEATIC-lflMl 10 tk1 AUCaST lJ . Back on tu stage for t he llrat tiln~ since hu triumph in "The King and r YUL BRYNNER in A new musical co .. t.,ri1ty JOAN DIENER OOIOTMY CMMOLH PAVILIOIC-JULY 1™'AUCUST1& T he radiant singing-dancing cbmedienne NANETTE FABRAY· I stars In XoJUledul 1Z11111 First presentation by the Civic Light Opera MH•ir 6, B""li br LEONARD BERNSTEIN 1¥irs ,,, JOSEPtf FIELDS and JEROME CHODOROV amv COMOa ..... ADOlllf IMEI : , (ban<I upon tlle1r !)lay. "My S.111er E11een~1 r - OOROTIIT CllAltltH PAVlllOl-SUT. 2 tk1OCT.11 A romantic. couple •tar aa a romantic ~ou~ Robert ' Carol GOULET LAWRENCE a1 King Arthur n Gueneve,. Ctno~lot M111ie &11. FREDERICK LOEWE SEASON TICKET PllCESfOR ALL 4 SHOWS AT SU8STAJITIAL SAYINGS A Season Ticket la fOf' the same ... t on the aame nl;l'I\., matinee tor each show. Please r~ue.t only SECTION <I.ired. Ordel'f Will h ftlled eccordlng to the date of Nteelpt. __________ ....... _.-.... ___ _,, .. • ' . . . . , . . • Frkf!f, March 7, 1975 DAll.YPl!XlT •i ,. • ~ '). • ,. . •• • I • • " ... • , ~·· .. ·,, .... ~ .. . .,1 -~ • . . ,\ • • Well, we're .pretty sure you•re a · hard working kind of : 'person who doesn•t throw money around foolishly. When . you buy something. you want to be sure it1s a ytise . ·-urahase • • • that you1re getting ·your money•s w~rth • , • that it1s something you and your family wl'I enioy for a long time ••• With thi.s ki~d of smart thinking, we think you . deserve a New Car •. '· " . . '· . . ' < New cars .are safer. You owe • • provide safe transportation •. it to yourself and your family to 'L.....,1>l>"!IJ" • . "' • • .; !Jo' ' . , . Your pr~ ccr, costs you money each time you replace worn parts, tires, battery or maj°!" r~air. ~oney which makes your ccr worth not a cent more when it's traded 1n at a later date. . I . . ~ -· l··t:t~ioit has. increased the value of your present car •.•• It's worth · · fhcin you think! Get an appraisal at any on~ of these dealers • 1 • ' soon. .. , . -. ':1~954 ' . 1975 4.4 ' ' r .· ',. • • • • • t ' • ~· THEAVERAG.EWORDR . . HAD TO U.IOR AT HIS.JOI 5.1 · ... MOimfS"i'O PAV FOR A STANDARD sm CAR . ~-~ . . . . THE AVERAGE WORKER· 'JiAICES ONLY THE PAY OF MONTHS TO PAV FORA STANDARD SIZE~ . . . ,. A~ CHIYSUI PllllDUJll cr"t•• AiolHC; 22t~ .... CotteW....4'-ltl4 IAllll IUICI ~: c..nw ... t7t-2IOO comu tllEYBIT " CM•r~t1C ... 1T.-, . 2121 ...... ...... c .... W...54 .. 1200 COSTA MESA lllSllll D._C....&T,.._ 2145H.,._.llN.. c .... w ... 5404410 • • •I • llOW'S IHE nME 10 CHECK .IHE YALIES . AVAILABLE AT AllY~; ONE· OF THESE DEALERS CUY1£1 ll0111S IMW , 201 w .••• StrNt. s.... .... 11S.:Jl71 ' DUNTON IDllt FordC11"S&T...- 2240 s. .... Shit. s-t. AM 14 .. 707o . 1111 FllOUlltll llPOllS ....,.c.;. . 9621 ..... ,... ....... .,_... .,.o-.:• 5~·7777 ' . . • . 1 IWI l.fl1S IMPOITS. T.,....Yoko -lt66H.,._.IMI.,. C ..... M9M64MJDJ · Bill MAXEY TO!llll To'yoN.c .... & Trsk:I lllll lffc.lllMI.. ......... 11147-1555 Ml~~lllA ........ 2150 ....... lt'"'-c .......... 4M700 • DICI MllUt llllllS ..... 12o!ti ... w..,,.. ........... 1.11p ' . . nSTAFSOtl i.nn:!lll llaY U.C•M-• 1 c.,.i 16100 lffc"ll'f'&. tt.t. IHdl 14J.1144 HOWllD CHEYIJUT Clle'IT'9ht C91'1 I Tn1ell! MocA ....... & JI It I 711, Newport IHcll IJJ.OllS • '" . . c..t.t .~~· ' . ., .,.. . .; .. , ..• Ai~ . • ' ' \ ' • • MISSION W1£JO llllOITS Mwc ... leM-ft .. 2170 I Mwp•rite P'lcwy .. Mll .. Ya.tolll·l740 • llABllS ClltlW: "-"' 2600.....,.,.. .... d.. Cot .. M-. 540.flOO .NIWl!lllT Ol!SflN D..._.~A"•lOMtO M~,.._&J.....,_ ..... ,.... .... lll-1100 ' 't ~ l1I PANIS MIZlJA M.-Cws&TNCb 200115. M..c:llnhr ......... 750-2141 t NEWPOIT IMPOITS lrifh4I L., ... d-f .. I .1. Lot!t.,J ... ..., 11oow.c-1Hwy .. Ntw,.... 1Hcll 642-f405 OUNGE COUNTT Ylll.VO Yoh·o fl' 2025 S. MOKlrlntw, ....... 1so.2011 THEODORE iOllNS Riii· ford C•r• & TNClis 2060H.tiorll ..... c .. toMn11642~1o DAVI ROsS POllllAC ··-2410 H...._. ""'- Code MoM 54'4017 .SAlllll£81Cl WALLET IMPOITS IMW 21402 M11r9Ul'fit~Pkwy., MlfHoll YMtelll-2040 SANTI IHI !INCOUI MIRClllT Lincolft-Mwcwry.copri 1101 H. r .. ,mi SontoA10 547°051 I SHOllCll[SI AMCnEIP AMC·JHp 16751 hocllll.d., HIMf.hctelll41-1DMo SUNSET FORO Ford C•l"S & Tnicb 5440•Gw .. Cio,..,.ll"f'd.. WH~lltr6l6.4010 UlllVllSITT OLISlllBILI ow.-116M-H ..... CiMC 2150H..._,..._, "c ......... 540.9640 WILSON F81D ,_.clin&TNCb 11251 IHcll,....., ............ a.u11 MM MlllND illllll &:MS Eirc lllll1r L t ··' Shih lleell t:..!I. 11oow.c .... ...,., l How,.... .. oc11645"-l 102 \ ' I ' • ' '·' • ,. . .. .. • jl i .. • • ; -i • ., • f l ' l I .. . DAI. y "'-OT .. -,. """"""'-• ..,_..,..,,..._,.,,net .. . ..... ,. ........ -·-· :; -: ::\~~~~::.'.: ..... :~~r ., , ... f ,._ ........ ,_ ..,,.. • ...,, •. -·""-& ....... ,_ ........ , (• . ....c~·-........ ~ P UBUCNOTICE PUBUCNOTICE 1 OISTRICT'Ni -·,,,~~ .... ---... ~ .. PUBU CNOTICE ... CTITIOUI aultNHI HAMe ITATUA•NT n. lollowfn<a per-sons are dol"9 busl· -AJ· HAltllOlt CENTER STYLIST, DOD Hertler atw., Cftl• Mast, CA~ Paul J. ICltur. Ute s. Rosa,~ AN,CAtl107 Wllllam 0 . Wiiiiams, 1700 ~ W.y,No.S1A,CMtaMaw ,CA,.._ Tflh 1M11l11tts 11 conclucl-4 by • ..-ral ~f1n«ll\lp, WllllamO. Wiiiiams This lla'9fnanl -I f II.cf wftll IN Cou11ty Cl4"1l of Ou11~ C:-y °" F.bn.tary 10, '"'· sw..•Meit ' SA ft A LOT 2 story fixer Upper. Priced well below market. Seller 11.arted upgrading just to be traGSrerred. 1bia heavy •hake roof home baa #UL pote1u.J. ' tarae ··bedrooms, wtth 2 bathL P-rice aod terqw are ~· cellent. Just ~erect ll $4S.9SO with FHA & VA terJnS. HOl1H COSTAMISA .LOCATIOM · LOCA110M · LOCATION OMYOUlmMS Dover 4' Wittlcllft Qo need for ••to· All 1ho,1>- p1ng n .. rb.)'. * .upcr de-, luxe muter .WC.. Slyle -PURI 8LEGAHCE~ Cl;· '\ Tfff REAL ~~TATERS__, EASTstDE FIXER UPPER Great little starter home ·---------or rental oq huge bu.Uda- MIDICAL ILDG. ble R-2 l?t. BrinJ paint I Oo/o RITUIM brush with ct\ecltt>ook. S Co De Only $31,500. 646-1711. Leased 'lo .8. · pt. Opeo Eves ol Pub. Health. Trade for · Newport Bch. re1id. or ll)C. prop. $17,500 LA WSOM RIAL TY 67S-4i62 ~ Walker & lee Heal lstate SJS,7IO Beautlrulty uparaled home with 3 bedroom.a, 2 bath. DecoralOc' touches throughout. J ust in· troduced into the market this week. Lovely pauo. This home may be Just l•--•------1 what you 've been wait· Cusfont wlSTCUFF Vil.LA $85,000 an g for. 545-9491 Quality Elegant & spacious one story convenience set. in ~ Walker & lee Real lstate MOHIY TO LOAM . . on homes, all areiu. Protect your credit. call 962-7751 l 24 hr. service. l BKR. AMAZIMGLY LOW PRICE MESA Yet.DE a bunga low type al· Big 4 bedroom, 3 bath. mosphe re. Completely .. Almost Custom" hom private and rmestquallty with features only found thruout. Gue on two in more expensive beautiful patios from homes. Formal dining walls 01 glass on eadl rm, separate eating area side of huge living room. in kitchen, huge ramlly Pres uge. maintenance r oom , completely re-tree h v1og at its fm~L decorated mter1or. cov-Appl. Ooly. 646-7711 ered pauo, professional· Open Eves. ly landscaped grounds. Jo\111 price just $77,500. Excelle nt financing available. 546-4141 ~ Walker & lee Real (state For so much home! Huge separate fa mily room has Swedish fir~place + MESA VERDE bar. Extra large formal RMS ~ d i n i n g . Err i ci e n t GI TE COATS& WALU\CE homemaker kitchen. Al Take advantage or lhl-; REAL ESTATE . INC. .kingsize bedrooms. 8 1 motivated se ller who will corner lot. All for only ~~~~~~~~~~ pay loan fees ror you to $48,500. Call now to see. -purchase this beautiful 4 847-1010. Agent. OCE • ~FROlllo.IT bedroom family home in A" " JUSt about any method .._.,,.RIP• l.!V INVESTMENT PROP. you choose · VA, FHA or ,i• ~ .. on a DEEP 13Srt lot. Conventional. Mes a CORONA DEL $175,000. Verde tor only $39,500. MAR NEAR near s hop ·g, Balboa Bette r take a look. Fe rry •. main bay and 646-7711 Open Eves. Qua flt:~~~~ Built l. _m_o_;_•_·c_o_•_s_R_t.EJ_•_IL_TY __ • •. ·• Jocat1on tone btock from 675·6670 beach>. private rlnanc· 2919 Newport Blvd. ing and view. One of lhe few legal triplexes 1 Corona del Mar, Prime }>rOVertY for winter an summer. rentals. Buy it and watch it apprecia in vaJue. $127,500. Call for appt. l o see . 673-8550. . •. 'OPfN Ill 9 • 11' FUN TO 8E NI(( 1 ' ~------' THE REAL ESTATlRS J HEWPORT IUCH $40,950 CalJ us about this im- maculate s unny bright townhome near Hoag with closed double garage, 2 BR, 2 BA and lovely patio. 644-7211 Agt. $79,500. Owner anxious-submit your terms! 4 Bedroom • l! story ho~e in prime location. Excellent. for entertaining formal din-. 1ng, & huge family room w I fpl c & wet bar. C811 545-!1424. Associated South Coast Brokers. 1002Gen1ral 1002 A COMPLETELY WALLED COMMUNITY OF FINE HOMES FEATURING QUALITY, SPACE, SUPERIOR DESl&N AND LOCATION! •Orange Unified School District • 2900 to almost 4000 sq. tt. ol living area • Atrlums, lanais. massl~• duel flreplacea • Vaulted and beamed ceilings • Floor to celling windows • Optional gas or electric appliances a Three car garages • 9000 to almost 14,000 sq. ft. lots • Countryside atmosphere w1lh clean air. Only mlnutet lrom beaches. major industrial centers and freeways. • end 5 bedroomti 4ba0. from '82,950 Sales Office: 10?45 Sherwood Clrc .. VIII• Park, C•lll. Telephone.(71•1~-3832 Open 0.fly 10 AM 'Ill DUilr 11• CYM '"DllAWl.lr-YllW New fantasUc 4· BR modetw !bonus rm. lll)pressive ~story entrlhcei lge LR & DR, wet bar, most invit ng spac.' Kitchen. Top quality cptng. $139,500 ' 2111S..J ............ teWPOIT CIM'tH. M.I. '"4910 ---------------- NO-FAULT CONDO Only in. The Bluffs can you enjoy such catefree living. We offer this popular Trina plan, with S bdrms. & 2~ baths, lge. living rm. with frplc. Dffered at ooly $$4,950. A !IDTURE WINDOW ... with view of waterfall, that will lull you to sl~ep. You'll be enchanted by this custom bull( home with every con· vftl.lence. incl. a large htd. & filtered, · 'very secluded pool. 3· 9drms., family 'rm., formal dining tm. & 3 baths - also, 2'h car garage'. Profess. ap·. pr aJsal suggests price of $112,SOO lllJH 26 YI 1\5~ B AY AND B EACH 67S-30 0 0 ) ' I l I , l • t I'" ,/ f l Ip ( J r"J (\ I ' , r'\/" I I ~ _. DOVER SHOllS Sandy beach is the setting for new, custom colonial home w /5 BR, fam. rm., formal di.I)., aircond. $295,000. • DUTCH COTIAGI MIARHARIOR 4 ~FAMILY +pool windm1 t,rce lined ~l~t. Courtyard enO'y. Mam· motb ENTERTAINERS ;,1VJNG R OOM. Huee SUNKEN H01''FBRAU area overlooking SPARKL1NG BLU.E POOL. Huge covered patio invites you into Dutch country kitchen. Family sized bedrooms. Giant irregular yards. BOAT + trailer access. Near Harbor & Marina Schools. Full pnce only $46,900 . take advantage call 842-2~35 O/Pff>I ru 9 • II s fUH ro 81 Nl(f. ~~-~llM PRICE RB>UCTIOM TRf.PLEX in excellent rental area. Each unit has 2 bedrooms, separate patios, quiet area, but close to shopping. Only $59,950. CALL-644'7271 ... 2121 I. Coaat HiCJltway, Corcana .. M• PIOPEITY MANAGEMENT flff NAtlOMAl MULTI UST Sll YICl '°::"V:: .. C.H .. , -• .,. nu. OI '"" l llt(llUl't ··'""" ,. ,. "", ... . -UIJ~~IN ~ H1'~TIN l11l LIDO ISLE Large 8 BR, 6 ba. home beach; 50 ft. lot, shore $295,000. Will consider trade NEWPORT HTS. • I 3 BR -plus well bult G...,... 1002G...-al 1002 • on sandy mooring. hdwd_ floors, lrg. hv rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -R·2 Lot -Needs de· --'REA~TORS----- 2 ' CoaOHA Da MAR 'HUG HOMES, IMC. LIMDA ISLE Lovely custom home, 3 & den plus family room., pier/slip. On broad ex- panse of bay. $650,000 . LIMDA ISLE Beautifully decor. 3 BR. & den, on lagOQn. Ramp & slip. $255,000 BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 3·11 Buy,,d .. 011v" r~ B 675 6161 G....-al ·1002 G.....-al 1002 .............................................. SPANISH TRUST SA.LE coraung. Call to see. E'AREL WALKER 642-2668 CB HAlfO. BACK BAY SEVEN HOMES AVAILABLE IN CORONA DEL MAR . WITH 100% ANANCING . -To qualified buyers. Gov't. insured CALL us FOR DETAILS HARBOR INVESTMENT COMPANY REALTORS . 673-4400 2865 E. COGst Hwy., Corona del M• .. 14LIOA PENINSULA Bayfront beauty! Pier & slip. 4 Bdrm. Many amenities. Asking $295,000 567 San Nicolas Drive, Suite 102 HACIENDA Fantas tic 3 br, 2·~ ba, split level. pool. lge $1750 DOWN patio. Top cond. Estate ----G--___. 10021G ___ _. IOOZ· BEACH say::. sell ! •D•ILYDIP ~ ~ SPARLING A A ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Getteral ERITAGE REALTORS 1002 G.-ral 1002 ···················~··-...........•........... * BaJboa Bay Properti~s * O ceanfront Back lay ~ 3707 Seashore . Sh<\TP 4 BR., 3 ba. Di x Duplex, will condo. Frpl., patio, trade for more .un; pool. Try $42,500! ... its. Sl05,000 eqwly · 675-7060 675-7060 MeH V~ . Corona del Mer Very sharp m.s1de Oceanside of Hwy. &oul.3BR.&fam. Sharp deluxe r ~ . I n x l n t dupleK-. 3 & 2 BR. n e l ~ h b o .r h o o d ! $106, 950 ! 675-7060 $58,500. 556·8800. lB REALTORS . (B I Gttteral I 002 GeMral I 00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• became a LISTER! USTHS make more money! USlPS bave a:1ore fun! USTBS golf more, vacation more. and enJOY life more! usnas are specialists Who average $20,000+ per year! Maybe YQJJ can become a LISTH too! Call Jack Peck, 540·5140 or 842·4455. Newport Center 640-4050 South ot the border style Rt::AL ESTATE Can now become your three bedroom ranch 833_3548 rouune -instead of a house. t-'1esta s11.e living __ dream. The pool 1s not and d1n1ng rooms U 1._..,. Ule only extra. it s at-GetMral • 1002Gewral IOOi Gourm e t kitc hen : IFYO A .... , tacnedtoa lovelyMJ::S.\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious mai:.tcr and GOT A BARREL Vb:RDE Pacesetter. :l FIXEA ~omethinCJ Special! ch1ldreos s wtcs. Wall 01 OF MONEY BR, + lg family rm. 01 · . u,,ER Great family home on a glass LO llnely manicured fered at only ~.500. Call qwet, Costa Mesa street~ gr 0 u n d s . Terr aced But you want to start out now Priced at $23·000· All 1ge. kitchen & farruly rm. gardens. Extensive patio take a gander at this ~ FHA or VA terms with arta. a ildrms. plus cov-work. 1''ull price ~.soo. Hunl1ngton Beach J UPERB min. down. Seller t o ered~at1o 'forentenain-Don 't d e la y. C all bdroom. It needs only credit buyer for costs m Fu• some tender loving care Q M ES lieu 0 (. pa mt and repair. mg. 1 o down VA or •¥' 963--i>767. b 1. 1 h terms. Asking$49;900 . . _ to ea 11ne airu y o.me. ~ C.mpu1 NB 549-8655 For this price why rent·~ oPfN,,19 •11 ~wNroacN•c:f• Bargain priced al Just I---...:__ ___ _ cau ~~~l~~~ £: . .L~ol~~lo ~ .•. :1HMl*I ~1i':~~;':.,1~'l~~~t 963-g;JJ6 FRENCH L2...=_---··--!!::" ENTERTAINER'S ----CHATEAU DELIGHT ST ARTER! Beam ceiling beauty in WALNUT 2 STORY BEACH Home lntheWest exc1u::.1ve Ne wpo rt POOL $32•900 Cute g r een one -low Heights. 3 lge brs, 2 SQUARE priced and good buy. frplcs -1',rench doors Formal double door en· Costa Mesa. 3 Bedroorru; overlooking enclosed IRVINE try to dramauc Living & sep. works hop. As· Spani~h pauo &-garden. Here's a great home to room. F ormal dine. s umable loan e t c . Warm&cozy 1am1lyrm st.art your new life. Two Huge ga rden v 1 e w i:il.950. 642-43.'>3 ceramic tile & parquet bedroom s, beamed ce1I· k1lchen. Artistic open PETE BARRETT . lloor::.. Many other cx- ing living room. Cozy st.airs sweep to separate tras. Call tor appl. k1\cben,.central air con-master suJte. children's -REALTY-SPARLING Carefree Living Super sharp 2 bedroom beac h Condo located close t o shopping & banks. rh1s e1dull de· velopmenl oilers 1c1sure living at 1ls best. Won t last long. New t1stmg. ~ll.~. 6404161 diuoning. All yours for win g. S ec l~ded 22· 642.5200 615·4060 HJ::ALE::i'TATE i25.500. C~ll 673--8550. BALLROOM s1lled party -----......_ 833-~ !~:!:!!!!:!!!~~! Ol'fNIU'l•llS 'UNIO lllMCi· room that overlooks ~--~---:: --- walled courtyard. Hurryt--------•I EASTSIDE THE REAL I ESTATERSJ for th1i exceptional Hall of Fame BARGAIN BARGAIN! Call 963-7881. BEAUTY $4000 DOWN Don •t .Delay On 5 BR + fam OPfNlll9•11SFUNrOe(NI(£•' FAMILY ROOM This great farruly home PENIH POIMT .v··: ... ··.. 1s immaculate & e:olor Hard to find 2 bath beau· Nearly new 2 s lory, 3 ~. ' ~ coordinated. IL features " ty all dressed up. Lux· b e d r 0 0 m , 3 bath , :~}:,, .. , .... ~.,J large pedrooms, 2 baths, urious panelling sct.s oft For the large grow1n~ family at a µnee you t an afford S4 5,5u u on secluded culdesac. E1- fect1 vely landscape d. Close to elementary school. For appt. e n c I 0 s e d pat 10. 2 ~=:::=:::=::::::::~===::..1 oversiied living room large hvmg room. Fam•· fireplaces, electric built with ch arming slone Jy pl11y room overlooks ins, garage door opener. COLLEGJPA.RI( fireplace. Family room easy care yard with cc· Priced at ~12!1,000 . $4_2,SOO or formal dining room. m enl decking-bring 642-2253evemngs. d neat kitchen w1Lh gas your boat or dads truck Ho me in prime con •· bltns. Enclosed pool in olf alley access. Ease uon. 3 Bedroom. 2 baths sized back yard. An out· in for S4000 down -steals + luxurious cabana & standing buy at $43,i.50. don't last. Call 646-717l pool. Lar~e living rm w I All t~rms considered. oPf.N ru., · 11~1uN ro& Nl(1 • 400l~--JM C.Mf'~ .· .. ·::-·a.ii. associated 8P0KEAS AfAl TORS 1 ... 1'1 \A ho •• "'11 '"t-' DELIGHTFUL HOME SPECTACULAR VIEW Cn Harbor V1ew•lulls. An imm aculate four bedroom plus large fa mi· ly room home. A view r e aching from San Clemente Jstand to Palos Verdes Peninsula. The much coveted sandpiper model. Lovejy lalldscap· mg -easy to care for. C;ill now 673-8550. .• Of'f.N Ill 9 •II HUN f08l NICf ' ~T!H[REAL a;.~ER!J tpc. Plus tam11y rm. ..141 Hltns. Snake roof. Owner 546- is movm g out OI area. 646-J!IU eves 540~1 Lachenn1yer Re~ltor OVERUD I 11 12 I I 1--~H__,A,...P-....C........,I T"-11 ~. I I I 11 _ 1 ~·-A_O_F__,..R_Y-r--il i 1 -Mlly -•• 10 • , .. ,.., I I' I I _ nighl club where there was no --------. -}-? ( ~ •• . ~ .. ~ THE REAL ESTATERS · ----- FIRST CHANCE OR L AST. 11 sold this weekend. Sl4,000. reduc· uon on Jrv1nc Terrace view 3 BR with pool. Outswndmg corner 1oca uon. Now only Sl5t .uoo. Owner will help tmancc. HAL PINCHIH. RJtr. 2727 E. Coast Hwy 675-4392 ' 1002'G.....-al 1002 ······················~······················· WATCH THEIOATS- FISH & JONATHAN from the spacious living room of your five bedroom Cape Cod home. For mal dining room, patio plus sheltered terrace on 45' frontage. Pier & float -Excellent fee value $250,000 ill macnab I Irvine ~r realty . DEYUBO I "---1 -, ---, -,,.......,..., --4 G Complete the cll..clt.. quoted • -by ftll"'9 ... the ""tkn9 WOtd .__......._...L--1--.&..--L~ "°" de..elop ,,_ .... No. 3 below. llG CAMYOM VIEW LOT Right on the golf course just waiting for a custom home. $79,500. · "BA YFRONT LOTS . FORSALE BY~DER11 2 choice bayfront lots in Bayshores offered by The Irvine Company in Fee Si mple. .. Minimum bid $1 30,000 and $134.500: For information regarding locations and bld~lng c~ll : (R52) • -~·~~~Etmm 'I l I I I I sci:..aeh A~ in Clossfficatfoe 1010 311&FAMRM Country Club Dr (M.V.) CM ·m-9636; 213/486-6215 S/S 12·6 8122 lndit¥polis Htg. Bch. 536-6697 Oaily·l2· 9 Anita St. Laguna Beach • 494-8558 $85,500 4 11 & FAM l.M :J. Kite Dr . H.B. $TT.OOO 963-7031 Sun 12 to dus • Pool . . Waterfront Waterfroni&Pool ' llG -IEAUTIAJL-ILUFFS Warm 3 bedroom home with family room, formal dining room, 2 fireplaces, view of park and bay. lots· of mission tile and much more. $105,000. SPY•LASS SPECTACULAR 4 bedroom family home like n~w; forever view. Separate dining room. Large master suite, pool size lot. $145,000. Let us show you. Ila CANYOM- llAUTIFUL IOIDEA.UX 3 bedroom. highly upgraded, 1973 price. Great location, big lot, air conditioning. Corning cook top, some view, privacy. $118,500. Quick occupancy. MIWPOIT COHDOMIMUM Sharp Uaree bedroom, three bath condo .near Hoag Hospital. Full pricejnst $49,900 terms. DIAL 644-176' Z 161 st. Je1 ..... Id., M.I. A COLDWll.L IAHKll CO • . \ SOLID CHA.RM You know most charmers in Corona del Mar are a little flimsy ... well this one isn't! It's solid charm! Over 1400 sq.ft., 2 bdrms. 2 baths, an, ~ean ~iew, a patio and small yard. Its 1ust nght ! and built like a brick charm house! A new listing of Marilyn Hodges. UM19UE HOMES Redtors-675-6000 2441 E. Coost Hwy .. Coroea del Mar · . G~ I 002 . Getterol I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ill ·macnab I irvine ~ realty FINER HOMES FROM $81 ,500 to $775,000 PRESTIGE IUILDIMG sm - llG CA.HYOM. Excellent location. Excellent view. Fee property. Charles Arnold 642·8235. (Rll ) OCEANFltOMT DUPLEX. Near Balboa Pier, Parks and shop- ping. A 4 bedroom -3 bath unit and a 2 bedroom unit. $176,000. Harriet Perry or Martha Macnab 642-8235. (R12) MEW LIDO COHDOMINIUM. Bayfront condominium on sanc!y beach with view of the channel. Spacious 2,100 sq. ft. 2 bedroom + den -single story. $215,000 Jeanne Newman 642-8235 (Rl3) NEWPORT CAPE COD. Lovely 4 bedroom & den w /huge kitchen and low maintenance yard. Bike to beach. $81.500 Lynne Rothell 644·6200 ( R14) DOVER SHORES VIEW LOT. Located at 1900 Galaxy -approx- imately 78 X 92 X 147. Fee land at $87,500. Amy Gaston642-8235 (Rl5) IMPIESSIVE DOVER SHORES. CUstom 4 bedroom w /62.' of bayf ront. Rosewood & teak family room, formal dining, gourmet kitchen, breakfast room +pool &jacuzzi. 45' dock + Fee Simple Lot. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 P .M. 214 Evening St ar, DOVER SHORi:S. (Rl6) . . IA Y .40111 1JUACE. Prime front row view residence overlooking.harbor and the ocean. 4 bedrooms, 41h batm, pool. Low maintenance grounds. Work or hob· by shop. Appointment only. Tom Tumer642-823S. (R17) UDO HAClfMDA. Single story on 60' lot. Large living room with open beam cemng. 2 bedrooms + convertible den. Triple garage. Cathy Schweickert 642-8235. (Rl8) • ! OAILVflLOT frld!y,M-7,197~ .... 5-,, 1 ,.' For,~ • ", ...... . ..... 1 11;1!-.,.For,~;I.-<, ', --:.=:~ · .. •f.·•~.f•••••••w••••••• "'''' ''"'.J!!· ,,,,,,.,, ••• ii"''''''''''' ••••••••t•••••••• ••• ''''''''''''''"''!.''' ••••••••••••• •• .,.,,, •Of~Wf " l'wS. '• · •'-W. , , C""'1Meao I~ Ull ...._. J..., ..rHt 1~1 liiMli 069'1o!C-,i._..1076· •itt•••••··-·· ..... .._ ·-··········-····• ••••••••••·•-·••••••• ,,,.,.,,..,. •••••••••• ,.,,., ,,, •• , • , '-"¥'' ., l"r-~--1-'"'•• ,.,. ... ••••• ............ ~.. ••••••••••••••·••••••~ ., ..... .-..... •••••• Cltl:11.WM• IUIClf'Pl .. M• I CotteMue • 02.4 MESA VERDE-brln1 f• 1\ ~ ~ · ... '.J • 9Cl•t•~'-• DUl't.D s•M•Ctnaanl: ~···•••••••••••··~··•••••••• .. •.••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• p 111 nl , hiirnm'er &. •. ~Nit~ T .,.....,."OUW , ~ ~ 'IYO~ • M ~ILJ •· VALLEY •••ty Mes;..ue·rde '"''"'''· m 1 c 1ubllout•. Oll(n•ra orlhr•!*louu . , ""· ..• 11111o'.J'1f I~ • Bdrm<l.o., •Bdrm do. -R~,.11,. ·~·ooco; · IWIL O I """° t'\. 'SIOl'Jf,' HH, 3 bedrpom o·olt\•t· Juu Dram-.uc D aoe l!ensit "" P II corn•r 01 btl"-Y1r11 ~ -• PRES&n'S HA . ASiumo '57.000 VA bloek• rro~\;O.,o Hoi;ne,11e,µed iJl 40 fdr people 'lll\11> bmt.olf~red.RJll.llUOJIOI MKflO& $43 950 i..o;jn wnh $SOOO, ca11h. na ye tiou t l-not.tie; Ac ,........_,-_, prOvidee jc)y the cood (life." Se•1hot•i1S-t5TI Truman 811'*1 SHORECLIFFS ' $5UtJU1• -i'",:1•r• .... opUuu. home .... nd I .. "" mli?it.ribspbere auri• s-ep ile!il kEWCu}LombyOwntr.4 PeleKallOdl ' 0 S . 'fi . . ""1'. , ............ of. -• • I t d . p b 1-~--pin lleJSY ..... .. ... TRADE FOR HARBOR VIEW wner acn tee [ I ~ f•"•• •••k• t'OOI, bw.I<· 10 m10. s 1:1.m w y e 0 ••'!' BR . 3 8•, ~-· ,•· -Charming two bedroom, den home on GI FHA.I N IMJMI lnkllchtn~·ithhug~<Hn· Beach and~T n. cell. + ht to ~e1l 0.~faoH~iu~ew~:i~n~ C.!'J!Em:~~.;:.c;,!:mt! :4ln outstanding lot with mature fruit • erms ~•w l Ina: urea, decorator I.his spbc beauty ruajt,c frp)C ,. TbQ . tr.s1U,tioo.&l.5-2'l.18 bch & a hoAS. W,lklO. 'trees. Owner wants a four bedroom Savi.> th1>uMt.nd.! on this ---~~~rp,tlna ;t,ndhdr•pe6, ~ature.s a 2 story flo.w open11 from '•n..•-owner, •'''<Br. Be_rt••. Henry, Realtor, be11 ut1ful home In the -tWater,and .Ui!COV· . tert~izo entry tO .... ......., '"} -home in Bren Harbor View_ As klng pre.s ti,we tite~11 ve1rde ered Oi1t10. Price<!, (or terrauo ent.ry, lrg Uv rm dln rm or· :tba, den. Reduced . cin-e.... / ~19,000. areu. Newly painled 111 J BEDROOM r1411•1 SA1••1i..S!1 71~0w11Ut& famrip,clro-.eatlng 11cb' 811 w'/hi s111,buo. 67:1 ·2933/ S.J•• TRADE FOR 1 side & ou t GIU'dcn patio P 'erffll; 11c UdM11 ; •. • \ t13-8T6U CoplstrMo 1071 darkroom: Enlr)' hall t-0 WESTSIDE t~flA. Call ~11 or barf bal". w.all.i; ol wood beirns &~'or, Y OWNBRis br .. l YI ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• J>utstanding location with white water hug e 11 v 111 ,w room . S56-7U35. •1-• window·s~ overlook· thru walls of glass vac,ant. 1,~, _. Hbr . 8yOwner 2Br,tbaCondo. iView , this home is a ''remodel natur.a1or1ckl'1repl~t·e. New aold ~rpet,~ • . , &whic:hopen l-ofree--Hih E 1 Ui Poof,gMr.<t mltooce&n. rapecial ''. Owner says SUBMIT ANY d1n111 ~ room. P•'.ivate f:~i~Yr':i!.~:ii ct'!~ J.qfrrustic1 dec~s fOrm depk where Th~a .C::Jf\o ' ·~~: $24,~.it.a0-4336. ·tDEAS. Asking $138.500. m3stct 5~~1jj~ b.:ith. and as.suiTie S253. per mo. 1" trees. · A gracious ~ood 15.r a )>o '4n d . Mon lhtu Wed 215 ~ casit•• CapistranoT'Wnhs TRADE FOR ""PAPER"' TAAIELL. REALTORS Paym e nt. Full price ~taircase , to ~str rhls hotn ~ has BLUFN ··z·· plan 5 BR San Juan :I bdrm, 2 ba, ·Large four bedroom family home with 2!155 11arbor Bl \'d. s.321~ .. 900. UP.to;~ HOUSE~at/Sun suite + 3 fanl br's. 3BR. 2ba , A /C, wndo, fe&.. SS,900. dn. frpl dbl, gar, elec dr.,as. ·pool, needs ''T.L .C .... but what a place J, '· '· By o~·ncr. 4 b~ :! ua , TruJy an eleg 2400 w/approx 1-SC>q sq Owner. ti3S--70t>I or f~':,eed5~'!ss~;.t.~~: for a family to enjoy the good life. 3 B d 962-4471 1':~)5'6·8103 F·1n . .ur. bch. i.SJ,SOV. . t. Im med occilp. 4.94-6404 . Owr1ercYJ-?ll9 -Owner has $40,000 equity and will con-e rooms f;~:~..:.!j~~ Whitehorit> SQ ft .masterpiece. Call to view -OCEANFRONT bowie &J -"==-=-7'-,-:-:-- Stderpaper. Asking~.500. 2 Baths. h~rdY"Ood Priced for immed own er anxiou s. ga r . apt. for aale RY Owner Must Sac.' BO. ·1 BLlJE I' \VE" owner Coll •••• & home for VA loan ot TRADE FOR MONEY 1 oors, ~, ·" p I J • HUMTIMGTOM saJe $68,900. . 931,900. wknds. S.•--· · '67.500. 1'10 Down. Exel·. PUOL. L•'<• pat"' 00 -acuzz1 SE/lo.CUFF .. ~ ;Divorce forces the sale of this super Quie1 :.1re<·LS3H.~. Call TOLLE R&A&.._TORS. SIMSOO ,· BIGCA.uYOH ,' local . nr. Ocean . two bedroom, den, canyon home with RoyMcCcrdlr $48 950 4 L u .1t:u r y honi~s '0 " 4!16·3Mll. t:hvo5f lrom. Close to BEST BUY l-"-'-"~-----:--:-:-1ots of vi ew and two pati os. Jn great RIMltor ·l810Hewport ' Gu1fCours1:artdRat·que1 Laguna leach · 1048 t191"aMlpe4 ·1052 BROADMOOR s-taA.. 1010 'tondition with 10ts of c u stom Costari.1esa.>41:1·77~ Save Thousands Club. ca11 now, Century ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••ot•••••••• tmmac.1ts new4aR.W&:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wallpaper. Asking $l!Mi,OOO. 21 . SJ6-754l. poollot on Cul·de·s1tc. B1..-.u111tul College Park -----Call 675-7225 hu111c. u\\ncr sacr1(1ce! BY tiW~t:K, a niost un-APlc~reyilnclow Va1c0a,n1tm,s;J~ood- l'i.:tur .. ·:.que ~rounds usualcot\'J&dcn .~h;ik1,_• of waves on the shor~ IEALTOll 11ROU ONLY 9 LEFT \v11h plants, trees. l:ug roof cottU~e surrounded and iust ste1l6 from Vic· SalebyOwner.00-&WV $1200 Mo••• You IR Puyments less than rent. £111.!:f5U Full Price. '2 Bedroomi>, 2 bathll , bltlns, H 10. WQOd cabineLa, 1''A heal, air cond1lion1nc. w1w cptli. Cull Vilh1 ge Gardena, ~·8321 CALL US FO R A FREE ESTIMATE OF VALUE \T,;\LLEY REALT)T A BERG ENTERPRISES CO. ~neral I OOZ Getteral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• VA Priced ;ii u11ty SJ.5.WO, tfus ·;i bdrm µuol home already lu.1:> Its VA ap· Jilraisal 1n . SJW1ng s he re, ~umm1.·r ·:. .-on11ng <111 th e pool and Lrt--...-~hadl•d MESAdelMAR 4BR lb3 with separiHc n1.1,;ll•r S llllC. S<H'.~IJU CAJ~L nu\\'. 5.Jti 2ti6!J C::SELECT ..... TPROPERTIES )'11 rtJ are w;.isUng. Balboa Island 1006 L-.Quai~ .... Plac9 . . Praperti••. 752-1920 MOO OWUlSt HIW alACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• JDt:,\L .l''anuJy honll· or Ln\•estm\ L;.: r•~lln~ . .J Or, i ba. 7· ,,. , <L~-.un1ahlt· Joan. $7~ •• )\111 Con1a1·1 ov.·ner tl37 .>Ml•• V.A/FHA Repos L1Ltle lslan•l ~·11ar1n1ng .1 l 0 C t B<ir.nl. luls ul wo1o<! & u1 . range oun y ~tone·, 2 1 rplt: "'· Keys inonice ill /\1Jalo11<· Sl:!.'i,1~.\! WORLD ltobcrt MuH.,r Ho:a lt~ REAL EST A. TE ti7J -7\J.'tl Specialists 1n gov1,_•rn · men t 11nancedhon1es ~ Capistranohoch 1018 I 5.'!6-7777 c;1JI anytime ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br, 2 lla , H:! z. ~18.500 b~ STEPS TO owner .. 1~:.i -81 1 1, M.'i.i1. THE BEACH _v_i .. _V_t·r~1,_·--- t-1,·e the good hft:. As· Corona del Mar I 022 sot·1a11on maintained ••••••••••••••••••••••• µrounds. One year ne~'. 4 BR. 3 IR Condominiums Ne•t to Runainq Str~am . nra r Newport's Upprr Bay. $40,950.-S44,9SO. 345 Uni•~Dr. (J us\ ot r Irv 1ne A1·c i 548-7223 $42,900 Mesa Del Mar Owner Leaves Area l'r1l'l·d helow market value . He re 's your r:ha11r:1• 111 own thal lll';1u11tu! hrime you'\•t• •11 1<.<iy~ 1<.';111 t1,_'<l bul at a ~mall µrtl'C. i'ark·l1ke ~artls. c11closed 1>alio Central air 1:ond111un1ng. µar:i g.c Uuur upent•r :Xatur·;1I l>r1ek f1re11lacc-. tan11ly room, :1 t11g liedr·oom,,. :>.:lr:1 ha th,., l.ull'IY brick patio. 540-1720 p1"-'l v.1111 Jacuzzi, party l>Y J>1nes.Jl ot J<tcuzu 11001 tor1a Beacn, this J JUSTLISTm pauo, brLl'k 1enc.1ng .. Eo· & prof. ca r e t ree bed rm, 3 ~a hOme is one and will sell !aSt! 3Bk ILUFFS CONDO iry halt lo O\'Crs11.ed Ii\" x<i rdens. lndoor/outdoor o/ a kind. 2 Fireplaces+ OCEAN VIEW. Many Upgraded 3 BR, 2'h Ba. 1ng room .. 1 bedrooms living 1n comple te pa t io & decks. Red ame1utlesinthis private Ask'g$79,000.()peol00f· plus d e n area, log-priva cy. 8122 In · C;1rp et, R eal1ors guarded area. Only ter.Owner,640--llW. hurnang 11replace, new du1,napoils, s.JS--®7. 497 -171.il ........ i59,500. 1•:.rpc4. & drapes. Enjoy the Good Life- 540-1720 E¥1ERALD IA y Coll 493~5 I 3 :rp~:~. ~~aym& ~~·nl~. ~oblle HOfftfl TNENEIGHTS T •RBELL,R"•'TORS YOU'LLLOVEIT Spcclacutar views from 1 _________ 1 ~-Sol llOO """ ~ &tu:.t beauliful in La thi s 4BR home on R'fHV EW b Lovely yard ; guest apt. r"'lill"' e 2955 \1 .irburBlvd. L' •· d I culdes a c-l fpl 's, ·1rg NO I , y owner, ~.S.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • • MESt\ V EHOE ** :J1"1U Coun1ry Cl ub. Ot><·n Sat S1,1n . r:\l'"!17!;1---9G:Jti n1· U :l,\'S 213(~;16-621 5. t.:ULLt-:GE J'ARK J Hr. FHm Hni. :! Ba. dbl lrp!. block I.\ all near ne v. (·a rpet s, S 42 ,5 u u 11\\ner/brokt·r •·o op 112 l'nnct·ton 5-!H -.::.9-ll ucs1a ivrana al ~1v;u. 2 story 380RM, f;im rm GEM-SUPER Ocean view, No. l tiW + S(I . ft. 4 hr, ;i•,, k1tl'h, huge Iam r1n, w /fpl , Zif.Iba , cus lm • Laguna, El Morro Prk. Oa ., lg. J'am . rm. w/lrpJ. t'orml din rm. si79.500. crptg;drps thruotn , lrg 120·FTustin Ave. N.B. N 7 bc"-1.••. ilv rm, din rm & OPEN houso Sat. Man::h cov·d pat io facin" E . o. lti , pvt. , cnr. • Hth 2 to Spm 16U5 .. REALTORS 642-4623 lot, lg, concrete deck·g. drnette. Cust. cpt~. & • Ldscpd for E·z care. d "'m•tald li"Y W/i•• t'lrepat & BB•\ rps. ttiruout. 3 car gur_ "' .. u • 1\tany dtx. umenit1cs, ly< ·o•Eu s•Tt••~ 1·5 · ~ LluGo .--" "' ~ Home is l'1.4Usq. ft .. 2 br, 11 /uutu. door opener L~. " ne w, mint cond. Priced 135 4Sfh•~~ ......---. 2 bu, lg. kilch. w1bllns. eusL cov 'd. put10. pro1. REAL ESTATE to seU al ~.200: 29132 Super duplex, 2 BR. Must sell. Reduced to lndscped. & mainla1ned. 499-l:i97 4~-80HG Ken~1ngton Dr; IUl-9167 nds · kl & h each, w1th1n block o f ~.!f5tJ. Open wk • l ·ti !'<prn rs · many ot er t.l t h g "all'. 494-5037 eves & cx1rns. l'crlect. <1u1 ct E11-1EHALD ilAY i{et1re· NIGUEL SHORES oce a n ; 'f ns , s ll "' luc auon. 9!k>I Ki le. t)r. m e nt hm . :t Jg . BO, carpeting. i'low vacant wknds. 2b S87 "'"" 4~t 7117· f llere·s the one you·ve ror new owner. You own Dona Point I 026 <>pen House Sunday l2 to a. ,"'N. -a a I. been waiting for. 3BR, the la nd. itl,!},51.A.1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dusk.S77,UOU.Owner. -'----------20a. lmn1aculate, priced Gii WAU(ER ~rnt1 for sole 1300 NEW OUl'LEXES, Di:in a J'L lr>o111 ~litl.\-!50. JJ~31 !'.1 a1~1ga .. \gt -l~-:W31 J'i.1 AG:-l I Fl(;l'::"'IT <)C t-_;1\~ Jl,\RB()R VU. Nu. GBH, :1 car gar. 1Jag lot '" 11cre Prof. lili;l'pd. SIOJ.5UO. u~ Ov.'nr/ .'\gt. Ph: ti75-; 11.t Ef Toro 1032 .............•..•...... BUY A HOME . to sell quickly. $77,500. BEACH LOVERS OPl:':N hous.e::>un. '91arch REALTY 67~200 tJpcu feel 1n this exec 9th 3-5pm: 2Jn2 Hoban1---------- beach residence. Loads Bay, La~una N1suel. IALIOA. ISLAHD 01 glass w /\'1ew to LINGO IAYFROHT ~p;1rk1111g t ilt· pool! REAL ESTATE GU 1''t. frontage on So. Custorn n11rrors, pape r-494-8V86 499_1397 bayt'ront ; 4 bdrms., 3 ba. 1ng & decorator effects. 4 PRIME --,--c·c:-:----:--:-::ol plus m111d ·s quarters. BR's 1ncldg mas1er suite Mission Yi•jo I 067 Prime corn.er localion v.'/ va nity ·& conve rsa· No. Co;1st vu. Old brick ••••••••••••••••••••••• v.·ithunsur1Jassed viewof t1on , Pauo k1tl."lten, l'am1· lf)l f'. Hm . to ;idd a lnd By o~·ner-Sv.·im . pool ;i bay ! ly. used b1·1ck J'p!c. '!'hick J1:~;1! 11111l : I '~ blk v.·alk tu llr, <!Ha, 1''/lt. cent. air. &··toasty ''eplS thruouL~ D11•crsCO\'e.S62,5cAJ Li ke n e w thruoul , ~2.:JIKI_ You pick term~! ·53 .. -o p · c I Ukr!it.il -5511. '""~""~~~~~~~ ~ ,_,;, . r1n . on y . ---I· l-"'°--0-1-10-·-----I OPEN HOUSE , JONES REALTY INC m- Open House l·S Sat & Sun ~UN O/\V 12·5pm (714)873 0210 64~ ANITA ST. 25oa 'rree Ave. 3 lklrm. 2 1~~=""07_--=.,_-~ 1 OPEN HOUSE SUH. :.>u7~1l Sp1nrlr11t t'i r.~t time oJicred. lla. air cond. home W/ 2001 w.e.iooellwd. Deluxe :i bedrm, 2 bath supc rass.umableloan. ~lleedl·CellfonM02HO • •••••••••••••••••••••• fOH s11 le 22 unit apt bldg, .'llnt location. 1 yr old. SJ~.000 . 979 -3376 C....tory /Lots/ Crypts 1500 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Cl-IUICE cemetery lots. 1-turbor Rest Memorial Park, very cheap. SIU Nor~·ood St. Redla nds, t:a. 7!t2--4690 Commercial '"°porty 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NOW LEA.SIHG OPEN HOUSE High secunty pn vatc con1mun1ty. 'J'akl' adt. an· La ge of low. low pnt•e- ~ust S36.5W' C<il! nowt see 847 -tiO!il. Agl·nl. DupleI wilh J HH. 2 Bl\ l'l'n\al TARBELL. For th•· l>ll l'e 111' .i <.:ondu So. of Bays1d1: Ur. ~·ith REALTORS a nt! h.it.·c ALL Lt1e i\C'w 11:.lin~. Attrat:tl\'l' I stor~ . .t BH home. 111 ~tuu·e Crest. Llo!e paneled J:in1 rnl. 1nany ex1ra:-. ownl'r miJ1•111g, v.'ants <re· t1on . :s54.5oo. Dre.am llomes lamr!y home 1n 11n -lleait:stalc mal·ulate conchuon . I.i v· 586_5111 , 71 LINDA ISLE Open Sal & Sun 1-5. 530IJ sq fl of wonderfu l waterfront, 5jlrJ<!i Ba, J frplc. rec. rooln.. t'ier for' 55· boat. Brk 1724000) 645-1200 New commercial fro m JS<° sq. ft . Plenty of park- ing. From 336 ll. to 14.0tl ft. and more. Prime oft' l'reeway location. st(ong growttl area. Leasing of· rice on site. Open house IU-5 P.M . daily &Sat. 9·2 P.M . t:all to preview. 17 141 75<::-1700 . I NV t: ::;1·~1 EN 'f DIViSJON·IKVINt-;. TlfE REAL ESTATER;-; :,VETERANS Ttred ot getung the run around ·:·."! /I \'Ou have ~RY q ucslions ~bout buy· 1o.g a ho1ne V:\, call Lhl' i{-A Experts at World Rral Estote spec1a1Lsts 111 VA hous· rng. As k for Veteran ~oun selor . 55ti -i777 , anyumc. 1 ELEGA.MT c' POOLHOME Spacious two story 1n lov· ely community. Raised Cotry steps down to plush l;l\'1n g room. Extra large (ormal d1n1n~. !'iuper r.,am11:v room . 4 big bedroo ms. You must see this 1m1naculate home. Qa ll now 847-tiOl Agent. · hc-;1ut1ful natural WOOi\ 2955 Jl:irlK>r Bl\'d . h1:nt·1Lts 111 this \\'r\111\.1. J 11'.'llU re~. Only Ofll" yt·iir \Jell r n1 . 2 h<>lh ho11lt.' nl!\\'.C.:all644-72llA.l(I. ,.. __________ w , pru)'. landSl'lll-:. Sharp!Sharp~ cu::.rt)1\I "''tin·urk. 11.1v, •DISCOVERY• ur ,,1·houl:. & ::ihop11g . (;rl'('nbronk, 3 lx:drm, 2 ~ .. )OIJ. Ca!l !!Ji 12(}3. h;.ith horne. ·2 Yrs new , -- l'p ).!r adcd thr11out Founta1nValley 1034 VOGEL & BABBITT REALTORS 644·6056 1n)! rm & d 1nu1~ rm have i-----c--c ---:-~ high beam celling, st on<! M•wport BeaCh I 069 t'P, well planned ••••••••••••••••••••••• k1tl·hen, n1l·c level ~·<1rd w /11·1111 trees, protected patio. large surl(:leck with Ol•c 11n v iew, l ca r gara.ce. sg5,5W. Westcliff U•i"'J 3 Bil. 2liA Dream Hou1e. Magn1f1 c1enl is· x 40··1---.-P-O_R_>-.A-L"'E • Pool with Oazzt1n g ~Ji-1 e1ous 5 Bil t-'ronl lh•u,,t• v. lh:e lain rm. formal rli111ng & lgc 4 I.la l Bl< l-t1:ar ;.pt v.• lq,ll-. sundeck. bllln~. t"Ll' '\r &al."h. \our lerrn:.' ~hu~·s like a nl(Xh·I. ~c;1r ••••••••••••••••••••·•·1~~~~~~~~~~' South 1·0:.i st Plaz<1 s hop 11\' OWNER Snarp ~ br. ping. ,\lu.~t see befort· J!ol50 ,,q, Jl . Jf()mc 1111 lg yo u huy. Brok<'r lul. l'an1 rm. d111 r n1. 530-88:16. dinette 1n lg. J.ntch. MARION MILNE REAL ESTATE \Vatcrfall. Patio house, hy owneri 38R ranch style, Back Bay. Fam sz Mahbu llghung. Owner liv /~in. sunny tile l((t, leat.•1ng area .. Pnccd for huge prof maint yd, big quick sale. ~.~. l506 \rees, rftl l'or gard, entry lr\·1ne 1\ve. NB. Owner almos. nr schls/shop. 752-0460 Anytime. NIT PICKER'S DELIGHT $4200DOWN "'fhc closer you look tht'.' better I look.·· On lour .St':.1-"0ll {jUH.:l lrt'1.• llrJl'd slre<'l. Cuvctl•d t'a"t ~ldt• co,,,ta c\lt•sa . 1'111n11y pl:J y roon1 lit ~·llUl 1or .i re· g ulalto n poul li>blC'. C..:r a c-kl1ni,: firt•pJat·e. llom cmaKcrs kitrhcn. 3 bt-droom:. lX.11111 /l' dc- ::i.'iS.500. ltl'.126 !'ian lH;i~ \.168 -1:12! Huntington Beoch I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CAL CLASSIC Y u u·11 love this ::ihowpl;ice IJst1n1?, on a J bedroo1n, 2 bath mode! v.·1th ti replace and 1am1ly k1Lchi.>11 . Only 5 yrs nt•\\' . Close lo bt•ach and shop· p1ni:: with excellent 1crm ~ ;11•a1! .. 1Jh: i i~ M~J7 -~:12 1 FRANCISCAN FOUNTAIN $PA.:-.llSll llAC IF.NDA O.'l •1:1 rd ACHE l)r .~ma tic SJl i ral staircase . hu~e h1n1 rm Wllh crackling 1rplc., 1ormal din. ~a rdcn k11ch. 6l8 S. Coast Hwy. L;agun.lil Beach 494-.&58 **OPEN** SAT/SUH. 12·5 W;ilk to new city hi.kt-Norlh )..a guna duplex, Hnd pa rk . Anxiou s al>o ve Crescent Bs y 0 11.