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1975-05-21 - Orange Coast Pilot
• • DAILY PILOT * * * 10< * * * f' ~ -WE.ONESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 21 , 1975 VOL .... NO. 1'1. 1SECTIONS,16 PA.Ot:S • • •• • u m co Mrs. Ford Meets Viet Re·fugees on Coast • • • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' 1-ncal ·Doetor-s' lnsU~ Upl41% Frotn Grove Tanzania Moh Seizes Student -+-~ ·-~;;.· '..%~, :" ~~~~,-e~ ·~~ DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania The sourcesrSaid the lddnaping (UPI.) __. Three Ameri~an stil-. ~Jtce -MonCfay night--at a deb.ts were kidoapea fz;o.m a ga\iie J.reaearch station run by wil):llife researc·ti st ation by ,Jane GOOdall, auiftor ol sev'eral arpted Africans in a remote area booksonanimalb.ebavior. . of northwestern Tanzania, U.S. CStanfos:d . ._Univei'si,iY Sai4 it. embassy offieials s'aid today. A had been lnforme.d ' by State Dutch student also was ab-Departmentofficl'alsin'Fa'nzania ducted. that 40 armed men ',,_ftom Zaire seized-the three students and an administr·ative· assistant. * * -* U.S. Citizens Terrorized Around World (Stanford said the students kid· naped w~re Barbara B. Smuts,24, Ann Arbor, . Mich.; Kenneth S. Smith, 22, Garden Grove, and Carrie Jane Hunter, 21; Atherton, Calif.) . • The research station, in the Gombe game reserve, is localed north or Kigoma on the short of From \Vire Sefvices LakeTanganyikaneartheBurun- , Americans C"ame under in-diborder. creasing attack today throughout The embassy asked the Tanza· the world . 'fwo u .S. Air Force 0r: nian go\lernment to launch an in· ficers were murdered in Iran, an vestigation, the sources said. American civil ian and two The Americans and the Marines were held hostage in Dutchman were among about 30 Laos. and three Stanford stu· students working at the station. dent s \Vere kidnaped in Most of the students are from Tanzania. · Stanford .. Terrorists stopped a car carry-Miss Goodall and other mem· ing two unarm ed U.S. Air Force bers of the research station wit- officcrs to work this morning, or-nessed the kidnaping. They said -the kidnapers were ar.med with FORD SAYS BOMBING NOT PUNITIVE. A4. del'ed their Iranian driver lo the fl oor of the car, then shot and killed the Americans. The U.S. Embassy ~dentified the decid as Col. Paul R. Shaffer Jr .. 45, a native of Bryan, Ohio, and" Lt. Cvl. Jack J. Turner, 45, from Carbondale. Ill. .The Iranian government said the assassins, \vho escaped, were Marxist guerrillas. and ~·no ac- tion will be spared to find the murderers · an·d bring them to justice.'' A wo"m.al\ who said she spoke tor the "Iranian People's War: riors Association" calJed .. The As- ttoc.•iated Press and said i.the ex- ecution of American officers was , a ·reply to the e.Xecultorl of nine· . Iranian revolutionaries in prison lttst month." · She also said ,that as 'Shah ~ohammed Re~a PB.hlevi 'is ·:a stooi,;:e o'f ' the l\merJcans, we therefore murder Americans.'' Meanwhile, a mob of ·about 200 Laotian' leflistS demaridif!g the oust<;r of all Americans with the· U.S. Agency for lnternaliQJ'lal Development seized the ·AID compound in Vientiane ~ay, traJ5pin8 .an ~mer~can civiliAh and two M arlncs Yjfto,ho<l,ll*;dt ID '"hold the fort." , . the early·mornin.a selnft o the comp0uncl ')'•• th la\cst \n··a series of ant1-Amerjcarl out .... bursts in Laos, which is all but . under complet~ Communist eo'n · trol gJnce the flight into exile or •lfhUst een•r•I• ·and C'llbinet minUurs in Ill• wake~ tile fall (See TERROR, Pagel\!) ' 'rifles, but thei r 'ideptity was not k.nbwn. The embassy sources said there was no apparent motive for the kidnaping and relations between the students at the re- search station and local villagers . were good . However. the border area or .Burundi near the ti.re& ol Ute kid· naping was the scene of tnilitary operations against dissident tribesmen thfs month. The U.S. . ~mbassy in the Burundi capital of Bujumbura also was working on the kidnap case, ·the sources said. Tanzanian.pqlice were flown to the scene ·in a h'elicopte'r ·and Derek Brysoon, direCtor of the Tanzania natipnal parks, also new there to help with the in· vestigation. THIRD CALLER BOUGHX .Y:4.CHT . ' "The ad produ•.e<l\flllmY calls and I sold the yacht on·the third call . I'm very pleased." That's the success story told by .th"' Huntin~on Beach man who pl•oed l{lli a•Un tile Dally Piiot: C~WM:BIA 22, 3salls. knl)t n\eter. ·cockpit tushtotrs,·Newport$i.P $2800. XXX•XXXX lf you }\ave a boat or sails to sell, call 642·5678. It only takes a few words in \fie Mital place to make a, sale . · Alona Che Oranse Coast, tile rllht pla~ I• the Dau.v Pilot , Junior Jumbo Jet UPI T•l9f'llGIO The Boeing Commercial A"irplane Co'm· ; pany shows off its first Model 747 SP (special performance). The junior jumbo .iet is 47 feet shorter than the standard versio11 in the foreground and is designed to fly higher, faster and farther \Vhile still carrying up to 288 passengers compared with 360 for most standard 747s. ' First Lady Visits . ' PendJ,eton Refugees By JACK CHAPPELL Of lfl• O•Uy PllOt Stiff First Lady Betty Ford toured a Camp Pendleton refugee center of 5,400 Vietnamese today in· specting living areas, schools, , and mess hallS. Mrs .. Fofd arri.ved from San Diego at aboUt 9:30 and went first to the ~e(ugee processing center A REPORTER VIEWS 'LITTLE SAIGON'-A7 w.here she was met by Pendleton C'ommand~r ·srig. Gen. Paul G. Grattam and Nick Thorne, civil c~rdinator for the inter-agency task force. She was given a 10-mirtute briefing on the resetUement pro· gress being made at the sprawl· ing Marine base in the hills behind San Clemente where so far 26,000 ~ielnaJllese have ar· rived. There are currently 181000 refugees at Pendleton. · Mrs. Ford went first to meet with representatives of the volunteer agencies who are as- sisting in resettlement of the re· fugees. . She th en went to a dining area. a Marine messhall and ten olive drab tents where she talked with ·refugees.. · Leaving the messhall area l\1rs. Ford visited a "survival English " school where 10 to 11 year olds Vietnamese were being taught the rudiments of English lilnguage. The c lass has been un- der way for .about three days. From there Mrs. Ford was to visit a PX area where refugees \\'ere able to purchase clothing and toilet articles needed for everyday life. l\.1rs". Ford walked along a line of more than 400 tents in Camp csee TOUR, Page A2) Construction Bill Get.s OK WASHINGTON (APl -A House-passed bill to authorize $5 billion to prop up the sagging constr'Utlioi\ industry is going to the Senate, wh~e {l.sjmilar bill is oppased' by.the administration as infiationary. By a 313·86 vote Tuesday, the House sent the emergency employment bill to the Senate, which is holding hearings on a 'measure to authorize Sl.9 billion for the same purpose. The Sen.ate vote is expected next month. ' . ThreeOCMen Found Guilty In Bunco Rap Three men involved in an alle· ged Costa Mesa·based bonco scheme were found guilty of multiple felony counts late TUes· day in Orange County Superior Court. . A jury in Judge Raymond Vin- cent's courtroom · ended a two month trial by finding Donald C. Lightner, 44, oJ 2000 Easl Ocean Blvd., Newpolt Beach, gui lty of three counts of grand theft and one of conspirary. Frank J . Passantino, 29, of 5242 Royale Ave., lrvin.e, was found guilty of seven counts of grand theft and one of conspiracy. Co· ·defendant Alfred P. Sanna, 47, of Orange, was found guilty of two counts of grand theft and one of conspiracy. All three men face possible state prison terms of one to IO years on the grand theft convic_: tion and up to 10 years on the con· spirl!cY counts. Judge Vincent: will sentence them June 26 after ruling on a de· fense motion for a new trial. It was alleged in the tfJal that the defendants pocketed an estimated $157,000 .paid Dy in· vestors· who thouaht they wel;'e purchasing franchises in a widespread and profitable sport· !See BUNC(\, Page !'21 · Surgery Slowdown . Continues A 141 percent increase in malpractice ' insurance bas been slapped on Orange County dO<"- tors even as some of them went into a work slowdo\\rn over such insurance costs. The bad news came for Orange County dociors and physicians in Orange County Tuesday, the day after most of Orange County's 125 anesthesiologists decided to stop part\cipating in non · emergency surgeries.' The surgery slowdov,rn was beginning to take its toll today \vith most hospitals in the county discontinuing non-emergency operations. Nearly all of the hospitals in the county are ex· peeled to be shut down for all sur- geries except obstetric, cancer. and emergency operations by Friday. . Travelers Insurance Com-' panies, in a Jetter to customers Tuesday, termed the increase ''a minimal one'' needed to main· tain coverage while the state legisla.ture holds a special session on the malpractice crisis. By today, the withholding of non-emergency services llf anesthesiologists was expected lo affect hospital s i n Los Angeles, Orange, San Ber- nardino, Santa Barbara and Ven· 1 tura counties. Surgery at 41 hospitals was re· j ported down 80 percent. The loss , of revenues from would-be sur-· gical patients was estimated at. $400,000 a day, according to th9 Hospital Council of Southern California~ 0racag:'4_,:-•t Weatller l\l ostly su nn y skies th r o u g 'h T h u r s da y . Warmer with hi ghs in the upper 60s at the beaches to 70 inland areas. Lo\vs tonight near 50 . INSIDE TODA V Laguna Beach isn't tile only place where beach goers in the aUogether .are catching city officials with tlieir ordinances dowti. It's .a nationwi de phenomenon. See Page Al2. Index /lf Dl,,l.L Y ..-1LOT s W9dneSd1y, May21 .197S Cost of Living Up 12 Percent Locally El Toro Laildf119 10·1 Cambodia • R~fugees Here By Tbe A1socla&ed Press Consumer prices m the Los Angeles metropolitan area coritinued spir.aling upward, climbing almost 1 percent in April, Department of Labor 0£- ficials said today. Department statistics indicat- ed an increase of 12 percent in the cost or living as compared to April 1974, tor Los Angeles and Orange Counties. Suzanne Sadowsky, head of the department's Southern Cali(ornia Bureau, said the con- sumer price index in the Los Angeles area in April was 155.6, meaning that it cost $15.56 to buy 3 GM Recalls· 50,000 Autos Involved DETROIT CU Pl) -General Motors Corp. said to- day it is recalling about 50,000 current model Chevrolets, Pohliacs, Oldsmobiles and Buicks because some models may contain steering, ac- celer'ator and ai1! conditioning defects. <Related story, Al4 ) · GM said three separate recall actions are in- volved. About 3,100 Chevrolet Camaros and Novas, Pon- tiac Firebirds and Bui ck Apollos and Skylarks, the company said , may contain defects that could cause drivers to lose ·steering control. Another defect, which might m ake it impossible for cars to idle properly, may involv.e about 16,000 Pontiac Venturas, Oldsmobile Omegas and Buick Apollos and Skylarks, the company said. In addition, GM safd, about 31,000 Camaros may contain faulty fan blades in the air conditioning unit. These could break under engine vibration. No injuries have been reported as a result of the defects, GM said. Physicians Urged To Return to Work SACRAMENTO (UP!J -Some lawmakers said today striking physicians have made their Point arid should return to their jobs while the Legislature finds solu- tions for the medical malpractice emergency. ··1 call on the doctors and anesthesiologists to return to their work nO\\', their point has been made," said Sen. George Deukmejian, minority leader or the Senate. But striking doctors £ell that · 0they were no closer to getting re- asonably.priced malpractice in- surance now than when the crisis began. There appeared to be a grow- ing (rustration among some lawmakers Tuesday because they felt the Legislature was "go- ing all out" to solve the im- mediate and long·range malprac- • Mrs. Graham Takes Picket From Youth CHARLOTTE, N.C. CAP) When a protester passed by with a sign reading "Don't Tread on· Me._'' Mrs. Billy Graham leaped from her seat and snatched the sign away. It happened Tuesday in Freedom Park where President Ford and the Grahams came to celebrate the bicentennial. Mrs. Graham WHS seated near the front of t he audience when the young. man, identiried only as a member or ·the antiwar Red Hornets Mayday Tribe, strolled by silently with the sign. The de- monstrators claimed the true spirit or the Revolution was not reflected in the ofrlcial pagean- try. ORA.NOE COAST s DAILY PILOT • TJw OrM>Vf CN>I o..uy "llOI. '''""'""'c" I• com-tllned Ille ,...,. •• p,.,~." P.,bh>M<I by, ... a. • ...,. C.0.11 ""llli.,,lf>Q CofTlp•n•. 5f10M•tt tG•I ..... .,. pUl>ll--f>Cl•J lh•OUQh F".S.' '"' CM!• Maw. N••l>O'I IHKh. Hyntlnql"" Dll•<"'~"""'" 11ln V••l••. !••Int. S•d•loW<• V•"•• tnd Lot.,... h •<"'So"'" Cottt " •l"'I'• ••toon•• tdl1""',. wl>ll-o! StlMro!a-,, '"" ~-o '"' PtlMil>dl pUbl1 ... lnt Plfnl Ii II lOO W.11 B•J Sl•ftl. Coll• Me .. , Utl!o•nl1'76~. Robert N. w~ Prnl .. nl •"" Pllbl!- Thomas Keevll Thomas A.. Murphlne Mena91n9 E11>1or Charles H. t.oos Richard P, Nall AHo> .. ftl ~Mflnq '-"''""' Offlc•s (HtlMIW JIG W.lllloe•Sl• .. I He..-p0r1 IMIK"· JlUltt-•t -l••••P ~8'<M IMl.Ch, 11 .. (;.ll-,.rtill'HI W\O'll!IW!iOfl hKI> tfl 1! 9eKll IMIYlo¥t•d s.ddloMt• v11i. •. IUOI UI .... '111«1 ti !W11 Ditto '""••• Tel...,.one (7141642-4311 Cl•ttlllH. Aclv1rtl1in1 642·5t7t s.dcll•Hit• v.n .. , "''""Olfl<t Sl1 -6J10 Fr-"" (lo ... nN 4t5°06JO ~o· '"'~' tl•IO••AI ..... " Mtll, .. o .. , ..... ,,,.,.,, ..... u.oo :---------~ lice crisis and the doctors have not responded by returning to their jobs. Man y physicians ha ve boycotted surgery theaters in San Francisco·, Sacramento and areas or Southern Californi a to protest medical malpractice in - !Urance premium increases of as much as 400 percent. "I think we have proved that \\>'e have moved as fast as pcssi· ble to provide legislation for im- media'te malpractice insurance premium relier ror the doctors," said-Assembly Speaker ·Leo T. .l\tcCarthy, adding that doctors should go back to work now. Dr. Donald Walker, chairman of the anesthesiologists section of the San FrancJsco Medica) Socie- ty, said legislation to immediate· ly roll back malpractice rates would rorce doctors to pay less now and more in the long run. Deukmejian, a Long Beach Republican, warned that some hosgilals face closure because of the strike and patients who need medical attention must be cared for. "Nothing will be gained and much will be lost i( the doctors persist in curtailing their services,'' said Deukmejian. He said a special session has been called by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to deal with long- range reforms and there is a measure (AB928) in the As- sembly Ways and Means Com· rnittee which would immediately limit premiums for a seven. month period. Legislative sources said As· sembly leaders planned to hold a hearing in Wa ys and Means on the measure Friday. Then the leadership planned to rush the bill by Assemblyman Robert McLennan (ft-Downey ), to the floor the same day ror a vote. The bill would roll back malpractice premiums to 50 per- cent above the Jan. 1, 1975 pre- crisis level. Insurance carriers annuounced since then that pre- miums would be increased as much as 400 perce nt. TERROR ••• or Cambodia and South Vietnam. Twelve Americans were still under house arrest by leftist stu- dents in Savannakhet, the former right-wing stronK,hold in central Laos which was taken over by the Communist Pathet Lao Tuesday. U.S. embassy officials said they Jost radio telephone contact with the six U.S. AID officials and their wives, although they belJeved they were sare. rn Vientiane U.S. Charge D' Af· faires Christian Chapman. met with Prime Jttlnister Souvanna Phouma and Forei gn MlnJster Phoumi Vongvichit, the rankine Communist o££iclal in the coall· Uon aovernment, to protest the seizure or the U .$. compaund. ln the third incident, three American students have been kldnaped rrom a remote animal research station In Tanzania by armed Africans. The rePorts said a Dutch stu· dent was also abducted. About 30 students work at the staUon, most of them from Stan· ford Unlveralty. the same goods and services which cost $10 i.n the base year 1967, The purchasing power of the 1967 dollar dropped to 64.3 cents last month, she added. Heavy increases in transporta· lion and housing costs were largely to blame for lhe rise In April's eOst or livinr,-Mis Sadqwsky said. Nationally, the· rate or inflation quickened a bit in April as grocery prices reversed a two- 10-15% PETROLEUM HIKES SEEN. A4. month decline and helped push over-all consumer prices up six- tenths of a percent, the govern· ment reported today.· The April iQcrease, though double that or March, was in line ·with the Administration forecast of an annual inflation rate or about 6 or 7 percent this year for the U.S. The White House had said it did not expect the lower rate or in- crease in Jlr1arch to continue. The highest previous monthly increase this year occurred in January, when prices also rose by six-tenths of a percent across the country. u ... ,.1 ...... N.,.., V.N. ~111>••7' . Daniel Patrick Moynihan, former counselor to Presi· dent Nixon and ambassador to India, has been nominal· ed by President Ford lo be the new ·U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, suc- ceeding John A. Scali. Supervisors Okay $_3,500 Promotion Retail prices the past three Orange County l{overnment months have rise.n at a Seasonal'.' will chip in half the estimated. ly adjusted annual rate of 5.8 per-$7,000 needed to launch an in- cent in the U.S. During the same tensive public relations cam- three-month period in 1974, retail paign over the next two months prices rose at an adjusted annual to draw customers to shoPS in rate of 11.8 percent. Dana Point Harbor. The Labor Department said The County 'eoard of last month's increase nationally Supervisors voted unanimously rerlected an upturn in rood Tuesday to a llocate $3,500 in prices, rollowing two months or harbor tidelands runds to the pro- decline, and a large increase in. motional project which could nonrood commodities. become an ongoing effort, ac- Prices were reported up in the cording to merchants. U.S. for many items, including Su pervisors Laurence Schmit used cars, furniture, houses, and Robert Battin voted ror the gasoline, magazines, auto in-rund s, but they said they~ still , JlyARTHUR R.mlL A pafr of brothers Ind• pair of 0tlMo.11,,.._.. at1tet1 from the Saigon area are • 1cb,dultd for a double weddlili Ai. planeload of 101' retuaees cere.many al 1o a .m.11tunday ln ll'om Cambodia landed early to-Camp s one of the Lttl!lf-mlll>li day 1t El Toro Morini~ Air compoul..io · , !ltaUon, but tbou11n~manwalt '11it rltta' unltl•I N11UY•• Thi 111thePacl!lctoco1htoAmerlca. Tuyet Doanh with her h111band pl:n!e~~~d•~h~u~!d':, ';::'!I,~1 V41\-..H.•1; .all!!. IWtr slate• tbe bise 1omotlme t.cx111y, after N~ Phal Klou Aiiih with her being delayed -durlnJ a riltlJellnf future b111bandi. ' N1uyan 11Ullf, .stop. ~ will·belnaten -chureh. ~' A.uth"ol-itieS at LltUe Saigon on Today, the young bride to: be the giant Camp Pendleton re· are sewing their. ~wn w ding servation, meanwhile, reported dressc;s In a . m1ll1nery center its population o( refugees has established with hel~ f.rom the dropped below 18,000£orlhefirst Laguna Beach Ass1stan~e day in days. Lea1ue, whose members are A handful -some 37 now _ 1pon1ortngthe1ewing. have asked to be returned. to Viet-A"'thorltles are uncertain what nam, while nearly 200 lert the. ~do about the re(ugees who dc- dusty encampment of olive-11re to 10 h~m~. because no co~- green e.ight-man tents a nd mercla l a1rllne routes ex1st --m clumps of white Quonset huts between the U.S. and Vietnam Tuesday anymore. They ~re homesick, although And f!leanwhile, thousands some who long ror their left-more ~a1t on Guar:n: W~ke Island behind families today have re-and 1n the Ph1l.1pp1n_e~ £or portedly changed their ,minds clearance a n_d transportat1on to about risking a return to their America. homeland. * * * "If you know the Vletnameae, they are very family-minded," Fro• Page AJ remarked Lt. Col Arthur P. Brill, publlc in(ormatlqn officer at Camp Pendleton. · "I think the fact that their families are across the sea is an overwhelming (actor in their wish to return,'' he added. So far, no Cambodians have ap- plied to return to their country, which reports by foreign newsmen indicate is being ter- rorized and literally uprooted by victorious ~hmer Rouge Com- mupist forces . Despite the heartache or separation among some Southeast Asian families, others are planning new lives in a new land. TOUR ••• Eithl at·the refugee center, one of several t~nt and quonset villages now known as Lillie Saigon. Panel OKs Rathai.my surance, natural gas and food s believe private enterprise should such as fresh fruits, eggs and payroritsownpromotions. Ozone Warninu beer. Pri~es were listed as down But Supervisor Thomas Riley, ---e WASHINGTON (UP.() - The Senate Interior Com· mittee today recom- mended confirmation or former Wyoming Gov . •Stanley K. Hathaway as In- terior Secretary. The vote was9to4. for mortgage interest and £resh whose district includes the coun-TAMPA , Fla. (UPI) -Tampa . vegetables and sugarrates. ty-owned harbor, said county was under a high air pollution ad- In a separate report, the Labor government is a partner in alien· visory today and persons Department s aid that average terprises there and must bear sensitive to ozone were advised Sen. John Glenn, (D- Oh i o), joined three Democrats who announced opposition earlier against confirmation or the former Repul:>lican governor. hourly earnings of production part or the responsibility ror ac-to avoid exposure to the outside workers continued to rise along tivitiesthatcostmoney. air as much as possible. The ad- with the average work week, but The Dana Point Harbor \'isory was issued by the the purchasing power or the Mefchants Association. a loosely Hillsborough County Environ- weekly paycheck continued to knit organization or people who mental Protection Commlaalon lose ground. hold sub-leases on store sites in when ozone levels climbed above Hathaway's record has been under attack by en- vironmentalists. Real spendable earnings -the harbor, made the proposal the IOOlevel Tuesday afternoon. that is, what's left after deduc· ;_:f~o~rli~oi~n!!t~f~un!>_d~l~n~g;;. _______________ _:_ _____ ~=============-' lion for taxes and adjusted £or in· flation -£ell one-tent.Ji or a per- cent in April and were down 4.1 ' percent over the year, the gov- ernment said. Caltech Wins $10,000 From McDonald's LOS ANGELES (UPI) McDonald's will have to sell more than 12,000 ex ti: a Big Macs to pay (or the great Caltech computer caper that blitzed the ha"mburger chain's contest. Becky Hartsrield was the big· gest winner In the college prank, showing up Tuesday at the award ceremonies to collect a new Datsun station wagon and $3,000 worth of groceries. All told, Caltech students, us- ing a computer, won $10,0bO worth of the $50 ,000 in prizes or- rered by the hamburger chain. McDonald 's, caught by its ow n contest rules, announced earlier that ror every prize won by a stu- dent, a matching prize would be offered to be won b y other contes· • tants, adding $10,000 to the ex- pense of the contest. The students shocked the chain two months ago Dy programming a computer to churn out 1.2 million entries. A band or stu- dents drove carloads of the rorms to McDonald's stands throughout Southern California and wound uP submitting a third or the total entries. The top prize was a new sparts car and a year's supply or groceries but the students did noi collect that. It went to Ll.lllan Robinson, 28, an o£fice manager. Steve Klein, one of the brains behind th e plan, said he regretted using the computer. "We should have used otrset printing -it's cheaper," he said. ·•rt cost us about ssooror the com· puter. '' McDohald's has already thought of that. ','In any future contests. each e ntry will have to bear an original , handwritten , signature," a spokesman said. BUNCO ••• Inf good.a business. nvesttaators claimed the ac· cused men operated their fraud through two businesa firms: U.S. Dis tri butors' Exchange, 3303 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa and National Rent·A·Bo1t Systems, with officCJ in Santi Ana and Lls- Vq11 . • Cl ·a.vi.s • b r·owo . FRIGIDAIRE HEA YY DUTY Model FPl-170T FRIGIDAIRE Family Size REFRIGERATOR WASHER s2s9"s DRYER s 17995 This Frigidaire Heavy Duty Washer can deliver dependable. trouble·free performance with its heavy duty motor and other components used in Frigidaire Commercial Washers. You can wash per.manent press. cottons. and -heavy work c lothei efficiently, or reduce wear on delicates with Normal and Gentle Wash cycles. The matching Frigidaire Dryer lets you dry up to 18 r>ounds of laundry au at once. With the turn of a dial, match the drying time to the type of load. including permanent press and knits. . '3M'' FRIGIDAIRE LAUNDRY CENTER This space·s·aving Frigidaire Laundry Center combines a famlly·size washer and dryer into a single alim eabiner. Plugs Into any separate 15 amp conventional household circuit. \ &~)?@QB(( ®@[(WO©® Assessor Consultafi.i "'N~~d The.column 1ppe1rs dally except S.lard1y11nd Maed1y1. 'Breecb Crime' r.ot a problem? Then wrire Pnt Dunn. Pat 1vill cut rf'd tnpe, llt'l 'lie nt1swc r11 and oc· l ion yo u n1~ed 10 solve inequillcR in (love rnment and bu .s iriess . /.1011 11our qr.wstio11s to J'af Dunn /At Your Se rvice. Uru11pe l'oasf I.>ally J>i/ot . l'.0 . Closure Set IJor I~. (.'01.1fa t.1 ... 10 . CA 92626, I nclude your tefepl1onc num t1ftr. At Hot Springs -Sexy European DEAR PAT: I purch'nsed a new Capri 2000 in June 1973 All~o~gh l 've always bee~ sat1sf1cd with the ove rall pcrform<incc or this "sexy Euro· pean, ''an e.ngine noise developed at 11,000 nules . After attempting to get _this problem corrected many t1mci;, I finally was told that ''most 1973 Capri 2000's make such a noise." Last O<:· tober 1 was inrormcd that the engine needed overhauling due tO ·~·p~ston slap.'' The cost was ~~t1mated between $275 1.1nd $300. Since I documented the noise in 1973, J r~~I that Ford should pay for r epa1r1ng the damage done by this ''piston slap." D. C., Newport Beach B. Bellaire, or Ford customer service in Dearborn, Mich., re· ports that the district office serv· jng this area has inspec:ted your automobile. He says, "There was no evidence that the 'piston slap' existed earlier and that the parts and service zone manager who inspected your vehicle orrered a SO percent r eimbursement for re· pairs solely as a gesture of good will." Siace your Capri is out of warranty, and the "piston s lap'' and noise you documented in 1973 were declared unrelated by Ford's representative, Ford would not consider full reim· bursement for overhauling the engine. Threadbare DEAR PAT: After receiving a $20.24 Perpetua l Calendar kit Hnd frame from lletter I-tomes & Gardens. I found a shortage of one of the salmon pink shades of cotton floss. Since there are three similar s hades, I wrote to the magazine anci requested that all three s hades be sent lo me. This same proble m happened with another kit offered by Better Jlomes & Gardens. My efforts to match the thread colors were fruitless th at time too. l\oty letter remain~ unanswered, and it ap· pears I m expected to settle for two partially finished pictur.._ ..t: .. JJ,, ea.La Misa Dorothy Walker, of Better Homes & Gardens Reader Service Department, asks you to senif sainples or the three shades or pink floss from the calendar kit. She then will mail matching replacement thread to you. If possible, also send samples of the thread you need to complete the kit you'd purchased previously. Walker's address is 1716 Locust St., Des J\lolnes, IA 50336. Slides Lo11t Branding San Juan Hot Spr- inij:s a ''breeding gro1,1nd for crime,'' Orange County su· pervisors have ordered the old spa along Ortega H.i ghway closed and heavily patrolled. The board adopted five recom· mendations to that efrect Tues· day, four proposed by Supervisor Thomas Riley and the fifth added by Supel,'visor Ralph Clark. Riley, who conte nded the general public has been scared away from the springs by "an un·. desirable element," outlined the following approach to "cleaning up" the area: -Designation of the springs as a hazard to public health and safety to the extent they be closed to all public access. -Direction to the County En· vironmental Management Agen· cy to de termine whal can be done to close the s prings without permanently damaging the flow of hot water. · ~ Request the Sheriff to im· medi'ately commence an in· tensive patrol of the area to the leve l necess ary to dissuade pe rsons from using the springs. -Appoint a s pecial count y government tas k force to analyze problems at the s prings and r e· port back t o the llarbors, Bea('hes·and Parks Commission within 60 days. Clark's additional recommcn· dation asks that every effort he made. to find a private party in· lerested in revitalizing" the spr· ings into a well-kept concession DEAR PAT: I sent three color s lides to Kangaroo Color Labs of Sea ttle, Was h. in Se ptember i 1974, requesting e nlargements. My charge card was debited for $17 .50 on Oct. 18. Since then I 've called s ix tim es, written three letters to the firm ·and written others to the Better Business Bureau in Seattle, Washington s tate's a ttorney general a nd · Popular Photography magazine. I 've had no results at all. Could you contact Kangaroo and re- quest that my slides be returned? M _ G ., Mission Viejo that could return some income to the county. The old spa, which lies about 12 miles from San Juan Capistrano, is on a portion of the ·county's 5,500-acre Ronald W. Caspers Regional Park. Since the co unt y t ook possession of the property, an · estimated 400 arrests and 63 traf· fi e accidents have occurred in the vicinity of the springs, ac- cording to Riley aide Robert Nelson. Once a posh resort, the springs fell into disrepair during the 1930s and gradually became a haven for wandering motorcycle gangs and young people. Riley contends his staff study of the springs has revealed open drug and alcohol use, nudity and "'undetermined activity" in the remaining pools. ' County Harbors Beaches a nd P arks Department officials are doubtful an y thin g s hort of p e rma ne ntly c losing off the water flow or leasing the springs to a concessionaire will solve the problems. Larry Leaman, acting depart- ment chief. sa id numerous fences have been erected over the years only to be tom down within hours by young people seek in g entry to the springs. He also n,oted t hat ft would be a major e ngineering job to shut off the water s upply to any extent ''·ithout permanently damaging it. UPI Ttlep"-11 OC Roll • Audit Set By State By GARY GRANVILLE 01 tll• Di ll' Pil .. Stitt j)rQn_g.{__G_ounty supervisors de· cided 1'uesday that the county's 1975 assessment roll can be de- livered on time without the help of an outside consultant. .- WAITING TO SEE THEIR LONG-LOST FATHER James Miiier, Sister Cheryl Scan News Report The board's canccll ation..of an order for an over seer in the coun- t y assessor's office followed as- s urances by Co unty Ad·. ministrative O ffi cer Robert :. Thomas that pre paration of the ! roll will be closely monitored. ~ After 22 Years ' And. indict ed Assessor Jack ~ Vallerga said in a letter to the ~, supervisors that completion of ~ the roll is proceeding on : sthedule . ' ' "Nothing, repeat. nothing, not : Father to Meet ChildTen HONG KON G (AP ) -"Myson . and daughter -and six grandc hildren'! Wh at a great s.urprise!" said Capt. Charles T. l\1iller of the M ayaguez to nev.