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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-01-14 - Orange Coast Pilot., ' . • • • ~---~---" • ' 1ans ------------- • -·-·-. -----~-- . . • • Parents Seelaing Becall. . . ~ . MONDAY AFTEftNOON; JANUARY Of· •neep Throat• Figures I I I YCK...tl, MO. It. l fKTtOWI. M , ...... ' ~-c I ~------------------ • • • .Judges Ask Disbarment Of Agnew .. ANNAPOLICS. Md. (AP) -A special three-judge panel recommended today that former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew be disbarred from .the practice of law in Maryla1¥1. • • • • • • • • • _oot_ Mrs .. __________ --~roping Way to Court .. In Property . -Guaranteed By JOANNE REYNOLDS ··Of ftM Diiiy l"lklt Stiff Eloise Popeil, the woman police accuse of a plot tO murdc.l-her -multi~milliornlir~ husband, returned to her Harbor Island Road home this weekend, thanks to efforts of her neighbors. Acrording to ,Mrs. Popeil's attorney, Phillip Petty, Mrs. Popeil's neighbors pledged more than $7 million worth of property to guarantee the slim blonde's $100,000 bail. Reached today at her home, Mrs. Pope.ii said she was very grateful for her neighbors' generosity which led to her release Saturday morning Crom Im The three Circuit Court Judges said that Agnew 's evasion of income tax, acknowledged in a 001!ontest plea, was "deceitful and dishonest" and "strikes at the heart of the basic object of the legal profession .... " "We shall therefore · recommend his disbann~t. We see no extenuating circumstances anowing a I e s s e r sanction," a 14-page reoommendation , i .Mngeles County Jail. v. W "I am very gratified," she sajd. "They are darling people and it is particularly reassuring when you realize I haven't DISBARME'°'T ASKED ' Former VBP Agnew said. · ~-t "Mr. Agnew will ool be making a ·~ . statement at this particular time," said ~aren~' ;Group ::'1<ee~:..:.,~n1st at Agnew's A 'Ibe recommendation goes to the -_ J.! .Re all Maryland Court of Appeals, which makea • U,IT ....... <' eeiu,n.g C the final decision on whether fa bar Agnew from the practice ol law. A policewoman holds the hand of Allison Thomp-Af HB T •~ "The Court of Appeals can either accept son, an IS.year-old Santa Barbara girl, as she and pearance on· ·charges of conspiracy to possess weapons illegally. She was ordered held in custody for another week. '«/ ruS...::eS the disbarment recommendalon, reduce • two plainclothes officers guide her into the Ux· .!! the penalty to suspension or reprimand _·bridge-Courthouse 1n London for a formal coutt ap-·~ n .. t of!iclal slep bas been taken Agnew. iit a recall campaign agaiillt two, Disciplinary actloos were .filed by the llllMington Beach Union ·High School state bar as.octatloil last Natember ·after < ~~~ .. ·=1n!it~the· ~~.,,Pcy'~.and~::ir:mau:.~r~ K~singer Plan Ni.·xed' · Trustees ' Dennis Mlngers and Roo .. -an .. now have \lrlW ' Friday to . 'l1'e bar uaociatim asked the three · · ~ Boy Says Glue · Made Hirn 'High'; Held in Attack chirg.. mBd• .,a1ns1 .u;em in judges to disbar . Agnew. The former E-. ~~1~·~::t~=:.te~~ ~~~~~~·=p~cr~ By .. gyp· tian Min. ister ~ar of voters. • law, arguhig· that bis mlsconduet was .u... .... bers ~f the· Cltiuftl ~for 'Parents' not ainneded with duties u a lawyer. • ~----. . ._., All Apew 1old the judges' that be had Rlcl>ta Ccm)1lltt"!'1 led' liy Doris en at .. 00 , time enriched himself at the By Ullted Pms Intenallonal ti W'eatminlter, lllOd the nolloes Friday. Egy\it today reJected the · troops Tlla' l(Usteea have one week • fa rebut e"IJ818e.' ol bis , publlc ins. and that dl!en«...,....;t: plan . worked <Mlt by -!alter wlllcll 'lilile the actual recall _there wu notblng to Indicate that he Secretary of·state Honry k: l{isslnger, can bs nled. . ~ llllt faJillfuUy and booesUy E-•an F_._ Mbiister Ismail Fahrni ·'-L' f (See AGNEW, Pap Z) .,..., -·-~ there have -IJ\reals o said In A.nan. Be said Egypt wa ~:i::ii . .:b'~c\t..for ~.,,this './', . ·•. . demanding that It be redrafted Into ~:·'.\lien . "'Id to<!ay ·~llel citizens IT 1 LIA.N ACCENT 8ll ~f.:.~';f .J~~r. Kissinger brooght -·pi-to, start clrClllatlni! l"'littoos · .nJi.r f';; .. ~·ss•FIED with him was "not satisfactory," Fahrni set Ille ....... ry 21,0llll •llll\"t~ • v n . ~l'a ~ told '&'news conference near the end W&tet ~a1'T;t!Clll·,iecli0n ~ .. att'ei.-die,, .,.:·..,. .~· ~ _J • of a -day of negotiations involving ~...,_ the llleg1lJmli. ; • l!~'I a llUCce8S story told ·In , 8ll Kissinger and Egyptian leaden including · \1oe "* f1iure re-Ls· lO ~t . !~ acceot;' · President Anwar Sadat. ~_Ille • ,...isteroll $1. Mrs, Allen . · ' FQnil Aid Klsstnger · wu returning "1!· fit group lrttalda lb U'y fa' get '' llilian 11111<e. Like new, • to ~ tonight •:)'ith an Egyptian 1!1'1euti liO,llllO 11iD4iur.>iJt osse 10me l!OLD~G, Btcyele, 3 spd. ' plan and an Egyptian map o n ~ tbnn!n:'oul d~ val!d@~. ,. ~ o~,. (!'ilone 'No.) -. ·: .d'-aement with Israel" along the >ID tM imt'lcos ot'1n\'li~ ~· par"!ts?; ~ ' . • Sues canaJ. pltlp ,..._'the ~ ''wl\11 '."n>&,'llllle -••made-ln •llllJ;'•bltl ' ~·1i61d iOWsiiieD'elrJJer ~fler hUdlllolt ua of moiieY:·-.;;eglect of ~ '""Its were strlctly fn>m tho a ·~rklng l~ with Fahrni lliat dCt, loot "of '.lla:al reapOOslblUty aJld homelP'Own IJOlly Pilot. The bike was his • aitempi to 'ConCtucle an • Jsraell· eifdllct 'ol -. Sold the second day the Id appearod. Egyptian agreement "is the toughest ·•ia. ~ ·WJl~,by ~,1roup'1 II yoq_w.ant to try !or a new= nt!IOllatlon I've ever been in." Despite ,. --·lliii:,......,~... ,!qr ..Ulna; a bike .• '<!I' Killtnpr's statement, American sources f.!'~lq tbd abow!N • tri'flle.odlrect line•to·..wta..• Aid a major lllllOllllCelllt could be '!Dllllp~T&r.bat'"~ .. erpec&ed 'halllly. - I " . ,... 'i) , JiOOhli,r bad 'llowo..Jo-Aswan with !;_ .. ~ ..... r. ... ,. ~ ~1' ; l r \v . ' ' •• ' ., ~ •w' •' f ~7' • " r'· :'· ,, f • '' "" ~ . ' • ., ,. • A 16-year~ld Costa Mesa youth who ·what basically :was a plan worked out claims he was overcome by glue he by Israel calling for Israeli withdrawal used to build 8 model car today faces 1 to about 20 miles from the Canal and an assa u1t charge st.err.ming from an a thinnin~ out of Egyptian anned forces alleged knife attack on an acquaintance in the Sinai Desert on the Israel side Sunday. of the canal. Work had gone so far on the plan The youth, booked into Orange County that both Kissinger and Fahrni said Juvenile Hall after lbe alleged knifll)g experts were using maps lo pinpoint at the apartment of Kevin 1'1ills, to1d the exact withdrawal plans. An American officers he had never had an urge to s p 0 k e s m 8 n said an interim smell glue before and that he remembers announcement was -eXpected late today nothing about the alleged atwack. with the major announcement Tuesday. . ~fills, 19, suffered a gash in his hand The Egyptian dernand for 8 revision when he surprised the "'youth as he of Kissinger's proposal forced Kissinger was rammaging around in hi!i apartment lo delay bJs scheduled ret\lm to Israel at 300 Avocado St. The knife had been for more than four hours. given to Mill! by the youth as a present American officials said he expected a week ago. to leave this afternoon . to place the The boy told police he had been r~viled .Jll'Oiect before the laraelis. ---••. WO£)\iOB._On : the .model .'II( hen Jbe lwnes -ln an indication of what caused the from the glue rose and he became Egyptian objections to Kissinger's plan, overcome by the desire to snlff and Jtatnni said any d Is engagement "get high." Later he was overcome agreement "should be s u ff i c i en t l y by an equally powerful urge to make deteiled that there can M no hang·ups. a phooe c!ll and , not having a pbone "Everytb.lng must be in c J e a r c u t at home, went to Mills' a~rlment to language ao that there _will be. nothing make the call. afi1n like Point -B (of the ce&1<>fire Apartment Mlllllger Btlll'. Carden, (See MIDEAST, Pap.J) --(See GUI&, P011 1)-- --• , . 11 -~ :_:_:;~ lived here too long." .. Petty said the pledges came primarily from residents of Linda Isle where Mrs. Popeil and her estranged husband, Samuel, owned a summer home. Mrs. Popeil, 48, spent four days behind bars following her arrest last Tuesday with her boyfriend on suspicion of hiring a Long Beach man to kill PopE!il a Chicago kitchen gadget manufacturer'. The boyfriend, Daniel Ayers, 37, an unemployed machinist from Santa Ana . . . ' re~ams m custody today, unable to raise the $100,000 bail set Frklay in a hearing in Leng Beach. Police allege the pair conspired to kill Popeil so that she couJd inherit roughly one-third of bis $150 million estate before their pending divorce became final. ~ccording tQ. investigator:_s, the couple (See RELEASED, Page Z - Oruge Coast Weather Some high clouds at times, other- wise sunny through Wednesday, according to the weather service with inland highs In the low 70s and beach temperatures of 65. Lows tonight In the 50s. INSWE TODAY . An AEC official clai,.. tht chance of a nuclear J>()1«T plm1t accident ii 'one chanci in a· billion.• See 1&ort1 Page 4. -·· " -" I.. M. ...,. , --• ctf11on111 • .... __ I Cltnllltll .... ·''"'" ......... It ,_ ... " ,_ .... , __ " , .............. " 0..fll MtHat I ·-• l!ffWltl , ... • -• ••ttrt•""""" II -• ,.._. 1 .. 11 w.....-. .... U-M -.. --. ... .._ .. -- ~ _ __;_..•.,..-"'·-""'~ ·-.,.·--~-~ • .. " • I .e: UAIL. Y PlL.0 I MondiJ, January 14, 1914 ' Murder Trial Begins Morn of Texas Slayin$ Suspect Testifies HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) • Pauline lf<oiley testUled tocjay her 17·year<>ld IOD wu lncoberent and in need or a doctor after hla armil last year in ccanectloll with the homooexuaMorl!lre slaylngs of %7 lteJW1gen. Elmer Wayne Henley Is charged with murder in si~ of the deaths. His trial opened today with his lawyers raising --~•an_attack..on tbe.ic....young-client:& written and orsl stalcments lo police alter his Phony Passports aJTtst. (Picture, Page 4). He allegedly told polk:e details of a 21£.year rampage or homosexual rape and torture killings . Htnley would have been 14 when the state accuse1 h1m of having started to participate In the killings. After morning testimony, the hearing was recessed until 9 a.m. Tuesday. Mrs. Henley said her son telephoned her from police headquarters alter his U.S. Says Leary Drug Cult Made $200 Million From Wire Strvlcea Once headquartered In Laguna Beach, the Brotherhood of Eternal Love led by Dr. nmothy Leary was a drug Importing ring that made $200 million, the government charges. Testimony revealed Sunday I n 'llashington,. D.C. alleges that members .t the Brotherhood fitted around lhe globe an lradulant passports easily rlllalned. Frances G. Knight, dlreclor of 1be Slate Department's Pasaport Office, chargeo that Brotherhood members bad 130 pllooy passports. 'lbls repreoents about a thlnl of 1be H9 · false passports oanliscated or . otberwi9e · takel1 out ol circulaUon in the past fiscal year. -Miss-Kmght-said it ls s<r easy tQ obtain phony passports, fraudulent birth certificates, driver's licenses or other identification that an applicant could get a dozen. One or the 150 indicted, arrested or coovicCed Brotherhood of Eternal Love members had seven, she testified secretly Oct. 3 before a Senate f---C.mmitlte Her testimony was Only refeasei! ·Sunday ln a statement and summary by the committee. , Federal agents also told the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee that their efforts have crippled t he Brotherbooil of Eternal Love, but not· lrilled il They said worldwide surveillance has linked at. least 750 individuals to the so-called cult, from minor messengers lo the big admlni.tlraUve men. "Of the top lZ organizera of the Brotherhood's acUvlUe!, six continue to be fugitives from justice living on their ill-gotten wealth in foreign countries where addlllonal enterprises can be pl.a:lliled," olalim John R. Bartels Jr., admJnistrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. \ He charged that one of thoae who was involved is Dr. Leary, the onetime LSD advocate now serving a IO.year _ term for. marijuana poesesslon. He Is coofined at !be CslUornla Medical Facillly at Vacaville, while still From Pagel RECALL ... facing a Texas prison tenn on the same coUnt. Leary escaped from Los Padres Men's C.lony at San IAlls Obispo In 1970, allegedly With the help of followers, but Was recaptured. Authorities allege that his Brotherhood or Eternal Love made about $200 million from smuggling 24 tons of hashish into the U.S. and -have sued the tax-exempt organit.aUon for f70 million. Fro111P .. el RELEASED. • • separated this. .summer _ ~nd P~il -rettiiTied -tO Oilcigo to start divorce proceedings while Mrs. Popeil and their two teenage daughters stayed on in Newport Beach. The three women vacated the Linda Isle home while It was being remodeled and neil!llbon said wotk en the house located at the northwest ;>oi.,t of the hland, slopped when court 1tctlon on the divorce started. Since -then, · n~opeil aliil-her dau~ters have lived in rented homes in Irvine Terrace and on Harbor Island Road. . Petty alleged today that Popell was $14.250 behind In bis_ temporary allmony and child support payments of $4,250 a month. In Cllicago, Popeil weot to court Fri· day in a stormy session to ask for custody of the two 5irls 3nd an end to fmancia1 support for his wife. That bearing was C<JOilnued lo this Friday. •• Ae<otding lo the Aasoclaled Presa, Pooe.11'1 . lawyer, Samuel A. Rlnella, called the estranged wUe an adullereos and a "willful, vicious woman." . rn opposing the motion to tenninate the separate maintenance payments, Mi's.· POpeil'S " lawyer, OJarleS StelD, charged that PopeU "haa altempted IA> ·use every technJque to starve ,his wife -and chlld"'1 lnlo submlaaloo In this caae," acconllng to the AP alory. He said that If the monthly paymenll were cul off Mn. Popell would he without funds to defend benell In Utigallon. AP ,.ported that In commeolin( lo neW3111en alter the hearing, Popell said, "Mv wile baa two sides to her-o good at an admlnlstratJve conference. side and a rough side." Mangers and Shenkman were invited • One of Pooeil daughters related to see the film at the conference in last week that the three women all San Diego last August but left before had bet!:n forced to take jobs in an the screening. After the matter became apparent effort to support them.selves public she weeks later and Ute board in the bayfront house and maintain the discussed It, trustees voted 4 to 1 to three eipemive European cars they end tt with Superintendent Jack Roper 's used. apology over the film being shown. One or those cars, a Rolls Royce, The cltltens claim tax money was was Impounded by police as evidence misused because the educators at the In the case. San Diego conference didn't view LOn""Beach detectives who arrested instructional programs but I n s t e a d Mrs. Popeil and Ayers allege that they watched the sexually-explicit film at gave ~00 cash and $60,000 w o r t h taxpayer's expense. of diamond jewelry to an acquaintance Mangers, '!'ho Is a c;orporate officer of Ayers to kill Popeil. of the Amencan Leanung Corp., which Police claim the case was broken sells instructional materials, is accused when the would-be killer got second by the group of having a confi:lct ~r thoughts and called Popeil to infonn interest because a stockholder m bis him of the alleged plot. fmn wblch is a major land ~eloper According to AP. authorities ln Chicago and could buy land from the district. said Friday Iha! the woold-be killer OIANH COAST IT stalked Popeil while carrying a gun DAILY PILOT 1'1le Of'Ml9 C-' DAILY PILOT, wltfl wllltfl; II·""*""" IN HIWt-Pr ..... II ,.WlllMll _,. .,. °' ..... PHI ~..,..,,. ~, . ...,.. ........... 11'9 Mlllllld, ,..,..y HI,_.,. fi'rWf, fw Cle!• MtM, ......... IMdt, ............. ltach/,,_llln Vtlley, Lefllni ....._ l,.,.,.StOdlebedl •M ~n <:i.m.ntc.t .... ,,..... (.lplll,.,,.. " ,.... "'"""'' ..... ,.,Ollt'*I "~ ..... ,_...,.. fM ,,,..... 111*1111111!1 itlefll It 11 Qt Wnl .. , Jtrwl, Cette Mne, tellfen!la, ..,.,... lekrt H. w,94 , .... """' ......... ..... ' Jee.• l . c .... 1., VIII ..,....,.. Mii '"-*•1 ~ Tlttir•ia• K.ewll '""' "'"., A. M•,JlliRI -·-~ H. Leo1 ltlc.liW 'P, Nell .....,,, .......... h i-- .. and a key to Popeil '1 10...room apartment. They said he followed Popell to his businm and to several restaunnts but never got a chance to kill hinL Other than his brief remarb following Friday's divorce hearing, Popei1'1 only public cocmnent so far has been, 0 1 am very happy to be alive." Winter Olympics --Nude -a11d Col.d 'Wm' LAFAYE'M'E, Ind. (UPI) - Six of 43 hardy Purdue Unlvenlly men brawd 7 degree below zero temperat~ during the weekend to win the fourth annual Cary Quadrangle nude winier olymplcs here. They were wd only In tennis -sod hats. Forty three nmnen entered the three- mile-C<JOtest which began In 19'70 as a prank between residence halls on the men 's quadralllle. Tbe w Ind er a completed the race this year In 5' minutes, compared to one hour and I! minutes lut year. The wind llll]I have proven a lac!A>r In 1be small number of llnlahen. The wind chill Index al the Ume of the race was St below zero. Tbe ab -•bared a purae of ~ ' ' arrest Aug. 8. ''1 asked when I could see him and he said the police would call when l could come. I just went all to pieces," she sald. . She said she contacted the family lawyer but he was too busy to see Henley right away. r.1rs. Henley said when she visited her son the nezt day in jail at Pasadena, a Houston suburb, she found him cold · to the touch and apparently . hallucinatlrfg. "I was with \Vayne for about five minutes and he was incoherent. I just asked ii he was all right and he sald, 'Get me a lawyer and a doctor just as quick as you can.• " She said she asked police detectives not to question her son again but they refUsed, telling her he didn't hive to answer their questions. Stsle DiStrict Judge Wiiiiam M. Hatten has reaerved the opening days for pretrial motions. The hardest fought ones are expected to be motions by defense lawyer Will Gray, 48, to exclude from evidence oral and written coofeaiom Henley made to police. Charle! Melder, 44, who heads the ' Do>ltr Pilot lltff ~. MARCIA CULBERTSON TRIES UC IRVINE'S BOOKSTORE 'TRAM SERVICE . A Short Ridt, But a S-t Ont for Students With Sttcks of Textbooks for -Quarter defense team of lawyers, says: "We'll . p d proceed on the assumption the boy was ·Propane owere without counsel al the time, and wasn't Murder Victim? adequately warned of his rights .'' Without the Henley stalemenl3, 1be Trams Operating state's case could be seriously weakened, Marine Deserter's Body Identified in Clemente prosecution lawyers say. I The prosecution says there is only At UC rvine one other witness to the killings: Davkf Owen Brooks, 18, hlmsell charged with four murders. Brook.s, due to be tried beginning March 4,-will not testify al the Henley trial. Such tesurTiony Would-incriminate him, even though he has given a statement linking Henley to at least seven deaths, prosecutors say. The U.S. Constitution allows a person to refrain from giving self-incriminating testimony. Dean Arnold C.rll, 33, the man police call the mastermind of the ring, was shot dead by Henley. It was Henley's shooting of Corll during a sex and paint· snttfing"']>arty"'Aug;-Augc 8 which broke open the case. After the shooting, later ruled self· defense, police say Henley began telling them about tbe series oJ .murders. At first they were incredulous, but soon they found Henley was telling the truth. He and Brooks led them lo 27 burled bodies in three locations. Henley has bet!:n indicted in six of the murders but is being tried for only one of them now: the death of Charles Ray Cobble, 17. . Cobble, wbo lived acroos the slreet from Henley In 1be facllni Helg)llS nelghborbood close to downtown Houston, was found dead two weeks aller he disappeared, buried Blong with 16 youths In a boat •lall rented by C.rll. In Texas,. there is. only one classlllcalion of murder. '!be stale does not have charges such as llrsklegree or second-degree murder. Frotll Page 1 MIDEAST ••• C01130lidailon agreement EjlYPI and luael signed Nov. 11)," Fahrni satd. Point B of the November agreem~t called oo Egyptian and Israeli military representatives to negotiate a return IA> lines held when the first U.N ... nlered cease-fire went into effect <>c;. 22. EgypUan officials said Its lmpreclae phrasing enabled the Israelis lo lawteb "stalling tactics" and prevent its lmplementaUoo. Fahrni said Kissinger was playing "a constructive role in the negotlatlons, in the aenae that he would Ulre to aee a good (disengagemeol) plan as a fll'1t step towards a final settlement." He said Egypt would not reopen ,the Suez Canal except "in the context of a final settlement" and not as part of any diseogagament arrangements. "When Israel fUlfills all its obllgaUOIUI under Security Coundl resolution 2U, Egypt will alow Israeli shipping through the Suez Canal ,'' Fahrni said. Resolution 242 of November, 1967, called for an Israeli withdrawal from all Arab terrilocy occupied during the June 1967 war. Man, 56, Bludgeoned BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -Merchant Richard Hateld, 58, of Bakersfield, was found dead SUnday after he was a/)parenUy struck over the bead during • robbery. Court to Eye Mailed Smut W ASlllNGTON (AP) -The U.S . SUpreme C.urt today eolarged Ill newly launched reconsideration of onlfobsceoity law by ._in. to hear a case lnvolvlna the federal 1t1tule against malllna oblcone material. The law WU cballqed U un- coastltuilooally VllJllO and t o o brood In an appeal ll'oQl c.ufor. nla. On Dec. 10. lbe court aireed to bear the appeal of an Albany, Ga., mo v I e theater oerator convicted under tale obeccifty law for 1howi111 the R·ra!Od, crlUcally pralaed rom "Carnal Know!•" ''-~ Propane po-trams plied the shortest bus route in the City of Irvine this week, carrying UC Irvine-student San C emente police today: 1 en!J~ _ . ~v book buyers acrQS~ Campus Drive to 1 · 'd · "ed Dec 20 dl ·-vered the remains ':J To,:nn a~e:;.student committee became the body found early last month in head down in ~fhe-canyOh:-A-clfea canvas tarpaulin had been thrown concerned about the lack of parking inland hills as that of a young deserter partially over the body and only the spaces at Town Center particularly stationed at Camp Pendleton. lep.s were visible. during the opening week of school when The remains, which had Jain unnoticed Recent checks for a pc>JSlble crlmlnal students buy their books. ·for about %5 days in' a ravine near rerord on Erlewein show a aincle booktnC So, Howard Bidna. Tim Kelly and the Oc 'de ...... _ related Hillary Davis met with rep~sentative1 San Clemente High School. were tho~e in eansJ area on ....... es of the Irvine Company. They gained or Dale Arthlll' Erleweln, 21, wbo ~ to ~~~ves said that their ca.m~ a promise of increased parking spaces a member of A Company, 1st Ma~-in-Oeeanside plan to uaia:f int.he cii- in TQwn Center. ~· -=--otvtsfon, at the base. Unulng investigaUon. And, they laun~ the Associated 'Ibe Identification was made after Students of UCI, Irvme Company and . . . . aministration special projects office police furnished hngerpnnt records to experimental bus service. _ the FBI. The agency answered the query The idea is to see if students will late last v.·eek v.·ith data on the young take the bus instead of their cars for Marine. the short trip across Campus Drive Police ooUfled the man's p;u:ents in to Town Cent.er. the Midwest over the weekend. Bidna an ASUCI councilman, said, Erleweln was fatally shot before his "There ' seems to be no way to get body was stripped and dumped into students to walk to the boQk store." the ravine , police said. Coroner's investlg•torf noted a 'single wound In the skull, entering In the area of the left temple. The slug, part of which WaJ recovered during an autopsy , was a .32~llber. From Pagel AGNEW •.• repre3e0t clients as a lawyer. Bui Circuit Court Judges Shirley B. Jones, Ridgely P. Melvin Jr., and William H. McCulloogb said Agnew's condw:t was harmful lo the proper administration of j..,Uce. "In our opinion, the p rope r administration of justice, the proper reepecl of the court for f1aelf and a proper reganl for the Integrity of the prol ... loo compel us lo conclude that the mpondent ls unfit to continue as a member of the bar of this state," the recommerxlatlon Bald. '!be three judges said I b e I r recommendation was based SC)lely on Agnew's 00<00lest plea to the la}< charge. They said they did not lal<e into consideration any of the allegations made by the Justice Department In Agnew's U.S. District C.urt appearance Oct. 10. Detectives said the FBI planned to continue in wisting In the investigation, but gave few other details of the continuing probe. Early last week, before the identity . of the remains was determined, officers released a aimposite drawing made by artist sandy Martin, who spent a week working wiUi a magnifying glaas in an attempt to draw a portrait from photos · of the skull Detective Dave Munro said today that compari.oon of the drawings with mugshots of the victim showed "an uncanny resemblance. "Sandy's work was e 1 t r e m e 1 y accurate, and he had the victim's features right on the button," he said. The theory surrounding the killing holds that Erlewein was murdered elsewhere and then dumped in the remote ravine only a few yards from lhe edge or Avenlda Pico. An off-duty fireman walking hls dog FromP .. el GLUE •.. also of 350 Avocado Sl, said he oboel "4 the youth outside-Mills' flat looklltC suspicious as he fumbled tllroup hll poclt& lool<ing for a key, Just then Mills drove up and WU lnf<Jinecl by thO manlger !bat a Itron# was inside 1be apartmenl Milli jmnptd inside and said he was lrnmedlatejJ collared by the youth who al tht ..... lime placed the llve-and-1>tll Inell . blade against bis throat. MWs told officers he kicked the 1""81 In the groin, wbemipon tht youth hm&ol at bis abdomen with the knlle, m~ltl bis target but atrildng MUii' baDd. , A> 1be youth bolted throucb tbt """ door he made another Iuace at cue who was slaodlng outside, acxmdlill lo police reports. Canlen lold invtlllplorl the boy appeared "mad, cianrei-alll wild" and -id have lnlllcted a toriaii wound U he had not jumped u1d9 • the last moment. 'fr Police arruted the hoy al bis ..._. and said they were wllllnt!ly -till knife and the car modef, a1q wt~ three tube! of glue. -· They said the boy claimed not to remember using the knife IA> thneten, or Inflicting harm on anyone. Nobody Sells Amana for less thlln 1>uAta,P Where do yqll want the· freezer in your ne\v ifmono. refrigerator ... • WE TAKE TRADE INS LOW PRICES ARI BORN Hlltl RAISID ILSEW!illtl on the side? on the bottom? on the !gp.1 tf.m•na gives you a choice ---·- 90DAYSCASH Willi A,PllOYID ClllDIT 1115 NEWPORT Bl VD~ Downtown Cilsta Mesa -PllGlll SQ. 7711 -. -~-· -. -· - • , _, · .. • , MO<lday, J.lnu"y 14, ·1974 $ DAILV PILOT :J . - ; A . • rh.ysicinn~ ~hnrge4 •• I lnDeath ' .. " ?.!!NEOLA , N.Y. (AP) -"Willful utder" is the charge against Dr. , 1ncent A. Montemarano in the alleged mercy killing of a cancer patient. Montemarano goes on trial today in Nassau County Court. 1· Tbe SS.year-old physician was chief i'tsklent surgeod at Nassau County Medical Center when he allegedly Injected a fatal dose of potassium chloride into the patient, Eugene Bauer, ~ 19. • At the time of his death Dee. 7, 1972, Bauer was suffering from neck and throat cancer, heart disease and pneumonia. He was in a coma and had been given less than 48· hours to live. KEY FIGURES -,The Senate Watergate Commit· tee is investigating possibility former associates of Howard Hughes Oeft) paid sums to President -Nixon'sbr0thir F. Donald-Nixon (center) id New· port Beach. Hughes' mining associate, Yohn Merer~ is pictured at right. Boat Cra sli es; Skipper Tips y? Montemarano signed a certificate citing cancer as the cause of Bauer's death. After an investigation by the Nassau County district attorney's office, he was Indicted for murder June 21. He pleaded innocent to the charge and has been free oo $25,000 bail . • 1The motive appears to have been VENICE (UPI) -A 42-foot cabin ·ir cruiser ran aground at Venice • mercy killing," Dist. Atty. ·Wt iam _Beach aod -the skipper., who was-1caJur,.1a llf1llifO>tlncing1hc 1ndtctmeo . HThe evidence indicates the only reason found passed out at the helm, wis euthanasia." was arrested on suspicion of The body of Bauer, a retired Long operating a boat while under the . 1sland Rall Road worker from Hicksville. influence of alcohol, police said. Donald Beland, 44, of Woodland )Vas · exhumed but an autopsy railed Hills, w·as arrested Sunday arter 'lo·show any trace of p<>tassium chl~de. he told officers he and three rriends How.ever, ~ said he had evidence, had been drinking while making __ lncluding_testimooy fromJ...n~ -·-repairs-on-the-boat and decided had been present, about the alleged to take it to Santa Catalina Island fatal injectloo at the medical complex according to authorities. ' In East Meadow. Bauer's widow, Rose, said she knew or no request ror a mercy killing and said she would never have agreed to• it. --~ --'-· The trial reportedly is the fll'St such ~ involving a physician since 1949, wheo Dr. Herman Sander of Manches- 'ter, N.H., was accused of killing a woman '.cancer patient . ;.Countian Killed ~In Truck Crash Near El To1·0 . · A ~year~Jd Anaheim man was killed 'Saturday night when a truck he was ~ in rolled down a hill in Live ~ canyon near El Toro and caught '' California Highway Patrol officers ~entlfted the man as Jimmy Sartin of !22 Florette SI. •. Sartin and Said Adam, 31, of Westminster, were ~gen in the pickup truck driven by Theodore Elder, 34, of Fullerton. , Adam escaped with minor injuries and Elder wasn't hurt in the 6:15 p.m. .a1ccident, officers said. ~, OfOcers said the three men were hill- climblng on private property off Live Oak Canyon-Road just socth of Cook's Corner when the truck &tarted to slip bick down the blll. The truck then ro11ed over and the fire broke out. Officers said Adam and Elder pulled Sartin out of the burning vehicle, but he was already dead. Hit-run Killer Of Girls Catt ght After ~scape . TAMPA, F1a/' (UPI) -Raymond McMahon, tbei' convicted hit-and-nm killer of t~o litUe sisters, was recaptured in a telephhone booth, 24 hours after he escaped from a mental hospital following rec~ipt of an apparent "Dear 1John'' letter from one of his two wives. Police said Mchfahon, 32, w a s arprehended while making a telephone call at the University Community Hospital. He su1Tendered quietly. He escaped Saturday night from the North Florida Mental Hospital at Chattahoochee Wlder cover of a staged fight. Illilsborough County Slate Attorney E. J. Salcines said McMahon received. a goOdbye letter from his wile Friday, fol- lowed by a telephone call which appar- ently left him agitated. McMahon has never been convicted of bigamy, but a Hillsborough County police spokesman said the former Bible college student claimed. he had one wire and childrerf In Orlando, Fla ., ·and another wife in Brandon, about 10 miles east of Tampa. McMahon was sentenced to life in prison for the July 13 deaths of Roxanne Caton, 13, and her sister, Rabyn, 5. ii Real Watering Bole ~~~--~~~~~ Money to Go to,.Charities If Starr ~~11 c~1 ~c~ired By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of llM DIHY Piiot SU11f \\1hen and if Orange County finally c es it~-see-saw deal to buy 5,500 cres of the Starr Ranch as a wilderness park, county residents won't be the only big gainers•~--- The purchase price of $4.4 million "ill go to the Starr Ranch Foundation trust, a conglomerate of 10 charities that was willed the land by ]ale catl1eman \Villiam Starr. The -tax~empt foundation will di'(!de the money between charities devoted to the preservation of beauty as well as the restoration of the human spirit and body. Some of it will even go to help the aged who have worked a lifetime for · their place in the sun. If_ the C9W!_ty acquires the 5,500 acres of rolling hills ahd iretnerY. it will ®mplete a package of open space more than 10,000 acres in size. Starr heirs gave the otfter half, much of il bordering Cleveland National Forest land. to the National Audubon Society as a bird and wildlife sanctuary. Among the charities that will benefit from the land Sale are the Braille Institute, formed to help the blind read : The American Cancer Society and the Los Angeles County ·Heart Associat!On. Others i n c I u d e the Los Angeles Orthopedic Foundation; the Joho Tracy Clinic, a non-profit group formed to Union Chief Booed . ' SOUTH GATE (AP) -United Auto \Vorkers President Leonard Woodcock was criticized and even booed during an appearance at a labor hall here Sunday. • \VoodCock spoke at a UAW local union meeting near a General Motors plant where 1,900 of the facility's 3,700 workers are scheduled for layoffs starting Jan. 21. ,UPI Ttle!IMtt help dear children; and the California Hospital, which treats charity patients. Also benefiting from the sale will be the Salvation Anny, the Southern California Foundation ( B r o a d v i e w Sanatoriwn), the Los Angeles County Museum_of....Art _and_ the.___12iru~sion Trust fund of the Southern California Retail Clerks and Food Employees Unions. Starr Foundation attorneys said the charities hJd to liquidate the land or continue paying more than $100,000 a year in property taxes. Several prior deals to sell the land fell through and the charities finally accepted the county·s offer even though they felt it was too low. "Starr Lawyer William Poindexter has indicated the charities hoped to clear $5 million in the . sale, giving each $500,000 -COr· their works. Under· the agreement with the county, 'vhich faces final Board of Supervisors approval later this month, the charities will get a $1.5 mill ion down payment and the remainder in equal installments over the next five years . Porno Ra,iders 'Get the Limit' FORT PIERCE, Fla. (AP) -State Atty. Robert Stone says a warehouse raid has yielded esimated $1 million worth of pornography. "We've got the limit," Stone said about the estimated 10,000 items seized here. "We found books, maga~ines, films, an types of Simulated sex devices ... i~ al.~ ~uld be worth a million dollars," he said. -' · · ··· · -· Deputies are sifting through their catch. Stone said the inventory of all items is necessary before be can seek a court order aowing him to destroy the cqnfiscated material . I .... nooc1 watant inundate .bar. of Royal. Hotel at Wee Waa, Australia, 370 miles northwest of Sydney, but the drinkers appear to adjust swimmingly. ) , . • Coast Man Tied T.o Mine Funds By CLAY F. RICllARDS WASHINGTON (UP!) -The Senate Watergate. Committee is. inv.estigaJipg the possibility former associates of Howard Hughes paid "suOOtanlial " sums to President Nixon's brother Donald or Newport Beach for his help in mining claims ventures in the western United Stales and the Dominican Republic. In Tti probe or a -$·100,<lOO-dOOatioD that a Hughes agent made to Nixon's 1972 campaign -what the committee's chief counsel terms "as important as anything we have done so far " -the investigators linked F. Donald Nixon to these mining ventures: -One in \vhich Hughes contends his associa tes conspired to buy 2,700 worth- less mining claims in Nevada and Utah cheaply, selling them to him for greatly inflated prices totaling $18 million. -=:Anol.ber in.YotviogJm alleg!!(l att_e.mpl to pay orf Dominican Republic officials to obtain mining rights in that Latin · American country. _. F. Donald Nixon's tie \Yith the alleged scheme to swiDdle Hughes over worthless mining claims is net clear. But it is known lhe President's brother traveled to the Dominican Republic in 1969 with Hughes mining associate John Meier the key figure in both ventures. ' (Donald Nixon has repeatedly told the OajJy _Pilot he. did Jrav:el _with ~1.eier lo the Dominican Republic but the pur- pose of the trip was onnly to see Meier hono~ed by the Dominican . Republic government.) Committee sources said lhey are convinced the White House has details of F. Donald Nixon's involvement. They said they have learned that Herbert W. Kalmbach, the President's personal lawyer, fund raiser and-long-time friend quietly investigated the brother '~ finan cial dealings in 1970. (Kalmbach, a Ne"'J>Ort Beach resi- dent, has repeat'edly declined to com· ment to the Daily Pilot on any relation- ship with Donald Nixon's financial deal- ings.) Investigators say the recluse billionaire tnay have been entirely ignorant of the mining enterprises being carried on by his associates. Although a dozen of the names on the subpoena were oo tbe Hughes payroll, nooe had ever met Hughes. It was not until he became concerned he was being swindled that Hughes began to look into the affair, ·a Las Vegas source said. · · The C<>mmittee's interest in both areas is reflected in subpoenas served on Nixon last month seeking all White House. documents, tapes and other matters that might link Donald Nixon with a group of-44 pel"S()M and 23 corporations. A lengthy investigation by UPI of f!l persons and corporations named in tile subpoena shows that 30 -nearly half -are tied to the two mining deals. Three key figures in the mining ventures are dead. Senate Investigators said the testimony t~ey received developed two conflicting pictures of Donald Nixon's role in the mining transactions. According • to Hughes' associates Donald Nixon sought persooaJ financiai gains by offering to use his kinship with the President to win decisions favorable to the Hughes empire and related interests. Figures outside the flughes circle including Donald Nixon himself, tell ~ · dlfrere"rit story.· They claim the··Hug11es associates sought to use the Nixon name in their dealings to gain mining rights and other potential investments. They contend this was done to give the false impression the President supported the operation. I -·- WIN'rER SALE STARTS FRIDAY • • .. FASHION ISI:.E President Nixon, who had kept close watch on tµs brother's activities, stepped in after the 1970 investigation he ordered, and according to several sOurcbs, ended Donald0s dealings with the Hughes associates. \\'ate~gate Comm I l t e·e documents, some still secret, revea l a belief that Don~ld Nixon was well paid for his ser'il.ces. One investigator, w hi 1 e declining to give a specific figure told UPI "The amount was suOOtantial.'~ ~1inutes of the committee's executive session Nov. 29, 1973, include this comment from staff investigators: . "\Ve_ have been investigating the f1nanc1al and business relationship of ~· Do~ald Nixon to a number of people, 1nclud1ng one John ~feier ... (this) relates to possi ble illega l and unethical behavior including illegal contributions to the 19'72 cam~ign, an1 allegatiorls of bribery, conspiracy -and Improperly influencing government decisions." At an executive session five days later, !erry F. Lenzner, the chief investigator in the Hughes ease~ said: "We are investigating. _ .~1r. Meier's relationship to F. Donald Nixon and his (Nix9{l's) possibly r~iving cash, or compensation of some kind, from either Mr. Meier or the Hughes Tool Co. directly." Chief Counsel SaniueJ L. Dash refused to divulge infonnatlon concerning the _,,, subpoe~aed names;-but.-he-~said-they --- are lied lo '-the 1972 presidential campaign. "There's nothing we're investigating !~at cannot be tied directly, through !1nkage, lo the 1972 election," Dash said in an interview. He added that the ~om~ittee's inveslig(ltion of Hughes was as important as anything we have done so far." -~he comm_ittee's main witness is J~hn · ~te1er, a scientific expert who worked lo~ Robert A. 11.faheu, the former head of Hughes' Las Vegas empire. Mei er ~o~ lives in Vancouver, B.C., and was indicted by a federal grand jury for alleg~. inco"!e tax evasion In relation to m1nmg clauns. . Meier told the committee staff he hired Donald Nixon in 1969 as a cons~Jtant. ~1eier as fired by 1.faheu la~e m 1969, and .printed reports have said he was dismissed because the Pre!idtint wanied his brother to 8"er the business relationship, E~en after he was fired, Meier contjnued to at~l!t .lo buy _.mining cl~ OOth in the western UnJted Sates and 1n the Dominican Republic. Another key witness named in the subpoena is Arthur Blech t h e accountaint who drew up the Pr~sident's controversial income tax returns. Blech also was tax accotu1tant for Meier and F. Donald Nixon. Blech has told the committee he went to the Dominican Republic · wt th hfeier a~ the President's brother in 1969. A1e1er contends the President was aware of the trip. I~ ~ddltion to the mining claims, ~1eier test1f1ed he and F. Donald Nixon wanted to build an extensive middle-income housing project in the Dominican Republic. Blecb denied · to Senate investigators that the President's brother was involved at all in any Dominican deals . Blech said that before Meier and F. Donald Nixon had an argument that te1111:inated their friend ship in 1971, they considered "four or five" business deals, ·but ·none was cOinpleted. "To my knowledge, no concrete deal ever was consummated," B I e c h reportedly told Senate investigators. It now is apparent that no firm deal resulted from tbe trip to the Dominican Repi.blic. Att1111H to tod•v'• importtnf lookt, Thi Rid ltlloon ht• 1v•rythin9 lo pl1t11 our youn9 c:111tom1rs , , , •11d th1ir moth•rs tool Di111• Sc:h1ll h11 c:hot1n 1 10119 whit• drtlt by Dorl111. Oi111• i1 i11 th1 fourth gr1d1 1t Htrbo11r Vi1w Sc:hool ind th• i1 th• d1ughl1r of Mr. & M'I. Th1odor• Sc:h1ll of Hunti119!011 H1rbo~r. 'ASHION ISLANO ,...,,.,. ~-...... TOWN & COUltTlY or...,. 01111..,,.. HUf'Tll!ltTOM,MAlNUa cn•1 .... ,"' /II -•--~I --. ·' ----~~----- • •' ( . ' 4 . • l...UI Power Plant _Accident Termed 'Slim' In 10 billk>n years" for a given reactor. - WASHJNGTON IAPJ -An Atomic F.nergy Commission ofllcial says the prtllmlnary results of a eclenUfic study •UIL'"' there will never be a major acc:idCflt in a nuclear powei"" plant. Kouts said that tbe study's figures show that •·evei ,..·itb the J,000 reactors oxpe<;ltd to be opera Un1 by the year m .. it would be 1,000 (0 101000 yean: before any given reactor might be expected to have an accident." We're Not All Super Bowlers HOW THE BAIL BOUNCES: All across America today, wives and mothers ol the land are breathing rollcctive sigh,, of relief. This b because of an epic e.vcnt whlch happened Sunday, J<nown as Super Bowl Vlll. It means the football season is done. It means that television may now return to reruns of John Wayne movies, or whatever else it reruns when it does not have collegians atom.plng all over gridirons on Saturdays a n d professionals doing likewise on Monday nights and Sundays. As it developed, the cli mactic conclu- sion to pro football this Sunday could be best characterized as a bust. It brought togeth<!r a group known as the Minnesota Vikings, wOOse defensive people are also alias the Purple People Eaten, and !Ill opposing group known .. the Miami Dolphins. 1llE DOLPl!ViS Al.SO had an alias. This was a conclusion of Dr. Harbert Kouts, the AEC'1 dlrector ()f reactor safety research. wM commented on the resultl o! the study. TllE ODDS ON a major catastrc>phe at a nuclear plant were gi\•cn in the study as "once in 1 bill.ion to OOCC! , Thll!, he sald, .. ror the 100 to 200 years we eipect to be using fisskloable uranium before supplies run out . • • "'e would e~pect never to have a catastrophic acciden t by an overwhelming probability factor ." The study was cooducltd for the AEC at the ~llwactwsetts Institute of It was the Walking Wounded. Ml>sf of "----their peoplt wert ln'S'p\l"l!;-bandagt!- and plaster. 1- The DolphiM have this large backfield chap named Larry~ wl» was suHering the Ou and a sore toe. They have a Oeef catctler of passes calJed PauJ Warfield who wasn't going to be very fleet beoause of _AO ailment.known as a pulled hamstring muscle in one of his two legs. Ali or this • tended to make things look pretty bright for tbe Minnesotas and pretty t'oucb-and-go for the Miamis. But then the contest commenced. Abruptly, ii appeer<d that Miamis had - all stepped into telephone booths ju.st before kickoff aod emerged with a large "S" on eadi jersey. She Wore White ' ~ UPI Teftpftet1 THE AFOREMENTIONED C so n k a proceeded to run through the Purple People Eateni like he was knocking holes in brick walls. The aforementioned gimpy-legged Warfield, other times, streaked down sidelines . capt~g passes. 'If was amazing. To say the Miamis won would be to understate the case. Anyway, all of this can get you worked up into your own desires for athJetJc adventure. So when Daughter suggested we try a Uttle basketball alter the game, I was ready to go. "NOW DAUGIJTER,'' said I, dribbling the basketball with great vigor, "I am going to demonstra te for you the way to dribble-drive in for a bask.el You "\\'ill attempt to guard me." "You really think you should try that, Dad?" she questioned, watching the rubber tire arowtd my waist OOtmce in concert with the ball. "\Vhy, certainly. \Vatch out now. Here J oome" . . . dribble dribble. - A FUNNY 'l'lllNG happened on my way to the basket. There was this stabbing pain in my right cal(. Everything stopped abruptly. "You kicked my leg," 1 aca1scd her, glowering. "I never touched you," she protested. She was right. The Old Man had pulled a leg muscle. Or what used to be a muscle. So today J'm barely moving. YET IN MY MEMORY, I see the aforementioned Paul Warfield , streaking down a sideline with his pulled hamstring muscle. Ah. that's v.t.at youth can do. Or is it money? • And so did everyone else al the wedding ceremony for Lana Asp- lund -and Steven Fredrickson of Omaha. The pair wanted an out- doors wedding but weren't counting on snow and temperatures dip· ping lo 22 below, the coldest in 57 years. Youth Survives Savage Attack by Wild Animal FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) A 3-year-old boy bitten by a ~poWld lioness survived ''by a couple or millimeten," says a hospital official. Ryan Murphy was listed in serious condition Sunday with a six-i~ bite acrcss his neck and ,teeth wounds in his chest. He was the second person attacked by a big cat last week in Florida. Polil'C said dlat the boy 'vas riding his tricycle near his home Saturday \Vhen attacked by the yea r-old lioness, owned by Kenneth G. Bumstine, after it jumped a fence surrou nd ing Bumstine's estate. "The cat missed an artery in the neck by a couple of millimeters," a hospital spokesman said. "lf the cal had struck there, the child would be dead. He'll have a six·inch scar across his neck." "The kids were out playing and they started screaming and J went out and the lion was on top of my son," said Mrs. Terry Murphy. "We couldn't get it pried loose. ~fy husband tried IQ '''Ork with his (the lion's) mouth ... pushing it ... he just tried everything." Gary P-earce, Burnstine's 18-year-old stepson, finally got the animal off the chi ld by hitting it acro6s the back with a strap, police said. . Burnstine said his stepson was walking the lioness, named Sonia, when the jncident occurred. "Apparently what happened -and th is happens with any kind of wild animal -is something upset her," Burnsline said. "She may have heard the trike clanking, and that may have upset her and she went after it." Burnstine said he received Sonia as a gift when she was a cub and kept her locked in a cage at the rear of his property. East~rn Plains Freezing Fog, Rain, Drizzl,e in Loive r Missi ssippi Valle y Temperat ures Mi.II LIW Pq. ,. "' " ,. " .. ,. " n " lt ,, " " '' l • ;~ l.S ,. lt ·~~ ~~ ,, 1., "° -U 11 n " .. 11 1• ,. " ,. " '~ '' ~ .. 1' XI .01 14 14 n " ~ ~ ,. " " ' tt " " ' ~ ----:-__:..:- • "'" .... ,"'. f0t0C4't • - lfll1,1.1N ,,~.~alNOW ...... f:raMIOWt•S f lOVI -' • ~ !ht middle &tld ~ Ml1s.l11!peil \ltll&y. Sornt uiow dusted 110rlllem lll'W• 1nd porllot11 ol •••fern Ml~• &nd Upptr Mlch.lg&n, Ind lhowt>r'I s.prlnkltd -'1'1•111 Florida Ind tlll' nortl'l-centr11 Gulf C11111 111111 Into TenlltUte. Two lnclln of r•ln ICtllmlll1trd ti Weit Ptlm h«;h, Fii., w1111 .tlout 1 twilf-lncll t i Mufltn. Idaho, Ind Sa.tr•met1to. Ottwrwl .. , tilt r•htf•ll WIS llglll, Tiit cold, lllfh ~ Vltllcll 11 clllUli'lg tht Nort!M•sl 11 movlno lnlo ttie An1nt1c, 11111 only ant lnlll't night ol cold wtllnet II l llOfded, ""( Tl'lllf"nlng te!'nolfttlft'n r•f'IO'd from • devre.1 b9low nra 1t Glen F•lb, N.Y., to n °'Ir"' •I Miami, Fl1. Coutal We a t her MosfJy wnny todoty, LlfM ~,..,,, winds t119111 •nd n'IOl'lllno '*"1 .,.. toml119 -· to 90Vltlwnt s to u knot1 11'1 •lttrrlooM todey HI! T- d•Y· HlOft lodly 65. C1111111 ltmOtf•hlrn r•nee from 50 to 61. lnltnd ~'"""" rtn91 from .., to 70. _w•ttl' '""'"'''" #.--- Sun,M0011.J'Wea • Teclmology. It's lindinp were reported by AEC Chairman D!xy Lee Ray and Kouts in separate intervltws. KOVTS DESCRIBED a catasfropbic accident .., one in which .large quantitiel or radioactive materials would be re leased, kUling "thousands o! people, po&lbly 5,~ to 10,000 although the figures are very shaky." . He said the study tended to conlJrm AEC's estimates that cbanoes of such an accident are "so low as to be negligible. He and Dr. Ray also reported that the MIT ~ fiJ>dlocl also· pn>jected tho pooiibllity ol I ... SOvtn! acddmt as once ln a million IO once ill JO mll1lon yean tor any Ii""!' .-tor. Koull cllsaibed lhll type a<cJdent u "oompanble in Its c:onsequencet to the crash ol a jumbo-jet alrc:ralt that mJl!>t. Jcill 200 people ...... " ''111AT'S TUE same kind of pn>l>ebllty_ that woold !""•ail for a -to lie bitten by a .-DOUS anal:e while .,_, the -t at DupOOt Qtd• in the heart of tho natioo's capital ... " Or. Ray said. She said that, for this and Other reasons, "I think wo (the AEC) are going to hive to begin to come out swinging a little harder ••• " A refer-. ence to envlm\mellQllists and other cri1lcs ot nucleor power plant saltly. She said lhe study toOk nearly two- yeors arwt $2 million Bind was conducted by Dr. Nonnan C. Rasmussen, • I wornoor o( nuclear englnoerJnc ac ~UT. , n-·~ Kouts said that Rasmussen a •otr.-- stlll are preliminary and · subject to comment from other scientists IUld fn:m AEC C"ilics before fonnal release. Battered Tot, 3, Dies· • Ill HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (AP) -Little Jonathan Workman has lost an 84-hour struggle for life that began after he reportedly was beaten _for wetting bis pants. Officials at St. 1.1ary's Hospital said the 3-year-old boy died Sunday nighl He was in a coma after being injured and had relied on a life support machine. Hospital had been babysitting with Jonathan and . Jonathan's S..year-old brOther DaUas, told police the cbild bad fallen In the bathroom after he had been "whipped for wetting his pants." But Fort Gay authorities had already notified police here and ,.IcAboy, formerly of Huntington, was taken into custody on a felonious a s s a u l t JONATHAN WAS brough t to the charge. 'Ibis morning the charge was hospital Thursday afternoon •by bis changed to murder. mother, Della \\'orkman, of rural Fort_ "Dallas was the only witness," said Cay in neighboring \Vayne Cotmty, and Wayne County Sheriff Keith Ray. "He by Jackie l\1cAboy , 23, McAbov, who told us ,.1cAboy was 'breati.ag Jonathan Court Mu .lls Editorial Equal Space WASHI NGTON !AP) -The Supreme Court today agreed to consider whether states can demand that newspapers give free space to political candidates for replies to editorial attacks. The justices accepted the case for arguments on the merits but left themselves the option of deciding, after ( IN SHORT ..• · ) hearing the argmnents, U;i.at _ they do not have jurisdiction in the case. The ismJe reached -the justices in a case from Florida in which the state- supreme court upheld a 1913 state law requiring that newspapers which "assail" the personal character or official record of a candidate mllit print his reply v.·ith equal prolninence. e No Free:::e CARACAS !UPI) -Venezuela will not freeze its oil export prices and plans to adjust them as of Feb. I. a high-ranking mines m i n i s t r y spo kesman said today. "\Ve did not agree by any means" to the three-month moratorium on oil price hikes set by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Oxmtries {OPEC) last v.'eek in Geneva, be told UPI. e Neto Info? WASlflNGTON (AP) -Samuel Dash, chief counsel of the Senate Watergate committee. said today the panel had "important new information" and ought to hold further public hearings. "I think the committee will follow my recommendation on the matter." said Dash during an interview on the NBC-TV "Today Show." He declined to reveal the nature of the key infonnation. e Spatt Record HOUSTON (UPI) -Methodically looping the globe every 93 minutes, the Skylab 3 astronauts l<Hlight begin setting a spare endurance staodard ezpeeted to go Unchallenged for years .• If all goes well, Gerald P. Carr ol Santa Ana,.Edward G. Gibson, formerly of San Clemente, and William R. Pogue will have been in orbit around the earth 59 days, 1t hours aod 9 mlnutt'9 by 6' 10 p.DL PDT, equalling the enduran<e rcoord of the Skylab 2 crew. e Merger Plan TUN!~ (UPI) -!'resident Habib Bourguiba today dismissed f o re I 1 n mlnbter Mohamed Mas m o u d t , 001111idered a leading advocate of tbe newly proclaimed merger be t "e en Tunlala and Libya. · A government announcement alld that In • partial cablntl ahuffle BourJulba replaced Maamoodl with Habib Cbatt)i, head or the Pmident's private cablnel Bourguiba, 70, head of a moderate pro. w ... m nation, and Libyan revolutionary coonctl chairman MOOllU!llt Klwllfy, 31, leader ol • military, dectrlnalre Jslamlc republlc, announced the merger ol their two C01111trles ill a turpdoe move oo Saturday. e N'-Bsefcetl WAliHlNGTON .(UPI) :_ Sen .• Barry M. Goldwater (R-Artz.), Aid &mdaX that resignation of PmidtnfNJxOO would· cnuse "an upheaval" in AmertcM po1ltlc111 and "raise havoc with the whole world." He said he WOUid .not adYlle r the President to ~P clown when Interviewed Swlday on NBC'a ''Meet the Press." • ' : ' '-j. of wetting his pants' and that he hit and kicked his little brother and threw him into the commode, bead first." THE SANDY • HAIRED c h i I d 's injuries included a badly cut mouth and a broken jaw, A doctor who examined him at the hospital emergency room said he SlBtaioed massive 1?r3in dam- age. Hospital officials sald the child was injured about noon 'Illursday. At that same time, his father, Ray Workman, 27. wa! in a local courtroom being sentenced to a year in prison for armed robbery. Fort Cay authorities said 1'tcAOOy had been Hving at the Workman home. They !'aid police had investigated. prior complaints of mistreatment of the children "Dallas said Jonathan never said a word during the beating, just cried a little bit," the sheriff said. Nurses at the hospital also said the child never uttered a word during the three days he lay on his hospital bed. RELATIVES SAID Jonathan, who V.'eighed .about ~ pounds, wu a bright child who Wa!'I just beginning to make simple declarative sentenCes. His a1.mt, Mrs. Howard Stevens, said tearfully Suoday night: "He was talkin' real good." .,.,_ Trial Begins Accused mass murderer Elmer \Vayne Henley goes on trial today. Although he was in· dieted for· murder of six run· aways in Houston. he ls being tried for only one murder. Frozen, Beaten Body . of Kidnap Victim Found · JAMESTOWN, N.Y. (AP) -'lbe partly frozen, bruised body of a 14-year- old kidnap victim has been found tied to a tree in a heavily wpocted area near bis home, authorities said. Investigators said the snow-covered body ol Daniel Ebe""1c, who had been missing since Tuesday nighr, wa, found slumped against the tree Sunday by an ageht of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and a deputy sheriff. Investigators said a glove had been stuffed in the youth's mooth and held in place with surgical tape. They 118id a ski mask. had been pulled over his face, covering his eyes. Aulhorit.ics said the cause of death had not beeD determined and that an autopsy had been scheduled for today. The body was found after an anonymous telephone call. Daniel 's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Glm M. Ebersole of the Jamestown suburb of Lakewood, had pakl St5,CKXI ramxn for the OOy Thursday. And autmrtUcs arrested three area teen·ogers Saturday, charging them with kidnaplng. Kenneth L. William.•. 18, and MarUn C. Whitmore, 19, ol We!t Ellicott, and Jeffrey L. Swan, 18, of Lakewood were arraigned in Buffalo, N.Y., Saturday and ordered jailed In lieu of 1100,000 Back In Washington Nixon .Plans Next Steps In Watergate Defense By HELEN THOMAS badt In oealon Jan. 21 , and their flnol1np WASIDNGTON (UPI) -After flying ori the public mood will be an ~t ba. ck ~m Calllornta ill an ollldal plane, !actor ill tho Mure c:oune ol the inquiry ~ Into -"'1• lmpeacllment ol tho President Nl>oo is preparing for next Presldelll. week'• reflD11 of Congrea and plaMlni Nim! and bis amlly Dew beet !rom the next stag .. or hla Watergate -· Calllornla to Waahl,,.U.O on a lllllall ms AIDES clelc:rlbed him 11 govemment Jetatar 5wwl.ty, with aldes "detannlned" In the lace ol calls for nplalntng that they felt ·his secwity hb resignation and lmpeadJm<lll, but • would be endaopred by tn..iJna apln they ""' telllng niaten that they by cormner<lal airline llnct tho element rea1J1e the neii few -111 will be ol llJlllrlle 1"lllld be .........r. On Dec. "crucial" 1o 1enn1 o1 the p1'1111dency. 11 N!DJll 11ew ....-1o tho w111 · Memben of Coao-who ..... been -..... ooomdloc ont wten oeat1me1t1 p eo..t Cll a Uolted Air U.. plqo. . . DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtltwry IA ... Dai~ Pilot k ... -...J,.,,..,, " ,.. • ... .... ,... """ ., 11• ....... utl -.,.. .-: ... ........... ,...c... .... -,, ..... ......., ... ...., ........ ...... f'9f "" ., ' µI. ....,, .. .. ..., ....... .., ........ . .,... Cell .,.. ...... ".... • T ...,._., ... Or .... c-e, ""'"······ ....... ...,....... ............. """ ' ....... , ......................... . ' ... ~c.,....._......_ ... ""',.,...,... ..... ~ . ............. ~ ........ ~ ....... - .. --:-' -~ - I " ,, . . • • -• Monday, January 14, 1974 PAILV PILOT &_ 'Rare Futagus' 37 l1aj111•ed Surgeons Operate · GOP Fundraising Rapped by Brown Juvenµ~s Riot · On Crosby's Lung. SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Qov. Ronald_ Reagan's ph1n to hold a Republican Jundraising party tonight in hJs taxpayer-supported official residence is ''h igh l y improper," secretary of state1 Edmund G. Bro~'Tl · Jr . t contends. conlender for governor, Sund.-y urged Reagn.n to move the event to a Saa-amento hotel or some other facility rented by the Republican 111 Record Store BUR!JNGAME (AP) Singer Bing Cro.sby was in 11tis!actory condition alter a 3'it-hour operation in which two-nrtlls ol his tert lung and an abscess the size of a small orange were removed, doctors sald. Initial tests on the tissue removed in the operation -Swlday· ind icated the-Ulness was from a rare fungm and not cancer, said Crosby's physician Dr. St an 1 e y Hanfling. A team or three surgeons performed the operation at Peninsula llospital a fter Crosby, 69, Who lives in nearby Hill sborough , did not County Sherlf!'I De p u t I e s Suoday recovered the bodies of two Southern Ca!Uom!a men in the wre<:kage of -a private plane that crashed In the hills north of here. The victims, Dr. Delmar Herrick, 49, Loma Linda and Frank Fleming_, 52, Claremont, were still strapped -to ·their-seats, w h i c h apparenUy had ejected when the plane crashed. The twin-- engine Piper Navajo was reported mi5Slng Saturday night on a flight from San F r a n c i s c o International Airport to Gnoss Field in Novato. UPI T .. ffllolo Su•~ct • Shot Da-~ Nancy Devoto, 26, also ~-known as Nancy Ling, ( Slate ) IMPERIAL BEACH {AP ) -is being sought in con. A 63-year~ld man was shot nection with assassina- ~---------to death in a holdup moments tion of Oakland schools after he walked from cJlureh superintendent Marcus Drown, a top Democratic Drive r's Alcoliol Tests OK'd party. 'The Republlean P a r ! y expects to raise approximately $25,000 at its cocktail party,'' said Brown, hand l think it is highly improper to hold that kind of event in a state rented facility . CALIFORNIA Ba11 Lifted; Roads Open To Resorts •1mE TAXPAYERS of California pay $32,500 a year to maintain the official residence for Gov. Reagan, and I am sure most taxpayers do not want to help subsidize the Republican Party out of state funds," Brown said. SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) SAN DIEGO (AP) Hundreds of youths, angered at lhe closing of a record store thal had plaMed to give away free records, began a rock-throvo'ing disturbance that left 17 policemen ar)d 20 youths injured, authorities said. Eight juveniles were arrested early Sunday in the riot, officials said. Pol ice said they were booked r or investigation of a variety or charges, including drunkenness, ·assaulting .;in -County Supervisor.; Sunday Reagan·s press secretary. lifted their rour-day ban on -------SACRA!\iEl\11'0 (UPI) -Clyde Walthall, said one of th ree more mountain resort Non-physicians can conduct the purposes of the $500-a-highways, once closed due to blood alcohol tests on plate event was 10 raise funds the unusually heavy snowfall led d k d . for GOP Assemblyman Jerry last week. suspec run en r 1 v e r 5 Lewis of Highland, who is without the supervisioo of a seeking a state senate seat Six to seven feet of soow A GAY TIME FOR PICKETS officer and narcotlcs \'iota· lions. Police said the Tow e r J Recorcf Store had p13nned lo T give away Steve Miller rock I group records Saturday night after a concert by the group at the nearby SporU Arena. OFFIClAlS ordered t h e store to abandon the give- a\vay because tbe store could hold only 50 people and thousands attended the concert. \\'hen youths found the store closed, they started throwing rocks at Yo'indows and soon attracted a crowd of hwxlreds, authorities said. Police said injuries ranged fron1 a fractured leg to cuts and bruises. respond to antibiotic treament . services. Foster Nov. 6. She is Sten Bjernefett o1 Imperial said !o h.a.ve workesl. doctor, Attorney Gener a I in an election Tuesdav. remains blanketed over the ' S Be ~· SAN FRANCISCO {UPI) -1----------Evelle J. Younger says. Walthall said the Republican an rnaiu1no Nation a I Admitted to the hoSpital New Year's Eve, Crosby contplalned of chest and back pains that doctors later said were the result of pneumonia. Be3ch was Ie-avin_g_ church actively in presidential services when he was campaign of Sen Barry Younger Wued the opinion State Central Committee was FQrest, the Sl!J>Crvisors said, Abou t 24 persons paraded he f M picking up the costs of the but the road ban gave county outside the Soviet -consulate approached by two men. one Goldwater. of lhem carrying a pi.slot , ----·------ at t request O onterey fundraiser, which is only the crews enough time to clear ~unday to protest the jailing County Districl Allor n e Y third Reagan reportedly has the highways. in R~ia-of film director William P.-Cm1b. had et his Sacr"ame nt o Authorities feared !hat a Sergei Paradjanovon chafges e Wreck Fo11nd SAN BER!'IARDINO (AP) -A sheriff's rescue team hoped today to remove the bodies of three men, including the former mayo r o f Vancouver, Wash., after locating the WN!i:kage o{ their sma ll plane on a snowbound cliff in !he San Bernardino l\lountains. authorities said. ·A struggle resulted, and Bjernefelt was shot in the back ol the head. He was dead on arrival at Bay General Hospital. The attorney gc:'lf:ral said residence since becoming threatening new snowstorm conn ected with homosexuality. it would be ''fn-Wlous'' to governor. might have made the The Proteste rs were require a physician to be in Walthall said there wa s no highways impassable, thus n1embers of the ad hoc "misuse" of taxpayer funds trappin g t h o u s a n d s of co mmittee against S o v i e t attendance once authorized in making the home available Southern Ca I i f o r n i a ski oppression or homosexuals. e Strike Etads personnel "have been lawfully for the partisan event. "The enthusiasts who would have They carried such signs as VERNON (UPI) _ Meat l ___ i:n'...'.'.the:!!~•!~,~~!t'~l~@~ll~•!~IJ directed to perfonn the pro-taxpaye r s aren't out ventured to the resorts with "S.F. Gays support Russian ~sat•••) FlltlBAr packing PI a n 1 s, employing 1 ____________ ced_u_re_._" ________ an_y_1_h1_·n_g,_"_h_e_""_·d_. _____ th_e_se_a_so_n_'s_f_irs_t _bi..:g_sno_w_. _ __:g'-a'-ys_._" ________ 1 about 1.600 ~·orkers, were allowed to r~n today after - thrre unions ratified a new three-year"contract with cost· of-living clauses that ended A spokesman for the San Bernardino Cowity sheriff's office said the crash site was in deep anow on the west ' slope or a steep cliff at the 8.~foot level, four miles south of Big Bear Lake. e 2 Jtlqrclered? VICTORVILLE {AP) '-The bodies of a young man and woman, both a p pa rentl y murder victims; have been · found lying togeUl_er under a bridge about four miles north of here, authorities said. Identities were w i t h be I d pending notification of kin, but authorities said the woman, about 16, and the man, about 20, were both from the Victorville area. e Bodies F-nd NOVATO (UPI) -Marin a month-long strike-lockout. Both sides claimed victory in the eettlement, although management said it was the same pact which the unions turned down before walking off their jobs. New Publication Capitol News Service SACRAMENTO -The State Resources Agency has offered the public a new publication, "California EIR Monitor," at an annual subscription rate of $20. The .semi-monthly Monitor WO! proposed by the agency al hearings in August when amendments to lhe guideHnes !or implementation of the California Environ- mental Quality Act were pro- poS<d. GOOD NEWS! ' ' I for our early birds NEW SHIPMENT CHALLIS PRINTS 1.19yd. Values to 3.00 SpoClal LOW price 3 dayi only! C•l•r ~ • ..,. catc•fet prl•t• fM" ........ ••d d,...... ..... , ... ~ ........... • .,. ••.• , .. wfff. ,. •• ref· LOW pric• 1.79, POLYESTER GABARDINE : ~~~~:s 398 449 e ,PLAIDS YD• YD Values to 6.00 ,... ............. W..ny .,..,. '" .... .... .......... ..., •• t.Mut. ................. .. .... ~. Knit Prints 1 g 8 Utth ""'" .. ,.... ................ c-.. • yd. w-1 ............... .. 1r· ww.. -.., •••· V1luo1 to 3.00 ........ ,.. ............ .. • I ·------· _, ' • The 1974 Official Associated Press Almanac contains 1,040 pages J>ilcked with information on a wide varie)y of subjects. Included are full-color maps of the world , vital statistics, major sports' records, biO!jraphies of world figures as well as comprehensive information on historical world events. This almanac is yours free at any Mutual Savings office. Limited quantities-one copy per family please. Not available by mail. FREE f i You may have your Federal and California Individual Income Tax Returns prepared by professional tax experts without charge at Mutual Savings. This free service is offered tQ.'ijlllers with an account balance of $4,000 or more. If your savings account is not with Mutual Savings, we will arra nge for transfer of your .funds (including any tenn certificates that mature during the first quarter of 1974) so you may take advantage of :this valuable • free offer. Visit your nearest Mutual Savings office for additional information. Income tax preparation is just one of the many valuable free services offered to Mutual savers. The number of available appointments is limited, so make yours early; This certificate yields a big 7.79% annually for four year accounts of $1,000 or more. Other Mutual accounts provide high earnings with shorter terms. For maximum fiexibility, our passbook account imposes no resbictions on deposits or withdrawals and earns SY.%-more interest than paid by any bank! Interest is compounded daily and paid quarterly. Fedent.1 regulatians provide that an ctrttlieate ao::ounts.art iut:;ect to•~ S\terest penalty If funds a~~ before compeao.1 of term. Annual Annwl Rate Y..id 6*% 6.98% 6!'.!% 6.72% 5*% 5.92% 5!4% 5.39% ~ ,., . t' l ~ i THE BIG M MJn. T""' 30mos. 1 year 90 days No min. e MllftJAl- ..... -:1 •• ,.. Mio. Bat.vu $1,000 $1,000 $1,000 $5.00 C-clotl Mir. 2867 Eaot C-~/67$.60~ THIRD_ORANQE COUN It OFFICE NOW OPEN AT 7th & MAIN, SANTA ANA • I I • .! • .. - FASHION~ ISLAND HCWPOllT CCHTElt .: /, f ~-1!J;t promenading with Elaine Shopping 's most rt1wording morren!s ort1 providtld bv !he 60 merthonts of Foshion ls.lo!ld Wfio oflt1r Jt1lt1ctive qua lity mt1rchond ise prt1)tlnted by courteous soles peopl. in o pleosonl shopping atmosphere. H&ft1 ogoin lhis week, I'd like to introduce you to o 1....., more of ovr super spe;_ciolty shops, ...... On '"-• cold, wider ~I, wbat b.H.,-way to ~ .,, e¥Ming l'- doying cozil-; WOtm at home listening lo ,_-kNorila .. lllUSic? THE MUSIC HALL hm S:trod-and caswffe lape1 e1nd 0 . rnognificanf collttfion or e1lb.ims l•otUring clossicol, jor;r, soswdrod:, ond ·chikhn'r music. ktd wit.I'-' yow fosfe n.ns lo Corly Simo1t or Slnn-indy, THE MUSIC HA1L'S p ric•1 ore completely diKowtt.d/ H you•" been yMminv for on out-of-print or ...-uswl <Hbum, mono9er Corl Crow ond hi1 competMf doll will olso Jo lhefr best lo special ordtt if for )'Ol.A. ••••• JuniOf -..omen (sizes 3 to 1 J) will oppreciate knowing that THE Pl.ACE recently inlroduced "The Jeonery," o bl'ond new deportment spedolizirtg in 011 11yles of jeons, denims. recycled jeons, plain studded rhl1'19$tOne jeonJ, custom designed jeans. ond the latest in tops, sweofers, ond jockets to go wilh them. THE Pt.ACE olso offers seporote sportswear, occessorles, coors, lorlQ dres.ses, robes ond gowns, onliques, ond ort prints. Monogt1r Bridget Morsholl otlribvt~ lhe friendly 01mosphere of TH E Pl.ACE lo her employees, o group of oll-Am1~on type girls who dress wilh o lloir. These cortgeniol girls ore olwoys willing lo rus!M you in ·puning together ond occeuorizing o coordinated outfit, ..... If O"'f of yo11 ,,.n hoY. eMr wonted to ocqtire that ip«iol k>ot of a MO.oned pi,,. smoW, now's your tltonce lo find Ifie pt,,. thof IOYJ "you" d THE TOMCCONIST. T"9y cony o ~ co/l«tlbn in oil pric~ ronve• Md con o/10 '-'P you s-'-1" btotwl Joboao or~ f#tot wil wit your-lo1te. In ockli1;on, THE TOMCCONIST off.rs impomd 'mtJ Jon.stic dgots otwl ~es. plus acceuories For the di1criminoliltg smok«. ····· A lobl.tlous wledior> of clothes fOf" !l>e stylish mother·IO·be' con be I011nd 01 fosh1on hlond's MOTHERHOOD MATERNITY SHOP. Cllooie from o complete line ol maternity fashions, plus cosmehcs. longer+e, or>d ho~"'Y· Mou1el!!n Costello, monoger, revealed tf\ol you don"! h~ to be e•_pediftg to sllop or MOTHERHOOD MATERNITY, !hot Y'l!"f oher> shoppers ho ... only to browse in lier itore 10 f1fld ju$1 the lo1h•o11 irem !hey hod il't mlnd but touldn't lond onywhere elM!, ....• Sopliisticoled yof.lflg o•nl/1'"'" who enjoy high Fosltion clofhine .,;,ilf• porliculotfy #eon towonil ~ al THE tOQIC. • GOYS GE.U. lrnpomd quolity 1n1n•s -.or mods o( sllldded ond J«JUiMd d.nim oiwl •e,.,el, fo1/ilon 1hoeJ, E11ropaon IK1fh.t, -n·s ;.w.ky, (vr coob '°1-H•~ ond .,..cio/ gtft iltmJ ON off owoiJoble for tht foJhior,.coruc'°'4 '"°" wfrlo fiffe1 dNuinQ in o .tp. thol ..n.ctr f111 ~lduality. ····· Our blord Ho.JM IJ A.iot.i. IC!' Co1t1mvnlly lJie~ For l11forMtli01t. eon 0••120'20 • l • •• D AR Y PROT EDITORIAL P A GE Nuclear Fo-wer Needs -- Apparently responding to a barrage of criticism that greeted its Dec. 5 narrow margin denial of per. mils to expand the San Onofre nuclear generating sta- tion, the state Coastal Zone Co nservation Commission has voted to reconsider the application Feb. 20. The decision does not guarantee approval or the $850 milli~n project which would add two generating units to the facility, but the announcement indicated a compromise agreement bas been worked out with the Edison Company with regard to environmental con- cerns: - The denial was based on environmental questions invoJvifig destruction of coastal bluffs and damage to marine life. Significance of the San Onofre operation \vas point- ed up last week with the revelation that it will take a million barrels of oil to make up for the current three- month closing of the plant for repair work. Additiona!ly, it is estimated that -completion of the two new t1nits could reduce oil needs by 24 million barrels a year. The expa11sion project already has been approved, after intensive study, by all federal, state and local authorities, except the coastal commission , which lacked one vote for approval. II the U.S. ever is to attain the goa l of energy self-sufficiency, increased nuclear energy production is essential, along with'f" development of other energy sources to_ replace diminishing gi1 Sl!JJpli es. , Every consideration must be given to prompt ex- pansion of the San Onofre plant. , Boat Law in Effect owners to delay the el!epts of the law for another year saying sailors have already had 18 months to comply since the law was passed. 1'he job of enforcing the new rule now falls to the county's l-larbors, Beaches and Parks Department and it promises to be no easy task. Short of checking each of the thousands of boats 1noored in county harbors -a move which the Har- bor Pat\Ol has already said It will avoid -finding all the violators will be nearly impossible. . l<·or now, at least. the Jlarbor Patrol will check the boats U1ey stop_for otbu _yiolations. IJ J h'll'e i1 a \9ilei and no holding tank, a citation will be given and the courts will take it from there. County officials think the courts will give offenders a grace period to comply with the law after which ·the penalties will be applied for non-compliance -similar to safety y,•arnings on auto laws. The county will also have to take a good look at the holding tank pumpout capacities in the county over the next few months to make absolutely sure there will be no problem in that vein. The intent of the new law is good but only time will tell if it can be enforced effectively enough to do the job intended. Sen,sihle Soliition A proposed -new state law eould help eli1ninate a. needlessly frequent accident -death by choking on food. ' -·Scarcely a month goes by without news or a res· taurant diner who has strangled painfully when a piece of food -usually meal -became lodged in his throat and could not be removed by the time medical help ar- rived. • ' -' . . • PRDPOSAi OF S/q · PRICE INCREASE !!OR QAS Orange County boaters who pump waste from their shipboard toilets into harbor waters are now breaking the law and could face fines up to $500 or six months in jail. The new law requires boats wit~ toilet facilities to have hblding tanks and it went into effect Jan. 1. Such tragedies can be lverted by use of a small· plastic device to dislodge the food and restore breath- ing. The .Proposed law would require all California res- taurants to keep such a device on hand. It is a simple, lifesaving, sensible requirement. 'Li$ten. We've got to make sacrifices during the fuel shortage!' Supervisors held off a last·ditch e!lort by boa~ Tax on Tax Syndrome Never Ends ( ltUS WALTON J ln case you care. Dec. 16 was the 200th anniversary or the Bos1on Tea Party. That big "do", at which some of our feisty forerunne rs tossed a load of Oolong into the harbor up at Bean- town. Those folks were ti cked off at King George and his heavy handed ways. Especially tile taxes and levies h i s ministers kept ta-~k­ ing on almost eve ry- thing. That was 200 years ago but some things arc pretty much the same. Dif- ferent tyrants. differ- ent min isters, but still those damn taxes ... on almost everything (including Oolong and even Lipton 's Orange Pekoe ). NOw the boys in the state Department or A'ransportation want to increase our gas tax. We already pay the state seven cents on each and every gallon -plus another four cents to the Feds. Every time yoo fill the tank, governtnent gets about two bucks. TIIE HIGHWAY:\IEN are afraid their revenues are going to drop off because of the drop in gasoline sales. JJ that happens, they say, road construction \\'Ould be cut back and state workers laid off. So up the taxes, and let the motorists carry the bigger load. Stale Senator John fo.;ejedly (R-\Valnut Creek), is real cooperative. He says he will introduce a bill to hike our tax on gas. He plans to leave blank the exact amount of the tax hike. \Vhen the highwaymen come riding up to his capitol door, and tell him how much dough they want, he'll fill in the tax blank. It could come to several-extra cent! per gallon. The Feds are thinking of addin& even more. · You know who gets hit on tlw he8d in that kind or a rip-off! Not the 'pleasure driver or lhe fat cat ; Jhc working guy Dear Gloomy Gus A Gallup poll shows Nixon has drop- ped lo third p4aee as the man most admired by Americans. How about a poll showing bow much respect Americans have for that poll? A. J. S. 01-. GWI <.,.,!Mfttl I,.. IUflimltfM h' ,....,._ •1111 .. 