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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-02-28 - Orange Coast PilotI I ' I ' l • I 1 j • ' • :. • • • • - ., • • -.... • r1en - • a1n Fu1nigaiprs Fell A1111rak·~h,ar1ered . . -. . -Age~ •e.sidents Bus Bit hy Train; ' . -. 01· fJie111eDte In·n 3 Persons Killed .AY' AFTERNOON, FEBRU;6.RY 28, 1974- v0t.. ''· NO, st, j SICTIONS, st P'AGAS .·. Fume-filled . -. --. . THE LAST TO LEAVE -and l\laude Courage,-lett,..look mo"-._lhan 1 a little coaxing out of her fume-filled room at old san Clemente ·Hotel-i.Vednesday night when fumigator's ~as seeped into landmark· Inn. With Mrs. Courage is patrolman Mike Currell, center, who r~romlsed to take special Rare of Maude's cat, "Bumper," in wicker : ~age. Fire Marshal Don Hodgson , (right), lends assurance to reluc- ' tant hotel tenant. Clemente hm Residents . .. . ---·----------~--- ~iricken ·by Fum~4tors By.JOHN VALTllRZA ., ' Of 11iM1 DallY Plt.t Stiff :,& · fumigation project that .. mellow ~t awry sent a 'powerful insecticide l8ed with tear gas through all· thrte )CoielJ of the Sin Clemente Hotel Wedoes-dif night and dozens of elderly residents de evacuated. • .,. and w.,.,m~ took four~ldenta ol;ttie botet to san Clemente General <:out Hospital for emergency trealmeol for nausea and irritation caused primarily from.the •tear gas. Firellll'll said the gas is lnteotiooally ble~ with . the · lnsectldde .methyl , bromide, betause the ,bug-killer has no· smell of its own. The evacuation, orderly and without -·aity tpanic-, 1beian• '8bort1y .,after1 ·p.m, and police brought aboot 30 mldenta out In pairs and shuttled them to two JocaI motels which o!lered them lodging for the olgbt. • . r .•• , l'ire,•ftl~"!llm ,~·. wbo ; .. • ' ·~ Uie .......... _.. eldirl)r . ~. ·-~~-.. · "the:~! 'was ·-·-• SU ,>to ln';'Ol'f',~l"' Ibo-. ftetldlel'' •:-[.. ' i bulldllig ii*11 ·-lo. tlJel oil! .The'~; Sees ~.IJ.i;,. • ~-~~-~·:~:~~ _._ of lbOli' 'l'rida ,j(th Ma(, w San,-w I __ .. )!!I. ~..... en Y ·ihe ~ .1"Sotueb0w I.He fU made l it · put ··~ cooler temperatures along . •lite wall -~-· ·bolLtinp and ~· Coaat. High! of ~ at~ , • -~· _,, ·lii4el .~ will rile to llO 1n1,nd. over-• I ~Y, a • t"'!;. In ..tbe • • . • ~t IOWs lb the lowetf!OI· · · · ~~ ··la1· -' ' ~ ' < ~ •t(_:_~ ~ " A•,: INSmE-TO. : ' ,_. ~ -~ . r A iudg• jn Al<ibam<i· ha.t b•.,. first imlc.-o1 the 1111: Jato la ocau<d of diap<rsing mercy in the~ and said It became , pro. • return for """"' favors from gresalvtl)r worae lbrough the Dllbl-'1llo f•lll<Jl• dlf•ndaftta. Stor\', Paa• 4. holel !l1M8&ll'. P!limedtlJ911ce. ·• . ;,~I_.'.._.,. . ~tMI ll'Wft ff • .~Pu"bliC Slft!f)r ~1dirferd Murri., ·= ~a NttltMI """ .. JI said tibll m>mlnr:~t trlpdy WM molt ..,.. or..... c""'" • certalril7 1vertecl became of tba fumes' c..-. . M PT.A M I In the _._ • CIM•• • M ,.,..... ...... ,, di96overy ear y ev ....... "15. ·11!.L-=. 1: :=" ~ :=;; Jlad the leakage oecuned after gueitl ·rn • .... ·-• bad C to' bed. t11e lndcll!nt cou1c1 #' ,.._ ..,, .,......,.. IN1 .--...."' be odded • ·~ '' .,,..""' • have far more iXIW, . • .... I ~":'=:.:>~ It ........... lft'#t n"'4 AJlhough \be danger WU obViOUS, ... :... ~ ..: WWM Men 4' • firemen ud \ pclllee found ft dtfBc:ult : (See EVACllA~ Pap I) .· ·' • Bus, Train Collide 'Ki11ing 3 .. DEL MAR (AP) -1bree pel'S\)ns were killed and 24 Injured when their bm chartered by the Amtrak rail service stalled oo a railroad Cr<llS!ng and was rammed by a Santa Fe freight train, authorities said. Oflldals aearching frenziedly for vic- tims at the crmh acene today surpr~ed M illegal Mexican aliens, one of them a woman. hXling in box cars of the 6kar freight train. All were taken iitlo custody for questioning by the Border Patrol. "Tbe windshield ol the bus was stick· Ing to the front of the train engine and people were lying ~e moaning and aying," said Peter Sokolow, a security at the Ocean Windows Hotel overlooking the crub alte. Tbe dead were lcleotified as Carl < \ _.old Ever~hing Airport X-ray Machines Illegal W ASIIlNGTON (AP) -A federal judge has ruled that the Fed· era! Aviation Administration acted illegally when it gave airports permission to use X-ray machines as security devices. at airports across the nation. -- U.S. District Judge Barrington D. Parker ordered tise of the machines halted Wednesday until the FAA files a statement certify. ing that use of the devices would not harm the environment. There was no decision whether an appeal would be filed. Parker ruled that the FAA acted ille~ally because it failed to permit affected persons to comment on 1ts action before it took effect March 29. . Use of the X-ray machines was challenged by the 'Aviation Con- sumer Action Project, a group associated with Ralph Nader. The group. contended-that the machines posed an unknown health haz· ard because of a lack of safety standards. U.S., Egypt Announc~- Full Relations Again J-.ph Bertram, 47, logelwood, the bua CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -Tbe United Desert and continuation of the United driver; Sky Jeoilna, I, Clatskanie, Ore.; States and Egypt today formally an-Nations . buffer role betw... Egyptian and Jennie lloeocllet<, 58, Aplington, nouoced resumption ol full diplomaUc and Israeli forces there. The United Ion, who died in a hospital two hours relations broken off since the Middle Nations mandate expires April 2(. after the late Wednesday nJgbt c:rcuih. East war of 1967. Also high on their age~~a were Kis- Mrs. Doescher'! husband Harvey, 80, The . announcement came in a joint sin~'s media~lon proposalJ for.: Syrian- wu listed in crttk:al c:oaditlon. declarilion read at the White House Isr~eh troop disengagement on the oc- Youog sq's mod:ter, waiting at the ..,, at about the same time it was being cupied ~Ian Hei~. . . depot. watdted la bomll; a the relght dtaclosed In Cairo, where ~· Amencsn officuw m . tile,, Kissinger baJTelled Into the ti.. at about 35 miles State Henry A. Kissinger w mee ~r •tressed that Syria holds . the an hour, firemen '8ld. They comforted with Egyptian leaders In bis 1 te!t • key to . the second round of Sinai her wblle an ambulance took her hmbaud dle East peace-making cam negotlatJOOS . to tile bospltal. . In addition to gene al ·· d" They said the Golan Heights dlsengage- Aboe.rd the bus the diild bad · 8 r r~ai ment agreement must be arranged , beeh of contacts, the move meam the Sl)M.1$h before any new pullouts in the Sinai playing with a deck ol fiasb cards, with Embassy In Cairo will oo longer ltouSe--sadat also bas said Egypt will noi whldi words, phrUM and pictures are the American diplomatic delegaUoo to Mum to the c.neva peac, talks until llllldJed. Under her body they fouod Egypt, beaded by Ambassador Hennann Israel and Syria agree on the Golan (See ~ Page J) Ellis. pwloul . Similarly, an Egyptian delegation Kissinger came here from Israel , Winter Swrm . Strikes Nortli 'SAN ' FRANCISCO !AP) -A • -'otorm -Nortbefn Clllfonla. todlJr ...... bin& raill, _ -ml -1u1 -rly gal<s. Tbe Nailomtl Weather -• illued IOlrm wamlnp aloag the oout -of Point -tor ~-.. •·to• -per boar, -.. lo ii to 42 m.p.h, ll>nfglrt. Gale ....... are ill o!lect-1llroogb ~ befween Polnl -and Pulnt Sur. lea'f)' .......... -ill tho NL·~kiyou area and Sierra Nonda, alollg wll/I wlndl 40 to 75 m.p.b. llO!ih ol Lake Tahoe . beaded by Ambassador Ashraf Ghorbal where be brought from Damascus a will move into facilities of its own in (See EGYPT Page Z) Washington, where it ba• beeo working ' W>der the lndtan flag. 'lbe two ambassadors have been tn place since Kissinger and Egypt's l'N!I!· dent Anwar Sadat agreed In principle to restOre diplomaUc relations In Novem- ber cfuriDg a visit ' to Cairo by the Ameilc!an aecretary. Relatloo9 had been "!Vered 1!nce the six-day Middle tast war of June 1967' when Egypt broke them oil because of the American role lh favor of Israel. l\i!Slnger returned to Cairo. today for taib with Sadlt at 'a rest houae overlook· Ing · the Groat Pyramids. The Egyptian leader greeted him warmly with a tradi· ~ Arab embrace aod suggeoted they -I'?"" for photographs with the pynuuids as a bockdrop before their clbculalooabepn. Klsatnger and Sadat w.,. ... • centratinl ... the oat .... ol .. Israeli tluJp wliidrawal la 1lae occupied Sinai No Honors For 'Thieves ' , ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) A ~uve $.'Ompeny c a 11 e d 'Tht~es Inc.,'" will have· ito look for another state In which to lnci>rporale tinder .. tenns of a bill which bas hem oent w the New Y ort Senate. ' Following debate Wedneoday, the Asoemby pesaed the blll to give lbe secretary of state power to leny Incorporation to applicants '1toot!!ng offensive Utles f o r incofl>Oratlon. . - ,. ; • ., • Populatio~, · - Demand Slowing Up By CAND!CE PEARSON Of tlMo o.llY P'lld Staff Slower population growth and reduced energy demands have co n vi n c e d Southern California Edison officials they doo't need w expand their Huntington Beach po:wer plant until 197.7 or 1979, it Was IeUned today. 11tls tentative time line is up to four years beyond original plans bl the com- pany. \ UUl!ty officials applied la<hOctober for a construction permit for the $312 million expansion from the South Coast Regional 1.one Conservation ComrnilJsion. But the appliCatloo was returned for more information about three months ago and the_ company hasn't rea1>2_lied. When it will, aCCX>rding to ECli9on District Manager Paul Richardson, ii definitely up in the air. "It will probably be three to five years before the Huntington Beach generating station would be completed and on line," he said today. The company had figured new units o,f the plant at Pacific Coast Highway ahd Newland Street in Huntington.Beach would be producing power by 1'75 to 1977. The fossil fuel plant now generates 99? megawatts of power. The combined cycle additioos would add another 1,416 megawatts of peak production. Edison Friday will file a new resources &ehedule, outlining its future plans for all its major facilities including Hurr tlngton Beach, with the California Publlc Utilities Commission (PUC). Until. II la accepted and. approved by the PUC, Richardson said today In Hun- tington Beach, noting b final: At a recent state coastal commJsslon meeting ln Santa Barbara -where the company's $1~4 billion expansiori of · the San Onofre Nuclear Power Plant was approved -Edison Vice Presldenl David Fogarty said a number of planned units have bt!en deferred. Fogarty .aaid a nuclear plant in the desert near Victorville and a fossll,fUtl plint In LoQg Beach will be delayed, In addition to the expansion program al Huntington Beach. . Fogarty died the reduced load Edlooo reported a 10 ,..,_...,1 clnJp In power u,,age in both December and Janulll'l' -and the reduced,availabtllly of foail fuel as reasons. · Rlcbard3on said today that the red"""1 need la !be main factor. PopulaUon growth In the area Edllon 1erve1 ls now running at a rate of 4.5 pScen\ yearly, he said, In contraot w previoUI amual ratea ol aeven and eight perceot. The 1rowt11 is. sWJ !lightly lllctw (See EDIBON, Pare l) • j, t J • L. I : DAILY PILOT s ThurJday, FtbruBtY 2'8, 1974 Coast Driver.s Gear For Friday 'Rationing' ,.,.m Wlre Servlcet Fear of the unknown brought lona:er- than-normal lines to Orange Coast area 1aa statlons_!_his morning as J.llotorists apparently prepared to mee t Friday's start of the even-odd rationing plan wilh the gauge pefged at full. lf you are atll unclear about how the game will be played, here are the rult1, Avoldlnl their vlolaUon will keep you from paying. a maximum t&OO line or spending six months in jail, or maybe both. -Do not app~ch a gas station unl.ess you have less than hall a tank. It the st atlon attendant demandl It, ahow him your gauge. -1£ you are a a'tatlon owner you EUROPEAN GASOLINE PRICES tOUNTIY PllCI Pl GALLON HICINTMI llPT.lt11 Hl.tl,tt74 Of INCtWI AUSTRIA $0.74 S0.92 24.3 BELGIUM 1.04 1.10 ., S.8 llRITAIN . 81 1.09 34.6 . CZE~HOSLOVAKIA .65 .65 UNCHANOID DENMARK .89 1.1 5 29.2 FRANCE .88 1.22 38.6 HOLLAND ,77 . .80 3.9 tTALY l.02 1.44 41.2 PORTUGAL: .86 1.44 61.• SPAIN .66 .8' 2V.3 SWEDEN .88 l.14 30.0 SWITZERLAND .96 1.0• 8.3 WEST GERMANY .BS 1.23 . 44 .7 YUGOSLAVIA . .73 1,00 37.0 , U'I Ttl .. lflftt UP, UP AND UP -You think you've got troubles with high gasoline prices? This chart shows how -European motorists are faring. They can buy all the gas they want over there -if they :an lfford !t. Huntington Gm Station Yielding '~host' Fuel By TERRY COVILLE Of tM Dtllr P'llet Stiff City records say the empty Chevron service staUon at 8472 Warner Ave., Huntlncton Beach, bas definitely been doaed 1lnct last AUillsl. People who work near the station say It has been clo!ed, unused, un- manned. for nearly a year and a half. But Wednesday the ghost station came back to life, at least long enough to supply a liquid nearly as scarce as rare blood -gasoline, a minimum af 4,000 gallons of It. A ·standard Oil delivery truck spent three hours at the empty station sucking dry the underground tanks. The truck driver said be was taking out about 4,000 gallons whJcb bad been left there when the station was closed. Another worker, helping pump , the gas, said it was probably sour frotn being stored so long and might have to be taken back to the refinery In El Segundo., Skeptics who work at nearby service stations and other business establish- From Pagel EDISON ... in Orange County, he said, but, even here, it has almost ~n cut in half from what was once a ten percent growth jump a year. Fuel is still a concern, Richardson said today, but a less important one. In 1974 Richardson said, unless there is some reallocation of fuel or other ~ Edison didn't expect, "we'll be all nght for fuel ." 1be company plans to go through the public hearing on the Huntington Beach plant on the PUC level before returning to the coastal commission. The original October filing came before a lawsuit designed to halt the project was filed in Orange County Superior Court by the Environmental Coalition. That suit was rejeeted this month by Judge Mark Soden. ments near teh intersection of Warner OU.Nell COAST " DAILY PILOT and Newland Street charge that the sta- tion has been used as a Sf!Cret storage place for excess Standard gasoline. They say more than one visit -others at night -have been made to the supposedly dead station. And new locks have been put On the suppo&edly uoused fuel tanks. There are no locks on the underground tanks of the nearby operating gas stations. No one has proof, but in this day of panic gas lines, government claims, and consumer counter-claims, they view tank trucks loading ~ at a closed station with a great deal of 1u..Jj.clon. "I think It's ridiculous," snaps Pete Kudenov, supervisor for Standard's sup- ply tenninal in Huntington Beach. "We don't store gasoline anywhere, we put it into circulation as soon as we can." His tenninal supplies all the Standard and Chevron stations in Orange Cotinty, and he admitted it was one of his trucks a\ the Jhost station Wedn~y, but said the purpose was to remove the old gasoline. "Apparenµy it wa:i a marketing decision to close that station and not try to re-open it, so we took the las out and transfe1Ted it to other stations,·• he said today. "I don 't know about other operations; but I kno'IV ours, and we. aren't biding gasoline at closed stations." Under the city fire code, the un~ derground fuel tank5 are mpposed to be removed from any station closed for 30 days, but Fire Marshal Roger Hosmer admitted Wednesday that rarely happens. It's a problem of inspection and know- ing just when a station really ls cloted, he said. There ls no requirement for companies to report the closure of a station. From a fire safety standpoint, the tanks are safer full than empty but loaded with fumes, Hosmer said. The city also has no records on whether gasoline is stored in unu.sed tanks . Hosmer said, however , the city has the aulhorlty to impecl the lank.s, and the fire department may start doing that on a regular basis because of the fuel crisis and the rapidly changlng status of local stations. ~mPqeJ EVACUATE .•• in some cases to convince the elederly tenants that they \\"OUld have to spend I.he night away from home. . may not "fuse u1 .. on the aPl'fOprlato odd or even day unleo the customer has more than half a tank of gas. -Stations must clearly post m- ticlJ.>4ted mlnl!"um business botlf• and days and manage their alloe1Uons so that they will Jut throtJib ~ entire l!)Ollth. -·Dealers must indicate lhelr psoline supply by a sJgn or a flag. A ereen Oag means gasoline is available for the appropriate customers, a yellow flag meani ga1 for emergency vehicles only, and 1 red naa: means cloaed or out or ga1C1llne. -Only emergency vehicles, b.sses, commercial vehicles and out-of-state NIXON VOWS ENERGY aJLL VITO, Pa .. 26 tourists are exempt from the restric- tions. -Motor!Jtl whose llcenae plat@ _eod with an odd digit can buy 1uoline In participaling' CO\IDUts on odd num· bered calendar daya w1111e those ending with an even dllit can buy on even numbered days. --On the l11t day of each month sales will bf unrestricted. -Personalized plate• with no dl(lta are considered odd numbered p11tet and plates ending in "0" will be considered even numbered plates. Violations ~ punishable as misde- meanors in the participating counties of orange, Loi Ange~. Alameda, Contra Costa, Modoc, Rlvtralde, San Mateo, and Solano. - Gov. Ronald ll<!BJID said Wldnwf.ay that the otfd.even pion wtJI. bo enfor<ed ~Y local police and · wUI bo somewhat like luulnr traffic llc:ketl. "Nobody'• golnJ to come 111d .dnr IOmooDe away by the acrul! of llJe neck,'~ be aald. · . The criminal sectloos will be applicable to both motorists and service stations. Reagan noted that in other states using the plan there · has not been widespread breaking of the law. Reagan tenned the county-by~unty program temporary and uld the restrlc- Uons Would bo' lifted when counl)'. ol· flclals decide the rush for guollnt hu cooled down. However, the governor predicted that aeveral more of C&lifomla's 58 counties would join the prDtll'am before S p.m. today, the deadline for getting in at the start. He said counties. wilt be allowed to join or to drop out later, depending on local conditions. Reagan told newsmen his chief goal is to eliminate panic buying and long 1lne1 at 1ervlce staf.lons. He Aid the plan will .not aolve the 1tate'1 fuel shortage problems, and he urged motorists to continue to conserve gaaollne. . H?/e do this . reluctantly, because as I've said to you on several occasions, we -don't believe there J.s any reason for thiJ panic buying," he Wei. "But it baa feached a polnt in some coonUes where something bu to be done to cool this down.'' Four 'Streakers' At Y~ Placed On Probation NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -Yale University has placed on probation four sophomores who dashed naked down a cily atreet In a display of a current camp!I> craze, known as 11reakln1. (Re- lated story Page 3. I The Yale College executive committee said Wednesday the stUdents, whO were not ldenlWed, Intended to ll51oobh rather than offend but the act wu "lnte11>reted as thoughtless contempt for the city and its people." The C<Xnmlttee said tho lour atudents will remain on disciplinary probaUon unUI the end of the spring semester. "We have heard atreakinf d..crlbed as a joyous act of freedom ... " but cltizenl o:>mplalned that It was "an elltill ple<e of. llllens!Uvlty for Yale lludentl to behave In a way that does not take Into acooWlt the feellnp and value1 ol the other peOpJe around them," the committee 11td. FroMP .. el EGYPT .•• TM Or111" Co•1t DAILY ,U .. OT, wllll wtrlldl ll anitllNf "'-HfWl..l'reu, II ovblltMd tJ tlle Or•• ~ Pvtllll#llftt COrl'!Nn'r . ..,.. nM edlflonl ''' ""11tllell, M ...... 'r ll>rwtll Prllllt~. for CO.II 1111.... H...,..-t lffdl, HuntlftlllOll hedlll'-tfln v.ii.y, l.,...,. leec;h, lrv'Jn.1"6dltb1Cll ari4I S.11 (ltrfttrtlll 5'11 JVln tapltlrfno. A 1111111 "Ii.Ml Wtttal " ,.,......_ Sah.lnl•YI ari4I ""'°'P. TM ,,1nc1,.1 MIW.lnl Jlal'lt lt •I ... Wal lfT &11'91t, C-1• Miu, C111foma., ""'· One gues t -the last to leave -list of 15 llraelt war prisoners held a.i..rt N. w • .4 l'fft ...... W P""41 ..... J11• R. C111l1y Yiu ~ldtfrlt lrlf 0.-11 l't\1111 .. r Tho111•• x •• ,.11 Editor n.o""°' A. Murplil~• ~ti ... EdllOI'' Ch1rtH H. Lo•• Rlch1t4 ·r. Nill .11111111111 Ml""lil'it h l""• -t.11 M-t a ~ Strftl N....,, 111<11; 1)» ...,....,_ l,.llfllM: 91Kti; ~ "'""' AVl!Wt ·Hllllllllflll"' ..... 1 11'f11 ... ""'"'" llfl ~ al H0tlfl •1 Glm• lt .. I "''"''• cn4• ·.,.1 .. u1 a '""' •••elf a 1 '41-1671 ,_ c:... ......... "9tM .... ·- \1 ' I - held out for more than 30 minutes until by Syria. His delivery of the lilt marked police coaxed her out. a major diplomatic breUthl'Ollgh, 1lnco Mrs. Maude Courage finally left her the . flraella refllMd .. to negoUato on room, but only when patrolmen prorniSed./"~ents until the Syrians tumed to take special precauUona with her. It ove-r.-\ 11Jy companion - a cat nlmed "Bump-The Isnell premier, Go1da· Meir, er." uluted. bll efforts· Woili>elday night. Bui Several resident! walk..t out of the Kl•lncer'• aldu aald tho secretary felt hotel with Police, only to try to sneak "in hll bone111 that the .Arab oil embarao back again . one wa• seen leaving with arainlt the United States will last at his hotplale and b_reakfast fixlngo . !cut another lew.-claya detplto lbelr Hodgson sala a probe of the b.lldlng procres.s. being fumigated was planned today to determine the eJ:ad source of the leak. He and Murray expressed alarm that the fumlgaUon firm, a Gardena com- pany, asl!e!'ledly did not conform to local codes which specify that public safety agencle.a: be notified .. of lJ))' such fumigation at least 24 hoW'I before the job. No city buslne.ss. licenae wa1 iuued, either, lhey said . Hotfg.,n praised the quick reaponse from two local bus1.ntue1, the San Clemente Inn and Algoclon 111<!111, whlcb offered to put up the mldentl for tho night wtth oo!Y a low """""4i• nollol. • CHP Officer Dies BAKERSFIELD (UPI) Tb e Cll~ornll fflchway Patrol office here reported today Cl:IP officer Gerald .Har· rll, It, died In a San Francl1co boopltal W~nac!Jy nlaht of lnjurt.. sult<rld wlien 1truclt by a hlt·nm drlvel: one week ago. Harris WI.I dlrectlnl traffic at a l!akenlleld lnterse<llon alttr a •llJl&I ll(ht bn>ke down wh<11 he w11 hit by a car whfcb bocklltl him 15 feel · -- "'Occ1:'pa11.ts' Escape Fire This is a story ol . a resldcnijat structure fire handled by the Newport Beach Fire Department WedneadaY and II hu u hippy an ending u a residential structure fire story could. Firemen quickly extinguished tho blaze caused when a light bulb on a 11\illly pole at Via Lido and 'Central Avenue in the downtown district jgnited the straw and feathers used in a bird's next built too closi to it. "Occupants were away ••• residence appeared vacant and not in use at the time," said the 904N (structure fire) report. "No in- juries and no damage to the pole." Nixon Savs " Republicans To Remain By HELEN THOMAS , WASlflNGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon, spurred by cheer1. of yoq ll<!publlcatl3, predicted today that the GOP would keep the White HoUlo at least through 1984. Apdre ssing iibout 600 party members 18 to 36, at the Young Republican leadership conference, the President gave his "advice for patential politi· cians." "Keep· your fa ith, keep your con- fidence ," he told the crowd, even when "mistakes are made by pe.ople in your party." Despite problems besetllng the party because of Watergate, Nixon said there would be a Republican in the White House "for the next three years and eight years after that, because we're going to be there for a·long time." The speech -laced with such political homilies as "Don't a.,sume the time to run for office is when it ls a 1ure thing" and "When the battle looks toughest, get in there and flatit"' - wu greeted by cheers and applause. "Three more yearJ! .•. three more years!" the crowd chanted u Nlxon held up three fingers. Nixon stressed the country would COD· tlnue to: maintain its responsibilities as a world. leader rather than "bugging out" on the burdens of the aftermath of the Vletnam war. "You can take pride that you supported Ule men and policies that put an end to the war which was here when we came to office," Nixon said. He said it was easy to support the , country in time of war but harder to "live in a time when· the; challenges are the challenges of peace." The president advised the Young Republicans: "Never quit, always go on and fight for the things you believe in." In his extemporaneous ·speech, Nixon appeared to be discussing his own Watergate fight when he gave his "ad- vice for potential politicians." He told the GOP leaders, ranging in age from 18 to 36 : "If you think there are things wrong then get in and do something about it. Build the Republican party, that is a just goal." The President's exhortation for young party members to fight vigorously fGl' thelr cause comes amid some gloomy predictions about the effect of Watergate on voters. With frequent bursts of prolonged a~ plause interrupting him, Nixon promited ~is Young Republican audience that "looking over the next three years I beUeve we can make great progress in wor1d peace, relieving tensions in the Mkldle East and on the home front, moving forward toward p r o s p e r 1 t y without war and inflation." • • • UPI Ttll'PflOI• Stun Jt • Dennis Johnson, 12, a patient at Denver's National Asthma Center shows a dillerent way to get a basketball free from a light goal. From Pagel AMTRAK •.• two of the cards. On~-read "and my slater," while the other showed a picture of a graveaton6 and a alngle word - "died." 'nle traln was not derailed and no one aboard ~ freight was Injured, authorlUes said. .• Joseph Jones, Amtrak passenger rePresentatlve, saJd the bin was under charter by Amtrak, the national railroad passenaer service,. and was carrying 30 pe1'80lll when the accident occurr..t. It wa.s en route to SM Diego. He said m\ll!t of the pusengers had come aoutb by rail from Vancouver, Wash. and arrived In Loo Angeles too late to make train connections to points south of Loo ' Angeles. Some of the 38 passengers who board..t In Loo Angeles had already been dropped Off when the accident hlppened, be said. Offlclala at the scene of the accident, some 100 yar<ls from the Del Mar depot, said life stalled bu.s was attempting to back away from the tracks when the !kar freight train, bound from San Dleg<> to San Bernardino, crashed Into It. They uld the front portion of the bus wu crasb..t and boggage and other • personal belongings of the passengers were acattered around lhe railroad cross- ing. ~ AutboriUea said some of the injured were taken to Scrlpp$ Memorial Hospital and the others to Veterans Memorial lloopltal, both In San Diego. 25-cent Bus Fares? LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bus fares may be cut to just 25 .cents fOr anywhere in spra~ling· Los Ange\es County undw a subsidized three-month experiment that could begin in a week, the Los Angeles Times reported today. Pat Hearst Food Plan • • Calm Today . SAN FRANCISCO (VP!) -The food giveaway program aimed at. wmnlng the release of kidnJtped Patricia Hea!'1t began its second day of operation today In a calnt mann er that contrasted aha.rt ly with the opening day confusion an(! brewllng t'rlday. At one San 14~ranclsco center, about ha lf the 1,000 bags or f~ on hand had been given ou t an hour m a~van~ of the scheduled 10 a.m. operung . A wlunteer at the center said they_ decided to go ahead and start tlving out the free food rather than maKe people walt in line. ' Others of the 10 ce nters scattered throughout low·incom~ areas of Sar\ Francisco, Oakland, Richmond and E8:St Palo Alto reported· all wa.s proceediilg calmly Jn· the effort sponsored by Mlsa Hearst'$-father, Rand,.lph A. ~earst , to meet the deinands of the Symb1onese Liberation Army. At two centers, which did not ! until the scheduled 10 a.m., ope , small group• of 25-IO waited paUen fy outside. ~'It's going great," said a volunteer at a center on San Francisco's Potrero HUI. "We're all set. We've got abOuL 1.200 bags all packed and ready to go. There's not going to be any trouble today." on· Friday the free food was n~t dellver..t until the centers openeq and the crowd at one cen\er besran 1 filt- swlnginf, can·throwlng .b ... Wl . All the fOQd was dellvered this hme on Wednes- day before the site locations were an- nounced . · O£ficials of the program , called "Peo- ple Jn Need," said they had enough food for up t<r 24,000 people. The brown grocery bags at one San Francisco center each contained a chicken, white bread, crackers, bananas, cabbage and canned goods. A· larger crowd of about 500 WIJ in line at the West OalrJ&nd center, lined up along the sldewal)l outside a pink stucco building. . . "Everything went just perfect," aa_ld one woman in Oaltland. "1bank God,"• Long but orderly Unes stdetched fOr a block from the East oak.land center, the outlet which eM!pted into violence Friday but was switched thl.s time train a tiny Black ~fuslin bakery to an abah- doned supermarket. It also began distributing food prior to the sch..tuled opening time. In San Francisco, one recipient said she bad no qualms about taking tile food offered as a ransom demand. "The rich have plenty," said ?t1rs. Grace Laun, 26, widowed mother qi an I-year-old boy. "If my son wu kid- naped , no one would give a damn. U this Is what makes the ru1ln&. clus stand up and take notice, then I'm for It." In San Francisco, police were in- structed not to go near the distribution centers unless they received an urgent call for help. The SLA had demanded that police stay away from those receiv- ing food . •· Ludlow Kramer, a Washlngtoo !late official named to run the program by Randolph A. Hearst, the yoWlg womln's father, sald his volunteer staff c:hanged its procedures and hoped for more ef· ficient distribuUon this Ume. · He urged newsmen to keep away from the distribution sites and police to stay in the backgrowxt to avoid a repeet of last week's problems. S111oke Fatal to Baby SAN PABLO (UPI ) -A 11·month-o1il girl died of smoke inhalation in an explosion Tuesday c~used when her father tried to pour gasoline from a leaky pail to a bowl on the kitchen· stove. The baby, Angel Bennett, was asleep in a bedroom above the kitchen and died about five hours after the explosion. . Beat The Tax Man SALE! .MAllCll lot I GO TO 1'unla.f>'s TO COLLECT TAXES PN THEIR lllTlll INVENTORY. fLCAN HAIDJ. T WAIT I ' . . ~O DEFROSTING .. FREEZER/ \ 'REFRIGEFIATOR · :.'.:.1 8 • ~j. ) Beaullfut'1llmllne styling ••• wllh evet)1hlng et · your fln~t1ipiJ CANTILEVER s~el~• tdJutt up and down. Cabinet roll• ea ally on wheels. Aulomatlo lc.e m,ker can be 1dded at any time . I • • I . I . ' ~.' • 90 DAYS CASH .•• : . • wirH·APPRovEo 1815 NEWPOIT BLVD. · llawntm CaSta Mesa -Phone 548·77Br CREDIT 1 _ . ' . ' } ) I Thu~ay. Ftbruary 28, 1974 5 DAILY PILOT 3 Saddleba~k , Candidates Give Views EJihl candld'I" will be on the March 5 bellot of the Saddleback Community ' College dt!trict for one oeat oo the oo!· lege board of trustets. The seat Is being vacated by cbarter lnlstee Michael Collins, who resigned to give more time to his Newport-Beach law !inn. 1 Of the el9ht candidates, one of them, Andrew MWTay, withdrew from th~ ~gn too late to have his· name taken off the ballot . He is inellg!ble for tho J>O"I because he has inoved from the trustee aree . 'lbe candidate elected to the seat mll!t JiYe in Irvine or El Toro and will represent that area on the board, but will ~ elected at large by all Yot.crs in the college district. 1be following Is a brief wrap.up of the seven candidates, In alphabetical order. NORRISA BRANDT, 52, ol 17921 Angell Street, Irvine, is a former teacher and served as Irvine's first city clerk. She and her hus· band Alfred have Jived ln the Saddle- back College district seven y e a r s <ind have three children: Barbara, 22; Norris, 18 ; and Alf, 13. She ha!I served on the Citizens Urban Design Committee for the Irvine General Plan and with her oosband was the UCA Blood Bank Chair- man. EARL H. CARRAWAY, 43, of 24731 Eldamar Ave .• El Toro, is a mortgage I banker and former ~ · Tustin Union H1gb • . School District trus- ' tee. He and his wife Patricia have lived in the ooll egc dis· trict three years and two months a n ·d have three children. RRAWAY Carraway is a member of the Saddlebock ·Area COOrdJ. nating Council, the American IJ!gioo, and the Veterans ot Foreign Wars. STEPHEN DELAPP, 24, of HUI Kazao St., Irvine, ha,, lived in the askln&: th,.. quettlons. Six of the seven candldates replied. l!et'O Is What they 811d. 1. Wbat do ,,.. believe are t~ 1uets of the Saddlebact College dl1trict (In 58 words or let1)? VERA SNYDER: Among Saddleback C.ollege's assets Is Its excellent faculty, beau~ 20()..acre campus ard strong tai: base. With these re s o u r c e s Saddlehack has tl1e potential to develop into one of the fme:st commwilty colleges in California. G ARY RASMUSSEN: Saddleback College is y0W1g and can ~ one of the leaders in ooml]lUD.it.f colleg by using all of Ute 1atest lnoova developed in education by <bro off the bonds of the 18th century and looking and educating for the 2.lst century. Another asset of Saddleback c:oUege is the concern and Involvement of it,! residents which I feel is its greatest asset and to which I feel the board of trmtees should be more responsive. NICHOLAS DIGIURO: A tremendous potential to be developed. Location. Outstanding faculty . A buUding program in progress. An inner desire to serve the C<MnmWllty adequately. A willing Board of Trust~. A commwllty waiting to support the college if asked to do so. STEPHEN DELAPP: The district has ?nany assets. An increasing population and tax base which will allow Ute college to grow and an e.1cellent faculty which has maximized the use of the limited facilities available are two major assets. Also the enthusiasm that the residents showed seven years ago when they voted this district into existence ls still there. EARL CARRAWAY: Our attractive climate and superior university and college systems gives us the ability to attract the best t e a c he r s , administrators, curriculwn directors, building and finance experts in the country. We don't have to settle for less than the best! NOJUUSA BRANDT: G r o w I n g community with education oriented cltizell! who want best educational opportwtlties "for least amount of money. A school for all ages. Very students go elaewhere. 'l'nlnsJ>OriallDD crisis. Because of no building bonds, taies too high for student body of less than 5,000. Not enotJ11h input invited from communlt)'? faculty , and students. Not enough commwllcalion between college and unified scllool diitrjcts. lrvine School Di.strict has n o representatlon. Repressive c a m p u s atmosphere. DELAPP: Perhaps the f o r e m o s t problem facing the district ls the lack of faith and trust which residents have in the Board of Trustees. Compowxling this is a very weak and limited curriculum, and a campus atmosphere which does OOt attract students. 'This has led to the dissatisfaction of many residents and the de-annexation attempt by Tustin. S. In 159 words or leas, U you are eleckd lo tbe Saddlebacfl: CoUege board. what will you do to begla alleviating tbe1e problems? DELAPP: The Board of Trustees must regain the trust and faith of the people. This can only be achieved by the positive actions taken by the board. nie curri- culum must be enriched and expandiXI. A district·wide survey should be taken to detennine what fields of study stu- dents and potential students desire. More vocational training should be established, the work study program expanded, and more courses should be offered out in the community. We must increase the var· iety and number• or courses offered to attract more students. The extended campus program should be expanded to include more evening classes at area high schools and an extension campus in the Irvine-Tustin area to offer day-time classes. To ease the driving distance a commuter bus system from ooUying communities to the campus should be started. To complement these actions an utensive public relatioru1 program in the di.strict, especia~y in the high schools, must be undertaken to change the negative image many people have for Saddleback am. increase t h e enrollment. These ""' only a few of ~ probl..,,. facinti Saddleback. I feel they can be aolved L and If I were given tbe opportunity I would endeavor to ad'lieve this goal. RASMUSSEN: If tlected lo the Saddleback College B<lord of Trustees, J will push for a school site to be leased in the Irvine Tu:st1n area that v.·e can erect an inst.ant school of mobile units on and hopefully it would be open by Septemher 1974. I would take mooey from one or more of the new buildings for this site because 1 feel that we _ml;lSt keep the re.sidents of lrvine-Tu!tin in our district to have the tax dollara to provide the educational facilities we need to make Saddleback College a leader in education. Next, I would work to increase the courae offerings o( Saddleback College to match those of tne other colleges in the area which l belln-e is one of our f i r s t -lblltties. Waiting Wltll permanent facilities are built Is cheating the students of today of a proper education. 1 wouJd take a close look at teacher training and qualJflai.tions for I feel most teachers are glorified students and need practical experience outside the classroom. l wou1d develop incentives to lurt top professionals from private industry to the classroom. J also fav :r revamping emting school calendars to full operation year-round. CARRAWAY: I will ask for a a>mplete and thorough review of the present admioistraUon, faculty and curriculum In order to detennine what actions should be taken to make our college a more effective learning institution. BRANDT : Become a channel of communicati~. Ask to have on agenda irtmediately discussion and action of P<l"'iblo answers for the gas crisis such as use of minibus between communities and collet:e. more public transportation, or whether more interd.Utrict permits be given for nearer community college and/or poshing at much stronger curriculum programs In local commuruty high schools or other buildings???? The Citizens Advisory Committee members from mv district would be appointed Immediately. Would push for more definite structure and explicit functions of the committee. Ask for a Board of Trustees r.leeting in out. lying areas. Have direct communications betv.•een other school boards of district and oollege board. Ask for curriculum pl.inner a~d Federal grants project wrilers to be hired. Consideration '6r vocatiooal tcchnlcat director. Ask quest.ions. Listen. Ask ques1ions. Listen. Make decision s for action. Then help to inform the ciUzcns of progran1s and achievements. ---·-· -··~~ • . " ' . ., "· ' . 't~•«"f'*"''''.!I' ,.....,......,..,_ ._.. .,.. FIRST DOCUMENTED STREAKER MAKES HIS WAY ACROSS UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS CAMPUS This Brave Soul Won His Notoriety for Dashing Naked Through Cn>wded Mall in 8l'Olld Daylight Sacllleback district four and a hair yrars and is an activtties coordinator fo r the Santa Ana • Tu.stin YMCA. , good faculty and clissified emptoyes. DIGIURO: The flm and m o s t important issue is to solidify ihe rel&ti\tely new boa.rd .Jnto a cohesive positive unit. A decisioo must be reached and publicly stated as to What direction the board (especially aftet' the June el<dion) is going to take to ellminate the poor Image of tho college in the community. Seoond.Jy, a 'ftvlew of the beat way to project and complete the Master Plan ,(Educational;and Building) and then review it annually. C:overed With Enthusias1n A bachelor, De· Lapp attends Long Beach State and was active in the prein· DE u.,.;. corporation drive for the city of Irvine. He is chalnnan of the Irvine General Pl.an Houaing Committee, was a candidate for city counctl in the incorporation election and was an administrative assistant to the c.ity manager for the city's first nine months. NICHOLAS DIGIURO, 43, of ;4f01 Blrdrock Dr., El Toro, is an insurance · l agent ;jnd has lived in the Saddlebact District eight years. He a n d his wife Mary Jo have two children -Joanna, 14 ; and Mooica, 11. DiGiuro is an elder in bis church and is on the boards of di· 01 01uao rectors of the Sad· dleback Valley C h a mb er of Com· merce and ltle Saddleback ValJey YMCA. He is past president O{ the Exchange Club and was active in the successful bond election of t h e Saddleback Valley Unified s,c ho o I District. GARY Roxbury RASMUSSEN, 38, of 4682 Drive, J.l'Vilt, is a bachelor -and roal est.ate in- vestor. He ls a director of the San Juan Capis- trano Resource Con· servatlon Dlf.rict and works for • ling Investmen of. Irvine. He has alended aAsMuss1N USC, Br lg ham Young Unlve<stty, East Los Angeles Col· lege, Woodbury College, and Orange a-t College and is a native Californian. VERA SNYDER, 28, oC 153!2 Tc-.:raine Way, Irvine, ls a hou!ewile and has lived in the -Saddle- back College district four years. She and her bus· band Donald have two children: Jeri Ann, 8; and Rldlard, 7. She ts 1cUve in the 1:-vlne Junior INTDIR Women's Club, t b t O>llege Park-Oreemree ScltoCll PTA, the 'Seddleback Valley YMCA Indian Maiden ~m, and tl1e Saddleback Valley Re-. publ'tcan .Women's Cllib. She attends Unl- venlty Methodist <llurch. . • ' St1Xienl8 are serious learners. Good transfer program and work study program. .... %. Wlsat do ,... belJeves are tbe problems of the Saddlebacfl: College district? (51 words or leu). · DIGIURO: Primarily a negaUve image that does nol typify a college c:ampu.> today. A lack of. overall a>lltge "spirit." Not competing effectively for bigll school graduat.S. Not asking the oom1mmlty for inpul To this point, not publlclzing their good points. SNYDER : Fi>r the school to achieve tis full potential , many prob!..,,. must be resolved , among whim are rapid growth, Jack of community involvement and curricula. Our district lost almost coe .million dollars last year because students had to attend other college when courses were not available at Saddlebaek. RASMUSSEN: One of the problems of Saddleback is the fai1ure to aerve the Irvine-Tu.st.in area adequately witb either public transportation to Saddleback or school facilities in the area of lrv~~tin. Another problem is the lack of oourse offerings which would stop the mass exodus of our students to other scboob:. CARRAWAY: I. Leadership, oo the part of the administration. 2. Failure to adopt a forward looking policy on the part oC a majority of. the preeent board. BRANDT: CurTiculurn inadequate, ao Nude Streakers Run Wild Public relations, ·commun ity DALLAS (UPI) -A fidgety freshman mother in hot pursuit. A bal(~ozen nighttime nudists at the involvement whenever poaible must be at Southern Methodist UniverSity slipped "At first, it just started like a joke," University of Texas, covered with 1 oontinuing ,plan. ~untcaUons out of his blue jeans near the school's one freshman streaker said. "Now, it entbwiasm, sprinted arouDd -Jester between adminlfuatlon, ·fiiculty, board, 1. ed boul .~ Center in the buff. · and atudentl ·must be lept open at tree-m main evil.l u and made a seems .everybody wants to get into it.. ''I imagine a lot of people have a all times. Immediate review oC the wild, naked dash acro,s., the grassy It's sort of a fad and an ego trip. fantasy of running around with no feasibility of a bMi election to sunain campus to a .waiting motorcycle. Something totally crazy that appeals · clotheson, they identify with lUl'IDiQg the building program. "Yoo don't have time to look at their to people -running around nude." around nude," one SMU strea~er aa.ld. face, too," one coed said. A·t Texas Tech this week, 25 male "Once the act starts, it gives them 'SNYDER: Is Saddleback a community The latest fad, called "streaking," bas students, wearlng ski masks, tennis shoes a vehicle to release that fantasy." college? 8addleback · has done an --..i.-.. --'de-•c p~•~ T and "es, ran from the boys' dorm 200 "It's a fllll thing to do," said ---••-r oois'•-"-w. (t =viding' the first ~~· .,. "" • .,.., _,. oo exas " m~~ ._..'""15 ,.,., r· campuses. yards to the girls donn and back, while freshman on the streak circuit. "NObiOdy two years of. a formal education. At Baylor, students with their dates Lubbock television crews shot footage would believe we'd do it. Once you However, that is on1y one of the lingered at curfew last week near one and girls sboUted phone nwnbers from start streaking· you don't think about responsibilities cl a community college. girl's dorm when a daring freshman, the balcony. • being nude." · Another -·•bility ;. to provide • _,..-.-clad in on1y a ski mask and tennis At Tei:as A and M last week, sii: The streaking trend , whlch has spread the certificate career program, the shoes, sprinted two blocks down an male students dashed through a main across the nation, apparentIY draws nurses and technicians of tomorrow. I adjoining sidewalk, romped along the quadrangle between the girl's and boys' much of its impetus from crowds of feel "' need a Dean of Vocational side of the building, then cut through dorms, ran along an adjoining street female students who gape at the roving F.ducatioo to establish a direction for the dorm's main lobby with a dorm and into a waiting car. bands of streakers. a Vocational F..ducation Department , -:-:-;;:::;t:::J~";;t;.;-::::;;=:;;:i~:=;:=:=::=:=:==:=::==:=:=:=:=::=;;;;;;;::::;::::;::::;;;;;;;;~:---Another area I feel can u s e I improvement is the reJatioos:hip between Sacldleback and the non-studenl. M06t of the ~.e I have talked to feel the school b~ nothing to offer them. Some college> have att..cked th~ problem by cifering special classes in a spirit of community involment. These have included instruction in swimming, music, ·tennis as well as tutoring high school students and assisting in local activities. 01llY Pllet Stiff ,.,... Jeans Fumilure now on al JJ.J. Also Specially Priced During Month of Morch JJ J JJ ~ ,_l.,_ I ,,r-~, :~-t Need we say more. It's eleqant Schafer Bros, furniture covere.d with durable blue-denim that 's just as comfortable and relaxed for sitting as it is for wearing. Created by noted designer Zegaroli, each denim covered piece is touched off with the warmth of real leather and the bold elegance of brass buttonry. All to create that just right "down home" feel for those who are living today's new relaxed lifestyle. Come in, sit and relax. See if Jeans Furniture isn't just what you 1ve b"een hoping to find to express the "you" in you . Your favorite interior designer will be happy to as.mt uou · ... T~u I• './tfr. (;l!arch' H.J.GARl\ETT fURNlTURE Rev, Dr. McO!ub assures ~ldren at Fairview State Hoopital that God loves all his children. Tb'e children call him Mr. Church or Father. He ls the chaplain at the facility serving 1,714 retarded patients. See Page 15 toda~ for the fifth part of i ,.rles on the hospital that is probably America'• leader in lrealment of the mentally retarded. 'I .l, PROFESSIONAL ~ l:IOR DESIGNERS Optn Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. Tllun. I ftl, Eves. COSTA MESA, CAllF. • .. . " .. .. • .,_., •J-1, ' ••~--·I ••' • oo Finding Joh Top Prio1ity For Calley ... OOLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) -For the llnt Ume in nearly three yelll'S-, Lt. Wlllllm L. Calley Jr. ta lree to oome ml p n he ple11e1. and to chooee lrom -ol clvlllan job otre ... "I r.tl I could be ...tu! to !OClety," Ille IO-yeor-<>ld olflcer told U.S. District Oourt Judie J. Rohen Elliott on Wedneoday before Elliott ordered Colley l..ed on 11,000 bond. But the alllhl, lllldy·halred lleutonont wu not required to post bond. He was re\eued on his own reootrnlzance, The Army '8ld It had not yet decided whether to appeal Elllott'1 order. · IN ADMITl1NG Calley to bond , Elliott said he would hear at a later date Calley'• cballqe of a court-martial verdict wjllch found him 1 u I It y cl munler1ng ot leallt 22 clvUlana at My )'..al fn Man:h 11168 during on Army • swoep tllroulh the Vlelnameoe village. Calley wu aente.iced to Jile In prlaon, bul the term wu 111boequently reduced to to years. The Jud&• aold Calley should be !reed for hcKlle alftlt at hl1 apartment at nearl>y Ft. Bennin& because he preaented no dlngor to blmaell or to aoclety. Calley left lmmedtately uncle< ntllltary eecort for the small red brick apartment where he baa been conllned for 35 -· A COURT SOURCE said Calley chooe the military eacort becauae he had received a throat. The source decllned to elabonte, however. Mllltary (U&nll were removed from Calley'• apartment ohortly after he arrived, Wt military police continued !Al circle the block In • jeep. Calley's red-haired lfrlend, Anne Moore, met him at the ment, where his rrrst act was ¢0 dlase his dog, "Joe," · rd. "Calley has had literally thousands of job offers, "finding employment won't be any problem,'' said Capt. J. Houston Gordon, calley'1 Anny counsel, after the. beorlni-.. Immediately I've got to go back to ICbool and I'm going to try to be ..it-employed," Coltey told the oourt when hJJ attorney asked h1m to describe his plans for the future. CAILEY AND MISS MOORE had dimer on bla !Int night of freedom al tbo home cl one or hi.I attorney'•, K-llenlon. "He wu glad to get away from hi! apartment and see the out!kle world," H_. Nld today. 11'Ibat a man could be pemed up lbal loni and ni>l feel pe"'°""t animoalty Is amazing," be added. Henson said he and the other lawyers had requt.lted clarlflcatlm from the Army as to whether Calley, 8! a military prtaoner, could accepl a ctvm'I' job. He 118ld be expected a reply would take a few weeks. Gonion aald that Cilley has already made a job choice and will announce it "in due course.'' He declined to say what the job waa. MISS MOORE, who has had power ·of attorney for Calley 'n-ilile he was tnler house arrest, has visited blm daily. 111 think It's wonderful ," she said of hla re1 ..... Army Secretary Howard H. Callaway now has Calley's sentence under rev iew, and President Nii:.on has said that he will make a final review of Calley's cue. John Gause, the civilian public inConnation officer at Ft. Benning, said the Anny will no longer pay for calley's food, rent or utilities. Calley has dra~·n no pay or allowances !Ince his conviction in Marcil 1971. "He will still be a first lieutenant in the U.S. Anny, but he will not be pekl," said Gall3e. CALLEY GIRLFRl&ND AnM Moore Selassie Oianges Prime Minister, Grpnts Pay Hike ADDrS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - Emperor RaJle Selaule named a new prime mlnlMe< and 1ranted broad milltary pay railes todaY.. In a move to end an enlllted men'a revolt that hao swept Ethiopia. The emperor, broadcuting to the natlm, said he uked Endalkachew Makonnen «> fonn a new government. Malroonen la a popular ftiure and was mlnister of telecommunicatlon1. It appean!d that Ethiopla'a 40,000.man military forces got moot ol what they wanted followl111 three days cl nonviolent rebellion aga!Mt the 1ovemment of Aklllu Haptewold which r e a I g n e d Wednelday after four generail fall«! to negotiate an end to the mutiny. Instead, the rebels in ~mara, in northern Ethiopia, took three cl the generals hostage and sent the follrth one back to Addis Ababa with new demands. The emperor said the base pey for privates would be rai.!ed to $56 a month, from $50. The ceiling for privates would be raised to $75, and other ranks would receive proportionate increases. ERA Backers Hopeful Apollo 13 · · Pilot Rips Sex Bias .Ban Enactment Seen br 1975 IN MLSSOURJ, the S..ala Rules TV Movie CommlU.. reported out the ERA by W ASlllNGTON CAP) -5"pporter1 of the F.qual Rights Amtndment are optimistic of approval at least by 1975. But they expecl additional oetboc~ before ratHlcatlon by the noeded 38 slates. hava let • , .. , or January 117~ foe raUllcatlon, the uld. <11be three states that are key now are JUlnols, Florida and Lodlslana," sa id Pal Keefer. who ls coonllnatlng the Common Cause lobby for the ERA. "If we won the battles in theee three statl.9, that would bring us up to 38 and then it might be poesible for ot)ler borderline states, such as Oklahoma, to ratify this year also," she said. But IOrrte temporary setbacks are expected ln other states and supporten nvz MORE BTATM must rat!IY the conlltlioUonal llTW!ndment bamlng sex disa1mihatton before It becomea law. · · With an assist from organized labor and the White House, ERA prwonents have woo. ratification um year in.Maine, Oblo and Montona. Georgl•'• Hoose defeated the propoeed conllltutional amendment in JMuary. Tbere were two contradictory actions tbl! week. . Jn Virginia, the Houae Ptivt1eges and Elections Conuntttee defeated the ERA 12-3, a predict«! tumdown. a ~2 vote. The proponents' optlmlsn sterm partly from a recenUy repeatad fll®raement of the ERA by President Nl1on and tho turnabout ol the Ai0L-CIO to favor the meuure. They are aure or &Jl!lrOVal by the 1171 deadline, partly beca-o f precedents that a state cannot undo ill ratification, as Nebraska bas voted to do and other atales Indicate they may try to do. Proponenta do not plan to challenl!" Nebruka11 vote to resclnd unlMS the 1979 deadline near• and Ill vote ii needed for ratlfl~tlon. Love on Ben~h Amonc the groupo devotln1 full·tlm< elf«'ll to the ERA are ihe National Organization for Women. wblcb ta pustmg candldat .. who ·oPP<ll< antt·ERA leglslatora; the League of women Voten, which his so far contrtbUted to the fight about $65,000 from the sale of bracelet.I with the letters ERA on them ; and the cltizerui lobby, Common Cauae. Judge Accused of Sex Bargaining HUNTSVfLLE, Ala. (UPI) -Four women have testified ·that General Seulon1 Court Judge Thoma! B. McDonald offered leniency ln hb court ln exchange for serual relalJons with the women. One of the wltneues, Cheryl For&)'the, 1aJd she escaped punishment for as many as 25 charges of writing bad checkl during a two.year period. St.ate Attorney General Wllllam J. Baxley withheld from the courtroom the names of two witnes!es because, he ,.Id. They did not have criminal reardl, they 11o•ere married mothers and lived ln Huntsville. ONE OF THE unlderitlfied women oald she met McDonald at the office of a local real e9t8te company to dl.scuss an. automobile theft d?arge agalnlt her brother. She oald McDonald IAlld her to remove her clothing and ''have a .ex relationship with him on the couch." h-frs. Forsythe had testified 'earlier that she met McDonald at the same real estate company office. and "\Ve had sexual relations on the couch ::. Another witness, Laura Bland, said she appeared before hlcDonald on a dlarge ol bigamy, and the Judge made advance• toward her ln his Jocked office and asked her to meet him at a local motel . Mrs. Bland, 26, an lnp\ate in the West Virg:iDia Federal Penltentiary f0< Women, said ahe dld OOt McDonald at the motel. meet A MADISON COUNTY Grand Jury indicted McDonald, 58, ln May, 1973, on fi ve charges ol lrregulartUe! in office. He was being tried aeperately on each charge. Baxley said in an opening statement that McDonald had "allowed his · lUJt or sickneu or whatever Tu ln11uence hls judgment where young female defendants were concerned." Defense Attorney Cleon hfaming nld ~icDon.ald had been one of the most respected men In MadJson County before pretrial news coverage of the case. IS EQUAL RIGHTS GOING TO DOGS? BOISE, ldaho (AP) -An equal M(hls !or female dogs bill has been introduced in the Idaho Lesislature. The town ot Bellevue la required to charce $2 to llceriie male dop and $5 for female dop. The charter dlange v.·ould enable the to~n of $37 penon! about 3S miles 90Uth ol. Sun Valley to charge ~·hat It wants to license dogs, wlthout the mandatory sex dlscrimina· ttoo. MAKE IT A STANDOUT SUMMER! WITH FASHIONS FROM JC PENNEY ... HOUSTON, Tex. (AP ) -Fonner Alltionaut· Jamet A. Lovell, commander of the near-tnoalc Apollo 11 1pece fllaltt, saya a TV mo•I• baaed on tho 1170 mla6ton la "ftctlilouo and In poor taata." Lovell aired his complalnta about the ABC-TV movie, "Houlton, We've Got a Problem," ln a letter lo Dr. Jamet C. Fletcher, chief of the Natlonal Aeronautlcs and Space Admlrilatratlon. "NASA did a dtsaervtce to the filaltt crew and .,,,.00 )>e1'900!H!I connected with Apollo 13 by cooperating fully with this film," Lovell said. "I resent the mJxing of fact and ncllon. If NAllA wanted exposure of tb1I natl1l'e, the story should ha ve been blted Clft a fictitious space rught.ll mE MOVIE, to be •hown S.turday, is billed .. a lrlbute IAl the men of Mtaslon Control who helped get Lovtll and fellow utronauta Fred W' Halle Jr. and John L. Swigert Jr. back IAl earth. The mission w11 launched April 11, 1970. After an explosion tn the HrVk:e module, a planned moon landing w11 canceled and the crippled opoce cratt limped back IAl eartll. "It is not necessary lo resort to 308p opera plots to enliven the Apollo 13 stOry," I..Dven .. Cl~ "lt-lJ • Aa commentary of the timet when we have to ftctlonatlre the truth to make li pelatable IAl the public. "rr """ ls to believe this ...... k was obvloUJ!y more traumaUc to be in Mis>ton COntrol than to be on IJoord the cnppled opace ahlp •.•• Drinker, 33, Dies; Left Lying in Bar Five Hqurs WILMINGTON. Del. (AP) -Police are blaming customer apathy for the death of a 33-year~ld man who fell to Ole floor in '8 topless go-go bar and was left Wllttended for five houri.. Dr. Ali Z. Hameli , stale Medical examiner, said John E. Bradley of Wlbnington died Tuesday night ot acute alcohol Ingestion . Police said there was a posalblllty Bradley might still be alive If he had 'It's our son, dear. H• must be happy, he0a jaln•d • g•y movement.' been holplt.aliud ln ·time. But not one of more Ulan 7.0 cmtomen called an ambulance. "I don't tblnk they gave a damn. 'Ib1s 18 the wom case of th!! J'\le ever eeen," 11aid Police Lt. John Doherty. Investigators 11aid Bradle)' downed 12 otingers, cocktails made of brandy and creme de menthe, before falling off hill &tool at the bar. A group of patrons placed him oo an unU!ed bandsland while the show "'·ent on and left him there, police .said. "He wan't bothering anybody," officers quoted one youth u aaying. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Del;very of the Doly p;lot i1 guoronieed Molldal"fno.i u '!'Oii do llOI P\twJ your -.,,. l•JO p "' • can •nd your COPY .... 11 oe IJrouOht io you. Callo .,. 1.ic1n U<V•I 1 oo run. S.turdly •re:! Swndsy. II \'O<I C10 no1 r«elW l'OWf COll"f' by tam. SatlWdly, Pf 8 1.m. S..f'd&y. call t/\d 1 COii'!' l'Wll Ill birougl1 IO,.,... Cll15 are !al«HI ""'ii 10 1.Prl. Telephore1 Mot10rar9'Counly...,_, ....... , ... M1~1 ~ ......,.inglon S.letl ...... Nt••o1191r ............. . ..... ~1710 POLY STER DOUBLE KNIT SHORT SLEEVE TOPS ZIPPER FRONT NECK 5 50 ASSORTED COLORS • SIZES S to XL I 100% POL VESTER MISSES FASHION PANTS 3.99 FLARE LEG WIDE MOCK CUFF ELASTIC WAIST BAND MISSES SIZ ES 8·10 QUEEN 32 to 38 Pacific Coast Buffeted ( 1 , (; ' . ' 1 ' I -100% POL VESTER MISSES PLAID PANTS 10.00 WIDE STRAIGHT LEG , WIDE MOCK CUFF ZIRPER FLY •SltES 10-18 . JCPe~ney We kndw what yOlltt looking for 24 FASHION ISLAND N~ORT BEACH ONLY 6.00 1 ' , ., '? , .. • I I. • b • r d a b t • s ( a < s I , Thursday, F'tbr11ary 28, iq74 DAILY PILOT :; • ,, 2 Reagan 'r -·.~Vetoes St~te Dairymen Seeking • • [ ·sustained Another Milk Price Hike I . SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The Senate hu rejeefltd attempll to ovttrlde Oov. Roaald Req1n'e veloe!! ol two bllls 4D expand IChool meal prosrame and to ch.nge the law ort donatlons to private mental health facilltl.,, The override elfort Wednel- day on 1116 -meol1 bill by a..,... Maaoone ([).Son Franc!ICO) f1lled on a 21-11. vole, lhort ol the ri voles needed. Tho override attempt on the cbiatloos measure (8Bt0M) by Sen. Nlctiolrus C. Petris (!}.()akland ), failed on a 21·11 vole. SACRAMENTO (UPI) · -milk drink en llM mtlllon more ere.... granted by the do>-conducl..i lI he had any Idea Contending the very survival a year and could price the partment last yeGr hiked of oow much a hike would ol the ii.ate'• mtlk lndu.try nutritious commodity out ol the rel.all price ol milk at be approved , Cllrtstenaen .,.., at 1take, Ca 11 Io r n ta the diets of the poor. lensl 10 cenll per hall gallon replied, "No I don't. We'll dairymen Wednesday asked lf the seven cent per half atatewl!e. just have to see the results the state to bike lhe retail gallon price increase i 1 C. Bnlncl Chrlstemen, atnte of the· hearing:'' He &aid a price or mllk fro m an average approved by U1e Agriculture agrlcultuni'. director, has said decl.!loo on how much the hike of 68 C(lflta to 11 record 73 Department, It will be the an lncrease 11 assured. Asked will amowrt to would be made cents A half gallon. largest ever granted. Jn-while· the hearings were being next month . Quit• Po1t Appearing befoce the Statelr=========:;;;:;================:;;;:;======'==================~I }leparlmenl of Food and Agriculture's milk stablllzalton unit during the first day ol a two-day hearing, m!lk producers said the jump was vital to rneeUng higher prodtJClion coots. M01CODe'1 bill would have required CAlllomla s c h o o I ( State ) dlltrlcta' lo apply for all avillable 1tate and. ff)derol money In order to provide breakfaat.1 or lunches, or both, to pupils. e Kidnap P~1alty Ore~n State Superln· ten nL of Public ·In· st cUon, Dale Parnell, has resigned his post to be<ome Chancellor of San l)lego Commun- ity College System. He begins work April !. BUT SPOKESMEN f o r consumer groups said the boost would cc.ot CeillQrtilil New$man Farr Faces Judge Older~Again SACRAMENTO (AP) - N.,. leglllotfon tn the California Senate woUld apply LOS ANGELES (AP) -William 0. Dou11la1 freed him the death penalty to It dnaper1 Newsman William F a r r , pending appeals. such as those who abducted batWng to keep from being Said McCourtney : "It'• his Patrlda HeaNJt; sent hick to jail, will have (Older's) rontempt order. The Introduced Wedneeday by state Sen. Jame1 Q. Wedworth to take his flgbt before the petition should at least be (!)..Hawthorne) the bill would judge who ordered him jailed initially filed with him for provide a death penalty In the first Ume. him to 11et a hearing." He all kklnaplng cam ln which Superior Court Judge Alfred added, "Whet he does with ca)>llll punishment ts not M c already specified, such as J . c our t n e y said It Is up to him.'' tlhping with bodily hann. Wednesday he has transferred Older held Farr in contempt e La1Cver Jailed Farr's petitkm for a wrtt of when the newsman refw:ed SAN BERNARDINO (AP) habeas corpus to judge to reveal .the source of -Attorney Uward Foley, Oiarles H. Older. It was Older information for a story he who defended Lucille Miller who sentenced Farr to jail wrote for the Los Angeles in the renowned trial ln which in late lm for-refusing to Herald-Examiner about the she w111 coovlcted of killing oomply with hls order to Charles a1anson clan. His her dentist husband, wil! serve reveal the source of a news story concerned allegations 90 days In county jail !or story. that Manson's fo llowers had failure to pay state income planned to kill several ccle- The Sea Terrace Apartments- the new fun-place to enjoy ocean-close adult living Laguna Nlguel'e neweat deslg(1 for fun·livlng , fun-loving adults: The Sea Terrace Apartmerlt!I. Close to the surf and sand, ll'a 11 fun place to bG. Oce an or park vleWI. Beam celll:iga upstairs. Panellng downstairs. Pallas or balconlea. Plus a Recreation Building with fireside lounge, pool and JacuztL We think the~e apartments era lhe be1t value In the whole area. Come aea them today, and see If you don't ahere our view. 1 Bedroom from $205, 2 Bedrooms from f22S Directions : From Los Angeles, take San Diego Freeway south to Crown Valley Parkway exit. Right (approx. 6 mL) to Pacific Co113t Highway. Lett 1 mlle to Nlguel Rd. Left on Niguel Rd. to The Sea terrace Apartments. • LagunaNiguel The Choice Community Rancho Bernardo and VIiiage Park, olller fine New Towf!I by Avco Communlty Oevelopert, lne.1714) 493-<1501 •@ . --=---· ta1 during three year•. THE REPORTER spent 48 brtlles. The sources of the Tiie judge llsued t he days ln jall before U.S. story violated Older's gag ....,., aentf.OC8 Wednesday. Foleyl_'.SU'.'.'.pre~m:e:._:Co~url'..'___::J_::u'._'.s..'..t:.:.l c:_:•:__o:'.'.r~de:_r·:_ ______ ~'===================================-='"=~======-'I was coovlcted earlier I n superior Court on t h r e e mlldemeanor counts for 1969 , 1l10 ab:l 1971 taxe1. e Gems l'aket1 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - r Police searched today far a young black man who robbed a New York diamond merchant of an attache case conlllnlng mo<e than 1125,000 worth ol cul diamonds. But the gunman may only have wanted the man'1 wallet. .,He pulled a gun on me by the elevator," Abe Bormtein told o ! ! I c e r 11 Wedneeday, "Then he said, 'Keep walking, I'm from the Symblone.se UberaUon Army.' I thought be was going lo kidnap me. but he oald, 'Let me have it.' So I gave him the cruse. e Moderate LOS ANGELES (UPI) - StatAi Sen. Lawrence E. Wal!h , a ~ocrat, left without a district by a change in bomdary 1ine1, ennoWlced Wednesday he would run for Lieutenant Governor. H• denounced his opponents for the Democratic nomination aJ leltlsts, said the Republican candldates are too far right , and presented himself as e moderate. MARK · ON ALL SKI CLOTHING ls tock frotn 'both stores · here for this sale I Star Fined For 'Attack SANTA MONICA (AP) - Ad« Stu Gllllam. •tar of the recf!1llY canceled television eeriel 11Roll out," hes been fined $625 and placed on two yean prob a tlon for ttreatening a head waiter with an ax at a local restaurant. Gllliam, 40, amvlcted Jallt month by a superior Court jury ol dllplaylng a Wt&pon in a threatening m&Mer, was sentenced Wednesday . 'l'hat's No ExeJ_nptio1i SAN FRANCl!ICO (Ul'!} -T11: ASff!!Ot JoHph Jll, TIMey bas'declined to grant a tu exemption to a church which featured an vt eihlblt on love- ma~JI. TillMY lltl4.. Wednesday that the art eihlbll of lhe Geneel1 Church a n d ecum1nlc11 Center • 1 rt f 1'ctl commercial aspects" becausa lldmla-~on ,.., d11rged and, thcrtl\)re the <ollectlon ~., not 1.1 deductible. . "You bel we'll appeal," Church Prtsldenl T t d Mcl!llvttlna 11td 1 f t or le•nilnl ol tilt lllel!Or) ded816n. TWO DAYS OHL Y! DOORS OPEN PROMPTLY FRIDAY at I 0 a.m. . (sale moves to our Marina Del Rey store on Monday I MEN'S WOMEN'S SWEATIRS SWEATERS Myloo T-NHJi Wool T-Nocli WMIVoMecll Wool Crew Htck WoolT·Mkll PANTS w--..1My1arfltltdl Stffith PARW Mytlt ...... Dan""" S.ALE HOU!lS: FRIDAY I 0-9:30. SATURDAY I 0-9:30 I, Reg. Price $15.00 25.00 Jb.00 39.00 <0.00 HOO ~~00 46.00 58.00 65.00 65.00 1aoo_ 86.00 118.00 99.00 SALE s 9.00 IS.00 21 .60 23.40 24.00 25.80 27.00 27.60 34.80 39.00 3'.00 4'.80 •1 :.a sz:IO H.40 HykHIT·Hetk Wool T ...i Crew Hffll WMAV-HHlt WHACrewHKk WoolT•Hock PANTS Reg. Ptice $15.00 25.00 Jb.00 32.00 39.00 <0.00 . 43.00 45.00 SALE $ 9.00 15.00 21 .60 It.JO 23.40 24.00 25.IO 27:110 WGMlpl !Mylar fin.di 46.00 27.60 Slrtlch 65.00 39.00 PARKAS Myt .. FltlH 74.00 44.40 78.00 46.80 82.00 -0.20 84.00 50.40 88.00 52.10 99.00 St.40 Down RUH 99.00 H .40 AtL HATS GLOVES GOGGLES ~0°/o 714•556•8276 OFF • ( ' l 1111a '':z' M-ARK C. ·BLOOME WOlltO'S tfA-• . ,,., OIAtlW ELIN . .Ll11R~OIAl ECIALISTS · :;i.;,.~ .. MICHELIN X STEEL BELTED RADIAL TIRES NOW ONa.Y • • • 91-IBefted Radial Tiree ••Iowas. ..... 1 411/t 0 . ....... + 11.07 ,. ... IL , •• MICHELIN XAS S111•L -LftD RADIAL Tlll•S l'OR YOUR IMll90llTllD •-'re CA" , .. ,,. AS LO AB ••• Sft•L •RL ftD RADIAL TIR•• COlllPACT9 to CADILLACtl 175/13 .• •4311 195/15 .. •57" 175114 •. 14581 205/15 .. 164'' 1a5114 .. •so04 215115 ..• ,,,, 195/14 .. 153'" 225/15 ..• ,, .. 205/14 .. •5939 SIZES 230/15 & 215/14 .. •65"' 235/15 AVAILABLE • 4 WHiEL DRUM or 2 'WHEEL DISC RELINE • ... , I ritlf•LI• LllU#I • INSPICT MASTll (TL • FOlllCM& HMi.SilC •ADD llAll fLUID (MOSf UIS) • IOAD flST CAI • IU~rtT •IAAI llfllllD • CttlCI SPltllS I llAU - • CMtU WMltl C.Tlt- • MIAlllll 1 t#SPICTDIWIU NOW ONLY ••• Ol IAVI 41% I CIT A COMrllTI PllCIAll·llAll IOI fer .•• Mt.II (US. CARS) COST A MESA 3001 HARIOR ILVD. l.....iteta.w-itl ..... i 17141 557-8000 ' , I { I 8 DAU,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAG,E Orange County Supervisors this week took a logical step lo confront a gasoline shortage of almost cllsAstrous proportions. They asked Gov. Ronald Reagan lo extend his emer- gency powen; to Orange County and apply man<!Alory gasoline marketing controls lo cut down on long lines and short tempers. The acknowledgment that Orange County is in the grip of a very real gasoline emergency was not easy f,,. some board members, especially those fearful of too much state control Q.ver local matters. But considering the extent of the problem, it was the most practical solution al band. "" The new controls are not really rationing, because true rationing limits the amount that can .be pumped to ea ch customer. It is actually a distribution system where- by cars with even-numbered license ptltes fill up on even-numbered calendar days and those with odd·num· bered plates on odd-numbered days. days. While it won't change the amount of gasoline avail- able to pump, it should at least cut down some of the long waiting lines. There also is a provision aimed at preventing people with almost.full tanks from utopping off" before they hit the hall-tank mark. There Is little doubt this pro- vision will be hard to enforce and might produce some hardship. On the whole the odd-even system should pro- vide that psychological incentive needed to ward off the panic buying now all too apparent in Orange County. It's worth a try. Co11nt y Deserves Better From the outset, it bas been apparent that the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission, serving both Orange and LoB Angeles .Ccnmti~s. is he~vi· ly overburdened by comparison with the five other Cali· Cornlll regional coastline commissions. Now, at the urging of Supervisor Ronald Caspers, who sits on the South Coast commission, Assembl)'lllan Robert Badham (R.Newport Beach) has Introduced a bill in Sacramento proposing that the Los Angeles and Orange County areas be ~plll into two commissions. A survey of commission workloads accents the need for such a move. The South Coast Commission meeta an average of 28 hours a nionth, collecting monthly per· mil processing fe~s of about $150,000. San Diego County's s~parate commission handles · about hall that workload. And at the other end of the scale, the North Coast Commission logs about six hours of meeting time and collects fees averaging $23,000. Dr:-Donald Bright, chairman of the South Coast body, oeposes the spli~ maintaining it would take six months to set up a new commission and cost a great deal of money besides. That may or may not be so. But the fact that the solution is not simple will not mako the problem go away. A major concern is the fact that the regional com- missions are expected to ,help draft a master plan for the entire California coast for presentation to the state Legislature by 1976. The heavily overloaded South Coast commissiOn can barely keep. up with current pennit demands, much less devote sufficient time to long-range planning. This could mean that the final statewide plan will be based largely on input from other regional commissions wliich have more time to spend on planning. Combining the densely populated Los Angeles and Orange County areas was questionable from the be- ginning. It would have made a great deal more sense to have coinblned Orange and San Diego Counties, if a combination was essential. But politics of.the Proposition 20 drafters and supporters dictated the plum of a sep- are commission for San Diego -and now it's Orange County that bears the burden. In the interest of balanced coastal planning for the e!ltire s~at~~~dham's bi!! shoulc;l be giv~n_serious C_2.n- sideration Dy the Sacramento lawmakers, ' \)\N0SAURS IH -THE 1AA-PIJS """"'uL:x::.1~ Solution Dear Gloomy Gu s I Government Will Demand Bigger Share of Aranico To Gas Line Boredom ( A'iif'troPPE ) - The energy crisis was cracked in the summer of 1974 with the .opening of rthe first authentic Super S e r v i c e Station, As with most inventions, its mother was necessity. By March o! that year, half the p:>pulation was waiting in long lines for gasoline while ttie-other half was circling the area sear c Ding unsuccessfully for shorter lines in which to wait. The median wait bad grown to 7 .6 hours and it was the lucky motorist who aveTSged a gallon an hour, no matter what size car he waited in. The initial eifect on Americans, phys1cally and raentally, was disastrous. Sitting all day in a car while munching box lunches and staring angrily straight ahead tended to make them sedentary, surly and surfeited. ACTING swrFTL Y in this new emotional crisis. The Energy Czar issued an emergency booklet entitled, "What ito Do While Waiting in Line at the Gas Station." Chapters included: Jogging in Place, Counting Up to One Million by Sevens. Playing Parcheesi with the Motorist Ahead of You, Counting Down from One Million by Sevens Backwards, and Tatting Made Easy. While the booklet· did much to relieve the tedium (Parcheesi players were constantl y getting into fistfights), an even more grave crisis arooe: the economy was grinding to standstill. 11 \.\11111 ALL the breadwinners waiting in line to buy gas so they can go out and win their bread," the worried Energy Cza r told his wife one evening, "no ooe has time to win any bread." "Let them," said the C zarin a complacently, "eat cake!' "Cake?" said the Czar, "Yes." said the Czarina. "I know 1his marvelous bakery that will deliver Jn protest lo the odious deodorant commercials on TV, may I offe:- this slogan; "I stink, there£ore I am." E.D.Y. Oltem'f OVI tt-"" ,,. 9"111mN ..,. "'1!d'" lllf "' "" MeftSffflY f'tfMd ttlt ..... ., .. _.,.,, ltlMI nw ill'ft "'" II 0111111'1' G .... Diii., Pilot. this scrumptuous chocolate .•. " "Eureka!" cried the Czar. "You've gat it. Here we've been tcying lo produce more gas to get people to rtheir sdlools and jobs and the dry cleaners. Instead of bringing the people lo where the services are, let us bring the services to where the people are. And where are the people? At the ~as station!" So It was that the first Supe< Service StaUoo opened in Duluth oo July 4. It coosisted ol a complex ol bulldings hovering over a wide, five-mile-long conveyor belt. At the far elXl ol the belt, like the light al the end of the tWUlel, sh>ne a golden gas pump._ EVERY MORNING, the whole family would pile happily into the car to drive down t.o the Super Service Station and onto the belt. Schools and offices were first and the husband and children would climb out with farewell hugs and kisses. The housewife would then begin her leisurely trip through the day on the conveyor belt at .6 miles per hour toward the distant pump. On the way, she would pick up the groceries, the re-soled shoes, a rinse and set, a new filling. lunch at Ye Olde Tea Shoppe, a half hour with tile psychiatrist and all the gossip she cou1d handle. At day's end, glowing with accomplishment, she would reach the golden pwnp to be given precisely enough gas to drive her family home that night and back to the belt the next morning. And so, as the Arabs fumed , Americans dwelt in serenity, having discovered the key to happinw in a modem technological societ11 -how to make waiting in line a pleasure. Saudis Ready to Boost Oil Output RIYADH -The next victim ol the Arab oil squee7.e will be ttie biggest oil producer of them all, the giant Arabian American Oil Co rn p a n y (Aramco). This is the word of Sheikh Ahmed Zaki Yamani, the smooth Saudi Arabian ,oil minister, who told me his government soon will demand a greater s h a r e of Aramco. His goVernment is also willing, he told me, to increase pro- duction to meet the world's oil needs. The Saudis are un- der presSure to boost production one mil· ' lion barrels a day each year through the rest of the 1970s. AFTER THE Arab oil embargo, the daily output was cut back from last year's nine-million-barrel peak. Yamarti told me it is now back up to 8.6 million barrels and coold reach 10 million ban'els next year. There Is plenty .of pe<roleum, be said , under the hot Saudi sa.Ms. The proven reserves are estimated over 60 billion barrels and he believes the available · supply could be doubled bf exploration. 'lbe abundance of petroleum in Saudi Arabia adda emphasis to my own findings that there is no real oil shortage Wlder the ground. There is a shortage, apparently, of refined p e t r o I e u m products. This has been caused by a tightening of refinery capacity. SAUDI ARABIA now owns 25 percent of the great Aramco complex in partnership with Exxon, Mobil, Texaco and Standard of California. Yamani would not say bow large a share he will seek. But he mentioned the example of Kuwait, which recently took over 60 percent of Gulf Oil's operation in that country. Other sources clo.5e to Yamani suggested that.,..-Ole Saudis may seize full, 100 percent ¢6ifftiol of Aramco. In return, the consortium would be paid (JACK ANDERSON) for their assets 300 would be offered Saudi oil at a discount. The takeover will come as no SUJ'l'I'ise to Ar2mco, whose secret papers have been forecasting the move for months. Jn fact, 1l!e corporate brass had expected to sit down with Yamani this month to discuss the "restructuring" of Aramco. Yamani told me he Isn't ready lo negotiate with Aramco olficlals jll.1t now, but he implied tl:µlt it wm't be long. AS CZAR ol ttie world's largest oil reserves, Yamani Wields tremendous economic powef. Oil barom from Texas lo Tokyo have been flying into this sandy, remote Saudi capital to coosuJt with him. He is as disarming as be is powerful, with a soft voice, soulful eyes and a gentle manner. ln bis persuasive way, he told me of Saudi Arabia's willingness to ease the world's oil hardships. Not only will his government try to relieve the shortage, he said, but will e1ert its influence to roll bac~ prices. I CllAll.ENGED the 20-millioo-baml daily output he had promised in public statements. As evidence, I showed him a secret corporate document, which declares: "Severe technical problems have been encountered by Aramco in the Saudi Arabian fields ... (In 1973), production was increased from 6.5 million barrels/ day to 9 million barrels/day to meet increasing U.S. demands. "The reservoir pressures fluctuated so greatly that corporate engineers now estimate production will be stabilized at no more than . 7 .5 million barrels/day. far below the 20 million barrels/day projection ... Y AMAN! expressed quiet SUl'prlse but intense interest in the Aramco papers. He said his technical expert.9 keep close watch on Aramco's production. The alleged "severe technical problems" couldn't have developed, he felt sure, without his knowledge. He agreed it will take a few years to reach the 20-million-barrel goal. It will also require a huge investment . Development of the Saudi f i e l d s surpassed $600 million last year and ~d reach 11 billion a year, he said. Despite the Arab oil e m b a r g o • meanwhile, Saudi prodllction has gone steadily up. The cutback during the Arab-Israeli war last October merely reduced the output from nine million lo 7.5 million barrels dally. This was still qne million barrels a day more oil ttian came out ol Saudi Arabia at the height of. its pnxluct:ion a year earlier. U.S. OIL companies, meanwhile, have misinformed t:he goveminem about the true amount of ·oil in their reserves. Sources on the inside have told me that the figures submitted to the . government consistently have understated the amount of available oil. · Additional billions of barrels could aJJo be extracted ecooomically from the oil sands at today's market price. The real issue, in other words, is oot supply but price. The oil companies can rome up with plenty of oil when the price is right. THERE IS a legitimate shorta~, apparently, of refining capacity. But this, too. is the fault of the oil companies. 'Ibey have built oo refineries in tbe United States since 1969. Refineries were neglected because the profits were low, But now that refineries are vitally needed, the oost of building them has doubled. In the eod, of course, tbJs will be added to the Pike's Peak cost ol petroleum produots. FO<YrNOTE: Oil induotry spokesmen admil they underestimated oil demands and. therefore, didn't gear up fO!' it. They deny charges that they deliberately created !lie shortage O> boost prices and profits~ The Writers ' America A panoramic view of the American scene and the American people, as they · have been experienced by American writers from the first days of settlement until modern times. is conveyed by a handsome, abundantly i 11 us tr at e d volume: Tbe Wrtler&' Amerjca by Marshall B. Davidson and the editors of American Heritage (McGraw-Hill, 119.95; de luxe ediLioo, $22.50). 111E WORKS discu s sed -are representative of the best and most interesting ' writing that has been produced in this country throughout its history -essays, poems, novels, plays by writers from Captain John Smith to Norman Mailer. M the author notes, "The writers' America -oi;ie might as well say the American mind -had its true birth in the literature of disc o very , exploration, and settlement, penned by ( TJ;IB BOOKMAN) those who first faced the actualities of We in the New World. It is a literature deeply rooted in the rich tradition of Elizabethan and Miltonian England, and it reflects the intellectual excitement of those vital times." IN chronological order, the book presents the essence of America's best literature from eac~ period. Biographical information is enhanced by some 300 illustrations -many in full color - of places, people, and events associated with writers. And contemparary opinioM of their works show that writers have always traveled a rocky road. VICTOR DE KEYSERLiNG Ohio Vote Could Spark Panic • Ill Republican Ranks WASITT NGTON -Tho s ho ck of \ Democratic victory in Vice President lli:ofd's old Michigan district could be magnified into total alienation between Richard M. Nixon Party at tbe moment Mr. Nixon and his battery of anti-impeachment lawyers are plotting new ways to withhold ' material from the House committee's impeachment proceedings. • and his party by !he next congressional TllERE ARE strong indications that s p e c i a I election: the runaway Michigan upset b y March 5 in Ohio's !st Democrat RJchard Vanderveen was the Congressional Dist· result. ol tho~ of out r I g ht rlct, another long~ Republicag switches, not merely angry time Republican and disillusioned Republican voters stronghola. staying at home. .. U we lose th~t For example, nearly 30,000 get-out-the- ooe," a top Rcpubli· vote calls from ·Republican telepbooe can told us, "real panic will set in." Such bank! went to identiDed Republican penlc could r~!Ucalize congressional voters the day before ttie election. "We ~Ucans on· r e s i g n a t I on or gat -~ out," a high-level Jmpeacbmeol. Michigan Re!)ubllcan told us, "but they But '..... before 'the tnJclal Otilo aoublecrosSiirus Ind votedTumoerallc:" election, Republlcans who had muted Jn the Re!)ublican hlmk:ore counties dldt deep Unease over lhe Impact ol of Ford's aafely Republican district , W•"'ll•lt are oow preparing hanh new precind captains and county chairmen d<mancl$ en the White House for sent this ....aage lo lllilte Republican -""'Plel~ dlsclosure of all documents headquarters within hours afte!' the_, dea>anded by the House Judiciary "Ni.Ion baa lo go." -"l'.cnmluee. ,,,,.._ people would have crawled 'lb•a, at the very least, die lbocttng wer hot coals for Nixon IDltll ,_,,, ol Ille Michigan electkx> have Wate!1!ate,• a political lieutenant of stll!ened ...t of/ended Ibo .Republican • llepubllcan C.V. William G. Milliken . - • I ( EVANS·NOVAK) told us. "Now they've had it." THE ME.5SAGE of Michigan was only dimly visible here at a mid.January session of the House Congressional campaign Committee, headed by 'Rep. Bob Michel of DlinoLs. Moving from region to region, Michel received heartening reports from r e g i o n a I chainnen that Watergate, after all, was -not going lo lw'll into the Republlcan- eating monster that Some Republicans feared. -n;e only discordant voice raisecl that day crone from Rep. William J. ScherJe,. a ~ oonservaUve from Iowa. On boarl.ng that Ford's seaf was "safe," Scherle vehemently protested. In Iowa, he n!eounted, a fund·rals<r planned for the 2nd ~looal DistrlOI last November liadjb be called oU for a fairly declllve ,...,., R •pub 11 can leader$ simply could DOI sell near -eoougb llcketa ~make It -U.w11lle. SCHERLE'S warning: a n t i -N i x on sentiment well~ up from the Watergate issue was still quiescent, just Wlder <he surface, but would surely burst sooner or later 1n a torrent of protest votes. Scberle's grim forecasi was fuJlilled by the Michigan electlon, in which Vanderveen Ignored Inflation, energy and Wleinployment to cmcentrate on Watergate and the President. , · In Ohio's !st District, Democratic prospects •~ far better oo paper than they ever werrtn Michigan, deepite a 70 percent win there in im by William Keating, 1be rest g n e d Republican Congreesman. Openiliveo of both parties believe Democrat Thomas Luken waa running lllghtly ahead' of Republican Willis Gradison , Jr., just before the Mich!pn tiJoclrer,- 'Ibu.s, Luken mmt be the odds-on choice lo capture the seat for lhe Democ:rats for the finit Ume tn to years. But more Im~~ a powerful pn>- Luken labor campaign baa been quleUy transported from Grand Rapid.• te CmciMati In the past few days with a( moit aophlatlcated AFl-CIO political operatloG. ·IT WAS ttiis-Of'Ol'Btl1)0, und..-the over· all command of, top AFL-CIO political operative Al Barkan, that lw'lled out a maximum Democratic vote i n Micltlgan. Some 35,000 ~e calls got ~ lo the pol)s; backed by unprecedented batteries of doorbOll ringers and plenty of mooey, To save the Ohio district-and stem what is surely potentially faleful political blood-letting for President Nixon -the Republican high command Is prepared ' ~ . ) OIANGI COAST DAILY PILOT Robm N. Weed, hbluhu Thomas Keevil, Edjtor Barbara Kreiblch Editorial Page Editor 'l'bunday, February 28, 1974 • I to put every resource avaJlable at Gradison's command. But moving Republicans O> the polls March 5 may well mean more votes for the Democrat, as in Michigan. If . so, even a last-djtcti,_ .m a x i.m u m Republican campaign with help direct from the While House may only be sell-defeating in Clnclmati. Having , experienced shock in Michigan, party leaders are now half-expecting panic from Ohio. I The edliorial paae of· the Daily Pilot attics 10 inform 9.nd rllmulate ~aderg by »~nllng on thls page d1wrv. commentary on topics of·tn- tere by_t)tndic1ted columnim and <:attoonitta, by providing 1 fot'Um, for readers' views o.nd by presenttna U\lt neWfP8per'1 oiilnlona and ldeu on Ctltrent topics, Th• ..-dltorlal OpinJons ot ~he ""'Deily Pilot •Ppe&t only tn the edllorial t!OIUmn 1t the top of the p1;ge. Opinions expJ'tNtd by the col· umnlstJ and cartoonlrti and Jetttt wrhen are their own and no tnctorae- ment or thtlr views by the Dall¥ POot should be inferred. . • • ' We'd like to make things easier fqr you. That's why we've combined our most useful services in one checking account. The All-in-One Checking Plan. You pay a flat fee of only $2 a month. No fluctuating charges. No minimum balance. Write all the checks you want. • 2. No filling out separate applications for separate services. L---4 One application does the job at Bank of America. 4. Look at what you get: u 1. 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M an • { . • • • •• 8 DAIL V PILOT Ttn"1d117, Ftb<ultT 28, 1974 IRS Dispute Actor's Daughter To. ~eep Rail Car From Wire Services A federal judge has awarded an aging railroad car, ~1tlch had been selzed by the Internal Revenue Service, to Gretchen H a y d e 11 , ·22, daughter of actor Sterling Hayd~n. Judge Cllarles B. Renfrew , in u .s. District Court in San Francisco made the award Powerful Glue 'Not Dangerous' I x I ~" 1o R....i.ct. Wil .bdon-VtMft! RtddinlJ. ~ 1500 hbM. Cmlo MelO I 1( • ' ' • • Jack&J1lf CJ/'ie Gofd Piece CHILDllH'S HAllSTTUNG §:/_ SP!CIAUZJNG Custom """',.....,, Designing lo p..-t'""" $400 ~ Engraving lon9 hoir 557-642) Diamond ••tra 1-.--1 ·~ ·-... Setting 979-8157 ,._ ...... 1..._ ........ ,, ...... 1n.n.,M,,WJ l UNCH DINNEI!. SUNDAY 6RUNCH COUNTRY BREAKFAST I Oo.m.-2:30p.m. 11_ o.m.-2p.m.: .5:30.1 Op.m. . the west end · where the nicest clothes hang out Happiness is FUN IDEAS from .pitf A UNIQUE GIFT & CA RD SHOP 557-2702 ·TIME ------- LIFE BOOKS. AlllEAYAILABLEHERE. Single tltlu or compltt• Mri11 --wUhout 111bKrlptlon. C.mtlnanctbnlww M!RCHANTILEBLDG. SS7·ll7S ·I 'hurigiy tiger ..... TAU RANT .••••• -.,ooo ,,., ••••• • 979-llBl OPF.N Dally for l.Unth Sunday for Urund'f LITILEGEM INDIAN ARTS l'fHl HAHDClArnD IHDIAH JIWMT HAT AJo.HOJ'l.lUHI WISHON-HARRELL STONEWARE a truly unique collection, of ~andt~ro)'ln. pottery • PHWHHted Coffwe ~ • C...,tete Miiite UM . . .,,.. . ..,... ........... COFFIE TUDER. ._......-lc9NI Mn~ 1117·f,711 r.e~ervotions honored •Dinner .; Sunday Brunch •Cocktails •Entertainment the lofty lady h e>tu•e1 lo.liloft lovor•ie11ft 'f'O'll-Ot o"d ohtr·fl.e 1.;,. f1111 and loq. !~-OJ34 WHIMS EV HDIJJIW 'D8L9'S .. m:ssame~l(a 1co1wo::K~ e s:om: cmrr 1'LLl.D \'our Q:implete Womcn·s Fashion Shoe Boutique (7141979-9'252 SPfCIAUZ1NG IN N..-.,11ow WID1HS c/i;dlede/f~ All Origional Reclwood Pieces F'eoh,1rl~g Beou!ilul Bu.rl1 -Oislir.tllV11 Gtoln1 •Occo1iofll:I( T oble1 •Porio Fvr..orin •Counret fopt •Heodboorcli •Gome Tobie' •hi Objtct1 •Momle1 •Stielve1 CUSTOM DESIGNED FURNITURE AND ACCESSORIES -- Nearly Everyone List~ns to Landers · NEEDLE NEST •/~ ~~NT •RY,', RUGS •LATCHhOJK RUGS 516-ltlS-7 DAYS WllK USSOMS-s.&.TURDA Y MUOLIPOIMT WOIKSHOI' MEEDUMEST AllOi ........ c.11 ........ COLLECTOR'S n Exclusively Stamps, 0 Coins, and Supplios . ~ . m f'IE•VTH ING FOR STAMP ;1111 AND COI N COLLECTORS 556-6850 OPEN Belgian Waffle WAFFLES Daily' 9130o.m.-9100p.m. ' Sunday: 9,30a.m.-6,00p.m. TOmDWITH: ··s1ni-we.me1 Inn .,,_.,.., \" "'"c- l . 8/utberri• 1 •Whl~dCr.orri .__-t •Mop/1 Syrup 557-5186 BllEAKFAST•LUNCH•DINNER AlSO: •SOUf'S •SANDWICHES •OMILITS . '•lltOIAN •IUIOHI ~~~g~-................... ..... ........ :: .... ••..•. 1T'1.W4 ~ shoe\--boot~ & ~el l~menond~n _._ (all ~1e\) -156-60JO I 1164276 ACTIYI SPOITS WEAi . FOi MIH AMII WOMEM UNUSUAL GIFTS AND APPAREL FROM AROUND THE WORLD Hand Wovrn VIR~IN WOOL RUGS ll'UI and FOLKART from l'OLAHD "(] tal.ian <l/ dfafj~" DELICATESSEN ~ SANDWICHES ~ PIZZA •C~IMIALS• Em On,,..,,.,.., Or To Go CATHINO HIYICI WINE & If ER FRENCH === I\ MUl fl MEDIA. ~HO WIHC, Of (JVFR nn AP fl ', TS .REST-AU RANT HINCH - PH11t ~[~ CUISJN, COCICTAJLS LUNCH 11 o.m.·21IOp.m. OH SUHfil.OWllt, Ol'l'OSITI SOUTH COAST PLAZA DAILY 10 lo 9, SATURDAY !O lo 6, SUNDAY IZ lo 5 r \ ; \ • €Y€'S a Rt Q.\LIER1€S l'INIST COLLECTION OF CHISS & FAMIL V GAMES IN THE COUNTY IN THE MERCANTILE iUILDlNG LOOIC !'Ott THE FlAGS ' Antiques cod Plants .., - Thursda.r, Ftbfuary 28, )q74 DAILY PILOT 9 Reagan Backs. Staff Flight Expenses .. • SACR4M&NTO (AP ) Member• or Gov. Ronald · Reag111'1 IWI clalmed .... 1191 In u-for out .. f .. ta11 trlpa they made with the. Governor durlq the lalt three montht of 1171 , the Sacramenlo Bee baa ... port«I. The Journeys Included a trip to AllltraUa and 81ncapore: to Ml111MtvPI and 'Te-; Atlanta, aa. ahd Reno, the Bot reported Wedneldly. trip, the out-ol-ctate tours marked the 1W1 of Rt111n11 ....... lo tllo"'.DWl!ed ~lo" c tr c uH ,•f 1peakl•I appe-, larceJy·oo boheU of Republican canclidateJ Ind parlllt ID otblr .. tes. 1be •Pteeranctt are viewed by POlltleal ol>ttrvers u one way tor Reagan to win GOP frlendl fO< a poulble bid for the Republican prOlldentlal nomlnillon In 1971. 111E REPUBLICAN Chief EXCEPT rOR TllE (orelgn uecullve hu I n 1 I 1 I e d , ''You mode a mlltaltt aftd got some on· the ceiling, Daddy. Are you gain' to troM it?" !lowover, that etch trip II bUllt arOund at least one olficlal bulkaeD appeara n ce~ 1ovtmor. ~gan aldea have said all of Re•1•n'1 expenses, and thole of his staff, m being paid out of the proceedl of the p o I i t i c a I fund~ral!lln1 affairs where R e a g a n appeared. Tho exception II the aocurlty force that travell with Reagan wherever he 1oe1, whether in CalUomll or ouWde the 1t1te. Rel(ID rtcenUy deleaded the praeHce of bulldlnc hit o ut -o f -11 tat e poUtlcal appearancea around an ofllc:!ll duty. The chief p.trpOBO of the Febr\tary trip, he laid, was to addtt11 the Dallal crime Commlulon on Feb. 11. HE Ll!:r? California Feb. JO and rolurned lour da)'I later after making GOP fund. raising lppearahces in Dallu, Oklahoma City, Wichita and Topeka, Kan. and Salt Lake City. "The lul trip WH With reprd to an invitation to Dallaa, Tei., and somethlna to which I think I made 1 eontrlbuUoo, their c r J m e Ul"IT~t 1\'Y Lob1>11bt Fonner Broo klyn Con-gressman Emanuel Cel- lar will serve u a non- pald lobbyi!t for the city of New York, ac· cordlna to Mayor Abra- ham P . Beame. CLAIM& HAVK NOT boon IUbrnltted for ex p e n 1 e 1 Involved In trlpa In January to Wa"'1Dgtoft, D.C., Virginia, New HamJ)thire, Vermont and South Carolina, and I n February to Texu, Oklahom a, KMIUand Utah . commll.llon," Ret(ID Slid. J ljiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiii~~!!iii!;iiiiiiiiiiiiii!!!ii!iiii~'!iii!ii!ii!!!i!!iim;jjj- B~Y~roR f+~~~R * * * * * * Not Dis Fault Reagan 'Does What He Can' HOW TO DO THEM STEI' IY STll' Anyone can care for a Brush, & Blower h,air style, or our 0th.er curl coalllng, luas·lree, lull lunctional SCISSOR STYLES wflict\ are as easy to do aa just sttampoo! Our lamp cuts, linger tumPle cuts. curling iron cuts, waah. lowel dry, brush, 'n !lull cuts or simpfe wash. and wear culs are SCIS- SACRAME NTO (UPI) _ much .about that. 'Ibat'a one SORED. all take-care-al yourself styhls. Good !or any aoe. any ti11r. No teasing, no rollers, no i:i1ns, no POLLUTI NG Gov. Ronald Reagan says he thing that gQea with this job," HAIR SPRAYS. ALSO: la turning off llghll In his he replied. MO sn·P'EIMAMIKJ W•VIS, YOU M•T HIVll WA.HT home and set the thermostat TO HT TOUI H•ll •G•IM. down to conserve ener1Y, but "Everyday there Is a piece STYLING 1ald he did not have "too of paper that comes out and JOSEPH'S SCISSOR much" control over h is I look at it and It tells me Huntinaton leoch Fultrton Wldelpre.d tr.v·'· what I'm &oln& to do every tl64.r...t..... HIM.tt.tler .... .u.. 15 minutes and half-hour for Reagan wao quixxed about hol hedu 968-3535 879-3863 hil personal efforts tQ cu t :.e won ~~~·'_al.,~·~~~·:'.'."_u_·n_g_ll_!.!~llllllllllllllll'!liiiittii~'~A.M.~!'"~1~°'~.M~.~;s.t~.~·!'"!•~•,;;to!s!'!.M~. ~!!'!!! bl.ck fl.lei conswnption during ___ _ a question-and-ans .... :er session with high school students. "Well now, I don't have too much to say about my tr1vellng so I can't do too Pre-Inventory Reduction Sale at BalJ ioa Island Store Only 'h OFF This Is our own stock regularly sold in our own stores. Use your BankAmerica rd or 1.faster Charge. No house charges. All sales final. • SALi INDS M•ICH JND. Co1ne early for the best 8electlo11 9 :30 to 5:30 P.M. ' No D~•l•r• Rcni~1nber, Balboa lslnncl Store Only.' CHARLES H. BARR Ww.t1ift' PlW, Newporl Bncll, Callt. 111 ).1uiM A•tnlM, Balboa bland, Calif. ~@~~~~~~ United Air Lines Friendship Service Memo Friendly ' • ' r\1 1//l lt11 UPRIGHT JUNIPER • hetJ. c,,.... ·• .._ Pohit $329 • 5_.L -M- 11 BEGONIA ANGIL WIN• 'fAllltT PINK ,LOWIK 59' UlGI SIU 1 GAL • AL6ERIAN IVY Yllflttetff ;-Ctl•11 SNl!ed" YAllMATID VfltONICA c ... ,... Y..t.tlf"1 ,..,... ..... w .. I wMtl .... ... . tp)e¥f4l4 "Grower's Special.'' RANUNCULUS MIXED COLORS 29' 4" POTS . ~ • • MORAEA IRIS PEHHNIAL 1115 1 GAL •DRACAENA PALM E1cen.1tt f• !) . Ac<elltlnf ,_ '\ ' ' r. • es • • arege en er. Good news! On March 2nd we will be expanding our schedule. While the fuel situation is still of national con- cern, our fuel economy measures are working well, and it has become possible for us to reinstate some of our fl.ights suspended earlier in th e year. So here's our schedule with all non- stop and one-stop fli~hts from the Los Angeles area to 53 cities across your land. You will notice we have increased \ our service to Seattle and Portland, and also to Hartford, Baltimore and Memphis.And we have return ed to every-hour-on-the-hour commuter service to San Francisco from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. United has seats available on oyer 1,300 daily flights serving 113 cities of your land .Just call United at 537-7521 , or tell your Travel Agent to book you on United. Nonstop and one-stop flights from Los Angeles. Fronl I.All Allcele! 1n1m..uonal Airport '· Telal.._,. tolhlhakn To Boise To Cedar RapWs/ low• City To CU.tlotte ToO..-.t ToO-. Tollwok To- ,.. __ hi Orr •••••••ffl'P -To Hartto.41 ~ I . D..-H F .. M No, St•PI JO:OO a.m. 734 344 • 8:40 1.m. 7:30 a.m, 374 S:OO p.m. .S22 11 :10 1.111. 314 8:40 1.m. 344 1:55 p.m. 700 8:45 a.m. 61 0 6:40 a.m. 426 8:00 a.m. 100 10:30 a.m. IC» 1:15 p.m. 108 S:JS p.m. 110 12:201.m. 118 tl noon 78 10:15 a.m. 726 12:1Sp.m . .574 2:30 p.m. 176 3:45 p.m. 310 5:35 p.m. 210 8:25 a,m. :l04 11:10 a.m. 314 l:JO p.m. 176 !:Mi p.m. 352 11:20 1.m. 118 10:30 1.m. 104 1:45 p.111 •• 84 I 0 0 0 I 0 747 0 O OC-10 0 0 747 0 0 0 0 0 0 I 0 I I I 747 I E1 Sat Thi Sal 0 DC·IO 0 0 0 To Hi&. To llot1olul11 Toll.Uvllle To Lai Vqu To Men:ff To rtfollne/R«k hland!O.vn~ To ~10111.,•1 To New Yoric/ N1w1rk ToOm1t.111 To Plllil1dd~hla To Pltubw1 .. · To POftla•d 1 1 :~1.m. 11:40a.m. 9:30 a.m. l:OO p.m. 4:00 p.m. 9:50 a.n1. 12:50 p.m. 6:45 a.m. 6:5'01.m. 10100 1.m. 6:00 p.m. 8:4!1.m. J:SS p.111. 7:40 a.m. 197 0 7~(Tu&-Wcdonlyl 197 0 ExTue-Wcd 191 0 747 81 0 747 5 0 747 780 0 782 0 426 0 •S4 0 '" 0 526 J 610 0 700 0 !M3 I Ex Sat 12:10 p.m. ~ 0 Ei S1l..S11n s.1-sun only 12:.lO p.m. ~8 fl J:4S p.m. J IO I 11:45 a.m. · 168 l 9:\Sa.m. 4:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m: 8:4' 1.m. 12:00 noon l:ISp.m. 1:15p.m. 696 0 652 0 71U 0 6 0 OC·IO (JFK) 11 O 747 (JFK I 12 O (New1rlr.) 108 I DC·IO (New1rlr.) 8:25 a.m. J04 0 11:45 1.m. 168 0 5:50 p.m. 352 o ExS1t l:ISp.m. 1:45 p.n1. 88 0 DC·IO 84 I DC·IO ToS•• l>Mt:• To San11 B1rb1r1 To Suttl1tr.c:on11 To Vball1 To W11hln110.. o.c. 7:JO 1.m. 4!1 0 JO:SS 1.m. 347 0 2:00 p.m. 7! 0 7:35 p.m. 799 0 9:30 p.m. 275 0 8:00 1.m. ~ 0 9:00 a.m. 506 0 10:00 a.m. 405 0 11:001.m. S!O 0 12:00 noon 433 0 I ;00 p.m, 7fJ7 0 2:00 p.m. 516 O J:OO p.m. 59 0 4:00 p.m. 520 0 5:00 p.m. :.::!l 0 6:00 p.n1. 526 0 7:00 p.m. 815 0 7;30 p.m. 11 0 8:00 p.m. · 6J7 O 9:00 p.m. .!130 0 12:50p.m. 984 0 4:00 p.n1. 864 0 9:10 p.m. tl72 0 8:\Sa.m. 292 IO:lXl a.m. NO 12:00 noon 308 I :00 p.m. 7f11 2:45 p.m. 381 0 0 0 • o · • Ex Sat 4:00 p.n1. 520 . 5:00 p.m. 286 I Ex Sat O 7"7 !EA Sat) 5:00 p.m. 286 7:45 p.m. I ~ 8:00 p.n1. 4S& ·s:OO •.m. 504 5:JO p.m. 418 O OC·IO !S11 only) I S1tunly O EJt Sit 7:40 a.n1. .... 0 1J:0011.m. 11:45 p.m. 52 OOC·IO S4 0 • 7:00 a.m. '°2 lj:50 p.m. 846 :15p.m. :)90 8110 p.rn. 822 0 8:45 a.n1. l:OO p.m. J:JO p.m. S:JO p.m. 7:45 p.m. 7:45 p.m .• 380 0 486 0 201 J E~ S11 418 From On1ario lntem1tlonal Alrpon 6:451.m. 61501.m. ll:JOa.m, 1'1ll •S4 1406 0 I 0 Sat only 59! 0 E1 S•t Tb Cllk8to 8:00 a.m. 216 0 158 OOC·IO !Satonly) To Ona~er 9:50 a,m, 780 Sat, Sun only To R1leltWh••m , ,..._ 11:5'0 p.m. ?82 j E.l Sat To Norfolk/ Po"1mou1h/ Vlrz;mll He1cb 9:00aA, 7:JO o.m. 374 0 76 0 3:55 p.m. 970 0 11:45 p.m. )4 I To Om1h1 There are approximately tho 11me number of return nJahu.Cllll United or )'Qur Travel.Aaenl for 1pecific1. ' . The friendly skies of your land United to 53 cities • . ' Par1ntr1 tn Trt vtl with Wescern ln1em•tlonal l lo1ela., , ' I 12:50 p.m. 8:001.m. 12:50p.m. '" 0 216 I ~ I E.• Sa1 ' \ - r . • ' I J,O DAILY PILOT f ~· • • ,. For the • • J ' ., ~ Record I 4 , ~ Dissol1rtio1t ~ o·t Marriage ) ' \ Deaths ~ Else·u~here , HONOLULU ( A P I J Hyotaro Inouye, father of U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye, died .;: h .. ere. The elder Inouye was ,,. born in Japan and came to · Hawaii as a child. He and his "' wife celebrated their SOth ~ wedding anniversary in Au-1 gust. PARIS IAPI Pa ul Deschamps, 86, f o r n1 er curator of the French Museum of Moownents and member of the French academy, died Monday. LOS ANGELES IUP ll - 1be county coroner's office said Wednesday that a former : Phil adelphia attorney collapsed and died of a heart attack midway through the Californ ia bar exam. The .. victim was identified as Sidney L. Weinstein. 44, a partner in a Beverly Hills land developing company. Death Notices Tt111rsday, ffbr113ry 28, 197i4 Cl1ildre11, Wome11 Lack Iron \VASHI NGTON (AP) About 95 percent of the nation's preschool children and women of child-bearing age appear to lack sufficient iron in their diet. according lo a prelin1inary government report. 'rhc U.S. Department of liealth. Educa!iun and Welfare ~aid W c d n es da y that inadequate ·v intake of the essential nutrient, whi ch could lead to iron defiricncy ,1nernia, appears to affect. 1ncn1bcrs of those two groups regardless of v•helher thev are rich or poor, black or White. DIETARY INTAKES o l calciun1 and vitamins A and C, however. approach or exceed federal standards for n\Ost persons except black females .aged 18-44 years, who 'had calcium 1nta::es about 20 perL"ent below normal, and . \ow-income white females of the same age whose vitamin A intake was 18 percent lower. The findings, which are expected to inf I u en ce nu tritionists and government policymake rs, are reported in a new volume entitled, "First Health and Nutrition Cagne~ Started As Impersonator By MARILYN and HY GAllDNER Q: We're look.log forward to 1eeing James Cagney aCcepU11g an award on TV from the American Fiim In- stitute. Didn't U.e tough actor get bb: st11rt.,. ill the tbe.atu as a fe1nale tmpersonator?