•ncr. Bkr. ~---443JI Beach; upper unit has 3 11-12-61 6~1 &12 --&108 bdrms .. ocean view liv· ..C--~----,----ling rm. with brick rrple. lr•ine I 044 & s undeek ; lower unit ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rancho l·bdrm., r,aneled living rm. with rplc. plus1ge. storage area or hobby room. yriced r11Jht lit S77 ,000 with terrruif Co.tdotniniUfftl ~ 646-62K7 For sole · 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-----------i Minutes to UCJ. $38,000. Assume l'H. $2IK mo. Mission VieJO·llY Owner, 645-4767 sngl lev J Br, 2 Ba, 1''/R, 2-STORY Ne v.· port Heights. al·,-A-S_T_B_L_U_F_F_C--d-cent. a ir. patio, gar, frpl. lidrm . oldie but goodie! c. o n o , N I "= ~· J' $49 "'""" o 3 b 2 b r. poo · .....,,...,.,. rinc. New dbl. garage; Oill J\·2 ·"""· wnr. r, a . only. gJO-QJ711. rorncr lot. Ocein vrew Xlnt. home/renttil. N~· 1;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; from upst.airs. Only schls, mkts. park. tennis l- i3"/' ,65U clu b. 532 -4543 CLIFF DR. HAHBOR VIEW HOME VIEW home: charming. r·ors~le b~own~r. b ea utiful d cor.· J, Beaut1lu!Landscape, e · new lv d ecorated . 2 bdrms .,d1n1ngrm.,love-Bed;oum s & De n . ly krl c ~e~ wt a.JI new ititiOOtl ii44 _4J!:H ONLY 9 LEFT ' 31RCoodomi ...... 'c O I t;.icht.>d gara~e ·r1s prulc -ustom un ex hi the lmh. ''oo'll "" t" Ouplrx-$74,900 '"·II "-Ali -i:i!J Bil San Joaquin Townhouses from~.991.1 Select from l Br. 2 Hr + 1ten or 3 Hr t-'rplcs. i;u n- dceks. patios. All qualH} tt:::ilures. 14 L;1 go !'lorlf' !C ulver & Un1 Vl'l'S1l y l)r.) j7!4J 1S2 -7JIJ 289 CAJON ST. U1rt.'ct1ons : No. Coast il\\'Y· to Ca1on st. \\'atch Jor signs. bltns & indirect 1lghl1ng.1 -~'--·------­ ~nac k bar & W<!t bar, BLUFFS2 HR&Den;pro· lrplc. Lovely verdant ·f·Jy decorated. ~.SOO. yard w"i th l pal1os. 644 -ltl45Uwner ~79,lJLll) Hext to Ru11nln9 S t r e • 111 , n • a r. Newport's Upper lay $40,950.-$44,950. ~droom units. Clll5e lO ,, I '" -iOecan,,,1ucu!I w.~·1 ""''•!<19 •HS1unro111·1· I' M ach. S ll7 .~. Owner ~H4 !'.f.l'J [ I ~~~c~:~~~:~.u~1!~~~~~~1 ~~I v~~~(1,~,~=~!~ ,, ® ltjl(!i\lJ : you don t hurry & see 71)4, U fiwll©!Pt!l DOWNTOWN MODEL HOME IJ:lG>i;:,Illl';'7 2 On a Int. ScheduJed in-_ !Jei1g htful J hcl r m . 499·2800 -0 • SUN LOVERS ·.-A. TTENTION! l)un yourseU on the huge ;;econd s tory sundeck, Th.i s parly home has a Narc1ssu,,. Uc itghtful JBR lba l1ome & WR 2hoi income apt . both only I vr old. IJ l'LN ;dL1·r- Ooons. Agent. 6'i3 -1Xi2_1 _ ~zy ramaly room with CATALIHAYIEW fi replace, formal dining, SBR. 2Lh Ha, J"am Hm . btg &tep down living Din Rm. 2 frplc:;, ex· fpom . Al l 4 kinjZ s ize tens ive Janrlscap1ng & ~rooms have SO.lilring decorat1n)! Fft' land by v•ulted ce1hngs. Would Owner. i l39,5ll0. ·1001 Cou bt!lieve only s.55,500? 'fopside Lane. 614-\1110 ::.ee ll now! Call 847-alllJ ~ent. OPEM SUH. 1-5 308 Poinsettia HOME + IMCOME Very unus ual wood & EASTSlDF. 3HR house bric k ho me; extra IJ::l' th bachelor apt+ !BR 1 J bd 1v1n~ rm.. rrni. . pt. over garage. As · fa mily rm .. gourml·t e 1'/, VA loan. S27ti .... h Sll2 SOii 'r mo. Call PRESl'IG ~ .... tc en. · · OM ES, 6C.S-&>46 I B27 Sal>rino TftT. -l:;o:::.::;o_::;:__::c;;_ ___ I Y t'L ce1l 's. thruoul thu; IFYOU'RE s pacious home : J bdrms., fam il y rm ., FUSSY ~ame rm., lge. pool, sun· ou lovt! thi s executive ngle story in pr1 me t::ach l oc ati o n . n1 cure corner lol. Im· c1date. lntenor defflr •terrific. FeaturelS eff1. t ent wrap aro und ream kitchen. Cozy am1l y room with eplace Formal din· ny pauos. $224,922. CALL FOR Al'l"T Wh3t a view of ocean ,ir, Jetty! ~uahty 3 bdrm . fsm. rm. & den hun11• plus fantA 1l1c gt1l''I houM> Best buy on Ocl·,on Blvd. ~lt14,.5()0 I •. One yr:tr new. Ju11t ._ ~~·~;;~;';!;;C;•;li;;M;w;;t;o;';';e;.1 0J I : EST A. TE SALE ~'i.';_~~l tG CANTON _,,_ ............... 0 • .,. -_....::;., .. __ • __ 000 sq.ft. of hlxwy CMtoMesa 1024 1 •1119, t p•ct ac•lar ••••••••••••••••••••••• olNw. M•"J •rtra•.1<1-;11 c>~~r;s s1o~s ,n...'t last IOfMJ. cal for S3s1 ~12.voo ;·4 dn c11.q ;i a,,..Mftfww .. t. ,\·lc5ll & C..:ounty t.'all lhr AGIMT 644-4056 addr1•Ss t!a. u~nr/A~I • Mii-7739, Slti-IM:ilO PATC_H·PA.IMT AND SAVE$ c•ome S42U. month l)'. tu\\'nhousc overh.10k1n.1: Hoorn 1nr another unit. main greenbelt w1lh OPEN SUH.2·5 1Jwner \VIII help hnance. 1JO<il. Ji!Cl/1.ZI ;ind tennis. I 011 Emerald Bay This is lhc IX!st pnct::d \'lalk to beach. Uroker V('ry upgraded ins ide Adorable i;h1nt-1 led coun· hon1~ in l'ollt•i.:c Pa rk .. ! 5Jti -88Jfi aotl a well cared tor try t1ome : 2 txlrms .. dcn. he1lroom, 2 balll.<i ~·1th \----------yurd. A musl sec at only brkl ~t . rm .. ~·et ba r 1n ~real tam1!y lun room. :1 c ra c•kl1n ~ 11rcpl._icc. \Veil feni·t•d llackyurd w11 h lots u! shadl'. a ll1J.:h 7''2-', 1:ontract that may be as· sumcd or only S!IOU. 11 cant lo.1 st. C.ill,-,..Ui·:lll :J. PRICE REDUCED :-1;:J.i101J d1n1 ng rn1.; sweeping CALL 552-7500 lkt.>;in ~·1ewii. AU on one $7,000 VIS.ION lt::V el. with s pacious ,,n this !'i&S showpl.ace, 9 • room s & expandabl e lt·~s Lhan one year new. are11 below. sunny patio. 'l'here 1s sohd comfort tn REAL TV deck & garden area. thh 4 bedroom, a bath. A Heil 1-h JJCompany 1£a sy walk to p.ark, 1 r1 lt:,.,I home ~·1th 1·.am1. Univ. 1•.ark Center beach. pools & tennis. I) n111m + tormnl d1n1n" lrvrne Slti9,5d0 r (1<11n . Ow ner be1ng 1..,.--~..,.,.~~~~~~1 OCEAHFROMT I r an s fer red, w1I11 Jn exclusive Three Arch i;acnf1ce below market SUPER SHARP Ba y; lhis d1 st1nctive pro- \'<llue. Call us at 714 3 IJR in GREENTREE, pcrtyofoveranacre,in· CLUSTER HOME ~~_?_;2 1~.J l t 0 r 2 l 3 air c()nd1t1oned, s ha11: cl. an 15/and & overlooks. t-'tJU HMO/IOT~ISNEW c.a rpet1>,·w.allp;1per ed. two wnite water coves. Short c11c row poss1bl~. l'heYiittr.lilcu ve home has Prl'!>llJ!il)us 1.,0 pcrly . , • 41Ul Gle nwoo.1. Agt . J Ddtms., den, l'ormw l """___Jl7"".0"EN HOUSL' dlnin1 !fc ·· taau1y rm. W1t l1 ;111 lht: Pfl\'UCY of .II ' """'--v ""' ..-"' !<1n,.:l i· tio mt: i>Jus maint '~ ~ . Sat/Sun 12.fpm. Direct a cess to phvat~ & ~ct unt.v pnJvide<l fo r __ _ l--~--~-----1 beach. »376,000. you ll1:<1ut. :iuR w/up· ,~;;,;;=----SUMhlne lrtght . 11.;UE LAGOON )lrJdi!d rrpt .. t•te. near -... 11.ndalmostnew:teome ... c ol\'(tom {nlum, Cn thl' 1,1k1• .11 Sii Coal!i l Rttlhl1_onetodlflly,you'll prim~ Loea t1on. Sl.IPl!:r Shor1:' W,ilk 10 bOUU · -be'gtacfyou did. E1ther3 eo11s11ine v1cw11 rram (!Ul'!j al !')n , Coast Vii i.age plus den or 4 Hdrm, e'f'ery level ot' thtii 3 & P/.:i1;1. tlr;1n l!t.' Dlast·s ReaJ Estate iM/fo~·mal d1n1n& & coun• odrm., J bath ocean iude r1nest planl\'-'d <:om mun1· try kitc hen. Acr'Ossstreet urtit. P riv. be11rn. pools, 1y .1,,•Atl.1urdl..1~ulsand byNk!t/AY from park, pool & tennltCls.StrJ,~ uppoinlmC"nl. 6C h ool1. Proress. SUMSET REALTORS Jandtcpd.: shows lots 01 ~ ' OYERlOOKIHG pride of owner•h lp. ~ 848-0 I 00 . IEAUTIFUL ,AU $51,500. V .A. Ter"" ovail wr --~ We ar(' orrenn.c you a-R I ..I.-• By jJwner. sharp ~1esa house Where you can an· a SUI" s ,, ......... .. Ve rdf' 3 Br, 2 Ba. r·:un joy Ji\'lllJ.: I ~~ rmles to I 110SN.Co0ttHwy.,1.og- llm Horne, C"lose to :;chis beach. 1•1·1mc area. ALL Rea fors 494•1177 & shops. Prine. Onl y TERil1S. t.'ALLl:Ml-9371 i51.9'Jo5a1-T6SOatt6. LOW, LOW • t&sza Irvine A,ve-.: Irvine 1eccpuOnal ·So. Llif{un• S:-rnPu' VaJJeyStp.Clt, Vit.lue! z .Br. Adult. Own Call llJ...8600 · yourOfi'rf. 1,15,U!ll. COLUGEPARK Beau landscaped . 3 lge Hr~. 2ha. r·11 . 2 frplcs r;,., r1·cl1<.uotl , int de ro1,1 IL'd, (,'overNI 1)al1n ,\Jao~ xlras l'r-1 c{'d Lo~ ~:i.aou t)v.·ncr U79~ 1•\'Cll It wknds. INTEREST L11u1M1 ltach I 041 Arcll Bay RE 41o19~z.n7 SS LOW DOWN SS F'or-S40,50o huy~ lh11 !<ha p 4 UUlt.\I tiome ift ~·••••••:•••••••••••••• a....,.HHti', 1050 i.:~ a1·en. cluso.: to !lhQp-~£DUCED t? s~lJ. 3 l)r, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ping. -'C~I ~ & Frwy. V/\ b~, Py owner, ~ blQ, lO S~VJ; COMMl~ION on S t'EkMS. CAl.L &: SEE, bea~h. 1Z57 ,.,;aL1hna1 •BR C6ado. ~ 1'it Ao1.'8'2-i37J ; 4f4_.:f721 :lilaft!'.UP,OOO.~l-4!SI • '1 CALL • '-' .,,;·z-•ii Newpot t Crest, ll~ K_ialo~ 9 ~ ~ t:t , 4 lJr, J Ba, M7;J mo 34S u.1.orslly Dr. iJustofl' Irvine /\ve.1 548-7223 __......... 8ltns &re1r1g1ncl. MIEALTY N••r N•'fP•tl 1'•11 Orf lt• BJG CANYON J br. 3 bu, pool & JilC UZ-zi. li13.5,00ll, Will consider trade tor HARBOR i n c:ome lot or units. Owner/ /\gt. 644-6742 1 -~--1 rl. 71EW BIG CANYUN """"'~~~~~~ -VI BROADMOOK F Abo · JI Beauulul 4 BR+ !'am: * S 11,425 * ve It a . : . Conv. Pit /Lg. Cor. Lot. sl.100. Moves you in und This 4 bedroom. 2 b~lh w1Trade For Smaller $21~. per month pays lllll home wnh fa mily room H. V. tlome. Ovmer -incldg taxes & maint. 1s situated on a prof. 644-444ll fees. landscaped corner. viewi-----------i Beautiru12 bedrm,2 bath Jot. Low, Dn. · BACK ;rAY 11ingle sdtory Condo ~ur· D, round e by spacious A 4 bedroom, ;i balh unit •CUST0,\1 BUIL.'I'• grounds and securi.ly with a fum1iy room and Hr.and New lieauuful !l_alei>. Corne to Villa1e many upgrades. Never ONB Lt:F'r-~.tliJO. Gardens at 4100 W. 5th Jived in. Excellent view. f Br, 4 Bil , Fltm1/y Rm. St., Santa /\na IO:JIJ AM l'anor1t mlc Kitchen. 2.:1 1i to 1 : JU P ~1 or Call Near te nnis and pool, Windward Lane .. I-tax.el &19--aJ:!l r'or appt.. Quan. thj112 slory, 4 bedroom, 4.•cN,o:w~•c•:.:·~"~'~'"'c·, .. ,,~....,.,,:·~:'.'..--l;~'c"~y~Lc;cm~•cl~ed"'-. ----- bath home on a cornerl o.&eae1/ iot.Gra ndv1ew. Cozy CWtssGle 1100 ., . Hid •••••••••••••·•••••••••• With a view c>I' lhe cntir eaway z Large 2HR houses, like Newporl area, thia Pool-1''1-pl"- Bd .__ ''" -.-.. new. Bdth r'1cestteel.2"" rm . 3 hath • ..,me has u Lus.n G""'•nds 1 d &-'""' apart. New cpts, drps, rorma 1ntnVll: room Low Maintenance paint. C lose to ever . car garage. our terms. '"'· 2bo + !Joo"• Rm" -)'thin g , One vacan t. Boal s1oruge. Save Com· M I A kl I-I.ow nboul a prof. de· Jl'Ussion. ,... ,5UO. i.·ee Id .• ove n now. II ni d •-I dsc · ....-~· $45,UOO. 2086 Meyer Pt cc>rate ... an .11..,.,.,, OpenSattSun lUlo4.2&!1J Open Daily. 844.~. bedroom , 2 b'l-q Por l.:hff Or,ti46-41S44 Owri•r. Bkr-. Lerwick home with a1.,---.,.---.,.---.--1 o'-"-'"'-'::C.C--.,.-ro-:c- rami ly room'! Ow ner pen tfouse-&t. ft Sun ._.._~ 2000 anxious . Lease1va11. L1k'e n ew /Iara• vi ew,•••••••••·~··•••••••••• home 4 Or; 3_ 811, P.R. Ii NHD INCOME t .752-0460 Anytime, den. Port of1 no1 Harbor 20 Unlta CM . atkl WU \/1ew ~· ~I ~ Whit· 12 Unit$: CM ~Utu'.uuo b y. Hkr . Ytil -785V 12:Unu.s,lfwyd $14U,Uoo ll&l-w4W 4 Unit&, ECfi.t ~"l&IMI I ......._.C.. >Unlll, ECM ""1,IRll a, .... -. .3UnJta ··Fixer .. $4".wi.I Buy f!; ooe•n vu. 2 Or; Z ·COMMERC. BLDG. '1t_. ba. i5d,WO. lt1A-l>Qwn. • 3 ~rm . Mp\-. Cott11 ~GE.NT •75~ Mesa. Sde.l,uoo S.c11~.... 1076 COCKTAIL ·a,r, ••l. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cil•DL, CllOetl fll' .. bull• OCEAN VIEW. brl1ht, ne:sa only or-~ill ult prc'tly • 3 BR 4 Oen. bids .. Coafa M~ IY1U. OPfO dalJ.,, ...t03 PyrMtl41 I• fi i , C.UallalitlUa.<G--.... .,, IU-1761 I• 1•1 PN~ 2000 Ma•t='-D--' ...._ ,.__.. ......., i , H ..... a •+ · • . -ue••••n•u•M••••t.•~ 1..;;.r :!~_,, · SUWtlvWYIA-.; .. ~1..,.tWF.-• UMfaA•1• Uta .. llfi1d ";~~~~~~~~~I J t . Z4N M•t ••• ••••••• ••• • ......................... ••••• ••• , ....................... •••••••••••••••• o::. •••••••••••••••••••••-.r. t M 3 2 ' • -~ •A-M4'°9MT, LAKE ELSINORE a •••••~••~••••••••~ •• ~ u•••••••••~.~~!~ ••••••~ ..... ~~~ ~~ •• , ..... ?~~·~!. .. ,.i~•.tl!• •• •u:•~i.:.~.~-~!~' .. !:.~!:!.;.. ~!~!.':.~ .. ;.tt ONLY P!LOT . DUPLixls •te•ll 40UUO', a1J Ulll, PRIVA'tS ov ... 1ara.at• l CIR&M'' beC1rmo 2~ ba, LAK84c001.trOOURd~ BR, tam tm. as.Avail ............. 3740 Ceet•Mffe 3114 c..t.M... -~ Pa~IOl&aocea.n Vi pvd rd, oh vt! ~ no br.1tv1rer. -Jlu. lam area & s-tlo, 2 car a 8r, 2 8a condo. lliZSO now. Hentaie ~ale.on ••••-••••••••••~••••• ... \••• .. •••••••-•• .. •• •tt.t. .. , ......... ,. ... ~ SDP'btl"tlfuldupl•e~ lrlr1, •JS~O. Owper . BfllNG kids •qieta:&Br, 1ar. 1116. per cno . d7~2')30orm-tl10 • S.U-lUl LOWW91.Y HAC1£NDADCMESA · JlK G.JuH •LUIUO. ull! l"rom$61,0SO es 648 -7614 suo. tncd yd, an. ~7\HklorK•~ SRCNG Juda• peu i cw, RATB .L60W.Willon.C.M. p,S. Blt.01, crpu, pool S9 500do ,. $analeaok Ylefe U67 SW Pned d -.............. 8eautJl\llGrounde · UIJO. 1171 M•ple . olficeoPen w~~ RClllc~........ KIO~ Wt:Jcome it Br. l\.'i vac:al ~ :a.:i~ ~ ................. -.... MOVE t.od:y·s'::' !Qda" .............. Adulll ·NoPas 6'5-IOTlor~'7 Wkdaysc11u'1H Gl'OYft 2700 ~~;.$2J~1~U~3~cdbf' ~.wd,pmoblle ,cr.'0 .. 1BR,3BA·l~yrold,11r pe&a~.•1~.Yd.iar J!tlr;:!~~:,~ 10 mln~os to ocun.Aur2 Br,1ha&C!pts,bttns, L •N·U31a11. ••H••0•.•1••5•:;-::·:;C••t:•• Cnc'd d ki'd r, I 1ln11e1, ramlhu. Ait. :;s4 ~o mo. FronL " KlO~ •BIO dolOk, 2 cw, 116_..11 Larf~ 1 R $175., Oaa & drpa. A~ult1. No pets. r-~lM.al•l•Or. 5 ~ n 10 aai~ r. P•lf, Fte.lr19-&G>. 1 · n,Ul~ 1"' ba, tncd rd. dbl STUDtoS&I• Water anc., Drape,,.,, $165. l»'Hl Walhn:~.· • bana Harbor 5 .. 1 750 r • · L!!~E 1 au ... totOO. carpel•. cu M&t. P• 644J--Ol76 Jn.comoffonu:s "' , HOMfflN)BS ll'reeren~I booklDofflce. n ce a Bt, 2 ba, HOtitaMIDlll •P\alllutchen stove, air cood.ltloolna, --------f!liht )'Ul' old CU1tom •642--t900• Ex.ample 2 bdrm, 2 ba&h, bltm, e.ncl. PA.do. 28112 •U.ated pool 1wlmmln1 pool rec Lr& 1 br, near 1hopp10f, ·~~~~~~~~~! norne. Central •l..t' ClOndl · 1ara1e, fenced yard2 A¥eoJda Sonae.hon. $.110. •642-ftOO• •Lawidry facilities room, waabttalkdQeN · adlt.a, no pets. $W. ca~ -uon~d. s Hcirm. + f•i:ni· C!hildren fine. lST ana Ml-Z830oraat--0661 a BR, a iiA. ire rnect yrd. •Frff utllitlea · 642--0461. . PllD! ly .Zontd&orhorses.Call , U.ST$1DI l11tmo.'nentM~. Bllnl, A1t;. Nr. Mcf'td· •Fre.Unena MIDITll......... .-------....._ Of Bkr. COSTAMISA HACllMDA.• den & Ward . .-into. •TVfrmaidserv.avaU VILLAGI :it BR dupltll, carport,~ , OWMflSHI' 963-4S43; Separate, 2 bedroom, l llALHTAtl a Br, 2 Ba, !awns I& 891-101 or 00-4>5'$ •Ber·B·Que l Bed cmldren ok. no pet:>, ~110 14 uoh pool. Walk to,_____ ba th, ••noJe "ar •• , ... , .......... Bea-.. Blvd. "B privdate patJoa, lovety evea. •Phoneservace lBed:::.,m •·Den mo.5'~-4S92aft.4PM ocean. Abdeotet owner -~ '" o • "' ~ o;a n. • far en Uy le La1una •1 mile lo ocean . '"' . J m"'t sell. Make oUer. fflllsteM home . :small fe nced 863-a316. HilLI c.ownhOUM. Won't CONDO nr. :;o. Coast '4 Bedrooms l BR, 1 BA New cpu. oc $298,000. Exc"-te 2800 yard. $245 per month. a-1-. 1..... tuut szas. mo. Ptaza, 3 br, 2 IHt, z car NO increase ln tumme 2 &:droom Townhsel . drps, .bltn. nnae & o~eb SPARl.JNO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call eves. ~-e38S ......,_ ..... sar ~ Lie s....fiOM rent Beaut 1 br furn 2400 Harbor Blvd. no ch1tdren or pets. ~ Jl (2JI di l2J ••-••••••••••••••••••• ' · · · -· . Co.;ta Mesa t714 >SSHI020 pe r m o. Mesa VerAe· E~L3~~~TE a ... MESA VERDI f()R homea for LEASE Of a Br, could be (. 2 Ba, Wffh olsttter l2tl apta S16S & $175 Sparusb area M9-1U58 .... -....,._ Newport leach SALE in the JRVJNE huce t•mlly/rumpus ra. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• Style blda, '1Vl encl aar., , ...... IJl&e · FOURPLEX ASJume e xisting 71h~ lotp of approx $43,600. No qualifying necessary. Owner wall trade for free & clear house, up to $25,000 for bi~ eqwly. 01· buy outright for fOR 'rHE 2 br, 2 aty. like new, new ·area< 1Call uat We are Dream k itchen, lte nusiutl a 8ft muat aee PoOI, uuna, lndt)', adlLS. Swra •1119 2 8R apt, fnarned cpl. o_q-PALISADES paint, vacant. Move 10 bert ,0 1erve YOU It walled rear yard. Must it! Nr Mile 'i;q. Park. 11301 Keelson Ln •• 1 blk DELUXE 1•2 "3srApts ly. 2 sm. ch.1ldren o~ Two Executives ;:~:1· .. •2115 per mo. WJLL MAKE EVERY seeatonly$335.mo. lSlU Warwick Cir . ~ 0~s!each. ott Slater. Alsofurn.Bachelor $155mo.t>48-&23 w ve mNewport 0 • EFFQ!lTto aolve YOUR U9-~ -PvtPatioa-HldPool ARGE 2 br, pa~o. ~ WorkinPalisades 3 Br, 2 ba, Oresibrool: houa,.i!1•n1~T • .;"'··-1Gr.o'!;~08U•2~•Bar nrew ~ Llflil•le.clla 3748 Nr.Shop·e -AdJt.sOnly pets,il80.7~W.Wllsoq. WANT TO TRADE home, nr. So. Csl Pina. !"• f _,' • ., ~ r, ~ • root.. ~llllled 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marti • .A.Al. !)57-il.560 0 542-W77 we have the foUowing 9!12 c a rna lion. Call Uruversity Partc, Irvine r ear eprinklered "••••••••••••••••••••••• BACH nr beach Sl6S/~, 1777 • ftl .. ...,..C. _____ r_......_.;__ __ Sir & DH+Makh owner675--0771. 512-7000 landacaped yard, air EXECUTIVE WANTED wk SSS. Util pd, col lv. ~anta An&Ave, M. NEW 2 br, 2 ba, cat.hed('al <Prop.ExchangeJ lBR 288 ,._ 11 p cond . Iii pool. A real Deluxe 3 Br, 2 Ba, pvt 1435No.Cout41M-2* M1rAptn3 646-5542 ce1rgs,skylites,l&.kltc~ A~D Rent or Lease, 4 Bdrm, ' • ..,._ege ark beauty atonly$335. mo. lake & rec .center. sec. EFFICIENCY •"'"· from CHILDRIH OI( & bdrm~. Patio, BJut,,. Den, 3 Fireplaces, 4 Ba, home. Nr. park, poole Ii ""' · overlook a. Hunt. Belt llr&D +Maids Asr,RecRm,wJCustom elem. IC!hool. ~.mo. IA sy1tem.8y:)o.CltPla1a $180 mo. $30 wk. Hld Lge2Br$17U;3Brl\.1&Ba 2226 Puc ific Ave. C¥ (Lease E.xchange ) Pool Tabfa Wet Bar, 6'0---1538; 998-2323 r,ge 2 atoey Spanish, &S.D. Fwy9'19-<M93 · pool, mall, phone, laun· $lW. Duplex & 4·plex, 2 ~235. 847 -3541 day"'. C"LL ..... gol course location. 4 Br, d po o Is c r pt d .. I . . . OlympicSizePool,Love-. maid's quarters, giant Br,!BaCando,dblgar, r y. V1LJ..AGE INN, u".7911' s, rps, 5J6-3638 eves 211 N.wport II. · .Sat1Sun 714/5484J794 ly Res idential Area . *4 BR, 2 Ba, A/C, t.ile Green Valley, poot. & 494·9436 ..,.. ~'rfi __ Days 213/4.54-0371 7H-557-7257 ~~:~£~!.~~· ~;~~~~att~il~:i::'ci rec. Kida & Peca OK flra\ o-=.C.:..E.:..A:.:N::_F_R_O_N_T_B_a _ch-.. l:E:-x-tr_a_l_a_re_e_2_B_r_,_2_b_a *VILLA HIMOS 1 1 Reat Estate ,...4 BR 2 BA $265 Cpts fm:om '100to~. mo. and last. $325 mo. SlOO $175. Ulll meld. Avl thru Ca rf:'te ls• drapes & Sun~En ' Wuted 2900 gar., 'busa'ne s~ ok: •llMTALS• Wehevemanymore 4eposit,9ti8-178leves. 6/15/75. 497 -1591.J or buJlt s gJOCENTERSt. 21r,2 .. "-"": ,46-5855 •••••••h•••••••••••••• 642-2221·646-9600 UN IV. f)ARK NO FEETOY6U untington Beach 3 br, 538-t1321 846-11111 Super·Cozy.QWet , --------·-1WAN 1 Tdto buy from owner Mo t eU' C d 38 2 3 BBRR, 21,!>•bt~.: .... • S.'US. COUITISY llMTAl.S l ~ ba, garage, nr. bch. l BR, k1tch, din. area. LA MAHCHAAnS 'fi~~~:i_~r!!~ : $73.900 W. NEW PO HT. Ocean· an n us traal zoned lot n ac 0 on o. r • • ~ a .. , .. · .. 'f'SO, SM-91Z7 Children. $275. S36-70S2 Blk ( Vi 771! S t Pl CM _. view, 2 houses, l lh lots, north of •Hoag Hospital. 2ba, dbl gar, OW, W/D. T,KE TERRACE . rom ctor Hugo, cot ace, ' Mo to Mo rental • ·nu cpt, drps, $l35,000. 645-JllW N~w c~ts, drapea & 2 BR, 2 BA ... ~/'350: IRVINE 2 BR, 2 Ba, Air, ::::.b·act.l~~~tl;~·$~~ Adulu~~.:7~hwhr CMkltett WtlCDM' sock loan + 2 l d pant. S275 + cleani(lg 3BR,2BA ... $395/$400.. LEASE Pool. Redwood patio, lease . 497_1617 or Sbagcrpt-<:losed 23:t4EldenAve 133-i (2131~_5880 . . 38drm, 2 Car gar wt LOW fee. S260 on l&e. No kids WALNUT bQUARE NEW CASTULES beaut. decor, encl. ear, 1 642~ g g G BB -I LOW tnl ra te in Central or pets. 557·9560, 3 BR, 2 BA ... furn.$350, Take your ctwiice -3 br, chiJdo.k.i28$.551-"'228 ~=s~waterpd~~oolQ ·~ARP 1 Br,d walk 8 UHIT$..POOL or West 0 .C. Pvt P~y. 4 BR w/pool ~ a BR, 2 bath ....... $295 .. 2 ba, lg. ram. kitcnens: •ff 11......_ 3600 Immac. 1 bdrm. Near c oset, cpts, rps, ap.:_"' 546-fltii!O ._,.,per mo. TURTLE ROCK ·•hag cpts, decoralor .. .,.......... T S200 pins. Swedish frplc, r""' VIEW•$ 175,000 . mcl'g. pool serv. Avail 3 BR 8 drps, prof. landscp'g.·, 1 ••••••••••••••••••.•••• Jaodwyn. 4. ""-1.~lr.employed HEWPORT adll, no pets. Ut1I pd.• P · R-•tals • 3·10. • 2 A········ $4S(), ., ..., "''"'RT~s .:.110 . .,,..,_lru"' rime back b1ty view ... , CORONA DELMAR ' w1ram. rm. &aircond'g. BR, lge yard, pauo, lc•-----------1 A A .....,., • <>'I&. '7V\I location! J ust reduced! ••••••••••••••••••••••• S40.4'03 2 BR, 2 BA ........ -CA! M ·5572 garage. E. Costa Mesa. Furn. Studio. Arch Bch. 2 BR. Unf$13S/MO All -· PLUS UTILITIES '130. 28r, separate cot~ 2 bedroorn::i .Swim· 4 BR, 2 BA, bJ•~. new . C,l:UNA OOVE · .. __._ 3269 $210. mo. 833-8690 al\.5 Heights. with Kltcheneu. · d mini pool. i2.\,000 down. Houses Fumlthed ..... 3 Bd 3 b&. f -499-1457 a(ter 6 pm infants. No pets tage, le nee , enc gar, 1 Just back QJi market· ....................... ~~g.SsGli1;is6 Lg. bk yd. $800. ~':!Ui to ~ urn.· ....................... NPT. HGTS. Medit·atyle, · · 2450 Newpon Blvd, CM child OK. Deposit. req • . take advantage! Ca ll · C"'LL SS• ..-00 HARP 3Br, 2ba Harbor ne~. 3 br, 2 ba, beam Mewpori leecll 3769 NEW BREEDAP't'S _63_7_--0_l_57_·-------' now to pre view (714 JGeneral 3102 LARGE3br,2ba,bltAs; A · _,v ViewHome.CommPooJ. C!eilg., frpl, d bl. gar.••••••u••••••••••••••• lbr&bach$165/~ olfcourse view.;~Br,im, 752-1700. ••••••••••••••••••••••• frpl, lg. yd., in CoUege •VIS IQ N •. $4.25 mo. 644~. &46-2666or64~1 .95 WK UP. 1Bdr,2 Ba Pool, jacuzzi, gar, util mac. Patio. Quletadults.' JN VESTMENT HUNTINGTON Beach va·. Park. ~5. Ms-4M92 ask 2 Blks t Be h ·1 & .... Iii Bach. Color TV, maid pd, frplc, adlts, no pets. ~00. 642-3153 .'DJVIS10N·iRVlNE. cant J Br ·Sl35. kids rorJoe te 't ol b a:a T 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• serv, pool. THE MESA, Eves 645·4411. 393 . __J THEREAL&>i'ATERS pets. 1 Br ho~ ~uo. n; MESA DEL MAR AREA. REAL TY ba~·~;1.~: Av!;1. =~· l•H 111..d 3706 :!:~ewport 81• NB, Ham11ton642·1960days. Adu 1 t s 0 n ly . 2BJdl S S $ $ $ Newporl Fwy. 3 Br.ocean 3 BR, 2 BA, ENCL'D A Red H1tCOom~pany 645-ltiss ••••••••••••••••••••••• E v1ewmob1le,Hunungton P ATIO ·D JW GARB. Univ.ParkCenter BACHELOR, $150 .SfEPStoocean.clean 2 HEW21R$225 ~tside.Nr.newup~'f MOHEY MACHIHE Beach $180. Agl. 1''ee. 01 s p L NEW Ly Jrvioe DOVER SHORES wanter. $175. Yrly. Quiet br, dshwhr, patio, Pvt deck, spacious. 1 tnplex. ~25·645-75:>4 2-1Story4-Plexes !179-~30 · DEC OR ·o'. NR. ALL BEAUTIFUL2sr.oryc Br FRONT ROW adults. 675-3613 garaee. ~pral & May. child ok. 2675 Elden, 'lean & Quiet. 2BR. New Side By Side in Great Balboa Island 31 OL s <.: H L..: • 4 2 5 Mo B ' ,_a•...,.• 3707 673-e300 C · M · Wk nds & eves cpts, drps & paint. Bilt~ Cos M R 'I v ..,. ~ · ~.$395.mo.Leaseor 180'bayvaew,5br,5ba,3 _.__ 64 5·8177, Wkday1 ·"' ta esa .enta Area. ••••••••••••••••t•••••• 5'15-6740 mo lO mo. ~. moves car gar. 4000 sq. ft. tux· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br apt, furn. ~'tmo. 642-4~5. ins . patio. Adults . .Small .Each Unit ha s al BR •26• 1 1 you ·n Le t" _, buby OK. Nodogs~l85. Separate Pauo Area · ~ ;, yr y, me · Large 2 Br home. Crpt, 1 · ase op ion u r Y home· ~ 9 7 5 · IALIOA ,..,. last mo. free. !>4S-171S2 Jndiv1dual encl garage. utihues. A~ults, no pets. slv, rel'.fncd yd. Garage. avail. 83S--O'lll. exllS3Y 64 S-6177 • Aft· 5. 1 Br apts. equipped 213f2gs-11122. Large 2Br $175-, Sgl Story, 1----------C~U no,w to. see th1 Lge patio. 675-Ull9 Adults $200. 675-l827 6 BR, 4 Ba, 2500 sq. n. <! 675--0985 kitchens . Unique loc. bu m ed ce11lng, cpts. LET US SUPER r Sh IL Winter rates by wit or 0 c ea n V 1 e w Park drps, bltns. 204~ Wallace , "'M'~ YOU ax e er. YBARLY . 2ar. Newly painted, shag Story, lge fam·rm, wet· Harbor View 3 br, 2 ba, mo 675.g740 Newport l Br, partly Ave.646-92.&3. A 5'IL $70,000 EACH l Bedroom, furnished. cpt large lot. zoned for bar, frplc, 2 yrsold. $450. sprklrs , wtr. sftner., · furn. bltns. Must see, Have at your way m lh1• DAV ID ~ 0 U R KE , ~ltio. mo. 4114-4.524. h o'r s e s. $2 35 m 0 . mo. 8 3 3 -1103 or comm. pool, grdnr. mcl. BEACH, Pier. 1 br, Ut.al 640--1)411$ aft6 ~~act 2BR. Gar. Patao. w e I I -I o c a t e d _ RL rR . Balboa Penlnlllla 3107 642_191g. 963-4()g8 $455/mo. 644~ pd. szoo. Adults. 303 E. . . <..:arpets. Drapes ~l~. No. .townho use-for adult.s 546-9950 . Ed t l-87l 2866 On the Buch, studio apt pets 0 r chi 1 d re n ·only. ----------1••••••••••••••••••••••• SMALL 2 br ·c dr Lease, 4Br, Dmrm, 3 BEDROO~. + view + gewa er. -il25. mo. Adults only, no 645-8720 · •3 bedrooms, 2 baths Look what y~u can buy fo l. ~Ly. ~drn . 3 br, 3~a. 2 stv., basemt. ~~naeps& 38a, Fan:' rm,~ mo. J>0:1X + ten~. Formal CO.-O.. clef Mw 1722 pets._.~ecase.,_ 1oa Mcr'ad·. • •Fresh. paint & carpets $53,250, 80k loan com· car gar. Lndry, trpl, Monte Vis ta Aves 552--0EMS D1n1ng, r1replace,••••••••••••••••••••••• dent>1;1 -lli6:> ~.BR ~tudio,l lh ba,bltns, •Cozyureplace m1tment. Triplex. 55<!-8666. Mam1n, S4S-tJOlll0-4PM · NEWD r· ldho lbr ga r dener, close to l BR apt all utiJ pd 5175 cpts, drps, encl gar, •SunnyaiJ.UO Owner's unit has frplc. courtesy to bkrs. . 2 ba fe~~ 1:1 w":! t' Fashion Jsland. Jmmed. Adults ' no pets 2500 B~Al:ON .HAV 1 br apt, pauo, new paint, adults, •Garderf!;etllng w/pool All g~ crpts & drps. ana Point 3226 dr 5• r 1• , ~· cp · occupancy. Avail. Now. Seavae~ Ave. · :sw~1sh trpl'. uut ~·Yr· no p e t s. U85. U43 •Full gar a gt! w1storage Live with an income + a LCICJU"a leach · 3148 ••••••••••••••••••••••• P • poo $42S. SSl-4393 644-46117 Owner. ly · $300. mo. t>13-8al3 Pomona, call for tippt. \'ours for Just :i225. tax write-ore. Agt.••••••••••••••••••H••• CLOSETOMARlNA •Coll. Pk. Brand new Large, attrac tive lBRduplexoncanal,pets 5411-6357 THEVENOOM E 979-7668 EM E RALD BAY 3 br, 2 ba. ~5 per. mo. 3BR, den, schl, park, LIDO SOUO Bachelor a pt. Mature ok ~00 mo BR d '1845Anahe1m MS~ House well furn. 3 B~. 2 Lease. 714-4964U90 pool maint No pets. IAYFIOMr ge. nlleman only. So. c;>f • '4u7 _:_31.,.., 1 : cpts , rps, range/•---------- ---------"' Ba, ocea n vu, beachs1de. • • d h h 6 .. _ c:. 56 "' £• refr1g Carpon Clean Lge 2 .Br, auacl). gar. "'"'''" tll .,115 . .,7., ... 169. Toro ~232 Lse. i395. 551-1266 6 Be rooms. Pier & Slip. 1& way. 7.r-vl . , . · . . . WHAT IS __,., u u ..-. • $1.200/MO til July l 1628 Oc · 2 A ~rno. 731 W. 18th, CM Children ok. No dogs. YOUICHOICE u _. _-. 31L ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lagit11tt1leacla 3241 D"'V. IDr,_.· ostaMes• 3724 avail. :=~~ro~~~S &l~~· 673 -77117. . 21111 c Placcent1a. --I .... ewpon 1 .. _. v9 4 Bdrm 2 Ba Condo ••••••••••••••••••••••• A ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ., • W ' ;;.J5-Wll3. rvr-• 11•nhntnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• · • II.ALTY ~~ol.J, uta 1 pd. inte r£XTRAlg l&2br;$150up.•---------- DUPLEXES l BR 4 houses from b 'h Pool & Rec Facitiues Extremely Charming 2 6 .. 5-7573 Casa de·Oro 003~ Sp. discount lo qual'd. Duplex·2 Br, frplc, gar . .-•~~umable VA I an W ' .d ~ · ~mo. 581-1045 BD + den. 2 story, 2 .. t 1 f OK ~ o ell !.~~n .. encl d. frplc's, wood paneling . . ALL UTILJTIESPAlD San Clement. 3776 ren ers. n ant . no washer /d ryer hookup.' 8:,~=~~~:s~~~~ patio._ ~l3;i wtr1elec. met. tain Vall.y lil4 throughout, many trees. TownhOuse 2 br, 21h ba, Compare before you rent ••••••••••••••••••••••• f,.~~74138H7 Monrovia No animals. ~235t m01' Huntington Beach 871-601:!:1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• North end. Yi bJk. from pool, bltns, wash/dry, Custom d6'.Signed NICELY Furn, 2 br. apt. ;>ig-lltiij ask forChns. $71,000 Oceanr'ront.5Br. Br, 2 ba, crpt/drps, oc. CoupJe prefr'd no gar.Nopets.biS-9188. Featunng : Oceanv1ew,closet.op1er. •IRAHDHEW 2 HH . P ool & refr1i :· '""50 MonthYearly range, oven. dshwshr, pets $550 mo Yrs C Ir B ·• •Spaciouskitcbenwithin· 49'.l~ti0or4!it!-371<! Delu"e., br, e n*cl'd . Adults. ~lti2. ais.J, l7li. FOURPLEXES .,., fncd yd.968-lOll lease~494-i791 . . ana ront, 4 R, 2 !12 ba. direcllighting. .. "' "I in Huf\lington Beach Call 642-7431 · Yearly lse. $500 Mo. •Separate din'g area Apw IMtlth l.Ww'lt patios & decks. Se p. Pl.. off Santa Ana Ave,. Bra nd new, $95,500 Hou.e1 Unfumiihed Monterey ToWllhouse OCEAN view a king Caywood Realty •Home·likestora&e . ...................... garages . .See to apprec. See aft. UAM. BlocktooceanS122,5oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 3 br, 2 ba. Approx. bdrms, 2 ba, frplc. bit.ns, 548 1290 •Pnvatepatios lllOVactona,CM LARGE 2 br. gar, 1 child 8~~~~3~31~~$~~ 1400 sq rt. Pool, tennis ~ams,fncdyd,lge liv/· LUXURYcondoonwater.·CI06edgaragewtstorage lolboa,ttt"'-la 3107 HEW311$29S. 0 1<, n o p e t~ .. t>:tti c NINEUNlTSSlltl.000 G...-ral 3202 c ~l , many xtras. dm area, washer/dryer. 2br,2ba,viewfrpl,boal •M.arblepuUman ·-••••••••••••••••••• Spacious house size t:J ~m1~l o n . ¥lt>O mo •. We have the property.••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-2361! '?r 842-4474, Lease. $375. 499-3720 slip, pool. jacuzzi, hob· •K1ngs1ze Bdrms Walk to bay/beach. 2 br, Lriplell apt, fncd yard, 640-1730 'Th _.. . '. . ALA UN-T'•t,,.-ask for Neille. 3 DA 2 b 2 bloc"-c byshop. Price reduced! •Pool -Barbeques -SUr · adults, l 'll ba, gar, 1ndry r I dbl d ----------e ..... 01ce lS up LO yoLJ. A ;i .ou, a, ..., rom M H d 673 7022 rounded w/plusnlndscpg rp c, gar_. cpts, rps, Love1y J lir .. 2 ba. UPPt:r~ CaU today. ww wecwiu 1HS11MC1 Immaculate 3 Br, 2 Ba, Bch, fireplace, etc.~. r. ea · -eve, Adults -No pets pauo. ~40• yrly. Refs. dshwhr, 2 ch1l?ren ok or bllns, c pLs1 drps, quaer! THE REAL , Fam rm. fpl, bltns, dshw mo. 497-2077. G29-966l days. Agent 1 BDRM Furn. ~10. 543-7558 or S48-3ti07 adult bldg avail. No pets. aa·ea , 16th P1ace, nr . ESTATE FAIR f 2~ "'"'"" lge yd. '3'1> mo. 96.1-3358 BLUFFS £-Plan 3 B" 21'> 365 W. Wi.,on "'2·1971 2 BR, "Pl, paoo, w' ms Elden, C.M. Wknds ,,., . .,. M••·•·•ed •• ,.,. 4o: 339.6133 536-255l =* l .. _!_ NTS. ~Oii leoctl 3240 $275 MOMTH Ba, ram rm, dan rm. Mo. SJO-WEEK Is·-shag. encl. gar, steps :ar::~5oo~5-ain, wkdays No pets. ~u.>. EHti-2414 ' ~~~~~~~~~~ ..... .-_..__.._ DUf'\S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• All UHL ,aid to mo. $525. 644-5173 vw-bch, bay, Bal. Ferry. Yr-Dana Point 3826' NIWPOIT a IAY.0."4. '4i·aa CLEAN 3 Bedroom, 2 ~ec8ic~ ·~it~ 1:e.~aif~!: 38R, 2ba, Single Story :~:,~~~~'a~.... ly · 645-3343· eves. 2 BR, 1 ba sngl sty garden ••••••••••••••••••••••• Retirement .. oc • 5 B hs La b h • I D Co d Pl L M . .,... wknds. 5411-837!* unit shag cpts drps IM MA • l u u ·"'· __.1~11 ac · g, u.p. al , b lns, W, crpt.s, nyon views. Bwlt-in n o. an on aJor •TV & MaldServ Avail • . . • · • 1 l:. o n., stuve ~ $125, l Br unit furn CM drps, 2 car gar: Nie kitchen. Greenbelt In 1st section •PhOneServ. Hld pool C~strano leach 3811 dwhr, l ncd patio, beam rerng .. crpt. Nr Marana. srecial!! CHOIC FOURPLEX 10 prime location. Corner lot, owner /user could manage adjacent pro· perties an spare time. As· s umable loan-no loa n fees. All 2 bedroom units 1n excellenl condition. Exclusive I llies price li74.95U. C»ll 545 tl-l24. Associated South Coast Brokers. $165Bach,smpet,Lag ya rd s, i285. mo . MISSIOHIEALTY oCBluffs.CstmDeslgned •Children&PetSectlon •••••••••••••••••••••• ceil, 1.rPI:. gar . ~~ults ~lt)(J.4ll4-ll7ll4Agt. $175,lBr,H.B.garage 963-4567 963-1786 ask Call494-07ll interiorinearthtones& •$5.offweeks rentwtad DUPL E X a Br z Ba S200.26SOElden "A · ~15. l .Br house Laguna. lor Bev or Dale resawned wood. i.S75 Mo. 2376 Newport Blvd, C" bllns 1°e yard ocean' 2 HUGE bed Su El Toro lllZ ,.... . .-. rooms. per ••••••••••••••••••••••• Uulpd,l ncdtor pet. ., BR 2 b d utb Laguna. Oc. vu. Lse or monllU)'. H.13-2431 54H·97S.S or~lll67 vaew.S26o.04:l-1155 location. Bea~ ce1hngs .. , ....... 1,_ ba, t\!''. pool. ~160. 2 Br dplx, garage c. ' ba, garage, ran walk lo Bch. n..-i.-. 3BD, weekdiAYS only. No t · 110 ~ u n ~ u ~l75.2Brhse C.M.now new. Co mm swim pool. 38A , Dra~oven V .8 . X SUSCASITAS VI EW2Br.2ba. ~s-ra~os . ~ m o . ~.t1·1 trasn I'll. ~1!5. + $195/S2252 llrhSesCM ~B.Rmho. b refr ig., washer, Im· .. eryBdlo vely l~uHs ·plan. Minutes to Newport 81ket0Beach. :>0>V . Cll'Clll g. tut!- S210. 3 Br dplx NB Hts 3 uge apt, 2d a, maculate. $4so. mo. h rm5 1·1• d ami~y rm .. Beach. bachelor & 1 .Br ~75 mo. 64o-Md5. 3 Br, 2 ba, cpts. drps, 1:!31 4.llOll Palso. kid's & petfme garage, $290. mo. Ki sok 494·9721. uge wa e pauo. (urn. Adults no pets. 2110 Co--a ... _, M• ~•22 bltns. pool, lndry. i l90 Htlltti....ton a.--L. 11_4_0 $225. 2 Br tri NB Heights mall reotal.s. No fee. 1st Mo. Brokert>44-1133 N l Bl CM '..,.., u.. -mo 126 Monte Vasta i:9 "'"JI' ~ P . R I ewpor • . ••• •• • • ••• • • ••••••••••• .•. 3 . ••••• • •••• •• ••• ••••••• • S265 2Br CdM,patio 1o n e er e a LY.L a rge O c ean View , Be B A 64;,-4 00. S22.>.J Hr ECM,familj ~2-4421 hUlsideprivacy,4Bdrm, a~n ay. vail nowonF.URN. Lge 2 BR Apt. NEWLY . BEA UTll"UL CON DO ~o. 3 Br (;M, sngls ok UTIL d 1 B f 21h Ba, Leas e, isoo, lse. 2 .br, 1 t>a. ~d~lts on· Adults only· no pets. ln· HEDEt:ORA fED J BR, 2 ba. encl. pauo. nr. overlooking oce1m-:.?BR> NEW 4 unit, 2 blks Lo och. S<!-15/S:.IOO. 3 Br Near occ · P · r, i.lv. re • 499·1213 or 714-682·529'7 IY · 53i -4ooois73-87gs quire 179'tl Rochesler 422 Larkspur. 3br, 2ba. OCt:. Cpls. drps, bltni.. l!b~, frplc. wshr, dryr, ~110. Sm . child&petok Pat tRear > ~. <!or, lba. ~~. ~15. mo. 557~ re lra g, dbl sett clean·~ Great buy, good ta x wnte·off. Jncome ~1 200. mo . M a n y x t ra s. Sll>-25711. t::,~~•3511 · 3 Br HB, COUPLE needed. 1 Br, Lease, 3 bdm, 2bathcozy A 1 I w / g arage ., • oven, D1W, trai.h t'On\l $350/~50 :!&4 Br homes. $150. Fncd yd, stv/ref, family home. Good area 2035 Fv......_CM li44-til!W1ti44-7326 2 BR,U pper, nr:sun1lower pactor, cr ptd & drpd: C move today. $450. mlh. also 1 bdrm 1 BR Furn, 2 lrg cloeets, & f airview. $200. No $350. mo. Pets OK Cltll Ne w po rt , dM , H . ~l!!AR bus. 2 Br $185. apt". Beams, wood, HAlllOIVliw queen size bed, prav. OUPLBX 2 Hr,.l Ba, 429 pets/child. 644-8775 alt. Thelma Allen, HOWARa Harbour bes i; ncd yd.~ar, kid ok. stained glass, atrium. 4 • Bedroom, 2 balha & dressing rm, extra lrg Jras. ~· < 714 I~ 6 JOHNSON REAL TORS~ IMlu=ntrial Lar&e:-.t inventory, t CAT & kids ok, 2 br, yd, owner after6.4W7·11122. tamUy room. Useof pool, roo m s, enc I. gar alter;, pm. 497-17-&4/ or 494-443lt 2100 ser v1ce 11l So.Cahr. garag•,avaal ·--~~•io. j 1 •. . d •Tro.Jcal'ool* eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'L"' 11...., •• r ... ..,.,.._ ~cuzz ... teruus courts. W/storage. A uJts oruy, 2 BR, trplc . walk t o ,... A A "'~ HOMEFIHDlltS PLUSH 2 Br; 2 Ba $350. UOO /Mo-lease. Belle nopets. t>each! l'ool. ~/MO 2 br, cpts, drµs, bltns. --------- Jndustrial Buildings, 642--838) •642-9900• By the sea, frplc, 2 car. Chase Lee 644-6200 d . ,.., . · spiral Staircase , real Placentia Ave. NB, 2600 All apploa, W&D, see (Rl9J East.side CM, l BR. comp. A ults oruy. t>.5-i.!Mll. 1rpl<.', refrig, tge patio, to 7800 sq. I\. Days call Corona d•I Mar 3222 l BR w /cpts, stv, drps, now. llMTAL' r,edec._: pool. Adlta. ~m.o Very spec. 2 Ddrms, new gas & water pd. 548-1161!. 645-3323, eves & wknds •••••••h•••••••••••••• garage, rncd. yd & patio. CHOICE biichs $165/$185 Redecorated 5 bedroom 64CS-l509 548-0ZlO cpt, drps, app'I, 2 pau06. r-:::=-=~~~----...1----------'" 613-7989 or 833-290 VIEW HOME for lease, 2 1 m1 from beach. No Utl pd, color TV Dover Sh ores ho m e . ADULTGAROENAP J'. For spec. person. ~5 SEEK & FIND~ B•••tt..ll,._.,.. • anytime. · br. + den or 3 br, 2 ba dogs. $195. 536~ C.a Us 642~319 View. $1,000/Mo Martha 2 br. ~l75, 1 br . .:1•=. ~ays: 644_~_ r---_....._...,.. ..... --. _________ . t WI/sweeping oceanvlew & M b 642-1235 R20 • ,,.. E cS7 ~ ' Lots for Hie -2200 pvt. beach accel'. ~. 4911 Pearce. Lge new3 br, Ocean View, 4 Bdrms, 2~ acna ( J Qwet, pool. encJ·d. gar.. ve_s_. : __ ;i ____ , •••••••••••••••••••••••pe r m o. Rer·s. & 2'1lt ba .~5.incl.water& Ba. Fam Rm,2400aqtt HAllOIVllW no c hildren or pets. CostaMne 3824 •ast Codd Mesa personal interview req'd. gardener. Kids & s m pet new wood & glass con-Av•1I. on tease or mo-to-64i)-273d •••••··~··••••••••••••• .. o pftQX. lt.i ACKE, Rl 673-S409or '86--04~ ok. Vacant. &l&--4008 or struct Ion ror rent or mo. 5 Bedroom. ramuy CA~A VlCTORJA "T --------....,--• """ 9 1 -~crui room, dlntna room . l SR, no cnlldr.DJpets. LO't . tW5--tJ177 a1ta MHa 3224 :ruv-188 aseaksero'r'!soranmko. 494--..-. decks & 3 CIU' aara1e. Pret. middle age or re· Adult• 1 & 2Br, no peu "' • •'red "'150 "'"2---" .... " Untur/turn rrSltlf.50 I R·20CEANV1EW ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLASSY s inttl• st(Jr)', 2 $6UO / Mo . Emmet .. .• ·'" ~ l I No.D•na Pt.soxoon. VETERANS BR. 2 BA c~. 2 ~r Z Bd. 2 ba. Den. frplce, a McKuneM4-1iaJO t!UU Nice 1 Br dplx qukt., sep S:c°:;,~~~~~pd. I 6'&-5962or tf7$-0080 Don t r ent .... you ctQ ~:s"& ~: r;:~~"mn:. :!~!· e!r!~~in~'.~ Duplex, new 3 Br, 2 a., b,r gar. Empl. edit ove; S2S Vlctorta.643-8970 .BAYPRON'r ~100 Fee own a home w1Ulnodown Bkr893-W l.. •IH-1941. · •~tc. tch. w/w CS1". ~. 35. nopetaMd-1021 Lot. $11 5'.ooo. $32,000. paym ent. No payment 8 . 8 .a1$ mo .. yrty. Fintsl 0... P.W 3726 NEW• down. Prmcipals onJy. ror at lea st 3u days. 3 R, l:Y~ •· new crpta, 2 BO, 2 Ba, Din. renced l>each. $4d·il!Ulf/ t:U3> •-.••••••••••••-••••••• e , MJ-62&1 World lt e MI. E s tate drps, frplC!, nice yard. yard,2 pauoa,f,.125.lncl, 333·~ 1 SR ft 'd GSO. 1 ~;;:......;..;...;..-______ 1 sp <'tat11ls in vetorun Dog ~~n, ~b.l gar.•· u ill.636-!Nt65. ;;;-RBhR VI · M ~. dtcor~dn Jc uUl~ewp/ M•-'•"• DeMl't, housing. Ask for Veteran mo.~ • .. ... ~.., v •• OM'-V i " · · · 1 8 R APTS · a..ert · 1400 Counselor, 566-mT, call ~ S BR, 2 ba, phvac~ , lg. Br+ den, :l ba. MonUll)'. 4Y6-0b$or"60-1142 ....................... an..vUme. , 8 EACllWALK Condo, tam. rm, sunkeGllvrm, t:U3J 5 41 ~723 or lkatlllrt•.._. 3740 new, 1.i. a br, 2 Ila, CIOM 11 deck; Ocean vlew $53$ 673-Tl:n • ,.. 81GBEA1thomerorreot, 4Bdrm,;t Ba,F .P.,fR., t o be ach. $375 mo. Mo.Aat.41M-7.ss.l t•••H•••••n•••••••••• Avaal . .Dall¥/ Weekl1 / nr OCC ~ S4i ~33 5111~7 L Hut.. 3250 Hirbor Vie.~ Montego MEN, 1m11l beach hotel. ICo.;im.-1~ aHPri' e'loftDr CM -1 .. 1 .-modul' Dr/i bo, •'11\, Rooma$22.SO...-. A.PU cttALl:T &ll•r Loar ~o nc · 3 BR. Condo. Full c.,,ct II ....................... 1.18 . 0 /R, com.poOl.1119 SlOO. mo.SM-7056 in t;orn Skl uoa. 2 Br hou &f, sin11ea, drps .. WHh r /drye r. All IBr, 28a, air, bltn.'J, cpt. Port:kuh1,g.61Ht7i .• m · f11mlhea ok. AJao ~ Br •PPll •· Pf:>OI a Rec. dbl 111r. UH. rno. ' fr" I Br. Purn. Downtown tJ.1.000. 144-1429 hoN-O ranch 1n ltei~htJ prwlgs. ~ amt Children tna-..:n :n or 84&~ BJ• ~l.nv1ett, 3 pulot, •Na. tllO. AdUlt.a onb' Cabin Bit aur. $pa J2. 2 nr. ll11cl Blly. A,i. 1''ee, ok. ~Jtmo. 1.St fc Wal + 019 tar• 86Q, we& bar, 53S-at1 {rplc • Cir 1'V Pl'°' tble, 1111* -tl-43-0 d •p ot ~100. 86:1-4741. S230 MO. LAGUNA KILLS ~. M.15 mo. N+aul i.441 ,;. --1ovel1 a aa. :t bc, 2 WMlll "'"._.. 11111MIU1--.~iaor •Li :t er. 4apl in court. Huntington Harbour Con· 1'ownt.ou1t JapanHt Have tom~lhtn~>'O'J -'m Nut to be1dl. Studios, lDYl..L.WU.i D Crot u1r.~ndp1Ulo.nopct.1,l do. a.&.W11nn.S8r,:MW'1 modern dtt ,Nopetsor tonll~lt:IUll e:::~o~ t•I br from SJU. CeMn 115,0UO. Call Mlkt 'h I Id UK S l 9 5 . bo'!,~!hp7.",..,, ....... 