•s that the rescue of his ship is goi ng to help r eunite him \\'ith a son and daughter he has not seen in 22 years. "Please tell them I'm delight· ed to hear the news and I'll con· t act them when I get to Hong Kong," Miller told the Associat· ed Press in a rad iotelephone in· terview. ' The freighter, released by Cambodia last.Thursday after a military assault by U.S. Marines and planes, is scheduled to arrive in Hong Kong from Singapore on Friday night. Miller said he and his children -J ames, 34, and Cheryl Miller Pedersen. 28 , had not seen each other since he divorced their mother. Miller , 62. has remar- ried and now lives in Fountain Valley . J a mes, a n e lectrician in Te rra Linda, said he and his mother were s ure the skipper or the Mayaguez was his father after they heard his voice on a television broadcast and com· pared old photos of him with those in newspapers. 1t1rs. Pedersen, who lives next door to her brother, said she was sending ·a letter to her father in Hong Kong informing him that bot.h she and her brother are now married and between them have six t•hi ldren . even m y own personal prOblems. : "'ill stand in the way or my re-.: cognizing and fu lfilling my ~ responsibility to the people of : Orange County,•· the assessor • said . ~ Along with Rep.· Andrew ~ Hins h a w CR -Newport Beach),: V a llerga was indicte d on: criminal charges two weeks ago : by the county Grand Jury and· charged in an accusation with four counts of misconduct . The indictment and accusa· t.ions were part or a year-long Grand Jury inv~s ti gation or the 'assessor 's office that has result· ed in various cha.rges, most of them related to the period when· Hinshaw was Orange County as- Miller said he would make sessor. plans to re:t urn ta: the. United. InreactiontoValler ga'sindict· States aft er he arnves 1n Hong · m ent and the accusations re· Kon g. turned again st him, supervisors •• 1 ·ve got to get together "·ilh asked the assessor to take a leave· my children a nd all those ofabsence. g randc hildre n.•• he said. "I T~ey also orde red ~hom as and guess everything has a silver lin· Cou_ t y Counsel Adnan Kuyper _ ing and I 'tn glad this one will r e· to £Jn~ an overseer ,to r~present unit e me with my son and them Jn the assessor soff1ce. daughter ." Vallerga r~fuse_d to take the Two Bengal Tigers Chase Spectators JOHA NNESBURG , South Africa (U Pt ) -Two Bengal tigers broke out of their cages, leaped into ·a screaming crowd and a ttacked six specta tor s watching a ci rcus before being chased back to their cages by their tra iner. Police said Tuesday an in· vestigation w as under \\'ay to find the person \~'ho tampered with the lock on the cages. The tigers entered the ring behind the clown, Tiekie, and leaped into the screaming crov.•d of about 1,500 . A s pec tator , Clifford D e leave and R1 vers1de County of· fi cials rejected a request to lend." their county's assistant assessor, Gary Cottrell , to Orange County to ser\'e as the overseer. Tuesday, Thomas conceded that state Board of EqualizatiOn officers now conducting a $50,000 . assessment audit in the office· have the authority and expertise to monitor completion of the as- sessor 's roll. The administrative officer also sa id the county's computer center can measure \York pro· gress on the roll. And, he added, the auditor· controller a lso has marks by "-'hich the work progress can be measured. Thomas admitted that hiring a private consultant for the board's purpose m ight be dis rupting rather than helpful in yrepara- tion of the assessmentrol . Rescue Death' Toll Adds 23 Reuck, whose wife J\1ary had to WASHINGTO N (AP) -Thct , h ave 125 stitches on her legs after Pentagon, saying 15 servicemel! bein g bitte n , said ''pan· were killed in the actual rescue d e monium broke loose. We tried of the freig hte r Mayaguez, ·to r un but one of the tigers acknowledged today that 23 grabbed Mary by the legs. A others killed in the crash of a Kangaroo Color Labs will con· tact you personailly following a search for your slides. A refund will be Issued if the slides cannot be located. policeman ran up and"fired s hots helicopter in Thailand were en ATTORNEY JONATHAN GOLDSTEIN DEMONSTRATES POSITIONS OF SIX IN LIFEB'QAf~"°10 into the air a nd then the trainer route to Utapao Air Base foe . came and scared it off. Then it possible use in t he operation, .Santa Ana .Sklpp~r Charged In Deaths of Two Crewmen Whlle Dog .Survived went aft er other people." <Rela ted story A4) llore on /ffDC DEAR PAT: I received a letter in November 1973 saying that I had won $100 ofr on a sewing m achine, and i£ I wished to take .E.dvantage of this prize the machine would cost an additional $79.50. I sent in paym ents re· gularly. By l\tarch 1974, I had paid the full cost. When I did not 'feceive the machine in several tnonths , I began writing lo· Market Development Corp. of· 'Cincinnati-I s till haven't heard 'anything. K. S ., Santa Ana This column has reported "11umerous complaints against Market Development Corp. In lhe pas t three years. Several states, Including California, have 'brought court action •galns t ·MDC conce rning this ''second prize'' technique ot attracting ~ustomers to purchase a sewing machine. Market Development Corp. declared bankruptcy In June 1974. A final meeting or ('redltorw was held recently lor distribution of funds. Leonard Gartner, bankruptcy judge for the Southern District of Ohio, re- portt that. 11tbere. will be no dis· 1Tlbutlon to any ~redlton. The ule of a111el1 <of MDC> wlll not be 1ulllclent to pay even the ~eral lncnme taxes owed by MOC and the •wner, Raymond Andefaon. '' M•re than H,MO credllor11 •uch a lt yourself, Oled clalm• for payment whta MDC declare4 ·.baakrupty, bal nope wilt ret evea· a partial rdnibal'H:· · me•l: "· · • . , l"i~;iiiiii·uo;;. ;:if'-,,._:;:--:·;;,,.;"~"-:.:::J•i:i:.£'2':;~;;;.;;;=o;:;·i"ir"··;;"::·.iiiii~'-;;~ji;;;;-~,,..iii~,,_;;;:u;aiiiw;:'";-.:,~;;;·;;·~~.~~-~·~ii;j . .,,.i;;i;~S··J.PU.~~.;-;;_:;;,:· ;;,;;;,.;;;,;::-'j ' Yachtsman Charged , In Death of Pair Gem Talk ' t 1 1: , . NEWARK, N.J . (P) -Th e owner of a shipwrecked yacht who allegedly saved the life o{ his dog while allowing two young crewm en to die in frigid water was indicted Tuesd ay for causing their deaths by misconduct and negligence. The crewmen died after being las hed to a lifeboat in 43-degree . water for 10. hours following the Jan. 28. 1974 wreck of a 61·€oot sc hooner. t he ''Sadi e a nd Edgar," off Little Beech Island near Allanttc City. A federal gra nd jury charged· the master of t he yacht, Cy ril E . La.Brecque . 50, now of Santa Ana, with. neg]fgenl Ope.ration of the schooner a nd the liJeboat re·· suiting in death -a feder al. maritime law viola.l ion. equivalent to m anslaughter. U.S. Atty. Jonat.hail l.. liolds· Lein said the last £cdernl case a.rising in similar circumslances occurred in 1842. Afte r th e wrec k ol the sehooner, Golds tein said, one of tts l 'fO lifeboat s proved un- seaworth y. LaBrccque. his wire Jessie. 51 i a n lnjurea c.re wman, Michael J . Rlka, 20, ol South Windsor. Oonn .. and the LeBrec.· quc's 80 ·pound Labrador Retriever, ''Happy," got Into an· 11-foot wooden rowboat. Three other c r ewmen, Brad· ford Blakely, 20, a nd Paul Sagar in o, 19. both of Wethersfield. Conn .. and Valen· tine Bach, 4,7. of Ches ter, Conn., were left in the ~w.ater hanging on tolhe sides of the dinghy. ·rne indictment charged that LaBrecque refused their r e· quests to throw lhe dog over· board or to rota te the people in a nd out ol ttl e water, giving each a chance to wprm up. · From midrilght to 10 a.m ., Jan. 29, the indictment said, Lhe boat drifted further offshore. The in· dictment said that alter 10 hours i n the water, Blakely a nd Sagarino died . Drown.Ing \Yas of· ficially the cause of dcnlh. La Rrecque then allowed Bach to cli mb aboard the rowboat, Golds· tein said. Shortly after noon, a passing tanker picked up the four sur· vlvors, the dog and the two cor· pses. which were still tied to the sides of the dinghy .. The indictment charged lhut LaBrecque "knew or should have known'' that the 'jSadie and Edgar"' was in an unseawonhy condition . • Bu .I .C. 11 u ri·1 P f/I~/ ts tlo<_, .. ,,. .• THE ULTIMATE , •. , ··•·· RICH MAH'S WATCHES How would you like a gold and enamel pistol watch featuring a trigger releasing a lotus flower and activating a perfumed spray; all with fine ena meling in red and blue plus exquisite e ngraving? Today's Wedding Ring for Tomorrow. CL.AlllOGE HUNllffQTOH Forever. ' ArtCarved wedding rings reflect your love, Your fashion sense. Your way of life. Select your matching wedding rings from our complete ArtGarved collect1on, c.Ai1 Carved ,,_,.._.,,., •. -c ..... c..,..o1 Or perhaps you'd care for an opera-glass t e lescope watch, highly d ecor a t ed with pierced gold and open work, the tube containing e name l silhouettes of birds and animals, with hinged moveable watch which swings out a l the end r evealing the lens? / hese two, a nd hundreds of other similar Rube Goldberg designs, were actually m ade during the excesses of the Louis XV period; but you will probably never own orie, as most arc now in museums J c. I I I J fi and private coll ections. • -Hum.phrw6. eweler6 If you have an old pocket watch, cons id er restating it. We 1623 NE'W'PORT BLVD., COSTA MESA " •• I: ,. I~ I' I • ' ! have r esto red many sucl1 CONVENt ENTTERMS BarlkA"'8ricard-MasterCharge watches and have some beautiful ... 27·Y·E·A·R"s.' .. N·T·H·E·S·A·M·E·L·OCA···T·IO·N··-.. · 11P:::H:aO•N11E•5"8""'-3.• .. 0•--~ example~ in our store. .. ' l .... '· -· _,tf DAILY PILOT ( ·.iast • ' '"'.. '\~ . . ~ -,._ >.'<•'> with ·'.i' Tom arph ine :• .·, :.:..,, .... i LONG GREEN DEPT. - W9dn1s... .. ,. 1 0-1 50/~ Oil Hik e Feared Ford Denies Cambodia Bombing Was Punitive and before we took anfmltltury NEW YORK (AP)-Presldent' --~Ford says there was no "punitive element" in the decision to con- t inue bombing Cambodian military installations after the American freighter May_aguez and her crew were retaken. action ," he 5aid. Fifteen servicemen were kllled In the .rescue of the Mayaguez and three others are missing und believed deod , the Pentagon now . s11ys . now is "as Close to final es possl· ble" except for possible "minor ad j uatm en t is-,'' Pepta1on spokesman JosC!ph Lai tin 1ald. · 1 Orange Counlians arose this --! ~~morning to find brighter skies, ~.~1wafting breezes and ihe news · that the dollar they had in 1967 is .-MW worth 64.3 cents. WASHINGTON-(AP) -Ad- ministration officials ex~t the cartel of oil-exporting nations lo i mpose 3 petroleum price Increase-of 10 to 15 percent by the end of the summer, a move thal <:ould provide more trouble for the U.S. economy. A f~eral Energy Adnlinistra- tion-spokesman sa-id t.odi.y that "all indications point to that sort of price rise by OPEC" -the Organiiation of Petroleum Ex· porting Countries. "Ir there had been, we could have used considerably larger force and that was ruled out,'' the President said in an interview published in today 's edition of the New York Daily News. The dead included 111\farines, two Navy hospital corpsmen and two members of the Air F..orce, according to the Pentaeon. Another 50 Marines, Air Force men a nd sailors were wounded in About 350 American t.roops took pal't in the batUe to Crea the Mayuguez and rescue its 39-man crew from Cambodian captors. The casualty list shows nbout 20 percent of those who participated were·eitheFk-illed or wounded. Laitin said the three Marines· listed as missiltg in action were fighting on th_e island when last seen nnd were not accounted for when the final muster was com- pleted a'rter the Marine force was ·Withdrawn. '·" Well. that's the way it goe~. ·:'folk s. Some good news and some 4·.: bad news . The allegation that we are now operating with 64 -cent dollars --=·• icame in a news release from ··" Southern CaliCornia offices of the , United States Department of ··,'Labor. All of this involves heady ·,'fi gures and s tatistics like the .: ' consum.er price index. : Labor Department people ·,calculate that in our Orange '' County region last month, it cost ". $15.56 lo buy the s ame goods and -. serviceswhich cosl$10inl967. •,; THAT'S HOW THEY get ,. ... around to figuring the buck is n9w worth only 64.3 cents. ··,-:-Information on the deClated ·~ ' dollar moved to us on the news ::. wires earlier but Cor soine ob· ·· · ·scure reason. the Labor Depart· , ment brass insis ted the story be ~·· held back until 7 a.m. today. ~,-:Why? Who knO\l.'S ? '~ Maybe somebody in the Labor D epartmen.t has somethi ng against Wednesdays. Or they !: didn't want to wreck your Tues· ;,·day shopping trip. You can never figure what federal people are ·. thinking. -···· ,._,·. ANYWAY, YOU should not .... ·t ake too serious ly the allegation tha t your buying power 'has · declined since 1967. You take T· •· • bone steaks for example. I pay· 100 percent less for T-bone steaks today than I did in 196.7. That·s b ecause I don 't buy them anymore. Because I'm a pipe-puffer , I use skads of matches every day. Not much tobacco but lots of matches. My costs of matches just declined 100 percent. A kind ·~~.fellow sent me a whole free -· carton of them through the mail. .-Put that in yo ur Department of Labor statistics and smoke-it. ON THE OTHER HAND, 1 ~, h ave this new c3r that would · ·· have cost $2.000 in 1967 and cost ·' ·' $4,000 now. Because it's new, you f•1 have to wash it all the time. I've driven junkers so long I'd forgot· ten what it was like lo wash a car. .·. It had been years since I'd been. · in one of those quickie do-it- yourself car washes. You know the kind. You drive in and put coins in the slot and the sprayer turns on and yo u st art washing. In these places, it used to cost a dime to turn on the vacuum cleaner a nd two bits for the wash job. Well, I w3s shocked and dis· m ayed lo drive in and learn the vacuum cleaner is now 2S cents and the wash job demands two · quarters instead of one. -~ THAT'S AN INCREASE ol ~ 150 and 100 percent, by golly. I 'll ~ bet the Department of Labor doesn 't know about that. -· I just fi shed around in my· pocket and found a n old beat.up dOll ar bill. Just look al George's face. He stares out a t you blank· r Jy, his mouth set in a thin line like ~ he has a toothache. George has always looked like that. Infl ation , de£1ation or whatever. Always the same grim fellow. ' • ' • • ' You can start worrying if you ever look at your dollar bill and find that George has reached up with a hand and covered his e-/es. Officials say the move probably would add a penney or t~'O to the price of gasoline. THE ADMINISTRA110N'S expectat ions \1re're made kno\11n after the House Rules Committee abruptly suspended action Tues· day evening on a Congressional energy conservation measure. Committee Ch,irman Ray J . Madded ·(0 -lnd.), said Dem- oc·ratic leaders had informed him it was ''impossible to pass this bill. in two days." ·The controversial bill boos ting gasoline taxes faced more than lOOamendment.sont.he floor. Reps. Herman T . Schneebeli (R-Pa.), r a nking minority mem- ber of the House Ways and Means Committee, and John B. An - derson <R-111.), predicted the de- lay will prompt Ford to impose a second $1-a-barrel tariff hike. THE FEA OFFICIAL said the indications that led to the ad· ministration's predictions about OPEC prices included recent of· fici al statem ents by oil-exporting nations and the fact thatOPEC's previously announced price freeze ends in September. Worldw ide oil 'prices now range from $10 to ·s11 a barrel. Before · the Arab oil embart:o began in October 1973, the price \11as around $3 .60. I-likes of 10 to 15 percent "'ould rai~e the price from $1 lo $1 .65 a barrel. Salk Will Go On the Couch NEW YORK (AP) -Child psychologist Lee Salk and h is whole family have been ordered lo undergo examinations by a court-appointed psychologist and a psychiatrist . Salk, brother or polio vaccine pioneer Jonas _Salk , and hi s "·ire, Kerstin, are s uing each other for divorce and custody or thei r two children, Eric, 13, a nd Tia , 7. Justice Guy Ribaudo ordered the examinations Tuesday in the Slate Supreme Court. • .. Last w.r... UPIT• ..... Mayor Frank Rizzo of Philadelphia sco r ed s mashing victory Tuesday in prirriary election. He was dum ped by Democratic leadership two years ago \¥hen he flunked lie test. Metropolitan Commissaries 'Unjustified' WASHJl'o!GTON (APl Congressional investigators say the P e ntago n is operating military commissary stores in metropolitan areas without justification b ecause servicemen could get the same products from commercial stores. ··commissaries in met· ropolit an areas are contrary to lhe·original intent of the Congress that they be located in remote areas where the serviceman does not h a v e the b e n efi t -o( metropolitan sales," the General Accounting Office reported Tues- day. ~ The military operated 279 com· mis:;;aries in the· United States during fiscal year 1974 and with sales totaling $2.2 billion, the GAO said. The operations were subsidized with $226 million in fede ral funds, the r eport said. In its s urv ey of six U.S . metropolitan areas, the GAO said there were al least eight large commer cia l food stores with in a five-mile radius. Daity Pilot Deli•ery It Guorantttd MoOiiay·Friday: II you do no! have your papet" by 5:30 p.rn .. call belore 7 p.m end your copy will be oe- hvered. Saturday and Sunday: II )'OU do not receive your copy by 9 a.m. Satur- day, or e a.m. Sunday. call before 10 a_m_ arwj your cogy will be delivered. Circ .-.M-Telepho111t Most Orange County Areas •42-4l21 Northwest Hunting1on Beach. al"td W~lmins1er .. ____ 540-1220 San Clemente, Capistran.a Beach. San Juan Capisl12no. Dana Poinl, South Laguna. Li19una Niguel .... _ ...•• 4•S.O•lO Corps Corpulent? Marines' Quality Questioned ~ASHINGTON (UPI) -The Marine Corps, whose recrwt.e rs look for only "a few good men," now has its largest peacet~me force ever and may be sacrificing quality for quantity, according to the Senate Armed Services Committee. !he committee has asked Commandant Louis H. Wilson lo in- vest1_gate and find out whether the Marines can "maintain a quality fighting force with fewer troops.·~. ·' ~n a report rele~ Tuesday, the committee noted that the Mann.es appear lo have overcome a recruiting shortage and that r_e:,enl1stments last year were the highest in 15 years. · "Ho~ev~~, the question of quality still must be raised." the report said. The-committee is <Concerned about numerous re- po~ t~at the Marine Corps is <Sacrificing its traditional high quality 10 order to.have large numbers of personnel.•• The ~arines reqUetted authorization for 196,300 troops for fi5.ca~ 1976, c~ntinuing a steady increase in peacetime years. Warti~e strength bas r anged from 475,000 in World Wa r II lo 249,000 tn the Korean War. '' ... We still had lhe Marines on the island Koh Tang vt'ho were under attack and being fired at and until we got them off surely. it made good military sense lo continue the bombing o( the two airfields and the t~·o harbors," Ford said. DEFENDING ll lS hanftling or the Mayaguez incident 3nd the retaking of the freighter, Ford said the Cambodians were giveil a mple time lo returrt the vessel. · ''There was a 60·hour interval b e tween th-e sending of a message, a diplomatic message, to the Cambodian government Sears I the batUe. THE CASUALTY LIST, re· vised up and down several times, POP CONCERT FANS FEi l.ED CA RDIFF . ·Wales (AP) Scotland's "Bay City Rollers" abandone d their pop conce rt Tuesday night after a near·riot in which police said more than 70 young girls were injured trying lo storm the st age. Use Sears Revolving Charge ' ' In the intervie\V, Ford reiterat· ed his administration's commit· ment to stand its ground in South Korea in the event or attack from the North. "We have a treaty with South Kor ea," he s aid. "The South Koreans h ave done an outstand- ing job in building up their own military capability, defending their economy a nd they are a loyal ally. ·~ '' This Ad Effective through Saturday, Mo y 24 Violent Storms KiJ] 7 --r--s--:--i .... n_g ..:.1-n...,;jto...-W-a-:..r-m---w-e-a-th-e-;_;·.·~1-a...;.y_s--' I ' • I ' ) ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' l ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' • . State s in Mid.continent Hammered Hard Wi t h Your F a v ori te Tops'n S horts Coa.tal We a tller Moslly I•!• with 'om• Y¥l•ble (loudinel' loday and 1oc .1! gusty wln<11.11 !Imes. W1~1 to n0tthwe~t wind\ 1S 10 2J 1'.noh tod•r <k~•••slng to 6 lo 11 knots toni9'1t. 1-llghl today In the modM>'I. Coastal lemptralure1 wlll rMIQll be1we1n SO 1nd 113. Inland tem · P"'fal11re• win ,.,.ge blllwll't'n •Mod ~. TM•l llr lemptrature wlllbl.O. · s .. .,111 .. ..., Tide• • Wl.DNl.IDAY ScotOfld low • ~12.!oOp m. Of $e<Olldhigh 1:11 p,m, S.t TNUltSDAY r:1r1110w 1.0lam. o.s """"'Of! 1·1sa.m. •.O Saot-low 1.llp,m , t t Saot-1119" l.Stp,m. a.l Sun rlwss~ .... lrl.,loelsl S1p.m. Moon,. .. ,': lSp.1r1., ~111 J;Ola.m. l ... t,..,, -1111111 °"no 'moo *"'<led loday lnthl LOI A1191le1 tlallft. t11 lhl mavntalni, part11 cloudy MllK wllll 1 law Ilg/It s,....eri ....,,,._ ~. Cool wlflds gul tll\9 up la JO m'IH an /\Ollr ""'IPOt'd lhrOU9f! m1u 1 .. tof1 IO<atloftl. A ,_ 1111111 1110w1r1 damptlOld ti. ""'8rt •••11,_Strono wll'ICJ1 ctetl'Ni<ld '' •bOllt ao mU11 an llo11r In ~• •. s.s-..... A1 ,1ta1l t.eYtn Ill•-• Wl!fl dtff In .,.,.,....,,,1atH lnclft11t1 at lhlln- 1Mttt9f'IM, uMnnl"" off IOtntCloti. tlH..-Y rat II •"! II.Ill, "tmm1rl4 I wide ' lml•AIN~ ,,...,., ...... ~'"°""'' r1ow ~k ff UolltnlnQ wllltt j094lnoi.tur-1n9111t dlf>ner hour. A man 1n tlllnolJ died.,..,.,.• cr-111 was oper.1111'19 at 1 con11rU<:tion Siie w.1s 1111 bW llQnln-1..,. r-men died In Ille ChlC.IQO 11rea l•I• Tue111.1w atternoo11, one wnen .1 downed live wlrt !'Ill fllm at>d another wl'IM M !ell from a ••Oder aner an f lK1rlcll wire nudqed him , Si• pen.ans .. ,,e ln l11tad In the Clllcaoo wbllrtl of C•lumel Po1r1i as winds overt11rn&d tralttr llOl'nff 1/\tl'1. TeMperat11re• Ml•ll L-""" · It S2 " .. .... ., .. 12 M ... •• jl 1.J.it " .. IS llS • .0 ,. .. .,. '° •1 .OJ 'tO .. .05 ..... 01 .. " IJ ., '' ~2 ,)I 11 1$ 12 '° .01 " .. " .. • .. .O'I " .. " ~ .. " .. " " .. " .. .. ,, )0 31 ·°' I> M It 6S .6J u " ·* .... .... ' 97 Kni t Tops Regular ~3 .99 Cotton Shorts ChooH from a colorful collection of ~nit lops of nylon polyesle d l ' polye~ler blend. All ore easy-care. Sol ids and prints. Many ~tyles! Mo;~hotnhe~~~~h 1 mach1ne·wa1ha ble, cotton shorts that feature classic ieon styling Solid I ' patterns. Tops:...S,M,i. Shorts: Misses' sizes. · co ors, rc=::l So . Co ast: P laza ~ 333Jltltiel$t, ... ~ ... "'-J.<tO-Jl)J B u e n a Park ti JO Le hl-A••i ,.._ ., .... 400 .fi • Oran ge 2100N.fv1tl"A ..... : ~837·210ll 1 ' 7 ' " " • ,, • ., " ' " " !i " :: " :: " ;· ·: " ::r ~ '· ' I . .. " " " " .. " " " " " •' ~ ) , < ~ ·' ! i ' " " " ,. " . " ' " ' :.~ ' ' ' • .._. , , I ' • •• h tl p F ,. ~ 1. p ii " c 0 q p ii p r. n ti t: e c p • e ( ' [ s ~ c ii I· rl I: ' ~ s! h ii s h n n c I " l> j · ~ le rJ p " •: " . , •. " " :: " " •, :: ·, · . . '• " !:,_ ' l ,. " I •• " " ,. " " •• ,. " ,• " " " " .. ' " ' ~ :. • ,. . ' • ·1'ntismog Standards Tightened LOS ANGELES CAP) -Cars sold In Callrornla iri. 1977 wUl have to cause less smog than those sold elsewhere ln the nation -even at. the cost of higher prlce1 and poorer gau mileage. The federal Environmental Protection Agency granted the slate permission Tuesday to lm· ' poi;e stricter s mog standards tor 1977 ca.rs because Culifomia's air Pollution problem s arc the worst in the country. ; A STATE OFFICIAL called it ''an important "S tep'' toward cleaner air. Auto manufacturers, on the other hand, say the re- quirement will mean: -An inc rease in purchase prices or Crom $5 to $180, depend- ing on a variety of £actors;_ -A drop in fuel economy of 5 percent to 15 percent ; -A smallea· selection of dif- ferent models, because not all models can be modified to meet the standards . TO MEET the tougher regula· lions, tl\e 1977 cars will be equipped With the controversial catalytic converters that remove pollutants rrom e xhaust gasses. Stricter 1977 standards were scheduled to go into effect for the entire countr.y under the federal Clean Air Act. But EPA Ad· ministrator Russell Train recom- mended earlier this year that the standards be delayed because or potential health hazards from tho converters. CALIFORNIA officials, in ask· ing to be exempted from the de· lay, s aid they believe the dangers from converters have been vast· ly exagge rated . Tom Quinn, chairman of the California Air Resources Board, said Tuesday that Train had told him r ecently he r egretted mak· ing the recommendation. "Everything that has come out since the warnings of health hazards has conrirmed our judg-· ment that there isn't any im· mediate sulfate danger with catalysts," said Quinn. Red Leader Sick LONDON CAP ) -Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev may be suffering from· cancer of the jaw, the Dail y Telegraph 's Moscow correspondent reported today. The correspondent, ,J ohh Miller, said there were "fresh re· ports" that Brezhnev was h3ving radiation therapy for jaw cancer. 'c Parole Date Set Sirhan Sirhan, 31, sentenced to death in the assassination of Se n . Robert F . Kennedy, will be paroled from San Quentin on Feb. 23, l~, after serving 16 years and 9. months in prison. Homosexual Mom to Keep 2 Children LOS ANGELES CAP) -Two children of a self-admitted homosexual woman wiU be al· lowed to Ii ve with her, under a ruling by the s uburban Torrance Superior Court. .<Lynda f\.1ae Chaffin, who lost cus tody of her two daughters after she admitted to being ales- bian, was granted a modirication Ti.iesday of the original custody order. THREE PSYCHOLOGICAL experts testified living with J\.1rs. Chaffin would not be detrimental to her daughters, aged IS and 12. The girls ran away last January from thei r legal home with J\.1rs. Chaffin's parents in Marysville. Wash., and had been living with their mother. LAST JAN. 311 the ·original cus tody was upheld by the 2nd District Court of Appeal. which ruled d e ny ing Mrs. Chafrin custody of her children was not entirely due to her admission that she had been a homosexual. Cheryl Brat man, a law student intern who worked on the case, said the custody modification was obtained because the Tor- rance court agreed with experts \\'hot said "it would be detrimen- tal for the c hildren to be taken away from their mother al this time." Levi's can match any kid. Sure, kids are tough. . .... Head Severed Body of Girl, 1-4, Found in Orchard MORENO (UPI) -A severed human hea d torn from the body of a 14-year·old girl by aniinals was found Tuesday in a backyard nearthe girl's home here, seven miles east or Riverside. .Riverside County She.riff's Lt. Neil Adkins said the body of Susan Ware, missing since April JO, was found tn a citrus orchard 100 yards from her home. The head was discovered by a neighbor, Curios Martinez, who notified deputies. Investigators said the ( J head had been torn from the Sta l e torso by animals after the. girl's death, which is being in· vestigated as a murder. ~-----------' Breae11 0,,,,..--A11" TIUt l11f'reaae SACRAMENTO {UPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., £aced with a shrinking budget surplus and mounting demands ror in· creased spending, dug in deeper today in opposition to new laxes next year. "I'm not going to s upport any increase in general taxes, he s'aid. "I'm going to resist very strongly efrorts that will make that a necessity a year or two down the road.'' Brown discussed t axes with reporters Tuesday foll owing announcement of upda ted fis- cal estimates which showed state government in the fiscal year starttrfrJuly 1 would spend $257 million more than it took from· taxpayers. Three A...Utor• GuUt" 111 Fraud LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Three £arm er auditors of Equity • Funding Corp. of America, which went bankrupt in one of the lai'gest business frauds in U.S. history, wer e convicted in Fede~al Court Tuesday of securities fraud and filing raise statements with .the 'government. · U.S. District Court Judge Jesse W. Curtis ordered Julian S.li. Weiner, Solomon Block and Marvin A. Li chtig to return to court. June 23 for sentencing. They were among 22 persons indict ed in the masSiV~ securities fraud case. Slal11 SLA /ff......,..'• Brotlter Talk• SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Slain Symbionese Liberation Army member Patricia "Mizmoon" Soltysik came to her brother 's ~chool one day in 1973. She told him Marcus Foster deserved to be killed. Fred Soltysik, ~tifying Tuesday al.the trial or two reputed SLA members charged with Foster's murder, said her visit was the last time she spoke to him before her death in a fi ery s hootout with Los Angeles police, Stephen Weed, fi a nce of rugitive he iress Patricia Hearst, also made a brief appearance fo r~he defense at the trial of Russell Little and Joseph Re miro who are accused of the cyanide bullet slaying of the Oakland Schools superintendent and the attempted murder of his deputy, Robe rt W. Blackburn. Super.,1..,... to P.robe SM' AT Unit SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Diego County supe r visors have asked Sheriff John Duffy to meet with them June 4 to discuss the sherirf 's Special Weapons and Tactics squad. The unit. commonty·known as SWAT, was heavily criticized by the county grand jury after a February incident in Oceanside in which a 15-year-old boy was mistaken for a sniper and killed. Z Arraig1oed 111 81 /ffUH011 Fra~ . Wtdnesd•y. May 2 1. 1975 Therapy Aid In Pot Case LOS ANGELES CUPll - Linda Eas tm a n McCartney. wire of former fi{'atle J>aul P.1 cCar tney, can go to a psychiulrist in London instead of ·jail ln Los Angeles for possession or tnarijuana , a judge ruled Tuesday. Mrs. McCartney, 33. was arrested M ar<.·h 3 by a highway patrolman who slopped a car carrying the singer and his family for going throug h a red li ght. The officer said he detect- ed the smell of marijuana in the auto and a search turned up 16 gra m s of it in ·flt.rs . J\.1cCartn ey's 1>urse. Assemblyman Denies 'Fix' Of Citation 1 SACRAMENTO (AP) -Th e California Hi ghway Patrol s ays it reis s ued a ticket to As· sembly man Louis Papan ror driving 90 miles per hour in a 55 mile zone after an area com· mander erroneously voided it. Papan, (D·Da ly City), says he didn't try to get it fixed. · NEWSMAN Bill Branch of KOVR ·TV in Sacramento said Tuesday he started making in- quiries arter the station reeeived an anony mous call that .Papan · had received a ticket and lhat it had been voided . CHP spokes m an Kent Milton confirm e d that it had been voided by the Vallejo area com· mander, but said it was done "in error" and \Vas "inappropriate." THE CHP zone commander •had the ticket reissued, Milton sa.id. Papan told KOVR he got the ticket last Wednesday while driv· ing on Inter state 80 between San Francisco and Sa<.•ramento. He also said he contacted the CHP lo question the way he "'as clocked by the patrolman, not because he \vanted lo get the ticket overturned . "1'1\ot GOING to pay it. I did not make any threats. The allega- tions arc not ·true," Papan told KOVR . DAILY PILOT A5 • Winds Rip Bay Area; One Dead By The Associated Press The high winds that raked Northern California on Tucsda;r will subside today, but there still may be some snow showers in the Sierra Nevada. the National Weather service said. • One man died a nd a nother i~ believed dead after the higl1 winds, sometimes reaching 50 m iles per hour. a pparently capsized the Sea Witch , a fi shing boat based in S<t n Pablo, the Coast Guard reported. TllE BODY of Glenn Douglas Page, 26, was recovered near Angel Is land , a s pokesman said. The Coast Guard said P age left the San Pablo Ya<.