11ot lllCe\M,,lr reflect JM views M ffl• n-•-· Send '"' Ht "'°" "' Gl-y OW. OlllY l"Mo;t. and gal who needs a car to get back and rorth to work. And the wage-earner who will pay more for food and necessities delivered by trucks that use the gas that carries the tax that Ncjedly made. SO IT GOES, tax on top or tax. Another lea party, anyone? Assembly Speaker Bob J\.·loretti has a solution. He wants a stale energy C'lar. A big Po\Verboss to tell us when lo go and when to come, \\'hen to use our gas. when to flip our lights and what car pool to join. That way \\'e can cut back on gas, hold down our taxes -and turn orr our freedom of choice. Moretti wants the state Secretary of Resources to meter our lives and our lights . by the number. Hup-two-three- four! To the rear, march. Moretti is the bird who. two years ago, hiked the tax on oil producers and ran the small , independent oil men · out of business. The guy who, six months ago, said the gas shortage was a fraud, a rigged dea l. This is the guy v.'ho, last month in Seoul. Korea, said the thing to do was to kC'ep on rai sing the tax on business and ind ustry. That \\'OUid mean less industry to tax and fewer people v.'ilh jobs. THE r.tOST pertinent poke at Morel· H's plan for an energy czar ca me from State Senator George J\.1oscone, (0-San Francisco ). 1'-tosrone charged ~1oretti •·v.·ould turn California into a police slate ... \vould concentrate the power to regulate our life styles in an energy czar • • • in the best tradition of fascism.'' Riglit-on, George! That's the rea l danger or this fuel shortage: that in the hysteria of crisis headline hunting politician s and panderers of socia lism will invoke even more government in - terference and control . There are substitutes £or oil: there is no substitute for li berty. Perceptive Look at U.S. ALTSTAIB COOKE'S AMERICA. By Alistair Cooke. Knopf. 305 Pages. $15. Somebody remarked recently that the current generation of Americans is learning the history of the country. not from our own academics. but from Alistair Cooke, who used lo be an Englishman. COOKE'S urbane <.'On1mcnts on his adopted country through vario\ls media reached the[r ptnnacle on television with his "America: A Personal Hislory of the United States.'" The present book is an expanlan. o[ hls scripts for the weekly TV show. Tbe great advantage of the television 'ven.ion, obviously, was v ls u a I : Innumerable details caugbl by tbe cameras. llu\ 1he book bas retained much cl tbil eye •pPell in the llllDltl'OUS palnlln&S. drawings and ~ nproc1....i In color and 1Jlack anil wlllt•. suat A hiatory ,_ C!ooke"s Is bouni! to be hl&llly ptl'IOOa! and lmpresslonlstic. and 11 should bt. 'Ill< tm expands eonsldttably the dtl&il •which thc ' ( THE BOOKMAN J narrator could crowd into a script, each less than an hour long. And lt Is good for Americans to get a view of their country through what were originally English eyes. But Cooke often surprises us: he. has absorbed our 'society so thoroughly that when we exptct him- to react Ilka an Englishman, be may bOb up wtih aometbing very American. lie can write with originality and force, as wh en he says the atomic bomb was. made by some of the. world's+ top !'hYalclsi> Whom llJUer loolilhly drove into exile, only to have them meet M the New Mexico deoon lo "breW tbe Apoealypoe.'" Charade< prrceptlOas are shrewd, details may be skimped ·or occasionally exaggented, but on the v.·holt the book is bravura. Rooald C. Hood AsHdoledl'rtll Aratneo Pressure for lnerea~ed Profits ' I O_il Moguls Urged Arab Price Hike WASHINGTON -Locked in the files of Aramco, intended for the eyes only of its top executives, is evidence that the giant U.S. oil combine encouraged Saudi Arabia to increase oil prices. According to the secret paperwork, Aramco caJculated that a price increase would boost its "rate or return." So the company, fear- ing nationalization of its Saudi oil \\'Orks "well belore 1980" a n d wishing to squeeze out more profits before. the takeover, pressed quietly for higher prices. The cost or crude has shot Ul!o. 470 percent over the past year. This fias caused economic shock waves throughout the industrial ,vorld and could precipital.e a \vorldwide de- pression. THE ARM1CO documents show that the corporate controllers were uneasy over 'the size or the increase and , belatedly, began to 'A-i>rry about the world reaction. Likely, loo, the Persian Gulf countries would have raised prices without any behind·the-scenes encouragement from Aramco. Still, the company deserves a measure of blame for the Great Price Squeeze. Aramco. known more formall y as the Arabian-American Oil Company, is a consortium or four U.S. corporations -Exxon, 1.iobil, Standard of California and Texaco. Together, they work the fabulously rich oil fields in Saudi Arabia . AS SURELY as oil is the lilel>lp of the West, the Saudi development is the jugular vein. -~ We have now been given a peek behind the corporate curtain, which for years has concealed the Saudi oil story. We happen to believe that the truth about the oil crisis is a journalistic challenge every bit as important as Watergate. Not only the press but the government itself has had to depend upon the oil companies for Information about the dimensions of the crisis. Now, we have developed our own sources inside Ara mco who have access to its most secret files. Admittedl y, they have been able to give us onl y a limited view into the backrooms of the great oil consortium. 1.-1any of the documents are also highly technical and, th erefore, difficult for laymen to understand. TO PROTECT our sources, we have agreed not to quote directly from the documents. We read carefully selected excerpts to an Aramco spokes.an, who disputed the contents. "A lot of people within the company write memos." he said. "This doesn't mean everything they write is correct." Nevertheless, the confidential memos, supported by tables giving the "rate or return" at various price levels, show that the company early last year was quietly agitating for higher prices. (JACK ANDERsO~ The documents also show that the company later became alarmed over the greed of the oil producers. In fairness, the press for extortionary prices came more from Saudi Arabia's neighbors than from the Saudis. Aramco sent a delegation, headed by George Piercey, a senior Enon vice president. lo urge saud~ Oil Minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani last fall to hold down the price demands. "We were trying," an Aramco spokesm~ told us, quite accurately, "to keep prices from going crazy." BUT ARAMCO'S only coocem, judging from the documents, was to prevent political repercussion,, in the West. Earlier, the company h;:ld belpOO. to stimulate a prtce lncreaSe. The production costs for a 42-gallon barrel of Saudi oil avefages only a trifling 12 cents. In contrist, the posted price fmally hit $11.65 a barrel on January I. This is a fictitious price, which the oil natk>ns use to calculate taxes ·and royalties. 'Ibe actual price for a barrel of cnPe, upon arrival in America , is closer to nine doUars. Aramco's confidential price-and-profit tables are based on complex caleulatioos. But they can be reduced to this simplicity : The company winds up with a percentage or the price: rise. Therefore, the higher the prices, the higher are Aramco's profits. ONE REASON for this b: that the company can charge off the royalties and taxes it pays to Saudi Arabia, dollar for dollar, agaiMt its U.S. tases. This lovely loophole leaves the four members of the consortium with a U.S. tax debt next to nothlng. In 1972, Exxon . with a 6.S percent tax rate, paid the most. ~106il paid only 1.3 percent ; Standard of caiifomia, 2.05; and Texaco. 1.7. Other U.S. cOrporatiom p&y around 50 pereent. Now. Saudi Arabia has increased Aramco's tax benefits by raising the royalties from about three dollars to seven dollars per barrel. The conlidentlal 1ables also Indicate that Aramco gets a pay-back from 8audi Arab\a for lts tecbnlaal bell> In developing new Industries, such as salt production. The tables aren't clear, but it appears that the P"'J>Orllon cl the pay-back increases as the price of oi! goes up. In short, the secret documents reveal that th~ four Aramco partners are making a profit off the price tncrea.se. Only their ~tomers are hurting. FOOTNcrrE, The documtnls show that Aramco is changing ii! economic base. Because the Saudls arc expected tn take over the oil at the well-bead, the company is preparing to take its profit:I from refining and marketing. In the past, it has . been the other way around. · Research Spurs Marijuana Concern \VASHINCTON -Broadness of mind , even in such conservative publica tions as The National Review, has begun to create a national atmosphere accepting the legalization of marijuan a as no worse than booze or tobac· co. This is .an emotional and intcl· lectual , as \\'ell a~ medical, iss ue and definitel y related to political attitudes. Before this trend goes much farther than it has already gone in the $12.50 survey o( the ·Consumers Vnion calling for legalization, it is w~ to realize that concern about the bad effects of cannabis is growing, not lessening. The mof'e the research, the greater the concern. Seven scientific. papers dealing with Wicks ' 'Oh oh ••• oh oh ••• It 's'-" to tMy go ••• • (rucHARD wn..so~ believe that be was in charge of the Mafia and was at the same lime the Eastern Potentate or the Ku Klux Klan. He rollect.ed guns and knives and trained his German Shepherd dog to attack his enemies. various adverse effects of marijuana Case 4 _ A 19-year--old boy, arter and hashish have been published by four months or smoking, concluded that the Scoate Internal Se c u r I t y Subcommittee. This import Ls not he had superhwnan mental JXlf'\"~ which reflected either by The National Review could control the brains ~ actions of animals. · or the Consumers Union. , It must be added that in all these EXAMINATION of these papers at cases the delusions stopped when the random reveals effects so ln conformity marijuana smoking stopped, but it is \vilh common wisdom on the subject by no means certain that in such cases as to be comic if they were not so permanent damage may oot have" traQ:ic. Herewith are four rather rhild already been done. case histories out of 38 studied by Ors. ONL y IN tbe last couple Of years, Harold Kolansky and, William T. Moore In fact, ha$ scientific researcll opened o( the Philadelphia Assoclallcn cl up Ille possibility or pennanenl physical Psychoanalysis and Hahnemaon Medical and genellcal damage cl a serio'!' nature College of Pblladelphia: traceable to tbe use of cannabis. Such Case I -A manied 24-ye&N>ld man poaibilities are now raised in tcientifk: the emphasis on heroin suppression, U.S. imports of cannabis have skyrocttted. The makings of more than s bUlloo cigaret tes. enough to provide every man, woman and child with 20 joints lcame into the country in 1973. ' \Vith . this huge supply came the newly recognized risk of irreversible brahl damage and the J)OSSibility of retal defonnlties in· animals similar tlJ ~ ~aused by thalidomide. , · There Is plenty of time to legaliz.€ the sale and distribution or marljuann after full weight has been tiven to the whole range or scientific rese&'rCi on th e effects of eannabi s whtdl il yet uncompleted. The civil libertarians, even the conservative ones can sw:ely wait a while longer . ' 1 OlAN61 COAST DAILY PILOT with no record of previous psychiatric papers left with the Senate oommiUee illness or personality disorder began to by the director of the United Natioos smoke marl juaoa. At first he thought narcollcs laboratory, Dr. Olav J. he could think more cleuly, then he Braenden. Dr. Braeoden has heel bead .Robert N. Weed, ~lither began to withdraw, feared bis friends , of this United Nat10n1 rac tyiOGeneva Thom01 Kievit, Editor' suspected he' was developing heart ror the past 14 yean. Barbara. Krtl!>ith disease , and at the end ol two months Dr. Braenden censulted colleagues by .Editorial Papi Editor developed a Ml blown p s y ch o s I s telephon< in a ""'!'bet; ol different The lncludln& tbe delusioo lhat he was a countries before leavJng Geneva to P,'Jot ..:.~ = !i '::...=· member ol a new wper race, tn appear In WaM.1 .. m .... before the Senate read by ....._.._ compensalJon for his loss of sexual ...... ,._. en. ... ... -.. -•• on ttlia PIP committee. A1. a comequenoo et this diverwicommentt,ry qn topb_ 'ot tn- Jl'?wel'S. eonsultaUon he emplloolltd one point. '"''' by ~al<d c:olumnl111 mi CASE % _ An l!l'yeal'Old ooy Wfill-While .there ts a cllflenilco of qpinlon -i•JI, by ••~:--1•••n>clar 8moked marijuana and b8!hisb regularly on the etrecta of camabis, thet are rHdttt.' vltw1 and bY Pnttntlrw ttdl ~. 1 1 Increasingly reeof!tllzed 11 dallll..,.. """'PAP"'• Ol>lnlooa and tdtu on for three years ~me progress ve Y Muell ls still 10 be lelmetl a~ tb~ curren1 '°"ca. The idttoriaJ, - withdrawn, confused and depre$1ed. Bis degroe cl danaer. UntU more is Jealned, ot .u.. Dally Pllol:.-oni, tn ""' lnt~st m astrology and eastern letallzlilg marljuana~kl'· 11ltft 11 odllorill column ~· the top a1 a.. 1 religions mer~. He became a a1hi..... ,,11 ukt 1 s h l 9 h" 0 Jlllt, °"*" eipo 111a by thl ooi-.,. veaetarlan, practiced ~· 1 n i:l .~--· qew~, q .. , .... ,,1+;r wnm.t. and ~ ..,.,, i.ttcr -pcrceWetl tharhe-~'IOll cl'God-mar!Juana-all,~-...........___wrl,.. ______ ,..,~ placed on earth to save all people from which ls dallllerous _ """' al lltlr -'r a.. Dall7 violence Md d<struclioo. MOREOVER: S<nalor Jam.s-o . Pilot -Id "' - Qlse 3 -Alter &ix months cl steady Eastland. chairman cl the Judiciary Monday, January 14, 1974 smoking, ~ l»-y..,...,ld man come to 1u~mlltee, points out tbat wltb all '~---------....-! I I \ --- • . . • !QUEENIE B · Phil lnterlandl . "Why don't we go over to my place to~t, lit in the dark. and conserve enera:v?~' · ~ ~ · L~ M. JJoyd Taft 'Steamed Up' by Press Polygamy was legally abolished natiohwide "in 1882. That was the same year that Frederick W. H. Myers · coined the WOr~ "telepathy"-to-descrtbe-''fellow--feeling;" same-year, too, Ufat Phil Casey built the country's first handball court in Brook lyn. And the sa'me year that Henry ,V. Seely patented the first electric fl atiron, that SclluY1er Skaats Wheeler brought out the . first electric fan, and that William Horlick produced the first malted milk. Big 1 year, 1882. 1 The technical boys are working on-a radar system-now Uul' will au. to"l8tically put on your car1s brakes whef\,,}'OU start to tailgate. Good. Q. "You know that fellow Richird Thomas who plays John Boy on 'The Waltons'? Did be come from a poor mountain family?" A. Not quite. His folks, Richard Thomas and Barbara Fallis, run the New York School of Ballet. TAF"I' U.S. presidents for many a moon have devised in- genious ways to dodge photographers. But none, I think, ao cleverly as William Howard Taft. When irked by tl1e camera crowd, be made his point by sending up grelt clouds of. mist around his steam car, then driving off behind that screen. llow well do you know your husband, young lady? A matrimonial counselor of some experience says a wife is not really acquainted with her husband. unless she can specify these three things : I. What color he thinks be- comes her most. 2. His three favorite d~rts. 3. What he wants to do when he retires. Were you aware that bicycles have been outselling · cars for two years running? ••• Not June but Decer&ber is the big marriage month in Norway. Because of the re- .tum of the fishing fleets then • . . Scientists figure man is res~ble for only about one half of one percent of the v.'Orld1s air pollution. Say you draw an imaginary line .Crom lhe . top of a v.'Oman's head to the point of her chin. U it measures 10 inches, her overall height should be 5-feet~inches. Other- wise. either her head or her body Is not properly propor- tioned. Generally, the body of a y,·oman shoula measure six and a half times the size of her head. Or so contends an artist or sOme renown. --... ' I -TON IGHT 10-11 P.M. HIGHLIGHTS of The Broodwoy's CIN EMEDIA IV festival of award winning stude nt films KCET-CHANNEL 28 • Monday, January 14, 1q74 DAILY PILOT l CENTURA"' • POLYESTER DOUBLE KNIT SPORT COATS 49.99 Reg. $65. Early Spring '74 hos arrived in the Men 's Clothi ng Dept! Our newest ..:ollection of-Gentur•® sport coots ore now on so le. New patterns. New colors. An exciting choice of styles. Our own fine label guarontees the quality and fashion rig htness. 100% polye ster doubleknit fabrics assure you superb weorab ility and comfort ••• without wrinkles;. Men's Sport Clothing, '48 • The lest tube boys in the Department of Agriculture have come up with an al£a1fa juice said to be richer in prolein th an a prime beef cut. Food faddists know all , about it already. They predict it will sell well. Even lJ••••••••••••••' ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• better maybe someday than chicken liven, beef tongue or pickled Pig's feet. Address mail to L. lit. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1875, New- port Beach 92660. Firm to Publish Jacqueline Book • KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)- , A • publishing house with ofitces in Kansai City and New Yark reports it acqulr~ an exclusive collection of pholOllJ"'phS of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and her ;. famUy for pubUcatio!I In a book later this year. has been involved in litigalion with Mrs. Onassis. More than 300 pOO!ographs will be in the book under the title "Jacqutlipe" to be released this spring. Galella, who made a career of photograpblng ·Mrs. Onassis, lalcr "!' lm!Sted by Secret Service agents for harassment. Galella won the ensuing court batUe on the principle the preas must be free to cover ~blic figures . James \ F. And r~ws, president of Sbeed and. Ward, Inc., said 1 the photos ·were taken by Hoo Galella, who -- ' What Do Many Docto:r;'S Use When They Suffer Paill OfHemorrhoidal Tissues~ I ' Eicle;le F.....i. ~Pr.Ill, T..,...., Relief In MuJ CaMS rr.. s.crlm. ""' Htlps s.r.11 Swtllill of s..b r Wll!I Die ........ f Jn a 1urvty. doctor1 were asked many casct1 rrom pain, it.chine whli lluy Ute to ~lieve 1uch in hemorrhoKlaJ tiuuee. And it painCul 1ymp1.0m1. Man y of lhe actuallr helps ah rlnk painful dOC1tor1 re.po.r.ti.ns st_id.. lbey 1we.Ulni-of 1u.ch__U.uea when either use PN!paraUon H thtro· infected and inftamed. Ju1t tee ' 1elves or in .their..-+ prac\ict. if doctor-tested Prej'>9ratlon H• · Prt:parat1on n IJvel prompt, doesn't helP you, Ointment If I. temporary relief for hours in auppoeit.orid. ' I' OLEG CASSINI DRESS SOCKS 89c 1.50·2.50 values. Famed name designer footwear at speciol savings. Anklet l~ngth styles in assorted fas hion and dress tolors. Stretch size fi ts I 0· 13. Men 's Underwear, 91 -....._... ------ H.l.S."' PLATFORM SHOES FOR MEN 14.99 We've three young hi-rise styles to choose fro m ..• now specially priced. Shown: the "Speeder" krunch leother with stocked 'hee l and -current two-tone color combo. Men 's Shqes, 57 -' ANAHEIM ------~~PORT 444 N. £11clid 17141 5)5 .. 121 47 F•1hlo11 hl•nd 17141 •44·1 212, 2300 N. T111ti11 Stre•t 4)-991-IJTI 7777 Edint•r A••flltt' 111~) lt2-JJ)I 0.!IA"l_GE, M~OF O!A~GE HUNTINGTON HACH SHOP THURSDAY AND FRIDAY , .. -I . • 10 A.M. TO 9:)0 P.M., SA UROAY 10 A.M. TO • P.M., SUNDAY 12 NOON TO S I . ·-• • CUllTOS 500 LM C4'tlt9i Man ttlJJ MtM41 P.M. • l , 8 DAIL V PILOT Otlier Deaths Mood<1, JlftUllY 14, 1974 Woman; Sentenced ------1--F --d SHREVEPORT, La. (AP) -H1rvoy Leva QUiun, 75, n rau fatber o f fnt<matlonally 1t110W1i<d plani!I Van Qlbum, died Saturday. He was a retired executive for the Mobil Oil Co. Death Notice• DllArall . AW-woman who obUlned nearly 11.000 in usistance payment. by making false statements to the Orange County Welfare Department has been smtencod to 120 days in county jail. Superior Cow'! Judge1 James Tumer onler<d the jail term !0< Helen i.... Burke, 27, OI 7322 21St St., and lurther ordered ·her to serve five years probatim after reDse. A oondilion of that probation Is that Mrs. Burkt: must make lull restitution of the Jl,962.36 she admitted embezzling from the aiwrty. Mrs. Burke pleaded guilty to allfcations that she drew thft welfare funds after falsely ,..,.....ming that her husband had left be!' and was living in Nevada. It was learned by Investigator. that Burke was at heme at the time and ...,~ to the support of hlJ family. Heart Club To Gatlier Wednesday Mery 11. Dr1~r. ""'9 71. of 17101 Sclrll'Od•ll St., Hlll'ltllll'folt 1141<11. Dile of dHltl, JIMJa'l' 11. lt74. SUl"ri ...... by d1ugl'ltt<', Mr .. CmMI-~r two grandMJnS, Oorwld .,,. C•YM Oll.rlvnd1 i.lit.r, Mt1. 'Ednrd N91kl. s.rvlcn, T.....,.y, 11::30 l'M. l"Mtt Femlly Colonl.t Funtr1t Ho!M, F.mlly '"'""'• rhoH wtlllt11111. ptff" mak• """'°'111 contrltluflofl• hi Odd F .. 1-• 1nd .Jllb9Cc•l'I Chl1dAn• HonM, l".O. ORANGE -"Everything 1°~ m, G11":Tt ... ~~~••nuc Ycu Always Wanted to Know p.._.1. E. ic:r..-nbl1nk. "' w. '""' About Your Heart Association s1 .. coat• Mn.1. O•" of 0t1tl'I, Jlflu1ry .B I ur .i.t-..ui •~ •~][" ill ''· -im ~111"'4 bY. twll.. bcathtra....-u -.neit:_.a.u.aa1. w ~ w LIOlll•d Kr~nbrlrtl<. S1n11 A1111 ll..... he -· ,...,. Wednesd --~ Eric 1Cr111tnbrlnk, C1m1r1Uo: !We 111191'1, UJC .....,.c ay wut:n Mni. E111'tr M. O'Brien. Cc.I• Mt'll / the .....,._e County cha"'-of Mni Leone SITOldf, H~t h•cl'I. ....,, ... "!>. .,_... serYlc••· W«lnN•v. 2 '""" Bell Mended Hearts meets at 7:30 ll'OIOWl'i' c h • p 1 I Ytlfh ll..... l . E. p.m. at SI J-•ph Hnc:nita] HllvotlOll 1nd lt.-v. llOblrf J1cobt • ..._. ""'r" • offlcl•tlno. Interment, F • Ir fl• v •,. Orange. MlmO!"l1t l"lrll. Btill lf'Ndw•Y Mlll'tu1ry, J ~... Heather wif of Dlreclorl. a~ . e w1n1r11d Mc1e~r.!.1"wr "_,.. wev. cardiologist Lcren W. Heather, N41wport &tKll. o.1e o1 0t11t1. J-ry M.D -~" he '"-.......... t-. at 12, 1974. Helt!.,.. flf Sin Fr.ntlK"01 ., ..-w w..o "~ I • """'---:i---32_00,000 Grant ORANGE COUNTY Lase1~ Beam Used- A $200,000, th ree-year, rc5earth grant h a s be'n ay,·arded to Dr. Michael W. Berns. associate professor ot biological sciences at UCI, for the study or heart fWlClions with lasers. Dr. Berns, 30, San Juan Capistrano resident, is one of the scientist.! \\11o adapted the • laser to use in . blomedicaJ research and surgery. The grant, a\\-arded by the taken from a rat in an artificial culture environment and uposing the I i v i n g , beating cells to a laser bcan1," Berns I a Id. 0 By focus-' ing a pencil-thin shaft of laser light inlo a single contraoting heart cell , it is possible to bring about a ''ariety of changes in the c;ell's ability to conlract normally. National Heart and Lung N-Many Wear SANTA ANA -Orange lnstilute, will support Bern's ra I C[ TEETH continuing research into the r ~ County planning commis· causes of one of the ma;lor With More Comfort sioners have elected Yorba disorders in heart disease. He ,,.. Jmow .. deat'lll'll e.dbelift eu1 Linda's Roy Knauft to sue-previously received $14 100) Wp. r.1.STEETR• P0111'1W ~~ Planni11g Chainnan Elected eed R SI r H t. --• }onflr, Armer. -·-c oger ates o un 1ng-from the National Institute of bo'd. YoaUtl~eomforlable ••• ton Beach as their chairman. Health to cimport I as er •tmoreaatlft-111· Wby•·on'Y'! Gtt y-,. J'ASTEETH Deature Adbetlve • WE QUOTE . P-RICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME ..,. ,..., -CHICI THISI SUPll SALi SPICIAl.S-lutt. 1ttt., OliH' lllM. ttrtc• 74c 5 CAY C•odor•11t P1d, #75 , •••• , ••••••••••• ••••• $1.19 tt-74c AlBOLEN.E Cr••i:i• l ., •........•......... · • • · · •. · · 91 c It¢ 74c -N.A.IR-lot1on D•p•l•taPy, 4 01. ••••••• ·••••••••• ••• St.l• $1 .0t 74 JlJOENTALFlOSS,IO vd, ..•••••.••••.••..•.. $1.09 lfj! C 2700 l Coast Hiehwav. at Femleaf. Corona del Mar •• AMPLE PAlllNG lfrl ltlAI Ho11n -9:10 • 6:00 hlly CIM9d S111t4eyt; olMf• H°'kMyt 644-7575 T1·y Saturday's News Quiz Bart S p e n d I o v e , 'vho research on heart cells. Powder DentlDWI that flt are~ r c p r esen t s the Fifth ''The research i n v o Iv es d•I to '11u1Ut. S" 1our denti•t , Supcrvisorial District on the ~~pl;a;•ing;;;;11;;·v;;in;g;;heart;;;;;t;issu;;e;;;......,;;;;";·;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ We Dare Yo11 commission was elected vice chairman for the new year. Both Kntiuft and S"Penillove are considered moderates in the continuing debate between environmentalists and developers over how the oounty's undeveloped tenitory should be developed. Knauft , 55, is an industrialist and an appointee of Fu11erton Supervisor Ra1ph Diedrich. lie is a former Placentia Unified School District trustee and is still a member of the boa rd of directors of the Yorba Linda County \Valer District. .. tMllllM of 1111 .... M• '°"""""' the Dhlmg Room A meeting. MclC"'-' t1ro1t11r "' Ject 4.. ,.,_111, u-. H--"---ii .n-chairman I __ lt'llle a.. C~I Hane. S... Frenc:ltcOI "°""" -~ .,_.. M.1rl111 Fitrli..1, 9' u__,.1-vncte cf·1be·Newport·Beach planning of ~ ~. lldlnd1. ~ Astronomy Shows Set At College • Tulldlv. 11 AM. ,tctflc: "._ c11•. mmmislion and mt woman •--'· l"ldnc vi.w Mrn'lwlll ,..,k. dmmen of the or 1 n g e Pee.Ifie \llfw MOff\M~, 01..mn... Thlodor ~"-:r:.r~W::.ll n. °' ius Cocmty Heart Association's Oll'lv Pltct, C•ll /NM.. Oet9 of dllttl. l:oard of. directors. J1nu•rv 10, 1974 s"""''<'td ttv wrt.. 1.1ended H··•· o r f i c e r s 1C11Mr\111: -. FtrdlOMtd, of Co.fl o;:cu ._, Mn1: -or•ftddllldi tw11 brotMn •rid elected at -the December rwo sl11tr'I In lltU1M11I•. llDMl'Y wet recl'*<t Sllltd•'I'· 7 PNu M111 w11 meeting in C 1 u d e d : Gus c~I*~ tOd•'I'· Md11d•'I'· IO;:IO AM. Studdard, chairman·, J a c k $1. St9PN1ns Ct fl'lollc Cl'lurdl, Los AftOel•a. 1ni.rmtnt, Good ShtPhfrd Bancroft, vice chairman; Dick ~i~:I: a111 eroRw•Y Mortu1rv. Sheppard, treasurer; Dorothy H-E. Sl<•~T~ ,,: Nsld.n1 De Palmer, re c ord ing o1 1+.111uno1m aMCt1. °''' o1 c1111t1. secretary and Jane Young, J1t1111ry 11. lt7-l SUrvlvfd It'/' fWll c11ugh1en, '•ullne II:. Clw.c:y, Huntington corresponding secretary. 81acl'I: 8tttv Lou MeCllnllrt. Wyoming: !wo ~. Chlrks tnd 'W1ll.r SIC.llt'll 1l1m, Edlm cr-.1 ttwee 11renclci'IHdf111 1 -orul"'fl'll\4chlld. S • r v I c 11, w.ctnt'ldl'/', 1:30 PM, Smlttwi Ollpe/. lnlenntnt. Svnn'fllOI MemOrlll ,,rk, Long lttch. Olrtcfed tw lmltht Mor- W"'f. UCI Begins B.ILTL-BERGEJION FUNERAL HOME New Series • Corona del Mar 17a.NS1 Costa Mesa &IHU4 On Russia • BELL BROADWAY A ~es of lectures on 1.IOR111ARY Russian civiliz.ation will be 110 Broadway, Costa Ptfesa offered by the Program in U l-U.33 Russian at UC Irvine starting • today. 'The lectures are open Dll.DAY BROTHERS to the public without charge. MORTUARIES '!be lectures are part of 11111 Beacb Blvd. a mulU media course designed Rantlnglol Beacb 11%-7771 to give UC! studenls a rapid ; U4 RedoDdo Aft. S'ID"Vey of Russian cultural Loag Beacb Z~lllS developmenl Professors from PtlcCORMI~ LAGUNA six depar tments will BEACRP.fORTUARY partic ipat e in the La C Rd interdisciplinary class. .1106 guna anyon · All seMions will be held 4"":15 Mondays at 7:~ p.m. in Room PACIFIC VIEW 174 or the Computer Science MEMORIAL PARK Building with the exception Cemetery l\fortuary of the sixth program which Ch1pd is sdieduled for Tuesday, Feb. l5ll PKWc View Drive 19, et 7:30 p.m. in Room 161 Newport Beach, Calliorula ol Humanities Hall. mrtoo Dr. Michael Green and • Helen Weil, lecturer i n PEEK FAMILY Russian, are instructors for COLONIAL FUNERAL the oourse. 1be course, wllich ROME will Include c I ass room '?Ill Bolsa A\·e. ~ as well as the public We1tmia1ter 8!WSU lectures, will trace crucial • historical events Which shaped S~Dm'S MORTUARY the development of Russian m Mahl SL society from the !nctptJoo of -~53t -the RussLan lltate lo the '==~~~~~~2'JftSOlll, SANTA ANA -A series or public shows throughout the spring has been announced by officials of the Tessmann Planetarium at Santa Ana College. The programs. v.ilich will be conducted every Tuesday and Thursday at 7: 15 p.m. are offered free: Some of the programs Include, "A Star Called the Sun," "Myths and the Stars," and "The Shape oC Space." For further information or to make reservations, call 8.15- 3000, extension 317. Card .Time For Aliens SANTA ANA -It's "green card" time for 0 range County's 70,000 aliens. The message from the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service means that all non-citizens must complete an A I i en Address Report Card at a local post o ffi ce or inunigration office. Acting District D i r e c t o r Donald T. Williams said aliens have until Jan. 31 to complete the can! and hand It to an immigration official or post office clerk. Weiher Picked SAT\'TA ANA -Dennis Weiher of Orange has been appointed Director of Exploring for the Orange County Council , BOy Scouts ol America. PUBLIC FORUM ; January Io, 1974 Wil li1m A. Whitt . M.D. 01/GYN February 20 , 1974 March o, 1974 March 13, 1974 March 20, 1974 J1m1, H ,.,...i111, M .O. l11t1rn1I M1dlci111 . Vic.to; Inc•, M.O •. P1diatrics P1ter C. Bramwell, M.O. lnt1rn1l Med icine Eu911nt 8. l1Yin, M.O. lnttrMI M•dicine lori9of St ... t..k, M.O. lnt1rMI Mtdicine MENOPAUSE Jo11ph Irey, M.O. !;,:.mily Pr1ctlc1 CHILDCARE HYPOGLYCEMIA NUTRITION OBESITY 9-UEITION ,AND A IWH PUIOD - SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL AUDITORIUM 7JJO . ..JO:OO P.M. NO ADMISSION CHAlH ' . s,.. ... rM ~ SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL 11m...,.. c... Hwy., 1Mlli ...,_.,CM. tt•n IOI JllllTHU 1-lllA-CAU.4t..,Jl1 UT. 2U -· • \ • Califomla Federal SaVings proudlJ offers a bumper crop of new high rates. · FOR 1\000 OR MOR'f: ~a. lettM;' to lO p..s. 6%% ~--... 6.98% .--Tlmll: 2Jf W 10 )IHft. """':""" l'lolll 6~% Co!**--... 6.72% ,,,_..,. Terms: 1 tG lOyurt. -lillll FOR 1100 QR MORE : 5%% c.rtilUl•AaoU"''""""" 5.92 % ,..... ... lltlnt.""80 dill to 1 Jfil". -..... FOR 1100,000 OR MORE: CertlUcatesol $100.000 or more can earn Interest rates in •~cestof 711" depend1ngon terms and amount ol depos.it. FOR ACCOUNTS OF ANY size: 5)4% PmbooloAOO)UOIHmL .... 5.39% ,.::..'";'... Add or withdraw enytlme _,:or. Ytil hout penalty. No terms. ., SS minimum deposit. 16-flffServices Free travelers chCC:ks. mo~ey. orders.notarysel'\lite. trust deed note collection and photocopies ol important documents with Costa Mesa Office: balances of Sl,000 or more. Eleven other free services with any balance! NOTe Cef11ficate rates above are offered tor a limited time only. lndit1led yields ire earned when !nterast ts ot>111POUnded daily and all funds 1nd &1rn1n11 ,.. main in the account to maturity. Federll recu1a1ions requirt a subslenti1I penalty k>r nrly "Withdrawals from certificate fCCOUnts. ' c~~!!!tfn~!~r ~l• ,t,a;ounts lnsured up to S20,000 tJr 1n apncyd the UnitedSl.IWJGovtrNMnL 2700 HARBOR BOULEVARD ---~Et.,_§<!§·23~ __ --~-~-­ OPEN SATURDAYS, I TO 1. • -CUFFORO ).f • .WESDORF, V/co ProJfdllll & M1.1tlgtt I ' . ' \ ---- • f34.6 Mllllon SOllJlht ·Budget Boosted .for~Parks SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The Reagan administration llal asked !or an addltlooal ' fH7 ·mlllloo to open another 26 8egments of the vast state pJrk system. '!be propooed budget !or the Student;s Spittin' Up Storm TIDS IS THE pioneer and Deep South procedure of pulling out the lower lip. shaking in a generous portion ol tobacoo, closing the lip and letting it seep arowxl. '!be problem is thal snull begins to make the mouth water. Sometime or other, the user must discharge the overflow or drown. lf a pupil v.'8s in a corridor, there went a new brown splotch on the floor. Sidewalks took on a speckled look. THE YOUNGSTERS solved the ~e at such affairs as be.sketball games by using paper cups as spittoons an d theo-leavlng them. . state Parks and Recreation Departmenl !or the Dscal year beginning July 1 i.taled $34.6 mlllfon, compared· to $31.8 million this year. About $1.39 million of the increase in spending was for meeting additional costs of maintaining the park system. The other $1.47 million of the increase was set aside !or the opening ol these park Wlits: ' FamH11 Circus ' by BU Keane ! "Mommy, how long did it toke me to ;row up?u 11It wasn't sanitary," said Copperas Cove S c h o o I principal GlyM Powell. "It's just a lad. Mostly cowboy types are doing It." Tbe school trustees, spittin' ti" _______ ~------------.J mad, so to speak, took action last week. There won't be any more snuff dipping or tobacco mewing In school, t h e y decreed. Tobacco chewing? "A FEW CHEW," said Powell. lie eotimaled 50 boys use snuff or chewing tobacco in the t,2QO.p.ipll school. Then he thought a minute and raised the number to 65. Ally actually dipping in class? 0 0H, WE'VE had a few kids coming to class with a jaw or a tip lull," said ihe principal. THE COMMITTEE FOR ART Unlver•ttY of California, Irvine · presents THE CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER ENSEMBLE .. Arthur Weisberg, director • works by : Castlglonl, c_.11, Crumb, D1vldov1ky, StockhauHr, Schw11ntner • FRI., JAN. 18th 8 P .M. U.C. Irvine Fine Arts Village Theater Admission $3.75, Students $1 for ticl<at information call (7141133-6617or133-6614 1.49 each is all you pay . for I color portraits of your Child. Select either large 5x7~ or set of 4 wallet size, from several poses. • 2 dtchn lllt*Voded )Dgelher-1.411-- • Al pa trails dat.wld to:,watcu- • fo(Jl liTil : 12 )WS Pixy And we never Charge for handling or delivery. Pixy is available only throogh-JCP-en~.- \ JCPenney. FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH ONLY Jenuery (5·t~ru ·9~ .. Tu11. thru Sit. Hn: Tues .• Fri. 10 to I p.m. --2 to 6 p.m. Sit. 10 to I p.m. -2.to 5:30 p.m. • ' t---·-~· ' . \ .. • • •' Monday, January 14, 1974 DAIL.·• Pu \II .JI .._ 2 Design Courses To Start 3 Billion Dependents CURE Oa1nr the...,. ii out-. HOAG HOSPITAL. "Loar domtlonl help tn WI__. Orange Coast College lr4 offering a pair of display and visual promotion courses in the evenings this spring. "Display and Vis u a I Promotion 180" is a three-unit LYLE SNIDEll, a 211-year old Quaker school teacher Who said he wanted to protest American Involvement in SQutheas~ Asia, claimed a large family ori his 1971 tax withholding form -three billion persons! SzJ,kl.er, of Durham, N. C., claimed the world's population beginning claM that will meet .-----'"'----. on Wednesday nights lrom 6-10 ( p•rop•T E' J' p.m. "Display and Visual ~ .J.JL Promotion 185" Is a n _ intermediate course scheduled '---------' for Monday evenings from as dependent5, citing religious 6-10 p.m. Both classes meet convictions as grounc:k. in ROOm 5 ot OCC's B~lnes.! But the U.S. DiStrict Court Education Building. for the Middle District of The courses will teach North Carolina sen t e nced students the basics of effective Snider to eight months in jail display and the principles of for his action, and then tacked balance and p r o po r t j 0 n . on anQther 30-day term arter Students v.•ill have t h e the Quaker refused on 13 o p p o r t u n i t y to v.'Ork occasions to stand when the extensively with color and court ordered him to do so. lighting. Field trips will also Snider has appealed .. be included. * A London art dealer sued Spring semester classes at the Cleveland Museum of ~t OCC begin Feb, 4. for $225,000 and demands Registration is being held return of a small painting -~Y-~p25po_in_tA~~-ot."!Y ,t~~r~u~h alleged. to t>e _ !~ \V9r~-_Q.f_ o.1an. · ppo1n men~ may German master Hans Holbein be secured by filling out the the Younger. request form in the Evening Art dealer Charlotte Frank College brochure. alleges that she gave the Late registration will be painting to Cleveland Museum held in the OCC Records and Director Sherman E. Lee in Admissions Office from 8 a.m. 1970 to determine whether it to 8 p.m. Jan. 28 through v.·as a genuine Holbein. Feb. 14. The Admissions * Office closes at 3 p.m. on Sen. John c. Stennis (0- Fridays. ' Miss.), woo was wounded by For registration information robbers in Washington last phone 556-5733. year, said he will be a Ul'I Tfflttt. NEW CAREER -New Jersey Gov. William T. Cahill says be will practice law and teach at Princeton Univer· sity after he leaves of- fice Tuesday. Two of his cabinet members were indicted during his tenur~. re-cltctlon in a-minister ln-a eeremon1 ...itncq..t. Jan. 20 aboard his San ~iego,L-------~~ based .tlip, the destroyer I ·tender DWe. Seaman Howard L. 1 Marshall , 25, plans to say hb ' vows for the Church-of ·Chrl!it i'ID UllL'I ~-(Hollness) U.S.A., with \\\'O TllM 1tart1 Nav_y captains looking on. a...--'--""'9&•1 ":.:,.. Marshall works as a 495.0401 '4l0171J librarian on the Dixie andJ!=:;=~~~""'~~""';;;;:"i preaches in a San Diego church. * The widow of muralist David Alfaro Siqueiros says the artist donated his house and a workshop to the people ol Mexico. Angelica Arena! anmunced the donations at a news conference. The house in an exclus ive section of Mexico City will be converted into a museum or J\.1 e xi ca n muralism. The artist died last week at the age of Tl. * Gov. Kenneth J\.I. Curlis of Maine ordered state agencies to think small when it comes to new car purehascs. In an executive order sent SELF HYPNOSIS STOP SMOllN• LOSI WltaKT llLIASI TINSION INSTltUCTID IY F. C. McGuire Calif, SttM ~ C ...... 838-7340 324 N. NEWPORT BLVD. · NEWPORT BEACH --to all department ·and ageoc y. heads. Curtis said new car specifications v.·ould include an 642-3766 "One of my purposes in engine no larger than six 21 Y••rs S.rM L.outioll clindidate -for 1976. being here in Jackson is lo cylind.en; and a maxllnum • SALES • SERVICE· show the people of Misslssippi 1 ,..:w::e;:iigh~t ~of~l:_:;ooo:::,.!:po~Wld=s:;. __ ..;.!.,.;=;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;==. that l am on my feet and am already working oo 1976," OPl!N EVENINGS & WEEKENDS the '13-year-old 'senator told 9:00 •m to 1:30 ~Sat. 9:00 im to 2 pm reporters. "My health is good CHIROPRACTIC DOCTORS GROUP with no complications." * A .sailor will be ordained 1115 Park Ave., Costa Meu 646-5202 .. reshape, firm'n trim with a body that's.fit to live in. ' A .11w-·•· f I •• • • • • • i • • I J you do11't just 1 ~ a-et a shape < ) ''you e-et in shape'' '.,· fj!I /; ~ . . Diet Alone Can't Do II ••• While you shed pounds that cut down ugly fat, you've got to build rnuscle tissue that firms unsightly fl ab. ' 1 \ '. 1 l r I • The result, a shapely figure trimmed down, with texture tight as a drum. It's all here-dietary and exercise programs designed for your individual need. lnstructOrs and exercise machines that get maximum results in the shortest possible time. Plus Sauna, Steam, Whirlpool, Sun Rooms, and Swimming Pool to make the complete change. Before you know it, you'll be firm, slim and trim. You"ll look great, feet .great. Remember you don't just get a shape; you get in shape. Make yourself a promise-Call Today! Introductory 5 week Program • 20vlslts •20fot 2 That's $10 per Person Regular Membership Available at Low Cost, lower cost on your first visit. Holida~ 1 $,i ~~!~1"~£~~88 allt~. . BUENA PARK r.10 s. lractt lou1e,.arct. SovUt 01 Ll11Col" A"""" 126.0511 ORANGE 122 l e11 Ktlella A"'""'· Wt1t or T11.1l 1t1 A••""'' 139·2441 COSTA MESA 2loo He r bor l o11 l•••r~t. Herbor Ctt1lt 1 549-3369 WESTMINSTER 1151 weatn11"1i.r• """"'*· Wt•lnli"'''' Ce11ter 89"·3397 HUNTINGTON BEACH 11Sl5 Ma it1 StrMf. Mel" I L at ltac~ 11 .. 11. 942-1451 LONG BEACH e 101 All a"llc 1 011l •••rd, Co'"'' of Car10" 426-1974 ENCINO 11031 V1t1ture 101111 "''11· W111 of le lboa 9H·l330 7 CO NVlNIENT LOCATIONS IN OllANGf COUNT'f'. LONQ l l ACH & lNCINO *Not available at our new Encino Spa. , • • ' . ·' • ' .. ·~ . ' ' . .What Does '7 4 Mean Recvees Conve11ed To the P.ockethook? To Buses By SY_LVIA PORTER -~ \Vbat will 1974 mean to you In terms of your o w n pocketbook? It will be one of the toughest years of thiS generation. \'et it could_ turn ·out a rewarding year, too. The questk>n is not whether it will or will not be a tough year, blotched by climbing un- employment, soaring living costs, wtdespread shortages of essential goods and sertices. O.lty l"u.t Stiff "'-" LIZ REINDERS INTERVIEWS JOB APPLICANT IN NEWPORT OFFICE Plocement Expert MlltclMs ti.. Employer With the Employe The question is only bow tough will be the squeeze of a business setback of an u n predict abTe sever.ill' coupled with inflation. E111ployers s~reened l"OltTll INHERENT IN the very toughness of 1974, though, are tremendous-opportUntues-for each of us to use our own ingenuity to beat the pinch. Depending on the extent of the shortages ot energy and other raw materials, the business setback also could be less grim than generally predicted now. Personn.el Age1icy·· Witli a Perso11ality By STEVE MJTCHELL OI tt1e n.lb' "ltt 11.., Liz Reinders runs h e r personnel agency with a slight twist -she interviews the employer beJore sending out an applicant. This screening of t h e employer might sound a bit pretentious, but a look at her file folder of testimonial letters, including s o m e impressive letterheads, sho'.l.'S that, "Obviously we're doing something right." "JOB DESCRIPTIONS and resumes don't tell us enough abOut what a client or applicant is really looldng fOr," explainJ Mi!s-ReiiiCJei's; a trim blonde who has oi>erated her own agency in Newport Beach since 1965. litiss Reinders visits each client company before sending out a potential employe. "Understanding the .style and structure of a company helps us to present the people who would best fit the environment of the hiring firm," she says. ''The position to be filled is carefully reviewed with the employer ,'' says Miss Reinders. "\Vhen we send out an appltcan!, they k n o w everything .about the hiring company that we do, and they also know what is expected of them in the position for which they are applying. This . is what really impresses the employer. The applicant and the employer profit from this kind of research, 11 M l s s Reinders says. A MAJOR FAUX~pas in the personnel placement business, according lo P.fiss Reinders, is soliciting for employers. "We don't call around to various employers and ask if 'anything is open today,' or Supreme Court Airs Alien Commuting Bid send applicants arotmd just to get them placed," says Miss Reinders. The firm relies mostly on newspaper classified advertising to find employers and people looking fur v.vrk. The Reinders agency also depends on referrals. "Nearly a"ll inquiries from Harbor Area firms a r e referrals, people ¥lho have used our services before, or heard about us from other employers or friends," she says. And If we do make real strides toward international cooperation to fight inflation. solve t h e challenge of shortages and stabilize the monetary system, the long- terfD outlook for our country CO'lld be brighter than ever. But in the immediate future, here are some pocketbook certainties and probabilities: -Our co s t of living TH IS W 0 R [)..0F-mout'1 will skyrockel Th at's ~r-e­ method of advertising is '"''v l1eWS to You btit 'h" apparently paying off for Miss -harsh-probability ' is tllat Reinders and her staff of four during the first half of the young. women. The agen~ year, the rise in living costs says 11 placed 200 persons m will surpass 1973's oppressive jobs during 1973. rate of more than eight l\1iss ~einders o~ned the percent and it even could agency 1n 1965 adjacent to what is now the Irvine industrial complex. Sh e realized the potential for a personnel placement agency in the fa st growing area and, as business picked up, soon fOUDd a need to do some employing for herself. ... The problem with a lot of people looking for a job is, they're in too big a hurry. 13 Plywood Mills Hurt By Chill By Tbe Asseclatod Pm1 reach Into the range of 10 or exurbs, you'll find t,he ----peretnt. pi'oblem OI lransporlaUon piled on top or the old EVEN IF THE pace of problems ol scarce mortgage There ls no w a Y you money, steep morfgage rates can prevent this; it is built and inflated cost! across the FINANCE 0......--1 -DETROIT_(UPJl -1'14. natk>n's rtcreaUon vehicle manufacturers are havlnc a rough time with their luxury motor homes b<causo ol gas Into what already is happening bOard. For an t n de f 1 n 1 t e '----------' to food. energy and other perit:>{" many potential buyers '· bas!• raw m•l•r\a!S price•. will be •cared t• tak• on Sliortaues But you, as an individual, can this commitment. e ease your own squeeze bY'. Of T , C following t h e fundamental' -IF YOU'RE in the market . Ul ans money-savi""' r u I e·s of inflation moderates as the ~ ~ .. shopping the year· round year goes on, 1974 will Nex. t Crisis? seasonal sales and f 0 0 d continue this longest, deepest r- specials, by sub.5titutions and i n r I a t Io n o f o u r switches, 'lbe changes might even enhance your health and urestyle. -Unemployment will rise, with joblessness concentrated In such areas as housing, autos, travel. Even i£ the unemployment rate rises to' "only" six percent. that will mean six 'tO seVin -DtiluOn jobless -.and many more millions who are deoendent on or who provide goods and services for the unemployed will be hit hard, too. The jobless rate also could · go much hiJZher. ir the s1o.,.,·down tu~ into a slump. MODESTO (APl -Next a history. tin can shortage? ft' possible, to sell land in the exurb.5, say the firms the~ produce you'll be up against the same millions of cans every day obstacles. to pack away Califorft.ia 's huge -U you're trying to build fruit and vegetable }tarvest. a house, your special problems Jim Clark, con 'oller of will be shortages of materials National Cans co. which and fuels. Even the National Association of Homebuilders makes 180 million c.qs a year, . sa~s that housing stam wUl said the firm laJ?i off its crlish so percent beklw their second shift of 20 : t mployes recent peak before .the housing today for at least two weeks market bottoms out. because its suppli~ of tin -If. you're an investor in ! 'Plate are low stocks, you'll find the market ' · more viciously sel~tive than "TIIE Sm.JAnON ~Id j?et ever before, and Its al readr worse,'' Clark sajd. "What can f'bvious that manv of 1973 s the processors do without darling stocks wi:J be 1974's cans?" horror stories. This v.·iU. be "Tin plate will be in short B U T T ff. E f e d e r a I ~ even though stock pnces supply-in 1974," said Rick Hill, government and the states will nse. , . s p 0 k e s m a n f o r t h e act to help cushion the i~~ct,__~ --.If_ yo~ re goml ~ ~-1anneroJvned C:T. Supply Co. by eXtended unenlploYment vacation away from home. here. benefits, retraining outlays, you 'll have to make many emergency public employlnent adjustments in your habl13. "We \rill just make. it." Hill said tin plate -steel with a thin tin coating - will be hard to find because worldwide demand ifor steel is up and American steel mills can't· iDcreaSe oulput rast -.gJi. and other government Haphazard touring, for spending programs .. We do not in.stance, is probably gone know hew to cootrol inflation foreve r. -but we haVe learned how -IF YOU NEED to borrow to control unemployment long-term money you'll pay _ .. Sorry. we're out of tha_" near-record rates for quite a Wl!Lbe<ome_an_increasingly while. Lenders will not supply commonolace answer to your funds at declining prices reauest for a long and varied (rates) while other prices are list of goods. You already are surging upward. familiar with what shortages -U you're saving money of energy mean. but scarcities ln the fonn of savings will range rar beyond energy certificates, you'll continue to -from anti-freeze to tennis get near-recqrd rates for a balls, from phonograph while. too. · records to blue jeans. ~1an~ A tough year, yes. But products will simply disappear 1 o ad e d w i t h · h id d ·e n frvm the marketplace. opportunities, particularly Ir -If you 're in the market we fmally tackle inflation and to sell a house in the suburbs shortages on a global scale. RoberrKett; spoTe.Wn ,.,r ·Carnation Can Co./ In nearby Riverbank, whichf turns out 1.25 million cans ' daily, sakl supplieJ are. getting harder to find. '1luhl!O rar we still are getlillS the tin P\ale we need." HILL SAID the problem comet·from profit C(lntrols on ,:1teel; rather than a shortage of energy to run the mills, rmst· of which use still- abnnd1nt coal. shortages and higher gasollne costs. TWO GIANTS of t h e Industry -Winnebago and Champion -have cut back production. General Motors is delivering some of Its $15,0IJO. and-up motor homes as shelb to be oulfilled by the ownen as olfices or mobile doctors' offices. ~ But Sheller-Globe Corp., ol Toledo, Ohio, has found a way to cash in on the energy crisis and still provide a gasoline- conserving vehicle. The company, w h i c h recently signed an agreement with the Ford ~1otor Co. to produce a motor home for Ford dealers, has introduced a "Conserv-A·Rkle" line: of vehicles to ease the transition fro1n the passenger car. 1'Wlm THE growing government emphasis o n reduced use ol personal can to and from the job, we believe 'Conserv-A-Rk&e' tm.its will expand the potential of pooled transportation beyond that -possible with m a s s transportation and car pools,'' says OteS1er Devenow . chainnan and president d Sheller-Globe. The company has taken its Superior J\1otor Home model and, rather than adding a sink, beds, a stove and closets, put In 16 Individual aircraft• type seats and reading lights, paneled walls, carpeted floor, y,-ork tables, coffee counter and other amenities t o accomm<>date 16 persons. The motor home, built on a Dodge chassis, re~ils at about St2,500, a lot dieape,- :than a bu! but more txpen.1ive than the large vans offered by ·the automakers that can seat nine or 10 penoM in far 1ess comfort. WASIUNGTON (AP) -The Supreme Coor! today agreed .to decide whether thousands of l\fexican laborers can legally canrnute tn the United States for seasonal farm work. The ruling by the appeals cowt for the District of Columbia cooflicted with a decision by the U.S. Circuit Court in San Francisco which allowed both seasonal and daily commuting to U.S. jobs. · They begin to panic early in the game and decide anything is better than nothing. So they settle for anything and end up in a job that doesn't benefit them or the company they work ror,'' Miss Reinders contends. Complete Mid-day American Stock List BiUerly cold lemperatures111 .......................................................................... .. have forced at least 13 I plywood mills in th e North West to shut down ~or cut production because logs are frozen. ' The issue could have a major impact on California aod Texas farmers who rely enensively on alien v."Ork.ers. The Supreme Court \\'ill review a U.S. Circuit Court decision which o u t 1 a w e d seasonal commuting but permitted alien v.wkers to enter the United Slates on a daily basis. REDUCED LEASE RATES 0. L-Mll"41• p,..Drl••n ·1z·-·11·-·14·, NO OROER D•LAY, ORIVI YOUltS MOMI TODAY l'ROM OUlt 110 SELECTION. The Supreme Court also accepted for review a companion case challenging the iea~lily or daily HER PLACEMENTS commuting. include pos i tions in The issue was-brought into a r c h itecture, engineering, court by the United Fann medJcal scienes, accotmting, Workers. and a group of secretarial and clerical work . California and Texas workers Miss Reinders maintains who .eomplained of unfair that querie! from employers competition against U . S . are roughly equal to queries v;orkers and accused the for jobs, a rarity in the Naturalization Service o f personnel placement business, v i o I a t i n g the law by especially considering t h e permitting Mexican citizens to agency Is 100 p e r c e n t com mute to U.S. jobs. employer paid. Miss Reinders The debate also af£ects a claims hers was the first much smaller number of agency in the county to charge Canadians who v.wk in the the employer for her services United States. instead of the employe. Government lawyers Th is may seem like a estimated that there are 8,500 strange way to run an seasonal commuters, but a employment agency, but like 1974 PINTO group of [arm organizations !he other oddities of Liz IUNAIOUT calculated that there are Reinders' opera t Ions , it $63. 73 MONTH llr1~so~.ooo~i~n~Ca~lif~o~m~ia~a~l~on~e~. ~:;.;a~p~pe;a;;:r;';;:'o=wor-:k~. :~~11 36 MONTHS OPEN END ~ § C"'" Mll'. 1 nc.) tal cc:-... iv• 1000 -lk:, WSW tires, rllllt, ~ ,..m ,"'411t rt• _. c.1111. 11•u11 OR'DER ',:J/ I TO CNOOS< "0M . '#:· ~eautiful Stick-on 1974 MUSTANG H {· $7276 ,.:~=~~ YOURS ·,\ OPEN END / LABELS (l"tn t1x & lie.) t.I lltw q ,. WSW ffNs. '""'' lfftt'tnl afllll lllHKI, ....,. mwldlflt". (131WI CMOIC E 01' AU· TOMATIC Olt 4 11'1.IO. 1973 T-BIRD $1354424 M~~~~ OPEN END ,,_ Mx & Mr.I All • ......,., ace. ,... ..,_. """' Yllllyt rwf, ~M --.tHtWfll,,,_,,_,...,,._ tMKt1 -. .... Mlle. IDJlt) 1972 LTD 10 PASS. s9u111 WAGON $1911 24 M~~~~~ OPEN END f"" I•• l lie.I An 1l11!11111nl KC. ,... ..... ..., .. WSW lfm. •Ir (91'141 .. *''· .......... -.. 2t-~ ... It"'") wt llASI ALL MARIS C'F NIW CA.rs !ND TPl'JCr.. CALL UM C\.I,, ~ ..llM Mlu.SAr --• -· . ' TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For You,...11 />r 1 Frl...t M1y be used on envelopes es return eddres& le.bels. Also yery hendy es identification labels for marking personal items such 11 books,· records, phot01, etc. labels stick on 9lass· end. may be used for marking horn• canned focd items, All libels •re printed with stylish Vo9ue type on fine quality whit .. gummed pi1ptr. The American Pl y WO 0 d Association sald matty others are considering closure or curtailment because of a depressed m a r k e t for plywood. Hugh Love of the Plywood Assocatioo, based in Tacoma, Wash., said at least 20 other mills report production curtailment from 10 to 50 pe rcent linked to the weather in the Northwest. He said the col~ had idled about 2.800 workers and caused a production loss equivalent to 25 million square feet a week of %-inch plywood. Nor1nally, Oregon's 85 mills account for nearly half of the Mtional plywood production, and 29 mills in Washington produce 12 percenl Earnings Up At Keystone Keystone Savings and Loon Assocation reported record earnings and loan recordings for the year ended December .31. . Ronald W. Caspers, Kevstone chairman, said that the association's 1973 eaminga were $552,420, or $1.1~ per share. as compared to $515.934, or $1.08 oer share, in 1972. Loan recordings, he said. reached 123.340.1163. up 47 percent over $15.852.291 in 1!172. K•ystooc, formed in 1957, has b r a n c h offices In Westm.inster, Anaheim, and Newport Beach. It plans to opeil its Mission Viejo branch early this year. COllELLEASE LEASING :J il Your Foetery A11~rl1ed Chtwo:".f l Mii I DMler • New "'I\ Y99• HntcllMc:ll: $8840Pl:l MONTN PIUJ Tu-I-Lie. On Apcw. Cl'tdll 24 Mo, 0.1.L CONNILL CHnlOLO 1121 HAllOI IL-YO. COfTA MISA 14 .. 12ff ' . VIit. Ntt ... a.. 2 1\lo + .... 1 11 ... . ~· ... 2 • .. ~ .. """ . ' ~ 1 W"t •.• 11 ,~ .. + .... , 1·1t-1·lt 2 17 + "" 20 I -.... J 1_,,. • i ... 1S .~ .... U S'-+ \\ 11 •V.+ .... 1 1 ..... I S\t+ \lo I ,,,___ .... 1 '" .. \'lo ' 1V. ... 1 111oiit• .... -~1-. 1' 11'1 ••• I ' ' .. -·- ' • • • • . • • • • ! ' • I ' -4 ··-···-- • . ' e ••• l omet ing For range oast • • Here's. a "seven-pack" you can have delivered to your door for only $2.65 a month anywhere in the Orange Coast prea. Nourishing too ... whether you have a taste for local sports ·reports, crave more news about the world of women in which you live, feel a lack of community news in your diet -or want the variety of top cartoons, comics, columns and co'mmentary,packa~d so they please yo~. The Daily Pilot delivers-seven days a week. Want to order? Phone 642-4321 or the Daily Pilot office in your neighborhood . .. ' ' ' DAILY PILOT . . • •• I . • ' . -------· _,. ___ -- • -• • • • • • i. l ~ . --~· ' " ~ . --. . •• " . ' .. I ' ' • . . 'Exorcist' Wrings 'em Out • SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - 'lbousands are lining up every night for a chance to faint, get sick to their stomachs, or merely be scared out of their wi ts. More than 6,000 persons have waited for up to two hours -sometimes in near· freezing temperatures and driving rain -to .see the new horror movie ' • T h e Exorcist," since i t opened here Dec. 26. "I'VE NEVER seen anything like it," said Andy Poryes, manager or t b e -NOrthOOint Theater where the film has been breaking local records. "Three shows a night and every seat is filled." Most oatrons seem satisfied with the time and money they've spent to witness the bizarre tale, based on a novel by William Peter Blatty • .aboul a litUe girl who becomes possessed by the devil with violent results. "I'm used IA> blood and guts, but that was too much." said Russ Thompson;21, a pr~med student from Long Beach. ONE THING'S for sure said Pat Colegrave. 23 , a Berkeley street vendor who makes string art. "I'm not going to trip fe>r a v.•hile. It was a heavy flick." Poryes said that on the average one viewer faints during ead! showing and pa- . trons overcome by the gore frequently leave their seats on a desperate dash for the restrooms. Some make it, be added. Some vewers li ke being terrified so much they come back a ~-time. "111E FIRST TTl\.fE. well . afterwards I was scared," said Deborah Fleming, 23, an artist. "'1'1lis time . just say I came away feeling un easy. I don't often see the same show more than once. The last time I did it wa s '1'-1y Fair Lady.' " But s om e vi e we r s complained the film failed to live up to its promise as the most frightening experience or all time. Hln's the petfl!Ct way to mau· ~!securities do 1 Ynwlll btl!el~lltftltlod ~M -tti. hu ll) 1iod "11• • .. l~c fl ,_r ltllow ••· 2 Yw "'" be ~"'" with • •IKll~ti1l M-i~1•.,. rwr • Cllfltollt l~tollle tun. 3 YH con contiftu1 to '"lot' ti•• lln1ncllol _...11r t1f I~• 1110111t )ft CGfllrllM.t ••• •it• • . .-............ ,.. ... .,,.fmi!J. Jf trlis soundJ lmposslble ••• call IDdlJ for 1111 eye-openin( ltOfJ' of Hoar Memori1I Hospit1l's "Four flpibl1 P11ns for Givln1". You wlB .. in fol .. plNacrt 111rpriSll , .. ,,.r: (714) 6Gl6GO fA I .. • ' I ,,,.,., ........ MOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ... ~,.,.. IMdl, CA •1660 Jiii Hew,__+ lovl1Y•N • Monday, January 14, 1974 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . ·• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . . . . . . . . ., ...... . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • --·-·-· ._._. . -~-· .__._. • • • • • • .• • • • • r • • • • -'%:;;...,.:;: . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • \ • I • • ·- .. \ • • • ' t The two of you-. And Robinson's. Right from the start. Finding that one perfect gown. Enjoying a treas~re hunt of special prizes. And setting up house with a "e)V Right Start Charge Card, planned just for brand npw budgets! See it all at our senaational bridal shows we· sented by Robinson's11I1d Sevent.een... · ! THE From our collection of thought-provoking ideas for a romanticist like you. Ruffled GOWN organza. With a chapel train. By Frank Masandrea for Bridal Couture. , • White or ivory. And what else, but a picture hat? Robinson's Bridal Salon. ..__. l . : ............................ . . . ·. '·· ............. · ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... . ...... :.· .. ·; ...... -.:········ . . . . . . .................. . . . : .................. · .... . . : ................ · . .-; ......... .. . . . .. .._ ___ ,.. . .. ... ".·,·.··1------~ ••• •1 :::.: .... ···."··t ... ----1 '.':.:•','] ......... . . . . : ... · ·----""" ·;.:".:·:.:·.: . .... , ...... ·.1.-... --1 .............. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . ; . . . .. ·:=:: :.~ ::·:::: ···::: . . . .. . . .. . . . .. . . . ·; ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . : : :>.·:: :: ::::.:::: :: : ...... ~;:.· ... :::::::::: :: : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. :: .. ·:.·::. ·: .. " ...... : .. : . ·:: .. : . . ·:::: '.:.: ·:::.: ....... ·.: :. :: . ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .... t •••• :::::·.".:~. ... ·. ·: ...... .. . . . . ·:. · .. ' . . ' . . ' . ....... : . . . . . .. . . :.::.:::: .... : : :: : : ·:·:···::-·.·.·::.· . ........... . . ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •, . . . . . . ; ... Tickets ·.;. to ·-Tr·e'asu.re: There's a book of tickets waiting for you in our Bridaf Sal;;;\;, Cl')lna Department. Pick yours up. Then gd through the store~ · register for any or 1111ofthe42 Right $tart prizes along the "1'ayi· · ' I First Stop: The Honeymoon Prize. Come realster In our Credit Department to w in a fabUlous honeymoon In Canada!. You'll fly.A ir C..nad11, And stay at the Chateau Frontenac. On us! Next? Fashion, furniture, everything! • • l ' I I ' ,, • I ' 'I I J ' I .I 1 ~ • I j I ' I ' ~ I ' I I ~ I i I ·I "' '-ho'tos by L.. Payne I •. • • Eleanor Kimball works on refinishing table that had been damaged by sandblasting treatment (above). At right, country tin pitcher she restored by reproducing pattern on cardboard~ then repainting, varnishing and handpainting. ' . -" t:: ' '" ,!· • ' ' -Gra ts N-o-t New or By AUJSON DEERR the Huntington Beach Union High School restoration and decoration have been At one time, she had classes going ot '"' D.IJW "''°' Miff District, decorates antiques fur shops acquired in more than 20 years of study·. at two colleges, a high school district .I Time an.d Pauence ··are· essential "ti) and .. has-· ·refinished .. ·and -decoraft!d . Her s'ch001ifii. iiiCfi.iil"Cd""W"Oik-·at·· the ... aoo· "Leisure World;·-g . weu·· as-doing .. •• the true craftsmaJL . furniture for dealers and private Rhode Island School of Design, Fitchburg private ·refinishing an'd restontion work, f Eleanor Kimball began to siudy color individuals. ' State College, the Dattorro-Tonoff "I love the Early ·American things,'' '-- Mahogany :cabinet pitintecl, .in softer colors• to match modern decor is checked . for structural condition, above. Brea~front af right was hand painted l:iy Mrs . Don Wainscot, Costa Mesa, under --... Mrs: Kimball's year-fong guidance. ' -• . -~ .._ - and design as a teenager. She still is She will open her own shop, combined Gallery, Eastern Cormecticut State she said, "but for my own home, -1tudying. st~,dio, workshop and supply store. 'College, Fletcher Craft SChool in I .prefer something a little more elegan~ A color eonsuJtant and specialist in . Too many people · will J.ust grab. 3 Vermont and at califomia St ate Fr,7Th~ ~-l~~i~ .. !tyles." ........... .: . antique-rest.oration-and-d-e-c·oi'-a·t-i-v-e-ki~-;~Y-can:--tllllL_jJuLsomething_University;-Fullerton. ~ --Y~can~~d:ll_ancL__-'.J . ti the H tingt Beach qwckly, Mrs. Kimball asserted. Bu t, d 1971 h te d d country tin are American folk art. In pam ng, un on . _woman kits don't give the novice enough In 1969 an s e at n e summer my classes, I do offer simple wood ~eels there bas been a re VI val of mterest information and often don't recorrunend courses that offered two weeks or 120 refinishing, but 1 try to introduce other ID #le crafts. --the right tools." hours of ·mten_siv~ works.,hops -~n~Early techniques as well. It really takes at "Young people have really gotten into American Decoration and stenciling. furniture refinishing the last few years, BUYS SUPPLIES least 18 weeks to just cover, the basics." babl ·1 · And h 1 FOLK ART Students often go on lo handpainting, pro y or ecooorruc reasons. , Many of the supplies for er c asses, 1 M stencils and gold-leafing proi·ects. J think they 're learning that 1 such as special brushes, have been, If nothing else, a c ass ... with rs. craftsmanship is lacking in most of oi-dered from the East coast because Kimball gives one an appreciation of ALL CREATIVE today's furniture," she said. they are not available in California. craftsmanship. She feels that "everyone ls creative The native Rhode Islander kept up "I've. learned which stores have just For example, a country tin coffee pot and it just takes time and patience her ,interest in the er.alts field while the right pain~s. varnishes and other she ·displayed had been treated to two to prove it. Pe+sistence is something raising her four children. oow aged 14 supplies. Usually, I buy supplies to sell coats of metal primer, several coats you must have in a craft." to 24. to my students so they don't have to of paint and several of varnish ·before Mrs. Kimball tells new students, "I Today, she teaches classes for Orange search for them." being decorated with authentic Early began where you are now, sitting jn Coast and Golden West cOlleges and Mrs. Kimball's skills in refinishing, AIJ)erican design and varnished again. a classroom." ' ----• ' ' "':-" There are olher benefits fl:om learning -a craft and pursuing it in the borne, she asserted.. Other members of the family become interested, and they absorb an apprecialion 0£ craftsmanship and a feeling for beautiful things. "Everyone _should have an out1et fCl' their personal creativity, especially the young mother. I alWays had five or six projects going while my children were growing up and all of them are · now interested in some art form." Some of her students have become good friends. Sile spent. part ol every Monday ·for a year working with a Costa Mesa woman On a 1 a r g e breakfront. HELP CALI.'l "There are a1ways a Jot of calls for help," she said. She feels that soon the interest will be in good reproductions of antiques , because "people who have antiques are holding onto them. H And, she noted, \WOd Is becoming more and more scarce. One project she bopes wUI come to lruition Is a fair display al lbe ~ Collnly Fairgrounds. _ "We had a display last year of sludenl "''Ork that was vfry popular. It would be an open exhibitioo. Milfy ol. my students have promised to lend their work for the smw. "No one person could have an example on hand of all the various technjques. And, it would be a good inlroductiGll to I he general public. We would demonstrate the various techniques at the display." ON DISPLAY She bas done this in the past at the Renaissance F a i r '"1 -0range and at several shopping center mall exhibits. Speaking to clubs and organizaU* Is anothet-facet of her work. Among upcoming speaking engagements is the Thursday, Jan. 17, meeting or the, South Coast Chapter, National Charity League at 10 a.m. _in the Huntington Hafbour Beach Club. "People learn to a~ate wbal -Into a pieci? that' is a good examP.e or the artist's wOrk. 1 dui't teach "nvthing new and fast-[ .teach thing:a that are old and 'take tifne. "But they are things lhal will las~ be<:ome a family heirloom and lbe1 instill a sense of pride." -. .I '4 DAILY PILOT Infant Debut --Congresswoman Y v o n n e Braithwaite Burke, first member ot Congress given ma· ternlty leave, Intro- duces her baby, Aut- um.h Roxann and dis- cusses her new role as mother and politician with Dinah Shore on NBC-TV's "Dinah's Place,11 Thursday, Jan. 17, 9-9:30 a.m. r DEAR ANN LANDERS: ·Pl .... say • aomethlnl In :rour column al>Oul guard p. -1<1 -le... know they e_ ..,L_ pelS. A IJUanl dog ls trained to kill and he will do II il he thinks his muter ls being threalA!ned. I have a baby and wt live In an ~.l,c=M;:Y':--IMl"''ml.. lllod yoa !loo~ Qve In my nt1_4bbor· •••-,.;;; I .l'd·bt a<ared-lo d .. ~. Don:I yoa husband travels "' I need •~ """ or roalile Illa! your dos ls a poteallal murr protecllon. When I take tho baby out derer? You bave no """-'" pootog Jn the carriage I always have the dog oucb a tbreat to lanoceol people. -:- al my aide, on a abort leash. Ualeu yoa have !bot beo1t .. der per· I can't undenlland bow people can le<t coa1n1 al all Umet you abould DOI be ao dumb as to walk over ...i tzy be penallled lo take blm on the 1lreel. to pet a strange dog. When I say. I hope ,.. ... bolyily lmured, lady. "Be careful, lllJ' dog Isn't friendly," 'null doc of yoon coald !NI ,.. 11uler they answer, "All dogs like me." MY wat«lorlbemtll,..,We. dog ls trained to bark-llnt. II -the- per1<>11 doesn't back away be goes ri&bt DEAR ANN LANDERS: My sympatby for the neelc. I bad an unpleasant to the woman wi-stepdaughters lnvito experience a few da)'ll qo and the their motMr over whe>ever they feel like man screamed, "Why don't you put It and ask her to stay !or meals. I a muzzle on that thing!" Guard dogs also have stepdaughters who try to aren't suppooed lo be m=led. It breaks rearrange lllJ' life. (The old<Ot is 13.) their training. Another word of warning Their lather Isn't much help. He asks to people who are walldng their Jl'(S. them to report on every telepbooe call They siloold be kept on leashes and and vlallor who comes to lhe boose. Wlder control at all times. Even if a Almost every morning be leaves notes dog ls of a dilferent se• the guard iMtructlng me I<> ''make pancakes !or II kill · Th-• f the kl•-" or "dean up the girls' cl05ets """ wi try lo II. m~ you or = ~ me a chance to say something today." . 'mportant LOUISVllJE lie OaUy refuses lo do me small 1 .-favors because I have a car and ''errands DEAR LOUISVILLE: And DOW may I oay oomelblng Important? are not a man's job." (He passes the cleaner& and drugstore every nigh! but he won't stop.) All I hear Is wbal a lovely borne I have and bow hlc)<y 1 am! No mention of lhe · -I am t makillg lo( his sis motberlea-children. I Pl,..., Ann, tell this knucltlth!ad how much ii would coot him to hire a ' boosekeeper to take care of his klda. Also tell blm that he would be doing ALL-lhe errands u 1-wenn'umund.- OLDER AND WISER DEAR 0 AND W1 Tbat'1 a marrlaJ'? i It soud1 more llke aa armed camp, wltb your bOlbud ud ddldru OD oae 1k1e ud yo• oo tbe Giber. I hope yoar letter Wll wrltlea at ~ eocl ti o bod day. II H'1 oo better !baa It IOUDdl, wlt.y do )'OG Ila)'? DEAR ANN LANDER&: I started to read your column wben I was 11. I didn1 think I'd need you '111til I was at least 16, but here I am, two years early. . I talk too much. The kids at oc:hcd call me BlabbermoUtb. I hale the ~ but I can1 l<eep quiet. Please bO!p me.-SlllJNNED DEAR S: Most 11Blabbermoutlll" are afraid If tbey don't say 10metllb:IC people will tblal< Ibey '"' 1tupld. Notblor· oould be !ortber from tbe trutb. Force ~ to Osten. REAllLY lllten: Yoo will be amazed at what yoa cu ._.. when your moat.ti b 1baL Horoscope: Capricorn's Past Efforts Rewarded TUESDAY JANUARY· 15 By SYDNEY~ ARIES (March !I prll 19): You are fascin 'with the obsazre, the oc It, the ___ -.._ Some_ol tbis could be attn"buted to reluctance to wake up, to see the light. You will receive informatkln which has bearing on financial status. II will be necessary to peer through the covers and face the day. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You inay be too confused to arrive at definite deci.sioo. Situation should be regarded in humorous light, not panic. Sagittarius, Gem.int a r e featured. Perceive opportunity for expansion. Timid family member should not be granted undue influence. GEMINI_( May 2blune 20): Stick to the practical. Don't be tempted into action which brings with it r J s k , extravagance. Stea<;ly pace should be maintained. Gelr rich-quick scheme or apparent shortcut simply will not work. .Know it and act accordingly. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Accent is on movement, change, dynam ic action as contrasted to placid approval. Take nothing for granted, especially where opjXlsite sex is concerned. You have right to ask questiom -and to rece ive frank responses. _LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Home, family relationships dominate. Taurus, Lt b r a persons figure prominently. Be diplomatic. Hannonize relatiooships. lgnore o I d c r relative who ls stubborn, insistent and aching for an ernoticnal showdown. vmGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis is on crystallizing ideas. Don't ignore inner feelings. You are being told something -by you . No one can fool you but you can do a pretty good job of it yourself. Short trip could be high on agenda. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Money, solidity, payment and collection -these a r e featured. Don't attempt to delegate duties or d u c k responsibility. And please do not play games with emotions. What occurs now is likely to be foc keeps -and stakes are hi~h. You will understand! SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Appeal base broadens. More 19): Emphasizegoodwill, aware of it. persons become aware of your improved reTatioos with PISCES (Feb. 19·Marth 20): potenlial. Your judgment, professional superior. You will Long-range projects are CffiOn"" intuition ere on target. Take be rewarded for past efforts. highlighted. Your persona) . .::J lnltiative. Make new starts in Your position will be more philosophy also is accented. SPOkTSWEAll new directions. Be original, secure. There will be less of There is some concern about independent and ertative. And a panic atmosphere. ff single, Aqg_arjgJ, (&Q_ peIS®S. W'Cltc1ilf Pf_"'9 1711a -4 ll'Yfne. weal' conspicuous Cillors! talk gets around to marriage. Newport Beach,Cllitomia9'2660 . SAGfITARIUS (Nov. 22· AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.1~·-······•iiiiiiiiiiii Dec. 21): Yoo get benefit of 18): Mooey and bow II gels light as well as heat. You that way could be a dominant feel wann in sense that one feature. Profession, goats and behind the scenes stands up ambitions mingle to provide for your lights. · Creativity · doubts conf.idences and basic surges to forefront. You are . ' .. able to imprint style, to leave drives. Older individual can mark -and to love. make room for you at top. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. Know it and act like you are r ., Wherever your musical fancy leads you, loldw;n ·. 1. . ;.J , fantaskl will la wUh you l) > aft the woy. I ..... WOODWOaftl ,...i··='~'•,. 4 Coast Clubs Back • Session 1n ELECTffOLVSIS AS P ERMANENTLY ARCHED BROWS. AN INTRIGUtNG WIOOW1S PEAK. THE ENO OF' UNWANTED FACIAL HAIR. THEN LET OUR • . SC Mothers Today's Young Woman .... in the Law Profession will be the topic of di.scussi~n . ~)I Elizabeth Eberhard Zeigler, judge or the Superior Court, Courity of Los Angeles. She will address t he Urtiversity of Sout hern C a I i f o r n i a Inlersorority ~tolhers' Council at 10 a.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, in Town and Gown.on campus. Theate r' Guild 1-t-.... LICENSED T ECHNICIAN SHOW YOU HOW A special meeting is being called by the Children's Theater Guild of Newport Harbor. I SAFE ANO EASY IT IS. Interested adults, •Who ~annot attend d a y t i m e Q1(S._ IN OUR BEAUTY SA~ON0 ' SEMl0 ANNUAL • ~ JANUARY SALE! e UP 0~ AT ALL STORES TO .. JANUARY 8-12 · V .. I t ! ,,_ • All MANUFACTURERS" PARTICIPATING 0WHITE DRESSES OCOlORED DRESSES OTO PS & SMOCKS OPANT SUITS OPANTS OSKIRTS OSHOES OHOSIERY AND A LARGE SELECTION OF MENS WEAR • llWllUFACTUJIEM Jot.t.V[ IHOUEITED Wl REGULAR MERCHANDISI ON SALi NOTAOVUITlll!TllEUIN.WlllNTHIS.t.D JAN 8th · 19th ALL STORES 8 s To seR.ve ou · · · COSTA MESA 239 E. 17th St. 1714! 646·5388 NORWALK 11657 The Plaza Norwalk Square C2tJI 863·65t0 ANAHEIM 1763 W. La Pal ma Ave. • (714) 635· 1092 HUNTINGTON BEACH 18555 Mein St., 5 Points (7141842-4234 LONG BEACH 5523 Stearns, LOs Altos Center (213) 431·4012 GARDEN GROVE 12136 Brookhurst St. (714) 530.4710 SANTA ANA 2036 North Main St . • (714) 835-2296 MAV WI[ AQUAINT YOU WITH OU" NllW "ACTOllV OUTL(T ,.£ATUllllNQ DAILY 8AlllQAINI 0111 C1.0•1t·OUTI ANO "ACTOlllY SKCONDS FOii Ml:N ANO WOMl:N. o., ..... Q"'" ,..,. 11749 CAROIP~AL CIACLE GARDEN GROVE. CALIFOANIA PHONE 1714) IJW3IO o..n 011lf lllCtudi"I Su• 10 A.M. -5 PM. meetings, are invited. Church, Laguna Hills will be will be Mrs. ~farion ' 'IAllO AMI DlG AN SALIS ........ ~ ........... The session will begin at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, in the guild's studio. Plans fOi-the spring production of "Three Fairy Godmothers," will be discussed. the setting for a luncheon azi4 of Huntington Beach. -sis-NORTH MAIN;SANTA-ANA • SU'51.S1 fashion show to be presented =========J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ BPW A Woman or Achievement will be named by the _Newport Harbor Business and Professional Women's Club during a 7:15 p.m. meeting Thursday, Jan. 17, in the Mesa Verde Country Club. The winner will represent the group at the San Oreo District winter conference in by the Lake Hills Community If Churchwomen at 11:45 . a.m. Thursday, Jan. 17. Parliamentarians A parliamentary procedure course will be presented on the first and third Fridays In lhe llllskelt B r a n c h Library, Anaheim. Beginning at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan . 18, the course will be sponsored by OU Unit, National Association of Parliamentarians. Instructor San Bernardino Jan. 19 and l,-;::======'-'==.11 20. SC Juniors South Coast Juniors are distributing hoaltb pamph- lets to preschools and ele- mentary schools in the Fotut· taln Valley School Districl Irvine Juniors Irvine J u n i o r s have chartered buses, which will Jeav.e at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 17, for a taping of "Let's Make a Deal." On Saturday, Jan. 26, board members will be joined by their husbands for a potluck dinner In the Gerald Muzzy home. Afterward the men will demonstrate how they conduct meetings. Churchwomen MODEL OR REMOOEL Put It All Together Fo, Fun, Popul•rlty, ConfldenCe JohnRob11t f':we11 ____ ,..._..,.., 11 .. _,_ OIAN•I • l r ... I C...,,, ,..._ 147.UZI Geneva presbyterian LONG llACH-IOJ L .,...., ...... 4)6-6121 RENT A RUG DOCTOR "STEAM" CARPET CLEANER DELIVERY AVAILABLE to lllOll "'"'• or you pick up •t our store. 10 MINUTES FREE INSTRUCTION --... -~-,.., ........... ..... ........ -....... -.,.,... ft ........ " ... --REALLY CLEANS CARPET -............... .._ ... , ..... " •-""'" ..... . ---· SAVES YOU MONEY 4 Hn. lo< •12.50 c.t k -._ ..._ - 24 Hr1. ·~r $20.00 c.,.t -c-. 6 P.M. to 8 A.M.· ,12.50 RUG DOCTOR RENTS IN LOI AN•R9 (J131 423.o454 IN OllANM COUNTY 17.141 979.7944 au•·-'-""" ·1NtL_...,.....,. arance GROUP #1 PRINTS e SOLIDS NOVELTIES Gre_. selections of cotlon1, oco!otu ond polyo•'"• btends. VALUES TO $2.91 YO. ' ALL WASHAIU 41"/60-WI• SAVE TO $2.23 YD. 2 yds. 1so GROUP #2 PLAID SUITINGS QUILTED PRINTS SCREEN PRINTS SOLID FLANNELS POL 'r'ESTER DOUBLE KNITS Cottons, acet•tes, •cryllcs, r•yon polyester ond wool bl,and fobrlc1. VALUES TO $4.91 YD. SAVE TO $3.41 YD. MACHINI }¥.ASH 2 44"/SO"""""' yds. for GROUP #3 Mochlno Woshoblo POL VESTER ACRYLIC 1811~1 1111.1 Oraot colon ond doolfni to inlx ond motcri for dro1a or aportsi VALU&S TO $5.49 YD. SAVE TO '2.'9 YD • 0•,••1••1 2 1111ui,. _ H "IU" ...... y .. tor 500 .HOY!~.~~o,f!?,~Rlq • Honer,._. - 11111 '91 , lrlltvl' Santi AM -MWU1 . Or•....t1lr Maill -~ auena P.rlt Centw -°'"""""" ... 11'111 "'""" LI Palma at St~lwt ,.11--524-DM •-Pork -nwan ..,.... °"'9-J2181 BrookhurSt (next to Von'•> -,...1MJ H,~ c..ttr -F.dlnaer at llffch Blvd., Huntll>lfon Beadl -m ... 11 ·-~ ... -------------·-------._ ____ ONN W MON. THIU SAT. ____ _ • . • I MIXED SINGLES G't"Pf'/, II' t'D Ktloiotl 'bU JI> A urn.£ Gl111.. I llJO!JLD llAYe MAD A CIWSll Ct< Yoo! TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS . NANCY bY Wm. F. lrown and Mel Casson ,.~_,..,,v_,=-111-llA-~ ---~-'1(1().,-., ~I~ 113 A 1.111~1 611U.r SCl\t66Le S(.Rl&ele !ICRte&Le. by Tom K. Rya11 .t _f .=c.s .. -· GooONIGHT,MUTT! ENJOY '/OUR NEW SOFT MATTRESS! LET'S HAVE ·VANILLA by Al 'Smith by_l)ale Hale by Emie lushmiller -- ER. COULD. • DOOLEY'S WORLD Dr. SMOCK GORDO l·lf .»~110 ~-.-..._ ... _ ;;, ·-----... ,...,~.,, --- ANIMAL CRACKERS MoodlY, J....,Y 14, 1974 DAIL\ PllDT JS TJ.lE Pl<ESIDENT IS A >IEJl:f BUSY~ 1 2 • ' >--f !--.&;;...~~ l g?AQ;ko ! by Geor9e Lemont by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson -·A-I-IA! THAT f'XP~AiNS 'ioUR El~HAVIOR TH~ PAST zo'lf;,AF!S ! /(\!~ 0 l II~ .:;s by ROCJer laHen , ;..:_:=..;~-:--:=-'! RIGHT YOU LEND ME THE MONEY? f00l1 · 1:11 • llDAT'S CIDSSIDID HIZLI ACROSS 41~ ........ , .... 4S .... ol•khf ,.,.,. .... HalfwaY: PNll I PIGlll 45 Pltctl ol 10 T*'1 bnllln \- • I t4 tiudwlt 41 -....... °"' ., lcoflMd"• ... 11NMcltc.t 12v..,.~· 18 U.S. Mfrt OM:811ng Ra MFltUnawtM 17 -TN Cini "'°'* T-......... ·dll*W ConlP09W , • .._ .... MO. 11·~ 11 Efllell ao ...,. a lMll"""' ' IMjKN llitt 83 Al all ..... peapi.;2 6' ..... -... es Ot01i1P1 o1 ,._ -.. ,,..... • COi;;;. ........ . ........ &7Gl9P SIC-... .._2 DOWN -.., ......... 3,...,.., ... ·--.,_ .... • i ....... -40·Dld .... - ··-21<1nt0f ..... ......... 4 "Ths,...of ___ .. • a Is 90nY for ..... 10-11 &omt'*'lof ..... ·128odll~ 13.-., --21 Girt'& -21 ........ -.. _ 'ZT ECJ,191: Pr9IJt ,. ..... -~ ...,, 33 RMIO ... 34Trntl._.... ...... •c- • -31Wua -310 ...... .. i.w.y,2 -"""" ....... -...... ·--· ..,_.. .. ...... _ ~Weird ea Ctty'lnth9 Olkol .. 53 Roolpmrt MAlllnnmtf• 58NL ..... 67 Merriment 60 Wuout• .... ON PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz ---===:;c~I==F1NA==Lc~~<;=--'---=1f=;i~H=OW~<;:----'-""'1" \OARWINAND1llE6EA61.£' FOVNDTMAT NlCE! I• 1' ,I ii !1 ., ,, " v'?Vb-11M. JUDGE PARKE.R 1}1\S CALL ISN'T IMTENOEO TO MAt<f YOU FEEL eETTER. SLAOe ... eUT IT MAY . SAVE "fOUR UFE! . MISS ·PEACH 600< !'VE 6E!N kJAl{TIN6 ltl 6ET \'O\J- c AUGUST POOLE'S eovs ARE l.OOKING FOR YOU! IT SEEMS THAT AUGIE'S VERY UNHAPPY! by Harold Le Doux T\o\E WORD'S OUT THAT YOU LAID A 8UNOlf ON SUNDAY'S GAME ... AND NOT THE SAME WAY Tl'iAT POOLE'S eETilNG! by Men lll.1'1" Tt•L. Mf.1 i11:A-WHi!lol PIP ~ l'i#,'f .• ,,. "THI Fiii.i~ vou•11:e NO"T HIN• rNVITIP -------r 10 A•L. "!Hf. PAlll"T,.~ ? WHIN : -SAW "Tl-111 .AD "THAT fArO: i j :J i I ':l • :l DICK TRACY l [~l • "iVlll:Y PAY I~ SOMll!IOOV'S 1111,T~AY .. ! . by Chester Gould ",... ....... "''"'"'"'"· DID I ICILL MV ,.,... ""~':'.."""""" GRANDMAP _,, __ _:,. ___ ._ :-----=,----,..J.~ ~-I --- l~~) ~VP .. .-.~ ., DENNIS THE MENACE • ' I. .. ··~--. • • Miami Assembly Line • _Ha·s Another Ch!i_!ll~ UPI T~tt THE VIKINGS' STU VOIGHT IS SHAKEN LOOSE FROM THE. B!'\LL B't NICK BUONICON TI. Page Impressed CouUln't Stop Them, Says Vikes Hilgenberg HOUSTON (AP) -The Minnesota Vikings minced few words about ho\v they were overpowered 2477 by the Miami Dolphins on Super Bowl Swiday. Coacll Bud Grant, asked when he thought his team was in trouble, said blunUy: "On_the_lim_driye __ o/. Jbe game." Linebacker Wally Hilgenberg said or the Miami offense and devastating running back Larry Coonka: "'Ibey just took the ball, ran it down our throats, and \\'e couldn't stop them." Defensive tackle Alan Page said, "\Ve could have used a shotgun." The Dolphins ranuned two touchdown drives through the I Vikings for a 14-0 Jead and had the game under control with a 17-0 halftime bulge. "We scored 17 points against them in the fourth quarter and beat them in a preseason game," said ~rant. "We thought we still had a dl.ance." Although Fran Tarkenton set. a SUper Bowl record with 18 completions and scored one touchdown, the Dolphins sustained their fJ.rSt haU cushion. The Vikings, without a trace of emotion, explained simply they had been outplayed. "They played about as well as they could," said Tarkenton. "I thought we played well. but the ball boonced their way the entire game. Everything good !hat could have happened to them, happened." A lot or bad .things happened to the \likings. They were penalized seven times for 64 yards. A clipping violation against Stu Voigt. who made three speetacuJa r catches, nullified J o h n Gilliam's 65-yard return opening the" s_ecQO<i haU kick.Qr!, ROn" Porter. jumped offskle on an onside kick which the Vikings recovered after Tarkenton's toudtdbwn early in the fourth quarter. "Jake Scott fumbled our first punt and the ball bounced right back in his hands," said Tarkenton. •'When Oscar Reed fumbled at their six on the fourth down play just before the half. \Ve lost it. Then we took the clipping pe nally that wiped out Gilly's return." But Tarkenton said he wanted to offer no excuses for l\iinnesota 's second Super Bowl loss In two appearances. "Somebody has to Jose," Tarkenton said. "You play the best you can. We gave them a shot, but it wasn't good enough. No sour grapes. We expected to Win and we didn't." Grant felt Miami ball control. more than 11 minutes or the first quarter, led to Minnesota's demise. "They took the ball down the field their first two times and got 14 points." said Grant. "It's pretty hard to overcome that kind of a lead against a good football team." Miami did not )!Se any unexpected strategy, but they just outplayed the Vikings, Grant said. Miller Collects Birdies, S11atch es Phoenix Title PHOENIX (AP) -Johnny Miller \\·inced \vhen l'7C heard the gallery's vast roar from the 18th green that rolled and reverberated through the pines and palms dotting the Phoenix Country Club course. "I said to myself, 'You've got to be kiddin~ me. He oouldn 't have made eagle again,' " l\liller said. But there y,•as no kidding about it. Lanny \Vadkins had just rolled in a 30-foot putt for eagle three on the It8h hole and suddenly, from a four·stroke lead. !\tiller was one stroke behind with two holes to go. He birdied beth and ,~·as a w:lnrmer- again. 1'1iller's four-under-par 67 in the fanal round gave him a 271 total, 13 under per on the 8,709 yard layout and a one stro ke margin over the disappointed Wadkins. Miller, the current U.S. Open champion who \\.'Ofl the weather·shortcned Bing Crosby tournament just a week ago , pulled away to a four-stroke lead with nine holes to play but ga mbled and made a double bogey on the 14th hole, then three-putted for bogey on the 16th. "I knew I was in trouble then.'' Miller said. 'I said, gee, you're gc..nna blo'v it.' Then Lanny made tha t eagle and l knew I had to get some birdies." He respondt'd to the chall enge by flying a six iron shot only a foot from the hold for the birdie that tied it on the 17th hole, then boldly drove a \hree-•i:iod shot over the pond on the 18th, chipped to five feet and sank the wirming putt. Miami Human In Execution And Emotion HPUSTON ( API -Not only did the Miami Dolphins establish they are still the world's best professional football terun Sunday but they proved 1hey can be human and not emotionless .robots as some critics have suggested. With the 24-7 Super Bowl VIII victory in hand, the Dolphins barged into a tiny dressing room in Rice Stadiwn where· there were no prying eyes or reporters, or television cameras or photographers. There were hugs and slaps and smiles and soul shakes -an avalanche of emotion released from a long season trying to equal the back-to-back Super Bowl victories of the great Green Bav Packers in the late 1960s. · "It's the first time this year \\.·e've been emotional," said wide receiver Marlin Briscoe \\'ho descrl~ the celebration which occurred soi'M 200 yards from a candy-stripped tent where reporters cooled their heels on a pea- gravel floor wailing for interviews. Briscoe added, "It has been a long year ... we really let it go." Th~re \vere no champagne corks popping but Briscoe sa id . "!\Ian, there will be . . . for days and days and days." Quarterback Bob Griese. a cahn. poised serious person, managed a wide grin and said, "Later. \vhen I'm sitting back and relaxing, I think all ol this will sink in and I will have a hard time believing it." Center Jim Langer said, "I'll be six months getting over the ,thrill of this." Larry Csonka. the Dolphins' fullback ~h? was the star ~f the game, said, It s a great team without an individual leader. We don't really need one in this outfit." Griese and Csonka, proving the Dolphins click even when they make mistakes, combined for a touchdown on the only offensiv e mistake the Dolphins made all day. Griese forgot the count on the Viking two-yard line in the third quarter with the score 17-0. He turned to Cson ka to ask for it. "Larry shout ed. 'It's one ... no wait ... it's two' '' Griese said. "Well as it turned out, it was one. Jim La~er snapped tbe ball in my hand and I just handed it to Larry." Csonka took the mistake and bowled t\\'O yards for the touchdown. Csonka couldn't resist joking that as an added incentive "coach Shula said we'd have next \Vednesday off if we won. Seriously, it (morale) is the under- lying fa ctor on our team -not pep rat· lies or rah-rah." • HOUSTON CAP) -"U we're not tire greatest football team that ever was, there never was one," crowed Miami Dolphins center Jim Langer. "I don't gi\•e a damn what Green Bay did." The Dolphins, especially Larry Csonka, didn't care what the MlMesota Vikings did , either. Langer and his offensive line.ma tes prOvlded Csonka w 1 t b mammoth holes Smxlay t shoved the over- eager Vikings around at will, and steamrolled to a 24-7 Super Bowl victory. On the rare occasions when the holes weren't there, ~ made his own, carrying \vhat looked Uke 1 half of the Vikings' Purple Gang with h~. And when the Rice Stadium field became nothing but a littered carpet, glistening with the first misty coat or an appropriate drizzle, the w o r d "dynasty" was -not so subtly -back into the National Football League lexi con. As in the Dolphins' 14-7 victory over \Vashington in Super Bowl VU a year ago. their thumping of Minnesota in Super Bowl VIII on Sunday was essentially a dull affair -but then, how do you root for General Motors? That's what these Dotphiris are, you know. A smooth,· silem, assembly·llile maclline, WlClllOilonally cllumlng oot yard after yard, touchdown after touchdown, championship after champiooship. Il was that way with the Green Bay Packers of the 1960s, too. That's the team everybcxly was talk.irfg about when the sµ~j~ ot a dynasty. came up! The Pack had won l\\'O Super Bowls In a row. Nobody else had done that -until Sunday. "I think now we can consider ourselves comparable to the Pack," said Csonka. "\Ve had to reserve our opinion before the game, but no tn0re." Csonka Is comparable to anything the Pack might have bad in the Vince Lombardi days. He was nlore than anythiitg the Vikings coula handle. Thirty~ree times he carried the ball. Everybody in the joint knew he. would_ The only problem "'as, nobody could do anything about it. When he trotted off the field berore the fina!, meaningless play of the game, he received a thunderous ovation from most of the 68.142 fans (there were, after all. a few di ehard . disgruntled Viking rooters) for his record-splintering 115 yards. "Our biggest reward," said Lanier, the center, of the Dolphins' bulldoi.er lines, "is to see Csonka going through for a big gain." Csonka did th at a few times. He also went through - \\'i th help or on his own -for a lot of little gains, like l\1iami's first touchdo~·n, a five-yard burst up the 1niddle, and its last. a 1~·~yarder 011 a basically busted play. Jirn Klick. who once kicked around lhe league with Csonka as half of the "Butch Cassidy and the SundanCe Kid" sho\v before fading into the . shadow of Mercury Morris' jitterbug act scored the Dolphins' other touchdown ' -his Mlnroesola O O o 7-1 Miami 14 3 1 1)...24 First down1 Vlkl""1:'°'1>11l~ Rushes·v••ds 24-n 53·19' Pessl>19 Yltr<h 166 6] Re!urn yards o 30 P1tSSt$ 11·2!·1 &-7.0 Pvnts S-'2 3·«1 Fvml>lts·!O,. 2·1 1.0 l'fonallies·vdrels ' 1.0S 1..-INDIVIDUAL L~ADElt9 -RUSHING -MlnMSoll, R•~ 11 ·31, ForlHl'k'ln 7·11, T1dr."1IOl'I .C.17i Miami, C$Ol\k1 ·~14S, Mo!Th 11-J•. Kilck 7·10. RECEIVING -Mlnnesol•, Foremen S-11, Gllll1m 4-«, Volo! J.46, Marlnore, 2·l0; Miami, Warfi .. d 2·'.l:l, Marnllth 2.21, Briscoe 2·19. PASS ING -M!nnl'IOI&, Tarl<enton 11-29·1, lll Yl•dl. Miami. Grle~. •·1'!', 11. W8Iton May Stay Behind LOS ANGELES (AP) -The top- ranked UCLA aruins hope to have injured center Bill Walton ready to play when they meet second-ranked Notre Dame in an intersectional college basketball game Saturday on the Irish court. Walton is suffering from a week-old back injury. But Or. Gerald-Feinennan said Saturday that the bruise over the right hip Of the 6-foot-11 senior Is improving. Nevertheless, coach John Wooden said he didn't expect Walt'on to play Thursday when the Bruins n1eet Iowa at Chicago. "If Bill \Valton cannot practice with us today and Tuesday, he will not ,make the trip," Wooden said. Notre Dame was the lrui:t team to down the Bruins when they topped UCLA three years ago. This year, the lrlsh are Wlbeaten. first of the year -on a one-yard dive. The Vikes' on the other hand, eametl their only score. But, like the Redskins of 1973, they got It when the only thing it counted for Ylas pride. Fran Tarkenton,· the iM i n n e so t a quarterback who once more probably will be assailed most undeserved1y for his suppooed Inability to "win the big one,"· got that face-saving score on a four-yard run, the end ol. an SO-yard drive. ' JI was about the only time he really had the Vikes going. On the other occasion, when it might have really mattered, the DolphlN rose up en masre and fractured any hope of a rally that Minnesota might have nurtured. By that time -the last minute or the first ha1£ -Miami already had scored two of its touchdpwns artd the field goal. "Tbey took the ball, wmt down the field and got 14 points the first two times they had the ball," said Bud Grant, the Vikings sroic "!couch. "That kind of a lead is hard to · overmme against the good teams." l\1il\CK"sota made It to the Dolphins' six.yard line ln that turning point final minute of the half. Fourth down and a yard to go, the Vikes needed someth~. But they di.sdllined the almost sure three points Fred Cox could've kicked for them. ~'hey went for the yard and the )lO"'lble touchdown, but Nick Booniconti, Miami'• wily middle linebacker said "No way.'' Oscar Reed slanuned into the line. Buonicoot'i slammed into Reed. No pin, no ¥Ore· No way. "Our whole objecfive against Fran 'vas to catch, not chase," he said. 'Today, .,...e caught," Shu1a said. Miami caught the Vikings a t everything: they tried to do. UPI TlillPtlOho LARRY CSONkA MOVES FOR SOME OF HIS 145 YARDS. Sports in Brief '75 Super Switch Denied; Vendors Roll Up Score HOUSTON -An official of the National Football League has denied reports that the 1975 Super 1l9wt,foo<ball game will not be played in New Orleans. · 'There is ·absolutely nothing to that report," said Jim Kensil, NFL executive director, shortly after Sunday's Miami- Minnesota game. A New Orleans television station reported Swlday that ii learned the 1975 game would not be played in New Orleam, as · scheduled , because the Louisiana SUperdome will not be ready In time. e Price Gouge HOUsroN -Ccncession . s t a nd s peddled Minnesota and Miami knit caps at $10 each at Rice Stadium for Sunday's Super BOwl. The same caps -purple and gold for the Vikings, orange and aqua for the Dolphins -were going !or Ill at downtown hotels and s~t corners. WestenHha[ied felt hats ccot 15 at the stadium, pennanls at i2, buttom and ribbons lrom 12 to $4. C!lairback oeals were going !or 41. Hot dogs cost 75 cents, !Oft drinks and coffee 25 cents and saOOwicbe.s $1. Veodors filled beer cups ror 75 cents. e S urprise Plea SANTO DOMINGO, D.R. -In a surprtse move, the pl"05ecution today asked that the charge of involtmtary manslaughter in the shooting death of a teenage girl be dropped against Houston Astros outfielder cesar Cedeno. Judge Porfirio Natera said be would rule on the SUI'p'ise request sometime this week. e Hulme SC!Ores • BUENOS AIRES, Argentina -Denis Hulme of New Zealand drove a McLaren to victory in the 196-mlle Argentine Grand Prix SWlday, the first Fonnula I test on the 1974 international Circuit. Argentina1s Carlos Reutemano, led throughout tbe race until sll91alnlng mechanical difficulties on the last tap. Secood place went to Austria's Niki Lauda 1n a Ferrari, Swiss vderan Glanclaudlo Regmonl, -drMng a Ferrari, WU third. e Go ttfried Wfm Fin l! Kortt •l'ld l'IWll'Mt wlnnln11i In 1i.. Pnoe111x OP9ll: Jll'NYIY Ml!~. U),000 ''-''·66-61-171 U.S. Humiliated ID Davis Cop Play PORTLAND, Ore. -To)»eeded Brian Gottfried won the men's slnglol crown by de£eating Jean a.nrreau of Parts In atraisJ>t lets SundaY at, the Pacific Cout Indoor tennll championsblpo. L111ny Wadklru, $11,lC.O 69·6H9~72 Mille• &.rDt!', '7,t!O 611'61"61·1G-21• Hubtorl 6'""' 11.m 69·70.ff·66---27• JOl'ln ~,,_,. f1.t!.O 4t·~~v1 oe... Llnlff. 5S,10lt 14 ... ·7Ull-21S DIYf St«kton. U.100 n ......... 1-11s 1°"" ,...,.,...ti.v. MAS ... ~n-111 o.wru w-Q..IJO n-1MI...,_,,. ,,...rk H•V'M. IJ,1)0 •1·n•1Mf.-211 Mlkt MCC:ullovoh, Sl.1'0 4MJ.n ...... 279 1111y CffMI', U..fOO 7'0-1W1..,-Vt Kltl''"ll Z.rlty, U,tCO '9·t).1'M7-47' Tommy ,_..,,..,, Q,fOO 11).10-1•-4.H)'f G1ry ~ S2.A7S n ·104f.-1G-2H G«w"ot JOl'WIWlll, $2,AIS 711-71·~2'0 fl"1 l(#ft. Sl,100 11..0...7-11-2'1 ::: f"~,g;,,,,. ~~:ll:R::ll ""' ......,... ,... 1"**"15-m I.':;. ~~·1t~ n1~~!!:m one tt111. ..! .-· 117n., __ •• ~-,._,,.. ••.m ~ •. -!1-'" ,~ ... ~"""' J1of» 6f:~n:Jr-h3 ~.wor~ 11.1• ~-~.a:n:m BOGOTA, Colomhia (AP) -"Maybe the Americans ovcr·estimated themselves a bit ," chortled Jalro Velasco, ·who paired wilh Ivan Molina on the C.Olombian Davis Cup tennis team which shocked the United States 4-1 In the North American zone finals Sunday. _ Velasco and l\1olina each won two singles matches from Ille U.S. squad, losing only Saturday°• doubles event. The humiliating defeat. the earliest evel suffered by a U.S. team In Devjs CUp competition, climlnat.. t b e Americans from contention for the prestigious international trophy in 1974. - La.st year, the U.S. was beaten 5--0 in the challenge roWld by Australia. Dennis Ral5ton, the non-playing caplaln of the American team, pralJed._ Lhe play: of the Colombians. "Molina played very well," he said, "and Velasco took good advantage of his abUlt,y." • Velasco clinched the victory for Colombia In the best-<>f·five compeUUon l>y beating Erik van Dillen, 6-0, 7-S, H , 6-3 ln Sunday's opening match, giving the home team an lnsW11lOW'ltable Sol lcod. Molina closed out lhe ooe-slded aeries by routing Harold Solomon, 6-2, &-1, 6-0. ' .. The Americans )lad dra\111 criUclam queat!Olla poled to him by reporters !or sending a toam wblch did not Include lollowtng_Sanday's matcbes. , , a number · ol well Ja1ow\I otan, but When 1ibd whether the def<at -1d Ralston defended the squad -Van ca111e a .niJ In U.S. temls, Ralitilif Dillen, Solomon, Cbadle P...,.ll and ...,Ued, "'lbat ii a stupid queotloo - Eddie Dibbo -Sunday night .,.•ve oeen wlnnln, and loelng tollllil "'lbls wu the best U.S. Davia Olp matcbel !or yean.' team available;" ileclared llalstOll, who Did llof>ll'• 1ltitude -the COiomb.ian explained that oome of the better-known capital is apprullnatoly 7,000 feet ab\lv• Americam c<>uld not """pet. bocauae 1e1 le..i -hurt the U.S. squad, eveo ol. other commitments. Among tbe tqp tl\oUlh It mlved here one week oarly U.S. tennil 11ar11boenl...,.. Staa Smith~ 'f_ lrl' Ind adjulll · Arthur Albe; Jimmy Connors, Morty ''111at'I onother S!Upld questlOll," Rieloen, CIUI Ri~y Ind Bob IAttz. • Ra1llDn replied. "Obvioolly, we are nol Ralsl<llt bristled nt a number of at sea lev.I here.'' Gottl(ltd, IOOred a quick stralatit«ts . victory, W, M. _.....,,,..... ' RIVERSIDE -Hero m Ille top qualUlen lllt-the Pennatu 200 NABCAA late model .,.;unian -Cir """' race at Riverside · lntomatknal Rooeway next Sunda7: • I. llerlhel McGrilf, Bridal Voll, Ore., '89 Dodge, 108.729. 2. Bobby AJlllOl,I, Hueytown, Ala ., 'GS Cb.velle, lOUti. T. Sam . Beier, Lakewood, ''1 Ford, 10i5MS. 4. Ivan Baldwin, HllhJand, ~ 'GS Cbevtlle, 100.298. 5. George Glendale, 'M Cbevelle, 104.33$. , . I • . ' .. " , . M011da,, Jin111uy 14, 1974 DAI LY Pl LOT J f . FoJlCotten Bruin . Webb E~joying Prep Bask.etball Log-· Reserve Role LOS ANGELF.S (AP) - '10ne night ast year-after a game •in Qdcago," Bob Webb remembers, Hwe were in the Playboy Club. '11lls Ill>' came up to our table and slartod pointing at ua. "He said 'You're Ke!th W II t e 1, you're Larry llollyfleld' and went down the line until he came to me. He didn't .know who I was. Then the other guys told him. and he pretended that he knew all along. But he didn't." The glory Illa! belonp to Bill Wafton; Keith Wilkes and Greg Lee seklom spreads to Bob Webb. In three seaaons at UCLA the senior guard has played an avtrage of two minutes a game and is unknown to many sports writers 11 well u !ans. But despite two damaging injuries Webb -26, a former Air Force aergeant and a one- tlme all"'8tate junior-coDege star iil Tacoma, Wash., - has oontlnUed to work hard when many a younger man would have quit. "I CO\lld see after the flrst year tbat It wu going to be tough," says Webb who prepped at Ben Salem High School In Cornwell Heights near Philadelphia. "! c:oulcl have lelt, but It was. a cballenge. I had to ri'!ake UCLA's basketball ream to !uUUI my """ belle! that I was good enough to play --here -: ·. -. -- "Today most or the guys fetl that ~en if we don't piay we're )l!lrt of 1l>e team, beciause by playlng up to our capabilltteo, which each of II.I feels are at a certain level, It belpa the guys playing ahead ol ... ''The other teams lllWllly don't have starters w1iOse _, u live men ts u good aa what our starters practice against every day .•• ao when our guys get into a game, they don't have to adjust to a higher ·1ev.1-ofcompet1Uon, and that helps them." lt'• not always lliat easy for the Uoot-3 Webb to !eel good about bis reserve role. During his ll'uhman year be scored :as points a lame for Ft. Steilacoom Junior COftege In Tacoma and was named player of the year for Western Wuhlngton, 1be player ol the year In NC State Slips Past Maryland eastern Wa&blngton, Bernle 1 Fryer, WentOn W &tar at Brigham Young University and now Ploy txtensively with the Portland Trail Blaz~r& of the NBA. "When I think about that it makes me wonder if I made the right dec!Jlon," Webb admlll. "When I think about not playlna It discourages me a little. "I thought that 11 I had a chance to play and show what I couJd do I would think about going to Europe and playing or getting a "pro tryout I here. Now it doesn't look like I'll be playing that much and maybe 111 have to change my plans a little." Webb was playing aervlce ball and serving as a j<!t alrcralt meclianlc at McCord Air Force Base In Taooma I when he met former UCLA baaketball star K en n y Washington, who contacted coach Wooden. UCLA assistant coach Denny Crum recruited Webb, but it was decided that he should attend junior oollege for a year before joinlng UCLA. Ile """ honorably dis-charged from the Alt Fon:e and enrolled at Fort Stell-comm. '1Whe-n I came here I dkin 't really -If I could start," \Vebb remembers. "because I talked to a lot of people and they said yoll had to earn your_posltiO:n. SQ it was more of a challenge to C001e and •ee If I could play. :rhey were the national champions and Ibey were only losing John Vallely. I was suppcoed to rm hts spo1. "When I did. oome J found that the callbtt or the playen was a lot higher than I expected. I came down in the swiuner ol 1910 and played with Sidney Wicks and Henry Bibby. I oould see the difference from the men l bad played.with. "After my flrst ··year l thought about leaving bul I figured I'd tMve a b e t t e r chance nm year. But I fractured my tailbone. That put~ me way behind and I redahlrted. · "Last year f'was do!!V ""' well when I apralned my toe and cotddn't nm for . a few weeks ..• 0 When the toe healed T thought I had made aome progress but they switched me from left wing where r felt oom!ortable to the point whe<e I was oontendlng wllh Greg Lee and Tommy Curtis. "There was a time last year Vihcn Cur_tia was sick for five Or six games when I was the backup point man and my condition. l felt I was ready and o>ach aald be felt I had played well enough in I was really glad I had kept practice to be ready for it." "NEVER UP. NEVER IN!' " " .. " " " SuMetLeGfue •-m ··-flM.lflfelll V1llty ... ~ 1 ....... kll~ ... I .. " " .. " " .. ... When you'n linlns op for th* loll&. bruklll& putts remember the o1d ada&•, "n1Y1t up, nnir tn.t• [!yo~ <lon't strokt the boll hard cnouah, tlltn'ajult no way it will drop in the cup. In addition, thtr• la .anothtr..zeason~ lo lt.rokill& th•l!...P!Ut1.lirl!!.!Y. II you do miao the putt and the ball 1oes put, you havt a r~1dy-~de Idea of the line back to the hole. Thot is, you wiU i£ you watch the ball an the way. Don't turn away in dlsauat if you see that the ball it going to 5lide past . Watch 'it roll, for that's the way it will rtact on the way back. If you are 1hor1, you'll have to line it up apin without that tur• knowtedae or how ll " " ,. """'8llOll• ~"""" ........ -,. it will rolL ~:I< ).-.1lJ,,.y-\ ~ 0 ! I ou you t to vnpr<we your pm• ou can nnd ld•kt for rmy pr problem in Arnlt'1 M• book. "495 Golf' La10nS By Arnold PW,,et.·" To a•t four copy, send yow name. addte11 ind S4.95 to Arnold Palm• c/o this n per. For Tonight ' " .. " :1 . u .. II " " " ,. •• " .. " n " " " .. " :I .. " " .. .. " " " .. .. ... .. .. " " " .. " .. " " G .. " .. SI " " Alnmiws Entries .. " " " .. - M1m• 11v1 Go IRlt111rdt.I l"l••M Conttn1,19 (Orev•rl Alu llltlMt JIM Ml (Adair\ " " 11t M lit ~ .. '" .. 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St St .. " " " " " ,. " 6' St " " •l 62 .... ($ ,, ,, " 37 SS ($ 67 " g " .. " " 57 31 61 23 " " 63 55 .. " " " " 51) " " " " " " " SI " " " .. " " ~ $S ~9 61 15 69 b5 66 ~ .. " " " " .. " n " .... ., 71) " " 17 Sf Mlttlll'I llltl• SI"'' .t.111 Valley S1ddll'btc:k &o111 Gr•nft El Toro • 01n1 HUit 5•n CleMf!lft G1rdell OrtW G1rden Grove ··~ L• Quint• COl11 Mesa .. _ Sade!~ ...... '°''' ......... Loni! h6tll MHl!ltln R111cho All"'Uo, Foo!h!ll W1rren KenMdy Strvite El Dor•do La H1br1 Foolhltl f'oottif ll El Modffl• ·-· Los Amlsiot ~\hslon Vlelo San Clll'f'l'lenfti PaeUlc•' Otl!•llO Esp11r;int• Norco o-HUit L~ Amloos s1nt11 Ana v1111v VIiia P1rk Ml'5!on Vl1lo Tvtn• R 1nc~o Al1mfl61 C11ron1 del M•r Westm!n11er ·~-Long 8e.tch MUtlk•ll G•rden Grow e111r S1 nt1 AM V•111Y L• Puenlt-WltfOfl We,imlnsMr e u.na P1rk S1nt11oe K•tell• FOOlhill VIN• ,Irk SI. Plul AlhtmDr1 Plontff"·- UniY'tt"lllv L1g11111 lt•ch ---·--·-. ·-··6• -..u " " 71 76 . .SOftOU. ... ---An1helm " tO M19nolll .. Crestlllew_ League " .. SI Rancho Al1niilC11-M1~noll1 loll Fullerion (ol) L1 S''"' Compton " • .. " .. " .. • .. .. .. .. " " ,. " " .. " " ,. .. Orange League EIClll'•ni. S1nta An• SIYIMll AmbltMdor !~ TKll El Toro EICl'ftnM 0"'111 -~ ...... 511<111Y Hll11 L111un1 81Kh 54n Ci.trMlnt• OIN 1'11111 LI JoU• ('(PflSI Etl1nd 1 MIHI°" Vfllo Ccat1 Me~• NOrwllk C1nycn ('fllf°•11 Saddlebatk ....... .. " 41 Sl ., " "' .. " n .. " " .. .... .. " ,, ~ 57 61 .. " " .. . " •t 1S " " ,, 54 .. " .. " 47 53 .. .. .. " " " .,, II Modenl Ntfl KennK!y W1rAn Collon 11:1.....-11c:i. Norlh Uo1tnd cw-L• Plllf!te Wlt!.on ,~, 81•1~ Fullerton Ml11!on Vleio Or•noe fK!llllll Comp1on Sen Clem1M1 Or1nsi1 SU'l!IY Hiils "" A~lhtlm Gltnn S•Y•nn1 Servlte Lowell S1v1nn1 Or11ngl! ~ .. " " .. " " " " " " " " " SI ., " " .. .. " ~ .. .. .. "' " " " .. .. ,. ., " .. " .. M .. .. • .. " Los Amill~ Stdcl!e~ck 1(1tell• l1ufepemlents ...... P1cHlc• £1lt11Cll Elll-e Ce'l'ritol Mission Vl•lo Ett1ncl• Pacllk• St. Mlc""'I Breit Nertionnl Canyon Sonor• Sherman lndl•11 tnst!lutt Canyon Etpl!r1ni1 ~:~Ty~~D~AR IDLE ROUGH? WE GiVE POOR MILEAGE? CAN HELP Sii THI NIW 1t74 DATSUNS COSTA MESA DATSUN 1141 HAllOI ILYD. C.M. 540-6410 THE CARBURUOR SHOP 1M1 MMllOll M.YD.. COSTA MISA 604llM AM w.n: O.rlltfMll ' Mn. tr ... Ml• ~...,...._.., SAVE\ENERGY ~BOATING - RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Dlvtd Thompson gave a virtuoso basketball performance Sunday, l!COrlng 41 points as fourth.ranked N.C. Slate defeated third-ranked Maryland ll0-71 In an AUantk: Coast COn!mnce game. Thompaon did everything a forward could be asked to do !or the Wollpock before a national television audience. Ile ocored m 2S-loot ju-rs and on soaring · 0 alley'1>!JP" layups. He hit II ol II shots, grallbed eight rebounds and had tine steals. The men he guarded soored a total or two points. Five County Jaycees In OCC Tournament 01~'1 .kt (G...Ul 1t1vmonc1 "'' eov (C..,,.,,, On Limits (knl,rrtl Bold Adventurt (Adair) Clltnc• Al ICl'OMiy) Dill Ctech ITrHW...I en1·1 Aeqytll (LIOlll..-i) CllDlntO IRlch•rft) ...... •lltlllll 81d Who tK1nlsl • Ovpe 8 Sl•" 1W•rd) :~: dtpth-loaded Sea Kings edged 1n defending champion Irvine /:: League \\Testliilg r i v a I 112 Fountain Valley by less than "' five points for team honors 1n Saturday night ot the fourth in annual C.OSta 1.lesa High There has been a lot of misinformation and confusion regarding the use of fuel for recreational boating during the current "energy crunch" Before you rush out and put your boat on blocks, take just o few minutes to separate these FACTS from FICTION. FACTI Although boating is America's number one family recreation sport, all of the pleasure boats in the U.S. consume only 1/2 of 1 per cent of the fuel used · nationally. At the same time, recreational boating is a clean, healthfu~ family activily enjoyed by 40 million middle income Americans. MMyland used thtee players In lta el!orll to atop the llOft. spoken junior, but all they accumulated was a total or 13 !ouls and -· The Terreplnt were lortwl.lte In having tome ho< ahooters or their own In John Lucas and Tom McMlllen, eath or whom scored 24 points. But '111ompoon forced the Terpo, now 9-1 on the fear, to constanUy play catch- up. Ile led State to an early ll-4 leod before Maryland got lta o11..,.. unirlCk.ed. The Terpa came back with McMlllen · going ......,._, aga!Mt the laller but slower Wollplck center, Tom Bur'-1. They took a :D-21 lead on a abort McMlllen jumper mldway through the ball, but Thompson, olded by lUtte Monte Towe, pushed State back ahead. It WU ~I at the hall. MMyland then cloted the gap again, with the bl( aun Jn the seCQfld hall being Low, Ille oopbomore guard. The Terpa nooed Into a one- point lead belon hittbli a L ~ ": s.i-m/d '111)' .\ ~ '!1lompooll, ,..,,.., and I . Monil Rivn doing tho . ilaomc State t!ppod off 10 . lll'alllll pckl!I mid elltdlftly 1111 tlie ..... away. • ..... The :Wolf1'0d< ~ lls ~. r-.1 to 9-i .. the l'W:·lftd ' Ued North r-ilna for Ont place la die A<X: with LM j. ieccri. • Five Orange County j1D1lor colleges will participate In the third annual Orange Coast COiiege b a s e b a II tourna- ment, Thuniday through Sat- w'day, Feb. 7-9. In opening round . games, OCC's Pirates host M t . San Jacinto, Saddlebadc faces visiting College of the Canyoos, Golden West hosts Riverside and Santa Ana and Cypress tangle at Santa Ana. AU are 2:30 games: The OCC-Mt. San Jacinto winner will lace t h e Saddleback-Omyons v i c t o r Friday at Orange Coast (2:30) with tl>" two losers meeting at Saddleback. And ·the Golden w es t - Rlveraide winner meets the Santa Ana-Cypms winner at Santa Ana In a second round test Friday, Feb. I with the looer'a brackel Ult at Golden West. Four games are planned Saturday (Feb. 9) at noon with the champlon&bip Ult set for Orange Coast. The occ tourney -the 1974 season !or Orange Coast and Golden West w b 11 e Saddleback s i a r t s the campaign Saturday, Feb. I against invading Mt. San Jacln.to in a noon doubleheader. Four area JC playen were recently selected in the pro baseball draft. Golden West pitcher Steve Williams WU picked In the first round· by the <>akland A's while teammate Rod Brown, a leCOOd baseman, was also drafted by Oaldand. Saddleback sophomore pitcher Rick Peregud WU picked by the A'i and Gauchos !N:Slunan plldier Rich Douglass wu aelected by ~ Pro Hockey ·~"~r .....• , •• '°''°" 11 1 s n 1n 1• MOl\lrtll ,, t 4 $.t 1"5 IQ7 Toronto 11 11 1 .ft ISi 122 N.Y. ll•llfll"• 30 '' 1 f/f 1'6 123 lllff&IO '1 II .C 4' 144 ltl Dttrolt ,, ,, s J7 ,,. l" N. 'I'. lllM!dtll t 21 11 1t f1 1 J! VlllOOWW t 2S 1 U 10. ..., w..t Ol'ltM ......,... a t • tdl 111 11 CMtNo ' If • 1J .....-111 k "·. Wul1 ,, 1$ ' 41 11> 10'1 '"""' " • ' .,. "' I" M•-· ll it 'I " tn e )1,.:=:-It,. • I \,t \s; Getlfl"llit ' a • 21 "' 1n ....,, v.rr.:l :'T.'t.t1fllnlfe > ~·,~· . IMt;.'· ~ No~-.. .,,; LOI A,..i.ttt'MO,,,,':'" TOl'Of!IO .. '/lft(tl!IW Af1111t1 •t N .. Yer~ Ill"'"" Ml ........ 11.l#lll Pro Cage . Standings "''· ... .•a "'' .J•l "" Wrestling "' •• ,., "' '" •' .. ' •• " ·~· invttaticoal. Mission Viejo High's Bill Morrow was named wrestler of tbe aU.<Jay and night meet after defeating h i g b I y regarded Dane Muhlig of Newport Harb<r~ In the 147- pound championship finals. It was Muhllg's first loss of the eeuon and ?.forrow piMed three opponents to get to the finals . Six o1 the top etaht team finishers were Orange Olast area cootin&eots In. the 24- l«lm setup. Cti1"""" ,ln•t. t1 -YIM.l"'ll (FVJ dtc: a~ (CdM). J·l. 105 -S-1 CCdMJ dee Pl1t• 1!11) ... II• -ltfrft•11 (FYI dtf ThofnllOn fSA V•ll•Yl ..... t 122 -Cllrlt: (CdM) 4tc ClltYlt ($11.. V•lle'f) 44. 12' -Miiiar (l11J 111111'\fd Oodtl (El MOdlntl );11. l'f -Avltl (llllhoctl cite: Wllbw (El Mod•n•) ot. 1«> -WllM>l'I (fl ~I dtc: SCl!nlOtto (S1nf!t0ol ~. 1C7 -MQ#row IMh1ltn ~10) cite Mllhllt IHH) ,..,. 1'6 -Or•ptr !MlMlofl Vltlol dK 01•'1 ICdMl )-1. ,., -bl...+1 (co.ti Mtilll -WlnMr fll Mo!HMI I« 117 -Fotl'lr (Lot AU ll(nntd Mll!owk:kl IMIOflOlll l S:to. IH -Ovttort UlAJ plnntid Mtllory (Hll 1:•., , Hwt. -. Alb• CL• Am)Ooll dK ,.,., (CMI lU. (Ill'*""" ''"* f1-HOl'l'I• (Masl"'llol dk H'-'lec:I ((Ml U. lOl -Womtek IWMI folt 1"1111 lltAI S.1. lie -· Olllltrt !An!. Vl llly) dK $'-rt ICM) )4, 121 -Mlt~• Clot Amltotl dtc M111y 1111) w. 12, __.lt-~tl\ll IMB) Plllntcl Ctl1Pt1t (LQJ It• 1.llJ -M'6df1 CWMI M OrKVO (Mtilnoll•l 14. 1'6 -HIM IM ...... l•l die ~ (Ortflll) 2'1. 141 -,,,,......, (Wfn)' -YM'I ow.., ... , If, 111-NlrNltllfln IFV) 111111\H tlntoot '~:l ~·;..;. ~ .... , ""'*' ,.,..,., "''11 .. t" 1 -DfMs ~LQI ._.. rt fllf'ftlll ~ 1!"~ • IW"'J die Mortort !LAI Amlf!M 7•!. ttwt --Al.mtn ISA V~lfyl p!Mlt L1rtl11 ll'VI l :d . l'll'll'f korfl'IO? 1. ~-· dtl M•r '""'· '· l'ounl•!n V•H•Y llM !, l. ~Olll Mal IS11, .. El MOdtn1 JIOI, s. 1!1l1nc!1' tSl), t. Mlt&lot1 l•IO { .. Vil, 1.· M'tnll• ln\~I, •· Wttt• mnhttr ll'ICI • Am1tot lC.U, 10, JA V1l1ty (tel. FACTI FACT·! FACTI FACTI r Recreational boating is a $4 billion industry directly employing 500,000 persons, plus providing important support for thousands of other firms. Nd responsible government could conceivably think of seriously damaging an industry that has such a profound impact on our nation's economy and people. By far, the overwhelming percentage of recreation boals in the U.S. are small (average 16 feet) v.ith low horsepower engines (40 per cent under 20 horse- power)-NOT the large luxury yachts featured in fiction. When you spend the day boating v.ith your famil).I you probably are using LESS energy than ~you stayed at home. You're saving energy because you're not running several TVs or hi-fi's. The air conditioning or heat can be turned off. ~u're not burning lights. Your wife is not using the range; hair dryer, vacuum cleaner, or other energy consuming appliances. You're also not burning up fuel in your car shopping. visiting friends-or fuming in a freeway traffic jam. Boaling is a close-at-home sport for Southern Californians. You are jusl a short fuel·easy drive to many excellent water recreation areas. Boating is importanl to millions of Americans. And to America. It Is a healthy way for you and your family to get away from it all-and get Iogether. On top ol all t~is..boatll)JI can l\.ctually help you SAVE El'!ERGY. Tlilnlfabout it. • " ,. .. • .. " .. .. .. .. .. " ,, " " " to " " n .. .. .. ., " " " .. ,, • .. u " .. " " II ., • .. " " .. " • " ~ " .. " " " .. n .. .. " " ,. .. " ., " " " SI " .. " ~ ,, .. " " ., " .. ., " " " .. " " " .. " .. " " .. " • .. ~ • I O~LY PILOT Mond.u, Jani.IVY 14, 1"74 ·TONIGHT'S TV IDGHLIGHTS NBC 0 9:00 -"The Naked Runner." Frank Sinatra plays a busi.riess man who gets caught in espiona ge and Intrigue behind the Iton Curtain. --··I~ l\llk. fJ 9:00 -"From Russia \Yith .Lov.e." Sean Conneij' at his Ja1nes Bondian best in this action-packed 007 adventure, helping a beautiful Russian girl de fect to the West. ' CBS B 10:00 -Medical Center. When a not- ed woman sur~eon Dr. Gannon considers "knife happy" is appointed his superior, Gannon becomes upsel Rosemary Murphy guest stars. TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening JANUARY 15 Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES I lfoaotru Los Pob1a Mlpelito YalOts Sllow Movie: (Zin) .. Four Mottten" (com) '40-Lant Sl1ters. Cl1udt Rains. 1:30 0 (C) "h11k 111 the City" (dr1) '68-How1rd Duff, Lindi Cristi!. t:OO ID "Sm111(1er'1 bltnd" (adv) 'Sl -Jeff Chandler, EvtlYl'I tleyes. 9 '"C1nt1t Alt of M1rdtr" P1rt I (dla) '62-Richard Todd, 01nlell1 l'.a fJ (t) .,....I" (dr1) 'Sl -Tony Derr1eu1. CUrtia, Jantt Ltlf!I, Tori11 Th1tclltr. J:OO ([I (Cl "Tiit S,.nlP MUI" (alh) Ci! (I} "Tiie UHe,.... (mys) '43 '4~au! Henrtid, M1ureen O'H111. -8ar101r M1el.J111. O (C) "T\lt fMIJ FMIM(' (eom) It.ti CJ).,.,._. My a.., ..... 11 Me" ·~ndfl Dee, ~by Darill {111111) '48 -Da11 Dtilty, j J:JO 1J (C) "'T1m11 Sen ti 1""-• Gnble. (ldv) '62 -.lad: Mallont)', M1rt g ..,.,.., llanW" (wts) 'SG-O.n1. Jon Hall, Franca Unaford. 9 @ (Cl "ttl.tnlerpolnt" (dra) ll:Jt 0 "'T•im.t" (wa) .,2 _ Rici!· '68 -Cha1ltan Heston. Maximillla11 ~nl Di1. "fltH Ml11'1 (pa" (horl l 4:JO ~·~ n JOA.Iii Mstlnc «-tan Cl\11111, Jean P1rk1r. I (QJ ~J "'Htf• c...1 Mt, Jlr't111• U.• m "'Calrt 1114" (mJSJ '50--Etie (fan) .ti -Robert Monllomuy, fOrtmin. Uurtnct H1rt1J. E\'tjyll Keya. KOCE TELEVISION LOG J;OO Lew• T11111!1 (CJ "Tiit Str .... " A te•!tt ot It 111111 IMtrvcillfl proortln$ Wlltl pro11 Ltw Glt•ll'CI ll'ICI OOfl C•nd"f'. Jilt Mtlllllf Tlllflt• trew IC) "'1\ort OIW · P'*-" -T"9 lnlll'l!ltblt TPWlllJ.. ""''° t0l'Ktn!r1lt\ on dltMten! ttl*h ol i•rcltnl,,., •i• At MM ...... ,,., ICI Ltuon J1 ••°""" TMINl'f" -PlrdlOIOIY (-.. """4 .., Of, M•ll Ot111t•fi, 41• m.cMc (""'""' CCI TV'I Ill~ :',.... lol !Mdl Mtlc r-.dlfl!I •1• ..._ S...... !Cl Clllllhn'l ....... ft«fl .. Ilk ....... ... -•r• nt .,_ C----,..._. CCI ' i.... " ..,. ... ""' ,.., ,...,.. -,... .., tN ..., ...... ... ••11 """""""... "" .. ..,., "'"' .... .... rtfllM. •1111 .... 111111• .... ,...,,, • •1•1 fecw or.,.,. Ctvnlr !CJ "Loc1I !e~-HOfit Jim C..,.r 1)(Qlort1 tl'lt fo!'Klll of '"' tor 11\t ~r In 0••"'9• wltll 'l'ftlll fl,ltlh. 1:• Tiit O/'Mf C___. Clflltll IC) L11,0,, 41 ''Tldl 1tld Till T11t1" -5" Hflll'IO tocllr ., ';CIO D.m. ':M Olnttl"" A (CJ !'Ulllwr111, of Cilllorn!I CtrnJuMf" •• A ftt111 ~by' tM C t l lfor nl1 llflfverJl:v lllOWll'IO t!lll mMv opJIOrtunlt..-1 offtrM 1W lb lllM tlf'nll\M,. 11• ........ At Tiii I'• (C1 "M ,.•Miii',! wnn COit Porter"' - Thi ho1 IM tf1e4t """-' tuftll llllY Coi1 l"orter Mta. t1• -~!Cl t1• Al ~ leMnt IC) l.tttOll f7 "Gfou9 n.-...r" -... '°"' 11 (:CIO 11.111 IJtl mint. HELDOVERI l rd WIE K Funni•1I loYt Story of tl1• Y1•r - 'Very, V•rr , ... , ..... -Jfflrtl Crid Geor9f' Sefal "A TOUCH OF CLASS" IPGI ••• "THE NIGHT VISITOR" Starrl•t Trewor Howord Llw Ull••" WOllDER Or IT AU. "GllfAT NEW NATURE FllMFOR1974~ • ' ,,~ ·~· )l;,iJ FrN.al~l<m WI• R ~ •!Jblrl'Gl t Poe: t~il' llill;Jll!:! tr: i!1m "l!X LAST 2 DAYS MESA THEATRE COSTA MESA FAMILY TWIN CINEMA FOUNTAIN VALLEY Wttll:dayt-S:I0-7:00-1 :DI Sil. Sun.-1:00-l:OO.S:QG..7:11f.t :OI -. DmlPIClllD TillT UllTI II 11CIDf fiUlf mnrn llVlrutr! S.Hd on lhe controveral•I bOOlc that shattered conventional lheoti•• ot history an4 archt10/ogy By lbe Associated PrtSI Blllboard's hot hits for the week ending Jan. 12 as they appear in next week's lss of Billboard Magazine. -Barbra Strelsand Columbia 8. LIVING FOR THE CITY -Stevie Wonder !\1otown COUNTRY SINGLES 4. LEAVE ME"'ALONE - I. I LOVE -'!Vm T. Halt Helen Reddy Capitol Mercury s. SHOW AND TELL -All 2. JOLENE -DOiiy Parton \Vilson Bell \ RCA 6. LET ME BE THERE 3. HEY LORETI'A -Olivia Newton,John MCA Loretta L)'M MCA 7, THE MOST llEAUTIFUL 4. ONCE-YOU'VE HAD GIRi. Charlie R 0 c b THE BEST -George Jones Columbia Columbia 8. YOU 'RE SIXTEEN - 5. IF WE MAKE IT !lingo Capitol THROUGH-DEGEMBBR ·-9. Q'.S,__~ H E Merle Haggard Capitol STR A WBERRY PATCH Ot .. !flA,lll'lllMAtldH,~.t· " 0 l(JUN'll.ON ~Alll I . '· HILD OWl ll:I .. THI WAT WI Wiii .. IPGt llrtlN Slrtl ... IMI llMI 11......, ........ . a.fc')!!NI~ >,j•ll•'.I• "'""'~..nu II W"'.;o::,:;;;;,. """" " "l XICUTIVl ACTION" • ~-~·'"' -"lllfll .... MAN" IPGJ TOP SINGLES t. SHOW AND TELL -All Wilson Bell 9. LE'J' r,lE BE THERE -Olivia Newton -John MCA 10. LOVE'S THEME -Love UnJimlted Orchestra 20th Century G. THE LAST LOVE SONG WITH SALLY-Tony Orlando & Dawn Bell I ~~~~~~~~~~ -Hank Williams Jr. MGM IO. GOODBYE YELLOW )- 7. WORLD OF MAK E El J hn TOP LPs BELIEVE -Blll Anderson · ~l~~K ROAD -Ii" o 1. JIM CROCE -You Don't MCA '•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Ojl 2. THE JOKER -SLevt Miller Band Capitol Mess Around Wi.th Jim ABC 8. BIG GAME HUNTER -11 2. CA HPENTERS -The Buck Owens Capitol LIDO N>wroor 3. SMOKIN' IN THE BOYS' ROO~t -Brownsville Station Bell Singles, 1969-!973 A&!\, 9. t.OVE SONG -Anne 3 JIM CROCE I, Go l\furray Capitol BEACH 1HflA1"fl ''O llOO l~lf 4. l'VE GOT TO USE MY IMAGINATION -GI ad y s Knight & The Pips Buddah . ' -ve t 10. SONG & DANCE MAN a Name ABC 1" AJ\0 4. EL TON JOHN _ Goodbye -Jotmny Paycheck Columbia Yellow Brick Road MCA EASY LISTENING S. STEVE M1LLER BAND I. THE WAY WE WERE 5. YOU'RE SIXTEEN Ringo Capitol ' 6. TIME IN A BOT!'LE Jim Croce ABC -~e Joker Capitol 6. BEITE MIDLER _ Bette -Barbra Streisand Columbia l\Iidler Atlantic 2. LOVE'S THEME -Love 7. NElL DIAMOND Unlimited Orchestra 20th Jonathan Livingston Seagul Cc3~t~\fE IN A BO'M'LE _ 7. THE WAY WE WERE 'Godf atlier' Too Mucli Columbia • _:~~~~~~:.~:~!~~~~~~;,;~~~1 a. JOHN DENVER I-Jim Croce ABC Greatest ~lits RCA U.A. CITY ANO SOUTH (0.tiST CINl!'MAS-TUl!SOAY JOc 9. PAUL MCCARTNEY & tu.01•s AND ooLo•H AOl ll.S)-OPEN 'TIL t :eo P.M. WINGS -Band on the Run Capitol 10. Al.I CE COOPER - !\1uscle or Love \Varner Bros: ELNORA, N.Y. (AP) -A--------- "' state ruling caused th e ~~ removal or "God" from "God-' . father," but no infringement SY ' .~ ~ on religion was intended. The State Liquor Authority said the name of a new restaurant. "The Godfather," had "criminal" connotations and refused to grant a liquor license. With some costly l'diling, the posh Italian-American restaurant now is thriving - with a liquor license -under the name "The Father." ·~·eroTHer """· "' stsTer Moon· __ , -.<:..UL• CtN/OOMf 20 .•. "'-~..:....~~' -'I .. -•"<"'-• CINEDOME 21 :; ... ~.....'..'.:l'C:llJ:'.::J:Lol -'" t.<• STADIUM · I :.•; .. ~l.!.l>'-'•'.:J _, -.. STAOIUM·2 ..... ... ...A.!.lu ,._l_C.J,,L -• _,,..,_ .. S!AO/UM·4 ~::; '-..-.UW,•.L!!.hL' l'.• ' "rArlUON" IPGI WI• SltYI MtO..,ttn & Dinlln Ho!llNln • Walt DINtey'1 "ROllN HOOD" IGJ "AMERICAN GRAFFITI " .... "PETE 'N TILLIE" CPGI "THE MECHANIC" lrGI • "THE GODFATHEI" IPGI "SERPICO'' iRl' _, ... "IA.OGE 171" (RI "THE SEVl!N UPS" lrGI ... "STEELYARD ILUES" Ill Thi~ time the bullets are hitting pretty close to home! -~ fou .. 1.0.1~ v~ c::trI> OfllV f ,;;---I S....0-...ffWV ... --,_ ... ....., ·'51·1••1 c .... -.-11 ·----.......... Al.PACNJ. •11£111.::0~ MON.·FRI. 7:25-9:45 SAT. l 9\IN. FROll 12:<5 '. II . ' l•US ,..,_11~-·d ·~-.... 67'·160• ~ I . • Wiii« Mt.ltMu ''THE STIHOH • Rollertlt.....,_ I• C1lw (,.c;) W1HK M'1nuo ·--"THI • LAUGHING l"OLIC EMAH'" "LITTLli MU ltOEl S" EIHott hull! I ·~,~ 1.AUGtOHG • POLICEMAN,. -·~ "VANtSHIHG "'llHT" "SIL•HT RUNNING• •ot11 l11 Ctt.r ll'OI Cllffo.r- "COl"S AND lDaal:RS" • °""" 5tf.ll-Glendl 'Kit- • "A TOUCH 0, CLASS'" "LOVEftS & OTMEfl StllANOEllS" : at11t 111 Cohr ll"OI one iastwo,e.r :·•s DWCJ1ta1111rn ""• ... u~:,Fe~e Plus This outstanding Snort Sobiecr "NORMAN IOCKWILL" • 5fAll-IHG: l'IMOTH'f IOnoit.S. l.IHOSlYWAGMEl- JOKll llCll/K.""""-llQIHIYI OUMCll CO. fNl'-IMf Wlul1ya 7:I0-9:JO, S.t., .._, 1 ~i»S:S0-71»-9\Je Al.l!ltlAATISJ'S~ ITIWMI• •1111111 Mill II 1111 ll!A!t:!.tl'I ~SOWfJllllillll -····· =,J,,~§ 4" ........ -SAT. l SUN 1:»-t:15 7:15-10:00 1ua.umi I &$.M WIDMMtil't (I ) I'll.Ii • UllM mfl...,. U, THI UHDIOJ. {I I -.itl.CllllllttWL •• It._ ~CIP:IC TM•AT ... DlllV•·IM~ SUPER SWAPIEm HARIOl ll.VD.11<'"·"' ''-'·" '"'"···-10 "'"" OR AMO a D<l•o·t• t & l ftl.. s.t.6 l lM.-1-1• ''"" ,.,~,, .. ~11 ..... 11 ..... F•mHw Fun! ProHl1l ••r1•ln1 0•1.,.1 o\Mt 11#1 I J.. WHIN WOMIN HAD TAILS I ,tut , WHIN WOMIN PLATED DING DONG L"'t•lft l~t . ... , .. •-11 l l1..t010 CIJllY~ ...... --·---THI 5T1NO Pll CARIY TIU.TMINT 11'1 '"'"Diel• ,,.., .. _ ,, .. -~ ... t1 1 .... 1 g11.?411 HDlltl IO •lllftf llAlt?I" CU!llt WTWDCl9 • MAGNUM IOICI 1111 IAD MAN'S llVll 1,.I ...... -. !k. .. .:.. ... . Gt_, ..... . SJ4-UU ., ............... -···--5LllHll'lt COlD TUIKIY,.. 1--·· • • ...~1111.1-f& , , , &,. .. _,....._ 111.1•1 ---,...,....._ ~ THI AllNA 111 Pns 111 ·-.. _,, t1 ........ S4~·llll __ .,. msr11 """"' ' . -~­'Of~(ll ::~lit ---.. :?:' !. • l T ' - PUBLIC NOTICE PUlllJC NOTICE • " STAR GAZEE-1<.k. 1uPr1.01 ~J.,a:,;-o" .,,.. sur11101 ~J~ o" TH• No.~~::1::J::.O::te• ~ By·~ •v11.-tl.A""' ~ • '*-STATI Of! (ALl,OINl.A 'Olt STATI 0 111' CALlllOINIA fOll Tlill CITY COUNCii. O" fMS .....a..n.4 rv l'I TNI COUNtY Of' OltANH TH•coufll'TY °"I.OS ANOILl1 • CITY M lllVINe i:.. ~ Daily; · Jd. i:.. Utll,A, Mt. A·7$M4 • NO. Ill" ff7S NOTICE HiREllY IS GIV£N thtil ow di¥Jty Gu Uff J).~ NOTICI Of' MIMIN• Of' PETITION NOTICI Oil llfTWlf"rlON TO 111.L"" lollowl~ Pff"Wll Move b••n ArcerJlttg to'"• Sta,.. .. ,OR l"llOIATI OF COOICI\. TO Wlt.l RIAL rtOPlllTY AT r11VATl I ALI noml1111tM tor tlle offl« of Membtt .Jo d•v•lop messoge for T utsdoy, oq. '' IXICUTIO ON Sl,TaM••• ,., ''" lfl Ill* M•tttt of tilt e1t•t• 0( °' ,.,. ~Ol.H"!Cll ot l~..Clh' ol nacfWofdS· .......,.. ·-...-i.._:...;., l-17-2$.33" --CW illNrilll ...._ .. 1 0.~11. MAltl!ATHA-E:. CHILSON,-•IMi known lrvl,... to bf tlll«I If 1119 Otntrtl .f~·Zoc1'1·oc~rt":'.',~,~to .... ,.,... 1.,1UJ ''" Md DtolmW 11. lt12) ,TO •• MA.REATHA E. Kl.1,PE/tT. 11.0 M11nltll1•I Eltc:tlon to IN Mid In "" 1 -· 111 n *"" "lllVIOUILY AQMITTIO WILL known tl MAREATHA E, 1.AFFLER, CITY Of lrvl!lt on TueMliy, tilt ~111 G•W • -31 M'nl kn ,, u..M-~PIO DATID "'lllL .. Im 0.C••*· ol Mlrtll. 1tJ4. 2v-nu to! .. •2 ',,."::7' cxr. JJ Etltl• ol MARVEi. 8ERNICE OWEN, Nollet 11· Mrtby glvll'I ''"'· WblKI Vol• tor flv• IS) " ~ - -........ ' . 0.C.•Md. -' • -.. _. to-CORllrm•llM av fM .. •bo-tllltd JOHN-H • .JIURTOM ,_ '!:«.,<ii. AtOl>tt '3~ HOY.V NOTICE IS HERESY OIVliN 11\tl Suwlor Court._IM....J!fllltlllan"--•' GASRIELLE...G....1".AY_oR • ,._ _ _, •. ):fow._6l~-. -l &VERLY--ANN IRACKEN;-ho4tltd A"d"mWllr•IOf Of tilt .. , •. ,. ol E. RAY QUIGLEY, JR. 5W1• ,.3~~ .,.............. :¢: Mrtln ' Ptlltlon for prol:MI• ot cocljcU MARl!ATHA E. CH ILSON, Will Mii •t HENRY QUIGLEY •S.. ,,,. to wUI ·-Kultd on Stllltll'lbtr 24. 1m pl'IV•t• wt• ~ tllt Pllghfft •nd bt•I ARTHUR w. ANTHONY '•~--37~ 67~ SA&tn~llJi (but bt1r!1>9 dttH of DK.,,,btr 21. Ml blOOtt' on Jitbru•ry I, 1914, ., RICHARD 8. IOkkl Cl.ARK .._.._ 31 This 61 Boblft Hor. l~ -6\n ,,,, •nd Otctmbtr 21._lt11) to P'•~IOtnh> t:OO •. m .• or tlltr••ll•t wlthlfl lllt !Im• MARY ANN HOLOEN 9a-fwl 39~ 69TOllNw • Mmllftd WUI Attd Aprll 20. 1971, 11towtd bv l•w, on 111• ltrms •nd RO&ERT J. HOLMSTE OT 10r.rtonollty AO Ntw 70About DtC. JJ rtfff•nc• to which h mtdt for fllrtbtr tondlllon• !Mrt!n1n1r mtnllontd •ll rl~t. FRANKLIN$, HURD 11 s-.on.'1 .. , To 71 Ultlv 6-lS.21-31 111rtkul1rs, ll'IO !hit the flfl'ltl lttd l)lll<:t !Ult, 1!11;1 lnltrtll ot MA.REATHA JACK KISH 12Ti!U ..QDoy 72So.ok of hl•rl119 fllt tllmt ht• """ .. , e. CHll.s'oN, o:1ec .. wc1 •• , lllt thne-of OAVIO A. LOWE 13~ 400. 7JYow lor FtbrtHl'Y 5, lf14. 11 9:00 t .m •• Mr 0t1IPI •nd ell rl11l'lt, tlllt 1nd 1n11r111 c. 8. CAR L MORRl&ON l .. F'rlfinck 4'Arld 74Todoy lfl th• C011rtroom of D•!llrfmtrrt No. 11111 tllt ••t111 1111 1cqvlrtd In tddll!on MRS;" HAZEL 8, M'l'ERS l 5Atooctt A5You'"• 75And , 01 Uld court •• , XICI Civic Ctnltf lo 11111 ot dKt<t•nl ., Ille !Im• ol ROllEllT A. SMITH 16And MNOt 7611'1ttf'ftt Drive Wirt, •o tllt City of S.nt• An•, l'ltr 61•th, ff! tht r••I pl'OPtrty 6"crllled ROBERT .I. WEST -17T~ 41~ ?7Whtli C.lltornl1, '' lollowJJ Lot 73 of Tr•ct No. 6'3 C1rol J, Flynn 11To ... TW... 71Uo Ofiltd Jen. t, lt74 In tilt City ol LOf Atarnl!OI, Countv ' City Cltrlt of !Pit Cltv or lrvlnt 19f'°"" -490f 1 7'lfd.tt WILL IAM E. ST JOHN,, ot Or1n;t, Stolt of C11ifornl8, 81 ptr Publ1111td Of1nge Coe1t O•llY Pilot, 20~,.,. 50ht• IOYou TMoMA?r~o~='~oP:.... M•P fKOl"lltd ,,, !ook 20. '""' "Jtnu•l"'I' 7, IA,,,,, 51-.1• 21 Mokt 51 Y01Jr 11 AM RONALD H. l"lll!NNI• ol MIK1U1ntou' M•Pll Jn !ht Ollie• PIJBUC NOTICE 22Pior. 52~ llOf '1J Wt1t Ttiinl Strttt _ of fflt County R9COrcSllr ti .aid «Ml!llW• ol -~=,..;~==~~====-I .n Attd 53 1,,,.,. 13 bc;itlng ........... CltlfOIW• ""' Dtttffnl own• •n llndlvld«I on.tlllrO surl!:lllOll COURT Oii CALIFOllNIA 2' Ytt1'1 54 Ct a. FrloMd$ AllOl"'MY"J lor1 Pltll....,..l.llK.llMll lnltfld In Hid rNI pl'OPtffy, Tilt COUlfTY O" OIANGI 2!To 3S H.ami 15'"t--,-.,..,-or . ·c " 1 1 ••• ulldtr.1lgntd reorewnts tMt tno _oilier ~ c . N 111 =-.r1tn ... -' "·-~ .. T ,_, I.I • • •1181 otl DI 1¥" f' ....,, i-111lrd1 lnltr.51 llWV 8110 IN purclWl!ltd ... '"" r '"''"'"'" .56....,.""'""' --J.,'IUlrW 14, 11. 21, lt7• 131·14 ll\d tl'lt undenlgfled wlll turnhll Pl1l11lllff1): MARIAN A, LOPEZ ft~ ~~ g ~ PUBLIC NOTICE ~=";::i':.1 "99•Rlfllf 111' ollMr owners Otf.:;'.,!jant(1): JAMES HA l. S 0 ALE • 1 , 2'0f M$a1lditd 8'Dut Tiit HI il_.wt!l!tCLtoJ:!lmnt t!l!.•._ EDITH PAYNE WESTWEL.L. DOES I SlfT· 11 30 llond 60 Ntw 90~ ILJO.J.ttn coveli1nf1, cortdlflcilii, re 11 r r c~t (o n s , 10-xx, lnclullv• tO. __ , IV\ () 1115 svrllllOR COURT o" TMI! re .. rv111on1, rights, rlg1111 of w•v. •nd To Ille Detend•nH1I: .' \g/Goi:xi \8)Ad•cne Neu~ ITATI o " CAl.l(llOllNIA FOil etterntnl1 ot record. Any tntumbren<es A tlvll romplalnt I'll' bMl'I flled bY THI COUNTY of fKOl"d 1rt 10 lie ullsfhrd out of the pl1lntlffs eg•ln1t you. 11 you whh · Nt. A·=f10ltANOI! 1n. pi,orclMM! prlc•. Tiit l'.ll"QPllrl'f 11 lo defend lflll l•ws11lt, VOii mu1t Ille Ell1lt ot STEPHEN CHWAT tho lo bt $Old on 1n "If Is" llasll. txeepl In Thi$ court 8 wrllltn plt•dh\9 In BOATING Terrorist Lives Up To Name /' 'O©~~~-l£t.~S • knOWfl 11 STEFEN CHWAT 1 nd •1 lo tine.. resPOl'ISt lo tM compt•lnt (or • wrllftn STEPHEN HSVAT, 0tc1aled, Bld1 or offers •r• Invited for This or or•I plt1dl119, If • Justice Court) NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE"' lo the property •nd must bt In wrltlrig and wl!hlfl 30 d•ys Iller thl1 summonr; II t redllor1 of !ht •bovt n1mect dlctdent wilt bt rtc1lved •I the ofllc• of HAROLD served on 'IOU. 0 11".efwlt.e, vour dllf1ult 11111 •II ""'°"' hiving delms lll•ln.i G. AYER, JR., •!lornev tor .. Id 111111 IN lf!lertd on 1ppJlc111on b'I' lhl fht 1tld dtctdtl'll ''' rtqulrtd lo tli. Admlnlr;lr•lor et Suitt 205, 7860 Ml11!on plalntlfflsl •nd 11\e t'Ollrl m1v tl'ller lhtm,• With the ntefllll'Y voucheF'$, In C1nttf Court, Sin Diego, C11ltornl1 '2108, • lud9ment 'Sltlnst VOii for lhe 'T'{'l. fht-ottlc1-ot tl'!t derfl: of tfM -•bOVI ~ (1\() m-3575.-or mtV bt tlled or olllcr__tellel ftQ~s!~ JI!. ~!,j!l"'•"i' "iii - .tnlllltd CO\lrt, or to prtstnt them, with with the Clerk of wld Supel'lor Courl It Yot1 wish to stH 1119 -··ta • • Al Cassel's new and r e vo l u ti o nary One Ton Terrorist lived up to its name in the first two races of the Qne..ton Championship Series in St._Petersburg, Fla,_ over the weekend. Thal Intriguing W orcl Game with a Chuckle Ult.I ., ClAY' I. POllAN" l_.H_U_._D_.C..._Y......_.I t _ll'll_t .J· the 11tCtu.1ry V«itller1, to th• or delivered to MAROLD G. AYER. ltlomty 111 ttlll INltftr, you lllMMl!d .. " undllr1lgntd 11 IN L•w Offlc. of JR. PtfM>Mllv. •I 1ny tlmt 1ttti" tlr11 lll"Ofll9ftv M ltltl YoUt "-"llfll, 11 lflY, DURYEA , -RANDOLPH, M AL c 0 L M ' publlc•Jlotl ~ !his nollc• •nd btfor1 m•J ... _nlld _on_J!l'llt. DALY, Po5! Ofltct Boll 2110, Ntwpor! m8klr>g Miid Ille.--W. E. ST JOHN, Clerk Ile.ctr, Ctllfornl• '2663. which 11 the Tiit pr~rlv will bt aold lor c•sh B't' Mtrlon l.. Gr1ul, D1puty piece ot bullnes1 ol The undenlll!led ol\CI ltn perc1nt (l°';.) of lti.e 1mounl SEAL In 111 m11ltr1 plrt•lnlr"ICI to lht nt1te bid sh•ll 1ccompeny •n~ offer wltPI WEST •lld OlllARDI of Mid d«tdtnl, within lour month• Ille blll81'1Ct to tie Pllld on ton!lnn1t!on •. GOERGI tUCKLES elftr tilt tlr•I publlcttlon ol tPll• notlc•. of Milt by tllt SUPtrlor Court. T•••• 48 S. "'9MfM St .• Suitt IUt D•IMI Jen. 10, lt74. shill bt ·ororated •I ot ttie d1te of Los An91ln. C1. totl7 FRANK RE1ll.Y contlrm•llon of ult bw tllt Superior (21il 621-4611 EXKUlor of tllt•W!ll et Court. Ex•ml1111tlon of tltle, reeordln11 P~bllshed Or•llll' cont Dfllty Pilot, the •bove n1mtd cltt«ltnt of comrty1nc:e, lr•nsler l••t•. •nd •n'f Dec1trnber 31, 1'7) •nd J•l'IUlllY .7. 11, OU•YIA, ll:ANOOlrM, lllle insur1nc:e POiley allall be et Ille 21, 1971 . 3929-73 MAI.CALM DALY ~PtflW of the 1111r'eh1ser or pu1"1:1\11er1. PUBIJC NOTICE '"' Offltt •ell 2110 Tht IHl<Mrllvlltd rtm-ves tl'Ht right, ___ :__:==::;:,:,:c:.:=::.... ___ 1 N•"'*' lfftll. C•Nforail fUQ lo rtlKI eny end •II bids prior 101 • SLr·U• 17141 &»-Ont tnlr'f of •11 or<llf confirming tnt salt . Allom1y1 .... I X""'9r DATED: J1nu1ry 2. 1t7C. surEl:IOI COURY Of' THI! Publllhtd °''"'' C···· Doll' Pi'., FELTON M. BRATCHER STA.Tl! OF CAL.tFO•NIA FO• .,.. "" THE COUNTY OF oauGI J•m.tln' 14, 21, 2,, .tl'ld Ftbrutry 4, II AdmJfllltr1tor of lh8 E1t1lt NO. A·nttS In the first round-the-buoys race on-Tampa-Bay Saturday. Terrorist finished seventh, but came back in the long ocean race Sunday to beat the field by more than a mile. Terrorist was designed by Bruce King of Newport Beach and built of aluminum by Sparcraft, a Costa Mesa ftrm oiyne<I by CasS<I. • ~_,,..P_O,__R .,,,o_oT--11 i I I I• I Olpital punishment Is what . . . . you get in the -market. 1974 12'-14 of 1119 •bOvt-n•mecl Decedent E1tatt of GRACE s. KE ITH, •ISO HAROLD G. AYER, JR., kOONn •S GRACE THOMPSON KEITH, Attornw IOI' Admlnlslr1!0f' OeceiH<T PUBUC NOTICE HAllOLD 0, AYIR, JR. NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN to ttM 1------------="I t::1:T.:!.i~ 1111 Court trldltor•-of the •bov.._111med...dectdt.0t INSfEAD OF A KEEL, Terrorist has two bilge boards that can be extended when sailing-to weather or retracted ..----------. ',.,., , .. Otlleft) I TEKNAR I flCTITIOUS IUSINl!SS Stfl DI .... c.U:...: •. n1N lh•I an perlQM h•vlng da1ms against NAMI STATl!MINT Ttl•hMt 1714) :ttt4$7J tht self decteltnt •re required to 1111 ~sailing--downwind. I ts ballast consists of several hundred powids of lead poured under the cabin sole. ....... I --.1---.1.,.' ""1--.lr-i e c-'""' ,,,. "'"k'" _ ... by filUo• In !he ml•ng WO<d ...__.._..__.__._.._. you d.vtilop from step No. 3 b.low,. Tiit foll-tl'ltm, ...-Ith the ntee1$ll'Y vouthers, 111 PlfaOM •r• doing tMISI-Atlenit'i' fW Adnfflllttr•ttr tllt ofttce of tl'lt d erti; of 1he •riov. l'llJ5 81: · Put>l lshed Ore1>9e Cbt$f Dlll'i' Ptlol, I • ' ,.. "' THE HALL TREE, Sl21/a Twtnly.nlnlll Jan~•rv 14, lS. 21, 1914 76-11 ~fl ~~e:::, or ~IJtlf! to''"":::. Wun- St., NtwpOt"f l1M;11, C1lll. '2"60 dtrlfl!Md •I Robert~, HOW$8f & L•rry Edwlrd Hill. H02 OflHI Cir., PUBLIC NOTICE Gertll'ICI Attorn1ys 11 law 4340 C•mpw Two more races remain in the 0 n e -t o n Championship with Terrori'l holding a lhree- point lead. ' • PR~~·s~~~~~s LETTERS IN i' r ' I' 14 1$ I Hun!ll"l{llon Bt•cta, C•llf, n646 ' ' C•rolvn M1rl1 Hill 9602 onwt Cl Orlve. P.O. SOx 2701, Newporl 8e1cl'l. Hu11Tlngton Sffch. c.i11 tu"6 r., tlW C1tlfo~t• '2663, which 11 !ht pilel' Tiii " NOTICI! TO ClllOITOll$ ol bus111n1 of the undet"ilgfled ln •II lndlv~u~lhMll ll tondllCltd by In 01< IUU( TRAHSfl!ll mllle<'I ~1lnl119 lo tfM tstatt of .. UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lfTTfRS TO GEl.ANSWE~ I I I I I I C••olYn M. Hiii ANO 0" INTENTION TO TIUNSllEll 1ald decedent, wttPlln lour months 11ter Thl1 l lli.mtnl Wll filed wllh tht At.COHOLIC llVl!RAGE LICENSEllJ lto.e first publlc1tlon of ltlb rioliCI. ' ' '•·-• -c cs.a. •111 ... 111 u.c.c. •rod/w 24fn a&l"l oa1ec1 Dec u. 19n 111,1n y ,..,.~ of ...,,ngt O!.lnty °" NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN to ELlzABf::TH McSHERRY SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700 J•no.1.try ll, lf14. Ille Crldllor1 ot: Alt.EN R. -MUSE Eleculrl• ot the WHI of ....... Ind MAR YLEE MUSE, Tr1n1ftror •nd lllt 1bovt nlmed deeedenl Putlltsftld Or.nge CO.it DlllY PHol o J811\18fY 14, 21, 21, ll'ICI flbnlll"V 4' Llctnitll, Wiiow buslM$1 addreu Is 1125 ROIERT10N, HOWSill & GARU.N After the One-tons, Terrorist wilt remain in Florida for the si1-race Southern O c e a n Racing Circuit when it gets under way Feb. 1. PUBIJC NOTICE 1974 132'7.i ~:,~• o~'·O::,,:" i~Zte 01ot '~':in:::; ~m=~~~lli.mi. lhlf • bl.Ilk tr•Mle~, Is •bout to bt Tel: Me.-5400 PUBLIC NOTICE maGI lo ,JOHN EDWARD PETER.SO)\! Attei"MYI for ElKutl1• 1--------------(•nd VEVA JOY PETERSON, Tr•nstertt TPublllhed Or•f'llle Cotst 01Uy Pllot,1------------- flCTITlotJS •us1N•1s •nd lnlt'nded Tr•nsffrtt, wllMt buslflffl DK. Jl. 1t13,. J111. J, 14, 21, 1974 :mJ..73 NOTICl TO CONTRACTOllS NAMI STATEMENT eddres1 Is t121 Regattl Or., Jn the CALLING FOR llOS Tilt lollawlng .,.,_ .... doing City ol Hllflllngfol't Bead!, County ot PUBUC NOTICE school 0 I s l r I c I : NEWPORT-MESA bllllneu 61: Or•noe. $1•1• ot C•llfomi•, SLl"·m UNIFIEO SCHOOL OlSTR ICT VAP BRAKE SEIVICE, 1 t ltl6 Tiie praper'lv b Qtsef'il)td Jn g-ral NOTICI! TO C•IDITORS Bld Del411ne: 11 :00 O't lock 1.m. on A COHVtNIDn SHOPPING ANO flrWINC GIJK>( fOll: THE 9rookhur~ St .• Hu11!1ngton Btttl\, C.HI. e•: All mi<k In !ride, fht!Urfl, tqUfpmerit sur1110• COURT OF TMI! the 22nd da'f of J•nu1ry, 197'-'2"7 Ind 900d will ot • ttrtaln beer b!Jr STATE OF CALIFO•NIA FOR Place ot Bid Receipt: 1151· Pltcenll• VHl1gt Allfo P•rtt, Inc. CA C11ltornlt business known IS THE KEG alld located THE COUNTY .011.-0•ANOE Avtnue, Costa Me$1. C•Ufornl•. COJ"POr•"on), 1903I llrookhurit, Hun!· •I 1125 Vldorl• Sl~!!I! , II} _.tl!_e _ <;IJ't' , , , . _ . • " " .. o , A-ml+·-·-•.... -· Proltd. ldenllllullon H1n1t: -Compvltr •ir!gton ·tttm; C.111:-·m.rr· · · ·' · · ·· · of ·C~lll 'Mft"a;"'C"cMiritv Of Ofen~. ~tale Estate of LEONARD c. GRAVES, Room, Air Condllfonll!f. '1:" ~~-9!-t J!i,E ~~- Tl'lls bullMll I• eonducled by 1 o1 C11ilor1111, •lid 1r1risl•r 1118 following Oece•ff<I Pl•c• Plans •r• on Flle: 1151 Pl1tfllll• corpor•llon. alcol'oollt btve<'1gt lltefllt lor llceme1): NOT1cE IS HEREBY GIVEN to lhl Avenue, Coste Mn.I, C1lllornl1. For· an Id Jn Wom1~·1 ~·orld ., VllltOt Auto P1rts, lf'IC. On-Siie Gtner•I Liquor UctMt Number freGL!ort Qi the ibOW ntmecl dlftdlrot NOT ICE IS HER'ESY GIVEN ·fll•I J11TM1 ArllOid, Prnldtnt 4G..S.UU, "°""" lsslllld lo 1Wtmlses loc"ed Illa! •11 Otf&onS 111'11"9 et.Tms tp1111t the •bove named" School OIJlrlct of Thl1 ll•femtftf w11 llltd with ltll •' 1125 Vlctoril Streit. Cost• Meu, lht uld dt<:t<ler.t trt rtQUlred to filt Or1nge County, C.llfornl1, •ding by COUfltv Cl1rk of Or•l'lll• COlltlly on C1 .. ror tN ll'"etnlMt loc•ted •I 112:S them witl'I tllt l'MCtlll"f vouthit"' tn •nd thrqh lh (1owrnl1111 Board, Jat1u.ry 11, 111" Vldorl• Strtet In IM Clt'i' of Coste fht 'otflct of the dri of 1f1e tbOVt Mrtln11ter r1ferrld t11 II "DISTRICT/' Coll Mory Beth A Happy Time 642-5678, ""'· 330 Crochet Swirl! "'*" Mew, C1111nty ot Or•nge, Stilt of tnfl"ecl tour!, or lo present ttMm, wltll wlll rtc11lve uo to, tlUf !IOI l•ter lll1n l"ublli.hed Or•t!Ot Cots! Dilly Pllgl, C•llfornl•. lllt nectu.1ry YOOtheri, to ttle-Ufl-!ht 11bove 1laltd tlmt, lffled bids for TIM J1nu1ry 14, 21, 21. tnd Feotuerv 4. Thi! ll'M •mount of P11rch111 prkl derslgned 11 Ill• L•w Offkt of Hall •ward of e tof\lr•c:I tor UM •lllW• \974 1n.14 or constdtr•tlon In connection ""''II wld seerev, 366 Sin Mlguel o r., N""'°" proJl'Cf. 91.76 .SIZES I0~-20~ r.., 1lf,..;-11T,,.r ... HAVE A HAPPY TIME at lttnebtoiw, le c tures, parties, where~ you go in thla iklm:mtr wttb princess !Wt tlial pWt lntmstlngly atthOmp. ' Prtni.d i\attem MTS: H.'1! Sizet 'lllli. •1210, 1411. 1611, 1811. !20\I. Size 1411 (bolt 37) taket 2 318 yirds 54-lnch. llEVENTlM!1Til Ol:NT8 .fl)i'' -po~ -add 25 centa tor tad'I pattern for Air Mall and Speclt.l H.and-linl: other.wlse thlrd-cla.is deJfyery will talm three weeks or mpre. Send: to Marian Martln; tlw DAILY l'JUl!, 142, -[)ept., 232 west 18th St. New Yori<, N.Y 10011. Prl·nt NAME, ADPllESI wlth ZIP, llZE and ll'l'U: SEE MORE Quick Fuhiona and chooM one Plltem free from -=-=~.Catalog. All !Nlfl'f:l SEWING BOOK .... ~ • .,,.., torNJ11oW. $1. JNSTAN'F FASHION BOOK R-ol -lactt.$1. 7234 !------------=-~ lr•mfer o1 stld llceni.e (or llctnr.e~) BMttl. C•llf., which il the p11t• of Bld1 111111· bt recelvM In Ille pl•ee PUBIJC NOTICE-•nd said busttMSs. lnc:l~lrig Ille ••rlmettd bullrltSS ol Ille undersl11ntd In •11 rn1tt11r1 ldtnflnld .OOV• •nd UMH bt osiened •nd ~~ •• ~~ ot~ht ~j'Dwt~: Slt,25G.OO, pert1ln!119 to lllt n t•I• of uid dKede~I, publkly rel4 •louel •I th• 1bovt 1tlled !------,-,..,.=,,.------Cllttk c 1111 Cllttk $1 000 00 within tour montri1 tfler IM llrll JHJblic•· tlmt llnd plate. ILl"·1.,,. rmrnl~ • ..! ,!~ dem•nd not.I ,;,,bi, Tlon of 11111 nollct. There wlll bl 1 N.,t, deooslt required ,ICTITIOUS •IJllNE'IS I -' ' 01ted Dec. 24, 197l for Heh set of bid documtnts lo MAMl!STAYIMl!NT ,, t~lll ll'lr o uvll ••trow , MARGARETM.GRAVES qu.a rinlet the retur)t in good tondlllon TIM followlng ptf'SOfl 11 dol119 blnlttess T lofT~:·.. -I I '' I ... ,2.SO.!' E•Kulrl• ol Ille Wiii wltllln N-A d•w• •fl•t the bid ooininv 11: •nv coer., ns • min "° e m of the •bov• n•rned d1eMent d 1 JOY co., 402 Vl•t• Sutrt1, Newport T t•vlo;;.ot Ulle'.:... A ""I ... u.~.oo MALL S•ILE'Y ee!<h llld must ~m •rid bt Bttch, C•U'. '2661t •nv prope,., swm,., on ui ex 11 1'111 :au SH Mfloll Of". nts110111lve to tlM """"'° 11oc11merit1. Rlt• Mtrll TllomPSOn. MJ2 Vi1t1 ~:=-~~· tvldtnctd .. DY ,:'.::!!~ N..,.,t IHtll. C•llf, nut E1th llld: sh•ll bt tctompllnlecl by Suert., Ntwoort 9"1<.l'l. C•lll, f2'60 llSC1'0W -·"" {714) MWSOI the $.eCllfltv referred ·10 In ftM conlrtcl Tllll bl.lslntu b conduc:ltd bY •n All otller bu1!11tu n1mes •nd l<klrtlll$ AlflrM'f for lxtwtrhr documents 800 bY !ht nst of ProooHCI 1ncUvldu•1. used bY ftM Tr•n1feror wllhln fllree Publllhtd Or•nv-Cet1sl 01Uy Piiot, subeonlr•ctor" Rlt• M. Tholl'\otorl . ye8rl l1sl pest W far II krlown to OeclmtMI" 31, 1973. J•nutrv 1, 14, 21, Mr. JltneS M. Heistand, Olr«lor, Thi• 1l11tmc11t wn tlltd wltl'I fht ";h~t'7'~':. flortt, reed belwell 1974 39'2t7J ·sclloOI F•dlltlfl, Milln1en1nce •nil Optr•· C1111nty Cl•rk of 01"1119• Cou11ty on u n •II n • tloni. will meet with tl\oSI ptrlonS J1nu1rv io 1•1•· w1d uc""" •lid inttnded jr•mterON PUBIJC NOTICE in11rt1te<1 In tour1nv llM llt• '' . ' · •• ,..qull'td by Ste. 2407' of 1118 ButlnHs f'IMD •l'ld Prof'Hllons • Codt thll t Pl e 1157 Pl1centl1 Avenue (01!1 Proo:n slnol, Pvblllhed Or•no-Cout Dtlty l"ltot con•ldtr'itlon for lllt tr~Mfe~ of said loc11ec1 11 Cosll Mist, Cellfornl•, ti Jt11u1ry II, 21, :21 Ind Ftbr1111ry 4, builrMU llld trinslt:r of said license SUPIRIOR COUIT 011' TH!' lll:Dlt •.m., J1nU1ry 17, 1'7'- 1974 130-7( Is lo bt P•kl onl'f Iller uld transl•r STATE 01" ClLll'ORNIA Tiit OISTR ICT rtsf!'VIS tfM right to h11 btefl •pprvnd by uld Plpertment FO• THE COUNTY OI' OllANGI!: ll!fect en'f or all bids or to w1lve PUBLIC NOTICE ol #.lcohollc ltVtl'tQt COlltrol Ho. nm •nY lrregularltles or lnforma111!11 In 1--------'-----Th1t 8 Mlt, tr1nsi.r Ind ' ISllOnment ORDER TO $.HOW CAUSE FOR. CHANGE •nv bids or fn lhoe bidding. o1 tht 1forntld 1tock lfl trldt nKtures OF NA.ME The DISTRICT ll•S determll!ed lhe SLl"·MtU 1q11!pr'M!'lf 1nd good will of uld bvslnes; AOOllt•tfon of MARY H.vM\ YAEGER, 11-ral pre:velllno rtte ot per diem lllCTIYIDUS tUllN•ss wlH IN mldo, •rid flM conskler•tlon For clllmot of l'llfl'la. waatt tn the lotllltv In Whldr ll'le NAM.I! STATEMINT ttiertfor together witll llM tom.ldf<'8llon WHEREAS, MARY HA.MM YAEGER, work 11 to be pertorm&d for e~h Tiit tollowlno ptnOnl ,,.. dolng ror Ill• tr1mflf •nd •lllonment of Plllllontr, ll•s filed • P•lltlon wltll cr•ff or tv1H' of workman Meded to bllllrMSS ••: tM •lorts1ld UctnH (or lltinwl) II !ht Cltrk ol th!s C1111rt IOI' •n order ••ecul• the conlncl. Thes.e r•lfl Ire ' JAV OR llLING. J6t Sin Mlgutl to bt conwmm•ltd on or 1tt.r !ht ch•nolrig Petltloner'1 lllmt from MARV:' l!lec''r la51 Pl1et11ll•11~vtnue, COll1• Or., Sit, 105, Newport 8ffth, (1111. lttll day of Fltll"W•r"I'• 1914, 1t thl HAMM YAEGER, to MARY HAMM A ~ 0P1fll :s: ~1=11111111 0::.''!!!4i'eci l'IJBLIC NOTICE '2660 HC:row deplrtment of PROFESSIONAL CROWTMERS. ~ .... v g ,....., Community Con•u"•"'• Corpor•tlon. ESCROW SERVICES, •t 17332 lrvitte IT 15 OR DERED, fll•I '" ptrMinS •1 '"'fob 11!•· • C11!fornlt corpor1t1on. 3ff S.11 Mlll\tli llV'd., Jn tN City of Tustin, County lnttfnted In !ht 1bow-tntllltd m•lf•r Tiie foreo/llnv K!ledult ~ plr dltm Dr., Suitt • 105, NtwpOl'f a..cta, of Orenoe. Sl•I• of CaUfoml•, provided •POt•r btfonl tnls Courl •I 2:00 o.m. w~ ts tteed uPQn • orkl'P!I d•Y C1llfornl1 '2660 lhll t11t Ofotrtment of Altollo1it on Ille 26111 d8Y of F•bru•l'Y1 1974. ot tlglll (9) hours. TIM rlt tor holld1y John A. Vtrtvllo. ... o . Sox 5"" l;enc:ho BtWl'lfill c onirol II•• •ppr11'ft<t wld 1n tl'lt Couf'irOQm ol Dep1rtment 3 m •nd overtlmt wort 111111 at le11t S.nt• Ft, C1Ulornt1 tr•mle<' of ..rd: lletnW. lhl Courthou1• bl.llldlng loclte<I •f 700 11,,.,. 111C1 one-hllf. This bullnH• is btlng rondudtd by Oiied Jin1,11ry t, 1974 Clvk C.nle<' Orlve Wnt. City of San!1 11 WU be m1nd•lorv tipon tht CON· 8 tolnt Vf!'lhlr. co-p1rt""™'IP. Allen R. MUii' An1, Countv of Or•not• Sl•lt ol TRACTOR to whom lfle conlrect 11 JAV DRILLING Tr•nsferor tnd Llctnstt C•lllornl1, •nd si-CIUH, II •nw, 1war0ec1, •nd upon 1ny s\lbcontr.ctor Iv: Cornmu11lty Con1ult1nts Corp. M•rvln Muse wily the Petition 1or Cilln9' of N•me lltldtr lllm, to ptY n.of le11 than the l ui1 E. Hine. Presldenl Trtl!Sf«or" •'Id l !un11t slloukl not be 11r1nlecl. w1d soecllltd r1tts to all workmen Thlt llllttntnl llltd wttll the County Johll EdwJlrd Peltnlln IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, 11111 1moloyed by t11t:m In tht txfClll!on Cl.nt of Or•• County on: JMlu~ry Vev• Joy Pllerson a CGP'f of Thl1 Ofdlr lo Show C•Ull' ot f11t conl111ct. 10, 1974 WILLIAM I". ST .tOHN, COUNTY Trtntftfei •lid 1nttncled IN pulllllhtd In 111 • Dall't' Piiot No bidder may wlttldraw his bid for CLll;I(, bV l1tty J. ltrtslt:n, Dtoutv. Tr1risftrn NfWIOl!Ptf, • ntWf,peptr of gtntr•I • Ptflod of lt>rty..fl 'lfl (AS) dav1 •lier f'JNM rllOllllSSIOltAL E'SCllOW $E'ltVICll tlrtul•llon printed ln the County of the d•lt HI for Ille openh'IV ol bids .. l"l.lbHlllld Dr•no~ Cotst Dally Piiot P.O .... "' Orenge, Slate ol C•tlfornl•, on'' • A payment bond 1nd 1 ptrl"Ol'm•nc:• J111111ry lo&, 21. :rt, •nd Ftbruery 4, Tustlll. C•l"tonll• n• week for tour (4) tOl'IWCllllve Wteks. bOnd will be required prior to 1xecvtlon lt74 131·74 iKl"9W Ne. 14-4022.s prlor lo the d1te of hMrlno ot lhe ot the conlr•d. Tiit p11vment borld Puttllllled Or•l'l9• Coast 0811y Piiot P11t1t1on. 1noU bf In tllt 1orm set 'forth In Janutrv 14. 1914 131·74 D.atld: J1n1.1ltl'y lit, 1974· tlM eontr•d documents. FRANK DOMENICH1NI Gowrnl~ 811trd ------;~;:;;------1-~=P~UB~IJ~C~N~OTl~~CE~~~-I Jurfll• of 1118 SUotrlor Court 9y Oorotl'IV M1rwv FlslMr Whirl out lo parties ln a SLl"·Mllt lltlllt1'L, H•mpllrtYI Publlihl!d Orenge C011t D•llY Piiot lo · swirl .r.a NOTICI 01' SAL• Of' •EAL Altwfley et Uw J gay, g r1ous IJIUrt. lllCTITIOUS IUSINhS \ l'ROP••TY AT "RIVI.Tl SALE' ,,.. AtlllM "'""""'· s-. * enlltrY 7 •lid,,, tt7• S.-74 It's the swirl skirt NA.Ml ITAT•Ml!lfT N•. m.. Colt• Mew, C•llfwlll• mu fashion's newest! Crochet •• ~ ... fdlowl1>9 ptrwon I• dolno bul\l'llQ SVINf1tr C1111rt el '"' TlltplleM m•l ....,,. PUBLIC N~CE U to ti S11te tf C•llfenllt fw AlfenMY fw l"etl"tMI' 1-------------eas Y, one co r at a me. MAlllNERS CONSTAUCTION COM-ttM c-ty of LOI Allltltl PullllWMCt 0rMgt CotJI 01lty l"llol, Use worsted in a 3-color rANY; lntl trvlne llV'd .. lull• 111, 11'1 tlM M•tltl' of the Est•tr• of STEVE J1nu•ry 14, 21. 21 •nd FIDnNlry" 191'-FICTITIOUS IUSINISI combination. Pattem 7234: Tu•llrl, C.UI. nao N. CHOltAI(, DKt•ted· ,,,.,. NAM• STATl!Mll!NT Jltll: 0. L0Vlt1 1417 MtrlM!'I Ori..... Nollet 11 Mrtby given 11111 the TM following lltf"IOlt II doing bl.lslntu directions, sizes S.lB incl. Newoort tNcll. C•lll. n..o \lfldtr\l "'° 1 •s: SEVENTY .nvg CEN!'S Th!t llUSIMll le IN!nt conducted by OI\ .,. g •fftr W:::. ':Ji' ~y P~f''J:n::;: PUBIJC NOTICE IRlllGATION ANAi. YSt!/SERVICE ,for each pattern _ add 25 •n lndlvtctutl. 1974, •I .ttle office 01 H•nn• •nd Morfrtfl, COMPAN'I', 690 "A" C1ntw St., Cost• .l•ck O. L.ovlt J•mn f'tvl" t.owtt, 523 w. ,,11 St., SL,.-1.-11 Meu. ca111. m21 centa ft>r each pattem. !or Tht1 1l1ftmtflt llltd with tl!I, County stt. 112., l OJ Al'lfil'll• 90014, County surE•to• COURT Oii TH• Cll•rln Murray aoxold, 690 "A" Air Mail a.nd Special Han-Cltfk Of °'""' County orr. .1•-rr of t.os ;. ,. 9 •I• •• S••I• ot C11tlornla STAT!' 011 CAl.lfOllNIA ,Oil C•nltr St., Cost• Mita. C•llf. 92'27 dllng; otherwise thlrd-class '· 1t7" to lllt ft!Ohif,t Ind btlll bl&ler and THI COUNTY 011 Oft.ANll• This bt/sll'llU 11 c;onducltd bY .,. dell~..., will take three r111111·thtd °""* Coett DIHY ':r~' •lll>ltet to toftllrn11tlon tl'f ••Id sUiierior OllDE'I ~ ::oS:: CAUS• lndlvldll~~''" M eoxord ·-· J 1 'Court. •II Ille rltPlt, tlttt •l'ICf lnltrest 1 ... ..... ....... NIEC OEAN . weeks or more. Stnd to •nuery 1, 4. 11 • ., 1971 q .7, of MW dKNsld •I tht tlmt ol IH•ll'I n '"' m1,..., "' ""' Ttrll •t•ltf!lll'lt wes flltcl wit!\ 111~ Alice Brooks, the ~An."" and •11 tfM tol!t title Ind 1111 t SATRE. •llO k-II DANIEi. DEAN C:OU11ty Clerk of Dr•11v• County on 'I.I .... PUBIJC NOTICE tlltt "" "''~ oi Nld clKN!ltd ·r::. 9RANTI.EY, •M LAURA ANN SATRE, Dee. 27, 197). fILQT, 105, Needlecraft I od" '' I I , .. -.~ 1110 k-11 LAURA .l.NN BRANTLEY, , .... Dept., Box 163, Old Q.e1'ea ~~ r fllll'I ':'rTn on.:011: ortoo 1~f'!; Petltlor.tr1, Fcic.....c.1'11119' OI Nern• l"ubll111ed Ora~• Coast 01nr Piiot Statton, New York. N.Y. IUPll\tOI: c:ouaT OP c.lLl"HNIA wld dtc:Hwcl ,1 the 11,,,. o1 dtllll WMrH1 o~DEAN SATRE tnd J111u•l'Y 1.14, 21, 21. ,,,, .a.14 lOOU. Prlnt N I~ '°'"'"' OP ...... In I nd to .11 • ltlfl c1rt•l11 '11•1 prtlptrtV LAURA ANN, ~sATllE, Ptllflentn. ti . amt. -~ ... A1Dtt _ llllulft In tfM County of Oren,., Sl•ft llusbend Ind wife, CMr the IO' ol PUBLIC NOTICE Zip; Patten Nmnbei'. ,-OftDllt TO SNOW CAUS• OI C.IUoml•,~ partlcutarly dtKt"lbtd 11 elqllteen y11rs, htv• fllld •n 1Pf)llc•llon•1--------------I .NEED LECRAFt '72!. In the MltMf" of tN ~lt•flOfl oftoll-91).wtl: wltl'I tilt clttk ol this Couff fOf 111 •lat Crochet lcntt tc. no-. CL.AUD• IMMETI LINOSIY for CMl'lte Loi 44 lloc.~ ~ of Tr.ct No. 121. 'mU!r cl'l•nolno ttMl r MIMS from DANIEL SU,l!lllOll COUllT 0' TM• • • e .... '".... of N•mt. '" tllt City of San Cl•""'"''· 15 OEAN SA.TIE ~ L.AUAA, ANM SATRE ITATW °"' CAll,O.NIA FOR dlrccUons, soc. !¥"JltEAS-a.AUDI b\MllTI LINO. tM lfttP fht...ot recordtd''"in '°" lo DANIEL OE'AN SRANTLEY Ind THC COUNTY Of! Ott;.NO• fMtut Ma«am8 Bol.t. Sl!Y '"""°"" tin flM pttltl ltl! 24. 11 "~ 4t to Ill lnclut!ve ot I.AURA ANN 81lANTLEY1 H" A•1tW Buie, taJIC;Y knots, -pat-ll'lt Cleft; of ftii1 c_, 1fOI' lnon :O.r mlltllllntCM ~ r~I Of Ori~ 1rJ:,_:!c. ~O:i!E~~tlr.!t ':::': HOTICE' -o, tllAlllNG Oft rlTITION fl 00. chll'IOl'lf the M'lltlolllr' fr C'...,..,ty, I ,Oil r•o•ATI: 0' WIU ANO 110• lenJll. .... CL.AUD• !'MMITT L.INO~l~CHRj;. Slkl ,.., JW'OPlflY II • V8tlf!I lot 1PP):~l:lef~I 1~11 1~.;:'rt,•t ~m:;; llTTlllS TESTAME'NTA•Y ...... t (INelael lloet' -TOl"HI!• t:DWARD l.INDSIYJ IT IS OR· on !oct d• I• PllYI t11 !ht City r of t!lt u6,11"9'' CDUntY S~lor C9111'1, E1talt of ARTH\11. T, STRJIHOllN, Learn ~by plctu.l'Cll Pal· 01.RWO..., ... ,.,,.,.,. ,,...,.,.., lfl tM ;'.,~~ c;."":;';'c •• 11 In l•wtu• IMMY IOClltd II 1'00 Civic C.11ter Ori,,. WM!. °:6i-~E IS HEREBY GIVEN th•f ~ ~(9.~ __ ..,.,,,....... IMttw ..,...,. ~ tflll Of tf11 Unn.11 St1tn on COfl!lrrn•llon S.111• A.I'll, C.llfornl•, tflll lftOW CtUM, lot L. Slr•trorn flt•' 1111111 1Mrt111 ~ ~ liitallt Olft"lJeOll: Court• ,..._,., t. lf74 • ., 2:00 l'.M:. Ill of ult. °' "'' c•11\ 111\d-bl!frw;• ll ....,, wfly lM .