7.,... ~b1ldron. h l ft Jut. •l ~!.a -Cll .1 a C\lllh • l nnlt . CtOtf ror 1nror.4&M~ 151 ~1M&-4J78U .,_ o1•v ... -149 titll·oni.,.. Ml-1m ' Lile• llvtns In • Wutern movie tel 1 Old West flavor with cilY sUelt rcaturu: Pool, com.ptett kltchen with retrtsenr.or incl: Walt to waU pluih c:arpt\lnJ. A.du1ta only, no pets. ALL NEW! Rl&ht now • only • \evy few avaUable. ltJt w •• '4CI 642...;.7458 KNVORSLP aOOITIN saaa 1'c YT ODMS O IOROSNP TAOD\f LSTPIO OL ROl&ao SJ.APllTV&OIMMlL · .aa11a&AIMaOODIUNGBL Brr••&a&CAWL&081M :N lllPAP llKIST ~TALLOK aaS90UMDTIMalaPRA UG \ I G1.1uantecd no ~nt increue In 1U75 OMIEACH Bachelor from $200 %Br.1&2 Ba from$275 l Br, 1 Ba, view, $3'l() • Wmter al the beach 111 beauuruJ '* V 1ews ot ocei.n. CatalJna & Paloi> Verdes •Large pr1 vale decks •24 Hour Secul\ly • Heated Pools-&sunu •Assigned covered par mg •Additional free park.mg *Maid service avail. • 1'"'urn1ture a vatl. Open M·FJJMi Sat. H)·S. Son 12·5 Closed Wed. . Hunti tot. Pacific 7l~eanAve J.714) SJ6.1487 Mngd by Wro Walters Co W ALIC TO llACH UTILITIES P~D •Beaut. s tudio apts, 2&.:J Br. frplcs. bttns, dts· hwashers, 2 car garage. S undecks. Jo'rom ~75. 536-2579 CHEZ OROAP'fS ll234 All an la 1.2&3 BR. Priv. gar, pool, washer. dryer. Close lo beach. 536--0336 EXTRA lg 2 br. 2 ba. dlx poolside apl nr bch. Adil, sorry no pe t s. ~ltiS. SJS-8362 FREE RENTAL S£RV1C£. New apt!>. avail. in H.B. Walk 2 · blks. to ocean. 305 17th St. H.B. CAL!..536-4250 . THITOWBS 8th rioor I Br. 2 Bu. 2 ter race , slfp 11v .. 1I $500. mo. furn o r unfurn ti42 t931 or 646 H318 ----Bay It Oc."4t1UI Vww. 1 Br ti!. fpl. renced patio. pvt quie ~ !1ti66 Irvine.Ave. at Me&a ~ PARK NEWPORT APARTMIHTS Meta~ Eoit J. Acbtw . 540-1800 n..c::J ""-;/ ~ .. Z.~!:4r~ CORONA DEL MAR r 2 Br Townhouse, J'rplc, ------....--_,..,...,,..r1 from $260. 1 Br trom $205. Pool, tennis, contineptat brellltfast. Some ocean & Catalina views. Separate ram11y sealon. Ctose to shoppmg & lane beach. 644·2Ul.• onthebaY Luxury apartment Living overlookan« the w ater. t:nJOY ~750,000 health spa, 7 swimming pools, 7 liJ:hted ienrus courls. I~~~~~~~~~~ plus mites of bicycle 'ANTA ANA 2 er, 2 Ba. tr111ls. pulling, shuf. Upper $ll0. do.wn $116. 1 lleboard. croquet. Jwiior Br upper $115,down ~2S. 1 s lrom S224.50montbly; All w1encl gar & A/C. a lso l and 2·bedroom Will accept ktds & peui . plans and 2-story town 542~7 hou ses. Electric --------~ kitchens, pnvate patios or blilcon1es, carpeting, draperies. Subterranean parking with elevators. Optional maid ser'Vice. J ust north of Fashion island at J amboree a nd San Joaquin Hills Road. Telephone <714> 644-1900 for rental information CORONA DB. MAR 3 Br, 2 Ba furn or unf. ssoo. yrly OCE.AHFROMT 2 BR. l ba. unfyrlyS395 STEPS TO IEACH 2 BR. l ba, wmter, ~ 3 BR, 2 ba, ~unJ. yr ly J BR, 2 ba. Yearly. $400 NEWPORT CREST 2 BR. 2 ba. condo~ COMMERCIAL Ol'flce si.v\e, Npt. S250 associated >!RUll.ER S-RE A LTORS ~l•l", \,\ So>lbuu bl 1.]bb • .. CONYIMTIOMAL ousek eeper, Cqok. Live-in. Unemcum- bered. References. 042--9606. ATIASI . Of Newport.._. · .. . Desir es to hlre. on • 1 perm. p /tune basis a Custodial Person. you must b~ neat in a1>- pear ance & of sood cbafacter. You will be t r e q u i'T e d t o "" o r k 4 8:30-l ~3U Monday tt>ru t J-'riday. J Send ResumeTo: ) Class1f1ed Ad no. 3t2 ! C lo Daily Pilot ~ P. 0. Box la) i Costa Mesa, Ca tullll!l8, W LOAN . J UMDUWllTllS -' Downey ~-v•naa 44,W.n JUNIOR SALESMEN 11..a openanas ln it.a !f.8. Ace 11>-is. Earn ~MO otc. Must be aper d In pct week getting ntw unde rwriUnJ ~onven · customers rorthe DAlLY lioaal !oans, Pflrtlcularly PIWT after school _.wt Preche Abe & Fannie &tturdays. You m• ~ Mae. fo'or.~fu~r 11\fo, outofacbool~ya:oo.,.m. eontaet an. Bl'ehm, Jnd be able '°wort at Wl-iWl. Equal Oppor. 1easl3 daya per week. No J &$>1oyer •1&veraes or COllectln1. < • exper. in 'modl!ltd Traa11p.or1auon pr•· ctteu. apply al WiUow •aided. CaU64tcm .I.A• conv. Holp. ~'1J i!qual Opport.aahy Onnd Ave. Loq Jteadt. Emplo1eC; C.; IJ3.......utl-'4141 . ... ·: .w,w ...... ,·110 HelpW..ted 1100 HifPWmite4 7 100....,w..t.4 7100Aatt ... s 1oosC•1reslr ........ IOSOG•ogeSale IOSSMIK elMHUS IOIO . ••• •••• ••• • ···~······ .................................................................. ~··. ••••••••• •••••••••••••• iqlll,...t 1030 •••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••• •• •••• ••• ••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ' • pportunaty unlimit~. S•••tr.. WAl'fRESS, PIT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Anuques. prof. drafting WAMnD LVN ,a-11. ,/tL.m e. Looking for a carew an Interviewing, exper. Tht!StewKeWe PUILIC AUCTION ChrOrf!ega Enlarger 4 x s MATTRESSES... tbl wt mach., furn. Masc. Med1eau0Aa. Mesa sales'!-Here.it is. !:ieJJ seamstress foe garment Costa Mesa 979-1878 MANY ITEMS OF FINE Autotocus ~. Besseler Queen,Full &TwinSets SAT 9·4. 1127 Somerset TOP CASH DOLLAR ~erde ()>ov. HDsp. 661 Shaklee products tQ manufacturing at 1001 ' ESTATE J EWELR V, color print dryer 16 x 20 Priced to Move Now!! Ln. NB. PA I D F o ·R YOUR • Cent~n>t .. CM-home & ind~~ry, Con· W. 17th St. Unit H, CM WAITllSSlr ART ~BJ ECTS, AN· rotary ~50.16x20Kodak 833.9625 &~. JEWELRY, WATCHES, ""' tact Rulh Masdin, 9am to 5pm, Mon thru IARTEMDllS TIQUE:s, FINE Fl,lRN, processor ~150. l~ x 14 RUMMAGE ~le, 3;M, ART OBJECTS. GOLD, MA.oHIHa~ 4~-J534afl5 t<'r1. Mexican· Restaurant. El ETC. PHONE FOR JN-Processor $1:.l. :5ell or Great Savings on Use lOAM to 4PM, Eastblufl S l LVER SERVJCE, A .bivers1Cied wo~ lo~d. · RanchitO'ReatAtu.rant,4-09 FO. &: BROCHURE. fra~e f~r cameras or Furn, apph &Masc. Shop·g. Ctr., Eastbtun Tl''1t,~0E£.:.F. }!5~ .... ~. AN· H tg electronic 1 n· ORGAN TEACHER th . N 8 -~ 045-~00 trailer. 548·531f7. Watson's Bargain Nook Dr. Bargaans, Treasures, "" ~ ,,.. ~ flru'mentation. Modern SECRETARY 28 :st, · · v• • 545 w. 19thSt., CM Goodies. Sponsored by ---'---------..-orkshop. Ad'vanced For<.:lass lnslrucllon • S $3 MILUOM Cats 1035 AAUW for Fellowships. •FIREWOODSALE• ~ 1 1.,.~1 V E1Hhus1asuc. Knowledge If you can taJ(e Gregg WAITRES ••••••••••••••••••••••• Love Seat & Sofa. G Org. Euc. del 'ilS. cont._ anelJcs, nc. _. •c· of Music & Chords. Exp shorthand at 1.00-120 CARTE "TRAY ANTlnl IE HUGE NeaghbOrhood gar. ~. Y:r.eord. Slll-1122 raaSl,C.M.646-7l6S. not Necessary. Class wnm, type between ~ERVICE ,...,. Sia~se.Kmens qual, never used. man I TV I 1·~·stF1rewood.:...•pp1y " ~ SHOW & SALE ~.oocall ot her uems, movan sa e ; color • ree mer ~ .-~ale full & p/time. Apply alrudy formed. Part S<>-75Wpm &arelootung Orange County's Busiest, 9ti8-l~aft5 908.~l. chr .. typewriters. bikes. _P_U_l_L_l_C_"'_UC_TI_-..;;....;;....;;._ t k F ed Ch. k ume. 557-4336 for a challenge, then Dining Room. ~ Mr. Anaheim Convenllon desk. books, records. A "" en uc y ra ic en, r'ULLERTON MUSJC, F li "--1040 N TEM OF FINE 29211£.CoastHwy,CdM send usyourresume. 1 pc1c. Center -_,.. Bookcase Credenza frames,etc.Sat/::iun.9-6, MA VI S F.V. Classifiedadno.362 . AllPO.TMIMM 800 WestKatella ••••••••••••••••••••••• Walnut. 6 'X6'. ~150. cal !12tiClay,N8 £STATE JEWELRY, C/0 Da1ly PUot, HOT& March.6-7-8-9 !Mi3-20lro. I AR'r OBJECTS, AN· MANAGER TRNE RELIEFRH· . P.0;8o~1'6o • 833~2770 Thurs-Frida,v·Sat -------..Two families-. 3i8t1S. 9 ta 'fJQU£S, l<'JNE FURN .• Chapmari/HarborConv. CostaMesa,Ca9'.l.626 ltolOPM •PETWOILD• i! N~W love seats, uphol. 5. 6451 Moi'loq~ H .8 . )';TC. PHONE FOR IN· .. PET STORE Garden Grove 534-8030 WANTED: . s~n L2to6 PM. Pug , Hus It i es, m naugawe.ve. Must sell! Slater /E.dwards. li'O. & &ROCHURE. w FORM l!:R MA.RINES -:sekuhch Productions. Chihuahua, tiny poodles, ~For pair. 842~13 645-2200 ,,.a l e , ove r 21. ex-~staura1u.residentchef, SECRETARY ·i 1 •·" be Lab, peke, doxae, pat Antique sohd mahog. y.-ri.e n ced of i'is h to work under executive wanted al Pbe Ip s Has c valllan llle en 17th & ldth c English anti· bulls, cockapoo. pom. lOO M ~va ng . Fo r ma~a drop leaf dinangtable &4 Harbour Surfboard 1no·· inowledge. 642-5522. chef, Xavier Koch, apply Cbiropracuc of cs in what yo~ expected'! Do ques: Welsh dresser. mixed puppies. Stud walnut d101ng table chairs, misc. 044~003 swallowtaal. Gd con<J sso. an person at Warehouse Fashion Island, Newport !ours_eu a favor-Call library table, Wm/Mary service most breeds. 2525 chairs, sm. couch. quee 2400 Vasta Hog•r tBlwK> N&Sh1k1 Olympic Mef)S 10 l\rechanic, hte duties. Restaurant. 3450 Vaa Ctr. Good typing skills ;>48-:>d47 o~ 968-9171. dresser base, Queen Ann w. l7th at Fairview . .SA. & db.le beds, dressers NB. s pd. 25" fra me. Xlnt ~~.to ... ~~i!Y~~~li~:· OportaL1doV11Jage,N8 necess for insurance fhge~areer~~l<!~:::; lowboy, & acces. Int. 0peneves531-5027. ~c ~· dl 9J~ Por Dashes. iurn1ture , cond-~.673-4460. -.... " ____ ...._ __ ....... !!?._1._. __ _. _____ tforms. Wall tram. Part or an or a Dec. Design Pac1f1c 105 ey n ge, · · gla sswa r~s. Jewelry, ,. Pl il Do Mannes to R~1st. Matn Bal 613-5322 Boston Terrier Pups. 7 . . · .Medical Assisumt RM/LYH •/lJme. ease ca n· · 675.oJ75 · wks. 1 Male & 1 Female. G_RN. Velvet <;:~uch. g ~l~tha,ng. Sat &.Sun. 10-6. Doctors Office. Challengang position for na, 640-6ooo •· Wanted. Lave· an house A.KC shots. 494.2096. $200. Tbls .• lamps~ ea. :>!161 I:' ranmarCar, HB. 6~·6780ortl40-0267 keeper. Able t.o dnve. Jn • 552-816o ---=--------1 right person w/superv. '.SECRETARY good health. Free to *ANTIQUE* AKC Teacup Poodle & ---------•SMALL Garage Sale, 11 • Medical Ass't a btUly lot PM's fJtime. SaJes-Order Desk. Good travel. Top salary. Refs. SHOW &SALE Schnauzer Pups. t> 7 n augahyde couch . am -5 pro Fr1;-Sun. txper. pr~11trred under Creal wages~ bene. Ap-typing & \ranscriping req d. 4~-'~. Laguna Beach weeks. Std Adult Poodle. floral pattern. $9S. Als 17Hl2 Oak St. H.Q. Misc. •. Front ofc. principal· ply 1445 Su "°O Ave. sk al Is. W Ill answer MUSEUM 639--0219. matched coftee tables. hshld items. y.Call'Mon.642-4~. N.B.642-2410·£. .E. phone, take orders, give WHOWANTtiTOWORK? ofART.307CWfDr All an good cond . • . • _R _________ 1 info., mamtam busmess DRIVE ACAB! March 7 &8 <l.21.09> Obedience Classes by ;;.iv-~. t:state :sale, 4111 E · {SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Devour -Panic - Foray -Buoyed - COVER I recently went to a top· less night club where there was no COVER. • WiotCA"RECEPT. R .... 's~CCUflCU records. Opportunity to CHOOSE your hours. March 9th U.2to6> licensed profess trainer .Vlagnoha between Irvine f:U tim~. Tu~ Wu Sat 9 Day.,"•. ' lghts. Stand by learn • legal secretarial work for yourself •• be Adm1ss1on ~l.25-AdlLS Sdti-3610 . . . II loot Couch, Leak ~hat & 'fusun an C1\f, Fn. i th • "' • k'Jls ":'°'' p H t ......... Men or Chld 12 r dlt · w /ottoman, 9xl2 area lnru sun. !Ith. Anuques & 1-----------n I . Mu.at have of(,lce & time. d11·reren•'al pay. s ' . _,., er mo. un . your own ..,.,.,,;. u/ ree wt a 'U PEH SALE SHOtu;s ~roe i&ccJg slulls. Exp'd " Ben. s:JO-Jti.96. women. <.:an be sucnuy DISCOUNT wt AD York1es. httJe beauties. rug, a 11 Lu rq uo1 i.e . not so anuque fw·n. line· ·~ .. . . : . ... l>erefd. Call Fri. i to 5, Full or pJt1me. ExceHent handicapped. NeaL . Cb ampaon s ired , wall t>«--0184 orac. lin~n. & misc. IN I t:.IUOR. !'ylon plush ~._l.l2 to5. 557~. bec:~~~~t Mrs. J~en : •Sec'vs, lookkeepen Clean Appe~r.ance. \'.LS., AppiaKes "10 I 0 hold tor Easter. !16241717 3 Pc Con temp LR set. Cd galore.Jan es Anuques f.~~td~·:~ .. ;df~~~~r~. 1 ...... ;...__._ ___ -"---,-I COSTA MESA LiiitetndersAgency retired. Age2.lto7o.l:>llp· •••••••••••••••••••••••GREAT Pyrenees, male, <.:ond. S95. 644-5767 1" Hakes, bousehoid Items, yd . Pub m1rrors 40'k 01f. tr trne, no l~.Yo~r:s.. 40"~BirchSt,&el04 plement your tncome. G.E. Was her & Elec. Jyrsotd.AKCReg.Won· Poa·tCarlow.NB t>ooi<s, toys. fn & Sat. 2ti40 Avon St. NB. stab a ccts. 22-46. Memorial Hospital Newport teach 883~100 Drive a cab II hn; or more Dryer $100., G&S Bltin derful lace & disposition. . i;as2 .~ontoya off Slater. 042 _2255 60+ ,guar. Mr. Lyor:ts. 301 Yldoria.CM· CflllForAppt. a day. Apply in person, Dishwasher $50, Ken-Gd home only $150 i!Dr.GE Relngerator,lrg Goldenwest1Edwarcb. &-MSS. 642-2734 EOE Eatabllshedl96.; • Yellow Cao Co .. 1116 E. mo r e Was her $50. ~-OOOS · · l'reezer top, pert'. cond. LG. PASTEL Kermm & • 16lhSt.,<.:ostaMesa. Guar/De1546-8672 ~150 . L r g metalSAT.ONLY.lOspd.b1ke, asst'd. Chinese ru~s QD£L~ ~4 ) fema~e, full.. . 'd fo ' rv1ce·,Stat1on Attendant u~ .. -~1 · • Springer Spaniel, Iyr old wardrobe, good cond. surfboard, stereo & from lg. home. Misc. igu!~·::,harponly.Over 0alesta~hy,peOxvpeerr"= Sari &Car Wash Help; Over ~-se Refr1g.l!dr.only$85.Apt. fem hver/wht papers Sl!5 Sear ·s washer, masc. 11)5g2 Thames Ln. Collectors atell\6 Mdl ll. "''.fnt wages 54 re~s "' 0 c.J. 21 F II•· rt ll A ••••••••••••••••••••••• · .:..:-. Both g e t con ' ' · · d .,.,. 7 liB H I & Be h) · · t · Commensu~ate w/ablll· · . u ""pa me. PP' size ..-. r a · Sac~. 830-154d. works goo . .;.;,. 100 . tnr. e1 ac $00 Culligan wtr. sftner. lam~ pm. . Jy L<tgl)Aa Hills Car dauon 549-8500 Delaware HH. Like new 21J~~2 • . ty.548-5~. Wash. 24.085 EJ Toro Rd. Altticpte1 8005 Dobie 8 wks crOwt.>et & . -·----MOV li>IG : fo'urn. Washer,----·-------t'i"'1~-~11owkly ?IF1t .ALES LagunaKalls.830-4750. •··~··••••••••••••••••• lti Cu Ft. Harvest gold. s hots. Maraenburg SACRlfo'ICEPKlCE Dryer. Refrig. masc 'Al.ESMAN'SSAMPLES ~+. Houseof l''ul~r. ,, '£SU l£S AntiqueVactoraancouch& frost·free HotpoanL4Y Maestro hne.Showqual. Fane Oil Paantangs hshld1tems.Sat.&Sun. S la cks 32x32; J4X:l2 Mr. R1chards,846-645a 01' H C ..J!L .d 'ERVICE Sta. :&alesman 1cha1r. Excellent. See to warra,nty. g Mo 's old. !162-8608. Salver Serving Pieces. 2208 Vista Hogar, NB ~·SlO. Jackets, shirts, Nbw's the lime to get into Litfge co. n .. ~ ~tsExe & lube man. Top J><i!Y & appreciate. 646--9:)45 645-t878 Must sell. 646--2559 <The Bluffs I med. $8-~20. Saturday " H sa ~s p e.rsonne : ~ fringe benefits. Exper. Sib. Husky. r'. 5mo, AK<.:. only neal ,f:state. usiness per d. olc supplies man prer·d. F ull or .Antigu•Shop R.efr1~. West1n~house, all shots, nousebroken. 7 Pc. Burlington House<;arage Sale. ~urnature. --·--------~. g always been good for prtntu~g: Phone for a~pt, p/tlme. Shell, 17th & & s~-Jrosl tree, s1de-s1de, c.;>J?· Ask $125~~75-&;;!4. ~mmg rm set & hutcb. mostly new~ SOia. tub HO Trains. 3 eng·s .. 15 • But we're a small 557-9212. Newpo~ :sta-irvine. NB we per.tone. lak e new. S2~ ~700, ltgnted gun cab. cnairs. n ight stund & cars. track, bld~s & ac· mpany. If you're 10• ttoners, Barry West. Marc.h 14-J.S.lo ;;.tt>-<.1768 SAMO.YED PUPPY ~o. 4x!I pool table~. sofa bed. breaklast table ccss. $65. 830--0170. re~ted call Hacieqda Swv. Sta. Att.d Ross more Shpg Cenler SS2-15tM 5'57~ & 4 cl1a1rs-i2cu It scuba ---. e 4& I. Es t'a t e, Jn c . 'alespersOI\ w /proven WI E. Coast Hwy. NB Former Kress Bldg. 1 yr. old Wnarlpool hvy du· tank. misc games. slot lr\'lne Country Club Golf ~-8316. track record in busa-12421 Seal Sch BJ.SB. ty Wash~r & Dryer. ~17 Laoi Dalmation, r'em. lJ DINJNG T~~· " 4 cane car set, 419 North St.ar Membership. ~1000 or NURS£::J ness 11 nte r1or sales. Sltorp Alerl Girt Friday &Saturday ea. or $300 ll:lJ<es botn. mo·s Loves ku.ls Xl nt backcnrs. ~15. Lane. NB. lOam to .apm, best offer. Leavtng Area. ~ • LY .... 'S Unl1m1ted earnin gs For d1vers1f1ed ofc. lOAMto!IPM Call672-77M9aft6pm. watchdog.968~· 4~-SHSd Mar.!l&!f ti44--0ll0. " pou~nual w co.• that has work . MacGregor Sunday 10to5:XJ O'Keefe •· Merritt 11as u k h k -.-0-L:-. E--M-A-,-•• -,J-l_N_E-.-u-p-. All Shifts. Fttime. Xlnt the edge. Les Young & Yachts, 1031 Placenua. d "" mod 1 " Ches e1peake &y orea ·~g up ouse eep-SAT 9·5. Kitch tbl. chest. " " ... 11.enefll progrllm. Asaor .. Inc. l213J C.M. · range, eluxe e. ReLr1ev~rPupp1es.AKG mg. ::iellang everything. dashes. pwr mower. tv, right, xlnt cond. $200. $J.&-~5 per stufl. Ci-Ill 778 -7123. $75. 548-5927. ;il..)Wp 540-162.i! Maple Bdrm,_ Oman~ set, utensils, baby item:., 042 -2311 J>1recior of Nurses, .., .._.TtnllE Auctio1t 8015 Desks. chairs, Clean masc. 2400 Holly Ln, NB --------- founlein Conv. Hosµ, SAUTE COOi JElEPHONE "" ,....,. SPlUNGEH SPANlEL Anne 17 Century Lumps. Beaut. 5 yr old Fan Palin 1 W L V A Cl AUCTION ••••••••••••••••••••••• P UPPY t:tc, Etc. Pri. pty. Ne1ghborhood Sale: 'free, best ofr. Weber , 835 · 8 eta ve, ~::ie;~~~:;,~r c~t c~!~ •PUILlC AUCTION • uveriwht. AKC. shotS 4!#5-t556. Galaxy camqer. furn., Barbecue, xlnt cond. $.!O. • .~range. 5:!2-<i848-SQ[·l,CITURS <Dealers Welcome> 833-1840 • baby cloth'g & toys. Mar 833-J066 • J&pl belwn toam &,2pm, -6....1 NEW c t Twn s 1---------~ Nurses Aide, 11-7, exper. 644_1yoo.£.O.E. SunMar9-12Noon •TOMITE7:30,.......• . .. 1 us om 7 thru 9 . lti732 Sum-RVlNE Coast Country 't>c-traanee.JntervwsMon ..... '-' MonMarl0~:30PM Repos Bankruptcys ~nence Oog lrainer Wateroed. complet mercloud.HH.840-4~14. ClubMembersh1pl7SO+ lhe'u Fri ioam-2pm,Don 'l ~1,•e up me snip. Start i''""ad •Completelhventory• &Laquidauon Watttra1nyou1·dogoas1c w1neater. $100. ~au -~esa Verde Corw. Hosp. You l I f 1 n d it 1 n lllUKiU. St.aoton Antq Gallery Fantastic White & Gold obedience. at yoor nume. DaotSn Wall Unn. ~100. Fr11Sat1Sunday 3i!6 21st transfer fee. ~-&lM -' titil Center St. CM t:lass1f1ed. Top fMIY +'11 tr=n. Exquisite Amencan Carved Bedroom Set. ~·or .•.n•o call Pam at ,~apte Chest wmurr:o~· St. CM. Divorce, every-Electrolux vacuum. Xlent · 00 a.a• ••7..a A t ' ues American --'· .MlJ-2:!74 ~. Rabbit hutch, ~L:>. ltuog goes. d ·• ... old "ITS ·ti'.a..a...w..ted 7100HelpW.ted 71 .... -,., .. n lQ -Many other out.staUUJng . Kmg size ndbrd, ~5. con ... Y.ea.... . • • ~••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Telephoa'letiohcitors Oak.M.lntcond. BR sets. Beauuaul bunk •AKCllEC.• Masc .. ti4~-7~72 o Typewriter. Dinette , new.$75tar·m.~-7704 ;imi::l;iimi!iii--miiiliiiiiiiiiiililillilil-•••1~ f /tame work avaaJ. OverSOO lTEMSof, beds, Chana C3b1nel3 & Al<'<.iHAN t'Ut»t>JES t>42-S44!f Des~. clothes & many . wood sliding doors ror .l .. TAUlAHT Mornanas, afternoons or BRiC A·#JRAC BreakfronLS. Cail 9tio-270I. usetul household items. d • • · '" Cutglass-<:locks Lot.of...,....... . • All1''urn1tureet.c.movang Sat Sun 3151 Canadian triple o or closet, .J \ ~ ~venane hours .. ,We . PA.Y Antique Jewelry MAPLI FUIMITUlE reacup .Poodles AKC. Garage Sale, i;m1tller Or.'cM.. 42"x~2" ea. Underwood • • . . THE JOLLY ROOER . RESTAUIWft C~gtls to~od~~:l~n:: •Ove~lOOOAntiques S amsh tables. Solid ·lie11ut11u11 y •. pro.P?.r· 1te ms, 2602 Sanla Ana •. • . . typewrater .644-1607. 540 ~,.,01 , ~ A..,eles & Object.a O'Art WP 1 table w/4 lloned. Wna te. SJU-64~ Ave. CM. l"n & Sat . 2 1' am1ly Blockbuster. :l1g W"'TERI-r •• ~ -.... ~·tt a nut game . . . .,.. ... _2266 & 9, 10 to 5. Col. Pk. U7 A ur -'fimes, 137 Sunflower AUCTION SITE swivel chrs. Barstools, Siikies. AKC. xlnt one. M anyume,.,..., · Hanover C.M 97!1~ Coronado Water bed,-. , Ave. C.l(. .a..._. ..,HEIM •OWL Bookcases, Credenza, & 1''. Xlnt watc~dogs. MOVING : We nave a ' tlJOO E. Edinger, Santa """ Eye·level ,range, Large tltid-H40tal lO,ev<tJ6. nOtlSe full 01 aurnllure. Hotwt 1060 Ana, <near Newport -TlLUR F 1flme pos1lioG. Some S&L exper. req·d. Ce>n· \act Mr. Fer1u1on , 549-9141. 1925 ~-n~~::!,n Ave ~~nters, :stoves, Desks, To YM I04S fop quality, 111 xlnl cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1--wy > 542-2097 ·• \2 Blks WestoC Eucltd> Gia Sito ...................... Must see '° APC>reca<tte. HORSES IOMDID Lrg rod beveled hvy mar- PREVlEW: H WCaMI ... P l:'O•G RE L· Po"'dl No reasonable oc:cer re & For Sate . .R1d1n g ror· chest ot drawers· ' Re fr I gs. w a 8 be rll, i;, >£ .:.. .. e. !'used. Shortbed U.mpe Lessons & 'frauung. con-• • Sal'4(dayMarch8 Dryers. Coffee tables, male, S )'f'lll. Black. Free shell.;>44-tt.al lac t S u sa n Smith, el~c. !awnmower, chair. 4to•.PM end tables & large t o gd . f\ome only . 7s1_.,,,57. 1_64ti_~ __ 37_. _____ _ $1ndalMarcbi rocicer. Pictures, lamps, $46-1171 -.s• · 1051 Refr1g. 'sears Pwr lOAM t SafeTime round 'chair, But~her ""FECTIONA""'"" "'~u 0 ••••••••••••••••••• .. ••Reg. Quarier Sc.ud Colt. Lawnmo•er . ~rt. Dis-D..t Miu ... _. Block tables + U>n> 0 r u .. ~ c • Chestnut. 2 yrs. ~. d MISC. Some items sub-1 mos, shots, spaylC'U, box PUILIC :'UC110H Also pipe pen~' offer. ~~~:=~~~mos 01 • ject to pre11ate. Food tramed_. td. home onty. MANY ITEMS OF PINE ~~l'3. ·, available. We honor &M--Oll9 ESTATE J EW ~LRV, POTTER ·s WHEEL- 8ofA& M11tersCf\1r1e. FEMALE ~payed Spr: ART OBJECT~. AN· Goocka065 tH;lt dertrlc, $125/BesL MASTUS AUC110M tngersp .... 1'ot.milYoo-TJQ~ES, l'lNE FURN:•••••• .. ••••••••• .. •••• O(f'er. VW trailer-.i.lto ' !05'1\tNewportBl.CM l)'.Loveskida..a.2-'l~l £TC. PHONE FOR lN 1rb)'V1cuum,w111u~~h· s ides no. vw rear • 83S-962S orl46-t886 PO. Ii 8 I.OCH UR ~n~. lO ,.o. nu, pd~ bumper 4r rear dedr IJd. ---------•fREE to 100~ home "5-r.IOO sacnt.iJ~.~1-wu mate offer, qnour vw IOJO adorable amaU black Mov l na. TJpewdt er 1070 var1-CALL IU-4>163 ~········-···· .. •••• poodle, (emaJ•, a l'rt1 lawn-mower. mi• ...................... afler&pm ED 8 Wce11 "Parue1!!: 1s1--0w1 furntture, .bOoU, floor WANTED •-H-l_D_E_A_B_E_O_A_nUq_ue_ "~P·~ NOtPOrt · f!'t'ee bllc male .(..AB.lyra, polisher, lo)'• et.e. :lit• Couch Chair Ti-ll ler 2 C.M. .-l9lU · tovea cblldt tfl. Xlnt Sun only. lllS .Por~ TOP CA.S~ OOC.LAR P uab J..aw ~d\owt;s , Ameri9-.n E•aJe 10 apd, g arddol£. 113~ Weybridge N.8. f i\Jf1..a~o :....fu~~ Pck"\.. O.hw bf-, pl.,-pcn; xlJ\l eond, ec»t ,1.a new, 10 Atlt OBJECTS. 'GOLD, bQ)'s bl.kt, sal-rtrll Mlllf$.SCO..-.. S l LVEI\, S&llVlC.E . , bwwa ~.(b f l N.8 FURN a ,(N. 1 11-~ 'fl~O&i. M$ • I> .. ' . . \ SSS$SSS WJLL BUY YOUR GU·~----=;....;...;------• FOR CASH· 646-4* ereo console w/ AM / FM l>!NfNU Tbl. or Om. Tf)l radio. Mediterrtnean. & Cb;urs, &d cood. Con· ~150. 54t~. lemp. s.<&lt-~ 23 · Admi ral Color TV Uwd U1&41We W...tecl ~loo. Picture tube under ti7S-~ p/war..-nty. g.fl-2946. A CONVtHt£NT SHO~NC ANO SEWIHC CUtOf fOlt THE CAL ON THE CO. For• Ad la W.at/1 W..W Cal SH 642-5671. ht. 330 Jiffy-Crochtt! ( l .Stamttl-To-Slim ........... ..,.,. ...... Authorized Saf J!J a ~!~f 1 . MIWPOIT DATSUM MacArthur le Jamkr• NtwPC)IC't Bbdl m.uoo . . · " . 24t>D. fllll• ••I• p~ice' '8,082, aer. *5. ,._....at · SH4.37 mo. l41 mo11t.a· open end le .... P'UI t.&JJ~ Jim Slemons· · · Im~ ~ 1714l IJJ.9300 · 't.i MB 210SL, x1nt cood. $485(1, ·72 911 T, 5 speed, air, Am /Fm. Aubergtd: ,ult .• $ll,950. Slll-67110. 'tl9 9US Tarya, $5,.500. &.htE week-pa ntecl le de· tailed. ~.500 nett week. ~-MlV bm • 567-1 .. °''· ' ' .. . OUI IUYllU MAYI •CMAlll .,, M1w a •s·•• PINTOS .. •t'lllCIC1 • couun ,_.,.. DetcOUM?s. ~­ I IUY MO~ WHIU THI S&ICTIOM LASTS . .. Buy Your Brand New : COURIER ~. . cincl SPECIAL : . Receive TOYOTA SALE! . $150. Factory Pemos. & Ex· ' ecut1ve Car8. Good Used Toyota Selection .ALLPRICB> CAS~!:,SATE . . ':,.:~l~~a . FORD MOTOR co. ~141H wna __ . . ... , QI TQ~OTA .. !: LIKE ·NEW .. !~Harbor, C.M. 646:9303 ... 'SPE.OALS . 1008 TOYO'J,'A 4 dr. :>SSU/bestoffer . • 531-2906• ; • .,, ..,_.... Dttlttr Kato. trans., power E g, radio, healer, e#17SCCM · f hi Fl•••cl•9 l-. ··~ .. ::.s1377 . · Triumph ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·70 G'fti, 42M, 28mpg. Korues, mags, radJals sLereo. New ptltnt. ~ 645-57~ . V ofbWCICJeft ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72Pllltol.Hllle.t . SHARP '73'h 7 Passenger Auto. trans., radio, Bus. Low ini, sunroof beater, mag w~eels, ·AM/FM. $3695.546-4764 ~~or group, License '7S4FAY · . '74 VW lh Camper, xlnt. Speclel Fl•••cl•g cond. AM/FM stereo. A•ehWe ~3,995 . or best offer. 74Mtrc.C-t .-door, 6 cyl., auto. trans., power steering, (disc) brakes, radio, healer, whitewall tires. (886KBE) SpKI .. FiMlic)llg .A ........ . ··~· 5286 7 y,,-.c...,..w..,.. Auto. trans., radio, ljetter, power steering, i>Ower windows, air eond. (YXV588) . l1eclel Fha•ch9 .......... •• t l 5788 '71 LTD 2 Door V ·I , auto. trans., factory air, power keerinlf, vinyl root Dcense 3UCCH ., • c • • • Ff ••• c •• ' ... . ....... ... ·St 688 • -"74PWeS.-luto. trans., power .i.eering, radio, beater, wbltewall Urea, vinyl Interior, low, lo~ miles. (4J.SKXT) lpeclel Pl•••cl•f ....... . · 522'67 · · '74..U.C:W...... Loaded incl. power ..ieertng/brakea, vtnyl roor, low, low miles (090KBS> 'f¥SpecW ......... ' .......... l• $3277 .. 4!f3-31?4 • ·71 Bus, 9 pass., X!nt cond See to appreciate. biS~l·U afters PM ·72 SUP.ER B~ETLE, le mi, new tir••,-•1850. 644-2839 ·53 v~ Bug. Runs good body good. SSSO. Cal b'75·9360 aft 7 PM . l BUY Junk VW parts/ Cars. Call Dan sn~ <HtolOam or after5pm) '65 VW, rblt eng, mags, wide l1ros, new paint. ~s. 645-1642. '67 VW Bug. Rblteng. xlnt cond. ~lUOO. 847-2737 o . (213) 430-5091. • s999 .10 Toyetl (856AOE) 5 1099 ' ,. ... ,. Ct1pe . (UHK628) ' ' ,-$599 • 13 Plltiac (llM684) 5299 \ A V~lla:ILE FOR U~MEDIATE DELIVERY! • * GOOD' SELECTION I of Colors .&,Equipment '74 REGAL, vmyl top & mt., air, P/S, P/B, P/W, tilt whl., lo nules, i3,800. 979-tllSS •• AutQmatictransmlssion (52981U) Used low ml. .. IMMEDIATE · s2·· I,_ · ... , 1 • .,, ... . DELl~R~ , · 5:199o~wN 581.?~NTH 12n1 lull price plut tu a llG '81.75 tollll -. pMI. I~. tu I lie. I .it C8'tYlno ~ ~ CMlly 48 -Oetlrred~priceH123.AIWWl~RM17.1• · ., '74 -4AZDA U4 . "' Coupe. Used, Low ~' (83~KLJ) IMMEDIATE $2777 DELIVERY I S:Z777 luM ptlce l>kl• tu I lie. '91.75 kll.i mo. l)lft Ind. w a. Mc. a. 1111ca.rytngct>wvea10r or.Iv 48 moa. De'-'*' -n1 PllCe $4123. Annulf ~A.ti• 17.7~ '72 DA TSUll PICKUP c1a1s•S> · . ... • . · . · .. . ·IMMEDIATE .. DELIVERY ' ' 511:7,7 ... ~!~~~=---.. ~~~~-0.'-'*' ~nl pttce •14" 20 NnJttj PwcenlJI09RM1& ~. .'72 FORD PICKUP Courter {69542U) 51177 ~- 168 TOY OT A SED. Automatic ()VXU706) 5100DH. 546~. '11 n 1u11 onw oru• ra,. a 11c' Me.64 JOtll mo. pm1. ll)CI. t• a. toe. a 111 airry•llQ C:"lf9" tor on1y 30 moe. O.lefred P11yment pr1e• l 1499 20. NnllA Percent- "-'• 111.73% • '72 DATSUN· (LB110776346) Rill PRICE 51377 171 .FIAT 850 ~ Coupe (901 BZJ) ~E 51277 ~ . '71 MAZDA RX2 4 speed, air conditioning. (858010) FULL PIJCE 51277 172 CHEV. VEGA Fastback (FYF957) .51077 11377 lull -01US tu a toe: SEO 118 IQ(lli mo. Pft'I ~-w a. he. a. all catrytOQ Cl\ar9*S 1or only 30 ,..,,._ Deferred payment pnce i t 928 40 Al>nual P11u:en1911<1 ~21.73~ &1217futlj)ncepluslaJ1 &11c Mll&e.cOlllllT'O Pl"' Ind tax & lie r.1111 c:aNYl"ll Cflerg .. lor only 36 mos. Deterred Dll\'l'Nnt ~ '18~8116. Annulll Percent-oe Rale 21~ , I ' l mSTUTOR CLWANCE . . SALE ·FORD 1975 THUllDEllllD 2 DOOR HARDTOP ....,....._,,....WSWtires,co11••"*1C1W.,_.,tilt•_.,,. Md.._ .-fft point,..._ WI.....,. rool, ._. ........ $749 5 wt..I. ........ ..-d coftttol, S--IMl-6 way,~ o#y, ' ...... -· ....... ..,. .................. po-lodi ..,.. & _., 5*. 7$fJOI s... 0350 + tax & lie. 1975 TORINO ELITE 2 DOOi HARDTOP llld.~_,,SSIOD~lr}ll .... ,...,_,,~~..W. $5.489 _.......__,,....,.,wsw...,~"°"" ... _... . ....... ....., ........................................ . ....... AM/fM -.-... iMlricw ~ •°"P• ~ glcM.- ......... coi.r ••re4. -..,_ ll9hl """"· Ill-it •Ii"' + t1x ._lie _,._IS*•Otl,S..1563 .... . IEW 1875 THUIDEIBllD '°:.~.=~~=~= WINDOWmcua .... '9844 __ ........... -._.,........ ~=--~~"-::!:.::::'.:;: DISCOUNT ..•..•.. ., .. •1 a27 .,.,.._,......, ... ,_~_...., .• .,u. ••••---•D •••)Y .... ..,. ...... r..... •. ... .. .~ NEW 1m IUSTAlll 11 IHll ~=-=~=:.c:::t.-== WINDOW STICKla ...• '•.714 :::~ . .':::ri:-...:-.-.""'!--. --:v DISCOUNT •••..•..•.•. '"1 =-~.,-........ ,.......,.,_ ... ""' · •s11 • IAU PlllCI.. . . . • & • NEW 1975 FORD LTD COUITIY SQUIRE WllOll ::.C::..~~7:...":..i..-:".: WINDOW ~TICKER .... '7111 , ... ·.-.:,":~";.::"'~"=:; DISCOUNT ••••.••..•. •11~2 -.. .... ____ ...., ........... _ ---•-IL<t"2.S..•JHI . SAU NICI ....... '6827 1974 Monte Carlo Landau. ( Low ma. $3800. Alt s, 498~. San Clemente.. • ·72 N'Ov a VS, loaded! ~ 33,000 ma. Xlbtcond.. · ~.aoo. ~H7U5. 730NEVY · · CAPRICE Vm)fl tot>. very Jo m1, fact .• a ir. extremely cl~an. t685HG£> .w. ....,._ 70COUGAR Landau root, factocy a . <542ACV> $3295 ,,_ ....... u..--, $1118 . GUSTAFSOH •· 16800 Beach Bivd. H.B. 842· 99 C..USTAFSOH UNCOLM/ MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. , 69 IMPALA "Huntington Beach 69 CHARGER. , 1"act·ory air. Nice ___ 84.._2_·8844 ____ lux. car , v~ry re$.- tr ~ n s p o rt a l i on . 646-2&14/4't>?·Stl46. ; t YRJU4~> 72 MARK IV .,, $918 Loaded. with equipment. 71 DODGE . ~ GUSTAFSON <2l7FEZ> POLAUSfOAH ldtSOO Beach Blvd. S4Z44 Landau roof, factory ~Cr. H s .w._,, .. H GUST AFSOH less than 50,000 nuht• · · ...u.-v<1't'I 16800 Beach Blvd. <280CF J ) ' Enjoy more closet $pace H.B. 842·8844 $1·688 : ,bY sellmg "d~'t needs" Classified ad~ sell bag GUS'.f.APSOM ·: WJlh a Diuly P1 lot items small items or 16800 Beachmvd. ! Classified Ad. t>42·5678. any 1tem.642-Sb'18 H.B. · 842-81M4 173. l!LDOR.ADO" Y•How/M •t chlng lellther; less th81l 27,000 mH•: Ser. 4964 .. ·~.... SAVE SAU PllCI s7455 "~5 56500 • WE'R~ OVERLOADED WITH l!AUTIFUL ,USED CARS . • WI MUST MAKE IOOM! S..•LlkeMenr hf on 4o ·J · ~!~~!L~S! AT • HUGE SAVINGS 12.TUMSAMS IOFOIMULAS UAMPll: 1973 FIREBIRD . ESPRIT f Mol'Nlic;. laCIOtY ..,. AMII' SI ... Wllec>• Slf COll<I . • t~. -w1N10wa.-~ ...... f090H0Cl LHa I M.000'""" N .. catl•- $3689 .• 25 · GRAND PRIX$ AU.LOADED. IXAMPL,S: HEW '7S . " GIAHD PRIX • (165874) IMMIDIATI DWVIRT •ff Olck. Cvttas1 &I~ cpe. ve. Aoto .. lir, Vf'l)'I roof, RlH. P.S.,. P.B .. ('tXR660) 5t89 , THIODOI! -OltHS .· '-OR~ : .,,. . 29iO tlarbof Blvd. C-Osta Me$a 642·0010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • '7JUMCq.H Mark lU • Con,vertible V-8. au t omatic transmission, po..ter steeri n g & br.akes, am/Cm stereo, leather in· teraor. vinyl top, tilt wheel, whlte s1~wall llres. t572 GNJ> • $5488. GUST.AFSOH 16800 Beach Bttd., tf.8. 842-8844 '71 LINCOLN : , MatFm - Full power, vin>'l top, AIR CONDJTIONING·, while sidewall &.lres , leather interior. Hll6 HHWI 19&8 ·BUICk RIYlllA (837 30•>. OFF .. WINDOW· STICKER · 1.913 MERCURY ' 11 PAIS. COLOllY PAii 361 V.teng., ~ delun JltTa. 21,000 ..... SMwroom frethl (S.. #47_26) 131~9 · . · 197 4 COUGAR s4599 "' OFF WINDOW s:r1CKER -·- $ .. ll 88 72 THUHDElllRD wnclau roor. all ·eower equJpment. low. low Jo4:81 lnUH. uR!lkilXI $1711 . •UST.AFSOH tti800 Beach"IMvd, 1"t2-d844 (Ser. 520739) OFF W INDOW STICKER S•e .O~r Big Stock Of MONEV SAVINI COMETS! ' 81tANDNIW 1975'• $500 OFF· 'WINPOW snCKER (SER. 51 95;47) SAYE WHEN YOU BUY- S~ YE WHILE YOU DRIVE! I .1 • , I . f BRAND NEW DUSTER ' -i. ~ . . .. '· ·. ' ' . ' "•...: .. ' ,.• -.. ~ ::.~ ~\ ~-· J : ....... '.., •.• . -:'.!•" -. . . ... t BRAND N•W· '\ ·197.5 FUR~ ·. 'CUSTOM 4 DR.·. SEDAN CORDOIA HUGE SEli.E TION OF THE SUCCESS CAR OF THE YEAR CORDOIA THE IEAUTIFUL HEW SMALL CHRYSLER. 73 CHEVROlfT MALIBU Q)upe. VS, automatie. AM/FM radio, power_ steering & brakes, white walls, air condittooing, tilt whelll, vinyl top. (187.Kil() 52645 73 PLY. DU.STER (fie. Ve, AM/fM ndio, pow9r' ste8iing. power brakes. white tetter tires. vinyl top. (385HONl 73 OLDS DB.TA ·ROYAi.E 4 Or. H.T. VB, 'IUIOrNlic. radio. heat•. power 1teerlng-br1ke1-window1. white walls. air c:onclitioning. vinyt top, tilt wheel. (1.98.l>EJ ·1 '2935 .. 74 CHEVROIET VEGA GT. Coupe. 4 speed, radio, heller, vinite•l tifes. air conditioning, rack, nw:gs. cuatom,jnterior l ~-52475 . 70 OIRYSlER NiWPdRT 4 door l9dat\. V8, autonwtic, rw:S1o. hlll#. PCIWW'- steerl ng. p-ower br•kea, white w1111, •ir-, c:ondiUoning, vinyl top. (871AVN} ' . • . 5109$. ' '68 CHEVRWT MALI Coupe. V8. automrilic. t'ldlo, MM•. power • ateering. white wall tires. bucket 181t1. (13678Z105601) . 7,fPINTO ~- . AutomaUc: tn1nwn1sa1on.~,._-,... •• .., · Wlllllrel. (237 JOY) · 521 ,95 . ',"\; . . ~1 ., ;,~ !'' ' ' 4W•IL ., . . ' 1· ' .· . . .,, ~;.' . \" ...... _,,. ;..·• ... ' ,~· ' :, - .·• 1 ; 'i . '• ,. ~ " ~ I I( .c Jj l! 1 .. Q a s n p • .. sl ] ] .J. I l (] ~ n c ii c ~ • ' ti ~ : j l I ~ I~ " l '! A te'arclt con,tinued tOOay over a wide area ot the Pacifi~ for {l Marine F4 Phantom j~ Tight~r out of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. whi~h crashed Thursday oil a routine training ffi&ht. \J.S. Marin~ Corp~ officials ldenUfied the pilot ~s U . Michael . C. Blazantan, 26, of Des Mollies, low a. Only crewm a.n aboard was Radar Intercept Officer Lt. Robert D..-rell Johnston, 24, who resides at Ute El Toro base. Coast G'uard helicopters are searching waters west-southwest of Santa Barbara Island and west and north of Santa Catalina and San C~ente island. Cause of the crash was not im· mediately determined; but the pilot of a second Phantom jet said h e thou ght he s aw SOlnething fall from the plane shortly before it went down. The .~...-b occurred about 40 miles olfihore southwest of Santa Barbara Island during stormy weattier. Tbe·origlnal search was joined ' More Showers . Diie Tonight Alo g Coast M• rain fell on parts of the Onage Coast Thursday J1igbt and tioda)' and more is expec\ea ~t. And the weathermu sa)'S there lit' i 40 percent chance of showers Satur1!ay. · · Th6 Los' Angeles Weather Bureau's forecast also ~arned of 15to 30m.p.h. winds tonight. The Orange County Harbor Patrol said storm warnings are up from north of Monterey to Point Con· cep(ion, 'and -s·""all craft warn- ings have been posted from Point Cone&ption to the Mexic.an border. . 'lbe patrol s.,;d that the sea is swelling ftom four to eight feet and· is up to 10 f~ in outer nol1)\ern waters. From Point. Conception to -the Mexican border, the wind is 15 to 3() knots with gusts up to 35 ~nots. Iri Newport Harbor, .65 inches of rain fell in ~·~hours, bringing the season totaJ to 8.3 inches. compared with a season total or 1.20 inches at this time last ~ear. No rain was recorded in Hunt· ington Beach during 'the night, but .14 inches was recorded at the Laguna Nieuel fire station. -The weather bureau reported that showers sho1i1ld decrease late tonjght and Saturday. It will be a little cooler fonight. ;Colombia, Cuba BOGOTA <UPI) -Colombia and Cu)>a Thursday night re- established d1plomatic relations llft~ a 14-year break. expressing lj>pe the move would help in '"thawing the Cold War." I ~Y aircraft from· the Pt. Mugu Air Station, but, officlaJt there I said they had discontinued the s~arch. .Lt. Blazanin is survived by his widow Janet and Lt. Johnston leaves his widow Shirley. . One Way· Weighed On Forest By FREDEJtJCK SCllOEMEHL Of\MO.llrPli.t~" More than a decade ago, so- meone suggested that Forest Avenue between South Coast Highway and Glenne)'l'e Street in ~aguna Beach be a one-way, northbound thoroughfare. · The propposal never we11t anywhere .. It: was sent for "study." It appears, however, that a re· newed suggestion calling for a one-way Forest Avenue has a chance or happening, if only on a trial basis. After listening to several downtown merchants, city coun- cilmen this week decided not to act. on the propoql and iastead cOntirtu~ the m.iter to J. meet· ing Wednesday. • But comments for councilmen lQdicate Ulq WOUid like to tes\ the idea. · HWe )VOUld be takioga very big step, .and we shouldn't until we know what we are doing. But it does not seem at all unreasona- ble to try it out," said Coun· cilwoman Phyllis Sweeney. <See FOREST, Page A2) DAiiy Piiot Staff f'M~ LION COUNTRY SAFARI'S 480.p'()UND BEAST 'CRISCO' IN SURGERY Glut of Llofts on Market Prompts Vasectomies at Preserve 103 Lions Face S11rgery Safari Overcrowding Prompts Jf asectomies sxa~~~~· ·Lion Country Safari, the· African wildlife preserve which qnce celel}J'aU!d Prasier'-s fruit· fu1ness, now has a beastly pro- blem on its hands: too many lions. That's why it has launched a massive birth control program which eventually will result in all 103 male lions ending up on the operating table for vasectomies. Or. ~·" Dalley~ ~narian at the IPre· serve, descrribes the~ as simple and sate and has already performed it 15 times. And Pat Quinn, the corpora· tion's zoological director, ex- plains the vasectomy is superior to castration because the lions lose neither mane nor social stature. "lie won't notice a thing," Quinn sajd Thursday as Dr. ~.,..iMWing ... .--. cision on Crisco, at 480 pounds, Lion Coun\.ey 's. biggest lioo, "He'll just be shooting blanks ... Still snoo&ing from the general anesthesia, Crisco was on his way back out to the range in the bed of a pickup truck less than 30 min.._tes after the operation began. The operating room scene is r epeated frequently as Lion Country endeavors to s tem tht: lion ,glut which it encouraged when the park opened in 1970. San Clemente Poll At that time there weren't enough lions either at the Irvine preserve or all the other safari parks which Lion Country began ~open in other states. Under public servi~. ·more than 37 percent of those respqnd· ing wanted pier area improve- m·ent. More than 17 percent wanted im9roved publi c tranapor~ation . More than 10 pet· ceqt wanted improved downtown parking ; 10 percent want a center for the elderly and more than five percent' wanted more citizen input into government. Less than two percent wanted city financed advertJsing for tourism. Under recreation, 20-percent of those responding said more parks were needed. More than 14 (See CENSUS, PageA2) ~Showed Up Capo Adopts Boundary Platt Grim-faced growth planners for the' Capistr ano Unified School District entrenched themselves at the front or the auditorium Thw'sday, waiting for the verbal onslaught. They were armed with microphones, an overhead pro- jector, and oodles of statistics. They were ready for battle. Five hundred chairs bad been 11et up in the auditorium of Marco Forster Junior High in San Juan Capistrano for the giant crowd expected to protest the boundary 8'tllt between Forster and the new Ntauel Hills Junior High. The clock moved to 7:30, then 8 p1m. At 9 o'clock the chairs were stiilempty. The public hearing was con· ducted anyway for the two women who did come. The growth Planning Advisory Commission unanimously Mlopt· ed a plan that will place the boun· daries through San Juan Capistrano and a portion of Dana Point. "Next )'ear there's going to be someone who'll come to the school board and say, 'No one told us','' said Trustee George White ... You just watch." Breeding was encouraged and ·management c h eered and notified the press whenever grizzled old Frasier sired another litter. His Pl'QWess in- spired wrist watches .. 