-Mrs. Lee SaphJre, l.Gng Island Clly.N.Y. A: Yes. Cagney's fi rst job on Broadawy was Imper. sonating a chorus girl. "Jn order to be a hoofer," he once said, "'there has to be something the matter with you. No- body else ,,;ould be in a theater at 8 a.m. day after day, beating his brains out with his feet." We wouldn't be sur· prised if, during the function honoring him on television, the 7&-year-yowigster does a tap dance. To prove he's still \\'ith it. Q: l was shocked to bear tlutt Jack Benny saw the notorlus Llnda Lovelace porno fllm half a dozen Umes. Why?-Oeede Loach, Shreveport, La. A: Whoever told you that is pulling your leg, Benny didn 't even sit through the film once. "l live· a very clean ('Glad You Asked That') life," Jack joked. ''The \\'Orst thing I've done in 10 years ,vas to look at 'Deep Throat'-as l drove by the theater where it was showing." Q: Settle a bet. I claJm the longest running Broad· y,·ay show of all lime was either "Tobacco Road" or "Abie's Irish JWse." Nobody else ill my condomlnlum club agrees. \\'e need your decislon.-Malcolm Frisch (aa oldtlme sboY.'biz buff), l\Uami Beach, F1a. A: Sorry but you Jose. "Tobacco Road," \vith 3,182 performances, "'as recently upstaged by the musical '"Fid- dler on the Roof," which racked up 3,242 superforrnances. Runner-up to that hit is "Life with Father" with 3,224: "Abi11.'s Irish Rose" is now seventh on the all-time list witlil a total of 2,327 curtain-raisings. Q: Who was it described Hollywood as "a town "'here every Tom, Dick and Harry is named Tab, Rock and Rory"?-Mrs. Ernestine Hughes, Baltimore. A: The late,. great humorist Herb Shriner. Q: What are the three biggest box-office movies of all time, up to the end of last year?-P. Purcell, Balti- more. A: "The Godfather," \vith a cash take of $85 million. Followed by "The Sound of Music," to the tune of $83 mil· lion. Next is the 1939 film, "Gone With The Wind," with a gross of $77,900,000. That's why it will be a Jong \vhile be- fore you'll see the old Clark Gable-Vivien Leigh classic fo,r free On TV. Q: Fulton J. Sheen oiree gave a wonderful description of history. Could you dig up e:xactly what be sa.id?-Mn. F.N. Metzger, Washington, D.C. - A: Yes. Archbishop Sheen observed: "History? The British never remember it. The Irish never forget it. The Russians never make it. And the Americans never learn from it." Send your questio11s to Hy Gardner, "Glad Yait •Asked That," care of tliis newspaper, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. Marilyn and Hy Gardner will an· swer as many qu.estions as they can in their column, but the volu111e of mail makes personal replies i?n· possible. r ' I .. c ..i's ""'s-t\'f. e Miranda SENSOR ET COMPACT JS e AUIOITllHC t•posutt with manual ov1r1idt • Aul01111llc: flltttrln& e [ltct1onc shutttr 1an11 4 stc. to 1/100 sec. • R1n11 llnd1r loc:usln& e Autoinatlc flash system Mf1 . List P1ice 129.95 82.95 Honeywell Pentax STROBOLl'IE ti e Rtcyclt Time I Ste. 11.89 e Hot Sllot ; Fl1td PC Couf Our Re1. 15.95 · PRINZ ~35MMF2.8 TILl,HOTO LEIS • Fo111 lent tMmtnt e f ltld an11e 11 esmallest 11111tutt 1/22. Our Rt,c. 64.95 Pmw f.'ant 47.83 SOLIGOR LENSES T4 135mm F 3.5 AUTO LENS • 4 Eltmt nl Ttltphott e An.cit ll . M.L.P. 99.95 89.95 Miranda SENSORET EE with F 1.8 Lens •Full automation PLUS spot and •••••I• me111ln1 =~::~:::::::~.~"··;,· ·2· 3 s o· o •Ctost-\IPS down to. 7 lnc:hls llita .' List P1ic1 338.95 • SE l•~'"'"I 14 9 5 CARRYING CA .... Utt '"" tl.!S • . Bauer XL Super 8 MOVIE CAMERA e Takes movlt1 In "11lstln1 ll&hl" , e Flis In the palm ol yol.I' hind e B1l lll1nt lhr0111h-the-11n1 view tinder 9 5 e cont1ol llldlcato11 ln th• view l lndtr 13 4 0 Mf1. List Pr lct 152.95 Bauer C4 MOVIE CAMERA •Automatic behind -tht-11111 11po,i;11 conlrol • 230 shutt11 • 4 lo 1 Power Zoom .... Ll>l "''" 189.95 227 .75 BRIGGS _ Examination Survey, United ~-ii~-~-~-~-~-~-~·~-~-;;-~;-~-~~-~-~-~-~-;~-~-;:-~;-;-~~-~-~-~-~-;~-~-;~I H•rold c. Brigg,, R~dfllt of H1,m11ng1on States, 1971-72." '"'"' dale DI c!fflll, Febn1ary 26, ~ir--'-19?•. Survived by wife, Irene T. Brl9Qs; f'MdPcliliUIA(h•e111,.....nt .J --1 Pi~J;C~:ON 90 230 F 4.5 AUTO ZOOM Vista 46 Strobe f$11111hters, Pelrlc!e Manes. HunTlngton THE REPORT represents BHch; Joan Peters0t1, Mon11111a: mo!her, 'Mrs. Ethel Stone; !011r vr1111dchUdre11; the first sc ientifically designed one ore111~ra11dchlld. St>rvlces, Friday, llUtn·l,·onal survey of the U.S. 11 AM. D•lday Srothers Chapel, w;th Rev. Michael 011Uy ct! St, 8011ave11tur•'1 uf t. to •·t · th Chvr<h, 0111ci11l11g. vislra!IOl'I, 1oc11y, pop a Jon ~ ermine · e Thvr5d1v. from i 10 ' 11'\d 7 10 t dietary impact on health. PM.·ln!trmenl. Good Shepherd Ceme!trv. ___ .:..___cc_ ______ I Olld1v Srolhers HuntlnoTon 8 , a c n ,. MOrluarv. M2-7771, Oirtctort. '------------,I SURD II Myra J. Burd. 910 W. 191h St., Co•t11 THE Mna. Date of death, Febr1111ry 26, 197~. Survlv~ Cy huscand. Cecil; 100, NEPTUNE SOCIETY L1r,.Y Roger1, of Hawthorne; daughter, Mr>. Mary Shirley, Phoenix; two brothers, Compttlt Crem11!on Services .Jack Gregg, Alabama; Luke Grl'9g. wllll d!sHmln•lion 1l 1N FIOl'ldll; two sls!ers, Pearl Ba•Ter ~na Tiii Ditnlllnt Slmpl1 Altarn1!1va £lvlr1 St11ckey, both !>f Tennesi.ee. T1 The C01lly 1nvolvtd Mo11t;iltY services and 1111ermen1 will Ile t\eld Fvntr•I Ctmtiery Sysllm In Fayenevllle, Ten111ssee. Bell Broadw•v 24 Hour Service 714-646-7431 MOl'tu•rv. F'orw•rd!ng Olre<:to... I'~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;;;~"~"~'~"~"~"~·~~~"~"~~· '~"~'~w~"'~'~"'~"~·"'~'"~"~'~"~;;;;;;~!I CART&.R John (Pete) Carler. R•sldtnt of Co.111 1teia: d•Te of death, February 76, 197~. :At• 611. S11rvlv~ bv wile, Beatrice, of the hOmel two d11u11hters, C•roly11 .line Tllom"'' C01't• Mt1a: Calhrvn Sue 11\ICk, Aocl'lflrilge, Alaska : brother, Thom•s Miiier Carter, o! Manilll, .,.Mlllolott; sevan grandch!ldren. Memti+r of SPESQSA. Vhila!lol\, Today, ThUrM!ay, from 5 lo 9 PM. Service•, Frld11v, 11 1'M. both at Paclfl( View Chal)el. lolermenl, Paclllc View Memorial Par~. Smiths Morluarv, O!raclors. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. ! 71h St., Costo Meso 646-4888 -·-BALTZ·BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corono del Mor Costa Meso -·- 673-9450 646·2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 1 lO Broodwoy, Cosio Meso 548-3433 -·-DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARY 17() I 1 Beoch Btvd. Huntingto n Beoch 842-7771 244 Redofldo Ave. l ong Beoch (213) 438-1145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA . HACH MORTUARY 1795 logvno Canyot'I Rd. 494.941.S -·-McCORMICK MISSION MORTUARY 28832 (om•1>0 Cop1s1rcmo Son Jvon (apo~rror.o 495-1776 -·-PACIFIC VllW MEMORIAL PARK Morti;or1 (ha~l 3500 Poc1 l1c View Or•ve Newport &och Col1lo1 n~ 6.44.2700 -·-·-PIEK FAMILY COLONIAL fUNIRAL HOMI 7801 Bobo ,.,_.., Weltl'!l•fl~i.,- 893-352.S -·- ~IWo steak di111iers fbr$5.95. That's Right. Teriyaki for Two. Specially priced at just $5.95. Come have dinner with a friend and try one of the great steaks we serve. Tertyaki. Marinated in our special oriental teriyaki sauce and served with a grilled pineapple ring. Dinner also Includes sou p du jouror fresh garden salad. Choice of potato or rice. Piping hot homemade bread with butter. Plus-a bottomless.cup of our own spei::ial blend coffee. There's no shortage here in Our galley. We planned ahead and You should too. Begin now. Clip our coupon and enjoy two o~ our great steaks. I I r ' . ~'-'"T--·1· --'-SCREEN e \llon dtr -Lltt e 11 Eltmtnl Zoom • An,clt 27:12• • Dulll·ln Ltnl Shad• 40x40 R11. 28.95 sl lvtr lenticular •Flame and ml kltw 1esl st1nt 19.95 111.L.P. 249.95 188 .. 95 T·4 MOU/rilT NOT INCLUDED cra.AIG CAil STEREO • P lu,c-ln quick rel1as1 mounlln,c QUICK ftE LEASE • Au to and manual procram chang1 Mfg. list price •104.95 89.95 CONVERTIBLE MOBILE TWIN SPEAKER 9415 Kit • Convertible for Surface or Flush Mount ing • Chrome and Black Molded Plastic • AltrJctive Modern Styting • 7" W x 4'\4" H " ro · 94.15 Ou1 Rtl-49.95 • GN 46 , color lllttr • Rtvalvln,c hot shoe e Sync cor d AC/DC 38.95 Velbon VE 3E Tripod e J ste11on channel leis (lip type le,c locks • Htavy duly pan htad • Rubbtr and spike f11t Our Re1 . 21.25 17.83 ~IG ELECTRONIC 'CALCULATOR Has % key. lloating dec imal, automalic constant .. priced for everyone's pocketbook. Mlg. list 1 09 95 price '139.95 • cra.AIG ELECTRONIC CALCULATOR . • Full-Floating or Program- med Declmal Point Position- s • Co nstant or Chain Multiplication and Division • AC or Battery Operation • Bullt ·i n Recharging Circuit with Low Battery Signal • Large· Easily Leg ib le Flu o re9cen1 DiSPtay • 4''4" W x 1·3/8" H x 8-5/8" D 89.95 " Mfg. list price •t 14.95 ~IG 3114 Kl AM/FM I Traek STEu-o~T-STEM Prlct& tlf1cll•t throuaft Sunda1, M1r~h 3. crmeras e .cete·ra ' e AM/FM Sttrt .tirt.,..JtioriO , carlrld&• pl1 1 • r1111-s111 dlh.t• .. , wltft dliimond tlylUs 1nd sr '"shut-oft • ALltomatlc fM 1tet10 • chins Walnul llnl1h wood c Ml • '423 ... ,11;., sy1t11111 Mfa . Litt ,,le• 215.95 179.95 \ . SOOTif''COAST PWA-COSTA MESA , WUST9.AT $ill DIEGO flWY • PffOll! 979-3373,.. . ~Y~T:-1~9 SAT: 101., P.M. SUit 12 (i-) S P.M. 1 '; • • . Rainier, 'Onassi~ ·Make Up MONTE CARLO (AP) Prince RaWer and Princes, Grace have sealed t he tr reconciliation with Jacqueline and Arlatotie Onassis ·With lunch in the prince's palace. Cow1 lnfonn1pits II I I d Chrbtlna Ona""6, the Greek shipowner's , daughter, alio .attended tile lupch Tuesday. !">'"'it · OnaasLs and his wire arrived 1n Monte Carlo Sunday. PRINCE RAINIER a n d Onassis had been at odds since tbe early 1960s when Onassis !ffll!@ll 18 Jllll'!IP!j!!l@ In I 4ml'lll!l11lit pJ,n fllf die ' principality. At the time, he held the controlll!i&. ln"n!ll Ill the Soclete des Balris de Mer, which qwns the Monte Carlo Casino 3nd several hotels. ON.U,IS SOLD his share In 19117, \lul~th• feud continued. In th~ past' \everal montha, however, Onwis met twice with Rainier and much of the bitterness of their earlier cWft:rences dissipated. UPI Ttltt>llol• .. , Cflele Champ Pretty Debbie Lawler,' a former model, holds the indoor record for motorcycle jumping - 101 feet over 16 cars. She thinks her record will stand for a whil& becau se men are too heavy. Huge Fraua Suit Filed oll Doct~r SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A former patient Ot Sacramento physician Or . John G, Nor~ has flied a $M mlllloo fraud suit accusing two law flrms and an insurance COJDpany of · lrylng to cover up for the form·er orthopedic surgeon. The suit was the largeat among the more than $100 million pending against Nork for negligen t surgeries. _jhe suit names six la'!l'_erS Jn the lwo firms and it insurance company officials. HURRY-UP; ,HAIRDOS: CUT, BLOW 'N GO! W@ !h9w ¥l!Y haw II! QR! lliiiolhMI st~R bY •l@R-§yr cyrl coa~ltig SelBSaA-al'fEES are air fllis:'fi'lfij ar)p fi.Jnctlonal and are easy to do as Just ~ampoor !rt· cfuded are lamp cuts, finger lumble cuts, curling lrq(l c~ts. blower cuts. wasti towel dry, brusti 'n fluff cUts Qf ~imple Yf~§~ ard wear cuts. Tiley are all SCIS· SORED, lake-car.i-of·yoursell sl)'les. Good !or any . age, any tiair, N\ teasing, no rollers. no pins. NO POLLUTING HAI SPRAYS. ALSO NO SET PEA· MANENT WAVE . YOU MAY NEVER WANT TO SET YOUR HAIR GAIN. JOSEPH'~ SCISSOR !TYLING · Huntinaton llloch FullertOll 9564 .r...,... i••· JOI .H. ~-jw. 968-353!j 879-9169 0,...o.ty J..M. .. 10,,M.•Sef.S..9 ',,_..., , . --... ~-·1 - .l!ARLY•BIRD · :::::::=:::=:~ 19" Servess Rotary Mower 59 95 3 H.P. l ngine, Recoil Starter. Side Ejection. 6"-Radial Disc Wheel• w /Nylon Bearings. Big %" Chrome Plated Folding Hendl11 Rem ote Engine Control. Safety Package. Rear Baffles, front Wheel Pads, Completely Assembled.2-S 194 llltlclr s. /Jsc/{lfr • REMINGTON MIGHTY MITI 1 O" Bantam Chai~ Saw with FREE CASE Gas-powered unit ha, 1 a· cut~ ting bar-slices trees ~p to 2· ft. thick. l ow-tone muffler. 2 handles for control. 595 395 . .,. A SEED FDR EVE"Y LAWN NEED I SAVE NOW Windsor Seed-1,0DO sq. ft.1303E ..... , ..... 7.95 Play Soed-.1.000 11. ft. 14038 ............. 5.95 Family Saed-1,00Q SQ. ft . 10038 ..... : ..... 3.95 ... • TURF HALTS I lilf llll*i BUILDIR PLUS ·714• . 19'' ~· Circul1r SAW DRILL 799 5'5 8'5 Nl nt·l"1P burn·out·pro ~ · tte:ted mbtor. Has sawdust · eJtctlo" .chute, depth and bavel cj ntrols. 730t . Double·insula1ed, recessed on/off button. Takes 14• s1eel. %• hardwood. 7004 %"Drill (104 ...... 9.99 Am~riCa's favori1e fertUlzerl Prevents crabgrass. fo>1t•il Gives lawn a good foothold. and barnyard araaa 41 it t•r~ 16,0001q. ft ....... 11.96 tillzes your new apri"a l•w.n, 10.000 l q. ft ....... 1Q.15 5,000 1q. ft. •..... -.18.96 . 6.000 sq. ft ......... f .95 2,5001q. ft ......... 8.95 . . Port•bl1 1 54'' ·,,;pit TllAIH1-69 . G~llDEN 195 '144 .C1lcul1tor CAN LJfgR CART h11lb1rrowl T1k1 It' 1nywhert-lt adds, 33 gallons each. E3-1 pBO Thru cubic foot can of hHvy Utility wh11lb1rf!Jw holds 1 1ubtr1cll,multiplin,dlvldes. [ 20-PK. 20 Gallon liners. gauge steel: tubular ha~dle. 3 cu. ft. lo1d. Steel body, Floating decimal. Tl26t 0 -E3·2070 . '. ......... 1.89 · Semi-pneumatic tires. 74 /3 tubular h1ndl11. I 6/3 r . . . HOURS · MOtlDAY-FRIDAY 9-9 SATURDAY 9-6 SUNDAY 10-4 ' ' • c SYLVANIA GT·MATIC ZENITH STEREO 25di~!ona ChroMotrix II Picture Tube, 100% Solid Stole Instant Eolor All this for 4995 COMPONENTS -- .. • Thursday, Ftbf'uary 28, ~974 DAILY PILOT RCA . ..,, 18~nof COLOR TELEVISION E4S41 ES4Q5 qlso feqture~ ABC's warranty, 1 yr .. rts, 1 yf. serviqi . pi<fµre tube 23'''zENITH . Solid State Closeouts! HXl% Solid Stole • Chromocolor II .Audio fine Tune • One Button Tuni~ ALSO E4545, E4549 IN STO<X · CALL FOR OUR LOW CLEARANCE PRICIS . ' . . ?£Zenith Remote ~ZENITH R~MO~E .~.91id State Specials Portables 1n Stock CALL US- THESE SETS NEVER, NEVER. PRICED LOWER Y o·u'll Love These Prices 100% Solid Stot1 Chfomllfofor II one .bu tton tuning, puto fine tuni~g. PQ'l'llt-ttntry system. \ SE1610, 16" diagonal ·cALL FOR SE! 960, 19" diagonal ' ,. •. OUR LOW PRICll5 SE17S0, 17" diaQOnal PRICED TO SILL 25'' ZE0 NITH CHIJlltAMOlOIII Solid State _Specials • • ·' • ; \ ' I ' DAILY PILOT Thursday, FrbtUMY 28, 1974 . ·; (Cheese of the-Week) -- 8 EllE FLEUR PART SKIM MILK SEMI-SOFT 20¢0FF per lb. 642-11972 WESTCUFf PLAZA SERVICE DELICATESSEN --IAR-1-q BEEF RIBS ,....,,..,....., NOlol 1*' U IO.t.Jt MCTIOM l .t.INCU. 'JO 11-SMACIM u.98¢ --•YOU H.t.'84'1' TlllD THIM HOW'STM:TIMI SERVICE SEA FOOD ~~IN LOBSTER $29! FLOWN IN DAILY-SEE THEM SWIMMING IN OUR TANK M-A-RK-ET BASKET WESTCUFF PLAZA . DON'T DISCARD THOSE OLD TENNIS SHOES We repair and rebottom LL TYP~15f-ADIDAS All!~, uHN SHOES COMPLETE SHOE -WGGAGE lo HAHDIAG IEPAll ..Anfhon'Jj SHOE SERVICE ' ' •MH"--17111&1r, ..... .,. ....... ' • C091*A D& MAI • 74 FASHtOM tsUJe ...... c-..... ....,..._ • .... OIT llACH •Ill fASHtOM 19'1•U _ ... _ -- --..-COAn•ow.•1 SAMrAAllA • ;;i,;· "1fc.(c:;, .. ,r::, St. Patrick's Day Cards S•Hy. Mardi 17 • Cards For Every Occasion • .. I • •Paper Party Goods •The . Unusual In Gift Items PAPER UNLIMITED · Wutdiff- 541-7921 ' 24 OZ. SUPER SIZE SCOPE MOUTl;IWASH Works fir Ho1rs! ...... ggc SUl'll LOW l'RKt • OPEN 9 l.M.-10 P.M. 7DAYSAWHK ~ALE s..-.h-*-._.. . ..., ..... as. .. ....,T..t Sale Items ·112 PRICE " Infants, Toddlers. Boya 'Giril _.. ., ' • 'one-stop' shopping at its finest! , open Thursday evenings 'til 9 Bring This Ad For 2 FREE WASHES IN OUR COIN LAUNDRY or•..,_Mlldl tl MONTGOMERY-0eaners &~ Hose Hanger Steel construction with 89;. enamel finish--keeps ,. hose neatly stored. RION HARDWARE WESTCUFf l'LAIA OUR STAFF ·Miss Charlene, Mgr. -Mr. Roy Alvarado - Miss Jerri -Miss Joyce -Miss Linda Manicurist On Duty ~Ilmmrr ~-· -... --------~-W1!UVU!ft . 17th & Irvine • Newport Beach • 548-0460 Open Sunday IMPROVE YOUR IMAGE! !HEW OWNERSHIP! WESTCLIFF MEN'S HAIRSTYLING FeaturillQ the Sebring Method of Hair Design 646-9925 17•1.,...-ttlwpert.._. Men's & Women's Alterations Custom Shirts Fine Custom Tailorin1 Westclift Plata • Newport"BeaCb 10-6 Daily 6'S-1CJ72 JOIN THE SMART SAVERS ' -SAVE FUEL _... SAVE ENERGY ' , . DO.ALL YOUR SHOPPING . AT WESTalFF PLAZA ' OpooW,&~-. 1 • • J 17 . .. \ 7 . 0 ,. DAILY PILO T :J l ltyou're shopping for a small car, • GM · offers ·more kirids -- of small cars today ·than anybody. · ' ----------·"·-~··-····----·--------·- 4 Pontiac Firebirds ) 5 Chevrolet Vegas Hatchback, Notchbaci< and neat little Kammback Wag0n models. Sporty GT options also availablet All with a very advanced 4-cylinder engine that goes a long way on a gallon of gas. Pontiac's great little sporty cars. Low-priced six-cylinder models, luxurious Esprit model, Formula versions and the ul~rnate Firepird ... Trans Am. 12 Chevrolet ;Novas Practical, versatile, comfortable, hard-working. Sporty SS versions available. All good to look at, of course. · ~-OldsmeJ)ii&-omegas --. . Easy to handle ..• easy on gas ... and easy to own. Choose from ; Hatchback, Coupe or 4-door Sedan models. Eight-cylinder versions also available. Omega, it's a lot of little Oldsmobile. ' ' .. ··-·-·-- l I • . 3 Chevrolet Camaros . . ' Limit your size without cramping your style., Available in 6-cylinder or V-8 Sport Coupe, luxurious'TyRe LT and heavy-duty Z28 versions. ' . • 6 Pontiac Ve,nturas · Pontlllc'i ' great little.compacts. Hatchback, Coupe and sedan models. Plush custom.versions available. Low-priced, roomy, sporty compacts with economical sixes. Eight-cylinder versions available: • _Qt course, if Y.OU'd feel more comfortable in a larger car, see a GM Dealer:-Atter all·, GM · makes more kinds of cars in different sizes f than anybody.! " • \1 3 Buick Apollos Six-cylinder econ0my in Hatchback, Coupe and 4-door Sedan models. Eight-cylinder versions also available. What you might expect a Buick to be !lnd a lot more than you'I/ expect a small car to be . • , . 4 Opel Mantas The best selling car In Germany is available in luxurious Manta Luxus, Rallye.and Sportwagon. We want · you to drive what you like - and like what you drive. • " '· • • ,. I , • j _.. . • ' . • ' ' ' I r I ·. J 4 OAILY PILOT 'Thursday, February 28, 1974 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC N«mCE • HOTIC .. TO CONTl.ACTO•S C.&LLlNO PO• IK>S tUll'll.IOtl cou•t 011' TNJ 'tC'TtflOVI I USINUI SC._. Dlilrlc11 C..11 Communllr Clllleoe Dl•lrkt IT.&TI 0111 CALlflOllflA ,0. Mi.Ml nATIMt:,.T 1111 o.Ntlnt11 TNI cou•n °' OIANOI TM flltlowttig pet'Mft I• dolnt IMlrifn IN No, *'1A-IN,.-01tMA1 tOH 1106-4UICONll\.&CTI fO• ,.l.UMllN01 Hl!-AT-Mt. A--nt6t 111 ING •• VENTILATING ANO Al"-CONOITIONltfe1 •nil ELECl•ICAL: l :Oo) p.rn .. llOTtc• Oft M••••M• Of' PITITtlll MANTA CARS. rm " Klltor 221-.d d1y of ,,,..rd\, lt7t. f'O• t>•OIAT• 0111 WILL .&~D •lvd., CO.la Mt~a. Ct. t0'2• aid No, ..,_,,_,.!Ml! GENE•AL C~SfAUCfl~ COHfll.ACT--1:00 p,m., :Ull'I dly Lll"flltl TllT.&MINT.&IY •rMlord L"M Lo'l'IJ .. , "°' Htll ol M1rct1, 1t74. E1l1lt •of lllCHARO G ll AV E S No. 14 Mut111 ... I~ It.ch. 'l tll, ~lice Of llld llltc1lof: Office et the P11rtlll•lno Ao'"t, Coe1t ~llfllh C9'1tOe OILfll!RT, O«•IHd• • T11l1 IM,llJnau la .J:ondllc ... ~ tn Obtrkt A41'1'1inlt1r111on lhilkllna, 1:110 Adami AVl!lut, (@'II M ... Or1na• County, NOTICI! IS HElllEIV GIVEH 1'1111 INl.wld\llL C11Lf0nll1, CLIFl'OllD STliJSKAL 1111 flied Mrtln lrfdW(I l , Lo\11111 Proj«:t ld..,lljlc1llon H1 ..... ; I 11tlltl011 11' l"r°"'911 al Wiii 1114 Thh 1t1!-I w11 llllif ..,illft !ht O•A.NGI COii.IT COLLEGE IAlTHOVAKI ACT. tor lllillll'CI ol Ltfltf'I l1tl1m111!1ry COUfllV CIOf'k ot °'""' COUtltY on l'•OJl!CT 1 -IKILL CINllll le flll 11ttlll-rettrlfl(:I le wt.left J1n11ory l•, lt7•. Pl1c1 "l•ns ire on 1111: 0111<• of 11'14 Dlttrk:t Olrtctor of l'tlyslc1I '•clUtl• 1nO 11 l'l'ledl fol f\orfl11r 111rlltvl1rt, ind ')ltll OIUce 01 !hi Arc.bllkl, WltHfm lllill1C~ a. ~rll'lff'I, ISi(I ll)'tlde Ol"l ..... cw-'1111 ll'IO llmt ll'lld P'«• of he1rl1111 "11bllthtd Dritn91 Cotll 0.llV ,Uol dtl Mir, C•lllornli flit "11'1 1111 bll11 llt ..,. M.1rch l't0r111ry 14, U, ll, 11\d Mirth 1, NOTICE: IS HERieY GIVliN ll'llt Ille ._..._....., School Dlltrl('f If Of1not 12, 1•1•. ,, t :OO 1.m .. lfl tfl• c.u"rOOl'l'I ,,,, t,,.,. COll!lty, C1Hloml1, 1cllt19 br 11\d lftf0\1111 o, GovtJnlne IOlrd. ""'•lrithtf' ,,,.,,.,, of OeP<t"""""'' No. i of 11ld ~t. .. e1 "0151RICT''. wlU r1Qtv1 11(1 IO, OUI nol liter ftltn llll l llooV•lltt.11 fll'l'I.._ II ,DG Civic Ctnllf' D,I .... Woll, In Wiied bldl for Int IW•r<I OI' I CC111lt1CI for the '""'' proftl;I, Ille City of l•M• Ant. C1llklrnlt. PUBLIC NOTICE 8td1 U..11 bf r1<tlV.:I fn l'hl pl1c1 ld111tlllld 1111>¥r, ind 111111 bl OCtntd llld Dlllil F1bru1rv If, 1'7( pUOllclv rffll •loud II 1111 •lloov•sltltO Hme1 Ind pl1c.. WILLIAM •. ''· JOHN, f'ICTITIOUI •USINlSS NAME STATlMINT TM to11ow11111 porUon• 01 lht ~ 1ri.11 bl bid Mp.1111 .. ., to It!• ot11rlct 11 MAll.Yc;in~v,,i~f~N WIXOfllr1ct _.k Ind 09lfltd prior to llld1 on 1111 PrLllW Controcl: ,,,.,....,. 1j uw Tiit foflowll\G perloOl'I 11 dOl,,g D-\1111'1911 11; PLUMBING WORK HEATING, \IEHTIL.ATLNG AWO AIR. CONDITIONING WORK .. New,.,.t CtMW Dt1v1 Suitt 46t ELECTRICAL WORK N1w,.n •tMll. CIHft1flll nu. ClllEATIVE COM,.OSITE$. 210ol So. Grind, $ilnl1 All .. C1Ut. 91105 l11bfnlltlf'1 of bld1 for lhe tuocon1r1cl p0r11on1 of Ille -k '""'I 1gr11, 11 1 T~i 11111..,"4-fm Conellllon for, blacuno Ind II ut1CllG DV Oll!•lct •1 •1XCns1 ... 1 bidder, kl PICl,lll. •,:hid ·.!~-. ·, .. ,, Ooll• 11>DC;Ontr1e1 1gr..,,,...1 IOr 1111 ,,,_, bid w1111 1111 Prime Ginlf'•I conslruc:tlon .,.,,,.. r conl••<tor llllC!lld by .... Dlll•ICI. Conditioned or qu1UlleG bk:l1 will no! bf con-Ft "'\HlrY ti, 12 .... ,,,, Wllll1m E". f'•1rt. 17'7• 1. .. ,_, J'OV!llllf'I V111ty, Cllll. flJOI t.ldortd or 11~. Sllbt'nllllf"'I DI bidl for tll1 Prime G-11 Con1trvcllon C011tr1C1 111111 lrw::hldt In lllelr 1114 •mount, onlr Dhlrkl tpprvv .. 1mount1 for: Plurn11lng WMk, Hullno, Vtn!Ulllf'll Ind .... , Condlllonlng WMk, EllC!rlcol Work. Submln111 el blch tor 1he P•lme 01<11!'•1 ConJ,lr11Cliot1 con1r1ct m1J1I 1gr11, 11 1 condl!IOll ol blalll11111 llld 11 SllKI .. oy Oli!rlcl 11 l\ICCtulUI lllOdtr, lo "'9k111t 1r.lbcor.tr1et 111r"rntnls 11' 1111 bid 1mountt wlll'I th1 Olstrlckll.Cttlll w11C:antr1110r1. Can41110oed llr Qllllllllll bkh Wiii not be c~llalred W 1110,..llCI. 81d01f'I ... ltlt Prln11 G.,..,11 Carutr11Ctlon contrtct wHI bt l\l!Ullld of tflf D11trlcl 'elocl .. 1W. C'Orllr1c1or1 •na lllltro~ld old •-ti on1 4•Y prior to Did ~Ing. Tltlte wlll bl I 1100.0C llltPOSll requlrlll !CH' ftCll llf of bid documlfltl le gu1rMIH tti. roturn In gooa cond•llon w1mln fl~e days 1fffr lllt bllll opening d•I•. &Id 4«umen11 1r1 1v1ll1blt trom 1n1 attic• or tM 1rchlrt<I. Eac:n Dold mu11 conta.rin 1na iw rnpe.rn.ivt 10 "" con1r1c1 0«.1Jmefill - Eoch bid W11H Oe accomr-1nLu1 by Ille 1.1Curlly rtlt rred lo In ll'lt c«.1r1c1 docum1nt1 •rwl by IM HU DI P<OPOW<I sulXanlr.C:lMa. Tht OISTlllCl rl~l'VH thl rlghl ta rtltct eny or 111 bid• OC' lo WtiYI •nY lrregi.lotrltln or lnfornwiht111 In 1nv l)ld1 or In 1111 ~lno. Tn1 DISl~!CT. 111~ _011..-_rnlnlll mo i.lfltr-.!. pr1v1Ulno ,_.,, 11 Plf' dltm wo11al In !ht lotJllr;lli wri1Ch lfif1 wort l1 to be pef1WnM11 lw H tl'I cr•h or typ.e ot WOl'llmtfl nffded la ex1e.,11 Ille contr1ct, to Dt 11 fallow1: Crill, Cl1ulhc1Hen, tr Type Witt ••II lltlCICLAYl!l Forln'lan 12 lo 111'111'1) no• I•• thin '-k per heur 1tiov. JiturMyl'llln r111. Forfl'l'li!_n ti lo n men I not 11u lh•n 1X per hour 1bov1 Journevl'l'lln r11t. 8rl~kl1y1r I. Slllnt Miiion lltlCKTaHDI.• tlrtdl.lllKlll" 1.10 .... l'lltl, Tnl1 1t;,11l11t 1t 11 condllCttod 9'r 1n U..-1• lndl~u11. - -Wlllltm Ill!, PMrt PUBIJC NOTICE Tllh tllltl'Mftl Wll '111111 with lht COtH'ltv Cltfk of Or1n.g1 County 1111 --------------1Ftoru-rv I, lt14. PIC'TIT IOUI •us INISS MAMI STATEMl!NT P\lbllth9d Ortrtft CNtt f'l\Hl O.lly Pllo!, .. ..,. Tiit talowl"f ,.'111111 ,,. dofl\G fl'tbru••Y 1, 14. 11, 2t, 1.t7• bu•l~:,~:ANA MEDICAL OROUP, J4s,, ___ ,P_u=B~L·l~C~N·«m="C"E~-- North Or•l'ld Awn111, 511111 Ane.1' jl1cTn16Us 1us1flj111 C1ll!otnl1 t2101 NIJl!ll ITATIMINT Oenlkl K. Kilty, M.D., 1110 CtnluN Tiie lol~lno person 11 IM>lne b!JslMSS Ptrk ''''· No. 1'101 Sovfll, LH An;t1t1. 11· C1Ul0tnl1 t0067 . HUNTINGTON flEACH LANDSCAPE 9or1' 9. Ltvln, M.O.. 412' OCll MAINTl!NANCE COMPANY, 264' $ull1 Lul1 Orlv1, LM Ano1l11, C11llornl1 O Or1no1 SI .. CO.II Meu, C1lll. fOOOI L1nc1 T. McNellb, 2~ Sulle O, Otvtd ~.\. Moll, M.O .. 4601 ll1lllo1 Or1nge, SI., CMll ~1. Cell!. fli21 Av1n119o Encino. C1lll1>1"n!1 t1316 Tl'lh bVlilneH 11 <ondUdltd by en Albfrte Hl1d1too, M.O., 1561)9 High lndlvldull Knoll R.otd, Endno, C1lllMnl1 t1316 L~nce T. McN"b{I Thi• bu1l1'111U II (OndUCIMI bv I generll This 1f11tment WIS l!IMI wlHI .,.,, p1rt~1r11'11p, County C~trk ol Or1ng1 Ccunly on Oorll ld K. Kelly, M.O. P:tllfu1rv 1\, 1914 T1'1!1 tll._1 Wll flled with 11\t I' 314'2 CounlV Clerk •I Ortno• Co11nty on Publl1~ Or1n1• Co.11 0111y Piiot, 1'1br1J•I)' I, 1'74. Ptbl'Utl)' 14, 21, 2•, · 'tnd Merell 1. 11'1-0C 1'74 S»·14 :Actor Bedeviled Afte1· 'Exorcist' .Role By VERNON SCOTI' HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Juon "1iller, who played Father Karras in . ''T b e Exordst." has discovered to b.11 dlrmay olhtr actora .. are uked !or autographs bul he Is asked !or mlracl.. by people who have aeen hlrri. in the movie. 'Miller, who won a Pulltr.er Prize for his play. "That Otampioilship Season,'' and an Oscar nomination for hls first movkl role ln '"nle Exorcl11t," Is stopped by fans seeking spiritual aJd, some of whom clalmed to be possessed by the devil. "IT'S UNBELJEV ABLE," ·said Mllltt, a quiet man wttb large, haunted eyes set in an ·~c !ace. "People coof\J~ me with the role. sctk me out," said Miller. "Evcry ooe or them te-lll' me that it Is the first lime they've seen o priest portrayed honestly. They are especially grateful for the mother-son relationship in the picture . ..... Evidently that's alway!' been a major concern of priest11. J enjoy talking to the priests, but I try to skirt !be Ions. "RECOGNITION IS a turn-' on. but lt ls also dangerous. ''ou begin to contemplate yourselr too n1uch and your ' y,•ork is forgotten . ''Girls develop an interest in you. l! you're not careful. :ill of your discipijne and intentions can be destroyed. "I guess most rewgnizable nrtors are beiieged b y attractive w o m e n . But because r played a priest it is even more obvious~ \\1omen seem drawn to priests, and even actors who portr3y them, becaus e...-' or their inaccessibility. ,;SlNCE Tiit-: picture was released women have mnde passes at me , m o. k In .!t . references to F'ather Karras. 1 I assure !hem rm not n prlC!st, but It doe sn't scc1n to make any differ1..'flcc. The Image re· mains . "So I found a way to destroy my in1age tts a priest I throw I in 11 couple of quick s.wear v.•ords and my stock ns a spiritual I e a d e r drops quickly." l\1iller h.:ts con1pleted his second movie, ';Nickel Rfde," e o. st a r r i n g with Cliff Jlobe.rtson. He's also busy writing the sc reenplay for "That Championship Season," for which he hopes to entice Jimmy Cagney out. o f retirement . "They thrk I'm really a priest. 111e also believe I can perfonn the rites of exorcism. I'll be walking down the st reet and a man will 'NO MIR/ICLES' Actor Jason Mil ler -W ANTED- plead with ine to see his Jesuits at the University of brother who is a victim of Scranton ln Pennsylvania . He demonic passession. "Now I try to keep a lo\v says church reaction is 75 profile. When I see someone percent favorab le to '"The with that gleam in his eye, Exorcist" whi(!h has been DIAMONDS • GEMSTONES CAa~afllT••I C1rpenttf' TMDll ll(IWlf' 11'11 Optr•lor Mlllwrlght I.I) l.IJ .... .. •LLIOT a. WOf.pp, llt. Atty. --, ... (tflt~IT-Ptrl 1111, NI. l M L• Alfltll• .. C111ttm11 ,_J PUBLIC NOTICE I walk Into the nearest nominated for 10 Academy .I---,~ doorway as if I lived there. Awards and promises to earn Ja-.. by jOMplt h 1tor<l'lln9 tor cllor11ond1 '"d 911111toM1 lro11 prlvo.i. llu1U,lduoh ond 11tot11, Co•tl..! ••Dmlnotlon °'"' 1¥oluot""' 1Jy -••pttll, Highe1I ,.r1c1t polcl. Call 54(1.9066 10-• eloUy, $ollll'doy 10·6, Svndoy clo11d, 01~ tor llw. 0..-11 Pohl or Mr. Jo11p~. 1111141 Nt. H •• Nllltl'" IP111Wm11t!cJ fortmtn 60c: per hOuf" more lll•n hlgh11t d•Mlfl~llDll AUP1rvlwd, lltCtpl jlrllUfNHC ntlllr. lllflttt P1ct1T1ou1 1us1N1ss I do everything I can to hide." more ~-ey than a n y !1'lm "Ubll1lled Or1ng1 COlsl Dtl1V ,lie!, NAMI ITAT•~aNT urvu l'•brv1rv 1, 14 21, 21. 1t74 '24·7• Thi rouowrn11 per10n 11 Hint bu•ln111 ever produced. l------------lis:DRIND MI LLER ENTEJl.~ltlSf"I,' ~flLLER IS a Roman "The most surprising thJng iewels by ioseph SOUTH COAST P\AZA • 3333 lllSTOl. COSTA MISA. • 540·904• CA•PaT & LINOLIUM U.Ylll Cerptt, Llnolaim & $0!! Tile L.lyw CIMENT MASONS Cimini M.11an, tlNllnt llld trowlllno 11Md'l!n1 oper11or PUBUC NOTICE ,,,. •1n<1.rp11 Ave.. coa1• M111, CA Catholic, educated by the is the number of priests who '2616 __________ .:._ _________ _:. ______________________ ·------- Cti1'11nl Miian JourMymen j:ui'b &. Guller M1~hlnt ow11w Cctmenl only) fl>f'lfnln 60c PC• l\o\lr ~t>Ove Jo11rn1yrn.n rite. E.LS:CTl.ICl.&NS G11ntr1I FD<HNtl For.,,..n JwrMvmen 1-'ar1men C•llle Spllcff (.1D11 SpilClr C1rtifl111 Welder GLAJ:IEll 61•JJ•r IRON WOlllKElllS ur,,,.men111 Iron Worker R..:inlon:lng Iran Worker Struc:tur•I Iron War~er fl'll(I Croc1or FM1m11n 7X per hOur mero 1h1n h!ghnl cle:nlllctllCl!I 1u~rvlud LA THEil , Llllllf' Foremen no! 1111 th11n 10~;, per hour mar• 1111n Jourl'll'flTlln ra1e LAIOltlRS • L•IXH"•rs. 11ener11 ar corntrLl(!lon Uptr1tor• end !tnder1 ol prwium•llc end Ol«lrlc lool1, vlbr1tJon m.11chlnH •nd 1lmll1r mech•nlt•I toe11 mil 1tP1r1!1fy cl1ullltd h..-ein II raker 1nc1 lrantr "1 II SllDYllrr Concrrle Curer · lmPlfvlout membr•nt 1no form ollu !t<indlll11tM !nozzleman) SandDl11111r (POI llnder) i>lri. ltyer 10.fl '·'' "'' 10.3' f.ll "'' 1.11 ••• '·" ••• .. ,. "'" "'" "'" ..... •. 115 •.l9S 6.115 ""' NOTICI TO c•IDITO•s Orlno Pllfro MUltr, 326 111t 16!11 SI .. Co.ti M111, CA '2627 SU,llUO• COU•T OP THI ST.&TI 0111 CALIPORNIA POR This bll1lnn1 It condutltd by 1n ]ndlvld~•L Dlil\O P9dro tAlllt r - THI! COUNTY Of' OllANO'I! Tiiis 1111emenl w11 flle<i w!lh 1111 Estel• ti JosW:,..t·=ueL ,.ETSCH, ~:':~ • ..,. c~rk19~:' or1no1 county on Ol'Clllld. FJU17 NOTICE IS Ht:lllilY GIVEN lo 1111 PuDllll'ltd Or.r1g1 Coast O.llv Pilol crtdl!flr1 ol 1111 ebov• n1mld tltcldenr Ftbru•tV 11 111 M.1rcll 1 u, 1974 1!1-J' !hi! 111 P11"1Dt11 1'11vlng d1lm1 101lrut ' ' ' th• 11ld d1ctc11n1 •r• ,..q111r..s to 1111 PUBLIC NOTICE ttitl'l'I. with 1111 n..:1u1ry V1l11Ch1r1, In the t>f!lce ol 1111 clt rk ti IM 1tieve l----------~~--- 1nlllltd court, or to pre1tnl tlltm, with l"ICTITIO\JS 8USINf:SS 11".e fllCIHlfl' vouclltfl. la 111 t NAMI! STATEMENT unde,,lgnld 11 the tr111t dtp1rlm1nl Thi lol!DWl1111 ptr1on 11 doing bll1loess el the SECURITY PA CI FIC NATIONAL 1s: 8Alo/K, &l'O NMlh Mtln Slreet, S1nl1 FAR WEST LE AS ING I. Anl, Ctlllernl;i, which Is tht p!1et: ASSOCIATES, 37t(I Ntwparf 81vd .. el bu1lnesy•af Ille under•lonld Jn 111 N!wport Be•cll, C1lll. 91M9' m1tter1 1)11111~1ng lo th1 nl1t1 of Fir We~I Automollvt Le• 1 I n g 11ld d«.ldtnl, wltllt" tour month• 1tt1r A110Clll11 lrw:: .. Cal11Mn11 C1r"°r1tlon the llrll publ1c1t!on ol lhl1 notlct . :t70CI Htwl>Ort 81vd.. NtwPt>rt 8••cll •. 01ted l'ebruerv s. lt7.a. C1llt, t'1660 Sl!CUll lTV ,AClflC Th!1 b111llWIH h CondYcltd by I NATIONAL SANK CMpor•tlM • By: GUY a OUCHElt Pl, Wtll AlltOl'l'lollw Trull Ot11c1r. l itlC\ltor 11'1 th1 wlll l.Hslfll ASJOC1t1ts. Inc. ti the 1bov1 n•tnld dtc:tdtnl J1m1s D'Al'l'lbt'o.lo, Prn. MclC INNA. llllTTtNe a PllfCN This 1t1t1mont Wi t 111111 wttll DMl II Ttn ...... s.n. "' COllnty Cltf'~ of Ot1ng1 COllnl'f' "" ~ Pipe L1yer1 B1ckup rMn Window" Clllntl'", Vllld'lrNfl Foreman 50c ~ l'lal.lr ,,,.,., lh1n·tilgh111 tltulflcttlon 1111p.ervllld. 0,IEl.ATIHG lfllOINS:l•S '" '·"' "'" .... ""' 11 T-c1111. ,,..,. Ftbru1ry/1, 1t1' . T1h 17141 ~ .&111n11y1 '" t11111t1r Publltllld Drl nvt Co.it DlllY 1'1bru1rv 7. 1 .. 21, 21, 1t 14 "ubHthed Or1ng1 CNll ,.net l<ebnNlrv 1, 14 21, 21, 1'74 «7-74 lllSltH Delly "Uat • a,_14 Graup I Group t 7.1).l Gro.,p l 1.27 PUBLIC NOTICE Gl'OllP • 1.n PUBLIC NOTICE GrOllp l 7.j] FICTITIOUS IUSINISS Group 6 7.11 •OTIC• 0, ,USLIC N•AlllNa TO NAMI ITAT•MINT Group 1 1.tl •• M•LO •Y TMI OIAN•I COf.INTY Tiii toll-1nt Plf'llnl ••t dolna Fa -JOc "-· 1.01 IOAllD OP .u,11.v1101t1 1'0 111/tlntu IJ! ~-INTIRI p.er '""'r more llli n hltl'llll CllUlfkllltn lllMrvllld. CONSIO•t TMI •tADOf"TION. 0111 LOVE 1S A HAI RCUT, Ut A!vor1la1 Forfl'l'lan I' men or fell). )Or; tbove JOUnMymtn tlll , A I 0 111 N 0 0 It D IN AN CE Av1,, Ntwporf llud'I, C1llf. '2660 Fortm.n (S 1ntn M morel. 7l(: lboYI JOl,N'MYll'lln rit.. RICUlllPYtN• CllllTAIM LAND IN Kurt E1.19en Hoftmant1. H'.l'li G!enneyre Aegul•r brll$h painter TH I SANTA ANA HllGHTS Al:EA $1., Lagun. Inell, C1lll. 1'1651 Bruin 1wlng lllge 7,41 (J:C 7).11) Ull OllDlll TO COl:lllCT Jomes Ntwten R.edg1rs, 1Jl1 Journ1yrnan Spray 7,61 ANY POSSllLI LEGAL DEFECTS Sunll°"'er"k-'• Santi Ant, C1llf. '1407 Journ1yll'llf!, Spriy iwlno tliige 7... TH•ltllN Tl'lis bv1!ne1! Is condLl(ttd by 1 gentral Shttl Rock Taper 7.t3 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhll p1rlntrshlp. Sheet Rock IUtJns eirOOll;ir) 7.'3 !hi Or•noe County 8o••d 11'1 Supervl1ars IC"'' E. Holll'l'l11nn S/\oef Rock (Uilng Skim a exJ •-'3 will hold 1 public h11rlno to CQl1$ldtr This 1t1temen1 w11 llTed w!lh !ht Sign P1ln11r \L•adminl 1.n 1111 r11dopllon by ordln1nc1 of Zone County Cttrk ot Or1nga Coun!v on S19n P1lnter (JovrneyminJ l.~1 Ch1ng1 Na. 7>-17 r1ci.t1Jlylng c1rt1Jn Flbru•rv 1, 191,. ~I,& TlAOES 1.12 l1nd loclltd In thl S1nt1 Ant H1lghl1 f ll21J Plumber1 1noi;1 ile•mflniri 1r11 from tht Al "Gtner1I Aglicullurt" Publl•Md Orel'IOI Coest 0 1nv Piiat, Gonerel Fortman· 11l"-al»\<e gro.i J01ITT11V!Tlln ritt . l.U Otstrlcl lo tht CCf:a5 Cond. "Cetnrnvnlly P:tllrvery 1, l~. 21, 11, 1914 '21·1' F'orernari -ti!% •baYI grotJ Journeymen ,,1., ~omm1rcl1I <Cendltlon1I)" Dl1!rlcl. This Sewer •nd Storm Oraln Plpei.yer tont Ch l"OI w11 orlgtn1llv 1pprovM1 PUBLIC NOTICE llOOl'S:ltS S.:U 1n11 1!1epted Is Ordln1nc1 Na. 272'''---------------l'oremen en Dttfl'l'lbe• n , ltT.I, ~ the clfldltlon1 I Sub FMeman 7.'4 of dtYllOP!l'ltnl which Mre lnllndtd JOUrl'llyrnan I 1.3"1 la be • pert °' Ordlnll!Ct No. m' f!CTITIOUS IUSINISS NAME S1ATEM&NT following pen.on 11 doing bu1ln!u SHEIET METAL WOltl(EllS 7.0t wart l\01 Dlllll!shld 11 r"'11lr1d by fow . The ShMI Ml'tel Worker Cen1eq111ntly, ttll Kllldllllld lll1rlng 1$ 1s: ARIES COMPANY, 3001 Red Hiii Far11'1'18n -11 ~. aoove Je .. ,,,,-., '''• '·" lar lhl riur:"ls' of curing •n~ P01slbl1 11, 1 • .._ I I ' ,_ ... , • •n• Esplilt>ldf \II, (OSll Mt•e. Cl orn. Ger>er11 Ferarnan • 11,. it>Ove Jovrneyrnan r•I• 'j' t n.•J n "'"''' o. . TEAMSTER.S ' hl1 gubllt l'lffrlllll will bl 11114 an 91621 Foremen 50c (9 !hi flftll flov 11 1111 c 0 u n 1 v fAirk 0. Cernlch, lll6 Galn1b0reuan or more T11m1ter1 llnd..-lurltdlcilM OI' Tt;imsteri Admlnlilrillon l ulldlllO, SIS N 0 r 1 h lld .. Or1nge, C11!/arnl1 9166t Uni.on, !XCludlno any equlPl'!'llnl 1111 "'4n ' 10f11 1nd This blls!n111 11 conductrd by 1n ll'll1nlen1nc1 ..,, .. l ..... ao•I. Syc1rnort llrffl, Senti Anl, C1llfornL1, A Fr1m s.,.d1;h '("~ on M1rch ll. Tt7.a. It ti".e !lour al lndlvld111I. O~lv •• '?;..,, I ' •IM, M 1lmll1r type tqUlprn.nt 7.0S 10:30 I .In., or II aogn -r11ttlf IS M1rlc 0. Ctrnlch '"' er c • or omblnttlon of \lll'llc.ft1 ol: th• l o.rd'• eqtndt lltl'ml1•, 11 which This 1ta1ement wa1 llled wl!h ~ :~:: • YtlllcJM In• lllln I 10nl '-" 11,,,. inv lnllreitld pll'llnl Wiii !loo CO\lnlY Clark ot Or1nae CDll"IY on Forlt LJtt Dl'lvtr 6.5(1 lll1rd. Fibrulry ll, lf1(, lll·JlUI fr\ICll M ted p 7.~J O•ttd f1br111rv lt, 1174. v111;--.J1? ower eoom '-" sJ:E11:~~s~~ g; o~'l~G=~~8NTo.r, ~i:;~~l\ld ,,?r12'?:° ~~~t"" D•~rr="~: Wlldtr 6.JD CALll'OANIA. 1t7l J:W.-7• Winch t 7.lO WILLIAM II'.. ST JOHN rllCll Of'lvlf' • UV.C per hour 16clltlontl wlltn optr11r111 County Clerk 111d 1x.eff'ldo PUBLIC NOTICE Phl"tr wlndl or 11mn1r SPIC.Ill 11!1chmonl1. C!lf'k of lllt ao1rd a1 DrlY1r1 of Tr1nsll·l'l'lht frvck1 undlf" J ~•rds 1 Or1v1r1 of Tr1nslt-mlx ll'\ldl;t J Vdl M more 6.J' luporv ltll"I of Orln(I• Counly, llllCTITIOUS IUSINlll TILE LAYlll I ll 1.77 C1lllarnl1 fllAM• STATIM.INT Tift Lover a y J1111t Al•••lldtr, D1outy Tiii following pen.ons 1r1 clal111 ' ' •• (SEAL) orem1n • llest thin ll lntn) tl.50 per d1y Iba~• JOUrfll\'mtn . ..., ,.ublllhld Or•""~ co1st Dt!ly ,.llol, t>Ut!flllll 1" TILE NELPE• i ll · '"' 7 ltA.IN80W TELE Y I S I 0 N & Tilt Helper l'ebrulrY 28, 1t74 ISO-l A,PLIANCE SIRVl(f:, 11814 Qulrh Ctrlllled 5.'6 Circle. Founllln Viii...-, (.!Ill. 92108 Tll! for9S10•flll sth«!ul! ot per diem wtges 11 based llPO!i 1 workl d 6.141 PUBLIC NOTICE l'rtdorlck J. Huson, 11114 Qu1ru <1•, I .':.",,,••;__The '"..'~e tor 11elld1y Ind ov.-tlme w.)rk lh•l1 bt al 1,,,, llm"o ,:,• .~.~.',',' Clrd1, Fount1ln V1tley. Calif. t270ll .,, "" m.i.,..ator " " .., NOTIC• TO CONTl..&CTOlll Oorotlly J, HulD'f1, 11814 Q1J1rt1 C1rcle, .,00 y IJPOn tilt CONlRACTOR to Wllom lht contract !J 1w1tdfd, CALLIN• POil •IDS l'eun!aln V1lltY. Cati!. 9'l708 10 .,1~:~k~:., !~~ntr~clOr under him, lo IMV nof 1111 thin l~e 11ld 1potclllf0 rate,; Scllool D 11 1 r I c 1 : N!WPORT -MESA Th!1 1>V1lnn• Ls conducl!d b'f 1 gentr1I lolo bidder m1y :l1~~1w by th1m In the lll~ut!on cl Ille contrtcl. UNIFIEO SCHOOL DIS Tlt lCT. p1rlnlf'11'1 lp. sel lor !hi Opening 01 blds~11 bid lar 1 Plf"•Dd al Fartv·Flve ('5) d1y1 1tter !ht d1t1 l id D1Mlllnt: ll:Dll o'clock 1.m, en Dorothy J. Huson A ~ytT!ent bond and • performenci bond will be 1 Id th• ltlll d1y of Mtrcll, 1974. Thlt thl!mtn1 wos lll!d wan Ille conrr1cl. Tiit peyment bond 111111 b 1 1,. ... ~eqw' rirrar la aw,rd of ~. Plate of &Id lltct lDI· 1151 Pl1ctnll• Co1Jnly Clerk of Or1nge Counrv on Documenllt. 1 "' ""'" sl't forth In 1111 Con1r1ct Aveni/I, co111 M111, Cellfornl1. M1lllng Flbr\ltl'Y 11, 197'- iddrt H: "· O. l o• 1361, ~t1#110rt l11cl'I, P-ll(Jf COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE CellfMnll '1'63. ,ubllslled Or1ng1 Coast Dally Piiot, DISTRICT BOARD OF TRUSTEES Pro!td ldonltflcillon Nimi: lnllrCl)lll P:ebrulrY lol, 21 , 2i, Ind Merell 7, By /I/ NMtnln E. Wiison Svtltfl'I 11:-v•tlon -1!1t1ntl1 High 1114 SJ.j-14 Publlthed Or1n11e Co.11 0.11, "' ,'K,V;_ egird 01 Tn11tets Scllool. PUBLIC NOTICE ______ _::;_::_:::__::::::_:_:;:'~·c ::'":':~:'.'.'_"'.'.:_· ~·:'"~M~•:•.:"~''._· _'1~'7~•-_27=»~7~41 Pl tee Pllfll 1r1 on Flit: 1857 Pl1cent11., ------~~=------I Av•nue, cos11 M1s1. CalllMnl1. r 1 1m PUBLIC NOTJCE NOT ICE IS HEREIY GIVEN lhil SUPf"l:IOlt COUltT 01' THE ;'°'"''°'"'"'"ru"'";-,;;;;o;:o;f----P:_:UB:::=Ll=C~N:OTl:::.:CE: ___ 1 ·n· lbaVI fllmed Scllool Olslrlct of STATE 01' CALIFO•NI.& l'Oll Or1ng1 County, ClllfMnlt, 1cll'IG bY TME COUNTY Of Oll.&NGli NOTICI OF INTENTION TO ENO"ll -'' .. , '' '· 1-Ooo•O '. '.. ' ''''''IOUS 1 1 ,,., r I uvvern .,,, , NI A 7"s:J SALE Of' ALCOHOLIC MAM• STAT~~':.JS 11trtln1!11r rettrr .. ,. te 11 "DISTRICT", NOTICE OF HIE.f.1tiNo OP PITITION ll'VEIAOl!of T ... ._1,_.~ will r1c1lvo up lo. blll no! l1!tt lhiln fOlt "ltOIATI! OP WILL ANO f Oll 2-26-7' ,,. "'_,ng IMtJ.on Is doing Dllt!MU tile 1bov1 st1ttd !1m1, 111ttd bids for LETTll.S TESTAMENTAIY To Whom 11 !Illar Concern: · the d of I t tor tilt 1llov1 SuDlect to luuinct of IM llctnst AQUARIUS "OOl SERVICE 16"1 iwar 1 con <IC Estill ol CAR.L F. WOLCOTT, "''°' • ·•1 kolth ,l $7 F-·-I V I ' Pf'DIKI. ~eesed ari,... ,.,r. n.,. Cl 11 htr1by glvtn 11111 _700 ne " """'"' l'I 1 Jey, Ct llf. Blth 111111 bf rtoc:elvtd In 1111 PllCI!: JfOllCE: IS HEAEllY GIVEN 11\al the undersigned P•OPC1$11 lo 1111 1lcollolfc ~· ldl-n11tllld Dov nd 111111 bl 1p1nld ~v~;~~!~: 11 l~t pr1mlM1. dMCrlbfd Sl~~~~t~·fl ~'::~;; ~~ ~c:,ch PIM Ind eubllc~y r: .. • 1loud 11 thl 1bov1 ~:i~n!\ :iL~~~t!"'101111~!11'1t~e.;;; ~ 1 Tiiis butlne•t It one! 1!1ltd time 11\d 1l1c1. for luu1nct o1 L1rter1 T11t1m1nl11ry CaHrorn!!th Slrtel, N1wpor1 klc:h, lndlvld1Jal c uctld &V '"' TMrl wllt bf •• t:IO.Dll dl'POlll r1qulred trt l'tHI PlfltlOMr rlferfflC• lo which 11 p M ll ~I 1 for •tell Ml of Md dOCUmtflb to mad1 fOf' f!Jf"lher p1rtlcul1r1. INld that ur1u1nl It> such lnt1nllcm, tht rs.. Ol'I 1 ftr gu1r1nto1 Ill• return In good candttlon th• llml Ind ptice o1 hearing 1h1 underaloned It 1pplvl"g to tile Otparlmtnl Tl'llt •l•t•m""t w.1 fli ed ""'II the wltllln 10 d1y1 1ft1r 1111 bid OHl'lllll 11m1 hit blln m tor M•rch 12, of AlcOll<>Hc 81ver1ge Cantrol tor 111u1nc1 C-ty Clerk of or1n11 County on dett. 1,74. 1 t ·OO I thl OU<lroom ol fin 1lcollollc bev1r1g1 11cen11 far Uc•n· Febru1rv If. Tt7i. --Eecll !ltd mutt conform end bt r1f ~rtmtflt '·~ 3" DI u~d tour!, 11e1J fol' tlle~e premise~ 11 tellows: '·llUt rts!)Cllslve to 1111 contr1ci docu1n1nl1. 11 7DO Clvli (tni.r or1.,. w111 In ON SALE GE NERAL Publttt>td OrtnOt CO.It Ot!lr P!tol Et ch bid $11111 bl 1ccomp1nled b\' ll'll CllY Of Si ti Ant, Celllomle. ' {PUBLIC PA EMl~ES) l"ebr111rv 21, 21. M1reh 7, 1.t, 1'74 •22·14 Ille s.cur1ty rtltrr .. to tn !hi contrl cl O '" ... O '° 1'7• It E FRENCH & 1 rvery ' 111:: o'. GERARri dOCumtnh 11\d bv thl ll1t of pl'OllOsld WILLIAM E. SI. JOHN, f'ublllhld Orft~Qt to.Ht o 11 Piie!. PUBLIC N-CE 1u1M:onlr1clOl't. County Ct.I'll: F bf' 21. 1l7j I y V.fl Mr. J11n11 M. Hll1lllld, Olr1c1or, TMOMAI'" t.O•D I "Irv n'·1• Scllool F1tlll!l1s. M1lnlen1ne1 I n d tJhl 1111-ff V11Mcl1, 1•11• 111 PUBLIC 00tt'lllo1,., wen '""' 'fl'lllt thoM' .,.,_t \;"lflM "'"" c111feml1 nm f\:QTlCE PICTtTIOUS IUSIH9SS 1nt1rt1!~ 1n tovrl"I the alte 11 thl Tth 1nt) ib1""'9 ----:;:=:::::-:::::--:-ccc=~--NAME ITATIMElllT Schaal l'"•Clllll•• ()f1 Cf, llClftd •• nl A'"'1111• for: 1MllH•,,.r l"ICTITIOUS IUSINIESS Tht IDll°"'lng Ptrson II dall'IO bll1lne11 Baker St .... t, Cotti Mtt1, C11ltornl1, Publlslled Oringe Co.st 01llY Pl~, NAME STATEMENl IS : et 10:90 t ./TI., WMIMlclay, Mlf'Ch I, f'~111ry 21 71 2:11 1t11 41'9-1• Thi followlgg Pl•M>l'I> ir! doing C '° L INVESTMENT$, 10Al 811t!n111 1f74. 1-'-".:_.:_:;:_•_:::•_:_c•:.c. ______ _ !Ntlnes• •!: CM1ttr Drive, lrvln1, Ctlll. t26t4 TM DISTJUCT reMrve1 tho Mght lo UBLJC NOTICE llll:VJNE ATHLETIC CLU8 ll~l John C. Lundtll, llOJt Eton "t1ct. r1l1tt 1ny 1' 111 bids or le w11w 1 __ _,_,,.p~~-..,,.-.,,.,.-:-c--:::-,,:--L1nQll'f' Avtll\lf. 1rvll'll. C• t'JIOS Santi An1, C1lfl. f210S 1ny lrrwaul1rl!lt1 or lnform1Hl1u ln1 W1rmlnglon Otwt°"""'"'· Inc, II Tllh bu1lnn1 It belnt conducted by 1ny bids or In 1111 bidding. SUPEl!OI COUltt 0" THI C1llfeml1 CiOrPOl"allonl. 11S1 Lllli!lt~ In lndlvl0111I Thi DISTJlllCT hit dl'termlntd 1111 nATS: OI' CALl,OltNtA FOil Av111111 lrvlne Ct t210S Jo/In C. t.ll!ldtll g-r1I llf'IVllHnt r1t1 ol lllf' diem TMll COUNTY 01' OU.NOS: Tnls bUt1M11'11 °11tl1'19 CDn(IUCled by l ,.;, ~tot~menl filed wllh 1111 C~l'V Wiget In !hf 1oc11tl'I' lfl wlllch the .... A·?MM 1,. unlncorpotlled lllOc:ll lion othlr 11>1 Cltr• af Drlnctl Cou""" 11'1 Fib. lt, work 11 lo bl pltlom\ld fer IM:h N011CI Ois N•AlllllG 01' "ITITION 0 p.1rtMrlhlp fl ltl4. cr1ft or type ol wwktnlll fllldld ~ ,~ !"•OIATE Of WILL ANO 1tlcfl1;d L 9e1uc:h~mp '·11111 llltCUlt lh• conlrtcf. ThtM rites .,. L.lTT••s TalTAMliNTAltY (I OND ll'lll itelln-t!nl flied w!IP! IPll C ~I Pullllslltd Or1not C""st Dally Jtllot Oii 1111 11 1157 ~l..:111111 Av~n111, Co.11 WAIVIOI Clierk. ol Of"~ C~ty on Ftb~ y Ftbrlllrv 21 , 211, Mlrch 7, 14 1t14 117·74 M111 . Cople• rntY bt obltlntd on Eal1te of •E"M"Y JANE HAHICINS, "" 1114 uiry t'IQUttl. A CCCIV of lhl.>0 r1111 lhl.11 Dt<1•1f!Cf. • p.)JlfS be POiied tt tflf Joli 1111, HOTICE: 1$ HEJIESY GIVS:N thtl ~btlJ#lld °'•noe c.,..11 D111v Piiot PUBUC NOTfCE Tiit foreoolna ectlldul1 DI Pl' diem ROIEJl.T KEtlYAN II•• llltd t11r1rn F lllrY 21. M1rch 7. "· 21, 1tU 700-1' .... ·1oe1 11 blHd Up0n I Working d1y I pelll!Ofl tor "'*'' " Wiii 11'1111 of eight Ul hol/rl. Th• r•I• tor hol1d...,. for 1111111\CI of "\.lttttt THT1lfllnt1ry -,1CTn1ous •us111111 11M1 -11m1 work &11111 ti. 11 IMll to 1111 Plllttotlll' nfilf'WICt t. .tlkh P ... UBLIC NOTICE NAMI ST.&TIM•NT t11n1 end orit..tltlf. 11 11\tdt for fllrt!Mw 11rttcv1trt. Ind TM tolklwlfll P'tT"IOflf ,,. doing 11 1rt•n t1t m•nd•torT llPOll "" 11111 tt1t """ ..... •tct t1 M•l't!!O ,ICTITIOUS aUSIHISI b111hiet1 11: CDNTllACTOll lo Wl!orft !he corrtr1c:t tht 11m1 flll Men "' tor Mlteh NA.Ml ITATIMllllT MAI (MAN UFACTURING ANALYST& IJ.. 1w•rdl'll. ll'lld -•nY Slltl«lllfl CIOf 12, 1t74 ••• t100 1.in.. In , ... cowtroom 1'M fOllOWlng perlOn Is oolnO INC.), 1f712 $aybrook LIM, Hllllllntlon und•r lllm, to> NY Ml less !Mn flit of OftM"rntnl ~. J et .. 1d cowt, ltwltlffl Ill IHCll. C11lf. '1&.tt .,,, .,.clfltcl rel.. lo •It worll"ltn It 100 CIVIC C1tnll!' Dtl.... Wnt, In ADAMS INSULATION COMPANY, Mtrtln F. Dt FflPl(O, 11112 S•ybrMIC trnplfl'J'*I by tltlm lfl '"' ••.c:utlori '"'City ol 111111 Ane. C1U1arn11 • ..,, Mlnr'OYll All'I .. Cotll M.1s1. C1HI. LIM, Hll!lllntlon ltech. (1111. n6" °' tN contr1ct. Dated FtlWUll)" to, lft~ ~1 Junt Dt Fronco. U7U S1ybl'CIOll; !"• blddll' ~·r w!tlldr1111 M1 bid tor WILL IAM E, St JOHN JWltfl "'-111 Adtrnl. '"tlNtr..Hlll'l!tr Unt. H11nt1ng1111 811ch, Cflll, tf6.tf 1 per!Od of torty•l!v• {41) dlVI lf'lfr COl.lllly Clerk .._.... H\ll'lf11\11Gn llHCll. C.111, ,.... Tl'tll blltlntU. It Condll(ltd bl' 1 gtnll"tl tho d•l9 Ml !Or !ht OPlfll"I of blot. P•·n7 l"hft MIMM 11 a!MUC.,.. by 1n N rl-thlp, A p4yrn111t ller'4 ,,.. I r.rtorm•nct llOOllS. U.•N•• &ND ,Lo:_QSTll ' llW!Yld1111I, Ju111 Ot l'r1nco llOl'ld wl11 Ot rtq\lll"M prklr I ••telltlon IY1 JAM•S l , C:AltHlt , ...... AllMfft Adl"'9 M1rtln F. 0. Fr1nco of "" c:ontrltl, ,.... ''''".,,, boM An.nti't'I •• ""' ' '1111 "'""'*"' WH flltd -..1tll ,... Tiii• "''--~' Wit ""d wtm• , ... lhltl bt In ft.I l'Ol"ll'I Ill forlll In lint ...... 'I"''""'"' tM c.tfltf Clerk If OrMtO• Ctvntv on Covnt~ Cltfk ol Or•no• County on n-.1 cot1lr1CI _.,m.-nt1. l'tr""'"11f, c Ufftflll "m FWrutn' 1tr. 1'74, Ftb. 10, 1'74. ,Govltnlfltl IOld TOI! lilll m-1•tS p 41nt ,41ftl t y Darottly Htrvtv Fish•• All-YI lwl "-'IMllM" ~I--or.,.. CM1t Dtlt'I' ,;1o1 "UMl1/lld Or•noo Co.11 Dally "llot ,ubtltlltel OrlllOI C0111t O.llt ,llot, ftlll)ll1111d Oranet Co.ti DtllY "llot, ~-lillf't .. M111rQ 7, 14. 11, lf1• ..S.1l ,IOrulry Jl, 7L MlrCll J, lt. 1tP' t21·7J hbtu1ry tl, 21, lt14 l»-74 FW111ry fl, n. .. 197• Ul-7• I .. -· • • . "' The security gat9i1uarded entry of . Sunrise East . A small con.imunity in the desirable South end designed for people who value their privacy and are seeking a serene "' atmosphere. Single-story, Low Density Luxury At Sunrise East you·11 find just three sprawling, single·story two and three-bedroom condominiums · to the acre. Up to 2,000 square feet of living space as lavishly appointed and deta iled inside as they are luxuriously landscaped outside. The Amenitiff of a Fi ne Reaort Sunrise East offers 80% of Palm Spri~gs · most valuable property in ! c t • 'ii I ' . " .= 0 " c M~squite Ave. c ~ I _.!~ • 0 i • ~---;; ·~ --' .. ~ Sonot"• Rd. l c , "' Ea!lt Palm C.n)'On Dr. vast expanses of lushly landscaped open space. Scattered throughout the scores of pine . olive. palm and pepper trees are six beautiful swimpiing pools with companion therapy pools. And three tennis courts, slightly sunken so As not to obstruct the views. Total luxury as only Sunrise Corporation. the desert·s most su ccessful builder. can provide. A Limited Opportunity The second and final phase is now under conS:truction and, wh ile not all of the condominiums are fully completed. there are a limited number of prime locations avai lable for immediate occupancy. If it is your wish to own Jhe finest condominium in Palm Springs in terms of beauty, security, privacy and value visit Sunrise East. And be sure to ta~e our map along. We 're a little hard to find ••. and a lot harder to forget. Two and Three Bedrooms From$49,995 ·s••nnse A eeValopmant of Sunrioe Corporation and ALODEX Corporation _ 2251 M11qoite Avenue. Palm Springs . C.llf. 92262. (714) 323·1881 I ' ' , Tb11rsday, F"ebruary 28, 1~74 I o..liLY PILOT Ji! Fairview-Faith: 'God Loves Us the Way We Are' Convent Alimo1iy?. • By ARTllUll R, VINSEL Of Ille D•llJ ,~ .... H ol emphosi>ing the ecumenical nature ol the discusslon rrou\> wblcb then numbered about 25 membets. rejection and all the . aame -,--:-------'---. range of burrian ernotjo[IS felt by ordinary ~e who IH 'normal! guy would -CiOIDI: along and they would lali In love and marry aod bave a 'normal' lamlly. t.bose · concepts. "'Ibis was workt'd on for a loog time," says Rev. McOlash. ol the way his retarded students interpreted It. . ~ (Fifth ln • Strie1J not retarded. FAIRVIEW ~115Y~ ReUtlon ls be.Jed on human Jlffd• and feelings andthelr relaUon to whal a person perceives as God, and at Fairview State Hospital there are people and feelings, as anywhere else. ONE MIGlrr SAY the Holy Rollers were the cream of the crop lntelle<.'lually and llieolog1cally •speaking, when lt comes to those who worship within ''the walls and wards at Fairview. 'Ille client_, 1:1ving a a-, learning al 2501 Harbor Blvd .. know they are different and • that they must learn to cope among them who are mentaJly with it and ndjust. retarded. "1bis was one of our most sensitive discussions, yel lh<y were an very objective. Som& said fl wOt!kl never ba_.. 1be Holy Rollers ::; !-group " retarded kids. a~ 16 on the &Vt'!rage, with ph ysical baodkaps too -worked out tbdr own version of lbese lheor"9. ft 1' the · 23rd Psalm, from Fairview: CHICAGO (AP) -An insurance mnn bas filed a peti tion btte .see~ing an end lo alimony payments because h.is rormer wife entered 11 convent. James A. Lane, 47, con- tended that the living ttX· peruses of his ex-wife, Mary. are pro'tided by the Roman Catholic Chur,ch and that there is no rea,,on for him to continue $250 montllly payments. "God is my friend, l will 1~ver be alone. 0 SOME SAID: "You never lie helps me to do what is best for me . "WE LIKE to koow that "WE RAD A GAL about know.'" He leads me where it is safe for m.e to go. God loves us j111t the way 18 who came to the group The mlnfster to the mentally He brings me back whe1& I get to.st. The feelings may simply be e1pressed in a more simple fashion and the concept of God may be a bl! less.fancy. "~ were all teen-agers ind ~ adults averaging atiout ic· years okl,'' says the ·Rev. Dr. McOlal!h, Fairview's Protestant chaplain a n d we are, because some people oae day,'' Rev. McOlash and physiCJlly re t ~rd e d He teaches me the way of good11ess, because He i.s good. don't like m the way we are,'' recalled. patients _ or clieotl as they Even though I sometimes cm1 troubled, Oturch meets at the Costa Mesa facility for tbe m'entally ls the way one fl Dr. Her worry . was one which are called at Fairview _ lam not af1'aid. McOlash's lesscN phrues it. can be heartbreaking. agreed in a sense. For YoY are-with nlf. He wrote It, tho clients· 'lbe Holy Rollers sat ln Your ptopl.e1a1ld Your words realize and accept It. .. When their wheelchairs-and listened You never know. Inskle or The11 comfort me. ..... ------------......!.._ -------------..... -----~~~~ 'Girl hoped normal gur/ tm>uld eonae along and theg tc0ullf fall .fn lotle a11d marry and laatle a normal family.' we remember, we plck flowers to what was troubling the outskle. You never know. You: alway! have love ready f ur me. and bring them along to young girl, and they thought Those who don't know, Even when no one el se does. 11'•11111 ll'tlllkM AdY.ni-t Help Mo lo Help Yov To KH17 L .. una • l- -NANCY GASPARIA- church . We all like flowers out their confments carefully. however, can rely on a You eake care of my hurts. because they are very The mentally retarded do mea3W'e ol faith .• and ~1U life ovnflows with Your love. beautiful. God made the think, reason and feel. acceptance, no matter what Surely, goodness and mercy shall follow me '"'"' ..,. .,. N_., •-..ri•• n t "It t' ''She ................ says Rev. their IQ may be, as long as AU the days of my life , <""'"""-na 11.i .. a1r1u111, • owers oo ... , con mues. ......,....... God' f ,, L., .... .._. One or the object Jessons1,_M~cO~l~as~b~, ~"~lli~at~som~e~da~y'._'.'.a__:tbe~y~und~e~rs~tand'."."'~some'.'."'.:~lli~m".'."..g~~'.__~A~n~d~/~sh~•~ll~h~·v:•~i•~•'.:'.:~'~ho:u:'e'...::o~r•:"'::_:'·~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~ retarded and physically handicapped on S u n d a y afternoon. used is nothing m o r f! American Bapti.!t minJster complicated than showing a with his doctorate from USC clenched fl.st, then reachinf in the fie1d of oounseling and out with an open hand. education. A"GROUP OF retarded teen-He sttys ''th1ey were,'' THE CLOSED FIST i agers confined to wheelchairs because the Holy Rollers demonstrated as the bad bane -and who kiddingly called group no longer exists. that means J don't like yo\ themselves the Holy Rollers New programs designed to and I might strike you. -also used to ga ther there place the mentally retarded The open hand, explains Dr to talk of th eir God and their and de v e Io pm en ta I l y McOlash, means a kind prob1ems. handicapped, as some with Christian greeting; that I likl They met in the visiting physical problems are called, you and want to be yow room or Ward 36 at the large have sent many out into a friend. hospital housing 1.714 persons more normalized environment "Kids' have differences here· and they represented every than the confines of a state just as on the outside," sa)tf church. belier, doctrine or hospital. Dr. McOlasb, whose career denomination among those at Fairview is by nature 0 avis•brow . TAX · RELIEF SALE OUR TAX DAY IS ALMOST HERE! WE MUST SELL THIS MERCHANDISE OR PAY INVENTORY TAX. WE'D RATlttER CUT PRICES AND PASS THE SAVINGS OM TO YOU! BE HERE EARLY. •• MANY ARE OME OML Y! v..ilich sometimes squabble "TIDS WAS at a time W'hen devoted ~ making religion . and b a c k b i t e among we had a lot 'more capable' simple and Wlderstandable 11!,.-~r~ themselves on the outside. kids," explains the Rev. Dr. instead ol the other wa5 There is oone of that McOlash, and in phrasing it around, as it often is on thf seclarianism inside. that way be means simply outside. They believa:l. -and still that those who remain inside He said during the Ho1) do -in theif own, simple have more difficult problems Rollers' 90-mlnute discussiol. fashion, that the word religion. to face in deVeloping. groups which spanned l'h which ts taken_ from the Latin Developing also me a n s years that many matters WerE term "rellgare" means the coping with such things as brought out which concern all binding together or people for love, dislike, jealousy, fear, young people, not just thosE: a greater good. 1~~'--~-'-_:_~_:_~~~~~--~~-~ "We were genuine 'ecu· maniacs,' " jokes Rev. Dr. Francis McOlash, as a way -----------.---------I I I Board Selected I SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Cov. Ronald Reagan has appointed Dr. \Vallace Winters of Davis, Todd T. Tomihiro of San Jose and Bruce Wooley of Atonrovia to the state Medical TherapeutiC3 a n d Drug Advisory !)ommitt.e. I I I I AT THE NEWPORTER· INN PUBLIC AUCTION of AUTHENTIC HAMD MADE PERSIAN RUGS and OLD PERSIAN COPPER •xtNmely lin. 1ellldiOl'l of OVfl' 200 "'9• oll sold with ceftifitot• of awthenticily o/M A FINE SELECTION OF SILK RUGS (collecto(1 lt•1t1) NEWPORTER INN 1107 Jami..-load Newport '-"• Callt.mlo AUCTION, SUN., MAICH Srd °' 2 p.m. EXHllUTION, NOM 12 ,_.,. TERMS, CASH, CHICK. CUDIT CAIDS. AUCOR INTUNATIONA1 (rTY) LTD. 14008 VENTUIA ILVD., SHlllMAN OAKS 91403 (213) 990-2910 • - . ~~~~~~~~~~.:__:_--~-·---------------..! /wco Saviigs and Loan A$socialion consOlidated staf9ment of financial position dee. 31; 1973 and 1972 (unaudited) assets Ccuh, cMtlfkotet of ......... U.S. ... .,n...,.. MCUritMt ...... leol &toM • .., •riot•*"""" ......... To t.dliMt• MK.I ofreol .stot. fOltdottd OOf>« Urtcfltbutwd loon Md• Total loat1t rec•Noblti atol MtGf• ocqulr•d ln t.ttl•111•t1t of "*'t rs-........_ ollonnc•• $2!10,000 ln l •73 ond ttOM WI 19721 •..i Mlott o:t:;.•d for ln'l'ffhn•t1t PMIA Hoin• n tonic 1todi, ot cotl PrtPOYIHl'lll to P'td•rol S0Yln9tnd loof'I ' lnwr911ce COl'porotlon ..con ory r•Mrvt Prop«ly and equlpmtnt, ot eot ... CH:culllulcrted d•preclotlon ond •mortf1otion1 $171,000 Ill 1 P73 end $1,061,000 h\ 19721 ~Oii.ti TatolaiMt• 1973 $ 13,762,000 2.4,,'90,000 5, 12!1,000 16!1,000 3,6'7,000 2!1,,627,000 ,,,!i,710001· 2SS,03D,006 1,102,000 .5,0!if,000 . 3,209,000 2,071,000 1,79.4,000 3,321,000 1216,041,000 31,.500,000 3,000,000 • S,294,000 2'3Ai.600 .... ooo 2.1,MM,000 J2ii,o,1.ooo 1972 ,. $ 1.4,115,000 232,111,000 !i,!11 1,000 111,000 1,fl,,000 2,1,213,000 17,665,0001 2h,S<l,000 190,000 4,16!1,000 2,,15,000 2,004,000 1,,16,000 2,72,,000 $261,,24,000 23,~00,000 2,000,000 5,3,7,000 Ut;o+;.ooo 937;000 1,.1,,,000,.. il61,tl;.ooo AMhcl ....CW lfalefllonlt ot tf MtvtMW JO, 1'7J ... ...n.ble fw 1M ..... ~ ~ "'°" -·· . . . ~1~¥ii .. ..... °"'"'mo iot AYO. HuntlngtOll P"k • IOIMlf_... -N!IO Allon~· Avo.. - - -NlO Jrlolol 11. • Loo Mtelo•,. <921 Wll•hlre llYd. •'"" --M11 No. -!Id. ---.. 40 TwtOdy Blvd.• .,_c11r -12221v ... 1ur1 Bt..S. ·T--111F- 14'1i1n• I .....,...,__260 lo. Miiis Ad.• Wiil LM Al••l•-1151\ llf'lla"!OfMoa ltvd. , { ' • • ' 1 t FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR with AUTOMATIC ICE-MAKER! ~rost Proof. Fully: adjustable ·~•Ives Reverudcxn. big t<>P freezer. SAVE NOW! s32888 l'tus I 7.50 wator ...... FRIGIDAIRE 17 cu. ft. TOP FREEZER Totally !root Pl'OOf adjustable 11ie1WS: bullt·in. rollora. Ice ·maker rMdy now or later at &milt extra Cl\arge .. H11V911 Gold or Avoc1do only, . "°'"°"" s32888 PRICES SLASHED! 3 DOOR · FRIGIDAIRE FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR ~~~~ $ 48888 . DISHWASHER 3 door Frigidaire s21 sss refrigerator, 20 cu. ft. side-by-side .' Refr igerator t,as adjustable at-ielves 7-day meat kee'per: door storage. Add optional ice maker now or later at sligttt lddition11 pr ice. Wlllteand /)Ol>pyonly. SAVE NOW! Frigid8ire deluxe Mobile Dishwasher regular wast'\. sti.ort wasti.. rinse and ti.old, plate warmer. spots away rinse injector. Ct1,e rrywood cutting block ·top. Harvest gold Of avacado only. . HURRY! RCA COLOR TV REDUCED! RCA 17" walnut cabinel Color TV; 60% solid s325ss state, Accuoolor. automatic fine tumng. 3 only, each . RCA 18 .. Coior, walnut cabinet, aulomatic fine, _ $ 348 SS tuning and Accutinl. Sale Price RCA 19" COior XL 100. All solid slate. s42sss accumatic II. color monitor, beautiful walnut finisl\. Sale Price, only . RCA 21" Color. XL 100, 100% solid state.· s4s· ass Black matrix picture tube. plug c1rcu1t modules. super Value RCA 25 .. XL 100. Super Ac;cucolor black matrix Picture tube, beautiful · Maditerraman s575ss cabinet. TaitSale Price. Only ~ SYLVANIA COLOR TV I STEREO REDUCED! 25" Color Sylvania console, Cl\romatrix picture s548SS tube. Perma lock color control, remote co~~~ Only Sylvania 25" Color console, 100% solid stale Chromatrix picture tube. Permahnt, push $ 588S8 button tuner. contemporary cabinet. Now Only . Console ·Stereo. Sylvania contemporary s25ssa cabinet. air suspension speaker system. AM/FM stereo. 50 Watt peak power. Great Value 120 Watts peak power. Sylvania Mediterran~an . cabinet, .Garra.rd. record $ 35aa changer. AM/FM stereo radio, bu1lt-1n 8 track tape player. air suspension speaker systemSale Price 4 Master Cl\arge • BankAmericard • N~.lnterest. 90 Day Accounts HURRY! SALE ENDS MARCH2! ' LOOKING FOR A GOOD USED APPLIANCE? • ..,;._ selection of recond1tl~~ . MANY MOR~ TO CHOOSE FROM AT BOTH STORES··· COSTA MESA and EL TORO ---- PRLGES ARE D~STIC~LLY REDUCED FOR THIS SALE! COME SEE • COME SAVE! - See our nte d washe". drye"' and wan-a e refrlcrrators. AT OUR COSTA MliSA STORi O~LY. row ,. l'nrt ............ , .. h(ll!•ll•bllliJ • Cost• Mtu • lllrllor Am T El Toro • S.dcllab.ill V1llty 1 _,. ... 411 letf S....tlllltti S)mt II Tw• load 1t ff('f. ll4t•f t• Sp·Oft) ;==!1=¥1~=-~ Dolly•·•, ~ • ., t·• Do~ f.t, \elutff~ •·• --1-137.3130 ' II II ' • f l ' . t ' ' • • ' OZITE ® 'INDOOR OOR CARPETING • • PICTOR® ARTISTS' OILS & ·"~ACRYLICS 12COLOBS • •FOR·PATIOS,·DECKS, FAMILY 119· ROOM, BOATS, CAMPERS, OUR ' TRAILERS, ETC. PRICE -'. •5 COLORS . •6 FT. WIDTHS SO. YD . . •i}AVAILABLE·IN 12 FOOT WIDTHS AT 1.79SO. YD. •1-HOUR DRYING •GOOD HIDING •CLEAN-UP WITH WATER •BRUSH OR ROLL OUR PRICE e'HANO SANDED •READY TO PAINT Off .STAIN LOUVER •SHUTTER HARDWARE AVAILABLE 6% X 13 IN. OUR PRICE ·7 )( 20 IN .•. , •••• 1.59 7 )( 24 '1N .•. , ... ,·1.89 79. c 7 X 261N ........ 1.99 8 X 24 IN .•..• ,,. 1.99 8 )( 26 IN .••••••. 2.19 8 X 29 IN •••• ,.,. 2.39 9 X 26 IN .....••• "'2.39 EA. 9 )( 29 IN, ...•... 2.59 9 )( 32 IN .••..... 2.79 COMP. RETAIL 10 X 29 IN .• ,, ••. 2:19 10 X·32 IN ...••• , 3.19 10 X 36 IN, ••• , •. ~.39 12 X 32 IN ...••• , 3.99 12X361N .•.. , •. 4.29 12 X 40 IN ...•.• , 4.79 15 X 36 IN ••. , ••. 5.79 15 X 40 IN .....• , 5.99 15 X 48 IN .. ,, •• , 7.39 .. ' PURE WHITE &COLORS COMP. 239 RETAIL 4.95 BAL. 1.00 AVAILABtE 'IN 41 SIZES UP TO 15 X 54 IN. ----'GUARANTEED ' -B111GHT WHITE I. COL'ORS TO COYER ANY COLOR IN 1 COAT SEMl·GLOSS -ENAMEL PAINT •IN TERIOR •EXTERIOR •SCRUBBABLIE •SATIN FINISH • E~XTR EMEL V - DURABLE FOR WOOD, PLASTER, METAL OUR PRICE ----...... ) OUR.PRICE39c COMP. PER RETA ll 79c /,i'~· •HIGH GLOSS •FAST DRYING •EXTREMELY TOUGH AND DURABLE FINISH •PERFECT FOR FURNITURE, MACHINERY, ETC. PROTECTIV . FtbrUM> , l 974 PILO\· • • •• • ' t • ~"''"Oti! J1'14 l • ; . • •EXPERT SERVIC~,' .. . ' . ~I~ .. : 95 . "': PER SINGLE · __:,nou.......__ S~i.Q :'2L~~~r~~~ ON.LY. ANO ADVl<;E, ....... . BY OOALIFIED • PRO'F-ESSIONAL si&;t.ESCl·ERKS' ... I • CO , ' -,; . PicT\I~· 'IX·101N.F~AMES OUR .PRl~E . . .-, . 17 I •LOOKS LIKE HAND CARVEOfl e".OUR CHOICE OF 4 FINISHES =~~7~~i~J::vM:LASTIC t~~c~~'/.~' . COMP. RETAIL 3.99 • I lllll!iiii--99 · 8110 IN. FRAMED . . OVAL MIRRORS, EA. •MADE OF DURABLE PLASTIC . e A DECOR.A Tl VE ADDITION TO ANY ROOM! 1 l-landC,.o/'f:ed WOODEN-BEADS •ADDS A STYLISH TOUCH TO ANY. ROOM!! • STYLE 101 B FOOT COMP. RETAIL 1.20 OUR PRICE 59c STYLE 601 STYLE 203 8 FOOT 92 INCHES COMP. COMP. RETAIL RETAIL 2.50 • 2.50 OUR PRICE ,OU.R PRICE 1.65 ' :f.85 PLASitC BE . •SINGLE COLOR'. • .• llNGW: COLOR ROUND BEADS <t <Cl\.V'St..AL SHAPE OUAl'RICE· • 941' P'AICE 2 H COMP ' <e COMP . ilD RETAi • 2·'' , RETAiL SO FT, 3.95, -· ~ 50·f1T. 4.ff COLOR DIAMOND SHAPE ~ ~OR ~utr~SHAPE ... YOUR CHOICE 395 m.:ll 50 ,T, :&,n "., OZJTE· ~ . ' . 1·1·12· . .. :\ . . ."1100M 'SIZE • RUSS l ' • •MODEftNCOLOR& & PATTIERNS •FOAM BACKED e NEEDLE PUNCH COMP. RETAIL 47.88 ' OUR PRICE '39!~ • 't I • , Ftbrwy • , 1974 ··woN-r"cRACK OR RUN '· SGALLON SIZE O!JR 469 ~~iiL PRIC£. '"" UO , . . 50.All. ' AA:Osa;,; CERAMIC TiLE a Ung~zed OUR PRICE .. 'Pottv,.s ·59·c .. COMP. RETAIL 1.10 PER •PRE-MOUNTEO SHEET ON GAUZE •STANDARD SIZE SHEETS · I APPROX. 12" X 12" I •PLUS MANY GLAZED 19.,. PATTERNS UP TO SHEU ... _-1:ali%.:PURE PR~PA·REo POLYFOAM :.-:H·OUSE PArN·T-~~rA-D· -s· , .. ouim,J:£~1tio ' j COMP. RETAIL EA . . 2.39 •FINE QUALITY •OIL BASE . •TOUGH & DURABLE •JPEAL ·F.OR ALL EXT.ERIOR WOOD . •l'R'E·MIXED USE ·Sl'.RAl,G_HT FROM .CAN . \ . . ·, DUR Pl!ICE· 75 TRONG®CASTILIAN. VINY·( CUSHION . 'FlOOR.it~399 . •AHORTED.PATTERNS& ~-. COLORS •LONG LASTING SHINE ·: •6 & 12 F,QOT WIDTHS coMP •• RETAIL4.59 ARllSTROl&®IMPERIAL -ACCOTOl_E: CUSHIOll YlllY FLOOR <&& 12FbOTWIDTHS· '•MANY N£W PATTERNS · & COLORS o LONG LASTINGS.HIN -COYEfllltB _,. , <o-:-a;:: COMP. RETAIL l.75 . . • : .. ··I ·0 \: \ . I I . . . VU}Q,L .. ·; -~ .·~: ~.,. .. UPHOCST:IR ~· . ~MAlERI~ .. • . I ~·48 & 54 ·1N<:1:f. ' WIDTHS °.:". • EASY TO Cl.Jf.: SEW, TACK.O)l PASTE Ji: • • • •' '• .. •• •• .,, •• . · • . )• . ' - .. r. -" I ~ t: • I ;;: ' . . . . . ·: . . . , .. ~--· t~ .. .. . .. -.. -. .. . . . . .. . . I • • J8 DAILY PUOT s Thursday, February 28, 1974 1'Jarch 22 Exchan~e. Club's Talent .Fete Set Talenl<d·youtlls bctweon the ages o( six and 18 may now enter the talent contest to be held on Man:h 22 by the Huotlngion Beach Exchange Club. are vocal, in.strumental and dance. A n y o n e interested should contact Garry Jonea, chairman of tbe event, at 10006 Adams Ave . in Huntington Deach, or phone ·.Wholesome -Aetivity Huntington Tr ustees Okciy ~«c_kpacking A new b a c k p a ck I n 1 • kidnapings goln1 on, these Slid he d!Jagreed w I t h '.THI· IDL'S complete Plumbi~, Heatilti and Air Conditioning w!ldern .. s survival class was wildeme81 akll!J may be _ Sllenkman. "Ir1 Important to NEW LOCATI ON approved bf HunUn(ton Beach necessary.'' eneourlge_ wholesome l~laure 1riMPortARYI Union High SCboOl District District adminJstrator Johl) time adlvlUee," Knox added. ''Do it Yours'etf Stores" trustees after one objected It Hunt iald -.~ of I h e Students are 1u,_,.....1 . to NO 2' wasn't traditional enough. ·~· ,...,.... 27601 FOR BES RD. • • Trustee Ron Shenkman was district'• 1,500 quarter-length learn how ti> travel safely LACiUNA the only board member to courses are tr ad it Ion a I . througb' wUdemea ud skill! ~.. '' NIGUEL vote agalnat allowing the Backpacking would be an Jn first aid, survival and-basic •-. r.~~·:111.:~ :~n:'~ " clas11 along with a co.urse in elective, non-required part of emerg-ency acuOns in the fHI IAWL'S + ~·• Preliminary auditions fer the final c<>ntest will be held on March 16 at 9 a,m. at Dwyer Junior High School, 150'l Palm Ave. in H1.tt1tington Beacll. 963.53117 or 894-1287. l technical illustrating, to be in-th'e physical education backpa·'ing cl•··. f "!!"~t,'~~~;~:~ • i • ';;'o..'~ 5~f.·m. ~ "uted ~· .. d artment u. ~ 24 MOUll 491r. un·1 ! $1111 LI~..,,. o•n wws Y r. ep · The vote was t-1 .to appr0ve1i..;•;;,••;.;',;;";;,".;:;:,-: . ...:,;:;:;:.. ________ ~.,.-'...,_"_"' _ _, 'The final oonte!l1: will be t\\'. at Dwyer School at 7'30 p.rn. EDUCATION ADVISER oo March 22. The local winner will be able to compete in Robtrt·J°' Vasquez the area 'contest, and -the 0 WHY DON'T we look for TRUSI'EE ROBERT Knox both courses. 1• more basic classes ... like pi~;;~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ....................................... ;;;lillii_, remedial reading?" asked I Shenkman, who said he had -· -CAT!'IG-OR!ES in the oontest ... -Gardeners Aid Girl Scout Fete Irvine Girl Scouts and the winner of that competition will advance to the district flnals in June. All winners will receive trophies and savings bonds. Irvin e ls ... Dates Slated lrvine Garden Club will mark Dates for the second aMual the 82nd birthday of girl . Irvine-1'-.ai:ts.ftsti•al have sCouting Man:h 16 by been set and groups and · distributing seedlings a n d individuals are being sought cuttings.. to participate in the lo-day -' The gift plants will be program. available from 10 a.m. to 1 The executive board of the p.m. at both the Walnut Jrvjne Citizens for Arts and Village and University Park Cufture decided this month to 8hopping centers. operate the festival from May The distribution ends Girl 31 through June 9. Scout Week, March 10 to 16. The next planning sessioil The annual cookie sale in wiU be held at 7:30 p.m., Irvine will be from J\1arch March 14 In Rancho San 15 to 25. Joaquin Intermediate School. • MEN'S SHIRTS Ml I FU a 0-•fl ProfeoslioMlty L-dsrecl ........... .,. J/7/74 J,4U I Dohony Poric Rd., Caplstr.o B-h ,. ...... _,,..... ... Tony & Pe<Ji Carlson Welcome you to SOL CASA ••• A uolquo colleclloo of Handcrofffil Creotloos. We hon tried to C)Olller a true cross soctt. of Callfonlla arfish and croft ....... P1taff feel free to all< _.how the Items wero made-: materials or technlqutt. If you don't SH an item you want, cnk. wt c• probably loc:alo ~ fO< you. I• flll'f event, whiJ. you art ht,.. fakt your tinw, tnwst. enjoy • • • Tony & Pe<Ji 3 1754 · Camino Capistrono , : We 'are located at son Juan Capistrano ... Acro11 frOM tM Mission RICHARDS BEAUTY COLLEGE l f060 I ROOll.HURST STREET AT GARFIELD e· HUNTINGTON IE.I.CH, CALIF. 9264 6 Phone 962-8831 · ' OPEN • TUES. THRU SATURDAY 8:30 TOs;Oo TUESDAY ONLY AT RIC:HARD 'S ~:~~~E~'~'""'"''"' . 42s f'lvt M11lr Cllf WIDNESDA Y ONLY AT RICHARD 'S • SHAMPOO & SET ,,, iwah th ii coupo nl SET .,, lwlt~ t~I• te11pt~I 't Education P ost Goes To Lag unan no complaints about t b e illustrating class . U students want to )ea rn backpacking, he added at a Saturday board meeting, let them pay for it. Shenkman-rHOadd, jokingly, "Possibly with ·all the Irvine Company planning Addict Board ad mi _n istrator Robert..Joe Vuqu02 of Laguna Beach has SACRAMENTO (UPI) - been appointed to a four-year Edwln A. Kujawa of Coronado tenn on a state Board of was reappointed by Gov . Education advisory Ronald Reagan to the state · 1 Narcotic Addict Evaluation comnuss on. Vasquez was named to the Anthority. Kujawa, 52, a educaUcnal innovation and Republican and retired career planning commi~ion, state Navy officer, will receive school supelintendcnt '\\11lson ;:='=13=,54=8=ann=u=a=ll=y.====1i Riles said. The group of 2~0 revl~ws proposals for federally funded programs and makes recommendations to the state board. Vasquez joined the Irvine Company in 1973, coming from the city of Hwitington Beach REFLECTIONS ~. Reyn Sheffer planning department. I'---~~ A native of Califomia,, 1,----- Vasquez earned a bachelor's degree rn pub l ic administration and economics at Cal State Long Beach. He and his wife, Leah, have a son, Davi!, and a daughter, Maia . 'N osu;ilgic' U1ii High Evenin g Set ' A oostalglc evening of musical memories of the 40s, 50s and 60s will be presented Friday and SatW'day by· the University High Schoo I Parent, Faculty and Friends Organization (PFFOJ. "On• thorn of experience 11 worth • whole wllllerneu Lowell Life has no shortage of warnings. Each day bring& a new supply, in ~ewspapera, on radio and 'JV, even on cigarette packages. Warnings come from friend, foe and casual acquaintance, him pulpit and public addies11 system. Perhaps their very profus- ion is the reason these warn- ings, though usually valid, are seldom heeded. People, be1rf'f"'buman, seem deter-- mined to learn mostly bY experience, however painful._ We are available ta discuss with you any respect of funeral services, Including price. The cost ot a funeral 11 determined entirely by the desires of the family. The fund raising program, "Music. Music, Music" begins at 8 both evenings in the high school multipurpose rooms. Tickets are $2 for adults and $1.50 for students and may be reserved by calling 552· 73 i:ighlights o! the program ~HSFFSR i n c I u d e the "Andre\\'S" fnOATU.tJlY Sisters, Daphne W a Iker, 970 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY i1arllyn Goss and 0 or is LAGUNA IEACH f I · r 494.1131 Pascale; a acu ty reprise o SAN CLEMENTE RED and Gl·WNY are READY . W"EN YOU ARE! \ -BACJ< in BUSINESS A.f. (AF1'£R l~E FIRE) .. 40 Years iii Laguna leach under same ownership Red . & Ginny Stoddart Custom Upholsterers & Decorator$ Association 14 9 4. 3 7 9 SI Recovering • Rebuilding Complete Fabric Selection Free Estimates COAST UPHOLSTERING Frtt Pick-up llMI Dtllnry 345 Canyon Acres Dr., Laguna Beach 50s tunes, and s tu dent 1533 NORTH EL CAMINO R.EAL renditions of excerpts froml[r.~~~·•~2~.0~10~0~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ recent mu sicals including "Cabaret" and "Applause." Hunting ton Uniforms Solicited Band members at Fountain Valley High School may take to the field next fall ""ith a new $26,000 set of uniforms. Bids on tho 200 band costumes are being advertised fO'J'" by Htmtington Beach Unioo High School District officials. District trustees h a v e approved the district's $11,700 contribution. 60 percent of the cost of 150 uniforms. The student government at the school will pay 40 percent of the rost of the 150 uniforms plus the run price or so uniforms. That totals about $14,300. Students and· a s c h o o I boosters club are conducting fundraising events. Fountain Valley teachers have donated $~19. ' I ~LJ50 (r"Et.~ l'l:T?~ ~ c~ HO.._, A\141LA81..f. FOil ()Hf l)OLlllll ~T-rJtG/i~Vf• lMlfl 1•lT 1f·Clldf' ...,, PIL.L'() ~ '460 J.cetrvll/fl'f.. FMf'JIEt r,..~~ •• , .. ..... ,._ ... , =2;;, ~ .. • Set the course for ltaylftSI home In style with our fresh new RI ortglnal design eight foot sofa of ••a·plald and hancf. rubbed wood frame, at a terrHIC made·ln·ou~factory price . Our,,_ decollllloil Mr.Ytc. wlli dulgn your room -Ing oround this crl1p new-look sofa wllll a ....t Ind atunty H9rculon fabric. and an unu1u11 nautical design wood !rams hlgh- llghlod l!Y br-llnlahed atrlpplng and 1tud1. S.. the total nautical look wllh coordlnalod c/JMrs, lalllM -ICOMiorM In Iha 74 now room dlaplay at ave<y RB showroom 1toie. ~t\1'17~ ~~ljlJ.~ •• ~~~~ .. ~~~# ' • • • . ' " ' ~ , ) J I I j I i j I I • I. • .. ~... • J ,.. . _, ~llad1e lhaeli •• • THE PRICE OF HI-Fl JUST WENTDOWN 70 SAU ENDS 318171 • STA·7S AM/FM stereo 1cce111er clcs1gnEMJ with lhese features Ma1n/remo1e speaker conlrol. Aulomalk: FM/rn<>no-sleroo sw1k;l'l lllumlnall<I 1un1ng metcrr PushbuUons tor oower, t0Uclness.1ape monitor. FM muting £xctu.sl"'41 Ouatravox :synlhes1zer bu1U·1n .•. ·A nip ot the :sw1!ch gives you the option REGULAR SEF-~nATE ITEMS PRICE $'409.80 C,OMPLETE AM/FM STEREO MUSIC SYSTEM 339ao· lby adding 2 mo1e :speakers to this system) ot 4-channel sound. 24.95 walnul wood case.• OPTIMUS'" 2 acou:st1c-susoonslOll speaker systems. Tuning con11ol customizes sound Priono 1ack/sc1ew terminals for easy hookup. Beau11tul walnut enclosures. LIFETIME GUARANTEE"• LAB·12 B automatic record changer w1th cueing/pause control Counrerwe1ghtccl arm for precise tracking. Custom base. $12 95 value stereo cartr idge There's only one place you can find It ..• Radio Shack REALISTIC" AUDIO ACCESSORIES AT CUT PRICES! ., 'LIFETIME GUARANTEE Fl•d•o Slllc ~ Qu•••n!~•• w•lll•l"I 1•"'• l<m1111~.,, 11\<1 '"'"~" o-l••c!•" Mf!C...,.<•I lun1:t•'" rn "I R"'""t,.-• 01>11..-uS • ··I>~'~'' ,,,1.-m, .n or>Q"lll UP'loQO·• "'" I.«" o • """!"""''' ~ ptQvOCl•llQ lndl 1~~ >ftl"'"' Ill< n I~ bf .. '11 l>"V"(•"~ .l~u>t •1 "'"' <k i. le<m• .... 10011 •> lon1• ,,...., 111•1 I"" • o->e• i:trOVKJ<'-> P•<>>P<J'l•T••n '"'"' l~t •tl>I' "1~ v,,.,. ,,..1'"" """" lunct'!ll' l>"l>'"ll < • n1••., ~''"' •.-<II ·~•>I" ,J f AEl or l'Af!IS A~D:il LA.SOR CCSTS . 11;1<.1.., lurm.t~ !~ ~ ......... 111 •• Q ... ~ ..... ,, """""' -1 ., 111 R•mo ~·•I·••~"""' <.:t~" rn ~:••: vc~''" f Ol•>Qil·,-Nn<!e<llD 001111 llfllU.'l l•o'~ •~'•><•·' ' ~ n QXID".1\1111!'." c.' REALISTlc® SPEAKER ~­ SYSTEMS Reg. 69 95 ea 399~ OPTIMUS"' 2 bookshelf acoust1c-suspens1on speaker systems Tun+ng con11ol ad1us1s sound ro ind1v1d!Jal room acoustics Wi!h ohono jack anq sc1ew term•nals1or bu+Ck sa1 up Sealecl, walnu1 wood enclosures. Use ro a,.;oand yout present system. LIFETIME GUARANTEE~ <10.2022 REALISTIC"STEREO HEADPHONES · En1oy tnhm<'l!e stereo Reg 9 95 hstenin9. Quality 497 headset is comlorlab!e/ adjustable. Vinyl headband e· cord 33· 1o12 31S3 S. lrill<il .:.... S.. AM UPI TtltPllOID Ou Lbt New Jersey lµgh school senior Lori Paton. 17, has filed suit because her name has been put on FBI list of subver- sives. She and her.fam- ily caine under investi- gation last year when she y,•rote a letter to So- cialist organization .for class project and it was intercepted. Mail Rate To Go Up Sa turday WASHINGTON (AP) -The cost of mailing ·a Jetter goes up ~·o cents beg i nnin g Saturday. The iacrease is p.3rt of a new postal rate schedule that will also gradually drive up the fees pail by book and record club members. as well as the charges to people who buy from mail order houses. Subscription p r i c e s for magazines and ne\\·spapers by • mail are expected to rise. 11JE NEW STA\1PS are available now and must be used on letters posbnarked after Friday midnight. The Jefferson Memorial replaces former President Dwight p. Eisenhower on the nation's basic stamp. First class mail goes from 8 cents to 10 cents, Airmail goes from 11 cents to 13. Post cards. now six cents, will cost eight cents. 1103 Howport ll•d. -CMlo Mosa 2701 S. M9o St. -S.. AM 11120 lro---oio V.U.y 1443 W. 17 .. St. -S.. AMI 1...;;".;; .. ;.;•.;;••;;....1 The increases for books, records and publications will be gradual. The cost of a one-pound bundle of books and records will~e ~y 14 cents over five years-to 30 cents. (•n fountol~ VoUty 1'1010) (1~ HOM!' Ptozo) 1oo1t f 0t ri.;, s;p. I" 'f-Nt lflllWhood 1941 Ad-An. -H...ti.,too - 6991 w--A·•· -"""""'"" loach 30232 CroWll Valloy l'tlwy. -L...-Hipol 114s.·ca 1· a lftll -S.. Cl•••• .• 11024 Mewpotf lhd. _ ,_ THE POSTAL Sen,ice es· timates the mailing ('()st or Reader 's Digest will go from the current four cents an issue to ei ght cents in three years. , I Slit .. 11U.st -WulWia .... CONDENSED CON SOL IDATE D STATEMENT OF CONDITION __ ..... ,,' • • -. -. as of'Close of Business December 31, 1973 , . .... ... . .. ,, .. .. ASSETS LIABILIT I ES C81h end U.S. Government Securities s 27,942,024 Saving• Accounts . --$ 283,165,726 Advances from Feder1I 5.383.400 Horne loin Bank . 64.600,000 Feder1I Home Loan Bank Stock • , .••..... FHA end VA l oans .••••• 230,842,586 Cononntlon1I l oans ..... . 115.356.388 Othtr Li1bilit i1t .... 14,081,985 Lo1hl on Real Estate Owned for Dn tlopment 780.BOO Specific Loss Reser ve . 86.475 160,003 Loan• to fac:ilitat• sale of Real E1t•te .•.•. Loan Valuation.Reserve ... Office Buildings ilnd Equtpment lw Oepracl1tion ••••.. -•• < 13,000 > Capital, Su~p1us, General Reserves and Utidivided 3,653,346 Profits .•••..••. . 29,934,124 Other Alst tl ••••••••.•.. 7,762.'157 TOTAL AllCAOIA 41 E. LM 01k An . (11ll •4J..05511 IELL OAROENS \ 1141 Eof FltrtllCI Aw. CZ13l77l·5Dl l CANOGA 'ARK Ot 11111 INll r.,..,,. PW• Slloppi119 Ct111tr 1113) 113-ltZI CERlllTOS 0111M1111!1 lllf"C1Frit11 Shoppl"f Ctllt• (213) 115-IZi l COSTA MESA 0111111 irttl_I $391,863,310 TOTAL s 391,888,31 0 Ni neteen Offices to Serve You DOWN EV MONTE fl EV PA"K CO NCO RO 011tll• ~11 I DOOO L"'W004 llv4. 201 N. G11flt14 Al'I. Sun V1ll1y Sh1,,i111 Ct11rtt (415) 711·1400 !Z1ll t2J·9&01 l21l) i73·1710 IE•tcttiw Oflicd 1211 E. Fl1mt111 llf'!I. 1Ztl l li2·111• EAST LOS ANGELES 5411 t. Whittler '""'· (21Jl 7Zl ·lll51 L,~ C_RESC~NlA 26!1fttthill1114. (1131141·1121 LAKE FOREST Z43f1 Muirltltd$ 11'1'11. (Jl4) 51&-09DD ORANGE 011 tht !NII Tltt r.t.h 11 0111191 Sht,,lllf Ctnltt 111•1131-4512 FDSTEfl crrv IMDfMlttCityttrll. 14151 574·il51 SAN I RUND 011thl111111 SAN BERNARDINO --Ta11for111 Prrk O tit n $Mppt119 Cfl'tt• ,;,~ $':ppii11 Ctllltf 14111 llJ-1117 11141 114·6451 Soinh c .. n 'lu• LOS A~GEtES WHln lEll Slllppl111 C111ttl' 400 N. Vtfmonl Aw. 11215 E. WMhlfllllll II~. MOUllTAINYll W 011 tM°Mill ' ... ,n.w u S11oppl1t9 CM\tr (41 5) 911"'41D (7t4) 14Go40BI (213) &&5·1111 121 JI 192·DJS7 Com1tltlt lln¥1Clt l 1tat1mtrtt avfll1l'll 1 upon rtc1ut1t. • \ . \ • Thul1d11y, Febf'uary 28, 1974 DAILY PILOT 9 Bi.U Would Cu1·b Ques tio ns · Nurse Pos t ' SAC.'RAMENTO !API Registered nurses would bf trai ned-a11 ''physi c I a 11 extenders'' under two projecU approved by the California Department or lieallh. Dr. William Atayer, director or tht department, snid that a "physician extender" is a non· doetor who can perform many routine scree n i n g and treatment tasks whlch take much o/ a physician's iime. SACRAMENTO I UPI I - Legislation prohibiting the defense c o u n s e I from que~lonlng s. rnpe vlcllm about her prh>r scxunl acts hlls been proposed b y Assemblyman Alister A1cAUster (0-San Jose). "Pe.rmitUng the d c re n s e counsel to go Into prior sexual nets has anlOuntc<l to an open I South Coast Dru g I COSMETICS CRYSTAL hw1ting season on the ''il11m 's character," ~tcAlis1er said Wednesday. "It hns n1eant th..1.t the victim has been plnccd on tri al ruthcrr t.han the defendant." The legislation w o u I d prohibit the court from admitting into evidence any "evidence of spccllfc Instances ol sexual acts of lhc victin1 Jnvolvtng any per!On other than the dclendant." "The existing law i s cs peeially ironic and unfair since wlless the defendant t11.ke3 the stand in his own behalf, the law does not permit evidence to b e introduced of any prior rape coi1\·\ctlons of the defendant," J\.tcAIUter said. RELOCATION I South Coast Drug I . starts .FRIDAY. MARCH I st ON ALL MERCHANDISE JEWE LRY STATI ONERY GIFTS FINE -CHINA GREETING CARDS SUNDRIES South Coast Drug & Gift Shop located in south coast pla1a-lower mall-near may co. Costa Me sa -~ristol at San Dieg o Freeway WE HAD A FIRE ... BUT NOW WE ARE COOKIN' AGAI • On Sunday, January 20th, our man ot the stove wos fryin' up a stcrm ... ~s, hamburgers, the building. Since then, we've been SetVing from a limited menu. Now we ore bock in full swing with our usual big array of delicious, 'round-the-clock ~iols! To celebrote, we're hoving a ... ''WELCOME BACK'' FIRE SALE FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY MARCH 1st MARCH 2nd MARCH 3rd MARCH 4th MARCH 5th MA~CH 6th MARCH 7th DllCGWtt ~ """" .. I J:OI LM., ,,...,., Mrtll I. ..... ~. ~. Morclll 7, 1974 OPEN 24 HOURS, DAILY • • • Any food order, be it from our weekly menu or a value -packed weekly or monthly special . . . We'll total the bill, then give you a ... % DISCOUNT KOIA LANES ·COFFEE SHOP DANCIN~ and , ENTERTAINMENT _.,"'"' S.W.toy 9:00 ,_ .... 2:00 ..... 2699 Harbor, Costa Mesa ( I · ...... ' ' • .. I I ' 10 DAIL V PILOT Thursday, February 28, 1974 LAFC Ups~S Cal Beach's Sphere of Influence By WIWAM SCHREIBER Ot "" et.ll'r Pllllt llaH for lulurt expansion by Seal l!eoch and are abmst completely surrowlded by lhe cily already. after a short debate and a Jplit vote. '!be I.AFC, . slaff had recommendcct it be put into the sphere of 1.os AJamltos, y:hlch surrounds it on three sides. centers 101Detime in the future. 1..A!'C planntrs said !here is no lndlc11lon that the Navy is ,...dy to give up ils facility. Alamttoo' >Plelt drew Ibo ""1!L~ debale .. Fullerton Councilman LoulJ "Rt<!" Refiihardt, i1so an LAFC member, • warned the Roosmoor resld<ot& that they are already !Ully developed aa a residential area and would baVe a hard time financially u an Independent city. SANTA Al'iA -LOcal Agency FonnaUon Commissioners v o t e d unanimously Wednesday to lncr<ase Seal Beach's municipal sphere of influence to Include the Naval Weapons Station and the 1Hellman Ranch. There was vlrtua'Uy no debate among commissioners after a staff report on the·J>l'OPOSll was read. PLANNERS Al$O backed lhc Sea l Beach City Council in declaring the city has no interest in annexing the <.-ommunlty of Rossmoor, or the narrow strip of Sunset Beach. commissioners were told Seal Beach ~ncilmcn rejected Rossmoor and ~unset Beech because they would return only enough revenue to offset the scniices provided by the city. '!be Hellman Ranch, 1-0cated In a atrlp between lhe San Gabriel Rl,.r and Seal Beach Boulevard, is surroun~ on two sides by Seal Beach, on a ·third by the Naval Station and on the fourth by Los Angeles County. Leaden of homcownen groups said they cloo't want to be amexed by }'1S Alllnltoo or any city because they waot lhe future option of loootpor~llng themaelveo. &ipervisot Ralph Diedrich, ·an !.AFC member, said a ephere of lnflumce doesn't 11loek the future or an area DIEDRIClf, REFERRING to Rossmoor as '1the walll'd city•• said if it is e\ler to go tnto any city, it should go into Los Alamllos. in cemmt". , LAFC planners said the l\l.'O parcels of land were the 1nost logical areas Rossn\oor, a development of 15,000 people north of the San Diego t"reeway along Seal Beach Boulevard , w11s given the status of freedom from any sphere 111E NAVAL station and the •lcllman Ranch, on the other hand are still open land for the most part and could provide space for industrial or commercial Commissioners were told by LAFC stair members that Sunset Beach should either be anne1.ed to Huntington Beach or len fore\ler as coonty territory, He said the communlty codld sWI incorporate If it is put ln another city's sphere because, either'Way, the residents ~Id have to vote on the annexation Or lncorporaUon. But a majority of the a>mmission was swayed by -the homeowners and the vote was 3-2 to keep thin.KS as they are for the time being. THE INCLUSJ9N of Ros.mioor in Los Die(l,rich Pushes D·isclosure-only~ Bid f -Hair Slaves, Go Free! WESTLAKE ....................... ....,., .................. . __ ,.., SANTA ANA -Super\'isor Ralph Diedrich VO\\"ed \Yednesday to resurrect bis disclosure-only c:ampaign roru.rol law in lhe wake of a recent ruling by his opposition has been vindicated JJy When the three Jaws came up to • .._.... 111 ....... ,...., .._. 6 ,.. ...... ._,, ..... the ruling. a ptJblic hearing. Diedrich claimed Costa Mesa C.ity Council ..,,._....._&at ••••• '1 ··,.. _...,... ....._ _,... LAST l\tO'NTll, the Fu 11 er to n donation and expenditure limi~s would ... _..,..,....... _. fr•'bP " 0. '-'"" ....._ Supervisor proposed one of three possil>lc be impossible to enforce because smart • a.n..-,..;.,_ Servic" • hlh1tlon c-tNI -. .... _. ...... ht .... .,.. ._. ,_ _, .,... _, campaign control la"'S requiring full lawyers could work around them. •Iii••~ a Troil1 • eon .. .-tMon ...,,_ ~ . ....., ;_ 1. It w .... tit ,.,..._ .. ,._,. '" .., CBlifomla Attorney General Evelle Younger. That ruling, made public a week ago, Informs local go\.'· ernments that they cannot put limlta· tk>ns on contribu· tions or expenditures ••··•-··e , •~.die Protrom • "'blic o,.nn.u --W .... w:t\,:IV<)Ul • • .... ._,. M l9f '9fl° ...... TM ....... . Another law drafted by Superviso r HE ALSO c l a imed later that VOTE MARCH 5 .._.. .... ., ............................. .. Ronald Caspers required some ' limitations wou ld infringe the freedom -•· we - --A -Wt -*' lloe-. disclosure, but stringent limits on a candidate enjoys 1n distributing Paid tor by !ijthmand Wesilake, 162$ Sandalwood. C~o Mete ...,, donallons and spending. campaign materials. JO~l:PH'S SCISSOR SffilHG The main thrust of Caspers' proposal Younger's ruling states simply that X was to put a limit of 50 cents per local governments have been supcrceded voter on candidates for office. by the state in the matter of campaign Nearly -Eve1·yone 91'4 ...................... ·--~ rf6l.J.JM A third law was proposed by the financing. JOI N, HeW ~ P•l'te;ll -fll.. .,.,_3163 because the state DIEDRICH Orange County Environmental Coalition Several laws have been passed in llOW Mii YOVI CONmllmlCI',., •. OJIM DAILY that was bulkier than either. Caspers' recent mont.hs by the state Legislature L" l l L d supercedes local leaders. Diedrich, who supports full disclosure but no limits, told fellow supervisors or Diedrich's and contained much tighter which limit donations and expenditures IS ens 0 an ers ·• AM. .. 10 ;.,_SAT •• SIWY~t .. I P.M1 restrictions. ~~~::::::~:::::a~n~d~r~eq~u~ir;e~d~is~c~lo~su~r~e~. ::::::~::::::::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::============~~~=======~~~;~~!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!~!"'!!!"'!!!"'!!~ Awards Luneheon Easter Seal Society F etes County Groups ANAHE f~f -Twe Ive groups, Including the Daily Pilot, and five individuals were honored today at th e Easter Seal kick-0ff luncheon and awards program at the Grand Hotel. Commended for outstanding sen"ice to the Orange County's physically~h and I capped through their support and work with the Easter Seal Society of Orange County were: DAILY PILOT, Costa Mesa -"Communications." For its many in-depth features telling the story of rehabilitation at the society operated Rehabilitation Institute o f Orange County. Radio station KAP'X-FM, San Clemente -"Community Awareness Award" for year- round help in bringing the story of Easter Seals to their listening audience. EXCELSIOR DAIRY, Santa Ana-"Public Service." Since 1969 Excelsior ·has annually made available their milk cartons as a medium for carrying the Easter Seal message to Orange County residents. JOE GREICO, Anaheim - "Patient of the Year." For symbolizing the hope and courage of all physically handicapped children a s Orange County's 1973 Easter Seal Cllild. Fr ee Help On, Taxes WESTMINSTER -Spanish- speaking taxpayers can get free help in preparing ino:ime tax returns from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Monda y s at Westminster High School in room G-8. The high school 1s at 14:l52 Goldenwest St. The tax project is offered by volWlteers in the Huntington Beach Un.ion High School District adult school. Lo\\.·er income or elderly residents also can get assist· ance with simpler tax forms at the high school on Monday evenings. MARTIN MILNER - "Easter Seal Award." For leading the 1973 Easter Seal Drive to an all time record high. SONORA mGH School Students, La Habra -"Youth Award." For the students who undertook a program to raise funds to help handicapped children and adults. HOPE ~REFF, Anaheim -"Volunteer of the-Year." For devoting countless hours of her time to help the handicapped Children <!l RIO. TERRY GEER, Anaheim - "President's Award." For conceiving and organizing the 1st Annual Easter Seal Toum- A· Thoo. this past Au~ust . QUALITY I N N. headquartered in S i 1 v e r Springs. ~1d. -"President's Award ." For providin g wholehearted support a n d endorsement to Terry Geer in his spoosorship of the 1st Annual Easter Seal Tourn,A· Thon to aid Orange County's handic:apped. l\IEDELLAS ( fl.I e d i c a 1 , Dental. Legal Ladies Society) -"Special Citation"· for fundin g the Educ at i o n a I Therapy \Ving of RIO. NATIONAL CH AR I TY LEAGUE, Fullerton Chapter -"Special Citation" for sponsoring the Le a r n i n g Disabilities Center at th e Institute. ' ' I n d ustrial Partnership Awards" to XEROX. Irvine: ALL STATE INSURANCE, Santa Ana ; LA!\.IBERT·KAY , Irvine; COAST CATA!\.IARAN, . Irvine; and PRIMARK, Sa nta Ana, for helping make possible the immediate success of RIO 's Vocation al Rehabilitation Program · for the se v e re I y handicapped through their g e n e r o u s utilization of the Program's sub-contract sen"ices. GENE n.rn', Tustin - "Past President's Award." For ex tr a ordin ary commitment to serving the handicapped through t w o terms as president {1971-1973) of the Easter Seal Society for Crippled Children and Adults of Orange County. I See by Today's Want Ads e /I. LJ'ITLE RUNABOUT for sale. This ·n Pinto ls in excellent .condition and has under 18,00l miles. @ CHILDREN BEWARE! this whlte Shepherd guard dog Is free to you, but this ~~ Dobie does NOT 11ke kids. I ~16 million in sales in the past 1~ weeks. has lo tell you somelhif18 about &unDse Countfy Club! The mo()l exc ilif18 and dynamic concept in dec)erllivif18 eve(,off er ed. Ownership I Membership All Tn One -Sunrise Country Club brings you a ll 'the advantages of belonging to the most elegant, private golf c lub and tennis cl ub plus ownership of a beautiful single- story condominium on fee land in a gate-g uarded community for the price of condominium owner- ship alone. A new precedenl in lu:ituri ous d esert livi ng. A new criteria for your condominium dollar. How it \Vorks -As an owner you receive propri- etary me mbership rights in both the golf and 1ennis club with the ability to activate your playing priv- il ege in either o r both for only nominal a nnual dues. There arc no membership initiation recs.· These membership ri~hts remain \Vith 1hc owne n•hip of each condon1in ium. An irnportant asset to the va•ue and security of your investment. Club Facilities To Rival The Finest -The focal point of Sunrise Country Club is the IS,000 squarc- foot , split,level clubhouse. A masterpiece of Medi- terranean architecture, it includes a glass·wallcd main dining room and adjacent fireside lounge which overloo~s the !st tee, I 8th green, the out· d oor dining deck and one of the four community lakes. There's also a men's grill, locker rooms, snack bar and the tennis and golf pro shop$. Nearby, arc the main swimming pool and a separate children's recreation area. Tennis -The Tennis Club facilities measure up to the finest any\1here. There arc nine beautiful courts, four lighted for night play and one over· sized and sunken for tournament play. There arc also four teaching alleya with videotape replay ~uip­ mcnt to sharpen your game and to top it all off; one of . the greats of tennis, Dennis Ralaton, is Resident Djrcc· -·tor of Tennis.' lnnni1 R1l11on, Oirtttor o{T~nnil, Sunrile Coun1ry Club. puich •nd C.p11in or1tie t97'l 1nd 1973 01"it , Cup Team. Suptrb playtr, teacher and coach. ' . Golf -Spreading outward from the beautiful clu~ house complex ia the challcngins 18-hole Ted Robinson designed golf course. Winding ill way gently throughout the community, you1ll find it well trapped with just enough water hau.rda to make it truly interesting. A great courte for either the high or low handicapper. .l'j ' • Single-Story, Low-Dtnaity Luxury -Nestled com- fortably along the rolling green fairways arc the beautifully spacious condominiums. As o nly Sun- rise can build them. And scattered among them, approximately 18 scparate·sunning arcu complete with swimming pools and companioG therapy pools. To make Sunrise Country Club an 'even more im· preuivc value, you'll only find about four condo· miniuma to the acre. And as we've said, on fee land. ' • - • TLC· Target: Poori Nutrition Storlet by AU.ISON DEER!\ ot ..., ~,., ,.,. ll•ff l.Mellneu, -poOr health, tact 'of ' • moblllty .,. cooking skills often result in pgor nutrition among Orange County re1ldents over 60. A Utile TLC can make a big difference. Slnee December, Project TLC , llJlOll'Orecl by !he Feedback FoWldatioo Inc. and fWlded . lhrough !he Calilomla . COtnrnlssion on Aging, has offered an alternative. A hot lunch, transportation to the site and counsellng are the components of the project, explairt&I Project Director Wayne Warner. ·"A nutrition program for senior citizens baa Ioog been needed In O.ange County. City bodies, cl.vie organizations, various agencies and volwiteen..are now joining with Individuals needing tbe services to develop and support a project Bite for lbeir area." Warner explained that !he Orange Coonty Council on Aging, based on 1970 census figures, located eight target areas for the project-each wilh a high dcn1ity ot over-«» population living on low Volunteer Cessina Rebarchek pours coffee for Sara Adams (right) at Community Bible Church, one ol four TLC sites in the county. Program is sponsored f, by Feedback Foundation f of_ Santa Ana. •. , .. •' ' I 1. f . ,r Small tables with ':: brightly patterned • . ~· ' cloths make friendly setting for TLC program in Huntington ·Beach, below. incomes. ~"Sitt! were chosen as close to the heart.tot these target areas as posslble," Wamer said." We wanted the sites to be within walking distance for those who needed the program." Before sltes were selected (all 11.re donated for the project's use) staffers canvassed Ule nearby area to sign up seniors' for the progra1n . '1We went door.to-door," he said, "J>e... rouse the people who need the program don'·t have access to the media. Many are isolated In their homes and would not have heard or the project." other participants were reterTed by community sources or heard ol the ~ gram from other participants. There now are four sites operating In the county-with a rota! of 10 planned, Warner said. The first opened early in December in SOutbwest Santa Ana, the secood in LagW\3 Beach, third in Huntingtoo Beach and the fourth in Orange the first week in February. A fifth site ""is ·plamed for Costa Mesa. Eligibility for the program requires \ participants to be 60. and over and limited In !heir skills and knowledge in preparation or nourishing meals OR lacldng' in mobility to shoP for and prepare meals OR "'hose Jonellne!ls inter· feres "'itb their des.ire to prepare a meal and eat alone. Project TLC also oflers a home delivery program geared to those who are bedridden, while convalescing after a hospital stay, for example. No more than 15 percent of TLC meals can be del lvered, he~noted. When all sites are in operation, a maximum of 700 meals per day will be distributed among all sites. A central Feedback Foundation kitchen in Santa Ana prepares meals for three of the sites. The fourth is located at Ute Scandia restaurant in Laguna Beach: Because of the distance to Laguna, a special arrangement was m._ade with tlw. restaurant to provide seniors TLC lwu:hes in donated banquet space. Putting senlor citizen\ in touch with community resources is an important element, Warner said. "As weTI-as-PrO"vktfui nutrtUonaJ meals , the program also provides the following supportive se~: outreech, lnforination and referral , bealtti and wel!are coWJseling, nutrition. education. shopping assistance, recreation and transportation.'' AddlUonally, programs specillc to· !he needs and interests of participants at eadl site are developed. Transportation is provided b Y volunteers :. serving is done b Y volunteers. Most coordinators at sites are over 60 and paid, thus providing jobs for some as well e.s the other benefits. Feedback Foundation Inc. is a non· prol'it corporation, organized in 1967 to provide a wide range oi community services. Other projects sponsored by Feedback have been: daily free hot hutch program for 1,200 school children, summer sack lunClt program at Santa Ana parks, a clearingbpuse for Quistmas giving, an emergency help program for families with urgent needs, and coordination of countywide Toys for Tots projects. .. e . BEA ANDERSON, Editor 11111 ..... ,. ,....,,,,.., •• 1'14 ,. ... tt 'A nutrition program for senior citizens has long been needed in Orange County. Getting in touch with community resources is vital.' friendly Setting Attracts -seniors Rowxl tables 'vere topped with patterned, fringed cloths and there was a delicate mingling of scents-turkey, dreSsing, sweet potatoes, hot rolls . . Gertrude Dandurand. directing the operation field marshal style, was overseeing volunteer hostesses. • .__...Frances Langdon checked in the over· 60 men and "'Omen trickling in ones and twos into the Community Bible Church, Huntington Beadl. tt was approaching noon, and clusters of senior citizens had gathered near the door on this warm day to talk before another Project TLC lunch was served. "We haven't, been open very long," Mrs. Dandurand said, not missing a beat in her regular routine. "We've had 95 different people here already and there's a core of about 25 regulars." On the table near Mrs. Langdon was a Doral print box labeled "contributions.'' "People give what they feel they can," she said, "How much?" asked a newoomer. "You know what you can give," she reassured. "Just give what you can." A young volunteer from Huntington Harbour was getting serving instructions. "They don't go through' a. line and sit at long tables," said M r s . Dandurand. 'They v.'OO't alow that kind of reeimentation." She pointed to the round tables, capable of seating six to ei1tht. "We got those from the Parks and Recreation department. And the tablecloths were doooted. too." The volunteer said, "I drove someone from up my way last time. When he came out t thought he'd say his father would be out in a minute. He was 71 and looked about 50. 1 think that's fantastic . '1Why dol)'t they have more places like this?" she asked, wonderin~ aloud how the gas shorta~e would affect the volunteers who pick up many particl· pants. "We have five or six people who are blind," added Mrs. Dandurand, "so we really need drivers for them every day. If we can't get them here, they can't participate." The smell of turlcey dinner, in honor of a holiday was overwhelming. "Aren't these menus fantastic," the coordinator said, displaying a tw~week sample. Eggplant parmesan, lari}'llld chicken, spaghetti with meat sauce .... "After lunch, we have activities," she said, counting off the days. "h-1onday, we have arts and ,crafts; Tuesday, It's sing-along. The church lets us use the piano and organ. Wednesday, v.·e show a half hour movie: Thursday, we have a rap session, and Friday, it's counseling. "We 've heard people from the Orange County Cotmcil on Aging, a talk on ftre prevention and we're planning a field trip to .visit the paramedic team. Six of us went to SOdal Security to lee.m how lhe new system w~." Yes. she said, !he meals are wonderiul and it's Important "but getting people togelher la the most Important part. They've gotten to know each other and _, have new friends to eat with e"Verf day. "And, they 're helping each other. They ,. go out to help the ones the volun~ drive 'every day." Mrs. Dandurand· doesn't Interrupt !he many conversations to begin serving. "I let !hem talk. and when lhey're ready to eat they all choose a place. It's relaxed, and enjoyable, and we all love It." ; Site director Carl Hansen called the Laguna Beach program "just like eating at Victor Hugo's." Laguna TLC1Jarlicipants have dubbed their group, the Over 60 Commwlity Center. "We had 55 happy seniors today," he adds, "Z51..in the last week." Thirty.aine volunteer "hostesses" help with serving and greeting participants. They l15e nine every day . "Everyone Is served as in a flne restaurant," he added. "Everyone is so adorable and they love being treated like royalty ." Part of the royal treatment in Laguna has been a visit from a naUonally known magician, consumer adviCe from a representative of the Orange Coimty Bureau of Consumer Affairs, classes in macrame, bridge, bingo and drawings for "white elephants" contributed by the partJclpants themselves. The Laguna site, opened in early December, also needs volunteer drivers to transport potential participants who lack transportation of their own. "One reaS>O why it is so enjoyable is the atmosphere-elegance and dignity combined." nus Is important, he said, becau,e many could not afford "such fine meals" and everyone enjoys the social aspect. Hansen ts currenUy looking for an aide, over 55 and retired willing to help lllm out for a small salaey. "It's such a beautiful program, bow cou1d anyone help but like it?" Weighty Problem Ea~flg at · Neighbor' S Hospitality DEAR ANN LANDERS: Pl..,. tell me what to do. I couldn't look llll)lone In lhe face and .. k this question. A very lovely coµple moved In ......., 1be ball. I haw bait 80IJ'! nice, friendly cotlee ldald>es with the woman and my h.-id has 11"'1 a few !hon visits wldl ber -· In lhe corridor and elev-. We would Uke to Invite them to our nellt dinner party, bllt (f don' know how to 1ay this dellcately) the man Is "' fat I don't think our dln1ng room cha,Jr could hold him. Would II be Insulting to ask ber to pleUe lx1ng die dlalr he sits In at home! lo(y buobend •YI I simply ¢an't do-. thing. Any Olhe' suggestionl?