-ic.ilOfl tlr ~ PttlllOl'I fiDI" l"rco.te of Wflf ll'ld *°'" mar. tban Ult) ... _ 1t1t ~ of Olotmn..t No. 3 tvlcttncW by l\Olt Meuf"ld tiv Morttltt ol l'ltmt •l'lbl.lld llOt M grlnftd, luw•llCt ot Lftl•l'S Thtitnwnrory II' -"'4.. -.. Hid Cowt1 .. * CIW: Ctl'ltlf or Tl'lllt bled Oil fftlt Pl'Ol*'l'f' &r IT IS FUll'THl:lt OllDERIEO '"'' • !ht Ptflflontr """"" lo Which ls $1.00. Drl .... w.ei, In the City tf. s.ttt• All•, IOld Tttl ptretnf of ~mount Did to ~ of ttllt trdtr to ll'loW CIVM be mtlff for lul11'1tr 111rtlcut1r1 end fflal ()omplete ~ 9ooll: ... C:tllfotnl•, tf!d Iii-. qlMt " ""'' Dt -ltd with blil .. - . .. . ~·"'*',,.THI DAILY PllOT •• fttWf• ll'lt Hmt Ind PIM• of ~r11>9 the M l)O .._ Ml'i, tllil fll'lltkll'I '°" clliiftile Of ,.._mt Sldl or offWt lo bl 11'1 wrlfll\D l('ld ~ of llll'llf81 <lrcuQtlon ptlnled In lllt s•flM hit bton Ml for J8n1Htrv 711, ..... ;__ ---ltA.. thol'lld -... tr'll'lleil. Wlll IN rtctl ..... •t tllil •fOf'tMld Olfltt County " Or..... C•llfoml•· Ol'ICt • 1974, ., 9\CO ··~·· I<! ltM «Wf'lrootll ••• ., .., • --.;. IT IS FUITH&ll ottot:9'E'D ""'' •• , lt'I¥ tlfl\t •l"ftr tilt "''' publletflon 'll'fflt. to!' fouT suecnsl.... wttk! lll+or of °'°'""""'"' Nn. 3 of ••Id C0\111, Book tf tJ ,,_ .,..._. c.v of flll• ...., to ""-twt1 M l'llflof •!Id before utt of wle. to ttM dtte Ml for 11ttr1,. tN IPflll"tlon. 1t 100 Civic Olnlfl' Drl\11 w"', }fl !IOc -Mtllhed 111 !fie OftAHG!.,(9MT OAll.V O.Nd Jinuary 1, 1t14 01\TIOi J11n. 3. 1974 1111 (lty ol $1111& Ant/C1llfomlt. ...:... -I •• pow---l"l\.O"T.,• ,,. ...... !" ....., .. clreu'ttlori EMMA "'· CMOAAI( ''ll-'NK. DOMENICHINI 01lid :l•llvtr(ll. 1974, ~ -<loll '~-1-P"lnftd lfl ORI.NOi CMfV, Ctillforfllt; .Ektet.rtrl• of '"' J\11119e" "" fliptrlor Covrt WILLIAM •• It JOHN, _,.. -I week fOr teul" ~ _.. wltl ol Mkl cltUdtrlt 010101 w ... n 111:sOf11 COUl'll'f Clerk fl • q.lt .... • ... ~ lo tfM d•le ... flW" "'9rhlt Ol'I "-.. ...... A"'""" Al Ln JONAH JONIS. Jll, flDc. fN Pf!lllOtl. J•IMI l"HI L..., 11'7 Cl'llc ClllW Dtlvt WHI lttlt '*" .ltl'llllt TMI l19t, r-... _.__. • ...._ 0.ted 11111 tllft cl1y of Otc.11'1\W, .m ..... lfwtll St..t ..... 112' llllle ,.. Ito I . CkMfl AYM!lt ... _ I -•-.... lfn. Lt1 A ....... C11tteni11 ,..,4 11111~ Au, Callfer"Mt ft1'U Ltllt tMdt,, C1llf, ,_ blat1fnt pattenll. eoc. Cl.AUOll M. OWliflll ~ .... ......... tn•) ...... T•\1 1ns1 QS.1471 J9 Witate,. Regatta a ~~ Boaters Enticed By ALMON LOCKABEY '"11111 ld:!lor Andrews, BYC. SABC11' C (7) Flip Smoot, BYC. (ll Kwi1<. The first good sai l ing weather In· several weeks Results or other southland regattas: enticed 110 boajs in 12 classes KING IJARBOR YACHT to~m~t~ jn Balboa Yacht CLUB Club's Winter Reg at ta New Year Regatta ' .; t I 1 • I t Saturday and Sunday. PHRF-A (13) ( 1 ) Biggest. turnout on outside Cheetah, Dick Pennington, ~ KHYC: (2) Celebrity, Bob courses was 18 in t he Folkrnan, KHYC; {3) Jchiban Performance Handlpap Racing Maru. Kokk:i Shindo. KHYC. Fleet. The winner was Swirt, PHRF·B (9) _ (1) Sea Sea a Newport-41 sailed by co-Rider, Jack Tatum, KHVC; owners Gayle Post and Jack (2) Celerityt Robert Vollmer, 1 Mallinckrodt of BYC. KHYC. ~ Trophy winners in a 11 CAL-20 (9) _(I) Incredible, / classes : Pete Nooteboom, Km'C; (2) PHRF --' ill SWIFT·, 121 It's Swell, Biil White, KHYC. LID0-14A (8) ( I ) \Vhite Llghtning, Dick Veith<>-Careless Love, Jon Baldwin, nen, Anacapa VC; (3l The ......_ ___ ._ Taurus, George Chase, BCYC; KHYC; (2) \Velt OUM, v1W\;A (4) May Be Hank Thayer Dunn, KHYC. NHYC, ' '. \ Llll!J.148 (8) -(J) Wild ETCHELLS.22 (6) -Non \Viki, Carter Gage, KllYC : (2) Sequiter Rick Gan t ner No name, Glenn Wright, WYC. NHYC. ' ' LASER 16)-(1) Chipmunk, SHIELDS (8) ( I ) Mark Williams, KHYC ; (Z) Prudence. Bob Koll, VYC ; (2 ) Harlequin, Mike Galloway, Aileen. Dick M c A 1 e e r , KHYC. Potomac River SC. CABRILLO B_EACB YACHT THISTLE (6) -War and CLIJll Peace, Will Templeton . BCYC. W:later ~es LASER (12) -Tubed In SOL CAT (6) -(1) Tio • lvo.ry. Mark Guadio, NHYC; between Kane and Haryey, (2) Blue Marauder, Robert CBYC, and Sol Brother, Roger Kinney, NHYC: (3) ti e Jewett, CBYC. j between · Curt Wiese, NHYC, 470 (II) -(I) Shantih. and Mike Didonato, SSSC. Zarky and Lord, PMYC; (2) Cul Up, Cutting and Rhodes, SFVSC; (3) Magic Crylllal, Jess-Atkinson, WYC. LIJl0.11-A (19) ( I ) M"agic, Dave Ullman, BYC;- (2) Banana Boat, John Thome, BYC; (31 Lady'Wind, Stu Robertson, ABYC . IJD0-148 (9) -(I) Frenzy, Don Weise, BYC; (2) Ardvark, Don Aarvold, LIYC. LIO().llC (5) -(I) Gondolf, Herb Hope, BCYC. MONTGOMERY-12 (8) - (1) Yellow Brick Road, Susie Carnes, VYC, -and Bret Mason, BCYC. SABOT Buckshot, NJIYC. A (6) ( I ) Bill Buckingham, SABC11' B (6) ( I ) Maleficent1 Molly O'Hara, NJIYC; (2) No name, Mazy CAL-20 (19 ) -(I) Tension 11, Bill Carmichael, CBYC; (2) Ginger III, Gary Johnson, CBYC: (3) Mai Jungue, Bob Caswell, CBYC; ( 4) COlle<n, Ed Fox, CBYC. MERCURY (7) -(f) TUI, George Patterson. CBYC; (2) Duet, Lloyd Greeno, CBYC. MORF (71 -(1) Mallhinf, Ed Zimmennan, CBYC; (2) Con Lady, Wallace Miller, CBYC. PHRF (13) -(f) Ahsante, Lou Comyns, CBYC; (2) Happy Time, Everett Comings, CBYC; (3) Trim, Dennis Olsen, BYC. --on~ Dissenter -oe· .... Holding Tank Law Supported By JOHN ZALLER ot "" o.1tr r 1i.i '''" Orange County b a r.b or commissioners have reaffirmed the c o u n t y ' s intention to enforce the new ·holding tank requirement for boats in Newport Harbor . The only dissenting vote in the S-1 endorsement of the controversial new law came from Commissioner Thomas O'Keefe, "ho qu es tioned whether it is needed. u1 think enforcement ought to be delayed," O'Keefe told his fellow commissioners. "1 think we're doing some- thing that's just not neces- sary." THE NEW county ordinance, approved. in 1972 by the board of supervisors, went into effect .Jan. I. It requires aJI boats with heads to have holding lanks !or sewage. This ordinance is designed to discourage boaters from dumping sewage into harbor waters. O'Keele maintained that the new Jaw was an expensive aQd unnecessary burden. since very few people actually' dump sewage While inskte t he harbor. MQM, he said1 dump only while at sea. The matter came up when Commissioner Jack Woolley asked the commission to commend Ken Sampson, director of .fhe Department o1 · Harbors, IJ.eache! and Parks, for-refusing to back down oo enforcenient of the controversial measure. "A YEAR and a half ago, I agreed with Commissioner O'Keefe that ·there was no need for a hold.Intl tank requirement," Sampsoo satd. "But how there a r e hundreds of people w1lo have put them in and people who have-begiiii businmnes tO service the holding tanks. "What happens ''" lhem ti we dfcide not to en.Corte the law?" Sampson asked. 111 lhlnk the trme to diACUS3 philosophy has passed," he added. nevertheless contended., -·1 · f..,I the first dollar wasted isn~ as bad as the non ·thousand." Woodward Will Head • Boat Show Bob. Woqdward ol Newport Beach, yeteran southland sail- or and boat deal.,., bas been selected as chairman of the annuiil Long Beach Sailboat Show scheduled Feb. IS.24 at the 1-Beach Sports Arena. Woodward has been D10ll active in Southern C8.lifornia Marine Association-sponsored events. He bas also served as a member of the SCMA board of directors and is a member ~Balboa · Yacht Club. Members of the Sall- Show committee will be Stan Miller, Tom Schock, BW"ke Sawyer, Buster Hammond and Bud Hartman, all of Newport Beach. OCC Team Places 3rd The Orange Coast College sai1ing team finished third out of a field of seven .entries In the Gran! Trophy Regatta al Newport Bay. Coach J i m Jorgehsen'a squad placed behind t h e University . of Hawaii and Princeton in Ute two-day charnpionshi~. U.C. San Diego Was fourth, U--arvey Mudd fifth, U.C. 1.rvine sixlb and Long &ach State seventh. Roy · Reineman skippered OOC"s -ShleldS and ROI> 01~ and Kevin Kerns -.. oo the ere~. A total of sewa races decided the t e am champtonshlp. ' -JUltft I/A W. "'""'°' Covrt ml OC . A~ fw Niii_,. AttlrM; Mz 11ttllltMf' \ l'llttli.tled °'""'-Cont_o.nr l"IJot. PWllshtO Drtntt to.it t1•11v ·Piiot, l"\lllllll'rtd Ot.,,.. CNtf O•lly Piiot, Publlll'rld Of•lllll Cotll D•l1y Pnot. J•t\\ltl'V' 1, 14. 21. n. me · ,..,, J111111ry 14. 1s. 11, lt24 tt.74 J1llillll'Y 1, 1" 21. 21. 1'74 .. ..,. J111Wry 1'-1s. 21, 1n' t:N--7' ADMITrlNG !ht pn>bletn of changi n g Ille law in mi d stream, O'Keefe Jorgensen's Pirates_ ha .. been competing a 8 a I n s t lntmollegiale teams since last October and lhe ,.._ MIDS through May. The nHI event on the OOC acbedule Is the Southern Berlec ot We5liake on Feb. 9. \ I • .... , • . " • • DAILY PILOT Monday, January 14, 1974 enaral G.ener•I _J General Gentr1) Irvine Irv Int 1.;:;;;;;;;==;;;;;;;;==== ~=---""--=-==;~=-----~----=-====;;;;;;;;====!1 1-PRICE l'L•f'. flOMF.5 - • • UNl()Ul' 11()Ml'S IN MESA VERDE -There ~re several im· 1naculatc family homes available in pride of ownership neighborhoods in this unique country club conununity. Galling a chip shot away. schools a bike ride from home, parks just around the corner and a library 1n the middle. 1'1esa Verde has it and Unique Homes (formerly Mesa Verde Realty) is it! Listings from $40,000 to $198,000. UNIQUE HOMES Roaltors, 546-5990 2850 Mtl• Verde Drive, Costa Mesa La na -Brand new 3 br. REDUCTION.-s.i•.500 IRVINE TERACE :;::~: 119.~•mlly home, 4 EXCELLEN Eiutblutt " i.usk hom•. 3 br. -SS!l,SOO ltRMS Newport -Bayfront, 3 br. -$19,lm -A rno&t uno.susl hOme In Corona del Mar, 4 nice bedrooms, lowly l a r g e trees. 2 patios. aome 8a.y virw, contl'r flropllu:e In ta.mUy room and additvln81 fireplace In 1paoloUA living toonl. Owner v.·111 consider t.'Onll'Ot't Of 511Je-with good In terest rate for buyer or possibly a lea11c oplkln. Call 67'.Hi500 ... OPf.N 11L J • ll'S FVN JO Bf N/Cf.1 THE REAL ESTATERS MOBILE HOME FOR SALE: SILVERCREST MOBILE HOME Newport -Harbor View, 5 br. -$81,500 Nev.·pc>rt -View O:indo, 3 br. -184.ThO C.d,?!f. -llarbor View 2, 3, 4, S Bbr. -$16,00C C.D.M.-Lu.'l-k f.larbor Vlcnv, -I br. -$91.!\00 Newport -Baycrest, New 3 br. -$105,000 CDJ\1-Si>yglass Jiii!, 4 hr. Sl2J .500 COJ\1-Spyglas..o;; 1-1111, 6 br. $129,000 ' COM-Spyglass Ulll, .a br. $13S.lm Call ;is.ms • lND ASSOCIATES REALTORS WELL, ALL RIGHT!! RIGHT duplex on the RIGH'l' street,-ln-the RIGHT location with the RIGHT decor and the HIGHT Income. Don't be LEFT out. Cail RIGHT NOW! A listing of Bud Austin. CALL 644-7270 EXECUTI RETREAT Start the ~ew year with champagne. Exclu- sive Pttsideril Model, plush ca'r~Unt, air condiUonlng, 2 massive fireplaces, sweep!Jll view. A rare opportunity at $115,000. GRUBB-& ELllS CO. . ) -::::==::==::::;::::==::==::==:::::::::======z::z al' x 53' 2 BD 2 BA, carp., ii ----draped, blt·lns.. refrig., * W 'TERFRONT LOTS * washer & elec. dryer, wired Olympic 1lze pool, formal dining room, ~ fam nn, 3 spacM>us baths. plus huae game room. Transferftd GWner. " '°' 220 air rond., kiloh. do.:k, storago Shod, land---$BOO TOTAL LIDO ISLE -LIDO NORD seeped patio. Three yrs. old 30'xl05'. Magnificent view! $165,000 · Hkc ""· L<>"atcd in new DOWN 2 STORY IRVINE TERRACE BEAUTY-$174,500 Greatest view or bay, ocean & Catalina! Custom quality Igo 3 BR home w/FR, for- mal dining, 3 baths, 3 !rplc & tieautiful pool. Ocean Air a<iwt pk. away trom no;,y • VACANT'. 70 LINDA ISLE DR. • LINDA ISLE St. One-hall bl. from cl""' Real Estate ~ /.Jn NIG[L UAILEY & ASSOC IATES Charming ~ BR, ram "" w/tplc. Unique kitchen wilh all extra.a, pantry . Cathedral ceilings. Super cptt throout, cust drp1. Submit terms. 0 W n er tnui&fcrred. Prime 45 It. lagoon lot -$150.000 hoW>e. Sts.495. Cati EVES. BEACH HARBOR 1_$LAND 2~~·4~ SEEN AT: COZY entry. Large WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. Prize 50' lot adjoining easement. $400,000 CRESTMONT entertainment area. F"omial 2111 Sin Joaquin Hills Ref. ESTATES, dine. Spadous kit' h•" · NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 .HOME OF HOMES n·s THE BEST Cost• Mftl LOR WALK IN PANTRY. BILL GRUNDY, REA T 1051 Sile Dr .• Bt:0•. Contra! Tw;,ting ""'""'"'· Family !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~""!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![ Ave, across tron1 Brea c-~ .. 1 •·-• "· NO MAID ' General BEAUTIFUL BRASHEAR REAL lY 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.8. 675-6161 Co H ) bedrooms. ~ u "" pauu. Here is a spack>us ultra mm. osp. Lot #46. Co ru'ly pool' s 8 o O CONTACT RAY, PK. ~fGR. mmu · NEEDED EASY T modem home ottering the COLEGE PARK I General BIG BUCCOLA EASTSIDE 5 BEDROO~ FOURPLEX $82,• ~ l\tosr home for the Deluxe units "1th owner's L.ARGER family. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath home • r~onnal dining + 3 rentals, 2 bedrm each. • Family rm + brkfst area PRIDE OF O\YNERSHIP, e 5 Bedroom, 3 baths DELUXE HOME and IN· 1 • Boat or trailer space COME a11 in one package. e Palk> \\·/bltn BBQ See your accountant on thi!> • Yruit trees & roses tax savei·. Buy no1v for full ' Priced at ONL'Y $51,950. year bencllt. Call now for appt. 2211 Nowiio!'t II. Mf.'.Stn 400 ll71 I FOi ALL CJl au for showing. moves you in. Tak I.' • LAKE FORES finest In decor and styling. ---~-----1 :t;~~e NO\V and call MAINTENANCE New lake front 5 bedroom Nearly 3000' ol luxurious HARBOR '""'" 11L'. IT'S FUN TD BE H/Ct! Rela."t In a home designed home ln prestige area of livl.ng space. FIVE ~lig SHAG CARPETS ..,..-.. ,. Lake Forest. Offered at bedrooms. Super big lam1 Y HIGHLANDS for'""' living. 4 bedroom•, fT',500 or writ le"" at $650 room. Sparkling Po o L DOUBLE FIREPLACE 3 BATHS. Dine !onna1ly. month. Call Co I we 11 R t>o ~• OVERSlZED ...,_,_ be tllUI Coll P ~ • n~-3 Llvo ""'""ily in h""' 1,. -ta ecrea n... i •= au ege an• °"'"11-uums or Bedrooms ..... " ...,, .... 646-()5,j5.. LOT. All this and l!O much home mU.!lt be seen to bee plus Den, 2~ baths, heated room. \l/al k to all schools more. CALL NOW TO fully appreciated. Inside & pool, electric.~ door ~~:!==~~~~ and to beach. What~-else? EXPERIENCE this <lream Ouf; Oiii lion1e 1s !OT"the opener, in one 01 the highest Corona del Mar Boat gate. Ttailer pad . , 847 "lO •· 1 · ,,_ bu Ali 1 Corn'r lot. Til.'T·s NOT co1nc true. -vu . 1scr nuna .... ~ yer. o demand area11 in this+ no dov.'tl terms lo NEWPORT BEAOI offered Bachelor Pad ALL. Unbelievably Io w l!"~~,:i;iii;iiii;iiiii;iiiii.-11 Vets _ or loY,. 5';io to all. at S57,500. Call Colwell. priced at $49.900. Call now F'or further infonnatkin 646-0m. With Paol t• "'' 841.ro10 "''""' ca11. 54!r9l9l THE REAL ESTATE RS On a generous 60x100 lot OP£H11L 9 • rr'S FUN TO BE MCE, ;n watk-to·privotc romm""-~"I]' ~I =~~I ity beach Corona High-• I iiiii ~;,·;·a:. ;:;~e ~~'i~:!J. owNER 1N FLORIDA THE WORK'S . Walker&Lee dining, spacious master ... Must sell· vaeant 3 ~room ALL DONE •••L '''''' suite, renr yard v.•ith patio ~ bath TO\\'nhouse unnied-If you're tired of looking MESA VERDE S250 Down sun deck and large free PENINSULA iately. Shag Carpt~ts, lots ol at projects Instead of lor Gt. We pay all ot~ form. pool. $69,500. POINT'S BESTI extras! Popular Costa r.iesa homes, check into this kwe-closing costs. 3334 \Vyomin!: 968-1178 2 Bdrm. + Pool $24,495 2 Bdnn condo., delitablt ground level floor planlnl~• years new, Freshly Pa led with -tutefulfy pane~ and min-orcd living room, plulh v.·aUpa.peml dinlnr att1, shRg carpets & custom drapes, ovenlzed pantry ll.l'rB, near SLilOOI~. "'&!kine 1listance to 1-1 u n t Inc t o n Cl"ntet, ~·immtne pool and numy park areas. FOR SALE BY OWN~R. Asking: only $24,49.1 call today 8-17-3095. $3B,500 NEARLY NIWll Sun/Eves. . _'4'-_51_55_ 1 "'iF_Y_o_u_L_IK_E_P_E_O_P_L_E SWIM EVERY DAY -MESA DEL MAR OPEN HOUSE WE'D LIKE YOU CALL 644-7211 GREAT 5 BED R 0 OM location. Clubhouse pools. Jy carmel plan in harbor Circle, 1970 Sq. ft. 2 Yean HOME on Seville. Has Now priCf'd below market v!e1v homes 3 Br. fonnal old, 3 bdrm, pool, alrlum, /.Jn NIGEL GAILEY & ASSOCIATES everything! Inc I u ding: at $24,SOO. Cal! 540-llSl. dining, family room and the dog run, huge patio, elec billiard room, wet bar, most lavish front and rear gar. $47,990. A GIANT of a f" .11ly home, located just a hop to thC' beach. Rustic stone fbi>, trml dining, vaulted ~[J. ings, bl1 M!p&ratt tam1ly rm w/hand polished 'ft'OOds, Y1alnut glus kitchen ~·Ith patio pau thru and bi& pantry! 4 Spaclou11 BR'~ and lge \•anlty b a th a . TERi\IS TO SUIT TH E \"OUNG l''AMILY! ! Bkr 962-5511. l AM To 3 To ronsidor a ,,.,...r with $40,000 1 PM the v.'Orlds finest Real separate family rm .. maid yard ll·eatment you've seen. Costa Mes. Rtalty rm .. on quiet 11treet near On the greenbe.lt a shor1 Since 1958 * 541-n11 0 -·"L Harbor Vi ho · Imagine entertaining guests ~ ei\• me Estate company. You • Br 2 Ba t 1720 at poolside in this lovely 1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii [ ocean. bay &: tennis club. v.·alk to clubhouse and pool AFTER 6 p .M. Call 557-4617 * 6 UNITS * $ll9.500. call 54&-5880' [!!!!!!~!""'~!!!!!""!'"!"!~[only S7t,500 Fee DECORATORS CALL 644.7211 Secl"dcd Ocoan View Parl< Nearly ne1v 2 Br., 2 ha. \\lrottghl Iron & masonry " , ani 1m. provide the desire and P • St 1· $71 t.IV\ home. Featuring true 01 ~ et· lfl&· ,.;vv. \\'e'll provide the training. * * * * q\Jality tht'Oughout Including Together \\'e'll earn you hard"'OOd floors. Call nov.· OPEN HOUSE s1 ,;;oo1month lconunissionl for an a ppointment to see deluxe units on oceanfront DREAM IN "'Ork suroounds this 2 yr in Balboa! Elec. frplcs. old home. 4 BR. 3 BA. h<avy shag carp., blhu: MESA VERDE family & !ire pla,,., Small 11 AM TO 3 PM Ask aboul our free licensing _ 646-7171. program. Call 545-9-191 and OPf.N TIL 9 • ITS FUN TO BE NICE! Lake Forest Home. 22773 Isla ~;!are, 5 Br 3 Ba, fam- ily ITil. $57.000. • • • • ·-· · ··FAN·TA~TIC ··· OCEAN VIEW ask for Di.strict Manager. waiker &lee · Prime Joe. pres!jge home •t•L 1•11.111 Lag""a Niguoi 3 Br 3 Ba, RE SALESMEN fam rm. $160.00'.l. LINK Rt-:AL'TY 837-8292 POOL HOME + PART TIMERS FAMIL y ROOM Ex::~sJ~~~RE JOG TO BEACH! THAN YOU'R UNDER $30 00011 INCOME? JOIN AN P<U'QUet f'ntry. 11u~e Hvi:~ OFFICE WHERE YOU room. Family dining. HAVE· NO EXPENSES. Family room. Secluded den. CALL CARL NELSON Fanner:s kitchen. Enormous 846-1305 Cabana adjoins frttform .---- custom pool, Excellent VA location. 5~;. 00\VN n1oves you in! l .. urry call s.12-2.)35. OPfN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN TO SE NICE! :~ • '=' THE REAL ES TATERS 8 UNITS \\:ell 1naintained, x l n t VA 01vner may seU there lovely 4 Br, 2 Ba home on VA-FHA terms. Quiet tl'ee linl"d street in Beautiful J\1l"sa Verd('. Elect. bit-ins, crpt, shutters, frplc, forced air heat, lg double gar. A,o;king S36,500. MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 localion, no vac11ncy. 1 & ---~-~--­Frida~ 2 Br."""'"· OPEN HOUSE 104PM PYRAMID EXCHANGORS 1407 N. Bayfront BALBOA ISLAND REAL TORS I SALISBURY REALTY 1~-~'-J_l-_17_68 ___ 167'6900 67~5016 General General BACK BAY VIEW 3900 sq uare feet in this fun family home featuring separate master suite + living room + den + dining room + 4 bedrooms and 3 baths. $125,000. NEVER OCCUPIED But you can n1ove in today! Yes, the land- scaping and drapes are in, and this 3 bed· room 2Y.i bath. home is near the pool and tennis courts in University Park. Just listed at only $64,900. LIVE LIKE A DUKE Fantastic Bayshores with 182 foot prime bay frontage. 4 bedrooms, 4\li baths, large dock. pool, 4 car garage. Offered at $495,000. ,' CAMEO SHORES Ocean \1iew, very large living room and master bedroom with beautiful parquet floor s, beanicd ceilings. 4 badroorns. 3 baths. $115.000. BORDEAUX MODEL BIG CANYON Dclighlful S bedroom, 3 bal~ end unit with ocean view lavis hly decorated with out- standing carpets, drapes and wallpaper. Large fot. Private master beilroom terrace. $14~.ooo. ~ 644-1766 Coldwall,Bankar ~ 2161 Son Jooquln Hills Rd., N.B. 1· BEAUTIFUL VIEW -$3B,500 sundeck or balcony ~'/each ,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,.,I If d 1 unit: 7 oov'd carports plus Exciling coo temporary 2 -ao tary-e-v-e 0 P m "" I 1-parking space. $330,00'.l ON PRIME LOCATION bedroom condo completelyliOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil encompasses a beauliful Call ·. ~ ~• 9~ .,~ Eves · I · p-~-h. tand·-ped Mth gonerous park. Only $47,900. Owner v•~ 1.,....-uw tn Un vers1ty 11J11o sets t 1s ...... &U--1060 183.1 p k t ta ·Hanovor ·Model ·t"""""' ·3 .. bricl< .. And ....... deokill.. ··OEllGHTFUllY· .. ·c1··•e:··c .M: .. ~~ ... ~ .• associated BA OKERS-RE ALTO~S 101S W Bolboo 071 JiotJ bd 2 bat•-1· 1-.oi Interior slur1ningly _ '"" rms., "'" ltl t:U A YE E \\rindov.·s, refrigeralor, elee. ~.~~~ ... ~th. ~ca~ DECORATED MES RD garage opener and more. ... • .. -r-$52,950. custom drapes. CALL 552"7500 Ail'-COnditioned! Believable Super ?o.fonaco model in H1ll'-2·STORY only when you see it! Call bot \711iw llomcs. Two OO::I· Januuy White Salo Only $22,000. End of cu Hie-sac, on. ovenl.ztd .W)t. Good landaca.pinc, o:cellant conditioo. l•411Nl;lif.\IA HZ·4471 I :fJ l01 Front this e x q u i s i t e I y ..,..,.~ ....... ~ ... ...,.,. decorated young v IP .= 6 HOMESll I residence with spacious ••• bedrooms, quC<'n s i 2 c d srx newlv decorated cottages baths, and large yard that on enormous tree-shaded 11·ill accommodate a pool. country lot! Shag cpts, Flexible terms. B e 11 e r frplcs, paneling, be R m check this one. 646-77ll -ceilings, pvt patios! Xlnt VISION MG-2313. roon1s, cuslom de n, formal OPEN TIL 9 • ITT FUN 10 BE NICE/ dining. large klt chen und "l:::::::z:=::;=: i;-"-""~:;;;;;ii;iii;i;;;;miii.-\1 cute as can be. $69,500. Nl"w carpel, drapes & paint. • • red hi II 1 9,·~ •. : .·, ESTATE REALTY H.,..c oul-do-''" lol This bea utifully decoraied REALTY REALTORS 1103 AVOCADO OR. !\1esa Verde home is a must ~U~~ni~v.~P:!;'or~k;C~e~n~to~r,~lrv~i;no;:1 ;:~~~~~~~~1 NEWPORT CENTER. see for the va1ue conscious ..:::: --~ --~--....,., bu)''l'r. Tht> 4. huge bedroont5 Open Eves -income! Super buy or ttadc Walker & Lee at $93,500! Call toda y ! REAL ESTATE 645-8400. CHOICE s.;:;pu;;;v.,ST1y Park 640·1120 & ramily room with MESA VERDE S BR Buy or lease option. Beautiful 5 Bedroom, 3 bath home with semi-fonnal dining room and family area. Full price $54,500 or submit on lease option. HURRY!! rc;,,,,._ co: TS ~WALLACE REALTORS ~141- (0pon Evenings) DUPLEX lll Gay and bright carpeting, firepla~ a.re just a rew • • • large floor to c e i I i n g -:z:===:::::z=~I or the features oUered by Lost tenantR! LA o"'Tler 111indows, cozy fireplace. all ii ---~~ thia fine home. For further wanlll lmmedlate sale of this llith 3 bedrooms and JUST LISTED Wonnation. please ca l l; NE\\'LY DECORATED Pe-fam ily room on cul--Oe--sac. SUPER 4 Br. + den or 5 br. nlnsula units~ Oiarm pack-$65,000. home. Great condition "'/ ed -Open beams. lrpk, PETE BARRETT new crpt" paint & d'P•· Perfect for young family -cptg, shutter.ii, brick pnlio Lg I ed dbl gar ' Walker l! Lee -O\'Cr-sizcd lo! just steps REALTOR · overs z · ag. · U 2 Br & Den -12 block ba 1 \\' . 1 --, Quiet cul-de-sac location 1n 111,L 11,,,1 to brand new $1,400,000 to Y· on t ast at 642 5200 No. end of Costa l\tcsa. Walk boo! w-'k I k and $83,950 -Low do11·n or • · p,.;--~ I ~9491 sc . iL4. o par I trade OT<\! Cnl\ 64.S.RlOl'l. ~~ lo E.'\'eryth1ng. ..-.. .... on Y ~~-~~-~ community pool -Large lot ~~WW!l!Ua:<llZtl.l!l.1, --4 Bdrms & Den ~!~.:~· S PARKLING GEMi -12 fruit trees -one owner I r" '1'W"i.>OOU Open E\~!I 2 S d -$65,000 and you own the \'. E. l '-anl & Co. & Family Rm · · tory, etached garage. I d Cali ~ """' ~ 1 .1 5 BR, 4 bas. Lge Famlly an . no1v -61~ a...i r..~ No down G.I.! Great am1 Y Dln·rm + formal Din-rm. OPEN TIL t • rrs FUN TO BE NICE! home V.'ith dining rm. Cathedral ceiling pa.neled --:.-. BLUFFS kitchen built ins. Family Fam-nn. new cpts. Cresh\y i Located on "•ide Greenbelt. pane ing. Orct' 81 Balboa Penin1ul1 lo Sehl• & shop. By O\\'ner, • I Cl-c 10 sJ-pplng. , -w heat. Shake roof. Sprinklers. •en 1:11n ,...,. 1 ...,.., . ' ~ 2 Br & den, 2 hn, end unit. i"o001' den, l'fircp~ce. d Ri<:~ painted;, inside&. out. Close ~1· '"' "' u.. Only $.16,500. Ca11 MG-1720 V CANT 4 BR f ~-~·~?'-' -'-"-"-=-~--YOUR HOME maintenance &: low low TARBELL Realtors A · · ' am. rm., TAKE over my loan of BY OWNER price. $50,500. I -="""'-=='-,;~:-;-;~ I lge. kit 2-Sty. $87.500 $23100 at $197 mo . Incl AT THE BEACH Lovely 3 br. 2 ba w/km nn C.F. COLESWORTHY BEACH GIANT Ma,.ball Realty &75-4600 T&i. Wo price $29,sOO. woll Jn the coveted single family & 1vashroom on large comer Re1ltors 640-0020 5 DEN Corona del Mar maintained 3 BR, l bas. residential area South of !he lot In CIJif Haven. t\ew gold E ASTBLUFF CONDO-+ 2 car gar. walking distance Hv.'Y in Corona del l\far. crpts & drps. \\1alk to I-far-1 story 3 Bdrm, 2 baths. $25,950 tPrino ".blo~yahop cntr. 64H374 An approximately ZS'OO .sq. bor High & Ensign Schls. fl. 3 BR 3 BA home ,.,.ith $6.1,500. Open House every-Many luxury cu s 1 om RAMBLING Rlu'ICH nestled UNDER MARKET family room & huge master day noon-8 pm 'Iii sold. reatures&w-~500 r i rm · near sandy beach. 5 Assume ol.d VA on sharp suite only one block lrom JOOO Cliff Dr. Eves. 642-1122. Owner Bedrooms_. .step down den. 4 Br in quiet cul-de-sac. Ocean Blvd. Days 548-419'2. MESA DEL MAR t~ormal dtnmg .. Party, room. $33 950, Agent 546-7739 It can be yours for only ! iii ... i;;i;iiiiii;i;iiiiiiiiiiii..., 4 BR, 2 BA. Freshly Painted Real country kitchen. Large -=-' "'"~=·~=c-:::= 000 * 4 Bedroom home ihugo Inside & Out' !\e\v :-;l•;v::-grounds. Entertainers patio. · 3BR, Fam rm, many xtras, $9a, Can for Details master BR> + family room carpet. $35,950. Bk r BETT'ER HURRY! Ca11 Q-1lo ula!]predat;~ooo. 644-7711 + den, 3 baths, many ~x-~>1~9-~2288:r.~o~r~eiv•i'i55i-7i-8968iiiiiii8ikri.i6'5-0303iiiii' iiiiiiii/ uie c e-sac, 1'JD.NI GEL DAILEY f.. Ira .. Qwel ,., .. ,, $55,750. ---TREES, TREES Roy Mccardle Rteltor So. of the Hwy, close to big lB!O N';'7~9d., C.M. M Ac NA· 8 ~);;'.a 2 8:.'~w~~tl~J~:;J HUGE R-4 LOT in & out & newly carpeted. REPUBLIC HOME "ilfE'AliifH'fAiJ ·IRVINE J:::~:l.;~~.;,'';)':.::Thls beautlfol "°""tey home ASSOCIATES ESA VERDE SPECIAL /IT lo buy. In the city reminds )'OU of M ALSO newly · painted & a mountain cabin. Huge $42,900 -Look at the Great' for VIiar round living p-• v ~-f'-r I features: Centra.I a Ir .,~ carpeted 3 Br, 2 ba In very a.io t!•"'-" u-o:P ace, arge -ndo·1~ntng, underT'l'W'·und & close to the village. 3 private Milting, $64,SOO. living room, mo.d e r n ....... IV ,;•" yr old Bavarian style 3 lelh:I kitchen, nice shag carpets uWities, Del Plso tile in home with open beam ced-ARCHITECT'S HOME PLEASE CALL with room for 5 more unltt. entry, kitchen, and family 1ngs thnl-<lut, 3 br 2 ba H VA terms available. For room, decorator kitoh•n + rompfetoly finishcd ..,._ 2 BR's, 2 baths, FR & 2. fireplaces. uge 675-3000 (W'tber fnlormallo!I, pleuo with abundant storage . ment for playrm or shop. landscaped ya.rd. $43,900. Helen Wood , call 545--9491 HUIT)', see lhls delightful Lndry faclliUes. $36.500. 644-6200. 3 BR. 2 BA home today. (213) ib,-3898 after 6pm or Call 54<>-1151. ~ DOVER SHORES FAMILY HOME 4 BR, 3 bath, FR & gourmet kitchen. Lg. yard -partial vielV. $98,5QO. D. Chichest-..u» HERITAGE • • REALTORS RAISE TROUT? m 11.\\ ,\ UI \I'll Walker &Lee ···~ '''"'' PARTY PERFECT $19,750 WALK TO BEACH VACANT -Surfslde Condo Sharp and clean. Dilh~·asher, bltns. Call to Sf'e! SCOTT REAL TY 536-75U call anytime H;:~= o,;;.i;.,510Ns .1r lnlorninllnn anc! k>catlon n/ th"i;e }11.A &. VA homes, , C' 1ct • KASA DIAN Real Estate 962.- Huntlngton H1rbour WATER VIEW Plushy pad v.1th jumplog jacuzzi, doodley deck, volley ball cout! and one block to ocean beach. S24.500. llUNTINGTON HARBOUR REALTY 17214 Csl . l lv.·y. L19un1 Be1ch NEW CUSTOM Ocean view home. Almott complete!i & ttady for occupancy_ H.u 3 Br. 2 ba. lg living rn1 w/vaulted ceilings Ir: trplc. Chery kitchen with load1 o t storage Ir: break(ut .na. All bedrooms ha\·e sliding glasa walls to palios. Lots of v.'OOd & glass. An excellent buy al S68.500. RIVllRA REAL TY 149 Broadway, C.M. 642·7007 Pano.ramie Vltw Outstanding home w I t h !!Weeping octan &~ Catalina view! Hu 3 bcdl'OOml, 2 baths. Forced air heat ~taster suite & llvns rm both with view balconies. High beamed cetlln1 . Fantastic ltltcben . ApproximatrlY '11'.m f t , above 1ea level. $59$0. Call- TARBELL. RNl!ort l9IO S. Cout Rwy. t.B. MONARCH BAY IN THE BLUFFS GREAT BUY! You can In this 30 x 14 tiAA pond! Custom decorated like an old Spanish Mis!don, 2 Story, 3 Br, den, 2 Ba, fire- place, 2 BBQ's + ga., Bl. 2 fount&Jns1 25 x 13 heated poot, 3 patios. grape arbor. Must see to bellew! Only $47,900. Near Lake Forest! Call Realtor for a'ppt. 64s.<Ml46. er, 642·8235. COUNTRY ~NGLISH-DOVER SHORES Magnificent VIEWS-Upper Bay & Ocean. Custom 5 BR. 5 1> bath home on Galaxy. Ideal !or large family or entertaining. FR, lonnal DR, brkfst room, billiard room. A unklue 4 !k + df!n + family rm home of man[. t~ture" built around 11. pclC) • This warm cont~mporiry, Exl'C. truly • h a. r P O.n1 Point built by an architect tor decoritted home. Cr Pt • ·I';;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;~;;;; I hts own honie, hu an octan drps, 21hulltrs. 81"' 'famllyl• . .J-w <n tbi1 p ! t ~ I ocE•N H•RBOR •re r va • -"'--'=""-'-""c='-'-'~~· ' Secluded Oeean View Parlt Wrought iron & masonry work 8utrouNbh thia 2 yr old home. 4 BR. 3 BA, family & tlrt plact. Small tolltary development enoompa.1se11 o beautiful t>Arf<. Only ~7.900. Owner 642-1060 185.1 Park v I a ta Orcle. C.M. • Pool. Harriet Perry, 642-8235. [Irvine I ---1 .. 1""!-'''---'""' I ' IOI DovtrOrfvt 142•1231 114-t M1cArtftUt NC •UOO H--~.Coll~•·- • rm w/bookca1e11, 3 g ""' "' tront bdrmJ1 Incl master suite. VIEW 0 c ea n oornmunlty.' l\Sll,!>00. ln>!de l•ordry. 211 rarafll!. 2200 ·aq tt • 4 BR. $6G,900 TURNIR ASSOC • lron ptes to beaullful m IQ Jt • 4 BJt. S62 950 ~ N (but H Lacuna. 1<cludt!! ant<lon. Q " I ' k 2800 1q -It • G BR. $19'.s<io . 4M-1 i17 escrow. AAkinfJ._$79,950. lSOOOsq ft lot ~00'.I . I . THE OIRRIE CO. ' Bkr. J7141 G7>14~1" 2 BR. lit BA, c:an be ' Rltr. 644-I070/ 644.f22t ronvortld with ll<lJotnhw I FOR SAL.E .. BY-0\VNER BY OWNER.:~ EXec. home. unit to • 2100 911, ft. • Harbor Vu ft\11","U.dk. Gr~llt 3-a BR,,«iptntl 11ta1m11tr l\4 :~k j~ 8~ Octa.n Viewa. 1 0 C" e-an v I e w q u I et mL to Marlnl', Boat Yrd. only C9T.Jm.f • PrlnclptJ1 cul-dH&c beAutf, 4 Dr, 3 $63,00'J 493-7417/838-3001 =<;-:' ===,,..,=--I ba, (am nn, beamed OWN YOUR OWN APT. DtU 1 ttlllng11 2 f'rplc's l car laVe an extn apace heater Victor HIJIOl. SpectacuJ., I n/ie tainlly home: 1;,.u;;d )'OU no 1onatr tlltf Sell it coa11tllne vu.' $ 4 3, 5 O O. Occpy. a 3 5 -31 O O Ext MW with a Da!ly Piiot Walla<:O L Nett Roaltw 3101144-!m. Clallllletl Adi tl4H6l8-Fonot -II I • • WHALE WATCHERS. • • Pf:rch. V1e"! Uie mlan.Uon ot the whalH from Your upstalrr room& In thll remodeled 2 Br + IUfll nn house In the So. Laguna r-•·alon .-Complet~y­ tttnrpeted & co11tain11 a firoplaoe $l9,'°'1. _--JO/an REAL ESTATE 1190 Glenneyre SI. ~"'9113 M!Hl316 L~una Niguel NE\V 4 br, 2~ ba, FR, Not1h View. 2100' split lvl. $55,0CJO. 49»197 /54U135. Lido Isle *MEDITERRANEAN 3 Br's, famlly rm, dining rm. 2.% ~. beaullfully aripolnted. $39,500 *UNIQUE SPANISH I Br, lam rm, 4 ba. Keady tor ahowlng. 1149,SOO. LIDO REALTY ! L • I,, I , I "\ 11 *67J·7300 * LIDO ISLE-$65,000 llere I" your chftnce to live on Udo &: erQoY prestige by lhe tea. Your own Spanish CMtle. Just slep11 lo the beach. Vacant It the owner · will even C8JT)' the loan. Herbert llawkinl Rff.ltol"I 839-1600 or 963-fi681 BEST COR. TO BCH. 4 BR, 3 ba with h~ master suite w/bay view. Red. to $132.SOO. Open Sun, 1·5 pm, 425 Vl1 Lido Nord. fmt.7414 . LlOO ()peor. 3 Br. 3 Ba. DR, $'19.SOO. Ojien S/S. 133 Via Warlen, 640-8146. OU.el.EX nc IH.'ean. $62..500- MU~ Lanon Realtor 6'J3..ll563 Nowpo<t Heights OS<!!M. "'""y J HOUSI + • UNITS N~· w\111 al '1.37 l!.1den, CM. ll:t ~r w/2),)~ writ• of1, Call BullC:er 546-4414,• Loll for Salt 170 Lri· octan-vklw krt R·l zoned tor 6 COl1doil or 6plt. Xlnt ~ cation, ckiee to evrrythlng; In Laguna S.h.. $1l0,000. Prln. on~. Gt-9907, 642444. Mount•in, 0.Hrt CoroM cltl Mor l BR. t""OUR P1.EX-fli5. Kkll pets ok. Urtl pd. Homtfinders 547·"41 •OiAR!\cllNG l BR. trplc. •-ooded yd, BBQ, uUI pd, $25(1, Adu1tJ, hO pets. 833-m4 Cost1 Mtaa ' ::,-,,..,.~.....,,---~_M_ond~U~,~/>~~~"1-'F.1=4,=l-9_14~~..,..,~_,,="~:::-~-P_IL_O_T-"l2nJ'i<I HouMt Furn. o,. Apt1. urn. ta. urn. Unfurn. 310 Corona d•I M,ar Laguna Beach -------·-Balboa Penlmul1 Newport Beech Gen.ral TOTAL PANORAMIC VIEW, 1115 • Utll Pd. CIW'mi .. -=========! $35 WEEK a UP Spyitw ~1111. Brand NL'W) I Br, priv. deck, So.3 • R" .., I I , e Slccpina Rooms 1 STEPS to bctl, l BR, Nov.• •1 until June 30th. Call S'IU&IO 4 BR, 2 ~~ aa. 2 trplc.' Lnguna. d "" • *·· Ull' new lrl), • ffcUM"keeping Rooms Leaae $1000/mo. 673-a& $250 • UtU Pd. 2 Br. New rape•, d«.'Or, )Tty. $325. • Ocean v· Aptt I San Clement• eves crp1/drps, '2 paOO&, oc..1ran WA!erfront 2 BR. 1 bll. yellJ'o BAL BOA INN vie~·. ly. Vnf. $300. San Oemente Resident llotcl Cotti Mell ~ • Charmlng 3 Br, 2 2 BR.. 2 ba. lurn. winter :05 \1.ai · ~trtt1 $79.50 Per Mon!h ___ .;.c;._____ Ba.. \Voodscy s e l t l n g • $300. ~8740 Quiet -Secure •'ree Rental Service -Lagwui. Olnyon. f'URN Irr 2 BR. !rplc. ~\lrn-utU -wn11'il\g dlatance Spacklua I br. 2 bath honte $350 • 3 , BR, frplc, Sea Balboa Ptmin, Clo.se to to evtt)'thing .J. with 2 car aara.ge; fen<.'ed Terrace Condo, La Kun a PavWiOo. S*/mo. Yearl y, SAN CLEMENTa BY OWNER-FIXE!t'UPPER R110rl 174 3 BR, 1 ba. tmmac. home, good tumllhlna:•. West1kle, No chlldren or-,,et1~$260. Mo. Phone b.492-7885. YlliJ!. fireplace, forced &tr Niguel. Wlcda.ys til 5, 835--lOU P.tr. HOTEL hl!:at. Cilrpeted lllld draped NU-VIEW RENTALS Swing! or eve ii/ w knd s Ull'UOOt. $li5 per month. 673-4030 or '194·J2.111 842-2S06 .e 114 DEL hlAR, S.C. e 1 bch·n1, 1 bath \\1th several Wll)'I to go. Orlve by 430 LA.KE ARROWHEAD F\illerton, Wle your tmaglna· Gt't'at for year round llvlng tlon $28,500. Shown ·by a t. & close to the vii'age. 3 673-1638. PP yr old Bavarian style 3 levtl 646·-'mJ 01>e11 eves BACHELOR apt $UO. + utll. Huntington Beoch Walker & Lee Laguna S.uch, plW!h condo. Condominiums lmmed & Feb. 5th. 492-0338 home with or.n beam cell· San Clemente lngs lhru-ou • 3 br 2 b..1+ $UO-COZY 1 Br. Cottagl". AU utU pd. Call TOOay! Hom1ftncler1 547-9641 · LONG TERM· RENTALS Corona del Ma r I or $12:5. utll Included. Avail. REAL ESTATE Watl'rtronl, ~I. Beaut. Unfurn, 320 ELEGANTLY furn apt,. 2 or 774-ll77 KIV~ OK dccM'~ion· 2 BRv.,.· JO' v 0 ai-I. nFeebw. I~ I--'-------= BR., 2 bas. lge Uv. dtn. .:::...:..::~::....----36$~ ~ J Fountain Vallty kitch area, Superb view of Apt. Unf urn. 3 .BR, 2 BA, blt ns, c p t g I C USTO~f DRPS, ENCLOSED YD & patio. $36i900. 492-<619. ~uth Laguna 2 BR • den lmmac. home Welk-to ~tott-5, school &: beach. Great ocean vu. f\tany extra1. Only $52,500 ,c.au for appt. §44-2442 d~s 499-1925 cw. [ -- Mobile Homos For Salo 125 completely flnllfled base- ment lot ~o.yrm or \\'Orkshop. Lndry f ll C , $36,500. (21.1'l 451-3898 after 6 pm or anytime \\--eekendJ. 3 adrm, 2 ba, ~hly pntd. decor. 2 BR, fam. rn1 ., buy. Ideal for Exec. cple, _.. 3· BR nr.. beach, nice :ew c1p~ &Ndra,pe1~.1~~v1 e Seville. Upgraded carp. & Short Term Rtntal $450. ~vail dlort tmn. Balboa l1li1nd yard,' 'frplc, patio. \\10.ter re r g. ear '"''iuu s. drape1. Child & pel ma,y Tiburon 3 Br, 2~ bo., <.'Ondo, 673-3268 Pd. $275/mo. Call 675--5810 Wlbon & Placentla. Fenced be OK $2'75. ll'IO. ru="'RN""'"ba~c~h~Sl~90,.--,-,""I -u°"tl $250, Pl\RTLY 1'Urnl8hed. Out of St1t1 P'!f': 171 Houst1 Unfurn. 305 r:"1,_;~~.lrult trees. $275. Red Carpet Rltn. <19'l-l16l FULLER REAL TY S.h~ above average-i;ee to 2Blt, utU, trplc yard, Joi ......,., .. J parking, 200 Sapphire, NORTIIENO: Walle to M&-0814 anytin1e apprec. nonsmoker/buslnes$-675-3288 KAWAll Kona Cout Prop. O.ntral EAS'1:'SIDE, frr1h 2 BR. Beach, Quaint,2 BR, trplc, man 675-4859. ,;c.::.==~-----ser.n~ porch, crpta, drps, "'OO<I ~ ...... 1;""' retrig stove Huntln•ton Beach ~lboa Penlru.uJa Contact Don Hart box 2315 ---------fncd "ards. Gu. u'ater pd. ._. ...... <o, ' ' • C I "-s Kailua-Kona, Ron Burla A.uoc R.E. No ~. ,_;:1•0 Ph· gar., water paid, $300 mo.. os a ~ • .jUA ~NTALS 642-li9• ' _,., ' · Yrly. 4!>\.$14 NEW luxury 3 BR, 2 ba• .. RHI !stilt Ex cha""' "'"""'"' .. w.... SHARP 4 BR, 2 BA, ill;· L1guna Niguel ~/·~~~·.~·~~';,'; ~'."'96t Casa de Oro bltns, nu cpts & dtps, ~. l97l ALL UTILITIES PAID 182 f fiil MOUSIS per mo. including gan:lener, NEW Garden h?me, 3 BR, Co111par(' b<'lorc you ri!nt • urss ~ '"" or ~ ..,9 2 bas. Rec facils. 644-1751, 1 BR. New c1-pt, drps, refrig, Cu.~ton1 designed, featuring: TRADE Newport Be a cJ1 :...W..:f . ·~S. V-ACANT ZB-R •-.. ,., ll<S, 493-0136 washr/dry, pa.Ho, po 0 l . • Spacious kitchen \\'ilh In-Prop. for out-ol·town prop. ----· • ,..,.,. $170. 548-1405. dil'C('t lighting mer. 714/673-:K68, eves NfWPOtT & u.v,c.M. 642•Ull. Also 2BR, HB, $1113, Sgh1, Lake Fortst L • • Separate din'g area 61t>-5487 ?UATURE Male $80 Bach, 9Ki7~~~'•30,pets, Agt. Fe c' LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA, family 1gun1 Niguel e Home-like stor11ge RHI~ E1ti1te Wi1nted 114 tum light cook/re!r, util ::rat ..i ...... fe ·-" d •t 0 c · -• Private patios rm, crpts, .... .,... nt"='t Y · "" N ~ R H S u 1111n It, e Closed garage \\'/storage UNFURN. lrg. 3 BR, frplc., ncv.•Jy redecorated, l blk. to beach. $275/mo. Yearly. Wk· days Lil 5, 835-lOll Mr. S"·ing; eve. & "'knci5. 842· 2806. NEW unfurn duplex, 2 blks to ocean-bay, 2BR, 1 ~l ba $375, 3Blt, 2 J~ ba, $395. pd. 3 BR, 2 ba. custom home, $265 mo. Avail. I-'eb. l. magnif1clcnt ocean & coast e Marble pullman MOBl-LE HOME CORONA Del Mat, lmmed. PAINT Me 1 ~ $120 unit frplc1 fncd yd. Dlx kit, dble ..Phoiie 837·9115 view! new 1.ge 2 BR, 2 BA e King:sz B<lnni FOR SALE: ~r;.~ 6:J ~:!~. o~ ~ ~tv~!!,f·J:s~ ~. ~~r'an541lls. Lease Ok. LI-do lilt_ w7mic:w~vet ovt'n & dmaeyl •Pool · Barbeques • sur- I Both frplc, crpt,, drps, sio West Balboa Blvd, 644-2911 OCEANFRONT lUDEA\VAY Single cozy studio. 90 dcp-ee ocean vlew. 1 adult )'I'ly. 673-6372 or 987-1988 SILVERCREST bldg. Any E. O.C. 11.n!a. Lots of closets, fUll kit. unusu · ea~~ a. u , t rounded with plush land· MOB' LE H. 'OME Bk r . ' Ca 11 co 11 e c t 2 BR H Sl New Paint 2 BR. $185. Crpts, LIDO (>ppor. 3 BR, 3 BA, con1muruty ""I. I c c . scaping 213-$2-ln& ouse 00.Couple lncd drps, g_ar, yard tor pet. DR, $490/mo. Open SI S, ~<;llities. 1Lease831$4""~ mo. Arlullll, No Peis 2 BR, bltin!I, $250. mo. pa.Uo. al' x 53', 2 BD 2 Bl carp., w/gar, pet & child. Homeflnders 547-9641 133 Via \Vaziers, 640-8146 in. on y. .....,.....,.., or l BDRM. Furn. $190. ' Partially rum 2 Br, 2 ba. draped, blt·inl., re(rlg., ANOTIU::R 2 Br. $165 HB 675--02"".>5 365 \V. \\'Uson 642·1971 1 673-9591 1 washer & elect. dryer, wired .,y/gar. child, pet & singles $175 f\lINI Eslate. 2 Br. ~) ••·oss·oon V~jo C · I Be h for n:> air cond., ldtch. [iJ ok. ac. Fncd for toUpet. 1.,.. •• Newport Be1111ch $30 WEEk & UP apis reno IC clock, storage shed, land· 'tin.new I • BALBOA . 2 & ~ $250 yrly Homefinders 547-9641 FOR lease 4 br, 2 ba, lam •· • Studio&: l BR Apts. \VALK to beach, new 3 BR, r.caped patio. Three )11'11. old . furn, bnng child &: pet. JBR, lBA 2641 rm, crpUdrps, view. \Yater PROF. Decorated condo, nr • TV &: Maid Servtce Avail. "J. ba undeck d/w gar • like nu . Located ln new ATRIUM 2 hr 2 ba $265. Elde r.n) garage, pd. Avail now. $300 mo . Hoag, lBR. 2B1\, washer • Phone service -Htd. Pool $"1.70 6~::1760 or'493-758'1. ' adult pk. away from nolly f.p. appll's, gar, walk to n, ~~71 557-5(T.'3. &: dryer, pool, !rplc, elect • Children &: Pet Section -Cor-ona_dec::l:..;;:M,caccr""'"'-- St. One·hAlf bl,. from club-Business 5ea. Be h gar opener, $350 per mo, 2376 Newport Blvd., 0.-1 house. $15.495... Call EVES. Opportunity 200 -OIOICE 3 br $22S E/side. •3 BR, 3 BA, 2 story town-Newpo1'1 ~C _ 673-5700 54.':S-9755 or 645-3967 213-6Sl-4690. l'itv/ref, fnca, 2 car, pets. hse, Back Bay, pool, gar, IS UFFS SHARP 1 sty BluUi 00;ndo. (Ad gOOd Cor $5-on ttilo CAN BE SEEN AT: Used Cu a LtHlnt REAL Deal - 2 br 2 ba 1325. mo. 8J3.l653/ms914 TENN B 3 BR, 2 Ba. Vaca"t. ~~ - CRESTMONT HARBOR BLVD. furn $295, bltns, F.P., cvd Dina Point Only 1teps to tennia court, $395/mo. Sale by O\\'ller BEAtrr FUR."'I 1 Br lot1 'll ESTATES Auto . body &. paint shoo. patio boat gate, 2 car, mi s\vimming pool--from NEW $49,995 \Vilt •ake 2nd'. of blliM, pool, walk to 1051 Sile'Dr7. Brea.-{Central 4 man cnw. G~~ENER Inc 3 b NEW Ocean Harbor Forever 3 bedroom (or 2 & den) 83J...86.15 shoppuig, nu from bch $150 I Ave. acrou from Brea RIVIERA REAL TY i $350 Ip r r game View. 4 or 5 BR 3 Ba,, formal dini~, fireplace, sell NE\V 3 BR 3 BA d' mo. 931 W. 19th St. 548-0492 TOWNHOU>E • Comn1. Hosp.) Lot •46. 149 Broadway, C.!1-1. ~. ' ., app 1' pat1o, Fam rm, FP, Cpts. dps, cle~g ove~, bea~lif~ Can-frplc, dbl 'gar., ~pt~~·~~'. -• · -':l Hr, Jtrep!llee, pool, pl"'vate OONTACT RAY. PK. MGR., '42-7007 NgU shag, 4 Br, 2 Ba $325 only im s000~7,h~r sell. yun Vlew/~~t llght1. ln1-many qual. extras. pool, FurBn1~hedE Bac!'elorlls & patx>1, continental break· for showlng. fl.fl"!:i v., F.P., bltns, 2 car. • • ·mediately av1Wable. Loca ted tennis, sauna, 544-3049. .1 r I xcept1oru1 y Wt. Spacloua grounda, near and only l~~ blocks to the NE\V custom bit beauty ln Money to Loan 240 HUG E 5 Br 2 Ba $340. Now EXEC HOME; 3-6 Bedrooms hl~h on. the hlJ!s of Harbor EXCITING Bluffs 3 hr 2111 nice. 2110 Newport Blvd soopp.!::i:'. !: line beach. Fur· JUtf. One block lo a huge adult ~rk on the •-y. 1st TD Loans lrplc appll's 2 car w/pool spiral staircase. 11,4 ml. to VU?\V Htlls. $495 per month. ha t . ·I b ' --• I Costa Mesa n1sned or WlfurnWted, from pool, recreatlon·room. One 'lr ua ' ' Marina Boat Yrd $475/mo 644-4687 'nr enn1S cu ·.......,, $495 ~ Co d 1 Mar PINE TREES & BEAMED CEILINGS of the most upgraded 3 $18,500. 61:>-0723. MANY 4, 5 &: 6 BR's Now 493-741i/8J8.-3001 . . . mo. Sa.le by owner $69,!JIJ5. I BR s16o&"'"$150 ALSO 2 -....i.~u. rona e ' bedroom homes ln Newport B&ST buy Udo Yacht CALL OR COME BY . . . DREAM COTTAGE ON Will take 2nd. 833-l!635. BR $195. New cpl, xtra lge. "' •• Shores. Just li&t«I at $48.500. Harbor, double wide, patio. UP TO 90% ALA Renti1ls 642..&313 Fountain Valley CANAL NE\VPORT CREST CONDO. Adults, Ideal for __ Bachelon;. To .ee ta to appreciate. pool, garage. $7950. ~ 8~ % INTEREST BRAND New T 1 bur on Small 2 BR, shag cpt, drps, 2 BR, 2 BA. \Vet bar, frpl, 1993 Church, 548-963.1 LRG 2 BR apt, Quiet; lecJ.ud· !::!' •• ~.11 • .!!; ,.~ -.. -·1 ~ 2nd TD Loans $ LANDLORDS $ Townhouse, fully crpt'd, bltn&, frplc, lrg. deck, walk· near pool, tennis. Drys. * SUNNY .APTS -POOL ~· ~ ~~~,ts~~· ~· ... " .. .,,,. ,_, ......... . . -Let US rentJUR properties. drp'd, self clean oven & in pantry~ washer/dryer, extras. $425/mo. 552--017a. e Adults Poolside $15'0 up ery ce. • 'YU41· ill ~ I _._ I We service all the beach dsh\\·hr. wa.~her & dryer. <i;Jock avail). Ideal for 2 Duplexes Fum 345 e Abo Children's Sections 548-8638 or 646--0977. 11~!',jll\'.tl .....,.. Lows•.•'11'1e1tresMOrlf•. "c9o•. Co. Cities & inland Orange Co. 3 BR. 21.2 BA. fl.laster BR girls, $285. yrly. Adults, no • in E. 2'lnd St. CM 642-3645 CHARMIN9 new 3 BR. 2 FEE FREE. Save Tune t· $$ overlooks XX>I & clubhouse. pets. 6~2124 B1lboa Island NICELY furn 1 BR Trail BA apt. Convenient CdM 642-2171 545.o611 $ALA RENTALS$ $330/MO. Call 962-6666 VIEW 1100 & UP Ad 1' .~ew"·t lDCBtlon. 13'15 per mo. Rltr Acrea_ge for sale 150 Serving Harbor area z.t. yn. Nev.-port &: Bay, CM 642--838:"i wkday1 betr 5 pm. or BRAND NEW PALERl\10 STUDIO $150 f!K1 winter, 1 Wilson, cM. 64~ .L.u • 644-Tll_!>'---=-- GRANO Ot'ENING ATTN. BUILDERS ,,-ON'T BORRaw--494-4196hes &: wkndJ. 4 Bdrm, 2% Ba, crpts, drps, Br, $180 wmter. quiet SM at 1 older adult Utif FRESHLY P.AINTED-2 BR. Newport Bey Towers Approx 3 ae nr Fairview , rtuntin1ton Beach gardener. Pvt swim & ten· mature man. 675-3613 No pl {tis See !.I No 4 1 BA. Crpts, drpl, bltnl. 1 &: 2 'BEDROO~t ltd. le l ?th St, in W. Santa TIL YOU CALL USI nis club 6 mo tse pets. . · ;,.,..~Eld gr.CM. Corolido Apts. $110. 549-2288 CDNDOMINJUP.t llO~tES rrow on your home eq~ty Thnr!EDIATE oCcupancy, 3 $Sis. Pe~ Mo. 2 BR, 1 ba. Winter,$300 mo. in rear. ~ en, · • or eves 557-8968 Siytront Homes ~~~~~ cotN"d1 q~~ for any good-purpose. Sei'v-BR, 2 BA, bltns, culdesac 833-0780 BOB \VlLLJM1 \VINTON LGE FUU.Y FURN 2 BR 2BR T den, 2 BA, duplexr Boat Sllp1 for cluster development. ing Loi Angeles County tar * •• * slreet, lge lot, dble gar., Realtor 675-3331 bltn.s, pool, bm cell, adlts, no crptl, d rps. appUaoces, Fun Stturlty Hlghrite Just $lOO,OOO. g'er XI yean ~ NOW in -s·0111 S25CJ. mo. Ask tor Dale $150 • Small 2 Br, xlnt loc-1 Nt rt Be h pets $180. 642-9520. '909 , -Steel·•concrete cpmtrucl.Jon· -646--3928 ·of'<£\'ft··-646-454l.·· .... nwge.-~b! •........ --··-.. W;'ttth-COITAllllA· -~ ·--·-. . . .. --. ~-'J.B.~ bf ,.!_bay,_ ~-boa· wpo ac NICE lBR, duplex, Qui~t. I ga.rqe. 615-6369. Private BalcorUes· t..acbentnyer Realty SIGNAL MORTGAGE 00. $lS5 • BUS route 1 Br. tum LOVELY neighborhood <I br -~ hlic tfiS, sliag crpts, 0 CE AN FRONT Beaut ~p. by gar. Employed adltl NEW W'le deluxe 3 ~ ~-spaces.~ .... ? unit. Cemetery 4500 ~~ ~=. N.B. apt. handy for itudent. 2 ba, large lot, dbl gar'. d:'. Lrg 3' ~y.!f11:"tio Winter rental 28R, 2BA. wl over 30, no pt?tii, -548-1021 2 BA, trpfc. Shoppiq: wttbilj -.. ~ 1.31 L /C $175 • LITI'LE 2 Br hse, bltlns, super condition. $.125. child pet. CorO~ del 1.-tar • frplc, $300 per mo. 646-3839 Huntington Buch I blk. $395. 673-2918 , U~':"1~~r!'fn oh rypts 156 MortT ...... , ,... __ ..1 nice yard, will comider pet Rent or lse. Ask for Dale, NU-VIEW RENTALS Duplexes Unfurn. 350 N~W large deluxe 3 BR, 1'owport Beach. 2 CEMETERY k>U Cypress rut ._s 260 I< child 96i-441l 673-4030 0 494.3243 $155-$165 2 BA, !rplc. ShooPlni wltlilii JlO Fernando Rd., N.B. section.. Harbor Rest $185 -HOUSE uni 2 Br. 3 BR, 1 ~fl _Ba, bll·i111, FOR l r -b Balbo1 PeninsUll BACHELOR & 1 BR, Pvt ) 1 blk. $395. 613-2918 ' 7 • 0 ,. 1 Memorial Park. ca 11 ~ Gar, yard, kids & pets. dillhwRSher, carp., drapes, ease, 5 HR, rand gar, laund rm, adults. -4 BR-2·BAS·~~~50--·1 • -837-2439. Home Owners $250 • S.A. Hgts 3 Br, 11,.i hdwd nra Near Marina new view home. Enjoy 2 BDRM, crpts, drps. bltns 842-7848. 1 1 1 , CHARMING CA$H NOW Ba house, nr elem. sch!. High: shoi>ping. $275/mo. tennis & ~ <:iu& priv. fr p I c. ga r . Dryer 1 BDRM l block from ocean 49'1·~·15, 4!H-6045 Commercl1I S20 $325 • LaQuesta Home 3 Br, 846--4017 aft 6 & wknds. $600 ~o. Will oonstdcr lease furn. Adults, no kids or pets. Redecof.ated pool Sl30. BU< to ocean l\1kt. Immac Lovl'lY Ir: charminl: 2 bl' Property 158 $1,000 to ,000 1V:1 Ba house, nr elem. sch! 2 BR House, lrg fncd yard, w/opbon to buy. Call 6T;,--0496 960-2fil8 • , . :l Br, trpl. beams, patio, home ln prime helihts ~ ..... ~1n:;:1~=c!~o't $325-. LaQuesta Home 3 Br, encl garage, crpt/drps. Near 547·9'l84 days, or 644-4184 Corona del Mar qlllet adlts. $235. 642-1276 aru. 1':· llv nn w/fl'plc T\VO adjoining income .,._.. 2 Ba, country kitcb, trplc, be eves. NE\V condo, bachelor, w/ A: beam cellq. r. i' properties, center Costa factA. Monthly payments yard & cov'd patios. ~~~ds/pet ok. $185/mo. 11JE BLUFFS BRAND new 3 BR. 2% ba litarlna view, walk to ocean Costa Mesa landlClped yard w/double l\lesa. O\\'ller. ~~m~~ti Individual $375 • Pool 3 Br. 2 Ba, VACANT 2 BR ho 1145 Smart new. 3 BR, pool & unit w/lrplc. & bltins. 16.10 96(}-~ aft 6 I EASTSIDE:, 2 BR, 11ni Ba. range on alley. $39,500. & 64.5-Xl20/642~ trplc, pool aerv incl. use • yard maintenance -cust sq: ft. of chann & a super Laeun• Bei1ch retrtg, bit-Ina, cpta, drpl, OV.'llt'f will rtna.oce. Condominium• ~~·needlnle!?.,t'""ls!lnancet ·T.D. ~:?,"'th WE HAVE MANY, fl.JANY = 2 BtR'a~IF, fl45 9:n.S1}!\ cpls ' & drps, $575 :-00. 1st neighborhood to boot. $450. )mtu pamt. pool. No pela. CALL (!) 646·2414 for Ille 160 ·-=~ .. MORE!! · • pe s, ._.. ee. ·~ & last & deposit 644-1846 673.-~. Rustic Ch1rmer $170. 646-0t74 At.~ ~:i~~~ =~~~ri LANDLORDS FREE Irvine eves. & wknds. BRAND New 3 Br, 2 1;1 l·Bdrm. unit close to bea~ SPACIOUS new 2 Br, 2 Ba, r.IALTY ~~Ri%~· Plan 3, for )00. Jum Ktve UI a call; 3 Br. 3 Ba. Laguna -New * SHARP 4 BR, 3 ba Ba, Wlit W/ frplc & bltns. & shopping ln South LaKurta. bltns, drpl, carpeting, pool, Niir l'ft•p•rl Peat Off lee pool &: i . ocean w. No obligation. Home . $35ll "NEW HOMES Townhouse, Back Bay. Pool, 1650 sq. ft. of Charm &: Stove & retrlg. incl. $175 frplc, gar. AduUs, no pet&. SINGLE LEVEL _.,""" n..~LS ... -~~-.!· CALL 3 Bl'. 2 Ba. Laguna-View, 2 BR den 2 ba •A'lC frplc, self-cle1an oven, d653ble A Super Neighborhood to mo., alfol util. included. Call 376 w. Bay St., CM • ..,.,......,. vwno:r uap .umu.......,, Netlonal Mortsl9: Co. close in , $395 • • • ·-·.,...., gar, $375./ ease. 833-1 -boot! $450. CaU 6'rrr1076 owner r app't. 4~3930. 2 Br, 1 6a & 3 br, i u ba, BLUFFS ''LINDA" call 615-Bm 835-2424 3 Br 2 Ba Newport -3 BR, 2 baths ....•••. $435 or 833-8974 NEW 3 Br, 2 Ba, deluxe. OCEANFRONT A.PT -Table n D I /U It aayb,,nt tow.iho 1425 3 BR, !am rm, 2 ba .•. 1450 bltn r;ange, c!rps, crpt, poo~ J BR, 2 ~ corner lot, deep up exes n I 2700 N. Main, Santa Ana use 4 BR fam rm 2'ii ba $475 BLUFFS TOWNHOUSE, E\ij!cyt:hing you want. No Rock South Laguna. 2 BR, clubrm, carport. 2212 Col· pile crp g. pr1vate pe.tlo. sale 162 ~~ Ba3 B,_r 2t l~c 0 •t ·w· al421 •' 'NEARL'Y NE.W ElegaECnt 4P B1r, 2 1iii hlBa. leW. Call 673-t691 ~BA Yearly rental only. tege Ave. S4fHi032. M1,...l conalder lease option. · uo.. · ·" • 4 BR ! 2 RED . oo ' view, sc s. ·-,,....,., o thl R f ' $69-:SOO. NEW DUPLEX PUT YOUR MONEY to beach .••...•••... , •• $425 , am nn, ~ ba • , S..'lSO $4~. Call to see, Dane Point . 4!$--2851morn cri'i> 681-~ s. DELUXE 2 BR. 2 BA. New CORBIN-MARTIN 3 BR, 2 BA Hoose w/ frpl. TO WORK FOR YOUI 2 Br. Fam. &~dining rm. 3 BR, 2 baths .••..... 1190 n~l973 SPACIOUS 2 BR w/frpk, EFFIC. apts lrOm $50 wk crpt'g, drpa:. t.undry tac11. REALTORS u•7u• l 2 BR ~' B Shore Clli!s .. . .. .. $500 2 BR, den, 2 ba ........ $400 y ONTS 3 Br 3 "· 2 car pr. $250. 1mmed. _.... -P Ut • .,;,, A Earn 10% or nlOre on well-Bkr 675-7225 3 BR· bonus nn 2 ba • , $425 BA FR , on, very private. New palnl, 01· $170 mo. Pool, maid, occupancy. 646-4157 -Townhcxme w/frplc. 2'CUl'ed 2nd Tnurt Deeds on · ' ' pier &: s1ip, $750. -4 Br, drps 2 blks to beach. $200 ph, ldry, \'illage Inn NEWPORT SHORES 214 Knoor St, CM. $69,000 Orange County real estate. LANDLORDS! family, 41> Ba, pier & sllp perm. 49S-3T.l6 eve. 494-9436 QUIET FOUR-Pt.EX 2-Sty. A·frame.; 3 BR., Cmalr. 646-441-4 SIGNAL MORTGAGE 00. $1500. Denison Assoc s • Huntl..,..on _C... SO. Laguna, furn BACH 2 Bdrm., 2 bas. $00. w/atrlumJ, 'l bo, 11undeck, p 2 d (n') = "l06 \Ve Specialize in Newpor1 673-7311 .... '' No pet. 2868 La Salle No. l bltna brktJt area Club 2 BR U , own, spadoug. " ~ Beach e Corona del Mare APT. Ocean View, near 549-3.S24 or 541Hi338 teMii. A pools 'nearby: Xlnt value & terms. By 4500 Campus Dr .• N.B. &. Laguna. Our Rental Ser-BLUFFS, view, pool. Brand BRAND New deluxe 2BR, beach. No pets. Isl &: last $45,900. owner. 34595 caIJe Paloma, vice ii! FREE to You! Tcy New lg. 3 BR., 2% ba., 1 % ba, nr beach, blllns, mo. Sat & Sun. 499-1656 llOO VICI'ORIA, CM CAYWOOD REALTY C B :;t;6-63)8 Nu View' "SINCE l"."" ram. rm. Only $450. month! laund rm 609 18th St r>ei: DCE \NFRONT 2 BR, !rpl New. Large rooms. 3 BR, lnco . :....., Pr-rty 166 NU. -Vl.EW RENTALS ~ mo ~0 -•~ ' e, 2 BA, dbl garage, 2 patios. * 541-1290 * .... -,..... ht Western Bank Bldg. H.B. Do"'Cl., Rlt. 644-0!34 ·• ........._.... deck, TV, garage. Winter Call 6T:>-2749 l-,-,~~~~4!""""'-1 ;;;;:;;""c...:..:'O!='-'--:-..:.;.;; ._. 673-4030 or 494-3248 Untvenlty Park, Irvlne BEAOI home. 4 BR, 2 bas. Newport Buch only. 494-5792 1 BR Cl Mo , * 5 BEDROOMS * DUPLEX-$39,900 Jl\fMACULATE, CUSTOJ\1· Di1ys 552--7000 Nights Fam-rm, pool·tTf.l w/pool $325 YEARLY 3BR 2BA it. LARGE 2 BR. ~le, pat~. $l22.s0n.to~seAl~o Larg: g2 Den, dlnlng area, 3 Ba, clean Carden Apartments (1) 2 BR IZED, 3 BR, 2 BATH, FAM· _ tbl.e., frplc, Tenn1S_ &-pool blk In be h 1295, • 1~ oceanfront. $300 incl. util. BR ll!lO/MO. No pet•. sptt.ckiua l·story, Oltfha~. _ l Bath (1) 1 BR -1 HoUMI Furnlshtcl 300 lLY ROOfl.l/FIREPLACE. pnv. Lease $42S. 645-0836 ac • year Y 494--7873 I Vacant. May lea.~. $19,500. Bath, private pat Io s, 0 CE AN VIEW. $350 2 BR., 1 bath . . $225/3.15 HARBOR View Home, nu 3BR. 2BA, 2 blks to beach: . b"l3-2833 or~ Bkr. ---GEM tncklsed garues, built-ins. Gentri1I l\IONTIILY. EBB TIDE 23 BRBR, 2 ba, den, al~ $2?5 2 Br. Den, 2 Ba, beaut 642--7914 & 642-3188 STIJDIO, patlO, ocean vu. 2 BDRM 1Y.a BA Quiet street. 'Ex ce llent REALTY 496-41i64 .,2be.th1 $38.i/425/450 cpts & drps $385. Eves YEARLY: 2 BR. $275; 3 Yrly rental $175 incl. util.~ AoULTS-$160. U'.>-F Tustin Ave., N.B. cOnditlon. SllO • UtU Pd. Quiet Bach . 4 BR, 2~ baths $425/450/475 642-1536 ' • BR. $350• 4 BR $400 494-7813. I • REALTORS 642-<623 1714) m6SOO w/ ....... A "'°'· Corona Hones OK, Oldie 3 BR, $285. CALL 552-7500 · Balboa &, .....;p, 67>-1'>60 SfUDIO lull kitchen, dose In Sll JoaM 548-~'13 3 ~~.E:.~·:.11, ~ ~'gtll Pd. 1 Br. Deck, J.'~.fl=~s 547-9641 VISION SJlifE:... Hi;;;, 1:::::. !1nr!: 3 Br, 2 Ba has ... ..,.._ r~~ ... "U,~131150 DD pe... 3 BDRM$ 'eolV. BA. ronson beautltul view, V 1 ct or I a club w/pool & tennis, $470. near ocean, tennis, pool · t room . Com PI et~ I Y Coron• clel Mar 644-4186. $285. ~73 BEACH !ront rental, walking 862 W. Center, 01 645-6857 ~=:~· Mc:ts v"1 sdfl:: Rulty & Investments $~~· ~· Br. })'pie, SEAWIND ' • red hi 11 NEW exec 4 BR, 3 BA w/180 Newport Shores dis. to shopping, 6 mo or 1 & 2 BR. $135-$155. Stove, Ka.19er, CdM, Newport 91)5 s. EUCLID patio, 1 blk ocean, Balboa • degree view, tennis le pool yrly lse, 00 pets. 644-8989 rer, crpt/drpl:, hid pool. u_. v Bay. 22!lO Golden FULLERTON Penln N xt T s lass REALTY REA' ~RS $600 mo. Eves & wknch, 3 BORMS., 2 ba, PaUo. Walk BEACON RENTALS Aduti., l1D peU. 645-8965. Clrele, 64:>-U)52 or 64IHlS67 NU.VIEW RENTALS e 0 PH u I v•v 644--1791 to beach. 1300 Yearly. Laguna S.ach 494·94!n 2 -3 BR, ... crpt/drp1 INVEST In C...W Property 4 UNIT APT. BLDG. 61l'!l030 or 494-3218 VIEW n v. Park C'"ter, !rvl"e * EXECUTIVE View 5 Br Property Houoe 642-3857 N1wport Beoch pools, playground. 1150 up. Newport Beach New Condo. S~ oo!t:;:J~ 1)1.tti'i." l COTTAGE $$>, kids, pets, 3 Bedroom. 2 bath home, 2 BR CONDO ..• From $220. H.V .. hm. Fam rm, din rm, Apts. furn. 360 ~C~a!~l_645--0_'~l-'°-----I 3 Br. 8 Ba. Din rm. $n,soo. unit bid.a. 2 BR ea. Great aleo gar unlt Balboa $ll0, tlreplace, formal di nlng, -$245. mo. lsc ;~~1,1!..,pool. $500. Owner ... G I BACHELOR Apt, yearly. At 2 BR. Adults no pets. BAi Contnct or Leue OpUon. loc. Costa Mesa. Inc. $7,740 1 BR HOUSE HB, $125, aclf-cleanlng oven. Enjoy 2 BR condo •••• ~. Afo./l1e U'l\l""\IUVO enera Beach.$120/MO. + $3.5/nlo f.IEADOWS APTS, 387 \V. ~•.ooo dn. n.-nt HU>i/mo. W 2BJW;165 .. _.. Fee 9'79--80> prlv8.te community tennis & 3 BR Home • • -= Mo/lse NEWPORT HGllTS 4 BR SM extra for the 3 sun1mer Bay St., CM. 646-0073. •.w .--''" -..,... • ......... ' ' ALL Bach. for 1. Near mo"s Al.!IO 1 BR until June I ~,,"-~-~~---1nc1S~~(:=~ ~sley N. Ti1ylor Co. Bllboa lslMCt ~~= ~ I~ b 0t:I! : :: ::~: · · · • 1:: :~~= ~:Uino~~all schls, beach ln Laguna. $115. Re-15th ·at beach, s'i3S/mo. No 1 BR Apt. Adults only, $165. Linda Ille fi BR, famlly, 21lJ SM "":~WI Rd. Corona del l\Iar. $495 per RANCH REALTY 551-»Ml 3 BR. lam rm. 2 BA. Harbor spon/employed. 494-4200. pets. 6T:>-2833 or 6i:i-5800 ~~ Center, Apt B. 4~, BA, pier I 1Up. Only Newport Center &IH910 AVAIL. NOW month .. leue. 64fi-4687. BEAU11FUL NEW, 3BR. View Homes. New P ort Balboa Island Bkr. 2 BR. $165 + $15 dep. No 1115.000. can De,!1on IDLE MONEY--UtUc JJ!and Home; 2 2 BEDROOMS 2BA, Unlveralty Park. Gold Schls. $450. lro-3891 lBRBarbeloretlelooklngout pet~ Children Dk. SW •·--·73u bdnnJ., &rn., with utUlties ......... crpta matchi""' ,._ 2 ba 4 BR, avail now, ~ blk on Tropical patio & Newport Cei t St CIJ ·--~. v•;r CATHERS NO !N~ME•. ~ -P th A --.. ' .. " .... ...,, * BLUFFS, .fBR, ~ ' t bay Lrg BR' Bay J .. ~ laund prl I n er ' . ~'°""'· """' . ..... tr' mon . vaU. G-·~ 1--• unit •"th •-patio 3.trlur.1 •• .,., ,..,.r di f rm prt patlo o . •. , ac ...... ~. v, 2 B BLICS to ocean + comm. Thia fourple>c tnvltes your In-J Ma)' 31 1fl • .......,.. 11:•g •1 · "" ' ' ....., ..,.. n rm, am • • STUDENTS WELCOME. prt ent, rare find. ~2793 R partly furn. No chlldren . pool, tennla. 3 BR, 2 ba apectlon. Prime location tn an. to rt, 4. prtvate patio. Rt cen t 1 Y ~i:ea;.:4.~~p., ~ mo., 644-1480 $250/lttO. 213-289-8366 eves or• 67>2'l97 {&rl5'1.·ering ser-or pe11. $155/mo. hou&e, Uke new. 147,900. Costa M.,.. Qill HAftaOlllt remodeled & clooe to NEW 3' BR born• In ~. Newport Heights DELUXE 2 Bedroom 2 Bath, vi.,.), can 642-51148 1°" On. 242 Cedar, &t5-t599 The Reil E1t•ttt F•lr-everything~~ 640-lUJ Rock 216 Crystal yrly $325 mo. a:» per wk &. up. l BR. Deluxe 2 Br. crpts. drpg. or &U-1l63 SS6-2SSJ Qt.6lD ESTATE · Walk to schools, ten-3 BR to reaponslble middle 673-n7S or (l) m..2149 2 Br & bach's. Color TV. bltln1. Eastlllde. No pell. HARBOR vtEW/CAllMEL nis, pool &: bus. $42:>. mo. agtd or oldtr cou.ple. Long $165. Call 644-U03 BR. 2 BA, Fam/Rmi Din. OORONA del Mar, New I)plx 3 BR, 2 BA, new Mag cpt, 833-2'i'm """' term rental only. No child· n:AJU.Y sml Jlland bach maid sen:_, r.I. WE XJ cond l« yd by OWT\tr. 3 BR. 26AJ frplc, aar., $350 mo. 1st B.E.At.rr. Princeton model 3 l'(!n or dogs. $215. 1513 Cliff apt. $13:5 mo. Fem only. f.IESA, 415 · Nev.'Jl(>n 3 RltS, S95 mo. Adult., over ~ Sfri.~.' fni Port 2 BR, 2 ba. l\11 blt-lnt, cpt'd Ir. la.st. $100 deposit. 605 Br, 2 BK, q Uv & din Dr, ~2 em or wkends. 6T:>-5666 Blvd., NB. &16-968l. ~~'!° Sti:elA· Inq. at 2«> Aahiey PL 6U-6t80 le drps. shunplt<me trplcs, NardPW!, 673-8115 or atta, BBQ & patio. Xlnt San CJtmente Balboa Penln1ul• ON THE BEACH • Yearly. llACON BAYflRONT Tttml ottered. 6~ ~ Univ. Prk loc. $325/mo . , 2 BR. $285. mo. 6001 1-BR Apt . 1\ll utll pd. Prtvatc la _L ·" .AA 6 2 BR u,us "•/pool •• near WATEft11tONl'·A\llJI J 2 BDRM .. den. completely Avail Feb \st. ~7355. $785., 2 BR. 1 BA, 202 FURN Bach c I 0 r. nr. ~!:"~ Dr. 67J...0404 or patio, 5h&a crpt, ~Uns, view, p.,,r • -P ILll 17th S~ EutaJde C M, l9th PIO J... pr 2 b:1 remodeled. Pt.tlo It deck. NEW 3BR 2BA w/bltins PB.1l%ada, ZU.-376-2814 . or Pavillion. $150/mo. Incl. '1'"t\Y"JQ'f\J retrlg, $150. &'6--0112 ~ yacbl. $19.000. nm. $106,00il PrlnC. Only. qt, bluh. trpic 1 Ca,. gnr' Avalle.ble new. -$310. mo. crpts, ~. eon1m, park .\ TI4--968-7058. (Mr. White). util. \Ykdays til S, sr~1ot1 2BR, front duplx, fum/unlun1 38R, 2BA, deluxe, 4<77 C 1 111on Auoca., 6'f3.7311 64i.ml dock,• prl, • pty. ( 213 ) Realtor 644-7270. pool, nr UCI, m-M41 S.n Juan Caplstrino Mr Swing or evu--'c \\'kndJ, 1 blk«:ea.n: $210 avail now Hamilton, S7n, &'U--8100 Jo.r BY OWNER •· 2 BR Buch G UNITS In •--Ir. --•erttlal &12!6. 3BR 2BA + I BR Income I ~··-•. -840.2ll06 128 46 St, SHAG: 644-43>~. appolntm•nt 1 •--· ~06 000 -w JVYc l-n.iu 2 BR Qmdo. Wa nut ""'........ ~===~----1--· .. • • -• lJ'U on Balboa 1 Pcntnsul• a.ibu Pen•MUI• unit abcwt 11\r. $81.000 $m/monlh NEW 3' BR, Frplc, Shai cpt 3 BR, 2 btl, 11•ln1er1 frtilc, OCE:AN front, lu.~urious 2. 3 , NEW 2 1tory. 2 BR. Crpu, '~lv~ 7 5·8 4 9 3 · pt_. S12()(rper-m0 I~. OWntr :tXl Fern I en. t ,' Call 642-26.17 blVlM, l'il ba, pool, pr. 2 hou11c11 from "111.nd, $250. Ir: 4 BR, 2 ba. apts, gar.,' drpe:, bltna. Adult&. $225. 381 _. -":!.. _ ~138,MO. Owner. SJS.9&9!1. YEARLY, fW"n 3 BR, 2 ba m.1840 Be.ch 2 patios. $325. 493-7210 to June 28th, m-&j,Sl lndry. &16-3114 Vlctorla l, IL.UPJrS CONDO SJIARP 2 &ep. houses on brand new untt. 3' doors LOVELY 3 br, 2 ba, 1wlm'g &.. .. uni NEW HOUSE 3 BR 2 bn \VTDE se.lectkwl of apts., 1 Br-fum·!t'.Ule ocean ~IM-=l\!A:.=:C:::...~, -.-,-. -n-ew--, ... -, •• 1 J BR, U.plu., trplc, $11/100. 1 lot. E/&lde. $460 &f'OM. from ocean $400 mo ... (90S oool, lrvlne Terraet. Yr. N~\V 2 BR Arch Seo.ch + fam frpJc. all blt/ins. weekly or monthly. vlew.pool-1lngle ndult SlS.S. re tr I a. •ha.a· QWtt Ownir. ~ SSS.tiOO. O\\'Tll!I'. ~ W. Balboa) 673-2CM Alt. lte. J."\trn or \Jun. m.3173. Jtelahts Octan A canyon w . POOL P¢rm. $350 499.-31!.6 Sand t.i Sea Realty ~ yrly. 646-2696 ne\ihborhood. Sl!JO. ~. di ltll bt& Uema, U \1NtTS wl Pool In E/alde "BAY-.... S-BR., S bl.U., 4 BR. J ta.. •dulta, DO pet.. lJeaut. cptl/d"tpt, deckl, tt'1 a breeze .• , seU your FURN. bachelor •Pl by lhe CLEAN 1 BR, best 8')'. LRG 2 BR I.pt. 1"1W"bt lm&ll Item.I or 1.111 Item. CM. Inc. 11,• per •· trplc., dllhwuber IM 13ei0, Gt Poinlett"-. vacant. S3.'iO rent or •ll ttems with t!'U&, \lie Dall9 beach. $150. mo. tncl. lltll. !k>&ch loc. Adlts, no pell. decorated, nr ab o 1' ~I a 1 Jmt col! IG>llflll $1111,000. Owner. 54Mlll5 Yeorly. !131.tOIRI 87?>-62!4~ W,000 497-Dll or-. Pilot au.llltd. -~n4. l17\l/t1115. 673-0012 centor, no pet& 11«1-1823. I 1 • • • l • Monday, Januuy 14, 1974 r Afits Apls Office Roni• 4«1 l~ustria enta 450 Plumb!!'! _f.F!!u'!'.!"~·_!0~r~U~n!!fv!!rn~·:!3~70~_!F-~u~r~n:_. !0!.r ~U!!n!!fu~r!'.!•~· 13~70~+.oifi>::;.,;:.1cCiE~a',;;nd;'";;oe;,,;k-;SScpa:;:ce-;:: * COSTA MESA * [ -aatt-1~ :.._"'1.."'11.-=0TIS=-PUIJIBlN---G- Ntwport Bf!l(h N•WPOf'' Buch Con'lp. fum: short or tong. 680 S.f . 220 pnwt>r $115.. • . _ ~ Remodels ~ Repairs. Wattr term reotul: (catwina{ 1300 S.F. Prlv:i.te olllct, heatert. dilpoul&. fumaces, -Comp. """'"""I ...-vice plenty al parldnc. · Babyslttlnt dMwuhn. 64U263 MIC I< -OictaUng equipment t.argtr units avallabfo. BIA. Com.Plete Plu.mbln& -n.ete(lt10niSt & phone Re-ad)' for oe<:uoaney. llABYSITTINC fut In.)' bOme Servtce. Uc. 2'12119t. flnHv.·erlne BCr\1ct C. ROBERT NATTRESS Co 1 ta 1\1 e1>1. Ar C! a. f elevl1lon R91Nlr -Xl'toX 4000 REALTOR aererenoes. fbone 642...ro&I -~1(tll service O:>tlta l\1t!14 ~n Carpenttr Ideal location near O,ange NEW Bldg. M-1,23 Unlll. ;c;.;.,;.;.;c;..;.;.. _____ _ IZ DAJLY PIUIT Apt. \hllurn. Cost• Mesa County Ah;>ort. SC!UBE:S 1250 OIJ. h. 1189.i!O/ mo. CARPENTER PINECREEK PARK LIOO OF U DO 4340 Campµ• Dr. 2 Units 1><X1 aq. tt. $230/mo. Good wor1c, Guaralllced. LIVES UP 3 bedroom, 2 bath condo. Steps to community Suite 209 N•wPort B<ach, l Unit IOOO aq. tt. 165/mo Call Bua, 894-1838 COLOR 'TV rel¥,. Expert, reuonable lef\lice. ,Free Estimates . BERT GALLEMORE 'TV 963-2783 Tiie pWenled, All POSITIONS 100% pool. Unfurnished $325. month. en. 92tl60. '"'5290· Front om .... crp11, Irr c 1 Seril TO ITS NAME • • • EXECUTIVE OFFICES rear doora. Anaheim & arpe ' ce CERAMIC TILE NEW A O·-r ~ tall ·--, and 10 GRUBB & ELLIS CO. AVAILABLE Airport area, Termlnnl Way Si>. CM. JOHN 'S C•-t & Uphollt~ remodol, Free e•t .• Sm jobs FREE .... ~ u~-.:: . ,_,.. "" fl, SUite !or lease. D•~ 64&-S\3, evl"S 646-0681 Ori s .-.~mp o o, ( 1tre1tm1 \\'Ith waterfalls ....,., "" '"'.J~ 1...:w;.:•::;lco=m::•;..· :;s:!G-::...:2426='-' ---1 create a relaxing seulng for S 67>7080 Estab. bldg. air-cood, cpt'd, 850 11'1 ft Garage, 20ned Re~ts). Degreasers & y.our spacious ne\v 1 •. or 2. _R!!E!!A!!L!!'T!!'O~R!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l~!!!!l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! drpd. paneled Ret.>eption Commercial. $100. ni o all color brighteners & 10 Top Soll bedroom apartment. From 1!'. a~a in ofct. attractively Call 494.1966, 645-2126. minute bleach for wblte AT $170. Fumiture available. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apts., pnced. Al.SO 1 of cl ~~~~!!!!!!!!~~ carpell. Save y(>ur nlOney •QUALITY* Office open 9:00 to 6:00. 2300 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 v.•/recpt , phone answtrlna:.I: b)' saving me e:xtra tri91. * ~1.ULCJJ le TOP SOIL * FairMw Rd., Costa ~fesa-:-Laguna &each -V ':':ce-:!,iin ren\i S:'Y [ ~-1' 115'1 Will clean living rm., dining ~!!!!!!58IH;930~;~~~~1 AAMES Phone: 545-2300. NEW .a~1uxe tov.."nhoose. Fountain illty be r/:ied nlOce t ava . c!fi ' , $rm7 " & J:lallch $1S. c':ir rrt;· F0 """" , o mo. "'iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii. .SO, oou $10. $5. -~fESA Ji:~AREA 7BR + den, v.•et bar, ocean FROM 170 y li S.2564_~=---~ • 15 yra. exp. is 'vhat counts l[Il]J ~-• •·•---, 2 '-th view, wlk to beach. 1 yr 1 , ou can ve NEWPORT CENTER Announcements 500 not method. I do work • ;l1s. 1• ...,... .>-V1:W~111 .,. lease:, $400 per mo + where • ou play: 3 pools, ja.· NEWPORT CENTER rnyaeU. Good ref. 5314>101. _ apartment. Private patio, cleaning, New deluxe lBR cuzrl, bllllatd roms, party \VRITER 001..... h prage, dishwasher, new Townhouse · rooms, voile)' & basketball 2 ROOP.1 o!fice with fantut.lc . ..>to researc on STE AM C L E A N I drapes, fireplace. N e a r wlk to be~ch.oces.300 ~~ courts, barbequea, babbling view of Ne.,.,rport Harbor "-medical rum, would llke to SANTI'IZE! All dirt out, schools, park. Some kids I aning J 536-8138 brookA. SUNDANCE, best Cata11na. 56f> sq. ft . $425 Interview ""'omen who have Aladdin House of Service, ok. Call ~2219 after 5 c e on ease. managed 1 & 2 bt.'droom per mo. Includes utilities, had an abortion and c55'°"'7-::2678:!:-------I SCRAM-LETS pm. Please hUIT)' & Call. 1 BR Duplex al mo " t t . Or C.OU ty janitor setvlce carpeting homosexuals who have been DIBE:RNARPO~ &. Sons ... \Ve want just the right oceanfront. Victoria Bch. ~&:a ~arne~ FoWl~u; & lots of free ~rking. -in a hospital. Call 644-22:23 carpet sales -installation lamil)' for our apttrtment. $240 yrly. Valley Is your kind or place, ESTATE REALTY 646-lUI 1.;•tt"'-'6:.Cp~m"'". --,..-.,~~~ and repair. 96.1--26.19 ANSWERS Sl'erra VillaCJ• * 4SM7J2 * m41 962-1202 NEW OUice space near Auto Transportation 525 · CONOO for lease 2 BR 1 H • B Orange County Air Port Cement, ConcreN SmallAdultComplex inLush ba. North end Laguna untington each with vie\Y, carpets, drapes, CAR POOL SERVICE Typist-Duchy-Droop- Forest Setting. Located 5 Adults, no pets $265 494-0076 DELUXE adult p 0 0 ts 1 de &Jr, 460 sq ft at 41c per For Information CEMENT & Block Work. TaCanke_r -1 ST~. I h t Job W1nted, Mlle 700 Bureau of Employment Agency Little Mlt1 Muffett Sat On Her Tuffet, Typing Words & Pl!ro,se._She Mede i Mistakes And Did 3 ,....1kes We Got Her A Job Anyway! Min. from Beach & Frwy. Mesa Verde garden bungalow, nr ocean, sq fl. Includes 1 private Call 833-2195 \Valls, patios, sidewalks, pita pun ent 8 w a 1 Br $115 2 B 111 Ba 1195 ;;;.:::.=...:...::.;:;:.____ !ft 1 f etc. B)' hr. or job. 646-6915. you get in the STOCK market. , . r, .,. . lrpl, lrg patio, 6 pools, o ce, _amp e roo~ or 3 After 6 PM Cut EW8ihtr ~ald.C HO,_ME ATMOSPHERE-Dix 2 sauna, tennis. 846--02'j9. deskA in outer 0Ji1ce, 1811---'=:::....:....:..;.:.:___ C~~a~. drives, ~eum:G Man 8)ks stea~ H(fnderella'' $750 · <•• 013. 1 h 6;~ • 095 .r.t & 3 br,f170 up. Rental Also Br. "From $135. n1onth& rent tree. 556=8530 1~~~~~~~~~~ w .,...,,__, ~-:'"""" & paln-tlngune e ~ o fkm e ~ ..... _ , wha 1 .1'tO'V or ....,... Ofc, 3095 Mace Ave. I & 545-5958 I, remove:-.i-,....,,·est1'".,..._;r.JO, --V.U1N\\'Or -e c. , .. .,.t:a-t you'l -feel like BABYSrrrF.lt HOUSEKE& PER needed. Very rtllable. Own '""'P. $55 wlc. CM. ~82611 .. BANK PROORESS!VE. ~ Independent Bank Needs ExpeMenced. :£ x c e 11 en t Salary A nln&e Benelltl. CENTINILA BANK fi46...T111 Mr. llolloway An F.qual Opportunity Employer BEAUTIFUL N!W COMPANY SUPER WORKING CONOS FOf""Electron.IC Auembl-4;n wlu little aa 6 mo's exper. crea.t pay " boneftta. can 'Dottie, Now! 540--4450 NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO ' TEMPO T •l"porary Help BOAT Cook tor pvt yacht, perm. ooahkm, exper. Days <TIC) 641-0457, Eves (%13) 59Z-ISl3. BUSIOYS EVENINGS Apply In Person Before noon or att 2 pm COCO'S ' • CLOSE to shopping, Nice, ii\4&.o=:l7034:;__=....,..----I ~agun1 Nlgue 11•1 PA:rlOS,. WALKS. DRIVES, Call Greg m.9621 w/~ fanluttc pay;ng job. clean 1 & 2 BR apts. No Mission Viejo *BRAND NEW* r.r.onn CONCRETE PUMPING Grea t -o·ppor·tun·lt)'! pets. Bltns, dahwhrs, crpts, 1 & 2 BR, 2 BA. From ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Call Don 642-8514 JOb-W1nted,,.em111e702 However, just like 4647 MacArthur, N.B. . drpe, V.'ashlng facil., closed DARLING & cle••, ---•o Controctor Cinderella you must '9.'0rk "'"ual Onnn" Empl""'er m/I .... '-VI"' $195 Unturn. Furnlshed units NEED help al Mme'!' We hard & be strong. Work "'""I .. ...,.. "') g~Li urn. PAID • living, 2BR, lrplc. crpts & Avail. _P_•_rs_on_a_ts ____ _:.5...:.30 GERWICK & SON have aides, nu rs.~~. for 2 dynamic men v.'ho """"""B,;..U"lS"l80'\!"Y ... "'""""I $160 1 BR$•~ 2 drpg, laund fac in-the apt, CROWN VALLEY Apts housekprs, compan ..... is. need someone to control -Call.; • .,~ BR. Rec. fac, enclad gar, $220 ' LICENSED SPffiITUALIST Bldg Conti". Addit & Retn9d Homemakers Upjolul their b:>oks. They need salary a.CCO('dlna to nper. V'tk"Oo.J•o mo 830-9569 8:;1wyDief: =~·r 138.J! Spiritual readings 10 a.m. Slate Uc. Bl-114321 S47-4i681. super F/C Bookkeeper who Prefer no sludenta. Exper. CU~M BUILT -high Newport Beach Hillburst, Lag. Niguel -10 pmJ Advice on all 673-roU 54~2170 can keep them 1n line on pref'd, but wW train. Apply qualil)' apt with 3 BR, 2 _;...;..:-'-------<TI4)83l--0730 North ·Costa Mesa matters 312 N. El camino J ACK Taulane. r epair. HelpWant.c11,M&F711 expenditures 4 Y."On't be betwn 2:30 I: 4:30pm. BA. drps, plush cpta, bltns, PAllJ NEWPORT ___ _,.c:..:~::...;.:.:;'---_Small11. profes.sional building aRpepalt'caSall ~ ~IJl.•4n!;.9,!~r remod, add. Uc. B-1 269072 afraid to say, "Hey!" and Hamburger Hamlet, lM5 """Shop-papgtloC.en\Vtealrk. At~-~arbonowr· APARTMENTS Newport Be•ch with up to-s-omces-a:vall-....,..,_""""" .,...-wv _.My WJ.Y.Q>... ~7Q3. -ACCOUNTANT "No!" F[C thru P/L. Adams. Of, Ask 1or Mt. •~ B 2 Bed 11 PROBLEl'I Pr e gnancy ~--·--tlon d'·bu--ment '-"·-loca"--_Hcc!!!~•-n.'-------at $250 per mo. Call Agent acheJor 1 or rooms 1 BR's. From $115 . $225 able. Exce ent for medical, . " . · Dr•ftint , .• uua........ .., '""' uv1..11<: ........ 546-41 4 I. and Townhouses Bachelor Furn $205 dental, accounting, etc. Best Con f 1 den l • sympa~tic .::.::::cc::.o!!------dept. AA degree or equiv. BUSBOYS Fr. ·$IM.SO Open 9"' Daily value! Call 545-8424 SouthCo pr~cy c 0 U1,1SeI1n g • D ES J G N -DRAFTSMAN, in exper. Xln't salary, Day shift p/time. at MARTINIQUE APTS. Spa Pools Tennis Ocean View. Year!)' lease. Realtors, =~ & adoptions ref. desire free lance work on benefits & advancement "Littht Bo P9ep" $525 Oelane)''s Busy Coffee £bot> 2 & 3 BR. Priv. patios. Pool. Across from Jo"ashkln lc;land HLAS1 ~R11s'A.~1A,~~. • 1 ?.10 FREE RENT * 642-4436 plans 1or homes ,condos, ~f~~nget~:e ~-Call Jf you are constantlr f~llng at o.c. Airport tennlnaL Nr. shopg. Adults only. at Jamboree on San Joaqutn 5s Deluxe offices a/port, full LIFE Off; DE~\:rn Apartments. 545-7361. ~""'='==''-';7"=-lost & unhappy ttris is the Appl)' in penon. betwn 9 171 Santa Ana Av~ .• C.l\1. 11ills Road. ~ 15 C~~c~~ NB S1?rvice ample parking Let our babies hve. For Electrical APARTMENT l\tana & er, spot to perk you up. Fun, ~•:_::UAM.::::=-------1 Mgr. 113 646-5542 1714) 644-1900 Loii•ei;t' rates. From 1 ~ alternatives to ABORTION ----------older couple, experienced, meet lats of people & keep BUSBOYS \VANT ED : TIRED of small 2 br apts? SPECTACULAR 3 BR, 2 ba, 2 doors from to l<KKI IT. Also desk space call LIFE LINE S:lJ.-5522, e ELECTRICIAN e 27 units, Hunt. Bch. 846-3166 bUS)' doing a variety ol 6am-ll:X\am. fl.1 on -Sat . BRAND NEW 2 Br, 2 Ba, OCEAN & HARBOR ocean. Sharp. $275. mo. from $60-mo. 833-3223 9 to 24 hrs. Lie. #156310 duties. Cheerful & oUtgolng Exp. ftQ. SL15/hr Call 1150 sq. ft . adult apts Nr yearly. 673-1.825 or 77S--0709. noon. BE~ ~tASSAGE JN N.B. ee 492-1934 ee ARCHITECT are very essential ·along Jackie WestbroOk. 494-Q)74 20th & Npt. $235-$250. For 3 Bd VIEW S h APPROX. 500 s.f. upstairs. 3400 Irvine Ave., SU!te 1038 ELECTRICAIN lie. old jobs wrote typing. Mon thru Fri only reservations, 675--6900 agt. nn., 3 ba., new a:>ndo • unHt Beac Cheerful, .. •-led, heat & (at Bristo_!) Open 8 At.I. n-" ~ Any job•. Any M Of · CASHIER lull"--pd ~- ll ed ,_, o· sa1 =:::.:..=::::.:.----~ A 55 --0539 •• ~ anager "Minn'-"-·--" $550 n"-~ In .'::'.~'...."'y•--jo. WALK/BIKE to \\'Ork"" or never v . .~u, Jl}.§l!!Q_--...!. elec. ind. Plenty parking nn. 7 . place. 836-7689 ,,.. mvv.w ---# ~1 .., abops, pvt 2 BR trl-plex, compactor. dishwasher, L·· LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA, ..for. ·spa~_. -Next--to-Secur-ity. BUSINESSMAN, 39_wants.Jo -Ga·•·-'-"!:===---Thia great .Irvine oompany send resume OJt appbl In prdt:n, guiet st, bltns.. encl. f~ l\;o.~~ts 2 P~8fe~:-~~pie. SZlO mo. Near Pacific Bank. 188 E. 17th meet slim & trim com-n19n,.~ --pr-d·uc·1---r looldJ'lg kn tt1e ldrxf-ot· peiloo. at ROiift:-Gudeia. aar6..., ·o.!'¥ts. $200 642-0247 or children accepted. 675-0050. __ _::*::213=' 59i-=::19l2=*=--St., Costa fl.1esa. 642-4210 patible gal 19-35. Call EUROPEAN G a rd e n e r . I U person "'iio just loves 2221 Fairview Rd. Colta l.J""Oo.JVJI .., $175. mo. 54S-147'9. Maintenance -\..andscaping. D • ' nmnlng around. WW be &tesa *LA PARISIENNE* IR::oo=m:::s:_ ____ .;::400 DESK space ava>Iable $50 EXECUTIVE, 39 to meet Tree Removal. Very es1gn busy, buay, ""'>'· You'll =:c=..~C~P-Az---- 0.na Point 2 BR. Furn & Unfum. All ROOMS S20 .,.,,k Up w/kit, mo 1 ._ Will :id~ furni~ slim & trim compatible reasonable. 642-5329 eves. • :::rut: shthentypebeupO:: f~ O.C. carpel mf&. 2 to 3 YTL elect. Fireplace, htd pool . $30 v..it up apts. Children 1· at ? mo. wenng service gal l9-J5. P. O. Box. 1003, Gener•I Serv•cu \\'e have an inunediate KO apin. f'xp. carpet exp desired but _ =!_ BJt,, 2~2 BA, split level Adults. $1S5. & Up. 979-1.268 & pet section . 1376 Ne\li'pclrt avail;able. 17875 Beach Blvd. Santa Ana, Calif. not necesaary. Complete view, cpl, lrplc, gar, lndry. Across from goU course Bl\'d 0.1. 548-9r:>5 or Huntington-Beach. 642-43Zl ALCOHOLICS Anonymous "'fHINGS!!....by Moose. Gen'I .JJpcning for a qualified "Olive Oil" $550 fin an c i a I responsibility, $2!K). nlO. 496-4920 IDl32 Santa Ana Ave. &ia-3967. BAYFRONT OFFICES Phone 542-7217 or write Carpentry, Repairs, Plum· individual to direct the lmmed. opening. Send East Bluff I :"!~'!"'!'!'"!"""!!!"""""'" I ~. · 140 550 "'" p o Bo 1223 ~t 'I ..... E I e c n -........i....11.... aclhiities ot our Product On the ball gal for top r , • u m, • , a I arr. ROOM for rent wilh use of ~ .-esllge area. • , JJOJ • • " ......., a .11 esa. .....16• • no:~ Q J I f I d construction co needs a "' 2 II noo N -rt -Bl d 642-5613 design Rl'OUP· u a e · ....,,ulrement1 to p-.. e . ----------BR. l BA Apt. New crpts, kitchen ~1cn or \li-Omcn. sq • e\\'J)O v ·• • P.AU.1 & CARD READER .=::::e=·:,..,,=-----candidate s will be super A/P Clk. Very nice-·-" ........... . e DELUXE e bltn appli's, drps lhnl-<>ut. Phone 646-6959. Between N.B. 61a-1220 ad w/reduction 10831 Beach CARPENTRY, electrical registered architecb and people to \\"Ork v.ith. f op ~r\;.t!:: ~Box 13• Corona 3 BR, 2 BA apt tor lease. All Util Pd. No pets. $195 12 & 13. Cosla l.1esa. PRTh1E office space, avail Blvd., Stanton. 527-3406. plumbing, fix-it. F Bl B have at least 3 years recent benetia A much chance for I iiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiioo ..... iiiiiil Jncld spac. master suite, din per mo. 1605 Haven Pl, e 1\-lAKE TIUS YOUR at Fashion Island, Newport Sociil Clubs 535 Home Repair, 642-1403. experience in all phases of ad~nL 1 ' CLERICAL rm & dbl&~"· Auto door Newport Heights. 64&-2723 }IOME, LRG RO O l\1 . Beach, 861 SQF, to 2,350 ·---'-'-----""-' .Ha::;U:.:li;:nt~------· I residential ~ing. ' opener avail. Pool & Recrea· EASJ'BLUFF. Back Bay PRIVILEGES, C 0 ST A SQF. Fum or-unfum, Reply IN ·O!'ftnge C.O. for an instant -SP"CIALS tion area. View. Stunning 2 Br, 2 Ba l\tESA/Call 548-4271 PO Box 1264, C.M, 92626. date. Call LOCAL moving & hauling fn addition to liberal starting ~ NEYER A FEE • $297 • townhouse. Frplc. Lge R00?.1, oceanfront bldg, priv 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB li~836-167~~9~H~nt~U.~7~M~on-Sa~~t by student. Large truck. aalary, v.·e offer an F/ Bk 865 ~~~?8ged\Vabyy, NB patio. Adults, no pets. $330. ba & entrance. CentraJ La· 2300, lTIO, 12Xl, 720 sq. ft 6Re7,'!,•7Barry. . 534-1846 or outstanding program of "-~ty •~t 17$10000 .,........ 