'T-shirts and bump~r stickers .-and many elderly men from nearby Leisure World. Ne more. Lion Country recent· ly sold some of its money-losing parks and. even though it intends to open another preserve in Japan, there are s till too many lions. In fact, there is a nationwide surplus-of lions. Lions which used to command bet.ween $250 and $500 aren't worth anything now. Zoos can't give them away, ac· cording to Quinn. The zoologist says he would be quite ·happy with half as many hons at the Irvine preserve. "A park is only so large and you can maintain only so many lions. <See LIONS, PageA!> Greene's Victory LOS ANGELES CAPl -As· semblyman Bill Greene's s lim margin narrowed even further in a new count released by election offic.i{lls for Tuesday's 29th state Senate District contest. The latest totals tightened Greene's victory margin by six votes to on· ly92. an · 300-page 'Policy' Unveile_d ·· SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) - The state's proposed "Constitu· tion" for protecting California '1 1,000-mile coastline from furthee: - assault by bulldozers and de· velopers was unveiled today by the California Coastal Zone Conservation Commission. The 300-page plan for keeping . undeveloped stretches of the state's Pacific shoreline open to the public and preserving its natural condition spells out com- mission policies on matters from public recreation to coastal energy plants. But it makes no recommenda- tions on how the policies should be carried out or by which gov- ernment agencies. Proposals for funding coastal preservation and improveJllents range from of. fshore oil drilling to statewide bond issues to taxes on hotel rooms and real estate transac- tions. Those recommendations will · grow from statewide hearings before the final version of the plan is turned over to the 1976 Legislature for further hearings and passage of laws. "The essence of the plan," said the commission, ·'Is that the coast should be treated not as or- dinary real estate but as a unique olace where· conservation and s pecial kinds or development should have priority.'' Highest priority is given to public recreation. ''Public recreation should have the highest priority in suitable ., areas of the coast. and legal rights of the public to have ac- cess to publicly owned tidelands should be vigorously enforced, .. the draft says. "'Public use of coastal lands and waters should be consistent with natural re· source protection,'· The draft does not rule out coasta l energy plants but declares that ··energy installa· lions a llowed must be subject lo stringent e nvironmental stan- dards.•· It aJ.so declares that publie ac- cess to the coast should be pro- vided and that "coastal develop- ments that serve the public. such as campgrounds. resorts, hotels · and motels, and rental housing, should have priority over coastal developments that are essential- ly private. such as typical re- sidential developments." The plan a lso declares that public transit should receive priority over roadway construc- tion in urban areas "to reduce the need for coastal parking lots and major highway programs ro · conserve energy and to improve coastal air quality." The draft says conflicting de- velopments should be "cban· <See COAST, Page A2> Cutoff Set By Cowicil Marathon city council meeting s. which sometimes last until 2 a.m .. are coming to an end in San Juan Capistrano. City councilmen voted unanimously Wednesday to end meetings at 11 p.m. The decision . was made after sleepy councilmen had sat in the same chairs over six bours. I tion for safety. He said other safety impro ' t ments could be installaUon or stenal llghts, left tum lanes and sidewalks "small features, maybe a lot of little tbtngs lhllt we can do taken all toget1Jer can actomplisb, 100<1 ln terms or pet1estrtan amt tr amc safety • .. That's really what we're after. The peed limit is merely a tool, oee UUlt tool you use alone thew~.•• Drosendahl said. other Jurists ... I:. t £on:WCt Attacker • . From WlreSel'Vlees ASTLE GATE, Utah -A 2 ;ear-old Dana Point man has • convicted by a jury of rob- bJ¥ a Utah state trooper ol hJs b'41e. belt and gun, threatening oltlcer wltb the weapoa and Uy handcuffin him to a f e •long a desolJ\e stretch of l•rstate 70. ,.n eight-member jury de. li .. rated 45 minutes before issu- !. a guilty verdict to charges of ravated assault against ry Don Ander son, 25382 \tlstborne Drive. m ery County Attorney ries W. Taylor said the rre incident occurred the m6i'ning of Sept. 29 as Anderson and John Buhl, 18, of 26731 Calle Maria, Capistrano Beach, were r~ning to California after a stay in Vail, the Colorado ski re- ~(t. ~ccording to the county at- torney, the pair was traveling along Intersta te 70 in a new German sports car stolen a day earlier from a Vail automotive dealers hip when highway patrolman James Sauls stopped the vehicle for speeding. When Anderson was unable to produce a registration certificate for the car, Sauls began a search that turned up a small amount of marijuana, Taylor said. An- derson and Buhl were placed un- der arrest. According to Taylor, Sauls or- dered Anderson into the patrol upit, Buhl into the sports car and tbe two vehicles proceeded in tandem down the hi ghway toward the police s tation in G-Teen River. During the drive, Taylor said, Buhl faked car trouble, bringing both cars to a stop oo three oc- casions. . Officer Sauls at testified the two-day trial that during the third stop Anderson grabbed him by the throat while Buhl grabbed the his revolver, bell, hoslter and badge. At that point, the officer testified, Anderson and Buhl handcuffed him to the fence while he was being held at gun- point. The pair, he said, fled in the patrol unit, but couldn't find a place to ditch it and ended up re- turning to the crime scene and took off in the sportscar. Taylor said the pair got as far as Price where they were arrest- ed by local police alerted to the crime after Sauls was freed from the fence by a passing motorist. During the trial, Ander son's at· torney uns uccessfully argued that Anderson was forced into the robbery attempt by Buhl. 'f:iuhl later pleaded guilty to an aggravated robbery charge and was sentenced to a term at the Utah State Industrial School. Anderson faces sentencing April 8 on the felony conviction. He faces a sentence from fiv e years to life imprisonment. He is in custody in Price. Boat Motor Stolen Orange County Sheriff's of- ficers are investigating the theft · of an outboard motor valued at $250 from a boat moored at Dana Harbor. Deputies said the loss of the engine was r eporteq by boat owner Ronald Allen Kolar, 45, or Upland. They sa id intruders broke open the storage area and carried off th e motor. Suspect Nabbed LOS ANGELES CAPl -Three men who allegedly beat up a ba nk messenger and took $23.191 from him Thursday were booked for investigation of armed rob- bery following a high-speed chase. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed Prftldent •"" Pvlltl,,,.r Jack R. Curley Vice Prn•*"' •"" 6-nHel Me,,.._ . Thomas Keevil editor ThomH A. Murpt\lne tM-.rftOI..., CNrle-s H . LOOS Richard P. Nall M .. -~ ....... t:41tor• ue: a.adt Oftic.e ......... ==:~:~·: .... .,.. OlhffOfflcn ClRlt MMal ---..., """' ......,, ....,__aw ... ..,.._ __ ~··...a. ,,.,. e..oo ........... IP -v.-. '""._.,._,...,_ M llfl OW.. ~·-.,, T ..... M (1'4) .. 2AJ21 OluHiM M~ertlllnt 641-1671 ~ le•dt "'~-~.t; rtmefttJ: T•~ft\=r -.,,..... C:..f•lti.4. ,.,, °'*'• ~l ........ 111 ... ~' ....... "" .... '"·""°"'' .. """' ..... .... tn•"ff ., ••••fll .. _fllt -.i. _, ... ...... " ..... ~ '"'1•1 ,.,,,. .. ~," 01 «In' ..... -. .. <Nd Cl••• ~· ... ,... •t c. ....... Gel~ S-f'IM*IWC.,,Mll'AM......Wr: .,, ftMll "'""''"'1t11r; l'ftillUoff MlllMM-U.• ........ , ' UNEMPLOYMENT STAYS AT 8.2%. Story, Pag• A4.· UP'I Tel.,hote E;rpensive A rt work f Op 'he bright 6We of \he Eo)'ment picture. there was n <>C 11900 jQbs in gavemment rt( dunn1 th~ month, most or it mldter• staffing in public 1choel1 n• ln newlyereatedjobs under• federal emptOyment ,ro- grapt. Fro•P~AJ COAST •• · •. neJed to the inland parts of coastal cities and to otb~ ~and areas" and that 'coastal agriculture lands · "should be kept in agriculture." The .commission also calls for the preservation of weUanc,ts and cqastal streams. Artist Salvador Dali unveils one of the first five in a series of 10 paintings com- missioned by Merrill Chase Galleries of qlicago as part of a project with a pro- jected value of $2.75 million, believed to be the largest single commission ever awarded to ;my artist in hi$tory. adopted by the Department of Labor and January's unemploy-• ment figure was adjusted down to 56,300 a nd the unemployment rate to 7.1 percent. Statistical adjustments aside, the short t erm e mployment out- look in Orange Coun,ty was· termed "bleak" by EDD's labor analyst Alta Eldridge. •'Coastal marshes and other wetlands, many of which have been filled and diked in past years, should be iprotected from furthet destruction and restored where possible. "Free flowJng coastal str~ams should be protected because they • are necessary for the migratory fish caught by commercial and sport fishermen and because they supply sand for coastal beaches." Council Sets Parting Bond Vote Meeting Laguna Beach city councilmen will meet at 9 a.m. Saturday at City Hall to try to put together the nuts and bolts of a proposed May 27 parking bond election. At a meeting earlier this week, councilmen indicated they prefer an $850,000 measure that would provide funds to build a two-level parking structure on the existing parking lot near the intersection of Glenneyre Street and Laguna Avenue. Following a recommendation from the city's Parking a nd Transportation Committee, the counci l appeare d willing to cancel plans to add $250,000 to the issue for acQuisition of a parkiniz lot site somewhe re in the south- city area bounded by Thalia, Glenneyre and Calliope streets and South Coast Highway. Rather than a ct, the council directed the ci~ staff to continue to hone the proposed measure in- to shape and present it Saturday. According to Stan Scholl. public works director, the measure would ask voters to al- low the city to issue revenue bonds to pay for construction of the Gleoneyre structure. The bonds would be paid off with meter fees collected from parking meters in tbe central downtown basin, stretching genera lly from Legion Street north to Cliff Dri''9e. Sc holl sai d it would be necessary to raise meter fees from the present 10 cents per hour now charged to generate sufficient revenue to pay off the bonds. He said he could not pre- dict how high meter fees would have to go. Water Main Project Bid Cited as Low A construction bid for installa· lion of a half-mile of 18-inch water main in Coast Highway . along Main Beach Park in · Laguna Beach is about $140,000, nearly $55,000 be low engineering · estimates. The project, a joint venture of the Laguna Beach County Water District and the South Laguna County Water District, consists of ~eplacing two existing and de- lenorated water mains with lhe one line. The low bid by Drainage Construction Company or San Marcos has been taken under submission by the water districts and will be acted on by the boards of directors in mid- month. Work on the project will begin as soon as possible after the bid is approved. Completion is hoped for by June 1. The project is the first phase of a major water main replace ment effo~ by the two waterdJslricts. Total cost of the project, whJch includes 3.3 miles of pipe, is estimated at more than $1.5 rnUllon. The section or the :trlain Beach Park are a had been moved ahead or other project work because of the pendJng 'ttalltn· ment and repavln1 of Coast Hi,lbway in the park at'ea. Devils No More CRTCAGO CUPl> -WhJtepco- ple have refoTmed their ways and no lon1er will be called "dc- vil1," accordioa to Wallace Muhammad, son and suc~ets(>r' to the late Black Muslim leader Elijah Muhammad. Fro• Page Al LIONS ••• There comes a point when you have too many and you have to start a program of birth con- trol," he explains. Lions average four cubs per lit- ter and throw litters twice a year, advancing the lion population by quantum leaps if left unchecked. Out of all the males at Lion Country only a handful may be doing the actual breeding, but it will be necessary to vasectomize all of them to ensure birth con- trol. . Lions who have received "the treatment" are ear-tagged for identification. It is doubtful that their m ates will look for it. As zoolo~ist Quinn explains it, the male hons -as far as they are concerned -lose nothing, not even their pride. {QREST ... "I would like a trial period " said Mayor Roy Holm. Both Holm and Councilman Charlton Boyd urged a decision be delayed until Wednesday. Given council approval to test the plan, Forest Avenue could be restriped by mid April, said Stan Scholl. public works director. Scholl and his staff renewed the suggestion that Forest be made one-way. The recommen- dation has been approved by the Parking and Transportation Committee. · Under the proposal, two lanes of trafifif: would be allowed to travel from the highway to Glen- neyre. Scholl said the plan would allow addition of 11 parking spaces on Forest and increase the width of existing traffic lanes, thus creating safer traffic movement. He estimated the cost of mak- ing a permanent change to be ~7,000. Thal would cover restrip- 1ng and construction of de- corative planters at each end of the affected block. Forest Avenue businessman Stuart Avis said the idea was "excellent." But he added he "'.ould support the plan only if the city dropped controverisal plans to close off and create a mall on lower Park Avenue. Another merchant, Bill Axline, termed the proposal ''one of the biggest moves in Laguna Beach in 10 ye<1rs ." He said the council should de- termine whether one-way north- bound or one-way southbound would be better for traffic circulation. He warned that one-way north- bound might make Fores t Avenue more attractive as a thoroughfare to Laguna Canyon Road. Merchant Doris Shields said the CQncept was "very interest- ing" but complained that it had s urf aced too rapidly and had not received enough study. She said a trial program would be in or- der. Border Check . Bid Extended SAN DIEGO (AP> -The 27th lO·day extension or a con· troverslal btan~et wauant bas been rranted to UJe U.S. Bon»r Patrol. The wanant, whlth auahortas the patrol 'a checkpoint oo. In· tentate s near Su Clement.t "u extended 1'~uuday by U . Mast1lrate l:dward ~J.W-.. A f cderal •neats court II ex-~~ to till• IOOft • the coo- fltitutionalJt.y Of t1M warrant, the tint or tta .kind tn the Uldted SU tea. . Two Marines Arrested on Burglary Raps Two Camp Pendleton marines were arrested by San Clemente police detectives this morning as part of a continuing investigation into 17 local commercial burglaries. Today's arrests brings to six the number of persons arrested this week in connection with burglaries that occurred at restaurants, churches and busi nesses over the past six weeks. Taken into custody and bookec. into San Clemente jail on suspi cion of burglary were Terry Lee Elwood, 20. and Manuel Romo. 1 18, each of whom was held on $1,000 bond. Earlier this week officers ar- r ested a 19-year -old San Clemente man and three juveniles, all students at San Clemente High School. San Clemente Bar Burgled The theft of $123 cash hidden behind the bar at the Stage Coach Inn, 3707 S. El Camino Real, is under investigation by San Clemente police. Police said the cash was con· cealed in the back bar by a female bartender shortly after 11 p.m. Wednesday night. It was discovered missing Thursday morning. Burglars also made an unsuc- cessful attempt to open a floor safe in the building. Entry was made by removing a restroom window, police said. Mrs. Eldridge also predicted a rise in unemployment rolls in March because or anticipated layoffs of Orange County resi- dents who work in neighboring Los Angeles County. The gloo m y pre diction follo w ed a pattern set in February when the number of unemployed in the county in- creased by 5,000 workers. As a result, the 61,300 workers· unemployed in the county was a 45·month high and a 62 percent increase over February, 1974. . From Page Al CENSUS ••• percent said bicycle trails were needed ; 15 percent said youth r ecreation programs we r e needed. Nearly 13 percent said additional beach access was needed and·t1e arly eight percent said adult recreation programs were needed. Additional recreation needs were listed as tennis courts, nine percent; golf facilities seven per- cent; and other courts (handball squash •. etc.), four percent. Slightly more than 9 percent said no additional recreation facilities are needed. Employment figures show that or the city's _total population, 10,809 are not in the work force. Employed persons account for 7,4&>. milita ry employment ac· counts for 804 -p-euons, un- employed workers account for 839 persons ; and students over 16 account for 813. More than hair (52 percent) of primary household income com- es from wage~ a nd salary; near- ly 14 perc,nt are self employed ; more than 11 percent are depen- dent on social security, 10 per- cent are dependent on pensions and more than six percent rely on returns from stocks, bonds and savings investments. The plan says development ip areas subject to beach or cliff erosion, landslides, elirthquakes or flooding should be permitted "only if adequate engineering can reduce the hazards to accep- table l~vels." Clememeans Join Others Against Oil The San Clemente City Council has joined other local g<>Vern- .ment bodies in opposing federal pl ans to lease offshore tracts for oil P,roduction. The council approved a state- ment Wednesday questioning the hasty federal actions which have put tldeland areas on the auction block. The statement urged by Los Angeles Mayor Thonvs BradJey follows a form passedbyotberci- ty councils including t.bose of Laguna Beach, San Juan Capistrano and Newport Beach. It questions the ability or technology to control blowouts and to clean up m'assiveoil spills. I~ charges legislation regulating 011 leasing and prod~tion is out of date, and may not guarantee the taxpayer is receiving full value from the oil company pro- duction of a public resource. Further, it states the offshore areas should be regai:ded as "key" elements in a long-range energy plan and should not be commltted until that plan is de· vised and agreed on by. the Congress and administration. The statement won approval of all three councilmen present. Mayor Tom 0 'Keefe and Coun- cilman Tony DiGiovanni were absent attens!ing a conference in Washington D.C. 7eJ "°" ~eHWet, 'J1ee, Sketchbook by Heritage. Inspires ~our in.divid~ali~y. y~ur flair for the dramatic, your. longing for the lovelier things in ltfe. ·When is a collection of furniture not a .. ~oll.e~tion? When each design has an independence. a flair. and an ind1v1duahty all its own. When. it can stand alone or become part of a total took. I I , : .f Merc.h7 1975 OAILYPJLOT NEW ¥ORK; STOCK • EXCHANGE .. Nl!'IW YOlttC ' IUl'j}' -Wk hi.I ~ Mr1 !°!'...'-'y!!f I" Jlt•lc~ 4ll! ·wi-., • N r-1 a-C1'Q. ,.t Na! 0¥ 09 .._.. .lfll •ll 4 ~ ~ Qlt J 11 ...... .,.. €•r. ... ,1 • ' ~ Ill c!llM. S.IM ..._, Ing Olltf • . 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A n()rp.40 s t• 't .. ! v: CMttr HY t s 31 12til. .. v. "Ft.'wh•~" .•. ~ !it:·:.:. ••t'-.-.~ 1 tt ......._ {NISP'ncl • .0 .. 49 114 + It, _ •• r • ,, .,. -"'"" • -... • ~. c;NlieeM 2.20 • 339 Jn.. ~. F.,t11 ~!9 •• n ... ~ Douglas Changes Robert L. Johnson, (left) corporate vice rresident for engineering and research for McDonnel Douglas Corp. will replace Charles Ii. Able, (right> asq>rui· .~ent of the astronautics division for Douglas in Hunt· mgton Beach. Able, who joined the firm in 1947, bas retired early for health reasons. AliolMfl . I ~ IS • . CNI M .alb .. 24~ S41 ., ~. F~•Q 4M 'f' ~ Allled_., I 4 t \.! .. -'-' ~ .00. 2 2i n, ... '"-ltr•lCel 'j It JI .. •tJ AllledSt • • 171 11"-+IV. Otitmtr I 10 S U• 21h-1 a Fff Me 1.M JO 2' 11•• WI A.lid Slipmk •· 10 I • • CllmNY t• • 10' J7~ • I'• FctNllMt .61 1 608 Jt\lt.-"-All~ °'9 .2' S IOI 9 t ~ ..._,..,. 1 .... ..., Ill <ft , ~I'·• ""Im I ... • 10 22 .. + "' ~lro: '\Z : lll ~~! ~ O:Ui; t.io •• 1)0 li'h T .~: F..t ..... iO ; ! • ~ AINISuQ 2e 4 '° 31'4 +I Oii E Ill .4S S I 1i , . . f'..S~t It 1S .al 4. \lk AJMX i .)S 7 u 3'w-v. Oil Mltlw CQ ll S'I 9~-14 Fin' I 1 "t6 2M9+ I~ AMAXtlf j 1.-, , • 3 100 OllMllCP Pf .. 4 U~ -•.. Fil>f .lo 4 ~ UV.+ \11 ArnOK SO S 'l .-,. C" PMul'll 2 I SI 21\;i• ~· fkl Fl~ 1 ) ~ ,., .~. .• •2• • ,'s •. .. Ole(ll · '31 •• 1 3\:. • . FldU&c ' 19. ,_ ... '"""'°'"' · • ~ ·-... Owll c:r•ft •. 53' 4 + 4-,. F .. l~rM J,!t U tv.-~ Amer1te 1.20 • t II + "-Ovltc:r Cpl . . I '3~. + 1~ Ftl\reK:p 60 S 10 U"9-V• Amerpt 2.60 •• 1 JI"> •.• QvlsO tot •. 4 1• .. + ~ FlndF.d ,_ 4 Jt ~ ~ OC Accountallt :~~~1~ •4 1r. l~"-!/•'t OlrotN .)t S 44 1 1~-h F1rstne 1.M 7 lst 17 +It. AlnAlrFI «IO SS ll"9-~ OVoml,. S •• 4 SI • . Ftt °'9ft SI 7 t'1 Ullt-\!It AmAlr11~• 14 7-t"~ g:~ C. •• IOIS 11\.'t+ '• kt Cait'.tO f U• 17" ... ·-· .. -T r .. , wt •• 41 , .... Fslllkal.1014 119 43\lo• \.'t Am 8ak .20. · 37 . t i!.+ Vt Ml~ S6 2 FSI Miss .24 J ttt '4.,._ ~ A8••ndl .08 I 111 Jt~+ v.. ct R••••r n" • 3 Fs1M1-1nv •• 90 1~ •.• Am&rcst.IO 1 182 191/o • w .. • ·.. ... " ..,, .., v •• ... n G.u t.M 9 JI> 17~-~. FslNS 8ncJ 7 at 22V>- Group to Meet .,,, Bl""' •• • 9 1•. ~" oell .60 1 I 2ov. •. . FsNBOs 1.11 1 2s 29~ ~ A Can 1.lOil 7 9l :U"'11-\Co nMlf• 1 40 6 11 19 -1;. FsP•Cp 1.# 7 .st 19V.. + A Can pf Hoo • • 1 HJ'o! •• • It P'ln l.20 I lO 3'.,.-~.. FsPMI U7d I t 3"' .. . :"'J.~n'i'il ·s 2~.1'~-·~ Citicorp .8013 -llh+ \1 FslUAIE.MtC> 11 9 .. . AmCyM 1~, ·9 m 2'~+ .,_ ~y 1.40Q S 11>1 39V.+ ~. FslVflk.Jll> I lS ~ .. . AmO.ll .1ltlJ1 , '"• v. g::s!~~; ,~ !~-; ~ ~~:~n:?: g :~: ~ AOi$tTe1 .nu uo ~· .\.. Oty tiov ·"". 341 1~+ v. Ft.i-F .40 1 • W*-\.'t AM~I Vi.t.. 20 ' + 14 O ly Inv •Is .. 11 13·1' • ., Fi.1tlerSc .20 1 21 nll+ Wt AOl.lfllf...14a,, • 13 ... "4 ~~PH .. 2' 17\oo + I/• Ft .. IEl\1.1421 ... 12 +\lo Certified Public Accoun- tant Page Jenkins is the guest speaker for the professional ~evelopment session of the Orange County chapter of the National Association of Ac- countants. The meeting is scheduled to. start at 7:30 p.m . Wednesday and will be held al Disneyland .Hotel in Anaheim. Loren K . Carroll, program chairman, says J enkins is presently a partner and Santa Ana office director of taxes for Arthur Young & Com- ~any . .. He attended the Univeristy ~f Southern California, where e was awarded a degree in 962 and is a member of the American Institute of CPA's. the California Society of Ford Dips Custom500 Price Tag CPA's and the Orange County Estate Pla.nning Council. Harold N. Engel, public re· lations director for NAA says the topic should give insight into what is currently .being legislated in the way ·or c hanges to the Internal Revenue Code. For further information, call Enge~ at 836·3226. Insurance· Firm Cites· Good Year AmEIC;li'W t • ~ I~-· E t.60 I 93 21"9. ~ ,,...,,,no .10 • 20 UY,+ Iii ~F~~~~ .. ~.~ ,~ !t.·~ Oii .SO ... ,, I~>+ v. ~:r:11k~·~.f! ~ ~ :m:1~ A Fin pl H1 •• rso tJ -h ~b~2' J: ~ ·~ 1:~ • 11" Fllntk of •"'1,. z.320 S3Vi+ IYt A GnBd .4911 ., SS 24ft~ "" Oev El 2.41 1 111 26\.• '• F11ntk of 2•.i. .• 1 24\1'>+ \I'> AC-..1\S< l.:n • • t I 10.. + v. O.vEI pt ll •• i.380 1 IS'.A + \, Fla E Cout t S 23 + 14 A Gn Ins 60 S SI 1"4-V. 0.'11&111.40 .. 1100 7''1-. + ~. Fla Gu .IO 4 143 11'4-l't A G<I !14 1.IO · · 37 11~-'°' Oo<'o1Co .Sl 14 1381 11\• • " Fli1Pwr l.9S I SI :ZOl/'J+ 1.<\ ArnHotSI .10 ) 2' 10~• • , • CMll p )0 308 i" n FlaPwL 1.36 9 IOS 22-I/• ArnHomM28 741 39~ .. CluettPsii 1 :: 9 h: ~. FiaSlel'll'h 3 9 21:W.+ 14 ArnHosp .30 24 201 30\11 + II> CMI Inv Cp348 272 I '• • "" FMC e r 9l 6 31>2 U + -I'• Am lnves tm .. 10 31•~ 0.. CNA FIN 'I.. IS 41,0 • ~. FMC p 211... l 29V.+ n A Medltl ,, 1 n• ,.,.. + "' CNA pl '· 10.. SS 9•. FOOdFar .20 s :n s~.. . .. A ~·""''P 6 1131 ... t ~. CNA 111.llD .. tt '"• ••• FooteC8 .IO 10 ,, l 'J\ Am Motors 17 309 S' • . , CNA Lawin • o tlo , •, FordMo l .20 9 130 l6 + h AmNGs l S4 7 ao Jt\, + ~ CNALpf 2.10 . ' 8'. FO< Mck ... ' 73 ·~ ~~rN~ 1~ I~ .~~;-.·: c.oau St Gs 3 208 9 FrM pt 1 IO . s 'lJll) Am Stnd .IO s ISi> m.-h C$ISCpf 1'19 .. l 1) . ~:;>,':;~l~ ii ~ 1:1! ..... AmSldpf4\.. 2 S2 • '• ~~~t~i4 62, ~~~:~ 1 1 '" FoslerWnl I I ., ll'Mt+..., !:::S~f;:~\2~ '! 1~! ~''": l ~I Coci16oll .40 19 lllAll n,..,. >,, ~~;:·~:~a 1:~ ~! :~ AmT&T3.40101211 SOh+·V. ~:~s~~~ ~~ 1g:~~ :: FreplMl.60 s 24' 21>'111+ .,.. ~ii!U't.::: s~ m:: :~ eo19i11e . .a 11 31>7 ,. ... 4,. ~~~u·.~~; :11U:+·v; ATTplB3.7A .• 41 ......... '• Co~Ppf 3'n .. 1280 S0'1•2 --0 ~ Am T&T wt.. 111> 1•,,. t;w ~1~1~0: ~ ~! ~~ : ·: G•t>le lncUt J 32 SV. •. AmW•lr .M S 11> I._ • . . Col ~M .40 U 206 34\• • \• GAC Corp 3 41 1"'1+ 'Ai AWlr P"'· .. ~,,. u~ + 'A ColonSl1.2S • 10 10• ..... ~ GAF Cp .SJ s 1'2 10 .. '"' AWlr pf 1.43 .. 1100 16 -h Colt 1 nows l 3 113 29 -•• g:~ f~ l:!i · .4 ~ ~~ + i~ ~SS~ ;: : 182 12~ • • · ColtofA UO • • A 20 .,. ~ M:te• 'in 1 1 21 1!~:-· ~ Collln pl 411< .. a ••~ • . Geml!IP' l:V. • • · 1 22\n+ 1 • u11..11· 1 .... 12 2'3 14 ._ ~ ''1 COi Ges 2.06 • 81 26:... + ~· Gemill>f I .l>O • • l ~ + 1 ~1c'inc'i • i. 11;:.: ''• ColGs pf s".. • SA~•+ ~. ig:~~n '.% ~~ 1~ 22~' .... AMP Inc 3127 112 341,," .\. g:J'~u.-;: ~ m I~::: ': Garttnkl .96 o 17 IOV. ... ~~0• ~ ! 712 ~·, ·•.: ColMll MlCI • • 14 l'. , , G.,lock .• I> 3 1&'14+ "- A;;,-;;o Co~ ; l' ;;: .. :,; ~~Ec,om.IO \Oo • s• 3'~ • ' , 8!~.~ir' •'~ ~ ~ 1 ;~ : : • Am$1ilr l.AO 2 dS 30 -~. ·Cm't OI t.70 8! Ji• t 1 GCA Cori> S 21 ~+ V. S . I h D ·1 P'l Amslr of .WI .. •2 ••.• . . . CMnSlv t.•O 8 I 41 .. ~ .,.. GeGn'!'mlnll c.,•4P .... ~ ·.~ ... t·L .. peCla tO t C 3 1 y I Ot Amslecl 3.20 6 10 49h t ~, CmwEd 130 9 S"1 lS\• ~ ti #7 -,. NEW YORK _ USLJFE ~·:~~~}~ ~ ,!! 1r1·:t: c .. edpfu1 .. 1s 19 ... ,. onA011.IOQ, 6s 3S .. ,.,., lo CMnEd or 1 . . J 12•.. • GenATr 1.80 I •1 34V.-I/• Corporation has reportedj !~~i~v· 1 ~ ~ ~t::~ cwEdt>ft42 .. u 111 •• •• GnATllf?'i'l .. 1100 ... :v .... -111 · l f I i I ll 1 CM~ '·'°.. 4 21~•-V. GenC•bl .72 S 261 9'h .. operating resu ts or 1974 ~~u•' <ea•·~. • st 15...._~ ·;.· eomw Ed rt .. as.. ,.,.. ... Gn Got 1.20 1 11 13...,_"' t d h d ~·-•• ~ ... T ' Comw Oil At 1l 11' ,~,. .... Gen Cine .« ' m 1111• + .... rep r esen e t e secon Apacr.ec so s s9 10 ~ ~. cwo11pf, 72.. 13 u~ •••• Gn 0eve101> • 60 ·~ highest in company history, !~o0~.4~.~ ~~ 1r·-.~ ~::,~;1 ; ~~ =:,t: ~nE?l~~.To 1~ ~~ ~:'v. with life ins urance sub· ~PPLLr.c.orc1P • ..!..s. ", 1,~:~~ ~1 ComputrS<11' 10s 311> ..• GnFooc11.4010 * ,.~. v. " -#•• • Con Aor• In 44 Slfa + ~. G<onGr 1.0t.d 11 10 161h + Y> sidiaries setting new 1lll·time Ai>P• ..s MD .. 31 2 ... c-M 1.10e ·• , 11 -•i. GnHost.• 1 30 H-v. records. !.~!1!~1·:1~ ~ ~ ... :\ .. ~c'·:g :· ·2~ m:~ ~! Genlnstrll s 222 ,.,.... v. b AlcllrO •<-U II> n• 'n GeGe~lnst p·f'~ ·,· .4s 3101., + :1 Net income for t e year re· .Vcll< E~.. 6 l +. .. Con Ed .lOb s ... 2 llYo • .• r~::.~.111.20· 1· :.. ... ~. ~ h il i Ari I 2 1 eons.Ed pl t .• S 511,. •. • _,.,.. • ., _.,... .. ac ed $46. l m l on, equal to "''~~ 1~ 1~ 1~1 ,!~! ~ c.onsEd pf s.. A 4S + .,. GenMo1 .60D13 mo •iv.+ ~ $2.06 a s hare, on total re-.Nktlest .44.. 10 n.,..l"I ~,,'::ttl ·iz~t~~ -·~ ~J~:: ~r,~.·~ DETROIT (upl I f$450 .11. A A1kuG1.10 s * 7•~+ ~ CIH\f'Clj)I A~1 .. 1,. 53.,._ ..... GenPori.102• ... ,.._v. ) -n an venues o m1 1on. year Arlen 1h1ov .. 201 2 -"" eon Fro• ,70 " 191 u,.,. .. :i.. G Put>U 1.68 • 100 w. + 111 effort to increase interest in earlier. net income am~ted ~~~.~ ~ 34~ ~~!:: consNC.l.tl • o w,.' ·• GnRtfr .io1> J 21 9'1'1 '• .11. 3 Ill! Con.wn Pw, 11 141> 14\a t.1 ~~ss'9!'ea111.n7d6 t13 118s 344•1.~ .:.• its large cars, the Ford Motor to $47.0 m1 ion, or $2.10 a ~r'mm·P1CkJ .. ~ •11· ~ ~<u:-:z ConP o• 1 t.a • 1260 u ~ • ..,.. fo4 •. Co. said it is lowering the share. A~m~Rubc; s .. Ii m.: '• ~r.~~~li: 9 12~ s~:-:; :,: gr1:~'2'(',11 se; ~~;·" b . f . F d Cu I . th d AroCofllln 1 s 1 12• .. + "• Cnll(.M ' 80 1 141 18 • 1. GTFl11pt111• 1100 14 ase price o 1ts or stom n announcing e year en Arvinlnd 311 10 ls 1v .. '• cnucO(IC> 80 1 ss 1 •• , •• GnFsp1 , 30 . 1,0 1s • ~. 500 four·door model by $92 by results, chairman and presi· ~~~11i~ .• 'n ~~ !: ~rC:'2';,o 16 1 :~ n ... ~ :. ~~:c~ ~ ,: I;~ ·;~· :,: making radial·ply tires an op-dent Gordon E . Crosby Jr. AsOryo uo 1 11• ,..,., • .\lo' C1>11cp o12•. 10 .. , '·• Gen~•ar 1.20 • 20 11-11. . 'd ··c 'd . th d'{ Al Si>t"o 1.40 " 14 2I •IV. Cll111Cp1 20 • JI 3l'•• I "·nu1nP .~ 22 124 ;u.i... ~ lion. sa1 . ons1 enng e 1 • Atn1o"e ·"° J 130 •·-11o • v • """ I h f . t b f' It . d l't' l Allco M .ISb 1 "° '"-+ .,., ClllllPr .l1D .. ~9 q Ga P•J: .eoo 14 S28 ~I>\-·+ ,,.. t WaS t e ITS move Y any ICU economtC an po I ICa AllCtyEI ,..., 1 x .. 17 + ~ g;,,::• :i,"1 .. 1~ ::: : :': g::;:~l~d~ ·9 zm ~ .. ~ of the a uto companies to climate which ' existed At1Aitn17Vt 9 S60 71v. .. ~ eonunuo'.r;·; 110 4i..,, " Ge11yo1uo 9 2411Jw .. 1•1o th h t f l AIRC pf l .IO •• 113 Sl:i.+ ~ Cont Doi pf 2 .. 1 ..... ~. GF Bus 32 A 1 5\. ... ma~e current_ly s tandard roug otJ most? astyear, !¥asin~~g .5 {~ ~l:t ~ eon1;111re11 9 11<1 11~u "-g:~'~fn7\: ~ il ,~,,.! ~ equipment option al on the we are pleased with the over· A•t o.1.10tiu ''° 46Vi+ v. ~~pf0:.1a •1~~~ !r·-1" G1ddLw 10b • 2si. s.,.,. ~ • larger models. Following the all accomplishments. Our life !~:"11~m 1~ ~ :~ ~ ~~2.: ~ 3;~ 7;::: :.: gmer.!11is~ 1~ 2~ ~r,~. , .. end of the cash rebates l ast i~surance companies con· !~8';'~ :: 2.~ 1\·~·~·~ eoop 1n 1.•• 1 11 3•''· •• G1nos 1ncor s m ·~ . wedekc. hGeneral M_otors, Ford tmude !? grow .• 11~eacb1in.g a .re· ~~:v,~o.-P:~ i:; 2~t1~ ~L:-J 1~' •! ;;:~ ~ g~:1n~r,~ ~~ :i~.~ an rysler stripped some cor .vc7.4 m1 ion o income Av11t11 nc .34 l m ~· ..., ~~ ,'.~ ! g ~~~, _ ·~; Go•dWst Fe• 1 34 m.-"• ""Uiprnent off s mall cars to from operations as compared ~vv~111~12i"L : 1; t':H1ot1~ Cordut• eo .. 31 1~-•1 Goodric 1.12 s A8 ·~· .,. ~.., '"' ·-P CorftG 1.11• 18 •IA ..,, , + J \9 Goodrpf 7.IS . zlO IM keep them moving. With $44 million )aSt year. ~::~111;,~ l~ I~ m~-.~ Cou""'M',Y,.. 31 1~+ 1'• ~~·:;f : ~ :~~! :~ Bigger Rebates To Rich Blasted United Press International Poor people a ngrily denounced as absurd the ad· -a a--~'t,Lo ; J i=tt ! 1~ Gouldln 1.20 s 39 m .... • • B•t>&Wll .IO 1 11 llRto+ ~ CPC lnll 2 9 181 39~t GouldOI I.JS , . 30 lilt~ '• a.en. Grup ,. 283 ,...,,. ~ Cr• 1 6~ 3 14• JI -1,, Gracew 1,60 6 151 is ¥o Baker In .20 7 109' 11/e+ Vi ,._d"l'I r'1 · 9 x 1 S • •~ Gr'4'<! U .to 30 JS lf"> + 4' BallfrOll .37 11 320 32~+ YI! ...,. ' .-• '" t~.;'t ~ ~ .~::; ~ =:~~·~: ;~ l!''H l'to g~:~~· .i.;,~ .~ ~ I~~!:!? a.11Ges 1.9' , m 1'fllt+ "' g:u.:~:~ ~ s9 11•• • ... &mfi',o•l:. ~ ~; ~· '• BilnC.tl 1.34 10 IS 1614+ -Vi c:ro-z 1.IO 6 J: ~~; ~ Great A&P 1 1i • + ~. ~ Inc 26 101 ~· "" CTS Cp .so 6 " n• ·-~. GtL•Og 1.20 10 9 ·~· ... hl)90f" Pn •• 11 4V.+ i.. Cu411Qiln 40 1 St 11., GINNtk 1.80 4 S4 J6 +1\lo BengrP ~C .. I 14 • • • CUO'lm1ns I• s 111 11~. • h g~,f:n1:~ ·; 1J 21 + '•• :~~ltNJ.:: ~ ~ ~+·~ ~~no~·~i· 1~ 8!1,,-1,. CIWtU1.9lD I lo m'!:-:,,; R:;:Jr,u.~ .~ U ~!.~ Curr111u111 .. 1a w .. ~ v. g~wGf~ ::: ,; 2~ :~r;::;: B•td CR ·'° 11 96 I~+ lWo ~Ii;:~ ·,1~ ~ 1r. 1:"": :.: Gryll<I I 00 9 YI ll .. ~ ::-M7l~~!f·; lt ~t=+ ·~ •CyclOo l.40il 2 ,. ll.. • . Grl'ynnd •t ., >4 We a-\lnn pf 2'(l •• ..-2.-... ·\\lo C)'Pf\1$ I 40 t 13 26',11 + •,1 Groher Inc . U 1-\!o O.res Mi .20 3 'ill 1~ ..., --o o-GrurTYn .Ml J 10 t~+ •· B•IHM Pl I .. I 20 + \lo g:m«IC 20 IS 1~ 11> • ._ Guard I .10t> 7 21 'I'.• '• Einistration's theory that it would be betleY for the conomy to give bigger inco me tax rebates to well·lO·do tax· ayers. "I don't think that's right. If there's anything coming ack. 1t should go to the poor people." said New York City taxi driver Rocco Mangelli . "They don't have any money to begin with." S.111 Ind .401U124 I.._+ ~ O.~~ 11~ ~ ~ 7~~~~ ~ g::;-,~~f~I~ '1 :~ t~~: ~ l,lauschL .60 11 211 D Y·-~ O.rt 1:#'~ 8 121 14V. .. 1 G<IHMI RI s 1 • '. =~~~c. \:~':·Mt ~~· .~ 8:t!'c-..~ ·1• J~ w·: .~ g::::.?t ~ ·~ ~~ ~r · .. =~·~~ .. n I~ _.!~ ~ ~ O.yc.C Alb S 70 10,, • ~ .. GlfR of A ?O . t 19' , • Btckmn .so t• 1Sl Jlln• 8' O.'flonH 60 • 121 111. • "• GlGuflRt:p,Bu ', 3012 ·1· 7 11•. '• &eclonO .4011 222 37 + .... 0.11PU 1 66 I 1S 14'••-'• SI Ill 17 • '• BH<hA ·~ S : t~-+ y,, OPl pf 12' >.. t40 110 . . Gull &Ws I• f •SO lO' • C ...... ~..-w1r 4021 ,,. 10•. • '• Gulf&Ws ws .. s..o s =~n .;1 ·s ~lS ,··~ ONrt 1.10 1 358 31\..-1. GlfWspf J• .... JS S7'o•l'-8ttcoPt .SO. • 19 14 -Mo 0.IPI.!. 1.20 • Ut 11 -.... Gullon lndSI II 38 ,., • •,. Mangelli and most others, rich and poor, responding in .! a random UPI s urvey, disagreed with Treasury Secretary • William Simon, who said this week, "To s timulate the son · spots in our economy, the tax cuts must be focused more heavily above the $10,000income level.'' "SIMON OtJGIIT TO SPEND an hour jn my office.·· said Henry Munoz of San Antonio, Tex., a labor lead~. Munoz agreed with Simon that poor people would not likely • spend a cash windfall on cars or t elevision sets. "There are a hell of a lot of people who haven't boQght •' any clothes for their children. w~·ve got ~chool~ with lltlle children wearing rag_sed clothes. You 1lve them S200 and it ,:.. would be lilse $2 million. It would go for shoes, little dresses • ~essen'tiafs." '.;, • Middle and upper income ta.xpa)'ers, who would benefit : more from President Ford's rebate proposals than from a ~' liouse bill. were s plit abobl.evenA:>n the tnetits ot the two plans. A Cew agreed with Steve Lanham ot Atlanta. a well- to-do engineer, who said : "I would like to hnve the $200 but I Ceel the lower in· come, elderly and sic.kneed the rerund more than t do.'' Balden 1.20 s l IS11o+ ~ 0.1 M"" 1~ • 19 24\lo • . . HAii F 8 A-;n H ;;-,0 .. &o141QH .JO!I S ,. ~ W Pell•.Alr • · ' n s 40¥-+ 'Vo H•••Prt """· s 1 11 , •,• S.11 l-lwl .M lo 113 ISl/4 t ill O.lttc 1"!!' < • 1 l'IJ .. • H•lllkl.n 1"""' .... 17 •7s ,...,._, S••" Bem•s Co 19 4 s 14V. + ~ Dellon• 1..P 1 S SS 6.,._ V. u •• • .. ,.. Btl\Cli>t 1.90 7 101 31Y>+W• Dennison I s 11 " ·-· HamP• 1.20 3 71 IS ' 11 8efldlx pf J • . e 41~ +2141 0.nnya I .20 11 M2 1414 + 1 H•mmond • 2 A 1 • • &en Cp 1.2S S l'IO 11'"+ .. 0.""91J .80 11 11• l:l11o+ ~ ::.--.=~~ : '1 ~: 1~!:·: ~ 8enc:p,f 2v, .. dO 36 ~"'•' ·* 24 4S 11\17-11. 11-,co ..... . . 33 11. • i, Bene pf4.!IO .. lt .. + 1 SOtoln :60 69 • 7 • \.'I •• ~ -Ben Sid Mlg . , l4 4 tEdll 1.45 I G 11 V. HM\ne I lS'l 7 2A8 Ji'• \• BengeB .10. a u 3'"' • .. 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I l2\oo-\\ Sy-.n It 11 11""+ " tnlfhltild 1 JS "l 11 .. +I~ =::nf : ·~ 2:::: ~ $yllt~ 2.40 •• S mH I l""' Incl >t 10 t• 11.. ... ,.,..m pf .tO • • l 12"9 + -. Pro<l &.Gt 2 Ja 410 .... + "' Wf Rn 30 4 S •'--\\ trlnt 19 2 S 22~-111 P A lrw; 11 4S Slit+ h Pus eo1 11.~q i " "~' • ~. PSE .. c n 1 ljO IS•. '• PSEGol 1 .cl • • 7 ,.._ + ~ P5E<>PI 4 lt .• tlO •I • t•• P'SEGol • llill .. tlO 4t +I~ PS.Ef.a e W,. tlO 12• ... PU •.• ~ .. ti>t ff .. 1'11$ , \t • 100 -~ fl'SI~ ,,04 " &1~ i -"' P$1;::r. ,:: ·i· .,, a~ :·: •'1Q fl ·~"'· ., "'., ll ,,.. ·--+ \.,. • ~ s i a~ .. ,,,, .. ,c, -~ _.. J~-." ~ 1 ?0 • IOI 4J.'--" ,._.,llC. .. 1. 1t II\\ t \• PSASlumps SAN DlEGO <AP) -Pacific Southwest Airlines is erounc:Ung Its two wide·bodied Lockhttd LlOll jets due to a slump ln ticket sales. The two Trisler jets, whlch carry 297 passengers, were used mainly on flithta between Los ~lH Rd San Franclsco. They wiU be re~ b)' 1malltt Boelna 7%7 JdliDen,aald PSA board chalnnan J. '1oyd Aad.rewt. f ,,. Enjoy smoking lo~ge~ :without .s1119kirig mo~ei: . . .. . ' . . ,. . That's the Sa!atoga idea. More puffs than 100's. Tailored longer and slimmer than I 00' s, so you enjoy. extra smoking time, extra smoking pleasure, without smoking more cigarettes. Priced no more than 100's. And Saratoga 120' s are rich, full-flavor .cigarette& • made from a fine blend of tobaccos. More than just a new brand. Saratoga 120's are a whole new idea in smoking pleasure. Because now you can enjoy smoking longer without smoking more. Look for them in the new l20 mm ctilsh-proofbox . Regular and Menthol. ,. . 17 mg:·1ar:·1.1 ~-nicotine av. per cigarette by nc MethOd. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your ~.ealth. l .. .. . . \ ... J. ... ~ . . " . .. ..,.~ 1· :J I • ' - , •• • ... J .. \ .. .. . .. ... }':' ? '\ "' .. "Getting more without paying more. . That's a pretty radi~ idea!