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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-03-25 - Orange Coast PilotI • -WO e un Ill ·a e -"" DAILY PILOT Wonaan Sought in Coast * * * 10< * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 25, 1974 Hit-run: Teen Injured VOL. fl. fllO. M. I. SKTfOMS. 11 ll'HP • • ' I • • • • • • • • • • • • Dean Counters Mitchell Testimony 'Plaantmn Swi11a111er' Searchers Comb Coastal Waters C:Old and emotionally shaken, a long. distance 8\\'irnn1iog enthusiast was found oollapsed in exhaustion on a Newport Beach strand Sunday night, mumbling about a mystery swimmer he claimed he aaw. A search for the second possible victim o( cold , choppy !Wells. was immediately resumed and lasted into predawn houni but no tratt couJd be fOllld. JO!eph Amato. of Pomona , was listed tn satisfactory condition today at Hoag Memorial Hospital, v.ilere he was lmdergoing treatment for exhaustion and exposure. • He y,•as found collapsed on the beadl near 28th Street shortly before midnight, following a fruitless offshore search by the Harbor Palrol, lifeguards and the Felon, Hostage ;Die in Batt'le :with, Policemen ANTIOCH (UPll -An es<aped prisooe.r and his hostage were killed early today after a gun bettle with police. Authorities said Caplaln Spicer, 20, and bis ~tage, Robert Taylor. both of Antioch, died of gunshot w~ in a car near Taylor's residence. AntiOcli police said they had come to the usi.tanc:o ol Pitt>burgh police who were Involved ln a shootout with Spicer about 3 a.m. Spicer managed to elude officers in the darkness and made hi!'! way through an open field lo Taylor's house where he took him captive. While attempting to e9Cape in Taylor's car, a !truggle ensued inside, police said. Officers then rmhed the car. Police said they belleved ooe of their shots fatally v.wnded Spicer but were unsure how Taylor was kWed . AntiOcli police said they were notified llat SplC<t" .,.,.ped from the oomty omoo in Lebanon, Pa., and police s>id he bad 1 criminal record. Pillst>Utih pollc. said Sf)ioer was stopped for haVlng a j\J""1ile girl lh his car after oorfew. However, before patrolman William Gay could make an amst, Spk:tr SJl<d off, lmocldng Goy to • the ground wftli tho oar's do«. . Gay w1t1 t.Qcn to Pittsburgh Community Ho6J)ltal for ot>oervatJon but " ,,.. not believed ""°"'ly injured. Both v1ctlllll wore pronounced dead oo aiTival at Della Memorial ROS{>ital. Police said th<)' believed Taylor u...i alooe. Newport Beach Police helicopter. Amato bad battled the swells for some iwo hours. Investigators who located Amato about 10 p.m. said he Ulld of seeing what he believed to be another swimmer battling the Y•aves about ooe mile offshore as he swam in. Before being husUed off to Hoag MemorlaJ Hospital after treat.meflt at the scene, Amato told authorities the other swimmer appeared kl be in grave trouble. He said he v.·as thrashing around and was wearing scuba diving air tanks and pinpointed the approximate position as about one mile out between Newport Pier and the 2.8Ut Street ·subsurface rock groin. Harbor Patrol officers immediately crganized. a secondary search. utilizing two cruising boats equipped with radar equipment in the hope ot turning up the reported victim. "U this guy did have tanks on and be went down, that would be It for him," commented Harbor Patrol Sgt. Dean Cordell today. He also said ft was possible the reported sighting ol. the swimmer in trouble in the dark, rough seas may have been due to the exhausted distance swimmer's mental and p h y s i c a I cooditJon. No formal reports d. any missing swimmel'5 or scuba divers vanished in the specific offsbcre area had been reported as ol today, lifeguards .aid. DOUBLE FEATURE SOLD BOTH ITEMS ..... Here's a "double fcaturt'' SU«CSS story about Doily Pilot dasslfled ads. Flnt. look at U-1"~ ads: f • '73 HAIUEY Spomter, just like new, only 3,000 miles. Socriliao, $1195, (Phone No.) i.rel'AL Filing e1binet w/locl<. Adjut@ble typing atble, boa> Uke new, $75 for both or Jrell separa1e- ly. (Phone No.) Both odl """' placed by the same advertiser to nm tmder different classifl08llooo M the ll&lJ)O day. You g1l<Olled tt: bolh -ked. T h e merd!:andisde was soJd in each cise lo the fll'll caller, Want to dcrJblc your ~· lults? DW &Q.4fl&. • A Visit Fro1n Prin~ess Princess Anne visits her personal bodyg uard, In· specrt.or James Beston, at the hospital where Beston is recovering from bullet wounds received in last "'eek's kidnap attempt on the princess. She also visited others wounded in the incident. Police Seeking Woman In Coast Hit-run Case All lllldentified. motorist ran down an 18-year-old bicyclist early Sunday morning in Huntington Beach. then sped off leaving the boy unron.scious in the roadv.'ay. police reported today. Roger Demers of 163.iQ Jody Clrcle, Wesuriimtcr, is listed in satisfactory condition today at H u n t i n g to n Interoommunity Hospital. Police said Demers was riding hls bicycle a1oog ~ Avenue. near Bushard Street, about e: a.m., when he was hit from behind. He wu on his way to work at Fairview State Hospital in Coota Mesa. Traffic· investigators said the crash may have shattered pa.rt ol. the front wind3hield of the car, descrfbed as a white Cadillac, 1959-61 model. Demers' limp bcxl.y was discovered by Ray Megll, cl Huntington Beach. manager cl Ute Orange County Sv.·ap l\1ecl at the fairgrounds in Co6ta MC1$8. hlegli and hl.9 wlfe were on their way lo the fairgrounds to prtparo for tho day 's meet, when thty spotted the bicycle end the body. lie phoned pc>lice and Demers was soon taken to Pacilica Hospi tal for emergency treatment then later tran.slerred to HuntingtOn Intercommunity. Police said three other witneS6eS. all on their way to the swap meet , had seen the pre-dav.'Il accident without realizing It. One moklrist told investigaton he saw the white Cadillac behind him, It swerved right, then left, and at Brookburst be saw the female ~rtver, descri6ed as in her 30s or 41:8 with bushy, black hair, attempting to clear some of the broken glass from in front of her. She tul'Md oorth on Brookhurst. the witne:M told poH~ .. Two other drivers also saw the ~iliac swerve, but btcau.1e 'it was dark, didn't know why. They all realized what they bad seen when Megll at-rived at the fai'tgrounds .,.i told ""' other> what had happened. po)ioe Nid. ( Barbecue Costs 'Ne'V}lOrt 01cf $500-aiid· Meat A Newport Beach m3n had a t506 barbecue Sunday night. hased on the _ going rate of porch prlC<!s and build.Ing material costs . .)like Houser. tenant of an upstairs apartment at 12~11 43rd SL. ov.ncd by Tom Hymes, cooked out on the balcony. according 10 Nev.'P(lrt Beach firemen . I~ allegedly emptied the hot chan:oal briqucts Into a plastic !rash can on ~ second Door 'landing. but they burned through the bin and kept smoldering. By the time. firemen \•1tte noUfied at 4:30 a.m. today, the coals had burned a two-by-two foot hole In the noor, dropped to the ground below and also !COrched the door. Pot Van Confiscated LAREDO."Tcx. (UPI) -A vnn loaded with t.450 pounds of marijuana was confiscated Swx!ay on Zapata Highway Inbound to Laredn trom J\1cxlco. The driver, who fled on foot, was the object of a seardl today. P1·oceedings In Vesco Probe Eyecl NEW YORK (AP 1 -Ousted 'Vhito J{ousc couns<'I John \V. IX'an Ill told a jury today that former All. G<'n. John N. J\li!chell reJl('atedl~· asked him to check on a securities fraud inv!'Stigalion ai:ainsl financier Hoben Vesco. Dean also said that forrnt'r Comtncree Secretary i'.laur1ce ll . Stans told him he v.·~ concerned about thl' circumstal'K"('S of Vesco's secret $200,000 cas h contribu1100 to President No1:on·s re· ctt'ction <:ampaign. Dean appeared as a govrmment v.1tncss at the ·federal <.."Oui1. trial of :-Olitch<'ll and Stans. The !\\'O former Cabinet officials, .. r ho resigned their pos!s to Join ~1xon's 1972 re..elt•ct1on campaign . arc charged with trying to impede an in\'cstigatioo of V1~sco in return for hLc; cootributioo, and lying: to the grand jury about it. One perjury 1..·oun! ag;iinst ~litchc\J Is based on hi s deni,ril that he talked 10' i)(·nn about Vcs{'o, Dt'<ln 1s 11an1ed as a cocoo:;pirotor in thr case but not a drfendant. Dean said that 1'.11tc.ilell on numcrott<i occasions asked hirn to rhrck v.·J!h \\'1l1lam Casey, then rh;iinn;in of the St>curities and E.'<changl' Comn1L'iS1on , about the status of the Ve 5 co in\·f'Stiga1ion. He s..1id that on (JT'IC OC<'asloo ~fitdlC'll told him that some of \'csco's aides bad ht-'<·n subpoenaed by th" SEC. lie said :-.1 1tchell called lh;i t "harassment" and ··towlly unneccssaey·." l}(<an ~id ~litcehll told him the. 1n\'f'Stigation "appeared to be politically ISet DEAN, ragt ZJ Orange Coast Weather Decreasi ng eloud!'I Tuesday after· noon is the v.·ay the v•ealher .sc.rv· ice calls 1l. Rain pos5ible tonight and early Tuesda y. llighs in lhe upper 50s at the beaches and the foy,·cr 60:s inland. INSIDE TODAY The lni.'Clde-r l1aa rett.1rned th.e Sir Thoma s Lipto" .CJlallenge Trophy to San D1e60 b11 de· feating f iuc rivals in Newport Stor~. photos Page 20. ....... ~ '" ,.,. lff'l'lc• .. L. M. '"'' " ... .._ " CalifOf'fll"' • ,,... .. i., " ct.»111..i 11.-Jt Ht~I ""' 4. II Camln " 0•111" CWN!f • tr.11-• .. ,,, ...... ., ... " Dlflll Htll<" " ...... 11-tJ l!tlltrla1 , ••• • lltt-M1rlth 1•11 lillllrtl lll-1 .. l tlevl11M " P'IRlftet 11·11 Wt11!11t • ,.., Ille -.... " w-·• .... , 11.1c HetOWIH " Wttlll "'"' 4, II '· ' ' ... 2_DAIL't_Pl_L_o1 _____ s _____ ._, ... _1. Mattl't 25, 1974 • -~ Boy~ 13~ Killed • ID Holdup Try Loot Found · ·tNDIANA POLIS 1r.r i -l..ank.ie Lee \\'hisenant Jr. told neighborhood friends not long ago that he probubly 'ft'ouldn't finish school . The har1nll'SS statement turned out to bt truglc<illy lruc . Jt wesil't that Lank.le disliked school , but his family moved around a lot and it wes diffjcult going to new schools nil the Umr . nie 13·\'ea r-0ld \'C>Oth was tall and old· Jooklng f0r his a!ir Several kids lJ\ 'tlis neighborhood thought he could have txctllt<d in sports. Those who knew him said Lankie didn 't 'Black11iuil' - Peace Threat -Kissi11ge r ~1~COW (AP) -Serrl>tary of State Henry A. Kissinger cnulloncd Soviet leaders today that there can be no world peace "ll we attempt to blackmail each other." He m3de the remark aft er opening talks in lhe Kremlin with Communist party leader Lt>onid I. Brezhnev on prospects for :i new treaty limiting nuclear arms and fosterirl8 peace in the ~fiddle East. At the same lime, K~er pledged that President Nixon and his Adm inistration remain committed to dctl'fl.te. "Our greatest goal is that over the next three years we can make the relaUooship that tw grown up between our two peoples and our leaders irreversible," Kissinger said. Jn a luncheon toast, K!ssinger said "\\'e want to make the next swnn1it as sign ificant" as the two preceding ones between Nixon and Brezhnev. But he said, "If our two nations attempt to lake ad\'antage of each other, ir we attempt to blackmail each other, or deal with each other from a strong position, then there can be no pe8i:e amoog ourselves or in the world." As the talks opened Brezlliev said he was optim istic about another Soviet· American anns agretmenl. Kissinger hoped during his thrCt' days o( talks in the Krernlin to set the stage of a new nuclear weapoos treaty President Nixon could sign on a visit to Moscow next summer. Asked by newsmen if he expected to reach another arms agreement with Nixon Own, Brezhnev repUed; "I take an optimistic view of that. \Ve have made a very good beginning on that procese.." He said relations between I h e superpowers "are good" but "there is much wcrk to do at thi.s time." Asked to OOaracterize lhe situr llon \\'ith regard to East-West dek11te. he said the European security conference in Geneva is "dragging Its feet a tittle" beca11Se "the opponents of detente are introducing petty matters lhal have no bearing on detcntc." Although he was speaking of the Geneva conference. It was assumed that he was referring to the S o v i l' t govemn1C11t's problems with the U.S. Congress over trade and Jewi s h emigration as well as to the Western demand at th e security conference for freer flow of peoples and ideas. Before the meeting. Brezhnev sought oot American .reporters in the large Kremlin room oonnal.ly used for the ruling Politburo's v.·eek ly sessions. He askl'd them , "You do want it to be better. don 't you ? There are some people who would li ke to see things worse.'' When Kissinger and his small group joined Brezhnev, Ule Kremlin leader shook Kissinger's hand and said, "I told them I was optimistic . They agreed they all want pcal."C. That niakcs it easier to start." 9 llurl in l\lclec P0~1 PANO BEACH. Fla. IAP)-Nine persons. including eight policen1cn. were injured v.·hen a rock·thr0\\1ng melee broke out at a carnival Sunday night. police said. The disturbance v.'as brought under control about 3 a.m. today, !1\'e hours after it started, police said OUNGI COAST IT DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•l'lllt ("JI OAILV ,ILOT, ... llfl w~IC~ It ~'* ll!t H1w•·''"'• ,. 11Ubll"*' I• tM ()range CM ll l''*lfll'llflt (-11y, lf~ fl!t fdlf .... f •fl ~I·-· '-'"""-Y lflf'O<ltfl Frloil•t , lo1r COii• Mttl. Ht-I ~II. M""t1•t!On 9t•<ll 1'11111"!1111 ,Y~lltv. L"""" INC~. ,, .. lr-',Ndl-k 1nd ~11 CN....,,tt/ '"" Ju•11 (1,l\1'lllO. A llfttlt fttioM! .ijJ1i.. I• flOllltl•Mll S11u!'••v• •1111 S\llldon. '~· p•IMlPll ll'l/ltl!ol\k>t 111•"' ,, ., no W*•' 111 S!rftt, Cotti M-, C.llf<t111l1, f)t)6. ltolltf l N. w,,4 Prftlffllt ,.,. """'II""'" J t d1 It. Cvrlt y Ykt ,.,.,....,, 1M a...tr•l MMle9lr The111•• Keovil ...... Tlltffl .. A. Mur11lllftt M"'6tlnt E•llw' Ch1t4t1 H. lee1 fll~"••lll 'P. Nill ... 1111111 "''""""" ll•1111 ... ...... C.lt Ml!M: n1 """'' ltf SI ..... "-' IMdl: :1W 1'1-1 '°"tnl ... U.-, IMCtl: m l'-1 A-H9'!1 ........ llllC!'t~ 1"'1 ltldl """l•~•nl t.11 ,..._ .. I 1M -II C.mlM AMI Ttl ...... t71 41 '4MU1 c._..... • ....,....,.2.1•1• ·-Qollllll4 ........... LliflM .... 4tt-44J:t ..,. ..... Df' .... C..ty ~-MO-IJ:Q c.trwo•. •m. Ori• c ... 1 ~""..,. (~. Me -'"'"'· IHrn"'••loM. "'l"'lel _., ... ... ...... ~ """''" _, M ~"' •lft>wl 1*-i.I -"'"'""' .. -""' -· tlW"'I CilH .... , ... NW t i ( .. II --· (t!l.,..11. ""*'"""*" "" CMl'loH U.fJ """""""'' ., -" u ,. "*"""'' -~ ~...,,...,. n.61 -"'"· havt man)' cl08e fr it>nds his o,i;:e. He kept pretty much to him.~lf tlnd relied on his family fOl' what companioru.'.1lp he had . Lankie died Saturday night from four bullet v.·ounds. The bo)..and his Wtrle. Troy Su111tz, 42, entered i"ast·food restaurant v.·hile his father. Lankie Sr., stayed outalde. After 11haklng and 11tomping to rid themselves of 1'100'111 stuck to their coats, Lankle and Stantz ordC"red coffee and egg sandv.i ches, \Vitnesses sa id the boy stood fk'ar hi~ uncle with a white ~arf tied arolilld h.ls face and !laid ool'lting. Etad ita Sigltt? ''rhlle Grootendorst, 54, was fixing the food \vith his back to I.he counter, the uncle said, "Tb.ls i.J a holdup,'' police reported. Grootendorst carried a .%2-calibtr revolver Jn a bolster on his hip while working late in the store. Upon hea.:a what Staotz saJd, Grootendorst whl around, and l..ankle began ~Ing, police .said. City detectives said Grootendorst returned U.i fire and within seconds both Grootendorst and Lankie were hit at least four times each. Windows were also blown out and the walLs chipped trom gunshot. GrooW!dors!, wounded In the siomach; chest and legs, was ll1ted ln critical condition . Lankle, hit at least twice in the stomach, 11tagsered backwards out of the restaurant and fell Into a snowdrift. .J'ollco. QY tllot .. the aboo1ing subsided, L&nlde's father leaped into a c~r parked oul.'lkie and then noticed his son on the sidewalk. WltOCS3el said the father tried to get his son in.side the car but gave up when people began an1v1ng on the scene. Vandals Ruin Student Work • At Preser've lleavy vandalism over the p.1.Sl week to bridges, trees and trails at a new v.-ildllfe pre.aerve ooar Dana Hili.s High School has ~ ectllre project ~ck_. disal>PQimed school spokesmen sa.ld today. The canyon, a gift to the school by the developr of a nearby housing tract, was developed during hwxireds of hours of ·donated labor by shxlents and other volunleers, but vandalism whidl began a week ago b.a.s ruined most of the -Specimen trees planted by science department pupils also have been taken or damaged, said Dana HUis Science Department Cliairman James Klein. Klein said many ol. the stairways were torn out and sycamore aad oak trees were stoloo. ,;We were jtm get.ling ready 11> dbtribute leanets around the community leu.ing residents know that the preserve existed," he said. He said the amouncemenb will still be sent out, but the emphasis now will be to discourage vandals. 1be canyon originally faced destruct.Ion as a habitat for wildlife, but through an arrangement wiUl a developer, the Ca pistrano Unified School Di.strict and the County of Orange, it became permanent open space. This sign on the wall of a building located near the Newport Free- way at 17th Street in Santa Ana makes still another comment about the lalest collegiate fad . The role of the 18-acre canyon is that of an outdoor classroom where st udents can take guided v.·al ks with teadiers and study native vegetation and wildlile. Klein dkt not set a dollar amowit 10 the damase caused by vandalism. Mission Viejo Residents Seeking Advisory .Cotmcil But much of the 1,800 hours of V.'Ork by JS young members of tbc Neighborhood Youth Corps will have to be repeatt.'d 10 -the ...... he 08id. - Laguna Schoof - Office Burgled Representativl'S of the Mission Viejo Homeowners Association will be.gin circulating petitions this week asking the Orange County board ·of 5t.tpervisors to set up a muni cipal advisory council (J\lAC) In Mission Viejo. The council, a locally elected body to give better repre s ent a tio n to unincorporated areas, v.oold ha\·e from five to nine members. A relatively new local government concept, it would be a legally recognized advisory body to the board of supervisors oo local issues of law enforcement, parks and recreation, planning, traf£ic and development. Ten percent of the reg1stered voters within the proposed COWlCll boundaries must sign the petitions to bring it up for consideration. included In the ?ttAC area \\'Ould be the 11.000-acre ~1isslon Viejo Planned Com· munily v.·hich now has about 27 ,000 per- sons. The rouncil v.-ould be financed with tax re\·enues in County Service Area Nirre, v.'n.ich corresponds in area to the proposed J\.1AC boundaries. Pa\ Schubert. chairman or the ~tAC study committee, said volunteers would ~ going from house to house and v.·oold lit'! up tables in rccr!!ation and shopping centers. The petition is the outgrov.·th of study. committee on the municipal advisory council in the homcov."ners association v.•hich has for the past eight 1nonths Fountain Valley Schools Offering Varied Programs Another full schedule of classes, lectures, workshop! and sports activities arc planM'd for this spring in FOW'ltain Volley School District ·s community sdlool program. ArU and crafl3 classes, such a& oil palnting, Cf'OChet and decoupage, and sports clBS9eS, such as ladles bowling and flunlly miniature golf. will be held. Also. wotk.!lbope in home fi r e prevenlloo. coosumer protection. tho how and why o( Sesame Street, fund ralsinc a.nd othtt topk:s wUI be ~vatl:ibtc to t'ountaln Valley resid<nts. · Resldenta may aloo join tho community band, community chorus or lht ctlCSI club. Rcglstratlon f0< theot and other claw:s, lS' now ln progrtsa and wUI continue lhn'.Klih April 5. PenKlftl-.rnay rtglster at the Fountain VAiley School Diatrict office, or may call the Community School OfRce, 842-&651 , ext. 217. l • • Yr'OTked v.i lh both the board 0 f supervlson and the community. May 22. 1973, the supervisors adopted a re.solution setting up guidelines for municipal advisory councils a n d describing their purpose, functions, eligibility, and formation procedures. In No\'embfr. the study committee sent questionnaires to the 7 ,100 homes in ?tfission Viejo to ~ whether the conunW"lity was interested in b council idea. or t1te 20 percent who .._-89 p(!rcent said they vroold s upport fonnatioo of a MAC "v.ithout delay.'' If the needed signatures are obtained, the board of supervisors will hold a public hearing on the proposal and then decide v.·hether to set up a MAC structure for ).fission Vif!jo An election ~·ould be called and voters \\'"Ould elect their MAC representatives. Since no additional need for finances beyond Ule service area funds are now projected, voters would not be asked to approve any tax rate illCl'ease. Young \ Office equipment valued at more than $350 was stolen during the weekend by burglars who broke Into a Laguna Beal'h area school, Orange County Sheriff's o!fii:en said. Deputies said intruders broke a window at the nor1h side of El Morro. Elctnefltary School, 3681 N. Coast Highway, and then forced their way Into tbe school office via the equipment room. They said an adding machine was among the M iness equipment stolm. The brtakin W1lll discovered and reported by school principal William F. Allen. Five Die in Blaze DAVIDSON, Mich. (UPI) -Fire swept through a two-story frame home late Sunday, killing five members of a family, including four children aged 3 to 9. Authorities said only the fathe.r, Fred Tyler, managed to escape t'he blaze after futile attemp13 to rCSC\Je his wife and the children. Driver Boy, 9, Ta.kes Car for Spin LOS ANGELES (AP) -·The officers never did see the driver as !hey chased the sports car through three .red lights at speeds up to 70 miles an hour. \Vhen officers Vi ctor Colello and Robert Page stopped the car near a busy city intersection they still aouldn't see a d river. Then the two saw a little 9-year-old boy sitting .in the driver's seat, peer- ing up at th'em from under the rim of the steetfng wheel. The unidentified lad, who a spokesman said took the car rrom a neighbor's home, Saturday, was released to his parents pending a juvenile court hrring. Thousands Wait SAN FRA NCISCO (UP!) -Thouoando of pef'$0flll tumed out in heavy rain today to pick up boxes that contaiited ateakJ ond lr..O product In the mumption o1 the food g1veav.'&y program demal'lded by lhc terror!Jt kldnapm of Patricia Heant. Although the distribution ol 17 Son Fran<:ICD area locatiorvt WU acbeduled '° 1ta.rt at a a.m., many penions aot In line hours early despite the downpour. OperalOl's of the '"People In N«d"" P<>tl'""' ~ by ·rar11cta•s rather. RMdolpn A. Hemt, lald the glvuway wns intended to come as cloee aa poalble to the· $70 "orth of me ff'O(lH'i05 dm\anded by lho SymblOOClJt t.lbe<atlon Army wblcb kid~ the girl Feb. 4. · A typical box dl!lribultd at • ....., In , tho pttdominantly La.tin A m e r I c a. n Mission District ol San Francisco Included four or five 5teak1. s0me of them" T-bone: cuts: two packages of lroien filet of solt, a fror.en chicken, a dozen eggs, a quart of mllk, a jar of peanut butter. a p.'lCkage of fresh produce that included yams, onklOS, oranges. apples and bananu. and o<ht< foodstulb . ,,,. line .. the Mbsloo District peT10n and a number had mo.:e .. t_ba9J IWO blocks Wllh about 40t).$()t) pmoos waiting at a a.m. Because of me.crowd, the -•r had begun handln~ out \l\e food early. Ttwe were no rtttr'ictioos on how many boxes could bt takm by one ~a dna .a number had mora than ..... One man whcoled two or the food boxes Lanklt Sr. then drove away . About 30 minutes latt·r, Lank.le was pronoWlctd dend at t.iarlon County Gt:nerp,I JlospUaL Twtnty·four hours after that, no one had oome lorwl[d to claim 1be boy's body forburlal.' Officiats said the only thing found on ti~ boy's clothing was a !IChool test 011 whlch bc...had lvriUen bll-A a m..e...ai. answered some quesHons. Lankle Sr. is being sought by authorities oo an armed robbery charge. Stanl.z. Is In jail on lhe aamc charge, and Lan)c;ie'• mother i5 W&llte<i on an embezilement warranL UPI Tt..,.,.IO IMPLICATES MITCHELL Ex·Nixon Aide Dean Fro111 Poge 1 DEAN ••• motivated." l\lilchell asked Dean to call Casey and get the subpoenas posted until after the election. Dean 1estified . '11ne subpoenas. Dean said J\litchell told him, v.·ould be likely to reveal Vcsco's rontribution; that Donald Nixon Jr. of Nev.-port Beach, lhe President's ncyhew, \\·as involved ~'ith Vesco. and 1hat Ed"·ard Nixon. the President's broU~r. also was corviected with the case. · "The whole thing is something v.·e don 't need bf fore clet"tion," Dean quoted Mitchelf as saying. Testimony nas indicated that Vesco and his aides lOOk the Fifth Amendment before the SEC. The contribution v.·as not made public until after the SEC filed a civil iraud action against Vesco Nov. 27. 1972. Dean said that Stans told him in late October 1972 lhat he was concerned about the Vesco contribution because Corrunon Cause fil<.'d a I aw s u it deinand ing -revelation of all large contributions to t~. Nixon campaign before April 7, the effective date of a new \a v.· requiring conlributions to be reported. Dean said Stans told him the Vesco contribution v.•as designated only by the initials "JJ\I." Sta ns said he was concerned about tne date the Vesco money arri\'ed. It was d!!li\•ertd April JO. Dean said they discussed another conlribution that came in lat<', but they determined they had "constructive possession" of it before April 7. After the election, on Nov. 15. Dean said he met ""ith ~ti lchell and Stans in Nc\v York. Stans said he would like to return Vesco"s monev nnd ~litchell agreed that was a good ·idea, !lean said. Dean said he told them. "Of course, )'ou'll have lhe problem of reporting this." Another wit.ness has said that lhc refund w as reported to the General Accounting Office but the contribution V.<lS oot. De~ said Stans lt>ft the meeting first As Alitchell and Dean were leaving J\1ilchell said he had.received a packet oi materials from either Don Nixon. the Presidenl's brother. or Don Ni1on Jr. o( Newport Bead! about the \1esco case. lie said he had looked into It and it ~·as "a bunch of crap, .. Dean testified. Other witnesses have said that a packet was addressed to Don Nixoo at.a New York hotel. that it was never de_llvered to him but w8s picked up by 1'11tchell, and that a paper in the packet Ulreatened to e;q:iose Vesco's contribution uni~ the SEC investigation wa.s Slopped. At Hou se 6£ Plumber ·: I A rouUnt visit to"li"Ke a Garden Gi'Ovt I plwnber lnlo custody oo suspicion ,fll I parole viola lion led Sunday to recove17 .. 1 of what police allege is loot llnked •tif • ' bu IA~ ,., .... ' scores of Orange Coast rg n1e&, including at least 67 jobs in Newpiori Reach. De1ective ~1ike llleta1n said today the majority of the allegedly stolen il!!ms stockpiled in the residffit'C \'i5iltd Sunday \1·as transferred lO Gardt.'11 Gro,•e politt headquarters. Jie. said a truck "·~uld ~ pressed into service tod ay 10 begm hauhng the hoard of valuablf'!i back lo Nev.·port Beach '"·here it could be invefltor icd piece-by. piece. "\Ye just don't even knov.·:· the veteran investigators remarked when asked to estimate the number ol stolen · items·and their potential value. L-- Arrest.ed and booked on suspicion tA paro\!' violation and receiving stolen property fo1Jo,11ing the u n exp cc t e .d'. rli.9covery was Paul F. Fulkerson. 'rl , « 10442 Lampson Ave .. Garden Grove. The unemployed plwnber and pr}Sff1 • parolee allegedly pro\•ided information leading lo the swift arrest of tv.·o allegtd aC'COmplices involved with the stolen property. James D. Spradlin, 26. o! 9582 1.iadlson Ave.. Westminster. and Patrick ~1. Do~ell, 25, 0( 12819 S. ~lann SL. Ga rden Grove, "'·ere also lxlth booked on s11Spicion of possession of s to I e n property. Orange County District Attorney's deputies may tack additional charg~ onto formal criminal complaints naming Fulkerson, Spradlin and Dowell. sul'h as· suspicion of burglary and grand lhefl Newport Beach Police Deparbnent policy calls for booking a prisoner on only one count pending issuance of a criminal complaint. Detective Hietala asserted among the first stolen Rems identified among the haul discovered in Fulkerson"s apartment included items taken ~larch !9 al 428 CabriHo Terrace, Corona del ~lar. lie added that with tht' arrest of FulkerSOfl. Spradlin and Do"·ell that police believe they have temporarily at least sidetracked. the so-called TV Burglars' Ring. The lhief or thieves gained that litfe due to their penchant for absconding widJ,.~-- all som -or television sets. ~· Officers Ousted After Assault HOUSTON IUPI J -City civi1 service commissioners have suspended two policemen for insubordination stemming from the controversy over whether lhey beat and raped a prostitute. Commissioners said Uley were una'"e to determine \\'hcther officers Jack lleard Jr. and Wayne ~t. Jones lied in ronnection v.·iUi the Feb. 14 assault on the woman. In effect, the punishment assessed was ' for insubordination rather than for rape because Heard and_ Jones refused a direct order from a Police ~tment. official to submit to a lie d'\est. Gunn1en Kill Victim BUENOS AIRES. Argentina (AP) - Eight gunmen trit'd to kidnap a textile executive today but he resislt'd and they shot and hilled him, police said. The. victi m was identified as Jorge Oscar \\'ahelidi, 46. Police said the kidnap attempt look place near Wahelich's hou~ in the wealthy suburb of San Isidro, five miles north of the capital, \\'here doieoe. of kidnapings have occurred in rec:eol years. ; Nude Batlier Found Dead LA JOLLA IAPl -A nude swimmer at Black's B e a c h dr~-ned in a ri'p: curren\ Sunday. The lx>dy or Hl'llty l\tanuel Ruiz, 25, was ~vered. later. The beach is used for nude sunbathing and swimming. i ' Ill Rain for Food • .. t1\\2f in a whfflchair. and another had a box on his shoolder \\-hile limping aM>oc on one crutcn. Allbough thoy had been askod 10 brlllg shopping carts by the pin op<ra1ors. a number or J)er30flS tu~ up in automobiles. some of them CadillaC!I. One v.una.n left balancing a lm. on her head. Several boxes ~·ere belna JOOded into t ho same automobUC. ·ltO ooe apptart'd cheerful. "I've been walling In the rain since 6 o'clock." one man said. 'lbe distribution ~'as possibly the In.st under the People tn Nted pragram. Spok~mcn for tbe group said they llad about II mllli6n loll to devote to the provam and that It all might be spent today. 1be latest diltrlbutlon "'u the flfth l> ginct! Patrlda v.-as kidnaped and the SLA • demandtd the distribution as a "good) faith pl.,.... · lo ""Bn~g' shoppi111 corts .,. 90melhlng wt carry .the food," KrJmer said. :t He said the program .• ..,. ha.. quality. food lo dlslllbute," u.,. meettns. a maJo< c:omplalnl of lbe SL.A. The food prosram I& flnanced by · H-insid<nl aod ·<lllllor of the Sin Francl1Co Examiner . The givee~·ay aa orlglnally sel up. came to an abrupt ha.It t"-o woeb ap after Uie St.A tldnapers labeled it only ""crumbo'" for the peoj>le. The termed oome'" the rr .. food ... "hog reed .. and "unfit for humsn ~sumptlon." So far, abwt $1 miUk>n worth <t food has ~ given to 120,000 penona. r l ~ I I 0' e I D .A By W 'Oran gt expected to that will 1}t': O'Neill Par v~ board the expendit 232·acre par the county group of operates a Supervisor d('('ide .... he negot iate fo tbe park at County Department actually be. Society Ian $20,000 in ba for fencing tbe monks. -The-societ SlU"rounding casement th given to th Li.\'e Oak C offered for market \'al )!arbors, s Jtf •NOR FOL breezes • Stephen his church from on hi "~1y ges Cam Wea Jails SAN DI sei-geants arrested theft of a rounds or v.·eaponry authorities Marine S booked ro gove mmen fede ral offi Marine and Charle employe at were arre apartment reported. investigat" stolen gov sa id. FBf and found in phosphorou roimdsol M-16 rifle reported ammunitio Juhl's horn The by a fed er • ..N~ ! I Spr In Bo brlgh Lhrou of Ihi eill Pro ouhle Acreage t Park Looms By "'llJ,lAPtf M;HREIBER Of 1111 O.lly 'Not Sltff nge County supervisors a re led to wrap up a land deal Tuesday will nearly double the acreage of ·u Park in the nills above Mission board is being asked to appro,·e xpenditure of $33,000 to take over a ere parcel of property being given to county by the Vedanta Society, a p of Ramakrishna mooks !hat ates a monastery near the park. pervisors will also get a chance to u·hether or not they u•ant lO tiate for anothe r 40 acres adjQlning rk at a cost of $165.000. unty Real Property Service rtment officia ls said the county is Uy being gi\'en title to the Vl'd.anta y land in return fo, rmyment of oommissionerr-ncommen;ded-purchase of the 13--acre parcel and tv.·o others along the road ov.ned by private individuals to give roe park run access to the road. According to the real property agents. the 13-acre Vedanta parcel Y.'OOid cost another $66,500, a ~acre parcel ju.st belo11· it v.°OUld cost $58,600 and the third parcel -about six acres, v;ould cost $41 .680. Total acquisition C06t or the lilnd in the area 'l\."OUld be just shy of $200,000, supervisors ..-oere told. Improvements on the property would cost another $-143,000, according to park o(ficia.ls but that cost is coosiderably lov.·er that It might have been since the Ramakri5'ulas have prohibited any development of the-232·a~ parcel . I Mond.iy, March 25, l'l74 OAIL V PILOT Tlu·ee Sl1ot At We(lclit1g Celellt'«:ttio11 S:1nta Ana lire are hunting today for ;;i1sl>Cci5° U\ the youth-Sang shoot1ngs of thr{'l' tt't•nagers attending 11. \\'f'dding 1>.1rty t'arly Sunday rnnrning Tht• !hrt•i' youths ;i rt• 111 counl v ho'ip1tab today aft('r u 11 d (' r ~ o 1 n J.: 1•n)l·rg~·nty ~ur1.;1·r.1· Sunttay for n1ut!Lph• hullt•I \\Ound~ (ln(' J'> 111 ,<,1•nuu.; but ~1able 1'011thl1on ;)l\(t 1h1· othl'r~ ,1r<' hste<J ill fai r cnnd1t1on. Poll""' :-:url Till' trio 11t•rt-~1:1nd 1ng 1n thl' fruut ~ ard of a hnusl' at 9\U S I l1•o;perian S!rt'<'I 1\hcrc 1h1• 11·ffld1ng fl'~\~\11'rt• going on 11 h<'!l !ht•y l\t'ff' ft'lll'c! by a h;ul uf snt:.ill t:allbcr gw111rc JU:.l alter n11dn1ght in back taxes and a $13.000 outlay fencing around me land retained by monks. Part of the deal made with t~ ooonty v.•as that the land would remain in Its natural state and be open to hikers and horseback riders only. Co11t1•asti11g Va11tafje Poi11ts \\'11n1·'.;t'S told pohc•t' !)I<' ~hotc; wcrr hrerl rro1n the l4'ind1111·s 11f a c;1r parked aero~~ the strrt't fro1n the ~ard 11hcre the rhrrc 11·1•rt• s1;1nd1ng. Police 11·er,.. told the c;1 r ~q>1·d a11.1~ _bf(Qfi' <Ul)' Ql JJ.S Q.C_l'U!Ji11l!S l'UUld he Jdt•n!ifa·d. 60Ciet.y....:will retain -about 40....acres ounding the monastery, a road ment through part of the land being n to the county and 13 acres along Oak Canyon Road which has been ed for sale to the county at its fair ·et value. rOOrs. Beaches and P a r k s er1non Spokcsman..{or...severalsuper_vison.Said_ Friday it appeared likely the board would go for the 232--acre parcel right away i.inc.e the cost to the county v.wks out to only, $142 per acre. But the remaining pareel! may take more study before the board goes along v.itb tnem, the spokesman said. on ~1inister Holds Rooftop Service ORFOLK, \'a. (APl -With sea zes whipping at his coat tails, hen Thornton climbed to the roof of church and delivered his sermon on high. 1y geslures this morning will be ·mp Pendleton ea pons Theft ils 2 Marines N DIEGO (AP) -Two ~1arine eants and an Oceanside civilian were sted Saturday in connect.ion with the ft of a machine gun, tv.10 rifles, 10,000 ds of ammunition and o t h e r ponry from Camp .Pendle ton. orlties said. ~ arine Sgt. Clair John Juhl, 22, was ked for investigation of stealing emment property and assaulting a eral officer, an FBI spokesman said. arine Sgt. Daniel Dean Birman, 22, Charles Scott Morgan, 24, a civilian ploye at a Camp Pendleton toy store, arrested at the Oceanside nt they share, a u t ho r itie s rted. They \\'ere booked f o r stigation of receiving and possessing len government property, the FBI I and Naval investigators said they in the apartment nash grenades, phorous explosive devices. 10,000 of M-16 and M.00 ammunltion and 6 rifle parts. The FBI ir\ Omaha rted fmding two ~1-16 r if I es , munition, grenades and gas masks in l's hometown of Amherst, Neb. e three \\'ere to be arraigned today a federal magistrate here. I pri119 Flotvers limited because I'm not used to preacning under these circumstances." the 23-year-old minister told some 150 parishioners Sunday as he balanced himself some 20 feet. above the ground. The sermon on the roof was Thornton's payoff to the congregation of his Ocean View Church of Christ. He promised the offbeat service as an incentive for his congregation to sv.·el\ Sunday school ranks to 125. "lt was difficult to decide \\"1at to preach about sin ce 1 do not usually preach from the rooftop," Thornton said. He finally decided on a sermon based on the Bible story in v.·hich the apostle Peter addressed mult itudes from a rooftop. The young minister climbed a rickety ladder to the roof oC the cinderblock church .. building about two blocks from the 1bore of a.esapeake Bay. His congregation gave him a musical sendoff -a chorus of "Nearer ,\1y God To Thee." Besides hi.s congregation, Thornton's sermon attracted the interest of passersby. Children on bicycles stopped to stare at the man oo the roof and cars passing by the little church slowed or stopped at the side of the road . Next door two young men In ""- motorcycle jackets peered around the corner of their house sipping beer as they listened. The v.'eatber v.1as balmy and v.·onhipers sat on the Jay.11 and in the parking lot under a bright sun. Saturday had been cold and rainy and the weatherman wrongly predicted rain and the passage of a cold front for Sunday moming.- "God takes care of everything," Thornton said, .spreading his arm.s against a blue sky interrupted only by the white oC passing sea gulls. ..The \\·eatherman just tries to predict "·hat God does. We've got God oo our side." Jn Bern1ud:i . springti nle n1eans fields bursting WI"th Easter lilies and brightly colored 5traw hats shielding young faces . From late ~farch through April the delicate Lrumpet-sh aped blooms carpet the fleld• or this mid·Allanlic Brillsh colony. An_eslin1aiec.L3.5 .. QOJLs.pc.ctators at 51111 Jau c,11r istrano's 17 th annual ~'iesta de los Golonclrinas parade Saturday found vie1ving points that ranged from raili ngs and roofs to trees. 1·oung n1en below are desce n.ding !ron1 the1 pine tree perch al c:on-~ ('Jusion of parade. Boy at botto1n seems te1nporar- ily stu1nped. Dogs Protect Officers From Rock Music Fans FLl~N SPRl:\GS l:\Pl -A picnic and rock concert touri~d into a confrontation \1·ith sheriff's deputies. "'ho y.·cre backed against a v.·all and protected from a rock- lhrowing cro11·d by only their snarling dogs. By the tirne it 11·as calm SEv. 20 sheriffs deputies and eight igh"·ay patrolmen "'·ere on the scene 11•i ·o helicopters in the air. ''Brighter Day Productions .. sponsored LA Porno Movie Producers Freed Of Smut Cl1arges ~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -1 Tv:o "San Francisco men have been acquitted of obscenity charges in the screening al a Los Angeles the ater of their sexually explicit film '•Behind the c:reen Door ... James L. ~·litchell. 30, and his brother Artie. 28. were found innocent by a jury in an Wlusual Saturday session at Los Angeles ~funicipal Court. Judge Vincent t\. Erickson ordered the jury to deliberate Saturday in hopes that ll v.oold reach a verdict. The jury 'nad been ~uestered since Thursday. The ,).lltchell Brothers produced .the film and leased the Wilshire Boulevard theater where it -v.·as s'fioy.n, 1bc men also face obsc-enity charges today in an lngle\\·ood court on the showing of the film in another theater. The e\ghl-mnn. four-woman j u r )' viewed the film twice and deliberated 30 hours before reaching a verdict. ' thr picnic ill a rctnch ne.'.lr F'.l Cajnn. Eightcf"n persons 11·err arrt·stcd on a variety of char~C'S ;1ftc·r !hr· arrival of the first depuly. 11·ho l\.1S tryi ng to 'A'rite a speeding ticket. • .,_ . Judge Kicks Jr' 011ict11 Out Fo ,-Pa11ts ~tc~ll :\'.\"VIUF:. Tenn. IL'Pll -''I put my pants on that day just like I do c1·cr.1· day ... said ~!rs. Lindn Lusk. But v:hen she appeared Hl Gcnernl Sessions Court \lo'Caring slacks last month it touched off a furor. l'Onlrmrt cita 1ions and :i $400.000 federal court suit. ~!rs . Lusk. 28. a teach<'r's aidt•. \1as fined $10 last '>l<'<'k for y.·c:1nng 1hc slacks into the t'Ourtroom or Judge \\'. G. \JcOonough for the S{'COnd time. ''lie treats evf'rybody hke a criminal," ~l rs. Lusk told UPI. On r~eb. 18. ~!rs. Lusk apprarcd in court on a sp<'('Cling violation ch;irgc . "I y.·ent in th<'re 10 pay the fine and he called my name and I 1~·('nt forv.·ard. lie asked where I lived and he said to l'Qlnc back \\'edncsday in a dress,·· ~!rs. Lusk saod. "You see she·!I gol on pants -dressed like a man," ~lrs. Lu.sk quoted ~tcDooough as saying. ?>.1rs. Lusk said when her husband, Robert. 32, a Vietnam veteran. objected. the judge called him a "sinart alcck." ?llcDonough fined Lusk $10 for conten1pt of court at the first hearing. ~l rs. Lu.sk also said the judge accused the NAACP of sending her there m slacks. She said the charge 11·as w11ruc. Since that incident, the Lusks h;11·e riled a $400.000 darnage i.uit agounst ;\lcDonough. t'harging that he \·1olall'd their C00.'>1itutionat righL'i 1.rith his rul e banning \\'Omen fro1n wearing slacks 111 his l'Ollrtroom . Fcd£·ral .Judge Charles '.\f'l'Se of Greeneville r<'fll.5ed to enjoin ;..1cOonough from enforcing hi" rule but observed th;1t it " appeared !hat ~1rs. L. us k 1 s constilut1on<il nghts were violated. He said the U.S. 6th Circuil Court of Appeals has a polit'y against en1oining state court judges although the praellct· is not in force in other circuits. .. , think slaek.~ eol'er morP of a \\'Oman 's body than a dress." .\lrs. Lu.~k said. '.\lrs. Lusk said she did not know of ~lcllonough·s n.ile against ;hlnL" until the incident occurrt'<l. "I just put my panL'i on 1hat day likr I do every day. I 11·ear mostly pants." .\Ir.;. Lusk said. ··1 don 't "·ant him iellin~ 1ne ho111 to dress." Sal\'ador .Jurrado."' 19. and .Ju~taclo !11:1z, 19. both nf Sa111:i An~1. 11·cre tht• 1no~t ~t'rlllUSI\' \IOlllldt'd of !ht• thrt'i.'. They 11('rt; tal..t"n 111 .\1l·rl',\' <_;ent•r:il lluspual in Sant;1 Ana for ~urg1•ry and ar1· rt'portcdly "hulchng lht·1r 01\'ll" 1iida~· .Jurrarlo. in scnouc; ('Olld1t1on tortay, \\;JS h1I hi' fl\u bU!lt't._. nnt" or ll'hll'h ludgt"d r!o~t' to his heart l>1az 11·a~ 11ound('d onee tn the atxkln1cn TI1e (lther v1tllnl. a r;·-~<'ar-0ld Oo1· 11;1!> struek 111 Ilic ri ght kn ee ;in<l l" 111 f:nr conclituin at Orangl' County 1\h."<11t·.d (t'll!t•r. A police ~p<1kt~srnan :-aid tod:i~· no arrt•Sts h~1d hc1'11 n1adc but added "drt('('ti1·r<; are lol101r1n~ surnc fa1rl.\ strnng ]{'01ds" Thf' ~pokc'>1n:111 said 1here :l!Jf)('tlrerl to be a definill· ~ang·relaled rnotive 111 lhr shootings and po~s1hle gang eonncC'l 1n11~ of the three :,hooting \'IClin1s <Jre bein g probed . 'llippi es' OusL<'<I Fro1n illaluy.~ia l\l',\L.\ 1.r:-.tPrn:. :-.1 n1a~s1 a 11\P) - Authorill f''i toda\' rnundt·rl up 94 p<'rsuns thf'I' d£>~l·nb..'1I ·as h1ppii·" :1111! rJrdcrcrl 1hen1 deportt'<I. .\t lea ,\ 17 \1·erf' 1\rnericans. They saal 45 alrc:1dy ha1p left l\lalaysia nnd the rl'SL 1\!l\1 in pri~on 1111 north11·est Pcn;ini.:. v.ill lt•rt\1• 1111htn 1h1· next day nr t11·0. ln1n11 gr;11!nn official ~ said Pe111Jl !( n.·sident ~ 14·ere f'On1pl<Hn1n!.( about sc;1n11ly dr('~st•d or t·1cn n~1kcd hippies on the beaches. llome Affairs ~lln1stcr Chn1ali Sh:i fi•· said deporiation of tht< 9~ \\';)" part of 1hl' governn1cnt effort tfl k{'(>p th1<; r.1oslcn1 coun1ry free of bad influence.-, Girl, 6, Unhurt Bv Freight 1'rain . ' F.1\ST P!\LATKA. Fla . !Al1 1 -1\ Ii· year-0l d girl was abducted fro1n lu·r bt·1! before da\rn; raJjef! afid left on ;i railroad lral·I: v.·hert' a freight !rain roarl'd O\'C'r her body ',\'Jthout touctun;: her, poh rr said. Ch.i rgcd 11·ith r;1JX' :ind f J ! :s ,.. in1rri.~onn1rnt v.·;i s Jackie Cl'ntrv. 17. nt East Pal;1f k.a.._authont1cs s;11rl. l'nl1c1· ~:1111 <:entr1 !fouk lnt' girl frum h•·r ho111r assaulted hl•r an<l l1·f1 hf'r 111 <;ho1'k 11n :1 nParbv Flondu E:n~t Co.:1$l H.1ilro;1·I track.' The t rf'V.' of ;i northbound frc>J!.!ht S)')O!lf'<I 1hr girl on thl' tr:1ek . 1111! lb" l.'n~1ne and 13 c\lrs p:1<~f'd fJ\'"1· h1<f ht fo rc U1c tram l'oul<l bo· st.1pp•·d. pohcr !laid. By Florence Eiseman of course The Hum chrldren Tina 8, and Jonathon 7, are ta stefu ll y dressed fn summer outfifs designed by Florence Eiseman Tina and Jonathon arc students at Mesa View School and they are the children or Mr. and Mrs. James Hum of Hun\1n9!on Beach. THE. 1 RED BALLOON LTD. t A'< .. 1(1 .. •5~AN0 .. ... ..,......"" ... -" '4+..a T .,,-, 5 tOV"'Tll• O>•~ n•i ,~~n "IJNl,NGTO"l ... All&o.111 11111846-•• , ' .f. DAILY PILOT Monday, March 25, 1q74 Just ~ Coasting,~~ J :_;--.., ~ Syria Reject·s U .N.. Truce-Israelis • I ,1. , ·'.> ~)lf'l'I\' ··'·"'~. with ·~'" . ·~:··. Tom '• urphine So1ne Tails Aren't Moving \\'ILO HLUI=: YONDEHS: Orange County AirpOrt hend m<in IW!x>rt Breshnah.'ln has jtl'll rcportcrl that in the last l"'o months. commercial jct operntion.!I rtid 25 percent more business at lhc li.tac/\rthur Boulevard ;ierodrome lhan in the t:ornp<lrablc two months of '73. Well. statistiC!I like this are pretty dull . usually. To JX.11 son11! 1.ap into them, 1---tiov.·cvcr-:-Just try li ---Vl§ll to Orange County Airport. I did, only yesterday. 1'o say that Sunday was busy at the airstrip \\'ould be etJlling it mildly. The place dre"' more people than a streakers' convention. All the lraric isn't in the air, either. Out in front of the terminal, it "'as curb- lcrcurb traffic. Air chief Bresnahan h11s de9Crib00 the parking problem ai; ··remaining al"Ute.'' There isn't anytJ1ing cute about it. PEOPLE DON 'T just park cars out at the count y airport. They abandon them. You suspect a lot of the ru.'itomers just quit where they ran out of gas. You can de> enough laps around the termin al parki ng area looking for an open slot to figure you've just qualified l11r the Atlanta 5(X). Some run1ors "'ere circulating that one poor c:hap lry ing lo fly to San Jose starved to death looking for a parking place, I tend to discount these stories. \Vhcn you do get onto the parking Jot, it's interesting that you can still find son1e cn rs out !here 11,1ith bumper stickers den1anding, "Ban !he Jets.'' INSIDE THE TEH~11NAL, Utings aren't really any bt>tter. You can't e1,1en sec the floor. It's l"ither covered with people 's feet or their baggage. Anyway, I got inside along with Elder Son and .,...e edged our way toward a spot 1,ticre there .... ·as some air lo await thr arrival ol his rOOfher on an inbound Air Cal flying machine from San Jooe. , "Sir . .,..·ill you please step ahead," a lady snapped at me hnpaticntly. "The line is moving.•· •·rn1 not in any line." I protest ed. "I! you're not in line. then please get out of the line,'' she insisted . Then I looked around. Sure enough, I y,•as in a line. IT IS DIFFICULT lo stand any\\'here insjdc our airport lern1inal building without being h1 a Ii~. So it is that air chief Bresnahan·.s dry statistics carry a strong ring of lruth. He says th at durin g the first f\YO months this yea r. Air Oil. Hugheii Airwest and Golch!n West Airlines carried 233.627 passengers. For the first t11·0 months last year. the total v.·as 187 ,466. That's an increase of 46.161. ,\LL TlllS SUGGESTS lb.at despite the anti-airport, anti·jet noise cam paigns, lhe place isn't losing MY popularity. 'llli.s may be disquieting nev.·s for the ban the jet set. Bresnahan also reports that last year, a tot.ol of L40!l,148 people became 1 pl\SSCJlgcrs at Orange Coun ty Airport. I believe him. J think they v.·cre all there Sunday. 70 Parcuts Picket KANSAS CITY. r..10. (UPI J -~tore lhan 71) angry, sign-carrying parents jammed UlC school bo.1rd offices loday, vo11ing lo stay lheN' until th1• <'itv's 98 strike-plagued schools are closed. By United PrtM lirt.ernaU011al Artillery fire exploded In the C'.olan Heigh.ts between Syria and Israel for the 14th straight day today . Egyptian diplomat ic sources said there mu.st be a disengagement agreen1ent there before further talks between Egypt and Israel. Both Israeli and Syrian spokesmen reported the ne w firing in .,..·hat appearOO Coup Falb President Ida Amin of Uganda ha s purged at least 50 arn1y of- ficers following a \Veekend ! ribal battle between military uniL<> in Kampala. The aborted cou p was broken by Joyal fo rces in fi ghting at several tnilitary camps in the Kampala area. Seattle Voting For Legalizing Pot Possession SEATTLE (UPll -Seattle oo Tuesday \1•i1J become the first major etty in the nation to vute on a proposal to legalize possession or nonprofit sale ol• small amounts of marijuana. The initiative in ,the municipa.J election Is 8JlOflSOf'ed by a group which calls i1self BLOSSOM (Basic Librration or Smokers and Sympathizers of Marijuana ). The measure eliminales all city penalties. both civil and criminal, for private posses.5ion of less than 40 grams. or about 1.6 ounces, o( mari juana by persons 18 or older. The initiative also Y.'OOld legalize nonprofit private sale or less than 40° grams of marijuana by persons 18 and over. GOP CJ1.air1nen W a11t Reaga11 PRINCETON. N.J. (AP) California GO\•. Ronald Reagan is the top choice of Republican coun ty chairmen for the party'!li 1976 prl'sidcntial nomination. according to the latest Gallup Poll. ' In a 1nail sur1,1cy of 3.72.i countv chainnen, 39 percent or the 2.384 v.·ho responded chose Reagan. \'ice President Gerald Ford had 24 percent of their \'Oles; !onncr C<iv. Nelson llockefc!ler of New York had 12 pcrl'f'nt: :ind forn1er Treasury Secretary John Connally, 7 perceMl. to be attrition fighllng preceding the disengag.met1t talks. THE ISRAELI oev.·spaper Yedioth Ahronolh said Syria rejected a United Nations truce observers propo6Al to stop the clashes for a week, while Israel ''immediately responded positively." EgypUon diplomatic SOUfCt"S s a i d IRS Probing President's 1968 Returns BALTIMORE (UPI ) -The Baltimore Sun saki 1oday the Internal Revenue Service is checking into the I~ lax returns ol President Nixon to see if there is any evid ence or fra ud . The ne11·spaper s.1id in its morning editions the inquiry was bein·g conducted by .the Baltimore f)ist rict office of the IRS and it included the President's 1008 return,· the year before he became the nation's chief executive. Souf'Cf'S knowledg:able about the invcs1igation. the Sun sa id. reported the probe Y.'OUld focus on sel'eral key iten1s. indud.ing lhe $567,000 deduction Nixon took in 1969 for h i .s vice preside:itial papers given the government, arxl a 1968 deduction claimed for bt1siness ~ ol Nixon's apartment in New York City. ,• The Sun said the broadening of the investigation to cover the 1968 returns was the first vi!ible evidence ttie ms inquiry was going beyond a routine re- examination of tax return i t e m a previously made public by the White llouse. The newspaper said ooly the possibility that fraud might exist would ffiable the IRS .to go into returns for years prior to 1970. A three-year statute of limitations prohibits routine checks for previous years. the paper said. The newspaper said it had learned a key element in the deduction involving the vice presidential papers was whether the deed was backdated in order to circumvent lhe cut4f date v.'hen such donatiom no longer V.'OuJd be deductlblc . It said, in reference to the 1968 relurn. it centered on three points -the deduction for use of the New York apartment for bwiness purposes: a transfer ol stock in Fisher's Jsland. near P..tiami, aod. a deduction for the gift of earlier papen: oot involved in the 1969 donation. Streaker Kisses Linda Lovelace During Sex Week TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) -Sex Week at the University of Alabama ended with four streakers appearing on stage to kiss sex starlet Linda Lovelace. J.tiss l.A:>velace, star o( Deep Throat, \\'as a featurod speaker Sunday night. During her address. four male streakers appeared on st..1gr. 'Jlfey ccircrnon·iously gave her a bouquet of fto11·ers. one of the men kissOO her and the four then streaked off. St'x v.•ttk, subtitled ltuman SexualitY"ln 1he iOs by the University of Alabama 's Uni\·crsity Program Council, .,.., a s designed to Inform , not offend, publicity director Andrew Powell said. The program inchi:!ed lectures, films and an originaJ play on Yarious aspects of sex uality. "ll started when. as a joke. UPC members suggestOO bringing Linda Lovelace here lo speak. We booked her and found 1hat other colleges were doing Sex \\"~k. featuring 1nany areas of sexuality," POY.·ell said. Egypt believed thll the current Pi-fiddle East P.'.!8Ce efforts ol Secttta.ry of State Jienry 'A. Kis!linger could result In a Syrian -I1raeli accord by lat. April or earty 1'1ay, settlng the stage for the Sinai talks and a leCOnd Israeli trooop pullback Ibero. A Syrian communique s a i d A1'3b gunners seored direct hits on an Israeli observalion post at Tel Al Fara.s in the southern sector of t h e Golan Heights Sunday, destroyed an engineering unit nnd killed or wounded "a number" or Israeli troops. An Israeli cunmunique sakl there ftre no casualties In the 30-mlnute barrage which began at midday and that Israeli ., gunners did not retum the fire . It was tho 13th l'DnstCUtl1•e day of fighting aJong the bulge of Syrian territory held by the Israeli!! five month.~ after a Unlted Natk>M cease-Ore endt.'<1. the P..tiddle East war on Oct. 24. Since then, 13 Israelis have been killed and ~I others wounded in the art!Uery outbursts, Syria has not rcpc111ed Its casualltlcs. "IT'S WORSE 11.lAN the la.st fl96i ) war,'' said Alex, a 21).year-old Israeli artillery gunner from Pet8h Tikva. ''Then in two weeks ii was finished. Now it's ever; day and v.•ho knov.•s how k>ng it 's going to last.'' In a. message Sunday to an Ah~Asian peoples conference in Baghdad, Egypt.Ian See our President Anv.'3.r Sadat said Egypt I~ not prepared to conclude a separate place settlement .,..·Jth IsracL gl\•e up one Inch or occupied Arab lands or bnrgaln with the rights of the Palestinians. 1 "The Egyplian army," he said, "wJJI remal·n n the alert· until l!!rMI v.'11hdraws from all OCli.ipled Arab land.'i nnd until we fealit.e all our just ;ilOd legitimate demands.'' Diplomatic $CMJJ'ces in Cairo said U.N. 1 supen•lsed !Blks between Egypt and Israel Ol't r troop separatlon5 in the Sinai could begin this summer provided the there is a di!l'llgagemenl in the Golen Heights where Israel bolds positiom only 27 miles from Damascus must eoo>e first. most coveted hand-loomed knits at the St. John Trunk Show tomorrow! MIS9 KEUN DZO DZO WILL. PRESENT , THE COMPLETE WARDROBE COL.LECTION • • • DAY-TO~INNERWEAR, IN NEWPORT 'TUESDAY, SHOWN, THE ACRYLIC/NVLDH COST\JME. GREEN/ WHITEt NAvY/wHITE. 6-14.$160. ROBINSON'S CESIGNER DRESSES. ... I , Atlantic C~ast Freezing • ReCQfd Lo1v Temperatures Recorded in Binghamto11, NY l 1tllfl~l!1ll DELIVERY SERVICE lltli"~ of It. IJa,lr P~ • i'J'fi11leed ... lrUy; I "' ._ .. .,.,. flll -~~••a..ul•twn•l'd .. n.p1 It ,., tlh •• tat.• -JJI ,_. ,..., Mil Sdll' n ,. • • rtt11" l'fl" c.,,-., 1 1 a. Slll'tly • I 1.a. """'· tll .. ' t"' Iii .. ..,.1 11 ftl tills •1 IJ!itt •t.C 11 ' .. l•l'""'I\ i.111 Orqc c ... 1, Alui .• 642·4311 -~ .. 11 i.tll!(I .. IUO Mid 'll"llllMl\11 .... . ••0-1 2~ 1"I Cllrltf:NI&. ~1111"' lttdl. s,., Ital t1J111n111. llH ~. '-" ll(W. llf• Ml(l'tJ 492 4420 MAllOMA\ WIAT"fl M.hlCI IOUCMT •• 7A M ISt J •J4-74 't.77 . . ..... WlA'M:l HMOCMl. g""ltll ,, .. ""·•·"· 41(11'111 lf'9 ...,,.""'" IUl4flli( (O&l l I Pld mt '--On.II L11ln, ... lillll ....... 'ti! ... _ "" "°""'' c;.,.11 L''"i ,,,. .-r Miotlul~I v111.-,. ,..., r. '"' _,,,..," 11oc.r .. Dvt kCV'"Vlf rlori1 W.rt 1111 llif" - IMll btforf tltYOtM~. Clclv<I• ""'"';i"' i>W• l'lltKll 01 11'1<1 111tlofl. l)v! 1~lfll <IN•ld llll'OVQll t~~ Pl•IHV R~IOl'I 111(1 <'!\\Jtll 01 1!11 upf>lr Mld'#1'1I Cnlltornla V1d1tl1 lllpi CklYdJ (-t(t lnOll 01 Sl)ll!l>tm C•llforfll• f'OOIY lf'd 11un ""'"' to lloltOfPlt ~lly <lolHIY llY Ill< ,.,10111, """'!"' -!ltrH 1•!n In 1~ ,._!l lflt • Sun, Moon, Tide• MOftOAY St<ond /lloh . . , 10:4 p ..... !.I Skond low . •::M p.m. 1.0 TVSSOAY Fin i tilon ... 11 :~ a.m. ).t Flr11 low .. • J:l.S a.m. ~.I Stcond lllah . . . .. 11:72 p.m. $.• kcond low J,OJ p.m 1 J SVfl •lNI ':l>O a.m. s.h 1:CS P.t"tl Moor! a1 .. ''" a.m. Sllt·f :lt p.m. '.l'emperat.ures Hip Lew flt .. • Q 11 .Cll " 3J -~ ~ n " . .. " 11 It ,. " J: ,; .ca " . .. .. ll ~ fl l! .. . " " .. " " " !; ?: 11 J! .. ~ » " s n .~ ·" u : .ct i: .n 2 FASHION ISLAND SHOP MONDAY 10:00-9:30, TIJESDAY I0:00-5:30 644-2800 I • • I ' I . - Stri Tea 'To SAN faced wi •Mrutdown -San Board a 1~wnc n aimed at ..Oalkoul. Repre!! and me Certificat have ag a.m. PUT O'Brien . r.tayor The slnking ol Teache Teacher!! hM threat job loday. about 2, all the cit e \l'r TRA\7IS invegtisali Force o[fi wreckage comnlefti tiploded Saturday one death Three e iroond er rputine Airlif! Int Jarking r :Ji. a civi killed ·a employes injured. mainten aircraft a eBla LOS Angeles I '"" been intern associati con trove rule inten ooise. The Cl rating lntematio Air Line llFALPA in Cara lab e l s Interna.ti deficient standard. . "' ~~orld eDrl 1LOS A Californi Northri campai over IO "frosting Some for 98.b faculty earned them available Coa Giv 1.: 2.' 3 , " • ,, ft'lif todlJ for ""'" Flti.iblt 11t inf (71 ..... HQ N•wpo )011 -... triking each~ o Meet AN FRANCISCO (AP) ed with Ille virtual tdown of au dty schools, San--Frand~ School ard and striking teachen wne negoliations t o d a y ed at ending a 17-c!ay lkout. rpresentatives of the board members of the rtificated Employes Council ·e agreed to meet et 10 . POT, acoordlng lo Bill rien, new! secretary to yor Joseph Alioto. , THE FAMILY <JRCllS By 811 Keane • Nixon PlaqU£ ' Stolen RIVERSIDE (AP) -Pl>lk< mnain batned today by the theft ol a plaque from the hM!IOf'ic }.11Mkln~l.M-het-c which comme morate s President Nixon's marriage CAllFORNIA June 21 , 19'40. Police sakl. the bro n ~ t '---------1 marker apparently was pried from its place In the courtyard and smuggled past two U.hour guants al the Inn , a state historical landma:t whk:b ns formerlv a hotel. Pair Drown Diving Off Catalina Sanitation ProfJlena Rest Rooms Closed SAN BER:\AHDIXO (AP I -A sanilJtion problem could result from an unexpected byproduct of the energy crisis. stale officials fear. ' for{'(ld lo use h I c h v.· a ~ 1 free ser\'IC'f! provided\by lhe shoulders as open a i r .:a-.:ihn(' dealers. have bet11 rE'fitrooms hecau~ lhey a re' closed along wilh tht gas-- unable to find service slat ion~ htrn~ry p..i.mps. open. 'Ille California H I g h w a Y A spoktsman -ror the state -0 TT COULD f)e('t"lme a Deparlment of Transportation s 11 n i ~at Io n problem.'' here said many n1ouirisis are dep;irt1pt'nt spokrsman l ... 'lll<'e Stalker said this weekrnd ll(";t ron11i.;, 11. trarl i!ional Pat rol said highway and f ree'A·t11'-sfi00~ a·re for t.·ux·ri.:1-ncy stops only and the nffii tn relieve oniesclf -f¥' 111at\('r lww pr~ng -is not <'onsidered in that calegory. Sick Lca,·c LUCILLE KUEHN x AD~tlNl!\IR,\11\'F ,\,~,\I y51· Newport Beach City Council VOTE council repnsents the 'king American Federation Teachers and the CaJifornia J.cliers Association, which s threatened to walk olf the today. Each group clahm "Mommy, wili you come and lie down with me? I f .. 1 unottentioned." "'i\'e'\·e been qujte upset about this but we'\•e done everything we feel we can do." said the iM's manager. Sandra Hartness. She said It hastl 'l yet been de c Ide d -the plaque will be replaced. T.he final decision lies With the Riverside Hisloncal-ely, she sald. SACRA.i\tE;..10 ( l'PI ~ -A bill requiring unused sirk leave be credited tO\.l'ard !he reurem('nt of n'l<'mbcrs of the State. Teaehcrs' Hl't irement S\'ste rn was signed by Go\•. Ronald Heaf?an, Sen. Jolvl AVALON (UPI\ -A l-l'Oman Harmer (R-Glcndale1 ,"''as tht> became entangled in kelp sponsor. ut 2.500 members, nearly --------------------ll-'hlle .scuba diving off Catalina ===== OP.P!i!ii am drowned along with. her C'Otnpanlon. \\'ho apparently used his air 9.>pply to try to the city's teachers. n1rerk Probed RAVIS AFB (UPI) -An estigating board d Air rce officers has been sifting kage or a DC ·S Rei11ecke 'Encouraged' By CRA Endorsement 200 Rw• t ke<p her alive. sheriff'• de111Ues said Sunday. Deputies said 45--vear--old I,, Raid Eugenia Ludrnila Jack's air ., tank 'W&S empty when her body was found by lif~anls. mmercial jetHner which ploded on the ground turday niRht, resu1ting in e death and three injuries. FRESNO (AP) r think I:! the mainstream of That M her co m p a n I on , the Replblican porty. This On party Michael James Erickson, 28. ee explo-sions erupted as nd crews were performing 1tine maintenance on the rlift Intemational jet at a rking ramp. ~1aurice Simon, . a civilian mechanic. was Hed 'and three fellow plo~·es of Servair, Inc. were jured. The firm performs intenance for all civilian craft at Travis. Encowaged by !Us lopsided victory at tbe Calilomla Republican Assemblv. U . Gov. Ed Reineclre omiled and said he believes ~ troubles are behind him in the race for governor . dee.rl:y indicale'I: the pt0ple was allTIOl'lt exhamted . are confdent ol my integrity," In a separate d I v i n g he said. SAN BERNARDINO (UPI\ accident, a Palmdale man was -About 200 reYl"le~ started in stable condition today. REINECKE SAID the vote Qro\l;ng rocks, bricks and recovering from injuries Reinecke said the OVCT'i\ilelming 222-24 v 0 t e end~ing his candidacy for governor vindicates' him in the m scandal and proves that he has broad grassroots support despite campaign defections by several promin- ent Republicans. proves grassroots Rept.i>llcans tx>ttles at autb:>rities who suffered when he came up too believe be "'will be cleared d broke up their weekend party fast from a deep dive off any wrongful dw'ges" in the by confiscating 10 kegs ol beer Catalina Islo.nd. I'IT case. in Muscoy. Robert Fisher, 21, v.·as flown He also acrueed the news Sheriff's deputies and city by roast guard helicopter to media of keeping the t'IT police joined State AlcoOOlic Long Beach Naval Hospital issue alive. But whell preMed Beverage Cootrol Agents in Sunday and placed in a on that point, Reinecke aakl. he raiding the party in the dea>mpression chamber "·hen did not intend to criticize s.iburban community Saturday he began suffering from press ~e ot "legtttmate" night. cramps. Doctors said he news such tbiDp as bis taking The state agents arrested sufferl'd an air embolism and an FBI lie detector test. He two pers::.ns for selling beer neck and shoulder inturies In Blar klbted Stale Cont.roll« Hoosloo l. LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Los geles International Airport. s been blacklisted by an ternational pilots ociatioo, escalating the ntroversy over a ianding le intended to reduce airport ise. Flournoy. whose bid for CR.A support was swamped by nearly a 10-1 mar gin, predicted he "WOUld defeat Reinecke in the GOP primary June 4. stillted the attack to the ,_wnoou_· __ t_a_I_i""""' __ . _____ the __ "..:P_id_aacen __ t_. -----' Wate,Pte prosecutor "foc' - The-CIMS 3 Black Star- ting was issued by the temational Federation of 'r Line Pilots Associations F . .o\LPA )atarecentmeeting Caracas. Venezuela. It bel s Los ,Angeles temational as critically cient and gta\•ely sub- !ar>d3''1. a black: mark ven to only a few airports in world. FLOURNOY, who ls regarded as more liberal than Reinecke on most issues , said Uie conservative CR.A's vote to endorse Reinecke "came as no surprise." Floumoy predicted broad support for h l s candidacy .,,_ C R A m..-S In the Nowrnber g...,..i e!ectloo if be de!eata Reloecke in Jtme. Drllle J,a11neJM,t1 The t ,500-member CRA, the LOS A NGELES (AP'J -• California GOP'~ I ~ r g e s t lifomia State UniversUy at graJSrOOts orgaruzatioo.. abo orthridge has laundled a -stale Sen. H. L. mpaign to raise $10 million "Bill" Ric:han.:bm of Arcadia er 10 years to provide for U.S. Senate, state Sen. frosting on the cake." John Harmer of Glendale, for Some of the mooey is to go lieutenant govermr, Evelle r sabbatical leaves for YO\Klger seeking re-election as cully members who have attorney general, and state arned them but cannot take consumer affairs director em bec3U5e money is not John Kehoe for treasurer. vailable,-<:SUN officials said. CR.A delegate9 approved Coast Student Given Honors dual endonemenla lo both Brian Van Camp and Mike l\1ontgomery fCX' secretarY of state, and to both James Floormy and Marian La Follette in the race for the ·steven Richard Burlingham, GOP no mi D at ion for of Mr. and Mrs. F.G. conlroDer. lingham of Corona del '1'his is a very big boost." dragging this thing oul" Blonde, 25, Streaks In Hospital SAN PABLO (UPI) -A 25- year-old blonde s t r e a k e d through the emergency room al Brootllde Hospital Sunday Dlght. Al~ she was tal:en lo the psydllatrte ward at lhO Cootra C..ta County Medical Center at Martinei. Witneases sakl the worn.an, who klentified herself on)y u Peggy, apparently disrobed tn the parking lot. She then skipped alld danced U..Ugh the emergency ward smiling and saying "hello" to all presenl "She is obviously a na~ loving free spirit," Nurse Margaret Edwards said. 'Ibey Mid obe ielt In good qlrita with her arm .......i the amtMlance driver. ar, has been named to the Reinecke said. "Phllosoph.ical-- ean's list of Bob Jones ly, it identifies me with what niversity in South Carolina.. ,....::.:....------------------I Burlingham, a sophomore, is the College of Arts and PERSONAL f.4 i IDENTIFICATION tJ If ttiii sou!lds impoaSWI ••• CID IOd•r for tllt .,...optnl111 storr of Hoar Memorlli llO$pltlrs "Foell' flfliblt PllM fOC' CW!n('. You wll i. In tor• pMUlftt sarpmel T .. l,~llC (714) 645 1600 -106 Aak forTitomM ....... 'i' ROLE.Z Worn by heads of State, leaders of industry, and great sportsmen, Aolex is identified as the world's badge of success. We feel it's all the ktentification you'll need., This is the Rol~x Oatejust. a 30-jewel, self-winding chronometer guaranteed pressure-proof to a depth of 165' when case, crown. and crystal are intact. Stainless steel and 14 karat gold Oyster case with matching bracelet. $565. Do Something Beautiful.,,. 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Corona del Mar A.litPlf ,..t.R•ING IN kEAlt Ho11rs -':JO · 6:00 Doily Clowd Su11day• Oftd Holldoy1 644-7575 \ HOAG MEMORIAL HOSPITAL N1wpott lt•ch, CA •2660 )011 N1wport loul•vttcl 18 FASHION ISlAND NEWPORT BEACH-8«-1380 Open Daily: 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Mon.and Fri. 1o·a,m. to9:30p.m. W""laolllOtol ~ T-. °"""""Lt°""""'-U"""" ....... &MOltQQfti.. ........ Shop Mondar thru Friday, 10;00 .. m. 10 9:30 p.m. I Bullock's San11 Ana, I Fashion Squtre, 2800 N. Main Smet, San" Ana, Telephone ' 547-721 i Saturday, 10:00 .. m.10 6:00 p.m. Bullock's South Com Pl"" San Diego Fr«:way 11 Bristol, Com Mesa, Tclcphooc: ll6-0611 ,. ,, .\ ( l l ' ' , , I , ' I I - 6 DARY PROT EDITORit\L PAGE College by I \ I Fourteen years after Onnge Coast Co llege was opened ln Costa Mesa, lt.s enrollment topped tbe 3.000 !IW'J<, In just Tiiree semesters of educaUonal television broadcasting, the third just getting under way, KOC£. TV, Channel 50, has reached an enrollment o! 3,430 in jts televise£( college credit courses. 1 \ The fi gure reflects the remarkable success of the \ Coast Co1nmunity College District's\ ;'Communiversity" wh ich this semester is broadcasting six different credlt courses from the district's Golden \Vest College campus in 1-luntington Beach. Clearly, the advantage of registering by teleP.hone and viewing the television courses at home to build up college cred it appeals to county residents. l\lo8L popular course this semester is a 3-unit offer· ing in cultural anthropology, with 1,139 registered stu- dents. f'reehand sketch ing has 040 students and follow- in g close ly are courses in physical geography, family risk management, sewing and flower arrangement. Of course, vie wers are free to follow the courses simply for pe rsonal enjoyment, so the Communiversity has a two-fold benefit. Piano and guitar classes, creative writing and other intriguing topics are proposed for future semesters and. considering the interest generated so far, it would ap- pear that "going to college'' by television bas a bright future. Sunday Dump Closing The advent of spring clean-up time undoubtedly will find more Orange Countians inconvenienced by Sunday dump closures. But the county apparently has no intention of restoring seven-day dump service. The Sunday closures, and a reduction of Saturday dumping hours, were inaugurated in January as .a fuel· saving measure. Diesel burning bull dozers must remain in operation at all times when the dumps are open. The move has not saved as much fuel as anticipated: The Mystery Of William Shakespeare ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ Receiving a review copy of the new "Riverside Shakespeare." an admirable one-volume edition of the g r e a t dramatist 's works for college study (a public edition v.·ill be available late this spring), I re£\ected once again on the strange case of William Shakespeare. lie is certainly one of the tv.•o or three most famoU! men who ever li ved. But we don't evrn kno\\1 ex· actly when he "'aS ·born or when be died. We do '.<no\v that he left school around the age of 15. and also thal he was the first generation or his faniily to be lilerate. J1is father s i g ned documents \1•ith an "X." HE WAS forced to marry at t8. v.'hen he got an older ·.roman with child. The child was born six months after the marriage. A few yea rs later; when ·they had three young children, he deserted his family and did not reappear in StraUord for more than 20 ytar!!!I. We know virtually nothing about the most crucial period in a man's life-his )"ears between the ages of 21 and 31. We don 't know where he was for that whole decade, what he was doing, or how he happened to find his "''ay to fame and Quotes .J:icqut>lln (Jim) Smith, Lafayette, ex~. dir. Calif. Historical Society - ·· 1 ·m as concerned with young people today as I am with fheir grandparents . . thei r lifestyles, values and 1em plt1 tions. 1'hafs what history is all about" Dear Gloom y Gus Streakers re-pant! sight! Your end is in O.E.\V. o•-• 0111 '""'"flit' .,. uMitJM w -........... , l>Kt$Ultllf ''"*'' !hi 'lltw$ tf !ht MW-PW. llfld , ... , tt-1 ,...., t. O'-r 0\0S. D•llf P'llll. fortune in Loodon. NOT A SINGLE book he O'Wned-lf he owned any-has e\'er come to lighl Not a single letter he wrote or receivt'd has ever been found. Only six authenticated specimens of his signature exist-all of them spelt differently. in the sloppiest handwriting, almost an illiterate scrawl. 1be only other official records of his existence consist of court cases in which be was suing or being sued for petty sums and offenses. The only thing that we know for sure that he wrote himself is the epitaph for his gravestone-a v u I g a r and supersfitious quatrain that would hardly be "°OrthY of a village cobbler. NOBODY can explain satisfactorily how he seemed to know so much about a score of subjects he had no first-hand acquaintance with : law, medicine, navigation, soldiering. languages, foreign custom!, even royal ceremonies. He was basically a country boy with only a grammar school education, and there is not the slightest evidence he ever went more than 100 miles from the llUle town of his birth. AL\105T everything written about him has been speculation or gossip or downright falsehood. t.tore historical frauds have been perpetrated in his name than any other person in history. And more books written about hint , although all the facts we have would fit on a single sheet of paper . A multi-million-dollar industry ha.! spntng up around Ills name, and enormous fortunes and reputations ha\·e been gained by trading on his \\'Ork. Yet nobody can really ·prove that be was not a magnificent imposter. Television a 12 percent weekly reduction, rather than the hoped for 17 percent. Jfowever, that does add up to 1,200 gal.i Ions of diesel fuel ' week, which the county road depart- ment feels ~ subs~tial enough to warrant keeping the Sunday closing policy. The dumps must remain oeen on weekdays to serve commercial trash collectors., b~ Uie weekend closures are a real inconvenience t.o wo ing householders. And as the Bardenlng seas n get! under way, trash collectors may find themselves urdened with material that otherwise would be handled by individuals. The fuel saving is important, but it might well be accomplished by spreading the weekend fuel allotment over two days, reducing Saturday houn In order lo provide a little Sunday tame for the clean-up consciowi private citizen. P1·otes t in Order For three days this month beaches along th"e Orange Coast were fouled by huge globs of tar and oil -some of them football size. The globs were traced to a Greek tanker that ap- p~rently ~ose lo clean out its tanks en route to San Diego. Coast Guard spokesmen said no action could be taken against the ship or its master, be<;ause the dis· charges were made outside the 50.mile limit. Such clean· outs are common practice, they noted, because the use of port disposal systems is more expensive. This shrug-off attitude warrants reconsideration. \Vhile no formal legal action may be possible, there cer· tainly is no law against alerting oil shippers, via a pro- tE:st channeled through diplomatic representatives of the offending vessels' countries. It may well be that the ships' masters could be persuaded to do their housekeeping far enough from any shore to avoid a repetition. A major beach clean.up job. especially in summer, could be a severe economic burden for coastal communities. Bill Would Litrait 'Free' Serrices to Candidates Labor Opposes Campaign Reform \VASH.INGTON -President Nixori"s campaign reform proposals are not likely to go far in Congress for one simple reason. 1bey restrict AFL-CJO's free "'heeling campaign activities a n d i n t e r f e r e ""ith liberal cause organization.!. This is to say mthing of the proposal for a federal political libel law wilh ""·hich Co& gress may sympath- ize but \Viii never pass. The kit:kfr for labor and the liberal causes lies in a pro- \•ision 11:hich limits,. <.: if it does not elimirr ate. the "free" scr· \'ices of immense value given directly and indirectly to favored candidates. TYPICAL examples are the volunteer participation (I( labor in r e c e n t congressioml ek!cUon,, tn Ohio and ~fidtigan. The record nationally is re· plete wflh \'olunteer serv1oes worth many mllllons and ranging frun massive· tele- phone campaigns and registration drives to the use cl airline cards, all financed with rompulsory union dues and fees. Federal law prohibits the U3e of dues money by unions for direct political purposes, but three loopholes allow ample latitude for »Called non-partisan or volunteer work -and d i re c t oommmlicalion with union members and t'neir families. BIG LABOR can therefore accept with equanimity proposal.! for exclus.i\'@ federal financing of politioi. The big tmions \\'OOld be left with the balance or political pov.-er through their registration drives, voter ''education,'' and "volunteer" services with their fall-out benefiUing Democratic canfildates· AFI.rCIO openly boasts of its success. through its ronunittee oo political education, In marginal races f o r Congress in 1972. This included not only 'volunteer" manpo\lo'er, but assigned hill· time staff, increased funding, Improved proclnct.-leve! organization and thousands of letters and other literature deemed to have provided the margin "Of victory !or labor. (rucHARD WILSO~ NIXON'S NEW law ••••ould tie into knots much of this activity by labor. The value of such services by individuals would have to be reported \\'ilhin the $3,000 ceiling for congressional races, and for 1 organized groups would be prohibited altogether. Presidential counselor Bry:C! Hartow says that such overt actlv\ty as labor's nmning a phooe bank ond>ehaH, of...a cclndidate, as in the recenrOnctnnati election, would be forbidden as a political contribution by a political organi7.at.loo. Labor'.! political committees would be required to contribute money or .!ervi.ces not to lOOlvidual candidates, but to the Senate and House campaign rommit.t.ces and the Oemocrat.ic National Conunittoc. Nor could they contribute the services of members of the committee on behalf of a candidate. THIS LEADS to rather ridiculous reslriclions on individual cootributioos by union members. If Archie Bunker gave a dollar through the union in his name, and precisely who he was giving the money to, it would have to be listed. which Archie might find inhibiting or humlliatlng. TM-' whole process w'bukt have a strangula~ effect ·.on labOr.a otganized activities, and lberefore is not likely to &et far in c.oo,ress. The milk producers. ,fw'ho have been imitating I a b o r ' s methods, 'NOU.ld be in the aame boat. IN VIEW of the impracticality of these and other Nixon proposals, it can be wondered v.ily he took the trouble to present them to Congress. T h e \\'atergate atmosphere is, of course, the answer. He wishes to respond lo the public demand for a clean-up of campaign financing. \\lhiJe t'ne measures themselves may be impractical politica.lly, they do serve to illustrate v.·hat could be done in lieu of the even more impracticaJ proposals for federal financing . THE HEART of the matter is strict limitation of individual contributions and the fullest disclosure, including both money and "in kind " volunteer contribuliarls. with a · powerful federal agency to epforce the law- This is not. perfect, by any means, but it is better than using SlOO millioo to rmance a preSidi:otial campaign from tax money. Nixon has one proposal which ought to be adopted whatever else happens: no presidential primaries before htay 1, no national conventions until September - both designed to !foorten the presidefitial election campaign to a couple of months. Portrait of the Remarkable Knotts A home-grown portrait of Walter 3nd Cordelia. Knott. as ""1iolesome and lack- ing in fancy frills as their roast'-cblcken. mashed -and bo_.i,eny pie; has been fasbiooed by a Fullerton writer. The young Oklahoma couple who came west lo homeste>d hopelessly in tlf Mo- jave Desert before moving on today art knov.n literally, in their 80s, as Mr. and t.Jrs. Orange County. "Walter Knott, Keeper of The Flame," tells a side of the close-knit Koott family not generally known to the public. The average Mr. and Mrs. America and The Kids, who visit dleir Buooa Park spread ln droves all year 'romd. tnow that Walter and Cordelia fix fine foo:l, are good Americam, offer all kinds of family fun arxl. favor the Republican Party. THE NEW BOOK by Heleo Kooiman. of Fullerton, goes beyond the rustic, tree- shaded KN<YIT'S BERRY FARM bill- board at Beach Boulevard and Uncoln (THE BOO~AN) Avenue and U.C bu.st.ling amusement park beyond to tell a bigger story. Not all cl the original story gets told . pertmps, due to space limitations. The book balances oot 1o 25 brier chaptern. but was cut from 43 chapters and 150,000 v.-·ords originally. Still, it is a chronicle of hard work. A side of the Knott empire not generally known is revealed along with the earthy, God.fearing A m e r I c a n pioneer spirit that artlessly established it, long before Disneyland sprouted do"11 the street. \\'E LIBE~ ba\•e been known to anicker at Orange County's conservative ark in the politically troubled waters of the 60s and 70s, with John Wayne and Barry Goldwater on the bridge and Walter Knott as the purser. Still, sectfoos of Mrs. Kooiman·s biography show. the simplicity of the man . his wife -and equal partner it ap- pears here -and their beliefs, "I would like to talk to you about how it was that a fragment of the human race, people with nothing but their bands to begin with, c.onquered a continental wilderness aod rose to the Wp oC the world in five generations," he tells au- diences. \Valter Knott goes on to mention religi0\1.$ faith , limited government, basic freedom, strong incentive and the challenge of competition from some guy trying to do what }'OU can do better. Some would call this combination mun· <lane, but they worked for the Knotts, all and in combination. ("Walter Knott, Keeper Of 'lbe Faith," By lielen Kooiman, Plycon Press 236 pp. $7.951 -Arthur R. Vinsel Nixon's Words Dramatize the Importance of Detente ••• a1id a Wa shington Vieiv of Efforts to Bwck the Niguel Ziggu.rd.t Sw ap \\'ASli Jl'\r.TON -President Nixon ls dt"f'ply ron.-,cirus of the terrible power at his rtnger!ips to plunge !he Y.•orid into a nuclear holocaust. "T couh'I posh tht.~ button rlabt ~re :ind in 2(l 1ninutcs 70 Jnillion nuu~ Y.ould be dead," he lold a secret st111tr session on l\tarch 8 " A n d Z: rn inutt?!' later. 