641l--OM9 $125 497 1232 55c f I k .;io--\IU't benefits and an opportunity oX\; • .'""'"'"t' · WJLLlAM WALTERS CO. ' guna. · · · per sq t. Amp e pr 'g. to gro\V with a leader In Advertising & Layout S700 3 BR, 2 Ba. "$415 mo + 2 BR for rent ln 4 Br house. Utll. Baumgardner, 541-5032. , I~ YARD, garage clean-ups, ·1 "eld ·Bookkeeper $600 SECRl!TARllS RECEPTIONlm SALES Huntington Beach util. See al 7404 \V. l\1 or F or Cpl. Costa hfesa OFFICE \\'I storage, panl'd Lott and Feud remove trees, dirt, Ivy, 1 5 u • Tellers (3\ · to $500 Oceanfront 1119-1/20 or ph. $65 mo. 548-3012 walls. shag -t, air conc1.,IJiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiil·~ dr l ve V."ll Y 5 • st um ps. Policy Typist $525 bef !Oa 642 •115 ..... " 847 2666 Plea.c;e apply Immediately by Dartnell Pe....,.;.,.I $220.-NEW e 2 BR. l~i BA ore m; -o · 41 s refr/sink, stall sh\\T. 1652 -· Gen. Ofc. $-150 Guest Home SCRAP . h sending your re s u m e , NEW deluxe 3 Br 2 Ba, ----------Newpol1 Blvd, CM. 548-9766 Found (frH ads) 550 U'On, \\'as ers, (handwritten is fine ), 10: Service At•ncv upper. Lush cpts, lrg deek, 1 SHARE e•ec oc·-n V>'ew . Relrig., Stovt:a. Ht. wtr. NEW concept in iving for " = htrs Ti Me•·•-841 ., •• 3 blks to bCh, yriy $375 suite & sec in Union Bank ?.iALE Irish Setter, approx · n, '4lZI ""VUO't. (213) 355-3600 or GTa--0642. ~Precf;:~642-sn~ t 0 bldg, Ne\\-port c e n t e r . 1 yr old, Scar on leJt SKIPLOADER & dump truck \VESTCLIFT 2 mt. 1 \J ba. 644-9440 foreleg, has b e a d e d \\'Orie. Concrete, asphalt, townhouse. Adults only, no V1c1tion Rentals 425 OFC 8 't 1000' ft Suitabl neckl ace. Vic. Costa 1\-~esa. sawing, breaking. sis-ruo. ~ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ w e, ·. e Taken to O.C. Animal pets. 1728 Bedford Ln .• ,_,,/ for doctor. Hunt 1 n gt on Control Cenlel·. 645--'7937. &10VJNG'!' Local furn. or e Bltns + DW • \Vet Bar • Enclosed Garage • 12 Blocks to beach • \VaJk to market ftealtor 536-8836 l c'M='c.·,'"'"'=1533='-7"'=~~-I . all •G~ard~~"~"· ~846-~11!323~.~--l sif.'::.;:~"'ii;;ii~-"';;;,";J; gen. hauling. 3'l Ft. furn. BRAND N~ 1 &: 2 Br Apts. NEAR beach. 3 BR, 1 ba. LIVE m the new Dana -:::: SM. part Collie, male van. 548-1862 557-2736 Pool. Bltms, D/\V 0rps & New carpet. Lg. bdrms. Point Harbor at th e OFFI_CE s~ce for _rent Philadelphia licen.w. Vic. 1 MO. FREE RENT Crpts. From $175. 2000 SUnd k y arl ir-wi beautiful ~1ARINA INN l\:larmers l\file Io cat 1 on . Newport Blvd. & l.6th St., HouseclHning Florida, 1 blk W. of Beach, I ec · e y, ..,.,., mo. Motel, 34902 Del Obispo St. 642-1122. C~t. 675-3042. 1 blk N. of Adams, 960-1769. 67$-lmG (496-2353), Kitchen, Ef· 700 SQ ft office. Ocean vie\\•. F;;O;;U::.ND""':..:,:::n=,.'-B~l-ac_k_Sh-,-..,-FOR BACHELORS Bay ront spac. 3 Br, lse. flciencies & Apartments. 1111 S. El C ·no Real ONLY 2 Bdrm $150, Avail lor im-$350 inc util. 2 blk trom Heated pool, direct dial ami • dog Vic Golden West & med oceup, Wik to stores, ocean. 6Ta-4397 C::hones, televtslon, sauna San Clemente, 492-I384. \Vestminster, Westminster. Bi-Monthly housecleaning: drps, cpts, bltlns, cor. Ellis th 1 a d r y faclllt'e 842·0251 Call The Organiiers & Delaware, o \\' n e r, • IBR, upstairs apt, $150 • u n 1 s, Business Rental 445 """'=::::,,------673-7755 675-4869 Mgr eves & plus $20 util, yearly lease, meeting room, close to San FND-Vic Newport \Vest ~-~-"::'.,'.:;;-~-- wkends, 842-2671 6T~4. 304 ~ 3.1rd St Clemente & Laguna Beach. NEWPORT SHORES Track sml white long haired Dedicated CleA'hing TRt-PLEX. Large, clean l 1 BDRM penthouse. $UJ5. ~~etishig~~ s~~plngo u l 600 To 1600 Sq. ft. spaces, ~~ar ~~blue jeweled • ~-~!v;s~~~ * BR, blt·inli, di sh w sh r , mo. 1st & last. restaurants. $50 week & Up . avail. immediately~ 62nd & refrig, encl gar. new cpl'g, (213)697-1496 Bring this ad & receive Pacific Coast H\''Y·· Ne\vport FND: Schwinn Ramhorn Income Tax Huntington 1-larbor area, OC&\NFRONT Nu 3 Br, 2 $5 otl 011 first week's rent. Beach. For office use, bar-5--spd. Describe Vic. HB -;.:.;;.;.;.;;.o_.;..... ____ _ 846-2097 aft 5 Pl\I wkdays. her shop or any business, CM area. Brookhurst -Income Tix S.rYice ba, frplc, bltins, crpt, drps, Rents very reasonable; Hamilton 962-4793 -n.....-nl b · OOG RlJi'l GTa-1536 LAKE ARR 0 \V H EA D. -th t th I !='""'KU or llSUlesS Spac. 2 Br, CID closed gar. PARK Newport , Bachelor wk/wknc:ts, 5 BR, nr Lake, mon ° mon or ease. GREY min. Poodle red 23 Years Harbor Area Pool & rec nu. $16.."i/mo. apt on pool, all priv. Sub-let gar. Cnty road. 64&-3705 or 675~&050 '' collar \vith El Centro tags. (714) 675-6476 3 BR. $19!J. 842--0389 or 551-"'""" ... , 53&-3484 __ ;.F.::•r:....:cA;,P,_Po:;in:;t:.:me=n'-t __ lo\V rate, 546-2462 -,,.,;Al --..,. 3424504· 2 BEDR001if, bltns, D\V, Rent1l1 to Shire 430 -llM'm"l ct.,llC. l\llX Gennan Shep puppy lronint NEW 2 BR & 3 BR Apts. near Hoag Hosp. Adults, 601 Dover Dr Suite 3 Vic. Edinger &: Springdale ;.:;::::::!~------m to $240. Adult & f"am $185 to $2:!1 per mo. 642-4387 WANTED, Roommate. \Vork· NEWPORT BEAOI Fem, 847~71 * * * PROFESSIONAL 5tttton, pets. Patio, lenced • ing lady, 55, \vlSh:?s to share aOJ . . FND: Hydra-Kit w/contact • lRO~JNG * * * )'ard, nr. beach. g.1&-3166. ~N:.:•:.:w:..po:;:.:•.:.1...:Hc:.;;oe>tg'-'h:.:ts:._ __ I 3 Rm. apt. with same for ~ii ()r 4000 sq. ~t. bu1ld1ng lens Vic. Beach at N.B. ___ _:::&15-:::.e8875:!:'.~--- e WALK TO BEACH * PLEASANT 2 Br, pool, rent. $62.50 & J,ii light & gas ~~e~~~~il)'~:;ed 1,,:•.cY...:t:.;;h•:.-<,je:.:t:=tY.:.·~5J6.64SS==::.· __ Masonry Brand nu 1 & 2 br, crpts, gar. Adults, no pets . per month. Not deluxe, but by Mar Vac Electronics. FND Calico kitten Vlc 40lh drps, bltns, gar. 221 16th S1 80/mo. 5 4 8 -4 9 2 2 or clean, comfo11able and reas· 1829 Newport Blvd., Cl\;1. St. Bal Pen 675-5092 aft 7 BRICK block stone \\"Ork. st 53&--0063 or 847-3957 642-8011. onable. 2079 Thurln Ave., Phone Deno Va c ch e r, ..:P~m~. ------s:ss l o-'~Quall~}lY~·~,,_~r;:ans~-~hl~p'!!.!'!.. suPER Sharp! 3 Br 2 sty S•n Clemente C.M. Avail Jan 1st. 540-3280. Lost SSS stuart Masonary, Twnhse, all appli's, pool & WANTED: mature male to ATI'RACI1VE 5000 sq ft'I '-'-"------...:.:;.:: Moving clubhae. No dogs, no V.'ater NICE apt for rent. 2 br, shr 4 BR house & util. building, in busy Costa .REw ARD I;::::.;;;.::,,_ _____ _ beds. $250, 84&-3410 2 BA, Jive rm, kit \\'/pantry, Close to beach, H.B. $1CD. Mesa at only 2'lc per sq Fml. him. Toy POIXlle -HAULING $10 & up. A1oying ti" WALK TO BEACH din area. gar. 219 Santa _962-=~-==~------fl, 963-4759. apricot w/brn nose. Nds Yard&: garage clea&up. Barbara, Apt B 633-673'2. FEMALE mmate wanted haircut. Ans to Sauy. J 1 _• __ ..:*:...:64Z-4032=-='-'*'---2 &: 3 BR. Crpts Drps, Bltns, roo ' SHOP spaces avail. in yrs old. l.Dst or stolen In p I I & garage. 308 16th St. 536-2165 Apt1., to •hr lrg 3BR house, blk do~ t.o wn San J~an Vic. of Aliso & Beacon N.B, a nt ng or 847-3957. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ~:iu.~h~~::;, Capistrano near Mission. No questions asked. Please 1-..:P:;•::if'!".i::::~h::•::;nt~lng2.--- 2 BL.KS Beach, 2 BR, aurac · 493-1153 return! 400 Aliso N.B. PROF. Wftllcovering state lie. No. 279514, insur., all ~.of paper. 714 : blt-inll. new cpl, paint &· Cost1 Mesa WANT working lady to share PRIME retail location next1 ,..:64c:~:.cll!=55::• _____ _ drpl. pr. $155. nlO. 536-9638 !I'_Y h !um4"" ... ~t, M Logunalngs to Radio Shack, downtown LOsr German Shepherd. .Bob Swank MISSION YIEIO COMPANY ADMINISTRATIVE 500 Newport C-r Dr. Newport llueh -70 "Chief Accnt." to $12K J:nm£YZ:::Zl:l:l:lc:zl Take charge, 1'1'ovlng &: Storage Co. Should be knowledgeable of m I n l computen. NCR 399 ICC CLERKS NEEDED NOW 26137 L1 Pu Rd puc I. ta> related to trana. Must have the f<>ilowtng skWs, ROOd figure work, vocabulary I spelling Ii: lite typing. Mission Vieio, C•_ 92675 "Assist. ControlMr'' F..qual OpportunJI)' to $l 6K Employer -=========·! ~. bright, CPA ill background. Work u p Apply In The Penonnel Department A1onday -Ft1. 9 am-12 Noon ASSEMBLERS •yst•m< for cocntNter. • Openlnts on d1y sh~. F•ctory •x- parlonca helpful, but not necessary. $2.15· par hour to st.rt plus shift dif· ferential. Apply In Per90n At: PRIMARK PRODUCTS TECHNICAL PACIFIC MUTUAL 700 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach "Radio FNq. Eng.'' to $20K ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...,~! E:<per, in land mobile rad.lo CLERK for 4nia atore, . ~--.. Jed ~ exper helptul but not nee. transistors. n.i..,...• gl! u1 Write, Clas&l.6ed ad a g5e, antennas 75 MHZ to 450 MHZ. Build &: debug equip. Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, for digital equipment. Costa ?.1.e1a, Callr. 92626. "Communications Proj . Eng." to $11K+ Deaign Eng. expe.r. in commef'dal VHF-U HF . Transceivers. Crowing co. C.Ompetittve. COLLEGE STUOENTS To call on eatab. F\lller customen. A\11 $3.50 per • hr. M2--0242. aJOK Bullet style restaurant needs Cook. Seline ex peilence preferred but will train. SALES Phone <92-1344 s.n 2629 S. Susen · Clemente. Sant• An.a, Cellf. MANAGEMENT ""roo=1<s.~01=ET~AR=Y-AID-ES=1 Equal 0 Employ If LVN'1-Nun.1.11( Aides ppor.. . er m "Mklnt & Sales" $13+ Houaekeepen. lull, p/tlme Jn1lde &ales ........-. in (642--11().14) ( 6 4 2 ~ 5 8 61'") ~~ .. ~-f64Z-2410l furniture. Knowledge ot 1st Healthcare Centen credit A finance. Cood co.1 --='-"===.::o:"'!!_ w/future. Must be <DOK bifingual. ' Experienced. Santa Ana. Call Exparlenced M!>-3061 VOLT ''Sales Outsiclt"' to $25K 1 °"roo""'K°'."e'"x-pe-,-. -p,.~t.-OV_er_l8~1 Previous exper. In Full or part time. Instant Ptrsonnel computers and/or grafhie 18514 Beach Blvd., KB . (5) ASSEMBLERS aft 5 A wknds LA l\iANCHA APTS. °"ac · ~ om · Costa Mesa, ale, approx. Silver w/blsck muzzle & NEW Apts. Walk to Bch. NE\V Luxury Apts, close lo aOJ sq.ft. 548-3403 saddle. 4 }T old female, Bach, 1-2-3 Br. Fr. $150. shop'g & beach. Gas & Wtr FEM will share w/same. WAREHOUSING, office or 60 lbs, needs medication. Extras. 536-2579, eve 1 Pd. Adults only or famil y across from the bch. $108 commerciaJ , New building. Wearing black nea collar Temporary Sel"vice arts. Indu.sttial 1 a e • Cotmt15c S.les Clerk PAINTING interior & 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 tt0ftware or ha r d wa l' • Letadt.... lnd-nde t d · e x t e r for 2 7 · )' ears Newport Beach 546-4741 oriented. .... -..... n 536--0269 \\"Ileen. Blt·lns incl. dshwhr. mo + % util. 96().-2559 16' ceiling. downtown CM. & choke chain w IL A · R. Shag Crpts. Small pet ok. GIRL to share 2 BR. 2 BA 548-3403 CoWlty license. Vic Npt ~ 1 :ms. U=rt~~ Pool. Gas BBQ. apt wl same tn 'Laguna. ••11-IE Factory" haS a 1rg ::.~ beach. Reward. ,trwy .t: lhop'g.$140. No peti. I. 2 & 3 BR Studio. Call 644-2760 shop avail. $185/mo. In1 ,;.o==·c..,.~-~~~ Call 646-3786 or MS-0760. Prlv. Patios FEMALE roommate to share cannery Village 425 m St., LOST: P.tale Co Id en 2 Bit. I BA. bltins, garage, mo ~~~l~c.~~:· 2 BR hou.~. $111 UWs. paid. NB. 60--1960. =~ev:1~PP1~~ n~ $1'5. AsJc for Dale. 642-2007 cBal=boa:::::..:"'::::.·~~::.:..=·'--=' I ART Center, Laguna Beach. v.-earing·blk nea collar. Ans 962-4471 Gar1gff for ICent 435 •ml shop, year lease. 1436 to Orion. He Is exttemely LRG 2 Br, 1 % Ba 1tudio, THE EXcmNG South Cotl.St, SW, 494-2lS6 loved. REWARD. Please -' pr. yard. O>uple. PALM MESA APTS. MINI WAREHOUSES ,.;&~~=.::;·9665;:::::..· ~,--:-::I bring home to 3t921 Virginia 515!.IO/mo. 847-4440 MINUTES ro NJ>r. SCH . STORAGE Industrial Rental 450 Way, So. Laguna. mJDIO, llO' l!lht, q yard Bach, 1 & 2 BFt from $157 NO ~love-In or Move-out I ~· ;-;,:;·-;;,;-;,;;"-;;-;,;,:;-;;-; .. ..:,:1LLO~ST!-i8la~ck~/~G,;:,..~y;cT11i$gerer-;ca;&;1, ~ plus utl..litles. Call Adulta. NG Pt!ts. charges. From $7.50 per NOW LEASING lrg altered male, 2 '' yr "5i m:r 1561 Mesa Or. month. :1' 8Nch old • Vic : 19th It Tustin •• JJ Jiii. 2 BA -$'~. mo (5 blks lrom NeYJ'l)Ort mvd.) ftamil toti &: N~wlaM St., HB Hunt tan Q,1, l/Sn4, please call eXJ>Crience, free estim&tea. F.qua1 Oppor. Employer store teekl exper. tndlvJ G<i-1255 1 ..... .,...;;;,,,.,_,.;, ... ,_1"Purchalfnt to h&ndle ~ex.me "'p•"°pel'IWlginl='---&-paln~lill(I~. Asst Bookk-$700 Exrater" $750 . ~ ~ ,,.= 21 )'l'll Hart>or area. Refs Fee Paid. Expansk>n creates Exper. \n packaging 3--3 yn. Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd tum. No. 183-281. 642-2356 this openlng in In1ne. Some Material shortage bandllng. CM. ' · *Wallpaptr H .... r* ~:U·J~bg.CO:S1C:~~~ Shop Foreman: S800 CX>UPLE, exper. to manqtt C. Rebko 646-2449 Career Employment Agency Tratfic Clerk $600 full ~ unitt near new qit PROF palnter,•bonetet 'ol'Ork. 3400 Irvine Blvd KB. Se.rv. Tech. 1625 bldg, CM. Blk trvm *'I' real. Int/ext, fl~ 8tlrnftte, 556-85m. " ' Sales Outside $100+ ct1' I: 3 major a:me«Y aef .. 548-ZiSll, GG--39n ASSlSTANT "-•·-to MP.mt. Tme< S53l ~i.. Re~'1i ~t •. INT/EXT PAINTING .. _,.. ... : Teller So.,.,n ·"' · -·~· tnin, il'ftYeyard &b1tL 6 Ship I: receivina $620 -='='p=m,,..,._"""~---Free Eat Jlm 67S-3559 nltet w~. Co. pakt benetlll. DENTAL ottlct.Slron( trwur. • Painter. hlghlY qualllled, JBakaclc Stln c~ Box, m; All Posit-Listed bJccmd. Able to handle ""' . etUclent would like )'OU1' er ·• .ITT.o ct•. payabie/recei'fl.ble A bus!..,.. Reaa. ~ -· _,1 AVON At Both Offtcn beck~ -t o111co. 'l7Plor. Pl•ster. Potch, Rapelr CHRISTMAS MAY-hoevy -!:•per . POOL. , -i\4&.9860 ALLSPACE N W M-1 513-3217 ••• ~~) *CASA VICTO RIA * 960-1970 940 Sq. Ft. Ir t.1P REWARD,forretumofblack -'], 2 & 3 BR. furn &. wir ))'TORAGE-""'gara_:c.;.. .. :_tor.--re-nt l'lamllto~,m1~.,d St. .male poodle, hfll PUJ>U)' * PATCH PLASTERING • Irvine Ctlirpcts. drapes, DltJ!. TV s 2 0 / m onlh. Huntington cut, mtulng from 700 Blk All l)'Jltl. Tree tst1.mates BE OVIR IN COSTA MISA 1_11rel'd. H.B. aroa. tJl2.4'll But, Eve,.,.... Stlll 27" H•rbor llvd. Needs A-Pnduct1. ~ -Suite 2W 9UICK 'CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT • ...--...--.,alnut Sq•••-. ant. Pool, etc. 525 V1ctorta Beach area Ph· 979-1010· !!!"!!~ .... !!-~~,..~~~! West Wlh1on, CM, call " ___ C:::nl=.I .;-.::..=;_--• °"" '--" "' _.. SI, al Harbor CM. 642--8970 536-0764 • • ' RF.NT M·l, 600 sq. fl, 2944 639--0?81 or ~l 1'" ~ .. ··~~1 E-. ' ·-I 2 B Randolph, No. lO. c.~I. LOST 2 Id Ml I" h Set '"m••nv ...-_..-.-, '"''~' ........ se or r. \VANTED: Garage f or $100t11.f0. 615-Sll6, 673-7039. : yr o 1·11 • ....... •---'-hen.tel'! pool. 1'~1om $145. Mo· stora~e in llunt. Bch or • 11'.!r Vic Vk:torl&, Pl1centi3 PLUMBING REPAIR ~ _.., IW"c! adults-. No P<"ts. 1887 f'ount11.ln Valley a...re a. t·l SJlOP JGoo SQ. n'. C.?lf. Under medlcfttion. Re--N<l job too amall l lllt _. *91 stho61, w 1-tonrovla. 64iHmG: , 847-23l9 1930 PLACENTIA AVE. 0.1 ward. 646-9075. •rt ~ ** 6 ~ SUS incl utlJ, LUXURY Lrg 2 BR. adultJi, $40/mo NE Cosla Mell e 54&--1M2 e LADIES gold half glaues. Have IOS'Mthirw )'OU want to ui • loll A ~ cl<pollt bltlns, pool, nr •hopplna E·Z ,;,....;, ·Double praae 4001 BIRCH, NB Vic. 1500 Blk S. Coul Hwy, .. u, Oa..ulld ads do It • 11~-----centtt A bua. 1941 Pomona. tor 11orage only. 6G-lid)99. 3600 ttQ. lt. &41-5002 Laguna. 64i-1470. weD ·call NOW llCHlll. • Yes, AVON <lall.v care pf(>-1--duct1 I: COKmetfct sell yeft.I' Call 556-1 "": arotmd, & now Is the perfect time to be<:ome a Repre- 1e11taU'"· :·ou can make money' at )'Olli' own pace A meet new •people tn )'OUI' communl!>'L•to<I. For .- dolall.o, U.tt: 56700. • IN ANAHEIM IOI North Euclld c.n 77Mt1I CLASSIFllD AD CALL MZ.5671 I I I I• I ,_ - • ,_ - t . -·' -------··.------ • • Help Wanted, -& I' 11' Help w ant"'!, M & F 710 Help WantM, M & P 111 Help wanlocl, nt 6 ~no Help Wantod, M & F 710 ,..Ip wanted, M & F 710 DENTAL Aaotstant_. EXECUTIVE TYl!IST u••••ft• ..,....,. cllain\de, min. 1 yr exp, INSPECTOR ~~.. 1 &1wn. Expanded duties, &<IOd •'ray Strong Elisll1'h bock&T<>w>d TRAINEE tedintque & Ile. Beo<:h uto We will pay lor quality. YN•-lldy (~' wanlocl ·~-~ ' 644-18!10 Call bel 8 AM • PM ~ ' °"'' -""' for ltstffm•te tun ttme poa:I· neotal-Oral SorJ<aey Ult, :io. FEMALE ~L DER E R A new division of AlleTfll' tlon. No exp. ttec. Wo emd 35 -attra<: tni."~n• requlteid, .-.1 .. , New .Phanna.ceutiCJI• lnvolnd tn to school, ellTI while ie.m. 0en'i.i.i' ~ Or ach:i'mi plant in cMta M;, Apply the new, fut pwfnl Apply in peraon anr aft. or nee. HB uu. S.O-U.. SAF! Advanotd Packaainr. nuclear. medlclne field, bas eve. 7lOO W. C.L Hwy., DENTAL -ASSISTANT 3111lAll'wayDr.QiotaMeoa ""lmmedlai. need for an _;N~•:;;wport!';;,:,,Be:;;:;ach""".~..,.-,,- QWrsJde le X·ta)'. Non CENERAL Electron tc an&peetor. MECHANICAL wizard tor 8 tmolm'. Pre.terabl,y undtt a.uembler in CM area. In.~pectlon wUl be on wide variety ot tooling. Delivery-Sunday Only OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE- QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STATION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. HARRY SEELEY, 330 WES.'MlAY STREET, COSTA MESA, TELEPHONE 64Z-4321 FOR AP- POINTMENT. ;so. M4r0&1l Oppor. ln small co. 645-3411. electrical, mechanical " d fl al r n • ma ch In e DENTAL Recept. desk only. GlfU.. FRIDAY to do secy, valve usembly. You must maintenance problem s . 1 yr , dental exper uec bkkpg, lnventOQ', J)l I a c. be able. to work with 11. 0tg:ree oot -re q u Ired · An Equal Opportunity Employer rnnie tienefltl. Som6 Sa.ts: Must hftve good peNOnality, ntinlmwn of documentatlon ~~~~Uay, t:~. ~ -------------------H.B. area. 846--3540. 83~ . & he famillar w/eleetronlc "'" D~ Aulstant --~~ * GUARD$ * hund tooi.. Wo prefer a 1~cu mwc, ot 2 yn work ~r. Im • tor ~ Nlpel OPENINGS NOW .t n t h e a Te & 0 t manuf. co. 2'o r more yra FtJLL & PART TIME · e I e c tr 0 /me ch a nlcal exper •. Tom &utter, 831-2900. e Retired OK a11BeMbly &/or &inall nuld DRUG C I ii r k/COhltt, ·• Xlnt OPPOrtunlty College valve!!. downtown KB, Mature, ex· Studcuta perienced , 5J6..2'l'01 • Car &. Phone req. Good beginning s a I a r y • T!.me & \~ for o~r 40 hrs. coupled v"ith an opportunit)' ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAJI UNIVERSAL to build a-career with a PROTECTION SERVICE unlque company. 403 No. l~al·bor Blvd., Santa Ana 554·1433 Contact •t Y our Conven'9nc• EmployM Relations ALLERGAN HAS your job become a Elf!df'Onlc firm n e e d 1 crisis or is It about too? e ~ p e rlenced technician. LA.!t us show )IOU how to Electronic checkout 0 f tum your crisis into money! digital or RF oomponenu. 1 ;;;Cal;;;;;;I .. u .. Plil""1."1.;;;8J0-8292iiiiiii;;;;;;•I 2525 D D KnowlediJe of Oll<:Woocopea'' upont r. & teat equipment helpful. HOSPITAL Irvine, C•llf. ~~ 1': :f~/:n~ SJ AR-J-THE-Equal Oppor. EmplQl'.er mlt minlmwn 1 yr related !NEVER A FEE REC E PTIONIST To $2.80 Per .Hr SECRETARY To $3.50 Per Hr STAT TYPIST To $3. 75 Per Hr MAG CARD To $3.liO Per >Ir. F ILE CLERK To $2.15 Per Hr KEYPUNCH OP R . To S3.2S Per Hr CLERKS To $2.'15 Per Hr PBX To $2.75 Per Hr. . Pacific l!ersonnel Services He lp Wantod, M & F 71 0 Help Wantod, M & F 710 REAL ESTATE Salos Opportunity SALES 1n Laruna Beach.. Growlf1i T $1 000 company has openJng tor , 0 rental poglUon with fulure Degreed + exper. tor the opportunity to enter sales. Cadillac of i n s u r 11 n c e Lcar,n the business whlle companies. making a good income. R.E. Uc.nse required. Move NEVER A FEE to Laguna Beach &. enjoy living where you work, Call: I Dertnell Personnel ~/IZ,!t Service Agency REAL ESTATE soo Newport Ce n ter o r . ~owport Boach 64G-1470 1190 Glenneyre St. 494-9473 549-0316 Sales Order Desk. Girl RE AL ESTATE needed for busy sales order SALES LA desk !or Orange C.O. Boat DY 1'.1anufacturing firm. Ofc .. --- Mondaf, January 14, 1974 DAILY PILOT 2 .-.. Help Wanted, M & F 7101-Cameras-& rl1nos10tf!ns Tho Rusty Pelican Equipment IOI e PIANOS Now lntuwwlng For FOR SALE' MJoolla SRT • ORGANS Oyattr Ber Waitress•• 100 wJ50mm le111. AIJO, , & Hosto11os Nikon auto. 1,1.4 llOlnm FULLERTON MUSIC MJS w ~--t Hwy NB lens. Best oUe.r. 494--7294 Our Newest Loe1tlon •• · u.... ·• · · or darkroom 494-7900 TREATMENT Pl.ANT SUP-18191 EucUd, :;"owitaln Valley , ERINTENDENT $U32. • WANTED I BU<. No. of San Dleao Fwy o $1398. Stale Crude IV Re· ~ntax spotmaUc 557-U36 quired. 1111,,. deadline • • Calt :;u.1730 • Rentals from $5 February 25, 1914. Cty of San Juan Caplstnno. 32400 Furnltur"* 11 0 .• 1 Paseo Adelanto, Sar. Ju 11. n • Plano a l Gr•nd1 •, Caplatrano, C.1. ELEGANT ~tom 9' sota ALL MAJOR BRANDS 11 fn4) 493-1-171 w/matching loveseat. 4 Uaed &: rebuilt pianos also i ' -TR-E-AT-'M-ENT PLANT OP· mot. old . Hf'rculon hide-a· Uprights from ••· ...•.•. $69 ( ERATOR JI $807 • $993 bed F/F Deluxe Frlgidalre Spinets " .......... 1l45 ) State Grade' 11 Required · wd /i(.-e ~~er, 1•1yr, ~l!IO Players " · ·· ......... ~m / ·lll , · etp u~-.::zer. 4• ust sac. Gr--""-" Hn-: Ji ng deadllne · February 673-0275 a..JUA • • ·' • ·' • • '· • _,,,, 18, 1974. Clty of San Juan "· • Organs ~ Cap~trano, 32-IOO Paseo * SOFA & LOVESEAT * ALL MAJOR BRANDS 11 Adelanto, San Juan Capis· Never used • Very gd. qual. Opt1gan .... demo .... $195 _. trano, Ca. (TI4) 493-llTI. Usually home. 968--7910 Spinet •..... 1M!W , ••• , • •AM 1 NEW 9' matching sofa &. F rH Orgen Lesson":"" if love IK'l\t. Sac. $280. 494-722-1 Phone 557--4839 aner 2,00 F ULLERTON M USI C / BOAT Slip for rent Newport 12"1 N. f.larbor, Fullerton •1 Bcal·h. $2.00 a IT. 871·1805 TYPIST An immed. opening for an 64.>8715 or 548-7066 hrs: Opell' Nights ·1u 9 l~~ua(~ .,.,./good lyping l\1ISC. furn, chairs. n"frig, Sat ~ 'tll 5:30, Sun. 12·5 II s. w · P · Ill· ac-dinette set, '.l hide-a·beds. ANTIQUE cura tcly) 300 Cataline Dr, N.B. G RAND PIANO For Appointment Contact Carol Smith AVCO Flna nciel Service 644-5800 s IT. Span~h sow, $35. 2. EMERSON gold recliners $20 ea., oil O F BOSTON flt'eds recovering. 546-8392 DlNETTE set 4'X3', walnut (circa 1860+) finish with black vinyl TABLE TOP ohaits, S<S. 832-5725 G RAND PIANO CEJ\tENT l\1IXER $75 h1quare top) f>.14-3417 I\'ory Key!i • Beautlful \\'ood experie=~<>t Appl. NEW YEAR _(58) Call 640-1970 Needed tlO\V! My saleslady exper. a must. Position who ts leaving ju.'it mad<.' • hon k ood her broker's Jlcense.· She req 6 p e wor & ~ooo TRAILER Axle and pans tlgure S k i 11 I • Salary Equal Oppor. Employer waiting lo be loved & re-I store<!. llas Brass sound buul'cl. was with me less than 3 yn c ommenJ1uraie w/abllity. TYPIST /RECEPT. for boat traJler. $50: 544-3411 N'w'pa-· Carrie-. & during that time 1 paid ,.. __ •net n--• Hill, s~ ~-. G S I 812 .,.... '" her appro $60 ooo NOW ......,,.,....,. ""°"'"""' "".°'6oou In growing business. or .. , 1·n ara ge a e BOYS & GIRLS if you ar:· reud). I~ \\'Ork: SALES; Elegant.-new table Newport Bch near Allliort.. 'i 10 yrs & Older this sam GOLDEN t linen, diiinerware boutique Req. xlnt lyplng & lrans-GARAGE Sile, Evejo,,.th!ng ~. '~~:;'1 ~7 HERE INVENTORY TELONIC * RN'o-LVN's CLERKS INDUSTRIES * NA'o-TECHS Daily Pilot has ROUTES · e opp Y· ·~· 1s waiting fur you. 1 don 't in Design Plaza seeking full crlblng skills. Sh not necess. must go. Refrig, 2 dr, $50. I OPEN ··Dana Point. Cap-mind if you are new. My Ume sales person. Exp. in Salruy commensurate w/ex· furniture, antiques, 6 fl _ ~'t 1 * Rospiratory Ther apists * Biiiing Clerks * Cu1todlan ';::=::z:z::-I HouHkprs Ii 1''ull or P/time Equal Oppor. Employer E J.ECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS * BookkMplng * Admitting Clerks lstrano Beach, San Juan office J.s on Balboa Island. field prel'rd. or will train. per. PCM, Inc. 1801 Do\·e i\quariun1. Lots of neat ., ~...,? ! Capistrano. · We handle both sales & Exciting oppty. to use St., N.B. 833-3313. StuJf. 83.lt Castllian Dr, <. . ..,.,-~,,.. -~ , 1 CALL MR. LOWDER rentals. Call me, Albert E. creative talents in color TYPIST ll.B. 536-W29 -""' 4924420 Dayton, at 549-0647 mom-coordination. Please can VOLT No EXPE RIENCE ings, & we will talk about ;Oi644-4049ioiiii;;altiii;ii10iiaiimii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii X1n't typist needed for N.B. Jew e lry 115 ..........._ ,,_, i•I la~ firm to le_am auto. type--1:::.;;;='-----= .__ lilst•nt Personnel NEC ESSARY YQU. SECRETARl "'r1ter. Previous ~1TST or RED\VOOD Burl raw slaba. l Tempora.t Service T RAINEE P-OSITION _ other ""Ord processing l'l)ach. Enjoy time creating your :m48 Campus Dr., Suite 106 NOW OPEN ~ exper. helpful, but not l't'q'd. natural wood tbl, 960-1185 $300 phone 548-8404 j NEEDED IMMED. Newport Beach 54&4741 CB Industries of So. Calif. ..._HH,, l\.1ajor. land developme.nt firm Call 54G-:>400 for appt. FREE ORGAN LESSONS u I Openings exist on the day SADDLEBACK Equal Oppor. EmTIIO)'f!r h Immediate "1.,,_ f ~ has 1mmediate opening for UTILITY MAN Mlscell•MOUs 111 long as you like! Adults shltt w/manufacturer of , I"""'"""'""'""""""""~ I as ope .... '6"' or . secretary with substantial I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; welcome to attend Tuada,y · c 0 m m er ct a I t e 3 t trainees in di 8 P la Y •-Real Estate Salts-Lie. , cxper. in the fie1d of fiance. 12 l\.1o. position. 7Al\.f to1, night at 7:30 PM. We want Instruments located t n COMM. HOSPITAL .....,. • ~ """' marketing di'>tribution & We're branching outslde the Sh 80 w.p.m. Typing 70 3m'o30.PM. $608 to $737 per INTERIOR everyone to leam to play Irvine near ... A n-........ er-edit merchandisinJ. 6 new Harbour, we 've got a great w.p.m. ?o.1ust have good the o~"' Tom o r .. .__._._ u ..:: .......... ..:; locations to o,....n In im A0 pply In Pe-n DESIGN . m' e·h·.-,..;·e "'"2851-. ~'.":', County Airport. ..-~ · program for sales people public & t e I e phone '""" -o .nv u...u D ..... 1rements I nc I u de 23.561 Pueo de Valencia mediate future. Many posi-and you ought to talk it pe1·sonalit". Ex c e 11 en t Saddleb.ck Va llty Music, Ne .. --. Blvd. at ...... 'I... tlons now open-'for full time v U 'I od Sc STUDIO ·~· exper. in wlrlnv & soldering Laguna Hills ~ permanent people. over with Bill Com.stock. benefits & working n1 i hool Dist. Harbor, CM. of electronic componentL 837·2121, ext 1C6 .,_ .• * XLNT TRAINING PRO ~ HARBCX..m. conditions. 25200 La Paz Rd Opens Its warehouse for iiiiiiiliiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;iOi;;;;;;-1 Good benettt package & Equal Oppor. Employer GRAM. · ni::Ar·:iy Cell Mrs. F iedler Laguna Hills clearance sale. PIANOS-ORGANS P8¥ range. • _ WORK ALSO AVAIL FOR rw-u-644-3389 By Jan. 25th, 1974 FURN ITURE New & Used. Great selectlon. ' • . Pleue_ Apply HOSTESS HI G H -SCH 0 0 L & 17214 COAST HWY. 9 AM-Noon LAMPS O>mpetltlve prices. Open -· OANA -----!J.$GX..S'!'UDJ!:llTS n•, 840-1384 & 213, 592-2845 --VElERANS-·IMP0RT-AeeESSORIES ~-"' ~·· Ti,. ~beJf=1-+----1 2401 Cam Dr '""" 3 night• per-·· Prefer IRYINE""""""'"'"" COMPANYBENEFrrs---------THE IRVINE HEYTIJRKEY!bterestedln Savings up to 70 % deals ... alwaysat' • !Near C. ...:;,.,,., e mature br,";. 5A~f In '"""'-"~'~"'-FOR PERSONAL RE SALESMEN COMPANY college' No' Well then, In· Willie~ Music CJty 1 ; Equal Oppor. Employl':r m/f pel"!IOn wn ' · SERYKIS•AGENCV INTERVIEW CALL: terested m money?? Con. South Cout Plaza 540-2830 V ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS Pieue Apply DANA .' ~l~fr~~=; 0es;to1 Engmeer · Call ~~f~!.s. Only PART TIMERS F.qual Oppor. Employer ta~!~eran's Attalrs Office 1'iJi'~~~s"~t I '!!O!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I; 3S01 E. Cbut Hwy., Cdl\.t f\11cro-"•ave filters to $953 9 S ARE YOUR SEC-VERSATILE Orange Coast College Costa Mesa 645-6133 S~rtlnt Goods 130 , :Mot Campus Dr., Irvine (Near O.C Airport) Equal Oppr. employer m/f No Phone Calls Please Teleprocessing. 360 81\L •m-pm EXPENSES MORE l\fature & exper. to handle * ~5153 * Hos Ess -Programmer to $12K NURSERY S A L E SMA N t echnical correspondence, ""!!!!!! ..................... ~I AVOCADO F r i g I da I re T /CASHIE-R Constr Loan Processor .oai '--.. Jed bl I 1· • THAN YOUR telephone, quotatiom, etc.= WAITRESSES Relrlg, w/ice maker, Zt. mature, Exper Apply E.'i:ec Sec'y/Ofc Mgr~ 5~ :;: f~~ ~u..:!;~ INCOME? JOIN AN in one-man sales office. deluxe, 1 yr, Freezer, Hamburger Hamlet. 151.i Sec'Y 'Brokerage to $800 l\fission Viejo. Send resume OFFICE WHERE YOU Good salary & all fringe NEW restaunUlt openin& ln aSBOrted dinette tables & Adana Ave, C?it aft 2:30 &oeretarles to $750 or ap'ply in penon at Rogers HAVE NO EXPENSES. 'benefits for someone who Dana Pt. Now hiring for chairs, expandable laltice p.m. See !\.tr Hagen. 1 S<>c'y/l\.1arketlng to s700 Garde 2221 F . . Rd can perform efficiently on ~~ 1'00M m be&be· cocktail work, area rugs, Zenith TV, NEW K-2 short slda, w/or · w/out marker b1ndlnp,. uoed3tima.640-al95. TV, R•dio, HIFI, Stereo HOUSECLEANERS Supervisor/Retail to S8SO C.M. ns. aavtew ' CALL CARL NELSON her own. Send resume to: ;,o:rvice. u&t t. 21-26. B &: w, Hide·a·bed, etc. :~:EC~=~~~ Babysitters, llvc--lns needed. Sec"y/Llfe lns. exper. $600+ NURSES ~1305 ~~ A~~U~cl1'd&%~ =n& arl=tDetp~~ c6.c73--0c=27S"'-. ------1 ZENITH I: RCA, color, BA:W Own lransLJQMation. Ref5. Order Desk/Typist $563 RN-LYN-AIDE REAL ESTATE n; Anaheim, 92801 or call Dana Pt. (across from TVs & stereos priced 10 Exper on·PCB's. Da.y shift. f\1'ira.sher * 64&-9172 ~aint Man/ Anaheim $550 SALESMEN 630-6TIO Brookside Winery) Mon-Sat I BUY'.'• clear. Priced lea than tbr Gene-ral l\1anltors, Inc. :.>19 'IO"SEKEEPE , . Accounting Oerk to $550 RN-LVN:AIDE Equal Op-~. Em~i.......... 9AM-4 PM. dlscounten with 3 y r Enterprifi• St .. CM,-540-4895. ~ "! R. Engl.:.h Steno $500 + ll·7 & other shift.l. .. Top pvt Why not work in the hoth t V"'' .,....,-~ · t tube 1 parts • spcflklng, take care of love-Typlst/G. Ofc, duty pay. Immed, pay for area • Huntln-;ton Beach · EXEC SECRETARY • WAITRESS Good, used furniture & 1!'ivt.~. NO ~ tcr ENGINEER EOE To $1100 Month ly home and 2 boy11 age . M. Viejo to $475 floor duly. C ountywd Fountain Valley. Let us Corporate president needs Exper: Dependable; Mature appliances orwillsell foryou delivery or aet-up on 19" 6 & 9 .. H~ from 12 to CALL TRISH HOPKINS lntervws, hfon·Fri 9 · 5. train you. Call Phil f\1c· part .time executive secre-&. ·Neat. Apply in person, MASTERS AUCTION & larger. 25" Solid State 'I. Possible hv~ In, phone JERRI WHI'ITEMORE Lescoulle Nun;e.s Registry, Namce, VILLAGE REAL tary lo help with correspon-Surf · & Sirloin, 5930 w. ~ Newport, CM 646--8686 from $499. Ca.ah 00 · Plan · 96&-9386 or 5-IB-2524 ask for 488 E.17th St. (at Irvine) CM 351 Hospital Rd, N.B. ESTATE, 963-4567. d & Coast H NB 83" •-•aft 6 f Sund • ABC Color TV Toni (Lobb p k ence personal financial wy., . . ~,,,.. . or ay or terms. , NEVER A FEE · Suite 224 642-l47U Y ar Udo Bldg) REAL ESTATE record. At Newport Beach WAITRESS Behlnd Ton>:'• Bldg. 'tat'L 0021 Atlanla or 19 O '6 HOUSEKEEPER · filature i -642-~. 5«>-9954. office. 1-lours can be fl ex-BARGAIN DAYS N o W , Brookhunt, H u n fl n g t Oil woman. Mon thnt ThUl'I, VP ~ ¥-• t NURSES: Morgan Nurses SALESWOMEN ible. Top pay for qualified At Delaney's Busy CoHee • · · · Beach, 968-3329 or 962-.5559 For non-&ero career. 1-2 Yn experience noon to 4 pm Irvine home Re . try C M takin person . Send resun1e to: Shop at 0. C. Airport term-We re: clos ing; p r Ices $2 hr ~ . JANITOR apfii~r;;;,na· io nowR N, g PART-TIME Oassilied Ad #51B. Daily inal. 2-10 shift. Apply ln per-negotiable c:-n all antiqU~s, RICE'S TV SERVICE Dartnoll Por-1 Service' Agency · · Pra r s' Prefer New Lt'consMs son betwn 9 & ll AM. furnlture. iewelry, + 67 (formerly :In Pantry S Cntr) H 0 u 8 e k e eper/Cook for LVN's, cs., aides, Live Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Toyota PU $600. "Michael * TV c-ial * couple. Uve-ln. Unencwn-~i&ienced janitor needed 833-lns. 2365M&F. MS-~ or Excellent training program. Mesa, Calif. 92626. WAITRESSES wanted, ages Angel" 213 Ocean Laguna .,..-I bered. Phone monlll, 642-to .,.,'Ork day shllt. Good Ask for Ed 962-6644 SECRETARY 21.-30. Apply in penon 497-2355 ' Used & Color TV Rts • Whlle 500 Newport Center Dr. 9606. 'benefits and \\-orking con-NURSES Aides, day . shift. KASABIAN REAL ESTATE Head of large manuf. co. Beach House 619 Sleepy SAROUK Persian catPet they last!! Color from ~ I Newport S..ch ......n ff O USEKEEPER, live-in, ditkms. Call for appoint-Convalescent Hospital, Call REAL ESTATE SALES~1AN looking for bright indiv. w/ Hollow, Laguna Beach Handmade, 5x8', 26o knot; ':~'::!ii~ $35 up...For j own trans. Student OK. ment: (714) ~. ext 44. &IZ-0598. wanted; active office, best good skills & lite exper. WHO WANTS TO WORK? sq In. Blue il cream. Xln't 54S.fi002 or 546-6003 I 640-0100 or 6'1:>-4630 1-_ -NURSES AIDES Coast Hwy Io ca t ion. Fantastic :i;tartlng salary & CHOOSDERIVE A hoCAB! cond. 497-1193 eves. 1375 Logan Ave CM Exec. Secretary $700 H 0 US EKEEPER-EXP'D.1iiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiii XJnt working condition & Opportunity to learn about co. paid benefits. X1n't op-your urs, work SACRIFICE· Natural mink , ·• ABoocckkto .. p~~ Clerk $55014-Se Habla Espanol._ ' omono KEY PU NCH good aalary. 5t9-306l. syndM __ }catioG'wnn b~"~reve&lol>!12~~~·. portunity for advancement. for yourself, be your own tol $31)). w h $35 19' PORT color on roll about ,._.. •;, ~...... tu.I\ ... ~. ~ J•son Best Agency boss. Men or women. Can ~:U.ble TV .~ er Furn. stand, 2 yrs nu, xlnt $135. I . Receptionist S550 Beach. Call 499-W.1 ~ . NURSES aide, exp. pref. 1550 s Coast H La be slightly handicapped • s .... reo, 558-1782 Bookkeepe C Of $600 OPERATOR '1:00-3:~ shift. Apply Beach .494-9421 wy, guna 17400 Brookburst, F. Vly. Neat . Clean Appearance. & other Misc. offer. 552--0326 22" S I . • Girl ~ . c INSURANCE SALES Bewrly Manor Laguna . Suite 213 963-6775 Vts., retired. Age 25 to 10: CUSI'OM Wall M urals · I wht rv vu ;: console blk A .A?'iZ~.bl;;,mmute to ~r: r<o exp nee., earn while yo 11 2 ;ears mlnlmwn exper. 119 ~:~.?'.!;;t ~?,!i~ To . ~.;7~40Ja'~.,~~~ *~J~~~~n ~~~·:;;.~~or~~:. ~~~ IJ~ T~c ~1 :::·mlke & ,De&lgn Engineer leti,rn, part time, eves & IBM Keypunch machine. beco part f .6.L.>-=v-t Suite 104, NB 833-8190 Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th \VASHER xlnt cond $60 access $350. 'C~I~ ~~ Wter $933 \vknds, full time when quali· Alpha Numeric. Excellent man::'ement te~ ~::S~ RECEIVING clerk & stock Dial A Job 133-0855 St., Costa Mesa. 6 piece dlnetle set' hand 54&-7255. eves. er 5 S500 fled. wol'king co n d I t io n s & know Medi-cat & Medi-care man for hardware store. ! ~~f0t.,~nl Ofc. $500 Farmers Insuni.nee Group outstanding benefits. w/exper. in bookkeeping, H. \V. Wright Co., 126 No Cha rge To You WOf ~EON about your c55arv7 ;000d Mexican $500 · 1 '-"'n uce to $600 Ed Lani * 54(}.lS34 Rochester C M Established 1965 uturc. ow Is the time.' -"ii-~ii" .... ~===-~-I I l!H I & s;d Hoffm an procedures. Considerable RECEPT/GIRL FRI SECY/RECEPTIONIST $326 to start +' ir.Jn1ng · ...... ~ can .Jeannll! Sisco A1 yER!nTEA. person typing & general office ' · · --Think about the U S NAVY 1·p 0 BOX RENTALS I --~ NEWPORT 1~;~~~ed~~ ~i~ ~u~ ~:~ ~~ ~: Growing professional 1te 0 a1 Part time. ~ SO wpm. Ages 17·31 or prior service: l49G Riverside Dr., 'N.B. · · I I mPorDo-IDAgo~ Pref. some experience, but Clark, 892-66811 bet. 1" A Estate company in Laguna Near o.c. Alrport. C.all Phone 642-4272. Behind Graham Realty. • will CORPORATION ,,... Beach has need for part al.ter 1 pm, 979-3797 1 ?.10VING-Everything mus 1 Dogs 154 j .ver r ., • • train qualified person. Office Help P/ttme time recept. with some SERVICE Station salesman go. Furn to misc items. 642..Jl70 ~~n;~. O. Box :1208, San 8:30-12:30. Typing, phone. knowledge of bookkeeping. & lubeman. Top pay & I · lf~l Call 548-2560 anytime. WHITE SAMOYED HUSKY ! 18001 Von Karmen Youne aggressive s al es Weekends a must, + 2 half fringe benefits. Experienced •d• 111 • · DECORATOR has 200 yrds * Any reasonable offer 1 "felp W•nted, M & F 710 Htlp W a nted, M & F 710 l rvlnt, CeUf. organiz. Irvine Indus Pk. days during week. man preferred full or part . . 3 tone gold carpet terrific conalderedl MUSI' SELL -: I• 133-1424, txt. 294 Call ~2333. ~/. time. Shell, 17th & Irvine, for apts, 642-2210, s4s-4ss4 noSa room for thll beautiful J Equal Oppor. Employer m/f OLDER exper couple, no ·~ ,_ Newport Beach. A t" 800 '69 Chev 283 en g. , moyed HU!lky • male dog : EXECUTIVES MAllAIERS children no p@ts, 30 units .,.., ,., SERVICE Sta. Salesman, • ~~__i_quts overtiat.tled, compl. Skis & -WITH PAPERS, one year l --LEGAL SECRETARY H.B. 2 Br apt + ""h. REAL ESTATE f It; me . da y s , Ii te boots, trade or sell. 53&-8667 ~t·dPLEASand E cailkdaSatal/Sunt , "JOB OPPORTUNITI heavy recent probe.le 84&-3927 • mechanical knowledge. neat ANTIQUE .--1 ay \Iott YI er Es'' experience, t n c 1 u d I n g OPERATORS-single needle, llOO Glenneyre St. appear. Apply morns, 2590 SHOW & SALE T~NIS Sale, Everything ~ 6 p.m. 998-5831. ' accounting. So. Or a n te exper. on dresses & 49t-9473 549--0316 Newport Blvd, C?o.1 LONG BEACH ARENA pnce, 901 Seagul! Lane, e PUPPY WORLD e 1 ~ .. ~ Send T = RECEPTIONIST '='""''==O"-=~--Newport Beach, ~2911 Chih h Tiny Poodl $15M·$75M Range SAL.Alla..NI CM>TIAIU An You UHmplov-ecf Now-Ari You S11kl119 A Ch1111il• -Worried Abo11t Yo11r A9-Tlr1d of lrok111 Promi1e1- U1Mf1clded A• To A Pro,.r C,.,11r•• of Actlell'- ARE YOU UNDER: PAID1 lf,YM C.. A•.., TM Mewf .. c.t11a•let. I• TM A.HltWMll,., Wa'4 LI:• A.1111 lltaf'ft•w Wltll Yau IF YOUR ANSWERS.ARE TRUTHFUL -WE CAN HELP YOU A. Do yo11 h1 111 1tra119 voce~o111I driv11 I. Do yo11 h1v1 good 111th·1 l11t1llr,.11c11 C Do you f11l u1fflcl111tly moti••t.d to ech te•t1 D. Do v•u h••• th1 1blUty to m1k1 d1ci1lo111 E, Ari yo11 tttdy to.tot 1 r111i1t;c c•r••r obl1ctl.,o 1 f . If yo11 w1ro ca11.,J11cH that h1lp w•• 1•oll1bl1 wa11ld ,you eccept it, without del1y1 Y OU SHOULD KNOW e flit Mttor j1b1 1r1 1101 1d•1rlb.-I e 1\lrd ·por+y prof111lo11el l11fl11111c1 11 torn1tlm11 111c11· "'" • Geffi 111 ,._, r~ht cloon opttl, •t tho rleht 1 ••• 1 ,,_ \.N\l n...,. resume to: sportswear. op pay, ow SERVICE Sta. Salesman, Ocean & Long Beach Blvd. R ua uas. es,) Write, ClasAl.tied ad No. 977, Production Pl. N e w po r t Leed Ing dynamic R.E. firm f / t i m e , . d a y 11 , ) i t e * $3 Million Display OAK F I EWOOD Amer. Eskimo, Pit Bulli, Dally PUot, P.O. Box 1560, Beach. fi46.0308. seeks top -OOtch recept. to mechanical know\edge, neat * 100 Exhlbiton 9!&3397 Bull Terrier, Cockapoo, O>sta Mesa, Calif. nDS. PBX Opr. :r. pref'd. handle front desk. Must appear. Apply morns, 2590 January 17, 18, 19, 20 Ml ha ~bendrmanioo' ;<"1IXE•J>hti'd0 ~'?°PSch-• P/tl St k have good phone pet'!'IOnal-Newport Blvd, CM Th~. Fri, Sat 1-10 PM see neovt .. ,u . .. rv 1 ! u •CHINE SHOP me. ea wor . c-.. da W ~, 820 ~-• •-•-Most ~~ -UR Huntington Beach. 536-8881. lty & xln't ~ •ldll•. STOCK ROOM & •~n Y JU PM an,_ i\;'n ~°'."'S3HQl7~•. DEB RER PIZZA man ro ex..,., full r.~~I J:;,.,,, ~~~ INVENTO~~E°NTROL EDISON Phm>vlO'apb; Hall SILVER COINS sat~AUZER Piii". shot~ ~~~h~~": ~:g::~ ~ 8P.J~1;t ~ =. bor Blvd., CM. 54G-6055. Some exper. pre.Pd. Call for trees, Grandfather clocks, Paying 100% over face stud• service, grooming. desirable. Steady, day ahitt .t.airunaiii:iiiiiiiNiilgui&eiil;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_, I RECEPI'IONIST, Gen ofc, appt, S42-S96l. Rocking chairs, eafe & value. Call 962-3646 bef 9am Terms. 871-8182 or 52'J..8366 .,.,w k in a fine pfant. Land development co in ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;; stand, pitcher & bowl set, & att 6pn1. aft 5. YARD NEWPORT bvine Good typist -Wall clocks, a Surrey WANTED old Tread l·e2 ---M-ALE~-m-ln-la-ture--a-pti-cot-1 PRINTED CIRCUIT pe~able. Must have Exp. lEMPO'S Buggy' r r Yb t I 0 we~ sewing machine or case poodles. 11 rooa, AKC cert. 3324 W. Warner Ave., S.A. Available Immed. Call Mrs. arrangeme.n s ras cas only 546-7487 pedlgreeds, Must 1ell. CaJI Eq I ()ppo E I NATIONAL Ch I •"3160 9 t 5 registers, etc. 495 Old New· 75, =• ua r. mp oyer esey, .....,. ' 0 D I A J b' po11. Newport Beac h, Musical lnstrument1 122 ~·=~~===~-- PM '1a 0 642-5151. DOG OBEDIENCE-Spin. by MAIDS wanted, part or ftill j TECffNQLQ' GY REFINED woman . compan-• • • ~~=------fl.UTE for sale. 5 month11 Pwrks A: Recr For tnfo Ume. Apply SeaclU'f Motel to cook needed lend A ppllancet 802 old. $150. or offer. Call 541-.3914, 673-31io. 55&-53oo · 1661 $.C.H. l...agum. Beach. lo~' younO'' inCapadta~ed ~ TEMPO 'olftra a truly unique 646-Jn6 ask tor Gerl. -• & ..:--~--DOG obedience clan to start MALE OR FEMALE year old woman. 673-3078, un1f! sa .. u,.. opportunity OOUBLE electMc oven &. Offl F P/U F/U dell IS HlRrNG Balboa Pen. for &kiµed . K"E'y' PUNCH electrlc cook top. Oven only ce urnltv,../ ~n, .. ~e\\'JIOl1.•lrvine area. me or m·.: very Excellent }o'rin ... benefits $60. The cook top i. onl.y Equip. 124 -~=-0~-~-----1 help fo r C.M. Chamber ol · M ... ~ RELIEF RN. 2 days wk. • -AKC Irll h Se Commerc.-e adve.rtlsing pro-plus Convalescent Hospital. Ca11 SECRETARIES s35. phone 557-20tO WAREHOUSE ~ tter pu8:hct, motion, Cood knowledge or 4 DAY WEEK 642-aiSS. Who want dlgnltled &: Rent Washtrt/Dryers CLE ARANCE :.~~ 10 $125. • C.M. area helpf\.11. Your own SALES 1t.imulatilig long or short S2. \Vk. FuU maint. tninap. Above avg tl\rnlngs. term aulgnmenl! . few * ~12>'J * Office furniture. wholesale It LAB Retriever, male, obed. l\11lm t1chnlq111. -1-- • l111cut lv1 potltla111 •t• flllid ,tflto119h •XMU tiYO l1tt.t• ''/1w1. ~ .PAID nAILY. Piclc your IOHOURS/DAY (Q.T.) ~~1':~~~la~:: da,ys, couple \\'eeks ~r few FREEZER. chest type . ~!:w·:e:r!~~a~ina:: tac~~21~:'·s.;~.~\s~· dWn hrs. 9 am-I pm. Apply e DRY FILM to call on retaJI 11),ores months · you decide. Now Perfect condition. fitust sell. 1733 Monrovta St, Unit P, ' ~h.3:;105~ .. g~~ ~"'.'" e ~:~~:=~RS for dlr<cl moll ad~ fp"PL Y .BY .PHONE Coll 6n--0275 Collta Me ... 3,30 am. to G~:~ld~~ ::~ .. Cal~ ' 4 M••• rotufft• m,olllnf, h not 1 tot•I 111iw.r. 1 SI NO RESUMll OR CALL TODAY -l'OR- NO COST I X I CUTIVE INTE RVll W- ' EIEOUTIYE SERYIOES, llC. _ -HOMI 0 1',.CE - (714) 547.fW " ... N. Moln St. Santa Ana 11 tl!CURITY IAN( I UILDINGSUITE 7011 ........ ,_.,..., .._tT-•~11•-t ~ ~~· .. 1~,~ ynap'"pt'o, xlnt Call 540-4450 •Let us know ~'~hS HEh R.165 ~ .. r yer, 1 p.m. 60-$19. ':'!'.:'. ,,_ ~'!.... !:'.:"_ e SCREENER$ ~ ,.-ied ' = .,., er •a~, USED -I I t I ==-----1 ~ 0ppr •fillC ~ comm.&. bonuteS. 540-Dl .wtult your ski.US ue. No ' · '"''ce mpr n n 11: PUPPl£S mlx breed, -WliTCLIPI' e PABRICATORS need to''"'" In penonally . Call 1146-11848 machines, elec. p Inn In I ""-old, >lotl>en IO ---(u~ m ~--) e J USPECJORS OI~ DRIPPINGS FR 0 M until we have the' just right' Bulld l119 M otorlals 806 machine. iabl.,, "o o) s. ! IO -t. $$.OO 51&-llai --. ~ ~ Yf>UR AUTO b ·spot for YoU' ----ehrun.-Good Pl'ic'et. Pierce, ""==~"='~~~;;,,-[ 508138 • TOUCH UP remowd 'from co;::;, .. ~ NE'/ERAFEEATTEMI'() • Surplus Bulldlnv 867W.19lh."CM.642-3408 KEESHONO PUPPIES, ~•~~_!~-·...,.8·"-,:n D>WeslCtn~Avo' opp"'1ru: a com.mon Tamp0 T1mperaryHolp MITEATERJJ.MS ~OOO'sbeOINEWEXEC SWVL$8 CHRS SIS/25 ~ET, SHOW, Sia ~ 1>ouseoold d~··r uoe """"""""'"""""""'""""" 1 uuu1a, l11m r, pty. Sec chn 124, dkl. Pierct' "°*"~""'"-=~-~~ car A Dhone nect9I. $12' Santa Ana 9270'1 1~ trom•·u; 'bottle WOt'ld, alum 1heetlna, mokt· 861 W. 19, CM-SC-3408 1 -2 Yorbhtre Tenitrl. Mala. v'::.:... slut...: ...:1 Rm 546-6!86 · =~•t :.~ .. ·:3" = T.:i~ 0~~ 'J?.~ ~~U ~·IL~~ ~URP LUS P.__!.;.a;;.no;;.;•;:_1°'9:;;.::;;.;an:;;sc__.;.82;;6 :;::ia.1775 <L M2-4!l!ll or ,.., -· apt., ,_ All Equal Opportunl\Y I money llhorta .. by 1hopplng those Items with a Dlilly 2406 so. Main St., S.A. REMBRAN!n' Ma ho ga n y 22 ~TOffiPP"P<pood!iiidi;esiljpo;ii1111iii"i'i,._;;:-iJ blda., ttt. ttana ' Dt.11,y PUot Employtr tho DIJ\y Pilot Oall:lned Piiot Cle.uiOed Ad! Call Mon thru S.t 11).~ uprlaht piano. Xlnt tone & chllmpqne btlp, 1 !Mlltk. au.tiled Ad. 1 .. --...,;.,;,!!!!!!!!!!-A.di. GO-!!rn. • ~-n•, 546-ltm _ ·concf. SJOO. 497-1'121 Bob Female, AKC rt11'. • • • • • • -• ' I i j I \ ·-v . ... -. ' ' .. ,, ., t~ • ' . . ... ~11..t PILOT lkNlts, Gener1I 900 NAVIGATION ' LESWNS: ~leatial and/or pilotina. Individuals or small classes. Licensed captain. 548--8837 llloot1, Sall '°' COAST Rhodet1 33' Intrepid, 2 suits of sails, anchOt, 4 HP motor, racing sloop. $4500 /befit offer 675-0024 20' OUTRJGGER, g o od shape, i175. ssz.-0129 Booll, Sllpt/Dockl 910 SlJP under Arches bridge, ...aide tie,_JAke up to 16' boat ~-mo. 6'13.814.Sevei: ... I MondaJ, January 14, 1974 • ' 2 utos, I mportOd t 70 j Autos, lmpor1oct -. 91il 1 _Au_tos~, _l_mpo"'"-,_, ___ m_ Autos, U I MERCEDES BENZ TOYOTA __ c ....:A;:;..Dlc.;..LL--'•-c_+"------1 Yov Saon Tho RHt, Now Try Tito Bott -"""' '" __ D_A_TS_U_N_S_,_ JIM SLEMQNS '74 TOYOTA$ 1973 CAWUAC au ,.!, ~~K..!i~. call DATSUN ·b:i:=~Jkk~.19A&Ni NO:,~ ·:~cK ME~~~§~ENZ N~~.i~~~ D:M~~~R ·~i~~~aa::. ~2-1832. IMMEDIATE SALES & SERV ICE ~ ~- DELIVERY Jim Siemon ~ [•...:• SAl:.E ·ss CONTINENTAL 2 "'·top '66 kANCHERO look! & runs B71D'1 thru 200Z modela I c.11 Coupe O.VllJe1 cond, luxury car $000. Da.Y like new, 289 auto, air, nu Over 100 new, & used 111DOl'IS morA Anttrua Blue '(174235) 646--!689 eves 646-4939 !':::~":~~"ir1~a~ ,•.i~ LEASE • $ 172 80 ECONOMY CARS c:;.re M~ ... ~;•it.,:> any u=., Y,!!':(~J:ltn CORVm chrom< whl•. t ...... u' BMW' I B -~: 20 ON DISPLA y llll Quall 1966 H~ixn". c.•t ~~ Slladow Taupe 1it7590) cover. 54S-S814 a uxury !lv ...... , Newport Beach '73 TOYOTA Pickup \~ ton, Sedan O.Villes '72 FORD PU, l' Ton, cust I Q.~~ar. Sl~:n;e>. i~~~.?.: 833-9300 Takoma wheels. Fl\'l stereo, AnUgua Blue (2069711 cab, air, standard trans, ~~"""'-ENTER ERQM_MacAR.ntUR ..J'h:i°°c1omaJr .~ks~ Renaluance Gold (214338) CORVE'ITE '70 StJniny, hal'dtop, auto, full l>"''r, leather, aJ.r, MVl't.1, Mich- elin rad:iaJ1, lo mJ, lmriiac. $.3900, Prt. Pty. 84&-&>38 aft 6pn1. - ,1,2750·de .t~..!, bo2883x, lo mUeage, == I '64 l\fERCEDES 220 SE 4 x • ........ BumtESlldo"""r ~.J~30100101 --I llp on tloor. lmmac. eo'nd. days. egg 1971 Fon! % too pickup. HILLMAN Pr. pty. 64&-6842 • TRIUMP. H St. Tropez Blue 1430\64) Good oondlllon Sl -7 o o .._... 0 USED 1 • Cotilllon White ·(417031) '69-XLN'f. cond, S3400 or biit 642-llJTaftec 5o:IOPM ---'59-HILLMAN wagon -----.. s-1a1 Discounts oltt, only 39,000 m I. ·--------'---''-'---'--'--'---" cond. 4 •pd. Goo<i' mpg, MERCEDES TRI. ·~. TR-6,. 47M, IOOJ. r--AM/FM, auto, 1 owner I '!!'!!!!~!'!!!!!'!!!!~~~~ '13 FORD ~ T pkup. Auto 28402 Marguerite Parkway Priv pty Immae cond · During , _54>-837~-"--'-4' ______ 1 Ii 1~ trans air, 3,lnl mi. Xlnt Mission Viejo ~~~~e offer. 55l·15.57/83.5-8306 ON DISPLA y 497-1973 • ' '' , _ r..._,atloo ...,, 1 cond. $3500 831-174.1 eve. 831·:00. • 495-4M9 F VOLKSWAGEN Inventory Sale COUGAR [~;;::=:;;::=::;;:::_: .. ~ . 1 59 FORD % Ton, ideatfcir U-5E AVERY P\VY EXIT. JAGUAR actory Authorized Oistrlbu· . home ~ner, runs ok, tor for all Me1'Cedes products T 1i 915 ........ ~~ A""97= f c ORANGE COUNTY'S New cars -•'arts -~r Ti• c 1961 COUGAR, auto trans, Aircra as .... 'b _,.,, ....,,,,. """ at "· _ 1967 JAG. ~str, xlnt cond. Ask About Our Unique WILL BUY YOUR l . OLDEST AM/FM, wu• whl5. $2650. U ed M -•-L GAS SAVER ~;. &129"2'"•i;('!! '122 '64 SKYl-IA\VK PLANE. Xlnt Vans 963 . Eves ~1996 ' erc._.s ••n II--'~= ~ I M~i "~'.""~a:.:.·"m:i VAN CONVERSION·s-1 o· JENSEN Pion• PAID FOR OR NOT. WILL .~~~~~~~~I DODGE Hoii5e of. ·liiipo .. rtS --p~y -TOP 001.b\R. CALl. '74 caa· Cpe-de Ville,-Muat ----Quick "'1'· $5500. o.,.,, & CAMPER SHELLS K 1'NT ALLEN 54<1-0442 ·- 1 548-3641; eVt's 548-5775. t JENSEN on the Santa Ana ~·'t'Wy. =~·=~-~·-~-· -1 sell. Only 1600 mi, $1500 1971 OODGE Chlslwood sta-1 --Uy upj.1()1.11uue11t unJy INTERCEPTOR 523-7250 '73 V.W. Kannann Ghia cpe. wider· sticker pr Ice. Don wagon, Power ateerin& Cycles, Biket .!..):> &jg-1046 eves 638-':"3&9 l.x .... -cUent selection of pre-Large Selection 6862 ?.1anchestet•, Buena Park Like new, AM-FM, w-w's, 64fl-l515. .,;; DraKei;, rur conu. AJ.~1/r 1,, ~ Scooten 925 •7., DODGE van like new price re-c,..aL.atlon models. of Colors Only 9,000 ml., orig owner 1973 CADIU.AC Eldorado. raruo, luggage racK, wt m f1Nlliv Ill 'n1usl sell,~2037, . ' DEMO $ALE Immediate Delivery MG $3,300. 64.5-3455 1'"'ully1oaded Black on Black steering wheel, only 15,000 -.... S..\~ ......... ~ .......... w...ii.SING FULL SERVICE t ·n vw super bug, yellow, Must sell, Excellent cond., _miles. like new. 6#-4687 ___ _ A NEW -------UVErt::i.l:.:AS D~LIVERY E ART1'.1ENT f IF cl '69 DODGE Van, 6 cyl, 225, D P 1971 MG MIDGET sunroo, AM M, ean, dlr 1600G\VWJ $6995. 892-4444 '63 OODGE convertible. Xlnt lllG good conil. ..,_. RO¥ CARVER, Inc. 11900 831-1645 . rnmung con<Uoon" .~. ,,..., ,,,,,.., 36,000 mi. S1300 wi!Olesale. ----CFIE" OLET 64< 0166 , LOCATION ··~~w _ . _ . '234 >:. ntn o.. * 543-3691 * .,66 VW Dune Buggy. iR . ' _ ~ - I IN MARCH rcHEVY Van camper, l Costa Mesa 546-4444 OPEL _S600. pvt ply. ~ .... t. -'69 DODGE Super Bee, 383. + Coronadel l\lu Bike Soop . Xln_t cond, ~. gaa ml. 1 CREVIER BMW -FOR sale VW bug, '60, Iron! '73 MONTE CARLO Extra•! Orig. owner. 3032 E Coast Hwy, 640-0911 $87:>., Norm. 67:>-2875 J '69 1900LS Cpe 4 speed l-end -~d!lrtili'ge. $250. Uin"dau. t::oupe. 1'~<.-1..-airj $ll00 847~1 It.AMBERT &: criITuRION 1972 Podge Van, V-8, auto. .l...JL.> ,... .}l;!f\'"..:c " a:i1ng 3100 \;, rn •s; !I -y., N.B. [ economy car. Can finance., reblt eng, nu trans: 546-7642 auto., etc. 6,500 miles. (106-flk.:MIRD ---~-~Sl ••IJCI'. :.AA\ 11. lS .. , i;,J\, t!Ja.3·11 642-9405 ·-1 vr · :1 t nd M t u GIVJ 250 cc Bultaco Punang. ___ ca1_· __ i $02Su_ _ USED BMW'S \Viii trade! 831-2040 or I ' 1 , :· n co . us se . · $3188 ~---·-Good condition $275. -1495-4949 Dlr; $1700. '69 FlREBffiD, R&.H, auto, 494-4747 73 DODGE van cust. int. '73 3.0 CSA DEMO MAZDA ~...,.., G 847-CE28 PH/t'S, chro1ne lug. rack. ___ . FM 1 l3500 .w1~ T, a/c, auto, radials, nde fa •• .,. Peugeot 10 Spd, near new, 11 ereo, mags or '70 2800 CS ---------landau top, U,000 nilles, OLDER V\V '62 1vill trade u r ct. warranty, ................ best offer. • b/off. 842-2872 or 536-1008. '71 BAVARIA 1974 MAZDAS $4,450, 960-124.5 a.ti Spm for Karmann Ghia + cash m1. i1,n.o. 67H300 l!:ves 1~=-""'°'' 7-l~968-6~732~-.= JAutos Wanted 961 , '69 2500 IMMEDIATE PEUGEOT--0' '67. 'G8 Bug. 645-8998. Mobile Hom•• 93S '70 2002 DELIVERY VOLVO r.:.;;c:.M;;.;O;_B.;.;IL..:cE=H-O_M_E"""'-TOP DOLLAR PAID '68 2002 SEE TH C A'."· NEW NEW PEUGEOT ---·--·---IMUST SACR1FIC£. '69 Chev '71 T·BIRD LANDAU fOKD IMMEDIATELY Cl°"" Sunda.i> RX4 '74 VOLVO'S Impala 2 dr hanltop cuslom 4 Llooc. ,~11 i'OW''" foetol'Y FOR SALE : FOR ALL FOREJGN CARS ---~----1 DEALER HERE NOW ~·automatic tram floor fu, "'""" ek. t31)it;).'VJ. SILVERCREST CaU or come In to see us. CAPRI shift, strato bucket seats, $2m MOBILE HOME BOB LONGPRE Compkte Sales and Se..vlce. Immediate DeHvef'Y powec Sleering. Vinyl roof · -.~ .... J 20' x 53', 2 BO 2 BA, carp., •n CAPRI 2(00, stereo, MAZDA 50 cOmpacls on display. On All l\todel.!! ~ ~Red with white j"'.': ;ra~r' & e~~f18cicyer~~~ ~o:1ga~~1. !2,~~t~ 0emo clearance 00\v · 1 PACIFIC MOTOR BUY or LEASE ·~P~ovA cpe, small eng, tor Z!O Rir cond., kitch. D SUN progress. 10 1 IMPORTS 1\ l • auto, PS, PB, a.ii', vinyl, 1 clocpedk, ........ tio ~~· landld. 3100 w. eo ... Hwy., N.B. A 'l' .,c~nltaEAn. 1." Fwyst., .1 PE __ U_GEOT. /SUBARU -Wt w smi.lee\..._~ .. '!"!':1< Only -1-sca pa · ~•u.~ yrs. o 642-.9405 .3<l 150 \V Ll ln A vol Vft .ruuu•:: U"W"w.w . • '69 LTJ> 2 cir full . -like. nu. Located in new '74 DATSUN 260Z's in Stock· Santa Ana _ ~7871 Anahc~ · nr.'O ~'.sm 1t•V ;64C:iEVY -Malibu, need! xlnt co~. $ll00. Y eqwp,j :~"';,!."·· -~·w""bl ~m "°,'? TOP CASH :;:~d~ y·~.~~ ~."1.~ * Mazda 74 Rotary * PORSCHE 'l"-H . c 'l "'"9303 body wod<. Engine & de!,., 847-2366 . ;:. •• val!;:'" illll • .uvm cu.,. •-la ode! $n MONTH ""..J :.ruor, ..... --train xlnt. 283, auto, p_/s, 1969-FORD·-W·-•"·" "le• -t"'ou·-115 4""'-call EVES wr clean le_ m _ .Qll __ a _diffetent one everv 12, "A" ,,,,, • ., _.. '-&LI a..1 • :21~: ~"· · and trucks! 24, or 36 months IWJcitvifik 36-MONTHS OPEN-bEASE-.,.....,., PORS~'" ' b .1, .1 4 sp~~~1 l2,900 ~ .rtV""\IUV.L or 646-lllti ~pm._air_,cnadition,-radi'). CAN BE SEEN AT : Howard Chevrolet Le&;Se Back. Always the \Vtll accept trade-ins WQQ • \...nl!... -ew re ui • 1111 e '· e ~.inoniy .v uxury 't' ~Ai~lAH.v 317 cid air 54$.-0297 thrill 1 N CALL 'lR. FRY 842 = 1 en g 1 n e. Good conct !497.iCP) ..; 3 1-2 O 4 O or ·,'b p/IJ Ji OOU rm ' ve.~ --~ ~· CRESTMONT MacArthur and Jan1boree 0 a new car. 0 ·~ " B ........,... $3150/offe .. 642-5998. 05-4949 Dlr. "'·~~" ,· . .._ • .' !'"'"'' , . ;"1 J·.J1tu, '70 Galaxy Money Down makes it easy t h I '-'"'""'" ~. vv ... .. a/ / /b. t ESTATES Newpon Beach UO eac '67 PORSCHE 912, 2000 nu· · c, P" P v. op, to upgrade yourself in car. Autos, Used 990 f"'restdenle, SC 11000,* 833-8246 l!'~~t~ B~~~~ WE eAY~ DOLLAR ~~~-~:~~ ~ -MA. ZDA ·f:v=:i!~ ~'m°ating ··au1c-K 't~lEwYJ::1 :~!oDrta~dJe: MERCURY ___ , ·Comm. Hosp.) Lot #46 FOR"TOP USED CARS before you put on high SAAB buck. sts, beautiful car! F~ RAY. PK. MGR., If your car is extra clean, .miles, rates include main· ,70 RIVI ERA Only $900. 67~6754 1969 COUGAR Convertible, or · see us first. tenance saving no penally * SAAB Full .63 Chevy lm .... i.. radio, Htr. Air. new radials. Motor Homes BAUER BUICK leases for high mileage 17331 Beach Bl. 842-6666 powe factory air. etc. .--$1350 89'l-66ll ext 63 J eff .' Salo/Rent a•111 2925 HarborBlvd. drivers. Domestics 811d im· ==~"°"'°'· B std al_, C 1 1 Extra ean. f592EXC). 2dr. Best offer. · $ · · -Co•ta Mesa 97!1-2500 pom available. Gel rid of MERCEDES BENZ e e ~"'""'· omp e e $1999 "'8--034! MU TANG WE HUY your presettt Big car today =tion now. Buy or lease RENT A MOTOR HOME - ~I HOME OR VAN CONVERSION, LOW AS 19 tier Day le 6C per mile. ltESERVE YOURS TODAY 894-3341. e Oale'a Motor Home Rentals '73 ~26' M.H. &: Minis Free miles 9 til 9, 838-09l'XI ~uto Service, P1rt1 949 .FoR SALE: Panasonic AM. ~radio lo fit ~mall size pick· · up or Volkswagen. Also SW tach. Phone 646-1300 before I 7( p.m, IMPORTED Atrl'OS without taking any more big NOW OPEN J' p kl BEST PRICES PAIDI dollar 100•· cau Mc. tm ar n-'• "'-L 1 1-·rt . 1 Mlcbaels ,s.56-0571 oc Miulon Viejo lnl'ports uean •w I mpo s 993-4560. fP'.l.t··r•n .. 1£66 H<.rbor. C.M. 646-930C ~W~l~L~L~B~U~¥-.~y=o~u=R-MERCEDES' BENZ ~t,'tJi,_ ~~ DATSUN, TOYOTA & 546-7070 OR VOLKSWAGEN FIAT-- 970 PAID FOR OR NOT. WILL Con1o:l'•e Sal~ A Service ;_Ac;u;..;toco•:..• .;;lm=po;;.;rt..;.ed.;.;o. _ _;. PAY rop DOLLAR. CALL Visit U1 Soon At AUDI 'TI AUDI wagon, Air, 4 speed trans. Xlnt cond. al MPG $2000 494-2212. KENT AU.EN, 540-0442. 28701 Marguerite Parkway '70 510 Datsun 4 dr 4 pd Mission Viejo 495-1700 ' ., s ., !USE AVERY PWY. EXIT) Good . cond. L ea ving C0W1try~ $1200. Ne a I , 675-4477 -, -~11\lfh Jh11p1111~i f J> ' ,., 1 " , .... ,,• '"' '" •• ·~ • t '·~ .. 4(>!' -. . .. or .SIMCA '71 SIMCA. 25,ooa miles, 2S MPG, Micheli.1 Ii.res, $995 or best offer. 675-4178 ,. '74 New Datswi Wagon, '73 MB 280 SEL 4.5 Auto, air, AM/FM, rack, 1-213-793-6127 675-3808 · 64 SUNBEAM $150 ALFA ROMEO $400. below coot. Pri. Ply. 1968 MERCEDES Benz 250 Need' Motoc & Trans . .,. I [~ I "6"'7'"'8546'-'C""=,....,,.....--,.,-..,,-[ S, auto with air. $.1200. sembled. Price firm. 544.3417 ......... ----· ' t.. ~.~F~ ay~!OBe~EllnC?. '73 . 240Z, 5 mos old, low 9'9-8549 . TOYOTA • ~ miles, Fact. air. SUll under '59 219, 24 mpg, very good ! Rec,..etionel Vehicles · SAND Buggy, vw $700 49>-4683 Trucks 9S6 962 Ton, from $3795 (Ser. #02881. =w='""'"-"an=tyc.· -'84U27"'-'=0-~= cond. $1,IXX>. OZY 692. Pvt j LEASE ·74 TOYOTA 1200 '72's & •n·s. Complete se-'TI Datsun pickup & '66 party. 673-lOGS Corolla sedan ... Get 30 lection now. Buy or lease Datsun 4-dr. sedan. Call '52 MB 300SL Rdstr. Superb! miles per· gallon .. , Only iro!T' after 6 &: wk:nds. 549--0495 -late engine -trade $61.27 mo. 36 mos. open Jim Parkinson's 1970 DATSUN 5 dr wagon, 831-2040 or 495-4949 Dir. end lease. good cond. 32,llXJ miles. '72 MB 280 SE 6 cyl., loaded, 548-5761 &: xlnt gas mileage. Can Bill-paying time? Sell "Don't lease 831-2040 or 49.5-4949 needs" fllJllt and easy. with The.fa.stt'ist draw m the West. BILL MAXEY#' ,·TOYOTA -.'( , ; • ,r L! '' \!' '1"''>0:- , "J j',L,'j{ 1\ !>J.A(1~ •n MONTE Carlo, all extras, ai r, ail p'AT. Like new, MUSTANG 5<8-3793. 1967 FASTBACK 1968 CHEVY Impala 4 dr. Low mileage, mech excellent. Air, 302 V-8, auto, PIS, New paint. Mags & fl1ickey PJB, radio, elec, windows. Thompson Urea. All shocks. '72 BUICK Skylark 4 dr, $950. 846-3957 Mt151 see to appreciate. V-8, auto tran.s, factory air, -59 CHEV. -$150-. Make otter. 54~2083. R&H, P/S, dJSC brks, new I Small . •73 u ·en 1 Pwr 1 · tires & shocks. Like new. w_o, n ull.I, wr. Price ~..,.,. . I er~, Orig. owner. 16 mpg. ill'm. 544-3417 t disc brakes, AM l ~;I 53;;-4912 ·62-CHEV N 6 1 3 stereo radio, folding bac.c · ova, cy • seat. i\Iany extras. Bsl ofr. ·n LE SABRE, sharp. Sacrifice 64lJ.-0555 CADILLAC '71 SEDAN DE VILLE Full power, lactory air, leather, !01.-lerl. (529EAPJ. $27n 1973 CAD CDV , ll,txlJ mi's. spd. Perfect body. $250 or * 546-3367 * bet otr M8-a271. '66 MUSTANG. G00(.1 cond. CONTINENT AL ""10• ..... engine ~ ..... $250. Aft 6, 673-4873 '69 MARK Ill Full power, 1ctctory air, load- ed. (XEX175l. $2444 • '72 MARK IV Full power, 1.ictory air, spot- less. (224i ·1 '' $5444 OLDSMOBILE '72 TORONADO Full po\\'er., factory air, stereo. (393F.TG). $2999 Best reas. oHtr. Pvt. Pruty. Sales 6 SP:'V\ce 894-8000 or 638-1857 °'""· I OLDSMOBILE . , . clean out the garagt: 1 Gf:AC TRUCKS '62 CHEVY PU, ~-2 '!''/gate ~· Runs ok, 548-7255 eves. 1~~~ Autos, New I a Daily Pilot ClassUlcd Ad! I . .JI. Daily Pilot Classified 645-fi400 1 642-5678 for fast results. Ad. 641 -5678. _ ----. 980 . Auto1, New 980 Autos, New 980 ' Autos, Mew 980 _Autos, New 045-6400 °' 1 ... turn that Junk into cash liONDA CARS - 980 Autos, Now 980 . A7u:=tos=, o;o:N:=ow===9IO:-:-,-UNIVERSITY 'OLDS P.S .• Radio, Huter, Air. AVIG. 6tue IZM Xflll $1199 '69 FIREBIRD P.S., R..ilo. Httltr, AUIG !Z6R1'9) $999 •n CHEVY IMPALA CUSTOM COUPE Rtdlo. H .. tff, P.S., Afr, Avto !7"ESGJ $1299 72 FORD VAN $1999 .. '66 CAPRICE COUPE P.S., R1dlo, Heater Auto ClOOFTE) S399 '67 ,CHEVY IMl"AU WAGON Auto, Redio, Hea!fr, P.S., Air (\IFJ909) $499 '65 CHEVY lf!lplll Sp0rt COUpt R-9111, H~lll', Auto P.S. (TI X111) S399 '65 FORD FALCON P.5., Rldio, HNltr, Auto, Air tfl.Een'I $399 ·, ' e 4 C'fl. 0/H Ctm. E111. e ,, .. Wllttl tlM e l"vtl C.CI S11111tn~11 e lltncltd Air N"'ttr e llldctl Sttls e Diie. On.rri lrellu e l"tlk!N Dall! e ov.i W/S w1.-. 52538 $199 $71.51 DOWN PIR MO.· nm.to II fllt tot1I tt"' pr1ct: Ind. fn • "71 lk . '"" Otltrl'tllll p~ml. Pffet Is ll')IA ltKhldl1111 t•• " 111 llt. 1 ... & 1n ctrrylno Clllrtfl for 4 ll'>Onllll on APPROVAL of vour (ffdll, ANNUAL PElll.Cl!HTAGI RATE IS.~. ORDER YOURS TODAY WORKING MAN'S GAS SAVER LEASES '/4 VEGA Htclllbk. h.lrbohydrtm11tlc, r• dlo, ~rpellng, whit• wtll1. l"IER MONTH Sl6 '/4 Mallb• Cloak ~ affff"h>11, POwtl' disc brttu, :l50 VI, turbohydrtm11lk, ~ C0¥1n1 btlled wllll.w1ll1 t In It d Ill•~ it•R MONTH S99 ''4 MONTE Cui lo VI, rtdltl whlltwtlt1, IUl't>of'lydrama!lc, pGw- •r 11eer11111. pOWl:r disc br•kn.. llrlltd . .... PSlll MONTH Sii '74 NOVA Auto lrtns, ' c't'I eng, Pnwer llelting l'•lll MONTH s75 '74 CAMAIO Powtr itetrfn9, powtr dltc Dl'flft, 35(1 va. turbotlydrtmalk, wtlHI CO'flrl. belled whUtwans. tin ltd gltU. l"Elll MONTH S99 '74 CHEV. PkJiup \.'f Ion. ' C'fl tnglnt, 2 1PMd 1r1n1m1urcin. 1'111 MONTH s79 DON'T UNDllSTAND LEASIN•? PHONEt 147-6017 M MMnt 0... IM \MM. CW... YMt T-., ' ... Dlwll PtfTIMM " ...... Wt WHI Sir( Yew flNMnl Cit' or Tna All c;,... MOlf ........... "" ,... • ' • \11 TIMI l"k lUtp • l"l•l1ltlt Pkk" 1M .. "'· ... e f Cyl. 52890 $99 $85.55 DOWN Pll MO. ORDER YOURS TODAY Priced For Quick Sale 123 IMrALA CntoM c •• ,. ..•. SJ2tt 233 IMrALA Cn.._ c..,. • ,, .$Jiff 277 IMPALA Cm.111 Co•,. •• , .$3Zf'i 12 IMPALA c-.. C..,. • , . SJHf JJI IMPALA e ...... ~.,. ••• $Jiff JJ2 IMrALA c ..... e • .,. •• ' SJJtt 331 IMPALA C..,_ c..,. , . . Sim JJI IMPALA C_... Co•,. . , . SJIH Jlt IMPALA c ..... c..,. • . SlJtt •'lot CAPllCI eo.,. .......... SJJff 12 IMPALA C.... CMpo • ,, .SJJff 16 IMPALA C..111 c..,. . ,, .$J:Jff In CAPllCI C..,. .••••••••. SJ4ff -121 CAPllCI s,..t W. , ..... SJ4tt IM CA,llCI -.......... $Uff n C.vtllCI 4 -........ ,$JI" U7 C.vtllCI W-. . • . • . . . . pm 2850 Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa 540·9640 PINTO '72 PINTO Runabout, 4 spd, air, 16,IXX> miles, deluxe decor, Pi.lust sell immed. 675-4178 '73 PINTO Wagon, 4500 nU, Michlllen tires, 4 Spd, 24 MPG, 551-1498 PLYMOUTH ATLAS Chrysler I Plymouth Open Dally & Sun. 'tll 10 PM 2929 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1934 ·n DUSTER 6 cyl. eronomy, AIT, lo miles, mag whls, XI.NT! Can finance 83~2040 Ok. 1 9 7 0 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner$1100.; Semi-chopped 450 Honda mo. c.u <92-3735 1972 nJRY III 4 dr, air, PIS, PJB. Orig. owner. :n,ooo ml. 11900. s~11l9 PONTIAC '71 GRANDVILLE Hardtoo. Full power, factofy air, stereo. (529CJV). $1"9 • • -- . I .. . ~ • • . . . San ~leDtenie '_"_ ~apistrano EDITION VOL. 67, NO. 14, ·2 ·SECTIONS,.24 PAGES ... , y ••• "' -' .. , . -Today's .final N. Y ._ Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 197'4 TEN CENTS • • Ill Clemente Proves to · Be Slain Marine San Clemente police today Identified 'r the body found early last month In I Inland hills as that of a young deserter 1tationed at camp Pendletoo. ' The remains, which had lain unnoticed tor abou& 2S days in-a ravtne near 'San Clemente High School, were those of ·D.aie ~ur Erlewein, 21, who was • member of A Company, 1st Marine Division, at· the base. • Brannon's I .... Deci-sion • The Identification was made alter police fumlsbed fingerprint records fo the FBI. The agency answered the query la te last week with data on the young Marine. fyllce noUfled the man'~ parents in the Midwest over the weekend. Erleweln was fatally shot before hl1 body was stripped and dumped Info the ravine, police aaid. O>roner11 investigaton noted a sinete wound · ht the· skull, entering In ·the area. of the left temple. The Billi, part of which wu recovered during an autopsy, was a .32-cali~r. Detectlvea l8ld the FBI planned fo oontinue hr uslstlng in ·the ·inveatigatioo, but gave few other details of th~ continuing probe, . Early last week, before the identity Fire Remains ---··------ al the remains wu detennlned, olllcen releeaed a oomposlte drawing made by artist Sandy Martin, who spent a week -king wttlt a· magnl!ying-glus Iii an attempt to draw a portrait from pbotoa of the skull. Detective, Dave Munro said today that comparbon of the drawings with m"ishotJ of the vlcUm showed "an uncanny reeemblance. "~y'1 work was ·exlremel Y. • aocurate, and he had the vlctim'.s featu res right on the button," he said. , . The. theory surrowiding the killing bOids that Erlewein was murdered ellewhere and then dumped in the remote ravine on1y a few yards from the edge of Avenida Pico. An oil-duty fireman walking his dog · Dec. 20 discovered the remaiM lying bead down in the canyon. A cheap Court to Eye Mailed Smut su:.:.HIN~:~~~)enlar~eli~; . Missing Persf)n newly launched reconsideration of antiobsceoity.-lew by agreeing to canvas tarpaulin had betn thrown partially over the body and only the legs were visible. Recent checks for a pOssible criminal reoord on Erlewein show a single booking in the OCeanside area on charges related to drugs. _ Detectives said that their counterparts in Oceanside plan to assist in the con- tinuing inY.estigation~ Panel-Calls Former VP 'Deceitful' .. hear a case involving the federal • -s d M B n statute against mlillng obscene t ~... · • l__.!..L&J.liaL..vJ.~· .Llel..l.AJ,_..ueld,. __ m~-~ ......... -eballenged-u-un-1--c-.... ~ .. e-po--r ---: tt-U~ 1e.....__ J constituUonally vague and t o o broad in an ·appeal from Cllifor· nia. ANNAPOLIS, Md (AP) -A specia · three-judge panel recommended today that former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew be .disbarred from the practice of law in Maryland. • Saddleback College trust.es will meet tonight for the fll'st time since Trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa Ana pleaded suJ!ty fo bootmaking Dec. II. l!ramon. 43, a charter trustee and former president of ' the board, is lcbeduled for Bentenclng in orange Colmty Superior Court Jan. ·24, . OtlW tnistees have' declined lo affirm or closly nnnors that they plan fo ask for bll ...._..tlon IClllght. -But-~ Doona-Berry~Misslcrr · Vlojo, Pol -" -·Not, lllCI J8*" Uanlilll ot Lallll!ll Hilll. oil l'fllrled, thq bod .-w111 calla from --asking them lo urae Brimai'1 .nslgnatton. '!lie . Sacldleb8ck College F a c u 1 t y Asioclatlon at a recent meeting pused a reo<>lutipri "'"'41ing that II Brannon doOI not mlgn tonight, they will oooslder ullhg for bis ouster. "A "wait and see attitude'' </macteri7.ed other citizens interested bl the sttuatlon. 'l!rl11DOll could be given either a ~ or . felooy seotence. If 11·1s a felony, be wili be automatically ~from his position by state law. Jaw. · If the aenteoce ls · a misdearnor, Brannon wou1d not have to leave bts post, by law. Hi!: term expires in 1'75. Other Items on the agenda for the f'".m. meeting include: "'k AUlliorizlng an aPjilication fdr federal flliicl: for a language laboratory. 1..Consldering recommendaticns on "'-ement of a school csfeteria. , , . .:...A p pro vi n g recommendations for lilnber development of . the Campus l\lasW Plan p<0poae4 by the district aidlltect, Robert Lowrey and Associates. . -lleceiving a report on enrollment ~ the winter quarter. * * * ·Fornms Slated For Saddlehack Board· Csndidates -. ' Two forums for candidates for a ·alngle t i!Cancy on the Saddleback College board attrustees have been scbeduled. . · Thi ftm Js from 7. fo 9 .. p.m. Sunday Ii. die S&ddlebock Qlllege U!Jrary, .RAlam nt. '!be elllhl · candidates have been '8stfld fo acid... Saddleblclt Colle&e eiJJployes and locll pms. "j-Vlncenzl, a Saddlebact Instructor, u• cnordinalor of ·the event --Iii> Ibo facillty assOciatioa. • . ..,,,. -•led 'Sludent Body --will !ponaot a publlc 'foruin ··1or the Candidates from 11 a.m. lo 1 p:in. Feb. 'ij.., the camplis quad. Tbe outdoor dllcusalon will be public. ·A truotee for the Jrvine.El Toto post, netted 'by resiglling charter trustee Micbael Collins, will · be elected In the Maidl 6 opedftI electlon. 'Caadlci.tes. Include ~ -~ llleve DeLapp, Andmr Murray, Gary lllllnUlsen, and Vera Snyder of Jntne; and ·r.ari C8rraway1 Nick DIGluro;-and ;Jlllla Tolle of El"l'Oro. ., ' .. , ' ' ,J:;raJi Victims Found • JA€Kl'OT,..l'lev. (UPI) -Seardlera lilnc ...........U. Sunday readied the bodies ol two Utah ~ "'- alrplue c:rplhod on 1,11111-loot callyer l'tlt Gii ' • trip from Jldpot to tllelr 'llilme at ~· ' '" , ' .. Jo • . . " On Dec. 10, the court agreed· to bear the appeal of an Albany, Ga., movie theater operator coovic. ted under a state obscenity law for showing the R·raled. critically praised film "carnal Knowledge." Vandals Attack f.ars 'With Knives In San Clemente Vandals armed with lbarp knives left a trail-of Dal tires and ruined convertible tops through several San Clemente nelgbboihocids over the .... keA<l. Police received several calls fl:\)m irate midents reporting the cootly damage late Saturday and 'early Sunday. The total damages in the five incidents e1oeeded $500. Tlros worth l50 """' slahsed ori a car belonging lo Jan Betty McAlpin. A total of $210 In dam1ge was dooe to tires on a car owned by Gordon SooU. · eOth victlmlr lesi'!t at an apartment llouse at :149 """"""· A 11ll0Smg-pel'IOl1 report fded on a San Clemente woman late in 1970 Is the ooly solld lead available lo local police !Oday on the circumstances surrounding the discovery of a woman's skeleton after Wedneo<lay 'a devastating mobile home part fire. lletectWe U. Mel Portner l8ld tbilt dental ~ cOmpiied alter· lludy of the charred skull found near Capistrano Shores..Moblle..ao-4!Jf1<..llave-been !!.'!!8111'i1,,to •. •1 ·~ ~ "' ' we midi weman"S l'ortner "ec:llDOcl lo "ldiitlfir ·the mldlnlWdman. "We'ft not ready to draw lhat cto. a connectloo, n he explained. The bones -nearly cremated from the Intense beat reaerated by .,; bunt gas main. at the park -were discovered sboftly ·before midnight When a gaa company repairman looked down and noticed the .cbarred regiaJns. The blaze bad burned away ail the dense shrubbery OaM!ng the .part's access road, revealing the bones. Portner said tbal the r8S!Omblance between the phyalcal features of the bones. and those · of the missing woman Is subotanUal. The missing '(oman, be added, stood less than five,feet tall and bad poor teetll. Tbiit ls the same situation with the skelelDn. Coronel:'• aides meeJUl'ed the length aDd II alloWed the vlcUm . to be very ahiJtl with .rflddlsb'.bniWD •. halr which .. lS:oe CORPSE, Pqe Z) By Neighbors . ,DISB,f\RMID!T' ,liSKID ... :··-Famiir YP 'AjMW··7 . . ' The three Circuit Court judges said that Agnew's evasion of income tax, acknowledged in a no-contest plea, was "deceitful and dishonest" and "strikes · at the heart ol the-'basic object ot the legal profession ..• " "We ohall therefore recommend his dlsl>armeil~ We see no exjenulan,- clrcumstances aDoWiog a I e 1 s e r aaocttoo," • ltpag~ , I~endi~ said. ·· , "Mr. Agnew will not be making a , statement at this particular time," said E. g· . ypt Rei'ects Ann Breen, a receptionist at Agnew's office in Washington. The recommendation goes to the K • ·• · · Pl · Maryland Court al Appeals, which rnakea iss1.1iger ' an the final decision on whether to bar By JOANNE REYNQLDS Agnew from the practice of law. 9f .. D.lr .,.. ...,. F W' hd l The Court of Appeals can either accept Eloise Popeil, the Woman police accuse or it rawa . the disbarment recomrnendaton, reduce of ,a plot to' 'riiµrdc.. her mutu.muuooatre the penalty to suspension or reprimand. '"and By United Press Iamutloul Agnew. husband, returned to her Hartm "" Disciplinary actions were filed by the Road . boine this weekend,1 thanks to Egypt ·to:1ay rejected the troops state bat· association last November. after e&ris ot toUr ot her neigbborS. dlse!!iage111ent ·plait worked out by Agnew pleaded no contest to a federal · · • · " Secretary· of ·State Henry A. Klssbtger, Actordlng to Mrs. Popeil's attorney, Jltyptlan Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni tax charge and resigned from the vice Pbllll~· Petty, Mrs. Popell'aineigh'10is aaid In Ailwan He said ' Egypt as presidency. At 251 La Cuesta, tires worth $'10 and a conveftible top_ worth _$70 '!ere Slashed on cars owned by KeV!ii iiiid 1 Rep0rt Today On _W atcrgate pledged · more thali ti ll)Qtion worth dernandin'g thai it be redrafted ;fo •. Tll• bar a;isoctatlon asked the three of . property lo guarantee the •~.,;;,,mUan ·•··.. _ . _ Judi!" to di#J>ar .. ~w~'ThLf!!!!D!!'._ ___ _ --~-·s~100,ooo·bll1. · .,..,.. ~ , . ---v icepresldent(b<>We\<et;aSkecl th~~ Jeanett Hagerty. . ' . The Dally Pilot today publishes the first ot 8' five-part 1eries written by a United · P re s s International inl'estlgaUve reporter on the Status of the Watergate probe. ' . Reached tbday at ; her home, Mrs. The Israeli P},an Dr .. Klssmger,,hrought lo merely suspend him' from practicing Popell. ·-'• .abe· was . very .grate!, uJ for with· him was not satisfact?J'Y, Fahrni law araning that' his misconduct was Yet another incident.was reported in ShorecliHs, police said. M.JU told a news conference near the end · ' "...... . her neighbors' geoerosity wltlcb· led fo ot a cJaY·-or" JiegOliatlolis · Involving not connected with duties as a lawyer. her releaae Saturday morning from Loo Kissinger and Egyptian leaders including Agnew told the Judges that he had Angeles County Jail. President Anwar &.lat. at no Ume enriched hlmself at the Burglar Hits Laundry For Watches, Cash Today's story on Page S deals with two prominent Newport Be•ch residents, F. Donald Nixon, the President's brother, and Herbert W. Kalmbadl, !lie President's penlOl!al attorney. ' "I am verj gratified," she said. '"l11ey F8bmi said Kis.iinger was returning expense of his puDlic trust and that are darling people ·and It ls particularly . to Iirael tonight "with an Egyptian there was notb~g to indicate that be reasaurlng when you realize I haven't plan. ·and an E--•an map 0 n would not faithfully and bonesUy lived here too long." disengagement •;t"fth r;J'brael" along the represent clients as a .lawyer. A burglar haltered bis way through the. rear door of a downtown San Clemente laundry over the -kend and made off with three watches and $85 in cash. Petty said the pledges came prlmari!y Suez €anal. But Circuit Court Judges Shirley B. from resldtnls of Linda Isle wbere llln. Kissinger tOld ne"'11len earlier after Jooes, Ridgely P. · Melvin Jr., and Popetl and .her estranged husband, a working luncheon with Fabml that William H .. McCullough said Agnew's Samuel, owned a summer home . his attempt to conclude an Israeli· cond~c:t w~s hai:m'ul to the proper The Daily Pilot attempted · lo 00111ac1 both men for I b e I r comments-m ·the allegations 1n the · article. Neither man was available. llln. PopeU, 48, spent lour·days behind Egyptlait agreement "is the IOughest a~?'""'trallon of Justice. barsw~::..IJow.boyfingrieodher .:=.=·~blrln! negotialiQl!·rve ever been·tn." Despite In our. opln10~, the proper Police were SUllllDODed ear!y SUnday morning lo the Service Center Laundry at 120 S. El Camino Real after mtployes arrived lo open for the day and noticed the theft. •w• -r· e KIS5ingef'i' st8tement! Amfrican soun:es adminlstrat1on of Justice, the proper a Long Beach ·man .lo kill Popell, a said a major announcement could be respect of the court for llsell and a . Olicago kitchen gadget mannfacturer. e%pecled Tueaday . proper regard for the integrity of the The boyfriend, ~. Ayeta,: fl, an Kissinger bad Down lo AsW&n with profession compel ua to conclude that ' (See REU:A8tl>, Paci z! what bl.si~lly was a pJan worked' Out the respondent -is unfit to co!llinue ~ by Israel calling for Israeli withdrawal a member of th.e bar of this state, Re~all Campa~gn Launched 2 Huntington Trustees-Target in 'Deep Throat; Case The first olllclai: step baa been taken to · let a nc8ll election aoon alter the ol the tnv.Stigati.,; Info the Sbo"flng In a recall campaign against two tnptees~anlwr·tbe aUegations. of · the x~na~ fi!!n1 __ 11~ ·Throat,'' Huntington Beach Union High School ThO l3 llll9tlgure repments 20 percent · , at an admintsltiUve <Oli!~: District trustees stemming from the of the '-'·tered voters Mrs. Allen MangerS and SbelllcmanJIVert Invited "Deep Throat" eex movie controvt.rs)'. -, .... & .. • In · to see ·the fdm at the conference m Trust... .~-•-. u •• _ and Ron • oaidc the . gi:oup tend! to try . to get ' San Diego lut AllflUlt bul left before --·-· al least 30,000 olgnatures In case some -~•-Al Shenkman now have witU Friday fo are thrown out during validation. the ~~g. tar the mattor became answer charges l!llcle •P!nst them In In the notices ol Intent, the parents' ~bllc lit weeu. later and the ~ the notk:es al Intent to Circulate recall ""·--Ille' •--·-Ith discasaed .It, trustees voted f·1o I to =u·-··~· th the "-'"'-... ,. •. -= ~---.... ...--• · ·...r 1rw1th ........... ....._. Jatt Roper'.I peu cm •-wl , ~.,..e ...,...1y fraudulent uie al. money, neglect of . · .• .,..._.. · registrar ol 10teni. duty, Iilct Of lllca1 reopooalblllty and apj>IO~ over .the film being shown: · Members of the CiU-for Parents' coilfllct of lnl<rest The cltllens ·claim tax lllOll'!Y .was RI , •-. • , mlallled because the educaton at the gbla Committee, led , by Doris ,,... Tbe actlon -sparked by the group• Sall Diego cont.r.nce didn't view of Westminster, filed the notlcel l'rldaJ. dllploa111r1 wltb the trustees' reooluUoo lnatruct1onal ~Dll but I n 1 i ea d ·~.~~ume'"'"tiie~,: :::l . , -:-·--:-:-. Wllldled llte .•~IPllcll-fllni ·•t not1tt1 ell ha ru•. M r!..c. Bl·•d ed taxpayer'• ..,..... • -.,;,__.. "'"""-lia ..._ -. ~ ~~.iv; u llP..OD . Mancen, who . II a corpoate ofllcer ' ............. ...,... ve -,.....,... '• •' •• • i:>--· -of the. Ameilcafi -Learnlnt Corp'., which a reqll ca-lgn for --, 11111 lo •. liADlllni:LD • (UPI)' -Men:blnl M!Ia 1Mtruct1anaJ matm'lali,. la -· the flrlt -actJon. • Rlebard ......... al Bl~ .... • by thl ...... ol having •• eonlllet of ' Mra. Allen said today the dtll101 found W ..., ·after be ..U lnll!test -a otocldlolcler In his group plans lo start cln:ulatinl potlU-•PPlftlltli -ovw the llead dmtnc ·!Inn wldcll Is a major• land develoiier to &et the IMCU 77'1 IS,lll tlpatuNI I rolllJl!l. ' · . ' '' ·llld cauJd bey laad fl'Om , the district. ' ' ' 1 ,. • ,. .. • • to a.bout' 20 miles · from ·the canal 8nd the recommendat100 said. a thlimj!ig out:of EfYP!jan armed lorces · The three judges said l he Ir in the 'Sinai Desert• ol the brae! side (See AGNEW, P1ge Z) of the cailal. ' ' ' Wor~ lujd :gone so far .'on · the plait tha: ·both Klss!Dger · and· Fabiru said experts _were using maps to pinpoint the exact withdrawal plans. An American spokesman said an ·interim announcement was expected · late today (See MIDEAST, Page Z) IT A.LIAN ACCENT ., ON CLASSIFIED · He~"'• 1 · suocess story told in an Jtalian accent: Italian. make. Like new, FOU>ING Bicycle, ; spd. Best offer, (Phone No.) The bike was made In ltaly1 but the ~ta . nre stric,Uy 1rom the liO!Mll'Ow'll Delly Pilot. The , bike was sold -the aecop\I ciay the ad appelfed .. If· )'OU 'want to tr:y for a new speed' record for ielling a bike • , . or.anythbtg else, try the direct line fo. results . Dial -·· Oruge C.ut • Weather Some bigh clouds at Umes, other- wise sunny through Wedneaday, according to the weather service wilb inland highs in the low 71ls and beac'fl temperatures of 65. Lows tonight in the 50s- INSWE TODAY An .AEC officilll claims the chance of a -nucleaT j)owtr plant accide nt W •ou chance in a bUlion! Se•. story Pog. 4. IMtlfll " ~ ... M...,. 