• 7 'I ,.1 ., J . I 7 I f )SyTOll B-'ftLEY Of .. Detlyll'f ....... Orange COunty Superior Court Judie James K . Turner refused today to allow lawyers for nine men indicted after an investiga. lion of the county assessor's of- fice to examine witnesses who appeared before the Grand Jury. Jud~e Turner quickly reject«! a motion for a preliminary bear-ina filed alter def enM attorneys complamed µtat indictment or & their clients ba~ u.m fro& municipal c.ourt ·atOon tt)at would have permitted them to cross examiie witnesses. He set March 21 a the oext date for pretrial action on charges of grand tbelt, coo- s pir acy, submission of. false claims and violation of govern- ment codes obtained in tbe in- dictment. All nine defendants are free on their promise to appear. Coast .Plan Told Sta.t e ·u nveils , 'Protection'· SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The state's proposed "Constitu- tion .. for protecting Calilornia's 1,000-mJle <jOastJine from further as1ault by bulldozers and de- velo~rs was unveiled today by the California Coastal Zone Conservation Commission. The 300-page plan for keeping undeveloped s tretches of the state's Pacific shoreline open lo the public and preserving Its natural condition spells out com· mission policies on matters from public recreation to coastal energy plants. But it makes no recommenda- lions on how the policies should be carried out or by which gov· ernment agencies. Proposals for funding coastal preservation and improvements range from of- fshore oil drilling to statewide bond issues to taxe,i on hotel rooms and real estate transac- tions. Those recommendations will grow from statewide hearings before the final version of the plan is turned over to the 1976 Legislature for further hearings and passage of laws. "The essence or the plan," said the commission, "Is that the Sea Se arch Widens For El' Toro J e t A search continued today ovir a wide area of the Paeific for a Marine F4 Phantom jet fighter out'of El Toro .Marine CoQ>S Air station which crashed nnirsday on a routine training night. U.S • .Marine Corps officials identified the pilot as U. Michael C. Bluanian, 26, of Des Moines. Iowa. OJ\ly crewman aboard was Radar lnterce pt Officer Lt. Robert Darrell Johnston, 24 , who resides at the El Toro base. Coast Guard helicopters are s,arehioif waters west-southwest of Santa'Aarbara Island and west and'north of Santa Catalina and San Clemente island. $33,000 Budget Cause of the crash was not im- mediately determined, but the pilot of a second Phantom jet .said he U1oucbt he sa'' s omething fall lrom the plane shortly before it went down. Tbe crash ~curred about 40 miles off shore southwest of Santa Barbara Island during stormy weather. The original search was joined by aircraft from the Pt. Mugu Air Station, but ofhctais there said they had discontinued the search. Lt. Blazanin is survived by his widow Janet and Lt. Johnston leaves his widow Shirley. . coast should be treated not as or- dinary real estate but as a unique place where conservation and special kinds of development ·should have priority ... Highest priority is given to public recreation. "Public recreation should have the highest priority in suitable areas of the coast, and legal rights of the public to have ac- cess to publicly owned tidelands should be vigorously enforced," · the draft says ... Public use of coastal lands and waters should be consistent with natural re- source protection." The draft does not rule out coastal energy plants but declares that •'energy installa- tions allowed must be subject to stringent environmental stan- dards.'' It also declares that publie ac- cess to the coast should be pro- vided and that ·'coastal develop- ments that serve the pu~lic, such as campgrounds, resorts, hotels and motels, and rental housing, should have priority over coastal developments that are essential- ly privete. suclt • t.Jpical r:e-. sidential developments . ., T)ie plan also declat'et' tll'1 public transit should receive priority over roadway const,nac- tion in urban areas '"to reduce the need for coastal parking lots and major highway programs to conserve energy and to improve coastal air quality." The draft says conflicting de· velopments should be "chan· neled to the inland parts of coastal cities and to other inland <See COAST, Page AZ) Toro ·Teen Center Urged The establishment of a Teen Center has been recommended t>y the El Toro Homeowners As· sociation with the adoption of its $33,000 recreation budget for couaty Service Area Six. If ratified by the County Board of Supervisors, the budget will al- w $6,000 for the placement of a rtable 9ffice at Stlverado High hool and another $6,300 for the biriog of a teen coordinator. Homeowners Association President Bill Monoson told members of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council that those plans were formulated because: .. The teens in El Toro should ,._.ve something lo do other than th race around the streets or hang around a corner.~: . It i1 planned to keep the center open five or stx nights a week 11nd to begtn offering teenage ac- tlvttles sometime in the fall. Rick Bobay, presldent of the Saddleback Area Coofdinlting Council, noted that hdorganiza- tJon meanwhile is conUnulpg to push for a valleywide recreation program. He said plans to hire a reCf'ea· tlan coordinator at qo,ooo a year bave been set back With the de- cision of Mission Viejo and Aegean Hills to drop 6ut or ~~ yalleywlde program. SWAPMEEI' SWMIPEDOur That leaves ser.vice areas Four <New World ), Six (El Toro) and Eight <South Laguna Hills) l'o as- s ume the cos t of financing. Bohay doubts they can do it. He said he has received the s upport of Fifth Di s trict Supervisor Thomas Riley to amend the county's budget to in- clude the position or a coordinator not just for the Sad- dleback Valley, but all unin- corporated areas of the county. ThRt is only one of several funding approaches being in- vestigated by SA.CC in its effort to provide the Saddleback Valley with a coordinated recreation • program this summer. Another possibility is the part· time hiring of Russ Hazelett, the man who currently serves as El Toro's recreation director. Hazelett, who does his work for ~ervice Ar'ea Six under the auspices of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District, has agreed to do the job for $6,600 a year. The figure includes office and pl\one expenses. Bohay said this would be shared equally at $2,~ by the. participating Service Areas and that Service Areas Six and Eight have already agreed to such an alternative. Addressing MAC's . Chief Heads-Agenda Members of the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Councll <MAC> will be asked to decide Monday night whether their or· 'gantzatlon is headed by a .. chat.rman" or a "chairperson." The council meets •tn:3o p.m. 1et 26129·0 La Pas R.oad, Ml19lon Viejo. California voters approved ProPoSlUon U Jast November. Mission Viejo vo\91"s elected their lint MAC representaUn>~ in the Nine elect1on. Proposition 11 rettialres tba( the state Conatitutlon be amended, ellmlnaUng references to the male 1ender. nere bll beeri • some question 11 to whether the MAC ought to COllf orm ta the new ~tandard. . Kathleen Kelly, eleaed to taead the counoti. h•hmt#!• \to herself as •'cha~ .. bot sald abo would prefer to be ad· dressed as .. chalrpian ... Jeanne Gaanebln. the other <•81• member of the MAC, ••YI • tlaiUlfi council abouW spend leu Umt • Plarutoao1ytnct more bft Willie tile mollop was being ara.aed ln Judge Turner's courtroom, Jud•e Wllllain Mur-ray wa1 bearln1 testimony two courtt"oom s away in the divorce action filed 'by Mrs. That.. Hinshaw. 41, the con- ereaaman 11 second wife. Jud&e Murray took the pretrial conterenc& Into bis chainbers when a newsman appeared iD \he courtroom. ~enS& attorney Qlarles Gar- rity commented before the Judge and both lawyen hurried into chambers that Hlnabaw is pre· sently in Washington and would not make an appealace today in either courttoom, A trial date of July 22 was set. ' ' • I Hinshaw is currently under a court order to pay his estrang~ wife $650 a inonth pending trial of tier divorce Jction. ' TEN CENTS Bid ·~ • Mrs. Hinshaw, a victim of wha~ is described as a delerioratinl multiple sclerosis condition. testified at an earlier court bear- ing that be~husband had j>aid her only $300 in the six months prior to the hearing. She claimed Hinshaw had &everal bidden bank accounts and had refused throughout their two-year marriage to provide her with sufficient Ii ving ex- penses. O.il'f Piiot Staff ~ . . . LION COUNTRY SAFARI"$ 480..POUND BEAST 'CRISCO' IN SURGERY ~~~-on •~'9t PJOmpta Ya-.cloml•• at Preaerve 1~3 _Lions . Face S11rgerj I Sa/ ari Overcrowding Prompts V cuectomies By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ille Dally Plle4 ltatf Lion Country Safari, the African wildlife preserve which once celebrated Frasier's fruit· fulness, now has a beasUy pro- blem on its hands: too many lions. That's why it has launched a massive birth control program Which eventually will result in all 103 male lions ending up on the operating table for vasectomies. Dr. Donald Dooley, resident veterinarian at the Irvine pre- serve, describes the operation as simple and safe and bas already performed it lS times. At that time there weren 't enough lions either at the Irvine preserve or all the other safari parks which Lion Countr.y began to open in other states. Breeding was encouraged and ·management c heer ed and notified the press whenever grizzled old Frasier sired another litter. Hi s prowess in- spired wrist watches, T-shirts and bumper stickers -and many elderly men from nearby Leisure World. No more. Lion Country recent- ly sold some of its money-losing parks and, even though it intends to open another preserve in Japan, there are still too many lions. In fact, there is <1 nationwide surplus of lions. Lions which used . to command between $250 and • SSOO aren't worth anything now. Zoos can't give them away, ac-- cordingtoQuinn. The zoologist says he would be quite ·happy with half as many hons at the Irvine preserve. ''A park is only so large and you can maintain only so many lions. There comes a point when you have loo many and you have to . start a program of birth con- trol," he explains. Lions a\·erage four cubs per lit- ter and throw litters twice a year, advancing th e lion population by <See LIONS, Page A2) And Pat Quinn, the corpora· lion's zoological director, ex- plains the vasectomy is superior to castratiob because the Hons lose neither mane nor social stature. "He won't notice a thing, .. Quinn said Thursday as Dr. Dooley was sewing up the in- cision on Crisco, at 480 pounds. Lion Country's biggest lion. "He '11 just ~shooting blanks." El Toro Pool Plans Set for Sclwolmen Stitl snooilog from the general anesthesia, Crisco was on bis way back out to the range in the bed or a piclrtap truck less than JO minutes after the operation began. Th~ operating room scene is repeated frequently as Lion Country endeavors to stem the lipn glut which it encouraged when the park opened in 1970. Strachan's Cas e Out? Preliminary plans for the El Toro Community Pool ·arc scheduled to be presented for the fjrst time al a meeting Monday of the Saddleback Valley Unified School District board of trustees. The board meets at 7:30 p.m. in Room F -5 of Los Alisos ln- termediate School, 25171 Moor Avenue, Mission Viejo. Funding for the $500,000 Olym- pic-size facility were recently as· sured by county approval of federal ·revenue· sharing money for the project. Trustees also will make official a decisio\'1 to name the pool after theJate Firth District Suoervisor Ronald Caspers, who ga~ the first $100 towards a pool rund raising effort. Other items on Monday's board meeting agenda include: -Presentation from represen· tatives of \he Classified School Employea Association <CSEA > wbo are protesting a consultants' study recommending a pay tree" on 40 percent of tbe classlfied employes' salaries. -Approval of the Mission Vie· jo High School band particlpat- fa& bl a Cavateade ~ BaDds in lV.lhlllltH. D.C. Jw14, itte. ASslplhent of a constructlion m,ana,ftr for lbe instruct~ re-' ~~enter/warehouse projfft Mlsaion Viejo. -Autboriaatlon to idven· Co, bids fot t.be abovo project. -CO.SlderaUon of a ~•1 • '4>Mf'• 00 •nes of the;~ ~~~~~~~~~=~~ Bancti from,. tbe Capl1tr1no ' Unified District to the Sad· dleback district. The property is half of the proposed Nellie Gail Ranch owned by the Presley Company. or~":{i :ns•· W t"atht"r Showers decre asing · tonight and Saturday. ac- cording to the weather service. Hi ghs Saturday mostly 60 to 65. Chance of showers 40 percent Satur- day. I NSIDE TODA'\'' It has been said that today's htgh school end college jazz mu$icicn! are better than the professional players of 30 yeorJ .ago. Orange. Coast . G1.1· dUnces will have c chance to jud~ for themselves at the 1lh Orange Coast ColleQe Jazz Enuml* Festiool. See page · CJ of today'• Weekender. ..... x are•l'I'' and tbat coastal a1rlculture lan.-1 • 'stiOij)d be uoUn agriculture." -the commission also calJs for the preservation of wetlands and coastal 1tre•m.a. .. Coastal marshes and other wetlands, many of which have been filled and diked in past years, should be protected from further destruction and restored ·where possible. '"Free nowing coastal streams s~hd be protected because they ar necessary for the migratory fi caught by commercial and s fishermen and because tht)' supply sand for coastal ~chts." the plan says development in artas subject to beach or cliff el'fl5i.orl, landslides, earthquakes or-llooding should be permitted · ·qa)y if adequate e ngineering can reduce the hazards to accep- taitle levels." The state commission was created by statewide voter in- itiative in 1972 and charged with drafting a plan for conserving the coastline. It also was given regulatory power over development inside a 1,000 yard corridor along the waterline · from the Oregon .border to Mexico. It has blocked or curtailed several large coastside developments. The swath also cuts through · cities such as San Francisco and Los Angeles. One of the six re- gional commissions functioning under the stale com mission, the north central, is proposing to limit higbrise apartments in some residential neighborhoods in San Francisco. Three Named To Silverado HorwrRoll Three students were honored· at Silverado High School in El Toro this week for achieving the Principal's Honor Roll for the fall semester. . Steve Call of El Toro, a senior ; Pat Doughty of El Toro, a junior; and Renee Le Mieux of Mission Viejo, e sophomore, were named to the honor roll. Call has a 4 .o <straight· A> average; Miss Doughty has a 3.8 average; and Miss LeMieux had a4.0 average. · They were the students who completed the most contracts during the semester, a school .-spokesman added. At Silverado, a continuation school, students work at their own pace and may graduate whenever they finjsh the requirements. "In addition to their high academ ic achievement, these students are all outstanding citizens in every respect," Prin- cipal Bailey Daugherty said. El Toro Lawyer's ·Home Burglarized J ewelry, coins. liquor and a skateboard with a total value of $145 have bee n stolen from an El Toro lawyer 's home, Orange County Sheriff's officers report- ed today. Deputies said the loss was re- ported by deputy county counsel James Russell Flournoy, 39, of 22956 Moonstone Drive, who was absent from his home at the time or the theft. The m et hod or entry is unknown. Devils No More CHlCAGO CU P f > While peo- ple have rC'formcd t hei r ways and no Jonger will be <:ailed "de- vils." according to Wallace Muhammad. son and successor to the late Black M ushm Jeader Elijah Muhammad. ORANGE COAST ~e DAILY PILOT ""9 Or-C.0.\I 0.t4y Pll<ll, •OI• -tll IHom-IJIM.d .,. ~w-. p,.,.,, '" put»hShfd °"''""'o,...,~ CMlt Publ1..,,•nQ C.otT,C:hlttY !)(..,...d,,, ~•hon\ ..tte ,..c>lklwd "'°"°•Y I hr oYtfl ~ r .OS Y tor Cm I• ,,_M, ~wDO<I S.<t<ll, Hunll"'JIOtl ~,)(II Foun- taht Y•lf•y, ., •• ,.... S<t6dleb.tck V•tl•Y •nd U9UN 9'11<1\/Sovlf\ C.001. /1. ~"Ole ~-• ecllt'°" h 1>11114•-d S•tu•IUYI ....i S<.w>cl<I~ f,.. p1no:lpAI pub41\l!lr>Q pl•nl ii •I JOO W.>I B.oy S.., Co\t.t M<lw . c:.111ornl• ~ Robert N. Weed Prn1clenl •t>O P\IDllsf\er Jack R. Curley Vke Pl'~tclonl •rid C..-M ~ Thomas Keevil Cclllor The>tnas A.. Morphine M<IMf1"9 Ccl1tor Carles H . Loos Richard P. Nall .l'nlit.,.1 M<l"'"91"9 Eclotor> OtMrOfOcn c.i.•v la'l'l'P\4 ... s • .-__.. h~ll »U"'•-1--<I ,..,...~ .. Kii '"" 6t-__ ., w..-..... ,11.~,..51- Tele,ae• (114) .. 1~311 ca.assUled Advertlsl"11 .. M•71 S..-\ Vtl .. y fff .. Ofl~• Sl1·Ht0 ,,.,..~Cit.._. 49t-06:t0 ( .. yrlfllt, 1.,) o. ...... CeHI 11'11 .. hhl ... (~ ... -'--,, ........ ~HllWI .. M •tter •f HwtftlW"""'h Mr•IA II"•• ff ........ «•• .,,....,. -··· """"'''"-., ,._,., .... -. k <eM cltll ....... ,.., ... (9'141 -u. Ullfen'l4 S4iMcr1pt•Dor<•••U•-11ty, "'"""''°'·-flllt.fl"IHl•y •\1--U• _, ... , Expensive Artwork MURRAY, Ky. (AP) - Willla.m &,. Cilley Jr. Sl,)'8 be wai; abocled to dll~ver th-1 tbe flrst PftlOD he klllld &I a IOldler Wal an unarmed wom~n. ''When l killed my flnt Com· munist ..-it was a ahe,'' Calley toMl -.n a\,dlence of some 2,000 Murray State Univenlty atu· dents Thursday nlabt. ''Stie w_. not armed. I reallied the Com· munlsts do ~me ln human fotm, and it shocked me." In bis first appearance as a col- 1 eg e lecturer, Calley also described his training and the an· U-Communfst ideals be sakl he grew up with. He said they coodi· tiooed his actions in Vietnam. . "I was not in Vietnam to analyze the war to determine what was right and wrong, .. the former lieutenant said. dest~oy the 48th North VJet· namese battalion. . . "As far aa the .Sth ... they had eluded us," Calley said. 'The ln· dlvldual actions of myself and . my men is something that only . we can appreciate as far as hor- ror -something we-have to live with -goes." He aaid he felt his mlsaion in Vietnam was .. to seek out and destroy human beings.•• Calley w~ paid· $2,000 for bi5 talk, and ·another banner said.: "No student S for killers." Five students picketed the auditorium to protest bis being paid. Calley said tbatf while it was idealistic not to pay speakers such as himself, it was not re- alistic. He said be had bad heavy· legal expenses for four years and no salary. I Northern Artist Salvador Dali unveils one of the first fiv e in a series of 10 paintings com- missioned by Merrill Chase Galleries of Chicago as part of a project with a pro- jected value of $2.75 million, believed to be the largest single commission ever awarded to any artist in history. "I was sent to Vietnam lo destroy communism. I was given an M16 rifle to kill Communists. I dido 't know who the enemy was. I didn't know there was an enemy," he said. In the auditorium, a sign hang- ing fro111 the balcony askedr ·"Why?'' State Hit ByStonn WASTES TOID -ON PAPER TALLAHASSEE, F1a. (AP) - A drive to eliminate pointless paper shuffling has been started by Florida Secretary of State Bruce Smathers. The campaign was heralded in· a six-page an· nouncement. "Unneccessary and ill-planned paperwork has long been iden- tified as a villain undermining government efficiency and in- f! a ting its operating costs," Smathers said. Attached to the one-page news release were a two-page letter announcing the program and three pages or addresses to whom it ~as sent. 1,000 Layoffs At Douglas; More Expected Unemployment Rises Again For County By GARY GRANVILLE Of tlle D•llY PllttS...lf Orange County unemployment continued to rise in February despite adjustments in U.S . Department of Labor figures that forced the county jobless rate down from January. Altogether , according to the state Employment Development Department, 61,300 countians were out of work la~~ month and the county's unemployment rate was 7. 7 percent. A month earlier, EDD's mon- thly bulletin s howed 62,500 persons unemployed with a job- less rate of 8.1 percent. But during the last 30 days, new measurement figures were UNEMPLOYMENT STAYS AT 8.2%. Story, Page A4. By KATHY CLANCY 01 '"• 0 111v Pll« si.11 adopted by the De.l)artment of About 1.000 aerospace workers Labor and January's unemploy- at the McDonne ll Douglas ment figure was adjusted down Corporation's Long Beach plant to, 56,300 and the unemployment were laid off today. Company of-rate to 7 .1 percent. ficials r efused to comment about Statistical adjustments aside, reports of 5,000 more layoffs next the short term employment out· week. look in Or ange County was The cutbacks were the result of termed "bleak" by EDD's labor a nearly month-long strike by · analyst Alta Eldridge. members of the International As-Mrs. Eldridge also predicted a . rise in unemployment rolls in soc1alion of Machinists (IAM >. March because of anticipated with 7,000 members in Southern California. layoffs of Orange County resi- The rAM workers supply parts dents who work in neighborir1g t th Lo Los Angeles County. o e ng Beach plant used in The gloomy prediction themanufaclureofDC9andDC followed a pattern set in 10 aircraft. February when the number of Co mpaav offiC'ials did say to-unemployed in the county in- day that no layoffs have come so creased by 5,000 workers. !ar at McDonnell Douglas' Hunt-As a result, the 61,300 workers· mgton Beach pl a nt, wht:re 1.500 unemployed in the county was a IAM members are on slrik.e. The 4s-month high and a 62 percent company spokesman said the· . • Huntington Reach facility is not I mcrease over ~ebru~, 1974. as dependent upon parts made by On the bn_ght side of the the JAM as som e other Mc Don-e~J.t·Oyment J?ICtu~e. there was a nell Douglas facilities. gam of 1:900 1obs m govemme~l Meanwhile, federal mediation w~rk durmg the ~onth_, mostof_ll between the striking union and midterm ~ta ffin g in pu~hc the com . n . b r d b schools and m newly created Jobs . . pa Y was e icve to e · under a federal employment pro- contmmng. gram A spokesman for the National · Aeronautics and Space Ad - ministration in Houston con- firmed Thursday afternoon that NASA satellite launchings at Cape Canaveral, where McDon- nell Douglas employs 200 TAM workers to assist with launch prepar ations. Therapy Set By Hospital ~ Saddleba c k Community Hospital is offering a new series of classes to help r espiratory out- patients improve their health. The classes are scheduled from 1 p.m . to 3 p.m. March 24, 26, 28 and 31. Patients may make r eser vation s by calling the hospital, 837-4500. extension 285. Sessions will m eet in the respiratory care center a t the hospital on 24451 Via .Estrada. Laguna Hills. Covered in the classes.are exercises, equipment care, bow lungs work and many other subject areas designed to ln- c re as e the longevity ot respiratory patient.I. Faahion Show Set A f ashlon show fOt' children wlU be held at 7 p.m. tonl&trt al Gate5 Elementary &hoot ln El Toro. Sponsored by the Oates PTO, the event wUI reuture children from each claas us models. Several mothers and teacbeta will model 1ptlJ'8 fash.lon.s uwell. ( ,, ·Panel Okays Jolls Funds WASHINGTON lAP> -A $64 billion special appropriation that Democratic leaders say could generate nearly two million jobs was approved today by the House .Appropriations Commit.tee. It includes among major items '$1.625 billion for public service' jobs and 1412. 7 million for sum- mer jobs for youths. A House vote was tentatively · setforWednesday. Buil~g Tools (;o Orange County sheriff's of- ficers are investigating the theft of construction equipment valued at $2,400 from a Lpguna Ni~uel building site. Deputies said workers wbo are b"1lding a bank on the site at 252.55 Cabot Road, reported the theft or tools and equipment whJcb had been left ovm:lllht in the unfinished bank v.ault. Suapect Nabbed LOS ANGELES <AP> -'.fl)!ft m~ who aUeaidJJ biett Uf a bank messenaer aad took 923,191 rrom him Thursday were booked ror· invesllpUon of armed rob- bery f ollowln& a btah·•P•ed cheu. t Fro•PageAl LIONS ... quantum leaps i( left unchecked. Out of all the males at Uon Country only a handful may be doing the actual breeding, but it will be necessary lo vasectomize all of them to ensure birth con- trol. Lions who have received "the treatment" are ear-tagged for identification. It is doubtful that their mates will look for it. As zoologist Quinn explains it, the male lions -as far as they are concerned -lose nothing, not even their pride. Japan Jungle Holdoul Remarries TAIPEI (UPI) -a Japanese soldier who waited for 31 years in Indonesian jungles (or World War II to end remarried hi:; former wife. He gave her second husband $2 ,500 and a water buf- falo as compensation. Lee Kuang-Huei was found in a hut on the Indonesian island of Morotai in January. He had never received the Japanese sur- render order. Returning to his native Taiwan, he discovered his wife remarried 10 years after he was listed as missing in action. Taiwan courts ruled Mr~. Lee's second marriage inva:· •• but Lee was angry because she did Ml wait for him. Taiwan newspapers said Lee's son. who was born shortly after Lee was drafted into the Japanese Army, convinced bis father to remarrv. .,I can't answer the question," Caijey said, acknowledging the sign with a nod. ..If the govern· ment could tell me why I was there to begin with, I might be able to answer some of your questions." Calley was convicted in 1971 for the murder of at least 22 Viet- namese civilians at My Lai in 1968. A federal judge upset the conviction last year and Calley was released from p(ison. The Army bas appealed the rulings. He said that at My Lai his men had been conditioned to believe that a strong Communist force was there and that the mission of the task force to which he was as· signed was to seek out and School Plans Flea Market Straw flowers, pot holders, dough art and macrarne are just a few of the items to be on sale Saturday at a flea market at San Joaquin Elementary School. The event is set for 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on · tbe school grounds at 22182 Barbera across from the Leisure World Towers. A concession booth and bake sale also will be in operation. Proceeds will go to buying equip- ment for the school, newest in the Saddleback Valley Unified dis- trict. Greene's Victory Margin Narro~ed LOS ANGELES CAP) -As- semblyman Bill Greene's slim margin narrowed even further in a new count released by election officials for Tuesday's 29th state Senate District contest. The latest totals tightened Greene's victory margin by six votes to on- ly 92. By The Assoclated°PresS An angry Pacific storm pack· ing howlinJ winds cut into Northern California today, snarl- ing traffic, causing minor flood- ing and dumping snow in lb~ mountains. The storm drenched the San Francisco Bay area with hall an inch of rain overnight and some minor flooding was reported in San Francisco, San Jose and Marin County: Wind gusts of 67 miles per hour were recorded at Pillar Point. Gale warnings were posted northward to Cape Mendocino. Snow began Calling today in the Sierra Nevada. Travelers' ad· vis ories wer e pos ted for hazardous driving conditions because of blinding snow. Early morning commuter traf- fic into San Francisco was slowed to a cr awl. The storm is expected to lose much of its punch tonight. Rain and clouds meanwhile will continue tq cast a pall ov~r the San Joaquin Valley through· Tuesday, the National Weather Service predicted. Thunderstorms will end tonight, but showers are expect- ed Saturday and again Monday. Antique Wagon Stolen From Mall An antique wagon valued by the owners at $250 h,as been stolen from a store in E1 Toro's Saddleback Mall, Orange County Sheriff's omcers reported today. Deputies said the miniature circus wagon was stolen from the Alexander Haagen Shopping Center at Rockfield and El Toro roads after employes had cl06ed the premises for the night. 7ecl. """' ~~. 'l1ee. Sketchbook by. Heritage. . Inspires your individuality, your flair for the dramatic, your longing for the lovelier things in life. When is a collection of furniture not a collection? When each design has an independence. a flair, and an individuality all its own. When it can stand alone or become part of a total look. OAEXEL-HERITAGE--tiENREOON-WOOOMARK-tt~~STAN...:eAKEA NEWPORT BEACH• rm Wat't'U .... ~R.. tid·IDSO ' ~~OUNA11EACH • J4S NOHTll COAS"fl HW\. •• 4~1 TORRANCE• DMt HAW'nfORNt: BLVD. (0"" F'rl. tll 8. ~un lJ·S:IOt 3?1f..127i I ] t ' I l r ' l 1 By TOM BARLEY CM•DMly ... 1'(.,.. Oranae County Superior Court Judie James K. Turner refu.seP today to allow lawyers for nine men Indicted after an investiga. tion of the county assessor's of. flee· to examine witnesses who appe.aJ."ed before theGrandJury. Judge Turner quickly rejected a motion for a preliminary hear- ing nted after de!ense attorneys complained that indictment ot tlleir client.$ barred them from muni.olpal court action that ~d have J)ermltted them to c~ examine witnesses. • He set March 21 as the nest date !-Or pretrial action on charges of grand theft, con- Splr acy, submissiQ_n of tal~e claims and violation of 1overn- ment codes obtaided in the in· dictment. All nine detendants are free on tbeir promise to appear. It ls alleged that the rune employeg wbose alleged. ~rimes occurred while Rep. AndPetr J. Hinlhaw· was cowity Gses5or billed · tbe county in e¥cess of $10,000 for time actually speut w,rkinl on HinshaYt\'s con-creuionat campaign. All nioe def eodantS have been ordered to face trial June 9 on the cllar"te• contained in the indict- nient. t ' COast Plan . T old .. State Unveils 'Protection' SAN FRANCISCO <UPI> - The state•s proposed "Constitu- tion .. for protecting California's 1,000-mile coastline from further assault by bulldozers and de· velopers was unveiled today by the California Coastal Zone Conservation Commission. The 300-page plan for keeping undeveloped stretches of the state's Pacific shoreline open to the' public and preserving its natural condition spells out com- mission policies on matters from public recreation to coastal energy plants. But it makes no recommenda- tions on bow the policies should Sea Search Widens For El\ Toro Jet A search continued today over a wide area of the Pacific for a 1 Marine F4 Phantom jet fighter out of E1 Toro Marine Corps Air Station which crashed Thursday on a routine training flight. U.S. Marine Corps officials idenflfied the pilot as U. Michael C. Blazanian, 26, of Des Moines, Iowa. Only crewman aboard was Radar Intercept Officer Lt. Robert Darrell Jobnstoo, 24, who resides at the El 'Toro base, Coast Guard helicopters are searehine waters west-southwest ol Santa Barbara Island and west and north of Santa Catalina and San Clemente island. In Long Beaeb • Cause of the crash was not im- mediately determined, but the pilot or a second Phantom jet Said h e thought he saw· something fall from the plane shortly before it went down. The -crash occurred about 40 miles offshore southwest of Santa Barbara Island during stormy weather. The original search was joined by aircraft from the Pt. Mugu Air Statloi., but official& there · said they had d iscontinued the searc~ Lt. Blaianin is survived by bi s widow J..anet and Lt. Johnston leaves his widow Shirley. 1,()()(). Lald Off Jobs at Do.u'glas By KATHY CLANCY Of .. O•llY l'lleilU" . About 1,000 aerospace workers al the McDonnell Douglas Corporation's Long Beach plant were laid off today. Company of· ficials refused' to comment about reports of S,000 more layoffs next we.k. The cutbacks were the result of a nearly month-long ·strike by members ol the International As- sociation of Machinists (JAM), with 7,000 members in Southern Callforrtia. I . The IAM workers supply p'rts to the Long Beach plant used in the manufacture of DC 9 and DC 10 aircraft. Companv officials did say to· day that no layoffs have come so far at McDc>nnell Douglas' Hunt- ington Beach plant, where 1,500 ·Weatlte r ' JAM members are on strike. The company spokesman said the · Huntington Beach facility is not as dependent upon parts made by the JAM as some other McDon- nell Douglas facilities. Meanwhile, federal mediation between the striking union and the company was believed to be continuing: A spokesman for the National Aeronautics a nd Space Ad· ministration in Houston con- firmed Thursday afternoon that NASA satellite launchings at Cape Canaveral, where McDon· nell Douglas employs 200 IAM workers to assist with launch preparations. He also said the stl:ike could af· · feet the joint U .S.·Soviet space linkup, scheduled for mid-July, but not unless the walkout con- tinues past June. McDonnell Douglas officials explained the second stage of the Saturn rocket which launches the American Apollo spaceship is manufactured by the company's Huntington Beach plant, but the oo& being used for that mission already has been completed and sent to Cape Capaveral. I be carried out or by which gov- ernment agencies. Proposals for funding coastal preservation and Improvements range from of. Jshore oil drilling to statewide bond issues to taxes on bo\el rooms and r eal estate transac- tions. Those recommendations wiU grow from. statewide hearings before the final version of the plan is turned over to the 1976 Legislature for further hearings and passage qf laws. ''The essence of the plan," said the commission,, "Is that the coast should be treated not as or- dinary Teal estate but as a unique place where conservation and special kinds of development should have priority." Highest priority is given to public recreation. "Public recreatjon should have the highest priority in suitable . areas of the coast, and letal rights of the public to have ac- cess to publicly owned tidelands should be vigorously entorced," the draft says. "Public use of coastal lands and 'waters should be consistent with natural re· sour" protectiClll. •• ' 1 The draft ~ not rule out coastal energy plants but de~lares that "energy in.stalla- tiohs allowed-mdst be subject to strinaent environmental stan- dards." It also declares that publie ac· cess to the coast 'should be pro- vided and that "coastal develop- ments that serve the public, such as campgrounds, resorts, hotels and motels, and rental housiog, should have priority over coastal developments that are essential· ly private, such as typical re· sidential developments." The plan also declares that public transit should receive priority over roadway construe· tion in urban areas ''to reduce the need for coastal parking lots and major highway programs to conserve energy and to improve coastal air quality." The draft says conflicting de· velopments should be "chan· neled to the inland parts of coastal cities and to other inland areas " and that coastal agriculture lands "should be kept in agriculture ." The commission also calls for the preservation of wetlands and coastal streams. "Coastal marshes and other wetlands, many of which have been tilled and diked in past years, should be protected from further destruction and restored where possible. "Free flowing coastal streams should be protected because they · are necessary for the migratory fish caught by commercial and sport fishermen and because they supply sand for coastal beaches." The plan says development in areas subject to beach or cliff erosion, landslides, earthquakes or fioodtng should be permitted "only if adequate engineering <See COAS'l' •Page A2) WbUe the motion was being ar1-..ecl in Judge Turner's ~m. Judge William Mur-ray -as hearing te1timony two court room a a way in the divorce acUon filed by ¥rs. Thais Hin~haw , 47, the con- gressman's second wile. Judge Murray took the pretrial conference into his chambers when a newsman appeared in the courtroom. , Dtfense attorn•Y Charles .Gar· rity ~mmented before the judge arld both lawyers horrled into chambers that Hinshaw is pre- seotlY in W ashlnttoo and would not make an appearance ftlc:lay in either courtroom. A trial date of July 22 was set. Hinshaw is currenUy under a court-0rde.r to pay his estranged • wife $650 a moatb pendiag trial of her divorce action. .. TEN CENTS Mrs. Hinshaw, a victim of what is described as a deteriorating multiple sclerosis condition, testified at an earlier court hear- ing that her husband had P-aid ber only $300 in the six mon~ prior to the hearing. She claimed mnshaw bad several hidden bank accounts and had retused throughout their two-year marriage to provide her with sufficient living ex- penses. o.llY Pl• Miff ...... LION COUNTRY SAFARI'S 480-POUND BEAST 'CRISCO' IN SURGERY Glut of Uons on Market Prompts Vasectomies at Preserve l ::.ions Face S11rgery Safari Overcrowding Prompts V ruectomies By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of Ille O•llY Piiot St.fl Lion Country Safari, the African wildlife preserve which once celebrated Frasier's fruit· fulness, now has a beastly pro- blem on its hands: too many lions. That's why it has launched a massive birth control program which eventually will result in all 103 male lions ending up on the operating table for vasedomies. Dr. Donald Dooley, resident veterinarian at the Irvine pre· serve., describes the operation as simple and safe and has already performed it 15 times. And Pat Quinn, the corpora- tion's zoological director, ex- plains the vasectomy is superior to castration because the lions lose neither mane nor social stature. "He won 'l notice a thing," Quinn said Thursday as Dr. 'Ghost Ship' Cutter Lodged in Glacier WASHINGTON (UPI) -The 8,600-ton Coast Guard cutter Glacier, stuck in 25-foot thick Antarctic ice will become an ice-encrusted ghost ship until Nov- ember unless it can break through 12 miles of ice to open water. The ship, which carries a crew of 211, including eight civilian scientists and three naval sea cadets, got trapped in the dense Antarctic ice Wednesday while steaming to rescue another stranded ship. Coast Guard officials said that Glacier. its largest icebreaker, might have to spend the entire winter right where it is. The Antarctic winter won 't be over until Nov· ember because seasons are reversed in the Southern Hemisphere and "the ice will get thicker and thicker and thicker." a spokesman said. ~ He said the crew "are in no danger" because the ship is built to be squeezed upward as the ice thickens. and the vessel has heat, lights and several months of supplies stored away for just such an emergency. Dooley was sewing up the in- cision on Crisco. at 480 pounds. Li on Country's biggest lion. "He'll just be shooting blanks." 'Still snoozing from the general anesthesia, Crisco was on his- way back out to the range in the bed of a pickup truck less than 30 minutes after the operation began. The operating room scene is repeated frequently as Lion Country endeavors lo stem the lion glut which it encouraged when the park opened in 1970. At that time there weren't enough lions either at the Irvine preserve or all the other safari parks which Lion Country began to open in other states. Breeding was encouraged and management cheere d and notified the press whenever grizzled old Frasier s ired another litter. His prowess in· spired wrist watches, T-shirts. and bumper stickers -an<t many elderly men from nearby Leisure World . No more. Lion Country recel'lt· Ly sold some of its pioney-losing parks and, even though it intends to open another preserve in Japan, there are still too many lidns. In fact, there is a nationwide surplus of lions. Lions which used to command between $250 and SSOO aren 'l worth anything now. Zoos can't give them away. ac= cording to Quinn. · The zoologist says he would be qwte happy with halt as many· <See LIONS, Page A%) Showers dec:reaslng• toniiht Md Saturday, ac- cording to the weaiher service. Hlcha ,~turday . mostly 80 to 85. Chance of '· atiowera 40 J)er~ent S.tut· day. INSI DE TODA~ '" "'11 Otn IGJd that todoJI'• laigh aclaool . Md college jazz .'