·ht 1-l a rbor A1onda y with Kenneth Williams or Richmond. The search con- tinued for Williams. 1-:lsewhere, the unpredicted storm closed roads, nipped over a s n1all aircraft al San Carlos Airport, felled trees and caused power outages, pe rhaJ>S the mos t serious in the cast San Francisco Bay are a where thousands or ho1nes were out of power ut tin1es. TllE \\'EATllER!\olAN blaml:"d lhe storm on a IOw pressur·c area \\'hich today drifted eastw<.i rd. "Higher pressures edgin g into California will herald a retu1·n to more typital f\·1 ay weather," said a National Weather Ser vice forecaster A small ~raft ad visory \\'as s tfll in effect for north\\'est '''inds or 15 to JO miles per hour in the San Francisco Bay area. GALF. WARNINGS ,~·e re in ef. feet early today for gusty winds or 20 to 40 miles Per hour on the far northwest toast. It \1:ill be \varmer in most sec· lions today. with Bay area hi ghs ranging rrom 60s to low 70s. 'I'he mercury s hould climb lo the mid 70s in the valleys. A warming trend in the Sie rra Nevada will begin Thursd;;:a y, the weatherman ~aid . Utility Evicts PUC Meets LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two men we re arraigned Tuesday on charges or grand theft and fraudulent stock sales for allegedly bilking more than $1 million from investors who sank money in a purported "fuel-less engine" which ran on the static electricity in the air. Edwin V. Gray Sr., SO. Northridge, and Richard B. Hacken. berger, 52. Van Nuys, were ordered to appe ar June 2 for a pre· liminary hearing. Gray was fJ"eed on $10,000 bond and J-lacken · berger released on $5,000 bond. · Branch said th e anonymous calle1· claimed the re was a pat· tern or la\\'makers threatening to vote again st CJ.IP salary raises to get out of tickets. SAN DIEGO CAP) -San Diego Gas and Electric Company says the State Public Utilities Com- miss ion can no longer use SDG&E's a uditorium £or its hearings. SDG&E president Walter' ZiUau said Tuesday it wouJd bo better for both groups if the PUC found another place lo meet in San Diego. • But new CHP Commissioner Glen Craig said h e knew of three or four legis lators ticketed in the last 30 days, Fur Clearance. :Four days only. May 22, 23, 24 and 25 . It's the season for smart shoppers to put their money on a fur. Prices are nicer. than they've been all year! Natural Tourmaline® mink/lea ther stroller. Now $699 . Dyed ranch mi,nk stroller. Now $1599. Natural Tourmaline® mink cape. Now $399. • Natural Autumn Haze® mink jacket. Now $599. Natural Orchid Autumn Haze® mink coat./Now $1499. Natural Tourmaline® mink stroller. Now $1.099. Natural Azurene® mink cape. Now $599. Natural Autumn Haze® mink coat. Now $ 199~: • But Levi's• Double-knee outfits are tOUgher. Because the Jeans have twice the atrength right where ypu noed it. In the knOOs. And they look sensatiohal • Dyed ranch mink coat. Now $2199. N.Btural ranch mink and white mirik.shirt; Now $499. , Tip·dyed raccoon battle jacket. Now $399. Natural Tourmaline® mink jacket. Now $1699. Especially whenyau add the rugged, handsome matching jacket. It's a for dressing up. ut wears like iron when It's time to play. see our super selection of shapes and colors. In size& 2·14. . • Fall Into the Gap. We're s trong on kid stuff. WESTllNSTEI • WESTMINSTEI MALL • PUil 194 S• ol'lli 7 DAUA-. MOo!-SAT. ltTO f , SUll.-t'O I " '.> . ,~ Dyed ranch mink jacket. Now $1799. 1 Bleached white mink. straight stole. Now $1599. Yellow·dyed and white·dye<I mink jacket. Now $1699. Natural Apoll()(!i) mink coat. Now $3299. All subject to prior sale. Ask about our credit plans. Robinson's fur Salon. f:I Embfl Mink Brlll'dln' Ass'n. All futt labeled lO show country of origin Of lmPOrttid fu rl. 2 FASHIOf'l ISLANO SHOP WED., THURS. & SAT. 10-5:30, FRI'. 10-9. SUN. 12·5. • . . ·"' ~A6 . ' . I VA •LY P I L O 'r E D ITO R I AL PAGE ,. .. . ~ Forecasts Can Change How ABOUT t>ETENTf~ 5Ut>l>E!-lLY I HAVE THIS <RAVING • FOR HAVANA <l(!iARS. As a development firm moves intO the stretch on 'tesolvi11g details of a master plan for development of 1'-1he1 ,015·acrc Reeves Ranch irtSan Clemente. ilhas re- •'Jeased a report claiming its project will be a financial plum ror the city. und the C<:1pistraJ10 Unified Scl1ool .District. At lhe ent.I of the 1 5 ·yeur ·d~velopment period, the report st utcs , the eity annually could realize $700,000 rnore in ti.I x incorne than jj: spent on municipal services. The report predicts'lrlc school district would receive an i 1n prcssivc $1 .2 million paper profit. In receiving the re port last week, planning com· missio11crs \'¥'isely urged that the report be continually pdated us the ranch planning process continues. me3,200 d\velling units are proposed. It \\l a s rortun<1te that the con1mission was uut iou s in acct..•pting conclus ions of the report. By their nature, attempts to gaze into the financial rystal ball arc fraught with a myriad of economic fac· ors tha t can, and do, change with predictable un· rcdictability. YE S on Parking Laguna Beach vote rs will decide Tuesday whether he town is to ste p into the real world with a workable, conomical a nd attractive bond-financed parking tructurc. A yes vote is 11eeded. The structure wpuld huvc space for 233 cars and be catecl on city 11roperty along Glenneyre Street just ou th or Lagu11a Avenue. The city is seeking vote r J)proval to sC'll up to $800,000 in bonds to pay for the rojel't . l\l <Jjori ty approval is required. Opposition to the plan has been mini mal,. mething unus ual for Laguna Beach. Mos t of that op- s ition has been far afteld of the real issues of benefit • and cost. Everyone with occasion to pass through the downtown business area will benefit. More spaces downtown will lessen numbers of autos cruis~ng the streets holding back Lraffic while drivers look !or park· ir1g. Bonds financing the structure will be paid for by meter fees rrom the structure and from the downtown area, not by any city taxes. Those who say the cost is high overlook the fact·that the project is·thc least ex-· pensive the city can undertake. Laguna Beach needs the parking. A yes vote is needed to get it. W ate r Needs The South Coast County Water District is seeking voter approval Tuesday for sale of up to $3 .5 million in bonds to pay for improvements to that South Laguna- Laguna N1iuel system. The improvements are urgently needed and worthy of voter support. . Bonding represents the least expensive way the. district and its t axpayers can come up with the money needed for cons truction of a new reservoir, a coastal waler main , improved neighborhood distribution systems and other necessities long overdue. District officials assure voters that the bonds can be r etired from revenues over the next 10-year pe riod without themse lves causing an increase in water or tax rates. Other costs may go up, to be sure. but the bond repayment could be absorbed irito the current budgeted income they say. A two-thirds margin is required for approval. The DailY Pilot urges a yes vote on the South Coast County Wa te r Di s trict bond m easure. s o Split n Ford L.oct•I A ge11cies Ct111 A rl111i11ister Cot1st 1•1n11 • • ec1s1on EVANS-NOVAK \ll r\Slll NGTON -The gamble k1..•n by Presid1..•nt Ford in using med fo rce against Ca mbodia, urt1ng \Vith <.i ir strikes against an1bodian gunboats last v.'eek, as basf'd :.ibove all on lhis hard nelusion: the U .S. hud to seize lC o c1..·a sion o f C:.:an1bodian irilCY to prove it both could a nd ould re~t't with decision and to int1..•rnutio11<.1I lawless· ~ 'SS. 'fhcrc \V as no s plit of any kind the Nation <.il Sccu1ity Council N S Cl . In · ('(•(.!, ('Vl'ry p official in 1!1 e u tJ - in1 s trutio n .\ g r ee d t h ~1t •ha lcver the sk, a :.ho'" of meric u n i I I u n d O\\'t'r \\"~I S bsolutc ly ''s- ntial follo\\1ing the humilialion Sout h V1 c tna1n . (n ord1..•r1 ng ,\n1c 1·ican ;1ttacks th e C;un bodiun gunboats to ock <.1 11 obvious Ca mbodiun cr- r t to 1·em uve the· American lh·c''' of t he l\"l ;i y<igul'z to the f'a1n·bod i:.i n n1;1inluncl , neither t he Prl'sidcnt nor the NSC 1..•vcn a tt cn1ptcd l o f1 gurl' out ;;in uns,,·1..·r to this potcnti;)ll y cx- plosiv1..' q111..•stion : ,,·hat if the Co.im bod1;1ns should use the gun- boa t attac k as the pretext for 1nurd erini.: son1c 40 American t'rl:\\'m t.·n ·~ "Of course '' 1..· h:.:ad <·ontingency plans." one top pr1..·sidcntial <.iide told us. "Hut \\I t' <'ouldn't sit <.1 round and try lo l'slimute every possible cont ingency when \\'C <.1 re dealing with u primitive gov- ern1nenl whit·h has virtuall y no outside c11t'lt;1 t·ts •vhh lhl' "·orld. We had to at'l. '' Tll F. UN D•:ltl.YING assump· ~.1 00 of the President's aides was n1u t th1..• ll.S . 1nust de;.i l with such ;.in :1ct of pira1·y ~1s a \Vcstcrn na- tion acting: in a civilizt•d f<.ishion : de mand i1n1ncdiutC" return of the !}hip and t r (''" und m<.1p ~ cont- thgcnl'y plan to seize bo1h by Corre if the demand "':is not n1ct t\..ithi n <.1 l'l'~1 son a blC' ti n1l'. • t. f''ollo•' 1n g s ei z ure o f the l\tayuguez by C umbod1a j ust ~(\er rn idnig ht, Sunday , the · Pre~dd c nt ull owcd uln1osl 48 .llours to go by without any thilita r y responst>. Ne xt, the •asic pl :1n of isol<tting the little l\land in the Gulf of Thailand, 'l''hc re the l\1n y a~ucz v.·as held , \VCnl us tray when1 Coi mbodian cun bol:l lS ITI UVCd tOWHrd the , 1polnl und ubout 15 miles a"•:1y_ f'he PresidC'nt lht·n gi..lvc his or· ~eer to halt lhe gunboats. • t tbut 1>oint. the U.S. \vent the 1,0.JJ and n ec.·cssary dist ~1nce to Wrove what "Mr. 1' .. ord and his Secretaries of St a l ~ ;i nd D!'fcnse. 'ffanry Ki sstngt>r tind Jan1 es •hlesJngl'r, had bt.'Cll preaching ffOn ·stop ev e r s in c e the ca tastrophic end or the Vietnam Dea r Gloomy Gus What is J ust P lain Henry's target of oppor tunity ? Could it be the taxpayers of Orange County forced lo clean up his Alice in Won· derland litter? M.W. Gi<.ltm' G.,. tomm•"'' .,., i»bmitlie+ll.., r-..s111d M •et,..t•s11rit' ttllotl-vltws ot 19" ,..wi;plptr. s.tlld ,,_ ptt _ ... toGIOOm,G11s, 0 111, ~let. ..0 .... ·ar : des pite that n ationa l humiliation. no foreign country shoul d make the mistake that the United Stl..ltes was discarding its role as world leader, or was re - lu ct ant to ta ke s trong action ,,·here demanded . INDEED, the private remarks of top officials here make it abun- d a n l l y upp:.irent th a t the J\'1a yaguez s eizure bccctme the ideal case to prove the point. In the bnckground was the ul· ter failure of all efforts to open s ome ki nd of c irc uitou s diplomatic cha nnel·to the revolu- tionary Cambodian government of the Khmer Rouge. The Soviet Union has been ki cked out of Phnom P enh for failure to break v.·ith the old regime. The People's Republi c of Chin a , according to one high offi ci.:11. informed the L:.S. it would try to help, and did so, but proved the point that the jingoistic Cambodian r egime v.·as simply beyond reach. On Tuesd ay evening, l\1r. Ford ordered word passed to con· gr('ss ional leade r s that '·ap· propriate action" would soon be taken. Perhaps in retrospect the Presid en t s hould have s um· 1noned these lea ders to the White !·lo use for a face-to-face con- \'('rsation. Sen. Mike Mansfield o f J\.1 o nt a n a , the Senate Democr atic leader, for example, suid later that he had not been "con~ulted," on the theory he v.•as told, not asked. OTHE R CRIT ICISM in a Cong r ess n o w showing dangerous symptoms of taking over American foreign policy fro m its feudi n g committee rooms was also heard, raising ominous questions abou t a vicious partisan debate erupting from the Preside nt's bold a ction. But on that point Mr. Ford and his top aides, often indecisive i.lnd vacillating on lesser m at- ters . s ho,.,,ed no concern this tim·e . They ass um e d th a t whatever partisan outcry ·might ensue. the American µco pl e as .11 v.•hole would react with over·· \\"helming approval lo the Presi- dent 's powerfu l response to an unprovoked act of piracy on the high seas. ''Sure they'll try to demagogue it,·· one senior presidential aide told us. "That's par for the course. Dut no ona considered that as part of the problem." TftUS, in this first., clcoir show of American power since the In · doc hint!se fiasC'O , Mr. f<""'ord has demonstrat ed what he is often (•rttlcized for lacking : a talent for, leadership and command, in ii cusC' \'Oid or ambiguity lo him :.ind hi s advise rs . Despite · political ris ks. no one around him e.xhibited scc"ond thought~ about the obligation of thC U.S. to W1derwrite the rule of law in lhc world. To the Editor: Realtors a nd many other Americans .,.,·ould have t.o find other work under governments which now control more than half or the world's population. The simple reason being that individuals are not free to own property in those countries. Could this freedom be lost here? Only if those interested fail to act when the bundle or rights that go with property ov.•nership suffer.infringement. It would seem that property o wn e r s, current a nd prospective, to protect their own interests would turn out to vote against all encroachments. In actuality, voter participation in recent e lections has been declining. The problem seems lo be that many are working too hard to have the time to ide ntify c ri tical issues or ·to respond appropriat ely. The Newport 1-larbor-Costa Mesa Bo ard of Reull ors r esponded to this problem by forming a Political Affairs Committee to study iss ues an d recomme nded appropriate actions. R ECOGN I Z I NG the infringement by the Coastal Zone Conservation Commission on the rights of the City of Newport Beach as well as on many property owners seeking to improve their properties tbe P o liti cal AfC ai r s Committee decided to explore the situation. We learned that the commission. "''hile mandated by Proposition 20 (w hich a large majority of Orange County voters turned down ), w as c harged · with preparing a coastal plan -and expiring. After further study the , committee proposed and the board or directors approved the foll owing statement: ''A s the Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtor s ha s w it n essed considerable client experience with the impact or the Coastal Zone Conser vation Commission created by Proposition; and ''As we co n s ider th e commission will have served its purpose by m aki n g loca l government aware of the need to protect the environment or the coastal area ; "As actions of the current commissions have proven costly :to California in jobs lost: to the ·property owner and the ultim ate buyer in time a nd money spent even for minor construction: and "As local general plans are being completed to support the coastal plan, which general plans -can b e administered f ai rly , consistently a nd judiciously by local elected of· ficlals sup_ervised bf existing state agencies : ''We, therefore, urge the mandated expiration of the Coas tal Zone Conservation CommJsslon be fulfllled. '' SINCE the state Legislature will make the final decision on the commission and its pl uns, we have forwarded the above s l a tement to each board o r realtors In the state asking them to proteet the Interests or their clients by Impressing their Legislators with lhe importance of this matter. 1.YMAN S. FAULKNER Chairman Political Arfa lrs Commlw.e, Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. Should Dissolve • ions • ( M AILBOX ) LAii••• lrom rtld•r• ••• w•k -. T""' ri9n1 10 condtnK tll••• to Iii •P«t •• .+irntnllt libel"·~· .. ,.,.,._ LAii••• 01 JOO word• or IOI• will De t iw" Pf'tltrtM •. •n ltlltr• m1ut hoc:I'* .i,...,,. .. and ,,..u,,.. ..,,,,, '"' n.tm11 """"tot wil-ld 011 r•· ,._,, II 111llltl111t rt11011 Is 1pt11rtflt. ~'' will MllN-jMiMlifle<I. Erro11e uus To the Editor : In prefacing a presentation of viewpoints on the forthcoming parking s tructure election in Laguna Beach, the most recent Temple Hills Community As· socialion newsletter states that Laguna's r esidents "will be lax·ed eight hundred thousand dollars" to build the structure. This statement conveys an e r· roneous impression unsupported by fact. and is symptomatic or the misunderstanding remaining in some people's minds on lhe is· sue. The pa rking structure cost will not appear on our tax bill . The moneys for the structure and its operation will come from downtown parking meters only , as used by tourists as well as loca l residents. These are facts s upported by law and deserve one's attention rather than their misrepresentatio n in print. ANTHONY DEMETRIADES Parking llassle To the Editor : As a busy mother of young c hildren who has livCd in this lov· e ly city of Lag:unl..I Beach for nine yea r s. I keep h opin g that something "'ill be done about the deplorable parking s ituation in lhedownto.,.,,n area. As soon as we have warm sun- ny weather and tourisls are al·· tracted to the beach, it is im · possible to find a convenient spot to p:.1rk while shopping. And so, once l..lgain this spring, I have de· cided it is fa r quicker and more convenient to head my car north to Cor ona de l Mar. where park· ing h1 plentiful. than to hassle with the congestion on the streets of Laguna Beach. JANET ALEXANDER l'uce R c>ulU11: To the Editor: These arc quotes gathered this v.•eek from our m ost dedicated e nvironmenta l leaders . (Names furnis hed --0n request). "I shall vote for I.he struelure because 1 feel we must face reality." "l vote yes. because we can only take one step at a time." "Yes, keep heavy traffic on Ute edge of our Village." "I believe we arc a ll working for the same thing. a healthy, viable Laguna", All planning und environmen· tal groups have Jong espoused the cause or pulling parking struc· lures on the edge or town , a nd this concept is gathering the ac- cepta nce o f m ost thoughtful per50ns. We all prefer to use u little of our precious land as possible for storage. so the obvious answer is some kind of stacked pllrklng facility, in thorough aesthetic agreement v.•ith the lund. THE PRESENT Glenneyre Street lot hi owned by the dt.y, paid for. Is 25 feel 11bove the valley floor. one block outalde ol the downtown basin. and et lbe entrance to town used by the ~~rgest . port or our popul1Uon . thos e ramtl1 es from our &0uJ,hernm o1 t nelahborhooda can park <it the entra nce and \\•alk <1lmost any\vhere. Those f;:11n ilies from the north of lO\\ln \Vii i tht·n find tri..lffic in the crov.·ded basin cut in half. Attractive s igns cl.In dra\V our beach visitors off the streets into the structure. which "'i ll be one- third underground. then maybe the eld erly and infirm 1..•an get a chance at the convenience spots. _.\nd yes. the businessmun must be educated to park outside and ,, .. aJk ~ Laguna has a t errible r eput a- tion as a traffic bottleneck. 'rhc substitute for the c ar is a gene1·a · lion and a half away, and the m;1 - jor cities are pouring millions of dollars into their mass transits •v.tith subsidies each year. Face rea lity~ Laguna will s tag nate if we don 't provide parking now be fore costs double again. Revenue bonds generate income . Read your bultot 1n casurl1! ll says ''Not to be secured by t;;ixi ng power of Lagunl..I Beach.'' Indeed \VC do need this tux-free parking s tructure. . DORIS SHIELDS S t r111·111re Nt•ede d To the Editor: As I talk to some or my friends and neighbors I am sort of sur- prised that a Jot of Lagunans a re not aware th at there is a special election on May 27. The purpose of that election will be to finally decide lo build the long awaited parking structure on Glcnneyre Street. Being a resident who works in Newport Beach , l get quite.tired of spending 10 minutes or so try. ing to find a parking place to go to the beach. l really think the city council has done a good j_ob in proposin1, a structure that is not right downtown a nd cannot cost us ta x. payers any mon ~y . ERNIE P. QUIGLEY p.,rl<i 11g Lflgic To the E<lilor: On May 27, Lagunans will be asked to vot e ori $800,000 in r e- venue bonds for a p'arking struc- ture on the city's Glenneyre parking lot. This at a time when the city ls lpsing $25,000 per year on three parking lots. As a matter of simple logic and ordinary common sense. l s ub- mit thnt the Topics experts cur· rently conducting a parking study in Laguna, should first tackle the problem of the three lots which are underused, before embarking on such a costly gam· ble. The three lots, although cove. nient to beach a nd shopping, have low vi1lbllfty to the visitor to Laguna, a nd even to Laguna residents, sandwiched as they are between buildings and poorly identified as City parking lots. They are further hampered by a ccess difficulties. A visitor typically heads s tralght down Forest where he comes up against Coa•l H ighway. A system of signs should direct him to available public parking us he enters the Central BusJness Dis- trict. These signs should bC highly visible to motorisls prior t.o reachin1 the turnoff ROhils. jUll 81 stop signs eive udv11ncc w•mln1s. A GOOD ay11 tcm of directional s igns could, con ce.ivPbly, put the&1 Parking s paces. to use and get them olt the red for the tax· payers. If parking spaces which are not located directly in front or Forest A venue s hops arc to be con· sid ered "peripheral," then by that definiti on, the Ocean avenue lots are a lso "peripheral" and even closer than the Glenncyre loca~ion would b<! just across the alley, in fact. Th.e restaurant proposed to be built in the airspace "over the Broadway lot is surely a non· solution. tr the se purking spaces arc needed. then v.·hy give them away in an unfavorable tradeofr situation, while proposing a parking structure which, as ever· yone admits , people avoi.d going into if they can help it. Winter and summer, this structure must be fully used or someone will have to pay the piper. I s uggest that all the good peo- ple who have been working tire· lessly on this park.in& problem for such a long time , are too close to Forest A venue to see the tree;i:. In voting against the structure J am voting for a rational solution that will utilize our present re- sources, including the potential for leasing commercial parking lots "1.'eekends . at minimal cost to the taxpayers. MILDRED B. HANNUM H1e ll Du11t• To the Editor : As a middle-aged housewife and mother of a young l\.1arine, l feel I must say this: Thanks a lot all you "armchair know-it-all s." I do not want "'ar; we are a Christian family , but sometimes one has to slap hands. The President had a big de. tision to muke ; it must have bog- gled hi s mind. The s hip is safe, the crew is safe and moSt or the Marines arc safe -thank God for that. Those boys need a "Well Done" -not 11 "No. don 't do that." So, shut up or go do it yourself, all of you know,-it-alls. C.HARR!S Quotes Grace Holsclaw Ilarrington retired S.F . school teacher at ag~ 101 -"I'm certainly glad I 'm not te<1ching today. My, the crazy things that these young folks do nowadays." Christo Javachcfr, N. Y. artist working in P..1arin County -"( th.ink the poverty or the mind l.s the deepest poverty.'' Of ANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robnt N, We~. PubJ.fahn- Thomo1 Kfevll, Editor Bortxiro Krtiblch, Editorial Pog~ Editor I l"'he edilori11! page or the Dally Pil ot ~et-k s to inform and 11timulate reader" b)' presentln1 on thh1 paJ:e dl\•erse commentary , on topic~ or lntertst by !)'ndic•t· .. tod <'olumnist11.and t'•rtoonlst1, bY 111'0\'id in,1 u f.o'rum for readefJ' vie .... 11 i1nd by pre11entlnJ1 this ne\\'lipaper's opinions and Ide~• un curr1..•nt top ies. The 001lor1a l ' opinion~ or th e Duily ~'l lot uppelJif on I)• In the edil orlnl col\Jinn at th:i: top or the page. Opinions e)( pt('.!l:lcd by the columniiJl3 and~ rgrto.11·11 ~t:111 nd lctl cr writers are th('lt """"" and no endorsement of U1elr \'Jev.·s b)' the Dally J'ilot Should be ln!frred. .... Wednesday, May21.1975 f) ' I I < •• " ' • • -· • ' • ' m Pigg11•haek Ride r This Nalionf.11 Aeronautics a nd Space Ad· mi~slration model shows a Space Shuttle 9rb1~er attached to a NASA 747 jum_bo jet as 1t will appear in test flights in mid-1977. Rockwell Jntcrnational spokesman· Bill Greene says the orbiter will detach from the 747 during approach and landing tests al the Flight Research Center al Edwards, ex- pected in 1980. Pilot Logbook ' U .. S. Flag Up Again for Her By JACKIE HYMAN OI tM O•ilr Pllol Sl•tl Probably euch person has a slightly different reaction to the arrival of the Vietnamese refugees in America and in Orange County. • . My own was crystallized when I visited Camp Pendleton and saw "Little Saigon" for myself. TWO THI NGS STRUCK ME: TH E neatness and friendliness of the Vietnamese, and the concern and respect shown by the M arincs. It seemed a commentary on the complexity or the mind that these m en , many of whom fought in Vietnam a nd some of whom may have kil led people r esembling those in the camp. took delight in playing with the children. Those f talked to showed a respect (unusuul in th i.s ins ulated L'Olln - lry) for the la ng uage <i.nd customs of thc:se forei gn people. Our e:s tor l <i.t 'Olll' poi nt c a ugh_). himself suyi ng , '''fhcy i.Jl"C learning thC names of the part::; of th(.;' body" and amended it to sa y, "1'hey :.ire learning what we tall the p.irts of the body." HYMAN And the Vietnamese themselves -well, a large percen- tage of them are doctors, teachers, lawyers, veterinarians and other professionals. They must have had nice houses and servants in Vi etnam. They must have had wardrobes of stylish clothes (judging by the ones they still wear), family heirlooms , scrapbooks, friends -all left behind BUT THEY SMILED AS T llEY washed their clothes in tubs, as they lined up for medieal examinations, as they dozed in their crowded tents Their tents nestle in only 203 of the 125,000 acfes at Camp P e nd le ton. The facilities themselves arc crowded bul around the people, there for the m to walk on and play in, are uncut m il es of rolling !:.and. ''Little Saigon '' is a tribute to Americ<1 -to her conecrn for others, her ex p::in siveness a nd her hum a nity. A total of 18,000 peopl e are not reall y very many ,<tl all But they have given our country back lo us. I don 't know what your reacti on is lo the refu~ees, but I will tell you min e : It has restored my fa ith in this coun try Jt's a faith I nearly lost during my college years , along .with so many others of niy generation, I SAW A GOVERNMf~NT WHICH, a lthough \11e didn·t yet know tiow corrupt it w:.as. clearly did not belielo'e in in- dividual Ii berty. We heard our leaders preach h·atred - hatred even of our own citi;;ens who happened to h ave long hair or disagree with government polic'ies. My faith in America was nearly crushed when I s aw our fiag fig uratively lowered -from a symbol of freedom to one of intole r ance and s elfishness. Now they h ave raised our fl ag again at Camp Pen~leton . COSTA MESA SEW & V AC MHGIR DliALER HARIOR CEt4Tl!R 2300 Hart.or ll•d. 549-1195 FREE STRETCH & STITCH LESSONS c.lfwlMf••"- Endorsed Ad Rules Outlined WASHINGTON <AP) -The Federal Trade Commission has made public a package of ground rules overhauling the way ad · vertisers us e celebrities, r e- s ea r c h er s and sa t i s f ie d customers to endorse products. Under lv,io final and three pro- posed guidelines on advertising e ndorse ments and testimonials, the eommission Tuesday offered these examples of the guides' im- pat l on advertis ing. -AN ASSOCIATION of pro- fcs ~"iona l athl et es declares a breakfast drink to be their "of- fi eial" breakfast drink. The en· dorsement must be based on an expert evaluation of the nutri· li onal value of the drink and a L'Omparison with s imilar brands. --An ::istronaut who owns a substanlial interest in a motel chain cndorScs the motels. l·lis link to the motels must be dis· t losed. --A drug company c om- missions rese a r ch on its produet by a \~r e ll -kno\.\'n research or- ganization and. s ets the ground rules for the test Ads based on the test results must note the fact tl\al the drug company request· ed, paid for and designed the test. · ~AN APPl.IANCE maker uJver tises that a customer used lhe produet for eight years. Even if the stalement is literally true, the ad\•e rt ise r must state what the typical life or the appliance is if it is less tha n eight year s. -An e ntert3ine r is s hown holding a cigar If the entertainer did not smo ke the brand or does n·l s moke cigars at all , the ad v.•ould be considered decep· live unlcs:s the conditions of the (.;'nd or:sement ,,·ere spelled out. The guide::; :.ilso would ban en · dorsements of drug products by laymen a nd prohibit such things as t;.ikin g film critics' reviews out of L'Ontcxt Tii i': GUIDES DO not have the fo1·ce of lav.;, but put advertisers on notit•e that violations \\•ill be prosecuted under the agency's general sanctions against unfair and deceptive practices. 'fhe two guides which had been offered earlier for comment and were provided in final form cov- er expert endOr sements and e n· dorserfl ents by organizations. For the most fabulous collection ol "Second·Time Taos." you must see lor ycurself - Tht SECOND TIME AROUND H_.t..: 11·5 Twt...,,. s.t. (Ne11t 10 Morri's Flowers) srm.H FA.MIL Y STIAtC HOUSI 21t6 HAllOI I LVD. Mm.H FAMILY STUJC HOUSE 2 I t6 HAl l Oa IL VD. COSTA MISA S41·2122 COST A Ml SA 541-1112 ' 2 STEAK & LOBSTER P4\mRs A oretl pl•ner. p1111ng up S l••k • LoDs!er . B lkOd 0 Po4•1o m ''"'" ...... ""''2 ' s599 Sll1lerT01s1 Regular l• M H eacl\ 01111er. Save 1300 H ()tt.r gOOd now ltlru May I :SUI. I 'ft'ITHTHIS AO S 2 STEAK & LOBSTER PLAffiRS A grett platler 011r1rio uo St••~ & l obs1or. Baked D :?::,~, ~o=~~~c;g:;~~~:~ 2 ~ $ 599 e.ah 011tter s~ve ,3 00 l'4 Ollltr gooa oow thrll Mav I 3111. I WITH THIS AO S .... Wednesday. May 21 . 1975 DAI LVPILOT Al . \ . Top Army R e se roist R e l ieved LOS ANGELES <AP> -The'top Army rei;er ve o(rlcer ror Southern California , Ne vada a nd Arizona w:ts re lieved of hi s command one month before his retirement after an investigtttion of miscondut l charges, a s pokesman says . An Army spokesman said Tuesday that ~1 aj. Gen. Louis Kaufman "was found lo have used un -. due command influence in r egard to his son's military career. I-le was ·also found t o ha\'e cauthorized the itnpropcr use and payment of A1·m y reserve personnel.'' . KAUf'MAN, REMOVED MONDAY AS H EAD o( the 63rd Army. Reserve Command, said he \vas innocent of :.iny v.·rongdo1n g and "l'..HJld seek lt•.t.::i l l'Ounsel to appeal the decis ion. l .~1t cr . in a s tutc1nt-·nl rclt'<ISL·<l by hi::; offi t e, ht: said : •·1\:s a resul~ uf un :.inonyniou s lett er, :1 pre liminary 1nvL·st1 g <.1t1u11 \\ U:'.> 1n:.idc by t he DL·parl· ment of th!.' ,\rm y in:spt"c lor gent-rut in volvi ng po:s!'.1 - blc adrni ni stra tivc n1 isL·undui:t I deny ~111 .\ \''rongdoing \vhile scl'vini; n1y tciuntry . I intend I\/ ask for a full , eo1npletc in vl':sllg:.il1on \Vith a rcv1c\1 by a pprop1·i <.1 I c it' vL· ls of govl·ro n1 1·nt · · KA U f'ftJ ;\N, \\1110 (,'()J\1~1 ,\NU.t.:V u.100 m en 111 the r eserve, is vi t e -chanC'cllor of the Los A ngt~ll·~ Con1m unily College Distric . BE SURE TO VOTE YES TUESDAY -MAY 27th IN HUNTINGTON BEACH WITH:. PROPERTY' TAXES UP AS MUCH AS 40 % THIS YEAR. • WINDFALL MONEY FROM RECORD HIGH SALES TAXES. • AN ESTIMATED 10% INCREASE IN THE ASSESSED VALUATION OF PROPERTY. • A BALANCED CITY BUDGET. THE CITY S1l\.\_ ENACTED ANOTHER NEW TAX - e 1.4 MILLION IN EXTRA MONEY WILL BE COLLECTED .THIS YEAR THE TAX CAN BE INCREASED NEXT YEAR STOP THE NEW TAX BY VOTING YES FOR THE CHARTER AMENDMENT THAT OVER 8000 CITIZENS PUT ON THE BA-LLOT Paid lor by CANT -Montana Schu ltz, Chairman - 17931 Beach Boulevard, Huntington Beach. Ca. 92647 Phone· (714) 847-3397 X YESoN TUESDAY, MAY 21th COSTA MESA WALLI'APBIAZAAR 1832 Newport ll•d. t:osta M•1a -PhoM 6,5-9292 DISCOUNT WALLPAPER 50°/o to 80°/o °"' .