1 ,....... ...... Cet~• S -CiMltr I C_.... •M SrMI ,.._ 1t C""*' If ._,. ... ,, ·· c~ ..... ts .,'"*--... tt-11 0..-........ I •T...,...I • • ....... , ... ' ~ . •• ...,... ..... 11 ......... • ,,...,. 1•n .....,. .._ U.tt ....... 14 --• .............. ,. •• ' I _ ... ~ ' . ~ _ .... ~ .. ,.,~v1 SC IVY Edison Down tolO Day Supply By The A.1IOC.laled Presa Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, Olwn to a lo-day supply of fuel oil, today increased ita voltage cutback from S to S percent and said it was preuini the federal government fo'r additional fuel suppliet. "\Ve don't have any reason for optintlsm at thi.!I point," said a spokesman for the utility which supplies electricity to about three m i 11 i o n customers in the city and Westchester County. . Con Ed burns 150,000 barrels of heavy fuel oil per day lo generate power and normally maintains a ~ to 26-day reserve. The spokesman said he could not recall when the reserve had been ao low. • I Monday, Jan\lll'J 14, 1111 .. O.Uy l"Uol Slttl Pholll ., V .S. f:Mrge Leary Cult Use d Phony Passports. From Wtro s.mc.. Once headquartered in Lagwia Beach, the Brotherhood of Etemal Love led by Dr. Timothy Leary WU a drug frnporting nn1 that made mo ml111on, the government charges. Teslimony revealed Sunday I n Washli>gton, D.C. allefea thal members of the Brotherhood fitted around the globe an fradulant passports easily obtained. Frances G. 1Cnl1ht, director of the State Department's Pauport Office, charges that Brotherhood members had 1!0 phony passports. This repretents about a third of the 449 false passports confiscated or otherwise taken out of circulation in Front Pqe 1 ' the pasl fiscal year. Miss Knight said II la IO easy ta. obtain phony passports: fraudulent birt!I> certificates, driver'• lictNU or other lda>Uflcatlon that an A!Jlllicant oould get a dozen. I " I One of the tSO Indicted, arrested "" oonvlcted Broiherh>od of Eternal I.ova_ member! baa · -seVen;--&ne ·asilfted ---i--1 ISOC!'eUy Oct. S beloto a Senate Committee. Her teatlmony was only relused Sunday In a statement and IUllllDAlY . by the eemmlttee. Federal a1onts alao ~old the Senato Inte rnal Security Subcommittee that their efforts have · crippled th" Brotherb>od of Eternal LOve, but nol killed It. I -Con Ed and other utilities in New York state have been operating at a 3 percent voltage reduction as an energy conservation m'eaaure, under order! from the State Public Service Commission. MAR CIA CULBERTSON TRIES UC IRVINE'S BOOKSTORE TRAM SERVI CE RELEASE D. They said worldwide surveillance has· linked at least 750 individuals to the · S1reailed cult, from minor messengen to the big adminlstratlve men. , "Of the top 12 org&nlzers ~ the Brotherhood's activities, six continue to he fu1JUves from justice IJvlng flll their A Short Ride, But a Sweet One for Students With Stacks of Textbooks for New Quarter • • ~~~~~~~-- The utility estimated that conservation efforts by customers saved 815,000 barrels of oil in December. It renewed its appeal to them today. Deat h Suspect's Mom Con Ed said plans to switch one generating plant on Staten Island from oil to coal had been tennporarily set back by delays In getUng a sufficient stock of coal to make the change. Says Son 'Incoherent' In washington, federal energy director HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) • Pauline William E. Simon today assured Henley testified today her 17-year-old Congress that the rue! shortage is real, son was incoherent and in need of a despite doubls about some oil industry doctor after his arrest last year in statistics. coM.ection with the homosexual-torture Simon said the oil companies' reports slayings of 27 teen-agers. of ample stocks on hand at the end Elmer Wayne Henley is charged with of the year should not be interpreted murder in six of the deaths. His trial as meaning there is no shortage. 'The opened today with his lawyers raising favorable inventory position is attribu-an attack on their yollllg client's written __ ....;;ted~to an tmusually mild winter, con· and oral statements to police after his 1ervat10H'eff ortrand---some shJpmen~al'Te"st:-(Plcture;-Page-4). of the Arab CO\llltries despite the em-He allegedly told police details of bargo, he saJd. a 21h·year rampage of homosexual rape However, Simon told a joint economic and torture killings. Henley would have subcommittee, "as of Dec. 2, the been 14 when the state accuses him American Petrnleum Institute reported of having started to participate in the we have only ~lightly over 30 days killings. supply of the ma10r petroleum products. After morning testimony the bearing The lhortag~ ca~ by a fully effective was recessed until 9 a.m. Tuesday. embargo will qwckly reduce these to Mrs. Henley said her son telephoned dangerously low levels unless we act her from police headquarters after his quickly to reduce demand and equitably arrest Aug. 8. all~te the available supplies." ~I asked when y could him d Simon conceded the government lacb . see an IUl adequate system ror collecting energy he sa.Jd the ~lice would call wh~ data and must rely 00 what Is provided I coul~ come. I JUSt went all to pieces, by the oil companies. But ·he SBld that she wd. in the next few wee.ks the Nixon She said she contacted the family admlni.atration, with the help 0 f lawyer but he was too busy to sec Congress, will sel up a comprehensive Henley right a,)VBY- collection procedure. Mrs. Henley said when she visltCd Simon said legislaUon may be needed her son the next day in jail at Pasadena . to enforce stiff reporting requirements a Houston suburb, she found him cold for the petroleum industry and Congress to the touch and a p p a r en t l y should also move to require reporting hallucinating. by the coal and uranium industries. "I was with Wayne for about five Winte r Oly mpics --Nude and Cold WEST LAFAYETIE, Ind. (UPI) - Sii: of 43 hardy Purdue University men braved 7 degree below zero temperatures during the weekend to win the fourth . annual Cary Quadrangle nude -winter olymplC3 here. They were cald only in tennis shoes and hals. Forty three runners entered the three-- mile coolest which began in 1970 as a prank between residence halls on the men 's quadrangle. The winners completed the race this year in 59 minute!, compared to one hour and 15 minutes last year. The wind may have proven a factor in the small number or finishers. Tbe wind chill index st the time of the race was 36 below zero. 'lbe six wiMers shared a purse of $52. ' OIAMM COAST IC DAILY PILOT ,,. Or.._ CM1t MllY l"llOT, wltll-Mlldl ti ~ IM H-·I",.._ h (IUtllllflM ll'f' .. Dr-.. c .. s1 l"uMlllllM """'-""· .._ ,... ...,.... a,. Ml....., MMMr "'"'-" 'rlfllf• fw Coll• ~. Nl'Wllef1 IMdl, ::."""' •HCtiJl"-11111 "'°''"· ~ lf'VIMlhddlttiKll n '-" c.._,w .. ~ Catilslr1"" A 11fttie ........ . ,.-1(11 """"""' S.MM\'* ........ ,... .,,. IJl'IMJtel ""4~ l"il>ftl t. •I UD w.t .., """"· C..te ..... C.!lfwnlla, ,... Rekrt H. Wa~ '""""' Ml ,,. .... J1ci l. c,,,,1., v-. l"NNfellt .,,. °"'9l'ei ._.., Tlr-i•t KMril '""' 1'trl.fll11 A. M"',,hl .. ....... "" lfllW Cll•~" H. t.a1 R;Jt,NI P. Ntll .................. l:1'1W. ._ Clsm1ts 0..... t05 Hsnt. ~ C1mh111 Rttl, t2671 --c:.-. ... I Ill WMI .. 'I' •1Tttt """"' ...-1 »SI ,....,.,. ........... ...-..i lielldl: 1107S loMcll ~•111 ~ e.dll .. l"tr+tt ·- . ... 0 I 17141 MMJJI ft P al .W.•11 I I '42·1611 S.ct; s Al ..,M1m.ft1 T1' .. as 4fJ..44H ~ ""' ... C-....1 ~ ..... ~ ... -.• ..... , Hlwtr•I• .................. , ...... ,. .... _, • ,;011 t t ..... lllKMI ,... ................... ...., dSI! ~-· aC:: .._...., ~-... &ti _...,, ,..,...,,, ........ , ........... . minutes and he was incoherent. 1 just asked if he was all right and he said. 'Gel me a lawyer and a doctor just as quick as you can.' " She said she asked police detectives not to question h;er son again but they refused, tellin~r he didn't have to answer their questions. . St.ate District Judge William M. Hatten has reserved the opening days for pretrial motions. The hardest fought ones Sailor l njm·ed In Freak Dana Harbor Accident A boat owner from Corona suffered severe gashes to his left leg in a freak sailing accident over the weekend at Dana Harbor. Harbor patrolmen said the mishap occun'ed late Saturday artemoon as Robert R. Veriti was tacking up the main channel in his 2l·foot sloop. They said Veriti was at the tiller when the vessel suddenJy was "caught In irons" {unable to make headway against the wind). The sloop then began drifting toward the jetty rocks. Seconds before the vessel hit the rocks, Verili tried to lend oU with his feet but slipped Into the bay. The drilling boat crushed the man's leg against the boulders of the west breakwater, patrolmen said. Passengers on the v~e.l helped the injured man aboard and then sailed ooward harbor patrol headquarten. Verlti was treated for the gashes at San Clemente General Hospital. FromPqeJ l\flDEAST .•• 'Aith t6e major annollllcement Tuesday . The Egyptian demand for a revision of Kissinger'! proposal forced Kissinger to delay his scheduled return to Israel for more than four hours. American offidals said he expected to leave this afternoon to place the revised project before the Israelis. In an indication of what caU!led the Egyptian objections to Kissinger's pla n, Fahrni said any dlsengagement agreement "sl)ould be s u f f I c I e n t I y detailed that there can be no hang-ups . "Everything must be In c I ear cut language so · Uuit there will be nothing agaln like Point. B (of the ctase-flre """°lldaUon agreement Egypt and Israel aigoed Nov. Iii," Fahrni said. ' are e:ii;pected lo be motions by defense lawyer \Viii Gray, 48, to ·exclude from evide ce oral and written confessions Henle· ade to police. arles Melder, 44, who heads the defense team of lawyers, says: "\Vc'll proceed on the assumption the boy W"1S without counsel at the lime, and wasn't adequately warned of his rights." WithouL theJlenley_statements, _the state's case could be seriously weakened, prosecution lawyers say. The prosecution says there is only one other witness to the killings : David Owen Brooks, 18, himselr charged with four murders. Brooks, due to be tried beginning March 4, will not testify at the Henley trial. ' Such testimony would incriminate him, even though he bas given a statement linking Henley to at least seven deaths, prosecutors say. The U.S. Constitution allows a person to refrain from giving self-incriminating testimony. Dean Arnold Corll, 33, the man police call the mastermind or the ring, was shot dead by Henley. It was Henley's shooting of Corll during a sex and paint· sniffing party Aug. Aug. 8 which broke open the case. After the shooting, later ruled self· defense, police say Henley began telling them about the series of murders. At first they were incredulous, but soon lhey found Henley was telling the truth. He and Brooks led them to 27 buried bodies in three locations. Henley has been indicted in six of the murders but is being tried for only cne of them now: the death of Charles Ray Cobble, 17. Cobble, who lived across the street from Henley in the fading Heights neighborhood close to downtown Houston, was found dead two weeks after he disappeared , buried along with 16 youths in a boat o::taJI rented by Corll. In Texas, there is only o n e classification or murder. The stale does not have charges such as first-degree or second-degree mW'der. Light Agenda For Capistrano Council Tonight A relatively light agenda rat.es San Juan Capistrano city councilmen at their 7 o'clock session tonight, with routine road-improvement reports and planning matters on the schedule. Councilmen will hear a progress report on several Planning projects being accomplished by consultants Hayworth and Anderson. The finn is nearing the end of a redrafting of the conceptual land use element o{ the general plan. other items on the agenda include : -Evaluation of a contract calling for an environmental impact report on improvements to Valle Road. -A report from the Qrange County Flood Control District on its latest plans to . develop Tr a bu co Creek from the San Juan to O'Neill..Park into a recreation area. "' -A report from City Engineer Jack Kubota on the progress of the mlhion- doUar rebuilding of Gamino Capistrano. FromPqe I AGNEW ..• recommendalion wu based solely 1on Agnew's oo-conte!lt plea to the tax charge. They sliid they did nol take .Into consideration any of the allegations made by the Justice Department In Agnew's U.S. District Court appearance Oct. 10. In a 40-pue stalement of evldenct, federal prosecuton ·alleged thal Agnew wu Involved Jn a syttem 'of ldckbocks to Maryland politiclant from ardlltecta and engineers doing non-bid government buslnea. Propane Powered Trams Operating At UC Irvine Propane powered trams plied the shortest bus route in the City of Irvine this \Yeek, carrying UC Irvine student boo.k buyers across Campus Drive to Town Center. unemployed machinist from ,Santa Ana, 111-got'ttn wealth in foreign countries remains In custody 'today, unable tp Where addlUonal .<nterprl!ea can be raise the $100,000 bail set Friday in ·planned," claims John R. Bartels Jr . ., a hearing In Long Beach. administrator of the U.S. Drug ' Police allege the pair conspired to Enforcement AdminlstraUon. kill Popeil so that she could inherit He charged that one of tho9e who roughly one-third of his $150 million was involved is Dr. Leary, the onetime estate before their .pending .divorce LSD .. adv:ocate now seMng .a ll>-Ye.~ became·f!µal . tenn for marljusna possession. Aecordfilg to investtgaton, the couple He is confined at the catffomla separated tills summer and Popeil ~tedical Facility at Vacaville, while sWl , returned to Chicago to start divorce facing a Texu prilon term on the procffdings while Mrs. Popell and their same count. two teenage daughters slay~ on In Leary escaped from lml Padres Men 's . Newport Beach. O:llony at .JSln. Luis ObiSPo in 1970, The three women vacated the Linda allegedly with the help of followers, Isle home while It wa.s being remodeled but was recaptured. and neighbors said work en the house A tho ltl 11 th his B her~~ located at the northwest .,...;.,t of ~e u r es a ege at rot a...uu 1 .#\/.. u 1 of Eternal Love made about $200 million ~':'::J;..:i'it:n.:;hen court acUon on from smuullng 24 toes of hashish Int• An ad hoc student committee became concerned about the lack of parking spaces at Town Center particularly during the opening week o{ school when students buy their books. Since then M · ~-" the U:5. and bave sued the tax .... mpt -• rs. "'°""' l!l!Lber--0rfBllWltlon rw $'10-mllUon.-------1 C!apgli ers li8villVeCI ln rented homes · -·-So, Howard Bidna, Tim Kelly and Hillary Davis met wi!h representatives of the Irvine Company. They gained a promise of increased parking spaces in To.Y.11 Center. And, they launched the Associated Student.s of UCI, Irvine Company and aministration special projects office experimental bus service. The idea is to see if students will take the bus instead of their cars for the short trip across campus Drive to Town Center. Bidna, an ASUCI COllllcilman, said, nThere seems to be no way to get students to walk to the boo.le store." From Page 1 CORP SE ... could possibly have been dyed or tinted. Only a shred of fabric from a dreM was left after the blaze was quelled, and that was discovered beneath lhe pelvic area. Portner said the one element on the possible match which is of concern is the lime or death. Crime lab investigators woi;khlg with a tiny bit of tissue set the time or death as perhaps six weeks ago. The woman in the missing-person report vanished Jong before that, he said. An exact cause or death, he added, would be impossible to determine because of the condition of the remains. in Irvine Terrace and on Harbor Island Road. Pelty alleged today that Popell wu $14,250 behind In his temPoracy alimony and child support payments of $4,250 a month. In ~cago, Popeil went to court Fri- day in a stonny ses.!ion to ask for cus!odY of the two lirl! and an end to hnanclal support for his wife. That bearing was oontinued to this Friday. A00>rding to the A!aoclated Pres& Popeil's lawyer, Samuel A. Rtnena' called the estranged wife an adUlte~ and a "willful, vJcloUB woman." In -Ing the motion to terminate the separate maintenance payments Mrs. Popeil's lawyer, Cliarles stein: charged that Popell ''has attempted to use every technique to starve hi! wife and chiklnm Into submission In ibis case," according to the AP story. Ho said that If the moothly payments w~re cut off Mn. PopeU would be ~llhout funds to defend her'Milf in litigation. AP reported that in commenUng to ?,ewsmen after the hearing, Popeil said _My wife has two si~ to her-a good side and a rough side." One of Pooeil daughters related la.st week that the three . women an had been foroed to take jobs In an apparent effort to support thtmaelves In the bayfront house and maintain the three e1pensive European cars they used. One ol those cars, a-Rollsl!OYce, was impounded by police as evidence in the case. Santa Ana Pair OK After Two Gun · Incid ents Two Santa Ane men were in •tisfac- tocy Clllldllion today after betnf abol In two separate incidents over the weekend Poikt aaJd. ' Pulte. said a I a m 11 y flclll -it today left 1.elda Qiultor, 21, lying on the floor of a Santa Ana Boulevard home wllll a bullet wound Jn the moutJ\ Police said It appeared the man wu shot by hi! .wife, Velma, 21, after the couple fought for aeveral hours. Mrs. Coulter wu booked into Orange County Jail on charges of usault with intent to commit murder. Her hmband was · taken to Orange County Medical Center where he wu listed In satisfactory condlUoo today. . In another Incident late Satur<lay night, police said, a fist fight on the !root lawn of a Santa Ana home erupted into gun fire. Officer1 said Lorry Gallegos, 23, waa shot In the face and cheat wtth a u gauge ahotfU!l from about eight fee~ He was also Wted in satisfactory condlUon today at Mercy General Hospital. • Police sald they have a suspect ln the shooting but no arrest had been made. as of this morning. "' Nobod y SeH s Amana for less than Where do VC1lJ want the freezer in your new 1fm,,,.,,, refrigerator ... • WE TAKE ruDE INS ' ' LOW ·:--=-~· 0 --•• , .. :1 " ~~-kif · I --· PR ICES AR E BORN HIRE RAl llD ILIEWH IRE on the side? on the botfom? on the !!1>.l Am•n• gl\.s you a choice 90DAYSCASH WITll APPllOVllr ClllDtT . 1815 llEWPllRT Bl VD., lllli ntawn Costa Mesa -Pllanl 541-Till ' • -· I ' I ' I' i • • • ' ~ -. Monday's ' ' Closing Prices rcew VOttl( IUP~ _ "°'tow!~ Pj cT:.." ti. ~...., erk Stock •u .,. • • • N! lr.. .... I HIOft ._.., Utt t: •• 1t 1M ' " f~ ,.,~ 14~ ,., > ·- • I H Monday, January 14', 1974 SC DAICV Pll.DT J j :f . NEW YORK ST()CK EXCHANGE Year's High-Lows ' ~ ' Appear Every Saturday Detol-.... r= """ ~ "'" c'=. . ' /tf11rlte• '.l're•• " ca, ., II ' • • ~ ~\~1 1 • ~ .. f:..i~ HIOll Low l •1l tii:'. .. .,, ' l I _, wcm It *:!ftt .) .... H• ci£ Market Follows Yo-yo Patte1n 7 • NEW YORK (UPI) -Slocks moved erraUcally Mon- day ending mlred on the N•w York Stoclt Exciwlie. Trading Ytas moderate. A The Dow Jones Industrial average was of£ l.30 points to 840.la. The widely followed average travelled a \\'Obbly pa.th.· The Index was more than nine· points ahead in..-tho opening h>ur, but later was behind moru than three points, then climbed once more , and retreated by the close. Advances led deeUnes by approximately four--to.lhree among the 1,764 issue trc1.ded. Enthusiasm was dampened in the ea rl y afternoon by news 'Egypt reje<!ted the troop disengagemenl scheme v.·orked out by Secretary of State Jtcnry A. Kisslnger. • I • 'Exorcist' Wrings 'em Out SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Thousand! are lining up every night ror a chance to faint, get sick to their stomachs, or merely be scared out of their wits. A-1ore than 6,000 persons have waited for up to two hours -sometimes in near- freeiing temperatures and driving rain -to see the . new .... horror ... mov.ie ... '..'..'.1:.h .~ . Elt9rt.ist," since i t opened here Dec. 26. 0 J'VE N E V E R seen anything like it," said .Andy Poryes, manager of t b e Northooint Theater "'her.:? the film has been breaking local records. "Three shows a night arxt every seat is filled." Most oatrons seem satisfied with the time and money they've spent to witness the • M-, ""'""' 14, 1974 • • • • . , • • ... • • • • • • • • • • • • '-T"'L~--:;:-• • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,,,,,."(>. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • -·-·-·-·---..• _.. ·• .. •~ •.... ·-•••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • •re • • • • I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • The two of you. And Robinson's. Right from the start. Finding that one perfect1 gown. Enjoying a treasure hunt of special prizes. And setting up house with a new Riglft Start Cha,rge Card, plilnned-flist for brand new budgets! See it all at our Sensational brida'.i shows pre· • • sented by Robinson's and Seventeen ... ---~ onano-ve11-1---1 by William Peter Blatty, about a little girl who becomes ~ by the devil with violenf results. "I'm used' to blood and guts. but that was too much," said Russ Thompson, 21, a pre-med student from Long Beach. ONE THING'S for sure said Pat (.olegrave . ~. a Berkeley street vendor who mates string art. "I'm jnot going to trjp for a "fule. It was a heavy flick ." Poryes said that on the average ooe viewer faints during each showing and pa- trms overwme by the gore 'frequently leave their seats m a desperate dash £or the restrooms. Some make it , he added. Some vewers like being terrified so much they come back a second time. "THE FIRST TTrt1E, well . afterwards I was scared." said Deborah Fleming, 23, an arUsl "ThiS time, just say I came away feeling uneasy. I don't often see the same show more than once. The last time I did it was 'A1y Fair Lady.' " But some viewers complained the film failed to live up to Its promise as the lll06t frightening experience ol all time. Nert's Hit perfect WIY to rnaQ' JOUf moner or securities do "lrtplt~uty"; ~ttris--·~···"" Way for llM .,.-openln1 ltOfJ of Hotf Mtmofial Hoqlftal'a "Four flPitllt PilM tor c;Mnt'. You wUI Irle II fof .a ~111rprisel ,,, :' t: (714) 6451600 &1 'alll ,,,,., ........ II = IW HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPffAL New,.,t l••eh, CA '24'0 JOI I Newpert leule¥•nl t . . THE From our collection of thought-provoking ideas for a romanticist like you. Ruffled GOWN R organza. W ith a chapel train. By Frank Masandrea for Bridal Couture. White or ivory. And what else, but a picture hat? Robinson's Bridal Salon. • • . . ..... · ...................... . . : . ·. . .. . ............ · ....... . • :: :-: ·.':::: :::::.:: ~·-:·:.:·::. ·::.: .=.=.=: : ··:.·.·.··· ·····:·· ... ·.··:· . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . : : ···L.----. ... =::.:-:.·: ': ·::·::·:i ....... ----'\ .... : .... L,,..---"' ·:··.".":;:·:::.:., .. • :: ::. ·:::.: .,·.·:Ll!'!'!r---f ... . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . ... ._ .. •' .......... ·; .. ·.: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : •.• =·: :: : :::::.· .... : : .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... : : : ·::·:·'.. ·:::::::::: :: : . . . : .... ::: ...... :·:: ..... : : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ·. ·::: ·.:.: •',:: ·: .·:: ... : ."·::.· . . : . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .... . . ' .. ' ...... . :::·:.'···. 1 ..................... . Tickets -to -Treas.ure: - There's a book of tickets waiting for you In our Brklal Salon or_ China Department. Pick yoors-:Up. Then go through the store and register for any or an of the 4;? Right Start prizes along the way! r First Stop: The Honeymoon Prize. Come.register , In our Credit Oepertment to wlr;i a fabulous honeymoon In Canada! You'll fly Afr Canada. ,And stay at the Chateau Frontenac. On us! Next? Fashion, furniture, everythlnsl . ( ~---'• . I J . . . . , 1 I I l .\ • 1 { 1 1 ·\ • ' ... • ' . ' ' • iag1111a Beaeh E-D ITION ,VOL 67, NO. 14, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1974 • J • " From Wire Servi<" •Once headquarter<d In Laguna Beach, the Brotherhood ol Eternal Love led bY Dr. Timothy Leary ivu a diug Importing ring that made $200 ailllion, the government charges. Testimony revealed Sunday 1 n _ Waahington, D.C. alleges that members ol ~Brotbeyl!ood fitted around the globe an fradulant passports esslly obtained. Frances G. Knight, director of the State Department's Passport Olflce, charges that Brotherhood members bad 130 phooy paaspPrts. · This represents about a third of the 449 false passports confiscated or otherwise taken out of circulation in the past fiscal year. Miss Knight sald It ls so easy to iilitaffi ptiony passp0rls; fraudulent birth certificates, driver's licemes or other idmWication that an applicant could get a dozen. One of the 150 indicted, arrested or convlctea Brotherhood of Eternal Love members had seven; she testified secretly Oct. 3 "before a Senate Committee. . . Her testimony was on1y released Sunday In a statement and summary by the committee. Federal agents also told the Senate • Internal Security Subcommittee that their 1 efforts have crippled t he Brother~ of Et~ Love, but not killed it. · They said worldwide surveillance has linked at least 750 individuals to the so-mlled cult, from minor messengers to the big adnlinistrative men . "OI the _top lZ organizers of the Brotherhood's activities, six continue to tie fugitives from justice living on their ill·got'ten wealth in foreign countries where additional enterprises can be planned," claims JohI) R. Bartels Jr., administrator of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Adminlstratloo . He charged that one of those who was involved is Dr. Leary, the onetime LSD advocate now serving a 10-year term for marijuana possession. He is confined at the California Medical Facility at Vacaville, while still new IS arm en Plans Weighed Officials Study Arch-Beach Bid- Troubl .. plagued Arch Beach Heights will be studied by both the Laguna Beach City Council and Planning Oommisslon this week. P!annlng-comml!aloners-will-welgh a ....,;r., plan propooed !or the Hilltop &mmunity al 7:30 tonighl, while First Steps For Recall Action Taken Tbe first official step has been taken in a recall campaign against · two Huntlngtoo Beach Union High School District trustees stemming fr.Om the ••neep Throat" sex movie controv"'rsy. Trustees Dennis Mangers and Ran Sltenkman now have until Friday to ...-er charges made against them in the noticet of intent to circulate recall ~tlUoos filed with the Orange County registrar of voters. Members of the Cittiens·. for Parents' Rights Committee, led by Doris Allen ol w .. tminster, rtled the no!!_cea Friday. '!he-trustees have one-week-1o-retiut_ -all<r wblch time the actual recall notices can be riled. Although there bave been threats of a recall campaign for months, this is the first such action. -· Mrs. Allen aaid today lhe cltlzem poup plans to start circulating petitions to get the necessary 23,000 signatures to set a recall election soon after the trustees answer the allegations. The 23,000 figure represents 20 percent ol the registered voters. Mrs. Allen aald the group Intends to try to get '~ leut 30,000 signatures. in case .!IOme are Um>wn wt during vatldatlon. In the notices of intent, the parents' pp charges the trustee.• w I t h .traudu1ent use of money, neglect of duty, lack ol llscal responsibility and conflict ol interest. :.11'Ibe action was sparked ~y the gro~p·s ~ispleasure with the trustees' re90lution ol the Investigation • Into the abowlng .. t the X-rated film , "Deep Throat/' at an administrative conference. Mangers and Shenkman were invited (See RECAIL, Pace Z) Rep-0rt Today -On Watergate ,,,0 Dally Pilot today publlahea · !be first ol a fi...part aeries • written by a United · P re s a 1 , International Investigative repPrter .... the atstus ol the Watergate Iftbe. • Today's story on Pac• I deslll orith two promJnent N-rt Beach reotdents, F. bonald Nixon, the President's brother, and Herbert W. Kalmbach, the President's personal •ltorney. • The Dolly Pilot attempted' lo t<lld.tef botll ·mm lot' I h e I r ,...,,.--on ill&-llleptlom In Ille lrtlde. Neither 111111 , WU ' 1nllable. ' , .... ~~~~~~~~~~--' the council will conskier an extension of the "interim" building ordinance during its public bearings at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. -Tbe-plan-belore-the -p 1-l·n-n+n-g commission includes a controversial provisk>n to limit new building sites to lot.I of $,000 square feet or greater. Tbe at.andard lots In Arch Beach Heights have been subdlvldod to 25 by 100 leet, tolallng 2,lllt--!ell. Tbe provlslm, 11 adopted, woald bait buijding .--.qc11 Iota, uplea alrWod1 ... - b7 developed "ope: ty. Planning Director Wayne Moody baa tenned the mlnimnm-lot slie suggestion a 11polnt of departure" on ways of easing projected @nsity or the hilly community. It is not a--fmal ·-recommendation, altbough it is supported by the Arch Beach Association of H001eowners. Opposition by builders and real estate interests is expected. . Deitr Plllt Sllff Plllt1 Other provlsioos of the specific plan, ., which would be applied in a manner similar to zoning, call /or standards relating to parking, open space, and MARCIA CULBERTSON TRIES UC IRVINE'S BOOKSTORE' TRAM SERVICE A.Short Ride, But 1 s-t One for Slvdento With Stocks of Te.-b fod~ew Ouorter traffic circulation and new home design . At the city council, the plannlng B · z f M p · z ~:·:ro~~"'~~ ~ ai or rs. op~i sought. ' =·=:~~J? Raised by Neighbors ' development. --· In a report to the cotmcil, Moody said the extension of the ordin~ is By JOANNE REYNOLDS necessary because the p I a n n 1 n g °' "" EHHY PIMt s11n commission ordered an envirorunental . im t report on the specific plan. ' Eloise Popeil, the woman police acetU r~vlalon of that lntertm ordinance ol a plot to m\Jrd<.. her multi-millionaire limltlng building size to 1,250 square husband, returned to her Harbor Island leet on 2,500 lots has been criticized Road home this weekend thanks to .by builders. e!forts o1 lour of her neighbors. Boardwal,k Buffs Collect Pieces According to Mrs. Popeil's attorney, Phillip Petty, Mrs. Popeil's neighbors pledged more than 17 million worth of property to guarantee the slim blonde's $t00,0lllJ bail. Reached today at her home, Mrs. Popeil said she was very grateful for her neighbors' generosity which led to her release Saturday morning from Los Of Memorabilia · Angeles County Jail. Eager Boardwalk collectors snapped up remaining chunks of 111• olcl Main Beach wooden walkway left on the park site over the weekend. Although "aptlnten" ol the Boardwalk were still available kMlay, major portions of what wu once a 1,000 foot long Boardwalk ......, gooe by Saturday afternoon. Collectors swooped ®wn on the jloardwalk -deemed 1musable by the city and caried away c111 lull ol the old wood. . ' l'orUons ol the. walkway, estimated lo be between 40 and 50 years old, were saved by city ere,.. and will be cut ma.. l•lncb -!or dlstrilJution.,to c1111 ... --'I'huraday. City crews lllo aalvaged 1bout $3,000· worth ol uaable lumber !or other dty • projecta lrom the 'l•lk. Boudwallt wood plcken .c:ollected the remaining WOOCI !or a variety of purposes !run aouvenln to llrewbod. , "I am very gratified," she said. "They are darling people .and it Is particularly reassuring when you rea1ize I haven 1t lived '1ere too long." .Petty said the pledges came primarily from residents of Linda Isle where Mrs. Popell and her estranged husband, Samuel, owned a summer home. Mn. Popell. 48, spent four days behind bars following her arrest last Tuesday with her boyfriend on suspicion QI hiring a Long Beach man to kill Popeil, a. C1lcogo kitcben gadget manufacturer. Tbe boy(riend, Daniel Ayers, 37, an unemployed machinist from Santa Ana, remalna In custody tlM!ay, unabl< to raise the $100,000 ball set Friday In a hearing In Long Beach. Police ajkg'-_the pair copsplred to kill Popeil .. that tllie oould inherit Doggie Door Used By Laguna Burglar roughly one-third of his $'150 million estate before their pending divorce became linal. According to investigators, the couple separated this summer and Popeil returned to Chicago to start divorce proceedings while Mrs. Popeil and their two teenage-daughters stayed on Jn Newport Beach. The three women vacated the Llnda Isle home while it was being remodeled and neighbors said v.:ork on the house located at the northwest poLit ol the Island, stopped when coutt action on the divorce started. Since then, Mrs. Popeil and her daugbte" have Jived in rented homes (See RELEASED, Page Z Superintendent Del.ays Opening Of 3 Schools Laguna Beach Schools Superintendent Donald D. Woodington has order.<! schedule chang .. delaying the opening ol three ol the district's scl>oola, effective Wednesday. · The schedule changes will affect La~ Beach High School, opening 15 mltiutes later:. Thurstoo.. Intermediate. opening 30 mlnUJea · 1ate~ and AJJso Elementary, opening 30 minutes later. · Dr. Woodington aaid he ordered the change becauae of concern !or students walking to school and to bus stops In the morning darltness due to daylight aa~tlme. · uwe have had a lot ol anxlous A dojgle _. provided llCteSS to. I parentl.~ Dr. Woodington said. llllel wllo but8Jarlaed the home ol "We haven't had any, problems, but, Crash Victims Found I-Beod1 builder JoM Ballew, 1254 wedoo't want any,'' he added. Storlll Orlve of• cuh rriday ni!lht ~ -· Tbe schedules !or El Morro and Top Polloe Lt. -McMurny said It ol the Worlcl' achoolll will not change a_...i -lo the -waa gained as the7 open -than Ibo other ochools. : 111 ,... ... lltioup the pet entrance Bus P.iclt up .limes will be set lonrard ud anJorklns tho maltl door, 14> relleOt the later school atsrtlng tltnea. ; -j Propane Powered Triµn~· Operating At UC -IF-Vine Propane powered ·jrams plied the shortest bus route in . the ·City of Irvine this week, carping UC Irvine student boQk buyers across Campus Drive to Town Center. An ad hoc studenf committee became concerned about the lack of parking spaces at Town Center particularly during the opening week of school when s~dents buy their books. So, Howard B.idna, Tim Kelly and HµIary Davis met with representatives of the Irvin& Company. They gained a promise of increaSed parking spaces in TQwn Center. And, they launebed the Associated Students: of UCI, Irvine Company and aministratlon special projects office experimental bu.S service. . The idea is to see if students will talce the bus instead .of their cars for the short trip across Campus Drive to Town Center. B:idna, an ASUCI councilman, said, "There seems to be no way to get students to walk to the bxlk s~re." IT A.LIAN ACCENT ON CLASSIFIED ·Here's a success story Italian accent: . told In an Italian make. Lik_e new, FOLDING Bicycle, 3 spd. Best offer, (Pbone No.) Tbe bike was made in Italy; but the ~ re·sults were strictly from the homegrown Daily Pilot. The bik~ was sOld ' the second day the ad appeared. U you want to try for 1 new 1peed record !or selltng a bike •.. or anything else, try the dh.ct line to results. Dial 64U171. I Today's Final TEN CENTS facing a Texas prison tenn on the same count. Leary escaped f~ Los Padres Mep's Colony at S'an Luis Obispo in 1970, allegedly with the help of followers, but was recaptured. Authorities allege that his Brotherhood of Eternal Love made about $200 million from smuggling 24 tons of hashish into the U.S. and have sued the ta1-exempl organization for $70 million. Panel Calls Former VP 'Deceitful' ANNAPOLIS , Md (AP) -A special three-judge panel recommended today that former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew be disbarred from the practice of law in Maryland. The three Circuit Coult judges said that Agnew's evasion of inct0me tax, acknowledged in a no-contest plea, was "deceitful and dishonest" and "strikes at the beart ol the basic object of the legal profession ••• " "We lhall tbtre.fore recommend his disbarment. We see no extenuating circumstances· anowtng . a 1 e I s e r sanction," a-· 1-t.page reoommeoi;laUoll said. "Mr. Agnew will not be making a stilitement at this particular time," said AM Breen, a receptionist at Agnew's office in Washington. The recommendation goes to the Maryland Court ()( Appeals, which makes the final decision on whether to bar Agnew from the practice of law. The Court of Appeals can either accept the disbarment recommendaton, reduce the penalty to suspension or reprimand Agnew. Disciplinary actions were filed by the state bar association last Noveinbef after Agnew pleaded no contest to a federal tax charge and resigned from the vice presidency. • The bar association asked the three judges to disbar Agnew. The former vice president, however, asked the panel to merely suspend him from practicing Jaw, arguing that his misconduct was not coMected with duties as a lawyer. Agnew told the Judges tha~ he had at no time enriched himself at the expense of his public trust and that there was nothing to indicate that he would not faithfully and honestly represent clients as a lawyer. But Circuit Court Judges Shirley B. Jones, Ridgely P. Melvin Jr. and William H. McCullough said Agnew's conduct was harmful to the proper administration of justice. "In our opinion, the proper administration of justice, the proper ·respect of the court for itself and a proper regard for the Integrity of the profession compel us to CQllclude that the respondent is unfit to continue as a member of the bar of this state/' the recommendation said. The three judges said t b e I r (See AGNEW, Page I) Oruge Coast Weather Some high clouds at limes, otJier.. wise sunny through Wednesday, according to the weather service with inland highs In the low 70s and beach temperatures of 65. Lows tonight in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY An AEC official claims th• cha11ce o/ a n·uclcar power pla1it accident U 'one chance in a billion.' See s rory Poge 4. .. ) ' • . ..._ . • -·-~'-"-"-'~~-'~8~~~~--,-M_o~~''~·-J_M_u_a~;_.1~4,_1_9_74 Brannon's Deci,sion May Be Due Saddleback College tru[t®;s wi.!.L meet tonight for the first tlme since. Trustee Alyn Brannon of Santa Ana pleaded guUty to bookmaking Dec. 18. Brannon, 43, a ctiarter lt\lltee ~d fonner p-esident of the board, ts scheduled for senl.erlcing ln Or•nge Cotmty Superior Court Jan. 24. Other trustees have declined to alfi nn or deny rumors that they plan to ask for his· resignation tonight. But Trustees Donna Berry of Mission Viejo, Pat Backus of Dana Polnt, and James Marshall of Laguna Hills, all reported they had received calls from constituents asking them to urge Brannon's resignation. 'lbe Saddleback College F a c u I t y Association at a recent meeting passed a resolution suggesting that if Brannon does not resign tonight , they will consider asking for his ouster. - A "wait and see att i tude '' characterized other citizens interested in the situation. BraMOn could be given either a misdemeanor or . felony sentence. If it is a felony, he will be automatically barred from his position by slate law. law. If the sentence is a rnisdeamor, Brannon would ·not have to leave his post , by law. His term expires in 1975. Other items on the agenda for the 8 p.m. meeting include: -Authorizing an application for federal fund for a language laboratory. ~nsldering recommendations on management of a school cafeteria. -A p p r o v i n g recommendations for further devel opment of the Campus Master Plan proposed by the district architect, Rober£ Lowrey and Associates. -Receiving a report on enrollment for the winter quarter. * * * Forums Slated For Saddleback Board Candidates Two forums for candidates far a single vacancy on the Saddleback College board of trustees have been seheduled. -The first ·1s frOl!l 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday in the SaddJeback College library, Room 139. The eight candidates bave been asked · to address Saddleback College employes and local press. Jean Vincenzi, a SaddJeback instructor, Js coordinator of the event sponsored by the facul ty association . '!be Associated Student Body will sponsor a public forum for tbe candidates from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 15 on the campu! quad. The outdoor dlscus!lon will be publlc. A trustee for the Irvine-El Toro post, vacated by resigning charter trustee lw1ichael Collins, will be elected in the March 5 special election. Candidates include Norrisa Brandt, Steve DeLapp, Andrew Murray, Gary Rasmussen, and Vera Snyder of Irvine; and Earl Carraway, Nick DiGiuro, and John Tolle of El Toro. American Family Worse Off--Study WASHINGTON (UPI) -The average American family, contrary to what the Administration sa)"!, was worse off economically in 1973 than in 1972, according to a congressional study on inflation. With inflation and higher taxes outpacing wage increases during 1973, the average family ended the year with I percent less purchasi ng power than it bad in 1972, and the outlook for 1974 is no better, the report said Sw>day. OUM•I COAST t.a DAILY PILOT Thi Or .. 0...t DAILY l"ILOT, wllfl wllldl .. °""',,... ... ,._.,, ...... pull!..,. Dy 919 Or ..... C-lf l"vblltlllnl c.mp...., ..... nN edit ..... .,.. llUbfllllld, Mend1y 11'1""'911 l'ri..ty, flDr C0.!1 Mhl, M9WP11t1 llt1ch, HwltlfWIM " hecrlll'Nllllll V1U1y. l.lfu... a.di, lrvlrw/5Mldlt:Nct fl!d Sin Clement•/ Sift JUM C1pl"rlM. A 1lng'9 r'19imMI •tllM Ill Mii~ llhlrll1y1 111111 ~ T ... Jll"lllc:•I PllOIWl!ftl lllMll Is 11 SJ) Wtst· .. r Jtrttt, co.11 ""-"· c.111o11111, n.•. "olMrt N. w,..i ,, .. IMM tl'Jll Mlltlllr J1ck "· Curloy Vitt f'tnlcltnt .... 0.W11 MllllOtf n .... "-'•" • ·-,... •• A. Mw,...iiw ...... ,.!fir diorf11 H. Le.1 llch1,.. P. Noll ............ -.. ... Ediliwt __ .._ 222 ' ,..,.. •• A¥1ftUI #il•illitt M4"111 r.o ..... '''· •2•s2 --.CMll MIMi • w.i .. Y-Jttwt ........,. 1eectt: am ,....,.., ......,,,., """'......, --.ctri: 11111 aMdl ie\11W1fC ..... o--fll -"""' 1:1 C.IMll9 ... , 11' 111n1 fTI4) MWlt Cl 1fMf Moectt ' I M2 .. 671 "--.... Al ••• lrfl @PHI , ...... I 4,..,.... "'""-· tm. °'*""' .... "*""""' .....,. ... .... ...... '""'"·'---.......... W fl/ •otl'ftNl1&110 ...... ...., ................... .-1111..,.. ,....,. .., """"""" ...... . ..... -......... ,.., "' c.t• ..... Cit""'*" ........ am... ttM DlllY Plltl ''"' ~ A LITTLE HELP FROM FRIENDS Mr •• E1orn From Page J RELEASED. •• in Irvine Terrace and on llarbo'r Island Road. Petty alleged tod ay that Popeil was $14,250 behind in his temporary alimony and child support payments of $4,250 a month. Jn Chicago, Popeil v.•ent to court Fri· day in a stonny session to ask for custody of the two 5i rl s and an end to financial suppo rt for his wife. That hearing was continued to this Friday. According to the Associated Press, Popeil's lawyer, Samuel A. Rinella, called the estranged wife an adulteres,s and a Hwillful, vicloll.! woman." Ill opposing the motion to terminal< the separate maintenance payments, Mrs. Popeil's lawyer, Oiarles Stein, charged that Popeil "has , attempted to use every techi\lque to starve his wife and children lnto submission ln this case," aCcordfug to the AP story. He said that if the monthly payment! were cut off Mrs. Popeil would be without funds to defend herself in litigaUon. AP reported that In commenting to newsmen after the hearing, Popeil said, "My wife bu two sides to her-a good side and a rough side." One of Popell daugbi.rs related last week that the three women all bad been forced to lake jobs In an apparent effort to support themselves in the bayfront house and maintain the three expen.1ive European cars they used. One of those cars, a Rolls Royce, was Jmpollllded by police aa evidence in the case. · Long Beach detectives who arrested Mrs. Popeil and Ayers allege that they gave $400 cash and $60,000 worth of diamond J.ewelry to an acquaintance of Ayera to <ill Popell. Police claim the case was broken when the · would·be killer got second thoughts and called Popeil to infonn him of the alleged plot. ~cco~ing to AP, authorities in Chicago said Friday that the would·bc kill er sta lked Popeil wh ile carrying a gun and a key to Popeil 's IO·room apartment. They said he followed Popeil to his business and to several restaurants but never got a ch ance to kill him. <?the~ th~ bia brief remark! following Fnd~y s divorce hearing, Popell 's only pubhc comment so far has been, "I am very happy to be alive." Cable TV Porno Filmer AITested PITTSBURGH (UPI ) -Gl<n Kucera 21, of suburban North Versailles township was held for co u r t on a charge of showing obscene films on a cable television hookup. Kucera all egedly showed the stag movies early Dec. 26. Several persons complained and Kucera was arrested. He was later fired from his job with Valley Cable Television. ¥ Defense attorney Daniel Berger argued at ~ hearing before magistrate George Bob1ch that police confiscated the fllms without a warrant and obtained a confession before Kucera was advised of his rights . Berger also claimed his client was drunk and the films were seen only by adults. Winter Olympics --Nude a1id Cold WEST LAF A YETIE, Ind. (UPI) - Sil' or 43 hardy Purdue University men braved 7 degree below zero temperatures during the weekend to win the fourth aMual C8.ry Quadrangle nude winter olympics here. They were cald only in tennis shoes and hats. Forty three runner! entered th< three- mile ~ontest which began ln 1970 as a prank between residence halls on the men's quadrangle. The w l n n e r s ~pleted the race this year In 59 minutes, compared to one hour and IS minutes last year. The wind may have proven a facto r In the ilmall number of fin ishers. The wind chill Index at !he time of the ra ce was 36 below zero. Mlfllf:ftll ., NA a.If .....WI '"'1....., .,.ts1•a #M ....,..,,., ·The six winner' shared a purse of L..---------'l.. 152. • • I I ~gyptNixes IGssinger's Troop Plan By 1Jniltd Press illkrnatloul Egypt today rejected the tfOO!ll disengagement plan worked out by Secretary of state Henry A. Kissinger, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni said In A.wan. He said Egypt wu demanding that it be redrali.d Into an "Egyptian plan." The Israeli plan Dr. Kissinger brought with him was "not satisfactory," Fahrni told a news conference near the end of a day of negotiations lnvolvlng Kissinger and Egyptian leaders Including President Anwa r Sadat. Fahrni said Kissinger was returning to Israel tonight . ''with an Egyptian plan and an Egyptian map 1 n disengagement with Israel" along the Suez Canal. Kissinger told newsme.n ear1ier after a working hmcheon with Fahrni that his• attempt to conc,lude an Israell- Egyptian agre{!ment "is the toughest negotiation I've ever been in." Despite Kissinger 's statement, American sources said a major announcement could be expected Tuesday. · Kissinger had flown to Aswan with what basically wu a plan worked out by Israel calling for Israeli withdrawal to about 20 miles from the canal and a thinning out or Egyptian anned forces in tile Sinai Desert on the Israel side of the canal. Work had gone so far on the plan tht: both Kissinger and Fahrni said experts were using maps to pinpoint the eIRct withdrawal plans. An American spokesman said an interim announcement was expected Jate today with the major announcement Tuesday. The Egyptian demand for a revision of Kissinger's proposal lorcod Kissinger to delay hi.o scheduled return to Israel for more than four hours. American olficlab said he expected to leave this afternoon to place the revised project-before the Israells. ' In an indicaUon of what caused the Egyptian objections to Kissinger's plan, Fahrni said any disengagement agreement "should be s u f f i c i e n t 1 y detailed that there can be no hangups. "Everything must be in c 1 e a r c u t ~ge so that there will be notbtng agaJ.D like Point B (of the cease-fire comolidation agreement Egypt and lsrael signed Nov. 11)," Fahmi said. Point B of the November agreement called 111 Egyptian and Israeli military representatives to negotiate a ttturn ID lines held when the first 1J.N.-<>rdered cease-lire went Into effect Oct. 22. Egyptian olliclab aald Its imprecise pbraslng enabled the lsraelia to launch "stalling tactics" and prevent its implementaUm. Fahrni said Kissinger was playing "a constructive role in the negotiations, tn the sense that he would like to ... a good (disengagement) plan as a first step towards a final setUement." He said Egypt would not reopen the Suez canal ezcept "in the context of a final settlement" and not as part of any disengagament arrangements. "When Israel fulfills all its obligations under Security Council resolution 242, Egypt will atow Israeli shipping through the Sliez Canal,'' Fahmi said. Resolution 242 of November, J967, called for an Israeli withdrawal from all Arab territory occupied during the June 1967 war. Court to Eye Mailed Smut WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court today enlarged Its newly launched reconsideration of antlobscenity law by agreeing to hear a case involving the federal statute against ma~g obscene material. The law was challenged as Wl· constitutionally vague and t o o broad in an appeal from catlfor- nia. On Dec. JO, the court agreed to bear the appeal of an Albany, Ga ., movie theater operator convlc. ted under a state obscenity Jaw for showing the R-rat<d, crttlcally praised film "C8rnal Knowledge." From Pagel RECALL ... to see the film at the conference in San Diego last August but left before the screening. After the matter became public six weeks later and the board discussed it, trustees voted 4 to 1 to end It with Superintendent Jack Roper 's apology over the lllm being shown. 1lte citizens claim tax money was misused because the educators at the San Diego conference didn't view Instructional programs but I n s t e a d watched the serually-upllcit film at laxpayer's eipense. M~gers, who ls a corporate officer of the American Learning Corp., which sells lnatructional mai.riala, lo accllled by the group of haVing a conlllct of interest because a stockholder In hi.I !Inn which Is a major land developer and could buy land from the district. Man, 56, Bludgeoned BAKERSFIELD (llPIJ -Mm:bant Richard Hareld1 1t11 of 8Uenlloi4, WU found dead ...... , Iller ... -apparently alradl. .... 1111 bead durlDC a t'obbery. a , -• ~------""'·--~--.. . ·--·--·"' ..... . . . . U,I T..._... DISBARMENT1BKED Former VP Agnew From Pagel AGNEW ... recommendation was based solely on Agnew 's no-contest plea to the tax charge. 'Ibey said they did not take into consideration any of the allegations made by the Justice Department in Agnew's U.S. District Court appearance. Oct. 10. .In a 40-page statement of evidence, federal pros ecutors alleged that Agnew was invotVed in a system of kickbacks to 1.1aryland politicians from architects and engineers doing non-bid government business. Although Agnew hu not practiced law In Maryland since being elected to public office, it Is the only state where he was a member of the bar. He appealed to the judges at the hearing last month not to deprive him of bis means of earning a living by reoommending disbarment. . Two Countians Hlirt in Laguna Traf fie Accident ~o persons were injured in a Laguna Beach auto accident on South Coast Highway Saturday afternoon. Iloona M. Brent, 21, of Anaheim received a broken left leg and cuts In the ooDisim which also Injured her busbaDd, Tbomu, 23, abo of Anaheim. Mrs. Brent was tranof,erred to Orange County Mecllcal Center illter emergency eare at South Coast Community Hoepital. Brent was treated for cuts and released. Huntington Beach resident Janet M. Vincent, 42, of 192t Alsuna Lane waa · not hoepltaliud, said Police Lt. Robert McMw-ray. Lt. McMurray said the accident occurred as Mrs. Vincent turned left dnto Bluebird canyon and collided wtth Brent who was northbound on Coast Highway. Viet Camp Retaken SAIGON. South Vietnam (AP) Thirty SOUth Vietnamese t o d a y recaptured a border camp in the Central Highlands taken four months ago by the North Vietnamese, the Saigon command reported:--HeliCQpters landed the government patrol in the Le Minh camp. and they met only light resistance, according to the spokesman. ---- Door lammed ' Manager of Spa Admits Defect By TOM BARLEY Of .. DI...,,. ......... Fonner Holiday Health Spa manager Charlee A. CUsaua today admitted that the alldln& !l1aa door Of the lllUla room In which Maria Panon wu trapped tbree yeero aco wu defective before the incident. Cassaua, called to the witness stand before Mn. Parson, 50, bad complei.d her !eetimooy In the Oranie County Superior Court sauna bath trial, allo admitted that be found the ~ Santa Ana Pair OK After Two Gun Incidents Two Santa Ana men were in satisfac- tory condition today after being ahot ln two separate Incidents over the weekend, police said. Police said a l a m i I y fight early today left Ze1da Coulter, 29, lying on the floor of a santa Ana Boulevard hom e with a bullet wound in the mouth. Police said it appeared the man WM shot by his wife, Velma, 21, after the couple fought for several hours. 1.trs. Coulter was booked into Orange County Jail on charges of assault with intent to commit murder. Her husband waa taken to Orange County Medical Center where he was listed in !atisfactory condlUon today. In another incident late Saturday night, police said a fl!t fight on the front lawn of a Santa Ana home erupted into gun fire. Officers said Larry Gallego!, 23, waa shot in lhe face and chest with a 12 gauge shotgun from about eight feet. He was al!O listed in satisfa<:tory condition today •t Mercy General HMpital. Police aald they h•ve a IUSpeCt in the shooting but no arrest bad been made aa of thl.s momln&. Bail Bondsman Cites Stereo Gear Theft LaJUDI Beach bail bondsman Ronald Kaufman Saturdly repor1ed the theft of a f240 stereo from a car be wu holding u collateral m a bond. Kaufman reported the theft occurred last month from a garage at 435 Ocean Avenue. Lt. Robert McMurray said today. GARBAGEMEN AIR THEIR •.. SHORTS PALERMO, SI c 11 y (AP) Garbagemen In a Slcftlan village aired their grievancea Saturday by allowing up for work clad only in their underpants. The men said they were demoostntlni agalmt the town government of 'lillabate to get back pay and gloves and co~alla to work in. BecaUR of chlly weather, the Pf8.lesl lasted only a few minutes. • door oil Its tricks alter tho hysterical woman had been ruthed !Q. a. I~ hoapital. ~ C..11zza attrlbtited the •tn!lith hO ha<. acquired as a phylical lltn ... eipert with the Oranie health 11J>1 to his belnJ able to r<place the belvy door Wltholil assistance. Mrs. Porson wants $1 million Ill damages from the spa for the alleged neglect that led to her entrapment and for the creaUon of a "three fam of Evo'• psychiatric oondltloo on which she. will resume tesUmony when cauaiaa leaves the witness · stand. It is alleged that the trauma crea~ b)' ber «1tr1pment led her ID deve!Op separai. peraonallUes. • Sbe haa stated that one or those penmai!Ues, Maria. lr<quently become dominant and seeks extra marital .exual' relatiooshlps through men picked up 11< local bars. eas .. zza today admitted that both patrons and employes had complained about the sticking sauna room door before Mrs. Parson was trapped on March 2, 1970. 1 The fonner manager said ·the ooly attempt to repair the door prior to Mrs . Parson being trappld was rriad.e, by tv.'O male lnatructors at the health "1"'· He also confirmed Mrs. Parson's testimony that the handle of the door broke oil In her hand as she tried to force the heavy door open. Mn. Panon testified that a h ' collapoed In the 170<!""'° heat alter ahe was unable to open the door and the handle snapped oil In her hand. · She and other patrons have tetllfied tbnt health spa employes were nev~r within shouting distance m s u c b occasioos and that many complaints had been filed in the months prior to her 'ordeal. Sailor Injured In Freak Dana Harbor Accident A boat owner from r.orona suffered severe gashes to hls left leg in a treat sailing accident over the weekend al Dana Harbor. Harbor patrolmen said the mi&hap occurred late Saturday afternoon as Robert R .• vertu was tacking up lhe mail) Cha111'!1 In his 21·100! aloop. I 'Ibey said VerlU wu at the tiller wheil the vessel 1Uddenly was "caught lD Irons" (Wllble to make headway agalnj the wind ) . '!be sloop then began drtltlng toward the Jetty rocks. Seconds before the vessel hit the rock11 Verltt tried to lend off with hil feel but slipped Into the bay. The clrlltlng boat cru!hed the man's leg against the boulders of the west breakwater,\ patrolmen said. Passengers on the vessel helped the • injured man aboard and then sailed toward harbor patrol headquarten. VerlU wu treated for the gubes at San Clemente General llolplta!. Sextuplets Respond CAPE TOWN, South >Jrjea (Al'J The Roaenkowitz sextuplets a r • responding uUslact011ly to pholothmpf treatment for jaundice, doctors at Mowbray Matei'nitY Hoepltal aaid today, --'-----· . ................................... . Nobody Sells Amana for less than 1>illl(a.f> Where do YC1lJ want the freezer in your ne\v 14m11n11. refrigerator ... • on the side? on the IWtfom? on the .tgp..1 · ,f,,,•11• gives~ a choice ·I , ,, -· -· 90DAYSCASH Wl'TM Al'l'aOVID calDIT 1115 IOPlllT Bl YD" Drntnn ~ Mesa -"''"" 548-7718 i -~ ) I l I l -I I / . I /' ' . ' ' ... I ' Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 67, NO. 14, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1974 TEN CENTS Newport Seeks Budget Boost for Airport Panel ' • 1 By L. PETER KREIG Of tlle Dallr PIW SI.,. Newport Beach stepped up its legal battle against Orange County Airport today by serving Orange Co u n t y Supervisors with a writ of mandamwi in an attempt to force them to beef up the budget o! the Airport Land Use Commission. :.. City Attorney Dennis O'Neil said the writ was ~rv® in the C9\lllt)'. clerk's o{fice and he will file it In Orange ' County Superior Court Tuesday or Wednesday asking for a show caWle hearing. O'Neil said Newport Beach was taking the action "on behalf rl Mayor Donald A, Mclnnes, who is chainnan of the land use panel created In 1971. O'Neil recited repeated frustraUons that Mclnni.! bas complained about during the past 18 months .• He pointed out that /iewpor! )l<ach succeeded in getting state .. fegislation ! ' " passed that forced the county supervisors to fund the panel, but ao far It has beon getting ooly $500 a year. '"Ibey asked for $62,000," O'Neil said. "The mayor feels this Js an affront to the .rommlsston. It is 1till required to do all the land use plannlng yet It doesn't have enough money to pay its postage," O'Nell said, . He __ said , the -show -eame hearing hope~lly will force the supervisors to reconsider .the panel's current budget. MARCIA CULBERTSON TRIES UC IRVINE'S BOOKSTORE' TRAM HltVICI A Short Ride. l'ut • s-1 0,.. ftlr ShMl•nts Y/ltli Sl•cks of Textbooks lor-'""''Ouwle• ' Propane Powered Trams Operating At UC Irvine Bail for Mrs. Popeil • Raised by Neighbors Propane po-ed trams plied the lhortest bus route in the City of Irvine this week, carrying UC Irvine ~tudent boQk buyers across Campus Drive to TOwn Center. ; An ..ad hoc student comrniUee became ~cemed aboot the lack o! parking spaces at 'I.'own Center particularly ~uring -die £1'!'ning w~k 21.. s~I when 1tudenu buy their books. • So, Howard Bidna, Tim Kelly and Hlllary Davis met with representatives ol the Irvine Company. They gained a Promise ol. increased parking spaces In Town Center. . And, they launched the Associated Students of UCI, Irvine C.ompany and aministratioa special projects office uperlmental bus """ice. . · The idea is to see if students will take the bus Instead of their can: for the short trip across Campus Drive 'to To'wn Center. Bldna, an ASUCI councilman, said, 11'1ben; seems to be no way to get ,1tudents to walk to lhe booJc store." · Crash Victims Found JACKPOT, Nev. (UPI) -Searchers using snowmobiles Sunday reached the bodies of two Utah couples whose airplane crashed on !,()()&.loot Callyer l'uk on a trip from Jackpot to their ohome at Kafsville. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 1tM O.lly Plklt St ... Eloise Popeil, the woman police accuse of a plot to n'lurd<.~ her muIU-mllHonaJre husband, returned to her Harbor Island Road home this weekend, thanks to efforts of four of her neighbors. According to Mr>. Popeil's attorney, Phillip Petty, Mr9;-Popell's neighbors pledged more than $7 million worth of property to guarantee the slim blonde's lt00,000 ball Reached today at her home, Mn. Popeil said she was very grateful lor her nelg!Jbor1' generosity which led lo her release Saturday ·morning from Los Angeles County Jail. "I am very gratified," she said. "Tbey are darling people and Jt is particularly reassuring when you realize I haven't lived bere too long." Petty said the pledges came primarily from resident& of Linda Isle where Mrs. Popeil and her estranged husband, samuel, owned a summer home. Mr1. Popell, 48, spent lour days behind bars following her arrest last Tuesday with her boyfriend on suspicion of hiring a Long Beach man to kill Popeil, • a Chicago kitchen gadget manufacturer. The boyfriend, Daniel Ayers, 37, ao unemployed machinJst !rom Santa Ana, remains lo custody today, Wlabfe to raise the $100,000 ball 1eL Friday lo a hearing In Long Beach. Police allege the pair ronspired to 2 .Men Jailed in lrvi,ie Restaurant Lot .Brawl A parking lot fight at the lttdOnioo mtaurant In Irvine earty Sunday ended with an alleged •asautt on a Colla M ... police omcer and_J!>e . jallini o! two men. Officer Paul Louis Jessup said he was hit !rom behind and lo!pt in • str"Dllellold as he arrlvod to break up Ille ft!lht -t a o.m. J-p reoched for his club Ind clouted hll alleied attoclo!r over the bead. He Wd It '-the only avaUable targtt. BleedlnJ from 'I liob In hll held, Victor P. -·,mt Hendrts ~vo., !nine, WU lUm lo c.t& ,.. .. ' . ,\ Memorial for stilcl>e! and then trans- ferred to Orange Conuty Jail. Mendez is being held a 12,500 boll· on charges of battery OIL.a police officer and disturbing the peace. Also arrested at the time of the !rocu at the restaurant on 18512 MacA.rtht&r Blvd. wu LeRoy Burb, 33, ol ct7 E. Falrvtew SI., Orange. Burka, 'Who was 111d to bllVe boon beating a nian In the porklDa lot -the officer arrived, waa Wen Into c\ISIOdr on charges ol a .. ult and blttery.~ dillllrbing the peace, ..i re- miinl orresL lie IJ held Oii J1GO blU at Oru&e Oluotf Jail. f . -',. kill Popeil so that she could inhtrit roughly one-third o! his $150 million estate before· their pending divorce became final. According to investigators, the oouple separated this summer and Popeil returned to Clllcago 'to start divorce proceedings while Mn. Popeii and their two teenage daug)J.ten stayed on in NeWport-llea<ll.------- 'Jbe three women vacated the Linda Isle borne while it was ·being remodeled :!t:l8:tbo~ ~w:!t C:,t.;7 0tOO:: island, stopped when court action on the divorce started. Since then, Mn. Popeil and her daughters ~ve lived In rented homes (See RELEASED, Page Z New Orchestra Sets Rehearsed 'lbe flnl·reheaml of lhe newly formed ll'Yine Unified Sdlool Di41rict Honors Orcheltra will be at 3: 45 p. m . Wednesday, in Jla!!cho San Joaqull> In~te SChool, University Park. " Nearly 60 studenu 1elected from di.strict elementary and intennedlate sd>Oo)I will meet one hour Ofch week to prepare a May cancert pn>gram. A dislricl bmors choral group Is to he • formed In February, a district 1pokesman said. Doncil.d Nixon Cme Detai'led United l'r"8 International today explores tn detail the possibility form er aaoclates of Howerd !!uglies paid "substantial" sWM to Prtlldent Nixon's brother, Donald, in a mining venture. .Tile report al• dlscu,.... the l:"lallallablp belwt<n Donald Nlr· an, ol Newport !leach, Ind • .,,.... ·-a aaoclate, JoM ....... ' Dm,111 !lbon ... Id net bo riol:lljd .tar eomrnenl"OO•tbe·allool 11t1oao. S.. tbt nport,,... s. • . . "We ire asking for a public bearing to reoonskler the budget and a statement o! ......,.. and findings !or the current $500 appropriation," O'Neil said. He pointed out that the commission Is suppoeed to be preparing a comprehensive land use plan for the airport. The running battle between the land1 use commission and supervisors began shortly after the panel was formed. At first, SUj>erVbort" refUsed 'to budget any money at all. It wasn't Wllil the state legislation, authored by ~emblyman R ob e r t B<dham (R·Newport BeaCh) wu passed that the county appropriated any money. 1be writ served on the supervisors ls the second legal move by Newport Beach In what O'Neil sakl. will be a cootlnuou.s legal assault until the jet noise problem is solved. Newport Beach went to ~t last month to force the California Department of Transportation to conduct an Immediate hearing oo tlM;, airport's request for a variance from. "'new state noise standardS. C.ounty businessmen joined t h e airport's battle for survival Friday by issuing a declaration jointly with Airport Director Robert Bresnahan that if the waiver isn't granted, the airport likely will have )o close down. That h1aring will take place Feb. rg; 20 and 21 in Santa Ana. -Judges Seek End to Agnew Practice ANNAPOLIS, Md (AP) -A special three-judge panel ,...mmended today that former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew be disbamd from the pracUce of law in Maryland. The three Circuit Coµrt 'judges said that Agnew's evasion of income tax, acknowledged in a no-contest plea, wall "deceitful and dishonest" and ""trikes at the heart of the basic object of the legal profession ... " "We 3hall therefore recommend .his Irvine Group Nominates 5 Candidates 11Jr•• ·~ mnunJU...of .Jret. ~ · ciU.. lorJrrn organlsa~ · ,. ~ fiiw undlllata• tbe IUD tllellibenblp 111111 tr may not emom !or eloction to !he Irvine City Coundi in March. Dr. Irwin ~ber, chairman ol the 1eve11-member ll!lrillnating pane~ said today the choices resulted f r o m intervlewa Saturday with 9 of 15 Irvine oounctl candidates who "IOught IT hacking. 'lbe five candldatel selected lo the lnittal screening for IT endorsemento are: , Councilwoman Gabrielle P r y o r ,' Councilman Henry Quigley, Planning Comm.Lssioner Franklin S. Hurd, former planning . -chairman Robert West and Greentree Homes Association director Richard B. Clark. Irvine Tomorrow-endorsements in past e1ectjOOsJiave_been_gtven t.J_canilidate. who comprise majorities of · boUt the present city COllllcil Ind the Irvine Unified School District " ·Boan! o I Education. Dr. Alber 111d the entire membership will vote on the final endorsees. A candidates forum bas been set for 7:30 p.m. Jan. 31, In Rancho San Joequln Intermediate School, University Park. The sessioo iJ open to the public but ooly IT membm whose dues were paid up as of Dec. 31 may VOie, Alber said. Dr. Alber's committee made Its choices from a · list of interViews in- cluding Arthur w. Anthony and planni"i rommisstoner Robert A. Smith, both ol Turtle Rock, and l>ousewlle Mary Ann Hold~ and _busil}e&mlan Robert J , llolmstedt, bo\h of Callfornla liOlll"I. An 1T endorsee . ol two ·years ago, Councilman William Fischbach is oot iieeklng reelection in the March 5 eouDcil nee. , Mayor John Btirton aod Councilman E. Rly Quigley Jr. declined the IT Invitation to be . considered f o r endorsement, even· though both are (See 5 BACKED, Pqe I ) disbarment. We see no extenuating cln:umstances allowing a I e s s e r sanction," a If.page recommendation said. "Mr. Agnew will not be making a statement at this particular time," said Ann Breen, a receptionist at Agnew's office in WashingtQn. The recommendation gOes to the hfaryland Court of Appeals, which makes lhe Cina! decision on whether to bar Agnew from the practice of law. 'Ibe Court of Appeals can either accept the disbarment _recommendaton, reduce the penalty to suspension or reprimand Agnew. Disciplinary actions were filed by the state bar association last November after Agnew pleaded no contest to a federal tax charge and resigned from the vjce presidency. The bar association asked the three judges to disbar Agnew. The former (See AGNEW, Page !) BiddJng Postponed ·Costa Mesa Mayor Plans ~ppefil. .. ~11 .. CdM Freeway. Ma1•>< ,J~k !Lammel! :Ill Q>sta Me11 'iaid ID!llJ. be will llli G o • e u o r Reagan to tiitefcede II the fuel criJIJ. threatened Corona del Mar Freeway Is not reinlta.ted as a top construction priority" Ibis week. 'Bidding on the first unit ol Route 73 linking the =unities of Costa Mesa, Newport !leach and Irvine has beon postponed by the state Department of Traniportatloa beealllt o! a drop in gu tax t'!venue u a result o! reduced gaaollne ules. -llainmet~ who headed a deleptioo o! Coota Mesa official1 protesting the poatpoael!lenl In Sacramento, said be Is "hopeful that state Traruportatlon Director ·lloWard Ullrich will be able to salvage the freeway. "But jf there ls no progress, I atn going to pull out all the 1tops and ask for an audience with the governor," Hammett said. He said the Corona del Mar . Freeway is not only crucial to solving Costa Mesa's surface street traffic problems but failure to complete it could create a domino effect that would kill the Newport Freeway Ol!ension and O>sta " " IT A.LIAN ACCENT ON CLASSIFIED Here's a IUCt.,. story told In an Italian accent: Italian make. Like new, FOLDING Bicycle, 3 lpd. Best of!er, (Phone No.) The blke wu made lo Italy: but the results were strictly from the homegrown Daily Pilot. The bike was IO!d the 1econd day the ad "appemd. If you want to try for a new 11peed record for aelling a bike .•. or anything else, try the direct line to resulu. Dial M!-im. Mesa's downtown f1td~velopment p~. Mayor Donald Mcinnis of Newport Be8ch shared Hammett's c o n c e r n , adding that it would be "a real shame" if the first fl'ftway unit were delayed The unit, from Jamboree Road to Bonita Canyon Road, would help significantly in easing airport and UC Irvine traffic, he said. Irvine Mayar John Burt on, however, was of the opinion that the delay wouJd not have a serious impact becawe the actual routing had not yet been determined and bod been wider negotia- ation with Newport Beach. Cotta Mesa's i:ollcern is with the $12.! million section connecting the Newport Freeway with the San Diego Freeway, a project which local olficials believed w11 in the budget and ready to go. But Hammett learned Thursday that the_ secUon had never been" included in the stales 197J..75 construction budget. budget. "It is inconceivable to me t h a t a budget item like lhat has been left odt and nobody seems to know about it, including the Highway Comntission," Hammett said. Hanunett, who along with Councilman Alvin Pinkley and Vice Mayor Willard Jordan talked to UJlrich, said the trans- Portation chief appeared embarrassed about the missing budget entry and agreed to research the problem by Mon· day, St.ate of!icials made the decision to call off bidding · on the first phase of the Corona del Mar Freeway on MQDday, following a new policy which calls for the completion of gaps in existing freeways before construction of new freewaY8 is contemplated.• The policy ·was formed to create the longest usable portions of freeways and (See ROUTE, Page !) Oruge • Hinshaw ,to Dedicate Weadter Some high clouds at times, other- wise sunny through Wedoesday, according to the weather service with inland ~ In the low 7Us Ind beach temperaturel of 115- Low. tonight in the 50s. Aliso Freedom Shrine Congreaman Andrew lllnshaw CR. Newport !leach) will IV<lk at 10 ~m. Wednesday at the dedication of a Freedom Shrine fur AllJo Elementary School In El Toro. . The> l).edom Shrine, a collection or It hlstoricol Americ11t documeriu, ts ~ ,pt"'11ted to the acboot by the Stddlebact V1Uei Excbqe CM>- r The Marine Corpo Band from the Toro Mlrlne Corpe Air ~ alao n be featur..i, alone wltb All'° pal Mel Pactel and PTA ~t ary Phllll111. The Froedom Shrine program Is part of a nationwide project of the Excbanf[e Club, which alml to put reproductioos of the documents in every school. Richard Welte and' Robert Dameron are ·tocal chainnen of the Freedom Shrine project. The documenu span the lime from the May!lo.,er Compact o! !CO to the World·W•r U lllllnnnent ol SUrrender siped lo ltMS. Jim Manion, president or th e S.ddleback Excllanre <lub, 11kl the public ts tnvtled to tlio pruenlatlon. ') I INSIDE TODAY An AEC official ·clainu the chance of a nuclear pmotr pla11t accident is '011e chance "' a billion.' See storv Page 4 . ,r ' " ' • ... .. ,, I • .. , .. ,, .. .. I "• \ • , ·-. l"IL.VI HEADS HARBOR COURT Judge Oon1ld Dungan Don Dungan Presiding Judge for '74 Judge Donald Dwlgan has been elected Presiding judi:oe of the Harbor Judicial District Court. Judge Dungan, 57, sue· ceeds Judge Selim S. 'Bud" Frank1in as adminstratlve head of the four~visioo municipal court. Judge Dungan was ap- pointed to the bench in 1966 by Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown. He had already served Costa Mesa In capacities which won him honors. Judge Dungan was a member of the city's incorporation committee in 1953 and was immediately named city attorney when cityhood was approved by voters. He served for 12 years and for 11 years was a member of the old Newport Harbor Union High School District Board of Trustees. Judge Dungan 's colleagues for the current year and their assignments Include: -Judge Robert C. Todd, Division Two. wh_ere most criminal cases are bandied after being assigned from Judge Dungan's Division one. -Judge Selim Franklin, Division ~. which hand.lies small claims and other civil matt.en. -Judge C.lvin P. Schmidt, Division Four, where Lraffic citations are handled. Forums Slated For Saddlehack Board Candidates Two forum! for candidates for a single vacancy on the Saddleback College board of trustees have been scheduled. The first is from 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday In the Saddleback College library, Room m. The eight candidates have been asked to address Saddleback College employes and local press. Jean Vlncenzi, a Saddleback Instructor, is coordinator of the event sponsored by the faculty association. The Associated Student Body will sponsor a public forum for the candidates from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 15 on the campus quad. The outdoor discussion will be public. A trustee for the Irvine-El Toro post, vacated by resigning charter trustee Michael Collins, will be elected in the March 5 special electioo. Candidates include Norrisa Brandt, Steve Del.a.pp, Andrew Murray, Gary Rasmussen, and Vera Snyder of Irvine; and Earl Carraway, Nick DiGiuro, and John Tolle of El Toro. • OUN•I COAST IS DAILY PILOT T1M Or• .... ea.ti DAILY PILOT, wllfl wllldl }I c.mbl....:I !ht JrftwJ.Pr .. 1, It llllblllhtd by the Or•noe CO.II Pl,lbllllllinl Conlflil'lr. hl't' r•I• 9lllllon• ••• Pllflll111«1, MW.S.r lhrouvt\ l'rlcl.-,, for COlll MtM, H-..or! INd\, Hurili119ton ll~ltlFOlll'lllln V•llty, LIOllM e.-cf'I, l"'""IS.odln.d Ind Stn C~/ i.11'1 J-Clpl11t1fl0. A t l.,.11 1"1910MI ld!UOl'I It """lllhld Stlll'rlt•yl Ind ~l'ICll~S. T ... ptlMINI Pllbllll'>lflt pl1M fl 11 llO W~'I 81' SlrMI, Ctl!