70 n1lllio n A1nM'icans would be dead," h~ added . He made the state- ment to dramatl re !he importlloce oi the Soviet-Americ.ln dct.cnte. 13ul lt I.! a- t?mnrk llf' h."ls mrttlr I In past private C'OnVttSSUOlll. betraying a !.trangc fascination with h11 control over ,the "'orld 's n1ightiest nuclertr force. lfe hM also spoken 3dmltingly of the cold courage that the late Pre!!ident Ken- nedy denlonstrat.cd ((,µring the nuclear showdown with RnS!lia in 1062 over missile shipments to Cuba. But on t.1an:ti a, accordil'li:t 10 the ~­ ndflttlaJ minutes , he spoke only o( averting the massive CMUahles he could ca~ by pushing the nuclear button. We should "pray a lot/' he 1old pal"ty l~rs. and "do everything In our power to g<t aloog'' with the Soviet&. mE WAY to prevent 8 "longterm aU1s 11 be said.. w11.1 to avert a "shol'C· tenn 'crisis." One way ,this could be ac- compUslrcd, be urg<d, was lo C1inl th<m trade ...-slon>. ·~1 ... don't talk to them, w !re don't trade wkb them, we're going to face enormous ......,_ In dclmoe u- pe<M!Kurea,'' he wamtd. Tbe """tdeot .,.,...t Orot k ls.pooslble to d<Ol wtth the SovltJta wt-•J> pnwhlg thelr tdeolot!Y. "l despise what '-><d to Solihen!Uyn," he llld, rc!errfog lo th< b3ni3hm<nt of Ille di.Ul<leol So¥I« writer Aleksandr Sotzhenltsyn. "Dul he's In Parts rather than Slberla « six feet under. We're not appnwJnc anything a boot their system." Scnal< Repul>llcon leodu Hugh Scott quietly agr«d. "We IDed lo look for Reds under the bed," he aakl. j'M I aee It, wt'm rnovm, .to the llYtng room, not lnto bed with them.'' Secretary of Slate llenry Kissinger suggested a diUcrent a n a I o g y . "PrtStn(ly," he said, "we have broken the lee. We're in a parlous period e\•en ao, but we 8hould wte Ule thaw to get 1ood warer Iron> the sprinj;." STRANGE SWAP 'Ibo taxpoym are ballq out anolher giant .. oorponitlon, Rocl<well lntema· Ilona!, whldi bad bem otucl: with a lavbb, out-ol<J>o.way building tt couldn't -· NOW' the Ctncral S e r v I c e s AdmtniM.rcttlon ha.1 agreed to take over the unoo:upkd building In exchange ror go~-owned properly. whid! the a>r])Ol'ation ii lcaslng but wootd Ji\e to tcqultt. • The $20 mlllloo ractlily, which the tu· paytr1 att ebout lo take off Rockwtll 's bands. ts Jocat<d abollt 40 mtl<o out.lidt or Los Angeles. It ls a masnJficmt building, -led in th< rolling bills of Laguna Niguel, Calif. BECAUSE of a cuiback in military electronics procurement. howew:r, tl has remained empty since its cunpl~ In 1971 . Quite understandably, Rockwell of· ficlala Mve been eager to unload the white elephant, which has ens. Uie com- pany '!!OT'l' than fl mi!_ion a year merely to malnt.ilri. - About a year ago. GSA advised ~ of iu Intention to erchao;e three "turpha" facilities in Loi Angeles for the Laguna Niguel building. The ap- pnti!ors determined <he value of the &W1pptd pnl!lertl<o was approxlmately the wne. The dell would have gone tbtougb a montb later, exc<pt ror the ""°"' op- position of Rep. Jack Bnms 0.Tex., whose Govemm«rt Operation.~ aub- comm-dog<dty moniloro GSA. Brooks' ye&r-Jong probe hu deter· mined that GSA has actually rteelwd rescrvat1oos for only abollt half or tti. 'll0,000 equmo feet In the huge llD<kMU plant. And ...,,. d thooe "'<iuosls, Brooks ftlt, ...... - ''The GSA has misled Con1r= and the I' public about the need for this space," .Brooks told ln. "in an effon to jumily the acquisiUOO." He c.unplalned that "there is no public trDNportatkln. no low or middle income housing in the area, and It is going to cost the government millions to provide these services and to move govemmcnt agencies'' to Laguna Niguel. GSA boss Arthur Sampson told us, in rebuttal, that the acquisition of the OlANM CO.AST DAI LY PILOT -Robert N. We•d, ,..bfu~tr Thoma.1 Ktt.rJiT, Editor Barbara Kreibkh Editorial Por1e EdiCor Monday, Mar<b 25, l974 • • ' Rockwell facility was "a once-in-a· lifEtime opportunity to get (the spact) at half price.'' He sai(t "action plaM" woold be formulated to provide housing and transportation. , He made no effort to oonceal his feel· I~ toward Brooka. "I'm U{OO of being nice to ... our dear okt friend" on Ca~ilol Hill. S.mw. st~ tom·- ~u:'ing that-Br'iSob had delayed the ac. quuitlon of the fadlity for almost a year. r- 1 I -· .... - " ,. '!l' ... r "" I I I • ,_ • I I I I I I I I ·- Monday, Man:h 2S 1q74 CAIL Y PILOT 7 Increase Sensitivi~y S trecikers New Way Found To Stop Hair Loss, Grow More Hair ATTENTIO~ VETERANS OF WORLD WAR I Daydreams Good Tl1e1·apy? A 11aly zecl lri Article lfOUSTON Texas -II Uut, 1r you are 1101 alr't'fUiY you don't lluffcr froin male .. 11rk hald, hu''' can Y£ll! be 1ure ·------------------· I I I Name .............................................. .. I I I I I 1 Street •••.........••.••• , .............. , ••..•.••..... I 1 City .. i' 'i" .............................. Zip ........ I ....... ~""-\;'~ Ooyou receive av.A. peQJi~. Married • , ................. ,, ....... Single _ ..• , ...•• ------------------ The Yelerans 01 World wu 1. U.S.A... ts a national organizalion ~tred by congress and pledged to 5efViCe the veterans of W.W.I, their wive• and w•dOws. There are ITIOfe lhan one million lhree hundred thOusand llving wit!\ an average aoe ol oWr 76 yean.. If vou sefY9d in any bt'arteh of the armed services ol the United Slates. even 1o< one day, between April 8; 1917 and November t 1, 1918. you are eligible lo join. Many are unaware of laws or pending l~islation per1aining 10 their wetfere. To secure lurttler 1nlormal10n, coml)lele the above ooupon. NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -01ydrean\lng Americans who Utink they are ""-a.sting \heir time should dream on for pleasure and menuil health, ~rding to a Yale University psychologist . 'l~t~nk-that we cen leam-to use i0ur daydreams much more than we do," Prof. Jerdme L. Singer said. SINGER SA ID that daydreams determine a person's moods and rela· tiomblps with others. Often, he said, people do not know it. ··we can bCocome more aw~ of some or the more in- teresting aspects of o u r personalities. \\'e can play v.ith our fantasies and help the time pass in rela1i\·ely boring situations. We can de velop a f\'e1,1man. He 1,1ns !he one name that n!3lly stood out in his .!iubject.s' responses. Singtr said. Daydreams also can be used to n1ake plans nnd ~'Ork out problems. he added. .--..=::ln QSY.Cll91hcra (!y_ there's an increasing mo\'emenl. to use thr claydre11n\ and the ca paeity to daydream as a \'Cry ctntral parl of the lreat· ment process and to help peo- ple ovcrcom<' 1he.1r rears lbrough .S)1ilemat1c kinds of \ daydream tnps." S1ngt'r add· ed. IN A~fERICA . daydream- ing is gellt'rally considerl'd "·asteful. he added ld 11h111 1~ 1u·1u11.ll v cau!llRi:: your pattern bn ness. you can h1tlr 1,..,.~~ Ev••n ·u tit.ldncu m~ 110\\ stop your hair loss ... "-«n1 t" "n1n in your fan11\y,' • . . and grO \\' r)101·e hair. 1111~ i~ ef't',lflinly nn proof of the LONDON ! UPI ~ -A Bnt1sh r•Jr 1·1 ·ur~ "thi•i s111d it ,•o 1ild· !'nu~~ ,,f \ O\J H hRlr loss. .!iOC!ological magaLine says thC' n't t"· {lu11<'" 1-1111· 11"" 11 f1nn of Jlalr hiss _cRus<'d by 'IC m \l/11tergale affair n1 a\' have lnt~oratur\" 1·,,11~111111.111 ~ hn' df'-t·an also run 111 \'uur !Rnlli)', nd helped 10 r"•npt ·trC'n°kJ ng \ 11•l ul"-'1.I n t1•·1\11nr•nt f•1r l}lllh n11!.ny ?th"r ~~~11dlllonit n . .P ..... s. ·r ·I 111•·11 and \\l1111,•11. that 1,, H<lt t'!\UJ'<' hair I s. No 1nat rr 1ned1cal )Ournal S<lld the fad only ~'"Pl•Llll.: lu'111· J"'" . . hut 1,·hll·h nn<' b. 1·11 1sin~ your h Ir rould be ili'rapl'.'t1t1c. 1~ r,.l{Jl}~ i.:m,1 l~n1t-.,---tri!(~ It )·nu .,,·11.I .. until· Y"•tl fl Streaking dcvt•loperl within Th,·.1• d"_1ft •'\1•11 a.,k ~o.u In l'lirk h~ld ;in~ yvur hair r 1 ,, . , . Taki• 1t11·U 11 .. nl f.,r JI. rh,•y II.fl" dt'lld. yoUllU"" beyund hr! . a .'"~"" "g<'ncrahon of 111,11.· >••u '"t r~ tlu· tn·111n1<'nt g,., ir ,,,u sl.11 h11.11f' any h American students probably r.w :1:.? 1ln~•. "' 1h,,1r ri~k: 1\nd Pn '"I"' ;>f ynur hl'Rd. and y,·oold ""ishing to d1s.wci111t' itself M'<'. i.ir ~ ,,ur ... 1·lf' · Ilk"' tr. sto1) your h11.ir loll5 ftnd from Ille \iotrncc ""'hi c h "·•t11111lly, 1h .. , 111111!1! n•·' ~r'''' n1orr· hair ... 1100..1· Is the h 1 -~-' he I I ofl•'I thi" "l'l~H l11nll.1 11nl1·"·" 111n» tv du ~l'Wnrthln~ ILbout It C ararrn.i.c.-u I '-"~ e~e 1h.-ln'.111111•111 ".irko-d 11 .. 1,. bt•f•'r•• it'. ru" ]l\tf'. t:nerat1on 1m111ed1atel\'1·1<·1-. 11 1% 11111~""1bl1· tr. h·•lp 1 1 .___ .....__, 11 •ad" the :'\t•\\' ., __ E>I\' ·d .. ,.,.1 ... 11nt• ~"·~f·h n ......... 1ory .......... ~u • . • LV<.I -SJI .~ . . 11nt ~. In ... , \\•ill o;up['llY )'OU with ThE> artirlr. · "'rilll'n by l he gr('~l ~ll<lJOr1t y 0£ 1 r,..11t 111•~nt fnr 32 d11y~. at tht'!r social anthropo!~f.111 Shirle,· l'ase~ (lf ex1·ess1,·e hair f~ll 11<-k. If 111.~y lll'ho·1·1· 1111" tN"at- Ard e11er. ~1ddE>d tliat "ptrha1>S and balrtne"" are the tx>i.:1n ·1m•·nt "ill h•·lp ~ou . Ju~t !lr-nd .,<.hs1llus1onn1t'nl rrsul11ng from lnin<..: a1Hl rnorc full\' £level· 111 .. 111 thr 1nf .. rn111l1••n t1s1NI bc- the \~:ater~a!c affair pla,ed a 1opC'd ~ta:.:e -. flf 1nalc pat·i'1,,,,_ All ln11ui1ir~ at~' ans"·"red par!. l1crn h:il1lnt':-!-ancl cannot he ,~•nf11l.·nlinlly. hy n1ai l and Tht' British \ff(\ic·al Journal helped. 1\\11h.ut1 uhli~fltin11. Meil obo•• Coupott to: VETERANS OF WORLD WAR I .. 275 E. 11111 SI., Apl. 37, Coota Mesa, Ca. 92627 certain increase in esthetic Ml 1~ sensitivity," he said in an in· terview. · ··Aml•ricans. ~1ng n1ore 3<"· tion-or1e111ed peopl l'. thi nk of !hen1scl\'cS as \"E>r y praclLcal. \'Cry mt'<'hanically oriented on the whole and as a result sort of scom thi~ sort of \\'hims1ca\ quali1 y'tha1 these fleeting: fan- S.1id strcaklng Ill.I) h 1·1 NO 08llG .. flON COUl"'ON ------- psychologically beneficial be· • eauS<' 1! :illO\l"ed siudcnt ~ !O l o: I oc--.ch I aN>ralotY C--0n1ul!anu, Inc. 642-4321 Direct or Collec't to subscribe to the Dally Pilot YOUR Hometown Community Newspoper Singer said research has shown an upsurge in awareness of daydrean-.s when people llTe preparing for bed beCause they have fewer distractions at that time. FOR WOMEN, sexual in· tercourse also seems to be a time of increaSc.."<i daydrean1· ing. Singer said. Terrific variety, first quality fabrics for all your spring sewing needs . Car-pool it! ~, • TUES . thru SAT ., Mar. 26-30 SPRING PLAIDS & SOLIDS Vdws to 5.00 , Make it a plaid spring. Create three 1,,. piece ensembles -iaCket. skirt and pants to wear coordinated or separaled. Machine-washable Acrylic and some Polyester-Acrylic blends. 60 " wide. FG 's reg. LOW prices 2.49·3.49. yd. DRESS & BLOUSE PRINTS Valiies to 2.00 A great selection ol lightweight Cottons and blends in bright florals and sac geometics. You can sew a beautffOt formal fo r the sp r ing prom . Machine-washable. 45" wide. FG's reg. LOW pnces to 1.29. yd. Value• to 2.00 It's the real thing! If you 're planning a wedding you ·11 save a lot with this classic. $pnng pastels. 45" wide. FG"s reg. LOW pnce 1.59. REAL BLUE JEAN DENIM 1'~ One of the creative ideas for '74!" You can do a lot of nice 1hings to these -stud them. trim them or app/ioue them! Cotton. 45" wide. FG's reg. LOW price 2.49 Valoeatol.00 LINEN -LOOK SUITING · 88 Complete spring '74 selection. Combine several !or C softly !towing swirl skirts and a softly tailored pant suit. Machine-washable Rayon. 45" wide. FG 's reg. LOW d. pcire t.49. v ... to 2.00 Y DENIM-LOOK SINGl.f KNITS Today 's popular look 1n easy-sew. easy-care. 75% Polyester-25% Acrylic. machine washable. It's for dresses. pullovers and pant suits. too. 60'' wide. FG's reg. LOW price 1,98 VMt to l.00 I'~ SEERSUCKER 88 PLAIDS 1 'llwy'N ofl wnlhiM! Valoes to 3.50 yd. You·n wan1 several ol these! Bright color combinallons for dresses and pant outfits. Mach1ne·washable Polyester-Cotton blends. 45" wide. FG 's reg. LOW pnces to 2.29. LAGUNA BEACH 211 ..... , ...... Open Mon -Sat. 9-5:30 Sun. 12·6 D m. ' • TRUSEW® THREAD ·~~~Is 100 Value to 50< 1000/o spun Polyes ter, 250 yards per sp90L Btack and white only. Great v alue - stock up for spring sewing. ' NEWPORT BEACH JOf..w-1.._.. Mon.-Fn . 10-9.30 Sat. 10-e Sun. 12-e o m. NO. 1 FANTASY Paul Newman About 65 percent of the 150 suburban housewi\'t"S who participated in a 1970 research project of Singt.•t"s reported •·moderat ely freqllffit daydreams" at that time, he said. lie noted that somt' of the won1en daydreanled ab o u I other men during S<'XUal in· tercourse. llo' 66001. 31 11 \I.'(''' P.1 ;i.in St. 1asil'S ha ve." let off slcarn. Hou)1011. ~cx .. l 77o(lti ll ands Tied '"It is µrob;1hly ht·st for th<' prtsent to aC"cepl 1 h 1• streakrrs· ov.1' assessn1en1 of their n10t i\'t's -a !ark. a l"M:t. to liven things up," th1· Journ.al ~aid SACRAMENTO Cl'Pfl Auornc)' General Evellc J. 'i"ounger said the ci ties of San Francisro. San DLt'!;O anrl Chula \'ista do not h"'' 1he Hea ppointl'd po1\'l'r lo enforce I he i r I ~rn i ut>1111uu1r. 1ht-following information with 1he undcr- ~1an.!1ni c h~1 11 .,..ill l'oc ~cpl urictly confidcnlial and that I arn undrr no ohli~at1011 \lhat\OCvcr. I no"'' h1 vr or have had the fotlo.,.•ing conJ11ion': l>o you hll"C danJruff? __ h it dcy! __ or oily1r __ _ Docs yot1r -"'"Ir 1teh~ _____ Whcn!·------ lln.,., lonR h"" \our hair ~rn lhinninr.?------- r>o )•HJ ~1 111 ti,,,, an) 1<cak hair on tor of your head! __ II•'" h1ng " i!'' f\ ii dr) ? ____ h it oily?• __ _ Anach ~ny othrr 1nfo1ma1ion you frcl may he hrlpfu1 ~A \1 ~~·-----------------­ ,.t,l}DRl·~\S>----------------- ord1nt11)('('S. limiting campaign S,\('R.~\l ~:\'1'0 1L"P\1 -C cont ributions. In a for n1al L. [k>1iums. onr of !ht' ong111a1 011inion. Younger said the ntcmbers of 1hl' stale l'on1- l~gislature prccn1pled the m1siwn on f air F:mplo~ rnrnl THE ONE PERSOi\ men· field of campaign contributi(in Practices. has brt'n rt•:tp· tioned most durinl? sut·h la""·s and ony local ordinances pointed to anothl>r three·) ear ! L~'~·1~1~,~· =======ST~A~TE~====~7~.l~P===::..:. daydreams ~·as actor. Paul on the subject ""'ere invalid. tern1 b~· Gov Hnnald Heagan 1 -~~~~~~~~~~~--~~ reshape, firm 'n trim with a body that's fit to live in . ' • 'i • • yo11 do11't j11st ~etaslaape •\ ''yo11 ~et i 11 slaape'' -; \ Diet Alone Can't Do II ... While you shed pounds lhal c.ul down ugly lat. you ve got to build 11ssue lhrtl ltrms uns1ghlly Hab. The 1esult . :i shapely ttgu1c !rimmed down. w1lh 1exlufe t1gh1 as :i drum Ifs all here-d1et a1y and cxe1c1se programs designed for your 1nd1v1du.JI need Instructors and e.:e1c.1se mac hines Iha! get ma 11:1mu1n rf's ul~ 1n 1he shor1esl possible time. Plus Saun,1 . S1c;im Whirlpool. Sun Rooms. and Sw1mm1ng Pool to make the comp1e1e c.hange. Belorc you know 11. you·11 be lirm. shm ,1nd trim You II look gre at. feel grea! Remember you don t 1us1 gel ;1 s h,1p~. you gel in shape. Make you rself a promise-C.111 Today! There are SEVEN d1flerent programs lo choose from to suit your individual needs. Bcg1 nn1ng as low as ·$1o for2 weeks al the spas H@~nd~~ ~,i ~~~~1"w£~~es call today . BUE NA PAR!( ~lO .!i I r •<" 8ow!e••"I Sowl" ot l •t>COI" A••-126-0311 ORANGE 522 l••1 K•itlll ••t"w•. •••I of Twot•" a.,,.w, 139-:1441 COSTA MESA 2l00 1t ••bo• ll ow i.•••d . M o •~o• C•,.t•• S4t-3fse WESTMINSTER 1 1~1 W••'''"""" ••t"wt. Wtll••""''•' Ct M•• IM·l317 HUNTINGTON BEACH 11s1s M••" St••l "'"'"St 01 le•<~ l lod. 141-1451 LONG BEACH 4101 Au,,.1.c 8ow1 1 .. •d Co'"'' ol Ctt toR 42'·1174 ENCINO 1roi1 ~e nlw•• l ow•••••f W•o l ol 9•1•o• 9M·ll30 ) ( 8 DAILY PILOT Monday, Match 25, iq74 Sheritf ·ltlarshall Duty Duplication Studied By WltJ.lAl\.I SCHREIBER Of !ti. o.tll'J r11t1 lltH NTA ANA -Orang..: County son Tuesday will be ~od t<> a C2UJ"Se of action aim at ct1l- t-,1'it'iiiooiin OtiP!ica llon of dullf'S ' twL-en the Orange County shl:rl!f's of( :c and the COW1lY marshal 's oUi<.•1•. In a report to supcrvi-'Ol'S, nty Administrative Officer Robert Tllom tis said the board cannot take any diret·t al'* tioo that mig\it change lht duliet\ of Ille marshals. who act WI officers of the rounty'!I munkipal courts. bailiff" and court ofHcet1 for the coun· ly's SUpcrlor court judgl'il. Thom.a! said the~ ar(' b.111;ically four nreas ·,•:here the duties no.,..· overlap - process serving, bailiff duty, courtroom security nnd prisoner tra1L~fcr. 1-fe told supervisors that little money v.'001d be JJaVcd in several of those are.'111. hut .a good bit of money and effort could bt' s&.\'ed in su~ areas as sr<:u rlty and prisoner tramfer. TIK1mas gave supervisors f I v c --Se<!k general legislation allowing euch county to effect such mtrgers al their own option. -Au~ize a boord representative to n~t wit~ l.tltl parties involved to discuss eiU1er a <.~pletc merger or a transfer of some specUic fullC'lions. -Direct an immediate <."OMOlidation of lhu prisoner transfer function under the shcriff'8 department. -Direct tne CAO to study the matter in moro depth. -Seek the support of the judges for ap- pointment of the sheriff as marshal. 11.e sald County Counsel 1\drlan Kuypt.'1' also studied the sHualion v.·11.h an 1'yc toward pOISSible comolidation of the 1 .... ·o units. "Since the ma~hals are appointed by a majority of the municipal court jucli!cs. &:hey could appoint the sheriff -corpncr as the marshaJ." Thomas ·said. •·sut t'ilc bc>Md is wilhout the auUiorily to 1nakc such an appointment." alternatives to choose from 1f they want 10 punue the matter any farther. \ lfe said they could: 'Family' Prog1·am Started By Coastal Ai·ea Boys Club Thomas wa s asked by Supcn'iSOr Italph Diedrich to study the possibility of cofnbining the t .... ·o offices in an effort to t.'tll down oo costs. Diedrich made his request nfter the retirement last month of <.%cf marshal Dillard Wllkirson. Retiring Orange County SberHf James ,_fusick said he thinks such a combination of duties .... w!d be a good idea since both deputy sheriffs and deputy marshiils perfonn similar tasks. Sherifrs deputies currefltly serve as A new "ramily-development program" calculated to help youngsters with hebavior ·proble1ns has been launched by the South coast Ana -Boys Cluj>. The program, dealing with children wTio6e behavior has become a family and community problem, will be headed by diredor Barbera Trear. Instead o( using psychiatric cYaluaUons and other s p c c i a I i z e d processes. the program is geared more toward ena'IW'Dging youngsters. "We look for what is happening to the child at the moment and try to guide him in using constructive altematives. We calnt a-n·o::nonsensc-a pproaeh-l'9l<'Uiat.ed · to build better relationships within the family.'' shl" explained. Besides the director, the new_program Includes Kevin Delnold and JamC'S Ciilmorc. who are paraprofessionals in the rleld . A rcpresentallve of the COWJ.lY liiental liealth Association also sen•es. Mesan 's Bookkeeper Gets Jail Sentence what could have been a state prison term of one to IO years after I.he defendant pleaded guilty to charges of grand theft. Tustin Man Sentenced 111 Burglary SANTA ANA -A WCfll..1n \'t'ho admitted thal s h e pocketed an estimated $1,700 of her employer's money while she worked as a bookkeeper for a Costa Mesa co mpany has been ordered to spend 60 days in Orange County Jail. ---. Superior Court.Judge James 'J'umer ordered the jail term for Sharon Rae Scott. 38, of El f.fonte, placed her on three years probation and ordered her to make restitution. $100,000 Suit Filed SANTA ANA -A man who pleaded guilty lo reduced burglary charges after being accused on arrest or also rap- ing a Wcstmirisler woman has been sent to state prison for not less than five ytars. Orange County Su p e r i o r Court Judge Lloyd E. Blanplcd Jr. ordered the prison term for James Victo:r Smetana, 19, f.1iss Scott was arrested a year ago alter officials at f.f a i ntenance J\tanagement Corp., Costa !i-fesa, spotted a humber of forgeries and \iliered cheic:b. ••• j, ·Judgt ·Turnet'· · iUSpended ' iCycle Rider • Files Suit SANTA ANA -A Fountain of Tustin alter examining the Valley \\'Oman who contends defendant's prior rcrord. negligence by school officials Smetana v.·as arrested Jas1 led to her 12-ycar-oJd daughter Oct. 20 after being identified suffering serious back injuries by a housewife as the intruder has sued the Fountain Valley who raped her al knifepoint School. Distrrl for $HIO,Wl. after burgling hrr apartment J\.1rs. Sherry Ann White names the district as defen· and robbing her of $35 in cash . Police said the v.'Oman dant In an Orange County snatched the knife f r o m Superior Court action cbarging Smetana as Ile fled and gashed it v.·ith responsibility for· in-him with lhc ·weapon. They juries suffered by Sharon Ann said he was r..tianp:ing his White. 12, last May 31. blood·soakcd shirt \\'hen they Mrs. White states that her later arrested him <1t his daughter was injured during a play period a t T a I be rt,::""==""'==·==========:::;;=:;:; I SA.llff A ANA - A young Elementary School when a 1. motorcyclist who. blames a hinged table fell on her aud in· school bus driver for serious Oicted severe injuries on her Injuries he suffered last Nov. bnck. HOPJE ·14 at a Huntington Beach in-;='=":~=~='::~====, tersection has sutd him and Tff• MOt1tm rnc!latlon equipmmt gjves bOPe in tbe ti;ht ll.gn.lnst. -cancer. Help provlt\e lhia at his employ<r. for 1100.000. I ., Bobby A. brewster identifies mw. BW 151 1 ~========~1 HOAG UOSPJTAL. Charles f'~. Blair Ill as the ....,.... 11- dri•·er and the Huntingtoo ·-· '"""' Kids Like to Beach Union High School •II"~ District as his employers in an A k And ~ !~~1:':C 1'========::':.._--S--·--):'..'_I failing to yieki the right of way. Brewster contends he was knocked from his machine and seriously injured at the in· t('rscc1ion of Chestnut nnd l-!::in1n1 StrPcls \\'hen Blair drO\'(' hi!; ht1s through the in- tcrsf'C't1on in a careless and nec:h~t'n! n1anner. Free Lecture 1 .. _., YOUI SPINI PLAYS SUCH AN IMPO~TANT l PAIT IN GOOD HIALTH MAINTINAN(I ~ !?,!:! ~ !! ~ !_! ! ~ ~ Chlroprottlcl The DseaH"I Mtntiontd Brlow Arr Only 1 Few Which Are C.~ by Vtrtebr.ae "Pinchi ng" Nroes. S111dy thi~ · "Htahll Ch.Arr' of Chiropractic, and yo~ will undt"rsland why mott and more prople are 1uming to Chiropr•ctic ci.rc. 1.,..,.... .........,.. .. -............. ----... --~-.... -._, .. ___ .......... _ .... 2 ... ~ _ __, ............... .. .. _ .. ____ _,...._ ... ____ ,....._,..__ ... ....,. Board to Clwose LUCJLLE KUEHN x i\l>~llNl!i.TR>\TI VE ANALYST Court Archirect Newport Beach City Council VOTE SANTA ANA -Thrte of the four flrm3 bidd!ng to design court.rooms to fill up four shell noors of the new Orange County Courthouse are based on the Orange Coast. ~"J<"'"'"''""~c-~ ........ 11 -~~.,~' APRIL9 taken up by federal Judges in1 ~~-~~·~~~.,..~~~~~·~·~-~·~~~~~~~~~~~~ the oear fut11te. 1• The County Boord o f Supervisor's will decide TUes· day which company will do tne architectural work foe the job, which is expected to cost $3.48 m\llion. companies biddlna {or the design contract are: -Anthony and Langford of Irvine -Bissell and August Assoc. of Newport Beach -Tom and Tnukler of JJun- tington Beach -Crilllas, Pirc, Rosier and Alves of Santa Ana. The board decided to go ahead with comPletion workl----....,,--,-------1 on the floors after an appeal by Q>Unty Superior Court Judges. The four floors -about 97 ,000 square feet -will pro- vide at l~ast 20 adctiµonal courtrooms and attelw:lant facilities. There ls a poseibility some of the space may ht Drive Slated · Hair Slaves, Go Free! ,.,..,.....¥ ... , ............................... . -.. ~la. ......... ""'-.... .... ....... ..... .. .•.. , ... ,.. .... ,.... ..... ........ .._ et-.,.. _. fr11br r· O• lmp lllfl. W.W- CAlfl,, ................ ,., ........... tw .., .... ..,, Wt. ' . Al9i1.'lllJ.Set,.. . If W .... te. ~ ...... , .. .., ...., ....... -,.... Wr .... n.1 ,. ..... ,.... """....................... .. ......... .. a.. It. W• .. tM1e ...,...,.. A litt'9 Wt Mftef' ,._ fk"" . JoSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLMG 9564 --A"" ~ ·-~ •llollM JDS N. -IW. ---..... '1f.J16J MOW POI ·YOll8 CONYlll'IMCI • , , OPU DAILY' . I AM. to 10 P.M-U.T. & SUNDAY; 9 to I PJil• " ORANGE -Cha pm an College will be the site of a -1\\.1Hiay recrotJmen_L_d r I v e J\iny 19-20 by the-Peace Corps ~ -FLOWERS_&J'J).IlNT_AINS and VISTA. The drt\'.C is aimed at.. attracllni ZS graduating senk>n with majors I n education, home economics and chemistry, according to Janet Johnson. director. A LIVE DISPLAY OF SPRING South Coast ?tua T~IGHT ONLY! -------1. ____ .... 1_ .. ,... .... ...,._.........,.._ .. ._ __ ---·--.. -.... At Glendale Federal, we offer you they do. That means 4 years or more . .. "-• _ ... )• ....... ~ -•!>Cl 111111!1y""""""' dl*l.ro;J • ·~~· 1~11 , ..,.,..1-0-~~~~ ........ ~·.•·..,,,.,01 ... -, .... ,.,,. IP'lo•"'llW ,,.. 11>< '""'''..,,t.,"4'<1 .... l'I~·' .,.., ........ ~!! ......... ~~ , ...... CO-t<!bll•---"' <\1,1-... 0• "'"'"' •"II lht W••I M Wf!Ch•• -Ol')Mll1'1111:7'1'1 111 ~ .,. ~ ,.111~ "" '"",,,.., •h °"' t-........... "' .... !Ool"O -M 1,.,,_.,..., '7""11 C-:~ !n <'>kl ·~ ~U>•1' t•·~·~o ... e·oM ,.,.,.~, Gu•tl• -""ii"° m ••Kl"'"' toll' -llQOlo 01 .. M"I ..... ~-""'•>Ol'ft"'-NllN M.•e l '""'O' ll'OO!_.._U_IAllltonoo> """..ill)ro>i Mike Turin MON .,MARCH25 7:~P.M.AT NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH CAFETI:RIA BlDG. lnlM& lwtlSI,,, ...... port ltldl Yo~ car C~arge DAILY PILOT Classified Ads 642·5678 I -----..... -·-.... ___ .... ,..... __ _ ., ___ _...._ -...-.----s._ .... __ ,..._. .......... --=-·_...,,_.._...__ __ ~ ..... ,... ......... -........... --~ ...................... ---. '·---.. ·-.. --.. -.,....... .. ____ _,.... ......... .... 7.,,,.,,,.., ·-· -..-. -, ..... -· -.....-... -----·-"' _...,._...., ......................... . ··~ .. -~----__ .... ....-.-... --~ ...,_ ..... _,.... . 9 . .,., ---....,.._, --.. -..... ~-~....-. .......... __ ... _ ..... _, 10 ... .,, ....... _ .. __ _ --... -...-... ........ -....- SICK? ___ ... ,..., __ _ !Ill OUIT CWllY l1tOWS WlfT TOii MAT • SUIFDINGI l\tpd.ln1 of wb.t yout 1ilment is qi!~ •• , no ma1tf:" how lonr you ht•t sutrcrtd ... Chiropraclic "" iuy be the euct annt'rr lo your 1pccific he1lth probhm. Chiropr1cUc 1uccttds many timt1 ahtr .u obtt method• Nvs failed. FJ .. 11 I tll•int ••• HATll•Al ...,'1flMI frl ... , 1t Dr. Joke W. Pivaroff Chin>pNclor, ·-CPr-• 1 ill ...... . . ,.,,...._ 67)·•070 ............ ' 27111MtC ... tHwy . Wt1202 eor... ....... c.. t2621 ( ~%interest on accounts as small as $1,000. If that seems like forever, relax! We've Jusl $1,000. That means savers sn:iort got Umpteen other ways to sove:They all pay enough-lo save with us can now earr:l lhe lop doll9r. And wit!Jsi Passbook Account for some ollroctive 7li% rich guys had lo .i~vesl instanc«:, yo~ can earn big without hav!ng to $10,00\), $20,000, e.ven $l00,000 lo earn. lie your·money up al oil. -· One thing lo remember, ~-----..::--~ Ri°ch man's interest for though. If you want lo eorn like 418/_ ordinary, everyday savers-it's a rich investor, y.ou have to be 1-/U at Glendale Federal right now. willi ng to tie your money up like -Come gel your share t . ··~ (;LEW4LE FEDERAL More 0H1ca to MM you lfu" 11ftY oiher f~ Sovinga" Ol'ld lMn ~lohOl'I in the natton. 0. l I .I btUiorl In ct.Mb. AU. o~t Oii' ,_0111!1)' of fll'IGnciol Setvi<11. Cosio Mesa Br.anch : 2300 Ha rbor Boulevard (Harbor Center) 642-4711 Fullerlon Branch: 320 North Harbor Boulevard· 526-8331 Newporl Beach Bronc~: 500 Newport Center Drive (Newport Financial Cenler) 644-5300 Santo Ano Branch: 51 Fashion Square (across from Desmonds) 541-3314 • ' \ E ... I Wired .. GIBRALTAR , Mich. (AP ) - MN. Debi Hom, the ZJ.-year- old, 229-pound v.-oman wbo had her mouth wired shut to kl6e "·eight thrff: months ago, says she also has lo.st some privacy ' and the right to visit her mother-in·la .... -. A case of jangled ntrVeS " from a constantly ringing tt:lcphone evtn put her in the hospital for a Jew days.\ ' Dieter But ~trs . Hom. \\'ho is do"'·n to 184 pounds. VOWS she wUI "'car the \\'ires ror another two months to reach 140. "~fy mot:her·in-law saK1 she ttiowrtrt this was stupid.'' Mrs. ~[orn said. "She didn't v.·ant 1ne to ever come O\'er to her house wit.b my braces on. "\Vomen also Y.-ere calling me all the time.'' she said. ''I had lo take the telephone off the hook t.o go t sleep. Thert Good Deed Loses Priva~y Her make the sceoe \\'fre tal~ up to t o'clock in ing Issue The !OC!ety said that the method should ~ uSf'd. Sundays the mom.ing. 1 _j"~pa~t~ie~nt~'s~pll~y.,~·e~ian~. ~not~~·~~~,,~,.~1~1om~·~s~mou~t~hjj"~"'~"~"~'e~d~--~in~the~;j~,[!.1i~[l:·~Ji~(,~llU I dffitist. 5hould dceide whether shut by her oral surgl"Oll. ·-••1••1••• ''[ v.'8.S real upset. so my ----- doctor put me right in the hospital and v."OUkln't let me have any calls or ,;sitors." She also has lx>en born· barded with requ~sts to aJ>- pear on local and ,national television talk shows. E\·en the American IX>ntal Society has gotten into lhe <ict by taking a stand on the \\ir· VISIT THE BUNNY CAROUSEL COURT 5outh Coast ?laza Extra C\!'e in engineering .• .it mk es a big di erence in small cars. \ ' Have you everwondered why ~st gas mileage claims never mention the l cars~--Chrysler-Corporalion? omy Chrysler Corporation reports its own small-car gas mileage against competition! It's one thing to test you r cars, by themselves, under ideal conditions-it's quite another thing to ask an independent testing organization to test your cars under normal driving conditions. with non -professional driver s, through traffic and on the highway-and include your competition. That's what the United States Auto Club did for Chrysler Corporation ; and the results really mean somet hing. First. while some may get more and some less. these results give you some idea of the kind of mileage you can expect to get while driving sensibly either in th e city or on the highway. Second, they tell you how the small ca rs from Chry sler Corporation-Dodge Dart and Plymouth Duster -measure up against the competition. Read th ese results. The more you know about Chrysler Corporation's engineering features. the more intelligent choice you'll be able to make when buying a small car.' ·Results: CITY DRIVING HIGHWAY DRIVING - 108 miles of light city traffic including 225 traffic lights and 30 stop 972 miles of cross-counlry driving at an ;:iverage speed o f 53 .2 mph. s igns at an average _speed of 25 m ph. " . . -m.p.g. mp.g. • PLYMOUTH DUSTER 6 cyl .• • • • • •• 26.2 DODGE DART SPORT 6 cyl. • • • • • • 27.4 DODGE DART SPORT 6 cyl. • • • • • • 24.8 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 6 cyl.. • • • . • • 26.6 DODGE DART SWINGER 6 cyl. • • • • 23.6 FORD MUSTANG 11 4 cyl .. • • • • • • • 25.7 (automatic transmission) DODGE DART SWINGER 6 cyl. 23.6 FORD MUSTANG II 4 cyl .. 22.0 • • • • • • • • • • • (automatic transmission) FORD MAVERICK 6 cyl. • • • • • • • • • 20 .1 FORD MAVERICK 6 cyl. • • • • • • • • • 23 .6 DODGE DART SPORT 8 cyl. • • • • • • 19.6 DODGE DART SPORT 8 cyl. • • • • • • 21. 7 . PLYMOUTH -DUSTER-8 cyl .• 1 s-.-4----CHEVRO'LET NOVA 6 cyl~ .. ~. :-21.3 • • • • • • • • • • • CHEVROLE:r NOVA 6 cyl. • • • • • • • • 16. 7 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 8 cyl .. • • • • • . 19.6 .• 7he answer is at your Chrysler-Plymouth and Dodge Dealers: (And you can drive one home today!) DODGE DART SPORT 1 .. ---~ .... ,, •I .f,11 • PLYMOUTH OUSTER A~cHRYSLER '•' CORPORATION OOOGE •CHRYSLER• PlYMOU TH • DOOGE TRUCKS SEE ALL THE DARTS AT YOUR =DEALER. lnllu..CllOflifd tlOd rt111M c.thl~ by 0 .5.A C. Jtl'l!NfY .net '•llrll«T. I 914 A" CPI ""il'l09d wotll """"' .. 11tn~ t~trpl •\ •rldlf.tlil'd. Dodf'I D•n S00<1 •!Id Ptvmovlh Dll$tlf l 'l .qu"ltPed w.111 ""tnw.tl l••"""'Olons ..,.. ,,..... ..it""lltrd 2.71 l•lt r•l10. M1"l•fl0 U tQ1ot1pped with C1htom1t t111luiot. ~ wl'!icl'I m.iy Nwt tllttttd Ill !l,ltl t<OllOf'ly, SEE THE DUSTERS AND VALIANTS AT YOUR DEALER. I • LlAll Y PILOT 9 ~": ~ What ., Makes Glazier Run? I Elhs Glat 1er and his family moved to NewPOrt Be.ch wnen 11 was a nice. Quiel. res1C1ent1a1 community In tt>e years 1na1 lollowed he witnessed a deleriorahon o f the basic re51denhal oon- capt.oLour city_Speclal In· terest groups always seem lo gel their way High den-- s•IY and htgh·ns& develop· ments became an un· deniable reality. Ellis Glazier is running for c1!y counc1t because he wanls lhe city government to eJ1press lhe wilt of !he people. and nof lhe special 1n1eresl groups. "'_,..c ....... ~ l ll>•Gi.I• ........ w.., o.-,. t Ht.rtnl-.:1 ...... ~Bl"°' Do """""'" Jo,,..1V V<tll .1o.1na1oc1c ... 1""""'°"" 1-.E .,,.,., ..... ~s. .. F<0n alod ''a"~ lloa."""" E~""L'"""ll AUan -...OICl -JcM"~ , __ ,,.... A...:1'9>' UOO" °' '"" ... ~ """""s-·-"'""' Ind ... ....,W"9f'IW "'"'~ S.,.f"'"'' E~Coo• -· ....... """d °'"""'" c ..... 1 JOM -""o ... s-.,,. -•r>O ll<;D Elll ... , 111•~1 ... c-.. -11odA,"91l11.0......," ""' """ "'" w"' Sl.l• ..... -.... 11 .... ---v-"'"'"""t p,_,w,1...,., 0. _ ... ,, Hoc...as..._. ....,.,_.... 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J.il'>MWNM.•• Ne t °"1""" l•.r•·"" l I"'" i;..,.. ...... ~ S Jd1rod A o<A'C.••- "'' """"" G V•ll....,._ """ . ··~·· .... ¥"""" s ..... ....... ,,,,. ..... _/\ ....... , ..... , __ ..... l._ .. ,_ °"'' t "ll Sle~~ .,., ,,,,, .... , I'!"" 5114• "'" '""""" ...... ,,.,.,. "'' .,.,.,. .. Ool>W-~""1•V.•"'°" ........... 5r><lll .> ... .,.,~.""~ --G<ece •.,,,.... "'' -''"' f 0 C.0...11'. A0 •-11 -.rod ........ ...,:so..- Wl '"'-'~"""' ~IW>•"d""""-0.-W f...-.....,M CI. Swt1"• l'l'lel'I ..,.,_ .... _ ............. 1•.e,1 L"'61l.o"O c.r-... <.1..~....., """''l"°" Jf'#Y> .. ..,., ... " 0. ""'""'' Fr•t ~ Jr. ....,,,,_L Pl!..,,.. ... """''"' r. "" .... ,., ~·:;I~;·;:, '"""· ....... ~ "'' """""" (•o~.-'-' •~H ,,., .......... l J Goi"'"' .. •<•II ~"O J .................. . &it,...,,R B~·-•1...-•' ......... . ... • .., ........... -..,..;e. """L.o'"'"""-',,..,-·""' ..._ ........ , _ .. a .... ~,, .... e,.._.. ......... . ~lf ......... ~·1.>< -">ltt°Y' { .... , ..... """~ ...... ("""' "'" '""'" S•""""'1 "'°"'"Ga,...,.,. .......... ...i11,, .... o-...,. ...., c.-i..c;l--= ="'" ~.";'J',':f: °'""*"' l••Nh ....... "'•1910iYoG-..... , .......... ~. 1: ..... ~ .. "·-"°"-"''"'°"_, E_.,..,.., ........ "''' JI "'-.,. ""-°' .,,,, "°" PW ........ rn111-... ,.~ .. ~ ~ .... er.11,,.,, E,...,G a......_ ""'' I " l •U.-<l<t ...... ,,~.11 ~ ,..,.L....,.,_ 11-L ~ .... -..... ~,....,..,.. ............ ftlflOl!t"ltti!-Gtll ... ~ft °""" o.ue~ll'y ............... lolllell90 '"" JOM Ill::. -·-.... -"'•• S"'-<11110~ , ]0 DAILY PILOT Monday, March 2S, 1q74 ~Truth • Ill Furniture' Law Aid to Nation's Consumers By SYLVIA PORTER • Surely wben you have bf.lt'n FiowlnQ ror furniture. you ~ve run lnlo: • . -Furniture that looks like wood but actually Is pla-;tic; : -f'\u'nlture coverings that look like leather but actually &re vlnyl; ~ -Furliiture ]abe!('d •· Dnn~ : lsh" ix;t\ actually made in North Carolina. ' -Furniture' labelOO ·'fruit I l v.·ood finish" but not ing whether the lbhel re- fers lo the typt• ot ...,'OQd or color of stain. 'Ml\.>$C ere ::1 fe.,.., of the practiet>s be· In~ bannL'11 by a new set ttveal· of Federal Trade Commi.\slon "Guides for lht' ilou.54:nold Furniture Industry.'' Ult.· first new 5et of furniture fudu~try guides In more than a decatle. Tllt:St: NEW rul ts represenl a giant step toward "Truth In Fumiture" -giving you solid WRY" to judge and compare fumiture ln today 's vaslly complex world of ~w coostructioti and uphols ry materials, furniture Slyl , perforrnance claims. finishes which simulate any material. 1n addiUon, says lhe FTC, its guides are a I m e d at "widel'!pread m J s I e a <l l n g advertising and other decep- tive pr3c.ticcs" in tht! field. Specifically covered are: "all kinds and types of chairs. tables. cabl.neU:. desks, soras, bedstea93, chests and mirror frames." Not covertd are bed mattresses and bed,,prlngs, metal cots, cedar chests, mir- ror Klass, musical tn- slrumet1b, radios and TV sets. venetJnn blinds, p I c t u res , lan1ps, clocks, rugg , draperies, such appliances as rcrrt~rs and air COO· dilioners. -From now oo. 1f the furniture ls made ol plostic or unother materiaJ made C.O look like wood or something else more desirable and expensive. 1 '. Tuned Up Auto Saves on Fu el Capitol News Service SACRAMENTO -The most c:onJident segment of the automotive industry in 1974 $hould be the serv ice indust\'y. While the govemmenl, oil companies, automakers and some parts manufacturers are perplexed by the quandary oI uncertainty, the service in· dustry has an opportunity to save the American motori.!.1 -n billion -gallons of gasoline In 1974 while contribututing to the robust health or the af· termarket. So states J . Robert Connor, editor or Motor, an automotive service monthly. The 3.8 billioo gallons came up during 'a Chicago trade show when it was determined Cl\11~ WAl'I OlDGUNS ' _MANNlNG'.S CoLLECTORS SHOP. ·.~l~ CALL 011 WIUTIE • (213J 1n4J • I 278-0674 541-n96 "liiiRT-t-colN-coiiPA°N"Yj J 833 Dover Dr. Suite 2S I Newpott Beoch.Co.92660 I· RUSH DETAILS TO: I that vthicle cht.'<:k nnd repair the \'<.•hic le of the future -gas 11t.·tion could cut pollution nu· shor111ges and ;ill -and this tionully. could mean a c1ulck demise of • Hemembt'r lhe ··overdrive" the so-called "air bag .. safety Computtr AutGmatlon, Inc. transmission~ featu re which manufacturers of lnine, has naplt'd four \Veil, it might be making a at Ford and General J\fotors employes to new extarliYe romcback. The last thnc ll decided was the crash pro-positions. "'as W!i':,& on d o m est i c tertian device of the coming Em mons l\files, co-founder •111om 1 \Yasin 1971. If the years. al)d vice president f o r Borg-Wa'rner Corp. has GAf had """"MOl....i tht air thin bout 't "l 'II l''v ~ FINANCE engineering will becune vke any g to say a 1 • ' w• bag to meet the U . S. "d 1 of 1 · be back in a 1975 sub-compact g 0 " er n m en t • 5 passive ~----------'-pres1 en opera tons ; -------=="---resffiiint--requlrement-whrtlf---Sleit'a Dale, -f.o-r~m-e-F=--~ ~ says that in the 1976 model5, engineering operations direc-IN HIGH GEAR an auto occupant must be pro-Banks Jump 1or takes ~files' old post; _ _ tected in a crash eYen though James Slehl, former national he does nothing to prol('CI car. anti the f iv e-spee<l transmission will give the motorist an cstimaled 25-30 miles per gallon if the car '''eighs no more than 3,000 ?QundS. • Since small cars seem to be LA. LINES 531 'MONTH TILEPHONI COMPAN'\' OF CALIF. 'l'f. ltM *1 ... Miii, e..1• Met1 CONNRLE4SE LEASING :J [i Yo1t fKr'"l' A11tltorlnd C._,oi.t U.Witt 0..1« • Now '74 Veta Harchback S&840 P'I!" MONTH Pl!K Tall j, lk. 0~ Appr, C:l'ftl lt 2• Mo. 0 E.l. CONNELL CHEVROLET 2111 HAllOR ILYD. COSTA MESA 546°1200 l"I' • 1s ' ', .irlti ? ? "fl.t. himself. Cost of the de vice is Le d R sales director \\"8S appointed about $225 \\!hiC"h do~·t deter ),n ate vice president of sales. Phil the Cadillnc buyer. but "·ould Kattfman, who was technical be an extensive option for the JJl State director for engineering, wa, lo\rer priced compacts and promoted to director of "prod- sub-compact s now in demand. uct planning. Court battles may hold up the federal requirement until 1978 or later. • Dcsoite the substantial dent Detroit has made in car thefts by going to Lhe locking steer- ing colurm and the bll1.zer that v.·ams the driv~r \\tlen he has left the key in lhe ignition, motor makers are looking for even more methods to foil car crooks. There are several ideas for adding a third key to increase security of door and lrunk Jocks and to slO\I' rlri1\-n thievt>s "·hen the.v try to start the car after gel'!ing bv the door locks. G~-1 changed the set up on its '74 models. so the door key "'ill not work In the ignition switch. The company is gathering infonnation lo see if the change reduces thefts and break-ins on GA1 makes. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Bank of AmeriC'a , the \YOrld's largest conunercial bank, and Security Pacific N a t i o n a I Bank ol Los Angeles have rais- ed the prime rate fron1 8~4 percent to 9 percent The banks followed the lead of New York's First National City bank, the nation's second largest commercial b a n k : Bankers Trust oC Ne"· York, Olasc Manhattan Bank and others which raised the pr ime by a quarter percent. On Thursday \Velis Fargo Bank, the nation"s 11th largest con1mercia\ bank. raised the prime lending rate to 9 per· cent. Crocker Bank and Bank ol California also raised the prime rate last v.·eek. The prime rate is the in· terest charged by banks to !heir major business bor· rowers. * Fred Sotomayor has been named st.ore supervisor for A I p b a Beta 's Adams and r.t a g nolia supe r - market in Hunting· ton Bench . Soromayor \\•as former· ly grocery JOTOMAY•• department head in a"Garden Grove Alpha Beta. He joined the food chain in 1968 ns a clerk in Iluntington Beach. • Balboa Island r e s i d e n t Samuel Tower has been nam- ed ·general manager of the Ofange County division of iive11Y Hllil_ Tramfer lUld Storage Co. that fact must be disclo&OO , either on lhe fum1tw-e II.Sell or on an altached tag. -tr the fumJture comMI from the U.S .. It cannot be labeled "Daobt" bul imtead must be labe.ltd "Danish design." And this must 00 fol· lo-.'td b)' ··t-fnde in U.S.A." w UM OOmcsUc manurac- hnr't mme and address. I -IF THB 5Urlace ol, say, a ToWi!r joined organir.ation as dillpald>e<. the moving an assistant table, is made of marble p\eets or imltalJon marblt lo look like marble or slate, the tag n1ust. speR out "m:irbtt p.arUclt'S with biOOcr." t>r \\'hatever. Imitation leathtr abo must be so labeled. -If the furniture I s veneered, it mu,,t be so labeJ. ed oilh ""' twe " -....i alto named. And "' It goeo - for J,!lalttcs, for reoonstttulld • wood; loi:, fumlture stuffing, "" q,,u, In alldn. l In addltlon, monulactur<r,f\ and toetallers 'are now rorbl'd· dta to l"fJ110Ye or alter or hide My lnlonnii.tion required by the new guides. In fact . no furniture covered by the guides may ~ sold without In· eluding alt the lnlormatlon now required. IF SPECIAL daims are made for upbolstery fabrics, the menuf~cturer mnst ~ vide you with lhe aef,ual test • results, in layman's language, I.la B. eaiter has joined !he and also me deW!s of !he teats wltb the FTC. Newpcrt Beach office of Also banned are ColdwtU Banker Commft'Clal m I s r e p r e s e n talions of Hr(lterage Co. where ""he-wui~~ or -t-Nt-cf-e....-i n specialire in the sale al in· r~!ture as "~OCN" :iam~1es" vestment properties. or demonstration pieces He and his family reside in Fountain Valley. • \\'Allam S. Cosentino has been appointed r e g i o n a I superintendent ~ New York L If e ln1111ance Company's South Pacific region. head· quartered In Los Angeles. Prior to bis new assignment, Cosentino. was g e n e r a I manager of the company's Newport Beach general office. He and his family live in Costa ?ttesa. El Toro resident John E. Ericsen has been named assis- tant vice p r e s i · dent of ope ra · lions cootrol (or Air Olli· fomla. Er icse n '\'Orked \\'ith Jlacific AlrlinE:~. in e:•1csr;11 the flight control department prior lo joining Air Cal idiOOi as a flight dispatcher. Telephone Earnings Up For Year SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Pa<:ifte Telcph:lne reported that its earnings for the 12 ~ended Feb. 28 were up from the same period a year ago. ~Net income for the period was $260.2 million, or $1.57 ?f!r share of common stock, com- pared "1th $232.fl million, or $1.51 per share. in 1973. The company said rate refunds O<de.-ed by l h • California Public U t i I i t i e s comnuss100 decreased per- share earnings by 16 cents. For the three monlhs: endin~ Feb. 28, the company said. per--share earnings were 32 cents, d'.lwn from 40 cents a year ago. Pacific Telephooe Bttributed the decline lo in- flation. wage Increases and cost ~ restoring gervices in· teriiapted by severe northern California storms. - a ledmlque w1de-ly used in llhelto areas \\'hf're mui:h of lhe furniture rum: on a noo- stop mtrry11'.o-round of sale, repossmwn. res1Je, etc. Nor may furrUture be advertised as "dlJcontlnued" Wllest the manufacturtt actually has discontinued UlC type • o r model ' Nol ~et oovered by tho rules but unil<t CO<lll1'ler&tiol1 by the JiiC are: reqWrementl UJ3t the tumltore in du •try i.zuarantee the durabilhy, color 'fastriess and suiLabillly of fu.m.iture CO\'erings "under normal conditions of reasonable use," and a bafl on guarantees that w a i v ! "lmolied "'arranl~er."' on furniture. I An implied war- rtinty is an unwritten pledge that a product will be and do nwre or less v.'hat a person shollld expect It lo be and do. l BUT THI!: CLEAR im·~ pUcation is that unless the furniture mdl,15tr)' m o v e s toward thi! mOestone in trulh in furniture, the FTC will ex- pand the rules to cover these .......... This is your alert to be on guard if details in lhis column are missing in the future from furniture ads or labels. If !hey are missing, ask the retail er lo Callow through. Reputable retailers v.•ill hail these guides . Avoid those stores that don't. \1se the n~· protections. Tht>y are designed for you. GM Raising Destination Clinrges DITROrr (API -Gmeral Motors says it will raise destination charges on Its 1974 model cars and trucks an average or $15 within several days. The auto maker also said it may raise retail prices on certain "basic options by $13. but company spokesmen said no final decision ha s been reached. Destination charges are the costs incurred in shipping a vehicle from the plant to the dealer. The costs var y OOpending on the distances involved. -~ Ha111•---------: 1 Addtto1t _________ 1 "'"-----"''----1 ,!,h~~!..c~_c_=-=-c-=-=-=-c-= J DAILY PILOT L. M. Bogd Aggressor Won Complete .Mid~day American Stock List MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS -MERCJ;DE_S 11.E.NZ - Sales • Service • Leasing 28701 MARGUERITE PARKWAY 49~1700 MISSION VIEJO 831·1740 ilOVEIHISEt.IENT Health News Question: When Is A Headache Really A Headache? Answer : When 1l '"a ~lll!rainl' . "'h1ch \s us ~C\'Crf' a "lleadiu:he" as any health problem can be. "'Just exactly wha! LS a mii;r;une headarhf'"" Thi s frequently a;-ked question "'as put to J)r . G,jry routur~· ot tht• {;uulur(' Ch1ro11ra ct1 r olt1ce tu lit•tter 1dent1ry thr rf'h1t1onsh1p of thl' m1~rainc lo other types ol hra<laehe~. "llt:l'nre I i'ITI ~ll'Cr th Dr.G.,.., (lue sti on , ·· \\'hat nr, Couture has just dl'S<'r1bed IS a typ1C'al migraine :1\laC'k . Al the curly stages of lhc mi µra111e C'ond1tion the S\'rnptorns may Ot> less St'\'erc. bul lcll untrt.•11100 they ~·111 most surel y 1ntcns1fy 11nd 111 n1:1ny (':1:.cs liceon1e a lifetime of sht't-r "gon.\ . ,,. \\'h11l e11 ust"5 " m1gr111nc'.' "Nt•r\'C pressurl' at the bai>t' nl tht• skull is the first C'3USC'." ~.1 ):. l)r. Couture. "Teehnt<'ally, niul-do rs al nl'r\'t' 1>rcssure impairs ·the tone or the pylont• v:1l\ e dim1n1shing the cff1c1t'nry of d1gl's l1nn. llilt' cnl.e-rini:t the ston1arh bcco111C$ d1ff1cult to dispt'I. Thl' lower pelvic organs 1n;1y produt'c low-ba rk neri·e prf'ss ures ·· \Tndtrn r l11ropra r1ic. suC'h a<> 1h:il prartit'\'11 hy Dr . C:ouh1re. ts kno"·n In IJI' 1nost su1·1·csstul 111 th(' 1rt'ill1nc11I ul' nHJ);rainc heao ln<'hl' ..... l'.1111 f)dls anil h<'ad :•fhl' r1•n14'tllt'" onl .\' nfli·r h ·1ll1>()r:1r} rl'hef. it ;111.)' reht•t 111 .tll e-tw-.,D.C. :.ays llr . Couture. "h•t me i.11y that ..,.,~ ~'l!1rs n1:1k1• a 1n1~l<1ke lf'Ml often or u~1n11 n[jffit',<. or 'l;ii)(']s' c)r ~t1·1nu ... l'Ond111on~ "1thout t'xpluin1n.: them Ju~t because a 11trsnn 11\,n· not know the n;imc of h•s prf)blcni. th11t d•i<'~n·l me.-i11ht·1~11 ·1C'\l)C.'tic1u:111i.:11a1n 11ni:I di.~comfort " "l '\1• lound ."' ~:1 .¥:. Ur Acrord1n i.: lo Ur f()ut ur1•. l'ou\url'. "lh;1t all 1h1• techrur.d n1ii.:r:111u· 1~ lh" n1o~t lru11l l)f"'l' l .1nc u.1~~·. UJml'~. r1•n11·1\11• ... o(h€'r11l(Jrh1· pill~. 1,.-.1 .•n1 ... ~·l(' nu•an hlll•· '" '• 7of10 Wars International report : ... Only iron-curlain-type coun- tries ,that permit the striptease dance in public houses are Ro1nania and Yugosla\ia .. In Scotland. a jury can not onl,Y relum a YCrdict of guilty or innocent. but o( "not proven,'' too . J • You knew !hat West German chil· dren go to school ~ix @ys a wee)t _until age 18. didn't you? , .• Those proverl>pronc Spanish say. "A dog with money is addressed as ri.lr. Dog." . , • The guards in the Russian prison system are army draftees . , . t.1ost Swiss holels charge a flat fee of $2 a day for dogs ... Biggest of lhe marriage months in Bulgaria is February. Am repeatedly asked if white paint is black before the can is opened. It is. And the n1iddle or a watennelon isn't red until it's cul either. CO!\tEDIANS You repeatedly hear in TV commercials the distinct ive \'Oi!'CS of dead comedians. \V. C. fields, especially. But Hugh Herbert, Bert Latlr and Ned Sparks. too. They v.-ere pretty stylish. those old boys. Relied more on their in- dividuality than on their materi<il. Ir's just the opposite with today's comedians. mostly . A client asks if the heirs of 1he bygone "its could possibly sue their imitators. All I know is }Oii can sue anybody for anything. Sevl'fl oul of JO 1vars during the last 155 years have been won by lhc Pffiple 11·ho started lhe1n. And I.hose in- stigators sufferC'd fewer battle fatalities, too, in almost eighl out of 10 of those \\'ars. QUEll lES FR0~1 CLll:.l\"TS Q. "Hov.• old is Donald Duck!'' A. He's 40. Q. "'Vhich lung is larger1" A. The right , usually. Q. "Docs a bullet get hotter or cooler after it leaves the riOe muzzlt•?" A. Coolt'r. I-lave yuu~~n under the i1npres. .. ion thal you can lose 11·cight by perspiring profusely~ Uke\\"ise . But thaf's u-rong. evident!,\'. Or so sa~'S an authorit~· 111th 1hc Food and Dn1g Adn1inislrRtion . It's thought to be the common- est m!S("OOCeplion an1011g dieters. t\ddrtss ninil to IJ. J\l. Boyd. P. 0. Bo:t J8J5, Ntw• p0rt Btacla 92660. "I.cl m1· dt''t•ribc a l)PIClll lhl· 1u•r-.11ij "ho ~uffcr' 1ron1 mlJ;ra lne :11t:u·k," hi' ~••v~ .. 11 m111r111nt• ;.iUack~ l'urely ,!IHI (.'llO start with a ho.>h\')" f~hn~ ~1rnpl,\', 1h••\ 1111\l' J lt•rrthlt• I~~~~!".~~~~!".~"-""~~!"...,.~~~!"...,.~~'.:' over lhl' l'Yt'~. The tnrliv.,idual hurd ('tl ,ind 1\'anl In rld !' ,.....,,,.,.,_.,11 g1:tnerally bt>rome.~ deprtsiM thl•1n1ol'lvc"' 1111t wllh tht' lhoui.:ht of goin" ·It.'$. my ~1 nrl'rl! hoJ>f' lhAl all through a"noth~r bout with of thti i;e 11coplc \.\'111 seek migrainl' 1·Hl'rll~l'. "'urthwh 1ll' lrt'11lmf'nl 01 rhc1r 1•nndit1nu And quitr "The pnin beglnli at thl' base hnnrstJ y, th1·1r lilt' r11 mist'rY 11' O( lh f' ~kull l\nd r11dn1tcs Or .llOlllJ: lo c11nl1nuc. :ind Ill nlost throbs. tonne or both 1h1e~ of 1·;1-.I'~ "''~l'n, 1l the.' don 't do the head Some M!nses become -.0111t't h1 n~ :itiOUt.Jt rLj?ht awa y." clltrll <'('Ult' ror 1nst•ntc, Dr toulure matnta1n~ oflh~ loud noise~ see m 1i11inru11y at Thl• Ct>uturtt Cturoprartl t' louder Tht> le:u.a. j:arrtng Or u 111rr . 26~l w,.~tclirr Ur •• 11too11ln11: ai;t11;r11 "11te_. th~ pain ,'i .. w1~·r1 llt·urh ~r.1rn<'r 171h & Rl•~k 1ip(ll.h orf11u;hc\Or lij;!·lUfil lr11 n" nt'.1r 1·01•tl'1it , Phone lilhl' l'f!Mf' bcfOfr the t'Yf>:I t.4.i ~~I Oftrn thrre 1s vomitin g." U"l AflS l!fiJ • ' Tormenting Rectal Itch Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues Promptly Relieved Jn many ~~M!I l>reparntion l·I ,tves 1>rompt, temporRry ~let from 1111ch ix1i.n :ind il r hinR nnd ar111110y ht'lfk! .11.hrink Ji\\•ellinit: of hf"1norrh<>ida l h tl· suf'11 eiu~ hv inRammntlon, TC!OU: by doctOM!. on hu.n· .. drrd.s of patient& &howf'd this to be true in m..1ny CUle9. In fa ct. m11 ny doctor&, them· L't'h'l~. US<' Prt•pornlion JI " or rf'f0 n1mt'nd it for th!'ir ft1m· iht'!'. l'rc1111r;1tion J-1 ointment o, 5up~i 1or1r"I, \lol. Net Lall 0>9. S!M1><F .09d t I'>• '·• ~nte~ .n l ,.., .. Sill 0r""9 I I .. • lo Stc!Mt!•' c.o 1 ~··-'. Siii P•<>IOO:: 16 1'•, •, SlllP'tlld wt\ 1 1 -'. ~r.:r.vC,.v~ ; 1 :~!. '• !t!••llu\1 Int I l 'o , ~1•1n""' 1n1 1l 16', -•, StHl"'f! I~ !l S l , J, !o\t!l>o• Ind 1 J I !.!e!l•I~ 1 11 . Sl~nc .:i. 118'••'• S••<11~q Ele l 1 , Stt< E•I 10 ~ l 'o-'• $"'•1Pl'K ~ ) J ••• SIHnO~l I 10 -.,, ~~og5(':",: ; 1~''" ·1 ; S!fU!hW.111 11 611-'• $<Jtl EIK . .a I ll'•• ,. ~Co 10 1'o-'• SulrvM"'18 I >o SW IAd 60 1 11'•• '• Svn•lloy Co U J'• SY~lf• C .olO l5 i.p,-" Sy KO C.0 10 I 11'·• • ', Sy1!em Enq 1 1'•-\, -TT- T•118t 88.o 1 \1'1-'• TK~ym(p I I'>'• T~ (DID 1 2'•• '• 1-<0 Wll I •'1-'• Tt•a<tY,.,.i~ • 1'3'•-'• TewiroP """ n ll"' . Tto '"" Co 1n IQ,_,-'o l t'1!•• Crp S l'-o-'. '~"""' lotl 11 ~'··· • Todwell Incl 1' ''• •, Tl!11ny 10 • • -'• '"""''°"" 5 ''•· Tr.ICM! '8<:l S 10., To•.,.·m 1'3 J p,. '• To•c~·n 1~1 J J•, , lOD1>1 (, .10 s ii, ..• lot•! Pe1rot 11'1 t l T• T<>l•IPot XI J 111. •1 Ta-.& Cl ry S 1'• T•M:O• lncp ' ' I l •..,s lu• 1 J •, T•e .. :1wy •• 1 ''•· '• Tfl\4Mo1 l• ~ I >. •, Tull M• ll!I 1 1', , .. Tu!!<O (Oii> 1 ) , •·• Tu•-¥"" \l 11 , , • T...,n F••• I S« ... ~"-UI P (p ~ 1a )•,, ·, UnaMI I Old • 11 , l}f<A!t? 103 1 •'1-•1 t}f!A\0. 011> ~ )' o • Un8•-.., "' I o-'• ""°"'5 l)'<:I • »•-'. U..F,,...,.,ln 1• J., , , U111 ,..U{to ) J o ,, US~llltr .10 11 ''• USlRll .•la 10 1_.i .... ; US l!QR "'1 1 '•-, US Not R•I 1 J'o uS~<l\lt!n 11 11". •, US R~Ot 60 J 1'1 ""'' Cioni > 1•, .. Ufll•Rtt CP J l', , , , Uri•S'l'Q ,)l • t ... uqs !.''""' 1 2•, UI ... !.qr .'O I IJ'• U\11..,wts 1l 11'•-'• -11¥- V•• 0o< 11'CI S •lo , , \'"ISIH-10. 1 t 't -, \'811tf """" , 11,. • """'~ 60 I) , ...... """° ll"I' I I', • " ... °"'~ » l "• '. ~0'1~"'r. ~ ,r: · · ...... nlfQl'l(D. 1 J -V'H opllt In 1 1·, .... ~ .. ·-· 1...: 11 1 • • • \'•~Oo 1.,.~, l 1'• V111 .. 'ilf Ent " I ''• , \I lN C.O.o 1> ''1 ' V11k..,.ln .IO 11 ''• ., -ww-w~,.KI ~1 t'1 • 1, WIC'.111 .:IQ 1 I',.-, W.+cDM .~ 1 1s•,. '• W11'11F"'~ t 1 .. '" W•rnllfC .Of II ) .. -i., WI Post .JO 1 l~ MWllll 1.JO I \I Wahco l"C 1 •• ,_ , ....... ,. ,tO!I ' "• ~°'" n ' ,. ... '· Wf"•lt Ptt II I'• 11 'I'll\! Oituill ,, ,., ...... ~\ ,.,11 10 • •G', WHI•-'" 10 11 •,_ , =::~1.: i ,~:-1, 'Mt!CO• Cilb J i\1 'o 'Mmamn 1t II '" ., <M"•···· a, ' ... _ • Wl•'IO'I........ • l • • • =~=.~ t 1~ ·; :: .... ,,......,....0 I I 1 ....... """' ,, ' . ~""l H"l 11 1 l).t• I lo WTC: ff 10 J J\o , ""~" i.ara1 ••• WWf'lf'lt 1nll I t 1 w,o S"t ~ •I ll't WyO<ft'~ll'I ~> •• ... .,., I~ I 1, ,, z,,,.,.,.,,. 1• I • , ., I I ••• • I I I I I I . • • I • I I I I I I ' ' I I I .. - . . • . . . • AMONG \ THE GREAT RCENP IST • =···-;;;.::-:........-'--~.....::·-=-~··-~···~..;:::;~~ :N-Vollveniammlunii trltt ··--• Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friend . The DAILY PILOT looks as much at home on this international newspaper rack as it does at the front door of thousands of 0 range Coast area homes where it is dropped daily. That should tell you something. It should tell you that a "home- town newspaper" can be sophisticated and still not lose touc~ with what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it's news from around the w or Id or down the block, the DAILY PILOT packages it best for you . And the simple fact is that, because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local coverage, you'll find a ·lot of stories in it you can't find in any other newspaper in the world, On this international news rack, it's among the' great ones of the world. But at home, it's the great- est one in the world (for local news). ONES [F,'ORSERVF."R .it·i ~p ~1.1~~1110 .~ -- -; • .---~ ' l . I ct.:i:ii 11 roPAOCrb -o i 'l~JH_~l ~ ( ~·~tt3RECTttH ~.~ l . ~ ..... ,.,..~~"''" ,. rr r~ .l,. I I ~~I!;'R~.,.ijiL~ SER .; j -,£J'·il~aJM·iB,!~~ ~~ !£:~ -. .. ...... .- . ..--....... i:.~-~ -· M il i'fMM t Ij ll?Ji, · DIE ~';\'ELT . . "' ..... • DAILY PILOT • " .. ... " :~: " . ,· . . ' . ' .. ".: \ '"• ·:. •, ' . . ~ 't:· ',• • . ' . "· « •• ' "' I • ' ' ' i: : . ... . ' .. .. I I l ' , -.. J2 DAILY PILDT Deaths Elsewliere HOLL YWOO~ (U PI\ Frederic W. "Ted" Conant 82. a i r c r a·r t manufacturinJ! executive and Olympic medal winning ya~htsman, died at his home Sunday after a lo ng illness. Conant, vice chal nnan of the Douglas Aircraft Corp .. ran the finn's World War ll pr.o<fuction, tuminf:l' out 30,000 aircraft for the military. Death Notice• AUUCKU&SON WISKLlff -UMY "427 E. I 7rh S1.. CC»to Mel<I 646-.4888 -·-IALTZ·&EIGllON fUNllAJ. HOMl C0tono del Mor Coito Mesa 673-9<t50 646-2424 -·-llLL &IOAOWAY MORTUARY 110 8roodwov. C<»lo Me1a 548-3"'33 -·-DILDAY &IOTHlllS MORTUARY 1791 I Beoc.h 81vd. Huntu•g•o<1 SeCJ(h 842-7771 244 Redondo A~11. t~Beoch {213)438-1145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA &EACH MOltTUMY 1795 loguM Canyon Rd. ,94-9415 -·-McCORMICK MISSION MOltTUMY 28832 Cam.no Cop•11•0~0 Son Juan Cop.1t1ono 495-1776 -·-'ACJFJC VIEW MEMORIAL 'MK Mot1uo•y Chnoel 3500 Poc•fl( v,,,-N 0.l~ Newport ~I<. Col•lo•n•O 644-2700 -·-l'llK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ' HOMf 7801 Bobo A~, Wes!mlrulef 89J.352l -·-SMITHI' MmTUMY 627 Moln St. H11n1irtg1on S.oc.h 53U539 Tlf~ NEPTUNI soe1m c..nll'lttt c,..,.. .... ..,.. W(ftl ~ ... "'"'""" •• -""' Dltnlf ... llMtle ... ...,.,..""' Tl Tiit c.ttrr lnftlWf ~ ''"'•' Cf"lttttY l)'•ttftl J4 Hew Sertk• 714-64&.7431 • . ' ' ~UEENIE , ' Bs-Phil lnterlandl Cal State Fullerton Students Feted -Bl{tsp~my Larids Ballet Scott's DELUXE MOWER • ,.._..,,.,.~.f.U , • .,1 .... « ...... ., •. • S.,...NMl,..syMiflit ...., __ -16" wiN. s559s Std, Ete<tion . 20 lllCll ROTARY MOWER • J~ ~lritfl&S.,.._ ..-.. ttwettk cMlfnl • -.. ·••"4• ............ •-•-hlly..t.. , ..... llG.'77." •6100 Side Ejection 22 INCH ROTARY MOWER • l Yi ...... ,.. 'SerlllM ... i ... . • my-lih'llfllml...,.,• 4ip 1tid.,111 ...... '-""'""°""' ...... 1wvn• llG.'lt." .,, .................... ........... ~~ ..... &Str.n....-. • sw.,.. ..... ...... _.14( ........... .. IWISP2'24 ' I Dtlu11 t 18" REEL MOWER • 21if.lfins&Stnlltell4 cycle ..... w/rtt•ll .,.. ... . • " ..... 111••"' <•tr-*•· ... rHI w/S stttl ~Wet ~· Mhty '"""" iMWM. ·-· I ' ll ' , I Star in Jail I " ''The G'fll'JIJ Growln' ,,.,,,.Spff#Altead -' Treat YOuGelf & Your lawn To A •Mower!" ..,,;,.' ' ~-~ J 1 . ... ' our lakes he's · OUr old nge, I has al J've k • Lasl when • FLORENCE SMALES MA KES FASHION EXCITING e BEA ANOERSON, Ed itor MOft41y, Marth "' 1'74 P11t lJ Lessons By JO OLSON ot JM Olltr PllOt Si.ft on Alter nearly 20 yeal"'i or describing tht' fashion scene for Orange County, you 'd think Florence Smales might be getting a little tired of it all. But she Isn't. The Newpo r t Beach resident is still booking up to 150 tashion shov.•s a season and personally taking the mike to offer commentary as the models parade do1111 the ramp. For F1orence Smales. fashion is an extensjon of her belief that "women 'A'Crc meant to be attractive. "This is a competitive 'A·orld ," she said. "It's important that a "·oman strive to be attractive and well groomed .·· Many prople only see Florence al the microphone as a fashion sho"' is in progress. but her real 'A'Ork lakes place during the v.·eek in her two modeling studios. There. she leaches \\·omen to find their best assets, take prope r care of themselves and ha\'e a Jillie "'piz2azz." Bet"A·een classes. she spends hours poring over the top fashion magazines. going to designer shows in Los Angeles and reading. reading, reading. "l try to improve myself all the time:' she said. WARDROBE In her classes she teaches proportion. line, color and accessorizing. "It's amazing how m3ny women don't kno"· how to put a wardrobe together. A wardrobe should be small but complete. It's OOw you put it together," she explained. Modeling is somewhat different now than when Florence took her first classes around 20 years ago. "\Vhen I 'A·as laught 'A"(' 1\·erc very demonstrative." she said. ··\Ve don't do that any more. \\·e·rc very quiet in our modeling now. We 'A'ant them (the guests) to really k>ok at the out.lits. "At some sho'A-s there is 11 lot of dancing. Some is okay as long as h doesn't detract" In opite cl. Ill lie pressures and lcq hours (her 10wj; IW become Iler recre.atioo), F1orence affirmed that she wooldn't Ira.le her ~ foc aiy ottier. Love Fulfilling A!J a child In Cheroket. Iowa, she li kOO pretty clothes. f-ler physic1e.n-surgeon fat her v.·ould often say, "\\'here did sh1• come front~" as she dressed up ui hrr best outfits. As a young mot her In Fullenon she c.ften bought clot.hes at ooe particular shop. She was asked by the ov.·ncr once v.·hy she didn't model since lhe ··clothes fil you so nicely and you ha\'e a nair. ·• "She talked ffi(' into it and I enjoyt·d it." Florence s.:iid. •·Then I look a modclUlg course in Long &a{·h." Pl'.'\01-HITIER A modeling agency open('(! in San!" Ana and Florcncc the }'Oun~ n1odt') 1rorked for -her. !hen startrd to help teach courses. Then, the oY.ner hcca1nc ill and Florence v•as called to eon1n1cn - ta1e her' rirsl st\011·. "I wa s terriricd." she admiucd. "I \\'as told J 'd ha,·e to and I did. It \.\'<JS a fiasco, I just read everything the 111odl'ls \\'rot1• on the cards. Today. I ad-lib my shows.·· The owner of the agency became quJ\<' Ill and Florencc had to comn1C'nl"ate all the :sho\.l'S. She started do ing a lot or reading on fashion and decided it \l'CIS feas ible 10 open her 011n S<.'hool ;ind agency in Anaheim. florcnce believes she and h.:r th1•n partn<·r. Verna l\lillt'r. v:t'rr the first to push fas hion sho\.l'S as fund-rai sers son11· 20 years ago in Orange County. Dul the hC'Jrt of rlorenc~·s \\'Ork IS in J. Before a show, Florence Smales puts finishing touches on model Val Jackson I left ) and Cathy Larsen I above). thl' classroo1n \.\·here she-n1ft'l'i '.rome n frotn all 1\•alks of hfe "·ho are searching for n llC'I\' ou tlook on l1!e. '"There arr a lot of troubl('({ propll' t<>:da~·." sh1· said, '"and thr dhorl'\' rate is htt;h. A 101 of fN..-Ople conH .. • 1n here def!a!rd \\"e can g1\·e thcin :i nc1v out- look Tl-:.\Cll[S LO\"E .. [ also teach spiritual bC'auly. Thry n11.s1 00 beautiful inside. I teach love in this school. They must get t h e r.:St'nlnicnts and hate all out and try lo 101 1• onr another. I teach thetn to look for the good in c1·\'ry<l~t»" Thl' h1i:h poinr i~ hrr life is Sunday, a d;i\' \\hlrh bi.•gtns 11·ith <11ll'nd:1 ncr flt Cal\'ary (.'hap1.'!. and ends \l"ilh <1 \'JSil ro ht•r st·vrn grandchildren in ClarC'1nont. '"I don't ha\"C rccrca11on." shr said. "I never n11ss church. and I "·ork 13 hours a day. Other than that, I rC'ad and \.l'atch , TV occasionally."' i\s she hils lcamlil to b(' St'lect~·e ahout the cloth"~ she buys ~ ··1 used to buy too manv-at first I r~11 like I had to ha\'l' eve.ryth1ng" I. shC' has le:imed to be selecr1ve about ]1()1r .she s}X'nd:, her 1in1c. ;..10.!lt of all shC' \1·an1s lo grO\I' and ht'lp nlht<rS find s:1t1sfact1on as she finds happiness Ul hl•r O'Atl hfl". '"E1·crythin~ in life 1s <flanging." she ~nid .. \\"t• should ~ro11· \\'l' should kC'f'µ our mind s alert. \\"ornen 'A'C're tlll'illll to be a1tract1ve. Fashion is a pan of that."' Mrs. Robinson Not This Mother's Name DEAR ANN : I'm 37, lhe mother of a beauutu! teen-age daughter wh:> comes by heT lool<s natunlly. (I wu a finalist in a naUonal beauty contest in the late. 'SO.). Wo look more like s!sten than tmt.her and daughter. · Like. many other women, I do my howicwork in the nude. When the v.'"e&lher is pleesant I slip out ror a skinny-dip in our .ecludcd. private pool. ~1y husband takes frequent business trips but when he's borne he often jo~ -· our daughter has a hand90l1le 17·)'t'ar- old boyrrtend. Jn spitt or Rick's tender age. I find mytelf ouracted to him. He ha.5 always tre•ted me with retpect and I've kcpl my infa tuation well concealt'd. La.11 week r was enjoying a nudie swim wh'n RJck suddenly appeared at the side of the pool. l was speechles.s with embarrassment. To make me feel "at ease/' be.calmly disrobed and jOined me. Rici. is built like a Greek god and ~"e cavorted playfully in reddess·abandon. It ended when he ~ me in a way that made my head twirl. Now ruck wants me to be his "l\.1rs. RobinsoQ." arguing that many mkldle-- aged "°men have young lovers. I'm tempted, but scared to death. lf my da~er found out she'd be furk>us. t bave a 33-year~ld divoroed neighbor who would be crazy about Rick. "l\·e thought cl. Introducing Uiem to get him off my trill. In tile meantime I'm having nightmares. I haven't ~ skinny- dipping !Ince. This letl<r ls no Jijilny from Yal~. It's a REAL problem, and I need help in -ltlARlN COU~'TY DEAR MARIN: ID:flN"th Rkll: that ht is DOt welcome lo drop aNIUDd your pool imlnvUed. Wbea be comes to see your daagbter, gtt lost, 1\la. And don't Introduce him to aoybody. I'll bet this kid already knows se\·tral mldtllt>-aged womtn. Let's hope R.lck doesn't have a loose lip or you coo.ld be l.n for the baple of your Ufe. DEAR ANN ~DERS : What do you think of t.he recent ~ project. 'A1tlch revealed that men \\'ho smoke pipes are viewed by \\'Omen as "sexier, superior intellects, more. mature, sincere, attractive. slable and masculine"1 This survey '1''89 conducted by a l~I po)'Chology lnsljtute. can a plre giro a ............ 1 ,4_•_.t~--~ man all IOOse enviable qualities? -BAY AREA ANN FAN DEAR DAV : A pipe can't give a men ANY of Ulose enviable . qualltles. The sun·ey merely •ttld -.-·omen vtEW men •·ho smtke pipes 11 ••1uJer, superl.>r Intellects, etc." Did yoa kno• tbe restart.ti pro}ttt was coihhtlo loatd by a pipe manu(acllll"er in Burlingame? ) DEAR AXN LAi\bERS: I've been reading your column !or 20 yea rs and you are a quack. ~ly diagnosis is based oo a detailed computerized analysis. You have prod uced only 79 orlginal ans·wers since 1953. Sincc.,you write sc.•vcn days a "'--c.k, this means you gi\'e only one 'oone_g to- goodnes.$ reply C\'Cry 93 d11ys. The other 92 days you sneak by 'A'lth "seek professional help" or ··$ce your clergyman"' or ··you )'ale g11y3 make me sick. Knock 1t off." You ar(' a phony. - CLOSE OBSERVER DEAR C.O.: l'\'t been 1A·rlttr.g: this f'Otumn for 18 ~·ears, not !O. Among your otbtt ''glfi.s ·· art you also a claln'O\·ant~ You'd have to be to Stt me comln( tl'·o years btfore I appeared. I~ alcoholism ruining your life~ Kilo\\' the danger signals and what lo do. Read the booklet, "Alcohojism -Hope Md ltelp, ".by Anrt l;anders. Enclo~ 35 cc:nt1 in coin 'Aith you r request and a long. !lamped, sclf·addres.'led cn\'C)oPe 10 1\rui Landt>rs, PO. Bo;i; 3346, 222 \\1 . !Jank Dr., Oiicagu, Ill. ~. • ' .. J4 DAILY PILOT Mo~ay, M.11ch 25, 1974 ". ' '.J • ff ,_ .. .. • Ht ,. • • • In Tune For 50 Years MR. AND MRS. HANS PAULSEN ) . Leo Gets Hint TUESDAY MARCH 26 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21·April 19): AcoMt it on mmey, penonel ~. payments and a>llections. Budget ts "' be omidered in special purchase lnvolv~ gift or luxury item. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Lunar cycle is high and your judgment, tim1ng are on target. Know it and take in- itiative. Make oew starts. con· taets. Yoo can set your o"·n pace so be a self·startcr. , GEt.llNI (~1ay 21·J unc 2\l 1: Emphasis is on illusion, film. special effort \\'hich ltakes pl.ace behind the scenes. You gain infonnat ion which can be turned to profit . CANCER (June 21·July 22 ): Accent is on r ri end ship , romantic interlude, hopes and desires. Aries , l.Jl;lra could be involved~ Gain shown through recent professional contact. Lt.;Q (July 23-Aug. 22): Study Canctr message for Im- por tant hint. Deal w i t h persons who pull strings. Bypass underlings wOO would wrap you in maze or red tape. VlRGO IAug. 23-Sept. 221: tial. Long·range \"ieW Is «in· struct.ive. Catch up on call.St comspoodeoo! . LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 221: Dig deep foe Jnlormatloo aixlut time and motion. YOU have rJght to be, knowledgeable about oosts, ex· penses. sa>RPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 1: Lie .low. Play waiting game. Check details. Be aware of subtle nuances. Empha.si:!! is oo agreement. ' SAGmARlUS /Nov . 22· Dec. 2l J: Don't attempt too much. too soon. Conserve energy. YO\l may be pushing yourself. Slow do""11 moderate pace. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 191: Somedesiresarefulfllled. Don't play games where tmo- tions are concerned. You could beo>me inertricably involved. This may be a positive ractc:r. AQUARIUS (Jan. •20-Feb. 18): You may find yourselr dealing \\'iU.. one who is stub-- born. Yoo are no slouch in this dci>artment, either. Key now is to concentrate on basic is.wes. PISCES (Feb. !~Mardi 20): J An Indian bison kill site in Nebraska By CAROL MOORE Of rlMt o.llY f'llof "'" The musicians playl'd al the train sta- tion. too, for campaign whistle stop.s by Roosevelt and "that other guy from Kansas." Thei r site is now a supe.nnarket. The faithful frau would rather sway to the music than remember thilt. Look beymd Ule immediate. Become more aware of pot.ecr Emphasis is on visits , relatives, close neighbors and can be transformed intA:I viable acti~. (above) is an ongoing survey and excavation project. Total solar eclipse can be viewed in Australia. As the foot taps and the fiddle zings, you can tell lians Paulsen made the right decisions 50 years ago. But he most enjoys recalling \\1len Mary Pickford was supposed to fall into ·lhe orchestra pit in "Taming of the Shrew," missed her landing pad and landed in the bass drum. Paulsen switches from a Swedish palka 1---------------------- 10 an American hoedown ditty to an J{e had been an Itinerant dairy farmhand and steel carrier sinCe coming from Gennany in 1921. Mu.sic was his love: however the $100 unlon fee wasn·t feasible. operatic aria. He has played for Harbor Area restaurants and is always ready for SPllHG SAL.I ¥111'"'"#oo;ldShldM ......... ., ............................ ,., ...... ,., ,. ,. , •• 1$11. Ol'F a party -"as soon as I wann up my r,.,_....i~ ...................................................... 1~0FF fingers." ~Fabt>cl .••.•........••..•.....•..••......••••....••.•••••.•••••. 11.ooYo OFF Pl ..... ~Catpel .•••.•.••.•.....•..........••.....•. ······•··~·· ......... 11.tl!YD. Sometimes the practicing gets to Mrs. uG'U~Mz-'1f.CH"OO-iit0as Amateurs Join Scientific Treks "When an Army recruiter said I could WaY in the band, I quit roving. We wenl to Jo'ort Douglas in Salt Lake City and the best thing or all ... I met my wife," he said. Or the time Pat .Nixon \\•as an extra in ''Becky Sharp." Or when Ho\1'<1rd Hughes made "Hell"s Angel" all over in sound, shelving the silent version before release. Paulsen but her husband is prepared 1030s o-i .....,..or <:..11 ~Forr,..E11.,..1eo111>Sou1"-"~CQurltJ with a mattress that props up against the !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!:'.~~ door for sound·proofing. f()r a vacation this year, y.1Jy not try something different? •low about a trip to Perth in west.em Australia in mid-June to observe a total solar eclipse? Perhaps excavating a n d surveying a n unplundered Bronze Age cairn complex near Glasgow is more your style. To support Lina he sayed in the military. band three years. windin g up in 1 Los Angeles where he started playing tuba, bass and fiddle in movie studios. He was part of the music for Nelson Eddy and Jeanette Mat.:nald in "Bit· tersweet" and "Donkey renade," Bing Crosby in "Going My ay" and Mario Lanza in "Great Caruso." Perhaps the best jobs were the studio parties on the beach at Santa Monica with the Marx brothers cavorting around the dignitaries and bottles of soot.ch by each bandsman's chair. Mrs. Paulsen remembers those heydays too, but her favorite times were at their home in Baldwin Park with 21 goats to feed by the bottle, ducks, geese, chickens and turkeys -so idyllic like her native Germany. Today the music wanders through more nationalities, "Marseilles," "Blue Danube," "Lara's Theme" and "Return to Sorrento." The.re will be many more songs and pa.Mies to be enjoyed by son, John Paulsen of Granada Hills. daughter Dolotcs Bradfield of Huntington Beach and six grandchildren who saluted the Costa ~Icsa residents on their goJden \\'edding anniversary. WC. · THE WATER CLOSET INCOMPARABLE BATH DESIGN 428 31 st STREET CANNERY VILLAGE NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA Maybe you'd prefer an archaelogical investigation of the Neolithic and Iron Age periods in Kenya. Or a destination closer to home might be more appealing ... say Nebr.aska to survey and excavate an early lndian bison kill site. Programs Interest Workshop -~~BRI~~ 1, .. Soond like ads from a travel brochure? They're not. EXPEDmONS However, they are listed among 45 available field exped!Uoos. arranged b y F.ducationaJ Expeditions In- ternational, a non-profit or· ganizaUon that coordinates f'leld research projects for scientists. Tt is based in Massachusetts \•,ith offices in Newport Beach. "These expeditions are not for tourists, nor are they educational outings," cla imed Cynthia Citron, a rounder woo was in Newport B e a c h promoting the p-ogram. Open to men and women of ~ eJI ages, the excursions bring together scientis t s and amateur participants, sh e explained. "No profe8.'looal quallficailons are requ ired." PERSONAL GUIDANCE Participants are t a u g h t what they need to kno\I: to be productive, t.1rs. C i t r o n cootinued. Under p e r s o n a I guidance, team members nre instructed i n fi e ld metmdQlogy, lncluding the use of instruments. tools and equipment, surveying :1 n d mapping techniques, co!IN:ting and sampling and o t h c r rcle\'ant ac tivi ties. ~!rs. Cit~. "'ho also ,,·orks fulf-time ln the public rC'lations department al Bost o n University, said that scientific re5earch all over the \\"Orld is being ftmde<I by dedica!ed ho us C\Vives. businessmen . !'!tudenl$ a n d professional pl'Qpl('. • .. Am atE'UJ'S arc (\hargerl from $490 to $1190 '''hlch subsidizes Cynthi•. Citron had been on so many expeditions. We t h o u g h t organizing expedilions would be a good way to meet both the needs of scientists and the public. "When ~'C first conceived the idea ," she said, "the hardest job was convinc ing leading scientists that amateurs without tr a in ins: could be useful. ''Now many say they can accomplish far more with amateurs. After all, they take part because of s t r o n g involvement and desire for learning, and they work with more dcdicalion than the ordinary paid hand.'' PARTICIPANTS Women educational leaders are invited to aUend an all-day workstlop for i m p r o v i n g communication tedmiques. The sessioo will be conducted Saturday, March 30, in the Balboa Bay Club wlth Dr. Theodora Wells. an organizational analyst and U-aining consultant as keynoter. Boys Club Family Nights Italian Style i:!I planned by thE" \Vornen's Auxiliary or the 11arbor Area Boys Clul>. The fund·raiser \\'iii begin at 5:30 p.m. 'lbursday, !\larch 28, in the American Legioo !~all, Newport Beach. Tickets may be purehased at the door. .. Women Those participating range in \Vhy women arc diss.1tisfil'<l nge from 17 to 72. Sometimes with their gynerologisls v.·ill entire families take part, and be discussed on the pro:rram often after the expedition is Women to be aired on KOCE· concluded many will extend TV 's Channel 50 at ~ p.m. the ir time to tr ave I Thlll'Sday. J\farch 28. independently in the country, Speaking \\'i ll be Barbara r.1rs . Citron s.1id. Seaman. author of "Free and ~1;iny joining expeditions Female" and "111e Doctor"s thii; ~·ear h11vc been on others Case Against the Pill." and and th<'Y drscribc their trlµs _Ellen Frankfort. Vi!l ai:i:e Voicf' as the '"greatest <'Xpcrienrc of health colwnnist and author of their lives.'' she c\au11cd. "Vaginal Politics." D \ s c i p J i n e s i n elude -;::=========:; archaeology, both mode rn and prehis\oric astronomy. marine biology. geology. <'('(!logy and \'U!canolog~·. Srlcnti~t ll n d team lc;iders repre5Cnt some 26 lt>ading institutions in the world, she s.1id Sunday is FlltlE>AY' f'XpcdHions. she explained,,;;;======-.;;::;;;::;===="'"-,.;======,-11 "Th<"Y pay to \\'Ork hard as 11 mc1ntx>rs or field 11·ams in excllange for training in tiasic SC]CfK'(' !('Chni r1ues 11nd the ad\·l'fl!UJ'(' of <'11n1µlng out in rrn-iotc mmcrs oi th<' earth." ~::El \\·as ('(rfound·'<I hy her :ind her husb,1n{t. Hnbt.•rl , a scil'ntifie adn1in1 ~tr."lto:· for the Smith.~ooian lns1it\1~1on . NEEDS ~1ET "\Ye have llvcrl nil ovl'J' lhe .work!. and he thC'r husband I dirL A Vemon·s SPORTSWEAR THINK OF ELECTROLYSIS AS PCRMANENTLY ARCHED BROWS . AN INT~I GUtNG w1oow's PEAi<. THC. END OF' Uf1\VANTEO f'ACIAL.. HAIR. THCN L..ET OUR ' L I CC:NS£0 TECHN ICIAN S HOW YOU HOW SAFC ANO CASY IT IS. , IN OUR DCAUTY S ALON. .. .. Betting on Generosity l·lalecrest Park clubhouse, Costa !\1esa will be trans- formed. into a gambling casino by T\VA Clipped \Vings or Orange County for the annual Las Vegas ?>.-fard i Gras, scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, !\larch 30. t1rs. Ron Barnett (left) and Mrs. James Ahder- son say a sure -bet is charity, as proceeds go to the l-lun1an Growth Foundatton.. RENT A RUG DOCTOR "STEAM" CARPET CLEANER ' DELIVERY AVAILABLE to most areas, or you pick up at our store. 10 MINUTES FREE INSTRUCTION shows yo. l119 Doctor It Nf• & ff'Y fO orrote OS 0 'l'OCIUllll cleo11•r, one ffleft or WOl'IOll con opl'rClfo It or 'ako It 11p a11d dow11 stoltJ. REALLY CLEANS CARPET ..ltttl of ftt ''""' 1 ...... dirt, whkli h cofffftff 111 t.M1 • d11111pff 4ow11 111,..1 .. SAVES YOU MONEY 4 Hrs. for $12.50 CMt Is -c• 1 .. ttio11 lilrl119 24 Hrs. for $20.00 Co,,._ ''""' Cloonor. ' 6 P.M. to 8 A.M.· $12.50 RUG DQCTOR RENTS IN ORANG.I COUNTY IN LOS ANQ.lllS (714) 179-7844 1213) 423°0454 WftkOff ~1• 111 Mftkw '"'~ 1212 S. 1ri1t.f, S...tti AN 10•1 I . ArtHI•. Leitt a.ere~ ,._,.n '"'" ••IN.I IJl•fMI L--------------------"' ._ ________ _., 11-----0l'IN I ·• MON. THOU SAT, _____ _. ) ' • '·. .. .. :~ " " \ •. -·. . I .. ~ ··--...... wrrn EASTER IN MIND •AIRLAWN LENO PRINTS •SHEER VOILE PRINTS •NYLON DOTTED SWISS •FLOCK CHECK -FANCIES ·e SPARKLE ORGANZA •SHEER CREPE PRINTS •SEERSUCKER PLAIDS •NOVELTY SUITINGS •.SUPER SCREEN PRINTS •EMBROIDERED EYELETS 1~. 1~ 169 Yd. 1~ .. 198 Yd. 2~ 2~. 2 ~. &. lll) A SPRING FRESH COLLECTION OF NEW COLO~S. DES1GN§ AND COM9\NATIONS ON FABRICS JUST RIGHT F"OR NOW ANO EASTER SEWING. COTTONS. COTTON/POLYESTERS. NYLONS AND BLENDS. •4'"/il5 " WIDE. ALL ARE WASHABLE RDulJlt l(,nlt MATCH-MATES STAR STITCH 498 Yd. MATCHING SOLIDS 398 Yd. A NEW CONCCPT IN POLYESTER OOUBLC KNITS IS 'PRESENTED IN l'1E.SE RITZ CREPE MA'fC:H• UPS. GREAT FOR ANY TWO PIECE OUTPIT, MACHINE 'f¥ASH, TUM9L£ ORY 98"/10" WIDE liHOUSE .oF F!IBRICS • always first quality fabr ics · Solrth Coosf PltrlO ............ "'""""' trio ......... Cottc1Mt..-54S.158' Sant•~S4J.5551 0.-.foirMolt _,_.C ...... O.z91 .. p_,..._ '"°_"'._ FWlnfOll SJ .. ZZJ4 1-Pft-IZWJZJ \ CScrdM Gro•o -11111.........,. lod ..•• -.1 -SJ0-1542 Hwilktgiton~tt-....,.~..._....._., .. -lt7 .. 0ll ' ) MIXED SINGLES t l ! ! • JOV, I/OU LOO< Af i!CO>!te #Jo 51.£ A ~G 51eoHG WoNO· ~ f0016ALL 51Ae ... 1 MUTT AND JEFF 0 Sor I LOO~ M ~IM AND l S&e A £.1f1U SO<I AF~AID OF 11b1NG ~LJ~T! • -' ., -• ! 1 • , by Tom K. Ryan WI! WILL. NO'T P16NIFV VOUR llEMAllKS WITH A ll&l'L'(, S'lllPIP! SO FL.AKl!·OFF ANP PROP PEAP! bv Al Smith DOOLErs WORLD ___ _ COME ON , fr'\A)(! TIM E" 7b 6E-r UP! Dr. SMOCK SAY, Pfl. SMOCK. MA.Ve YOU 5 1551>J M.V -MR. 1"UFF=°'r' .. ;' 1":, \ . • GORDO RCMEMBE.R I T~E" EARLY Bl'?D 6E'"fS ~E Wor<M ! -l • \.OSIMG -Mf:Z. -rui=:~v · C0UL-t7 r:?LJ1N MY 17AY. y •l(i.lOW .1 DAILY PILOT J5 by ltOCJer Bradfleid 1 COllLD NEVER llNDER>TAND HOW 1HE (ARLY E!IRD COUlD FACE SOMETHI NG LIKE 1 HA"f f\RSr TMt f.J6 I N 'f>lf MOR ... ING by Geor<Je Lemont Qj.JL-V '10C.,-O(:l IN "1"Mf: WOF<L-P WHO'S NAMEC" H IS SCSO!u & ei.RuSH .' HERE, I.ST ME §HOW YOU HOW TO T URN CORNERS! FIGMENTS • 11 ·1n L. .=='1 NANCY STARTING TOD.._V. I'LL NEVER SPEAK TO NANCY _, AGAIN AS .>. I.ONG AS I LIVE ,. , ... "'" ... ,, .... ., .•• ,,c-... •··-·· ....... - ·-@~ER~ SHE C OMES NOW WITH A B AG . 0~ CANDY ( _(6_, .. . ' 0 -... TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE (\CROSS 44 Appeor smootn 1 Blood: 46 Hubbubs Prehx 47 ~·1 1ck ed 4 Change' .ig Before ovE:r !o lil 50 ::iecure 9 Checks . 5 I Hindu the co11·s<: qoddess al .~2 Traop1ng 14 Eggs device 15 G11r.din.3 :..4 Kinde! IOOlh ::a.ind t6 \'V1gwam ~ ~·fl Had a rel~1•Y'l m!!a l Ji Clerp·; •,;,·1'; ttl Orinoco 1es1dc1 n::c • 1r1butary 19 Join o 1 Encou1agc 20 Blue· 62 Takes ·pencils ou1 2 1 Elec1.Eng. 64 Reacted degree to a pain 22 Rudimenta1y 2 worGs planl part 66 On the • 23 Loved !ell 24 Dear 67 Eu1opean Stang b11d. Var. 26 The 68 ln\'I · buttocks Reliel 29 Be In debt Org 31 Negative 69 --- word COCIC 32 Work : 70 Oeles Prehx opposites 33 Sou1nem 7 1 Ellolos1ve stale: compound 1nlormal 36 Grain spikes 38 Fr.ar* Buchmarls org . 39 Cash sale •lit> 4 1 Loilored 43 Feline ' ' .. . " 20 DOWN 1 Was con It dent 2 'Escaoo by deceit 3 Glrrs oamo ' 6 " r " •' ~Jtu•dJy s Puzzle SoNed 4 Andy s 28 Thorough!ares friend 30 Forsaken 5 Spanish child lord 33 Curved 6 Te•JS 34 Go away · shnnc 35 Cataiysl 7 Whe1e 37 B!acktnorn headhnes 40 Cyclone~ are. 2 42 Smalt wo1C1s 45 Break. down 8 Aboreal trom use· :? trog· 2 words worcJs 48 Volume 9 C1garbutt un11s 10 Permanence 53 Spur • ot pos111on 55 .. t nave --- ' t Skin ·-!. 