-nemployment .Rising Truck Stolen At W ork Site mUlfciaU.aH bitter them the pro/•Hkmol pta11er1 of 30 JllOr•. ,.,. Orangt Coad au- dlnce• toiU heave c ch<mct to ~ Jcw Shnittlvcuit t1tt · 1th Or~ Coott Col~ Jaa . Eumt~ l"•ldool. s. PIO' • ' CJ0/tod411'1 Wte~· . l •tlex By G RY GRANVILLE Of Ult 0.lly ......... ff • Oran1e County unemployment continu4d to rise in February despite adju1tments ln U .S. Depeit.iDintorLabor figures that forcecf:'die county jobless rate • dowafrom Jnuary. Mtosether, accordinl to tbe state Employment. Development Department, 61,300 countlans were out o( work last month and the county'• unemployment rate w~7. 7 P.ercent. A monlh earlier, EDD's moet- th ly bulletin showed 82,500 pettOns unemployed with a Job· less t&te pf8. l per~eot. · ._ duri111 \he ·1ut 30 days, .nK' meu~ement nsures were ~ by lbe Oepartinent of -a. . ---- . Labor a~ JanutrY's unemploy- ment ft•ure wu adjusted down to 56,800 anct the "nemployment rate to 7.1 percent. The California rate was 9.4 per cent, the blghest in 25years. stattaUcaJ adjustments aside, the abort term employment out· UNEMPLOYM ENT STAYS AT 8..2,_. S tory, Page M . A hunt is under way to<lay for a workets since September of1974. stolen pickup truck and tools · There were also several layoffs valued at more than $1~. taken in aerospace mllDulacturing that from a paving construction site ccst 1,300 workers their jobs last in Irvine overnight Thursday. month, according to the labor re-Wendell Max Tonkinson, of~ port. . Sully Miller Constructiotl Com. An indicator or a continuing un-pany, told police the loss in· employment problem was the eluded $cores of tools being used fact that 5,600 unemployed on a job in tbe immediate persons filed claims fer extended vicinity. durallon benefits la.st month. tnvesUgators said that ln addi· Such claims 1re an tndicaUon tlon to the tools, the tb.ieve stole that unemployed ~ have a pickup truck belOneing lo used Q ·their DOr•al 'Gcmploy.. employe GUbert. Gomez. mMt befteftts Ud ar• tamed on Police sJid the tbd\ ocC\\l"l1!d • ~t~'l'olls • durlnr-a period of hea.y rain as ·, ·~ factor adcllilg '4 the • Gomez &le pt in bis motor' KOIDe, l'lle lft unempto)meftt, ac~ which had been J*'ked near the to tDJ>. •as an lnOwC Of mkl· ll'Uck at 2818 Barruea .... ind term graduat~ on tti ''-1 • ~ , tbal be b~ard nGll,lalil bftMtM ot depress d J.o b mark at." thedownJ)Our. Al· OAll.VPtLOT Cal-e)r's ¥ictifu , AWo'man MURRAY, Ky. (AP) - Willlui L. Calley Jr. says be was . shocked to discover that the first person he killed as a soldier was an unarmed woman. .. When I killed my first Com· munlst -it was a she," Calley told an audience of some 2.000 Murray State University stu- dents Thursday night ... She was not armed. I realized the Com· munlsts do come in human form. and it s hocked me.•• ln bis first appearance as a col- ! e g e lecturer. Calley also described his training and the an· ti-Communist ideals he said he grew up with. He said they condi· tloned his actions in Vietnam. · ''I was not in Vietnam lo analyze the war to determine what was right and wrong," the former lieutenant said. "I was sent lo Vietnam to destroy communism. I was given an Ml6 rifle to kill Communists. I didn't know who the enemy was. I didn't know there was an enemy," he said. In the auditorium, a sign hang- ing from the balcony asked, "Why?" "I can't answer the question," Calley said. acknowledging the sign with a nod. "If the govern· ment could tell me why I was there to begin with, I might be able to answer some of your questions.'' Calley was convicted in 1971 for the murder of at least 22 Viet- ·namese civilians at My Lai in 1968. A federal judge upset the conviction last year and Calley was released from prison. The Army has appealed the rulings. He said that at My Lai his men had been conditioned to believe that a strong Communist force was there and tha t the rnissi.,n of the t ask force to which he was as- signed was to seek out a nd destroy the 48th North Vi et· namese battalion. . "As far as the 48th ... they had eluded us," Calley said. "The in· dividual actions of myself a nd my men is something that only we can appreciate as far as hor- ror -something we have to Jive with -goes." He said he felt his mission in Vietnam was ·'to seek out and destroy human beings." Calley was paid $2,000 for his talk, and 'another banner said: ··No student $ for killers." Five students picketed the auditorium . to protest his being paid. Calley said that while it was idealistic not to pay speakers such as himself, it was not re· alistic. He said he had had heavy legal expenses for four years and no sala ry. Fro• Page Al COAST ... can reduce the hazards to accep· table levels." The state commission was created by statewide voter in· itiative in )972 and charged with drafting a plan for conserving the coastline. It also was given regulatory power over development inside a 1,000 yard corridor along the . waterline from the Oregon border to Mexico. ll has blocked or curtailed several large coastside developments. The swath also cuts through cities such as San Francisco and Los Angeles. One of the six re· gional commissions functiooing under the state commission, the north central, is proposing to limit highrise apartments in some residential neighborhoods in San Francisco. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 'The Of ... Co.\I o .. 11y P11o4 • ..,,,, ...,..,, ru om· lltno<I -H•W\ Prf'\\ I\ publl\,,_,, by -0<«>~ CH~ f'vOl•\llon9 Comp•ny Se!><ilrel• «"''°"' .,, =-~~: .. :~,~·~.~:!'~~,~· tel" V•ll•Y '"'""" S•ClctttN<k V•IK'y •nd ~ 0.K ltl!.oullt (o .. I A •lf191t re9'°""1 edll!Ofl "pul>ltt~ \41wrd•~ -S...00.o . TIW prlneipel pul)ll ... •nQ Pl'"'I h .. JOI ~\I 8•y Slr8"1. C.OSl• llM•<I. (Alllo(llo• ~. Robert N . Weed PrttoO.nl •nd P\lllll!Nr Jack R. Curley Yt<e P•o•O.nl •"" Goe-al W-' Thomas t<eevit fOltor Thomas A. MurJ>f'ine ~""9'"9 £•1 .. Cherles H. Loos Richard P. Nall "'"'''""' M<IM°'nQ [dnon Offices CM .. M9u U0-\1 ... M,..t ~ ...... "",.._ ~ .... ~ ....... 11 .. c.i.-vre\lrftl ..._... ..... ., k.wll 11'H 9M<l\ ...... ,..,d ~-0 .... , ... , "~' u .... ,_.,.., •• ~ .. o~ ,,_.., TtltpftoM (71•) 642""21 CJauHfecl AdvtrtlSlfttl 642·S.11 ~ ......... , .. ,,.. .. ~ H1-6l10 ",_&ool'IC.._.,. 49M630 u .. 1 T•1et111eto Mot'e rain r9la on pang ot de Orange Coast Thunday lllaht and today an~ m9re ta expected tonight. And the weatherman says there is a 40 percent chance ol showers Saturday. The Los Angeles Weather Bureau's forecast also warned of 15 to 30 m .p.h. winds tonight. The Ounge County Harbor Patrol said storm warnlnt• a.re up from north of Monterey to Point Con· . '(:{ * * Northern ('epUon, and unall er-it warn· Na bave been posted from Polnt tonceptlon to the Mexlcan border. The patrol said that the sea is swelling from four to eight feet and ls· up to 10 feet in outer northern waters. From Polnt Conception to the Mexican border, the wlnd is 15 to 30 knots with gusts up to 3S knots. Jn Newport Harbor, .65 inches or r aiJl fell ln 24 hours. bringing the seasop total to 8.3 inches, compared with a season total of 7 .20 inches at this time last year. No rain was recorded in Hunt- ington Beach· during the night, but .14 inches was recorded at the Laguna Niguel fire station. Expensive A rt work State Hit ByStonn The weathel' burea\I reported. that s howers s hould decrease late tonight ~nd Saturday. It will be a little cooler t onight. Artist Salvador Dali unveils one of the first five in a series of 10 paintings com- missioned by Merrill Chase Galleries of Chicago as part of a project with a pro- jected value of $2.75 million, believed to be the largest single commission ever awarded to any artist in hist~ry. By The Associated Press An angry P acific storm pack- ing howlin~ winds cut into Northern Cahfornia today, snarl-. ing traffic. causing minor fiood-Strachan's Case Om? Fro• Page AJ LIONS ... lions at the Irvine preserve. "A park is only so large and you can maintain only so many lions. There comes a point when you have too many and you have to start a program of birth con- trol," he explains. Lions average four cubs per lit· ter and throw litters twice a year, advancing the lion population by quantum leaps if left unchecked. Out of all the males at Lion Country only a handful may be doing the actual breeding, but it will be necessary to vasectomize all of them to ensure birth con· trot. . Lions who have received ''the treatment" are ear-tagged for identjfication. It is doubtful that their mates will look for it. As zoologist Quinn explains it, the male lions -as far as they are concerned -lose nothing, not even their pride. AIM Leader Faces Charge RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) - American Indian Move ment leader Russell Means will be charged with murder in connec· tion wittr the death today of a · South Dakota man, Pennington County States Attorney Jack Klauck said. Authorities said Martin Mon· tileaux, 28, of Kyle died this morning at a Rapid City hospital of wounds suffered in a weekend shooting. · Means and R'ichard Marshall. 24, Pine Ridge. S.D .. had been charged with shooting with intent to kill after Monlileaux was shot in the neck early Sunday at a bar in Scenic, S.D. Suspect Nabbed LOS ANGELES CAPI Three men who allegedly beat up a bank messenger and took $23, 191 from him Thursday were booked for investigation of armed rob- bery following a high-speed chase. ing and dumping snow ~n the 4 d W k Ok d mountains. • The storm drenched the San · ay e e aye Francisco Bay al'~a with half an inch of rain overnight and some F HB D • minor flooding was reported in or etect1ves ~fc!'riiit~~~~;~o. San Jose and Wind gusts of 67 miles per hour were recorded a t Pillar Point. WASHINGTON <AP> - The government moved to- day to dismiss Watergate cover-up conspiracy char ges against Gordon Strachan, a principal aide to R.R. Haldeman when he was White House chief of staff. Orange County Superior Court Judge William S. Lee has ruled that Huntington Beach detectives are entitled to work a four-day week the same as their fellow of- ficers on routine patrol duty. Judge Lee gr anted a writ of mandate against the city as re- quested by the 170-member Hunt· ington Beach Police Officers As· sociation. His decision covers two man- dates. One says Police Chief Earle Robitaille must put detec· tives back on the four day (10 hours per day) plan, and the other says if the city wants to change that system it bas to first meet and confer with the police association. City Attorney Don Bonfa said today he has not yet seen Judge Lee's full decision but the city would comply with the order. Bonra s aid the four-10 plan would not be reinstalled im· mediately. Jnste~d. the attorney for the police association has agreed to polJ officers to de· termine if they would rather wait until after meet and confer sessions. The main point of Judge Lee's decision, issued last Friday. is 'that the city must meet and con- fer with labor over such policy is- sues. even though ·it may still have the power to make the same decision, Bonfa said. Police patrolmen now work the so-called '"Four-10 plan." Chief Robitaille had also experimented Greene's Victory Margin Narrow~d LOS ANGELES CAP> -As· semblyman Bill Greene's slim margin narrowed even further in a new count released by election officials for Tuesday's 29th state Senate District cbntest. The latest totals lightened Green~ victory margin by six votes to on· ly92. with lt {or detectives and some administrative personnel, but scrapped it last September when he decided it was not efficient for their work. The police association filed suit in December to get.other person- nel put back on the four-ten plan, which provides officers with a three-day weekend, while they still work a 40-hour week. Japan Jungle Holdout Remarries TAIPEI <UPI) -a Japanese soldier who waited for 31 years in Indonesian jungles for World War II to end remarried bis former wife. He gave her second husband $2,500 and a water buf- falo as compensation. Lee Kuang-Huei was found in a hut on the Indonesian island of Morotai in January. He had never received the Japanese sur- render order. Returning to his native Taiwan, he discovered his wife remarried 10 years after he was lis t ed as missing in action. Taiwan courts ruled Mrs. Lee's second marriage invalid, but Lee was angry because she did not wait for him. Taiwan newspapers said Lee's son, who was born shortly after Lee was drafted into the Japanese Army, convinced his father lo remarrv. Gale warnings were posted northward to Cape Mendocino. Snow began falling today in the Sierra Nevada. Travelers• ad· ·visor ies were posted for hazardous driving conditions because of blinding snow. Early morning commuter traf· fie into San Francisco.was slowed to a crawl. The storm is expected to lose much of its punch tonight. Rain a nd clouds meanwhile will continue to cast a pall over the San Joaquin Valley through Tuesday, the National Weather Service predicted. Thunderstorms will end tonight, but showers are expect· ed Saturday and again Monday. WASTES TOLD -ON PAPER TALLAHASSEE, Aa. <AP) - A drive to eliminate pointless paper s huffling has been started by Florida Secretary of. Stale Bruce Smathers. The campaign was heralded in a six-page an- nouncement. "Unneccessary and ill-planned paperwork h as long been iden· tif1ed as a villain undermining government efficiency and in- flating its op er a ting costs," Smathers said. Attached to the one-page pews release were a two-page retter announcing the progr(lm and three pages of addresses t o whom it was sent. "We do not believe that the interests or justice lie in the continued prosecu· lion of Strachan," special prosecutor Henry S. Ruth said in a motion filed in U.S. District Court. Strachan had been charged with conspiracy to· obstruct justice, obstruc- tion of justice a nd lying to the Watergate grand jury. He faced a m aximumm or 15 years in prison and $20,000 fines if convicted. Court Action Set on Patios Plans for the construction or aluminum patios at two Irvine homes were challenged Thursday in Orange County Superior Court action taken by the Culverdale Community Association. · Lawyers for the association will de~and at a hearing to be held within the next week that a r estraining order be issued against property owners Bill C. Hott, 3582 Hamilton St., and Melvin H. and Karen Sanchez. 3612 Baylor Ave. It is argued that the structures are in conflict with architectural styles in the area and that both de- fendants failed to submit plans to the association for approval. 7eJ ()()# ~~, 'J1ee, Sketchbook by Heritage !~spires your individuality, your flair for the dramatic, your longing for the lovelier things in life. When is a collection of furniture not a collection? When each design has an independence, a flair, and' an individuality all its own. When it can stand alone or become part of a Las Vegas Shakes Again in Testing • total look. MERCURY, Nev. <AP> -The nation's second announced un- derground nuclear test in a week rumbled far beneath the barren Nevada desert today, causing on· ly minor shaking in Las Vegas, about 90 miles away. The weapons-related test was conducted at 8 a.m. PDT 2,000 feet below Yucca F1at at the Nevada Test Site. northwest of Pot Sentence: Wash Dishes SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A photographer who says marl· juana made him a "healthier. happier person'' has been sen· tenc!ed to wash dishes at a charl· ty kitchen in Ul!u of goinc to jaU on a drug charse. The unusuat punishment lo the marijuana poueuion casa was imposed by Superior Court Judge Franc1s McCarty, a loag-tlme foe of severe sentences !« eoft.4rui ~rs. He ordered Davist Be.rg\n, 23, to help out at St. Anthony Dining Room for elght week1. The ldtchea hu a. rved at leut 11 mllllon free meala ln 25 years to the city's poor. Las Vegas. An announcer at a Las Vegas radio station said a studio microphone suspended from its cord jiggled slightly from the shock wave generated by the massive explosion. The blast registered 5.3 on the Richter scale. Dave Jackson, a spokesman for the Energy Research and Development Administration CE RDA), said there was no radiation leak. "Everything is normal," he said. · The shot . code-named "Cabrillo." had a yield or between 20.000 and 200,000 tons of TNT, but the payload likely was in the upper reaches of that range since it was announced beforehand. ERDA dpes not an· nounce all or its nucltar.tests. The test came one week after the liral announced undereround t~t of the year. also at delo.lale Yucca Flat. That test wu d~· layed two days due to adverse we,ther. nxtay's test was condueted by the Law ten ce .~adl atlon Laboratory at Livermore. Caiif., ~rated by tbe Vni•milY or CaJJ(ornla for ERDA. The underground tes was the 267th announced since the United ·sutes endC!d atmospheric tesUng Marly 13 yeart ago. OAEXEL-HERITAGE-H£NAEOON-WOOOMAAK-t<AA.ASTAN-B.AKEA .. WIBDAYS I SATVIOAYS t :otte•JI & NEWPORT-BEACH• 1127 WESTCUt'F DR.. 642•20$0 LAGUNA BEACH • ~ NOfiTlf COA..~J' HW'' ·• 4114.f.SSl TORRANCE• 2*t HAWTHORNE BLVD. (OPtn Fn l1l 8~11t1 . 12.:1 ·311• JTl.1119 • ByX.ATHV CLANCY ••o.tt¥" ....... education teachtcs and addi· tionaJ plaanlag U~e at sdaool. more. . ... I TEN CENTS T•achera jn the Ocean View Sdfbol bistrict have boerl told by tbe ~cbool board ,there isn't enough money in the budget lo meet their $10 million contract demands next year. Thr district·~ noa-teaclUn" staU also has asked tw a 1S per- cent pay bike. But district olttoU.ls Uid Tbunday the costly demandS caMot be m et bee~ of infla- tion and a tight, SJ.5.7 nilllion budiet- IOefatian. criticized the school eoatl'a reponse, delivered Mon- ·~)u~t, saying it iDcluded he i"OQtretaoffers. ~. She saict teachers bpd hoped YW laoard would make a specific gay oil•. (or example. ;. Otl moat items involving money, the board referred lo a section of U.eir proposals that ex- plains how hard the economy has hit the school district budget. ''We received a r~p()nse, not a coqnter proposal," Miss DeVore # said ... It la very frustrating.'.' Ji01 Jones, assistanl superin- tendent for business, said a re- vision in the district salary schedule proposed by teachers, could take one of the district's in· struclors fi:om a $16.000 salary this year to $30.000 next year. gr~duate class credit.a can move no higher on the pay schedule. although they still receive annual across-the -board salary boosts. Under the teachers' proposal. one district teacher with 23 years' experience, 64 graduate hours and a masters degree could earn $30,000 next year. Teachers asked tor a tost or Jiving raise, estimated at 1S per- cent, as well as smaller classes. more art, music and. pb,YSical t Outlook 'Bleak' Marilyn Devore, president oC the Ocean View Teachers A&- County Jobless Rate Increases By GARY GRANVILLE Ofuie o.ur P11etswt Orange County unemployment continued to rise in February d espite adjustments in U.S. Department of Labor figures that forced the county jobless rate down from January Huntington _Man Guilty lnKUbuip SA"N DIEGO O\P> -Self· styled soldier or fortune Bobby Joe Keesee of Huntington Beach plead,d guilty today to . con· spiracy to kidnap with intent to ransom a U.S. diplomat in Mex· ico. Murder and kidnap charges against the former civilian Viet- nam ,war prisoner will be dropped, a prosecutor s aid. Keesee, 4Q. told U.S. District Cou~ Judge Leland C. Nielsen he was enteridl the guilty plea on tbe condition that it prevents bis ext.radftj_on to Mexico. However. Nielsen said such a guarantee was out of his jurisdiction. The body of John Patterson, U.S . vice consul at Jiermosillo, Mexicot was found in ~dry creek b ed e ight miles south or Hermosillo after he disaps)eared from the cons1.1late there last March 22. Attempts by Patterson's wife to comply with ransom demands fell through and the $250,000 soueht in a letter was never paid. A furniture m aker who former- ly lived in an apartment complex at 6671 Warner Ave., said he and another man he identified as a former employe of his furniture shop ci>nspired to carry out a kid- naping. The other man spoke Spanish so they went together to Hermosillo on Jan. 16, 1974, Keesee said. But at the U.S. con-· sulate, he said he waited outside the front door fqr five minutes, afraid to enter becaU&.e too many people were tnslde. P~tteraon disappeared when • lae left the cQDs ulate at the end of • \be day. Keesee said he wrote the fetter last April 30. Keesel said he didn't know Patterliion's tiame unW he saw ~spaper account. ot. tbe'kid· naplng. The question of e1ttradition to Mexico rests with others, Nielsen told Keesee. There was no im· mediate ,qdbim ent from pro- aecutors, bat Nielsen was told the 'overnment was dropping charps ot mur~er. kidnap and extortion against Keesee. Sentencing was set for April 28 at wblcb tlm~ a prosecutor aald, murder and kidnap charies will . be dropped. JCeesee wu arrested last sum· m~r arid remains in the Seo Dleto County.Jail. SAN DIEGO <AP> An El Ca· iJOn man faces f~eraJ charges for allegedly oY'erchariing Matinet on the rnce ol alrtlDe tJdceta. A federa frand .tvry re· tarned an Indictment ap.lnst Stuart W. Dobbins, atCUMd of overthar1ln1 the se"Lrimen. '7.:SOO for alr rares whUe a Uc~ .,_ l&H ~year at die Muine •eon;iltecrwt Depot. Altogether. according to the stale Employment Development Department, 61,300 coi.mtians were out of work last month and the county's unemployment rate was 7 .7 percent. A month earlier, EDD 's mon·- thly bulletin showed 62,500 persons unemployed with a job· less rate or 8.1 percent. But during the last 30 days, new measurement figures were adopted by the Department or UNEMPLOYMENT STAYS AT 1.2%: Story, ... ~· Labor and January's onemploy- mertt figure was adjusted down to 56,300 Jnd the unemployment rate to 7 .1 percent. The California rate was 9.4 per- cent, the highest in 25 years. Statistical adjustments aside. the short term employment out look in Orange County was termed "bleak'' by EDD's labor analyst Alta Eldridge. Mrs. Eldridge also predicted a rise in unemployment rolls in March because of anticipated layoffs of Orange County resi- dents who work in neighboring Los Angeles C•unty. The g loomy pTediction followed a pattern set in February when' the number of unemployed in the county in- creased by 5,000 workers. As a result, the 61,300 workers unemployed in the county was a 45-month high and a'62 percent 1 increase ov·er February, 19'14. On the bright side of tbe employment picture, there was a gain pf 1,900 jobs in goverl)ment wortt during tbe month, most of it midterm staffing in public schools and in newly created jobs under a federal employment pro- gram. , I,ooo Layoffs At D .ouglas; MoreEwected • A~t 1,000 aero'spa~ workers •t tne JleJ)onnell Douglas Corporation's Long Beach plant. were la1d off today. Company of- ficials refused to comment about reports ofl,000 more layof(s next week. , · The cutbacks were the result of a nearly month-long strike by membera of tbe lnt~ttonal ~s­ soctaUon of Mac~inlsts (lAM >, with 7,000 members in ~tMrn Calllornia. · ,, The lAM workers supply part5 19 the Lone Beach plot used in the manufacture of DC 9 and DC lOalrcnft, Companv Ofllcials did say to. day thil no layo1fs have come so . far at McDOnnell Doullu' Hunt- inaton Beacb plant, where 1.SOO 1AM membt:rs are on strike. The ~mpany spokesman said the· HQfttilistoo Beach facility i not as dependent upon parts made by t"e lA.){ u some other Mcl>on· nell Douatas f acilltles. Meanwhile, federal med1al1on betw• the strlkina union end the CO'ftl~f Wll believed lO be COntlnuln1, A 1p0kt1mao for the NaUonaJ AerenauUca and Sp•ct •d· minlltr•tlon Jn Houston con· firmed ThurtMay a~ that <lie DotJOLAS. Pili ;\.I\ "Then -.e could malt' a coullter pr0posa.1i. ttiey cootd make a co'1rtter proposal, and we would be e,loser to .an agree- ment." &ti.la QeVore said. • • l ..., Accordlpg to figures prepared by district Superintendent Dale Cooaan. the teachers, pay pro- "PO•ala alone would cost $3 million He explainetl the revision -.would remove ceilings from the salary schedule. Now, a teacher with 10 years' experience and 60 The proposed reduction in class size would cost $4.2 million · (See TEACHE~S, Pa•e AZ) ______ ·o ast an I . 0.111 PllOI St.ft Pboto 300-page 'Policy' Unveiled SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) - The state's proposed "Constitu· lion" for protecting California '.s 1,000-mile coastline from further assault by bulldozers and de- velopers was unveiled today by the California Coastal Zone Conservation Commission. The JOO.page plan for keeping undeveloped stretches of the · state's Pacific shoreline open to the public and preserving its natural condition spells out com- mission policies on matters from public recreation to coastal energy plants. B ut il makes no recommenda· tions on how the policies should • be carried out or by wruch gov- ernment agencies. Proposals for funding coastal preservation and improvements ranee from o( •• £shore oil drilling to statewiae bond issues to taxes on hotel rooms and real estate transac· tions. LION COUNTRY SAFARI'S 480-POUND BEAST 'CRISCO' IN SURGERY Glut of Liona on Market Prompts Vasectomies at Preserve Those recommendations will grow from statewide hearings beforf' the final version of the plan is turned over to the 1976 Legislature for further hearings a nd passage or laws. Safari Sorge~y . Vll$ecwmiesfor 103 Lions By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of the O.llr .-fietSUtt Lion Country Safari, the African wildlife preserve which once celebrated Frasier's fruit- fulness, now has .a beastly pro· blem on its hands: too mal:ly lions .. That's why it bas launched a massive birlh control program '¥hich eventually will result in all 103 male lion$ ending up on the operating table for vasectomies. Dr. Donald Dooley, resident veterinarian at the Irvine pre- ser,ve, describes the operation as· .simple and safe and has already performed it 15 times. And Pat Quinn, the corpora- tion's zoological director, ex· plains the vasectomy is s uperior to castration because the Hoos lose neithe r mane nor social stature. ''He won 'l notice a thing,•• Quinn said Thursday as Dr. Dooley was sewing up the in- BafJg Rescued cision on Crisco, at 480 pounds. Lion CounlrY. 's biggest lion. "He'll just be s hooting blanks." Still snoozing from the general anesthesia, Crisco was on his way back out to the range in the bed or a pickup truck less than 30 minutes after t he operation began. The operating room scene is r epeated frequently as Lion Country endeavors to stem the lion glut which it encouraged when the park opened in 1970. At that time there weren't enough lions either at the Irvine <See LIONS, Page A2) Colombia, Cuba BOGOTA <UPI) -Colombia and CUba Thursday night r e- established diplomatic relations after a 14-year break, expressing hope the move would help in •'thawing the Cold War.•• Scout·s Lend Hand To Beach Firemen Two Boy Se.outs Thursday .nl«ht helped Huntington Beach Flremen who were on an emergency calrto aid a choking baby. The scouts, Mark Vidano, 12, and Ron Reinbaeh, 14, were re- turning home from a Troop 557 Court of Awards w.tien \hey spotted a fire tru~k ,.racitll BrOok.bunt S\r~. They also ht-arcl resid nb in en , apartment complex at 21.SSl Brookhurst St talki about • baby in trouble tn~ ~lft· plex. Detectives To Receive 4-DayWeek Orange County Superior Court Judge William S. Lee has ruJed that Huntington Beach detectives are entitled to work a four-day week the same as their fellow of- ficers on routine patrol duty. Judge Lee granted a writ of mandate against the city as re- quested by the 170-member Hunt· ington Beach Police Officers As· sociation. His decision covers two man- dates. One says Police Chi ef Earle Robitaille must put detec- tives back on the four day (10 hours per day) plan, and the other says if the city wants to change that system it has to first meet and confer with the police association. City Attorney Don Bonfa said today he has not yet seen Judge "Lee's full decision but the city would comply with the order. "The essence of the plan," said the commission, ''Is that .the coast should be treated not as or- dinary real estate but as a unique place where conservation and s pecial kinds of development should have priority.' Highest priority is given to public recreation. "Public recreation should hav.e the highest priority in suitable areas of the coast. and legal rights .of the public lo have ac- cess lo publicly owned tidelands should be vigorously enforced.·: · the draft says. ..Public use of coastal lands and waters should be consistent with natural re- source protection .·· The draft does not rule out coastal energy plants but declares that ·'energy install~ tions allowed must be subject to stringent environmental staD· dards." ,. It also declar es that publie ac· cess to the coast should be pro- vided and that ''coastal develop· ments that serve the public, s~b as campgrounds, resorts, hotels and motels, and rental housing.. should have priority over coaaal developments that are essential· <See COAST , Page A?> Bonfa said the four-10 plan would not be reinstalled im-·------------ mediately. Instead, the attorney for tJte police association has agreed to poll omcers to de- termine if they would rather wait until after meet a nd confer sessions. The main point of Judge Lee's decision, issued last Friday, is that the city must meet and con· fer with labor over such 1><>licy is· sues, even though it may still have the power to make the same decision, Bonf a said. Police patrolmen now work the so-called "Four-10 plan." Chief Robitaille had also experimented wi1li it for detectives and some administra~lve personnel, but scrapped it tut September when be decicled it was not efficient for their work. ..... Weat .. er Showers d ee reasing tonight and Saturday. 3C· cording to the weather service. Highs Saturday mostly 60 to 65. Chance of showers 40 percent Satur- day. INSIDE TODA. V It has ~en aoid that todtw~ high school . and collt.gs lmZ , • musiciaM. are better lbaa Uw prof essfonal play•rs of JO 31tOrs.ago. Orowge CQOd.-.. dience• will hon a chaltc:e to ;wlge for themuloe• .at t1'c • 7th Oro• Coast c~ Jaz:z • Devices Aseiilled EnMmble Pediual. Sa page • Clo/ U>day'• Weekocfer. 1n•x · LOS ·A.NO EL ES <UPI) MY-lenln ., Supervisor l{enneth Hahn Thuts-....... •1 day char,ed that the nitl'olen ox-=.=: .. :: ide smog control devicM on . a...-.. DM• Clill*I 0 1966·70 a&ttOmobiles would add as•tt • o 246,QOO PoUDds of lead to the air in · o..-...-.. _. the 8outh Coast Alr Ba:Sin eacb · :='P• ... ~ Th A bl ""'• .. lfftftPt ..... I ... U year. ~ ssem Y ~, ...... ,,........ .... •uh a tlon Committee Wednesday will ·1 .:!·=~~~.,:..* ..... .:..::...!l.~'~~~~~~ . consider two bllls. ._ .. AJ DAtlYPILOT H/F HONS ... preserve l>r all lhe Other nfari parka 'which Lion ~. be1an '° opee In otfler states. Breeding w 1u; encouraged and management cheered and notified th~ _press whenever crinled ""1SV 1-'rasier sired another Utter. His prowess in- spired wrist w ate hes, T-shiJ1s anlS b.umper stickers -and ny elderly men from nearby ureWorld. . o more. Lion Country recent- ly aold some or its money-losing pyks and, even though it intends to open another preserve in J•an. there are stlll too .many ll . i: fact, there is a nationwide S'lfPlUS of lions. Lions which used , tQt command between $250 and $SO-aren't worth anything now. Z.os can't give them away, ac- CGl'dingtoQuinn. l'he zoologist says he would be qeta happy with half as many liens al the Irvine preserve ... A· pil'k ls only so large and you can maintain only so many. lions. There comes a point when you h ave too m~my and you Ov4! to start a program of b1rt.Mon· trol." he explains . Lions average four cubs per lit· t er and throw litters twice a year, advancing the lion population by quan~ leaps if left unchecked. Out of all the m ales at Lion Country only a handful may be doing the actual breeding. but il will be necessary to vasectomizc all of them to ensure birth con- trol. Nort hern State H it By S torm By The Associated Press An' angry Pacific storm pack- ing howlin$ winds cul into Northern California today, snarl· ing traffic. causing minor flood · ing and dumping snow in the mountains. The storm drenched the San Francisco Bay area with half an inch of rain overnight and some minor flooding was reported in San Francisco, San Jose and Marin County. Wind gusts of 67 miles per hour were recorded at Pillar Point. Gale warnings were posted northward to Cape Mendocino. Snow began falling today in the Sierra Nevada. Travelers' ad· visorics were posted for hazardous driving conditions because of blinding snow. Early morning commuter traf. tic into San Francisco was slowed to a crawl. The storm is expected to lose much of its punch tonight. Rain and clouds meanwhile will continue to cast a pall over the San Joaquin Valley through Tuesday, the National Weather Service predicted. Thunders t o rms will end tonight, but shower s are expect- ed Saturday and again Monday. Police Sued Ove r 'Att ack' A m an who claims he was at- tacked without provocation by ·eight officers from the Hunt- ington Beach a nd Fountain Valley police departments has sued bQth cities and the officers for $40.f>oo. Keith All<'n Strong claims in his Orange County Supe r ior Court lawsuit that he was beaten ana battered by the eight officers last June 15 and suffered severe injuries as a result of the alleged attack. He states that he is unaware of the reason for the alleged assauJt and was not advised while it was taking place of the reason for it. ORANGE COAST M1J DAILY PILOT Robert N. w~ Pu\.-e11t •"<I PuCJOI_, Jack R Curley 'lll(f "'"""'"' • ..., c,.,...41 Mo,,.Qt, Thomas Keevil (dllOf Tttomas A . Murphlnc> .... 0"'9 (dolO< Terry Coville _ _. Ot-C-y Edi .... H••Unaton ... ct. Office 1JWJ--. .. --d ,,..111,.. _, ~ ~ '°" ne •- OtMr Ofrlc.es U-.. .. Mft, 11 .. 0.........\lt .. I CMu _. lll """"...,\I,_ .__, 9'f'111 Wl ,...._, ....,.._. ~llKll Yeli.y tSMl l• l'w• -.. _o....,~·-"' Yo ung Doctor Frank Bryant. 34, bas recelved this year's D.istinguishedSet'vlce Award from the Fountain Valley Jaycees. Bryant, division manager for the Jelferson Standard Lite Insurance Company, has lived in Fountain Valley for the put 11 years, and has taken an active rote in civl~ and youth affairs. The award was presented at a Jaycee banquet. Also honored were runnersup for the award, Dr. Mike Steele, a dentist, and Hans Tietz, a commercial artist. Bryant, a captain in the Air Force Reserves, is president of Teen Help. the Fountain Valley family counseling service and food co·op. lie a lso is on the board of the Fountain Va lley Nancy Daniels, a 17-year-old senior at Huntington Beach High School, is watched over by Red Cross nurse Barba ra Hahn while sh e donates blood .at the campus. It is first high school in Orange County at which students donated blbod under new state law that permits 17-year-olds to give blood with parents permission. Previous age limit was 18. Eighty-two Huntington Beach High Students gave blood Wednes- day. · Boys Club and recently was chainnan of the Fountain Valley Scqool District's tax increase election campaign. Bryant and his wife, Marlene, have two daughters, Kathy, 11, and Eileen. 13. They live at 10583 El Este Ave. Dally "lofSQH ....... CITED FOR SERVICE Jaycee Winner Bryant· Front Page A J DOUGLAS. • • NASA satellite launchings at Cape Canaveral, where McDon· nell Douglas employs 200 JAM workers to assist with launch preparations. He also said the strike could af· 1 feet the joint U .S.-Soviet space linkup, scheduled for mid-July, but not unless the walkout con· tinues past June. McDennell Douglas orricials explained the second stage of the Saturn rocket which launches the American Apollo spaceship is manufactured by the company 's Huntington Beach plant. but the one being used for that mission already has been completed a'nd sent to Cape Canaveral. The delay could be caused in June, however , because the lAM workers at the Cape are needed then to help with fueling or the giant spacecraft. The 1,000 workers laid off in Long Beach are members or the · United Auto a nd Aerospace Workers, who recently signed a new \!ompany . contract r~ther than join the JAM on the picket lines. Union officials on both sides criticized each other over that is· sue, with the UAW accusing the· JAM of not acting in the best in· terests of m embers and the JAM claiming the UAW had promised to support its strike efforts. New Unified Plan Back e d By V alley · Members of the Fountain Valley School Board Thursday night said they s upport efforts to form a new unified school system within city borders. But trustees a lso told parents in the Huntington Beach portion of their district that they want them to h ave some vote and some choice in the matter. "We have been entirely sup· portive of the efforts and believe in the right of the citizens of Fountain Valley to vote <on the city border plan )," said Board Preside nt Fred Voss. "On the other h and we have said the vote should include some option for the people in the Hunt· mgton Valley area." At the same meeting, Fountain Valley teachers said they oppose the city border _plan because it does not provide for those in· structors now working in the seven Huntington Be ach "strip" schools. "We will not support any plan which will adversely a ffect teach e rs' rights," said Judie Lowman. pres ident of the Foun- tain Valley Education Associa· lion. "We consider the right to re· main with the district of their choice as basic." Controversy over petition ef· forts aimed a t forming the new district arose after parents in the Huntington Beach area learned they could not have a multiplc- choice election over which new district to join. Parents wanted to vote over joining the ne w district, Hunt· ington Beach elementary school district to the south or remaining a seven-school district on their own. But sta te officials said that vote was illegal. Carl "Bud" Jones, leader or the petition drive, saJd 1bunday he too had hoped parents coutd have lhal vote. After the ltaC. re· jected that idea he aald his com· mltt<!'e h as tried to »rge retfclerib in that aren to petitlon to join the 4WW dlstrlct. 