~ PW•cts O M l OOO IOLLS Oii IM-STOCIC FAlllC VIMYLS. FLOCK~ ...,.,.,MTS_. Pll·PASTIDS. l awtlM 11lecU•. IWOtTAlff .... T_ ..... 0 ... .-. .. s.,.1 .. 1 C AMPUS MEHS WEAR In New Co-Vtloy ~pp llog C...ter 452t c_. Drt.., ........ "'°"" 752-1 144 TENNI$ SWEATERS S898 RACITl'S COSTA MESA JEWELRY 1831 Nowport Bl•d. Colla Mesa -Ph. 646-7741 • RINGS SIZED MOST atHGS-UI" TO 2 SIZES LARGO OR SMALLEa GEMS REMOUNTED o.. ... 111 ,..,.._w.,. 0-°" n. ,..__ THE TREASURY San1a Ana. 3900 So. Bnstol Orange, City Or. at Garden Grove BL Mam:>nal Day Spe<;:ial SAVE '5 . THERMOS $ 49 55 91. l ICE CHEST NOW . ........ 1'-"-M-V 22 lflnl M•v ~6. 191& " 'i> .,I 4 8 DAILY PH.OT Wednesday, May:Z1. 1975 10 Picked for Foreign 'Study • SwimJl,er Senteneed Ten Or~nge Coast residents are. among UC Irvine students selected to study at UC centers in 13 foreign countries under the Education Abroad Pro· gram next rail. The studenls. their majors and the countries in which they will study are: Costa Mesa : l\tary Ann Cejka, a Spanish major,. will study In Barcelona. Spain. Vivian Loumeau, a French major, to Poitiers, France. Craig Raynsrord , a hi story major, to Nairobi. Ken ya. Huntington Beach: Steve Brotman, a biology major. to J erusalem. Israel. ~ l rvlae: Hope RubeU, a social ecology major, in Grenoble, France. Sharyn R. Yoshimi1 a social science major. to Tokyo, Japan. La1uaa Bea~b: Llnda Fitzgeruld, a French ma· jor. to Grenoble, France. Thomas Klyce, a teacher education major, to Sao Paulo, Brazil. Los Alamlto111 : Lisa Shaefer, a Spanish major, to Bar<:elona, Spain. • ' Newport Beach: l\farsa B~aubelle, a linguistics major, to Mexico City, l\.lexico. HORSE M'EA T ' BEEF A IRED MERCED CAP ) -A Doe P•IOS man has pleaded no contest to thTee counts or selling uninspect· t!d horse meat as beer. "Donald Hennagan, 47 . uls,> pleaded no contest in Merct:d County Superior Court tQ.. one eount or slaughtering a horse without a license. •KINGSVILLK. Tex. (UPI) -State District J~dge Vernon Harville b•• handed the maximum sentence of 10 years in lhe penitentiary and a $5,000 fine lO a Florida man on each of two counts of fraud ln a n alleged $4.$ million nationwide 1cheme to aerraud returnln1 prisoners of war. .. However, Harville ruled Tuesday that Thomas A. Preston, 42, Fort W uderdale, Fla., could serve the twq sentence,• concur· reoUy for defraudin.i Navy Lt. Cmdr. Davie CMey. Lona Jkfach, Calif •• of S$1,l60 on worthless Tuskegee, Ala. Industrial Develop- ment Board bond• and Navy Cm<lr. Robert Woods of $11$,000 on a 1imilar,1ecqritleS deaJ. ---~*~*~*•*•*~*~~~*•*•*•*•* ' m ~i~~=; ' All-PURPOSE HONEYCOMB CLOTHS INTERMATIC Time-All EXTRA A lfilim Place To Shop! , ' . . . . 12 OZ. CANS EA. • LOAF PAN !V214V211V.-':-"'o.::::;- ~ •LOAF PAN 9l/,x5 1/,x3Y•" ' " SQUARE CME PAN f:1· • BROWNIE BR BIS CUIT PAN • COOKIE SHEET -,. 1lY•x9l/4 1s,\"' EA. 'J. •COOKIE SHEET 15V.x !) lO V.1'\'4" • PIZ ZA PAN ~ • OBLONG CAKE PAN • 6 ' CUP MUFFC~.PAH • ~ ' • .. 1.19 EA. .s _F__,IX...--IN_'S_f_or....,..-Y_ou_r _ou_ti-=ng:.........''~~v SWln Premium -.. --·- TURNS LAMPS ON ••• TURNS PROWLERS OFF ... AUTOMATICALLY! ~j HEINtBBQ . COKE PAK.. • ., • 1l CUP MUFFIN PAN ' • ROAST I BAKE PAS • COOKIE SHEET · nv .. ., 11 Y2xl" -. GEA. ~:fi BOX OF 22 Wash , n Ori ... 4 \ MOIST DISPOSABLE ~~ ' TOWELETTES! WHITMAN'S Air Bons PUFFED CANDY Your Favor ite Flavors 1 6 DZ. "MAUI" Sandals Velvet straps 1n assorted colors for casual summe1 wear. (<Cg _--) PR.1.66 C'iJ¥":Q:nj SPrCIAL iilif; SUPER t 6 OR 6Y2 OZ. CAN Purina -~~ _ . ...........,. •'.P11ri n t • • .... 953 '' " fitl<ll• fl•"n! CAT'FOOD · ...... -- ' ::::; -,, Corned i ~:::-d BEEF Patio TRAYS • Of 6 CANS . • 11 1 07 oz . • . b1 CHEINCO Coloriul gingham design, 14x \ l/2" s11e . Slain resist- ant and durable ! DISPOSABLE -REU.SABLE CLEAR PLASTIC Glassware OLD FASHIONED 66C 9 oz. . PAK OF 10 ~;,.-MOREHOUSE 1~11 Mustard ' 10 l l. . . .. . ' c . ·. 2 69 9~~ oz. ~ i=i 13 OZ. 27C Spoons or . Forks HI BALL 66C PAK Of 16 14 oz. Ice Tea 77~ .. or Beer PLASTIC PAK Pok ol 15 ~:;~;pose 7 gc HEINZ "Polish Dill" SWIFT Premium Pickles 11 OZ. PREM .. ' . ! ' I 31 OZ. 59c 77c For a night out from the kitchen! •TURNER !6 W' •FORK 88 16'h " • BASTING BRUSH C 161(,'' • TO NGS 16" EA. PRINGLE 'S "Newfongled " NESTEA Iced Tea Potato MIX ... CHIPS ..... TWIN PACK Sugar l lemoR . flavored! 4Y, OZ. .:.~ 'I 10 ENVELOPES ' u.79c ~,· 1.39 CHINA FOAM PLASTIC All METAL Picnic Baskets Timely designs 1n 13 718 x7 718K9¥4"·siie. "WIC KER " or "DENIM'. 4 • 77 EA. r -"· :r;'~ Tableware ~:~·;"Ois,ouble wilh ··e ---STYROFOAM CUPS #' ...... .:____ ~-difference!" 9·· Plat· I fl_' : ter, Plain Plate or J --"=~=-·. Divoded Plate. PAK Of IO PAK ....___, BUll Off BUGS I Summer tun • means'oul · -.;.-:.._111" door fun! PAKS Of 2 60 WATT 100 WATT JOHNSON & JOMNSOI BAND~AIO.w.o PlASTtC STRIPS . • ' FAMILY PACK Of 60 -¥• INCH SIZE COLEMAN 30 QT. Ice Chest #5280 10.69 1 GAL JUG COLEMAN - Easy lo fill 4 98 and carry! "'5591 • For Hot ot' Cold Drinks! • 44c • 6 DZ. SIZE PAK Of 51 BIG 'sa QUART SIZE! Lighlweig ht and I . easy to handle but Iv •I •J . rugged for•eKlended _ ·•I_• . camping. 117~1 • ~ , .~ ' TU BORG \,, I l ' " Beer I ' ~ ·-- ' ., 11 OZ. CANS ' PAK OF 11 ~- llRAND SAVEl .10 Count Vasya • ~~~KA V..CAL 6. 79 MacKinnon's EXTRA LIGHT SAVE 1.40 8.48 SCOTCH Re1. 9.88 Y, CAL. KENTUCkY STRAIGHT SAVEJOc Reg. 8.69 ao-.RBON 7.99 Canadian Reserve· BLEl.IDED CANADIAN SAVE 1.1 1 :'~slSKY v, CAL· 8.84 .. ~-~ NATl.ONAL BRAND .LIQUORS Popa~· ~q~1;1• V2CAL. 8,99 'e·1ack rei·vei .. · · ; 8LEl!DED CANj\DIAN 11 '" ·~~··~~'CAL. ~·79 Scoresbv · ... ~1 sc'oTca 11 75 1/2 CAL. • •• ·.IM. flWIGTOH llACH __.,_ .... .., ...... ._.S, ........ , ......... ..., •• lfli I . ,t, I . • • - ! Hout publ dcor I seen I ond Kelli j ·-~ . ~ ·~;.:.: --"I Wi Pen li gh 411111 "' • !ll ,'\ '. .. ::: :_:,::::: "'P :;: ... : .. ' ~ ' Bills o.n Violence Proposed BICENTENNIAL MEETING SEI' A meet ing or ull residenls and 1ocul organizations or the Sa.d · dl eback Valley interested in plannin g l!Vcnt s for th l.' Amei'ican bi cente nni al is set ror 7:30p.m . ThL1rsday . SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI! -IC the Illinois Hou1e a:ets its 'WUY, it'll be obscene in lhe state to publish ''bloodthirs ty violence, t orture and deuraved brutality." At present, onl.Y expUclt sexual ucta are ob· scene in Illinois. 1'1 THINK IT'S TIME FOR society to reaffirm and set standards of decency," 1aid Rep. Richard Kelly, (D·Ea1t tlazel Crest}, the bill's sponsor. "Sometimes violent material <.•an be more ob· see e than pornograph .'' . ' Permanently curl ed, fea ther· tight and easy to wear. COTY Kelly said hl• bill ouUaw1 only close· up views or violence. · "I wanted to go beyond the scope or par no· grophy -there a re tOo many violent movies thut show detailed murders," he said. "It's like 'Te"as Chainsaw M a1sacre' that shows bloody violence.'' KELLY'S BILL, WHICH GOES TO the state Senate, outlaw1 a ny publication which describes "in a potently masochistic, sadistic, or bloodthirsty way the cutting, burning, &hooting or otherwise in- juring, maiming, or killing or the body of a person or animal .. " ' ' m~~r 1 ~-J AND The Gathel'ing, to be in the community room of People's federal Savings and Loan, El 1'oro, is parl of coo~ration "'ilh the U.S. Bil'entcnnial Coordinat· in g Com rnitt ee of Ora nge County. Gradually chariges gray hair to your naturdl !!! by NEEVIL looking c.oloi. Ge1 ·r1d ot all the ~ray . or lF Scui1 and stall\ re&i~tcint vinyl some of 111 r: :"5: covering 111 popular colors. i~i ~ · Quilted lining with lid ruff It! ';c'''':;:·::•:::;,~.:~~.·''.':~i:~~! j ~~" j:' Protect Your ffai.r from Heat Damage With l[[ i"!: 11~ ''Blow-Care'' ... ... !il I!! ... ' ' " ' .. tt ' :: MIRRO 7 -PIECE Cookwear Set ~ Si1k screen deco ration on polished aluminum. 9" lry- pan, 1 & 2 quart covered :::;~~ns afU! 7 a 8 4 8 qua rt dutch oven. • LADIES FOLDING SYRINGE "PERFECTION" - Jde<1I tor travel and vacation . . . complete with attractive carrying Case. 1.98 MEN'S & LADIES' Shoe Shapers 21/4 or. Pitcher THREE·POSITION COVER Stu1dy handle tor tdrryinp and pour111i.; . flame, chocutate or blue. ul. 11 Wednesday, May 21 . 1975 OAILVPILOT A9 Turtle· Ban Set WASl-IINGTON (UPI ). Citing thousunds of cases of severe illness and the threat of death, the Food and Drug Administration has banned the sale or pet turtles effective next month. The ban covers all live turtles with shells less than four io· ches in length, as well as· fertile turtle eggs. Turtles usL'tl fo r scientific, educational or e1'hibition purpos~s will be exempt, The ban, which affects the interstate s ale of turtle!;, will become effective 30 days after publi c .. tion, a date whi <.'h probably will fall sometime next month. FDA Commissioner Alexander M. Schmidt s aid Tuesday that "Turtles continue to be a significant carrier of pathogeni c or· ganisms, particula rly affecting s mall children." ' - . MARVAtON SIGNATURE Garden Hose ~SPECIAL 1.19 1.19 Shower "Kaddy" · by GRAYLINE -Stet:1 ht1m·: with white vinyl coating. Hi!ngs over the t.hower head with your 1 39 ~tlr.iwering nctd~! • r · '" ·:. Shelf & Drawer .. "'·''"""'"::,"""··'"""""'""'''"'"" "'"'"'""""'"'"'"'""'"·" I lining Choo~e l!um l'O'~ 131 ~·· shelv1n)'. 1~·x~o' dri1wcr l1nint ur ~}",.; lif' adhesive l1n1ng. • Oecor.ilor 1..olor. comb1na\10n~! ul.19 jj! POLAROID Super Shooter ,~ ; , !!! LAND CAMERA . MiJ ! v~11sat1lt! color H~ pdtf e~e1 ol!crcd! Six 111 d1llcrent ~rnds of 1n.~l<1nt ii! pictures horn ne;v Pul,1 ii1 color ~ ·10 1nexpcn111ve !!l black and while t.Qu.irc ::: pictures !Ii 19.88 . Polacolor 2 F411.6M6 i: ' "' TYPE108 -8EXP. • H iii:::;;;;;;:;;j;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;; :::::;;;;;;:::;:;:;:;;;;;;;:::::::::::11 ~ ·~~ '5'~ SPECIAL bmB GELUSIL APACHE MONO Line · ~ M;s1 blue color ... 4 to.40 lb, test BBC YOUR CHOICE I ';;;;:=c:==~ c __,. C:: :::2 C:::::~ C: ~ C:::. :=::J1 ,~ TOH MACH +J I ........... 1t-Sfwl"njJl'1_A l6ipr • • N1t1ral Lec ithin, Kelp, Ci•cr Yi111egar plus Vila- "''" 8·6, ANTACID TABLETS Wednesday. May21.1975 '-II JQ DAILY PILOT • . Montage I -Panels Over the Hill? I Winner Supervisors Take Streamlining Action Picked SANTA ANA ~A pen and ink m ontoge depict- ing modern O r an ge County h as won for Edison High School sophomore J\.tike Hall top hon.on i_n county govern- ment's bicentennial a1·t contest. Hall's rendering will be printed on the cover of all the county's bud&et books for the next fiscal year. The 1-lunlingt.on Beach student also re- ceived a $50 first prize. un engraved "Honored Citizen '' c ard and a certificate of m Crit. Two other Orange Coast students, Dee Dee Challis and Pamela Neil of Laguna Beach High School, plu ccd fourth and fifth in the competi- tion with more than 40 o ther s tudents from county high schools. Second place, which took a $25 prize and the honored citizens card, went to Jose Vasquez, a student at the J opli n Boys Ranch high school in Trabuco Canyon. Paul Smith of Tustin High School placed third. The cont es t \Ya s s ponsored by the county Department. of Educa- tion and the county Ad · minislrative Office. Prize money y,•as donat· ed by private bu s i- ORANGE COUNTY 2 School Measures Top .Field SANTA ANA Two school election issues have reC'orded the top numbers of registered voters of the eight elec- tions due -to-take place May 27 d'fO Un d the (.'Ounty. I By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of,,.,. 0•11, P'ii.tat." SANTA ANA ...-Orange County Supervisors ha"'ve laktn steps toward streamlin ing their bulky system of boards, commiisi;ions and committees. Thty adopted a series or policy guidelines Tueiday proposed by Counly Administrative Officer Robert Thom us that. would stan- dardlte the method of creating s uch panels a nd how they would bc"expected lo operate. But they backed away from another Thomas suggestion t.hat all members or such panels Who 1 don't already receive some pay- ment for their services under 0th.er statutes be paid a flat $20 per month. SUPERVISORSTOLDtheCA:O ihey ·would make Such a policy determin ation during budget hearings in mid-June. Thomas ' report grew out o{ rin.- dings several manlhs ago by the caunly Cilizens Direction Find-· ing Com mission (CD°FC) l hal county government st.i ll had In the Garden Grove-more than 80 committees, boards Un ified School District, and commissions in its active ' where the issue is files. · · whether or not lo link up The CDFC claimed many of wilh the Coast Communi-; the panels had outlived their "tyCollegeDistrict,there u s efu lness , but we re n o t are 62 ,400 r egi s tered abolished because the county ~ad voters, according lo In -no form al procedures far doing t erim Regt§:tr ar or so. ' Voters, !\·l .J . !\layer. Jn his re port, Thomas told And the Ne\\'port·!\lesa Unified Distri ct h as 58,219 voters eligible· lo cas t ballots on a pro· posed tax override. supervisors his office agreed "·ith most. of the CDFC findings. Ill-~ S AID T ll ERE are a number of commissions and nessmen. -•••nt•1•~'""'"' ... ,.,..,..,~--•1m11•1 ..... u~MQ•1l..,:1111~••1~a""'w""'*'.!ti°"t,.r I Other Deaths MALPRACTICE FORUM SET olher cillzens panels set up in ·past y~ars that could beellminat· ed and there are others that could be pul on police. The istandardlzed procedures for tt_eatlon of such panels would se( m..\ndalory cxpiraU<>n dates. Thomas explalried his $20·per· month payll\ent to all panel members now workipg araUs was aimed at improving the caliber of commission represen- tation and improving meeting at- tendance. THE MONEY would be in- tended for use as reimbursement for milease to and from meetings ·and other small expenses. Th9 recommendations ap- proved by supervisors provide for preparation or a published roster of sueh panels and t heir members for use ~y lhe public and creation of a const antly up· dated lile on each panel by the cle rk Of the boar<! of supervisors. SupervisQrs Spurn DA's Bid for Grant SANTA Ari A -Orange County Supervisors: have refused lo permit the ·District Attorney lo seek a $359,90f?,fedf:ral gr~n~ t~ s~~ up a program aimed al putting so·called career cnm1nals back behind bars soon after their latest of(cnse. The board T~esday balked at a pproving the grant application two weeks ago because it was for too long a term -three years. The proj)Osal was revised to make il a one· year fund request. BUT THIS WEEK, a ll board members except Supervisor Ralph Clark chose ilot to support the program at all. Clark said he would have backed the program with the proviso thal it wouldn 't commit the county lo continuing its funding after the grant runs out. The program , whi<.·h \Vas being sought by the district at- torney and the public defender, would h ave created two.new posi· lions in each office to expedite lrials of so·called career criminals. Several supervisors protested, claiming it would be a waste of money to hire new DA's to prosecute the cases and new def en· ders lo fight them .. JACKSONV ILLE, Fla. who founded the 60- CUPI ) -An oxygen fl ash member sect eight years fire Tuesday killed the ago . was b ein g ad · ailing 6l ·year-o ld ministered oxygen s he found er of the Universal had been receiving in re· Church of Ontology and cent months, d"ue lo a one of her minister-heart condition when the disciples. Fire offi cials bottle exploded. burning said Do rothy Brown, hertodealh. SU PERVISOR ROBE RT Battin was the most vitriolic in his ORANGE -Offi cials' al St. criticism of the proposal, cl(li ming it would "only give new titles Joseph J.lo s pital here have and fatter salaries to a few deputy district attornies and public s ched ul ed a special for,µm defenders." tonight on the m edical malpruc-lice insurance crisis. He said he opposed the program on the grounds it did nothing It is set for 7 : JO p.m. in the la attack the root of crime. · · Lovola !\il ary mounl Auditorium . Supervisor Thomas Riley offered the fu rther argument that Ba.ta via Street and L.a Vela cration of such a prosecutian·defens e team wou ld only put more • Married pe~ons over twenty.five Twenty-one year old .li!!~e males NinJteen year old single males .. LOW COST AUTO INSURANCE 184 * annually 1 1~* annually 1154*'annually jh.iH tllM 1kldenh only) •wifti ,.M drl•ins '9<0ld BOB PALEY and Associates Inc. Sovth Orang• County 642 .. 6500 Phone: North O•ange County 546-3205 ANNOUNCEMENT WESTERN ST~TE UNIVERSITY • COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY CALlfORHIA'S LARGEST LAW SCHOOL fUUY ACCllOlftD I Y THf COMMITTfl Of 1M IXAMINlH Of ~ StATl IAI Of CAUfOINIA OFFERS A CHOICE OF FOUR PROGRAMS Of LAW STUDY: • 1N llTHll 2 'II •• 3 n.r.as or fVll-tlMi l•w 1tvdt [15·16 cl1111oom hovri pet week!. 01 · e IN llTMil JI/, •t .. YIAIS of ,AIT·TIMf d1y .• _..,.~, or weekt..d l1w 1t..,dy (3 d1nt1 p<1r wffl\, 3·• hovr1 per d111). e You ,,., 1er11 your IUllS DOCTOl !J.0.1 1k91tt an.d .,._ ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION WllTl 01 'NONI FOi CATALOOUI 1111 N. St•le College Blvd. lt("!"!l"!'"i'd Fullerton, CA 92631 17141993-7600 FALL SEMESTER BEGINS AUGUST 28, 1975 ALL f ROGRAUS ALSO START IN JANUARY,,,, STUOfHT1 IUOllll fOI FIOllAllY IMWUD STVOl:Mf lOANI ...,,.OVIO fOI VITEIAN'S Avenue, Orange The publi(' is in· pre_ss ure on 'tbe coun.ty anc't "Its ·taxpayers ~a hire new judges and -----~D~.,-a-th~N-0-11-.,.,-.------vi2ted.5 7 ,0 00 Seruth:irOaurenSdantl'.s;.tHa~r~u"~·H~T~l~H~G~T~O~H~----::;iiiiiiimmmiiiii~!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ J£iltMY fn•t·O Club 01 H...,U,.g!on ~.ac ll, I ,t,O,t, M. JEAMV. •e\hMl'll ol ~ mtmtter of SI. $.;mon I. Jude Cl'IUrt" Be•tl't, Cl. D~lt of de•lh M•r 19, 191~. !oe<,.l(f\: Rowrr 1:l0 PM F"dlJ, Mllr 5.unoivtd tty lwr llu\t.al'ld Wiiii...,; ~\· JJ •I SI. Simo" L Jude Churtll. lOlh L 1£ACH -t' * ..._ OAAMGE COUMTY PUILIC SCHOOLS" '""· Mr\. _, Tr.om p~n ol Et19I-Or•,_ s.1, ttu11111191on 8e1ch, C• Miii\ UMIOM HtGH SCHOOL ..._ ...,.-.i... .wld Mr\. Jl\\•f V•llo•IS of Cert\. C.., 10·00 AM S..l utO~J . S.I. S•mon a. J..-G F Rid M ...,,,..,.,1 nofte\"nd""pr1t•~.1N..-••I C llut c " lnt erme111 All Soul\ t ' es a..of'65w•IM......,. * *· wrwic11w1ll bel't•ld on lnun.d•J.-Y CH•>elery, Lon'il Be•th (1 5.motn~· e ree 10 W"· Clesl ,..,.... ..... 22. •I 2:00 PM , Ne1 11 httor ho<10 ~tlu••y.S•recto•~ tfti. For Wo. wWh t• c-. ~ Con<1Jrt9•Tion1I Churth, Lill'""" Bt.Ktt. Y,t,ND£111: l(LOOT ~ * Pr ivile ;.,u<n mt .,t . Par.od11e JO HNA YAN OER l(LOOl ,,~~·oenl '65 C/• lay McHl'il, P.O. Jtrm" w'"' at hvl ,., Ll gu,... IW..:h O•lt<tlotal!'IM aYXI. 1•15 Survo,,..OllY . 0 0 Th d · l f074Z -, .. loy M<-T L• ... n8o wll"'l1 Cruo.1,.1.euo111°""",.,· ""wile l(•t"•"ne. <1•119111e•. M•' than 257 .00 r..enge e ex pen I ure - BEST ART ALL THIS WEEK eemeiery, P•rMli ..... c•11•o•nl• Mr,."" Eme•11a a•v. L•11un• ee.o(.ll, c.. SANTA Al'\/\ -!\.'lore November ... >o4. s.....1 h•ll. ca ~ w 5oufh (ioaSf ·?taz.a <1an11 1an' m•v oe m1<1 .. ,., T,., c.n1ue Mille• o• ta' "'"'ii"'"'· 111'"' County senior citize ns amounts to payment of; 14'-4501 -A• Artlill.,._ N•ll!htt<t•,._ cong••ll•hon•1 etturc n 11•"1Mkhildre.,, De ooranLiRh•er. ll•e 11 l k . d -t· f th 25 cents per rt"der . 1¥•=•= .. ~J=l~fl;;·;;;;:;;::;;::;;::;;::;;:~~-~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~-~ Slwllet L•11u11• 8e•t h Mottu .. yd.,IK· L Mlli.t and J Mkh•el Mitltt. ~II ol 00 ;.I vµn age 0 e 1or,. Lo,Ar>gele' C• Service' wt111>e twi1.i f1-ee ride program on The la t est ridership TAT£ lll1.r.a•v May22 11:lOAM.S.I Mil•Y'~ I l ··t b 1 r· ho the serv1·ce CH,t,ALESTHOM•STAl E ,•e~lot"I EPl\COPlic11urch:L•11u .... Bea<:fl,Rf\f coun y r;;tnSl uses o~er 1gures s w ' ' I I I I of Founl•I" v.u,,, ca . D••t at a..•tn Jo11n Rarmond ot 1u1are, ca. 011 .<1.in1 the three months end1nE; is increasing in populari· May''· !tit. Survlveo DY hh daUQl'tle<, l"lt<me"I F•lrh•vt" Mema<••1 Per\ April JO ty, rising from 81.200 iTT Eldor• Cerulli; ""d lrlend, Oo•ofllyM, S.nt• Anil, C.o Sl'le~le< L•gu,.. St.acn , , M•,c••en•. se •••ce• w••1 w Mid M<tr1u••,o•recro•• fhe count) Board of February to )USl over 11>u<l.d•v. M•r 11 •• io:lO •M. PHI< LE ICHEilt Supervisors has agreed 90.900 in April. F•mllJ ColO.,i•I funer •I Horne .n JOHN EMILE LEI CHER <f~odol.,l ol . . . h r· h We11m1n,te•.C•. C<tron•ot1 Ma•. c•. D•'" o• oe11nM.o, to pay the transit d1stncl During t e 1rst t ree GIFFOlll:D 11.1915.Su•v••,eob,,.;,1.,,,,,r Jottne $64 ,400 t o cover the months, a total of234.000 PE,t,RLE E. (;IF FORD, re\ldt"f!1 ol Le.tile• at M••n'I•, Flo••dd '"<.>thl:• d h h f d h f Hunh.,<Jlon lk•tn. c •. o.i1e ot a..••" Mr• c.A uo•n• w111o""'' 01 ea•""" secon l ree monl s o people u se t e ree ,.,,., 10. '''i •• O••"'il' Med ic.ti ae1M11.•i•te r,E•enaFett•••o•co•ta the fare cantraC'l that buses at a cost to the Complt•l.,Orin9e C• BarnMay ??.Me'" gr•ndmol he< SOPh•• · t • I l f$58500 1•1 tn Pt11.,1rl••";~ S.urvove<l l>J Mr ~fl>r•i.ote 01 CO•I• Me••. ,.,tee, y,.,.,1 Went lnlO Ope r a !Oh as COUnty 0 , """'· Ft•l'lt•I O. (r lllO<d a t Hunh"91on Fe<r•til ot Co•ti Me •a Mll1tary li••··---------------;;•1 Be.acll, Robert E. Crotlord al Wllo the" q••vt~•<lt ...,,.,te\ w•ll be ""ldilt 11 00 Lt••• v (,Uto•d ol H""''"910l't !W.Kfl. """"lflu•l.d•Y. P•C•llC View Me..-•• ! Jo•eah w. C.1llor d ol Hunllnglott P•r~. New1><1•I Be•cll. Cil P•<ohc Votw Be•cn: d•uvMer, M••Y Cr. R•n-11 ol MOrtuiHJd1tec1or• Or•nve; 111r ... '''''''· M•r tll• M<"""' O,t,M,t, BRUSH_, BLOWER SCISSOR STYLES o!C...1•"9•,C...,Ann•B<t"'tro!Mon-DAN IELLE DANA . a11e l+we , O! teDtllo, c. .. Elita Dt ll'I SPt,.<t• ol ~I· '"'""·Ca. Oale ot dei!lll M•J ''· 1915 10.ld, Pen.,.; O•Oll'ttt•. Ch•rle' ,t,111"e SUrv ovtd Dr ""'' p1re.,I•, Lee •no ol (l••C'ndO". Pe11n,, S.omon Jo ll•lft ol 5.Jmuel Oa"a : br'11nto •, Sleven 0...n• OI B•O S.od. ,, ... ,: twel•e 0•11\d<;hlldrffl S.n i:temenle: "stet, S.u••n Kn1gn1 ot •nd eigl'tleel'I gr e•l·'il<•n dCllold«!n H•wtnorne; pa ltrnill gr•nOrn:>lh1rt. ""''· (.lft oro w1•, • ""'mbet ol Tl'tt Aothelle D•n• al L<t\ Angel e•; (•lhO!lt D•ughl e<\. Tfle St.,l<tr m.o1ern1I 9<•nd11•renh, Mr & Mf• C•liten' ol HU<1U,.Qto11 Be•tll •1111 lllf W•ll t• E. Sc nnel der ol Fla<iO•, HOW TO DO THEM STEP BY STEP Anyone can ca re for a Brush & Blower hair s1v1e or our ot her cu rl ca1ollng fu ss-free lull lunctional • SCISSOR STYLES which are as easy 10 do as 1us1 sham· ooo• Our ·1amp cuts. linger 1umble cuts. curli ng ,iron cuts . .vash towel dry . t><ush n !lull cuts or simple wash and wear cut s are SCISSOllO, all take-care-o f·yoursell styles. Good far any age, any hair, No teasing. no rollers. no pins. no POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS. 1.4.LTI-llEl&IElOH fVHEl.4.L HOME Corona del Mar 673·9450 Cosla Mesa . 646-2424 llUIRO.ADW.4.Y MOITUAIT 11 0 Broadway , Costa Mesa 64 2-91 50 McCOIMICk MOITUAlY .-ifaouna Beach 494·941 5 San Juan Capistrano 4'95-1 776 PACIFIC VIEW MlMOll.4.l P.4.lk Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac ifi c View Drive Newp0 rt Beach, California 644-2700 PllK ,AMILY COLOHl.4.l FUHll.4.l HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave. Weslminste r 893-3525 $MITH5' MOITU.4.IY 627 Main St. Hu nhngton Beach 531>-6539 P UBLIC NOTICE P'ICTI TtOUS IUSIMISS NAMISTAT•MEMT T"-fol .... 1,... PtrMn 11 dohog ttu.i· ....... : NEP'TUHE DIVIN G CO . 1)0 f"WtlnAw •• NO, c. N••OO'I 8ekll. CA, -. .Mltnffl I . Cro'"""ll, 107 A~. ,,.,....,,, San,,,,,.,.,,,'"'·,,,,. Tiii• lllutlMSI I• COfldll( llCI Oy .., I,., ...... ,. Mltllof1I E. Ctomw•ll ,.., ... 1 ..... 111 ..... tiled with ""' C..-'(Otr11 OfO•llltt CeuMt Oft ...,., 16. 1•7L """ '°'*hl1911 ()1'111 .. Ce•H 0.llJ Piiot, ""tY ZJ• ,,..l'ldJ-1. II, tt1J 11US.1S • S..•w•<t• ... 11 be ne1d Tflu•>d•r. Mar 11. 1;00 PM P•<•liC Vie w Ch•~!, Rew. Br..c:e A. l(urr lt olliti•nr. ln1erment, P•tilit view Men1o•i•! Pil•l . Newpafl llf•cfl. C•. In lieu Ol llOwer• lht l•mll y '~~Ii conttibul•Otl~ be m•de to HO.OO Mtrnc:u1•1 ~osp11a 1 t /O Tl\f ~velap. ment Depart ment In memor ~ of O•n1e,le Oan1. Pat1 !•t Voe,.. Mo•lu••v AL,0, WO \If ,llMAMl!olf W•YI~ YOU MA1° .. YH WAl'O TO SIT TOUI MAlll ........... GOA M,t,"4 OPEN JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING S •M · IOpMSAT.&SliH.t ·S 356S Tus11n Ave . Ora nge 9564 Ham ilton Ave . Huntington Beach 305 N . Harbor Blvd .. Fullerton !LOCA lEO AT ltiE f ASCINA TING MILLA OCL SQl.1 997.1 ltl 961-JSJS 179-ll'l RD~E a . CrOAMA N. Dale cl dea tn M.oy 20, 191S. l1.t~11Se,.1 ol (a•ld Mew. C,,. S.u••••ed bJ two •O"I. R•c,.1roct L~ A!1m1 !0• ~na Edward ot Co~la INM, Ca.; ln•te dau9nre1-. M••lne Petr•ull ol Co~lil Me,d, Ro:l<!mary 8r~~ a! ,t,naMlm •nd Btt!y M. 0•11ood al In· ai...,..; 0101no!r, Freo "'"''ot P•!oaOtB41 ;1 ~~'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ e•g"I <;1••,.dchlld1en ;ond one o;•t•t I· lgrlnd<.l'llld, Ser· .. ict\ .. ill be held Tnuri.· d•Y 11 ·00 ,t,M 8ell 8ro•c!w•J Mo•l u¥J Ch.ape!, Aev Wolli•m .Ac Ion ollko•n t · 1,.u•......,nl. Faothi'"e" Memo«a1 P••~. S'"'" An•. C•. 6elt Bro .. ow.iv Mo•luatyOlfeC\O•'- Today more lh•n ever • .• 11111 lhe best buy LEARN INTERIOR DECORATING At Our New Newport Beach Location lmllOR DISIGMJIS GIJD is the leader in conducting an interior des ign school BECOME AN INTERIOR DECORATOR We offer a .short term course Or a year course with an associate in arts degree CALL NOW 640-0500 The DAILY PILOT lse~rsl TRUST SEARS TO HELP YOU WITH YOUR HEARING A RETA IL TURN OF THE CENTURY VILLAGE ADJACENT TO, THE FESTIVAL 0F ART$'1'.;ROUNDS OPENING JUNE, l975 ....... ,,~~'11!!~(1-,~ Some prime space a vailable PROBLEMS! 1~~~580~B:R:O:A:DW~AY:, :LA:G:U:N:A:B:E:A:C:H:, C:A:L:IF:O:RN:l:A:·:7:14:4:94:-7:9:15~~~ Hear less than you· used to? Don't worry needlessly. You can trus t Sears to help you . Come in . A caref ully tra ined Sears hearing aid consultant w ill ar- range a te s t. If a medical problem is indicated, he'll rec- ommend that you see your doctor. If a hearing aid wi ll help, t here's most likely, one fro m our w ide range of scientifical- ly designed and en- Qi neered models that may be just right for you. SEARS ALSO SERVICES AU MAKES OF HEARING AIDS ..... , ... ,,,,,,, ."if>llr"JI t :o111·,.,,;,.,,, (;,.,.,Iii l'f1111• l1f'•ring Aid• Arc A'"ai lable al lhc Followin~ Se•r• Stor~• Al••,..br• 1-. "-•C' .. "•'"" r.,... ~t1nhrkl•" c.".,... p.,... r ... Jt"• l"A!rritw "'-II RIMP..• t:o•pt-t.,·".... P-· El •-•• ~.-. tMtt GMM•lt '11 .. lnal•"'-' Tt1N"•ftce ..... "... v ... , .. , •. .,. .... 1".'''" Your Tax Rebate is worth more at Singer' seo of your taxrebate is worth s120 at Singer TOUCH & SEW· machine Reg.price '389.95 your lax rebale 60.00 'Less Singer discounl 6000 Balance •269.95 and even less wit h your trade· in! Carrying case or cabinet ex tra . •35 of your tax rebate is worth'70 .. -a , (3ENIE ' PORTABLE machi'le Reg price S199.95 ~l ax rebale 35.00 'Less Singerdiscoun l 35.00 Balance '129.95. and even less with your trade -In! Glide·on case included SE WING COURSE for Young People.Ages 10· 19. Only 98'hr. Eight 2% hr.lessons,$17.50. SINGER Sewing Ct11tei1 tnd per t•c1pa111.,9 App1CM!d Oeat~t tOl1<ou.,1 •oOll91 wll llo11t r•b•l•i ell•• •PPlk.1ttl1 only 011m•cn111cn 1drt•hM'll. «I. l •fdtOl,,l 11'1 hi( ''""lit <:OM, ANY I • I • >' • , • • I I I , I I I ·-. • . ' • ' ~· • >' • 1 DAIL y PILOT A J l " ( .. .:•. .. "'Whal r.eotly upsets hjm is that it woi his Father who did all the drinking." . K eepi11g 'l'trb." Vote Listed On Sex, Etc . 8y0.C.11USTINGS . ol tlw O..Ur Pllet ~Wff Here's how Orange County•S lawmakers in Sacramento h ave been voting lately: POT: SB.95 by state Senator George Moscone <D·San Francisco) would drastically r educe the .penalties ror p-Ossession of small amounts or m a ri · juana. It was defeated 37 ·36 on the Assembly fl oor . with all six Orange County assemblymen voting against it. . That includes Republi.<'ans Robert Badham of Newport Beach, J ohn Briggs of Fullerton, Robert Burke of Huntin gton Beact) and Bruce Nestande or Anaheim , plus Democrats Paul Carpenter of Garden Grove and Richard Robinson of Santa Ana.· However. the Assembly has since passed on a 41 -24 vote a motion to reconsider the Moscone m &ri - juana bill. t Badham, Briggs, Burke and Robinson all voted ' ~RTS • N ORTJtRIDGI! • e .WESTWOOD J"HURSDAY AT ·rHese 10 sT0Res1 . e DEL AMO e LAKEWOOD e WILSHIRE e NEWPORT e 7th STREET e WE.STMINSTER MEN'S SAVINGS • e CREN sHAW e SANTA ANA Were 125.00 to 165.00 90 Fine ly tailored suits in so lid s and patterns. 'against r econsideration., Carpenter and Nestande '-::========================================================: didn't record votes on lhe"motion. ! ,... I I • • • SEX: AB 489 by Assemblyman .Willie Brown (0-San Francisco) legalizes cerlain sexual acls by consenting adults in private. It passed both houses and has been signed by Governor Brow n. The only Orange County assemblyman to vote for .it was Garden Grove De mocrat Carpenter. All of the other five cast "no" votes. As11emb lym an Briggs has said he will .introduce legislation designed to·overturn the meas ure. . , ~ . . . OIL: AB 177 by Assembly man William Lockyer CD-San Leandro) eliminates the 22 percent oil depletion allowance for all but the smallest petrol~m prod\,lcers. It passed both houses and has been signed by Governor Brown . Orange County Assemblymen Carpenter and Robinson, both Democrats._ voted for the bfll. as did RepUbliC3n Nes ta·nde. GO'P · W,."sernblymen Badham , Briggs and Burke all opposed. On the Senate side, James Whetmore <R · Fullerton) voted against the Lockyer bill. -oennis Carpenter (R·Newport Beach ) was not recorded as voting whe n the Senate passed the bill on a 30·9 vote. • • • BINGO : AB 144 by Assemblyman Leroy Greene (D·Sacramento would permit nonp!o£it bingo games for charitable organizations ir a pro· posed constitutional amendment legaliz~ some forms or·bingo is approved by voters. ~~was sent to the Senate on a 41 ·26 vote in the Assembly. The bill got the s upport or Orange Coun- ty Assemblymen.Carpenter, Briggs and Nestande. Assemblymen Badha m and Burke voted against it. Assemblyman Robinson didn't vote. • • • DISCRIM INATION : AB 744 by Assemblyman Howard BermBn ID·Beverly Hills> would a dd a provision to the Rumford Fair Housing Act pro- hibiting discrimina tion by landlords on the grounds that a prospective tenant is a stude nt. Jt was sent to the Senate on a 41 ·26 Assembly rloor v ot e. Oran ge Count y Assemb ly men Carpenter, the Garden Grove Democrat, a nd Nestande. the Ana heim Republican, voted Cor the bill. GOP Assemblymen Badham , Briggs a nd Burke voled against it. Democ rat Robinson didn't vote. $10,300 'Sunk' In New Study WESTMINSTER -struct~ral repairs have Another $10,300 will be been <ton e and several spent on study and ex· courtrooms have been perimentati·on be fore closed down because or »DY actual restoration severe cracking in sup· work° is performed on lhe port beams due to the West Orange County sinking. Co\Jrlhc;>us.e, .wh ich is Building S e rvices slowly s1nk1ng into an old Director Joseph Smisek peat,bog. said in his rep(Jft that ln- The ~ounly Bc;>ard of iti31 attempts to stabilize Superv1~ors decided to the building seem 'to be move i n to a second k' phase of analysis after, wor ing. ' Famous Nam e DRESS _ SHIRTS .. Were 125.00 90 Solid co lor suit with coo rd inating check slacks • Most Famous Maker JEANS Denim s an d Hopsacks · Re g.13.00 to 15.00 799 . Lon g and short slee ves 599 9.00 ~l~dalues 699 Reg.11.00 599 • MEN'S SLACKS Dress slack styling in assorted fabrics Were 35.00 15.90 Califor'nia Maker MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Assorted stYles and Fabrics Regularly 16.00 to 18.00 • . 