12 Came 56 Motorists toge tiler maneuver 13 Take note 57 Station ol 59 Tnis: So. 18 Flash la"l>: 61 Building lntormal wings 24 Syna-62 Foal's gogues parent 25 Weird • 6J Army Post 27 Give Office consent 65 Wager 7 ' :;; ' ,, " 12 IJ ,f;· 16 " " j 17 21 l t'JAS 1-/0P!iJ& VOl)10 00 T/.IAJ! MOON MULLINS ~~--.. by Ferd Johnsan WHAT ARE Yow TALl<'.IN<i ABOUT? I'M FINE, RE,ALLY, IT WAS A "\'RIAL RUN, YOO SILLYTH IN<S ·· I WAS RoAPING WHAT l'O Po IN CASE: OF A SoRIOLlS ACCI DENT. ?'\"'-~ by Ernie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS · by ROCJer Bollen STARTING TOMORROW. I 'LL NEVER SPEAK TO NANCY AGAIN AS LONG AS I LIVE _ .. --·- .r•••r-""'"~"-...-.... I 'M 434 qfAR5 Ol.D, l.Yl.E • TO llJ~AT 00 'IOU /IITTRIB!)TE 400R l.ONGE'/IT4? PEANUTS by Charles M. Schuh ~~~~~~~....:... A 'S .>ND 6'5 "" 60;liN6 JUDGE PARKER R EMIZING TH.4.T LE~T'f STRANO WILL f'IOT KEEP 1'115 ENO OF THE &AR.GAIN . UNT\L l'\E HAS eEEN PAIO $50,000, WAKEMAN -RELUCTANTLY AC::i REES! MISS PEACH LOOK. WAKEMAN . ., ;usr TELL 't"OUR SISTER I WON'T TAL!<. TO NOBODY UNTIL SHE COMES UP WITH TH~T GR.EEN: J;;---<!f [ O~AY ... 1T'S A DEAL ... 6UT Tl"E D. A. IS SUPPOSED TO COME 1.>P kERE TO SEE ME TODAY! SUPPOSE HE WANTS TO TALK TO '10U '? l "°A A901.AT THIS PAli1'AN0LA o,: YOlAlr?, IN Wl-llC H 't'OtA F'-EL.1 THAT E V~YQNE 147 YOU R f.NEMY AND OIA T TO 6 &.f YOU, L.ET ME ~AY fHAT !.., FOi' O~E., AM YQIAI;: FJtiENO. IN FA ,'F, 1 AM A '1.INICAL. P!CY'MO~O(;ilST ; i c:J 1-! ~ • c • r. 1"~A INEO i O MEAK OU T VOi.i il FliAK~, A""D TO MEl.P Yc:lr.A L.lNDf~Sf.ANO fHAT VO~I< •E;o;.o; ARE BASELESS ANO W!T~OLA't--SIABSTANCf. \~PS~~~~. ~1~S-r~]=;------~. • KEENO's BEAUTIFUL ASStsTANT VM:lM ME USED TO OUTLINE WITM KNIVES ·WOllOEJIWMERE SHE IS? "ES. SNECOJlDIE. MEl.PFU -TEVSI MAPPENEO TO MER? ) A:JI _,J I \ , I .) ~-11'~ '~-! - by Harold Le Doux Jll5T SAY Tf1 A.T I WANT TO Tl'llNI<. T1-11NGS OUT BEFORE MAi<ING ANY COMMEl'!Tf:>.,. TkAT kE 5!-IOULO COME BACK L!KE. !NA WEEK! by Mell Ali, HA! 'TliAT'S .. WHAT 'TH!Y Al.I. ~A'I !! --[ "[ ''l'n1 l;'lad you'rr hack -it's so nice to be able to talk tn !'Omt'oflc ,\·ho isn't on a new dil't." DENNIS THE MENACE • !rs JUST Q><E Of l\lEM OAYS WHEN SllE FLI ES (Jf T~~ HANDLES A~ EVERY UTTl~ T~I~ • ' DAJLY PILOT "1ondar, Miltth 25, 1974 NC State Guns GREENBORO, N.C. (AP) -Tommy Burleson , a lonesome pine from the mountains of western North Carolina, Is the center on the North Carolina State basketball teain that is rahked No. I netlonally end tonight meets thif'd..ranked Pi1arquette for the NCAA dwmpionship. l~e. comes from the town of Newland and )\es earned the nickname or "Newland Needle." inspired by the £act On TV Toulght Cha111lel 4 •t 6 that, although he is the tallest man playing major college basketball, he ca1Ties only 235 pounds <ln his frame. At limes he has been maligned for awkward, sul>-par performances, such as · a game early this season against rugged ~taryland in which he went 3-for-19 for the floor. •le plays with great intensity and iln occasion tumo\'ers and other errors have led to still more mistakes. But in his last five games, all under tournament pressure, the Needle has bff"rl l:hrcadlng-h\s -v:ay-t h r o u g h opponents in a manner that at times has been awesome. Over the 25-game regular season f)f the \Volfpack he averaged 17.3 points; ll.7 rebounds: 67.4 pereenl from the foul line, and .512 from the floor. announced three weeks ago. a few days before the sturt of the ACC toumamenl, Burleson has been playing like a man possessed. Uke a man g r i m I y determined lo prove a poinl and show up lhe selectors. 1be last five games ~·ere against Virginia and Maryland in the. ACC tournament ; Providence and Pillsburgh in the NCAA Eas!em Regionals, and UCLA· in lhc national .semi-finals Sa1urday. Over the five'game span, Burle!IOI\ has averaged 23 point&, 14.S rebounds and shots .516 from the floor. all better than his ZS.game regular season effort. And COMlder some o( the people arrayed agalruit him in those games - All-American types such u Len Elmore of Maryland, Marvin Barnes of Provid~ce and UCLA's Bill WaJton. Burleson averaged 34 minutes playing time in the five tournament games, with a high or 42 in the 56-minute double over- time victory over UCLA. The WoUpa<!.k, No. 1 in the nation and 29-1 on the season with a 27-game -winning streak, b averaging 92 poinU a game. ritarquette, ranked No. 3 on a 2&-4 record, traditionally has been a defensive leader under A1 McGuire, who regards his swarming defense as part of his o(fense. JERRY PROCTOR SKIES HIGH ON HIS 27·H'• LONG JUMP SUNOAY AT UC IRVINE. Rebuffed by sports writers who relegated him to a second team berth on the All·Atlantic Coast Conference team His Warriors are lM-11 for their last four seasons. In those 115 games they have yielded more than 75 points only l l times, twice in overtime games. Sports in Brief King·s Demolish Seals; Pack Favored by 10112 OAKLAND -All three members of center Butch Goring's line scored in the second period as the Los Angeles Kings demolished the CalUorni<l Seals 7·1 in a Natiooal Hockey League game Stmday. 1be Kings, '4'ho stretched their non- losing string lo 11 games; held lhird place in the NHL's West Divisioo with 72 points. e Park f'avo,.ed RENO -A bookmaker here has installed North carollna State as a 10'~ fa\'Orite to defeat ~larquttte ·tonight for the NCAA basketball title. e A 11ge b Romp PALi\-1 SPRI NGS -"I've been ho1 before but never anything like this ,"' Charlie Sands said. , Sands had a right to be astounded. lte had jusl crasht'd a grand-slam homer and a double and raised his sp ring ba tti ng average to .615 Sunday as the qB.lifomia Angels crushed the Mil~·aukee Bmvers. 15-2. His four rbi gave him a spring total of 12. tops on the club. "I can't explain il I'm ju.st swinging tbe bat ·good," said Sands. who counts among his hits four home runs. The Angels as a team had just one hon1er all last spring. bases-loaded single in the eighth inning Sunday broke a scoreless tie and sparked Los Angeles to a 3..0 victory over the Houston Astros. the. Dodgers' eighth straight exhibitloo baseba.11 triwnph. Don Sutton and former Dodger Claude Osteen due.JOO through seven innings, Osteen giving up only one hit and Sutton three. e Valb11e11a Sharp TOKYO -Former Fountain Valley I Ugh and Or11nge Coast College star Gary Valbuena 1ean1ed "ith Dallas Cowboys slandout Hoh Hayes in leadi ng the United States All-.0:1ars to a 12-10 football victory oVer a Japanese All-star contingent Sund a,\'. ''afbuen:i tossed a 10-~·ard touchdO\vn pass to (·nd John Singal early in l he tbird quarter alter hitting llayes Y.ith a 20-yard strike to set up t"t.~rc. ~A CT'O\lo'd of 40.000 viewed the game. e S11spe11•lo11 Failed JOHANNESBURG. SOtllh Africa American race driver Peter Revson died ~o<·ccr Hooligans ~ar Stinday tilts ~\ULAN. Holy IAPI ..... Socce r hOoh ganism. v"hie'11 had flare<! up 1n some [~/ian n1:ttor le<11tU<' ~1ad1ums l\10 '4'eeks ~io. again 1narmJ ~m(' matches spnday. as the result or a mechanical fa :lure rather than a drivtng error, according to UOP Shadow team manager Tony Southgate. Southgate said Sunday {hat the exact cause of the accident had not been determined but error on Revson's part has been ruled out. The 35-year-0ld driver was killed Friday "''hen the front end suspension ~ his racer apparently failed and the car slammed into a steel barrier ~uring practice for the March 30 South African Grand Prix. e l\'IT lo Pu,.d11 ~ NE\\' YORK -John Garrett and Frank Kendrick contributed th c i r cxpcctl'd scoring allotment but it was a strong second-half periormance from the bench that helped Purdue defeat Utah ffl· 61 Sunday and capture the National Invitation Tournament title. Boston College defeated Jacksonvllle 81-n in the consolation game. e V .S. Team WI"• WUBWA.i'lA, Yugoslavia -The United States national hockey team. getting two goals from Dean Talafous of the Lniversily of \\'isconsin, defeated Norway, >J. Stmday for its third straight victory in the \\'orld C'hampionships B Tournament. A'I"LA.NTA -Cale Yarborough hounded front-runner David Pearson from the start and finally caught him with just over 100 miles to go to win Sunday's AUanta 500 Grand National stock car race. Third place went to Buddy Baker in a Dodge, fourth to George Follmer in a Ford and fifth to Donnie Allison in a Chevrolet. Richard Peuy was sixth. Yarborough ~·ho won $ 2 6, 9 5 o. completed the 294 laps in 3 hours 17 minutes and 26 seconds. His average speed was 136.910 miles an hour. e Ashe Defealed TUCSON -.John Nel\'l'Ombe stormed back from a G-4 deficit in the second set to y.•in his 13th comccutive match and the $25,000 Tucson tennis championship. The 29-year-0ld Australian topped Arthur Ashe, 6-3, 7-6. Sur.tay sher forcing the second set into a tie-breaker which he v;on 7·5. e Co1n1or• Triumph• SALT LAKE CITY -TO!>'....i.d ..J'unmy. Connors de.!cated Jlo. -3 Seed Vitas-Gm.ilaiti! to 'vin the singles compet'ition in the $17,500 inte.matlonal tennis toumam~ Sunday, 4-6. 7.(i, 6-3. e King B,.u::e• . AKRON , Ohio -Billie Jean King \VOil her fourth ~-omen's professional tennis loumament Sunday by defeating Nancy Gunter. 6-3. 7·5. in the $501000 Akron Open. ..., . .. Tear Gas Used On Celebrants RALEIGH (AP) -Police u.sed teer gas early SUnday lo disperse some 3.000 persons who staged a frenzied celebration follo\\ing Nort h Carolina St a t e 's basket.ball \'ictory over UCLA in the NCAA semifinals. Officers said 31 persons, including nine university students. \rcre arrested near the university campus. One streaker was charged '4'ith indecent exposure, police said, but several others were not apprehended. Police Olief Robert Gooch1in said seven officers y.·erc injured, but none serN>u.sly. After the game. ~'d.t ran down the city's main street, and caravans ol · • ,aut#llnobiles cruised lhe city J>llling 'horns and ttelhg up traffic. officers .. ·reported. '\" I ' - SOCAL COLLEGE 'S MIKE SINGLETARY WINS 44-0. Most arrests occurred after midnight, when police blocked off an area near the campus to clear traffic. Officers reported several incidents or vandalism to police can. Goodwin said police intervened after receiving reports of beatings and damage to property. He said officers dodged beer bottles and other debris as they cleared the area. It was the first time in nearly 15 years that teer gas ~·as used to control a cro~li at the campus, Goodwin said. Swim Mark Falls BERLIN -East Germany's Ulrike Tauber set a Eoorpean record for the 200-meter women's backstroke i n 1-fagdeburg Sunday. the East Gennan news agency AON reported. ritiss Tauber was timed in 2:21.13, .53 better than the mark set Aug. 19 by llungary's Andrea Hesz-Gyannati. Spikers Sparkle at UCI Proctor Leaps 27 -1; Ca.rriga1i Vaults 17 -7 Jerry Proctor. once considered l..ay.·son. 1\·ho attends IdalnD State, in a America's brightest young long ju1npcr. Y.1nd·aided 20.4. may, yet liv.e up to ~·hat C\'e~·one SoCal shot putter Don Turri was predicted for him in l!l67 ""hen he soared second at 53-:1r~ '4'h.ile UCI's Judd Binley 2.6--0111 while at Muir Hig'n. set a.sCnool record in the discus at 156-2. Proctor. who has been the national The y.·ind also helped push '-fohinder leader since the flI'Sf. v:cek or th<! track Gill to a fine triple jump mark ol 53-5~4. and field season. leaped 27-1~ Sunday in John PoY.'el\ of the Pacific Coast Oub the Meet ol Olampions at UC Ir:vine. lo!tl'd. the diliCUS 201-4. Proctor's mark is the best in the world IDO -(HNI I) I. Slrlekll,, C\1111 t.7, 1. • .._ ISC since the CMympic Gamet. ~~'::.; jc.~~~." 2~sf.c~::'1t,~~~· .~ Casey C.Srrigan, another youngster who "ism'.,"'",•, '",'" ,s•.J •.1.1 (Hti115 11 1. Que~lil di .. _ .... f1~ 1J.. world -I•"& Ir l"I .5, • .......... ICW'lo I) t.6. l. .-ell.I ~>"'-'Y' ,.. •• ,-'-!"" ...-.... --ISlfl_..1 t,6,.,.. no-(HNI t) I. Jltbcll few tiand , ... ~ 1••· vea<--·~ .. ~ l"'io."1 21.1. 1. Driver (5!rkt9r,) 21.4, l. ·--...,.-~~-,, ...... ,.,..--~..... Cilll-21.-4. Otul 2) 1.-0U&u.le.. tSlrlGlr1).....JO.A.-. i. easily d the second best mark of the · L1wton !l~lto so 20.1. l. arown fC•I 1n1111.1, day, cl aring 17-714 in the pole vault and ~ ,.::':!H·\~!'r1 ~.1~·38~~1:~ 1fifs~ ... J~~e!1·~·> :: missing tbr~ tries at 18-1. st1111.i1rv ~sect 4 .i. 1. V!" Holv.99en 1s1riders) 41.!, ]. RICl'laro1on tUSCl 47,., Southern CAiifornia College's '-flke · no -o•~~r' n '· GonrMe1 /~ Nortnr1~1 1 :ss.1. ··--1 •·ry ••pt d ,, ... A.II\ ... 1 .. 5 ·hlle 1, Splr .. IC• l l:!oll 7, l. Sile Ct11 1:57. ,.,,.,II 1 . ...,'6 e..,, ._.. llJ'C "' '-'ti' In 'ffi, \lo 1 . .w,rey (Slrloers) 1:Sl.O, 2. Coolute !IClll\O SI) 1 :~.,, teanunate J im Fttney "'On the javelin at.. ]. 11w1e. 'uc1) 1.1•.1 ...,., • Miit -I. JONI 11011\o 51) ol.:10.7, 2. (Irr !S•ni. """'2. . . l ~onlCI TC) •!U.o. J. (1111.,., fAlh!•tu 1,, Acl!olll The 220 Sl>oY.-dO\\'fl y.·as as exCitlng as •:12.1. •· t11rr111c111 •:ll..._ 5. Lil"°" 1c11i •:u .o. b'll~ •-USC •--"·• Don l·Mlle ,... 1. Y1ro1.., llOaloo St) l3,5l.I. ~. I t."U WiK.'11 eX• SldUUll\I~~ t rtdeflc~iOl'I IUSIU! lJ:U.• l. lllKl!tnool !USCI Q\Jt\rrle, beal fe{JOW' Jam&icatf Clrl 1~:~}::: .t. ~ CAIA1 ll:iL.t. !. C.1otll ll~llO 51) 1:10 Htt -(HN I 1) I. ICurrlt (IH Str1cltr1l li.I. 2. Cl.ei!dle !UCI ) U,t, l , tt1mllton !(11 Poly) li t. l"'"I 2J 1. Wlll11ms IUSC1 1'.4, 2. Flo.1n!<C10 US, l. Palmer ((ill 1~11 14.7, HM•! Jl I. llich !C•l In!) lJ.J, 2. Whll1 ISlrJclenl 13.P. ]. WMwn (Sir~•! IJ.t, (Ha.II 41 1. T11rNr tCill lnll U • .2, 1. Jotln:ion (USC) li.J, 3. lllOVll CU111!1) 1•.I. UD IH -!Hill! ll I, \11n loer11en (Fullerlon JCI $.C.1, t. WTlli1mt1 CUSC/ U.1, l . Lundy 11.i.ho 51) 5'.t. IHffl U 1. M, Wiii 1ms !U!'Wlll l U.S. 2. Col"""" USC) SJ.7, J. Ewl!IQ (Slr'-s) 1.4.D. IHtill Jl I, ICl"!I ISM! Dli!oo TC) 2. c-r ilOlllo $1) 51.t, l. Joynl1' C.t ,,,,_) 15.0. UI lll!1v -I . ...,,,,..,, HUis llrlden 40.&, 1. Cit '"""'''icl\.ll Al.A. J. c11 ,1.., .._ llllllo sr. ,q,o. s. LA Soulttwelt .Q,I. Miit R.i1v -I. ll•kliln 1:12.6, '· LA sou""""' CeUtlM l :ll.I. S. Cll ]:15.0. I,, lclifie S!ll't J:ll.,. 5, UC lr'l'tllt J1lt .1, sr.ot P111 -1. 1111111ncldl ~usci ~1.1, t. Tlll'ff IK't) a.iv.. J.. ,,,,_ cc.ii ~•. •. ,,..,...,. 11111.11o-s11 9'.f J. ~-(et-t Stridilr1) S\..f. H'ioh J11"1!) -I. 0-. {USC! .. 10. t . .u.ot11 fF'ulfii-rcn JC! A;-3. Fr11t1r !SC "'""'"""')-H,-..-llln..-1lh ((11 ) M, S. Mlt.1 (S!Tldtnl M . Lone J...,,p -1. Proctor ($trlclef'J! 77-1>.li. l . MOO<'• (Si!n 011<10 TC> Ji'o.2, ]. Wllllill!'IJ (USC! 2!-f, i . T11Uoct (Id•"° sn 2•.:3. JIYflln -1. l"MM'I' IKCJ t»•t. 1. Slvfr1 IUllllll ?ll·f, J. Scr1111111 ICill lnt) 'll2·l, '· Hlllby CUSC) 111· •• Dlff~ t l POM! 11,.tH;lllC CC) XI! ... 2, DrWwlv 4PCCI 1 ... ,. l . l.llttr 1Strkkr,1 116-4 •. Weber IPCC lll·l. s. Kolllt'f' cs1rldtr11 11.s.V1. COIMrs1 l inlty, UCI, IM'L StllMI. lean) Pele \11111! -l. C1rr1C111 IP(CI 17•1'•, I, Diii (Strl<Mril 11·1~., J, H1mer (II Poly Sfal 17•1\lo, '• rr,, R~tn:I +u ... ni ilnd Roell; l1Tt1*n.~\.. Tr111l1 J11m11 -I, Gm (Cll "" , 2. Tiff / Strkllril ~., J, lyth (Slf'Oft1) U-1, 4. JKUon Strk;en) J).71.o , ,A re(l"ree ~·a!ii had\y beaten by Rngry ftns in ~tllano, S1cilr. after the third· division hfllazro..~fodlca matth. Togannl Pappont'tli '4"as hospitalii.ed suffering from serious skull contmioos and back lnjurlts after fans invaded the field and chased him into the dressing rooms. AIM a linesman and a pol!ctman were injurrd In 1~ cl~he!. Wooden Bla111es Self for Se111is Loss Jn Milan. duMng the a!l~~titanest ma}Or league match bel"'een ~lllan nod Tntrmaiionale. an 18-yeoar-<>ld youth ~at; st.Abbed in 1'111! ~tomach by an oppo8ing fan . Other fans were Injured tn mass punching. . Jn Naples. four Polt~men were Injured b1 bottles, rocks and bars hurled Into the field by fans protesting ttx> rererc-e's decisions durins the Napoli-Jto1na match. One ran was arrc:s1ed. GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) "Disappointed but not uoduly dejeded." Th11t's how John Woodtn, coach of coUcgc basketball'~ lonleot'""'1\lnt! hit sho"' at UCLA, desttlbed hb feelinss SW'Klay, less tbao 24 hours art.er his Bruins had been denied a shot at their eighth strafght national lltlc. North Cllrolina State •. ranked No. I natlon.ally, a po11IUon h e r e t o f of c habitualfy 1"C$Crvcd for UCLA, wiped out the Bruins bid for No. 8 in a soorcblng SO. __, • 77 NCAA double<>Verlime sem!llnol Saturday. The !ldiolarly, 63-year-cld Wooden. as.swning the blame for the loss to the Woffpack. said: ''We have had trouble holding lhe lead be.Core this )'t!ar. I should have callOO a timeout at cnJCinl moments In the game." ~ked ~'hat he might have • done ,dit{crcntly In the t.eronct overtime. "'hen his team h:id :l sevcn·point it rouktn 't ·hold, he mpooded: "I would have gone out and grabbOO somebody to have them call tlme Out. .. Wood<n h,. asked wily be wed only seven men in tbe hotly-<Onlested, 56- minute g11me. He said the game situation "didn't dictate"· going lo his bench more olfen. ' E~ch teem used only seven p\a}·ers. but NC Stale coach Nonn Sloan u.500 his two nonswrters 22 minutes while \\'OOden's tY.-o norutarlers played only Jo& mtnlltes. lfc said his philosophy over the years has been 10 tell his pJaycrs 4o guard ngalnst 1•exccsslvc exhilaration when I they win and m:astwi dejectioa when they looe." He said NC stale lhoWd he !a'/Ottd to beat third-ranked Marquette tn tonight'• champlooshlp game but oaJd Marq..,tte Should not b(! t!iscomrtd because of--lu quickness and "good. solid players Who arc competi1ors. '' Woodet1 's Immediate objective ls the '°""'lntioo toolgh< against Kans&!, a M· 51 106l'r to ri1arqum.te. lle rt'JK!uf.ed that he doesn't like <'Cll301atioo games and wlshe! the NCAA Y.'OUld do away with them . SPORTS GLENN WHITE Sports Editor Winning Title Ren1arkable, Says Sharman INGLEWOOD IAPI -After 81 gruncs It ~·as flnaUy over and Gall Goodrich was on the phone to owner Jack Kent Cooke in New York saying "We're going to bring you a world champion.ship." Goodrich and the Lakers "''t!l't' understandably jubilant. Los Angeles. appearing oot of contention '4'hcn it lost a pair of games to Golden State only last weekend, had won a National Basketball Association playort berth ~'Ith a crushing 1~124 victory over Buffalo Sunday night. Their highest scoring ootput of the season meant .that in eight days lhe Lakers had defeated four teams going to the playoffs -New York. ·~lilwaultee, Chicago and Buffalo -to O\'('N.'Ome the Golden state lead, They had also y.·oo 15 of their Jast 19 ga1nes. "!consider .!his a renta r kable achievement by the players because of the injuries we've had and the makeshift lineup we used all year."' said Lakers coach Bill Sharman. "Gail Good rich was the only rcgu1ar not seriously hurt by injuries." The Lakers also started the season with a new center, Elmore Smith, and he may be more responsible than anyone for their current position. After averaging 12 'points for most of the s e a s o n , Smith scored a season-high 37 Sunday, giving him 158 In the last six games. He has also hem n!boonding and cutting better ilal} at any time this season. "E~ ·is unbelievable. ... II e's incredible; said Happy 'Hairston. ~·ho had 29 points himself &may. "l'\'e never seen a player resj>Olld like he has. He has taken charge. He \\'ants that ball now. "He's not practicing any differ~ntly · and ~·e're running the same plays. But he's something else. \Vhy, he's coming d™11 the court on the fast break and stuffing. I've never seen anyone stuff the ball quicker. He's also rebounding and blocking shots ." "My role on this team was as a defensive player and shot blocker," said · Smith. "When we v.·eren't sooring against Golden State, I decided to do something. No, I never talked to coach Bill Shannan about it and he didn't ask me to shoot more.'' Smith's spurt comes al the right moment because the man he'll meet in the playoffs bcg1nning Friday i n J\lilwaukee is Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the NBA's most valuable player this year. "\\;e'JI have to play well in all categories," Sharman said, "but the real key "ill be tough, aggressive rebounding on both ends of the court." The Victory Sunday kept alive I.he La.kers' string_ or having made the playoffs C\'ery year since arriving here from Minneapolis in 1960. But the Lake.rs did not need the victory to qualify for the playoffs. Golden Stale eliminated Itself from contention by bcN·ing to Phoenix Sunday nlght. - The Lakers triumph was achieved despite the precisiai shooting of Buffalo center Bob l\fcAdoo. The league's leading scorer had 40 points and at one lime had hit 16 of 19 shots, most of them 00 medium range jinnpers. I VFFALO 11141: M.lrf'I 16, MCMlttllft JI ~ Ill, OIGrf!!orio 14, S...1111 5, Gouti11 I Kilirffm111 o MK1h,11a l. R""'Nr 2, Wlf!llrid ], Tot1i. 52 20-27. • LOS Ar+GELES (1501, tt1ln1on 1'I H1wld111 t Sl!'tllh J1, Gaoclrlcll JS, Prk 1 U ' 8rl0Qoill i Hlw111or,.. 4. lllltY 1, W•slllnqlori 4, r.i111, '° )O.:J7, ' 1111tt11o l:i i. ,, ,._u, L0s A!Welt1 :M 13 .,, .U-150 ~~A=iflM:in. MfACloo. Toti! fe\11•1 lll.rflllo • -He1·i~ge Open W ?•1 by Miller • "' a court. Inst 15 I idea "' wool suits. ··1 t '4·ork mont " I Amer "I' the G i~ ~'M 1· ~. ~. . . . . " . . . . . ~--. Ex-Sailor Albritton: Shq.t Putting Hermit By STEVE BRAND Of ""' O.ity '°Ott Sltlt Imagine Tenx Albritton standing al lhe r/Oe throw tine on a high school basketball court . Instead o( racing the basket 15 feet away, he'! looking toward the one 66 feel in the distance on the opposite end of lhe C()\11'.t. He winds up and throws. the ball !anding three feet beyond the end line at 69 feet . Big deal? Any kid over ll couJ.d do ii. On1y Terry Albritton did just !hat 'o\'ith a 16--pound snot and instead of tt1rowing. he \\·as putting the big ball. That mark is the fanhest ever thrown by a 19-year-old, landing him a spot in tbe USA-Russian track meet recentl y. The 69-0\'' effort surprised track fam and experts alike, but not Terry Albritton, the former CIF champion lrom Newport Harbor High. It was just six months ago v.ihen Albritton made the tough decision IQ give up foot- ball and education at Stanford Univenity to devote all oC his efforts to becoming the best in the \\o'orld in the shot. He decided to become a shot putting hermit. "I really thought I could hit something around 70 feet if I concentrated on just th.is one thing:· says Al britton v.'hose best last year was 61~~- "\Vithout the distractions of football and my studies. I've been able to get my technique down and increase m y strength. "Al Feuerbach started the idea !hat giving up everything to concentrate on the shot v:ould produce phenomenal re- sults. "I tried It and it has already v.·orked for me after just six months. '"I suspect now a n y American shot putter \\'ho \\'ants to really be great v.•i\l become a hennit. I v.·on't say it'll v.'"Ork for everyone, but it helped me." Abritton is seen daily at Ne:.vport Harbor High, in both the weight training room and out on the £ield practicing. Six months ago he admitted to being one of the weakest shot putter! who had a 60-plus toss. He still th.inks he's one oI the weakest. "I've improved my lift in the squat from 320 IQ 420 pounds," says Albritton. "But Ron Semkiw can lifl 650 and Jim Neidhart (ex·Newport Harbor and current UCLA shot putter J can beat me by about 100 (X)Unds. ·• \Vhile Albritton says he uses a modified Al Feuerbach style in the shot, he hasn 'l exactly Me sa PD Wins Flag Grid Crown The Costa r..tesa police department v.·ott the Orange County nag football cham· pionship but 1ost in a playoff against three-time Southen1 Cali fornia champion Ca r I ' s Jr. of Los Angeles County to conclude the season recently. The Costa 1\1esa police finished the regular season \\ith a 7·1 record, losin11 only its first game to Hughes Aircraft by a I~ margin. Following the opening loss. the Police posted seven suc- cessive victories. v.•inning over El Toro Marines. 37-18 and 60- 6: Santa Ana police. 12~ and 12·7; and the Garden Grove police. 21·12 and 39-8. In the championship en- counter. the Costa Mesa police Jost. 35-12. At the present time. the of· ficers are competing in a soflball ctrcutt wltll baskelball starting this \\o·eekend with a tournament on the Southern califomia ,p>llege gymnasium. Members of coadl. Gary Barwig~ nag football cham· pionship unit include: Bill Bedltel, Roben Oleney. Bob Crogan. Don De La Mater, John Casey, Dennis Hossfeld , Cleo Jones, Dave Ketchum. Owen Kreza . i\1att Lette.riello. Mike Livolt. Jeff ~filler, Al Mi.iir. George Poling. Dave Stem.. ~1ike Watkins, Mike Folsom, Bob Tron<n•<>. Eddle Barnes and Barwig. Pro Baseball .. gone out of his way to copy the outdoor record holder. '"You take certain" things and adapt them to your style," says Albritton. "Al is S-11. I'm 6-5. I can't say I've stuelied Al since I've really only seen h.irn lhrow twice in my life. Albritton is tabbed a!I tbe next v.'Orld record holder. but he says by the time he gels the record it'll be far better than the current 71-2 ~. "I think George \\'oods and Feuertlach -v.·ill push the roo- ord out past 74 this year," says Albritton without a trace ol a smile. Albritton Isn't predicting 70,. feet for himself. "I know 1 can get a tar bet· ter pot than the 69-footer," he says. ''But I don 't know when or where it"ll oomt'. rm not selling a stiff schedule of meets. In fact. I'm only plan· ning on one right no"\\'. the AAU championships (at UC. LA). ··The res1 ol the meets I'll play by ear. That's the ad- vantage to being a hermit, you pick your spots." 1 L.:..... _____ ..;. ... ..-............... ..;:::~ill• TERRY ALBRITTON WINDS UP THEN LETS LOOSE OF SHOT . .•• DURING USA·RUSSIA MEET. ' Alamitos Harness Entries L• A11'1'11tM 11""" tw TMltllf Ci.M, Tr.ck fMt. f lrtf hit 1:41 U I 11e·1&t .. Mii. ftll .... tta " £ .. d .... .,.., .... 1111 mi l'l•ST •ACI -°"' m1111. l'a.:1. Cl•lmlno. All ~ ,,,.. .. tl1CO. Top c1.1..,1ng price u.ao. 11111 81&1111 0'11.._1 lllldlftor Fi lr 15Tfm-l $«-(WUU.,.,.11 Gralld llrooiu tFonl Jr.I .... ,.~ 111_, tMf•~ll MIMv'~ 110" rG•fOO'"'I') sn....., 1t 'IMntw!l J_..,Hol~) lliCOlfO llACI -0/11 .,.;111. l'Hf. M&l-.•. Condltlor>ld. I .,..,, ot!S• f!ICI .,...,.,. C•lil.fW..,. ~-SlilOCI. Llllokld rwno ..... 1 HI Wi~ OoU CAut1111) llilllr. Jim O IC:i""'°"'I Jr. A""90 C11ltt l~l And¥'1 TrUffll U.i&ll Ola..,,..,1-1 Oukfolu CMolT) Lumi.r 0t-w ILlghrttlU I ~~(~) TMllD ltACI -Otlf: Mlle. Pict . Claimil"ll'. AH '96· Purw \1600. C1•lrn-"'9 ll'"lct '2'()0 M.l•Mr llrown !G•ltrdo) Pllllll:o: 1C.n19ni lk"'"~'J Frtlll:'O Ptp.11 COi F••ncol I( s ,,..., (GotdOlll Clmmy ll'tocc.,;oi Pul••lll Sllvtr UOl!ntol'll OlKllKt P•r1<1! .. IGr~y) Ht<lfY Kid Cllur11$) l'OUltfH IACll -OM Milt. P.tc:t . Condl!IMed S VH• otos & """''· Hon• win,..,. ot • ract1. p..,, .. '1000. Ptrh!<:I Tempe. !Gregor.) Lou• Cholct (Cronll $&11Vf Admlr&I IConrovl T1ml1 &nt (W!l111m1) PQ"~ty Cn11<:-cs-11 Ntll.,. S..e (~n11hl PIPTH llACI -O<>e ... 1r.. Pact . Claoml1'9. All tQtl. PurM U000. TOl:I Ct&lml11V p-lce '10.000. Mlt1 Mtlrow CY•ll•ncllnof\lm) \'600 Miiford• C~ (Ottomtl") MOOD s .. r C!>«k CYollt<ol MOO!) T,_~, Yldo.y {Con<Q"V ) UC.00 llon11le LfOdt. (lti<ll"'ond) l,IOOO Kiwi Aml>lf (Wlllit m1I SHOO W1y Anti 1-1&1 (8tiltyl 110.000 Mklw•v tGordonJ UOOO SIXTH IAC:il -O«t t"'ite. Ptce. Cltlm lng. All loqM. Pu"t S17Qi). TOP Clt l"''"9 p.r;tt "111S. 0....-Flo (Otftfl1S) M500 WH GI n., I I Fuu tVt!luto dlft91\fmJ "500 Frosly'• First IWIMtrl) '"" Sel~tl'lflwln CT-\ \MOO llt<"'f'"" DfOOPY (VllltY l(ty) W11S A.dlOt C•rt (Mllt.rl W.500 Go Glfft !6oyd) l.&500 Cuttorn Dttl9ft COel111nl 1'100 SilVl!NTM llACIE -OM mlt.. f'Kt. Clflml119 Hfncllctp. Att ~-PurM MlllO. TllP Cltlmln<J prltt tll.750. A·ltlppi"9 WiYI lltlldllorU) 511,llOO uor. Olrect (Gordon) 111.nc Lvaor ( Ll9nll'lil1) I U,000 Sl"91t Smllh {Ar'"11r"Oftll] l lS,000 A.ovtrhl ul l lt11Cllford\ $16,llOO Ctlllt Chitf CCrt,..! \16.COO AMy'1 Coho lll•rtone) 111.om Thfrp LLOl'IQ'O) $11,000 A·WIU!•m C•"'P --1nlrv. El~KTH llAC• -0... mile. ~Mf. cona;tlonfd. All 19••· FltllH & Mf<tl wn;c11 ntve ~ wot1 1 Sl'OOCI "''' m<>ll•1 In 19U t •CtPI t1&1"'1"'11. p,,...W: M(Q). Ml Ca1ili11& !LIOMfWU) Suzy ~UI !Yfllfr.:lll'IQ'l'll"'l Bye •v• Otl<i"' (B&yleul T••Kl'J l(lllJt (lltlll~hl &r_,., Flatt fMllftr) S•••n Duk• !COOi!) N.&v Ton• 1wm;1.,,11 Sl'lllwfy Widow l &oyd) NINTM llACIE -OM rn\le. P1ce. Gals' Golf ' Roundup Bobbie De.Planque and Jane Roberson fired a net 73 to v.·in a partner's relay tllumament at El Niguel Country Club of Lagwia Niguel last v.·eek. In second place at 75 "\\"en> ~larion Ausness aiid JoaMe Woodward with a tie at '15 1:i: bet\\·een ~farlon Cook and Alyce Parker on one te11 m with Tina flall and !\ell Townsend on the other. At 76 11.t \\·e re Judr Erickson and Bobbie Bardsley with Ruth Keil and Virginia Boanh~1ell. Tied at n were Rae Cochran and Shirley Per· ry "'ith Eileen Schuhmann and Doris lfandschuch. Big Ca1111011 ;\fembcrs of the \\"omen's rlub at Big Canyon Country aub of i\e\lp'.>rt BcaC'h held a mini-guest da y tournamenl as their feature event Ja sl v.·eek. Net Lessons Available The Co:;ta ,._lesa tennis club ls offering Jes!IOfls. open to the public. beginn ing the "'ee k of April I. V.'ith regi~tration scheduled to start today. Cost is $10 for a 10..IC'sson course. r.· I f r.1 vt:ll .. ' I ti.. II• .,1... I ... i.u' ____________ _.:::.=..:.::=-''·· Why Did N eidhart Switch? To Learn More About Slwt A year ago v. hen J im Ncidhart y.·as as kC'd about his move from Katella l·llgti to Ney.·port llarbor, his ansy.·er v.·as simply, "my dad n"IOVed .'' Now that he 's graduatl'd, Neklhart read1lv admits he attended Newport llarbor for ~ very important reason. ··1 knew the suecess lhey had In training shot putters and "''anted to furlher my abihtv in the shot," he savs. · "11\at v.•as the. primal')' reason for the lllOVe." There may not be recn1itirtR on lhe pubhc high school level but a repulat1on. y.•he1h£•r 11 be as a super football sdlool like Anaheim, :i basketball school like ~la rina or a tr.1ck power like Ne\\'J)Ort. sure helps. Fam at the well·run Southrm Countlrs lrack mtel rtttntly c o u I d n ' t help \\'Ondering about a rematch bt1"·ten J'lit'Y.'port llarbo.r's Brian Theriot and Edison's Tom Lloy In the 4~0. That rematrh shou ld romr at cbr lk'arh Ciel~ lnvicadonal tbis Saturday at ~c .... port llarbor High. lntertst Is hii=:b because Theriot led from WiJe to \\"ire in clocking 47.7, the fast~t C\'('r run In tbe Orange Coast a.rea. Lloy , last year's frO!ib -!lopb 6GO champ, has been out for track for jlt~t O\'l'T two v.er ks btcause of basketba ll and while he ran his best ever, 48.5, be dJdn 't appear to ha\·e the strength or sptt<t be sho"\\·ed las t ~·rar. \\"hen he's rtady, tht rematch v.·111 bf one of spttd l'llltrlotl against sltrngtb (Lio)'). Joe Tosti. \\'ho lhre\\" the shot and discus for Corona del ,\lar 11igh last ytar, is changing STEVE BRA~IJ O\'t.T to the ja\'elin y.·h1lc co1npet1ng for t.:CL.~ and has already tossed 192·:.!. This yr:ir appears to be far ahead of last In prep trat k. In Jit'\'~n of lhr 15 e\'l'nts, n1arks rt-<'<lrdcd this yt>ar hn\·r surpassed last yt nr's Ix-st. Thl'riol in the JOO Ul.!11 and 4-10 {4i.il, t:rlc llulsl ""lth his 8:$8 . .f in the 2·mlle, Sle\·e Adams' 14.7 in the 1?0 high hurdll"ll, N1·11·porrs 3:21.2 in I.he mile relay, Dou~ Casl'·s 6-6'~ in !he hiRh jun1 p and Jhu Spain in the lonR jun1p al 22·9~, are all bel.ter than n1arks of u year ago. Only ty.·o of the 1913 efforts appear safe. l'\o Mt' "\\"ill upproat•h Jln1 Nekihart's 69-3J' In the sbol and Jim UiS1anislao'1 li-0 lo the pole vault. Pro C£1ge , Hockey SJlOl"lS CaJen<lar l"IHW..• ("""'· ltl 1",,..,...,f>C-f•v•~~ l••Q<>e prth<n~ ti l .., •l<>m·1,,. '";" Ill. 01&11;t L•a<iu~ p.•fi1"'\ •' U"•>tt•••I• Ill llo~c.o!I...(""'~ .0.'••• •' [O•!oO". ta. '"""'''O• Al Ccr0<>1 o~ M•r, E•l•llt•• ~I """nteln V•llt·,. !~"'" lo ~• •' •1.,..11.-.g•on Brae". LO.Oro I! ll •rl"~· Wt •l"""•tt• •I Nf"'·pot1 H~•llO<. 01,,f "'II' •! UN•tnl!y, S•n Clfmft1'e •' l •Qun• B•~<ft. Sa«i~nac~ •1 Mlu•on V1t10. P1u• X &1 M•le-< 0.1 !•II al 3 1SI. 0••"91 (p,olf o! SO ......,,., GWC ar ELAC. 1Nll>ttn C~ll lotnl• Coll•Q• ~I P•cl hc ("•h!i•n (•II •1 1 XI). UC l'•lne t i H~weii. G•'"n~\!<t,._LO"'!I !let<" 1t Gcldtn W&-11 I)) l ~""'' Eel•'°" •T Cc1•• M~••· ('>'0'1~ a~I //o&r ti LM "-1•"'''""· F O<J~ !~·n V~llty "' E•Ti"(•~. H>J<>llf>Q!O<'i Bt&~~ &I S•<>•• ,, .... "'''"" ~I L°"''· N•"'Po" ""'"* "' h••lml"''~'• U"'""'l''' et 0 011& '""II'. L"0""• Bee·n i• ~·n (1f....,.,1~ "'''""" V'•iC ,i 5,., <II•""''' !•I! •I) 11. 1 .,11..,1on •I 0<.C <11 UC ,,.,, .... •I "' ""' !•11 oJ . ~l>tl!""rn C.ai.to•ll•• ~t""<•~ M c.~ .. ~ " "' I I Interested persons. can sign· up for tv.·ice-"'ttkly classes on w..inn.i•v CM••. ,,, '!ond --' ~.1 s ........... ~? C../J~11 "'·" i ,, a ~ ay·\l.·~ne:way or rv11~rt:>t1 tl '°' 'fuesd Thursda b . a~~•!1 UC.''•~•• 1••-."11•> . ay· }' l S IS , T•a-• I>••~~' \.1"'~'"'1 u it· v.•ith sessions slarting each T-.... vc ,,,,1.... ·" ~ ..... ·~··" d 9 lo nd t t G«I~ v<>11..,..,,.n-G<JI0..11 v.~.i ~I MllDO ay at , a a.m. "'''''~·We">, 1..A ., oc.c coo1n ,., Ji -F r rthe ·nr It Gld> >ol!l'Mll-(10•~" •• G?lvcn Cl1iming. AH fVIS. P urMI UO!lO. Top CloJim!ng ork e \S800, Vll>W!"I IMt<k-'ll U100 or u r 1 onnat1on, ca "'"'r 11:1111. r..,11,,,on ,, occ r1 \}· C•t>ilil N (M.,.-) LOIUI Ta » {Aut!ill) G<•ttl\11 a. ... !Dftel'Nrl Chu(!! Ffrr C~llOI.) MO(KI the CJUb at 557.(l2JJ. C."I' t•a<;i<-EStar.<i•. [I To•i;> ~· ::;: ----------------"--'-'-_______ .=:......:c.=..c_.cc:;:::::.: _____ c':":":"'cl11, o 1" _______ _ Mr. 1Ertsig11 IYalltt Kt"Y) Sir BOO fYall&ftclll'IQ'hll'll) Big Vinet (lltflllcl'll ::::1r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Harness Res ults LI• AgMl lK llt•u1h Clf•r, Tft<k Fill l11ftcl1y, ~rch 24. 1"• l'!llT IACI£ -Oftt mil!. P1:t. c111.,,1ng All eg". Pur1• s1!00. POPI•• cnuc~ CToddll1 11.~ 10011 70 ~akvon Htrilf91 !6ahou!n) 1.110 ''° ll~•on & tOevltonl 6.611 T"·~ -2.06 At)O ••Ced -Mt'1Y Rultr, C•PI Kaola, Tonv Tont. Tony Aml!jO. BethillY ll•Y. ll Elk1i -f.l'•ar C/llilCll: a 1• Hfl<¥M H..-1119', Paid U"M· SECOND IACll -Ontt milt. Trot Ct11..,1nv h.lncticaP. Atl t9H. p.,,.,. '"" Ctl91ry Lid (Ot11ftld t.1~ S.40 3.olO O&rl'l•Y Cl!t l'I fAutlinl 5.114 3 60 Tff"Y Vlctcwy CWHH1m1l l .tO Ti .... -1.0D 1 '5. Al)O ••ted -111..e Leqs, WorHnl • ~111. Harr0<h1>u•9, Armoro lnv\cti, Worlny Er>OVQl'I. I TMllO llACE -~ ..,111. P11ct Coftclll!oned '"W·l l. } ~••r Old• & u-•. Pvrw 11100. O!recl C1vst fOtnn!I) ?•.llO 7 60 S.:lll Pclnl Pv•dvl (1tu11ttll '·'° l .OCl I(.., P.ce rcorema111 '111.1 r ;..,. -1.05 1/S. Al)O •teed -Htilllin..,. Fred, N1u l H-y Pel, Anct¥'1 Enu, Wlft1lon Kirk, I Sref<ly Gotft. - PO\JITH RACE -Ont "'lit. Trot. Clalm;ng l'linGi{.ip. All 19H. Pur,.I ll100. F••nci1 Mood IT. Oennl•l '°ll11lloc-IJ. ~"nls! Frr!gl!I P1fll CWilti&m1l Tlmt -2.03 l/S. ~-IO 3.611 1.40 1 l.~ 1.40 ... AllO racftl -Ito'"" Phldlr r, Neo<>- ll•ll:>r, Prlncoe TOl!y. Pll'TH llACll -~ .,.; ... P•t1. (l•lmi1'19. All -1. Puri,e 1111)1 T•tnQlrilt!ly &&V IY•llarlllino,,..,,I Ne.,.lt 91111 CG•uncly\ YOft Rom""I CWlftlt r1! T1mt -1.0.. 4 ., ].l'O ?.60 • :I.to J.60 ... Al-"' rKed -HoW<:IY Oc!ll, JtlflPf'IOl'I Cr1;n, Albion 81..e Polftl, Htrm'1 ....... Sllt:nt llACE -Olll milt. Paa. (l&lml"9. Al! •11fl. Pvt1<! U'IOO. C.tc:hum1 Cl>ltt (L_,,l ~.to J.60 l.DO llrl!'!ln• II, /Grvncl'Y ) 7.0CI 6.l'O C°'"'I P1rt1 (0t$Oll"ltl") 1.70 Time -1.1).C. AllO rtced -ll•Y '°liQhl. Si119t~ & •• P•»iftg o,,...,, Anclr11 llcy. Cirino lift!. SJ EJtdl -t-Ctc"91'11f Clll•f & 1· l •tMll I ., Pal• SlH.Je. Slt:VE NTH •ACll': -Ont milt. f'&et. C-111""" !CO·J!. All •Ill!'• PurM UOOCI. T ~ SHI 811cl'I, HOOYt• (A,tlf"'fll) Mr. Jill fTl!lllrl M••lotei ((>.,,fthl Tl"" -2.0) US. l.60 'llO 2.-0 3.llO 'llO "" Also rKtd -J~. ltfd"V Colon. G4-ll•v, o.;..., l:Hf. IUilfTM IACil -~ milt, PICI. Cl•i"loi"9 l<lndk•P. AH &Of~ ......... ""'· Rtltnl"V Cllllf IT. Oefwllil T¥11M (J. Ottw>ill Gtfli11 C'...s IWl111itml Time -J,Ol !IS. .)Cl.00 t.00 '40 .. 20 ?.tO , .. Abo rleMI -S.. Ufll!, Wln!tr f•P"fU. Up 1M1t A ....... n1, 9,,.,. "''· U ••Kl• -t.alttft(111 CNtf & J. T1rt1-. P_,.. ., ..... -I fll l NTlf tlAC• -Olll m(lt, l'•C-cg1..,,1"11. All eotS· l"urM ll.00, 01le Pl'llHP tG..,,,.,I 10.to 1.00 S tel Wrtnto T•u 11 • ..,....1 1).00 10.• 1ra1t1er '" La• cwt111.,,..1 .i..ool ri--t,os. Gef $1.50. And a double-edge shave closer than the Personna Double II. ridges of your fingerprints. The only double-edge razor with twin blades on two sides. Buy it, and get $1 .50 back. There's never been o double-edge rozor like the Pe1sonna Double 11. It has twin blade~ on IWo side~ W01k1ng togelher !o shove you close. Very close. And lo m1n1m1ze nicks ond cU1s, each ~el ot blades Is preclselyol1gned, fhen locked in plost1c Designed to cU1 vour whiskefs, not YoUr face. The 1azo1 g lides 10 srnoot!V'(across vour !ace tho! vou"d never guess the whiskecs left behind were less than a thousandth ol an inch high. Bu\tlhe Personna Double U, and send us the bock ol lhe package wr!h the coupon below Yo1ill gel o S1.50 relund , And possibly lhe best shave ol your 1;:" r-----1'9rsonno Ooubi. II ----~ I '· O. loJI 21119 II PGIO, TeltOI 79991 : name. ___ __:_ __ I address. ____ _ I city ______ _ I state. ___ zip. __ _ I I I I ·1 I .. V6•0 "'llt lt fl''Ml•ll'l14. I C•~1•0 ft t1Ao.O. W!O<I "'' '*l""I "' Cv•lon>t• l • ... t• l>et )11!. ,,,, .J --------· AIM •.c.cl -$Htlltl'I Mon. Vlld• Tilt. Clowfnt, LOC&I Jitoll, lltl~ AM "~ tJ IU<i. -~Oltt P~Kp a 1•·1':::::::::::::::-:::-=~------------------.:_--------------~~------J ~ft Tit&. l'.W ... Ltt. I. .- • .. 8 DAIL V PILOT Mond•y Mar~ 2.S. 1974 I l Arab Kin g Reas sm·es Syi·ians Drivers Hit Road as Gas S·upplies Rise ~ • BEJRUT, t..banon IAPI - King Falsll of Saudi Arabia has assured SyrlJ he \.\'111 reimpose his 01\ e1nb11rgo againsl the United States ii It docs not get hrrael t o withdraw its forctS rrom the Golan flelghts, t.hc Beirut newspaper Al Dayr.ik reportod today. Dy Vnltftl l"Tt1'K lntfrna.tlonal Sunday dr1\crs l'lnergcd frorn l'nrr't:Y cr1si.~·imposed \\)ntcr hlbcmatioo. lurt'd by sprinc \\'Cnlhc r and ;iva1lab1!lty of g:isoline for the ltrst thnc In months. In Florida the cars \\'t'rc :;tacked up for blocks at a ~·l inmi t ou r Is l attraction. Jlt·sorts in Virginia a n d i'olaryland reported r o o 111 s wcr<' flltlng up after a no>se· dive In January and Februa ry. Traffic vn highv•ays fr o1n Oregon to New York ,,.,.,s heavier Sunday th6 n it had been since fl volun(:iry ba.D on Sunday gosoline sales was called for by J>rcsidenl "1xon last November. The ban bt.-eantc· niandator y in January. TllE PRE.5lD ENT l!ftt.>d the b<ut six days QiO. saying the end of the Arab oil boycoU ilnd increased supplies of gasoline had made it. possible for stations lo re-<:ipen . Jlundrt'ds did although a majorily rvmained closed 1n mo.st nreas. In Connttll.cut one couple decided on the spur of the nKMlltnl lo d.live to Chlc-Jgo \.\'Ith their dli.klren for a visit. with grandparents and in Oregon one driver said his windshield was cleaned aOO oil and tire! v.•tte checked at the .service station he visited. Th(·re "''as additton.al good Jle\\'S, and a word ot caution, frorn \.\'1lliam E. Simcn, the natloo 's energy chief. Simon predicted. gasoline suppUes should I n c r ea s e sufficiently for a o r m a I :summer lra\·cl but drtvt:rs should plan thtlr t r i p s • oWrve SS mile per hour speed limHa and shut otr their car oir eondiUoner:t Prla-s for gasoline will a!Jo lncreesc. he added. "USING OUR heads, Ylt arc going to be able to ha\'e n normal summer,'' Slmon said in a television interview. In the middle At la ntic st.oles, wbero. the gasoline .$horlage almo.st became a crb:i.s in Ft brulU')'. a United I~ lnltm.itional survey .showOO that despite thl' lifting of the ban few service stations opened Sundar. Reser'\'ations were peu-ing in for \Vashington area hotel and nxitel rooms ror next weekend 's aru1ual Cherry BJ08.."K)ltl festival. To u r is t s -...-..i·-AlloC • I BAmRIES 16'' uP OlAHCM COUNr( IATTiaYCO. ,..,.. ftodclng ID pop!lar eastern eeaboard attractions. in Ocean City, Md.. a.rd \\'1lliamsburg, Va ., and somel stnte parks in ~1aryland, · Virginia and North Carolina. •1 Bad .-.. th« kejlt peqile al' home in many areas, incli.:ilng rain-soaked Orlando, Fla., site of Disney World. Snow and ice plagued travelers In areas ofl Ohio, ~1issouri and Texaa. LEASE A 74 610 WAGOH$tt.lt- • f .. »MO (aL The rtpor1. said Faisal's assurance ll'<lS dcli\'ered to President llaI1~z Assad of Syria on Sunday by Saudi Foreign ~lin1s1er 0 n1 a r Sakkaf. i.\'ho ri;1id a bii cf visit to Damascus. •f\'o Dete11te' Chinese l1ren1ier ('hou ~n·L.ai s a i ct Sundav there can be no real detentc between the U.S. and the Soviet Union. ·"fhc tv.10 super· po"'ers at ti1ncs t.1lk about detcnte, but in ac- tuality they are en· Jaworski Delays Subpoena Demaruls 7J4 w ...... c..t. ..... ,,_.._'4M l61 .... ,..,, .. , ... -_., COSTAMUADATSW4 2141 HAllOlll.YD.c.M. 5404410 The pa1M'r said infnrmtfl Syrian sources rl'portcd lh<1l (1N SHORT ... ) the Arabian monarch pledged d · · ali..out lJ.lpport for Syria in its gage 111 ;in intense rivalr)'." conflict \Vilh Israel and said ---~~-----­ tile oil embnrgo "could be reimposed any time. e Au••le Rlol PERTH. Aus~ralla (UPll - Prime 1'-1inister Gou gh Withiam v.·as bool'd and prlted \\•ith sofl drink cans aod ton1at()('S today hy hos!ilc fanner dcmonstra1 ors v.ho tried to punch And kick him ~l a polit ical rally. Whitlam . v.·ho 'ras addres.sing the crowd of more than 2.000 in support ol the stale Labor government at nen Saturday ·s elections, v.·as visibly worried about the lncideat. e N. Koren Bid TOKYO. Japan (AP) North Korea today proposed to the United States that a peace agreement rep I ac e the military armistice that ended the Korean war in 1953 and that all American forces will be vl'ithdrawn from Soulh Korea. Streaking . Insurance Rejected llARTF'ORD. Conn. (r\P1 - The Hartford Insu rance Group s..1rs il y,'Qn 't insure streakers. Streakers clubs in rreori::ia and Idaho contacted the con1p..wy r cc c n l t y for insurance aga inst assaul t and exposure to the clements. The J~art!ord's undcrv.-ritcrs clccidcd since there was no underwriting rxpcrience in thi s area. the company could not afford lo take !he risk, a spokesman said ~iday. The lci;al d e partment reported that b cc au s e :.ircaking is a misdcn1canor . !he comp.any could not be a party to such an al'livity. One Hartford undern-ritcr said itf streaking should become legal "a bl ankel policy might do the job." \\'ASlllNGTO'.'l (AP ) -At 1he request of the \Vh ite Jlouse. special \\In t erg a t e 11rosecutor Leon J a w o r s k i 1oday J.t<IVC President Nixon four more days to respood to a su bp o ena demanding add1!ionat \Valergalc C\'idc11ce. The subpoena, issued March 15, called ror a response today. BUT, OVER the \Veekend J ames 0. St. Clair, President Nixon 's.chief \Ya tcrg at c lawyer. asked Jaworski ror moro lime and the prosecutor extended lhc ret urn date to Friday. lo a brief sta tement . Ja'o'·orski's offit'C said. "In agrl't"ini; to the \\'hi!c llouS<' r(!(1uest. ~1r. J a w ors k i rn1phasizcd the grand jury·s need for the material CO\'ercd under thi.c; subpoena.'' 1'hc prost.'CU!or's 0 ff ice refused to give details about the material subpoenaed. And. in a re!;i;ted matter. 1.-1wyers for t'>'·o rormer \Vhite !louse aides sa id they will not go to the Supre1nc Court to t.ry lo block transntissioo of the secret grand jury report on Presi dent Nixon's \Vatergate role to !he Ho use in1peachrnent inquiry . "\Vt:'V1'~ .JUST decided that wc•'ve slated our objections and our wamings as forcefully as we can and the government has decided to take the risk." said Jotm Bray \\'ho reprcscnls 'Ibe North Korean rl<'\l'S agency reported that !he req uest v.•as made in a letter ID tile U.S. Coogress by the fifth Supreme Peo p I e • s Assembly in Py~yang after a proposal by Fo r eign J.lini.stcr Ho Dam. e Extort Try DALLAS (U PI\ -FRI agents have arrested two men for trying to extort $1.27,000 from the president or Braniff International by threaterting to destroy the Dallas·Fort \Vorth airport control tower. Bird-plagued F<ir1ner To Cliop Doivn T1·ees Agent J . c:ordon Shanklin identified t hC' suspects as J erry Lrnn Orrick. 28, and Will iam \Yade Puller, 33. they \\·ere to be arraigned to- day bcrore a U.S. magistrate. GHACEllAM. Md. (UP!l - Edgar Emrich vo v.•ed Sund:'ly night he \Viii chop dov.•n one- third of his pine grove "'her(' most of the mill ions or birds have been roosting each night since December, saying: ;.The birdlovers and birchvatchcrs "ith gr~atcr success. altOOugh n1any of lhe birds driven away fro m Emridt's grove roosted in groves of trees in nearty C."<lmmunities. Sunday night·s effort began at 7 p.1n., until 8:45 p.m., wi!h i ncreascd success -' ' a e Killer Surf can ha\'t' their day, today. but 1narkcd reduction" f r om llONOLULU (AP) -Giant those birds \\·on'l roost here Saturd:ty night, Emrich said, \vavcs of up to 30 feet pounded next year." but adding that Dr. Kenneth the oorth shore of Oahu over the weekend, claiming the THE TREE fa rmer favors L. Cra'o\•ford, 1'.lary land st.ate lives Of five persons and extermination or !he birds, but \'Clerinaria"n and director of injuring several others. added this \\'ill not be done. lhC' bird·ridd ini? project. 1'he mountainous surf \1•as Emrich's statement canie 11arncd large 1,11111bcrs niight caused by a slorm nort.hY.'l'St afte r Sunday night's third 'sneak back in during-the rl'Sl or HA'>''aii. a spokesman for major bombardment of the of the ni ght. a!: they did the National \Veather Bureau huge flock of gr a ck Je s, Saturday night. said. 1'he v.·aves be g a n rrd1,·ing blackbi rds a n cl ~I SAID although he subsiding late Sunday and starlings by eJt15erls using y,•a uragcd by Sunday were experted to be back to 111n1>Hfied bird distrt-ss calls. ni ntt-nsified effort he normal tod.1y. he said. fire\\'Orks and propane cannon has decided to chop down 15 or e Atttt4" Visit rire in efforts lo drive the 20 ;icres of the SO.acre pine birds off. grov<'. h<l\'t' the t re es LO NOON (UPI) -Princes.~ Anne. who has never been out The expert :i s s au It. shredded. and stun1ps on the of the sight of ;irmed guards including up to !JO county. <icrC'age pulled out. since an nttempt to kidnap her sta le and federal ofOcia ls as -111111111111111111111111oiiiiii \\'ednesday night, left for \Vest \veil as Emrich, his neighbors' Germany today under cover oi and citizen voluntl'ers. '>''as PORSCHEOWHERS one of t.he biggest ~curity launched Friday night as the *'r=~~·r!:,..""IT!.~~~ operations ever undertaken birds came in to roost after ""r.o. ci"""' '*· ..._ eo11 ...... ..., sunset. There was limited "-"•1• A~11-• -Po>..-.... there. l.A k ONlw. au10 ..._,Of Clll! L£ATH(.R Before she left shP ''isited ~s~u~c=~~·:'.an~d~l-.".'.1'~":_1"'~0~~w.::"J~"~'~"~'!"!"~"ii'·~·"~'!· ~~~~I her mo!her. Ql>e<'n Eli7.abcth1_ intensified Saturd;iy ni ght - II. at \Vindsor castle for the first time since the kidnap attempt. e Cro11kll.e Blo.<I C lll C1\GO <UI PI ! - Neo.vscaslcr Walter Crr.ink.itl' Administration of an attempt has accused the Nixon Administration ol an attempt to undennine lhe pr ess • despite I t s constitutional guarantees or freedom. Cronkite said Sunday the Constitution gives the press a "constitutional duty . . . to keep all bran ch e .~ or govemmenl under c r i t i c a I scrutiny." PUBl.IC NOTIC•: IL'·lf\71 SU,1!11011 COUltT 01< THE ST4TI Ott (ALtl<OllNIA FOlt THI! COUNTT 01' OIANGE H•. A·l•kS l'IOTICI! 0, HIAlllNO Ofl flET ITI~ 11'01 l"IMATll 0' W1LL ANO 1'01 LITTEllS TESTAMIHTAIY EM•N ol (#lltl FIEOElllCK TllUlTT, •lw ~-" •1 CAR L F. TR UITT, DlcN..-d. NOTIC! 1$ k[llEBI" GIV[H ~I LVl.U HOPE Wit.EV M1 llil'd ,,.,.,,,., " roetltion 19' Prot111t QI Woll 11'd IOI h.v111CI ol ltftltl Tt1!tlflffll•N IO 11'>1 pl'llll-, rfltrtftCt IO wM{ll 11 11'1 .. let 1"'1flfol' "°'''k"l•rl. lftd 11<1•1 '"' llrM •<Id ~Kt ~ l'le .. lflll ll'lt l•ll'lt 1111 -II lolil for AP'll t ltft , ~I t :OO 1 11'1 , ln lllf CVlll'lr-of o-nttll'lf'lll NO ! tit vlo COll'I. 11 1tlO Cl'll( c .... ter Ol'I .. Wt't. ill ll'lt Cl!' of Jtnle An~. C1tltor11I•. Otttd Mtr(ll 70, 1'1t WILLIAM f . SI JOMN I COlllllY Clftk ' lflNOl l. ANO ANOllllON 1flt NO•TM lltOAOWAY SANTA ANA, CAL1l'OllMIA tntl 1n•1 .... nn Anwr!ltn "' PfTITIONl:lt PlltlllhMd 0.t? (6111! O~Ut r 1tot M1ru1 IS. 16, <1...i Apnl 1. lt11 16.I• 1' SEAN CONNERY: The original James Bond. -' DOES YOUll CAI IOU ROUGH? WE Cri>rdon C. Strachan. John J. Wilson, lawyer for former presidential chief of staff IL R. llaldem an. declined to comment on tho decision not to appeal. with the \Vatergatc cover-up. President Nixon h.ad llot opposed delivery of the report 10 the !·louse committee. Jav.·orski sa id the subpoenn START HAID? N HELP did . I GIVE ,~ MILAGI? CA not 1nvo \'e the \V;itcrgate .......,... oover-up or Whito House THE CARBURETOR SHOP l M J _ ......... COlllA-........ llcputy presidential Press Secretary Gerald L. \Varren refused last week to say whet her the President planned to co mp l y \.\'ith the pr()S('('t1!or's subpoena. l l c said it \\';is being handled routinely by White House la~·yers. plumbers cases. in which ~~~~~~M~-~-~~·~·~·~~·~-~~-~~~;;;:;~~ indictments recently were ;. An appeals court had gi\'cn them until 5 p.m. today to carry the matter to the Supreme Court when it acted Thursday upholding t h e decision to give the report 10 the Hoose inquiry. returned . That would mean t h e material sooght pro b·a b I y relates lo investigations of the rrr antitr u s t sett!~t. dairy industry po l i t i c a l contributions or the 18.> Haldeman and Straeha n were among seven person .. q indicted l\tarch 1 in connection minute erasure found on one A S P 0 K E S ~I AN for subpoenaed tape. • Goodrich Steel Belted Radials Two styles of Goodrich Steel Belted R0diols ore available that vary slightly in conslruclion ond tread dcs1$Jns ... c1ther 1hc Lifesaver Radial Sleel R/S (sho~vn above} or the l 1lesovcr 76 Sh~rl Bel1ed Rorf iol. S!rong slcel belts help give 1he5C lires o utstanding durability. And thei r rod1o l construct1r>n makes !he s1dc\volls more 11e}l.ible. so !hey absorb shock more readily. giving you o stronger lire and o smooth ride. These ore lires. 1hot deliver greorcr stob1l1ry, improved traclton and longer tread life And because Thcrc5 less rolltng rcs1stance. you con save up to 10% in fuel ... depending on the way you drive. In these popular sizes ••• STEEL BEL TED RADIAL BLEMS FR78· I 4 and GR70·15. LIFESAVER RADIAL T /A BLEMS FR60· I 4, GR60· I 4 plus Fed. Ex. tax of $2.81 to $3.34 and trade. $48 for Steel Belted Redial Blem sizes HR78-I 4, HR70-l 5. plus Fed. Ex. tox of $3.15 lo $3.60 and !rode. HURRY, SIZES AND QUANITY LIMITED 1:HllH&lfl BFG Wheel Alignment Special heavy duty lifetime shock sale ONLY Tr1lntd BFG Mech1nic1 $ 95 will 1llgn your lronl 5 whnl• according lo tht MM!(¥t auto m1nuf1clurtr'1 a· ((:lr'<...ift~ .. -"""">0 tp1Clflc1tlon1 ··-::,':::.' °""'C.-Jl)()ll• --·-PIMwC..lclrAl'V>l'I""""' - tN:!>lM.ltO saoQ .. h OI•• AM "-'Un CM E•-H!'Q. t15 t6 '"'"' ' JIM'S ltmRNATIONAl HAIR SllLING CEtmR P.-.a.-........ MEN-WOMEN-CHILDREN • '-11,.,....H, &oorl'll • S1y1ot10 a °'"91 • r-Slnid- lOffLl:lt SCULl'NI IUT MITMOO •Mod& Loog H .. r $lyhnQ •c..io...tu .. ,._ Goodrich "fot._.....,.Clllt, •• 642·2631 .222l.17tl1Sf.-Cottw .... Lifesaver Radial T/A 1he rod iol T/A offers ~tyle and performance fort.he .family car. The wide, low sporty pro_fil~ 1n~reoses sidewall 5tobtl1ty and gives a d1s11ncl1ve, dramatic appearance. And its Dynacore rayon cord body a ssures you of a smoolh ride. It's o tire that excels in cornering and traction And its ra dial cons!ruction ca n save up 0 lo lO~;) fuel economy ... depending on !he \vay you drive. llemlshed (Blem} Rodials ore structurally sound tires with slight appearance varlatlans. \ 4 ways to charge/Revolving Charge, American Express, Moster Charge, BonkAmericord B.F. &OODRICH STORE 2049 . HARBOR BLVD. lat Bay) COST A M.E~t--cOUMTY Stori H°""' Moo. "'"' Fri. 1:00.6:00 -541. l :l0.4:00 .. 646·4421 540.4343 TOUFUI c mat of Truf epl! first \' port f T I • : L ... fll -"' "' •• • . • • l I ! 0 ... ,.,. ,, D (d• " R "' d .. " • ll:JO .. U:M ... ' 1n1 " • 112' I ., .. 1111 ., " • ... '"' • , .• •• ' " • TVIDGIDJGHTS CBS II 8:30 -Dr. SeuM' the LOru. This ani- mated special t.Us of the LOrax. a Seussian •)'ITlbol of eco~91&. who speak! out for the pre!en.·auon of Truff!I"' trtes. ABC U 9:00 -"Cleopatra." The concluding episode of the Elizabeth Taylor spectacular whi ch first united the Burtons in 1963. Husband Richard portrays Mark . .\.ntony. TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening MARCH 25 '"'IJDCIJ IDl!Dal•.., (!I 1111 CII IS CIJI ,.., a~ Cil tMi m Nw a."•tti•n C111111plOt11hlp fillll ffGm <11Mn•· boro, Ne. C1ro!in1. 0 lon1ru1 (j) Ho11n'1 Mttol1 fJ ll'ttrty Hlltblltlt1 m The FlllltstoMI (iJ Nlrlrt G•lltt'J fl 0 h lh't Go1111lu ~Q MD'tll: IC) (Zhrl "1'1rrish" (dr1) '61-Trtir Don1hu1, Cl1udett1 Colbert. f1i) Hoc111Pt41' Lodt• w ..... - l:lO 00 Ol11tr's CMlct 0 M1¥11: (C) (90) "T1r11 Bulba" P•rt I (adv) '62-Yul Brynnu, Tonr Curtis, C~mtine Kaulmana, (J OldY1n ~ m That raiit QIDnirut I~~ ...... _ Rerlatl ftllllllllll Dt:Mrt 1'tltn Uttlt R11e1ls ml Ptllll'lllU N.¥'tl1 1:00 6 (~ (['I ((l Httt'1 LUCJ (R) ~nn1 Themas 1ueru as an und11· covtrtd p~1nter "llose Pli&M in· 1n1ue1 llltY and lt1ds hH to p10· mote his utistic t1ltnt. O am:!!D A Toudli ti Cold Mac ~YIS is host for this 19w1I In which 1old 1ecord t rtists pu!orm lht1r curr1nt mi!llon.uHin& hill, Cl) Tlw hid On11 O @CII G.l AIC Monday M"41: (?) (l llr) "Cletp1l11" Conc1. (d11) '63-EIU:11>1th T1y!or, !Udlard Bur· ton. R11 H1rri1011. Stoey of th• historic M nts tll1t lollo'll "hen Julius C..asar. ruler o! the Roman fmpire. (Ml to [Dpt to Kttle th• s11il1 IMtwt•n Kit11 Ptolen!J l!ld his sis\tl, Cleopatra. l'rcJI Mow+t: (C) (2h1) '1t.fJ' ol A W.1111n" (dra) '69--81bl Ander"°"· Robert Stack. m Sll•rl t. Alhtntu re m Jloller G•••• ~ti) Mwl1: (C) (211r) "F1hftft· lleit 451 .. (dr1) '66-Juht Chrh!it, Os~" Wemer. fI) lCCT M1•IM11hlp WHk/WorW .sy_,holly Orch1stni (R) A flOf\54 ol Ille Th1nks&ivin1 Day. 1!111, con· urt by tht orcht slr1 compoud of 142 "musical 1mb1uadors" lrGl!I 111011 t1'11n 60 11tlo11$. Arthur fled tu conducts. Em (lltrt AMiin El:) MIMI: (C) "Aflkl, Ta.ti Stylt" Er!) V1riltJ' Shew 1:001 m•m iOwlJn1 tor Dollm Ma.It: (C) (Zlw) "Tiit TI1111, l:JO IJ (9 CIJ) Cl) Diet ¥111 DJ l t the Plltt & tM 1111" (drl) '.ft iflow {R) 81rbJ11 RI.Ill\ iUeStS 11 -Dennis Mor11n, .llnh Pal&•. M1rirot Brl1hton, th• 1111 of a day· •' . . . . •1'11.Hll llo~ "IAD COMPANY" -"" eoot C-.uo1. -•o "",,.. ........ - • C-'w • N • BY POPULAR DEMAND! '"LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL' might very well be the most important film of 1973!" .,,~ ~! LrT lH!l:...0011,.rJI K1• 1 7 & I 0:10 Doily Svitd•r· 2·S:l0..9 p.11'1. ~, .... -~ .......... .... --·-CllOCIH'nJ, ............. -GODll'UL• ·--···-.......... 11 8}' The Asi.oci!Md l'rtss Billboard's hot record hus for the v•ttk ending ~larch 30, as they appt1tr in next wttk's issue of Billboard magazine, HOT SINGLES I. SUNSHl~'E ON :\1Y SHOULDER -Jchn Dtnver, RCA 2 HOOKED "0 JOHN WAYNE EDDIE ALBERT ''McQ'' SUPlllCOP IN ACTION! 1t1f;s.1 1884 Newport (osto Me'a S48-1SS2 MAI. WID. Sl.00 NOMINATIONS -ANO- LIV ULLMAN IN( .r/l"t.t !if j,,'(7MAN 0:, I Wi id World ol Anl1111ls lime s11!11, who finds 1clo1 Dick Whirs MJ lint? Preston vary 1ttr1ct1v1 1nd of!ers I LO¥t Lucy him • con!lnuln1 1011 Ol'I hlf show. 1:45 Doily ModS41utd I""" s.doy,J :4S.S:l l -t0:40p.111. CRIES AND J WHISPERS' (17J (fl I Dr"lltll of ktnnll Go111tr ""' ===========::'.'... m EJ1111r1lda La H11n1 _ ED Wnhl11ctot stf1lpt Ttlli /KCO lO:OO fJ (~Cl)) ... I C. •• ~-Mt111btnll1p WHk IOI ti . n,..., ~n i (!)) Bobbit Colisbtft Show De~ulsa 111nts •J 111 111nl 'tln1rilo-.~Dh•• quist "host 14·JUl·old orphaned . , C:O.tdy nephtw Is 1bout to bt sepmttd TilrM Sloqti from him by !ht ~rt lftlr !tie boy is lound lo bt critiully 111. 7:JO II Jetlthln Wlllttll 5""' Dt11 n Polkl Sur..- Row1n end Lynn And1tion ruest. 0 m m@ Nm p11'1 Htrot1 (i'J Nrpi Gallery Ip TllJ Nellfllltl' Ril On•• T111SUN Him.t mr PrliM dtt lord C1u• 18111 s ""'6e: Ctlll) "IW' 10'.JO 1 _ 112-hlll N1wm1n. Melvyn • Twitl(ht ZDlll Doui!H, Plh'kll Ntll. · lov'"1 to Adwflt11t •1ndll" m'"""" 6il ())To Tt lf Utt Tnith Biii Cosby fl1) Jl:tn MIMblnlllp WHk/£1t ti ' ~ Muilcal fye "A Book of. Mimis'.' 10:45 ED ll:CET M1"'1Ml1lllp W1ek{Y11 (~ 001 Nt:tlmlle Mus" Cl!I tflat Art? Artiil Allan Kaprow, cri) ffottywood Shoo# host for a two· part serltt on LA , EE Tlw Ghoul G1nr 1rtists wor~in1 In the mfll ium ol wldlOl•Pt. Visib John B1tde1Slri, who "p1lr1b with photoar1phi." ... ' ..... ' CtNFOOMF 20,,:. "' ...:::......:..:... •. otf ' -.. ' ..... -. SIAD/UM· I .:. '-A 'UL<U.c.tll~.:.. -.. _,_ ... $140/UM · 2 :" "POSEIDON ADVENTURE" (G) 'M • •''•"'.l. '.!lol.''l' • "NEPTUNE FACTOR" ., .... ' -.... , Sl40/UM•3 ·.:.: ... ~l\U. !.\.l>t' ~·-- "PAPER MOON" "SAVE TH~ TIGER" .... ,. -'"' St40/UM •4 '-~'. • ... •uot•'l.1tl.IJ.C e,:a. 10 ACADlMY &WHO NOMINATION "" BESt PICTURE o;.::• llST ACT•ESS • ~ .;.~~ ... • Pl•FO•MANCf SCHEDULE • MON· rtrES·WED·THURS·2 ·00·4 30·7-00·9.30 fRIOAY·2·00·4·70·6 S0·9 70·11:SO SATURDAY AND SUNOAr THE GREATEST ADVENTURE OF ESCAPE! ... ~---- SO'.\li -lharht' H1ch, lolun1· b1;i I 2. SEASO:"iS L~ TIIE st.;N - Tl·rry Jacks. Hell I 3. DARK !..ADY -Ch<r. :-.!C.o\ 4. Sl>-:\SUl:\'E O~ :-.!\' SllOLiLDER -John Ot>n\·cr HCA 5 THE LORD'S PHA\'£11 -Sls1er Jant-t ~lead. A&.:0.l 6. STAR -Stta!ers \\'her!. A&:0.1 1. LAST TJ~U: I SA\\' 111:-.t Diana R~. ~1otol\TI 8 F.RES TU -'MUCH rm; \\'IND -?-.locedarir~. f'~unous 9. KEEP ON Sl:\GINU - llclen Reddy. Copltol 10 I'LL llAVE TO SAY I 1.0VE YOU IN A SONG Jun Croce, ABC COU1''TRY SISGLF.S I. \\'OULD YOL1 LAY \\'ITH \lE In A Field Of Stone - T;iny:i Tucker. Co!u'Tibi11 2 THERE'S A HO\KY TOXK AXGEL -Coo1\·ay Twitty. :-.IC;\ J. :0.f!O~I GJIT. :-.IE &. THE BLUES -.\lt'I Ttlh~ . .\IC 4 S\\'EET .\1 A<; ~ 0 I. I A BLOSS0.\1 -Oillv ··erash"' rraddork. ABC'' · 5 J'\'E GOT A Tlll'\G A~OUT YO l.i B:\RY -TAKF. c;ooo CARE OF' HER - l::l\'is Preslt,·. RC'.·\ 6 AAA\' DOLL -Barbra Fu irchih!, Columbia WINHlA 197'1 CANNlS FILM rtlTIVAL JURT PRIZE AWARD LAUGHTERHCUSE FIVE --.,.,., ,...._ ..... ··--IHHYITOI:" AG>UtSS WHAT ~E LU.•MtD IH SCHOOL TOO.A.T" --c-ti! • "WAl•IHG TA.LL" ..... , ... "PAYDAT0'1.,. c:-··· .._~···­"IUSTING" -WHEll'S POf>l'A?~ -•c-'••• , .. --"WALklHGo TA.LL" "PAYDAY" 0 111yl .., ... ....u:rrot· "!loYI'\ 'MU.l W'fl.Ul - IOI ~CHOO!. TOOl l " -•C.-! •• 7 A \ r~H'r' 'PEL'IAL L0\'1': Sll'\li l'h;irht· R1l'h. Co\unl b .. 8 lfA'\C: I'\ TlfERE (l\HL ' -Freclc11(' liar!. Capliol 9 \\'HO~G lllEAS -Brtn- da Lee. ~!Ci\ 10 /'LL mv A l.rrrtE llAl\DEK Donna fargo. Dot .JJl"":J fOUNTAIH VAltlf ... tc,a.-~1 ~~~,i,jjO;;c.1• U S•11S"" T1! 11M ··WAllttNO TALL ' Wk•t~• 1:20 Stl!S1111 J.U--i "'1AY DA't'" Wk'''' 6c)•lf:Jll Stli SllR l ... 1011) fOONIAIN VAUO IJ• D ~· II kl/I"" TU l:)t Ml •D OVEllt ••tHE '10il1000f 40\llH1Ulfl!" IPGJ W~dV1'4 11 " M St! lllfl•t 001 It 'IM'111f0 1f 0 " TMli "10 1t10f" WkdW1·t ... lf!IO k l'1wn·L U.f:09-19 If 1"0! -- J O~Cll •O•"U•O•~ JACK NICHOlSON lfl\f l (f()I lANDY QU AID (IH• 1~•-""' woe THE LAST DETAIL • DAIL Y J .IO•lO W.:NO l lS f JOJO ·~ SAV E TH E TIGER ~•n• • •1 W'OI MO > )II I I II u I 1 D\CI, lOlll"l!l{)I) JOANNf WOODWA•D "!I' AC!Of\I SYLV IA SIONiY j1!11IUH·O•nM(,1'11111 SUMMER WISHE S, WINTER DRIAMS, , .. Ot,llT: l 14S 'AT.-SUN .. J:OD·t:IS·l ;ll SAVE THE TIGER n...i'\o l·lD 11 "'' 1 .. )J.t' 11t1) I l O'it•• -~l!IO•~ I JACt< NICHOlSO N I rlUI IOOll IANDY QUAID THE LAST DETAIL 1•1 DAll'f: 7-10,JO ~IND' l·1S. 1, 10::>0 -· A TOUCH OF CLASS D&IH I 0 '''''i"D I JC I, I 0 I DAILY PILOT l9 CllN'! 11\lWOOG MAGNUM FORCE ~ l'lU1 I ''UI NIW.OU.H MACKINTOSH MAN l'C>! ---------'l l AZING SADDLES' IS / A COMIDY 1101'. " ' YdU'IE lOOICINO '01 LAUGHTfl, ~ ~ SHOWING TOGETHtR ' a1sr PICTURE lfST ACT'RISS -·· STAI S: MIL !ltOOkS ADEL INE KAH N-HARVEY KORMAN • '••lormo"<e Sched..,te • ONDAY TH•U FllDAT • 1:00·1:4S·IO:J NOMINATIONS COMBO 1£5T ACTOR · Chnt hst-is ll!rty Hart'J ' In .,,._um Jotoce WHi l 11115 f ll llll I APOSl S lBOUI UNO(llCDYFll YICl COPS C&•'I !IE $EEll 011 "JUll JV Sl10 O!ll1 HfRf' •• Tuesday i.(f)"ln Mlwrtblts" (d11J 'JS"'- ef11t11 L•uflllon, Fredric lil11ch. CJ (t) "Th GNll M1•'1 Wlllskert" (drt) '70 -Otnnls WtlYlf, Dt•~ ~ .... 9·70 AM. ll:•S.2:00.4·20 6.S0·9:20·11:50 :""·" ............. ~ ~~~~~;;..:~t"'SATU•D~! -~~a~ ~~~~·.~,!~M 1130 ............. ·~·· •""·~·· .•. ·-· " . . .. ..:_ ·""'.' DAYTIME MOVIES 1'.JO n (t'I "Tiiis ,,.,.rtJ 1s Coii- U 1111td" (dfl) 'ii-loblrt Rldl0td, "•tlli1 Wood. tt:OO Cf} "S1111rb1 et C.lllflOblllo• ConcJ. (drtl ·~lltlph 111111my. 0 •fliPI lo M111" (scl ·ri) '$2- Carntnin Mlt~htll. m "Tll1u.t , .... (wu) '5' - Dint Cl1rl @ "Mot11 Wolf' (mys) '66--Calt Mothn1r. 3:00 ®\ltl .... "'" ............ (rt>!!!) '65 -HayltJ Mills, J1mc:s 1 M1cMhu1. J:JO II (Cl "It Sbrttd In N1plt1" (com) '60--Clarll G1bt1, Socihl1 Lorin. ll:lO D "Sam D10r1 It 0.11!1" (l!IYI) rD (J) (C) "1111 1'11lnsm111" (wei) '42 -Chick Ch1ndttr. ~~ Hus-'66-=&n Murray, Guy Stockwell. "'"d' ,... ... r)',. 1oom1 •z-""i •:•rn_s. .... ilWI 111t1111 . M1lla"d· 8•1tJ fltld. ~ ) 1111 C... Al:ainlt l root· lU» m "'1M GN•l Sl1111tr"' (d11) '4l-t,,. ~)1) 'SI -Duren MeGivln, GrtCOfY l'ld. A'll Gtrd1111. M1cri1 M,,... KOCE TELEVISIO N LOG 41• IL•CT•IC: C:DMl"A"Y (Cl 1,11 1a1AM1i IT•an IC) 1111 POCUS OltANOI: COUNTY IC:I "S1nlt At11 S.C,_•: Tr.. f"rotllf.m" -H•t JIM CCIOfloW wm dl1<\10 Pl'obi-ti rhl $1lltl Allt khoolt -lll(lulllno I looll ti 111oltrotf, f!'llMll'lf'f ' CIOM•K9ft. ...., wllel II Ml"lll ..... '"°""II, ·~· OIMINSlotrS UI CUlT\1•11 fCI "lll'WIOI ....... -l•-11 Jill INTltOOUC'i'ION TO PNVSIC&L 010.IAPNY CCI "Oltc:lttlOll .,.,, Le!'ldfOl'll'lt" -~ ,, ,,. OMHll UI • lCI ~SOoltMffi (alltorotlt All Star Hltll klleell Jtn 111111" -,,, ... It~-w111 ,.,.,, ~lld NM tOll' lllfll Kliool ,.,.,.i. t:I-l•Oll'I °""" Ind lot Ano•I•• CountlM. lilt lllOYA ICI ·~In. Do.lllhlm It'll ""-4" -Alt ffltl't ITYI -11111 tTIKll ,.,... lilt,, YOl.I l'Vtt W\ll'l'(ttd -tbell.ll IM mnl l~ltll)f'tl'll !"'~! ID m•11) m1mrnel1 Oii """· t ill 1111 MAii( OP OIL PAINTING !Cl .. ...,,..l'.lhlt .k_.' -Wiii! •"I" Wlllll "' AllJtl'ldtr, t 11<t OIMINSIONI IN C:UlTUll l l IC) "ltfV\t!OOY'' -L.-orl II ClO rt1lt1l ' ' APRIL 3 ROBERT REDFORD MIA FARROW • IN • ''THE GREAT GATSBY'' . . . . . . ' ' 'I ' 28 DAIL V PILOT Monday, March 25, 1974 r • ·Kl!;-"'"1fe LIPTON CUP RACERS ENGAGE IN WILD CHINESE FIRE DRILL AT WEATHER MARK Invader (47037) And Warlock (37515) Ride Over Raider end Bright Star San Diego's Invader Wins Lipton Challenge Trophy By ALi\tON LOCKABE\' kallM IEdltw The Si r Thoma." Lipton Challenge Trophy ·~'enl home again Sunday to .San Diego Yacht Club where it had its beginnings 71 years ago . It made the voyage in the cockpit .or !\1alin BWllham 's Erie!Jon-46 Invader whose blue-ribbon crew bested five rivals including t h e defender Tim ~an and cr£'\v aboard Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ericson-46 Bright Star. For three-fiftm ol t h e oontest, sailed in the Ott3n west of Newport Pier, it was one of the cla;est Lipton Cup races ·witnessed in recent years. BURNH.Ul GOTINV~DER off to a safe leeward start and appeared to be ouUooting his rivals to weather. Hogan was buried at tile star\ aod was the first to go O\'er to the port tack to pick up dear wind along the beach. When Burnham finally wcnl over to the port tack he c~ the rest of the neer and flopped back to starboard to cover Stan !\tiller in Long Beach Yacht Club·s entry \\1arlock . In doing so he Ignored Bright Star and Balboa Yacht Club's Jim Linderman in ft aider. both of whom had come bac,k to the starboard tack and appeared to have no chance of laying the mark.· THE APPROACll and rounding of the weather mark was one of the most exciting for the big spectator fleet. L\nderman's Raider had an inside overlap on Bright Star and roWKled the mark first while Invader and Warlock. also overlapped. ·were bearing down on lhe outside. The foor boats rounded the mark overlappt>d \\'\thin eight seconds of each other. ln\·adcr and \Var\ock on the outside y,·crc ~hie to gel the l r spinnakers up and dra\ving ¥•hile Raider and Bright Star START OF SUDDEN DEATH RACE FOR LIPTON CHALLENGE TROPHY Invader (47307) and Raider (37722) Lead lit LHward End of Line fought the big chutrs al close q~lers. ON THE REACll to the second mark Invader ·was :ibOlitl'O serondsafie5d or \\"arlock while Bright Star and llaider v:ere fighting an equally close battle sonic 30 seconds back. 'Ille tin1e split ren1ninl'd about th e same on the run to lhe end of the triangle. \Vith the wind piping up lo 15 knots on the second v.·cathcr leg. Bumhan1 chose t.o chanp.c from a double heads'! to a genoa and OC-µ:an to pull steadily 3\\'ay from \\'arlock. Bri~ht Star v.·as ·also able tn outfoot and out·t;irk \\'arlock and had moved into !lf.'l"IMtd place on the second rOUJld!~g, \\'ARLOCK \\'AS TJllRD Around tlose aslern but roulcd Ufl! mal'k and had "to -go around again, dropping ber back two n1ore places. on lbc run to thc~nnlsh au five Ericsons ho is ted "~hooters" in addition to their hi g parachute spinnakers. Burnham dropped the mains'l on lnv;ide_r and saill'<i to the finish \Y ilh jus! U1c two light chutes, finishing a tninutc and 30 seconds ahC'ad of Uright Star. Lindcnnan's Raider was a ff'w set·onds bt.'h!nd Bright S1:ir. But thcrl' is "no second'' in a Li pton challenge rncc. so the ortler or I in is h \1·:is 1nc:inini::lt<SS. The other 11vo bo111s 111 th.• race. \\'ere. Carl Hob1nl'tte ·s Hobin from Santa • • )l'it, ·~ 1.J '1._ .. Firelo ck ~ • Amica.pa ...,,. Winner Firelock. skippered by .John Fie.Id of California Yacht Club "·as 100 hnndi<'aµ wlnn~·r Stllday in Cv<.;·~ 1Q0.-1n1!e Anacap.1. J.slond 11:1<.~· in the Overton Series. t~irst to finish \\' a !I Mud Sltmk's Xanilyn of eve in 26 hours. 42 minutes. Jn lhe Malaga Cove race for yachU rated under the CA and PllRF rules. M I k I Eilenber.'s Whit«ap was the CCA Wlni'ler and Roy \Vih100·~ Wlndf•ll was the w!Mrr in PHRF. Arlactpa lsJand Ral't ovsi..it.1.1, ~ (11 l"1•tl~1t1 ti> levt. 1m OHtlftf, lllM't'Ci UI suno. IVk .... • lf'ICll, C'l'C1 411 '41Mllf,..,, JOl'u Corn1119~. WY(. ttl C011c:111Uon, L.1rrv .,.,, .. ~. CY~. $V.l$ A -(II M1ml1. Mitt .Smltll. ' c. Cl.ASS I -1// l•llll UI J<1~v1111 • ....1. CLASS C -I llll~atk: ti! 511..,... ~ll ,_,,.,.., Cl.AU 0 -(II Pf'M k>!ffl, H1r11111 l-. OltVC.. Blackbird Scores • • • Cleai1 Sweep. Wi11 'lia 111i Skipper H.cpea ts Win REDONDO BEACll (UPI\ -Art Noms of Mi.'lmi. F1n .. won the fourth a n n u a 1 Bushrni1\s-KRIG grand prix offshore powtrboat r A ct &lturday in :i 3G ·foot "(,'lgaretle" cr8£t. Slapstiot . romplf't\ng lhc 11'16-milc courioe in t\\'O hour~ 18 minules at an a''eragc ~peed of 1:.11 miles ptr hour. It Wfl! the M.'COnd straight yc-11r Norris has won the ract. Second place went 16 Billy i\l<irUn. who ~pleied lhl' CO\lrl"l' in 1wo hours 211ninutts at ·io6 mlle5 an hour. il1a ggie J ,Captures flonors . " .. • PUBLIC NOTICE PUlllJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE '· ' " • " ' I • c pl I\ 10 • " F. w A T " IC p " I c ' y st m fo th ai 0 H K d ., I t: d st A J in w .. se a C\ a w SC w tO in SC an of cd M a as w to to be di u. f; an bi & ' A F s w M R c SI l c • In I Culprits Foul Up Hizzoner •Tom Wirt Servien Mayor Eugene McKinney spent a lot of tax dollar.i: to change municipal stationery to plug his Detroit suburb or West land as one of America's JO sare~t cities. Now he's too tmbarras.sed IO 1J.'4! It. McKinney's troubles started when the December Issue of Esquire Magazine reported \Vest.land 10 be ooe o I America's 10 s.&rest cities. based on 1971 crime statlstlcs. The mayor ordered a line on !his added to tbc city's s!fl· tiooery. But days after the ne\\' let· terhcads arrived. \\'est.land Police Chief \\lil!iam Rechlin released 1973 figures sho\\•ing \Vcstland suffered a 35.6 per- cent incr&ise in c r i m e s reported over 1971. the baS<:' yeer for the Esquire story. * American actor and romcdv 1'1lar Danny Kaye \\'ill conduct ooe of Britain's oldest and most distinl?uish!'d orchestras for a charity event. Kaye \\111 take the baton of the Halle Orchestra r-.1av 23 lo aid ~lancheslt'r area children and to help S\\'cll t he orchestra's ov.11 funds, the lla\le mai::azint' said. Speaking tongue-in-check of Kayc·s a~aranct> as a ('(lll- ductor. the magazine said : "The resulting encounter rould \'ery v.·ell set serious music bac:C: a generation," * James Turner, a 25-year-old self-employed businessman. said he would ride a h3rr('l over Niagara Falls on July {, ( PEOPLE ) 1976, to commemora!C' the United Slates' bicentennial. He said he also m1E!hl clonate anf proceeds from the stunt to charitr. • Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, his wire, Jacqueline, and her children, Caroline and John Kennedy, arrived in Egypt for a vaca- tion. Accompanied by friends, they are lO toor the pyramids and other ancient monu mooLs in l.m:or and Aswan. • Sen. J, Strom Thurmond, who has been in the Senate since 1954, says he is going to seek re-election in 1978. "I think whm. counts Is how a man feels , his mental and physical condition." sai d the 71-ycar-o!d South Ca r o I i n a Republican. * The Writers Guild gave Pnd· d)' thayef~ky, who v.·rote the movies '"fhe Hospital." "The Goddess:' and "i\farty," its Laurel Award. The guild gave \~alentinc Davies A\vards "for bringing honor and di~nitv t.., .. Titers evervwhere"-to Ray 8radbary- and Philllo Dunne. Bradbury, ,,.ho achie,·ed fan1e as a sclence fittion and fantasy uTiter. prodJ.\.ccd seven plays, 10 books and liis v.·orks apocar in more than 200 antholo~ies. Awards for best mo\";<: scripts v;cnt to J\l elv ln Fr~nk and Jack Rose for "A Touch of Class" as best origlnal com· edy; Alvin Sargent for "Paper !o.foon " as best comCdv from another medium: S t e v r Sbagan for "Save the Tiger" as best original dra1na. ;111d 'Valdo Salt and Norman Ex ler for "Serpico" as best dn11Jla for another medium . * Or. Norman Topping has been appointed to the board of directors of H.F. Ahmanson & Co. Topping is chancellor of use and a nationally knov.11 figure in medicine, education and business. H.F. Ahma nson & Co. is a $5 billion financial holdirui: com· pany that owns Home Savings & Loan Association. nine-in- surance companles ~ n d Ahmanson Bank. * Kentuckv Gov. Wendell H. Ford ended months of political speculation when he an· nounctd he \\"OUld seek the U.S. Senat:-seat held b)' Republican '-t-.rlow Cook. Ford, , .... 1.0 has nearly 1111·0 years left in h I s ad· mj,gjstratlon. said ht v;oold run on his record as governor and v.11at he '\\'OUld Oo as a senator and not dwell on Watergate. Park Chairn1an SACRAMENTO I AP J Mrs. Leah F. ~tcConnell of Reddlng h:i!I been elttted chalrmlln of the Callromia State Park and Recreation CommlssJon. !Ur•. McConnell, the commission's vica chainnan this past year, wa! eppolnted to the commission In i967 and reappointed tn 1971. I THE PICK OF Punch I ililJO~m I PVHCH (-••'llol lt1" ""f-to -~ .. f11ery Mtek It~ t.im w. don't #ti the Chin:IJ Tmet or dw Methodist &cortkr •. : .. • ·~ F 01· the Record __ .._ .. . . - Bi1·tJ1s SOUTH CO.UT COMMUN l "J Y HOSPITAL FEIRU.t.RY l1 Pt"'IV lte l<>d William R. Golt>, Utll Co•r!tn!t L•ne, Mlu1on Vltoa. DO,. Htlt'I •NI 1100.tl 011e Scl><tll. 3161' Viq1l"lll W1y, S.0...th LIQ<tnl . OOY. Jeni, I(. •1>11 Glenn E..-,.n "II'"· 2'.t1' !.~j Tr~ 11e1 .. 5•n Ju•n C•Pl•"tr.· Llf>CI• Jt~" '"" M•r-1!:11Wl" Prentv, 111 Pocillt SI. Lll""I BtKh, H I Pll•• M. lfld Cner!•• Jaf\f\ Ge.i11u..,, .»It$ P•li«I •I Arc(J. San J.,.n C1pl1!r1no, qlrl JVCJ• 1N1 Ptr..-w .i111m Zimm...-"""· l'·U~I V11 Sin Cle~fllt, M<Hoon Yol lO, OOV YeronoCI """ 01vlCI JOU•" Ht0tn. ?tS•l LOl 5l'fr1no~. L<tgunt Nl!llltl. bOv. 5h•ery t»CI L!'t Fr1n<i1. 2!1lS Mu·q11eri•t Pa•I.. Wet!, LIQwn.o N•Q<#I, llO"t Fl:lllUAllY 13 J<tOl '"'Cl Pelot W••ll~m l•mm....,,..~n, l••ll VII s .... Clemrnlt , Ml1flQtl v~. 10. i)O~. l'ElllUAllY 21 Vr<"o•dc1 ena 01vi<1 Joseph H&Ot•. 1•}.11 Lo• Seffl..O>. Ljogun1 Nll;i,,..1, ~ .. MAllCH • J111!t />. 1N:1 Rob«I W, Bolstor, Jr,, U Annlndale lld Pe11~ ..... DQV. MARCH I Sv••n Ol111t •NI lr1,1t• Ml •ll 1(1rot, 11>171 V!t c .... rvo, M1n 1°" Vielo. DQ1. MAltCH 10 Olan• l"d l!khltCI 01vla E"ll•I. 6iM Svtt s ... C<,.lft /MU. 1>11y. MAllCH 11 K1 ren 1n<1 ~rn•ra Han1 "'lmi,, 379~• Pe<fO dtl Lutero, S~n Jv1n C.ap1!1 .. rl0, DOV iT. JOSE 'H HOSP ITAL MAJICH I Mr 1na M" Lefter G. (leve11....,, 11« s111e Av•, No. e. '°''' Mn1. o•ri MAllCH ' Mr ana M" Pel"' J. Bool~•ovd. 1"611 Btl(h Ave . lrvo.,. OOv Mr 1na I.fro. Frniedcll. H Myero. 1491 Flag!!lr (lfCle. Irvine. oo·, M• ~Ml M rt S!ovtfl H SJ...,,r, 7~7• 5•nlarow Drive. Mi•••on Vle10, 8itl. MAllCH 11 Mr. l'l<I M•I. j""" A. Kvri. tfl9 e-.lt Ooont Tt'l'r1ee, Coron1 ,._I Met, DQY. MARCH 11 Mr tnG M~. L'1"&V J . 1-•· ?II! F11rvlt,.., F :KU, C.~1 Mll!\I. OOJ Mr. 1nCI Mra. C1rley Lt~~. 11}7';1 Mt rMlirh Orlw , HWflli"lllOQ leltl\, -· Mr. I /Id Mr1. CL.rt Sml/l'I• ll)IU1 WlllDPOOr<¥h111 Ave. Foun11 n v111,1•, ;\rl. • ST. JOSEPH H05,ITAL M.t.ltCl\ lS M•. Ind M•!. S!eol\en MlnQ·Kll (~f~, 7.0!7 Pl1n1 Ave .. Miuion YitlO. °"' Mt Incl Mtl llTcn•rd JaKn~ •• 1>11 MlnOol&, Co~ll& Mtla, oov. M•llCl'I It '"' 1nll Mr1. Paul 0 . Pe1er1, l601 M1rln 01ivr. lf•ln•. otrl MARCH 19 Mr 1na Mrs. Gt<lra" R Si•<•~' 11 11 Vl•1ll& OrlVf, C0!il1 l,lr•a, t>Oy Dissol11tio11s Of ./11arriage Scnrlwr, J1m11 E. •no Nt!IQ' s. Jonnoon. W•lttr Allen fNI Donne LH 11.•n<i. Louil Merrill ana Coro! Annt NOtlon, Lorin EClwarl;I incl Oeool1 L""'" Ka1~n1>1d11'". Gl<>r•I J. •nll 11.lcA•rl;I Cl1v1on M•llOW, Bann•e $<# ard G1rv FE. Thom••• CttCW" Eckl'WlrCll ft<:! PnlliD Edmu1'Cloen C11m1n. SwSln M1rl1 •NI Gr~ory O••>• F0<CI, Fteady J r . .and 8ttnk• E. -Mt,,ny, (l•Ot Lorent tnd O.•l<I Philip C1i1.n, Jenice C. 11'1<1 JOH F. Gro1Jan. 0••+•"" 1roc1 "-'' Leroy McF1t11ne, G!O'"if M. 1..0 8atry F, McGJ90Clf, sn;,ley Jeoill IOOJ Vernon AnQu• Willey. Cn••l•11t Loul•e and Bl1lr L1<1n 'llH Pt'bnr1rv 11 51mwn, NOrm~ 0. -f.r•••("f M , Grf!1, Pett; Je•" 1NI Jamt• LltOY ve1aso..e1, C1ro!vn ""Cl Felix oeanno. Jim 1na Sacl\i~o AD01'11t, 1-lKIOr anCI Mi••v• Mill\IO Trlflet. H1111h Jer1ICI 11roc1 sanv 8tll~ '"~ Em•tlt , Norma G. 1ne1 Carl lllVl"l"onl;I SMpm1n, Naal"" •nd J amin Rooerl M•llcl, Jave• ind John Ch1mber1, Conrad F. 1Nf N1ncy H, Alooio, ClaYde and Cl!Mrlne v. Rlcl\mond, ChlrlH E. •nd C&Orl1l1 lli Worsman. Sh1ron A. ana PnlllD T, "'Iii''"'• P1lr!cla Ann 1<><1 Te1ry Allan F0<em1n, Lvnel!e IC. •"" (lvOt E W•!ker, Gtrv '114 C•rO!f M. Fr;JG-all, Ell .. n Nancy 11'1<1 ltg.nfld W•lllu• INTEllLOCUTOllY DECllEl:S Enrt rtd Fttw'warv U II.none, Mvra 1rent ano Kermll Lvn~ 5YMlmf , EC1w1rd Oee" Jr. lr1d G!1av1 "°"' Le111 • Hav!t v, Olo•n J. and Aavrn<lf>d E. Gra.1. 1(111\lff<\ M&rjlyPI 1t>d (.1rv Ger••d Jonft. C•ll'lfrlne C. 11'11 Tll°"'a1 0 •o<1ntll, fojatKV Lvnn •lld W1HKt oi1.ver.tt C:.t'8CK1 Atlfn -C1rol AM IOW=. NetKV Faolh INI Atll 011111 Hrnrv, Oouol•l L and Melinda L Pilato•, Jw1n Tar!bla 1N1 Conce1>elon GrtlUrfl, Ooro!hv Mlldrl<I •NI John f1 1vmand Wlwl!...-, Rev a/'ld l'lorO!!'oe• APIA "TP>Dml!. Cttol !I. Incl JICll. H~tr-d Enell. C.,.olvn Oline ll'ICI MHIOI' Rid...-, Cl"" Lou I ncl Geor<Je £vert!I KtMl1', 6t:Mle Mt~ 1nCI Cl'llr111 Louts BurPletl, 0••-I nd Alex J1 ...... e on .. 1r, Ftor1 E. and Mi:hl!t W. Meocllfol, F•lncM G. -,,_ T .,.,., 811~~~/ Nl'ICY llltllJrdson_11>11 Kelli! Qwc:"ranlella, Emelll~ G. and Stv.r;o Davl1, S!~anle Dsoor11. -'"" GQl"Gon WllVM O~Plle!Mln, Alln G 1nd Lau-el S. Pltma,,, U...,. M. &nd Wiiiia.., E, ~k.~~~;"&. ~i.d·r:,;.:;::} Per!K I, Saneltl 1/'ld llonald Gene ru..,.r1, "Tfmo!ll~ Mlc111.i a1"MI II.Ila F. r::~.11~~os(,!';~d·1J'rr-..:""" ... "'°'"'"'"· Pa•r1c11 •mtlll 1ne1 Stf~n Cr•kl l!tll, Lindi M. 11'1(1 TllOl'l"le' II. M((°;dlf, B•trY Ml(l\fft 11111 O.oor1ll ,.~ Tl'ICmat. Pattie!• AM af'!!I' w11n1m c1vl~r s10·~. 11.1111n1~ G. tnd G..orol• 9e11rlc1 M•ylt,.,, Moll¥ J.,.n•ll 1111:1 llrrd '°'-' .... " L11i.r, L•ll'• M. •nd ttlWI w 11n1m "' H1fl, H-:;fJ·,~~~· HuftfT\1,,. DllNld II -Cl'lflrvl Ann $mf11\, Min"'"°" ••lira aNI """'.,..' ,_, ~. J.,.,,. K. ..-.11 C.,-nill1 D. Stultfl'!1n, ICaltotf'llW Aft1I "" MJc~•Y Ea•I • Lf,,,,._rt, Cl'llrVt L •l'llf M'1vl~ Ill 11..,_. llltll«(I 11$1le t NI Ot vld W•-F....,_, 111-141 ttMl"'flO<""» IJK1ttt • .J1111 M. 111\11 81en C1f1 Scl\toW, Hopf Ttt'l'!• ~ M«!ln J1- 1t11UttM. ("eltt1u1 11C1v """ !'v•fl (Pulrltr' f."i•t. '-"""' C~lt ...., oi."' A, p~1111..,, Loi• '-°"""" 1nC1 ,..,, Oennl,, H1lllf, 1..-r...c• I . And A!'iUI L ... I .. l'"'t!WOOO, Doo\91d ~I 1nG Chrvsli"' ·-JOl'ft...., O•viCI Mtl11 •fld Mvrn.1 ll11C1r1w. D~nol,., P..111>1* Kl.., ~ Ot~ l(ffl""'"· s11i:--•t, c-l'IClolY"' ,.Ii",. •lld A.rtlWr C11,.r1"-• C:.f'"'O.,,..,, Oonna ,,.,.rl<I -Cl'l..-1" ltod4rfldt ~ ... .,.,.,It•~ L •NI O~tw H. Gtlll.ln, Oanlrl ll lcM«I llf\d Jiii!• o.°;~~"°""•' I!. J•. -M si.~nt. ~to,,, HI!• Y. ~ 'Niii IJ. ~Uf!fl", M,.-dl Chrlt,ont .,.,., L"' Otrmott. HOOllC•O· ci.rtnct w•1111'll •"II ""''¥ M1111sr1r un•.,.O<""•n. cner1 .. Wdght 1no lll'ld• lr•r>e ACl<tv, SUftn F trod Mtnit-y l!dwlPI 1'1111..-, Oor<llnv Jhfl ~NI ll •ll>ll Ntt\OI •. ~ll•ttv, £i!tla 1NI C11e1 F MWN:lefl, 111c1>ard e. 1..0 C)r)fln• L l"llMI l'_..ltJ n Do1"11. R!rt -Clllrlt• !l•r.,.., Ktnnl!h D•"'<I •1'4 ll •cnl! '"" Tlt1;1. N1t1CV l lll1Wll\ 1nC1 Cn1r115 EIS-II\ '?.?;'' L~•'d J. 1n<1 J..,lct L. F1! ren, Lll'ldl ~. •nd llrvct E. C11 tll. M•rv 5. lf>ll ,..1..-C Wa(lenl>ffg, ,,.,,.,,;,,. A INI LI"""'' • F"111>...-, lloc ... rCI G. Ind C.1ald1nt I'.;, coraes. Ptnnvt E. -Augutl w. Wrkjft!. C1rroH c-Ind JU<ly Lt• Who!t, l(•lhry,. Ann I nd Wollllm Oclwl•I AllCHr'°", snerrv J1n1 ind WI"•~ Lwl1 11-rrion. 11.-1d Ell•-•h 1n<1 Cnrl1rv Lin" Colo.tr. 5"irlfY J1111n ano llov11 cecn p...,., M1r!1 (°;v.o!•lwpe 11\0 M1nwtl JOl'lfl>On. Llflllt J. 1na M1ch1tl Wtrren wn•I•, II.urn E. 1no J.,n•• M Hlrd!"lil, R-rt C. Incl M•unt ll>\r c;;.&1nt1. soon!• aNI lwdort £iCntflDl:l1il. lloOtf1 J Ind Dodi I.. 11.IQ~arlll, Je1n Ann 1nc1 1-.-11 Erwin Swttll•« EC1w1rd '"" Ltl• M•v 1111<1, S!~ C. I nd Ir"" LH Audlu, Olane L. 1MI Rao.rt llodnt¥ treltfl. J•ntl kl Yt Incl Tnom1' RoO.rt Haloe .... Avl1 M. lnCI Roo.r K. C!Ol:>Arelll, Edw••d L 1na P1mftt1 II. Gr1bo•n. GordOI'! Lt urtf'>C J 1NI Mtrv Cynthl1 M•rchuk. lon• Evelyn Ind Ctrt 11e,,lm1n, Krnnell\ Ltt Ind Su11nne J •nl ""''""· 1J111r1ce , 1nc1 WIUl1.,, E. lltlJ'o'<n, S!lerrv Lt• 1nd Mlcn1el 1-<ttOfr, L••h R. end Ktnne!ft II. so.,illltre. 111vmond '"" Rtn!'f S••ck, Otlorl1 01urlnt 1nCI 011nl1t '~ L• v10.,., $htrrv o. 1nd H•rold w. Jr C1rC1et'I, Tnorn1' M. 1nd Cllrhrlne L. Goof. PtYll J•an •1111 flllly llon Nuntl. Mlria L. 1NI Fr~nc'<co T ............ L1Nor1 •1111 JtmtS JKk•o" Ftll.,..,f, Lind• Ptr>On• 1n<1 fhor!lll Mltllll!I Je'"'"· JtrMI C. 1NI Otrtv J MHl1rl0\0•(, (Vfllllll J t nCI GO'O"H Carey, Tod Wlm1m i nd A"nt El!r•Delft ,...lor, Pennv Sw 1na """' Alie" .-1~"'"• Chfrvl 0. In<! J1mo1 T H•iQM, Micl\MI Ktmlt •lie:! Donn• Jean Tur~, Con.,le Jran In<! John s.iv••· ll1tber1 Sue 1nd l!oowld Z•clC ~ .. ~t>M-. J°"n ANlrew 111<1 Oennv L.,...~ I.' '.\lrom, M1rl1 Jta<tltt Ind Ltt (il'I.(' t.:el,.;t1, Avylon<>t WJn111,..,. 1f'ICI 11011114 f", l"'.$1 DD•Dlhy F. 11111 JOW'llh Jk~ Pro••m. lerle •nd J•me• Wltlltm " "(0-t, Lln(!I and WIVTI' 01vld run•r~•~• 51"dr11nid Cl"'"'" 11.U<lf I -•t• 1.•ArV Lwl•• '"" Ml~• B•n\Ofl. ~tn11tll\ Fr1nhl111 •nd Jotn M "":~",f,~ Evo•,,• ""'"'"'Y 1na M1r111rel /,\oiler. MArV Ann 1nd Mark P Yrdv ()ulaley. '"'°' P.nn """ L•rrv llO(k,..tll S,.,,Jth, are,,dl K. ind Jimmy ,It,. BHIPt, Jl\'""1"• s """ llol1nd E. 1--Joward. "•melt IC '"" Ft••klln W. Aecvtoa. Nancy 1nCI RoOorrt l<Owf P•m•la Oen!H 1n<I Albl•I • icenow•11 Ou!!M , llo""rl We~I •f'l<I Ju!lt K•v PDUl1•rC1, Timolny Cnarltl 1nC1 Joanna M1de Slll!lcrou, Jtmfl Ctlvln 1nCI M1rv •oM Roe!•nC11, Dont ld laul1 1nd P1ttv J ..... ,,,......., • .,, G•rv k . 1"11 C1rt1lv" V. HOt'l'Qn, Rowty11 Jov:• 11111 J1mei 'nUli1> Jr Filtd 1'11M"v1ry U fl•ldv, DolOl'11 ""· •nd Fri nk IC. Gfltner. Dtt n f111tnene 1NI S11U1nne ··-!omtlm1n, CIVCW ... I NI 1-.l>ell• C«•n11l•r, AtY"lldo tfld II.at• Stqnllllagen, 11.ot•M I.. •rid EllW~r.:I J ~ ..... ll.ob..-11 Jo ~ C6(rOll G. l\cDonPld. llfl(I• L. And Wlll!•m fl Forbf'!·Rt'lblnlOl'I. P1111 Jel n I~ 51u1r! oooe_, HOW•tCI U. ~n>'I "•lln• A. NP.....,1n, 01rrel 00111ld 1ne1 L11n ~ .... fll~rm•n. L1wrence Ed·,.1rd and J1nlct IC"lfttVll Owm11, Mid• Elrnt •rid ECl .. ~•d Jr Jo'"'""'· Er11tsl Oliver Ind Dlet'll 0e1,,.. •• p.,...,an F.tw1"1 M 111>'1 M•<clA K, l-lo,.1. S1N1r1 o<. i nd Cfl1r1.n P S~•co,..1;, Marcil Jtl Mlt arid Wlt1l1rn Art11ur l'Hl<I '-'irth I Fo~, Corl Elc ind lll!A l. ><troe~. Oebll!e 11111 Oclu<ll11 I'. r•De"I"'""· J\ldlth 4. """ Don11d E. OO"hall. ltlnl "11111"... I nd Hl rOkl wimam Frltna. )•mtl 1--J. tnd J..,..I Kay P1u!I. fla.,c11 0 . t"ll Onu<rl~1 G. EQ8,,, Daw" L t nCI MldlAel R, Fol~. R~bf•! 5 Arid 511118 $ FO'l!ft, M!cl\1el T. l'nd M1rrld1t ,t,,,,.. Wlthl•dl, ISIOtf aNI HllOO H. NCM"d, OonM •ncf" N0tm1n Mull111tau•. Ned H Ind llulh 5. C~!.,n1n. CKlr!ll J. •nd 8onnlt L. Ha.,,...., Kennt!ft L alld llernl<ltnt M, Mein!!