- BLANK WALL DEAR BLANK< U your dining chair> are dainty, why not use two of your stiNlet& living room cbalrs (even if 11101'"' iippobteredr at the bead and Ille !IOI el Ille dining table. Your husband coalol tll ID oae and tbe nelgllhor In Ille olllor. It woal<I ho ''" obvtoas ,to tile iPUt• tbat there wu 1 ')lvliloal.!'· DEAl\ ANN LANDERS: I am on epileptic anc1 .• 1•m-fed Up wllh people beli1g afraid to go Myplace with me tor !ear 11 wll get an attack. T..,nage yeara ere hard, even when you aren't an epD.,,Ue, eo pleeae, Ann, print my • letttr. Moot <1>¥cs have seen a doctor • • • ~ '4•.t~ \ ~ .. and are taking medication tha t controls their attacks. I am not saying it is impossible for an epileptic on medica tion to have an attack, but it'a unlikely. If an attack should occur, tell people not to panic. It Isn't necessal')' to call a doctor unless the attack lasts more than three minutes. ,:. J ~:~ ~ vl:~~e i~J;:~e;:: :~ no objects nearby he can knock against. Put a wad ol paper the size o[ a l .. , tennis ball between bis jaws so he wcrt't swallow his tongue. Open a window and make sure he bas plenty of air. Walt for him to regain consciousness and let him rest awhile. The most important thing to rtmembcr Is that you are dealing with a person. not an animal. -HUM.\N THO' EPILEPTIC 1 • DEAR FRIEND : Tbuk you for I letter that will sarely ed.acate 1 creat , , . • maay peeple. DEAR ANN LANDERS: It's obvioos you don't have a son or you could never have printed sudt a stupkt answer to "Daughter-in-law." I'd like to respond to !hat self.right"°"' little witch, since you didn't do one thing to put her in her place. DEAR DAUGIITER -IN ·LAW : You seem to have a lot to say a bout what a rotten job I did raising my SOil. Why didn't you write "Dear' Mom and Dad?" The boy DID have a father, }'Otl know. Or do yoo think the stork brvuP,t him ? Girls like you make me s1clc. You have qu1te a load ol anger for "lousy mother>." Do you hooestly believe !here are no "kwy children?" Since you've made It clear that I did sudl a miserable Job on your 1 husband, please don 't ask.me to baby-lit wllh your children any IDOl'e. I'd bate to have a hand in ruining them, too.- YOU KNOW WHO I AM DEAR YOU KNOW: Yoa cu1t llJ I dldo' give you <qui limo. U yow d1apter-ht-bw rec.pJael lllenelf, >• haven't beard tile lut .t WI. Md ' oeltber ilave L ' Don't flunk your chemistry t.st. !Am! I is ffiOl'e than ooe set or glands ealllnC' to another,. lf you have trouble maks'DC a distlnctioo you ne<d Ann's booklet, "Love or Sex and How to Tell Difference." Sen<! a loog, telf.add.....S, 9tamped envelope wllh your requeot llld 35 cents In c:o1n to Am Landenl, P.O. Box 33141, m w. Bank Dr., <l!lcqo, m. I . Thursda_t. Fepruary 28, 1974 And the Winner Is • • • ' Sweepstakes winner in Damas de Caridad's annual Bal h1asque coinpetition is this floral interpretation of Swan Lake by Carl's Flowers, Coro na del ~1 ar. htodel is Mrs. J-loward Peltier of La Habra. FACTORY SALE hand silk screened wallpaper · 60%0FF Saturday & Sunday 1 la.m. to .4 p.m. 332' A' MARINE IJUST OVER THE BRIDGE! BALBOA ISLAND ·. ' ' I --- Your Horoscope Tomorrow Shopping Fun Doubled Doubling shopping pleasure by guaranteeing bar. gain prices are 1nem be rs of the Orange Coast Mothers of Twins Club who. wlll present a benefil sale at 10 a.m. Saturday, March 2, at the Westmin- ster home of the Robert Deget1felders. Browsing through salable items are (left to right) Jeff Buck· ingham, Brian Dutt, Jenniffer Buckil1gh an1 and Derek Dutt. -RUFFELL'S- ' Large Sizes uPHoLsTERY When You Wc111' The l esf 1922 Harbor llvd. Costa Meso -549·025t Sagittarius: Use Diplomacy SIZES 38 to 46 FRIDAY MARCH I By SYDNEY O~IARR ARIES (March 21-April 19 \: Relatives, neighbors are apt to be pugnacious. D o n ' t attempt too many changes. Go slo\v, especiall y '''here travel is concerned. Be sure of messag es, ca l l s, reservations. Some people tend to be malicious and the y misquote you. Know it and protect yourself in clinches. TAURUS (April :?0-~lay 20'.: Questions concerning costs, earnings. budget are featured. All ans"•crs are availabl~" but not immediately. Patience now is a virtue. Aggressive individual could be covering up an expensive error. Do some personal · investigating. GE MI NI (May 21.June 20): Take special care around n1achinery, elect r icity. Certified check could be coming your \vay. What you had given up may actually be revivt.)i. Past-due bills could be hOnored. Don't rush, push, chide or incite anger in those who could be your allies. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Select those "'ho can keep a secret. Some around you -are only too willing to u~et appleca rt. Know it and be discreet.. Tempers f I a r e around you. Che<:k tendency to compound unp l easant situation. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22 1: Lovers' quarrel should oot be Peering Around "i\'INNERS Or the American essay contest. sponsored by the Col. \Villiain Ca be 11 Chapter, Daughters oJ the American Revolution have been honored. ELECTED to the board of trustees, Claremont Graduate School \\'BS Carlotta Herman J\1 ellon of Balboa Island. taken too $eriously. Impulse now tends j.o dominate logic. Study Cancer I,Dessage for valid hint. Bring forth sense of humor. If you expect perfectioo from one close to y ou , the r e wil l be disappointment. Strive for greater degree of maturity. VffiGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22): Be thorough. Yoo m a y uncover details "'hich make present tasks much easier. One in authority may appear harsh. However, this is only of temporary d u r a t i o n. LIBRA (S.pt. 23·0ct. 22 ): Analyze. Find reasons. Re- ject superficial explanations. Gemini, Vlrgo per90l'IS could be involved. Hold off on journeys, If practical. Some Jong-range planning is in need oI revision. Memories could be do<eptive. B~ lo che<:k on a>nditions as they CutTently exist-be f ore makibg commibnents. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 211 : u..ts may be loo high-know it and do something about it. Protect ycur own interests. '"1o.5e who supposedly are amigned to certain tasks seem not to be aware of duties. · SAGrITARIUS (Nov. 22- unle55 you want a knockdo'¥'.1l, drag-out kind of battle. Legal counsel may be required to complete transaction . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Highllght practicality - review time , motion. !Jasic costs and responsibilities. Ex- pect added pressure. But also realize you are not without al- lies. Older individual will lend benefit of experience, as "'ell as mora l support. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 18): Relationship could be going through·' stormy '' period . Key nov,r is to maintain balance. A v o i d making statements v; h i ch u ltim a te l y result in embarrassment, r e g r e t s . Member of opposite sex figures prominently. Promises tend to be broken-know it and don't expect something for nothing. PISCES (Feb. !~March 201: You are able to f i n i sh assignment whfch has been restrictive. You will have chance to exercise greater independence. There will be more room for s tyle . creativity, special touches. Pan t-suits become you ... they go with the busy life you lead ... look great every inch of the way. Come, tr y on a spring-y pastel. Our friendly salesladies would love to help you. from $28.00 Ella ··-····· ~:.:. · Nor 'sHALF·SIZE SHOP Huntington Beach 14 M11n11lngt1n (enl•' t N••l IG B•r~1t BrD>. Furn, l Costa Mesa 1 IOS M .. port ll•d. l ' lllD<k Nof!n ot lltn \!.I Laguna Hills • Laguna Hills Mall 224 Oro119"fDlr MDI I, fwllH-to.1 Ooity 10.6, Mon .. Thwi., fri. la '9. S11n. 12·5 BankAmrricard • :\l41slt'r lhar,i~r Dec. 21), See plainly, not with 1----------------- Placing first in their grade Jevel v.•ere Jeanine Clark, eighth; Maureen 0 ' Too I e , seventh: Lucia Dube, sixth, arid Cathy Johru;, fifth . She is an assistant professor of history at California State University, San Diego. A cum laude graduate or Immaculate Heart College, she earned her ma s t er s and PhD at Claren1ont. embellishments. Mean s be 1 __ ............. _ .. _._ .... 1 11 111• 1111•, 1•1~·~'"""'""~~""""~""'"""'""'"""""'""'"'""'''"''"""'""'"'~""'"""'~'""'"''""'""'"'"'' practical a b o u t evaluating J situatioos, persons. ~t a t e , partner wants action. You ~ "m.~~-·~-···~~'.o~tic · I · · Best Idea Since • Enjoy a stroll with the fl avor of an ancient Bible-land village. * Browse through a rich storehouse of books and greeting cards. * Roam in a simple art gallery and watch an artist at wo.rk. February 9 through March 4 -10:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m. daily Larry Normao ·Mar. 1 Norma Zimmer· Mir. ·2 7:l0 p.m •• t::Jl'.l p,m , 2:00 p.m. SAVE $1 .00 SAVE $1.00 SAVE $1.00 BOOKS TAPES RECORDS Best Sellers by: ALLELUIA Bill Glithtr & No. I selling albums P11t Boont Ron Huff ALLELUIA Hal Lindsey SEEDS Barry McGuire Bill Gaither Iii Ron Huff J1net Lynn LIVE AT CARNEG IE TIME TO RUN Larry Christenson HALL Andre Crouch Dale Evans Rogers HONEYTREE Nancy From Billy Graham film Johnny Cash PAT BOONE & FIRST M1rjorl1 Holmes Honeytre1 NASHVILLE JESUS BAND A· Linkletter John Wooden P1ttr & C1tt .. rine Marshall THE LIVING BIBLE Reg. $10.95 Now $7.95 BIBL E IN SPANISH • Reg. S 3.15 Now $2.95 SAVE $5.00 TAPES THE LIVIN G NEW TESTAMENT; THE NEW AMERICAN STAHOAAD NEW TESTAMENT SAVE $4.00 SAVE $1 .00 ONE WAY LIBRARY GIFTS& RED TAG CASSETTE ALBUMS: SPECIALS W1lt1r Mwtin Jwfflry, T ·lhlrtl c rn,ck Smith Howlf'd Hendricks L .. ther punctt .. Ken Pou,. Pl«iu• ,,V J. J. RIV Stfdin1n Appe 0 1•· John M.cArthur WltMw potttry Stu1rt 8r .. COI Seith Pl1nai Waod or•fttd •ion• R1llglou1 candle• 2400 Sunflower St., Co1t1 Mesa * NOfth oT-South Coa1t .f>f111 and Sin Diego Fretwty Between Bristol & F1frview • J I Shopping Carts I I Two -year supply ( 104 lists) furnished in convenient teu-off pad I for 1ust $1.00 I (posl•ge prepaid) I Send in I Coupcm Today I and Become A 1 Super Shopper t-------··-········ Fill in thlscouPon , clip and m•il with $1.00 to: Pilot f'l:inting Shopp!ng List Post Office Box 1560 Costa Mesa,Calif.92626 --------------------~- 1 .--------------------~- Now you can do a week's shopping without forgetting a ·single item l Use pre-printed shopping lists · prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 separate printed items, plus add itional spaces you can fill in yourself. Just check 'em off - 34 Staples- 21 Vegetables 14 fru its 6 Bakery Items S Bevera1es 19 Meat and fish entries 11 Dairy items 20 Miscellan .. us DAILY PILOT I .... ,. ..... , .. ,z,.c.,. . I _______ , __ ....... 1 ... ·---~--"' -----------·-··----··------ l ' . . - ~ Lur~_d ~Io Luau ·\ Golden Horseshoe pa-it' trons of the Peacock ..,_. Hill National Horse Show will be honored guests of the Orange County Guild for the John Tracy Clinic. A Polynesian Luau is being planned for 7 :30 p.m. Saturday, March 2, in the Newporter Inn. Greeting members and guests will be (left to right) Mrs. W. Scott Biddle, patron chair· · man and Mrs. Richard . -- Tku..,ay, Ftb•Ulry 28, 1974 O~JLY PILOT %3 ' Ear Plugs Requested rr~HSHOPp Custom Lining Drawers, Shelves '& Silver Drawers . . By Whistler's Mother ~~g EVERYTIUNG FOR THE · BATHROOM By ERMA DOMBECK A long time ago someone figured out that If cows gave more ntilk when music was piped into the bam, think what it oould do foc a group of girls at their IBM Selectric. Today, I defy you lo find a comer of this world void of music. The question Is does music indeed soothe t h e savage beast? Or does it drive a per90n lo a corner waJI into a fetal position with his hands over his ears roclting back and fcll1ll. AT WIT'S END he realized his motor had died, "Do you have ste r eo playing?'.' "No," I repeated. "Do you hum?" s h e asked, her eyes narrowln. ""!>iciou.sly. 31 FASHION ISLAND Towll.lt ""'' """"'" u1rtat"' a~ 1 com•l•la 1111.1 · If •cc1uorlff •tlfff 644-2353 I shoolt my head. IANUMlllCAID MASTll CHAIGI "Then, maybe, just for 2 ~=========~=======~:::__:::. inlnute." - "Wanda," I sat\ "you've got lo get hold ol yourself. Music is 11..1pposed to calm a person. Why they even play soft music lo gel plants lo grow." ... -·····--Manltn...Ir.,...l'usidenl.- Some of my friends who w«k in offices tell me something happens lo a pmm who listens 1o Lester Lanln f« 81h hours. It's nothing personal about Lester, it's just thet wl1erl you keep pace willl 8'h: hours of "Ebb Tide" played In a military march tempo, Y°':1 are exbaui;ted before lunch. At work she was ushered in by violins strumming, "Begin the Beguine." On her lunch hour she shopped In a funky place where the decibels were so loud she had to read the salesperson's lips. She couldn't seem to escape iL Her dentist huna over her mouth while his drill kept time to a bossa nova. She ate bet dimer 'at her f a v Grite restaurant all the while butter- ing her roll in time with a Viennese waltz. "Did you evtt see a plant with ears, Dummy?" she asked. "Wait a minut e! What's that?'' she asked, her eyes shifting from one side to the other. "YOU DIDN'T TELL ME YOU HAD A BIRD!" WHITE IS ALWAYS RIGHT .. I had one friend, WaMa, who was awakened every morning by her clock radio and a disk jockey whose theme was a bouncy, "Everything's Coming UP Roses." Her car pool had a rnd!o oot who turned the volume up so loud he would sit through three lights before Her ootire life w a s Poor Wanda. I didn't have the heart lo tell her I didn't. dominated by music . . . at the pool, in eleva,tors, in restrooms, in planes, theater lobbies, and in churches. 1----------1 She came to my house one -oviu..~,A-~=--7"11 afternoon and knocked ~ desperately on the door. She looked terrible a n d l summoned her in. She hesitated. "Do you have your radio on ?" "No," I said. beverly's table talk Talks, Proi~ct~ _ Spotl igh~ted w ......... ,,.,.. bf ·-• N•rlMll Wlett e AH IHOIS --c .... ·s-Ml1 3127 Ea •t Coa•t Hwy. Corono dal Mir 673-47'40 Alpha Xi Delta Orange Cooo.ty AJumnae of Alpha Xi Delta will dooate proc<e<is of tl1eir b r i d g e benefit luncheon to Orange County Teui Oiallenge arid the Santa Ana Girl's Club. The Unique Boutique for BIGGER GIRLS SIZES 121/2 to 32 1/2 Women Voters League of Women Voters of Orange COOnty has scheduled a workshop on redevelopment and relocation assistance for Friday, March I, at 9:30 a.m. in Rep.Jblie Federal Savings, Santa Ana. Speakers will include at- torney H. Lawsm Mead ; the direct« of public works for lhe City of Orange, and Fem Zimmerman, member of the Santa Ana Redevelopment Project eommittee. Five cities in Orange C.OOnty have re- cently establ.iShed redevelOP"' ment areas. National Secretaries AsBociation will hear Abigail Van Buren.. "Dear A~y," Saturday, March 2, in the LeBaron Hotel adjacent to Knott's Berry. Farin In Buena Park. Also appeanng at the ooe- day symposiwn will be Dr. Max A. Schnelder speaking on "Emotion and Drugs." A fashion •wing will b e featured. Auxiliary F-USA. will .theme the Saturday, March 2, siring fa>hloo benefrt .piaMed by the Trojan Jlmior Auxiliary. The ev<llt at the Huntingto>Sbe<-"°"' Hole! will benefrt the University ol SOuthem Oallf· I orrua. ~·~'p fwld. Auxi iary ~-- a.ira1 Readers from Service League Oi.apter of Sweet' Adelines at a garage sale. - The sale ls set for Saturday, March 2, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at 10032 Bircmvood Drive, Huntington Beach. Sisterhood Mordecai's Mutiny will theme the Harbor Reform Sisterhood's Purim party Saturday, March 2, at 7 P·I!'· In the Oakwood s 0 u th a.-, Newport Beach. DinDtr, dancing and costumes will be featured. Harbor Key A gypoy fortune teOer will help set a carnival niood for the annual spring fashion show presented by Keynotes, a junior guild of Harbor Key, <Jlild Guidance Center of Orange County. Quality & Value at · FABRIC GAU.ERY Is always right, tool WHITE POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS Valuos to 5.00 Several weights and pat- terns tor spring suits ' and dresses. Team up with a spring polka dot blouse or scarf or bright trims, 60" .\\1de. FG's reg LOW price :J.49. ·-' . NATURAL PLISSE Fl.ORALS Valuos to 3.00 Colorful little llorals on rioturol grounds. One of the great fashion looks.for 741 Machine washable Polyster- ·Cotton blend. FG's reg LOW price 1.98. Sptclal LOW pricn 3 clays oolyl 38 to 60 _ hard.to-find 14-16-18-20 .... ~~~m!e'n~~-~~~f:.t-sa= Awtiliary of SOufh Cout Mardt 2. at 1:30 p.m. In the O>mmuni1Y Hoopital Friday, Sec u r It y Pacific Bank, March l, at 11:30 a.m. in the LaillDI Hills. Women who El Adobe restaurant. The have toePVed o....-. willl the group, under the dlrectioo of Armed Fcrces, Red Cross, or Olarles Sc h i 11 e r , bu government agencies during perfom1ed I n Sacramento war, e me r g e n c i e s or under auspk:eo ol the Festival occupallon& are elliible for The Salurday, March 2, event will begin at U a.m. =~1CE:r£n~ .. --~- pBYchi•tric t~~thildrf or table . emotlooally di·~-c en andadol....W. Dance DESIGNS FOR DINING RACKS OF FABULOUS FASHIONS LAGUNA BEACH . 211 .............. O,..: Mea,.W. t :J0.6 p.a: S.. I Z-6 pa IMUMl:ltlWI of Arts Comnill1ee. memhenhlp. Southern Calllornla Chapter of the Mooe~ of Arnericon Dance ~ will hoot the four1h 8IDl8i conference of Ille AADC Saturday March 2, tllrougb Monday, March 4 in tile Hw&ingtoC>Sheraton Hotel , •DllSSES •GOW MS 50%0FF •PA.HTS •ILOUSES WE'RE GROWING SOFA ST -WE MHO MORE ROOM -MOVING ACROSS THE STRIET THE NEW LIDO VILLAGE CENTER Borgoins Galore in Specially Sizes Counsel on The Marriage and Family Counsei«-Sllall or Whale? ill the topic piamed f o r dlllCllJllion at the Friday, Marro 1, meeting of the Orange County Olapler ol Ille California Association o f Mattiace and F a rn 11 y Counaelon. -Phyllis Welherlll and Evtlyn Oark will apeak at the 8 p.m. meeting in St. P a u I P r esbyterian Church, Anaheim. I Newoott\ !orge>t ood newest f0t Soecioltv Sites 3442 VIA OPORTO I Mew Lido Vlllaqt Ctnt ... I 'SCUSE..OUR DUST -THESE ARE GROWIN' PAINS • Secretaries Seven d>apters of MEN'S TRADITION Ai. CLOTHING. not faddish apparel •llRSUCKEIL. " crisp, very cool, very comfortable, made of wash and · weer. polye&t:er end cottan the VFW Auxiliary Ladi<o Auxiliary, Vete<alll of Foreign Won, Second District will Marro I n t o Sjlrln8 with a faohion benefit let for Selllrday, March 2, at 11 :30 a.rn. In Ille lll1lm Inn, Fullerton. Pasa~rchwomen Read the Daily Pilot llarborAreaO!urdtwornenjp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.i.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i Fashions from oounly OOoP8 ond music by Rene Zepeda and Hiraldo cuanova, will be featured. Adelines Cootumlng and transporta· tiOl'I ~ to 5an Diego to con1- pete ln ·the llDIUW chorus com· petition will be defrayed by funds ralled by Harborliles United will ptller Friday, March I, at • 9:30 a.m to observe the !8th annual World Da,y .ol Prayer. 'lbO Rov. Jamet Ashey ID will wolcome participants lo SI. James l!lptscopa1 Church, Newport Beach. The Rev. Wilbur Davis, .. Lltant pasror ·of SI. Joachim'• Catholic Churdl, Costa Mesa , will be guest tJllOBl<er. The publlc i> invited. Final 2 Days e PRIOAY & SATURDAY, MARCH 1 & 2 e Women's· & Childrens SHOES VALUES $288 to $16.95 • • • • • VALUES s4a to $19.95 • • • • • PLUS MANY· MANV MOR& VALUES ODDS 'N ENDS VALU!S TO $12.95 All 51111 l'lnal . . '· ,. .. Al 1 time when people ar anding more Informative advertising, televlskln getting shorter. The trend Is 10 30 second spolS. about 50 words. That's not eriougti to tell ewfY!tltng-l"ISOfira \ want lo know ltiesedays: prices, colOl'1, ueranteos, where to find!!, whal it'srNlde of.and eo ...... · lns!ead, advertise where you can tell a complete 1tory Wilhoul beil'IO i "fas1 Talker." In ntWSptpers, In newapapers You cen 9ive the ru11 d$1ails-itl' 3CI seconds the ave raga reader can absorb 250 Y"O!dti..P!fi tlcfies as much lntorma.tiOn as. rrom TV. Attd MW$p1per1 lei a COMumer pause lo evaluate, re-read, 1nd even cllp ~ad n a reml'*·' Newspa_pen hive ajways been !fie hardest working 1~s\rig medium . And we think !heir future lookS bet1er tha n evet. DAILY PILOT ·\ . . ' • OAILV PILOT . ' Scoliosis: • Early Detection Key to Cure ' .; . Units Nominate ;, ---------.. , ' Mary Jo Miller te.+s student at Spring View School , Huntington Beach, during scoliosis clinic. Disease affects mainly girls, during adolescent years. By JO OLSON or ,... o.1t1 ,.... , .. ,, Remember the Jlunchback of Notre •Dame? "He was probably a victim of scoliosis.'' commeu\ed Mary Jo Miller, director of education a~ F<>untaln Valley Community-H09piW~ ----· - She is coordinating a scoliosis Information and test- ing program for the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley area. Scoliosis, a disorder of the spine, is·a disease that\ is very likely to go unnoticed until It is too late, Mrs.\ Miller said. "It bits at the growth spurt of an adolescent cbild. Visits to the doctor are not as frequent then, and people don't realiz:e it happens as of~en as it does." Scoliosis, which means 11twisting," ·is a bending of the spine from side to side characterized by a high rib cage hump noticeable on bending, an elevated· hip and shoulder and poor posture. It is a' serious disease, commented Harriet Kelly, school nurse who has assiS!ed. with a "testing-pfogJ'iln in Huntington Beach. The curvature of the spine can cause reduced lung capacity and eventually, heart failure. "The cosmetic affect is very traumatic," added Mrs. Miller. The disease more often affects ff11:1s. and those who go untreated are "not as attractive 1 ln their clothes and are particularly unsightly in swim 81lits. ''.If a mother sews, she might cat<;h it," Mrs. Kelly said, "because the hemlines would dip.1 · Tnoatment falls under two general categories, Mrs. Miller said .. One school of thought favors a cast ·and the other advocates a Milwaukee brace and individually prescribed exercises. The brace is worn 23 hours a day and does not in· terfere w\th any normal fun¢ons, Mrs. Kelly said. The length of time it must be worn varies with each case, but in each instance it is "until the vertebrae have stabilized. "Surgery/' she added, "is a last resort." SHORTAGE OF NURSES Since sColio~ is found eight times as frequently In girls as hoys, and since it is most easily detected In Election Time . DWYER PTA: Unit will celebnlte Fowxiers Day by preseat.irig a talent show Thuroday, March 7, at 7:30 Jim. ln the auditorium. Prizes will Ile awarded ln first, second and third p ! a c e wlmers. Honorary service award also will be given -g the evening. Mrs. Dale Bush, first vice presiden~ is In charge ol the program. EASl'BLUFF PFO: Paper drive from 7 to 10 a.m. Wednesday, Mlm:h 13. Mrs. Coleman Colla, c·b a i r m a n announces that two trees were purchased with the pl'OCO<!<b from the last dr ive ... NominaUng committee'headed by Pam Larson will prepare the slate oC officers for 1974- 7~ ·FULTON PTO: American heritage p r o g r a m will highlight general m e e t I n g tmlght at 7:30. Beginning and advan<:ed ch<x-uses w i 11 perform, and Fulton winners of·the Fountain Valley Scmol Dmrict creative w r i t i n g contest-will present their -· BARBOR COUNlflL PTA: --.-illg ,crod1~1e11 by 'Mi's. Jame3 Schafer, president will take plaee at 9:30 a.m. Monday, March 4. in the Costa Mesa City Council Chambers oo Fair Drive. Mrs. John Scapple will present the report of the nominating committee, after wh ich the election of officers for 1974-75 will take place. Fc>llowing the meeting Dr. William Sanborn, director of Instructional media, will present a film, '"lbe Newport-Mesa Story." Dr. John Nicoll, superintendent of the Newport-Mesa Unified School DiatHct will spellk a n d comment on the film. LINCOLN PTA : Annual father"l!IOll break! ast themed Basketball Personalities will t.ke place from 9 to LI a.m. Saturday, Mardi 2. Mr> lllll>ert Cole, chalrnJan has .t.Dged an ifathJetic" menu ol fruit, ju.lee, a beverage, aaamb!ed eggs, ham, hash browns and a special breakfast bread for a price ol $2. Mr& William Rawlings, ticket chainnan will have Uc:Mts avallable !or purchase during the hmch h o u r loi"'"'""'· Mouret' Linoob>, bollr<lboll COICh' will sene· • mui.r or cmmonles.' MEADOW VIEW PTA: N"ew olfloen will be elected at Wilt • • . ) meeting Tuesday, March 12, at 7:30 p.m. Olildren's Fair also will he presented during the evening. PLAVAN PTO: .General meeting is scheduled tonight at 7:30 in the multimedia center. jlinnen ol t h e American heritage contest will read their essays, and a choral group wtll perform. ST. JOAOllM PG: Father- 300 banQ1.!.et at 6:30 tonight jn the multipurpose room at Harper Scllool, Costa Mesa. Tickets are $1.65. Movies, a speaker and a demonstration on minibikes will be reattued. ST. JOHN AUX.: A mdl of Class is the theme of the annual dinner dance that is to take plaee Saturday, Marcil 2, in the Mesa Verde Country aub. Social hour w i J l commence at 7:30 p. m . loUowed by dinner at 8:30. Music will be provided by · Eddie Steel and his orchestra. Tickets are $16 per couple and may he obtained by <00ta<iing Mrs. Dennis Walz, chairman. Profits will be used for the purchase of school .suwUes. -. .llo.ok fair lfQ!D noon lo 2 p.m. Sunday, Mardi 3, in the Cl~. Books are ,pirehased and donated in the buyer's fimlly name to the school library. Mrs. Reno Pierotti, chalnnan is i n charge. . . Eileen Fitzgerald, ronsumer services consultant for the energy services department ol .the SoiJthern California Edison Company, will present a film explaining the roncept of power generation, transmission and electric energy coosumpUon in the IDme Wednesday, March 6, for upper grade· science classes. F.nergy COMervaUoo brochures t4nd Make Every Kilowatt Count club buttons will be given to the students to encourage wise energy management at home. 'lbe program provides underStan<ling ol electrical theocy and offers t h e opportunity ol relating the classroom experience to daily activities. TALBERT PTO: Unit will organize a block p a r e n t program. Parents interested In partldpat!ng .,. asked tO call the school office duri"1! tilt month of March. Goals and ~edures will b e discusser ,a an uJ>coming orienUtioo meeting. • - : _BUENA PARK .. --....... °' , . .,. °"" ..., f'3' .. ,.,. ,..._...., .... 1 l I I • (. '""' -., ' the preteew years, an· annual testing of eJrll would b6 Ideal, Mrs. Kelly noted, but there are not~nouch: 1eboOI nurses to do the job. • Fount.In Valley Community HosplW !s.~perat(nc with various di!trlcts to test fifth. and sixth eraci. Clrla. and bas "'ported an approximately 30 pereent. ~d ol girts 'Wh:Oll""4 !symptomatlc. -· - Tue parents of theSe-girll are uked ID bring their dau,hters to a clinic at the bospltal for X-nys ancl a con'l:rence lf scoliosis Is detected. Tue cause of scoliosis is not known Mrs. Kelly said. "It bosaibly is a gena!c thing, like ~lor b~ In bOy,\" she commented. · · \ \"Some is present at blrtb due to Injury or'blrth·cl .. l fe~" • _ 1foliomyelltis used to be the cause, a sden~. writer 1reported. · \ '. To study the disease fojrther. a Scolloals R ... arcb ~lety baa been founded by a group of orthopedic 1111' goons from the United S(Jte6 and Canada. How can parents test their daughters for scolloslsT 1 FILM AVAILABLE A . good starting point wol!ld be to see the ftlm Fountain Valley Community Hospital offers, Mrs. Mlller said. For parents unable to have their daughters IMted by a physician or in a school program, here fJ the method for giving a brief test: Have the subject stand straight with feet together. O~rve the If eight o f the sHolllders and the distance be- tween the arm and body. ! Then, have her bend over like a rag doll. almost limp, and look for rib humps. "If any indications-of scoliosis are .Present, giria should be taken to a doctor imme~tely. "People with a cul'l>atu"" of the spine die In their 40s at twice the rate of other o<oUI'l'ences," stated Dr. Robert Wini<\", associale professor of orthopedic surgery at the University of Minnesota. ·"Scoliosis is a Berious disorder/' Mrs. Kelly com· mentoo. "But'happily, with prompt diagnosis and treat· men~ it can be controlled. ' " ...... • • ----.... - ' . • , . . ov , FA SH !yo . ·- ' I .. ·-. -- • Tllund11, Ftbru1ry 28, 1974 Dow .io Dedu~i for Dependent Children I! By SYLVIA PORTER 1 (l'oarth of dght polumn1) slmpliflcaUon of eome of the rule'• very co,_mpllcated upecis ud the latest 19'13 develoJl'llOllll. end a l~ytar-cld. You pay a hou>elreeper f4(lll a lllCllth to ,_1cte household services for your apart· ment S> you can go to work .Is your child· care deduc- tion limited ·1 ' 'Jbe rule that 1•14 you deduct as an· itemized deduction "'tip to !400 a month of your eipenses for c~re of children llld dloabi.d dependent. can be extremely valuable to you. Btlow you w iU 1 find • a , . In general: you can dedUct within certain lilnlls tho amount you. spend o n household abd aimilar care for your children 'Under 15,. or . tor i!l disabled spouse or other disabled dependent. In order . to, enable you (or U you are !lUlrried, bQth o! you) to go tO work. Now · a>me the technicalities. , SAY YOU are a working widow with a 13-year~d clilld to only a row:T•• portion of ol the !400 a month becawie the maid.'1 services life also benefitliig you and your 1$-year-old child in addi· lion to benefiting four one un· 1DAYONLY! 1DAYONLY! OVER 50 FACTORY SHOWROOMS TO SERVE YOU! GREAT BUYS IN EVERY SHOWROOM! .. - SAV.Ef . ·•3t· 95. '. Reg. $Zl9.95 ORTHOFORM KING SIZE Ortho Pak With Every King or Queen : Fletd .. crest No-Iron Top and Fitted Bottom Sheets & 2 Pillowcases. 2 King. size Pillows. Matlress Pad. Meta! Frame on Easy·Roll Casters. I The widest dimensions of comfort can be yours tonight, when you buy at this terrific sale price to~ayl Th9 supportive Crown· Flex Center lets you rest easy, with the added q_uality of a Tempered-Steel Innerspring surrounded by soft Urethane Foam .ea<!dlng.All thls ••• and more. CJ>mRLete King Set lncjuHos Mattress, 2 Box Springs; Ortho·P•k &: DoOble Bonus. Double .Bonus With Every Mattress Set: King or Queen -Padded Vinyl Headboard and; Quilted Bedspread, Twin or Full -Headboard and Metal Frame on Easy-Roll C11ter1. ; . 1-··· Top saVlngs on a smart sofa thal'• also a cozy double bed! So~oh, for such clow price ••• onlYat 0~1 Also avall8ble in Super Queen Width,. 5'' wider t~in normal .. , ···, .'... . Qu;e~n.1lze1~1)tr.,L<1veS•At&. Reg. $119~.95 Mitch Ing i;!lalr 111~ avalllble. ···~~~$ 8 -0.RTHO FORM TWI S, p_· '':--/E,. SIZE . Here's a versatile size that'a·pi!rfect for your child's room or your guest room. $11 95 You can be assured ot proper support. • with Ortho's Crown·Flex Center and • Reinforced Borders. And look al the R $99 95 savings!CompleteSetinclud8.Mal• eg. , . tress, Box Spring &Ooul:)le Bonus. Nawsaa FULL SIZE ONLY . ' BAHAMA CARMEN When weekend guests arrive~you;11 be the perfect hosts with this versatlle corner group I What a trial to your budget •• , all lhese features for one low price!' 9·piece Set Includes: 2 Mattresses, 2 Matching Founda· tlons, 2 Qullted Coverlets, 2 BOlslers and Walnut grain finish_ Corntr Table •. SAVEf •21·95:• Reg. $179.95 I •99 • ,, · l YOU MAY have paid in 1!172 for child care services performed bl 1973, or you may have pald In 1!173 for cblld care services perfonned in 1!172. For instance, a Widow may have entered her preschool child in nursery school for a period from Sept 1, 1!172, through June , 30, 1973. Say the tuition was $200 a month and she paid the entire $2,000 In Seplember 1972. Only l800 of this would have been deductible in 1972 at the rate of' $200 a month for the four· moo.th period September through Ile<ember 1972. The other $1,200 Is treated as If Jt were actually paid in 1973 at the rate of $2llO a month for the six months January through June 1973, 11 becomes part of her 1973 cblld..,..-e deduction, therefcire. 11 ··i I New Highs At Bertea Both sales and eaml!v ol Jle<tea Oorp, ol Irvine reached ..... highs In 1973. l!lc:hanl Berlea, chairman ol the board, bas anoounced. Net income rose t o $114251000, equal to 95 cents per llbare; an Increase· pf 16 pt,cen1 ....-Jhe ti.m.ooo, !"" 82 oents, adtleved In 1972, Seles '.increased 6 percent · to $16.208,000 In 1973 lrom 124,833,000 a.year earlle<. Far West Offer Told Far West Financial Corp. ol Newp«t Beech, aald that It intends to advise a11 of Jts shareholders of th e tender or· f~ ~d~ this week for, 350,000 shares of Far West stock by First City Financial Corp. Lt. of Vancouver, B.C. ·rar · West Said it will, however, continue to pursue negotiations with Jim Walte- Corp,, previously annowiced In January, for sale of the entire company at a net price of approximately equal to the tender offer price of $12.25, in a transaction which will require regulatory aPP"!'vat Coast Firm ·On Market I MUTUAL FU-NDS I Ntw 'ion -f'OI· OodtOI 1'-M 14, IStel Fnd ... n.m "' .. ,.. )> S.lt '·"' lowl119 h • Usl oj °"-•1 E I.IS 8.lS l'IY FUfld 1.50 1.50 S.lec Eq 1.t\I .... bid •nd •"'*' Ori-DttaY,UI Glill' J p Gw'lh 1.87 t.M s.a1111r 1.'6 1.'6 Cf$ on Muh.191 [)ryf Fd 10.S6 11.S7 JtnllS I'd 1S.• 1s.• KllDO••·•DS: ---~-N~g-~~~---~ tM NA$0 ff'C. 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FOUNDf:n MuOrn r" 1.s. •.n Qp111 '-'' t.6s Bo$1 ~ t.4S 10.U GltOU": Milt Sirs ..... 16.G Stock 11.11 11.71 &r..-7.'6 l .tl Grwth '·" J.20 Ml.Ill Trs 1.11 1.11 SIS GltOUI': Brnflm '16 t 16 lnc:om 11.a 11 ... ~ '"°"' t .56 t.S6 Gnolfl s.a 6.lt CALVIN PUMOS!' P' Mllill I.SO t :1't NAT $aC l'DS: Inc-I.I• t.t\I Bull Fd tt.Olll.11 F Sp.c:ll t.IG t,tt e.1.nc I.Oil 1.1' Srnmlt 8.U I.fl Cdn Fil 11.3' 12.•~ Four1Q I< 8.62 1;62 Bond Sr 4.15 S.1' TKPIN 6.11 6.1' Olv Slv' l.2S J,S6 ,ltANkUN . 01¥1dn 1'1 l.li """"'' F ,.01 f.IS N1tlillld '""' 10.34 !JltOUI": Prel Slit, 6.0S '-'1 Sl'l'(ro G •• ,. t.JS HY Ven 10.S6 11..56 ONTC 1.36 101 lncom '-" '·" Tempi G 7.11 1.u CG fll'ld tJll t .14 Gwtl;I Sr 1.41 1.05 Stoc11 5,. 6.U 7.11 Tr111 Clo 7.51 8.n (.Ill T1ln t..5110.40 Fr lnc:m 1.'2 1.10 Gnotfl S.tJ U11 Tr•¥! fQ t .MI0.'1 C«i1 Siii 12.:M UM US,Gv S •.1S 10.U NEW ENO LP: Tuclcw H 10.Jl 10.SI OYI Inv 8.14 t.U lltllltle 4,?7 •.7'1 Equity tS.1717.H 20th CG 1.11 1.tt CHANNING Res (.Ip S.$1 6.0. Grwth t .2110.ot 'lOlh Cl 4.11 4.• PUNDS: RI EcitY 3.711 '-14 lllCorn tt.• 16,0 IJnlfled LCIO 1.14 Mwr 1.20 1.11 ,,111 LIE(! t.J• 10.'4 Side 14,41 U.14 IJn!fUrld 6.JS 1.a 8-!ncd t.6110.SO Fd Mt dp I.JS I.JS NE.A Ml ........ UNIOM saavics 8nd Fd t.O. t.• PUNDS IMC" Heu («II 4.WI 4,tl OflOUI'! £Q11 Gr '-IJ 7.49 OltOUF: Heuwtn c 7.tJ l,tJ llrd s IV "·" 1J.01 Eq!y "' 2.IJ 3.M (.(wnm l.U t .OI Newton 11.tt 1S.t0 ,..,.II Inv 6.111 1.'2 Fnd Am '·" 1.s1 I~ 1.11 8.S4 Nw Pt" 1•.•1 U.81 IJn c.eot 8.S6 ,,. Gl'wttl •.• •'.?t Indus tr 10.6011.~ ,. .. YOd 11 .flt1J.• Wl'llfllf 11.u11.11 lnc:Olll 1.U 7.H Piiot 7.31 1.07 N!Cllln 11.'2 11.'2 UNITID ,UNDS: SOMI l.•S 1.IO G.Jt1wy S.61 1.10 Nest lvtf 14."4 14.M Acwm W 1.91 Ventur 7.tt 1,11 GE WP 2'.14 .•• on-119 1 ... 1.71 8nd I'd l.U I.» CMASI 9DSTOM: Gtn Sec 6.U 6,SI 0 Mell fd (l_) (.t) Cont ... t.• t .11 Fnd .,. 7.SI .. .,. Gth FAm &,2tt '·"' ~ 'Mtl 1s.os 1Ml5 Con! f11t '·'' IG.0$ Fron Co 4,n S.11 Gtth Ind 11.n11.11 0"1'1NNM ,D:· lflCMI 11.001111 SJITr es 1 .. I.CM <MYnl lllO H.lO 0p Alm '·" IG.SJ S<leflt "10 t.M $cJKJ J.74 6.17 MAlrlULTOM Glil": Op Fnd 6.'1 1.01 V'"'1CI S.d 1:91 Oilm I'd .... t.IJ Fund 3.'1 4,7' 0ti Tmt 1.21 6.?t USAA Gii I.ff I.ft OIA ... ,DSl Gtw1h S.'1 6.47 ore SK t.1t10.J4 us G~S '·" 10,,IO llbrtY '-" s.01 lncam 1.•i 1,0. Ptr1mt 01 1..s1 usu'a l'UNDS: lrMnllt s.n l.n twrt Glh •. Q t..Q P•ul Re'I .. ,. •.a AMII ,. .. a 4,IS Schul F 7.2J J.to H.tt1 Lv 1.11 8.11 f'9lsus F 4.:M 4,JI M P''lld 1 ... 8.1' B . ,..,._ t..-Schu s. "'' ,.,, Hedbt9 1.n a. ,,_ Mt 2.10 t .10 eom s~ 'It.au..,. unningtoo ......,. ........ t..,._1, I TMllt A !US 1.ll Htdle t.11 ••• '-"" SQ t.'1 t.11 VALUI U,_I l'OI: CDLOMIAL. Hlri191 1.1'1 1,. PMt. I'd S.M •·II V•I lM Ui 6.tt Roc::hester, N. Y., b. s e d '"'"OS; Hor.c;e 1l.M II.JI Ll'tLGllllM GI': V9' Inc .. ,, .. ,, h I d I 0on .. , , .. 10.U •mrw1 QI 8.Jl '· PU Frm I)," . • . l.H Gttt t.R t.lt m a o a g e me m: o n g Equity 2.ti11 1.u 1mp 0r ... 6,'7 CIP"' 121 J.,, ve• Sile ,,.. u. Aonl t ,tt 10.t1 l11t Am 12.U 1), l11tom •.n f.3ool VAf4(1 company, bu been listed on Gnwth J.4' I.DO rnc 9oll '·'' 6.JI Pilt I'd 7.11 1 ... SANOlltS: !11tom t .4410.J:I Ind ~II\ J,07 3, Pine St IO.U I0.1S ln .. tt ... JAi the Bos•·n °'""k Ex...,.~e """""' 1.11 t.tl '"'"°" a.a •.s.i Pin Tre '·" ••• vs °"" J,OI J.M w o>W\: .,..,...og . Qlol""1 O 11.47 11.47 IU 111 .. tt 18.Y.H. l'IOflllallt FD: S!;lttl 6..S7 J,18 'Da--......f1..,.. Btmninn+..-at C:OlllMOW#LTN ln .. rn G U1"'i.n Pion £fl 6.16 J.Jlt VnOI'~ l.1' 411 .•~........_nu-a &""'" T•UST: 111v-co A 12;)11:LU P!... Fd 1l.lt11,ll V'"'°"' 1.H I.» the ln monl s "1. • 1.10 1.1• 111v Guid ... ,,._. 11 10.3111.34 v'r 1°'° s.11 ••• 1 ~g:~ ba:n;a ~ .. l:::~ll :~:·~ 1l!;1C·~ .. o 1;:~lt~~:ri~ tt~t' · • , a c · i: ::~ ::: ~'tit's111. '"~,~ ao:T.~ n.• =~ :; 1t:.i 1l:fl At the listing ceremonies it Fd 6.tt 1.st CllMit!\ 1.ss 1.v 111tom t.to t.'O Wtl;l.l:o 10.21 •• W.. • n n 0 Un -. d that (II '·'' ,,,, Celli! IV l.n "" Nw &:r1 11,M 11.JI WIL lOM " 1 lilv t ,TS 10.1S C~ll Sh S.!t S.tl Hw Hof J.M J.M OllOUfl: Bunn•-~·s West c 0 8 1 t 111 ow s.n 6.11 llii ISY ~'"; Pro ., j I·" ,...,._ tt.M 11." u'6""'" "" lft 1.M 1.16 IOS Giii f,,U ••. "'OYllll .20 htSI I.ft ill aibl"11&ry, Newport ·"°"trots ~ 1t''" 'UI :81..!'0 lG I· ~sf: ~-'I'. ~ lt; l1'.1 ())rporaUon ot Newport Beach, °"' to w ,.... 1.a,' PUTNAM -...., ,..,.. tu he '"' M "" -11.?'1•-" ............... -' had begun deliveries of t ~ • .., "" ~ , ... •·• 1...-i., lil 1.u •*-JI 11• forward and aft tecllon of the IOU;.'1111 ;:,:,::t tlJ !:111 t:i& '::a:: = "'ii'. 'rn" •··l •••k s•-·~ .. -for the Ottttt .._,.,.,,.. 111: , ••om lf·" t"n wt" Ml :a.1 ·~ ,..., "'""'',.... O.IW , t.iS .... (;rw111 ... J.OI '"""'' ?·!! .... ¥hN Or • J. -McOonneU·OOUglas Harpoon :=.i T i::~ ,t.~ ~r'Ut tit ': . =• ' ~ ,:.~ i-'::' t~ •.n AnU..shlp Mlnlle. Ort<f co "" •.ll Tn.t 511 it.n 1s.M Rewv ' 1,00 1.00 ...... ~ r ' ~· ' ' ' ·' I • I • Thursday, Fttw111ry 28, 1974 outiOtJ Leiter P1·esident Backs $2 Minimum Pay Nixon Pledges Veto f-New Energy ·ni WASHINGTON (llPI) President Nixon, noting the hourly minimum wage has been static for six years, says tie would 1upport }I o u s e legislation f9f a S2 minimu1n that would exempt household 1~r11 D t .1, YQUltls and government workers. As the President sent his position letter on t h e minimum wage to Congress Wednesday, the Commerce Department ls&:ued m l x e d reports on inDatlonary trends. The department said 11.& foreign trade was strong in January with a $644 million surplus of expc>rts o v e r imports, an indication that inllatioo had not eroded the international strength of the devalued dollar. Commerce revised l t s December Index or future business conditions from a 0.1 percent Increase to a 2.6 . percent decllne, sharpest in 23 years. This report would seem to suggest that business was headed for r educe d growth, less inflation. In 1Upporting Hoose legis- lation to ina'ease the mini· mum wage from II.60 '° $2 tru1 year, N'IXon said he favored excluding hoosebold servants, youths WK.ler 18 alld government workers. Nixon said these workers were likely to lose their jobs if pey was LA. LINES $31/ MONTH TILIPHONI COMPANY O• CALIF. t7'-1DI Ml •M Hiii, COttl MIA COllELLEASE l:Ji•a1111m1 YMr feaetY A rbN a..r.a.t ........ '-'-' • N.w 74 Veta HetcWMtck ••o PEii MOMT"M PIUI T111 .I. Lie. On AW. CrHlt 24 Mo. O.E.L. CONNILL CHEYIOLIT 2121 HAUOl ILYD. COSTA MESA 546·1200 IE HONEST WITH YOUR HUJ.TH Increased. "!' , Nixon and the House agreed that Ult mlnimun1 w a g e should rise to $2.10 next year and $2.30 in 1976. A Senate bill would raist the minimum to 12 this year and 12.20 In 11176. WASHINGTON (llPI) President Nixon 1ald today that be would veto a n emergency tner1Y blll passed by eoo.,..... He said It would result In longer gas lines a n d rompulsory guollne raUon!ng -"and that, we're not going to have." Ni-~king to a YOWll lltpubllcan le ad e t1 h Ip conference at the Shoreham Hotel, nld the answer to the nation'•~ pm,Iem would be w act oo other leglslaUoo ho bad propooed to -the energy ,.ppuea. "I 8RALl. VETO that bill:' Nl<0n declared. 'l1le President called tile bill -tJven final ~onal approval Wednesd>y by the House -"well Intentioned/' but said a provision to roll ba<k oil prices would cause longer lnli.td of shorter gasoline waiting lines. "It would be better " Nixon . ' aaid, "for the Congress to act European Gold Dips In Trade 1 Gas Alloeatlons LONDON (UPI ) -Both gold and the U.S. dollar fell 1n Ji:uropean trading today. ln London, the price of gold fell SO cents overnight to $173 an ounce, while in 7.urich the fall was 14 w $170. Oold broke through the $175 barrier -once thought unattainable -on Tuesday. In Paris. the commercial dollar used in foreign trade opened at 4.81 francs, down from Wednesda y's -4.M. The financial -dollar used b y tourists and spec u I a tors opened at 4.805 francs, a drop from Wednesday's 4.85 franc.a. In Zurich, the dollar opened at 3.12 • 3.125 Swiss franc3 com~red with the overnight rate of--3~13 -·3:147. The dollar was also weaker in ·Frankfurt, opening at 2.6660 markJ a I t er Wednesday's close of. 2.6760 marks. The dollar also_ dr<l\ll)ed slightly in Rome, Brussels and Amsterdam. In Loodon the dollar fell at opening to $2.3070 to the pound afte r closing Wednosdayatl2.30 ~ dollar closed in Tokyo at 288.30 yen, 2.30 higher than W edne.oda y . Telling It Like It Is If you don't need at least a half tank of gu, don't come into this Everett, Wa sh. Mobil service station. Patty Sweeney, wife of owner Colin Sweeney, ,will check your tank and send you away. . .~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- We Can Hope Bread Czar Will Have Lots of Crust By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) The American B a k e r s Association predicl! t h e United State1_.!'?Il.I have • a bread shortage this summer lmless the government curtails wheat exports. This warning must be placed in the same category with la~t swnmer's warnings that American was headed !or a gasoline shorta ge this winter. Which is to say, we consuiners have nothing to worry about. geared to cope with scarcity that might arise. At thi~ very moment. any you may be sure, there is a prospective dough ct a r waiting in the winp ready to do for breaditariana what energy ciar William Simon ia doing for motorists. Suppose, for example, Mrs. Krwt has a standing order for a dozen prune Danish once a week. Will the n e igh borhood delicatessen be -permitted to hold them tmder the pastry counter until she arrives? Or must the clerk dispense them on a first-come, first-serve basic forcing Mrs. Krust to settle for so m e day . old crumpets? Shell Says Supplies For March Cut Back l!Cl_llSTON (AP) -Blaming a llhortage of crude oll and reduced refinery producUon, Shell Oir Co. announced •hari> cuts Wedn...tay In March gaaollne allocations for !,. service statlona. Service stations east of the Rocky Mountain& will receive pared with 115 percent In Feb- a 70 per<:<nt allocation com- niary. We&t Qio8I stations will receive 60 percent alloeatlon1 compared with February's 84 percent.• "Shell has 10 percent less gasoline avaHable than It did 1n the bas< period ol March Automation Buy Told General Automation Inc:. of 1972, and, at the Mme Orne, has more customers,.. a spo~eamaD .said. MSI Data's Backlog $15 Million M S I Data Corp. said today recent orders for-tta ·electronic: field data mtry systems have lncrea.aed the company 's net backloe to 115 million, AS WE NOW know from experience with the g a s shortage, the government is According '° the bakers, "brud, hamburger b u n s , birthday cakes and even pizza" could disappear from the shelves before the new wheat crop ii harvested. EITHER WAY, the dough czar's job will be made easier by the fact that the baken are referring to the threatened sho<1age as a "bread black-Anaheim, and T a I · S ta r out." Computer Systems Inc:. have Sales Diroctor M I c h a e I Grimes aaid new backlog !!guru reflected firm orders received from a variety o1 · customers in the supermarket and retail-wholesale merdl.andi..!ing trades since Dec. 31, when 11-1 SJ ended the third quarter of fiscal 1974. with a $13.5 million backlog. Carson Oil Refinery Slated by Richfield "PEOPLE MAY have to stand In line for a loaf ol bread, at much higher prices, the way they now wait In line to buy gasoline," their · spokesman says. II and when that happens, we can count on t h e government to work out some sort ol allocation plan that \\'ill insure equitable d!Jtrlbutton ol our dally bread. That apparently means that .. reached an agreement for the only white bread will be purchase b y G e n e r a I u n a v ~ t I a b l e. For if the Automation of the capital shortage included b row n stock and business operations bread, it would be called a of Tal-Star, for an undisclosed "dimout." amount of cash and Geoecal Dark bread, preswnab1y, Automatloo common stock. will remain plentiful. And that The announcement ol the more or less .assures the agreement was made jointly dough czar of e. promhlent this week by Lawrence A. place in history. Goshorn, General Automa tion 111e company reached the $15 million mark recently with two orders for a total of 492 eleclrooic units. These came from the TG&Y discount store chain of Dallas for 400 Source 2100 terminals and a Model 3040 data rece iving ltltloo, all valued •l 1694,000, and a $1811,000 order for iO Source 2001 tennlnals and one Model 30.a from The Gap, a San Francisco-baled chain o I men '• panta atores. CARSON (llPI) -Atlantic Richfield announced Wednes- day plam to construct a $200 million oil refinery here by 1977 -with the Southern Cali- fornia F.dison Co. as the only customer. The contract calls f o r Edison w aupply Its own crude oil to the Arco refinery, and get back the plant's entire daily output of 125,000 barrelJ of low-sulphur oil. One possibility i..! the odd· even system. When informed that tile chairman ol the board and people have no bread ·to eat, chief executive officer, and he can blithely reply: '""1en Robert J . Smallacombe>, Tai· let them eat pumpernickel." Star president. on the proposal• we have before them -S01ne of them for a very long time -to inerease the 11upply of energy." The eoer&Y bin w a 1 approved by Ute Senate by a margin of men tban two to one, and Sen. Henry M. Jackson (O.Wash.), '" chief •JlOll'Or, bal predicted. the Senate will v* to ovenide the veto. But the margin of passage in the Howie was less than two to one. IT TAKES A two-third< ma,iority in each chamber to override a veto. Gasoline lines which Ni:ron said would get longer under the disputed legislatk>n were lllll loog tocby -.. peclally in metropolltan areu -and motorists will aee prices go up atartlng Friday. A 3-oent increase in pwnp prices has been aulhori1.ed by the Energy Office, with 2 cents of It .slated to go into effect Friday. Nixon's objection ls to a provision ordering a rollback in price of "new" oil from domestic wella which have gone· intD productkvl since 1972. This oil , now selling at an average of more than $10 a barrel, w1>u1d be priced at the average $5.25 al which "Gld" oil is already controlled. Savings from the rollback must be passed on t o ~ers ol residual oil or refined petrolewn prGducts. The Administration argued that the rollback w o u I d discourage production G f "new'' oil. Van Camp Quits Post SACRAMENTO (AP) California CocpGr a tions <:ommiask>ner Brian V a n Camp hu announced his resignation to seek t h e Republican nomination for secretary of state. Van Camp, 33, will leave the administration Mareh 6, Gov. Ronald Reagan said 1n a statement Wednetday. He LI a former deputy state attorney general and lw been co rp<>ratlon.s commlsaioner sine< A"iU'l 1971. The post carries a aa1ary o( PJ,960. lly TIRRY GllANT, R.l'tt Too often. people will try tlo convince themselves that very evident aymptorm of fl1I Wnes1 do not really exist or will disappear If they will' just forget about them. Thii type or. altitude can only lead to more lierlow prob- lems In the long run. A dia· ease In lli earliest stages b w;ually much euler to treat and cure. W. Virginia Coal Mi1iers Still Out In return !or the refined oil , Edison has agreed to pay Atlantic llichfield a per-barrel proce&ing fee and subsidize the operating costs of the refinery. On even-numbered days, bakers would only 1 e 11 products with an even number of letters (bagell, bt..culta, croutons, r:weiback, pretzels, melba toast etc.). ONODD .NUMBERED clays, sales would be limited to baked goods with an ndd number of letters (doughnuts, bard rolll, etc). Complete .Mid-day American Stock List Never lX' afniid to find out about aomethlng that ls bothering you. ?i-1ost often 1rou.r doctor will be able to diagnowe your problcn1 quick· ly. Then, not only will you be feeling better physically but you will have great men· tal relief as well. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US v.•hen you need a delivery. We v.·ill de· liver promptly wi thout extra charge. A 1,-reat man y people rely on u1 for their health needs. W e welcome requests for delivery service and charge accounts. PARK LIDO PHARMACY JSI HMplt•I Rnd frff Dellv•ry Newp.trt l••<h 642·1510 That happy. ~mo11ng !Jee brlongs 10 J ~.11 rlJmeiJ Nortta C1tou You w-e, oit 1he H~nk of Coill ,.1es.i we hive i numtler of proplc who tr.tn~act bu~inc\~ with 1hc rublic on ~ (l.uty bisis. \Ve would ll~e \ ou 10 know more •bout them ... .ind to gel lo l now 1 hl m be ti tr. Norila ls ~ newl y rlccte.d Officer of lhe B<ink who c.ime lO us aher 14 years of boinl1ng e11:pcrlenc.e -.ill in Or ,1n,i.;c County. Her primary roh1 will bl to head up our E~crow CHARLESTON, W. Va . (AP) -Some 15,000 soothern West Virginia coal miners are continuing a work boycott to protest the Jack of gas to get them to and from the pits. The walkout has halted the daily production of a n estimated 175.000 tons of high· grade coal for the nation's steel mills. United Mine Workers President Arnold Miller sent troubleshooter Steve Llmlng Into the stricken a r e a Wednesday to make a personal assessment of the problem. A UMW spokesman said Liming :and a delegation of miners will also meet with Gov. Arch A. Moore Jr. here today lo try and work out a solution lo the shutdown. Department. lioweve r, beciusc of the present volume of busi· nt\S we ire doing, Norita; i~ wearing many hats. She is making installment lo.in~. as\i~ting the Cred it De· rar1n1tn1 and has moved our R.:,11 E1tatc Financing Depart• ment into the forefront of the local b,n~ing pic:ure. Cornt in .:ind meet Norlta. Perhaps \'uu have a real eltale probltm 1h,1 need' a wlu1lon - or will 1*ed one. If you do, Norita i~ 1he gal to ~e. She knows c111r loc..il real euatc market quite well. She ~hould. Aller all, W\e '' been )hopping in 11. for the IAit 14 ye1ri.. l hc B.1nk of Co\ti Mfu I\ p!'Oud to h•vc Mr ~. Nod1a Clrou un oui ~taff. In f,\Ct, we're f"rl)ud of •II of our employtC\, Come ln and talk to them •.• you'll undcrn1nd why: _J"''= BANK OF .=l111r ( < l'i IA MF SA . . . • I' The plant s!Euld be able w SJpply enough relined oil to pro;duce electricity for more than three million people - almost half of Edis on 1 1 current customers. The an-angement signed by Aro:> and Eldiaon upset the traditional utllity-011 company relationship, which generally consist. ol. the oil company selling the customer Its finished product fuel oil - without the customer supplying its own1 to be refined. Coal miners say they simply can't buy enough gasoline to drive to and from work and that the short open periods at many service atations conflict with their work hours. Pla11t Out Of Material LOS ANGELES (llPI) Pacilic Lighting Corp., sald WedneJday It was abandoning planJ to 1ynthetlcally produce natural gas In So u the.rn Calllornla. The (lrrn, parent company for the Southern California Gas Co., cited rillng CO.ti and lack of raw rnaterlala. The dough czar must then decide whether bakers will be allowed to give preferential service to re&War customers. Hyatt Set To Manage PSA Hotels SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - HyaU C.Orp. will assume management of three of four Caldornla hot<ls owned by Pacific Southwest A i r l i n e 1 Inc., including the 4 2 5 • stateroof1\ "Queen M a r y berthed In l.<>ng Beach. The aMouncement w a s _made Wednesday by H. 1-1 . Friend Jr., pruldent of the hot<! chain, and William L. Shimp, prtildent of t he commuter airline. They said the oti1t1' hotels involved in the management tramfer are the 400-room !Jlandla at Son D I e 1 o ' 1 Mission B1y and the :J.IO.room PSA Airport Hotel at Los Angeles International Airport. Proxmire Bid 'Let Big Shots Wait' WAS!DNGTON (UPI) -Sen. William Prox- mire, (D·Wl.!.), has proposed a bill he says would Impress government and oil industry leaders with the conrerns of lhe average motorist. He called lhe measure, introduced Wednesday, lhe "at the bif shol.! wait in line, too" resolution 1 It would require written affirmation of govern· ment agencies and their chief subordJJlates, mem· . bers of Con~ress and vice prooldents and above of the nation a seven major oil C()mpanlea that thty bougiJ.t their gasoline penonally from a service •talion. "If the big abota have to stand In lint," old Proxmire, "II those who !Nike public policy have to actually taste what It'• like to wait hour upon hour to get gu, IO!utlom to the energy prob- lem will be found a lot futer," I I \ I A AC "' A Al " .. " " :1· :1 • .. " " •• " .. A ., A .. ... ... " .. •• ... "' ... ... "' "' ... ... ... A• A• "' ... " A '" ~ " ,, " Af! "' "" " A A ~ A A A A A A ~ A A A A ~ A M· ~ A • A A A A ~T ~ A i ' ~ •• ' A •• A A ' A A A A A .. A .. A A A A .. •• .. .. .. A A A A .. .. .. " A " •• " A A A A A A A A A A • • ' • ' • • " • ' ' • • • • : • ' ' • ' • • ' • ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • • ' ' • , • Wednesday's Closing Prices ' NEW-Y OBK ··STOC·K··E:X CHANGE -- < • '• I • • FtbtUJ:ty : t_}C)7C s D41LY PILOT Year's Hi gh-Low - Appear Every Saturday Mideast Tall{s Bolster Stocl{s NE\V YORK (UPt) -S1gna \If !iUCCess 1n secretary of State flenry A Kissinger's Middle East peace mission lifted prices m HC11\e trading on the New York Stock Exchange \\lednesd,iy The Dow Jones 1ndustr1ul ll\eragr. hnd r1s\ n 3 83 points to 803 34, follO\\lng a 8 13 point advance U1e pre\llous scs· SIOll Gainers led losers by an eight te>-f1ve margin a1nong the more than 1,771 lssues crossing the tape Traduig at t1n1cs was hec tic, totaling more than 18 mi l· hon shares al the close, compnred "'1th l'ucsday s IS 860,000 shares Prices on ate trading the 1\111cr1can Exchange advanced 111 moder • I , ' ' OAILY PILOT Thursd-r, Ftbruary 28, 1974 TONIGHT'S ~rv HIGHI,IGUTS CBS II 8:00 -"Hello. Dolly." Barbra Streisand , Clays .the title role ·in the movie version· of the ong-runnlng musical wlth Walter Matthau as her romantic target in the 'IV premiere of this 1970 ruck. KCET Elll 8:00 -"Trial By Jury." This is the first in a series or eight Gilberi and, Sullfyan oper- ettas IQ be presented on this channaj_. --. Daily TV Log "Thursday Evening FURU~ 28 l:JD ~Dullir's Qoiol Mowil: (C) (90) "Kelp!" (com) ' The Butltt. 1 .......... ' ...., lriffhl SIMw ""' "" 5::~·M> II!~:!::.!" ........... .. '"'JI oo am -· '"'a QJ ell ililll!l •-• ..., lo th• Ht1rF After 1 IO\otlf ~µ111 ·won11n drives !!er cJr Into lron:iide's van, the cti~f le1r11S she suffered not from 1 sll1ht he11t ttltck but lrom 111 old llullat that fl!Olltd close to htr h11rt. Tht woman insists sht never h11 'been sllot. EllZ1bttfl bhley, Tont E.isJey and Ptlll LIM· • &ert 111est. ' '!'.II flit .... -.... 0 CAINEs Strenph WINS * Solid Action-KUNG FU O @m atK1111 f l "The PU· 1ion of C!Min:ii" taint 1ets tiimstll 1rr11ted fOf b1nk robbeiy In his QUtsl lo prove the· in110C:encc of 1 formu Shao!in priHt jal11d for mu1d1r. •=:-.ru1 I) ~arildMln Vlfpl (i] _, ""', """ w-'''°I"'"' (iiits) '4Q.::..G111 Cooper.· u Hilftl I IMfetl tf1flll Diep . V1rilfJ,Howt WW'•MJ LIM? I Wit LUCY 10:00a 19@f0l m Mlllk C.11hy Mid Sq11id UsA DionRt Wanrlckt, Dick M11tln, I (1)1 .... If,... Nipsey Russtll and Gecua• 8UfRS bM,..._, . join host Mic Divis. ell "'"" 1m111-rqdtelqJ T°"J "lnlotmation llll(ht ltlllfy Procaslnt' . ® <D m Strteb ol S.1 fr an· . f:@)·l.nsll cisc• "Rampa11 .. A dectnl l1mil1 El rrt... AllOf man, 1 friend of Steve Kellei, be· TiS.:lntstl Illa~ comes I murder 5uspect 1fter he TltrM stoqes 1nd · ether 1esldenls or 1 crimt· . , ridden nei&)lbo1hood st111 1 liti· 7:» R OrMll Wtllu" Creal Mpterits tante raid. Robert Hooks and Ja111I "rot sii.-!ilence" (R) !lck Cassi: Macl11ehl1n a:uesl. d~ stlri. . . m .. hllld Ille Unu I ......... ......, a:i Dml• Ntw Pric:l ls ,Iii~ ' IO:JO 00 TwlliJfll Z- YM WM M It I Cole111b'atiH .. MllllM $ ~: (C), (211r) liU C.sbJ llltbtillt If Uft .(dra) 59 -Teatro CIR 0.Waldo C.ho Lina Turntf, ~n Gayin. . Las Dlu F1Nu1 Ltt'1 MaU A Duf , Pfabe Ult Loni Club lewtkW . ' .llJ :.JO:.~!;":;... 11"'! ~a IE s 111 = Accioll QluM Twillpt loN .(E) ,_., DIM aow 6-""' Mno11 Jin~ Wlnttn Sllow • Mtwlt: (C) "A Ti•• ltf lillinr" Tiii C.1111111 Gt"l (wes) '67-Glenn ford, Inter S_ln· · · · · ens, Gtorte H1miltc11. '1:~ D Help Thr Mel&llbor m Bradford Dillman Stars 1:00 * On Mission Impassible G Barbra Streisand in m Nilsloft: 1111pouibll * Worfd TV Premiere of (!I Mme: "Tiit Y1111plrt" (hor)- "HnlO, DOLLY!'' Atwil ·Salaz11. II C9tlJ)(J)CIS Tlllur1d1r @rn Llvin1 bsy llllwil: (C) (»ir) "Miiie hllJ" ID Allred Hltc11etc• l'rtlt•b (mus) '7D--8arttn StrelsalMf, W1lle1 fD Olf II Nltht M1tthau. Michael Crawford, Louil Armstronf, M1rianne McAndrew, E. (~ (J)) Tiii Plluen J.• hi Ur, TOIMIJ Tun.•. DollJ Levt 11:1s·m c:1111111 34 hn made a suc:uulul occupation ol m1tchmaklni. Sh• takes on the 11 :301J (~ (j)) fJJ CIS LJtl Movie: dltflcu!t tart of loclllnt 1 suit1bJe (C) "Sulldlf 111 New Yor"' (1om) 111te foJ the cant1nkt1aus m1rcb1nt . '64-Clill Robert'°", J1n1 Fond•, of Yonkers Horace Vander11lder. Rod T11lor. D QJ@®l (S fllp,Wi mSlltw 0 ID (!}@l.m J1ll11n1 C1r1e1 -· ·t11J'Sr1Ues!Sall-Redd Fw~ Den ~ -9 -Movlii -.,.11iit-l f1 $1eip"-(mys) · Ad1111s, Mclean Stevenson and M '-46-Humphrty Bo1a11. D.Ws. · IJ Movie: "MJ llood ltuu Celd" D @ (]) m Whit World $fleclal (du) '65 -Trvy Dcnahut, Joi)' IZ;OO @If, lme llassoril Healhel1on. ' • m Mlrie: "TIM Ner.dM" (wes) 0 CHOPPER ONE·AMBUSH 'SG-li"'dolph So>tt. *BY ROOFTOP GUNMEN . l:OO l1J 0 ell@@ N•n 0 @(1) aJ ~I "Ambush" 0 ®J a;) Tomorrow An ad i~ an und111round newsplptl 1:30 mAH·NllM Sttow: "fuP •I Ult," le~ds Gd i nd Dan to• ~flop aun-"J&lbll" "OM ;ood Tur1" 1111n out to nenp b11 brother's ' dealll. 1:45 8 Mo'llt: (C) "SI• Biid Htnts" m Winners Get Airplanes (wes) '62---Audie MurphJ. * ON DEALER'S CHOICE! l:lO ID M:ovil: "Slaled c.rro" (dr1J m Dtailr's Cholca . '51-Dana .Andiews, Cl1ude Raint. Friday OAYTIME MOVIES t:JD a cg "CeVibbip ., fAfcli•'• , •• ....., (com) '63 -Ronny lfowlrd. Glllln Fold, Shirley Jones. 10:00 (I) "lllWfl lot I hdllM'" (Wts) '64--iAltdit Murphy. O"AW If t11t rupptt ,..,..,- (0011 '5&-John Aa:11. ll:JO 0 "II I Hid A MllliOll" (tom) '32 -Gary Cooper. "lllt tat Cmps" (hor) '-4s-tols Collier. 12:00 Q) "Wilt V11H1 ·Secrtllry" (com) 'Jt>--Jtan Hulow, Cl11k j;ablt. 7:00 0 (C) "RIW Wh1d in £.dtn" (1d'wl 'M-<sth1r>Willi1ms, Jeff Challdl11. ID "I eo.. lfN War" (ad•) '37- John Wayne. a °'Cllllll'• IJttSe Dlrill" (drl) '45 -Paul Kelly. J:OO Cl) '1'• Hit" (mus) 'JS -Fred Aslfire, Ginpr Ro11rs • (ii (C) "A MN Cllltd C111lltfl" (wes) '69-TOl'IJ Franciosa, Michul S1rr1zin. J:JD fJ (C) .... You Stt It, Ntw YH Doll'r" (com) '68--Jonathan Win· ten. S11ve Allen. ta (jJ (C) "Wll1n'1 C111rtlt" (com) '~-RIJ 8oi11r. 4:JO (])SIN IS 10AM llstfR( <9 Ci)) .. ,, ... ff•tl ,, (lanlify" Cenci. (dr1) '54-lart Llnc1st1r. KOCE, CHANNEL 50 Orange County's U~IF television station. KOCE-TV; has sche:luled the following special• programs today. Detailed listings of Channel SO's programs are carried in the Daily Pilot's TV Week each Sunday. T1:,tcl SESAME STREET lC! l :OC EOUCATIONAL SCHOOL INFORMATION (Cl l l lO I CAN REAO (CJ !Al "°"ce ·-oiiOil A Tln'ie" -Children rN11act tlll folk lele "The Grt•I &It E•mous Turnip," 1:1' .COVER TO COVE i IC) (Al "TM Wll\CI !n tl'!t Wll1i:rw1" - ' A elal5!c wor k In ch1111rtn's lll#l t\11'1. ~-41 RIPPLES {C.l (Al "Body T•lk" -T• l'lt1p clllldren una•r1tend !Nit H )• l)O'jttile to communlc111 llNi fo ~ IHUng through bodltv Mhl" .... ""'°'"'11 ;ion.. ,.., 4U. A50UT YOU (Cl !Al ''$111M~ifl: WhHrl~, 111d Mte1IH" ,_ • ~ dlUdretl ew1r1 of ...-itM, 11'11 bo!IY'• llllUttl .,.... w11...i fhtrfl. J.lU ,• 1Wf0£ OUT {C:I {A) ''Tr1~lh1' ~·· -To llelP dllldrltl'I cor.110.r ... uptril~ • of l'nOYlng In • ~ lo 1119 ,..111191 of los1 .. If ........ ~ tia •aiftAK()LJNOAS (C) ';XI ELECTRIC COMPANY (CJ 5:00 S'ESAME ST"EET fCI e:OO OMNIBUS 50 fCI (A) "A CIOMI' Look -Roscoe Lee Brown" - The nOled blb'k -l<kM'· -f'kl .w\th •. Orenqe CCM51 Coll19e students on lllV.tCll)ment of clt1m1tlc K•ntt. •:30 FREEHAND Sl<ETCHING IC) lRI "Sh..tlnia 11 C>atkneu" - L1l50n 4 7:00 ORANGE COUNTY REVIEW CCI Tiie "m-0111111 of the air" tor Or1rig1 Cll111lll•n1. 7:30 CONNIE'S CLOfHING CO RNER {CJ "5n!PIJl!lil, Marking, TlflOI' Basting" -LHMWI 4 -With Co!>nle Werc-lj. 1:00 FOCUS OAANGE COO NTY !Cl (A) "COflJU~ W1tdl0o;1" -Hil'il Jim COO!JI!" dlKUSHI f!ll t~l\itn !t' g91 HfblKllon ;fom a llOtllled Vil<.orw:Htloii1L gu•rt111fw, and Ille Or•"tt COlllliy Ofllc1 of Conwmtf' Alf1!r._ j:ft ~$ CLOTH ING CORNE• --·-~4-f.!!~· T4Uor ,,.. rH CULTURES (C) ... ~~.~Er~~~· cc1 1:30 WOMAN,,.(() ,.The Equel IUghts Alnendmellt -P1rt II" -Pnyt111 Sc:halh• •!\Cl Gellne Wtllltm1. i..,,.. ovtJllOk111 opj)ON!'lh of 11'11 Eq1i11I lllgll"' Amendment, will dlscuu lllefr Obll(tlon1 10 !he propoWld ffil110n to-tl!T"ContHIUlliil. ,:00 lflltlNG LINE fCJ Wiiiiam I" . l!lldlliy, J t., It hotl ~ a Mrlet of lflouthl.Prov<*l!lo 11tr11 11 tncOlllllera wllll e u~ of ~ and lntlmtilflflll "II""'" C60 min.I . ~ .... ,, -.;:::;;;, ~liv-Ot•knt••" -.... \o ' " " , ~· , -+ I ,, \ ... • .\ ' ' , ·, • Caddy Hose Reel • Hnvy dutt ti9struttl111 • · l•sy Wlf t. st11• •-4 M~'I• y11i1r ho se • Reel co11~.111111ved fr em stand 1488 ,:__· _ _,_,_~ True Grit! Fliht Sandpa~r • (Mrse, 1ne4i111111 tr fi11e 1rits • ftr tll y1ur ''"""' chtrtt . ! f~~'!~!c~!IJ.f~i!~.'~.~~1 .. ,32'5' RIG.S' Pit lhHI I ~vi · ... • • /'" Durable, Molded Design White Toilet Seat REG . 3.29 • long-lasting, stufdy model • White finish will last, and last • Install it yGUrself •.• its so easy evin the Wife· can do ill • Now selling at a special low, low pri<e ••• buy now ond sovel ' f. 3 'lf2" Swivel Bench.Vise . """ "" ""'~ • s.vilH I• .... M1wiwel1, ,.,. Jn;1, •11ilt.fa ... 11 • IT'7 6~'· I > Golden Vigoro® Lawn Fertilizer • Speti9l sltw'4elt1sef1•-•-11..,s f1rtiMliwl ltttt .fttf Yt• ,.1 ii t•I • Gre"s 1r1t1s fe1i'e~ •ffPS it trlff t.r w1tk1 • 7S ... Ntfee4sst0f.~.ft. II , 2s9 Man-0-War Marine Finish • pmecflM_fr ........... •r, W..., tc.W, etc. e Attrtct!Yt, ,.It, htn .. WIMtlMt • w.. .. '"""" RIG.329 4.JO• Qt. ..-.- , I " • : .. 1 ' ' ,. ' •o 1! ' .. ,, ., .. i<t ... ·~~ " ,, ~· ~1: •·' 1 I " "' " ' • ~· . , . ' ' ' •! .., .. " • '· " ! I ' • ; r ' t • • ' " • Thursd~, f'tbtuuy 28, 1974 DAILV PILOT .29 Notre Dame, Eight Others Gain Berths It's NCAA Playoffs or Bust f ~~ Bruins want to go to the other tournaments -!he Natiooal lnvltaUoo In New Yorlr. or !he new Collql&te Commlsslonera Tournament for conference runnen-up In St. Lou!> -and he doesn't feel I don't know how you could be critical of our playtrs ii they don't went to do it." tournament becauSe we'd be rlibt in "I'm sure my players feel that-way. the middle of final exams." 1 J would In no way try to bdluence The NCAA lournament Is I b e !hem. I wouldn't do Iha!. I wouldn't exception, Morr.in said, "because we've Ue to them if they wanted to know beell in It so many times." how I feel about It." -LOS ANGELES (AP) -U !ho UCLA Bruins are Upset 6ji-SOuihem California for the PacUlc4 Confereft<e ba¥elball championship, It wUI be a blger upset if they show up In New York, st. Looi> or anywhere else. "Very doubtful1 " Is the way J. D. · his players would, elthtr. The St. Louis tournament bas been dubbed the sec<1nd11lacoi tounwnent bocause h would be made up of coofer- ence runnen.up. Morgan said the feelings of Wooden The nallonally lhlrd-ranked Bruins and and !he playen would affect bis IDlh·rated Soulhem cat Trojans are bolh KANSAS CITY -Second-ranked Notre Dame, eighth-ranked Marquette and seven other teams were named today to at.large berths in the National Collegiate Athletic A a s o c I a t ion • s baskelball championship tournament. 11\e other at·large selections were Pittlburgb, Providence, South carolina and Creighton, all ranked among tbe naUon'1 top twenty teams , plus Syracuse, Dayton and Oral R<l>eN. The NCAA said tournament pairing> would be announced later today. Notre Dame upset UCLA 71·70 on Jan. 19 ln South Bend, ending the Bruins' a.game wlnnJng streak and jumping temporarily to No. l in the national rankings . A wee~ later, UCLA avenged ill first defeat in three years with a 94-75 victory over the Irish in 1.()6 Angeles, the only blemish on the Irish record so far this season. Notre Dame has won 23 games. 'Ibe Irish have appeared In 10 previoui NCAA championship tournaments -the latest in 1971 when they were eliminated in the second round. Notre Dame's best tournament perronnances came in 1953, 1954 and 1958 when it reached the reglooal finals: ' e lockey Arrested MINEOLA, N.Y. -Jockey Eddie Belmodte bas a dale in Nassau County Dl>trict Court after he reportedly batUed with four policemen who attempted to arrest him · Wednesday on charg., !hat he shot bis young wile during a family brawl. Nwau Coonly di3irlct court judge Marie Santagata released Belmonte on $1,500 ball and ordered him to retwn to court with a lawyer March .7 to face charges of tecood degree assault, possession ot~· a deadly weapon and resisting arrest. e Gymnast Dies ST. LOUIS -Gary Morava, a National Collegiate Attlletic As.oclation champioo gymnast, died early today at Firmin Desloge H03pltal, apparently as a mutt of a severe neck. injury he surfered Tuesday. A. spokesman at !he hospital said the i 11-year-old senior at SOuthem Illlnoi.3 University-Carbondale died about 1 a.m, in the hospital's surgical intensive care unit, where he had been since being flown to St. Loo.Ls from Carbondale two days ago. Morava had dislocated and fractured two vertebrae in his neck during wannup e1ercises at the school. eKlngs on TV ATLANTA -The struggling LoS Angeleo Kings, cold-shouldered by the Pittaburih PelliUlns 4-l In !heir Last outing, face the Flames of Atlanta l<Mlight In National Hockey League actloo. It's on TV (Channel SJ at s o'clock. In Pittaburgh, the Penguln3 brought aa eild to a llhutoot streak by King• pile ~ Vachon, who had held tbe P..,.wns acoreleu f0< 145 minutes lacliMllDI two 24 vlctoMes IDd the first period of Wednesday's geme. • F•re•-Sufi LAS VEGAS -Heavyweight boslng ~ George For<DllD has been -in a 12.S millloo ault. charging him wllh breach ol contract. The acilon aloo -U• an Injunction !hat could postpone Foreman's echeduled title bout with Ken Norton next month. The suit was nled by KO, Inc., and lists Foreman, Oiarles . "Dick" Sadler, Foreman's manager,. and Leroy Jackson, as well as three corporations. e Robl ... on A bsent HOLTVILLE -The California Angels have opened spring training minus Frank Robinson, who ls expected to join the team March t when Its iralnlng base Is moved to Palm S!lrings. "I don't really ihln« he wanted to come down here, and I didn't see any reason for him to," manager Bobby Winkles said at !he opening of drills Wednelday. 41We don't want him standing around wasting his tlme while we go through fundamentals," he said of the Angels' pnibable deslgnatt<i bltrer. "! lhinlt he can go up and bit with three day• work." Morgan, UCLA 's athlellc _., said Wednesaay when asked whether the Burins, who have won the last seven NCAA championships, would continue to play ii they fall to qualify 10< the Natioo- al Oollegiate Toomameot. Coach John Wooden ha• said he doesn't Newcombe Eliminates Emerson LA COSTA -ToJ>Seeded John Newcombe needed mly 57 rnlnuies to subdue Newport Beach's Roy Emerson, 6-%, 6-1 Wedhesday In the secood round of the !50,000 World <llamplooship Tennis tournament here.· Brian Gottfried will meet Newcombe ~ the quarterflnals. He beat vetenn Clarlt Graeboer U , 7-1, 6-3. And Stan Smith ousted Geo!! Mastera, H, H . Secood.....!ed Ales Metrevell o f Russia and tblnl·rated 118ul Ramirez of Mexico both survived second-set tiebreakers·to advance. Metrevell topped Owen Davi<ls6n of Australia 6-2, H , and Ramirez scored a 6-3, H victory ov.,. 45-yeaM>ld Torben Ulrich of Den· mark. · In other matches, Patricio Cornejo of <llile beet <llarles Pasarell of Puerto RicO 7-G, 6-f, and Dick Stockton downed Milan Holocek of Czechoslovakia 7-5, 6-4. e Roche Vpae t MIAMI -Patrick Proisy and Clill l?_rysdale, both upset vtcton In World <uiampionship Tennis' !50,000 Red Group toumamenl,.-meet l<Mlight In 00< of two quarterfinal matdles on tap. Proisy, of Franoe, upoet lhinl-.led Tooy Roche of Australia U, H , 6-1 Wednesday. Drysdale had ellmlnated No. 5 Marty Riessen Tuesday and lollowed with a 6-1, M , M conquest d Sooth ' Africa's Bob Hewitt. Tooight" otheT quarterfinal pslrlng has fourth-eeeded Tom Gomum, a u, 6-3, W victor over Auatralla 's Ray Rulfet., meeting aeveotlHe<ded Nikki Pille of Yugoslavia,-• 1·7, 6-3, M victor over Ru Reid. 'fo!><eeded rue Nastase ol Romania advanced Wednesday by beating Pierre Barthes of France, 7.f, 6-2 and aecond- seeded Tom Okker of The Nethertancls tripped Jim McManus, f.%, f.I. • Ashe Atl1'attees BARCELONA, Spain -Arthur Ashe defeated Baroid Solomon, 6-2, &4, In quorterfmal aetioo ol !he World Cham- ~Tennis tournament bere Wednes- day. In other matdles, Tom Leona.rd de!eated Ray Moore, H, 6-3, Roger Taylor topped Antoolo ZugareW, f.3, 6-1, and Eddie Dlbbs downed Gerald Battrick H, U , H. eDurr Defeatetl ClllCAGO -Fifll>oeeded Francol>e Durr of France bowed to Ullleedecl Lesley Hunt of Australia Wedneaday In a pressure-packed three-set lelmll malch decided by a tie breaker. Miss Hunt engineered the first major upset <i the pro women's tennis circuJt toumam<nt at the Lakesbore CIUb. The score was M, 0-6, 7~. Also advaoclng were toi-eded BiWe Jean King, a &-1, &-2 wlmer over Sharo« Walsh; se<md-seeded Chris Evert, who also woo In straight aels defeatiog Australia's Karen Krantzcke 6-2, 6-0, and thinl..eeded Roeemary casals, who had to battle through three seta before o v e r c o m i n g t.eeuger Martina Navratilova of Czech>slovakia f.2, H, w. Young £!.S. Spi~ ,Tet;im Faces Stiff Clialwnge "l don't think anybody hu to go anyplace a.s far as I know/' Wooden said: "Personally if it were up to me, I would not wish to participate if we're eliminated from the NCAA Tournament. I don't like the secoftd..place tournament, but I do lots of thing• I don't Uke. ult'a not John's declsk>n," said Morgan. "It's my declskm, but made In consultaUon with other people." The Academic Policy Committee of the univenlty rules oo pos~aeuon play and ·Morgan said, "It's very doi,lbtfUl we'd go anywhere except the NCAA presentation of a imtaeasoo bid to the -20-1 for tbe .season· and, at '9-2, tied commltt~. for first plaee in the Pac 3, whose Wooden said UCLA's aentiment ls champion goes into the NCAA playoffs. 11nothlng new." After games this weekend at California "They wouldn't last year or the year and Stanford, UCLA and Southern Cal before. They wouldn't 10 years ago or meet March 9 at the Sports Arena, 20 years ago. USC's home court. Ex-Dodgers Rap Alston; ~eChan%s VERO BEACH, Fl&. (AP) -Biiiy Grabarkewitz, former Los A n g e 1 e s Dodger infielder, once said be dld.o't talk to manager Walt Alston for two years. Other playen, including WUlle Davis, the veteran center fielder traded to Montf'eal this winter, have mentioned a rommunication gap with the team's field leader: Appareotly the Dodgers will have better commwtlcation in Alston's 21st season as the team's manager. Alston said Wednesday he plam to begin private interviews ntursday witb each of his athletes. "I just want to talk baseball with each guy, ask them what they think their weaknesses are, and kind of grade each one myself ," Alston said. "I've done Uds in the pall w:lth a few players but I've never sat down individually with each man on the team." LAKER COLLIDES -Bill • Bridges of the Lakers (center) grimaces as he hits the floor after colliding with Milwa ukee's Ron Williams. LA's Pat Riley takes olf with the ball during the NBA game in Milwaukee won by the Lakers. Alston didn't say anything In the past prompted his inl<rvle'flng plan, but he apparenUy wants to reach a n understanding with playent, particularly tltoee liiely to be platooned. Don't Write Off ·Lakers: Warriors Lea-d Cut to One MILWAUKEE (AP) -The rebuilding Los Angeles Lakers, written out of the playoff picture by many National Basketball Association critics, woo 10,938 cooverts Wednesday nigbL Just ask the Milwaukee Bucks. Down 103-94 with five minutes left, the Lakers capped a furious Nib with two loog "1ots by Bill Bridges and Gail Goodrich ill the last SO aecoods to post a 110.108 victory over the Bucks and nm Utelr winning streak to five games. The Lakers, NBA d:Lampions two seasons ago but struggling oow with Wik <llamherlaln gooe and Jerry West immobilized by a nagging groin injury, closed to within one game ol. the Pacific Division leading Golden Staie Warrlon In the battle !or tbe fourth 3pot in the w..wn Conference playoffs. The Bucb, who saw their Midw.est Division lead over Oticago trimmed to . three games, had a three-game wiming streak broken at the -ol a grind wllich call> for theiA to pl&y sis - in as many nights. "It definitely was a big one for us," Lakers forward Connie Hawkins said. 11We need every one. ·I know of 10 games we gave away or we would be way ahead In our dlvtsioo. AU the guys are pulling together." ~ Bucks lost primarily because they rill.sled 11 of 33 free throws and were oulreilounded S7.a9. Forward Hawy llainloo, besides leading the Laken wllh 2% points, -26 rebounds -only two f...,. titan managed by the Bucks' starting front line. "How can you win when they get two or three -. and we didn't boon! on either end?" Milwaukee coach Lany Costello aald. • "We had more good llhots titan they dld, but I've never 9eel1 us m1ss like Utat," Costello sald. "Lucius Allen and Bollby Dandridge missed a whole bunch of llhort jumpers. You oame h and 1t happened bad for us. We must have been slail8htered .. the boenls." Kllreem Alxlul.Jabbar led Milwaukee wllh 33 points ,lB --· live assists and five blocked obots, but forwanls CUrtl> Pony, 1he Bucb' rebounding apeciallst, aod Dandridge combined for only 12n!l>ounds. The Lakers, -balanced scorlng, dUpped away at their deficit and finally toot a 106-1115 lead oo a l&yup by Hawkins with 1:19 left. LOS ANGl!LE5 1110): H1lrston z:i. H1wk1111 15, Smltll ~ GoodrlCfl 20i P'rlct 13, Lovw 2, Rn.., 11, er "12, c_,tt ,, MILWAUl(E (IOI): 0.ndrkll>t 20, Pff'ry t, AbduhltbtMr l31• ~~llf! 15, RObttholl t. WlrMr '' Wllll•mt 10, ~1111 4. Lot Anetln 2' II M Jl-110 Mltw.uU. 30 l3 2J 20-IOI Foui.d Giit: Wllll1m1. Tol1I Fout•: Los Anoeltt ti, Mllw111~M 2f. T..ctlnlcal•: S"'lttl, D1nOridQ1. A: 10,tJI. Mter 8-5 Win "I want them to understand my role," said Alston. Plaloonlng Is espeeted In the outfield llilere left-banded bitters W 1111 e Crawfonl, Bill Buclmer and Vo n Joshua vte hr playing time with rl&ltt- handed hitters Tom Paciorek, Maony Mola, Jim Wynn and Tommy Ape. Buckner -plays lint -and muld share time th!ft With right-blt-tllll! Steve Garvey. Meanwhile, ~ Don Suttm, re- portedly asking hr a 1115,000 adn•.'\. was espected to arrive today to ......,,. negotiations with Al Campenl1, Docteer vice pmtdent. Campanla oald be ond the 1973 winner ol 18 games are not lar apart. Also unsigned. are catclter J o e Fergua>n and pitdler Al lli>wninc. Ferguson, Ill wlttl the flu In Los Angelel, was expected to anive during the weekend. Downing I> at bis home In Tn!l>too, N.J. A Dodgen spobsman aald Ferguaoo and DoWDing ari close to readiing agroemenL The mt of the Dodgers were In camp Weilneriday, except for pkcber Mike Marshall and Mola, who were given permission to report late. WHERE'S WILT? Q's UNCONCERNED SAN DIEGO (AP) -Where Is Will <lmmberla.in? "I haven't any idea," said Alei:: Groia, g.....al manag,.. ol lhe San Diego Cooqui>tadors, after the Uoot-1 coach missed his sealllli ltnlgllt road game WeG"'9daynight. "He's probably out • co u t I n g someplace," ~ 8'Sistant coach Stan Albeek, -guided 'Ille Q's to tlleif sealllli straight victor}' I D Cllamberlaln's aboence, a 119-117 declsloo over Che Clarollna Cougars in Greensboro, N.C. Will OiamberlalD llhow up in New Yorlr. Friday night !or a game ~ t11.-Ne111?- "I don't know," Groza said. Is the general manag,.. ooooemed? "No." --~--------··--~--MOSCOW (AP) -Hedging against Cbemock won't know unlll !he SovieOI -VSC Next for Anteaters defeat In Satunlay'a Indoor track meet give him a rooter, .... ethlng he aked with the Sovlels, U.S. coocb Roy for again· Wedneaday. He was told to <llemock stressed the youth of his squad wait. Wednesday as the full contingent worked "If I had to say wbere we're stnJa&elt, out .111 l'mlmeMky Brolhe" Stadlwn. I would say 1he llO-meter bunlles - "It'a a real young team," O!emock Tim mil and Willie J)av.._t." the llid, "maybe Che youngest '°e've ever New Yorker contlnoed. Rill, lrolil Welt Ilk"' 1nto Jntematlonll competltloo. But Point, N.Y. wu a brGale madalllt Ill lhere's a lot ol talenl." Miiiich ...i 04"51(1C11t wm 1he Ol7mPlc "Only tlx of the 2% prll are . over gold lour years belOre d>tl!. IS years old, and tltero's Timmy Wallter. WhU. tbe )'Clllfb ol tbe tqaad II a ID'• only 17". Walker, from Newport, wager on the rut.re, It I& alao a ....Wt R.I., Is • bJsb jumper. "I bavtn1 of defeotlons by top athletes -begged worked out the average age ol the . ..olf-lhe RUllian trip, and the dnlw teem, bu\ I !hink It's about 211 years of die -lot -.. old. II loob good for the lature." Amoiig Chemoclt's kids are ~en Former Newport Harbor High atandoul Decker and Joni llmtley ol Ponland. Tm')' Albritton, a 1botputter, and half· Mis> Dl!ckor, a 1~,...,..,id, lo alreodJ mile aensalloo Mary Decke< ol Garden a world reaJld bolder lor Ibo ltlll...ile Grove, are member> of the learn. lndoont. Illa lllmlley, a dteerlu1 • The Americans will have to 1c1 by ..ttbeod, become at 17 yean old the what prom1lol to be a tough Soviet flnl Amerlcaft woman to ever dear equod getting razor itlarp for Ibo sti< feet In the high jump. Women'• coach lluropean dlaropioollllpo nest monlb. Bert Lyle 111• alle's been dolni It j 'Jllll how tough Ille Rutllans are, consisteoUy In practlce. ' r Ge"trag Readfl ' /I Hank ,Aaron seemed pleased to be back at the AUanta Braves train· "le camp after arriving Wedllesday. Aaron, who II expected to·su" pass Babe Ruth's , bome·run carffr record early ,tn the '.74 ... SOil, was among-'10,players to report to the Droves West l'llm-Beacli, "l'li. training camp. ' I Freshman Mike Nonnan pitched six hminp of one-bit ball to receive credit for his first college baseball victory Wednelday sfternooo as the UC Irvine Anteaters defeated cat state (Dominguez Hiils), 6-5, In action m the UCI campus fteld. Nonnan started the game and )e:fl tn the aeventh wtlh the M:O<e at 6-1 In faVO< of !he Anteater.. Freshman 10UthpaW Bruce Goodyear came on In a relief role in his first college game and ran In!<> trouble Iii thl eighth before vetenn Gory Wheelock saved !he cle- ctsloo. The victory brlng,s UC1'1 aeason record to W with !he next game Friday afternoon at USC (3). Wheelock ts ·~ to start the game wllh !he 'l'rQjfu, .NCAA university d iv I s Io n champions. Keith Brtdps Is turning Into one-of !he premier leadoff batten In UCI ' . history. lie opened the game with a double and ......i on Tony Stupy'3 single. Stupy drove In the winning r1111 In the seventh after Carl Petemel bad wallted. F9Uowlng Friday's game at USC, the Anteate" wUI eol<rtaln the UCLA Bnilns Saturday lo I -botdnnino It noon on the -lleld wlih Raj lllmi>I•"' and probably ~ Mlloe Hickman especRd to phdi. Cl IDMI. Kffltl Ill UC ,,,... J." alt r Ill rtll lrktnt. d I ,' ~ rM '•lmer,u 1000~·k...,.•1t; )On1aln, It S 1 I ! ,,_., c _. O J ~r=-~~lt t, '11 :·.,'b : ,. : : ••wr. ~ • I ~:i. & l t ' Hal'dton. cf 2 L· , 3b \ f , ~\;Jr.. c \ \ l I ;a:n... rf 1 I Ltc..111\·'I!!,.__,.., '\'I '""""' " ' GolOYeet. • I ' lhcker p 1 1 htaice, • I I ' ...w .... c: •••• ..... .. . ... ltlel• JO :..:. ~ .:.:=: • • 1 I ~ v=.ftMI Hllh :: ::t :.: ; i ' 30 DAILY PI LOT ThlH'Sdl1, Ftbru1ry 28, 1~74 Mohs' Area Hoo . --tar·s ~ Dominate All-county_ By ROGER CARLSON Of the DtllY l'lllf Stiff HIJ Edi...., High baoketball team had JU&t been belten by u pointa to a team his O!.arien had never beaten iii _ three tries. TbJs when Cllargers coach Da~ 1'.1ohs related that he'd like another crack a t Jiuntingtoo Beach you bad to v.'OOder out loud lf Mohs was in some sort of shock condit;on RAUL CONTRERAS BOB LOSNIR DAN MALANE ILMIR COMilS JIM STEPHENS after the Oilers <>f Huntington First Tt1m Flnt T .. m Flr1t Tum Co-co.ch of Vair to-coach of Year Beach had turned a three-_____________ _:_::..::.:....:.=::.._ ______ _:_:::_:..::::::. _____ _:::..::=::....::::....:~.:....----=:.:..:=::::...::__:_::.::_ __ S~phens, Combs Gain ·co-lwnor All.Orang• Cnunty Elnt Team Plapr, School Ht. c ••• AyV. Mark Wulfemeyer, Troll 6·0 Sr. 86.6 Raul Contreras, Hun\. each ·5.10 Sr. 24.0 Bob Losner, :Marina 6·6 Jr. 15.6 Dan Malane, Ftn. Valley 6-5 Sr. 19.4 Jell Welshans, Katella 6·6 Sr. 20.2 Matt Porter, Kennedi.c 6-4 Sr. 20.9 ond T1•m Scott Rankin, Hunt. Beach 6-2 Sr. 13.4 Bill Au~t, Lowell 6·6 Sr. 17.5 Jim De eese, El Dorado 6-4 Sr. 20.V 6-4 Sr. 18.2 point 1advanta'{e with 11 minutes remalnlng into an 83- 59 triumph. Today f\1ohs and h i s Olargers have achieved their rematch -getting the CIF 4-A's No. 3-rated Oilers in the first round of the playoffs after tying Santa Ana Vall ey for second place in Irvine League competition. Walnut Starters Unbeaten Tars, Monl!rchs Win Banning Tough Nut To Crack Keith Koeller, Marina Bob Yoder, San Clemente 6-2 Sr. 17.0 Steve Nelson,. Villa Park 6·8 Jr. 17.5 Third THm Brendon Mccaughey, M. Del 6-2 Sr. 16.2 Brian O'Flaherty, N~t. Harbor 5-10 Sr. 15.5 Sr. 16.2 Homers Pace Vikes Jim Swain, Costa esa 6·2 Byron Kosick, Marina 6-1 Sr. 12.6 T. Schnelderjohn, Los Amigos 6-10 Jr. 19.6 Jell Weber, Fullerton . 6-4 Sr . 17.8 . M~ explains his reasoning for wanting another crack at the Oilers : "Four of our be s t playeJ'l-Jack Clark. Ja y Wilson. Joe Troxell and Dave White-bad been out for only five days prior to our game with Huntington Beach. "J'v-e felt that HWltington Beach was a lot further ahead of us at that point. t'm sure they've Improved since then, but we have too." Mohs coached four years of Cee basketball at Huntington Beach and much of bis team's appearance resembles th e uaual Huntington B e a c h attack-a double post and 1-2-2 zone defense with t h e emphasis on running. With Raul Contreras pacing a rast break there isn't much of. a double post system at HWllington Bead! these da ys but that'.! only because Contreras ls ao effective shooting outside. "Elm~r was primar i ly Interested in me teaching good fundamentals at that time and didn't push anything down my throat. "But u thne ?.·ore on I found myself picking up more and more of Elmer's ladles and philosophy. He's the best coach In Orange ColUlty as far as I'm concerned." But Moh1 aaya he's not In awe and neither is bb team. "I don't feel we'll be Intimidated. Our kids realize V>'e're playing well at this time and we have as good a chance as anY second place team on the road. "We knew we wouldn't get a great draw and we were a litUe miffed that Santa Ana Valley, a team ~beat three Umes, drew San QOrgooio." 1\-fOOs and Combs maintain a friendly relationship off the court ·and although victory at HB would be a feather In anyone's cap, MoM says It's not an ego trip £or him. By STEVE BRAND Of '111 Dally Pilot lllH WALNUT -·Alt hough officially there ls only one undefeated basketball team left in the CIF, Walnut High could put in a claim for dual booors if asterisks w e r e allowed. Its starting lineup I s unbeaten . ·"The only games we lost," explains coach Bill Murray of his 2:6-2 record, "came when one of our starters was out with the Ou." It's been 17 games since Walnut High has missed one of Its slarters and because the team halll't lost any of those contests, the Mu stangs of the Hacienda League are beavilf favored in the CIF 2-A playOtt gairie again st host San t?J.emente High Frida.)' night. Walnut has a solid choice for CIF Player of the Year Jn H Kirk Christ, an All.CIF performer last y e a r wbo certainly hasn't slowed down this season. • Quist averages 23.4 points and 15 rebounds a game. His "leam has playeiJ in six tournaments the last two years and he was named to the all-tourney team ln each case, _nabbing Player of the Tournament honors in the Leguna Beach Tourney this season. "He's a major college prospect right now," says Murray. "He shoots well inside and out, rebounds -and can handle the ball." But the talent, and hei ght, doesn't stop there . The front l ine ts supplemented by S.3 Lance Parrish, who hits at an 11.4 average, and 6-5 center Steve Will , who averages nine rebounds and points <an outing. The guards are Gary Case, who missed those two games the Mustangs lost, and -Marcelo Maurin, a 5-11 ball· "I want to win," says Mohs, "but ·It's not because I coached under Elmer before. "ADd our kids are anxious." OCC Pair All-circuit Orange Coos! College's Bob Manker and Tom Crunk have been selected to the Dally Pilot's AJl-&ulh Coast Qinference basketball team. handler who has hit at a 13 .0 average. When Walnut goes to the bend!, Ken Czarnecki (6-4), Kelly Bowlin J>-IO) and Clilf Maoitlng (6-2) answer~ call. "We know San C1emefite is a good team'" says Murray. "Any team that wins 19 games has to be good. We feel we have to stop Bob Yoder and Dan Dodd if we h>pe to Alm named to the first wilt, were player ol !lie year Al Fruhw!rth (Cerritos). crunJr earned a second team berth ri lut seasoo. 11 win." Manker, a tran!fer, U averaged 19.9 points per ~ conference game while CTunk, iJ one ~ the conference's top •1 Walnut 12'·1) !11!1 Gar~t Rowland L• Canida Soulh P11adtnl T•mPll C11Y " " E " derensive players, hit at a n JO.I clip. ~~ Santa Ana's Bill Oates was u coach of the year. ~ Al,.lwtll Co••! Cllfthlrt"'' « "lrst T11rn il ,..,,,..., lclleol HI. Clnt 11 Ttm Cn111k.. Otlllf' CN1I 6-2 I•. tt .II"* llW!nloOfl, 10 M... , ... So. '' Al l"nll!Mrth, C.,rtto. M SO, 61 .. ....... .,, Oft• CMtf .... l1. il lobO'f' ~I. S•11!1 An1 .,_, So. If SKMf T111'11 ,, ~'"' Ltocher, S1n11 An1 '-S Jfff Hlltfan, ,.-un~an ... , G.n' 1'11111\. Ml. S..n A11tonlo ... 10 sr-1noc1gr1••· s'"'' A111 6-J "'ndY SINll, Cfftllot 6-4 "· Sa. 61 ... , .. ... C1nvan "'-··~ U11!wrslty Leguna l11cl'I B•ldwln P•rk LP Wiison Nov111s Rova1 Oek Alli Lame S111 Olmes Roy1t Oak Sierra Vltll Onlarlo Bonita Gladstone Alla Loma S•n Dimas ll OYll Ollk Siert• \lli1• Onl•rlo Boni II Gl•dstane C1F ,l1yollt !l•ldwln Par~ .. " " " " " " .. .. " " " " " " .. " " " " " " " Seventb-lnnlng rallies by Newport Harbor and Mater Del highlighted DOll·league baseball action for Orange Coast area prep n l n e s Wednesday. The sallors of Newport Harbor came up with a alngle tally ln the top of the ·seventh frame to ouUaat host Rancho Alamitos, t-3. And Mater Del's Monarcba scored a pair In tbe bottom or the seventh to edje visiting Magnolia, HI. Marina Hlgh'1 V I k t n g a blasted Botsa Grande with a pair of solo homen and a four·run outburst in the fifth inning to capture a 6-2 decision at Bolsa Grande. . Jn ni&"httime action at El Modena P a r k , University bounced error-prone Orange, 8-2. Westminster batters were unable to successfully solve the slants of Lakewood pitching and went under, l-0, at the winner 's diamond. Newport's victory got sta rted when Dave Vester pinch hit for Dwain Pautsch and walked . He stole second and advaiiced to third on a single by Morgan Abbott. Emle Hook, who struck out eight and pitched six·hlt ball, won his own game with a deep sacrifice to left to score Yester. Doug Chard led Newport's hitters with two singles and a double. Mater Del's winning rally was started by Dan Spaln'a single. Tom Kirkness got aboard on a~ pcm Catozza dou)fed in JM'iYlng run. Jim Garde' walked' to load the bases and Mlltt Smith got the winnlng run across when be was hit by a pitch. Gregg Foster and Mark Longnecker got the Marina Vikings all they needed in the fourth iMlng with circuit blast.I, but the Vlkes added four more anyway-an innb'!.g later with the help of a sacrtflce fly by Walt Saller, a two-run alngle by Robert Lopez and a bas ... loaded walk to Fost.r. With pllcl!lng ace Foster In <the outfield tile Vlkes used Mike Natalie for four Innings, Jesse Bors for two frames and Dave Werner mopped up ln the seventh. Natalie allowed one unearned run and a hannless single. Aside from that Bolsa Grande was turned away empty handed. Robert Hale was the hard- -luck loser ·for Westminster as he went all the way on the mound, allowing four hits . HUMMELL RESIGNS FoothDI H I g h basketball coach Hank Hwnmell has resigned his position after coaching the Knlghta f0< It years, the Daily Pilot has learned exclusively. Hummell turned In his resignation Monday a f t e r piloting ttie Knlghts since the Inception ol tlle school. No sucetssor has been named yet and Hummell will continue at Foothill in the physical education department. Te1mis Results J For Coast Area Golt11n Will UI OJ l•nll Anl Slrlfl" P•r1<•• (GJ cttf. D1vldi.on 4-2, k W1IMI (GI dtf. Tgpa1!1n '-1, ~ PDllO (G) dtf. M•rlln 1-J, to-2. Finck (Gl dtf. H1nns 7.,, .._.. Or•hood (G) dtl. Nord1lram W, •1. WtlllrNnn IGl dot. Alll1rton .. 2, .. t. Dwllht P1r1<""°"'1Jlood (Q) de!. Da~l.n­ TGP1ll1n 6-4, ..,, M1 rtln·H•nn1 (I) dtf. Flnd·Wtlfll'lll'ln J.J, ..... PO!tto • W111ln lGl d ' I. Nord1t""'" Allllrton ._., .. ,_ Vtrtlty l!tllffft UfY,) (TVil Mt1. IHA ""'"' Mallr (I) lost to JCllllS U , IOlt 10 8rN .... '°"' to llfl ...... , lot! ta •rM U , lo.I ta Liii"' 4"11 kid ta slllnk.t 1-1. l!:l1l1r !f l Iott H. won '"'· "'· U. Scllltl rt:J -M, l-0, U, Ml. k . Lynon {II Iott 24. "°" ..... 64. •t. ·-DtSolt-l'MIOn (I!) dl'f. CoOl1r-V111 0..-rlt't W , 6-31 dl'f. C11t1pbtll.011n- <11rlOll .. 2. Ml. Rulld-l'llPl'IOI'• !l!J 1pl11 •-1, '"" won .. ,, .. 2. J~nr.r V1nlty •dlton C20VIJ 0 \111 Htt. llKll Slntlfl Rinn Ill \oet to l"rt!ICl'I U , Iott to Cowin J-1, IOlf ta Low" k, def, 811nkl' '"'· W11~m•n fl!'! lll'd M. won '"'' 1.f, •t. Og1t1 IE) -'4, IOI! 2"-t-1, won 6·1. Rllbadill !El _.. .. 4, IOllt I ... ! ... _ .. o.- IClm-0. Llnnat IEI ci.f. Colt141111cll M , ... , dl'f. Slf'1111111•-Sltol 1•, .. i. l lnoham.f"rlll flEl won 7·S, 641 "'' ... ,. ,,..,..,.,... ldhon 7, H11nt1119lon 8NCll 1. ..... ,., cltl', V1n Zllldt 7-S, dlf. Avw 1 J, d.t. A)'ln 7-S. Cl'ltlaltr ICM) -M. 6·2, '"'' 14. Slmonl•n (CM) IOlt H, won ...... 3. ... . .\\ltl!IM {CM) IOlll ... , WOl'I M, 6-l. .... ...... Fr1r1Clt-Mar111Uno {CMJ Ml. Wll-a .. rd "'• .. 2, cltf. 011lfo.l!lll;ln ._,, "'· Gotly- .1-11 IW Pro Scores Basketball c::..,1 MtN Ul\.'11 114'"1 ,-.,..,._ ) Harrl1 ICMI lod Wl1ollt , .. , .. ta Hirt 1 ... tiff Taylor H. def. OltOod w Olf•lllt, • w-(CJ k19t U. l_.1 Mft U. '°''-lltfe 7ilW1~an It, 10 V. "' DI~ , <"°'"" " ''· • lltfl ••• ., ~~11 1*1 11, Ctl Ttcll 70 WN n. v-7f ,. .. , ...... u. _. u HI!• n. S.n tr11•fdlno Vt llty ~ w. =iiJ:li..M•l'lllfll•n 100 Ml nl ,ordNM .. "~' , I'· 101,.~l11r• IS ,«M,._.fl, I • T oltdo " ......... ~ .... Ml1ml IOlllo 1t1n1 St '' ~ltJ!OrM Cl , ,t,lr f'orc1 .. Sollftl_ c::tr ~r • , Plfttburvll so tMl'YMrW~. Wllll f'or•tl" C"""9fl t(, ~II DON'T DlSCARD THOSE OLD TENNIS SHOES ! ! .................. .,,.. .......... -- .vmt<>NY'S SHOI SlRVICI tWUTCUff "-AJA •UOO ·•AJHlON ISLAND •C.OIOHA Dll MAI .... ' Hllt!flf'IO'IWI lc::MJ I• H. HI \ll'Ofl .... °" M1otll111 ICM) Iott 1"'-M i "'°" ....... -.. Mlll'Vll'l-KrfllMll'I (CM J lofll to Hl- Jtl'llllOll J.1, W1 dlf. 1111r11Md .... cnd1 •t ... ,, ll"OWll-.Annl!lllar11 ICM) •Iii f.I. U i w Ut w, .... J•llll' V1nlty CMll MeU Cltl ltl ,-.,,.,.. ""''" Oltdl'IM' ICM) l•t ta Htl'ICUCll. Mt DOH YOUI CAR IDLI IOUOH? WE n:J,=1111LAGU CAN HELP THE CARBURETOR SHOP '"' --111.W.:"""'..... ..,..,.. AN-•-,,,,,..,_..,, .......... , I A single, 1toleo baae and aoother base lilf"'m the third Inning was hl.o Waterloo. He fa<ed only 20 batters and struck out six Lakewood play era. Westminster had nmners on second four tlmes but was unable to cash in with the key hit. Tim Wallach had two rbl for Unjverslty and the wlnnera put It on lee In the fifth inning with a four-run rally without benefit of a base hit. Wild pllchlng and poor throwing killed Orange. Pablo Silva had the only e1tra base hit for University. Mwlllrt Harllor (41 abrllrlol 'I 2.--V l V1 0 t/o ~ ~ ;, 0 1 1 ' l J 0 I I 0 0 2 0 0 0 H1nl•y, If Pa11IKll, 2tl AbOotl, ltr Sore•. lb Haoll, p ,,,.,d, ti Outty. ct !llDOMlll, C Tot•ls u ' ' a seer• toy 11111tnp ' • • -~-Harbor 010 Oll 1--<1 • ' A1nc110 Al•mllos 001 002 o-J ' • M1rln• '61 .. ' • "' 0.11110, lb , • ' ' Rath, lb , ' ' ' LCW\llnKktr. cf , ' ' ' Olcktan, cf , ' ' • Hlnn, 2b ' ' • • f0$!1r. rf • , , , S•lltr, c • • • ' LI l'r•nc•, e ' • 0 • LCIPlt. lb • • • ' W•tnlel"· st ' • ' • MarllMC. If , ' I 0 N•talla, p ' • • • llors, o • • ' ' O'Am0<•, P., ' ' • • Wtrntr. p • • • • ltOblnton, 11 , • •I • Tot1l1 " ' • ' sc.ni W lnn111111 ' ' . M1rl"' 000 2«1 11--4 t 2 !loll• Grandt 001 000 0-1 I 2 W"llllllMlitr (IJ ... , .. ,.. F11nk1, s• S O l o ROMn.cl 2010 ltlCl'l•rd1, lb 3 0 0 0 RUl\00. lb l 11 1 0 Pl119'1, r1 I 0 0 0 ~•Int, II 2 O f 0 Twt11. :itr 3 0 0 0 lh1bKlll, c I o I 0 W•IM.c t I I 0 Ji•le,p 2 o o o Tol1lt 23 0 3 o Sc-~y IMMnp Weslmlnster 000 DOD ~ l Uktwaod 001 DOD x-1 ' Mllflf' Dtt "' "'""' Glr'llN, cf J O I I N1tw1, •P • 1 I O SITllll'I, If J 1 1 2 Unntn, c 2: 1 0 0 Doran, lb 2 1 o t M1caul1y. Jtl 2: o o t 01nltlt, Jb I O O f 11191"' 2b 3 2 ' 2 ltl••nftt, r1 2 1 1 I Eccl"' p.rf 2 O O 0 C1HOl•, rt I O 1 I Tol1l1 '' 1 ' J BANNING-El Toro Hlgh's 'toughest task slnce early aea10n confrontations with Elslnote and Cerritos appean to be at hand Friday night at San Jacinto Hl1h School where the Banning Broncos await in the second round of the CIF l·A bas~etball play~fs. '!be BroDC.'OI of coach Ray CUrt11 have chalked up an l&-5 record, Including. the Dlrtd!Ma " 1111 .&Mtlltt ...... Hlll'lll on RIVlrtldt ,.,...,,,., to Vin l11r1o11 turnoff ln Sovlh ltlvtnld•. PrOCMd tail to JtS. Go IOlltl'I Dll m, hirll let! •I lttltlOlll l!xpt'9HWIY (110n1ll. Go 1111 1pproxlm1t11v \I mlfH (p..11 -.tonal) lo 1top tlOJ\. Tvrn rlollt an Sr.It II., It!! D11 R•ITIOlll E•PA••w•v. School It loclttill Dll lilt. runnerup position in t h e DeAnza League. Four of their losses are to DeAnza League ch a'm pion Elsinore and lo 3-A power Palm Springs. Each dealt the Broncos a pair of setbaclu during the regular sea!Oll. Included In the list of Banning victims are 2·A tqughies Hemet and Yucaipa and 3-A playoff entry ParlmoWJt, which ts now in the second round or the eliminatiOOJ. Pacing the Bronco•' attack is Tony Pryor, a S..11 tenior lettennan at forward with a 19.6 scoring average. He garnered All.CIF honoro in football and bultetball as a junior on the l·A level. In add.it.ion, the Broncos have a pair of 6-3 jump. ini jaclu in the front line. Steve SlmptOb, who recovered from a wrilt injury that put him on tlle 11dellnes for almost his entire junior season, lead.I the team 1n rebouiiaing with over II per game, in addition to a 15. t ICOrinc average. senJor David Bird ls the other t-3 seruor letterman and IDIW the other hall of the front line. A pair of quick and agile &.I guards complet. the setup. 'Ibey are senior R a n d y WIDlams and Junior Larry , 11 • strange. Maono1r1 011 20t D-4 10 J First off the bench 1f ICIH'I Q ll'lnlllti Mlttr o.i 100 «10 2-1 • 1 n-···y ·-• • gu·~ Joe ••-...,'I' ' • "' .. ..._. -~ .,..,.. .u-u Jorui-, and 5-2 junior Frtd s1nct11l. 2b 2 1 •, ! Wal•-. snv.,p ! ! -M. ltOOl"'°"' p 0 0 cu--..... and ,,__ both ,,,.,.\Id, c .i o 1 0 ..... .....,., • ·~v· are wan1e11. • a o ' t excellent leapers and can stufr c::oryer, lb. 2 o o o Svrlco, rt 2 s 1 o the . bill easlly act'Qrdtn1 to Ten players and two coaches from the Orange Coast area have been honored wilh All-Orange County baaketball honors as selected by the Orange County Sportswriters Association. Huntington Beach and Marina, which dominated the county with 23·2 and 25·1 seasons, dominate the '111-atar setur.. . Marinas Bob Losner, Keith Koeller and Byron KOllck received recognition, as did Huntington Beach's Raul Contreras and Scott Rankin. And coaches Elmer Combs of Huntington Beach and Marina's Jim Stephens share coach of the year laurels. Player of the year ls Mark Wulfemeyer, Trqy High's sensational senior who recenUy surpasaed the state record for polnls scored in a prep career. It's his fourth time on the all-county team and his . scoring came almost exclusively on outside jump- ers and drives on the fast break. He averaged 36.6 polnls through the regular sea· son as a senior. Contreras and Losner made first team after leading their teams to seeded berth In lhe CIF 4-A playoffs. Contreras was a one-man wrecking crew for Huntington Beach with his nifty oulside sbootlng, his direction of the fast break and his ability to stymie 11re-opposttion a.-the point manin Huntington's 1·2·2 zone defense. - Losner was the big man -for J.1arina and ruined most te1JD1' man-to-man defense by taking their bli· gest flayer outside with him and then cashing in on long lumpen. t'a Loaner's third time on the All-county team, earning third team and second team honors as a fresh· man and sophomore. Malane came on strong in Irvine League play to lead his Fountain Valley mates to their first ever cir· cult title and was that loop's player of the year. He, too, u a repeat choice, garnenng second team honors In 1973. GWC Girls Romp, 18-6 Every member ol the lineup had at 1 .. st ooe bue hit Wednesday as the Golden West C o 11 e I e RusUeretta IOftball i..m tromped on vl!ltlng Ventura College, IH, 1n a noo-le1gue game. 'l1ie l\uatlerettes ha v el--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;,;;; scored 66 runa In three games this season u defending Southern Calllomia champions ~ and opened with 11 markers .in the first lW<> lr1111es against Ventura. POOL TABLES $39500 -~..;; and up Hii., ii 1 1 o o u1lstant coach Dave Olmsted, v-•·-'"'· £;L::run, pll I 0 : g -IH1 .... T .... CH C!)OWIJllG ucrs D•LUAIDS t~~n~1Pllu ~ i 00 g 1peaklng for CUrtis, who was ''::.:.:-' :_•: k:r~1r~. 1111 : : , 0 i;;<;s..;;ro;u;a;H;·~P;•;•;e;a;•;>;;;~;;;;;;~~~;;;;~;;~~~;;;;;;~~~a D. ltotrlnlOl'I, 1111 o O t o Tettl1 11141 1«1'9 '1 IHI• ••• Untwnlfy 111 01' 1-4 4 1 Or•nte 200 000 o--2 ' ' THl!ITEEL BllonD RAqlAL 40,IOO -••• PlUll MAlllllUM-1\\d .,_ ... ,_, .,. ........ " ...... ..,.,.,,,,,...."" r SPECIALS FOR THE WEEK at tlte House . of Pies ALL YOU£!!!"~! $16.' • DINNER SELECTION • 4 • 9 p.m. • 11u1day Fnri1 & Ilona 111 Cos ...... fi~&Chlps SpOgltettl with Miat $ouc1 · S... or Sll•d-. Roll & htttr ' "'"P"'IMdl-lltt ... •Ff..._ l I Coast Area Prep Swim Summaries ' Area Five In JC Meet Prep Girls Track • SACRA M ENTO--Ot C&fMI *4 Mu IHJ CMll MIU llU ll I 4'1)--1 , v-fN) t. Qonl•ln IHJ, Inge fl-11111 VllMY (Ml '" lllllt -I. (Olli Mt,. 1 l. $111 !NJ, l lmt: l :C..1 Coast College's Jeff Noon IUld IO lH -1. w111 !CdM ) a. l.1yr1r corone 414 ~r S. Ct1111 M"'i Ti,...., am r111r-1. N..,._t H1rbor 1:u .1. ICM) 1 Mlr1monle• (CMI Time: 1·y 4 lot-I. K1U111111r (N) 2. ltnh ll \NJ Golden West'a Kevin Smith, ·,,.o -1. Tnotr\PMll 1cM1 '· v.rney ''' ' V ' 'I-((Ml Tl l -6 1 8rtdlord (N). Tlmt: 11,,. n~ V8'"''°"n, Ed James ~-.t · '"' ,.. m1: 1.... A0--1. 1tl1l k llllct IHI 1nli SlrlClnl nun 116'... Dll\I 100 -1. Cl1~~•1u tCMI 2. (Hl 3. Ntmlc CNJ. TlrM: 1,.1.S. Mart Smith will compete In TOUGH Mci:armlck ICM) ). klVOI tCdM ) "° .... y-1. Ntwport H1•bor S2.41 Time' 11.t S0-1. OlllOll \NI 1. M1rfmon N) V1r.lty ••m ltll i111 '"•Ml• I :: 'M4ldl1ylltlty -I. E;llllOl'I. llll'lf: :J ll'l'ff -I. 'NY1tt Iii), 1 l.• (al, 3. Vin Gorden (EOJ Tl-· 1:tS.l • .. .... _____ lnd.-Medlw hffl• '41 t,:.~.fllltr le),_!_ SllWP\5 {El. Time: 50 P:rM -f. GllroV (E), J . ......adotk (E). 1 "tlmtl' (Ed). Tl1t11: 1'.2. Diving -I. I.ti (El. t, O'TooM 11!1. S. VolPt (Edl. Polnt11 157.1'. M100 Fly -1. Glblon (Ed), 2. ~~.2.!E), 1 S1nfor4 (E4l. Tim.: lllnl«"V•nllY c-.. ... M•r Utl CM) !" v1 .. ey ' lOlolfr" -I, H111 (V J, Slr.ellY I/) • l'IO 11\lrd. Inell Mtdlf'\' -1. lie& IV ). Time: t:UA. 1,Jf tr" -/.1. Wlddl1, ICl 1. l1111r Dodlr r..). f lmt. 21.'1. ft~~ ftff -1. k1rm1n tC). Th'l'll; ' .S00 Frff -I. RICI IV) 2, Sll11ly VJ ,, no third. --100 leek -I. L11t1r /Vl 2. Tlm!·i l :•l:t . , lQO 8r11st -. Wt6d'9 ( 1. H.,.m1n (Cl I. Dod.,. ICI. Timi: :lt.1 400 Fr.t Rell¥ -1. SA \11ll1y. Time; S:Oi.S. "l'Mft.'"'" C-1 •el Mir lllO) (2'1 St, V11t11 the ~-t JC t f ' • • • 5.0 -'flrwOOd (CM\ 2. Tr100ICI l. Sholn\1~.,-IN ). Tlmt' 6A. -e w res Ing CFVl 1 Gllr ICM) Thn1; t:lO.t Mlll--1. "obernon IN\ t. Younv ·'·-·tonshlps at American 440 lllllY -1. CO•I• M•w 1. lkl '· Ry.n (H). Time: ,, 1i. ........ ..., (ConUnued From Page 3tll Foun111n v1111y 1. cwor111 d11 Mir 120-1. &1111111 1Nl 2. er.01ore1 (NI 100 er-1 -1. 'Jollllton rFI 1. River College, here, Frklay Tlmt: S3.1 l .• •,."1hw• (N1i. T1, .... : 21.'.:..... .. ...... MurpPly !Ml s. 11 ... titum 1111. tlmt: 111. !.() -I. ClllVllU ICMl 2. l el"IVG<' •Y rtlY-' NIW,..... .... r ..... . l :OJ.•. and Saturday. he (CM) S. P1pp.11 ICdm! Time: 6.S 1'~j~1. Wiiton (NI 2. Ctrl<ot Tf~/:',l 4"••IY -1. MINlon Vl•lo. N pbo !lni hed T Broncos pressed Mnt -I. Armo (I") 2. Leyrer l. Funa (HJ. Oht1ntt: u . . ' . JIHll# Ytnl.., 000, 8 SO more, S Jfoltvi!le Tuesday and it pl\id ICM) 1 Glll19htr ICM) T1m1: 5:,2.4 SP-I. 01nl1t11 (N) 1. Durw:1n Foolllll wlnt lly tor1-11:' second ... lasl Fr Id a y '' ff f . 220 -I. L.lf!lr ICM) 2. VlrMY 1 Gon1•~ (HJ. Disl1nc:t: lJ.11 . ,.,...,,_.., o or a 62-51 victory. ,._J, l. G11r ,._...,)Time: 21.4 u -1. 