8.99 MEN'S SPORTCOATS Were 65.00 to I GO.OD 29.90 and 49.90 MEf)l'S SWIMWEAR Solids and Pat terns 11 .00 to 14.00 Values 5.99 Famous Name Europea n Fitted DRESS SHIRTS Values to 13.50 8.99 Famous Name WALKING SHORTS 10 .00 and 11.00 Values 4.99 Famous Name SPORT SHIRTS Solid Colors Poly/cotton Blends Regularly 8 .00 4.99 Arnel Velour KIMONA ROBE Great Gi ft f or Dad! One·Size-Fits-AI I Reg. 27.50 13.99 BOSTONIAN BOSTONIANS PIERRE CARDIN FOOTSAVERS Wh iteTa ssre Slip-ons All-Leather Half Boots Patent Two-tqnes 24.99 24.99 34.99 Re g. 38.00 Reg. 50.00 Reg. 50.00 WOMEN'S SAVINGS ' Easy-care Print Poly k nit Poly Knit SPORTSWEAR 2 and 3 Piece SHORT SLEEVE JAMAICA PANTS CO-ORDINATES PANTSUITS SHORTS BLOUSES Asso rted Sol ids Pan ts, Jacket s, Sh irt s, Assorted Styles ' and Ski rts in summer solids and Patterns and Fabrics Re~. 14.00 Reg. 11'.oo Reg. 20.00 to 24.00 Reg. 16.00 to 42.0ci 6.99 6.99 11 .99 1/3 OFF 17.99 to 29.99 , being told in a ~e~rt. HE SAID ce.rrlent was' from ~he count~ Building pumped into the )oose '::==========~======:;--;:======-..:::;::=========:'....'.===;-;:=======--===========: Services D e partment nd .1 ·i t ,... that any repair work will u ergroun'!' soi s MIC· be "risky" al be!!lt. t~r.e a~ound a re~ or the p1l1ngs atop which lhe T HE A DDITI ONAL court was built seven funds will pay ror the y~ars , ago. From. all in: · r h Wh I d1catlons, he said, the services o l e ee er tesl plllngs have stopped and Gray Company, a · k' r th ti be •roup or prores!!lional ~in ang or e me • 1truclural e ngineers who ing. will be assigned the job 8\Jt S misek warned of determining how best supervlsorJ.'that'such re· to undertake the job that paTr work fs a ''calculat· could cost rnorc than ed rlSk'' and ,the resulu $500.000. . may not be known for Supervisors .were told certain unUI many years a DUD\bef O( temporary later. ~ I SUMMER -HANDBAGS Were 17 .00 to 26.00 13.99 BRUNCH COATS Asso rted Prints Reg. 12.00 7.99 SHIFT GOWNS Pr ints: Reg. 8.00 4.99 Crepset1! So l ids: Reg. S 00 5.99 . CHARGE IT! USE YOUR DESMOND'S CHARGE CARD, MASTER CHARGE, BANKAMERICARD & AMERICAN EXPRESS. Entire stock not lncl.Uded. All items subject to ,prior sale. Sorf'Y., no mail -or phone orders. .. 'j . ' Alt OAILYP1LOT Wednildey, Maz 21. 1975 Pieo Pond San Cle mente soon will l1ave high-quality efflu ent produced at city 's Avenida Pico sewage treatment facility. City is con- structing holding basin in which effluent will be stored Prior to being pumped for irrigation al municipal goU course and Camp Pendleton. Effluent, as clear as drinking water, is odorless. Nudity on the March Officials Thumbing Through Lawbooks By United J>ress International Naked s urfers a nd s un ,,·orshipers by the thousands are frolickin g along American beaches this year. Their raw pre- sence has n1a ny a local official· thumbing la\\•books. Skinny-dippers already have been "·aved off many beaches, but at others from Florida to California the sun·lan-all-ovcr set is flouris hing. Venice, l\falibu, Point Dume, Zuma Beach, a nd possibly 50 other locations a lo11g the Coast. ( NEWSANALYSIS J PROBABLY THE most widely used beach is a 900-fool stretch of sand in north San Diego, which s wi.m.ming . A _roar fro.m the City Council has designated fe~1.n1 s t_s, ch1:1rg 1n g sex d1 s- "swimsuit optional." Up to 6,000 cr1mu~at1_on , failed to budge the nude bathers use the beach daily, comm1_ss1on, but the controversy. and the "Nude Beaches Conimhf, .J1as .s 1~m ~red_. Topless s un tee" is urging that the option at"" bathing 1s still evident. zone be t:x tended by 2,300 feet. · · Also in Florida, a section or Key C1\PE CO D'S secluded Truro T~e biggest breakt~rough f?r Biscayne has been a havenforlhe Bea('h is one popular spot for nudists may come lhts year 1n naked for a num her of years on an nude bathers. But this1 year, jus t .. New York state. isolated section of Crandon before the s wimming season _The case involves 25·year-old Beach. began, a nervous National Park Dian Hardy who was arrested on Service banned nudity at Cape a Long Island beach five years Cod Nation al Seashore. ago for sunning in the nude. She Laguna Beach only recently was convie'ted of public lewdness enacted an emergency nudity and fined $100. lav.·. In Los Angeles, increased pre- ssure from skinny-dippers last year to open portions of Veni('e beach to nudists forced a heated d ebate in the City Co unc iJ ,. Despite a strong pronudist lobby· -including one man who showed up naked in council cha mbers - the coun ('il banned nude sun- bathing. Despite the Los Angeles ban1 nudity marc hes on at numerous California beach~s . including Capistrano Eyes Transit Panel Aides Those interested in untangling San J uan Capistr ano's traffic problems are invited to submit applications for a vacancy on the cily's Traffic and Transportation Committee. The vacancy was created last month with the resignation of Kenneth B. Crosby from the seven-member advisory panel. l\.1embers of the committee meet on the first Tuesday ni ght of each month and serve without pay. Applica nts should be residents of San Juan Capistrano, have ex- pertise in traffic and transporta- tion, or preferably both. accord- ing to Adm inistrative Services Director John O'Sulliv3.n. ~ · Application forms are availa- ble from San Juan Capistrano Ci- ty Hell , 32400 Pasco Adelanto. Resumes also will be accepted al that address. S11u1u1e1· St11d11 LAST MAY, however, a slate appeals court overturned the conviCtion, s aying "lewdness can not be presumed for the mere fact of nudity. There must be. a s howing of le wd conduct." · The ruling leaves prosecutors in a qua ndry. Suffolk County assistant Dis- trict Attorney Ronald Llpetzsfys each case of publi c nudity tlo\v· \Vi ii be treat ed on individual merits. "If it involves a person who is just lyi ng on the beach, then 1 'd, say we had a very, very weak case." he said. "But if really lewd conduct is involved -ob- scene . actions -then a charge could properly be drawn . ., THE NEW WAVE of nudism is far rrom the old image of secluded camps, high fences and endless rounds of volleyball. Today's nudity buff can be found just around the nearest sand dune. South of San Francisco, Santa Cruz Cou nty officials -an- ticipating a rash or nakedness - passed a n antinudity ordinance last fall a ffecting all county.land on the coast. The On ly location excepted is a cold, 'vindr. and almost inac· cessible spot. TllE SANTA CRUZ b a n, however, is on ly against remov· ing the bottoms of hathing suits -not tops. The county attorney has advised that a ban against women swimming topless -but not men -would amount to sex di scrimination. The san\e problem s urfaced last year al Cocoa Beach, Fla., ,.,..hen the city refused to set asUte a section of the beach for top_le&s A FUROR developed last year "''hen nature groups and schools began touring the jungle beach to study its flora and fauna, and found naked sunbathers. This spring, poli ce raided the beach and ch arged 10 persons with indecent exposure. But the Dade County Commission, which operates the park on the is land, has refu sed to ta ke a stand. · Near Austin, T-ex ., home or the University of Texas. s kinny- dippers and Texas law have been at odds for several years over a sunbathing spot known as Hippie Hollow. Now both sides have ap- parently reached a truce. "WE IN THE sheriff's depart- ment do not set moral standards for our citizens." said Travis County Sheriff Raymond Frank, who is responsible for conduct a l the swimming site on Lake Travis.~ "The land is for the public's use and as long as they stay by themselves and are restricted to those areas, we don't hassle them." Carl Nelson Mason Rites Set Friday Masonic funer31 servi"es will be held for servi('e club leader Carl M . Nelson of San Juan Capistrano at l p.m . Friday un· der auspices or the San Clemente Masonic Lodge, 671 F and AM. Mr. Nelson. 86, died at his home Monday. Mr. Nelson, a resident of the Capistrano area for 32 years, was owner and operator of the Dana Point Texaco service station, which for years was the only gasolinE!slation in the area. .,._College Deadline Coming Up Friday He is a charter me mber of the San Clemente chapter of the Southern California Shrine Club, a charter member of the San Clemente Elks Lodge and Past Master of the Fulton Lodge in Edgerton, Wis., and a charter member of the Capis trano Beach Lions Club. He is sur vived by daughter Ruth E . (Arnold H.) Chappell or' San Juan Capistrano, and sister, Mildred S. Geiger of Madison, Wis . Students who want to continue their education thi s summer can sign up through Friday for pre· registration a ppointments .{IL Saddl~back College. Those who meet Friday's de- adline will qualify for prl'-~eglstration ·appointments June 9·11. Those who don't will have to sign up for regul ar registration wh.ieh begins.June 11. A 32-pase schedule outlining the 661 summer school classes wtU be a•allable shortly lh rough Ult <ollelle '1 omce of communi- ty Jaformation and services, D1·'700oi'~·4950, Ext. 263. 'Clao•H will be offered in -ual flye wee~ and JO-week formats. prov1d1ng maximum· flexibility for district residents. Five-week sessions will run days and evenings from June 23 lo July 24 and July 28 to August JO. T en-week sessions for the -We~kend College, the Friday One·Day College and other special cour ses are slated to run June 28 to Aug. 30. Summer school applications s hould be filed with the ad · mi ssions ond records offi ce in' Building M on the Mission Viejo campus. There are no tuition Charges for persona who have lived ln lhe Saddleback Co mmunity Coilefe ·Di$trict for one )'ear. Past Worshipful Master Clifton rttyers of the Anrient Landmark Lodge 319 of I_ndlanapolls, Ind., will officiate at the servire. In· terment will follow in El Toro Cemetery. The family suggests memorial contributions be m ade to Shrine llospltal for Crippled Children,: 3160 Geneva St .. Los Angeles in care of Valerie Goodman. or to the Lions Club While Cine Fund in care of the Southern California Lions Eye Institute, P.O. Box 567, Santa Monica, CA . Arran1ement.a are underdirj!C· Uon of Lesneski Mortuary in Sein .Cl~mente~ i ' Fe1ninlsts Feeding ~ I ' ' First Distaff Eatery Celebrates Birtlulay , '• the spokesman said. • From Wire Sentl~ (..___P_EO_P_L_E _J The "first feminist restaurant in America" celebrated its third birthday as loyal paµ-ona reasted on cha mpagne and" a chocolato cake with yellow Icing in the 5hape of a woman's symbol. der'bllt, recci vcd her form al Rep. B1rba ra Jordan became ' the first woman and the first black to deliver a major com· mencement a ddress at Wnko Forest University. The Texas Democrat, w ho gained national attention last Ju· ly during the House Judiclery Committee's impeachment de- bate, achieved the two firsts dur· ing graduation ('xcercises ut tho Mother Courage, located In divorce. New York City, was rrowded The couple h ad been living with more than 75 guests includ--apart for more t~an a yeur. ing pioneering crusaders of the Mr11. Va nderbilt, 38, asked New women's movement such as Kite York state Supreme Court re- Mlllctl 81rbara Seam111 and fcree Gerald Mazur ror custody Susan Brown·mlller, all praising of the couple's lh~ee children, their1avorite hangout. age& 8 to 17, wh~ live with h~r. "It was our first place. Revolu-She also asked ahmony and chlld lions were dre-amed here as we s upport. broke bread together," recalled V~ndeibilt .• 63, was n~t present Phyllis Chesl er, author of dunngthebr1efproceed1ngs. ··women and Madness." "* • U.S. Supreme Court Justice Investigators said in Elk Grove Wllll1m 0. Douglas has been Village, Ill. that John B. Huirlsa, ·transferred from a rehabilitation an industri81ist found shot to de· unit to Univers ity llospilal of U1e ath, had between $3 million and New York University Medical $3.5 million in life insurance. · Center for t esting and observa- Police Chie f Harry Jenkins lion. said the insurance policy had But..Jt spokesman for the cen· been take n oUt some time ago: ter's Institute or Rehabilitation He said Huarisa's wife and his Medicine, where Douglas was business, Standard Components, admitted in April after suffering were the c hief beneficiaries of a stroke, stressed that the justice , the policy. "has been making excell ent pro- Police have not determined gress in his therapy program. whether it was a murder or a "Justice Douglas has an im· suicide. planted cardiac pacemaker and Huarisa , 65, lived in the his physicians fell al this point wealthy Chicago suburb or Win· that good medical practice in· netka. He was a founder of the dical ed th a t certain r outine Admiral Corp. and retired as ex-monitorin g tests s h ould b e ecutive vice president iil J..959. I performed l o confirm the proper • functioning of the pacemaker," Happy Rockefeller says it just isn't so. Baptist unjversity. ; • Charle• A. Wright was honor~d ; as Illinois Central College s \ teacher of the year. It was also his last day on the job because he had been told his teaching con· ~ tract would not be renewed .. because of a lagging enrollment f in German. Wri gh t. 37, an associate pro· ; fessor of German, got an en-! graved plaque at the commen~e· ment ceremony in East Peoria, 1111 but says he was tempted nol to take it. "~f it had not come from m y students I might have been in· clined to leave it on the podiurn after I was done talking," he said. • Sanford H. Kadis'll, a veteran member of the Uni versity or California School of Law, was named dean, succeeding Edward C. llatbach Jr., who retired but will remain on the Boalt llall faculty. ''The truth is that I have always wanted NelllOll to be in publ ic life so long as that has been what he wanted," the vice president's wife said while noting that she has been painted as di s- liking her hu s band's public career. Strong Support "I am his wife -first and foremost -and we happen to like each other very much," Mrs. Rockefeller said in an interview in the Ladies Home Journal. Mrs. Roc kefeller. answered questions by Lynda Johnson Robb, daughter of the late Presi· d ent Johnson, in a r are-in- tervie\v. • A $27.5 million lawsuit alleging fraudulent concealment of funds, conversion a nd breach of con- tr act was filed in San Diego against financier C. Arnholt Smith by Roberts F arms Inc .. The farming firm is owned by HOilis Roberts, Bakersfield, a longtime business associate or Smith. Also named defendants were Smith's n ow -defunct United States National Bank; James Jtlulvaney, form e r USNB presi~ dent; United Oil Well Supply Co.,. a firm controlled by Smith's brother J .A. Smith ; the com- ptroller of the Currency, the board of governors or the Fed~ral Reserve System, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The suit said Roberts Farms lost $492 ,000 in a com plex transaction involving the bank. • Jean llarve y Vanderbilt, the third wife of multimillionaire horseman Alrred Gwynne Van-, Art, Craft Fair Set in Irvine Bowl A "good old days" arts and cr aft s fair to benefit Tyna, a non- profit, private school in Laguna Beach, will be held between 10 a.m . and 6 p.m. May 31 and June I at Irvine Bowl, 650 Laguna Ca- nyon Road. Sellers of a ll kinds may re- serve booth space by contacting Mark Gumbiner, 1550 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beac:h or by calling 494-9421. Booth fees are $10. Howe Okays Major Weap0m Progra~ WASHINGTON (UPI) -The House, rejecting attempts to cut back major weapans programs and the number of U.S. troops stationed abroad, has passed a $32 billion weapons procurement bill intact. Supporters of the bill said it is the wrong time to reduce the number of fore ign based troops now that U.S. military resolve might be in doubt because of setbacks in Indoc hina. The bill included an ( J amendment ordering the service academies to admit JN SHORT women and train them for _ _ combat . That measure '------------' passed 303-96 before the entire bill was approved on a 33·63 roll call Tuesday. W. Ger.-S11Pport BERLIN <UPI) -Secretary or State Henry A.Jcissinger re- affirmed today that "the security of West Berlin remains a vital interest of the United States." Kissinge r made the statement in a 20-minute speech to the West Berlin House or Deputies as part or his efforts to reassure the European allies that the United States will stand by its allies despite the U.S. debacle in lndoch~na. Befr11t Battling By The Associated Press Palestinian guerrillas and elements of Lebanon's rightwing Phalange party ex.chang~ gunfire intermitte ntly in a Beirut sub- urb tod ay despite a cease-fire agreement. Police said seven persons were killed and 58 were wounded in street fi ghting that first erupted Tuesday in the suburb or Dekwaneh, site of a camp for 7,(M)O rerugees. Cars and buildings were d amaged by gr enades, dynamite and rocket fire. Police sources said guerrillas fired on a security patrol, escalating fight· ing whic h has dragged on for about a month. Bead Start WASHINGTON <UPI) -Congressional investigators today issued a JO-year report card on Head Start, giving it a generally ;>assing grade on improving the lives of poor children. Head Start, one of the few m ajor survivors of former Presi- dent Johnson's Great Society war on poverty, is 10 years old this month. Satellites Atm"fl CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) -Two m iUtary com- munications satellites worth $57 million are tumbling uselessly in space after a power failure in a Titan 111-C kept them from re- aching their intended orbit. The failure aboard the rocket's third stage ruined the mission of the Twin T riple-7 secret communications satellite, Air Force of· ficials said Tuesday. Newport Permits Take .Dip The city of Newport Beach became its ow n largest cu"slomer for a building permit ln April -to the tune of $185,000 ....... but it wasn't enough to jar loose the building slump. Aldes with the Com· munity Developme nt Departme nt· s:iid that the $1,155,090 worth or c onstruction in April permits amounted to on- ly one·l hird or April averages ror the past 10 years.· Fltcpjtccks Fla1nbet•t• The ('ity's permit wa.s the largest one of the month a nd allow11 for construction or new council cha mbers on the front lawn otcity hall. Other large building bids included two permits worth $195 ,000. They were obtained by Pllcific Coast M anu!uc· turers for commercial work at 3100 Irvine Ave. Their cookery a dmittedly hasn't been perfected but Missl<>"n .Viejo firefighte rs Tim Sappok <left) and Steve Garrett~ay by th~ time the Orange County Fire Deparlment Benevolent Fund pancake· breakfast rolls around June 8, you'll flip o•er theif fl apj acks. Tickets for 7 a .m . to noon event at Burroua hs Corp. plant In Mission Vleio are available from any county fire -station or county fireman for $1. , · r Four new dwelllnr un· its were included In the April permit list. WednMday, May 21, 1975 DAILY PILOT All I \ • Lltl. Bofl~ f:", . .;/ · Gals Admire Fellows Too qUEENIE ll y Phil ln terlandl Mr e.·'Eu To Speak AtUCI Students Fro-th CdM Triumph Students at Corona del Mar High School swept first, second and third place at the 13th a Mual high school architectural design and drawing com· petition held in Santa Ana. Of th e eight cash awa rds given to high school students, Corona del Mar won six. ERIC FLEMING, so of Mrs. Marlene nem . ing, won the firs t plac award · and a check fo r $75. . Second place, and $50, went to Michael .Weber, son of Mr. a nd Mrs. James W. Weber. Third place winner of '25 was Sanford Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. J\,i chard Buffum. Smith also won $35 for best model. Among the . four $10 honor award win9ers were Bill Langsdorf, son of Mr. and Mrs. William B. La n gsd o rf, and· ~ Donovan Ricketts. son of M'r. and Mrs. J ames M. Ricketts. THE CONTEST, s pon s ored by th e Women's Ar chitectural League (WAL) and the Orange County chapter of the American ln1titute of Ar chitects (AIA), was open to all high school j uniol.'s a nd seniors in Orange County. · Entrants had to design a branch bank, taking in· to co_n si d e r a t ion a description of the build- ing site, the owner 's criteria and requi re· ments of t~e plan. THREE MEMBERS of the AIA judged entries on site plan, floor plan, exterior elevation, solu· tiOn to ·problem require- ments, o verall design and drafting and delina· tion. The drafting teacher of the Corona del Mar stu· dents is Gerald F ults. 3 Speak.en Win Awards David Fra n k o f Newport Be ach, Cheri Lackey of Costa Mesa and Vin ce Morgan of Westmlnster have won awards a t a Ca l State Los An geles spee ch tournament. Frank took a second place ih the after-diilher speaking category. Miss Lackey was third in ex- t em p o ra n eo u s and Morgan placed third in exPository ,, T he three are O ra n ge Coast College student.I.· Wh.ttner ,,.,..,,,d to tM lttt ,,.,., -----honwfmmtld ,,._.. ..,..,., MOund with ...,,. ·~ ·NAME BRAND CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES! REMNANTS Ir. ROLL ENDS LARGE SIZES 6 0 ~lO UVllGS fl UP TO ... SMALL SIZES 80 OlO SAVllKS fl Ill' TO ... BllNG YOUI IOOM MIAIUllMINYI • IST QUALITY MAME BRAID CARPETS AT LOW 111SCOUllT PRICES ( .. , • HERCULON • HI-LOW 100% HERCULON'OLEFIN PILE IN A TIGHT LOOP WEAVE Rl&R THAT RESISTS STAINS ANO WEAR. MANY COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM . COllPAHIU man ... $7... NOW SALE PRICED ••• ·1 ........ ,.,..._. '' """"' ................. hr ....... ~. DUPONT NYLON SCULPTURED · 100% OU PONT CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. FASHIONABLE THREE.LEVEL COBBLESTONE DESIGN IN BRIGHT COLORS. <OMHIUUmall ... $7 ... NOW SALE PRICED ••• DACRON°TRl-COLOR SHAG 100% DACRON• POLYESTER PILE. CHOOSE FROM AN OUTSTANDING ARRAY Of BEAUTIFUL THREE COLOR DESIGNS. <OMPHAIU llTAll ••• $1 ... llOW SALE PRICED , • , OUl'ONT •EGISTflEO TIAOlMAh: HERCULON • WOVEN PATTERN 100% HERCULON" OLEFIN PILE IN A TIGHT LOOP WEAVE DESIGNED TO WITHSTAND WEAR. MANY DECORATOR COLORS. <OMPHAILI mail ... SI." NOW SALE PRICED .. , ti ... f,.;....n 11 11ett•1 IM ......... ht. fer lt'1 .......... sJt"· Vl uo II 99 s,. "· sf.I • IVERY IOU Of CAIPn IS MAlllD A•D PRICED FOi YOUR SHOPPl•G co•vE•IE•CE ·• SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CARPET INVENTORY II THE WEST Cl.elANESE ltvLON HI-LOW n.. ,._ Wlrll hit lllttt U.lllhtry 100% CELANESE NYLON PILE. POPU,AR HI.LOW CARPET YOUR ENTIRE HOME • ALL LAIOI u•co•DITIO•ALLY GUAIAMTHD KODEL"' Ill TIP SHEARED HI-LOW 100% KODEL ' 111 POLYESTER PILE. LUXURIOUS . PATTERN THAT COMBINES BEAUTY AND DURABILITY. A LARGE SELECTION OF COLO RS TO CHOOSE FROM. •ow SALE PRICED COlllHIAIU llTAIL ••• SS.ct llODIL"' Ill PLUIH SQ. YD. SAVE $2.00 100% KODEL ' Ill POLYESTER PILE, A NEW, DEEP, LUSH CARPET WI.TH LUXU RIOUS APPEARANCE AND LASTING PERFORMANCE. •OW SAU PllUD • , • COllPHAlll mAIL •• , $9.H · DUPOIT NYLOI PLUSH 100% DUPONT CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. THICK DENSE SHAG IN MANY COLORS. •OW SALi PRICED ••• COllPAIAIU llTAIL , •• $11 .H -, - COMPLETELY INSTALLID ov• LUXUlllOUI PADD•G LIVlllG IOOM, Dl•l•G I~ $ HALLWAY & . TWO llDI00111S 100•1, GLelANESE ltvLON PIU 11$11 .... $0. '''· -. KITCHIN PRINTS 100% ANSO• NYLON PILE WITH RUBBER BACK. 5·YEAR GUARANTEE. BEAUTIFUL PATTERN DESIGNS IN BRIGHT COLORS. •ow SALE PllCED • COIUAIUU llTAll ••• S7.H II so. n. SAVI SJ.H Hl·LOW STYLING WITH GENTLE INTERPLAY OF DES:GN AND COLOR. LONG WEARING AND EAS~ TO CARE FOR. MOW SAU PllCED COMHIHLI DTAll, •• $1 ... KODEL"' Ill SCULPTURED 100% KODEL •Ill POLYESTER PILE. NEW THREE LEVEL. TWO TONE PATTERN IN BRIGHT COLORS. •OW SAU PllQD ••• COlll,AIAIU mail ••• st.H .DUPONT NYLON SHAG . 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. EXTRA DEN SE LOW PROFILE SHAG IN LAVISH COLORS. IOW SALE PllQD , , , COMPAi AiU mAI. ••• $ 16.H SQ. YD. SAVI $3.00 SO.Tl. SAVI IJ.H BB so., .. IHI 11.M ' INDOOR 10UTDOOR ClARPETS DO·IT·YOUISILF. CUT AND CAXRY 100% POLYPROPYLENE OLEFIN FIBER. IDEALEOR PATIOS, POOL ARE'AS, PLAYROOMS. AVAILABLE IN MANY NEW II rKODEL® Ill HI-LOW SHAG 100% KODEL •Ill POLYESTER PILE. A CLASSIC PAITERN WITH THE DISTI NCTIVE LOOK OF PLUSH ELEGANCE. MANY COLOR COMBINATIONS. II EXCITING COLORS,. NOW SALE PRICID ...... . COM,~IAIUllTAIL ••••••• I •• I •••••• I •••• $i.tt so.''· SAVE SJ.ff llOW SAU PRICED ••••• co•A1A1L11nAtL •••••••••••••••••••••• $9.99 so. n. SAVI $1.M • ~ HYS 10 llTlllST • CHVIMT CllllT 1'41S ~ IAll lllMS AVAllAIU • CALI JOI Fiii SllOP·AT.ff• SllV1Cl • VISIT M CISTDM DIAHIY MPAITIHIT ;. NO. HOLLYWOOD VINTUIA WHITTIER LONG IEACH MONTCLAIR FOUNTAIN VALLIY ELCAJOH 7ot7 l...i "°"". Jstl L .. $11111 ut1• L Wlllttler II••· JOOI lelflowtr llrd. 4&1t ... ........ 15t•S ..... ..... Jl7 L .. SI. lh•. -t&J.J.aot (ltS) t ... Sffl . ttl-tlH Ul-193' (7Hj tJt.JSl7 (7H) 13'·1700 714 440.6262 HOLLYWOOD TORIANCI PASADINA CANOGA PARK COVINA W. LOS ANOIUS IUJVllltSllHI J 4JJtA1111hi lh•. J ... l.C• .. •ll••· JIOJIShtr.,.•W•y JIOE.ArrewMI"'"' IOUSVttlktltrL W-61U 542 ... tt 117·1'00 J47·Jl3' t••·••11 SSt·tStO ' .•. , ' . -. •• • ' ' ... • • • ' , . - Aj4oAILYPILOT Wednetdoy,May21,197S • THE FAMILY C-::;l;;R.,C.-U..,S ___ By Bil Kean .. Recall Order Names. Capris, Chrysler· Cars. By United Press latetuatlonal ducted· by the au\o lnaket-an_d 1"perv sed., by the have_ an lltlproperly ma,pulactured rront brakl" r r • 0 I The Ford Motor Co . .has ordered -the .recall 'Or ' state. The vehlcles .Were Jn11Duf1ctured between hose. In extende~ use, the out"er eov..-lng could 45,000 imported Capris because or pO!entJal .l,T'lke January and Ma rch. ~ . 1pllt, causing a loss of brake 'fiuid, a spokesman failures. Chrysle r Cori>. meanwhile, was ordered by· The latost recall by Chrysler invo!Ved most 1,975 said. , . "Momm y, this cup a nd soUcer don't rhyme." . 111 S;1«l«llelt;1ek Recreational Plan Funded lly JAN WORTH 0 1 IM 0.ily Pl'°' SI.Ill A year-long recreation program for com· munities of Saddleback Va lley Unified School Dis· trict will be funded jointly by county and dis trict money. ~ I The una nim ous decision of school t r ustees came this \\'eek aft e r representatives from J\1ission Viejo, E l Toro a nd Laguna Hills homeowner a s. sot·iations s aid they need district help with com-· munity re<·r('.ition. .· · the s tate or Call£ornla to correct sm og violations on Plymouth Valiants , Dus ters, Furys, Road ,Runners However, the driver would be aler ted by the 11 ,000 o r its·l 975 model cars. J. and Grail Furys ; Dodge Darts. Chargers, Coronets dashboard warnlna: li ght and tlie rear brakes would The Ford recall announced-T u(!sdaywa s part of a nd Mon acos ; a nd Chrysler Cordobas, Ne wports, be fully opera tional, a spokesman said. · a worldwide campaign coveri ng 195,000 Germ an··· New Yorker s, Imperials and Town and country s tu.-ir===o;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:::;="i];;========="\ built Capris a nd Escorts. The firm s aid it had re -· tion wa gons. THE ~ KONO HAWAII i 1 ports of 18 bra ke failure.• on the cars, all in Europe,' FORD SPOKESMEN SAID THE BRAKE pro· ... RL'S t socP'"'a"mnl• tho• F ti with four of them in\'Olv1ng ucc~dents. blcm· on. the Capris didn't show up on c11rs wlth less . .:=...""',... j ~ THE CHRYSLER RECALL WAS 0,RDt;RED than 20.000 miles. . ' . . • ...... by the California Air Resources Board1 and in- . The r ecall in the United States involves Capr1s '-"\-.:J1• ! SEVEN Opening May 29 {, volved a boUt 70 percent of the Chrysler cars S:~l<11n built in'the Colog ne, Germany, -plant bet~.een April At·~ ... Deer California this year . It was the second state.ordered · l 1974 a nd Feb. 7, 1975. The·25,968 Capr1 T tncodel ~· • I •9S~040l l m~=A=e=s=:=(=7 1=4=)=5=3=1 -=1=2=32=:'.. reca ll against Chrysler this year. · · a~e de'~ignated 1974s while the 18,922 afrec.ted l apn ~· i... ·u lf~aa·· 1 Quality control problems were Jll C1med by the JJ s a rel976 m odels. •111 .. v C!'iitl~'· bo.ard fo~ Ohrys le~:s fe_~lur~ to . meet California's The company esUm ated that about .40 percent 21t~~c5~ ... ~.~~ ... '!:- toughest-tn·the·n at1on s mog st andards in ~sts con-of the-vehicles being r ecalled in the tJ n\ted States SELL idlu itcn\.i "'ilh a Daily Pilol Gl1e1siried Ad . Trustee De nni s Smith. who helped found the . Polyester Cord Saddleback Valley Youth Recreation Council, said, "T he com munity is now speaking to this district with one voi ce a nd that's quite an accompli:i.hme nt. ''THEY 'VI-~ BEEN STRUGGLING FOR recrea· lion prog r ams for years. We're a lread y used lo pro· \'iding that kind of leadership and we're already in the reC'reation business. We need to do this and do it right away." ' Dis c ussion indicated th.at a community service · fund received by the district from the county - $259,000 th is year -is commingled with the general fund and is not a lways spent specifically for com · munity scrvit·e a nd rec·reati on. · Las t year, tile $190.000 received by the district .joined the ge ne r al fund a nd school administrators s aid they l'Ould not identify how it \Vas us ed. This year, $170 .000 of the fund is going lo build t he E l Toro Community Pool. Dr. Robert Matthew, assist ant s upe r intende nt of business services, s aid he could not sa y t'xactly where the r est was being used. "I J UST Cr\N'T QUITE ENVISION our getting thi s confused ,'' Board President George H e nry said. ··v.·ith th is amount or money available to us . "'h y c an't we just s ay there's a need out the re and get us a recre ation prog ram?'' Rick Bo hay. pr esident of the Sadd leb_ack Area Coordinating Counci l <SACC J and an active propo- nent for youth recreation, said . ·•r certainly would like to knO\\I wher e a ll this money is going. "If "'e had $190 ,000 a nd no recreation progr a ms las t year, I think the public is being shortchanged." flis com m e nts drew a pplaus e. SM IT ll SAID THERE W1\S NOTHING illegal about the way the money "·as used in the general fu nd. fie eo m p.irl'd it with a joint checking account, a n•t s aid if the dis t ri ct \Vants to sepa rate and ide n-· tify the community service money, it can. · · Matthew s a id part of the m oney goes to the Qf.- fice School and Community Services , headed by Ed J\1angan. J{e said about $80,CXKl of it pays s alaries in .tha t department. 1.~h ay complained th at students in Mission Vie· jo·s su mme r S\\limmin g program ha d to pay a $7 per person fee for classes last year. Adult Sex Law Prompts Study S1\N DI EGO <U PI) -fectlocal prostitutio n or· \\'ritlen ar ~um cnls have din ant·es. been ordered on whether · J\·lunicipal Court J udge t he s t a t e 's n ew f a w George Cr awford direct- l egali zi n g s ex a ct s eddefenscattorney Fred b e tw een c o n s e ntin g E. Corbin. representing a dults in p rivate will af-two wom e n cha r ged with Book Wins For Prof ''If t h e S t a r s Are G o d s,'.' a novel ette coauthored by UC Irvi ne ph ys i c s pr o f ess o r G r egor y Benford has. \\'on the 1975 Ne bula Award prese nted by the Science Fiction W1;ters of Amer iea . Benford 's writings in· elude science fi ction as \ve il as n o n -f i c tion art icles o n llutu r ology a nd as tro n omy . The s tory by Benford a nd coauthor Gordon E klund of San Fr a ncisco is about a c lash or cultures and philosophies be t ween huma n s a nd a n a lien race. Aide Nwned m isdemeanor prostilu· lion offenses. to s ubmit the argutnents wit hin 30 •days. · CRAWFORD HEARD or al argum e nts in t he non ·j ury tria l of Ann. Va'll ario, 22, and Suzanne Campus. 31 , both of San Di ego. They were a mong more than 20 wo men ar· res ted in Fe bruary after a thr ee-month poli ce in· vesti gation in to a lleged sexu a l a c t iv ities in m ass age parlors. Miss Valla rio a nd Miss Ca mpus were accused of soliciting lewd a ct s in a public place for m oney. Both denied the a lle ga· lions. THE JUDGE SAID the new law raised questions since the a lleged act s in· volved consenting adults and occurred in p rivate . and he said the question could e nd up in the ap- peals courts. · Pat Marrow, d a ughter Deputy City Attorney o( Mr . and Mr s. Willi am J . Tucker said William S . Marrow, 1879 he did not believe the Tahiti Or., Costa Mesa , new law would affect is working as a r esident local ordina nces because a dvia er i n the use an excha nge of money is Col I e g e -Un Iv e r s i t y involved in prostitution. Dorm.itory. The new law, signed by As a r etldent adviser, Gov. Bro>A·n J\l ay 12, re· Mis1 Marrow t s i n peals prohibitio ns gov· matp: or 42 glrli on her erning private sexual noor. Siie 0 u l• and behavior b e tw een ltelpe them d a pt to penons who are 18 or ..,....._, proteduree. · older aftd wbo COf!