•• c1..,.., 5,....,,, t< i nd L1•-v E. INTl:llLO(UTOllY Dl:Cll£1!1 l:fti.l"ff l't11NIN ff llillOll. O<>n,... M11 tNI It-I E1111tne ''"""'' Conttanct A Ind Jerrv L ~te-son. Dorlt I. tnd Robert t""""1! Joan II ,.nd Olartn Tl"'O!!ly 5ttnl..,., OOl'l•ld H, •NI l1url't11 I. 8rrnn•"• Ll'ftflle C. Ind Michal'! J . l""' E'""' anCI Irma SIAM. (lllr!n Euotnt l'nd 01rl- '"' HUCl.on. C1mtn1 Gena 11'4 ll11111ld Al1tn l 1nllft1r, ltot>ert Ll!tte tlld Jo.~n• '~ \•I•. O!onl'1" "· ....., L...,, .... Umland, Jnc~1rd Arnold Jr. tnd flArblfl G1!1 (!>Am~!. fldttil!e I nd Oom!lll<k '"""'•"' MQOrt, ~lrllll'l..ll-11'111 l-or!•IM Vorn~la, """ Nie~ 11M ll1111nl1 l'lfi.n Jl"roln. t•n~ l~ ..... 8~1!!>V l "'"~ '""'0"· ~· Ltl •»Ci l.OrN 0fl~ a,.v P11rlcl1 L1VonM 1nl;I Kern~rtt!I Oale MA•CM U H•rC1t1lv. NO""y A. Ill<! T"""'lt I(. Ooft'r. L1rtl1n 0 •lld Jenell lo.. Q'Pflilv. Mlf11ft JDW"DI\ lf'ld A"" 01""'-11111 Culler, llblfl 0 . Ind S•lllt 1.,.1,.e, Dl1111 C. ind Ruw•I II. <t1!l!on•. Lll>d• Lou. 11nd Jl...,ml~ 8wt1, K1ttiryn J N••' aNI Mlc1111t S. st••"""· c1 .. w 11 J. •"" 1tar1 w. C"«btl1t, Al\ct W. tflCI f'"111r1s1 Fart T-. Jollf> 4. •1'11 CNrvt C. C..rte-r, C1rrat 0 . end Dav1d T, 1(-, N1rtCY LM and MkhMI J-Oll Kins .. , Ewent M, 9"CI ~ J, IJaclo..-, Or1t1 Mwrt ,..., Llftolf Ol rtelle 1..f'I ..... , Mt"' AMI and Hof"K• G. Mll<Mf ...... •11111 .... ·~ c. ..., • ., ~•Mela M. afld oavw A.. ··-· L-...C:I Jolln end Deretl\'I' E•....,, llf1lora AM Ind I!~ Ca,.._,, Aflllt lrad• allcl OK1r ...... o ....... ".V'• ... •nd JtfT'I' 111-1..-..1<\!. lllltv WflHlo ..... VlrOlftl1 .... ~ 9.,.h#'lthl, Clla•"' W. end 01ft A, "11N, C•"lll A, 1111f Wirt!-H. Sl-oert. "-c ...... Jlld!tf\ s. r.:-rd, J...:llll!'Hnt l ..W l......., 0 . M.iDvt. MP"lnl Cralf ,,,. Yl,..tnl1 ... Cir~. Olin• lvfttl..,.. J11Mt ll11twll CcrH1nt. J....,ft11 I!. 11'1d J_,.. 11 Hud•k, Vfl'"fl~ll T. Mllf"lbl/I tl'ld I.rt ·-· Don, lto&oli"t LH Jr , lflll """'' l(IY l!IPl~t!l,ftlo, lllO<'lthl JlffttV lftd JOI~ ... Otot.i• Trapp, l!""'•rd J, Jr, t f'ld Ktrtil M1r .. !1t1 L-11. Mtt ,,t11c11 S et'ld il'tter W. Allfllar. Tnn1 Juflltlll •NI J- Ac..,tlatt .... li1 the • Se1·vice N":H'\" A!rnmn Recruit Oa\'id I "" \\'llllaml. son of !o.lr and i\lrs Dan1on €. \Villlarns of l 18985 San An tonio, Fountain Va!le\', graduatl'rl from recruit trnining i:tt tht> Naval Training Center at San Diego. ,\farine Pv1 Thol"l\a~ C. lfud~ins, so n of :O.·lr$. Shidev J . Jlude1n~ of 95.12 Telhsn Drl\'e ffunlin~ton Bt>ach. p:raduated f~o,.., basic tratninf at the .\tarinc Corns R~rult Depot at San Oi.ego. i\tarine Pfc. l\1ark A . Rankin. v.·hose ·wife Claudettr 1!i the daughter of i\tr. and i\trs. James Rud y of Huntinr;tton Beach, comoleted a specialized jel aircraft maintenance course at the )farine Corps Ajr station at Cherry Point, N.C. P..farine Pvt. Kurt \I. Brar. of 2563 Orange St.. Costa \lesa , grAd ua ted from ba~ic 1r,1inir11:: at the i\Iarine Corps R<'cn1 it Depot of San Diego. i\farine Pvt. Stephen B, Rvmes. son of ~tr. and i\trs Richard Bvmes of I S 5 0 2 ~1ayflov.•er 'Lane . l~untington Be.ich, graduated from basi<' ll'ainin~ al the ~fatiTlf' Corp,:; Recru it Depot at San Diego. Cadet Lynn R. lVhitne~·. ~n of '-fr. and i\lr s. L<'o11arcl H \\1titnev of 2.195 'T'emole Hills Drive.· Laguna Bfac-h. h1s been named to the Qe;in"s List at the Li.S. Air For c I' Academy. Cadet l\flchar l L. St.\"it'r. son of ~·lr . .:ind ~Ir!<. Donflld K Sevil'r of 801 Camphor St . Newport Beach , has been named to th<' Commaniiani's list at lh~ U.S. Air Force Academv. Cadet ·Sevier. a memher of the class of 1967. \\"as selPctcd for his outstandinl! mili1ar• performance. lfe will "'·e;ir fl silver \.rreath desil!natinc; 1tie honor accorded hi'TI b\' thr academy commandant of ca- dels. Coast G u a r d i\1achinrry Technician Third C I a s $ 1t-lichael E. Fields, husband of the former '-1iss Paula S. Todd of 2212 Santa Ana , r.osta Mesa. was awa rded the Coast Guard Unit Commendation at the Coast Guard Station here. tfe was cited for meritoriou~ !<"rvice aboard the Coa~t Guard Cutter Dependahle in J anuarv of this vear. Finlds took part in fire fir>hlinl! ooerations arter the Cfllli-.ion of a U.S. tanker ship and a N..,rwe~ian F'reighter o'1 tht> ~fi!<sissioni River. Due tn the heroic efforts of the CoAst Guarif cutter crew hot h disahled ship!< \\"ere saved and traffic on the ri\'er v.·as restored to normal . Greiory l\f. Shin. son of ~fr. and J.trs. llenry D. II. Shin. 8751 Adams Ave .. Huntinll!ton Be a ch , •"'as promoted lo Army Specialist Four in Germany. Jle..is a fire direct.ion center computer in Company B of the Slh Infantry 's 3rd Battalion in Be rlin. Airman First C1ass Ralph Rasmussea Jr., son of 1'.1r. and Mrs. Ralph Rasmusseo of 8116 Foxhall Drive . lluntington Beach. has arrived for duty at Kunsan AB. Republic of Korea. Airman Rasmussen. a n air craft repairman , is asslgooj to a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. lt e previously served at Nell~ AFB. Nev· Navy Seaman Recruit Christopher E. Bondurant, son of 1'tr. and Mrs. Richard D. Bondurant of 25562 Oiarro. San Juan Ca p istrano . graduated.. from r e c r u i t training at the Naval Training C.enter at San Diego. Navy Ensign Jane I., Richman, daughter of fo.1r. and ~1rs. Hennan J. ~lermanson of 26801 Lav.·s Tunas Drive. t-.llssion Viejo. beeame the Senior Ensign f)f Tr:linln 11 Squadron Seven a1 the Na,·al Air St8.llon i\.feridian. ~fiss Navy Fireman R e c r u i I Sltoben E. Scoles, son of ~fr. and ~tn. William t-.1. Savage ol 6S2 Surf St .. Costa "lesa. graduated from r t c r u i t training at the Naval Training Center at San ... Oiego. Navy F'ire.man Rrcrull John A. Carlin, aon of Mr. and r.1r'> John E. Carlin of 5421 H'il. lluntlngton Beach, ~raduatcd from recruit tr3-lning at tht Nav1ll Training Center at San DJ<go. Army Privat. ltob<rt G. 811'1ee, aon of Mr. and Mrs. J«T)' Burton, 9838 Dandeliao. l'omt.ln Vtllt'.j', It assigned to n. Ord. ·' - . .. &JLOT 21 The Bl11est Marketplace on the Oranee Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It , Find It , Trade It With a Want AIJ ............. ' IOO • })4 ·-· . . .......... ....... _ .. ... ..... ,,.. .... ·-.,, ... ..... ....... ·--.100.m torw ........... . [642-5678] . "' ,.. -_,,, ... . IOO • Ill .. _ . . . ... .. """-~-. "" ... .... ·-~- One Call Service Fast Credit Approval "' ~ ·-"". '" • IJ) "' lo<-• oN "'"'"''°"' .m ... ·"' ... i..~., ... .._._ .6"00-.... .•)O .'" '·---. . ••• .... 6 4 2 ERRORS: Adverti5ers I Gener.ti Gsnaral C;..en )ra l • ~:71~1d ,ch::~:~·!~,~~: I Huntington Crest EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Imm. d I• I• I y. The Sparkling Pool GOVERNMENT REPOSSESStON -$26,9SO. DAILY PILOT assumes Fnhulfl\Js 2 111nn· 1·K1'"('u11\·1· Unbelievable hut true. 3 beclroorn, 2 bath. li1blllty for the first Mn11• C'usto"m _rralUN'"i. large cloublc garagt' and roo1n for boat or i ncorrect insertion thrw~hout. • k•niis•.1:e 1""'1' tr011lt'r . Nl('e S(lt\1n~ on quiet !'trcct. Best I 1''()111S -"f'parntr dl'n or l I . I sn·o \ on y. llhrne) t.argr rnt<'rtaln· par 1s c O\\·n pJyn1ent .. on y '"'" . -' nyooe n1rn1 l'Of!n1. 1 m11rl.llr flrr-eligible to suh1nit a bid . llurry, bids close General GOOD GRIEFll :-\1•1Jrly all our listing! llDld pr.\ct!1•11lly O\'!'mlght. So ... WE NEED INVENTORY plaet>i-. r nrn1ul dinuu: · soon. Con1ple1e details. Cati 546-5880. C'u.,t.-.m pool t'nclUM"d w~lh "·rought Iron • d"'"s11lng room · rail nov.· for 1111po1nt- 1nent. 8-11·253:'1. oPrN fll 9 • lfS 'I.IN TO t!IE MC(• 5 6 7 8 II yo11 h11ve c.'Of\."1.lrieffil selling y11ur hon1r or irux11n1• pro1>- t'rly CALL US. \\"e <:llll p!fl'r THE REAL ESTATERS EASTS JOE CHARMER NORTH COSTA MESA $43,000--QUALITY BUILT FAMILY HOME 1,1,oith shake roof. h:1rd\.vootl fl oors and plaster \\alls. !·luge added 12'x24' bonus roo1n com- plete \\"ilh large stone firepla<'e. paneling and real bean1 ceilings. Beautifu l front kitchen '\"ilh nc1v double ov('n, 5 burner range and di sh"·asher. J u~i listed. ""t>n't last: CALL 546-5880. D A I L y P 1 I I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 of Prrsonalized 11ervk..-l 1 \'ou"rr ln1portant to us' of Con1ln11ous quality ex- posure (~·t-Try hardf'rl ./ Special "no obli!(flhon" llKl'('('n1f'nl 11111k U!'>I ./ t 'NH" rvnlu11ollnn (""ho <'IUtrgl'S~ I Plralle 1:11.1\ &4·1-7211 m!lla CLASSIFIED HOURS Advertisers may place \h{"ir ads by tl'lephone 8:00 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. ~lond!y thru Friday S to noon Salurda)' COSTA ~IESA OFFICE 330 \V. Bay 642·5671!1 NE\VPORT BF.AC!! 3333 t'Oe\VllO rt Bh·d. 6<12-5678 •IUr..'TINGTON BEACH 1i87;-, 8('ach Blvd. 540-1220 L,\GUNA BEACH 222 Forrst ;\v(', 49·1-<J.166 SAN CL.E~lE;>;TE 305 N. El Camino R{"al 492-4420 ?"ORTH COUNTY dial free 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for copy &: kiUs is 5 :30 p.m. the day be· fore publication,. except fo r Sunday & Monday Editions v.'hten deadline is Saturday, 12 noon . CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ET?nOHS: Advertisers should check their ads dally & report errors in1med iatC'ly. THE DAILY PILOT &S!umf.>S liabili ty Cor thie first In· correct itw1rtlon only . CANCELLATIONS: \VhC'n kiUing an. ad ~ surf' to make a reco rd •lf the KIU. NU~lBER f:"iVf'n you by your ad taker as receipt of your cancellation. Th is kill number must l:M! pre- SPnlfld by the sdvcrtiscr in case of a dispu te. CANCELLATION O·R COHl!ECTION or r\E\V AD BEFOHE RUNNING: i:\'t'l'Y rffort Is mfl de to ~:ill or corrt'ct a nt'w ad that ha.s tx-en orderrd, bu t v.·e cannot guaran· tee to do so un til the ad has appeared in th e paper. Dll\IE·A·UNE ADS: These ads are strictly ca.sh In advance by mail or at any one of our of. fices. NO phone orden. Dea4Jine: 3 p.m. Friday, Costa l\'fesa office 12 noon -all branch of- ficC's. TI-fE DArL Y PrLOT re- serves the ril?h l to clas- ~lfy, edit, censor or rte• fu.sC' any Rd11t'rt.isement, and tu chanl?C 1ll rates & rri;::ula tiflns v.·ittiout prior nutiCl'. CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. 0. Box 1560, Costa l\tesa. 9:!626 Walker & le e EASTSIDE FOURPLEX $65,000 lncom• $615. month ('Nuff 1aid\) 2211 NeW1'0!! It. Costa Meso n 646-8811 Sun/Eves. 646-5855 ·•M» HERITAGE ' • RE LTO Most For The Money I at $92,000 1\ll l:1n:I' I hf"o<hTlf.1111~, l111th, l<tn1i1y JYJOl1', ~•·1 b~•t". rorn1al 1l1n1ni: l~Jfim, lnv1,ly enll)". 2700 Sq. Fl.. all on oil!.' lf'\'C'I around pa!10 J.:/lnlPn v.i th fount111n. 3 Car i:;11-r1i.:c. Jlarbor Iii. This is Sl'f':C!,\L. Call for ;ip 1~nntuu•n!, ~·e Tri-ll11rrl"r rll Tn-1!;1rbor. S46·5880 Open Eves. 11 M•"J'I•1.unt><l a•hnlnhlrnli\·r• 111i,f1·,..s1n11:d 111 ('11,..111 ~1 r,;i !!",II" h•,..p1ral (;•)!"1(1 J"llt•nl1;1I (01• pri·~ll>!•" "Ill•"'· •'flfl· vrilesi"t'tll :t•"'"H1l1nno!1111on'. t·lr·. (';1!1 JM;..2:11 3 /!1r ;ill 1!1•\1• ii" _· .. ·_ l nPf'I r1L ~.IT ~ FU'/ rflBrlllC(I I 11~1~;~;TR~~y~~ HORSE PROPERTY 1 ~@i I THE REAL ESTATERS Huie-<' cu!>tom hnmt'. Im-[Jl('lltl'rl on !hi' h 1 u f [, ~ mrnsc ]iv1ni: rootn. K 1n~"lf" \\'l'sl•ule Co"tli (II ~ i;:i I bed roo111... Thank.,l{lv1ni: ,\Jn10~1 ~t art'f' Int. Ila" --THIS IS JTI ~1zr rlJ111ng , 2 rn,·•·rt•1I llOrctr,,. 11nd c-flrr:il nn"· • pati~. full t::ro\\'f\ ~h11dr Sl\.:.00. ~-:.~l •. l'rf'sttg•· $29 950 anrt fruit trer'. G1vl' ;"t"·ny l!on1rs fil~· ' 4 Spfl('irnn< tJ1"1r1'n~. '! b:\lhs. price, JU"i.I $4~.000. Don"• 1 mis.~ 11u1' ~auty c ;i 11 2 SMALL HOMES ),1::;;,~r1~1~·11;1~:~~.~~1 vc~;:~~-"~2-r.l3j. \ll!h manv (':1;tras -on n1w •1r \OfU:r!\ \\/hn;,1 i:atf'. 1111~ I Of'!N iii g . trs luN ro Bf Nier· !<11, S1i.;m Cus1<1m hu1lt. f.1m\lv !Tinn1, hlr-111~ un1 I in ~~ ~ fnn'fil air hc:i!, rpt~. drp~. a c~ntrfll tn1t 1 location I ~·'.. • hlt1n~, .t.''''"n·d p:11u•, di.It· i:r .,,·11~· fru1l1 liu~y er;iffj, r sir -:;1rai:r "'Ith 11ut" i.::u·:,i:r i-tr1•1·1~. Clr•!'o<' 1ro ~~t~. rl<10r, Ii.:•' sl(lrag1• rah1nr1~ 1 "hopplt1S:: . .di< rr11~11· !x11ch ('nniplf·trly f•·ncl'<l. 014'1cr ;u~·:• 1\!l · th!tt f11r onl:,. DUPLEX rinse In J.,r.;r11IQn I $29,9:.(1. Call !lli:!-1:,r:. H d rt Ill Roy McCardle Realtor I ea qua ers... 1810 r-;,.~·orl B!1·d .. C>l I ',. ""' ,., " ... ' Hri,·e \\"£' cn1 "11111~ llr1'1''11 548·7729 I a pin-sharp 2 i;triry suprr1 ,.,...,..--.,..-.......... ..,. vahlf· on O\'(•r~i~cd _\"vr. lflt'l"-aureT-STREET--1 j Hoon1y 01\·npr 5 unit -11·;.Jk (, \'A l,I ,~:\· IH<.\ I.I\ ' "' '"'• ' .... ,,,.,, ..• u•l~•c•~•T<•'''""•~·' ,.,.~, I to ;ill shops .~· fft"hr1n!s' Cutr .1 Bit drillhc.ru~r "l!h I J•rircil r1gh1 ;it $1fl,fl;,r) n1arhlr firrp!;,(~·. dtil K''~· i ·==~~---,--,,--,- 1 1!•1·ins OK :: Callfi·\5-X·l(il. rr1n 1•rP I C' _ilrl\•1•'":11 ~.· JIU(;~: 2 .;rriry \\1tl1 0:1c11nt1t .,orna'it.rroi. 'Ki· ~,1 ·1 ~pnnklrr~. ~.a~r~r<li• f •l' ·i f1o m~l1· 1"00111 l)\rr..,l~l· lot >lrS;\. fil't'rot hll.C"k y:.'l'il S-lz.:.rio I ~ I\ i::l\'l"a\\,I\. C.::1!J I " E JL. •nl &·''·· 1\·/pl11v nn•;i lfl' rln 1-ull ,,-,..,1,1 \·' · •• ... ""'n \.A.I. • • (' II I I ,. '1'"'' • l;• ~ ~t ..... 1........._ pnr"<' $?.""\.51"'1 ;1 'Tc~t .. 1 ----~------1 _:;:;:~::;::==::==:;;=:::'.I 11f)1nfl~ li·r>--r,i;v; PHESTIGE Jl.,cn1" !I ti i.:" C!.i\:;S SELl."' _ &12-:/,;<:! fan11 ly rnnni. Bii;11 i.:~t1• lhn1 · -I i.:e ri.L(l'. Sh ii rp' $1.1.!t: ~ 1 1~ a I :G~e:;n;:;•;";;;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;:e;n;;';';a;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Wirc111n C<11l 11)!·6/JlO li Prest1i;r I ht>d r r1<1n1.I Bf'au!iful! Br<~! a r l' 11 • $19,9-JO. II tJ r r y ! Call 847-6010. A~t . EXP'D, Gt;:'<I C'ontr11.(·1nr se<'kin~ ne~· projrL·f!I'. P°""· 1 joint venture. 543--61·18 1•\'C. PRESTIGE 4 bC'oroom. HC'RU·1 tifut~ Best art"a . Sl9,9;tQ Hurry~ Call !t47·6010. A~. . $©\\'*JlA-~t.fr~" That Intr iguing Wore/ Game with a Chuckle OCEAN VIEW -54 1,000 Attracti\"e small apartmcnl·llk(' unit in La- guna Beach. \\"alk1ng distonr.:e 1c1 ocean and shops. \\'onderful fo r v;eckc11d or couple. One bedroom plus den . VERY LtDO ISLAND 3 bA:roon11' 21 2 baths, dining r!JOITI. Superb home In 1de~il 11){.:ation. L·:xtraul'di nn ry value. $89,500 -------141M4 '°' CU.Y I. POU.AM 0 •eorro"'Q• le111ri of TM IO\lr t(rombltd WOidt be· ~ 10 form f0<.rr ti!Tlple "'°'di 5 ~I' l.__._t _,,_,I 6 1f:-1 ,..:-(-r-j GT.l~-Ti-11 i OCEANFRONT SPLENDOR ('harming 6 bedroon1. 4 bath hidca,~·ay. Enor- n1ous gla!'.>S·\\•alled living room caplurcs "h1te \\ ater 180 degree vie,..,. S349,500. DANA POINT CONOOS Fabulous \rhite \\'ater \'iew~ during the day and ma~nificent night vteY.·s of coastline lights. 3 bedrooms. 3 baths. 2 fireplace~ each unit. Three stories of exciting h\'ing. S79.500 7 ' I P E k I R I i My bertendier kit. cre11ed I~ I I I lln "Energy Qi5i1 Cock111I." '::·'.;:~·:::=·=~·::;:'......., Two of 'em and !he -;o r out. ~ . J~r 8 I T EC HOL \ I I I' I I 0 e":~:~~ .~~ .. "':'.'~~. -:.-: , C. -·· -•--··-··-~-yOll da-.flOP ltOfll '1tP No. J btlow. BAYFRONT VACANT LOT 50 feet of bayfrontage \\•Ith pier and slip pr1v1 leges. Fee t 1Lle 0'\'ncr ''ill consider trade. rioo.ooo. SPARKLlNG OCEAN VIEW 4 Dedroo1n , 4 bath. (a1nily hon1c on estate lot: \\'lndO'-''S OJ'Cfl to ocean & city view. P•1N1 NUMBt tlD llTltlS 1N ShO\\'n by appoint1ncnt . $142 .500 lH£~E ~QUAt($ ! uN,"o'o"""•• ~"'swtoov,c ltTrt•~ I I I I I I 11 DIAL 644--1 766 _ ,. _ . _ . . . . 1 2161 San Joaquin Hiiia Rd., N.B. A COLDWEL L BANKER CO. SC R AM-L E TS Ans we rs in C la 11 If re• tlon 900 """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""',,,f I ... . . ' .. • • . ~ . ' ... . . . ' . 22:' DAI LY PILOT "'ondJy M ~rclt 2S, lq74 "7'-------;::::;:;;:;--------;;:::::;·;:;------~:;::;:".~::0------,..,:".'::77.~ii:;-----,.,,--,...,..._,.,-,,----:"'.:;::'.Co::'.::::--R.:;;;:-°"--: IGener•' -----G~.-n-.-,.•:-Gen•ra' \rt"nert1 I General Gen.rel Coron• del Mer !!untein Vellty Muntlngton Beach 1---;...;;_-RieuviYi1iNiNG:iAliHKiiOMiME~? ---1 ~~~~~~~~~~\ ;;;;BA;;;;;C;;;;;H;;;;;EL;;;;;O;;;;;R;;;;;'S=L=A;;;;;IR=====1 WARRANTY! ' TIBURON I r1.1rr1·nll) tMrt' ii a l1J1:t1 in. Vny 1harp 2 bdrm phts W ESLEY N Price Reduced $2,400. \Vben you buy an American llome Shield protected home through us . you are as· sured of purchasing a \\'arranteed troub le- !ree hon1e. * American ~fon1e Shield 's Jlo111eo\vners Protection Plan guarantees service. re- pair or replacc1n ent of the ELECTRICA L, HEATING , BUILT-INS and PLUMBING SYSTEf\1S with in the home, includin g the hot 'vater hea ler. * 'fhis pl un is 'in effect for one full yea r a fte r esc row closes. * \\'ouldn'l you rather buy and own a home that hRs the 1\nle rican I Ionic Shield ~l onlco\11ne rs I 1rotcctio11 Plan? * Call 646-0555. SANTA ANA HEIGHTS J"m a new listing and \\'on't last'. l 'm bea ut i· fully upgraded and in 111ove·i n condition. See rny 4 large bedroo1n s. dining room and family roo m. Enjoy my 2 patios . llurry, 1·m anxious. Buy inc -$54.500. CALL 644· 7270 2828 E. Coa1t Highway, Corona d•I Mar .. """"7.0:;;r--w~1:-:c~•-•-H~lL• vvoouul1ltu~v~."llllllll11J SELL. OR TRADE A HOMI ANYPLACE IN THE NATION General ../JnJa J~£, PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront Custom 5BR., S bath home on 55 It. Jot. Garden view kitchen, waterfront living rm.1 family rm .. Yacht~225 ,000. 70 Linda Isle Drive Prime 451 lagoon lot · $150,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR TAYLOR CO. REA L TORS since 19'1 U EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE -$250,000 Uayfront luxury! Bea utiful 5 bdrm home !>pecially designed for 55' lot on wnter. Fam rn1, forr nal d ining rm, 4 bnths & glamorous pv.d rtn . Fantastic master suite. Lorge sunny ruls thruou t. .Just like ne,v ! Pier/slip . ~ WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 2111 San Jo•quln Hills Road General G•n•r111I -· ' ,~, .. ~N t ·.p "'"' ·! -. r .,,.. - ffi ~=~Rl ffo· ~'11 ,.. C· L:. A. UNl()Uf: t1CJMI: CALL ME, FOR LOVE -that's right! \'ou \Von't believe it but I have a ten nis court and ready for a Jove ga1ne ! I also have a bcisketball court. a delightful garden, spa- cious patio, 4 bedrooms. excellent decor and 1 'm clean and cute and in a prime Costa ·Mesa neighborhood. \Vait till you hear my price: $46.500! Don't you love it? UNIQUE HOMES , R,.ltors, 67S.6000 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar 2 BP. + den on quiet !ilN'CI in Harbor View llon1C'i;. \\'alk to C'Ommunlty fl'JOI urn! grl"a lcst rlen1enlnry so.:hool in Cali!. t:lu:u·n1lng mOOcm rlccor. Oll·ncr has purchased nc\\' hon1r . This 1\u n't Jut -Call no\\' 673-8:).jO. -BALBOA -2 BEDROOM CONOO., top floo r. 11.111 .. ry of hon1eia and foc:m&1 dlnlm:: or r11·n 1-.'00do. Ocean & !lay vle\'.·s. Designed and decorated 1!1.1p!""''~ for &ale ln COt.t Centhl 11.lr coodt nonlonx. for the single person. l::njoy life! Swin1, run \fa.~·bc YOUR home 1t.-ou1d ~Cttiorator. wa.o;h..•rt.Jr>er., . 2 Bdrm. + Pool $22,600 on'thc he:ith. r ule ii bike on the board \\>alk or St"ll a bit fu trr and 11t a dtluxe dhl a11rn includt>tl In Just 11•11 tch the sunset behind Catalina lsl'nd . bttl •·r pnC"r If • buyer had .ie, prlct. All tht jvn· You (:an pay $20C(l morw than " thr t'Ortlldrnct' tha.t for '' veni1?11Ce ol ownln.K 1t hon1c this for ll new Wiit or YoU Security b ulldlug \\1th n o maintenance V.'Or· tei..ct OM year he would ._1.lhou1 U>f' h e 11. d a ch"~. can buy my uP'[J'1ded unil rles 1f ~ou !ravel. Pri(·ed fa r under nearest :-.'OT have rnll,Jor repair BeautlfUl landsctlplng and for$2,000b<'lov.·ttpla<"cme111 1 compet1 tio p. $&4,500. CALL 540-1151 . ~~~~of ~~e P~:1b~~::ct ~~~ ~t!~~I ~.::.;',,: 2~drm rondo .• desirable GI REPOSSESS ION 11ystems and appliance" Uun Vtllcy atta. Cl05C to gn>Ulld level floor plan1 th NO'A·. aa 1 V1tlley Retlt;y t."JC· lhopplna', and <hen.ch area. yemi new. J''ttlhb' P1111ted BARGAIN OF THE YEAR -3 Big bed· ch.1J1!ve we can oner thl• on Call -now t~\et!. witb tt•telully paneled and roon1s, 3 baths, 3 car garage. Huge .25x25 all propertiei listed by our Call 963-61:$ mirrored living room , plush covered patio. Service porch, forced ai r heat, offlt·e,, \\'otdd YOU like waUp1pcred dinln1 BJ":A, qui et cul-de·sac. Full price $26.950. \'.•ilh $950. Youn property 10 have thil Iha; carpets &: cuatorn I N•n1f'('lll1ve edge? drapes, ove!'!lzed pantry < ov.•n pay1nent to an yone . \Vha t 's the catc h ~ Cull £75-7225 nrea, C'u~lom tile C'Ountcr It dot's nepd TLC f t ender loving care). Su per topa, lhakc roof, nea r har~ain , \von't lt1st ! CALL Immediately -1ehool1, "'a1king distance ro S40-11S l. Hwitll\itOn Cen!er • .i1t.•lm· .. .; \.\LLF\ .• Hl\1.1' " •YI • • •, • ERITAGE FANTASTIC, S & S Built Condo ml~ pool nnd 1nany park areas. No~ S200J ~lo"· coi11 I new. (Prl n ('l p11l11 only please ~. Call toda,y /Usumc \'t'ly drslmblr 7r: 647.3195 J'"HA IMn & rnjoy ll\'1ng i11 1 miiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiOiiiiiiiiiJ this hr('111 h1aking (·u.o,lom. l 1 rlerorntccl prc-stlg•·. :! ... iory S Blocks to Be•ch Too·nholl.M.'. $3.i,!ro. , 3 big bedrooms, 2 bll.th!i 531 5800 covered patio, :Z car ii•rage • oil aU•y with duk room. Frrshly painled. Ult1 of charm. S.19,500. Call for sno....·ma. 536-8836. 11lage Real [stale Costa Mesa BE#\UT. French ! t y 1 e I $33,500 . ' duplex. S11ac. 3 BR. 2 I:!,\ . Grt'al 3 bedroom home nf'&r ASSUME 7°/o LOAN """"''!'!'~~~~~~!!!'j 2 BH, l ~~ BA, C"rpls, UrJlli. be11.ch ~a and shopping-. OT just S41'X) dcm·n on 1his 1-INVESTORS bltlns, R &: 0, 2 dbl gar·.~. 2 Room· to build on. Assumf' , \'.\LLF\ '1{1\11\ hr:iutilul I brtnn. 2 bath priv. pati06, 3 yrs flld. 51,.r;,. VA loan at $138. per h.-.n1e "'i1ll lart::"e shade I $28,700 R·2 Prine. Only. $ 6 2, 5 0 0 . month. I r~~~--.Pti!lo. Funtily rn1, T\l,\T'S RICHT~ 58x14{1 R-2 Ownl'.!r/agt. 54~7?.68 C\"f'! & 531·5800 $1500 DOWN fH(pl,t1 t', Built uis S.· lot \\'ilh a SUPF.R RUSTIC -'-"-'~""~'~·~~===~-I' d1,.hi\'a.~hr~. Sch~ll'.ils & llhof>'i COUNTRY l-IO~I E' N·rt BUILD EQUITY $159. Per mo. n1·u rbv1 r ull pnt:e S11 {)('('I 1 • J Y Call ;;iU..im. · · · k11c.h<'11. Dining. a~a w_ilh Older 1 bdrm. house CUtf' ... rozy anrl all frl!shly ullhty rooni . f nnuly siie On large R·2 lot 16139 Brookhurst, FV decorated In ··sunshine" bedt"OOJTIS. Nl;AT COUN· Good East!lde locntion o-n Even1· .... s l'Ulors! Thick .thick brand TRY l/01"1F'. CLO.'\~~ TO $24.500 r--··~ ne\1' l'!!l'fll't: 4 Big BR's, Con· HF.ACll: 58xl40 R-2 lot. RIVIERA REAL TY rino kitchen hag oil tilt $2~.700. Curlvu.~. Ca I J * 642·7007 * latest bl1ru;, 2 ,·ani1y baths ~~i~;~7~ .11-s Fu11 ro BE NICE' MESA DEL MAR_ I Owner Desperate ~iar! r~~a~~t.fo;oa~~h 0~ ~--~==='=='"-'By 01t.11er , lovely 4 BR. 2 ha , rilnkt' offer " Sol .Vista be:i.u· tiny firice of $28,500. Only '· +i;cp. Cnni rm k rlln ini:; I ly, 3 HR, 2 BA, hke nu cpts, $2;9. Per nt0. P IT!. and NEW LISTING ' ' rm, patio, nlce yrt. Only rh"fl!i; Panelled gar"~" I $T.-,O closing cost. J u.st MESA DEL MAR 1• -'11 j / $42,500. 5-15--09.~ 38. l ~~:1.!::~sac r:~· Ovt'I'Si;:t-'d 11.'IJOS.~t'sscrt by V.A., It'!; EASTSIDE 2 BR \'atan! ... better hurry! VA U1r~e !Atllll;-.' ho1ne \\ilh 4 BOAT BUF s Clean. r~lshcd. ~ISO n::~ BRASHEAR REALTY. Sales BrokCT 962-5:>ll hi(! bNlrooms. New paint f !! converted to BR. $31,000. 842·7411; Ev•s. 968-117 JmOiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiOii J llll<I cru11C'I.~. !lurry un thi.~ Vn("ant bu t nci1ly rtcroratcd Phil Sull ivan Rea lt o r , __ -------.VA BUYERS onl' at only $J9.!XilC. OATS 1 :: BH .i;. rlt'11 island homf'~ 5<18-6'l6l N<'11· 1 ·1111~. fin.'i.if, b!tins. , CASH 24 HOURS Big Country kitcllen. J ust rn(·I pario, dot·k + lrg slip. SPARKLING , ?-£AN, nor1 h or J\li!P Square Park. & j S..•ll('r l\"ll nt..'I ltl!'Oll1C pt"Qp. 3 bd-v,Af~.hTdbl For .Your Hom• 3 Bedroo1ns plus den. W/W · WALLACE · C>rangC? or Sa n Diego ""• .,.. · gn r, No hld~n COW!, delays. cpts, fireplace, Mly $36,(0). Count\. Asking S&J."iOO .• larg~ fen~ YArd. No obllg11-tions, 15 yrs exp. REALTORS Suhn1i1 do\\·n or lrt:11h·: ! C:1tl ONL'I s.10.9;,o Bkr. G4Z-0200 BRASHEAR REAL TY -546--4141-G4~. Jt:ST l~ISTEl)..sot $41,500. 842·7411-Eves ffl.1178 (Open Evtnin9s) t.rS' l..AJVt'ly r:tSidc 3BR w/famn11, redl'\:'d i,-ounne11 kl I ch. Call ____ _ V. t:. ll0\1-ani & Co. no"·: Pattison ln\~Slmenl ~ "'"..1 1 ....... u,,""""'.. Co.,Rl1r.6-12·80ll . . ' [~·)1 l 29.J:, /larl10r Blvd. I==--===;;; • " 341 B Id D S 't t N B 67, ,161 OPEN TIL 1 . 1r s fUN TO.BE NICE' '-~-·-v_·~·~-··_·_"_'_·~·-·.;...·-~~-~---1 ~ ~ 1 General General ~ ~ CioSf' 10 llarbor Blvd. at 1'l26 '\'es!m1ni;lrr A\'·enue in San· ta Ana. 1600 sq. fl. BIO~. Plus 2400 i;q. It. of sher!, oow used as ornamc..olal iron 1t.•ork~. 011·ner n1ay !eaM' bllck for 5 yl'Rl"!I. Ex· l'f'llcn1 ittvl'5lmen1 . Dri\'(' bv and call no11'. PricOO U1 $65,IXXI. Call 6 i6-Q-555. . ' . "' ' .... ' ·' ; \',\LLE\ CALIFORNIA ------MES1\ VERIJE 2031 N. RANCHO \BALBOA I' r: N r N::; U L A capella. 3 Bednn, 2 ha. Rural acrt'11 ~e . !n th(' /3fll'k Dr luxc>, adult 1 llr , 2 Ba Like !lt'lt.'. n1u11t m·.-. Bkr. Ba,v. Elt•J.:Hlll and ,..,111for-cn.ndo. Bnyf~nl \\"l~h boat 548·7711; e\'e, 557·4617. ll1ble ho1ne \I Ith !il.huluus sllp. K; ~IOI. $52,000. 548--9695 BY o"·ner 3 BR, 2 BA , dinim: Huntington Townhouse 3 BR, 1 \2 BA. S21 .900. 96:1~ Durhan1. Pool. 2 BR, l1b BA. $19,!0J. 98Tl Cont inental Dr. Pool. BKR: 5'1&-7711. t'Ve . 557-·1617 CALIF. CLASSIC Popular 2 sly inod, 4 BR, Jpl, £~~ VA assumable loan. $42,%0. To stt call Bl<R. 963.5681. VA ASSUt.IPTION • $61,500. Prf!stlge area, 5 BR, pool, 2 sty, encl par1y iirea. Own· er very anxious. BKR. 963-5681. 1· i: Ii I ,! ,1 I, If you're pli}ll!ling a Newport Beacltmove Iturry fol your CT\9ice1 Half gon(> in hJlf ~ y..:ar ttnd 1hl:' rPSI 11..rill nnt l.1 .. 1 \cinq t-l urrv lo .,(,~ this di,!inct1v1• N1•1vpott H••1H'l1 ci.-.. 1·vl(lp1n1'r1t nf condnn11n1l1!n hotll\''· built 111 tlu,1.:r'> .1rnund hdnd,om.: r('lurtv<ird~. L1qlt1 ~Ltp\.'r h tlltX:ll-'l ... •'.1Ch ,., m.i~!l.'rpa.•c" ot li1,1 a 1. 1 (11nfc1tf. Cf')nv1..·n11·nc1· .ind quahtv . 1n .. 11 uc t1nn "'11nd1•ck~. t1r1•pl"1("€, \Vlr:!l·b(lr ,·l,·q.int i'-1., .. 1. r ""uit''· -;un LitC' .. kitchen. >1 .~,ti. 1•n1 11 ... ,·d dnuhl·· q<11 .1qt• H1•crea11onal f,1(1\i11,_,, 1nclud...: ht·,H..:d .,1,1.11nn11ng pool. nqht~d ti>nn1<> cnu11 ... ,,1un,1, ther<1py pool. ,.\;I l',ll'I 1nr bu1\d11li] ,1nd ~rnund~ 1n,11nt<'n.1n(\· prnvtdl'd ~.111 .. !1; ~·Dur run0511y-""-'\' ' i\,•\\POr! (r~,1 torli\\1 II lwo. l hree. •nrl Fnur 8t?droom Condominium Hom.t f r•m $63,0® to Stl,000 • 10°/o DOWN 8 1/4•/o INTEREST* ~wo..ort ,r/iiJ>.\ (:!rest ~ TOW NHO MES ' I ' 1,..,, .... I "·•IW'll"I ;\~no •I It\ ' . flkd I. d•M., up ""I""" I I • l ""f'l'l~111f:j11 ... 11<1 ri "' " !" l'lu1w,"W"1<• II"! f"I ·•n •t•"'1 ~ •nt"' 1,.i.t,..iv.r..• 4 d 11 t> 1 1 t>! •ll ...,,.., \{_)II , • ·1~ • IM 10• !'' !() ~ll!IK1 T111•c1I cor.n~llOl'.OI flMMl"O Ill >O VM• IM~ (.0111 prt(t ol Ill!~" t. WJ.l)O(I/ 0"*" P"Ymt"~I Ol k l 'lCI. "4 "'Ontlll~ MY• -.11 01 M!'tOO tl!<"iflC.1Plt Rrod l'nlf!'"!\ •t I'" ANN\JAl jll(R(EN TAOC RAT ( l'IYI, iff.00 lie• l!IM!ll "" &f "'1;11'"'• wotn ~ 11fty,...,,1 Ol ll,"$ 00 11 tht tft~ l"'IOftlll 11 I )Q"• INNUAL 'l!!RCEN1 ... CIE RAlE. ""''"'""'i;... ........ ~·""'"'"lrff.r-, ... '@;:::.,...-:..· 11 ..... 11.a.-~ .. _l.._ .. c-,, ... i.. -...::0 . ' .............. -~ ~ .......... -...... _,. . .-.... -~ ...... .._. ... _____ ....... _ R TWO GIRLS · l{I \I .I, vlt•11 , "l~•I Htu l c111rr1111n· or f:i4.1-4:zo.1. frp!c, sprl11klcrs, c omp. VA REPOSSESSION VACANT. 4 BR. 2 BA, nice sizr lot. Only $28.500 .. In The Bluffs "FRANCt:SCA" • nice lam· lly home. ln super loc. Bring paint hn 1i<h & i<H\'I!. Olfrl'f'<i at only S58.900. ' . . . n1ent tacili!it·~ 1u1<i roon1 for rt'Clcrornted. 412 Print"Clon 1rn11\s cuurts. Cnll fur cll!· An aheim Dr. fi..15-096.1. '"··~ .,, .. ,, .,,~, tails. e~,~.-o~,-,~.,.,~,.-. -,=n=n~.-,~t~.-... PETE BARRETT Sheer El....,anee v'"''· '·"''°'· "'" SCOTT REALTY 536-7533 TOWNHOUSE 3 BR., 2 BA . $1000 Oov.11. As· sume FHA loa.n. Jo'lreplll:C'e', tle1v lhag carpeting, new tile It pnint, Ne:<1l door to la('J:e ~h o pp ing ttnter. Cheaper than rent. $71,900. Ask lar Dale. ~746. "TRINA" • bi·lt>\'CI, sllglltly livrd in, nll fresh & 1·lean. ~a!'e <lr L1op!lon. Olfered Ill $69.500. MESA.VERDE POOL HOME -~ Hedwood, ,),17-::>176 -REALTOR-Large eountry st yle homf" in ~1,.8 DEL 642.5200 prf'Sll)!t' area A 11 ('n· ' • A l.IAlt 0 'VNER leaves. S3195 dow11 ~ 8f'aulllu1 4 bdnn, 2 ba.th l'lon1c \\'ilh bit i n s , d!sti.~·11:sher. Quality CIU'pE>ts, drapes. fA heat. Patio. brk SJI.950. Call R42-&l91. FOUR BEDROO~lS 1''0Rl'1AL DINING ROO~I I • · I . 3 4 HR, 2 ha. lnrlsc1xt trrta ncr !I par.u •~l-'. 85.5 S Cl . 557--0~0i ~ hNlroi•ml-, 21: ba1hs, hvo 1· air, I ! CORBIN.MARTIN REAL TORS 644-7662 BAYSHORES \\'01v. Shake mor, fou r bNlroom!', fnrm11I dininJZ room ond .bUie. pocil, aJI in J\.fesa Verde. Retter Hurry on this one. Call 5-154191. Walker &lee PRICE REDUCED to $89,500 "'-=="·=·=··::::··='=·=·=·====c FIXER-UPPER. F11 ntQ~lir --· Ju~! tty lfupllcatln.1': tfil~ ('\J~· IOm·bUil l hon1e on 1rxl11y'11 n1arkrt. •I brt!rooms, 5!urly, ~p;u·ious (;unily rnon1 :-ind \"lt'W of Ol"f'Hll. \\;dking dii;,. llltlf'C' 111 prh a:~~ bench, )Oll 011 n the l:1ru!. Tl iis one \\0on'1 lai<t loni,:. Gi:l·~~ OP(I/ Tll ~ • 1r "S FUN ro Bf Nl(.EI """"""1. A" ''"""'""''' '" HARBOR VIEW [ ~ ~ in\'Pfil 1n onf' or Nr11'1>nr!'!! I mos t 1lt's11·nhle pr i v n 1 "' HILLS . 1 l'lln1m1.1nltics. 2 B1,dron1H ~ ., r plus guf'sl stdll'. S:l-1.():Y!. Ll•\·r l)· ·'. hrrlroon1 • bn t_h 640 11 Zo 1 !ll'•'.'Hl \·1r1\'S 011 largr lot. I ~:o===; THE REAL ESTATERS • I :!·II)') sq. It :1 cilr i::at'fl.gl' tn S30.000'. Supl'l' !own hon1t' irn111arul11tt Mll<iitioo, Ff•{' 11 i1h lal):t' !:111'.:i)' nY">nl, !!rp· B lb I-SI d--lunrl ('11JI 611>-7711 11ra1e garn>(<', rrh11ff' 11atio. a oa an l WALKER & LEE C11H agt. Sli·nlllll. Water View r.i-~.\r. E~T1\TE I _i'._LASS ~f·~:w~,---c~,-,_-""- Duplex ~ral General Ju~t r.:, stt'p~ 10 h(':•• h -100· J I !fl tll'.1111 n1(l0rh1i.:· 11.1rhor \•1e11• frorn !i01h 111111~. ~p.1rt1!r r;u•·,r hirlr1"11) I 1"1n1 pl••tt•ly I 11 r 11 1 ~ h NI . \ (11\"IK'l' \\ 111 hr h1 f\n:\ni·f'~ 1 Hurry~ CAJJ :11f,...::::i:1 for tll'!fllb. OFCN TIL 0 . "'!> ru11 ro flf. /'l/CFI THE REAL ESTATERS BLUFFS CONDO VIEW I t'•ll'f'\'l'r \"II'\\' of n.1,•k Bnv ,,, \!1.~. llrnn1"fl••$1ll\ dt•i'fl~Jit· '"' 1\01111• 111111 ,;,,,·<>pl!nn~I n••ll" pl:it\ l-'11n11nl illnln.j:. " n .. 111 •. ~pt···111 1'1'i'u rlly Ii 1•l tU'l'~ ~ho •lfo t<'d pl'!\'l\te J•.•!i« 3 .'ipu·i"'I" l~!nru1. 'l•·11111r \ •h11· 111 S7t::.00. C. F. Colesworthy Realtors 640-0020 I JUST LISTED :'\•\1 1•w1 Island Duple" I ~ Rdn11<:. ii b11. c-Ath: on 1 lr1\el) ,.,.,1.,1rr hir: min! con· \ 1t111on. $120,00l. CMll : 673-366.l 6i5-85.11 E\'9. associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 101~ W l nlhoo 671 11.1,' MACNAB IRVINE ALL YOU NEED IN \lfESTCLIFF Designed for famil)' comfort · near schools . shops & churches. Spect.aculnr fan1ily roo n1 + 4 bedroo ms. d lni n ~ roon1, 2 1~ baUi s + off ice for Dad . $84.900. Vee Sti n· son 642-8~5. (Nll f BLUFFS -sse.ooo 4 bed roon1 condo1n inium availabl<' for lease or snle. 111 excellent cond ition. Irnrnediatc occupancy. $400 nlu. (;ladys ll usscll 642- 8235. I 1'15) GO LF COURSE ES TATE Custom 3 bedroo1n , ra1ni.ly room. play room home on the 8th fair\'.'RY in Big Canyon. Paddle tenn is & putti ng green. 1255.000 . Barbara Aune 642·82.15. (N241 -------~.,.~----~ Irvine M1cn1b·ltvlne ""1tyComp•ny fn·t'pl aN'~: 0111' 1n lht• living Dana Po int room and the othrr in thel---------- h•rxe lan1ily room. Fan-Nl'~A.R DANA PT MARrN,\ La..<>lic hun1c fol' cnlcrtalning BlliLOER'S O.OSU>UT. \\"Uh !hr large pario area, $31,950. 3BRl2BA h<'atrd & flhcrcd pool and ~ DOWN pool !ilde har. Truly an (213) 333-fi622 t-lt>gant home. A_ rnust s«o. Eait Bluff C11ll mw fnt' pnva1c sho.,,.. ---------- ing. CaJl 9G3"'45'1l BIG 4 BEDROOM '"" ........ , ...... '"'' , ;. \'.\LLE\ · RL\l.I\ "' '~"~". ' ... '" "•'''' ....... ~(,· ,, ...... Corona del Mar See The Ocean! 2 bath horn,, N f' \\'I y rC"de.:"Ora\C'd & landll('l!.[K'd. 165.""'. Herrell, McKenna & Co. Realtors 640.8454 ,E_ountain Valley SPANISH DREAM REPOSSESSIONS 0 '".'NEH mo\'es. Pool home For Information and location with l bdnn1. bonm .nn. kitchen bi t Ins. Patio, lols of of th~ nlA & VA h0me1, ~king. No down! brk t' conlaK"A" SABIAN $31,900. Call 842-2564 O\\'NER sa<'riflce. S 2 2 4 5 Real Estate 962-6644 ~11 ~ Bea utiful 2 bdrm ("Ondo overlooks pool, shag C'11rpel, custom drapes. Bit in~. brk S22,450. Call 8-16· OOOI. O\\'NER anxious. No rlo11.·n~ 3 bdrm \Villt fomily rm, frplc bit-Ins, dinlng rm & s1l'i nt pool. Huge patio. b J' k $39,950. Call 962-1373. O\\'NF.R r\esP<'rate. Beautiful TO\VNHOUSES 121 in xlnl location. 3 AR & 2 BR, ea. has 2 ba ths, frplcs. bltnr., WJD. 1 blk from shoppln&. 963-2801. By o"•ner. ~ngton Harbour ~ ~ pool home. 3 bdm1s. 31 - bathir. Faml~y rm, !r['lll·. WHITE WATER Blt-in!I. Pa11<1. Near thr \" I II I d d . beach~ brk $49,500. Call 1r11' rom \' ng an 1n1n1r 962-S..'!65 ronm. Bloek to beRt'h, Sin· O\\'NEn: Trl·IE'\1.'I 4 en.\ J:le:> Wlil. $26,jOO. \\."hy renl ? 3 BA, lg cul ·d('-!nc lol. pool. HUNTINGlON HAR80UR. spa, cash lo 6'(, Gl or conv, i RfALlY $66,900, 842·56.j2, From your front step. \\'alk Fou~ Seasons Home nnc !lhort hh>1:k tl tlfl \\'&!ch 1'1Tag11if1C'e'nt ('OIJrtyarit ""' the boats t"Ctw11 at s11ost't. I~ aut~~ntlc Spnn\~h foun · Takr nn eRr]y 1nnrnin;; JOK f,un. 1 lilny <:ltrus r_rrei;. on tltr h<'Arh. All this can <4BR. fo.mr;n. lorml din, 3 be YOU fit IO."hCO \nu buy thl'I BA & 2 fpl s. ~·r.-,r mi sq It , '.1 l "I ·1 ., of ,:pactous hv11li. Spet'-s,1:11.: ou:<i . n t an1~ > room lac:ulAr buy at $72,000 9636 llon1r \I lr h hui:c lll;'J.s!er bed· Larnora Clrrlf'. Prtnrioal<i roo:11 and. 1011 ·. 1011• upkttp. only pleaJ<'. Oll·ner. 96,'\...lR!lG (.US!' SELLS -642-5678 Only S9G.500. 1' ur :1pp1. c•nll ~==-=======--'====="==== 6•:t-71l l. - I ~ SEEK & FIND" K;ngsolAncientl.,..I ~ ZNADA_BNJ EHHOZZMMDMR BAYFRONT BARGAIN RARE OPPORTUNITY By :a ltmke of ruck I have ** DUPLEX * * 0 I V Y S T E B L U A P t A R y N z E !ten! shtll'f'I rf1tl)h').'.; lo\'rly 3 0 Z 8 Z I H Z I M R L M R 0 J D I L 1 IKIJ'n1., 2 l)f11h h<inl•'. frp!c., !' .. \. h1'1\I, cnrp. & drnpcs .,.. 11r1v !lrluxr 2 brlrn1., 1 bnth 1u1lf Xlnt lot.·111ion &I t)Wt1('r't<1 :tnxlo\'I~! MORGAN REA~ TY 673-6642 or 675-6459 I DUPtEX . ()\l"l)('f, -buuderl "'11nl' to ~"1!. Ranch stylel 3 BR. 2 H,\ hon11• + n, . .,.,. 1 2 BR apt 1>n h.:1: \01 nc:<1t f lO cicy park, .SO. of .H1t.y. Bei;t buy In lo""· $110,000. I 6r,....1GM I Swimming Pool & Private Beach \\'1111.t more Muld a person 11'an1~ !tu\\' :ilxn:t ti t·har.n· 111,11.. "'{In lkce:-i tcd 2 on 2 llA h?me 011 n .i:;cn"mus r1 ic 100 ft lot In Coron" d~l \l11r •. , . ., r·1tr1"1~lroC':"'!I <in·:in1 . On1y $69,!"iX:l. C11.!I Ii I \· i'.!! t. I ~ EM IAOA ZA HAOH EAMOES ELRRA ,J I K I NG S ERRR I J 0 0 AOAEES llMRll NA A l18 AA DDOVIB l A V Z D N I NA HAN llHEDO P AJA I RM Z A 8 E J 0 F llAL O ,E J HAI OREO ADA BR E J OMO LO SV MS Sit SRA R E AC HOS I Z UU1.BM ov A 0 NO c v I 1 B E L L ARMO L 0 S ~ N A A E U E. J N E L I I M I Z NJ E R A M T A ~ N D A A S H 0 M A H A I SO U L NSOLOMN 0 I V A 8 A A S S I Z N I l E R M I l l "nr11~1iof1., Tllo. l111l""·" n11n~• l11tnl bl<ll>" •r~~r IOf"'Hd. b;1,;i,, ... 1ol, Y,., dh -.. , Of dt~.ilt ftl V"= P\Jf tk, l·ito\l .rf('h h1\IJ(I! "Mt\" MJ ll'()\ I( If! •t \hl>Wft: t; AllAll El.AH OMM.I ;, I AllA7.IAll ll!JIORAM SAU L •. 0.USllA Jt:llOBOAM SQl.OMON l>A VID NADAi Zl\lllll To1110now1 W1a. 0-ripuonr. • . . 0 To ordrr 1ny nr 111 of lhc r .-pandtd "Seek & Find" books. numbrn 2 th1<111ah 7. K'nd 50 ernts fot t1ch. m1kin1 checks paY•ble 10 "Sffk & Find." S1.,..TrJt .. m Syndic.alt. Addrtu 1t11rn in 1'.11~ ofthiJ nt'lt~p:l~r. • ' a . option on 11: 5 BR b!l.yfront ftol.18e·"1.'ilh a 60' dot'k, W1u1 valuf'd & llstrd at Sl46,0IXJ. l\fj' option 11 ·ror S108,500. I w!U sell my option for $5,001. cash. Ir ~"Ou0re !\Cr· 1 iou~ about bltyhunt, clon'1 P811S thL~ up. Call t213• 726-!Y.X);"1 dnlly &. Sw1 c 11. I l 592-1421. )~"· FANTASTIC VIEW 1 Bt-llutlf'lll.b' de<uatet'I -.vlth plush carpetln;:, PMtllfll. glu.!! n~ mimn. Spacious cathedral ttllirc In U1~ 4 bdl·m., 2 bath hozne ln Tur- tle Rock Hll\1. Pn:>lmlona\ liUXIM'nplfli, ntrlum o f r mutf'r bMroo. and eltt- trlc garage_ door open, A I home or pmtlre S91.l00. CALL 552·7500 VISION • red hill REAL TY llEALTOllS Unv. Parle Center. lrvll'lfl U1w 90mtlhlna yoU "'''"'' to lfll~ Oas11nM l\da do It wtll • cal.I NOW 642-Sfrl . • '' • • lrvi rm .. ,.,,, loca OA RE So v1 .. ,..., priv d"" tam· Wo Buil sha Int<' doc t!llll ing roo •"' ...... A un· fa 111 lure. This by hom this niun T 1105 WH 7% den, Ing. -\ NE\\' Build ~ LOV Din ""' A~ o ... m atrlu cell'. Am ... ·-. -· .... ~ . - 01\IL ( PILOT r;:::;;::::;----~·-....,-,.,---~--------~--------~----·-,..,~-=-....,-=---...,.,,---~~---~~--~°""---""",...,.--Mood~~ Ma~lt 25, Jq74 Irvine-_Newport 6e1dt NewPort iMCh -! Income ProP9rty 166 Real E1t1te Wanted 114 Houn1 Unfurn. S HJU"!_Unfurn. -30S nfurn. 30 j Apk . Furn. Sl·-~~RT~~ ~~----\;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 OCEAN UNITS URGEXTL\' Nted 111n. lihop General t-:untlngton Buch Newport Be•ch 1 _c_,_••_•_Me __ .. _____ 1 ............ ,,.. ....... ....,,.._. . il'll'ldh11: Uvlnai: qu1u'lrl'll tor ----·--·-·- Hom1. 3 Bdnna.. tunny 1 YEAR OLD . 2. Crt\f, Blllboa. or Nt\\'por1 WHERE JO LIVEI SAVE YOUR 00"-'N 81::4\1.:T. SMi-port ~101'\'1'. rm., dinln& nn .• 2 batht Brh. 1·ll.IS{' ID IJC'h. Writ(' • PAY&rr. WHtu:: RBNTI~G hOmt'. 3000 icq. fl "llt. 3 6'+, $30 WEEK a UP f'rplc, A ahake root Ololcf I year old. 3 hl0<·ks to beach! C.11H1i-lflrrl Ad :O..u :\-1, 0111ly $50 a mo tttund on fMnl nn, romn1 pool ill lf'Mi111 • S•udlo •· t BR Apt1. loe.ation or. park. SSS.990 Tiny \'ll''>'' of Blue racifit'. Pilot, p O &, 1.SOO, C01tll 1 Br. pool · Vltl'\4 .. ~15. · · · , rt, 2 hlks •1t l•nn. ~I.in, • T\' &.: ~11ud Strvi1.-e Avail. DAVID D . CARLSON G<.l-geo1.1i 2 story -6 unit ~l~a. C"11 9'.iti'..'6 2 br. l<Wi'nho0$e • ponl ·· ~tO. ~hruit~~--'fio~~~~ Ul~ft~ ,.;1rA~ Sl'V ino L.~ 11nly 1 · • PhOnt Service-Htd. 1JOOI REAL TOR l~tltl ~~~:~~rw.;~~~ r ~U~ ~·A.~T 10 buy a hlllaidr 2 Br, l..lteuna ·" ·• ·"" S3~. i~.BA, bl.t ins, nr &ehls. $213. r.11111llr:. 61.>-:UTO al1 '7 • Children II Ptl Stttion ••TURTLEROCK l SR-NEWPORT COMMERCIAL I hlt11ch IO\\'n \'ialue at ONL\' r(',idi>niu1.l lot La.iWJ.a, San 3 ~Cl)~! . f'll'f'plAl'f' ~ nlll. 962-1~ ~'oj OR usrUR.'J-Dit~t>Ort :~~iCAl Fam, + 2BA, t.love in oo00: 3 units on 3 lots-Room (or expansion. Hot · s11:i.oo::i: Try 10•; do .. ~:n. Clernenle or further toulh. 3 Br Ci.)~)' ··;.~p1~~ · l BDR...\t. 2 Bath, bll·!NI .,.,., J.:a11bluff .i Ilk .. 2':i Ra .. 1i::r a.J or Owner, $59.500. 83.l-3347 test beach area. A speculator's delight at I f&nlaitlC llf£.":.~!!:1 k>n ll~a. e:~~lti:to'~~~~v: ;::d n1·~· .... " ........ " .. $3r.; fif)'t'r hook·Ujl. crplll, lri: )ti, i;;uit.·n.•r ~'()()I U~{' \'l'l!o I *SUS CASITAS * Sl.23 SOO SUBM IT YOUR ES Call today .:t.l.J"".ww, n~5'.' ?ollnin1un1 50' ,.•id1h. i In• Ltli;:-uns . Vic"' • ''.,.:'.! yrd. Srnl ~t ok F rpli· I';. Ftlfn S , ~ or ~1nlurn ~'ut'rtl.~hC'<I BaC'helor'11 & 1 L .. una a..ch • · TRAD ! lNVESTMl~,11\~I !Tl '4)&7~JJT ll('I\' ........... , .. , ... ~~ $-~:, "~"· _S211 GuiJd .. r, 1111 S.1-2:_ 1110.~--0:1'll __ I l:kll'rTli>. ExrtiitJonally nice. GRUBB & Ellis Co I' ! 1 1 ~~~~~~~~~~ 13 br. Alr1un1 &-DR. • t:!L:• .)25-,I.flu. :'P\'(;J.,\..::i~ \ !0•1\' 111 11\'Jt. I 2110 :-ii•iip<irt SJ, CM . REDUCED $9000 • .~ \ lrvinf' ............... i1So $11AltP, lllct' area, 3 nn. nit 1 Jih''>1'\' C!itllhn.. 101 BE \UT FLTJlN l li.r 10111 Of ScnsatiOnat ocean & IU!Utl , • If• I 3 br. ;-.:,11•pon · \'lt>ll' • • :.! I.Iii.~.. Lilt-in.~. la 111 i J y ~l(lunt &ldy .,-10~1 .. ,\1 a:J., hl /Jns. pool.· "'alk 10 Ahni>- vie\l'S from l h I I COO· RE LTORS '7S-70IO I FNnclll l\f'W ................ , S-1.;il k1h:ht•t1, frplc., Cpl, <h'll'· r\1w1I l ~!. &l.c-.1!!,3 u ! ru1s 1nl fl\n'll bch SL~ nto ttmportlry-4 bdm1 on large, 2 l~r FH OR. · , ~"Ov'r•~ 1w1t111., fned )'C!. ~~Li .. till ~16.i _I ~3! ,·,, l!'llh !'it. ~IS-0.192, ' private ;round11. °"tom Newert INch ·-Newport Beach I SITTING PRETTY ~ Shn1~: .. 11u~ "'. ....... Sl!tl. ,'>SJ \~1.luit J)r., 817-611_-!__ Sen Juan Capittra no 1-;-::-., . . Poo.I ~r \\1ltt cedar [)<1.oelM \ I . \\'Ith on1• 10 lh·.-. in arwl 3 Butlnets 'l.lr. Ci•n1c:o lhf.l:h· • 3 .Bl<, 2 B.A home. ~xtOO . " . • " ~~\~1<1." ti•~~~ '~d~~~p i·tr & \Vo od-buming 11...,pla""'. ,. ••-•-·-ho D I ·~ '" ____ por uni Y I l•r. ~p\'gla~s ·new .. Slr«l •.~· nto. Ask !or h:chh. till In•. frnlc'. OC'l"'an 1u lH ' nwnn . fam ily tm. Exposed ~an11. You WouJdn't * BAYSHORES * In ,.,,n1 f"out11ll'.~ \\'1th la .... , Op t "t 200 1.u1d.~ ......• ,,,,,,,,, un. t Ctll'l•<l lot. All ('Ice 11lt1"·1:'\F.\\ h<lllll', 3 Bl. ~ }J.1 I ,._ 1!'11! i'n G4:.!-3l11'. ... -Waif 'TD S..mmer a nw ..... ._,,,. re r. oc. n11nrn1 unil utwl<'r co..\n· -~~w .. 1 1 :~au;-~ia~l~~:~c:·u 0":~1 T I A.PP~; 2600 aq. IL .I B~:: 11t ru.·non UOY. lo 1-lunurq::ton Botti• ·water Route lj lir. L!itc~111~~7~;1~" Sl -tlVJ .961~:1 s$~"ll'ffn\<l _!!&_"'20_"_.,, --'1 ·~~:.: IJ~~~c~;.'1~1t'. \~'~ ~~r· p:fi: • 0 uy A am..., room. Steps lo In.:-lkth'h, only 5 bh:M.·k11 !ro1n u you an' intc~111ro '" oY.n· • I Jlg, ~ 1..,!~·. s:no. 1110, ii.1Un,1 a n ta Ana .\rtul! ~n fl\'' SI¥! 6l:,...S965 lntcrcoin.AM2Jargrparty·1 C beacb.$13).(00 I th(l •M·t•:lJ\. SIO.l.o.JO. Cllll 111r; your o"n uu~•n<:~~ f,1, frplc, l11Jl \\'rlt:hh".,1vd , --""o-"~0----"-'--"":7'~1 dl'Cks.$S9,500.CallG~ onYertibfe!! CAYWOOD REALTY Tht Real Estate Fair S.::000 ikl\111 SILVF:lt 11 .H. I\\'. nl Spnru:1h1 l1'. :-:: 1:1t, 2 l>&JI. ec!ntntl 111r, rt;RN lBR apt, 2039 So "h>' 11-itlt for the lnOatcd 6-t2--6033 ~18-1290 536-2551 or 839-6133 Sl'Hli\GS \\'ATEP. run 11u1 1\f ~latl'r. C<411 lWG-200! I h1,i.·. I)\\"., full c111 s '" \\'11llnct', C<llltfl. ;.resa Sl·l5 prlr'C.'ll of the ~ununcr to N H • h )'OU on n IUU\t' in Or11nJ:~ \r;\C.\:'\T 2 Br huusr, blkl' 1•) rlt·p~. hlt·111"· :"'l('f' :irr:-., fr,i· 111'" ~""'='~"~1~1 ~=-=~-1 bu~· a profit11hle iiun1mcr· ewport e19 ts EASTSIDE-INC.OME-r ounl} ·s fitK'<;I IU'l'tl rnrnini: li.·a1'h! i\IJr;O 3 Bit llori;.c j '~'"· tro111 Jn·u~e ln1lustr1_al LC.I'.: f1JR;'\J 2 BR .. m111~ \1•inu.•r l'f'n1::it property. Call OPEN SUN. 1-j Ncii· -4 UH 2 It 1 I 1 3 BR t Sl;tlU. fl('r n1•• 1>n11•n111tl l\,'\nt•h, ~2"L, ~ 1 n g Ii·~ , 1, •n1pl"" .r.. M:hl. · ~ 111••. 11· 11, rlnipc~. Adi ts, no pt'I•. w, About this y,·rll located Vit' .... ·polr11 , Ocean \'Lt''-'-'. OUSI'" on n . , unhn11trct \\\• vi'lll 11','lln !hl', ----------lnmtl1cs. i\gl. t"ee. 979-Sll'.l Ci.Ii &~ dll,)'1 6' y,•kml~ S!S.1. fil2-9:'~. 3 Bl-t do ., SH. d I :! UH l"1• · ri:i1u1·n. \\Uh 10' · ngh1 1n11n. S1h l't' Sfl\'Uli>l' ALA RENTALS ----or s.&S-4913 afl 6 I '-'-'--'---"------I lS'M s. Coast llwy, Laguna I II.Tl, • up U· Xlnt Jr~. Cpl ~ lot 11) 1ln O\\tWr 1111! '"U"f'Y 2nd \\ll'r, !tiil :'\. H.'tlit\l<l, Bl:::1\C'll ~\n •a 2 Br, s1;io u I <. p k Dan• Point Beach e~x. (Jnly 6 doors to Ill(' I 0\0.'ner $63,900 339'12 Cu.lit' ,,1 .. , 3 •nOl" (" l'hOO~l· l1"n• WI '"OA41ll OH \lrf1CI Fncll rvr k1d.5/pcl . Pn\'<'11" n v ritty ar -'-''--''---'---------1 •~·ach. :\011· on!.)' S79,3\XI., Bo,.._,o 831~~. ~ " " Ol'an.i:,.. '711 ' 53:?-WOl H f' d * .147 9641 1 IRGF. 2 BR ..-.1'1 "'eYo.i .. I I"' ""'· ··~.. h11t".~t \\~~C'I)' · t'i\'t' 1,)Un· om_e in er_• _ -_ Rl\'ATt: 110 :>.11::: ~ · · -..... 1• . .., OLD WORLD "" ........ u. T ,. II c II r I! f -:a cieo{'(lra lcd incl utiJ l11er;. Call • • • Call 644-1'211 J us in :•; ... n'~'G 11 r«:<ti •;(I t)1~11·~. e C'andv Store $7500 FP fiit MOUSIS ('()()IJ JE\\'EL. Pn._.a1c t l.'nh·f> . t,,y Part Arra 1. dC'n ... DELIGHT. An old ·:iitl'l()" ""'"' ""' e IJoat ·\lfg' Nets $50 \1 I W l •,,",',·,, 8Ur111, SI.~. -.1rt111ls prrrrrr"d S350 nin. -'-''-"~·-960-__ J_H_, _____ , ""' .,..,.. 1 • • !:.quip Rental om• 1n ers -....:.. · • • un 1ng on eac ly -•annln"' du~-on ' elln ONE of Orani;:e County'!! fine I 4 PLEX $65 000 ·• . . . • H f ' d * 547 9641 l'kr &1?..fl'lOO H t' t B h ~~~as~~c~~.~~d ~: ASSUME FHA Nets $18.000 \'riv. HfWl'OllT 'U.T,C.M. 642•1lll 41JR 2RA , l11111&d1n nn~. 11cr' Condominiums $40 WEEKL y 1 & kif •-e Job Shop gr S250l\1 1 Ill Hfll1 · \1"nn'1 !>i~r · B{•11«h !rm l'k. \\'11tf'r. i,:1h11' 1111. Unfurn. 320 "" nu. a.i'ta . ('u.:u Ti·u..-prld,~ or o"·n•'t"'ihip in HOLLAND BUSINESS 1 1 Br ~11·1 fll'l uk 1111 11i l llH S'.150.0nr. 1'!l:l-lj12t;):{6..1$·19 _;_ ______ ..c._. Executive Sultet room. 0c<'an viC'w. ,\Jso, n ihls vet')' !!hni·i) ·l pl1>1'. I 1 Hr $1!l..i yr!y 111! pd 11111 1.. ----Costa M esa 727 Yorktown Blvd. guest llvlngHrell.$49,500. l't•rlc>\·t n:n1 al 11 rca . j.Hl·060S SALES 645-117() 1 Br t'Olt/11(1' Sl7j -funt E, Irvine I lk11ch 8hd, 111 Yurktn"·n , -1-----.11~~ :-irr 11hnp5 ,r., !r~"O}l'l· f C~I ~ 2 ,fl,, 3 Bit. 2 ha'<., ~11-r.i~ro. 536·0411 r "" '.1111'1 H -i\S'<llln:\blr ~1~r~ ~11,\ loan MR. CATFISH 1 JJr dlllagi' Sl~:i ull pd E . ll<ll'li "l· r!uhh~f'. ,\(!u.Hs. STUDIOS & \ BR's, V -.,1&1 _or -Sl ;i,!;OJ do11·n In 1lt"11· C~t \\c prewntly ha\'e a ftrtl' ulr!.·r 1•h1lr!r-·11. S21:>. ur. REAL EST"':TE Ba... s~~~~ loon -S-111 pc'r mo. fresh catri!ih, in1portM fro111 2 Br fpl pr1 o~ SllP_ll.13. sr!c('Hon or 2. 3 & 4 011·nf'r. 5'ffi-.'l197. 5-16-7!!,'UI • Full ki!··h··n II'\ All 2 he-<lrooni unt!s. E..:1r11 ;\rk11nsall, llush Puppic1, 2 Hr d11I;< S2Kl fpl :'\wprt hcdronni f'()nlalH from $-."8<l 3 ., . . S . • I fr 111,·d JK~ll 1190 Glennc)Te SI. t siorAr;::c. SN to bclll'\'C' Ca!l b1i;quus 11nci l~11u11t)• i;:r;t\') 2 Br drenn1 hse! COON Hi;:Ls 10 S-1:.tl. mo .. as wt>ll 11.~ BR .. • 1'·1· Clr.~'.t· \\Im • LAundry hu·l!ltli•JI 494.9413 549-0316 S · A n•al prornolcrs dream. 3 B · 2 Ba f·p1 <Br S31{1 NB rr~nlcs in the area. \\'e are 1.00,1.:. ?olor1!1<~t!o. S.j{) • ~'n-1• uril111r>: Pri 83l-3.'IOJ a . : here to Kil\<! YOUlt housi"" _1 .1._:..,i_~91_ f\nl0.111 Hay_P111r_ tNVEs-fM£NT OMSION • 1 0....'Tlcr cla.1n1i1 $9,000. g:~. J Rr :l BA" Sl.'6 ll"\'11W .. ,.. -e FN"f' hnen.; MINT CONDITION 2 [W I for m.;ire infot111aU011 caU+J Br 2 HA ·· S2651~1J: lhlls; nL't.'115: .1 Bl~ .\!11111l1'1'llt1. ~ •• 1,, '" • T.\", & n11ud lltt"\". &\/AIL 2 Bdmt. oy,•n-your-Oll'n APL Roo I • , .~t:i.13. ! 4 Rr 2_tta.:· S~iO rosra :'\lcsa 1~1•• ,\\,Ill .\pnl 1 Aft :i.;\11 • li;1r·B·Q1u· CJoge to shopping & beach. Unusu11.I Opportunity to FOR SALE. .p 'ii~ e~lab. Bcaul.)' Su.Ion. i Br ~" 1\1 ~?7:> ,I.ill?. Jhlls p 111. ~12-2l~'t-i 1 • Ph1111(' 'M'rv11 f' Beautiful gardens & pAtio. ~1u:J~:,:rtBaJ'e~~Propeny l SILVERCREST ~ ' 6 2 Sra1ionJ1, s10.ooo. c.,t.)~.~r~t~$~~?')\~p~~1.\~8P.t Can• Point • 1 \Ill" ro o.·1 • 1111 Lge. heated pool &-re<'. 310 f"ernando Rd., N.B. \ MOBILE HOME ,·-,~a,;~n'.~_ Sand & Sea H.lty. S LANDLORDS $ 1 BR. $15>$165 area. fltake this an ext:ep-'75-8551 20' x 53', 2 BlJ 2 B; c11rp., FUNK FACTORY ,,..........,.., LO\'F:LY. nl''\ ~ lilt ,:--:F:\\' ot:COH. Pnv J:a.raae. tional bU;y at $32,000. l ped bit lJ f . . M t L 240 F"Et: FP.t:E ('1111 l"~ T'Wlay, Tn11•1W11111~f'. h•pl t'. •llx. t"pt, 1.n•l.J)' 1111. ,..;1•11,1,r Spanish • BELLE of the BLUITS 'ra • . ts., f'(' n{:' A un1qlJ(' lagUna Beach oney o o.n S ALA RENTALS S . illJ•~. 11!1 Ill\, ~ ~l 1n fron1 \rt11!r Cn nplrx 2 mi So ; . ~. ·, ~rf .~9,u·:::,w •. ,"..:n1TRJ. ,-,~" ~~~sh~ & ~~1.l~~~· k~1:'. ~~~~~·J1n1~~mpl~~~ln~1th o t~~ 11 t TD L 1' NN'pnl1 !.:. Ray, 6·12-8.'\ll'.l. l~t \~f'~I C'm )Bank Bldg; h1•.1"h • .\-\l,u·iriil. sz....-.. ino. :.1 San l~1cgo .. F'r\1·y. '1noi . ~·" ........ ..~ • clock, ~lOl'ffge shed, land· rus1nm designs OJI !ll'{'n on s oa ns LANDLORDS' Oa~~l\CSS1f.71~· "Ni;hts 4!'1t-4~J2 r i·rs ,(. \\'kn·!_•. __ I Kl·C-l."-011 1.11, llH. lW2-7W =~~·s ~~i'r!rpd.:r!1J1din scaped patio. Three ~I'll. old N.or111n.1l T\' An (-~111blish('l'l • 1Hunt1ngton belch Ad It G d A t 4•t 1100 · like nu. Located ln new husifl('r;,.~ 111 a priinc loca· UP TO 90% 1 \\'c S()N'ialize in N"e11•por: u a r _en P • 4t4·S•71 • m11ny mlm>ra adult pk. away from noisy !Ion. 81A'i! INTEREST Bcach e Cnt\1narl<>l !'llar •1·· , .... ,.1 2ng_2s101')·.nc11·bldi:-,sha~ l ,Ur, tu_ni. Sll:,.1!10., pool. MONARCH BAY •Her rear patio is delightful SI. Onc--hall bl. fro1n club-R I " o I f;,. Laguna. Our Rf'nlal Ser-~ Ml;. ~ Ba , .. , ....... , i:;-~', i't'p!, II i•, no JX'I.~. C1uldrr11 ' ~r 111<1'.' perk. 10.'ti 12th SL, . 1*3 Bedrnui, 2~ baths have houi.c. Rcrluccd lo $12."". Red Carpet, ea to rs 2nd TD Loans \'!Ce " ~~REE to \'ou: Try:; HI .. 2 ,u.i .. _d .. 11 .....• S:-,"· ok. S2'.!:rs·.o cleanlni::. Si~, \1,f'-1 117. nf1. 5"' wkt'riciS. fAnl rm. ~nie of ntnny lt'X· 11!Tcrm~ Call EVl::i. 21 3-694-4690, • 1 ~u.\'1e11·: . :; HI<'.' .:. ha i h~ .'.,:: · $jj0 ·r~l ·'"" r"1un~tnt~I~.: Pa\ ,. . ! HI!. 1 l•IOt'k f1i:1111 ocean, ,\ tmique 4 bdn11. + <l!'.n -~ many xlnl charms. 497 1761 BP. I i h1U1s S WCI tures, btult arounll a ponl. J Carey Rlty 646-7~1~ 6!>7-7152. TRIPLEX , Lowest t•f•s Or9 n99 Co. NU-VIEW RENTALS 4 J.H. 1 ~. halhl' ..... , $.?I.Kl ~7-620.'\, %::-1iilH. 1 lo I ot.: k frn ni OCl'.'An. This Y.-a.nu . oontemp.: built e Ask Ior DICK \VI-UTE e CAN BE SE EN AT: :-.:cnr St:i. Coa~t Plaza. Sattler Mtg. C.o. r,73.4030 or 494·324.S •I Ult. '2 t..1lhs , ........ , $:171!' l.l'X Spa~·. 2 BR .. ~·a1,, rl'r :·1:1rll'<..,rnc cd, pool. $140. CAil by an a rclutect for h!S O\l'n :HS--7933 CRe,STMONT T11·n :.1-bdrn1 .. nn(' l-hdrnt. J 642_2171 545·0611 <1 f3!~. 21 2 hath.~ .... ~ 1.'.0 11:, 1 111~'n. P~~·fo t'I lnr _;·11!. or 2 -.:..l(ic;l}-_25f_I_, ~-~---- hontc, has an ocean vic11, 111 ESTATES Frplri; .. ~hog C(lrp., t:aragr~. I CALL 557.75N'I ~111::~ S-1~~~-:!!i.. Laguna Beach this priv. oceanfront con1· 1101\t.EY DUPLEX 11051 Site Or., Brea. fCC'n1rnl S!~j lll•l, Ul('. Xlnr 111\'ci<t. St'n·1ng I/arbor arr.a 2·1 >:,'!~ VIJ ':: llDl:.\l, l'i Ri\ l1l1n~. --~~--------1 munity, $158,500. 2 DLKS. TO liF.AQ-1 Ave. ncro11.~ fi'Uni l~N>a S~l100 !)o11·11. S·lli.OCllJ. Money Wanted 250 IV I SIQ N l'>'ln:.:. ~!u1ltf'r~. •TJils. $22:i. ' LfF'lC. ::ipl~ !Mm $.~ y,·k or TURNER ASSOC • Q\i•ners 3 BR·2BA \\' frpl. C JI 1 , .. DAVID D. CARLSON I I 1110. Jtr•fs. &16--07611 r1·r. Sl70 inn. Po<JI, inatd. ph. Log. wia Could be 4BR "'/modific. onim. osp. LAil •46. 833-9293 \\'ANTED $3.oo:l J.111.n for 1 ldry, \.1118~1' Inn 4!»-94Jli. llll5 N. Coa.111 HY.)'., e 11"'"" tl"l'llis, rovd patio COl'l:IACT IL\Y, i'K. l\IGR, REAL TOR , -, , 1 T • d h"ll Laguna H ills • ------494-1177 -~ ! h I I n1os. l1 f i ' "J.:i• n~I ru•t re I BEACON RENTALS e 2Bll 11· \'ir .... • • Brand 11e .. 1· or s oy,· ni; OFFICE BUILDING lund st"t1ll·n1cnL 003.:lCJ:!j, $159,000 e AdJ'acent to small nnrk 'J9'2 \'•'k•ng B-nt ood 2•-'" C JI A'J r e 4UW.1tlhCOSTAMESA.I :;111:t:?B,\, pool, 11•/d"'T, Lagu1111 Bt'fl"h 4!t-l-!H!ll r---' ... "' '''""' 2 ArlJaCT"nt sui1rs . reception a •• or 11 I " ., Emerald Bay, Great family • $114,950. :? BR 2 B.\. Custom cpl +4 o!rit:e!. One suite no"· ----LANOtORDS FREE! IREALTI" REALTOHS rrpl<;, 11!'f>S· ,\fC, \Cl')' ~!~~rt Beach ho •-I J I d pd J, Carey Rlty. s.i&-7414 & dm:o. Bt'au!. IRndSCA""d I · 1 b d I . L'n11·. i'ark CPntcr. irv1nc rlcRn. $26.imo. 61-l-51ll-J - lot. 4 BR. + maJd's rm. 3 • Ask for DICK \\'HITE • park 11.i blks fron1 be111·h avallahlc for 0.,...tlf'r/uscr. , R1r1~ ,, ____ -.-Newport Beach $3:> PER \\"k &. up l hr, me on .. 6 ., eve , n 1e • • .... .~ fll'1 up1C1 ) f'nt1s1. 011f'r I Ba Ibo• Peninsul• -- Ba. J.ee. !iv., paneled den, a-1g.7933 flun11ng1on Shore('!Jflio. Sec EICC'ellcnr norlh Costa ~t{'~a r LUXURY LEASE 1· BR. Cnndo .... ,. S2-I.> J\10 -:.! hr & bach's, color tv. dining rm., pl&ynn. 3 Car to <tppr. Call !or appl. loi:allon c:i.tcsa Vcrc'c1. 3 Bl-t. llou1c ...... S~i i\10. nuuil '«'rv, pool. TIIE gar. Lovely patio. Rm lor e 536-4Sl2 • Lf'ase option $98,JOO. Call I . d ~OO \Olh & Ray. Sho\O.'rl h.)' appt ·I BR. Hn1nt> ...... $.~1 i\I0.1 WATERFRONT ~lt:."\A. 413 ~-NeY.'µOrt Bl., pool., o,.1ier Lrans. l9iO . 12 x 52 Fh.'Ch\tood :'>l:J.-Af24 SnuthCo. ReaHnrs_ I riouses Fur n1she onl~. (N.'Jll'r a46--0(jlJJ 13 HH. Hnn1c , , .... $.11:t ~10.1 with SLIP. 2 Large I _':!_:_&_"~"-"'-I~~~---1 PEG ALLEN ~lobilc hon1e . cxe1111 Vie..... "GARDEN H\rr1•ox·r i;.f--p:-:i 1>1:. 11''111" ...... S400 :i.10. bedrooms 21/2 b1th1.12 BR Furn Frplc. ocenn- BIG CANYON '"ene al ' ' ' ' pri . 1 l<>r " UP II lOI" $4"'-)fQ ' I •. A I & '1 REALTOR 494-7578 Quiet adult Newport Resch v r ;,.,iul. 1.111:. n1odp111 J Br. " •· t ~ ··· · ...., · ·! C • r p •ts, drps. Very 1''111• , _nr pn '_ 1 11Y on· 109i l'W-Clllilt. !.-ma l BR hon1e, right on llth park. N. ·0 pets. Priced. foe 1 . TRIPLEX" $!~-u~JL PD Q,.,,.1 S60o 1110 \'t'h· .,,.,.,.610 RANCH REAL TY I 1 1 5500 Bk ly. 11:.!.l. tnl) 67a-3l21 or --;r. 'fn\')". Sl45,000. Open daily ed I ~..> • ~ " Bach -__ . ____ .: .. : " ** 551-2000 ** P r v a e · · r' j bi~,..Qit6. * 0 -..1.1--L.-nt 1 5 lmnicd OCL:U""''"'~· ~1!~11:,"18'".',,,AA,. ,J,e. Sa 9 9 5 · • T1.,·o 2 l>C'droon1~ plus lS.I~ ~q. nc111' hea<'h, Laguna. Corona del Mar ----833-2560. D\'" l'llC 1 • 0 1 1 3 ~ 11 Rue Vert~. ea1'i'67::-6900 ~ II 5· I ft , Turi'(' hedrootn O""nt'r's..,l~-0--Si\I,\LL 1 Bit pri\·a!r I l.P.G BR. for t'('nt, 2 )I'S I -,., ~ !""'" Cl' .. n ron Condorftinlums NEWPORT SHORES unit. ["\C't'llcn\ Eastside Ith d ~ill[}, pt'I \.\"C 11 "ul l. SEAWIND ohl. ·in 1';1nch ht h1•a1111!ul 1f-1T\'f10 Tl1r Bluff ~ !'I ' DRH" ~,.}~:J-O? \ l'lly ,•,1~,'~· . I ·-I'.·. '2' ... I Jd f. '. '·· t1\~ ... ,.., .. ,n1t• .. --J I Costa :\lc~a renta !U"ea. ~t:una. l'\1111, '._..1, orn1 111 ,1111;](• 1,.1 1.], •'fll"tlf'l' A•.il -· $49,500 to $115,000 \\'e special!zc in Ne.,.,·por1 "G:1!:'•· Ol'ii;:inal 011·1:eor!I h11ve takt>n •Slll -t.:TIL PD R..-11r Bllrh. Next To Spy9lass r111 11 11~<'1 h.J1. Jn: l1v rin.j ~,..,11 S·IOO. nvl inclrl~ San Clemente n......n House Daily 10-4 Shores properties · call· us 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO:.~~ I im1T1ill'ulu1r 1·arP of !111~ '1111111 1tt·L ok, Corona dl•I VIEW 1 cnn\l'l's1111<111 p11, Iain rn1.1 nuiint '.(I'} vi~ia Surr!r, 4'' Cliff Dr., Lag.Sch. A·Fn1111r, 11·111k to fl('aeh. 6·16--7111. szo~,..1 RR. frplc, gan1i;r, rir 3 Bci!rmn1, 2 broth ho111c, 1ll'11 p1'0~1c~l\e s c ti 11 0 l1 . , ' , ~i!) ·in !'":· 'lnnli1 ......-to SI'!' • 1 Pl'O('lf'rly. P rice s 7 s. 9 on , :\l.11'. I ll•b )iii, 3 rar i;u r, c..:c1tin>: 1111 •71~2 S<in ('J. nlf'rll" l{l•:.1d1·n1 Hotel : 494-5572 Realtor JXIOl~.l'1l'.3 BR . $49.500 Acreage for sale 150 OPENfl~g .1rsFUNT0 8Ell1Cl ' I 10 .... n/bcach, L.aguna. 'firepl11cr f11rinlll clinini;: '.''''111. !>'1/t 'ft'fl!cr, !{ardrnt•1•1 ('1'\[J() l 1ttk Lid" 1 HH Qlu~·t · .'kt·urf' WHITE WATER VIEW CAYWOOD REAL TY ~ ~1 $:;()11-:.! BH. 2 BA, nicely fur11. 1 ~elf-eleanlng oven. r:njo>: 1111 Jdc>d, SlOO inn, ll\"a1l :i.1.1yl .!1. Bi\ lpl 11<'11· • nr1: i11n1• 1"11rn-u111 · 11lllk1n1t dlsrnncc * 541-1290 * \\"A:\TED acreage vie. O. ' • fJ"pl c, gar, I blk beach, C<J:\l (lrh·Rte community tf'nnis &11'1 , 1·all ~(11~1786 rout 11!1 hl11n~ T•1f) '.·nnd I !11 r1·•·rythl nr:. 1'7o G. I. Loan. 2 Bd1m. & Cnty. srna!l or lari,:e. Bell NU-VIEW RENTALS ~-....·1 111n1ing pool in thi! \rAL.'\UT~s<Julire 2 BR ~.~-!(! 1:,10· Day r.io-~OIJ r')f SAN CLEMENTE den, 2 bath!!; lo!s of deck· 1/4 ACRE La.nci Del'c'?onicn! Co.. 111 6i3--Ml30 nr ·l~J.-32-lS prestil(IOU.!i area 1t b o \! e 11)1.,,1housc, A/C, c r p I ~, 671-1-11 i 1 HOTEL lng. Sale or leEt1.se. $49,500. Pool • Paddle Tcnni5 • ln· ;,1s-1115.i. ___ 1 BR house, Slli.>, Cr.i:-$lZ."i, 1 Corona drl l\lnr. $495 per h!tn.~. rlsh"·hr, \V 1 o. BLIJF.FS .1r1>.i. 4 BR, 2'21 ~ !Jr_;L ~!AR, s.c e -G M 1crcom. 5 BR, J car gar· ... ?matery HOUSE + 1 SlZl 11 ll n1onth -lease. fJ-4.l-16.'!7. balcony, encl. garage. UU. h;1~ .. nr. 111 :;chi & Cathnlif' 12().F Tw;tin Ave., t\.B. agcH. A$9Rl,500Bp'R VIEW Lots/Crypts 156 I 2 UNITS ~~he~:m~n~~: r-oa: sltj' BIG Corona ha!+ a rww f'hHll't -SIOO. dcp, &1:t-IJ.~ th~rc~i 1f·IS:), fil~~~a..~·-13 BP.. ~~1. ~~~~r. Sum· REALTORS 6'12..4623 A~:J.:._tt. 97~8-130 I 4 l:lr r1r 3 Br bJ\h u·/ frples. Tl"l'.TLl:ROCK, !{('~ A A Am,. I 1111,,.,11. yrly. ~92211. BEST BUY-J ARC?H BAY HOMES 2 CE~~t ERY tots, Paclfi"l ~ew Triplex. 3' BR. 2 BA f L R I l••ls nf open bt':in1.~ ,\· 11·.,\1" 3 HR. 2 11,1. 2 l'llR . 2 b11 ronrlo. !'\n -- REALTY ••• "780 • 2 BR 2 BA A Cali .'s argest enta ~1:iint><I "rJCMl, \'l('\l'S nl To•·n~,,,,,._ s•-. m 0 ,. pc·t• S29:i. Call !').l:-t·79'i4 ;if1rr l STt:IJIO \l"ilh pool. Joe. on Ocean view cham1er . 3 BR, -.-. Vie ark, Cdl\I, area, $235 +:r"'O, ; pts. S · H A t ? •r• "' "~1 • I $1 '" '' 2 ba be II LR f 1 ea, 646-563ZKill I Pallo. F rplc. \ ard. Laundry erv1ce. OUHS, P s ~pygla\S & ra'lhion Is!. stir[) x.1.l-61)12/ !13.~.-!!127 ;1prn. Y.alcr s f'( gc. 'ou . o. ~~-~h~~:m~T~~Ag~~: 1i'~l\~;~1~~J~t.1~~~~ Commercial r~~o;r~~ ~~:~"tr Homefinders * 547-9641 -~4-;1~~-::11 Hel101ropc. \\~~!'~f~~Ti~A'~~-nl~~ ~.~San Juan C•prstrano '~P~~'~S:~urn. itu.-~ • $55 000 • ... '--"" ... " :'\E\\' :t RR 2 R;i POOL "" Balboa Island 49-l..f»51, Abby 494.m1 0~ :\.'i'RA \\'ll)E 11.~ LOTS P roperty 158 9_.,00 No•· ~J'"X" 3 & 4 ~Balboa ltland Slli."1 l"NU:c;UAL ne11· 3 !M:rl place, pool' SJ7;;, ;..·12-7~ WIUTE \VATER VIE\\' ' BR Duplex. 3 Ba. Dbl gar \\",\Ll\ I_O aµ\CH? ~ Br, 2: '.': H/l, 2 BA, h:itchf'naid, .~rll L•guna Buch i,:oU cowiic, gar. Con1p. NE\V3 BR·f"tR·Beam Ceil. -THAT'S ALL THERE TS NEWPORT BEACH PA . $80,000. 5fr18ih St . ltS. Ba, $2."iO. Kids/pets ok. I f'l<"anlni: m·en. ~prr crpt. \Jain!. Arlultll. l'\o PPl!l S"' · L. P.GE ZBR 'JS, 0 Builder 831·1~92.-193-()$1 TO SAY Prime Ba.)1ront Sile Call Bui!rlcr, R47-l!157 Homefinders * 547-9641 .,..~!~-'-~beach. •WI fcrnlcaf, J. Custorn bit. 3 Br.. homP., s:1:.l5/n10. 493-1124, ·l!l.1-13$7. 1 ·f~~j,, \~w C'rpi~ ... 8r \,ih;i~: !:.!@~• Hlll1 J. Carey Rily 646-7~14 For boat repair & sales HOUSE 6 UNITS 67.K/<J.l. y,·/w carp, lrplc., J.;c. dttk p.1111", nr Sn Bayfrnni, e Ask for DICK WHITE e Bill Grundy Rltr. 6T.J-6I61 ~ .1 ~ 2637 Eld YRJ.Y 1121t;f /1·1d · 1rf ·cpriv. 3 HH, 2 ha_<;, 11/frplc &· 1r/r11_:f'.'ll n vie"''· 2 Car g-ai·. Duplexe' Unfurn. 35~ )"tu'ly, 675_3288, 6'13-Cf.62 5.1g.7933 lST Tl1'!1:; orrE~D . r,.,. uni .~ a .... ~n. paun. nc ut rp1~. P<•tio., Olrl Cd:>.1, So. Pacific A-t rond. th1-uout. G 1 Balbo-• Pon,·nsula LOVELY 4 BR .• neuly l'IC\\'. flAP.'"°R VIEW llQ",!ES F IJ I . I I C:\1. Isl USl'r \\'l'liXJ " l~Tltc ilrps. 6cy..1819. -I ~ t II -· C•ll ~3-29'-$350 MONTH >.::..:••~·~·~•:.:.. _____ _ JJ>V a u Y case, prime en~nt, off. Call Builder 6-16-4414. '-011~ "-'· JJ• ''" 1 Din rm. bl1-1n kitchen w/ · 3 Br. 2 ha, ran1 rm. & dr. ta.IC sheltf'r. Top local1on. I '111~~. or 670-4J78 evt's & 2. Spacious 4 BR. & f11.n1. rm. Get all rentals for 2 yrs l'r-,'[Qt:E OCF.ANFRONT Pl!-ntry. Used brick lrplc. Carmel. Complet~ly upgrad· $75.00J. Bkr. G'T:t--0700 C.l\l. TRl·Pl..F.X, 3 2BRS, .,. Balbo1 Peninsula 11knd1. + din. rm. Bit-in kitchen, • • 1 Blt,t IJO"'amf'rl «ihni;t". ff')<) Au-cond. Pall?. CloJIC' to ed thruout. $11.500. Open Sat SPENDABLE . I n . patios, l:'(IOll I o ca ti on ' j 'N'',\V Jrg 2 BR. I ''· lcpl r. \\'/\\' rar .... •1111.--., Pauo Guaran.teed service. I du! •· schools & shopping. Offe~ & Sun. 1•5. 1937 ~., ~nlty inc .. n atinn Srf!l,!IOO. Yrag"r R. l'a 1 t y, 45' B,\YFRONT. Pier, flont. • r-.. H f d * 547 9641 rlllH 1 1'harn1. A ts ... o By °""1ler. Best financing Pl NB 644-2542v• ''' hedge: nr. bay. 4,800 Sq. 11. ~171 j. BP., 4 Bath. \\"inter or 11//rplc, vlrw, d1sh11.'l'l~hcr. \\'/BBQ. An exc:t-llcnt ftt nH· ome 1" ers • I _P''1~. 673-6.~72; rt1987-1.988 avail. s. from San Diego • · · · ofc bldg. Bkr. 67~6700. · Yelll'ly. 67J.-'20:19 .·.oo·~ <upper unit) Poinsct-ly home. 12 Bf::J>ROO~T Jl6,; FNy on La.Paz Rd to H.V. HOt.'IES; beaut 4 BR .. 3 Lots for Sale 170 tia. $450 MONTH Bilbo• Penlnsula l:o;t & la.~t f.1clntyre and right to Pike. ~~ ba .. din. rm., frun. rm., Condominium• Coita Mesa NE\\' 3 Br, 2•2 hA, frpl, ~11r, 3. J-::nglish Tudor home. , . ~ * * :.!13-697-14.llli ** •-11 on S••on, then to 25692 bonus rm., 2 frplcs. Drive. for 11le 160 4200 sq. ft. C-2 lo!, Jl('nr . · hho , __ _., ~ .. NI N°Qr!h Cllli ~ct1on Can bi• OCJ-.A:-1 tmnt. lni1er, 2 AH, ~ ~ S Cl · < B · I St C'! I .~uprr nt'll': r ""''· .,..,,.,,. ' · · I D \\' I IP · '' "" · C d I M Callfl a. Shown by Appl or by: 1806Pt.Ren\\'i<:k&call ·'· air·· n..~1° · · :•.GROOVY Bachelor Pad, I , S3.'i0.6Ta-1076,673-29T:i usC'da.~·IBf!.,1hn.nn.,lgc. in!I. · "11 ·· 11" _i.,· orona e ar see at OPEN HOUSE Sat &. to~. EXTRA NICE 7>-1~>-16.17 Bit, Sl7:J. \1.,· 1m \\'Ith Irplc rtr;.rr h,.,.•h·nr p;itiu. l Ill~ Sun JJ.3, Marth 23 &: .24. Gib Walker Rlty 67,,...;)200 l SI\" ·1 Bit & den 2 ba~ QCL'A:'\ Vie\I" lot, Ne"""' .... I Homef•'nd••• * .147-9641 3 BR, .'2 b.1, OC'C'an l'l2~ . $j75 MONTH l)alll sr~f 111'1 )rll . r.7::-.·i72'J W\'E!.)' 2 Bit & 0•'n. gar ••• ·~1 ... . ' .. <;.. ....... !111). ~rplc, St'l'lude•I. s.1.~.· ~ . -\JI t:111~ Jl'l Sl:JO Ph: Days. ~ or BAYFRONT lrplc, custon1 cpts & drps. hriKhl!!. FOHTll'\ CO., Rt'11l-L B ,·,-,·,.J'9' :\flS:ilO:\ RlALT'i 491~1~1. C ' . . ... 56-(1966 eves. $35.900. 0-.t'llt'r 646-aJ.S6 1 ,~r. 642-~"100 agun• ••Ch · · ·• · · - ----oron1 del Mir c .. 11 7!4--537-Ti(}I Trade your ? for this super 4. S165-t:TIL PD I BR prl\'111'-'I Costa Mesa L-vunai N iguel bdrm, -41.f Ba family home. Income Property 166 Real Estate 1 tBR HOUSE. Sa!.irird mi'ln. Costa· Mesa lnl'd yard, ch1ld/pct ok. Pier & slip. $24 0, 000, Exch•n9e 182 No pl'ts or children. Sl;O, S2Z>-2 BR nr bf'arh, bcautilul ~.Br.. .mA. lohu1'. frplc, 1 BH. 2 B,\ Ju~t llkr home OWNER, 4 BR. l yr new, many improvementa. Nlgwl Hills. pat buy. $49,COO. (TI4) &11·132S Lido Isle 90 FEET 4 BR, f&m nn .. d1n nn., 4 Ba. Beaut. gardent. One or a kind, a l'ihowplace.! $165,(Q) TRIPLEX Penthoule &. 2 sludkl apll. 3 BR, 2 ha. ea. 50 F1. on 1and,y beach. Leasehold. Sl60,00J. LI DO CLASSIC Dramotlc Grerll1n homtJ & atrium·Hkf' 1arill!!n. 1-llgh cell's., 4 DR., clen, din. rm, A 1nust to set. SJ59,000 LIDO REA LTY ,, I , I o. "II *67J·7JOCJ.lli' FANTASTIC BUY- Back door to beach walk w/ tcDn1a court adj. 4 BR + bl.)' w . Low t a:1e1 ii C«Y prdtn pet1o. Now .SlO,oo> Ina. Hunyl ()pen S\Jn. 1-5. 425 Via Lldo Nord- m.-7414. Newpo;rt &Heh ** llAYSHORES ** OWNER ANXlOUS 4 BR, l BA. $65,000 642-..... HARBOR l!lghlan<\I; 4 BR. Ft1.n1·rm, trplc. Owner. prtn only $46-6L16. LIDO $Andi.• 3BR, 28A, 3'.MI ft to beach, $52'.SOO by °'""'· m.4XJ3 Deni110n Assoc-. GTJ-7311 WATERF RONT 4!"11-8170 L\'t"S. 3 BR, 7 BA. very sharp. L.ge \'1e1-1•! Sn1I pet ok. O('f'nn \U, h<>111n {·c1L 2 1'Ar ~1.-i~ drpl< & i·rpt. D,\\' ,' CONDO. split level 3 BR .. 2 5 linlls. fantastic location i· MESA VERDE N B h lan1 n11 all blln5 quiet SJ.'ill-CllAlt :i..llNG o!dC'r :! t g:ir, P\'t hl a<·h rrivl, S.IOO 111t.j11,, to\Pl) i11110, enclosd •-hobby nn Ind~ nn \'il'\O.'. Pool. Inc. SJT,500 ewport eac f11n11 \y 'street. S up e; DC'n, frplc home. ..m~o~ .. ~·~1~;..~'~"'~''--~--•r , ... ,.,.1,. .,..,., ,,10 Ph b;ic dbl "i::ar ·~· pooi' Out.standing opportunity. TRIPLEX REAL Sharp! l Br duplex, Easlside, C.'.\I. k>l'ation. ~t ,\NY 0 T Jl E R S Huntington Beach :,a;'.:;.1',0 , .. · · "'~ · S4.J OO(i • " . 15% Dott..'Jl . .fl_Z,000 Chol 'D-·aJ Pal D $150. Kids/pels/&ngl~ ok. ,\\·ail now! $3.)() :>.1o. Call A\'Atl.ABLE I~~~~-~-~-~ ' . DAVID 0 . CARLSON t:e ""J' m r. area 964 Larry, ~5880 NU.VIEW RENTALS Sl5G-2 BR. Rlt-ins. rn>t~, I LG F; 2BR. ~iud>n. 11~ hA. G. \Valke:r AKt. 67"'~ -OW!'l('r hall approx. SJ0,000 Homefinders * S47-1 1 1 1 1 11:ar, nr ~hopp1ni::. married ClPLE REAL TOR 833-9293 equity \\'lllllll &-10 units or roR Lea.~e~ A~'ail April Jst. 673-4030 or • 494-32.l.'1 'rJlll, rp c, pa io, cnf1)0T"t I 11 1 Id n 3-20 PRIN S ONLY -122 small commercial in Harbor I BR, 1 blk to ocean. lncld Small house 2 Bdrm +: le LEASE 4 BR 2 ba f & 1 .. undry lac1l. <;nuplc & m 1~• no'" 11 t'en a\•a. · Harbor Island Road. Large 9 f'l;"E\V 2 BDR?-1 UNITS pa1io, ulil ~-quiet. 11.'0rk· fenced Yd . .,.,-aJk 10 shops-h!tllnll, ne11_r ·, :~~ ~·' 1 1nfnn1 ?~ No1 pets. 1 · 3 F 0 rd ha. m • O.'l. 2 BR, den. 2~ Ba . $85,500. C:OSta Mesa. Scheduled gro51 Area. in!': cpl. S200 f>4A.142S. older 11nuhl! prefem-d. 151 It 13%/mo. 4M--Ol40. S.12-16174 nit .1.30 P) · _._,..~·"'~'·~~==~== By appt. only. Call_~~ S24.780. Price Sl94.(Q), Try MAMMOTH HouMt Unfurn. 305 IA5t plus cl dep. Call L NI CLOSE TO BEACH! I • t:L:\I GARDJ-;~s APTS BA.YCREST owntt-4 Br, ~ IOtA. do1o1rn. Broken roopera· · ~HS-3916 agun• gvel Brllnd N~· Df'luxe 3 81 ~I Unfurn 2 Br S\60, Ba. F .R. 2 fp. a!ISllme tloo. CJS Real £stale CONDO Gener al 2 ..lllt.....3 dl;I 11 in Ch1l•lm1'!1 ~tlon 5~$f. $74,950. &48--5044. ~1168. J?,ELUXEho JR BR., .BA 4 BR 2 I* U1·ing rm k clinln ll CIBA, 1 gar,,.~ Ji1 ~:. Tlnd lit C:\I 642-3645 'I ' Local n'-l·ncr y,·oulrl UM' this n"'" use. ecreat1on area fam. nn. frplc bll/im. 1tn~. _oi;c o rc-C'r~11,1n1! ~~,~~-~-~-~1 lo\'rlyS50.000prriperly, rf';iter, pool. $323/month. cpt!l/drp!!, f ence d & ~ .. srhl~ .. 114 1RthSt R4o -.. 95i l\,t,l!I~ ~It run rtir:i\.G11rden cornplc1ely fun1i11hed 11·uh ! _!!!:;-6610 sprinklers, 2 c11.r gar. 1m-Newport Shortt 'p,. 1''.:111 ·1.D .'· priv. rvery1hln~ n.-:-edccl lnr 11 I:: BR, 2 BA . f11m Rn1, Din maculn1c. S:GO ls!, l11s1 t.· patln. !li0-$1.f.l, ~~.:..Irvtnc "('('kly r~ntal including n f~m. Liv Rnl. Neu· CT'<'Cn· dep. 499-1'>44 :J BH.. 1 ·~ 00,, frpl1, D.\\"., 2 ln•l~~11'·1 .l.ll·2ll·ll. 11110wmob1lc. a11 part o[ !he II hrook Hnmf'.'. 992 Carnation. Newport Beach blk~ 10 (JP11('h. s:ioo. JllO )"I'· I.HG 2 Br. 2 H.1, chn rm. ckl'-l·n p.'\)•n1en1 for :. (':\!. tii.j....Oi71 ly. 211-311-17n l r11t drp, s11 l'<L MOI . Orunge Cnunty Rcsirlentinl -2 \\' • •-· "-h 2 B , Bad I A-· F 360 ,\dull ~. no pct s. S l 7 0 . I 'bl l 1 O;.IE OF' A KINU'. 2 Ur. ' Al.or>. °"ac r M p x. pt&. urn. ~J.' ~.-nconie or (>0881 Y an ex-Bath in ·l·plt'x. Sl70. $28:> yrly. Sngls/stW"lents -., .~ ...... pcn5i\·e v~e'o\' h0n1" I Homefinders * 5'47.9641 Ok. Balboa Island 2-~B~R~,-,-,1-tt-.-.,-,-.n-d~l~l,-.-,-,..-i Located In Tyrolean \"Ulagc , . . , Homefinders * 547-9641 1'0'lrn,., l hlk 11"\•tne, 2 hlk~ on an a.llJ}car road. CORONA DEL MAR I Sl:'\GLES or t 11mthes. 2 BR • SE\Y 3BP.. :nm. frplr, all 1 hus ~t•l"\'icr. ~o rhildri·n, no C 67>7225 t.ood view k fli>lc Like new home, Sl50. ,\li.o 3 BR Horse NEW Harbor Vu, $4.iO/?lfO. 3 hltins, oolor \\",patio ,it bbq. ~ts. Refs ttq'd, 8.~lli!O ·~-· 2 Bd • •~ IU!m·h, Jffi. S225. Agt. ft"e. an. trplc, 2 Ra, pool. t#!Mls 11vail hy 'ft'k nr mo 6i~9022 . . 0 \ \I.I.I .\ · ll I \I I \ .,., """'!. mu. ....... m114JO prh·I &4Q.-1327 or 58&-57).J LARGE 2 Br 1n 1nplex, HARBOR VIEW HILLS SEUUD.ED 2 BR. Sli3 64{).lSoo ext. 1465. 'B1lboa Peninsule \"Cl)' .clean, ~110, centml ~Ion•! view, 4 bdrnu. Brlng l, & lA\•e! . NU lt.V 4 br/2 frpl, .... ·etbar, Sl5 WEEK & UP loc. l'ir Mlnpp1nu &12·3254 LAGUNA NIGUEL Hom1finder 1 * 547·964' \lu. comm pool/1ennts 5 Sleeplna Rooms 2 BR, 2 R,\, Tnplrx, PRtk>, :..c:c.c.:__,.;,,:c.,,'--'::.,,~~-1 S5.i0. AILk IOI' J 0 y c e ' • 11 k I Roo gar. l":tll'l"<lr11.I t't'U. v a rd . On UK' 7th Kftt~n El Niguel • SHARP '} Br, 1 Bl TO\\i!> &44-1791 642-$1235 • ~UIC ':1p na: A nu S2Z'>/mo 646-4411 Golf COON(!. 3' B . Sl:ll-or hnu.~c. S225 .. Pool ga?ra1te1 11ARBOR Vin-.4BR. Vac. BAL BO .. rnN EASTISJDE 2 BR. Of'W shag Real E1tafe Wented 114 .~~j.;l(l \\1th opl1on to buy a1 palkl. i\Tesa \ erde. 83U971. \\'ster ~ 5la.rdener l"K'. ).12 lQ) fllA!n Strttr crpts. drp!'. inclci gar, no r"• · Dan• Potn1 n10 l&e S400-S475 64-Hi146 ~Th-S740 )'('IA. SJT.j/64-4-1103. We're Buying Hou1asl Call Scott Jteall>' . ~7l.13 oui 25A 'IAI f"RF.SH n~ Sprlnl': clr\Jghlful I IJ BR: homtl) ln NJ1· ' B.\CHf:LOR Stli n AV BEACH 1 )1 ltl; hf•l"llf :\ 'Htt. S285 Shnrl'.'~. )i'ly lsr, frf!m S3 l•! & fl\lll DMT ond l!(i..•1-*!16 or 4'9·1111 CAY\\'000 REAl~TY 5'18-1290 • • 213-697·1496 * • JIOUSE 11·ant~. Pvt pty wUl 7 • 0 0 h \\"F:STCLlIT 4 Br. 3 ll8, fn m C d M 1)6.y all Clll h for local I Hunting ton Stac rn1. ?XI aq. tt. Rtf'll. Call orona el a r . f!!'?P!'1l· 640-«X& ~W~E~'R~E~M~O!::'V~IN~G~-l~N~ 31.iR. 2BA. blT\111, dbl . fl'.39-I~ · Stll pr month. F\Jrnlshrd 'l The •.• r..•1:=..!,t 11 d("Pllwotn 1 a",.• W 1 ut. 11 ed TO HELP YOU OUT· 1· 1 """'' p11lnt .~ <'llrl)('t, Sh11 rp~ 3 ~R llot'fle Rn·nch .Arreage. llMrooin. F'IN<plaC't'. )'OOI, '""' . • • S:J~ mo. alk !or Oftle SJSO, Al~ 3 BR 1£ontc Rt l'ICh built-Ins, Adults, 673--8574. Ad. C.11 &12 5m. Homefinders * 547-9641 !&-6746 HB. $2%1. Aat .. Fte. fm.-84.10,_:;61:::>-.:-=------ ' 1.c. BActW'llor. Nr acc. St40. ,11Y1 U!llltlt~ pn1d. No pets. I Ct1ll 979·{)1~ . VF.RYf.1ef\n 2·c1~lf~t.-,-. .,,-,,-. -n,-w d1"JI$, blth111. no peu1. $l~'l . ~SS Shull111ar, 642-8907. COi\TPLETEl. V private t BR apt, 2 <'O r prkg., \\'fllk to &hop's;:. SITO. &f&.1063. I I I • <2~4~~·;~~LY;,.,;P~IL~D:T_--,;;-.-:-.~M~ood:::•Y~,~M:•:~:•~~2·~1~9~74:_.-;;;:-~~------;a:::;:----~~--;n;;;i;;;-o;;;;;;;r---.;iii::P.;;;;;;;;r;----J3o f iApt. Unr•wn, 30,)I Apts.,. Apls Apff., JOffic• Rental 440 Perwn,,ls 530-Contrector P•lntlng & >Mlp Want.ct , M&F 10 1...::...._:_ .... ._;_ __ ..:...;,:. ir Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Un furn. 370 Furn . or Unfurn. 370 I OFF ICES AVAILABLE S!NCU: nm tr 37, ~:tn'I dig Jn.ck Tnulanc, p • t to", ---'.::'Pl:.:;•.:.h.:•;;,"9:..:.'n:;g:...__-:: I AS51STA."i'f ma.na.gtt Arl>y'1 Co1t11 Mesa .. niy&tk'wn bul bC'hcves tn rt'n.00, add. L.lc, 8-1 aiSCrn. Rollit Bfff, mmt be 1-'.;.,;;c.;;..;.,,,.;.;.o_ _____ IC :~·~··~•;..;,M~·~";;:.------~C~o~1~t•;;...;M~1~1~1-----·I S1nt1 An1 (>n "Ol'I ;\l11r htonn nc Son rtAIHy ~ks fem. oornp. r.I)" lA'/\v Co. fi-12--4700. P AP ER It AN C I NC & m • lhematie1lly lnc:llned. I Ct-mf'nlf', Jhl for BL'-v.ilO ~·lll\l't'!'I thtsc \'sluts. · J>a'lntlnc, 21 yrs H.i.rbor f>rof~ 111·lth fil.lt food U · CHOICE 1"<itJntu1111, In 11 urn n c e. \rnir L'ln.i.l'Ufl'-d Ad N,.,: !Jl, Elect rlcel ~!;t.1$. !um. No. IS32U. Pt'ricl'ICt'. Train al O\'f:t $-100. rtll•MI:~" l)l'Okers or 1 UuUy Pilor, P. 0 """ !56(1, BCTRICIAN ...-.-..., perrno.Ad \•rtnceme nt V• t Del Lago LLAOCKEAFTRIOONNTS ~';:.'.~~'.1blc to rio.·rn1a1\l!n11 S~111 \le~':_. {·nt1f. 92G'lG. ~>S. M1v ~~. ~Y ;,~ *Wa llpaper Hanger * ~:~& 51~!~ ~-~ Dote~ Jon"~ Rrally •192-1412 A:>.:\'OXF: k11(;11 !"Ii: I hr i\nypllu'f'. 83&-7889. C. R"bko &M7-Z.I l9 pin, l\lgr. IS a When ERS LLES whel'f'n.boul.$ of ,\llt•n C. EL.E."CTRTC!AN _ l.icf:~ Plaiter, P•tch, Repair Address Counts v A I Sloll•. "'""'"'' of >ll No. 233108. Smalt ~.... AITRACTIVE lady, "·"' PINECREEK LIVES UP "Ap•rtment V•lue1 Above th• Other •" ON Tiit: I.AKE-: : I'd I ll 1•~•~1 ~ "ATCll r• •~"UNG -r hr. 9om-lpn1. l'of•ke , ifrll'a c-r r., xu ...... l, 1nnJn! & repaiMI. ~. ,. l..l~ILN\. .~ 00 ht plM.se contact 8rtb. Box m Ail lypet. f-,...r estin1alt>s nprn111 fnr 11 lo~ntp r At south C(Jfll<;I Ph1,o,i , Pool • Ar11puh-u Ac1un Bnr t, .Jn,.uizi. Sl)('('tncular 8' i\Cl'r Lflk(' 11·1·r o11·1·rl11g Dnly Cll)', ca 9WJ7 G•rdtning , Call ~ \\'Ork. lintg. Bch atta. Phont' 1·3 !Dr ap pn t , TO ITS NAME .,. e 8111 Stop e Ad j•c•~• Goll C911to• LICEN~f:D SPTRITUALlST COU...EGl: trained 8iu'l:l~ner Plumbing 636--2280. Splritwililil reading• JO t .m. (If 22 yni f"Xp, "'ho is mo~ I ~"":::::.....,..,----::-:c::-:::c-O\·er ~ tull trees and 10 st.reama wlU1 \Ytllerfall~ crt-alc a ret{.lx!na sett\~ 101 YOUl' l!ptiC;lO\C!' n('IY 1-or ~· 1 bedroo1n nra11n1e:nt. ~-rr'1111 $170. F't11-n1turc ut·nllabh• foutl1Hh:s -I: ~tUH011 nouur • • r, .... ;, cou•h, 1·1uhhous1·. Gym, Sl.luna. NEW OFFICES • 10 p.n1 odl'il ... fin 1111 pa'Qutl of hlli <ltu1lily "'nt'k I .. It OTIS l'I.L';\lBll\'G AUTO SALESMEN 1nn!lcl'!', 31:2 N. t i Cnmlno !lt'f'k!I lnnd'<!D.pe clean.ups & Rt•1nodcl.I! ~ R1•pnirs .. \\'llU~r Nttd for one or Orange ...a. Re1ld1 11t Pro 'fto!ul Sc1·ur l1y, ~~vi e J ~0011, 011• AOUL TS IN LAGUNA NIGUEL llelll, San Clr nten1c, lur .~f'\'f'rlll "'kly miilnl Jobs , hratNit, dlllposa!:i:, fu11111.~"<'~· 1 Counly'11 l~3dlng Pontiac: appt CnU 492-903'1'4.9'2·9t".G dA11\\a.~11r,, 642-626.1 iol/C t Dt>alcrs. NC'w or Ul!INI car · ~ G_ro_ra-r * 5tg..2015 * B/A. C(iniplell' Ph1n1b1na "3!r!I. E:'4:ct"llrnt Ir In ge , Office 01K"n 9:00 to 6:00. 230l) Fairvj{'\V ful., CM1n :-.1c ... ;i. Phom': :~1~noo. "Olvn'lpi< 111• Bachelor, I, 2 & 3 Br'1. Only 42c per sq. ft _ • Gym, S1u11•1 from $17S per mo. 4llO fl. ti.· UP. All uttl ln1•1. e R1c1111io11•I ('rpb1, drl).'. nir, 11•1•llW'u'. •cti.it111 3700 Plaza Dr. 279!1'1 Cnnuno Cn111~1 rnno =ai Puradiilf" Gardrnin~ ~n.•it'('. Li(', 71'2G94. ht'nefil:c. Expt'rltnced or I , ... -• ....., I ~pt·ciallzt' Re-i;toratJon noAnd" ,.'''C \\'Ill tri,lrl. Ask for ...,.. ..... _ .~ Landi;cnpt>. P.toulllly Roofing .\!11iu1Prm.nN! & S=inkltr DAVE ROSS . C·'I 6 llOOt' fvr lcSli. IY'p<l1 r~. Hl'l><ur. IU • ONTIAC -5h1n1Llf'.~. n'll·k, con1p h <'i' 1 P J•paneH Gardener · I 1 • 1 ~ ~ co·o•di111 10• Santa Ana S..1n l)i~-o f'l'\\'Y f() · ( ,\Vf'I)' P11rkw11y tum citf. Found (free •d•l HACIENDA OE MESA e t.~. 1ide Li.i119. i'\t.~1 10 !'<luth Cn.i~t f'l;i111 tll·l600 S50 160 \V. \\'USOl'I, r .i\t. I St d ' I 2 2 & Oen $175 to c:.1as Tl.(.SS6.-0446 cc:~ro=~~~~=---"'l~ .. :;,,;:o:-· -;;,,;:,,.-;,_:.::.,:,,,:;:, .. :1-:,,.:.:,11· c>.!. L1 r. lh "'I 2-IBOllorborB \'U. l·:xpcr. Con1plCIF' Gordo-nln!l; 511·1!SS m:ilt~'O. Cosla ~1esa 516-8017. B EAUT! FUL U IOl, • • • -Allt RT AREA. tiOO sq. fl. r ,. ,. " " Jt.ooml 400 SZin/mo incl. u I j I it if' s . lrl~h !\cttcr Ind ::.21 \'ii". GROUNDS ; Me1.11 Verde & Ad1m1 540-1800 ~ll 'LLAN RF.Al.Ty. :;KX) F.il!'\•le1v .I! San Diei::o 10 l\11nulcs lo tk'i.'WI l ~I ROO'.\I k , , . 1 k Irvin(', ;,,J0.-200() fn:•t'\\-uy -tak~'n 111 Orani.:(' Close lo hus lilK"~ k storcli. kl , 1n.;.~1111 : 3 1 1~·' ',\0~. $~'" ... U 1_ 11., ...,n. Counly pound SPACIOUS 2 Bf'l $1-& I\ Y• u J'J )I (JI • ll 1 '""''I~ Sv.,o, 0 llf'. ""'1 . ----------~ $180 Gas & \\'ale;· 1 td~~~ Apt Unfurn 365 1 Apt. Unfurn. 365 "~;1·J.; ~l1/T,\l:l.E STl'DE.!\'.T I Air. 1'1~1 Beach, !Inti; Bch. FND: hllle blk f'IUP~'. nialo. 0raPen~ carpel 1 • : • • App. fln,1 l11fn A<:F:. ••tr. R 12-:lll:'.il . Cl)(·h·a·poo., trul 111l'ls up. healing & 'gas kitc1~;1 s1~~~~ Huntington 8••ch •Sa nt• An• R1 ·1i1y '" t.ll·~~1fk'(t Ari :-.;"·I * Deluxe Off'rces * v15= !7•h & Nrr n,ivc1 c~1. Clol>ed gar.Utr. Air mn: ; :i.1 M2, lJ;i1Jy .. I'.~'?'· Box }.j(jll. -61.,...lm vr 96:?-JOOI or ditlonlng. !\wim.ming Pool. ~ '11<~h·~1 ~:li!!l• ! . . ~lh--000'.l Rec. Rn1. Wn,.:hcrs & UNDER NEW NEW FAMILY APTS. PRIVATE 1,.JOn1 E.· b;\th, frpl, I f.nr l.rusr, :'JM ti<J. f.t, 1'tln1111/ FOU~N7D~.-. 7b-,.-,,-.n~f,-m-a~I-,~,,-"-,. ~"'· Adults. No P<-t~. MANAGEMENT j Grand Opening .. J'f'lrit:: 1::11'!rle,C''.\I. $1(}.i s., ~1!Rh1t.>~.~. 12 n.fflN'~ 1:lus rr· 1.ing do&:. Victnily D11?'.er COAST APTS 1 RH. Ultn.~, nl"\vly deMrf1!rd, ~F\V l·2 & 3 R/<'J; Pitrk·hkj• SHM'.I. li·lf>-.1\r.1, 6T.-,...G-J~,~ • • pl1fln 1tN'11 .~ SIQ11tge1. All-Schoo~ Contact Ch l Ii; • f•nt·I g1.1r11.ic••s, 1k11ulHul I 'J;f'.1lini:s. Rec. 1,~111 . Pool. ---J1tc·en! 1r1 Ornni:e Co u n I y ~ll-(L\:16. FRO~! $195. tn $2'20. !,;ii<t~~a~ltll{. L•·t: plr~y nrC'a .J J•J r,y Jlt'l';i~. i'f•ll,.,!< .t 101 Guest Home 415 Ah·J)(1rl. FNDc,~11~11~1,~b7la-,~,~La~b-p-,-,,. ~,NOW RENTING * 3 d11.td 8 dn·11111. c.111.~f' lu l Jots. Gas & \Vatf'I' Pd. Shag, ' . • Call 546-8801 Jnjurl'd. Senclln;; to unlnial NB\\ 2 B~. 2 HA townho11ioi1• -xhopp1n1: ,t ~··hl.~. Chilrl/'{'n rlrflp('s & sn rnrrh! ROOf..T ,r., Aol1rd for t'ldcrly ronlrol 11.B. Vic. Bca._.h & apls. PatK,,.:., enl'loi-l'd r.-nr-\\·rlr11n1('. 842·!111':1: II no ans Starlin~ n! $1119 + llf'll. 111cn t.-1von1rri. Good food & llell 847-S9t6 ag~!i. lZ'i !\l!'lorly Ln. OPE:-.· 8~i·i:!JL . Newhope Mtadows ~ 1~~; eure.G-Ood location. MODERN .OFFICE F"N~~o~,-A~l~l -w7h~it-c.-yoo--t11;-.-ma~I, DAU..Y 12 TO 6 p.n1. ,.,17 S N .1 SA 2-:)." _, I t \' I bl •· ·" -;.i • e1\ lOfX', . . f.Ully crptd/.,l"Jl', urrrishcd. rat. _<:>ry ova c. r OUnu nr I., t"'" ·r 11 1 lrvtnPeARK WEST w.,,m;n5s54-te2r600 V1c1tion Rent11s 425 l i)(>><k1'. Ctulh'M & l'CCPI>-Old Clly llall, r.~f. 515-02 1K _ tionisl lurniturl.' ot only Jo'OUND. Black Lab pu11py. ;.:.;.;,;.;o;.c.;.:..;.. _____ ILJYE in lhf' 111/ new Dnna Sl?>. prr 1no. Al lROOC' Fent. Yi('. San Joaquin 1.vlf '°~" I APJS. llDULT 2 Rf!. fl"JOI quirt, Point Jl urbor at th t' Nc..,.·1>0rl Bl\'oi, r..t. roursr, lr\'ine. ~·8911 RI .!1'7 N I ., I '1AP.£NA l"N Call Ac:~nt GIG-::923 L ... ' s I • AGT. G·l-l·OSiS Family Apartments ~upcr clran. tns. '' · 0 X'auti u " '' •' r .,o: n1 blk n1&1t• ., 1 Ila h .1 11 Prts.893--0119 l\lnlcl 3·1!1!J2 1)(>1 Obi.~po !\!. La~lype pup. Vi<'. Ta:bcrt LEASE: i\lcs.1 Yt•nlt> Co11-• RR, _ t ll?\\' awu ~ 1 r A t 4 9 ti -2 3 5 3 J , h:itCIK'll, & II 00 C ,1 <'8-~" I fro"' $"'~;. "-• C"l"f'r Dr•·-pl• ,-11 · · , A ar r, ·-. .... .01.).;; •• do. lBR/2'hBA. patio , . " ~1... • '" • ~ ~' • -• • 1<'tf'tlCH~s •" pnMmcnt1'.' 8u1ine1s Rent1I ~5 -. jacuu;i, pool, Adj. h1C'Sa ) JU"I o_lf S:~~ ?rC'~'O F.~Y· I Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Jlc:\H.-d pool, dirf'Ct dinl f"ND: Blk poodl(' puppy \'1c. Verde Ctiuntry Cluh. Adlts. -388.1 Park\ 11 " Ln :J.1--9200 phones, relevision. i;auna lnduitri•I & Comm'I Plac:<'ntia &:. \\'ilson $42>. Day: 894-J3jJ I Ligun• Beach 1 Corona dtl Mar h,11h. laundry f;:ieililies, MISSION VIEJO &l~~JJ Eve:556-0928 j 1 n1w1irig mom, rlosc to Sun f"i\D: 3r20 \\'hilt' king Mirerl l"A"' TO SllOI'. l"•lh & OCEA~ Vie"'• new-dehL"l' 21 •••••••••••I Cl1•1ncnlc & Lagun.1 Bcnt'h. :;(XI ro j(l) Sq. ~·1 . .-..11>pv Yir.. 1'1esa \\'oods C'.\I • ~ ('o pl·y I• o '' r \lain tho1"0tu;:hf11r•·. ··~ , T .. ~,;... Llk"' n,, .. , ....... -.. -. Br. 2 Ba \\1 frpl, larg(' nir " " a.J7-'3ti ..,..,.. " ...... ..,.,R,., k loscd spo1 lfishing, f:'h¢ppini:' Sr 2il7j2 !\ln•'l:Ut-rilc PrlC\1)'. ~~"--------- ~· L.·i.ndscapinit" Sc r ,, ~>¥ ... 0724. Thk11ta Nun.el)•. EIJROPEAN Ct1rdcncr. i\lalntcnance -Lnrw.bcaping. Tl"Ct· rP.1nov al. Very re;150nahlc. 642-:'i.129 f>VCS. )·rinu11:11chi G11rdcn 5"rvil'~ Costa '.\lesa & Nr"·port Bch &i2"'626.J alt('r ·IPi\1 Sewing/ Alterations SL.\'.\l~RE~· Cu s Io nl bikini!!. ril't'~""~· ht•Pl'h hn!!~. t•t1·. Hl•ft...Oll.tlblt" Pr i c r. fi le CERA~l!C TILE' NF.\V & rt'.mOOel. F'1'<'e est. Sn1 jobi; \\'th.vn1C!. 536-2!2ti, Top Soll 2BR, 2BA. $275 up .. 'UlH. dt"<: · enc gar 8 g (' · n;S -... ~ 1'f'stauranfs. sriO ll'<'Ck & Up. 831-1400 Lost 555 2BA. Ip), pvt pal, pl clbh.<;(', 497-2.6.10 I rr .f. --Hrinl(' this ;id & l'C'C('i\•e dbl encl ~ar $300. up. AGT 2 BR. ON!an viC'W, s11·in1n1in1: " 'l!:.!!.!,._ s:. oil 011 fir:<t \\'t>Ck's n'!ll. 1801. WESTC~IFF , N.8 . LOST 315. 8 mo. old Femali!J 646-32Yl, &12·7771. 0 PEN pool. Lea.ore. $275. Prt-~lig: l0t· .. 30 lronr ?n st. lri!ih Seller. Dk. mahogany DAJLY l'i.J J Tw;lln ( N (' 11· 67'.l-614~ 2 Bit. Tn1\·nl10u~•'. fnf!r. LIOO ISLE 2 BR. 2 ba., ~ui!. ~1ores -of(~. l9;'JO sq color, shorl hair, had tan Orleans Apll;.) l BR. vpt:ii, drps, I bJk 1n ft~1n1 $250. I Bl{. frurn $1!15. Avail. J uly, $1100. Aug. fl ar ·~" air i'Qi!d. 1_1,.ury roll;1r \\'/silve r rivets & MARTINIQUE APTS, ;\Jain Jkach . .'s:t80. f'ool, ll'n11i.~. cnurlnc11111l $1200 .• 213 -7!13-()471 Cnl!el'l prkg. Cpls, 1lrp~ •. 11S-9.'"JAA. sonic ink niarks. AnS\V{'~ io 2 & 3 BR. Also Furn. &1 1 7 17~ .J!)..l.,fffil brr<1kfas1, &p:1ra1 r fninil;:1 JOIN Barclay's Rank at "Brandy'' \\'c just n10vf'fl Bachelors. Pr iv. p a ti os. ·-' M'c•ion. Close to ;;lioppin~I Renflll to Share 430 Brookhurst & S. D. l'\1)•, fron1 1'1orida & she is not BOOKKEEPING. n1y hon1e llAULING \1T1n1 ~mething l'l'CS. E:xp'd. Call art 6 p.1n. haule<I 11\\'tl,\'? Anythil\g. 1 &iZ-66.15 ~.;1.{j\~: rl"a sona bl c HelpW•nled,M& F710 LITE l laullng, Li le Tl'C(' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Pool. l'\r. shpg. Aduhs only. Mesi Vtrde & Uni' hl'a('h. &1·1-2611 YOUNG, Soph. f cm a!(' Storts & olflrf"s, rinlshcd h1n1illar "·Jth I his at'f'a. Vi c. lm Santa Ana Ave., C.M. desires suct'<'Sl'ful mat r t.y 4/t.l/i•I . Ai:I ~&-3166 or Brookhurst & Ha1 . .1n'<I. TrimminJ<. Y"d "''"'"P· ACCOUNTING f. rN? cst1nu1t('. 5.19-4736. liliJ'. 113 646-l>12 e H0ti.1E ATl\IOSPHERE .FEl\1ALE only, lBR, n1y ITn,;cl Ex('t'. type. lo sha~ 300 & GOO SQ. ft of("s, $!h> & G<1rden Grovt>. RC'\\·ard! NEW BUILDING Deluxe 2 & 3 BR. Rental Ofc. hon~r. ove~lookini,: I .u sh rent for clal!Sy Party s1;4 , C.J\I. Al!-n 800 l'ri. fl. Co11t11rt Sf{'\'r 11! ~t-:Yi&.i. 1175 & •·p. D"LUXE' I be. ~ l\face J\l'f!. :H&-1034 tropical pnt,io & Nt>\\fl0\1 j)C'ntMuse. &J0-18."JG i\l·l !<hllJI, C,\f $1l:Z. 6"6·2'130 LOST German Short llnlr v "-llay, jacuzzi, laund fll'l\'l,/.,!'.:0:::::,0""-~' ..::.::...o=-~-Crpt/d111~. hltn!; t'f'fr~. Newport Beach rvt. cnt, 110 kilch<'n, rnre C.'OLLI::GE ~irl l'IC('(ls fr111 . SI'ORE t'OR LEASE-30 f1. Point('!' Sat. J.far~h l?th. frplr. pool. 1915 f'omonn find. 6il-:l7!'1.'l or 67~1'197 roornrnl<'. lo share 2 HR., 2 fron1agc. 2130 sq. fl. Jus! off Durk bro\\TI, \Vf..,.·h11~ lick- Avt> .• C~I. 645-8891, J\lgr. * 2 WEEKS FREE* t:ins"·crint: Sf'rvicel. bit. UJJI. in G11nlen r.ro1·('. i\farinrr's i\Tilr f.· Np! &ii ing-. "l~rt tail. An51\t'n; lo ' BR I 2 Vl'sta del Mesa 1~1~ h , b t $Si,;)() + I~ ulili;. Phon\' J>ost OHitT. fi.l'.'·9a20. "_9rrta~. Reward offered. . & r en, ba. upper. "'r..1"' ~•·'pr. n1011t .. -.r. -~tl J 4,J.!J!l6I _. , . frl·l•IH.r2S20 days. or eves Bltns, carp. &:<trp,i., garage ADULT GARDEN HOi\fES 113 ba!h..c;, Built tns, 'I " . Oft-Jct Sill!(' or J;!Orf' bldg. & 11·knds GT.t-8697 &: Carport. Married, O\'er 40, IRYINE /\VE. AT MESA J.'irerlucr. pool, 61()...0019. l"EED Roomn1af('"· II r w Crpld, panld. 5 rms. 900 !IQ UJ!