01n1111 !N) 2. fhl•r• MIM1111 VIII• 111 JIUI Ptollllll I naf lupound di isl Mtdltr Relay -I. Co1t1 M111 ;;';· ;";-~;'";;'·~O;l';";~;i'i;';'; ... ;;;;'"~· ~--too 111eo:111y R•••v _ 1. Footllln. reg o ,,.,. v on at But the Broncos can also 2. cos11 Mes• 3. Foun111n v.u,.,I Ti~: 2:06•6 Ventura, losing to Cypress' play a tough zone d efense Timi: 1:01·' LEASE A ' 4 2••z Cll••• \FF'T'3. T.,.,1r l~i. ~r'::::-i~:i~o. 2. long Jumv -l11ter (CMl 2. w111 7 - 100 n11. Mldltr _ 1• Dl•n !Ft John Correa. Noon, who placed when their man tactics don't !CliMJ 1 Tnomp'°" ICMJ 01111nce: LOW AS $12l MO. f:.~' IF) 1 Doftohul (F). Time: row1l\, in the state Iasl year, get the job done. , .. ~io11 J\lftljl -Well CCdM) 2. ~Ith SJ Fr" -1. 01ru1111 !Fl 2. Lowt (){fensively the hosts like IC.M l 3. o·xeei. ICMI oi.11nce: s.. COSTA MESA DATSUN IFI. Time: "·'· has a 2>2--1 season record, 1 d 1 of th s11o1 Pur -Tomun !CMI 2. Vogel so Fly -1. Clll (Fl 2. Du••n 0 run an ttlOS e ICCIMJ 3. Ml,lllO ~FV) Disl1nc1: 2'·•11 18~5 HAllOll ILYD. c . .M. ;. TAX o.e .L. DAILY PI LOT l 100 l"rff -I. Wyett CEJ, 2. Vin ~don (Ed), 3. M1ddoc:k1 tEJ. Time : SOD Fr" -l. Riiey !Ed) 2 KllptMr tEJ, l. Pld1.lotd (Ed). T1..,.; S:t.1.1. lO Medley ll1t1r -1. CdM. Timi : 1:5'.7. 200 Fr" -I. S1y1r IC) 2. $1m11110ll (Cl 3. P1nnlnglon ((). Tlme: 2:03.t. 100 Ind Mlldl1y -1, Wflfn'Y (C) J. Orr /CJ 3. 81nler fVJ. Time: !Fl '· Time: 19.t. with the two losses being firepower is contained atnong H1w111<1 1n1 1111 H11~11~ ... ••ec:~ ir'"o-641' $0 Fr" -1. K. How1 (M, L T.,.ry -~~~~~~~-----------------~~~~~:i~~~~~~::::_ ...... 'f!.:2!~~~1~~:1~~::~~~~~~~~;;~~-~~~~~.::======================== !Fl 3. o1r11111 !Fl. Tlmt: s1.1. dealt by Correa. Pryor and Simpson . •G lH-1. w llOfl {N) 2. Dlnltf• SO 8ltk _ 1, 0.ln (F) 2, Scott lNJ J. M~yer (HI. Timi: U.I. 100 l1ek - 1. W1lk1r tEd), 2. "•l1m1r (Ed/, 3. Scr1nlot1 (El Tim.· l :ID.3, . • 100 lr.111 _.._,, 11Jdr1n CEdl, 2. J-!!ell, 1 Slt'o'Wl1 (&;J limo· l :Ol.S. • • Tia ,-,.. lttllly -1. Er11ncl1. mt: 2:JU. · J""'""'"'"11y ••• Cl•l IMI a111rw:i. -Mldlty R1l1r -1. Edlion. Tl..,.: 1:12,1. 200 Fr• -1. But11r (Edl. l. lbornlk (Eli), 3. Prcwo•I CEii). Time; l:Ot.I, 100 Ind. Medi..,. -1. Wooch fEd), 2.. Zborntk (Ed), l . Wltb&ltr (E). Tlf'M : 1:17.0. W FrM -l. lrY1M l Ed), !. :.i"°'' fEI, l . Fir. (Ed), Tlf'M: 100 Fly -I, Zbor11ek (Ed}, t , NIW!Mn !Ed), 3. H011!1 (El. TlrM: 1:10.4. 100 Fr• -1. Bull.,. (£), J. lrvln1 (Ed), 3. Mlli.r (El. Tl,.,,..; SI.,. .SOO ''" -1, Zborn1k !Ed), 2. H1lc:oc:k IE), 3. Fln1 IEdl. Tl,.,,..: •:02.0. 100 81ck -l. Wortll (Ed), t. i:~T' (Ed), 3. Wlbllll' (E ). Tlm11: 100 8tMtt -I. N1-n IEdl, 2.. 8.,_ IEJ, 1 HQ.II.II lEl. Tlll'll: l:lU. olOO ,.,... Rel1y -1. EdlJ.On. Tlll'll: .. :O\.f. ,P,.....Stpfl 1•1-11•1 (HI ltflMll 20ll Mldl•r Rtt1y -1. EdllOn. TlrM: 2:°'.s. 1CIO F'" -l. Ochlnll' (fd), 2. Cniu !Edl, l. Hoffmen IEdl. Tltn1: 1:09.f 100 Ind. Mlld'9y -l. Mutill'llut1r fhl, 2. Wei,_. (Ed), 1 OIMlll (!:). TlrM: I :Ool.1. JO F'" -1. 8rron IEdJ, 1. Slo»n !El, l . Gre; (Ed . Tll'l'll: 16.S. » P:ly -1. Kluek !Edi, 2. w1..,. {Edl, 3. Slo.n (E). Time: 21.D. 100 Fr" -1. lynn !Eco. 2. llNl'l'lll (E), 3. l'l\1Yfltolcl IE ). TlllW: ff.... . ID lacil -1. Mutill'lltlMr (Ed), t. Cr-(Ed), 1 sio.n (£). Tlll'll: .... jO l r111t -1. koffm1n <E•l, t. OhOll (EJ, l. Ocll1r"' !Eel. Tl.,...; •u. 20D Fr" ll1l1y -1. E1tancl1. Tlmt: 1:52.1. "•"'tr Lew-: ... Eflo-fUI OMI II MMeM 2flll Mtdley Riiey -I. El l)orldo. Tlmt: I :'9.5. :10t P:rM -I. llrcllflftd IEl !. M1mllton (El 1 Morr111t (lJ. Tim.: 2:00.1. 200 Ind. Medley -I. Mlllll' lEJ 2. I~ IEl 1 Sl"9M IE). Tlmt: J:lt.O. jO """' -1. Cl1tt.y IEJ 2. I . CL1ffey (E) l. Ml!-Ill. TlrM: .... Olvl"'ll -1. Wl'I (l.) 2. V•n Mour1c (l.) l. EwrrMd (EJ. 100 fly -I. Mori !El t llttk• IEI 1 Merton Ill- KID Fr" -I. l1udtfto.cl\ (El 2. H1mllton !E) a. DIVWI tu. Time: ss.o. JOO Fr" -1. Cl11'11Y !El 2. "ott.r (l.) 1 81r!U !El. Time: S:\1~. Ml aldt -1. Mori !El !. hl'llOI (El 3. kallodr. (l.). Ttm1: \:!U.S. 100 l r1ul -l . Miii.,. (El 2. I MllClnl ILi ), I,_ (El. Tl,,,.: 1:m.t. «ID ,.,.. ""''-, -1. El OOr.0., Tlme: ':00.S. .. ,...,..,.,.. ~ l•cll {12) COi •I DW'Mt • XIII ""'°11¥ R111y -l. El Doredo. Tlmt: 2:01.,. 1IO P:KllEE -I. 8unttnv Ill t. • Cl.,,_r IE) l. Rkhlrdi {E). Tl,,_: ... f :"'-1 ' 1• Ind. Mlldlf'\' -l. llnklltttr (l.I t. '91'9r$ (E) 3. Kerr (E). 'I Thn.: 1:07.0. jO f'r" -I. lun:lltld CEI 2. O'H1r1 Ill l. Mlbl IE). Tlmt: 14•. 51 l'tf -1. O'H1r1 (l.l t. Cl1ffly IEI l. ,.,,..,_ (El. Tlmt: 1'.7. 100 Fr" - 1. lurcftlkl l'El 2. IUl'ltl"' tu 1 Rld'llrdl (El. Timi: .... j0 lldl -1. Slmon1111 IEJ 2. Mlbl IE) l. Amtdln ll.). Timi: :O.< 50 lrMll -1. Crll.,. (El 2. kfl1r CE) l. l lnklltt .... Tlrr>1: ~.I. :JOO Fr" tt:111r -1, El Dorlfo. Tlmt: l:Ut. ....... ........ NlfW Olf> fU1 M•IMlm IOO Mldfl'Y Jttlly -I. Anll'tllm. Time: 1:•7~. :IO FrM -I. WIUl1nu (Al 1. f:'f'zl INl 1 OW.11¥ CPO. Ttmt: a Incl. MldltY -1. Hlnchbtf'o tt.?w~ ~o:t~n INl J. RlllllrtllOll (Hf. .90 Ir" -I. 0.Mott INJ J GwflhOll IAJ J. 511Yt111 IN). Tl""-i n..;)Ylfll -1. NIWpOrt wd\ by tort.et. 100 ,.,., -1. kll'JCl'lbtl'll '"I '· l 1 Dotlrotf (NJ 1 tt:1111n IN). T m1: ~·· "" •i:. -1. ·-(A) • ·-00 1 Mott IN\1· Tlmt: Sl.4. F"' '•'" .-• Wllll1m1 IAj 2. r.ilb NI ~ NIWl1nd IN). T me: s:o.i.•. ~ 100 l1clr. -I. J. OtC1n1tt INJ :t ~~. IHI 3. LIPPOid IN). Time: ';f'co lrftf -t. _Ald9rl {Al 2. NIWflfld CH) l. AMtnon {NI. Tlmt: l:Ol.7. 400 fr91 Rlf1y -I. Newotrt ~. Time: )itt.1J..,...V""9Y MeWMrt M.,... t•I C•I AMMH!t Si Frw -I. Ji•r.'MJI (Al 2. li.r.:. ':O~r ~1r 1. Nl~l~I:: l~.t Enc.-1" (A), No ll!!l'd. Tlmt: 90 Pf"-I. Htr.11:'41 (N) 2. HUMlklf (Al, N1 thl,d. Tlmt: tt.4. IOI P'lr -I. Willi\-!A/ 2. Stvrfwlnl INl. No lhlrd. lmt: 1: 1.1. 100 P'rll -1, HMll:tll lN). No ~or third. Tl,,..1_ 1:05.t. !!...!!" -1. umlllllll (Al :l. "'fOO"li' lHI. N1 tfllrd. Time!• !:42.t. *°"' r,..ecdi,,;: tlm.rr~ NJ. No ~ r9fl1 ); M.l: (~). t~Jm:: 1:11.1. • ...... • ... ., -1. Mlllllm. Tlmt: 4:11.1 -r,..t.."'til:T'iu) -M M -Mid 1Y R..t1y -1. NfWPOtf HwDlf., T{me: 2!flA· » ,.,.. -. Pr1C?llrli I~ I, MW l:!J. i.,:~k IN!_: T\~i.~ .....,. WJ..~ :.?.'"°" 'rNl J. l'ttf'Ml'I N). • ,,... -t. Grey (NJ t. !"troll (NI 3. Ct.lier {Al. Tim•: ''"· '° l" -1. ''"'' IN~J: TIO-• (NI , V1r• !Nl. Tlm11 .... 100 ,.,... -1. Grn: fN t. M'Vtrl (N)). l"rkhlrd \N). Tlme1 AA( . Tlfl'IM~K~)-1 ..... ~111!AJ. ~lm:; '2.f. I 40 lre11t -1. 1.lld\'lom fNJ 2, Jell,_.. {M) J. Gllnn {A), TfrM: .... 200 llrtf lt:tltY -1. NtwPort H&rbor. Tlm11 l :M~. Vtl"llllY e ........ M•r (\tlf (JI) •• YtlwY 200 M1Cl11Y 1tt11y -1, CctM. TltMt 11l!l, P'rtt -1 -,,_. (Cl t. w:i;,.;;ltl • C.,;i.,o;ko IV), Tl-• "!ltc ...... -1. ,_ "' t I" nvtorl{C), J, l"llmtr ((), l'llMI ~ r. -1. 'ir'Vl (() .!· ""''" f 1~,,; ~:~of.kl 'r:i 1. '~IMltY ' ~lr. '-'r .-,.:i .!~ ... !'/.~~ .. "°'" -1. i.:.~n1n.t.n a. M IC) i. Oii Vlll9 {Cl, ; I ' -1!cj'.'ff <~>J1wt"; f!J."r' ~a. •rvr:rfv1. ~,J; Ill" ...... -'· '""" "I '· 1 m ICI ., 119111Mft IC). T tM: ·:1:1"7• P'(J!ll ltlfi., -1. CdM. Tlmt1 l:Ol.I. 50 Fr" -1. Smith {() 1. HKk {Cl. I.., Denny (VJ. Tln"ll: 2S.7. SO ,.ty -I. Whirry {CJ 2. S1r1r (C) 3. Jerrv IV). Time: 21~. loo Fr" -1, HKll (Cl 2. HO!Xlllfon CV~ 3i1~~ ~)·1~1r.'~~M,ii (CJ Smllll (Cl 3. Yrl<'tbUrn (Cl. Time: 311. 50 lrlltl -I. l.IUMr Cj 2. Dlblc1 (V) l . ,._lnaton IC). T m1: 35.3. 200 Fr" lltllV -1. CCIM. Tlmt: 1:'6.2. V1nl1Y Siii Cll1n111t1 (HI,\) 11•1"11 lnorl 200 Meo:ll•Y "1l1y -1. S•1' Cllfnlfll•. Tlmt: 1:50.0. 100 Fr" -I. "enc• (Son) 2. Cl'llrCI (Soni l. llMblck ISC). Time: 1;.SJ.l. 200 Ind. Mlldlty -1. Ttylor (Son) 2. O'Gormen :SC) l. AlklnlOll !SCl. Tlmt: 2:06.0.• jO Fr" -1. D. WlllDl'I (SC) 2. (Ill ) M. Wiison CSC) OIYoung (Son), 01vl1 (Son). Time: Jl.t . Dlvlnog -I. W11v.,. ISonJ 7. Me111off (SOfll ). Wlllt. (Son). Points: 1f.l.S. 100 Fty -I. hrw:1 (Soni 2, IC.....cft (Son) 3. Atkl-(SCI. TlrM: .S.I. 100 F•ff -1. J. T1ylor !Son} 2. D. Wlllllfl !SCI 3. Sewell ISC). Timi : (f.6. 500 Fr•e -I. lln•blck (SCl 1. Chin! !Son) 3. Croult CSonJ. Tlmt: S:U.o.• -100 8.lck -1. O'Go1'1'nan tSCl :l. M. Wiison ISCl 1 Ker.ell (Son). Timi : st.2.• 100 lrnl -1. (11) M. Dorin fSonl K1rih ISOn) 3. Cld1 (SC). Tlmt: l:pt.7. d Fr• R1l1y -1. Sonor1. T!me: l :21... ( • Scl'IOOI •ICOl'd .. ,...,.., .. " Int Cl-l'e 1111 IUI SIMtl Vtl"lllY Ull'ftlnlty 11111 (YI l fN 'JOO Mld!ey Re1•Y -1. Unlv1r1lrr. Timi: 1:50.7. 200 Fr• -l. McC•rt (•l 2. ClllGrovl (U) 1 Kunc1 (9 ). Time: 2:02.S. 200 Ind. MldtlY -I. McCOl'T'l'llCk (U) 2. Thornp-. (UI l. McClu11t1y (U). Tlf'M: 1:1t.t. ~ "'" -I. ktndrlckt (9) 2. 01vl1 (U) l . Steven1 (U). Tlmt: 24.0. OlvlnQ -1. Mllltr IU) 2. llltdllff (81 1 Ovnlop (Bl. Tim.: 204.tO. 1CD Fly -1. C1mpbltl (U) :l. Tl\om~. {U) l. 01ndrM (I}. Time: 1:01 . .t. . 100 Fr" -I, Otvlt IUI 2. G1ull ... (UJ l. H1l1W1 (8). Timi: D.7. 500 Fnit -1. Cos11rovt (U ) 2. l11tn1ncl Cll 1 Spiteht (UJ. T11n1: S:lS.to. 100 IKk -I. G111fll..-(Ul t. Nellson 18) 3. V1,,nlc1 (U). Tlmt: I :OS.6. !OD 8r11tt -1, T...,,...t IUI J. kll'ldrtck1 f8l l. McCllnkl'I' (U l. Timi: I :111.7. 400 Fr" Rel1y -1. Unh1r1lty, Time: 3::19.t. , J11lllor V1r*y Unt...,.rtllY ...ins bY forfflt. ·-Ulll'f'tl"ltlY (11t lftl .,.. 100 MIClllY Rlf1y -L UnlVll'altv. Time: 2:0S..t. 200 Frff - 1. C•mpbel! (UJ t. H1nlOl'I (81. 3. 81nk• !l l. Time: J:Ol.1. (F;. Time; 30.t. jO 8r11t1 -I, Donohue (Fl J. 01ret1 (F) l . '-en (M). Tlmt :M.1. "·'· 200 Fr" R1l1y -I. Foollllll. Timi: I :'5.S. V1n.lty I'll\. V1ll1y (tJ\11) 02V.I I.." Al1ml'°' 200 MldllY R1l1y -1. LOI Al1ml1M. Time: l :jO.l. :ZOO frff -1. $. 81bllloff (F) 2. Hull fl) I. I . 81bltlloff IF" Time : l:S4.6. . 200 lnli. M.cll1Y f I. MUl1r IF) 2. ldom (L) 3 .Nomur1 (F). Tlmt: 2:0l.7. jO Frff -1. Forbl1 !l) 2. M1u1rl Il l 1 Pull (Fl. Time; 13.2. Olvlng -1. MtAd•mt !Fl 2. ~ry ~Fl 1 Poolll' (F). Pol"tt: 100 Fly -l. 1(1Hy IF) 2. M1r11rl IL.) J. Mlglll (F). Timi: S1.1. 100 F,.. -1. Forbft jl l 2. 01vld'°'1 If') 1-Siiffill11nd CFJ, T me: Sl.1. JOO frM -1. S. 81bllloff (Fl 2. e. Blbllhoff IFI 3. Hull Cl.J. Tlmt: 5:00.t . 100 llCk -1. ICtllY (f) t. JH01r Ill l . ldom Ill. Ttm1: 1:01 .5. 100 8 r11t -1. MllM-Y ll.l 1. H1taon (I") 3. ,.ull !Fl. T!me: 1:06.t. .,, Frt• R11ly -I. F-l•ln v111ty. Timi: 1:37.1 • JVlll.,.·Y11'11ty Pia. YllllY 1nl uel l." 411111l1'M :ZOO MltdllY R1l1y -1. Founltln V1!11Y. Time: 1:"'"·'· 200 Fr" -1. Frltnd (ll t. Cl1rk fl.I l . Furlono (F). Time: 2:03.1. 200 Ind. Mldllf -1. Aldrich (F) 2. M1rr1LI (l.l J. ,.ooler IF). Thr11: 2:%1.0. .so "'" -I, kOOUI (F) !. l r1m1n ff ) 1 l.ftd• (Fl. Tlmt: 24.I. 100 Fly -I. Aldrlcll.(FJ 2. Mll'lltav (l.) 3. Krlkl (F). Tlmt: 1:02.S. 100 Fr" -1, l11C11 !Fl 2. $llllii:l1 {l.) 1. IC1l1y l!l. Tlmt: 57.4. 600 F'" -1. Friend (ll J. Cox !l) J. Hot11nd t~. Tjme: J:J4.0. 100 llKk -I. Furlong (I") t. ICl.flv (Fl ). H111v (ll. Time: 1:07.,. 100 8r1111 -1. Br11111n IF) 2. Mc.t.c11m. lf'I l. ICrlkl !Fl. Tlmt: 1:13.1. a F .... R1l1y -I. Los Al1m1I01 . Time: J:SS.7. , """'Sotll'I • '"" V1Uey It) (I} l• Al1mllM 200 Mldley J11l1y -1. Fount1ln V•ll1y. Tlme: 2:0t.4. 200 Fr" -1. Ml-11"1 2. Runoe (Fl J. McGinnis (Fl. Time: 2:21.$. 100 llld. Mldlly -1, Bot1 IFl 2. Ford 11'). TlrM: 1:12.0. 50 Fr" -1. Hoo111 !Fl t. ~rlnelll (l"l 3. k...Orlckt Cl!). Tl1r11: 21.0. so Fly -I. 8oer (Fl 2. "uflr IFJ J. Mll'ldrl<kt IF), Timi: 31.1. 100 Fr" -l. Kolllz (Fl 1. kOOut (f<l J. M1rlneltl (Fl. Tlm1t: 1:00.1. JO leek -I. Fonl IF) :l. M1rw1n (I") 3. lhll'l;I (P'). Tl""'' 33.S. 511 8rtltl -l. IColltl (F) :l. Otll1'SIY IFJ. Tlmt: :M.O. 200 "'"" "•l•r -1. Founl11R v111ey. Tlmt: l :U.I. Roundup For Coast Golf Clubs 100 1rod. Mtdlty -I, Col11>nt1n1 1u1 2. J-111 s. OwntrHI cu). At least three Orange Coast TI-1-edof jO Fr" -1. 1roo11:1 1u1 2. woo111y area teams are assur (91 l. Terry !8). Tl1r11: ts,,, spots • t•-1 ff ~-n so Fir -1. H•1111t (UI l. c1mpblll U\ itt: P ayo S wnt: IU l '· T•r,., (l l. Time: 21.t. the Thursday team match 100 f<rff -I. Col1111Hrw (U) t. f>edul tf"-t woo11ey 111 i. l rookl cut. Time: SC e compe uuu g e s s1.o. under way March 14. jO aick _ I. Ro01r• 1111 2. Mldun Coif CJ b IUI). lllomldln (U). Tl.,,.: 32.t. ltlission Viejo u woo 511 llr•••I -1. H11tlft (U) 2. the p 2 t>'Ue by a half J-. 191 l. llnki (1 1. Time: 33.7. gro\1 ZlD FrM R111r -1. un1vw111r. point '"' over Irvine .Coast CC Tim•: 1:ol9.t. with a 4-1·1 re<=Drtt ' V1"1tr Ht1. •-" 1441 1111 M•rlR• In rnw1p S, San Clemente 100 MedllV R.i1y -I. M1rln1. r:.•- Tlm1: 1:511.. Country Club appears as the E=•rLr'i'Ml-1 ~c~el/M1.1 ~,J: winner with a 5-1 record and :~ Ind. Mtdl•r -1. Golonk• !Ml in group 14, Huntington }-Arm110rl'IG lMJ no 1111n1. Tlmt: Seacliff C.ountry Club also =~·'·F, .. -1. 1uc111141r !Ml '· boasts a S.1 mark during Wllite'r lMI J. MOOnlY (HI. Timi: • 2l~IY1.,g _ '· G9!'1011 !Ml 2• Wlloer regular sea.900 play on a fMI no 1111n1. home-and-home basis. 100 Fly -I. SC!lol•• !Ml 2. Klll'l'Oll In otbe . I '"" (kl J. HOf1'1'111 (Ml. T1me: st.,, r groups tnVO Vulf!i 100 Fr11 -1. F•bl•n !Ml 2. t Old Ranch ·~ IM> 1 sr.r jM!. Time: "·'· area earns, Edw•~',Ml-,, . s~lld·:~,. '11.n!: Country Club or Seat Beach s :l~r ••ck _ 1• euc:tr.ner !Mj 2. is the only team with a shot Rock <Ml >. Golonk• !Ml. T ""' at a playoff berth as a division "f0o ,,.,,, -1. Lown fMI 1. winner. With one ma t ch F1b11n fMl l . Moor"I !kl. T me: remaining, Old Ranch holds l:ID.f . .-""' Rl'l•r -i. Mlrlna. Tl1r11; a one point advantage over ''"·'· , • ., v1rt1tr Oallfomia CC of Whittier. 1u •. 11Ktt c11 "'' M•rlR• Red lllll cc won group 11 :ICIO Mg;'llY Rtl1Y -I. Mlrl"'· Tl;;: i :r.e'· _ 1. Erlckion !Ml 2. where Santa Ana CC and Big SIOlll {Ml IMI tfllrd. Tlmt: 2:12.J. Canyon 0:: finished behind the. ~ Ind. Mld111 -1, Donnally !~,...,~· lllKhl ( I ne tlllrd. Time: 4-2 winners. 1l. FrM -1, Hiii IM) 2. Wltt>Urn cM '· I*.,, (M). T'""' ts.,. Santa Ana F y -l, Tog11lll tM . T1m1: l:l&l."Frw _ 1. HIM (Ml 2. Erlckaon All but Ohe finalist has been (Ml J, '*'" (MJ. Tl1n1: Sl.3. detennlned >'n -'--,·on 500 F .... -I. st-(M). Time: Ulll:: """" ':l,_, •. seek _ 1. LVbcll«lko 1M1 tournament at Santa Ana 1. Wllbllrn (Ml l. 0...-IM). Tlmt: Country CJUb with Denny :n.r. E nd Dr Ed Cran 100 ''"'' - 1. llltdll IMf 2. vans a • e rr.t•~ (Ml ,. Hitchcock lkl. T rM: acheduled to settle the t r o100 ,.,.. fl ... ., -1• M1t1na. Time: diffe--s t'hls week in the 4:0..5. • ........... ..,.. ...:.-....... 1,.~, -.11111 Ponce de Leon flight (80-a). .=,. ~:Z,1!' f! HUml~t'.:~':. MU McClain defeated Dr. Tlm1: 1:01.0. Pete TreadweU for the other 20 Fr" -I. "II IHl l . I(.... • hi di lsloo (H) 3, lleCkltl'JjM). mt: !:OS.. spot IR t S V • \00 Ind. M 1¥ -I. Rol11nt. (M) In the Old ~-ftlght •--1, Weir (HI • RMlflO (H). T\mtl '-'lUW IUI' :oi.o. n-olfers 7o.and~ver, Otarles 500 P'rw -1. JDlllllOl'I l'{l 2. 111 r,111tr1 IHl 1. atom (Ml. m1: Mciver dereated Geoe Fason 4;£ 1 -1. lt:olHM (Ml t. Yto ln the. Upper hiJf f:l ·the oo s. MflMI oo. Thnt: ».t. .._ k t nd Bill Foote~__, 100 '" -1. JatintOl'I IHI t. U("""dc e a o"'l'I""" ~u11r• IHI 3. S'-r IMJ, T me:)' Al Honer ln the lower half. 1 1/o ,!'f:._;1~·,.1\-,-,:: ~!s. :r. W•1•11 1Joyd Stocker was a winner ~ •r111t -r. Weir I~' t. W01111Y over Bob Corfman ln the I~ >.;",:1•J~~· n:.":1~.5H..m1~ RenaiMance Flight (S0.59) and •eec:11 '· ""-r1ntvl11TJt: •:~. ·u 1 Houston Kier In the M11t11111 Vllfl 1;:ri1t11 "llfM" wi ace 1 •-• led * Mtdf1Y Rt1•¥ 1. Foott11n. rmals. The atter !Xlea Trm1: 1:41.2. Vince H~an for"-berth toO Fr• -1. """"9 {Ml , JollnlOfl "~ 1~ ' (jll) J. l1ll::hllOI' !Fl. Time !~f. 1 "=a•=i ,:rr -.i.1 1 \1J:: Jflb•lo• Viejo 2:0l.1, .. '"' -'· r.~'!' '" 1 ""' {fl) s. Dini.II P'J. fmll t1 . .. 0'""' -1 .•• , .... '" •. CMI S. l"•rktf' IM • hlflh: !OJ l«t fllY -. -.. , SPUl'Mtl'I 2. U.J~lloff ,,, ). ''"" (MJ1 ""* 100 ,,... -l.Wltlt (P'} t. Otlllltl• (l"t->. onnld IMj• Tl-1 •.t. -jt,_ -, flllm!U ('~ • HO"l't (M) :i, tt:ldltl (M.l. Tlmt; •i ti. lDll llCll ~ -,. ~ ,,. Ooodtll CMl J, SNll'lott CP'), Time: lf.2. . Gals Basketball I Members ol the men'o golf group at Mission Viejo Coif C)ub wlll hold quall!ytng rounds for the a n n u a 1 pmidenl'1 cup c:oinpeUtion this weekend. F o I lowing quall!ICAtlons, pl•yers will be plae!d In flights with :12 expected In the p<elident'a c:ompel!Uon. Alter that It will be motcb play. -life•• Venle Qualifying tor the IJl'Uident'1 cup c:ompeUtlon at 1.1 ... ·ver<1e Country Qub will late place this -· • 0 z 0 A. ::» 0 u 1 SAVE ON Tires&--- Shocks Belted 2+2 or 4 Ply Polyester Outstanding tire performance. Features a tough 5-rib chain·of-command tread design. The Seiberling 200 is built for control du rability and smooth riding comfort. EXTRA WIDE BELTED WHITEWALLS --SIZE RIG. SALi SAVI MORI F.E.T. SOLD POR PRICE IA. 1N sns,or 4 (·71-14 27.84 23.50 4 for $88 2.15 1·71-14 28.60 25.00 4 for $94 2.37 f·71-14t15 30.04 26.50 4 for $100 2,54 G-78-14115 33.19 29.00 4 for $110 2,69 H·71-14t15 36.35 31.50 4 for $120 2,95 J·78-14t 15 40.58 35.50 4 for $135 3.05 L·78-15 42.78 37.50 4for$145 3.27 SHOCK ABSORBIRS COLUMBUS SHOCKS WOIN SHOCKS All DANGEIOUS Your br•king &nd stHrint control are useless ii your tirts art no1 on the r01d. Worn shocks c1use tirff tO bounct and "shimmy," thus reducing your control. Jn 1ddition, worn shocks O:IUSI rtpld tread weir, underc1r d1mage •nd we&r, •nd shaky ridt. . Reg. $9. 95 OE Quality Shocks .. Reg. '11. 95 Heavy Duty Shocks • .•1 00 -h •2••-h •3••-h Reg. '15. 95 Extra Heavy Duty Shcicks PLACENTIA 144 South Bradford !South of Ch1pm1nl 524-9280 SANTAANA 209 Bush St. (3rd & Bush) 547.a201 ' J ORANGE 1100 N. Tustin IB11"Mtn K111111& CotliM) 532·3383 • COSTA MESA 1739Superior Ave. (17th & Newport) 642-3384 I I ' , Top Individuals Highlight PlllUC !jOTICB • ••1• ''(""°"' ....... NA.Ml: ITATIM8NT TIMI lolltW\nt ,.,_ I• •1111 llMI-. 11: ' . . ~ Area Prep· Track Outlook CINTUaY 1' -llA• ltllJ,.'f'I', 1"'1 lroo!UWttt ttrwt, Hll!lllf9fon IHdl. C1/lfo'1'111 ,,.,._ Tnd Ind field - """" bllo high ,.. llM wMit ~ every Oran&o °""'* area ·1wn In acllon. Loci by -t lndl..w.Is lllre Edlloa'a Tom LI o y, -·•Gary Blume, 1-Beleb'• Eric llultt, E._.., Koo Cooner, Mloolon Vltjo'• lllart -and Ne.,..t Hutlor'• Brtan Th e r I • t , ~ 1tta team1 are e ed to either win or challenge for champlonshlps In their leagues. Here is a summary ol the area teams and their top Jl<O.'pecls: OORONA DEL MAR - Versatile Joe Denger, a 6-6 high jumper, 15.2 high hurdler and 2Q.3 low hw-dler W.di the Sea Klop. ,CO.ch Jolin Blair wlll be relying heavily on a Milld distance naurinl crew to BCOre well. Brim Hunuker (9:29) and Mike Messinger {4:27) are the standouts. "I thJnt If we . have eome o! the )'OUDpten come Uwoogh, we'll linlsh In the top three along . with Santa Ana Valle y and Edison.'' predicts BIAlr. C 0 ST A MESA-S.Veral holes in key events prevent the Muatangs from being a challeng«. Paul Desmet, school record OOJder In the ~ at 49.9, will also have to go in the 220 (22.71 and maybe eveo the 100 (10.i). Miler Nlrk' Priest (4:30 and 9:29) and wtJght specia!IJI CUrl Ellenberg (52 with the ohot and 150 In the discus) coold also -.. high. Coach Joe Fisher tabl Santa Ana Valley to win the title, .. becauoe they have all the speed" DANA JIILLS.-A large turnout ol 70 can didates brightens the Dolphins' tracl: picture after a di!mal 1ea10D last year. Be.st ol the group appear to be sophomore Jell Brown In the aprints (10.4 and 13.1) and half milers Broce Tovey (2 :00), one of the re w seniors, and Marlo Alamin, -it CllllJns llr I """ mm t'tAVllr} -. f'fllllfe -lllMI ·-12: If) will oilo ......... EDISON -D•·~ aad ta!ml<d. u~-""""''" chall-S-ta Am Vlllty, ... Cblll"" -lo be ........ Sprlll<n Man Ellhort jlU Ind :l&ll -' Dom-...., 00.1 and 211) ... botstend by u.,, ... Cll' .. .._, who cloclred a l9.9 In the 440 last year and 2:00 in the 880. "-tc:Pherson was second in the league In tbe lq jump at 21-6. Versatile J9e Tn:waD Is CDt: or the ln1ne 1-'• top ...,. jllmpera II W, 11 ...0 M I -a tN llllr:d8 (JU). Colil lllcOlmell, a sopbomore, no -ol Ille tbne best ...... _., and ~d proYe I 1111 poilll gelltr In Ille mile 11111 S-mlle, -. -. Ana van.,. 11 -''We coald him the tables on a.a.a Ana Valley," says coach Gordon Fitzen, "but tbey'g, .UU -the favorites. 11 EL TORO-Finl.,._. IChool oaly has » tot Irr track. Brian Heaney ran a 10.3 last year alld wiD head the syrilll>. Football star Chd Van Liew will na the 440 and lnDg ~ but coach Larry Nlua will have lots of w..-1< ahead <il him to find the rls!>t eveol5 lor the young team mtmbm. F.STANCIA-Some standoot lndl?lduols bat llllle depth. Hurdle ltllDCloal Ste v e Mims (I.I OllCI IU) Is joined by Cll' _..,.. llicb jump champ Km C-(Ml llld 1mb dillance -Forrest llletcall. '!be Eagles will be pg to )'OUllp!on ellewlierec FOUNTAIN VAUZV- Coodl Stan Clorl •1' bis team ll a year any from challenglng foe the HU.. Junior aprlnter lbig Wlbcn (10.3 and 23.9) jolnl aeoi<n AJ Powell Jn the allot (51.f) llOd pole vwlter John -(IU) oa the mallllllya on the club. Dlatalloe aoe Bob Acoola (l:Q Uld IO:OI) ha.I tittle front.line help. HUNTINGTON BEACH - Former Oilers 1t1odout Paul WUU&m1 has b e e n tutoring J u n lo r dlstanoe ... Bob Ansel, whJcb could meon a baMer year lo< the Huntqlon 1-... Angel's W-ol 4:14 llld t :H ""' already ..... the best In the ~e Oout area. Football standout Lo re n Ptf.icklio will be concentratirig on the 100 (lo.41 and long jump (11.0.pka) while senior Grog Callie will bondle the burdlell •. LAGUNA Jl!!ACH-Early pleb to "'" the Oran&• Leasue. · A Vflr'J potent team beaded by distance ace Eric Hulst (1:51.4), hurdler Dave , Kleaelboch, hJlh J u m p e r Doug case '"\ and pos~bly John Carlson (10.0 in the 100 arid 21-plus in the long jump). Coach Jim Toomey has twQ 13-foot pole vaulters In Robert Wood and Stuart Footer as well as the makings ol a strcq weight duo In Wade Binley and Mark Shlpkey. MARINA -While lactini in depth to make a nm at the title, the Vikings hive the people to give the «111tendera fits. Rick Merigold llpped to a 10.0 last yeu and already baa NI 10.Z. Gary Blume (4:2'.t and 9:00.!) b one <il the top distance nmnen in the Sootbland but baa Loar•'• Ralph Serna In the same league. Don llankln (15.1 and 20.0J I.a a atandout hurdler as well as a 2G-JO long jwnper. Greg Hamilton (l:l-0 in the vault), Rick 'l'llmn (M tn the lhotl,. and junior sprinter R1c:k Matteson couJd .score well in the league meet. lllATEll DEi-Best Mater Dei team eftt. Chris Martin (10.0 and :ii. Area's _Sunset Nines .Ready ~or 197 4 , Circuit Campaign \ Prep baseball action Is tmder way for the Orange Coast area's Sunset League representati ves as they gird for upcoming action in the circuit. Here'• 1 brief on each or the area's four Sunset teams : Buntl11gton Beuh Coach Don Terranove has onl y four varsity lettennen to roold a Sunset League ba.seball cootender around, but he say11 this is the best team he's had at Huntington in the past three years -due pri- marily to the junior contingent that has worked together since they were fn!6hmen. Lettennen include seniors Bob Stlmmler and P a u I Dugmore aloog with Juniors D o u g 1 Manaollno and Ed Vignaroll. MaMollno Is coosldered a bona fide all~_.. candidate after settJnc tbe school record I last year with errorless ball at second bo" kr 17 1trals!>t games. Sllrnmler is !be Oilers' No. 1 outfielder and Vignaroti i~ one of the team's helter power hitters. ' Pitching Is O&e or the cru<lal questiool and TerTanove rates junior rlJthl-hander J o h n Kraemtr .. potentially the team's No. l burler. Addillonll slab work Is talllled for Dugmore, junior DeWayoe Douglas and senior Vic ,Lucbelsl. Ooron1 de! Mar High transfer DUiy Hultoo figures to fill ia at third base, while juniors Mart K I m b a II (shortstop), S..,, Terri: (first braR ), Jlm Van T 1 gem (outfteld) and Tom Freman (outfield) are prominent In !be Oilers' fllture. Rich --(•.) also figures bellvlly In Ibo oatf\eld plans while ..,.......,.. Jhn Coleman mar wort: In at catcher or the outfield. Speed b present w I t h Freman, Kimball, Stimrnlcr and Hultoo and most of the power -Id be 111pplled by Vlgnaroll , ~. TerrJ and Coltmlln. 11....uNI F"1111t .-lion tO Ille \larina High -II vista Is that tntre mllll be I ---at the Vlklnp ,...,_ wllll three-yoar lettermao GrtU ' I I ' Foster on the mound. Only two other monogram winnen (pitcher Je.ue Bors and shortstoP Mike Wetzstein) are in coach Paul Frey's camp. Bu t that's not the case as Frey has a bevy of excellent players to fill the gaps Uld an example ol their abi.llty is 19 runs scored in a pair ol scrimmages. Foster a 6-1, !.03-pollld seni>r who also had three years as a 1tarting quarterback m M a rl n a 's football team, has added a slider to his fastball and bits in the Vikings cleanup spol Nine other 11enl<11• are In the Jold, moot from the third place junior varsity outfll Walt Sitler is at catcber, although sophomore Richard La France ls pushing !or the job. Ilobert Lopez is stationed at tu'SI hue and~ Hines and Richard D' Amore are batlling for the stanlng berth at second baJe. WeWtein haa a lock on short and Wamn Rdb ts pu9bing · a>pllomore M I k e Dapello at third baae. Two newcomers are in the outfield -Jim Martinec and Bart Dickson in 1eft. Junkr Martt Lo!itlDecl«r ii in -field and Rick Roblnlon and Footer figure In Frey's plans at right field . Mlke Natalie is penciled in 11 the other starting pitcher (rJehlohanded junior) while Dave Womer Jenda add itional depth in pitching ( r i g b t • handed senior). Newport Harbor Eight s e n I o r lettermen, incJudlnB a pltcber with ., o.M e.r.a., ma.tea the plctury brJlj!t 1t Newport l!aJ1df High. • "I'll be 1111 pc lled u we doll, do well. ....... boRWl- Andy Stnlth. ·All-Sunset League pitcher Ernie Hook and second team choices Dave Vester (.386) Prep Soccer V11'111r DIM Hint <I. S111 Cl-tt I DltM Hllli KOrlPlf: C1nMllo 1'11"t1 a. ........ ,.,.,., 0.-. HAit .a, ... ~ I 011111 "'"' tcOl'l/lt: t.rmelle ,..,.. .. ~ Owt:<\I,. JOI ~. • and outfielder Malit Dulfy teed the Jetlermen. 'Othon I n c I u d e ohortstop Doug <llard, third -Pat Robertson, pl t ch er - inllelder Morgon Abbott, and outflelden Doo Pier and BUI Ml>Cketl Key replaoements lncll>le juniors Dwain Pa u ta: ch (infieJder), catcher Kevin BWOO.tte, rfgbtbanded piidler Mike Blanchard, first baleman Art Sorce and Bob Hanley. Larry DuUt (pile her ), second bueman Rick Dostal and senior ootfielder Steve Buldch coold """ be big lacton In the Sallon' -· Hoot's forte II In mixing up his pitching along with a:ctUent control. Abbott 1s elso effective on the mound and is versatile with tbe ablllty to excel at third and catdler. >.. lllUI tbe team.o to beat In Sun.9et Leel!Je action are Anaheim and Loera. WestWtltuter S!J: -lttlermen krm the nucleus at Westminster HIP -... baaebell oooch Frank Munot att<!mpts to mold a &met League Utle contender. Pacing lhe LionJ a r e catcber Dave Walah (an aJI. league ba*etball pl a y • r ) , pitcher-outfielder ]t()b;ert Hale, lirst baseman QirnaJ Rungo, second baseman David Twiss, third basemal>pltcher Tim Richards and out f I e Ider- pitcber Rich Rosen. Major belp Is expected from juniors Larry K u b a c k i (c1tcber), Tim Fun~e (Millop), Caey PI s te y (-) Ind Daryl -(rl(lit!Mnded oulllelder· pllctor). Phi Gtrollll>o""'-O""llt (J u n J o r ootlJ u P) IDCf IOpliomcte Croll,.,... (ibcl ...... ) could llao be a -· although the Jat!Alf II ~ with a •dllloellad ~er suffered In I ierlirmlfe. Abo looming In Lions' plan.s ~ juniors Joe Rivera (ouUleld·llrst baoeman ) and Steve AJvenon (second base and pitcher), •lone with senior Robert Maciel, ID outfielder. Ari TNI and Km Loomer, -........ GllllplN Ibo l.JoM: ,...., ' WILLIAM CLl:MlHT COMJll.\NY (A C.\Lll"Ofl:NIA COftfl'OltATION!, lttfl l l'OOllllllrrt Strffl, Hllnfl,,.._ ~ C1Hlorrll• *"" Tiii• WllMM I• c:oMllctM 1Jr .. corporlllol\. WILLIAM CLIMCNT COM,ANY TM• tt1t-t Wll 111.0 WI"' t1M feet ln the long Jwnp) rtturns c-;J c11r11 "' or.,. c_,., • '"' 11, lt.. N1• as do Mark Fttzpl\rlek (IO.O MMlhtd °''""' COltt o.ny Plklt, In the ~) and Joe Dowljno ,..,,,,.l'Y lilt ti, u, Mil Mardi r. ... ltt• ....,, (9:40 and 4:28) and BUI St. -PUBLIC NOTICE John (1:30 and 4:151 In !be _________ , PKfml)ijt IVIUt•ss distance races. NAN nATllMINT Coach Jim Frost tabs PiUJ .. ~M h&wlnl •rtmi 11 .i111 IMfMM X to Win the ···eJus T .......... ILA.111'$ LAIOllATOIUES. Im w. "''6 --.-Ma(Artf'Nr l tvll.. c.t1 ,,,,.._ Ctl". ""' crown. ,.,,...., l...,. P,...lldt. I 11 t , ~J' IC11tkrn11), lSH W. MlocArtiwr 11¥d.. MISSION VIEJO -VI:' t-co.It /MM, c.JH. m» Tlll1 M lntU It ctnd«ttcl trl' I nltely a ()'estview League ~•tlon. A"911'1 L-Prod\ICft, Inc. front·runner. Depth and plenty RIMI H. 1111r, """""'11 or potential champs make Th l1 11ettment we1 "'" wtlh tilt County Cl«k of 0r-. COl.llrt'( on coach Bill Crow's club a Februery 1, 1r1L ..... power. Publl1hld Of"•nee coa't D•HY Plktl, The Diablos are especially Febr\lery 1, 14 ii. n. 1n• AO:S-t:t strong in the 440 with Kevin PUHi.JC NOTICE Eaton (i0.2), !be 880 with ·Mark Hower (1 :57.9), Jon "'if.lll~0~/Alf\r:/s Cook (1:56.9) and Eaton ff~ following Pf•llon doh.i b\11lne11 (1:57.2), the mile wlth COQkd 1.nAL.:!!fc1T.fW~~ 'N!:~o~.;3;; (4:18.1) and Hower (4:26) an c.111. t:1660 I th H, Je'"" P. a1rr1tt, Jr., 1423 OC••n the two-mi e wl ower Avt., S•tl 8ttch. c .irt 90740 d J·m Thi• bu1IMll 11 (~ by. limited (9:29,) Cook (9 :27 ) an 1 pertntrl/llp. , H-~-(9 35) J11nM P. 81n-etf, Jr. &11 ~ : • Thlt 11at1mt11I wa1 flltd wilt> tfle CIF 70.yard high hurdle County Clerk of Ortl'lfe County on b Wubur G (g !) Ftl>r\lal'Y 1, 1f7L • • PJ\Ut C amp regoryK vi. Publlelled or11191 c-t· O.llY P11c1 returns along with e n F•IM'\lan' 1•. ,,, a. lftf M1rch 1, Weilein (10.3 in the 100 and in• ""°7~ 13.5 In the 120 lows). PUBLIC NOTICE NEWPORT HARBOR-Pick •101T1ou1 a1.111w1s1 NAM• ITATIMINT of almost every coach to win The to11ow1ne ,.,..,.. •rt doing bullneu ••: the Sunset League. CA.II: WASH P ll:OOUCTS (OBA), l<ll The sm.Jon ll't toughest in E. 11:..wood, Anaheim, Cent. mos ..... --• f eJd o.n.w a. Kl-. Im E. R05tWOOO the 1.,. .... ts &1M i events A..... ANMlm, c.111. "* but will gtve away plenty in .!"!'f-111~. J1~ 1m Harv1rd, s1nt1 the distance r3C'tl. Thl1 llvlhwu !1 cotlductell bf I ;ener1I ~· . cham plrtlllnhlp. CIF UUOU"'. 220 p ll:oblrt J . Ledd Brian Theriot (10.0 and 22 2) Thi• 1t111rMf\t w11 flltd w11h ttie Mulro. Conly Cltrk cl OI'.,.. Counly on ii joined by Vinnie y Febr\lery 19, 1114. (10.2 and 2%.8) and B~t Publllllecl Or•not Coe1t 01tty"·~~~ Humann (23.0) in the spnnts. F~ry ,,, :n. M•l'dl 1, 1., "'' ,,,.1, Tberlot ( 49.1) can also run the 440. PUBLIC NOTICE Shol putter Skip Franklin l"ICTITIOUS •USlllllSS NAME STATIM•NT (5' feet) will try to alve the The following w-tr• doing Sailors their fourth straight busls-:k~~ LANE' Al'AATMENTS. 3f(l(I CIF shot champ. Mulroy in erra-''""'· svtt• m N1Wpoo1 •••ch, the long jump (20-11), Gerald c~= G. H"9ft, 101 c1r111t!an, Foster ln the vault (13-6) aild Conin1 dtl Mer, Ctllfornl• 9:162$ U the bi h Gr1nt O. McN1fl, 2NA Ph1tar0Pt Casey Conne in g COllf't, c os•• M1M1, ca111om1e '2&26 J·_ym_p (6-4) make the Sailors E. M1rt1n lh1m1ntt1111. 1005 VI• . . .. ---Zfft.te. Rh•tnldt, C1Uf«n11 ft507 tough to beat in the field ltDW1 e. 11umen1tie1, 1oos v11 Za1111., Rlvtrsldt, Cellfcrnte t'l101 tventJ. Tril1 buslnt11 11 c°'1C!UCl9d PY 1 gen1r1I per!Nntllp S AN CLE'IE'-New 11:-rt e. •1-"''' 1' ll: J ,.,,...._ Th.11 1letemtnt we1 fll ld with thl coach Chuck McFate inherits County ci.rk 01 0r1noe cou11ty on a handful of outstanding Fer.irvwy 7' ,,.,, Fiim atbJetes but will have to build l'ubltllhld Or•not ci 1rt D•llv PILct, bts program with youn-t Febr\11.t'Y 1,, 21, 2t end MlrCh 7, O"' ers. 191• '51·1' Terry Hudd1eston, t h e Tritons' distance nmning ace, PUBLIC NO'l'ICE has clocked 2:06 for the 880, stPo141w IUP•IUOlt COUltT Of' TNIE 4:31 in the mile and 10:01 IJTAT• 011' CALlf'Oll:NlA POii: in the .Z.mile. He had a fine TM• couwrv 0111 ou.Nt• Ne, ... _,,.. cross country seaDt and now 111onc1 o,. ttu.a•M w PST1T10N as • --"-e •gures .A POii: l'ltOIATl °" WILL AMO l"Qll '""I'"'"''..,. u w LITTIQ TISTAM•lllTAAY move up quickly, EiJl•I• of MARlA Au Gus T I N ... GONlALE'S, Otc.e..-. Gary Wise is the lronman NOTICtr: IS HEAEIY GIVEN ltl•I OJ tbe Club' clocking 15 3 tn DIEGO H. GONZALES AND MARCOS • H. GONZALES hev• fllld twreln e the highs, 11.0 in the low petlHon fer PralNt• ef Wiii aftd fer , l11uenc1 of l.tl1er1 TMt1ment1ry lo hurdles, 2().6 in the long )Ump, the petl!IOMrs, rifer~ to w111c11 ls and 41-4 In the triple i·ump med• fer turtMr par1kw!tn, 1nc1 th•! • lht HIM enet pl1c1 f/f llt1rlng thl .. ,.,. t111 been Ht ... ~·· 12. UN IV ERSITY-A.lthough· 1t14 et t :oo 1.m., In n. courtroom t k of l>tolrtlMl'lt No. 3 of salt:! court, 18 young1ters answered rac ,, 100 Civic C1t1t« 0i1.... west, in roll call, only six were seniors 1n. a 1y of S.nta A..., c.11'°""''· or Bob B di d d. Dltld Fib. 22, 1t7•. U>ss ra or an WILLIAM E. SI "'°""· k b County Cltn: Brian Dy es urts. QINI It. MINSHEW, Top returnees include Rick nn w.tiN,...., 11..._ In !be . •• (lO ! d WM""lllSI..-, CeMflnlll "611 Risse spnn~ . an 1n•1 lfMrf1 •• O) ..... _ n-...A.. l th AttwMY ..,., f'lllll_,.. -w. , ..... ,_, ,-i ~· n e l"utitltfled 0r1ng1 cont D111y l'l1ct. long jUIJ1I (20--3) and Kurt Fttlt'\lll"Y 21, 1nc1 Merc11 1, 1, 197• n1-1• Shulten (50-311) in the shot. PUBLIC NOTICE W EST MINSTER--"We'll· sTATIMINT OF . ..,,...,.DONMIENT light It out for second behind c:i,e us• OI' FICTITIOUS aUSINIESS MAMI Newport," says Lions coach ,.,,. fol 1ow1,,. ptl"Mllll Mw •lllNloMd J . O'H ttlf UM of the llctlll-busl1M11 nam1 un ara. SANTA ANA MEDICAL GllOUP, ., 2100 1be Lions have g o o d North M•ln StrMI, 11111• ""'· c1. m" strength in the m i d d I e The flctll!CllS b111lntU 111me rlftrrtd distances with Tom Shirley le atiov. Wll flied Oft Afrll 17, 1m In 1111 County of Or1noe. (1:56.5), Mitch Oki (1:57.9), I. Domld IC. Kelly, M.O .. lllOtel'ltllf'Y and Dan Prince (4":35 7) as Park Ee11, Los Angelu, C1. 90067 · 2. David M. Mon, M.O., 105113 s. well as the distances with H1wt11omt Blvd .• 1n111ewooc1. c 1. 90«13 ohn Al (I ,. 3) 1 hrll 9. t.vln. M.O .• IOS W. J varez :..u. . 111t1 st., LOI A111111n, c.. tcm7 Pole vaulter Rick Poss (13· 1. Albtrto Hld11110. M.O., 5526 Riied• I P k 81.-cl~ Tenene, Ca. tl:l» 0), high jumper Dae ar er Tllll rius1r11u w1• conducttd .,.,. • (6"'6 ) and shot putter Scott 0tntr••c:~~r~1,Kt+tr KJamer (51.g) should score Tri!• "'''r'"' w1• flM>d wtth t111 well in the league meet. ?.':~ry c:7'"1n4~ OrMIOI coun1y on CIF Sites •• ........ Mtttw W "'"' v...-SI Twnf!Ct tfftl'I El ltal'ldloo et Troy Mt. Ce""ll et 0oml""""2 LI Ml"lk.M et PwMet• VtlltY K...-.,,Y II IM!1M smrtt 11 PK lflf C:l'ffClfttl V11tt'1' VI S111t1 Bel'lllrl 1t Gltnd11t CoHf'll• VM""9 ti C....,. v""""' Ott w Ctntlnnlal 11 Compton ~ (S.tllrdey el IJI SA Veltty et hit Gotlefile Plonffr et ComplOll Lowell VI Torr•ftCt II l"UlllrfOll <•-.................. La W1'9M w .I.. Amel ., ldttWMd Hftl'l l"alffftM VI Olllfldtle et lln MlrlllO High lo)'ol• .. 1.... ., v...iw. CD1h9t . f 17'1-0C: •LLtOT It. WCK.l"F, ..... Atty, ,. c....,., ....... •mt, .... ,,.. IM .......... Cll ..,,....-J ~ ar.11119 c..tt oeny Piiot, lltb!'VWY 7, 1~21. 21, "'' ~,, PUBLIC NOTICE r Cagney Doe Donors Hoofer, Gangster Reealls 87 vmoN scorr HOILYWOOD (UPll Jimmy c.p.y II -ll(a who uv .. up to advanCe.. He's a towering man of charm, Jntalecl and • curJou> -al inttmocy. Cacney tal<M no Jdoa llibily, no con· v ..... tton .-J1y, no frltmd for granted. He Is filled wlJh humor and wtsdom. On Marth 13 be will bo bJnored by the Amtrlcan r!il!I Institute at a te>tlmoolal .din· ner at "11Joh be will bo ~the l~e achievement awanl. He's llaliered and pleaoed lllat HoUywood remembers him a!lecllooately alter an ""°"""' ol 13 years. Bl& tbrougjlout hts 40 yeon .. an entertainer it never croaed his trWnd to register 1 ••ufe achievement." '10N STAGE or in the movies I concentrated on what I was doing at the time, not a career," Cagney said. "You g<> to work, you do 1 job, )00 pick up the money and go home. I never had 1n overall view of my life. "In the beginnlnl k WU hoofing in vaudeville. Wherever there waa a Job, lllat'o .me.e I wtnl -ano J was so bed I was thrown out "' the worst -In New York City. That's a Ject. "It was the old Fox ~ Theater at 107th and Lex· ington. I was the Zl·year-old juvenile ltr&Jght man In an act. After oor (ll"9t perform- ance the: theater manager gave me a paper and lllid, 'Sign here.' I did, and be said, 'You're through.' "It was really a lousy acl 'Ibere were five of us in the group. I'll never Jorge! the grand IOO!I ol our check , $11.33 -split five ws;ys." CAGNEY WAS In the oom- lortable den or bb old canyon home. He wtJf'e a beggy ......tor, pelnt-otalned-..... and high, old·llllhlooed tennis sneakers. Only flecks or red '""" In his gray hair. He's a little hea\fier than in his dancing days, but there is a spark and CJCackle to tills eyes wlllch light up an mlire room. "I was llroke and looking for worit a lot in the ql.d days," be went on. "I med to hal\g around Panic Beoch at the comer of 47th Street and 71b Av~ue. All the UJ>ellll'loyed hoo!ers s t o o d aromd oomperlng Mies, hop- ing eomebody would come aJoag and hlI< tbem. "They ...... really pollsl>ed claN:era. llucb better tan me, Bui they llmlted --to liooftng. t toot any kind ol a perlonnlng job for breakfast. I guea I was luckier tllan the C!lbin. "CHANCE PLA Y8 a large port In any lllCCffS. You take the chance and -IO ou1 and It> the ,.., .. hard .. yw ean. 111 vaudeville )00 only had u ... :io -to do evwy1hlng )00 coold. "Once a performer gets In the habit ol going all out. it coatJnues rt&!!t Into tbe m>Vies or whatever elae )OO're doing.'' Clgney's fllrlous energy Is apparent in every one ot his soom ol movies. His own favorite fthn Is "Yanl:ee [loo. die Ilondy." It woo him the Oscar lo< best .-In 19C. "Playing George M. ·Cd>an was great," he sakl. "It wu good drama and good nwlc. The picture toolt SO yean ol a troubled Ille Ind put it 10 music. 1be movie was what it should have been." ~ Cagney ii one ol a handful ol· movie greats to retire and U"IT ....... LIVING LEGEND Jamel Cagney make it stick. AU S11l1 1.M TU 1 1)11 "I~-my C"--was over Sl'ICIAL LIMITID AU11:1W _._~ ENOAGl!MINT in the middle of my 1Mt. pie-1 ••EK ONL y !Ure," he •• u . "J WU stand· ''THI POSl!IOON ~ AOVl!NTUlllt:" ing out in the sun at Goldwyn 11JN14M•SH-1•111J Studios when the director.call ,~~~~~~~~~~ ed me in for the next scene. The picture was 'One Two Three.' When I had to leave that sunshine lor tlte darl< gloom of the oound stage , I knew. "EARLIER I'D received a picture oI a bunch of my lrlends toalltlng my health with highballs ab>ard my boat. 'lbey'd written on the back, 'Nice you are gainfull y employed.' That did it!" cagney divides his time betwem his home here and a J\.fassachusetts fann. He paints, visits with a few friends and watches a greet deal ol taevtsloo. EXCLUSIVE! HI• PIOtJ II lncmlblol ... -·"--:=Cl "THE CANDIDATE" 11:....,, • ....,. 'I don't see many movies· In fact," he griMed. "I've seen four IIl)Vies since 1967 -'Oliver,• 'Patton,' 'Uon in Winter' and 'My Fair Lady.' " "And I only went to thosel---------- bec:ause my dear f r I e n d (producer) A. C. L y I es aD.IJ'Od me I would like them. And I did." "" be approaches bts 7lth birthday -and 52 yean or marrlqe to hts wife Frances -James Cagney is. enjoying his Ille fully. He aloo bas a very special talent lor con- trlwtlng to the Joy o1 tbooe around him. m MANN THEATRES Van Dyke Comic Great -But Not in Ratings MILT1111•11 1iAl1Wl,J11l,1 ... ... 11, .)ill, J1tt. .... By RICtr DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -It seems incoocelvable that a television comedy s er i e s starring Dick Van Dyke Is erratic In the popularity ratings, but unfortunately that ts the case. Van Dyke ts a comic: genius, but apparenUy that is not always enough to guarantee succeu fbr a weekly video entry. Red Skelton is a comlc: genius, and hia series was canceled alter a long run. And Jactie Gleuon is a comic genius, Uld his weekly show also got the ax despite Its great popularity over the years. CBS-TV, in its drive for a contemporary tone, felt that the Skelton and G 1 e a 1 o n programs were a bit old- fuhloned. and were n o t attracting enougb or t b e younaer viewers the network WU seeking. And the Van Dyke llOries, lor all Its poslUve poinll, allo ...... to tad< the image of cont em po r • ry operlde that one would expect or it. Thia b • problem that oould certaJnly be hs.ndled wtlb concerted effort. UJCILLE· BALL Is jual .-the only liar I n teleYlslon lltuailon comedy who CID get c«lllstenUy otrong ratlnp with material thal Is eaentlally very it isn't a smash. "'Ibe Odd Cwple," invariably bu a bright and uJ>*date !eel to It. ' Mil\!' epltodes or these selies are about something that retstes to Ille today, despite their frivolous and o n c e-over-llgbtly attitudes. And· 11W!J1 olheT epiaodes that are oot specifically Jnrolved with contemporary s o c l al matter• nonetheless give the Impression lllat the leading characten a r e motivated, either pro « con, by clear~t modern developmeet& TOO OFTEN, it seems u though story lines for the Van Dyke .. r1 .. are, Uk• sltuatioo comedies ol old, n o t particularly about llll)'lbin(, and Ml particularly ldenU!led with any place or time. 1bere Is too much reliance on Van Dyke's undeniable g 1111, whereas what he needs II 1 litlle help rrciii bis friends, lndltlonal hi lta outlooll: and "LI THI approodl. Bat Mill Ball ·and GOOD TIMI$ ROLL" vi de 0 hive ad an • MATINHS s.AT 6.SUN • e xtraordµwy ldeoUllcadon J~~~~~~~~!!!:._====---= with -other tllit llhe Is not merely a b r JI Ilea n t pertol-mer, but a 1bow bust-~ Almolt evert major bit In ~~.comedy nowadays hoa • ........,..,i ""'1teDIJOl'I tooe. You nome tbtm.: "All ID tht Family/' 11Slalprd IDd Ban, fl HMASff.," "MalMlt" Ind tlot ~ Tyler _.. and Bob--!i ... bert sboW1. E"" ID lpPOIWlllY ouccesalUI rww entrr that deaJI -I bJali ldlaol bor, Jn !be --"HIPP!' Daya ' ;_ Jm I C0lllll7 -eutloot. ADd I -tllat oonll• s, L~ .mn lf • " • L • \.. "'"llSIJ!f llllilsYOIUll' ~ I NOW PLAYING ·ONE WEEK ONLY ORANGE COUNTY. COSTA MW U.A. !1l'-S4045!M) FOUNTAIN VALLEY r011nl11n \11!1ty # l GARDEN GROVE Hlway 39 Ori .... ln cwt 1114-139·1SOOI l1l4-S34·6Zt21 OEN CltOV£ Grovt f114-Sl7·'600! LAGUNA Ni1ue1 (11._.!16-1253) _ WESTlrflNSTER C1orm1 Weit # 3 Ul+t92·449JJ . LOS ANGELES COUNTY LONG BEACH U.A. Cinem1 (4J1·1267) LONG IU.CH Plau (429-:IOIZ) Al SO l"lAYING At OlH£1t lH[ATll[S THltOOGHOUT sou1Hc1tN CAUrOttti11A. .... -~ , ......... (on! "f-.NT"5TIC . ........ .. ..__ "WtlOSEPT. ,,.,... Boin "' Colotl '""' -({(\'II '""''l HOW SHOWlMG . '\Y.'~ ~.~!; . .,: FIRST RUN , ~-COftONA Oii. MAI. . ELIXITT KAST~R pr~ A R08ERT ALTMAN fi*n ELLIOTI GOULD ,, "TIIE LONG GOODBYE" • • • • ._.,..At 1 ' ll:JO "l'llllllY" Al l:H . Dolly bcept s.Moy. s.doy c..t. ,,_ 2 ·,. • • • • • • HARBOR AT AOAMS~'COSTA MISA·o,979-4141 e e IN THEATRE ONE e • . "'' .............. 11 ... -Mttlnt • iw:e"Yc ...... ..._, mr--•--t t-e:•1•.i • ~·~--~=. B.LPJ •-' ...... -. • IFOll IHI . ._ .. 6. Acildtmy Nom1l lndlldlne ~" A<!Nu , larbre S!Nbond le1t S.,.' • • '$1.REISAlllD "'""''ibY ·M'cl:R .J.;EIUEM!, • -T-Wed.,.,,...._ .... 7:>0, 1:11 (PG) · UT. & l 1IJ.Jr;IM 11S·7:1S·9=15;11:1.S ·~ e . , . fHIAntll , ' •• •• ,. • 'Shrew' Open.ing at SCR ,Sooth Coa st Reper t ory breaks a three-week dry spell Intermission o( new st.age productions elong lhc Oran e Coast this weekend when the SCR con1pany turns for the fourth tim e to the '---------' works or \Villiam Shakespeare and unveils "The Taming of U1e Shrew." The classic comedy goes on the boards as two other local shows in Irvine and San Clemente head into the ir final performances. Winding u p their respective engagements are the Irvine O:inunun.ity 'Ibeater comedy "The First Fl.sh" and the rol 11 ck Ing nrusical farce "A Funny 'M!.ing Hawenect on the Way to the Forum" at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse In San Clemente. At the Costa l\.!esa repertory theater, "Taming of the Shrew" will be infused with the talents of t\\'O guest artists -director Dan Sullivan and Shakespearean actor C a r I Reggiardo In the central role are Don Tuche, R I c 'h a r d Doyle, Gary Bell and Darren Kelly. The Shakespearean production is being staged as part of SCR's living theater program, which has brought classic theater such as "Death of a Salesman," "'l'he Glass Menagerie" and · • 1 Th e Tempest" to Sou th er n Calilornia high school students once a y<!ar since 1969. "Shrew" is being partially funded by the National Endowment for the Arts. "Taming of the Shrew" will be presented Tuesdays through Sundays until April 7 at 8 o'clock in the company's Third Step · Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 6~1363. ~~;::::::==~-··· .. ,,i P.elnlchio. -··· ---s.~ Oloa• ... TWO fl&!. i><:rJormanc~s of Frank Tarloff's unique comedy "The F irst Fish" will be given Friday and Saturday by the Irvine Community Theater in the Humanities llall Pl ayho use on the UC ,, ...... l ., .,_h1110l \S...J 961·1411 3 AUDIMY NCIMtNAnoNll MCl'CllO'• THI WT DITAIL 11> Pllm MAIDS AU. IN A IOW 111 MThU SMITH will enact the plum role of the fire-breathing Katherine in the S C R production. Other South Coast performers in the large cast SHAKESPEARE LIVES ! ! Irvine campus. Lois Farah and JoOO Loughman headline the cast. o[ t.be lhQw, which _ depicts a Y.'Oman who "rents" a call girl to improve her husband's self-confidence. John Phillips, Beth Titus and Mary Benton complete the company ror the JCT production, which goes on the boards at 8:30 both nights. ReservaUOll6 557·7297. ALSO CLOSING t h I s weekend wiUl: performances tonight throogh Sunday is "A Fwmy Thing Happened oo the \Yay to the Forum" at Sebastian's West, under the direction of John Fetzacca. Patrick Lang, Joe Fletcher, Bernie C.Ollins and Sharan Levitan play the principal roles in the comic musiq'\. Curtain . time is 8 : 4 o following a 7 o'clock dinner at the theater, 140 Avenida Pico, San C l emente. Reservations 492·9950. * .NEXT UP for -the _fwn~Jn -Valley Conununity Theater will be a musical production of that classic fai ry tale "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs." Ron Albertsen i s direeting the children's production . - ---~-.. -·--·---· .. MAN ONA SVl9IG LIFF ROBERTSON JOE'-GRE "''"'~~DOROTHY TRtlTAN -.. DAw111-..ooooo.tN EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT SHOWING NOW Casting assignments have EDWARDS not ·been announced by the HAFiBOR cZ:. 2 theater, b u t performance .... _ t L•o. 'f wll1011 If. The lord'• '"°'' popular comedy i" o bri9ht, bold pntductio" directed by-Don Sulli¥Gn-(of Haw York'• Lincoln C• •). - -dates for the production will •••·~:: ....... ::~utt ...... 91 ... h .•IG&••11 ...... , ...... SJ.t-6212 GOif IU!CICMAH e llNISf ICllCIN .... $HIUY '#ll'l'l'W e u.tOl lnu't' POSEIDON ADVINTUIE !NI IAD MAN'S RIVIR IP9I 11 ..... i.1 , ...... ' : . ' .. •::.·~·~.~-. 171 -1162 UM...,fr.,,., -·tel ...... S17·222l J au.DIMY NCIMINll!ONl,I AMfi.tCAN GUii.,;-,., . TAICI THI MONIY AHO RUN tNI '••'II• All• --.... ,.c ...... • 1!>9·7077 ·-• .... -·· ....... l tN. 8'7-lStl S.n Diq.r...,. . . I C•"oi,..,. on~ .... , .. l -4S41 Mii f .. IJTll llOJW.O Wl'HllLAHD DON'T LOOK NOW (I) WT Of nll UD MOT LOVllS I ON STAGE -Tues. thru Sun., 8:00 p.m. ''THE TAMING OF THE SHREW" ~ Jouth Coast Repertor_\) , -,__c -..:: CtNEODME 2D;.:; ... ~-~-·-. •t.r.:.!.J....., -.. .. .. SIAD/UM · I ::: ' •'.l..o1"1 ... ,, .. ~·~ _,, -.... SIAD/UM l :·- ' .A'l.i"'..I l'l!l':l"'.'9 _,. .. -.... STADIUM ,3 ::: ' .._ .... .,._._ 1.:.u.r~ :ir.:.m "PAPILLON" (R) .... "JUDGE RO'f B!ANH "AMERICAN GRAFITTI" • "THE LONG GOODBYE," "THE MECHANIC" "PAPER CHASE" .... "PANIC IN NEEDLEPARK" "SERPL;Cj>" lR) , "IANG THE DIUM SLOWLY" "POSEIDON ADVENURE" (G) .... "NEPTUNE FACTOR" HILDOYIR! DmdMI..;. "THE STATUE" Ill ,..._ ..... _ ..... ~, ..... 5 A001E.MY AWARD NOMINATIONS BEST PICTURE -BEST DIRECTOR BEST SCllEfNPIAY -BEST ONEMATOGRAPHY BEST COSTUME DESIGN ACAD. AWUD NOMINEE llST ACTOR AL. PACINO. •SERPICO" ' e PLUS o~ ~ ~·:Jeremiah . JOhnson'' "MELL BROOKS' INSANE TAKE.Off ON THE CLASSIC WESTERN ••• LAUGHS MEASURE .10 ON THE RICHTER SCALE",.,. =-==-r.;\·-- e SHOWING N0w e MIL·llOOKS HMVIY KORMAN MA.DILINI KAHN ' IN THEATRE ' be March 22-24, 29·31 and April 1 MILis IOllT" n• '"" 01uio fin'. f>-7. Reservations are be;n~ lll••••••••••••••••••r bkenat842"972:.::•n=d~962-::..::2=00\i=·c.._~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~ AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING: B(ST PICTURE ~ BEST ACTRESS ~\~~. BEST DIRECTOR WILLllM FRIEDKIN ORIGINAi AND UNCUT ELLEN BURSTYN · WX \.D'J WYI/ ·LEE l COBB · KITTY ~NN ·.ID M£fJ'lfll-N MLLER.r....., UNDAIJJJR.~ 1o1.••,'ll1LLWv\PEIDi !VJlY \i:t'UJ.lvWSHAJ.1.. ........ w1u~ lffiR BLNTYi..o.i...i r~111..i.Cl)ALU..-.... c....; IRJ-..::.4':!'.'h--I PerfOi-mance Schedule• MON. TUES. WED. THURS. FRI. 11 :45 AM, 2:00, 4:20 6:50, 9:20, 11 :50 SATURDAY.& SUNDAY 9:20 AM, 11 :45 AM, 2:00, 4:20 • • • • .. , ~NSTaR AND q.Ci&.:DllN wmaT-1'2.....,, ,,. c;;1..1...,UPSl:>E . ·:~ I ,Et:!!::=.~ir:~::J:i5,..l;.;::=:!~~~~~~~~===ON==£=·================H.srAlllNG: I-ENE HACKMAN f "'ACMI Jl.N0M5 llWAIOI TWIN C...U 1£5t ACTllS llAttllA lftlllANO · THE WESTBROOK ~TOM WllTM1Nm1 AYI, •t MU. IO. Of M111N MOW IW'f, SIHEISAllD a REDFORD·· fOGi'i'HERI THE WAY WE WERE Pl.U$40LDll HAWN llLllN MllCICAH IN "l~fUH Al£, ..... (PO) '· . THIS TIMI THE IULUTS .UI HlmNG CLOSE TO HOME lllill DrilW•ll. '• •• .,II• D,f *9' 11•2 , •• , ..... 2nd TOI' ATIIACflON al .. •11 --- (R) -NOMINEES Gtol"ge Segal • Glenda JKk~ 1\ U Hu:h ()fl 'la!-1~ (PG) Also Goldlt Hawn & Eileen Hatkart "BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE" ' 1"'1 - ERNEST BORGNINE·RED BUTTONS (PG) • ODDY McDOWALL·STELLA STEVENS HELL 'I WINTERS-CAROL LYNLEY , e ACK ALBERTSON-LESLIE NELSON ., R R O' NEL ·PAMELA SUE MARTI 'llST ACTOI. NOMINll·IOaflT RIQFORD ) Robert .ijeremiah mlA~:° : ~~[)f~u'~AU~.§liJ!~!;'IOY ~::. e .. . . . ' . ' 34 -DAILY PILOT / Thursday, February 28, 19'°4 MIXID SINGJ,IS TUMILEWEIDS MUTT AND JEFF lllGMINTS NANCY H0W' OLP ARE YOU, NANcY? NANCY, YOU KNOW VERY ~ELL. THAT\ YOU'RE OLDER THAN FOUR by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson IT CAMt OUT OF No· w~e:11e. IT WAS Pl?trlY MIG~, AND tr JU6T UUIJO A/illVHO ~L/N~ING A1 Me ! by fom K. Ryan I ! ' J . .. -.. • ' ... HE ATE . OUT OF MY PRIVATE by Al Smith WHY? WILL BOWL.! IT1~URT HIM'i' yOU GOT A COLD OR SOMETHIN'? by Emit lushmlller SURE, BUT I LIKE TO TAKE A FEW YEARS OFF MY AGE LIKE YOU ALWAYS DO PEANUTS ,.> TDDAT'S CBDSSWDID PUZZLB '(ES", SIR, I (EAUZE THAT I CAV5ED A DIHVRe.\NC( ACROSS ~ EUtasJan ... R> Not ' 7 . - 11 Horse ~ 1 Make cdlor beloved 12 • .;..... Boleyn 44 Knock out: 13 Large Slang amounts: 47 Elderly DOWN Informal person 18 Ethics 49 Tropical 1 Pemog-22 Saloon American raphy :24 Stogy ltee 2 Narrow 26 -··· 51 Great praise way whales 53 Small 3 Smith 21 Martinique aper1ure: and rnoun laln Bot. Landon 28 Did Some 55 Miid oath 4 large gardening 56 Golden calf Shallow 29 Ir« 51 Surface of dlSh Ingredient an ob]ecl 5 Earned 31 Plahl 58 Slugger-- 6 Buildil'ljl d!!eese s111ughter .section 32 Brass 60 Cover up 7 Olamootted liorfas 8 LOtJd 33 Portends 6 1 Ages aounds 36 Closer to 62 "Thin crisp 9 Naked malliilty cookie 10 Waters «> ltallan of 65 Blaster's doWn old Item S 6 1 I 9 IS Ill II 11 IJ " IN CLASS •. • LOOK, .JEAN ... MAYBE WE SHOULD GEt A LAWYER TO REPRESENT ME! MISS PEACH DICK tRACY IOY I DIC> ME HA'!'! NiWS· -I REALLY THINK TH.A.T JUDGE PARKER WILL INVE5Tl6M"E OUR 4~ ANO THAT YOU'LL ee RELEASED, KARL! DOOLEY'S WORLD Dr. SMOCK GORDO MOON MOLUNS ANIMAL CRACKERS --~ lly Charlt1 M. Schlllz by Harold le Ooux I ·1 by lt09tr lradfti141 by Georg• Lemont Vt>o'1 .. o&YIOU$L..Y' co1..o• eL.u..iv by Gus Arriola lly Ftrd Joh11u11 by Roger Bollen t;ou ml6l" SETr~e: D~M I 'IOOLL BE Oi.c> ~e~ TOO! "I'd lofe 111deillll1 U .-,.. bou1bt en rylldit1 tut Waj Jt. II DfNNIS THI MINACI ' p .. UN 3' M '" " ' '" " • '" " " " c 10 • "' IOC '" "0 10 H " " " ' " .. ·~ .. IU '" " ' II " 't I, ' I I I • ! I • = " . -, .. -· ... • Thtir1daJ, Ftbtuary 2.8, 1974 DAILY PILOT :J5 l'UllUC N011CE ':;o' PUBIJC NOTICE "once 01' PUll.tc Ml.I 1L-•Mii .... """' • ...,.. • peQll °"' COLU.TIU.,. I Tl"" rildt J'tcTITIOUt ..,,, ..... ' llM. •111 u.c.c,J T-r.cll; •AM• ITATWMl•T tt. OTICI IS He:ll:llY Ol\llll ..... I Qlllr .. ~M froli.wlJlll WMfl I• ~ ~' Na tives Chan t at Continn·in·g ·c~nfliet 1M11f proptrty ~\-· lllW tllll W I CMI,. l'JlAHK D. H U a \. I UT lo .... Ullltld C1ll!otTll1. ...... " I Neill .............. -.di!• A I I O CI AT I 1111'1VlltOfWIHTAI. ~'1:1(! ~1.10.,:~ A~,.wlt M6t tt ,1 ,,..., \t ....... ..... ..... WC)ftLO, INC,, 1"'2 ~ ll'l'f .. 1'74, It t ~tti •frtllt flflMl,"M-QI .. • •, CDMll; (Sult1 »fl, IMM. C.111, t11'07 tN ow 0r.,,.. Covntv C""1hol.w ..... ! ""c~ ,,11111 °'"*' Hill'tlM, l.tN CertM41t M h ""' a ~,Of .Wttt kt\11 "' ....... MM l'J ~:"·~ ':c~~;..nu:., '" fl i::-111'!• lir._...-r,.,--.,-Uli1'0 t:l. t gmirt11T1~rrt -lfl"'°"*'M IUOtllnM "•tMt ~tPle'ft I .,.._. unarc ' U.S. Troops R emain on .P~t!°~l i~~-K~rea ----------·-· --·--:f~-=91 ~-Ho!n1:it~ 11~F.;'l ~ ~....._. ,.,, ... ~11k o. ~nll'.lt-tl lttd .,... • I ~. _ t * Wntl l"kth Thl1 i11f~ Wll fl1H Witt! thl llm '" 0::-"lll!p, II ...,.,, wMdl • WtMt _, .,,.,. • • COlll'llY Cltrk .. o,...... Clllllltr Oii A~: IN'Kltl' the llld s..;wtt)' 11 It IM'-4 ~ c.m J1nuery JI, "' ... Th • • c~ ch•• of lll'llf! tw •II ,.,st oll .=' ~.r.:h't lo 119 told c-i111 Of ,._.. I~ 11\d Jlltow CIMf) l"llblllhtd Or•• CMlf o.ur Pilot, M ,... OWN ~-flf ~ 1 1.,.. Wltw ¥KWl'n ll•IJrltlff'f lo&, '1, 21, enQ MtrCll 7, tMftf Mt f\lt-, ht ...id1 • I 11 I llltf\t.h ,,,., .. ,.,, fhe dtblOI" Ml# 11 W llft....., tcq11l'tt. Thll notlct 11 t i"" '" ICCW'dlllCI -f"f '111111• 11111 ar 1111...-"1 •Jld •U witti 1111 .wwv1111~ tt he. "°'' PUBUC NOTICE ~l"MMI ttwr.IM and ~ tftir.t,_: J*lwltlfllt l. 91' tt. Uftflerl'I ~II 111 c1rpeh, dr1pt1, furnlhlr•. llxlur1" (ecM ot tM! 511t. of C•lllotnl1 ,nc1:l------------I 1ppll1ncn, tqulpment, 11tc11, ~111111ry, Ii i.td hi llltol'c:I .,_ rltllt• °' iJnli.cl ITATIMINT 01" Al&rtDONMINT ~r~~ tt!'i""::?:• Ind efhtr .... llONI C1IU-l1 _llftk 11 MC11r• JtrfV, lldt "ICTITIO~: ~i~1:1" II NAMI -• or n11y "' ,..,..11 ... wlll .. ICHP'-d Ol'ltr tor bl.Ilk P\l!'WH IOCA!M h1, Oii Ir u.,,t ttw lll'0'"1'f lllll Mck Wiii Mt IM lllowtd 911 HPlllll :r,Tht followlllliJ J"f'MH'I 1\11 1b1nclontd commontv 11\0Wf! 11 1111 Hll!on '""' 1.....,.. I lilM ti llM tlctlll-blltlntu MIM utvtl9 Hiiis, !twtld If 1nol LI l"l l 0.tW• "IW'UltY 17 lt74. VINE OA!LLINO ANO SAWINO 11.llfO, LMlll\I Hlt11, C111fotnl1, i/Kh.ld(llfl \.INITIO CAL(,tMHIA IANI(, COMll'AN'I', II )llCll ltM Hiii llclg, 1 Dht111bii1 AIMmbty • C:IHl«fll• corw•llot1 ,, '"''' 21SI CMll M .... l Wtrt CM\ltr Tt. flc!lt OUI ti.11iM11 119-r'eltrnd 1 SIM A..._ erct•;!.i~• MIMOff to l llO ... w11 llltd In Or1ntt CovnlY 1 Prtp 110\ll. A1~y NAltWOOO lo ADl(IMIOtl Oii NOY. 6. 1f73, , Ill' Mh11r1 ....._..II U w Mlcl\ltl It, L11t_.,, lDI E. 1'11tll. l Mltl"1ng Unit I ~ ,..,.., "°"'I Kiit. Ct, '2701 1 1(1 Crvtl'llf" r. ......... c ...... Of'IYe . '"'''... Thi• lMlne11 Wll c:and11ctld r, Ill l Sllvltl' SOlk Sink hit Offkt IM "" !Mlvl0111l, 1 Ol1llw11....,. ~ I Ndt. Cllll. f1U1 MJtllll l II. Lt1l1¥ 7 01111 C1r11 Ttlt 1n•1 ... 1111 '''"" l I« Cnislli<' ll'ulllltllld Ori.... COiii 0.11¥ Pilot, PubllU>ld Orentt Coe1l Dlll'f Pllol. l WIM lltfr~llor FffnHry ,., '"' 111-14 Ftbru•rv ,,, ,,, H . tn4 Mirth 1. 1 ""'"' 1t74 507.74 ~ =-1::=" S«11on PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC 1 Cti1r l rolllr •ICTITtOut I USUlll l NOTICE ~ ~!~:; , MAMI ITATeMINT l'ICTITIOUI •UttNl-11 1 Till ftllowlllf ,..._ 1rt lfolnt fill.Ml ITATIMlfllT l ~= C...... buslntu 11: Thi toli-lnt ptrlOll 11 doing bvllMll 111.UCHAMP MAH AGE M. ! HT 11: ~ ~r:.~ l(tttlt COMll'ANV, 11n Ungl.y AVl/1111, OCV.N Alllt: No.. 2. SIU M1ln St., tMftt, Cl , n70I H1t111tlnt16n ltKll, C1U1tr11l1 HUI 2 Port1blt ll1t~I Jtobtft F, IMudllmp, 0.0 .S., HS2 Cl1rtnct FtnMtl, 2U27 5, V9rmont 1 Utility C1rt1 Ltntltr Avtnllt, ll"W'IM, C:t. t::1705 AVlllUt, Torr1nc1. C1llf, 90502 1 R1trl;er1lf111' Ak ..... ~. Tiii bu I I 1n l lloll-ln F•-·-111'11 L. __,;.,.mp, 260i Wl'f I I..... $ CondU'11d b'f "" •• LIM, C..-Otl ~· (I, f1Mll lndlVld111l. 1 Lobby T1b11 Tlll1 llllllflhl 11 11f tondvtltd bv "Cl1r111c1 fltnnttl l Ph-LiCIOt 1 Ck11er1I r1rtMrlhlp. Thll 1!1ttnwnt wll lllld wllh tht 1 M1!1r1 d' 511nd lllcl'll,., l . all!Klllmp COUl'llY Clerk ol Ori.,.. County on 1 Pl1rio 81r TI1l1 111""-f tlleoll Wlttt ttt. Covnty F1Dtu1ry ,Jf, 1t74. 1 COlll'lltt' Cl•rti: of Or•ng• Count,, '" .......... ry P•tl•H 1 81ck COVl'll•r u. lt7ol. Publl•llld Or•llOI CM•I O•!lr f'llOI All Oll'lif'll llMll'I Ttllltt. ,41"4 Ftbr~ry :11, tt, M1rt ll 7, U, lt14 •20J4 All COl'IM ll!op T1bltt. "llMltllld ~lftlt C:otft b1lt)' l"lllt;\-'-~---'---'-------'---'---'"-- 1 Ch1lr/Mltrapotll1n FlbrU•l"I' 11, Mlrch 1, ''' 21, 1t74 1'01·7• PUBUC NOTICE 1 Sol1/H•YH / 1 Ol1hw11h1r Hood l Work T1bll 1 P111> T1b11 1 Pol Sll'lk AINmblv 1 ll1lrlger1tor I let Cuber & 81n 2 Sollld Ollll 511tlvl1111' 1 Olst10UI AU Ol1llw1ih!ng R•tb 1 Wini Jl1tk I ltfl Cuber & 8111 • '°"'''"' I GrlOdl• W/DOt" 8urnlf"I I Chffw MIUtr I FrYtr I Porl1bll 81~ I Mlxtr lflf'lll I Sllctt Sllnd 1 Dilf!OMll 1 R1nge 1 S1t11ner I Pof lllCk 1 Sc1l1 PUBLIC ~OTICE PICTITIOUI au11111 •11 NI.Ml STATIMt:NT _ "ICTITIOUS IUSINl ll Thi ~Intl pt<llOll• lrl dalflll N.LMW STATl-M•HT butl11111 11: Thi tol'-ll'lf ~ It doing bualntu I lo G ,AOOUCTIONS, 7~ l 1k1r ••: Sr •• c .. ,, Mtu, Cllll. 12•U DESIGNERS l"LAHT SEtllVICf, 1n• Fr1ncl1 J. l•n1, "' Calton St .. W1ll1c1. Cotti Mtw. c .. m21 Newport •11ell. C•lll. ""'° MlcllHI Elllolt lrlll, 1n6 Wal11C41 ltldtlrd Gonlll", 316 Colton, H•wport No. o~ Cosl1 Miu, Cl. ~ liJM:ll. C1!LI. 12UO Tllll bullMI& 11 Conducted by 1n Tllh bvttn111 I• conducted by I '11-•I lncllvld111I. 1>1rlnffllllp. Mich•-' E. 8rtlf l'r1ncl1 J, 11111 This tt1t1m1nt w11 flltd With !Ill Tlllt 1t1f1n1111I w11 fl1td with !hi Cou11ty Clll'k of Or1 .. 1 County on County Cltrk of Or1 .. t Counly on "*"""' 16. 1f7it FIOfu1ry lt, lt74. ,..11n1 "nno PvillltMd Ol'lllOI Clltt Diii¥ Pllol PYt1ll1hfd Orll\ll'I' Co11t Dilly Piiot "ltWl.llry ZL Mlrch ,, ,,, 21, lt7• '°"'' FlbrUlfY 21, n, Mtrcll 7, '"' 1'74 ,2 .... 11 PUBUC NOTICE PuBLtC NOTICE I 81r Ml•ll'" I U •Jll• 'ICTITIOUI I UIUllll 1 llolHn A1frlgtr1!0I' SUPlatOll C:OUltT OF THI Jiii.Mi ITATaMeJllT 3 PorMDle 1t1cb I TATI OP CALlt10.Jllll. flOlt Tiii lllUowlpo perllOll 11 doh .. b111ln1J• 1 Pnone l.ldllt TMI COUNTY OF OltAN•I 11: 1 Coa t ll&tk Nt>. A-J'ttn A·ill TV ANTl!NHA 76' W, W1l1on, I 8er Cauntlr '90TICW Of' Mh•IMG 011 r fTITIOlll COiii Mls1, C1Uf, '26i7 1 Mlrrw (lboft pl1110 Mr) Poa ... OIATI Oft WIU. 'ANO "Oii Wellitr L 8n11y, 76' W. Wll10n. I ltr Ctw1tw LlmAt Oft AeMIJllllTllATION WITH Cosl1 Mffl, C1Uf. tu27 1 LObbY 81nCll TNI WILL AMfllWklO , Tllll bu1ln.11 It candutltd by 1n All Cocldlll L.Olll'fl Tlbill &:111~ -JOSEPH J . I( L Es s • lncllvldu.il. • 2 Enlll4o¥ .. '• Dini .. T1ble1 o..ctntd. W•ll•r L. •••H·r 'C111lr/HtJ'H HOTICI. 15 Hl!illl!tY GIVl!N fh1t Tllll 1t11ttmtnl , w11 flltd wllti 1111 2 L1mp1511"-'I SUU.HHI M. Kll!SS ll1S flied hlf"ll" Countr Clark ot 1'0r111 .. County on , Tlbll/ P1c1nc • """'" !Or ll'rotll!f pt Wiii Incl F•br~rr 2'-lt74 1 Conl0!1fl(, WUP1m1 ftr" -...U.l'ICI M Llll1tr1 61 Admlnl1!r1tl011 '·11nt 2 T1bl1tM1h'01M41t..n wl11'1 IM Wll A"lllMld II the petUlon,r, Publllllld Or111(11 CMtl Dlllr Pllal 1 L1mpJL. Artlln '~ to whld'I 11 midi for furt!Mr F.Wu•'l' 11, Mlrch 7, 14, ti, 1'71 H+.74 2t Stncl UNI Plff1(11!1rw. Ind tl'lll fl'll llm.t INI plict•l-------------1 1 A Ctock/C1nll!'blwv ol llllor1119 the umt hit llMn Ml PUBUC NOTICE I C Clock/C'"flfbutV tor Mitt. 11, 1t7t, '' t~Oll 1.m., lnl------------I I E Cloclt!C1"ttrbVfY tM ~ ot Olll1rtmtnl Ne. ! .. ' .. I C M•o, C 61 t.ilc ct11r1, 11 7tio Civic Ctnttr '1 omm. " ' o. °'Ive Wnt. I" thl Cl ... Ill '"'' •·-, I .10f1/H1.,.. •r """ 2 L1mp/L. Arkin C1llflml1, "tcTITIOUI BUSINl l l NI.Ma ITATaMIHT Tiit !0Uowl1111 "'""" Is doln'I! butlnnt ft: I Bench/HI,,_ OltM Fib, H, lt74. I Cfllir/Vlrtu. ~~AMC'·!.: ST. JOHN, Nl!l!OL~OillKS, lllll Vlllt W1y, ,,,_.n, ,.,., Ntwporl 811<h, C1. '26'0 I Cflllr 1-nr1C1mbn IAMll I . MASOM Illy T. Currie,, no 8. 11tbal. 1 L1mp/lll"°" 1111 w..-Mtw A... Ntwport 8Htll, C1. t::IMO '2 T1bll/l1nlc:k1 • .,... .. ..,., C•Ultftl• nm Tllh bull111i1 11 conductld br "' J T1bl•l l1rr1c.1t1 int) .....,.1 1nc11vldu.I. 12 8 Cll1lr T1\1Ck/VI~ A"'"'" ..... ............ ltlY T. Cllrrltr r ,:1~,,:.c Publ11Mc1 Or•IVI C111t 0t.!1r 11110!, Tllll tllltnwnt w1• fllld with till 1 Fri mtd OU J'Wrwory 21, Ind Mlrdt I, 1, 1'14 711-71 C-ty Cltrk et Or1n91 COVllly on 1 Tapntr¥ i---'----------IF1t1ru1ry 2•, lt14. ""l1" , Fr1med 011 PUBLIC NOTICE ..... t A· fr1mecl ,rtnlt \-------------\ ,ublllMd Orll!lill COl!tt 01llv Piiot 1 C· Fr11Md 011 • a '"" f•u.rv •• Mlrdl 7, lo&, n. "'' 709.1, I I!:· frlmld Oii IU,dlOll COUlllt OP TN• PllllUC NOTICE I Mirror ITATI: Oft CALl,OAllllA '°" ~ Chell "'* wttlte W/pe(ll'I fell THI counv ... Olll.lNOI ,, Sllnl•'f lour>tl dlllr 1mokl ... 1v11 ....... n 1n .. •ICTtTIOUI ~SIHlll ti Pllll m1r le~t MO"MC I Oft HUalttO OP" P!IT1t101t lllAM W STA MIJllT t4 Tr1,, Limp · Anll11-Wll!t1 "" PaOIATI fW WIU. AND Pott Thi fo!loWll!lil ptrlOll t dol119 bvll11111 lN Er'IOllndtr 8«11111 "' ~ It lpteltl LINlllll TllTl.MINTAaV l t i MVll'. il071 lllttro HUfltlngton 8i1eh. ... 1,., ld1t1 If WINl'ltlO J . MclCINHOH, Cllll '*' ' 1 L1mp1 um11 O«MMd. ,.lli1t11 H. Mook, jr., 01 Flg1ro. t L•mp/L. AMiin HOTICI II HWIUE&'I' OIV!N 11111 H1.1ntln111ton B11cll, Cl II, '2619 I CONOie/i(, Wllll1m1 MRI. AllMOlO LANG LEV 1k1 Tllll bu1h1111 11 conduclld by Ill I lllldlt H1vn GIEOaQll! L.AHGLl'I' h11 ltlld l\lnln lndl.,.ldu1t. lO Pllnlll' Pott 1 p1111!Clf> fol" l"n:ICNI.. Of Wltl Ind ,lllllp Motlk ' a CIOClr./C1"tltrtMJl"'t' fol" lllUll'ICI ot Lllftrt T••'"""""trv Tlllt ··~19rnthl W~I fflltl wllll .,. I 0 Clotk/C1nttrbur"'I ft tilt pl'lllt.-l'"lftrtl!Ce TO Wlllch County C lrt. ot rl l'lfl Coun'i114fs 14 ClllltfComn'I. Mk'9. Co. It """ tor f\lrtlltr H rttcvllf', Mid ,...,_,1'1' I lf74. " ll1t Stoe'-/Comm. Mkto. Co. tNI IN tt-Ind pl1t• el Mlr1.. Publhh.d' OrlflO• COii! 01Uy Pllol 2 Chtlr/Comm. Ml!ft. C1. !lie Uml 1111 bltn. Ml lot Mtrch 1t14 Sl .... 74 t Tlbltt./MOdlr" Modi 1t, 1t74. 11 t :OO 1.m., Ill IN courtr.om -24 Chalr/Cemm. Mllto. C•. .i o.p.rtm.ent No. 3 ot 1111 ctlllf"I PUBUC NOTICE 1 Clllcker Staol/U11•td. Chllr 11 701 Civic Ctnler Dtlw Wfll, ln•'t --------------1 CllMOll/IC. WlllL-TM City ol lanll Ml, Cl11fornle. l"ICTfTIOUS I USINUS 11 8tneh/Ht'ffl Dlllcl l'llr\llfY 21. lt71 MAMI ITATWM•lllT iu Cflllr/Vlrtvt WILLIAM f , St. JOHN. Thi ft&wllll .... -••• dtllnt s " Tltlll Trvck/81n-lck1 c-"' , .. ,. J74 Of1pery F1br1c aOIT. M. ••CM bu1ll'll'SI •• , 3t LlnlnG Fibrlc: WOVln WOOd 1Hn4 SllS h ll lteM FOUHTAIN VALLEV DENTAL 1 T1pesfry c~ C:ll....... Gill.OU... '"'°"" M19Mll1 SlrHI, 2 Fr1mtd Prlnlt Til: (JU) h1·7'11 F0111111I" V1U1y, C1lltornl1-'270I , I. '' .... P,1•1 •=t: "' ,.._ si.pt11n c. 01i.s. o.o.s.. m 2tlh " 1 Strttl. M1n!llM1n 811ch, C1lltoml1 2 Fr1med Gr•pllic llu thlct °'"'"""' Ca4111 DlllV Pllct, WU. t a · Fr•med Oii Ftbnlel"Y •· 1/ICI Mlrch 1, 7, 1t11 106-7• Mlct\llt Nmtlffd. o.o.s .• n:wi Lomi 1 0 • Fr1med 011 .,., 1 Fr•tned Oll \ DUBLIC NOTICE Orlvt, t-!ffrt1t111 l11c:11, C1lllOl'T'l1 '°25" '' N!gllltllnd-lllto w/pec1r1 !op ~ Tiiis toullne11 11 conclvcttd br • ttn1r1t fl Sle'ier Jr11Md mirror 1>1rt1>trttllp, .. Sl1nll'f dftk cl\llr1 IUPlltl .. couaT °' CALI, .. ,...... Stlflhln c. D1ttt, o.o.5. ti Pllll Mir 11mp nl11111t1rid COUNTY OP OlAiilOI Tlllt 1t111m1nt w11 flttd with tllf lN Tllrow Sprtldt -Qulllttd • AllOrttd 1lt Cj\llc ("""t"'" w .. 1. County Cl•rk of Or1no1 Cou111Y on color1 11111• A,N,, 11!ftnjl1 F1br1,11ry It, 1t74. ltJ H1rv1iid Btdlrlmfl '" CAii MUMlla D ""1t ".Jlfll ,, Sill 01vld .. 01&11-0r1pery Tie lllMMOMS CMA••IAOll P11bll1hld Orlntl Coetl 01llY Piiot 1>1Ck1 In l'I IM '"'"11111 of Pt!ltltlfllr: l'tbru1ry 11, 11. Mlrch 7, lo&,'"' &12·7• t4 s .. Throuth C1wm9"l·01cran 81tl1l1 MAllGAJtET ANN SMITH I n d -· ,, N!t llllllncls • wt1l1tt pec:1n 1op llffPOAdtnt: Hl!H•Y aovo IMITH Jiii. PUBLIC NOTICE 31 M 8lt11r tr1mld '"lrrtln Tit 1111 lll1$POAdllll: Thi l!llllllontrl------------62 s Moorl 10\l!IG'I thll, • Ho. JS II•• "ltd I ptlltlon tonctrl'llllll JllUI • 1171 '' Phil Mir l1mP1 N1hllt1rid1 · white m1rr11111. Veu m1y ltlt I Mllltn lltOTIC:I TO C•l-DITOllt 31 l(lno 1lt1 ~ '"'" ...... E"llltr.Hr l'llpOllMI wltll!rt • d•'I' ol ,.... dill '"'••toll COUlT 01' TH• Jl s.t Or1119ry Tit l1Ck1 • 01vld 11'111 lflll W"""9ft• 11 Nrvtd on YOU. ITAT11 O• CALl .. OJtllllA "Olt & 01.ti It roll ftll to ltlt I written rttP6111• TMt COUlfTT Oii ORANOI ,, l lKkOlll Or.,,_.. vrlt!ilfl IVCI\ lllN, rOlll' dlllutt mlY litL A·n7'21 10 M. 8ltltr MlrrOI" bl Wlttl'lf Ind lhl cturt IM'f lftltr 1!1!111 If MAllGAllET AGNES BLISS, 111 Vl1!1 drnMr1 • I drl-Wlltl :..l"°f"*" Hl'lllll'llftl ll'llUl'lctlvt If olhltr llH ·-ti AGNES I LISS, 0Kt1HCI. pec:1n lop Clltlctflllll8-4l't11lon of pr'"'1ro NOTICI! 11 HEllEl'I" GIVEN le tht 11 Coni.ol1 dftk ll)tll.ISll .~. tlllld Clntoofy, cNld crtdltor/·tf Ille 1b0w n•mld dleldl-nl 10 S. MIOrt • Llllll'lft Cll•lr • 1rnok1 lllPllll'f, •"9n!IY'• ftn. cosfl, Incl Midi tllll Ill ptrsons fllvll'lf clllm1 19111111 .,.e1ve1 111111' rtllel' •• mtY bl er1nted bl' tht Mid d«9dl"' 1,. requlrtd to 1111 11 C11e11 lllT!PI ttw cwrt. 1111m w1ttl ft'l'I _,,,.., \'l)Ut:Mrt 111 Ill lr1y l1mp1 II '" Wltll to .... ,... "vi<• If 1111 inlc:1 ot 1111 cltrk ol lhl 1b0ft 10 01Yld • 0.ltt lllrvw 1Prttdt 4/1 Ill ....,..., ill fNI ""'"'' YM ........ ~-~tr .. """""'tflltttl, Wint 10 H1rv1rd bid lrll'NI M $e '""'"tty • "*' '°"" ""'* !ht lllCftlllY voudlfrs !ti I 11 t lt SM !llr0U9ll C11trnfftll ,.._., If ...,, IMJ .. 'tllM 11 lllldlNl""9d et lhl offltt o1 'n11 IHOl"lll'(I, 11 M lltlll' Mlrnr1 II'"" SCHOOLING ANO SCHOOllNO, 267' IJ Col!M !11>111 • wlllt• Witt! pee..n 0.ltd Jlftl.tll"I' lS. 1'74. Cit~ A'ltl!UI, H11nll111i1I011 P1rk. !OPS W. f , St IOHH, Cllfk Cilltomll 'fO'lSS, which It 1111 pllCI 1) Oltk c:h1lr1 IY llllY" T...-rt. ~ of llU'lllttll of lhl und9'""9Md In Ill J6 S Moor1 lounGI cl'lllrt • amokld (SIALI m1n.<1 ptr11lnl119 le 1111 nil.. of • vtlllll MIL.AN M. DOITAl 11ld ffct41ftl, wflFll" foyr monthl 11111' tl 11,ekoul tltll'llln1 '-•1sls•_, C.,,...,_ tilt flr1t pul>l!c1tlon ot llllt nelt~. 111 M llellf" Ptctur•• A__, " Lw Olttd ,...,,,,.,., s 1'14. '' F-cht1! dr1wtrt lwlto 1• Ullltll , .... '""'"' ITANLW'f WAlllAl!H MeOINT'I" " ~n-h~ll wlllll 11m1 1111111 PKllt G1'91119, <Ill"'""• nu. l~tor ,,, 1111 wlll ot 1 tn41 ....,.,.\ the 1110Y1 n1nwd d1Ctd1nl. )1 htl Mlt Chlll l1mp1 Alllf'M'f fw '-'lrltlllr SC:MOOLINe ANO ICHOOLIJllO ,, ;iPIVfd .. 01111 • lutctltf' 1111111 • PubttJllld Ol'antt Co.it D•llr ,Ila!, ldt Cl•,....,. A'llfllll Ttlrow 1prltld • ICll'lt 1111 • Qullttd hbru•rv ZL ,,.. Mlrcll J, 1•, 21, tt•nft...._ p~ C•lll. ttHS • 1rl td Ct11or1 1f7l 6t1.J4 ft11 lfil) •.flll "---~~ -----JI .lff tllr0\1111'1 Ditton l1Utt1 Dr•Plt PVBIJC N011CB 'ubll•llld or.11111 co11t D1llr Plktt 14 ~· 8tellr PICIUrll ~• -----_.-_ ,tbr'lllry 7, ''-SI,•• 1t74 416-74 1!1. ~· lltldbOlrdl • Wrnll 'tCT11IOUJ IUllfllll* 1011.Vl1ll c:effM ltblll • whllt • IMC-Ill WA.Ml lfATaMI MT llf Thi follow111t ptrtOll II dOlnt bulfhln ~~ts~~o.::i1ct11.,:, • 111 Ind! wtttt 11: fHI WALLPAPllt .MAH. 2 l6l ----,~~-,-,,,-... -11-l-.-,-l.-l-1-l--em ctPt 11\d Cl""' H111'1Vlll1 11. No. l, Hunffntlon IMCll, fli t.Ml ITATIMllllT IOelmPI . dtlk C.1MI. ,,,..._ G 11_.........'.. 21& N111Mlll Thf folllWlflt PfftOl\t lfl ftli .. 20 llfitr lrlrl'f plclvTft oon. ordofl ._.. ... ~ c Ill bullntt• II: lf ll041ndlr lldMh •t•XtO :;i,.No. c. ~llllngtOn ........ I ' 111.Vl~l OJl:ILLIHG "NO SA_WING: 10 111 Otv!d .. 0111'1 drlPl"Y TlllJ Wtlnt1i It conducttd br WI COMl>AN'I", JlOJ 11..i HIU IE'9(1ntde ·1~·1Ck0UI curl•lnt lndl'lldltfl, i YI, Cott• Mttt. C:1lllornl1 ,,..,. 1 tChllf fl•k whltl Wllh PKlfl ._ LVC111• lthoOtt 011mond Cort Orl1Mnt Cl., Inc., J End-10lt1 ·Whitt w\111 piC.1111 Jopl Tllll 1!1Mmtl'll Wit flltd WOii ... Ctltror!ll1 C:Olpol'lllOl'I, Ill loo--Critrfll, 1i Simmon tof1 bid• • 71 lnc1rt1 • Ceyntv c11r1r.1 ol' Orlfltl CM11¥ '" °"'""' Clllforfllt ""' I ... !ff 11Ylt ,IO(lllf"Y i, It '-f'tl4M Tllll 1111rt11IM11 II conchlCltd br I 1• ,: =:~LI-=: =-:.111.. F1~1~0ti;7!' .c~ o~~.ilr. corpor•~m.n. Cort Di11Un1 co., Ille. t 1111.,-,-,l'IMCI p1ctvrn 1'74 , • ilW• Mlrt. O. Clf"lcll. ,,.., I .... t111•vut11 UMfMl!ll ' • -Tilll tll""""" Wll fl!M Wiii\ lllt • lllCll:out _.. P\JllJC NOTICE Countr Cltrtt et Ortfllll Ctut11Y °" 1111 tlml ''""' "IOl'Uln' 0 , 197• 11ld Ml M l'OOl'l'I carft -. • P-i14M 11 lnOIOll tllllllfld m1null ~II., 'ICTTTIOVI l utlfllftl ,ublliMd Dl'•ntt Cot~ C111Y Pllol, lltACtt MAoll'I IT+TUlltMT Ftbf\llfY lo&, 21. •• Ind Merell 7, PUBUC NOTICE CANBEJ\RA, A u 1 t ro ! l'a (AP) -Several hwrdred aborl&ines drowned out I.he naUonal anthem as .,.Queen Elizabeth , II arrived at Parliament Hoose today. And later as she •as opening Parliament, another abori&lne held two officials at gunpoint four miles away. EDITOR'S NOTE -For 2l1 yearr American fighting men ha~ been up on tilt ltne in Korea1 onned'cnd wc!t- ing . .A.s tht years have passed, the biggest foe has been ttdhtm. The latest CO 11<1! jumped lttto th< battl• wfth both f eet with a bLt11d of karate and kindt1tss to uet tht Gls lean and mean. The gunman was talked into surrendering and no one was hurt. The Queen and her husband, Prinee Philip, displayed no d (spleasure when the aborigines' chanting of "land rights now" drowned out "God Save the Queen" as the royal oouple walked up the steps or Parliament House. e Officers K ille d CIUCAGO (UPI) -Two young Chicago policemen were shot and killed in a scuffle with a gentlemanly looking gwunan ln a tavern on1y about (IN SHORT ... ) two blocks , from the Foster Avenue District Police Station Wednesday night. The victims were identified as patrolman Bruce Garrison , 29, and William Marsek, 28, both assigned to the Area Six S~al Operations Group - a ~al task force assigned to high-crime districts. e Britain Vole• LONDON (UPI) -Britons today turned out in strength to elect a new goverMlent, with a last minute opinion poll predicting victory for Prime Minister E d w a r d Heath's conservatives. An opinion research center poll in the London Eveni ng Standard gave the conservatives 39. 7 percent, Harold Wilson's Labor Party 36.7 percent and the Libe.ra1s 21.1 percent. · e SMl't'f!nde r NEW YORK (AP) -Joseph "Joe Yak" Yacovetli has surrendered to police who have sought him f o r questioning since 1972 In the gangland slaying of Joseph "Ctaey Joe" Gallo. Yacovelli, a reputed squad leader in the crime family of Joseph Columbo, turned hinueU over to police on Wednesday-in the studios or radio station WINS . eFare Bike WAS!IlNGTON (UPI) Citing higher jet fuel costs, Unlred Air Llnes Wednesday annowiced that It will ask for a ( percent hike in fares. 11ie nation's largest airUne said fuel costs for all domestic canim have gone up more than 47 percent since last June and that the average price for domestic jet fuel jumped to 17 cents a gallon in January -up 6 cents. e Nuelear Blast MERCURY, Nev. (AP) A nuclear device with a yield equivalent to between 20,000 and 200,000 tons of TNT was exploded underground at the NeVada test site Wednesday , ral.slng a cloud of dust and caushig shock waves felt In Les Vegas 80 miles to the south. No radiation leak w a s reported from the weapons- related test, code named operation Latir, an Atomic Energy COmmission spokesman said. er1a11e Down HALIFAX, N.S. (AP ) -A Toronto real estate company's executive jet with n t n e persons aboard r a d I o e d Wednesday night that it was short of fuel and would try to land on a frozen lake 30 miles southeast of Frobisher Bay. An air force and a pollce plane we re ordered to the area ta begin searching for the twln·englne craft, which is owned by Brelhrour Real Estate Ltd. .... e Premier Back By JOHN RODERICK CAMP CASEY, South Ko<'• CAP) -;--For Maj. Gen. Henry • • T b c Gunfighter" Emerson, the enemy weanl many faces : the 'North Kore an Communists, racial pressures and the girls outalde the gate. Spare and ramrod straight, Emenan ls commander of the U.S. Second Division, the last ci. the American fightJng forces left over from the Korean War of two decades ago. Unlil recently, the continuing P""""""' of U.S. troops In South Korea so long after that conflict seemed likely to be the subject of bitter debate in the United Nations. A compromJ.se defused the Issue, but lt will arise again at the end of fiscal 1974, W"ben Washington itself will . review the situation. Not1h Korea wants them to leave, the South says they are essential both politically and militarily. TllE SECOND Dlvision"s 13,832 combat troops -the total authqrlzed American lroop strength in South Korea ts 42,000 -are st.rwig out over a 500-square-mile area from the weste rn edge of the demilitariz.ed zone, separating the North from the South, to Camp Casey, 16 miles south, and Its environs. What makes it unique ls that 86 percent oC Its personnel are volunteers , 13 percent "Katusas," or South Koreans, 23 percent black, five percent of Spanish orlgin and ooe percent of Oriental descent. That 1s a mix which can, and has, spelled trouble. Racial violence, an astonishingly high venereal disease rate and hard drugs have for a long time been ·or problcins. Sin ral Emerson took over six months ago, Camp Casey and the Second Division hav n't been the same. A West Point.er with a generous am<IW\t of combat exPer ce, he Is described as an irinovator, ' peop indi· vldual" who beli ol the-anny's problems begin at t human level. HE HAS TURNED the dMslon Into something the old Korean War veterans would blink at, a combination of tough training programs and what, ln a rougher, less enlightened em, woo1d have been called pampering. _ The training begins early and efid.s late, and Includes night manuevers, an area in which the North Koreans ar-e strong and the Amertcam traditionally weak. Everyone, including the chairbome headquarters staff, gets a taste of It, as well as Some n.igged hiking and sky diving. He keeps up the fi ghting spirit with taekwando, the Korean version of karate, combat football , played by l-0 people with any number of footballs, moWlted dueling, which is hand-to-hand fighting piggyback. boxing and the usual other sports. People who know sa·y it has done a lot to bring the men from t h e flabbiness ol inaction to combat ready condition. The second , and perhaps most difficult phase of training, which he calls "creating the pn>life environment." is an effort to give his racially mixed, Often deprived soldien a stake in things, to give them a chance at achievement. E~tERSON BRING's e n D r m 0 u s experience in that field to the task. After a long time in alrbQrne units , he became deputy commander, then commanding general, of ttae John F . Kennedy Center for Military Assistance at Fort Bragg. It stresses people relations. . "We Americans are great at saying what we are against, but seldom say what we are for," he says . The pro-life • PARIS (AP) -Premier Pierre Messmer was putting together a new, elreamlinec:I" French goverorMnt today , but both Foreigll Minister Michel Jober\ and Finance Mtnl>ter Valery Qiscard d'Estaing were , .., elJ>COred ta continue In their posts. 1 Otiwtr flT\111 ,lit C1blfllf Tiii itllOWlnt Ptl'"" It illolllt but!,,... 1t74 U1·1• ,1 ~ O•l'Y , ... with OMft: chftt 111 . ,.,_ • I .l~~~=~=;;~;;;:;:;;;~;I •, ·:..:t-..... lltt 1111 ubfnth L VM8uriN IMST\TUJ"E, at t ~( ;:·~ ................. , ...... ,. .... ·-·--.. ,~-~--.u.a) '!be sliver-balm!, !7·yoar- old premier tendered hi> :llJ. man IOl"'f11tneOt'a reolptloo Wildnelday during a regular 'tlhlnel meeUng 10tth ailing l'rellitept Georl" Pompldou. Six 'liciurs later l'om.jlk!Ou /ippoln\ed hiJ!' t>"'ll'lcr again, In effect gliJnl Messmer hi> f~n backing ta end dlSarr,Y In tj>e aovmunenL l al'ld °"'' c1111r ,,... ,,. P • --mDr•ll• 11111" wim umllttll•• OMrl• H""'1 LY!'11:11Jm. f." ' ~ c11•t1 Loullll'I T•~· > :,:r'' Ho. 11S. NtwPOtl 11..cll, I l MaHl'IM P•• I I L i iil1tco "''' •••""" lhlt * ""' 1 col'tductM " •n l1 ll&lt , ~,-l'ofdlllf ··~ lrlllll'M\ltl. • . • r A ltr ""'111 llll!vlnt for UM!! Tllh :=.~ L::,wr;lld) Witt! !flt 1 ' • • Old fll(I• '* l:tvl'tl on -i"'••""" : t:C::ci:c't!n ~ c:r,1,1r °' ;,,,,,:l . .L~·~,g I'. ~;\ii)~· ~--=~~q~ti~!l~l!l~n~1~i~,1 r ;~' ~~ t11 1IKt • D1"4d PIA!tbrrisi °''* CHtl Otft¥ ,llot a O•th P'lllfM,., 11, a Mtrcll 7, 1 .. "74 II•·'' • ;J • I I I I GENERAL EMERSON GETS TAEKWONDO POINTERS K1tuq Soldiers Form 13 Percent of Second Dlvltlon \ " .. 11 program .l.! supposed to supply some of the answtrs. One of his major problems is Tong Du Oton village, outside the camp gateii. There two girls wait for every man. and gi1i4orally not for Jong. The veneTeal disease rat.e once was close to 100 per-cent, now is down to half that, thanks to treatment centers, a full~lO'Nn anti- VD campaign, and greeter on-camp recreational actlvity. ONE OF THE difllculUes Is that the Americans, located in what theoretically, at least, is a combat zone, aren't authorized to have their wives or depend..,. here. They mn if they pay their travel expemes arid upkeep, and many have. Some 66 dependent families are squatting In some!hlng close to privation among the proolltutes ol Tong Du a.on, some without running water, all without medical racllilles, and most having difficulty making both ends meet. Education is one of the big "musts" in Ernersm's Pro-Life campaign. Some 12,000 of all the men are involved in some kind of. educational pro~ for -a minimum of. eix houni a week. Uslng 50,000 tell!tboob, they are plowing through the rudiments of reading. pre- htgh adlool, high school and college-level courseo. Emerson'• title! of staff, Col. Paul Bcain, a ~ Vietnam veteran, ls about to get his doctorate in American history from the University 1 of Delaware. Again, not eveeyone Is happy with all this book learning. Some of the most .enthusiastic students, says Brain, ~ the blacks, 42 percent of whom haven't ftnished high sdiool and are busy making up that lack. Overromlng racial prejudice, Brain cootinues, Ls one of the most daunting problems of the Second Division. mANKS TO THE human ' relations program, Brain aays , there are fewer disturbances tlw1 In ·the rert or the army. Emerson emphasizes, he adds, that ' there must be absolute equality, not only under the Jaw. but in everything. Th.is Is easier said than done, he admits. But peer .pressures -!buddies talking a race offender out of hi! aU"udes -rock music festivals, social relat.Jons seminars, sports like taekwando, movies, and a "Pro-Lile Cent.er," cope with ·the problem_ ' But not everyone ls happy. A 21-year· old black from Washington, D.C .. interViewed in bis Korean girl friend 's "hooch" outside the camp, said bluntly: "If anolher war breaks oui, I'll be shooting at whites." Others complained that all the talking bring> few ....WJa and tlllli the wllltes get all the soft jd>I. BllT . BRAIN says the program muot be working. lie .... ris 1hat major racial incidents now are down from 30 or 40 a month, when Emerson arrived, to three or four. Taekwondo, · he says, helps relatiom between the 21065 Katusu1 wtld are experts, and the Americans, particularly the blacks. Serying three y e a r s , compared to ,the Americans' me, and paid $2 a month agalmt ¢he Americans' !200, the Koreans have tended to be shy and aloof. But Braln say• ~ and other programs are bringing them into the maimtream. 'Ibe Amerlcam generally rate the Katsu.!as highly, higher, they believe, than the North Koreans in military preparedness. Hard dn.igs, Brain says, are less 8 problem than they had been, alledlng about 1.6 percent of the dl•lsloo. Barbituarateii are U9ed by one perOent, but marijuana exceeds them all. "It's hard to discourage When you atand up at .the bar with a dry martini in your hand," he says. ALCOHOLISM IS "a oomewhal bigger problem" than drugs, he adds. An Alcobo).ics Anonymous group meets every night. ' 36 DAILY PILOT Thur5day1 Ftbfuary 28, l'J74 I The Bluest Marketplace on the' Oranie Coast ~emtntl •• , • , .• 500 • S24 • ~ ...... "" ,... ••• 125 • 149 ~ .••••••• 9S0 ·990 •l11iploy11M:rlf .-••• -.-••• 100 .. 199 r-lnOnCial • • • • • • • • • 200'. 299 _DAILY PILOT C,LASSIFIED ADS ~~::'.::::: ----;:-~:-;;;;--;~-,-=============.:-~--::-'-'"-=~-=---:-~II• ~ for So6e • • I ••• lOO • 124 Loit & FCu.1d • • • • • • • .s.so • 574 1Nod1onc:td.e., , •• , , • , • IOO • M9 You Can Sell It, Find It, [ 64-2--5 -678 J One Call Service =:.:..i-:.~:::-:--~::: Trade It With a Want Ad _ _ Fast Credit Appr0val ::::.::: ~::: :::: [~INDEX) General I ................. I~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;::;:;=::: General General H-fllr S•ll .............. lot c.,:~:.::_: _______ ...;..-C-...;.. ____ _ Metllllar/P,..811111 H-.• , 12CI - MM.lit *"''" l'ff S.11 ..•... IU ·--------Ac,...._ .... wi. . , . , .. , . , . . . IJt A,artJMfttl .., N'-, •••• , , . • . In l ftlMM P'1"91NffY • .. • . • . •• • . . 1J4 Ctr!Mflf'Y utt/Crntt • •• . • .. • 15' C.m!Mt&t "'°perty , .. , ... , IM c:onci."'lfllum1 .., 111• •••••••. 160 Dlil!llUn/U"lt1 Mk. , ...... , . lU W..lft MM IM¥1id ... ,., ... , 1'4 W-Proli'tff)' ••••.•.....•. : I" 1Mllnlr1at ...... ""' • .. . .. .• . • '" Leh "' , .................... 171 M91Mlt N"""1Tralltr l"•rt.s •• 1n Mt.llln, DHef't, ltMrt , . . . 174 Onnee Ct. '""'"rty .......... 174 0111 9f Sl•lt l"l'lpel1y .•...•• , 17' ltlldlts, "•tmi, GNYft •.•. , llO 1 .. 1 ES!''' l!nlltnee ........ Ht ll:NI l.1tflt W•lllH • . • . •• .. •• IM B111lnnt Opp0rt11mty •.••••••• , 200 B111lntu WAl!ltd .•.•••.•.....• 210 l11vt1lmtnt 011Ptffltnlty . . . . . • lll lllYHlmtnl WMIH , • , • , .•. , ... 1M M9llt)' It LNll ..... ", ••• , ••. 140 MtMY Wt11IH ............ , • , • ut Mtrtt.,.._ Tnnl Otedt . • . • . . • Ut SALESPEOPLE NEW or experienced men or women. We olfer PERSON· ALIZED TRAINING. A con· genial ollice in the best Corona del Mar location. A top commission plan and superior bonus plan. The.re are ample parklng lacilitles lor your custon1ers and con- sistent adverlising support. For your confidential a~ pointment . Call: John Allard, Manager 644-7270 I~ I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ,.,.1·.~"-.-.-.... -_--_-__ -__ -__ -' ....... * ---------·-........ """""· . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . * l+wMI f11m. " """'"'-• • • • • . Jlt C' .... lltl11illm1 Ill,.. . ....... , . JU • CttldMl111111m1 1111l11l'll. • • • .. • •• m C'tlMtt. flml. Ill' llllf11rn ......... m ' Ttwllllt-lllm. . • . • . •. • ..... • t:IO . TtwlllltvM 111rt11ni. . ........... W TOWRlllwM, !11n1, It vnt.nl ... )ti . • Dltll4tx.. ,.,,.., . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. )U O.pu:.. ...,.m. .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . :no Dvptu:... '""'· ... ...,__ . . . • lSS Allfs-fllrn ..................... W .. .., ..... -. •.•.•.•••..•..•..•. :u5 .. ,,... "'"'· .,, llllfllm. • • . .. • • • 270 1toorn1 .......................... 400 l'°m & IMl'll ................ 40S Htllt&. Mottll .................. .Cll 0...t Nt-.................... .CU ·-lltnl•ll ............... at Vtet15M lt11tt ............ , •.• ru CORONA DEL MAR DU· PLEX. ONE OF THE LOW· EST PRICED R-2 PROP- ERTIES SOUTH OF THE HIGHWAY . HARBOR REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 INltll '°' Slltrt ...... , • ., ..... 4JI !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. r., .. fir Rtllt .............. .c:u Oftk1 ... ,., .................. ... lfld111trttl llllltl ... ,., ... , ..... 45'1 '""' ........................... 4.SJ 1tent1l1 ••11ftd ................ ""' MIKlll-lltnllll .. , ...... 4lf ~-_ ___,,~ .t.1111111nctt11tt1tt ................ SOC C•nl of Tllllllltf/111 Mtmorlum sos L.,11 Nttlcn •.•.......•......• Sii ,~""-"'"'-'~ A111'11 trt11Jportlll9!! ............ SU l"lrMl'l&ll •.•.•.•..•.••.• ;;, . . • . l:IO HARBOR VIEW HOMES Popular "Carmel" ~.fodel . Three Bedroms, Form a I Dlning Room, Family Room and a sunny kitchen. Well located and on fee simple land. S69.500. ESTATE REALTY 640-1120 Stc .. I C'lllbt , ................... Sll ·--------Trf'l.i ............ ', ... » .... S40 l'--LKt-... _-_ ..... I~ l"llolllll fft'N Mii ........... ,._JSll Ulf •. ............ . ...... SSI w•~mn -)~ kMth & l111lrvcllwlt •...•.. , SJS TI! .. tric•I . . , . . . • . . .. . . • • . . SIG ltrYk9 Dlrt<Mry .............. llOf M W1ftt•, Miit . . . . . . . .. •. • 7IO ..... Wtll!ed, F1m1l1 .......... 702 -"" W•11ltd, M&I" .......... 71H Hllll Wlftltd, M&I" .......... 710 -I~ '-----~ AlllJilluet . .. • .. • , .. • • .. • .. • IOO A,..UlllKH .................... IOt AlldlM • . • . .. . . . . . . . . . .. . .. • . . I04 B"11111111V M• .... 1111 ...•.•.• , , , • 1M Ctrntrtl & l:4'Ulj1r11tnl . , . , , , •.•. IOI l"•nilfllre •• , , .•. , .•. , .... , , • , , • llG •• ,... l•lt ....•..•...•.•.•.. 111 ~Ill'"'"' .............. 114 ,.....,... ........................ llS M.9dll....-r ....................... ,, Mllett"-.................. 111 Mhc .. s11•••t W111ftf , • . • . • . • m ,_.le.II 1......,_h .......... m Ofrlc. ,.nt1tert1•111i, ......... 124 Pl•Mt/O'llilllf •.•.••••.•.•.••.• 12• Stwlflt M1c-lllnn •.•.....•..... 121 Sportl1111 Goodt ................ IJO =-~~~-~.:::::::::: TV, ... ,., NHll. Sr.. .....• P' I ,.;,..,_ I~ Ptft,, 0--lll .................. IH Ctb .......................... •n 0.,. ........................... l.S4 ...... .......................... ISi ""-......................... 15' Ltvftftdl ....... ........... .. lSI I ....::"'...;'-I~ Disguised Landlord! Easy to solve tenant prob- Jen1s lorces sale of this neglected Peninsula Duplex! Best fixer in town at $54,!0J. -take over pvt financing!! Call 645-8-100. 9 <YFICES & f V. E. llo.nnl & Co. IWI £,t.., iw.:r..,. $36,500. Lovely"'tul-de-sac Jo-- cation. Supe r clean vacant home. Dou ble detached $:'.at· age. Call 847-6010 agt. Walker 8-lee lllA~ ttT•lt COSTA MESA FOUR-PLEX Just listed, a top money maker in an excellent west· side location. All 2 BR unlts backing to a golf course. SG05 monthly Income could even be more. Only $61,500. CALL 644-7211 /Jn NI GEL [!A ILEY !.. ASSOCIATES Just reduced $2750 ... beaut- 11ul 3 bdrm., family nn. home with sparkling pool, in Harbor View Hills. Pro- fess. decor., & In move-in cond. Please call for app't. $84,750. EMERALD BAY OUI. 2 TIAt Eastside BAY and BEACH Doll House 67 ·3000 Perfect starter Home. 2 Bed-I ~;;;:;:;;;:;;;::;:;;;;;:. room, beautiful drapes and 1---------carpeting. Extra modern s· I St 4 kilchen. Step down conver-l 1n9 ___ e Ory sation area arowid pictur-Great Mesa Verde location!! csque fireplace. Room for Quiet. Pride of ownership 1 garden or orchard. We tri neighborhood. Lots of patio harder at Tri-Harbor. space. Quality family home. 400E.17• fORALl "PACESETIER" mod •I. 1 Call to Inspect this well C.M. llOS priced home, $46,950. co: Ts -WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pon Evenings) 4 BEDROOMS Nr. South Coast Plaza (of! SunDo"•cr, south on Fuchsial in the Grecnbroo;c tnct ·in COfl& bleu.'1 fastest growing y o u n g couples community. Vacant • at once occupancy. CALL ANYTIME ""-3921 Evn: 646-1543 Lachenmyer( Re,i ltor . General (~) EASTBLUFF TERRACE Deluxe T ownhomes Immediate Sale Eastside Coste Mesa BeautifUI estate home. S Bedrooms, 4 b a t h s • ._ ......................... ,.. Beautiful pool. Many trees. ... ,.. Mlllll\l./ltlf'Yk• · • ...... · "2 Lots of extras. P r I c e A view oriented, totally mal nt .-free ga rd e n IT'S YOURS community in one o I Got a boat? Like waterfront Newport'• most de• Ired living? Better act fa.st • areu.3 4 '&" B ... tl./MlriM 11111111 ........... ... .... .._ ,.._ .................. "' reduced from $107,000 to ...... ltNl/Ctlt119r ....... ,,. tOI $75,000. ...._ 1s11-..................... "" Roy Mccardle Realtor ....... Sfltlt/Declu ......... , .. JIO ... "' : .... & n1 ............ "1 1810 Newport Blvd. CM ...,._ Sllfl" .................... JU 548-7729 I T_. .. m. llrti l1""-P""R""1D""E-OF-- .,~,.. ........................ m OWNERSHIP Ct""'"' S•1t1•111t .......... no DU-PLEX Cfttll, **"" ~ ........ m •lsdl1l c. .................. , .. •• 2 bedrooms and patio each. MloMlt "-.. .. • .. .. .. .. .. • JU Mlttf .._ .................. Ht Evtn a sundeck on the Tr•""'-Tr• ..................... KS · garages ovtrlooking the golf T,•hn. UHlftJ .. ·· ...... · .. · JO <'Ourse Call Red Carpet Airi. llln'kl 6 l"lll'tt . .. .. . . ,.., • • Realtors for an appointment 54&-864-0 ONLY $45,900. 1 .___-_ ... _ .. _,l/M) ._.. .~ ...................... ,,. ~ .............. m ........................... fW """"'" .... .... . -.. . .. . .. "' '"""*' ........................ "' "-........................ HJ ... Leeslllt .................. ~ --~&P.m ........ Ht ............................... ..... • ....,,,... .............. t10 ..... .... .................. -....._UM ................... ,"' ft'• " brenr. .. ~ .llt.0 :i"')ltf' Jeema wtlb eur;·.m Dally &o--56'18 tor fut, .....,Jts. ... ... J louse of glass has pool, 1.ufCe family room. Two tire- plAces. Pre1tlge.. execuUve area. Call 847-6010 agt . OPEN f/L t • rrs FUN 10 WE NICil f' I ~ 642 .. 4HI DINtt or Cohc:t .. ---"'-....... ,.,. """"' -~-- PENINSULA PT. 3 BR., 2 baths, beautiful cond. 2 Patios: dbl. car gar. Qulck possess. sn.sool call: 673-366.l 673-6688 Eve1. associated BR OI( ERS-REii L roqs 1C1~ \lit Balboe 1.11 l~tl TRIPLEX Eastslde money maker! Convenient to 11th S t • shopping &. tram. 2 Bdrm. un.ltl, tn:cl. garages, aep. pnv. patiOt. SU.per income record; act tut on this onel SSl,500 ' Vacant 3 Ba with beams, ' S R. f\repl, blUns. ne\v crptg. 50 Popular Price Range , FOOT SLIP! .,..., owner MODEL OPEN DAILY asking $94,500, Will take 8.15 Amigos \Vay 644-lllJ nearly any trade. Ca 11 !Broker co-op lnvHed l 645-MOO. l-'-'-"-'---'-'-'-<--"'-'"'-''--- 909!.§&GlQWN;·.CWUSf S ~ units show gooct ln- 1. v. E. "---~ & I come. Prtme close-to-benrh • .,..•;:::~Co. area won't last at $79,!l!JO. . _ can agt M7...,10. ----~ Custom Collfornle !n Newport Beach. Newly completed and ready tor yoo. Open beams thruoul this 3 btdroom home. Well appolnted kitchen and nJOmY '""""'-SM,500. PE'TE BARR~TI -REALTOR- '42·52• Ol'EN m. t • ITT Fl.JN m lJE NICE/ '"'''·"·' THE HEAL 1 t! ,w I I 1 •1111,'11 ESTATERS C. F. Coles worthy Realtors 640-f020 Ckitdoor sportt loe:t I t s appeaJ? Stll wqr equjpment with a low-coif' Dilly Pilot ~'"'"!!-!!'!-~-!!-'!~-'!!!-~!!!-'!!!-=-!!'!!!-~-!!'! Oas~ified Ad! 6(2...5678. MOTIVATED to •DI~ r.ot R new f1nnJly room thllt to mow. loll ot aJ.us. · . n«'ris more fu.rnlturt? Shop Eicecutive areft. Call · 00\\'. every day! Agt. 8'7-«710 . I WI CAN HILi' YOU llUY, NLL., OR TMDI A HOlll ANYPLACI .. THE NATION General * Balboa Bay Properties * BAY AVE . WALK TO BE.ACH 4 Units-$75,000 Super sharp 3 BR., 2 • -5 :•· HERITAGE REALTORS. General 546-5880 Open Eves, General OCEANFRONT ba. Enlarged liv. rm. ,. U.._, Nifty duplex I Pools & tennis. $48,500. ~ rolVUI' liCMI' $155,000 67&-7060 642-7491. SEE ME, I CAN HANDLE A POOL TABLE-.. ---------' That's right! Family room's big 'nuff, besides MESA VERDE Corona del M•r I tiave four bedroo1ns, a woodsie back 40, a Golf Course Duplex cul-de-sac location and new carpets, dish· washer and disposer. I'm all class at $58,950 11th Green is right at Ocean side of Hwy., in Mesa Verde. your back door. 3 br. 3 close to shops. 2 & 1. UNIQUE HOMES RHltors, 546-S990 ba. home w/pooL 3 Car Just reduced to $63,500. 2850 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa -Mou gar. $74,500. 556-8800. 673-7420. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~=! IB REALTORS IB 1~G.;;;•n,;.:;.••;,,ji•r.......---1 General MOBILE HOME HALF ACRE 4 Local Offices to Serve You FOR SALE: ESTATE GOING LIKE HOTCAKES! Mesa Verde Villa -Immacu- late 2 Br. Home with com- munity pool, shows like a model -lots ol mirrors - rough hewn wood -Bearing dwarf fruit trtts! Seeing ii believing. $24,500. Ca 11 546-2313. OPfN Tll t • rr"S FUN 10 BE NICE/ ,,, ...... ", THE REAL 11 ,11•.11 ,,111.1 ESTATERS , CALIFORNIA RANCH STYLE MACNAB IRVINE JR. EXECUTIVE ESTATE 3 bedrooms, 2 baths -country klkhen - family room. Patio -pool. Perfect for Indoor/outdoor entertaining. $63,500. Bob Owens 64U235. (J60) DOVER SHOR-ES "COUNTRY EN<fLISH" 5 bedrooms, S'h . baths, formal dining room, family room, billiard room & library/den. Pool. $485,000, Harriet Perry 64U235, (J61) BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM Designed for comfortable living. Massive entry & richly upgraded thruout with atrium off kitchen.& dining areas. $92,800. Carol Berry 644-8200. (J62) ffl -°""9 Ml•HSI • • •'!!I'-N4·~ SILVERCREST FIVE BEDROOM MOBILE HOME 4\0 BATHS 3)' This i! a beautifu1 home x 53' 2 BD 2 BA, carp., in a beautUul setting. S,000 draped, bit-ins., refrlg., sq. ft. of luxurklw lamlly washer .It elec. dryer, wired living with two fiunlly lor 220 a1r cond., k1tch. I I d' --clock, storage shed, land-rooms, orma 1n1ng room, scaped patio. Three yrs. old beautifu1 pool, and many lik Lo ,, in other features that only a • e nu. ~at.:u new custom buHt hOme can offer. adult pk. away from noisy !:t. O"ne-hal! bl. from club-For further infonnaUon house. $15.495. Call EVES. please call 5'6-9491. 213-69M690, '697-n52. CAN BE SEEN AT: CRESTMONT ESTATES, 1051 Site Dr., Bree. c.entnJ Avt. across from Brea Comm. Hosp.) Lot •46. CONTACT RAY, PK. MGR. for showlni:. Walker 8-lee Jll•L lllAll -OCEANFRONT ON THE SAND Charming Beach Cottage situated on choice R-2 lot on the Sand. Cozy entry. Stepdown l.iVl.ng mom. Massive stone Ji.replace. Skippers galley. Large patio. Present income $4,500 per year. Call for more ln1onnatk>n. 842-2535. [i'"S-roM~o~ BUY ME VA I'm a cute lBR dollhoole with marble fireplace & double garage in Eutslde Costa Mesa. I have a great backyard with play area Ir: tttes, concrete drlvewa,ys &: spijnklers. OnJy $34,950. Call Prestige Homes, 645-6646. 5 BRAND new unill. Only $79,950. Showa good Income. The~e v:on"t last. Call agt 847-6010 no\\\.. Gener•• -~!!2~~ BIG CANYON VIEW From the kitchen, family room and master bedroom ol this 4 bedroom, 21'.a bath Harbor View home. Land Included at $89,900. IMMACULATE BEACH DUPLEX Front unit 2 bedroom,s, 1 bath plus fir&- place. Second unit 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. In- vestors please cbeck this out. See and buy '89,000. LIDO ISLE ESTATE Large 4 bedroom home on two lots near tenru,. courts, swimming pool with separate poolbouse. $149,950. BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED BAYFRONT over 4,000 square feet In this custom built, near new, exquisitely decorated home. 35 foot frontage on exclusive West Bay Dock fac,ilities. $300,000. • G~ LIDO HOMI! 4 Bedrooms, 4 \aths plus formal llvin« room, dining room, and den make this 390ll sq. ft. home ideal for a' large active family, near boat, garden & club. $169,500 . DIAL 644-17'6 2161 5.., J°""uln Hills Rd., N.B, , A COLDWELL BANKER CO. • '• • . • ' 1 • • • • • • < • • • ~ ·1 ' . i{ .~· -r . • • • • • . • .: • • I :f. , • • • • • • l , .. . ' Thursd;iy, Frbruary 28, 1974 1.G~•~ne;.;;.;,;r•~•-__ ....,-_-:_-~-;;B~1~l~bo~1,...,.l1~l1-nc1"'"'°~-~..,,Co-,~,,--=M~,-,-,-~~~·...,.,H~·un-t~lng_,,ton~~B~.-.<h..-~-..,.,.-....,.,,.,-"°'•~c~h~~~-r;L"'!;do,..,.h~lo"'""~~~-·-;;N~•=w=po:::r1;;;11N:::c~h:-Ntwport Bo1ch Walk, To Oc~n· IMMAC Ocplex, 2 Br home, * E'ASTS IDE * Price Reduced UDO IN r '15,000 CONDOS -w .. 1<11!! are. P •t'pl.rllte 1 Br &"'t, Ideal JO 1 •·· I BR l" ~~. f hlU;-fU B k B B wa lk lo aho1~. 3 Bf\, 2~ restl-Home Joe. m.soo, m..JSC2 • _, " n -·~· $1000. Ocean ront llC 11y e11uty BA. Townhoc ... frpl c, club- "2-dJnina: nn.; I u n p 0 t' eh ; Here II )'OUt' chance to ltve Lee 3 BR, CUiiom l\olxle fn nouae & pool, $49,500 . Under $40,000111 Cocon1 dtl Me r beaut l-1111. IJS.000, · 2 ldrm. + Pool C d on Udo A enjoy -""*'°'• on .,tale we ALSO 2 BR. 21; BA Town· r,,,ely corner home. FaahJon. L Ontu $23 995 on OS by the ..... Your .... Mliil loL Detached 3 , ........ house, !rplc, ,...1 • able netahborhood. Parquet usk Two Story Ill' • Cutle. Just atept to the redwood plllllter gazebo, en· chtbhouse, $.52,500. l.e!LM'- DAILY PILOT :Jl, Income Property 166 Li ke 3 Uttle Houses At S 16,650 Each 3 patios 3yaros 3 t ntrancff tntey, i'ntahly paliue<t_ 2 UJ?rfaded five bedroorn, next '21 2 Bdrm condo,. dnlrable .. beech. Vacant A thl ~ _ cJ.QHd ttar yanJ, Many !Wt: OpUon. ~1231 or MS-0030 BOAT CATES. Large Lot. to iiretnbelt whh large patio, &J'(Xlnd level tloor plan, 11' Directly ~ lle~er p~~.! ;te';~~n ~ ::jit>n W'Y features. Only Newport Heights '-''---' ~~."fl1 ~ w~~~me ~-~rtah'51~~01:!:xi:mdy·1---"l::I ,.J'Jfu!!fiitir~~~~n~ed -~~. fvee-~~ --~~-.$2-1.,0QQ ___ ---- -fore entertaln[ne call now dltlona halt bath and lo1 1 BURR WHITE REALTOR mlrTOred living room, pluah = i-eafi:O.ces: l''orm&i Mission Vl1)0 It's 'Convertible NEW LISTIN G e(t.S)" care Jandaeap!ng rent schedule $>l85.00 A··aood~ll'IVlillll\l.QUl .Jlartl...&t -- 64i>-?171. • 842--25.M. of paneling and wallpaper. UEWPO'!;, N'~J wallpapered dining arc•, decks, et~' fireplaces, BY Owner ......... <led condo. Home or dupltx. Quality bu.ill Allru.cUve 2 BR home, \Y/ O'Q1Jt t • "'I RM 10 BE NICE1 $115,000. • shag carpets & custom . 3 BR, 1 J,ii b:,...sh.a: crptlrur 5 bedrm hon1e or use 1u1 a h\ilG'e rumpus rm, opening OPfN m t • IT1 FUN 10 BE ~El ~ I ~ • .... - • • . • • : I : • • i 'I :1 . ' • ,, ·- ~ I ~ Harbor View MESA VERDE drapes, oversized pantry $92,500 to $185,000 Asawna.ble t' in." FAJfA 3 & 2 bedrm duplex. Only to brick~ pat\o, beamed ' Jll --lJ,~·~· 4 BDRM, Gou COUl'5t! home. ~!n:~ ~~·1;;1!'~ ONLY 5 AVAILABLE! wl pyments al $228. Open step$ to sandy bench and cf.Uings, trplc, bllln bar·b-JfJI! Submit an otter on thll love-Lrg living nn w/!rplc, Center, Swimmh\g pool and House, &iit A Sun. OllJ for channel. On [llf'lle conier qu_e. ow~r , Iv!~{( nren, ~ -=ini:~, :::;c::••~ ly four bedroom home with dlning rm, kitchen ba.rbeque many park areas. Price re-OPE N HOUSE ~nt to see Eves. Dys, lot. Sil:>,000. Lois Vogt:! RI l r , r;v~l~stanmd•'!'&ble"""~pvila<Wc-,' git.a~:'.~~~~· :e,,ta~~~/ duced$11XX>.NowS500below DAltY-10 AM to 4 PM ""'"~J.· n..1!~na0.nl Eves $11 9,5,00. S018-9J46J' C • 1 JUST LISTED ~ • ~.., ... '"' ucu· market value. Call today ~. ......... Y· an uan 1p1s rano $36 50 'P'"'°"' formal 1"'1"1l roo.n, rebig A !rplc. Lowly patlot 147.3095 491> Cliff Drive VACANT 4 BR or I + den. Ontu ,9 • pool-shed yard wllb lotll of &: gardens. Master Bdrm I d l ~ Owner says sell l'IOY.', thls landacap1 ..... a~in .... •ot!,000, suite 1.Q"lude1 ottlce area, bd N d G Laguna Beach w/2 patio$ Cl enc ose $23,950. CONDOf..ONIU I\! lovely 4 bedroom 2 bath .. ,.. ~16 """ $79,500 "or trade $40,000 4 rm. • 0 own .I. Comp. landscaped &: beaut. 21 Viev.•, retired country lhinK, house, Very ahup wtlh t\W ''Old Corona'' . Ow MS-26S8 Beautiful home with he~led decorated. 0wt1er 586-1592. ~ San Juan Capo. 2BR, p)u., patk>s, one IJ oH the private eqwty for! ner, · & filteml .swim pool, COV· 49s...ss72, Re•ltot:_ Newport B.ach ~ 11 patio, swlmmlng pool, & muter suite, large fenced Walk to the beach trom thb GI OR CONV LOAN ered patio. Huge family nn 1_ 0 C'! 642 1771 laundry available. yard, and a fireplace for one-Of·a·klnd charming two $54,500 E·Slde by owner, 4 & fireplace. Dining nn, g'l~ -----"'' range, " · Call Henry \Yall Rel'l\tor 1110"", 3 bedroom home with Br, den & lge fam rm. built-Ins, dishwasher. No HOME & INCOME Yau Wouldn't 31966 cam•-Capistriui" those cool winter nighta. ·~ M •-• d n $39 950 C I l ·-Hardwood floors and a large 1nodem kitchen, suMy 0.,a~er1_5Sa_7 & e'Suri_ps~ wax t e. , . a I Walk> to beach on tree Wrl Wa'tt 'Til Summer PRIDE OF San Juan Capo 496--1435 heavy shake roof. This one family room and a bit o( an 842-Z"IGl. street. From this large OPEN SUN. 1·5 New 4 BB will sell . fast. Call Red ocean view. A One-of·A· Aliso 675-0936. [ lovely home w/3 Mnns & To Buy A OWNERSHIP Viewpoint, Ckean Vie"", Carpet, Realton tor an Kind home $95,000. Dana Po int 'l'Aftll&!l IJ 2 ba, formal din rm, living XI 1 Cpl Lrg 1 1 B appointment to aee this one I~ IUUHi"'-dnn w/frpl~.h i:;;au~~Uy Convertible!! Charming homj In quiet area O\v':!erociGJ.900 33922 ° Cau~ 645-8080. Attention Singles EXPER. Real Estate Sale11 ecorated wit e est So why wait for the Inflated of Hfl!bor H g~lands near Borrego R.1l--0642. An opportunity for H. single men needed. We're a new materials. Has lovely lg. prices of the summer to Westchff Shopping, school.I~~~~~~~~~~ l~~!!~~~,~~1 Laguna Nig,uel pel'llOn to buy a charming office with a fantastic 17945 Magr.olla garden patlo, delightful for buy a profitable Rummer-p~, churc~es. Heated pool I~ ..: Outstanding' VA buy for only one bedroom doll house and future for" sales people who ---=-=:..::=:=::.__ entertaining. Plus lg. l br winter rental pro~rty. Call with all equipment. 3 Bdrm, [ I~ 9 NE\V DUPLEXES- $42,950. 3 big bedrooms 2 have a culie little two bed· want toCallwo"!;..,I~erested! Loan Assumption apt over 3 car gar In rear. u5 about this well located 3 ba_ths & den:. peripheral lloba.Homll JilllP DANA POINT VtEWS baths. Canyon views. Lovely room rental, as well. Both ~~1 Xlnt location. A good buy 3 BR down. 2 BR up du· lighting, electri~ I aw "Liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:l· iiiii FABULO US OCEAN patio & BBQ near beach & have private palios, c~ to Dae~ PJ~~c ~~ ~s:te + Pool at Sll9,500. plex, only 6 doors to lh(• mower, automatic ~ar~~e11 $68,900 to S'l'J,950 tennis oourts. Call us lo shops and beach, Of)ly Seller Is Ready! -~ beach. Now only $79,0.'XI door, etc. You name it, it s Mobile Homes $48,950 non-vie\v show. 646-77.11 . $72,000. Fountain Va lley ~ .... ~ 10% Docwn 011 ._,. 7211 Clhallere,..~f!!~. for ss7.500. For Sa le 125 4 Pfe1:>c~ ~ss&$~950 $38,000 for a Pool Home! ~·...,-U"t"I"" ~ 675-722S,> Summer fun ahead in this Office open Fri-Sµn at ''MUST SELL'' 2yearold3brbeauty. Walk 494-5671 499 .2100 em /r!i\ MOBILE HOME 33861 Copper Lantern Walker&Lee llll Al llTAll OCEAN VIEW LOT Strictly Newport! Large R·l, home plans lncluded. Owner asking $17,500. • Ma,y sub- ordinate or may take TD as down paym L 9 ''" v. E. """•"' & c.o. 'fhll::.-~ Deluxe condo with 20 x 21 family room. 1'~ireplace. Private patio. 1-~anlltstic con· dltion! Assume 7%%. Full price $30,000. Hurry · call 84?