~en~ •. ' ' . . , , rae 1->ea • The General Poly.Jet is a smart looking, smooth ridi ng,4 -ply polyester cord tir e designed for long mileage a nd · tra~tio n. Its deep tread .pattern holds the road on tough comers and on straightaways ! . VcduePriced! $ size A78-13 tubeless blackwall. p lus $1.76 Fed. Ex. Tax ea ch Size Value Priced F.E.T. . Size Value Priced F.E.T . A78 13 2 for $45.90 $1.76 H78)4 2 for $61.90 $2.77 B78·13 2 for $47.90 $1.B!l G78·15 2 for $59.90 $2.60 E78·14 2 for $51.90 $2.27 H78·15 2 for $63.90 $283 F78·14 2 for $55.90 $2.40 J78·15 2 for $73.90 $2.99 G78·14 2 for $57.90 $2.56 L78 15 2 for $75.90 S,3.11 ' Whitewalls $2 to $4 more per tire. S izes J78-15 & L78-15 Available at Value Prices in whitewall only. Charge it at .General We lltonor-, •MosterChartje •'-*Arnericard 1975 New Car Tires! Brand New! Not Blems! Not Retreads! Value Priced! $279~ Sile A78· 1.'l tube less black\va\1. plus S l.77 Federul Excise Tax. The General Jumbo 780 The General Jun1bo 780. the same tire you ·11 see o n many 1975 new cars. Built with two gtass belts ahd a two·ply J)Olye ster cord body for great perfo rma11ce. . ~Jue S11e Priced rE.T. A78·n $27.95 $1.77 C78·14 28.95 2.10 E78·14 30.95 I 2.32 F78·14 33.95 2.47 G78·14 34.95 2.62 H78·14 37.95 2.84 E78·15 31.95 2.4 1 F78·15 34.95 2.55 G78 15 35.95' 2.69 H78·15 38.95 2.92 .J7s.1s 39.95 3.09 l78·15 41.95 3.21 Whitewalls $3 to $5 more per tire. ALIGNMENT SPECIAL s1·o•s COMP•!!r•IT-. AWlllCAMCAl1 Extra charge for larger or airconditioned cars, setting torsion bars .. ! and parts If needed . ~ ' ·r I '• • size 6.50·13 tube less bl;:ic kwall. plus $1'.'7-7,Federal Excis~ Ta~ The General J~t-Ai~,"' III • The General Jet·Air Ill With long mileage Durage11® Tread Rubber. strong four·ply construction. and famo us tw in·tread d esign for traction.· V.h" Si?.e Prl<ed. FE..1' 6.50·13 $)5.95 $1.77 7.00·13 18.95 2.00 C78·14 19.95 2.04 E78·14 20.95 • 2.27 F78·14 22.95 2.40 G78·14 23.95 2.56 H78·14 25.95 2.77 5.60·15 18.95 1.79 F78·15 21.95, 2.45 G78·15 23.95 2.60 H78·15 25.95 2.83 L78·15 • 32.95 3.11 •Available in ~hit.ewall only. Whi1ewalts $2 to $4 more per lire. YOU MUST BE SATISRED All.service work is quoted at a filir p!ice when Cilr Ii checked. "4th no add ·ons unless neces!W'lry for safe operation. then you are the judge. All v.rorn. repla~d,parts are bagged for ,your insi)ection. \.Ve . do the job fast ... right ... the first liml:!. If nOt. \~>e ·want to know about It. lmn1ediately! That's Our Pledge • RAIN Cl l~Ck: Shoukl o.1r 1upply of .t0n-1e tlte.; or ti nes run shQrt durlog this f\lilnt, \l.'e \1.1~1 hotKw any ordtrt pl~ now 10! ful:u~ dellwry at the 111dvm:IHd price, . IE•ERAI \TIH Don ·Swedlund Inc. .. COAST GENERAL TIRE .,... ................ ... 1.:S~~f 2855 · Hprbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ·· Phol\.e 540,57 t O *'' •11tur1~• 1~• 646•50J·J ....._-~·---------Sooneror lates; you11 owp Generals-------~ r 1 r ·- ' I • • I J l 1 • • I --' I l l E I> ir sl fr R ir "I 4. l< K cl M E hj 'r i n b h· " h Ji I> o' ~ h b ( F h :i c A h f i I r p A s p d \ . W..:tnelday, May 21 , 1975 DA ILY PILOT •• IJonhaIQ, CUhs Forgetting FD:tility Davis Inks Sun LOS ANGEL1':S i AP) - Eve.ry"here Chicago manager Jim Marshall goe!i, he's asked lhe same ques tion : Are the Cubti 'ror real ? '11 s uppose e very manager says the same lt\ing," he s:..ys "but 'we'll go as fnr as our start'. ing pitchers take us." tr Tu ei>d ay n ig ht 's · perlormiin cc by young Bill _Bonham. the onetime UCLA pjtching s t ar, is any indication, the Cubs just might find an end to their 30 years or futility. Bopham hurled a two-hitter; j .. ~ .. ·; outduellng ~os AngtJes ace Don Sutton, tor a 2·J victory as the Cubs improved their lead In the N"tional L e ague's .£as te rn Divis ion to 21f.t gam'es. The Doqgers tilay five games in front in the West. ln the·t·hird game of the rour- game series tonight former ... ' Kqtella Next Foe • , Edisp;n I~.it~s . . ·For 12.;;·7. Wfu: By HOWARD).. llAN!/Y Ofll" 0.11, ,.llDtlgfl • ' ROLLING HILLS ESTATES - Edison Hi gh School unleashed a powel"ful hilting atta<.'k, includ- ing thi-ee home runs, a triple that should have been a home r and four doubles in pouhding the host Rolling Hills 1-lig h baseball team into submission Tuesday after- noon. 12-7, in seco nd~round CIF 4·A playoff uction. The victory advances Edisbn to Friday's third round agains t Kate lla, the Empire League champion. Kate lla defeated El Moden'a , 2-0, and will play at Edison Friday . Mi.ke Ma coy, the stylish le£t - han<!er for Edison's Chargers, ·ran tntOfie IOingProblems in the first and fourth innings b}" mates but t~·o big five-run inqin~s helped to e ase the phyaical as well a s t'''O ment<.11 base running lapses that could have beei:I cost· ly in a closer gf;me. ··, ' Macoy didn't have the over- powering fast ball that has been one of h is strong points th1s . ' .. ~ea.son but he did have-a·n effec- tive c}langellp ansf held, the hosts in check most or the wind-blown day. The Chargers were trailing, 3-1 afte r two innings ind coach Harvey Jense n admoni shed them by asking, '"}Yhat did you comedowhJ)ef.e for, a l}ua ride?" At this pOint, the big bets went to work and.before the inning had ended, eight batters had tooe to the plate with five runi:Scori'Dg. Bart Schaefe r beJted a ball over the ileft-center field.wall in the second inning but stopped al second base. The ball was called a ground-rule double but later changed to a home run when Jensen objected. In the third inning; -Schaefer belted one deep to right cen- terfield ijlat went over the out- fieltler'if head and rolled'" into open spaces. Schaet_er romped around the· base paths· and was celebr~ti n g His clout al home plate when Ule third base coach approached· Kim ar\d sent him back _!o.third lo touch the base. 2 Rustlers Sign Pacts ·· .. · ··.. ·On h.is ·way:.back, however,.he f,ai1ed"'to step--on homr plate' and was later ruled out on an-appeal pl'~ a~e plate, taking a home run aWay an"d a run rrom' the Ediaon total. His clout wa. long enough that he had .sufficient time to return to third.' 1 .• ' Golden West College pitchers Kent Hunzike·r and Bob Madde n have sign e d ptofe ssiOl)al baseball contra cts with the Chicago Wh ite Sox, the Daily Pilot has learned. Hunziker , a freshman right- hander, had a 3-2 record and a 3.13 e.r .a. this past season for coach Fred lioover's Rustlers. Madden, also a freshman ri ghl· hander. was l ·O with a 1.85 e.r.a. He pitched'only nin·e innings. Hunzik er is from Santiago High and Mad den prepped al Esla nci<.1 . Both a re expected to report to the White Sox 's Ap- pleton, Wisconsin team in the Midwest League. White Sox scout Ga ry Johnson signed anothe r Golden West player -shortstop Curt Etchan: dy-last week . Oiher Edison homers were belted by Jon ·Holmblad and Jelf Ryder in the secon,d fi ve-run in· ning -the stxth. Ryder, Matt Teske, Holmblad and Hibbard had doubles in the lS.hit ... EdillOn attack. ' .A, ~ EdiMMI (UI ltolli"fHllll (1) •t>•hbl •1tr1t1tl ,..., .. ,, p Glb$.on,p _ Hit!Dlrd, lb 8all>O<e. SS Desr~i<'rS,C: HIMS,CI i-oo1rnt1i.d, lb 5co11Hler.1b TM kl',rl R)'der.11 •2 11R1lo.lt •17·1 0 0 00°"9•1\!',< J O O O 4 22.0$4:1111,Sl 3 1 2 1 4 1 00Moiic:h.ltl 3 1 2 0 • 1 1 2 f (hoU,rl 2 0 1 I 4 1210.-ler.rl 1 00 0 4 2JJSt.GtrM.2tt 41 2 1 •I 2 l O.Emer10fl,ab J 1 I 0 • I 2 o Colllni;,cl .l 2 1 o 41 3 1 W.k.p I 0 00 a.. Emerson. p 1 o o o Turc:hl,pll 1 O O 0 H1ni.on. p 0 0 0 0 3' 12 111 12 TOlaU 21 7 11 5 EOli.on RolllnQHllls Scire lty l11•l"'fl 015 ODS 210 201 . ' . 1-12 1• J ,_ 7 11 0 ' UPI 'r&r;;: RICK BARRY'S 38 flOINTS l:u> OOLDIN .ITA~'.I ~. 1 i ~ 'I ,Dodier Geoff Zahn, 0-r, op~e• his former mates With Andy Me11er1mith , 6·0,~ shooting for his 11th atraight victory over.two seasona .. Zahn, 11tarUnglln place of Steve Sto~ho will mlss a turn becau of a tender ahoulHer, said he ve no trouble.getting "up'' for the game. l<The biggest thing," he said, ''is that I'm facing one of the best teams in baseball -the Dodcer.s -not the fact that's the club·that trapedmeaway.'' Mon~eal Mayor 0 -· . . , plitlllS~IC. ' LAUSANNE,, Switzerland CAP) -Jean Drapeau;mayor or Montreal,' said today he would re· fuse to discuss alternative plans for next ~ear's Olympic.Games. The mayor was due to report to .the worried International Olym· pie Committee on the situation in Montreal, where strikes have put the constr-\'ction or the Olympic stadium and athletes' village behin'"d schedtile. .. The Situation is returning to .normal ," Drapeau told newsmen. "I have answers for any questions the IOC may put to me. ''But I will not discuss alternative plans, because'tt is unnecessary.'The games will go on in Montreal as scheduled." In Tuesday's night's victory, c:"1u.o.o L.01•HG1\.11 the Cubs punched over two runs 11. w ·~~11,•~ U<y Jti ·~•,k1 11l In the firs t innin" on doubles by c!,...,."":,'(,'' i 1 1 o ~·*'o'a •• 1 o o o et Moflaly<I 2 I 0 I) Wy...,(I l 0 0 0 Jote Cardene.l and Bill Madlock, Mtodloc k >V 4 o 1 1 Ge,.,.., •v loo o awalktoRlckMonday,one ofon. ?.:;~~., :gg~ ?J,~ ... u ig~g ly two walks Sutton issued all 'fli:O~~d't'"' ~ g: g r.!:'1 ~,, ~ g g g evening, and a run-scoring in-Tr111a1t1 Jo o o °"-'-"•'•'~ o o o o field out by Adrian Garrett. ' """'•rnP 3 0 0 0 ~~~::-~~' ~ g g g Bonham then made the lead ~~:'.::, p11 ~ 8 g g stand up by allowing onl y two t~••i ~1 2 ~ 2 ro•i•l 11 1 1 1 hill. One of them was Lee Lacy's c 111c100 xio ooo ooo. 2 fourth-inning homer, his second L°ri:~~1i.00 2. Loe cr.1c.-00~1..o,1:'ngeO::;,~ olthesea1on. 2e -c 1•a•n•1. M•o1oc•. HR-L.•c• c21. s- "I had as good stuff as I 've t1ad "''°'"'111 · 1P " 1111 Ell•• !oO all year;!Lfl:onham said arteF-im ........ =T1..'.~-'a~·31 ; ~ ~ ~ ~ 1~ proving hi8 record tO 4-3, P8-V•l9"•· T-1:1J. A-2,,S2•. • Drapeau arrived for the IOC annual assembly after the mayor -of(MexielJCl{y"1ra·d--satd-his-city- was ready to step in and stage the Olympics if Montreal cannot get ready in time. · IOC leaders are known to be in- terested in alternative sites, or usliig other centers in Canada if f thirigs gdwrong in Montreal. \ Drapeau declined to discuss how much more time Montreal U .. 1Ttl .. M41 could afford to lose. RecenUy '70gt" "'---_. Off HO\ltata · Radrora· ·ttea:sorer··of ····•·1 -~S· · · . . ' the Montreal Organizing Com- mittee , said construction workers might be asked to give up their summer holidays to get the Olympic installations ready. · When newsmen asked Drapeau if he could give a 100 perc~nt guarantee that the Olympics «11 ·take place, he replied: "Hqw can I do that? There migh,t)e II third worJd wir, or airline strikes might stop people from getting to ·Montreal when the time comes." · The Montreal delegation was due to gr;> before the IOC near the end or the day. First, reports were being received from Laite Placid, N . Y ., site .of the 1980 Winter Games; Moscow, host of the 1980 Summer Games, and In· nsbruck , which is staging the Winter Olympics next year. Tanana Faces Tribe Tonight CLEVELAND <AP) -It's hard to feel sorry for Frank Tanana yet it's hard not to. The young left-hander of the California Angels is 2-1 and has _permitted j ust five earned runs A...,ebSlate . AllO.m"•ll:Ml'COKl Mir n C•Utornl••I C1•¥t11nd Mir n c .u1orr.1111 8oston ,.,,.., 23 C..Ulor ... 11 et Bo5ton Mew 24 c.t11ot-n1111 ao11on ,,...,1s C1111ornl1 •t eos1on 4:1Sp.m . •:1Sp.rn. •:llp.rn. 10:SS1.m . 1o:s.s1.m . in mot'e than 36 innings this season. New York Mets manager Yogi Berra le ts umpire Paul Runge know what he thinks of his call in the ninth in· ning of Tuesday's National Leag.ue baseball game with the Cincinnati Reds. The Mets won, 6-2. Aging Veterans Dominate at Indy INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - They're old men in what is essen- tially a kid 's sport. If they'd been around 20 or 30 years ago, doing what they're doing now, they pro· bably wouldn't have gOtten the chance to become old men. While the average guy closing in on the age of 40 might~ think- ing about slowing dqwn a bit, these guys are going faster than ever. And in the Indianapolis 500, that's quite a feat. J.u st making the field or 33 ears, packed with rookies, hard- chargers and the like, is a victory of sorts. But making the ·rront row -well, lhat'is really excep- tional. Yet that's just what A. J. Foyt, Gordon Johncock a nd Bobby Unser have done. When the 33 sleek machines shriek into the first turn on Sunday on the firsto( 200 laps around the 2'h-mile track, th~se thre e old men will be showing the rest or the guys their tailpipes. excellent depth perception. He's as sound as someone maybe 15 or 20 years younger . He's as good as h'e ever was.'' Like the sometimes irascible Foyt, who is gunning for an un- precede nted fourth Indy victory, Unser doesn 'l understand what all the fuss over the age is all about. "So I 'm 41 . So what?" said the 1968 winner he re and last year's runner-up. "Age r eally means nothing. As far as I'm concerned, I'm gonna keep racing as long as it's fun ." Johncoc k is the kid in the front- row trio. On r ace day he'll be three months aw ay £rom hi s 39th birthday. And h e doesn "t vi ew th e younger drive rs as a bunch of puoaks , trying lo muscle in on his shot at glory. In fact, he'd like to see a lot more or the m around. Contract The Southern Callfornla Sun of the World F"ootball League an· nounced tod ay it has signed Corm er USC All-Ameriean An- thony Davis to a multi-year con- tr:ict in excess of.$2 million and more than s ix fi gures a year . Da vis, a second-round draft choice of the Ne"· York J ets or the National i''ootball League, had . b ee n nego t ia t i n g Simultaneous ly with the Sun through h is attorney Mike Trope. Trope indicated t\vo v.·eeks ago that DavisWould de mand twice as much money to play fo r the World Footba ll League than the Nf'L. with fi gures mentioned rangin g from $1 .5 million to SJ.5 million. Buffalo RaUln BUFFALO -Re ne Rober t .drove a slap shot through lhl! mist of a heal-created fog al 18 :29 or overtim e Tuesday night Lo give the Buffalo Sabres a 5,4 victory, over the Philadelphia Flyers a nd a ne"· li fe in the Stanley Cup playoffs . Robe rt, laking a lead pass from Gil Perreault, fired from the right face-arr circle to beat Bernie P ar ent a nd give Buffalo its first viclorv in the best-of· seven finals after Philadelphia won the first two ga mes at'bOme. The game was played unde r extre mely humid condi.tions. with te mperatures · re aching about 90 degr ees a nd fi ve timt>s in the third peri od and seven in the overtime the play had to be stoppe d so the fog could be cleared. Pitelters Traded C LEVEL 1\N D -T he Cl e v e land Indi a n s tra d ed pitcher:s_J_imJ_grry and Di ck Bos man to the Oakland A's for pitcher John "Blue !\.1oon" Odom and a n unspecified amount of cash Tuesday. MacK'i•non Soclteltes ST. LO UIS -Bob l\lacKinnon r esigned as coach or the Spirits of St. Louis . Tuesday to accept. a .position as .. director. .. or .. player· per sonnel for the Buffalo Braves in the National Basketball As- sociation. Portland iM WCAC SAN DI EGO -T he University or Portland vo as voled into the West Coast Athletic Conferenl·e Tuesday, effective in the fall ut 1976, replacing Univer·sily 'ol Nevada· Las Vegas. E.,ans Na•ed OAKLAND -.Ja C'k Eva ns, \\·ho guided th e Cali(ornia Golde n Seals' farm club in Salt Lake City to a title last year, has been named head coach of the Seals . Alsto•'• Dad Din LOS ANGELES -Emmons Alston, father or m anager \\f aller Als ton o f the Los An geles Dodgers, died Tuesday in Ox - ford, Ohio. He "'as 82. Alston left for Ohio today a nd will rejoin the c lub Monday in New York. In hi s absence coai.:h Tom Lasorda will manage thE Dodgers. WTT Su•-rin Al P1!Ub11r,r. PllUb11rgl> 22. lo' A~M-' 11 Wnmen -Gnol•qong (P l bea t Siu.art, 6 G. Goolil'JOl\!l·M ltP>l'I tP) Coet l C.tw\,.H~rle•.•·J M~n -lull (L) Coelll G•'fUl.to1i,, 6-2; M,o,, •• ~ Ci'e ll 1 Coe•l CO•·G~rulah,~. I>·~. Mire<! ~ C.•,al~·Ma ,ter ' (L.J tie.al Micr.~1- Wil<*•C ~,6·•. A : 1,~1! AIPllotni• Phoeni• Jl, S<11n Oie902• Wo~n -Curr {Pl tle•I Hunt.~~; Ourr-!on~w CP) beat Gourlav-Voung, 1-S. ' Men -V. Amtotr111 (50) bedl F.ilrllt. I·~: Roche-F•irlie \P l beal A. Am,,1r111-v. Amril•.i), H Moxl'O -A .. Amrotrl1·Hun1 RDCfll', Au~lln, 1·•· A -Uf!IYilllatlle But the fellow has endured some bad luck, too. Tonight he faces Jim Kero, Cleveland's lanky right-hander, in the second of a three-game series. Tanana hopes for better success than he's had this season. The Angels have won four games in a row. "What the hell's age got to do with it?" the crusty Foyt said when somebody wondered why, at the age of 40, he wasn't think- 'ing of maybe shifting into a more sedentary existence and leaving this hectic, dangerous life to ·others. At Los Alamitos Tanana started the season by injuring a leg, had no decision in a 7-6 loss to Kansas City and finally won his first game of the season April 26 with a 1:0 triumph over the Oakland Athletics. But after pitching six innings of that game, he had to leave with a bliBter. He Came back four days later, pitched one inning· and pulled a hamstring muscle. His second victory came 12 days ago 1and was a 2-0 complete · game gem over Boston before more than 43,000 in Anaheim. Age, it seems, has very little to do with it. According to Dr. Steve Olvey, the assistant medical director at the s peedway's hospital, Ule average driver here (the average age is 35) has the eyesight. reflexes and the rest ol a man in his low 20s. . And Dr. John Hanna, who directs the entire medical opera- tion, adds : ''Anything they might lose in one area, they seem to pick up,in another. It's almost amazing sometimes to see these drivers, like Lloyd Ruby at 47, the oldest one in the field, Starl- in& in the second row. He's got tremend_Ously <a.uick reflexes and Racing Begins Six evenly-matched sprinter s are set lo contest tonight's $12,000-added Inaugural Stakes as the 25th season or quarter horse racing gets under v.·ay at Los Alamitos Race Course. The silver anniversary year , which runs for 79 nights through Aug. 20 and will ofrer horsemen more than $2.6 million in purses. begins with Timeto Thinkrich, Jet Set Three, Pass Over, Al's Alibi. Five Chics and Jo"li ght 109 all awaiting lhe sta rt of the 350 - yard dash that begins a stakes schedule th a t includes 33 of the top quarter horse events in the country . · Post time for the opening ni ght program a nd every ni ght will be 8 o'clock with a $2 Exact a on the first race and $5 E xactas on the sixth, eighth and ninth races. . Favoritism in the sma ll but . talented group or horses figures to fall to Timeto Thinkrich, "'ho up until j us t a few weeks ago-rei· gned as the industry's leading money earner . His $570.000 bank a ccount now ranks second in the s port be hind sensa tional 3-year· old Easy Date. ·Warriors' Barry: ~oat ·to Hero • • SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - "Remarkable· Rick Barry ad- mitted ~he was tired al thC end, but be wasn't too Ured to aink two free throws with 23 ~stfdJnds Te· maintng, giving the Golden;State Warriors a scintillating 92·91 '(iC· \ory QY'f the Washi~aton Bullets Tuesday night i'nd'<l 2-0 lead In their Natioilal 'Basketball As- eoc:iation championship series. . "l didn't see;n to have much energ)' after the game." con- . f ... ed Barry,·the game's high 1corer with 36 points. 11l'm just Siad It didn't· go overtime." , Before B1rry'5 winning foul shots, he relt he would have been the 1oat it the Bullets had w6n. He admitted commiltlng a foolish foul aa:ainst Mike Riordan :ovillt t : 01 left, enabling the BWlett' forward to complete ,a .three-point play that · pushed W11hlngton in front 91 ·90. , "If I didn't toul him, tbe worst we. WOl.J.ld have been was. tied," reflected Barr)'. the Warriors' captain·. "After the foul , f said . 'Ob no, not a1aln' ! " He was r e f e r r in g t o the Western Confe re nce fin al series When he was the goat ii\ a game against Chi ca go, firing an un· necess ary shot In the closing seconds, a nd the Bulls Lhcn get- ting the ball and scoring a field goaJ just before th~ final buzzer towinttie game. 1 Despite lhe Werriors' com ·, ml.ndlng lead in the series now, Barry still was wary. "ll's tar trom over," tie said . Neverthe less, the Warriors ' pulse-pt>unding triumph, coupled with their 10 1-95 victory tn the opening gam e at Landover , !\.I d. last Sunday. put them in a soUd and unexpect ed position. * * * WASl'llHGTOH ltll 1-llY•I IS, Rlord ln 11 , Unwh:I ~. Chi~~ lO, Potttr ), Rot1!n10f'I l , Hll klnl 2, WMl,.•11.0DO<l 4 Tol•h 3211-:i.. 00\.0EH STATE ltt! a ... ., li, w 11•t-' 1•, c.. Johllson ll , Sm1111 ,i, Okk•, ~. G. Jollnwn •, Mullln11, 8rlOQ91 I. T01al1 ao IZ·ll. W•ihlnoton t i M 21 ,ti -,, , Go10tn Sitt. --t.. 11 1Z... ft ~ ft P'011ltll out: Non•. To111 toul1: w~ 1' GolatflSl1t• 30. Ttthnlc•• i H • .,. •• A~ 11.llS. • \ I N ONLY PILOT .. • ,.,-:Ne~~"-Se•nls .Tr~~~ns ,. Rqifi. ~ ~iuu,, Match Bree~e ·lly DAV£ ROMiNO Steve' Maroa! ::--~Ira!·. n~ k. pl •S. n'a of i RIVl:kSlDE -:-,IA!I byl · °''"" .. 11'"'"'*"" ·· ••l o·.e, Sena '"l'tlowed. bal•nce. Ken \l1.ar.a, th• pywertu NeWl>OI'\ lhrbor Hi9h Thom .. tq \Xl!ll a .. \ UP·' "Maro1I pl1yed very tJniveralty High TroJans advantt'd to · ih• aet.v\Ctor)'. i . ·. ~ :well agotnstSena,"••Y• ro11edloa20"1·1'4tenft11 ·••mlfinal1 ·of ·the ClF .. NewpOrta1aOtkOriled' Wllaon . "He was putUnK vict or y over hoat · 1enn11 playolr1 Tu~Jld~Y a big double• "'(Iii' ,lorly· the ball where he wtlntj!(! Rlvehlde Poly In lb• . aftern«?Qn •with ,1 rain· in tbe Competlt~-'Bradi most of the Lime." c 1' a-A quartetflna11, ·"""''T ihorten,ed O ~·~V...,wln .eaurhan. and ttt ~Wit· In the flrit two gan1e1 here,Tue1dayilfternooa.,. over Su)/nl' Hllli JJl•h In ll"t~·leamed up.lo tlllal· Sena mana1ed only one In 8 battle of two ufl, a m1.te-t> pl ~be~ al su19n·y Hlllei* to)-.,,team polnt against J\te.roisi. beaten team•. the no- Fullerton Juntor blleae. &.t,·C-4-io a matc.~:M:IUch: Wt.th Sena serving the Jans took 13 0111 itnilei Newpo~ttakesonRoll· wai Cieuf-ed lo l:iti>-'very.lhtrd game, the iscore matches, and wer..• ing Hilla an the •·A semis •Jose. -went tb ~euce several h ' Frldayanernoo, nataalte !if .The tempo ic'~thJngs: times bef(){'t! ~tarosl pacedbyVietr•w ow~ lobed t 1 ;,.i ' ~" h d filling In tor Brod ' , erm n. . 'W~s sel e8rl-Y,, W.hen broke him fort c ~econ Faltermeier aa No. 1 · k:y~~l:'[~ r:fbe~T;~:~ .~~tosi bre~'B4-\pasl str&lghtttme. . sln&lea player. • • a; • ~na. Both play.tr•· are M a r c R u y l( ave ._ of 1ts..roat~h. _p.uJl~ng JJl! rated--as alnoun1·thlbest Newport a key point with Vieira won 6-"4, l ·0,.6-2, one blJ u.pset. With the u; Southern Calilornia, 11 6·4 sin1Ie1 win ond the 8-l:and Univeraity coach score s~,-2 ~ and,hls best but Marosi . co~pJetely · team of John Pearson Gefy Sisel said, "it was players .•lrea dy. hSvlng don\inated the "match. and Rick Lada t eamed his best match of the bt;en d efeated •. Sunny He was putting the ball up to tiplit a1oin1t the year . He was hitting the Htlls coach SJ.eve White e>cactly where he wanted Lancers. ball with a uthority." coraceded the match to • The win mov es N~port 3.!i a steadyl"ain \ . ... · Univer1ity (22·0) into be~a n tofall. La --~~ CdM w· ·Friday's 1emiflnals 'I don't kpow whatthe •· gµaU:I," ID again&! !,a Quinta, a 19·9 Clf .rule is i"i a.ease like victor over Mira Costa "t his ;!' says Newport ~ _... Tuesday. c.oat:h Pat Wilson after Corona .del t.1 ar High Mira Cos ta Friday night the mill.ll'h."."1.'m SW'e. a"tl.d La1;:-'una 'Be~eh1f.ifh a·nd L&guna ,Beach u11l••r111, '~'":;!,,11~1 •l••f •• .. h·owever, th~'l if ~th '10!-h advant.·ed in.t·hi!C F travels to Serra Friday ''"'''' ·coaches agTee it's OK to volleyball playotts .. Tues-in the quarterfinals. Mv~~:~1~~:1.~·J~1'R'i.c~ot':';'~ ·cllllthl n~soff." · 1 d1fy night with wilts, but Whil e Luguna Beach ln111 <UHMtl·•·""°"'·S.•·l1'-'· The set which bfoke lfuntiftgton Be~Cli. was had llttle trouble "'ilh ~1u;;~~·11 <UI 1011 1·•· •°"' .. i. •·:a. the b1tclt of Sunny ft.i!ls elimi'nated in an: 'after· Chadwick. Corona del 11:at111 nJ1101ll·l,WOll6·~.•-1 ... J. SAN CLEMENT1''S TOM BEARD (33rAND DON ATKINSON PREPARE FOii BLOCK. 'was $colt Ttiomas' upee't nOotr,~ontest. ' Mar fell behind 12·5 In H•fit·B . .-.1r.:, 1U111 .... 11,. ·or Eddie Sena the host In a match played al the fir8l game and 12·3 In P. M•\\(l'l·R. M•t•<"' 1.1. 1-t. •1 i S , T I . Rl'""'''"'"'td•·'·•·1. Lancers .bes singlet an ·J,1arino. Corona del the 1econd. he \'II tang Aoten·G. f'•ll••"''''' 1u1 '"' t-6, player. Frustrated after Mir caroe from behind Sea King s. however, 11.ci1·1 :~•·1.•1· 'JO.Si n g' t 'o Ne.wpprt'.s tWlte to reeord 9.15·13, rallledtowinbothgames ;Z t? '<::-\~ ..A. ..A.. JS·12, 10 ·15 ,. 1S·8. win for a commanding 2·0 1. ~ ~ "'" ~hil"e L,agun'B Beuc h lead. ~1""'''''" "'."" "''• """' cty,1 s-r bre'ezed to 8 .l•.2', i~·l . 1 1ru1t•11111 1 Miit,. • "' l,,•911ne eeacn d1I Cn•dwlck lJ·l . Sailors Topple . . . ' San Cleniente ' . Match Reset • sin."• • 1·s.o ·\'ictory over 1s-1•1'"· *-IONTE. BELLO'-• Miil••~' INI d•I s eniil ,:o,.oit·,,chadv..•ick at · Lauuna ~rr10.1 to rr1nc11i.1.1s.11,1s.1a. ,, By RON EVANS f I:' r a It' t do \V n . The JoMiton6-1. e "'''' 0 '1' cffr MunHnglon S.•cll Rain forced po1lpone-. ,. Ro,CNl o.lk•llito .. 4. Beach. _ , 1s.•.1s.1,1s.1. CMllllO•llf ll•lSl•ll Tritons "'ent in front 7-0 NiHlelllNllO~t loGLlbarlt... H . l B h CMon• del ""'' Cl•I !>•n M.irlno menl or the Corona del With Greg Kelly doing andwonlffiingawa'-'. tn0,..,, IN) e11• ''"• 1-1,.d••· . unt1ng on eac , 1s-1i,1,.11,10-1,.1,.1. • •·tar.'lontebello ClF•·A lb llj d M .k J Jot>Mlon6-l. playing w1lhout ita top LI Qult1I• Cit! LOYOI• •·1S, IS.I, l• ll e se ng an l e The .tal e!t ·player on o.t.111 is-io. ,._,,. high Scl\ool lennls match Blanchard doin~ most of the cou••. Blanc hard 8,.11 ... ,11.w111.,,, '<',..1 q.1 .. , ... ,.··hitter , dropped a 7-15, c111v,, c 11, d•• ""''"'''' 1s-11. here.Tueoda'y a n •r•oon. h . 1 1 ,~ ttln·F~rtv•·t,t·'· 3.15 7_15 decision at 13.1s,1,.1•,1s.n .11.10. "<II 1l the alt ng , ewpor. lobk control of (h.,.-·m ~tch "••·~•n·L•d• t N i ,put ,..11n , , N'.,"°'' H•rbo• a11 S•n c1e ..... "'' The two schOols met H b H·gh defeated '" ., 1e1um•n·Sll••'••l·t ,•·1. 'Mira Costa. 1s.12,1s.1.•·11,1s.7. ar or 1 in the ti'°''at · game as ... • ,, ,, , , C !>t11t•Mon1c.1d••OosP111111 ... 1s.s, agalnthi'satternoon, S Cl t Ill h 3 1 ~ 1c ct • 110 or•"'· . oron• del Mar hosts ,,.,, ••·••· an ernen e g · Newport started to go toJjpiiiiii;jji!ijiii!!j[iii!iijiiiiiiiij~-~~iiiii~~iiii~iiii·m~~--~~~~~~~~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Tuesda~ night In the CJ.F him for its spikes. Serv· ~ volleybtt ll pluy~ffl-4it -tng<speciaJisl-Bill~€ahill--- Corona del Mar High. offered up rour straight A sll~ht underdolf go· poi!'ts~uli ~ewporl went ing i nto the match, in fr~nt.7 -3 . · Ne"·porl w.on the first A light tap over the n~t two games by scores or by Straw gave Newpart 15·13 . San Clemente the point .it needed to win came back t.o win the the match. third contest easilr 15·5, onl y to see the ho st Sailors win the ftnHle , 15·7. The "'in rno\·es r Newpor.t into the quarteffinals or thl' • ~ playoffs Friday against .Ba r Leagu e tti · champion Santa 1\f"onicu. Playoff Scores BASEBALL T1M1NY'i ~•MMU ••• llrtiilllil •, ~otre D•~ 3 ea;,,..,, n, A .. 111,..., Mill• 1 Kettlli2.El~t1ii10 L••.....,oct2,t"lil<I I Foot/\IU J, EtM n .... 'iller 1 qO'l'll 1. N6rth TOr'ftnce o Hoover 6, LB Jordan 1 ( t lnnlnt;1~! St. Jo~n Bo~co8, Ktnned1 • " POLYSTEEL RADIAL So.in Clemenletook a6-4 lead in the first game, but Ne wport 's Blanchard gave his team a 10-7 lead with four s traight points MIKE BLANCHARD (9> BLOCKS SllOT, on his serve. The Sailors ,.. D•m!tn 6, Moonl•ln V•r• J Lyn....o<>d 1. CYlwtr City? R•Ml'IO .t.lem1 1os 1. ~lll<;lillt~O Giilh• I. R111>inou • 0 O· 0 Scott Severt ol San Cleimente Spiked the Ball. never got more th<in a four point lead, but nc\"e r trailed agai n. F11ner!on 5, An1e1ooe 11,llley 1 • 81~r.opMOnt90me•J I, Stt1la M.ltitO Lo,·.1.u~ }, "''"'" • !11 lnnlng,J l•oy. C.•t nn !••lned 011\l C , N' F d Newport look a quick err1tos me avore 4·0 udvanlu~e in the second conk!st . but San 11 1o Mtw •.C1'1<1n~~~3 ing at 11 and Thursda~ .. s Clemente batt led back 11or.i10ii1k•,Nortol , . , beh. d th I f 0 , ti 8r1w1erl.S..n Marlnol1 \\"Inners meeting at 2:30. in e Pay o .;>i.'O s 1oom111111on•.Br1 .. o The c hamp ions hip Severs. Tom Beard and games are Saturday. 'San l\.1athi s. The Tritons ,.111,,,..,e •,L•B•~~,1 0· Cerritos. ,,, h ic h has caught Newport at 12 und 1mpoor111 s, 0t.i1eno11he .1.n111,o won the state title the took a 13 -12 l ead . TENNIS LOS ANOELES - Cerrilos faces College of the Canyo ns at 11 a.m. and East L1\ battles Pierce at 2: 30 Thursday al East LA College in the openin g round of the Southern California· JC baseball tourney. past tY;o seasons , is 1"o m S lra'A·, ho"·ever. •·.t.0Vt•l1fllnii111 fa\"orcd. ser\·ed three strlli••hl N••110•1 H••t1o••~,.sunnv~•11•1'• o Ro!llM! Hiils l •\>. L8 Pol¥ l \> The double e limination arfair continu es Friday with the l wo losers plar· The v.·inncr of the points lo "·in the game Pt1os11erdes11.sa11ta1Wrt>.Jr•I SoCal playoffs \\·ill fat·e for Newport. On the final ~1c;,::,~~~. Mir •• MonutMllo, the Northern champion poi nt . Ne "' port ·s J\1ark in a besl·of·thrf'e series Louvie r and Tim un;.1,11~·:.;::1~:~1~:~.1 ,~ for the slate title begin· J\lcClary combined on a L•Ovin1a1•.Mr1Co•t19 Gymna8tiC8 !tat1 Marino 11, l?.el lllow•r 11 ning Friday, l\1 ay 3Cl. block. c11r1mont·So. Tor••n~•. i>mll'<>N!CI . ' Fresno . Citrus . ra1r.. - Canada and San l\1ateo The third i;ame w1.1s all 2·.t.s.it11t1.,.1, CIF GYMNASTICS P IHALI !Al l.e"t ht<ll Mll lOt•lll Flnll ~co•e1: 1. We11m1",lt• 1>1.73 '·Arroyo 136.1• J. Llllo t WOOd Ill, 1). a re "ompeting for the San Clemente as e1111op.01.40111<o.Mo••o81v9~~ ' d l uf C.nlull·P•••Oen1 Po1y, POstooned Northern title: Ne\vport !Seeme o s · rein. -----------------··-- FACTORY Demo SALE! Baseball Standings • TOYOTA llA.MPLI: '75 TOYOTA I*""• .. --6. "'''"· "'NI' wll! lltff ff£31:)1)111\ 52996 • VOLVO '74 YOLVO 142 Auto .. lllr. ~1•tl0, •atlJll •llHlt. QT ...nrio ....... tolOS,SllJ 55888 • USED CAR SPECIALS '73 DATIUM.610 e.. Auto, ..... ,,,..., (5'3(1\'J) s2aaa , •70 IL CAMINO Avllt .... ' ...... ••lllio, •llOti. ...... ~ ,.._, s1888 ·12 CADILLAC C*M OtW1t. 1¥11 tMI, ,Ml ,,_., ' lillckwy.W.l~t!a (I01EVVI • AME RICAN LEAGUE F.ast l>ivision w L Pct. l\Jilwaukec 20 13 .606 Boston 17 15 ' .531 Detroit 16 •• Baltin1ore 15 19 Ne"' York 15 20 Cleveland 13 20 \'Vest Division Oak land 21 15 'fexas 20 16 1\ngelti ~o 18 Kansas City 20 19 Minnesota 16 L7 Chicago 15 20 TIMidiilJ"I Gtift.ft Bmton 1. Oakltnd O ~ ... York 6, IC•tlill CltyO M1lw111lo<rt 7, l1l•l6, (lOlnn!nQ,) e>e1r11n J, MlnntllOll J 81ltlmor1 et Clll<•jo· ppd., rtln Onl'l'Q•n">t1t<~d11 rd Tt'll•r'•G•,.. .. ·"°° .441 .429 .334 .583 .556 .526 .513 .485 .429 GB ..... 31f.! 51.2 6 7 1 2 21> 31> 51; Otklend !Holl1m1n l·•! el Bo1ton (C.11,,.!tnd 1·2) . Celllott1I• lT e11ene l ·I l ~I Cle,,,.1..-d tKrrt10..0! llM'll•~ Col1 (Ltol>••d \•I l al New York !Mtnlcl'I ,.., 11w•• {Mtr99n l ·2 •• wrio~l !l-ll ti M!lw•llkH tt'..lltmiilon '·l l Otlroil IR11n1t)·I ) ., Ml-IOlll r.1.0 ... ,., 2·11 Blltil'nOr• l Pelmer t ·l I 11 Cnlc190 lOilHn l·JI • T~11r•llltf'I 01""1 T•••,•IMltweul<r<r Ctlol0ft111 ti Bolton e ,,u;mort 1t cnit•90 '?"ly t;l<lmf' )(l>O'Cl .. led NATIONAL LEAGUE Easl Division w L Pet. Gii Chicago 22 13 .629 Philadelphia 20 16 .556 21> Pittsburgh 17 15 .