>,-"1• 1\1 1 s· ..... -J-1 ky no pets. $225. &46-2.114 or 646-!\love in w/de~11s onl)' 673-:!0ai.. IM>tJ.<w. nr tich, L Jevrl boy.~. fr . t 20 per fl. 32'6 i\lahi, ... •: • a(' L""r1an us • U33 _.. 1 le\'el girl~. StiO. 317 11 B :.JG-0200 full gt01\·n. Ytc. 2Srh SI, l BR. $180 2 Br. $220 Cost• ..... Hel;ntro"", Cdi\I G+l-417·1. -·-·-·-N('"""JlOrt Beach, Frierw.tly, 1 Day &: Night Security, Pool, '"" .... ,~ lndustr11I Rent•I 450 namrrl Suki., R c ..,.. a r d .. l DalUI Point Jacu z z I, Rec. Bldg. ROOi\!i\1ATE "·unted. J."en1, 673-2393 11----------w/exerel~ nn, ,billiard!, ll('W 3 BR. 2 B<tlh Condo, C:C~~~~~-~-~ SPACIOUS-AIRY APTS rolor TV. Ea. Apt. has LA l\1ANOIA ~. HB. 847--0347 or M2-5040 NOW LEASING \\'llITE !\!air Toy Poodle, -SKlPl..OADER & dun1p lliJck 11·ork. Concrtt(', rispha!1, sa1ving. breaking, 8·1&-7110. MOVING. llaulin:.:. Exper. Reliable. Reasonable. Frtt ('Sf. RU-73.~1. :\IOVTNG? U:>t·al ful'n. or gl'll. h11uling , 32 f l. fu111 . \'an. &12-(635. LOCAL mo\ing & hauling hy student. Lari;:t> truck. Rt!M. Barry, 531-1235 or S..19'-~ 'YOUNG 111an \\•1th biJ: \'an for hire. i\lo1·e. haul. f'h.:. Rf"all + Reli11ble &'6-l:J.46 '2 BR. 2 BA: 3 BR, 2 BA. dlshii'l\.,hcr relrig shag cpt NF:\V l.uxury Apts, clnsr to Jruu~_i.· 1 ,1 lBR ?RA Huntin11ton B•ach i'l"OOked 1ighl Io r c I e g, 1 Bl'""' D/W, garb. diipl, ' ' shop'g .t-beach. Gn! It. \\'h• ~ ' 0 s i:irf" · · -: • Rr\1·ard \11c: Afissloo Viejo, .. _ &: p~·t ~~~i-~oor d eck. Pd. Adults only or f.1n1ily nr Atlnn1i1 & Bench, Jill S1'J NEW M.f ;.,\;6~127 HOUSE OF CLEAN i """'1 ' drf •pehll~& b&lrony \\'/Iron. Blt·ins in r 1 . lllfl. 536-0092 • 940 Sq. Ft .. t-i;p -I C ·-" 0 v ews O Lll OCtan. BUS SERVICE TO DOOR I llini>'lt• RN I I., 1!~7\\'ARD! 1..ost mac n1NI. arprls. 1vrn ... mvs, oor~. Housecltanlng ', G•--& carp" r I . d.~h\\·hr. Shag Crpls. Sinai \\':\nl€'d !'IIaturc $ 1 r a i g h 1 1 un · l'""' nui =" · d • . b · Blk I I s · 1 ie f g --· " PARK NEWPORT 1 c ~·1970 !'~.. o~. ...1 1111x. . up t0 .• prc1:i rn s or rr . ResonablP. yrly rn les. Tl<'l ok. Poo. a.c; BBQ. 1nolr lo shr 4 Br hs{' Sr util. ,..,,....,-,.._,...,.,...,..,., 11 /1l11le 11·hi1e on C'hest. l<l'l'V. 642-6S2·1. I 34132 An1bcr Lantern,! ro j APARTMENTS I, 2 A'. J BR Sturlio. Cl to bC'h. JIB $10.-1. 962-RGG.'i --An~, l<l "P.1iuX>". 67?..--0962 1. 0 0 K I NG ~· 0 R ORDER CLERK Progres..~ivr phar1naceutical ro. locatt'd in the lf\•in(' Indus. con1plrx has an im· m1"1 . I\('('([ for a 1'1\arp order d('sk clerk in a busy ac- l"Ountlng dep1. Applicants should possel!s ability lo IYJ>t', above a\·er- RI:(' SJ)('Jling 8.: good tClt'- phorl(' et111uct. C.ood benefit package & a n npponwiity lo build a car('('r Jn a "ro1ving ro. APPLY IN PERSON Rl'tu.·n I & 4 P:'ll Or Call 1133-SAAO, l'xt 133 ALLEGAN pm. &('hf'loi· l or 2 Bedroonis siuJ)11~v$r~';:c~sll.lo. G1rages for Rent 435 ! INDUSTRIAL & TOY Pood!('. male. Blark ai.:-HOUSECLF:,\NING \\'ORI\. PANORAi\IJC Ocean Vle"'" aiid Townhouses 778 o-11 Pl c '1 COMMERCIAL I'd n1issil"' 3116. Sunset EXPERT JOB. '.!j2."1 Dunn11t Dr. '~. $1n·•.ui O""n 9·6 Dail\' .,.-u ' ·" • S ~ ,~ 1 Lrg 3 BR, 2 B.\, 2'7' ll v 1·111. '" ""'""' r-'-''2-~7 MINI WAREHOU ES 1600 Sq. Ft. UP BcriehllfB area, ~70, * &1:>-1113 * Jf\·fne 5..... Pools Tt'nnls ..., """ bltn kitchen 2 Unil bldi;:-. I ...-STORAGE LAGUNA NIGUEL :?13-281-1166 llOUSECLF:ANI!"Li. Thol'- 1 f'.quiil Oppor. Employt>r 1n f ol I $290 · i\d I Acros:; frorn Fil5hion lslar.d ' yr < • imo. 11 t~. at Janiboret> on San Joaquin TIIE F:XCITiNG :'\o J\lovc·in or .\lo\·e-0u1 27~2 Can1irl'l Ca11l!<lrano LRG gray 1ieuL male Joni: out:hlv dnn<'. J{rli:\hl<' \I' 1 -4"'-~7~55~7~-------• Hills Rood. PALM MESA APTS. Chfll):C!I'. .From $1.50 per Sri n Dici:o F'rl'f'\\'n)' 10 hrd rat Yit' Balboa ls. rrfs. Rrnf,Clnabl<' R%-~111•1. NE:E:D tmn1edh11ely'. Fountain Valley LUXURIOUS 2 BR, 2~} BA. dbl gftr \\'' automatic opener, burglar alarm, inlt>N'01n 1\•llh Ai\!/ Flot stcrro radkl. Good lo- cation. Afany Pll'lres. $77:i. Ask for Dftlt-, 96UT46. Huntl"f!-on BHch CHILDREN and parents love the l•rv•. spacious apart· rMnh •t B 1 n b u r y Cross. ,714) ,,.1900 'llNUTES TO •~ BC/£ n10111h. Al'i'I)' Jl11rk11ni T'"'' OH fl,-."·:ml. Pl!'ase ea I J S S . 1 • A111on1otiv<' Cashit.'r ~ ,. ,,,-,. . -i\1E. A Cll'nnln,g r r" 1 e (' • e Au1omoth·c Bookkl't.'""r Bat·h. 1 S.· 2 BR. fm1n $lji llan1ilton & Ni'\\ land SI., 118 831 ·1600 675-p:l.l. Crpt \\•lndO\\'S, flrr;. ('fC. , ,,... . :~~~~a~~. ~,~~e~pr~i Adults. No P!'ts. ALLSPACE \rAREHOUSJ-:, \l'llh loadinr: LOST. Cold & Diamo~ "':'l"ist 1~~sid/Comm·1 . 557-6742. 1 • ''·u~on10r!vc D:'v!Y tnn!1 nc1 I l."i61 Mesa Or. 960-1970 _J""k, •PP•"·" 7.•• -1, 11·a1t'h nl N.B. T1!nn1_s Club. EXCELLE~~ l'o"•-I• nin• I gu·. ·, · bay. 3 BR, ·2 BA. parking, (5 blks tron1 Nr"'llOl't B!\'d.) """ .,,, "'"' ·-1 rd C ll GG--0800 · ... , -. ~ ... a A I lhrt'C positions OJ'IC'n 1n1. lake ov('r I ease f 3 yrs. !H&-9860 \\'ANTED; Single g11ra2r for \\ith son1f' offi ec sp.1n' Re~'tt a Tom by day. 01111 tran.~p. $22 n1cdiat!'ly. i"t>l\pcll1 Oa1sun, I Silll.50 + uli!. can days, car. In Harbor J1i &hi arrn. Annual least-\1·i1h JO day LOST; Ladies Omega \\'alCh. pC'r day. 836-0).18. lt\1-1300. ~ton-fli, r1141 896-2200 or Huntington Beach !lays 532-7495 or 612-1243 cnnr·ellalion clause. l.oC'ate<I Fl\·e Pt".. Htg. B ch, \\:JNOOW!\ !)!RT\"! Frtt e!<· cA~c=c"-"o~U~N=T~S~P~A~Y~A~B~L~E= ......, .......... nf! 9 P/1.1 in NoMht>m Crni!A l\lt"~a. RP\~:artf. 847-60.'Xi. ' I II ,,. J """1"'"~. DELUXE adult pool ~ide L,\RCE' •. ln"I". $f.OO. per mo,. Con!a('t i\lr. ~ Hniaes. onics. 0 u·rs. · BOOKKEEPER SPACIOUS ..... , .. ,. ,, .. lk 1· I '· I """' "' ", Dunn. 5--18-97J.-IS or f..1~·9:172 • ~ '"'~ ,.. "'• " u gal"t t'll uunga 0\1', nr "'-"an, Johnson 6-12 72(1 for \\'hOJ~le frozen food lloag Hosp .. i\tl'dicat htdg & frnl, lri: nntio, 6 pools, p,s.25. prr nltlJll~.... I . ' -., I l~ JAPANESE hou!l('('Jeanlng, I Beach. tTpt~. b 11 n s · J ~~um, tcnnfs~ 816-()'lj9, .J:\6·0121 or 962.153,, 1\E\V l\t·l .. 3010 sq fl . :\!r Stnbs .w:r~ f'XJl('l'iPnCf 81 do 8 ~job. <li~tribu1or. subsidiary of lrg ~\\·lni'g pool. t BR, SlK> :? Also 1 Br. Froin $1 3j Off' R t l _. .. ,.. rond. offl('ci;. 11·c1 h11r, . . 54ti-0Ci2T. llJOd scrvi('(> corporation. 2 Ba d' $26.5 1-ice en a ~ TI'fr!g c1·p1(1, 3 phaM' flO\ier, niany benefit!', cont a c' I Br, P• stu '°· car· l•gun1 Niguel 2 o\'er hl'ad, allev doors. off • Income T1~ , i\largnrc1 Gil-:3450 r-.~ ('Qual ly. s,a--t!ll I Bkr. OFF ICE SPACE slrret parking. e" x 1 f' r i 0 r Accounting opporlunity employ('r l~ArtGE Oclux"" :1 br,~ ha,! *BRANO NEW* MISSION VIEJO nirJnt., t1·S1.o;h & \\1llt•r pd. "ES/A . /Book Income Tax Service ACCOUNTS n'tci\·:ih!e. iie-1 fr•pJc. bltns, d~h\i·shr, an,. 1 &. 2 Hit. 2 BA. Fro11i $\!):; 200 Sq. ~·1. $..· UP For inlo. PllOne 839--0ill or T A~ ~untlng · J>('n;onal nr hui;inri;s tm1nts Pay11ble clerk frll' AVON A;..IBITIOUS~ E~,,IUSIA$. TIC?' You 11'0Uld makt> a rl{'r!('('t ,\\'On R('presenla- th-e. You can run your own busilK"its. !ll'hedule your 0\\11 hour, & niake the most ol a real earning ~portwtlty. Call j4(}.70-ll. BA!\'K Experienced Proof Operator Baxler'd St1•eel NOW HIRING HOSTESSES DAYS /NITIS Apply In P<'MDn Before 11 am or aft 2 pm 4647 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Btach BEAln'Y opel'l\lor . Assis- t&nt. Must l>l"t llCt"Jised. 1610 \\'. Coai>t Hwy., N.8. &12-3970 . BOOKh:l::l::PE R . full charge thn1 lri&I hAJ. NP. .vn. ctn. St.I. contract hilling, \'Olll'hl'l'!I, payroll. taxrs. h('111·y dt•tail. At least ~)TS cxper. ?.lature person. A.~sisl \\'Otnan \•ice-Prt'."ii- rlt"nl. Plumbing: contracting p1'f'L Xlnt l><'nefits. Start S.~ .. 100. yr. Appnt. 5.57-4976. Ronni!' Dct-. R('SUITie to P.O. Bo"' 512i !\antft Ana 92607. Street NOW HIRING FULL TIME COOK rd ('f'i~i1ig1s. 1111!,~ure aoi1•111ts. L'nfun1. !'urnl~hc(.I t1llll~ CHOICE LOCATION 96~-s::i7. kt't'ping, Jdoh:o;ire 1',.111a 1 11 ac-2J YC';irs Harbor Al'\'a inf" i"Onipanv. <':\P nee, i:~oOCl I '1\o singe_,_ ... rar ."'' ,, .. ,·,1. 2"?"''1 · l'k (1)Unts. on 11 lcri; (714167''676 " ' I ~ .:o.~r l• ftl'l::U•'l'llr r 11r. Nf'\V BLDG J\f I l2 u ·1 -11·orkin~ rond & fring(' lfosp: S 2 j:> 1110· Ca 11 CROWN VALLEY Aph, Avail. lrnn1N!iurel). 1 • -' 111 .~. 491·til07. t•or Ap-loll\\"l>t "-••"11·1.•, h•> o ,•,. c·I! ;:•<· 1~111 •Children 6 & }'OUrlfl't'r r.42--0:)96 SJ! 1400 12'.'--ii Sq. ~·1. $176. 2'20-J ph. . ,.._. ' "'-' ~ ., "' "' ... .,.. A 1. p O State liecnSNI pre srhl ---· 1 Si1n Di1·i.:o r1·11·y •ir t_'<l11,1 • Fr"On! Orrir·r, rrpts, large Babysitting Janitorial ACTIVE rouple 10 nianagc PP1.V In f'rr.on •Chlldr('llS llll\y Al't'a IPARk< t:':'V';oR~ RA~~TY J/111·~ to lli!lhur~I. :!;!j;;~ 1:~.1~•1 ~v.11 . in i·la~~i~· \'11·-i·rnr do0rs. AnHh .. ini .t 1 J. d Nc\\·po11 Beach inot('I. Call Bcforellan1ora.ft2pm DAYTIME • l.ar)!'.c 2 .~ :\ Bil np1$. 1 T 8 • .st OC:raion., \~1~·· Hillhurst. t..s1~. Ni1.:ul'I. 1.i11nn 0 111 ·r. hid.I!, rio11·nro11n Tr1·n1in11l \\'11y, C.f..I . Dn)'S l· 12 1;;:·s -~l."C' h y~r~. COL\IPL .. l;1n1torinl &1vice 64•1-1562. 4647 MacArthur Blvd. • 2 adult 1-et·. ""n1l'I"~ 00. many ex 's -0 1" '1 1714 I . ..::n.n;:io S1111ra ,\na. J11divi1Ju11t or-64h-J0.~3. ""''~ fi.16-00St. IK'iu· L, ic {'15, e · floon•·\\'nlls·\\'indci\\·s • Euy acct-i;s to n1r~1 l'n1·1 i\\-n.11. 4110 .•. $214 .. ~ in~: I A ts -I 'JOO 1100 f * COSTA MESA * 6J6.j.').'\.I. Sco11 1~ayn,. 67:':-11 fi6 ASSEMBLERS Newport Btach p\oun1eut :irras ltob<>rt11 Snnth, $....,...~ p '' h".,~. • IO '1 !<<(. I. B\BYSIITfNG y lionl<' "'!!~-"!'-:".':~~=-= ... !!!!!!!!•I .Nr.J·'"-pi>lng •1.,,, •.•. I 11·rrkdayi1only. I Furn.orUnfurn . 370 t,1':•~ •111Y iu·1,1 sr111'e :i1 111J(l. \'.:00-17:'.0 -2~,j))~q f! ' ~in. · Landscepi_n_g ~R oo•·r -• R <>rrv « • • ' -:,i;R' n••r I! \\'JLI. ,\.-.rll 1. '(\ I I · I ., .. "L"F-clay or nigh!. Ft"nC't'd yard. _ }"our day \\'l:>l'k ll'C<'k. 10 "' (J.;f,.1·E /Acrotmti-• from SI&:,. "llARP? BR SUNllECI " I .. L ,. 1111 11" ru• Hni. .. -.. :-r. ' • I i I chcs 61?--"299 hours per day, 6 J\.)f. 111 nc ll,.rk·~linin1ur11 7 )l'.'al'5 r;,11l·. nt'11~ ~hag, a~pl. b< h 1 Fountain V11lley \h1~t ~. c· !•1 ;o1•J'~IH!t> Ht int:RT NA'rl'Ht;~_ ..o tm . .> . ''LANDSCAPING'' -1:30 P .'.\1. E 1'. p e I' i c n c <>I txp1•1 ·it't1rl", ,.]r11n rer'Oftl a BANBURY CROSS ! hlk, lM'llnl crilin!!, Adu!i~. I ~:·1''2.l Rr:1llo1·-Co:;1n l\lr~,:in..6.171 Carpenter hrlpfu!. liut l)(')f necc'l.~ai). niui;1. ~!In. 2t)wpm typing. I I l'l<l'l' O"' ICE pa I For A \jnique i.; Pt-rsonnllzC'd C 1 1 . ll\·~a•Br111•hO!\·(f$. \\'1n11t'r1 1i.._1 prt.~. Pre.I ~1r s. $:z&j. r----, • · r r i; C'C _or COSTA ;\IF*5A C,\H.P_l.,1\TRY :\I 1 S I I . S:?.00 pc>r hour, good (1(1< Mary. rapid 11d- l6i6l Vtf;\r POINT L.\~:1.; +>-16-T.,O:, lru..c. 40t ~·1· sq II ur tr. l ,ro Nt'1\' lndustr1al Ltnits -· as er L ty e In Lani Sl'RP111h· Culor· benefits. Apply in -nion 1 1T1nN'n1t'nl. ":o.: c et If n t • ' · CUT OUT r ~-, II , I t-... Cr11 fts1na11 -renlOdeling & scapin' ll: Per:o;onnl De~Jgn. ,,L .. _ 1. 1 1 • 842-6604 -iJB-l.&T ~ 1 1 &R p k ~I I ~n ~'{'n n vr par $1().}/.:\10, Phil ,;)l.llllvan, fini sh \l'O r k guani:ntCl"d . PRIMARK ,...,ne its. p u11. nterviewing ... I:'<\ _,, au . , nr 11 POR I 715 R11t.'rt;id1' \1·r NB ReAllor 'j.18-6~1 Con1:'1CI nov.•. Call Army Op-SP,\CIOUS :? BR fron1 $1:.9. f\'e11·port Apls., llprl thru 15,1~:;Jti6 . . ' • . . • r rre rl'fimate!'. ·r.17-79.('i Grunhaven Garden• PRODUCTS co. portunilics. &t>-1163, Costa A~~!i on~~~~'.· ~~s n:: ~~~1 6~~~ o~~~~ll '1 IUllDANCI I o;;I< \~~~~tm~;;~u~~~ih~~ ! :;::~.Is ,::~t7. or k ~~ ~~~1~~-: .... ~;~.' ren_~.. 2123 N~=~~ Blvd. ~ ~'JIJ s. Su~n t ,~'-~~;;"-~;~,~,~E~C~.--.f~or--m..,-fg. ~gTne!~h 1~11n1~~~~~2-0:>~:· 2 B LE~1SE ~R ,:""~~ sr ' Live In a sunptu:llS Dnl .it S:1. 11111. Ans". er in J: nn•her. d11u~htrr .r.i dog -nil i";'11rrg ~:.Jlllli'· \itnCf' Co1ta Mesi {&.~!~An"Tiarbo~·& \\·hole'<alt' mn1pany. \Ve 11 842 ... ;;o.t r, ' °""1011 ··' c:rtwabedroOmalrcan--1 s('rvice iivailablf'. 1.7S75 \\<'It beha\·ed, nC'l'd ho1n<>. _.cnio · •.>. • fairvi~. organizcd.rt"liable&:exper. frpl~ ~1 ~~ s.'i~usc. I dltiooed apartment with 84.'ni.:h l~l\•d .. llunt1ngton Rf"Rl'., Plt.>R~f' rall days EXPERT carpenh')' Cabtnrt& p . 1 south of \\"arnel') 6/.'1--1900. 2 BR for lea~. All "lroric. Sl9,. · ,,., · · 1 1 waU-to-wall shag C?""'I"· IW.•a,·h. l}.l:J-•1:~21. ft-IO-J006f evn; 5~ or .t Hep.'llrs Reasonable rait.>~ •int ng & An f!qtlal opponunity ~..:...-=B~O~Y~S""&""G~l=R~L~S:--~h\\1lr, bltn~. shai;: cTJ>t. 3 OR. 1:i ~A. t door 10 1 '"-di J .. -vlQ)d. I o~·rrcf; SPACE f-'OR ~S--391•1 &li'r1995 )(' P aperh•nging Eniploy<>r mlf ~';"· ,~:~;'t,;;'~~ ~/.,r..:,7;: "'"'' ~:1\"'IJi-~ I pr.e1~1::iroom, , ~','i.~m"."'~:~~f~; :,\~; Corpet S.rvt<e * Wlllatd Pa;n1;ng ASSEMBLERS ~~';'";'J"';,.,~·;:';"t>i.-.::i ~::it~~~'~;~ llO pef~. VERY ltll~C 1 BR :tpt Al I warmcoloraccent wa!I~ I nir 111Ul'il'. janitorinl. Ch1ss I Per1on•l1 ]r.l JOJIN'S C;ir~I &_ \;phoblrry Contra ctor• * r I!. p n c j I 0 r 111altuf11C!Ut'C'I' fk'11ch. r-."1'11·pnrt ll~lt:htl' .t- Park Nt'\\'JX)rt, Sub-1..cast' a kitchen fUll of bultt·tns A \\1alkl•r & \..l'(' Rldg. Cull. .~ Uri S 1111111 !)(lo, l~nl JtESIDEXTIAL I 1nr't.'Cls rem a 1 e rll't'lrnnir NC11·por1 Prnln!!ula. Conlart NEW DUPLEXES April 10 SC!r1. &I0--0."\76 1 (Including d~). I :1."17-0136 or ~IG-.182$. I !l.·1,1rrt.1111!1'1. l){'.:n•nscrs & · & COill ~I EP..CJ.\L 1 n!t.<;('nJl:lll'rs. No l'XJ>l'l'if'n•~· :\Ir. l/~rt~. Clrcul&llon ~pl. 1 !\~ ba, p11t10l5, crpt11. drpQ, ~RR, z BA To\\-nhou.~. BLDG. ICklO ll•I fl. l'tir1eled, I fill l'(ll<,r brigh!l'l\l"l'i ~ 10 1 f'ne!Oll f'rnll.sint•n nt'l.'t'S~ll)'. Fu!! iinie dn~s, 01\11.\ l 11.,0T. Call &12·4321 D\V, rp, 11·nlk J(I bch 2 Bl~· I \\'rs1rlilf lll't'n. Adnll'.'. Meet and mingle With 1 ·1111.~.;, r1rh .1tr· offil.'t'"" ad-PerlOnals 530 n1ln111e bl<'ucll fur Y<hlh· Di·yiiull \\':ill pllJ><'riilg Call !'i·1!4l2·11 ~ & lr::i"e fl;>pllcnllon, s,.~5 ~~ 11R.:S32i 1;,111. !.· ,~1·11· , _S'.l:.O~l\10. Pl-I: fl.I~~ I neighbors at 3 blg swim-I "'.·. ining . 1<. ,'°. x,·,1:, •. oH.ii'C'. cu1"J}(·I~. Sln't' your nwn(•y ,,,,.11,.1t1•01 c ... 11111 ~" I AS.~F..,,-10-l.F..RS-~----..... IB ·--·9671!1 0 SI :>;t 1 · ~-=poo!s, ""'"" IJI/ ( £ , • ., 11 . 1 \J l'P.EG:'\A:XT ~ hy ll:lvh~ t'llf' r .... ll'H 11·ipi;. •Jo.;,· · rrn · n .:._" 2 Bl'. 2 S.\. , . .,,1,. ll'•t"r ,, Jl"""'l"oU• • ·.'•.· 1._./VV .u tn i.1, .. • r· · 1 1 1· ,,. · Plci+.~C' C'oll Fnr r:~nn1111;• precis ion rlcclro-mf'ch. · "'.I.,,. r l>l"'P•-"l" or,. I , c-r, 1 l(lfl ·11•1ni:. t'Olll1drn11al •~nu1,, · \\'1 I l'lt•n11 t\·n1i:: rn1 .. u illlll{; L~2 5 I ,., 0 ' WALK TO BEACH I:'l•~ pnid. 111 rooms, party rooms, I ,, __ , . I --111~ ,t, N'ff'11·111. Abor11011.1 r111 ., & hnll s1ri. J\ny rn1. ·-. 775 640-IT36* ll.~!il"mbl). ('"'P· & ®Od I \\':i ntcd ln1n1f'dh\lrly J k 2 Sr. cpt !ch~. ~nr., 11~:1~ 497-Zl~i Clld YDHe•1ball: At birbe--* BRANO NEW * .~tlol>li(in & kttpim:!'. , $i.:-io. ('Olll'h SIO. Chair s;i. l:i St:1lr l.lc. :{o . .2$10:'1.it nll'<·hru111·a1 1·•·•1. nr11!111lr>. frr111t-Bif"k ..,rr Girl hltn!f. l'.ti 161h s1. N~ ,~Is N ewport Height• ~by babbling brooks. Olfi1~ 1'P.,1t'l' a1'11ilnbl1~. l.~ Al'(;,\JlF; 61Z-14)}1 )r,, c\11. i11 "·hat rn1111t~ 11C1! -~ ''"'"n \lt'!l1, r~12-~o. I-:..,nrr. Ptltr-ntin1 man11.~rtal p1ca!lt'. !JG0..1110 or 8~ -• I , . the I ~ 11. _ ~1&:1. 1~r. n~. •!I -, . .\.SEC"ni\IY -l 11,1t'tho•!_. l _~k> \\ork myi:elf. PAINTING BY DRAKO t ~\...l\SibtBLER.S 1ml1ion. If~ G.1 k J.7. Dr. NEAR BEACH DE'!\TRABt~E 2 BR. J'.l?OI. Ew'vlMna including the \\•'"' I 1th SL < .~L &12-9..."91 Conrickntinl 111 1n 1. 111111 1 011 ~ti 1 ;.i.,J--0101. , Ltrr~~SF.D 254931 1 pre<'\ s lo n elcctro-m('('h. Gnr:v C('llJfutt, ~3 \VMtf'l tff Bnnxl Nt'W l)Cl(I.'({' 2 &. ~ l'IOSl"d gitr a;P.. RC!lpons1blt I rllltidwciM.is _clesrpl I NE\V oi.~rICE -1\1.'0 roonl& (~lllst'llng & 1·1r,•1TaL • lJIHl::!tN.\ROO & Soll!I . l!\"'llKl<'UtiAI &· Comn1t'f'Clnt "~~bly, f'~p. &_ gGC(t Dr. Suilf' 107. N.B. 645-$300, Br, crptl df'P!I, bllm', gar. ~dult!ll. No flt"I!: . .$ t Sa. wHhyoutn-mind. i.; x 15 and 10 x U. All APCA!lf.:, lnivq1. ,\ Non-Carpel s.ilcs, iruJt111la1ton, &: ~Jt. k ,.~1 .1{~pedal11t• & mcchirnieal 1ilcEa, 642-8080 ~----- 514 18th SI 8•17-.tT.7 .,13--4922 .~•-•~ om:· 1111Jllle1 pa.ld. $100 l'J('r Profit A.;:CllC> .. 612-113ti. rt'pain;. 963-~. U nr ~•SU init. Custom ttqpt(;ogt CU"'f.'TERIA h~lp. ~. San Clemente I .,.,..,._ I month 0.ta ~fcsa area ~'Ork 111 ('(lmj)C'tltl\~ prices. pref. wf !1-'lad Pl'tPM:ttion NEW APT'S. WALK TO •••II Ire• 171. S.IR-rr.i9 or 6U-8372 ' LIFt; or. DJo;'.\TII: I.ct .t>ur Cement, Concret• f'IW' Hf. 642-600§, ,m1 ?.lgrCon:rum 'fin Open & customrr serv. Jfrs. 7 _ "8EACH. 1 & 2 BR. t"rom S rtl h I •-bab1f'!i h\"P f nt• allf'm:111\~~ Q ~~~ S23S. EXTRAS. ~E~~"~s.~r1.r:_1; 1;;;, • .: ••. :.~~: l ~~~R~~; ~:~.'~ ~JN~~~J.&i~2[~1~.Llf.'J=:c\~;~ir;~ •• ·Tpa~~~~;~c:: P.Ni~~~~r~~lnl-~~s:~11~~. s~~ i:ll·"~:~· "~tHolc~ BA I:_ 2 RR 111' BA. $m. A ·-.,. &°",,,,.. Ing. Ext.-Jnt. All or par1, Pa.yroll Clt'rk Cniptzd. S5i:; 8.U-8691. NEAR. New l BR. t blk UI). Ds\\•t\r, din nn. Cable, .. Ml9. ~· n. 3iOO Nr.w'Jl(lrt ID\-u., BEST l\!ASS.\GE IN 1" B. etc. By hr. or jOb. ...._.-Li. CAll l.y1r. 642-1569. &16-&119 Clerk T'yp!!>t lo $470 ............................. 1 tG shopping&. f""Y. 1 chlkl lndf)', 2 Gar a\•al\. 4!n-2007 N.8 . Phont' 6T.,-U'll. :WOO Irvine' Air .. Sulll' 10.18. CEL\ll::~'T; Patio, drl'~~. ~tnry IMur. ro $5T:i CLERICAL <*. ho pets. $1&; per mo NEW GARDEN AM'S. NE\lt' OCEAN VTEW OFC'S. 0J)f'll S At.I. i\lon, \\'ed. l''rl .. \1•11.lk111·Rcpl\in. saw & ~~?f"N~."~4~r1;;ur~tn~lj Df'iilgn Draft! Elec $S40 ~or 5-ii--0760 2 BR 2 TH Cst lf\\')'i H.B. 1700 ~lf-lgr. ,\nn. ~7--0.l.19. rt'fl\O\'t', f"'rt'e f'SI. 544-89118. '"..,.. 71_.184 Bookkf"f'!ll'r, TL11'tin S650 ProgtTs1•1i\? l'O, i"' Attk!lw Extra l..al'Kf" 2 Br, :J &. t)!-. • BA ' Sl!rl e e ~n .Div de. l.ion..<1 Eslatl$, I * PAL'! & ('ARORJ.:ADER• CONCRETE Palio". '400 ~ fl ~s paper. 2~. ~<'T'tlAry 10 S6rJO arcuratc typll>I ~·/Ille ofrfet. I ' Ide ~ 1 '.l BR, 2 BATil. mti.1,·hr, lrpli·, ...... -""1il 1 1 ·rnot· pnlnt•r "--,1 ''"'-' ex-r. G!'t'at bcncni. A a < uxe poo.s '11.pt "'a.r '""11c l $2:1'1 r-11 49'0111 1 ~ .._~ ~ I ~..i rir 1''/reducf on. Jlml Ikach nr more 65c tK'r 5\l It, D.m, · • ' • ,,,_..,.. ., • P<.'1'80tlUtl C1rrk ~ r- SJ&S. 2320 Florld11 ~~ . ....,, "' . ..-1.,.... • '°.!!."""'-Of"(' Rul•to, li'OO It .'\111111bl" 1 Bl\d., St:'tnlnn. 527-lml. GC-8St~. l"t.'>i~. ~e.'Ct, ff'N' t'Slimatc. NI .Jce.nnle Si~ dJ' "'orj,. wttk. 2 BR. Apt. S1nllll' pet & kid& S•n Juan C1plstr1no htnt. north ..... lor dot'lo'lr. "'' n t 1ni:I1:t n l\IAS~AGEIRA11i---Contractor ~ 2'T"::>9. &12·391'.l. ,\: Sit! 11othi1>'\n ~~:;,o~roo8::~n~;.n~r, .. ok, 1175. 791' N• .. mon No .. 1185, 2Btt. now condo, w ,. , Acn•trom Ml!e Sauoro I c"~'"'· 'lt\-11'1.1. ,, 1ou<l> •f cl"'" '""''"r. N>:AT>:<T. "'""~''" "'""' NEWPORT $\ule 213 ,.,~ A. ll.B. ~. . J() Park. Phone: 714-~· .. _ rr11 111). fi~~!. CUSTOM BUILDER '"'Jlerll~r npnHuntlon lnr-Ptrsonntf Ag•ncy NICE 2 Or.': 2 n.. Crpl•.. crp~t; ~urid;;-t~l:Cn?s.C ~ 202. Mod* oplll dlily 6•,:!!!!.,.°!':~~le•t j -L\fAS.V\CE & RAU~ RMnod-A4d·U'ork Oul\rnntd t:xt f'l\ll '93-till:i. I l l Dov•r Dr., N .,B. lift\'(' "4llltt:r ~·rn,r you have drps. Nft\\•ly redt'C. No pet1. JJM Carrocl. PH: Pitt Lil. --~---Cnll !-il'H.'t·a. 003-1217 \'antrs Cnn11t. No. 2198TO INT /EXT PAINTING '42·3170 out'""'·n? Stll It l•tl WI.th Sl50 mo, 968-8114 ndnu1n, f213J 681-·IGriS. - - -I m9 Arl»n1!1 i\1'f'., lfntg Bch. 10 )"1"11 f"xf)f'r 4~~ All Or.in,::-r Co. 6i>:ta.'9 11 O.fly PU01 Cla_qlOM Ad! • Ml ' No f M 8 w E d l·l d • d & H M ti E. • c R a M T F h • ' -· i>1;;i;;-;N;;;;;:•nr.;;;;-;.,"'"""""',.....,....,..,..,.,..,..=.,,.,~~~.,.,....,...,,..."""''""'"'...,"'...,""-:-rr.c;-;,-,;;-;.,"'r::"'"'c::.,,--,,-.T.,.,..,.,..,.....,.,.,.--,--"":-::-::-::-,o-:r-r.;:c::-:7•,..,Mtl11d.•1 M.1-"t1o1e Wantod, MiF l'lO H elp W1nhd, M & F 710[ HOlp Wanted, M&F 710 Help Wanted, M&F 7101 Help Wanted, M & F 710 1 Help Wantod. M&F 710 I Help Wanted, M&F 11orH1lp W 1nt1d, M&F-710 OAI LV PILOT %!> CLERK ~PISI' I I Tll.l"t: }'; ~11· 1~0 y ~, F. '.\ T Mln;mum ? Y•u• <x· GENERAL OFFICE , INSPECTOR Mrn/Woo .. n , REAL ESTATE f SECRETARY AGC'Y perltncf'. Mtn.. 311. wpm. Small oUictr. Grfal OOu GE.'\:EJt.\L ~ Job 'f'IY Ll>1Hi1 Jnln 11 1v1nrll'r, "'<' nN• now .Cnn1pru1Vtn~ only no! I~ -~ SAiary, Ml.pid ad-need1 good typb;t & Ille 1st & 2nd Shifts 1 1~ The .Arrn:v Is nff1ltlltl'd \\'Ith CC'1Uury :!I. 1 ri.,111r,111·~-l'r" ii I 1• "' \IJ\C'tTnent. ex c ~ 11 en t bookkttpi.ng lklU.1. AU POSITIONS . \ourt r., t\t,•p tilt' l"f''iOUl't"f'-of IK"i~ 1.~n,::r r l'lr Mlf'~ & mr.rkf'llni: rlrpl I ~u1ul.1r "'"·11! -~"'' k_"r" 1n ,, Appliances 802 =~i·nr. fl~U:i1 :::, c:n· Jason Best Agency All•11, &jllfl'\'Pi\'t' ~r;ion \Oollh ! rnr":r!:na t!::i1 ~;~ll!~::xi~'".~ phut lh1• llC'l~Jl\lllllation ol of ... n111!1 f'll"('!ronl('" n1anu ! t l1kr Cllllb['(' JJ~7Z :\111n, ------- rtunitkl 645-llS3 c.f' 17400 BrookhUl'llt, f'. Vly. l.'XJ)('rit'ntt \rt C h r c k 1 n R Arn v t'M become t'Ql'l'('l'!I) in l'in1111lnr~, Hl'q ~ £Ood t-k1ll... & \\'rd, F1 I 1 ~(>It Gt: AUIOrlL&C k! \V1~, ~esa.. :,. ' • Suite 213 ~ AT mal<'rlnl 1~1s11,'~k~"'.~ (!~.}~11 th('~·. Or ln civlliRn hie. • PIN'l·t 1,·f•·rr~li fro111 O\'l•r kr)Q\\INii:<' uf ofllC"' p1'!. .. -------'I 16 lh. sn. c.;t: auto "'"'i;~r. COLJ..ECTOR pl"O('('f;!. (. Pl t .. g gUUUll , Jobs tlK'y 1~\'tt kJM?w "''t'I 500 h1,,k1·ti1 t'l.'l'.iu~ TYPIST/CLERK l llh, $ii.'!, t:"u11r i dC'll vcred. 1 deal penn. p/tlme. GENERAL OFFICE 131 t'Ustomcr 11.hlpnit'nls. had or kit'\l.' lhey'd bi:-Rood • O.rani::e County t'Ornpu1t>r• STACOSWITCH, INC. To SS:-0 rti•Pf'1Y'l u1J: on ''>=J)('r. ~S61'.! !em1 1:~ t I~~~ 0 r FamUy type oUice nrects AAMES 1-:XCf'llent bl'nt'(U package al. . \\·~-~ '°' Ovt'r zoo ' 11(-d !t~ILn;; ~·r\"lC't' t 139 13.akt•r, Cogla ~It'~ \\'(l!'k Ul plusti Ill'\\' fllfi("l"'I Rent w0a-.h~.-,-.,70=-,-y-.-,-. 642-4Ul per90r'I. cute bubbly type pcnoo lo PRIMARK jo~tn.lning oounet. Taua,ln 1•lnth\'Ldua!,1-1ro!ef;l.1onal a-19-."lGll "'''"' 111T('l'1111.:-ap11l1cntK1ns $~ \\k. t'ul! nialnt. !Ake orders over the phont'. by xln't lnltruttora. in gonrl -"UflE't'\'ts1011. Equal Oppor. t:mploycr Jn t ,, r \' 1,.1•-" 1on1nn,111·1· • 6.l~l-r.?O:.! • CUSTOMER SERVICE Type invoices & t"ettplion~t PRODUCTS !K'bl!c, withe. ftnellt equip 1 • Al! n1t•un n10 l't' 1-on1ntll'l· _ ~l:u·.-h :O-rh du~. Call Coe1nal Pt>rson· around. Jobs thal eould l'<l~t ~1nns for )'OU! I SECRETARY J ason 8 e1t A gency R1·:n1.T \\h1'h1•1·• t!r Y<' rll , nel Agency, ~. 1190 Bureau of 2620 s. suaan you1,0to1 t 01.11 "'ro~y !ci Alrarn ( CALL ron. I~TERVIE\r 1:.1i ional •lt•pt I! you'ic 17100 flf'O(lkhur..t, r \'ly d1.~h,/~i!t~,si~ .~ ~i~;6.101 )r CASHIER HAtbor Blvd, C~t Santa Ana. caur. Inc v An ' I"· vullY ti rniy Ontu I V~U!U1.l'fl .... ;1 ("I'll r ;1 1 ,. ' $11111• z1;,· Y .. 1-6iT:1 ~·~· ' . -. • GENERAL oUice -Eire-Near !{arbor & Warner Avt:. P&.>'•. ~·h1lc yuu I t•o.1 rn ~ tlt•t.11! c•on!'l'IOO~ & flradll!l('o t"ll ll;!L),\!HE u\"•'11, pull rh .. ·n trical Conrractor, e,. p . Employment Agency 11141 540--4020 Starting 111 S-126 10 11 n10 01•11.,11,"1. )nu l'l Inv•' lh~1 -C'l)unh•i' l'l-Vk'1t un11't>, ta·: prefcm'd. Laguna Ni~l. F,qu11\ Oppor. Employer belore ded~ct10ra, 1""/pn•nlo1-21 1 l'hul!f'n..:<' of "J..'-Olur,r: 111 TYPIST 'RECEPT. ~1..:. J~ll-. 111 11>1.". lik>-llU Now necepling appllcatlom for pl!ml .. full lime pos!Oon. !\lust be bonda.ble. neat a p-- pearing & l!njoy cus(on1\·r con!AC1. 831-1400 00 Yc Uong & r:u~ 8" ~'()11 "1"1 ~· ~ pn•,~" 111 uur puhhi.hin.: 1'<'l''lr.11r I\ fling .~· !,!•1'1(1 \ CRO\\'l~G !um nt>t'd.1 ,sharp 1 1 o 0 ~ ~!7 .. ~u~~~~lon~h~:1;~~·: 1 c:::r::-I_ I ,',',,',,',',',·"'''(:',',',)ti f u I 11 r" Ph"n•· 1)('~1nC1h1y "'i\l J:f'I Auction 804 ~ d ' C b " rl I • ,\nu 1n!n rh1~ ;:;!"11111ii: <" IH 01 ... t'r ~k ~tary. ?o1mt mrrlir11l ,t-rll'nl;1! 1·nt"t· ,\ :~1 or 1n-1V:1a 1n nc. • ·''''H"I R•·~uin(',( 1 •.. ,,1111,..,1 :..E\\l'OHT Ut .. \{"ll be good on lt'lt'phont'! Typlni;:: • dll\11 pd \'a(' t':1 \ r .\· I * 644 7662 * ~ 1 II 1 J B A & 10 key adding 1naC'hlnc I Th0rl'\''1-;1 101 n}(11"1• \"U 1·.1n -· 11 .iry 1~~niy '1 ason •st gency * PERSIAN RUG* I U ill l"t'<juin'd. H)1fro Raln, l{('I that few Oll!C'r J0h~ .l:l\"t' I )!~":'"1n~ t .<1111•1 171(-1 Hn>okhur•!, r \"II I ~lary Ann 492-TJ63. FREE • )'QU. ,\ rhl1n1'\' In trll\"•'I. T11I R I E A , .·" tJ,\ \1~ l.1:_1'1, Sul!•• ~1: !~1~;-:-, *AUCTION* Apply In Pt>rson DESMOND'S HAND MAN • --· lh'l' & work ln pl:'l.(.'('S t11uri~1.. ea state ssoc. ~. l\f'l!.)l'I Bt'IU h,_('.i -~ 0!1 It. h:.lf I JI ,\ l''i•r .. 1.1n Ru,.: 1 Y ~ only \·isit. 1.ik•~ Jo:urn111·. 1:, .. 1 C":1r1)('1"i. l<":a.,h1nn f:olnn1I TY!'J:-.T fol' p,.111 11 \l:r1 •• l11lf"'•rl•' l\1· \\ill lla\·1• .\ NEWPORT •3 Fashion Is land Equal Oppor. EmployM' C'O~L\lUNIT\' A.'i!iOC. oei'lt, Panatruj, A\l'l~k.'\, Kr1rt'a. 11 1 .. rri.··· 111 ;o;""!Jn1·1 llr;u•h h,1.i 1 SECRETARY O.·nlal r\p helpful. .\!-:•'• ~.ih• {In olrter exper. ~1aintcnanr" I you'd 11kr In i<'.1n1 a J•lh n11n1 .. 1l1· 1.-. 11p1~•lllUllt~ l•lr \\'ith hurld1n~ in rl us 1 r) ::5 IS. lull .:_1~-1'."JI S UN MARCH 31 'l PM :O.lan w/pool rxp. Bill, • rhat's1u••\'aluablr lo~~uJ:'l•1! •:,1 nr"'l"·r:o;3ll«H'( .... l(·-1 h:11•k1:"1und.Pl"t"'l'cl inal\•11.~11·iri·i·1L··· r 1 < U I ' , ' fi.Mi-57t'JI Ralph 645-3.l19 SHORT h II I f I ~ . ' .r_,,_ ..l.JllC'\ • UI · 1/'rT'lh'\\ ,11 !.! Noun ! . is lo t " ,\rrny, C'it ,Ytl11r 1.11,., I{•" f'.,rprt 1~ .. ·111 .. ,~. o .•. i l''i ., 1'<1/l~lnn 11n11 111,r, i\lu:.t be :!I.\!"'< old. ,\P-I "·, HEAD COOK ft1\.ltto..IC PER.S0""'1El. IOC'al Army RepJ'r'Sl'tllHtL\1 1111 11 ••l•'I' l.iOIJ ••l!I«•"• n:ui.1n. :t1l:tl") 1·on11111•1i.~ur11 tr 11 ·• '"""L 6 I 63 "-r.•-·· I I !ily in 1,.·r..on. I rn !) l_l'.;l [ THE '\'l':\\"/'l 1l~TEH IN!\ DENTAL, AllsL-.tant, 3 yn exp, chalrside only, Group practict!' in Newport &rich, ioclud~Sal. mo r n In g11 , 646-1122 Con\' llosp &12--0593 t"CD\/V""ES•""rc .... v-v -IS-l . ........,.ra ....... ,. 1,1•1" ;•11n •llh•r 1h1• fl"'ll•·~-(''l:f>('r. Plt'a.o;,• F<Cnr! f'l.'jU111r fntl\" Ht'~Hiuranl, l!iti.).• . . . ~I\... rit.....rlJ""'-1 i.Jonfll i.:;1"1111·1h F.· fl\h 'Hn(·t-. \\ ,;;dut'\' 111~~11f)' 111 P11•·1 nc C<•a~I llwy , Sunset I 1107 .111111!~n·•· ltd. H.lp U. Bul'ld OF GAS? ,\cC'OUnli\nt 1Q SJ 5K MEN n1,.r1t •}1•1 M•rtun1tii•:o1 )'m..t"r.· <'!n~i;111rf! nH r\1) 111, f ., BC'IH'h. ~-\6-lJ.M) 'r1\flOl1 ltr.1rh • Prod. ~tgr ~1ach !'ihop!o sin.,: r "' k II loukh1i;: r •I' ~ ·•ll xlnt ""Ill· 111111~· l'llut r O Bl•\ 1:i.i0 -----.\u "i' ln1 .. 1·ri,,•i.,n11! Beautiful Cruisi-Ind 1~l""h E S13K Put vour "1 {' 10 wor ~ ini;: · · ,, [ c 1 ' , WANTED 'Pt\ • LTI • ... WI"'''" .. nJ.,T ~. Shilkl('{' llonil' l~IU<'l ~. nulii;ion ~1i·u,1ur•'. ... untn<·t ()!;ta .\'l'i.11, l'n !21.i~lfi , I . Sailboats CMr Arcoonlant to $1.K i f:io 't 1 lt 1 .. vou"i't' , 11_ Th11n1t•" r. 'la11\·tn1. n1an· 1 HAIRDRESSER T"I : 1!1':1 fll•0 .2')1U DOMESTIC, 2 d:i.~rs a 11ttk, 8 hn;. at $2.75 hr. J.ikC'~ !o \\'Ork, speak ,r,, unden 1.1nd English. All houst• r-!tnning duties + lndry ,r.,, lrn11•r;;. Own 1ransp. Ne\\·porl Br11r.1. 2 story. Bon<l11blc. C 1 1: ~7-4976 lron1 8 to Ii. Alt 6, 644-7434 . Needed : REGISTER Lt>gal Secretary to SSOO 111~ ~54S-~25.1u r . i" I !!"•"'. 610-"'ii:l. SECHi·:TAH \". ~··><I i.1·p1 .. 1 AT O NCE I \\'/at least 1 yrs expt>r. In Oii Lea.sing A~t to $75 day I ~l!Xl-~l'l Tr!llllf'(' nl~'(INI lnr l~ind.~c:q11ni.: 1iu~. $-IZ:• ul•• ---~-------F.xper. Finish Carpenters 1~lm ~t 10 Prr s SS()() --.'.. . -fur ro~la ;\l··~11 ~u r.,rry .t· CALL &4S-J337 Building Materials 806 boat carpentry & a concern BY PHONE Insur. Claun., A~s1stant :1dh('St\'I'. t·ol(lr /,. p;unt n11,. , ~ ' A1fply in l)!.'r.Y•n Tukal i \\"1\l~EH()U:'E-1 ;irl, ~··~I e SurpluJ. Build ing about thC'lr future. Drop t>;v t~irr &kCas~~!ty 10 SI: 111:;:11 ~~~1;~(_hng on 3 roll ,/'-r :'1.uri.t'I)', i1'1'.i llukt·;' ~!. (",\! 11r1 v" !', f 11 11 r ! 1n 1', '.\fATEHl1\1. . 1(Yi(l'5 ol NE\\' for llll lntervi~·-~1on thru Sales/r.1 cni::; -xc'y lo 101 · · -.1 J:1 --SE.-CURITY Jl(•1·111r1111•111, no ~1urlt'ht". ITr.\IS! !Joor<;, lun1bcr. ply. Thurs, 9 am-5 pm. Sccntarics lo $1."i() ;\IOTt:L l\L\ID, o c at, I I I I I 11n1i-,1u<ik1 r~ .. -. r!f1ys, 6 ;~J \\?IXI, nltun sl1C'f'Uni;. n1old- WESTSAIL CORP AT AAMES''i ·H.t'C't'Pl/~"Tt'tary to S715 l'nt>ry:eli<' Lai,'l1na B C'arh 1 ll OFFICERS A\! lo '.1 1'~1 1111h nvrr1 tn1t> in,ir, w'.ndov.i;, rre. • Billing Clerk 10 S~!5 n·M:rrt. 6 ·Dav v.·k. l!H-1196. Gr:1\·ryarrl ... 111rts, Ill hr "'k $1.)(j hr to ~1111'1. 1n1r1v1,•1\ :: BUILDERS SURPLU S 1638 Placentia A ve. ••• ~lll'STctap~':: Typist IH t-: ~lOTHERS-.Sub Tl'arh<'r:; --• 1 • -Al:-i•, p/t1n11• Fn ,\· S:1r In ., P \t \\"1111!011 0,.~1~ns, :!::.00 Sol. ;\l<iin, S.A DESIGNER Costa Mesa ' ••.11:111t '''·.' H &I 1 Coonh ·ior 1u~ht~. l'nl/orn1 ft1rn <11111 ::1•1,, IJ Airpon. Li'dr Ur . !\lon thru Sllt lO-!i Clerk Typ1.~. ~l.V. to $500 ° ni<'-· ~ . na · rur & pll'orll' n..'<f d. ltt't1r1'fl C .• \I. PC BOARD DESIGNER 1-3 years uperience11n high density, dual-in-line and dis- creet ci.rcuil layout from lo- gic diagrams. Excellent op-- portunity for advanl:emenl. Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to: PERSONNEL !\lANAGER Standard Memories, Inc. A subsidiary of APPUED J\IAGNETICS CORP. 2221 S. Annf' St. Santa Ana, Calif. ~1704 An equal oppor1unily employ~r HOSPITAL BILLING SUPERVISOR ImmC"diatt' opening for in- dividual exper. in hospillll billi~ proct'dUTE'S. f\.lust be esperially knov.·ledgeable in ;\led-I-Care billing. Candidate must p I) s s e s s suprn'!sory capabilities & provide a good past ~·ork history. ADMITTING SUPERVISOR· Opening currcnlly exists for rxprr, hospil al adm1t1ihg SUJ)('i\'ISOf V.'/p&st good ~'<>rd of i;upt>rviMry & DISHWASHER. devt. a ccomplishments. Exper •• clean, neat & dept>n-Ext'l'llt'nl heoefit s & .... -ork1n~ dabl~. ~ hi'!!. Apply. Surf I conditions a"'" a i I !he & Sirli;im. 5930 W. Coo.st qualifwd indivLdual. HIO.'Y, NB DRIVER Submit your r esun1r C · C nt outlining "'·ork h islory & rost ou ry salerv r.-•qui rtment11 to : No special Uc rr-q'd. Per5onnel Dept. bol•TI !flam & noon on!y S ddl ba k MacGregor Yacht Corp 3 e C 1631 Placentia, 01 Enter!n.inment Group for <.'OCl;ta il lmr, 3 ni1es. Audi· lioo. f:-!!i·'.!>12::. l'\01111 . EXPERJl:-.:;o;CEO Paint & mctaln1an lo do qunlity v.-ork on Clas~i•· r~. '· Lyl)n Classic Auto. 177ll Pl11.ccn- 1ia. O.f. FACTOR\' PRODUCTION TESTERS Receiving inspectors for testing & processing elec- tronic componcTll~. \\' i I I train. Day & S10o"1ng shifts availablC'. M ICROELECTRONICS TEST LABORATORIES 17312 Gil..ET'J'E, S.A. The Irvine Industrial C:Omplex Equal Opportunity Employer F "C BOOKKEEPER w i I h heavy Relll Estate b~L-k· .1:round. Send resun1r to P.O. Rox 2·180, Ne1l'port B c :1 c J1 frl!ifiJ. ·-~=~~~----F'RONT Dt>sk Clrrk, Surf & Sand Hotrl, 1.5,j5 S. Cori~t H .... y , Laguna Bench. Ask for Jackie \Vesthrook or Frank "'llliams. 494-G.'174. Community Hospital 23j61 PasM de Valencia Laguna Hill~ 1714) 837-2121 Take San Diego Frecy,·ay To E l Toro Rd .. Turnon, Via Estrada Equal. Oppor. Employer Hospitality Hostess Service Needs matul't' .... "On1rn to y,·elcomr ne"'· residrnts. F1exiblc hours. p/timt'. l\lusr ha\"I' car & l.YJl('\\Tiler. S.17-3095. 15400 E. Edinger, Sno!.a Ana. HOSTESS :\lom !nqs ,'.:. Evrnings e BLUE DOLPHIN e ~ \'ia I.irlo, r.; .. n ... l !OUSEKI::EPE~. Live-in. Sn1. fam . 0....'n room, ba, TV. 5 rly wk. Eng. speaking. N.B. S300/mo. 64&-722J JNTE RVIt:wER. ('xp'd lady for <"Xecutivt> inteJ"\licy,·ing & t·on~urner surveys. Steady rwrt lin1e work, no selling, S3.00 per hr + mileage, rep. Jy ClMsined Arl no 35. ',ii Sell idle ittms with a Daily Dally Pilot, p O Box 1560, Pilot aassif1ed ad 6~2-5678 Costa l\1esa, Calif 92626 Help W•nted, M&F 710 I Holp W1ntod, M&F 710 EXECUTIVES-MANAGERS "JOB OPPORTUNITIES" $15M-$75M Range SALAll.IS-NIGoOTIAILl Ar• Yo11 U".'""tovtd N•-Ar1 You Seelrl119 A Ch•11t;i• -Wo .. i1d About Your A9-Tirtd of lro••11 Promite1- Uncf1c.id td A1 To A PH1ptr c .. ~n• of Actio11----- AR.E YOU UN'Dt:~ ,AID? If Yee Cu A•-1'1111 Followi"9 c...,..ertn, f111 fte Afflrl!Mttve, We'd LUie A11 l•i.ntew Witt! Yo11 IF YOUR ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL -WE CAN HELP YOU A. Do yo11 h•"• •lrOtt9 voc1tio1111 dr;.,,7 I. Do yo11 h1Yo 9ood 11•1; .. , intolli;111ct7 C Do vou fool 1uflicit 11tlv W1oti .. •tt d to •~h: ... , 7 D. Do yeu h .... th1 •bilily lo ..,,1.;, d•c:i1iot11 E. Ari yo• t11dy lo 111 • r11lh tic c1roor oOi1tliYI ? f. If you w1r1 co11wi11c•d th1t h1lp w11 ,.,,11.blo would you •c:c:1pt it, wit hout d1l•y7 YOU SHOULD KNOW e Tli 1 bott1r join 110 11ot •ilil'1rti1" e fllltd p•rly pr•fo1•io11ol l11fl!t 11c• i1 tomotlrnt t l\OCot• .. .., e G1ttiftt tM right il•Mt ,,.11, 1t th1 right 1 .... 1 ,._ 11olto• ltch11iqtio. • e b o11.1tiY• po1;tlo111 1ro f'lll" tt.reu9h oJocuti..,. i11t.r• ,.;,..,,, •Mui 101111111 111•lli"11, ii Mii •tot•! •111-r. SEND bSUME OR CALL TODAY -FOR- NO COST EXECUTIVE I NTERVIEW EXECUTIVE SERVICES, INC. U8 N. -HOME OFFICE - 0 14) S.7-9625 M 1 ln St. SECUlllTY IANIC IUILD!NG SUIT E 701! ,. .. ,., Clll!MlllW.. -*-> "" Ill\ -""' .. •111 ......... 1. Exec. Sec'y $100 Dnllt.smen/10o'Omll.ll, pnntM ~d u r alJOlllll 1nlrrVl<'\\"!I. ; nr prrt.~10lll'~ pr<'f'C!. Pl.i11t 0-~--=-~---Tit: 546-1037 C. ·1 ~ 10 I'... tle:1:1hle hrs. GuR rn. $7.:..0 r< c· sir us\t"' r r 1 ,.._ Waiter1, Busboys F11ntutic oppor to join pre-lf'CUJ 1,...,. '"ru. · -("' II · ~. ·' •"-• · "-•n l'\•lnl" 111 u~ ,,,.,mpl€'\ Furniture 810 tige firm in Q c Plu~h CAl.J.. TRISll llOPK.INS br_ inler-;;-F o~~l'P~·1GR 1 Sa)·s, l v.urk l•lr b~ l"ornpJny l'honr 1.r \\'. \\'am.~n Dishwashers, Ho5tesses '----'-------- surrounding ~t~t 'lots of J t:RRI \\'Hl1TL!\10RE -~\I" o.l\nl ny, · ·· bu! don't n1akr n1ui'.h US$. !\;l,'l ... 300), C'XI 191, I0111n-2pn1 nppl1r11rl11n"' f'l'it!J! r 11 k r n 5 ROO:i.t..; of f urnilur£' for lniportll.nt ·~pie-. G n 0 rl 488 E. 17th St. <at l!Vlnc• l\I 55 -l 1. JI ynu nl'fl'I USSS rail JaC'k ,\l•1n thni \\'NI. bf'1:1nn1~ ,0.f arr h ~-AAll' a lso 1 BR l!i>U.'lt' for i;k11ls nee. Great hrs i lop Suite 214 '42·1470 NO EXPERIENCE f'rou: j ~t.1.1:=1irn.p1 1ar s-!\~('(lc'"rit ~~~1-.~11,~~1:/11.~rr~~'~;~;n~~~ rer11. 21i~ ("€.>flar Lani· benefit!!. ~ NECESSARY SCOTT REAL TY I 1!1~uran{'('. frt'f' !..1":111~. a \',:iy. '.'\ B. "l"ui.lln .-.11.1:9',!I TRAINEE POSITION And Investment Co. .\Ir. &ulry, 6J6-77jl 1 ~="~==~~=--er.>-.. ·".' .I· ,,1,,.10 n~., •.. ~·. lega l Sec'y JANITORJ,\L Ser.•1t'<' now $800 taking applicat1on?1. !or full lime t'Xpcrienced pt'nK!Tlnt>I. 5..'l7--€7il8. Xlnl rlrm draling in Pl. l\lust ha\'e gpixl secreh1rial skills Secretary I.real potenllal per.srin. Varil'IY v.·ord. $650 for riJ;:ht Is 1he k<'Y JOBS GALORE!!! If we don't have it! You don't want It! CAL \VINFRE\' & SONS AGENCY ll13 t>ain1!er, Irvine F igure Wh iz $6S01 ===9~79--3~1 _30~~~ . h.11'CllEN h<'lp & Broilt'r Temllc gpot for gal "''ho asslstnn! -Dav shift. has ~:q>a'lure to th~ IN1nkln.1: ANCIENT ~1ARINER or l~nanei? SN"a. IJ<t l.:\ Pro-2607 \\I. Coa..:;t HIO.")' re!iSIOg prep;i.r11t1nn n( doc· ='il'I\ rt Bear h ' uments. Con1putr 1hJot'<i11n1s. 'JlO ~==--U-.t~ of \"a1·1('I). LADIES ••• G;:ot your husbands ht'lp sell· inR "Shakl~ liomc Produt'IS A/P Clerk S600 l \Yt''ll show you hoy,·1 54S-525.l f\0 \\1! CunstrucLlon co. nct'di1 son1e-1 ""Li';E~G~A~L,.-S;;E'c•R~E~T~A""R~Y' one 10o·/l';OC'd A/P exJ)(>r. 21535 Hav.·thorne Bl vd. Exper.;' mature for i:ole ta.i: altornt'y in Ne~-port Ctr. Variety $5501•°'"~ .... 23 .. '· .................... N .B. Sale!' office for lite n1anul. co. needs flexiblt gal !or 1 gal spot. Bkkpn11;, lite typing, ans1\·er phones. Grt'at hr.;. ADMINISTRATIVE MACHINIST Sn1all pttci~ion par r s , ~eneral proto & small quan- lity runs. Small shop. Days only. Good \\'Orking conds. STACOSWITCH, INC. 1139 Baker, Cost.a ~fesa 549-lJ.ll Equal Oppor Employer MACHINIST $500 Mgr Trainee lo \Oo'Ork In one man shop on l'r('('e"'!-~tu~t b<" Toollng for in-R_lant nifs:;. 1' neat. l.ood Gi>nt'ral IRthl' E.: .!IOme mill for p I t I n1 t' "'·ork rNJ'd, 547-5-17.) or Exper. not hondable position students. F i•ld Sis Rep Some colle11:e & sale~ expcr. Salary + bonus + c11r. Great oppor. for libcraJ arts grnd. n J.-S60..-2012 •• MACHINIST , . Chuckt'r & Bridepon. mill operalon . :...1nt ~'Orking cond., overtime. 133 Callt' rll' Jndus1tias, San Clemenrc. MAINTENANCE 536-7533 ----\\"110 \\"/\~TS TO \\'OJ~K~ ... r '~ ' '""" '" ·-· NOW OPEN I I s Dlll\'J-: ,\ c11n: Oulldl. {)t·io:. Sl l()'l t ;1,od GB lnduslrii's of S,), Calif. r . Accountant ClfOOSr; yr.ur hOllNI, \\llt'k •'"•111 1sl Slf{I t ;1kr11 h11.:o; immedu1.!e openinJ,:;!' !or ) REAL ESTATE (;<'n\·ral ;u•1""1>1.1nlln:.: flllli·tu>n for your~cl!, l.x> )'Qur 11.,.,.11 &~1G09·~·-· ~--~~~- trainees in rf Is play· I SALESPEOPLE I r .. r ~m;.JI n111nur. !"(I. boss. "'lt'n or \l,'l'llfl•'ll, (':1n HCA 11" l'O]nr I\", In: l"if'firm murketLng distribution ,.., \\'or k in t11e holtPSI a rf'a of l'n ·l':11~· J'lUrr1:1l11 ,.., 1·\os111~ be 11h~hl!y h<1nd1ea ppeil. 1lr~:s~cr, Nnui:. <,.:ca~. ch..'l.ir. cred11 mt'rchandising. 6 nc1v !hu11ln..:1on Bt·11C'h &· }''nun-I 1•nrrv•. 111H"t1r <~>n1p11 rrr n1 n~ NC'aC -C!t>iin Aflfl'l'itr :oi<i'. \l'ork. s:i::-1010, II o rn 1·, lncat.ions tu open in in~-ritln \'11 lh·y \\Ith u 1«•11ip1u\)' I 't-1111~n1ll T'l'fl'"•rls l{r>~flf)11~1-Vrs .. N!if'l~rl. A~r ~ tn i O. l>ll-1i.-19:l. m.Nhatc future. ~1;1ny post-1h;1 t 11ff1•r"N n full 1·nr1:••r lll'O· hi" fur n"1on111ly lon;,11,...1111 & ~ur>p!t'mC'nl ,vour ln t-oo1e. G II>' T-,-,-"~4~1--,-- f r II ' ' ' I A. , ,\ { ·'"-· rrt! JC['('flf' 11nnsno1\'0pl'n or u 111nC'I 1,'T11n1 .1 orr1c .. s !(1 rhc••'" s .i ·~ 1.·;i 1n .. n11~•~n11.:n! Drivea rnh6hrs ornioren rluurs. 111 1110~1 IH•l'o . $:.!9:,. pennanent people. f"1n1. C1tll Ji'IT\' 1;i11.-,1)",! 1v-1 .-•1'1" Clll•ltf)Jt' o! rlay. Apply 1n oerson, c 11 11 f • * Xl21IT TltAINING P r:.0-\"ILL \(;!-; llEAL l•:STAT1 :. ~u1~'r\'l'(lng oih"r'. Assist Yl'!lnll' Cnh Co., 186 t.:. l61h ~4-l J:; a 1 '11"11· ~ ~RA;\!. . 962-2.i~. j ('<'l11trl"lllrr S.·ivl H.<"!<llnw ~1 • c 0,.111 ~le~n RIVJl-:f{,\ (',,nvcr! ~fn, \\·ORK ALSO AVAIL f'OR RECEPTIONIST 1 l ·1:11-:,,1f1•"i Ari 11 1. 1·/o Dail)' A\i 11•adn, \"111yl 1.ikr J1t.'IV JI I G II -:; C ii Q Cl L .~ [ l'llul, I' O. Ho'I: lj(jO, Custa Turn y!)ur golf C'IU~ in!o f'\"11111., STI:i. ~9.~-lGSO COLLEGE STUDENTS 1 P rr:;on11blr & !!harp. for Re.ii :\l{•sa, Ca 921i'}I'; 1.:0 !\IPAi.'llY Hl:::\!·:FIT:' r:s1;.itc. DcvC'!. Co .. 111 i\'.C'w· a s!rrl..-.. Srll lht'n\ ~·1rh SulfPrint: a storngr-cr1!!i!!? FOR PERSONAL 1o11rt &-a"h c·a11 \\'M. \l:lr st~\\' I N t: n1 a , hi n r a Uaily Pilot Oass1lil"d Ai! &-JI nn-lonr:t>r ru:'f'flrd ircnis INTERVIEW CALL : '!i'rh_f~-1nr.~1'\ll'10o. :..:s..1-111;.;f)_ "'t'rlock~'r. fully t':\p'<I, Tnp and use !he mo/11'y for a w11ha DailyPilot Oas..~ifil'd R D 1•1\ ~1\1111 111•111 1 '1111 l'itf'l'1'fl' Cn!l 6-12-!'li7S Today. A•I: 6-t2-56ill. 536-2591 REGISTE E 1 1>·~.:.,,.r: ·:~.f Kalmu~. <:.\I. _r_r_r m_r_T_,.._._? a_·_r_T Cal~:,:;p~nly 1 :;iv-1~1 1j~.1.,1an~?.~sx'1~rrt. NUHSF.S NURSES -Sharp-Alert-Gir_I_ RN-LVN-AIDE rr.r 1111 .. r~1f11~1 of, ..... ork. Jl-7 & other ~hilts. Top p\t MacGregor Yacht duty pay. lmmcd. plly for I. 1111<~1 Op<"ning:o; rl)r /{;-.' ~ rin Corp. fl nor duty. Coun!}'\\'ri 1h1' 1':'.l's & nl~h1 ~hdl f,,r It;.11 PJf\('f.•ul ia. C)I int er\-v.·s, :O.lon-Frl ~:1.1 r>u r s1w1•1;i l nt!f'111ng unit J.. ---- Le-scoulil' l"urscs R('l,-i.,11"), 01!1tr 111't'&.!>. 1'>1 llospital lld. ;.; H. c-. ll 1 1111 <l•!f 1. r SHEET METAL 1 Lobby Pt1rk Lido Bid;;. 1 1 • ·1· '< t' 1r,n :-. 1 errn 111 • 64?_9955 a.10-995-1. 11·111: 1 s '" 11orkin~ t'1•n111-BRAKE OPRS -· ' -lions. J\hl" 1<1 11111kt• Ul\11 ~t·lup11 NURSE S n •at! t•nnl~ · !'ln~r· roltn1n1·c. :1\Iorgan Nurse-" Rrb<i~try. Bt'au!Hul nC''v aL·u1c 1.,, !Illy I :-;11"11!~ \\'ork H.N's, LVN'K, Praes, FJr,.,r 111 l~i:una \!Uls. I <lv<'r·Th1u• duty paid "'·kly. 6."17 \\1. 1~111 rnrerr~rrd apiilii·nn!• ,,ri·,· I I Xln'1 l':1 y St, Suitt> D, C.:\I. 5-18-93GI ;1 11ply Ul pcn;on :'.'llvn IJ1r\1 I ' B1.·11"111' Or 833-2365. Fn 1 K. C . Holloway, Inc. 1 JIJ&'\() Arnis1roni; ,\\1'. NURSES AJDF:, cxpcnt'nce j pre!crrcd. Fu!! tune, shifts 1 7·3:30, ll-7::..0. B cvr r ly ~taoor z.i.r~ Via Estrada, I Laguna Hills~-""'--- Nurscs Aides [:<per. -11 Bed conv. hosp. J-'/llrne 'i· ~. Call 5-l!}.-3001 NURSES Aides 11-7 ~h1fl1 I ~lesa Verde Com·. llO!ip, £61 Center St, Cl\.! ~\-1 OFFICE MG_R_S90Ci Saddleback Community Hospital '..".'3>1 PasM rlf' \";,!rn1•i:;i J~'\~una Jf1ll' (714 1 837-2121 I JI"\ 1 n{' 55 7-4040 •1 Sl!ORT OP.O}';J{ COOK E>:J~'r. Top .... -.1:'.es. ~-re(' nlr'lht'<d. ,\pvly bctY.'Tl 12 & 3pm. 1\Sk for l)a v I', I C"harlll'0!! {.11111, 102 :\lcF11d- 'lrn Avt', ~.B. T'1ke S..n Di!'Wl f'~rtewn;.• l STAT TYPIST To 1:::1 Torn H.d. T11nl••ll, I ,\n iniine11 .• opt·n1nl: for ;,n Via E'(lrada 1nd1v ti.tl ..,,. ~1;,11~11,.al ~1·k· F.rru;rl Oppnr. l-:n1plo~· ,' r T 70 Sh, typine;, supcl'\l~IOn ' i.:roun(. ~p111g 11 .111n. Bt>:u.:h an'a 1 • -.\!11,r ht· dr1:11l n1ind1•<1 11~ A CONVcN!o.rt ~NC ANO SCWINC GU!Of FOA; THC GAL.ON THE CO. For •n ad ln Cell Mery Beth Nine-Way Basic Printed Pattern Women's Vtorld 64'2·'678 , ext. 3~0 Tops to Crochet! I WESTCLI FF I RN /t.\'N' 3-11 l/timr & i -3 po~111nn l"l'<I s llt<'Ul'u1£· Jn· MECHANIC 1 I I '"''"' '" Llcria!ri"'-"1n'• I rrui-n1Pl ''""''""'~· -"Pe-rsonnc AgC'nry 11.,,,·t·~ & l•1nrls. Co111e \"1~1t. M t T $750 '! k 'Ir " 1 " t'nr ,\ppr. Cnntarr ana,,emen rne r. ar • <'ntcr r 1.1:. :' ....... n·--,\\•e, '· ·""''l1or1 1 • Ed S A. "•~ v• C'11rnl Sm1rh. &11-:,.~ Degree in bus. adm. or i::xpericn~ in mR!nlcnnnce l6.ll J::.al~~r, · 13'"" Ii Avo·n l·'lnA nrinl Srn·iec < t (/' finance. l..el\m credit & 1nst~llauon ~repair of pro~ Equ11I OJJlllir. Em11lnycr len<.llng R..<ipt'CIS of banking. ~ucllon t'QU!p~('nl. Stea~~ ORTl·!Ot?O!'TIC _ ll r n ! r1 I ,..;,\LE . ..; _ JOb, good brne flt s. O'.>n1e u1 Ass1. f /hmc. F~xpcr. :u:e DESK MGR ~·rr::-;OC;Jl,\PllE!t &apply9-4:30 I ~30.f>.1~2291 ,NB. • f.l1n1mu111 2 yl'u r s r\· Sales Trainee $800 + CALIFOAM P/\STE-UP-nrlisti.o work •111 ,o\1\:-011-:S is cxpnf1111n~ ::ii.;.11n: fl' ru·nr·t·/HJ' hu.~1nt'i.~ srhO"""•I 1666! Von Kllrman. Santa Ana 11·cekly st10pper ney,spa1~t'. ()11!' (Jran;.:1• Co. ofr, al"• u1 ~ :l \'t>,1r•. IJlf'lat1or1 50 ! Dcgrff In 1He sclrnce biology. Salary + exp ;\lust be l.'XfV'r, 89~ a.<tk lh•· Pl"' t·~~ !•f ~t:dl111:.; <i I!""'" 1 y,prn. fyp1n~ 45 ~·pm. ';(l!H"I or -ual OJl'portunl!y rmploycr .-1 · 1 r I + ~·· for r-.tnf. Zant. !t.>s~1nn:..I d1v1~1on . Sfl 11ry. rnp1• nr Vlt!l('l'mC'nl, Mal.tre de PLASTIC INJECTION Ai\.\!~;.-; l<t !hf' "1r11·~1 \f)')' ~ "'C('(.'ill.'l1l hcn•·fil<;, JI I u ... ' '"· Sale1 Rep For \\'t'!\ known So. Calif. to $900 priva!e cluh. r-.tust be C'l:per. Suhmit resuml' I.: salary Knowledge of S. Dlrgo or desired to Classified ad oo. Ventura Co. Car + exp + l 15, c/o Daily Pilot P, 0 . bonu~. Prefer f o o d Box lJOO, CO.!ita ~Iesa Cali!. backgmd. 9262-i. ~~~-~-,-,-. Man or Couple t'arly A \I Sales Rep to $12K ~'Spaper delivery, i n ln1ne area. xlnt roo,~r oprn t140. mD. a pprox. no C'OI· lectioM 962-463.1 Exl)t'r . In lighting 11ecess .• electrical dlsl::tlbutors. Salary + exp. + Cllf. MGMT TRAINEE So. Orange Cnty, ambitioo~. . aggttssiVi!, live tigure~in- QC M.nager $11K + come. Call Mr. Campbt>ll at """"" Prtft'r BSME or acroMulleal 1 c::.;,'='====---englneering W/exper . In ~1A.."tUF'ACTURING OOth military & commercial P.D.A . fielrl~. Potential v.·/growing UTILITY MAN tocal co. Exec. Mgmt to $lOK Str o n ~ r.ale1 or admlnistrBtlw o r I t' n I e d party ready to join solid flnn. Dial A Job! 556-1180 2TOS HAtbo'I" BJ., SUlte 207 Corrta P.1esa 2J1i3S 11111\'lhOTTU' Bl\·11. Tot'f'ftnC't 213/Ml-7712 :0.1A<'hiflf' tool msnufAclurer fle'('(fs e~rgt't1c yoong man for prt,,ara.tion k. painting <lf mn.ehin<' components. \\'Ill !rain. Cont Act : Pnul Dosier A~!IOClates 1'-W Randolph A"f' (P.lta l\1t'U $ 7075 ;\t EDTCAL -Exper'd only. Back oHlce, x-ray, vmo- punctutt, lnjtttlorui, EKG, for M y medical practice. Newport Beach, 833-2528 MORTAGE WAREHOUSING LINES CLERK I n d I v Id u 11. \ w/servicimt. "''IU'thou~lng &. ahfpf)\ng hftcki::;l'OOrrrl in rnortaa.11:c bfl.nlclf'I& ltt'fivll)'. -MIKI-be wlllina: 10 lerim .. raft gn'IW• In~ fndepcndent bMk in 0l"'Rfli«! Counly. O>ntACI Pt-nonnet Oc!pt: WESTLANOS BANK 'fl-I• 315-2S11 F,,qu•I Oppor. Employtt hl'l' 11~f'n<')' 111 th~ L:.S. 10o'/ ln1t'r.'1l'"'lnl! nnw ("a 11 MOLD MACH OPR.S. ,,,,, 111 pr1n•·1p:i1 t1t11·~. A r my O pp o r tuni!ir~. Inquire in penon p ROFl'.::-\SIO:->AL srr-·k'f"i r.r,...116'.!, f flSLa. ~1esa __ Inca Pl•stics :o;1ni:c 1!128. l'nllm1tcd ('>.1rn· 1-* Streak On In! 32972 Calle Pc11<><'1o u1r:-pntrnt1aL , ~ . t. l~kk San J """ ea,,,,-,,, Call 5.'JG-1100 C\I · ,,,. ~·li " ('('prrr; ~ Ae,_. '8 -'" I . h I LI/ Hrindrl"!'; 1\i::1•nry : . n . Equ.11 Oppor. Emplo)'t'r {!~ Tffi.-/1\2(), Ana t'ini 40'.lO Bir .. h St.. Suuc 10.1 ' ~ •............................ 1 }'nr Appo!nfml'nt I ' !I 1 .,.,., ,.,., I 2i0b J!,,rhor HI. Sune .'1.l"i ·• t'\l'Jl'lfl r:ic l. ,, .• .-lll.•i l Cfl1t h ;ill ".v•" ~·11h '"·In PRODUCTION -CMt;t 1'l~·sa I Dia l A Job 833-0885 , ,. IOfl" ,,,,,.,,,, b1trk11 Th~ CONTROL CLERK / EXPEDITER High math aptitude f't'(fUire-l Scht'dulinJ.: & r oHnw-up. Able to rt"arl blueprints & type 40 \\'.p.n1_ Call For Appt lnduMrial ~l.'lr1011J 1714) 494-9401 TELONIC INDUSTRIES L•guna Beach Equal Oppor. Employer No Charg• To You . ..an"! SALES REP i-:s111bli~h<'rl 1!¥'.'• rt.11.IH? Tl:IANf ;Lt:S -I T ime L ife Books T£,\CllEB · • · · !OT" , •. ,,,h 1t~u11 11nd 1-mrl( 6 ~Ill \ I· bl, ,1 .. ~·'"" l'T'f'·."'-hool '""· nnl,v llr-. •"1'"111 .. l lu~:hni,:h! ••lfrr! nu 1-us 011.'i' va1 .1 t "-'' ,,.., ,,.. ,. I tr1p~ CP• lwl 11f S)n1hf'lt<l lmmffl. Perm. Full ''' 7:45 In l • s•ih<.lltuttnn ~ 1lf. -f1T • 1 7 "l••·m··· •.• ,,rn ,, mu~'-il.\ II 0\"t'r "i r111ys :>36-3Y.~ Mic... ttl'-"/. '~fl"r1 ;."1•11\. 'lll!t'rn ·114\ • ~" ,,, '"''"" .,... I \l"~··< ~11.I"~ 1\-1.\, L1uJrl•JC 4, vou ~·ant. Star1 at a base 962-742'..! ~.ti per hr. l'ao. taslk. al~ 1 -TE-.. -L-!:_P_H_O_N_>~: -.. ~"~-~1AN JJ!I SIS nf :i bt't1tllllul ;,2.111), ).~11;!\"T\' nrt '"""NT-4 ph ( 1 w('('k "·11n:lrrillr .c;.111' 11\1~ l" • •.. • ..,, .. , ., m<~ e_re or M!MOUI< m1111 • \\"IRE:-OI A .. '11 ""~v pl'ln(•rss RS 11 drr'"" rw .for C'ach p;it11m • :'l<id .. 1 l'{t, po~1!1\"I', fun lov\ng ~ i llnimum .! y t' a r s f''C-JUn.lJll.'f, M<w °""· hi•i, ra:hl I ('l:n i.~ fnr 11;11·h 1111t1ern lf'I plf'. •Acr:r;s rrorn OJ .. I Ptril'n1·r. Coo<I snlnry. rap1rl up tr> nine •lllll'rcni vi·r,1,.,11,. A1_r :>.tail .1n1I Sp<'l·11d H,,,... ,\1rpor11 t or fn(ln·~0111 f•, & 11rlv11nct'n1('rit,1•xt~ll en l Pnn!t>d l'ril!f'rn 9111 II.il l dl1n1c oth1·r1\1'ol' th11'tl-rl.1~· pi•rson_!l_!_nt41rvw. l(;.,-8(f.lfl; t)f'nelitl't. plul't. ;o;rw,· In-Sl?J'S l:l'o.:. 1 1 1 ~, 16 1,, J)('J. d"li\•l.'r~ w111 to.kc_ I ~'' ~.\LJ-.:s. leading gift ~hop "n I ll'r.il'1dn~ ,.\ R \fY Op-wi2 , 22•, i\lis.'if'!!' StL{'~ 1r1, 11•~·k~ "r 1n•1rC'. :;rnit i·f !h« bt>Rch need~ 111:11t1rr, ! por1unltles. &r~116.1. Co't>l.1 12. 11. 16. Jll. ,~!1t"'. l!i,l<'lk_s. 1h_e D•\IL'.,t rrh:1hlc lnrflv. v.·/r'l:rPr 111 l\lcsa. ~t.\'t:~,., •• ,.,".,; n :ST!-' f ll..C.l f , l!r.L_.~ !\1-e.l_lt•('r11h 1 ,,th·'I. bnn1t>fl op t'rl in L: • I fnr ,,11,,h p;iu.•rn _ ;irld 21 fJrr1 • B11\. lh.,, <~Id Chl"l_•,.:11 Snlan· I{) $.1. hr. C.•ll TEMPO'S j t'••nt. fnr ,.11,~h p .. !t•·rn tnr Sth11on. '\1•v. 'fnrk. I'.'. 6i:J>-MI, 1 ,\If .\lotl ,,0.1 ~J)l;'f'lit! 11.-.nr!-l~l!.0\>nn1 :\11.1nr, \ddr1'"'• ' ' \l-R'·"SS '" ' [ I 11110! Olh•'l'IAl<i(' lhlrd·rl: "" Z1p. I tt1trni 'l.IHJll'·r, t-IArl.,n :-0\J<rlln, rh~ DAILY llY'f' !'ln~. ""'· t s~~·~~~:~~:~t.C~!~li 0·1al-A-Jobl. II ~~;ryor "'~o;a11Sc~ <",~~"'",":,1J i~;f't.~;~ t~""2!. u ,. PILOT. ~ 12. r•nttem Dept., (11 .. taot 'l"rriu nr ~k. =====::==== * SECRETARIES TE)rPO offrr:i; n trul) niq~ ~rz \\rst L~th St .. 1'~1A' Ha!t1r, . 1.1111')' koor,.. pot· * RECEPTIONISTS &. time .sa\'lng opp>"'rtunl >I ''ork, ~.i 10011. pr: n 1' teni~ Sl.00~ REAL ESTATE SALESPERSON Bt'6.rh location often: b I ~ ~nellts. ID 10, Pd In~ .. N" 5"~ oU, list & M!ll T .0 Jl.B. 7".V !\lull1f!I". Cnll: Bill Comstock i\l tlny Other PosiUcm~ fur ~illrrl ' ' SA ll[, ADORE.& "llh 1 ln.,lant ( rorhl"l ~k A\'f&,l!\blt' KEYPUNCH ZTI'. ~l7,t; nnd STYl,t: l A'Am hy 11lctul"!:s. Par. Beach ,\rea F;I Toro SECRETARIES sl'l1Rt"H trm• $1 CWl NIGUEL \\'ho v.·n111 1,ii:;nil!l'd k -~f.:E • ~tORE Q u \ <' k t"n•n11lr1r 1n,..1111t1I 0111 '""'" P ersonnel Agency I AtJmu!attut: k•n~ 11r shr>n Faot,,trin~ 11nd C'hon'lt> n"'lt" • r'IOI"' 1hRn 100 itlfl~ ll"nn rt"5t~m<·n!~ f{'I\ r 111<11-n fn"r From '1'1f Slf'l 276~ forbr!I Rtl. ltll)~. C'OUPlC' l\l't'ks nr fr11 ~11r1n·· ·rnr•rr l 'ui"["I ~·or1111lrt~ Allh•n 80111.: .. LAguna J\ig"Ut'I mondi" . you d idl.'' No·\ •1 ~• ' OnlY 50<-. S (I 831.1477 \O'I •'lln. , , 1\IIT,,\"T i;:t,\VINC: W'lfl'\ 'I\ -1111 · Rn1t,Roo1'• ~11- APPL Y BY PHONE , s('w irx!11:.. v.·t!\r tfl•1111rr"\' n" I. •I 11: I the .\ti::;h1111" SEC'Y /BOOKKEEPER (';1j[ ;-.10-4--IY"r & '"'1 u11 k1i<1~· S\. ~r\ 'T ~~•II ll"ul> 1 • Hi p,illt•ln<t. To11 noft·h C11I l•'rh'ls; nr~ · 1 wh1l your !ikll!<t art' :'\•1 11 ·1_ , •11, 1't1 fl'lr I l{irl of\', Exf)f'r. n('t-d 10 Mmt> 1n llf'f'Vll\illi) r:i ' • 11 '-""' \ ,,.,.., '"' t ullt r~t : .. 11214 co,\ST lr\\"'I req'd In l\kkp~ t:yplnit. h. unltl 1v4, haVI" thC' •ju.tr ;:hi' :~,.t•l"1 r1111 '· C"'51.a ~lesii. 11141 b-12-!IOllO. 1 ~roi ff1r >•'u' ~· 11 \I' 110 1hi> :.h•r1 714. 846-1354 & 213: &!J'J-2815 t• , E"' T TF\ITV' l)••UI~ '·, 't111111 '• 11 !tL ! •n r!11,sif1J>;\, ~hlpl 1111ve M>melhlni;: you want ''1 '\' :•:J-J'l Ar ~ ... A ry H elp w tw-11.;rlri I f'..llh in .. ·,1 _ tu si1..;n 0 n .. 1iu1',;;' ii-0--7-(iifl ""'""'""'""'""'""'""""~'I aell~ CIU!lfled arl& rlo llf Tempo Tempor• CLASS SELLS -642.--5671 wt>ll -l"nll NO\\f &t2-567S. 1 wwwu il t.Pt _.~~,,....-"', • ' • • •' • 28 DA1LY PU.OT Monday, Marti! 25, lfl74 ---:':":o:-:"::::,---r.,-,~-,.,-,...---===-:-;;r.::r--.... 1 l'i;~!';:um=':,_"'··--=Fur.:..:S.C::::_tlona---cl :",..,"'. '1"':.=no=-11"'0=,,o:: •• :::c. c.:::;-''..12ii'6 r.~=A~;,-:-,,E .... :r.::'.-:=::-.. -.. -.h'. 7:6"".,,"I 1 "4-Wh;;;::::.~n:oD;;:~;.:~·~:::--T -;;;96rn1 :-;'1Ar:-:9"1'::::·2·:-;· ui'hMCJF:::lO_R_D--;990A;;;GniR::iu1o1A=N.•ul.:sec1T:r_-o -R· --, .N·-~liiilo_11 --,,v-4o_VL_Olv_ovo--~1-97~ FORD GRAN TOR I N"°o Gold llotpolnt Frlgldall"I' PIANOS -ORGANS v«tio IO\'t.'d n"M! ro1 n1arr1rd 4 "'hctl drh•e, power rtLtk & _ SGS. new Gaffel'li Sauk-r New & Used. Cr@at lt.tkcUo.n. & dot>8tt'I wa:nt 1n" bta:kn, V-8, po1ltrac:Uon. cont. clct.nlfli oven w/clock Compct11lvr: pMcts. Opton "nymutt. rm in l'xttll~nl roll ba.r, tint.rd glllAS, aux· 6 PASSENGER STATION WAGON S.it Deal Anywherel t 6 PASSENGER STATION WAGON a •uto timtr $150, E"· Eves. il Sund11yt, Thi: be.!Jt ~h.'IX' & n-1ldy to give my ilary gu.tank. very Rood 351 cld , V8 Engine LEASE OR SSl cid, V8 Engioe :--. pens1Vf' Kine bed. compll'te deals 11.tt a1wa)'l 11t: neKt lnvc·r the bHt yP11ni of t.-ondiUon. $21i0. 893--&160 • Cruis e-O.f\.1atJc Transmission IUY I Cruls~O-?tlallc Transmission w/headboard S200. Red Wallichs Mulic City my life for only $3,.i9.:t. I'm T k 962 Power Steering All Modefsl Power Steenn· g w/w nylon pUe cru1, 1t 18 fl. CI 11s1 pa r rue .1 OVERSEAS DELIVERY ~rds, $200, ml11e. 645-~49 South CO.St PlAu 541).2S30 Sun!Jncr, 110. 120 ur•. OMC ---------Power Brakes, Disc Front Ds,EAPECNllWls Power Brakes, Disc Front BED, King Size, new. comp!. ==~~;:::::::;:::: eng. c.11 G-14-1813 till 5. '67 E L CM.ttNO. Sharp. •I Power Tdallgate WiDdow Power Tailgate \Vlndow still p&l'kaged. XI" f1r1n, co N T t N u o us }>"REE 18' !/(), \\'"s t t' n er, llJl'l't.-'<l \Nut-m'IL'\.U:ln, radio, AM Ra io AM Radio $165. (\Vorth S350J. lnl'. ORGAN CLASSl:S roR f.1n-cruilu·r. Deep v. full ht'att·r, n1uJ1t 111.....i: ..-drtv.. Air Conditioner Air Conditioner <k>ll\_'t'f')'. UaulL!ly home. ADULTS. Every Tul'sday l"'IUpt, t1·1r. 5ki11, nnchon. tox 19•340PPrt-.$~1:::,0~••50nM.-t. Color-~ledium Blue VOLVO Cclor-A1edium Blue-S:i2-Z.188 'l':30pn1. St1trt any \\'1'f'k. t'tc. 1''inn $2000. IW~ or ( u"' J.IN N & License-118ESO Uctnse-117ESD *" LOVESEAT & i;ot:i, To1n Oi~tcrich in chru·)ie. 644-8320 OON LINCOLN MERCURY, ~~~11:"1~~::~ u!-d.v"Zun~;~ ~~~~~r~1~~d .eo:t1a =: $~~· 8}6~~~~."1~r;1, 1~t~~ ~~qi ~~. Bl\11., Q>lltn $1 ,595.00 ~~~~~.rd. &16·: 1 $1 ,695.0I hm 968-7910. &~2·2851 '"""''n flllhlns:. 2100 Bi1ysid1· ·n roRD COURIER See at Em~loye Parkin~lot, DAILY PILOT~. See at Em"p!oye Rarklng lot, DAILY PILOT, ~~~~~~!!'"""""'I 7.000 1nl, au10 trans, mag "'' UNIVERSAL M d ANTIQUE \\'OOl.I h urn I 11 i:: :;; Dr .. 67~7:\. \vhls. 5 ill'w tlrei. tinted 330 West ay Street, sta Mesa , Monday· 330 West Say Street, Costa ?l-1esa, on ay s1ovl'. Con111. rrs101~"<1 S223. TVSt!!:10• HiFi, 136 1.8' CLASSIC cc n tu r y glas5, It &. It Panct('(f through J<"riday. Call 642-4321 , ask for ~1rs. through Friday. Call 642-4321, ask for Mrs. IO\I• lan1p 1111. S;\2. &IZ-9083. ·-------1iunabour. EKct>I. oond.. 1:11n1per wl dual inside Greenman. AUTO SALES Greenman. DAVl!:NPORT & 1111Hl'h111g ZENITH. P.CA & SYLVANIA S.1.000. 3111-376:'1 11ft G Jighl~ & cabovrr +slorage . chair. l\'Ory l'ulurt•(I nau~. h•h.'l'i!ions & strt'('()i;, Pi·icC'd Boati, Rent/Chart'r 908 ruhi!M't. "l'4 t11g!!. Private Autos, Imported 970 I Autos, Imported 970 2026 HAllOI k"VD. Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, UHd S.1.i-~lovi11b . 5'UL2tit7 ll'>L~ !l\fui ihe discountrrs pttrty. $28j(). See al 2:Xi E. COSTA MESA -..,.--------1 G:.-,-.-,.~s~.-,.---8=12 ' """ 3 ,., pl<ture tube 1 ,, 42' NF.W Chri•. Cmh l~h ;S~t"'",;c:::·M~. ~---CAPRI .MERCEDES BENZ• E-Z TERMS CONTINENTAL " MERCURY 990 11;.1111 & SC'tvice. 19" ,r,, Ftv.Brltb~e Spo11 Fish<'rrn11n 73 ss El CAP.UNO. Air, ---------e NEW IN STATE? • OK:/-..:...:...:.:..;...:_ __ _ lnn{{'r color sets ar~ 1,lui.h. full l'IN'tron1a;, full ! 11000 ml. Auto, Alll·Fl>I. '72 CAPRI. :::xi. V-6, Lt. f.f-B '73, 450SL. Beaut. But· e NEW ON JOB?. OK '72 CON'l'INENTAI;-).fARK GOOD SELECTION of LO\V (;ARAGE Salf'· llnu!IC'hl•ld llen1s, clolhin~ S"l l 12. ~k1 boot!, mini b1k1• & u11M:. itcm1. 1937 Port Onri1li:r, N B. Yt'ed. l\larl'h :nrh 9:1111, l Dey only. dc\ivert.>d & SC't·up. All r.nllrv. ~hf1\\'1'r, t•11·. f1 •r 1n11ny ;.;tras. Clean. (7111 Blue, A)1.FM, air co nd , ler Ve.now, aJI. eKl.ral, e BANKRUPTCY? OK IV. Thl1 beautiful car ?i-ULEAGE '73 hfERCURY niorl"li;; in · stntk & 0 n <'hllrtl'r by d1ty or \\'M"!k. 6 612-7899. spd. Decor ~up orig ov.·ner Per!f'CI cond. Orig owner, • refiecb excellent catt and MARQUIS BROUGHAMS. di,play. Cash 90 Plan or r•'()pll' 1nrt\. r1sh, c 1111M', 7'z~f-'O~R~D-P-U-.-.-1,-.,,-..,-. ~10 $.12."JO. ~2 a.ft 3 Sll.800. 64().-0(iQ), 673-6143. e DIVORCED? -OK l\aS all luxury ili!rn1. AUto. Fully luxury e;iuipped. l.Jke: 1f'1'n111 to 36 rn1Jnthl1. Call for I rockt111I, t!lr. 5.""'6-{;626 days, niilrwgj', Good l'Ofldilion ~='-"':...::==..::...__ • PAY DAY temp. air condilklnln<'. new oondiUOn. Prices start our pr1M'.~ on nny modrl. g:;:i.:::~1 1'\'l'nln~<i v.l'f'krnf!s. rnl1kr olfrr. 5.l7·5"AA. DATSUN MG PAYMENTS . OK AM/FM 11ereo radio, tUI at $3975 (5138141 Johrulon &. ARC Cnlor TV. 19D4 Ii Boats Sail 909 * llleering wheel, 4 brand ,_, Son Lincoln lltercury, 3i26 IU;f'RIGERATORS. , ll I \V TV's, df')l"'I', l.iu)I' dttks, mi!ICC'll . C111t :~K>-0269 Rronkhursl or !1021 All.Ania, , ' Vans 963 6T MG M.d 1275cc · '61 PQNTIAC Fi.rcslone 500 steel belted Harbor Blvd., Cnlita ~1esa JIL1nt1n1:1on Bcaeh. 968-33..?0J n t:AUTlfUL 1'.lnr. 40 l\C"ll·h . .:.,::;.;.: ______ :..:..; '69 D1\TSUN \\'ITH CA~1P· good ~ ~. 548-f)~gme radial ttres. Individual 6 ~. ~r~2-:,j.j9. ·~ lnlerest avai!afilr. V"'':-' •73 DODGE VAN. 13·200. 127 l::R. 4 i'!pt'Cd lransmi!'illlon, LE MANS way pov."er seals. f887EAD J .:..C"-"=------.,,,~f STER.ED 8 TO,·,c •·' n •nso11;i bll'. \\'rue Classifil'rl rndio. hcetrr. ex c e 11 en I MGB IYXKOl)I $Ei275. Johnson & Son Lin-MUSTANG " r " '~ "' I N -6 D I p·1 t p 0 \i•hl OOSC". 360 V·S. Auto, lhmui.:hour v..•hh Penis Val· $488 J M 2626 H bor l.ikc l11c1ory insrallation lo A1. "· • . 111 Y 1 o. · · J>/8. P/B, posi lract, air, 1 C , k & con ercury. ar --------- your dw;h? Cnr dealers Box IJ60. C,.,sta ~1esa, 92626 Ai\l/Fl\t 8 tr11ck. lJ,000 mi. cy ampcr. u>O s run!i '73 l\ICB GT C'OUPE. 4 * Blvd., Costa i\lesa 5-10-5630. •a; l\tUSTANG. Good cond. Jewelry 115 OVER~'TOCJ,EU All Jo•wc!rv •,, Pr1<·t~l C. l\I. Jew1·ir.v · 6 liJ. 7711 llke ne11·. (965$1."iVJ. $1675. .-...1 · · · charge you S4.59.9S. This RANGER 33 _ G1·rat fiun S3ffi0. ~1-2Bnl JOHNSON & SON Lincoln s"'""" 1t'B.nsm11s10D, air con-'68 CHEVY IMPALA 'TO CONTINENTAL, 4 DR. Kuris great. l\1W1t l>eiJ . 11·{•ek S200 lns1alled with 2 rruil;er 01• racer. Full.• .:..c~-."~l -Cl-.~~-~-V-"•-,.-dit ioninx • .Af.1/FM l"lldio, etc. tYSY<041 LUXURIOUSLY equipp<d 6:»-49'j() days, 673-'6288 eves M iscellaneous 818 _, C .,. -.i:;.v • " illel'cury, 2626 llcu·hor lllvd., 11-HPD Thi · · \\'l:tzan1 one JO ounce ('(I-.'. &1·l-J662 ;ift 5 or Good · !600 "v I s car JS in $488 with faclO..., a Ir con· & wkend3. •::: .. , w running.. · Costa f\lt'sa 5-10.56.10. II di · Ll ., --~---spcakel"!I. *"·no monlrny. ,1,k<'nds. Call 642-3474 ei.:<·e ent con t1on. ke dlt!oning, full power , .69 f.tACli J. \Vhite, air, USA STEREO -"=""===~--WILL BUY YOUR new See and drive this AM-FM stereo. Extra 179 Eas! 17th St, C.M. LEHMAN 12, Autos Wanted 968 DATSUN, TOYOTA beau1y .1oday. JOliNSON & ****** * ···j clean, sec and buy 10<\ay pfs, disc br~. clean, 1 \'rOtXI, u~t furnhurt' .t· &1~U42 x lnt cond OR VOLKSWAGEN SON Lincoln Mercury, 2626 ! it f288ASHI $2475 John!IOll & ownr. 15 mpg, Priced to a11plinnr1-s or 11·111 ~·II fnr vl'lu 3721 So Bristol 12 B!kli No of 673·5Fo0!! WE NEED YOUR Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa 1938 PACKARD i Son Lincoln ?i-fercurf, 26$ sell. MG-4950. att_ti_. ~- I BUY!! MASTERS AUCTION o ... ,h c t Pl ) PAID FOR OR NOT. \\'IU. C.AJ\5630 '67 FASTBA~· 6 cyl .• auto, ...,... OO!I n1.a. 5,\llJ30'T, '· f.la11, 14' L TO 00 R C LL .......,. . TL Harbor, C.OSta M~sa , ~·.., ;,.·J6..-04:m " CADIL AC PAY P LLA · A , .. ;, c., w., o.., 540-5630 vinyl top, R/H, 17 !t!PG, ~ or 833-9625 trlr. lnl·lrlrd, J..'OOd Mn<l., KENT ALLEN , 540-0442. OPEL U1.d l y "lo9•tt' t .:o:::::::::c·------Must .sell ., 346-iall a ft 6 or S:.uwlriy. S1'1':P.EO rablnct: AM/f~I $600 or I.lest o[r, 8·17-9889 aft Sharp, clean late model can. In Th• "D••dEnd Kidi" DODGE ---• -~~-8J9..fl'J71 -r:w..o and rumta ble. Earl y 3 l'aidforor Not. 240Z ,'72, 4 spd. air, 2.;,000 1967AIUSTANG6cy'l.Green. nr a-:r. . Anu•rican style S75. Slah -"'-~~=~=~= J\!lk For Chuck Trapp mi., \Vhltc/Rcd, oo exotic '7G OPEL GT 45,000 miles. $10 000 00 Good oondition. PH: 6T.r 1969, 18' J n b rd Io u t b r d ben('h coll.:oe table $5. Large BOAT THAILJ:."'R FOR LIDO Used Car M~r gear, flsklng just $4,200. XJnt cond nu clutch,~~b. • ' • .i;iit or 675--0141 5~~~pur& $1~::1;., ~;$~;,. of2 n1oill'm piclUTC' S25. 842-3825. ~~6~~~~~J ND IT Io N 4~1-7614 ~ ~~~s. ~HJ:Q/or * * * * * * * * *' '6;/~~~~sk~~· s: Ch. · I I I TE:AC Dolby noL'il' -• .. otion NAIEIS CADILLAC '72 1 ~ DATSUN PU. 27 nipg, OLDSMOBILE 1varr1 c in rs, r on, •~...... Boats, Slips/ Dockl 910 ·'lo-lmmac. 1 0\\'nt>r. $2450. Call PEUGEOT '69 DODGE POLARA scatter "hielct, po5l·~ar e~. lealher & bras.~. $175. e11. uniL AN":60. Great for ~ ... ...,Blvd. sn.:mo I t77AC PI hl'aders, dual potnt d1sl . --------- 84:i-li679. <'a.~selll' pl nyer. 6 mos old. 20 FT. boat i11ip avail. at c..te-M0-91 S3:i0. '71 TORONAOO \18, Juli \V OOD \VORKING tC'itC:hl'r I\C'\\' $110, Sell Si5. &16-5625. $2.:JO per It. Oinghy spaN' '73 :!40XZ. Grttn, Ian ln1rr. NEW PEUGEOT $488 e ;)14.3417 e po~·er, factory air con· will do custom \\'Oodwork. $10: s1nall ~allboat space S2 TOP DOLLAR PAID 4~~1,nr ~~i.i90~'0ndition. DEALER '62 PO.NTIAC '65 DODGE DART GT, 6 t.."Yl. ditiooing, 6 "'ay po1o1't!r seat, c:abln€!ts, boo k c a s,. s , flt'r f1 · 979--0288 IMMEDIATE Ly $3.."JO. Call 842-43..?7 after 6: 30 ~t-~~ .. 1""'°1 II '1 landa~~P· ~!~~ Steve, ~7141. ---'-'"_''_'_'_" _ __,J[I . Boats, Speed & Ski 911 ~~ ;~~~~~\~N~~ ·~fk;1~~~oo~~~: cp;,mA~C~~:Slf;-1l,Cs~~ andM,~Opl~TY·O"'R· '$1'8'8 .~~'00RGER ~. PSIPB. ~~·U~~~a,~;J~=.u~ f1NE QUALITY PERSIAN · '69 SEA FLITE TMllull l«l * air, Mw radials, excellent Son, Lincoln f.1ercury, a;26 RUGS. 3 Li nu, 2 Times, $2.00 1/0, t.arsoii Trailel', 17 ft. ·1~ DATSUN \Vagon, all ex· IMPORTS fllll ClllDIT CHICK l'Ond . $1 750. 531·1633 Harbor, Costa Me a a ' Akhavl Oriental Rugs. $2.850. 5-10--0Jli2. lr8s., !Im ml., Paid S5250., 556 7573 >l<h\630 814 Nf.,~J ~~~M l:Uvd TO good home Dobrrmun '!'!'!'!'!'!'!'!'!'!'!~~ &ll $4250. 671>-&')46 PEUGEOT /SUBARU ~ FORD ~-·-.. -.~..,.-.-""---I,.,,==''='-=:'-"::...,~.~ n1ix. Cood hse dog, yard &" r 1557 w. Lincoln Ave., AMC OLUSMU81LE KENMORE auto. Se1ving childs dog. Has all shots. If•) 3100 W C H N B JENSEN Anaheim 5.13-8220 1972 FORD GMC TRUCKS Mac:h. In cabinet, ,11,, Hoover 1 546-70.19. Trll'llpOft•tiOlt · oast "'Y" · · PORSCHE portable v.•asher. 2·12 t~lower ==--~--~-'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~m 642-9405 JENSEN '69 RAfl1B. Wgn. Very good COUNTRY SEDAN HvNDA CARS lfu-orl, C.M. Ff(EE to you. Suod>y. 2 yr. I ~T~O~P~C~A~S~H~~$~$~$ INTERCEPTOR -oond. G" "'"'· •Uoh<lln WAGON UNI ~""'-1'1'" OLDS Fem. Lab. Retr. All shots, '68, 911 SpottamaUc 4spd, lites. $950. 6~. VS "'"' .-.. n... I HYBRTD..Wonns. beds, 4' K Kint w.child. 549--0866 A ircraft 915 Jmld for used AMC or Jl'eps La~e Selection rbll e-ngine, new tires & ,73 GRE'lLIN X 1 e.'6.ne . ~ HarbOr Blvd. 8' $150 Johns Bait farm ol Colors Int "'b. Ta deck Kint :• • ~ul Y load· Crulseomallc. transmission Costa A1ei>a "-'"·""- 'Vista Calif, 92os.J Box 1U4; \~~uNTt .~o. m','°1,m,',,.'° •. ',u"'st a~~ Hot Air Balloon t1uh Now 12/f";I lmmedlare Dell\•ery ~nd 4.r;:., .,.,.,.,pe • ed. runs excel. slight body POll·er steering """ - phone 'rai-5TI9 k~pl i~~ide :t49-llW6" "" romilng So. Cali f. New ls:l litl/$[/ •J9WQIJ F"ULL SERVICE .. v • ~ dainage 557-6693 aft l pm Power brakl'S OIL I t . . clf1SS equip. only. Pl'oless. AMC/JEEP DEPARTl\1.ENT '72 911S Targa looded & low BARRACUDA Air conditioning pa n 1 n g s · orig. >"REE puppy 10 good horn•. m·1-Wiii trado Can I•··· Seascapes Jan tis training. {TI41612-3545. 1 ~· · .......;.,.. AM radio PINTO • i; 8 pe 5 • 7· mo 1nale, l\1ixed breed, I 1969 Har bor Blvrl. C.?11. 831-rotO Dir. Po window abstracts, etc. Com n1 . StT-492S. Cycles, Bikes j \VE tnJY ·70 BARRACUDA 318. 5JK v."er rear SJT9;i e 12 PINTO Runabout. Xlt1l l'Ond. J ust over 18,000 mi, 23 mpg, Auto, niust sell. Only $16.AJ. 4:b-l.9'.6. eves, J\1orn. 644-24-12 536-5811 Scooters 925 L\£PORTED AtTI'OS RENAULT mi. llD suspcn~lon, 3·~pd. &e at DAJLY PILOT Em· ORGANZ..\ \\'edd1ng gov.·n. ---------BEST PRICES PAID! 61\fus~ sell. Best o l fer . ploye P1trking Lot, P.1onday gorgeoous; size 1()..12 $65. I ~ '12 SUZUKI, !IO Rovl'r, sm. D L • I '72 RENAULT, A/C, R&H . 73-5388. through Friday, 33ll \Vest Selmer Alto Sax $400. Pho~ Ptts and Supplisl I °LI ·n HONDA. SL125, $250., ean ew1s mports 3100 \V. Coru;I H"''Y·• N.B. auto, dlx trim. Below. evg CADILLAC a ft .. Stuel, Costa Mesa. mornings 8.1.1-1839. r\ '65 YAMAHA, 250, .. $100. ~66 Hwbor, C.M. 646-93o:: '42·9405 mi's. 25 +P.t?G. 833.-9300 or UGJ ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim· mii "'2 """'~ 4"" ....,..., ask for Bob "--642-4321, Ask for ?-trs. Green· ,.,., PORTABLE Color TV, .,., . .,JUJ CASH FOR ~ '-' .... ,. PL:-=cY""M=o =UT=H-o- ~ nell. '68 CADILLAC SEDAN DE .m::•;:n:O.. ~==-===-$lfi0, King bro $98. dbl bed 1974 HONDA f.IT 2 5 o YOUR CAR MAZDA -•~ AU Pool Pall, Ganeral 850 ·~ -SAAB VILLE Luxurlowlly eq,;-'71 FORD PINTO 1972 PL..Y~O)JTH CUST~ S 11Uf{!>AN S~ATION AGONS .....,, near new, Elsloore Orig 9R miles, xlnt ......-•u•v " tabl .... $!ll 842--0406 ""' with faclory air rond. . ~T~· model GE lrosttree t~~uf~tyc!'~t Pr;!;~ 2717' $Tia or ~t ofr, 645-Autos, Imported 970 5~9~D~ew --SM--8-S_U_B_A_R_U __ I ~~~!pow,!~=" to~~ 4 speed tranmtlssion, radio, ~~g$50. n,oo,l.l)S8i~~~!1S t,•,,n, D.H.L."1 ,2.so.1 iD~~ore ~: '72 CZ MX. trkkcdl heln\el, RENAULT (ZLK967). $1175. Take ad· heater, cuslom exterior. 5 to choose from All equipped with: ..,.... · · -..r"""'° e :i4T~39TI 1418 E. Wil shit'(', hoots, leathers, all ike new. ALFA ROMEO Rotary En9ine FRONT WHEEL DRIVE vantage today. Johnson 1r: {322COZl. 6pm. SA '"'"'" Pickup HEADQUARTERS Soo, Lll>COIO Mercury, 2626 $1577 V8 engines Automatic transmissions Yower steering 12' SUDJNG i;:las~ door. In D 854 .71 ~1 Tl\t '100 Suzuki Savage. 'fill ALFA lt0t.1EO Behlna.~. Dick Miller Motors llarlxlr, COfi.!a !ll e:1-t, good shape. $.'ii. ogs $'195. ~31~~~j~ from. Hurry~ a -New & U!!ed Imports 5'1G-5630,".-~----I J'Owel' b1vukes ~~~0712 Evenings 673-39!}8 'BtJ. 120 \V. Warner at So. Mflln 15 t.1PG, '73 Coupe De Ville, ;o l • STEAl\1 CLEAN your • PUPPY WORLD• 7JO cc KA\VASAKI 191'2 fl / Stt nt&. Ana 557·21:32 Green \\.'/white landau top, -ft•t1 "'"'' carpel. Cal.I for rree Chihuahua'!, Tiny Poodles, ~1JNT CONDITION AUDl uqJ TOYOTA ~.17 ~~,:.ss. 12,IXXI mi, $5.195. wn.TOYO-TAUI AM radius Air l'Ondllioning .t 'O\v~1· rear wu1dow Other eKlrM on some }'riced at or be1ow \\Jiolesalc Bluebook m imafe. 54&--57·15 Great Dane, Pit Bulls, Hull 5'lS-2:)~9 ..., ....,.,,,., Terrier, SL Ben1al'd, Cocka----~~~---'i 2 AU'DI 4 door, xlnl cond, 2001 E. First St . Santa Ana Miw:eRaneovs poo, J11.panese Span .. Labs., CZ 250 Enclum. Brand new. 10 ni\I('!, $3600. ___ _,55&-,,-'-""""'------I '73 CAD SedRn DeVille. All Wanted 820 Shephf'rd. 100 MI x l!: D must Sl'JI. $800. 551·3425. "i'2 RX·2, Radiofhceter, air, '74 TOYOTA Recess. 5.oco ml, $4960. 1966 Harbor, C.t.t. 646-9303 $1J9.i to ~1795 PUPS!! Slud Sen•it-e !\lost Call &16-MO!l blichelin fiI'l's. Good cond. firm. 642-9mJ~2065. T9n FORD ENT 'T'raller "'anted! Rent Breeds. Open Eves. 531·5027. 1973 SUZUKI 1i;1-,,--G~T~2~.500-·;~:u~:,~oxc}i1·0Xls.i~i-il $2'200/olter. ~·8128. Best Deal Anywhere! CHEVROLET COUNTRY SEDAN Stt a l l)Albi PILOT Em· p1oyt' , .. at.wig Lot, P.1onday .. u\.li.g,1 1· 1· • ...,y, ..lil \~est Hay :>treet, L'.ot!ta ~1esa. &11-432:1, As.k for twtrs. Green· for family vacalK>n. \Viii OOG OBEDTENCE CLAS.<; mi. all xtras. $600, or ,bf6t Private Party. LEASE OR TRADE need for l Wtt'k, July Blh or TO Start Wed, April 3rc1 offer. 53.l-7fi00 or 9~2376. -'-'="'-"-="'----MERCEDES BENZ Brand New '7 4 MONTE CARLO 10 passenger Station \Vagon 400 cid, VS engine July 15th. Call 968-19n, ask in the Neo4'J>Ort/Izv!ne area. ·71 \'A:\IAllA 250 ~IX, nsking BMW All Model1l .-0107'' =.u.2,,.,.'"'· ~--.,-1 ·Call 54&-4!1l8 -mi. xlot "'"" 50 USED DEAN LEWIS Power Steering Power Brakes, Disc Front n1an. Llntittd offer! ONLY Air Conditioner \VANTED: Gas dryers, "'Ork· JRJSll Setter Ah'.C puppil'5, 9 ___ Ca_l_l _5:_<&_952_4 ___ ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ing or,'.'°t~nable. ~~~"iS~d. Have s~ts. Call Mobile Homes 935 .,._ Dt&Lll '" MERCEDES TOYOTA LIGHT TABLE & 3 Tloy Toy POO<ll" 8 •"-' MDBI LE HOME BAVARIAN ON DISPLAY $3599 Al\I Radio ., Powu Tailgate Window Ser . NO. ~181 Ucense 767 ELU '12 PLYMOUTH Du 1 t er. Unusually clean, only lS,000 miles, VII, air oood., power steermg, poYo"er b ra k es, radio, heater, landau top. l~EXXJ. Excel l ent eamorny and performance ~'"· ~ and ur1ve toc..ay~ Joh1190n & Son, Unc:oln ?i-fereury, 2626 Ii arbor, Costa Mcsa. 540-5630. VACUUl\ol PLAT!:: BURNER old, AKC, Also oJckr. Baby FOR SALE: M & f * 870-45&1 * I chieks for Easter! 5.16-122·1. SILVERCREST OT '' \\'ANTED: Telephoto 7..ooni J)i\C.11SllUNDS, AKC Olam11 MOBILE HOME ~ len.'I for Canon Can1era I hloorl line 2 1na!es red OR S Rca~Ablf' 67'.1-(16!:() li·li.;;;~ ' ' . 20' X 5.'\', 2 BO 2 BA, carp., \\' NTED t Id draped, hlt·illS., rt'fl'ig., Ai to lUY o l'I'" gmis. GOLDEN Rt"trirvers. putt washer & ('lC<"t. dryl"I', \\'ired P~en~ call I !11'C,•d, 6 \\"k/old, ~·l/f. $7:. for 2'20 air l'O n1L, kitch. New '73 Bavarias 548-9617 to $50. :i..J&.l.!82 l'l ot.'k, storttg(' i<ht'fl. lanrl· at HUGE SAVINGS! WANTED 13 01· 11 Valeo or sco ped pati.1. Three yr.i. old Cregor Boat. Iteasonal>le Horses 856 • like nu. Located in ne\\' XL.NT r RE·O\\'NED Cnll ~3fi..0~. ndult pk. awtr.y fron1 noi~y Bfl.1\V ':;: RED Dun Mare, S:?T;'i, Et. One-hall hJ. 1!"0111 <"lu ll-e '66 1800 Tl • 4 s)'.l('('d \Vt:!stl'111 saddle, $150., housr. Hect to $12,9;iQ. CHJI • '70 mn. lo niiles 5.i7-9359 J<;\'"ES. 713.69-1-4600, 697-71:..:l. e '71 ~'800 CSA. sun roof Musical Instruments 821 GER~AN Violin, \\'rll sea· soned Tone • J::"ccltf'nl rond ho\\' & case included. sm. 64<hll014 CAN BE SEEN AT: • '7:!J.OCSA·lo 1niles I~ CRESTMONT ESTATES 1051 Site Dr., Brea. (Central t.ve. arl'f"lss from Bt~n :l yr. or 50,000 n1ile '"arranty nvailable on i1ll ne1v 197;\ & '73 Bt.l\V's. GIBSON SG Special GuHar, 1 )T old. l\hiroon, lnr;t action. $2'T.1 or orler. &~1-57:1.6 Comm. Hosp.) Lot #•l6 OPEN SUNDAYS SCRAM-LETS ~~~~~~:~:·PK. MGR,, r~.._.,~,......,..,--~, Boats, Gener•I 900 O ffice Furniture/ Equip. 824 OKS. $15 up E.11:ec s"vl c;hrs ANSWERS Sale/Rent 940 ~ S15/25, Secy chrs $SIU, lrr.lpcJRts. fDc. ""'"' R67 w. 19, CM. * RENTALS * "&t°"Z.'""'3408~~----= I Easily -Hedl'(e -Piker -All bran.ls • 23-26' i\1M's , 18- Pi•nos/Organ' 826 Clothe -LIGHTS Zl' l\.llni's, \'11n ronvl'r 's. ---~~---l\ty bartender hns CT(!all'd ''Fully ('Quipped. air. \'ery • PIANOS nn "~~nl'rgy Cri~is Cocktail." rlenn." /\'ow nerrpllng latl' • ORGANS Tuo ot 'l"nl and the LIGHTS model <'Onsignml'nls. ft!') OU!. DAie'!! P.1.H. Ren!AI!! Open Nights 'Iii 9 e SKIPPER e Snnta Allll, &18-0!HJO Sat: 'til 5:30, Sun. 12·5 Ncl'ds 11 boat. 1~ exp. incl. 1973 27' W l N NEB AG 0 Rentals from $5 I ~leKico. Coast Gunrd pas! n1otnrhonlf'. hn.~ evervthing. lit•. Good mcch & J>mf \\'lnlrr rail's. 962-4587. 111nint. 11rcsl'ntly sijtn<'d on RE.t'\'1' TllE BESr 'i3 r:x- 2'H02 J\l argue.rite Parkway ~fission Viejo 831·2040 • 495-49-19 USE AVERY P\\Y EXIT. ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST e Pianos & Gr•nds I :i~ al1ernare Skipper on 48' erutivt' %i fl. All r:-Xtra~. All MAJOR BRANDS l (; r" n de ?1:11!. rl in re r 1-'rN> mllf's. 979-90..'JG, ;>-~ P~1 1 Spor1fiMicr. 1i6f.2 Cf11TOI. ~=~. ~fpin~t~ h'oni .... S5fl$9-~ h"\·ini·. Ca. !'t2ii64. (Tl<lt Auto Service, Parts 949 1974 BMW's v-u ron1 , ..... , •• .. • ~' ~61·6'.ll!J. Pl/1,Y('l'l<. " ••• ....... ~l --~=-----In ~tnck ready for immedlal(' Gl'llnd!I •. • ......... S39:1 • BOATS \\tANTJ-:D . JOOS CAl\L\RO t'110V. 327. dl'll\"P.ry. Exc:ellent Si\Vings NO DE::AL1'.:P.S Pl.EASE SAU or PO we r I I P :« ad· euln. Nf'etlll motor \\'l'lrk. on rtmainin2 1973 nlOdels. e O r9•n1 I !'ttni&(t. Boy Sc o u Is. MQlor <k>ne O\ll O( Ctl l'. $'."'I()() SAl.ES·SER\TICE·LEASING All MAJOR BRANDS a-IM!n'.l. firm. 543-3691. OVERSEAS DELIVERY Wurlitzer v.•.rhy ~Ne\11 $ot99 1196i 0\\'Er-.'S 28' Sedan KlnL ROY CARVER, Inc. Thomli~ · • ·. fUM°d) · .. $195 throughout Jo"\lll CM\'ll-ROLLS ROYCE Lowrey •fsym 1Ne1A•l $2695 dinghy 17000. 962--1093. Au!Mfrors.I• JIM] 234 E. r:lh St. BM\Y e FREE e 22' ALBATROS sloop $900. Costa J\1l'sa e ~ Organ Lesson• 2:1~abln ~l.w:r 4~ w trlr '74's Are Here'. FULLERTON MUSIC N " v.'Ork SiiOO. 6.JS1ll l Recreetionli\ 18191 Euclid, Fountain Volley Bolts/Marin. Vehicles 956 Immediate Delivery I 557..4836 Equip. 9041---------1 Save On R amaining '73s -~~-----C:AS T·""KS '"'"""" by CREVIER BMW l22 N. lfarbor. 1-'ulltrton 871 ·110S PRIVATF. PARTY \VANTS TO BUY PIANO fOR C\SJI. .. 5flM15 ;r 11170 ~'l'EIN\\' A Y Sq Grit.I'd RO!le"'-oori. $.tiOO. EVl'nlng:s 6T.l-39'll FUEi, TA~'l-\S.. 1\\1) l:S a111l. J\IR)Ol'wny. 't'rucks and Tcmp-o U>ng Cn.1l!K'. JH \"11ns. 8.'lll \V. ~th St ., C.f.1. Sale~ •Sen.ire • Lc1111lng 17~"x2'i" Ion~. $60. ,.11 , Otw-4--Whffl D rive 961 a'9 \V, 1111, S,i\, 835-3171 Iii la.I. Tri Bov.· Tank S7G Closed 4'\u111 lay!I GB•1AS:"5• inta~~~ !!,., <M'rflow. ·72' CHEVY B11tttr. C.S.T., ·I \\1E't.t.. sell Your prc111ii.:r llPflM'''"' Q,).J-ll71. wheel dnvu, 4 11rid.•1:;·n1J>R, H~I\\' fe1r you! f~Xclusl''C ;,o 11.P. John.~n. ou1bo&rd P/fi, J11ckn11111 v..• he l' 1111 . Otl4nl(i' Coo•! IU't'D buyers l!m. Ex('('l, rood., low 111'... :J\1t1ny more X1rns. auptt '"'&\ting. Call 831-20-40 tAuth. '500. ~ cond, S4X(), 496-1283. df'Altr). ' 1966 Harbor, c.~1. 646-~Z••3 Howard Ch"evrolet Excellent eo2'o:;~n '72 MERCEDES BENZ LEASE A BRAND NE\ ..... -4 MacArthur and Jamboree _j_ LUXURY 4 5 SEDAN 1 Ne\.\.....,..rt Beach See at DAILY PI L OT • TOYOTA 1200 Corolla Sl'dan &.;.0555 J::mploye Parldnr, Lot. 330 Brais the crisis, more miles for only $55.25 per nio. 36 , West Bay Stttet, Costa per gallon, design & l"ngine mos. open end lea.sc. 72 CH~OLET No Ya J\lesa, ?-londay 1 h r 0 ugh for• Jong lime O\\'ncrship, coupe. Tius exceptlonal~y Fl11day. Call 642-4321, ask classic lines, aristocratic clean ~uto has a'd.lonw.tic for ~trs. Greenman. beauty nnd safety, choose transmission, poWcr steer-1,;:""''=~C"""'"'°--,~ --- ATLAS fron1 r"·o; SS.195. Could ar· tng, factory al r con-'70 LTD BrougJ:iam. 2 dr. ran~e lease for sul U!.ble dltionlng, etc:. Drive a car Vin. tp, f~ct all', ale. filll Chryiler/ Plymouth parly C864FUOJ {473GBZJ. that is striking ln ap-pwr. Xln t cond. ;1500. pearan('e, economical and 638-5n6. Open u.wy m Sill1. ·1i.1 lu Pb-! '69 CONTINENTAL '69 TOYOTA Corona. 4 spd. safe. $1975 t 7lOETXJ 1 '·"67"L"rn='."2°'d~r7hd7tp,-,5~1°',00J=-m~i. ~~ tlarb.1r Hlvd., MARK 111 R&H, brand nel\' tires. Musi Jqhnson &. Son Llncoln eulo, All pov..·er. ne·.v tires. Costa ?.lesa Lollded, lowmJleage (\VX1'I· 5ell. $l00. dov.11 & t.o.p. of Mereury,2628Hatbor81Yd., Beaut. thru. out. $7 15. 546·1934 S69) $-12. mo. or best otter. Costa ?i-tesa, 54().663(). 846-7668 °.59~~PL~YM, iocXl -m-1-1,,.-•• -. · $2699 962-5116 a.nytlme. hfUST SftCMfice beautiful '69 '69 FORD Ranchtto, 500, 3'0 · xi new tires, nl cond. $2'J5. '73 TOYOTA Co r o1. 111 , Oiev. Impala custom RpOrt V-8, loaded, clean, $1385, ('ash, 450 N. Nwpt, npt 18 , '71 LTD Only 37,000 milt>S, fa('lory air rond., PS, PB, po~·er "'in· ~-s t733DTDI. $1695 EKcellent condition., Call roupe. Vinyl lop, busket 847-2325 01 Eves. 548--9112 SM-8167 for info. scats, fa~tory air, oon!Ole trro liIAVERICK. auto trans, --1971-P-LYMO·'u"T"'H..-- '73 CELJCA ST cpe. Auto. sh_lfr, radio. Gets good gas 250cc 6 cyl efl!:, orig owner, SATELLITE CUSTOM t . & ., 'NT nilleage. Pliccd below K~ly s•=. "c.'l.l<>M alt 6 nm. rara., air, magz ALol • blue book "'holesa.le. Phone ~ -OOIV j' 2 seat Station Wagon 8.11-2040 Dlr. 6444687 '70 FORD 1'-agon fully loaded 400 cld, VS engine VOLKSWAGEN ·72 CHEV MONTE CARLO lnolOOing gos. $13$. Toniucrute T""'minlon House of Imports LA N D Au BCONoM'lcAL ~ Electronic Ignition 523-7250 19TI SUPER Beet1e, air Safe & attraeti~. Like new 197D Forl.l F11ll'hrne. Pis, Air Conditioner cond, mag whls. 'llt'ide ovals. and e qu ipp e d with P/b, A/C. $1000. Call ~t AM Radio EXEC. CARS FOR LEASE. steering \\'hl. L i ke Ne,.•? automatic lranl., radio, 3::Jl P~t, 847-4902 Heavy Duty Suspcnlllon ';:6~~":n!.~1Y4:1°i~ ~~ stv.~·J:0~!~ ~!~· ~~~~)~·~~ LINCOLN ~~~~ck 36 JI.to lease $215.78 per nio. $2275. S37-04:Jl, 963-1519 Ing $2575 Johll.llOn It Son $1:tfS OEL -+-Tax: l.lc._Setial. '69 V\Y Sqbk;-auto •II l..lnc001 Mercury, 2626 1973--See at DAILY.. PILOT No <XH16. Take your car in ('flJ't'd for, like new.' $1596. Har!>?r, Costa Ates a. LINCOLN 't:mPloye Parking Lot, 330 trade. \Vlll arrange f in a n c I D g 540-5630. CONTINENTAL West Bay Slrttt, Costa Jim Slemons 962-2919 CHF.V. '69 Impala ss 471 t Dr T . Xln'\ cond Mesa. Monday throu g h Imports V\V Fulbnck, radio, auto, AM1rn1 ste.~ Au to. A/C. FuJJY ;d. Uhf. int~r: ~d:i~. ~~n~' uk '69, recent ma,Jor overhaul, P, S, P 'B. Kon15. Xlnt cond . vinyl roof, speed control, --~~~~~-- !301 Q1111ll good i:obOO:, xlnt cond, SHXXI. 96&-1~ · & \\'a)' P"T seats, amlbn PONTIAC ~<'ll\W'll't BeAch $1705. 556-8993 Sun or eves '67 Chev Impala. PS/PB, air rad. wfstereo tapt. Will ---------1 ENTER rn"'o~~ ARTHUR 1968 BUG, 39,000 mil~. cond., 1 new dk-ff, Good llCll for SM~. Contact '68 PONTl1\C Sta. W"iOr\, :::,:.~:.:,:..:.;:"":,;'c.:':::'::;;,:::.:.::;: auto, new tires, $91i0.00. lransp. $375. Slfri»Z1 Penonnel ?itanager, equipped with automa.Uc. '72 MERCEDES BENZ 280. 96:1-8900. '59 tllPAl.A, orig owner, p:. BalboA Bay Club Jnctory •lr cond., pov.u SE 4.:'l, dk gm, cognac 11'1~, •64 vw, priv prty, looks "l,i"'~l~oo;}nd~,~-~~·-:::"~"":'j,,;1221B~l~Y~. ~Cout~~l!;jwy~,~N!!.;;;B;;,.. ilttring, pov.·er b rakes, A!C, P IB, PIS. Pf\\, TU -~t Nu valve job 30 oUcr &i2.-0IUG radio, hNlf'r, etc. Very auto Jock, AM/Fl\! 1~roo. ~ll>G"·-1h · Sfi95 s.:.,_1278 ..,,~ ..!IP". PS PB M MERCURY cluut IXSPfW.21 . Pr tee 16 ?i-IPG. Pvt Ply, Orig • r ' · '" •a tu.or\, I • Al • . reducfd IO $'iT.i. Excellent ov.'T'll'. htust iell. &H-8739 BAJA Bug Con\.vt. mag FM. Ex c e I . me ch . a.nd 111.tti famil)' and utillt)' "'E'U.. sell YoUr pro11ge r.m for you! Exclu1ive Orange Coas1 arf':a tM.l,y-trs waiting. Call 831-3MO Dir. "i1 1.tB ~ M!d11n, RJtno • !f/l("l'(I, 11tr .\ v.·111 lt11dt' 831 .. 2040 Dir: 'G6 f.ffi 251'.lSE cpt. 4 q>eect, leather Int., A 1\1 / 1" Al &11.-20IO Dir. ·~sc.-,~Stl-SLC--. -S-1-h·-er w/81111' llhr Int, '7.fW ml, lmn\nc. By owntr 64l-6;;74, &1.\..1603, ~14 'GO ~18 190 SL rd11!r. SUPERB! ftt.11\1111 trnn ... « recent YalVt• 83l~ZIO Dir. ' . J whls. $500. or heal otter.. cond .. 1325. &f&--1,600 "72 MARQUIS 4 dr, all ttrM. car. Johnlon &: Son, al26 9S-8liGI 'iO EL Camino, a ul o, xlnt cond, lo miles, am/bn Harbor, Cosla Me 1 a, '68 V W camper, ExceUmt air/rond. $1500. atel'@(), pvt pty, $3195, WI ~llHOl. c:ond. SH IO •JlPl'OCla!e: Coll 6'>-U31 ~on-Th1tn.' 6#-6<83 ""' 4 517-9277 VALIANT $l690.6'2·lfil COMET ~CoLONY PARK Wp.1 --------1 '67 VW Bua.. Very clean. 26 tlke riew-2.4,(XXI miles. Buy '63 VALIANT Conv., r & h, 6 l\IPG. ~t Int. Cassette. '73 ('()MET 2 OR below whsle. 83t-a>40 Olr. cyl. Great econ lrl\t'lspOna.. S1200. 645-4M3 Company ownC'd & mafn--.1-'"'u::::.:,M.:;;::;R:::C;.,:::;,R:::Y;.;:;$.;.l ::;:... Oon. One O'll>m:r. 13'!5. '66 V\\' Van, Re-bit. eng;. talncd like new In our - E U 25 Ml-tm Pnit'I w/bed. $800. Good gas .M!r\'ltt dept Equipped with 4 dr., ne«ls tuneup. $12:1. VEGA ml. 536-6145 l'Utomatlc tran~IMion, air • 54J.i691 • l.913 VW Dt1t.llt1 leu than cond, power stetrl111< radio, KEEP 111E BOMOM OF "" V1:'r..A, i/11cti...., .. i. Im.> IO,OOO mi's. \YUi Sac. 1ot hl"atrr, etc. Comlortilble. ROUND WA!fre Bb.SKETS ,~11.,,... ~ ~~ 1 6 •A"~o: Mif' and e.co11oml c:o1 I. "'Iran by placing• paoer m eJ.gre&teondJtlon • sw;;.,. A 1 · mr•o.w ll7811DEI 1.127!1, John~n & plote In tM bottom Of the 49°1'-l,i25 ·7! VW SUpcr Bce\le. A.\1 1 Son Uncoln i'ltt"n.-ury, ::Hi.26 l:illMctt. Turn ldlc Items tnto '•°"''T.l"°"V"'EGA=°'1ooc-d:-<do-•~•lt~h-.,. Ft.I 11crt0, low mi .. 25 mpg, H•rbor. Cotita Mc 1 a. c1111h with a Dall.Y Pilot tru, 'llill Aacrln~. ~ an. 5. MO-;&O. '-"O='=":::lflo.«l:..::A::;d·c;6C-5178.==::....-t ____ tm-= • .::~:::.. ___ 1 •• • " be I but " • A 1J.I • Today's Final San Clemente ... Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks L 67, NO. 84, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES - Boy, 13, Slain INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Lankle Ltt WhiJenant Jr. told neigbborbood friends noC loog ago that he probably wouldn't finish sdml. 1be harmless statement turned out to be tragically true. It wasn 't that Lant.le disliked school. but his family moved around a lot and it was dilficult going to new schools all the 13-year-old youth was tall and old· op g for his c;ige. Several kids in 1his Viejo Boat Mttacked' By Whale A Mmion Viejo family reported their JJ..