·6Q!O agt. OPEN nL $1 • "'$ FUN TO BE NCEI ~ ~ SEE AND BUY Just look one time. You can't help but want, t.hls large three bedroom Mesa Verde gem. Shag carpets, mirrors, 2 fireplaces, de c orato r drapes, large covered patio, a laundry -room. It doesn't stop even room for a pool, boat yard etc. Hurry before Its 'g'One. Ohly $45,450. Call Red Carpet, Realtors 546-8640. CLASSIFIED HOURS Advertisers may place their ads by telephone 8:00 a.m; to 5-:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday 8 to noon Saturday COSTA MESA 'omCE 330 w. Bay 642-5678 bPORT BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Beach Blvd. 54().1220 LAGUNA BEACH 222 Forest Ave, 494.9466 SAN CLEMENTE 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 ' NORTII COUNTY dial free 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for copy Ir kWs is 5:30 p.m. the da,y be· fore publlcation, except for Sunday A Monday Editions when deadline ls saturdoy, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS : Advertisers should check their ads daily & report errors immediately. THE DAILY PILOT auumea liabiUty for the flrst in- correct insertion only. CANQU.ATIONS: When killing an. ad be 1ure to make a record of the KIU. NUMBER givtn you by your ad laker a.s receipt of your cancellation. n\11 kill number mw:t be pre- 1en ted by the advertiser in case ot , a dispute. CANCELLATION 0 R CORREcnON OF NEW AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every eftort II made to kJll or.correct a new ad that bu been ordered, but we cannot guaran- tee to do 10 untlJ the ad has appetred Jn the paper. DIM&-A·UNE ADS: These ads are stricUy cash In advance by maJI or at any one or our of- flcts. NO phone orden. Dea411ne: 3 p.m. Friday, Costa Mesa office 12 noon -all branch of-fioeo. THE DAILY PILOT m- servn the right to clu- sify. ·edit, censor or re-- fuse any advtrttsement. and to change Ill rate1 6: rtRUlatlnna without prior notice. CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. O. Box 1560, Coat& M'51. 9'l626 /r!i\ =h~~~ -~. Successor to COLWELL Properties, Inc. Swimmin9 Pool & Private Beach What more could a person \\'ant! How about a charm· ing, y,·cll dcrorated 2 BR 2 BA home on a generous 60 x 100 ft lot in Corona de! Mar. The entenainers dttam. Only $(},-500. Call 644-7211. rJn NIGEL IJAILEY f.. ASSOCIATES Brin9 Your Family To enliven this vacant and charming 4 bedroom, fam- ily room home In the Bea11t· iful Bluffs. Great features • 2~ baths • step down living room • decorators touches • outdoor entertainers year round delight. Save on gu, walk to schools, tennis courts and Village Center. REDUCED to $51,900. Just 1070 down. Call now 673-8550 From your front step. Walk one short block and watch the boats. Return at sunset. Take an early morning jog on the beach. All this cn.n be yours y,•hen you buy this spacious 3 BR, family room hon1e with huge master bed- room aiid low, low upkeep. Only $96,500. For appt. call 644-7211. rJn NIGEL IJAIL[Y !., ASSOCIATES ~pportunity for thla gracious to the beach. Call 842-4455. ---~-----FOR SALE Phone 8.11-2701 3 bedrm home. Dramatic ~ THE --: \Vkdays call builder, 642-49!:6 tiled en'try, step down living Laguna Charmer I 1 , RG SILVERCRES T room with unique fpk and Very private 2 bedroom .JJJ. MOBILE HOME I "WANTE D'' hearth. Formal .dining. W Ike I! Le home with an abundance ~Y -=. 20· x 53', 2 BJ:? 2 Br' cai:P·· INCOME UNITS Family room. Dad • s 8 r U 8 of greenery. Secluded brick ONE LOOK draped, blt-1ns., refrig., • Client i~·ishes to invest in workshop in garage. Take •t•l ••T•T• & garden patip. Warm. .. and yon \Viii know why \Vasher & elect. dryer, wired I smaller income units. Costa advantage of this Tudrm-$l4t5 Down v I bran t decor w i th this is the best buy in •IAiTORS for 220 air cond.. kitch. Mesa areu. Has adequate opportunity to buy now. Call fireplace, plush carpeting, Baycrest. One look. That's clock, storage shed, land· cash do"'n und v.-illing lo The Real Estate Fair Immaculate! With forced air t:;'tched celling with exposed all It takes. Authentic 2 story Successor to scnped patio. Three yrs. old h t Kil h b ·11 · 2 IV tk 1 th be ch · 2" COLl'~LL p · I pay e•1 uit1tble purchase •"" '133 or 5"2551 ea · c en u1 ins. ams. n o e a ! Colonial featunng 4BR 72 v c.. ropert1es, nc. • like nu. Located ln new ""'~ -b th Re 1·v1ng f'-$52 500 c II 40• 8003 _, price. Call 545-8424 SoutbCo, BY OWNER. 4BR,2B"A, Fam. rm. trplc. NEW p1U$h cpl. 1950 sq. ft, Pool size yd. WALK to all shops. Principals only $43,950. 963-2187 Huntington Beach VETERANS ADMINISI'RA- TION SALES: BROKER '1«NDIDIITTIEACR A~A PROPERTIES, for your Inspection: Giant 2 story Exec type home. Sunken llv. rm., w/huge brick Door to vaulted celling flli>, formal din., step down tam rm., sweeping stairway to 4 bn, Incl. • a step down master w /walk in closet. Good 1ize I o t , all landscaped. Repossessed vacant. Avail for inspection. Bla 96).i5ll , Fantastic Beach Home a s. ar 1 rm, u.,. , . a .,..-BA, mellow den w/n:u. adult pk. a\vay from noisy place. Carpets, drapes. Lots brick fpl, inviting livrm. 2 + DEN St. One-half bl. trom club-Reallors. of cupboards. Patio. Full [ TARDEU..) w/marble fpl, s l unn in g house. $15,495. Call EVES. EASTS I DE TRIPLEX prloe $34,950. Call 842-6691. dinrm w/bltin bu II". SURROUNDED 21U94-4690, 697-7152. All 2 BR. 1 BA unit. ~ uncrowded kit w/lg eating BY PARK CAN BE SEEN AT: w/private patios & yards. [TAftllll!l 'LJ W\.5lliU~l!.l space. Generous ~torage. . CRESTMONT 10%· down f ! nan c i n g ...US" One look ... thats all It What a neat location!' A TES available. $51,00'.l. Also 3 ~ 1920 S. Coaseel •Hchwy, Laguna takes. OPEN & S H OWN park on two sides and an ESTA more to choose from. Invest _ LMlSlliU~l!.l ~ professionally 10 to 5 daily. outlook to rolling hills and 1051 Site Dr., Brea. (Central wisely _ Free counseling. .::16~ill;Be~a~ch~B;l';d.~, ~H;.B~.:;! "DAISY FRESH" j Newly decor. 2 Bdrm. & B Tli--u ; -""'"· den; 2·balh•:--2-!rpks. ettef an neW Approx. 1800 sq. fl. Enclosed Lovely upgraded home with atrium-entry: ocean view marble entry and no wax modern kitchen. Living & floor. Pass thru bar. BBQ din. rms. have white water Sunken tub in MBR. Bltns. view! $67,900. Call to see Brick fireplace. Bike to beach. 4 Bednn.s, 2 bath. Private cluba vai I able. $38,500. Red Carpet, Realtors 536-8836 BRAND NEW Sl.a;,500. 1320 Antigua Way. city lights. And on the in· Ave. across from Brea Call Prestige· Homes' Agt. side, s beautifully upgraded Comm. Hosp.) Lot #46. 645-6646. 642-7408 646-1124 home with Karastan carpet, CONTACT RAY, PK. MGR., FOUR PL E X professional decoration-and I '°'fo7r,,s"how~:!ing"'-. ....,.,,.,.....,..,-- Balboa Penin. Good tax most every possible option SMALLER mobile home shelter. $125,000 avaUable. A IQp value h.l completely furn. Located LIDO ISLE only $68,900 Fee. Lido Village '!'tailer Pa.rk, Serenely private, superbly Call 6411-7211 No. 24. 700 Lido Park Dr. built. Sculptured generously mm $4995 or wll lease for 3 yrs. into It's rustic setting. $350/mo. 646-6900 Strtklng dbl. trplc. 3 Full I • • SACRIFrCE 8'x23' Kenskill garages. 4 BR., 4 ba., I 1 , Trailer, attached 8 ' x 1 7 ' family rm. & poolrm. On Cabana, Must be moved. 00 ft. lot. $165,000 $1695, 2060 Newport Blvd, GRAND OPENING Costa Mesa, Space 35, See Newport Bay T ower1 1 ...:;mc::an=ag.,e::.r-~=~-~ l & 2 BEDROOM DOUBLE wide X40' + den. LIDO REALTY ~ ! 1~7 I, , I ,,i, , "\ II *673·7300* CONDOMINIUM HOMES At the beach, on the golf COVINGTON 4-plex, income $76Q.mo. Prcled below-Mkt. Only 10% Down. PattisOn Investment Co., 846-0782. lndllstria l P roperty 168 OVER 112 ACRE INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY Only $32,500. Large 4 bed· • Paint , inside & out room with fireplace and • Brand new carpeting huge covered patio. Close • 4 or 3 and a den to schools and shopping. • .2 baths, flttplace SUNRISE. •• ... Sunset; both the rise & fall of the sun are yours plus t.he twinkling of lhe moon upon the ocean, from a 3 bdnn. modern home that is nestled in the-hllls. 2 Story Ba~ont &vront Homes c:oun;e, near the pool. ' Boat Slips Driftwood. $10,000. Phone PRIVATE D K Full Security Hlghrise ~5824 owner. 4 Bdrm, 3 ba, 2 frplc's Steel & concrete construction FOR Sale By Owner 1963 Close to Harbor Blvd. at 3526 \Vestn1lnster Ave. In Santa Ana. 1600 sq. ft . Bldg. Plus 2400 sq. ft. of shed now used as ornamental iron v."Ork.s. cn.·ner may_ !ease back for 5 years. Excellent investment. Drive by and call now. Priced at $65,000. Call 646--0555. New gold shag. new paint, • lge comer lot w/block large comer lot. t fence, vacant $33,900. I'. BRASHEAR REAL TY 142-7411 ff2.+47t ( :;:::J 54M1DJ EvH: 9"-1171 4 P!.x Walk To Beach Only 2 years old and all rented. Excellent area. 199,500. Call 1142-445.5. CASH 24 HOURS For Your Home No hidden costs, delays. No obligations, 15 yrs exp: BRASHEAR REAL TY 142-7411 EvH: 9"-1171 w I t>h er a Pe u t i c pool. Private Balconies . Clarion lBR, turn, '12x55 Sl9!J,OOO . 2 garage spaces per un1t. w/10x18 expando, R Hauge, Ontu Roof top sundeck 642-5792 646-8091. Unusual Opportunity t o ' Purchase Bayfront Property 12' x 52' Mobile Home Ocean 21 in Newport Beach. view, 5 Star adult Newport , ~ 310 Fernando Rd., N.B. Beach Park. No pe_ts $6500. ~ I I . 675-155 I 646-8018 Evenings • $59,900. • ..AG tan REAL ESTATE . ' ll90 Gleruieyre St. 494-9473 549-0316 .BURR wmfE REALTOR WATERFRONT Cabana. 2901 NEWPORT N'PT OCH Newport Hei9hts Adults only. 113,000. 675-4630 or G.m.0166 Call 548--05.53 or 675-1996. 4 Bedroom 8x3S FLEE'IWOOD $1700 successor To NEWPORT SHORES B • 2191 Harbor Space '2, Cost& j COL\VELL Pro?Crties, Inc. A-Frame, 3 BR ....... $49,500 . GfCJalft r.fesa. VA ANO LEASE On the water. 4 B<lnns., you Probably the least expensivel·1=B::r:::..c:o_m_p_t _Ba~~&-p-a~tlo 3500 SQ. FT. Tll T-UP 10PTION BUYERS own the land; will trade 4 bedroom home in Newporl turn Mobile.Hom~ on Be.y Good area of Santa Ana. tEAUOt$ ~ for N.S ............. $79,500 Beach with fresh paint in· 673-5100 ' 11 Years old. $37,500. Owner Walker I! Lee Huntington Harbour We have an exceptional We have rentals · · · · $325 Up aide and out, with a se\ving will carry 1st trust deed. ..:~==::!::=:::":=:::::~I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 :v~n~~mrig::.dp~~I; CAYWOOD REAL TY room tor mom, pool ·d;(ecl Roy McCardle Realtor ••A •1Ta11 room homes. Avail for * 548-1290 * . yard for kids and ga.r~::-.c I •.i·Estat9. I I.al 1810 New{iort Blvd. CM - ,.. • immed o c c u pan c Y in DISTINCTIVE 3Bff+ 2BA 2 'vorkshop for dad. It can I . GIMJ.. . 548-7729 DISTRESS! ,HH-Laguna & Laguna Nl~•oel. blocla< from Marlnei. Parl. last at only 145,900. Calll ';;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ 1,,. ....................... 1 MOVE IN FAST! ~ Red Carpet, Realtor1 custom carpets & drapes'. 644-?2ll QUICK. II FOR Sale • 8000 sq. ft. new Big "Ftancl5can Fountain" 497-1761 \vood parquet flooring In Cem etery Tilt-up 'buUding on 20,00l just blocks to beach. No BEACH CONDO tam rm, inside laund, Lot1/Crypt1 156 sq. ft. of land. "15%'down quail.tying. Just ass ume $24,SOG Full Price NORTH LAGUNA sunken tub tn master bath, • Seller to provide 9%, 25 1u% FHA loan and , $289 • _.. 0 1 3 Bdnns., 2 baths ; complete firealarm system, 2 LOTS, Pacific Memorial VI", finan"ing. 711 ' and fully funu.sh.:u. n y i bl I ke "-· Vt p ~-N B Fl · .,_.. ~ · .. per mo. pays everything! remodeled, 1v th soaring t n stereo spea rs 1.u1u· __ ew a..... . .. ntsn.:u W.H. DAUM & STAIT -REDUCED $20.000 Nearly new plush Exec = ~~ payment. Why open beam cell's. & wood out, by ownert princ only, 1/2 BLOCK TO .,,develop area, $450, 646-5632. * Call 546-3107 * home loaded with model decks. Choice North end weekdays 640-8772, Sat & PACIFIC VIEW, CdM, 5 .... ...,. 6 000 ft ~ $99,500 extras. Transfm-ed owner ~ HARBCUR, view location. Reduced to Sun 644-1422. GAS STATION plots, $200 each Sell one or ~!, ~u~ 1 ~· ~ xtra special 3 bdrmllo ·18• dBQe~, LEAVING NOW!! Bkrl • Dr .a1-rv sell at $79,500 S OC SINGLE LEVEL One .,..v and % block to all. O~r. 546-42ll 40,000 sq. ft. of land. Low 2 baths, lge. pa w • nM ~· t ~· TURNER A S .. ..,, 0 •1tze gA,...<>e + sparkling ~...... 17214 COAST HWY. BLUFFS ''LINDA'' beach the other way. 2 Commercial down • Seller to provide ---c 1105 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna bedroom large fireplace p long term financing new 2 bdrm. apt. with N n4: 846-1384 & 213: 59'2-2845 494-lln 3 BR. 2 ba, comer lot, deep . roperty 158 0 UM & ST.AIT everything. Immed. VACf4.. T ----'--'---=~---pile crpting, ptivate patio. home with Income unit W.H. A WALK TO BEAOI & "A WORLD Sl'OPPER!" Might consider lease option. above the double car NEWPORT BEACH * Call 546-3107 * occlf~~~sity Realty shopping. Price reduced to ~lrv;;;;I;;•;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 4 BR., den, fam . rm. w/wet $69,500. ~arage. Call now 64&-7171. Prime Bayfront Site Lot1 for Sale 170 3001 E. Cst. Hwy. 673-6510 -Sbea!9,7501iful. Ml us,t se1!_-6..t!11sd • barb11 '1n"'ld~~h'· Afrpl., uni2300que CORBIRNS-MARTIN $64,500. For boat re~ & .sales I . ·' u s ory o>W""'1 e GRACIOUS HOME • "' · pprox. REAL TO 644-7662 OPENTIL • • rrs Ft.JN ro BE NJCE1 Bill Grundy Rltr. 675-61&1 acre, ocean -.view, zon= ** DUPLEX ** Condo. • with lots of charm. Step sq. ft. Entire grounds i !II ~ C nd 1 . R-4 Palisades, Capistrano !sOntuo. OF HWY.-$82,000 scorr6-~f3~LTY ~ ~:~ ~~e"':,~,~~ ;:~'12~\~ l!~~ilall1 ~.::l~<ums l60 ~~~'6<f,u~;;kt~ r~~ : ~ OWNE" 'I:RANSFERRED atrlum. 3 bdrms, 2 baths, BUILDER'S 3 Arch .... Bl~ CANYON ,----·•-•• NEWPORT Crest-View 3 Br, Po'int, 49&4345. , 21 n. one with sunken tub. O>n-1. • .. 000 ~ ~ 3 Ba, all bltns. $7000 under '-ccmTI" ... GOOD BUY ... vel'\lent kitchen, large Jam-rx,er-~pper. """'' ·Beamed Beaut. 3 BR home, rlJttll NEWPORT HEIGIITS bldr. Owner. Lease PROBATE SALE 3 R-1 lots 4BR, 1800 sq ft. Only $35,!m. ily room, and Jots of stor-~il limodv. "!11 hl~. oce~. on 10th f~ay. Just listed COZY;&: A'ITRACTJ;VE 38R, USO/mo. 642-3490 on Valencia ·Pl., Dana SDadoUa limn I: dinrm, age. P8rk locatk>n and a vu, · kit, SO :-: 100 at $149,500. ()pen Dalty. 19'BA, firepl, slidl.ng glass Point: Ckean view'. SeU one BURR WHITE REALTOR like new crpt throout, sep vtew. All for $69,900. l~~ ,.CJ:rn1 /agt.AbMbay else/opt. 11 Rue Verte. Call 675-6900 door opens to garden. Quiet Du pl 1 exes/Unlts 162 or all. UNI0:-1 BA.t'lK -1 NE"'PORT, N'PT BCH Jaund ru rm CO""' brick fpl CALL 552-7500 'Q't"\l'k) or y, enlury street S4J 900 sa e TRUST DEPT ( 2 t 3 ) 1.'1V .-. •J • ~J 1 .... 4••9~• * BAYSHORES * NE\VPO. RT, HE.ICHTS -'-''--------6754630 or &1~0166 30' covd patio. Nr schools 1.1 ;J'I"" '"" 687~1~ . ... -· 'lbil ...... , ..... VISION OPEN SAT/SUN-"""''°"' Elr. ·A-•. 2600 NEAR CLIFF DR. Qualll)) DUPLEX· ATTN: BUILDERS FIX~ft,UPPER oa11100.,~BKR. 847-3584 BRAND NEW Sq. It., 4 BR k l•m. rm. c:onst. Lrg limn, bg din-lam OLD COM ~--'d c M 2 BR H Work out your frustrations DREAM HOME _ . St!!PS to beach. $130,000 Incl. area. JSR, l"-BA, 3 car 3 Br owner's unit t:t't~3 e X · ri5 to an seailey. on this nice 2 bdrm., 1 •u 500 • red hill 4 BR moorinJ! & 28 It. diesel stressed garage, with extra $84 900 Zoned ror multiple units. bath home, So. of Hwy. l .,_, 1015 Oro $56,900 sport~ fisher. M11.rilyn Early guest rm. Ir 0 n. gate / Walk to the beach, store11 rmmaculate 3 bednn. 2 bath REALTY REALTORS 1248 Momlnlll'!Me sm.qso CAYWOOD REAL TY entryway. $68,000. 833-0780 {BKRl RON Ptin. only., 645-5714 & what hlw you! Qwne,. home. Modern hims, plush Unl,. Park Center, Irvine TRANSPAC 675-1219 642-6033 548-1290 F. KINGAAlUl NEW DUPLEX PROBATE SALE arodous. Olfered for $52,500 crptg, deluxe lam rm. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~,.;,!!!!!!!!!!!!! REAL E'ITATE Pacltlc Coast Hwy, Dana MORGAN REALTY Sparkling clean. Manl""1'ed 'TUR~~~ T AS4L~2,.ST Fly! NIS H ED -OCEANFRONT 642-2222 3 BR, 2 BA House + 2 Point. 14.217 Sq. ft. C-1. 67.,,.2 675"59 yard. Terms 11exlble. see ·•M£.~ errace, .},•~ Ful insulated, 2 DUPLEX BR 2., BA A Frp UNION BANK TRUST ~ _. and believe. cftl 5_45-8424 over 2600 sq ft, air cond, BR, 2 tsa. frplc, walk In 4fiOO Sq ft f wood "" ' .,,. , P!·~ lc's. HARBOR VIEW HILLS , SouthCo. Realtors. electronic tilter, 4 BR, 2 closet, slcyll~hts, beam · · o • .,..au BEAT INFLATIONI gar's, patios, YtllU's, etc. DEPT (213) 687-6016 LU~ La 3 BR d °"c:::;'"":,.:;:::::;~~=--1 \11 ba, 3 car garw/auto door ceiling, lots of stora~. 1025 & quality. 4 car ~arae:e. SUPER• Pin sha·rp 3 bed· Newport Heights. N.R VIEW LOT for sa.le . ~ ei.. Tl~ Model ;/2 LEASE-OPTION opener, 2 d fr'Plc's, wet bar, Oro St .. Owner 49'-<4288 ?9'Hs~~ Ra al~ind. Sl94,00J. room, 2 bath charmer. Fam· Call Builder, 646-4414 ~5.000. No. 3 Burning Tree, trplcs, beam clngs. Like 3 R, 2 BA Townhouse. SlOXl huge patio, Prof. lndscpd, 4 BR 3 BA FR wet bar e or. Uy room. used brick fire.. DUPLEXES HTG BCH Bir:-Canyon. <2131 278-7477 or new. Quiet street. View. • Assume FlIA loan. auto. sprinklen, Many 2400' sq. tf . Newly dee'. Classic Baycrest place, plush carpeting. Wal k New w Br dlx heh units. C2l3)·82:H766 $96,00J (includea I and}, F repla ce, new shag upgrades & extras. Owner ~. patio, s 64,900 Ownr. Big 4 BR. & 3 ba. Formal to schools, recrention, shop-15th ,t: Acacia, open daily 1-5. Ra nches, F•rm s, '~Prln=::.· .::only:::<..:::.644.Q79°"'='''==~I 00or$JUC I: paint. N~ occupied 6 mos. SUPER 494-55TI din. rm., f11.m. rm., 2 frpl , ping. Offered at $67,900. 5.16-4022, eve (7141 539-6779 Grovei 180 HARBOR VIEW HILLS center. '°ctte1:11'..,.e ~Pfei:;f CLEAN. $125,<m. ()pen Hse, Laauna N lq uel Pool: ne1v deror. $85.000. Submit your best offer ! 'ncome Propert y 166 ....c:.:;::.:.:::. ____ ..;.;:;: Elegant • Br. & Fam nn. Ask for Dale, 96Hl46 Sit & sun .. Noon "' 6· GEM . GRUBB & ELLIS RANCHO Cali!ornla, 2 * $.10,000 1n xtns lne pool. M22 Southall Terrace. BY BR d Re1ltors 6 UNITS acres overlooking • enttre •M,500 l'• land. 644-29'1?i REPOSSESSIONS ldownNelr 5 1 Sho& en, ""''h· '"'" T!"tin Ave., N.B. 2867 E ~, •1 CdM -,.lley of horse ranoh.,, ..,.. ""' n....n T f S & Sunda y s e gue · re~. 2 yn; REALTORS 642-4623 · ~a· ,-wy., S SECLUDED PVT BEACH For lnlormallon and location -..-' ' ' new. Guanled c:ommunlty, 675-7080 BEACH PANISH pa<oed road, undergrwnd Ocean vtew, l86 Shoreclltt of these FHA & VA homes, 14m Grovevtew. Alllumable Rec. center w /tennill CHOICE 3 BR den home utils, house pad w/fantasttc 4 B• -.ooo. ~ .... Bl'· -·tact. 7% loan. No t.Wta. 3 Yr. ~ .... , 0001 et• ··alk to In C.'<<'lusive Bavcrest arc11 J 3,, old \"I 1-li!~.rv! old. 3 h11<><B"'I to beach! vu. m,OOJ w/xlnt terms, • •_, 111~ """ '-VI• 2 Bdrm, 2 beth.s, upgraded .. vw' ' ' ""• .. Raised fJreplace 0 e w ust OJ yen.rs ! . ., th fam-• .. .,, ew o uc Pacific. call Ken Olsen n4-557-25JJ Costa Mesa KASABIAN 11lao new cpts • drps. beach. S79.500. 496-3122 urpet, sharp thfoi.tirhout. ily rm ftrepl:ice. Dining nn. Gorgeous 2 story · 6 unit weekd~ R I E " 2 .-........ $37.950. or less. Lake Forst An opportune buy at $69.500. drean1 kitchen. Tinted \vin-apartment Spo.nl!lh motlf.R ~"e"a l~E;<5=11-1-0-----1 BY OWTier ){es& Verde Pool ea stet• ....,.. QUINTARD RLTY 642-2991 Bkr 642-4156 clows, Cove~ patio. Sprink· Zero vacancy. Barg a In home. 3 SR, 2 trplel:, encl. CAPISTRANO BUYER wants iio~~~!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!P j TIIE SUNNY $IDE ot the NWPT HGHTS fll E 1 lcrs· front & rear. Trallc!' hea<'h to\vn vnluc ot ONLY Excha nge 182 lanai, very~ shU'liJ· Open H.B. 2 BR, 2 BA, ~ A BEAUTY on 1 up er ~I\ i~hl:~~· ~IC wl 0 >31 Modena., :J bdnn.. 1 be a<:ees!I. J>a~clcd gara&rc. Anr' $115,000! Try l.~ dmv11. 40, ~"K'>W'I" t'w..-Fisher hous~ l·S Sftt Ii, Suri. Wkd&Y hoUH7Condo, or Min. Mafnt. greenbelt, 2'ii yrs. prestige cottage. Lot SOxl.21'. A real lots more. $75,900. e-a 11 F1n1mtic opprec1ation al't'n, •"° "'ooo'"'~ v'afu """'e ,;;"a;._,t·deedS appta. $44,!500. C714)~1-8477 hO\lse • to $40,000. Bkr extcutlve ateR. v~ aharp, BR. al' Fftm-rm. + Conv harm 0 139 500 540-1720 Call today 833-3305 ....,, . Call EASI'SIDE, 493 Abbie Way. 962-55111846-6107. 4 B~ 214 BA, Uv. rm., :rt~~~-.&cr:'b ~ S::Tru.~~~~1.' [ TMBaL.. ] '""""""'I-~· 1i~1 Mr.~~~ :1 181» Sq. ft 3 bdrms, 2 DUPLEX 1-3 BR, 1-2 BR. fam. nn., form. din ·' bershi I 1 SS2 [ ....,1 642-4Gm ~·:."f6J::~Fii ~~r~~·:; _=r~&t.'£~i .::.~~~. :~£!~~:::. ~;j±) !El~~~RANa?J BY ~~ l: ~ din ~CJSC'AN De Four:ns 3 ~~~treAI In ·the Bl, F. R. 2 fp, assume 2005 1-larbor Bhid. ' BRAND NEW 4 Uni1 • 2 BR. -* liJ5.5016 • • rm, l'I i;42{16(l3 I • l>m rm. '"'I eond. l<eort or Central Irvine FANTASTIC BUY 5 !1 %.174.950. -4 51' BAYFl!ONT 1% BA san Clcmonte, nr EXCHANGES a •PtclAlty Selltnr ariythlng wlti a Dally =.Tom· Miller,_ Rltr. ~e ~~Co~l=t'11.1t~ a:: ~ ~-~~ nf.1~ Buy a new '74t Your t>ld~ On Unda. By appt. Hu;e: pnlh to beaeh. $11,000 down, Irwin A: Irwin, Rea.lton PUot Oasa:Uled Ad II 1 OWNER J...rc. 4BR. +FR community ueoc. pool 'i: 1 ff , n-.. modelCfl.rltln~dtmAnd cust . fam ily home consider trade. Mark H. 'Box838,Cd.M ~111 aim.pie matter Ju.If + 2 BA. flillc. Aaumr VA! PArk •. ic:roa u. sfrftlt. ~. 4rVt.:;"Udo ~m-J: . . . Sell It dfut. wtth • ,w/unmuai """'' qr tr• . °''M n.1tn. 1'.\\4 N. El &\'c son"1Clhh11: .rett .. J\t to call S4l-5e'1'St 11642 Woodla...., ~~. 0-'ntr •• .,1,500. ~t...S1St. 615-74lt J)elly Pilot twlntd Ad! ()pen Sun. Denison A&eoc. Olmlno Real, SM CJem. Sell'! Oass.tf\fd ads do It .•• ., ..., 6U-567!. 6'73o13ll . 492-9920, 492-7833. \\-"ell • cl\11 NOW 642-5'7& 0 • . . . . ' ~ . . .. . . . • • • DAILY Pit.OT Thursday, f'tbruary 28, 1974 11h.-W-.d 1u 1 Hou... un1""'. 3CB Houu;;.:u~n1v~ ... ~·=:J•~~"~'°~'"'~"O!:~-~~·=::!!!!jt;.~E~1iiiumo;;;;~-~~A~""~·~·!m~.===~360~~~~~?::==Ju~sVA1>1§~· ~·~"~"'?::· ::::!!!!i'"•p-,-.. -. -----~ $E)l.bfNG ¥OUR HO , .. ..;t General C~ ftC Mer trvlne Unfurn. 32C f m or Unfum. J11 1 Tl'Y our NO COMMISSION -=o;~;;~?s~2';i;' !I ;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I !'.'!"!Ill"!""' 8'ach Coote Motl Nt.._t B11ch _;.:;;":..:::.· ..;::._.:.:=""-- •Y"•m. A ~a1 tee of ool~ It "" COZY C•pe coo Style 2 bdr.~ · . .:.;'";;.";;.'l;;;n.!.9.:.:t•;;;n~BH:;;.:<h'"--..-WEEKLY cO•S.T •PTS. C01'on<I dot Mor $595. P&Ytble •t close ti! 'rh1u Ctru...\tl 1 bat:!) untunaiahfld bowie. \\'e ~tty ha~ a tine 4 ~ "' ""' * • Wl!l! 'i~iii]iiiiiiiii~iii;iiiiii\ It.Ir wl)I li•~ Y<)u full Sonl<lllfrc Near beach and """••""'· u k <llon of 2, 3 a 4 AVAIL. March !Jt. 3 BR l!naoll .. Svll11 FROM ~00 • l(S flltll * \1 ~"'!~naJf~~~a~~e ~ CAU.. ~~;~:nd w= home ~~~.~Orca~'f'e n'~o~~ ~ ~ u ~:u C: -~~~;;.· .:o;..;:~;,,· "'lia"'•-_,mi;.:i;;;·c.,poo_1 _1ac~, ,,,,"!:_1,..,.. YBolr~•t YoBrklv,,dw.n Ntv~': ::~=~ ADVUListaT ~ •~o!_ Mesa ~ ~:; ll~ni;ect, CX ""t>rl'f'n<"e d with a v1'ow, a prl"atc ~-~ •. ·-Mo. 4 1 8 -ga'--!•the•-.'"•·-'NEW• n. 2 ---'"-ui:-vu. • '-UU\ ..,JfOMES b n-c. ~ .".-1 nl "t ~ -" ~ " -·-"' M< , ~' Ba. ·~~. 13M411 apto. !'JU,., t"!'l ... d gar-IRVll'IE AVE. AT MESA n, l~·~.C!l .t -!,.:-=,-,·: .1!,.~~~~1,1, ten s court & sv.imm 1~ arch11ru1 -'Ph 675-3085 hel't' to solve YOU'R blN1ing Patio, carpeted gar, $1!'75. aett 125 ~ 1 .. OPEN M ort• "' ·~ Yq •• ' '""''"" .... ,. Or °'''""""·and ........... ......, 53&1685 .. '51-01%1 STUDIOS " 1 IR'•· kl. u ~.. .... In W/deposlll .. ~, -detalhs by phonlm\ 543-~ call it a luxury t Bedroom -• FWt 1'lldlen w 4'11 1 S;at "-Sun l~. l BR. fl$} 2 Br $220 ....... , .. ANY'f.IM,E. & den (or 3 bcd1'00m ) hOme COZ'i CO'irAGE, 2 BR, lpl, Huntington Harbour e H ted I [ [My • Nlgbt Stcurltr,-Poot 2 Blt---Town housll, u,_.. wtfl tb form•I dining room. 111 ':.'Al.' ~~l~~tf10· • ~.cliui.. ~l t: • li• !':~~ Rec. ' Bldg'. i:t~ ~;u~IB~· ~~tl,~~:i ~ ,IUY .............,S t<eplaCl', 'iuxW)' carpets &: N2EWS Condon.!...12 BR,hl ~· • Free utlllllei 11 t -• nn, biUiaroJ, hreakJ••t. Separate t.an1.lly I "~ ~ dMlipes, or call it the ~ RealtOt' 6754392 tory. J'V'll, nr. ar~~l • F'rtt 11.otns .. o..viot TV. Ea. Apt. has '" ho CASH tM 5 DAYS -Of a i.1nd \.l'llh a side Y•"1 CO y boat istontge,'$225. mo .. uw • TV l a dllhWMher, refwl .. , ''"' ept S<:CllQll. CloM! to a ppuig o;-Z • Ruitic So. of 11\\')'. collect, all~ au day · · maid serv. avail. a: rt tto">& d, A fl.nt beach. 6'4--.2Gll I o:!iE:~$y";J~~~'E. ~'tr e"';:'.i;::.:o •:, "'::'; :,.,~\,. be~~ia."""';;in:: l" we l Bank Bl~· wtmds. 21.l : ~~vi<... ACT. ~ ~: pa or eek. [ 2 I II ~ •-h/F camper; i..ocattd hlgh on t.'1$-4169. u !I trn ,,... Townhout• Unfum 31J e l Mlle '\o ........... n QUIET PLE•SEl Col-t• MM• U•n. ii;><;&C oun1 Valley the hill above Corona Del niVf'111ty Park, Irvine ' ..... ~ I ~ I 536 UM 142-5541 &kr. Mar in Newport lleacb. NF.W Spygla" Hill home, Doys 552·7000 Nifhts Hunlinfton B .. ch 1 Bit. $155-$165 2 BR. 2 BA In 8 unit l·BR. 1 ba. Film. Yearly. Close t G Fashion Jsl&nd, i'he Mai:Qi~nt vu. 4 BR, 2~ NEW OECX>R Priv prage cornple". All extra & lncl. util. Nr. bJy • •• • • · $275 WHAT YOU PVT. PARTY WANTS TO beach & steps to tcnnt1, -i'bu'-''-'1~9 _,T"'iburo=::•:.clla¥:::<c:·__ 2 BR 00,00 -2BR. l ~ bl.. trplc. pools. Lndry rm N.wer' Spani&h CllJ'&lil· SlJO, Adult.a, no 3 BR, 2 be. BlJY HOME DIRECT s\\1n1mlng & J 11ccuzi. Call Coit• Metll · · · · -mo. lse. wutlt'l'Jdo-er. refrla. child Adult eonlpJe.x. 2 ml. So. pet1. 2126 Thurin St. Newly decor •••••••••• • .m FROM PVT PTV ~3962. jt your ne>.1 homt.. }~Cl' ""'.;,;;;...:;=:::-----i 2 Bll CONDO •·• S225 mo. l•e. ok. $225, ~785e eves A Clf ~ Diego Frwy. 17301 545-MJO Udo 2 Br, 1 ba Uni. , •• $300 l!OUSE want<'<!. Pvt pty will loileiiaii"iio';iiCaiiU;.&iili;4-4.;68;;,.7 .... ...,iii , 3BR, 2 llatb one story condo 3 RAtcCH . -~Tf· w«keed• KHUoo 1'l. !Ill. W-784tl I.GE 2BR. studio. 1 ~ -ba, 4 BR \lllf apt. Yriy •. .._._!j(X) GET IS pny all cash for local m IJr•v.u.e ~·.iaeu ..... :i.s., ..... u Sen Juen Capiltt'•no L-• a..ch patio, pr, d/w, bldn range Jl"!P"rty. -· •tA UNTALS ,,. / * ••1--* ~--· """"· 1or<et1 air .,..t, nr .,.. t.i. \..H,..JllvUSC, IJ VVI , ~ ..... sbopplJli an1ed ..... iJlf(tAUU ""WIYQ ~1·•\'UtC li'OO hlteCI. ul'l\c, .J~J FOR LE As E. NEW childteni roll ~s .:> associated HIO, oo .-.:..a, uuw<I>, .o .• r. L--· S.ech TCl\Vnhoose, 3 BR 11>\ b&., EFTIC. apt.I from $50 wk -1/pt1 , a .,...,, All YOU'LL &l.H.155 --·-patio & other ei:tru. f.!65. or $170 .mo. Pool, mald, ~u~~~Fclo~rdha~~m.~CM~,~646~~-~1.:::::::::~1 f filt MOUSES •• -$l:W/U'I1L Pd. ·-all but SANDCASTLE R.E. ph. ldry, v~ lnn '2 BR. dthwhr, stove. nfrla', 81?(_,~f '.~ '1.tAt,,l 0 ~5 ~c;·,.,., 1! .. 11,.,,t 'llt>I) -• Am ~ o!{, .t>Alri 6; 1,'t, .t.:. Side "'" 494-8025 494-9436 h ll tll Poo1 I J ou"s· , . "" . ,, nice 1 Br, yard & patio. • · s ag, a u '• pd, Poo. · .......... , nu. ..:VlS, uui)' 1'1.l.1111L'(l, $22&-2 Bn near beach, Duplexes Fum. •.1• $135 UW~. Furn. apt. BBQ Gftr. Sml children or CHARMlNC 2 BR ..,.,Jslde • • ... -~ car gar, patio, $~i5 mo. _.. o••-il t k -•2301 b-"""' ~I .~~,......_., & &A't',C.M. •42-eMI. ~ beautiful view, sm1 pet ok. IQCI.. e gen eman pe o · ..,4.\r. mo. cottage. ""'"amed ceiling <),pp•f"hlrtity 200 Nie,; 1 n" ""' """ 11 % :__ '.' · S325-CHARMINC 2 n,., frpk, Newport.Beach on!j, .-4'1-'lro\'. 642-n38 11 am thrll 5 pm new lhag rup & drps: util pd, stv k rcrr: r:sl 1 !t'. 'l J'<.{ '1'i-1 lS~ :S Ult. :l liA, $'35. child/pet, 3 Arch Bay. . BEACON RENTALS ONLY. ' Quiet, priVate, walk to 17th *TV/Stereo Repair GARAG~ 2 br dplx $175 •'Ul•O, i,:a;', K!US oa... S375-LARGE :S Br, 2 Ba, 4 BR, 2 BA upper. View Lacuna Beach 494-M9l VACANT now, 2 BR. 2 BA, St. shopping centers . Must Sell! ............ $5,000 fent.-ed for pct. Ste M(v: Homet1nders 547·9641 trplc, dbl nr. yard,ptio. of bay. Nr 44th St. Avail. nev.r cpts &: paint. Walkina: PLEASE.! STAY AW A y •+£l'6t .Eood Take-0ut Cl.!'l'E t._ittle. 2 4r ~19;1 st\·, WTSIDE_--N;w-3 liR~ NU.VIEW RENTALS immed. $350/mo. 675-49ll New~rt Beach dist to ahopplng A thee.ten. unless yoo a.toe a person Good locauoBodn ....••.. $5,900 1 C & D. gar , srnl pct. ti.A, uuplex. Blins, urw, 67-3-4030-Cll' 494-3243-Bkr • ~~~t• only ~!~ale. $175 mo. ~~ .. appre~atee our Pdahn * Auto y & Paint HOMEY 3 br $225 ~vaihlblc 1:io1~. J:ard, Qwet ~/;> FANT As TIC ocean Duplexes Unfurn. -3$0 1·s·35 PER Wk & up 1 br, aoNthCo • R'C!Utors 545-8424 ,-,....J!...·• ..... ~ .. t__!a !.,..p'1!; Well Estab ........... $30,000 gar, fncd, yd. Kids & pct. aitb-i424 v · 2 b 1 BR A: LOFT APTS Pool """'t""''"" • " ..... ....-¥ '. NEED ••• VISTA DEL LAGO * Auto sales & leasing NU Paint 3 br 2 b11. $275 'f H.Y 'l'l iIS! :l 1:3r, ~Uf::i. Uur · '2 ie;~2d &~ ~ C\I~= Balboe Pentnwi. m~ ~cb':ooi~ ~ Jacur.zJ. Rents incl: ~ utll: rv!.· Mgr.,. 738 "E" Tustin · 50 To 80 Cars mo .•... $25,000 bltns. 2 car. kids/....,, ., loold ME0 • 415 N -~----' $190 ~=------- * J I S .,.... il"C, 1111.:u yo 101· •-. over ng Boat Cnnyon. '1no • Newport •~"&• e-il\.">. zare«e. -•wo. r.y tore r.lANY LARGER u "' r-· Le G ·1 pd Bl NB "0 9681 ~ -N Pet 393 Sal" & "'lP'lr ....... 1•0.000 SMALLER CALL US"' Homefinders 547-9641 8 '°· as uu · 497-2630. WALK TO THE OCEAN • -· '" ·-· 0 '· PARK NEWPORT Lu.xury lak.,id• adult living, IU\lllERA REALTY ALA Reni~l; 642 -&J83 ,-Wl,, "'" "~"ucps, encl L-• Hiii• Spaolously desi ...... crp1 DYNAMIC lg. oceanfront 3 Hamilton. 64>-4'll . APARTMENTS comfort and pl'lvacy, 149 Broad CM drps, bltins, d ts h w s r: BR, 2 BA, yrly. $«!0. Avail $1~1 BR duplex partly furn. Ba h I l 2 B aHol'dable rentals, aecutity, way, · · gar, priv patio. Lrg yrd. 3 BR, 2 BA condominium, frplc's, g_arage, 311 Day 646-n03, Nlte Uhl pd. Avail Mar 6 Lrg c e or or ed~nls boating, s\vln1n1i11g, tennis, * 642·7007 * $ LANDLORDS $ ~'Jal iun&1es. ~ Pets. NeW World, Laguna Hills, 4 BR, 2 BA. $400 673-2586 yard Garage. No children, Fr. ll~~ TO\~nhope~'9'~ Dail" handbaH, gym. 11a.unas and Bottle Wdr "Route We Need Your Listings " mo. bJ.>-• Cfl)ts, drps, 2 car gar, use 3 BR, 2 BA. $3SO VIEW of Ba,y,$1351mo. Iii no~· 1st, la.It & securlty Spa Pools -vTennl~ Yacht Club. E lliciencies, 1, your own 'bottlo waler So.::'.;:~,~~ .&wii:it:.:'• .You 3 L/~R·N'/,,, ~r ;;:.Rb r ~~Rk '. ~~'· eompl mainl, Drive by.,. E . Balboa.Blvd. June 15. 1 BR. Call Btwn 1 ... can aft 5, 54&-9390 , Across from Fa•bion Island 2;·t-& Den from 1175, with mute, 'II.ill train if qualified. $ ALA REMTALS $ 1 .• ~z ''-· . CM "°""" 9 & 6, 675-2833, 675-5800 1 & 2 BR w/drps, crpt.s, at Jarilboree Cln San Joaqum everything you need an B«t ~ ~ & I A ..... n1e. "" ........ nauon, i . L-• N' I 4 BR 2 BA uoo Agt d h . apartment lo be. v•ange .... u. ~ .. N 642 8383 bi.,..O'l7l --"' 19ue , • -r · stove, s wsr, l nc. gar. Hills Road. Areas avail. Will adjust ~ & Bay, CM -3 BR, 2 BA. $350 NICE Bachelor apt. $95. Walk to shoppina. For · ()'14,) 644--1900 crout.e mze to fit your needs. 4 HI-l hon\e, JU' So. Csl Ylaia. 4 BR, 2 bas. spacious unfurn 301 ~~ St Call Call eves. mature minded persons I ~=~,.-:."'°"c:..:._c.:.:.:._~-MESA VERDE EAST AND AOAMS AVE . Eam $1300. per mo. Paten· 2 B·R • Vielv Baloonies $400 ~::> monu1. Avail. 1V181' Jst. home. Avail now thru July ,._,, · 6.U.2800 6T3-m3 S~S165. mo. 646-1461 · SAVE Gas. Beti.ut 3 br, 2 tisl unJhnited. Silver Springs 3 BR · vie\\' · Lftgwia · $300. Heritage ReaitOl"S. !>'ll.l-1151 1st., $350. call Coron• del Moir Dini Pol t be. • n~wly dee, 2 ml. f~n Wate1:. 964 N. Batavia, 3 BR -Kids & pets OK l BR house~ii5.Aiso NB UNGO REAL ESTATE Newport Heitht1 n OC airport & Irvtn e Orango. 3-B$395R Ba·~ Sii $~. 2 Btt·s., ~.1.50. ;s BH'11 494-8089 LARGE 3 Br tho ' & DELUXE ., BR 2 BA. w/ complex. WI alk to stores & COSTA MESA 540-1800 (714i S32-650l -.l'"vnt -p -$l~. Agt. r·ee. :f'(s-.3430 u.---t 8 _ ch nr. pg ,......,. .. ,.,. 1 2 br di ocean vie-_:., di rest. ·Adu ts only. Phone $425 =:".,_...r u.• beach, $360/mo. ....i...Ll"U, or , a ts, w, .. t"c, n rm, 673-1158 3 ·BR. C.d.M. $425 QU!Ef 2 Br nr:-Back Bay. 833-ll44, 646-6075 no pets, tge k\t. $140-$160. sun deck, $275. Thompsonh:'i"='-"';;·~-~-~~ e l ;quor Store $25M mo 2 BR _ DR Sborecliff' No tea.e. No pel6. "1.>. NEW H""'°' View, 1575 mo, C 2427 E !£th NB. 64S-1048 Management C.rp. 493-0141. EAST Bluff 'paciou' I Br .. !---------.MFG _ Mei $SBM '73 $500 • 1st & Jtu;l. 642-43J.5,'1~t7 2 sty, 3 or 4 BR, 3~ bas, ost1I Mese ewe. 1 BR gard•n a~! 2 tlo nu cpts & d11>s, pool, adults, THE EXCITING 2600 sq ft fr p I c • · pa s, no pels. $185. 644-52981 m PALM MESA APTS. eflow•t Sh.-Nwp,Bch 4 ·BR-Pru1ofino.-$475 13 ~R-hse~ba;-Uext-~ conversation ~t. din rm: NW ,Apt. Unfum. 365 gar. $165. Ider lady, Domingo Dr. e SEW..M•ll ·Order Items 4 BR . Harbor Vte\v . $525 Npt Heights Sch. $230. mo. fam rm, + lge b:>nus rm E "'Orktna; cpl. 496""4883 eve. oD7LXE:'.::"Span~=,,-b-2_&_3 _bed_. -rn-1s ~1INUTES TO NPT. BCH . 'HOf"t'A:ND-BUS1NESS-_4sJoR -on golf_ rourse -:>'1&-151!.: 278 Knox_~---for sep._ apt or family NEAR BEACH ~lbcMi 111.ncl ' East Bluff from $200 mo., tpl, bltn11. Baf'.hA~utis~ BN~· ~~~-$157 645-4170 ... ·~s ••• ~"" 3 BR Com-H'ighland•. 151-, 3 BR:;'.!Oi.s, Fan1·rm, trplc. -e"n"t ertainment:-fi.4&.1321, 4-BDRM.,-2 BATH DELUXE 2BR · on• ...... H~"• H Ad It 1561 ~· ;1'1\l'VINO "" dbte gar Oean, no lB 586-5724 640-lliOO ext 1465 Walk-in cloeets, dishwasher, . apt indudlnc· -. DEtUXE ·• 64!.t._._... """'6 -~(!:. __ u s. · l\lesa Dr. '1• YRS estab. Beauty Salem. 6 Stations. $12,000. C.M. area. A Ssnd Ir. Sea Rlty. 4 ·BR -SPYGi..ASS -$1,000 ., . .c.;;. '::At.: u'l'lC. pe • ' · bl . boat dock. on Grand Canal, 3 BR 2 BA ,_ I 2-0596. {5 Lllks from Nt>1',i>rt Blvd.l 675-7225 -~·_n.o__.,.......-w HARBOR View pool house tans, refrig washer & Little Balboa Island, .... Y • apt .._,r ease. EA 546-- 3 H "~ Le ' .;i~-r area, dbl. car &""• .,~ per mo, no chilJ:..:0 Incld spac. mallter suite,· din p* 1 .,:,.TB, LUFdulF 2 BR. ...,.,., BR SE on priv !nod .,........, mo, ase (II' Option, .... .)'"' -....,... ,.."' dl oo "• t> c A ~ $265 * CASA VICI'ORIA J ot. dbl gac, bltin slv, $2.:>U. 3 BR, Fam·rm, frplc, 2 plush brown c r Pt• fully or pets, Clwner 6n..o:m · nn &-bl garag~. Auto door Ms AMiGOS w'·AY · J 2 & 3 b f & *_, inu. Avail :S.lti. ::>4!i·bo&l. bas., 2 + guest nns. Encl drapat $350. mo. Drlve by SOUTII SEA -n lBA, 1 1 opener &\1lii. Pool &-Rettea· ' r, um wu. pool N 1 1 , __ ... __ .....;i 16th & Orange or call . , ~ P. tion area. Ph: 644-8004. 497-1997 644-(1906 Sec. gales, crpts. drpg, Ll•ne Point '. ce y ...,iu:.uo ....... 642-2800 or 642-2164. beam .ttil 11, spin1 stairs, e $291 e ON THE BAY 3BR. 2BA, D/W, pool: etc. No petw. AVAil. H paAtiosRB.064(}-R L127VIE,58&-o WH7241LLS Newport •--·h I Saba~!:'. 5"!"°881· 1"'." OP325E'iiN 865 Amigoe \Vay, NB fpl, dJw, close to 5%> Victoria St at Harbor now new 3' br, 2¥.r: -_., .. "' •.r Man11.ged by everything. $·125. 67J.5TI9. CM. 642-8970 :.Vu!:·• ~ n: ~s'. 48~ND new Montego 2 BR. 2 ba, garage. C\Ofle SAT &: SUN. WIWMi'WALTERS CO. PARK Udo 4 plex. 2 BR, Dina Point l-~-9-,7~17'---~-~= inclds 28~ = ~r t:;iS to ocean. Newport Shores. 3.17 E. Bayfront, 2 Br, split Huntington Buch 2 BA. bar, bltlns, super --------- 1!6~7>-88<MI~~·!:!~~==~~ Moneytol.ean 240 ~ ! 1st !~o ~ans urrLE· mansion, 3 club, 547-1345, 558-3003 No pets. l.ae $225. mo. 218B ' level, ~le, pier for boat. great. $200. 646-1131. SJIARP. furn . 1 BR \\' lllfttlo. trplc, Dana Harbor, s~: Cedar. 615-1393. Spect. ew, avail Mar. 1· UNDER NEW SPANISH 3 Br. 2 Ba, fl"pl c, Unfum. I BR near ?i1ati11a. 4_?a-f~tM>.~499-~L Hi~U!le~'f~:'tr.AJiac~ Apts. Furn. 360 C67U900/67S-3331/S73-4'166 MANAGEMENT $250. 2 BR, 2 BA. $\90, 49:l--Mi76 & 4!'J6.Ql77. huntington ~ .. ~<-.---1 Bay. Over 30 yn-only apply. -eplttr1no BNch Nr. Hoag. Adults. 644-2404 Huntington BHch j 8V.. % INTEREST 1 tHI JD loans ' : low.st nte1 Or.ft9• Co. , Settler Mlg. Co. $225-3 Br, 2 Ba, fpl, pet patio, play fields, teruus, yixtl, 111· nu'Kt A a a lil ti & Brkhst. Mo « lse. Will help you move. b"Th-00.tJ, 96i.-0829 $265. 20181 Cypress. Owner. Balboa l11•ncl 2 BR. BltN, new I Y Newport Heights 644-5966 FREE 1 MO RENT! Mew decorated, e~I garag:es. DELUXE adult p 0 0 1 s t d e NEW H ho V ., 75 LITTLE I$LAND 2 ~~ ~ bch3 B.R. 52 0 . dBkA .• Beplaautllul land~a~lng. Lrg SPACIOUS 2 Br. smartly garden bunplo\\', nr ocean, ar r u, ~ 3BR, Bedroom, 2 Bath, Y area, a c~lld s dream. decorated, trplc, cptJl, drp!I, trpl, hi;: patio, 6 pools, I MJ.2111 545411 , Serving Harbor area 24 yrs. ""'""*AIJll. * 1'45°0111 * ~~~i:n1on' ~le, 6 ~ 0~ 1 1Jfi $275/month. Winter. Av! 49S-T::>8TJ6ia-3160 ~<Jr!0 sho1ppmg A &chis. patio. enclosed gar, storage. sauna, tennis. ~9. 5B6-5n4 ~1500 ex 1 , ... = Yrly. 673-n78 Cs_ron1 del M•r 11 n we847eo733me. 842--0480: Qulet bldg. Adults no pets. Also 1 Br. From $135. 'fVJ XTRA LARGE, lBR apt, c no ans · 1. $190 mo. 642-3781 now tiJ June 15th, bltin aJ?pl, STUDIO Apt w/k:ltc:hen. $150 NICE 2 BR. Sundeck. Pool, l•gun1 Niguel LOANS available, any type, anywhere, any size. $50,000 up. l\ir. Taylor (707)2554180 MoneyW....... 250 433 W. tfth COSTA MESA $80. • $140. · furn bachelors. $110 & up · furn 1 BR'S. CLEAN 3 Br, 2 Ba. shag t.TJll, drps, trplc, bHn dbl oven & range, dsbwhr. Patio, landscpd, fncd yd. Uuly $3lU1 lllQ. l73'tl C..'hap- paral Ln. t!46-3:!i :l. NEW exec 4 br. 3 ba w/ 180 degree vu, tennis & pool, _$515/m Cl . E v e s & \\llm(k, 644-1791. ~t;f.'m.~. ~fJ.o, ~.til!xt ~':· Ast a f~ e 2 st~%-:.!EW f~.1;4;~~aduit.s, no pets. * BRAND NEW * Paul. Eves 6'1S-CS25 e Bltns + OW ! & 2 BR, 2 BA. From FURN or Unf 2 BR, 2 ha, e Wet Bar Sen Clemente $195 Unfurn, Furn 11 be d lST TD LOAN, ~ Q[ $140 · I.«. 1 BR, unf. l child I VAWE. 10% INTnt.EsT. sP~ .. ~r. ~~· unf. l i,i ba, HARBOR VTEW HOME-4 BR. 2 BA. Fai.1 Rm. Frplc. \Valer & Gardener incld. Call 64.f..6146 or 644-1295. 1orced &ir, patio. gar. Yrl)'. $175:,~ BR.I bltns, crptsd , drps. • Encl-~ G·--units Avail. 219 Abalone· Ave., Call (213) avllU. mm e • 'rt!iY.i uaaJ ... ._.. NEW -...1 2 B 9'J;3..4549. Marigold. 642-9918 eves. e 12 Blocks to beach 2 gcuuen apts. R, CROWN VALL&Y Apta • Walk \0 k l BA. $19S.: 3 BR, 2 BA S D' F ' I 832-4387 gar. · Mortgage·s, · 1'!20 3 BR f I ~ • , un , gar, pet • Trust o..do 260 NICE. 3 BR, 2 ba., lg. yd,' vie. Bushard & Adams,NO P~1·s. 551-1100, 9-4, ask for 1Jat. ~lU:.!6, aft 6 pni. 81lboli Penlnsuli 12 BR VIEW APT. New crpts, mar e Mh\\'5!' fTple $250 s~ at an iego ~'Y or Coast NEY/ Harbor View Monaco :;.;;;.;;:;.:...;..;;;;.::;;.;;::::;::._..__ & drps. $215/MO. • • Kids &. Pets O.K. 686 Ca.~lno De ~ Mare,; H\l.'Y to HillhursL 237M Model. 2 BR +Den. Tennis $35 WEEK I. UP * 675-fG@ * Realtor 536·8836 llOuth of San Clement, llillhurst, Lag. Nlgue.1. & Pool. priv\!;: scz;;mo. e Sleeping Rooms · * 2 BR., blt·lns, pool * WALK TO BEACH Hospital, ~141. e t714 1 831-0_7.o30;;.. __ j,;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; FRflr,,1 $195 • 2, 3 & 4 BR I . 2HD TRUST DEEDS houses. Fa milies OK. \VE HA VE J.fANY, MANY WALK to Shopping! 1 BR 4- picx, $125. Gar, pet ok. 644-2696 eves, 6T3-376l days. e Housekeeping RootnJ $215 ·Lellle" 1 & 2 Br-Cpts, drps, Bltns, 2 BR, 2 BA, recently redec· Newport Beach * 4 BR. 3 BA 'Townhouse. e Ocean View Apts SEMPlE R. E. 673-6445 garage. 308 16tfi St. No ordted stove/refrig, orw J To boJTO"'' on your Real . r.fORE! Eotaie, inv..i tor good LANOLORDS FREE $395/mo-less on lease. Pool. BALBOA INN BAYPORT Pets Please. 53&-21.65 or small child O.l<. $100. mo. ... l BR. l'n i>a, crpt, drps, g:ir. 833-165.l/833-'8974. 105 Main Street ADULT 2 BR wJ FRPLC 847-3957 496-0911, 4.92-0801, eves. n- bltins, f:rplc. Nr warner & 3 BR 2 Ba Beaut Yrly ....,=~=-"m..7""'"'40:.:._._~-$290/MO. 644-1774 WALK to Beach, schools & 492-479-5. ~ l~e HomtfMltlers 547-9641 \\'e Specialize in Newpor. Ne\\'\and, (2131 634-2'112. " · · ;;; I 1 yield, or sell existing note. c.u us Sigoal Mortgago eo. LANDLORDS! (714) 556-0106 -Beach e Corotta del Mar e TL~,. ...... SIZE'. < BR, 2 BA, lease. $425 6 ' 7 . .,,,.,,... 2 BR, l BA, carpet&, drapes, * * 2 BR, 1 ba, new crpts, go f.red 2 8t 3 BR'Me. f'rPlc'e, ON OCEAN 1500 sq ft 2 ~ & Laguna. OUr ·Renta1 Ser· ~ ,,--=--'-"~~~~:._..___ Pool. paint, waJlpaper, adults, co~ garap. grs Apt BR., 2 BA. qul~t. luxur.ious. -I ~ & vice i! rnEE ro You! 'l"r)' ~ ,'auo, Pf', bring fam. S•n Clemente $215/MO. 675-0562 ,1"225=.::.m=o,.,. -=-'""'='-· ___ Avail. 410 21st St HB. AIC. Adults, no pets. Eves ,-Nu-View' Hornefinlllen 547-9641 1 DOOR tCl Beach-2 BR, Costa Mesi 644.-05.58. 4 92- 2131 BIG' 1;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~liiiiii I -NU.VIEW RENTALS 2 BR House. Obi gar. 4 NE\\'LY decorated 2 BR winter $175, yearly $225. .;:.:=c..c~c::._. ____ LOVELY 3 .BR, 1% ha NE\V 2 BR. 2 BA, Iaund., · :t , 573.4030 or 494-3248 biocb beach. aean. Avail home. w/enclo&ed yard & 673-6640 Condo., Nr. shop & schls, patio deek, gar., cpts, dros. I H F 'shed 300 Mar 1 $U5 968--0652 ft 5 carport No smoke/drink. cor. Golden West & $195 mo. 496-2828 aft 6PP,.,f • ou1es urn• Balboa Island · · · a · References $225. 494-7919 BAY VIEW-2 Br $250 util I Warner, $240 mo. 842-422'2 S A ' 1 General "-';.;.:.;.o.,.;.;;.;.:;.:;:_ ____ I NE\V 2 Sty, lrg 2 BR, tY.r: S J C • pd. Adlts. Bch, pier&: prkg. mornintB, 846-469l aft 6 pm anti n1 from OWNER'S mod . 3 Br. 2 Rn. BA Condo. Free lndry. Nr. In uan ap11trano 303 E. Edgewater l-8'n-2866 $~UTIL Pd Nice Bach. trplc, laundry, gar. Reduced all & beach. $250. 968-8446 NE\V 4BR. drapes, crpts, Costa Mesa I B ~EA~ ~E&A~~ Now Renting • • • • $l45 full kl Ir · d k So to $39J. yrly 6T>-Ol58; 2 BR, 2 story condo, 1"• blti f I ran new ' " r, cpt NEW 1 2 & 'BR' p k 1· , t. g priv. ec , . 64 0-4 307 1: ns, rp c, comnt. pool, I' bl Be drps, bltns, gar. 221 16th . -• 1 s. ar · 1ke , Laguna. Ba, shag carpet, drps, frplc, nr marina, 493-8746 or Unbe ieva y autlful or Sl4 l8th st. 847-3957 settings. Rec. ~m. Pool. ( $160-trrlL Pd 1 Br. bltns, Balboai Peninsu11 dryer. 962-2951; 968-1629 493-3381 VAL D'ISERE Garden Apts. Play areas. Patios & tot ' ·-~ 2 blks beach t.am•na I · S Adults • no pets. F1ov.·ers LARGE 1 BR. Stove & lots. Gas & Water Pd. Shag, .)'"'"'' · .. ~. · BAYFRONT pn·. beach, di-. t'vine anti Ana Hei11htl PINECRl!EK re~· $1251 A I M I $250-2 Br frplc sml pet A 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1-.,;.c....;.;;.;.;;.;.:.;.;;;.•~::_--everywhere. Stream & uq:; mo. v ar drapes & so foMh! ' C · lge 2 BR $500) or 3 BR waterfall, 4S' pool. Rec. Rm. LIVES UP L Warner/Beach Blvd. Starting at $169 + dep. ' ka~k beach, orona de! $600) duplex. Yrly or mo. 2 BR. 2 Ba ............ $325 3a:· 11 ~a~ .• nrv s~· Sauna. Sgls 1·2 Bdrm. TO ITS NAME Area. 84 7 -4«11 Newhope Me•dow1 i NU~VIEW RENTALS to mo. Dock Avail. 673..fMO. 3 BR. 112 baths •.•... $300 mo, ~3540 111 Y • · Fum-Unfum from $142. $149-2 BR. Crpts, drpe, stove, Apts. 6 73-4030 or 4 94- 3248 c c;.:°""';.;.:.;.;.:.a_d;:.e;;;l.;.;;.;M.;;•;<r___ 3 BR, 2 baths .•..• $375/450 ~-""C:::-7':.:.,.____ SE IT: 20ClO Parsons, Over 500 tall trees and 10 gar. Pool. 17361 Keelson nr 517 S NewboPt' SA -4 BR., l~ 00.ths ..•... $300 Condominiums 642-8670. streams with waterfalls Beach & Slater. Kids or ·554.2600 ' · · , WALK to Beach' Bach 190 SEAWIND 4 BR. 2 batlu; .......... $370 _.;,;U:c•.;,;f.;;u.;,;rn.;;. ___ _;:3.:;20 .;;..;;c5:c30;;,:.:w'-=e=E~K~&---1 er.ate a retaxlnc 1ettlng tor ~pe~t~o<>,>k;:_.~842-0389~~·~842-4~"!50l~-b:::.cc--=.:...::=---t Also 1 BR house, $125 4 BR, 2% baths ....... , $450 UP your spaclowi new l· or 2· IMMAC. 1 Br. Near bch. Apts., &~ l BR CM, Sill. 3 BR Next To Spyglass 4 BR., 3 baths •...•... $425 Costa Mts• • Studio&: 1 BR Apta. bedroom apartment. From See Mgr, apt F, 4ffi 7th Furn. or Unfurn. 370 I ~h1~;;. $185. H.B. Agt. Fee. VIEW CALL 552-7500 .• PhoTV & Ms-~~ ServiHcetd Av.UI. lo1u7~. Funrl•tuoore a8vallable. =s,,1,"HB~.c'53&-'==m=,1c-·~~~-1 ;, 1 .,-.,...,., r..tESA Verde, beaut. 2 BR, ne t:.1.,..,,., poo •ce o-· -00 2300 F I .. -· .,..... · w : · SPAC 3 BR, 2 ba., !rpl•, ounta n Valley Corona tle1 Mar 3 Beru'oom, 2 bath home, VISION 1 ba. &bag, gar, patio, pool. •Children & Pel Section Fairview Rd., C..ta Mesa. • [irep!Aee, formal dining, Adults $215. MG-Om. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM Phone: 56-2300. patio. l child ok, no pet11, ' APR 1 J 15 2 BR I Tum f 548-9756 or 645-3967 846-1848, 842-9494 i" - - - , • • UM: . , set-cleaning oven. Enjoy • d h (I your gol , clubs into ...,."-';:;::!:==""~~~~ 2 BR, $1.65. Crpts, drpll, L •-CUT 11t: ba., Lg patio. 1 blk private community tennis & re i a stereo. Sell them with *5US CASITAS* bltns. Sngl sty, beam ceil. •1une uwech OUT • beach. $300 mo. 3 3 O 1 swimming pool ln this a Dally Pilot Cla!>Sified Ad Nu pain! Sel-1·• pet ok I PO I Seaviev.·. Eves 673-5820 pre•tigi·oos 1U'ell above 1 REALTY REALTORS and use the mo_, fm' a Furnished Bachelor's&. · "'" o:u • NEW deluxe Townhouse, 2 R stereo! Ca.11 642-5678 Today. 1 B<inn's. Exceptionally 646-924J or 646-8882. Br + den, wet bar, ocean au11·D"ll ... CUTE COIT AGE -2 BR C~o~ro~n~a~d~•~I ~Ma~r~-~1~4~95~pe=r~u~11~iv~·~P~a~l'~k~C~e~n~te~l'~ln~·~h1~"cl~~~~~k;~~~:.. I nice. 2110 Newport Bl, CM NEW. Redec 2 BR .. adults, view, wlk lo beach, 1 yr. I A -I h'Plc. Nr. B!g Corona. $275. month lease. 644-468_7. 1 ' CLA&'\ SELL..<; 642-5678 no pets 1•-Gas & w1r I $400 ' • I Ki " LGE furn 1 Br w/ pool, • ~. ease, per mo + 11.-In ·--~ Al Oakwood Garden Aparl· ments· GREAT RECREATION . swim· ming. saunas. hael\h clubs. billiards. lennis. pro & pro shop, go!! dri ving ra ng e, part)' room. etc. FUN ACTIVITIES: Full·tlrne direclor, tree Sund.'.ly b1unch. BBC's, tfips, pa r11es, and more! BEAUTIFUL APARTMEN TS; Singles. 1 & 2 bedroo ms. Furn. & un!urn. Wilh all 1he ex!ras. Models open 10 to 7. Sorry. no pets or children, Oakwood Garden Apartments Newport Buch/Notlh l,.,.in• •nd l&tll 61~~'10 N•wport le•ch/South 16111 II l!•ln1 &.l2·1170 .. .. mo i;. renta.. ngaaiu RE. pd 114 E :11th St CM t ing N Del uww I -·~ Grw 642-222'.! nr. Harbor shop'g. No pet.,. M.Him or.646-4095 .. , · ~~.':ean ~iw1, w!BRk 1 or two bedroom *'con. I $155. mo. Call btwn 9 & d"'--' Costa Mes• s 4l}~ ~"£,tjV 6, 67S-2833 Agt. G7$.5800 2 BR, small yard, married to beach, $300 mo +"""'19(1 ~with (r\1-() a -Q. e e TROPICAL POOL e couple only. ~t OK. $160 cleaning on leue. 536-2l'JJ Wlll-tl>-wall .. f?-*• 1---------1 SnJDENT & r'in~lf'!'! 1 Br. ~ )..'-V Call -* 5 PM D UXE ·• I ..,cir ..:"" _,... I S t A MobH•Home. 1115. Util pd. 2 Br, Ill Ba. spiral mo. ~" ,-7 EL voew, 2 & 3 BR. • .., ..... Cfl!YlllllJll. 11'-"c."c.'-""..:;"..:; 8 :_ ___ _ Homoflnders 547 _ 9641 Thaf Intriguing Word Game wilh a Chuckle staircase. !rplo, pat 1 o. 1180-3 BR, 2 BA nr. Sooth Lea .. $240-$300. South •nd panlllid living 111om, CHOICE """' "1 CLAT •• POLI.AH Water & Gas Pd. 548-U68 Cout Plaza. Famlly 4-plex. 494-3383 or CM-~ 1.mco1or ~waits. I . Huntington Beach BEAUT FURN I Br lots No pets. m.<1272 OLDER 2 BR apt. ne.t view a ldld1a1 full or bl\Ht.lns LAKEFRONT Ql'lET COl'PLE I BP.·l·pl<x. o r=~~.h:::t";,, .. ~.:::. of bltins, pool, walk lo 2 BR !front) cpl, drp, bltns, ~e-~~ Cliff Dr. I (lricUllng dllllwaihlr). I LOCATIONS shopping, ml from bch $150 prlv. pa.tlo, glll'qe. Couple .... >-3 S125. Pel ok. low to form four iimple words. mo. Also unfum $135/MO. pref'd. 5.f,8.5711 Me.. Verela Meet and mln~lt with VERSAILLES Homefinders 547·9641 931 W 19th St !M~ · I SE OLE T ·1 · · · 2 BDRM, new crpts, d.,,. HOMEAT,MOSPHERE·Dl.x2 I mlnelglt==:i:a:n~bl"!" I r Irvine . LRG. 2 BR, close to A paint. $155. 7ST Shalimar, I: 3 br Ren 1 Of ~ Inquire 179 II Rocbe•ter NEAT 2BR lBA, bltlns, Mace Ave. 54&-1034. I a vol • bsbf'. I At South C.ost p1.,,, I 1 1 I I I I shopplng, adults, no pets. 646-3512 · · ta c, ~ I ~roanm ON THE LAKE 'Fum~p4rt1B1:tt .. tQi~ptba1.5 $495 I (teBarJ. patio, aar. Pref adllt, .no Mi11lon Vlel9. I ~br~brooka.1 7°'J~c~~u1S'°pec~~ .. ~r! Including i ardener. r~~G-~-~~~-·~~1 JJ 1 r lrg, fWTI, $165. Adlts. pets. $170. 540-4752 2 BR 2 .... I F bru h " Ideal for Bacl1tlon. JS93 2 nn ~ t drp • BA. cpts, drp&, al· &91=' 1--•~ Acre Lako wtrow.rlng e 8.1')' t ni Augusl f Oiurch. 548-9633 t-"'" uvnt, crp, 1, priv. .tached gar, &~ lmmed, _ le"'a"" • ., Fountains. \,i Million Dollar f'Um 3 BR, 2~ ba. $325 I j I' I l p&tlo. pr, blt1ns, cpl pftf. nea!•tea.,5.'l7-0528anytime. I!.: ... ~ I Clubhouse, Gym, Sauna, Per month Incl. gardener . • . . 1 BR Duplex, f\lrn, newly 543-SID N Bff h ,...,youl!11n11N. Tnt""I Securtt,y. '--.-~-T-.~1 I dee~ Muno onlioo $135. mo. 1195. REDF.cORA'l'ED ! BR, owport c . .... ADULTS-SINGLES r E ~ A E S _ 6 ;:~ ';:,~ 2 BA, pooli:'~ EASt: Blull, .:l 2 . Br, 2 I::::: ,,.. Ttf.: I 1, 2 I. ~ a.drooms Jal West~ 8f,nk Bld11:. Uni\U.lt)' Plirk, frvine p SS:Z.7000 Night• I I ........ Unlum. -305 I I BR ,.,... !<B. $t25. Cit. $1l.1. 2 BR'•. CM. $1«1. HB. : ~BR. $185. Aft, f'tt. I I• I I' My w;fe h11 a figure like --·--·--· DUPLEX t.,.e 2 BR, all. ~.:=:;~ no ~'t;. ~: 1 •••rtff ,.,.,,, .. 1 from $l75 per me. . • . . . Iha Supreme Court. No~ LRflG;,J. BR, ft2 BA,, U50 ... gamg•. 2179 "'8 ... tta. $\50. 644-52981777 Domingo Dr. a•r•••••• ,,.. 3700 Plaza Dr. 10 , '!NII IQ pa.Io, stove. month uc _,, • -S t • A I 1' mrtg, loundry fadl. $350. ' ~r•-I DUPLEX 3BR, 2BA, all . •-an I na S 0 0 P R U I mo fne ulll't, ,2 BDRMS, Iii Ba. Av.U bltns, blk to bch . XI lg. Noxt lo South Cbaal Plan l 1 I j \ I Q Comp~to IM ch1K1"• quot•d Call 493-8001 Marett 11. $175. Call 6~ )'<'-md. Nice 13l5-(!I 714"556-046' ,.; a · you 4~:nyn!;, tht ~:.'1 i::. ~ 0ff P=c~~~ ~~te ~~~~~3 ~~·ba. enc.I i-2m;B:,,~238C'u:::~::,· -,-wa-=tk~lo-b<,..-a~ch, Roomt 400 t BR. SPANISH VILLA w/ patiO, •baa opt, bU·lnt. Nr. "l21\i. Incl Ull1.-YrJy. Avail --. . _. e q tNl NUMSEUO tmE•S IN l . courtyard, privacy. $150. No O.C.C.! $195 mo. 557.()3.IO. 411. 2U-H7-9443 -I Sllllllegoi'Wy. Iii Broal\0 I BEDRCOM, pllv. -··TV, THESE SQUARES Pets, 6f6.12.1J, ~30. LG. 2 BR, SWO. Crpts, stove, :BR 11A ha, CN1lt.t l door tu1t. ricrll to w.nif, s hare bfl. w/ 9ne. Prlv tnt, f) u~lj''cf£il~~~E LE!TERI I I I I I I J Hunll"flOn leech ~n,'!11J1:·,~~2 No l><t• ~ 'b<aoh •• 1300 106 Olive I ~=e~~l= I :,;~! 3~;:,:mn~rt':.~ · - " · • --AT BEACH 2 BR, golf, CLEAN ttf!W 2BR close to oc;EANraONT 1 BR, frple, 1202. Models GI*' dally mo, Mature cmplO)'fd 1em. SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRC'A TION 800 · ...... adw11. 1!80 w1to 11th, 111151 1613 S.nta .w bit.Ins. cro11, • drp&, ,.,,, 10Lm. nr bcb, 110, ~ uUUu ... 644-4.U5 Avo .. •«•pm MWS11 · 1.-. c.11 l!li-IS.lil. - - -.Pilot aass!Ned. 642~8. I -- • 11.oms 406 6Rlco ltontol 4-.o '•und lfr~ t!!•I J~. .,.,, __ ~~§~Sj~~!j!~~~!!!!~~~£fil!!!!!i1~~~~~(2~] S~llSG room for reot, N EWPOlt.T C E NTER FOUND: -. A lillCk PLUMBING, EIJ!IC'l1\ICAL, RESPONSIBL.!l II u a on t B~U'l'IOIAN Men> "1lllt, EXP£1t. d<nta! """""'· k11Eh'n prf\'is. Cloae lO 2 ROOM otlk-e v.1J{h fantaitlc Shef>. m!x ~+_male cock· CARPENTRY. No job too de•lrt• partqjme n ff I Ce 1ttrac, LUI.rt rec pt, Part time. ~Ion 4 Tu8t. MAIDS.HOTEL Nunlnt N ~It &: ahopplng center. view of Newport 11~~ •·p:--ct poodle, wblte 1nwl. F l B ilofile ltepalr, work In Coat• Mtt.a.. Can martitre" etC, 6«Hi256. 4 hrs• dl)'. '46-0h1 Pt.one for apjt, 67a.-8800 ew i!Obi's,.km~up wlib ~~· :1~i ~iuit.:: ~~..,.~~-~ ~S"brV-.Gen'I ~IUld llko, lhorthand. ::1~ I T FACT6RT MAN Wanted to ...... In S di 1tltchtn '30 wk up apt. Janitor lt'l'Vice, cupetlnl w/black ta.11 wl•hUe tfff, Can>thtrY, Repatn, Plum-Help Wanted, M & ~-71~ "l;t>ebanie:-9 ~~n a~. ~~:rta1ctur. .°!. 'cecrt•'· mp· !°.! 8 d eback 54&-9755, 6'5-3967.-~loll ot -parking. very lllJ!leil._ll':21!1J llUW. Elto ~Romodeli.a -~ w-KERS ~'" ,....._,, l>ho -· LUXUIYQJ)S pvt Coata ESTATE REALTY ~lJ.20 SMALL grey ldtteo with ~. -""' .--.,-=-....,a\11 mt be neat &: clean. N;o ""' · Time. can Mt f.lar1no c o • lllesa, maid service,_.., OFFICE 1pa,e av&li. !\>r .;,Jte tlu:oat & •~ 11i!H!bEl\&ON'S ate...,.· ~. =:\~:.i':"ii,1r.' Black!Oa MA1 URE WOMliN :tt:°:M. -kds,.., Slits ommun1ty amokttt, Ms.n97. attorney at law. 12xl6 lit. wearln(t Oetf 0011'1 teMei. Se:rvill( Jlarbor .(ccountant to l~K aQOKKEEP!:lt. CPA firm, PE~EHT POSITIOHS H , 1 ROOM !0< reut. Adul1. ~ attomey'a offl< .. re<Pt. A In f!arbor View Homes, artL !:l?<f Mgr Mach Shop to IW< F/C tlu:u 1T/B, pe-••erit. 2nd SHIFT MANAGEM&NT 0sp1ta ~ nn for /t,vt• aeettto.ry 644-4317. *6'f3..m * ~ Electro r.t~h. to $!!OK 'I $6S(f ........ ~~~~~~Ke~~ s2!.o u: Call mir11 F?'Ej>oblf, (Do be r mani Ha"lln9 ~t&"'~7$Jri Secy ~ :;.8:1lc~un: =· Phone U1e mach. 1c gen. prod. A...'.!.!!.t~1t ~~ RN't far JCU-t'CU, II* H . ~ ~ * I MO FREE RENT * , .. uuue, less than year -. -1981 Placentia Ave., .. __ ... nuhinl ttntt med.I allrurzi Ul!,f ~m~ 41~ Deluxe 1' A: 2 nn. oUt~s l:'J6...7f1 Vlc: N~rtBlvd. YARD, ia!8i.e clean-ups, ~lt:f::~i:rld1~xp Sfm+ BOYS & GIRLS. Coeta Mna = ~=-avalli cal Ooor. , c SEMI·prlWtl! room iri pvt. adj, Airporier Hotel I: Rest. ~ !-tar t., C.M. "i :r;: .,,.liffi1 ;' :r:• m 1.1· Ptoces90r II'. to ~ Newepaper can1el'I, min. Joca~ton&. CoQd. Paf, co. Alto lttittiedlate opentncs h ome for elderly ~ . · . -• · Securities Clerk 19 j600 e,ge 10 )'J'S. for Ne,vpo1t FJ~dl1r1 111 R11t1urant Mtt_ro Car Wash OR techntd:ans. AmbWato"'-' lady. 556-15.17. 833-.J2239'J,'oNoon FND Swnete cat w/br<Wn t7:~. _ TY"'-l.st IBM t.•x/GO •.:""+ n-I N rt H 1" ' N~ hirlnJ' · II ~•• CM. BeaUtttu1 commUntll' NEW Con~pt ln Hvlng for OFFICE lpace avail .. heart nlatkinfg, VJc. L l t t I e MOwa. DELIVERY ' MAintenance Man --~ Ne~c;.:rt ;=Sula e 2~~:a~t Hott••it• a 8u1boy 295q &r!JUi-,.,.., ,.,,.-ptW ne.fled ln l.Alli\iM .mrlor c.lfb:ens. see 10 at Corona ael Mat; Idea.I Balboa Illa~. NM<ls gd. llAULING.!l. ~ave a blf walk 1 Oal oic. 11l bkpng to $550 Mt. Ryde Circulation Pept. Ot.ys Only MANAGER, exper, Im newer llllfs, ntiliutet from fQr CPA, Enrineef1 etc. S.200 hame Pleue contac t ln yah, IU!U + rellable, File aerk $500 OAIL'i' Pfibt. CA.II 64!·43%1 Please apply in r,non 10 unit apt bldg, Sen Cle-ocean ill a • rn o I· tr e a,ppre¢-Iate, 642.--9278 To 1300 Pe ..... fl>.1965. ~ Clerk Pfi"' ·-••~ U all mente. 49'l-tl39, ~434-6986. at-"--' ,,_, Ft) ~ & lt!ll.ft aipplleJOon. '""11 Laauna ll .!!I lot .. ....,r.-w:'"' Vacat ion Rentals 425 CALL '1$"-ml UNO palr o~tet1;;riptkm . rnOving & hauling M"aHnfi rJJwr Sales S3 ht ;;;;;;l~RS al 1 t..quna Hl11s loiAN wanted full lime In !XC'elltnt salary A bene{l 1 1 R 445 g~1. Vic. Bristol .t: bY stud!nt Large tNck. cAU.. tat~ JtOPKtN$ bA.Y'l i:.i • m e or em. R~ntal yard. Neal aWatt the cafte1" -• UI .,,,, .Jntal BltCh, Santa a Heights. Reai. llany. 531·1235 or JERRi Wfftn:'EMORE FuU or p/timt. a• cashiers F"RY COOK; rull °" p/ffme appearance; with vtl'Y neat lndiv.idtntl tntf'lftl~ l r 1.Jve Iii .the all new Dana Call 557-5807. 539-943S. ~ ln s@lf aerv. ga11 1taUoM. Exper. COttage o>ttu Shop, hand writing. 0...-n transp., providing the finest Poliit ltarmr at the -cv'\R Le b . 11 s•-D.M..tc Start!.... sal. S2 .... r hr ~ W, 19th St, CM. 646-5304. I · I rl h edl ·a1 f .-y ase, .ivi:l.R. ...,....,., l"ND Wooley pup, very lrf, MOVINOi Local turn. or 11'!¥11""~ • .... r~ WI I mt n ct man. m c care . .bcatitl ul RINA INN 23x40 In sho17Plhg center, lite br w/hlk A white face. "'"uli 32 Ft ,..,_ tth\Jir~C' ••rt .. v-v WI regular ea r n e d F'UU.. time bookkeeper, con-Apply 1930 NtWport atvd, Take San ~go Fwy, SOlllh Motel, 34902 Pel Obispo St. '33 EMt 17th St, Cotta Vic Aviemore & Gleneagle, ~: 5'i-1~·557_:m~>' '"'"· .xl\Y~ l"A.Aa....._ I lncreuea, Min. age 18 yrs. struclkrn office expet. pref. c .M. 9 am to Noon. Mon, to the El Toro Rd. tum-off. ( 4 9 6-2 3 5 3 ) • Kltcben, Mesa, $275, e 73-O1 CO, C.M. 968-7129. ,._ t.!ust be bendable &: neat 493-2141 or 831.()112. Wed 1'rt ~ Pa!M!O de Va.lend.a Efficiencies & Apartmcn111. 6'75-0707, 64r,.2450_ SKIPLDADER &: dump truck 488 E. 17th St. (at Irvine) CM bi iwear. & enjoy workln« A ~-'1 _ _'.114: 837-2121 J[eated pool, direct di al ==="-----~ F'ND: \\'ire tamed ~la.$ses w It ~ halt Suite 124 642·1470 w/lhe public. For interview • GAL FRID Y MARINE Maint Ch. seeks · · ~~~"ia~~dvtrs~nfacifi'J!t, Oiv~C~n ~a!!~T~. ~; jJ~· Little CdM beac 2-i4-8'0~1,;g, bre':f~;:.s:hio.' -Arc """" wsrJI, •w ~~~J~~· Peggy, ~0-~'. ~.v.1t~ d~~'. ~~i~• .l wit~f::1~: OFFICI SAL.Ii$ G IRL a:e~~~er:·~~= ~:c~~ ~=~~· l~cond;q, pr~·r: 638---07~ .,~!of..Clla_nlrist ACCOUNTi NC CAR WASH H&L.P Non-smoker. 83$-HJ'n. M:~~t 1~~: :~~ N:e:,r. ~ens. Apply tn Q:in1e pbly in our sport-'$250/fTIQ. Warelxluse also~~ BeT~::r~rWh~ics™if:f. RtsPoNS. Bondable woman C LERK P'Jtlrne drive rs , ps OIN!ltAL OPl'ICE Lancer11, 201£. Coast }lwy, KIRK JEWELERS f!Shlng, shopping & te!ltRU· avaU. Idea) for contractor. f>40--0583. · will do housecleanli:ia; tor Local electronics firm seeks attendants, detallers & Busy of{Jce In Costa Mesa N.B. 37 Huntington dr, H .B. rMts. sso week &. Up. Bring Call ~13-2616 Mtxt'B Colli . al Vic ttdulla. Tuei, Oj)!ti.. $W tor mat~ indlv. to handle this g~neral ~Ip, 6 Locatlom. Need avg ikllli, pleasant MEDICAL TEOINTCJAN ORGANIST needed for Luth· thLs ad & receive $5 oU on OFFIL"E or store bid<, over it e m e -: 6 hr. ~ trans. Refs . varlet; ~~llk!n-A/R, A/P, I Growth CO, IQol:I ~.Y· personality A-lite AIP & No n:per. rrt't!, Wiii tn.ln. ~an Oiurch in San , Cle:- llt'St week's rent. 900 sq. ft. Cptd, paneled ~8f!lilton & Brookhurst !J79.4l38 &ft 7PA-t Wed·Fri. 1D .key idde:r & accurate Metrd Cir Wash AIR. Xln't stlll'tlng salary, Ag@s 1'f.:w. $326 mo. startlng mente 492-4i164 492-T74S & divided. SL85/mo. 326 8.~a. 6T3-(1337, anytlme Sat-Tues, l~U\8-Call Coastal 2950 Harbor Bl, Of pleas-ant workin¢ conds. salary t many benefits. ' ' · Rent1l1 to Share 430 Ma.in St., Hunt. B ch. FND: Fml B«itty-dog Vic. H 0 USE W 0 R k . Exp . Pe_rsonnel Agen~, ~. Jason Bett Agency Now lnletrieWing. Army ORTHODONTIC ASSIS1~ ---------536--0".!00 lrVlne &-20th SI. CM t>epend&ble. Qwn transp. 2'Jro flarbor BIVd,.CM CLERICAL 17400 Brookhtlrst, 1'. Vly. OP~rfunltli!s, 6 4 5 -116 3, ~art time ~~u:,~:ev~ RETAIL shop1' avail at 642-9l-U Refs, NIJ.CdM a r e a. µC oUNTINC CLERK Immed. Assignments. Top Suite Zl3 963-6775 Colla Mesa. ~~tk: exp. 'n e c , WORKING mother w t t h children 1''0uld like to share expenses In my home in Mesa Verde with same. Mu.st be responsible and high-minded. Large yard to play ln and a happy atmosphere to share. Call Ruth 546-4478. n1\nl11.ture mill! in "Cannery FOUND : 2 )l:efis on key 547-4Z87 aft. 5"1.f Nat'! Sailboat Mfg. has SSS. Long or !lhort term. ~ Medlc!J !!Slstant bftqk office 642-G443. Vllh1ge" $ltQ 10 S180. <125 chllin, w/ril.edd.1 ion. itESPONs. COUege Student opening fOr A I Pa ya b I e Call 540.4450. O l!HEltAT""O,..C '500 glfl th H.B. Write Claulfled ---------1 30th SI. N.B. 673-9600 or ' 556--0979 will do fast & efftclent clerk. Mfg exp. n e c . NEVER A FEE AT TJ!;~fPO i6 key by touch tvhe 50 Ad No . 26, c/O Dally Pilot, fl'.ACKAGERS 642-1960 FOUND Boys bicycle. Vic. cleaning 4 hrs min.$.l hr. Relocating to Irvine in _TE!\lPO Tf!mporary lleJp WISTCLifF P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, ~ Pharmaceutical MfD' of Newland & IndlanapO!i!I, "Bobble" ~ ~I. Apply 940 W. 17th CLERK • TYPJ-~. ca. 9'l626. need! packagers tor ttielr RESTAURANT -H . 8 h ,_,.,0 CM "'-c-.. rn1 Personnel Agency d ~-d . BAYFRONT untingtOn eac . ~ . HOUSEWORK $2.50 hr ' . . part time ~ tt"mporar:f' fl.ill lMark Iii Centerl M1LITARY Pro u o;uun epartrilent, lost -~5$ ~ewtw:Ji't Beilch Or Cost a ~qual .. QpP.Jr, Employer lime-In au~rile~ .• S2.2> hr. 165i t:. Edinger, s .A. POWCE operate mme packaging at Ferry, Balboa. 673'.--1440 Mesa &tea. 646-5469. ACCOUNTS PAYABLE Want mature. exp rl . 542.8836 No exper. teq'd, Will 1rain. machines & per t o r m BLOG. 1vith fuhliture 11trlp-JAPANESE lady wishes to Nauonal builder Io ca t e d Call 892--8344 . ""' 1 itl ff! Ages 17·34. ~mo. starting milnual packaging. Good '!~N~oold~~:rto ~I~;~ plng lank! for lease or sell 'f1~~~e ~:.k:J ~~~ do housework. t' eed a Ifvine Ind nrea. CoruJ exp. CLERK . Reserv&.Hons g.5 G~18 :,i:· 1 g 0 c~. talary + many benefits. ra'~1fy ~ne.::,k 'm. a A;;~ new 3 BR, 2 ba home v.·f lanks. 492-7lll. w/whlte nose 1: white feet. transport&.tion. _MG-::J.332 req. Perm. position. Call Off Sun & Mon. l\tucli detail 847-8507 eep ng. exper. N9W Interviewing, Anny lh petson between 8 -'\Jj .,,........... &: 1 small chUd. Industrial Rent1I 450 Ans to n--•11. ,._. "-1--.a I T for detailsfappt. Mrs· JI.lust type "'ill tr a In Opportunities, 6 4 5-11 6 3 • tn Ansholl' I 1 N;:'.'u;;. Coasl Plaza. i.te H. H a7'b~ U r~u Ne:d~ ncome a~ Thompson, n4: 979-4550 494-8521 -Bet. 8 &: s. · GRINDER OPERATOR Coeta Mesa. Guiette, Irv!~. nc. yard, gllJ'den, rts ok:, ;;;;;;;N;;;;CNl;;;;;L;;E;A;:S;l;N;G;;;;;;;J medlcatkln. 846-$104 lnC:om• Ta x Service ANCIENT MARl.NE-R COUNTER Gi.ri Donut Ahop For ID . grlndihg. Small MOTEL Maid v.'Ork, need Eq\Jal !'.!Ppot'tunlty emplo:YH ~ or !fi7-sst MED. St black Lab. White pel'BOnal or business .. ~ 25-!5 Hr 7.3, Westminster. ' ma_nuf. 6"!!· p 1 ea~ ant energetic woman, Laguna PART time Lane Pis YOUNG temale d cs Ir~ s Huntington Beach on chest. Flea Co J la r . 23 Yem Harbor Area '"i:.c.u" 968-9958 v.-otlrlng eonds & toCKl co. Beach ttlOl't, 6 day wk. wanted. Ai:!·• In. n.non1 al I I t NEW "I t -DAY }rltchen help ad belieflts. 'faPm.atlc ~".1196 ' •-m e trave exccut ve ype m-•·colottel''. Left.cat &.ccldent ( 14) •75-6676 NJGJ-rr BUSBOYS COUPLE. Work tun time, U51 Ke l ter i n g , 1~Nc-• PROOF 0 • ., at SB.ddle ck L ane•; rwmmate to shr rent I.or 940 Sq. Ft. I: UP at Pomona & Wilson:, C.M., P:oi: AppoJJJ!n:ient manage 62 unit apt . m-«l80. " r~ 1ifonday thru Fri. afttt 8 cl11.tsy party p e 11 t Ito use, IIamiltol'I & Newland St. Sat, ~ard, 546-4fl3. L ncl I ..Apply In Person 3.5 Pl\1 complex, Costa Me sa. HEIJI. Woman writer/poet ExP'd ONJ. Apply ~·. &per only. 586-SJQQ. S«r-1856 ~1970 % SIAMESE le ~ Burmese 8 -seep nt 2607 W. COflllt H"''Y·· N.B. Salary &: comfortable new eed · l t typl t Ph Biilk of NNport ltfALE or Female "'an1('() ~~'l""~~--7~. 'l'M~!""~• I ca.t. M. Alteted.. Oeclawed LANDSCAPING: Sjirinlflen, AP'J'. ~-Jletlttd Indiv. or 2 BR. 2 B.6, apt. ~rry S»ik7° un ttr • · · 2196 E. Cout HW,., CdM *Plaint Su~flnt•nd•nt lo share tum 3-BR hou""l",· NEW.. BUJG.-M;i...J.2 Units. ·front paws, Oiildren tips.et. I -~-"'lln I 1• uni Writ G hOJ!!ls or children. §4H4U -~ -Eric eartaori. *17-~1.K be h I L 1250 S Fl $176 2'J0.-3 h ~ ·awns-, -IVWUI ,g; etc.· cp · "" ts. e: rove, itELP• HELP' C ttd· • ... n4r_. ,....!C n a g u11 a· F •0·1,1 · · 1 1 P · Harbat View H O mes · re~son. ~9_82/673-0012. 92'1 9th st. Manh. Bch. DELIVERY men, over 23 _ 1 ,·1 . i · 1•1.~. n ' Nr.tb P&.ft 1'Une •relp sackgrouhd ln preelslon tool· .............,,,, ront -ce, crp s, arge 644-n81 Painting i ~-~· Penn, SJ/time. Early vu un ~ :qr po uci:u cam· Cooks & Drivers lng tit equivalent. rear doors. Anaheim & LOST 2123, Male Husky ASSiSTANTS tn tableiirKI' &: mOm. newspaper dellv. to paign. 8J0.2'62't . *S•l•1 Prornofllf! WANTED-2 Females to lhare torn 3 BR house nr ocean &: beach. 494--01Ji3. 'fe rmlrial Way, C.M. t.ta.Jemu!e, white &. gray, -.P'9M~ban1I~ --o NB homes. ~ pet nio HOSI'ESS.~to2fiyri~Temp. Cal~r. drl~ he., over 21, Coordhtltet Days &lfr.SG.13, eves &16--0681 lfijured eg. VSo Goldenw'est ~hipping depts. Apply In + bonus. f>42.....4800. PR at local boat show, houn 5-12 rt·es, Neat "-• ..._ FEMALE Roommate .,,·anted QUAINT OLD BLDG. I: Warner 54IJ....4!'J08 ~Safnz, J~~gl!.~ DENTAL AsS!st&.nt Newport March 3rd thnt 10th . $2.50 perton11ble, 646-7136. 410 To t7w to shr 2BR apt, In Corona "''ilh loft. 3650 Sq. ft. -LOST 5 mo ofa sable &: * W lll.trd P ainting La.bs, 2148 Newport Blvd, Beach Orthodontic ottlc.e per. hr. &O-S364. After 6, Ensl l?th St., Costa Meia. Eitpet. In horrie furnlshinP del Mar, 640-4298 eves po1enti11.I unlimited. In 'A'hite fein. collie f:· (Ol'lti'•cflrs * Cltt. Must be neat. Chalnlde. Approx 4 day~ 640-8834 NEED h . 5 expd _ ~ w_ er ot ~e£k~ ~fTER 2 BR, 2 b&.. Studio ept. Nr. ~~11~7. Village. S42--5200 ~~C:.:-~!'1 t!ale, e. RESIDENTIAL ASStgrANT Indonesian cook, pet Wk, .. ~<JP6sal1 ary, llbMw.1all Hett,11, f/time m,..! .... c ho~fs ri:ra.,· s wS:::.' PEJ3,SONN!:L AOENCy Harbor A: Ada.ms. C.M. $90. .ivi:-..-ara. -"" .........., &-COMMERCIAL part or full time. Phorie lt1nge ll':'ne 9• _con,en APl>lY iii jlef&oh only, ~;,,..,,. · J .._. ' j,.,...,. Ci "• D s • NB mo; 979--5897 IOc PER SQ. FT. wfr Ute colored ma.le Finest Craftsmen 613-039ot environment, orthO exp req, Delaney's Sea Shanty 01~•.w, &t-.:iw VQV mp't"' r.{ "'lj • ' l.y;•"ANTE~°"'D-°'M"'A~T~u=n~E-m-a~l<-1-0 3000 •II 4001 Birch,NB neutered Slom.,. cat. V..y Oi'!'Wall Wallpapenng AUTOMOTIVE no •moklng, age 20-.J0, 630 Lido Park Or, N.B. HCNI INTERVIEWING 5!17-2'tl lhr 4 Br h!'le &: utll. Close Baumgardner 541·5032 Shy. Vic Medlterranttn Vil-Acoustical Gellffigl 642·:3626. HOUSEJCi!lPEfi: I BABY· hy Coolta, c'Oilntet itfls, tull p L: UMBER. Ex~. to beaCh, HB. $115. 962-8668. OOSI'A Mesa llOO sq ft plus Inge 546-6162. *P6411eueS7C7allS Forl::stllml~ LOT MAN DENTAL Am. chalrt\de, s rrrtR. Mon thni Fri. T time d,.i!..'· TMH BUrret t80I ~. Appty J'afid•',,..~' MALE roommate, 10 sh~ fenced yard. $17S pr month. SMAU. black female poodle, • "°'" -JI{ Immediate opening. One of sit-down. Exp. 5 de.yi 8-5, to 4:30, awn trans-. N.8. Wea-t ""'°st tty., f.f.B. Plumb!!lg. 556-8807._ 3 BR home on Balboa Isle., 642--5851 . BKR. not clipped, Vic: HIJ'bor & Stale Lie. No. mo38 Orange County' a leading Sal open. Nwpt Center Ref. req. ~7 a1t 4 or IMlESS._. "N I 67_ s..7613 VJetotia, am to Picliles, -1 al Oh _,_ 640-0300 ":!rends. .. '"'URSING rll ...,. 548-D'7 eVel I COMPLEttl HO\ile fta.lntlflg, ;1~ De en. See U\."JI. Dl1hwa1her-Cook Trne ff6UsikriiP'ilRIChild eare '' Who cafi Olitnllll A8 ntcll ROOMJ.fATE wanted, 1 BR, Announolnwlll II¥) U)ST: Male Doxie tr'i K-Mart ctalom ln!e~., we.'!thei:_ proqf DEAN LEWIS IMPORTS 7J1':-2P~. Moil thtu Fi1. npefietWd, 11'1! atrt. Qtim N A Mliltl U!!IO. D6 not ajfjlj ,. large Hiving ~~re~ Nr, So. -Shopping ce·nler. Black & exttt'. A~stlc ceilings. No 1986 Hatbat BlVd., •L hur••• •tat. traftl. _N••'""t BCh_ . _642-~9-ew unleu you "'Ve ~ Coast Para '"5-""""" t'"" _.,j,, """"'" jbb too small. r --ta M _.,..,,9303 """ " " ~ ---= >'@IH eltOef UN So. lalftnil ~nt -Ocean View ""· ~:opp. Tim O!ftna.Jc Painting ....... . esa ..._ . ~ 1\ffart B!Yd; Ow.I . HOtJSEKEEPt:k, tJ.ve ln, s d d lli.ttti Afit. in 4)_ ~fl. : Fuffi, 2 ~~. 2~1~iP8· Aut• Tran1poft1tloft su GH~Lh.ln or bl:,~~e ~: p A p ER n~~ I li G .l ASti'RVICI! CASHIER 0,.\S:Mt: Coti\l~ff~~~~: ~~~~~~~&U a lebaak ~l'fllHU!f ..................... ii\ !J~.-,-8!-.~~.~,~,r-_ ~R-.n~,-4~3=5 Need car pool fr0m Shn Rewanl. ~7858 ptfnting. 21 ,.... ljorj>dr & PBX OPERATOR 661 C•nle< S!, cM 548-~. iloUSEKEflP!!lR' BABY-Commun1"ty Juon Cepl1trano to I • LOST long ha!< fem ............. Refs !urn. No. 1!3281. Salurda,,. oruy g,l)O AM to bllkWASHIR SITl'El,t llffdd ed, d•Y> per IMMEDIATE MINI WAREHOUSES A«hH In Newport white pawi. ~2356. 4,00 PM. Call Mh. Brant Con H ... ~ wk, 8'~ lily. Must havt ,.._'IN"- h 96>-3473 Hi;.B·s u7.•541 •• Jolmoon & Soh Llhcoln v.. osp, ~~3 ear ro! tt ' Call ~3771 H •• I urcn .... STORAGI! Buch. Worklf!ll 1 ours ft ~ • ' " 0$pl a No ?ilove·tn oi' i\fove-nut I AM to S PM call s ---Int., Ext., Avtg room sn. Mei'dlfY ~S6:ll DRAFTSMAN alt SHOU~w)t!S;~ttaKi!\IPlfl !:xpetlenceJ l!tMtt:t1pr,tt tot dlarges. From S7.50 per 496-3360 I I~ AcoU!ltlc t1'·· I) _1ri ellp. AVON . 1.arp prewt11 , 36" to 61}", "'""th. ~~~~·~~~~~~ 1 ~ 11111..... m"lr'r>.nll'NCEO PA~-R-ENJOY MEETING PEOPLE For nlotheHHli Jioriit. i teen-Care('"' Posit:,,ns Avail. 81.,.L _ .... "'·hit• llne ··-k llamilton &: Jliewlanrl St., JIB ~.c.nu:. U'l .C. -I: MAKING MONEYt Itn~!(:Uate opening for age auid~l ltft.Vate room For The tbUowing: ..,)( <U"-1... .. .... ALLSPACE y . -I Ext. & Int. Free ~mat ... Become an AV o N !J:ri!totnan With mlnlriium & l'!llh-Nii. fl3'!1125/673-m4 * ICU-,/ti-RN' only. No color pi'oc!Hs. ff0..1'70 "'1en.i1 liltt'ftltfl~ 646-~ or~ !O representative &: do both. M 2 years !xi>ertehce. H01JSEK.EEPki'i · 1, time ~· I : Day shift -·--PROF. wallcoverlng, atate RUn ;o.ni own buBiiiesl, Knawledg~ of plastic af die -u· d 1 . -k -t F ---!-11 a ti-' am Frtnge Benefits CLEAN Garaae for rent; fiABYSltnNG Jr'l.W.F. in lie. ~?· 279514. lnsµr, all SCbeduJe )'our 01V1\ wotklrig casting heipruf. tWo Yl!ats :lte lnval~r car IH:.~e * SNU...,.fl/tlme RN't Eutslde Costa r.t es a my CdM home. n br. All types paper. n11842--4~. hotlrs • We'll help you or Engineering Or Math I --< --_-.. 3•11 • 11.1 ilm Mullee 646"-251.f or 646-1837 Person1l1 day care far aingle child. E1'.ITE1t• S320 & up. Roonu bUIJd ~ s.Ales teriitory. courile at equivalent re. HpU~ &.G!'!& Plint * M-'. lvrt. ''-' --...I DBL. gar~e on alley. S35 1 used to OA-"OIT)'-about 873~103. lJ(J. Neat -v.'Ork. ~lrless Call: 54(}.704.1. qulft.d. Call fot ipf>oint· ~~.~or J:~1:.:&~ RN11, 1•3i301" 11·7 lifn le,,.~llCflens. rho. Newp:irt Beach, easy everything. Not anytnare. BABYSITl'ING in m:r home. spray. Call Roy, ~l«n". B AB y s ITT E R·reliable, inent • info ~. -· -· Nunfll Ataei Act.tte !xtier. Inc · acces. f"irsl & la.o;t. 548-292S. Not since I discavei'ed the Fenced yard&: References. INT/EXT PAINTING mature woman. Peftnanen1, en•>~ A gu8EKEEPER/OoniP&n-'·3:j() .6: :\.i-1:~ im U17 Piacri~ A\le. Office Roni ti 440 Secret of Uvin;. lf you are O>Sta Mesa atea. 64M384 J)'_ee Est .)Jfn ""';..._ 3-4 dl"', 7 hn a day + PRIMARK lon w/car. \i:r"" Beach. * O!lftlllfll II..,, N-llu<ll, Cifl!. a worrier and want to v•,,-.._yy;r some eves & occai. over Live-in. 49'1-• l'/thflf f""kllfJBlh .... ~l1i•'i iU-Un chanie. lot me help you. C!!!!'J!!!r . * W•il!"'por Henter * nlgot wlrend. 3 i>r..,cli PRObUC'l'S · lli\MIDl~T! "~ hollP!'-' ..,0~. In An ~•-• ,.,~~·••· "RST MONTH fREE Preitigl! office space In N~·· port Bch. !US sq. ft . a\·ail. lmmed. S.U . Cali 540-4144 CARPENTRY -all.JI:• -tf. i).ebkii 64\1'2449 child. Salary open. OWn OPENINGS o.:_·, .. tilul ,'!:_., •• lj' l ~. "'f;i,r~·-., N ALI .. In PROF rir.t ho st trans. Refer. ii. must!. COMPANY ~ " ..,..win u1 ... ,. .. s LICE SED SPffiITU ST tuitn. 11:1· spec . er, ne Work, SpMlas1 Hill area.. Call * TELLER ff"'""' 6\itit~~·•ts' "!!!!'reJi-~~!'!!!l!!m~~~~"'"'J Sp irllual readln-JO a .m, ---•el -. ~ .. est. local freat, Iflt bl, free estlT.ate. Jo ......,. S. Su""-t-LOAN PACKAGING ... ,. ·' '"''"'" 1" =:; ..., &" '"-1nuu .rir-.::; w}l;days eyes only, 6#--389l.. w~ .,.,,., .t. . a WMitbtlt e6ftdl . Lld .1..1.0NS ~al~er:.-~i.2 ~.vifi co.nm:!! rel. 497·!945 bef. 10 aft. ;~ts. 541-:2759. ~~-•· BASYSITI'ER want e ~, CBe~t: ~~,ll~11.lr-Sa~f.X ltJaft ~~·d APPi d61l MOh> . • = eefti uiiltwei Real, San Clemente, for 6 pm. ftllstetf Pitch, lt~lr ffiatufe, full tlme, 7-5:xi view, So. ct Warner) MARIN&llt.l ·~WNos -peU offt~Frt = s.~l!!!"" ':!:.~ .pp!. Cali 4!!2-00:>4, 49"'9136. CUSTOM Wood•'Ot'lt, i..mod., -. . _,,. Moh-Fri, tny hothe, !Mne, •~• •· ~ (71 ') .. 7 "121 re llla-...'r.-"' ~-•• ...::.:_~ pane 00 11ngH • • rept!lr. Vbiee PATCH PLAoo~RING qwn trans, 2 lovely gttls, Qi> w•Ot w Dr • N •• , ~·~ ~~ ·~~~ "ntE Ant DATING U5o{t., -~lS-All typel. Fl'ef! estimates 3 & 4, Refs, 833-1357 alt 6. An ~qualJf>po~nlty . . aJ N~~fh ich er tn/I _ Tj~e .Sil\ DI~ ffl!ewicy & *1't bmplH to P.O. GAME" E1rpiJ , SirVt~ Call 540-43825 BABY-Sitter • day~. my mp er m l ~ -gppor. . .P~ .. . TU El 'nnt.!Gf. 1'Utti6tt, ~ ~-.B. ~ YR. group. From the Plumbing borne. 2 yr OI~ chlid. llRAPE:l!Y M•• --e d i lilsURAN--c'E co. fie• d • VIO ~•lt'adi. Rt•I l1tolt .................... _,.. privacy o( your telephone. JOHN'S C&rptt &. UpOOlit~ Dependable w IR e f i. , 1.6 _ n ~ Sales &gents & rl\ Rm t Equal Oppof. }jfnployer ''Sele1w.m1n'' MISSION VIEJO l>.O. Box 743, G.O. 5.14--4822. on S b ii fu~o' (&:!ii L.it. OTIS PLUMBING 548-7351 ~rienced OVttlocK I' ttainees Salary t6 $8d> T !!!!!"'"~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!! • >I hn. Retanlantil. . .,.l's • l!elnotfeio a no•~-W•ter bl . •Ui<h opeiiiton._ Good bimUi tio eitpel'. necffW'y. NURlll Salet ojiOnlnt lot a "'°k" O F Flr15· "" ... _ ........... ,!-i · BABYSITI'ER &: 11 t e W&.ges. Seaeh bfepetiet:, =.:·-:al _ 0t U~li.fe. RhJdftltiaJ '" PROBLEM Pre gnan c r · all color brl,J;tehert I: 10 =aten, u.ui.,..-.-.il, .. aceS, -! · 900 W. 17th st:, Cbata Mesa l131Hft!t Morgan Nunet Registry. ttA1 Relaited. tmoaphere CL09! TO HOME ConUdent, aympalh e t c niinti!e t,lb.cfl tot' W1Ute dshwashr8, 60--6263 MIC Ir: ~Jcb~~Urst2 f0~: DRUG & cns-MiTICJANn'OR1 pttime. ~to JtN'!, LVN's, ~ca. Floor ~e.loHil apaproacb: All afuerllties & util. incl lrtgnancy co unseling, ¢allM!.~-!'8!.'e ~a'W:. ~A. Compl~lumblng 962-4511, ~8PM CLERK, D:f;Td. P#tRK UlO r!_lO gu_am, for ju.I~ 6ut; ~d wkl~ «17Jtl'i e ortlfei, Best bonus 27992 ~aS:l;1!1.c~p~~ano. J&1E " a.dopOOnv~36 lWill8~h?~ 11'Vitut hri., dihfhg . -~~~Na REi>AtR BABY suter, hf!. 8 to 6. LlOO PHARffl~CY 642-1580 Tean: rN.t".1 ~~ ~ ~· s.rDesfi; .M.. dalk!!i Blal!k, ~ Avery Parkway "-SD F'rwy. SHA.KLEE dealer, new, need rm., & hall srs. An'i rm. No job too small li.ton thru Frl., 1 toddler tor apt, lt_!r_<?.!81!.t. gQ to W9rk en: IChoQl. Start NURlliiY TRAINEE ;a.· AL -EST' ATE' 831·1600 c.u.slomers, full line of $7.50, couch SlO. Chair $5. ** 642--3128 ** & 1 lnfant. 646-53i2 aft 6 DRIV&ft March 1. Call & find out T Jc /indoor pl In " ~tll, ctttn. a ttiitt\eU~ 1S )*ri. ~p1_ it what eeunts lllMflM ~ Ctat• Ceuftfi'.'f m~. W1c;,B.M,, 548-852'2. ~i:lirnu::ery, Appfy ~t~r· SALEIM&N prod. 846-MS. not method. 1 do wmk 1~~=------BANK Tl! Lll!ll No •peel~ Uc. r.q•d. Apply LYN M i DlCAflbNS son only, 2221 Fal.-view Rd ., Whi' oot wa;k In the hot!< t wtii share ride to Santa. mp~lt, Good ttt. 53l-0101. ROOP' for less, repaln, Newpert ath betwn lOeJn .\noon Only. F\ill time, ~pft>T~, RN· Calta Mesa. ~a • Hw\tin:tton Bel.en • •·· ~ N __,,.,. _._ ba k Q"MJER.AL CAilPOO'itY shl"'*let, roclt, romp tree MitOr....,r ICU i· tn --taf! 1k ;· y~ -fauntitn Valley. Let u1 '"'"' uvru e .. ....,., <11: c • Clf.~'M 1'.rNilili \v~(ipitl<ftk "& Exper. pref'd. Will train w/ _. "!"•-' p ' ~m. 8 NtJtt!t!i Alb!:!· all &hltta. train C]C&ll Phil Mc-7:31)...-0JM, Wkd1!J. You help Small •• jov"-0 . -ext. LI ~. 16 1 1 3 . ~1.· led •.•. ~, Yactit e6tp. ll_Pl!1·7am~ nt salary • Modem Conval--nt I.A•. Mltnff I j\GE -~ .. with gd. 6421461 .e\ri!s. Ull -511-33!8~50'20.-'"' Y" • 1631 Placentia CM btnetlt!. Ca~·· .P i' ion n e I pita! 642 <B93 ......... "u" !$TAT' .......,. ~ l>lFE or DEATII• Let out Kfesa Oeaning $erv1Ce. r5,~.,,~l"'nt-;-IA""lt~or~a"1"1a_n_1-~1 Apply In Pt!t1if>n "' I T ' bl de~. <T14> -1. Stanton · · · · An:; 3-4s57. - babies live. For ;Jternit\ves Carpett It. Uphol. ate~ 620 NiWptrt Ctr Dr alectron cs "'1s1m er ~Ital, Kat I! I la' to .b.BOJlTION call LIFE cl~an~d/sr.anittgoea. ~:67~ VtcKJ'S Orllftn&.li, expert N I h Must be e!(perletrid In StantfJn. _ -r· -=c=:':::"'":o--:===~--------.1 LINE ~l-5622, 24 hrs. Cetft!!'t, ~on~re+e t&Jl"!l.... restyllnt: • altet. •*pttt tac chassis W!rlfig & fitttitM ctr-LVNls. N!Jd;U &: P}.!s. _fll( A ff .. If E1tly Creek Cities DELliilE.one of!lce, 170 "1 BEBT MASSAGE IN N.B. ::::~:;:r, . ..-::.=="--..,......,, 64>4~. · CROCKIR llANK cult boen1 loa.Jlni<. Mll!t lie •. HCeftl HOijittaJ . tall f""==...::::wc.:..:t..:.:::o_~--..;---~-" •-Wk abletownrkfromwtn! · a'1. L -A tt. 11• Ambrolla Bl"'6, 5C6 3400 trvlne Ave., Stilte lCOB. CEMENT I: BloCk or · 11 tom Clothes llsls and uae1T1bl"y' df'aW· -· --. r r T A P A A T E M 0 L A S S N C 30th St, Bal. Penn. Includes Q~n 8 A~Mon Wed Fri Walls, ••tios, sidew1dk1, ell'"' 6t n-deilgn· -..,,_,al Oppor. Emplnuor - d•!!r_ jani"".rlal sen'. ati' r -· ' ' ' " r· ... ?4u &&~jNL I i$;~ lri~. Top quality work ~ Machit\ist Allst. $5 ht P L A T E t B E H T H C L P A I A 0 H •'I: _ _ Ann. 551 . etc._ny hr. or job. 646-6915. BANn:·-.0 quired. Secretafv S600 co Prki Ioli lge WlrtdoW ~.~P~A~LM~~&~C~A~RD~RE=A-,~-~=rt 9lNciii"fE .Patios, 400 sq I _i S-tr e 1-tems Ex. SeC"y· to pres. $75() S A A H ff It T E T ff '£ R H Y M A It H A &: recept. nn. Phone Ans. 1~ "'-lot!l'M'· ..... or mOfe 6&c: ~r sq ft.I -""'----~---Two i'oillons Dpen ,.--... ,. M!TVlce &: fUmlt~ avill. ad "·~u"''"'?n. ftwi r -CER.AMiC . TILE NEW It Teller, safe tl.@poeif, t lericBl 979-3400 _ F'lle O@r'tt SS<tl , P 1' A E S ! H t N I R AC A 8 8 A $ L Inuned. occupancy. S100 per lllvd., Sta.n~P!t· 521-. · ~!Jon.~,_,,&12-,,,,,!51=4.,____ rtmodtl. Frtt @!It. Sitt job! ·9toflt, Etti Ptel. Apttly 11.t 1A9k tot J~n W9f'denl Recellttonlat /Anahelm $500 mo. 1st It last. MASifuEIBA'i.ii Cohtt acte! I 536-2i28 ~url.11 'a~tlc NAUonel ELret'RQNJC& Ex. ~. _ tt'lltthj, ilam $700 . A I N i A A R l I 0 L Y L Y L M A H C OF..SK &pace ttvaJla.ble S5'l A touctt of c;jus. Olfnplele .;w"~::comec;.;,:;;·""':..;;.:. =· ---1 Bank, 18822 MacArthur TECmtJCIANS Securlttea Cl.etk S600 Ill S y g ll y mo. WJll 5de !urnlturii prlvocy. • ~· Jr )1._~~~~-~~ ~ r~ ~.!!. ,. _ Blvd., 1mn.. 558-'23a. An No ex~f. f'@Q'd. Will !rtlln. otcliP"°"' Ojlr. 1471i L M R H T A I R 0 C A S l at 15 mo. ftMW>t!nli ;ervlce FORTUNE fliL LING 642-4703 ~~LIT'! *' EiJi!al OpPfi. ~tnpiofti<. A.<e! l!-34. ll211 mo, itAl'U•• G1rl Friday $500 L P A 0 0 S L I L A t I A S . avaJl•ble. 7875t~ftc.h Blvd. ··-Ii.. rds t " ,_-m._...-Co. · ... TOP 90IL Be ti 1 "r\,. , Ad s(lUtry + nUlfi~ btf\tbta. Salei Ork, La1una S2.50 ht - H ti ....... n-.::. AA" •321 pai.,., ca "e c. !l"'-'..:1":.-.A E I * • · * )JU ~ sn • •uXY ~ 1 Now lnt@""""'--..i""· •~. y Call 'eannl_e Sl&eo Y R L C P 8 Y Y fl N A I S A Un ''b'"'n ~C • 'IJ'r't SS6-69l{) {))ltflJttS lOOking fQr' l"t'&eWI,.,., l'Ulll I: e'i11 Jf ft llilO!j. It· ideal )Qc. directly ~ -~ ~ E • ..,,._.,~ lie.,· old i--tt!tpontll)lt' gltl QpJ}>rt11nlHes, 845-llSi • C l"lllft MA tip l t Aly I p Lt N ~ S L n.~ I ""'~'~ / t I o>L•W Co!ta M•... NIWl'ORT , heh! ~· Onion Res!., IAotd r-11 jol!I, "'" , any Jobo. Ylc '"'f·= ' -~lit~. ~a Pt_r .... lltl ••llJCy Bk T 0 R NP Y L ~I H l A EA nr, O.C. •ltpdt'l. Avail . Anyp_lit't. _ ·7689 .r.r.~1,1 ..- Now. Furn or \lnfurn. 'IS B C S'l'RUCl'lON UI Dover Dr., N.B. M A A t p A . A A M A t 8 H R it 8 cents-Sq ft. $33-9643. -ELEGnUCIAN. License No. 'iiiiiii No expet. reQ'd. Wlll tn.tn. '42.Ufo -I ''11~A~Y~F=R"'ON~f""'"'o"'F~,~1 ~c:~E=s ~lltld (fr.. •> :tillill. Sm.Ji,th•, main! A • axler ~ Age11M4. t32t mo. ottorttn1 A t l I R A y IC: I f I E 5 ! A f H ! 8 Pnl1tlae ..... tl0,550, 330 ~2;v.·0~,g~ ~ "!~1.:i:~ t'.ffHllri. Ml'' ' ./j~ Wonted,~.. 7.'!9 If~ •• ~ .... ~~l~R·lif't~~ "'•At, C};!INM.EMFG•hop ..!!.!J.." ~! 0 E A A p L A T A E 0 D " t " A T I I oq, It. 3'100 j/OWJlOri Blvd. I '"h lii'nd'"1!13 G~r!!Cl~I E?tflolel m~flater (7l f "--rl 111., U5 116! "· -~~-" ~ L y " £ " N.B.Phont67ft..lDJ V~. 8$h"' Sil ~ ~PEAN Gard ener. like tffiPl:O)'fMnt. J'rOI vv'f°Mn ·' .-• f\ltutef(lll"ller\J:O'lnt man. ...S H C!t RPH T HE I ST Mn ~ if FOUND: Sil~' ' Malt cat. • ·-'A . at •• ' k ' "';i.:.-.1.. Cos a t!I&. M:u.t t'ffd Mlcn>rnelti's PRO m .. iu. SUITE . " ••·~· ilhttnall .. -~-sc•Pllli· .re~ , .. JM ~ ·--....Sls,"'ooo"'UtoTlril S~IOI· " •. •• ·• 0MAI DI · D " R A 1 c A R B M A c H E Y r A T T X1nt F.V. ocntlon. 4 e:itllm 11¥d. nea ff . .cJ.. "...,111 TiW lteftlhval. Ver Y iffi, NP.t Bdl. C!'f" Ot L6tUN. NOW HI RINO •A•.. -• ~ ~ room~. lab, pvt dfficc, C.M. ~l!Xfi "aJklnablt. '4>-5329 evH. ltM.. }M~1'791. or~· 1b1rt1rlloM! 'Ill,· 1hhll.·11 iiJmt1 111~ bdO•· ~t1 hi, reccpt room, AIC. 645--Q5S FOUND: t6fti-Hai.red eillco Mcow-z +--... oo". CLEANUPS JOli.WintU, 1lem•f• 702 Part-Tim. Send riltlttle Ot cah 'l'ObAt t~ .. •,,•1,"''·•"'.·,,•01,•,,",,',', ,',''.'°!.Ill,'>_· in •JM: I'll F r"i. o:,: .:I~~: ,\~ ;\ ':~1~~1~ ~~;;·~"'r':.o=.'oo""". lti.,,",..e"-·-".,.·ll_. _.,...,,,,·•_·I N_!w !'.'Aw~ :fi:.nmKLERS l'lllED lio!O -u no111er we HOSTISS-1 -~~~~~d7~1:1...,,':2, oo1rr Mature,. mu" "* .xpe<. •• :~f,l~ ci. ~~~~~o• :~r.~ls Gardens. 111&-lijil. roONo:Young dog. Vic. Oirde :i "'"' tlltld, ....... ~OKKEEPElt EXECUTIVE SErtV!tltS, -P'111mt. 1'ut•n•<I Ot• "" •• 1r. 11 ... .. II ... n: CM "'Gothard. i!latet· Hnti -· .... Trl~:.._ 11of.u 1uJ"'.•·k ' ""t"' ... u~~~ -!!IC. Miit. COltiN ,.,.,... ntEllllOP\'Ul 300 •~ •• "':' • Jl<'•ch. S<J:tOµ •tter ! J!!ili , ~" uww,. M '" • • "'""' 188 N, M•ln. 8'~'' Ana B•lboo lo'r C lli~ ,.,.,,..., ., .. ..., 1,.,.=="'646-""'2i"'30"_ -n1b";' 4 mo old iem.Je t!letul@. ~ ... -.,,.-"".:=:-: 4647 MotArlhur Blvd. (7141 547•tftl 1.221 \ti. Olut Hwz., N.B. 1" ""'" ,.,,. o• ill of tht '-'P'"dtd "Sttk A FINI" ti • 1617 WESTCL l,F-HI Basiett Houhd. Fnd Mela Lawtlatt ty "2 Gel1H Ci lee. U yn eiPfr N••llttt '!~th fee lot ooniUlttn& rvi~ ~-' •tortte d'ilb' 111111\bci" ~ throus~ ft. )tt111 SO «nb for tk'h, mtklna t~kl 545 sq.ft. &: bpi !fl.i.4032 . Vttdf • ~5$ Mow/tdp 60-990'7 -U~· IO. Not &n otter Of etnp 111 Sell ftd:Johat1t tlf!Nijed Utft'li l'"YMflt 1u .. Sttk &: find." Stu•frlr&raul Sylll4kilf. AIM• • •1 DallY liiiO\ Cluallled J"N6 lrilh Se_~~-~ppy, tl'nl, li) dd ij JJ;i DESI' DAY U, • ·' .. ll ) -5pl!!: f'jlot Oaaai&d Adi Cd !Ht ~ In he eit. with~ l'tlot ~1ulfite rllitl In c;ur uf this nt11o~Jhtptr, A.I. 64:1-5618. v1c. c.1-1. l:i;HXll7. Ill" J\11 _•di .llt>~'t ~!'!¥· . i;lLli mu.m..i. iiwm. ~ l(ow1 , • ·• 1>on1 _ til Cl! ln;,i Ad t , '----------------- .. • I 1 . , •• I • • • . . D,l!LY PILOT ~~~1~n~tod~,~~~~~~~~~~~~fi1jn~o~1p~~~~~!F~7~120\]""~tl~que~1~;;;;;;;;;~aoo~~An~t~lq~u~o1~;;;;;;;;;~ii0~1;M§~l1§ct~l~la~n§'"'~~gu;•~;;;;~i~l;l;;l•;<;•;";•....,.;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;';l•~I f~r~u~c:k•:...~~~~~'I •~<m.'1'ARr sECnETAR~ '" ma.nne SPECIAL COMMISSION Public Furniture & Estate Auction I T._...,.. j[di] ! FORD '71 V. TON - SR. SALES SEC'Y hard"·1u·e ttp. lite bkkp::. ANTIQUE AUCTION ~ =+ _ .. ht ~ n.u~1·1· clalu111 cwuper ihellt ·Red Carpet'• Jl"uhlun !stand \\'ill u·ui"' 1,i, our sts~\'\ar-fM'Cu. Lvp[ng, 111ah 1 •ompo-,. wn~11«10-1 0 Spor1 (,'Ui1run Pickup. Only ottice in No~1 !l(ll'l & .. \·h hw .k~ru: '.!£Pl ·" -~JO~ 10 k™Mleds:t' ot ulllnu;. Ca.II ~tioneer's Note : The Vermont '.[rad r, FRIDAY, MARCH 1st 7:30 P.M. ~--~ ~ /t< 121 JIJ..l lllUC!ll. y.8, aut~t.lcr taB:te <>ppotrotUzy rnr \\'Htem RC!'.tronm:-·~riires fc>M\J>Pl.---642 2lll'l, 1"30o4:3Q... Uiguna Beach • ..CaliL.J:l&.LC~.mmissloned Us PART OF LARGE ESTATE }JERE, 8 F"T. Bed Cantper ~eU ra~tlo, hcuter. \\'e1t coast ~.":l.:J'~:,,:.1-;;.,'.i~~ M•'· o,,ue; •icludc: cu•· s~11·1NG. '""' """''· ?:"'" To Liquidate Thell" Entire Inventory: • MORE Tl!_l,JCKS STILL ARRIVING $.>O. fim>. mlm>n. (9S13TJI. \\ithover :J0olflcet0 nn tl•>1i· 1arnf'l' tlatsnn. g11.h'l'I book· tn•h•hino, p/Um1>. .7.. FRIOAY •. MARCH 1, 711.M. mNY ANTlQUES & --,..-:•-:543-3691 * $2699 wl4'e can offer ihe P"lle.--ln>..::oi, ltttC'l·ftH-c iv 'elllit1..·1-n A1mly !l."162 lliu;ulltcn ,\\t , Partial LlSU1rrr-tnctudes: . C 1 Blk VoMt gro,,·ui .~ (Uh lln•·•" •Vti>. of.:, ~t•u't lXllT\'~'lJ. ell" ltunt. ~;h., ur cull 900-:?STT. & -OLD \VOODEN FURNITURE ye es, M, ment Ol)pf'rtunlllct )ou'ri..• Should W atlle to 111)rl. in-oot-6~1~. ___ ~-""---. .Lots oC fi'an cy Oak, li.ound, Square & Drop Scoot•r• looking tor + tu1 :..Int t"n1· t.lcpendcnlly 11· a ntln. SIIAMPOO Trchulclan, i.-ood Leaf '!'ables, RoU 'l'op D~sks, China Closets, ITEMS T OO NUMEROUS TO LIST mi.sllon 1tructurt. Contn•·! an1ouut of 11:optr\'ision. 3 VI'>'· flu•· Mh>11. \iOl \\'c,.,r-Bookcases, Dressers, Se1·vers, 1''ern Stands, ' '\ ORANGE Thornas E. ~tllJlcinl, 1111u1· YJ'S cxprr. llcsiffi\,. clUf, N.D. 6t!~'ii Cha irs, Rockers (inc ludin11 Sleepy Hollow PARTIAL USTING: • Antiques: Lincoln bed, COUNTY aptr, &10.i6T2. ~ P05ition rt.."<i'"' J.'00<1 typing i .io;;,;;.;,o;;;~;;;,;,;,;,..-_ R k • Sa eo drop front desK, Salt chest, server, chest of I r & sh >kilts. ,,1'"'""' phuno Siikscreen Printer oc er), Pie !es, Selected Wic ker:Stained drawers. old dining set, tbl w/6 c hairs & SUZUKl;iutrA"CO ~rsonulity \\' tit.! dci;Lre 1... • bl 1 .... . Gla ss, 1'1larble Top 'l'ables, Some Universal bullet, V.anlty w/mir· ror, Duncan Phyp!e tbl. gro1v ·"' co1nputt'1' orlcnh-'d t:nl>fl "n ,.:upviv .. in:: "nui·•· \1ictoriun & Mahogany Pieces, Wall1 Mantle NEW 74's firm. Goo<l lrin;:c benefit,; & fe~"11,'0~~~1~!1. •t1u11l1· ,.,~ & . Grandfather Clocks, Mirrors. Lamps, • Dinettes, BR Sets, Velvet & lierculon Sofa STREET & DIRT 11l1•e workin~ 1vnds. ST 0 SWI NC Paintings, Crystal, China, Pewter, Silver, & loveseats, Velvet swags, refrige rators, re-, Send 1.:.1:~unl' 01· A11ply AC TCH, I · cliners, occ. chairs, color TVs, corner gro up, Re•dr, for o..liv•ry Standard M•morles, Inc tl39 JWu-.! Co-.1n ~lf";;11 Brass, Pitcher & Bowl Sets & a Variety of oil paintings, old radios, stereo, poker tbl, lOOo/o F nancing, O.A.C. i\ Sul»;jtliiu')' .,, :t.19-:W11 Unusual Collectables. Of Special Interest: d 1 1 . ke :.i~ HAfW(Ht ~VO c tot Appl!s! t.8~;i.s:1\rulCticii51• CMp. Equal 0p,.,,r. 1-:1ti1llv! ''" P 0 aeirs· k (o 0 f 1 .g\Vid 1 dhecomd be Be) Rads, c0h1ipp~adale tr~cs~~. a~~s~~is~~ ~_:yi~sM~~eya i~:~s~~ ~~R AT \V~~~~~~ •13 rono COURIER 7,000 1111, auto trnrus, maa: whls:, 5 ne w tires, Uuled glasa, R &. ll. Paneled camper w/ dQa.I Wide lights & cabover slorage cabinet. '74 tags. Prlvllte party. 645-5813: 646-7915 att 5PM. ~· • · ' "' · .-S 1 1 of r tna ar ware re d Kitchen ·~ Santa i\na pee• Day * llutch, William & Mary Desk. numerous to mention. "13 PENTON us, pipe &: fenders & 1>1de panels. !a1.any RN's $65 mo. pay differential for advertised 3-ll, 11-1 shifts. OR RN'S 7-3, 3-ll: peds ICU RN'S 3-11, 11-7. £xp. only. Equnl Oppor. Entploy~r Ute J;i~!t1t un· C'li'rk~ S·ISO Inventory Moved For Convenience Of Sale To: Come out & browSe-around, ltems subi'ect porUn& by Mettco. Rahm -------L11. ltcl111lt·1'!1 ,\:.;1•n1:)' JAKE'S ANTIQUE AUCTION to pre-sale. We honor Bof A& olher Tr1pp pans, lmmt1c. SEC/STENO .to20 Un·1 h s11,.,., Master Charge & Food available' cond. Must sell. I 8 o o . Sharp, professional gal ~ulle 10·1, r\B s.tl-Rlflfl 272.2 N. MAIN (Near Bullocks) · IM-2:677 REPO'D '73 Ford F-250 ~r. xlnt cond, PIS. P/B, AIC, AIT. aux. fuel lank. etc. Now tllking bidS:, Ullking $2995. Call Mr. ri.t e go rd e n (TI4)547.tl.95 betwn 10.5 •killed "' wct•tion, typing D ial A Job 83:1-0855 Santa Ana MASTERS AUCTION LATE '1' Rickman w/Gnmd & com pos ition ol No Charge To YOu Inspection Wed ., 1'hurs., Fri., Feb. 27, 28, Prix Zuntlapp eng. Many 1..-oITespondence. Kno\\•ledge t:stahlil:'li•'<t lllli.i Marc h 1, 10 a.rn. to 5 p.m. 20751h Newport Blvd., Costa biesa extras. :xlnt cont.I. $4 00 . ol gen'! olc procedures incl (Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'ls.) 644-26TI'. setting up ,\:. maintaining SUPERVISOR Antiques 800 Ml II Costa 1i1esa ** 646-8686 27802 Puerta Real, Mission files. Xln't oppor. in sales --'"-'·'-----=I see aneous 118 Zi' Ct: \"'dfltt1.ha, rt!al Vit>jo. 495-4400. 831-2300 <lept. of rapidly growing ASSEMBL y clean, 1973 Model, take over Apply bet. 9 & '1. Xlnt Costa ~les..'\ engineering t.'O. SCRAM-LETS I BUY!! P ianos/Organs 826-------payments. 493-5375 aft 4PM. MISSION COMMUNITY HOSPITAL ... ·so CHEVY Pickup. '56 6 cyl eng. H. D. truck ._.peed trans. 12 volt system &ell or trade for Dune bugg)' o!f road or street any cond. or Baja Bua: call 642-$. '73 TOYOTA Hi·Lux Pickup, :I nlo old w/5800 mlle", 1..'0lor nia1cht'CI fiberglass lihl'll, bkt seats, 3 spd auto trans, 24MPG, $ 3 2 5 0 , 811-8758'-=--=~~--c-c ~RD PU, Runs xlnt. Auto, t1-aVs, new over sUed tires, (.'Omplctc camper shell w/dbl bed, rclrlg, sink, XI gal water llillk. $ 9 0 0 . benelils & workin g l'aul Dosier i\ssoc. ~1edium sized publi c I I~ HONDA XR-75 197 3 conditions. An E q u:i l Contact ·Eve 1 y n for con1pnny ls s ee king Pet• and SUpplitt "Li w/carr1cr. Private party. , •Opportunity employer. lntervieiv appl. 556--7075. assembly supervisor for ANSWERS Good, used , furniture & • PIANOS . . ri Call eves 675-J.>647 __ _ RN-LYN, 3.11 , Full ume l •"'"-'""·-~~.,;,.,;,_,._,,.,._~,...,_.\ :::wne':h;i~~~1 i~~~tJ~~ n~~STER$11A·ilUlseCITltl;O'·Nvou e ORGANS '69 HONDA CT oo, Low ntl, · .. =~~~·cJllntl.i;'a~~syde~ ScCY./RECEPT. R.E. C11.pistriu10. \Viii be in Eldest -Pagan -Tease -Pets, General 850 St & trail. Excel cond, $175. , G42--2-llO Secretarial position in active coniplete charge of small 1~orous -APP,l>.;AL 20751/;i Nc\vporf, 0-f 646--8686 Open Nights 'til 9 495-4700._=----- RENTAL AGENT Poi;.ition ava.llab\P. Calilomla Real Estate License neressary. Opportunity with energetic, growing company. Submit resume to Lingo Real Estate, 1 11 0 Glenneyre, Lai;una. Beach. 494-SOSG Realtor's office. Beautiful assen1bly group, assembling lily \Vife has a figure like 1 839-007 1 or .515-JO:iO aft. ti Sat: 'til 5:30, Sun. 12-5 *Security Pet Prod.* HONDA '66, xln't com!. oUice in Newport Center. small electro mechanical the supreme Court No 01' Sun!\;iy Rentals from $5 Beer 28c lb. Cott. 1~11. 2Qc Needs twieup. ~ or best Congenial stalf or mature device s. Mu s t ti e ,\PPC:AL. · Behind Tony's Bldg. ft1at'I. lb. D.H .. L.'s $2.50. JO/more o!r. 548-6280, ask tor Ken. personnel. A front of.fice experienced with s ome ANTIQUE 1890 u Prig ht nEJ.'RI G, Sl.5 .. Hoovcl' $20, , $2. 547-3971 1418 E. 450cc HONDA'73-1Ute nU: ix;sit~n ~ri~ &g ~~~ technical background. piano, llt'\\'IY refinished , old 1ypc\1·ntcr $10. Drun1 e Pianos & Grands Wilshire, SA -16-f\.fPG, $900. ~)(~. '1:bili11~;. l\lust be ~/~:rrYed ~;~ ;~o/~'ha;f~ ~· stool \\'/glass casLers. ~~~S751a~erord p~yer ~·ALL MAJOR BRANDS Oogs 854 __ <i9-l-!i860 Of' 499--3088 able to v.·ork Snturdays. Pilot, p 0 Box 1560 Costa S -. llWT)', won't last G . recor er . Ne1\• Spinets front .... $595 e PUPPY WORLD e Mobil• Homes 935 R.E. experience not e~-i\fesa,Cali f 92626 546--9340 D'uitars SlO. T.V. $15. Used from ...•...... , . $95 Rntial, but helpful. Prefer :;""'';';;:c;;~;'::"S'"::i::O~;l !A~p~p~l~ia!!n~c~a~•---~8~0~2 .inette table Sl5. Reclining Players " ·········· $895 Chihuahuas, Tiny Poodles, MOBILE HOME I 1 "d t F . v1brAtor $15. Fri & Sa.I only. Grands " . , ....... S395 Amer. Eskin10, Pit Bull•. FOR SALE·.· oca res1 en . or 1ntcrvu TEL!:::Pl·IONE v.°Ork, pleasant 140 Cabrillo, C.1\1. NO DEALERS PLEASE g II T 0 t'all h-1rs. Duhl. pttln1e fron1 your hon1e. u elTier, St. Bernartl, SILVERCREST Wesley N. Taylor Co.644-4910 I 1 "l6-TI5J •t . KENMORE \vasher & gas C A L C U L ATOR S e Organs Cockapoo, J<1.p~ncse Span.. MO Hr Y wngc . .,. · "argie. dryer both for S l :i 5 . I NVENTOR\' Cl.e<;trancc. ALL MAJOR BRANDS Labs. Dachshund. JOO MIX· , ,B,ILE HOME SALES Ri'T Au;-Largest picture tramc. art & l'l'8ft retailer needs s h a r p • aggressive salesnian & SECRETARY ca.shier. HL>tail sales & some 1~3. L.uaranlertl & delivered. brand nu 8--d1g1t .j \\' I' h ED PUPS!! Stud Sen.1ice 2fl X 53, 2 .SD 2 BA, carp., TRUCK DRIVER 5·~-lllfi2 functions. \Veight 8° 01.. ur ttzer \vt r Y <New) $4~ Most Breeds. Open Eves: ;JrapeU, I.in-ins., reu·1i,:: .. Wanted Class I dri\'er for G.~Sid'""e-b'""y-s"ide19.7 cu approx size · of dollar bill Tho~as · ·· · (Used,)'··· Sl95 531-5027 wasner & e1ec-t. dryer, v.·il-W cross-country boot ha uling. ft frost free ref:rig. Gold, 1" in<'h th ick $29 95 Lo\\rey \V sym (N e\\') S21395 for 2:.!0 liir cond., Jutch. art bckgrd. pre('d. Apply Professional career oppty in person, 1714 Ne1vpo11 for secy \1• 1IBl\f Exec & Blvd., Cl\1 shorthand t>xp. Some nutOi 1.SALES '""'~·.-""s.°'1~1 _no_n_pe~tro~le_u_n,· I aptitude. Xlnt fringe bcne- base produCl!I, sh a k I e e fits & plt>asant atmosphrre. Products, 893-8451 eves. For inter ife\Y call f\1 r !i'. SECURITY· GUARD E)(per. r /tin1e. Conlat'l Mr. rortl, Supervisor ' B~lboa Bay Club 12'11 W. Coast l·hvy., N.B. Prire 541·7539. SECRETARY Good opportunity to learn the ad biz. Typing 75, sh , SECRETARY. General office 100. Semi resume t o w/emphasis on shipping & Classified ad No. 46, c /o invoicing. 1'1ust be i;::ood Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, typist, shorthand prel. Good Costa Mesa. Calif. 92626. starting salary. Please call ! Cl . 2 Id 64o-sooo. . . • FREE • AIREDALE Pups • ,\KC • clock, ,10,_,,c .... ,~•. la•·"- Apply In person : .1ppcr yrs o w/auto cube 0 L Fl" tkot Ch s· S ...... "'"-"' ""' l\Ia.rine Corp. 1919 E . n1aKer. $l95. 833-8751! DECOJ°li.\TOR Has tl.'rrific rgan essons in e · t:re/ ho\\' scaped patiu. 'J'hl·ee yrs. old Occident:U, S."I.. -- -------buy 200 yrds Ginger Bark FULLERTON MUSIC ~1'Y556/Hu1ce~/1loPne/Calm Pet. -like nu. Located in new URGENTLY NEEDED FOUR KEYPUNCH OPRS Rent Washer-s/Oryers nylon shon sh..i.g carpet. 300 18191 Euclid, r-ountain Valley -' ' ty adult pk. a"'·ay from 001$)' I ' •rds 2 tone ...... an•Y ., .. _ ·-557-•&36 --ST.VD service -lll'@d a fen1. ~I. One-half bl._ !rom.. clulh ~i. \k. l''uH 1nal.iit. ._,,_ " u _... '"'--k terne. P"b mi,ro-·. "12-"255 UA: er span. lor 1ny rcglst. house. $15,495. CaJI EV.t::S. • li.$:J-11iJ2 * "" u-"'"" 122 r-;". i!arbor, Fullerton M I 2 S.!8-~654. ' 871 _1,. 5 a c rocker span. 8474)574 '13-&.t4-4600, 6!!7-7152. H.t:BL'l' \Vasher , dryer s, , ___ _::_:_:.:_:::. ___ eves. CAN BE SEEN AT: ash/\\'Sh, $5U & UI) to l DRAPES, \VOVEN ·.vooos 1-PUREBR c s CARPETS, UPHOLSTERY• CO ED SAft10YED RE TMONT )"l' gar. 546-a218 or !!:i9-7620' AST MUSIC Free Est, Train e d puppies. MaJe $75, Female ESTATES \Vl::S'l'iNGHOUS.C:, '73 Har-Decol'ritors. 5 4 8-8 9 4 1 Ne\vport Blvd al Harbor $50. 6 \\'ks, old. 642--7450 1051 Sile or., BrE!a. (Central vest Gold, 11 cu It, $15'.I., 1/621-4769 ' Cosla lllcsa MIN. SCHNAUZER, PUPS. Ave. a1.:ross lroin Brea _&ll>-_2311, _o_r_&l2-3'07_ev_es_ CHILD'S beds. (Norge dt)T ~2--2851 AKC rrg, chanlp. sired, Co1un1. Jlosp.) Lot #4ti, Duncan & Phyfe mag. din l\1aytag \\'shr, man g 1 c' Y~ma~ Pianos & Organs Avail. March lst.-644-2432. ('01~'1'AC'f RAY, 1-'K. l\IGR. lb!. ii chain;. Huftet, $100. RCA TV, lloo\•er s11·eeper'. ¥ eaturmg Koh l er & REC'D Dachshund, 11 mos ' tol' show~. ' 673--0188 · Sl5 ea\. i\Taple col tbl. 107 ~~ & also Everett old, l\1ust sell, $25. 645-008, Motor Homes &1&-2l.57,__ ______ I 1960-GMC V-6 ~ton plck·UP v.· 1 ,·:u11pc1· .. uell. Xlnt condition. 557-4951 Vens 963 '73 DODGE Van Tradesman 100, 3l8 auto, custom paint, Ull, whls &: side pipes. $4500. or $500 & take O\'t!r p.:lymentli. Ca ll 5'1&-5()13 bet 5, or 633-8117 a!t·c•::.·---I '69 FORD Super Van, custom inl, t l•blt cng, leaving stale must sell, $2400. 673-7069. . 1967 FORD Van best oUer over $900. Good eond. Cali ~89 after 5 pin. '12 FORD Van, auto, R&JI, Fact. air cond, Good cond., 968-2'.!44 Autos Wanttd 9'8 =--=1 WE NEED YOUR CADILLAC Sharp, clean late model cars. Paid for or Not. Ask Jo'or Chuck Trapp Use4 Car Manager Leather Gypsy In Laguna I Niguel lor inter appnt . 1lJI! Jastest draw in the West. 4$-5763. • •• a Daily Pilot Clas.">ified VOLT i\lust Sell! Philco side-by-side Coral Av .. Bal. Isl. 1 to 5. Sale/ Rent 940 re{rigerator, fros t f :r e e. 6' Port Bar \\•/casters Sporting Good 5'-830 SAft10YED. fem , 41.,, mo, ---'----:..;::I Kenmore washer 557-2679 stainless sleel ice & m~ LlKE neiv 12 gauge Pump AKC. shots. Contact Stan, '73 CHAJ\.IPION, 28' motor l .,.....__..aTJ:Ct.DL ...... .JiTJP Instant Personnel Temporary Service 34848 Campus Or., Suite 106 Nl"'-•porl Beach 546-4741 Equal Oppor. Employer APf-size gas-sTove~olive holdPrs. J.'otmica 1op, .~ Shot Gun ' · ro.t-44th St .. N.B. home, aU s1eel frame, roof grt.-en, ukc ne1v co11d. ucst fitted canvas OO\·er, $250. &1&-9aoo aft 6pm \VElftlAMNEH. Puppies I & dash air, 5,00) K\V offer. 675-fi070, Carol'-=---642-&S8 · I AKC 8 mos 2 males :i generator. 100 gal gas tank. Building Materials 806 STUDENT desk 22:<~8 $20 TV' Radio, iii Fi, fem~les Call 0 83(>.4158 ' cruise control, .TV anteMa· cs & · ' · · Stereo 836 · · & m-Ort'. ,\skmg Sll,800. Iv A I T R E S 5 , · · · short . i\·ave radio, = · BEAlif. AKC Doberm 714-492-7244 alt 6 & ·k d e Syrplu5. Building Sea-Snark sailboat make ~ . an "' n s. EXPERIENCED 0 NL Y · ~lA!!:.rt.l.AL. lOl.JO s 01 1'.C:\\' offer 586-5391. ' ZENITH, RCA & SYLVANIA ~:pi!s. For pet or show. e SHARE \f•'L~~.t;BAGO e Apply Carmel's Dining & !TL'~'lS' ,.. televisions & stereos. P:1•it·ed Y · ee by appl. 5@-7300 0-.'tl 'lt\N_ Int • luUy equip. ~ N Co .c." · Doors, Jumlkr, ply· l PORTABLE Col TV IN"f<} Pie Shoppe, uU> • ast ·~·• al ~ . or · less than the discounters sr. Bcrnarrl puppies. ""'rr. Use 10 weeks ,.,.. .. , ........ •·0-' --·" Be h w~. un1 sneeu.n~. 11101d· $160 Kin" bed 1 98 dbl bed ,.,~ ,.,-• ,,.~ ......... -H\\'Y, .....,.,..,a ac . do · b • \\1th 3 yr picture tube, I markings. Male & fen1. Call sider only responsible party. TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOR ALL FORE! N CARS Ca.U or come ii o For an •d tn Woman's 'V\iorld WAITRESS Q~'1 LDERS S'uc.RPLUS $68, All. near new, Pool yr paJts & service. 19" ,Ii',: :i45-i158 aft 5pn1 CaJI 644·5462 M-1" 9-5. table, fair, S9S. 8·12--0406 larger color sets are H Shift Open :l:JlkJ &>. l\lain, S.A. FTRE\VOOD! Se as o ne d , delivered & set-up. All orses 856 •DALE'S Motor Hom e Rentals NtwruRl IMPORTS Coll Mary Balh 6-42·5678, ext. 3~0 Seamed-To-Slim! . Instant Crochet! 11un UU'U ..,.,,, -;> aromatic. mountain pine. models in stock & on Dick Church••• Rest. ' "· lU 2698 Newpot1 Blvd, Cl\1. '114 : 546-1031 Delivered & stacked. S,.15 display. Cash 90 Plan or SORRELL mare, plus tack, '73 23-26' ~t.H. & Minis Free miles 9 til 9, 838--0900 \VAITRESS, p/tin1e. Exper. C'ameri.$&----& $80. 4!»--5469. terms to 36 nio nths. Call g years old, gentle, good f;~a~ g~f~~. 562 Y.' •. ~uip __ m:.;•;cn_tc.---"·.....:'::.0::.8 H~ug~~ainiro~ct.ch~~~:i!r~ ~ur l~1~~s ~V~1~~4~ ~~rerc~~~G $325. or ~t r~~t. 'f=d~· v.~}~:ra~~· self 3100 \V. Coo.st Hwy. N.B. 642-9405 . TOP CASH$$$ •« . Your own mirror \\'Ill tell ; you how much more attrac- 1 tive you look in t h · s ! SEAMED-TO-SLIM S I y I ! { Zip it up \\'ilh or \\'i out ~ embroidery. , Printed Pattern 9495 lialf ( Sizes 101.i. 121;-i, 141h. 6111, 1 18'n:, 201iS, 22~. Size ; (bust 37) 2 7/8 yds. 45-in. I Trans. SEVL''TY -r1Vlt CESTS .tor· each pattern .... ·add 25 l eent.s tor each pattern· for }Jr lt1aU and Special Hand· ' ling; otherwise thin:l-daAS l delivtt)' will take three \ w~ks or inore. Send to ., Marian Marth'I. the DAILY PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept, 132 West. 18th St., New f York, N,) 10011. Pr i nt , NAME, ADDfll:SE with ' ZlP, Sl'Zf} and $Tl1LE UMBER. -A-SEE-MORE Q u I c k ' Fu tdona a.nd choose one l =t'"1 kee trom our • ·Summu Cntalog. All • t ...... Qnly !ICI<. JNSTAl<'I' S!':W!NG DOOK ttW ~' 'ftV tomomJ'W. '1iNsTANr ~AS 111 0 N DOOi<--llundreda o I -1-.SI. r \VAITRESS 35 htl\1 Canon, 1.8 Jens, & V\V bus seat complete Broo~hurst or 9021 Atlanta, REC'D/ Palomino Gelding, 540-7796 or 54&-4037 paid for used A~1C or Jeeps For 1.1exican food & 1.2, 100 to 200 1\1~1 Zoom, 551-6127. HunU"i?'ton Beach. 968--3329 15.2 H., English, Western, RE-NT 1ne '73 Explorer 24· 1 cocktails, exp. only. 642-8274 $400. or besl offer. Call BftAND new Davis Classic or 962--5559 _ ju1nps 5'. no bad ha.bits, sleeps 8, lowest rates I FRIENDLY~! WANTED!!! Days, 557-3124 II Tcnffis racket \\'ith cover, FANT~STIC SfE~EO SA~ I ~So~und~~-~i4~50~-~·~·~'"""~~7 ~~~ I 552-lfl92 AMC/ JEEP ~1EN 1&-30 Furniture 810 5 n1ediuin grip · used.once. Sansui 210 Reccl\·er, 2•12 f 1 Auto Service, P•rts 949 1969 Ha rbor Blvd. I \VE OFFER TRATNlNG IN ----= $45. 8-16-1677 after 6 pm. 3·way speakers & Glenburn I I~ c.~1. Electronics, Nuclear Power, LLKE NE\V Standard-size • . m a g n e t i c I u r n t a b I c ,..,:::_,,and • ~ ' Aviation. l\t e ch an i cs, Salem r.laple bed, includes r.l1:JLTILITH 1250 -Rebuilt. complete "'·ith S hu re . _ Y. Administration AND 1fUCH head and footboards, fran1e, Ll~e brand neiv • $1250. Call cartridge. Lisi over $500. MORE. slats, innerspring mattress. 54~2590 aft. 6 p.nl. t-O'ow $297. Use your income ALONG \\'1111 !? First $95 takes. See at Ta5 CARPET Layer, Installation tax rt'turn check & get free Boats, General Rapid Advanc<'ment ... \\'. 18th, Apt 6D, DI. Repairs, yours or rnine. Cali headphones $24.95 valUc. 900 1 Good Pay-$326.10 a month &12-6840. Dean, &12--7101. U.S.A. SfEREO. 179 East to start. ALL ood din. 4 "'· Ol'AL . 17th, Costa Mesa 645--2442, lnt ·-·t·''· w 1ng set, 1u tube·\Vlute p I as tic 3721 South Bristol. '/. blks .... "'" = back chairs, .$1a. roll-up shade 12' "'·ide $10 DO YOURSELF A FAVOR * &1>21!34 1t fi.l2-.JlG3. · · No. of So. Coast Plaza, U.S. NAVY .,-,-,---,-'-7-~~-1 55&-0l2<l 642-4272 or '46-S6l6 * Lovcseat & sofa. Never COK2 r.lachine,. 3 flavors. RICE'S TV SERVICE used. Very gd. qua!. Custom carbonated, stainless steel . \\'HO \VANTS TO \VORK! made. Usually hm. 968-7910. cab., nr. ne1\' 557·2439. lforn1E!rly in Pancry S Cntr,l DRJVE A CAB! BE A UT I F UL Henendron 10" Radial saw, like new. * TY Specials * . OIOOSE your hours, work Droplea.f Dining R 0 0 m Orig. price Sl57, v.•Ul take Useo & Color ry sets· Whll~ $:'.· for yourself. be your own Table, 60x72 Oval, 673-2991 $250. 5.16-6\'189. they last!! Co.or from $65 · . , be slightly handicapped. K1NG Size Waterbed lram(', SERVEL Gas!Elcet Refrig service call: : . Neat _ Clean Appearance. headboard, bag & liner $50, C E. rcfrig, S40, 22" 546-6002 or 5-16-6003 J: .~ Vts .. retired. ~c 25 to 70. & bedspread, $180. 673-3560. lawnmo1ver. S35 &lf>.6674. 1375 Logan Ave., CM BOAT resins, laminating & finish, $6.95 per -gillon. Plastics Plus? 2706 Harbor, Costa Mesa, 556--0900. 18' GLASS over \\'OOd fi">hing ,C:C ski boat, 100 hp J\terc. Great buy. 962--4569 Bo•ts, Pow•r 906 Boats;"&! 909 ¢~· boss. ~1en or women. Can up, B & W from $35 up. For ~ !j Sup plen1ent your income. COLORED TV AND POOL Table. Slate top. •Xlnt MUST SEU. root a g n av ox -s: Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a SLEEPER SOFA BED condition. \Viii deliver. $400. home entertainment center. r,i,,,,...,.,,,."l ~ day. Apply in llerson, 968-6402 &.1.'l--015.1 Am·Fm stereo, color TV ,'l,; Boats, Slips/Docks 910 · t' Yello\v Cab Co .. 186 E. 16th Ai'llTJQ Dining rm set w/ tAiscell•neous phonograph. Meditt. style. o'ii"io· .i°"iiii"ii"oi'iil""'iiiiii' iiiiiiiiiiiiii I bullet. 6 Chairs. $ 7 5 Wanted 820 $299. Call 548-6368 N.B. afl WANTED: Slip for 22' Sail boa.I. Prct Balboa. Isle, Xi7-13.18 • 552--7323. 6 pm. \VROUGHT Iron glass top $5. each. 4 new-like new FOR SALE-Packard BcU WORK IN-PROCESS INSPECTOR th!, & 6 padded chrS, $50, Vikki Carr Liberty albums 21" Color TV Beaurtful 642--0888 7318, TJS3 7420. \Vrlte: 265.S Walnut cabinet with sliding KING. size mattress set, $35. A Orange, C.M. doors. Needs repair work Sm. desk $10. Bureau ss. Silver Coins on twier. $50. 548-Sm ·Jn-process inspection of elec-644-8575. I "ill pay $3.50 lor ea. n SACRIFICE I Toss on this marveloos tronic assemblies. Inspects BEDROOM Chest of drawers 1vor1h ol dimes., qlrS., halves Moving, must sell! Br d Boats, Speed & Ski 91_! SACRIFICE 14' Ski boat &: trlr w/65hp outbrd mtr. Xlnt cond. $.'iOO. firm. 1st come ht served 673--2676. Aircr aft 915 'ti TON Ford rear end complete. Ford iront spindle & brks complete. l\Hsc. parts Ford & Pontiac. Assoned whls, some \\'/ tires. Comp!. Studebaker eng. h-1ake offer or trade for all or part. 21()1 President Place. Cost a Mesa, 646-3424 JEEP, 6 cyl, supe r Hurricane eng, $100. C11U 645-8388, 657 Beach St., .Costa Mesa. 4 Firestone Sup-r·bC'lt G78-15 Belted tires. (300 mi) $100. 