1 ··untortunatelY their represen· tatlve. on the comm it tee I ailed to exercise that option," he said. ( ' T e achers Suggest Co uncil Mulls Ce ntral Par k In Huntington F rom P age Al TEACHERS Budget Cut Areas b«ause it would require the hir· ing of more teachers. The addi· tion of art, physical education and music teachers at each school would cost an extra $852,000, district officials said. Teache rs in the Fountain Valley School District ask~ dis- trict trustees Thursday night to make $670,000 worth of budget cuts outside the classroom. Judie Lowman, president of the Fountain Valley Ed).lcation Tackle Shop O wner Guilty I n S hooting An Orange County Superior Court jury has found bait and tacl~le supplier Joe Fred Creek guilty of assault with a deadly weapon in the shooting last Aug. 3 ol ~,15-year-old boy who broke iotopit defendant's Sunset Beach stont· The jury ended the trial in Judge Mark Soden's courtroom by additionally finding Creek, 57, Long Beach, not guilty of assault with intent to com mil murder. Creek asked for immediate sentencing. Judge Soden sen- tenced him to 60 days in the coun· ty jail and then suspended. that sentence and ordered Creek to in- stead serve six months on proba· tion. Sheriff's officers called to the store said Creek told them he was merely defending his property when he opened fire on the in· truder in his store. They said the 15-year-old victim has since re· covered from his wounds. E'rona Page AJ COAST ... ly priva te, such as typical re· sidential developments." The plan also declares that public tra ns it s hould receive priority over roadway construc - tiowfo urban areas "to reduce the need for coastal parking lots and m ajor highway programs to conserve energy a nd to improve coasta l air quality." The draft says conflicting de· velopments should be "chan· neled to the inland parts of coastal cities and to other inl and areas" and that coastal agriculture lands "should be kept in agriculture.·· The commission also calls for the preservation of wetlands and coastal streams. "Coastal m arshes and other wetlands. many of which have been filled and diked in past years, sh.ould be protected from further destruction and restored where possible. "Free fl owing coastal streams should be protected because they · are necessary for the migratory fish caught by commercial and sport fis herme n and because they supply sand for coastal beaches." The plan says development in areas subject to beach or cliff erosion, landslides. earthquakes or flooding should be permitted "only If adequate engineering can reduce the hazards to accep- table ~vets." Greene's Victory Margin Narrowed LO ANGELES <AP) -Al· semblyman Bill Gr4!e.De's al1m mor8ln narrowad eveh further ln a new count reJeaaed by el~Uon officials for TuHday~a •state Senate Oistrict contett. The latest total!t tighte~ Greene's victory margin by six votes to on· ly92. Association said that, because of Tuesday's defeat of the proposed •67-cent tax override, teachers re· alize cuts will be needed in the district's $12 million budget. "We along with the board wish this were not the case," she said. Then, Mrs. Lowman submitted a list of 19 suggested areas where the budget could be trimmed, mostly at district office level - district administrators, district libr"rian, assistant superinten- dents. district media specialists, district clerical personnel ; dis- trict expense accounts and dis- trict equipment. Her lis t did not include teachers. At the same time, Richard · Plum, elected to the board Tues- day, asked the board not to schedule another override elec- tion. The board will meet at 6 o'clock tonight to consider call· ing another override vote May 27. "My opposition to the tax re- venue increase was primarily based upo n th e fact that alternatives to existing opera· lions were not explored," he said. "For this board of education to go back to the voters without ex· ploring alternatives is not being responsive to the electorate," he added. Plum active ly campaigned against the tax measure. Mrs. Lowman, in addition to the district level budget cuts, suggested reducing Xerox ex· penses. testing, forecasting and evaluation, audio-visual equip- ment and instructional supplies. City Councilmen are expected Monday night to settle what hap- pens to several hundred acres of land south of Huntington Beach Central Park. The council session starts at 5:30 p.m .. but the vacant acreage subject is on a later part of the agenda. It comes under deferred items with four other proposed amend· ments to the land use portion of the city's general plan. The other four areas, involving the Town Lots, Sunset Heights, Old Town, a nd the Town and Country s hopping center neighborhood, have been settled, but council members are still de- bating over what type of future development they want south of the central park. In general, the council has said it wants pri vale recreation facilities -a tennis club and a . stable have been proposed on two parcels -and equestrian estates. · But some prope rty owners . have objected becau.se portions of the land are now wned for in· dustrial uses and sqme industry already exists there. Among themselves, couL.!il members have debated just how dense the hQ.using should be south of the park. The public hearing was closed two weeks ago, but the council will discuss the matter further before making a final decision. The teacher request for 30 minutes or planning time during school would cost $500,000 for the extra staff needed to give the teacher that time, district of· ficials said. But Miss De Vore said teachers ·need that time for special student counseling and other problems. The board a lso rejected teachers' request for up to one year of unpaid leave for new fathers or adoptive parents who . wish to stay home with their children. Trustees turned down sugges- tions that t eachers should help evaluate principals and school custodians. And they said there is no need for the special religious holiday. or personal leave teachers r e. quested. They may use up to six days of their sick leave for ihose purposes instead. Inmate 'Held In Shooting . . NORFOLK, Mass. <UPI) -An inmate of Norfolk prison Colony, possibly "high on drugs," sur- rendered peacefully to s tate police early today after wound- ing two corrections 011;.;:ers, one critically. The inmate shot officers William Murphy, 28, of Milford, and Russell Fontaine, 49, or Westport, following "routine evening rounds." 7eJ""" ~eHte'tt, 'l1te, Sketchboo k by Heritage Inspires your individuality, your flair for the dramatic, your longing for the lovelier things in life. When is a collection of furnit~re not a collection? When each design has an independence. a flair. and an individuality all its own. When it can stand alone or become part of a total look. OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOOOMARK-KAR~STAN-BAf(ER NEWPORT BEACH • . J,,: JJ l~A~~ A~~,. A•~ '.Ml~ LAGUNA BEACH• ~ ~ rnn WESTCLJt'F OR • 642·20LSO . ~ ~ ~' ~, 34~ NOHTll COAST HWY. 4lH·Wl I TORRANCE• Wl&DAYS .. SATU•DAYS t :OO ~ s~:ao 23649 HAWMIORNt; BLVD. COpen F'h Ill 9. Sun 12·S•30J 37 .. 12'19 l I I , L , t c. l I f ... By TOM 8ARLEY CMt11eo.11w..i1etlktf Orance County Superior Court Judge James K. Tur,ner refused tDday to allow lawyers for nine men lndJcted after an investiga- tion o( the county assessor's of- fice to examine witnesses who appeared before the Grand Jury. Judge Turner quickly rejected a motion Cor a preliminary hear- ing fl.led art er defense attorneys complained that indictment of their cliente barred them lrom municipal court action that would have permitted them to cr<>as examine witnesses. . • He set March 21 as the next dat'e for pretrial action on charges of grand theft, con- spiracy, submission of false claims and violation of 1overn- . ment codes obtained in the ln- dictmellt. • All nine def end ants are Cree on their promise to-appear. · tate·· · Kid~ap Conspiraeg Coast's Keesee Pleads Guilty SAN DIEGO CAP> -Self- styled soldier of fortune Bobby Joe Keesee of Huntington Beach pleaded guilty today to con- spiracy to kidnap with intent to ransom a U.S. diplomat in Mex- ico. Murder and kidnap charges against the former civilian Viet - nam war prisoner will be dropped, a prosecutor said. Keesee, 40, told U.S. District Court Judge LelandC. Nielsen he was entering the guilty plea on the condition that it prevents his extradition to Mexico. However. .. Nielsen said such a guarantee was out of his jurisdiction. The body of John Patterson, U.S. vice consul at Hermosillo,· Mexico, was found in a dry creek bed eight miles south of Hermosillo after he disappeared from the consulate there last Marcb22. Attempts by Patterson's wife to comply with ransom demands fell through and the $250,000 sought in a letter was never paid. A furniture maker who former- ly lived in an apartment complex at 6671 Walner A"'·· aald be and another man he iiientified as a former employe of bis furniture shop con.spired to carry out a kid· naptng. It Is alleged_ that tbe nine employes whose alleged crimes oceuned while Rep. Andrew .f. Himhaw was county assusor ~ed the count>' in excess of Sl0,000 for time actually spent working on Htnshaw's con- SftSSional campaign. All rune defendants have been ordered to face trial June 9 on the cbarces contained in the indict- ment. · . e ·8 • WbHe the m"Otlon was belog arpect i n .Z.11~•~. Tur11«'~ couttzuorn. Judl'e -William Mur· ray WM bearing testimony two court.rooms away in the dlvorco action filed ·by Mrs. Thal• .Hinsbaw, 47, the cob- ' gresa•u•11eeond wife. 1udae Nurr•f toot the pretrial conlerence into his chambers when a oeweman a,Ppeared in the COQl'troom-. Defense attorney Charles Gar- rity commented before the judge and both lawyers hurried into chambers that Hinshaw is pre- aenUy In Washington and would not make an appearance today in either courtroom. A trial date of . July 22 was set. Hinshaw is currently under a court order to pay his estranged wife $650 a rriontb pending trial of herdivotte ...-. N TEN CENTS ., 4 B .d ;, I ·~ .. , Mrs. Hinshaw, a victim of wbat is described as a deterioratin; multiple sclerosis condition , testified at an earlier court hear · ing that her hus band bad paid her only $300 in the six months prior to the bearing. Sbe c laimed Hinshaw bad several hidde n bank accounts and bad ref used throughout their two-year marriage lo provide her with s ufficient living ex• penses . ' an 300-page 'Policy' Unveiled SAN FRANCISCO (UPI> - The stat e 's proposed ··eonstitu. tion" for protecting California's 1,000-mile coastline from further assault by bulldozers and de- velopers was unve iled today by the California Coastal Zone Conservation Commission. The 300-page pla n for keeping undeveloped stretches or the state's Pacific shoreline open to the public and preservi ng its natural condition spells out com- mission policies on matters from public recreation to coast a l energy plants. But it makes no recommenda- tions on how the policies should be carried out or by \\hich gov- . ernment agencies. Proposals for funding coastal preservation and improvements range from of .. fsbore oil drilling to statewide bond issues to taxes on hotel rooms and real es tate transac- tions. Those recommendations will _Douglas Lays Off 1,000 The other man spoke Spanish s o they went together t o Hermos illo on Jan. 16, 1974, Keesee said. But at the U.S. con- sulate, be s aid be wait.ed outside the front door for five minutes, afraid to enter because too many people were inside. _ 0.11, ,.. ... Stiff~ • • grow from statewide hearings LION COUNTRY SAFARI'S 480-POUNp BEAST 'CRISCO• IN SURGERY befor~ the final version of the By KATHY CLANCY Patterson disappeared when ott11eoa1tyf"t1ots..tt he left the consulate at the end of the day. Keesee said he wrote the Glut of Llona on Market Prompts Vasectomies at Preserve pla~ is turned over to the _1976 .Legislature for further heanngs Safari .Surgery About 1,000 aerospace workers letter last April 30. at the McDonnell Doug las Keesee ·said he· didn't know Corporation's Long Beach plant Patterson's name until he saw were laid off today. Company of-· newspaper accounts of ·the kid- flcials refused to comment about naping. • reports of 5,000 more layoffs next , The question of extradition to week. Mexico rests with others, Nielsen Vasectomies for 103 Lions The cutbacks were the result or told Keesee. There was no im- a nearly month-long strike by mediate comment from pro- members.of the International As secut6rs. but Nielsen was told the sociation of Machinists (IAM). government was dropping with 7,000 members in Southern charges or murder, kidnap and CalifOJ'.nia. extortion against Keesee. The IAM workers supply parts Sentencing was set for April 28 to the Long Beach plant used in at which tim~. a prosecutor said, the manufacture of DC 9 and DC murder and kidnap charges will 10 aircraft. be dropped. Companv officials did say to-Keesee was arrested last sum- day that no layoffs have come so mer and remains in the San far at McDonnell Douglas' Hunt-Diego County Jail. ingtoo Beach plant, where 1,500 JAM members are on strike. The ~mpany .spokesman said the· Huntington Beach facility is not as dependen• upon parts made by the IAM as some other McDon- nell Douglas facilities. Meanwhile , federal mediation between the s triking union and the company was believed to be continuing. DOW RECORDS ANOTHER GAIN NEW YORK <U PI> -The stock market, e ncouraged by declining interest rates, closed higher tod~y in heavy trading on the New York Stock Exchange. By RUDI NIEDZJELSKJ Of the O.llr Pii.tSWff Lion Coun try Safari , the African wildlife preserve which once cel&brated Frasier's fruit- fulness. now has a beastly pro- blem on its hands : too many lions. That's why it has launched a massive birth control program which eventually will result in all 1D3 male lions ending up on the operatinc table for vasectomies. Dr. Donald Dooley, resident veterinarian at the Irvine pre- ~rve, desert bes the <>peration as simple and safe and bas alrea(fy performed it 15 times. And Pat Quinn, the. corpora- tion's zoological director, ex· plains the vasectomy is superior to castration because the lions lose neither mane nor social stature. A spokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- ministration in Houston con- firmed Thursday afternoon that NASA satellite launchings at Cape Canaveral. where McDon- nell Douglas employs 200 JAM workers to assist with. launch preparations. The Dow Jones industrial average. a S..99 point winner.. '~He won't notice a thing," Thursday. eained 8,29 points to Quinn said Thursday as Dr. 770.10. \. Dooley was sewing up the in·- <See DOUGLAS, Page A2) By GARY GRANVILLE OflllltO.llyPllMfUH Orange County unemploymeo~ continued to rlse Ln February despite adjusimeots in U.S . • Qepartment of Labor figures that 'forced the county jobless rate down.(rom January. ' Alto&ether. accordinl to ~e llate Empt01snent ~elopmet'lt l>epartment, 61,300 eountians Wde out of work last month and tlae county's unef1>ploymeut rate was1.,l).ercent. A month earlier. EDD's moo· tbly bulletlo sho~ed 82,500 pei'tou unemployed with a Job- Jeu rate of 8.1 per~nt. Bvt durin1 the last 30 days. new meaaurtment figures nere ~ by the Departm nt of •• \ A d van c es o utnumbered cision on Crisco, at 480 pounds, declinn b..Y about a nine-\O'four Lion Country's biggest lion. mar~ft. C'l'ables, All) "He'll just be shooting blanks." Pr aces also· were higher in ac· Still snoozing from the general live trading on the American anesthesia, Crisco was on his · Stock Exchange. i way back out to the range in the bed of a pickup truck less than 30 Labor and Januuy'a unemploy. ment ftgure was adjusted down lO 561300 and the unemplpyment rate to 1 .J percent. / UNEMPLOYMENT STAYS AT 1.2%. Story, Page M .' . The California ratewut.4 peJ\ cent, the bl&hest jn 2$ years. • Statistical adjustments aside, the short term emplO)'lllent out- look in Or•nf e C9unty WH . termed .. bleak' by &DD•a ifbOr analyat Alla E ldrld,.. Mrs. Eldrldae a lso pnfdicted a rise In unemployment roll4 in March because of antlelpatect ll)'offs' of Oranae COOl.ltY r~l­ dtnll wbci work bt Del•bbOrina IA)j A~e.s County. The 1 l•omy prediction· follow~~ a pattern set In. February ·when the number of unemplo31td In the county ln· creased hr 5,~ f10rkers. As a fN\lt, ~ 6lt300 workers· unemployed in ti• county wu a • 45-month b!P Qll. 62 percent t lncreue OYV FetJr;iary, 1.tT(. On the brlCll slde of the employmentlicturei there was a gain of 1,800 ob• in governmeat work duriDI e '*01\UI, inoft ot l~ 111tdtera': 1tatrha1 in publlt: schools and ill newly ereated Jo" under a federal emPl01meat cram. ' How ver, .. nfanutactu •I payroU1 dropped 1,100 WC>l"ftri. durin1 the paat ao da)'I iDdl0,300 minutes afte r the operation began. The operating room scene is repeated frequently as Lion Country endeavors to stem the lion glut which it encouraged when the park opened in 1970. At that time there weren't enough lions either at the Irvine preserve or all tbe other safari parks which Lion Country began lo open in other states. Breeding was encouraged and managemen t chee r e d and notified the press whenever grizzle d old Frasier s ired another litter. His prowess in- spired wrist watches, T-shirts a nd bumper stickers -and <See LIONS. Page A2> Devices Assailed LOS ANGELES <U PJ l Supervisor Ketlneth Hahn Thurs- day charged that the nitrogen ox - ide smog control devkes on 1966·70 automobiles would add 246,000 pounds of lead to the air in the South Coast Air Basin each year. The Assembly Transporta- tion Committee Wednesday will consider two bUJs. • Rising i Councilmen Eye Highway Widening· Bid Newport Beach City Council members will again take up trar. fi e proble ms confronting the community Monday. Among the discussion items on the day's agenda will be widening of Coast Highway along Mariner's Mile. Public hearings on t h e Mariner 's Mile phase of the city's general plan circulation element is set for the council's evening session. But earlier in the day. at an af. temoon study session, more dis- cuss ion is ex peel ed on the broader needs of the community. particularly a bypass for the highway through Corona ·del Mar. During the afternoon meeting the council also will hear pro- gress reports on dbcussions tak· ing place between delegates from sever11I coastal ci ties af. fected by tbe Down coast C1rcula · lion Plan which assesses future traffic needs. . Other item s on the council schedule for the informal after- noon session which starts at 1 :30 p.m. U>clude : -A pr ese ntation from Trautwein and Associates. who pre>po!e a major shift in the mooring system in portions of the harbor. The firm, specializing in . boat docking and other harbor · f actiliUes, proposes a circular tieup system which would effect a major increase in the amount of vessels which could be moored. -A ~eport, from the Marine <SeeTR AF~IC, Pa1eA2> Rebated Position WASHINGTON (UPI) President Ford says tax rebates s hould favor middle income Amttic.-ns because they bave borne I ncreasingly heavy burdens durjog the recession. Jn UllJna that pc>sltlon at bis Thurs.. day ntpt new& cbnferenc&, Ford Sld~d at lea t partly wltb Treaaury Secrttary William Si~. whcS said Wednesday tax cuts hOuld go m~tJy to middle and uppet income Am rlcnns. "l ' and passage of laws. "The essence of the plan." said the commission. ''Is that the coast should be treated not as or- dinary real estate but as a unique place where consl!rvalion and s pecial kinds of development should have prioril)." Highest priority 1s given to public recreation. · "Public r ecreation should have the highest priori t~ m ::.uitablc areas of the coast . and legal rights of the publi c lo have ac- cess to publicly owned tidelands should be vigorously enforced,·· the draft says. "Public use of coastal lands and waters should be consistent with natural re- source protection.'' The draft does not rule out coastal e n e r gy plants but declares that "energy installa- tions allowed must be subject to s tringent e nviron mental stan- dards.·· It also decla res that publie ac- cess to the coast should be pro- vided and that ··coastCJ I develop- ments that serve lht• public, such as campgrounds. r<>sorts. hotels and motels, and rental housing. should ha \·c priority ovt•r coastal developments that arl' t•s:-.ential- (See CO AST. Page A2 > OranJitt-.J Const &-•La~ Wt-ath~·r " Showers dec r easing · tonight and Saturday, ac· cording to the weather ser vice. Highs Saturday mostly 60 to 65. Chance of showers 40 percent Satur· day. I NSIDE TODA 'V It has been said that today"s high school and college JOZ% mu.tretans are better than the professional players of 30 years ago. Orange Coast au· diencts will hove a chance to judge for themselves at the 7th Orange Coast College Jazz EMt'mblt F'esht>al. ~e page Cl of todoy"i Weekender. lndt"~ AtTew...:..C• Al ...... ., L.M...:.r At Q • AS ~ DMl ~· CJ 0-..,.W g ......... k .. A.I ............. M ...... ,., .. ii ......... ........... """' ....... " ., ---,.., Place in the Sun Sun s plas ht:s light across Newport Harbor waters as 1t breaks through cloud cover between r ain showers. Photo was taken ThursdaL.!_r~m ~rches Bi:-i~ge looking east toward hills of Corona del Mar. Photographer used 135 mm telephoto lens to make thi~icture. Seal Beach Studies St. Pat's Sobering Fro•PageAJ LIONS •.. many elderly men from nearby Leisure World .. No more. Lion Country recent- ly sold some of its money-losing parks and, even though it intends to open another preserve irt Japan, there are still too many lions. seal Beach police are trying lo sober up the city's St. Patrick's Day trad ition. Clancy 's Bar and the Irisher have agreed lo help. Police are trying to avoid a re- peat of last year's St. Patrick's Day r ebellion, which started after the two bars closed their doors with packed houses, anger- ing the crowds outside. Jn the end, about 2,000 persons were involved in a melee with police from six cities, and 47 persons were arres ted . Thousands of dollars of damage also resulted after the crowd Fro• Page Al COAST .•. · Jy private, such as typical re- sidential developments." The plan also declares that public trans it should receive priority over roadway construc- tion in urban areas "to reduce the need for coastal parking lots and major highway programs to conserve energy and to improve coastal air quality." The draft says conflicting de- velopments s hould be "chan- neled to the inland parts of coastal cities and to other inland areas" and tha t coastal agriculture lands "should be ~ept in agriculture." The commission also calls for the preservation of wetlands and coastal streams. "Coastal marshes and other wetlands, m a ny of which have been filled and diked in past years. should be protected from further destruction and restored where possible. "Free flow ing coastal streams should be protected because they are necessary for the migratory fish caught by commercial and sport fi sherme n and because they s upply sand for coastal beaches." The plan says development in areas subject to beach or cliff erosion, landslides, earthquakes or flooding should be permitted "only H adequate -engineering can reduce the hazards to accep- table levels." ORANGE COAST .. DAILY PILOT ~:t.s~~~~::r. ::1=::ie ~=-eo.~t PulMi\l\•nQ (.ornp•ttY $.tp.o1t.C• t!Olt~ M•• pul)ll\/...S Moncl•Y IM0\1911 FrlcMy IOr Co\IA ~w. N••-1 IM4Kll, t<vtlll"O(on ~•<n• ~°"" t1tn V•lf••· lrvU••. s...ctdl•be<k V•lkioV •nd .... .,.,.,. e..i;l\(Soutll '""· • \lf'O .... ~ • ..i11-Is publlWd hlvnl•~ -~Y'-The prl11u..-I "'*'"''"' Pl•lll ,, ., lOO WHI e.r. :!M«l. '°'"Me .... c..111om• '2•1'. Robert N. Wffd Pr~ldenl 41nd ""°''- Jack R. Curlev YU Prnic1e111 •llCI Gt-el~ ihomas Keevll [d1f!)r Thomas A. Mvrpt\lne Q\arles H. Loos Richard P. Nall "'""-' M•..._ EClilOt• CffJr'91111t. lttt OtMtt C.Nn ~IMll~ ~.--.-.1 ................... ... ,.,.lier •r ••••tll.._.,U MAl'I .... , ... re~ody( .... lt-.VI -Cl•I 1NrMltllM •t ~, ........ ~. kcoM ( .... _.., ... ,.id .. CllMj ...... . C.0•1 ....... "'"'' .. <Oii..,,"""" ........... : ..,_,, ... "' ... """· ........ ;--i-u.. I I .started throwing rocks and bot- tles along Main Street. The tradition dates back about 25 years, when revelers first flocked to the city to drink green beer and have fun . But last year , the celebration went too far, police said, with nude streaking commonplace and some acts of public sex, in addition to the riot. Police sa id this year merchants, including bar oMiers and liquor store owners, have agreed to cooperate. Clancy's has decided not to open at all, and the other has agreed to shut down at the rirst sign or trouble, police said. Patrol units will be increased to keep crowds of drinkers off the streets. Fro•PageAJ DOUGLAS. • • He also said the strike could af- 1 feet the joint U .S.-Soviet space linkup, scheduled for mid-July, but not unless the walkout con- tinues past June. McDonnell Douglas officials explained the second stage of the Saturn rocket which launches the American Apollo s paceship is manufactured by 'the company's Huntington Beach plant, but the one being used for that mission already has been completed and sent to Cape Canaveral. The delay could be' caused in June, howeve r , because the IAM workers at the Cape are needed then to help with fueling of the giant spacecraft. The 1,000 workers laid off in Long Beach are members of the · United Auto and Aerospace Workers, who recently signed a new company contract rather than join the IA M on the picket· lines. Union officials on both sides criticized each other over that is- sue, with the UAW accusing the· IAM of not acting in the best in- terests of members and the IAM claiming the UAW had proml.aed . to support its strike efforts_ Suspect Nabbed LOS ANGELES CAP> -Three men who allegedly beat up a bank messenger and took $23,191 from him Thursday were booked for investigation of armed rob- bery following a high-speed chase. In fact, there is a nationwide surplus of lions. Lions which used . to command between $250 and · $500 aren't worth anything now. Zoos can't give them away, ac- cording to Quinn. The zoologist s ays he would be qwte happy with half as many lions at the Irvine preserve. "A park is only so large and you can maintain only s o many lions. There comes a point when you have too many and you have to start a program of birth con. trol," he explains .. Lions average four cubs per lit- ter and throw litters twice a year, advancing the lion population by q~in leaps if left unchecked. Out of all the males at Lion Country only a handful may be doing the actual breeding, but it will be necessary to vasectomize all of them to ensure birth con- trol. Lions who have received "the treatment" are ear-tagged for identification: It is doubtful that their mates will look for it. As zoologist Quinn explains it, the male lions -as far as they .. are concerned .:_ lose nothing, not even their pride. Club-wielding Mugger Gets $25 in Cash A mugger who continually beat a club against a tree to em- phasize his point stole $25 from a Newport Beach man who had been out for a late walk Thursday night. Thomas H . Goulet, 51, an engineer, told officers he went out as usual for a late walk and when he approached a storefront in Wes tclifr Pl aza. at 1104 Westcliff Drive. he was ap- proached by the strongarm artist who wore a home-made m ask. After rapping the tree with the club for emphas is, the mugger . demanded the victim's cash, then ordered Goulet to run from the area, police were told. Goulet complied, and after a (ew steps he turned to look back and saw the a ssailant fleeing through a parking lot. 'Ghost Ship' . . . . Cu~ter Lodged in Glacier WASlllNGTON (UPI> -The 8,600-ton Coast Guard cutter Glacier. stuck in 25-foot thick.Antarctic ice, will become an lcerencrusted ghost ship untll Nov- ember unless it can break throtJgb 12 miles of ice to open water. The ship, which carries a crew of 211. including eight civilian scientists and three naval sea cadets, got trapped in the dense Antaratic i~e Wednesday while steamini to rescue another stranded ship. Coast Gu,rd of0c1als said that Glacier, ltslargeat icebreaker, mlght have to spend the enUre winter right where it is. _ The Antarctic winter won't be over Ul!fil Nov- ember becaUH IHIODI are reversed ill the ~them Hemiapbere and ~'the ice will 1et thicker and thicker and thfcker," a 1pokeeman said. · He said the crew ••are in no danger0 because the ship ls built to be aqueezed upward as the lee thickens, ·and the vessel bu heat, lights and several months or supplld stored away for just !llUCh an emergency. ; .. ' .:.- .. --~-~- A search continued today ov~r a wlcle area of the Pacific for a • Marine F4 Phantom jet ftpter • out of El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta~on which crashed Thursday on a routine training night. U.S. .Marine Corps officials idenWied the pilot as Lt. Michael c. Blazanian. 26, of Des Moines, Iowa. Only crewman aboard was Radar Intercept Officer Lt. Robert Danell Johnston, 2', who resides at the El Toro base- Coaat Guard helicopters are searching waters wes~tbwest . .. . . Newspaper Recycling Program Set Spokesm e n for . Newport Beach's city department or general services reminded resi- dents that the March phase cf the newspaper recycling collection will begin next week. Residents of areas east of the bay will be able to pl19Ce their papers at curbside duridg the re- gular rubbish collection days of Monday. Tuesday and Wednes- day. For residents west of the bay, the papers will be collected with regular trash pickups on March 17, 18 and 19. General Services Director Jake Mynderse said that since the program began last year, a total or 447 tons of newsprint has been collected for recycling. The rebates to the city from sale of the paper to recycling firms. Mynderse said, is $11,190. Newport Pet Slwp fuses 9-footSnake A burglar with a special eye for reptiles managed to force open a window to a Newport Beach Pet shop Thursday and make off with seven feet of live merchandise worth$90. Police said the loot -a live boa constrictor -was discovered missing Wednesday morning by the owner of Mes a Pet Shop at 447 N. Newport Boulevard. Marvin Leache told offic ers that he opened the siore a nd noticed that the snake was miss- ing from a glass cage. The snake officers said, was on consign~ ment at the shop and belonged to a Costa Mesa man. . Leache said that had he stuck to his routine, two other pets may have thwarted the theft. He usually keeps a pair of Doberman Pinschers on the pro- perty after hours, but because of the bad weather, the dogs had been kept indoors during the period or the loss . police said. of Santa Barbara Island and west and nprtb of $anta CataliQa and San Clemente island. Cauae of the crash was not Im- mediately determined, but the pilot of a second Phantom jet said he thought he saw something I all from the plane shortly before It went down. The crash occurred about •o miles offshore southwest ol Santa Barbara Islaod during stormy weather. The original search was joined by aircraft from the Pt. Mugu Air Station, but official& tbere I said they had discontinued the search. Lt. Blazanin is survived by his widow Janet and Lt. Johnston leaves his widow Shirley. ·At Stations Newport Beach's bJcycle owners oow are to · purchiase the new state· required bicycle licenses at the city's elx lite sta-tions and new police f acill· ty, officials have an· nounced. The licenses, authorized recently by city councll ac· · tlqn, conform to a · new state law which makes the lice nsing or the cycles mandatory. · The licenses will be sold this year on a four.year format only. Thus, the cost for the new license wlll amount to $4 per cycle. The license would be valid through 1979. Besides requiring the owner to license the cycle, the new · code requires notification of the police department when the cycle is sold, or if \he owner changes addresses. 4-~Week Okayed For HB Detectives Orange County Superior Court Judge William S. Lee has ruled that Huntington Beach detectives are entitled to work a four-day week the same as their fellow of- fict:rs on routine patrol duty. Judge Lee granted a writ of mandate against the city as re· quested by the 170-member Hunt- ington Beach Police Officers As- sociation. His decision covers two man- dates. One says Police Chief Earl e Robitaille must put detec· lives back on the four day (10 hours per day) plan, and the other says if the city wants to change that syste m it has to first meet and confer with the police association. City Attorney Don Bonfa said today he has not yet seen Judge Lee's full decision but the city would comply with the order. Bonfa said the four-10 plan would not be reinstalled im- mediately. Instead, the attorney for the police association bas agreed to poll· officers to de- termine if they would rather wait until after meet and confer sessions. The main point of Judge Lee's decision. issued last Friday. is . ·that the city must meet and con- fer with labor over such policy is· sues, even though it may still Newport Woman Files Police Suit have the power to make the same decision, Bonfa said. Police patrolmen now work the so-called "Four-10 plan." Chief Robitaille had als.o experimented with it for detectives.and some administrative personnel, but scrapped it last September when he decided it was not efficient for their work. From Page Al TRAFFIC .•. · De'partment concerning changes in mooring fees in offshore areas administered by the city. . -A report from the committee which has been studying the re- newal of leases involving city- owned beaches on Lido Isle. At the evening action session or the council, items will include: -The tabiing indefinitely of a request by Seal's Ambulance Service to seek city approval of a rate increase. The fll'ID has of. ficiallx, withdrawn an application · filed several weeks ago. -Final action on a lease re· newal for the American Legion Hall, plus docks and parking . ·areas nearby. The new 25-year. lease will yield major revenue to the city, instead of a dollar-a- year rate which had been in ef· feet under the old lease. A woman who claims she re- ceived severe injuries when she was struck by a door kicked open . by Newport Beach police sued the --Action on a proposed bicycle trail stretching along Coast Hi ghway from the Arches to Riverside Avenue. Ir the plans are approved, the council will a uthorize construction-bid ad- vertising. officers and the city Wednesday Devils No More for$10,000. Judy Kay Robinson states in her Orange County Superior Court lawsuit that she received the injuries last Oct. 31 when police burst into her apartment with 4Je explanation that they were looking for a male suspect. ClUCAGO CUPI) -White~ pie have r eformed their ways and no longer will be called "de- vils," according to , Wallace Muhammad, son and successor to the late Black Muslim leader Elijah Muha mmad. 7d """ ~~, 'J11e, Sketchbook by Heritage. Inspires your in.divid~ali~y, your flair for the dramatic, your' longing for the lo~elier things in hfe. When is a collection of furniture not a ~011.e~t1on7 Wh~n each design has an independence •. a flair, and an ind1v1duahty all its own_ When it can stand alone or become part of a total look. · DREXEL-HER IT AGE-HENRE DON-WOOOMARK-4<ARAST AN-8".CEA WIBOAYS & SATUIDAYS t:H .. iJJD i I NEWPORT BEACH • 1771 WESTC'LWfl' DR., 842·2DSO • LAGUNA BEACH • 34S NOH TH t.:OA.~T HWY.. 4M~ TORRANCE• 23649 HAWllfORNE BLVD. (Open Frf. til II, !\un. l2•S:30) 378·127'9 N uAU.YPI LOT ' Friday's C losing Prices NEW · YORK· STOCK EXCHANGE • .. .._. YQ9'1( • (U 0 1'1l • -5cM llt4 :::;i;t 1:!t~C.U:. ~ ~ c.. ,;,; ~ ~ c:: .• ~ ''-· S.letl Ht l !'9 0 .. 1 . 10 2 .. -+ ~ ,._t llMl.ll CIOM Cllt· le l8 1 I l2<1'o + ._ ... _ ~M:ll"IS •• tlO '1 ·u .. Ft1 40 1 1 Si,\ 4 ._ NlllattL 1.n 1> i.2 ""'-2"' l 1 • .0 1 1~ u~-... ACl'IM t • .,q t Jt .,II.-V. \ u. ~ AlllltCIY .SO 6 1' I -~ l.:c :ii~ n~-. i • = .••o • t.s nu " ~ ..... ... ..... ..... .., E --·· ,. ... _.....uv ,, • ••• ... ..IOll )121"+" ...._._ ... 1.. , "' •.. "-'r..'·· u Jt"• ~ ....,_Pf\ •• 17' Vt+ "' w ... • , ·~ Mvlnv ..... • 1.S , ... + .... • ..... • " n "-4,..lt t.Cll t ~1 mu ~ t'&~.: 3t 2: 1~~-'\.,; ...._.. .... ,pit.. at M +I~ erTr1.t016 231 •S.., ... ~ ~ 1 2 S .. t ..... S 1.46 11 S4} 4l~)t I~ "''"" IMP t l~ ;:: .. ·v; c IS ptet' .. 50 ""'~ ~ Alt frel ~ 17 t20 ., t I C C I (orp . 11 ,._ ... ~. AlrtOlfl< S 7t •1•'-• • Ct<o Cp I.IS S •• ~ + '·t ~ C..IM\'8 2.IO 4 3tt -\• A J l~ln ·• 33 '" • • C..n<o In 20 . UJ 16+ \;, =• 1,20 5 110 131.-1.. m 12 U SIT "• ~ tnt•l 12 SO ti .-"' Ud U2 l 2A 11 ... _ .._ "*:S .to 6 U 0~ + "' I •" I ., .,., ii'~ . al·-103 ...... ,. • • 1.20 a :u u•.. . .• A1:lt'1', : ~1~16= ~~ I.ti t 121 11 ........ ~ Pw 1.lA I • UIU ~ AIU • • • • "" CM!l5W U6 t ns 1~ .. '-Ale.I\ .Mts M a -'--111 ~11'-Y .eo 1 10'! u .. -\I.I "1-~· tf t1 \Q + "" l'ICTol I.ft 9 117 It._ ., . Dougla s Changes i!!').~_'r., a u f~ + ~ c.at~I~ ' t;: :: .... : ~ i1'Jtli a at nt• '"' CM111-1e1 • .a . t .. 1~ • ..., """'~J·· 1.! ••"':-~ ChWC:...\Qb 3 S:M ll9HI~ -i:no,1 ... ... Olaf'tr HY J s 31 u:i.. + 14 ~lkl (JiM•1.AO ~ H ns:·. t': o,ntrM .60 .. •• 114 + 14 Robert L. Johnson, <left) ~l]>Orate wee rresident for eng~eering and research for McDonnel Douglas Corp. will replace Charles R. Able, (right) as presi-~lent of the astronautics division for Douglas in Hunt· mgton Beach. Able, who joined the firm in 1947, has retired early for health reasons. •1 ... -~~ 11uo • m in-. "' " -11 • I • · · .t:IO . . 2'2 Sh+--Allleclf'I 1 .. • --\41 . .a. 1 2t sv. ... AIUMM ,JO 6 2>1 114 + 1V. 1.10 s tl4 Utt-... Alld~k1 •• 10 l , ... 109 31~+ 1a., Aiiis Oii .M 5 101 t + ..... OIHPCI £3612 171 Sth + l"a ...._ P\.n • " ,.,.. • .,.. ~ ...... Ale~ t,lA 1 359 31•t. • ~ .......... 10 6 uo lit• ... Am•l&uou .. 40 llV.+l Oii R 111 .U S I 13 •• , AMAX i 7$ 7 6.S lt"i-v.. Oil Mil• GP 2 S'I tY.-v. l OllMllC,, "' . • .. 12a.. -"' AMAX• J~.. 3 100 . • QI '"91.tm l t St ti'-+ \I> "~ .so s 24 "· • ,.._k ,. ArncOl'e .14 S 7S 1 1.; -..-3 • • I JI,, .• A"'9rctc: 1 :tO 4 6 II • ~. Ow'IJ Ct•tt • . S.19 4 .. h cnr11er Q>t . 1 u~ .. ''"' Amtrpf 2 . .0 .. 1 31',, QlrlJCI' Doi 4 111. + \., OC Accountant :~~~j"~ ~ ~ ~~ ,., ~ 1 '°" Olrom. .lO ) 4• 11-\l \to ArnAlrFI .'4 10 SS 13t.-.... ~:l~J :: '°'~ ~119. i. ~~~~I~~ 14 2n :~ ! ~ o;Y'* wt 41 1 • h A8r¥1d2.61 8 111 Jt'o+-,, C I MIOt S. 2 AmBrut .80 I IS2 """ ~ ir. Cl llHlty In 4 l Arn Bid 36 • ' 9• 0 fl oell 1 . .0 1 I '20~t , • 11. • ,, • • • Cl"<>-• ..... ' 36 11~.