(oot cruiser was struck by a whale Suoday, bashing in tho alwninwn siding and friiht"1ing them all. ,/l'he Gone O'Neals, ol :112!12 Barquero Drive, were en their way to the Dana l'Unl Marina from Newport Beach when Gene, the fa1her, kloked to one side. The whaJe, "a big, black 25-foot s.o.b.," a«ording to O'Neal, surfaced less than six feet from the craft and appeared to be headed for a direct rollision. Timmy, 10, a carrier for the Daily Pilot, was steering when O'Neal yelled ''Whale!" A family friend f r o m Torrance. along foc the ride, wrenched the wheel from Timmy and swerved the boat away. · ~ head-oo was avoided, but the whale's tail slammed into the port.side, bashing in tbe aluminum skiing. "I never knew tho str<ngth ol tho tail of a whale," O'Neal remarked. Danny O'Neal, 3, was thrown from tho back seet by lhi jolt. His li>t<t' Teressa, 9, and a lrieud SheUy Ernocy 9, Wefe in the cabin. . ., Four Hearings On Busy Capo Council Agenda A hi!avy agenda Including !oar public hearings will race San Juan Capl!trano city Councilmen at tmlgbt's 7 o'clock meeting in the couocil chambers. The hearln8> pertain to establishing ift.iinage fees for land in the southern part of the city east of the San Diego Freeway: consideration of an t!Jlvironmental impact report, and an appeal of two rezones on Ortega 1--l"'l!n1W8Y- Both rewnes are for land one mile east ot the San Diego Freeway owned by Capo Ranches, Steven A n t b o n y , and Capi>traoo Development Company. The p\anning comm.issioo on a 3-2 vote ~ed the original rezone request for ~ unit per acre to one unit oa two-and· Half acre Jots. ;zi his report to the council, city plpmer. Dave Smith pointed out that Jll!rketmg was not COP$idered in Jl(fmu, studie8, ~ when all tuts are pi.id the lots might have to sell for as mudl a::s $$71000 for the developers to !lllke-a profit. He further pointed out that although value ol. the land bJ11t1ea:sOO. s:elling the parcels miet tai:e more than five years and probleml'tMldevelop- 'Ihe comm will abo act on three other ' !See AGENDA, Poge !) nefChllorbood lhollgbt be could have ' •xa-IWI in tpOrts. Thole who knew him Wei Lankie didn't have many·clooe lrlenda bis qt. He kept pretty much to himae~ and .. ued on ru. family for what~ be bad. Lankie died Saturday night from four bull•t-. The boy and his wcle, Troy Stantz, 42. entered a fast.food restaurant while his father, Lank.ie Sr., stayed outSide. Aft.er shaking and stomping to rid themselves of snow stuck to their ooats, Nude Bather Found Dead LA JOLLA !API -A nude swimmer at Black's •B e a ch drowned in a rip current Sunday. The body of Henry htanuel Ruiz, 15. was recovered later. • . The beach is used for nude sunbathing and swimming. Dean Counters John Mitchell ~~ y~ e~~o e~~~ite House counsel John W. Dean III told a jury today that former AU. Gen. John N. Atitcbell repeatedly asked him to check oo a securities fraud lnvestigalion against financier Robert Vesco. Dean also said that former Commerte Secretary &laurice El Stans told him he was concerned about the circumstances o£ Vesco's secret PJQ,000 ca s b cmtributiol1 to PresidelX Niloo'I rt- eleoti<o campaign. - Dem--appeared as a government wl-at Ille federal <OUrt trial of Mltchell and Stans. - The two former Cabinet official.!, ~·ho resigned their posts to join Nlxon·s Im re-election campaign, are charged witn trying to impede an investigation of Vesco In return tor his contribution, and lying to Ille grand jury about it. Ooe perjury count against Mitchell Ls based on his denial that he taJked to Dean about Vesco. Dean is named as a coconspirator in the case but -not-a defendant. Dean said that Mitcbell on numerous oocaskm asked him to check ~·ilh William Casey, then chairman of the Securities aod Exchange Commission, about the status ol the Vesco investigation. · He said that on one occasion htitchell told him that some of Vesco's aides had been subpoenaed by Ille SEC. He said A1itchell called that "harassment" and ''totally unnecess&f7. '' Dean said Mitcehll told him the investigation "appeared to be politically motivated.'' Mitchell asked Dean to call Casey and get the subpoenas posted until after the election, Dean teslified. The subpoenas, Dean said Mitchell told him, would be likely to reveal Vesco's contribution ; th!lt Donald Nixon Jr. of Newport Beaeh, the President's nephew, was involved with Vesco, and that Edward Nixon, the President's brother, also w& ronnectcd with the case. "Tbe whole thing is something ~·e don't need before election," Dean quoted tt1itchell as saying. Testimony 'has indicated that Vesco and his aides took tbe Fifth Amendment before. the SEC. The contribution was not made public (See DEAN, Pafe II Jdvisers Seek Revenge For Capo Tree Downing San Juan Capistrano city COlftlCi!men will be askl'd by an advisory gl"O\lp tonight to "avenge" the death of a 30-foot eucaJyphn that once was ordered saved. lnotead, the tree -.rid up in firtpla.,.. lhroUflliout tho dty. Retention ol lbe tree was a cmdition lmpooed oo w .. tport Home Bullden !0< approval of &heir tentative tcact map for • project located on tho Iwata property oil Del Obispo Road. F!ndJn( Ille tree goo<. the PlaMlng Cofnmlssloo deddi!id .that the tentative tiact map should be d.nled becaU&e tho ooadltlons of apprvval bad been viol.sled. 1be.y suggested Uuu the tnd map be 1'<9Ubmttted. In its •weal to tho city tlOW\cll at tonight's meeting, Yt'estpof1, ll om e Bo.Oden claims lt ill Innocent of any WJlll!gdotnc. The culprfl uoert<dly is Ille C. Mlchad Company which is also developing land in the area and .,,... tract will use the same entrance as the Westport tract. The 1""', reportedly, was in the righl- d·way for the •reet and the roadway aligmntm could not be "'-ed ... the tree was cut down. City Plumer Don Smllll, In bLs report to Ille cooncll, sald tho c. Michael Company, OndlnC Ille -in tile roadway, should have come back to the oommlaalon for lwUitt dLscussion. Bui be rttO~ that Wt:1tport 1 1 willlngnes to "Ill... Ille tree be considered adequate reparatloo. Westport b., og....s to plant six specimen-sized lreel in the cent.er merldi011, near tbe loc:ation o( Ill< late eucalyptus, but Ille council wm ¥vt to decide H this ii PoJlll<lll <lllJllllli, _, ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1974 During Shootout • Ill Lankie and Stano onlered coffee and egg sand~iches. Witnes!leS said the boy stood near his uncle with a "'hite scarf til'd around his lace and saki nofblng. While Grootendont. 54. was fixing the food ~ilh his back to the cotmter, the uncle said. "This ls a holdup," police reported. • Grootendorst canied a .22-<:aliber revolver in a holster on his hip while working late in the store. Upon hearing what Stantz said, Grootendorst whipped around, and Lankie i>Pgan -.g, police said. City detectives said Grootendorst returned the fire and within seconds both Grootendorst and Lankie were hit at least rour limes' each. \Vindows were also blO'A'T\ out and the walls chipped from gunshot. Grootendorst. wounded in the stomach, chest and legs, "'as listed in critical condi!lon. Lankie, hit at least twice in the stomach, staggered backwards out or the restaurant and fell into a snowdrift. Police say that as the shooting subsided, Lanki4='S father leaped into a ear parked outside and then notict'd his son on the side"·alk. \\"itnesses sai<! !he rather tried to get his son inside the car but· ga\"C up ~n p<'Qple began arriving oit the scene. Lankie Sr. then drove av;ay. About 30 minutes later. Lankie v.·as pronounced dead at 1\larion CoW'lt)' TEN CENTS Holdup · Creneral Hospital. 'IWenty-four hours afler tnat. no one had come forward to cla1nl the boy's bod y for burial Off1eials said the only thing found on th(' boy's clothing was a school test on ~·hich he had \\Titten his n a m e and ansv.·ered sonic questions. Lankie Sr. is bt'ing sought by :tuthorities on an armed robbery charge. Sta111z is in Jail on the sarne eharge, and Lanki('"s rnothrr L~ ~·anted oo an c1nbez.zlen1ent warrant. Committed to Detente, l(issinger Tells Russia ' 01!11' l'li.t Slltf ,..,.to LAKE ELSINORE MILITARY ACADEMY ORILL TEAM STEPS OUT IN SAN J UAN PARADE An Estimated 35,000 Spectators Watched Saturday; Additional Pictures Page 3 Mater Dei Takes Awards Privnte School Wins Siveepstakes in Fiesut P£1rucle By PAMELA HALLAN Of !flt 01lty l'ilel lt1lf ~1ater Dei Hign School 's marching band and drill team eame away the sweepstakes winners in the 17th annual edition of the Fiesta de Las Golondrinas parade in San Juan Capistraoo over the weekend. An estimated 35.000 visitors viewed the Saturday fmale to a week of festivities heralding the return of the swallows to the mission community. The sweepstakes winner in the float category was the Southern California First National Bank which offered a ' DOUBLE FEATURE SOLD BOTH ITE~fS Here's a "double feature" success story about Daily Pilot classified ads. First, look at these t'A-"O ads : '73 HARLEY spon. ... r, just like new, only 3,000 miles. Sacrifice, •um. (Phone No.) METAL Flllng clbinet w/lock. Ad)ustable typing alble, both like new, m for botb c.: sell separate- ly. IP!ione No.) Botil ads ....,, placed by the same advertiltr to run under dJfferent classiflcaUons on the ·Nmf: day. You gu<S8'<! It: both worked. The IMl"d:landise was sold In t. .. eh case to . the rtra caller~ Want to dcrJble your rt· ..Ubl Dial 642..1673. stagecoach drawn by Shetland ponies. Other float \\'inners among 200 total parade enlrics \\"ere El Adobe Restaurant in the commercial division: San Juan Capistrano Chamber of Commerce in the civic category; i'ofary Grossman 1n the non commercial category, and Order of the Alhambra in the fraternal division. Other winners in band categories \\'ere Basselt Senior High School of La Puente and Chino Jun ior HiRh School. Lake Elsinore ).li\itary Academ}' won the top color-guard honors, and the. San Juan Horse Club took one top walking· 'entry a.,.,·ard. Cub Scout Pack 11 from San Juan also {Se~ PARADE, Page%) Vandals Ruin Preserve- Project by Dana Pit pils Heavy vandal is m over the past week to bridges, trees and trails at a new wildlife preserve near Dana Hills High School has set the entire project baek. disappointed .school spokesmen said today. The canyon, a gift to the school by the developf of a nearby housing tract1 ~·as developed during hundreds of hours of donated labor by students and other voluntff.rs, but vandalism which began a week ago hu ruined most of the mnstructk>n. Specimen trees planted by science departmenl pupils also have been taken • or damagt!d, Sllkl Dana Hills Science . Department Cllairman Jamee Klein. Klein said many of the stairways we~ tom out and sycamore and oak trees were stolen. "We were Just getting ready to dLslrlbute leallcts arotnl the tommunlt' letting residents kno\\' that thC preserve ex-isted," he said. lfe said the announcements will still be sent out, but the emphasis now wlll be to discourage vandals. The canyon originally faced destruction as a habitat !or wildlife , but through an arrangement with a . de\'elopcr. the Capistrano Unified School District and tbe County of Orange, it became permanent open space. The role of the ta.acre can)'OO is that of an outdoor classroom v.·hcre students can take gukied walks with teachen and study native vegelalion and wildlife. • Klein dk1 not set a dollar amount to the damage caused by vandalism, But much of the 1.800 hours of "-ork by 15 young members of the Neighborhood Youth Corps will have to be repeill'd to restore the area, he Sllid. Blackmail Pictt1red As Tl11·cat l\·10000\\' (AP1 -Secretary ol Slate Henry A. Kissinger cautioned Soviet leaders today that there can be no "'orki peace "if we attempt to blackmail each other." 'He made the remark after opcnlng talks in the Kremlin w"ilh Communlst party leader Leonid 1. Brezhnev oo prospects for a new treaty limiting nuclear arms and fostering peace in the Middle East. At the sa1ne time. KiM.inger pledged that President Nixon and h Is Administration remain committed to detente. "Our greatest goal is that over the next three years we can ma ke the relationship that has grown up bet'W'eefl our tv.·o peoples and our leaden Irreversible." Kissinger said. In a luncheon toast. Kissinger sakl "We want to make the next swnrnit as significant" as the t~'O preceding ones between Nixon and Brezhnev. But he said, ''If our two nations attempt to take advantage of each other. if \\·e attempt to blackmail each other. or deal with each other from a strong position. then there can be no peace among ourselves or in the world." As Ule talks opened Brezhnev said he v.·as optimistic about another Soviet- Amcrican -anns agrttment. Kissinger hoped during his three days of Lalks in the Kremlin to set the stage o( a oew nuclear weapons treaty President Nixon could sign on a \•is it to Moscow next summer. Asked by nev.·smcn if he expected fl)' reach anolht:!r arms agrrement wiUl Nixon then. Brezhnev replled : "I take an optimistic view of that. \\'e ha\'e made a very good begiMing on that process." lie said relations bC'twecn the superpowers "are good" but ''there i.s mueh \\·ork to do at this time." Asked to characterilC the situation 11o·ith regard to East-"rest detente. he said the European security conference In Geneva is '"dragging its feet a tittle" becatl<re "the opponents or detente are in troducing peUy matters that have no (See KISSINGER, Page %) Orange <:eut Weather INcreasing clouds Tuesday after- nooo is the v.·ay the \\"Cather serv· ice calls it. H3in possible tonight and early Tuc!Klay. Highs in tne upper 50s at the beaches and the lov.·er 60s inland. INSIDE TODA.Y Th e tnvoder hos rctuMitd tht Sir Thoma.1 Lipton CluiUeiige Trophy to San. Otego by de· feating five rivals rn. Newport. Story, photos Poae 20. ... ,1'"' " .. ,,,. "'""'' .. L. M. ...... .. ... .._.. " CaU'9nllN • ... _ .. c1 .. 1u1tt ..... Mlt!IAI N..,. 4. It IM'u " °'"*' c-ry • ,_ " t¥WI• ,_ .. O..tll litttltff .. ·-, ... ,t lfdt..,,., ..... • ,_. ""'11th 1•11 .. ,.,, ... ~ .. T"""lll9fl " lllllltllU , .. 11 w ....... , • ..... ,,. ...... .. -~·-....... 1•tt -" Wwlt Hr1J1 '" 1 2 DAILY PILOT SC Monday, March 25, 1974 Hearst Giv eaway Thousands Get 'Quality' Food SA~ FRAN CISCO (llPI ) -Thousands of persons turned out in hctt\")' rain today to pick up boxes that contained steaks and fresh produce in the resumption of the food givea way program demanded by the terrorist kidnapcr~ of Patriciu 1 lettrst. Although the d1str1butlon al 17 S<l.n F'rancico area locations .,_.as schrdulcd to st.art at 8 a.m., many persons got in line Hunt Pressed For Swi1run er Off Ne wport Cold and emotionally shaken , a long. distance swimming enthLLSiasl was found collapsed in exhausUon On a Newport Beach strand Sunday night , mumbling abc>ut a mystery sv,,immcr he cl3imcd he say,•, A search for the second possible victjm of cold. choppy s"'·ells. was immediately resumed and lasted into predav.11 hours but no tract' could be fowid. Joseph Amato, o{ Pomona , was listed in satisfactory condition today at Hoag ~temoria\ Hospital. where he was undergoing treatment for exhaustion and exposw-e. He v.•as found collapsed on the beach near 28th Street shortly belore midnight, following a fruiUess offshore search by the Harbor Patrol, llleguards and the Newport Beach Police helicopter. Amato bad baUled the swells for some tv.·o hours. Investigators who located Amato about 10 p.m. said he told of seeing what he believed lo be another swimmer battling the waves about one mile offshore as he swam in. Before being husUed off to Hoag J\.1e1norial lkispital after treatment at the scene, Amato told authorities the other swimmer appeared to be in grave trouble. He said he was thrashing around and was wearing salba dJving air tanks and pinpointed the appro"limate posiUon as about one mne out between Newport·P1er and the 28th Street subswiace rock groin. Harbor Patrol officers Immediately organii.ed a secondary search, utili'l.ina: two cnlis.ing boat.! equipped 1Jith radar equipment In lhc hope ol luming up lhe reported victim. "U this guy did have tanks oo and he went down, that would be It for him,'' commented Harlx>r Patrol Sgt. Dean Cordell today. He also said it was po56ible the reported sighUng of the swimmer in trouble in the dark, rough seas may have been due lo lhe exhaust«! dislance swimmer's mental aod physical Condition. No formal reporlS ol any missing swimmers or SC\lba divers vanished in the specific offsh«e &rea had been repor1<d as ol today, lifeguards said. Officers Ousted After Assault HOUSTON (UPI) -City civil service commmif,ners have s~ two policemen for insubordinaUon stemming from the rontroversy over whether they boot and raped a prostitute. C.Ommis:sft:lners said they were unable to determine whether officers Jack Heard J r. and Wayne M. Jones !Jed in connection with the Feb. 14 assault on the woman. In effect. the puni.!hmcnt assessed was ror insubon:lination rather than for rape because Heard and Jones refused a direct order from a Police Depertmeat official to submit to a lie detector test. I OUNll COAST IC DAILY PILOT l)le Ort .... CHI! OAIL'I' PILOT, wllll ... lcfil II ~I-,,,_ ,.""'•~•nt, It .... ltlloMI .-, .... o.-c .. 11 ~Int e-. a... .... •1-. ... """""*'· ""'""""" ........ , .... ~. le< (h ll ""'""· ... _, a..c11, H~ll,..,.., lr1Cll/l'_,.lfl Y1tlt y, ~ 8"cll, l••1'>1l~IHKll Md S..n C""""'lt/ $on Mn Ct pht••-A llfttlt ,.. ..... I Mii'°" h l'l/DliJMlf """•••YI Md $tlnelll'I. TM JW~! ... 1 -l'tftW. itlaM !1 11 UI Wnl l1y ll•H'I, t1111 MtM, Ctlllott"la, ,,.:a., lobe•! N. W1e4 l"rtt'llllft! '"" l"""'411i..• J,,. l , C111,1 • ., VM ,., .... .,,'"'~•I ~ Th .... 11 K11ril l.•111< ThOMll .... M11tphi111 ""'""'"" l411W Ch1rl11 H. t..11 l ldt1r4 r. Nill AHIUMt MloNtlfle l!•!*I S. Cle 10 OHke JOS N.nti ll C-1111 k11I, f)672 . --c .... ~' Ja w..1 ''' ,......., H,.,...1 l..-dl1 J:2b H--1 ......... Mwrit'"""' hKll: 11'111 ·--~ ... ........... '-d\1 m ,_, ..__ Tiii ...... 17141 '42.CJJI Cl ............... I 5 '42·1•11 S.. C ....... All Dc,.,.-•1: ,,...,._ 4•2-4420 C_....,t, ltU. Ot.... C.0.11 ~"""" CM>tliln,, N1 -1 .... 111 Hh,,.1,..,.,,1 .. 11er111 '"''* .. "''"""'-" ,,......; fNjt .. ~ Wlttoll/I -ilj '41t MflatM ff ~--· ~ tltM _,._. ,.Id ti (nit #bl c.n""'i.. ~r.i"" .., "'"'~ n ;J -lllho1 .,. "''" •) IJ _,..,.,, mlllf'try OH!ltHilM U t$ INfl""", I, hours early despite the downpour. Operators of the "Poop le in Need" f)Ogram sporisortd by Particla's father, Rando!Jlh A. Hearst. said the givuway "'as intended to come a~ clc:ee as po&lble to the $70 v•orth of free ~roocrles demanded by the S}mbionesc Liberation Anny v.•bfch kidnapcd the girl reb. 4. A typical box distributed at 8 ~ter In the predominantly Latin Amer I can ti.tissioo Lfutrict of San Francisco inc:luded four or five steaks. 50me of them T·bone cuts; tv.·o packages of frozen filet or sole, a frozen chicken, a doien egp, a quart of milk, a jar of peanut butter, a package of fresh produce th.11.t included yams, oniornl , oranges, apples and b..inanas. and other foodstuffs. "nle line at the Ml!sion District person and a number had more th11n tv.'O blocks wilh alxlut 400.500 persons ~l"aiting at 8 a.m. Because of tne crowd, the center had begun handin~ ~ut the food early. There were no rcstrtcllon:i: on how many boxes could be taken by one persona dna a number had more than one. One man wheeled two of the food boxes away in a y;hcclahair, and another had a box on his shoulder v.·hile limping along on one crute'n. Although they h~ been asked lo br:lng shopping carts by the pin operators, a number of persons turned up in automobiles, some of them cadilJac:s. Ooe ',_.-oman lert balancing a bo"I on her head. Several boxes were being loaded lnlo the same automobile. No one appeared cheerful. "I've been '!''Biting in the rain since 6 o'clock" one man said. The distribution was ~ibly the last under the People in Need program . Spokesmen for the group said they had about $1 mllllon left to devote to the program and that It all might be spent today. The latest dlstributlon v•as the fifth since Patricia was kldnaped and the SLA demanded the distrlbutloo. as a "good faith gesture." "Bring shopping carts or something lo carry the rood," Kramer said. He said the program ''now has a quality food to distribute," thus meeting a major complaint of the SLA. 1be food program Is financed by Hearst, presid<nt and edil<ll' of lhe San Franci8co Examiner. 1be giveaway u originally let up came to an ~ halt two weeks ago after lhe SI.A kidllapers label«! It only "crumbs" for lhe people. They termed '°me ol lhe free food as "hog feed" and "unfit for human consumption." So far , a boot $1 mlllion worth Of food ha! been given lo tltl,000 penona. Supreme Court Not 'Chicken' Aho11t Profanity From Wire Services WASHINGTON -The Supreme Courl indicated today that judges shoudd not be too quick lo punish for a litUe profanity on the witness stand. Jn an unsigned oplnion, the oourt rev~ the Tulsa, Okla. contempt conviction of a man w!lo blurted out "chicken····" while testifying about an as.~ult. Terry Dean Ealon appealed the $50 fine for direct contempt of court assessed after he used the v.·ord to describe his alleged assailant. ''Thus single isolated usal{e of street vernacular not directed at the judge or any officer or the coo.rt cannot constitutionally support the convlclion of criminal contempt ," lhe Supreme Court said. Just ice Lewis F. Powell in a concurring opinion said he place a pre- mium on mai.ntenance or civility in the courtroom . "But before t~re ls -csort to the summary remedy of criminal coo· tempt, the oourt at least owes the party coocer ued some sort of notice or wam- ini;r.'' Powell said. "No doubt there are circunutances in which a courtroom outburst Is so egregious as to justify a summary response by the judge without specific warning, but this is surely not such a case," Poell said. Chief Juslice Warren E. Burger and Justices William H. Rehnquist and Harry A. Btaekmun dissented. In another case. the court today refused tO review M appeal of a decision which struck 009.'TI New Jersey's 1847 abortion law as an Invasion of a woman's prvacy and uncoostitµtionally vague. Siner it ru1ed last year that women and their doctors ha"e a right lO clcc.ldc on an abortion in the first trlmest.e.r of pregnancy, the coort has declined to hear any abortton CMC9. Before the court's last decision on ebortlon, a three-Judge dlslrict court declared that the New Jersey abortion statute "b unconstitutionally v11gue on Its face· as appUed" btcausc It "dlllls and deters the plalnUll1)111>tcfans In tho exercl9e of protected Firll: Amendment acth'itlts and , . • lt vk>latn plaintifr. pey.lclans right undt< the I 4 t h Amondm<nl lo freely practlco lhe profe&'lion ol their choice." 9 Hurt in Melee POMPANO BEACH, Flo. tAP)-Nine pel'IOM, tnclud.lng eight policemen, were Injured when a rock·lhrowing melet bn>ke out at a carnival Sunday night, police said. The disturbance was brou~l undt r control about 2 a.m. today, Clve hours after ft started, police said. L u,r T•l•P"''' Royal Visitor Princess Anne visits her personal bodyguard, In· spector James Beston, at the hospital where Beston is recovering from bullet wounds received in last week 's kidnap attempt on the princess. She also visited others wounded in the incident. Fron• Page I DEAN ... Police Seeki1ig Woman until after the SEC filed a civil fraud action against Vesco Nov. 27, 1912. Dean said that Stans told him in late October 1972 lhat be was concemed !Ji Coast Hit-run Case about the Vesco conlribution because An tl'lidentified motorist ran down an Common Cause filed a law s u i t 18-yeer-old bicyclist early sun d·a y demanding revelation of all large morning in HIJl'ltington Beach, then sped oontributions to the Nixon campaign off leaving the boy tmconscious in the before April 7, the effective date of a new roadway, police reported today. law requiring contributions to be Roger Demers of 16350 Jody Circle, reported. Westminster, is listed in satisfactory Dean said Stans told him the Vesro ci>ndition today at Huntington contribution was designated only by the lnteroommunity Hospital. iniUals "JJ\1." Stan11 said he was Police saki Demers was riding his roocemed about me date lhe Vesco bicycle along Adams Avenue. near money arrived. It was delivered April 10. Bushard Street, about 6 a.m., when he was hit from behind. He was oo his way Dean said they di8Cllssed another to work at Fairview Slate Ho.spital in (Qltribution that came in late, but they Costa Mesa. determined tbey had "constructive Traffic investigators said the crash ~-laa~_of it beflll)? April 7. m_ay ·~ve abattered pert of. the fron t ••"-~ -•~ -.., ~-· 15 ~-•• windshield ol the car, deocribed as a IU1Cl" ~ ~hUU, nvrr. ' ~ white Cadillac, lfl5.9.fl model. sak1 be met with Mltche!l and S~ in Demers' limp body wu discovcrt'd by N"' )'arlL Stam.,"t"'d ~ ")"'l<l ltke lo . Ray .Megli, ol ":!f!Olli!lllM~ ~. .m .. · _., ._ alid Mllchell manager ol !he ·~ Qounty 8"8p a(reed that was a good Idea, Dean said. Meel at lhe falrlniunds In O>sta Mesa. Dean saJd he toki them "Of course Megll and bis wife were on their way lo , ' ' the fairgrounds to prepare for the ·day's you 11 have the problem of reporting meet, when they spotted the bicycle and thls." the bcxly. Another witness has said that the He phoned police and Demers was 8000 re.fund was reported to the General taken to Pacillca H06pitaJ for emergency Accounting Office but the cmt.ribution treatment then later transferred. to was not. HuntingtOn Intercommun.ity. Dean said St.ans left the meeting firsl Police said three other witnesses, all A3 Mitchell and Dean were leaving, on their way to the swap meet, had seen Mitchell said he had received a packet of µie preda.wn acci;dem without realizing materials rrom ellber Don Nixon, the 11· President' brat.he ......._ Nix J ol One motorist told investigators he saw s r, or uun on r. the white Cadillac behirxl him. it swerved Newport Beach about the Vesco case. He said he had looked into it and it was right , then left , and at Brookhurst he saw "a bund! of-crap;" Dean testified. the female driv_er.. dcscril>ed...as in.her. 30s.. Other witnesse$ have said that a or 40s with bushy , black hair, attempting packet was addressed to nm Ni.xoo. at a to clear some of the bro ken glass from in New York hotel , that it was never front of her. delivered to him but was picked up by She tu!Jlcd north on Brookhurst. the. f\1ilche ll, and that a paper in the packet witness told police. Tv.·o other dril'ers threatened to expose Vesco's contribution also saw the Cadillac sv.·erve but unless the SEC investigation w a,, because it was dark, didn't know why. stopped. They all realized what they had seen Rites Conducted For Clementean Crypt.side services were held in Ontario early this afternoon for San Clemente retiree Buress Johmon Bole9, 7B, ,_.1l0 died Friday at a Mission Viejo hospital. llfr. Boles lived at 310 Avenida San Pablo. lie had been a San Clemente resident for the past seven yea.rs. A veteran of \\''orld War 1. !\tr. Boles \\'as a member of the American Legion in ArcadJa. lie leaves his widow, Mildred : a dauihtet..Shlrley el!nl of Sacramento; a brother. Carl Boles of South Pasadena : a sister, Mrs. Ray Lambeth of Nampa, Idaho, and four grandsons . Today's rites were conducted at Bellevue Mausoleum with Lesneski ~tortuary, San Clemente, in charge of arrangements. Firelne1i Rescue Kitty in Drain when J\1cgli arrived at the fairgrounds From Page I KISSINGER ... bearing on detcnfe ." Although he was speaking o{ the Geneva conference. it was assumed that he voas r6ferring to the S o v i e t government's problems with the U.S. CongrtSS over trade and J e w I s h emigration as y,-ell as to the Western demand at the security conference for freer now of peoples and ideas. Before the metting, Brezhnev sotql;ht out American reporters in die large Kremlin room normally used for the ruling P1>1itburo's weekly sessions. He asked them, "You do want it to be better, don 't you? There are some people v.·ho v.·ould like to see things v.·orse." . ~\'hen Kissinger and his small group 101ncd Brezhnev, I.he Kreml in leader shook Kissinger's hand and said, "I told them I was opWni.st.i.c. They agreed they all want peace. That makes it tasier to sta rt " -Young and told the others what had happened , poli~ said. The traffic division is seeking any information on the whereabouts or ownership Of the white C a d i 11 a c , described as "very shiny and in mint condition .. , Felo1i, Hosta ge Die in Battle Wit1i Policemen A~'TIOCJI I UPI) -An esca!>"1 prisoner and his host.age were killed early tcxiay afte r a gun bottle with jXllice. Authorities said Capt~in Spictr, 2b.-and his hostage, Robert Ta ylor. both or Antioch, died of g1mshot wounds in a car nea r Taylor's residence. Antioch police said they llad come to the assistance of Pittsburgh police who \\'"l're involved in a shoolOut with Spicer about 3 a.m. Spicer managed to elude officers in the darkness and made his way through an open field to Taylor's house where he took him ca ptive. \Vhile attempting to escape in Ta ylor's car, a struggle ensued inside, police said. Officers tben rushed the car. Police said they believed one of their shots fatally wounded Spicer but were unsure how Taylor \vas killed. _An1.iodl..Jlolice..said they were notified that Spicer escaped from the county prison in Lebanon, Pa., and police SJ.id he had a criminal record. Pittsburgh police.. said Spicer was stopped for having a juvenile girl in his car after curfew. llowever. before patrolman \Vil!ian1 Gay could make an arrest, Spicer sped off, knocking Gay lO the ground with the car's doer. Gay was taken to Pi t l 6 bur g b Community liospital for observation but V.'as not believed seriously injured. Both victims were pronouneed dead on arrival at Delta fi.temorial Hospita1. Police said tbey belie.ved Taylor lived alone. Carlsbad Chief Told to Resign CARLSBAD (UPI) -A fact-finding committee headed by form er Los Angeles Police Chief Tom Reddin. has re<'Ommendcd that, Calrsbad Chief of Polioo Ralph Lal,lghlln. resign. City lltanager Paul Bussiy has annolklced. Bussey said he would givt Laughlin 11ntd today to resign and would thtn name an interim chief. Laughlin, 45, has been dllef here since August, 1970 and before that was a West Corina police lieutenant. L a u g h I i n refused Bussey's F'eb. 11 request to rc=iign. Driver Firemen at San Ch:immte's north-erta substation became weekend Samaritaru ror a small cat trapped in a storm dratn. The rtrefighters became the last re.sort fc>r the cat and ~era! citizens worried ovtr the animal's fate aft.tr It b«:ame traPfM!d, Sunday In a storm drain along Camino de los P.latts. Boy, 9, Takes Ca r for Spin The an.Ima), stud: tn the deoep drain for more than a day, \\Wld have dk!d uni.,. It c:oold be htlped. Animal control officers from the counly agency ref~ to help, so firemen entered the drain and rt.moved tbo cat. LM.tr tn tht day ~· same ffi!CUers found a home for the rescued animal. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The olfle<rs never di d see fhe driver as they chased the sports car tnrough lhree red lights •I •peed• up to 70 miles an hour. When o£ficers Victor Colello and Robert Page stopped the car near a bu sy city Intersect.ion they stllJ couldn't see a drtver. Then the two saw a little 9·year-old boy sitting Jn the driver's seat, peer· Ing up at them rrom under the rim of the stecrtng whbel. The unide ntified lad, who a spokesman soid toOk the car from a nei~hbor'S home. Saturday, was released to his parents pending a juvenile court hearing. Cars Ru sh ,. " To Beacl1~s Once Again Freeways and tourist attractions along the South Orange Coast over the weekend became baromCler'S Qf the easing futl I shortage as traffic onoe more clogged the area. ~ers of the WC(kend CTUSh o! cars tenned the increMe ''jll.!t like the oki dars.'; Border jXltrolmen who maintained C'heckpoints both days at San Onolre said , a dramatic increase in weekead traffic • v.·as noted Salurday and Sunday. 1betr arrest totals of illegal aliens trying tO J>8S1 with the crustJ ol ca.rs wa,, normal for the two days. At Dana Harbor, where the weather was far from perfect, boaters tncreued in numbenl, nevert.belcss. So did tourists walking through the attractions of the harbor, said patrolmeri. Several service stations were open on Sunday along the coast, but the old days had not returned there. Lines V.'ett evident at each open business. Yet another indication of increased traffic was evident during the weekend. San Clemente police and ambulance crews rolled lo several freeway accidents Sunday as the afternoon t r a f f i c increased. No major injuries Wert reported in the mishaps, however. Frona Page I AGENDA •.. tracts oo Ortega Highway propooec! by Leadership Homes, Standard-Pacific, and Maurer, Development Company. One condition of their approval, provision of a school site, has now been met. The three companies have signed a n agreement with I.he Capistrano Unified School District to pay carrying oosts oo a sdiool site on San Juan Creek Road for 18 months . Another condition was the improvement of Ortega Highway. The dev~lopers have agreed to improve portions adjoining their land, but the COWlcil must decide il this will meet lbt conditions for approval. Other acti011S lO be cons1dered include : -:-Extension of the city clerk's contrac:t. unhl April 30. The temporacy clerk J Berutitt, is reSigning and. the Council bai not y'et fowld a replacement: •11· -Consideration·of new guidelines for fioodi>lain .zoning receivOO from tM COIJ!llY, urging the city to adopt a no1;f. pl_a1~ ~e and to discourage developmk~ Within It. ,,.. ~~eration of appointments to cify C?mm1SS1ons, boards and C'Ommittees. All city commissioners traditionally resign .after an election, then new commissions are appainted. . -A request by Ray Wheeler that the city take act.ion to protect a huge pepper tre~ at San Juan School, which is registered as a "champion tree." From Pagel PARADE ... '· 'I ~·on honors for the best walking group .,,,. . In categories related to ho~es ~ nders. the best horse-drawn carriaee was ~~t _of .l'.lary and Shirley Springer. The P)atn l''estem man an dwoman" categone~ v.·ere V.llfl by Joseph OJmia and Jennifer Pills. Fanci est lady was Joy Willison. Fancy tnan was Floyd Decker. , In ''Working western lady and man" category, the winners were Joan Green and John ~1cGuire. • Best working group was Mission TrGJ C:«rnls, The v.•orking-J>{l:ir award w£ ~. Sally J.lanW and pi The best matclted pail'-was Nancy al! George Ja<'q .... ;~"'11!iitng cham> w1t Tooy Cogswort11;, "I'll•" Wimllng charrv group '!as lhe .booclat!oo c1e cam,, 4, Eocoodido •" . • Rocey -·"Aiuuar -wtlJ.known I~ ~man: 'itOC1 the award for the • Mexican entry. The best junlor·moanl<d group was t!; "Folks from River Oaks." a local sta"-<: The best '""''P was "Roogh Rid ..,.. Roland Height's." ' ers " The best parade horse was Office o;i Robilard. The most -unusual man and woman entry went to William llolliday and Ann O'Flynn. The ~ted posse winners were the 08 ~am1tos Afounted Police. The btst conuc entry was the Rosmbaum Ranetti of San Juan. , Best family group "'as the Sundance nders, and the best mule enlly went bf Ed CMpentcr. .. Burglar Strikes ., ... D~g Worshi • A burglar r.llll!lmf • Sao a.-: resid<nce Surmy, mU!ng Off wtlh ISOO• in casb while lhe ownm wtno att<nd'-· churchserv!ca. - Mrs.. Erlh<r Amesal of illll Avenlla Sacramenlo phoned police lhortiy befort noon wticn .she discovtred the burglary '"""' Off.leers sakt sommnc! enttted ~ house and made 9'f wilh a sman metal cash box cont.ilnlng the cash and aevera1 Important document$. .. JnclCldtd In th• loot were two 1100 btlli. a pair of S50 bill!I and others of sma1ftt'. denominations, sbe nld. , 7 f ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' • • ' • : ' . NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE l\londav's . Closing Prices • O:OIL ( PILOT 11 Year's High·Lows Appear E,·e r y Saturday Piizzle 011 h1te1·est market aJ- recovered NE\\' '\"ORK 1:\J>1 -The stock though drained bv r1s1ng 111tercst rates ltiondav 1n late trading Rlue chip issues ~e11erally held firm, but the over 11:11 niarket \\'as \\Cak and voh1111e "'as lig ht 1n a repla-. of the pattern of the last three days of last "'eek The T>ow Jones index of 30 1ndustr1al stocks closed up 2 89 points at fl81 02 Anal\"ts said 111nnv 111\cstors \liere womed about higher interest rates possible unpact on bus- 1nes" expa11 1;.1on plan " It's kind uf d1ffn nil to interest people in stocks \\hen the) r;1.11 g<'t R In 9 percent interest on short· 1er1n 1n't"-l1nent~" "<lid \\ 1ll1a1n Nelson of Atoody s ln\csto1s Scr\1tC Amerlean 10 Most Aeth'e A merlran Sales Vol•- e Dollar lliqher I BRUSSELS IUPll -Tho donar o o en e d fract1onallv higher In S('VC'ral European mriney mrirkfts ~londav but It \I.mt down in London <'ind Zurich The price of gold dccrcaS«I '·old v.as fnted 1n London at $1i6 7~ an owice down 7J rents and in Zurich at $\76 50 dov.TI one dollar from f'r1dav s tlo.<.r tlf $117 50 m bolh markets Dial Direct 642-4321 Call Collect Subscribe to the newspaper that covers your hometown best ... YOUR Hometown Doil y New1poper DAILY PILOT s,,,..bob I ' J! OAILV PILOT Deaths · Else·where -Anucnr &'ICIN WHTCLlff -TUAllY 41'17 f . 17th St., C~o MeJo 6-46-48811 -·-IALTZ-ll•GHC>N fUNlllAI.~ Coro"o del Mor ' 673-9450 Colla' Mes.a 646-2-424 -·-IELL l•OADWAY MOllTUAllY 110 Broodwoy, Coiro Meta 548-3'33 -·-DILDAY llOTMIH MOHUAIY ! 79 1 l BeO(h 81...d. Hun1•~1:1•on Beoc., 84'2-7771 244 Redondo A~. longS.,oc.., f'2 1J)4J8.114S -·-M<CO•MtCK LAGUNA llACH MORTUAIY 1795 logv"O Canyofl id. 494-9415 -·- -·-IMmtl' MOllTUAIY 6'17 Moifl St. H11t1l111g!on Beocll 530-6539 ~UEENIE x f . !'I' • ' ' .r. • • •• - ' Bs-Phil lnterlandl Cal State Fullerton Students Feted Blt11p'hemy Lands Ballet ' Scott's DELUXE MOWiER • l'M enint t. '"" 1t .U (11•.,I• ,.w.,"1...-111. • S.,., M4Mt, "'' lrttitM Mjn-..t-16"w ... s559s Sidt Ejediol'I 20.INC. ROTARY MOWER • J\li 41titP&Stt ... , I i ...... dw.mt CMfi"it • -. . • ,..,,.,..,4-wMttMifM .. jfthMllt -flltly wf1. fWll204 llG. '77." •6100 Side EjKtion 22 INCH ROIAll!' MOWa .,~ .... -·-... i .. . • lay-lift .............. j;o ··~·--"--·I---" ..... 11 ......... -1wvn4 llG.'lt." 5 78°0 .. ,... ........ ....... --.. ~ .... -&Sh.ttrM ...... . w.,.. ............ __.t4c•tr.h_,.., .. #WIS'124 •aaoo ' Star in Jail '-'The Gnrsl is Growln' '"" SJNIHI ~--. TreatYolltHff& Youia...n To A'M Mowef'!" ~ t. .. • • ' •• • ' ' ' • 7 ! 17 .. I sl w to w • .. Lagu11a · Beaeh Today's Flnal N.Y. Stocks EDITl~N 'lcL 67, ljlO. 84 .. 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES Boy, 13, Slain INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Lankie Lee ==~::· :altd ~el~~~ =:i fuilih school. The harmless statement turned out to be tragically true. -:Jt wun't that Lanlde disliked school, but his fam1Jy moved around a lot and it was di£ficult going to new schools all the Ume. 'lbe l~year-old youth wu tall and old· looking for bis age. Several kldJ In tis Viejo Boat '.Attac.ked' fly Wlw.le A Mission Viejo famUy repo<1<!d t11e1r la.foot cruiser was struck by a whale Stmday, bashing in the aluminwn skiing and frightening them all. 'Ibe Gene O'Neals, of 24252 Barquero Drive, were on their way to the Dana ~int Marina from Newport Beach when Gene, the father, looked to one side. The whale, "a big, black is.foot s.o.b.," according to O'Neal, surfaced !es,, than si:i feet from the craft and appeartti to be headed for a direct collision. Timmy, 10, a carrier for the Daily Pilot, was sU!ering when O'Neal yelled ''Whale!'' A family friend from Torrance, along for the ride, wrenched the wheel from Timmy and swerved the boat away. A bead-oo was a\"Oided, but the whale's tail slammed into the portside, bashing in the aluminum siding. "I never knew the strength of the tail ol a whale," O'Neal remarked. Danny O'Neal, 3, was thrown f(Olll hi back seat by the jolt. His sister Teressa 9, and a friend, Shelly Emory, 9, were in the cabin. Esc~ped Convict, Hostage Killed During , Stmggle ANTIOCH (UPI) -An escaped convict smt and killed a hostage during a stii.Jggle over a gun early today, end the ~ was shot and killtd by police. 'Authorities said Captain Spioer, 20, aOO lri! hostag , II-Obert Tiylor, 2l, both of Antioch. were fatally wounded while sit- ting in Taylor's car. Spicer had been wving time for burglary at the Lebanon, Pa. county prison , police said. The incident began about 3 a.m. in Pittsburgh, northeast of San Francisco. v.'hen patrolman William Gay stopped a car driven by what he thought to be a juvenile girl in violatiol!_ of curlew . Gay said he asked the girl for Jdentific.atlon and when she was unable to produce any be asked Spicer, who was her passenger, for hls driver's license:. The girl then got out of the car and Spicer moved to the driver's seat. Spicer threw the car in reverse, knocking Gay to the ground. Gay jumped in his patrol car and began pu=jng Spicer wbo sped away. Near the Antioch dump. Splcer flred a shotgun al Gay and patrolman Ralph Hemandei who joined the chase. Neither officer was hit during the exchange but Spicer managed to cross an open field to Taylor's house. police said. Spicer commandeered Taylor's car and during a struggle Taylor apparently tried to ~wrest the shotgun from Spicer and was killed, authorities aald. AntJoch · (See 'HOSTAGE, Pqe Z) DOUBLE FEATURE SOLD BOTH ITEMS Here's a "double feature" success story about Dally Pilot cl..,.liled ads. First, look at the8e two ads: "13 HARLEY Sporirt<r. Jllll like new, only 3.000 miles. Sacrl~. 111195, (Phone No.) METAL Fum, cabinet wlloci. Adjtl9table typu>a atbl<, both llu new, 175 ror both •: sell seponrte- ly. (!'hone No.) Both ads were plac«I by .Jhe_ same advertiser to run undtr different clusUlcations on the same day. You guewd it: both worked. The merchAndise was IO&d in e~':h cast to the flflt caller. Want to cto"ible your re- .Wt.! D!al MWm. • neighborhood thought he could have excelled in sports. Thole wbo knew him said Lankle dJdn 't have many close friends his age. He kept pretty mud! to hUMelf and 'r<lied OD bis family for what oompanlon"1ip be had. Lankie died Sat....Uy night from lo11r bullet-. 'lbe boy and bis uncle, T?oy Slantz. 42, entered 1 tut-rood restaurant while hi!J father, Lanklt Sr., stayed outside. Alter shaking and l!lomping to rid lhemselves of snow stuck t.o their coa\s, Nude Bather Found Dead LA JOILA (AP ) -A nude swimmer at-Black's Be a ch drowned in a rip curTent SUnday. The body of Henry Manuel Rutt, 25. was recovered later. The beach is used f()f nude sunbathing and swimming. Puff Foe Sets Battleground In Courtroom By JACK CHAPPELL Of IM D•UY Plltt Stiff Smoking opponent Bruce Hopping vowt.d today he win carry his fight against smoking at Laguna Beach $chool board meetings into the Orange County Superior Court. Hopping who attempted a citizen's arrest of School Board President Norman BJ'O'l'll< and trust.. Gerald Lioke at last 1\lesday'• board meeting has been · rebuffed by the district attorney's office whidl reluetd to file diarges In the ease. At first, both men were charged by Hopping as being in v\olation ci a penal code statute probititing discharge of "gasec>'JS substances" which may be "Injurious, or nauseous, sickening irritating, or offensive to any ol the senses.'' Hopping, cllairnuln ol the healtll- consciom Kal06 Kagathos FO!Rlation , said he will authorize foundation Attorney William Sheffield to atke whatever steps are necessary in the case. As outlined by Sheffield, he will first attempt to have the Superior Court order the district attorney's offiei! to enter the case. tf that fails, suit may be filed ordering the sd1ool OOard to "cease and desist'' from permilting smoking durin g, public meetings. Hopping has been fighting IOOaca> f0< some time and bas betn suCl"eSSful in persuading the Laguna Beach City Coooct1 to ban smoking from the council chambers during meetings. Hopping's school ?Joerd arrests were (See SMOKING, Pag• Z) CofC Considers Police Fracas The Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce will consider its position in the current cootroversy between the Laguna Beach Police E m p I o y e s Association and the city of Laguna Beach during a board of directors meeting at noon Tuesday in •the Hotel Laguna. Olamber Pre!:ldent Larry HWll said while the chamber has no specific resolutJon prepared for the meeting, the current fracUs will be an item of dl9CUSSion. HlDlt said he personally felt the deportment lhould not be cut in effectiveness. adding "good police ls good for busioess." Nortlier11. State Rain Forecast SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -'lbe ""8111<rman Is calling for rain at times through Tueaf.ay OVtt N o r t h e r n CalllomlL Llgllt -began hlllng aionc the nol1bern <'JOU! about midnight, the Nlllooal Weolhel' Serviee reported. Sbowtrl w.,. eipected to opread IOUtlnrard to -y, Stocinm Ind Yooemil< by later toc1a3. Foreca.nen alao llld _, gal .. , :JO to 41 mil.,. per hour, wlllpped the c:out norlll ol Pl>lnt Arena today. Sma8 cralt advbor1's warned ol -II ind le m,p.b. -of there, with I""' o( almllar IGroe In._ lnlml ...... ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1974 TIN CENTS I During Shootout • Ill Holdup Lankle and Stanlz ordered coffee and egg sandwiches. Witnesses said the boy stood near his uncle with a while scarf Ued around his face and said oofning. While Grootendont. 54. was fil.lng the food with bis back to the counter, the uncle said, '"Ibis is a holdup," Police reported. Grootendorst carried a .n.ea.Jiber revolver in a holsler on his hip while ~'Orking late in the store. Upon bearing what Stantl said, Groolendorst whipped aroum, and Lank.ie began mooting, pollco S3ld. Cily deleclives said Groot,ndorst rtlumed the firt and with~ second! both Grootendorst and Lankie were hit at least four tl!nes each. Windows wcrt also blown out and the walls chipped from gunshot. Grootendorat, wounded In the stomach, chest and legs, was listed in critical condition . Lankie, hit at lea.st twiei! In the stomach, staggered backw ards out or the restaurant and (ell inlo a snowdrift. Police say Iha! as the shooting subsidro, Lankie's father lea ~ inlo a car parked outside and then noticed his son on the sidewalk. \\1itnesses sa id the father tried to get his son Wide lhe car but gave up wile~ people began arriving on the scene. Lankie Sr. lhcn drove away. About 30 minutes later. Lank.ie was pronounced dead al t.tarion County General Hospital. Tu·enty·four hours after that , no one had come forward to cla1n1 the boy's body for burial. Officials said the only 1hing found on the boy's clothing \\'as a· school lest on \\·hich he had v.·rittcn his n a m e and ans\\·ered sonic questions. Lankie Sr. is being sought by authorities on an armed robbery charge. Stantz Is ln jai l on the same charge, and Lankie 's mother is WMled on an embeulement v.·arrant. Committed to Detente, Kissinger Tells Russia Their Cup of Tea Smiling .skipper 1'talin Burnham (at the hehn) and his crew are happy because they just won the Sir Thomas Lipton Challenge Trophy, one of \Vest Coast yachting's most coveted prizes. The trophy now goes back to San Diego Yacht Club, where lt originated 71 years ago. To find out how Burnham defeated cup defender Tim Ilagan or the Newport Harbor Yacht Club, see Page 20. Proposed W a_ste Water System Set for Airing A public hearing on the proposed $26. 7 millioo Aliso Water ~tanagement Agency (AWMA) regional waste water collection, treatment, and discharge system will be ' he.Id at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Laguna Beach City HaU. The bearing will provide review of the projeci Environmental tmpQct Report ( EIR) which examines influences the huge project will have on the ecology of the south C'Oasl area. The AWMA system lnvolves eight agencies stretching from-Irvine to Laguna Niguel. • The a.geneles include the Irvine Ranch Water District, El Toro Water District, city of. Lagwia Beach. Emerald Bay Young Service District. Ros.smoor Sanitation Inc., Los Alisos Waler District, ~toultoo· Niguel Wal.e1' District and the South Laguna Sanitary District. M planned. the system w 11 accommodate an estimated population'"Oc 22'5,000 within the district bowlds by 1995. This is a reduction !rom previous estimates of up to 324,IXXI persons, a prediction whidt angered ~v1ronmental organizations during the first hearings of the project's draft EIR. They mainta ined that by sizing the project fo that population, AW~1A \\'ould encourage growth in the South Orange County area. The AWMA proposal calls r or tSee WATER, Page i ) Driver Boy, 9, Takes Car for Spin LOS ANGELES (AP) -The officers never did see the driver as they chased the sports car Uirough three red lights •t speeds up t.o 70 miles an hour. When officers Viet.or Colello and Robert Page stopped the car near a busy city inter...Uon Uiey still couldn't see a driver. Then the two saw a little 9-)'tal'-old boy sitllng In Ille driver's seat , peer- ing up at them from under the rim of the steering.wheel. The unidentified lad, who 1 spokesman said took the car from a neighbor's home, Saturday, was released to his parents pending a juvenile court hearing. ~~~~~~~~- Police Probing Four Burglaries Four burglaries including the theft or a $450 oven from Troller's Bakery were reported to Laguna Beach police over t~e week end. Trotter's reported the heist Saturday. The theft of the microwave oven reportedly occurred somelime l at e Friday night. Rosemary Seaney or 2939 Ch illon \\'ay reported the theft of S50 worth of tools from a vehicle parked in the residence drivewa y Sunda y. • Georie Posanke of 506 Bluebird told off icers $420 in properly includ ing stereo speakers, plants, a lamp and a ceramic elephaiit were stolen from his home sometime Friday , Dick Smith or 396 B Cypress Drive reported the theft of $54 in silver coin from his residence Sunday. Laguna School Office Burgled . Office equipment valued at more than $350 was stolm during lhc weekend by burglan who broke into a Laguna Beach area school, Orange County Sheriff's officers said . Deputies said intruders broke a wlndo v.· at the north sldt or El Mom> Elemen tary SChool, 36111 N. Coast Highway, and then forced thP.ir way into the 8Chool offlct via the e<:iulpmcnt room . • They said an Adding machine was among the businea equipment stoltn. The breakin was di.soa'Verfld and reported by llCbool prlnclpo.l WWlam F. Allen . • • • Blackmail Plct11red MOSCOW (AP) -Secreta ry ol sute Henry A. Kissinger cautioned Soviet leaders UM:lay that there can be no world peace "if we attempt to blackmail each other.'' He made the remark after opening talkl in the Kren11in "ith Communist party leader Lemkl I. Brezhnev on prospects for a new lreaty limillllf.! nuclear arms and fostering peace in the Mjddle East. At the same timt>, Kissinger pledged that Presktent Nixon and hi s Administration remain committed to detente . "Our greatest goal is that o\•er the next three years we can make the relationship that has grown up between ou r two peoples and our leaders lrre\•ersible.·· Kissinger said. In a hmcheon toast, Kissinger said "We want to make the next summit as significant " as the two preceding ones between Nixon and Brezhnev. But he said, "If oor two naUons attempt to la ke advantage of each other, if v.·e attempt to blackma il each other, or deal 'ft'ith each other from a stroog position , then there can be no peace among OUr$Clvcs or in the ~·or\d." As the talks opened Brezhnev said he was optimistic about another Soviot- Arnerican arms agreement. Kissinger hoped during his three days of talks in the Kremlirr to se t the stage of a new nuclear 'ft'eapons treaty President Ni xon could sign on a visit to ?\106C0W next summer. Asked by newsmen if he expected to reach another arms agreement with Nixon then . Brezhnev replied : "I take an optimistic view of that. We have made a very good beginning oo lhal process." He said relations between the superpowers "are good" but "there is much "''ork to do at this time." Asked to characterize the situation \\'ith regard to East-West detente, he said the European security conference in Geneva is "dragging its feet a liUle" because ''the opponents of detente are introducing petty matters that have no tSee KISSINGER, Page Z) Oraage C.ut • Weather Decreasing clood.s Tuesday alter· noon is the .,.,ay the.. weather serv· ice calls it. Ra.1n Po,ssible tonighl !lnd early Tuesda y. Highs in the upper 50s at lhe beaches and the lower 60s inland. INSIDE TODi\Y The. lnvadir hO# returned i~ Sir Th om(Js Lipto11 Chollenge Troph11 lo San Die.go by de· f eating f ive r iools "' Newport. Stor11. photos Page 20. hi'-" '" "" ~ n L.. "'° I m It Al\11 L...... 11 c1n~ s Mlvkl u Cl1uff... fl·M N1llMll .._, 4, 11 C-IU ' ll Otlft .. (MlllJ I Cl'ft•...... 11 S~l'llt "....., 11 ONltl llMllC:" 11 '"'1t lt-U 111Mrie1 "'" ' ''"• ""-""" 1•11 111'-•l .. _I U T~ ,, "llleflet 1•11 WN!flM' t ~" l"4 hair• ,, .._.. ..... l•M ..__ 14 WtrM ........ . ' I \. 2 OAIL V PILOT LB Mond•J, Marett ~. 1974 .Hearst Giv eaway Thousands Get 'Quality' Food SAN FRANCISCO (UPI J -Thousands ot persons turned out in heavy rain today to pick up boxe.s that contained steaks and fresh produce ln the reswnptlon of the food gi\'eaway program d<'mandcd by the terrorist k1dnapers of P~tnc1a llearst. Although the distribution at 17 San F'rancico area locations was schl'duled to start at 8 a.m .. many persons got in Jine houn early despite lhe downpour. Operators of the ''Prople in Need" pogram spon.!!Ored by Particia's father, RandoltM A. Hearst . said the giveav.·ay was intended to ~me as close as possible to the $70 worth of free groceries demanded by the Symbiooese Llbcratioo Army which kidnaped the girl Feb. 4. Dean Counters John Mitchell On Vesco Deal NEW YORK (AP I -OustOO Wbite House coumel John W. Dean UI told a jury today that former Att. Gen. John N. Mitchell repeatedly asked him to check on a securilies fraud investigation agairult financier Robert Vesco. Dean also said that former Commerce Secretary Maurice II. Stans told him he was concerned about lhe circumstances or Vesco's £ecret $200,000 cash contribution to President Nixon's re· c-lection campaign. Dean appeared as a government witness at the !ederal court trial of J'l.fitchell and Stans. The two ronner Cabinet orficials, who resigned their posts to join Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign, are charged with trying to impede an investigation of Vesco in return for his contribution, and lying to the grand jury about it. One perjury count against Mitchell is based on his denial that he talked to Dean about Vesro. • Dean is named as a cocoospirator in the case but not a defendant. Dean said that Mitchell on numerous occaskm asked him to check with Willlam CUey, then cbainnan of the Securiti'es and Exdlange Commis3ion, about the status of the Ve s c-o investlgatlon. He said ttlat on one occasion Mitchell tokl him that some of Vesco's aides had been subpoenaed by the SEC. He said Mitc:hel1 called that "harassment" and .. totally UMecessary." Dean said Mitcehll told him the investigation "appeared to be politically motivated." Mitchell asked Dean to call Casey and get the subpoenas posted until after the election, Dean tcstified. '1'le subpoena!. Dean said Mitchell told him. \\wld be likely to reveal Vesco's contribution ; that Donald Nixon Jr. of Newport Beach, the Presidmt's nephew, was involved with Vesro, and that Edward NiJ:oo, the President's brother, also y;a,, coMected with !he case. "The \\'hole thing is something we don't need before election ," Dean quoted Mitchell as saying. Testimor:iy nas Indicated that Vesro and his aides took the Filth Amendment before the SEC. The contribution v:as not ma.de public until after the SEC filed a civil fraud action against Vesco Nov. 27, 1972. Dean said that Stans told him in late October 1972 that he was concerned about the Vesco contribution be<:a.use Convnon cause riled a 1 a w s u i t demanding revelation of all large rontributions to the Nixon campaign before April 7, the e£foctive date of a new law requiring contributions lo be r<p0rted. • OUN61 COAST 1,1 DAILY PILOT 'no• 0.M!N C...t ~11.Y l'IL.01", _...._.,,Jcfrt 11 Uomlli"-1 11M ..._.,..._ It Nl1-'1 ~ "" °'"""' , .. tt l'vlllf>111nt c-111• s_. "1• 9dltleftt ••• """'..,,.,,· ~I' l!lr9lllt'I "rllloy, 1W Ce111 """"· N""""°'1 &t9(11. Hwnl•t>Q!Or>" INCll/l'-111j,, Vtli.y, Lt'9Wla Beech. fr"lnt!SeddleMtt -51,. 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INM U,U "*"""'' l!lllllwrl' -.illltll•M 0.41 ,_11~. A typical box distributed at a center ln the predominantly Latin A mer I ca n ~1ission District of San Franci11<.'0 included four or fl\•e steaks, 90me ol then1 T·bone cuts; two packages of frozen fllet of S-Ole, a frozen chicken, a dozen eggs, a quart of milk, a jar of peanut butter, a package of fresh produce that Included yams, oruons, oranges, apples and bananas, and other foodstuffs. 1be line at the Mission District person and a number had more than two blocks with about 4()1).500 persons v.'alUng at 8 a.m. Because of ttle crowd, the.. tenter had begun handing out the food early. TI.ere were no restrictions on how many boxes rould be taken by one; pei"5003 dna a number had more lhan one. One man wheeled two of the food boxes 8\\'8Y in a wheelchair, and another had a box on his shoulder while limping alone on one crule'fl. Although lhey had been asked to bring shopping carts by the pin operators. a number of persons turned up in automobiles. some of them Gadillae!. One woman left balancing a box on her head. Several boxes were OOing loaded into the same aul.Omobile. No one appeared cheerful. "l'\·e been \\.'ail ing in the rain since 6 o'clock," one man said. The distribution wa.'S possibly the last under the People in Need program. Spokesmen for the group said they fl.ad about $1 million left to devote to the program and that It aU might be spent today. The latest distribution .,,,·as the fifth since Patricia was kidnaped and Uie SLA demanded the distribution as a "good faith gesture." "Bring shopping cart.cl or something to carry the food ," Kramer said. He said the program "now has a quality food to distribute," thus meeting a major complaint of the SLA. The food program is financed by 11earst, president and editor of the San Francisco ·Examiner. The giveaway as originally set up came to an abrupt halt two w~ ago after the SLA kidnapers labeled it only ··crumbS" foc the people. They temed some of the free food u "hog feed" and "unfit for human consumption." So far, about 11 million worth ol food ha..s been given to 120,000 persons. Laguna Museum Plans Exhibits Of Two Artists Paintings of the femine fpnn by one of America's noted portraiti.5ts and a one· man showing of camerale.ss photography are currently planned for an upcoming exhibit at the Laguna Beach M~um ol. Art. The show will open with a public reception from 7 to 9 p.m. April 10 and continues at the musewn through May 2. The museum, 3fJ7 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. is apen v;eekdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and from 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekends. Admission is free. The study or the female fonn is by \Villiam Frederick Foster from the rollection of Laguna Beach artist lvan Anderson. Foster's illustrations have appeared In such-tnagat.ines as Harpers, Saturday Evening Post, Life. Liberty and Scribner's. Foster gained fam e 20 ynrs ago when he lcfl a $2,000-a·\\"Cek job in New York, to nlotorcyc le to Los Angeles. There. he painted portraits of movieland greats and nude models v.·orks which have found their way info the rollections of people ~uch as \Villiam Randolph He:irsl. Jfarold Loyd and John Barrymore. The Foster exhibit is in the museum's Gallery Five. Color photographs by Jerry Burchfield, an inst.ruclo r at Newport School ot Photography and UC Irvine will be displayed at the Cupren Gallery in the museum . He is coowner or B and C photography and Cu.!tom Jab services In Lquna Beach. Legion Slating Potluck Dinner Laguna Beach American Legion p05t 222 and its auxiliary will o~rve the S5th armiversary of the veteran's organization wi th a potluck diMer al 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the Legion clubhoust, 384 U!glon Street. Included in the evening's ,ictivil ies are a magic show by Francis Ashley and a reading of the post's hislory written by the late ft.a.lph Bell and read by 0. \V. Price. The erogram will be completed as Lt• Chatham re.ad! a list of narnts of put. post eotnmanders and Della Armiuige recites the namtt of P'o't auslUary preskientl. Veterans and their ladies m welcome to attend. Fl'OM PageJ HOSTAGE ... police then shot and kllled Spicer. Gay was taken to Pittsburgh CommU\lllY lloopllRI for obl<rv•tloo of poosible Internal inJurios 111ffered during the foll . The girl who had been riding with Spicer wes laken to juvenile h1dl. • Royal Visitor --' Princess Anne visits her personal bodyguard, In· spector James Beston. at the hospital where Beston is recovering from bullel wounds received in last week's kidnap attempt on the princess. She also visited others wounded in the incident. From Page 1 WATER ... con.st:ruction of a large treatment plant in Aliso Canyon aOOut a mile and a hail up the canyon from Coasl Highway w i t h collection lines running north to Laguna Beach and SOU1h to South Laguna. Treated effluent from the plant would be disdiarged brt.o the ocean via an outfall 8,000 feet into dle Pacific off Aliso Beadt. Current plaM also call for the highly treated waste water to be UMld for golf course, greenbelt, a n d agricultural irrigatJon during the summer. The diluent may ai.o be pumped Into the now salt contaminated ground water basln.1 and to reclaim them for agrtoultural irrlgatlon well use. AWMA olficials maJntain that tile regional approach W water treatment will make the project eligible for state and federal granto. - J,lillllll Beadt's CIU!moded 1931 oewage t-·jllant _ .. tit - following completion ol tile project. Completion has ti-tentativell' Id for APriU'1'c ~ --· -· Vandals Ruin Preserve Project by Dana Pitpils lleavy vandalism over the past week to brklge:s, trees and trails at a new wildlife preserve near Dana Hills High .School has set the entire project back.. di!appointed school spokesmen said today. The canyon, a gift to the schooi by the OeVenJpr of a nearby housing trect, was developed during hundreds of hours of donated labor by students and othe~ volunt.eers, but vandalism which began a week ago has ruined most ol the (J)(18tructiort Specimen trees planted by science department pupil! aL9o have been taken or damaged, said Dana Hills Science Department Clla1nnan James Klein. Klein said many of the stairways were torn out and sycamore and oak trees were iolen. ... "We were Jim getting ready -to distrtbute leaflets arouod tlle conupunitf • ~•.... • !.. """' ' letting residents know that the preserve existed," he said. He said the announcements \vill still be sent out, but the emphasis now will be to discourage \'a~als. The canyon originally faced destruction as a habitat for wildlife, but through an arrangement with a developer. lhe Capistrano Unified School District and the County of OraJ18e, it became pennancnl open space. The role of the 18-acre canyon is that of an outdoor classroom where students can take guided walks with teadlers and study native vegetation and wildlife. Klein did not set a dollar amount to the damage caused by vandalism . But much of the i;soo hours of \\.'Ork by 15 young members o( the Neighbor:hood Youth Corps will have to be repeated to restore the area1 he said. ,, Felon , Hostage Die in Battle Witli Policemen F oniier Mayor to Battle ·For Seal Beach Election ANTIOCH (UPI) -An escaped prisoner and his hostage were killed early today after a gun betUe with police. Authorities said Captain Spiter. 20, and his hostage. Robert Taylor. both or Antioch. died of gunshot v.·ounds in a car near Taylor 's residence. Anlioch police said they had come to the assistance of Pittsburgh police who were involved in a shootout with Spicer about 3 a.m. Spicer n1anaged to elude officers in the darkness and made his way through an open field to Taylor's house where he took him captive. \\'hile attempting to escape in 'l'a ylor·s c:ir. a struggl<' ensued inside, police said. Offic('rs thl'n rushOO the car. Poli ce said they believed one of their shot s fatally ~-ounded Spicer but .,,,,ere unsure how Taylor \Vas kil!cd. Antioch police said they were notified that SpiC<'r escaped from the rounty prison in Lebanon, Pa., and police said he had a criminal record. PiU.sburgtJ police said Spicer was stopped for having a juvenile girl in his car af~r curfew. However, before patrolman William Gay could make an arrest. Spicer sped off, knocking Gay to the ground with the car's do<r. Gay v.•as taken to Pittsburgh C.Ommunity Hospital for observatioo but was not believed seri~ly injured. Both victims were pronounced de.ad on arrival at Delta f\.femorial Hospital. Police said they believed Taylor Hvt'd akme. From Page l KISS INGER .•• bearing on deteote. '1 Although he was speaking ol tile Geneva conference, it was assumed that he was referring to the: S o v l e t government's problems wittl tht U.S. , Congr~ over trnde and J e w i s h emlgraUon as well as to the Western demand at ihe security conference f« freer Clow of peoples and ideas. Before the meeting, Brv.hnev sought out American reporU!rs lo the large Kremlin room normally med for the ruling Politburo's weekly 9CSSlons. He osked them . "You do want It to be better. don 't you? There .tl'f; some people who would llke to see things worse." Wboo Kt...lnger and Ilia small group joined nrezhnev, the Kremlin leader shook Ki~,ingcr's hand and said, "T told them l was optimistic. They agreed they :ill want ()(!Jct. That makes it ca.sler to ~tart." A former mayor of Seal Beach will try to oust the city's current mayor In Tuesday's mlmidpal election, in a bitter reflection of the 1971 recall campaign. In another councilmanic district . an appointed COWlcilman will Lry to save his job from a listed challenger and a write- in candidate. The third councllman up for re- election, Harold Holden. 72, repttsenling Oi:!trict. 5, Leisure World, has no opposition. In a heated battle, ~forlon Baum. 36, will try lo win back the post ne held in 1971, \\'hoo as mayor, he and two other councilman v.·ere., recalled from office by the voters. Baum is t.ry1ng to unseat J'l.1ayor Thom:is Black.man . 41 , who Jed the recall elC'Ction again<it him and took his place on the council. There are no other Traf fie Boomin g On South Coast As Crisis Ea ses Frveways and tourist attractions along the South Orange Coast over the weekend became barometers of the easing fuel shortage as traffic once more clogged the area. Observers or the weekend crush o! cars termed the increase "just like the old days." · Border patrolmen who maintained checkpoints both days at San Onofre said a dramatic increase in weekend traffic was noted Saturday and Sunday. Their al"T'f!St totals o( lllegal allw trying to pass with the crush of cars was normal f9r the two days. At Dana Harbor, where the weather was far from perfect. bo3ten increased tn numbers. nevcrth~less. So did tourists walking through the nttractJons of the harbor, said patrolmen . . Several .service statloM were ~ on Sunday along the coa5'. but the old days had not returned there. Lints '4'.t!e evident at each open business. "-. Yet anothf!r lndicaUon of increased trafnc was evident durillgJhe weekend. San Clemente police and ambulance crcw3 rolled to several freeway accidents Sunday as the 11ftemoon t r a f f I c increztscd. No major injuries wett: rtported In the mishaps, bowe\•er. contendeTS In the District 3 race which covers the area north of Pacific c.oast High\\·ay and a small portion of Leisure Worlcl In that 1970 campaign,· Baum. along with Councilmen Conway Fuhrman and Tilomas Hogard, "'-ere recalled shortly after they fired City l\1anager Lee Rlsner and City Attorney Jim Carnes. Baum and Hogard had just been elected to the council in 1970 on an anti-development platform. In this campaign, Baum has charged that Blackman and the Good Government Group \the recall organiiation) were s~pported. by such big developers as tnc Bixby Ranch and S. and S. Construction. Both companies had donated $500 each to the recall effort, but Blackman said he .,,,·as unaware of it at the time. and that the city council has not indiscriminately atlov.·ed development. In District I, which rovers old town and Surfside, future grov.1h is also a key issue. James Dunn , ~. the i.nc\lmbent cowtcilman, was appainted to his seat last August \\'hen Thomas Barnes moved out or \he city. Barnes had edged Dunn for the council post in the 1972 election. Sieven Kenyon, 28, claims Dunn should not have beerl"'Bppointed to the post since he had lost an earlltr election, but Dunn cmtends. he was the people's second choice anyway. Stanie Benz . 30, has run a strong. vocal campaign as a "'Tite-in carididate. She tried to file suil to get on the ballot when s'ne moved from one councilmanic district to this one, but lost the court case. Both Kenyon and 1-fs, Benz want to sec sharp limits lmpo8ed on the future grn"1h of old town. Son1e of the mcrchant.s have asked for downto"n redevelopment. Seal Beach ~ allov;ed lo hold Its election 'l\Jesday, rather than March 5 hke most other California cities, because it is a c:ha.rter city. 2 Shootings Probed For Racial Motives MANHATTAN BEACH (UPI) -Police arc tr;•ing to e3tabllsh a possible llnk between two wetkend shootings that left one man dead and may have been racially motivated. 'lbc 1 h o o t I n gs OCCWTOO within a nve hour period ~a block apart. Jn each caM, the Intended victim was a black mm· with a white Vt'Oman, police said. I Jury Picked In 'Devil Cult' Trial B·y TO.\t BARLEY 01 fll• o.i1y 'I'-' Sltfl' Jury M?lection begru1 today In IA 1 OJ'an~ County Superior Court trial 1 ordered to determine the prC!ent menial i suite or accused "devil cult ·· killer Steven Craig Hurd . lfurd. nov.· 24, ~·as reccnlly returned from Atascadero State Hospital \lfith the ruling by psydiiatri5t.s Uiere Uiat he has now recovered his sanity . - He 'vas round to be insane two y~ ago and unable . lo' face Superior Court trial Oil murder charges aft.er ~fmiod Viejo tcadler Fiorence Nancy Brown, 31.. was killed and dismembered in an lrvtne orange grove oo June 2. 1970. Hurd' is the ·sc1r-cooressed leader or·~ gang of drug using transients linked to that ritual slaying and to the hatchet murder 24 hours earlier ol Santa An.i" service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin. 21. 11urd sl ated in on<"' pre-oomm)tme~t session during which his I a w y e. r . described hin1 as "crazier lhan a hool 0'14'r' that he was obeying the orders p( the dc\'il al the time and that his life Wa$ dedicated to the worship of Satan. II was also-hlleged that portions or ~trs. Brown's lx>dy were consumed afler she \\'as stabbed lo death while members of the gang intont'd ritual tributes to Satan. ~ If Hurd is found to be .sane by the jury in Judge Walter Cllaramza's courtroom he will be ordered to face trial on the revived murder charges. Other members of the Hurd gang are serving loog prison terms for their role in one or both of the two killings. Among them are Arthur C r a I'S,, "~loose" Hulse, now 21, who is serving'$'.' life tenn in st.ate prison for the at murder of Carlin. ' ~ ~ang member Christopher "Gypsf,'" Gibboney of Oregon, now 21, is serving an indefinite term under the California Youth Authority for his part in the mutilation slaying of f\.1rs. Brown ol. £li Toro. ~ • Supreme Court Not 'Chicken' About Profanity , . " l .. From \\1re Servh::e1 v-ir ASIIlNG10N -The Supreme Court indiCaled lbday that 1udges should not be too quick to pwiish for a lltUe profanlW'' on the witness stand. · In an unsigned opinion, the couTf' reversed the Tulsa. Okla. contempt conviction of a man w~ blurted out · "chicken • - --" while testifying about an assault. Terry Dean Eaton appealed the $50 fine for direct contempt of rourt 3$Cssed after he used the word to describe his alleged a~ilant. "Thus single isolated Us&.ii:e of street vernacular not directed at the judge or any officer of the court cannot constitutionaJJy support the conviction d! criminal rontempt," the Supreme r .... ff.:t·' said. ..,.,,...,,.., Justice Lewis~ F. -Powell in 'i,,.t·· concurring opinion said he place a P':.'.-.' mi um on maintenance of civility in 1"' · cour1room. "But before there is :-e:sok:' lo the. summary remedy of criminal con· tempt, the court at least owes the party concerned some sort of notice or "·am:. in)?.·· PO\\·ell said. "No doubt there are circumstances in ~·hich a courtroom outburst Is so egregious as to justify a summaiy rcsponge by the judge without speclfio: warning. but this is surely not such ;. case," Poell said. _1 Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and: Justices William H.Rebnquist and Han:i:.- A. Blackmun dissented. . ..s. ln another case, the court tocllJ' refused to review ·an appeal ol a decisl• which struck down New Jersey's J!ICF• abortion law as an invasioo of a woman'i prvacy and WlCOO!litutionally vague. Since it ruled last year that women anil their doctors have a riJhl to decide on ah abortion in t he first trimester tifJ pregnancy, the court has declined to he any abort'°'1 cases. Before the court's last decision ~ abortion , a three-judge district eoui{ declared thet the New Jersey abort~ statute "is unconstitutlona11f vague on ltl face as applied" because it "chills a~ deters lhe plaintllf-ph)"ldans In u.. exercise of protected First Amend~t activities and •.. it violates plaintl!r- pbysicians right under the l 4 \Ji Amendment to freely practice """' profession of their d>Otce. '' From Pagel SMOKI NG .•• invalidated as ntltber man wu actuallt" taken into custody or restraiMd. • Laguna patrolman Roo U..ter, called lo lhe school boon! meeting. ,.,.. made oai a crime report Uatln& only Unke M , .. smoker. Browne had ttfralned from <:- smoking during lhe me<tlng • 9 Hurt in Melee POMPANO BEACH. Fla. (AP}--Nlne persons, including e.lght policemen, were lniured •·hen a rock-throwing melee broke out at a camlval Sunday night, police said. The dlsturbo.ncc was brought under control about S a.m. today, five hou1' after It started, poll~ saJd • I I ·1 t ' .. Ill .. ... I • . ... -• ..,: ' •• J Saddlebaek EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stooks VOL. 67, NO. 84, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDA~, MARCH 25, \974 TEN CENTS Mission Represent.alive. ol the ~fJssM>n Viejo Homeowners Association will begin circulating petitions this week asking the Orange County board of supervisors to set up a municipal advisory council (i)lAC) in Mission Viejo. The cow>etl, a Jpcally elected. body to give better r epresenta t ion to unincorporated areas, \\"OUld bave from five to nine members. A relatively new local government Viejo coocept. it would be a legally recognized advisory body to the board of supervisors on local issues of law enforcement, parks and recreation, ·plaMing, tralflC and development. Ten percent of the registered voters ¥.ithin the proposed council boundaries must sign the petitions to bhng it up 'for consideration. lncludcd in the MAC arta v.·ouJd be !he 11 ,QOO.acre l\!ission Viejo Planned Com- Petitions for munity which now has about 'Z7 ,IXM> per- "°"'· The a>Uncil v.'QU]d be financed with la1 revenues in County Service Area Nine, y,~kh corresponds in area to the propo«d MAC boundaries. Pat Schubert, chairman of lbe MAC study oommittee, said vol\.tnteen wouk1 be going from hou.se to house and would set up Lables in recreation and slx>pping centers. The petition is the outgrowth of study committee on the municipal advisory council in the homeowners U30ciaUon "1lldi bas for the past eight montm work~ with both the board o f supen1sors and tbe oommunlty. . ~fay 2%1 1973, the supervisors adopt~ a rtSOlution setting up guidelines for mWlidpal advisory coundls a n d describing their purp>se, fund.ion.s, Council Setup eligibility, and formation procedures. In NO\· ember, the 51.udy committtt sent questionnaires to the 7, 100 homes In Miasion Viejo to aSie6S v.·hether the MMlUJlity was interested In the council ld<a. Of the :ro pen:eot who responded .. percent sakt they would s u p p o r l fonnation of a MAC "without delay." If the needed signatures are obtained, the board of supervisors vt'lll hold a public hearing oo the proposal nnd Uxn deckie v.·hether to se t up a MAC structure for ~1iltiion Viejo An election "'·ould be called and votur would elect their ~1AC representatives. "5in<.'C no addiHonal need for finances lxyood the ser\'ice area fund,., are now projected. voters v.·ould not be asked to approve any tax r3IC increase. Conflict Growin~ El Toro Airport ]'!int Use Hit Their Cup of Tea Smiling skipper Maun Burnham (at the helm) and his crew are happy because they just won the Sir Thomas Lipton Challenge Trophy, one of \Vest Coast yachting's most coveted prizes. The trophy now goes back to San Diego Yacht Club, where it originated 71 years ago. To (ind out bow Burnham defeated cup defender Tim Hogan of the Newport J-larbor Yacht Cl ub. see Page 20. Sttident Running For Saddleback T111stee's Post Steven Mueller, a Saddleback Cotlege student, became the first o f f i c a I candidate for the school's board or trusleesr'riday. - ~1ueller, of 14582 Clarissa Lane, Tustin. will nm in Tustree Area One, a seat now held by refigning trustee Alyn Brannon. Other vanc:ancies will ~ in area two. Tustin ; and area three. including Laguna Beach, and South Laguna to Eastline Drive. Because the trustee areas are divided along complicated precinct lines making the boundaries difficult lo describe. spokesmen ror the Registrar or Voters urged prospective candidates lo have their addresses checked as part of the district by the Registrar's office, 834- ~. Fi.ling deadline is 5 p.m. April 5 for the three vacancies. New trustees will be elected at large by all district voters Jtme 4, but candidates must live within the boundaries of one of the three areas. l 'iejo's Students 1.' o Start School ' Hall Hour Later • Tape Claims Suspect ~Stoned' in Shooting A taped statement in which a key prosecution 4 witness described Cypr~ police scrgeant-Thomas..Baroldi. 26, as "stoned out o( his mind" when a 111arine Corps helicopter pilot was shot and killed In a Tustin bar was played back today to an Orange County superior oourt jury. Tustin narcotics investigator Fred Krosco sat in the witness stand :.ind listened to the tape of his conversation with Bachelor·s III bar manager Fred Cisneros as the trial of two police officers went into its fourth week . Baroldi is c:ccused or the killing or 111arine Corps captain Randall Steven Robinette, 1.5, on January 5, 1973. Garden Grove patrolman Jerry Gray, 29, is charged with assault with a deadly weapon in his alleged "1ounding of patron Sam Campise, 35, during the same tavem brawl. Bar manager Cisneros testified today via the tape that he saw Baroldi raise his weapon and shoot Robinette In the chest at point blank: range during a melee in the barroom. It is alleged that the dispute then spilled over into the paTking lot of the tavern where Gray drew a gun and put a bullet ooe inch from Campise's heart. Cisneros told Krosco during the taped interview that Baroldi fell back agatnst the wall after Robinette was shot and seemed incapable of standing on his feet. Firemen v.'bo tried to revive lhe dying ~larine officer have testified that his last v.·ords were to the eUect that he wa.5 trying to help the two struggling officers and not impede them. Laboratory analysts lesitifed In the prosecution phase of the trial that their tests Indicated that Baroldi was drunk at the lime of the shooting and that Gray was on the borderline b e t w e e n drunkenness and sobriety. Pot Va"n Confiscated LAREDO, Tex. IUPI) -A van loaded with 1,450 pounds of marijuana was confiscated Sunday on Zapata Highway inbound to Laredo from Mexico. The driver. who fled on foot, was the object of a search today. Boy, 13, -Dies • Ill Cooflicts betewen the city of Irvine and the Orange County Airport Land Use Col'Mlisskln over plans for property around El Toro ~tarine Corps Alt Station have maced 83 the county agency nears April 4 adoption of a master plan. Mel Roop, associate cily planner, has told city councilmen a f'mal state master plan of land u.ses around airports would have a signif1Ca0t Impact on city plans. Councilman Robert West of the Colony said !Oday the proposed county plan Sanity Trial For 'Devil' Suspf!ct Ope11s 11)1 TOM BARLEY Of -.,.,., """ ,,.., Jury sel«tlon began today in an O.range COOnty Superio.r Court trial ordered to determine the present mental state of accused "devil cu1t" killer Steven Craig Hurd. Hurd, now 24, 'A'3S recently returned from Atascadero State Hospital with the ruling by psydliatrists thert that he has now recovered his sanity. He was found to be insane twG years ago and unable to face Superior Coort trial oo murder charges after ri.fis:sion Viejo teacher Florence Nancy Brown. 31, was killed and dismembered in an Irvine orange grove m June 2, 1970. Hurd is the .9ell-confessed leader or a gang of drug ming transienU linlr;ed t.O that ritual slaying and to the hatchet murder %4 hours ~rller of Santa-Ana service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21. Hurd stated in me pre-commitment sesst.on duril!g which his I a w y e r described him a.s "crazier than a hoot owl" that he was obeying the orders of the devil at the time and that his life was dedicated to the worship of Satan. It was also aneged I.bat portions of J\trs. Brown's body were consumed after she was stabbed lo death while members ot the gang intoned ritual tributes to Satan. If Hurd is found to be sane b}' the Jury in Judge Walter Olara.nua's t'OUrtroom he will be ordtted to face ~ on the revived murder charges. Other members of the Hurd gang are serving long prison terms for their role in one or both of the two k.illinp. Among them are Arthur C r a i g "J\1oose" Hul5e. now 21, who is serving a life tenn in state prison for the ax !Set HURD, P1ge !) Shootout Students at Mission Viejo High School Ind El Toro Wgh School will begin their days a half hour later starting Tuesday. Mission Viejo will begin classes at 7:30 •.m. and finish at noon. El Toro will start at 12 :20 p.m. and end at 5 p.m. on Mondays and Fridays and 4:50 on Tuad11y, w~. and Thursday. Youtli Shot in Attempted Holdup Witli Unck · 'Ibe Ume switch Yt'a.S made due to Jtngthenlng days. The schedule Is the Same as lhat Wied at tbe be.ginning of the year. Jt was modified with the advent of national DayUlllJt Saving 'lllne. The two schools are meeting at the Miiiion Viejo facility on double .... 