642--0888 1§1 4S3 FORD 15, Brass Touring Very fine cond. $3300. ll!C1800) ** 492-1348 19S4 JAGUAR XK lat M Completely restored, $2600 ' - Recreatiunal Vehicles 956 \vt: HUY 11\!POR'!'ED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAIDI D•an L•wi1 lmporti l.',tiel Hr.rbor, c.M:. 646-930.'.: WE would like to buy your old ca.rs, please call this number Monday -Friday 8am-tipm for immed & tree pickup, 547-3007. CASH FOR YOUR CAR S<S-7070 WANTED: '67 or '68 V.W., Bug or Sqback. Prl.vate party, 894-1983' aft 5 Autos, Imported 970 VERY UNUSUAL ·73 Avenger, cu.stom built. Must see to apprec. Best olfer. 30 mpg, alt. 6 or weekends, 675-0046. AUDI ·72 AUDI, LS, 4 dr, auto, sun rool, low miles, Sell below Blue Book or trade for property, dn. p:ymt on house, boat or car. Dlr., 53&-6824 '71 AUDI. Sunroof, 4 api, air cond. Make offer. Call 557-1441. cape for fashion and warmth! ma.chined parts. electronic · 962--3646. new P·a·-y St---'n-' A. d d night stands, pr g re e n ... .., ...,....,. • .., A .stan u.P collai: tops ra-parls. printed circuit boards living nn chairs, 644-7329. COINS '64 & Belore. S4 for + 2 new rules. $400. all HOT Air Baloon Qui> Now mauc design of gradualed utilizing prints, 11peciflca-Sl,s. $1.55 for ha.Ives. ilc 5.57-8151. ' forming So. CaJ.U. New 1st 1970 Street Legal shells~, ~-I ti et 'this strld king Uons, samples & processes. Garage Sale 812 for quarters. 31c for dimes. Z::EN:;.,,:I::TH::;.&J-,G~E~po-r-ta~bl7e~TV~s class equip. only. Profess. Dune Buggy, $875, ·~!, A~~l ~nc:i.~:1:: cape o "'' I ng worste : use Interpret b I u e pr I n I s & 962-7689, !162-0700 ,. w/VHF'. $25 each. Sliver-training. (714) 642-3545. ** * 495-5797 * • * best olfer. 557-3425 a big hook. Pattern il52: di· schematic diagni.m11. MOVING SALE: Apt. full WISH to buy girls canopy ton' •tereo co· n"'le w/AM/ I"'=:;~;:=;;,;;;;:;:==.:..:===""'~'='=;=;_;~=:~;;::=:=;:;=:;:::= re<::tions sizes S-20 included. of antiques, 18th & 19th " .. ,,... SEVt:NTV·l'n~ OENTS Call For Appl. century American, brass bdnn. set & Boy's chesj., FM radio $25. 123% 25th St., .for each pattem -add 25 Industrial ReJatlon~ lamps, many pictures, etc. call aft. 3 PM 536-8735. N. B. cents for each pattern tor Sat & SUn 3/1&2 at 415¥.i • \VANTED TO BUY • ~19,0:.,-'B~/°"W,.,_.po-rt'"""w""e-su"·n-,g7ho_u_se-I Air ~ta il ond Special Han-(714) 494--9401 Dahlia, Cdf.1. 675-0.109. OXY Acciyline \Velding TV. works great. $45 or dling: olheN:ise thlrd-.class GARAGE sale Fri Sat Sun: Torch cee 492-2'759 best off. 673-7349 or delivery v.•ill ta1te three TELONIC l piece sectional $110. \VANTED: Gas dryers, work·• ~675-~5444~-'=' ,,.,,--;'7"".-:c-.,--:-- wctks r more. Send to INDUSTRIES Ladies clothes 14-16, Mens · I Re bl 1-AI•·-k•. the DAILY •-h" all II t M h mg o' no . """' e. Alll/FM stereo ~tr•ck tape. ,_., .. c,.,l mg exce en , uc 646-6848 Plus tapes. $125. C a.1 1 IWT. ~&.'!. ~r:'Ji~~ Lagun• BHc.h ~ 3162 Sicily 556-6296 OFFSET Plat!:' Burner a nd 673-2757 after 5:00. -,o."0oew:_ York. N.Y. FANTASTIC Garage Sale, ol llghl table wanted. ' dd Equal Op......... Employer handmade gifts, by Betts, * """<=• * [I &me. A reu, ,,....,. 1396 TeITace Way, Laguna 0 '"° "'" I I s D L ~· , 721 Bench, March :l" 3, llH. Musical Instruments 1221, __ ,_ ... _•_•_Y"' __ _, t, knit, etc. Free TERRIFIC garage ~ a I e • HARPSICHORD (Wiil\ directions, 50c. Miid.._ turniture, wall table & Spinet) port. :x1nt = 3 Linn, 2 Timn, $2.00 Wtaat l\tacrame Boole. mirror, tent, dryer, lots of • .,'111 SI · •=1310 Basic, !t'ncy knots, pal· misc. Call 830-30.}4. ;~°""''". ='"::·~~::;.:o:::c__ __ tems. $1.00. 800 THIS Sat & Sun. 1~2 Office Furniture/ ro 10ving hOme darling J119tant t'N>chP.I Book -Antiques Concord, Costa 111 es a. Equip. 824 Cook·A·Poos', German Sh~p. Leam by _pictures! Pat-FOR Salt!, Gu~av Btoker Oo~hing, many \IMii for Sprutlels, all b r" eds terns. $1.00. Grandfather Clock . Qr1ainal entire house. OKS. $15 up Exco SW\11 chrs 540-05& Of. 5.16-2513 HD. ,.~,pt-e lo•tant Glh e --k ~ H h Id Good 814 $15/25 Sec chr1 $81>1. N 'ED ~ ho -II I """ "' nuu Cornlltlon and ln ....... ect ouse 0 I Pierce 867 w. 19, CM E f,VVU me w Ol& 0 • more thM lOO gtrts -\\'Orklng order. It Ui a lovely l'A'l..,.'IA()8 love, r.tale Dane/Boxer, ll.00. ' I > ~ I k bal I -~ ed _, .....P'...Wte A4b&a llbok -_ dark oak c o ck 1 t1" •A • rlc$1. • c r, ' drv--. p • JO 826 1.1ale sm. mix brtiru. si.cii. '\. ·rwrna.tel)' le'Ven le!!_ tile cab. Sac. washer & 11nos 1gan~ 91.a-J770. IG ,Jiff,\· Rui Boob • r,oc, '~ghr-:t:nd °f:e~e Fo~ 8ttio~C ~ryef, l~I new-~60. crnn rrce-Coll)e get-_!em. -Bring ~Ill)-k r•I 1% Prtie Afchua. who know 11_ value of .i. rg~n uxe a.pr ce PIANOS -ORGANS own container. Culc pot JI.A '" lU model, brand new. 4~1!125 New--A: u!led .. ~~C('lJOll, mice. 675-15641"----- l)•;Ut Book I -18 patterns. ck>ck !he pr1cc ii; 11 Ill's f'IC· O:lmf"Clltlvr prices. OJK'fl wtt:rrE""Sht'phcrd guard dog, '°'· I at SGS0.00. To ace, call ~_ewelrv 115 ._..__ .._ S t Tl •·· 1 bl ·•-· ~f11~1.11n Qullt-llOOt t -su.J.060_ --...J,, r..-.. t!S. N , urw 11.)'8. ie m!~ & flll!1~. ~l Do c., ~ not • Mir'. ! ANTIQUE ge n 1 I cm en' s ntNGS J..:11.n1e sale diamond ~tc:.I~ nN alwnys al: llke children, 645-l.~003;;;__ Q11'11t• fl'W° T~•Y'• U\llnc ... 1 drei;str, Oak, lg. bevell'!d cluster $100. Ruby diamond• Wellichs Music City DARLtNC blk rcnl cock·a- 15 beauUtul pattttnJ. 50c. r mirror. $140. Antique Iron Sl)), Ml!MiC $50. Two South Coast Plar.a 540-2IJ30 poo. 15 mos. spo.ycd. Shott crib. S25. 613-!IOJ.9. wedding bands. 5.\Z-88<1. .... -------L~~~kl~d!!'~· 64+~2<67~:_:!9~~~9680~ ;,.. _____________ ;..._ ___________ _ I • • t• l • --' . . Th11rsday, Febtuary 28, lCl74 DAJLV PILOT 1A_ut_o_s,_l_m_.po_rt_od..__9;;;i:..;o Autos, I mporlod . BMW MAZDA 970 Autos, lmportod 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, UHd 990 Autos, '.UMd 990 Auto•, Ultd 990 Autos, Uotd Autos, Uotd Sii THI ALL NIW .A'VA'RIAN RX4 I & J;n:E H '1i Bo I NOW JN PROGRESS •t HuOE SA~~~(,~1 SAYE SSS 1'74 BMWs Bavt.rta11 !.OSAJ 4: 20021 ' tor immediate delivery 5 )T. or 50,000 nille warranty av&Uable ori all new 1'74 I< '13 1IMW'1. 2S402 Marguerite Pukway llllllion Viejo 831-2040 • 495-4949 USE AVERY PWY EXIT. ORANOE COUNTY'S OL!>EST & 1974 BMW's Jn stock ready for immediate delivery. Excellent aavinga on remaln1na 1973 modela. SALES-SER\11CE-LEASING OVERSEAS DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc. ROLLS ROYCE BMW 234 E. 11th St. Cotta Mesa • 546-4444 '74's Are Here! Immediate Dellvery,I Savo On Remaining 73s · CREVIER BMW Sale1 • Service • Lea1lng ~ W. lit, S.A. 835-nn ao...i Sundays '73 BMW 3.0 CSA Gleaming Verona with Ebony interlor 831-2040 Dir. CAPRI ·n CAPRI, alr cond, decor croup, bet otfr. 641).JS06 •n CAPRI AM/FM, A/C, ~ MAfO..f ~l E. First St., Santa A:.a 558-7871 * Maida '74 Rot•ry * $77 MONTH 36 MONTHS OPEN U!ASE -WUI acoept trade-tnJ CALL MR. FRY 1142-6666 Hunt. Beach MAZDA 1733'1 Beach Bl. 842-6666 MERCEDES BENZ 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY •n Olds ttatlon wagon Vltta Cruiser, 1 owner, low milts, ncriftce sale (315BTC). '73 MG Mldl'et. low rnileaa:e, like new, AM/FM (Ser No. 6921). '73 TR-6. Uke new, priced lor qulck Mle! (749GVQ>. House of Imports 523-7250 '70 MERCEDES BENZ 280 4 DOOR Auto r\l at l c tran1mia1kln, power stee:rtng, air condi· tlonlpg, power windows. (815AZM). $4977 . ~Wt ltwi& -YOLYO TOYOTA Y.OL-YO ~ADILLAC CttEYROLEI_ -,--=-.u=-SAL£-:----1--;:;,7;t4~YO;;;L;;;YO;-'--i;;..._::;::_;;~.w.CA;;;_;;;_;":;;;Si;;;;:;;;~;-;;5;::;:::V,' _ _ EORD ____ 4 ;;;;;L;;;IN;;;C;;O;;L;;;N;;;;; __ M_U_ST_A_'N_G_1 '72 PINTO '68 MUS'rANG. 6 cyl, 1uper 1973 clean, ad tlrfl. radio, gttat LINCOLN on ""· lo mt. sm. ·-l ~ I An ....... -'1 4 Dr. Jn xln'I cood. IA ml'L SAYE ttt -s .,.. r-•-re M_aey xtru. Vinyl top, ~ I EASE OR BUY 1 .. --•Dbol,-tilt wti, I a/oond. climate control, '71 CORVETTE Stingray Fastbock On!r 25,105 mllHI Exattnj Roman 1~ lflcquer ltnish with black vinyl in· tenor. Economlcal 350 ~· ln. V8 with automatic ttAns., factory a!r cond., lull power, tilt wheel. .Mt/FM: radio. Thia 1leek beauty will win )'OUl' heart at Urst si&ht (00.!DNP). Auto ma t l c transmlsaion. air contllUoning. roof rllck, rudlo, 'hei\ter. C159590). CONTINENTAL 675-3764 '" s. 4-Dr. Towncar.-Xln't cood.... .'86. MUSTANG Con v . Fully equ.!ppcd. Llhr Inter, R.&dlal1. New roof., etc. '74c ....... w_ (1054151 A I ~Isl 11.,.. nd .• .,/cape, 6 way DEAN LEWIS Woo .... ~ .. ~ru ~ VOLVO M•;:r..;.. Boy Club l2'l1 W. O>ut HW)', NB $2377 vinyl rool, speed co11trol, $700. 54$.'643 between i.. 8 way f.wr seaU:, am/fnt _7P=Mo;·~~~~=~-::~· (,,.'"'iS:oo~"'c..~~: OLDSMOllLE '73 Mark II C- (~I I '73 Coron1 Coupe (416211 '73 Corona Sedan (544521 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-JJ.103 ~ 1A';:;u::to..:s::,=-U::;atd::..;=:......::.:""990 ·~.~~ tfr0 ~ $5295 Penonnel Manager, Balboa Bay Cl ub 12'11 \V. OJalt Hwy, N.8. ~UfnJof di!os~ti'lr. 1966 H OMC TRUCKS arbor. C.M. &lG·!llll.1 ' HONDA CARS • '69 TORINO MAVERICK UNIVERSITY OLDS '72 Mark 11 Wagon (030561 '72 Corona Sedan (019541 '7~ Coron1 Coupe (025451 . All Can Are Fully Equlp. ped · Most have Air Con- ditioning. Balance ot Fac- tocy Wan·anty or 12 Month J)eitler Warranty on Eve.ry Car. DeAAltwia -TOYOTA 1966 Harbor, C.M. ONE YEAR WARRANTY '73 TOYOTA CORONA SEDANS Several nlCe one1 to choose ll'om all equipped with auto- matic, ta !t-"Y a1r cond, radio, etc. All priced below the cost ot a new 1974, SEE THEM NOW ... DRIVE ONE ••• Bl'Y ONE .... BILL MAXEY TOYOTA . ' ' ,, ,, WEEKDAY wholeaale m.. Book o< trade lor ~perty or down SPECIALS pymt on house, boat or car. Dir., 536-5824 Au to n1 a t i c transn1lsslon, '70 MA VERJCK 6 cyl, auto, 2S50 Harbor Blvd. power !l teer in g, alt 1 owner, new t.ll't't, sharp, Costa Men 5'0- condltioning, radio It heater l -'646-<;009-"'-"=.,.--=~--Wed., Thun., Frl. ONLY '74 CAD. CPE. DE V. (324.TSBJ • $6799 '73 ELDOP ADO C045HOE) $6499 '72 CAD. CPE. DE V. (8.1!.EONl $3899 '71 CAD. SEO. DE . V. (592EA0) $2899 ·n T·BIRD J304EXV) $2499 '70 CAD. SEO. DE V. (4978XG) $2699 '70 CAD. SEO. DE V. (417AFV} $2599 '70 ELDORADO (243AD $3099 '70 CAD. CONVERT. (8l68SR) $2199 '70 OLDS TORONADO C638CJMl $1899 '89 MARK Ill (XEX175) $2499 '68 CAD. SEO. DE V. (WQE633) $1399 '73 MARK IV, !Ully loaded, lo ml •. ll'rivate party. $6800. 96.1-690'l or ~n CAMARO · (ZSU555) $795 MERCURY '6;,w~;"1,soCUllom 911, ""1 Brand New '74 S3<>0112 MONTE CARLO ·~:m~1~:~y .~a?.' Neods --~,"'1""'NT~O~-- Sacriflee. Must sell. Only * 543-3691 • AMC • Jllll MUST SELL $3895 ,...IWl-IL<.M.645-mo 1972 MERC MX Village< 'Tl PINTO. 4 spd, Ron·•· Loaded \\'Ith extras. Xlnt bout, 44,000 ml, Xlnt oond. '68 CAMARO Howord Chevrolet rond. 12100101r. 642-4111 11595. 644-•~26. M l '66 :P.1usta.ng hot 289, ?tlallory 'r.l PINTO, Runabout Xlnt RS COUPE acA:fe~~~~~i~:;~boree ignition! air shocks. traction ~ ___ M_U;;_c;S..;T_A..:;_N:..G::... __ ! cond. Under 18,00J ml, $2100 a -·· •·-wl b bars, hvy-duty clutch & _ .,,.,,_1925 eve. ean. i .... ;iuo._ th Jack 833-0J.55 rearend, bad body. $2'l5 or -~~~-~~----vinyl top and matchlni tur· a bug that runs. '72 '74 r-.tUSTANG II Ghia -4 FORD '72 Pinto Runabout, quoi!e delux.e interior. 327 BY OWNER $595. RANOIERO PU 23,000 ml., cyl, air, auto, 900 ml. Pvt auto, white, $2150. Pvt. pty. V-8, tactoiy air, radio, auto. 1966 Chevy Impala, very air shocks, $3000 into it, party. \Vil! take smaJl 645-3447 aft 5 PM trans., power steering, pow. 1ood cond , new head gas· $200 eqUity, take over sports car in I rad e. --P~L-Y_M_O_UT __ H __ , er brakea, power windows, ket Ir: valve grind, etc, many payments. 646-8361 962-0656. tinted gla.u, tach,, console, lii.mdreds jUit speiit on It. J .:iiiiiiiiiiii;;iiii;iiii;;; ... ,... ~190'71'-"ccM"u,-tan-g~G~r .-n~d-e. wood grain steering wheel, call aft 7, 644-1615 Park 1972 TORINO, vinyl roof, ail·, Airrond, R&H. ''inyl top, • 1972 Plymouth wide oval gJasa belt Urea, "N"'e"wpo"'=rt"=-----38,000 miles. $1875. $Z25. oval tires. Pe11ect cond. space saver spare tire, etc. '70 Olevy Impala below wholesale book. $2350. 2952 century Pl., Custom Suburban 61,000 ml. Air, auto, radkl, vinyl top, r~: s'W"tri-H 5 cox;; ,C;:c·,::M:;.· ;,54'>-4~C:4S::_I'-""'"°".,.---,, 3 Seat Station Wagon PRICED B.E~'IW new tires. $1000 or best CAR LEASING, 300 W, 1969 MUSTANG, VB. air cond. 400 cid, VS ingine r~auJEl!CliC K AT ·offer. 545-0623. Coast Hwy, Newport Beach P/S, P/B. auto. trans., Torquefilte Tran&miBsion 1966 SS Chevy conv $650: vinyl top. 1 owner. Must see Power Steering $1395 CASH New top, tires, etc. Red '64 Galaxle, 2-dr. HT. Firm to appreciate. Call 546-5173 Power Brakes, DISC Front interior white top call ~ h Good •--~ aft 5 p m Air Conditioner ,,....., cas · u ..... ..,.p. car .. =c-·==·occ·~~~-"" AM Rad! CALL ORIGINAL -· Gd. tires. p/•. p/b, R & '10 MUSTANG, Blue, p/S, v1' I s I? o. '67 OIEV V-8 Wagon auto H '74 lie t:A~ 3955 b · xi $1650 M ny P tt .x-ats OWNER DAYS tran P/S P/B A/C di · ,.._.,.,. p/ • au-, nt, · "" Electronk lgnitlon hea~. Best offer~~· '70 MAVERICK economical Pawn Shop, 645-5595, 1763 Color . t'beitnut Metnllic 642-4321 6 c )'I. , automatic New?)rt Blvd, C ~f Ucern;.e 26JEOJ EXTENS 0. N ·n CHEVY Vega GT, 4 spd., tr a .n. sm is s Ion & air 67 lo mi. auto w/wlde tires. $1695 I 295, xlnt cond aft 5: 30 & wkends, cond1ttonlng. 831-2040 Dlr. vin. top p/s, di1e. r&h . EVENINGS 6-9 PM 551-0367. '70 MAVERICK, air, uuto, 536-1515 alt. 5. See at DAILY PlLOT Em·· '64 Chev Impala, PY.T, .air lo mileage, by ov.•ner, $1795, •68 MUSTANG , air, auto, ploye Parking Lot, Monda '71 TOYOTA MK 11 & W~EKENDS, cond, good tire•. good 642-6697. good gu, lo m11... lhru f Friday. Call 642-4321, HARDTOP 963 •11 21 tranip., $450 .. I -4'&-0307 ·72 RANCllERO 500, Air. * 67>-5675 * ask. or Mn. Greenman. Only 31,912 mllHI COMET P/S, P/B, A·I rondltlon. '66 MUSTANG, economical ATLAS Frost blue with color keyed '70 CAMARO, xlnt cond, ------'---31,00J mi. $2495 494-1387. 6 cyl, auto, PS, low m.1, black cloth Interior. Fae-AMC P/S, P/B, air, mags, tape. 1963 MERCURY Comet Sta IMPERIAL $650. call 54&-1800 h mouth tory air cond., bucket s.eats,.1----.:..::.:.:.:.;:; ___ I $100 _over wholesale. ~ _ \Vgp, _$®~_runs! 123~ _ ~-_ ·~.MUSTANG, Gd _l@.1 m.1. C rysler/Ply AM/FM radio, new White or Wkends 646-2226: 25th st, Newport Beach. -'73 IMPERIAL Nu paint. \V/tape deck. Open Daily & SUn. 'W lO PM walls, etc. Truly a fine com· '71 HORNET $650 ~ 1~2 2929 Harbor Blvd., blnallnn of quality and econ· '68 CAMARO $550. Motor out CORVETTE LE BARON 4DR H.T. ,.,. °' Costa M.,. omy. (9!5DSML SPORTABOUT of car. 321 Auto. Conv.1--------Only 16,038 miles l 546·1934 . $2J95 WAGON •=:;44-34~_1_1 ______ '72 VET Cpe. Pv.T \\'indows, Garnet Metallic finish with TIME FOR Automatic transmiaslon, air •n Camaro, air, p/a, very p/b, tilt wbl, air, fm stereo, color keyed vinyl top and ·n DUSTER eeonom!cal , conditioning, rad lo & clean, ~ MPG, $2100. auto. Gm w/blk inter. Lo matching leather intet1or. cyl. encine, auto. tran1., ' heater. (1768311) ~2494 mi's. After 6pm wkdys, Dual comfort seats, lull QUICK· CASH mag wheels. Xlnt f1nUlclnc $1695 CHEVROLET 644-7907. power, factory ak, tilt 831-:»IO Dir. · · map,xlnt cord.Call after ~1966==-~H~arbol-,:,,·~·~Co;.Mo;·~""'~ ;.. 1-' 6-"-"'""week""DA::::Ts:;.::«>-::::u:"==---'73 MERCEDES BENZ '74 TOYOTA FRIENDLY :~ FIREBIRD wheel, •tereo 'multiplex, PONTIAC crul~e control, every con· THROUGH A '72 MALIBU. Loaded! 1----------1 incldini stereo, Must seU. FIREBIRD '67, 6 cyl, 3 spd, AMC • JllP . Beat otter. 552-8345 Rwu excel. $415. or otter, ceivable option on this . '10 Pontiac LeMans. Auto., pampered l\Uto. (963G\VY). a.tr cond. WILL BUY YOUR ·"~'. DATSUN, TOYOTA OR VOLKSWAGEN -PAID FOR OR NOT. WILL " PAY TOP llOu.AR. CALL 'v KENT AU.EN, 540-0442. r 1970 ·~. ale, mar•. . am/trn, tuned exhaUlt, lo mlleqe, must sell, 673.-3654, . ·n 24G z. Mae•. air, etc. I Xlnt mecli. 32 M ml. Ask (orFrank, - ' ' 'fi UOZ, aJr, AM/FM; map, , make offer. ,/ * 495--0120 * ·' .. ·n Datsun truck Xlnt cond . ,. New Urea, very clean, air, heater, radio $1995. 496-0m. . im. 1972. 14,cm miles.= .. ,. Jotded. Immaculate. . ~~ .. FIAT , ·---------'7J FIAT 121 WAOON 4 cyl, 4 1pd, radio, root rack, i'U economy all the Wt¥ hire. (179HSY) • . MW/ 13600 Beach 81., Westm.lnlter 89H6M 636-2500 •n Fiat 850 Spider, nu top. paint A. clutch, reblt eng A dltt. Xtra.1 S!SOO. 646-8570 HILLMAN '61 HIU.?..L\N Hiu:k:)', small Sta. Wgn. 2.S MPG, Runs aoocf, $225. 84&-5972 JAGUAR '60 XK 1SOS Roadster Xlnt condition. $ 2450. •968-1865 • V12 ROADSl'ER. '73, 7,00) ml, $8200. or best offer. Call 640-0375. JENSEN JENSEN INTERCEPTOR I.atp Selection of Colon Immediate 0.Uvtl')' FUU. SERV1CE DEPARTMENT NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coul Hwy., N.B. 641-9405 MAZDA 200 ·4 ODOR B D t969HAUO!lll.c.M.64S·7770 '64 CHEV., Excel running 492-7244 aft 6 & wknds. est eal Anywhere! cond, Diamond tuck upholt, FORD $4599 DAILY PILOT 693-5186 after 6 p.m. =·sa-PONT~. T-em~ ... t-. P-S/P-8,1' LEASE OR TRADE '71 AMC GREMLIN mag wh11, 0Ifer·642--5100 __ _;._;:._;:._ __ All Mod I I Burnt Orange with black 19SO CHEVY Impala Im TORINO Sla Wgn, small AM/FM, A/C, $950. WANT AD '73 =AM • I vinyl intertor. Economy 6 iaoo or best oUer vs air xln d $1995 DEAN LEWIS cylinder, automatic tran1.. i:aJJ 548-1771 · 54~3895 • t con · · radio, heater, WSW tl~s. ,.-,--;,i'--'-"--~,.,, .;~=;..,.,----~ 642-3910 & 675-2349 TOYOTA ~~E~.nly 30,071 mlles! (3J.2. Autos, N1'W 980 Autos-, New 980 Auto1, New $1999 980 Autos, New no Autos, New -- l~~M~~e?~~~ any '62 Bue, sWU"OOt, new enitne '69 ELDORADO !.101 Quall & brak ... Good lranopot' Only 35,883 mllHI Newport Beach tatlon. 554-285.1 afl 5. For the most d!Jcrlminatlng 833-9300 INI VOLKSWAGEN buyer. Palmetto Green ENTER FROM MacARnlUR $1,150. Stephen, 592-2415 lacquer finish with white '73 MERCEDES Be 280 vinyl top and Palmetto nz • '68 V.W. Bug, top cond., re-leather upholstery. Full ww-harvest beige, 4-dr. p/a, bit enc., Excel mi., $995. er, factory air cond., lilt· p/b, au to, AM/FM call 963--0173 m I t IJ' l gas dual £:'=""'"==---~-I telescopic wheel, AM/FM uh e x ·.. ~.t -... '70 Sqback new ~ Extra stereo multiplex, new white overea cam...,l'••·•r v· cl 25 MPG • $8800. Jim Box, di.YI, ean. 646-9193 . wall tires, pllpl many other 6381820, nitet 993-1400. options on this line auto. '58 MB 300SL RdJtr. xtnt. VOLVO We Invite )'Our crlUcal In· Condition. Will tr ad e apect1on. .:1-=R~oEs -. 2.'!0, L.AAGEST USED economy, lo ml, P/S. YOLYO P/B, a~. mtnt, 49Ulll. '51 M·B, Excel cond., $3500. or Best otter., Call Steve, llM-2153 PEUGEOT NEW PEUGEOT DEALER Complete S&le• and Ser\rice. ~A'cfFICn t:4t>toR INVENTORY IN ORANGE COUNTY '67 4Door Afr C'Ol'ldltlonlng, automaHc tnmlmla&ion, radio. lUEP· 415). $1277 (1) 1968 '74 CENTURY LUXUS 4DR Only 6,503 mllHI Harve1t gold with exquisite Gold tapeetry interior. Fac- tory air condltlonlng, auto- matic transmission, power sttertn& & brakes. Tilt wheel, AM/FM radio, WSW tires, etc. Fantutlc value on a fine family car. (839-m). $U95 There's a lot more to it than Dull HttdHgtllt gas economy. s1-.1e.111d A1dl1/ P/'f Tlte1 lf·STHld M111111/ Tr1111mlnlorl- lrotlt" ..... , St1lll/11tr IWt l!aet I Pih/a" S1111/ng/ SIHf/ng COiumn LIJ(:t F11//'f Syncri1on/zld. f lo<H Mo1111ftd Srylld St11/ Wh11/1 With everybody talking about (a,nd working lor) gas economy, along comes Capri, the sexy European. It iiot only has European styling to brag about, but Eufopean ideas on gas economy are built tight lnlo il. Siii!, these aren't the only reasons why Capri sold mor e cars In Its first three years ln America than any other Import in tiistory. Shown above are 16 other great reasons for making your next car Lincoln·Mercury'a Ceprl. Everything you ~e 11 standard on the Capri-everything. •Tadtomflet, apetdomelet, f•llh rrlp odom•t•r}, g1yg•1tor 111tl, ettglnt 1emper1ture, oil Prt••ur• and batt•ry ch.,glng, LINCOLN-MERCURYS . --.- • • IMPORTS PIUOIOT /SUIARU 1557 W. Llneoln Ave., Anahetm · 533-8220 (3) 1969's (4) 1910's (3) 1971's (3) 1972's THE SEXY EUROPEAN YOU CAN AFFORD ' , I '74 Rotary Wagon sn.29 ma. 38 mo. O.E.L. MIRACLE MAZDA mo Har'bor Blvd. ~ ,.... 6«>51GO • • 'ti • RX·2, 2 dr, AM·J'M, Midi. ndlals, ail', Ml!, Ori(. own. pea, ll6Mlll. !ltlU,. anytblna f'flh .. Dlil1 , Pilot aiusU!td Ad fl • slmple matter • • • just call 642-e6'18 I PORSCHE 1971 PORSCHE 9U-T, $7000. Ml& whls, leather ••ta. A/C, AM/FM, Sempertt tiret, 1peclal. p&lnt, 53,000 mile, xlht cond. Mtn;y other extru. Can Fra.n Santlm; 54Q·09U ot m-3!0! • and '72 CAOILLAC Cpe DeVUle, 2 or. Xln't <one!. Msny l<lral. Vinyl top, '73 1800 laather tiDbol, tilt wh), '6T TARGA tu. ftblt q. a/cond, Cllmate control, '56 Spdltt!', • q. nu top STAT.ION ,· AGON •tertO rad. w/ tape. 8 way = ~el5.JW -· . . =::t!.:~t.~ru ~~ '82 • DCpe, iiiii~hdtp Air concllUont,., ··-c ._,.. __ .. Cl L cabrl.oh1t, new peln ere truwmltUon, stereo radio. • '"'1199 • y "• a. trans~, mt. , (ltml\P). ml W. Cout Hwy, NB !MS-124!1 SAYE '73 CADULAc· EIDorado. Ul80 POR.Sall:1 Ntw' ~t. . · w/&U fXU'U, Real Nlct. Cltan. MUii Hit. .t!lfl qt4) · Will tnde tor equity -_, •• -t, In beach art• Income PIOP· TOYOTA UUlll <m> 943-47'2. VIII 1111 •n COUPE De VUle, fUll .. TOYOTA Corona 4 dr t•1• J)WT, A/C, nu t l re 1, Air, low mil. Xlnt cond. AAtlFM. mlnt cond, 'lS500 Im> 4~2914. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 64~9303 dayt 833-2743 eves 640--0810. ' ' ~- Our SERVICE DlPARTMENT Wiii Be Open for Bullntn With NOTICE: SERVICE on SATURDAYS =~::~":,~1o~.:~.~ .. ~::t . 2626 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 54C)l.5630 " • .. . - I .i I 1· I ' ~% DAILY PILOT Thursday, Fei>tuat)' 'IB, 1974 .~'--~~~~~~~~~~~--....:.;~"--'--'~­• ; QUEENIE av Phn tnterlandl Govenor • • • • • Mansion Approved SACRAMENTO (UPI) - Final plans for a 11.45 million governor's mansion, a "dream house" long sought by Rooald Reagan for future c b 1 e f executives, have been approved by the slate Public ' Works Boen!. 'lbe actioo, which cleared lhe way for construction to begin this sununer on the early California Spanlsb-style structure, was p r o-t e st e d Wednesday by Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr., a Democratic gubernatorial 2.·28 candidate, who called the 16- o•,__.,....... -.1974 ,,..a:..-.;~ _room residence "too opulent." L.::;::=::.:::::.:::.:;:::.=:::=-------.1 4'lt hirns out he wasn't calling me-be was talking to bis sleep.'' L. M. Boyd Triangle Girls Feel Triumphant Our Love and War man has been examining that social phenomenon known as the eternal triangle. And he now holds the opinion that predatory girls break up more homes than do chasing men. Says he: When a fellow falls for another man's wife, he's usually slightly embarrassed by what has happened. But when a woman walks off with a husband not originally her own, more offen than not she feels triumphant. What do you know about the black-footed ferret? It's almost ex- tinct, that's a fact. Some bright boy a few years back decided it would be a good notion to exterminate all the prairie dogs. There went the black- footed ferret's main grub. I swear you can't step on a cricket without starv- ing a crow. CALCULATOR Q: "How long does it take to assemble one of those pocket electronic calculators?" A. About 15 minutes, I'm told. As you know. those in- struments now sell for $50, give or ta:te $20, depending. Eight years ago, their hand-assembled-predecessors sold for about $1,500 each. Q. "Who said, jTo obtain a woman who loves you, you must treat her as ff she didn't?' Stendhal?" , A. No, Pierre de Beawnarchais. Stendhal said, .. A wise woman never yields by appointment." Q. "What's the most useful Jetter of the alphabet?" A. Our Language Man says it's E. Personally, I prefer X. It marks the spot, represents a kiss, registers a vote, signifies restricted billing, plays partnership in tic-lac-toe, and serves as a signature. That's pretty useful. ANDORRA In that nation known as Andorra, if you're not at least 25 years old, you can't vote. That has bee.n criticized widely as Wlfair to the strong bright young. Its proponents, however, say the retarded voting age, by bringing more seasoo.ed judgment to the ballot box, is largely responsible for making Andorra what it is today. What would you be willing to do for $1 million? Poll- sters put that query to numerous citizens. Would you take off your clothes in public? Yes, said 12 percent of th>se asked. Would you serve a year's jail term on a framed charge? Yes, said 13 percent. Interesting. Those who would go to jail for a year outnumber those who would take off their clothes in public. In this survey, at any rate. Martin Shlkuku is a Kenya government minister in Nairobi. He recently decreed that any citizen who bounced a check would be flogged , then sentenced to 14 years in jail. That's also the prescribed sentence for "robbery with violence ." Address mail to L . M. Boyd, P.O. Box· 1s1s, New- port Beach 92660. THE WHITE adobe, red- tiled mansion will include six bedrooms, a courtyard, a swimming pool, sauna, tennlS court, guest rooms, forma and family dining rooms, two rooms for employes and a study. "Modesty ought to be the style of the chief executive, not the regal aura of this thing," Brown told the board. The four board members present -three Reagan appointees and a Republican senator -voted unanimous approval to the plans. They contended the p r o j e c t , envisioned by former Gov. Edmund G. Brown a decade ago, already had been delayed too long . THE PLANS, approved by Reagan, were unveiled to the pubLic at the board meeting. Qnstnictioo bids will be received in Ju1y and work will begin in August or early September. The mansioo is expected to be ready for the new governor by September, 1975. Preliminary drawings called for 17,000 square feet of living space. But architects Donald C. Hensman and Conrad Buff Ill of Los Angeles said the area was reduced to 12,000 square feet by Reagan, who also deleted a wine cellar- bomb shelter from the plan. THE MANSION still woold be five times the size of an a v e r a g e t h ree-bedroom California home. It will be situated on a scenic bluff overlooking the American River in Suburban Carmichael six miles east of Sacramento. The 11-acre site was don1ted to the state by a group of Reagan supporters. s..acramento Cou nty Supervisdt' · Pat Melarke~ a Democrat, warned the i1te would pose a security problem for a govermr because it was near a golf course. "It would be very easy to put a rine in a golf bag and shoot at the governor," he said. ASSEMBLYMAN E d w i n Z'berg (D-Sacramento) said the mansion should be located near the downtown Capitol and contended approval of the plans w a s "premature" because a public hearing on the project'w envinmmental impact statement would not be held until March 21. Reagan in 1967 abandoned the century-old Victorian·style marnion used by previous governors, calling it a fire hazard and an unsuitable place to rear young children. He subsequently moved into a state-rented home. t . '· r1v-1a: unimportant matters: trifles much of our research is wasted on. Triv-ia: New Daily Pilot Saturday feature triviaddicts can't live without • • ' ' ' .. The delinitio~ you get depends ·on who you ask- Webster may think trivia (small t) is ..• well, trivial. But Tri~ia fQig Tl is a fascinating feature that tickles the brains of Slime of the Orange Coast area's most sophisticated newspaper readers. Can you name Jack Armstr.ong 's hi~h school? How about Judy Garland 's dog in the "Wizard of Oz" movie? The name of the "Star . Trek" spaceship? If these are the kind of questions that turn you on , you're a triviaddict ••• or you .7<'uld .~e one if ~ou'd just let yourself go. Check out . Trivia (with a big T, -by T.T.) in next SaturdaY:s ~1llon of the ••• DAILY PILOT . , ... ,. 1~· • . , . • ,,•f ,, . ; M !·\· ' ;. ( • • " • r ·----·. r ( ' .-;.» . «: ' .. It"' ·s519. ·s1199 ·QUART . I ' . an Clemente Capistrano ED1r10N • • ·.VOL. 67, NO. 59, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES dRANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1974 ·-... • • um1 In Del Mar San Juan Train Rams Bus; Candidates 3 Dead, 24 Hurt Tell Views DEL MAR (AP) -Three persons were killed and 24 injured when their bus chartered by lhe Amtrak rail service •!811ed on a railroad crossing and was r~mmed by a Santa Fe freight train, atl1horities said. Officials searching frenziedly for vic- tims at the crash scene today surprised 3{ illegal Mexican aliens, one of them a woman, hiding in box cars of the 66=Car freight tram:-All were talr:en into custody for questioning by the Border Patrol. "The windshiekl cf the bus was stick- ing to the front of the train engine and people were lying outside moaning and crying," said Peter Sokolow, a Ucurity at the Ocean Windows Hotel overlooking the crash site. 1be dead were identified as Carl Joseph Bertram, 47, lngelwood, the bu.$ driver; Sky Jenkins. 6, Clatskanie, Ore.; nod Jennie Doescher, 58, Aplington, Iowa, who died in a hosp(tal two hours ~after the late Wednesday night crash. ' Mrs. Doescher's husband Harvey, 60, • was listed ln critical condition. Young Sky's mother, waiting at the "'.'depot. watched in horror as the · reight ·barrelled into the bus at about 35 miles "" howr, fireltl"1 oatd. They comforted her while an ambulance took her l\Ulband ' 1o the hospital. Aboard •the bus, the child bad been f>la,ying with a decl< o! flash cards, with Which words, phrases and pictures are matdied. Under her body they found .. two of the cards. One read "and my sister," whilt the other showed a pll'tlll'e of a gravestone and a single word - "died." The train was not derailed and no one aboard the freight was injured, authorities said. Jo.seph Jones, Amtrak passenger representative, said the bus was under charter by Amtrak, the national railroad passenger -service, iOOWas carrying 30 persons when the accident occurred. It was en route to San Diego. He said most of the passengers had come south by rail from Vancouver, Wash. and arrived in Los Angeles too late to make train connections to points south of Los Angeles. Some of tJie 38 passengers who boarded in Los Angeles had already been dropped off when the accident happened, be said. Officials at the scene of the acckient, some 100 yards Uom the Del Mar depot, said the stalled bus was attempting lo back away from the tracks when the 60-car freight train, bowld from San Diego to San Bernardino, crashed into iL They said the !root pdrtiOOOt the bus was crashed and baggage and other pel'30Nll 'belongings ol the -•rs were scattered an>Wll) the railroad cross. •·•' ' •. f • -~ . . Authorities said oome o! Ille inJured wm laked to ScripPMemoriol llo&plW and the others to Veteram Memorial Hospital, both in San Diego. ·Bkak Picture· Painted ~y Utilities Firm Official The head or the electrical utility .setv• ing large portions or the South Orange Coe.st today said the fuel crisis is still grave and that bulk oil costs are still aoaring. Watter Zitlau, president of San Diego Gas and Electric Company. said he foresees no relief from "staggering" increases in cosls of low-sulphur oil and othet fuels needed lo run con· ventiooal generators. "Since la« December our fuel prices have advanced more than 50 percent. Q:midering that the company will bave ~ buy 11 mlllion barrels of oil during thls year, the added costs are stag- ~erlng," be said. Some oil purchases have come with price of as much as fl7 a barrel - up from the $7 .06 paid last December. • ZiUau llgures~tbat the added costs to· the utility -hence its customers ""'-will be mor tban 108 million. That if more than d the cost of fuel 'ii last year. ZiUau said that low-sulphur oil used as a relatively pollution-free fuel in ateam generators has borne the highest Jiice tags in recent months. : Despite' the increased costs or the ·fUel, however, the utility still insists ·that its supplies are in healthy shape. "Bming government diversion of our ;i:tppnes-(for defense purposes), our coo· or .. ge ()out • 1feailter -- The weatherlady seea. a 60% chance of showers Friday with cooler temperatures along the Orange <::oast. Highs of 55 at the beaches will rise tO 60 Inland. Over· night lows In the loW<r 50s. :msmE TODi\ v A judQ< ln Al<>bama hat bten occ"'ed of di.!per1ing mtrCJI In r<tum fOt U%UOI favors from f<fll<ll• defmdonts. StOTll, Page 4, tracts assure ll! of adequate oil to meet our J>O"'er generation needs through. 1975." the utility official said. The firm is banking on required ap- provals for its own oU refinery in Carlsbad to serve its needs after 1975. The proposed plant would be built in an area near SDG and E's Encina complex which consists of several oil burning generators serving the South Coast. Ties Resumed By Governments Of U.S., Egypt CAffiO, Egypt (AP) "'-'!be United States and Egypt today iormally an- nou=<I resumption o! lull diplomatic relalloos broken oil siliCe the Middle East •war of 1967. The announcement came in a joint declaration read at the White House at about the same time it was being disclosed In Cairo, where Secretary of State Henry A.-Kissinger was meeting wilh Egyptian leaders in his lat.st Mid· die East peace-making campaign. In addition to a general upgrading of contacts, the move meam the SJ>!llliab Embassy in Cairo will no' longer hoUse the American diplomatic delegation to Egypt, beaded by Ambassador Hermann Eilts. Similarly, an Egyptian delegation h•aded by Amba-Ashraf. Gborbol will move into facilities of its own In wasblitgton, JVhere II has been working under the Indian flag. 'll!e two ambassadors have been In place since Kissinger and Egypt'• l'r<sl· dent Anwar Sadat agreed in prlnclpl• to ....,..., diplomatic relations I<> Novem- ber durjllg a visit to Cairo by 1he American secretary. Rolalions hid beenc se""" 1ioce 1be six-day Middle · Eall war ol JlllO ,1187, · when Egypt broke tllenr off boco ... . ol the American role.lo f.1Vor ol Israel. Klsalngor relumed ID Cairo today for talb with Social at a --o-lool<· Ing the C"9t Pyramldl. '11-Eo1111a Je1der gree1ed him llUDllY w1t1r I lfadl. Uonal Arab emi.-ad IUQdted tllty both poet .... =--wt.Ill the pyramids u • Wan ·11111r (See EGYPT, Pip SI • ' ! By PAMELA HALLAN Of ,.._ Dlll'I' .. 1111 Sllll Eleven ~tes -including a last.. minute writein aspirant-seeking election to three vacancies on the San Juan Capistrano City Council Tuesday. And in the most spirited and cont~versial campaign in many years for San Juan, issues of s1ate5 running as one block and assertions o f underhanded campaigning have been widespread. - The single . issue which transcends campaign fervor, however, is the future growth policies which will go into effect in the city. The city',s soon-to-be-enacted general plan, its new hillside grading ordinance and a general growth policy have dominated much of the discussion in recent days of the campaign. Besides the choice of three new councilmen, voters a1so will give an opinion on a ballot item which asks if the city C0W1cll should establish' a city police force. A 15-cent-maxirnum ta1 override for parks development also comes before the voters in Tuesday's election. The candidates are: MRS. J VDITH ,BEOOS, housewife with two ·daugtitera, is mar- ried to .an electrical contractor. She ,_ -Jllon'9 City, College and llllddleback Col· lege ind has been ac- tive in the Fiesta Association, cham- ber cX. commerce, Alpha Iota ·Parlia· mentary LTnit and lbe San Juan Capis- t r a n o Republican Women's Club. .... , On the issue of growth, Mrs. Beggs, 3193t Ca 11 e Winona, believes that placing a limi- tation an population in the general plan may be unconsUtutiooal. "Growth in our city is inevitable. I believe that an orilerly pattern of growth with equality to all patties concerned is essential." She also believes that a local police department is not ecooomically feasible. "At this time I am very positive that we should retain the contract services of the Orange County Sheriffs." U elected, Mrs. Beggs said she would keep regular oUice hours at city hall. EDWARD CHERlllAK, 322.11 Los Amigos, the only incumbent in the race, bas served 10 years on the council. He attended schools in Colorado and is a member of the American Legion. Chermak, an electrician., is not opposed to the city's new general plan, but believes implementation may be difficult because it will re- quire the use of the tax dollar. He does believe that no coun- cilman should adopt a bard and fast pro- gram for 10 to 50 years because Umes Change. He voted in favor of the hillside CMIRMAK ordinance but be• lieves Jt bas many flaws. He will be will~ ing to institute a local police department onJy when the cost of setting one up equals the money paid for protection to the Orange County Sherlif. He believes that llmiling growth is against the """"'Pt o! economics. 1'The tu rate has been reduced in San Juan ·eapistrario because the assessed valuation increased. through devel<>pment," be said. THOMAS A. FORSTER, a seventh generation CaUlomian, is the only candida~ who bas specifically addressed himself to historical pr ... rvatlon .. If elected, be hu pledged to support the formation of a cul· turat herita_ge com- missloo to presen·c hiotorlcal si~ tn lhc city. - Fonllir, Gue· dalupe, II a jradll- ole " local ocbools ..., the U.S. Military Acldell11 at Wesl w••• Polnl. Rb bocil· ground Includes t ,..rs In the service, .. ..,. yan witb TRW Systems and tbr,. yNrS Al b; iowner of an auto pert.9 •-· Ht bu aerved In m.any orpnlzatlom ...i· hu been • mayor, (Soe CANDIDATES, P11e t) \ • • um es I DtH'I' Pillt Sllff !>'"41 THE LA,ST TO LEAVE -and Maude Courage, left, took more than a little coaxing out of her fume-filled room at old San Clemente Hotel Wednesday night when fumigator's gas seeped into landmark inn. With Mrs. Courage is patrolman Mike ~urrel1, center, who promised to take special care of Maude's cat, "Bumper," in wicker cage. Fire Marshal Don Hodgson, (right), lends assurance to reluc- tant hotel tenant. , Coast Motorists Prepare For ~riday Gas Rationing From Wire Services Fear or the 'unknown brought Jonger- than-normal lines to Orange Coast area gas stations this morning as motorists apparently prepared to meet Friday's start of the even-Odd rationing plan with the gauge pegged at full. If you are still unclear about bow the game will be played, here are the rules . Avoiding their violation will keep you from paying a maximum $500 fine or spending six months in jail, or maybe both. -Do not approach a gas station unless you have less than hall a tank. If the station attendant demands it, show him your gauge. -U you are a station owner you PLAN AT LEAST WORTH A TRY -Edit0<lal, Pago 6 NIXON VOWS ENERGY BILL VETO, P1ge 26. may not refuse saJes on the appropriate odd or even day unless the customer has more than half a tank of gas. ·-Stations must clearly post an- ticipated minimum business hours and days and manage their allocations so that they will last through the entire month. -Dealers must indicate their gasoline supply by a sign or 8 nag. A green flag ·means gasoline is available for the appropriate customers, a yellow flag means gas for emergency vehicles only, and a red Dag means closed or out of gasoline. -Only emergfncy vehicles, buses, commercial vehicles and out~r~state tourists are exempt from the restric- tions. -Motorists whose license plates end with an odd digit can buy gasoline in participating counties on odd nwn- bered calendar days while those ending with an even digit can buy on even numbered days. -On the 31st day of each month sales will be unrestricted. -Personalized plates with no digits are coo.sidered odd numbered plates and plates ending in "0'' will be considered even numbered plates. Violations are punishable as misde- (See RATIONING, Page Z) 11 ,Candidates To Attend Forum In Capistrano San Juan Capistrano's last formal can- didate's forum of the campaigns will be held tonight at Mateo Forster Junior High School's auditorium. Spokesmen for the service groups sponsoring the 7:30 p.m. event said that all the city's 11 candidates have accepted invitations to attend. The sponsoring groups are the South Coast Jaycees, · Le.ague of Women Voters, American Association of University Women and the Capistrano Unified Council ol PTSAs. San Clemente lawyer William Kerns will moderate tonight's disc~ion, which will begin with a four-minute talk by each aspirant in alphabetical on;ter. After a break, wrltten questions wlll be ac- cepted from the floor. ~old Everything Airport X-ray Machiries Illegal WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal judge bas ruled thal the Fed· era! Aviation Administration acted illegally when ii gave airports ·permission to use X-ray ,machines as security devices at airports across the-nation. U.S.:llistrict Judge Barrington D. Parker ordered use ol the m1ch.lnes halted :w.anesd4y. unlU . the FAA tiles a statement certify· ing lhat use of the devices would ·not harm the environment. There was no d.ecbion whether an appeal would be !iled . Parker ruled that the FAA acted illegally because it failed to pennit af(~d person.. to comment on·1i. action before ii took eUect March 29. •• Use o! the X-ray machines was challenged by the Aviation Con· sumer Action Prolecl; a. group a.,oclated WI.lb Ra.lph Nader. The group contended that tile machines posed 1111 unknown health hat· trd beca~ o! a lack or safety standilds. ~ .. \ ' .... Today's Final N.Y. Stocks • TEN CENTS nn 4 :.Treated • At Hospital h1 Cleme11te By JOHN VALTERZA \,,(_., 01 !tie Dlllr l"l .. J Sl11f A fumigation project that someho\V went awry sent a po\verful insect icide laced with tear gas through all three levels of the San Clemente Hotel Wednes- day night and dozens of elderly residents were evacuated. Police and firemen took four residents of the hotel to San Clemente General Hospital for emergency treatment for nausea and irritation caused primarily from the tear gas. Firemen said the gas is intentionally blended with the insecticide methyl bromide, because the bug-killer has no smell of its own. The evacuation, orderly and without any pani c, began shortly after 8 p.m. and police brought about 30 residents out in pairs and shuttled them to two local motels which offered them lodging for the night. Fire M~rsbal Don Hodgson, who supervised lhe evacuation or the elderly guests, said the fumi gation project was supposed to involve only an abandoned business building next door to the old hotel which was built at 124 Avenida Del Mar in San Clemente's earliest days. "Somehow the gas made it past a fire wall separating lbe buildings and apparently acaunulated in the hotel basement. ''From there, jt WU~~ the ventilating system," be theorized. Some residents reported aensing the first indications or the leak late in the afternoon and said it became pro- . gressively worse through the night. The hotel manager phoned police .. Public Safety Director CliUor_d Murray said this morning that tragedy was OMl\St certainly averted because of the fumes' discovery early in the evening. Had the leakage occurred after guests: had gone to bed, ihe incident couJd have been far more ser.ious, 'he added, Although the danger was ob.vious, ~iremen and police ·rqund it difflpllt 10 some cases to ·convince the elederly tenants that they wc,>uld have to spend ~the night away from home. Ooe i;uest -the last to leave - held out for more than 30 minutes until police coaxed ber out. Mrs. Maude Courage finally left her room, but only when pattolmen promised to take special precautions with her only companion -a cat n:!llled "Bump- er." . Several residents walked out or the hotel with police, only to try lo sneak back again. One was seen leaving With his hotplate and breakfast fixings. ~ Hodgson said a probe of l'le b..,ilding being fumigated was planned today to determine the exact source of the leak. He and Murray expressed alarm that the fumigation firm, a Gardena com- pany, asscrtedly did not conform to local codes which specify that public safety agencies be notified of any such fumigation at least 24 hours before the job. No city business license was issued, either, they said. Hodgson praised the quick response from t"·o local businesses, the San Clemente Inn and Algodon motel , which offered to put up the residCflls for the night with on1y a few moments• notice. "They deserve credit, because if we cooldri't find a place lot those poor old folks, we wouJd have had a bigger problem oo our hands,'' he said . * * * San Clemente Evacuation Nets Two for Pot Wbile most of the San Clemente hotel's older residents found t~r temporary accommodations satisfactory at local motels during Wednesday's evacuation, two youngfr ooes found the.in a little more austere. They spent the night in jail. Police said that during the room-ft> room search ror tenants during the fumigation scare they found one room empty of midtnts1 but a small mari- jll'1na window garaen and oth<r Illegal oontraband all egedly ca•ght their •Y•· Later In the evening Glenn EdWan:ll Roberis, 24, and David Lawrence Cowan. 20, arrived. They were evacu.attd, booked and lodged at city jail on clw&er Ill possesslny, the wted. • ' ... ~ DAILY PILOT St ThurMlaJ, Ftbluary 28, 1q74 f'romPa•eJ SAN JUAN CANDIDATES • • • councilman, and planning commissioner In San Juan. On the luue ot growth, Forster believes hi.s knowledge of the clty'a land and its problems coup led with advanced planning t.ecbnlques Yl'ill serve the city's beat interest& at a time when councilmen will be faced with difficult land use decl>lons. lie supports the Intent ci the hillside ordinance and agrees with the proposed general land use plan now bcfol'e the t'Ommlssioa. ~ the police lssue1 Forster feels it is imprope rly on the ballot and ~·ill receive a no vote. • GEORGE N. FRIEDRJCll, a \vrite.-in candidate. is a retired T\VA executive. He is married, has four cbildren, and rtsides at 26000 Aeropuerto. lJe represented TWA as dil'e<:lor of the Visilor Information Program, Kennedy Space Center, under contract 1\•ith NASA. ''In thi s capacity," he said, "I worked with local comm uni- ties in developing touris m with the best economic re- turn, but least Im- pact on local resi- P:a1Eo1ucM dents." Friedrich opposes the police issue bc<:ause he believes it is a "cop oot" on the part of tbe city council. "How are we to know what is involved in having our own police force versus hiring county Strvice11," he aaid. He also opposes the perk l.ssue becall.!e the public hasn't been told what the proposed park tax would buy. He also opposes the tree ordinance which he believes is an improper "control. 11 JOHN C. GIBSON, 33895 C a 11 e Acordarse, is a retired businessman who served 23 years as a bank manager. During hls years ln various communities he served as president or a chamber of commerce, presiden t or service clubs and a sc hool board, and chalnnan of a park boa rd. He Is a director of the Dana Point Clti.z~ns for Action Association. He is in favor or plaMed. lim ited growth in all phases of development - ,OlllOM re~ldential, business and Industry -but believes the l~tter two must grow with the population. He believes the city should have its own pol.Ice department, but no t immediately, perhaps 1n two or three years. ·· ot the New York ln<lltule o/ Crlmlnoioi)' and has a deCJ'ee in pollce science from Orange Coast College. He has eomed the Me<lal o/ Valor and haa been Officer af the Year. He ls married and has two daughters. He believes in or- MD•YON derly gro\\·tb. but is not in fa vor of an arbitrary limitation of it. He Is: not in favor of the police Issue because he believes the city now has the finest law enforcement agency working for its citizens. 11If elected I will expose every city proposal to this test: do we need It? can we afford it? how much will it really cost? hoy,• are we going to finance it'.' \vhat is the priority'.' should y,•e do it now or later?" He has also pledged to bave an open office .at city hell every Saturday morning and t o encourage light Industry, end increase recreational facilities. DOUGLAS B. NASH, 3290ll Descanso, a plannlnt com.mis- sioner, Is a scientist who holds a master's degree in geology from the University of CalUomia. He was the principal sclentlflc investiga- tor for the NASA Lunar simple Ana· NASH • lysis Program and la the owner of a sailboat design business. He is married and resides In Troy Homes. Nash is an ad vocaU! of deceleration of current growth rate to bring future development ln san Juan into proper balance with school . traffic, (Ind other service capabilitle1 . He believes in htgh quality housing and c o m m e r c i a l devel()J1ment.s lqstead of high density, a retention ol open space _ a n d preservation or natural hllbides and the adoption and implementation of a rigidly followed general plan that will ·~pre.serve San Juan Capistrano as a small, uncrowded village com.munlty ." He Is opposed to a local pollce department because he doesn't believe the city can afford one. ROBERT ROARK, 26872 canyon Crest. is married and bas four children. He " .,.. '.1 as an Insurance I broker and is active ~ In YMCA activities. He is a past preal- dent of two Llons ,,_) C I u b s and baa served as president of the Mission Hills Ranch Homeowners' Association. He has a degree in journal- "l wlll we my experience of CS years 1S11l. to tllake sound business fud~ents for While in San Diego Roark organlud San Juan Capistrano," he said. a group or 55 homes Into an aS80CiaUon YVON HECK.SCHER, 32341 Del Obispa, and s u cc es sf u 11 y worked for holds a doctorate of 1aws and electrical improvements in the community . engineering degrees from the University "San Juan 's mas ter plan must become a fle:rible tool for balanced growth8not ol Callfomla, a bachelor's degree In just serving either the profit-at-any-price political sci enc c in terests on one side or the J've-got-m.ine- from Peppe.rdlne and a I r ca d y. so. now-let's-close-the-town a degree Jn national piped.reams on the other,'' sald Rollrk. security manage-"Since it is a new plan, Its structure ment from the Jn-should take energy as well as growth dustrial Co llege or into consideration and reflect the the Armed Forces. mandate of the newly elected council, An attorney, Heck-not the possibly imbalanced views of scher, is married the present council which may not reflect and bas three daugh-1974 voter sentiment." tt•CKSCMIA ters, and Is current-Because Sa n Juan is a tourlst-bued ly president or the Town Hall Assocla-economy, Roark believes a plan must tion . be developed to attract more retail He believes the most important iS3ue establishments and more clean, Jigbt in the . campaign is growth. He supports industry-ell archi tec turally compatible. the hillside ordinance and the new '-He is not in favor or a police department general plan wbl ch limits growtJ:i to ~this time. an ultimate holding population of 42,000. JOHN ~'EENEY ~-· "I led t k r h t• ! oJ" ' '-"lkllnnan of the , P .ge o wor or .l e ac 1ve planning commission, is a college pert1clp~l1on of ell res1dent.s, .. to administrato r who accomplish our goals of tota l citizen , involvement and a proper balance bolds a masters de- between public and pri vate interests," gree from Ohio he said . He is against a local police State University. He department at this time, but supports is a retired Marine the parks i~ue. If elected, he bas Corps colonel, is pledged to meet monthly wlth resident married, and resides associations irl their areas. et 25991 CaJle Ricar- GERALD J. HORTON is an investigator for the Orange County Sheriffs· Department. He is a graduate OIANll COAST IC DAILY PILOT ll!e Or.,. c .. 11 DAILY PILOT, wtt11 wfllc:fl !1 CMM!fteill Ille Nt ... •Ptt.._ It flOlflliflMlll .,. 1t1ot 0r-. c .. 11 Pv0111""" ~"'"· ,._. f ile Wltlttw .,. llWlll.l'IM, MG!lllay !fll'Wgfl Frii:11y, !Or Coif• Mtw, l<l.wp.r1 1!111(:11, HuftllnoN., 9ffclVl"O\Wl•1l" V11i.,. Ltqlll'll l!ltKti, l"'IM.llNll!eWd1 ...0 s.n i::ie.n.,.te/ "" Jll9" C,tpft!r-. A 1fflil"" ..._1 .cllll-.... ..._. &ltvnlt \'1 •lld Sur!d•ni. Tl'l<I Pl'll'IC!N I llllblltfllftt oi.n1 11 11 no W..I .. , it'"'· C..lt "'"'· C.lltor"i., f'MJll. Rob.rl N. w,14 Pr .. i..n1 t lllf ,...-tltl!H J1ck R. Curlty Vkt Prnkltfll Ind ~ .. I ~ Tllom11 k11 .. i1 lGlt« T\om11 A. M.,phi"' M.-it81nt Edltw 0.1rl11 M. Lt01 l icli1r4 P', Nill Anl•lfnl MMtelfltl ldlMr1 ... ca.-·· Office JOS Hirth fl Ct111iR• lttl, t2•12 _.._ 0\11 Mt ... 1 ~JI W1:~r llrtt! NtwflDl'I l tttl\: UJJ N low ..... ,. tt..111111911111 INCi: 17WJ •Md! ltull""f'd Lt,_ l!IHdll ttJ ~ ... II A"-"ue , ......... {71 41 '41-4121 C:..lft-4 .... "' ... '42-1•7• do. "Service as a plan· sw111N1iY ning commissioner. hus made me aware of land use allocation problems and the thorny issues of growtb versus no growth ," said Sweeney. "With imaginative, positive leadership these actually present unique opportunities r a t h e r than insur- mountable obstacles to planned orderly development of the city." Sweeney was involved in drafting the hillside ordinance and deliberations on the inter im land use plan. He believes, if properly Implemented, t h e s e documents will a53ure preservation of the city's present chara!=ter, natural beauty, enlt historic chann. He does not believe a local police department is economically feasible at this time. KENNETH VISE, 25882 Via Del Rey, a real estate broker, has a degree In business manage- ment and holds a college teaching cre- dential. He Is past president of a Junior Chamber of Com- merce, and has be- longed to san Clem~ ente Elks, California Rell Estale ANOCla· v1s1 tJon, Smit.hlon.lan tn- stiution, and c1tOcu.n '• sparta acUvltl.,, Vise does not support the general plan because he bellevee It Is too restrictive and could be a burden on the taxpayer. He is in favor of 1preadine the population out over a wlde area, not llmltlng It only to flatlands. On the pollce Issue, Vise bellevot that not enough information has been etven to the people for a yes vole, and it therefore voting no. Going South Former Garden Grove police chief George P. Tielsch has quit hi! job as chief of the Seattle police force to head the Santa Moni ca department. AJ. though the post pays $6,000 a year less, Tielsch says it's worth 1t because 11The sun shines there 325 days a year -here it rains 325 days a year. It's very depressing." EdisowCites Expansion Date Change By CANDACE PEARSON ' Of tflt 0.llY l'lllt II.rt Slower population growth and reduced enero demands have con v Ince d SOutbem California Edi.Jon officials they don't need to expand their Huntington Beach power plant unUI 1977 or 1979, It was learned today. This tentative lime Une is up to four years beyond original plans by the com- pany. Utility ofllclals applied last October for a construction permit for the $..112 mWlon expansion from the south COast Regional Zone Conservation Commlsslon. But the application was returned for more information about three months ago and the company hasn't reapplied. When It wtll. according to F.dison District 1t1anager Paul Richardson, is definitely up in the air. "Jt wUI probably be three to five years before the Huntington Beach generating station would be completed and on line," he said today. The company had figured new units of the plant at Pacific Coast Highway and Newland Street in Huntingtoo Beach would be producing power by 1975 to 1977. Tiie f06Sil fuel plant now generates 992 megawatts of power. The combined cycle additlcm would add another 1,416 me1awatts of peak production. Edison Friday will file a new resources .schedule, outlining its future plans for all ill major facilities including Hun- tington Beach, with tbe California Public UUlittes Commission (PUC). Until It ii accepted and approved by.. the PUC, Richardson .said today in Hun- tington Beaclt, noting Is final. At a retent state coastal commission meeting in Santa Barbara -~'here t.he Company's $1.4 billion expansion of the San Onofre Nuclear Power Plant was 8pproved -Edlaon Vice President David Fogarty said a number of pl&Med units have been deferred. Fogarty said a nuclear plant In the desert near Victorville and a fossil fuel plant · in Long Beach will be delayed, in addition to the expansion program at Huntlng'too Beach. Fogarty dted the reduced load - Edison reported a JO percent drop in power usage in both De<:ember and Jan uary -and the reduced availability of fossil fuel as reasons. Richardson said today that the reduced need ls the main factor. Population growth Jn the area Edison serves is now running et a rate of 4.5 percent yearly, he said, in co ntrast 'to previous annual rates of seven and eight percent. The srowtb is sun •lightly higher In Orange CoWlty, he said, but, even here, It hu almost been cut In hall from what was once a ten percent growth Jump a year. Fuel Is still a concern, Richardson said today, but a les s Important one. In 1974 Richardson said, unless there ls .some reallocation of futl or other occurrence Edison didn 't expect "we 'll be all right for fuel ." ' Winter Storm Strikes Nortli MN FRANCISCO (AP) -A winter storm struck Northern California today, unleuhlng rain, ,..... allcl powtrlul sotJtherly gales. The National Weather Service l•ued ootnn warnings al6i\1 the cout north of Point Arona for aoutherly wlndl l8 to 116 mlles per hour, deereaalna to :u to 42 m.p.h. tonight. Gale wamln11 are In ettect through Friday between Point Arena and Point Sur. Heavy mow was forecast In the Mt. Shuta.SIUJyou area and Sierra Nevada. along with winds ~ to 75 m.p.b. north of Lake Tahoe. • " ' l'roMP .. eJ ., RATIONING .. .___, rneanor1 In the pirtlclpating countle! of Orange, L01 Angeles, Alamed a, Contna Co$la. Modoc, Rlven!de, San Mateo, and Solano. Gov. Ronald Rea1an anld Wednesday that the odd-even plan will be enforced by k>c:al police and will be somewhat like Issuing traffic tickets. "Nobody'a gotng to com e and drsg someone a\vay by the scruff or the neck," he said. The criminal sections will be appllcable to both motorist.s nnd service stations . Reagan noted that in other slates using the plan there ha.s not been widespread breaking or the law. Reagan termed the county-by-county program temporary and aaid the restric- tions Would be lifted when county of· ficials decide tbe rush for gasoline has cooled doY.11. However, the governor predicted that several more or Ca lifornia 's 58 counties would join the progra m before 5 p.m. today , the deadline for getting in at U1e start. He said counties will be allowed to join or to drop out later, depending on local conditions. Reagan told ney,·smen hi s chief goal is to eliminate panic buyln.. and long lines at service stations. He said the plan will not solve the state's fuel shortage problems, and he urged motorists to continue to conserve gasoline. ""'e do this rel uctantly, because as I've said to you on several occasions, y,·e don't believe there is any reason for this panic buying," he said. "But it has reached a point in some coun ties where something bes to be done to cool this down." From Page J EGYPT • • • discussions began. Kissinger and Sadat were con· centreting on the next stage or an Israeli troop withdrawal in the f ·cuoled Sinai . Desert and continuation of the United Nations buffer role between Egyptian and Israeli forces there, The United Nations mandate expires April 24, Also bigh on their age-'a we~ Kis- singer's mediation prooosa!~ for Svrlan- Jsraeli troop disengagement on the oc- cupied Golan Heights. American officials in the Klsa:lnger party streS3ed that Syria "holds the key" to the second round of Sinai negotiations. They said the Golan Heights dlser11age- ment agreement must be arranged before any new pullouts in the Sinai. Sadat also has said Egypt will not return to the Geneva peac • talks until Israel and Syria agree on the Golan pullout. Kissinger came here Lrom Israel, where he brought from, Damascus a list of 65 Israeli war prisoners held by Syria. fliJ delivery of the list marked a major diplomatic breakthrough, since the Israelis refused to ne1ollate on dise ngagements until the Syr1ans turned It over. The Israeli premier, Golda ~r. saluted hls efforts Wednesday night. But Kissinger's aides said the secretary felt "in his bones" that the Arab oil embargo against the United States will last at least another few da ys despite their progress. 'Rescuers Save Trapped Woman SAN DIEGO (AP) -A woman who spent 14 hours in a canyon after ber car plunged 100 feet into rocks and cactus has been hospitalized ln serious condition, officers said. Eleanor Cloyd, Si, of San Diego was pulled out of the ca nyon Wedneaday by rescuers who lowered them.selves with ropes and cables. Police said her car ripped through a fence at the end of a dead-end 11.ttet Tuesday nigbt, hurtled down the canyon and came to a stop in rocks and un- derbrush on a ledge above a ateep incline. " News Flow Mushroo1ns By JOHN VALTERZA ot !tie .,..., ...... llttf THE CONTROVERSY over exactly how mu;eh a utility sbould announre , about the operation problems at a nuclear generating plant has been much in the news in recent months. And well it should be. At Sa n 'Ono!re's nuclear generator, two separate malfunctions of sorts recentl y took place and although they were duly repor ted by Southern Cali- fornia Edison Company to the Atomic Energy Commis- sion, no news releases came forth. Only last week. a pinhole leak deemed minor by the utilities y.·as discovered by a newspaper and , once again, the ho wl came fortb that the utilities should be more open with their Oow of Information. Now, this week, comes the overkW. Suddenly, the Daily Pilot'a San ClemenU! bureau ts receiving almost daily reports on the operation of the generalor. · V.&LTlllli ONE \\'.OtJLD TlUNK that we y.•ho have complai ned often about not being lold of event.s at Onofre would be thrilled with .sucb reports. Not so. ~· Each of the two releases submitted this week have a far dlff ent flavor than the simplified, easily understood releases that often com m utility firms. The San Onofre project reports seem to be intentiona lly written for the specialist In nuclear engineering. And they border on nitpicky trivia. ·0ne entry took a litUe time to decipher, but the gist of it Is tbat the e:eneraUng station's pennaneot crane apparently got Its license renewed . Hot stuff, huh! YET ANOTHER ENTRY translated into king's English hints that some-- thing may have gone wrong temporarily with one of three doodads that meas. sure dust around the plant Edison calls dust "particulate." If tbat doesn't thrill you, try this other entry : "Nuclear Instrumentation channel 1208 was replaced with a spam chan· nel as a result or a maUunction detected during routine system tests. The in volved ch&Mel provides a 90Urce of intelligence to the nuclear dropped-rod- turbine ronback circuit one of many redundant protection circuits.'' ·Comforting, Isn't It? Entries such aa these form the bulk of the material sent thus far as re- taliation to all the criticism heard over the two times at that problems were belatedly reported at the plant. THE INFERENCE that members of the media must drew from the latest utility game is that the utilities figure they'll bombard us with accurate, but unfathomable engineering until we get so tlred of reading the stuU, we'll lay Off. I Then. If something substantial happens and goes unreported, they will have a beautiful defense ! "Look at aU the effort we've employed to Worm tbe media and public, yet they didn't see fit to print it." · From the utility standpoint, the contusing technical language ls the best technique in this case. JF PUBLICISTS were lo tranalate the operating problems and procedures lnto layman ternu, the media ~-ould be running incident reports every day. , Edlsqa would suddenly ,tie; saddled with r.eama of clippings of operaUne problems at the eenerating station : the image of nuclear generation would need some eollshlna. and the promise of full dlscklluers will ha ve backfired. It i-8 much easier to tell everyone everything. And yet, tell them nothing. Huntington~ Station Yielding 'Ghost' Fuel By TERRY COVILLE ot "" oanr "'"' '''" City records say the empty Chevron service station at 1472 Warner Ave., Huntington Beaclt, hu delinltely been closed since last August. People who work near the atatlon say it has been closed, unused , un· manned , fo r nearly a year and a half. But Wednesday the ghost station eame back to life , at lea.st long enougb to supply a liquid nearly as scarce as rare blood -gasoline, a minimum of 4,000 gillons of it. A Standard Oil delivery truck spent three hours at the empty 1taUon sucking dry the underground tanU. The truck driver aakl he wa.s \I.king out about 4,000 gallons wh ich had been left there when the station was closed. Anotber worker, helping pump the gas, said it was probably sour 1rom belnl: 1tored so long and might have to be taken back to the refinery In El SeJUDdo. Skeptics who work at nearby servlct stations and otne-r business eatabll1b- and Newland Street charge that the tta· tlon has been used as a secret storage place for excess Standard gasoline. They say more than one visit -others at night -have been made to the supposedly dead station. And new locks heVe been put on the sup~ly unuaed fuel tanks. There are no locks on the underif'Ound tanks of the nearby operating au stat.Ions. Beat The Tax Man SALE! MARGI llt I GO TO ~'S TO COLLECT TAXES ON THElll .. , •• INVENTORY. I CAN HARDJ. y wan I . NO DEFROSTING ·.FREEZER/ \ REFRIGERATOR . :·.)8 -: ~~ BeaullfUI ;llmllne 1tyllng ••• wlU~ evtrythlng al · ' ' your flngert1p11 CANTILEVER ahelvea 1djust up tnd down. Ctb1ntt roll1111Jly on wheels. Aulomatlc let ma~efctn be adOtd al tny ti mt . 90DAYSCASH • • ND17 .. WITH APP~OYl!D CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., · Dowiitown Costa Mesa -Phone 548·7788 • I I I -' . ' , Thursday's ' Closing Prices • i I NEW YORK STQCK EXCHANGE · • SC DAILY PILOT fl1 Year's Higb-Lo~s Appear Every Saturday Dow Index Loses Several Points McCarthy • . . DAILY PILOT TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLlGHTS CBS fJ 8:00 -"Hello. Dolly." Barbra Streisand plays the title role in the n1ovie version of the long-running musical with \Vatter l\fi tthau as her romantic target in the TV premiere o~f tbis 1970 flick. KCET fD 8:00 -"Trial By Jury." This is the first in a series of eight Gilbert and Sullivan oper- ettas to be presented on this channel. Daily TV Log Thursday Evening ftlRUARY 28 "" IHJ(IJ~cmJCIJJll -u Killp IClf HeQey Cont'd lrom Sl'M. Kinas vs. AU1nll Fl1m1s. CJ) Clllftllllp el £cldlt'1 F1llltr I lrllrtr HIUbHlltt Dl1111b UM M1111ct I Dru• ol Je1nnlt Dtctrlc C..,1111 DM W111111'1 Town Tllk Tiifll Stoo111 fiOD _ (]J)ml~~~~:~~ 1'1 HttlOS De LllCJ' Sllow TM flinbtoo11 ....... ,.,, D Mn Coftz1lt1 Mnie: (C) (Zt11) "Ope r1tiH (1dw) '65--Gtof11 P1p- p11d, Sophl1 LOl't11. EI> twctlodl' Ud1e El'l lfllM llCtl f :JO Cil Dullt's ctleicr D MM: (CJ 190) "Help! .. (com) '"--'*" lutleS. lo~;r.:. """"" ...... I . .,. t:W.1lq Witt! tll• CHdldltu Uttle ltuull . 1<0 rn om .. n Cl) Mowlt: (Zhr) "Tht Wuten11t" (W11) '40--Cuy Cooper. I Secreb of tlle Dtep '#Mt's Mr Utt? I LM Luer ........ I (j) I Dn1• et Jt1nnl1 EM11rald1 . @ 1h"1pd Plfdlo'oo Todfr "Information PrOcusln1" f:CIJI""" QMIMl'A..r Ttle-lhvistl lll•iictl 1"" Stoeps I lodq Fl'lllll tlM OlrllJlk ........ -lilp kt Hodlly Kirlts ¥l. Al· l.lnta. IDDOUT ,_a ...... "A 1"11 Br Juiy" Thi firat °' ti1ht op11t"U w1ltlt11 br ttM brlltlant duo 11\d pr11111lt4 In ils tnliretr. ~ JuMS di Clie C.rnlh Mulklt Mowlt: (fir) "01111e1 Si&lllf" (dfa) '45 -Zachlry Scott, F11e Emerson. l:lO 0 (ill Ci) m fln~11111 C1pt1ln iyfrson 1n.d1ils men respond to 1 lire In 1n old t!Mllfl buildln1 wh111 1 vault filled wll h ••plosive nll11t1 film th1ealel'IS the enUrt netahbOf· hood. m MrN Grit/ill ShO'lr liIE) N0\'111 • '"' o 111 Ill ~ m '"""' .,,.,. IO !he Kearl" Afltl I lo'itly JOUlll 'woman dri\lls :"1e1 cs1 inlo Ironside's v1n, lhe cilitl le11ns sho wff11ed not lrom 1 slitht heart 1ttatk but from 111 old bltllet lh~l inovtd close lo her lle1rt. Tiit wom1n lllllst1 she never has been sllol Eliz1llelll AU!ley, Tony Eisley Ind Paul IJl'll. · bert cvest. m ~"""" 0 C'AINEi Strenglh WINS * ~lid Action-KUNG FU D (ill CI> Q) • .., fo "Tiie P1s- slon ol Choft Yi" C1lnt 1t1s l'llmun arrested IOf bank robbtrr in his CIUHt to pi'M lht illl'IO«llCI d I lotmtr Stn1olin p11tit }riled lot m111del. 1-llaclrl Mrul . Vlritdlda ¥11111 ""I" ... , LI Hien1 V1rletJ Hour 10:00 0 ~(I)@} m Mu Mc C1111nl17 USA Dionne Warwick•, Dick Millin, Nipsey Ruutll ind Geo11e Burns join host Mac Davis. ~mm• ... NIPI Gallery (fi'.I (j) m StrHll Of S.JI rrlll· dsu "R1m1>11e" " ~nl limn, min, 1 l1iend of SIM Kiiier, bt· romes a murder suspect 1fltr ht and otller residents ol 1 uime- ridden nei1hborhood 11111 1 viii· 7:11 B OnN Wdtr' Crut MJsterils 11nt1 uid. Robert Hooks and Janet ~ror Sai.-SiltlKe" (R) ad! Cm!· MKl.Khltn rutst. Htt:M't Henn @El Dni•I i1llr1. f!l ltbilld tk Unts · ~:;: ~~r 10:30 oo T•ili&ftl me .. ..-i=-$ ~ (C). (2lrl1) I ~::,.uo. i.italiMI tt Uf1 (dn) 59 -Tullt co• Osw1l6e C.lwo lHI Tum.r, John GIY!n. Us Din ftlka I= A Dl•t · ,,,,_ tM lord Ct•& , CI) l• l•l IM l111th 11:00 II 0 0 mm m Nns CIJ Wiid Welid ol Anlm1l1 (3) 00 ®) fJ) ID @ Nnr1 AccM Chlu111 0 Twlllitst Zone (()) Jl111MJ Dtn Sllow (6/ P11'1J' MISOll Cl Jon1rlla11 Wl11t111 Show Q Movie: (C) "A Time !Of KllU111" mtlM Cllo11I C1111 (wesJ '67-Glenn Ford, 111111,Ste~- IAS. GM11fe H1mllton. 7:4~ 0 Help ThJ Ntllflbor m Bradford Dillman Stars 1:00 * On Mission Impossible fJ Barbra Streisand in m Mission: 1111poslible * World TV Premiere of CE Mrrie: "1llt Y1111pl1e" (lll>rl-"HflLO, DOLLY!" Abe! s.11111. B<Q!CIJ)(JJ CIS Th ur1cl1r @(l)LINtlaSJ MMe: (e)" (lhr) "Ht.. Deir" Qj AlfrN HiltkKt PrlM•b (mus) '70---&rbra St11iuM, W11te1 fD o., II NiPI M1n11au, MicllHI C1awf01d, l ouia ArmsltGllL Muilnne McAndt•, E. (/jj (I)) 1lle P'ilffen J. P11ktr, Tornmr Tune. Doli,i l.1\1111:15 IE C:-1 34 ha 1111de 1 successful OWJpalion ol m1tdlm1lln1. SIM t1ku on tht ll:JO II (Qj ())) (J) CIS I.ate MIN: ditr1CUll 11U of loc1lin1 1 suil1blt IC) ......,., !!I lhw Yd"' (1on1) ll'llte tor Ille c11rt1nk1rous m11dllnl '64-Cliff Robtrboft, .lint foncll, ol Yonters, KorKt V1nderrelde1. Rod Tl)'lor. D Ql-@ag m mpWilsotl a ~m t11 m·1••••r cirs•• flip's 1uests 1r1 Redd fou. Don Q lllo'lll: "lk 111 Slffp" (my:s) Ac11m1, Melian Steven.son ind MK '46-4iumphny Boc•rt. ~:..,;.: "My llocd ftlllls Cold" Q l1ZJ {}) Ef) Wide W111d Sptdll (dr1) '65 -Troy Donahue, Jotr 12:00 Ci) Dr. lrut K.lssorll Ht1!111rton. m Mo'lie: "rH Ntw.Ull" (Wes) 0 CHOPPER ONE-AMBUSH 'SO-Randolph Scott. *BY ROOFTOP GUNMEN . ""' rn o oo @ oo .... Q @) t'tl TOl!!Ollotf l:Jo·m An-Nitflt ShO'lr: "full 01 l ite," "JUbll, .. "OIHI ''°d Tum" D @ (}) m Cho11911 I "Ambush" An Id In 111 underc1ound newsp1pe1 l11ds C!I i nd Oon to 1 rooftop 1un- m111 out lo 1ven1e his brother's de1th. 1:45°£1Movi1: (C) "Sir 81Kk Horses .. 1 GI Winners Get Airplanes (wes) '62-AUilie Murphy. * ON OEALER'S CHOICE! m Dt1l1r'1 Clwlc1 . Friday OAVTIME MOVIES U DIC) "Covrtlhip ot E6di1'1 Fi· tMr'" (com) '63 -Ronny Howard. Glenn ford, Shirley Jones. JO:OQ (}) "l llf1tl hH I hdllall" (wtS) '64-Audie Mu1phy. 0 "Altldr: 11 Ult Puppet People" (hot) 'S3-John AJ;u. ll:JD 0 ~11 I Hid A Millie•" {com) '32 -G11y Coop11. "Tiit Cit Creeps" (hor) '46-lois Colt!tr. lZ:OD m "Wife Ver1u1 SK1tll1Jn (com1 '30--Jean H•1low, Clu~ Gabte. J:IO £1 Movie: "$e1led C.111" {d11) 'SI-Dana Arnlrews, Cf1ude Rains. Z:OO 0 (C) "RR Wind in Effn" (ldv) '!t8--Esther Willi1ms, .lei! Ch1ndltr. CE "I Cowtr Ult Wu" (1ctv) ·37_ Jolln W1rne. QJ "Cblrll's Uttle Dnils" (d11) '45 -1'1ul Kelly. l:OG Ci) "lop Hit"' (mus) 'l5 -frtd Ast1ire, Cin1er Ro1u1. lij (C) "A Min C.Jled C111110n" (wes) '69-Ton1 fr1nciosa, Mlch1el SIHllin. 3:30 U (C) "Now ftu Sle It, Now TH Oo11'r (com) '68-Jonathan Win· ters, Steve Allen. @ (]) (C) "Wtlut'• Ct11r11t" (com) '52-5111 Bo11er. 4:30 (1) S1m1 IS lOAM listln1 (ijj (j)) "f1om Heie ll fl1rnltr" CollCI. (dfl) '54-Burt l1ncaster. KOCE, Cll1\N1'iEL 50 Orange County's UllF television sta tion. KOCE·TV, has scheduled the follovdng special programs today. Detailed Jistings of Channel 50's programs are carried in the Daily Pilot's TV \Veek each Sunday. 12:GCI SESAME StllEET !Cl 1:10 EOUC.ATIONAL SCHOOL INFOllMATION (Cl l:ID I (AN READ (C l IA) "Oflee lJPOft A Time" -C~lklrtt1 rftfl•t l ltMI folk !flt "1'111 Gri'il Big Ii'*""""' Turnip," l :fJ COVEil TO COVE ii (Cl !Al "Thi Wind 1n Ille WI"°""'" -A tl1$11C work In chfldrefl'' Hl'll'tture. l:d llll"l"LES (() /Ill "Bodv Talk" -To hllp c:Nklren llftdtr'l•nd the! It 11 poMlble ta <omnwnk•ll I nd lio tllCJlllif' ,_IN I~ llodll, ~''"°""· 2:0I ALL AIOUT YOU ICI (Ill ''SnltrlM. Wl'lliollft. et'llll MMlloff'' -To -~ cfllllH'lll .. ,.,.. of fOl'IM li'ld 1t11 llDOY'• llfltHM .oefWllM .. """ """"' 2:l$ INSI OE OUT !Cl (Ill) ''Tr1vtrtn• $""8" -T• Mlp dlltdren con11c1tr "" ...,.,tneo of l'l'IOvtl'Q l!I ·tellllol'I 10 t11t '"*llf' of IOI• I nf ..,..r•llOI\, ' f :» CAllllA.SCOLDIDAS !Cl a:ot ~Niil'$ CLOTHING COflNEll (C'I Htl '"""°'"'' M9rtifll, T1ltor ' •-",... -L.tttM ' J:M l)tMl!NSIONI IN CULTUllES ICI llll "A.re~ -t.lt.Mfl ' •101 ~l!IHANO SKtfCHINO ICI C"J ""11'1111111 '' '*""""" -._. ~:JD ELECTRIC ('O~PANY fCl S.00 SESA.ME STllEl!T IC) 6;00 OMNIBUS JO CCI <Al "Ai CIO$el' LODI!; -Roscoe Lte Brawn" - TM noted Dl•tk IKIOI' WVl'"kl W!lh Or•"9e Co.ti! Collt9f 11u0tnl1 on Ol"tkJrmel'll af O•MMllC Kfllll, •:30 FREEH.I.NO SKETCHI NG (Cl fill "Shldl1111 It 01rkMU" - L•DO!'I ' 7:GCI ORANGE COUNTY ltEVIEW IC) TM "mav11!111 af ""' l lr'' IOI' 0rl"9e CCIWlll•"'· 7:)0 CONNIE'S CLOTHING COfl:NElt ICI "S"'pplfll. M11rklng, Tl!iol' ll11ll1>Q" -LtS$001 l -Wit!! Conlll1 W.1rch. l :ot FOCUS ORA.MGE COUNTY (CJ !Rl "Consumtr W11cti11001" - H°'t J im CooPor dl1eu1"' fho r1!1Urfs !a g~ s1tl1lldlo!'I from • Mltl!ltd 11ncondll!ontl 11utr1ntto, I ncl Ille Orange C1111nly Olffco ti Can111mtt" Ailf1lr1. 1:30 WOMA.N (C\ "The E!fUll lt!OMI Aimendment -P1'1 11" -l"rlylll1 Sch•llY •nd G!!lnt W1tH1m1, l'tlll'O aut»Oktn ~tnll of 111o Equ•I lliohls Ain'llflGmlnt, wlU dftcUM lfltlr abj«tron1 la rhl ~ rnh!on to !ht (Gflsrttutlon. f :OO FIRING LINE IC ) Wlltltm F, luckloy, Jr .. 11 tloll to 1 Mrl .. ol "'°""hl""°OVOl(/"9 • • f b 1 I tf\(OUnltt'I wl1ft I llnt<vO oil 111 11111 lni.tftlllontl fl91Jr9$, lto min.I Caddy Hose Reel • HMVY llkrty co11slructi•n • l11y •• ., to store olHI move .,our ho s• • ltrrl con It. 111Mv..d from stend 14aa ~-... Tiil.. < .... .. ., ., . ·" ~·~ Glass Globe Hooded Fixtur~ • 11 ...... ktiUstlMI (ffllfl tlllipo ,,... tt.tfih«sititt • Att..ti •Y iKW •. ' ..Yr ... t ................... ......... ..,,.... -... R£G. aaa -10.9S DON'T WAIT! YC>ll¢4tl ·HAVE TJ¥. . , · BESt .• TI~ THE t HQUSE-. ... _~~A~ _,,SAVE! , ' • Durable, Molded Design White Toilet Seat REG. 3.29 ., ' • lot:tt-losting, sturdy model • White finish will lost, and last • Install it yourself ••• its so easy evtn the wife <an do it! • Now selling at a special low, low pri<e .•• buy now and sowel 229 ' • "'*' "" "" ' . ..-··-~ ··--·--· .. 1:··· .. , ..... ~-~ .. --............. ,_ .... , .. -..•. "! ..... .,·-:.~··:."·;":"t""'"!.•--'!"'-... ~~'!"'-'I""---~--~""" ... :. ( ~ ·~~ t . :,. . ... 1 __ _ 'i~ "''· .l7 ,)> .\it ~~~~~e~n,~ H~9d 'Swag l=ixture "· ~ • S.IJ'f'ttir Ne...htH ... •WWte._....._,... · ••na-ffiltt witti ....... ...... ~ 'Sftk*iiMWH -,RIG. 7aa 1'i:ts . ' ' ; • '· . .. Built-In, ft 7"Ceilit,g ~' • 'S.-• -.... flfl ,... ... . .,....w ............... .... • ~-.1r..-.w_w-..,.' . ..... ,.,,.(. 899 ·1 ., ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' 11105 ,.. ~e WGaRo Golden Vigoro"' Lawn Fertilizer • S'"i9l 1low-t"elM11 l•r1M1'9 ~· k..,1 l111ili1"'9 i.., .tt.r rM ,.., it •al • Gr ... 1 fl'n• N11 n4 k•tJS it llHll for w1olr.1 • tS4."' '"" stilt-111. ft. 2s9 Plastic Ball' .. 'rank F!Oots • ... T ) ' ..itl .... J oJ "" . . ,, , •• .. . ., ,, ,, ·' ' '· .,. ·.1! . . •, } ,I . ' • " .. • " ,, ·, ' ~l. • ·, -' • . . " " . • ":I. • , 19~: ' ' • Repl4iaim~ ·Strainer Basket • "'* ............ )f .. ..... •h ............ ..... •• .,,.,, ... l aac l ..... , , True Grit! Flint Sandpaper 3 1h" Swi1'ef BerlchViie • M.-y4.ty.-. , f/4~~, Man-0-War ·t ' Marine Finish . "''"'"" ,,_ ........ "' t (HllO, 111ffillfll If fifll pits • Fi r oll yeur Hlllli11t <'-''" • lc•111r11i11lly ,ricff t• MY•I RIG.s· 3oR' 5c Per Sheet ' J • • • J '"'· ..... -'Wi'Hk. .... ""'" ........ ..i;IJ . • 11'1 I .... eir,.....,,edtl,etc. "' . . •A-.,ot..hJI. N M41 ...... , • W..Cn .. t.tn .. 32! -· RIG. 4.JI 1 r r I I I , I l ;I ,. I ·I I ' ' ' r I I • 1· • - • r \ ' ' I I Today's Flnal Laguna Beaeh , EDITl10N N.Y. Stocks ' VOL 67, NO. 59, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THU RSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1974 TEN CENTS J ' " . " ·' ' . . ., • ' 1 U.S., Egypt Off i·cially ' ' I I l · I I CAffiO, Egypt (AP) -'Ille United Statea and Egypt today formally an- nounced resumption of full diplomatic relations broken ot:r since the Middle East war of 11167. The announcement came in a joint declaration read at the White House at about the same time it was being disclosed in Cairo. where Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger was meeting with Egyptian leaders ln his latest Mid- dle East peace-making campaJg6. Jn addltlon to 11 general upgrading of cont.acts, the moye meana the Spanish Embassy ln cairo Will DO longer hoU!e the American diplomat.le delegation to Egypt, headed by Ambassador Hennann Eilts. Similarly, an Egyptian delegation headed hy Ambassador Ashraf Ghorbal will move into facilities of its own in Washington, where it has been working under the Indian flag . The two ambassadors have· been in place since Kissinger and Egypt's Presi- dent Anwar Sadat agreed in principle • Ufill to restore diplomatic relations in Novem- ber during a visit to Cairo by the American secretary. Relations had been severed since tbe six-day Middle East \Jar of June 1967, when Egypt broke them off because of the American role in favor of Israel. Kissinger returned to Cairo t<>f:!ay for talks with Sadat at a rest house overlook- ing the Great Pyramids. The Egyptian leader greeted him warmly with a tradi- tional Arab embrace and suggested they both pose for photographs with the Detty Plllt, Stiff PJIClft THIS WEEK IT'S BEEN FOOTBALL, FAST •AND FURIOUS, ON THE LAGUNA GRIDIRON Liberated Junior and Senior Girl11re Practicing for Friday Night's PoWdei-Puff Clish Plan for Laguna ,Streets Seen Facing .Rocky Going By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ftM O.llr Plitt Shltt A general plan transportation element that wouJd keep streets in Laguna Beach at their present size appe.an: to be in !or •om•! roogh sfedding befo"' the Laguna Beach Planning Ccmmiasion. A fourth draft ol the element, one ot eeveral required by state law, failed to meet with commissioners approval Monday. · Planners voled 3 to 2 to con- tlmle discussion on the element until ¥orchl8. . The proposed element was recom- mended for commilsion approval by a broad-ha!led citizens commifu!e which llllilied Laguna's traffic and parking ' ' • . The ""atherlady sees a !0% chlnre ol obowers Friday with cooler temperatures along the Orange Coast. Highs of 55 at the bead!el wtJl rile Jo llO Inland. Over- night loWJ In the lower 50s. ~L. .M, • .,. 41 -. -..... ...... .. ·-.. DM9 ........ '' .. ..,.,...., .. ' .. ,.111111"''"' ... -.. • ··-""....... ,. IWI I I ?! --.. -.... •, .,•.., I problems for several mcioths. One of the major recommendations is that all existlRf traffic lanes in the city should be mamtained. The element also states that ·major roads providng acteSS to the Art Colooy -Pacific Coast Highway and Laguna Canyon !load -should Doi be enlarged to .handle more traffic. Commissioner J1clc McDowell re- quested continuance of the matter. He suggested the element was a n t I - automobile. Commissioners La r r y Campbell and Michael May joined McDowell in requesting the element be deferred for more study. Cbalnnan Roger Lanphear and Com- missiolJer Sally B<llerue 181d they felt it was time the oomm.lsslon acted on the element and -ll Gil to the city council for adoption. The element would require any street extension or other transportation-related pn>ject to be approved by the planning comrni'8ion. The cornmiJlioa would have· to decide whether the fl!Ojecl fit In with the general plan. "'!be lranaportatlon goal Is to avoid 'the creation and encouragement ol ad- ditional vthlcular traffic wtthin Laguna Beach ind to encourage aUemato fonns ol tromportatlon," the proposed element states. To accomplbh that goal, the element (See tRANSPOllT, PllO II ' . ' 1 · ... Gridiron Girls Collide Friday At Laguna High Some Of the tD<X'e liberated girls at Laguna Beach High School wi!I be taking to the gridiron Friday night in the an· nual Junior-Senior IVwder Puff Foot. hall Grune. Game time is 7:30 p.m. at Guyer Field. 'Ille girls have been practicing all week for the game under the direction ol varsity football players. Other members of the football squad will dres.'i up as cheer and songleaders. During halftime, the Powder Puff Princes .wlJI be prerented. Princes in the court include Peter O>ttam, Jim Slmrns, Hank Miller 1 Eric Heard, Robert Alire, Robert McCarty, Per Hendriboo and Sadir Gun. Tickets for the game may be obtained at the high school Activities Office or at the gate. Price is 75 cents for students and 11.25 for adults. Festival J uryi11g Slated Marcli 9 Jurying for the l974 Laguna Beach Festival ot Arts wm be he1<f lrom 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mardi 9 In Irvlne Bowl, 850 Laguna Canyon Boad. ~ Artists wi>hing to exhibit' ~ this yeor's lhow sbould bring ~ samples of their work to the boWI bet .... n 7 and l6 ..... Fllllk'al ol Art. )urm will Judge the worlr betweeo 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Artlsll l11IY Jllclr up their -between S •and 5 p.JDJ The jury'• results "!ll .\be pooled "' the festival o1nce -lnJlde the main gate • Friends Once Again 1 • pyramids as a backdrop before their discussions began. Kissinger and Sadat w e r e con- centrating on the next stage of an Israeli troop withdrawal in the r~pied Sinai Desert and continuation of the United Nations buffer role between Egyptian and Israeli forces there. 1be United Nations mandate expires April 24. Also high on their ag~ ~a were Ki s- singer's mediation proposal i for Syrian- lsraeli troop disengagement on the oc- cupied Golan Heights. \ American officials in the Kissinger party stressed that Syria "holds the key" to the second round of Sinai negotiations. They said the Golan Jleights disengage- ment agreement must be arranged before any new pullouts 'in the Sinai. Sadat also has said Egypt "'ill not return to the Geneva peac , talks until Israel and Syria agree on the Golan pullout. Kissinger came here from Israel, where he brought from Damascus a • I ! li st o( 65 Israelt war prisoners held by Syria. His delivery of the list marked a major diplomatic breakthrough. since the JsraeUs refused to negotiate on disengagements until the Syrians turned it over. The Israeli premier, Golda ~1eir. · saluted his efforts'\Vednesday night. But Kissinger's aides said the secretary felt "in his bones" that the Arab oil embargo against the United States \Yill last at least another few days despite their 1 progress. um es I nn 4 Treated .At Hospital In Clemente By JOHN VALTERZA ot ttM ~IW Plitt St.ff A fumigation project that somehow went awry sent .a p:>werful insecticide laced with tear gas through all three levels of the San Clemente Hotel Wednes- day night and dozens of elderly residents were evacuated. -~ Police and firemen took four residents of the hotel to San Clemente General Hospital for emergency treolm<slt for 1!9usea, ai; lrrilalion cauoo.d primarily trom the IF --Firemen oald the gas is lntentlooally hlended with the li!sectldde methyl bromide, because lhe bug-killer has no smell or its own. The~ ev.acuation, .orderfy ... and .without. any panic, began shortly after 8 p.m. and police brought about 30 residents out in pairs and shuttled them to two (See EVACUATE, Page Z) Laguna Firemen Join Teamsters For Pay Status · Tlie Laguna Beach Firemen's Associ>- tion has joined the Teamsters Unlon in a stepped-up effort to convince that city that its members should receive extra pay if they take on added responsibilities. The Teamsters will pr'ovide the association with a professional negotiator to handle association proposals presented to City Manager Al Theal last month. Fireman Jim McCrary, speaking for the association board, said men holding the rank of fireman often have to perform work handled by engineers, a higher rank carrying more responsibility, with oo increase in pay. Similarly, engineers often have to fill in for men in the rank of captain, McCrary said. "It wou1dn't be a problem if it ha~ peoed once in a while, but it U happening a lot more than 50 percent of the time," he said. McCrary stressed lhe firemen 8.re pleased with the present base pay they are now getting. Beginning firemen earn $885 per month and can move up to $1 ,060 after three and a half years. Engineers salaries range from $968 to $1,160, while captains earn from $1,060 to $1,271. McCrary said the Teamsters Union was se1ected because it ha! gone on record against strikes, work slow downs (See FIREMEN, Page I) ! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1 ·1 Delly Pilot Stiff Plllft 1 VINTAGE 1920 PILE DRIVER POUNDS THEM IN Wooden Pilings Will Hold New Main Beach Park Se1w1ll I Pile Driver Launches Laguna's Park Seawall be on hand, according to Mayor Roy 1 Holm. I Huffing, puffing and belching huge clouds of white steam, a vintage 1920 pile driver began setting the pilings for the I..agu.,a Mai~ Beach Park·seawall Wednesday. The pile driving whioh began at the south end of the pc)rk near the Hotel Laguna will continue for about eight days and proceed north toward Heisler Park. Dedicatk>n of the park has tentatively been set for June 21 and a host of federal, state and local officials will The pilings, rammed into the sand by the steam powered driver, are a ~ specially treated timber. Because of i assorted shortages -shortages or lumber, shortages of fuel, the truck l1 drivers strike and others -their ship-~~' ment was delayed about a month. Bud Curry, general manager of Mall Craft. Inc., said the project Is 1Ull 1 on schedule, however, , Despite its age, the SO yeaN>ld pile driver is in tip toP condition, said John 1 H. Hurley, representative of Pile Driving & Equipm..ent Rentals , Inc. ol Long Beach. Cl~im Lodged He said it has set pilings throughout Newport Harbor and Huntington Beach. 'Lot Ruined by Moratorium'-Ma1i Fonner Art Gallery owner Larry Kron· qulst tod~y lodged a 170,000 claim against the city for damages he alleges have been done to an R-2 pfoperty he owns and Is lhcluded In the controversial -•torlum pa!Sed by the cily council. ' Knmqulst, 68, said he had Intended to tear down the "old aback" on the property lllJW, reJ>!aclng It •wtlh a three 'lJ11t complex. "They ruined the lot where 1 plan to retire for the rest of my ~." Kronqwst said as he filed the claim with City Clerk Dorothy Mus£elt. ' The lot Is located at 386 Magnolia Drive. Knmqulst said he bought ii for '40.000 several years ago. He said he was offered $60,000 for it a ftw months ago. He aald that under the !our-monlh moratorium, if he were to bulld now, with one unit. He objected tv the """"" e with one unit. lie obje<tod to the CWllCll'a ICtlon fr<eli"I! censtrucllon and pennltllng only reduced bui!ding . Gls Held in Germany In Drug Robbery STUTI'GART, West Ge~y (AP) - A highly decoratod U.S. Army captain : and an Army sergeant are being he14 in a German jail facing charges · of armed robbery ol • ..,ptctcd German drug dealers, authorities annoW'ICed Wedf\e!day. Capt. Robert L. Van B..,klrk, 29, ol !'lo<ence, S.C., Is being held In protrtal oonflnement In llUbulllla Sluttglrt, the Army lakl. :l DAILY Pl~ ___ LB ' • • Laguna Candidates Tell Views EVACUATE. . • • I i local motels which offered them lodgln1 for the nlght. 'l'Welve c3ndldates for Laguna Beach cllJI Council wltl ccnlronl i.a,una voters Tutaday. The elec t.orate will chose three for four.year terms. T\l.•o of the twelve are write·in candida tes. T~~id voters in n1aking their choices. the Daily Pilot presents the background aod positions o! the candidalcs on com· munily issues. The candidates are \Vayne Bag11n , f\1argery Bentley, Jon Brand. Nancy Casparian. Jan1es Gillenwater. Car! Johnson (incumb<nt), Beth 1.4ds. Te<l Sparkuhl, Phyllis Sweeney (incumbent), and Gary Weber. \Vednesday, the Dally Pilot presented statements by the first five candidates in alphabetical order. The rest <ire presented today. . Formal candidates were asked to re- spond to the foll0'111ing questions : -City Finances: Is the city taking on more than it can handle . If so, what should be cut? If not, where will the revenue come from? -Development of land surrounding the city: What should Laguna's role be in guldlng or restraining that develop- ment. , -What Future Controls should there be. for Arch Beach Heights where 2.500 square foot lots exist as building sites? -Off-Street Parking: How , should it be financed and in what amounts? -Shopping Complexes: Is Laguna Beach going overboard? Should the city try and Buide, restrain or encourage this trend? 1bere bas been no attempt to correct errors in fact made by candidates in statements. quoted directly. Tuesday, polls will be open from 7 a.m. to · 8 p.m. Votes will be counted at the polls and results posted at City Hall. The City Hall switchboard vdll ~ft:l'M.in .. Jl~.tt _P:.rui .. X.~-~idel_!_~ .. n1ay call 4~1124 for the latest returns. CARL JOHNSON Carl E. Johnson Tells His Stand Carl E. John.son, 52, of 616 Mystic View is an incumbent city councilman. He is senior research associate with Chevron Oil Field Research Company and a lecturer at University of Southern California. He holds degrees from UC Berkeley and UCLA. Prior to his election to the council in 1972, Johnson served for three years on the Laguna Beach P I a n n i n g Coinmission and was chairman fron1 1971·72. He served on' the Citizens Advisory Comn1Htee for General Plan Gools. Johnson has lived in La,1?:un.: Bf'ach for 12 years. He and his \\'ife Sieglinde have l\l.'O daughters. ,;I am running for reelection because I "·ant to remain in a position from "·hich I ~an fight most effectively for the best interests of Laguna Beach and its citizens. This includes opposition to OIANGI COAST LI DAILY PILOT lht Ot•t>O• Coan OA.ILY PILOT, wllh Wlllell 11 COflib!neo Hit H•W>·Prts .. h. PUbll"*I bY tl'lt 011"111 C0.$1 Pllbll ... lnt Cttnrr.nv. 5,,.. rite ldlllont •re P<ltllkillld, Moncl1v ttiro11911 Frldly, for C.I• Mt11, NtWflll'1 9Hcl!, Hvntt1111ton e.t~l'l/Fovn1 .. 1n \/t!lty, L19un1 kadl,. ltvlM!kOGltb•ck ffMI S1n C*""-nttJ $tn J~n C'IPIOr1t>C .\ 1ln9i. 'Wlol\el ldltlofl i. pUb!Mld 5••~ra1n •llCI Sund~~'· '~• prlncltolr Plllll11~1"' Ol•nr 11 •I JJU w.11 11¥ S!fttl, Costt M•w, (1tllorni., mH. Rob••t N. We1d P,...idtnl '"" P110111~., J•ck R. Curt•'v Vic• Prnld1111 '"" ~ ... ,.1 "'"''''' Tiio"''' K11wil liGl19r lftoft'l 11 A. M.,rplli"' M1111tl"9 !•1"'1 Ch,rJ11 H. Loot Rit)•'~ P. N11J A111111"1 M~lno E 1ton ,,.. ... .._Iii Office 222 Fere1f Awtn 111 l,l1ili11g Addr1u: f',0, l1l '''· 92652 °""' -c .. 1. ,,. .... , J» ... , ,,.,..,, .. ,, frol...-i'I IHt~: JlU Ht wpott l 0Vltv1ra fl1o111tlflflort lt•tll: 1111J auef\ '°"'"'',.. l+fl •Cltf'Mti!t: ---., c.,,,1 ...... 1 ,.. ...... 47J 4J 642-4111 ~ O'ltd A4-1t t11 '41·1671 ~ ........ ,., ..... , , .............. .... ~""''· ,,,,, O!'... Cioltl PWl!.,,11'111 °"""'"'· Ho -'"'*• 1'111o!r1t-. lflltr'flt ""'"-tr Ml•ftfl.-11 "'""" -~ .. """"""'"" Wll'hwl '*'-' ,... ...... ., .,.,,11111 ...,.,, ...... , .... _ ........... (Olli ...... , ~ &wtcrlll>liln .., (Aftltt' '1'5 ,....,.,.,, lw IMll U.lf -"11¥1 "'lllftn' .... .._,..,_ UM -1111¥, high rlH and retenUoo ol the 36-loot htlght limit, defM.'le of the low density, low PQPU!a1ion land use element of our genera! plan aod pmervalion d open space 1I011f cjt)' boundaries and In th• greenbelt. -City 1''inances: "~1trary to n1ost opiok>n, the city is doing well financially. Jn the last two years we ha.ve had two balanced budgets and recstablish('d u nlOdest reserve fund for e1nergettcies. Ot COUC'S-0, the city just Ilk~ an individual family can always thin k ()[ 1nore things to buy than ils revenueis will allow." -Surrounding Development: A major battle that lies ahead is the establishinent of Lagwia's zone of infl uence .'.It the cow1ty level to include the Lagw1a Canyon watershed and the open lands surrounding us. This will be opposed by some growth-oriented interests but success is i1nportant if we are to have an effeetive voice in protecting ourselves from the flood haza rd, traffi c load, 'and population cru.sh th at wlll bear down on our village if typical urban development in these areas is unrcstrainect" -Arch Beach Heights: J o h n s 01! advocates tighter zoning controls, design review rcquiren1ent s and use of revenue sharing funds for park purchase. -Off Street parking: Johnson supports user-supported parking structures and public transportation. Financing would be met by meters and fees paid by may be over done. Bui , where the commercial enterprises in lieu of pro- viding their own on-si te parking. -Shopping Complexes: .. .there is probable commerical success of such enterprises is concerned, I believe it fooli sh for the city to substitute its wisdom for the private economic judgment of the experienced businessman." BETH LEEDS ' 211d Coun cil Tr y For Betli .Leeds Beth Leeds, 32, of 495 St. Ann's Drive, is an artist. She was an unsuccessful city council candidate in 1972. Mrs. Leeds is a graduate of Laguna Beach High School and a resident of Laguna Beach for 27 years. Mrs. Leeds was community consultant for the Un ive rsity of California and National Institute of Mental Heal th for Laguna Brach. She is a past 1neniber of tbe board of directors of the Historical Society. City Finances: "Realiz ing that the city has a budget of over $fi million. and also being av.•are that after studying last year·s budget, I could have cut out $2 million. I would have to say that our budget is not 'artist C(llony' oriented but developn1cnt oriented." -Surrounding Develop1nent: · ' Th e development of the land around our city known as the greenbelt would stop if the three of us 1 ~frs. Leeds. 1.frs. Bentley and Theodore Sparkuhl I \\'Crc elected bccawe a inajority is needed to be effective here. \\fe consider the Greenbelt to be the land directly behind the last homse before ,;1e open space begins." -Arch Beach ~!eights : "\Ve believe the residents of Arch Beach Height s deserve the highest priority at this thnc , that th e out-of-control building be stopped and property owners and residents come to an agreement that favors Parks and 01>en space. The fact that hornes are allowed to be built with no front , side, or back yards so close together over such large areas is Wlbelievable but it is happening now." -Off.Street Parking : "1e feel that there is a need for a park ing lot off L{l:guna Canyon Road to avoid sonle or the traffic snarls we have on the v.·eekends and during the summer m011ths. '' -Shopping Complexes: "\\le would encourage shop owners to create their ov.·n Images with gr1.--encry. murals on the walls, etc .. so ihat all of Laguna becomes a shopping complex in keeping with the artistic atmosphere that tourists and residents long for. Ru ss Continue Tests W.ISlllNGTON (AP) -The Soviet Union has continued ils extensive series of mWile tests in the PaclfJc by tes t· fir ing another new weapon, the Pentagon '8id Wednesday. Cu rbs Urged . By Spar kuhl Theodor Sparkuhl, 27, of 1261 Ocean Fronl is nn artist. He is a 15 year. resident of Laguna Beach and holds bachelor of arts and master ol arts degrees in clinical psychology. Sparkuhl was vice president of the University of tbe Americas Puebla A-fexico stud ent association. He was an urban and community development Peace Corps volunteer. -City Finances: "We artist candidates understand that the consensus here in Laguna Beach prefers to pay more for municipal services than most Orange County communities in order to guarantee high caliber services for the majority. Additionally we reoogniie the rights to live in Laguna Beach and the di£ficulty which the residents experience in ml!eting tax responsibilities. It is with this fact 1n mind that we prapose levying a graduated property tax here in Laguna Beach determined by income, thereby protecting the minority." -Surrounding Development: ' ' I f elected we will not permit any development of our Greenbelt and we will be prepared to apply any measure feasable to insure the protection of the disputed land . Tbe present owners speculated on commercially developing the land and lost as far as we three (Sparkuhl, Mrs . Bentley and ~~rs. Leeds) are concerned." -Arch Beach lleights : "Arch Beach Heights is in desperate ~ of being re-zoned in order to stablize the present condition . We three will allow a fire access road from Top or the Y.'orld to the heights if \Ve are electeq because \\le three will not . allow a'ny development of the adjacent property in our Greenbelt while the access road is in for use for city vehicles only. If the commun ity chooses not to open the access raod, \l'e v.Ull propose an additional fire station ... " -Off-Street Parking: Sp ark uh 1 propo.ses structure of two underground levels, one ground level and on~ elevated park on top of the structure . Structures \vould be financed through n1unicipal bonds, he said. Shopping Complexes: He states that as long as shopping complexes are compatable \Yilh existing est he tic qualities of the toY.n, they are welcome. PHYLL IS.SWEENEY Pl1yllis Sweeney Fil led Vaca ncy Phyllis Sweeney, 48 of 2775 Temple lfi!ls Drive, i's a member of the city council, having been apPoirlted in 1972 to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of the{I A-1ayor Richard Goldberg. ~1rs. SweC'lley is a real estate saleswoman and \\'AS graduated from the Universi,ty of Maryland. She is a 12·year resident or Laguna . Beach. She h'as four children. i\<Irs. Slveeney was active in the anti· high rise campaign, is a member of Village Laguna, Top of the World t-;eighborh.ood Assoc., Board of Realtors, Economic Priorities Committee, Parking and Transportation Committee, League of \Vomen Voters and has worked with Boy and Girl Scouts and Little League. -City Finances : "The city must take a hard look at ri sing costs of government and make some tough decisions. In 1972, th e city stopped deficit spending and also created a reserve fund of $190,000. In 1972, the council placed some services on a pay.as-you-go basis, thus ending gross inequities in sewer and trash billings. The city must seek to expand the economic base and actively pursue new sources of revenue for the general funds." _ -&IJToundlng Development: "Lacuna Btach's oommlllllty Identity. It's &ense of place, ia de.pendent on the prciservatlon of the buffer strips of Wldeveloped lanl surrounding It. We must ,.,k •Ille and federal help to make !he Lacuna Greenbelt a reality." Mrs. Sweeney said potantlal ... developen must r ~ s p e c t Laguna's concerns .and understand the hazardJ development poses. She oppooea . exten!lon of Alta Laguna Boulevard. -An:h Beach Heights: "It Is Lacuna Beach in miniature. Its problems are 4.'0mple:x and ils needs are many. It must have parks, a school to walk to, police and fire protectlob." --Off.Stttet Parking : Mrs. Sweeney notes the progress ot the city council ln developlna: a structure in Laguna Canyon near the summer art festivals. "l'hls will be financod by a cotllbioation of In lieu parking lees and parking meter revenue. The people using i.n4 · benefiting fro1n the structure wiJI pay for it. not LagWla's taxp.:iyers through the general fund. ~hopping .Complexes: Mrs. Swee~y SupPorts them as means of expand.mg city economic base, bul notes, "the city must ensure the new shopping malls adequately solve the traffic and parking demands ... tthcy) generate." GARY WEBER Crea te Tax Base Says Gary Weber Gary Weber, 39, 1570 N. Coast High\vay is a bartend er at the Hotel Laguna. "I have participated in partisan politics on the local. state and national level . In HMO was a candidate for the North Dakota State Senate. but v1as narrowly defeated by the incumbent," he said. -City Finances: "\Ve have to create a tax base to keep the city on Us feet. At the present rate of SJ),ll'lding, without a realistic goal in mind, we are going to be caught holping the short ~nd of the stick. Our revenue comes from construction and the present council's urgency ordinance on curbing construction in Laguna Beach is costing the city thbusands of dollars in revenue. This ordinance is down-zoning rather than u~zoning the community.~ 1 don 't say that we go . overboard in mass building complexes, but have a well· planned growth." -Surrounding Development: "Development of land surrounding the city -is inevitable in the future. If we were to restrain such development, the city would have to purchase such land at a cost of millions of dollars \\•hich would be utterly insane. Take Sycamore Hills project, for instan ce ... If this area were to deanne:< and come under jurisdiction of Or ange County, we would ·lose this revenue which would help our tax base. Looking at this realistically, why should we lose this revenue?" -Arch Beach Heights; ' · Fut u re CQntrols of Arch Beach ~lcight.'1 building sites should have been considered with thought several years ago \\'hen it was being subdivided, not now. _Many . at that time purchased those sites, rflade payments, paid taxes \Yith the anticipation of a view home in the future. Now, who are we to take away this right. -Off-street Parking: "I am in favor of struetural parking and the financing of such llrudun1 • al1ould '6Y for thems•lves and parktnc f... ..t at ~ rate commeMW'ate-w}th original cost construction.'' -Shopping Complexes: "I think the present trend in creating ah9pplng complexes in Laguna Beadt should be encouraged . . . these complexes add to the charm of our village concept. Many who live outside of Laguna Beach come here to shOp for Items not found elsewhere, espeCially art for which we are famously known." Two Write-ins Seek Positions Jn addition to the 10 candidates whose names will appear on the ballota:, two "'rlte-In candidates have declared for Laguna Beach City Council seats. They are realtor Paul St1,1art and savings and loan officer Fran Haller. Both candidates announced t h e i r candidacy in respo11.5e to a city council action opposed by the city's real estate intere~ts. Both oppose the controversial moratoriu1n the council applied to the city's 1nulti.fam.ily residential zones. Stuart, 56, has been a resident of Lagwia Beach for 14 years. He lives at 330 HJgh Drive and owns a manufacturing company and Paul Stuart Realty. Mrs. Haller. 