-\. Group to Meet A <An 2.20f 1 91 14\<lt-V. ClnMll• I 40 b 11 1t -\<, A Cllf\ pf H . . . I U h • . • CIT 'In 2.10 I 30 33 .... -~ Amc.n MtQ · 27 2 • . • Otlcorp .80 13 9&-4 J2h + h A <:Nin I.JO S S lJ\<lt-lo'. 01.Srv H()g S 168 39"19,. "'" AmCv•n \\a t 32> • U\lo + "' Ouens Mtg • 1 2~-.,.. Am~tl 12tl21 t t-..+ ~ OUnSIO .IS S 23 4\fa+ \'\ AOtilTet.n1> 130 ~+ ~ City 111v .61> a 3•1 ,.,... 11. Certified Public Accoun- tant Page Jenkins is the guest speaker for the professional development session of the Orange County chapter of the National Association of Ac· count ants. TJle meeting is scheduled to. start at 7:30 p .m. Wednesday and will be held at Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim. Loren K. Carroll, program chairman, says J enkins is presently a partner and Santa Ana office director 'Of taxes for Arthur Young & Com· pany. He attended the Univeristy oC Southern Calik>rnia, where he was awarded a degree in 1962 and is a member or the American Institute of CPA's. the California Society of Ford Dips Custom500 Price Tag CPA 's and the Orange County Estate Planning Council. Harold N . Engel, public re- lations director for NAA says the topic should give insight into what is currently being legislated in the way of c hanges to th e lnterna l Revenue Code. For further information, call Engel at 836-3226. Insurance Firm Cites Good Ye ar AmDual V•t.. to .. ~ ,,_ c11., lllV ... IL . 21 ll·1' ., • AO<ll 114 ..... • I II + v. fc tnw f.' 1 , • 1'I 11 ... + \\ AmEltl'w 2 6 '34 \6"'-1 ll E .60 e 91 2H11 • \'. Al'•tnlly .24 4 11 S"9 • •• .ni Oii.SO . • ll ,._, , Iii A FlnSys 21> . • 1 4~ + V. C Am 20 3 61 • \.o • 'Ill A Fl!' pt 1• / • 1SO ll -.,., OwClir 2 . .0. 9 • 18~ ••. A Gn8d .49b . • SS 1•"-+" ~ Clev El !.41 7 117 26\. • I(, AGen!.<. 1.32 • · 9 11~. + V. ClewEI pf 1' .. 1380 tlS'.-. + 't. A Gn Ins 60 S 58 10'.141-Vo CievEpl7.•0 .. 1100 79\.~ '\.. A Gn r. I.IC>.. 37 21la-'t"> Cl«o•Co .S2 1• 1311 11~ .. '\oi AtnHo \l.70 S U IOt. • .• Cluett p .lO •• :Mot S~+ ,.. Atn"Wom.M28 1•1 39 ...... o ... 11P Pl I .. 9 , .... ~ AtnHO\p .30 24 202 lOV. + V. CMI Inv Cp 348 212 101/W • ~ ~~~rtt "i 2~ !::: ~ CNA FINtl.. IS •Vo+ ~o A Me<tlcorp 6 1131 .. ~. + "• CNA pt 1.10 .. SS 9\. • • AM Motors 12 l09 S', •• . CNA In .Jib·· 2'1 11\o • Yo AtnN~ J.S4 7 490 :)6\, .-~ CNA Uw111 .• o In+ \, AtnStupe lk 139 82 n.-• • CNALpl 2-10 •. 1 .... • •• AtnSmll I\> ' 119 171, , • • Coast !.I ~ l 208 9 Am Slnd .ICI S ISi> l2'o·•-1/t g:~g:: rn .: ~ ~~1,• + • 1,. AmStdp4 n. • • 2 12 .. ~. Coc•Col ,.30 2• 621 11 '•• I AmSttrll .21 11 lOS Ho -1111 CoceBoll .40 19 1CJ4t t 71,, "'• Arn SIOftS 2 • ... 3o • 1 Coklw8k )I> b 41 '°'. . ' AtnT & l 3 40 10 1218 so• 0. Y• Coleco ln<lu so 0 )• • • I. Amt & T pf • • • SS6 ss .... -I,. c.o111111e .. 'I 301 ?Q•. • •• A"lTplA 3 l>4 •• SI> •S •• • ••• ,._, p ... 3' 280 so• 7 A"lTp18J.,. .. 48 4b<ot '• .....,9 ,... L ' Am t&T wt . 7t• 1'•• '• ~::.~·;0~ ~ ~~ ~,'; · ArnWilr 64 S 11> •·· • · C.OI Penn .40 t> 20. 34 , • • Awtr pr 1' • • Ll20 1)1 • • 1 • CotonSI L2S 8 10 10' • • >o AWtr pt t.43 . ,100 lo -' eon 1nous 2 J 113 29 " Nneron tO • l 11•• • • . Cott!Jf• 1 60 4 JO • '• ~m .~~ ~ ~~ 1!~: ·;,; Colllll pl... e •84 •. AMF 111 1.14 12 243 la •• t "a ~:G~:, 75~. ~ 8! t:i=; : : ~~~nc3l,; 1~~ ~::·~ ~; eoc.o115P01c11tu1re9~ ! s1s,! b'" •• Ampco 40 l 7 7'• . Col-II Mfg • 1: ·~.. • "~" Cc> J 78 •"-• '• CornO<l Con• 10 t )9 to• , t Amrep Corp 4 39 3"" • 1~ ComO E t ,80 10 IS lb1 AmJt•r 1.'0 1 az.s 30 -~ CmE pf 1 70 .. & 32\.: • i · · S Amslr pl ..... d '"" • • · CornSIY'l,40 I 1 42\a • ,... pecial to the Daily PUot Am"ec1 3.20 • 10 ••~· • ~ c.mwEo 1 30 9 s19 1s~ NEW YORK -USUFE' ~:~~:~ ~ 2!! 1~~: ~ c ... ec1p11.17 .• 2s ~;~. • ,,.. Corporation has reported! ~~6~f~ ~ ~ m::; ~ ~~'f..L: 1~ m;,.: ~ operating results for 1974!z=1~-.~~: ~~ 1~~ .. ·~ l::'e~·~1::~ t ·M ••. r e prese nted the second ~ .. c .so s s9 10 + ~ CoMwo11 • 12 11• ,...,. "" Alx. O 1 ~ CwOOlpl 1.17.. 13 16-.,, • :i.. highest in company history, ~0 &,.·~ .~ ~, 1~ ·-.::· ~S:~ t ~ ~ ~~;,~ with life ins ura nce sub· APLCorP 1 s 19 ""-•"' ~•S<ltt 10s 31'> .. . . • APL.ofC I.°'.. I 131n -..., Con Aor• ln .. ... sv. + ... . s1d1aries setting new all-time ~1i.o ~.. 31 2 c-M 1.20. • t 11 -v. records. Arc!t~~1·3' 1~ ~; '1~.:;'"" =~1:!'8 : '~ :~~_: ~ Net income for the year re-~~~1~0r!~ ~~ ': 2~~ ... ..., Cdl Ed .lOtl s '41 m: ... ached $46.1 million, equal to ~r~ t~ '!2 1;~ ,!~! tt f:::~: :a :: ! o • "" $2 .06 a share, on total re· Al'kBnt .4• •. 10 s~.+.,.. ~F':Nss .i 1~f 1: -... DETROIT <U PI> --In an venu es of $450 million. A year Z~~~11Je .~ 2i 2~"'"~ ~ ConFdPf •1 • 1• ~~-;-""' effort to increase interest in earlier, net income amounted ~rmcm•:41.S.'!. ! ~·~ :za't'.!: ~ ~~~·t,·~~ : 1!~ w • • .:: " ,.... .,. Coll\m Pw 7 11 Ub U \o '·• its large cars. the Ford Motor to S47.0 million. or $2.10 a !~:S"::t~ ii ,0: ID:";":·: eo11P c>t 1 i.a 1260 u •· Co. said it is lowering the sh1are. . h ~~~r~rn~ ~ '' g~:: ::: ~~~ :~ ~ ~~~ :i::: ;,~ base price of its Ford Custom n .announcing t e year end Arvinlnd Jk 10 3S ,.,. .. •·• ' an • r,: 500 f d d l b $92 b lt .h . d . ASAI.Id 1 40 llt 7Sfi-..,, ~",!~Cpoppp1~ 1 •IOOSS 1~. • OUT· OOr mo e y y resu S, C airman an preSt· Astll"°il jy, ·4 71 14»11; "Ii ~ Cj,1 • 1 n,,0 : :. making radial-pl y tires an op-dent Gordon E . Crosby Jr. •soryG 1.40 1 11• ,..,.. .. ~· tn111t pJi':°" 1~o 41 "' ,,, tion. said , ··considering the dif· !~ .. ~ ':: ~ ,~ 2: • .....: 1 :;: cuuicp 2 70 • 31 33' 1 • 1 f. It . d l' . 1 A11co M .1Sb 1 60 •'Ill• '" ClllllPr .32b 4q q lt was the first move by any 1cu economic an po tllca A11etyE1 1v. 1 .,,. 11 • ~ ~1111 Ruv ·• 1~ :~: ~ :;: of the auto companies lo c lim a te whi c h existed AuAlchf 2'h 9 S60 m ·•+ ~ eon11n1~',r,·; 210 ·~ ••• AIAC pf 2.IO .• Ill 53~+ -lli Cof'll Oil pf 2.. 1 l>l~H ~, make curr ently standard throughout most ~f last year. ~~~$.~~~·s ~~ ~~! ~ <:onttn•Te11 , ,,, ll'•• ~. equipment optional on the we are pleased w1th the over· Aut ou .10b2• 1.0 .. ",. v. ~~pf°!~~ •1~li:t !r.. 11' larger models. Following the aJl accomplishments. Our life ~~~:'11~~~~1~ ;: :~ ~ ~~~2.! ~ 3~~ 2~~: :~: end of the cash r ebates last i!lsurance com pan~es con-~:~gg:'J :: ~~ ·~·~·~·~ CooQ 111 t.44 1 21 3:~!: ~ week, Genera) Motors, Ford tmue to grow, reaching a re-AwryPr .3olS,.,. ,,v ... 111 .. =~~Jl~S '! 9~ ... ~ d Ch 1 . ped d $47 4 '()' (. Aw1s lllUll'J>10 n ~+ ,._ Cooc1A9 1'211 3 JI 1•~ an rys er stnp some cor . m1 ion o income Avnet inc .:u 3 3S7 ~· .,., eociwtc1 1.ao • 13 7s '_ '\; equipment off small cars to from operations as compared ~::i':l1~f.'1:: 1: ~~!1'16 f:~~t,~!ii 6f~ .. :~:;3~ keep them moving. with $44 million last year. 1UA"t~0r11£~ :~ 1n ~.~ eovs1ns MtQ •• J1 2-. ..... MARKET HIGHLI GHTS ~ CowiesC JO • 2 6~-t IA> aMWll-~ •nt~+ * Coa Brd • .0 9 lJ 1t ~ 1"- 8.tche Grup • • 283 1>11'> + * CPC Intl 2 t 111 3''n •.. S.k•r In .70 1 1096 7~+ y, Ct-1.609 3 144 31 -'" B•ker011.l7 11 l20 32~+ 'Ill Cttdlt Fl .4, t al s + ''t Bald o . ..a. .c I a1,._ 'Al ~!<_!'~r 11.6806 '• 2467 2~~· 11't 8'11C0rP .60 1 34 1S\4+ ~ ,.._,,,.n B•llG•' 1.'16 7 3'3 19'¥t + 'Al g:~~ ~ ~; ~:: ! t I N DEXES s.nc.1 1.:u 10 tS 16'/.+ Yo ~z 1.10 • 401 :io1it + 'o Bende9 lf\c 26 101 ~+ '\6o CTS Cp .SO • • 171/t \;i B•lllJOI: Pn .• 11 4~~+ 141 C 111 "' 1 S 11;,, NYSE Index ASE Index . Dow-Jones Ind S&P 500 Stocks Hew York tlJPll -Tiie foUO,Wng flJI Chows the slo<ks tlWlt have 991"'° most ~ IOSI o.. mo\I b.lsed on percent of oentno-CHI lh<I Ne w York Stoc• E•c~119t. Ntt •1111 oeroni.oe ell~ •re the Cfllferen<e bet-ef\ The previous ''°51"9 t Jlf'ICe Mid the t urref\I tloslng Price, CAINElfS 1 T11llty In .60 a ... + 1'11. Up ?U 2 MeNKO 41 6tt+ I~ Up 2S.0 J CNA uwln I ... + .,. Up 21.2 • wtutt•kr Co 1'11..,. i,., Up 21.2 s rein co~ 2v.+ ~ Up 21-• 6 ~n 4'•+ ~. Up 18.1 7 S..W Air 4 ... + ~. 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I n I ISO IS' ', PSEGQI '40 1 ... , I •• PSE(',pl • 11 . 110 41 • 2' P!.E(',pl 4 )0 • 110 •S • 1'~ 1' P'SE(.pt IOI . 110 I t-, , PSE(.pt t .• ~ . t1)0 ,. , PllS lnc:l 2.)6 t 100 13"'-Vt PSlllCJ1'f l.OC • 1100 11 • 1, PSlndCll I QI 1100 11~ • l'I~• 1 .. 6 1J U'-• • 110 J ''' U lio + ~ ~SI 1 JU t'°'t lo. 1,.-. > •O Jtt ... t ".. s ."' ... ,__ '·" • "' n9'-n jll\,f..,.,. '·'° • \01 4$~ "' fi'llfU(a M 1. I' 11\'a • .... PSASlumps SAN DIEGO (AP> PacHlc Soutt)weRt Alrlin('S Is ~rounding its l"O wldc·bodied Lockh~ LlOU jets due toa llump in tickets.ales. The two TrilUlr j«a, Which C'UT7 297 puse,naen, were used malJlly on fUlbls bet•teo Los A.n.ceMs Mii Sa Franclsco. -rhey will be ielal~ ~1 smaller Boeln1 m J~ aw PSA board chainn an J . Ployd.A.Ddrews. . . . . • e • ~ , .. I • l , • • t :.... Frh!!y, M.ch7, 1175 Enjoy smoking longer without smoking more.· .. That's the Sarato a idea. More puffs than lOO's. Tailored longer and slimmer than I 00' s, so you enjoy.extra snioki~g time, extra smoking pleasure, .without smoking more cigarettes. Priced no more than 100's. And Saratoga 120's are rich, full-flavpr cigarettes made from a fine blend of tobaccos. More than just a new brand. Saratoga l 20's are a whole new idea in smoking pleasure. Because r,iow you can enjoy smoking longer without smoking more. Look for them in the new 120 mm crush-proof box. Regular ~nd Me~thol. 17 ma:·~;'1.1 cng. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC Method . . Warning; The Surgeon Gener al Has Oeterm1.ned That Ci~rette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. , , \ Standard lOO's 1 \. • ,\ Saratoga 120's ;. ,. "Getting more wjthout paying more .. That's a pretty radical idea." . .. ~ • \ . . . ' . . . . . • ... I ~ ,. ' ~I• ' I ' ' I i ' '• .... •, I I , . ·' · 9 · Defendants By TOM BARLEY • Ot .. O.lly ....... " Ol'angt Q>unty Superior Court Judge Jamei K . Turner refused today to allow lawyers for nine men indic(ed after an investiga· tion of the county assessor's of- fice to examine witne~ who appeared before the Grand Jury. ,Judge Turner quickly rejected a motion for a preliminary hear- ing filed alter defense attorneys complained that indictment of ' their clients barred tttem froD\ municipal cour t action tbat would have permitted theQl to • cross examine witnesses. He set M•rcb 21 as the next date for pretrial action on char'4!s of grand theft, cori- sp\rac~. s ubmission of false claims and· violation of govern- ment codes obtained in the in- dictment. All nine defendants are free on their promise to appear. It is alleged that the nine employes whose· alleged crimes occurred while Rep. Andrew J . Hinsh.aw was county assessor billed the county in excess of $10,000 for time actually spent working on Hinshaw's con· gressional campaign. All nine def end ants have been ordered to face triaJ June 9 on the charges contained in the indict- ment. · COftst Plan Told Sta.te Unveils 'Protection' SAN FRANCISCO <UPI l The' state's proposed "Constitu- tion" for protecting California's 1,000-mlle coastline from further assault by bulldozers and de· velopers was unveiled today by the California Coaslal Zone Conservatio9 Commission. The 300-page plan for keeping undeveloped stretches of the ~ale's Pacific shoreline open to the public and preserving its natural condition spells out com- mission policies on matters from public recreation to coastal energy plants. But it m akes no reeommenda- tions on how the policies should be carried out or by which gov- ernment agencies. Proposals for funding coastal preservation and improvements range from of- Mu~~~ Charge Dropped Huntingtoll's Keesee . . Guilty of Kidnap ' • SAN DIEGO <AP) -Self- styled soldier of fortune Bobby Joe Kee~ee of Huntington Beach ·p1e._ded guilty today to con- spiracy to k.Joap wiUl intent to ransom a U.S. diplomat in Mex-. lco. Murde'r and kidnap char,aes againat the former civilian Viel- n am war prisoner will be dropped, a prosecutor said. Keesee, 40, told U.S. District Court Judge Leland C. Nielsen he was entering the guilty plea on the condit1on that it prevents his extradition to Mexico. However. Nielsen said such a guarantee ~as out of his jurtsdiction. · The body of John Patterson. U.S. vice consul at Hermosillo, Mexico, was found in a dry creek bed eight miles south of Hermosillo after he disappeared from the consulate there last Marcb22. Attempts by P atterson's wife to cQmply with ran,,om demands fell through and the $250,000 sought in a letter was never paid. A furniture maker who former- ly lived lo an apartment complex at 6671 Warner Ave., said he and another man he identified as a former employe of his furniture shop conspired to carry out a kid· , naping. I The other man spoke Spanish so they we nt together to Hermosillo on Jan. 16, 1974, Keesee said. But at the U.S. con- sulate, he said be waited outside <See KEESEE, Page A%) Theater Plan St11died ~- Mesa Leaders Back From Toronto Visit By ALAN DIRKIN Of llM O.lly Pllol Staff Two Costa Mesa civic leaders have returned from Toronto en- thusiastic about daycare pro- .rams in Canada, raising the possibility that a prototype gov· ~ment-as,sisted center may be established in Costa Mesa. The trip to Toronto was made by Councilwoman Norma Hertzog and City Manager Fred Sorsabal. They flew to Toronto Wednesday morning from Washington. D.C., where they had been attending a National Leaaue of Cities Conference with (rouncilman Jack Hammett. They returned late Thursday. Hammett did not accompany the others to Toronto. The trip ,to Toronto served three purposes: daycare pro· g rams were 1nvestlgated, a theater complex was visited, and meetlnes were held with an architect who helped des ign buildings for the 1967 Montreal Expo. Mrs. Hertzog, a former Cana- dian who used to work in the Department of Social Welfare in Toronto, has previously suggest· ed that the city of Costa Mesa help establish a daycare center. The visit to the civic theater complex relates to efforts -by Costa Mesa officials t-0 get the Orange County Fairgrounds further developed. A proposal made by Mayor Robert Wilson on how the f airground'S might be im- proved suggested a cultural- recreation complex. The talks with the architect in· volved in the Montreal Expo relates to a proposal by Mayor Wilson and Mrs. Rertrog that a World's Fair be staged on the f~gtounds as a means of getting the acreage developed. <See TORONTO, PageAz> fshore oil drilling to statewide bond issues to taxes on hotel rooms and real estate transac- tions. Those r~commendations will grow from statewide bearings before the final version of the plan is turned over to the 1976 Legislature for further he.arings and passage of laws. "The essence of the plan," said the commission. "Is that the coast should be treated not as or- dinary real estate but as a unique place where conservation and special kinds of development should h ave priority." Highest priority is given to public recreation. "Public recreation should have the highest priority in suitable areas of the coast, and legal rights of the public to have ac- cess to publicly owned tidelands should be vigorously enforced," the draft says. "Public use of coastal lands and waters should be consistent with natural re- source protection." The draft does JlO!.. rule out coas'tal e n e rgy phlnls but declares that "energy i.p,stalla- tions allowed must be subject to stringent environmental stan- dards." It also declares that publie ac- cess to the coast s hould be pro- vided and thal "coastal develop· ments that serve the public, such as campgrounds. resorts, hotels and motels. and rental housing, should have priority over coastal developments that are essential- ly private, such as typical re- sidential developments." The plan a lso declares that public transit should receive priority over roadway construc- tion in urban areas "to reduce the need for coastal parking lots and major highway programs to conserve energy and lo improve coastal air quality." The draft s ays conflicting de- velopments s hould be .. chan- neled to the inland parts ·or coastal cities and lo other inland areas" a nd that coastal agriculture lands "should be kept in agriculture." The commission also calls for the preservation of wetlands and coastal streams . DOW RECORDS ANOTHER GAIN NEW YORK <UP() -The stock markel, encouraged by declining interest rates, closed higher today in heavy trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial average, a 8.99 point winner Thursday. gained 8.29 points to 770.10. Advances outnumbered declines by about a nine-to-four mar~in. <Tables, All) Prices also were higher in ac- tive trading on the American Stock Exchange. While the motion was being argued in Judge J'urner's courtroom, Judge William Mur- ray was bearing testlmony two c.ourtrooms away in the divorce action filed "by Mrs. Thais Hlnahaw. 47, the con· gressman 's sec:o.nd wife. .ludge Murray took the pretrial conference into his chambers when a newsman appeared in the . courtroom. l)efense attorney Chatles Gar- rity commented before the judge and both lawyers hurried into chambers that Hinshaw is pre· sently in Washington ind would not make an appearance today in either courtroom. A trial date or ~ July 22 was set. Hinshaw is currently under a C®rt order to pay rus estranged wife $650 a month pending trial of ber divorce action. . c TEN CENTS Mrs. Hinshaw, a victim of what is described as a deteri.Oratine multiple sclerosis condition. testified al an earlier court hear- ing that her bus band had paid ber only $300 in the six months prior tolhe hearing. She claimed Hinshaw bad several hidden bank accounts and had refused throughout their- two-year marriage to provide her with sufficient living ex- penses. DAiiy ,._Stiff ...... ~~ IJ9N cQuNniy ~AM'S ~Q-POUND B™T 'CRISCO' IN SURGERY Glut Of Uon• on llarket Prompts Vasectomies at Preserve , S81ari Surgery V a,sectonUes for 103 Lions By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of llM O.lly Pilot SYlf Lion Country Safari, the African wildlife preserve which once celebrated Frasier's fruit· fulness, now has a beastly pro- . blem on its hands: too m any lions. That 's why it has launched a massive birth control program which eventually will result in all 103 m ale lions ending up on the operating table for vasectomies. Dr. Donald Dooley, resident veterinarian al the Irvine pre- serve, describes the operation as simple and safe and has already performed it 15 times. And Pat Quinn, the corpora- Jion's zoological director, ex- plair.s the vasectomy is superior to castration because the lions lose neither mane nor social stature. "He won't notice a thing, .. Quinn said Thursday as Dr. Dooley was sewing up the in- cision on Crisco. at 480 pounds, Lion Country's biggest lion. "He'll just be shooting blanks." Still snoozing from the general anesthesia. Crisco was on his way back out to the range in the bed of a pickup truck less than 30 minutes after the operation began. The operating room scene is repeated frequently as Li~n Country endeavors to stem the lion glut which it encourased when the park opened in 1910. At that time there w~en 'l enough lions either at the Irvine preserve or all the other ~arari parks which Lion Countr;y. began toppen in other states. Breeding was encouraged and manag e ment cheered and notified the press whenever grizzled o ld Frasie r s ired another litter. His prowess in- spired wrist watches, T-shirts ;ind bumper s tickers and <See LIONS, Page A2) 1,000 Layoffs At Douglas; More Expected By KATHY CLANCY Of Ill• Dally Pilot Sutt About 1,000 aerospace workers · al t he Mc Donnell Douglas Corporation's Long Beach plant were laid off today. Company of- ficials refused to comment aboul reports of 5,000 more layoffs next week. The cutbacks were the result of a nearly month-long strike by members of the International As- sociation of M achinist.s. <IAM ). with 7,000 members in Southern California . The IAM workers supply parts to the ·Long Beach plant used in the manufacture of DC 9 and DC 10 aircraft. Finnigan's Owner Gets Probation A Costa Mesa night club owner accused on arrest of possession of narcotics, marijuana and dangerous drugs has been placed on two years inform3:1 probation after pleading guilty to reduced charges. Orange County Superior Court Judge Walter Char amza ordered the probation term for Sylvester John Grove. 37. Santa Ana. after he waived the scheduled jury trial and pl eaded guilty lo amended charges of possessing amphetamines. Grove. who operates the Fin· nigan's Rainbow. 1714 Placentia Ave .. Costa Mesa. was arrested after police searched the pre- mises last May 15 and allegedly found drugs which included LSD, hashish. cocaine and marijuana. Devices Assailed LOS ANGELES <UPI) Supervisor Ke nneth Hahn Thurs- day charged that the nitrogen ox- ide smog control devices on 1966·70 automobiles would add 246,000 pounds of lead to the air in the South Coast Air Basin each ·year. The Assembly Transporta- tion Committee Wednesday will consider two bills. Or~::a:Ht: Weather .~Ounty Une~ployment .Rising Companv officials did say to day that no layoffs have come so far at McDonnell Douglas· Hunt ington Beach plant, where 1.500 IAM members are on strike. The co"'pany spokes man said the Huntington Beac:h facility is not as dependent upon parts made by the IAM as some other McDon· nell Douglas facilities. Meanwhile, federal mediation between the striking union and the company was believed to be · continuing. Sh ower s dee reasing · tonight and Saturday, ac- cording to the weather service. Highs Saturday mostly 60 to 65. Chance of . showers 40 percent Satur- day. INSIDE TODJ\ 'Y lAsboT and January's unemploy- ment figure was adjusted down' to 56,300 and the unemployment rate to '1.1 eercent. The Ca.lllornla ratewas9.4 pe~ cent, tbeb1gbeslln25y°"8. • StaUaUcal adjustments aside. the sbocl term employment out· look Ill Otan:t• County wH mmid '1>leak' b.y3EDD'1 labor • analyst Alta Eldriqe. • • Mrs. £ldrld&• alto pndicted a rtse ln unemployment rOUt in Much because of anticipated JijO(ta of Oranac County mi- d.ab bo work in nellbborlnf A SPokesman for the National Aeronautics and Space Ad- minlstratlon In Houston con· firmed Thursday afternoon that NASA -satell\le launchings et <Ape Canaveral, where McDon· neU Douglas tmploys 200 JAM workers to a~lat with launch preparations. He also aid th slrik~ c:ould al f~ the joint u.s .. Soviet space linkup, scheduled !or mid·Ju1>•. but DC)t unle 1 lbe walkQUl ~· llnuts p11t June. , McDonntll Douala\ Olflclals expllined the MCOnd ataie of I.be (See DOUGLAS. Pare AZ) · It ho.& been said that today's mgh school .and c~ jazz 1 mu.ricians are better than Ulte p-ro/essioraol players o/ 30 years ago. Orang~ coasc.au- dience1 will have a clianci? to .. jud~ /or themseh>es at ~ 7th Orange Cocut Co~ Jazz Enumble Festival. Sn page · Clo/ today 's Weekender. Index At Y-IMwlu A> ....... .., L.M....,. "' ~ "' ~ DMt ...., C1 O_..,., CJ DMaMMkft Al ...... ~ M "-ca -A 'i\.n ............ =~ ·--.. • . di ~Yf!l'LOT C ·.~:·.:..,,.._Paice AJ T'ORONTo .. • Son&b'.al said tet tho add.i· tional.piaa• f •re tO~to &om • ......._ amou~ *° Ae pee-• penoa and that they at.ayedooly anenlltit ln the city. · "We believed that because we Were so ooar Toronto, we mJght u well make the trip, .. Hid Mn. Hertzog ... It did not cost u& that much more and It proved ~whlle.•• . • The clty officials lelt ror Waslalngtoa ·1w Friday. Ham- mett dld not 10 to Toronto but went to· Ylslt relatives in' Virginia, the additional rugbt be· Ing at bis own expense. Lale last year Mrs: Hertzog, .mo operates two pre-Jdlools in Costa Mesa, proposed that a day- eare center be built on top ol a •ew lire station planned -for 4owntown Costa Mesa. Such a tacility is in operation in Toronto. Fellow councilmen balked at the proposal and said that they · wanted to know more about it. Mrs. Hertzog explained today that although they visited the center above the fire station in Toronto she and Sorsabal also learned more about other daycare facilities in Canada. She said that they are governme.nt- nan and designed to release aingle parents from the welfare rolls and get them in the work force .. Sorsabal said that he was im· pressed with the system and not- ed that the centers offered educ a- • tional classes to the children. Cost ranged from ZS cents to $10 a day and was based on ability to pay. Sorsabal said that federal and state money is available to fund such centers in Calitomia and added. "Maybe we will set up a , prototype center in Costa Mesa." The pair visited the 3,000-seat O'Keefe Tb.eater in Toronto, a ci· ty of two million persons and two adjacent civic theaters which seat 600 and 300 respectively. I A 3,000.seat auditorium bas been proposed in the fairgrounds plan by Costa Mesa officials. · Sorsabal said that . they also talked with architect John Parkins about the Montre·al Ex- po. Park)ns gave them the name of the official who arranged the financing for the 1967 exhibition and suggested the official could . come out lo California to explain how it was done if the Orange ·County Fair Board wanted to hear from him. The fair board, which is responsible for the operation of tlle state-owned fairgrounds, bas •not responded specifically to the World's Fair idea, but has or- dered a de velopment study of the fairgrounds a nd suggested that ·such a fair would be one of the no- t ions the con s ultant would evaluate. Mrs. Hertzog .has contended that a fair would cr eate employ- ment in the area. Costa Mesa councilmen recently declined to authorize any more expenditure of city money on the World's Fair idea, suggesting that the matter be left to the fair board. · Sign Report. Heavy Stuff An environmental impact r e- port on a proposal to ban billboards from Costa Mesa bad a negative impact on councilmen Tuesday night. Councilman Alvin L. Pinkley boted that the council members received 1t only two days ago and that it is 305 pa~es thick. He asked the staff to prepare a three-page summary. The public hearing on the billboard impact report was con- tinued to March 18. Campaign Order BARTLESVILLE, Okla. (AP> -Phillips P etroleum Co. con- sented today to a federal court prohibition against use of com- pany funds for unla wful political c::onlributions. ORANGE COAST ( DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed ...... .,. ... •nd .,_,_ Jae k f.t. Curley YIGe ~ .... ..., <ioe-•,.,.... Thomas Keevll ¥ lcJ1l0< Thomas A. Murphlne """_. ... , ..... ~rtes H. Loo~ Richard P. Nall A•\t"•"' M.one91,.. E•to" costa ~ Offk• ,. ...... ,St.--... ._,,n. ~.o .... '*' ~ Telet'M• (714) "42-4321 Qaslfled Adverll,.nwMM671 C#Y•ltlll, ttlt Ot ..... (Htl ,._..1\111"0 ~.._ ___ ........ <It-. ........ -ltn •t •fwtrfl .. _,.,, .,.,.,,. M•r Ml lffl"9fte•• ... ,,__ -··· ,..""'"' .... , f;/ffltf>tfll _ .. ~ .... ~lttl ....... 9"1\tf •I C:..lo Meu, •WM.a. ,.._,.._.,~..-rwPoM ........ . -··...-~·ml'"'°'Y_ ......... ..,_ -. O.ily Pllet st.WI Plleeo COSTA MESAN SCHEIDEL MINDS HIS HONEY BEES Animal Control Officers Say He Needs a Permit Lost: 6,000 Bees Somewhere in Mesa By ALAN.DIRKIN OftlM O.lly PllotSUft H you see a swarm of bees <that's about 6,000) call Roman Scheidel of Costa Mesa. He's lost a swarm and would be glad to come pick it up. Scheidel began collecting bees about 10 months ago to beat the sugar crisis. His $25 investment in a colony has paid off in about 120 pounds of honey since then, and he was expecting production to double when the colony divided. But it hasn't worked out that way. Half the bees swarmed all righl, but they fled the neighborhood. They also buzzed a neighbor on the way. Now the Costa Mesa Animal Control Bureau is in the picture and says that Scheidel must get a $15 permit to keep bis bee cOlony at665Surf Ave. "There may be many bee hives in the city that we do not know about," said Police Lt. Glen Walker, "but '&eQ we know about them we ~uire that the owners get a permit. It gives us controls in case we get any more complaints." Scheidel is d ebating whether he should pay for a permit -he says he wants to talk it over with an attorney friend -but he does know that he would like the miss- ing swarm back so he can have two colonies. · ·'They're probably under the eaves of a house somewhere," he said. · Scheidel, a senior research as- sistant with Hughes Aircraft, ad· mits it might have been scary for .neig hbors whe n th e bees s warmed last Sunday. "It was unbelievable, the back yard was a solid cloud of bees." Scheidel explained that bees swarm to form a new colony when a new queen hatches out; half stay in the old hi ve while the other s swarm with the new queen. Scheidel said that when they s warmed he got a new hive out and started throwing the bees in- to it. Bees don 'l sling when they swarm, he said, because they are engorged with honey and are un- . able to bend their stomachs. "I thought the rest would go in on their own, but when I looked later the hive was empty," he added. But they had not buzzed off without bothering a neighbor, Lou Laurin, a maintenance man, who lives at 656 Beach St. He said that they drove him and his dog indoors, and picked al the caulking ·on his trailer. "The caulking's son and they were trying to build a hive with it with their feet," he said. Laurin says that he did not get stung, but found the experience · frightening. Scheidel said that his other neighbors don 'l mind his keeping · bees. ··1 sell them honey at 50 lo 75 cents a po und," he said. ··They'r e glad l have them." Scheidel, who is married with fi ve children, said that little is in- volved in keeping bees. "You need to build a hive and see that they have plenty of wax and water," he explained. "I don't have any feelings about them. They simply cut down on the cost of sugar .'' 4-day Week Okayed For .BB Detectives Orange County Superior Court . Judge William S. Lee bas ruled that Huntington Beach detectives are entitled to work a four-day week the same as their fellow of· ficers on routine patrol duty. Judge Lee granted a writ of mandate against the city as re- quested by the 170-member Hunt· in gton Beach Police Officers As· sociation. His decision covers two man· dates. One says Police Chier Earle Robitaille must put detec· lives back on the four day (lO hours per d ay) plan, and the other says if the city wants to cha nge that system it has to first meet and confer with the police association. City Attorney Don Bonf a said today he has not yet seen Judge Lee's run decision but the city V:'ould comply with the order . Bonfa said the four·lO plan would not be reinstalled im· mediately. :'Ghost Ship' Cutter Lodged in Glacier WASffiNGTON (UPI) -The· 8,600-ton Coast Guard cutter Glacier, stuck in 2S.-f oot thick Antarctic ice, will become an ice-encrusted ghost ship until Nov- ember unless it can break through 12 miles of ice to open water. The ship, which carries a crew or 211, including eight civilian scientists and three naval sea cadets, got trapped in the dense AJ}tarctic ice We~esday while &teaming to rescue another stranded ship. Coast Guard officials said that Glacier, its largest icebreakeT. might have to spend the entire winter tight where it is. The Antarctic winter won't be over unUJ Nov· ember because season are reversed in the Southern Hemisphere and ''the ice will get thicker ud thicker and thic~er, '• a spokesman said. He said the crew "are in no danger'' because the shlp is huilt to be squeezed upward as tbe ice thickens. and the vessd has heat, lights and several month.' of supplies stored away for just such an emergency. l' ' I A search conttnued today over a wide area of Ule.Pa~iflc for a Marino F4 Phantom jet fighter ·out of El Toro Marine Corps Air StaUon which crashed ThW'Sday on a routine training filgbt. U.S. Marine Corps officials identified the pilpt aa Lt. Michael C. Blazanlan, 26, of Des Kohles, Iowa. Only crewman aboard was Radar Intercept Officer Lt. Robert Darrell Johnston, 24, who resides at the El Toro base. Coast Guard helicopters arp searching waters west·southwest or Santa Barbara Island and west and north of Santa Catalina and San Clemente island. Cause ol the crash was not im- mediately determined. but the · · l'r ... rageAJ DOUGLAS. • • Saturn rocket which launches the American Apollo spaceship is manufactured by the co(Dpany 's Huntington Beach plant, but the one being used for that mission already has been completed and sent to Cape Canaveral. The delay could be caused in June, however , because the IAM workers at the Cape are needed then lo help with fueling of the giant s pacecraft. The 1,000 workers laid off in Long Beach are members of the · United Auto and Aerospace · Workers. who recently signed a new company contract rather than join the IAM on the picket lines. Union officials on both sides <'rilicized each other over that is- sue, with the UAW accusing the IAM of not acting in the best in- terests of members and the IAM rlaiming the UAW had promised to support its strike efforts. l'ro• Page Al KEESEE ... the front door for five minutes. afraid to enter because too many people were inside. Patterson disappeared when he left the consulate at the end of the day. Keesee said he wrote the letter last April 30. Keesee said he didn't know Patterson 's name until he saw newspaper accounts of the kid· naping. 1 The ques tion of extradition to Mexico rests with others, Nielsen told Keesee. There was no im· media le comm e nt from pro- secutors. but Nielsen was told the gove rnment was dropping charges or murder, kidnap and extortion against Keesee. Sentencing was set !or April 28 at which time, a prosecutor said, . murder and kidnap charges will be dropped. Keesee was arrested last sum· mer and r e mains in the San Diego County Jail. --...... --. pilot of a second Phantom jet s aid h e t h o u g b t h-e s a w · · somethin( tall lro~ the pJane shortly before lt went down. The crash occurred about 40 · miles offshore southwest of Santa Barbara Island during stormy weather . The original search was joined by aircraft from the J>t. Mu£u Air Station, but official& tbere I said they had discontinued the search. Lt. Blazaoin is survived by his widow Janet and Lt. Johnato11 leaves bis widow Shirley. . Studems Hear 1 Lindbergh Pa1 At: Breakf aJJt Students from seven Orange · Coast high schools will have the chance Monday to attend the an· nual Christian Leader$bip Breakfast which will include a main address by an early com· patriot of Charles Lindbergh. Col. Heath Bottomly, a veteran fighter pilot and former cohort of the late Oying pioneer, will be the main speaker at the event which will last Crom 7 to 9 a.m. Stud~nts attending the event at the Airporter Inn will be excused from classes. Besides the main address, music and other messages are planned for the breakfast sponsored by a student commit- tee from the schools involved. Youngsters eli gible to attend the $2 per person event are those enrolled at Ne wport Harbor. Edison. Laguna, Corona deJ Mar. Estancia, Mesa and University hi gh schools. Angry Storm Slams Norih By The Assodated Press An angry Pacific storm pack- ing howling winds cut into Northern California today, snarl- ing traffic, causing minor flood· ing and dumping snow in the mountains. The storm drenched the San Francisco Bay area with hall an inch of rain overnight and some minor flooding was reported in San Francisco. San Jose and Marin County: Wind gusts of 67 miles per hour were recorded at Pillar Point. Gale warnings were posted northward to Cape Mendocino. Snow began falling today in the Sierra Nevada. Travelers' ad· viso ri es were pos t ed for hazardous driving conditions because of blinding snow. Early morning commuter lraf· · fie into San Francisco was slowed toacrawJ. TONIGlrr "JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR •• -Newport Harbor High Drama Dept •• Auditorium, March 7 & 8. 8 p.m . Adults $21 FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS ' - "Slaughterhouse Five,'" OCC Forum, 7:30p.m . Adm.$1. BASKETBALL -NCAA Western Regional playoffs, UCl Crawford Hall, March 7 & 8. two games each night at 7 and 9 p.m. Tickets $2.50 per night. Tourna- . menl ticket $4. UCI CONCERT -UCI Sym: phony Orchestra, Fine Arts Village Theater, 8 p.m. Adults$2, students $1. "YOU'RE A GOOD MAN, CHARLIE BROWN" -UCI Lit- tle Theater, 8 p. m . 75 cents. ''TARTUFFE" -South Coast Repertory Theater, through SUn. 8p.m . Also Sun. 3 p.m. From Page Al ·LIONS ••. many elderly men from ne~rby Leisure World. No more. Lion Country recent- ly sold some of its money.losing parks and, even though it intends to open another preserve in Japan, there are slill lOQ many lions. In fact. there is a nationwide surplus of lions. Lions which used . to command between $250 and • $500 aren't worth anything now. Zoos can 't give them away, ac- cording to Quinn. The zoologis t says he would be qwte nappy with half as many 'lions al the Irvine presenie. "A· park is only so large and you can· maintain only so many lions. There comes a point when you have too many and you have to start a program of birth con- trol," he explains. Lions average four cubs per lit- ter a nd throw litters twice a year. advancing the lion population by quantum leaps if left unchecked. Out of all the males at Lion Country only a handful may be dc.ing the actual breeding, but it will be necessary to vasectomize all of them lo e nsure birth con- trol. Lions who have received •The treatment" are ear·tagged for . identification. It is doubtful that their mates will look for it. As zoologist Quinn explains it,. the male lions -as far as they are concerned -lose nothing, not even their pride. RockD~Set For Fairgrounds , Exceptional children and young adults are invited to a "March Mixer" dance March 14 ·at the Community Recreation Center on the Orange County Fairgrounds. The rock 'n 'roll dance, sponsored by Costa Mesa's Department of Leisure Services will be from 7 to 9 p.m. The rock group Manijera will play the music. Call 556-5300 for more in· formation. 7eJ""" ~~, 'l1ee, Sketchbook by Heritage Inspires ~our in.divid~ali~y. your flai~ for the dra!"atic. your ionging for the lovefter things in fife. When 1s a colfect1on of furniture not a collection? When each design has an independence. a flair. and an individuality all its own. When it can stand alone or become part of a total look. OAEXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOOOMARK~RASTAN-S~KEA NEWPORT BEACH • 1721 WUTCL~u·•~ OR.. 642·20IO • LAGUNA BEACH. 34.\ NOkTH (.'()AST HW\'.. U4 Wl TORRANCE• 23MI HAWTHOl\NE BLVD cOpen fn. ut 8. $'u1" 12 S 30{ 3'111179 • . / I ( I I