• .V..., C..IUOl'"nN, f1'2'. R1h1rt N. Wtff "rnllltnt 11111 f'ltlbllther J1cli R. Cwrl•v Vic, p,_idlf!I tlr/I QMfrl l "'-t« Tlioll'l•t K11,il e:111tw '"'°'"•• A. M.,r11hl111 Mlf'l'tlflt illltw Ch-1if1• H. l•" Rich er~ '· N,n A111ll•11I MIMtll'll lll!IWI ....... (;Mia .._l DI W11I • .., Sr,_. N__, htdlr JUI ,....,.,,.,. ._,...,., L"floll'lt INdli m ,..,.,,, •-... .._..Int_, eMtfl: 11'11J eMdl lhulWll'd kl! ClllMfolt! JU Nortll II C..11'11111 111111 ,.,.,.._ 1n•1 '42-4111 C.....W Aftoltl .... '414671 ho C&.wte A• hport•••: , ••••••• 492-4411 CW!'f!IM, lt7l, ~ C.0.t Plilllllllilflt CM111111v. Ne -'"'"'· 11..,,,trel-. .. ,,......l IMttlr W 1411-9'-tt ...... Ill ..... , .. ....,..... i.1"*1t ....... ..,.. "'"'*' " COlt'ftitM ..,..,. '""" .... -'• 11111111 ., Clrt• ...... C..lltwml. ......,..,.,. .., W1'11r .,,., -WI"/ ... INIH 0.IS fl'IMl'llYI 11'111,.., ... llNlllM • .,.., IM'lllJWJ. ' • ' Brannon's • Deci.swn MdyBeDue Saddleback College truslees will meet tonight for the first time since Trustee Alyn Brannon ot Santa Ana pleaded guilty to bookmaking Dec. 11. Brannon, 43, a charter trustee and fonner president of the board, is scheduled ror sentencing in Orange County Superior Court Jan. 24. Other .trustees have declined to affirm or deny rumors that they plan to ask for bis resignation tonight. But Trustees. Donna Berry of MWlon Viejo, Pat Backus of Dana Point, and James Marshall of Lagwia Hills, all reported they bad received calls from constituenU asking them to urge Brannon's resignation. The Saddleback College F a c u I t y Association at a reCent meeting passed a resolution suggesting that if Brannon does not resign tonight, they will consider asking for his ouster. A "wait and see at titude'• characterized other citizens interested in the situation. Brannon could be given either a misdemeanor or • felony sentence. I( it is a felony, he will be automatically barred from his position by state law. Jaw. If the sentence is a misdeamor , Brannon \\'Ou1d not have to leave his post, by law. His term expires in 1975. Other Items on the agenda for the 8 p.m. meeting include: -Authorizing an application for federal fund for a language laboratory. -Considering recommendations on management of a school cafeteria . -A p p r o v l n g recommendations for further development of the Campus Master Plan proposed by the district architect, Robert L<lwrey and As.wclates. -Receiving a report on enrollment for the winter quarter. Irvine Schools Begin Clmse~ Half Hour Later Irvine Unified School District's later winte< daylight savings start of chmes lime began today without a bitch. · A district spokeSJDan aald b u s schedules ran smoothly and no school began classes later than the new time trustees set last week. Until March 15, Irvine achools will begin classes 30 minutes later than formerly. Elementary schools open at 8:55 a.m., Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate began at 8:15 a.m. and University High School started at 8:15 as well. The later start of school means no student need arrive at school before the stm rises, the district spokesman observed. 'The old schedule meant many students were in class before S\Ulup, having walked or biked to school in the dark brought on by energy saving lime. Crosswalks Set For Lake Forest Steps to improve pedestrian safety in Lake Forest have been authorized by the Orange County Boan! of Supervisors. Fifth District Supervisor Ron a Id Caspers said crossing guards and crosswalks wil1 be placed at the intersection of Ridge Route Drive and Elrond Lane. The board also established a "No Stopping Anytime" zone on Ridge Route between Rockfleid Drive and Overiake Drive for installation of bicycle trails. Original reques t for the improvements came from Olivewood School Princi pal Joe Adams. American Family Worse Off--Study WASHINGTON (UPI) -The average American family, contrary to what the Administration says, was wo rse off economically in 1973 than in 1m according to a congressional study ~ inflatioo . WUb inflation and hlgber taxes outpacing wage lncreues during tm the average family ended the year wtth l percent less purchasing power lhan it had in 1972, and the outJook for 1974 is no better, tile report said Sunday. GARBAGEMEN AIR THEIR •. ; SHORTS PALERMO, S I c I I y (AP) - Garbagemen in a Slcntan vtnage aired their grieva"""' S.turday by. qowlng up for work clad only In their underpants . The men aaJd lhey were demonstraUna agalMt the town government of Vlllabate lo Set back pay and glov<J Ind coveralls to work in. Becluae of cblly wutber, the protest Iut..r only a low minutes. ...,. l'tllt tttff l'tMto A IJT'(LE HELP FROM FRIENDS Mra. Elol .. Popell From Pqe .l RELEASED ..• in Irvine Terrace and on Harbor Island Road. Petty allegea toda:y that Popell was $14,250 behind in his temporary alimony and child support payments of $1 ,250 a month. In Chicago, PoPeil went to court Fri· day in a stormy session to ask for custody o! the two girls and an end to linancial support for his wife. That hearing was continued to this Friday. According to the AMoclated Pre!s, Popeil's lawyer, Samuel A. Rinella, called the estranged wife an aduJteress and a "willful, vicious woman ... In opposing the motion to terminate the separate maintenance payments, Mrs. Popeil's lawyer. Charles Stein, charged ·that Popell "has attempted to use every technique to starve his wife and children into submlssloo in thl.s case," according to the AP story. He said that if the monlh1y payment.s were cut off Mrs. Popell would be without funds to defend herself in litigation. AP reported that in commenting to newsmen after the hearing, Popeil said, "My wife has two sides to her1"""a good side and a rough side." One of Popeil daughters related last week that the three women all had been forced to take jobs in an apparent effort to support themselves in the bayfn>nt house and maintain the three expensive European cars they 113ed. "One of thooe cars, a Rolls ROyce, was impounded by police as evidence in tile cue. Long Beach detectives who arrestld Mrs. Popeil and Ayers allege that they gave $100 ca sh and $60,000 w o r t h of diamond jewelry to an acquaintance of Ayers to <ill Popeil. Police claim the case was broken when the would-be killer got second thoughts and called Popeil to inform him of tile alleged plot. According to AP, authorities in Chicago said Friday that the wou1d-be killer stalked Popeil while carrying a gun and a key to Popejl's 10-room apartmenL They said he followed Popeil to his business and to sevenl restaurant!: but never got a chance to kill biDl. Other than biJ brief remarks following Frid~y's divorce bearing, Popell's only pubhc comment so far has been "I am Very happy to be alive." ' Santa Ana Pair OK After Two Gun Incidents Two Santa Ana men were In satisfac- tory condition today after being shot In two separate incidents over the weekend police said. ' Pollce said a fa m i I y fight earty today left Zelda Coulter, 29, lying on the noor of a Santa Ana &ulevard home with a buJlet wound ln the mouth. Police said Jt appeared the man wu shot by hJs wife, Velma, 21, after the couple fought for several hours. Mr!. Couller waa booked into Orange County Jail on charges of assauJt with intent to commit murder. Her husband was taken to Orange O>unty Medical Center where he was listed in satisfactory condition today. In another Incident late Saturday night police said a fist fight on the fron i lawn of a Santa .Ana home erupted into gun fire. Officers said Larry Gallegos, 23, wu shot In the flee and cbesl with ·a 12 gauge jhotgun from about eight fttt. He was also listed in saUsfactory cood.ition today at Mercy GMe:ral Hoop Ital. Police oaid they have a suspect In the shooting but no arrest had been made ... of this morning. Union Leaders ~feet LONDON (UPI) -PJ'tme Mlnllter Edward Heath and leaden ol the 10. m!llion-stront Trodes Union COnllfOll met today for what pvemlltmtt olllctala said w11 atut-d!ldl btd to end llrttaln's industrill criala. U II failed, they 11id, Heath may cftdde thla lfttlt to dlaolve Parliament and appeal !or 1 new mlndate ht a special par!!lmtnllt'y general electioa In FebnW)'. ·1 Irvine Taps Arts .Fund For Classes __ Irvine Unified. Sd>ool Qjstri"1 may be the first tn tho state to tap a recently promJsed California Arts Commission fund to provide arts e D r I c h m t n t programa In cluarooms. Dislrtct stiff members this week aie completing filtni of a grant request autborlZ<!d last week by the board of educati.on. "If approved, this will be one of the most hlgbly innovative e a r 1 c h me n t programs in tile line arts ever lmplemented by a ochool district," board member Mrs. Sharon Slrcello said. Profeaslooal musician.s, d a n c e r s , s1111ers-and-visual -artists would be bNJuiht into schools both to perform for pupils and to offer training experiences for teachers. she said. The Irvine grant request suggests the combination of stata and local funds would be wed to hire Orange County artists for the educational programs in schools. The grant proposal has been prepared by Hal O'Neal, a dancer and dance teacher who for eight years has participated in fine arts summer school PfOl!l'BJnS for Irvine youth. Mrs. Sircello said that to her knowledge no oth« school district became aware of the arts conunlssion funding which was made available in late December. ArUsti In schools programs are very popular and succasful In OCl>er otates whole arts coinmlsaions are more al[IJ"ellive in their requests for sbarH oflbe federal arts and edllcatioo granta. Until r<ee11tiy, the California Arts Commlasloo bu been appareotly Yir-. tually inactive, accounting for tile dts- lnter5 by most dlslrtcts In seeking the grantl. County Approves Park Project For Lake Forest Development ol a l.kcre part for Lake Forest bas been authorized by tile Orange County Boan! of Supervbors. The site, at the intersectioo of. El Toro Road and Toledo Road, w!1l be called llaDchwood Park. Scheduled to begin in mid-February is grading, plus installatton of coocrote walks, landscaping, and Ugbting. Later development is eXJ>ected to include asphalt handball rourts, drinking fountain&, and playground equipment. Bob Yablonski, an assistant administrator for the county Harbors, Beaches, and Parks Department, said the first development' phase will cost $46,500. U~I ,.....,_ DISBARMENT ASKED Former VP Agn1w FroMPage I AGNEW .•. vice president, however, asked the panel tQ merely suspend him from practicin~ law, arguing that his misconduct was not coMected with duties as a lawyer. Agnew told tile Judges that be had at no tlme enriched himself at the expense of bis public truM and that there was Dotrung to indicate that he would not f&itbfully and honestly represent clients as a lawyer. But C1rcult Court Judges Shirley B. Jo..,, !lidgely P. Melvin Jr. and Wtillam H. McCullough said Agnew's conduct was harmful to the proper admlnistration of just.ice. "ln our opinlori, the proper adm..inlstrallon of justice, the proper respect of the court for Itself and a proper reganl for the Integrity of the profession compel us to conclude that lhe respondent is unfit to c0ntlnue ~as a member of the bar of th.is state," the recommendation said. The three Judges said t h e I r recommendatlon Wu based solely on Agnew's no-contest plea to the tu charge. They said Ibey did not take into comideratioo any of the allegation.. made by the Justice Department In Agnew 's U.S. District Court appearance Oct. 10, From Page I ROUTE •.. not to start new projecta for which there may .ho insufliclent funds. The Departm'ent o! Tranaportation forecast a $111 tnillion shortage in its budget for the fiscal year ending June 30. The total budget is $980 million. Blamed for the short raU are the new ~mile-per-hour speed limit, h i g b e r prices for gasoline and the reduced availability or fuel.. Recall Set Over Sex Film Issue The llrst oUlclal step bas been taken tn a recall campaign again1t two Huntington Beach Union High SChool District trustees stemming from the "Deep Throat" sex movie controv .. rsy •. ~-Trustees Dennis Mangers and Ron Shenkman now haYe until Friday to answer charges made agalnst them Jn the notices of Intent to circulate recall petitions filed with the Orange County registrar of voters. Members of the CittzeM for Parents' Rights Committee, led by Doris ADen of We!tminster, filed the notices Friday. The trustees have one week to rebut -alter which time the actual recall notices can be filed . Although there have be.en threats of a recall campaign for months, lhls Ls the first such action. Mrs. Allen said today the citizens ··group plans to start circulating petiUons, tc. get the necessary 2.11000 slg'natures to set a recall election soon after the trustees answer the allegations. The 23,000 figure represents 20 percent of the regl!tered voters. Mrs. AlleTI. said the group Intends to try to get at least 30,000 signatures in case some are thrown out during validation. In the notices of intent, the parenta:' group charges the trustees w i t h fraudu1ent use of money, neglect ol duty, lack of liacal r..,ponlibillty and ix>nruct of interest. The action was sparked by the group's dlspleasure with the trustees' retOlutloo of the investigation Into the llhowtng of the X-rated film, "Deep Throat,'' at an admlnlstratlve conference. Mangen and Shenkman were ln'fited to see the film at lhe conference in San Diego last August but left befor~. the screening. Alter the matter beclme public six weeks later and the board diacussed it, trustees voted 4 to 1 to end it with Superintendent Jack ROper's apology over the film being shown. The citlzen.s claim t4X money was misused because the educators at ·the San Diego conference didn't view instructional programs but i n s t e a d1 watched the sexually-explicit film . at taxpayer's upense. Mangers, who ls a ,corporate officer of the American Learning Corp., which sell! instructional materials, is accu.ted by the group of having a conflict of interest because a stockholder in his !inn which ts a major land deve~r and could buy land from the district. Fro111 Pqe I 5 BACKED ••• actively seeking re-elecUon. Others running for the five council seats are : Stockbroker David A. Lowe of the Racquet Club, aeronautical engineer Mrs. Hazel ~1yers of the Ranch. englnttr and economist earl Atorrilon o f Culverdale, and businessman Jack Kl.lb ' Close to $25,000 o£ that will come from the coffers of El Toro County Service Area Six. If the Corona del iiar Freeway is not built -as 1ocaJ officials are beginning to fear-Costa Mesa will Jose nearly $500,000 in investments made contingent oo the freeway! Pinkley pre- dicted. of the WiUows. rt"" The parks department will ask the county to match service area funds. The site was donated by Occidental Land, Inc., developers of Lake Forest, as required by tho county local park code. The code requlreo that residential developers contribute fees or land for park use baaed on the number of residents planned. This includes money spent on the Bear Street interchange and on the planning of downtown redevelopment for Costa Mesa. Hammett believes that failure to construct the Corona del Mar Freeway MU-spell the doom for continuation of the Newport F r e e w a y and the redevelD.l>fllent plan. which is contingent on the Newport Freeway., Viet Camp Retaken SAIGON. South Vietnam (AP) Thirty South Vietnamese t o d a 1 recaptured a bonier camp in tile Central Highlands taken four months ago by the North Vietnamese, the Sllp command reported. Hellcopter1 landed the government patrol in the Lf: Minb camp, and they met only light nsiltance, according to the spokesman. Nobody Sells Amana for less than ~ Where do YQU want the freezer In your new ;.J,,,11n11. refrigerator ... , . • on the side? on the bottom? on the 12P.1 · ·Am•naglves_youacholce , 90DAYSCASH Wt'lll .t.PPROVl!D CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT Bl YD., Dow11tawn C:lsta Mesa -1'111111 548-7788 I I I • l . , ·~ . . .... -,_ ... ' r .· . - T oday's Final ~.Y. Stocks Vi?L. 67, NO. 14, 2 SECTIONS,· 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1974 TEN CENTS ' l!ar-€nts-S ook Rooall-of-'De ~ Throat' Figures The first official step has been laken In a recall campaign against ·two Kuntlngton Beach-Union High School ~istrict .trustees stemming from the '-Deep Throat" sex.movie controv .. rsy. Ttwitees Dennis .,Mangers and Ron Shenkman now have. until Friday to lnswer charges made against them in \he notices of1ntent to circulate recall petitions filed with the Orange CoWJty registrar cf Voters. ' • Members of the Citizens rot Parents' Rights Committee, led by Doris. Allen of Westminster, filed the notices Friday. The trustees have .one week to rebut -after which time the aCtual recall· notices Can be filed. Although there have been ,threats of a recall campaign for months, this is the first such action. Mrs. Allen said today the citizens group plans to start clrculating petitions tc. get the necessary 23,000 signatures to set a recall election aoon after the trustees answer the allegations. Tiie 23,000 figure represen,; 20 percent of the registered voten. Mrs. Allen said the groQp~ intends to try ·to get at least 30,oOO signatures in case some are thrown out during validatiop. In the. nouces-·oHntenr,the-parents•- group charges the trustees w i t h fraudutent use of money, neglect of duty, lack of fiscal responsibility and conflict of Interest. 1be action-was sparked by the group's displeasure with the trustees' resolution of the investigation into -the showing of the X-rated filrq , "Deep Throat," at ·an administrative conference. MangerS-and ·Shenkman were invited Disbarment Sought to see the film at the conference in San Diego last August but left before the screening. After the matter became public six weeks later and the board discussed it, trustees voted 4 to 1 to end it with Superintendent Jack Roper's apology over the film ·being shown. The citizens claim tax money was misused because the educators at the San Diego conference didn't view instructional programs but i n stea d \>:atched the sexually-explicit film at taxpayer's expense. I\:langers, \i:ho is a corporate . officer of the American Learning Corp., which sell s inst ructional materials, is accused by the group of having -a conflict of interest because a stockholder in his firm which is a major land developer and coold buy land from the district. Judges-Oust Agnew ANNAPOLIS, Md (AP) - A special three-judge panel recommended today that former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew be disbarred from the practice of law in Maryland. The three •Circuit Court. Judges said that Agnew's evasion of inoome tax, acknowledged in a no-Contest plea, was "deceitful and dishonest" and "strikes at the heart of the ba>lc object of the leial profession ... " "We shall therefore recommend his Ted Bartlett, Ex-councilman 'In Running' disbannent. We see no extenuating circumstances allowing a 1 e s s e r sanction," a 14-page recommendation said. "Mr. Agnew will not be making a statement at this particular time," said Ann ·Breen, a receptionist at Agnew's office in Washington. The teCOftllllendation goes to the Maryland CoUrt of Appeals. which makes the final decision on whether to bar Agnew from the practice of law. 'Very Gratified' • The Court of Appeals can either accept the disbannent recomrnendaton, reduce the penalty to suspension or reprimand Agnew. Disciplinary actions were filed by the state bar association last November after Agnew pleaded no contest to a federal tax charge and resigned from the vice presidency. The bar association asked the three judges to disbar Agnew. The former (See AGNEW, Page Z) Bail .for Mrs. P opeil A former city coundlman and an bic:iiinbellt haVe picted up nomination papen lar lhci . .Aillitt <llaalingtoa.Bold> .. City Council - Lateol lddltlcn to the ltst of po4eDllll. Raised by Neighbors J1t JOAJ>fflE REYNOLDS Of N'Mt¥',111t .. Eloioe~, the woman police ICC\l!t of a plot to·mardt. her mu!U·miijionalre husband, returned lo her Ha<bor Island Road ho~ this weekend. thanks to eflo!U of lour of her neighbors. Popeil and ·)>er "'trariged husband, Slmilel, oWlii!d a summer home. · Mrs. PoJ>;U. 48,.opent I"!!' <!Us ~ind bin !ollowmg her arrest Jul Tuesday wllb her boylrlend ob suspicion of hlrtn' a Long Beach man to kUl Popeil, a Qzicago kitchen gadget manufacturer. TALL PALMS LINE HUNTINGTON BEACH'S PALM AVENUE Depending on View, Unusu1I L1ndm1 rk1 or Skinny Poles - Huntnigton Landmarks ' 'Upset' City's Residents By TERRY COVILLE Of ltM 01Hr P'llot Stiff They stick out almost like sore thumbs, stretching an average of 75 feet above the surface of Huntington Beach. Daryl Smith, a supervisor in the public works department~ says to passing motorists and casual visitors they represent unusual landmarks, . visible from five miles. but to people,. living next to them "it's like looking out your window at skinny telephone poles." A IO-block span or Palm Avenue is lined with 114 of the tall, thin Mexican fan palms. They are one of the few Vestiges of 'the early days when a place Celled PaQ.fic City was expected to pop up and rival the East Coast resort, AUanuc City. •The palms along Palm Avenue were planted by the Huntington Beach Cbmpany as ·an added enticement to real estate buyers from Ula Angeles. • Loog rows of MexiCan ran palms were also planted along Adams Avenue ahd the inland side of Pacific Coa!t Highway, •C!l'Ording to Delbert "Bud'' Higgins, the cl.tY historian. But like the dream of Pacific City, most of the Adams and Coast Highway palms have laded .uut of existence. -Tile-Palm AvenUe line of towering trees is one of the mc:re distinctive ITA LIAN ACCEN T ON CLASSIFIED Here's a success story told 11n an Italian accent: ltalian make. Like new, FOLDING Bicycle, s spcl. Best o!ler, (Phone No.) 'The bike was made In Italy; but the roaulta were strtc!Jy from the borne~ Dodly ·Pila . The-b~ 9s· aold . the at<ODd day the ad apPeared. U you wani tO try for a new lpeed rte0nHor-selling a bike ••• or-anylhing else, try the direct line to 1results:Dial -· ·_' marks of Huntington Beach, especially since all of the trees lean t o w a r d the ocean, Smith said the palms lean that way · because they are "seeking the sun," and the sun is over the water most of the time. Strong Santa Ana winds also have helped form their polite bow to the ocean. While the Palm Avenue row stands out a~ a city landmark, Smith said the Mexican fan palms are not widely used throughout the city 'for parkways or parks. ' He said, most people who live near them don't like them beeause all they can see is that telephone-pole trunk. "You really have to stretch your neck to see the tops from close by." Two years8 go, 35 more of the palms were added to the new section of Palm Avenue near the Seacliff C.Ountry Club, "to cairy out the street's original theme. But of their !uture,.,Smith shrugs and says, "We may or may not p I a·n t anymore. We really don't know." Like their lealy tops, the late or future Ian palms appears to be up in the air. Oregon Starting Gas Ration Plan PORTLAND, ore. (UPl) -Startinl today, Oregooiani can purtbase gasoline only every other day . undef a raUODirig plan approved by state ollidals last week. Under the plan, llel'Y!ce atatlons will sell gas today and' on upcorriing even- numhered days to motorlats wi- li<ense plat"' end with an ewn number. Motorists with license plat.a ending In odd numbers will get their -at the pumps Tueeday and on all odd- numhered days . l The only exception will be Slturdl)', w~ all motori&tl • ..., purcMM-iH since most statiOM doee on !lundly. Out-ol..utte cars will be allowott lo purcilue ps an)'llmc. -. • • canili-for JQlr ... ta are George Mcer8c:km, who aervecl m the round! from 1968 to 1m, and incumbent Ted Bartlell .. Of the lour Incumbents whose tenm are up at this election, only Jack Green has said he will not run. Bartlett and W Norma Gibbs have picked up their papers. CoonciJman Al °""' has indi· -cated be will . seek rHlectioo, but hasn't picked up bis paperS yet. Mcer.cken and Barteltt have joined a field of possible candidates that includet Mrs. Gibbs; Or. Ralpb Bauer, a trustee in the HlDIUnglon Beach Union High School and Ocean View Elementary School districts; Bruce C I a y ton Gabriebon, an electronlcs engineer; Mark Porter, a citY p l an ni n g commissiooer,_8ll..d _Haniet.. Wei@_r, bfad of the city's environmental council. City Clerk Alicia Wentworth is still the only potential aspirant to that post and no one bas ftled in the attorney's race. City Attorney Doll lloola has been out of town. Filing deadline is noon, Jan. 31. Man Dies in Glider FRESNO (AP) -Raymond Webster, 28, at Fresno, was killed when a seven- !oot section or the right wing broke oU. his glider, cruhing it into a boulder on Dalton Mountain about 30 miles' northeast of here, authorities said. lnvestigators said Sltunlay that Webster 1 li8d: been perfonning acrobatics over WOl!der Valley Soaring School when the wlJll broke, phnruneting the glider at an estimated speed of JOO m11.. per . hour. According to Mrs. PopeU's attorney, Phillip· Petty, Mn. Popeil's neighbors 1 pledged more than f1 million worth · of property to guarantee the slim blonde's $100,000 bail. Reached today at her home, Mrs. Popeil said she was very grateful · for her neighbors' generosity whtch Jed to her release satur1!ay mornin/f from !.-Os Angeles County Jail. "I am very gratified," she said. "They are darling people and It Is particularly reassuring when you realize I haven't lived here too long." PellY aaJd the pledges came prlmarlly from residents of Linda lsle where Mrs. College District Merger Stildied The possibility of bringing the Garden Grove Unified School District into the Coast Community C.Ollege District will be discussed by college officials during a special meeting tonight. Worth Keene, president of the college district's governing board, has called the special meeting for 7:30 p.m. in district headquarters, 1370 Adams Ave., Costa Meaa. Garden Grove school authorities last year propOsed the merger and at the same time declared themselves willing to finance th~ canstruction of a third general campus somewhere ln the Garden Groves area. The boyfriend, -Daniel Ayers, 37, an unemployed machinist from Santa Ana, remains in custody today, unable to raise the $100,000 hail set Friday in a bearing in Long Beach. Poli~ allege the pair conspired to kill Popeil so that she could inherit roughly one-third of his $150 million estate before their pending divorce became final. According lo investigators, the couple separated this aummer ·and Popeil returned to CbJcago to start divorce proceedings while Mrs. Popell and their two teenage daughters stayed on in Newport Beach. The. three women. vacated the Linda Isle liome while It was being remodeled and neighbors said work on the house located at the northwest poi.,t of the island, stopped when court action on the divorce startt'd. Since then, Mrs. Popeil and her daughters have Jived in rentt'd homes in Irvine Terrace and on Harbor Island Road. Petty alleged today that Popeil was $14,250 behind in his temporary alimony and child support payments of $4,250 a month. In Chicago, PopeU went to court Fri· day• in a stormy session 'to ask for custody of the two girls and an end to tinancia1 support for his wife. That hearing was continued to this Friday. According to the Associated Press, PopeU's lawyer, Samuel A. Rinella , called the e::;I:,:' wife an adulteress (See SEO, ·Page Z ' ' Spa Door Defect Admitted I Former Manager Say s Saun.a Users Oft,e n Complained By TOM BARLEY Mrs. Parson wants $1 million in °' "" o.+iy ""' stiff damages from the sp4 for the alleged . Former Holiday l!ealth Sps manager ed h Charles A. Cass•zra today admitted that lleglec:I that I to et entrapment and . the slidini glass door of the sauna for the creailoq of a "three laces of room in Wfiich Maria Parson was trapped Eve" psychiatric condition on which she Uiree yeers ago was defective before will resume testimony when CUsazza the inddeq. leaves the witness stand. c1 .. ana, called lo the witness stand It is alleged that the trauma created before Mrs. Panon, 50, bad completed by ber entrapment led her to develop her leltimony Jn the Orange County ,.parate penonalities. i;upertor eourt oauna bath trial, also. She bas stated that one of ~ Odmltted tl!at be found t1ie ZOO.pound penonalJLiea, Marta, frequently become door oil Ila tro<b alter the bysterical dominant and .aoeks extra marital aexual wonian bad been rushed to a Jocal reliltonahlpo through men picked up In boopltaL • local bars •• c-m attrlbuled the stra\glh be CllSllllll tooay adnilttecl that both hld'll'Cqodaecl u •1·1'11Y1kol fitoeal expert -potrGal and employes bad comp with the Onmp hOoltb spa to his being 1boclt the lllcking tiauna room door aliJe to i!!pi1ce the heavy door witbo<Jt before Mrs. Pal'IOO was trapped on uetsluce. Mardi 2, 1m. • 1be fonner manager said the only attempt .• to repair the door prior to Mn:. Parson being trapped was made by two male instructora at the health opa. lie also cnnfinnecl Mn. Parson's testllnony that the hanli1e of the door broke oil in her hand as she tried • to force the heavy door open. Mrs. Pll'1IOll testified that 1 h e collapsed in the l~ee heat after she wu unable lo open the door and the handle mapped off in her hand. She and other patrons have 'testified tbct health spa employes wez:e,. never within _shouting distance on s u ell occasions and that many complaints bad beeo filed in the months prior to her onloal. UP'I T ........ DISBARMENT ASKED Former VP Agnew Air Controllers Blamed by Delta CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -Delta Air Lines argued today that air-traffic controllers were responsible for the July 31 crash of a Delta jet at Boston's Logan International Airport. All 89 persons aboard died in the crash. In papers filed in U.S. District Court here, the airline said the crash was "caused directly, proximately a n d 9>lely'• by the airport's controllers, who are employes of the Federal A via lion Administration. Delta, which has been sued for $2 million in connection with the crash, named the United States as a third-party defendant in the suit, brought by the family of Roger MacArthur of Chester, a passenger killed in the crash at the !og·bound airport. Sextuple ts Respond CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) - The Rosenkowitz sextuplets a r e responding satisfactorlly to phototherapy treatment for jaundice, doctors at MoWbray Maternity Hospital said today. Or uge ~ast Weathe r Some high clouds at times, other· wise sunny through Wednesday, according to the weather service with inland highs in the low 70s and beach temperatures of 65. Lows tonight in the 50s. INSIDE TODA. Y An AEC official claims tli• chance of o ttucleor power plant accident i3 'one chance in o billion.• See story ~gt 4. ,· r . l ··-' t'h.01 Egypt By Ualled "'"" hlenalloul Egypt today rejected the troops disengagement plan worked oot by St.'C:retary of State tlenry A. Kis.sloger, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fabmi said in Aswan. He saJd Egypt wa.. demanding that II be redrafl<d Into an "EgypUan plan. '1 Court Clerk To Try Again For Sheriff By WILUAM SClll\ElBER Of .. Oltl'I' ""' lteft Orange Co\Ully Superior Court Clerk Marshall Norris, soundly defeated lhe last Ume be ran for sberUI, said !Dday he will try again this year on a platform of sweeping organizational changes in the department. Norris, 47, of Buena Park, announced his candidacy at a press conference In Santa A.na. He is the second a!mounced candidate to succeed retiring Sheriff James Musick. A.lso seeking the job Is Bradley Gates, a young deportment lieutenant. Another possible candidate for tbe job -Cypress Police Olief G e o r g e Savord-is waiting In the wings but hllsn't fonnally annotmced. Norris said Savord would ·be lhe hardest man lo bell. Norris was beaten In June of lll'IO by tbon·lncumbeol Musick by a total of nearly 150,000 votel. This lime be uld he Is running m a m-polnl pla~orm calling for a major ovemau! In the county jail, a program of coordinated city CllUDty Jaw enlonlement and reorganisation ol lhe -·· department. . Bui the IOl1!lel' sheriff's lleutenant slid his major planlt will be an attack on lhe dependeoce of a>unty peace officers co federal funcl!-a practice he said resulta In poor admlnlsttation. "'Ibero la IOl!lethini baalcally Wl'Dlll with accepting federal lunda and I am oppcM«I lo linking the le d • r a I government lo local 1berlll'1 ollloet because !bey mu.st lben do Ille government's bktding," Norris aald. He llid a lot of the money now being lllOd lo lllblldlie I b t r I II ' a d..,...unenl programa II going to wute and most needed expendituret could be ablcl'bed by what hi:: termed "proper adm!nlstration.'' Norris claimed the office of sberlfl Is now virtually unresponsive to the public. He eald It bas "been responsive only to a select few ." Noni.s said he will avoid taking contributions from what be called "big money" oonlributors because he said he is "frankly very scared of them." Winter Olympics --Nude and Co'ld WEST LA.FAYETrE, Ind. (UPI) - Six of 43 hardy Purdue University men braved 7 degree belQw zero temperatures during the weekend to win the fourth annual Cary Qusdranglo nude wintu olympict here. They were cald only in tennis shoes and haUI. Forty three CWlners entered the three- mlle contest which began in 1.970 as a prank between residence halls on the men 's quadrangle. The w i n n e r s completed the race this year in 59 minutes, compared to one hour and 15 minutes last year. The wind may have proven a factor ln the small number of flnishers. The wind chill lnde1. at the time of the race was 36 below zero. The six wiiiners shared a purse of $52. • OlAN•I COAST HI DAILY PILOT TM Or"'99 Cotti CAIL 'f l'ILOT tirllll _..ldl II ~ ..... H-·l'tlM, II M li.t.M W .... Orantt (019' l'lltllltt!.,,. 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Ort• Cwtt """"'*""" ~,. ... ..... ,..,.., , ... .,., ..... ........., ..... ., ...... 1....,.., .. ....... _, .. ~......... ..,.,... ..... .... ,,.,.,,. ti """'""' ~. ~ CS. ........ N W .t C.. MMI, can,.,..._.........,.,. .., CWTlw .... ~I ... Mlft tl11 _."' """"'>' ..,., .......... ......,.,. • ' Monda,, Jttlt.IJrY 14, 191-, • NiXes Kissinger P.lan 'Ille laraell plan Dr. Kissinger broughl with hlm was "DOt 11tllfactor)'/' Fahml told a news c:onlerence near the encl of a day ol negotiation> Involving Kl!slnger and EgypUan leaders Including President Anwar Sadat Fahrni said Kissinger was returning lo llifael tonight "with an Egyptian -------------- Ul'IT~ Nevi Trl•I Byron de la Beckwith, twice Uied but never convicted of killing civil righll! leader Med- gar Evers in 1963, goes on trial today for federal charges of carrying a ticking time bomb and other fin!arms Into New Orleans. Dwyer School's Updating Plan To Get Airing A plan to spend $25,000 to work out a master plan for updating Dwyer School and other facilltles in the HuoUngton Beach City School Dlatrlct will be presented to district tnJMees Tuesday. Deputy Superintendent Charles Palmer explained that administrators a n d architects will devi.oe luluro plans for the site that Dwyer School, lite oldest school in the district, now sits upon. "Several years ago, the board agreed not to renovate Dwyer School, because it would cost more to do ao than to "®struct a new building," Palmer said . "We made an agreement wtth the state, however, to do away with the bulldlng after Sowera School waa completed (students are moving into sowers Jan. 28)," he said. "We can now see that our Mure growth may require another ICOOol on that site, since It Is central to our district, and we're considering building another ochool there," lhe deputy superintendent explained. Other facilities In tho district, such as a proposed speclsl eduCJ!llon unit -perhaps on the extra land at Petenon School ~te -wUl alao be Included in the master plan, according to Palmer. Tntsttts will meet Tuesday night at 7 p.m., al the Dwyer School Llbrary, 735 14th St., Huntington Beach. Sniper Kills Driver EL MONTE (UPll -A. young driver wait fatall y shot 1n the head Sunday by an apparent sniper's bullet which crashed through lbe wlodow, but three other paasengera In the car at the time of tbe shooting escaped Injury. Raymond Cervantes, 19, was pronoWlCed dead at the scene. plan and au EgypllaJ1 map o n dlsen1111ement with Iarlel" aJeoc lhe Sues Cina!. K!lllnger told ne-earlier llltr a working luncheon witb Fahml that his attempt to conclude an Israeli~ Egyptian agreement "Is the louil>ell negollBUon I've ever been In." Despite Salary Hike 'Pondered' By Council Fountain Valley City Councilmen at 8 p.m. Tuesday will be faced with' a proposal !bat they grant lhemse!ves a $50-amonth pay rai se. The council will meet In City Hall at 10200 Slater Ave. La.!t ll1ay the council turned down a proposal that each m e m b e r get a $2.0-a-month boost in the present tm- a·month salary. Instead, I.he majority voted lo wait until 1974, when the city was expected to edge up into the 50,000 to 75,000 resident bracket, and a bigger raise could be approved. Becauae the lllate Department of a. Finance has said FoWltain Valley now bas more than 50,000 r e s l d e n t s, councUmen qualify for $2.50-a·month pay. Als(\ on Tuesday's agenda Is the official couhcil resolution establishing voting precincts and election officers for the council election March 5. , The council also ls scheduled to discuss poMible support of the city of Tu!Jtln in a sphere of influence issue before lhe IAcal }.gency F o r m a 11 o n Commislion. The agency recently removed lhe Marino Corpe helicopter Air Bue In Santa A.na from the Tustin .phere of Influence wltbout notifying the city, Its officials ,.y, and placed II In Santa Ana's domain. Fountain Valley City Attorney ".('om Woodruff is a city councilirian in Tu stin. FromPqel AGNEW ..• vice president, however, asked the panel to merely suspend him from practicing !aw, arguing that his mlsooodact was not connected with duties as a lawyer. Agnew told the Judges that he had at no time enrlchod hll!llell al Ille expense of his public trmt and llllt there wu nothlJJg to indicate that he would not faithfully and hooeally represent clients u a lawyer. Bui Circuit Court Jud ges Shirley B. Jones, Ridgely P. Melvin Jr. and William H. McCullough uld A.gnew'• cmduct waa harmful lo lhe proper administration of justice. "In our opinion, the p r op e r admlniotrallon of justice, lhe proper respect of Ille court for Itself and a proper regard for lhe Integrity of Ill• profession compel us to conclude that the respondent Is unfit to continue as a member of the bar of tllil state," the recommendation said. The three judges said t h e t r recommendation was based 10lely on Agnew's no-contest plea to the tax charge. They said they did not take into consideration any of the allegations made by the Justice Department In Agnew's U.S. District C.Ourt appearance Oct. 10. In a 40-page statement of evidence, federal proeeculors elleged that Agnew was involved in a system of kJckback.s lo Maryland poli ticians from architects and engineers doing nort·bld governmeot bu.siness. Unification Group Asks For Basic Information· Members of the HunUngton Beach School UnJficatlon Study Committee have ordered their coosulting finn to come up with answers to basic, financial questions before t.be conuniUee's next meeting Jan. 31. After mulling whether or not to examine another method of unification -along city boundarie9 rather than elementary School district boundaries - commit~ membera decided some basic, factual infonnatton is. needed first. ''The consuJtant, Arthur Young and Company, must find out the base revenue of the elementary and secondary levels ol the propoeed flv.,..ay 1plit along district boundart .. ," said C h a r I es Palmer, deputy superintendent of tbe Huntington Beach City School District "We also need to know hfiinedi.olely what Iha lax rate will be lo support the new, unlfied dlstrtcu·0 Ptlmer continued. ' Membors of the comml«et representatives from HlDltlngloll Beach City, Ocean View , Fountain Val1ey, Weslminsttr and S.al Beach School lllltrltta, plu.s the HlDltlngtm Beach Union High School District -have been meeting regularly to approve progr ... reporls by A.rthur Yowig and Compeny. Liii weel<'s meeting bepn, bolft\'tr, with a r~ucst from the League of Women Voters for the committee to Instruct the consultant lo study the municipal boundary concept. too. Lee Trubovitz, representing the LWV, made the request because "our members feel that communlly Identity Is a particularly Important cnlierfa." Mrs. Trubovltz added that the high school district should be given a more active role in the committee's deliberations because of ii.. "knowledg:e and lmP1rtiality''. lnitlally, representati ves from Fountain Valley, Ocean View and the high school district agreed willt the LWV's request. Roger Belgen, FolDltaln Valley School District trustee and C o m m I t I e • re~tstive, made a motion to dlrecl the consultant to 1tudy lhe city boundary method, and prepare an actual plan, not a atucly. The motion wu labfed, howtYet, whtn c»mm!ltee members decided th a I embarttln( on a new study, whel\ pertinent lnlonnsllon from lhe lint study la not yet In hand, 'll'Ollld be a mlltake. At the Jan. ll meeUng, repnaent&Uves of the dlstrltta will attempt to _decide lhe leaoibillty of unlfYlna ·oJang p.-~ district boundarteo. ~t ihat time, other plana, llldl 11 the LWV-eupporl<d municipal melhod, can be broueltt up again, oommlltee members explained. ·, . . Kllllnger'o statem111t, Alliorlcon - uld a major ...-cement could be eiJIOCl*I 'l'llelday. Klootniet bad Oown to A.swan wit!> what basically was a plao worked out by Israel calling for Israeli wllbdrBwal to 1bout 20 miles from tbe canal and a th!Mlng out of Egyptlan armed forces Donald Nixon Case Detailed United Press lnternaUonal today eiptore1 In dalBti the posslbiUty f'o rm e r aS90Ciates of lloward Hughes paid ''substantlal11 sums to President Nixon'• brolher, Donald, ln a minlng venture. 'lbe report also discusses the relationship between Donald Nit· on, ,of Newport Beach; and a Huglles mining BSIOCIBte, John Meler.' Donald Nixon could not be reached for comment on the alle- gations. See the report, Page 3. Ex-Hughes Man, Trio Indicted By Grand Jtrry LAS VEGAS (AP) -Fonner Howard Hughes aide John Meier and three men were indicted by a federal grand jury today on charges of conrpiracy and tax evasloo involving the alleged sales of $8 million In mining claims to HIJ4hes Tool Company. " It was the secol'ld lndlctment for Meler, who wu charged last August wttb two counls of attempting lo evade $200,000 In ..... In 1968 and 1989. The latart lndldmenl supenedes lbe all~gations for 1969, while a count DON NIXON TIED TO MINE DEAL? S.0 Pago 3 involvi ng alleged tax evasion for 1970 is new. ~feler, 40, of Delta, B.C., is free on $100,000 bail on the original indictment. No new arraignment date has been set. A.I.so Indicted were Anthony Hatsls, 47, and J11111e5 P. Cowley, 45, botb of Salt Lake City, and Robert Kahan, S!I, Los Angeles. Halals J.s president of Toledo Mlnlnl Company. Me!er wu named in two lndlctmeota charging two . cowl ts or c:onspiracy and two counts of evadlog taxes for 190 and 1970. " One conspiracy eount diatges hlin with obstructing Ille oollecUon of ineouit tax on the aele of mining cWms by Las Vegas newsman Alan Jarlson tO Hughes Tool. Jarlson has been indicted on tax eva!k>n charges in that' case and ls scheduled for trlsl In Marci!. VALLEY TEACHERS PLAY STUDENTS Fountain Valley lfiah Schoors annual Faculty v1. Student basketball game will begin at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday In lhe school gym, 17818 Buahard St. The faculty wtll be coached by Dr. Paul Berger, pr!l>dpo!. Students are non- arslly basketball players who have volunteered for the game. Tbe pubUc 11 Invited. ................... Ill tho .... *" •. tho !Jntl lide of the canal: Work had gone so far oo tile pl an tha: both Kissinger and Fahrni said e1perts were using maps to plnpolr)t the exact wilhdrawal plans. An AinericAn 1 p.o k es man sald an hlterim announcement was e1pccled late today wltb the major allll!>UDcement Tueaday. The Egyptian demand !or a revtslon of Kl..mger's proposal forced Kllllnger to delay hJ.s sclieduled return to larael for more than lour houn. _ A.rnelican olllclals said he erpected to leave this afternoon to plBct Ille revised proje<t'belore the Israelis. ln an indication of what caused the EgypUan objectlom to KJ.sslnger'• plan, Fahml aald any disenga gem ent agreement 11sbou!d be s u f f I c I e n t I Y detailed that th°" can be no haniUPI· "Everything must be in-c l e a r c u t lang1iage so Uiat there will be nothing again like Point B (of the ceue-fire consolidation agreement Egypt and Israel signed Nov. 11.,)," Fahml aald. Point B of the November agreement called cm Egyptian and Israeli milltary representatives to negotiate a return to lines held when the first U.N.~rdered cea~fire went into effect Oct. 22. Egyptian olllclals uld Us Imprecise phrasing enabled the Israelis to launch "sta11J.ng tactics" and prevent its implementation. Fahml uld Klulnger was playing "a constructlve role in the negoUaUons, in the ...,. that be would like lo see a good (dllOngagernent) plan u a llrsl step toward.a a final aettlement." He said Egypl would not reopen lhe Suez canal e:zcept "in the context of a final aetUement" and not aa part of any disengagament arrangements. · "When larael lullllls a!Llls obllgatiOOJ under Security COuacll re10lutton 212, Egypt will &low Israeli ablpplng through the Suez Canal," Fahrni said. Reoolution 242 ol November, 1987, called for an llraell wltbdrawal from all A.rab •territory occupied dllring Ille June 1987 war. Cable TV Pomo Filmer Arrested Pl'lTSBURGH (UPI) -Gltn Kuctra, 21, DI suburban Nor1h Vmallles lownshlp wu held !or court on a charge of s-lng obecene f1lml on a cable television hookup. Kueera allegedly abowed tho stag movies early Dec. 28. Several persons complained and Kucera wu arretted. He WU l•tu llrecl from bis Job with Valley Clbll Televtaloo. Deleme attorney Daniel. Beraer argued at a bearln1 before maglllrat• George Boblob.Jhat police conlilcated lhe films wllhoul a warrant and obtained a confeulon before Kucera wu 1~ of his n11111 .. Berger alao twined hlo client WU drunk and the films wCre seen only by lldu!ls. Chinese Eatery OK'd for Valley C.OOstructim of. a OUnese restaurant at 16125 Brookhurst St. by Pak Oiung Ng has been approved by lhe Fountain Valley Planning Commission. The new restaurant will be ln Westhaven Plaza. The commission al80 granted a conditional use permit to a new Winchell's Donut Shop al lro30 Magnolia St. The city council has the right of revlew on the actions of the planning oonunlsalon. Oel" Plllt lt11f PMf• A LITILE HELP FROM FRllNDS Mn. ElolM Popoll Fro.m Pqe l RELEASED •.. and a "wlllful, vicious woman." In oppcelng the motion lo tenulnat4 the separate maintenance payment.a, Mrs. Popell's lawyer, Cllarlea Stein, charged Iba! Popell "bas attempted tO use every technlque to starve h!J wtfe and children Into submlsalm In lltls case," according to the AP story. He aald that II the monthly payments were cul off Mra. Popell ,..uld be' without fund! to d•fend heraell In ltllgallon. AP reported that In commentlni to newsmen after the hearing, PopeU aald, "My wife has tw~ sides to her-a good side and a rough aide." One of Popeil daughtera related la1t "Week that the three women all bad been forced lo lake ·Jobe In an apparent effort to support themselves In the baylronl bou.se and mlinlaln Ille three expensive European cars the)' used. One of lhooe cara, a Rolls Royee, was tmpoundod by police u evidence In lhe case. Long Beach delactlvts who arrested Mra. Popell and A.yera allege llllt they gave !400 cash and IB0,000 w or I~ of dJamond Jewelry to an acqualntanco of Ayers to iclll PopeJL Police claim the cue wu brolwi when the would·be killer g:ot MOODd lhouih!s and callod Popell lo lnlomi blm of lht alleged plot. · , Acoon!lng to AP, authorities In Cl>lcqo 1ald Friday that lite would-be killet stalked Popell while calfyti>( a ...,; and a by to Popeil'1 Il).room aparlme!IL They •Id he followed Popell to hll business and to several rest.auranta but never got a cba.oct lo kill him. Other than his brief remarb lollowtn1 Frlday'a dJvorct bearing, Popell'a only public comment so far bu beto, "I am very happy to be alive." GARBAGEMEN AIR THEIR ... SHORTS PALERMO, Sic 11 y (AP) Garbagemen In a Sicilian village aired their grievances Saturday by showing up for work clad only ln their underpants. , 'Mle men sa id they were demonatratlng against the town governmen t of Vlllabate to get back pay and gloves and coveralls to work in. Beca~ of chlly weather, the protest lasted only a few minutes. Nobody Sells Amana for less than .. WE TAKE TRADE INS Where do YQU want the freezer in your new 1fm•n•. refrigerator ... LOW PRICIS ARI BORN HIRE RAISED ELSEWHERE on the side? on the boltom? on the .!2P.1 Am•n• gives you a choice 90DAYSCASH WITI! ~P,.IOYID C•EDIT 1115 NEWPORT Bl VD., . Downtown &Jsta Mesa -Phone 548-7781 • I I I ! I I I I I \ • I I I I ( \ I ' ' r MOl\da1. Janul]ty 14, 1974 H DAILY PI LOT j1 Watergate Panel P-rohes Don Nixon NY Edison , Day Supply By Tbe Astoclattd Press Consolidated Edison Co. of New York, down to a t().day supply of fuel oll, today increased its volt4ge cutback from 3 to 5 percent and said it was pressing the federal government for additional fuel supplies. • "We don't have any reason for optimism at this point," said a spokesman for the utility which supplies electricity to about three m 11 l i o n customers in the city and Westchester County. · Con Ed burns 150,000 barrels of heavy fuel oil per day to generate power and normally maintains a 25 to 26-day reserve. The spokesman said he could not recall when the reserve had been IO low. C.On Ed &nd other utilities in New York state have been operating at a 3 percent voltage reduction as an energy conservation measure, under orders from the State Public Service Commission. The utility estimated that conservation efforts by customers saVed 815,000 barrels of oil in December. ll renewed its appeal to them today. •. Con Ed said plans to switc_h one generating plant on Staten Island from oil to coal had been termporarily set back by delays in getting a sufficient stock of coal to make the change. In Washington, federal energy director William E. Simon today a s s u r e d congress that the fuel shortage is real, despi te doubts about some oil industl'}' statistics. Simon said the oil companies' reports of ample stocks on hand at lhe end ol the year should not be interpreted as meaning there is no shortage. The favorable inventol'}' position is attribu· ted to an unusually mild winter, con- servation efforts and some shipments of the Arab countries despite the em- bargo, be said. However, Simon told a joint economic subcommittee, "as of Dec. 2, lhe American Petroleum Institute reported we have only sligh tly over 30 days supply of the major petroleum products. The shortage caused by a fully effective embargo will quickly reduce these to dangerously low levels unless we act quickly to reduce demand and equitably allocate the available supplies." Simon conceded the government lacks an adequate system for 'collecting energy data and must rely on what is provided by the oil companies. But-he said that In the next few weeks the Nixon administration, with the help of ~ss, will set up a comprehensive collection procedure. Court to Eye Mailed Smut WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court today enlarged its newly launched reconsideration of antiobscelllty law by agreeing to hear a case involving the federal 1' statute against malling obscene material. The law was challenged as un- constitutionally vague and t o o broad in an appeal from Califor· nia. On Dec. 10, the court agreed to hear the appeal of an Albany, Ga., movie theat.er operator convie- ted under a state obscenity Jaw ror showing the R·rated, critically praised film "Carnal Knowledge." • Uf'I Tt.._..H KEY FIGURES -The Senate Watergate Commit· tee is investigating _possibility former associates of Howard Hughes Oeft) paid sums to President Nixon's brother F. Donald Nixon (center) of New· port Beach. Hughes' mining associate, John Meier, is pictured at right. Phony Passports U.S .. Says Leary Drug Cult Made $200 Million From Wire Senice1 Once headquartered in Laguna Beach. the Brotherhood of Eternal Love led by Dr. Timothy Leary Was a drilg-importing ring that made $200 million , the government charges. Testimony revealed Sunday i n Washington, D.C. alleges that members of the Brotherhood fitted arowid the globe an frad ulant passports easily obtained. Frances G. Knight, dir<ct<ir of the Slate Department's Passport Office, charges that Brotherhood m<mbers had 130 phony po!SpOrU. This represents about a third of the 449 false passpott& confiscated or otherwise taken out ol clrculation in the past fiscal year. l\tiss KnJght said it is so easy to Countian Killed In Truck Crash · Near El Toro A 38-year-old Anaheim man was kilted Satunlay night when a truck he was riding in rolled do\\'D a hill in Uve Oak Canyon near El Toro and caught fire . California Highway Patrol officers identified the man as Jimmy Sartin of 422 Florette St. S;lrtin and Said Adam. 31, of WE:$ttninster; were passengers: in the . pickup truck driven by Theodore Elder, 34, of Fullerton. Adam escaped with minor injuries and Elder wasn 't hurt il1 the 6: 15 p.m. accident, officers said. Officers ':Bald the three men were hill· climbing on private property off Live Oak Canyon Rood just socth of Cook's Comer when the truck started lo slip baclt down the bill The truck then rolled over and the ftre broke out. Officers 'said Adam and Elder pulled Sartin out of the burning vehicle, but he was already dead. obtain phony passports, fraudulent birth certificates, driver's licenses or other identification that an applicant could get a dozen. One of the 150 indicted, arrested or convicted Brotherhood of Eternal Love members had seven, she testified secretly Oct. 3 before a Senate Committee. Her testimony was only released Sunday in a statement and summary by the committee. Federal agents also told the Senate Internal Security Subamunittee that their efforts have crippled t h e Brotherhood of Eternal l<ive, but not killed It. • They said worldwide lllll'Veillance has linked at least 750 individuals lo the so-called cult, !run minor messengers to the big administrative men. "OI the top U 01111li2ers of the Brotherhood's activities, sli: continue to be fugitives from NaUce living on their ill-gotten wealth in foreign countries where additiooal entetprises can be planned," claims Jolm R. Bartels Jr., administrator ol tbe U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. He charged that one of those who was Involved is Dr. Leary, the onetime LSD advocate now serving a 10-year term for marijuana possession. He is confined at tbe California Medical Facility at Vacaville, while still facing a Texas prison term on the same count. Leary escaped from Los Padres Men's Colony at San Luis Oblsjlo in 1970, allegedly with the help of followers, but was recaptured. AuthoriUes allege that his Brotherhood of Eternal Love made about $200 million from smuggling 24 Ions of hashish inlo the U.S. and have sued the tax-exempt organization for $70 million. 4 Union Chief Booed SOIITll GATE (AP) -United Auto Workers President Leonard Woodcock was criticized and even booed during an appearance at a labor hall here Sunday. Body .Identified As Deserter Fron1 Marines San Clemente police today identified the body found early last month in inland hills as that of a young deserter stationed at Camp Pendleton. The remains, which had Jain wmoticed for about 25 days in a ravine near San Clemente High School, ¥/ere those of Dale Arthur Erlewein, 21, who was a member of A Company, 1st ~larine Division, at the base. The identification was made after police fumi.sbed fingerprint records to the FBI. The agency answered the query late last week with data on the young Marine. Police notified the man's parents in the Midwest over the weekend. Erlewein was fatally shot before his body was stripped and dumped into the ravine, police said. Coroner's investigators noted a single \~'Olllld in lhe skull. entering in the area of the left temple. The slug, pari of which was recovered during an autopsy, was a .32-caliber. Detectives said the FBI planned to continue in assisting in the investigation, but gave few other details of . the continuing probe. Early last week, before the identity of the remains was detennined , officers· released a composite drawing made by artist Sandy Martin, who spent a week working with a magnifying glass in an attempt to draw a portrait from photos of the skull. Detective Dave Munro said today that comparison or the drawings \Vith mugshots of the victim · showed "an uncanny resemblance. "Sandy's work was e x t r e m e l y accurate, and he had the victim's f~atures right On the button," he said . The theory surrounding the killing holds that Erlewein was murdered elsewhere 8nd then dumped in the remote ravine only a few yards from the edge or Avenida Pico. An off-duty fireman walking his dog Dec. 20 discovered the remains lying head down in the canyon. A cheap canvas tarpaulin had been thrown partially over the body and only the legs were visible. Torture Dea.th Trial Starts· Motlier of Suspect Claims Sort Was 'l1icohere1i.t' HOlJSTC\N. Tex. (AP) Pauline Henley testilied today her 17-year.Old son was incoherent and in ,need of a doctor after his arrest la~ year In connection ,with the horriosexual-torture slayings of 27 teen-agen. Elmer Wayne Henley is charged with munler In six of the deaths. 1111 trial opened today with bis lawyers raising an attack on their young client's written ahd oral statements to police after his arrest. (Picture, Page 4). •He allegedly told pollce detslls of a 2~·year rampage of homosexual rape Bltd lorture killings. Henley would have been 14 when the state aceu9es him DI having alarted lo participate in the killings. :Mter morning testimony, the htaring was recessed until 9~ a.m. Tuesday. 'Mrs. Henley said her oon telephoned her from police headquarters alter hit ~Aug. 8. 'I asked when I. could see him and 11' said the police would call when l"COuld come. I just went all to pieces," &lie said. 'She said she contacted the fam9y ta.wyer but he was too busy to see ll<nley right away. Mn. Henloy said when sho vtslled her oon the next day in j~Puadena, a Houston oubur11, Ille I him cold • .. I lo the touch and apparently hallucinating. "I was with Wayne for about five minutes and he ~ !D9>herent. I just asked if he. wu all right and he said, •a.t me a lawyer and a doclor just as quick u you can! 11 She said she as!<ed police detectives not lo question her son again bµt they refused, tellJni her be didn~ have lo answer their questions. Slate District Judge William M. Hatten has reserved the opening days for pretrial motiDll.'I. Tbe hardest foUgbt ones are expected lo ·be molloos by defense lawyer Will Gray, •. lo exclude from evidence oral and written confessions Henley mlde lo police. · Charles Melder, ff, who buds the defense leam of lawyers, says: "We'll proceed on the UIU!llptlop the boy waa without counsel at the tbne, and wasn't adequaUily warned ol bis rights." Without the Henley ltatements, the state'• case could be atrloualy weakeoed.1 prosecution lawyen say. The proteCUtlon says there IJ only one oUier witness lo the killings: David (>wen Brooks, 18, hlmseU charnd with four murders. Brooks, due to be tried beglnnini March I, will DOI loltUy at the Henley trial. . ch 1esu .... y would lncr1mlnate him, even though he bas given a statement llnklnc Henley to at least seven deaths, prosecutors say. The U.S. Constitution allowa a person to refrain from giving self·locr1mlnating testimony. Dean Arnold Corll, 33, the man police call the mastermind of the ring, was sbol dead by Henley. It· was Henley's shooUng of (;orll during a sex and paintt aniffmg party Aug. Aug. 8 which broke open the case. After the shooting, later ruled sel£· def-, police say Henley began telling lhem about the series of murders. At first they were incredulous, but soon they fOUDd Henley was telling the truth. He and Brooks led them to 27 burled bodiea tn three locations. Henley has been Indicted in six of the murdetf bot la being tried for only one of them now: the death of Charles Ray Cobble, 17. Cobble, who lived across the street from Henley tn the fadini Heights nelihborhood close to downtown Houston, was found dead two weeks after he disappeared, burled along with 16 youths In a boat •tall rented by Corll. In Texas, !here Is only o n e clualllcaUon of murder. The state does DOI have chartU such as f1n1t-degr<e or llOCOlld..i.,r.. murder . • • I ' • Coast Man Tied· To Mine Funds ' By CLA V F. RICHARDS WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate Watergate Committee Is investigating the pcssibility foriner associates of Howard Hughes paid "substantial" sums to President Nixon's brother Donald of NeYo}lOrt Beach for his help in mining claims ventures in the western United States and the Dominican Republic. In its probe of a $100.000 dooation that a Hughes agent made to Nixon's 1972 campaign -v.•hat the com.mlUee's chief counsel tenns "as important as anything v.·e ha\'e done so far" -the in\'estigators linked F. Donald Nixon to these mining ventures: -One in v.'hich Hughes contends his associates conspired to buy 2, 700 \\'Orth- less mining claims in Nevada and Utah chea ply, selling thein to him for greatly infiated prices totaling $18 million. -Anolher involving an alleged attempt to pay off Dominican Republic officials to obtain mining rights in that Latin American cowitry. F. Donald Nixon 's tie with the alleged scheme to swindle Hughes over worthless mining claims is not clear. But it is kno"n the President's brolher traveled to the Dominican Republic in 1969 with Hughes mining associate John Meier, the key figure in both ventures. (Donald Nixon has repea tedly told the Daily Pilot he did travel with Meier to the Dominican Republic but the pur· pose or the trip was only to see Pt1eier · honored by the Dominican Republic government.) ' Committ ee sources said they are convinced the White House has details or F. Donald Nixon's involvement. They said they have learned that Herbert \V. Kalmbach, the President's personal lawyer, fund raiser and long-time friend. quietly investigated the bro l her' s financial dealings in 1970. (Kalmbach. a Ne\\o·port Beach resi- dent, has repeatedly decHned to com· ment to the Daily Pilot on any relation- ship with Donald Nixon's financial deal- ings.) ~ Investigators say the recluse billionaire may have been entirely 1gnorant of the mining enterprises being carried on by his associates. Although a dozen of the names on the subpoena were on the Hughes payroll. none had ever met Hughes. It was not until he became concerned he was being swindled that Hughes began to look into the affair, a Las Vegas source said. The committee's inferest in both areas is reflected in subpoenas serv~ on Nixon last month seeking all White House documents, tapes and other matters that might link Donald Nixon with a ,group of 44 persons and 23 corporations. A lengthy investigation by UPI of ~ persons and corporatlOM named in the subpoena shows that 30 -nearly half -are tied to the two mining deals. Three key figures in the mining ventures are dead. Senate investigators said the testimony they received developed two conflicting pictures of Donald Nixon 's role in the mining transactions. According to Hughes' associates Donald Nixon sought personal financiai gains by offering to use his kinship with the President to . win decisions favorable to the Hughes empire and related interests. Figures outside the Hughes circle including Donald Nixon himself tell ~ dirferent story. They claim the 1Hughes associates sought to use the Nixon name in tbeir dealings to gain mining rights and other potential investments. They contend this was done to give the fal se impression the President supported the operation. . .._ wiNTER SALE STARTS FRIDAY FASHION ISLE .. ' President Nixon, who had kept close watch on his brother's actiVities, stepped in after the 1970 investigation he ordered, and according to several sources, ended Donald's dealings with the Hughes associates. Watergate Committee documents, some still secret, reveal a belief that Donald Ntxon was well paid fo r his services. One investigalor, w h i 1 e declining to give a specific figure, told UPI "The amount was substantial." Minutes of the committee's executi\'e session Nov. 29. 1973 , include this comment from staff investigators: · "\Ve have been investigating the financia l and business relationship of F. Donald Nixon to a nwnbcr of people. including one John Meier ... (this) relates to passible illegal and unethical behavior, including illegal contributions to the 1972 campaign, an1 allegations of bribery, conspiracy and improperly influencing government decisions." At an executive session five days later, Terry F. Lenzoer, the chief investigator in the Hughes case, said : "We are investigating ... Mr. Meier's relationship to F. Donald Nixon and his (Nixon's) possibly receiving cash, or compensation of some kind, from either ~1r. 1tieier or the Hughes Tool Co. directly." ~ Chief Counsel Samuel L. Dash refused to divulge information concerning the su bpoenaed names, but he said they are tied to the 1972 presidenlial ca mpaign . "There's nothing we're investigating that cannot be tied directly, through linkage, to the 1972 election," Dash said in an interview. He added that the committee's investigation of Hughes w~s "as important as anything we have done so far." The committee's main witness is John Afeier, a scientific expert who worked for 'Robert A. Maheu, the former head of Hughes' ~s Vegas em'pire. Meier now lives in Vancouver, B.C., and was indicted by a federal grand jury for alleged in come tax evasion in relation to mining claims. fl.1eier told the committee staff he hired Donald Nixon in 1969 as a consultant. l\feier as fired by Maheu late in 1969, and printed reports have sa id he was dlsmisse4 bec3use the President wanted hi5 brother to sever the business relationship. Even after he was fired, Meier continued to attempt to buy mining claims both in the western United Sates and in the Dominican Republic. Another key witness named in the subpoena is Arthur Blech, t b e , accountaint who drew up the President's controversial income tax returns. Blech also was tax accountant for l\ieier and F. Donald Nixon. Blech has told the committee he went to the Dominican Republic with Meler and the President's brother in 1969. Meler contends the President was aware of the trip. In addition to the mining claims, Meier testified he and F. Donald Nixon wanted to build an extensive midd1e-income housing project in th e Dominican RepubUc. Blech denied to Senate investigators that the President's brother was involved at all in any Dominican deals. Blech said that before Meier and F. Donald Nixon had an argument that tenninated their friendship in 1971, they considered "four or five" business deals, but none was completed. "To my knowledge, no concrete deal ever was consummated," B 1 e c h reportedly told Senate investigators. It now is apparent that no firm deal resulted from the trip to the Dominican Republic. Attun•~ .......... 1"',.rl•1tt 1 ••••• n ..... ltl1ool'I ~ '. .....,vffrti1tt l• , ... ,. our yo111t9 C111tom•rl , , , .ltd ttl•ir ftloth•rt too! DI•"'• Sch,U h•• chol•n • lol'lf white llire11 by Dori11•. Di•11• 11 in th• fourth 9r1de at H•rbo11r Vio• School •nd 1ht 11th• cl•11ghtor of Mr. I Mr1. Theoclor• Scholl of H11nti119fon Harbou r. flASMtON 111...ANO H..,,..n 11010 ....._ TOWM a COUHTlll'I' Or...,. in•1 .MMm NUNTIMeTOfll MAllllOUlll 1n4J ...,., ... I • • • • 4 u,..11 .. , l"IUJT MOnooQ', JilllU.VY l<t, l.f,., Power Plant Acciden·t Ternied··'Slim' with To111 urphine ···.:•\::. .. We're Not All Super Bowlers HOW THE BAU. BOUNCES: All across America today, wives and mothers or the land are breathing oollective sighs of relief. Th.is Ls because Dl an epic event ""'hich happened Sunday, known as SUper Bowl VIII . It means the football season Ui done . · It means that television may ho\V return to reruns or John \Vayne movies, or whatever else it . renins when it does not have collegians stomping all over gridirons on Saturdays a n d Professionals doing likewise on Mood~ nights and Sundays. M tt developed, the climactic conclu- sion to pro football this Sunday could be best charact'erized as a bust. It brought together a group known as the Minnesota Vikings, whose defensive people are also alias the Purple People Eaters, and an opposing group kno"'ll as the Miami Dolphins. '111E DOLPIDNS ALSO had an alias. It was the Walking Wounded. Most or their people \\'ere in splints, bandages and plaster. The Dolphins have this large backfield chap named Larry Csonka who was suffering the flu and a sore toe. They have a fleet: catcher of passes called rau1 W:arfleld ,who wasn't going to be very flee.t because of an aliment known as a pulled hamstring muscle in one or his two legs. All of this tended to make things look pretty bright for the ~\1innesotas and pretty fouch-and-go for the Miami&. But then the contest corrunenced. Atruptly, it appeared that lwfiam.is had all stepped inlo telephone bootm just before kickOff and emerged with a large "S'' on each jersey. THE AFUREAIENTJONED C s o n k a procoeded to run through the Purple People Eaters like he was knocking holes in brick waJJs. The aforementioned gimpy-legged \Varfield, olher times, streaked down sideli nes capturing passes, ll was amazing. To say the Miamis won would be to understate the case. Anyway, all of this can get you lVOrked up into your O\\'Tl desires fo r atbJetic adventure. So when Daughter suggested we try a little basketball after the game, I was r~ady to go. "NOW DAUGJITER," said I, dribbling the basketball with great vigor. "I am going to demonstrate for you the v;ay to dribble-drive in for a basket. You \\ill auempt to guard me." "You really think you should try that, Dad?" she questioned. v.·atching the n1bber tire around my wa ist bounce in concert with the ball. ··Why, certainly. \Vatch out OO\V. Herc I come" . . • dribble dribble. A FUNNY TllING happened on my \\"ay to the basket. There was this sW.bbing pain in my righ t calf. Everything stopped abruptly. "You kicked my leg," I accused her, glowering. "1 nevE'l' touched you ," she protested. She was right. The Old l\1an had pulled a leg muscle. Or what used to be a muscle. So today I'm barely moving. YET IN MY MEMORY, I see the aforementioned Paul \Varfield. streaking down a sideline with his puUed hamstring muscle. Ah, that's v.·hat youth can do. Or is it money? --wASflrNG'l'O'.'I IAP) -An Atomic Energy Commission official says the prellmlnary results of a scientific study suggest there v.1.11 never be a major accident in. a nuclear power plnnl . This v.·as a conclusion or Dr. tfarbert Kouts, the AEC's director of reactor safety research, who co1nmented on the results of tho study. •r11E ODDS OS a major cataslrophe at a nuclear plant were given In the study as "once ln 1 billion to once 1n-io bUllon years" for a given reactor. Kouts said that the study's figures sllow that "even ~1th the 1,CMXI reactors expected to be operating by the year 2000, it would be 1,000 to 10,000 years before any given reactor might be expected to have an accident." Thus, he said, "for the JOO to 200 years we e:cpect to ht! using fls.1lonable · uranium before supplies run out . . . '>l.'e would expect never to have a catastrophic a c c i d e n t by an overwhelming probability factor.'' The study was conducted for lhe AEC at the ' Massachusetts Jnslltute of She Wore White j And so did everyone else at the wedding ceremony for Lana Asp- lund and Steven Fredrickson of Omaha. The pair wanted an out- doors wedding but weren't counting on snow and temperatures dip- ping to 22 below, the coldest in 57 years. '-----"-. Youth Survives Savage Attack by Wild Animal FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. rAP) A 3-year-old boy biHen by a 350-pound lioness survived "by a l'OUple of millimeters," says a hospital official. Ryan Murphy was listed in serious condition Sw1day with a six-inch bite across his neck and teeth wounds In his chest. He V.'aS lhe second person attacked by a big cat las t \\lee k in Florida. Police said that 1.he OOy was riding his tricycle near his hon1e Saturday v.·hcn attacked by the yea r-old lioness, O\vned by Kenneth G. Bumstine, after it jumped a fence surrounding Burnstine's estate. "The cat missed an artery in the neck by a couple of millimeters," a hospital spokes'man Si\id. "If the cat had struck there, the child wGuld be dead. He'U have a six-inch scar across' bis neck.'' "The kids Were out playing and they started screaming and I v.·ent out and the lion was on top of my son,'' said Mrs. Terry Murphy. "\Ve couldn't get it pried loose. 1'.·ly husband tried to work with his (the lion's) mouth .•. pushing it. .. he just tried everything." Gary PearCe, Burnstine's 18-year-old stepson, finally got the animal oU the child by hitting it across the back with a strap, police said. -- Burnstine said his stepson was walking lhe lioness, named Sonia, when the incident occurred. "Apparently what happened -and this happens with any kind o{ v.•ild animal -is something upset her," Burnstine said. "She may ~ave heard the trike clanking, and that · may have upset her and she went after it." Burnstine said he received Sonia as a gift when she was a cub and kept her lockl'd in a cage at the rear of his property. · Eastern Plains Freezing Fog, Rain, Drizzle in Loiver Mississippi Valley Te111perat.11res ,.1i.,ny Alb\lq\ll!fQW Ant11Dr11111 8 11m1rck Boston 8utf1lo Cll1rloltt Chkl90 Cincinnati CltYellnd Pt"ver Ot$ Molnn Dtlr'Oll F•lrtwlnks IJllllll'llPOlfl ,_, K1nw1 Clly Mllw1..iiee Mt,.ne1P01l1 New York Ntrm Pttltt """"° Pl\Uldtlof!M ~:::=IM. :~v .. St, Loufl W•~""°" Hl9ll Low Pep. " .. "' . I\ .04 " " " " 11 ,, " " •• 1, 71 ?S ,, 19 \1 ;s "ll 19 n i~ •. 11) _,, ~' 1\ G• .(l! :1 14 M " " " ?S 11 . " ;1 ;o -~' 1' It " " " .. " " J• n " " " ,, t::.rftornin • r IO IJ'l WtA1 .. t IO'IOC4$1 . • • °'1111 log pl!'tltltd O•tr Plfll O' Cf'"lrll Ind Soothtr" (lllfotnll, Ind r~ln w11 reporttcl In we 1 l 1 • " W11llll'q!011 11111 wlt~ ,_ W In 10.ho 1nd wtttlrn Molli• Ftlr Mitt w.re tl'tl II l'\llt 1111 of toVtl\lm Cllltornll flt tile Horll\tffl ll'IO Ctnlrll PttlM lftd Wflltl'n Tt•lt. ,.,..,.,. Htttrn Tt~ll flw'ouOtl mud! of 1111 1owtr M11t1u1~ v111ty, fo9, rtln ""' drlrlll 0omtn1ted l'llll""Wlrthll' pkturt , Wl'!lll -fol tPl'ttcl Into tM middle •r><I upper MllsJ,,lppl V•llty. Some snow ousled riorthtr" low• 1nd l'>Orllons ot easttrn MlllllMoOll l"d uot:ier Ml(lllg1,., 1nd '~"' s11rlnkle<1 ~ll'IH1I F!orld1 •r><I tM nor!l'l-«ntr•I Gul l Coast 1lllH '"'o TN1ne$1et. Two !nclles GI r1ln 1c:cvmv11~ fl Wt•l Palm 611th. Fii .. w(ltt Ibo\/! • h•!f-111(11 II Mullin. Idaho. Ind 51cr11•11n!11. OtMrw!M, the r1tM1ll Wll Ugh!. Tiie col<!, lllgll prH5\ll't wl'llcll IJ cllllli"~ tllf No•tlwa11 ll movlflll Into Int A!lanllc. end onrv -mott r>igllt of Cold Wfllllet It IJPf(ltcl. Early morning lemper1ll.ll'H r11'1Q'td lf'O"l"I U Clf9tfft below rtro 11 Glen F•llt. H.Y .. IO n dtgrMS •t Ml1ml, Flt. Coastal Weather Mostly Wtiny IOdlV, Light ¥trfttlll wlncl1 nigh! Ind morning Plollr• bt- comlna v.nr 10 to1.1lhwt'lt t to u k.rtOIJ 1n 1111rnoor11 todly Ind T.,... C11y, High !Odty '5. ec..i111 11m0tr1hXu r1naoe from SO io 61, l"lllld l1mptr1tur11 r1~ trom .c9 to~. W1l1r ltmp1r1ture U. Sun, Moon. Tides MOJ!IOl,Y 3107 p.m. i.i .! 1:4p.rn. 1.• TUllOAY F1N1 high 3:SO 1.m. J.t , Flrrt IOW" 11:10 1.m. 1,2 Sfocotlcl fllOll s~os 11-rn. '-' Stcorid low •:• p,m. 1.t ~ rfMt 7:11 •·"'· Sett 1:01 11-m. Moon t1llt ll1JI t.rn. tt4 J01"4 t.1t1. • • I 'l'echnology,--Ws findings were-..ported by AEC Cbalrm•n Dil<y bee Ray-end Kouts Jn separate Interviews. ' KOUTS DESCRWED a calas!rophlc accident as one in which large quanUUes of radioactive materials would be released, killing "thousands of people, poulbly 5,000 to 10,000 although the fl gum are very shaky." lie said the study tended to con!lnn AEC's estimates tha( chances of such an accident are "so low as to be negiigible. He and Dr. Ray also reporred that the MF!' pr<llmillley flndfnca ·abo projected-tho -1bJlity ot • 1 ... -........ accident u once In a mllllon tO OllCle Jn l~mllllol\ yean for any given reactor. Kout. descrlbtd thl.s lype acdclftlt u "comperable Jn llJ consequeooes to tile ctub of a Jumbo-Jet aircraft. that mJaht k~ 200 people or ao.11 "'111AT'S '111E same kind of prollohllty that would prevatl for a penon ~ be bitten by 1 V<llOIDOll9 ...U. while crooslng tile sir.et at Dupon< Circle in the heal1 of the naUcn"s capital ' .... Dr. Roy said. Battered Tot, 3, Dies • Ill HUNTINGTON, W. Va. (AP) -Little Jonathan Workman has lost an 84-hour st ruggle !or lite that began alter he reportedly was beaten for wetting his pants. , _ Officials at St. h-tary's Hospital said the 3-year-old boy died Sunday night. He was in a coma . after being injured and had relied on a life support machine. JONATHAN \VAS brought to the hospital Thursday afternoon by his molher, Della \Yorkman. of rural Fort Gay in neighboring \Vayne C:Ounty, and by Jackie-h1cAboy1 23, 111cAbov, who Court Mulls Editorial Equal Space WASHJNGTON (AP ) -The Supreme Court today agreed to consider whether states can demand that nev.'Spapers give Cree space ~w political candidates for replies to l'ditorial attacks. The justices accepted the case for a r g u m e n t s oo the merits but left themselves lhe option or deciding , alter (.__1N_sn_oR_T_._· .___,) hearing the arguments, that they do not have jurisdiction in the case. The iss ue reached the justices in a case from Florida in which the slate-- supreme court upheld a 1913. state law requiring lhat newspspers w h i c h "assail" the personal character or official record of a caiididate must print his reply with equal prominence. e l\'o Free::e CARACAS (UJll) -Venezuela v.·ill not freeze its oil export prices and plans to adjllSt them as of Feb. I, a high-ranking mines m i n i s t r y spokesman said today. "We did not agree by any means" to the three-month nloratorium on oil price hikes set by the Organization or the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) last v.·eek in Geneva, he told UPI. e l\'em l11fo'! WASHlNGTON (AP) -SamUenlash. chief counsel of the Senate Watergate committee. said today the panel had "imporlant new infonnation" and ought to hold further public hearings. Hospital had heen babyslltlng wllh Jonathan and Jonathan's 5-year-old brother Dallas, told police the child had fallen In the bathroom after he had been "whipped for y,·etting his pants." But Fort Gay authorities had already notified police here and McAboy, formerly of Huntington, was taken into custody on a felonious a s s a u I t dm.rg~. This morning the charge was changed to murder. "Da11as was the only witness," said \Vayne Coynty Sheriff Keith Ray. "He told us McAboy was 'breaking Jonathan cf wetting his pants' and that. tie hit and kicked his little brother and thre\V him into the commode, head flrst '' THE SANDY • HAIRED c h i I d " s injuries lncluded a badly cut mouth and a broken jaw. A doctor who examined him at the hospital emergency room said he sustained massive brain dam- age. Hospital offldah said the child was injured about noon Thursday. At 1}lat same time. his father, Ray Workman, 27. v.'as in a local courtroom being sentenced to a yea r in prison for arml'd robbery. Fort Gay authorities said McAboy had been living at the Workman home. They said police had investigated prior complaints of mislreatment of the children "Dallas said Jonathan never said a \\"Ord during the beating, just cried a little bit," Ule sheriff said. Nurses at the boopltal a1'o said the child never uttered a word during the three days he lay on his hospital bed. RELATIVES SAID Jonathan. who •Neighed about 3,; pouods, v.•as a bright child who was Just beginning to make sinlplc • de<:laratlve sentences. His aunt, ~lrs. ttoward Stevens, said tearfully Sunday night : ''He was talkin' ttjll good." ,..-._._ .l She said that" or tbl.L und olher """°"'· "I think we (the AEC) are going to ha\'e to begin to come out swinging a Utile hantor ... " A rc!er· enoe to envi.ronmentallsts and other critics of nudoor power plont safety. She said the study look nearly two years and $'l million and was conducted by Dr. Norman C. Rasmusoen, • professor of nuclear engineering a! MIT. Koots said that Rasmussen's figUres still are preliminary and subject to commCllt from other scientists and from AEC critics before formal releose. Trial Begl11s Accused mass murderer Elmer Wayne Henley goes on trial today. Although he was in- dicted for murder of six run· aways in Houston, he is being tried for only one murder. Frozen, Beaten Body of Kidnap Victim Fo1md JA..\IESTOW N, N.Y. (APl -The partly frozen. bruised body or a !._year· old kidnap victim has been found tied to a tree in a heavily woodt'd area near his home, authorities said. Investigators said the soow-cove.red body of Daniel Ebersole, v.·ho had been missing since Tuesday night, was found slumped against the tree Sunday by an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and a deputy sheriff. IJM?stigators said a glove had been stuffed in ~he youth's mouth and held in place with surgical tape. They said a ski mask had been pulled over his face. covering his eyes. <J Authorities said the cause of death had not been determined and that an autopsy had been scheduled for today. The body was fowxl afler an anonymous telephone call. Daniel's parents, Dr. and 1'.trs. Glen 1'.·1. Ebersole of the Ja~wn suburb of Lakev.·ood, had paid $15,<XK> ransom for the boy Thursday. And authorities arrested-three area teen-agers Saturday, charging them with kidnap!ng. Kenneth L. Williams. 18, and ?ttartln c. Wltitmore;-19;--of \\'est ElllCOU, and Jeffrey L. Swan, 18, of Lakewood were arraigned in Buffalo, N.Y., Saturday and crdered jailed in lieu or $100,<XK> "I think the committee will follow my recommendation on the matter." said Dash during an interview on the NBC-TV "Today Show." He dctlinl'd. tG reveal the nature of the key infonnation. Baek In Washington e Space Record HOUSTON (UPI) -Methodically looping the glDbe every 93 minutes, the Skylab 3 astrooauts tooigbt hegin setting a space endurance standard expected to go unchallenged for years. I! all goes well. Gerald P. Carr or Santa Ana. F.dward G. Gibson, formerly of San Clemente, and William R. Pogue v.•ill have been in orbit around the earth 59 days, II hours and 9 minutes by 6:10 p.m. PDT, equalling the endurance record or the Skylab 2 crew. e Merger Plan TUNIS · (UPI) -President Habib Ilourgulba today dlsm!SB<d Io re I g n' minister Mohamed Mas mo u di , considered a Jeading advocate or the newly proclaJmed merger b e t w e e n Tunisia and Libya. A government announcement said that in a partial cabinet slluHle Bourgulba replaced MasDloudi with Habib Qiatty, head of the President's private cabinet. Bourguiba, 70, head of a moderate pro-- Wesem nation, and Libyan revolutionary council chairman Moam.mar Kh::ldafy, 31 , leader of a mllllary, doctrinaire Islamic republic, announced the merger or their two countries in a surprise move on Saturday. • e l\'la:o" Backed WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (R·Arlz.), &aid SUnday that resignation or President Nixon would cause "M upheaVal" in AmerlCIUl poUtics" and .. rtlse.-hlvoc~with-tbt-whole.-. world .'' He said he would nQt advise the President to step down when Interviewed Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press.. 11 : . Nixon .Plans Next Steps In Watergate Defense By HELEN '1110~1AS WASll!NG'l'ON (UP!) -AfteT flying b3ck from ealitomla in an o!fic!al plane, PrBldent Nixon Is prep~ring lor next week's return of Congress and planning the next stages of his Watergate defense. lllS AIDES described him a s "determined" Jn the face of calls for his resignation and Jtnpeacbment, bul lhey are telllng reporters that. they realize the next few weeks will be "crucial" Jn tenns of the presidency. Members ol Congress who have been home sounding out voters sentiment go DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtl""1 of t"' Doll! Pi"' It fUWMlttd ~,....,, If '" .......... ,_. ,..., ey Jllt ,....._ Ufl fMI .,.._,;,.W!!.' WIN IN ..,..,.... fll p!t. Cllll ltt -...... 11• ~"'-....,..., ......... ,!If'" ..... ~ ,..., ~ ., ' .. ,,.. ... ,,.,. .. , fl' ....... l l\!Mly, Clll lflf I Clf'Y will llt 11,...al M 'fh. (I ll' IR 1.-ill ""'It It I .Ill. Ttlfpf'IOntf. Mftl Or•"tf (-If .,.., ....... "41-011 ,,.~ .. ,, "-lltlllfi-••tdl -...... ..,'"....., ............. ,....,,. 1111 CWM!ttl• CifMtr...e •Mett. ,. llfl J•lfl ci......--. DIM ~. -lMltl ~ ~ Mll'ltt .... back in session Jan. 21. and their findings on the public mood will be an lmportanl fact.or in the future oourse or the inquiry into. possible impeachment o& the President Nixon and his family flew back from Catllomla to Washington on a small government Jet.star Sunday, with aides explaining · that they felt his security would he endangered by traveling again by commerdal airline since the element of surprise would be removed. On Dec. 26 Nixon flew unannounced to the West Coast on a United Air Lines plane. · 'l1IE ClllEF execullve arranged early morning conferences with bis dllef advtsers on bis 11111\ual state of the union address which he will dellV<lt ln per300 around Jan. 2.1. Other pressing subjects w"" tho 1975 flscal year federal budi•~ upected to call tor record 1pendlng ol 13(1() to 13116 bllllon, his forthcoming economic r.,,...i and Secr.tary of State Henry A . Kissinger's Middle Eut 'peace efforts. The President has been aumnbllng a new legal team, headed by proml.ncn.t Bo&ton trial lawyer James D. Sl. Clalr, to handle bl• dclense In Watergate mo.tters. r<ixon Is expected soon lo alt "'~" with Republtcan leadert to dllCllll with them tho 11111Plinll ot ""'°'°° they lave taken In their home dlllrlctJ. , \' iJ I I I • • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks :VOL 67, NO. 14, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1~74 N TEN Cl;NTS iow Incoine Housing Plan Backed in Newport By JORN ZALLER Of ... DaUJ rlW Steff 'Ibero Is a move afoot to ha•• Newport -~~dLadopt a pollw. _r,ging aevewpment of low and moderate !ncorile housing within the city. ~ading advocates of such a policy are two city planning commissioners Jim Parker and Jackie Heather. A 1ocal representative of the Or~nge Coast League of Women Voters bas jcilned In urging tbe city to do everything it can to insure that a wide range of housing i.a available in Newport Beach. 'Ibe lasue was raised 'ast week when plannlpg commlssionet"S were asked to approve a new housing policy for the city's ·General Plan. The Housing Element, as pro~ by the city's advanced planning staff, calls upon the city to recognize that it was unlikely that Newport Beach would ever see any genuine low income housing. The Housing Element al90 says that the moderate and low Income families currently living In the city probably will be forced to move out as older sec!iclli of the city are redeVeloped. Parker object& that "this policy is really veey insensitive to the problem. "I realize that It will be dlificult to provide much of a range of housing with property values as high as they are in Newport Beach," Parker said.• "But I think every community, whether Jt is Beverly Hills or Santa Ana, has an obligation to try. And l don't think this city is trying very hard with ihe plan it has here ," he said. Commissioner Healher agrees, arguing that "as redevelopment occurs in our older areas we will be displacing a Jot of people Wlless we take steps to do something about it. "I don't think it's right to force all the low and moderate income people back into the hard core areas like Santa Ana," she said. Joan Petty, a Newport Beach woman representing tile league of. Women Voters, chided the city for a proposed policy that she said was "totaJly unacceptable'' to the principles of open housing. "Economical discrimination is no more tolerable than racial discrimination," she said. l\lrs. Petty urged the city to consider greater density and less open space in developments where it is shown that concessions will result in more low and moderate income housing. Commissioner Parker suggested th1pt the city encourage the . use of planned community districts as a means of achieving a greater proportion or moderate income housing. Both Mrs. Heather and Parker suggested that the city c o n s i d e r (See HOUSING, Page 21 udges Urge Disbarment Agnew ' " • INewpor:t Files Writ On County By L. PETER KREIG Of "'-0.lty , ........ Newport Beach stepped up ii.! legal battle against Orange ColB!ty Airport today ti)' serving Orange Count y SuperviJOn with a writ ol mandamUJ In an attempt to force them to beef np the budget of the Airport Land Use Commllsloo. Cl!IY AttomeY Dennis O'Neil sald the wrlt was eerved in the county clerk's CJ(flce and be will file it In Or¥"• Olunty ~ Court ,_.1 or Wec!Jieidq ISklhg for a 1bcnr •cauoe -lteoi'lng. O'Neil said Newport Beach was Wing 1be action ••on behall ol Mayor DOilala A. Mcinnes, who is chainnan of the land use panel created in 19'11. O'Neil recited repeated !rustratlons that Mcinnis bas complained about during the past 18 montbs .• He pointed out that Newport Beach succeeded In getting state legislation J)oa!ed that foreed the t'OlllJty supervisors lo fund the pabel, but oo far it bas been getting only $500 a year. '•"nley asked for $62,000," O'Neil said. "'!be mayor feela this b an affront to the commission: It b still required tl> do all the land use planning yet If ·doesn't have enough money to pay its postage," O'Neil saJd. . He said the show cause bearing hopefully will force the superviSOI'! to ~ider the panel's current_b~get. ..i•1we are asking for a public hearing to reconsider the budget and a statement Of• reasons and findings for the current taoG appropriation,'' O'Neil said. He pointed out that the commission i.· supposed to be preparing a comprehensive land use plan for the airport. '!be nmning battle between the land dae commlssioo and irupervbon began obortly after the panel was fonned. At ~ 1upervbon rO!used "' budget any -•tall .It wasn't until the state legi..tatlon, atitbored by Aasemblyman Robe r t Blidbam (R·Newport Beech) WBS passed tllat the coonty aepropriated any money. The writ served on 1be supervisors fa, the sec<llld legal move by Newport lftach in wbat O'Neil said will be a q:inUnuous legal assault witil the jet mise problem is solved. 1 Newport Beach went to court last month to force the California i!Opartmenl ol Transportation to conduct tlti lmmedJate bearing on the airport's requeet for a variance from new 1tale riObe standards. .'County buslneamen Joined t b .e ~·· battle f« •lll'Yi•ll Friday by · (See AIRPORT, hp I) • , IT A.LIA.N A.CCENT . . ON CLASSIFIED Here,-1 1 success story told ln an Itllian accent: ' Italian make. Like new, FOLDING Bicycle, 3 spd. Best offer, (Phone No.) ' The bike was made ·in Italy; but ·· ·the reoulta ,,.... stricUy from the " bomegrown Dolly Pilot. 'lbe ·bike was oald the oeeond day the ad IJJll"ared. ---'.~t:JIL.lly for I -~ nicord for ..oln( I bite • • • or ollt, try the dliOctl line to resulta. Di -· "I ... • . 'Darling P.eopf..e' Panel Calls Neighbors .Raise Former VP 'Deceitful' Mrs. Popeil Bail ANNAPQLIS, Md (AP) -A special three-judge panel recommended today that former Vice President Spiro T. Agnew be disbarred from the practice or Jaw in Maryland. .....,_,, ... ...., ....... WANTS KYMLA'S' SEAT District Threi'i Blrn:tt Newpor! Realtor Barrett to Ruri For Council Job Newport Bead! realtor Pete< Barrett today joined what b rapidly becoming a crowded race for the 1bird District city council seat to be vacated in April by Councilman cart J. Kyrnla. Barrett, 49, or 320 King's Road, said he ls nmning beca.~ he believ~s he has experience iii city' affairs 'and has astrong-deslre-m-preserv.-the-·styJe- of life in Newport Beadl. He declined to state any specific positions on major issues at this point in the campaign, but .indicated be thinks those major issues-. will be the general plan and Orange County Airport. He said he Is a strong opponent of jet operations at the airport and says Orange C<>lmty SUpervlsors llhould be acting more quickly to find a new jetport site. Barrett d-1bed h Im s e If as "ooncerned witll property right.!. "I believe that particularly in Newport Beach the residenti .have an oppo-lly to describe their city ol the future," Ile said. Two other persons have already declared they will also try to succeed Kymla in representing Newport Heights, CIUf Haven and Bayshores. · They are Ellis Glazier, president of Newport Residents United (NRU), and accountant John J. McKerran. Glazier baa not yet obtained bis nomlna<ion · papera from City Cleek Laura Lagi .. , however. There are three otller seata up for election April t. Vice Mayor llowarcl Rogera has (See llAllllE1T, .... J) College District Merger Studied By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ..... Diii' ,Uot Stiff Eloise Popeil, the won,tan police accuse ol a plot to murd<. ber·multi·millionalre husband, returned to her Harbor IslaM Rqad bome this weekend, thanks to -ol four ol her neighbors. According to Mrs. P<lpeil's attorney, Pbllllp ·Petty, Mrs. Popeil's nelgbbors pledged more than fl million worth of property to guarantee the slim blonde'• $100,000 bail Reached toclay ........ home, ·Mn. Popeil said Ille '!JI' very grateful '°1 her nelchlion' _..,a!ty wblch Jed, ·"' her rel..W SaJunti.1 morning from Los Angeles County Jall. "I am very gratified," she said. "They are darling people and it is particularly reas.!Urlng when you realize I haven't lived bere too long." Petty said tbe pledges came primarily from resldents of Linda Isle where Mrs. Popeil and her estranged bll8band, Samuel, owned a summer home. Mrs. Popeil, 48, spent lour days behind bars following her arrest last Tuesday with her boyfriend on suspicion of hiring a Long Beach man to kill Po.JN'il, a O.icago kltcheo gadget manufacturer. The boyfriend, Daniel Ayers, 37, an unemployed machinist from Santa Ana, remains in custody today, unable to raise the $100,000 bail set Friday in a hearing in Long Beach. Police allege the pair conspired to kill Popeil so that she could inherit roughly one-third of his $150 million estate before their pending divorce became final. According to investigators, the couple separated this summer and Popeil returned to Oiicago to start divorce proceeding> while Mrs. Popeil and their two teenage daughters stayed on in Newport Beach. • The three women vacated the Linda Isle home while It was being remodeled and neighbors said work on the house located at the DO<thwest poi:Jt of the Island, stopped when court action on the divorce started. · Since then, Mrs. Popeil and her daughters bav'e lived in rented homes in Jtvine Terrace and on Harbor Island Road. Petty alleged tnday that Popeil was $1f,250 behind in his temporary alimony and child support payments o! 14,250 a month. In Olicago, Popeil went to court Fri· day in a st.onny session to ask for custody of the two ilirls and an end to financlll support for his wlle. That bearing was. cmtlnued to this Frtda.y. Acconl!ng to the Associated Press, (See RELEASED, Pap Z) Donal.d Nixori • • Cme Detailed The posslblllty·of bringing the.Garden United Pn!ss lntematlonal today Grove Unified School Dtatricl Into the explores in detail the · possibility Coast CommlB!lty College District will Io rm e r associa.tes of Howard be diSj;USsed by colle~e officials during Hughes pald'"aubotantial" sums to a special meeting tonight. PresidOl>t Nix6o's brother, Donald, . Worth Keene, president of the colJoa• -ID'a mining vmt~. district's goveming board, ha•· c:alled 11'1.. report alto dlicusses tlie the apeclsl meeting for 7:!0 p.m. Jn re1allnnsblp between Donald Nix· district headquarters, U'IO-Mlml Ave., Oil/I of Newport Beach, and a Costa Mesa. Billllel. miDhll associate, John Garden Grove ochool 1utboriu .. !Mt Meler. ~ Jf!-4 the merpi and 11 • ... ·=--!-.,.-. llimtld --could-not bl! .. me time declared~ wllllnf ........ far ••t•ieod OD tlie all• to flnance the canslluctlOD ol a llllrd '"*'* ' · general campus IOIDewb<re In tbe fflletbenpllll,~:L Garden Groft:I ar9. ' , -1 • -. --1> . ' . ·'-' I' INllY .. llol Stiff rw. A LITTLE HELP FROM FRIENDS Mrs. Eloise Popeil ----- I tvirie to File Evictio11 Notice On Trailer Park Irvine Company officials said they expected to file fonnal eviction notices today against residents of 33 bungalows 1n Newport Beach's Bay Shore Trailer Park. The notices were to be filed in Harbor Municipal Court. They will require the owners to vacate their homes or demonstrate to the court why they should be allowed to remain. However, an attorney for 30 of the 33 homeowners said today he plans to file a counter-suit in Orange County Superior Court which he 'says may !orestall the eviction notices. John Broderick, the attorney, explained that the suit will be based on the assumption that the city or Newport Beach, not the Jrvine C.Ompany, is really responsible for the eviction. "We believe UJat lhe Irvine Company wouldn't be taking this action if the city were not threatening the company with loss of the whole trailer park," the attorney said. On this assumption, Broderick says the foUowing are legal reasons why the city cannot force the owners of bungaloW> inside the trailer park to move out: '11te three Circuit Court judges sald t~t Agnew's evasion of income tax, acknowledged in a no-contest plea, was "deceitful and dishonest" and 0 strikes . at the· heart , of the basic object of the legal profession ••• " "We shall therefore recommend his disbannent. We see no extenuating ~ allowjng • re11er sanCtiOn," a 14-page .r.ecommendation said.. ~ "Mr. Agnew will not be making a statement at this particular time," said Ann Breen, a receptionist at Agnew's office in Washington. The recommendation goes to the Maryland Court of Appeals, which makes the final decision on whether ·to bar Agnew from the practice of law. Tbe Court of Appeals can either accept the disbarment recornmendaton, reduce the penalty to suspension or reprimand Agnew. · Disciplinary actions were filed by the. state bar association last November after Agnew pleaded no contest to a federal tax charge and resigned from the vice presidency. The bar association asked the three judges to disbar Agnew. Tbe former vice president, however, asked the panel to merely suspend him from practicing law, arguing that his misconduct was not connected with duties as a lawyer . Agnew told the Judges that be had at no time enriched himself at the expense of his public trust and that there was nothing to indicate that he would not faithfully and honestly represent clients as a lawyer. But Circuit Court Judges Shirley B. Jones, Ridgely. P. Melvin Jr. and William H. McCullough said Agnew's conduct was harmful to the proper administration of justice. "In our opinion, the p r op e r administration of justice, the proper respect of the courl !or Itself and a proper regard for the integrity of the profession cqmpel us to conclude that the respondent ts unfit to continue as a member of the bar of this state," the recommendation said. Tbe three judges said t h e i r recommendation was based solely on Agnew's no-contest plea to the tax charge. They said they did not take inlo consideration any or. the allegations made by the Ju.slice Department in Agnew's U.S. District Court appearance Oct. 10. In a 40-page statement of evidence, (See AGNEW, Pqe Z) Cable ·TV Pomo Filmer Arrested ' -The city bas issued bullding permits for work on some of the bungalows, PITI'SBURGH (UPI) -Glen Kucera, -The city has been inspecting and 21, of suburban North Versailles township certifying the trailer park every year was held for co u r t oo a charge or since 1961. showing ob$cene films on a cable -The city has in effect condemned television hookup. " the private homes located on Irvine Kucera allegedly showed the stag Cornpany-lea• land without due -process movies early Dec. 26. Several persons o( law. ...._ complained and Kucera was arrasted. -The city is discriminating against He \\•as later fired from his job with the bungalow owners by requiring them Valley Cable Television. to vacate while many ot tho alleged Defense attorney Daniel Berger argued problems with the bungalows also exist at a bearing belore magistrate George with trailers in the park. Bobich that police coofbcated the films ]Jrodcrlclrsald-;ibat IH h I II--.without-a wamnl=ond--ob~a accepted in SUpertor Court , ha wtll' cooresston· before Kucera was advised , !mJMdlaleiy ask t1'< court to stay of hJJ rlgbls. Berger, llao claimed his uecutlop ol the eviction no!iccs pending' ~llent 1".11 drµnit and the · fUms ' were (See,IAY SHORE!, Pa1e l) seM. ontr.llY adillts • I • Ul"JT .......... DISBARMENT ASKED Former VP At!"''* Newport Couricil Studies Lido Beach, Leming Newport Beach councilmen will be coofrooted tonigtrt with a variety of major items, including a request by City Attorney Dennis O'Ne il to hir.e a special attorney to determine the legality of the proposed Lido Isle beach lease extension . Councilmen will meet at 7:30 in city· hall where they will also: -Act on planning. commission recommendatk>ns to rezone several areas of the city to bring lhem into cOnfonnance with the new general plan. -Act on Councilman John Store's recommendation to appoint a citizens' committee to help speed construction of a new Pacific Coast Highway bridge over Upper Newport Bay. -Consider Councilman Milan Doslal's recommendation to continue participation in the regional public cablevision network study for six more months. -.Hear Police Chief B. James Glavas• request to relax the requirements for ambulance drivers. -Consider a recommendation by Public Works Director Joseph Devlin to make Cedar, Colton, Lugonia and Walnut Streets in Newport Shores all one-way roadways. -Confirm Mayar Donald A. Mcinnis' disaster proclamation that he made following the high tides and heavy surf {See COUNCIL, Page 2) 1 • Oraage <:oast • Weather Some·bigli clouds at times, othet- wise SUIUIY ·through Wednesday, according, to the weather-service with inland highs in the low 70s and beach temperatures of 65. Lows tonight In the 50s. ' INSWE TODJ\ Y An AEC o/ficiaf claims the c'&ance of a nuclear potcer plo:ttt acckfe1&t it 'O'lle chance in a billion.' Ste: story Page 4. - • _ UAILY f'lLOT N '/ • HEADS HARBOR COURT Judge Oon1ld Oun91n Don Dungan Presiding Judge for '74 Judge Dooald Dungan hl\ll been elected Presiding judge of the Harbor Judicial Di>trict court. Judge Dungan, 57, oucceeds Judge Selim S. "Bud" Franklin as administra- tive head of the fOUNilvisl.on municipal court. Judge Dungan was appointed to the bench In 1966 by Gov. Edmund G. Brown. He had already served Costa Mesa In capacities which won bim honors. Judge Dungan was a member of the city's incorporation committee in 1953 and was immediately named city attorney when cityhood was approved by voters. He served for 12 years and for 11 years was a member of the old Newport Harbor Union High School Distr;ict Board of Trustees. Judge Dungan's coDeagues for the current year and their assignment.. Include: -.Judge Robert C. Todd, Divisioo Two, where most criminal cases are handled after being assigned from Judge Dungan's Division One. -Judge Selim FrankJai, Divi sion Three, whic:b handJles small claims and other civil matter3. -Judge Calvin P. Schmidt, Division Four, where traffic citations are handled. From Page J BAY SHORES .•. outcome of the Superior Court action. Tbe city has told the Irvine C<>mpany that it must remove 43 bungalows from the park or !ace losing its trailer park permit. .... ~ - The city said the bungalows were structuraly substandard, inaccessi ble_ to fire trucks, and a general nuisance to the city. Bungalow owners who pay a rr.onthly feet to the Irvine Company for their land, have asked that they be allowed to re- main in their homes until the Irvine Company begins a major redevelopment of the entire Lrailer park area. From Pagel AGNEW ... federal prosecutors alleged that Agnew was involved in a system of kickbacks to Maryland politicians Crom architects and engineers doing non·bid government business. OUNGI COAST N DAILY PILOT The.Ofenot CHI! DAILV PILOT. wolh Wlllcll is comtiintd Tiie HtW1·Prna, I• Pllbhlllel:I by Tiie Ot•llil• '°"" P11bllllllno CGml>O~Y ,,~ •••• Olditloni •rt l)U{lll1l'lld, Monoer 1'!1•111191'1 Prld1y, for Coste MtM. Hewi»rl 8t+Qo. Hlll'lll"I... &ffCl\,IFClltr>ll!n V11~,. Leo- ltMd'I,. lrvlM/s.ddlt'ti.c• lrid Stn Cltmtn!t/ S.n Juen C.pl1tr1no A 11,..11 "'l!lenil Oldillofl 11 Pllbl!,...,. '91""'"'" eod ~una..vs. rt.. prlncl1191 pUl>$isl'llfll t llllt ll el llD Wt1l llr ''""'• Coste Mtt.. ~lltornl1, faiM. ltobtrl N .. Wttcl Pralffnt tnd PlllMliJllw Jac:k It. Curia'/' Vici ,,.lffnl ... 0.-11 ,,,..,.... "thornat KtaYll EdllOr 1\ornat A. M11rphl111 MIMlllll t:tl!Ot L Pater Krl19 N....-rt .. fdl Clly l!dllW N..,.,. '-• Offlc:• JJJJ N•wptft l11l1•1rtl Mtilint AJ!lr11t1P.O.111 1175, •26•! ....... 0 ...... C..No M .. I ! "9 Wnt .. , 5!fftt Lft\11'1 IHdl: "2 l"trMI A- HvntlfltMll hadll 17111 •tldl ""''"• ... Jan (ltnltftle: lO$ Hlf'1fl El C.rnhe llNI , ... , •••• (7141 '42-4221 O..IW Mu•tt•1 '41-1671 a.,ortfllt, lWJ, 0,..,.... C4iffl "*Ith"" ~. Nt -S tterltl. lll111tr•I• ......,.... -nw tr Mlllrt"""'"" -""'"'-,...,. .. I -110 Olll Wtlf!IWt N*lel ...,. ..... ., °"""9lt' -· ...... dM-............. c.t• ..... "'"'"'... ...,"'""" .... wrW ..... INflltll'rl llllr ""II SJ.If INlll~~I mllltrtf'J ........... .... ,,..!My. ' , Monday, Jinulf'}' 14, 1974 Admittedly Defective - By TOM BARLEY Of tflt DtllY rit« Steff Fonner Holiday Health Spa manager Charles A. Ccwazz.a today admitted that the sliding glss.1 door of the sauna room in which Maria Parson was trapped three years ago was defectlve before the lncident. Cassazza, caned to the witness stand before Mrs. Parson, 50, had completed her testimony in the Orange C.Ounty Superior Court sauna bath trial, also admitted that be found the 200-pound door oil lt.s tracks after the hysterical woman had been rushed to a local hosplW. Csasazza attrlbufed the stnogth be ha• acquired as a physical fitness espert with the Orange health spa to his being able to replace the heavy door without assistance. f\.1rs. Parson "'ants $1 rnUJioo in damages from the spa for the alleged neglect that led to her entrapment and for the creation of a "three faces of Eve " psychiatric condition on whJch she ~ill resume testimony when Cassazza leaves the witness stand. It is alleged that the trauma created by her entrapment led her to develop separate personalities. She bas stated that one of those personalities, Maria, frequ'2!U y become dominant and ieeks atra marital sexual relatioosblps through men picked up In local ban. CWazza today admltted that both patrOnB and employes had complained about the slicking sauna room door before Mn. Parson was trapped on March 2, 1970. The former manager said the onJy. attempt to repair the door prior to Airs. Parson being trapped was made by two male instructors at the health spa. He al!O confirmed Mrs. Parson's testimony that the handle of the door broke off in her hand as she tried to force the heavy door open. ltfrs. Parson testified that s h e collapsed In the !71)<1egree beat after she was unable to open the door and the handle lll8pped off In ber band. Sbe and other patrons have testified that health spa employes were never within shouting distance on a u c h oocasims and that many oomp!alnt.s had been filed In the lllOlltbs prior to her ordeal. From Pagel HOUSING ... cooperation with the Orange C.Otmty Housing Authority. "I'm not suggesting that w e compromise and allow developments that would detract from the overall quality of life," Parker said. "But at the very least, we should adopt a policy to encourage as much of a range of housing opportunities as possible." Commissioners will recomlder the housing element Thursday night when they receive a written report from Parker detailing changes be feels ought to be made in it. From Pagel COUNCIL •.. that damaged !ileguard beadquarten and the beach last week. -Act on a recommefldatlon to support the expansion of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Plant. -Consider extension of the multi- family building moratorium on the Balboa Peninsula. City Attorney O'Neil said be wU! need 8! much a.~ $3,500 to hire a Los Angeles attorney t o study all the I e g a I ramifications of the prop>eal by the Lido Isle Community Al!ociaUon to extend !ts beacb lease another $25 years. He want.s another 115,000 for legal assistance for the city's ongoing lltlgaUon over Orange County Airport. I SEEKS RE-ELECTION Dl1trlct One'• Rogen • SUBSTITUTES FOR ,HUSBAND District One Ch1llen'ger Forgit Bidding Postponed · Costa Mesa Mayor Plans Appeal 011 CdM Freeway Mayor Jack Hammett of C.Osta Mesa said today he will ask G o v e r n o r Reagan to intercede if the fuel crisis- threatened Corona de! Mar Freeway is not reinstated as a top construction priority this week. Bidding on the first unit of Rou le 73 linking the l'Ommunities of Costa Mesa, Newport Beach and ·Irvine has been postponed by the state Department of Transportation because of a drop in gas tax revenue a_s a result of reduced gasoline sales. Hammett. ,\·ho headed a delegation of Costa ?.1esa officials protesting the postponement in Sacramento, said he is hopeful that state Transportation Director Howard Ullrich will be able to salvage the freeway. "But if there ls no progress, l am going IQ pull out all the stops and ask for an audience with the governor," Hammett said. He aa1d the Corona de! Mar Freeway Is not only crucial to solving Costa Mesa's surface street traffic problems but !allure to complete it could create a domino effect that would 1<111 tbe Newport Freeway extension and eoata J\fesa's downtown redevelopment plans. Mayor Donald M.clnnis of Newport Beach-shared Hammett's c o n c e r n , adding that it would be "a real shame" if the first freeway unit were delayed · The unit, from Jamboree Road to Bonita. Canyon Road, would help significantly In easing airport and !JC Irvine tnimc, he said. Irvine Mayor John B u r t o n , however, was of the opinion that the delay would not have a serious impact because Fro111 P .. e l RELEASED. •• Popeil's lawyer, samuel A. Rinella , called the estranged wife an adulteress and a 0 willful, vicious woman." the actual routing had not' yet been determined and had been widP.1· negotia· atioo with Newport Beach. Costa Mesa's concern is with the $12.8 million section conn ecting the Newport Freeway with the San Diego Freeway, a project which local oJficlals belleved was in the budget and ready to gO. But Hammett learned Thursday that the section had never been included in the states 1974-75 construction budget. budget. "It is Inconceivable to me t hB t a budget item like that has been left out and nobody seems to know about it. including the Hig hway Commissio n," Hammett said. Hammett, who along with Councilman Alvin Pinkley and Vice f\.fayor Willard Jordan talked to Ullrich, said the trans- portation chief appeared embarrassed about the m!sslng budget entry and agreed to research the problem by Mon- day. State officials made the decision to call off bidding on the first phasa of the Corona de1 Mar Freeway on Monday, following a new policy whJch calls for the com'pletion of gaps in existing freeways before coMtruction of new freeways is contemplated. The policy was formed to create the Jongest usable portions of freeways and not to start new projects for which there may be insufficient funds . The Department of Transportation fortcast a Sil l million shortage in its budget for the fiS(::al year ending June 30. The total budget is $980 million. Blamed for the short fall are the new SO.mile-per-hour speed limit , h I g be r prices for gasoline and the redu ced availability of fuel. If the Corona del Mar Freeway is not built -as 1ocal officials are beginning to fear-Costa Mesa will lose nearly $500,000 in investments m a d e contingent on the freeway! Pinkley pre- dicted. This includes money spent on the Bear Street in~rchange and on the planning of doWntown redevelopment for C.OSta r.1esa. Hammett believes that fai lure to construct the Corona del Mar Freeway will spell the doom for continuation of the Newport F r e e w a y and the redevelopment plan, which is contingent on the Newport Freeway. WANTS KYMLA'S OLD SEAT District ThrM's McKerren From Pagel BARRET1' ... announced he \\'ill seek re-election in District I. representing Balboa Peninsula and Lido Isle. A1rs. Al Forgit has announced she will challenge Rogers. Councilman Milan Dostal h a s announced his intention to run again in District 4, representing Westcliff, Dover Shores, Unda Isle, and Beacon Bay. He bas no opposition yet. COoncilmaD R!cbard D. croo! says he wiD DOI nm agaln In District 6, ~Big Canyon, Irvine Temce, and parts ol Balboa Isl and and old Cor· ona del Mar. Planning . Commls.sion Cb a I r m a n V.'illlam Agee so far is the only announced candidate for his seat. Barrttt, a Newport Beach resident since 1939, said his prtvious experience as an engineering contractor will aid his service to the city as a councilman. On .the airport issue. Barrett said county supervisors should be called upon to make an immediate declaration of their intentiom to build a new jetport . · "That is what's needed to get the wort started," Barrett said. Newport Oass Openings Listed, City officials said today there are still optp.ings in all Classes ln the Newport Beach winter r e c r e a t i o n program. Unrilled protlJ'ams Include tennis. snow skiing, and e e r a m I c s, all three of which normally fill up quickl y, officials said. .slow registratiOns were blamed on the rainy weather la st wee'li:, according to Cal Stewart, director of I h e Department of Parks, ~aches, and Recreation. Signups will continue every weekday afternoon through Jan. 18 at the recre- atim office, 1714 W. Balboa Boulevard. From Pagel AIRPORT •.. issuing a declaration jointly with Airport Di rector Robert Bresnahan that If the waiver isn't granted, the airport likely will have to close down. That bearing will take pla,ce Feb. 19, 20 and 21 in Santa Ana. 0.11'(,ltetlfl",.... AFTER CROUL'S OLD SEAT Coron• do! Mor'1 Allff Egypt Rejects Kissinger Pla1i For Withdraival By United Press lnternatiooal Egypt today rejected the troops disengagement plan worked out by Secretary of Slate Henry A. Kissinger, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni said in Aswan. He said Egypt was demanding that it be redrafted Into an "Egyptian plan." The Israeli plan Dr. Kissinger brought ~ith him was "not saUsfactory," FahmJ· told a news conference near the end · of a day of negotiations involving Kissinger and Egyptian leaders including President Anwar Sadat. Fahrni said Kissinger "'as returning to Israel tonight "with an Eg)'Ptian plan and an Egyptian map ? n disengagement with Israel" along tho Suez Canal. Kissinger told newsmen earlier after a working lWlcheon with Fahrni that · his attempt to conclude an Israeli· Egyptian agreement "ls the toughest negotiation I've ever been In." De!plte Kissinger's statement, American 80Urce5 said a major announcement could be upected Tuesday. Kissinger bad flown to Aswan with what basically was a plan worked (Out by Israel calling for Israeli withdraldl M to about 20 mi les from the canal and a thinninJ out of Egyptian anned forces in the Sinai •Desert on the Israel side of the canal. Work had gone so far on· the plan· lht : both Kissing er and Fahrni said" experts "'ere using maps to pinpoint the exact ~·ithdrawal plans. An American s pokesman said ar/ in~rim announcement "'as expected late today • with the major announcement Tuesday. .. The Egyptian demand for a revision~ of Kisslnger's~proposal forced Kissinger 1 to delay his scheduled return to Israel 1 for more than four hours. · American officials said he expected ; lo leave this afternoon to place the revised project before the Israelis. In an indication of what caused the , Egyptian objections to Kissinger 's plan, Fahrni said any disengage me nt agreement "should be s u f f I c i e n t I y detailed that there can be no hangups. "Everythin g must be in clearcut lan~uag~ so t~t there wil l be nothing agam like Point B (of the cease-fire consolid ation egreement Egypt and Israel signed Nov. I t)," Fahrni said. In opposing the motion to terminate the separate main~nance payments, Mrs. Popeil's lawyer, Charles Stein, charged that Popeil ''has attempted to use every technique to starve his wife and children into submission ln this case," accordin g to the AP story. He sakl that if the monthly payments were cut off Mrs. PopeU would be without lunds to defend herself In liUgaUoo. Nobody SeHs Amana for less than 'Dtllt(a,(> Where do wu want the .._zer In your new Am•n•. refrigerator ... AP reported that In commenting to newsmen after the bearing, Popell said, "My wife bas two sides to her-a good side and a rough side." ·1:; . . . ~~ J ;. ~.),·i~, ... . ~ County Superior Court Clerk to Run for Sheriff WE TAKE LOW PRICES ARE BORN By WILUAM SCHREIBER Of TIM oeey ""' St.rr Orange C<>unty Superior Court Clerk Mar.!hall Norris, soundly defeated the last Ume be ran for sbertlf, aald today he will try again tbls year on a p!at!onn or sweeping orpn!UUonal cbaniea In the deportment. Norris. 47, ol BIMlll Park, lllllOWlC!td his candidacy at a press conference In Santa Ana. He ls the second announced candidate to succeed retiring Sheriff James Musick. Also seeking the Job !1 Bradley Gates, a young deJ'ltrtmenl lieutenanL Another possible candidate for the job -Ci'Prcss Pollce Chief G e o r g e S.vonl-ls waiting In tbe wln11 but bi>an'l lonnally lUUlOllllced. Norris said Savonl would be the hanlesl man to bea~ . Non1s WU beaton Ill June of IP'/ll by lhfll'll1cumbeot Mua!clt by a· total of. oearl, 150,000 votes. • ·This Ume he aaid be ii nmtllDc Oil s six-point platform calling for a major overhaul ln the county jail, a program of coordinated city county Jaw enforcement and reorganization of the sheriff's department. But the former sbertfrs lieutenant said hll major plank will be an attack oo Jbe dependence of county peace olflcen oo !aderal fUnd&--a pract!ce be said resul18 In poor admln!stratloo. "There ls something basically wrong with accepting federal runc11 and I am opposed to linking the I e d e r s I govemmeol to local sheriff's offices because they. must then do the g<>'IUM\tnl'S bidding," Norris said. He said a lot or the mo ney now being used to subsidize s h e r J f f ' s department programs Is going lo waste and most needed expenditures could be absorbed by \I/hat he termed "proper admlnl.stratlon." Norri• claimed the O(llce of 1herill ls now virtually wu-esponslve to the publlc. He aald lt.lw-'.'.been ~Ive ooly to a a.iect I ew." Norrli said he will avoid tO!n1 contributions from what be called "bll money" contrtbulora becaule be aald he ls "frankly my ocared of them:" I TRADE •' ' HERE RAISED ELSEWHERE on the side? on th9 bottom? on the !2P.1 Aman11. gives you a choice 90 DA Y·S CASH WITH APPROVED ClllDtT 1115 NlWPORT Bl VD~ Downtawn Costa Mesa -PllOne 548-7788 I I • • • " • , .. .• .., • ! I I . -, -- I i VpL:. "67, NO. 14, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES --0-~l'IGE COUNTY, CALIFO NIA MONDAY, ~ANUARY 14, 1974 To)l8y's Fl~al N.'1. Stocks c TEN CENTS Mesa Mayor Seeks CdM Route Reinstatement ---____ _, Mayor Jack Hammett of Costa P.fesa said today he will a.st G o v e r n o r ~agan to intercede if the fuel criJjs.. \}ireatened Coro,na del Mar Freeway is not reinstated as a top construction priority_ thi s week. Bidding on the first unit or Route 7l linking the communiUes of Costa ltfeaa, Newport Beach and Irvine bas been postponed by the state Department of Transportation because of a drop in gas ~x revenue as a result oI reduced - gasoline sales. Hammett, who headed a delegation of Costa Mesa ofiicials protesting the p()Stpooement In Sacramento, said be is hopeful that 11Ate Transportation Director Howard Ullrich will be able to salvage t¥ freeway. "But if tnere is no progress, I am going tQ pull out all the a tops. and ask for an audience \'.'Ith the governor," Hammett said. He said the Corona del Mar Freeway is not only crucial to solving Costa Mesa's surfate street traUlc problems but failure to complete it could create a domino effect that would kill the Newport Freeway extension and CoalA Mesa's downtown redevelopment plans. Mayor Donald Mcinnis of Newport Beach shared Hammett's concern, adding that it would be "a real shame" if the first freeway unit were delayed The unit, from Jamboree Road to Bonita Canyon RoadJ would help significantly in easing airport and UC Irvine traffic, he said. Irvine Mayor John B u r t o n , however, "\vas of the opinion that the delay would not have a serious impact because the actual routing had not yet been detennined and had been under negolia- aUon wij.b Newport Beach. Costa Mesa's concern is with the $12.8 million section connecting the Newport Freeway with the San Diego Freeway, a project which local oJficials believed was in the budget and ready to go. But Hammett learned Thu rsday that the section had never been included in the states 1974-75 construction budget. budget. "It is inconceivable to me that a budget item like that ·has been left out and nobody seems to know about it. including the Highway Commission," Hammelt said. Hammett, \\•ho along \\•ith Councilman Alvin Pinkley and Vice rvlayor Willard Jordan talked to Ullri ch. said lh,e trans- portation chief appeared embarrassed about the missing budget entry and agreed to research the problem by Mon· day. State officials made the decision to call off bidding on the first phase or the Corona de! Mar Freeway on Mond ay. f?llo"•ing a new policy which calls for the completion of gaps in existing frce"•ays befo re construction or (See ROUTE, Page 2) .I ' udges Disbarment of Agnew .\ Urge Merchants To Appeal Sign Law Businessmen, represented by the chamber of commerce, will ask for a aoltenlng ol the COsta Mesa sign onllnance u public hearings on the cwtt0tas11.l sign reform law begin before the Costa Mesa P l e n n i n g Oommla!oo toolgbl Tonight's aesstoo is IClleduled to begin at 1::111 p.m. In city oocmcil chambers el the Colla Mesa Civic Center, 77 Fair Drive. 'Ille most significant change requested by the bosU-leaden ii an iacnale of one-half square root of signint! per lineal foot ol frontqo for • total ., ~1.5 aquare_ feet per running foot -of lroo1A1e. Businessmen earlier requested three aquare feet but during negoUatlng sessions with ·planning commissioners trimmed their request. Other requests deal with an extension d. the amortizj.ng p e r i o d of non· confonning signs, elimination of setback restrlctkm, and a fonnula which woold bave computed sign heighi, letter size and sign .,... by taking into account the speed limit and the number of ~ In the frootAge road. 'Ille business leaders bave shown no objection to a ban on ll>alled "gittno ,qns" .md the mu:imum 300 square loot lign limit proposed in the new Ordinance. The recommendallons lo be made by the bu31ness community, however, differ sharply from a recommendation made last year by the Sign Ordinance Study Committee appointe<i. by Mayor Jack Hammett to revise the draft version II the ordinance. •.That panel, on a 9-6 vote , .-nmendecl to the city council and · planning commission that the draft be a~ llllCbanged. Also recommended wu a ban oo blllboards, which the lign ordinance do not regulate. t-Propooents cf stricter !ign control, JUCh as ouUlned in the draft ordinance, alao will make a preoentatlon tonighl • The presenlAtion will be made by Mrs. Maureen Di Domenico of Save OUr Sign Ordinance, ' Un ion Leacl ers l\lee t . LONDON (UPI) -Prime Minisler Edward Heath and leaders of the 10. million·strong Trades Union Congress met today for what government officials said was a last-ditch bid to end Britain's . Industrial crlsla. lf it failed, they said, Heath may decide this week to dissolve Parliament and appeal for a new mandate In a spectal parliamenlAry ·general election In February. ITALIAN ACCENT ON CLASSIFIED Here's a 1UCCeSS story told In an Italian accent: Italian make. Like new, FOLDING Bleytle, 3 1pd, Best o!fer, (Phone No.) , The bike was made .i9 llaly; but the results were strictly fn>m the ltomelJ'Own Diiiy Pilot. The ,bike was aold the ll<C.'Olld day the ad appeared. lt you want lo try for a ne~ record for oalllna a bite • • • or' ebe, try the direct Uno to nllllta. -- • l •. ( UPI T......_ DISIARMINT ASKED _ -Former VP Agnew Officer Injured In Irvine Brawl; Pair Arrested A parking lot ligbt at the Red Onioo restaurant in Irvine early Sunday ended with an alleged assault on a Co&ta Mesa police officer and the jailing of two men. . Officer Paui Louis Jessup said he was hit front behind and kept in a stranglehold as be arrived to break up the fight about 2 a.m. Jessup reached for his club and clouted bis alleged attacker over the head. He said it was the only avallable target. Bleeding from a gash In his head, Viet« P, Mendez, 3871 Hendrix Ave., Irvine, was taken to Costa Mesa Memorial for stitches and then trans- ferred to Orange Conuty Jail. l\lendez Is being held a $2,500 ball on charges of battery on a P>lice officer , and disturbing the peace. Also arrested ·at the time of the fr acas at the restaurant on 18512 MacArthur Blvd. was LeRoy Burks, 32, of 4237 E. Fairview St., Orange. Burks, who waa aald to have been beating a nian in the parking lot when the officer arrived, was taken into custody on charges of assault and latter)'," dlJturlllnl the peace, and re- sisting arrest. He ls held on $500 ball at ()range Comity jail. Panel Calls Former VP 'Deceitful' ANNAPOLIS, Md (AP) -A special three-judge panel recommended today that Conner Vice President Spiro T. Agnew be disbarred from the practice of law in Maryland. The three Circuit Court judges said that Agnew's evasion of income tax, ackDowltdged ln a no-contest plea, was "deceitful and dlsbooest" and "strikes at the heart of the basic object of the legal profesaim ••. " "We shall therefore recommend hi.s dlsbannenL We see no extenuating circumstances a11owing a 1 e s s e r sanction/' a 14-pa'ge recommendation said. "J,Jr •• ~ Jlill~ J>e ~ a statement at tpIS part!Cular µme," said Ann Breen,-a re<:eptlonilt at Agnew's office In Wubin(too. Tllo reooilimelldatlon · 1oes lo the Maryland Court at Appeals, which makes the final decision on whether to bar Agnew from the practice of Jaw. The Court of Appeals can either accept the disbarment recommeodaton, reduce the penalty to suspension or reprimaiid Agnew. Disciplinary actions w~ filed by the state bar asaociation last November after Agnew pleaded no contest lo a federal tax charge and resigned from the vice pcesideocy. 'Ille bar assoclatioo asked the three judges to disbar Agnew. Tllo former vice president, however, asked the panel to merely suspml him from practicing law, arguing that his misconduct was not connected with duties as a lawyer. Agnew told the Judges that he had at no time enriched himself at the expense of his public trust and that there wu nothing to indicate that he would not faithfully and h6nestly represent clients as a lawyer. But Clreuit Court Judges Shirley B . Jones, Ridgely P. Melvin Jr. and (See AGNEW, Page Z) Doncild Ni xon Crue Detailed United Pre5.1 International today expiom In delail the possibility f o r m e r -associates of Howard Hughes paid "substantial" sums to President·Nixon's brother, Donald, in a mining venture. The report also discusses the relationship between Jlo!l!ld Nix· on, of Newport Beach, and a Hughes mining associate, John Meier. Donald Nixon coold not be reached for comment on the alle- gations. See the report, Page S. V.S. ~l Facing Co11rt UPI TtlfPfttlo A policewoman holds the hand of Allison Thomp- son, an 18-year-old Santa1Barbara girl, as she and two plainclothes officers guide her into the Ux~ bridge Courthouse in London for a formal court ap· pearance on .charges of conspiracy to possess weapons illegally. She was ordered held in custody fo r another week. Trial for 'Mercy IGlfuig' Under Way ht New York MINEOLA, N.Y. (AP) -"Willful murder" is the charge against Dr. Vincent A. Montemarano in the alleged mercy killing of a cancer patient. Montemarano went on trial today in Nassa u County Court. The 33-year-old physician was chief resident surgeon at NaMau Cotmty Medical Center when he allegedly injected a fatal dose of potassium dtloride into the patient, Eugene Bauer, 59. At the time of his death Dec. 7, 1972, Bauer was suffering fi-om neck and throat cancer, heart disease and pneumonia. He was in a coma and had been given less than 48 hours to live. ~1ontemarano signed a certificate • Crash Victims F ound JACKPOT, Nev. (UPI) -Searchers using snowmobiles Sunday reached the bodies of two Ulah couples whose aiTptane crashed on 8,00B-foot catlyer Peak on a trip from Jackpot to their home at Kaysvllle. citing cancer as tli~ cause of Bauer's death. After an investigation by the Nassau County district attorney's office, he was ~icted for murder June Tl. He pleaded innocent to the charge and bas been free on $25,000 bail. "The motive appears to have been a mercy killing," Dist. Atty. William Cahn said in annotmcing the indictment. "The evidence indicates the on1y reason was euthanasia." The body of Bauer, a retired Long Island Rail Road worker from Hicksville, was exhwned but an autopsy failed to sho.»' any trace of potassium chloride. Ho..rever. Cahn said he had evidence, including testimony from a nurse wbo had been present, about the alleged fatal injection at the medical complex in East Meadow. Bauer's widow , Rose. said she knew or no request for a mercy killing and said she would never have agreed to it. The trial reported.Jy is the first such case involving a physician since 1949, when Dr. Hennan Sand.er of Manches- ter, N.H., was accused cl. killing a woman cancer patient. College District Merger Studiecl The possibility of bringing the Garden Grove Unified School Dlstri<;t into the Coast Comm Wlity CoOege District will be discussed by colle~e officials during a special m~eting tonight. Worth Keene, president of the college district's governing board. has called the special meetinb for 7:30 p.m. in district headquarters, 1370 Adal'll'5"" Ave., Costa Mesa. Garden Grove school authorities last year proposed the merger and at the same time declared themselves willing to finance the canstruction of a third general ca mpus somewhere in the Garden Groves area. Man, 56, Bludgeonecl BAKERSFIELD (UP[) -Merchant Richard Hareld , 56, of Bakersfield, was found dead Sunday afte r he was apparently struck over the head during a robbery. Orange (;oast We athe r Glue Sniff Caused Atta~k? Some high c)ouds at times, other- wise sumy through Wednesday, · according to the ~·eather service with inland higb.'I in the low ]Os and beach temperatures of 65. Lows tonight in the SOs. A IS.year-old C..IA MPp youth Who at 350 Avocado St. The knife had been claims he was overcome by glue· be given to Mills .by the youth as a present used to bulk! a model car today faces a week ago. an assault charge st.cJT.ming from an 'Ibe boy told police he had been alleged kni(e allack on an acquaintance working on the model when the fwnes Sunday. fn>m the glue rose and he became 11te yottth booked into Orange County overcome by the desire to snlfl pod Juvenile Halt after the alleged knifing "let blah." tater he .... overcome at the apartment of -Kevin Mills, told by an equally imrerful. t1rge to make olllcm he had , tltftl" had an urge to a ~ call ~. not bovtnt<a phone amell llue helare at.I.fiat ~ rt111<111lieij .,... 0:1 •llliiM, NI 1o· llllD1' aportmtnt to noildnc about the a11op1· at111ck. malE Ille can. • MU!s, It, ltllfered I gllb In bla lw\d A~-~ J1i11 F. Carden, 1 -he IQrprlsod the youlh as lie 11ao ol • A ...... Sl, aid he oboorved -t••""lf>f..-ta.bll apor1menl the JOQ!h oaislde Milb' flit looltlnf .-. , susp1c1ous as he fumbled through bis pockets looking !or a key. Just then ~1ills drove up and was informed by the manager that a stranger was Inside the apartmenL ~tills jumped inside and said he was immediately collared by the youth who at the same time placed the five-and-one-half inch blade against ~is throat. . · Mills told ~fic;ers he klckod the youth In !he groin, whereupon the· youth l\Jtlged at his abdomen with the knUe, missing hli target but striking Mills' hand. ¥ the youth bolted through the lront • . door he made another ltmge at Carden who was standing outside, according to police reports. Csrden told Investigators the boy appeared "mad, dangerous and wild" and would have inflicted a serious wound If he had not jumped aside at the last moment. Police arrested the boy at his home and said they were willingly shown the knife and the car model, along with three tubes of glue. • They said the bof claimed not to remember 11;lng the knife to th,...len, or lnlllcting ~ann on anyooe, INSIDE TODAY An AEC official claims the Chance of a 11uclear power plant accident U 'one clta11ce in a billion.' See ator11 Page 4. INllM " L, M. lord 1 C1Uloml1 I Clffllll.. ft.M CM!kt lS Crtttwtff 11 Dtl,11, "'llCH .• I. Edl?Wtal P•M '""rt•l""ltl'I 11 ~ , .. " ... ,...,. 1• ............... 14 ' ' ,., l - HEADS HARBOR COURT Jud~ Don1ld Dung1n Don Dungan '\ Presiding Judge for '74 Judge llooald Dungan has been electro Presiding judge of the Harbor Judicial District O>urt. Judge Dungan, S7, succeeds Judge Selim S. "Bud" Franklin as administr...- tive bead of the four-division municipal coort. Judge Dungan was appointed to the bench in 1966 by Gov. Edmund G. Brown. He had already served Costa Mesa In capacities which won him honors. ~udge Dungan was a member of the city's incorporation commlttee in 1953 and was immediately named city attorney when cityhood was approved by voters.' He served for 12 years and tor 11 years was a member of the old Newport Harbor Union High School District Board o!~ Judge Dungan'• colleagues !or the current year and tbelr assignments Include: ---1udge Robert C. Todd, Division Two, where most criminal cases are hand1ed alter being assigned from Judge Dungan's Division One. ---1udge Selim Franklin, Division nu-ee, which hancµJes small claims and other ciyU matters. . ---1udge Calvin P. SChmldl, Division Four, wberet.rafric citations are handled. From PC19e 1 ROUTE ..• new freeways is contemplated. The policy was formed to create the longest usable portions of freeways and not to start new projects for which there may be insufficient funds. The Department oJ Transportation forecast a $111 million shortage in its budget for the fiscal year ending June 30. The total budget is $980 million. Blamed for the short fall are the new 55-mile-per-hour speed limit. higher prices for gasoline and the reduced availability of fuel. If the Corona del Mar Freeway is not built -as local officials are beginning to fear-Costa l\1esa will lose nearly $500,000 in investments m a d e contingent on the freeway! Pinkley pre- dicted. This includes money spent on the Bear Street interchange and on the planning of downtown redevelopment for Costa Mesa. Hammett believes that failure to construct the Corona del Mar Freeway will spell the doom for continuation of the Newport F r e e w a y and the redevelopment plan. which is contingent on the Newport Freeway. DAILY PILOT Tl\1 0rt"'9 CO.II OAILY ,ILOT, wlllt whldl h ~omtil• lllt ... ".P,..n1, II publllflell .., 1111 Or•no• Co11t Pllblii.nlng Comi»n'I'. 5fll6- r.i1 •111ot11 •lrl ll'l(lllJi...i, ~'I' 111!'9Vlll l'rld•~. fclr (Gitt Mne, Ntwport 81Kf!, HunlinglOn lt.c:fVFountt ln Vtllty, L..- lffdl, lrvlnt.IS~llbKll. '"" ~" C~hll s•~ JUln Ctp!Urtno. A ,1~111 1'991oMI 11C11tion 11 M iii.ti• &11unte11 '"' 11m111rs. T"9 prftlP&l Pltlll!Jl\lng Pilnl II 11 lJt W .. t 111 $1•111, Cal• MIN, Cllllomll, 9M2'. R•lt1rt N. WeM l"r.ldltl.t .. ,111111111« J1ck It. C11rl1., Vin l"rnid9!\t llW Gffltf•l.MtMtW l hem1t Ke•.nl .... Tli•m•1 A. Mw~i11• M-.lnl Eol!Or Ch11le, H. Leet Rich1NI r. Nill Allilllnl Mtrlfflf!t Etlltor1 JJO W11I 1 • ., Stre•I M1llf11g Addrtni'P.0 .11• 15•0, •2•J• 0.... °""" Htwptrt lffcll1 WJ N.,.,,,.., loullv1N l,.etlllll IMdl; nt l'llf"I A- l Hvflllftt!1111 IHdl; 1,_IS lll<tl lo!Jlt<I•" k'll Clf:rMnlw! JOJ Mo11!1 Iii C..mN ... 1 1 ........ f7141 •42-4Jll Clo ''W Miit111lit.s Ml-1671 C'"'°llflll, ltn, O!'I"* C..M l'llblliltllflt ~. Ht -•WIN, !!lltltra1-. 111111..n.1 inatltlf ., at¥ertlwnti!11 ""'"" _, tit· ,..,,... Wl"*itt ..-111 ,.. ,,... " anr11111 ""*· ..... c!Mt ........... c..i • ...._ ~-tA:ollltllM .. ~ .... ...,....,, "" !Mii ... ,. """""",.., .. """' .r.u••• ~M ,.,....,.., ' . I Sauna Door 'Darling People' ' '• \ . Admittedly Defective Neighbors Raise ~-­ tA•!'~-AAt ca....-- Egypt Nixes Kissinger's Troop Platt ·Mrs. Popeil e ·ail TONIGHI' COSTA M E S A P L A N N I N G COMMISSION -Regular meeting, -rniy Hall, 8:30 p.m. By TOM BARLEY Of fllt Dtll., PUtt Staff Former llollday lltalth Spa 1nanager Charles A. Cassau.a today admitted that the sliding glass door of the saWla room Jn wblch Maria Panon was trapped three years ago wa.s defective before the inei<leot~ Cas.sau.a, called to the witness stand before Mrs. Parson, 50, had completed her teslimony 1n the Orange County SuperiOr Court sauna bath trial, alao admitted that he found the 200-pound door oU Its tracks after the hysterical woman bad been rushed to a local hospital. Cassazza. attributed the strength he hac. acquired as a physical flbl.ess expert with the Orange health spa to his being able to replace the heavy door without assistance. f\.trs. Parson wanls $1 million in damages from the spa for lhe alleged neglect that led to her entrapment and for the creation of a "three faces of Eve" psychiatric condition on which she \\'ill resume testimony when Cas.sazza leaves the witness stand. It is alleged that the trauma created by 'her entrapment led her to develop separate personallUes. She has stated that one of those peraonaliUes, Marta, frequenUy become dominant and seeu extra marital aexuaJ relationships lbrougb men picked up 1n local bars. Qissazza today admlued that both patrons and employes had complained about the sticking sauna room door before Mn. Parson wu trapped on March 2, 1970. ' · The fdnner manager said the only attempt to repair the door prior to Mrs. Parson . being trapped was made by two male instructors at the health spa. He also confirmed Mrs. Parson's testimony that the handle of the door broke off in her · hand as she tried to foroe the heavy door open. Mrs. ParllC>ll tesUlled that s b e collapsed in -!lie 17t)degree heal after she waa unable to open the door and the handle snapped o!f 1n her band. She and other · petrons have testllled that health spa employes were never within shouting distance on s u c b occasions and that many complaint.. bad been filed in the monlbs prior to her onleal Parents' Group See1'ing Recall Of HB Trustees The first official step has been taken in a recall campaign against two HIDltington Beach Union High School District trustees stemming from the "Deep 'IlJroat'' sex movie controv-.rsy. Trustees Dennis P.tangers and Ron Shenkman now have until Friday to .answer charges made against them in the notices of Intent to circuJate recall petitions filed with the Orange CoWlty registrar of voters. l\.1embers of the Citizens for Parents' Rights Committee, led by Doris Anen of WestmJnster, filed the notices Friday. The trustees have one week to rebut -after which time the actual recall notices can be filed. Although there have been threats or a recall campaign for months , this is the first such action. Mrs. Allen said today the. citluns group plans to slart circulatihg peUtlons le. get the necessary 23,000 signatures to set a recall election soon alter the trustees answer the allegations. The 23,000 figure represents 20 percent of the registered voters. Mrs. Allen said the group intends to try to get at least 30,000 signatures In case some are thrown out during validation. By JOANNE REYNOLDS ot ftle DtllY Plltt lt1tf Eloise Popeil, the woman police accuse o( a plot to murdt.. her nlulti·mllllonalre husband, returned to her Harbor Island Road home this weekend, thanks to efforts ol four ol her neighbors. Accordin~-to-Mrs • ...eopell's attorney, Phillip Petty, Mrs. Popell's . neighbors pledged more than $7 million worth of property to guarantee the slim blonde'• 't00,000 bail. Reached tcday at her borne, Mn. Popell said she was very grateful !or her neighbors' generosity which led to her release saturday morning Crom Los Angeles Cowtty Jail. "I am very gratified," she said. 11They are darllng people and It ts particularly reassuring when you realize I haven't lived ber.e too Jong." Petty said the pledges came primarily from residents of Linda Jsle where Mrs. Popeil and her estranged husband, Samuel, owned a summer home. l\1rs. Popcil, 48, spent four days behind bars following her arrest last Tuesday with her boyfriend on suspicion of hiring a Long Beach man to kill Popeit, a Chicago kitchen gadget manufacturer. The boyfriend , Daniel Ayers, 37, an unemployed machinist from Santa Ana, remains in cmtody today, unable to raise the $100,000 bail set Friday in a bearing ID Long Beach. Police allege the pair conspired to klll Popeil so that she could !phertt roughly on~ o! bis '150 mllllon estate before their pending divorce became final. According to investigators, the couple separated this summer and Popeil returned to Chicago to start divorce proceedings while Mrs. Popeil and their two teenage daughters stayed on in Newport Beach. _ The lhree women vacated the Linda Isle home while it was being remodeled and neighbors said work en the house located at the northwest pot1t of the Island, stopped when court action on the divorce started. Since then, Mrs. Popeil and her daughters have lived in rented homes in Irvine Terrace and on Harbor Island Road. Petty alleged today that Popell was . '14,250 b<bind 1n his temporary alimony and child support peymenta ol '4,250 a month. In Cbicago, Popeil went to coort Fri- day in a stormy session to as.i for custody of the two iir1s and an end to financial support for his wile. That bearing was cootlnued to this Friday. Aeconllrig to the AS!Oclated Press, Popell's lawyer, Samuel A. Rinella, · called the estranged wife an adulteress and a "willful, vicious woman." In opposing the motion to terminate 0 the separate maintenance payments, l\frs. Popeil's lawyer, Charles Ste in, charged that Popeil "has attemp!OO to use every tedmique to s~e his wife and children into submission in this case," according to the AP story. He said that if the monthly payments were cut off Mrs. Popeil would be without funds to defend herself in litigatioh. AP reported that in commeming to newsmen after the hearing, Popeil said, "My wife has two sides to her-a good side and a rough side." One of Popeil daughters related last week that the three women all had been :forced to take jobs in an apparent fffort to suppcrt themselves In the bayfront house and maintain the three expt!nsive European cars they used. One of thooe cars, a Rolls Royce, was impounded by police as evidence 1n the case. Long Beach detectives wbo arrested Mrs. Popeil and Ayers allege that they gave $400 cash and $60,000 w o r t b of diamond jewelry to an acquaintance of Ayers to itill Popeil County Superior Court Clerk to Run for Sheriff By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of flte Defl't '""" ..... Orange O>IDllY Superior Court Cler!< Marshall Nonis, aoundly delea!OO the last time he ran !or sheriff, said today he will lry again this year on a platform of sweeping organizational changes in the deperlmenl overhaul in the county jail , a program of coo rd ip ate d city l'Ol.IIlty la• enforcement and reorganizaUon of the sheriff's department. But the former sherl!f's lieutenant said bis major plank will be an attack on the dependence of county peace officers oo federal funds-a pracUce be said results ID poor admlnl-Uoa. "There Is aomethlng baalcally """'g with accepting federal !undo and I am opposed to llnklng the I e d e r a I government to local sheriff's offices becallle they must then do the government's bidding," Norris 1ald. By United Prn1 latern1Uoo1I OCC ART EXHIBIT -Mixed media exhibit .. of OCC Arl instructors, Jan. -14 . Feb. 8. Opening night reception tonight, 8:30-9 p.m. Egyp~ today rejected lhc troops disengagement plan worked out by secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, Egyptlan Foreign Minister Ismail Fahrni said in Aswan. He sald Egypt was , demanding that II be redrafted lnlo . A LITTLE HELP FROM FRIENDS Mrs. Eloise Popeil ------- Newport Seeking Airport Gro11p Budget Increase By L. PETER KREIG Of Illa OaUY PHol 51•11 Newport Beach stepped up its legal battle against Orange County Airport today by serving Orange C o u n t y Supervisors with a writ of mandamus in an attempt to force them to beef up the budget of the Airport Land Use Commission. City Attorney DeMis O'Neil said ~e writ was served in the rounty clerk-s office and he will file it in Orange County Superior Co.urt Tuesday or Wednesday asking for a show cause hearing. _ O'Neil said Newport Beach was taking the action "on behaU of Mayor Dona1d A. l\.iclnnes , who is chainnan of the land use panel created in 1971. . O'Neil recited 'repeated frustraUons that Mcinnis has complained about during the past 18 months .. He pointed out that Newport . Be~ch succeeded. in getting state leg1'1ahon passed that forced the county supervisors to fund the panel, but so far it has been getting only $500 a year. '"Ibey asked for $62,000," O'Neil said. "The mayor feels this is an affront to the oommlsslon. It is still required to do all the land use planning yet it doesn't have enough money to pay its postage," O'Neil said. He said the show cau.se bearing hopefully .. ·111 force the supervisors to · reconsider the panel's current budget "We are asking for a public hearing to reconsider the budget and a statement of reasons and findings for the current $500 appropriation," O'Neil said. 1He pointed out that the commission is supposed to be preparing a comprehensive land use plan for the airport. UC! LECTURE -"Mobile Home Parks : Past, Present and Future," Rm. ' 178 Humanities Hall, 7-10 p.m. Adm. '6.50 1UESDAY, .JAN. 11 DANJSH GYMNA5l'S -OCC 12 llQOn, Adm. '!. Gym, SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -O>m- munity Recreation Center, 11 a.m.· 3 p.m. ' NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular meeting, City C o u n c i I Chambers, 7:30 p.m. UC! LECTURES -"Happiness in Creative Awareness," Rm. 51 0 University High School, 4771 Campus Dr., Irvine, 7-10 p.n1. "Professional Practices in llousing Industry," Rm. 161 Humanities Hall. 7-9:30 p . m . "Scientific Medicine for the Layman: Cancer,'' Freshman Lecture Hall, l\ied. Surge I Bldg., 7-10 p.m. Front PC19e 1 AGNEW ..• Wllliam H. McOlllough said Agnew'a conduct .... bannful to the proper admlnlstraUon of jusUoe. "In our opinion, the p r ope r admlnlstratlon o! jusUee, lbe proper respect of the coort !or Itself and a proper regard !or the integrity o! the profession compel us to conclude that the respondent is unfit to continue as a member of the bar of this state," the recommendation said. - The three judges said t h e I r recommendation wis based solely on Agnew's no-conrest plea to · the tu charge. 11ley said they did not take into consideration any of the allegations made by the Justice Department in Agnew's U.S. Dislrlel (iqurt •-Oct. 10. In a 40-page statement of evidence, federal pnJRCUtors alleged tho! Agnew was involved In a system ol kickbacks to Maryland pollUctans from ar<bltecta and engineen doing DOl>bld aovemment business. Although Agnew bas mt practle<d law In Maryland since being elected to public omee, It ls the only 1tate where he was a member of the bar. He appealed to the judges at the bearing Jut n1onth not to deprive him of his means of earning a living by recommending disbannent. an 11Egyptlan plan.'' . The Israeli plan Or. Kissinger brought - with him was "not satisfactory,~· Fabml told a news conference near· the end o! a day of negottaUons Involving Kissinger and Egyptian leaders Including • Pmtdent Anwar sadat. Fabml said Kissinger was returning to hrael tonight "with an EgypUan - plan and an Egyptian map ., n . · di~ngagement with Israel" along the Suez C~I. Kissinger told new9men earUer after a y,·orklng luncheon with Fahmt that his attempt to conclude an Israeli· Egyptian agreement ''Is 'the toughest negotiation I've ever been In." Despite Kissinger's statement, American sources said a major annoWlcement could be expected Tuesday. Kissinger had nov.11 to Aswan with what basically was a plan worked out by Israel calling for Israeli withdrawal to about 20 miles from the canal and a thinning out of Egyptian anned forces in the Sinai Desert on the Israel side of the canal. Work bad gone so far on the plan th&. bolb Klsslnger and F1bml said experts were using maps to plnpolnt the exact withdrawal plans. An American • spokesman said an interim . announcement was expected late today with the major annoWlcement Tueaday. The Egyptian demand for a revision of Kissinger's proposal forced Kissinger · to delay his scheduled return to Israel for more than four hours. ' ' American officials said he expected to leave this afternoon to place the revised project before the Israelis. In an indication of what caused the Egyptian objections: to Kissinger's plan, Fabmi said any disengagement agreement "should be s u f f i c l e n t 1 y detailed that there can be no hangupa. "Everything must be in c I ear cut language so that there will be notblng again like Point B (ol the eeeae-firo COD90lidation agreement Egypt and Israel signed Nov. It)," Fahrni said. Point B of the November agreement called m Egyptian and Israeli military representatives to negotiate a return to line• held when the first U.N.-ordered cease-ftre went into effect Oct. 22. Cable TV Pomo Filmer Arrested No I.inks Found P1rrsBURGH !UPI) -Glen Kucero, 21, of suburban North Versailles township Yet m• Slaying' . S waa held !or c o u r 1 oo a charge ol showing obsci!ne !Urns oa a cable television hookup. FRESNO (AP) -Sber!H's o!ficm Kucera allegedly showed the stag said today they have not eStablisbed movies early Dec. 26. Several persons any coMection between the slayings of complained and Kucera was arreated. two men whose bodies were found less He was later fired from h1I job with th.an four miles apart south of here. Valley cable Television. The body of David William Frances, Defense attorney Daniel Berger argued 21, a Lemoore Naval Air Station aJrman at a hearing before magistrate George from Detroit, Micb., was found along BObich that police confiscated the films California 41 Saturday. The roroner's without a warrant and obtained a office said a blow to the head hsd confession before Kucera was advised broken France!' neck. Sheriff 's Capt. of his rights. Berger also claimed hia: William Saum said Frances had been client was drunk and the films were dumped from a moving car. seen only by adults. ---·--·---...... ' ............ " .................. '' .................. ········ .................... ' ........... .. Nobody Sells Amana for less than ~ Where do YQU want the freezer in your new if.m11n11. refrigerator ... on the side? on the b0ttom7 on the NP.1 Am11n1L ~you a choice Norris, 47, of Buena Part, announced his candidacy at a press conference in Santa Ana. He is the second announced candidate to !Ucceed retiring Sherill James Musick. Also seeking the job Is Bradley Gates, a youn1 department lieutenant. He said a lot of the money now being used to subsidize 1 h e r II I ' • department programs IJ going to waste and most needed expenditu~ could be absorbed by what he termed ''proper administration.'' "' Another pooslble candidate !or the job -Cypress Police Chief G e o r g e Sa vord-is we.JUng In the wings tiut hllSll't !ormelly aMOunced. Norria said Savord would be the hardest man ti> beat. , Norris was beaten In June o! ll'IO tiji then-lllcumbent Musick ·by a total of neartf'l50,000 vot ... This time be lald he ls runnln& en a llilc-polnt platform calling for 1 major • , • Norris claimed the olfice o! sheriff Is now virtually .unresponsive to the public. He said it has "been mponslvo only to a oelect few~ -llo1TIJ lald ho will avoid IOlng contributions Crom what he called "big money" contrlbulon because be aald he Is "frankly very scared or them." • L 90DAYSCASH WITH APPllOVID • CRIDIT 1115 llEWPORT BlYD., • • oewnmm Costa Mesa -P11ane 541-7718 • ' . '