1ooo unW the n ... 1:1 1'>n> Hl(h SCilool now under ooostructloo Ls completed. Tear Gas Tossed CORTE, Fron<e (UPI) -A police 1>11trolmM hurl«! a tea.r gas gr<Mdc In the diredim ol Premier Pierre Mesmer u he !cit the munlclpallty building In tJm centra1 Corsican town ·t00.ay1 polite' lald. Nobody wu injur<d and the 111kSentiflfld grenade thrower was ar· "''""'· they said. INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Laniie 1'e Whisenant Jr. told neighborhood friends: not Jong ago that be probably wouldn't finish school. The harmless statement turned out to be tragically true. It wasn't that Lankie disliked school. but his family moved around a lot and It wa> diffkult going to new schools all the time. The U-yeaMld youth was tall and otd- looldng !or his age. Several kl& in Ills ne!Rhborbood tbougbt be could have welled In~· Tbooe who lcnew him said Laniie didn't hive many dOM frif:Dds bis age. He krpt pretty much to himoell and l'l:U«I on hl.s family for what companfon!h.lp he hod. !.ankle di«! Saturday nlgbl ln>m four buUetWOWlds. The boy and his uncle, Tn>y Stanti, 4~ entered a fast·fooci reataurant •bile hl.t lather, I.Ankle St .. stay«! outsld<. Alltr shaking and stomping to rid thttn.selve. of mow stuck to lhelr coall. Lankie and Stanti ordered coffee and egg sandwiches. Witoesses said the boy stood near his uncle with a while tcarf tied around hiS face and aaid oofhing. While Grootendorst. 54, was l'i1lng the food with his back to the counttr, the uncle said, "111i! is a holdup, '1 Police repnrt.d. Grootendol'll canl<d .a .JUallber revolver in a bolster on tds :\:-=-hilt '""""" late In lbe lt<n. Upoo what Stantz •kl, Groott:ncSom wbi around, and ...._ began -ting. police said. . • City detectives oaid G100t-.i returned lbe !ltt and within -llOlh Groottndorst and Lankle were ,Jilt at iu.t lour Umes eadl. Windows -alto blown out Md the walll dip,.. fruo gunsllol. Grootendorst, woW1d<d In tbe -..II, che.st and legs. was Usttd ln crltk:al cooditlon. !.ankle, hit at leut twice in lbe stomach, stagg..-.d backwards out ol the restaurant and fell Into a snowdrift. PoliC"e say that as the shooting subsided, Lanlde's father leaped lnto a car parked outside aod then noticed his son on the sidewalk. w1-... said tbe !allier tri<d to get blJ: 10D b'Wde the car but gave up when -le began arriving on the sooie. IAlokie Sr, then drove IWQ. About • mirl.ztes later, lAnkie WU pninoun«d -at Marioo Ooonty G<netti lloopit.i. Twenly·four houn after that, no jJtt6 J'lld come forward to clalm-lbe boy's body f« burial. Ollidals 'llld tbe only lhlnc found on lbe boy's dotbq wu a achoo! tat on wllldt be .bad wrlU... his • a m • and answettd --loos. I.anti• St. la being IOllChl by eulhoritlel Gii an ITmod robbery cba'I". Stonll t.s In fall on tbe same cbarae, and Lank~'• mother i$ wanted on an embazlemeot warraoL ' appears to him to be "greasing the ~·heels for joint use of El Toro by military and commerc\aJ Aircraft. "I'm agin' that,'' West added. "1 think 'A'e should solve the county's airport problem oot just move It from Newport Beach to Irvine." West suggest~ the question of the dly of lt\'ine's o(fici.al stand on the rounty agency's master plan may be addressed at Tuesday's council meeting. Last Thursday, Roop "''as the only public or private agency representative to address !he airport land planners during a public hearing on the agencys' increas~ "area of influence". A motion to expand the territory the county Airport Land Use Commission 11.·ill plan aroW'Kt El Toro l\1CAS was approved unanimously at Thursday's meeting, Roop said. Commissioner Brian Douglas of Fullerton told the Daily Pilot today the (See AfRPORT, Page 2:1 Wl1ale Strikes C1·uise1· Of Mission Viejo Family A Mllskrl Viejo family r.,,.,n..1 their ta.foot cruiser was struck by a v.1lale Sunday, bashing in the aluminum .tkling and frightening them all. The Gene O'Neals, of 24252 Barquero Drive. \\'ere on their way to the Dana Point llfarina from Newport Beach v.·hen Geoe1 the father, looked to one side. The whale, "a big, black 25-foot s.o.b.," according to O'Neal, swiaced 1ess lhan six feet from the craft and appeared Lo be headed for a direct collision. Timrny, 10, a carrier for the Daily Pil<i., waa steering when O'Neal ye\IM. "\\'hale!" A family frit.'fd from Torrance, along for the ride. ~·renched the wheel from Tinuny and S'A'ervcd the boat away. A head-on was avoided, but the whale's tail slammed into the portside. bashing 1n the aluminum siding. "I never krww the strength of the tail of a whale," O'Ncnl remarked. Danny O'Neal, J. was tllroY:n from lhe back seat by tbe jolt. His sister Teressa , 9, and a friend, Shelly Emory, 9, ~·ere in the cabin. Kissinger Launcl1es Talks Witl1 Russ U1·ging~Cautio'u--- MCECOW IAPI -Secretary d Slate Henry A. Kissinger cautioned Soviet leaders today that there can be no world peal"e "if "'e attempt to blackmail each other:• He made the remark after opening ta1k! In the Kremlln with Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev on prospects for a new treaty limiting nuclear arms and fostering peace in the Middle East. At the same time. Ki.slinger pledged that PresWieot Nixon and his Administration remain conunitted to detente. "Our greatest goal is that o\·er IM: next three years we can make the relationship that has grown up ~tween our t\\'O peoples aM our leaders irreversible," K.Lss.inger said. Jn a luncheon toast, KLo;singer sald ''We want to make the next summit a.~ significant" as the two preceding ones between Nixoo aod Brei.hnev. !M be said, ·:u our two naliaQs attempt to take advanlage of each other, if we attempt to blackmail each other. or deal With eadl othor ln>m a stniog pos!Uoo., then thete can be no peace amoog ounelves or in the world." DOUBLE FEATURE SOLD BOTH ITEMS Here's a "double feature'' s~ s111rf about Dally Pilot classified ads. Firlt, look at thefie t'4·o ads : '7l HARLEY Spontter. j...t like ntW, only 3,000 miles. Sacr'i.lke, $11195, f Pllone No.) Ml."l'AL Filing cabinet w/lock. Adjustable typing table , bOlh like new, m for both<.: tell separate- ly. fPl\ooe No.I Both ad.t ,..,.. placed by the .. .,. act.ertber to run under dlffem>t clasatOcatJons on ~ same day. You g.-1 It; both 'WWk<d. T b e mercbmd:l.st WAI 10k1 In e. .. ':'h case to the llrtt c:a11 .... Want to do·Jbte your re- ...,lta! Dtal IO-a7&. ··, At. the talks opened Brezhntv sai<I he v.·as optimistic abotrt another So\iel· American arms agrttment. Kiss inger hoped during his three days of talks in the Krem lin to set the stage of a new nuclear 'A'eaJX>n.S treaty President Nixon could sign on a visit to llfa5e0w next summer. Asked by newsmen . if he expected to reach another arms agreement with Nixon then , Brezhnev rep lied : "I take an optimistic view of that. We have made a very good beginning on that process." He said relations between the superpowers "are good" but "there is much work to do at this time." Asked to characteri ze the situation \\'ilh regard to East·\\'est dctenle. be said the European security conference in <iene\·a L~ "dragging its fee.t a little'' because "the opponents of detente are int roducing petty matters that have no bearing on detente." Although he was speaking of the /J S.. KISSINGER, Page Zi Oraage Coast Weather Decreasing clouds Tuesday after· ooon is lhe v.·ay the v.·eather ser\·· ice calls it. Rain possible tonight and early Tue9day. lfighs in the upper 505 at the beaches and the lov.-er 60s inland. INSIDE TODAY Tht l 11vat:Ur has return~d tht Sir' Thomas Lipton Challenge Trophy to Sa n Diego by CU. ]eating five r ival.! tri Newport. Storu , photos Pogt 20. ... _ M ... M. • .,. lf C-.ilttnllllll I CltMft... tl,M ,_, " c-. II DMtfl lttflCM II ••1twi.. ..... ' •l"9f'l-'-1 It lllMllCt ,. .. """""~ ti -,. 1111 lflol..,.. fl AMI UMotrt II _.,.,.. ., ••MMt ..... ',. 0.-c..-, • .,,.... "'"" " ,_,. .... " ,_. ~"... 1 .. 11 T-M '#Mtflw • ..... _.."""~Mt .................. End iti Siglit? This sign on the wall of a building located near the Newport Free- wav at 17th Street in Sanla Ana makes still another comment about the" latest collegiate fad . Supreme Court Not 'Cl1icken' About Profanity From Wire Services WASHINGTON -.The Supreme Court indicated lOday that judges should not be too quick to punish for a little profanity on the "'itness stand. Jn an unsigned opink>n, the court re\·ersed tlie Tulsa. Okla. contempt conviction o{ a man w~o blurted out "chicken.· --" "'hile testifying about an assault. Terry Dean Eaton appealed the $50 fine for direct contempt of court assessed after he used the WQrd to describe his .. alleged assailant . ''Thus single iSCllated US3Re of street vernacular not directed at the judge or any officer of the court cannot constitutionally support the conTicUon of criminal contempt," the Supreme Court said. Justice Lewis F. Powell in a concuning opinion said he place a pre- mium on maintenanct! of civility in the courtroom. "But before there Ls fiesort ~ to the summary remedy o( criminal coo- tempt . the court at least owes the party concerned some sort of notice or warn- ing ... Po"·ell said. "No doubt there are circumstances in which a courtroom outburst is so egregious as to justify a summary · response by the judge without specific warning, but this is surely not su~h a From Pagel AIRPORT ... .se\•en-member panel probably will adopt a plan which conforms to city and county wnlng for the land around lhe military jetport. Douglas said he was confiden t any present differences between land uses designated ln the county plan propoeal and those set' forth in the newly adop!J.'d cily general Ian would be resolved prior Lo the April 4 hearing. .Amoog those differcnce1 art lowered density restrictions for land underneath approaches to the runways. \Vest ob6erved however, that while the county plan y;ould ban residential construction near the ends ol runways it laUo"'i homes to be built within areas classed as t00-no1sy for dwellings by the city's general plan. Councilman West said the proposed CQUJ\ty plan appeared to him to pr~e oPtions for expansion of U9e of El Toro sioee the most n strlctive land controls were proposed rorproperttes at the ends of runways. · If adopted, the county agency airport land use plan would . guide adlvSIOJ)' recommendations of the a I r p o r t commission . Zoning recommendations of · that body could be o\o·erturned by a four- fifths vote of the cily, or county, planning commission, according to Commls&loner Douglas . From Page l l\ISSINGER ... case," Poelt said. G Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and eneva conference. It was assumed that JusticeS William H. Rehnquist and Harry -he-was-r;etemng to ~ So v t et A. Blackmun dissented. governments problems \\'1th the U.S. In anothPr case, the COtJrt today • .C~~ OVPr trade and Jew Is h refused to review an appeal of a decision emigraUon as "'ell a_s to lhe Wet1tem \\·hich struck do"71 New Jersey's 1847 demand at the secunty _conference for abortion law as an invasion of a woman's freer flow of peop\~s and ideas. pr\·acy and unconstitutionally vague. Before '!ie meeting, Brezhnev sought Since it ru!OO. last year that women and o~t A:ner1can reporters in the large their doctors have a right to decide on an Kr~mhn ~oom , normally us~ for the abortion in the first trimester or ~\mg Politburos weekly sessions. pregnancy, !he court has declined to hear }le ask~ th~, "You do want it to be anv abonion cases. better. don t you. There are some people Before the court 's last decision on \\'ho "'ould 1ike to see things worse.". ;:ibortion, a three-judge district court . ~en Kissinger and his sm.all group declared that the New Jersey abortion Joined Brezhnev, the Krrmhn leader statute "is unconstitutionally vague on Us shook Kissingc~·s .ha.nd and said, "! told lace as applied" because it "ch.ills and them I was opt.im1slic. They ~gr~ they dctrrs the plaintiff-physicians in the all w?,nt peace. That makes 1t easier to e'.'l:ercise of protected First Amendment start. acth·ities and ... it violates plaintiff. physicians right under the I 4 t h Amendment to freely practice the prof~ioo of thei r choice ... OIAH•I COAST 11 DAILY PILOT TM Q, • ...,.. Cot" Do\ll'f 'llOT, wllfl wflldl " U<">O•n.,. .,,. !'10•1·'' .. •· It Mlh,l1ed bY Ille Or-• COfo•I PubUlll-..0 C6mPlllY. S- ••lr •u-••• POIOll1hMI • ..,._,, '"""""' F•ill•Y· l~t (Ol1• M .... HtWllOrl lffdl, l<untlf'l01"" llf .. lltF"-!•NI V•llty, t- fl-~, !rv•11••5•111tl.,.,,c• •nd S.11 c-....~111 !011 '""" (•~"!'"""· A 11'1111• r-eolon.ol ..,,,'II~ II NOh>-5~""11•f', ond $Ufld•rt. l~t P""«Pol -ll•ht"9 Pltnl fl .i UO Wnl Ill' l"MI, COOi• Mtw, C.•lllOrnlol, tJ1il. ltoli••t N. Wt1 cl ''"lot'*" fNI l"llfllllher J1c~ It, c.,1 • ., Voe• """111"'1 .... C.-ffl M•••- n,,..,,, IC11,il ." ... llio,..11 A. M.r~ifte lrMN'QlfllEfllw Chtrftt H, Looi ltic.hor<l P. Nill ludtltM ~ll'lt 1:.,,.,, ....... Cot!• Mttt· DI Wut •• ., s"'"' H--1 9"<0!: JUJ N""'pert loo¥"~•r• L~•-•fltd'I= m ,..,..., ,........,. 1-1""1""11 .... ltKfll 171111-'I ltoll'"•l'll S.~ (.._If>: Jltf Hor!ll IEt C.."'llw llNt , ... ,..... f71 41 442"'4121 CJ.tfW AihwrthJ1t1 442·S471 Sft Cle,...... AN ..,.,,_.., Tet.'""4 •tZ ... 410 ,...,,...,,, 1'1J, o,.,., C..t! l"ll'blt"''"' Ct-!IY. Ho ,,...., 110rtn, llhll!rlllllfll, "''tvrltl _ .. ,. ., ff~lt-tt ~ ... 111 '"'' llt r._,Oh(fll Wlll'ltlll llNClf'I ,.,. "'"'""' Of CVoPYfJtlll -· St<W tl1n .. 11.,. ""' ti Ctllt NI .... , (tllfoo'lllt, k!Otc.Tlll!flo! lrt' tttTIPr 12 U ....,,ttilv1 bit mtff tJ.lt .....,,.,,,, '"llll•rw fUlinoillMl··p .. -W!i,, ' ,, From Page I HlJRD ... murder ol carlin. Gang member Christopher "Gypsy" Gibbooey of Oregon, now 21 , Is serving an lndefini~ term under the Catifomla Youth Authority for his part in the mutJlaUon slaying of ri.trs. Bf'O\lo71 of El Toro. Viejo Festival Bootlis Availcible Rtservalions are available for booths in the 5'Venth annual 1'tisslon Viejo Higtl S<.'hool PTO "Cinco de 1'1ayo Fltsta'' scheduled for P.1ay 5. An application form and m or e Information may be obtained by calling Jean Cheselka, *37-2394; or •Eimer Benson. 830-09"2. Highlighl.o ol lhe 1!174 n .... will Include ~1exkan music, dancing. pmet, pr1~. • contests. art elhlbits and refreshments. 9 l{urt in l\felce POMPANO BEACH, Fla . (AP)-Nlne peMIOns, lnch>dlng eight policemen, were injurtd when 1 rock·lhrowtni mf!let btoke out at a camlvaJ SWJday night, police said. The datlUbance w., bnlught under control about 3 a.m. today, Off houn after It stM!cd, police f~· ' -- • .n. Dean Told to Probe Financier· T-ells Jury He Was Asked to Clieck Contribiiti?ns_ NEW YORK (AP) -Ousted White House counsel John W. Dean m told a Jw-y today that former Alt. Gen. John N. Mitchell repeatedly asked him to check on a securlUes fra!Jcl Investigation •gainst financier Robt.rt Vesco. Dean al.so said that former Commeree Sec!retary Maurice H. Stans k>ld him he was coooemed about the circumstances ol Vesco'1 ~ecret $roO,lMXI cash contribution to Pre1ident Nixon's re- electioo campaign. Dean appeared 8.!I a government witness at the federal oourt trial ol Mltdlell and Stam. Tbe two former Cabinet ol'ficiab, who rcelgned their posts to join Nixon's tm rHlectioo campaign, are charged with Both Gunnian, Hostage Die In Struggle ANTIOCll (UPI) -An escaped convict 5hot and killed a hootage during a struggle over a gun early toda y, and the suspect wu shot and killed by police. Authorities said Captain Spice r. 20, arxt his hostage. Robert Taylor. 21. both of Antioch . were fatally v.·oundcd while'sit· tilllf in Taylor's car. Spicer had been servin• time for burglary at the Lebanon!'"Pa. COWlty priJOn, poUce sald. / The Inciden t ~n'" about 3 a.m. in Pittsburgh, northeast ol San Franci!«>. wflen patrolrnan''WUllam Gay stopped a car driven bf what he thought to be a juvenile girl in violation of curfew. Gay ~aatd be asked the girl for idcntillcaUon and when she was unable to produce any he asked Spicer, who was her Passenger, for his driver's license. The girl ,then got out of the car and Spicer moved to the driver's seal. Spi«r threw the car in reve rse, knocking Gay to the ground. Gay. jumped in tri1 patrol car and began pursuing Spicer who sped llWA)'. Near the Antioch dump, Spicer fired a shotgun at Gay and patrolman Ralph Hernandez who joined the chase. Neither officer was hit during the exchange but Spicer managed to cross an open field to Taylor's bouoe, poV ce oald. Spicer <O!Dlnandeenld Ta)'lor'1 car and during a struggle Taylor apparently trjed i. ~Test the 8hotiUn from Spicer and Wll kljled, I U!llorllin .Aid. Antlodi pollai lhen shot ~ed:Sploer. Nude Batlier Found Dead LA JOLLA (AP) -A nude swimmer at Black's B e a c b drowned in a rip current Sunday. The body of Henry Man11<l llulz, 25, waa recovered later. The beach is used for nude sunbathing and swimming. trying to Impede an investigation of Vesco In return for his t'Ofltribution, and lyfug to the grand jury about ii. One perjury count against Afilchcll is based on his denial that he talked to Dean about Vesco. • Dean b named as a eoconspirator in the case but not a defendant. Dean said that Mitchell on numerous occasions asked him to che<:k \\'ith William Casey, then chainnan of the Securities and Exchange Con1mission, about the status of the V e s c o investigation. . lfe said that on one occasion Y..litchell told him that some of Vesco's aides had been subpocnaOO. by the SEC. He said Mitchell caUOO lhat "har8$ment" and 11"1 T...,,..t IMPLICATES MITCHELL Ex·Nixon Aide Dean Trash Dumping In Irvine Area To Bring Action Irvine city police will crack down .PO violatorl of a dty law banning dtimplng of refuse, acting public safety director Paul Brady said today. Brady obscnied that Sunday closures of the rounty dump in Coyote Canyon have led 10 increased instance:s of illegal dun1pin g. particularly along Bonita Canyon Drive near Turtle Rock. Brady said city police wtll step up surveillance of the dump site and roads leading to it and officers have been "iratructed to issue citations to tbose persons caught in the 3d. of Illegal dumping." Public \\Orks department staff have arrangOO. for f.tonday cleanup of any debris \vhich may be illegally dumped, Brady added. "totally wmecessary.11 Dean said f.1it<..-ehll told h.im !he invel'ltlgation "appeared to be politically mocivated." 111itchelt asked Dean to call Casey and get the subpoenas posted until after the election, Dean te&tlfied. The subpoenas. Dean said Mitchell told him. \li'ould be likely lo reveal v~·s contribution : that Donald Nixon Jr. of Newport Beach, the President's nephe"'· "'as involved "'ilh \resco, and that Ed"·ard Nixon, the President's brother, also \li'a.s connected \li'ith the case.· "The whole thing ls somelhlng "·e don't need before election,•· Dean quoted l\tilchell as saying. Test.ipx>nY 'has indicated that Vesco Young a'nd his aides took the fifth Amendment before the SEC. The contribution was not made public until after the SEC filed a civil fraud ac.1.ion against Vesco Nov. 'l7, 1972. Dean S.1.id that Stans told him in l~lt: October 1972 that he "'as ooncemed about the Vesco contribution beca~ ~ Common Cause filed a I a w s ult demanding rc\'clation of all large . contributions 10 the i\1."(on campaign before April 7. the efft'Ctive dale of a new law requiring contributions to be · reported. Dean said Stans told him 1he Vesco rontribUlion was designated onl:t by the initials "Jtt1:' Stans said 1ie was concerned about rile date the Vesco money arrived .• It "'as delivered April 10. · Driver " Boy, 9, Takes Car for Spi1i LOS ANGELES (AP) -The officers never did see the driver as they chased the sports car through three red lights Jt speeds up to 70 miles an hour. When officers Victor Colello and Robert Page stopped the car near a busy city intersection they still couldn't see a driver. Then the two saw a little 9·year-old boy sitting in the driver's seat , peer· ing up at them from under the rim of the steering wheel. The unidentified lad. who a spokesman said took the car from a neighbor's home, Saturday, was released to his parents pending a juvenile court hearing. _./ P;oposed Waste Water System Set for Airing A public hearing on the propooed $26.7 rnillioo Aliso Water !\tanagement Agency (AWf.lA) regional waste water collection, treatment, and discharge system will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Laguna Beach City Hall. The hearing will provide review of the project Environmental Jmpect Report (Effi) 'ftilich examines influences the huge project "'iii have on the ecology of the south coast area. The A\\'~tA system involves eight agencies stretching from Irvine to Laguna Niguel. The agencies include the Irvine Randi \Vater District. El Toro Water Distr1ct. city of Laguna Beach, Emerald Bay Service District, Rossmoor Sanitation Inc .. Los Alisos \\'ater District. t-.1ou\ton- Niguel \\'ater District and the South . Lagwia Sanitary District. As plaMed, the system w 11 accommodate an estimated population of 225.000 "'ilhin UM: district bowxls by 1995. This is a reduction from previous estimates of up to 324.000 persons, a prediction which angered environmental organizations during the first hearings of the project's draft ElR. They maintained that by s1zmg the project to that populatioo, ~W1'1A would encourage growth in the South Orange County area . i The A\\'11A proposal calls for construction or a large treaunent plant in Aliso Canyon about a mile and a half up the canyon from Coast High"•ay w i t q collection lines rtlilltlDg north to La~. Beach and south Lo Solllh Laguna. Treated effluent from the plant would be discharged into the ocean via an ~ outfall 8,000 feet into Ule Pacific off Aliso Beach. ... OJrrent plans also call for the highly. treated l\'aste '"·ater lo be used for golf course, greenbelt. -a n d agricultural ' irrigation during the summer. The effluent may also be pumped intO · the now salt contaminated ground water basins and to reclaim them for agricultural irrigation well use. . AWi\tA officials maintain that the .: regional approach to "'ater treatment •. v.'ill make the project eligible far state and federal grants. LagWla Beach's outm<Xied 1934 sewage treatment plant \l'OUld be abandon~ follo"ing completion of the project. Completion has been tentatively set for April 1976. Thousands Wait • Ill Rain for Food SAN f'RANCJSCO (UPI) -Thousands of pef'SOCl! turned out in heavy rain today lO pick up boxes that contained steaks and fresh produce in the resumption of the food giveaway program demanded by th.e terrorist kidoapers of Patricia Hearst. Althlugh the distribution at 17 San F'rancioo area locations \\'BS scheduled to st.art at a a.m., many per90llS got in line hours early despite the downpour. Operators of the "People in Need" pogram sponsored by Particla's father, Randolph A. Hearst., said the giveaway ..,.,.as intended to come as close as possible to the $70 v.·orth of free groceries demanded by the Symbiooese Uberalion Army which kidnaped the girl Feb. 4. 11ie ASSOdated Prea ~ that Washington Secretary ol State A. Lu<J. low Kramer, who has been in San Fmn- dsoo running tlle rooa giveaway pro- gram, is apparently quiUing Uiat pest to return to his job in Olympia, Wash. Peter Oelaunay, Kramer's press secre- tary in Olympia, said Ktnmer plans ot give up the job as head of the People in Netd program "unless Air. Hearst calls him back." A typtcal box distributed at a center in !he predominantly Latin A m er I c a n Mission Dl!trict ol San Frandl<O included four or rive steakl, some or them T-bone cu ta; tv.'O packaget of ftoien filet of !IOle, 1 froten chicken. 1 dozen eggs, a quart of mUk, 1 jar ol. ptanut butter. a paekag. of !resb produ<:e that Included yams, onions, oranges, apples and bananas, and other foodstulls. The line at the Mlsston District pmon and a number had more than t"·o blocks with about 4()0.500 persons v.·alUng at a a.m. Because of me crowd, It'll! cent.er hid begw'I handing1 out tlMI food early. There were no restrictions on how many boxts could be ttken by one penon and 1 number ~d more than one. One mAn whffl<d two of the food boxes away ln a whetlchnir, and another had a box on hi., 1houlder while Umping along on one crutch. Although th<y b.ad be<n asked to bring shopping carts by the agency operators, a. o'clock,'' one man said. The distribution demanded the distribution as a "good number of persons turned up in \\·as possibly the last under the People in faith gesture." autotnobiles, son1e of them Cadillacs. Need program . Spokesmen for the group ··Bring shopping carts or something to One v.·oman lefl balancing a box on her said they Md about $1 million left to head. Several boxes \\'ere being loaded devote to the program and that it all carry the food,'' a spokesman said. into the · same automobile. No one mi,e;ht be spent today. · lfe said the program "now has a appeared cheerful. The latest dislribution v.·as the fifth quality food to distribute," thus meeting "l\•e been v.·aiting in the rain since 6 since Patricia was kidnapcd and the SL.A a major complaint of the SU. "" ~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~__;----'-'-----~~~~~~~· Royal lllsitor PrinceSs Anne visits her personal bodyguard, Jn- ~pector Jttm s Beston, al the hospital where Beston Is rccov.crlng Crom bullet wounds received in last ' week's kidnap attempt on the princess. She also visited others wounded in the incident. -· . I I I I ,1 1 I I I I v be It but ""' tim loo ' IS. mb off ask gu! at I II poli but lite s Hun1ing1on Be~eh Fonn1ai~ :Valley VOL. 67, NO. 84, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES I : Boy, 13, Slain JNDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Lankle Leo Wbj!enant Jr. told nelghbo<bood friends not loog ago that he probably wooldn't f1111sh school. The harmless statement turned out \0 be tragiW!y tnie. It wa.m 't that Lankie disliked school, but his family movj!(f around a kK and it Wa:J diCricult ·going to new schools all the time. ' 'lbe 13-year.old youth was tall and old· looking for hi5 age. Sevmll kids In rus neigbborbood tllought be could have er.et.lied in sporta. Thooe who knew him said Lankie .i;dn't have many dO!e frltods bis age. He kept pretty much lo himaeU aod J'elied on hi5 Camlly for what companlonShip he had. Lanld.e d.ied Saturday night from four bullet wounds. The boy aod hi5 uncle, Troy Stanti, 42, entered a fast-food restaurant while his father, Lanki.e Sr., stayed outside. After shaking aod stomping to rid ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1974 D I • ur1ng s ootout • Ill themselves of snow stud: to their coats, Lankie and Stant? ordered oolfee and egg sandwiches. Witnes9es said Ille boy stood near his uncle with a white scarf tied around hi:i face and said nolning. While Grootendorst, s.t, v.·as fixing the food 11ith his back to the counter, the WlCle sakl, '1This b a lx>ldup,'\ pallce reported. Grootendorst carried a .22-eaJiber revolver in a holster on bis . hip while W4fk:ing late in the st e. Upon hearing what Stantz said, Groo endon:t whipped around. and Lankie began mooting, poli<:e said. City detectives said Grootendorsl returned the fire and within seconds both Grootendon:t and Lankie v.·ere hit al least four times each. Windows were also blown out and the walls chipped from gunshot. Grootendorst. wounded in the stomach, chest and legs, was listed in critical condition. Lankie, hit Bl least \ twic~ in the stomach, staggei-ed bac.kWards out of the restaurant and fell Into a snowdrift. Police say that as the shootlng subsided, Lankie"s father l<'aped into a car parked outside and then nolicrd his son on the sidewalk. \Vitoesse!I saic! the father trie<l to get his son inside the car but gave up v.·hen people! began arri ving on the scene. Lankie Sr. \hen drove away. About JO minutes later, Lank.ie was Today's Final N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Holdup pronounced drad at ti.1arion County General f£osp1tal. Twenty.four hours afler that. no one had come fon11ard to claim the boy 's bOOy for burial. Officials said the only thini: found on lhe boy's clothing v.·as a school test on "·hich he had \.\Tilten his n a nl e and ansv.·ered some questions". Lankie Sr. ti bt>ing sought by authorities on an arn1ed robbery charge . Stantz is in jail on the same charge, and Lankie's mother is v.·1U1ted on an enibezzlement warran.t. Arsonists Torch Newland Mansion Huntington Incident Hit-run Driver Strikes Cyclist An unidentified motorist ran down an lS-year~ld bicyclist early S u n d a y ~ming in Huntington Beach, then sped off leaving the boy wu:onscious in the roadway, police r~ported today. . _Unification, Politics Eyed By Trustees Unification ,and politics on campus will be two of the major issues dLscussed when Huntington Beach Union Hillfl School District trustees meet at 7:30 p.m., Tuesday in the cafeteria at ~farina High. School board chief George Logan will ast fellow trustees to adopt a five-point guideline to limit political campaigning at loc:al scOOols. His requested guidelines would allow political candidates to speak on campus, but would require: -No distribution of c a m p a i g n literature. -No seeking campaign v.·orkers. -No derogatory reference to another candldato. -Allow the public to attend. --=Giv an scboOI board member! n Murs notice before a candidate appears. Logan's action stems from an appearance at Marina High by Trustee Dennis Mangers, who is ·an annollllCed candidate for the state assembly, running agains1. Republican Robert Burke. other trustees have not indicated if they will concur with Logan's request, but the item has been submitted for action at Tuesday's session. 'High school trustees will also hear a re~ on the current status of efforts to create oew, unified districts out of the $2· sqµare mile high school system. Three ot the five elerpentary districts c0ntained within the high s c h o o I boundaries are supporting a plan to create five new, unified districts ak>ng the boundaries ol the existin( elementary .,........ Two elementary districts. Ocean vtew and Westminster, have recently rai~ stroog.objectioos to that. ·An alternative proposal wooJd create four. new school districts based on the boundar;es of the four cities - Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and Seal Beach -covered bi tho high -dtstrtcl. Roger Demers ol. 16350 Jody Circle, Westminster, ~ listed in satisfactory condition today at Hunting to n Intereommun.ity Hospital. Police said Demers was riding his bicycle ~long Adwm Avenut, near Bushani Street. about S a.m., when he was hit from behind. He was on h~ way to work ~t Fairview State Hospital in Costa ?i.iesa. Traffic investigators said the crash may have shattered part of the front windthWd of. the car, delcrtbed. a,, a white Cadillac, 19$9-61 model. llemers' limp bod)' was discovered by !lay Megll, ol H1111Ungtoo Beach, manager ot the Orange County Swap ~feet at the fairgz;ow:W in Costa Mesa. Megli and bis°Wtfe were on their way 14 the fairgrounds to prepare for the day's meet, wh<n they spoli.d tbe bicycle and lhe victim. He phoned police an.1 Demers was soon taken to Pacifica Hospital for emergency treatment then later tranderred to Huntingt.On lntercommunlty. P.Glice said three other witnesses, all on their way to the swap meet, had seen the pre-dawn accident without realizing it. One motorist told Investigators be saw the white Cadillac behind him , it swerved right, tben left, and at Brookhunt he saw the female driver, desq-ibed u in her 30s .or...AOs~wjth busby...blact hair. attempting to clear some of the broken gWs from in front of her. ., Forum Slated For Candidates The II Huntington Beach council candidates and four city clerk hopefuls will speak at t h e Huntington Harbour Conwnwlity Center at 7:30 tonight. The oorrununity center ts ln llarbow View Park Oil Saftroolc Lane near Heil Avenue. Tooight's <andldaies' aesslm Is spoosored by the Hunt t n g ton Harbour Property 0 w n e r s Association. It ls open to the public. There are four council seals open in the April 9 municipal election, as v.'til as the city clerk and city attorney post& Incumbent Attorney Don Bonfa bas no challengen in his bilUOl':J'l>electiaD. FIREMEN SWARM OVER ROOF OF HISTORIC NEWLAND HOUSE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH Will Old House Be Vandi11iiK Beyond Repair Before it Becomes Municipitl Mu1eum? Coastal Pru1el 01\.s Beach Sho.eJ!ing Center Proposal ' A neighbori>ood shopping center in the town lot area of Huntington Beach ~-as unanfmou51y approved today by the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission in Long Beach. In doing so, the coastal conunission stretched its permit review powers. It required that before construction begins. staff planners must approve landscaping and sign plans for the center at 44 17tb St. by Robert Taube. Jack Wallace ol the Huntington. Beach Compan}r, representing the owner. agreed lo the oor>iilions. r Proposed uses in the 11,500 square foot oeoter include a delic:;tessen, dry cleaners, liquor Store, beauty sOOp and real estate office. ~tlmated oonstruction rost ol the one- .story Spanish style structure is W0.000. 'Jbe project Wa!I Originally denied "without prejlllice" Dec. 17 when the commlss1on .... ""1Cen!ed lbout allowing development in the town lot area which "'OU!dn't be c:onsiiStent \\'ith city plans. About 30 percent of the town Jot area, an older sectioo o( the city near the l beach . Is still undeveloped. lluntington Beach Planning Director Dic:k llar!ow then told the commission that on-going city studies of the future of the area didn't preclude s o m e construct.ion now. The new shopping center wil l serve 3,000 people, according to city estimates. There are about 5,100 residents in the town lot area and 1,700 more in nearby Seadiff and Beachwalk tra~ without sufficient commercial f a c i 11 t i e s , conuniiSion planners said today. The cornmlssion staff asked for the rev~ of the final land.'iC3ping plan. Cornm1sskJner Ronald Caspers suggested the additional review ol placement. character and quality of Sgn.s in the ttnter. ~. -¥ is an Orange Coonty supervisor. Secoiid Judge · Nixes Requ est For TV Tirn e SA.\' FRANCISCO (AP) -A second judge today denied a request by tv.·o purported Symbionesc Liberation Army 'soldiers" for a nationally televised statement they cl.aim could 'nelp free kidnapcd newspaper heiress Patricia 1-learst. Oakland fltunicipal Court J u d g e Stafford P. Buckley denied the request by Russell Lillie and Joseph Remiro. saying he did so despite. slalfments that the purpoee of an appearance v.·as to help £ree the 20-year-old University of California cocci. The Symbionese Llberation Army says it abducted ~1iss Hearst Feb. 4. from her .Berkeley apartment. Buckley's refusal to permit a t~levision statement fo\l ov.·ed a similar action last v1eek by a judge in neighboring Contra Costa County \\•ho said it might hurt the men's chances for a (air trial. Afte r Buckley 's ruling, Li t t I e's attorney James Jenner said: "I feel l'ne defense ha!! done everything humanly possible to being tJus aboul." He said be "wld not appeal "al this lime." DOUBLE FEATURE I • ,. SOLD BOTH ITE!tf S Here's ·a "double feature" sucxess story about Deily Pilot dassified ads. First, 1oolc at tbe3e two ads: Recalled Mayor Seeks Qffice B.ack '73 HARl.EY Sport<i<r, just like ne'-'', ooly 3,000 miles. Sac:rtftet, $1895. (Phone No.) METAL Filing cahln<l wllock. Adjumble typing table, both like new, $75 ror both c.:-sell separatt-- ly. (l'llone N<>.) Both ads were placed hy the aame advtr'tl.atr to nm under different clwilkaUons on the same ~. You flleSsed "It ; both worked. Th• merchandise was sold in a" eh ca8e to the first caller. Want to dcrJble your re- tultsl Dial 6U-$67L I • A lmner m.,... ol Soal Beadl will try to oust the city's aareot mayor In Tuesday's municipal electioo, in a bitter renectioo of the 1971 recall campaign. In another councilmanic disttld, an appointed councilman wUI try to save his }ob from a listed challenger and • .,.Ti~ In candidate. '!be third councilman up for re- electlon, Harold Holden, 72, -Ung DllM<t 5, Lellure World, hU oo "lion. Ta h8i.d battle, M....., Blum, :Ill, will try lo win haclt the pOll he held tn 1971, when as mayor, be and two other councilman were recalled from olfko by the voten. Baum Is trying lo unoeat ~ .. Thomas Blaclanan, 41 , who led the recall electklo agaimt him and took his place on the council. There are no other contenders in the District 3 raoe which covtrs the art.a nortt. of Pacific Coast H.ighway and a small portion of LeLsure World. In that 1970 campai(!!I, Baum, along wttll Councilmen Conway FuhnMn aod Thomu Hogan!, were recalled al!ortly after they fired City Manager Lee 11i1ner and Cily Attorney Jim Camel. Baum and Hopn! had just beu1 elected lo tho council in 1970 on an ant.I-development platform. In this campalgn. Baum has charged thlll Blackman Ind the Good Covernm<nt Group (tho r'ecall crpotzatloo) wen> • ·' • supported by such big developers as tne Bixby Ranch and S. and S. Comtruction. Botll cornpanlea had donated $500 each to the recall effort. but Blackman said he ware of it at the time, and that ncll has not indiscriminately vtlopment. I, which OO\.'ttS old' town ldc, fut\Jre growth Is also a key James Dunn. 44, l})e incumber.t • COl.mdlman, was appointed to his seat last August wtim. 1bomas Barnes moved out of tho city. Dames bad edged Dunn for tile council post in the I 172 election/ SC.Ven KenJon, za. claiiM DuM should not have beon appolni.d lo the pOll since ho had loll an urller eleclioo, but DuM cootends: he Wds the people'5 second choice anyway. Stanie Beru:. 30, ha! run a strong. vocal campaign as a v.Tite-in candidale. She tried to rile suit to get on ~ ballot v.·hen me moV'ed from ont rouncilmMic diMct to lhis one, but lost Ult ('()Ur\ ca ... Both Kenyon and :\1~. Benz WMt to see shari> limits imposed on the future growth of old t0'-''11. SOmc of the merchants have asked for do'-'1H0'-'1l redc\--C:lopmcnt. ~al Dtach Is allov.·l"d to hold Its election Tutlday, rathtt than Marth 5 like most other Call.fomla dtles, btt.a\t!e II ls a chartu clly. Hm1t~gton 'Monume11t' Jeopardized Arsonists tou ched off a blaze Sunday that damaged the Ne"'·land _house. one of lluntington Beach's oldf.'!;1 buildJngs, the city Fire Department sa.id today. Capt. Roger lktrimer, deputy rire marshal. said SOmt.'One lit a fire in the attic. It burned through part of the roof, gutted the sllic and damascH some! of lhc upstairs bedrooms . The Newland house. bu ilt in 1898. is supposed to becon1e a city historical monument and a museum. Hosmer said the fire damage may jeopardize that. 1be wood frame. lwo-b1ory house sit.s on top of the kroll overlooking Beach Boulevard and Adams Avenue. It has been vacant·and boarded up for nearly a year. ~mer said it has been broken Into, vandalized and scarred by small fires numerous times. This blaze w a s disoovercd by a police patrol car about 5:20 p.m. Five fire t~ck.s and 17 men fougtit UW! fire, preventing it from spreading to the dov.nstairs portion ol the old home, lfosmer reported. He said investigators are still trying to determine how the fire ,,.,.a.!I started, but the-)' are sure it was deliberate. The house is currently owned by Signal J..andmark Corp. which owns the entire Newland Est.ate at Adams and Beach. City Planning Director Dick }larlow -said· today -negotlalions are near y finished for the transfer of the old house and about 24 acres of land to the city for a n1useum and park. Harlow said he doesn't know how the fire might affect the future of the house. The land to be lransferred involves acreage on top of the hill and the swampy area at the foot of the hil l. The Orange County Flood Control District. v.·i!h help fron1 the city. plall'5 to use the s1.1.·amp acreage as a hokhng ground for run-off water and at the same time maintain it as a small wildlife preserve. City Librarian Walter Johnson, under ~·hose direction the Newland Hoose is to be presen1ed. said this morning, "If it's to be saved, something has to happen fast. It's a very attractive nuisance. It can "t jll'rt sit there as it bas for so Jong." Hosmer said the Ore department ha., plae«t no monetary value on the Urt damage. Oraage C.ut • Weather Decreasing clouds Tuesday after- noon is the way the weather serv- ice calls it. Rain possible tonight and early TuC.9day. Hig~ in the uP{>(!r 50s at the beaches and the lower 60s rnland. INSIDE TODA V The Invader hog retun1td the Sir Thoma.! Lipton Challenge Trophy to San Diego by 'dl!-- feat1ng Jive rivals tn Ntwport. Story , photos Page 20. ..._,.., M Ill "-S..-Ylw 71 L.. M. ....,.. ,. Mii .......... ,, ~ I Mrittt l t Cl1"1ttlod !1•M 111.e-11 ... 1 Notwt 4. M C...-k-t IS Or•11" (-ty • CtJ'l-"i IS S1'IYl1 ,....,., M 0.lto ...,.._ 11 '-" , ... 11 ·~ ..... ' lM<l MMt:ftl tf.11 IMtrl .. llMMll lt T....,~ltll tt ....... , .. " ' .... ..,. . ..... !hi""""' ,,,.... ._ .. " ..... l).lt "'"''*" 14 • .,.. ..... 4. '' ' John Dean Testifies -Counters ~1itchell Denial of Vesco Plan 1 NEW YORK (i\Pl -Ousted White Hou.se c»unsel John W. Dean Ill told a jury today that former Att. Gen. John N. fl.fltchcll repeatedly asked him to check on a securities fraud investigation again.st financier Rob<'rt. Vesco. Dean also said that former Comiperce Se;cretary f\.1aurice H. Stans I.Old him he wu concerned about the cireum:tta~ces or ~ Vesco'! ~ecret $200.000 ca h contribution lo President Nixoo's e- electkin cnmp.aign. Dean appeared as a government witness at lhe federal court trial of Mitdlell and S"'"'- Five Attorneys, ~ tlvo former Cabinet olllclal!, who resigned their posts to join Nlxon'a 1972 re-el~ction ca mpaign, are charged with tryin'g to impede an Investigation or Ves~ in return for hls contribution, tind l)'lng]to the grand jury about It. One perjury cowi1 against ~11tdlell is ba~ on his denial that he talked to Deen about Vtsco. Dean is named Dl! a coconspirator In the case but not a defendant. Dean said !hat f\!itchell on nume~ occasions asked him to cbecit with William Casey, then chairman of the Securities and Exchange ComroiMion, State Ba·r to Decide On Watergate Figures SACR..UIENTO CAP) -The California State Bar will soon decide whether to launch formal disciplinary proceedings again.St five attorneys ll'ho have figured Both Gunman, Ho stage Die In Struggle AN'nOCH (UPI) -An escaped convict shot and killed 11 hostage during a struggle over a gun early today, and the suspect was shot and killed by police. Author!Lies said Captain Spicer, 20, and his host.age, Robert Taylor, 21, both of Antioch, were fatally wowlded while sit· ting In Taylor's Car. Spicer had been serving time for burglary at the Lebanon, Pa., county prison, poll<:< said. The incident began aboot 3 a.m. in Pittsburgh, northeast ol San Francisco. when patrolman William Gay stopped a car driven by what he thought to be a juvenile girl in violaiion of curfew. Gay said be asked the girl for identification and when she was Wl8ble to produce any he asked Spicer, w~ was her passenger, for pis driver's llceme. The girl then got ou\ of the car and Spicer moved to the driver's seat. Spicer threw the car in rever:1ei knoGkin~ Gay to the """"1<1. Gay Jurnped In his petrol car and began Jlll'S4ilia Spicer 11bo eped away. Near the AntiOch dump, Spicer firtd a shotgun at Gay and patrolman Ralph Hernandez who joined the chasC. Neither officer was hit during tbe exchange but Spicer managed to cr06s an open field to Taylor's house, police said. Spicer commandeered Taylor's ca'r and during a !truggle Taylor apparently tried to Wrest the shotgun rrom Spicer and was killed, authoritie! said. Antioch police Ulen shot and killed Spicer. in the Watergate scand3J. Bar President Seth M. Hufstedler said Friday that those under review were: Herbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach, personal lawyer to President Nixon: Donald H. Segretu, convicted. political trickster: John 0. Etu1lchnan, former White Home domestic advisor: former Astl Atty. Gen. llOOert Manilan fnd former White House aide Gori!.oo stradlan. "We are at the stage of determining in several of these iMtances whether or not we should file formal proceedings," he said, adding a final decislori could come in t\lt'O or three month.s in some cases. Hufstedler said a decision on whether President Nixon should race action may take longer. Nfi:on remains an active member of the California bar. "He recently paid his dues foc UU!: year," Hufstedler said. The bar will lint conduct hearings In the case ol SegreUi, who i! oow serving a prison term for violation of federal electi«I laws during the 1m Florida o.mocrat1c prmldenUal primary. 1be next act.ion l! expected to be in the case cl. Kalmbach, who has piead<d guilty to a charge cl. Wepl campaign practices. Fomial proceedlogs against Kalmbech will follow his ...,tendng In that cue, Hufstedl!f said. Hufstedler's comments came in reply to questi~ at · an informal breek:faat held in .cmiUll<lloo. with a meetln& cl. tile 'lar'• \!I-member hoard of governors. Hufstedler said tbe bar's role was to investigate whether ther. wu JJ081ib1e mi!oooduct by the Calllonila bar memben and to submit any such evidence to · the California Supreme Court. Disciplinary actioo is up to the COW't1 he said. Penalties can range from a private reprimand to disbarment. The bar first amounced last Augwit that it was invesUgating the conduct of Nixon and five other attorneys involved in Watergate. Hufstedler said bar investigators have spent about 700 man-hours compiling documents and other materials relating to the cases. ~1 eslern Dinner "--Dance Sche·dufed * * * Attor11ev-Client ~-. Waiver Prais ed In .IVixon Case • A y,•cstem dinner dance, featuring a chicken dinner, dancing to a Jive band and a ~qua re dance eMibltlon, is being planned to benefit the Huntington Beach Boys Club. " The dinner dance is the main fuod- raising event of the year for the Ladies Aw:iliary of the Boys Club. It will be held f.1arch 29 in the Fountain Valley ..... Commuuily Center, 10200 Slater Ave. Cock tails will begin at 6:30 p.m., with a d.Umer of fr ied chicken, baked beans and salads (ollowin g at 7:30 p.m. Tke price is $7.50 per person. For reservations, phone 968--4760 or 536-6244. O•AN•l C04ST "' DAILY PILOT 'Tiit Or•-Cout OAIL,. PILOf .. 1 ... Mll(tl II C_._ lt>e Hewt-P•nl. •I ...01~ Mt Ill• Or•"" Co.ill PWlh.lllftO C.,....ny, 5"1!»- r1tt 1'1111-.,. ••• PUlllhll«t, M-•'I 111~ l'rioll1y, fOr Cot!I M111, tt-1 8t1tll, .... ll....... k«.lo/jl.-lllfl V•llt.,, ~ a-.11. 1.......,, ... _ -s... c_,., 51n Jw.n C.•llt•-A 11,..lt r19ion11 ""I''°" 11 Pllbllol\f<d S.hlnMrt •M 5-•r1. l~I pt!nc.IPel Pl/blllhllll .i.nl II I! JlCI WHI ··~ SlrHI., CMll M .... , C1Htwn!1, .,.:16, lll•lt1ri N. W11d Pl'ftld ... 1 111d PY1>11- J1c:k R. C11rl1., Vici Pmllltnt ..w GeMr11 M<llllflf' n.-11 IC11~11 e<11.., 1\e111•1 A. M11rplrii11• M ..... 1113 t'I! .... Orerl" M. l••• Rlllri•rtl P. Nari ~ "'""1•11nt MIMtlllf 1E<1ne.1 T '"¥ Ce¥ill1 Wnl °'""" ~ folll"' " ........... OMce 171 75 ••• c1, •a.111.,. ..... Me ll111t' Ad4re•.i P.O. a.~ 7tO, tJMI °""' -~ ._,.. ta .. ., ... ,.,_ """' "'-' 211 Wet! .. , • ....., H ....... I IMCll: 1-J» H_, ._..._.. $et! C~r JU IMnll I.I Cl-.... ,.,,, •••• 11141 '42-4111 C'-HSH .U..,lllllf MZ.U71 ,.,_ 11wt1r 0r-.. c_,., ~""' M0-122' SACRAMENTO (AP) - A waiver of attorney-client privilege in President Nixon's tax case would be "a major br,eakthrough in our investigation," says Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. In a statement Sunday, Brown referred to the White House promise to grant a waiver with no conditions attached If requested by presidential attorneys Herbert W. Kalmbach and Frank DeMarco Jr. Contacted at his Newport Beoeh home, Kalmbach said, "I have not talked to my partner, Mr. DeMareo, and I cannot comment at thi3 time." OeMareo cou1d not Immed iately be reached. Brown said he has asked the President ror waiver. He said he wants to know what Nixon and hi! attorneys di~ April.10, J970,_a kw mlnu~es after the deta ror the vice presidential papers wa.s hadilated. Nixon took a $576,000 ta:< deduction for the papers. DeMarco has previously explained that the back-<!ated deed was made Out lo replace an older one that had been Jlgned before the tax deadline. He slid he ~·anted a new. clesn dtcd beca\J3e it would be an historic paper. He said the old one was thrown away. A joint congressionaJ commltttc also Investigating. Br""" said he thought DeMarto would seek a waiver. Brown ,.id that DeMarco, "under oalh, told us he personally met with the President and Mr. Kalmbach In the White House to di8cuss the tax dtduction. The details of this conversation m very Important, for Just 1 few minutes before lhat ...,.ting, Mr. DeMar<o and another Nli:on lawyer had backdated the deed." lie added that lht waiver "will allow us to find out what was sakt In the conversation between Mr. NIJOD, Mr. DeMarco and Mr. Kalmbach,, end will help us to determine the full extent o.f the Prtsident's knowled&e ol that back· dating." t • about the 1tat11S ol the· Ve i..c o tnveallgatioo. ... He said that on ooe occasion Mltcbell told him that .somi or Vea<,;>'s aides bad been subpoenaed by the SEC. He !aid Mitchell called that· ·~ment'' and ''totally wmecessary." _ Dean ,.id Mitchell told him the investigation "appeared 10 be potitlcally motivated." 11itcbell asked Dean to call Casey and get the subpoenas posted until after the election, Dean testified. 1be subpoenas, Dean .said Mitchell Lold him, would be likely to reveal Vesco's conlributioo : that DcllA.ld Nixon Jr. of Newport Beach, the Ptelideot's nephew, wu in\'Qlved with Vesco, and that Edward Ni.xoo, the Pre.s:ldent'1 brother, also W13 c:omected with the case. ''The whole thing t.; !Omelhlng we .don't need before election," Dean quoted Mitchell as saying. Testimony N! indicated that Vesco and hi! aides took the Fifth Amendment before the SEC. The contribution was not made public until after the SEC filed a civil fraud action agalmt Vesoo Nov. 27, 1m. Royal Visitor Princess Anne visits her personal bodyguard. In· spector James Beston. at the hospital where Beston is recove ring from bullet wounds received in last week's kidnap attempt on the princess. She also visited others wounded' in the in cident. I I Dean said that Stans told him In late October 1972 that he was concerned about the Vesco contribution ~use Common Cause filed a I a w s u i L demanding revelation of all large contributions to the Nii:on campaign before April 7, tbe effective date. of-. new law requiring contributions to be "!'Orted. Dean said St.ans told him the Vesco contribution was designated only by the initials "JM." Stans said he was concerned a.bout the dai. the Vesco money arrived. It was delivered April 10. Reds Given U.S. Warning ; Kissinger Says Black mail Could Kill Peace Effort .. "" Dairy Chief Claims Kalmbach MOOCOW (AP) -Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger cautioned Soviet leaders today that there can be no world peace "if we attempt to blackmail each other." Named • DJ He made the remark after opening ffi C~,808 talks In the Kremlin wilh Communist party leader 1£0nid I. Brezhnev on SAN ANTIONIO, Tu. (AP) -ry prospects ·ror a new treaty limiting cooperatJve'a gmeral manager claims nuclear arms and fO!tering peace in the there were plans in 1972 to ca.11 00 Nixon tif.lddle East. fund-raiser Herbert w. Kalmbach cf At the same time, Kissinger pledged that. President Nixon and h i s Newport Beach, for help wtth a Justice Admlnistratloo remain committed to Department antitn.mt suit agaimt the co-detente. op, aooording to testimony here. "Our greatest goal is that over the Harold S. Nel.9on said that Dr. George next. three years we can make the Mehren general manager ri Amodated.· relatiooMlp that has grown up between Milk ~ • ,_ .... :... a~ ~,_!_".',•hi ~~~. ~ .f'! l!,11dei;s Geneva cooference, it v.•as assumed that he y,·as referring to the Soviet government's problems with the U.S. Congress over trade and J e w i s h en1igration as well as to the Weslem demand al the security conference for freer flow of peoples and ideas. Before the meeting, Brezhnev sought out American reporters in the large Kremlin room nonnally used for the ruling Politburo's weekly sessions. . ~ lie asked 1hcrn . "You do \van t it to be better, don't you~ Tt:ere are son1e peoplC '>l'ho v.•ould like lo see things worse." .11 \\'hen · Kissinger and his s1nall group joined Brezhnev . tJ1e Krcrr,Jin leader shook Kissinger's hand and said, "I told them I was optimistlc. They <1greed thef all want peace. That makes it eas ier t4 start." ·.~ Thousands Turn Out For Hearst Giveaway . , ""' .....,...~ _ ~ .. • 1o;V~ e, ~ng«•S\lt.J· .. coovenatlon ~ -K:aiftil1adl. '' -·ln"a fbnchdln tolst, Kl"1nger-Sa id "We m Nebon. testified in a deposltloo in want to make the next summit as SAN FllANCISCO (UPI ) -Thousands T-bone cuts~ two packages of frozen ruet &Dtftn.t c.ases filf.d by private liUgant.s &ignlfi.cant" as tlle two preceding ones m pcrsom 1umtd out.in beaVY ralnitaday RI. sole, It lro1~n..cbiQken, a dozen eggs,\fij whidl l te to tbe J t between Nb:oo arid Brezhnev. to pick up boxes that contained steaks quart of mUk. a.jar. of pcarwt. butter.~ rea ~toe Department But-he .,JQ,l"ll oor two.. aat.ions package of fresh produ ce that includi:Q case. Nelscx:I, who was Mehr e d.1 s ltlelfipt to tlkl llilvanCag8 ol iach·olher and fresh produce in the resw:nption of yams, onioos. oranges, apples an<f predecessor as general nlanagef, hai · rt we attemPt.to blackmail each other, 0; the food giveaway prQgram demanded by bananas, and other foodstuffs. been lndi<ted on perjury cbarges in an deal with each other from a strong the terrorist k.idnapers or Patricia The line at the ~1ission Oistri~ Arkansas f e d e r a 1 grand jury position. then th.ere. can be n~. peace Hearst. person and a number had more tha~ investiaatioo cl. i~• d . J'tical among ourselves or 1n the world. . Although the distribution at 17 San '"'o blocks with about 400.500 persoits ~ .._ all')' po I Al the talks opened Brezlvlev said he Francioo area locations was-scheduled to "·ailing at 8 a.m. Because of t·n e crowd, activities. was optimistic about anoUier Soviet-start at 8 a.m .. many persons got in line th~ center had begun hRnding out t~ Nelson's deposition testimony 'was American arms agreement. hours early despite the downpour. food early. There \\'ere oo restriction.'!~ about a meeting m or about April 4, 1972. Kis,,in~er h~ d~ring his three days Opc>rators of lhe ''Poople in Need" how many boxes could be taken by one ~tllch he said took place at AMPl's of talks m the Kremlin to set the stage of pogram sponsored by Partlcia's father, person and a number had more than· a new nuclear w annns tr ty Pr id t Randolpn A. Hearst, said the giveaway one headquarters here for the natloo's Nlxoo could si e !"""" .e; to ~~s en was intended to oome as close as possible ~e man wheeled tv.·o of the food boxe!!I largest milk o:>-op. gn on a VlSI 06Cflw to the $70 worth of free groceries away in a y,·heelchair, and another had a The testimony adds yet another pl next summer. to 3 ;1;....,,,,ted s'"""' ._; ..... _. __ ked out"""by Asked by newsmen if he expected _to demanded by the Symbionese Liberation box on his shoulder while limping along ~ -~ ~'6 uia; ch thet Army Yt'hich kidnaped the girl Feb. 4. on one crutC'il . l \Vatergate investigators. It involves r!'.'8 ano arms a~ree":'.ent with The Associated Press reported that Although they had be<>n asked to bring \ 1' ) ' t ·- -.. -.. A 11-f - T s SUS th pa sla In fro St' goi of mi fir J WB lod WO claims that AMPI made an arrangement Nix_on_ th.en .. Brezhnev .replied: 1 take an \\'ashin"'on "~tary of State A. 1 ""· shonning cans by the agen i with Kai-•-~ for the an'"--l ·"t lo optimistic view. of. that. We have made a "'' .x...:•1;: ........, l"r~· · cyopera ors,,a u1VC1u1 uu ~ ;x&.l ..,.,..i Mm.....: h .JmiLKramei:.-\lo'ho--haa-been in-smt-Fra number--of---.penom urned up---tnr"--•---~P'n-' "die a--natural death" in exchange for vecy a--a---.. ng-«t·t al-ptlk!tSS .• cisco running the rooa giveaway pro-automobiles, some of th<-m Cadillacs. \Vi $300.000 in contributiOM. lie said relations ~t"'·een t h e gram, is apparently quitting that post to One. woman left balancing a bo:< on Mt Nebon said he bas ne\·er been tokl superpov.·ers "are good" but "there is return to his job In Olympia, fl ash. head.. Sevcr21l boxes \Ycrc being \oade8' such an arrangement ei:isted much work to do al this time." Peter Delaunay, Kramer's press secre· into , ·the same automobile. No on!' The arrangement. a~dlng t 0 _Asked to characterize the situati~n tary in Olympia, said Kramer plans ot appeared cheerful. r hearsay te3timony by former A1'1PI with regard to East·W~~ dl."tente, he ~d give up the job as head of the Poopte'"'in "I've been waiting in the rain since 6 official Dwight Morris was revoked by the EW'?pean secunty conference in !';e('d program "unless ~tr. Hearst calls o'clock.'' .one man said. The distributio!l , Kalmbach after publici'ty over the Nixon Geneva i.~ ''dragging Its feet a little" him back." II v.·as possibly the last under the Pecple ii Administration's handling of an ~ause. the opponents of dctente are A typical box di stributed at a center In Need program. Spokesmen for the groti · International Telephone & Telegraph 1ntro:ctuc1ng petty ~alters that have no the predominantly Latin A mer i can said they bad about $\ mill ion left 1 Corp. antitrust case. bearing on detoote. t<.lission District of San Francisco devote to the program and that it ~' Nelson said of tile April meeting that _A_ltho_u..:g_h_he __ w_a'_.:'pec_a_ki_ng::.__or_t:::h_•_i:::n.:cl:::ud.:cd:..::f:oUT:::..:o::'.:.f:.:iv::c.::st::•:ak:::':.:.·:'°::":::":.o::f_:t::h•:":.:.'_.:.m:::i.".gh:::t_:bc:_:s::pe::.n:::t_:t::od:a::y.:.. ------ Mehren "was exercised about actions by the administration and particularly the filing of the ent.itrust suit by Justice." ln seeking a discussion with Kalmbach, Mebreo "wanted to see lf there was anything they might do to help in that regard,'' he said. Asked if Mehreo planned lo di>cuss political coot:ributions and the antitrust suit witb Kalmbach, Nelson said, "Well, be was going to discul.lls the two matte.rs contemperaneously. '' Fountain Valley Scl1ools Offering Varied Programs Another lull achedule ol clas:!es, lectures, workabops and sports ltctivtt!es are planned for thi! spring ln Fountain Valley School Di!tr'ict's conmnmlly school program. Artl 1and craftl dasset, IUCh as ol1 painUng, crochet and -.pe1e, tiiid sports clas1e1, such as ladies Dowfing and family mlniatm goU, will bt held. Aho, worklllope In home fl r ~ pr'e\'f:ntlon, conmner Jl"(l(.eCUon. the bow and wtzy ol Sesame S<ree~ fWld raising and other topics ltlll he available to FOIJl\taln Valley 1'Sidenll. R<oldenta may alao join the community 1 band, communlly chorus or tbe chess club. Reglstratloo for these and olil<r classes, i! now In progi'm and will oontinue through April 5. Penons ml)' regilter al the Fountain Valley School District ottico, « may call Ole Community School Oftice, 842.f651, ext. 217. ..: < • Their Cup of Tea Smiling skipper Malin Burnham (al the helm ) and hls crew are happy because .they j1fsl won the Sir Thomas Ll~lon Challenge Trophy, one of West Coasl yachting's n1ost coveted prizes. The trophy ' . now goes ba~k to San Diego Yacht Club, where it originated 71 Years ago. To find out how Burnh~m defeated cup defender Tim Hogan or the Newport Harbor Yacht Club, see Page 20. - ... 1 \ . I IV Or SU mi • H DAIL V PILOT 3 El Toro J\irport Conflict Flares .. Whale ale -... ,Beast Bashes J1iej , Cruiser A ~fission Viejo family reported their 18-foot cruiser was &truck by a whale 5e"day, bashing In !he alwninum siding Mi! frighleoing them all. '!be c-o·Neals, o1 21252 Barquero Drtve, were on their way to the Dana Point ?.farina from Nev.'J>Of1 Beach when Gene, the fa I her. looked to one side. 'Ille ""'hale, "a big, black ~foot s.o.b .. " according to O'Neal. surfaced leSI than sis feet from the craft and appeari!d to be headed for a direct collision. Timmy, 10, a carrier for the Daily Pilot. \lo'IS steering .,.,'hen O'Neal yelled "Whale!" A family friend from Torrance, along for the ride, wrenched the wheel from Timmy and swet\·ed the boat away. A head-on was a\·okted. but lbe whale's tail slammed into the portside. bashing in I.he alwninum siding. "l never knew the Stmlgth of the tail of a whale," O'Neal remarked. Danny O'Ne.al, 3, was throYi'tl from the back seat by the jolt. Hb sU!ter TereMa. 9, and a friend, Sbeily Emory, 9, were in the cabffi. Teen Gang Saspected Gunfire Hits 3 Y outl1s At SA Wedding Fracas Santa Ana police arc hunting today for suspects in the youth gang shootings of three teen-agers aUending a wedding party early Sunday morning. The three youths are in county hospitals today after u n d e r g o i n g emergency surgery Sunday for multiple bullet wounds. One is In serious but siable condition and the others are listed in fair condition. Police said the trio were standing in the front yard of a house at 910 S. Hesperian Street where lhe wedding festivities were going on when they \\.'ere felled by a hail or small caliber gunfire just after midnight. Witnesses told police the shots Y.'ere fired from the windows of a car parked across the street from the yard where the three were standin g. Police v;ere told the car sped av,ray before any of its occupants could be identified. Salvador Jurrado. 19, and Justado Diaz, 19. both of Santa Ana, were the most seriously wounded of lhe three. They were taken to Mercy General Hospital in Santa Ana for surgery at\d are reporttdl.y "holding ''their own" (oday. Jurrado, In serious condition today, was hit by two bullet., one of which lodged close to his heart. Diaz was wounded once in the abdomen. Ford, Albert The other victim, a 17-year~ld boy, was struck in the right lmee and is In fair condition at Orange County f\ledlcal Center. A police spokesman said today no arrests had been made but added "detectives are following some fairly strong leads." The spokesman said there appeared to be a definite gang-related motive in the shootings and possible gang connections of the three shooting victims are being probed. Judge Kicks Worrian Out For Pants ~t~1dL'lNVILLE-, Tenn. IUPI\ -''I put my pants on that day ju.n like l do every day," sakl ~ Linda Lusk. But when she appeared in General Seaiolll Court w~rln& alacta last month It toucbed off a ftiror, contempt citations am a $400,000 federal court suit. ~trs. Lusk, 28, a teacher's aide, "'as fined SlO last week for wearing the slacks into the courtroom of Judge W. C. McDonough for the second time. "He treats everybody like a criminal," Mrs. Lusk told UPL On Feb. 18, Mrs. Lusk appeared In court on a speeding violation charge. "I went in there to pay the fine and be called my name and 1 went forward. He asked where I lived and he said to come back Wednesday in a dress," f\lrs . Lusk sakl.. Probe of Nixon Tapes Proposed ~-"'-al a n-con!'"-in "You see she's got on pants -dr~ .,,,.,....... ••• ----like " Mn Lusk quoted ,_....,,.,,llerttA1-over1be wedl!lld;'a-Ch>rl~~ ma!!.~. -~-·~•· McDooough as saying. \Viggirul (R-El Monte) proposed that Vice Mrs. Lusk said when her husband, President Gerald Ford and House Robert, 32, a Vietnam veteran. ob}e<.100. Speaker Carl Albert jointly study the judge called him a "smart aleck." \\'atergate tapes. McDonough fined Lusk $10 for contempt Wiggins, Woo represents P,mons of of oourt at the first hearing. Orange and Los Angel es counties htrs. Lusk also said the jlXlge accused suggested the joint bipartisan studf the NAACP of sending her there in might be the oolution to the impasse slacks. She said the charge v.·as untrue. created by President Nixon's refusal to Since !hat incident. the Lusks have relinquish 42 White House tapes sought in filed a $400,000 damage suit against impeachment study. McDonough, c:harging that he violatOO Wigg.ins is a GOP member of the their const.itutional rights with bis rule Hoose Judiciary Committee wbic.h is banning women from wearing slacks in malting the impeachment probe. hb courtroom.. Wiggins said that be had delivered the Federal Judge Charles Neese of proposaJ to Nixon's dllef Watergate Greeneville refused to enjoin McDonough lawyer, James D. St. Clalr, and to !n>m enforcing bis Mlle but observ<d !hat Judiciary Committee Chalnnan Pmr W. it appeared that Mrs. L u s k ' s Rqdino Jr. (D-N.J.). Tbe Judiciary constjtuliooal r1ghts ...,. violated. Cbaun!U.. is charged with Investigating He said the U.S. 6th Circuit Court or whether Pre.sident Nixon should be Appe.als bas a policy against enjoining irnpeecbed. state a>urt judges although the practice Wiggins said that he believed t~ is not in forte in other circuits. di!lpUle coold be n!t!Olved . If tho6e portions of the taped convenations dealfng wtih Watergate could b e separated from the othen. "There is a mechanical problem of isolating matters retatina: to Watergate ." he pid, "so that nonrelevant materials regarding political matters, s e c r e t matters of a sensitive nature on foreign ;:i,ffFs and others are not brOugta out unnecessarily.'' Young "I think slacks cover more of a woman's body than a dress," P.trs. Lusk saj.d. P.frs. Lusk said she did not kJlow of 1.fcDonougb's rule agaimt. ~ts ut\til the incident occurred. "I just put my pants on that day like I do every day. t wear mostly pants." ~1rs. ·Lusk said. •1 don't want him telling mf! h>w td' dress." Driver Bo y, 9, Takes Car for Spin . LOS ANGELES (AP) -The o!licers never did see the driver as they chased the sporu car through three red lights JI speeds up IQ 70 miles an hour. · When o!licers Victor Colello and Robert Page s!Qpped the Cllr Mar a busy city intersection they still couldn't see a driver. Then the two saw a Jillie 9-year-<ild boy sill ng ln the driver's seat, peer· Ing up at them from under the rim of lhe steering wheel The unidentified 1ad . who a spoket;man said took the car from a neighbor' ... home. Saturday, was released to h is parents pending a juveniJe court hearing. .. , • Jury Hears Key Tapes At Trial A taped statement pi v.•hich a key prosecution 4 v.•itnes.s drcribed Cypress police sergeant Thonw) Baroldi, 16, as "sLoned out ol his mind'~ when a ~1ariqe Corps helicopter pilot was shot and killed in a Tustin bar was played back today to an Orange Co\mty superior court jury. Tustin narcotics in\•estigator Fred Krosco sat in the wi~ stand and listened to !he L.1pe or his conversation with Bachelor's Ill b.lr man.ager Fred Cisnero,, as the trial of tv.·o pollce officers Wfnt into its fourth week. Baroldi is t ccu.wd of the killing of io.tarine Corps captain Randall Steven Robinette. 25, oo J anuary 5, 1973. Carden Grove palro\man Jerry Gray, 29. is charged with assault with a deadly "·eapon in his alleged \\'Otlllding of patron Sam Campise, 35. during !he same tavern brawl. Bar manager Cisneros testified today \'ia the tape that he saw Baroldi raise his weapon and shoot Robinette in the chest at point blank range during a melee in the barroom. It is alleged that the dispute then spilled over into the pa rking lot of the ta\'em where Gray drew a gun and put a bullet one inch from Campise's htart. Cisneros told Krosco during the taped interview that Baroldi fell back against the wall after Robinette \\-'35 shot and seemed incapable of standing oo his fee t. Firemen who tried to revi~ the dying ?.1arine ol!icer have testified that his last \\'Ords v;ere to the effect that he was trying to help the tv.·o st ruggling officers and not impede them. Laboratory analysts tesitifed in the prosecution phase of the trial thal their tests indicated that Baroldi "'as drunk at the lime of the shooting and that Gray \\"as on the OOrderline b etween drunkenness and sobriety. Etad ita Siglat? This sign on the wall of a building located near the Newport r·ree- way at 17th Street in Santa 1\na makes still another comment about the latest collegiate fad. Sus1)ect i11 'Devil Cult' Death Sa11c, Faces T1·ial By TO'I BARLEY 01 "" oeu, 1>11e1 s11tt Jury selection began today in an Orange County Superior Court trial orderl1i to determine the present mental stale of accused '·de\-'il cult" killer Ste \·en Craig llurd. l!urd . 00\Y 2~. v;as rc-cently returned from A!ascadero State Hospital ""ilh the ruling by ps~·chialrist." there that he has no"· rerovered his sanity.' ·s tate Plan Tou&es Off Co11t1·o ve r sy Conflic!s IX'!ev.·rn the city of lr,i ne and the Orange County Airport Land UM Commission O\'l'r pl.an s for propert y \ around El Toro :..tarinf. Col""p6 Air Station ha\·e surfaC\'d as the county ag~cy nears April ~ adoption of a master plan. ~lei Roop. associate city planner. has told city councilmen a final state ma.5ter plan of land uses around airports would havt a significant Impact on city planS. Counciln'lan Robert \\'est of the Colony said today the proposed courity plan appears to him to be "greasing lhe y.·hcels for joint use of El Toro by military and commercial nircrafl. '·I'm agin' that"," \\fest added. "I think \\'e should solve the rounty's airport problem not just mo\'c ii fronl Newport Beach to Irvine.·· \\'est suggrsted the question of the cit y of Jr\'iflt!'s official stand on the C01Jnly agency's master plan may be addressed at Tuesday's rouncil meeting. Las! Thursday. Roop was the onl y public or pri\'ale agency repr!'Scntative to address the airport land plan~rs during a public bearing on the agcncys' increased "area of innuence"'. A motion to expand the territory the county Airport Land L"se Commi~sion will plan around El Toro f\1CAS was appro\'cd unanimousl y at Thursday's meeting, Roop said. Commissioner Brian Douglas o f Fullerton told the Daily Pilot today thr seven-men1ber panel probably "'Ill adopt a plan "'hich conforms to city and county zoning for the land around the military jetport. Douglas said he wa!I; c:onfident any pre.sent differences bct"·een land uses designated in the county plan proposal and lhose set forth in the ne"·J~· adopted <'ily general Ian would be resolved prior to the April 4 ht'a ring. O'Neill Land Deal Gets lie \ras found to be insane two years ago and unahle 10· f3ce Superior Court trial on murder charges after 1.lission Viejo teacher t1orence Nancy Brown, 31, "·as killed and dismembered In an Irvine orange grove Oii Jtme 2, 1970. Among those differen('(!S arr JowcrNt density restrk'lions for lant.I underneath approaches to the runways . West ob6erved howe\'er, that while lhf- county plan 'i\'OU!d ban residential COll..!tructlon near !he ends of runways it allows homes to be built "'ithin areas classed as too noisy for dwellings by the city's general plan. Study by Supervisors By WILI.JAl'\I SCllREIBER Ol 1111 01111 l'll'Of Miff Orange County supervisors are expected to v.Tap up a Jarid deal Tuesday that vdll nearly double the acreage of O'Neill Park in the hills above Misskln Viejo. The board is being asked to approve the expenditure of $33,oob to take over a 232.-acre parrel of property being given to the county by the Vedanta Society, a group of Ramakrishna moo.ks that operates a monastery near the park. Supe.rvioors will also get a ~ to decide wbetber or not they want-to negotiate for another 40 acres adjoining the park at a cost or $165.cm. County Real Property S e r \-' i c e Department officials said the county Is actually being given title to the Vedanta Society land in return fo, ;1ayment of '20.000 in back taxes and a $13.000 outlay for fencing around rne land retained by the monks. Thf! society "'ill retain about 40 acres surrounding the monastery, a rood casement through part of the land being given to the county and 13 acres along Santa Ana's ,llinority Hiring Makes Headway Santa Ana already Is making .t concerted effort to seek out minority recruits for the police and fire departments d es pite discri'!_tination ch.arges leveled in a lawsuit filed late last v.·cek. a lop city official said today. The NAACP and the League of United Latin American Citizem (LLLAC) filed the suit in a Los Angeles federal court Friday demanding the city fonn new testing am select.ion procedures to overcome past p ra ct ices ot dlscriminaliOll. Dave Tayco, Sant.a Ana's assistant city manager. said \oday the suit has not ytt been served on the city;SO be i.1 UMWW ol the euct cllargea. But be iMi.!led the city is malrlng good headway in its attack on the problem. '"We recognize we have a prob!~ in this aru and we have been making every effort. to improve the situation," be said. Tayco confirmed figures in the lawsuit Uult lndk::ate the number of black and Otk:aDO firemen and potloemtn ls well bc1ow the percentage ol minorities in the total populatiOll. , °":" SUil chalJeA that only 10 of the City 1 160 pohcemen are Mexican· Arpe:rlcan and only one i.! black. Th.at ~ to a 26 percent Ollcaoo population and a U percent black populalioo In Sanla Ana • Li''e Oak canyon Road whi ch has betTl offered for sale to the county at its fair market \'Bl ue. . Harbors, Beaches and Parks commissioners recommended purchase of the JJ..acre parcel and t"·o others along the road OY.lled by private individuals to gi\'e me park full access to the road. Acoording to the real property agents, the 13-acre Vedanta parcel would C06t aoother Sfi6.500, a 2£>..acre. parcel ju.st below it v.'OUld cost $.}8,600 and the third parcel -aboot six acres, y,'O\Jld cost l<t.680. Total acquisition cost of th e land in the area "'OUld tk just shy or W ,000, super•isors v.:ere told. fmprovements on the property v.'OUld cost another $443.000, according to park officials but that cost is considerably lo"'f!r that it might ha\'e been since the Ramakris'nnas have prohibited any development of 1he 232·acre parcel. Part of the deal made ~·ith the county was that the laod "'ould remain in its natural state and be open to hikers and horseback riders only. Hurd Is the self<"Oflfessed leader of a gang of drug using tranciients linked to that ritual slaying and to the hatchet murder 24 hours earlier of Santa Ana service station attendant Jerry Warne Ca rlin, 21. Hurd stated in one pre-commitment 5eS'!lion during which his I a w y e r described hinl as '"craz ier than a hoot o"•J" that he was obeying the orders of the devil at the time and that his life "'as dedicated to the worship of Sat.an . It was also alleged that portions of Mrs. Brown's body were comumed after she was stabbed to dea th '*1lile members ot the gang intoned ritual tributes to Satan. If Hurd ~ (ound to be san< by the jury in Judge Walter Olaramza 's courtroom he will be ordered to face trial on the revived murder charges. Other .mtmben of the Hurd gang are serving long prism. terms for their ro!e in one or both of the two killings. Among them are Arthur Cr a i g ·;~100ISC" llul.sc , now 21. who is serving a life tenn in st.ate prison for the ax murder of Carlin. ~ang member Oiristopher "(',yp.-;y"' C1bbooey of Orcgoo, DO'I'" 21. is "Serv1nc an inde finit.e term under the California Youth Authority for his part in the mutilation slaying of r.lrs. Brown of E:l Toro. Councilman Y.'est said !he proposed coun ty plan appea red to him to preserve options for expansion of use of El Toro si~ the most restrict ive la nd controls were proposed forproperties at the ends of runways. If adopted , the county agency airport land use plan v.·ould guide adivsory recommendations of the a i r p ort oomm.ission. Zoning recommendations or that body could be overturnccl by a four- fifths \'Ole of the city, or COllnly, planni ng commission. according to Commissionf!r Douglas. lVzul e Bather Found Dead LA JOLLA (AP) -A nude swimmer at Black "s Be a c h dro"·ned in a rip current Sunday. The body or llenry ~fanuel R1iiz, 25, was recovered later. The. beach Is u~ed for nudt' sunba thing and s"·iniming. By Florence Eiseman of course The Hum children. Tina 8, and Jonathon 7, are tastefully dressed 1n summer outfit:> deS1gned by Florence Eiseman Tina and Jonathon are students at Mesa l/1ew School and they are !he Children ol ~r._jlfd Mrs. James Hum of'R'"u nttngton Beach. n n: RED BAILOON LTD. '"5Wl(llltlSUND ----TOl'l'N t OOVNUIY °' .... 17141 ~ """"f\NQ tOol HolMQult • c11•1....,, .. 4 DAILY PILOT So1n e Tail~ Aren't Moving WILD BLUE YONDERS' Orange County Airport head man Robert Breshnah!n has just reported that in the last two monlhs, commercial jet l)perations did ZS percent more business at the MacArthur Boulevard aerodrome than in the comparable t~·o months of '73. Well, statistics like this are pretty dull. usually. To put so1ne 1.ap into them, however. just try a visit to Orange County Airport. I did, only yesterday. To say that Sunday was busy at the airstrip would be putting it ntildly. The place drew more people than a stre::ikers' convention. All the trafic isn't in the air. either. Out in front of the !('rminal, it was curb- to-curb traffic. Air chief Bresnah8rl has described the parking problem as "remaining acute.'' There isn't anything cute about it. PEOPLE DON'T just park cars out at the county airport. They abandon them . You suspect a lot of the customers just quit where they ran out of gas. You can do enough laps around the terminal parking area looking for an open slot to figure you've ju.st qualified for the Atlanta 500. Some rumors "''ere circulating that one poor chap trying to ny to San Jose starved to death looking. for a parking place. I tend to discount these stories. \\'hen you ck> get onto the parking lot. it's interesting that you can still find some cars out there with 'bumper stickers demanding, "Ban the Jets." INSIDE TUE TERMINAL. things aren't really any better. You can't even see the floor. Jt's either covered with people's feet or their baggage. Anyway, I got inside along with Elder Son and we edged our way toward a spot where there was some air to await tht> arrival ol his mother on an inboond Air Cal flying machine from San Jose. "Sir, will you please step ahead," a lady snapped at me impatiently. "The line is moving.'' ··1 'n1 not in any line," I prolested. "If you're not in line, then please get out of the line," she insisted. Then I looked around. Sure enough, I was in a line. lT lS DIFFICULT to stand anywhere inside our airport terminal building WiLhout being in a line. So it is I.hat air chief Bresoahan's dry statistics carry a strong ring of truth. He says tbat during tbe first two months this year, Air Cal, Hughes Airwest and Golden West Airlines carried 233,627 passengers. For the first two months last year, the total was 187,466. That's an increase of 46,161. ALL THIS SUGGESTS that despite the anti-airport, anti·jet noi&e campaigns, the place isn't losing any popularity. This may be disquieting ne~·s for the ban !he jet set. Bresnahan also report s that last year, a lolal of 1,409,148 people became passengers at Orange Collflty Airport. t beli eve him. t th'ink they v.·cre all there Sunday. M()ll(fay, M.uch i5, 1()74 Syria Reject·s By Unltt.d Pres.s lnkrnaUortal Arlillery fi re exploded in the Golnn Heights bet"'·een Syria and Israel for the 14th straight day today. Egyptian diplomatic sources said there must be a rl Lc;engagement agreernent there before further ta lks between Egypt and Israel. Both Jsraeli an<! Syrian spokeemen reported the new firing in what appeared Coup Fulls President Ida Amin of Uganda has purged at least 50 army of· ficers following a weekend tribal battle between military units in Kampala. The aborted coup was broken by loyal forces in fighting at several military camps in the Kampala area. Seattle Vo~ For Legalizing Pot Possession SEA'ITLE (UPI) -Seattle oo Tuesday will become 1he first major city in the nation to wte on a proposal to legalize pooscssioo or oonprofit sale of small .amounts of marijuana. The initiative in the municipal election ia sponsored by a group which calls itself BLOSSOM (Basic Liberation of Smokers and Sympotl!I,.... al Mali)Ue.nal. The measure eliminates all city penalties. both civil and criminal, for private possesmon of less than 40 grams. or about 1.6 ounces, cX marijuana by persoos 18 or older. The initiative also would legalize oonprofit private sale of less than 40 grams al marijuana by persons 18 and over. GOP Chairmen W a11t Reagan PRINCETON, N.J. (APJ California Gov. Ronald Reagan i~ the top choice of Republican countv chairmen for the party's 197.6 presidential nomination. according to the latest Gallup Poll. to be at trition fighting preceding the (li$C ngagm{'nt talks. THE JSRAEU newspaper Yedioth Ahroooth said Syria rejected a United Nations truce observers propl)S81 to stop the clashes (or a week, while Israel "immediately responded posltlvely." Egyption diplomatic sources s a i d IRS Probing President's 1968 Returns BALTIMORE (UPI) -The Baltimore Swt said today the Internal Revenue Service is checking into the 1968 t.u: returns of President Nixon to see if there is any evidence of fraud . The newspaper said In 1ts morning editions the inquiry was being conducted by the Baltimore District office ol the IRS amt it included the President's 1968 return, the year before he became the nation's chief executive. Sourees knowledgable about t h e Investigation. the Sun said, reported the probe would focus on_seyeral key items, including the $567 ,IXMJ deduction Nixoo took in 1969 for his vice presidef1Ual papers given the government, and a 1968 deduction claimed for business use ol Nixon's apartment in New York City. 