43, ~ been a resident of Laguna Beach for 15 years. She was a candidate for city council in 1972 finishing fourth in a field of six. She is an attorney and employed by Lagwia Federal Savings and Loan as a data processing coordinator. From Pagel FIREMEN ... and sick cuts. The Teamsters, he said, was selected over the AFL-C10. "We had meetings with representaUv~ from both groups. We liked the Teamsters since we have a pretty conservative organization here,'' McCrary said. ·The vote authorizing the agreement with tbe Teamsters was 24 in favor and four opposed. Association members each will pay $8.50 per month to the Teamsters. Boycott Threat To Emmy Awards LOS ANGELES CAP) -Television's newly 11treamllned May 28 Emmy telecast has been threatened with a possible boycott by performers, writers, directors and produeen ·Who feel ti discriminates against regular series. Nearly 100 persons Involved in series television voted Wednesday night at a meeting to send a committee to the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences to press for a return to the previous system of awarding Emtnys to winners in all categories. Mary Tyler Moore, who was named to the committee, said "I would just as soon not at.tend. The new system is unfair." The television academy announced a new award structure Feb. 12 which eliminates individual Emmys in every category. Qua ke J ar s Mt. Etna CATANIA, Sicily (AP) -A strong quake jolted volcanic Mt. Etna and the city and surroundings of catania at its Coot before dawn today. Thousands woke up and ran away from buildings into the street and cotmtryside. Many spent the rest of the night in the open or in automobiles. fire A1arshal ·Don 1-lodgson, whe supervised the evacuation of ·the elderly: 111eo11, .. Id the fumigation project w .. auppo!i<d lo Involve only an abandoned but1ness building next dQor to the old hotel whlch was bullt at 124 A venlda Dcllfar in ~n Clemente's earliest daysi ;·Somehow the gas made it put 1t fire wall separating the buildings and apparently accumulated In the hotel basement. "From there. it lvas dispersed through the ventilating system," he theorized. · Sorne residents reported sen.sing the first indications of the leak late in the afternoon and said it became pro- gressively worse through the night. The hotel manager phoned police. -. Public Safety Director 21lfford Mu1Tay said this morning that tragedy was most certainly averted because or the fumes' discovery early in the evening. Had the leakage occurred after guest.a had gone to bed, the incident could have been far more serious, he added . Although the danger \\'as obvious, firemen and police found it difficult in some cases to convince the elederly tenants that they would have to speid the nig~t away from home. ~ One gttest -the last to leave - held out for more than 30 minutes until police coaxed her out. Mrs. Maude Courage finally left her room, but only when patrolmen promlsed to take special precautJons with her only companion - a cal n:.maj. "Bump-er." Se\·eral reeidents walked out of the hotel with police, only to try to sneak back again. One was seen leaving with his hotplate and breakfast fixings. Hodgson said a probe of t~e b ilding being fumigated was planned today to determine the exact source of the leak. He and l\1urray expressed alann that the fumigation firm, a Gardena com· pany, assertedly did not t'Onform to local eodes which specify that public safety agencies be notified of any such fumigation at least 24 hours before the job. No city business license was issued , either, they said. Hodgson praised the quick response from two local businesses, the San Clemente Inn and Algodon motel, which offered to put up the residents for the night with only a fe~ moments• notice. "They deserve credit, because If we couldn't find a place for those poor old folks, we would have bad a bigger problem on our hands," he said. From Pagel TRANSPORT • • • calls for a. better city bus and tram service, pedestrian walkways, blkeways, and parking structures located outside the city limits to handle tourist cars. The element also recommends the -city mtrict and 'possibly drop requlmnents for on-site parking at commercial establishm,ents and build parking stniC: tures to handle all downtown parking. A reduction of curbside parking would allow for pedestrian malls and bicycle Janes, the rePort states. The plan also suggests a bicycle rwte in the south end of town along <:.atallna Street; in tbe north end along Cliff Drive, and east along Laguna Csnyon and El Toro Roads. Bo y, 17, Charged In Three Ki11in gs Al.SIP, ill. (AP ) -A 17-year<>ld boy has been charged with murder in the slayings of three cemetery workers found shotgunned to death on the grounds of the Burr Oaks Cemetery, Police say. The youth, Thomas Riley. and his brother, Emest Jr .. 19, charged with obstructing justice, were arrested within an hour of the slayings Wednesday eftemoon. Police klentified the victims as William Todd, 47, Marvin Foster Jr., 24, and Larry Fo.ster, 19, a caretaker Who Jived at the cemetery. 'Ibe Fosters were not related, police said. Beat The Tax Man SALE! _, MAIOI ht I GO TO ~'S TO COLLECT TAXES ON THEIR INTlll INV ENTORY. I CAN HAIDJ.Y WAIT I . Beautiful sliml tne styling ... wllh everything at · your fingertips! CANTILEVER 3helve1 adju31 up Ind down. Cabine l rolls easlly on wheels. Aulomatlo Ice mak:e(C:an be added at any lime. • Ill . 90DAYSCASH WITH APPROVEO C~~OIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. ·Downtown Costa Mesa -'-Phone 548 -7788 , . . ) I ' I I \ I I Saddlehaek • ' EDITION • • .\IOL 67, NO. 59, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES I U.S., Egypt O'ficially ( I ( \ CAIRO, Egypl (AP) ·-The Unlled- :;t8tes and Egypt today formally an· nounced resumptio'rl of full diplomatic relitions broken off since the Middle East war of 1967. The announcement came in a joint declaration read at the White House at. 8bout the same time it was being diac1osed in Cairo, where Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger was meeting with Egyptian leaders in his latest Mid- dle East peace-malting campaign. ill addition to a general upgrading 15 Hopefuls Seek Five • of contacts, thi'move means the Spanish Embassy in Cairo will ,no longer ho~ the American diplomatic delegation to Egypt. headed by Ambassador Hermann Eilts. Similarly, an Egyptian de1~ation beaded by Ambassador Ashraf Gilorbal will move into facilities of its own in Washington, where it has been working under the Indian fiag. The two ambassadors have been in place since Kissinger and Egypt's Presi- dent Anwar Sadat agreed in prin~iple to restore diplomatic relations in Novem- ber during a visit to Cairo by the American secretary. Relations had been severed since the six-day Middle East \far of June 1967, when Egypt broke them off because of the American role-in favor of Israel. Ki!singer returned to Ca:iro today for taJks with Sadat at a rest house overlook- ing the Great Pyramids. The Egyptian leader greeted. h1m wannJy with a tradi- tional Arab embrace and suggdted they both pose !or photographs with the 1 ~ Friends Once pyramids as a backdrop before their discussions began. Kissinger and Sadat w e r e con- centrating on the ne:rt stage of an Israeli troop withdrawal in the c "X:Upied Sinai Desert and continuation of the United Nations huller role between Egyptian and Israeli forces there. The United Nations mandate expires April 24. Also high on their age:-~a were Kis- s~ger's mediation proposalJ for Syrian- IsraeU troop disengagement on the oc- cupied Golan Heights. American officials in the Kissinger party slressed that Syria "holds the key" to the second round ' of Sinai negotiations. They said the Golan Height s disengage- ment agreement must be arranged before any new pullouts in the Sinai. Sadat also has said Egypt will not return to the Geneva peac • talks until Israel and Syria agree on the Golan pullout. Kissinger came here from _Israel. where he brought from Damascus a T oday's Final N.Y. St o c k s • TEN CENTS Again ...-----' list of 65 lsraelt y,·ar prisoners held by Syria. 1-Jis delivery of the list marked a ma jor diplomatic breakthrough. since th e Israe lis refused to negotiate on di sengagements until the Syrians turned it over. The Israeli premier, Golda Meir, saluted his efforts \Vednesday night. But Kissinger's aides said the secretary felt "in his bones" that the Arab oil embargo against the United States will last at least another few days despite their 1 progress. City Posts Teachers Seek Cost of Living Hike I I I I . I I By GEORGE LEJJ)AL 0 1 the 01ilr ,llol SI.tit Irvine voters on Tuesday will select five city councilmen from a field of 15 candidates, including four incumbents. The two candidates receiving the most votes will serve for four years each. Terms of two years duration go to the next three highest votegetters. Since the filing period, the Daily Pilot bas run in~epth interviews of 14 of the 15 candidates. Candidate Jack Kish of 450'l Robinwood Circle, The Willows was not available for an interview. The following ·is a summary of the backgrounds and viewpoints of the four i.neumbents and 10 other candidates who are listed on Tuesday's ballot: i COUNCILMAN JOHN H. BURTON, , 17952 Aspen Tree Lane, University Park, ! ,_ is ai 38-year-:old tele- '.JI ' communical,i..ons and 1 marketing consult- ant Burton cites a need for "stability" in city government a n d calls for a return to ' the "idealism'' evi- dent when the city •UitTON incorporated. ffe favors achieving moderate cost housing through building innovation, urges development of a transit system. slipports increased police services and opposes excess allocations for bike trails. An English major graduate of UCLA, Bqrt.on led the cityhood effort, f0W1ded the Sooth Coast Republican Forum and is a director of the Bank of Irvine. COUNCILWOMAN GABR I E L LE PRYOR. 34, of 17726 Acacia Tree Lane, · I '" University Park, is ~. a housewife and mother of two boys. An honors gradu- ate of Stanford Uni- versity, Mrs. Pryor is ive in Junlor W men's Club, A erican Field Ser- the NatiC'nal Mits. R Wo n's Po!itlcal ·caucus, the League of omen \ot~rs .. alcog with council appointm ts including the League or catifornia Cit es. ··She ranks public safety as a first prlorily of the new council, urges prOvision or both Ww and moderate iDoOme housing in lhe city, ·looks for priservation of farm land open space an11 recommends a reduced planning bUdgel. I . COUNCILMAN E. RAY QUIGLEY JR., fO of 18751 Via Palatino, Turtle Rock, • '1 Long Beach, QUigley . . is a Marine Corps · veteran, is a director ', of the Friends.of UC Crvine and was a di- , ~or of the Irvihe THE LAST TO LEAVE -and M~ud•Courage, left, took more than a litUe·-<:<>axing out of her fum.,.filled room at old San Clemente Hotel Wednescfay night when fumigator's ~as seeped· into landmark inn .. With Mrs. Colirage is patrolman Mike Currell, center, who promised to take· special care of Maude's cat. "Bumper,'' in wicker cage. Fil'!' Marshal Don Hodgson, (right), lends assurance to relu« tant hotel t~nant. Clemente Inn Residents Stricken by Fmnigators ByotJ.2_H:'..~~;.~ A fwnigation project that i.>mehow went awry sent a powerful insecticide laced with tear gas through all three levels of the San Clemente Hotel Wednes- day night and ttozens ol elderly residents were evacuated. Police ancrfiremen took four residents of the hotel 1 to san Clemente General Hospital 1or emergency treatment for nausea and irritation caused primarily Thief Gets 2 Guitars And Record Player Two electric guitar1 and a record player valued by the owner at nearly $1,000 were stolen Wednesday nigbl from an · El Toro home, Onmge Oxmty She!'- iff's officers said. , Deputies said intruders who broke the front door window and unlocked the door by reaching in at the home of Thomas R. Lugo, 22, of 22001 El Toro Road, took the musical accessories from the living room while the family was absent. 1 from the tear gas. Firemen said the gas is intentionally blended with the insecticide methyl bromide, because the, bug-killer has no smell of its own. The evacuation, orderly and without any panic, began shortly after 8 p.m. and police brought about 30 residents out in pairs and shuttled them to two local motel! which offered them lodging for the nighl. Fire Marshal Don Hodgson, who supendsed th evacuation of the elderly guests, said the fumigation project was suPJK)5ed to involve only an abandoned busines,, building next door to the old hotel which was built at 124 Avenida Del Mar in San Clemente's earliest days. "Somehow the gas made it past a fire wall separating the buildings and apparentl y accumulated in the hotel basement. "From there, it was dispersed through the ventilating s)'stem1" he theorized. Some residents reported sensing the first indications of the leak late in the afternoon and said It became pro- gressively worse through the night. The hotel manager phoned police. Public Safety Director ~Ufford Murray (See EVACUATE, Page Z) By JOHN ZALLER Of ni. o.ur l"llot Slaff Teachers in the Irvine Unified School District asked Wednesday for a 15 per- cent pay boost next year to enable them to keep pace with the rising cost of living. Teachers also asked trumees for new early retirement benefits, more pay bonuses for college courses they take and a greater voice in the district's decision-making process. Teacher spokesman Virginia Poweu of Turtle Rock School stressed to trustees that all requests bad been "thoughtfully and analytically arrived at." point how much of the teacher request Train Hits Bus In Del ''Ma~;' Three Perish DEL MAR (AP) -Three persons were killed and 24 injured when their bus chartered by the Amtrak rail service stalled on a railroad crossing and was rammed by a Santa Fe freight train, authorities said. Officials searching frenziedly for vic- tims at the crash scene today surprised 34 illegal Mexican aliens, one of them a woman, hiding in box cars of the 66-car freigJlt train. All were taken into custody for questioning by the Border Patrol. "The windshield of the bus was stick· ing to the front of the train engine and people were lying oWide moaning and crying,'' said Peter Sokolow, a security at the Ocean Windows Hotel overlooking the crash site. ~e dead were identified as Carl J ph Bertram, 47, Ingelwood, the bus d er; Sky Jenkins, 6, Clatskanie, Ore.; a.nd Jennie Doescher, 58, Aplington, Iowa, who died in a hospital two hours after the late Wednesday night craslt Mrs. Doescher's husband Harvey, 60, was listed in critical condition. Young Sky's mother, waiting at the depot, watched in horror as the reight barrelled into the bus at about 35 miles an hour, firemen ::;aid . They comforted her while an ambulance took her husband to tbe hlspital. Aboard the bus1 the child had been playing with a deck of flash canls, with which words, phrases and pictures are matched. Under her body they found two of the cards. One read "and my sister," while the other showed a piC'ture of a gravestone and a single word - .. died." The train was not" derailed and no one aboard the lreight was injured, authorities said . Joseph Jones , Amtrak passenger (See AMTRAK, Page !) tanch Water DiS1rict ls an airline pilot and rather of two. · As·peechmajor I.It. OUIOL•Y graduate of Cal Stal~ ar# Greater Irvine Industrial League. JlaY Quigley urges a streamlined ~g process or ''partnership" with dff8]opers as a way to cut development ct*. He oppooes hoosing suboldles or "'4ioentralions ol single gr<llliJS of -le, la\lors an Internal bUs system to link to .:county routes and calls for a'dequale i:ampaign Spending High Four lrvi1ie Candidates Top $2,000 iii Expens es ' (Ste DOPEFULS, Page J) ' l' '.fw_o Killed in Ve_gas " Four Irvine • City Council candidates ~each have-spent more than $2,000 on · their cariipllgns, reports flied with the city clerk lliq . Councilman E. Ray Qu!Bley Jr. con- tinues ' to be the leader .In campoll!JI spending, reporting $571 In -1 .. , US VEGAS (UP!) -Two JM!rlOOS _. llld ....._., $Qll llP"'t '"' bif died and a lllird was wounded Wedneoday bebalf by "We 1he """Pie !or RaY in a mUJdet'tulcl® which appaNJl\IIy Quigley." Coatribulions lollied '3,289 u ~ .,,.., .a -brc>Pn .......,._nie. of-Feb. :a. . d;lid lnclUd«I Robert Kemedl Hall, 47, Councilman Henry Qaigley pj...,...,. o1 Las Vegas, a llChool bU1 clri..,.. ODd wllh -of "1,554. Gifts to ·SllarrY Lea Parker, :15, on atlnctlve bis ctmplign toW $4,a. tilonde who worked al a "alrlf>" bole! M.,... Jolm Burton Aid ,lhll, u of i-eNurant, died of a gunRI wound in . Feb. 13, his ca-1Jn hid received lbe 1'"'>at. • ' • -· .. .;)I '4,163 In --Erpemn tolaled !' ~ • 13,277 .making the Incumbent mayor's campaign the third most costly thus far. , ~fourth In the &pe!ldlng depart· ment It Cotmcllwoman Gabrielle Pyror's campaign group "Piyor·Commt-t." .. '.Pie organization allows cootrlbutioni ol .~7 and ex-oJ. 13,m for the period ending Feb. 23. <Uopaignl ol three othe~ ~!dates fall ID the fl,OllO to '2,0llO range . -Smith ol Turtle Rock reportl ......... ol fl,515 and expenses of $1,701;.Art Antholl)', alao of Turtle l!A>ck, lltla $1,212 In contributions and - Of flJ!!l;cand Robert West of the Colony I I • shows $1,200 in contributions and 'ex- penses totalling $1,IQ. Planning Commissioner Frank Hurd of University Park reported campaign costs of $586 and contributions of $782. candidates filing declarations thal donations llld costs wen> Jess than '500 for the period Include Carl Morrison of CU!verd,le, Mazy Ann Holden and ~ · Hob\lsteilt, both ol' Call!omla Homes. Also Jack Kbb of the Willows, David Lowe ol' the Racquet Club, Mn. Hazel Mym of -The· Ranch and Richan! B. "Dick" Clark qt Greentree Homes. Friday, caQd!ilates must flle campailn \~.:ftNDING, P.age J) ' without comment However, after the meeting. board President Charles Boulanger said there was "no easy way " to decide a~ this point how much of the teacher request% can be met. "We have a responsibility to the people in this community to: try to keep the costs of education in line," Boulanger said. "But we also have a responsibility to our employes to try to keep pace with inflation. "I just don't know yet how we're going to balance those two con- siderations,'' Boulanger said. Mrs. Powers explained after the meeting that the 15 percent pay hike request had been arrived at from a New School ',Irv ine High~ .. , Irvine school trustees decided Wednesday to. call their new northside hlgh school "Irvine High School." The action was taken unanim0\18· ly at the urging of Trustee Lee Sicoli, who pointed out that the name Irvine High School had finished second in a com- munitywide survey c on d u c t e d several years ago to give Universi- ty High School its name. "I'm especially intettsted in naming the new sdlool Irvine School since Irvine Elementary School is being phased out," Mn. Siooli said. "There should be at least one sdlool in the district that carries the city name." Groundbreaking for $9 million Irvine High School is slated for ne:rt fall. Police Arrest Viejo, Tustin Holdup Susp ect ·Orange County Sheriff's officers today jailed a man identified by them as the gunman who has pocketed nearly $1,000 in holdups at markets in Mission Viejo and Tustin. Deputies jailed Stanley Eucene Holmes, 21, on two counts of armed robbery after Investigation that Jed them to his Santa Ana home. Officers say they are satisfied that Holmes is the man who took nearly $500 at gunpoful Feb. 15 from the Thrif· timart market in Mission Viejo . Market workers said the intruder level- . ed a small handgun at them and forced them to hand over the takings before driving off at high speed from the area. Officers said identical methods were used last week in a holdup at Albertsons market in Tustin where a cashier was forced to band over an estimated $500 to a man whose description tallied with that of the Mlsslon Viejo gunman. Investigators said they hope to arraign Holmes on the charges in Santa Ana Municipal Court bole today or Friday. Irvin~ Fire Quenched By County Firemen Orange County liremen exUnguJ;hed ' a minor blaze in a ventilation blower at 17851 Sky Park Circle, !rvll)e, today. Only minor damage resulted from the fin> at Gree Wallace Productions In the Irvine Industrial Complex. foremen reported. ''mathematical calculation. ''Inflation this calendar year is ex- pected to go up nine percent/' she explaineQ_, "Inflation in the period January to June, 1975, for which we are now also negotiating, is expected to go up six percent." "We arrived at our 15 percerit figure simply by adding those two inDatioo figures together," Mrs. Powers said. If the pay hike request is met, it 1 would mean -a Deginning teacher just out of college wouJd qiake $9,59' in his or her first year in the Irvine The present base startnig pay is $8,343. school district. Mr,;. Carmen Perry, presid!llt of !be (See INCREASE, Pare Z) Saddlehack's Teachers Ask 'Agency Shop' By J AN WORm Of tho D.11/lr Piiot Sltff 1' I The teachefs• association of the Sad-1 dleback Valley Unified School -District will present a proposal for collective bargaining to di~trict trustees Monday. Following a districtwide teachers' con- ference Feb. 20, the facuJty association voted unanimously for an agency shop. An agency shop is a union term which means an emp loye does not have to join the faculty association to be hired, but would be required to pay a "representation fee" to the group, According to ~kesinen of the sad-1 dleback Valley Educators' Association (SVEA), both full-time and substitute teache_rs passed proposals setting up essentials of collective bargaining. SVEA president Jim Wehan said the group will also seek a written contract governing SVEA-administration relations and binding arbitration of grievances. During a three-hour evening meeting. the teachers made proposals which would in essence keep non-administrative, non- classroom persoMel from s e e k i n g salaries higher than classroom teachers. "We are asking for greater jn.. volvement in the decision-making process of the district,'' Wehan said, "including budget preparation and curriculwn development." They are also asking for "improved. programs" in mqsic, reading, physical education, food and work experience. Other reqliests include better facilities for media centers, and reduction in class size at all levels. The package lo be presented lo the board is the result of five months of deliberation, Weban said. Oraage • Weather The wcatherlady sees a 60% chance of showers Friday with coo\,er temperatures along the Orange Coast. Highs of 55 at the beaches will rise to 60 inland. Over- night lows in the lower 50s. INSIDE TOD~ Y A judge iti Alabama has beni occf.l.Sed of dispersi1ig mercy in return for sexuo:L favors from female defendants. Story, Page 4. Mvtutl l'llfHh M NatlOlllll HIWt 4. JS °"*"" Co•fY JI l"To\ l4 SrMo ll'trttr II -· ""' Stktl Motteft »U T ... \'..._ JI '"'"..... ~ --. _.. Nowt SI.at .......... 4.• , I ' • • .2 DAILY PILDl IS Thursday, Ftbruary 28, llf74 l'l'OMP.,eJ , :-cANDIDA 'FES OUTLINE VIEWS • • • Huntington malntenaoee o f city-o wn e d improvements. t'OUNCILMAN HENRY QUIGLEY, 33, ol 5132 Qlateau Circle, the Ranch, ts ·-a consuJti n11 ttono· n1lst and father of three. A gr:iduate of Johns llo pklns Uni- versity, he Is found· ing president of the Irvine Republica n Asrembly and "·as active in cltyhood ... ov101.• and lhe Irvine Cou n· cil for Educat ion. Henry Quigley supports the concept of a pennanent agriculture zone to preserve farmland, supports m a 1 s transit, looks to private enterprise to provide homes for all Income levels, urges development of off.street bike trails and suggests the city investigate ways of improving the school dl11lrict's tax base by zoning and land use planning. ARTHUR W. ANTHONY, 13, of 18691 Via Palatlno, Turtle Rock, is a retired Marine Corps jet pilot veteran of 21 years with infantry duty in the Korean War and a record of 100 missions in Viet· nam. A recent graduate in comniunications at Cal Stnte Fuller- ANTMDMY ton . he is president of the Turtle Rock Hills Community Association and headed the successful $50 million Irvine Unified School District bond issue election campaign. Anthony looks for unity in city government, favors increased police and other municipal services, likes general plan option one calling for a 320,00G- penon city. supports development m of an internal transit system and opposes sub!ildies for housing and property and sales tax barriers to prosperity and growth of tbe clly. RiCHARD B. "DICK" CLARK, 37, of 4162 Belvedere St., Greentree Homes. Is an engineer "'ilh Rockwell Interna- tional, An8heim . A mechanical en- gineering graduate or use, Clark "'as folDlding president of Greentree Hon1eown- ers Association and is the city's repre- ;entative to the coun· ty h-fosquito Abatement District. CJark opposes high density housing developments, believes farmland should 1 be saved, favors selection of a dynamic city planning staff to monitor Irvine ' Company plans, urges early development · of Town Center and opposes use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station for commercial flights. J\.tRS, J\.1ARY ANN HOLDE~, 26, of ~841 Gainsport Circle, California l-Toms, is a housewife ar.d mother of three and a graduate student in early childhood education. A graduate of UC Irvine with a major in classics, Mrs. Hol- den is a si:it year resident of the city. • HDLDl!M ~1rs. Holden fav- ors provision of housing In Irvine for stu- dents and employes of lndustrlal complex finns, although she opposes subsidies for housing. She urges retention of a low tal' rate, preservation of the city's r u r a I environment, provision of commuter rail service to Los Angeles and San Diego and development of Town Center. Russ Continue Tests WASHINGTON (AP) ...:. The SOviet Union has continued its extensive sel'ies of missile tesU in the Pacific by test- firing another new weapon, the Pentagon said Wednesday. OU.NM COAIT II DAILY PILOT TlW Onl!iM Olttt DAILY fl ll.OT, wlfl'J ""kfl Is o-b1'*' lht H-..,.,..._ It ~--fW ""' °"""" , .. ,, ~ltllifll ("""lltflY, a.,.. ,..,_ -'111Dn'1 ,,.. Miit'"'°'· 11\0l'Ml•Y "''911111 Frliffy ..... Cot.11 ~. H .......... ~ H11t1,......, a-111F-111n v11i.y, L.....,.. •llKll, trv~ls.ckll.O.c• .,., S.n Ci.-t•I ~ J-c...ktr-... lk'ttlt ""'-1 •lllori k INDlit.t!ed s.1vr1 • .,. •ho •~v.. Tl'le P"li'Pcl .. I IUb~Mlnf 1t.nt It fl UO Weil h r '''"'' Colli MtN, Clll'-"!la, ,,..,., Robt 1I N, W,,4 fltt1lllet1t ltlf f111DU.,._t J,,1i R. C11tl•v \fie. ,.,.....,.,,, 11'1111 Gtnfr11 Ml ... lltl' Ttiom•t ICtt•il ..... , Tltom•t A. Murphhtt M•,...lnt Edllo< Ch,1ft1 H. l••• Rlch1ril P. Nill Atlltllftl Mto'lfflnt E•11on ...... , .. ......_ lft4l '42-4JJ1 C'uln.4 .._hi I '4J.1a11 S-Cla 111 M ..,•tt-11tt: ROBERT J. HOL-"ISTEDf. 3', of 511% Yearltn& Ave.f California Iiomes, ls a department mane.- ger with S.rry L. Miller El1l!lneerinl Company, Irvine. _A arac1111hs with an auoclate degree tn tool deolgn rrom Los Angeles Harbor Col· lege, Hohnstedt seeks n1orc repre- LM l!D senUiUon on the cl1y council for north Irvine residents. llolmstedt favors completion of the Yale Avenue bridge over the Santa Fe Railroad tracks, opposes rapid transit while favoring local transit, suggests apen spaces should be saved only for specific uses and believes the city should draft a charter to guide I o c a I governmen t. FRANKLIN S. HURD, 43. of 18l6t Dewberry Way, University Park, Is an urban economist and father of two. He holds a bache· !or's degree in fi- nance and a master of business ftdmlnl· strati on dcgrf!e. both from USC. He is an Air Force veteran. a director of Irvine Tomorrow, member HURD of the city planning co1nmiss ion and former officer of Irvine Council for Education. Hurd selects no specific population limit for Irvine, but feels councilmen should set population policies to guide planning decision s. He supports citywide transit Jines, phasing of commercial development to coincide with residential m o v e · i n s , controlled growth of p o p u l a t i o n , preservation of agriculture, campaign expense limits and early development of ToW{l Center. ...:. JACK KISH, or 4502 Roblnwood Circle, The Willows, lists himself as a businessman-industrialist. He did not rtspond to DaJly Pilot requests for information. DAVID A. LOWE, 35, of 4171 Salacia Drive, the Racquet Club, is a Newport ~ Beach stockbroker and father of two. A communications major and graduate of University of Florida, Lowe is a . Navy vetera n and served on the origin- al city environmen- tal quality advisory committee. Lowe favors buf- fering developing villages with open space oppos'es subsidized housing, supports townhome and cluster housing solutions to increasing costs of housing, calls for citywide transit. urges city-school district planning coordination and supports expanded police and fire protection. CARL l\.10RRISON, 47, of 3632 Fenn. St.. Culverdale, Is an engineer with McDonnell • Douglas Corp. in Huntington , Beach. He and h.is ) wife, Helen. have ' two daught.ei-s, and have lived in Irvine three and a half years. 111 A Navy veteran of , .f World War II, Mor- rison earned a bachelor's degree at Northrop Institute and a master's de· gree in business from Claremont Gradu · ate School. ~torrison recentl y chaired the bicycle tra'il s study committee, has served oo the CUlverdale Community Associ ntion archi- tecture committee and "'as active in the cityhood campaign. He fa vors revision of city building codes , s ul> ports early development of Town Center, urges i mp rove d communications between city hall and citizens, UC Irvin e. and the industrial community and favors retention of agricultural open space. MRS. HAZEL MYERS, 52, of 15431 Lorraine Way, the Ranch , is an aeronautical en· gineer. A graduate of the University oC Iowa, Mn. Myers Is a member of the World Affairs Council, the Saddleback Valley Republican Women's Federated, lhe Art!> ritis Foundation of ' Orange County and served on the first city housing advisory committee. She opposes subsidized housing but fa vors location of moderate cost housing near UCJ and the Industrial complex. f\.frs. Myers urges provision of a civic center, establishment of an Irvine post office, preservation of prime agricultural land, creation of a city police department and continued controls a g a i n s t overpopuln tion by means or balanced development. ROBERT A. SMITH, 33, of 19122 Biddle a lt.om~ and father of ttA·M An bolior.J gradu- ate of OePauw Uni· versJty Jn Green· ca11tle, Indiana, he earned his law de- gree at Universlly of MJchlgan. A> one of the attorne)'I for tMltN l he lncorporators. , ... , •••• .n-4421 twrflltll, lffl. °"""' C:.t ...... 111111"' """-"'· ... -......... lll11tl••tifflt. ~ _,_ .. .. .. ,..... """"' ""'" .. ,........,. WltflllWt .,. .. , ..... ..... ., "'""""' ...... Smith w., active In tho cltyhood bid. .._. NII ....... •Ill .. Cllf• Mew, C.lf>Wft... .....flitf*'I ... "'"-11 .. ,,__, llr ... n u .1t ''*'""'' mUltll"I' .............. __,. • He chaired tho charter 1 I u d y commltttt, lhe hillsld• study commlll,., is vice chairman of lhe plannJn& commission, past chairman ol Irvine lfftrnorrow and is co-founder of Irvine f • Mule' Qionk. He II pmldtnt..rect ~ Gh G or Fti•ndt ol VCI. ost as Smith favor1 oqual h o u 1 I n 1 oppo!!lunlUet for all lncorne levell, urges .- hlllalde pnHrV1tion, and 1 u p po r t s cooperation '"th uc 1rv1ne. . • Pumped Out ROBERT J. WEST, ll ,of 3173 Clnnel Ave., the Colony, l! a real estate analyst. San Onofre Powe1· Plant He and hll wife, Nina. have an adopted son. , He hold3 a bach· e1or's degree in economics and a master of business administration de- gree, both rrom Stanford University. w1sT He i! a former ci ty planning commission chairman and has been acUve ln Irvine Tomorrow. West supports systems approaches to creating government services to meet both social and economic needs, favors provision of equalized city services citywide, looks fo;r a reduced overall tax rate for Irvine, would support state~ law change.s to requl~ dedication by developers of land for schools and urges preservation of land used in agriculture. From Pqe 1 EVACUATE. • • said this momlng that tragedy was most certainly averted be.cause of the fumes' discovery early in the evening. Had the leakage occurred after guests had gone to bed, the Incident could have been far more serious, he added. __ Although the danger was obvious, firemen and police found It difficult in some cases to convince the elederly tenants that they would have to spend the night away from home. One guest -the last to leave - held ou t for more than 30 minutes until police coaxed her out. Mrt. Maude Coung• finally left her room, but only when patrolmen promised to take special precauUons with ber only companion -a cat n:uned "Bump- er." . Severa1 residents walked out of the hotel with police, only to try to sneak back again. One was seen leaving with his hotplare and breakfaat fixings. Hodgson said a probe of l'ie b-llding being fumigated wu planned today to dl!tennlne tbe exact source of the leak. He and ?tiurray expressed alann that the fumigation firm, a Gardena com· pany, as11ertedly did not conform to local codes which .specify that public safety agencies be notlfled of any such fumigation at least 24 hours before the job. No clty b\JllineS! license was issued, either, they said. Hodgson praised the qutci: response from two local businesses, the San Clemente Inn and Algodon motel, which offered to put up the residents for the night with only a few moments• notice . "They deserve credit, because U v.·e couldn't find a place far those poor· old folks, we would have had a bigger problem on our bands," he said. FromPGf1e1 INCREASE ... Irvine Educators Assoclation, was uked atter the meeting whether it wu fair for teachers' salaries to keep pace with inflation when most salaries in the private sect.or probably would fall behind il Mrs. Perry replied: "Teachers have the most bnportant job In &Oclety - educating tbe young to be good and productive citlzem. Comklering that, I think our pay request ls realistic." Mrs. Perry added that the aalary request had been unanimously ratified at a meeting earlier this week attended by 70 percent of the district's 320 classroom teachers. Details on the other fringe benefit requests from teachers will not be available until Monday, wben a written statement will be presented to the district, Mrs. Perry said. From PGf1e 1 AMTRAK .•. representative, said t.he bus was under charter by Amtrak, the national rallroad passenger service, and was carrying 30 persons when the accident occurred. It was en route to San Diego. He said mosl ol the passengen had come south by rail from Vancouver, Waab. and arrived In Loo Angeles too late to make train connections to points south of UJs Angeles. Some of the 38 pas,,engers who boarded in Los Angeles had already been dropped off when the accident happened, be aald. Officials at the scene of the accident, some 100 yanls from the Del Mar depot, sakt the stalled bu.s was attempting to back away from the tracb when lhe SO.Car frelg)lt !rain, hound from San Diego to San Bernardino, crashed into it. They said tho froo l porllon of the bus was craahed and blaace and other peraonal , belOlllinP of the _.. were scattered around the rallroed Cf'Ollo- lng. AulhorlUa aald aone of !ht JnJtnd were taken to Scrlpp1 Meiriorlal llolpltal and lhe olher1 to v eterana Memorial Hospital, both Jn San Diego. 'lllose bospltalhed . at Scrlppo w•re ld .. tlfled as Gtorge Walk, 114, of San Die10, and hJa 6&-year-old wife, DOrothy ; Maurie< Welt, 69, ol Oak Park, DI., and hll w~•. Franc..; Robert Jenklnl, 28, of Clatakanl•, Oto.; Martin Melchert, 72, ol SprJnc Vallty. Y.n. Molcher1's condlllon Wll llJled U lerJoua, whll• Iha! of lhe oilier wu ttrmed saUsfac· tory . . I By TERRY COVILLE 01 "'-IUllY l"llet Siii! City recorsts say the einpty Olevron service station at 8t72 Warner Ave., Huntington Beach, has defmltely been closed since last August. People who work near the station say It has been closed. unused, un· manned , for nearly a year and a half. But Wednesday the ghost station came back to life, at least long enough to supply a liquid nearly as scarce as rare blood -gasoline, a minimum or 4,000 gallons of it. A Standard OU delivery truck spent three hours at tbe empty station sucking dry the underground tanks. The truck driver said he was taking out about 4,000 gallons which had been left there when the station was closed. Another worker, helping pump the gas, said it was probably sour from being stored so Jong and might have to be taken back to the refinery ln El Segundo. Skeptics who work at nearby service stations and other business establlsti.. and Newland Street charge that the sta- tion has been used as a secret storage place for excess Standard gasoline. They say more than one visit -others at night -have been made to t,pe supposedly dead station. And new locks have been put on the supposedly unused fuel tanks. There are no locks on the undergrowid tanks of the nearby operating gas statioll!. No ooe has proof, but in this day of panic gas lines, government claims, and consumer counter-elaims, they view tank trucks loading at a closed station with a great deal of suspicion. "I think it's ridiculous," .ma1>3 Pete Kudenov, supervisor for Slandard's sup- ply terminal in HunUngton Beach. "\Ve don't store gasoline anywhere, we put it into circulation as soon as we can." His tenninal supplies a11 the Standard and Chevron stations in Orange County, and he admitted It was one of his trucks at the ghost station Wednesday, but said the purpose was to remove the old guoline. "Apparent1y it was a marketing de(lslon to close that station and not try to reopen It, so we took the gas out and transferred It to other stations,'' he sald today. "I don't know about other operations, but I know ours, and we aren't hiding gasolfhe at closed stations." Under the city fire code, the un- derground fuel tanks are supposed to be removed from any station closed for 30 days. but Fire Marshal Roge r Hosmer admitted Wednesday that rarely happens. It's a problem of inspeetion and know- ing just when a station really is closed, he said. There Ls no requirement for companies to report the clowre of a station. From a fire safety st.andRQint, the tanks are safer full than empty but loaded with fumes , Hosmer said. The city also has no records on whether gasoline is stored in unused tanks. Hosmer said, however, the city has the authority to inspect the tanks, and the fire department may start doing that on a regular basis because of the fuel crisis and the rapidly changing status of local stations. From Page 1 SPENDING ... finance statements covering the . period prior to Jan. 1, 1974, and list contribu- tions who · give more than $100 to the campaign. A complete filing of all Income and expenses is not due until April 11, well after councilmen have been sworn in. That quirk in the Jaw resulU from a state ordered change in the municipal election da te from April to March. News Flow Musl1 oms By JOHN VALTERZA Of 11M Dall)' P'llOI ll•ff THE CONTROVERSY over exactly how much a utility slKluld announce about the operation problems at a nuclear generating plant has been much in the news in recent months. And well It should be. At San Onofre's nuclear 11:enerator, two separate malfunctions of sorts recently took place and although they we.re duly reported by Soythe.ro cau- fomia Edison Company to the Atom.le Energy CommJ.s. sion, no news releases came forth. Only laat week , a pinhole Jeak deemed minor by the utilities wa's diacovered by a newspaper and, once again, the howl came forth that the utilities should be more open \Vith their now of information. Now, this week, comes the overkill. Suddenly, the Daily Pilot's San Clemente bureau is receiving almost daily reporu on the operation of the generator. VALTlltZA ONE WOULD TWNK th&t we ~·ho have complained oft.en about not being told of eventa at Onofre would be thrilled with such reports. Not so. Each of the two releases submitted this \Veek have a far d1fferent flavor than the simplified, easily understood releases that often come Crom utility firms. The San Onofre proJect reports see1n to be lntenUonally written for the specialist in nuclear engineering. And they border on nitplcky trivia. One entry took a lltUe time to dec ipher, but the gist of it is that the generaUng station's permanent crane apparently got its license renewed. Hot stuff, huh? YET ANOTHER ENTRY translated Into king's English hints that some- thing may have 11:ooe wrong temporarily "'ith one of three doodads that meas-- sure dust around the plant Edison calls dust •·particulate." If that doesn't thrill you, try this other entry: "Nuclear lnstrumentatlon channel 1208 was replaced \Vilh a spare chan· nel a11 a result of a malfunction .detected during routine system tests. 'Ibe involved channel provides a source of intelligence to the nuclear dropped-rod· turblne runback circuit one of many redundant protection circuits." Cornfurtln(, Isn't It? Entries auch as tJiese fonn the bulk of the mat erial sent thus far as re-- tallation to a11 the criticism heard over the two times al that problem.I were belatedly reported at lhe plant THE INFERENCE that members of the media must draw from the latest uUlity game is that the utiUUes figure they'll bombard us "'ilh accurate, but unfathomable engineering until v.·e get so tired of reading the stuff, we'll Jay off. _ Then. ii somelhing substantial happens and goe.. unreported, !hey will have a beautiful defense! "Look at all the effort we've employed to Inform the media and public, yet they didn't see fit to print it." From the utility standpoint, the confusing technica l language is the be11t technique in this case. IF PUBLICSTS were to translate the operating problems and procedu.tt1 into layman tehns, the media would be running incident reports every day. Edison v.·ould suddenly be saddled with rea{llS ol clippings of operatlnc problems at the generating station ; the image of nuclear gene.ration would need some polishing, and the promise of full disclosuers will have backfired. It is much easier to tell everyone everything. And yet, tell thtni nothing. Coast Moto1·ists Prepare · For Friday Gas Rationing From Wire ServlCf.I Fear of the unknown brought longer· than-normal lines to Orange Coast area gas stations this morning as motorists apparently prepared to meet Friday's PLAN AT LEAST WORTH A TRY -Editorial, Page 6 NIXON VOWS ENERGY BILL VETO, P191 26 start of the even<><ld rationing plan with the gauge pegged at full . If you are still unclear about how the game will be played, here are the rules. Avoiding their violation will keep you from paying a maximum '500 fine or spending six months in jail, or maybe holh. -Do not approach a gas station tm1ess you ha\'e less than half a tank. U the station attendant demands It, show him your gauge. -If you are. a station owner you may not refuse sales on the appropriate odd or even day unless the customer has more than half a lank of au. --stations must clearly pos't air tlcipated minimum business: hours and days and manage their allocaUonJ so that they will last through the entire month. -Dealers must indicate their gasoline supply by a si gn or a nag. A green flag means gasoline 111 available for the appropriate customers, a yellow flag means gas for emer1ency vehicles only, and a red flag meana closed Or out of gasoline. Beat The Tax Man SALE! .,. I MAIGI ht I GO TO '1>unla4>'s TO COLLECT TAXES ON THEIR lllTlll INVENTORY. I CAlll HAID.LY WAIT I Belutlful alimllnt 11yflng .•• with tvtrythlng at · your fingertips! CANTIU:VER ahtlves adjust up and down. Ceblntt roU111slly on wheels. Au1oma1Jc le• mlker can bl lddtd 11 any time. · • • •' ' I I ( l ! I ! } t I I I I ) • • un1ingion Be•eh Fountain ·Valley •• . • • Today's Final • N.Y. Stoeks ' I I . . . • , : VOL 67, NO. 59, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ", ':' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 19H .. ., .... ,, ·, TEN CENT~~ 1 ,....--..,,,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-_:_•,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-,....-~JI . ,~.~. ·u.s., Egypt Officially Friends Once Agairi 1 CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -'!'be United States and Egypt today form.ally an- nounced resumption of fu11 diplomatic rtlaUons broken off since the Middle East war of 1967. The announcement came in a Joint deela7ation read at t~ Wh1te House at about the same tim e it was being dllc108ed in cairo, where Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger was meeting with Egyptian leaders in his latest Mid~ dl~ E.ast peace-making campaign. ~1 In addition to a general upgrad1ng • or contacts, the move means the Spanish Embassy in Calro will no longer bol.18e the American diplomaUc delegaUon to Egypt, beaded by Ambassador Hermann Eilts. Similarly, an Egyptian delegation beaded by Ambassador Ashraf Ghorbal wW move into facilities of lts own in Washington, where it has been workin~ under the Indian flag. The two ambassadors have been In place since Kissinger and Egypt's Presi· dent Anwar Sadat agreed in principle ISOll Huntington Airfield l To Close? I I! Meadowlark Airport operator John • Turner said today his tiny Huntington Btach airfield will be forced to close ~ in two· to three months. ~· Turner failed to obtain a Superior . Court injunction Wednesday to halt the ~-construction of new homes near the ; ll!!fthwtllt tip ot bis airport runway. • The property llne ol the nearest home ~ wm be it feet from the edge ot the ~ runway, a violation ol Fedei'al Aviation I "-(FAA) standards, ~ 'l'llrner. "'Ille hemes are too cloae. They create a hazard and I'm sure the state will revoke my liceme," Turner said today. Turiler said the FAA doesn't allow houses any closer than 250 feet from the nmway. He said a state inspector will look at the field Tueod·y « Wednes- day and make a decision on the license. The development firm of Stellrecht and Bartoli is building 25 homes on the west aide of the airport. The city bad tried to block the project before It started, but lost a Superior C.ourt baUJe over zoning rights. Turner bad sought a Superior Court injunction to continue use of a :tn-foot strip o( land on the west side of the airport which is actually on the Stellrecht-Bar1oli property. He bad hoped prescriptive rights - long term use of the land -would help his cee, but Superior CA>urt Judge Charles Batitt refused to issue the in- junction. 1be Warner Avenue airport, wi th about 150 private planes, has existed for more than 30 years, the last nine under the coatro\ of Turner, though he does not own the property. Turner's airport lease expires in NovembeT, but he said he was promised a five-year extension on it bf the Nerio family which owns tbe land. Three private finrui -Meadowlark Aviation, Bassey Aviation, and Harbor Avta'Uon, -are set to move to other airport., but Turoet said he doesn't know where the private planes will go. Two Killed in Vegas LAS VEGAS (UP!) -Two persons died and a third was wounded Wedoesday In a murdeNuicide which apparently stemmed from a broken romance. The dead Included Robert Kenneth Hall, 47, of Las Vegas, .a school bu.s driver. Sherry Lea Parker, 25, an a(tractive blonde who worked at a 04strip" botelL restaurant, died ol a gunshot wound 1n the throat. Winter Storm Strikes North SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A winter storm atruck NMbem Calllomla today, unlelablnc l'lln, snow and JIO'!'riul JOUtherly Riles. The N1Uonal Weather sem.. lsaued IOlr1ll Wltningl along the . coaal oorth of Point .V... fOr soullitrly winds 31' lo es mJ1es per hour, ck<nulna to 24 to c m.p.h. tonight, Gile warnings are In •ff~ tl)roqll Friday between Point A......I ond Point Sur. Heavy lll10W WU foncUI In Ille Mt. Sbalta.Slslllyou area llld Siem Nevad1, 11oog with wlnds 40 to 'IS m.p.h. oorth o1 Lale• Tahoe. I Sand Castlers Vie on Beacli Sand engineers are invited to turn out for the sand castle building contest Saturday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Huntington Beach. Sponsored by the Junior Women's Club of Huntington Beach, the con- test will take place on the sand across from the Sheraton Beach Inn on the PacifiB> c.oast Highway, southeast of the Municipal Pier. Both children and adults are in- vited to participate, with prizes, ribbons and certificates for ham- burgers given to builders of the best castles. Mayor S~nds Most in Valley Council Race The man who appears to have the safest hold on his Fountain Valley City Council seat is spending the most money to kE<p ii In Tuesday's election. Mayor George Scott -with campaign expenditures now totalling more than $1,400 -is in ahead of the eight other muncil tandidates in the spending race, aca>rding to campaign d is c I o s u r e statements filed Tueoday wilh the Orange C.OUnty Registrar of Voters .• Cllallenger Roger Slantoo lm't too far behind with about $939 spenl out of his own pocket as of Tuesday in an effort to unseat at least one ol the three incumbents. The disclosure statements, copies of which are filed with the Fountain Valley City Clerk's office, are required under a new truth in campaigning law which took effect Jan. 1. Although the statements are designed to reveal who is financing whom, in the case of the nine Fountairi Valley candidates, they mainly show there may be li!tle to disclose in a smal~town race. Individual contrlbutm of ltilO or more, whether in dollars or goods, must be listed by name. Only ooe statement 'f\lelday -llult, by the Committee to Elect Jwe Boykin -showtcj a contribution that large. Accordihg to the committee's state- ment, Fountain Valley resident Ron Shenkman -a former city councilman and now a trustee in the HunUngton Beach Union High School District - hosted a fundraising cocktail party for Mrs. Boykin. Its fair market value: $100. Contributors of less than $100 each don't have to be detailed. Three candidates -ll)CUmbcnts Al Hollinden and Edward Just a n d challenger David B. Goold -'l'llesday filed the "short form" disclosure state- ment, allowed If !500 °' le,. bas been spent or collected In the campaign. "I declare under !"'11ily of l'"fiury that fA> the besl ol my -JedCe." reads the statementa the c:ondidates must tiln, "not more than $500 bu been -.<! or expeoded on behalf ol or in oupport of my eandldacy by myaelf er bf Ill)' committee ol which 1 ba•e knowkdae." . Tbree cball...,.... who filed a abort 1orm Februlry I, the llrot r!qUlrtd dilcloiure elate, u ot this lllOl1llnC had lalled lo Ille their """""' lllllidatory atat~1 Tbey are Jo~ Kelley, Clarence CUpet and Her!Jorl -· A _.ty nstmar olllcial 111d tllOtt ts a 110 a day late ponally, bul the added 11 to molnly belna -thll flrll time throuib the new law. A third diJlclooura llatemenl el funds railed and paymenta made must be filed Friday, the JUI ..,. bolwe the ~ eleL1lon. A !lill llltemenl 1' -(See UPINSES, I'll' 11 to restore' diplomatic relations in Novem- ber durihg a visit to Cairo by the American secretary. Relations bad been severed since the six-day Middle East \Jar of June 1967, when Egypt broke them off because of the American role in favor of Israel. Kissinger returned to Cairo today for talks with Sadat at a rest house overlook- ing the Great Pyramids. The Egyptian 1i::ader greeted him warmly with a tradi- tional Arab embrace and suggested they both PoSe for photographs with the pyramids as a backdrop before their discussions began. Kissinger and Sadat >n' e r e con- centrating on the next stage of an Israeli troop withdrawal in the c ·cupied Sinai Desert and continuation of the United Nations btlffer role between Egyptian >-and Israeli forces there. The United Nations mandate expires April 24. Also high on their age-.:a were Kis- singer's mediation proposall for Syrian· Israeli troop disengagement on the oo- cupied Golan Heights. • ans1on I Amerii;an offjcials in 1he Kissinger party stressed that Syria "holds the key" to the second round of Sinai negotiations. They said the Golan •teights disengage- ment agreement must be arranged before any ne\v pullouts in the Sinai. Sadat also has said Egypt 'viii not return to the Geneva peac • talks until Israel and Syria agree on the Golan pullout . Klssinger came here from Israel. where he brought from Damascus a 'Ghost" Station Eyed Closed Huntington Facility Gasoline Storehouse? By TERRY COVILLE Of n.. 0.llY Pllll Sl.tf City records say the empty Chevron servi~ station~ 8472 Warner Ave., Huntington Beach, 'has definitely been closed since last August. People who work near the station say it has betn .c::losed, unused. un- manned, for nearly a year and a half. But Wednesday the ghost station came back to life, at least long enough lo supply a liquid nearly as scarce as rare blood -gasoline, a minimum of 4,00ll gallons of iL A Standard Oil deliv,ery !ruck ppent three houri at the empty &talion llUCtlng dry the Dndergr®Dd lanks. Tbe truck driver said he was taking out about 4,00ll gallaQI ;whicb bad been left there when the atal1<11 was closed. Another worker, helping pump the gas, said it was probably sour from being stored so long and might have to be taken back to the refinery in El Segundo. Skeptics who w<rk at nearby service stations and other business establil!h- and Newland Street charge that the sta- tion has been used as a secret storage place for excess Standard gasoline. They say more than ooe visit -others at night -have been made to the supposedly dead station. And new locks have been put on the supposedly unused fuel ,tanks. There are no Jocks on the underground tanks of the nearby operating gas stations. No 00< bas proof, bul In this day of panic gas lines, government claims, and consumer counter-claims, they view tank trucks loading at a c::Iosed station with a great deal of suspicion. .·1~ • "I think it's ridiculous," snaps Pete Kudenov, supervisor for Standard's sup- ply tenninal in Hwitington Beach. "We don't store gasoline anywhere, we put it into circulation as soon as we can." His tenninal supplies all the Standard and Chevron stations in Orange County, and he admitted it was one of his trucks at the ghost station Wednesday, but said the purpose was to remove the old gasoline. TANKER DRIVER PUMPS GAS FROM 'GHOST STATION' In Huntington Be1ch, An Argument Over Stor•ge "ApparenUy ii was a marketing decision to close that station and not try t o reopen it, so we took the gas out aM transferred it to other stations," be said today. "I don't know about other operations, but I know ours, and we aren't hiding gasoline at closed stations." . * * Under the city fire code, the un- derground fuel tanks are supposed to be removed from any station closed for 30 days, but Fire Marshal Roger Hosmer admitted Wednesday ·that rarely happens. It's a problem of inspection and know· ing just when a station really is closed, he said . There is no requirement for companies to report the closure of a station. From a fire safety standpoint, the tanks are safer full than empty but loaded with fumes, Hosmer said. The city also has no records on whether gasoline is stored in unused tanks. Hosmer said, however, the city bas the authority to inspect the tanks, and the fire departrnenl may start doing that on a regular basis be<:ause or the fuel crisis and the rapidly changing status of local stations. * * * Fuel YQ * .* * uest1ons, Answers SACRAMENTO (AP) -Here are key que.stiom about Cali£omia's new man- datory gasoline marketing J '.an and the answers provided by Gov. Ronald Reag iµi: they had also issued emergency declara- tions. Reagan said be expected more C0W1ties -particularly in Southern California -to join today. . Q. Witt h exchlded, and why? Q. How dOtS it work? A Comm cl I and g n c y A. Motorists with license p I a t e · er a e m e r e -hers cndln . · odd digits will be vehicles. So are drivers with oul-<>f·state ::'wed to ~,;:.. gasoline only on-v1icerues and all driver! in counUes which odd-ownbertd days in a;t~ed areas. choose not to jom the plan. Motorists with llcense plates ending In Priorlty Is given kl bwiness to protect enn numbers . will be allowed to jobs. Indivtdual service llaUoos are urg- purd>ale gaaoUne oo even-numbered ed to use discretion fA> ldenUfy abuses. doys. ~la! plllel ~tafnlng Tourista get a b<ea1r. be<:ause of the only letters ~ «Mlltal u ccldo. Thi importance ol tourism ond their probable 31st of eadi' ,!l\ootll IS ·t. Jne tlaJ for lack ol. fanilllarlty wilb Cllilornla rules. all Vebides. • ~ • New Cllifomia residents with out-<1[..atate Q. mtl11fleeltdT A. Private motoriata who llV1! In ooun- tlto which declare guol!ne emerpncles. Al lbe time of Reagan's alUJOllll<e!lletil Wednetday that Included Alalli<da, COil- ' Ira Costa, Los Aftleletl, 5an Mateo llld Solano counUes. Officials ot Modoc, Oranae and Santa CM counUcs aid llcensca are too small a group to attempt to police. Q. Wbeo doe1 II 1tarl! How lo•g '!Ill It lut7 A. Controls start al U:OI a.m. Friday, March 1. Counties may Join later. Any C01B1ty moy d"'!I out 'lhetr lcical offlclols decide the cootrola 11'1!..DO ~r need<d. t Q. Does it prohibit topping off the tank? A. Yes. Service stations are ordered not to sell gasoline to motorists who have half a tank or more. However. stations with limited supplies are urged to make them stretch. That could mean limits which might also prevent fillups at times. Q. wm 1ervtc. 11.tlo,. sun be cll>sed Sa.ndaya:? A. llopelully, more wtll be open Sun- days and nights. Service station ownern are also urged to staggt!T their hoon! and make arnngements to space out sales so · that there will DOI be shortages on ·weekends, nights or it the end of the month. That 11 a· request with no ispeclfic order on hours at individual statloM, but ~nalties may be Imposed ror nagrant violalions. Q. llow "'ill I know •We p10Une b available? A. Every stalioo must post a con- splCUOll.< sign or Ila" H flap are u.wd, !See Q'S AND A~ Plge I) '-l list of 65 Israeli ,.,.ar prisoners held by Syria. 11is deli\'ery of the list marked a major diplomatic breakthrough. since the Israelis refused to negoliate on disengagements until the Syrians turned it over. The Israeli premier, Golda ~leir. saluted his efforts \Vednesday night. But Kissinger's aides said the secretary felt ''in his bones'' that the Arab oil embargo against the LTnited States will last at least another few days despite their progress. . . ~·t • t·.i ' Timetable Moved Back Four Years By CANDACE PEARSON 01 "'-0•11Y Pli.t Sl•lf Slower population growth and reduced ~ energy demands have c o n v I n c e d ~ Southern California Edison officials they ~ don't need to expand their Huntington .t1 Beach power plant until 1977 or 1979, ~ it was learned today. • .'- This tentative time line is up to four r years beyond original plans by the com-~ pany. <ii. Utiljty offictals applied last October l' for a comtruction pennJt for the 1312 ! million expansion from the South Coast Regional Zone Coilservatton Commission. But t.be appl!CaUon was returned for more lnfonnatlon about three montm ago and the company hasn't reapplied. When It will, according to Edison District Manager Paul Richardson, is definitely up in the air~ "It will probably be three IO live years before the Huntington Beach generatiiig station would be completed and on line," be said today. The company had figured new uttlls of the plant at Pacific:: Coast Highway and Newland Street in Huntington Beach would be producing power by 197:1 to 1977. I The fossil fuel plant now generates 992 megawatts of power. 'Ibe combined I cycle additions would add another 1,416 megawatts of peat production. Edison Friday will fLle a new resources I schedule, outlining its future plan,, for I all its major facilities including Hun- tington Beach, with the California Public / Utilities C.Ommission (PUC). Until it is accepted and approved by ~ the PUC, Richardson said today in Hun-: tington Beacl), noting is final. At a recent state coastal commission meeting in Santa Barbara -where the oompany 's $1.4 billion expansion or the San Onofre Nuclear Power Plant was approved -Edison Vice President (See EDISON, Page l) Candidates in Valley Meet at Greenhrook Candidates for Fountain Valley Qty Council will speak to residents of the Greenbrook hotuing tract at 8 o'clock, tonight, in the community's clubhouse. Tonight's session is for residents of Green.brook only, not for the general public, according to officials who set up the meeting. Orange <:out • ·Weather The weatherlady ~ a 80% chance of showers Fnday with cooler temperatures along the 1 Orange Coast. Hig),s of 5S at the beaches will rise to eo inland. Over~ night lows in the lower 50s. INSIDE TOD~Y A judge in Afabama 114$ b<en CICCU.<td of d;.pming mercy in return for !UUGl fOt>OrS from femafe de/•ndants. StOTJ1, Page 4. l . M. ltnl U· Catl!M11le S Clffllf}M u-tt ,_kl ,. ,,...-4 .M O..ltl Nttlcn lf llllttltl p... ' ,,,,.,..__ftl n.~ 'llltMt 1W1 MY O•Nlltr HI ·-" .t,1111 UNtrl 11 -· ...., . - H ThuNdiy, ftbruary 28, 1'114 --------• Valley Candidates Give Views Finch .Says GOP Aided ,,. ls the last in a series Of profile~ procnms for youth in termt of educa· on the nine c1ndldat.11 llMinl IUtl Uooal facllities and recreation develop.. oo the Fountain Vall•y City O>w>CIJ, The election is next Tuesday. Foun· ment. The tUiclent lhlrin1 of common tain \'allev votC>rs wUJ select three ol govemmeotal aervfces with nelchborlng the nine ciind idatcs ror the council. c'itlel. Stron& opposition to the bulldlng ProfU<'S on six or the candidates a~ of the freeway along the presently peared in the Daily Pilot Tuesday and adopted route.'' Wednesday. Balanet: Yes (l am satisfied ). except Three questions \1·ere posed by the that more commcrcial-orfict bUJlnesses Daily Pilot to all candidatet;. should be agrcssively sought. -What do you believe are the major Qualification s: "~1y qualifications in· issues in this campaign? elude my ability to bring cooOicting -Are you satisfied with the city's interests to work together for common present industrial-commercial·residential interests, but primarily my desire to balance? have Fountain Valley grow properly ." -What are your qualifications for the GEORGE . B. SCOTT, 41, of 16675 d ty council~ Spruce Circle, has been mayor of FoWl- Following are the views of the final -. , , t tain Valley for one set of candidates: year ot. his four-and- J ORN F. KEIJ..Y, 34, of 18147 santa a-half years on the Lauretta Circle, Is a self-employed in-council. He has a surance salesman masters degree in and was 1973 presi· e duc a tion and dent of tho Green· teaches at Orange brook Fountain Val-County Juvenile ley Homeowners As-Hall. Director of the sociation. A coach city h-1arch of Dimes with th~ i'~ountaln · :ampaign. he is Valley LHti.e League slo past president of the and a On1ted Ctu· ~rks and recreation commission, .Jay- sade volunt eer. he cccs and Bovs' Club. He and his u•ife. helped s tart the "tarcella. ha Ve lived here aln1osl 10 years I LLY \Valls Sum n1 f! r and have six children. Youth Olympics in 1969 and ,,·as active Issues: "In my oPinion, !here are in the Los Angeles Junior Chambe r of no major issues. QS such, in this cam· Commerce. He, his wife Marlene and paign. I am confident that, in the four- their three children have lived in Foun· and-a-hal t years that I hal'e bttn a tain Valley three years. member of the city council, I have L 11aaes: "The devetopment or proper tned to do everything possibte to make I, • • President Sees I GOP in White Hou se in 1984 By HELEN nJOMAS \VASH1 NGTON (UPI) -Presidenl Nixon. spurred by cheers of young Republicans, predicted today that th e GOP would keep the White House at Jeast through 1984. Addressing about 600 party members 18 to 36, at the Young Republican leadership conference, the President gave his "advice for ix>tential politi- cians." ' "Keep your faith, keep your con· fldeoce,'' he told the crowd, even when 0 mistakes are made by people in your party." Despite problems besetting the party because of Watergate, Nixon said there would be a Republican in the White House •,•for the next ·three years and eight years after that. because we're going to be there for a long time." The speech -laced with such political homilies as "Don't assume the time to run fo:r office is when it is a sure thing" and "\Vhe:n lhe battle looks toughest, get in there and fight'' - was greeted by cheers and applause. "Three more years! , .. three more years!" the crowd chanted as Nixon held up three fingers . Nixon stressed the country would con- tinue to maintain its respoosibilities as a world leader rather than "bugging out" on the burdens of the aftermath of the Vietnam war. "You can take pride that you supported the men and policies tha t put an end lo the war which was here when we came to office," Nixon said. He said it was easy to support the country in time of war but harder to •·Jive in a time when the challenges are the challenges of peace." The president advised the Young Republicans: ''Ne ver quit , always go on and fight for the things you believe in." In his extemporaneous speech, Nixonl'\ appeared to be discussing his own \\1atergate figh t when he gave his "ad- vice for potential politicians." He told the GOP leaders, ranging in age from 18 to 36: "If you think there are things wrong then get in and do something about it. Build the Republican party, that is a just goal." The President's exhortation for young party members to fight vlgorou.sly for their cause comes amid some gloomy pred ictions (!bout the effect or Watergate on voters. .. DAILY PILOT 'l'llr Or~rite (06•1 OAIL'!' PILOT wllh whlcn I• com.,;~.v !flt "itw1.•rtu . 11 Wbllll'lllll bf lllt O••n9t COfJI P ..... lltl\ift9 C""'!Nnf. St!N- ••I• <'11•1.0~> "'' pUbll11!1'11, 11.o,,.;•r lll'ovotl fr•ll~. for Co.It MHt, N•-rl Bt•~h, t<un""ll'IM'I lllt<ll/Fou"Hln V•lley, l tqyn11 11 .. ~11. lt~iM/51'0dfl!Yc~ t nd Sfn Cltllltfllt / S•n J_,.n C•gl"•H•O. A 11"91• rf9lo<1411 edition " 1>111>ll1~1ld 11t11"ll•r~ '"" ~V'>ll•v1. ,,,_ ptu>e•Dilt pUl>li)lllfllll P'-111 !1 et lXI WHI Bay 51•••1, Co11a Mna, "m•r•I•, '211'. Work Defaced Of Picasso NEW YORK (AP ) -A vanda l sprayed large red-paint letters on the famed "Guern.ica" painting by Pablo Picasso today at the Museum of Modern Art in midtown l\-1anhat· tan . The suspected vandal was seized before he could leave and was taken to an office in the museum. Museum officials declined to give out any information immediately on the extent of damage to tbe large mural. The gallery containing "Guemica," whose subject is the ravages of the Spanish Civil War, was closed after the desecration. • From Page J Q's AND A's . •• green meam gasoline available to the general public according to license plates, yellow means gasoline for emer· gency vehicles onl y, and red means no gasoline. Q. What about violations? A. Dealers and motorists will be sub- ject to misdemeanor prosecution with a maximum legal penalty of $500 fine and six months in jail However, officials are ordered to handle cases by citation. "Nobody's going to be dragged off by the scruff of the neck," Reagan said. Q. How wlll IL help solve the problem? A. The even-odd plan will cut about in half the vehicles-that can gas up on a given day, thereby hopefully cutting down on the long lines of cars waiting to gas up. Prohibiting topping off a tank is intended to further cut down on lines and curb panic buying. By having station operators allocate their sales over the entire month. it is hoped that there will be no severe shortage at I.he end of a month. Tapes Anal yzed By Stanford Lab MENLO PARK (AP) -Stanford Research Institute has confirmed that it is \\'Orking on a tl?Chnical analysis of lape recordings for the White House. The nature of the tapes \\'3S not disclosed. SRI public relations director Ronald DeUt\fh said Wednes~ay . that the independent researc h inst itute w a s contacted by \\'hire House special counsel James D. SL Clair in January and began research Jan. 20. "Generally \\'hat v.•e are doing is conducting experimental \York a n d providing techn ical consultat ion to lhc While llouse on the tape recordings," Deutsch said. Fountain Valley ~ ot the besL ciliN · in the country In whklt lo llv• ." Bllaoce: .. I am not aatLsfled with our p re 1 e n t tndustrial~erclal­ l'fllldentlal balanct. However, we do hav e an exetllent master P..1-n whlch wtll enable us to accomplish th1s balance. "One of my primory concerns for he future is to expand our growing Industrial park to establish a broad and stable tax base. The developm t'llt of an attractive downlo\~'Jl commercial area is another Important goal." Other alms listed include low lax rates, youth employment, figh t against high density and freeways. Quallileatioos : "One year as mayor. four • and • a • half years as a Fountain Valley City Councilman, five years as a parks and recreation cc:nnmiMloner and past chairman of that body, nlneand~ a-half years of actively working in numerous civic organlzatiom showing my concern for the welfare of al.tr city and it5 residents.'' ROGER R. STANTON, 36, of 18303 .?\ft. Nimbus Circle, teaches management 'j at cal State Long Beach. where he got a masten degree In management. He is y,·orking on a ·doctor· ale at USC. A four· year ~FOITntain ·val- ley resident, he is a member of the cha mb e rof con1- merce, American 1TANTOM. Marketing Assocla· lion and Academy of Management. He From Pagel EDISON ... ' David Fogarty said a number of planned unita have been deferred. Fogarty said a nuclear plant in the desert near Victorville and a fos.sil fuel plant in Long Beach will be delayed. in addition to the expansion program at lluntington Beach. Fogarty cited the reduced load - Edison reported a 10 percent drop in power usage in both December and January -and the reduced availability of fossil fuel as reasons. Richardson said today that the reduced need is the main factor. Population growth in the area Edison serves is now running at a rate of 4.5 percent yearly, be said, in contrast to previous annual rates of seven and eight percent. The growth is still slightly higher in Orange County, he said, but, even here, it has almost been cut in half from what was once a ten perctnt growth Jump a year, Fuel is still a concern, Richardson .said today , but a Jess important one. Jn 1974 Richardson said, unless there is some reallocation of fuel or other occurr~ce Edison didn 't expect, '1we'll be all nght for fuel." The company plaM to go through the public hearing on the Huntington Beach plant on the PUC level before returning to the coastal commission. The original October filing came before a lawsuit designed to halt the project was filed in Orange County Superior Court by the Environmental Coalition. That suit was rejected this month by Judge Mark Soden. Allende's Aides F ou1id iii Prison RIO DE JANE IRO IUPI) -Top aides of the late Chilean President Salvador Allende and Chile's Communist party chief have been found in a Jcjnd of Latin American Siberia. an isolated prison island balterl'd by frigid Antarctic winds, the Brazilian news magazine Visao has reported. The publication said its correspondent, Antonio Alberto Prado, was flown to DaY.-ron Island in the Straits of Magellan by Chilean military authorities. There, in a crude stockade in the tundra, the magazine said the reporter found Orlando Leteller, Allende's de!ense minister and a Conner ambassador to Washington and foreign minister, who said he was JiVing "in a state of frozen limbo." Executive Kill ed 1'11LAN. Italy (AP) -Euj!ene Jean Knopf. French president of the Italian affiliate of Dun and Bradstreet, was sta bbed in a street attack Wednesday night, hit by a car as he fled from his assailants and died shortly after police got tiim to a hospital. A police officer said death was probably . due to the car injuries. llob1rt N. w •• d Prn'IOt<'of ,..., •¥bib.Mr Ja~k R. C11•l•v Vitt .,., .. ~, •nd Gftl1.,1 Mt 11tter t kof1111 Ktovil Edlll>I' Hold Everything llio11111 A, M11r,tli11• M1~ttll'll 1itllOI' Ch•rlH ti. Looi Riallar4 P. Ntll Awlllt •t M-tlnl lllll'W1 T t tty Covillt Wt1! Oll"ff c-ry ldttor Hatt ..... .._. OMc.e I 17•75 ···~II .. 111 ....... M•lllfli A4dr111: r.o. 1 .. 1•0. •2••• • Otlltr ~ ..... \..,..... ••.ui· m ,.,.., ... .......,.. CH11 #tu: t• Wttt t1y llrlff ,,......,. affd\1 UlJ fll~ ~.., Nfl ~: •J Hvllt ft (AllllM ltMI fll ;t 171 •1 '4MJZ1 Q• ... .w ... 11 .... 641-1111 ,,... ... t;: iii:' C'Aonm ..... MI -""'·..£. ONnte C-t -Wlllfi'"' ~. ,... ,..,...., 1n111tr~ ........ ,,......,.~ ... Ill .,,. .. 't t .. : ~ ...w ,.... ~-' -· ...... elm,...... .. 111 .. c.telli\ftf. Cl_... I q 4114.... 11¥ qnoW OM """"'!I w .... u 11 ~· """"" ................ ,,. .. Airport X-ray Machines Illegal WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal judge has ruled that the Fed· era! Avia tion Adminislration acted Ulegally when It gave airports permission to use X·ray machines as security devlces at airports across the nation. ' U.S. Districl Judge Barrington D. Parker ordered use . of the machines hailed Wednesday until the FAA files a statement certify· ing that use or the devices would -not harm lhe environment There was no decision whether an appeal would be filed. Parker ruled that the FAA acted illegally because it failed to permit affected persons to comment on its action before it took effect March 29. Use of the X·ray mac hines was challenged by the Avl allon Con· sumer Aclion Project, a group associated with Ralph Nader. The group contended that U1e machines posed an unknown health , baz· ard because of a lack of safely standarJI•. ' • ' alJO is a contultanl lo mnall busines..w-s. He and his wife, Kitto, have t.._'Q ~ ren. ' . "'"9t 0 1n ""1Venatlons w I th ""'dentl from all aver the city I detected fM>lings of alienation and lack ol identity wllh the city government. r.tany believe that the council ls more responsive to outsiders than to city residents. Adequate i:epresentatlon is denied especially to .fhose who moved here within the past five years." Ballnee: "Fountain Valley's goal of a single family residential eotnmunJty, properly balanced with !!Sentlal com· mercial services and light Industrial development is ia, jeopardy, The threat s t e a m s from repeated attempts at piecemeal rezoning for spectacular proJ· ects which seem to fascinate present council members. While property valuet are threatened1 our industrial area lies fallow." QaallftcaUons: "'Ibrough education and work experience, my specialty is ad · mini stration and problem analysis. I offer a fresh perspective and faith in representative government that is un- tarnished by years In politics. Since I ha \•e refused campaign contributions fron1 all sources. I am fr ee to put residents' interests ahead ol special in· terests." County Appoints Panel to Study Airport Routing Orange County supervisors h a v e named the II-member panel empowered to study the feasibility of routing future county oommerclal jet traffic to Ontario International Airport. The panel was suggested by Supervisor Ronald Caspers. u'ho raised t h e possibility of using Ontario to help relie\'e growth pains at the existing county jetport. Caspers said there is no possible way the existing facility can be expanded enough to handle future demands since it is already under ftre from noise- plagued county residents. He also said efforu to get either joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station or a new jetport oo Camp Pendleton land have proven futile . The panel created at Caspers' request wlll meel for the first time March 6 to start laying the groond.,,rk ol the feasibility study they will do. Members of the panel will include James F. Stock, chainnan of the County Airport Commission: <>range C,ounty Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan: Orange County Transit District General Manager G. J . "Pete" Fielding and Airport Action Association spokesman Dan Emory. Also, County League or CiUes executive Frank Sales ; Newport Beach Mayor Donald Mcinnis; Community Airport Council spokesman Bill Gremp: Anaheim Chamber of Commerce executive Larry Sierk; Duane Davis of Yorba Linda, an ai rport maintenance firm owner and county Chamber of C o m m e r c e spokesman Petor Muth. Employe Killed In Cemetery BAKERSFIELD (UPI) -A mortuary emp\oye y,.·as shot and killed while sitting on the lawn at Green Lawn Cemetery, authorities report. Kem C.ounty sheriff's deputles said Merced Romero Jr., 26, of Bakmifleld was killed by a bullet from a high· powered rifle. Two fellow employes sitting with the victim following lwtd! said they didn't hear the crack of the rifle but that they did hear something strike blm. OOULD We goofed Wednt1Sday. Photos of two Fountain Valley City ec-.indl candidatep were Incorrectly identified in a story dealing with their views and qualifica· tions for office. That's really Al Hollinden (left) and that's really David Gould (right ). The Dally Pilot regrets the error. So')optimists Fete Marina'~ Ken Wogensen Kenneth Wogensen, a senior at Marina High School in Huntington Beach, has been awarded the first place 1973 Youth Citizenship Award from the Soroplimist Club. Wogensen. of 6741 Bridgewater Dri\'e, Huntington Beach, received a $100 chec k and an engraved pl aque at the Sorop- timist Club's awards banquet held over the weekend. A1so winning awards were Janet Wh it· tenberg, second place, and Mkhael Bevarente, third place. Miss Whittenberg, 6672 Sequoia Ave., Westminster, is a senior at Westminster High. She received $50 and an engraved plaque. Benavente, also a senior a t Westminster Hlgh. won l25 and a plaque. He live.! at 8301 Marion Circle, Westminster, The three winners. selected from 30 applicants from Huntington Beach, Westminster and Fountain Valley, were judged on their service to the com· munity, school , dlurch and home. Judges also based , their deci11ions on the students' leadership abilities. Wogensen will now be entered in district level competition of the Sorop- tlrnist Federation of America, where he will be competing for $1,000. If suc- cessfu1 there, he will move on to national competition and a chance at winning $1 ,500. From Pagel EXPENSES ••• required April 4. Aocorolng to Tutoday'a documents, Scott -whose candidacy hasn't been criticized at all by the challengers. -. l!.as sperit $125 of his o~·n money on the elecUon. His campaign committee has gathered Sl.555 in contributions and spent $1 ,340, much of it on the printing of brochures and painting suppUes. Stanton, who has no committee, also used moot ol his funds on publicity -brochures , posten and malting pennit. Mrs. Boykin -who bas attacked the voting record ol Incumbent Ed Just -reported that she has used $179 of her own money, also mainly for c:i.m· paign flyers. Her committee, with treasurer June Welch , received $568 in cash con- tributions as of Tuesday and 1175 in non-monetary donations. Its reported expenses totalled $240 Tuesday. The largest payment was for bwnper stickers . ' Union Oil Asks Halt SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Union Oil Co. asked a federal court Wednesda y lo stop demands by the Federal Energy Office that it supply gasoline to retail chains it bas not previously served. In Us U.S. District Court suit, the company said the FEO threatened dvll and criminal acXlom If It doeM't deliver 1,336,000 gallon,, to outskle firms. U.S. h1 60 s When Water~ale has pas.<od. the ijepublican,, will be remembered for pulling the country together oul o( the "tortured " years o( the 19608. Robert Finch said Wednesday In HWlllngton Beach. The onetlmc lieutenant governor of Callfomla and former <XM.melor to Pretl· dent Nixon spoke before the Huntington Harbour Republican Women's Club m .. t!ng. The optimistic spe«!l by Finch at Iii.I focused on President Abraham Lin- coln's legacy as found•r ol the Republican party. Bul Finch later turned to other topics. "jl'hen an the melorlc a b 0 u t Watergate and about those people wh!> did abuse their tru..t has passed, .. Fin<h assured his 50 listeners, ''what will be remembered Ls this v.·as a tortured natkln . , . on the streets and on the campu.ws." f''inch said the Republican Party began a "healing process" by ending the· Viel· nam \\''ar "honorably" and decentralizing fl'deral govenunent y.•ith more revenu~ sharing. "It will not be Y.Titten in the pages ol. headlines," Finch said, "lt will be written in the pages of history boob," The GOP will be recalled as "maln- talnlng its honor and integrity," Find! contended. And he told the Republican women at the Meadowlark Country Club luncb- eoo that "no matter how difficult it may be, we can take great optimism in lflf and 1976," upcomine Congressional and Presidential election years. Finch also criticized the id•a of public fniandng of election campaigns. "We're going to be dead with the two-party system if you pass public financing of campai&JlS,'' he claimed. He said he support! full public disclOt'lure of contributiom by candidates, but said a measure like that pro~ by Ciommon Cause on the June primary ballot would eoc'OUra¥e "phony parties'' out to get the publics money. Most of Stolen Rifles Recovered; ., Marines Arr~ted · SAN DIEGO (UP I) -The FBI ,.Jd· \\'ednesday that 12 of the 17 rifles stolen from a Marine Corps base. bad beeh recowred, and the four m a r i n e 1 suspected had been arrested. The rifles. ~fl6s, were stolen from Camp Pendl~on by two men dress«I as the officer of the day and a sergeant of the guard. 'Ibey took the rifles away, saying it wu for "security reasons.• The rifles were found In tlte borne ol Pvt. Robert Copeland, 20, the FBI said. He was arrested aJoo7 with Lance Cpl. Jolin F. Fanner, 19, Pio. Denni1 J. Spence, 20, and Lance Cpl Cllarles T. Lewi.1, 21. • Spencer and Fanner were acamed o[ having impersonated the Officer al the Day and the Sergeant of the Guan!. · Arizona Slayer Gets Se nt to Gas Chamber TUCSON, Ariz. (AP ) -Willie Lee Ridimond WaJI sentenced to die in the Arizona State Prison gas ctiamber, the first such sentence given since Arizona's new capital ]Xl'li.shment law became effective last August. RJdunond. 26, was convicted in January for the slaying Jut summer of Bernard Cnmuneu, 23, a Univer.ity o1 Arizona stude!ll No dale wu aet Wedne9day for execution. Beat The Tax Man 'SALE! MAaGI ht I GO TO "Dunla.f''s TO COLLECT TAXES ON THEIR lllT•I INV ENTORY. I CAii HARD.Ly· WAIT I NO DEFROSTING , .. FRl'EZER/ \ .REFRIGERATOR -.: .. 19 :-. -..1· ) BeauUful 11imll1W styling ••• wfth everything at · your flngertJptl CANTILEVER 1helvet 1djutt up and down. Ctblnet rolla ea ally on wheels. AutOm111c Ice maker can be 1ddtd 1t 1ny time. 900AYSCASH I . WI TH AP,ROVEO CREOI T 1815 NEWPORT BLVD., Dewntow1t' Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 I l I I ' I -• . . • H DAILY PILO'T 3 Company :-Sees 'Bleak Future' San Onofre Power Plant New s Flow Mushrooms B>-JOHN VALTERZA Of IM OallY 'llfit Sl•ff THE CONTROVERSY over exactly bow much a utility should announce about ithe <>peration problems at a nuclear generating plant has been much in the hews in recent months. And well it should be. At San Onofre's nuclear generator. two separate malrunctions of !Orts recently took place and although they were duly repcrted by Southern Cali- fornia Edison Company .to the Atomic Energy Commis- sion, no news releases came forth. Only last week, a pinhole leak~ de-e-mcd minor by the utilities was discovered by a newspaper and, once again, the howl came forth that the utilities should be more open wjth their now of information. Now, this week, comes the overkill. Suddenly, the Daily Pilot's San Clemente bureau is receiving almost daily reports on the operation of the generator. · VAL.Tl!llU. ONE WOULD TlllNK that we who have complained orten about not being told of events at Onofre would be thrilled wilh such reports. Not so. Each of the two releases submitted this week have a far different flavor than the simplified, easily understood releases that often come from utility firms. The San Onofre project reports seem to be intentionally written fo r the 1pedali.st ln nuclear engineering. And they border on nitpi<:ky trivia. One entry took a little time to decipher. but the gist of it is that the generating station's permanent crane apparently got its license renewed. Hot stuff, huh? YET ANOTHEI\ ENTRY translated Into king's English hints that some· thing may have gone wrong temporarily with one of three doodads that meas- sure dust around the plant Edison calls dust "particulate." If that doesn't thrill you, try this other entry: . 1'Nuclear instrumentation channel 1208 was replaced with a spare chan- nel as a result of a maliunction detected during routine syslem tests. The involved channel provides a source of intelligence to the nuclear dropped-rOO- turbine nmback ci.rcu.it one of many redundant protection circuit!." comforting, Isn't it? Entries such as these fonn the bulk of the material sent thus far as re- taliation to all the criticism beard over the two times at that problems were • belatedly ropon.d at the plant. THE INFEllENCE that members of the media must draw from the latest utility game is that the utilities figure they 'll bombard. us vdth accurate, but unfathomable engineering until we get so tired of reading the stuff, we'll lay off. Then, If something substantial happens and goea unreported, they will have a beautiful defense! . "Loot at all lbe effort we've employed t.o inform the media ~nd public, yet they didn't see fit to print It." • , From the utility standpoint1 the oonlusing technical language is the best teclmique in this case. IF PUBUCISTS were to translale the operating problems and procedures Into la)'man terms, the media would be runnin g inciden t reports every day. · Ediaoo would suddenly be saddled with reams of clippings of operating problems at the generating station; the image of nuclear generation would need 11>me po lishing, and the promise of full disclosuers will have backfired. It ls much easier to tell everyone everything. And yet, 1.ell them nothing. Hearst Food Giveaway Beginning Second Day SAN FRANCISCO (UPll -The food giveaway program aimed at winning the release of kidnaped Patricia Hearst began its second day ol operation today In a calm manner that contrasted sharp- ly with the opening day confusion and brawling Friday. At one San Francisco center, about hall the 1,000 bags of food on band bad hem given out an hour in advance of the scheduled 10 a.m. opening. A volWlteer at the center said they decided fX> go ahead and start Riving oot the free food rather than male people wait in line. Others of the 10 centers scattered throughout low-Income areas of San Francisco, Oakland, Richmond and East Palo Alto reported all was proceeding calmly In the effort spoosored by Miss Hearst's father, Randolph A. Hearst, to meet the demands of the Symbionese Liberation Anny. Some centers began running out of food by 11 . At two centers, which did not open until the scheduled 10 a.m.. opening, small groups of 2&-50 waited paliently outside. "It's going great," said a volunteer at a center m San Francisro'a: Potrero Bill. "We're all ael. We've got about 1,200 bag> all packed· and ready to go. 'lbere'• not going to be any -le today." On Friday tho ,,.. food .... not dell-.d until the Cl!lllen opened and the crowd at one ""'ter benn a fist· twlnlini. can-thnrwlng t-.wl. All tbe food was dellvettd thlS time'On Wednes- cllly be/ore the site loaltions were an- nounced. Officials of tho program, called "J>eo. pie In Need," ,.id they had enough . looil for up to 24 ,000 people. The brown arooeey bigs at oue San FrandtCO ctnter ••ch conlalned a clllcken, wJlile bread, crackers, bananas, cabbage and canned goods. A larger crowd of about 500 WAI In Une at the West Oakland . ~ter, lined up along tho sidewalk outlido a plnl: stucco building. "Everything wtnt just perfect," ..Ud ... -In Oakland. "Thant God." Leng but orderly lines -for 1 block from the East OOdand center, the outlet which erupted into violence Friday but was switched this time from a tiny Black Muslin bakery to an aban· doned supermarket. It also began distributing food prior to lhe scheduled opening time. Jn San Francisco, ooe recipient said she had oo qualms about taking the food offered as a ramom demand. UPI T...,.... Gol.,. Soath Fonner Garden Grove police chief George P. Tielsch lllls quit his Job as chief of the SeatUe police force to liead the Santa Monica department Al· ' lhough lhe post pays $6,0()(Ja • Jelll' less, Tlelsch ,.ys It's worth it because 0 The Sun shines lhere 325 days a ~ar -here it raln4 325 ~ a ,ear. It'• very deprustng." i Sauna ,Trial Defense Raps,' Lies' By TOM BARLEY Of .... Dall~ l"llfl 51•lt "Maria Parson, her husband, her fan1i· ly and her lawyer are all active in a lavish production aimed al gouging $1 millJoo oot of Ule Holiday ·Health Spa,'' defense attorney Donald A. Ruston today warned an Orange County Superior court jury. "Far from her being a saintly character we have heard testimony to the effect that she once kicked her husband in the privates and used vile language towards him ," Ruston said. "Both she and her husband have lied on the witness stand i.n this courtroom.'' he told a panel in an argwnent that y,•ill close the three-month sauna bath trial. '"Neighbors have testified that she was plastering on green eye shadow, dying her hair bright red and putting on sexy clothes that shocked the neighborhood long before she U3ed the sauna room on March 2, 1970," the Fullerton lawyer said. "We only have her \\'ord for the fact that she really was trapped in the sauna room that day," Ruston e.rgued. "But iC two women, as she says, opened the door and saved her after she col· lapsed how were they able to open the door she said was jammed? "JC Maria Parson had a psychiatric illness she bad it when she went into the sauna room ," Ruston said. "And we have had plenty of evidence in this trial to show that she had plenty of reasons for developing some kind of neurosis." Rti.5ton said the Parsons had marital problerM at the heart of which was the collapse or their semal relationship. He said they bad have s e v e r a I bankruptcies and Mrs. Parson had had to leave her job because of increasing nervousness and tension. Ruston said allother factor the iUrr ·must weigh when it deliberates later today is the .OOCk admlnistm!cl to Mrs. Parson by her Pusbadd's sUUesfion that she Join him,in a Wife ll\l'&pplng foursome and on visits to topless bars. "AU tllis ls supposed to have come to a head on March 2, 1970," Ruston said. "But the sauna room may have come as a convenient inspiration that is now being described to you as the straw that broke the earners back." Ruston argued that there had ~ no testimony In the 1ong trial to ef- fectively prove that Mrs. Parson, so, really deVeloped three personalities as the result of tbe sauna ·room incident. "She bas been described as an eggsheU plaintiff," he said. "My belief is that the eggshell was broken before she went into Ule sauna room and we have to look into the Parson home for the answer ." Ruston drew on the testimony of a neighbor to remind the jury that htrs. Parson was leaving her home on a nightly basis and not returning until the early hours of the morning long before the sauna room incident. Mrs. Parson testified that her nightly excursions in which she picked up men in bars and invited them to join her io a motel room, began after she developed her so-called "ihree faces of Eve" oon· dltion. "It was explained by beT' lawyer that she was driving to Disneyland oo these earlier occasions t.o pick up her son from bis job there," Ruston: said. "But when you go into the jury room ask yourselves bow long it takes to drive to Disneyland aaj. back from Anaheim and take another look at her neighbor's statement that she never returned until the early hours of the morning." Ruston said the same neighbor testified that Mrs. Parson constantly screamed and used vile language at her children and that the Cracas could be heard in neighboring homes. "Add to that the same witness's testimony that she mowed the front lawn in the shortest of shorts and heavy m.ikeut and compare that with the pie-- lure of the dl'vout Catholic mother M> glowingly painted by her lawyer," he said. Officials Doubt Gatcli Balloori Actually See ri SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE, Canary Islands (AP) -Spanish news agencies say a weather balloon or an optical illusion may have been responsible for a fiUIT)' of "11<\rls Wednt>day that mJas. Ing American balloon~! Thomas Gatch Jr. had bc<O sighted. ---- The Cifra and Europa Pres.\ agencies i:tl)Ol1'd that thousands of people saw Ga6'h's balloon about 8 a,m. ov.r the Oratava valley, on tho island of Tener!!• The report.I said tbe balloon, deocribed u both blue and rose colored, was This Is 'Mr. Church' Rev. Dr. McOlasb assures children at Fairview State Hospital that God loves ail his children. The children call him Mr. Church or Father. He is the chaplain at the facility serving 1,714 retarded patients. See Page 15 today for the fifth part of a series on the hospital that is probably America's leader in treatment of the mentally retarded. Clemente Hotel Residents . ' Stricken by Fumigators By JOHN VALTERZA OI ttle D•HY Pilot St•ff A fwnigation project ibat somehow went-awry-sent a powerful insecticide la ced with tear gas through all three le~els of the San Clemente Hotel Wednes- day night and dozens of elderly residents were evacuated. .Police and firemen took four residents of the hotel to San Clemente General Hospital for emergency treatment for nausea and irritation caused primarily from the tear gas. Firemen said the gas is intentionally blended with the insecticide methyl bromide, because the bug-killer bas no smell of its own. 1be evacuation , orderly and without any panic, began shortly after 8 p.m. and police 9fought about 30 residents out in pairs and shuttled them to two local motels which offered them lodging for the night. Fire ·Marshal Don Hodgson, who supervised the evacuation or the elderly guests, said the fumigation project was supposed to involve only an abandoned business building next door to the old hotel which was built at 124 Avenida Del Mar in San Clemente's earliest days. "Somehow the gas made Jt past a nre wall separating the buildings and apparenUy accumula ted in the hotel basement. "From there, it was dispersed through the ventilating system," be theorized. Some residents reported sensing the first indications of the leak Jate in the afternoon and said it became pro- gressively worse through the night. 'Ibe hotel manager phoned police. Public Safety Director .;Jifford Murray said this morning that tragedy was most certainly averted be'Cause of the fumes ' discovery early in the evening. Fuel Pi-ice Advances 50 Percent The head or the electrical utility serv- ing large portions of the South Orange c.oast today said the fuel crisis is still grave and that bulk oil costs are still soaring. \Valier Zitlau. president of San Diego Gas and Electric Company, said he foresees no relief from "staggering" increases in costs of low-sulph1.1r oil 8Jld other fuels needed to run con· ' venlional generators. i "Since la st December our fuel prices '"4 have advanced more than 50 percent. 1 Considering that tbe company will have ! to buy 11 ml!Hon barrels of oil during j this year. the added costs are stag- gering," he said. 1 Some oil purchases have come with . price of as much as $17 a barrel -1' up from the $7.06 paid last December. • Zitlau, figures that the added costs to the Utility -hence to its customers -will be more than $108 million. That is more than double the cost o[ fuel oil last year. Zitlau said that low-sulphur oil used as a relatively pollution-free fuel in steam generators bas borne the highest price tags in re<:ent montM. Despite the increased costs of tbe fuel , however, the utility still insists that its supplies are ln healthy shape. "Barring government diversion of our supplies (for defense purposes). our con- tracts assure us of adequate oil to meet our power generation needs through 1975." the utility official said. The firm is banking on required air provals for its own oil refinery in Carlsbad to serve its needs after 1975. The propoBed plant would be !>lillt in an area near SIXi and E's .Encina complex which ~ists of several oil burning generators serving the South Coast. * * * Nuclear Plant Grading Friday Rough grading oo the SJ.acre b!ufft<>p site destined to hold San Ch:llre'a two new nuclear relietor1 la expected to I begin Fr'doy. , The initial steps in a projected. decade ' of colis!ruction comes after four years of pitch:-d batt'es over licensing of the $1.5-billio:i complex three miles south of San Ck·mente. Southern Callfomla Edison and San Diego Gas and Electric companies finally won their final crucial approval receotly when the California Coastal Conservation Commission upheld a decision from the regional panel which originally issued a construction permit. Jeans Furniture . now on al JJ.J. ga,.~ell~ Also Specially Priced During Month of March Need we say more. It's elegant Schafer Bros, furniture covered with durable blue-d enim that's just as comfortable and relaxe d for sitting. as it is for wearing. Cr .. ted by noted de•i gner Zagaroli, each denim covere d piece is touched off, with the warmth of real leather and the bold elegance of brass bullonry. All lo create thol just right "down home" feel for those who are living today's new relaxe d life•lyle. Come in, sit and relax. See if Jeans Furniture isn't just what you've been hoping to fi nd to express the "you" in you. Your favorite interior desig11er will be /i.appJI to assist you •.• r H.J.GAl\l\ETf fURNITURE PROFESSION~L Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DES IGNE RS T!Nn. I Fri. ms. COSTA MESA. CALIF. beodlq soutlhloutmresl at 3,000 lo 9,000 L--~~==:=:==::::::::::::=::::::==:=::=:::::===='=:_::::=:::::::==== r..i. --.. ... • --• .. • ..... -~ '. , Finding Joh Top Priority For Calley ... COLUMBUS, Ga . (AP) -For the first time In nearly lhree years, Lt. 11---Willi.am-L. Calley.... Jr.. -i'--free-.to-eome -~­ and go as he pleases and to choose from thousands of civilian job olfers. "( feel I could be useful to society," the 30-year-old officer told U.S. District <;ourt Judge J. Robert Elliott on Wednesday before Elliott ordered Calley freed Oil $1,000 bond. But the slight, sandy-haired lieutenant was not required to post bond . He was relea""1 on his own recognizance. 'nle Anny seld It bad not yet decided whether to appeal Elliott's order. IN ADllllTrlNG Calley to bond, Elliott said he would hear at a later date Calley's challenge of a court·martial verdict Which found him g u i I t y rl. murdering at least 22 civilians at My Lai in March 1968 during an Anny sweep through the Vietnamese village. Calley was sentenced to life in prison, but lhe term was subsequently reduced to 20 years. The judge said Calley should be freed for house an-est at his apartment at neart>y Ft. Benning because be presented no danger to himself or to society. CALLEY GIRLFRIEND Anne Moore Selassie Changes Prime Munster, Grants Pay Hike ADlllS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - Emperor Haile Selassie named a new prime minister ~ granted broad military pay raises today in a move to end an enllilted men's revolt that ha! swept Ethiopia. ERA Baek:ers Hopeful Apollo· 13 Pilot Rips Sex Bias Ban Enactment Seen by 1975 WASHINGTON (AP) -Supporten of tbe Equal Rlghll Amendment are optimistic of approval al least by 1975. But they expect addltlonal ,.tbacks before ratification by the needed 38 states. 'The three states that are key now are Illinois, Florida and Louisiana," said Pat Keefer, who is coordinating the Common Cause lobby for the ERA. "'If we won the battles in these three states, that v.1>uJd bring us up to 36 and then it might be possible for other bonlerline states, such as Oldahoma, to ratify this year also/' she said. But aome temporary setbacks are ~expected in other states and supporters have set a goal of January 197S for ralUlcaUoo, she sald. FIVE MORE STA~ must rattly the constitutional amendment banning sex discrimination before it bc<.'omes law. \Vith an as.