'I'he Sun Sa id the broadening of the investigation to cover the 1968 retmns v.·as the first visible evidence the ms inquiry was going beyond a routine re- examination of tax return it e m s previously made public by the White Hoose. The nev.•sf>aper said only the possibiltty 'lhat fraud migtit exist .. vould enable the IRS to go into retunlS for years prior to 1970. A three·year statute of limitations prohibits routine checks for previous years , the paper said. The newspaper said It had learned a key element in the deduction involving the vice presidential papers was whet.tier !he deed was backdated in order to circumvent the cut-olf date when such donations no longer v.·ould be deductible. It said, in reference to the 1968 return. it centered on three points -the deduction for use of the New York apartment for business purposes: a transfer of stock in Fisher's lsland , near J\1iami, and a deduction for 1he gift of earlier papers not Involved in -the 1969 donation. Streaker ·Kisses Linclll Lovel£Lce During Sex Week TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (AP) -Sex Week et 4.he University of Alabama ended with four streakers appearing on stage to kiss sex Btarlet Linda Lovelace. Miss Lovelace, st ar of Deep Throat, was a featured speaker Sunday night. During her address, four male streakers appeared on stage. They ceremoniously gave her a bouquet of flowers . one of the men kissed her and the four then streaked off. • Sex week, subtitled Human SexuaUfyin <t.he 70s by the University of Alabarpa's University Program Council. wag d~igned to inform. not offend, publicity director Andrew Powell said. U .. N. Truce-Israelis ' ; Egypt believed that the current Pt.fiddle East peace efforts of Secretary of State llenry A. Kissingsr could result In a Syrian • Israeli accord by late April or early P.tay, setting the stage for the Sinai ta~ and a aecond Israeli trooop pullback there. A Syrian comm~que 1 a I d Arab gu11ners scored direct hits oo an Israeli observation IQSl at Tel Al Faras in the southern sector of t be Golan Heights Sunday, destroyed an engineering unit and killed or wounded "a nwnber" of Israeli troops:. An Jsraeli cmununique said there were no casualties in the 3().mlnute barrage 1 which began at midday and that Israeli • gunners <lid not return the fire. It was the 13th consecutive day of fighting along tbe bulge of Syrian terTitory held by the lsraeUa five months after a United NaUom l"ea.918-flre ended the fl.fjddl e East war on Oct. 24 . Since then, 13 Israelis ha\•e been killed and St otllcrs.r~ in the artillery outbursta. Syria ~ not reported its casuallUee. "IT'S WORSE THAN the last (1967) war.'' said Alel', a 20-year-old Israeli artillery gunner from Pet.ah Tikva. "Then in two weeks it was finished. Now it's eve:ry day and y,·ho knows how k>ng il 'a going to last." In a mes.wge Sunday to an Afro-Asian peoples conference ill Baghdad, Egyptian See our President Anwar Sadat said Egypt is not prepared to conclude a aeparate pace settlement with Israel. give up one lnch ol occupied Arab lands or bargain with i the rights of the Palestinians. . ' •·n-e Egyptian anny." he said, "~ril!' ren1ain on the alert until Israel withdraws from all occupied Arab Jand& and until we realize all our just and legitimate demands.!' Diplomatic sources in Cairo said U.N. supervised talks between Egypt and Israe'{ over troop separations In the ~I could begin this summer provided tt.. there is a disengagement in the Gd.an Heights where Israel holm positlons only 27 miles from Damascus must COOle first. • most coveted hand-loomed knits ... at the St. John Trunk Show tomorrow! MIS9 HELEN DZO OZO WILL PRESENT • THE COMPLETE WARDROBE COLLECTION • • • DAY-TO""°IHNERWEAR, IN NEWPORT TUESDAY• SHOWN, THE ACRYLIC/NYLON COSn.JME , GREEN/ WHITE , NAVV;\NHITE. 6-14 ,$160. R081NSON1S DESIGNER DRESSES. •, 1 70 Paren ts Picket In a mail survey of 3.725 county chairmen , 39 percent of the 2,384 who responded chose Reagan. Vice President Gerald Ford had 24 percent of their \'Otes ; former Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New Yoric had 12 percrnt: and former Treasury Secretary John Connally, 7 percent. The program included lcdurcs. films and an original play on various aspecu: of sexuality. I ' KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI ) -More than 70 angry. sign~ing pa.rents jammed lhe school board offices toda y, \'Ov.ing to stay there until the city's 98 .5lrike-plagued schools are closed. "It started ~1Jcn. as a joke, UPC mtmbcrs suggested bringing Linda Lovelace ht-re t.o speak. We booked her and found that other colleges were doing Sex Week, featwing many areas of sexuality'., Powell Aid. Atlantic Coast Freezing J{ecord ~.01 v Temperatures Recorded in Binghamwn, NY . !i7J1£1a1M1 DELIVERY SERVI CE 11Ehvi1 y of !lie D.l1~ P1~t IS gUifanlet(f MolUylrGr. n ,. • 1111 Uwt '"' ,.rt 'r $.ll J.L tll IN ,_ c"' llil lit lr~I It ra CJls .rt• bktt Mlil l:Jt '·"· s.ttwbr w ~ n ,.. M •t rttllrt pw c.,, " t •.a. Sltw*r. • I la. kr!UJ, UI 11'4 I tlfl' iii k flllP! 1t '"' t"1 111 \Jlllft 11111 11 1 .. lele~es Most or11111 CMtr ""1 ..•.. &42.(321 1tern.m t lhll'tlflJ!t11 lf:JH .. "'~'·: .. ' ., . . 144-1221 ~ tMmr. c.inirm kx1I, ~ JUll Cllisltn Gau '""· ""' '""'· ,.,... ..., m~m • M1.t10M1.l W1 1.1M1t '11v.c1 •oac.u1 ,. '•• • •1 , .. 2 6~ '" 29.77 ' 29. , • lo.oo:"-h"'I<' , ... " ... " .... ,., .. ' ...... ~ ~ ....... ,. ~w..owtll '"'fftOW fl!Q ..,.Jt to '°'1ftlWfft I to '' ll::nolt 1~ all•r_, toda1' ttld T11n<11y. Hlo~ llXl•Y I~ 1'M' 4'0s. C::o.ttl'I "" ..... .,II' ..... "°"" ,, HI "'· 1nl•M l~lllf'n r-from .50 to 61. W1t9r ,...,._-'1.lr• 17. S11n, Moon, Tides MOHOA'r SKOnd hlOfl .... ,. .... 10:4 p.rn. .).~ Second low . .. •.• 4:.M p.rn. 1.0 TUISOAY First fll9h .......... 11:4 1.m. l t Finl IOW" .......... 1:15 a.m . .0.1 St<ond hlgfl .......... ll:tt p.m. !.' 5'cond low .•. """ S:CG p,m. 1.l Sun ai-f:!O '·"" Wt 7tot p.m. II-. 111'-l:t.I 1.rn. W. t :tl p.m. Temperatures ) 2 FASHION ISL.AND SHOP MONOAY 10:00-9:30, l\JESDAY 10:00-5:30 . I I , I • • • • l I • • ' I l 64•-zeoo . ' ' j • ' f I • I l l l ,, l ! [ I 1 \ . I I I I I I I f I. l , I I I I \ J\londay's Closing Prices NeM> )'erk Sole• Vebun4! I Y U11Ni1 J"" ~-,.. fliW fOI ,. ..... ~ , .... w ... .,. • .._..._.. IMl!fll"' •• 11.s•MJ y:li' ... 1 .'11 '!011' • It cl•lt 1' OOl.Jt'O lo 11111 - NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE * DAIL PILD f l l Year's Hi gh-Low s Appear Ever y Saturday Stocks Recove1~ Iii Late T1·acli11g NE\V \ OHK 1 \P1 -The "tork though drained b' r1 ... 1nt: interest 1 :itc~ ~1onda\ Jn late trading m:1r ket :il rcro\cred Blue ('hip issues ~encrall) hl'ld f1r1n bu t 1 hr. O\!er all 1narket Yias Y.l'ak and \Ohune v.a~ ltght 111 a repla) of the pattern of the last thret d11\s of last v.eek The l)O\V Jones index of :SO 1ndustr1al stocks closed up 2 89 points at B81 02 1\nalyst.s .i;a1d n1an\ 111\estors v.crc ~orrted about hi gher 1nt rre:st rates po~ible 1n1part on bus 1ness expan .. 1r111 plans It s kind of d1ff1t ult to 1ntcres1 people 1n stocks \.\hen the' can get R 10 9 pr rrcnt 1ntere'-t on short tcrn1 1n,est1ncnts ... aid \\1\llam r\cl~n of ritood) s hl\ est ors ~r\ 1cr ~· ,, 11 ,. E !Mil KIOn low C.lost {!!; NEW YOll K UP I I <><•I •dod on ~t E•<l•t l'IOt Mon61Y -TM Hl •c v A"" lc1n ~roe Cir-..;C"1 " . I o -t I " ' .. • w 1~ , ... )1 ~ .+. r e Dollar lllq/11'r RRUSSF.l..S fUP J) -The dollar open~ d fract1on<1ll) hi~her in SC\ rral Eurol)t'ar n1oc1c) markel.s ~tond..1\ hut 11 v.tnt down 1n London i:1nc Zurich The price of golc. decreased (old y,as fixed n Londoo a $1~6 75 an ouncr tl0\.\11 7 CT'nts and 1n Zurich at S\76 50 do...,n one dollar from Frida\~ cl~c of SJ77 50 in bolt market:; Dial Direct 642-4321 Call Collect Subscribe to the newspaper that covers your hometown best YOUR Hometown Doily Newspaper DAILY PILOT " • DAILY PILOT Deaths Else,where RENO, Nev. CUPll -Sam DoWue, one of the blight lights of the Big Bo.nd era. dled Firday, Donahue, had been hospitalized s i n c e November because of cancer. Re played with the bands o( Harry James ao<I Bennv Goodman in the tMOs and 1950s. llOLLYWQfH') fUP JI Frederic W. "Ted" Conaot 82, a i r c r a ft manufacturini;: executi\·e and Olympic medal winning ya<:ht$man, died at his home Sunday after a long illness. Conant. vi~ chairman of the Douglas Aircraft Corp .. ran the firm's \Yorld \\'ar II produelion, !urning out 30,000 aircraft for the military. Death Noliees -All&UCW &.-SON WISTCLlff MOllTUAllY •27 [_ l 7tM St .. Co~o Mesa 646-'888 -·-IALTZ·•••GllON fUNEaAl. HOMl C0t0110 de! Mor Cosio Mesa -·- 67).9450 646·2•2• IELL BROADWAY MORTUAllY 110 Broodwoy. Co~o Meio .'.!43.J.433 -·-DILDAY UOTHHS MORTUARY 1191 ! Beocn Blvd. Hu1111,.g1on S.-oc:h 842-7771 244 Redo<>do'Ave. l o"g Beod1 1713) 438.1145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MOITUARY 1795 lOQ U"O Con.,.on Rd. 494,94 15 -·-McCORMICK MISSION MORTUARY :'8837 Co"' no Cri111~··0~0 So~ J~-i~ Coo·\"-:1~0 dO ~.l/l~ -·-PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK · f/l •ttuo•y :1.'.100 Poc•loc v,...., O••v"' Newpo•1 BctXh. CololOl'n•o 644-2700 -·-PIEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNEllAL HOME 7801 Bolio Ave. Wesim.n11er 89J.J575 -·- SMITHS' MOllTUAllY 627 ""°'"St Hunt111910f'I S.-ot~ ,_,,. • • Monda~. March 2S, 1974 ~UEENIE • ' ~------ Cal State Fulle1·ton Students Feted . By Phil lnterlondl '·~<! S<ott's • r\te MSIHt le pnh el ell '""9.,.••rM -•ns. • S.,... NI ..... ••Y t.eitlil e.1;.tttn•I -16" witlt. s559s Sidt Ejection 20 lllCH ROT ARY MOWER • JV. 11.J. lrttl1 & Str.ttfil ....... *•"'• ,.,.,, .. " .... , .. • f• 1tyl•, 4-wktl IMiifht M;.1hltttll MO fwlty ,., •. , . .,.. llG. '77." •6100 Side Ejection 22 lllCH ROTARY MOWER ~ • Ji.; h.,.lritll&Snn. ......... • lny-lih "'1kml SWht, .. • i,.t1 .......... ... """"loiolol1.•--..l-'WV774 llG.'ff." s7aoo .. , ............ ...... d11i• ..... Jtt~ .... &51f9"M ..... . . w.,.. llWtw,-.... -i.4cMff•h•-'..,•· IWIS'724 llG.'ln." saaoo Delu1t~ 18'' REEL MOWER • 2 11.,. "in• & s".""' • cytl• ... l•1w/rtail lhlrftr. • tt..llle-r1tM1ltff Clflhtll, l" r•.t w/5 11HI W..1 "' Mftty ........ illdlltff4. , .... IUi. 'llS." s9aoo ) " 11 Blasphemy L<utds Ball,et Star in Jail ARCO~ DE LA . rnpN· TERA, Spain (AP) -Anllnio Ruiz, Spaln's best tnOwn 1 ballet and ftarnenoo danctr, · was sent to Jlriq\ for two monlbs after pleadlog guilty lo blaspiorn00. utU!rono.s I while shooting a Ide. film in thls town in soudwm Spain la.st sunmer. Ruiz, known s~y by bis first name, told the judge be had rot meant what he said. He was also fmed $170 and became the only prisooer ln the loca l jail, which bad bOeo empty for tn<llth5. ' .~ • I , 1 ] • • I , ] • -- Today's Final N.Y. Stoc!ks VOL. 67 , NO. 84, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1974 N TEN CENTS Newport Candidates Scurrying to Get Votes By L. PETER KRIEG Of ,,. Delly """' 11.tf There's more than one v.•ay to gel a \'Ote, and Newport Beachs' ll city council candidates seem to be trying them all. And there v.-111 be. a pretty penny spen t to try to convince voters 141lo's the best man, or v.·oman. \\'hile some candidates say they'll spend less than $500 in their quest for a Rat' on the cowicil , others estimate lbey'll spend 13.000, $4,ll\)O and more. • Planning C.Ommission Ch a i rm an William Agee hits the ·campaign trail each day ready 10 give you the shirt off his back. His hobby is silk screening and his picture is emblazoned oo the back of each of his dress shirts along v.'ith the •·ords "Elect BUI Agee." He says his children and their friends wear t·shirts advertising his candidacy. Another diallenger for the I.>istrict 6 seat in C.Orona del Mar thought he had a good thing going for av.·hile. Joe Stewart "'ould g{'t up early on the wC<>kends and pedal his bike up and down the lines of cars 11.·aiting for gasoline at scrvice stations on East Coast lligh.,.,'ay. .. I'd {'Ven go out in the rain. knock on the car 11.·indow and hand people my brochure," he said. Lucille Kuehn looked across the street at the Irvine Terra~ park one Saturday • morning and saw about 100 Indian Guide fathcn helping their boys in a kite-Oymg: con.lest. She grabbed a couple of handfuls of brochures and spread the word about her District 6 candidacy. She also took advantagt' of a captive audience fo\lov.•ing the dedication of Hoy 0 . Andersen School in Buffalo Hills. She passed out literature aft.er the Ct.<remooy to several hundrc<I voters. "I 11.·a.s a liltle COO«'mE'CI about mixin~ politics with the dedicatioo." ~trs. Kuehn said. "But I asked the PTA board and !hey said 11 v:as ok:.y." The c.1n1p.1ign h:.s l>N'n a grueling on!' There y,•ill ha\'t' bt-ef1 et l('J..~ a d0'1rn campaign forums in the month lx>fore the April 9 el('('!t0n. Xot e\·en the \'Clt:!rans. like t\\O-lf'nn \'ice ~layor Jlo~·ard llOf:l'n;, ('An renwmber as nu1ny 1n any pre\'IOUS el{'('tion . "This is the ·l1vclit-st' campa11:n J\·r been 1n," hl' observed recent!~'. "\\'e\•1· had a n1uch better tunt0u\ at the Committed to Detente, l(issinger Tells Russia Loot Found At House Of Plumber A routine visit to take a Garden Gro\'C plumber into custody on suspicion of parole violation led Sunday lo recovery ·of what police allege is loot linked to 9COl'm of Orange Coast burglaries, including at least 67 jobs in Newport Beach. Detective J\fike Hietala said today the majority of the allegedly stolen items st.oclcpil~ in the residence visited Sunday was transferrc<I to Garden Grove police headquarters. He said a truck would be pres.wd into service today to begin hauling the hoard ol valuables back to Newport Beach "'here it could be inventoried piece-by- pie«>. "We just don't e\'en know ," the veteran investigators remarked "'hen asked to estimate the number or stolen i~ and their potential value. Arrested and booked on suspicion of parole violation and receiving stolen J:l'(lperty following the u n e :< p e c t e d discovery was 1Paul F. Fulkerson, Tl, ol 10442 Lampson Ave .. Garden Grove. The tmemployed plumber and prison parolee all egedly provided information leading to the swift arrest of tv.·o alleged accomplices involved with the stolen property. James D. Spradlin, 26, of 9582 ?\fadison Ave., Westminster. and Patrick ~f. Dowell , 25, of 12819 S. Mann St .. G:i~den Grove. were also lxith booked on 5l1Spicion 0£ possession of s t o I e n property. Orange County District Attorney's deputies may tack add itional charges . onto format criminal complaints naming Fulkerson, Spradlin and Dowell, such as Sl&!J)icion of burglary and grand thefl Newport Beach Police Department policy calls for booking a prisoner on only one rount pending issuance of a criminal complaint. Detective Hietala asserted among the (See BURGLARY, Page !) Coast -• Weather Decreasing clouds Tuesday after- noon is lbe way the weather serv· ice calls it. Rain possible tonight and early Tuesday. Highs in th e upper 50s at !he beaches and the lower 60s inland. INSWE TODA V The Invader has returned the Sir ThomaJ Lipton Challenge Trophy to Son DitfJO by de· feating fivt r ivals in Newport. S&ory, photos Page 20. ..... ,. '" .... hnrk• ti L. M, ltff It Allll U<WH"I U Cal.......... J MeYlt1 lt ci.hlfltill tl·M N"'-1 N.-1 4. 11 Ctfltlet II Ot-Ctvllty • c ... ....,., n '"""• ,.,,.... it DMt11 Ntf!Ctl 11 1"'11 l'-lf •41.UI f'IH ' StK-Mlftlett 1 .. 11 ••""1al-.ill It T ...... ilflll lt ,,_, 1 .. 11 WNtlM!' I ""' .... bctrf 21 w-·1 Newt 11-11 ft~ H Wtrlll .... 4,11 UPI Ttl4plMll& BREZHNEV, KISSINGER ALL SMILES AT MEETING Kremlin Parley Paving Way for Visi.t by Nixon Story by Swnn1ne1· S1lu1·s Seru·cl1 of Coast Waters Cold and emotiaually shaken , a long- distancc swimming enthusiast y,•as found collapsed io exhaustion on a Ne.,..1>0rt Beach strand Sunday night, mumbling about a mystery swimmer he claimed he saw. A search for the second possible \•ictim of cold, choppy swells. was immediately resumed and lasted into predav.·n hours but no trace could be found . Joseph Amato. of Pomona. was listed in satisfactory condition today at lioag 1'.1emorial Hospilal. where he wai:; undergoing t.reat.ment for exhaustion and exposure . He was found collaJ'.)5cd oo the beach near 28th Street shortly before midnight, following a fruitless orrshore search by the Harbor Patrol. lifeguards and the Newport Bead! Poli« helioopter. Amato had battled the swells for some t~·o hours. Investigators v;ho located Amato about IO p.m. said he told of seeing what he believed to be another swimmer battling lhe ..,.,.·aves about one mile offshore as he swam in. Before being hustled off to lloag 1'.1emorlal Hospital after treatment at the scene, Amato told authorities the other swimmer appeared to be in grave trouble. He said he "'as thra~hing around and wis wearing scuba dJving air tanks and Storm Surf Du e On Orange Coast? Reports of major storm 11urf heading toward Nev.'PQrt Beadl fOl.Dld Ne11.1>0rt Beach lifeguards 9Cfatching their heads this morning. "If it ~ ooming. v.·e don't know anything about it," saJd Ken Jacob.1en. assistant marine safety director. pinpointed-the approicimale-position as about one mile out bct"'Cffi ~ev.1>0rt Pier and the 281h Street subsurface rock groin . •!arbor Patrol officers immediately organized a secondary search. utilizing 1 ... ·o tru!sing boats equipped v.·1th radar equipment in the hope of turning up the ISee SEARC H. Page fl Blacl\:1nail Pict111·e(l As T111·cat ~IOSCO\V (AP1 -Secretary of State lfenry A. Kissinger cautiool'd So\·iet leaders today that there can be no world peace "if .,..·e attempt to blackma il each other." lie made the rrmark alter opening talks In the Kremlin v.·ith Communist party leader Leooid I. Brezhnev on progpccts fo:-a neY.' treaty limiting nuclear arms and fostering peace In the ~lid.die East. At the same time. Kissingt'r pledged that President Nixon and his J\dm inis!r<i tion remain romm1tted to delC'ntc, "Our greatest goal is that O\'er the next three years 11.·e can m1ike the rt'lationshi p that has grown up hcl\ve~n our two peoples and our leaders irreversible," Kissinger said. Jn a lwichcoo toast, Kf.'\.,.ingt'r said ''\\'c "'·ant lo make the next summit as significant" as the 111.·o preceding ont'S bct11o·een Nixon and Brezhnev. But he said. "If our 111.·o nations attempt to take advantage of each other. if we attl'mp! to blackmail each other. or deal 11.·ith tach other from a strong pnmt ion. then ~re CM-be no peace among oursch·es or in the 11.·orld.'' A5 the talks opened Brezhnev said he \.\'BS oplin1istic about another Soviet· American arms agreement. Kissinger hoped during his three days of talks in the Kremlin lO set lhc stage or a new nuclear "·capons treaty President (See KISSISGER, Page 2) Their Ctap of T.ea . IMPLICATES MITCHELL Ex·Nixon Aide Dean lVe1rport l 'ouncil Plc1ns to Expcuul Traffic Co11trol Plans to expand city hall and to make a varie1y of chang~ in tr:1ff1i: eontrnl 1>n stret>Ls around it v.·i!J ht' considered by Ne\\·port Rr;u.:h 1'f)Unciln1t>n \\'hf'n they m('f'I tonight al i ·JO o'rlock 1n tit} hall Thl" cny fa!hers y,·ill <ll"oO get lo ht>;1r J..ns f:;i10.; :ttiornr v Boris B;1r::in1iv.·:.;k1 ;1ppc;,l to thrm to re \'okc ·t11c tity ordinance ag;-unst fortune lelhng Barano11 ~k1 rrpr{•!'<'nts g~ psy B<lrn{·\· '.\larino v.·hti 1vants to set up r1 sh<ip 1n f\ep11o·ort Hear h Counc1Jn1l'n l"'tll be askrd lo reject all hids f,,r thC' prr1pov-d t'xpan.~1on or tht' finance dep<lrtment \1h1ch w e r ,. coositlerably <tho\'(' the a r chi t cc t · s Mttmttte:- r\n.ihetm Om<ilnK"t ion C fl m p a n y ~uhm11ted tbc low hid Qf $6J.i43 but that v.as 40 perec·nl abo1c 11·hat archJ11·ct (;('(lr~e C. F.dwa rds of Corona dcl !'11;1r said it should cost. City '.\lana gcr Hobert L. \Vynn i<> r:oing to ask tJ1c council to rt>frr th1: prnieel to <1 !Sri' THAF'FI C, Pa~c 21 There were reports on radio stations today predicting huge surf. Jaoobeen said he knows or a storm off llav.·aii but docs not expect. that will generate any significantly high swells. SUrf was running about t"·o feet th is moruing. he said. Smilipg skipper Malin Burnham (at the helm) ~. l!21J' b>ck to San Diego Yacht Club. where it his crew are happy because they just won ,he--Sir ori~ed 71 years ago. To find nul how Burnham Thomas I~ipton Challenge Trophy, one o \Vest defeated cup delender Tim llogan of the Newport Coast yachUng's most coveted pnzes. The trophy Harbor Yacht Club. see Page 20 . 'ill.'a king engage n1mts. And thf're a lot n1on.' than I t'1·rr re1ncmbcr before, bU1 I think it's good. HogC'rs 1um-d to a r{'porh-r at one forum v.·hl~n h1~ D1stnc1 I l~l.'.lllcnger. 1\-.; For~1!. 1,1;1.~ absent and aski'CI, "Find ou! if :iht"~ not going to bt• conHn~ to !hi."Sr things. If not. I'll l,l('l a lot 1nore r~·$t " \trs. Forg1t, 1! tum{'d out. v.a,.~ horne 11 1\h 1he flu Sh(• and Hogers ha\'e iSee CA~DIUATES, Page ?) Dean Says Mitchell 'Involved' • :\E\'i YORK IAP l -Ousted Y.'hite llou.se rounst'I John \\'. Dean Ill told a JUry today that formt'r AIL Gen., John '.'i \litchell repeatedly askt'd htm . to che('k on a securities fraud 1n\·es11gat 1on a~ainsl financier ltobert Vesco. !Jean also said that former Cominrrce Srcf(>tary ~lauricc II. Stans !old him he was concerned about the circumstances of \'rsco's ~{'('rct $200.0CXI cash rontribution lo President 1'-01xon's re· elec\1011 campaign . Dean appeared a!l a ~ovcmmcnt v.·itness at the federal oourt !rial of ~li!chC'll and S1ans. 11X' {\\'O former Cabin<'t offa:1a\.c;. ,,.,ho rrsi~ncd thei r posti:; lo join Nixon's 1972 rr-flection campaign . are charged 'M'ith trying to impede an investiga11on °' \'psco in return for his contr1hution. and lying to the grand jury about it. One perjury coun1 ;igainst ~l itche11 is b.1sed oo his den tal that he talked to De-an about Vcsro. Dean is named ac; a COC'Onspirato r in the case but not a defendant. Dean said that 1'.1ilchell oo numerous occasicru askl'd him to check with William Casey, thl'n chairman of the Securities and Exchange Olmmission. nbout the slatus of the Vesco Investigation. lie said that on ont' occasion ~1 itchcll !old him that so1ne of Vesr.o's aides had brcn subpoenaed by the SEC. He said ~l1tchel1 called that "harassment" and "t.otally unnecessary." Dean said r..titchell told him !ht• in \·rs!igatlon "appeared to be politically rnotivated." ,\l1tchcll asked Dean lo call Ca.M>y and /St'e OEA~. Pagt ZI Judge Sets Aside Rulin g Freezing .Coast Oil Price A l .S. District Court judge has set asidf' a Fedcr<ll Energ-y Offitt ruling t.hat stop\)('d ~ev.·port Beach and !hf' Stale of ('alifomia from r<using the !)rice of cn1de tu! pumpi.'<i frorn t1dc·lands Judge James \\" Cunis issuC'd a tC'n1pora ry restrain1n~ ordrr t h :1 t 01·f'11urns an FF.O ruhng tha! st ate and local go\'emmenL<; are not f'xcmpt from cn1de oil price ('{'1hngs. Curtis scticdull.'Cl a hearing on an inJunct1on against I.hf ruling for Apr il 8 Jn effect . the court ru1ini;: al!o11i's ~t'111>0rt &>ach to l"t'sume ehaq,:1ng 59.30 a barr<'! for oil pumped from the \Vest Xe"·port oilfields. The FEO ruhni; had form.I the city !o r"ll ba('k it~ chargt'S to $4 18 a barrel. The re\'4X'al1fln l"Ould ha\r rost the city :ibotJt $7:l.OOO a yea r m revenue. The city rf'N!i\·es one-eighth oC 1h~ income from the 011, 1~·Dile the Annstroog l'ctroleum, v.ilich docs the pumping, gets the rest. :->c11.1Xlrt Beach is slill trying to rent'go!iate il" contract 11.·11.h Armstrong in hopes of kettlng evf'n a larger sh.1 re. Assistant Xe~·port BeaC'h City Allorney Oavid Baade said Judge Curtis set aside the FEO order because the 1·ncrgy office had failed to give proper puhllc notice of its planned action. He said the agency i.\ rf'qUired 10 gi\'e 30 days notice and then conduct a public hearing before revoking an on:lcr. Baade said he's confident the inJunction 11'1 11 be issued at the April 8 rourt session. "The FEO did not comply whh~ procedures and l1nles.<> they can show ('\1dence to the contrary. I am coolident the Injunction will be granled.'' he said. The order by the: FEO had rin even mQre de-v;istJtlng effect on the State ot Cali fornia. State Controller liouston L. Flournoy said the Jos.<;; or the exemption "u costing the stale $650,000 a day. . ' • . .. ' •.. DAILY PILOl N Barhr Area ltealtors Report I Racial Queries nte Newport Harbor-COsta fi.f~~ Board of Realtor s today expressed al11rn1 today that so1neone ls makii1S a tover1 atttmpt to find out If local real estate agents are p r a c I 1 c I n i; ra cial discrimination. ?be boord'11 weekly ne"·s!l'Ucr, rhe Scuttlebutt. distributed today, said some realtors have received telephone calls from people asking about rental units and then wondering if race 111akes a difference. "A woman calll>d local realtors feigning interest in an adverUsed property, making an appointment to see it, giving her name and room number at a certain hotel. "At the last moment, she would say, 'By the wa y, my husband is black. Does Rites Slated For Cora B. Humphreys Funeral services are sch e du 1 e d Tuesday in Escondido for 30-year Balboa Island resident C.Ora B. Humphreys, v•ho died al age 80 SUnday at her retirement home. She is the mother of Costa Mesa Assistant Attorney R o b e r t L. Humphreys. ~to is aJso a Coo.st ('.ommunlty C.Ollege District trustee. Ri tes will be at 10 a.m. in A1cCloud Mortuary Chapel, Escondido, with interment at 2 p.m. in Rosedale Cemetery, Los Angeles. A resident ot Balboa Island for three decades with her husband, William, the Humphreys' made their borne at 307 &lgewater Ave., near the old location of Ouistian's cale. She ta.ught sdlool in the Los Angeles County educational system from 1918 to 1928, while her husband was a tel~ imtaller tor tlij! old Bell system. Survivors include Mrs. Hwnftn'eys• b.-00, William, son Robert. a daughte!', Mn. Joyce AckmnM and 10 grandcllildren. From Page I TRAFFIC .•. planning CQmmiUee. , Public Works Director Jooepb T'. Devlin want.I the oouncil to make scv~al changes to the intersection of NewpOft Boulevard and Via Lido and wants . to establish signal progression !rom 28th Street to Via Lido. 0 He also wants the council to ask the state to allow t.he city to assume mafutenance and responsibilities for the signals at Via Lldo and Finley streets . Councilmen tooight are also e1pected to adopt a resolution supporting the assessment and treatment ctnter ~ a juvenile rehabilitation program. 1be resolution will call on Orange County to provide money to keep the center operating. From !age I Iba tmakc a dlffcrtnce?' .. "The answer "-'tlS always negative ," writes Glenn 1.1nrtin, realty board manager, In the newt'lclter, but he said lhe woman never kept any of the appointments. Martin io;aid thnt lype of call had been received over the past few months and then again only recently they started ~gain. !fe suggests any realtors receiving such calls contact realtor John Semple. Semple said his office has apparently been bothered the most. He explained a salesgirl In his office n!<'eJved a call last week and the caller refused to identify herself but said she ~·as "just testJng.' "I don't want to make a big issue out ot it," Semple said, 'But f don't particularly care to be tested. I've ~ tested in this business for 18 years Ul NC\\·port Beach. "l don't care if somebody is black. purple or has yellow spots, if I'm convinced they're not going to play bcngos at 11 o'clock or run a narcotics den, hell, I'll rent to them," he said. "U they really are testing, I just wish they'd tell me who they are, then I'll take their test," he said. Charles Brown, president of the realty boon!, said he does not have the fainle6! idea who might be behind the calls. "I'd bate to think it was a CiVil rights organization operating like that, but it'S possible," he said. "We have had black people come in looking for homes and apartments. We do for thefi'J the same as we do for everybody else," he said. Attor11tev-Client ¥ Waiver Praised In Nixon Case SACRAMENl'O (AP) - A wairer of attorney-client privilege in President Nixon's tax case would be "a major breakthrough in our investigation," says Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. In a statement SWlday, Brown referred to the White House promise to grant a waiver with no conditions attached if requested by presidential attorneys Herbert W. Kalmbach and Frank Of Marco .tr. , O:int.acted at his Newport Beach home, Kalmbach said, "I have not talked to my partner, Mr. ,Dei\1ardo, and I CJnoot comment at 'this time." QeMarco could not immediately be rtached. · • Brown said he has asked the President for waiver. He said he wantS to know what Ni1on and his attomeys discussed April 10, 1970, a few minutes after the deed for the.Vice presidential papers was ba<kdated. Nixon took a '578,000 tax deduction for the papers. DeMarco has previouSly explained that lhe back-doted deed was made out to replace an older one that had been signed before the tax dead.Jine. He said he wanted a new, clean deed because it would be an historic paper. He said the old one was thrown away. A joint congressional comntittee also ihVeslikctttng;--SEARCH ... u Bro\\11 said he thought DeMarco would seek a ll-'aiver. reported victim. "If this guy did have tanks on and he '*'"'enl down, that \\'ould be it for him ." commented Harbor Patrol Sgt. Dean Cordell toda y. He also said it was possible the r(.1l0rted sighting or the swimmer in trouble ln the dark, rough seas may have been due to the exhaUW!d distance swimmer's mental and p h y s l c a 1 rondition. No formal reports of any missing swimmers or scuba divers vanished in the specific offshore dl'ea had been reported as of today, lifeguards said. OIANGI CO.AST ,. DAILY PILOT Tht.Ottt'IOt C:H•I 0,fllLY PILOT, wllh M!ldl 11 (.....ill...,, mt HIWl·l'•t.,, It llu&ll\t>..i by lhr Or•"O' U tt! P11&1ltlll11C1 (-ny ~· •t1• .Olllon1 ut py0il111o11, Mo"'•Y llll'Ollfll ll'1lc•y, tor {0111 Mt\•, Ht'""'" ltKh, H""tiJlf.... IMoodvl'-ltlA Vtlltiy, ~ '"'"· 1•v,.,./ladollt61(li. -''" ci-"1" Se" J"" C.ol1!rt"" lo. 1;11911 •09/oNI 90ill!iOn Ii Mlhlltd S•l11ro1y1 tt>d lll!!CltYI. T~t P<llleltwtl """1l111l11t OltM 11 •t llO Wnl 11y si ... 1. c.i.11 Mn •, C..lilllr"i., f1'1'. ~ob.rt N. W11d Pr111ditit '"° l'u~llltltr J1ck R. Cu1l1y VJC>t ll'rn"'onl '""' G""""tl M1MW Tho11111 11:,, .. a IEO>lor Tht"''' /o.. Mu1 phi111 Mt NOlfle l!:tl!OI' l . ,,t., k'•i•t H""""1 ltldl C:ll'f l<lllHir N ........... tiotfke llJl N1wport l1ul1¥•f' M1!1l111 Add1111: ,.O. lor 1175, •266J OtkT Offic.et Cotlt M.-1 uo Wnl •~Y S!tftl l..•OllN l•tdl: tn ,._, A- l'lllf'llf'OlOl'I 8fld'I I 11US e-IO\ll•v•'11 &•ft °"""'"' as Mtr111 11 C•"""-... , , .. .,._. ff 141 MJ:-4J:l1 cs..i .... Mi•"' .. '4W6rt• (ICl')'t't,111. !fU, Ottntt C.O.t! ""'ll>tlllit Cfl"INfty, Ht ,..... 11P<ln, 111..,,trtt""'- fff!frlll JMHt r ., """~.rtrt~tt "'"''"' tNty .. ,.prflllll(... WI~ IM(!lil -· "'1111'1'1 Of '"YfiOlll -· .............. _, ... IMll tl t.11• MfM. C1t1frtl'<'li.. """'"'""" Irr ,_,,.,., n.u -llllY1 W ~II ~.lJ 111911lft1Y1 111l11t1ry dtff!MI"'* '2. .. MOl'rfflf'r. Services Held For Retired News Exec11tive Funeral services ,..... coodud<d today !or retired Los Angeles Herald·Examiner general manager Charles T. Griffths or N~t Beach, who died Friday. The retired executive was 72. He made his home at 2120 Coral Ave., Balboa Island. after retiring seven years ago lrom hls post wiNl the newspaper. SUrvlvors include his wife, Murrary; a son, Dr. Charles T. Griffiths of Wellesley, Ma~.; a daughter. Mrs. J\1argaret D. Griff~ of Fullerton; a brother, Da\lid Griffiths of Pasadena, and sisters Esther OriffitM of Glendale and Mrs-.-J\1artha l~f!'IS8.Y_ ol ~e~t Beach, p_lU! five graMchlldrtn. Services were conducted at 'pacific \'iew Mortuary Olapel. Burial foUowed at Paclflc View J\!emorial Park. nie family hai; suggested memorial oontriOOUons to a favorite charity. From Page I KISSINGER ... Nixon cauld sign on a visit to 1'105C.'0'W next summtr. A•ked by "'"''men Ir be expected to reach anolhtt arms agreement with Nixon then, Brezhnev rtplied : "I take an oplimbUc view or tbat. We have made a very good begiming on that p~." lte said relations between t h e superpowers "are good" but "lhtrt is much worlc to do at. this Ume." Alkcd lo characterize the situalioo with reganl to Ea>l·We>t detente, he sald the European oe<Uttty tonferelt<ll In G<neva Is "draQlnr ils feet a litUc" OOcau.se "the opponents of de<mte are lglroduclng pelly matlcn .ll>at bi" no bearing ort d<ten!A!." ' . Fireside ltaiticlti01a G.fl>' "Jltl ,llllt lfJ ~'11•'11 KMl!IM' . As campfire blazes, Del A-far Chier Mike Goar pre- pares to tap 26 flarbor Area Boy Scouts for in!Ua· tion into exclusive Order o! the Arrow. Ceremony took place Friday al Costa Mesa's TeWinkle Park. Parents and relatives of Scouts from Newport Beach and Costa ~fesa (seated on logs} watched. Order of Arrow candidates are elected by their peers and must have fulfilled stiff scouting require- ments . Boy, 13, Dies • Ill Shootout l' outh Shot iii Attempted floldup Wiih Vncle INDIANAPOLJS (AP) -Lankie Lee \\'hisenant Jr. told neighborhood friends not Jong ago that he probably y,·ouldn't finish school. The harmless statement turned out to be tragically true. n wasn 't that Lanlde disliked school, but his family moved around a lot and it wa::: difficult going to new schools all the time. The l:J.year-old youth wM talf Md old- looking for his age. Several kids in ilis neighborhood thought he <:0u\d have excelled in sporls. Those who knew hi m said Lankie didn't have many close friends his age. He kept pretty much to himself and relied on his family for \vhat companionS'nip he had. 1..ankie died Saturday night from four bullet 'voungs. The boy and his uncle, Troy Stantz, 42. entered a fast·food restaurant while his father, Lankie Sr .. stayed outside. After shaking and stomping to Md From Page I themselves of snow stuck to their coats:, Lankie and Stantz ordered coffee and egg sandwiches. \Vitnesses said the boy stood near his uncle with a white scarf tied around his !ace and &aid nol'ning. While Hans Grootendorst. 54, ll-'aS fixing the food with his back to the counter. the uncle said, "This is a holdup," police reported. Grootendorst carried a .22~1ber revolver in a holster on his hip while \~;orking late in lhe store. Upon bearing what Stantz said, Grootendorst whipped arolll!d, and Lankie hegan llnooting, police said. . City detectives said Grootendorst returned the fire and within seconds OOth Five Attorneys Grootendorst and Lankie were hit at least four times each. Windows were also blown out and the walls chipped from gunshot - Grootendorst, wounded in the, stomach, chest and legs, "-'SS listed in critical condition. I.ankle, hit at least twice in the stomach, staggered backwards out of the restaumnt and fell into a snowdrift. Police say that as the shooting subsided; Lankie'.s father leaped into a car parked out.side and then noticed his son on the sidewalk. Witnesses sail! the falher tried t.o get his son inside the car but gave up when people began arriving ~n ~ sa;eoe. Lankle Sr. then drove away. State Bar w Decide F rom Page 1 ' CANDIDATES ... attended e\'Cl'f forum since. Rogers said he's hoping U> spend le~ lhan fl.fW lo win re-elect.loo. J..ike tbe other candidates. be's had a brOdiW't printed and plans to spend the tt:St on newspaper ads. Unlike many of the other candidntes. neither Rogers nor ~1rs. Fo,ra.lt plan to dll any door·to-door ca1npalgnrng. , "Oh. I'll go to 11 few toffees and chili you know hov.: women arc ." ~frs. Forgll said . She Mid sht-has a few '>''On1cn helping her '>''ho '>''ill go thro~ so~r neighborhoods passing out h{'r ca mpai gn literature. John Baker lhe fou rth candidate .ln Distril't 6, Pians to employ sirnilar1 str;tlcgy. "I hope !he lasl coupfc ot n·eek!! lo ger' so1nc young people to hand out my titcra. ature house to house ," he said. Finding ways LO spend money isn't llK' big probJem, Pile problem for n1any of t~ ca ndidates is gettlne: ·it . fl.1rs. Forgit, who runs a hardware store, says she can't ask her cust<»ner11 tor o:intributions so she 's sued the city ln-1 hopes of overturning a new ordinanOC'I • that keeps candidates .from spending 1 more than $500 or their ov:n n1oney. 1 ' Stewart said he'd he fortunate 10 be' 1 able to spend more than S200 or $300,_ • ":O.·lr campaign fund s aren 't the healthiest," he ~id . "I'd like to do Is much as possible. I'll take five buck'S ' here or to bucks there, whatever I can get.'' Tbe new ordinance 1im-its ·the a1nount a single indiVidual can give. There 's a $200 , celling. But candidates like Agee. Mr.;. · Kuehn. Rogers and District 3 candidates ; Pete Barrett and Ellis Glazier, have filed 1 ifisdosure statements v:ith Usls of $50, ' $100 and $200 contributors. I All say they are not going to be able to '. come up with enough money for that ' familiar old campaign gimmick of direct ! mail brochures. ' ExCept for those on select mailing lisf81. most homeowners this year apparend! won't find their mailboxes filled with political material. , · "ffs just too expensive.'' pofnted ov.! District 3 cand idate John J. ~1cKerreti; echoing the complaints of other offict seekers. There are some candidates who a~ literally hitting the campaign trail -on Coot. ... Fourth District COUncilman l\lilan Dostal ventured away from home territory Saturday' to knock on doors iA Harbor View Homes. -: Awareotly. he's figuring his ra~ agaihst little-known school teadler Lyn Geronimi may be tougher than it looke4 0 W F • at first. . n atergate .. igure..s ' ba~:f~!":::eg~~~:.~~s:~ he wouldn:i DEAN ... get the subpoenas posted until after the Geronimi is trying to spread his name, election, Dean testified. Tne subJXienas, he says, with an extensive shoe-lea~i' Dean said Mitchell told him, would be SACRMtENTO (AP) -The C.ali!omia Hufstedler said the bar's role was to campaign. likely to reveal Vesco's contribution ; that St.ate Bar will soon. decide JVhetb.er to invesUgat.e whether there was possible "I hope to visit 2,000 homes before the Donald Nixon Jr. ot Ne~ Beich, the .. 1~'"". fortnlI dNtA.Ji..,,-."proceti.ungs misconduct by , the Catllomia bar campaign rs over." he said: ··r reaUy President'i nephcW. was ·biwf\l&\ With t -.,.... .....,~ .... ., members and to submlt • any soch believe this is the way to talk to people Vesco, and that Edward Nixon, the against five attorneys who have figured ~~~ence to ~e . <;alifoM Suprt>f1_e and B,~t lhei.r,;vie"1.'J)Ointi." President's brother, also \\'SS connected in the· Watergate scandal. 1,.UW1.. ~Geronimi said he's trying to spel:'fl with the case. Bar President Se<1l ri.r. Hufstedler said ' Disciplinary action Is up td Uie court, three h<Rls a day ringing doorbells. 1 . "The whole thing is something we don't Friday that~ under review .wr: he said. Penalties can r1n«e from a Glazier said he thinks his District .~ need before el~tion ," Dean quoted Hctbert Kall'bbach of Ne~-' Beach, private reprimand fo disbarment. candidacy will be helped by watking the Mitchell as sayinl. .... 1"pul.) The bar first announced last August precincts. Bi.It he·s doing it (Inly OQ. Testimony 'has indicated that Vesco personal lawyer to President Nixon: that it was investigating the conduct of weekends. and his aides took the Fifth Amendment Donald H. Segretti, convicted political Nixon and five other attorneys involved He 31so said he may have the funds to before the SEC. trickster: John D. Ehrlichman, former in Watergate. do one general mailing. He figures tO The contribution was not made public White House domestic advisor : former Hufstedler sald bar investigators have have upvrards or $4.000 to spend until after the SEC filed a civil fraud Astt. Atty. Gen. Robert f\lardian and spent about 700 man-hours compiling altogether. • action against Vesco Nov. 27, 1972. former White House aide Gordon documents and other materials relat1ng Glazier saJd he~ not doing 8D)'thUt' Dean .said that Stans told him in late Strachan. to the -·-. ..-·-··' ho October 1972 that be was conce "We are at the stage of detenntning in "If we came up with any unusual idea, med ......,...,, ua•~lUU, wever. about the Vesco oontribuUon because several of these instances whether or not we would do it, but nobody's come ~ Qimmon Cause fill'<! a I a w s u i t we should file formal proceedings," he S nd Jud with anything that would be cornpatibl~ demanding revelation of all large said. adding a final decision could come eco ge with my campaign," he said. • contributions to the Nlxon campaign in two or three months in some cases. Realtoc Barrett bad probably knock$:1 before April 7. the effective date of a new Hufstedler said a decis ion on whe~r N • R on more doott than any otber Thitd law requiring contributions to be President Nixon should face action may lX€S equest District hopeful . He says he's been out reported. take longer. Nixon remains an active almost every day. Dean said Stans told him the Vesco member oft.he Calilomia bar. r -"'V ,..,,. He's the Of!)y candidate who says he conlJ'=ibution was-designated onl}Lby1-1b<--"He---reee:nf.ly pakf--hil'l-dues-for thm-.r_:O r-:1 ---rim·e•----WI . really hippy ~·i1htfie'Cari0idite:-initials "JM.'' St.ans said he ~·as yea r," Hufstedler said. forums . 1 1 concerned about rhe date the Vesco The bar \.\ill first conduct hearings in Barrett, who starts out each speech at money arrived. It was delivered April 10. the case o( Segretti, 'vho is now serving a . SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -A second the forums by a mitting he·s not a good Dean said they discussed another ..,.;_, term f-v1·olat1·00 of federal Judge today denied a request by tv.'O d • · th~ I I b h Y'~" "' speaker. says the y jUS:t on t give <;:-contribution that came in a c, ut t ey election lav.·s during the 1972 Florida purported Symbionese Liberation Army candidates time to get their messages determined they had ·~constructive Democratic presidential primary. 'soldiers" for a nation.ally televised possession" of it before April 7. Th ti · ted to be I lh across. After the election. on Nov. 15, Dean e next.ac on 18 expec n e statement they claim could belp free "There is such a pressure on time .'' he- said he met with Mitchell and Stans in cai;;e or Kaimbadl . w~ has p\ea~ed kldnaped nev.-spaper heiress Patricia says. "And everybody says they're for N k. S id h ould l.k t gwlty to a charge of illegal camprugn H the residents and young people and ew 'Yor · tans sa e w 1 e 0 practices. Formal ptoceedings against earst. motherhood and apple pte. -return Vcsoo's money .and Mitchell Kalm~cb will follow h; ...................... ,. m· Oakland Mwllcipal Comt J udge ••· th ood id Dean ·d '-"" "' ....,.,.........,"-'& "1bafs \.\'hy I go out into u"! agreed at was a g ea, 5111 · that ease, Hufstedler said. stafford P. Buckley denied the request neighborhoods to amwer questions," he ~I hasaid bthe toproblld theemrn, ;Ofre courseporting' Huf.stedler's comments came in reply by Russell UU!e and Joseph Remiro, said. , , you 1 ve e to quesUons at an informal breakfast saying be did 50 d<M>Nte ztatements that Stewart acknowledges the fact he's not, this." held in coojunctioo with a meeting of the ..,...... ...._ and · 't rded tb Another witness has said that the bar's l5-member board ol. governors. the~ of an appear~ was~ belp widely N..,wn tsn rega as e ttfund was reported to the (j(!DCral free the 20-year~ld University o( likely wimer of tbe District 6 race. '11; Aocounting Office but the contribution Calil-'• ~. "I lry to be a dark horse. I h-O!I< to,; .......... ~ surprise a few people," he said. He sai~1 ~~:';,.;d Stam left the meeting first. Front Page I The Symbionese LiberaUoo Anny sa)'1 besides )mocking on doors , and car,; As Mitchell aM Dean were leaving, BURGLARY • it abducted Miss Hearst Feb. 4 from her windows, be's got a couple of other ideas .. 1 J\1itchell said he had received a packet of • • Berkeley apartment. "But I doo't want to spill them and let! .. materials from either Don Nllon, the Buckley's rtfusal to permit a television my oppoocnts gel the jump on me," he · President's brother. or Don Nixon Jr. of first stolen items identified among the statement follov.'Cd a similar actioil list said. Newport Beach about the Vesco case. haul discovered in Fulkerson's apartm ent ll-"eek by a judge in neighboring Confra He said he had looked into it and it was included items taken ?i.1arch 19 at 428 Costa County who said ii mighl hurt the "a b .. -..&.. of -..p Doan teotlfled o-~11o T•rrace, Co-· de! 'lar, ., men's chances for a fair trial .. Othwer~" ••·It.,;;:_· '-~·--.. Id· ... .:1 a \:O<Hll • .. '"'"' I\' After Buckley-'s ruUng, l.. i t t I e • i .. ,.....,.,._., Jl(ly... \W:I~ He added that with the arrest of paeket was adatessed to Dm Ntr~"at a "Fillkerso!'i, Spradlln and Dowell that attorney James Jenner said: "l f~I the New York hotel, that It waa: never ~ police believe they have temporarily at defense has done everything hwnanly delivered lo him but was picked up by \ea.st s.idetracked the so-called TV possible to bring this about." ?.1itchell, and that a paper In the packet Burglars' Ring. He said he would not appeal "at thls lime." threatened to expose Vesoo'a oontribytim The th ief or thieves gained that title unless the SEC invMttg~don WB.3 due to their pendlant for absoonding wlth stopped. all sorts of television sets. * * Five Die in Blaze D.\.VIDSON,_Mich, [UpJ) -Fire •)'•Pt I through a t\\ll-story frame home late Sunday. killing five members of a !tmilY,: including four chl ldren aged 3 to 9. 1' Aulhorities said only the father, Fred I Tyler, managed to esCape tine hlaze after 1 fuUle attempts to r~ hiJ wife and the 1 chlldttn. • I , Thousands Wait • Ill Rain for Food SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -'l'bousant!s of pe.rsom turned out lo heavy rain today tof'ck up boxeg th:lt oontained steaks an· fr~ produce in t.bt resumption of Ihe food gtvo•way prograll\ demon<led by the terrori st kidnapers of Patricia Hearst. AlthOugh ll'N' distribution at 17, S:m Francioo area locallcA'ls was scheduled to 11tart al 8 a.m., many perltlns Cot Jn line hours early despite Iba downpour. Operators ol the "People Jn Need" pogram sponaored by PlrllclJl's !1thttr, R>t>dolpb A. HtNtr.!f, '3id the gtmway "'as inleoded to. conie as clo&t 8.'5 possible to the $70 '*'"'orth of fret groceries demanded by the SymbiOOe1e Ubcralion Anny which kldnaped the girl Feb. 4. The Associ81ed Ptt., '"1>ot1ed th)t Wa shington' Secretary of Sta.le A. Lud· low Kramer. Who has been In Son Fran· ciK'O ·runnJng the. food gl\leaway pro- gram, i.• apparently quitting 1h11t post to return to his job In Olympia, rlash. Peter Dclaunay, Kramer's pre~ secre- tary in Olympia , said Kram er plans ot g!ve up !he job •s head of the People in Need program "unless Mr. llearst calJs him bGck." A typlc•I box distrlbllted al a center in the predominanlly Laun Am e r I can ~fission O!Strict of San trrancfteo included four or fivtt steaks., t0me of them T·bone cuts; two packages of froien filet of sole, a ff07.en chicken, a dozen eggs, 1 quart of milt, a· Jar of pe4tlut butte, a package of fresh prodiJce th>t Included yams, onions, cranies. apples and bananas, and other foodstuffs. 'l'he line at the 'Mission Dlstrld ~ and , a nwnblr had tftOrt than two bl\>Cks wtth aboQt -ponoos waitinS' at f a.m. Because ot rhe crowd , UM! etntt'r bH begun handing out the food t:nrly. There were no rcstr1ctkl'l! on I how many boi:e1 could be l.olleii by one ptl"!On and a number had · more than OJI<. One man wheeled two of the food boxes away ln a wbttl.chair, and another had a bOx on bis shoulder while limping along orrone crutdJ. Althou&b they bad been Q8ked to bring showing cart& bf the agt:ney operators, a nuiiber or persons turned up in au\omobllts, aome of lhtm C&dillacs. One woman JeR bal1111cing_ a box on her head. Several boxet Wl"l'e being loaded Into the aamc automobfle. No one appeared cheerful. , I j l/ j I I I i . - IND Whi nol I flltlsh . Tho be' tra II• but hi \\'a::: d time. The lookin I " • A Fire ''pot the the Th -t Driv u.. shou! l'l!Sid VOL 67, NO. 84, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1914 Boy, 13, Slain During Shootout • Ill INDIANAPOLIS IAPJ Lankie Lee Whisenant J r. told neighborhood friends not long ago that he probably wouldn't flllish school. The harmless statement turned out to be tragically true. It wasn't that Lanltie disliked school. but his family moved around a lot and it v.·a:: dirfh:ult going to new schools all the time. ' The 13-year-o\d youth was tall and old- Jooking for his age. Several IOds in ms ' neighborhood thought he could have excelled in sporta. Those who knew him said Lankie didn't have many close friends his age. He kept pretty much to him.self and relied on his family for what oompanlonShip he had. Lank.ie died Saturday night from four bullet wounds . • The boy and his uncle, Troy Stantz, 42. entered a fast-food restaurant While his fat.her: Lankie Sr., stayed outside. After sbaklng and stomping to r.id themselves of soow stuck to their coats, Lankie and Stantz ordered co£fee and eg sandwiches. Witnesses said the boy stood near his uncle 'o\ith a white scarf tied around bis face and said notning, While Hans Grootendonit. 54, was ft.ling the food ¥oith his back to the counter. the uncle said, "This is a holdup," police reported. , Grootendorst catTied a .22-aliber revolver in a holster on his hip while working late in the store. Upon hearing what Stantz said, Grootendont whipped around, and Lankie began shooting, police said. City detectivH said Grootendorst returned the fire and within seconds both Grootendom and Lankle were hit at least four times each. Windov;s "'ere also blown out and the wall! chippt."CI from gwishot. Grix>tendorst, \\'OUnded in the stomach, chest ' and legs, wu listed in critical conditton. Lankie, hit at least twi~ In the Committed to Detente, • l(issinger Tells .Russia Blackmail Pict111·ecl As Tl1 1·cat ~10.SCOW (AP) -Secretary of State Henry A. Kisslnger cautioocd So\'irt leaders today that there can be no v.·orld peace "if we attempt to blackmail each othe r." He made the remark after opening talb la the Krf:mlin with Communist. party leader Leorud I. Brezhnev oo ~-~ a new treaty limiting nuclear arms and fostering peace in the f\tiddle East. At the same time. Kissinger pledged I.hat President ~ixon and h is Administration remain committed to detente. "Our greatest goal i.s that over lhe next three yean; we can n1ake the relation.ship that has grown up between our two peoples and our leaders irrcverslble," Kissinger said. • NARMCO PLANT ON VICTORIA STREET TO GET PLANNING COMMISSION SCRUTINY City Officials Say They Are Concerned About Possible Hazard• to Nearby Residents ln a luocheoo loast, Kissinger said "We \\'anl to make the next summit as significant'' as the two preceding ones between Nixon and Brezhnev. But he said, "If our t~·o nations 'Dangerous Industry' E a-attempt to take~advantage of each other; Ye if we attempt to blackmail each other, or deal with each other from -a sttong position , then there can be no peace among ourselves or in the "''0tld." Mesa Planners to Revieiv Study of Narmco Rezoning ....I By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI A chemical pJ8nt which the Costa ~lesa Fire Department considers t h e "potentially most dangerous" industry in the city com€S up ror review tonight by the Coote r.1esa Planning Commission. • City planners have requested the zone change to bring Narmco into conformance "-'ith the Costa Mesa General Plan which re<.'Ommends a mtdium residmtial me on the property. If members of the five-man commISS1on approve the zone change tonight and their action is later '111e commission, at Its 6:30 p.m. n;ieeting in city council chamben. 77 Fair Drive, will tackle the question of whether tile Nannro plant at 600 Victoria St. ·•cora Humphreys, should be rezoned from manufacturing to residential. .--------.-·Fonner Newport Oruge <:east Wellther Decreasing clouds Tuesday aftel°"' noon is the way the weather serv- i~ calls it. Rain J>OSJ.ible tOnight and early Tuesday. Highs in the upper ~ at the beaches and the lower 60s inland. ~·noE TODAV Tl1e I11voder Ii.as retunied the . Sir Thoma.t Lipton Challenge Trophy to Sen DieQo by dt'· feaUnQ five rivaU in ·Ntwport. Slory, photo• P"ll• 20. ... ,... ,. 1,., M. • .,.. " C.11~ • C~llM 114' CM!lft II c~ u '*"' ... Hut ,, ·~ '"'" ' 1""'1tl-..I '' , ... lie. 1 .. 11 !ft llM tef'fic• 11 AMI lMlftfl 1J Mrl'lft lt Nal.._.I Hrn 4. It 01 an.,. ,c_,r • 111111• ,.n.. lt ~ 16-U Jltt• MaR1tl 1 .. 11 Tt+nlt*I 1f 'llllMI"-' 4 Reside1=,1t, Dies • Fwieral services are s c b e d u 1 e d Tuesday in Esccndldo for 31).year Balboa Island resident Cora B. Humphreys, who died at age 80 Sunday at her retirement home. She is the mother or Costa Mesa Assistant Atlomey Ro b e r t L. Humphreys, who is also a Coast Community College DiSri<I lrwtee. rutes will be at 10 a.m. in liteCloud Mortuary Chapel, F.oconclido, w i t h Interment at 2 p.m. in Rosedale Cemelery, Leo Angeles. A resident ol Balboa IJ1and lor three decades with II« husband. William. tile Humphreys' made their home at ~ Edgewater Ave., near the old )ocatlon cl Christian's: cate. She taught Kllool In tile Lco Angeles County .ciucatkJnal ll)"ltem from 1918 t-0 1928. while hor busl>And WM a teleph-One installer for the old Bell 1ystem. supported by the city council. Nannco. a division of the \\'hittaker Corp., "-'OU!d be declared a "non-conforming use." 'J'.hat does not mean the plant 1o1:ouJd be required to disband its operation because the city of Costa f\1csa does not have a rormal procedure whereby non - conforming uses can be eliminated through amOrtiza.tion. Adoption or an amortizatioo p r o c e d u r e will • be recommended lo the. commission tonight by the plarming staff. I ' The immediate effect of being declared a nonconforming use. bow ever, would prevent Narmco from expanding its facilities or rebuilding them in the event of destruclloo. Narrhco is engaged in the manufacture of aerospace plastics and defen'Jei"e1ated materials, many of which are secret. Although Narmco existed long before the surrounding residential tracts , planners emphasized that the fire department last ~by assigned Nmnco the "potentially most hazardous'' label became faUures in the manufacturing process could "endanger" the resident!. A fll'e department study tndicates that Narmco utilizes and stores reslM, sulfuric acid. alcohol, acetone, aolvents and methyl ethyl ket-same kinds or chemicals wNch laJt April blew down tile El Moo!< OlemlCll Cl>. and k!ll<d two employes. Problems "With the manufactuni of exotic cbeml~J roducts at Narril<x> have resulted In ....... 1 "'emei-genciei" and [ires inside the plant, the most 1erloua of which oe<uttd In on July 3, 19611. As the talks opened Brezhnev said he "'as optimistic about another Soviet· American arms agreement. Kissinger hoped during his three days of talks in the Kremlln to set tbe stage of a new nuclear weapons treaty Pr~idcnt Nixon could sign on a visit to r-.loscow next summer. Asked by newsmen if he eJ:pected lo reach another arms agreement with Nixon then, Brezhnev replied :"/ take an optimistic view of that. \l.'e have made a very good beg.inning on that process." He said relations between t h e superpowers "are good " but "there is much work to do at this time." stomach, staggered backwards out Qf the restaurant and fell into a snowdrift. Pollre say that as the shooting subsided, Lankie's faUler leaped into a car parked outside and then noticed his son on the side walk. Wi!Jl('Sses saiC: the falher tried to gt't his son inside the car but gave up "'hen people began arriving on the scene. Lank le Sr. theit drove away. About 30 minutes later, Lankie "'as pronounced dead at t.larioo County IMPLICATES MITCHELL Ex·Nixon Aide Dea n Secrrch Lnunched For '~1 yste ry' S·tvi111n1er in Sea Cold and emotiooally sh;1ken, a long- d1stance swimming cnlhusi:.st v1as found collapsed in exhaustion on a Newport Beach strand Sunday night. mumbling about a mystery swimmer hc c!aiml'd he saw. A search for the second possible victim of cold, choppy swells, "·as immediately rcsuined and lasted into predav.'n hours but no trace could' be found . Joseph Arnato, of Pon1ona . v.·as listed in satisfactory condition ttJday at Hoag l\lemorial Hospital. "'here he was undergoing treatment for exha11Stion and exposure. . lie was found collapsed on the beach ?K'ar 28th Street shortly before midnight, follo"·ing a fruitless offshore search by the Harlxlr Patrol . lifeguards and the Ne"·port Beach Police helicoplcr. Amato had batUed the sv.·ells for some t"·o hours. "Investigators who located Amato about 10 p.m. said he told of seeing what ha OO!icved to be anothl•r sv.•1n1mer balt!ing the waves about one rnlle offshore as he s"·am in . Before being hustled off to Ho.1g J\femorial Hospital after treatmrnt at the scene. An1ato told authorities the other swimmer appeared · w be in grave trouble. ·11e said he was thrashing around and "·as wearing scuba diving air tanks and pinpointed the approximal4; position as about one mile out bct'ft·ecn ]';e"'port Pier fStt SEARCH, Page if ,. .. "" "*"'11 t1 --" Wtftltll'l Nm 1).14 Ww"' ,.._.. 4, lf Survlvors ln<lude Mrs. llumphrty1' husbAnd. William. llO<\ Robert . a daught..-, Mrs. J-0yoe Ackerman aod 10 granddllldrco. Chemlcol fu""' spreading lrom tile plant lnU. "'""""'1lng area convinced flremea to evacuatt! 30 homes even lho<lgb Nannco olftdals said <ht rum... (See REZONING, PIC" II . BREZHNEV, l<ISSJNGER ALL SM IL ES AT MEETING l(....,,lln Por!.y Paving Way for Visit by Nixon • I ' • • • • • -· Today's Final N.Y. Stocks c TEN CENTS , Holdup -- Grneral llospital. TU·enty-four hours aftt!r !hat. no one had come forv:ard to cJ;iun the boy's l:lopy for burial. Officials said the only thing found on th~ boy's clothing "·as a school test <>n 1\•hich he had "Tilten h.is n a m e and ans"·l'red some questions. L.1nkle Sr. is being sought by authorities on an arined robbery charge. Stanti is in jail on the sa me charge, and Lank1e's n1other is 1\·anted .on an e1nbt<ulemcnt ~·arrant. Dea1i Says Mitchell 'Involved' ... NEW YORK IAPl -Ousted \\'hile !louse rounsel John W. Dean 111 told a jury today that former Att. Gen. John i\. J\1itchell repeatedly asked him to <:heck on a se<'Urities fraud investigatioo against financier Robert \1esco. Dean also said that former Commert'e Secret.a ry J\1aurice H. Stans told him he "'as concerned about the circumstanei:S of Vesco·s !ecrrt $200,000 cash contribution to President Nixon's re- election campaign . Dean appeared as a go\'emment "'ilness at the ft'dera\ rourt trial of illilchel\ and StafL~. The t\\'O fonner cabinet Officials. \\'ho rC"Signcd lheir posts to join Nixon's 1972 rc-clt'clion carnpaign , ;ire charged with trying to impede an in\'estig:ition of \'l'SCQ in return for hi.s contribution. and lying to the grand jury about it. One perjury count aga1ru;t r-.lilchell is based oo his dl'nial that he 1alked to Dean about Vesco. Dean is named as a coconspirator in lhc case but not a defendant Dean sakt that Mitchell oo numerous oecasions asked him to cha::k with \\'iltiam Casey, Ulen chairman of !he &'<.'U rilies and Exchange Commi.ssion, about the status of lhe V e s co in\'estlgation. He said that on one occasion Mitchell told him that some or Vesco's aides had been subpoenaed by the SEC. lie said \litchell called that "harassment'' .tnd '·totally unnecessary." Dean said ~1ilchell told him the in\'es!igation "appeared to be politically motivated." ~fitchell asked Dean to call Casey and ISee DEAN, Page ZI Thousa11d s Give11 Food by Hearst In San Francisco SAN FRA!'-;CJSCO ll)PJ ' -Thousands of persons turned out in heavy rain today lo pick up boxes that rontained steaks and fresh produce in the resumption or the food giveay,·ay program drmandt'd by th1• Terrorist kidnapers of Patricia llea rst. Although the distribution at 17 ·San F'rancico area locations ""'as scheduled to 5l:irt at 8 a.m., many persons got in line hours early despite the dov.11pour. Operators of the "People m Need" pogram sponsored by Particia's father, Randolpn A. Hearst. said the givea"·ay Wa.5 intended to come as close as possible lo the S70 v.·onh of free groceries demanded by !he Symbioocse Liberation Army "'hich kidnapl'd the girl Feb. 4. The As."Weiated Pres.~ rtp0r1ed that \\'ashington S<>cretary of State A. Lud- low Kramer, ~'ho has been in San Fran· cisco running the food giveaway p~ gram. is a~renlly quitting that post to return to his job 1n Oi}mp1a, I/ash. Peter Delaunay, Kramer's press secrt· tary in Olympia, said Kramer plans ot give up the job as hrad of the Peqple in l\'ttd program "unless ~tr. lfcar.it calls him back " A. t~·pical bo:ir: distributed at a center in the predominantly Latin Am c r i ca n ~!Lss1on District of San fraoclsco included four or five steaks, 50me of th~m T·bonc cuts ; two packages of froien filet of sole. a frozen chicken, a do'len eggs, a quart of milk, a jar of peanut butter. a package of fresh produce tluit included yams, onions. oranges, apples and bananas. and other foodstuffs. The line at the )fission District person and a number had more than l i,q) blocks "''Ith about 400-500 pc!MlOM "'ailing a t 8 a.m. Because of roe cro~·d, IM center had begun handing out the food early, There "'ere no re.~tricllona on hov.• many boXl"S could be taken by OM: person and a number had more than one. One man wheeled two o( the food bo'l't'e (See HEARST, Pase !J • ..__D::Al.::L::V~Pl::LD::,:l ____ c __ _ Fro111 Page J $20 Mllllma Cottapfex 'DEA N ... Groundbreaking get 1hc subpoenas posled untJ I afttr tilt election . Dean tffitlfleO. 1'~ sut>poenaa. De411 said ~lltchell told him, v.·ould be likely to rt\•eal \l1?SCO's conrributlon : that Dona.kl Nixon Jr, of SC\l.'J)Orl Beach, lhe President 's nephe\"· was involved y,•\1h Vesoo, and thal Ed"·ard Ni xon . thr Preaklenl's brother, ~also "''as COMe<:k.od y,·ilh 'the case. Slated for Fall .. The developer of Costa Mesa's $20 million "pay a.s you play" rl-creatlon complex remtlins confident that ground ~·ill be brokt!fl this fall on a tourist Coast Realtors Get 'Testy' Over Testing The NewJXirt lfarbor-Cosla 1'.lcsa Board of Realtors today expressed alarm today that someone is making a covert attempt to find out if local real es tate agents arc p r <1 c l ici ng ra cial discrin,ination. The board 's weekly newsletter. the ScuU1ebutt. distributed today, said some realtor.s have recci\·cd telephone calls from people asking about rental unit s and then wondering if race makes a difference. "A "·on111n called local realtors feigning interest in an advertised property, making an appointme nt to see it, giving her name and roonl nwnbcr at a certain hotel. ''At the last moment. she "·ould say. ·By the way. my husba nd is black. Does tha tmake a difference?' " "The answer was al"·ays negative," writes Glenn Martin, realty board manager, Jn the newsletter, but he said the ~·oman never kept any of the appointments. Martin said that type of ca ll had been reee.ived over the past few months and then again only recently they started again. He suggests any realtors receiving such calls contact realtor John Semple. Semple said his office has apparently been bothered the most. He explained a salesgirl in his office received a call last week and the caller refused to identify herseU: but said she was "just testing.' "l don't want to make a big issue out of it," Semple said, 'But I don't particularly care to be tested. I've been tested in this business for 18 years in Newport Beach. .. I don't care iI 50mebody is black. purple -or has yellow spots, if I'm convinced they're nol going to play bongol"at 11 o'clock or. run a narcodcs den. hell, I 'll rent to them," he said. "If they really are testing. 1 just wish they'd tell me "'ho they arc, then 1'11 take their test," he said. Charles Brown, president of l'ile realty board, said he does not have the faintest idea who might be behind the calls. "I'd hate to think it was a civil rights organization operating like that, but it's possible.'' he said. "We ha\·e had black people come in looking for homes and apartments. V.1e do for them rne same as "·e do for everybody else," he said. From Page J SEARCH ... and the 28th Strt>Et subsurface rock groin. •!arbor Patrol officers immediately organized a stcondary search, utililing two cruising boats equipped with radar equipment in the hope of turning up Ule · reported victin1 . "If this guy did have tanks on and he "'ent down. that "'ould be it for him,'' commented Harbor Patrol Sgt. Dean C.Ordcll toda y. He also said it was possible the r-qiorted sighting of the swin1mer in !rouble in the dark. rough seas may have been due to the exhausted distance s...,·immer's mental and p h y .sic a I condition. I DAILY PILOT l ... Or-CHI! D411. Y l"K.()T, wll!! wltlc/I lo ~ ""' """"-l"•eu, It ,_llolltd .., 111• Ot•-CA.11r ,.,.,""Int c-. .._.. r1M ..illloM l ft pUlilltl'ltd, M-y "''""""" l'•IOty, fw (00!1 Mot, Pt.--1 IH<!I, )4111111,...IOol l t lCll/l'-l•ln Vt lley, ~ ·-· 1 ... IMJs.t.NltllKl -._ (lotmtnlt / lit11 Jlit11 C.it11t.'1,,.. A t lfltlt r .. ltoMI .. 111e<1 1s ,..-u.-s.1yn11,t ..,.. s11,.•Yt· J~ !Wlnc!~I Mrl•~llle pi.n1 11 1r UO wnr It' S!r"I, COllt Mtw, C1llktrft!1, t'61'. Rol.1rt N, w,,, l"•Hiff<>I '"" l"lltll""r J 1c\o R. Cu.!1y Vll;t l"r .. io,..1 .,., Qs'llr11 Mt M91'" Thom11 K11•ll Elli.. Tttomtt A. M11r,hi~• ""'"'''"' '"'"" 0.1rl1i H. ~••• l icll1.J '" Nill 41110l111t M ..... ""' l:tlltft JJO W11t l1y Strtot M t ll!ftf A4'r•111·,.o . It• 1\.0. t2•J• °'"'°"""' N._I lffd'tl SW N-' SIWle"I~ 1....-hlUI: m ,..,", ... _ !+vol!~ tffdi1 11'71 ·-~ lol\llt'H~ ... " C'-"' 1111 _,,, 1:1 ,,,,,._ ... , , .. ,..... 17141 642-4121 c ........... ,, ......... ,,,. Ctr/'Flthl, 1'11. °'""' C..• "'1&1t"""" °"""'""' Nt "''" tltrltf, llllttlrtl ...... tlll ... lfl -!It<" " Mlltfti.-rt ,,.,...., _, ... ,..,.. .. 11(... .,,,,..,. -ltl ..... llllHllM ti UtrYrltrtl -• uc.N (Ill• "'""' ....... C•I• Mt..., Ctll,...ftlt . lio*O"I-''-' W clffllor ILiol 1'*"flllr1 W 1t1•!t U.11 -"'""' m1!11Wr .,11!nt110f!1 n U """"""· ' attraction only slightly smaller thau South C.Oast Pla?l!. Edward J. Regan, president of Four Seasons Villages, although admitting that the high prime lending rate has made financing the project t cm po r a r 11 y difficult. says he believes financi ng v.·ill be achleved 11'ilhi nsix to ell(ht n1ooths. !\feelings held between Regan 's firm and oorth Costa A-leM homeowners stirred the rumor that construction on the project oorth of lhe San Diego Fret1vay and 1ve.st of Bear Street were imminent . Although Regan maintains his project i!I just around the corner. he emphasized that site ~·ork would probably not begin until fall and that it "'ould take up to t"·o yea rs for the project's completion. No official action has been taken on the project since 197'2 when both planning commission and city council approved a new co1nmercial recreation l(CR ) zone for the 41)..acre site. The Four Season.' developmeflt is planned as a J)lace where families could indulge in a variety of sports attractions, including archery, billiards, .skating, tennis, water and dry.Jami skiing. and bowling. Theaters are also included in the overall design of the project. A cornerstone of the development l.s a $15 million, 500-room hotel , to be operated under a long-term lease by the lfyalt Corporation. · Regan said the leases for the hotel as "'ell as those for the theater, 38-lane bo"·iing alley. teMis club and several other attractions already have been negotiated. "I thlnk we11 be ready to bring ~"Ol"king drawings lo the city within four to five months," said Regan. "But everything ls cootingent on finalizing our financing ." The property on which the Four Seasons Recreational Village i.s to be located would be leased under a Jong. term agreement by Regan from landowner Genjl Kowamura. Five Attorneys Fireside lnitiatio1i Beach and Costa twlesa (seated on logs) watched. Order of .<\rrow candidates are elected by their peers and must have fulfilled stiff scouting rcquirc- n1ents. ' As campfire blazes, Del Mar Chier !\like Goar pre- pares to tap 26 Harbor Area Boy Scouts for initia· tion into exclusive Order of the Arrow. Cere1nony took place Friday at Costa h1esa's Te\Vinkle Park. Parents and relatives of Scouts from Newport ____ _;_ _________________ _ TONIGHT COS TA MESA PLANNING COl\tfo.11SSION -Regular l\leeting , City Hall, 6:30 p1m. TIJESDAV, l\tARCIJ ?6 SE~IOR CITIZ~NS C LU B Community Recreation Center, 11 a.m. • 3 p.m. OCC LECTURES -"Women in Wor ld of \\'ork." Ce nter Street Boys Club, 9: 30 a.in. "Creation, Care and Feeding of Corporations.'' Tony Dro"'Il. lecturer. Littl e Theater. Cdl\t lfigh School, 7:30 p.m. "Behind the Headl ines." Dr. Giles T. Bro~TI lecturer, Forum. 7:30 p.m. UC! LECTURES -"The M-lly Retarded-10eir T r e a t m e n t and Training." 1.1ult ipurpose Room, Rehabilitation Bldg . Fairview Stale Hospital , 7 p.m. "f\-1anagement Overview for \Vom<'n, Rm . 100 Humanities Ha\1, 7- 10 p.m. .... Huntington 'Monument' 11orched by Arsonists Arronists touched off a blaze Sunday thal damaged the Nrwland house. one of Huntington Beach's oldest buildings, the city Fir<' Dcparlment said today. Capt. Roger lfosmer. deputy fire marshal. said someooe lit a fire in the attic. It burned through part of the roof, gutted the atU c aod damaged some of the upstairs bedrooms. The Ne .... ·land house, buil t in 1898. is suppo5ed to become a city historical monument and a museum. Hosmer said the fire damage may jeopardize that. The ~·ood frame. t"·o-story house sits on top of 1he knoll overlooking Beach Boulevard and Ada.tm Avenue. It has been vacant and OOarded up for nearly a year. Jloemer said it has been broken into. vandalized and scarred by smaU fires numerous times. This blaze was Attornev-Client • discovered by a police patrol car about 5:20 p.1n. F'ivc fire trucks and 17 men fought I.he fire, preventing it from spreading to the do"'nstairs portion of the old home. llosmer rcportrd. ~le .said inV<'S1igators are st ill lrying to determine how the fire v.•as started, but they are sure it was deliberate. The house is currently owned by Signal Landmark Corp. which owns the entire Newland Estate al Adams and Beach. Dai1·y Chief Claims Kalmbach Named in Plans Stnte Bar to Decide Waiver Praised In Nixon Case SAN ANTIONIO, Tex. (AP) -A dairy cooperative's general manager' claims there were plam in 1972 to call on Nixon fund·raiscr Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, for help with a JwiUce Department antitrust suit agaWt the ~ op, according to testimony here . On Watergate Figures SACRAl\1.ENTO (AP) T The California State Bat wll~ aoon deci de wbether to lawtch formal disciplinary proceedings again.st five attorneys who have figured in the Watergate scandal. Bar President Seth 1.1. Hufstedler said Friday that those under review "'ere: Herbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach, personal lawyer to President Nixon ; Donald }l. Segretti. convicte<I political trickster; John D. Ehrlichman, former White House domestic advisor; fonncr Astt. Atty. Gen. Robert ]l.1ardktn and former While Howe aide Gordon Strachan. • "\\1e are at the. stage of determining in several of these instances v;hether or not 11;e should file formal procccdings," he said, adding a final decision could come in two or three mooth.'l in some cases. Hufstedler said a decWon on whether Preskient Nixon should face action may take longer. Nixon remaJM an .active member of the California bar. "He recently paid his dues for this year," Hufstedler said. The bar will first conduct hearings in the case of SegretU, who is now serving a prison term for violation of federal election laws during the 1972 Florida Democratic presidential primary. The next action is expected to be in the case of Kalmbach, who has pleaded guilty to a charge or illegal campaign practices. Formal proceedings against Kalmbach v.·ill fo\low his sentencing in lhat case, Hufstedler said. Hufstedler's comments came in repl y lo questions at an .... informal breakfast ht'ld in conjunction with a meeting of the bar's 15--member board or governors. llufstedler said the bar's role was to investigate \\'hether there was possible misconduct by the California bar n1embcrs and to submft any such evidence lo the California Supreme Court. . Disciplinary act.ion i! up to the court. he sald. Penalties can range from a private reprimand to disbarment. The bar first announced last August that it v.·as investigating the cxinduct of Nixon and five other attorneys involved in Watergate. ltufste<tler said bar investigators have spent about 700 man-hours oompiling documents and other materials relating to theu cases. · Former Mayoi· to Battle For Seal Beacl1 Election A former mayor of Se.al Beach will try 10 cost the city's current mayor irr Tuesda:V.1S munidpel e-lection, in a bitter renecuon of the 1971 recall campaign. In another councilmanic district, an appointed councilman will try to sa~e his job from a listed challenger and a ~TitC< in candidate. · 1 The third cooncilman up for re-~ electiOO, JJarold Holden. 72. representJng District S, U!isure World, has no opposition. Jn a heated bat tle, Morton Baum, 36, wUJ try to ~in back I.he post he held in J9il. when a!I mayor. ht and two other councilman we.re recalled from office by the voters . Baum is trying to UfL!oeat Mayw Thomas Blackman. 4.1, who led \ht recall election agalmt him and toot hJs place on the coundl. There are no other coot.enders In the District 3 ra~ which rovers the are.a norlh of Pacific Coast Highway and a snail portion of Le:llure World. Group (the recall organizatto!I} "·ere supported by such big developers as t'be Bi~py Ranch l\l1<f S. and S. Caostructioo. Both companies had donated $500 each to the recall effort, but Blackman aa.id he was unaware of it at the time, and thlt the ·ctty· m.mcll has not tndlscriminatety ' allO"'ed development. 11 ln District I, which covers old to1'fl and Surfside, (uture growth Is aJeo a lt.J!Y issue. James DuM, 44, the tncumbe.nt councilman, was appointed to hla se.at last August when Thoriw: Dames rnoved out of the city. B•rnes had edged Dlllm lor lb< council Poet in the 1972 e~on, From Pagel REZONING. •• """"' not toxic. However. Nannoo is not en;::r. wllhoul rrl•nda In 1 ho n: . Planntn:, who origlnally led a public hearing on tbe Narmoo r.one . cbonge lut month blJt delll)'ed tho he&.rlng. say they 'have r e c e l v' d correspondence b.1clting the ptant. SACRA~fENTO (AP) -A waiver of ·attorney-client : privilege in President · Nixon's tax t'ftSe would be "a ma.tor breakthrough in our investigation," say.s Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr. In a statement Sunday, Brown re£erred lo the White House promise to grant a "'aiver with no condidons attached if · requested by presidential altomeys llerbert W. .Kalmbach and Frank DeMarcO Jr. Contacted at his Newport Beach home, Kalmbach said, "I have n~ talked to my partner, Mr. DeMarco, and I caMOt comment at this time." Def\1arco could not immediately be reached. Brown said he has asked the President for waiver. He said he wants lb know '~'hat Nixon and his attorneys discussed Apr il IO, 19i0, a few miiiutcs after the deed for the vice presidential papers was b.lckdated. Nixon took a $5i6,000 tax deduction for the papers. Del\1arco has previously explained that the back-dated deed was made out to replace an older one that had been signed before the lax deadline. He said he "·anted a ne"'· clean deed because it would be an historic paper. He said the old one was thro°"'n away. A joint congressional com1nittec also invcsligating. Bro"'" said h<' thought De~tarro "'ould seek a ~·aiver. Harold S. Nelson said that Dr. George ]l.fehren, general manager ol A3soc:iated Afilk ProdUCers, Inc., wanted a conversation arranged with Kalmbach . Nelson testified in a deposition in antitrust casa filed by private litigants which relate io the J.ustice Department case. Nelsoo, \\'ho was M e h 1 e D ' s predecessor as general man<iger, has been Indicted on perjury charges in an Arkan.sas r c d e r a I grand jury investigation of 1968 dairy politieal activities. Nelson 's deposition testimony was about a mceting.oo or about April 4, 1972, which he said took place at A]l.1PJ's headquarters here for the natJorl°s largest milk co-<ip. The t£'Slimony adds yet another piece lo a dlspuled •lory being checked out by Watergate investigators. It involves claims that Ai\1Pl made an arrangement with Kalmbach for the antitrust suit to "die a natural death" in exchange for $300.000 in contributions. Nelson said he has ne\·er hem told such an arrangeml'flt existed. The arrangement. according Io hearsay testimony by f~r AJ.lPI official Dwight l\-1orris, wa.s revoked by Kalmbach after publicity over the Nixon Administration's handling of an lnlernaHonal Telephone & Telegraph Corp. antitrust case, Nelson said of the April meeting that i\1ehren "was exertised aOOut actions by I.he adm inislration and particularly the filing of the antitrust suit by Justice.'" Tlaei·r Ct1p of Tea "The whole thing is something voe don't need before election," Dean quoted i\1Jtchtll <IS S<)~•ing. Tcs!lmony nas indic3\ed thnt Vesco and hls aides took the Fifth Amendment before the SEC . The contribution v.·as not made public untJI after lhe SEC filed a civil fr41 ud action against Vesco Nov. 27. 1972. Dean said that Stans told hitn in late October 1972 that he '4'as concerned' about the Ve!CO contribution becaut.e O:>mmon Cause filed a l a "' s u i t •• I demanding revelation of all large : contributions to the Nixon campaign · 1 before April 7. the effective dale of a new· Jaw requiring contributions to ~ reported . Dean said Stans told him tt\e Vesco contribution "!'as designated only by the' initials "J&I ." Stans said he "·as 1..'0ncemed about t'ne date the Veseo 1noney arrived. It "'as delivered April IO. Dean said they discus.sed another1 contribution that can'le m Jute. but lhey - detcrm.ined they had '"constructive' possession" of it before April 7. After the election. on Nov. 15. Dean said he met with Mitchell and Stans in New York. Stans said he would like to return Vesco's money and Mitchell agreed that was a good idea. Dean said. Dean said he told them, ''Of course. you'll have the problcn1 of reporting this." Another witness has said that the refund was reJXirted to the General Accounting Office but 1he contribution "'as not ' R t Dean said Stans left the meeting first. As l\filchell and Dean W<'re lea\'ing. 1\litchell said he had ~ived a packet or materials from either Don Nixon, the ·R President's brother, or Don Nixon Jr. of. . Newport Beach about the Vesco case. He said he had looked into it and it was "a bunch of crap," Dean testified. Other witnesses have said that a - packet was addressed to Doo Nixon at a New York hotel, that it was never delivered to him but was picked up by Mitchell, and that a paper In the packet .~. threatened to expose Vesco·s rontributlon ·· unless the SEC investigation was · stopped. Second Judge Nixes Request For TV Time SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A second judge today denied a request by two ·' purported Symbionese Uberation Army 'soldiers" for a nationally tel evised''' statement they clalm could 'help free kidnaped newspaper heiress Patricia • Hearst. •; OakJand Municipal Court J u d g e ' Stalford P. Buckley denied the request by Rus,geJI Little and Joseph Remiro , sa}ing he did so despite statements that ; the purpose of an apf)earance was to help free the 20-year-<ild University of California coed. • I From Pagel HEARST ... a\.,..ay in a ~·heelchair, and another had a box on his shoulder "'hile limping along on one crutrn. Although they bad been asked to bring ' shopping carts by the agency QP('rators. a number of persons lumed up in automobiles, som e of them Cadillacs. One woman left balancing a box on her " head. Several boxes were IX'ing loaded 1 into the same automobil t. No one appeared cheerful. In that 197(1 campalgn, Baum.. along wlth Councilmen c.onway Fuhrman and Thomas Bogard. were recalled 1bortty aft.tr they fired Clty ~fttnagcr l.ee Rl!ner and City Allomey J im Cnrnes. Ba11m And ilo~ard had just been elected lO the council In 1970 on an any-<1cvetopment platlorm. 1 ln this c'mp8l3n. Baum MS charged 1h11t DlOck~n and the Good Govcmmcnt "11M? neighbor5 are ambivalMt.'' said advance plMnihg dMsloa chief Arnold Ham.ala. "Some o' lhem woukl just as IOOfl ha\•e Nt.rrrtco there as an 11partmtnt bulldll!(." Smiling skipper Malin Burnham (al the helm) and his crew are happy because !hey just won the Sir Thomas Upton Challenge Trophy, one or West Coast yachting's most coveted prltes. 'fhe trophy now goes ba ck to San Diego Yacht Club. where ll orlgi n8ted 71 years ago. To find out hpw Burnham dereatcd cup defender Tim Ho·ga.n of the Newport Harbor Yach t Club, see Page 20. ·