<1ist from organized labor and tbe White House, ERA proponenll have "'on ratification this year in 1Malne, Ohio and Montana. Georgie's Hoose defeated the proposed conslltutionel amendment in January. There "'ere two contradictory actions this ""·eek:. In Virginia, the House Pri\_'ileges and Elections Committee defeated the ERA 12-3, a predicted turndown. Love on Ben~h Judge Accused of Sex Bargaining HUNTSVILLE, Ala . (UPI) -Four women have testified that General Sessions Court Judge Thomas B. McDonald offered leniency in his court in exchange for sexual relations with the women, One of the witnesses, Cheryl Forsythe, said she escaped punishment for as many as 25 charges of writing bad checks during a tw<>-year period. State Attorney General WW lam J. for Women, said she did not meet ~1c00nald at the motel. A MADISON COUNTY Grand Jury indicted McDonald, SS, in May, 1973, on five charges ot irregularities in o£fice. He was being 'tried separately on each charge. Baxley said in an opening statement that ~lcDonald had "allowed his lust or sickness or whatever to influence his judgment where young female defendants were concerned." IN l\IJSSOllRI, the S..ate Rules Committee reported out the ERA by a S-2 vote . The proponents' optimism stema partly from a recently repeated endorsement of t]je ERA hy President Nixon and the turnabout of the AF!,.CJO to favor the measure. They are sure or approval by the 1979 deadli ne, partly because 'of precedents that a state cannot undo Its ratincatlon . as Nebraska has voted to do and other states indicate they may try to do. Propooenls do nol plan to challeogt Nebraska's vote to rescind unleu the 1979 deadlioe nears and its vote is needed for raUfication. Among the groups del'Oting full-time elfor1s to the ERA are the Nalloo.al zation for Women, which is candidates who oppose Mlti-ERA egi tors; the Leegue of Womon Voters, which has so far contributed. to the fight about $65,000 from the sale of bracelets with the letters ERA on tbem; and the citizem lobby, Common Cause. IS EQUAL RIGHTS GOING TO DOGS? BOISE. Idaho (AP) -An equal rights for female dogs bill has been introduced in the Idaho Legislature. rv-~ooie . ' HOUSTON, ·Tex. (AP) -,Former Astronaut James f.. Lovell, C"'11llllllder of the near-lraglc Apollo 13 space lllght, says a TV movie based on t~ 19'10 mission is '1tictit1ous and in poor t.aste.11 I.ovell aired his complaints abool tbe ABCTV movie, 11llouston, We've G<lt a Problem," in a letter to Dr. JamM c. Fletcl>er, chier of the Nallooal Aeronautics and Spece Administration. "NASA did a dlsservlee 19 the lllght crew and ground penonnef connect.cl with Apollo 13 by cooperating fully with this ftlm." Lovell said. "I resent the mixing of fact and fiction. If NASA wanted exposure of thb nature, the story should have been based on a fictitious space flight." ·111E MOVIE, to be shown Saturday, is billed as a tribute to the men ol MJs&on Control who helped f!'l I.ovell and fellow astronauts Fred W. Halse Jr. and Jolm L. Swigert Jr. back to earth. The mission was launched April J 1, 1970. After an exploslon in the service module, a planned moon landing was canceled and the crippled spaee craft limped back to earth. "Jt is not necessary to resort to soap opera plots I<> enliven the Apollo IS story," Lovell said. "lt ls a tad commentary of the times when we have to llctionalir.e the truth I<> make It palatable I<> the public. Calley Jell immediately under military escort for the small red brick apartment where he has been confined for 35 The emperof, broadcasting to the nation, said he asked Endalkachew Makonnen ,to form a new government. MakoMen is a popular figure and was minister of telecommunications. Baxley withheld from the courtroom the names of two witnesses because, be said. They dld not have aimlnal records, they were married mothers and lived in Huntsville. ONE OF THE unidentified \\"Omen said she met McDonald at the olfice of a local real estate company to discuss an automobile theft charge against her brother. She said McDonald told her to remove her clothing and ';have a sex relationship \Vith him on the couch ." Defense Attorney Glerm ,_fanning said McDonald had been one of the most respected men in l\1aclison C.ounty before pretrial news coverage of the case. The town of BeJlewe is required to charge $2 to license male dogs and $S for female dogs. 'Ibe charter change y,ooJd enabl.e the town of 537 persons about 35 miles soulb ol Sim Valley to charge what It wants to license dogs, without the mandatoey sex dJs<rtmlna. ti on. "U one , ls to believe this storv. it was obviously more trawnalic to be. in Mission Control than to be on boerd ' A COURT SOURCE said Calley chose It appeared that Ethiopia's 40,()()().man the military escort because he bad ~-·-military forces got most of what they , . wanted following three days of nonviolent received a threat. The source declined rebellion against the government of to elaborate, however. Aklilu Haptewold which r esign c d Military guards were removed from \Vednesday after four generals failed Calley's apartment shortly after he to negotiate an end to the mutiny. arrived lbut military police continued Instead. the rebels in Asmara. in to circl~ the block 'in a jeep. northern Ethiopia, took three of the Oalley's fed.haired girlfriend Anne generals hostage and sent the fourth Moore, met him at the aoartment: where one back to Addis Ababa with new his first act of freedom was (o chase his demands. dog "Joe "tn the yard. The emperor said the base pay for "Calley' has had literally thousands privates wou1d be raised to $56 a mmth, of job offers, fmding employment won't from $50. The ceiling for privates would be any problem," said Capt. J. llouston be raised to $'15, and other ranks would Gordon, Calley's Anny counsel, after receive proportionate · increases. the bearing. . Mrs . Forsythe had testified earlier that she met McDonald at the san1e real estate company office, and "\Ve had sexual relations on the couch." Another witness. Laura Bland, said she appeared before McDonald on a charge of bigamy, and the judge made advances toward her in his locked office and asked her to meet him at a local motel. A-trs. Bland, 26, an inmate in the \\'est Virginia Federal Penitentiary "ImmedJately I've got to go back to school and I'm going to try to be sell-employed," Calley told the oourl when hiJ attorney asked him to describe his plam for the future. Drinker, 33, Dies; Left CAILEY AND ~nss MOORE had dinner on his first night of freedom at the home <:A one or his attorney's, Kenneth Henson. "He was glad to get ;nvay from his apartment and see the outside world." He!lSell said today. "That a man could be penned up that long and not feel personal animosity is amazing," be added. Henson said he and the other lawyers bad requested. clarification from the Army as to whether Calley, as a military prisoner, could accept a civilian job. He said he expected a reply would -take a few weeks. Gordon said that Calley has already made a job choice and will annoW'ICe . it "in due course." He declined to say ---wllat1he-job w ... ----· • - MISS MOORE, \Vho has had pcl'o11Cr ·of attorney for Calley while he was t.mder house arrest, has visited him daily. "I think it's wonderful,'' she said of his release. Army Secretary Jioward H. Callaway now has Calley's sentence under review, and President Niicon has said that he will make a final review of Calley's case. J<im Gause, the civilian public infonnation officer at Ft. BeMing, said ihe Army will no looger pay for Calley's food , rent or utilities. Calley has drawn no pay or allowances since his conviction in 1'-1arch 1971. -"He will still be a first lieutenant in the U.S. Anny, but he will not be paid," said Gause. Lying in Bar Five Hours WILMI NGTON. Del. (AP ) -Police are blaming customer apathy for the death of a 33-year-old man who fell to the f!oor in a topless go-go bar and 9.'as left unattended for five hours. Dr. Ali z. Hameli, state Medical examiner, said John E. Bradley of Wibnington died Tuesday night o! acute alcohol ingestion. Police said there was a PQSSibility Bradley might still be alive if he had 'It's our son, dear. Ha must be happy, he's joined a gay movement' bee n hospitalized in time. But not one of more than 20 customers called an ambulance. "I don't think they gave a damn. Th.is is the worst case of this I've ever seen," sald Police Lt. Jotm Doherty. Investigators said Bradley downed 12 stingm, cocktails made of brandy and creme de menthe, before falling off his stool at the bar. A group ol palroos placed him on an unused bandstalXI while the show went on and left him then, police said. "He V."311't bothering anybody,'' officers quoted one youth as saying. DAILY l'ILOT DELIVERY SERVICE De'>~B'Y of t~e Cl:J;ly r.101 •1 q.iar.:in•ee<l ~,.Friday-u "°" 00 ~ ~ ............ '**.,, ~ 30 p "' Clll -'f!l<I' ~ ..,11 ba tl<Ovg~I IQ )'1)11, C.111 .. ~....,•r-oo~ .... Slluroty -S......,. H "°" oo no! -.. 'f'Ollf cooy tlf t • "'. S-0.,. or I 1 "' s.,_.,, call and • OOClf' ............... c:.iit ... -..... ~101.111. ,_ ...,.0...~"'-·•· .. ···· .... ,M1·W1 ---.,,.. .. , ............... . \ . ..... 6'!0-1210 Pacific Coast Buffeted • Wi11,ds of 65 K11ots P ou1id Coast of Orego11 r•ln d11rlrt11 Ille .w>1lrt11. St!Wm w1rnlrt11l .,,.re In 1111<! for IM entire 1re1. lnl1M. heavy-snow w1rnlrt11• W9rtl p05ttd tor trit ~Mrn s11,r1 1nd lrfvtftorl wer1• l(lvlHd of blowl"lll s.now In ltM l'l'IOUfl!1l111 of 1"8 Plldflc Nort!lwlSI Ind Hor1htnl C1UforTll1. SOme .fllOW 1llO followtd 1n lnv11iorl of cold air Into TM l!lr-llOrt1'lefll P1alM Ind !Ill llkl SllC*kor "91oft. W!ll11ton, N.0 ., Wll brYI...... by an ll'ld'I or -durl111 fhl l'llohf, .nci wlnd1 '11191'1 of «I "'p.h. -• Clockld II Gf'lftd ForQ. A blfld of "°*'' l lr oroctvcld ctoWv 111.lft 1,.,,, 1M -~ CW!f l lll'tt t!U'flUGI'! Tiii IQW't!' °"'8t llk<'i 8"" I W¥k COid fr'Dnl ,_,.._, ""'"r1tvr" from Oillll'IOll'W II Mlc.hf9lft. !ltr#tlel'I, t111v9h, ftlr tll.ln ~ mild .,,.. .. ltltr oP'9'1111tll. Cnatal lt'f'•fher Cl~ tdlY. t.IQllt v1rt1b11 wfnc11 nl1hl Ind momlnt hout's blcom1119 S01111'1~1t'rly 10 IP 20 11no11 In lftll'· "°°"'9 todlY Ind Frld1y. HIOll todlY ~. Colt1•1 1tmper1hwff r•net from $1 to ~. fnllnd ~llltlf'tl r111111 from If le 10. W1ter IM'!per11ure S6. Sun, /lfoon. Tide• TMVllDAV $t('Ol'ld 1111111 l ;,, p,1". ,_, *oM tow . 1:0t "·"" '·' ,.IOAV IEll"lt lllf!'I ...... 2;33 1.11'1. I.I Flrlt low ...... , ... 10: .. 1.m. O.• StcOlld Mtll • ". .... . . 6:0l ,,.,,,, 2.1 Stconcl low .... 1:11.,..,.,m. '·' $1111 ., ... 1i:t1 1.m. ..., •: ... •·"'· Moon RIMI" IO:M """ :94-;.., _ ...... --3-'.::ll.S"'"" MAKE IT A STANDOUT SUMMER! WITH FASHIONS FROM JC PENNEY ... POL VESTER DOUBLE KNIT SHORT SLEEVE TOPS ZIPPER FRONT NECK 5 50 ASSORTED COLORS • SIZES S to XL 100% POL VESTER MISSES PLAID PANTS 10.00 WIDE STRAIGHT LEG WIDE MOCK CUFF ZIPPER FLY SIZES 10. 16 \ I JC Penney the crippled space ship. , .. 100% POL VESTER MISSES FASHION PANTS 3.99 FLARE LEG WIDE MOCK CUFF ELASTIC WAIST BAND MISSES SIZES 8-10 QUEEN 32 to 36 6.00 We know what you're looking for 24 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH ONLY I I (' ( .. I ' -, • • ' ' ' I • ' . ' ' Oran de-Coast ~ EDITION :. * Today's Final N.Y. Stocks , .~I';(~·"'"•" ) ., .;.t ,, .,:,VOL. "67, NO. 59, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1974 N TEN CENTS ~ ~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-' ~·:""''' . !.:?Re8g· ·a· D /;, , .. . . ~?"~' I • ._ I Answers Queries on Gas Plan. ·• SACRAMENTO (AP) -Here are key questions about California's new man- 1 datory ga90line marketing r :an and the answers provided by Gov. Ronald Reagan : I I Q. How dOH lt work? A. Motorists with license p 1 a t e 11umbers ending in odd digits will be allowed to purchase gasoline only on odd-numbered days in affected areas. Motorists with license plates ending in even , numlK!rs will be allowed to purchase gasoline on even-numbered days. Environmental plates containing only letters are counted as odds. 'Ibe 3Jst . of each month is a free day for 1 all vehicles. 1·, Q. Who 11 affected? ·A. Private mot.orists who Jive in coun- ties which declare gasollne emergencies. At lhe time of Reaga.h's announcement Wedne!day that Included Alameda, C.on· tra Cosla, Los Ana:el,es, San Mateo and Solano counties. Officiala of Modoc, Orange and Santa Cruz counties said they bad also Jssued emergency declara- tions. Reagan sald he expected more counties -particularly in Southern California -to join today. Q. Who is excluded, and why? A. Commercial and emergency vehicles. So are drivers with out-of-state licenses and all drivers in counties which choose not to join the plan. Priority is given to business to protect jobs. Individual service stations are urg- ed to use discretion to identify abuses. Tourists get a break because or the importance of tourism and thelr probable lack of familiarity with California rules. New caJilomia residents witb out--of·state licenses are too small a group to attempt to police. Q. Wbea does Jt start? How Jong wlll It last! A. Controls start at 12:01 a.m. Friday, P.farch 1. c.ounues may join later. Any county may drop out when local officials decide the controls are no longer needed. Q. Does It prohibit topping off the tank? A. Yes. Service stal i<lns are ordered not to sell gasoline to n:otorists "''ho have half a tank or more. However, stations with limited supplies are urged to make them stretch. Th.at could mean limits which might also prevent fillups at times. Q. Wlll service stations sUD be closed Sundays? A. Hopefully, more will be open Sun- days and nights. Service station owners are also urged to"'Uagger their hours and make arrangements to space out sales so that there will not be shortages on weekends, nights or at the end of the month. That is a request with no specific order on hours at individual stations, b._: penalties may be imposed for flagrant violations. - Q. How will I know ~·here gasoline is available? A. Every station mu.st post a con- spicuous sign or flag. Jf flags are u.sed, green means gasoline available to the general public according to license plates, yellow means gasoline for emer- gency vehicles only, and red means no gasoline. · Q. What about violations? A. Dealers and motorists will be sub- ject to misdemeanor prosecution with a maximum legal penalty of $500 fine U.S., Egypt Resume Ties and six month.s in jail. However, official! arc ordered to handle cases by citation. ''Nobody's going to be dragged off by the scruff of the neck," Reagan said. Q. JJow will it help solve the problem? A. The even~d plan "'ill cut about in hair the vehicles that can gas up on a given day, thereby hopefully cutting do"11 on the long lines of cars waiting to gas up. Prohibiting topping off a tank is intended to further cut down on lines ard curb panic buying. By having station operators allocate their sales over the entire month. it is hoped that there "''ill be no severe shortage at the end of a month . Friendly Again TRAFFIC JAMS UP ON COAST HIGHWAY AT THE ARCHES IN NEWPORT OF 1930• City Councii Mffts Tonight to Seek Solutions to City's Traffic Problems ~~~~~~~~'--~~ County Appoints Panel to .Study Airport Routing ' Orange County ~upervisors h a y e named ·the II-member panel empowered tO' study the feasibility of rOutiog future 1 cixmty ·commercial jet traffic to Ontario l lntemational Airport. f The panel was .suggested by Supervisor 1 Ronald (;aspers, v.tio raised t h e 1 possibility of using Ontario to help 'relieve growth. pains at the existing county jetport. Caspers said there is no possible way the existing facility can be expanded enough to handle future demands since it" is already under fire from noise- plagued county residents. He also said efforts to get either joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station or •1 new jetport on Camp Pendleton land have proven futile. The panel created at Cllspers' request wil): meet for the first time March e• lo start laying the groundwork of the feasibility sludy they will do. Traffic Plan Viewed By Newport Council Newport Beach councilmen expect to make a final decision on a citywide trafric plan following their public hearing on ·the controversial document tonight, Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis said today. hfclnnis Wednesday predicted there win be a "standing room only" crowd 'Being Stalled' . Says Reinecke SAN FRAljCISCO (AP) -LL Gov: Ed Reinecke, a leading Republican can- didate for the gubemalorial nomlnalioo , U)'S he's· being sWle<I in his aim. to get a , Ii~ d~r test~ to prove bis 1 innocence In the ·1TT antl~trw:t case. "Because of 1 1he political situation, I think this is very unfair to me," he told newsman Wednesday after ar· riving from Washington. on hand for the special 7:30 p.m. hearing in city halJ. / Mcinnis said normal council pro- cedures -including a five-minute time limit on speakers -will be followed. In addition, he said, groups represen- ting a single point of view will be asked to use a spokesman. Mcinnis said he foresees a meeting that will last at 1east until midnight. The traffic plan, prepared by a con· sultanl firm tinder guidance by a citizens' committee, recommends about $67 million in road improvements. 'Ille most controversy in tbe plan in· volves something that isn't even in il The consultant, Alan M. Voorhees and Associates of San Diego, stripped the plan of an early recommendation for a downtown Corona del Mar bypass alter considerable pressure from Corona de! Mar residents. lt was also rePorted that Ute ultima te decision to dump the ~ s<>-<:alled "Fifth (See TRAFFIC, Page ZI CAIRO, Egypt (AP) -The Vnlted States and Egypt today formally an-• nounced resumption of full diplo matic relations broken o{f since the }.1iddte East war of 1967. The announcement came in a joint declaration read at the White House at about the san;ie time it was being disclosed in Cairo. where Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger was meetin§ with Egyptian leaders in his ~~t Mid· die East peace-making camir_ign:- Later, Sadat invited President Nixon to visit Egypt. . ~···---··. -··-· In. addition to a general upgrading iPf contacts, lbe move means the Spanish EmllaS>y in Cairo will no longer bouse the American diplomatic deJegation to Egyp~ headed by Ambassador Hermann Eilts. Similarly, an Egyptian de1egation headed by Ambassador Ashraf Ghorbal will move into facilities of its own in Wa.shi.ngton 1 where-It has been working under the Indian flag. The two ambassadors have been in place since Kissinger and Egypt's Presi- dent Anwar Sadat agreed in principle to rest.ore diplomatic relations in Novem- ber during a visit to Cairo by Ute American secretary. Relations had been severed since the six-day Middle East \lat of June 1967, when Egypt broke them off because of the American role in favor of Israel. Kissinger returned to Cairo today for talks with Sadat al a rest house overlook- ing the Great Pyramids. The Egyptian leader greeted him wannly with a tradi- tional Arab embrace and suggested they both pose for photographs with the pyramids as a backdrop before their discussions began. Kissinger and Sadat w e r e e-0n- centrating on the next stage 0£ an Israeli troop wilhdrawaJ in the c xupied Sinai ' Gls Held in Ger1nany In Drug Robbery STUTI'GART, West Germany (AP) - A l)ighly de<orated U.S. Anny captain and an Army sergeant are being held in a German jail facing dlarges of anned robbery of suspected German dl'l.lg dealers, authorities announced Wednesday. Capt. Robert L. Van Buskirk, 29, of Florence, S.C., is being held in pretrial confinement in sUburban Sluttgart, the Anny said. Med>ben of the panel will include James F. Si<>cl<, chairman of the COunty A1rport Commissioo; Orange County Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahap: Orange County Transit .District-General Manager G. J. "Pete" Fiel ding and Airport Action Association spoke!!man Dan Emory. Edison E~ansion S~owed 'OcCU[XlUts' 'Escape Fire Hu11tingto11 Plan.t Says It Does11 't Need to Rusli It 'Ibis Is • lllOIJ( of • mldenttll structure nre • handled by the ' Newport Beach Fire Department ' ~ and tt bas .. happy in ending aa a Mild.mill llrUdure · fire .story could. -" ..£1mnm quld:Jy uthJiuli!hed tile blaae caUlod wtJen a Ugflt bulb · ..; a U1Jlllf pole at Via Lido and Central Av111ue .ln !be downtown • diltrlct Ignited the &lraw 'and feathers Ulod In a bird's next built too<"'* lo IL ·~ were away ••• , residence ~ VllCllll ... 11111 In uae at the time," ail tile llOIH , (structure fire) report. "No tn-.. • lurlM llld DO damage to the pole.'' By CANDACE PEARSON and on line," he said today. °' t11t W.. """ "'" · · The company had figured new units 1 Slower population JP'OWlh and -ol the plant at Pacific Coast Highway energy demands have co n v I n c e d and Ne"' land Street in Huntington Beach SOillbem °'1lfomla Edi ... omciala they ...Wd be ptOduclng power by 1975 to don 1 need In expand their Huntlnclon 11117. Beach -r plant 1111W 1977 or 1m, Tbe fo!$U fuel plant now generates II w.. loamed today. ' lft mep'W.tts ol po-. The combined 'Ibis tenUIUve time line is up to "'"' cycle a<ldiUCllS -1d ldd another 1,111 ,_.. beyond ori&llial plans by the com-moP••tll ol put Jnductton. • ... y, ldloan Fna.y wllf Bit 1 -ruourceo UtJlliY olDclals applied last Odober llC!lodule, outliDl"IJ Ila future pllu IOI' for 1 COl1llructlon permit for the 1311 Ill lit major laclllUes lnchllllnc. Hun- mllllon extJllllion ll'on\ Ille South Coost tinlton Beacli, with the C.lllOrnla Public Repmat Zone Cc>olervauoa ~-Utllltieo Commisalan (Puc). But the applkatlon wu returned· for IJntll II " acalpecr and "lli'll"""'°"'""';r.i· by more Jnlonnatlon about tliree ,_tbs the PIJC, Rlcbardloll aalcl today II> Hun• ago and the compoay baan 1 nopplled. Uocton Beach, noliac la fillll Whel\ It wtll, accordlng to Edloon At 1 ncmt .._ ooulll,eommtslm, Dlltrict Manlaer PIUI Rlchlnllon, is m 11U101 in. $lllo 8arblra -wt>ere dollnltoly up In the air. the compaoy•s 11.4 billion expUalon of • "ll wlll probebly be three to five the San Ooofre Nuclear Power Pl1nt ,.an helore the Huntington Bta<h "'8 approved -Edl,.n Vice President i....,,....---------..J ,-poenlillC lllltion ...wet be completod -David Fogarty soid • number ol pllllllOCI .. • -1" . ~ ,., ' • • • un its have been deferred. Fogarty· said a nuclear plant in the desert near Vi~lle and a fossil fuel plant In !.-Ong Beach will delayed, in addltlon ~t erparu: program ' at Huntington eh. ,,/ Fogarty cited tbe~uced load - EdiS>n repo a 10 percent drop in poWer usage in lxtth December and January -and the reductd availability · of fossil fueJ as reasons. Richardson said today that the reduced need is the main factor. Population growth. la the area Edl!on tc:ms ts now running at' a rate ol !.5 percent yeerly, he uld, in conlr.,t to previous annual ntes of aeven and ~lgbt percent. Tbe grvwth Is still •118hUy higher in Orange County, he said, but, even here, tt has allllOll ~· cut tn ball from what was once a • ten percent !See EDISON, Page Zl Desert and continuation of the United Nations buffer role between Egyptian and Israeli forces there. The United Nations mandate expires April 24. Also high on their agr·· ·J were Kis· singer's mediation proposal "; for Syrian· Israeli troop disenga gemen t on the oc- cupied Golan Heights. American officials in the Kissinger party stressed that Syria "holds the key" to the second round of Sinai negotiations. They said the Golan lleights disengage- ment agreement must be arranged . before any new pullouts in the Sinai. Sadat allll' has said Egypt will not return to the Geneva peac ' talks until Area· Schools I1i Trouble? The Newport-Mesa Unified School District has a probJem, according to Superintendent John Nicoll. The district spends more than $1,200 per student each year, as compared to just $907 for most school districts in the state. That's no problem. But Nicoll says he· thinks the district is hamstnmg between a restricted revenue base and In'Oation. See story and other Harbor Area·related talcs on Page 18 today. Lido Bridge . Offered rNewport By Developer By ZALLER Of t'k ti Newport Beach developer n Koll has offered to build a public bicycle and pedestrian bridge across the West Lido Channel southeast of the Arches Bridge at no cost' to the city. The city Bicycle Trails CommiUee is currently studying a propasal to build a similar bridge at taxpayer expense or $80.000. By changing tile basic design concept, Koll sa)'! he can do the job for $10,000. It has not yet been verified by the city Public Works Department ttiat Knoll's proPoSed bridge will meet city re- quirement$. However Afary Blake. chairman or the Bike Trails Committee, says she is confident that Ko!J's proposal is far more desirable than the one the city is considering. The Arches Bridge area is considered the most dangerous area in the city for bicyclists. The Koll bridge proposal would eliminate the most dangerous features of the area, Mrs. Blake says. "The Koll proposal has ! simpler, more attractive design than our ptelimlnary proposal. It would be easier for bicycles to use, and it would be cheap. er," Mrs. Blake says. "It's just a belier Idea all the way around. We · ai'oold 'baYe been looking at it .... I! Koll weren't going to bWld It for us for Ir«," Mra. Blake said . Koll says he has two r.uons for o!!ering to build the bridge. The first ls Iha! he has a IS million commercial development project under way In the Lido Shops area. Tho bike bridge he Is pn>J>OSing f'OOld brin' bicycle traffic Into the general area of his shoP!. Secood, Koll says, "I think the public could really benefit frof the project." Koll's proJ>OSal ls to build a 120-/oot bridge across the Lido ChaMel ilO yards toUlh of and patallc! to the· exbting (See BllUlGE, ..... Z) • ' - ' Israel and Syria agree on the Golan pullout. Kissinger came here from Israel, \vhere he brought from Damascus a list of 65 IsraeJI war prisoners held by Syria. His delivery of the list marked a 1najor diplomatic breakthroogh. since the Israelis refused to negotiate on disengagements until the Syrians turned it over. The Israeli premier, Golda Meir,· saluted his efforts \Vednesday night. But Kissinger's aides said the secretary felt . "in his bones" that the -Arab oiJ embargo against the United States will last at 1 least another few days despite their . . progress. Nicoll Orders School Hiring Embargo Rule Superintendent John Nicoll today ordered an immedlale "embargo." on all new hiring In the Newport-Mesa Unified School District llllless h e personallY approves the case. Niooll said be issued the order to serve notice throughout ' the district that substantial budgetary cUtbacks are need- ed for Newport-MW to survive in the current inflationary spiral. (See related I story Page 18). "There may be a few . people hired ' for next year," Nicoll says. "But nflt many, and certainJy there will be no new positions created.·• "We are faced with a situation where ' we will probably need to ask for a tax election in the next two years," Nicoll said. "But we want to make whatever budgetary savings are possible in the meantime." Nicoll says a new tax structure im- posed by a 1972 state law, a declining enrollment, and state-mandated spend ing limits are oombining to put the Newport- Afesa district in a ''rather severe" budgetary crisis. Nicoll says he will allow new hiring only in cases where it is absolutely necessary. "ln general, we will be trying to reduce the size of our teaching staff by not replacing people who leave the district. uln the case where a specialist leaves, we may flnd it neeessary to replace him. But we want to keep new hiring down to a bare minimum," Nicoll said . Orange <:east • Weatller The \Vcatberlady sees a 60% chance of showers Friday with cooler temperatures along the Orange Coasi. Highs of 5S at the beaches will rise In 60 !nlancl.,Qver. nighl lows in the lower 50s. INSIDE TODA\' A judge in Alaballl4 ha: """ ccc.,ed oj dltpensing mercy m rtlf4n1 for 1enal fauor1 from tomclc dcje11dcnt.1. St011/, Page 4. • ~ 2 DAILY PILOI • Finch .Says GOP Aided . U.S. h1 60s \\'hen "'atergate has passed,•ttie Republicans 'viii be remembered for pulling the country together out of lhe ''tortured" yeal'3 of the 19608, Robert finch said \\1ednesday In Huntington Beach . 'Ille onetime lieutenant governor of California and former coun9elor to Presi- dent Nixon spoke before the Huntington .Harbour Republican Women's Club meeting. 'Ille optimistic speech by FiDcb at first focused on President Abraham Llft. coln ·s legacy as founder of the Republican party. But Finch later turned to other topics. "When all the rhetoric about Watergate and abo~t tho6e people who did abuse their trust has paMed," Finch assured his 50 listeners, "what will be remembered is this was a tortured nation ... on the streets and on the camp~." Finch said the Republican Party began a "healing process" by ending the Viet- nam War "honorably" and decentraJizlng federal government with more revenue· sharing. • Ege• Real Estate Kalmbach Quits Law Profession President Nixon's personal attorney, Herbert W. Kalmbach, Is lea"1ng the law pro!easion entirely, a source close to the Nev.-port Beach J'esidcnt revealed today. Kalmbach announced Wednesday that he was le•vlnc the law !Inn Ire helped to form In 1917 ju:st prior to President Nixon's election. Kalmbach Monday pleaded guilty lo t"'O federal charges inv.olving Political fund raising actlv1tes for the President. Q The 30uroe aald Kalmbach "expect.s the Calllomla Bar Aaaoc:Jatlon will con- duct an Investigation o! blm, but he does not expect to be dJsbamd.'' He said Kalmbacb's decLslon to reUre as a lawyer ls finn, however, and in· dJcated Kalmbach will punue real estale Investments. Kalmbach has also resigned from the board or directors ot the Bank or Ne\vport, \\•hich he and a group of Newport Beach busineMmen founded two yean ago. "In view of what has happened, Herb feels the resignation Is appropriate," the source said. "•le (Jav.·orskl) v.·as not holdJng anything over llerb'1 bead,'' the source ,,,,. SQid. "Those were the flictS. They wer~ !rue. lie admitted the truth. "It was his duty to tell the exact truth in respanse to any and all qllt.Eltions/' the source said. Kalmbach'• res!gnallon r...m the bank board was announced by R o n a I d Rodgers, a Bank of Newport presiden t. Rodgera said Kalmbach's resigna~llon "had nothing to do" "ith Federal Deposit Insurance Coorporatlon lltlpula· tions that bank directors coovlcted of CU'· tain crimes must resign or obtain spedal permission to continue to serve. "It was strictly a matter of hls own reeling that this decision was in order." Rodgers said. "He felt It was In the best lnterests of all concerned." FDIC regulation say no person con- \1cted of a crime involving dishonesty or breach of trust can serve u a bank officer or director without ex>nsent of !he FDIC board . Nixon Savs ,,, "It will not be ,,.,,.itten in the pages or headlines," Finch said, "It will be written in the pages of history books." The GOP will be recalled as "main· laining its honor and integrity," Finch contended. DEVELOPER KOLL AT SITE HE PROPOSES FOR ARCHES BICYC LE BRIDGE He S1ys He'll Foot the Bill in Order to Get Bike Traffic to His Lido Shops "Herb j'ust doesn 't have any specific plans al Uils moment. He's been through a traumatic experience and just wants time to spend wilh hls family and rest," the source said. Republicans And he told the Republican women at the 1\1eadowlark Oxmtry Club lunch- eon that "no matter how difficult it may be, we can take great Optimism in 1974 and 1976," upcoming Congressional and Presidential election years. Finch also criticized the klea of public fniancing of election campaigns. ''We're going to be dead with the twcrparty system ir you pass public financing of campaigm," he claimed. He said he supports full public disclosure of contributions by candidates, but said a measure like that proposed by C.Ommon Cau.se on the June primary ballot would encourage "phony parties'' out to get the public's money. Roadside Stand r , Operator Carter : : Services Friday F'uneraJ services are scheduled Friday ror a onetime mortuary embalmer who, in re~lrement, settled down , to run a roaW;Kte stand near Laguna Beach speciaJiz:ing in fruits, vegetables and date milk shakes. Rites for John ''Pete" Carter, 68, 'viii be at 11 a.m., in Pacific View Memorial Park Cllapel, Corona del Mar, with interment to follow there. For eight years, Mr. Cartei-and his wife Beatrice, of 1750_ Whittler Ave., Costa Mesa, operated The Cove, a pro. duce and refreshment stand on Coa8t Highway near Crystal Cove. He was also an enthusiastic singer and member ol. the Santa Ana , chapter of the Society for the Promotion and Eooooragement ol Barber Shop Quartet Singing in America. Survivors in addition to hi; \.\ile lnclude daughters Carolyn J. Thomas of Costa ~1esa, Cat.hryn S. Mack of Anchorage. Alall.a; a brother. Thomas Carter of 1\1anlJa. the Philippine Islands, and seven grandchildren. Rites at Pacific View Memorial Park are under direction or Smith's Mortuary in Huntington Beach. .. Executive Killed ~OLAN, Italy (AP ) -Eugene Jean Knopf, French president of the Italian affiliate of Dun and Brad5treet, was stabbed 1n a street attack Wednesday night, hit by a car as he fied from his assailants and died shortly afW' police got him to a ho!pltal. A pollai officer said death was probably due to the car injuries. OU.N•I COAST • DAILY PILOT n..,Ort1191 CHU DAILV '!LOT, wllll wtik:ll •• c1mblned flit H,..._flreu, 11 llVflll...., •r ~ Ori,... C..11 'illllltlllftg C:on-..ny, s..,. ratt Min-. ,,. llW!b.Md, ,,....,..,, 111..,...fi l'•lll•Y· fW COiii Mt11, Nl'WPtl1 •11<;f'I, Hvntln;IO!I l1Kft/f'-111" v1n1r, u..,,.. ... di, 1rvlft11l.odlltl»dl '"" S•n C~!t/ I.ell Jwn C:1pl1tr-. A 1lnt!t '"lontl Mltlllrt II ,...,,,.,.. ktwrdtya -"°""'l't· Tht •lftc:lp.11 pUllr~· ,i..ftt h 11 U1 ""'"' .. ., Strwf, c .. i. ""-• C..Jllltr11le, t»». Robor N •. Wo•' l'rftldt'lll Oflll NU"'°' Jock • C11rlor Yk• 11',..llleftl ~11 ~ ' n..'"'' K., .. a ICltor 111•111•• A. Mutphtflo MAMI'"' Elfl• L. ••••r ICriot ....,..., "tdl City llf!ltf .... ,., ...... Offk9 JJJJ N1w,ort ''"''"''' M•llli.t A4Ur11t1 P.O. lo1 117,, tJ66J ...... _ et.to Mew: .. ...., ..,. ,fl.,. '"""""" tlicfl: m ~I A-fWllll'~::.:rdH i:nttl .._ ....,...,lttC ,_ : JU II C-IM .... ••s;I (714J 64.MJJI Q •• ' .......... 641-1611 ' ~I "7a. ~ CMlf ~ ~ ....................... ,..., ..... ~ ............. """"' _, ... , .. ' ........ _.., ,.. ....... ., ......,. .,_, ---~-.. --. ~~ .. -4Mt1W "·" ;;;j;;;,Ji-• ;:::', a:.,,...-...w' ,..,. ... .,. From Pagel Naked Jogging BRIDGE ... The source said that Kabnbach was not let off the hook by speclal Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski when he plead· ed guilty 1-0 campalcn vlolatloos before Judge John Slrica In Washington, D.C. To Remain By HELEN 1110MAS W ASIUNGTON (UPI) -Prealdenl Nillon, spulTed by cheers of young Republicans, predicted today that the GOP would keep the Whlle House at least thiouih 1931. It's a Bird, No, It's a Streaker Arches Bridge. Th• bike and pedestrian crossing would reach from the deadend of c.entral A venue -near the Elks Lodge parting lot -1-0 the Orange County Docks property, on the Pacinc Coast Highway. Koll's offer includes the stipulation that the city must obtain the necessary perm.its. . Reagan Again.st Gas Rationing In California DALLAS (UPI) -A £idgety freshman at Southern ~1ethodist University slipped out of his blue jeans near the school's tree--lined main boulevard ' and made a wild, naked dash across the grassy campus to a walling motorcycle. "You don't have lime to look at their face , loo," one coed said. The latest fad. called "streaking," has reached epidemic proportions on Texas campuses. At Baylor, students with their dates lingered at rurfew last week near one girl's dorm when a daring freshman , clad in ooty a ski mask and tennis shoes, sprinted two blocks down an adjoining sidewalk , romped along the side of the building , then cut through . lhe dorm's main Jobby with a dorm mother in bot pursuJI. "At first, it just started like a joke," one freshman streaker said. "Now, it seems everybody wants to get into it. It's sort of a fad and an ego trip. Something totally crazy that appeals to people -running around nude." At Te'las Tech this week, 25 male studoots, wearing ski masks, tennis shoes and ties, ran from the boys' dorm 200 yards to the girls dorm and back, while Lubbock television crews shot footage and girls shouted phone numbers from the batcony. At Texas: A and M last week, six male students dashed through a main quadrangle between the girl's and boys' dorms, ran along an adjoining street and lnto a wailing car. A half-<tozen nighttime nudists at the University of Texas, covered with enthusiasm, sprinted around Jester Center in the buff. "l imagine a lot or people have a fantasy of running around with no clotheson, they identify with running around nude." one S~1U streaker said. '·Once the act starts. it gives them a vehicle to release that fantasy." "It's a fun thing to do," said another freshman on the streak circuit. "N~y would believe we 'd do it. Once you start streaking you don't think about being nude." The streaking trend, which has spread aCJ'OSI the nation, apparently draws muc.h of its impetus from crowds of female students who gape at the roving bands of streakers. "You wouldn't be11eve how many girls nm outside to see these guys running nude," one SMU coadi said. "It's hysterical." At SMU, some sororities felt left out, since their houses are a half mile from the main streaking wne. "The sororities called us up and asked how come we always run in the freshman girls quad. why those girls gel all the , action," one veteran S~1'U streaker said . "'Ibey said they want us to run in Most of Stolen Rifles Recovered; Marines Arrested SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The FBI said Wed!lelllay lhat 12 of the 17 rifles SUilen from a ~i.rtn• Corps base had boen recoverea and the four m a r I n e I auspectod bad been amsted. The rt!les, Ml&,, were stolen from Camp Pendleton by two m<n dr<sse! a.~ the officer of the day and a sergeant of the suani. They took the rlfies away, aayin& 1t waa for "aecurlty reasons.' The rtlles were fowid ln the home ol Pvt. Robert Copeland, Ill, the FBI fl~· He wa.s arrested ak>ng witb ·Lance cpl. John F. Farmer, 19, Pfc. Dtnnls J. Speooo, Ill, and Lonee Cpl. tbarles T. Lewis, 21. Spencer and Farmer were accused of having impersonated tbe Officer of !he Day and the S.rgClUlt of !lie Guard. I front of their sororities, but asked us to give an advance warning. They said they'd have rest stations along the way." Train Hits Bus Near Del Mar, 3 Dead, 24 Hurt DEL MAR (AP) -Three persons were killed and ·24 lnjured when their bus chartered by the '1Jltrak rail service stalled on a railroad crossing and was rammed by a Santa Fe freight traln, authorities said. Officials searching frenziedly for vic- tims at the crash ~cene today surprised 34 illegal Mexican allens, one of them a woman , hiding in box cars of the 66-car freight train. All were taken into custody for questioning by the Border Palrol. "The wlncbhleld of the bus was stick· ing to the front of the train engine and people were lying outside moaning and O')'ing.'' said Peter Sokolow, a security at the Ocean Windows Hotel overlooking the crash site. The dead were identified as Carl Joseph Bertram, 47, Ingelwood, the bus driver; Sky Jenkins, 6, Clatskanie, Ore.; and Jeimie Doescher, 58, Aplington, Iowa, who died in a hospital two hours after the late Wednesday night crash. f\.1rs. Doescher's husband Harvey, 60, was listed in critical condition. Young Sky·s mother, waiting at the depot, watched in horror as the reight barrelled into the bus at about 3S miles an hour, firemen .:;aid. They comforted her Vlhile an ambulance took her husband to the hospital. The city's proposal , as suggested by Lampman and Associates -called for a Lido Channel bridge that would be physically attached to the s o u t h side of the Arches bridge. This design, Mrs. Blake says, would be Jess visually attractive and would have the additional disadvantage ol belnt lorn down wben the Arches Bridge Is rebuilt in 10 to IS years. Mrs. Blake says she doesn't blame the Lampman consultants, who are still \l-'Orking on a $10,000 contract to draw up plans for bike crossing at the Arches and Lido Isle bridges, for tilling to come up with the design Koll proposed. "The consultants were told to study the area immediately around the bridge,'' Mrs . Blake said. ''No one !hough! of the possibility o! moving a little ways away from the Arches to build the crossing." From Pagel TRAFFIC ..• Avenue bypass" was made after at least two private top level meetings between the conrultant and certain city officials. Instead, Voorhees has reCXlmmended that a ban on street parking on East Coast Highway will have to be employed to alleviate traffic congestion. A proposed multi-Ivel interchange at East Coast Highv.1ay at MacArthur Boulevard has also stirred considerable opJX>sition, even though it was endorsed by the planning CX1mml.ssioo. Among doz:ens of o t h e r recom· mendalions. the plan proposes dead-end· Ing West Coast Highway at the Santa Ana River and re--routing through traffic on a bypas.s circling north of Newport Shores. The consultant's recommendation for a second crossing of Upper Newport Bay was rejected by city planners, wbo said they thoogbt the east-west bot· Ueneck can be solved by widenln& the existing bridge and improving the ln· lersection with Dover Drive. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan aald today he opposes gas ra· Uoning unless the supply of fuel drops considerably In Csllfom)a. He refused to speculate over whether he would Impose rationing U his odd-and· even gasoline marketing plan falls to eliminate long lines at service stations. -That plan takes effect at midnight tonight In areas where about half of PLAN AT LEAST WORTH A TRY -Ed itorial, Pago 6 N!)(ON V()WS ENERGY BILL VETO, Pago 26 California's 12.5 million motorists Jive. Commenting on rationing. Reagan said ~t his weekly news conference, "We don't contemplate ii. We don't favor it. We don 't think it would be useful. We don't think it wou1d create an ad- ditional pint of gas." Reagan also said there has been Ha lot of mistmderslanding" about the penalties alt.ached to violations of the odd-and-even Ucense plate distribution plan. He said the marimmn SSOO fine and six months jail term is the standard misdemeanor provision, but that it is a maximum he would expect to be imposed only in extreme cases by chronic offenders. "Jt can range from a warning to $1 , no jail all the way up to six months lf you have a chronic offender,'' Reagan said. He said gas rationing conceivably could be imposed if fuel became so scarce driving was extremely limited. Reagan sakl his odd~ven gas dislribu- llon plan in at least eight California counties depends on the willingness or motorists to cooperate. "We want the least interference with the private sector we can possibly have and do the job governmeot has 1-0 do. The pn:lll'am we have proposed, even though It la mandatory, still depends on the wWlngness ol the people lo cooperate," Reagan said. Addreolng about llllO party members II 1-0 JI, at tbe YOIUlg Republican leadership conference, the Pr<sldeot gave his "1dvlce for potenUat politi- cians." "Keep your faith, keep your con· lidence," be told the crowd, even when "mistakes are made by people ln your party." Desplle problems beseltlng the party because of Watergate, Nixon sakl the" would be a Republican in the White House "for the next three yean and eight years after that, because we're going to be there for a long time." The speech -lacod with such pollllcal homRies as "Doo't assume the time lo run for office ls when it ls a sure thing" and "When the batUe looks tougbesl, get In there and fi1ht" - was greeted by cheers and applau..e. • "Three mort years! ... three m01'! years!" the crowd chanted as NlXoo held up three fingers. Nixon stressed the country would coo· tinue to maintain u, responsibilities as a world leader rather than "bugging out" on the burdens of the aftermath ot the Vietnam war. ~ "You can take pride that you supported the men and JX>licies that put an eod to the war which was here when we came to office," Nixon said. ~ From Pagel EDISON .•. growth jump a year. Fuel is still a concern, Richardson said today, but a less important one. In 1974 Richardson said. unless there i.'J some re allocation of fuel or other occurrence Edison didn't expect, "we'll be all right for fuel." The company plans to go through the public hearing on the Huntington Beach plant on the PUC level before returning to the coastal commJsslon. The original October filing came befoi:e a lawsuit deslgn<d lo halt the project waa filed In Orange O>unty Superior Court by the Envlromnental Ooallllon. That suit was rejected . this month by Judge Mark Soden. Aboard the bus, the child had been playing with a deck of flash cards, with which words, phrases and pictures are matched. Under her body they found two of the cards. One read "and my sister," while the other showed a picture of a gravestone and a single word - "died." lpiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;jiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;jiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil The train was not derailed and no l I one abdard the freight wa.s injured, authorities said. Jooeph Jone3, Amtrak passenger representative, said the bus was under charter by Amtrak, the national railroad passenger service, and was carrying 30 persons when the accident occurred. Beat The Tax Man SALE! MAaGI 111 I GO TO ~'$ TO COLLECT TAXES ON THEIR INT•I INVENTORY. I CAlil NAID.L T WAIT I . II was en route to San Diego. lll3:!~J f{e said n1ost of the passengers had come south by . rail from Vancouver, \\rash. and arrived In LOI! Angeles too late to make train connections to points south or Los Angeles. Some of the 38 passengers who boarded in Los Angeles had already been dropped off when the accident happened, he said. NO DEFROSTING .. FREEZER/ Wi1iter Su/rm Strikes N ortlr. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A winter storm struck NCWf.hem C.ll!omla today, unleashing rain, snow and powerful toutherly ci:ales . The National Weaiher service issued stonn warnings elong the coast north of Point Arena for 80Utherly winda 18 1-0 IS miles per hour, decl'U51ng 1-0 24 1-0 42 m.p.h. lonlghL Gale ''"mlna• are In effect lfirough Friday belween Point Arena and Point Sur. Heavy 1now was forecast In lhe Mt. Shasta.S~ldyou .... and Siem Nevada, along wllh winda 40 to n m.p.h. mrth of Lok• Taboo. \:REFRIGERATOR . :.:JS . ~· ) • ' • : !1111 ' I' r . ·-:::-c·J-:.:..: "' Be•utlful allmlln't stytlng •.• wllh ..... ,yu1mg 11 • your llngerUpal CANTILEVER shelves 1dju1t up ind down. Cabinet ro/lt t•llly on wMer1. AulomttlG let mak-'' c1n be ldcttd •!anytime • ' • 90DAYSCASH WITH APPROVED CREDIT 1815 NEWPORT BtYD., · Downtown· Costa Mesa -Phone 548 -7788 • /· I J ll DAIL I Pf· LOT N • Newport-~esa Distri~t Fa~ing Inflation By JORN ZAU.Ell Of.._ 0.-,. ... tt.H '!be Newpon-M-Unified School Dllll1<:I II clearly one ol the more fonwmle school systems In California. While the average O.Ulomla ldlool dlltrlct •pends just l1I07 per lludent -year, Newport.Mesa spend& more tllan fl,200. ' ., Pllblic Access ·A Requirement For Bay Bid McLain Development can build II ipertment units on Bayside Drive in ~ewport Beach, II It l.U the public walk around the waterfront project. '!be South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission approved a ·iennit tor the !4M.ooo project, but said developers have to provide a IO.foot i::asement for public access. '11!E APARTlltENTS proposed at 909 13ayslde Drive \\'Ould sit next to an ~I.sting 50-unit apartment, also by \!cLain, on Irvine Company land. Both front on the new Promontory lay channel that leads into Newport .lay. With the access -which developers ;aid they couldn't and wouldn't provide -people could walk !rom the Balboa rsJand bridge in front ol the projects ·.md back up to Bayside Drive. Without it, people would still be abl e '.D walk a short distance by the new channels but then would have to jog 'lehind the projects away from the water o walk back up the road where there ·n no sidey,•alks. ROBERT BEIN, representing McLain Co., saJd P.fonday lhal one to five-year eases with residents of the 50-unit >r0ject and restrictions on construction ·oam prevent the access. , Be also said the easement would be diff'1CUlt to engineer on the narrow lot :md would make the building less salable. The commission voted 7-3 to require .be euement. Billioas ol dollan have been invested ·a pla~ like Marina del Rey, Commissioner Rimmon Fay said, and ·'they're all done with walkways adjacent :o the water. It's astounding to me 'bat one lending . finn would find this :mpos.sible." FAY IS FROrtt Marina del Rey. "Our bay is carved up for private •Jevelopmenl,'' objected Commissioner Jud~ ~er ol Newport Beach. "It's :JUl>!Je water." Commissioner Ronald C.Spers, also JI Newport Beach, said he agre<'d :>bllosophlcally with the idea ol access. but said in this case, it was too difficu1t lo achieve. 111 thought that's what we're all about," Mn. Rosener responded, "to gain pubUc access to water that belongs to them." BEIN SAID the lot is only 30 feet deep in parts and that previowi proposals r:I a restaurant and yacht club were discarded because o{ that. Voting against requiring a public easement were Caspers, Art Hobnes of San Clemente and Russ Rubley of Long Beach. Voting to grant the perm it with the access were C',ommissioners Fay, Rose- oer, Donald Brigh~ Robert Rooney, Don Phillips. Don \Vilson and carmen Warschaw. AND WllILE many school districts muot ltn.iiuil• to bl"' top quality l<Odlen, Newport·M ... 's pa,y scale and attractive locatloo allow It to sit back and pick the cream ol the crop o/ young teachers. • But deoplte aU ·this, school olflclals say they are worried about the district's l\tture. . When Superintendent John Nl<oll ioou Into his crystal bill, he aay1 he '""' the Newport-Mesa district ha!1llltrung betwett a restricted revenue base and runaway lnflatlon. Ultlcss something happens to change things -like a focal tax override ln the next two rears -Nicoll sees New. port-Mesa sliding slowly downhill until It Prayer· Meeting Ma y or's Breakfast Ma rcli 8 An ovetOow gathering of 450 people is expect ed at the sixth annual Mayor's Prayer Breakfast at the Balboa Bay Club A1arch 8, according to the Newport Beach Jaycees, who will sponsor the event. MAYOR DONALD A. Mcinnis, the Icthus Tea m singing group from SI. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, and most members of the city council are.ex· pected to attend the tradlUonal. event, according to Jaycees. The keynote speaker will be Col. Heath Bottomly, an Air Force Vietnam veteran who has spoken in the Harbor Area in the past. TICKETS FOR TJJE 7:30 a.m. breakfast are $3.75 and can be purchased through the orflce or the Newport·Harbor Chamber of Commerce in Newport Center. Newport Flanners St11d)1 . is comparable to other school districts throughout the state. 111 REA1J.ZE that most people . aren1t used to thlnldng ol Nowport~eaa as a district with flnaaclal problems," Nicoll says. "But many things have changed, and Hol iday Healtli Spn iii La wsu it Ove r Accide1it An attorney who claims negligence by the lloliday 1tealth Spa of Costa ~1esa led to his foot being trapped in a jogging machine has sued the spa and the makers of the equipment for $30,000. Donald Lewis f\-1 c Car ty , 413 Westminster Ave., Newport Beach, claims in his Orange County Superior Court action against the spa, 2.100 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa, that he suffered serious injuries las t Sept. 22 when his foot "'as trapped in the ·'Walton Jogger ." l\'lcCarty slates he was not y.•arncd that he sh oul d be wearing shoes and ·not Jong pants while using the equ ipment lie nameSlbe\\'"atton-Jogging Company as co-defendants in the action. Low-income House Bid Bab ysitter Cha 1·ged C .J!'GbE~D (UPJ) -A 12-yeaN>id By L PETER KRIEG Councilmen noted they couI gtrl was ch ed. with manslaughter °' Ille De11J. "'"' 1•11 . • virtually any strings they wa Tuesday in. the ting death of a lG- Newport Beaeb planning comnuss1on-membership in the Orange y month-old mfant for whom she was en will take a second loot at • plan to Jlousiiig Authority. babysitting. Police said the baby, Tracy do sometbJng about houslna tor low and Collins, had been struck several times moderate-income ramilles. VICE MAYOR Howard Rogers on llhe tiead with a blunt object. She Newport Beach councilmen Monday suggested rental subsidies ln Newport died Saturday in surgery at \Vhite told plannera they 1hould give further Beach be limited. exclusively to certain Memorial Hospital. study to a proposal ,to join the Orange senior citizens. County Housing Authority. "We have an obligation particularly But there Is no hurry. tD older residents who have lived here Even though they were ~old thnt a long period of time. We should not property values could forct more than forte them to move out." he saw.-_· 1,000 residents to move out of Newport Councilman Milan Dostal said that Beach, councilmen made It plain they sounded like discrimination to him and aren't enthusiastic about a plan to help Dudley Winterhalder. director or the poor people Jive ln <their city. housing authority, agreeed. "Make sure the planning commi.asion "You cannot give preference to age," understands this is not to Interfere with Wintcrtialder said. any ongoing critical elforts," Mayor Donald A. Mclmis told the city stall. - Plaming commissicmers voted against participation in the county housing program when they first reviewed the Housing Element of the General Plan late last year. COUNCILMEN THEN suggested the Housing Authority could provide hoo.51ng for more persons in other cities where rents aren't so high. "There are other factors 4 o consider,'' Winterhalder respooded. Candidates .Forum Set ' At CdM's Youth Center ' The Newport Beach city council race, unusu11Uy quiet for the number of candidates entered, may liven up next "·eek -as aspirant.I meet In the flrlt·of a series of "a.1eet Your Candidate!" programs. / mE FIRST forum where all 11 council hopefuls will appear will take place Tuesday at 7:30 a.m. at the Corona del Mar Youth Center. It is sponsored by the Corona del Alar Chamber of Commerte. The Corona del Mar C1vic Association will host candidates March 13 at 7:30 p.m. at the Corona de! A1ar Elementary School. The Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerct! is planning a forum March 20 at 7:30 a.m. at the BaJboa Bay Club and the West Newport Beach Im~ provement Association will sponsor one that night at the West Newport Ch.II· dren's Library. · Motorcyclist Killed HEBER. ( ~) - A motorcyclist was kined Tuesday when his vehicle collided with a lettuce truck at a hi2ti"''3Y intersect.ion near this Imperial Valley desert cornmwtity, tile highway patrol said. ruchard S. Boone, 31, of nearby Imperial, was dead at tbe scene, the CliP said. Runaway Auto Cliases Woman . EDMONDS, Wash. (UPI) - Daphne J . Kopp, 38, I oat two rounds with her drlverlfas car but is alive to tell about It. Police said Mrs. Kopp alit from her auto after backing it out of her ga r1ge. The car roared backwards, and the housewife gave chase. She tried to jump into the oar as it careened wildly about, but It ran over her p!).!terior. 'Jben the car twlled again and bore down on her. ~in. Kopp was struck a second time but neighton managed to rescue her before she W8! seri9l1Sly hurt. the changes are affecting affluent dl1trlds like t.h1J one more than moet others," he 11)'1. Tho big01t change ts SB 90, a t972 state property tax refom1 bill that made sweeping chan&cs in the enl lrc structlU"fl of scOOol finance. THE ~\AJOR aim ol SB 90 WU lo o.ur Piiot Staff Photo SEES DOWNHILL SLIDE Newport.Mesa's Nicoll 2 Marines Get Terms in Jail ' After Burglary Jail terms have been ordered in Orange County Superior Court for two young El Toro 1Marines boo.keel in Costa Mesa on burglary charges alter . a spectacular car and foot chase along '11th Street. Judge James Turner ordered a four· month county jail term or Marini? S~hf!lll ,J. Cassel, 19, and three years .probation after he pleaded guilty to second dearec burglary. Marine Don OelschJagel, 21, also stationed at the El Toro Marine Corps base, drew a three-month tenn and three ·yea~ probation after pleading guilty to identical charges. Both men drove off at high speed from Davis Brown appliances, 411 E. 17th St., Coota Mesa, lut Oct.· 21 as police sped to tho store in r- to the tripping of a burglar alarm. They ne<1 on foot after their car smashed into a service station near the Newport Beacb-O>sta iM... city limits, but _. outrun and arrested by two patrolmen. THE NEWPORT Heights Homeowners Association also plans to sponsor a forum, but has not announced. the date. \ Cheerleaders Meet at Rea School Candidates in the April 9 election to fill four seats include : -District I: Vice ~layor •toward Rogers, an incumbent, and Mrs. ~lar· guerite Fo rgit. -District 3: J. Peter Barrett. Ellis Glazier. John J. McKei'ran. -District 4: Milan N. Dostal. incumbent , and Lyn Geronimi. -District 6: William Agee, John Baker, Mrs. Lucille Kuehn and Joseph Stewart. Residents must register or report address changes by March 10 to be eligible to vote in the election, City Clerk Laura Lagios has announced. Thirty middle schools, from Santa Barbara to Apple Valley are sending cheerleading squads to Costa Mesa Mardi 2 for California's first middle school cheerleading championship Pat Stephen, advisor to the Rea PCp Club says the event hu been· plaMed for five yean. ~ will enter team1 in all divisions : c h eerleadlng , songleadiDg and drill team . Large groups from Weot Covina and St. Raymond'• In Downey have entered <he compelition. 81eira &tool In Riverside will send two cheerleader squads, a group ol songleaders, and two drill team1. Compdlillon will be held in all d.i\ffsions sill'ultaneousiy i nd judged by ofllclall of the N•tl0111l O!eerleadet1 ~1111on. '111• publlc ta invited to altend the ·-· It beglna at 9:80 a.m. on die Rea playing fields, 601 Hamilton St. Jow<r property taxes. It did Ibis by settlllg fixed limits on how much lcbool diJtritts -as welt as other govmunent enUties -can spend . And at the same time, it added a new 'one<ent saJes tax to raise new money to help out poorer school distrlcts. But as an arnuent district, Newport· Mesa hasn't recelvOO one cent in ~, state help l'rom that one-cent sales tax, Nicoll points out. But, he says, It will suffer badly as a resuJt of U)e Jlmit.t on spending. According to Nicoll , Nev.-port.Mesa will be allo .... ·cd 10 n use its spending levels less than three percent a yea r in each of the next four years. "lF OUlt TAX rate \\~'re alloy,·ed lo remain v.•hc re it is, 11e 11ould br able to raise about IO ~rccnt in ne1\ money each year," Nicoll says. The reason is that the assessed value of property in the di strict is going up at about that rate, thus allowin g the same tax to raise more money. ··sut," Nicoll complain,, "SB 90 tells us that regardless of ho\V much our tax rate cooJd gene rate, we can only spend so much. "So we'll have no choice !lot to Jower taxes. since we left the m at the present rate, they'd raise mo re money than \\·e're· allowed to spend.'' Nicoll s.ays. The di.strict now predicts lhat this yea r's tax rate ()f $-1 .40 per $100 a~:>J>Sscd valuation will rise to $'1.f>.I next year. BUT IN THE three ye ars after that, it \vi ii fall below $4. Tliese declining tax rates -calculated lo raise only the fixed amount of money the district is allowed to spend will be automatic unless voters pass an override to keep them at their curreot levels. Nicoll says that without inflation the district t'could live with the increases in spending that we're allowed." Nicoll says. "BlIT INFLATION is around nine or 10 percent, and it's just not fa ir to ask our teachers to absorb that kind of inflation each year, without giving the1n a cost-of·living raise," he said. To make up ror inflation absorbed over the last year, Nicoll says, teachers ought to get an eight to nine percent increase in pay and benefits. To scrape together the money for pay increases this year, Nicoll says he plans five percent across-tbe--bo&rd cuts in the district's education program. NICOLL SAYS this wiU trnnslate Into a slight Jncrease in claa aizea, • les.! adequa!A! building maintenance Jl<Oll'8lll, and a curtailment of purchases of new educaticnal materials. ''We can do um one year or maybe two, and it won't bmt us that badfy," Nicoll says. 0 But we can't go on doing it indefinitely, and that'• why "" -an override election." Nicoll believes that voters ahould be asked not to raile their taxes, but to keep them from declining as mandated by SB 90. "TIIA T SHOULD make it easier," he says. Coast YMCA Set For New Series Of 'Gym Classes A new series ol dasoes Is being opened in Mareh bY tile Orange Coast YMCA. "Tiny Tot Tumblin" Is for youngsters S lo 5 years old and will be offered Tuesday and Thursday mornings. A tumbling class for children 6 to 14 years old will be offered at 3:30 p.m. Monday and Wednesday. Judo ia ol!ered Tut!Sdny 3lld Thursday at 4 p.m., with beginning guitar at 7 p.m. Wednelday and aqua fitness classes at 10:30 a.m. Mondays and Fridays. Cooed 118llm and Trim " classes will be held ~londay, Wednuday and Friday at 9:30 a.m., noon and 8 p.m .. while yoga can bl lludlod 1t 11 :30 a.m. Monday. Armstrong Pastors Fired Estlaetics and Electricity Latticework towers (background) otbat carry "Edison Company transmission Unes lhrougb Cosla Mesa an being repl1c<!d by more modem poles (horizon- tal, foreground). Tbe company says ihe new poles ai.o are nicer to look at. New steel poles are being ' installed along San Di ego Freeway near Glsler Avenue. Because new poles can be· set. farther .apart, Edison o!Iictals point out. there will be 81 !ewer poles In Cosla Mesa when project Is com- pl eted. Twenty Dissident Ministers Cite Doctrinal Issues BIG SANDY, Tex. (APJ -A group of ministers suspended by the 85.000. member Worldwide Church of God contends they have been fired . The controversy.plag ued c hur c h disclosed Tuesday that churcll founder ller bert 'V, Armstrong. had ordered 20 dissident ministers and lay leaders suspendOO. A church spokesman said Armstrong wanted to head off what appeared to be the makings of widespread internal revolt against the leadership of the church. lo prevent dlaaldent members from addressing congre(lations. In s t ea d , Garner Tt.d Armstrong told church members in a letter to observe this Saturday as "a day of fastin g and prayer for lhe health and well-being or God's church" and with "deep prevailin g prayer for the afflicted of Jesus Olrist." THE DISPtrrE with the dissident elements reportedly centers on doctrinal issues concerning d i v o r Ce and remarriage, on alleged mllUN of church tunds for elaborate bulldlnp and tfiO ARMSTRONG'S SON and h. Ir disslderill' oon!A!ntion that die elder apparent to the lh<ologieal kingdom, Armstrong cooceaJed for yoora w!ial Gardner Ted Anns<rong. new lo the was IA!rmed the adulterous conduct ol church's Ambassador c.ollege camJJU.' his 44--year-old 90n. hert lo a11110U11ce the suspensions. But Rader Hid those 111Spended would be several of the dissidents said they bnd summontd be.fore the ruling council of been fired and said the number was the church which would determine JS, not 20. whether the susperuilons would be A minister ol the church, Sarry Chase, · permanent!"' said Armstrong went to the cam'P;Yl! · Watter t,. Shari> or lbe Ambawdor and announced he was dlsmls,,ihg l~ -COllegc. on' of th e 15 out~f·work church leaders and ministers around workers, sald he accepted the suspcnsloo lhe nation. us belng fired, He said bls meeting The figure of 20 suspensiol)S had bc<n with the younger Annsllong "was ctted Monday by Slllnley R. Rader, extremely lnllmldatlng." general counsel of the dturch. Rader told the Posadeoa Star-Ne>ts !hat Armstrong order..! cbmd! -. not to hold Sabbath oervicet this Saturday "1 ADVISED IDM tllal Ille mio111ers objected lo doctrllloJ .. .-............ tearing the chilrdl •port. and lbal tbm I ' was no open forum lo be heard," he said. "The church is forced to li\"t by the dictates of one man . Herber! \V. ArmstrOf!S. ·' Chase was one of seven member:' who n1ad e the charges against Gamtr Ted lhal first call!E!d a dl!iput' in the 85,000-member sect. The Chase group allO claimed Jhe 8l·)'ear-old founder, Herbttt. \V. Armstrong. concealed hls 80fl'a alleged misadventures for years. Following the Chase charges. Carner Ted was relieved of bl! fellowship witb the d>urcb In January 11172 by his lither ""'ho, after ween ol slleoce. Jald his son was "in the bonds ol Satan." The son's whereabouts remained a mystery ror months, but then he Wu restored to his radio and television programs. TKERE JJAD been other disputes over doctrinal questions that are .spUtling the church. O!ase said. He said he haa formed the Dallas Olurch of Cod. composed mainly of membtrs who left the Pasadena-b..i sed church of the Armslrongs. Ar mstrong relused cornnltnt on the situaUon or Clase aoc1 his group - "the dlsaenters" -n""!ll to say tllal they were llSini Ibo ~ for free publicity In setling up dlurdles for tMmsetves. ,., ... ' \ ' GUARANJEED ONE-COAT hatMIM ·1" ht =as· ODii\' ., '°" . . • " m. • COi.ON, •• "Ml! wltm OU311 PR81C8E COMP, RETAIL . 8.60, GAL. ROOF COATINGS Protectibn.·Wintu Ond SuwiMu · FIBERED ASBESTOS o FINEST GRADE COMP. •BLACK ONLY ~j~··· piv;:5LL03s9E ALSO AVAILABLE IN GALLONS --~~'tLS. 100% PURE PREPARED HOUSE PAINT •FINE QUALITY •OIL BASE •TOUGH & DURABLE •IDEAL FOR ALL EXTERIOR WOOD •PRE-MIXED USE STRAIGHT FROM CAN DUR PRICE 75 GAL. •"COST THE u.s. tlOVT. 2.05 PER PAIR •PERFECT .FOR THli WEEKEND , CARPENTER.MECHANIC, PAINTER. ETC. Mosail!. CERAMIC TILE ' fl Unglaztui. OUR PRICE . Pattuns 59c COMP. RETAIL 1.10 . PER •PRE-MOUNTED SHEET ON GAUZE •STANDARD SIZE SHEETS ( APPROK 12'" X 12") •PLUS MANY GLAZED 19.,. PATTERNS UP TO SHEET POLY FOAM n A OS , .. ouii·P8,l:f.1 oo r I'\. COMP. RETAIL EA 2.39 TRONG ~CAS.TILIAf:f VINYL CUSHION . FLOOR ,o,.y~ 399 •ASSORTED PATTERNS & ~% COLORS . •LONG LASTING SHINE •6 & 12 FOOT WIDTHS COMP. RETAIL 4.59 ARllSTRONB®IMPERIAL ACCOTONE · .. ~ CUSHION VINYL ~$. · FLOOR ~COVERING •CLEAN·UP,WITH WATER •6& 12 FOOT WIDTHS •MANY NEW PATTERNS & COLORS o LONG LASTING SHINE FREE CUSTOM Mi'XING TO HUNDREDS·OF ·· COLORS ' OUR PRICE ' ·39 ' . •·FOR MASONRY 8i STUCCO • .' . . •BRUSH OR ROLL •SCRUBBABt:E «•INTERIOR • ' •EXTERIOR' .. '.SCRUBBABtE •GOO!) HIDING •1· HOUR DRYING : •CLEAN-UP WlTH •WATER '' . PURE WHITE &COLORS . ' •INTERIOR· '· • . , . EXTERIO.R ·•FAST DRYING ' •SCRUBBABLE ' . ··•DURABLE" • ·' ., . ~. SPARKLING · WH {T.E .&,CO~ORS • 12X12 IN • VinylAsbes~ FLOOR TILE OUR PRICE •MARBLE PATTERN 12c •DECORATOR COLORS • EA •GOES OVER WOOD . OR CONCRETE COMP.RETAIL 19c •DECORATOR COLORS •GOES OVER WOOD OR CONCRETE •EMBOSSED PATT~RN -- . '~ PLASTIC BLINDS COMP •. RETAIL i.58 - • •1· HOUR DRYING •SCRUBBABLE •BRUSH OR ROLl- •BRICK, snlcco & ' . MASONRY . , PURE WHITJE & C\)LORS • Deeorat:.or Aooent* ' !il1iv Artists' OIL.COLORS OUR PRICE .... ___ _ MOST RUPICI FU 1W1 I Air PllaDlcJi COMP. RETAIL 654! TO 2.20 •PERMANENT • 54 COLORS 339 . Ill; ·-... ...___ __ -·---·-· .. - ,4 .. _,.U...oo.10111WC1.eaJJ,,.. llrr COloTENTI: -GAiJ.Oll · · tandard Brands · Point Jr Decorating Cen .... rs 52 convenient . Ul;J locations In the wesl DUR PRICE , 58CTo 1!!~· . 'JUIE OPEN 7 DAYS&'5 NIGHTS ·MONDAY THRU FRlDAY,I A.M. TO I P.M:0 SATUROAYS, I A.M;T01:30P.M.·•~Yl,IA.M. TIJl:llP.IL ' 1 BLK. SO. OF WARNER IDELHll \II I\ ~ U9Q 1 2401 LONG IEACH ILVD. ~ao~M~no H~·-1.·10~ .. on·. D--ch !Long 8aa<h TtLEPHONE 17141 648417 -1~ ILa..-50..-0F-WILLOW . ' 6800WARNER AVE. EAR 001,pE~.WEST • TIUl'HOllE •IZIJl UT .. 714 ~..,.,.-. Anaheim CORNER OF LINCOLN a LINDSEY 1 BLK. EAST OF BROOKHURST TtLEPHONE (714) IU-1507 ( TELEfl'HONf 111411;42all 8635 R2!n'-!t ' AT LAKEWOOD.BLVD. TtLEl'HONE 12131111-Htl • La Habra CORNER WHITTIER a IDAHO 2 BLKS. E. OF BIACH-HACIENDA TELIEitHONf: t2tll •t.a,. • • ' s que da •"-' Rea Q. A: n allo odd Mo eve ' pur day I onl 3 1st all ' c Sia ; Sta r wi I die six wh of tal ing lea ' ti . "" PY ' dis I Na oft Na si lsr cu w tis by a th di it .. 'Ki "I le • Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ( • ' r' VOL 67, NO. 59, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ' . . ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1974 c '~·.¥ TEN CENTS .,1 "'Reagan Answers · Queries on Gas Plan SACRAMENTO (AP) -Here are key questions about Cali£ornla's new man· datory gasoline marketing I ~:tin and the ans\\o'ers provided by Gov. RonaJd Reagan : Q. How does It work? A: Motorists with license p I a t e nwnbers ending in odd digits will be allowed to purchase gasoline only on odd·numbered days in affected areas. Motorists with license plates ending in even numbers will be allowed to purchase gasoline on even·numbered , days. Environmental plates containing 1 only letters are counted as odds. The ' 31 st or each month is a free day for all vehicles. ' ·~Egyptians, U.S. Now Q. Who Is affected? A. Private motorists who Uve in coun- ties which declare gasoline emergencies. At the time of Reagan's announceme.nt Wednesday that included Alameda. Con- tra Costa, Los Angeles, San Mateo and Solano counties. Officials of Modoc, Orange and Santa Cruz coooties said they had also issued. eqiergency declara- tions. Reagan said ht! expected more counties -particularly in Southern California -to join today. Q. Who Js excluded, and why? A. Commercial and e m e r g en c y vehicles. So are drivers with out-of-state licenses and all drivers in counties which choose not to join the plan. Priority is given to business to protect jobs. Individual serVice stations are urg· ed to use discretion to identify abuses. Tourists get a break because of the importance of tourism and their probable lack of familiarity with California rules. New California residents with out-of-state licenses are too small a group to attempt to police. Q. When does it start? How long will It Jut? A. Controls start at 12:01 a.m. Friday, March 1. Counties may join later. Any county'"'lnay drop out when local affi.clals decide the controls are no longer needed. Q. Does it prohibit topping off the tank? A. Yes. Service stations are ordered not to sell gasoline to rr.otorists ~ho have half a tank or more. However, stations with limited supplies are urged to make them stretch. That could mean limits .which 11\ight also prevent ftllups at times. Q. wm service sta&ions stlD be closed Sundl)'I? A. Hopefully, more will be open Sun- days and nights. Service station owners are also urged to stagger their hours and make arrangements to space out sales so that there will not be shortages on weekends, nights or at the end or the month. That is a request with no spcciric order on hours at individual stations, b.' penalti es may be imposed for flagrant violations. Q. Bow will I know where gasoline JJ available? A. Every station must post a con· spicuous .sign or flag. If flags are used, green means gasoline available to the general public according to license plates, yellow means gasoline for emer· gency vehicles only, and red n1eans no gasoline. Q. What about vlolaUons? A. Dealers and motorl.sts \Viii be sub- ject to misden1eanor prosecution with a maximi.lm legal penally or $500 fine and six months in jail. However, officials are ordered to handle cases by citation. ··Nobody's going to be dragged off by the scruff of the neck," Reagan said. Q. How will It help solYe the problem? A. The even-odd plan y.·ill cut abou t in half the vehicles that can gas up on a given day, th ereby hopefully cutting down on the long lines of cars y.·ailing to gas up. Prohibiting topping off a tank is intended to further cut dOY.'n on lines and curb panic buying. By having sta tion opera tors allocate their sales ove r the entire month, it is hoped that there will be no severe shortage a t lhe end of a month. ' i 'Embargo' 'Friends' Nicoll Airs School Spending Woes .J ~ . CAIRO, Egypl (AP) -'The United Slates and Egypt today (ormally an· nounced resumption of full diplomatic relations broken off since the Middle East war of 1967. The announcement came in a joint declaration read at the \Vhite House , at about the same time it was being ! disclosed in Cairo, where Secretary of ; Slate Henry A. Kiss~er .mt.. meet~g i with Egyptian leaders 1n his l:3test ~t1d­ ; d1e East peace-making campaign. • Later, Sadat invite.cf President Nixon · lo visit Egypt. . I ln addition to a general upgradtng I of contacts, the move means the Spanish Embassy in Cairo will _no longer bc:Kpe 1 the American diplomatic delegation to : Egypt, beaded by Ambasi.,or Hermann I Eilts. , d 1 t· i Similarly, an -pt•n e ega 1on · beaded by Ambassador Ashraf Ghorba\, will move into Iacilitles of Jts own 1n Washington, where it has been working WK:ler the lndian flag. The two ambassadors have been l_n. place since Kissinger and E~pt:s. Pr~I· dent Anwar Sadat agreed 10 pr1nc1ple to restore diplo~atic relatio~ in Novem- ber during a visit to Cairo by the American secretary. R(lations had been severed since the six-day ~1iddle East \1ar of June 1967. when Egypt broke them oU because of the American role in favor of Israel. Kissinger returned to Cairo today for 1alks with Sadat at a re st house overl~k­ ing the Great Pyramids. ~ Egypha!'- leader greeted him warmly with a tradi- tional Arab embrace and suggested they both pose for photographs with. t~e pyramids as a backdrop before their discusslOns began . Kissinger and Sadat were con; centrating on the next stage of ~ Tsr~el~ troop withdrawal in the c ,cu pied S~na1 Desert and continuation af the Un1~ed Nations buffer role between Egyp~an aftd Israeli forces there. The United Naftons mandate expires A~ril 24. . Also high on their agr 1 were ~1s­ s:inger's mediation proposa; ~ for Svr1an- tsraeli troop disengagement on the oc- cupied Golan Heights. . . . Ameril!in officials 1n the K1ss1nger party stres.sed that Syria "holds Uie key" to the second round af Sma1 negotiations. • 'Ibey said the Golan Heights disengage- ment agreement must be arrangep. before any new pullouts in the. Slnat. Sadat also has said Egypt will not return to the Geneva peac • talks until Israel and Syria agree on the Golan pullout. · PilllY Pllet S!illl l!Jlt!il TANKER DRIVER PUMPS GAS FROM 'GHOST STATION' In Huntington B11ch1 An Argument Ovtr Storage Ghos·tJy Fuel Truck Pumps Gas at Closed Station By TERRY COVILLE Of !tit 0.lly Plllt $11" City records say the empty Chevron service station at 8472 Warner Ave., Huntington Beach, has definitely been closed since last A"ugust. People who work near_ the station say it has been closed, unused, un· manned, for nearly a year and a half. But Wednesday the ghost station came back to life, at least long enough to supply a liquid nearly as 8CaTCe as rare , blood -gasoline, a minimwn of 4,000 gallons of i~ A Standard Oil delivery truck spent three hours at tbe empty station sucking dry the underground tanks. 'The truck driver said he was laking out about 4,000 gallons which had been left there when lhe station was closed. Another worker, helping pump the gas, said it was probably sour from being (See GHOST, Page !) Cliff .Slide Hits Cai· LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A 200-foot section of a cliff crashed down on the Pacific Coast IDghway Wednesday night, crashing into a small car and tem- porarily blocking the road. George Gran- ville, driver of the auto, was t~eated at Santa Monica Emergency Hospital for a broten nose and face cuts. police said. No homes or structures were en- dangered, police said. . Superintendent John Nicoll today ordered an immediate "embargo" on all new hiring in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District unless h e personally approves the case. Nicoll said he issued the order to serve notice throughout the district that substantial budgetary cutbacks are need- ed for Newport-Mesa to survive in the current inflationary spiral. (See related story Page 18). "There may be a few people hired Vandal Sprays PicasspArl In Red Paint NEW YORK (AP) -A man who said ·he was an artist wanting to "tell the truth" sprayed red paint across the famed "Guemica'' painting by Pablo · Picasso at the Museum of Modem Art in midtown l\fantattan today. A self-styled artist, the alleged vandal was apPrebended by a guard and taken into police cu.rtody within moments. In letters more than a foot high, he sprayed, "KILL LIES AIL." But the museum began removing the paint immediately and said the masterpiece cubist work about ·the Spanish civil war was undamaged. . The alleged vandal identified himself as Tony Shafrazi, 30, authorities said. Asked why he did it, Shafrazi said, "I'm an artist, and I want to tell the truth."• He declined to say anything more about himself. Shafrazi wore a black turtleneck sweater and denim jacket and trousers. He had apparently recently shaved the hair from his head. Museum visitors who witnessed the desecration of the painting, which is massive and surrounded by Picasso's studies preparing for its execution, said an wuClentified man tried. to stop the vandal but was shaken off. "rm an artist," the vandal was quoted as saying to the man who interceded. "Leave me alone." At that point, a guard grappled with 1be vandal, who shouted, "call the curator." Kissinger came here from Israel, where he brought from Damascus a list of 65 Israel' war prisoners held by Syria . llis dell•ery of the list mai:ked a major diplomatic breakthroujl~, since the Israelis refused to ncg~t1ate on disengagements until the Syrians turned Edison Expansion Slowed . ~ It over. Ida M . The Israeli pre ml er, Go eir, ealuted his efforts \Vedl)esday-night. But 'Kissinger'·s aides said the secretary felt .. in bis bones" that the Arab oil embargo against the United States will last at ltas.t another few days despite their progress. Hu11tington Plant Says · It Doesn't Need to Rusli It By CANDACE PEARSON Of .. ..,. ............. • Slower populatkla growth and -energy: dtmandl have c <1 n v 1 n c e d Southern C.lifomla EdllOO orficlals they don1 need to expand their Htmtlngton Mustangs Set aea~ power pl•nt tmttl ll'IJ or 1m •. ft"8Si.amed toda7. · ' This tentoUve Ume line IJ up to four Paper Drive = ~ orfa!na! p1 ... by the ...,,. uwtty ofllctals apj>Ued last October Scrap paper to beneltt • .OJsta tur a -..-pennjt 1or the 1SJJ Mesa High Sdlool Band -..., mJl110n apanatoo from the SOUth Coalt fund drive may be dropped off Rettlonal Zone ~"'"1 Commloslon. Sottlrday In the ~lot of l!UI the appllcatiolt was returned for the M"""" campus morn· more lnfonnallon about three months 1"' hour&. II'> and the -lwn'I rupplied. llour& "11! be 9 a.in. to 4 --... Wilm It will, aceordlng to l!ldilon for the scrap ..._per delt-r Dlltrict Manager Paul Rlcllanloon, Is at 2&5t Fairview Road, aeconling -ltely up in the air. to Band Boooters club m<mber ··it wiJI problbly be three to five Diano Hlll. reon before the lluntington Boach ll'OO"lting station woold be completed ' and on line," he said today. The company had figurW new units of the plant at Pacific COast HJgbway and Newland Street in Huntington Beach would be producing power by 19'/li to um. The fossil fuel plant now genera tes 992 megawatts of pow~r. The combined cycle additions would 'ldd another 1,416 meanatts of peak production. Edioon Friday wilfluo a lll!W re90Uf<el . acbedule, oUtlin!ng lls Mure ~' !Or all its major faCu~ lncludlna Bun. llnrtm Beach, with UR C.!Uomla Pabllc Utilities Colllmlssloll (PUC). Unttl ti is aecepted and approved by the P,UC, Rlcbardson said today in Hun- llllllaa Beech, nolll1g Is final. Al 1> recont 1tal6 coastal cornmllS!on Jl\fflfltg 1n Sarita Barbara -wtiere ttie -·· i1.4 blllioo erplJISion of u.., w °"°"" Nuclear Power Planl wu approvtd -Edioon Vice ~ David Fogarty said a number of pltulned • Wlit5 have been deferred. Fogarty said a nuclear plant in the desert near Victorville and a fossil fuel plant in Long Beach will be delayed, In addition to the expansio• program at Huntington Beach. Fogarty, ·c11ed tbe reduced load - Edbon reported a 10 percent drop in power usage in both December and January -and !be reduced availability of fossil fuel as reasons. Richardson said today tllat the reduced 'need Is the main factor. Population growth In the area Edison serves ta now running at a rate or 4.5 percent yearly, he said, In contrast to previous annual rates of seven and eight percent. • 'The growth ts stUI sllgbtly higher ln Orange County, he said, but. even hert, ll bas almost been ail in, hall from what was once a ten percent (Ste EDISON, Page !) for next year," Nicoli says. "But nc-t many, and certainly there will be no new positions created. 't-- "We are faced with a situation where \ve will probably need tO ask for a tax election in the next two years," Nicoll said. "But we want to make whatever budgetary savings are possible in the meantime." Nicoll says a new tax structure im· posed by a 1972 state law, a declining enrollment, and state-mandated spending limits are combining to put the Newport- Area Schools l 1i Trouble? ' The Newport-Mesa Unlllcd SChool District bas a problem, according to Superintendent John Nicoll. The district spends more than $1,200 per student each year, as compared to just $907 for most school districts In the state. That's no problem. But Nicoll says he thinks the district is hamstrung between a restricted revenue base and inflation. See story and other Harbor Area-related tales on Page 18 today. Mesa Pioneer Mrs. Messing Services Slated Mesa district in a "rather seve~'' budgetary crisis. Nicoll says he will allow new hJrlng only in cases where it is absolute!~ necessary. "In general, we \viii be trying to reduce the size of our teaching staff by not replacing people who leave the district. ~ "In the case where a specialist leaves. we may find it necessary to replace him. But Y.'e want to keep new hlrinl down to a bare minimum ," Nicoll said. t ., Nixon Says • Republicans ··" ~. f Here to Stay ' ~ By HELEN THOMAS ' WASHINGTON (UP!) -President Nixon, spurred by cheers of young ~publicans, predicted today that the Goe . would keep the Wb.ite House at least through 1984. Addressing about 600 party me!rs 18 to 36, at the Young Repub an leadership conference, the Pres" ent gave his "ad~e for potential politi- cians." / "Keep your faith, keep your coo· fidence," he told the crowd, even when "mistakes are made by people in your party." Despite problems besetting lhe party because of Watergate, Nixon said there would be a Republican in the White House "for the next three years and eight years after that, because we're One or C.OSta Mesa's 1as.t pioneers going to be there for a long time." · died at the age of 102 Wednesday night The speech -laced with such political in a convalescent home. homilies:--Jl.l "Don 't assume the time Funeral services for l\1inne Maude to run for Office is when it is a sure Messing will be Saturday at 11 a.m. thing " and "When the battle look• -in Bell Broadway Mortuary, with burial ' toughest , get in there and fight" - to foJlow beside her husband at was greeted by cheers and applause. Fairvhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana. "Three more years! ... three more He died nearly 30 years ago. years!" the crowd chanted as Nixon A native of Kansas, Mrs. Messing held up three fingers . came to Costa Mesa with her husband Nil:on stressed the country would con· in 1927 when it was known as Harper, tinue to maintain its respoosiblHUes a' or Goat Hill . a world leader rather than ''bugging They operated a 10..acte orange grove out" on the burdens of the aftennath at the comer of 20th Street and Santa of the Vietnam war. Ana Avenue and later uprooted the trees, ''You can lake pride that yoo supported converting the property to a chicken the men and policies that put an end rand'I. to the war which was here when we A resident of the Park Lido Con-came to office," Nixon said. valesoen't Hospital , Mrs. Messing for He sakl-it was easy to support the years was Cpsta Mesa's second-oldest country in time of war but harder tt) citizen, right' behind 105-year-old Lucy "live in a time when the challenge:; Marty. ./"/ (See NIXON, Page%) During her early days on the Orange Coast, Mrs. Messing wS.s a member of the community Oiurch -so nan1e<t because it was the only one in the community-and was a member of the Ladies' Aid. She devoted her life to being a horne"l!'ker and belping her husband run the ~ge grove and chicken ranch. Surviv6rs include her Slll a n d daugbter--in-law, Mr. and Mrs. c:warren Messing, of 1750" Whittier Ave., two half· sisters who are In their an.. one grand- daughter and two grandsons and four great-grandchildren. Funeral services f<r Mrs. Messing, whole last home was at 318 Alva Lane, are being dlre<ted by Bell Bniadway Mortuary . Quake Jars Mt. Etna · CATANIA, Sicily (AP) -A, strong qW!ke..joltcd volconlc Mt. Etna and the city and aurrounclinp of c.atama at its foot before dawn toclioy. Thousands wolte up and ran away f"'I" buildings Into tbe s~ and COlllltryaldo. Many open! the . rest ot the nll!>t in tho open or In automobiles. Orange C:out • Weadler The wcatherlady sees a 60% chance of showers Friday with cooler temperatures along the Orange Coas~ Highs of 55 at the beaches will rise to 60 inland. Over- ljight lows in the lower SOS. INSIDE TODAY A judge in Alabama ha.r bten accused of dispe nsing nu:rc11 tn retun1 for ierual favor& from ftmale defe 1ulant1. Sloriy, Page 4. L. M. llYd ti Cilll"'".. I CltnHllt »<tt c.min ~ CrMJ'lftl'lll M Offill Kttlttt lt lalt.rlll ,... ' •llftl'tlltlll!IHI D.Jf flllllMt• , u-n HY 01,._I 1e -tt Ull YMln ti "'"'" n.u ' ;l OAIL Y PILOT c Finch .Says GOP Aided U.S. i11 60s \Vhen Watergale has passed. the Republicans will be remembered for pull ing the country together out of the "tortured" years of the 1960s. Robert Finch sald Wednesday In Huntington Beach. The onetime lieutenant governor of California and fonner counselor to Presi- dent Nixon spoke before the Huntington Harbour Republican Women's Club meeting. The .optimistic speech by Finch at first f~ed on President Abraham Lin- coln's legacy & foWlCler of the Republican party. But 1',inch later turned to other topics. "\Vhen all the rhetoric a b o u l \Vatergate and about those people who did abuse thei r trl.l!t has passed," Finch assured his' 50 listeners. "\vhat wlll be rc1nembered is th.is wa s a tortured nation ... on the streets and on the campuses." Finch said the Republican Party began a "healing process" by ending the Viet- nam War "honorably" and dece ntralizing federal government wi th. more rcvenue- sharing. .. It will not be \\Tilten i.n the pages of headlines,'' Finch. said, "It will be v.Titten ln tbe pages of history books." The GOP will be recalled as "main· laining its honor and integrity," Finch coo tended. And be told the Republican women at the Meadowlark c.o..mtry Club lunch- eon that "no matter how difficult it may be, "'e can take great optimism in J974 and 1976," upcoming Congressional and Presidential election years. Finch also criticized lhe idea of public fn iandng or election campaigns. "We're going to be dead with the two-party system if you pass public financing of campaigns," he claimed. He said he . supports full public disclosure of contributions by candidates, but said a measure like that proposed by Common Cau.,e on the June primary ballot would .. epcourage "phony parties" out to get the public's money. From Pagel t NIXON ... f are the challen ges Of JidCe .. , The pres ident aavtsed the Young Republicans : "Never quit, always go on and fight for the things you believe in.·· In his extemporaneous speech, Nixon appeared to be discussing his own Watergate fight when he gave his "ad- vice for potential politicians." He told the GOP leaders, ranging in age from 18 to 36 : "lf you think there are things wrong then get in and ~ do something about it. Build the Republican party, that is a just goal." 'J'be President's exhortation for young P.YlY members to fight vigorously for their cause comes amid some gloomy predicttons about the effect of Watergate on voters. f From Page 1 EDISON ... growth jump a year. F'uel is slill a concern, Richardson said today, but a less important one . Jn 1974 Richardson said, unless there is some reallocalion of fuel or other occurrence Edison didn't expect, "we'll be all right for fu el." The company plans to go throu gh the pubUc hearing on the Huntington Beach plant on the PUC level before reUJming to the coastal commission. The original October filing came before a lawsuit designed to halt the project \\'35 filed in Orange County Superior Court by the Environmental Coalition . That suit was rejected this month by Judge Mark Soden. DAILY PILOT Tiit Oo"•llClt C..1t DAIL "f l'llOt, ...Jtri wllldl 11 comol,,.. !lit tww1-I'•••• 11 Mf!lllMd ~ t~t 0••• GM11 l'llbllll!lnt C-nY. S- rtll ecll!lo!'l1 1rt P\llllltfl .. , MonollY trlrowtll Frlcl1y, !Or Ct'lll Mt11, N-rt lffcPI, Hunll1"9ton lltKl'l/F-lllfl V1ll1y, lq- llrtdl, lr-int/i..HttbKk Al'lllll a.It C!Mwnlt/ sin J.,.., ca,111••"°· A 1lrt11!• •ttkHlll ICllllO!I Ii ~lhl'ltrd Ml11/111aYI Al'lllll hrdifl, tttl prif\cip.1 "'1bJl11\11"9 pltM II 11 Sit! 'Nnl .. , S11"t, C..t• Mtw. t•lllol'111.t, tNN. JI•"•" N. Wttd ...... -11'1111 l'llbllW• J1tk II. Curley Yke 1'rt1 ..... I IN Cl-ti.~ Th."'•• K11wU ...... Th1111•1 A. M11rphin1 .M ......... UI,., 0.1ritt H. Lttt ' llc.h•" P. Nill AM.llttlll Mtnttllfit 111,.,.1 c.... ..... Offtc.e JJO W11t lty Stt-11t M1lfl111 .A.ldtttu'P.O. l e• 1160, tl6!6 --,,.~ INdlt WI N..,..I l eui.w.11 Llf'P!'I' •-": m ,., .. , ,._ H1111tlnlfllll •llCll: 11'11 •-11 ltvlfY•,., 1---'--I-hn CWMlll9Lli0l Ntftri fl C.1'11M JlMI , .. .,.... 17141 642 ... 121 Clo lfW Ms•sll ) I MJ..1171 ""'•'· ,.,,, or-.. C'.-1 ''*llllMI ~. ... ,.... . .,... '""'"' ...... .. _.. N,,.... W __,IMolWlll ..... _, ....... -............. .... ........... .,.., ...... . --=..w•Cttt• ..... ~.._,I~· .,., ...,.., a.M """""""'' .., ,...,.. .. ,. _.,,, lllff"-"' ....... ,.... ...... • I •• It's a Tiglit Squee::e It• Del Mar Train Rams Bus; 3 Dead, 24 Hurt DEL htAR (AP) -Three persons '"'ere killed and 24 injured when their b~ chartered by the Amtrak rail service sW.lled on a railroad crossing and was rammed by a santa Fe freight traln, authorities said. Officials searching frenziedly for vic- tims at the crash scene today surprised 34 lllegat Mulwi aliens, one of lhem a woman, hJdlni In box cars ol the 6'-car freight train. All were taken lnto cust<>dy for quesllooing by the Bonier Patrol. "The windlhield of the bu.s was stick· lng to the front of the train engine and people were lying out!ide moaning and crying," said Peter Sokolow. a security at the Ocean Windows Hotel ove rlooking the crash site. Jate to make train connections to po ints south of Los Angeles. some of the 38 passenge rs \Vho boa rded in Lo5 Angcle111 had already been dropped ort when the accident happened, he sald. Ofllclals at the scene of the aceident, some 100 yards from the Del hfar depot. said the stalled bus was attempting to back away from the tracks "'hen the 60-car freight train, bound from San Diego to San Bernardino, crashed into it. They said the front portion of the bus was crashed and baggage and other personal belongings of the pas.sengen were scattered aroWld the railroad cl"OM- ing. Supervisors Na1ne Airport Study Pcinel Fireman George Munsey wheels bis 12,050-gallon pumper truck through pylons at the Orange County Fairgrounds where Costa ?.1esa city employes wound µp a three-day defensive driving course. Drivers o! eve;ything from street sweepers to dump trucks were Judged on their ability to drive safely and maneuver around obstacles. The dead were identified a! Carl Joseph Bertram, 47, lngelwood, the bus driver: Sky Jenkins, 6, Clatskanie. Ore.: nnd Jennie . Doescher, 58, Aplington, Iowa, who died in a hospital two hours after the late Wednesday night crash. Atra. Doescher's husband Harvey, 60 waa ~·in critical condilioo. ' Young Sky's mother, waiting at the Orange County supervisor! ha v e depot, watched in horror as the freight named the II-member panel empowe~ barrelled Into me bus at about 35 ·miles to study the fenslbillty of routing future an hour, flremm :iaid. They awnforted C0W1ty commercial jet traffic to Ontario Naked Jogging It's a Bird, No, It's a Streaker DALLAS (UPI ) -A fid gety fre shman at Southern Methodis t University slipped out of his blue jeans nea r the school's tree-lined main boulevard and made a wild, naked dash across the gras!y campus to a waiting motorcycle. "You don't have time to look at th eir face. too," one coed said. The latest fad . called "streaking," has reached epidemic proportions on Texas campuses. At Baylor, students with their dates lingered at curfew last wee k near one girl's dorm when a daring freshman. clad in only a ski mask and tennis shoes, sprinted two blocks down an TONIGHT "YOU'RE A GOOD MAN. CHARLIE BROWN," -Ney,·port J-tarbor High drama dept. Auditorium , Thurs., Fri. & Sat. 8 p.n1. OCC LECTURES -"Income Tax Preparation." Tony Broy,·n lecturer, Lit- tle Theater. COM High School, 7: 30 p.m. "Investments,'' Ed'tl•ard t.fcN ary lecturer. Eastbluff Elementary School, 7:30 p.1n . .,. UCI LECTURES -··s c i entifi c ~Iedicine for the Layn1an: The Nervous System," ,Freshman Lecture Hall , ~led . Surge II Bldg. 7·10 p.m. "Shaman1sn1: Studies in...Nonordinary Reality," Rm. 101 Physical Sciences Bldg. 7-9 :30 p.m. FRIDAY, t.IARCll 1 OCC LECTIJRES -"Herbs & Spices," Carol Dering lec turer, C o m m u n i t y Congregational Church, COM, 9:30 a.n1. "Religions and Values," Or. Alfred Painter lecturer, Science Lecture l, 7:30 p.m. "Solar Energy." Dr. Joseph Farber lecturer. Science Lecture 2, 7:30 p.m. BASKETBALL -Newport Harbor at Palos Verdes, first round CIF 4A playoffs. 8 p.m. · Roadsi de Stand Operator Carter Services Friday Funeral servict>s are scheduled Fridaf for a onetime mortuary embalmer who, in retirem ent , settled down to run a roadside stand near Laguna Beach SPEJ:ializlng in fruits, vegetables and date milk shakes. Rites for John "Pete" Carter . 68, 'Nill be at Il a.m.1 in Pacific View ~1emorlal Park CllaptJ, Corona del Mar, with intennent to follow the re. For eight years, Mr. Carter and his wife Beatrice , of 1750 \Vhltt ler Ave., Costa A1e.sa, operated The Cove. a pro- duce and refreshment stsnd on Coas t Highway near Crystal Cove. l1e Wa.3 also an enthusiastic singf!r and member of the Sanla Ana ch.apte r of the Society for the Promotion und EncooraJemcnt of Barber Shop Quartet Singing 1n America. Survh·ors in addlllon to hi 11lfe Include daughlers C.rolyn J. Thor.:as of Coota Mesa, Cathryn S. Mack ot Anchoreg~ . Ala.sk a; a brolher, Thomas C1 rt.er of hianila, tht Ph ilippine Islands, and st:\o'eU grandchildren. RllcS al Pacific View Memorial Park a.re under dlrecilon of Smith'1 Mortuary in flunt1ngton Beach . • adjoining sid ewalk, romped along the side of the building. then cl.I t through th e dorm's main lobby v.•ith a dorm mother in hot pursuit. ·'At first, it just started li ke a joke," one freshman streaker said. "Now, it seems everybody wants to get into it. It's sort of a fad and .an ego trjp. Something totally crazy that appeals to people -running around nude." At Texas Tech this week, 25 male students. wearing ski masks, tennis shoes and ties. ran from the boys ' dorm 200 ya rds to the girls dorm and back, while Lubbock televis ioo crews shot footage and girls shouted phone nwnbers fro1n the balcony. Reag~n Against Gas Rationing In Califo'tnia SACRAMENTO (AP) ·-Gov. Ronald Reagan said today he opposes ga! ra· tiooing unless the supply of fuel drops considerably in California . · He refused to speculate over whether he would impose rationing if his odd·and- even gasoline marketing plan fail s to eliminate long lines at service stations. That plan takes effect at midnight tonight in areas where about half of PLAN AT LEAST WORTH A TRY -Editorial, Page 6 NIXON VOWS ENERGY BILL VETO, Pago 26 California's 12.5 million motorists live. Commenting on rationing, Reagan s.ald at his ,.,.eekly news conference, "We don't contemplate it. \Ile don 't, favor it. We don't th.ink it would be useful. \\'e don't think it would create an ad- ditional pint of gas." Reagan also said there has been "a lot of misundefs tanding" about the penalties attached to violations of the odd-and-even license plate distribution plan . He said the maximum $500 fine and si x month! jail term is the standard misdemeanor provision. but that it is a maximum he would expect to be imposed only in extreme cases by chronic offenders. ''It ~a!l range from a v.·aming to $1. no Jail all the 'tl'ay up to six mon ths if rou ha ve a chronic offender,'' Reagan said. J-le said gas ration ing conce ivably could be imposed if fu el became so scarce driving was extremely limited. Reagan said his odd-even gas distribu- tion plan in at least eight California cotmti es depends on the willingness o[ motorists to cooperate. Winter Storm Strikes North SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A winter storm atruct Northern , Cllifomia today, unleashing raln , snow and pcwerful southe rly "ales. The National Weather Service Issued stonn waminp aloa1 the coas t north of Point Arena for southerly winds 36 to 66 milts per hour, decreasing to 24 tt 42 m.p.h. tonight. Gale warnlnp are in effect through Friday between Point Arena and Point Sur. Heavy mow was forecast In the Mt Shasla.Slsklyou area and Sierra Nevada, alon1, wllh wlndt 40 to 75 m.p.h. north of Lake Tahoe. From Page 1 GHOST ... stored so long and might have to be taken back to the refinery in El Segundo. Skeptics who work at nearby service stations and other business establish- and Newland Street charge that the sta· tion has been used as a secret storage place for excess Standard gasoline. They say more than one visit -others at night -have been made to the suPJ>OSedly dead atation. And new locks have been put on the supposedly unused fuel tanks. There are no locks on the underground tanks or the nearby operating gas stations. No ooe has proof, but in this day of panic gas lines, goverrunent claims, and consumer counter-claims, they view tl?k trucks loading at a closed station y,•1th_a great deal of suspicion. "I think it's ridiculoll!." snapi Pete Kudenov, supervisor for Standard's su~ ply tenninat .in Huntington Beach. "We ~o~'t 1~e ga.aoline anywhere, we put 1t into Clrculation as soon as we c.an." HL! tenninal supplies all the Standard and Chevron stations in Orange County and be admitted Jt was one of hi~ trucks at the ghost station Wednesday but said the purpose was to remov~ the old gasoline. "~~arentty it was a marketing decision to close that .station and not try to reopen it, so we took the gas out and transferred it to otber stations ·• he said today. ' "I don't know about other operations, Jbut l know ours. and we aren't hiding gasoli ne at closed stations." Under the city lire code. the un· derground fuel ta nks are supposed to be removed from any station closed for 30 days, but Fire r.tarshal Roger Hosmer admitted Wednesday that rarely happens. It's a problem of inspection and know- ing just \\'hen a station really is closed, he said. There is no requirement for companies lo report the closure of a station. From a fire safety standpoint, the tank! are safer full tban empty but loaded with fumes, Hosmer said. 'lbe city a1so has no records on whether gasoline is stored in unused tanks. her wblle an ambulance toot her husband Intemalional Airport lo lhe bospltal. 'l'l!e Aboard lhe bus, lhe cblld had been panel was sugg..ted by Supervisor playing wtlh a deck of fiash cards, wilh Ronald caspers, who raised t h e which won:b, phrases and pictures are JX>SS1l>ility of using Onta rio to help matched. Under her body they found relieve growth palns at the existing two of the cards. One rtad "and my county jetport. sister," while the other showed a picture Caspe1'3 said there \s no possible way ?,'di~J;avestone and a single word -the existing fa cilit y can be expanded enough to handl e ruture demands since The train wu not derailed and no it is already under fire from nol&e- one a~rd the freight was injured, plagued county residents. authorities said. . ~e also said efforts: to gel elthet Joseph Jones, Amtrak passenger JOlllt use of El Toro ~Jarlne Corps Air represent.alive, said the bus wu under Station or a new jetport on Camp charter by Amtrak, the national railroad Pendleton land have proven rullle. passenger service, and was carrying . The panel created at caspen' request 30 penons when lhe accident occurred. will meet for the first time March lt was en route to San Diego. -6 to start laying the groundwork d. He said most ol lhe -•rs had lhe feasibility study lhey will do. come south by rail from Vancouver, Members: of the panel will include Wub. and arrived in Los Angeles too James F. Stock, ehainnan of the County Services Today For Drowned Woman Servant' FWle?'a1 1ervice1 were scheduled today for a Japanese woman employed as a servant 1n the Lemon Hei~ area of Orange Counly, who appamUy Cell lnlo a blcl<;'ard swimming pi>ol while doing her domesUc cbores and drowned . Sumiko Nagasawa, 47, of 2342 Cynlhla Court, Costa Mesa, wa9 dl!ICOvered in the pool wl>en her husband Cblkayosbl NaJi:asawa came to pick her up. Sheriff's deputies said he honked the car horn but got no response until Mrs. Nagasawa's employer, Mrs. KeMeth Kirkham, oC 12501 Singing Wood Dri ve awakened lrom a nap. ' 1 1be mbtre!! of the house went to find her servant , discovering the \•ictim's body floating in the POOi . . Her husband, who is a gardene'r. leaped into the pool and pulled his vdre out. but efforts by Orange County Fire Department personnel to revive her "·ere futile. The victim was pronounced dead on arrival al Tustin Community Hospital. Investteatorr said Mn. Nagasawa was appartntly watering a backyard planter when she slipped and reu inlo the swim· ming pool. Fun<ral services were pending today al Blower Brothen Mortuary In Sanla Ana. Airport Commission: Orange County Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan; Orange County Trans it District General M:anager .G: ~· ''Pele" Fielding and Airport Action Association spokesman Dan Emory. Also, County ~ague of Cities executive Frank Saies ; Newport Beach Ma)'or Donald J.lclnnis ; Community Airport Council spokeSman Bill Gremp ; Anaheim Chamber of Commerce executive LarTY Sierk; Duane Davis o( Yorba Linda an airport maintenance firm owner and COWlly Chamber of C o m m e r c e spokesman Peter Muth. 'Occupants' Escape Fire This is a story of a residential structure fire handled by the Newport Beach Fire Department Wednesday and it haa as happy an ending as a residentlal structure fire story could . Firemen quicklv extinguished the blaze caused when a light bulb oo a utility pole at Via Lido and Central Avenue in the downtown district ignited the straw and ' feathel'3 used in a bird's next built too clo6e to it. "Occupants were away •.. residence appeared vacant aOO not ' in use at-\he time," said the llHN {structure fire) report. "No iJl. juries and no damage to the pole." Beat The Tax Man SALE! MAICll ht .1 GO TO 1'ulllaf>'s TO COLLECT TAXES ON THEIR .. , ... INVENTORY. I CAN HAIDlY wan I Betutlful •llmllne styling ... whl'l t'ltrythlng 11 · your fingertlpal CANTILEVER 8htlvtl ldjutl up and down. Cabinet rolls easily on wh••lt.Alttomadc Ice maker can be aCICleCI 1l 1ny llmt. ' • 90 DAYS CASH WITH APPllOVID I CREDI'!'. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD~ lllwnt11W1f Costa Mesa -Phone 548·7788 I '