>!ll 3'h New York 16 15 .516 4 Mo ntreal 13 18 .419 7 St. Louis 14 20 .412 1'h West Dl\·lslon Dodgers 25 .15 .1125 Cincinn ati 20 20 .500 5 San Diego 19 19 .500 5, San Franeisco 18 10 .486 '5\; Atlanta 19 21 .475 6 ltou8ton 15 27 .. 357 11 Tv1111lty'1 SCWll Ato.lnl1 t, Mot11r1tl 4 New Yorio 6 Clnclnntll 1 l-louuo11•, Pn11edetphi1J Sin Ol•IJO s, St. Lo11l1 2 cn1c•901, l.01 A1'19'l•11 S.11 Fr•ncl1to If. Pl!Utlu•ar.. 1 T•Cl•f 't O•mtt Pll1U111rQll (K llO!'I J.I) 11 S.t1 l'r111tli.c.o ~Moll• ltlUK6 J.J I MOnl••~ !Ril11to0·1l 1t .t.tlente fNleMro ,.,, Nt.,. Yotk IS••••• S·ll at Ont!nowll j8111. 1...,r..,...J.JI Pnl!1d•lo1Ue ITwiltl'l•ll l ·•I •I Ho111lan IOtt r l t r ,.,! 51. LOUii <Gibson l·JI II !!Ml DiitoO (Mc1111ttn 4·21 Chlc•eo ISlon• S·O> et Los A111el11 llro\tsw•ifl'li tnt·OI TMrl4ty"1Gtm" Pllhburol'l •I s.11 Ol•OO Cl'lit•to •I LOI An91M1 OlllW .. mtlMIMdlolll'd . .. ' save S60 to s92 per set of four tires 40,000 MILE_"CUSTOM POLYSTEEL" RADIALS These Goodyear steel belted ra dials [t) llil\"C money, (2) use less (u el, {~) provide longer mile· ·age, and (4) help conserve America 's resources. Now i& the time to buy these Custom Polysteel Radial tires that are orislnal equipment on many 1975 ne"' c a r s . Sale prices remain in effect through Tuesd11y ni,11 ht May 27. •AIH CHlCK -II we sell out of ~our •ize we wilt i1,u1 rou a rain check, ''~urtn1 future delivery at the fdvet1ititd prK.e. WHITtWALL "Tl MODIU OF RIQUMR 25".0FF SIZE PRI I • ' AR71·1l V1p, Pinlo, Gremlin, Colt, Falcon, Toyota $60.85 $45.63 & others BRlf.13 Ve1a. Cllll, Otrt, PlhlO, F1leon, Muslllll & othtrs $65.20 $48.90 DRlf.14 Gfemlln, Hotntl, J:rJitl, Vlllln~ !Mitt, Barracuda, Mavtri l ot~1r1 $67.85 $50.88 ERlf.14 M1tidor, Ambluld6r, Nof•. Cht~tl!e, CamarO, $69.00 $151.75 Dirt. Mustan1. Coucar l ot~ers . FR71·14 Torino, Amb1$Pdor, Cll!ltro, CllllJU, Cll•••llt, Cl'lllllft1er, loldrvMlf, CIW1t1 & otlltu $74.55 . $55.91 HRlf.14 M.t1dor Waaon. =Vis II Crulstr, ltMaM Wap,~. ~ l olhtll• $83:75 $62.81 . JRl .. 14 ctitwrolt' W1,0,., O= PoMlec W1p, Chfysltr TCWl'l Ind ry Wqon $87.80 $65.85 GR!f.15 cnmoltt, Pol111, ~lni•, Mont11•1. rury, Catalina l otlltt1 $79,80 $59.85 • I ' • Bolt•." thrysllt, Ood11, ford, Olds, ' ·H,7S:l5 ron111e $85.75 $154.3i • ' . ' L)l!l 15 1\1~. C1clilltc, C~evro!tt Wqt111, PlyMolllh, $92.85 se9.e3 f'onti1t,l LlllCOlll ConllMllltl '!us $2.11 It PM f .l .T. ptrllro Intl tld Hro. • 7J"'5toBuy .. • f ,~,Ends 'lie!NY """'' ~17 •Ollla •0.0..041111 ir . . ·Q':\;,'::.~;J:· .6 . -·-....... ,~ SH Your lndtptndtnt Dealer ~or HI• Price. Prlcu Ai Shown At Ooodyt1t llervlot llortt, " ' ~DYEAR TIRE CENTER .. COSTA ~l~RT llAOH llt6Ht .......... ol t611oll. 14 .. 9383 . .._.. ... ..,... .. 1.w.e- = " t . ' ' ,, -- ,, 1 .. • Ta I II• 1 AZ a den are ti New1 Sal I· fdusl1 Wp Cf CIF and ni gh tr here. ,# 1f 1 P as at poin~ Muir1 lillist Av mad• Pase sprin 1lD e: OLis I lay t CIF'o 42.1. r ou ld ' But the s1 man] who I Ttu l r u e: lhOU i win t and coacl -t? B· B: _£1 • ~ p ;Prui ~Hig h ;: lie ~New ~will :fthe s ~ Bu ~flrac i, ~na;!; ch an fie It . Collt ' HE will lac, with , e I irst 1956. ... ~ . jlft1 ck :t'.and .in th ur says pect to SC . ·our• ~ J 1 Pr' •Sat : ,lif!l ~ ilhe J ~Hun lioni low I·~::[ ,Cloe " ' •1 syst :1 givE =t say! ; N :' p I a :r 110-\ :1 1 first ;1 Pr.u ., po1r ~bee• .. . Ne1 ·:t Pru , two :t and " p i pre; pra· the t re!~ 1 The 1 th• l res1 ~ I f I ~ I Mu the !lei the ian the • pie Ha Op ( Ill "'I wll w• Ila :Cl ml R'I' I ~· . " • I Tars Seeo,••i' . Spi~Edge To Pt13adena lly ED BURGA RT Halley: Muir'• Walter CMu.oeuyPUetau " Opp and Pasadena's Bob·, AZUSA -The Pas· p ·t I II adena Hi gh B lid rw t-pract ca y con· . u ogs cede Newport these are the ravorates, but the three e venlit Ne~port Harbor High · Sailors and Muir 's The Sai lors' David fffustangs also (igure as Kurrasch leads the na· top contenders to win the lion this year in the shot CJF 4·A varsity track (66·10"Ai); Brian Theriot and rield . title Friday hJll ru_n 47.4 iD !he 4..0 - night al Citrus College he broke the CIF meet re· here. . cord ln <the preliminaries \~1rrorm prevails,w th a,48 .3 ; a'lld P asadena will score 45 Ne.>"port s m il~ relay. points, Newport 39 and team bas the CJF's top Mui r, the 1974 CJF 4-A ma~k or 3:17 -.2 and ha:s· tillist, 33. eQ1ly beaten its. top two Awinningcnsecanbe lh~eals (M uir a nd made ror each team . ~d1son). Pasad e na has a top Muir meanwhile has ~printer in Rick Jackson, depth. '11 has the 'most -an. excellent hurdler in qualifiers (nine) and Otis.Hunter, and a 440re· could pick up crucial lay ,team that h~s the thirds and fourths . And CJF s b~st cloc king or l\1uirshould benefit most 42.1. Easily, the Bulldogs by the new scorin g could win four events. system of 10·8-6-4:2.1. · But nothing is sure in lhe sprints, a·nd there are The m e~t 's outco.me, many other individuals though, will be decided whocquld win . in the sprints, hurdles The sa me doesn't hold and440relay . . tru e .fo r . Ne.wport , Weitt Covina and west lh.ough, which f~gures to Torrance have outstand· win t~e 440, mile relay tng aprinlers in Jan and shot put. All , three Smith and Steve Zak, coaches-Newport s Bob and both could deal f{ * * blows to Pasadena's Lille chances. Bulldogs Bidding Smith was impressive in clock ing a 9.6 100 in the prelims while Zak has go ne 21.S in the 220 this year . Jackson is no standout in either race. T Also, Pasadena has a vor 1"tle histor y o f being dis· -41.'-" ~ qualified in the 440 rela~. ' It certainly can't afford § PASADEtJ.A -Bob to~othatFriday. ; Pruitt s ays that Muir And Hunter\ who has ::High has strong depth. run a 36.8 in the 330 lows $' He also says tha(lhe ea rlie)' this season , "Newport Hart>.Pr Sailors didn 't ~k , that good in :fwill be tougl'i' {1,o beat in his pre~i)nin~y~ hea~. 0x· ;:the stale meel!1n.June, nard'si!'.r'ic t.a11ot t!ftged , But Pruitt, Pasadena's Hunter. ln the pFt!lims . .. track coach. wouldn't rurini '1g a ~7. 7, a nd •trade his .('hences with MOrnin gsid e'a John ' . anyone in the CIF 4-A (SeeSPIXE,PaceB4) 0 c~ampionship trac~ and . 6 , .A-· -~ , . . ·field. .mee t at C itrus -., H w " Col)ege Frida'y ri'ght. ...~ ' ~ • He feels that his team w1•0 · -nron't will pick· up rour first W ' I r places, and won 'l argue . ' . ith experts who-. Irick C! p • e Bulldogs to win thelr·.;,ur . rJfte" irst CIF track title since·~ '·. ·~ ~ ,· 1956. • "'H ii., , ''We 're banking oft ft eyi :f'.Rick J ackson in the 100 ' '. ,. <¥and 220, on Olis Huntet Bob Haifey ·Concedes' .: · ~in the low hurdle1 and on that .the • P~a~ena ~gh .. { !our 440 relay team," Bu•lldo.11 should be · [ .say& Pruitt. "And we ex· ravored'in Friday night's -peel our mile relay le&lfl CIF 4·A chaDtpionship to score pointS as well asi track and field meet 'al 1our440man." · CilrusCollege. t Jack so n wa s i m · Bill the Newport -pr essive in la st Harbor coach won't .he. ·S a t u r d a y ' s p re . surpri~ed if hif Sailors ' . , liminaries, tanning 9.5 in Win th~ir first.ever CIF ·lithe 100 and 21 .8 in th~220. track title. ~~Hunter holds the na · ''We have a solid 30 ~ • tional record in the 330 Points," he says .. "and low hurdles (36 .8), and Muir and Pas3 de na ~the Pasadena 440 relay could be topping each if team has the CI F 'S top other in the sprints ." :t clocking (42.1). . Newport is strongly -1 ''On th e old point favored in the 4~0 (Brian ~sys tem , J would have Th'eriC!~'s 47 .4.f, in the :t givenus30and Muir23," shot· put (David Kur· :1 says Pruitt. rasch's 66·10 1.A.) and in ;f Now, the (irsl six the mile relay (3:17.2). :f p I aces g e-t po i nt s Pasadena, m eanwhile, :. (10·8-6·4·2·1 instead of the has excellent s printers. ~first five (S·4·3·2·1), and But so does Muir. And ·1 Pruitt believes ·the new West Convina. And West ;i point system ravors Muii' TQ.rrance. . •t becauseoritsdepth. Hailey knows that :r ··11 will' llurt us and 'Newport will need more ~ Newport· the m.ost, '' than SO points to win, .~Pruitt says. "Muir has though. ; two men in the h'Urdles ''I 'm h oping that ~~ and has the most depth.'' Theriot will get a third in ';t. Pruitt is also ~im · the 220," says Hailey. :.f press·ed with Newport,' "And ~ honest1y b!!lieve l practically conceding it that Vin Mulroy will gel .t the shot put 440 and mile rourth in the 440 despite t relay. ' beinginlaneeight." 1 ''And I think Brian Hailey is also banking ·$' Theriot will be tough in on K.C. Connell (6·61/.i) to 1 the 2Zo. I have a lot of ~CO,r'' points in the high 1 respect for him .'' 1un1p. }* *. * * * * 1 Pasadena Pick,ed } By Muir CQaq;. ' ~ .,.. . !'-.. . • . P ASADENA ~Th·e of'lhe picture: thoug~. .. .. ,._. ... . ' )- ' ' '· • ' .. ~ -··-· ,. .Jay. May2t, 1975 ' 1$'. ·.~ . ; .. .r. ".' • ' . ... Size . ER70•14 F.R70.14 GR70.14 ~R70•15 F.E.T.'' per tire . 2.75 , 3.00 3:12 3.15 ' ' ' Tune-Up Special 20.,88 6 cylinders and vw 2·s.d s -e~)(lind0er cars _ .. ____ _ U.. Your JC~IMJ Ctwge. ' E11.cept supermarket Prices shown are for tubeless wh1le11ralls plus Fed Ex. T111. as shown. No trade·1n needed. Our Re1iAf!de8 Radial is our own name and does not reflecl ar:iy nationwide s1anQ.ard of qualily. Wilh the purchase of RehAride8 tires you get 1. lnstana11on 2. Rotation every 5000 miles. Includes new l)Oints, Aiteline.ph,igs,,dilltributor Cl!) and ro!Of. Owtll 1ngle. ti"!'i.rG and idle set ~~ldtus)ed. Power team. luel tine. dlslribu1or ldYal\ce: second~~~· RtsJW pllJOI addlllon1t eosl. Most .\met1hin Cars. PltlW'Ull for IQPC)intment. Not•av1H1ble on Sunday. Pric9I efftcUv. MonGty, May 19. thrU Wedl"IMlNy, M1y 21 , 11t75. .,...-.,..., .. , .. SALE Motorcycle Helmet 10.99 R-. 14.'7. G.E. Le•one light- weight plastic polycarbonate. Meels A.M.A. safety standards. Size HR70•14 HR70•15 JR70•15 LR70•15 F.E.T. per tire 3.41 3.43 3.60 3.74 SALE Auto Stereo 74.44 a,.. 19.97. FM mulliplex s1ereo H track tape deck. Fingertip controls. (2605) S1m11ar to 1llustratio·n . ·t Muir tneh Mui tangs'won He" thinks hts a ce : the CIF 4·A lraek ana sprln,ter, John Lynn (9.7 ' field \Ille last year , bill 100, 22.2 220) C.n beat ~ I -. • , 5'1. ~'f'ltldlve thnJ &indlly, M'y 18. t975., 6pen Memorial Day -Sun. Hours ~ their coach, Walte.r Opp, llvoted Ri,c:k Ja<k!IGfto<f ' ian'\ aa confident a---.,. ~U...JtJt>, and . . thelrchanCes thi1a41ubo. Oai_fiiiiJh~.tMl'Cl -~10\lnh \ °' 0 Rigb\ now , • would ia.t'9220.t-·r -1';;...'-+.:: • pick Pua•ena, Newport "Opp loo~i for '1111 :lew . Harbor and Muir," 11y1 hurdler1-Btl-I Smltb1 Opp. \ ! <s1.SJ [and Tim bf•l!i· Opp, like moat othenJ, berl.(17,fl""-to be lli'lbe sayi that Newport haa a top th'ree, ~d alto si,Vea 1ure30polnt1. hl1A40 relay•(eam (~.2) _l·1r l would rale teams agoodchancetowin,"I ' ' with lockOd polnto, then I "Arid we'll be, el_ In ' ~ould pick N e wport, the mlle relay,''·.Opp,. , . JT111den1 and'Mutr," he 1ay1 ... ~ thl nll we'll i:un. lff'· ''Newpqrt h• 1 tn the low 3: ltl. ,, ·. l\J'OdS 10 ln,tho·oG. In tho ''And In th• lon1 J,mp, mllerelay.andlntheallot Danny Plttmao hu P.UI.'; · '°"" lour or five Inches I ·He won'I co~nt hi• 'J;etter,than he did In the ~tan11 eompl~wl pnllmln1rle1 -<22·3~).'' . • • ' . ' • I J ' ' ' ' I •• • I · I ... . \ I • ., ' ' ••• -''4 DMLYPtl'oT Height 10/"Absurdity: Co...,,n,ty 10-team °Lpops • I Th• belch! of ab1unlity hu been re-Meaaina and Steve Hormulh II> Its· ached amon1 Oran1e County p~p of· v1r1tty coachtn1 r•nk1. Messina ftclllll Wllh lhe proposal to turn lh' talteo over lhl crop COUPlry-am SoQth Coist-Leasue upside doWn for and Horin."th takes o\'# wreeWnt1 · ar (187177> Wreatllns Coach Kent BenUey is on;:r.• poulbl~ oi lhe CIF Southern sw!te.hlnc to 1olf and Don Cfi/illensen Se<tlon coeo alon& wilh the Pl"!polal will contlQ!le u track roach. in1~mber) that there will be two • 1 , • ·10:1eam lea1ue1 in OrangeCOunty. Fermer Maler D<l IDCll ~el!>all One-eori1llta of the preHDt South Ital' Gree.Gree• II be .... I• C•I C:O..t Leacue CDana !tills El TOro !Male <LN Aaceteal ... Ja .. Deaa •• - SPOITS ' North , . • - • ' .. rth lie , Saddleback 1'friple 1J,ni,er in .SoCre 'Fi~ JlyCll,\IGSHEFF juat 7 tnches In back of f1 .. syou'reon~tural . ti~ and effort,"• ••Y• cw .. cw., ,., ... ,1.an the No. 4/lnia.her. ''Another one· of his 1Ca1n. When· R~ Br<itvn 'tri· Bro·wn, a 8·1, 160 · dr"wbic:k• b:1 hi111 ll\te,..e· Brow~ i11 ,u ndei;ide~ Pie J1.1111ped.:•7·~~ tn 1Ui p0under~ ·will aefd· at '-"•l whllt comipG do';"n abo~~ where he 'll be tf1· Jl'rid8y'a southein ~l,aat p fourth place the runway. He Ii go\ to ple..JU/'11?\"l:'next!lea~n. Cal,forniil tr a.ck· and finish ty gain the •lfle \~ Bble to refui at the ~qL one h1ng 's for CK~ field prellms tt was a lit· Cina.ls l ·week tJr · at 'board. ·. · , ~-it he contltlUe& lQ ue 'bit of a 'sur iiH: to Ba1Cer1rteld. ~ "The marJ( thal~he got improve at the rate he's Saddleb ~c k Cf'O·Jlege Two thil\&i tha have htst Friday watt the re· goine·-he's1turetohuvQ eoaC"hD.uaneCain: · helped l;lrown this suit or sheer dctermina.· alew.olfel'it. The reason was ob· season, •1lYS Cain; are ~;ii;;;;;;;;i;' ~· ::~~:!~::::!!E:::=~~~ viou1-Brown'1 best filmworkandspetializa·1. -·" • • I • t __.1=~:-tL-1J.e ........ ,.~-·~--St.. . , . , CollecelaOl)'mpla, aP.'.1 . , ' , • -. -+ ··c "dd'-I prior to that was Just ·ti6ninoife-evelit. ,._ -Ni· 0~_"'*;:1iri ~&i.Vkl. ~ ~ 4$-9. • • "L~t se,..on he <Om· ,._9),. '1-'-o">L,,." ''I ~-.w ti,e 'w1s ready peted in:• Id\ of events, • . for a jump of 41 plus wtllch may '.be why he · j 11ut f'4EW ;..;.._, -.-~·lwoc..uUeyieasue~en·· 'r1 ers talives In -tbe CIF 4·A bueball . • , ROGER ~ . \ ~ .. :·· · • playoffs-co·cltainpions Cosla Mesa and El Modena-are coache;d by former Orange Coast €ollese team· mates. • t · became he ,had been do· fluctuated so muchJn the Tl....:. J.RY in& lhat In.practice but I triple jump. We felt he REVOLU ~ r¥eallY ,didn 't e~pect ·was ~Pf!!ding hi~1ell STRING .l'Dl\,, SS· 47·:S,'';says Cain. · too ll\__in, so W.f gqt.ham to ~\If' "Named - . J ·-Univenity, Laguna Beach, Mission Viejo •nd ·san Clemente), plus out- siders Santa Ana Valley., &'tancia, Costa Mesa and Coronadel Mar.· The other is a mishrnuh or teams lo the north, pl Us Tustin and Foolhill. 10.team leagues simply don't make aense when all that is required to ,. maintain some sort ot sanity. is to :: move Tustin ·and Foothill inlO a six· -~ team setup with SA Valley, Estancia, :: Calta Mesa and Corooa del Mar. That .1 would leave the nor1hem setup an g. ;: team lOop and the.South Coast League alone-rand available to lake in the two new schools in that area that are ·~ expected to open in 1977. ~ lt would also offer some! stability for ·i · the en Ure county. But turning ever- ; : yt.ll;ing uptide down for one year? i ; Prepoateroua. •• El J\.lodena 's GleM Lukenbill and Coeta Atesa 's Jim Hagey played for the Buctt in 1952·. · ~ Edl-Hl1•'1feolllallala"lelli<h•d~a ....... Grande a•d' Wanea ·1a ... league for '7:S. Ajd'c.&a Mes1's 1ked featare1 La Qalata aW.Mfulom Viejo. New Newport Harbor High basket· ball coa ch Ken AIJlmann is in a unique situation . }fe'll coach al Newport and teach at Edison, where several or his history students play basketball for the latter~ "I bav.e' 'five sophomores in my clau now who will be pla'yihg aeain for Edison,'' muses Ammann. The two school• are in the Sunset League. Rumors tbat Newport' Harbor· IUgb's tenals and golf teams are hi· volved wltb Ulegal tralfers are U· !oanded. .Newport reports .• lrreplarttieJ ud tbeCIF office coaflrmslt. • : Tbe Saddleback Valley Scbool o;,, . : , trtct iJ considering opea ~arteS There's been a kJt, of noise ~bout ;: : for Its lntermedl•te 1cbool1-but · Newport Harbor Hieb'• &Mexation ol : · notldng is Oii tbe •genda re1arding a second straight Sunset League track i '. blgb acbool stadentli-.t leut not UD· title-but don 'l overlook Edison for a : ; til tbe new llilb aCllool epens lD &be fall pat on the back-. : , ol '11. The Chargers came within four · points of winning the title without in· . Open boandar le• llave unre1I jured star sprinter Chris Davis .. And ·: . ramlflcatl~DI reg•rdlag atbletlcs. Tom Lloy was forced to pull out of the .: Oftu, tbe re1alta •reje~y anddll· low hurdle!. And the Chargers were tratamong1cbools. without benefit of a state champion University High has f dded BOb transfer. Athletes Los Al Entries , J ohn Power \\'as .named most valuable pJayer Tuesday ni ght (or FUIST IACa -«ID Y••d•. l YN• olcls. Cteiml119. Pllri.e '2100. Clllming prkttSOOO. . K•11k•n fL.I01'11ml 117 WinlH Biondi IH•rtl I tr Nt•PDlicy CAdllr l 1n N.-Sllwllle RCKktl fMyltS) 119 5-oflebout IW•IJ011 ) 111 old!.. Cl•lmlne. p.,, .. •2100. Cl•lmltlO ""1<4 '500CI. . • Clelltllfiaw.trl8te ITrt••11ret 11' .-.1-.m CC&('do.z.•I in ._., '°"""' loy ICre191• l 1n a11111·1Lodi l\•rt•Ho"l 1n Copy A1911 CC1trl• .. > 1n ZIJl't Soon l~rll 111 OkktY'• Rec:k Cllftdr !Ce ll I Ill Slr0utl8ttlto.trCAICh•rchl U? IW. T09D1ic'• !l•rlr•ml lit Glorior&olll'ld lAO•lrl l it llXTM AACI -.f~ r•rch .• J rt•• ~ -·..t' ~ ·r w o p r·e p All· Americans lro!' Servile High-qua1ter:tiac1t·Tllrk Sc honert a nd tackle Steve Shoemaker . ..!..~ the 1975··North All·slar Cootball t.e am , an· nounced today by head coaeh Glenn _Hastings o( El Dorad• High. . The 16th annual Orange County .North· South charity game U; set for July 12 at Orange Coast Coll ege. The North squad begins practice· Monday, June 23. . Sehonert is ta 6-~. 190· j>ounder .wh .ile Shoemaker 1s a 8-5, 210-Pounder. Anaheim , Servite, El Dorado and Kennedy have four players each on the '7S team.' . ·The South team Will be announcec:\.Thurad~f. ltrl~AIH'9r~'- Aftli'ltlm-:;,e·pe1""'-( ....... 1. UIQJ; 110'• E l<tnltr, S.11. IHI; Chr l• Coons U1, J.11. l_tSI; §reel He"I"" llb,J·lt;1tSI. · • arow.._, a sophomore, conc~~~·tt more· on one GU.l.AMTEED TO,DOUliE will lie bidding for a ev'enl; .says Cain. OUI TIMMIS berth· in ·~he slate meet Br-~wn, w,h.o Ca.in lltl,LlfE Of Y . this·, Satdrday nJght at de..scr1~1 as 'very in· Gt;T S 5 Pll C .-M j .. B8kersfield College. tentie h:a..s •lJ.~ m-· · Krr .. ,,~ ; That;• w~en he.competes Pr,oved_/by l~ok1nc .•t p •·ft· •M· OUNT in !he ,lloc·a1 finals fil\ns. . fa /Yo nt, , . agai1bt 11 other triple !"ff• pUt together 4 ••· SPORTS jumpers. . q,uence or fil'ms from his Brown had the eighth f11')t lo last ~eet.~ and be>tiuinp in the·prelims; a~ shoived . ~1m some 333 .I. 17th SI., Cotta Mesa but was onl y 14 inches. OJymp,1c ft ~ms, •n.d . u1•,11•1"1C1T11e iiweo; .... .,,...Hoo.1 .. "J P•~! -• behind the leader and other s and . I think it lj~;;;;~~~H~O~M~Ei6~4~2~·~6~!1~8~6;-~;;;;~:;;~ h e"I P·i.d· h aim ... H.e 's . charile4. his f9r iil .a lot SPIKE. . • ~~~·.All!, ,l.lrst-of the LEASE. A Thompson (37 .6) also and i• Still bothered with ' ~· · 'Brown :-ha,t .a: severe JI Cntl•ae4FremB·3 · baCk ""Probletn l•sl Y,ear ••• looked good. ... it.\o_aome:extent .. Hel-e ii ii' dope 1heetol' ''Wbea he bigh:jumped Friday'st meet with pre· IUt year or1 ~hurdfed it The FIAT more forless l0ase. di eted times: /' 'se:e~ed to aiv.e hlm ~- 100-1. J•k-t~•~Nll , ... , .. bl,e. B~t.he doesn't ~ave Sm&tti 1W111'Cov1n.1 t.•:a. hll·tw.lt th~ .Pain as much 1'.'hen :'":Ti.!:~~i ~~~ .. ~.:lk~· hce:t.triple1 jumps,'" says tt..•Po1w1t.L • a : 1"I ~' alb Jeels Brown has J!:;! ~.:::~.1°~;~tl!::;. the"',POtential lo be a SO· IWti.l Covl"•I 21.• t . ,...,,lol (oof(ripfijUmper. ct••CIOf1l 11.1s. L""' tMu1,1;ia~.. ••u .. ne-"• to or• on MORE Value, Economy,.0!9Pendabilily, .Luxury. LESS Money . McGlotfllnl~IU.1 . i.I •• '-"" ~ ' W 1' 0 .. O<n·D .. ;o.o. ... ,., .......... ,, --~. -··:-h·t.ir•i>-.:r<t;--a n-d-1 e g; Dl-C:K ..... l.UER MOT RS II)). 440-1.,TMr6ol !N••,..rll a.•~·" stren.rih alid "hit! Corm is m 'o ~= com•t•"' ·4t.L.3 •. ,&;:1ey ,e • • · . , llUll Bl.WIWI P•r--Nt 9r.t l9•rd. .. I, 'f •••• 4, ·lfnllfl ,('9 ..... ) erQ&(i(:. -nte.tn,pJe JUmp ""tl,..~WAtmtO i;-;- 2.01.., ~ · . :t · '" '. •·• '·.=.::r..:.~·...,., .:o .. r "-18~~ ··' ,event!'wiPt,.a lot or 'Ai.Hrt-wic~.........,,0~,....., F111l••10t1-"t'k" LI·'"'.'.""· f...,.t:-~ , .. r · .. i:·~ :' -ique and" il •fkes a 1~ W. Warne;,.~. Milin, Sanfa Ano557~2132 .:001. · ' ,. __ , Ltrt •••tw111 ·M.s1:s· loii~: t" I~ r ·t 1:1 00r"°-r~ .. 1 Ptc1uir1119 l«ntt•. • ~ k.-i.1 1:u.s 1. w · -·.·~~.-:.:..u~m~.fl~~'~o~.,,~r-n.,,..•_._u_n_·..:,,~·~· ,.,,c:..-,,.t..,-.,,,.,-::---------------w. 1'tSI: M ,,,,, Ub. •·l, 1.01 ; ,tt11•ll'l*I· 1:SS.t,•. ~I ',· · •. ; : Fre11k Kini l•~. 1·2, ttol; THC! ·••I .1:5'.I S. Mc0H fDM!I,,._ , ~ •<lo ·) /;;"' •· cl KlfKllNr t• ... 1, 1IOI. ~. l:JLt.6.CWtle OM~l ,:IU. · •"" ~°"' Gr--JOMI Yer ..... IMI. s.n, 1111, . • · KtMitCfY-lob_ Terr•-• ~. M , ltsl; Ml~t W'Nlt l91111r•, M. 200>; Oolln CffUA11no ldO-tl,.."'l'ft, .. 2, no1 ; JM Gatcl• llb, .. 1, 2101. L• HIWl ¥·E4. PolNM•ltr UloooHI 11 ... -... 1. tttl. L-•-8o0 Peteri.on 1a11•d. .. ,, 21'1 ' L01 Al•Miles-Jlfl\ M•I" Cdtwft • •'"'-· M , l•Cll; All!' Cntl"' lend, M .trJl. • L-U-AkNrd Cr111 UIMlkkllf. S.I0. 2Hll; lr"'!lo" l°"'n ""'"""· &-•,d i. ' Or•nQe· M•rto. S•t1 Mr (lb. S·t. ltOI. ' I the Fountain Valley High : :volleyball team at the \' !v o 11 e y b a 11 · g o I f · N'"'' Molle tel IDr•w•• J 112 AlltoB1r !Trt e111r1 I 119 S.twjle-... II l:""•rd ltb, S·IO, 1•1; lltW ShoiirirNktf fl•c~i.. •·$, 1101; 8111 Lttr (lllCMe. •·S, 12.51; T11r- $c.-l lcib, .. t. ltol. 11t S1111nr M1111-0oe11"l5 0 11t'll;emo"- ol<H & ""· Cltln»ng. P11rw $UllD. CllimitlQ prt(t i rsoo. RitekOnlllllln C8•"k•I gymnastics banquet. Wayne Crossley was ! :selected most valuable golfer and Ron Heyer : :most valuable gymnast. AWard winners: .... , ....... V•r•lty-MO•I V•lu•Dloe: Joll" Powtr; C#t•I": Jor.n Powr; M01tlm- pr•wltd: Akfl He"''"· J1111lor V•••ll1-Molt V•!llllDll : 'Jody ~1et1CM1; Tte.,, C•ot•it1: S.tOT '.0g11 ; Mot.I lfl'lprovtCf: Mllte H1rrls. .. ,, V•••lly-Moll Vel11•bl1 : W•Yllfl ·cro~~11r; Mo.I tmo•ovtCf: 0•~ Ht"· 'oer,.,11. '. Ju"iot Vtr•llr-~oll V•IUlblt. .1111111<1 Gilmore ; Mo1t lmorov1i:11: H•,,. •Or l.ec:k••O. • Gy-.Hkl • V•r•Hr -MPlil Vel111D1e : q o" ;11tyoer; Tt•m C1ot1I": Stoll 8111· . lnglon; llllloll lmprovtd: Jolln Lund. ' :i Derek We'rner was .roamed most valuable 'player Tuesday ni ght at ; 1the Costa Mesa Hi gh ten· ; · nis awards banquet. Award winners ; var•ity-Moll v1•11•Dl•: Doi••• , werntr ; T11"' C.1pl1ln : Merit '-Krlltorl•n. MOU tmprov1d: Mtll • H•rrl1; MoU l"liPirlllOnel: St•V• • M•~· • Junior ver11!!-Mo1t ve 11111olt : I G•tl SlrnonlM; t•m C•pllltl: Dtb-l ..... "-•I; Mo111m11roV1d ; Alck Hltl; , • #lot! IMPlrel!ori.I: Jem•• Liu. ' •• '• ' Badminton c ................. .. S\111 TllUtN'f' al Ctl Slett Me.,wen Nt•k• , •-*''""'••• ! Smllh !Goldtll Wt •l I CMI B•t~erlOl'I •1 l\JC Elflrto.111w l 11.s. 11·1. 10.i to r. A.,...r1ce1Pet,'"-•ll ·ll,l ·tt. I • WlllMll'I o..Mei . 9"'°"1i•SflouM (GW I !Otl lo Ht!> pltlfl011·8111l111i !Cet Slet• Fr.vool 'f f.lS, IS.U. l·ll, ~1 lo AltunOlr- r ,,,,_"'°" CBtk.,lifOtldJ 1·1S. IJ..17. ' :1 Ml•••~ Jord•"·B•oolLli (GW I to't to MtNt11r·Mlller ICel Poly PotN<w• s.U,l·lS. Ttlm St0to:1: L Ctl Slelt Oom- 111911'1H111S11, 2. '"'Ditto SIMt 11. 3. C&t Sltlt LA 11. I. LO"ll Elfletll 11, i. ' c1-t •. U . Goldt" Wtlil l. ·I . ""='°"=== " ., ' ' ' I l • I ! I • " • • : • ~ .y NeSlldS<1n91. !Cr••11•rl 119 OUPl'dffdoo lW.tUOt1) Fer'1JlowTwo !Mw1•1.! 121 Cclb, J.11. IPJI HotSho1 C11ltler ICefffl•l 112 nt Tr01-A•wZoll•r tt1cktt,•·J.aio1. M19hlymeer 1w1ro1 . nt V•lllY Flttl "''" (C•ll I 11t VIit• P•rk-Oennlt 811rll C#b, S.11, AIME:ll .. IM Fr.,.ch 111111-t IAdllf I Vlt.t0tw '"•"' ILIP•h•m I GflnclKk'I 'Til fHtrl ) Ror•I 6•r Su COrere• l Tiny W•l'h Boul>O IHert I in 11s1 111 AirWI Ot""I I lrtl,urt 1 1 It· c.rt.r'1D•ndy ILIC>h•m I 122 FMlel(opy CA01lrl 111 ~111.-'•Ch••o-r !C••001•l Ju1llk1 Pe !Orero:r I "' m "' '" 1l1 "' "' ON "' "' "' BUY NOW AND SAVE! SWIM BEFORE JUNE I CJ.LL MOW FOR A lmER FASTER JOI AT LOWH COST 17141 516-4562 l'llH ESTIM.t.3-7 DAYS A Wiii! $3,100.00 to SI 0.000.00 + CUSTOM fjllWl1'YPOOLS . . ' .... ' ... --~.....,-.................. ,.._ ....... _ .. __ _ .......... _ .... ................. ................ 3530 DURl'll A ft PICO RIVUJ., CALIF. 1 • Women's Results GIALSSOFTaALL VAASITY ScHt ltW 111111111!. ""°"'lllw-1. PelMtM12.3 2.Mlllr 11.J J. Climttton 11.• •. LB hly 12.1 S. 11111ra .14. Domlne11t1 ~·' Mile lll•lllT:-1. N'WpOrl H•rtoof ): 17.r 2. Mlllf 1:: 18.S ), ll•IMHI l: It.a '· ,._ ..... J:ii.I J. Cempton J:tt.1 •· LO!. Al•ml10!.):2J..1 HJ-1. So•"'"' l"rctOI•• I ·• 1. c .. •woo IWldll'"I Mi. 8owen IWHl Covl1111l M •. ConMr 11::1~nc111JWJ. Con ... 11 IHtwPOtl Her"°rl I• I. FlllgerllG IRtdl~•l l·S LJ-1. W1 lliOl'I tFOfllt111•1 U1'h 2. Ktlly (LB Wll$Gll') U-1 l Pltl-CMlllrl ll-0 4 WU.on Clllllor11lnoJsldtl 21·S l . Leng CClfllllflnl•l I 22-""' •· GehrmMI CPelos Vtrdttl 22·• SP-1 K\ltteloCh INe•pOrl Hl.-J 6S·'"" 2 11111cKl111i• IH•rll •l·l J,· Odom~ COos P11tbl0!. I 14-S I . Madi!ICl'I CL8 "91yl ~ S. O«Kltme lWet' Tor·, r-.el 51-7 ._ JKk$1111 Cw.119'*.kt S1·1 . ...! .... • Pv -1. V•lllSlrom cv1111 Plrtl IMi 1. S.C:h lfl'lmtt !VIII• Perk ) IJ.f I. T11rMr CCypr11.• 111·• '· Swiltll' (8uf· rougl'o!.J 11-41 S. Boprt IEOltonl 14.tl. Addw !Jore.1111•.0. Pfedlcted l••m lo(Oft!.: P•WOIMI ... Ht...-.rt It, M1dtil , Edi'°" 21. ' CUSTOM WHEEL SPECIAL .. • I • lnclOOes cop • f\Jly pc1;shed • Its bolh drum and dsc b!d<e ..i'i&els •one pece cie-casl °"""""" • (Jddiiond cost for Superlug n!Js one week only off., er:!ds t,1ay ~8 !l ~ (i11 1Hlric h , ---. -----. B.F. ' . All . I ' '' ' . SPORT SHIRTS 700' Left To ChocHe Prom 1=!!· .$6· 88 IATHll'S DAT NNI 15thtlf SWEATERS VALUES to $45.00 -$ 5 e 8 UP t I ·,SPORT CQATS VALUES TO $95.DD ~L-PllCI P. Gi: J i Pai ingto most the 'Voll e tour Reno past thej~ to th pions Dit matE (Hui'! Debb Sue name All-A! , Lu -·voJI( 1Gold• ~and : / pers ·Greg• I All·A1 ~ Th( natioi , way. t Di pp ~ quar ; mate! . game : main Thi Sundi Dippt: defei: ·toum, ·. advat r ~La ' . • Ilk Le Loi f LaCb;: 'for lt l the fl 1 •day n ·nual Garn• 1Cosl t Lane: , La< 1 the I >-Elim: 'of258 ;vant; ,Bob! Co1 tCornc behln · Foun· ,...Have 1 bac;k Have JCham ~ Thi 'idle \.sumi J p.m .. , > .......... ~1.Rk.ll t ,2.BobR 1 3.Slfl~• 4.JICI< I S.John l ..... e111th • 1. E. G.1 ••• Siity I ...... ,.Be f 10. Ron i I "· Fr.a 12.Jlm · ~ 15. Oick 1 11. Jtftj O lllfl t Mtliel llnlltll! l ltlQtOll I r ICollt ·~ IH..,,lln t Fotlltt """' .Y Poltllll ,_, Mt .. ,. <v.11.~1 ~ (Cini•' ~ 1Tri t ~ ' I .Loi t will I ; Cl~m ~OU. I I iloteJ !-betW f.j<!pl. I"·, Tb1 f .a 1 ·1 r Clein .~r'e l . ~-.. -turn1 r Th• 1 JUI ' Y\ ~Y1 ,run . l' 01~~ Au ' · Au1 ....., , Se .,. .. ! • • Newport Five Wins Led by G .. eorg e 1Yardley Of Newport Beach, the Winded War- riors or Orang"e County recenUy won the $enior Olympic bas k e tball championship {40·49 age croup> title. Yardley, who played for the Detroit Ph1tons or PAULA DITIMER DEBBIE GREEN ,._ the Natlonul Basketball Association , is one or GirJs l'~leyholl 5everal players on the te am 1\s:om Newport Beach. Yardley, however, was the star of the team , scoring Sil paints in the final two games. Juni~rs Gain National Ti~le Other players on the team from Newport 1.1re coach Ed Regan, George Jones, rather of former Corona d c l Mar 1-ligh ' cage standout Casey Paula Dittmer or llunl· p ionshi p round with ington Beach was t:hosl'n morning action while the most valuable player in Dippers were idle. They the U 'nit e d St-a te,s played 12 games Sunday. ' Volleyball Association The Dipp~rs won the tournament h e ld i n firstgumeoftheqpening Reno, Nevada over the serit'S, 13-7 and the ~past weekend as she led juniors captured the . the junior national squall second , 13·6. to the national cham· pionship. With an eight-minute Jones, Gene Sulliv<.in, J\.'larshall Styli and Bob Johnson. En route to the title, the.,i!rca t eam de f~ated a team from Inglewood, led by Lakers' l'Oach Bill Sharma by a score of S7·3S . Wednttday, May 21 . 1975 .Coast Area Men's Golf '. \ . • I DAIL\ PILOT 85 Rustlers Win Title Dlt'k Trueblood ad· Chaddock~ M.or~an Fot· Horovitz fini£hed se<·ond Ju,ius Boros, Gary l\1ld· voneed to the finals of trel with Boq llcnning : with 127. dlt.'f:Off. Jack Nicklaus, Golden West Collegt the l eft-handers golf and .Willie 8-(ber with 19111 llole ~nd Arnold Palmer. has captured its fifth tournament at Santa Ana Jal'k tlol U•. Baseball s tars listed t·onsecut i ve Southern CountrY ·club and will l\1orco "IAnieh 'and Ray A l~all of Fame golf intlude Joe DiMaggio, Ci:i lifornia Conference face the winner or a 1-lurbour 11iere on one classicwillbet·ondueted Stan t.-1u sia l , Ralph Iron Man trophy. The match b e tw een L ee tea m and Jim Gianullulf al Sil ver Lakes Golf Kiner, Mickey Mantle, Iron Man award goes tu Smith und Joe Knox for t e amed .wJlll Denny Cours einthe desertnext Whiley Ford. Bob Feller th e co ll ege in the the quarter-score (every Geil er on al)other to tie year about this lime, at· and Sandy Kouf ax. Southern Cal circuit witb f\ve yea rs) ehatn· Cor fir s t place in a cording lo club pt·o Al 11 pionship. partner's bolte r ball Geiberger. Tom llarmon, 1'"'rank lhe lop overa sports re· A field or 16 southpaw cventoverlheweekend. 'fhe tournament 1nuy Gifford, Bob Waterfield , cord. swlngersopencdplay in In a two low balls of rcplocctheTournament Jim Brown, Otto G Id West r1·n1"shed Grall.m. Glenn Dav1·s,· o en the event. foursome com petition of Champions that hat1 ·n lh lo lhree 1·n einhtof Lou Gro'a alld Nl.ghl I e P eo The 27th annual in vita· sco red on · a low net been discontinued by the th 11 f n e s ports ·1 I Train Lane are Cormer e eon e_re c --~ tj9nall.Qurnament w1 I be b·asts·. L.eck A1 crrltt, PGA but it wit -not only totaling ss112 points. The held al Santa Ana CC William Jiolstein, l\1arco include golf It al! of f0<>tl>all slar1playing. Rustlers \\'Oil cham ~ June 9·14 including t'vo Anich and Bart l\1cHugh Famers but those fro1n From t e nnis, Jack pionships in water polo days of qualifyin g. finished first with 125. other sports as we ll. Kramer . J> a n c h o and golf and shared the Big CollflOll Ed Nahigan, Alan Golfers on the list in· Gonzalez, Ted Schroeder S\~timming crown with llJack led ge. Leonard elude Ben 1-logan, Sam and Lew I-load ; basket· Cypress. Ellsworth Vines and Sha ne t1nd Elliott Snead, J immy Demaret, Dall -Bill S harman, Dave Eva ns captured 1 Elgin Ba y l or, Bill East LA. which won the Southern California Russell and Bob Cousy ; t he baseball and football PCA senior.junior golf ·Sen1· ors Tourney Set au to racing -s am titles, finished second in tournament staged Mon· l-lank s . Rodger·· Ward th e balloting with 591h day at Big Canyon Coun · ~ind Lloyd Ruby ; box· points. Cypress, which try Clu b in Newport The first unnual Casta less than a week a fter ing-Joc Louis, Sugar also won the wrestling Beach. del So l v.•o m en 's Sl'nior ncv.·s of the tournament Ray Robinson and Jim· championship, was third The w innin g team golf tournament will be .v.·as released," directOr my McLarnin ; horse with S8 points, followed fired a 65 in .the better staged 'fhursday at the Nadine Maze says. racing-Bill Shoemaker by Santa Monica (541/:i). ballofpartner's"event. public golfcourse inMis· p1-ay will b't!•over the and Eddi e A rcaro ; Rio 1-lond o an d LA Three teams tied for sion Viejo for women 3,730·yard cour se with27 s wimming -J oh nny Harbor (461/2), LoS second place at 68 includ-over 45 years of a~c . foursom es competing in Weis muller; and bowl· Angeles CC (451/2 ) and Ing Bill f-lartley with Bill ''Entries were filled four nights. ipg-Don Carter. LA Southwest (6 ). . , time limit on all games Dittmer a nd tea m-except the final match mates Debbie Green and the Dippers needing (Huntington Beach),' only a win to gain the ti· Debbie L andreth ,end tie, the juniors went in Sue Woodstra(·were front, 11·10 as the time named to the first team limitranout. SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY OUR NEWEST PEP BOYS STORE & SERVICE CENTER COSTA MESA FULLERTON 2946 BRISTOL ST. 1530 S. HARBOR BLVD. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 870·0700 PHONE: 549·1533 SANTAANA 120 E. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547·7477 WESTMINSTER 15221 BEACH BLVD. PHONE: 893·8544 OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8:30 A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. 8:30· A.M.-6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M.·5 P.M. All-America squad. 11 The two teams con· '! Lu Ann Tcrh'eggcn, ·volleyball coal'h at i Golden West College, ,. and Santa ' Monica Oip- : pers teamm ate Kathy 'Gregory, completed the ~All-America first team. The juniors won the , national title the hard j way. They lost to the Dippe rs Friday in a ~quarterfinal round ~match and had to pl ay 13 . games Saturday to re· : main in contention. This set the stage for Sunday's finals with the Dippers as th,e only un· defeated ted m· in the ·tourney. The area team .~advanced to the eham· tinued a three-minute volley before 4,000 wildly cheering fans with the juniors finally getting the winning point to post a 12-10 victory. The championship was decided in a single, 15· point match with the U.S. junior team · win· ning, 15·3. The juniors team that involves seven Orange County g irls with an average age of 17. is the first to ever win the tournament title from the losers' bracket in quarter(inal aettq_n .. Other mem beri of the team from this a,r~ in· c l Ude Kerry DC aver, t" Kat~ie Maier ~ Ann ( LaCh Golden son, Rox_a.nne ~ ance liliasi a9d Angtl.lquf I Mizera. • , . ·1 · · i: ' Also in olved 1 In the LBowJinD' tournament thif year l -~ wH (he U. S. Oalidoal · "1 · I sen!Or·team that finished ' VfNTllATfO IOI COMfOIT ... JET SPRAY OUMOUT CARBURETOR CLEANER EASY TO USE f•ec• 11i c~r wolwe1 ond ""9'• d;>•ol~•• '°'bo" depo1i11, •e· •l0<e1 petw.,, ..ftoorl.1 ....... IS OZ. CAN EAST ro USE • ·"CARBURETOR CLEANER Ii LUBRICANT ader n;nth.' ; ' • • • .• .., • . , The jun;or squad' Win •;t PLY NYlPN.. · RD 1-'~= \ Long Be'1ch 's n;c h leave June 15 for @:•s. . rs MONT CJeon1 c0<bv•olor; cholr.e ond PCV'•·' l-e• po-o•eu;ve 1i· ' kone film. , }t.aChance ave,raged 227 day training progralp in GUARANTff*""' •for fiVe gatne\S to grab Korea and Japan. •:> , 1•-.,;iiiiiiiiii~iim~;.,----.oiliiliillOilolliiliiliw.1"6- fthe first round lead Mon· The or;g;nal goal o! the ·, c,ouRr·uNRl!ALL DOUBLE· BE• 'JED ~day night in the 15th an· gi rls was the 1980 OlyrtJ. • nual West Coa ~t Maleh pie Games. They may be ,.. Game Elim;nations at four years ahead, of . fl I .ER.GLASS POLYESTER t Costa Mesa '9 Kon a .schedule if' they can 1Lanes. • maintain their-present WHITEW. a· LLS j LaChance, bowling for tempo into next year. fthe firs t ti~e i n the ~Eli ms, had a high game , 4 •or 258. Re has a lS ·p;n ad· Mustnngs' $ ;vantage over Anaheim's I 1 Bob Ramirez. 1 · • •• , 1 Costa Mesa's Jack Bernh.I ardt 1Cornelson is fourth. 28 / behind the leader, while \ £71.1-4 ' ·Fountain Valley's John ff d $2.27 'Haveles ;s fifth. I~ ;n OnOre rn 1 back of Cornelson . ;;-Haveles is the defending Costa Mesa :High's l champion. Steve Bernhardl"Was the ~ The bowlers will \)e only Orangt Coast area ·idle next Monday, rt· player named to the Cen· \.suming action at 8 :45 tury League team !elect· J p.m. Monday, June 2. ed by the coaches. t To•1•Ellmieowl•r• Playing s~ortstop .for • -..w1"' c11, Pin4 the lea g u ~-c ham.p1on » 1. Rkh i...ch11nc•. LOl'!t,i e1o th 1,111' Mustangs, Bernhardt hit .2.BobA•mlrr1,.a.nanr•m 1.1n 1 413 and was one of the I l.SlrttGrlmes.Escond ld11 1.1~ • l •.JackC11rnol'\On.Cos10Mes<0 1,101 \te am leaders. s. Jlll'ln Howr1es. Founl•ln Vlll!ty l,09S E I M d . ·o· ;i.6.8u1cl'l!io90r,G•rdrnGro~• 1,081 0 COa S On -.1.E.G.Mocll,lon11eooch 1.1111s Gubler was oelectetf' as 1. Bll!y IN rtln, Slanton 1.oeJ · "" • ,9.A•t&.r1ns,How1l)O•nr 1,oe 1 player of the year. He ; 10.AonDloll,L•H•b•• 1,01• "1 "th ERA of i n. F•MI Alec II II, w1sim1n111r 1.01• was o-WI an 12.JlmTllomp$9n.s.n.01090 1.on 1 57 Jim Hagey o( Costa Fred Mrnal , Tuslln 1,012 ' ' L k '°""nNwtu11,cerr11os 1,011 Mesa and G-lenn u en· : 1s.01ci.eta•S<ti,w1s1m1nu1r 1,010 bill of El J'wfodena were f 16. ,Hrry Knlt,ihi. Gtrd1n Grove 1,06' • f \ othor1-17. s,1 ,~, Bldttr tcos1a chosen as co·~Oaches O ; Me1al 1 06•: 11. F'"'"u Hlnkte the year. >. 11n1no11~0.r: 19. Nic k Stro9t,1I !Hunt· C l M h d r·ive ! l"llt°"' e.echl 1.0M; 3,. Ron HOPCJO OS a esa a 1co1i. N1eud 1,031; 31. e110 Row players make the second •, \Hunllflillon 61•chl 1.0JS; <llO. A.Ion • h T • l-fotnr11cost0Mes•11 011;CJ.xio team : p1te er .Im t .N.e.cuo 1,ou; ••. oouqo M1ors co.n• Crocker cat~bet Stan , f'olntl Tr11ty OtV"'Srr IH\lfll lnt,iton , , • . t lleKhl_~LOO'f/· s1. M••-Ro.ay CCcKI• A-1cCoy,, infielders Gay NIIMI""; s , N.-1 H1y11, l'ountoln B ' d G ;;:V•ll•itl H J: st. Bob Schn•e-11 au m e a n . u Y J'lCOtt• ~,~,,•a. Krikorian and .out£ielder ~ l Steve De Wilde. I T • pJ Pilcher Moe Fleming ' raton8 an and outfielde~ Buddy Lorton of Estancia made Distance Meets th.e second team along t. with Corona del Mar ln· I .Long dl.i;tance runpihg fielder Rhttt ,Tu~k;er and . , ,.,UJ be tia:· ured at Snn 'o u t f i. e 1 d e r M a r k Clement! igh School .Frank.hn. 1 • ~lhissum with a 'hal{ a l1..-CJNTU:ttY t., AOUE 'f doze" rn e'S scheduled co1icM•sT•""t '' 20 d ~ PlrlltTot"' I , J bet•een unc an ,...,.,., r,w,...1 , Y4•tt ""· t 19 I ~-et•l\O Mll..tll I r, 1·1 ~ ' ' P-G4iblor, E1Modtn11 • .. , ~ Tbe a,11· nme~sl "'s""a h f.;;-!=.s11._t~:":~ ~ :: • f'l be g D ln!-H11nt,Mlo9ft0lll Jr, ,400 FOREIGN CAR SPECIALS ntts VW' rororAs, Mc:t.J, O,ll.J, POii $ OATSUHJANOMANY -~o's"·1·76•,,·44· S.60x1S •l'LY .5,'Q JC f 5 NYLON . • COIO Tianw -..c);w.U.lthJ tlalfTll CUAUIUtt ,,001tl 7•4 J 5,20 11.13 s15u j 5.60 JI 1 '1744 6.00 .. 12 '16" Cl A78-1.5 '")944 ~em~nte l&h and iJ-::::...-==-£~1·S!!::.:' .. t : :~ terested . aities ~i;e o'-G•• .. ,S.n1••n• ~ . .260 ·~led lo cO t ct BeM r g:~.~'~· ~~~;."~~·t: 1'~ I P~·.:::.:.;:.:;;;;;.;"-"==1•-t~j.,"P"'l"9' ·Qitnmlngs ( 92·4165). Ol"-ToM v1u1,..rll •· . .QO t •f~~r·· 1Jt11-1t11t. 1 Mod•n'• ..Jr. 1 ... ., ~tl'.i~'P-.:t;i.i]l~ l,>r The schcdu _,T_ · · lol ir.1 ;Une 20-1orYtt1e TO d ~::.=-.. Y•·~. ':i '' ;~:::.::f:,•.•' HIAVYDUn'aLAatWAUS T. . , ,._,.....W~.!J::!~'• If" ~1 tMI ·~~co••;/' 6.71 .. 11 , 1.oa11s I •.10.11 17.oa••• 11.so.11 ~ oJdne 30-10· lie ro f~::~~==•Mtr :J\ ~~i , ~A!df!'~·~~f\'Yi 2377 23H 2SM 28U 32•• ..... I r=:r-••-,C.••-.•N " I!! I ,tq,,1>0"~'···01·~~· ..... 11111 ••U ,lltlf '"'"""" l!U1ftU '"'""' •-· \_ flt-a•rtti. VIII• P1rk If l»ll .,,, ,Aui,.c:t • t•• S4NOUS July 21 -5,0(IO·me~er M-«Mllot fl', c .. 1. Miii Pr ,,,. \l\Lll•~lblitf "llittf fW,IH OI . n 1..t-t+otO. 11•1t1 Jr ·'°" .,, •••~oe;111rw-u11 •• 3 ... 7,, 9 ,r,I I '.u.11 .. 1"" I '4 ... 544.,, .• , •"•":1 yinp1c ru . ~ 0,_.,~ ,.,. .. ,,. sr.1 .111 '"° .. "' 0.1110"'"\' AU,.11-2-mll run. o';E..,;"'"',." tt. ·e :=\''' '"~f6:~9J " 25 -.. m ii • s OI'-r•Mll .. c•M Sr. I 1_1)1'""' •(I .. , ,t'I;.\ ... '" "'"'-'" • "" rllllfH • "' ,....,.. • '"' l'IM\-µgt. "'_....... I I UUI• , •·~t,inoli•, I •;:· '• ""\r"f~"-"· .... • l'l .. h <l.C ... 1 ... o1u.'3 .. l•--H ...... "4""to.OI ... .nllllo fY n . Honorttitt M•nl Ofl•A Chor , -Yo~~l 19-5 000 meter f;MlaMOH;'JOl'll•.-11,11'1Uor, ........ ....,.... ........ CDl11$4 o::I"!;' • ' •IMor;Lo,,...to,Ao~ulllO, ~llfl. ML,_..MWI PC.tAl&Ola.-. be1c run . c1 .. , I . I ....... 24 MONTH 36 MONTH 48 MONTH ,,, 1788 ~~~.19sa ,,, 21ss 81GGl5t 5t0(1C IN TOWN "' MTI MLL IMCI ltSMHlll flfl "'fl Miit --Lt " •1t1o1•R t .. t. ta-•t. l!ll*I .-. lMllf ••-I I ... t•U.1'111 • '" ,,. ,0,.1 ,.., .,.. •••• 11•"'"'"" •o • .,.1p, ....,;.. . .,:.. '"'"Iii'' i...~ •Id. ,,..,,,., u•o•• uioo•U·•·• "'"""'· •(-"'"'"I<>' • .,.,....., 1oo.t ....... ,,.,.., , ... , ........ "0"' '""'""'••OH UP • .,....,,. ., •o<ond• •o lo.ol "' • ~~:.:.:::::: '::::;"· : ""'"""'3588 ;::·~·.\:"'" 3388 . AVill&ll.l .,.,.,. "'"'""' Ml.II 1M Sllllllll , ,. "u•O•l•· - 1nwmi · · '''"".,.,...,,.,. -' llT ............ . PEP BOYS EXPERT I SERVICE .~ . 11 OZ.CAN 15 Heo•y dlt•y . .,;! Iii· •d· lo• .. 01+ 6 ,., 12·•0h A mofico~ .,., & .._,-ll-ooll l0te'9'1 (°"L 398 INCLUDES. 1 • · • . , • ln•t8' l"'""°' n $hoot.• • ~ ., MOST , ; , • A.tc-Gnnd ond '" .. ~ \ ,\ DIK IRAllU ft 'DAILY PILOT P VBLIC NOTICE ... ~ ' " ..... ,, .. ,._ ..... , ""' 1o1i.-1111 ... ,......, .,. Going blAI· "'" .. : ·EXt:CUTIVE L.l.NS - Vll!CAl..IT• LI.NS, m1 w. C.lilltral ..... , Mo. H, S-l•AM, Coll, ftlOil Monro• I!. loanr, 1•41 Port 0.1 ... ,Nt ..... 1 h~ll.(A.~ Mkt!ffl S ... any, 1•1ot 0.vlt, ~. H\ll'ltlr.oton .. .C.JI, CA. Tllh bl.o1lnet• 1$ (on0\lt1f0 br • ~,1,..'1Mt".tilJ1 . • Mtftl'ME ... all't' TWt tW-1 "''' 11 ...... 111 ltw c:o..111 c1er• of 0.-•oe cwn1y 1;1n ,,., -2. n>s. . ....... Pr.*IMled Ortnvtc CH51 Oollr Pl~. MriJ,1-4,11,1',ttJJ Ul2°JS P VBLIC NOTICE Sl,.·11116 MOTICI! TOCREDITDRS • SU .. l!R IOR COURT DF THI! 'sTAT~Ol'CALJl'OR_NIA R>R • TMl!COUNTY-OFORANGE- ' NCl.A·llJ1a EJl•M of HARR'I' GREElllSTEIN, ......... NOT1CI! IS HERE8Y GIVEN 1o the <,...,,,,..~of 1~ •bO,.. ,..,,,.a oec.ec1en1 M ... peri:on~ hi1¥1"9 cl•I"" ~n~I IMjwi<I de<.eMfll ere req11lrlld lo Ille I~, "'illl Ille MCilS!i<lfY ¥0i.Khlr\, jn U.1ofti<.e ol 11111 clerk ol tne 11b0-.e e<i· lit~c....,t,or lo llft!oen1 tl'll!m. witll 111.r ~~rrvoucl'll!•~.toll'll!u~ •I 1'M L• ... 0111<.e of JAMES It. JAtKMAN, 111 No. BrOMwilY. s.t!ta Anfi• C•U•ornl., 't2701, "'llitll h '""' p1:1f.• ol bll~•ne'' ol tl'll! unMri!gned in aU;f"atter~ perl.Mnf119 to Ille eslolte ot i.illp Cit( eden I, "'ltnln I011r m onlhl> efttr ~llr~t p.u.blkilllon of llli~nolke. Qo.ledMay 16, 1tlS. 8ENJAMtN T. WEINSTEIN, · ! 5P1"CLalltdMinislr•torotll'lt , Estate ot t,,. aDO¥• n.1meo ;t decedenl ~ .E$~.J.ACk MA.N I NCI. 9'H4w•r ~ b•, C..Ut•r•iet2101 Tri; MJ·Jtl1 """'"""' tw Spe<iel A"'"inbtr•"" ~;w..o Oro1ng.e CGilU oau, Piiot. """' 21, 111; al'O J""'" '· 11, 191S IMl·IS PVBLIC NOTICE Wednesday , May 21 , 1975 Auto Museum Adds \ To Hollywood's Gl~tter l'IOLLYYlOOO <UPI ) l\1useun1 , Knotts Berry -Southern California Farm, the Quee n · h1ary reasserts its claim to and other manmade 'l'ourisi Country U.S.A. wonders ln the land of with the addition or the the palm and the orange. Hollywood Motora ma Publish c r Bob l\1useu1n . Petersen, owner of the Car crazy Californians museum on Hollywood are taking lo it as they Boulevurd. already has would a traffic break on GO far-out cars on dis· the Hollywood f'reeway. play. ·'·We 'll have. twice that AN EXlllBJT or an· many by the end or the Nent automobiles, year,'' said Petersen, famed m l v_i e and who became a television vehicles, drag millionaire at age 25 racers and colorful through hot rod shows custom jobs, the new at· and auto magazines. tra ction th is month "No matter 'What en- becomes the first major vironmentalists say, this permanent car s how in is the era of automobiles. thenation. Americans are more The muse um 101 ns fascinated with cars to- suchother tourist attrac· day than ever. Our lions as Dis neylantl, publications, li ke 'Hot l\1agic l\tountain, Rod' magaz·ine, have Universal Studios Tours, higher Circulations than l\tarineland of th e-1oyearsago." Pacific, Movieland \Vax FINAN Cl Al CONSULTANT P ET E RSEN LED the way through his new facility, pointing out the Batmobile, the Green Hornet's Black Beauty, the A-1unster coach, the •Ta~ Beverly Hillbillies' hot the l\.1onkcemoblle, a twin batbtub buggy, a car wJth an outdoor barber Chair and an out· house special with a moon in the door. ''There's ' something for everybody," Petersen said. "Kid!:i and adults really dig cars they've seen in rn.ovies and television. "l\o1o~t young people are fascinated by the re· eord·setling race cars • We have ·some of the finest ever built." Nostal gia buffs are carried down rnemory lane by mint condition A-1ode1 T Fords and a sparkling 1938 Buick, which looks as if it just rolled off the assembly line. THE RE'S' AN old pad· dywagon, dune buggies and motorcycles. "The exhibit is chang- ing a ll the time ,.'' Petersen said. "We have dozens of offers from owners to display their unusua,I cars here . ......... .t, rod. the gleaming relic or NOT~.?ET:f~~~~·:~"~!~~t~•Ofl •"'-chll ,,_.. the ''Bearcat'' series and ''There are SO major J\o-.e ''· 1911, at '""' ho• .. o1 10:00 •~s M-1••• the bullet-riddled sedan traveling auto s ho;i.v;;, in o'Qotk a.m., ;., '"" c ounc.ii O..mbets from • 'Bon ni e and the country. But ours is of '""' Cit, 01 ••virw loc•Ced at •101 a. ROIERT TAI.AK 0ifl'ip11~ Drivr. s .. n, 200, trvirw, A. Clyde." the only permanent one. c.fii,,..nle . lllt' Clly ol lrwlM will open 500 5. w• 5trfft Addi lion al I y. there We're delighted at the in· alll$ "" ,,,. p"bli<.i1tlo11 ot '""' le<)<ll ~ 17141547 Zl71 d lllllfc•s 01 1rw ci1, 01 1r .. ine 011ring 1111 _,_,.. • were the Bob Hope an terest of kid s who want lo n.t.1 "'"' i91s.1•. ~i~==·~~·~·~·~·~l~l~w~of~~~=· ~UJB~~i~'n~g~• ~~C~!r~o~s~· ~b~y~~be~c~o~m~e~m~e~c~h~a~n=ic~s~a~n:d~ A.u b~ ~n be cofltiined In sealed -r --1 -lope$ moHked on the 0.,";oe 1n thl personalized golr carts, work with their hands." lelirr1m1.f\enO t Mner: "Elld for Publication ol LIQ•I Nolie.I S CIOlino D~te, J-16, 197S • IO :OOil.m." tfie bids shall cont•in t/\e fouow;ng ;ni.,ma.tiofl: : ~~ ~::~";','~~1~..:.:"f:::O-w~ minom<1m. ....;. ~~~:.~!\::.;.eq11ud for new copy '· 1tree Of tlrt ,.lation {ilt\~11 ~ 5116wing are.isol ,lrc."l•l!on I. '. 5. N"mber ol paid subi.c;rlpllom #lttlifl tr wine City Llm!U. •· Fr-r>(y of publitallOft. 0 I 1. N .. mber of capies oistributed or ""fil«I willlifl lrwine Coty llmil\ ill flll c.0$1 11. D.ite o f a dt.,ditillon •S M•$Pi1Per of 01neral clrt,.lation wlfl\lfl IM Co.,nly ot Orange ...0 ii st.temrnl tllill s.ald adl..c!k.l!lon is tu" renTlr in lull fort• •no .,llP<I a...:1 n..~ Mi)~ \'ac•teOor set •silk!. Al the lime li•eO lor r..c..,iving bM:I~. they ,..;u M p11DUc1y opened. e~•mlnrd -.ii aeclared. The DiOs woll W ca1c. .. la.I· l!d and IM r""°'' of tPle rt-suns of !h€. biOdlno ilnO \tie <illt11lar.ons 01 ll'll!bod~ wffl be rePOrted 10 tne Co ty Counti1 ilt 115 ne•I r19ul•• "'eelino on J'-""' 24, ;91s. 'fl'le City Co11nc:il reserve• the r'vl>l IQ n!jltl "'"'and •II bids II it tonside•S•I •S neces-Wrr to <lo '5.0 lor tne P"blot 9QOCI. iN! City Cour>(i! 11l1o<> rr'>t'r.,rst"" "II'>' to ;owa.•O 11>e DM:I on \llt' nasis o4 ton· siOer11tlonS oll>ilr lll•n wr.e1ner or not s.l<PIDiddtlr m•r be tne 10 ... eil Dlddrr or -1 .... es! •t-SP<>ns1Dlebi3Mr, 01> TED: Ma11J. 197S. OUR MEDALLI N RESERVE ACC UNT BACKS YOU TO THE LIMIT! Tired of paying interest on 1T1oney you don•t need? With a Medallion Reserve Account, ii you accidentally overdraw your checking account balance, we stand riad)' to cover the exacl amount you overdrew, up to the amount agreed on by you af)~ '- our bank ollicer. Thus, you are only paying interest on 1he amount you need! Interest is only 1V2°k per month on the average dally balance for the number of days when there is an outstanding balance. The annual percentage rale is 18°k. Your Medallion Reserve Accounl -you could call ii an instanl, temporary loan lrom your financial friend, South Coast National Bank. Come in and let us tell you about our other friendly services! Don't lnrget to listen to our twice-dally, five- minute radiD shows, "Speaking Dollar-Wise" With RDbert Rosel•kv. We're DR KWIZ·FM ' (96.7) at 7:45 AM & 5;1 5 PM.and on KORJ~f'1 (94,3) at 8 :00 AM & 4:00 PM. SOUTH COAST NATIONAL BANK "A Bank To Remember'" 849 SUNFLOWER sr COSTA MESA. CA 926 26 • (714) S40-!>300 """u.mber F.D.l.C. CarolJ. Flynn Clly Clerk,,,_1~ Cotyol lfwine "="=======================~===;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::c::;::;::;::;::==J 'P11bli~ Orang.e Coa•t Oally P11o1,l- to(..v11, 19/S llli-IS PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE DF •ULK TRANSFER • t!Mc1 6111 -•111 U.C.C..I •Hot1te Is hlrltDy Qi¥r n 10 t111 CtedHors of CltRL w. THDM ... S, T'r ... steror. "'hook business -••SS ;, t'l2l Brookl\l>rll, W tslm\ns11r. Clllllfoml1. Counlv of O••noe. Sl••e ol q.tifMl'lil, tll•I a bulk traflSf.,r Is aboUt 1o be m.Ge lo JltMES R. KUH L ....... N ""N D H AN CY B . kUHLM""°· nanster~s. wl'IO$t busi""s' ilOdrns is 3~S Coste Mr sa SI.. Co \111 Mes.,, C,..lilornle, Coun1y ol OraflQe, Stilt' ot Otlitorn11. • ;rw propertr lo be l•ilflSlered is too:: at· ti! el \6SOI ar-ll11rs! SI., fountain Valler. Call!., Co11nty of Oril1191, s 1 .. te d~ll!Mnla. ·Seki PRililflY h disc robed In llf""'•I M: AU slotk In traoe. lo•l11res, equio- mrnt lfld Qood ,..;11 of tnat F1orosl ... sines\ -flown "' Ml!.£: SQUAR ELORIST ltND GREE NERY an loc•led at 1•S01 Brookll11r\I SI., fo.....· l•in V•Uer, Calltorni•, Countw o Qt".noe. Sia It of C•llfornill. Tne bulk tren\ler will be tOflwmmill· .o ori or .tllr Ille 20\d dily of J..,,.., 1•1S 111 181 ll M11ono1i" S1., Fowr.1a1n \/'a111, (alitornlil. LltWYERS TITL INSURANCE CORPORA TION.Counl ol Or.nor. S11tto ol Ctll•orn1a. So far .,_ known 10 Ill<! l fans!torffs •n t><n•""" n.ames and 11ddre~1on ..., Tr-l1ror IM the lllrtt 'ftilrs 11~ .. SI, ii 11<1!1ret1I lrom Ille aDO...e,er1: MI LE SQUl>RE FLOR IST AN GlltEENERY Dated: Mar IJ. 191S J•mes R. l(.,r.1m11n N•nc:y e . KuMma" Translertts Publisned Or•"9' Coesl o.:111y Piiot Moir 21, 1t7S 1811·1' PVBLIC NOTICE MOTICllOt'aULk TltANSFER ls.ts l111-6101 U.C.C.I Nolle• Is r.ereDy o •••n I• tllt ~re<1i1«1 of HowarO"s Nutrition, Ill(.,• ~pofallofl, TrM>steror, ...._. Dusol· ..u .OOl"fls Is ion e.,,;oe Orl"'f. .... wpwt e.acn. CoUfltr of Or-. $tlteof Callforflie, 1,..1 a llulk transle< h •llcHll to be midi 10 Ooy11 w. 86•1,..rlohl ehd Heidi Bo•lwrlQl'll. hlritwnd '"° .. ue, Tr .. nslerees . ...._ floK.li>tss 1ddress is 2901 Bostonlllfl Ori-.e, LOI Aleml1os, COIHllW o1 Or""Of, St•of C.IM'or011e. : TMptoperly to M lran$le red !s loc.al· td •t 1on 811ysld1 Dr\¥e, Ntwpon .. IC:ll. C011nly of Orang.1. St.at1 ot c.11tornl1. ' Seid pniperty Is dlsc•lbeocl In oi:no:r111 •1: All Sloc:k '" tradto 11•1,.rt._ tq,.;11. ineol, tr-name •nG oaoa wolf"'"'·~' t>l•llll FOOCI Stt>re business known a1 HO-aoard's N11trilio" and 1ocateo 11 1on 8'ysidl! Drl¥1, Newporl Beach, Coun!y ~Or~, 511111 ot CllilO•fll•. TM lllulk tr11nsl1r will bl <onllllmmat· :::.:.:"'g;'~;:e1::':c0:i~1is~~~: 1•11 Stre•I, C01t• Mes•. County Of preinoe, ~•'•Of C•tlfornl•. S. flf ff knowfl to Ille Trl>mlerees, .... ~1 FWll'l'oti "'4 ldch'ISMi in.tO Cl'I T•MSfef'Of for '"' tPlrff .,...., list """Hcllltet"lflt !tom '"'•bow, .,1: , H•w ard'S Nutrlt10 .. , 1•11 ~ArtPlur al¥d., N1woort Beech, pr.,. C.O.U.11. C•lltor"la , "-"9'1 Nwtrltlon. 117S Nfwport 9hocl.. c:o.te Mt_., Orenoe, CeUlornl1 0. ... : April"· 191S SlftiMdby: ' (>OWleW. 8o1lwrl9ht Helllll e..1-1qn1 Trlfltltrfft. ' ._,~ Or•noe c;..tt O.ltr Pilot, 11, 191S 111 .. 1s ~oreollec:I, -.. iUbiCilbilo YOUll llolnetown :,..,.,,"" ' DAILY PH.OT Probably not. These days, yields of Treasury Bil ls, Bankers' Acceptances and Certificates of Deposit are declining. That'j why it will pay you to look into 10% interest bearing Trust Deed investments with Newpott Equity Funds. Newport Equity Funds offers you two elements vital to any good investment: High yield and security. Your money can earn · 100..b annually while your in vestment is secured by low-risk real estate right here in the Newp~rt Beach area -the fastest growing section of California's fastest growing county. Right now, you can invest anywhere from $2500 to $250,000. Your funds will start earning 10% from the day of deposit into escrow. All det3ils, accounting and statements are handled by Newport Equity Funds. And don't forget : It is possible to earn more than 10% on Trust Deeds paid oft prior to maturitY,. In those certain cases, it provides for a bonus of six months additional interest, as allowed by state law. For more information. call Newport Equity Funds today. Our phone number is~. Available to California residents only. 'Newport Equili;'Funds RNI E1tattBrokm '\ AVCO FINANCIAL TOWER 620 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH, CALI FORNI A 92660 I UPIT1 ........ NOW GROUP SHOWS OFF MOCK-UP OF.SEARS TOWER Slogans Protest Alleged Company Dlscrimlnotlon Economic Club-Sets Meeting The May m eeting of the Eeonornic Club will be held al the Community Room ol Home Savings and.Loan in El Toro at 4 p.m ., May JO. 1 -·~- The program will feature the First National City Bank of New York's monthly tape "The Sound of the Economy," a dis- cussion of econom ic issues moderated by John Daly and participated in by-the bank's economic executives. The discussion will stUdy what forces will be important in turning the economy around iil the months uhead . The meeting cost is $1 .SO ; reservations are requested by phoning 752-7323. Guests are always welcome. Ove r 1'h e Counte r HASDU1tt~1 • , SeaJ,?s Hit ... ·On Hiring By .~omen ... CHICAGO JlJPI) -It's been I Jen than ' a banner quarter for Sean, Roebuck and Co., aod the complaintJ were rolllD1 la from j all quartei's · includinc UJe N11· 1 tional Or1anizaUon for Women - at the firm ·s annual ahareholders meeting. The companY reported ila net ·first-quarter-income waa 80.8 ( percent lower than for the tame period last yea~. SEARS CBAJ>IM AN Arthur M. Wood told shareholders net in- come was $50.59 niillion or 32 cents a share during the first three months this ye11. com· pared to $128 .99 million or 82 -cents a share in the first quarter or 1974. ' (He said the 1974 figure ha\ been restated to renect changes in Sep.rs' iqve~tory method.) Then Wood started fi elding the gripes whic h ranged from t salesp~rsoni; making so littlt:' money they have to buy food stamps tO discrimination against women and members or minority groups. The complaints were Polite and Wood responded in kind, but the Sears ,chairman would not in- dicate whether the tirrn would comply with the various re- quests. WHILE ABO UT a dozen NOW. members picketed the meeting, NOW spakeswoman Mary-Jean Collins-Robson asked Wood to make public Scars• affirmative action pl an and to release statistics showing the number of women and minority group members in responsible jobs in each or Sears' outlets. MUTUAL FUN.OS • New York -l'ol low•nQ ls ii 1i,1 01 bid lrid •sl>t'<I Pf' tH Of\ Mlfl11• Funos as Q1.10lfd b Ille NASO lt!t. 8elncd t .•O 9.11 nero1 11 .IM N.f . lr'nCM"'f Cp 7.•S t.3' MASS CO: LI Tm •.II •-1• Stotll 12.!2 N.L =y ~ !:~ J:~ :rl~ure ~·.,; ,:;L~ :~p '1m 1t r. 1t:-i rr::"F :J~ ~:~s &.'!t~ RO:~~ N.L. l.!~0Uf'j_74 •.it l!Qty "' ,_,, 1.t;! IOELITT l'lt Bost S.•l 5.•s ..... SI F •.S1 10.43 lf'IC,OM 9 .•• N.1.. tnc:om 1.•1 •.•1 Fnd AM 6.11 6... lllOU .. ; Ind F,t,m 2.66 ..• MASS l'HCL; Nw Efa 10,79 N,L. ltltfl'ICI C 10.23 10.11 Grwlh 4.ot •.47 Bnd dtO 1.12 1.17 IMeQOn 1.42 l.O'l MIT •.•S 10.IJ Hw Hor 1.lS N1L. 5'M"•lt 1.ll I.SI IMotrl S.IS 6.1' Cilptal 8.11 9,Sl Ill lnve•t 11.10 18.74 MIG 10.0l ll.O'l ro Fd 5.91 N.L. lKhnl 6.16 6.15 T11nday "'°" In l .2• l .SI 'Cont•• 10.10 ••• lnwern G 1.09 N.L. MIO 11.90 ll.01 r(Wd Gt 41 1 fl) Surve, F' '·'' 9.l• May 20. 191S 5'iec.I '·'' l.62 Cw SStc I.OS ... '"'"Co A 12.ll 1J.1• •MFO 11 .16 U.ll •ud SIP e.s7 t.JI Tempi G l .J..4 9.14 lid At-\/'lfllur 1.S9 •. lt ty Inc: I.Oil N.1.. lnw GulO 6.65 N.L. MCD 11.41 ll.6.l UTlllAM ltmp 1¥ 1000,00 H.L. "'om G ... l .Sl J . rt Fd 10.)(1 u .2. ~SI 7,19 •• , ,,,... 1no1c I.JI N.L. Millf'S lw 1.H N.L. UNDSt Tren C.p 7.>0 J.9J .r.dm '"' J.10 J .St MASI E'st• J,16 ... '""' Bo\ t.ta 10,IJ Mill,..,. •·" N.L. COn...er t .SO 10.31 Trawl Eq I ... 9.IS Mm Ins ,,,, 1.14 OSTON; Elf'tlrtl 11.00 ... INVEST Mic! Am 4.31 •.19 Equity 9.09 t.9J Twdor H II.I• N.L. An; .. , J.a<l l .11 PndBos •••• '·°" F.....a ll.S71S.16 COt.l,.ll!L MOfllyM l.OON.L, Georo 12.IJIJ.16 hCG 1·•1N.l. -.111111 Fd '·'' 7.31 •Fron Cp 4.0l e,a(I Purl\" t.C!f t .tl CIC*n 7.•1 1.13 Mony Fd 9.06 9.90 Gr"'lh t .WI 10.SI X1tt1 Ct ,4( N,L, A.t lfll lfl 11.50 12.57 Sl!Tr 8s 6.)2 •.ti S.ltm F l ,M '·'° ~II Sf! •.6J S.07 MSB Fd 13.16 N.L. lncom 7.0l l."9 JJll'I Fnd 41.31 H.L. "future 1.7• N.L. $peel S.01 S.(I TrtnO 19.6121:'° IN EST GRDUP'; Mii a" F e.34 9.11 1n ... st 1.•1 I.II Unified l .ll 1.01 A.GE Fd •.?l •.l? FO •.3S t .13 INAHCIAL IDS Glh S.13 •.• MIF Fd 1.1• 1.•s VIiia F •.S610.•5 Un flllld 1.S3 l.2l A.U1lett t .1• 10.(7 ... MHG flbS: ROOlll:AMS; IDS •O •.•I S.OI MtF Gro ).(I 3.69 Vowao •.te 10 91 UNION Sl.ltVIC• , "ll>M Fd 10.1111.lJ flkk F S.lO s .e1 Fin Dyn 3.n N.L. IDSP• J.U 3.•! M;rWil.t l>nl•lll •Mr• F I 00 N,L. OROU .. : Amc:ICIF (.61 S.OolkflkkG 5.606.lJ FiPI IFld l .•3N.L. Mutllll 1.17 1.$8 ,W!Oh; ... r1F •.11 S,IS BdS !O ...... .. ""' BlrtPI 10.0S 11. LIOl'IY J.U •.2• Fin Int 6.00 N.L. Sloe• l•.17 11.23 ~· 11 .ll 11.SS ec Eq 1.01 J.'6 r Iv Am E11111y •.:M. '·" """'""'' J.00 3.11 \lent (.1(1 N.L. 'j,oil.-cl 8.61 t.2t Grwtll l .l't I.JS f((.0 G s.•s ··" 0:1~'"" '•"ii' ·,·!~ AM Ell .. fl!ESS SclMK F 6.'6 l.Oto ~IFd \/'1 10.62 ll.61 \/'ar P1y 6.(1 •.91 l&om I.ti 1.(9 UODEft l'DS: · .,. FUNOS; lOMIAL IRST Inv Rtl 5.°" J.st Miii Sflr1 19.61 N.l.. IMr In¥ ll.ot N.l , lJlllon n II. 12.0S Ctptlll S.8' •: UNDS: HVESTOfl!S: I S I: M11U Tri 1.11 N.L. MQI R15 10.0S N.L. HITIED f'UNOS: :~::, !:fl ':·!! ~~; ;;~; t'.: ~~ ~= ::i: ::~ f:c~~ ;:~~ ::~~ :t\.1£:~ ,.L;~ N.L. ~~nc '~J; ~:t: ~""F:o !·3 '1·~~ ~I 5.11 •.35 Fund 9.CMo 9.'IO tn<om 6.91 '·'' lt6l UI 3.31 ... 11.1 ... ( '·'9 1.19 $pece1 21,11 N.L. COnl "" • 1 ·~ SIO(k 6.ll '·" Gl"•tPI '·" S.•2 Slot:• F .... 7.52 Tnt Sh l?.49 u.., Bond Sr 4.0} 4.(3 LI¥ •.SS 4." °"' fl: :·ts 1'12 Am "Orth 4.5' 4,,. ·~-1.00 1.14 11 M\1111 1.Sl N,l . I.Mel FnG :l'O ... 21.S. Dlw!dn 3.IS l.(4 llCUIUTY FDS: 111t!n 10:1. 1j;11 A"' IMln 4.)l 4.11 Vftl1ur 1.14 2,:U LMO ••ttOER: ... , """° s.~ N.L. f"rllf Stlll. ~u s.n EQll.lly -l.22-i.u ki...t S;tJ "" Arn t~t 4.S6N.L, G 1J,01N.L. Flem B 1.17 ••. JPGWIPI 1.14 9.11 lf'l(orn 1'3 411 lnwlt Sii •2• \/'MIQCI Sii Jft AirlMIJI 7.tt 1.62 t.mD 6.S1 N.L. 100 Fncl •.9! ••. J-Fd IS.67 N.l . Stoc•Sr 6'.J1 .: .. UUra F •'.t:I! 1:S1 dSvcF ·,.N·L AmNI Gr 2.11 2. HWLTN 101 Fnd 1.• ... Jol'lnsln :l'0.15 N.L, Grwlh ).Jl J.IJ l'llLlnel I .St 9.M USAA Cl :·11 N-L· AHCMOll ' Fctn,(l.r J.I, '·°' -"°"M NAHCOCk: HIW IMO lF; fltry F 11 .14 12.1• U$ GvtS ,"51 t.i OROU,.i ,tt .K li"OU!OIDIRS llna FO 17.1.S lt.X Equltr T•,S1 IS.17 MA RIMLD Gft" : ' ' Otlly '" 1.31 1.12 lt(IU .. 1 Grwth '·°' •. 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L LO•IMO•: ' ,., al6 .,ltd I i ff iii DIVSIV 2.9GJ.11 .. le0t r.~i.ot 1&.TO'IOllP': Ut.YLll ~l,rm11.n11.•1 "'°' .: .. ,,.· ... vi-....GI c'). N11l'Olld t.1• 9 • .)1 ATON 6 Funa J.n 4,1) i;...,, O'I 10.la ff.l . C.61 .17 N,L. ,, 11'1( .,U N'.L: eU5t 1 .. r~. HY Ven 10.1111.0t &RO: GRWTH Mi,ltull lt.ttN.L, IM:ofn "'·'' 1,tJll•• s., .... ~ Hl.r:;., • Jtl ~Fl.Md 9.19 t,~ llln FQ 1.01 1.1? . ~ ... '-~, "1i ~· LOllD Aal1 -P11g ,.. I.I• 1,J1 lT•ADMAltl . ' ti ..:Int t(I 1~l2 .:·t• Inc.I"' '·!! J-14 OWtll , 9,00 9, .. lll(otn ••• J 1.11 .t.111111 6.f. 1.t1 Pine¥ t .1• N.L. AM I~ t, .. , , t lllcf '"' ,·,; ~v ~.''ii Jt'.kJ 1:.c."if,. j:Jt !:~!s ~: t~ ;;'·~ =:i.. = t: i. .1!:fl fl ar. V6: U> r::.-• 1:~: t ·L· Id °' f.tt :41 ="" l.'2 •.'2: Mc• ,. .ta 10.1 Hlf\O Fii ..• ""'"'"A" flO! ~ "' n .G tt.oa °""' •. oa ~:t::: tcMS :.:.: 4·~ '""' UIO IDI~ " 11.tl H.l . I ltl • .,_ H' 9A1 11.M ...... II :i'S lt.lt ltllN ttOI ;os: l Nt ..._ ..... l'lHf I' ltf't'I ,. 9.tO 10.1• I, '" .... l,,C I.ti '· , le,fl h""' 11.tO ... L. .. ....,, • "'""· ......... 1-t (lnMTrt 11.11 ••• Kt ,,, 11.u .,.. UI 9,tJM. • GAQ 1 ; lt.•1 c.111 >.11N..._L.~ ... { I Short•ra!ijje Problem. Social Security Crisis °'Dispf3lle~ ,Jly liYLVIA PORTE~ I (Seconcf Jn Q •fflt-1) '/ For the 31 mlllitn Americans -ag d, di1abled, youn's widows, children ~who receive Social Securtly benefit checks each month, a rughtma• closing tn ht1.hat your pay. men ta: might be dr alft.ically cu( or stop peel • For the 100 mlllioo or us work1na and pay- ing Social Secunty con- trlbutlon1 out or 'our earntngs, the . sudden spectre is that whllOour locial Security t8xes Money's Worth )'tlll Increase, fu1)dJ to -... ----~ pay us benefits wiJI ~exhausted when we reach retirelne:nt age. How serious are"'tAese financing problems? I-fow can they be met with minimum disturbance? ' (1) TO P UT THE FINANCING issues tn ~r5pect1ve no one need fear that Social Secunty ben.ef1ts wtl\not be paid to him (or her) when they fali due, declares a 'twhite paper" Issued ee.rl1 er this year by a responsi ble gro{fp oC experts. The authors · former ,Health, Education pnd Welfare ~cretaries Elliot L1 RI Chardson, W1lbut J . Q>hen, Robert Fmclli. Johi:i W. Gardner and ~rthur F1eri}m1ng : also f~er Social Security commiSs1oners Robert M .. Ball, Wilham L. Mitchell, and Charles I. Schottland. (2) There are two separate f1nanc1ng pro ems, short· term ai:id long-term. Talt1ng up the strort•tetm-problem fll'st, ~1s ha~ result~ from the combination o~a galloping rate ot 1nnat1on and a slump-induced plun,ge in 4mployment and paychecks This Will not last. l In the ~972 amendments to the Social Secunty law, con· gre~s provided that SS benefits were to rise automatically with the cost or living, ' . ~HE ASSl{MP11()NS IN THE estimates pr.epared at the time, of the 72 chaJ')ges were that the cost of living would rise at an average rate of ~bout.3 percent and qtat wages would go up at an average rate of 5 percent The additional income from Social Secunty t¥es paid on the higher wages of workei::s would be available to finance the cost o( living 10· creases in benefits. But the rate of infiation since '72 has far exceeded 3 per· cent. At the same time, record-high unemployment has been eroding revenues from Social Secunty conlribut1ons. Because of ~his combination or troubles, Social Secunty will pay out $3 b1lhon more tn 1975 than 1l will take in. This is .scarcely a basis for panic. The SS system has about $55 billion 1n reserve funds -$46 billion for the cash benefits program and $9 billion for Medicare's hospital in- surance. The whole purpose of thclie reserves is to create a pool that may be drawn upon dunng a business recession such as today's. - IN FACT, FORMER COMMISSIONER of Social Secun· ty Robert ~· B~ll Wnks that. w,th our Ji:l111 drooping economy, 1t 1s probably a good thing to have Social Secunty paying out more in benefits than 1t is colJect1ng from worker and employer contnbutions. W1lh these b1Jbons still in reserve, Ball explains there is no immediate need lo require hi gher Social Secuniy con- tributions. To hike SS tax rates aga1nsl today's economic background would be dramatically 1ncons1stent with the 1n· come tax rebates we are getting. ·'It is obvious, however," Ball told me, "that a situation in which the system gives out more than 1t takes in cannot be allowed to continue." When the economy has perked up (but no earlier 'han 1977), Ball proposes the maximum a mount of earnings subject to SS taxes be raised to $24,000. This would mean higher taxes for only about 15 percent of SS contributors; 1t' also would substantially increase the icvel of their future benefits. Among other propDSals by the Advisory Council on Social Security is one that would make the hospital in· s urance part of Medicare dependent on general U.S. Treasury revenues. But this, warn Social Seeunty off1c1als, raises the danger of mtroducing a "means lest" mto lhe program and undermining the concept of a system in which your contnbut1ons earn you a right to benefits, 1nclud1ng health care, 1n your older years. THE FUNDAMENTAL POINT is that the s.hort-range financing p roblem in no way constitutes a fina ncial crisis and Congress is right now studying the various solutions to the problem. MARKET HIGHLIGHTS INDEXES ' NYSE Index ASE Inde x Dow-Jones Ind S&P500Stocks . Ne• V4H'lt !UPll -noe Jollowllll list , -""•• ll•e aluci.s IJl..1 """" &o11Md roo.i """ .. U..1 '1¥111. 11,ok'd ... Plrot• 0( rll1n1t Oil the Ne• Yark Slntll: J:rtb..,IC" Nel ind 1><1rttnt1~ th1n1.,. ore Ute <lllftrence botl•••n ,,.... pr-c•i.:.u. clot.,nr prke ind lhe C'\ln'l'lol cklo"'I prlc.1 GAINERS I M1c0Pnkl J .. + 'lo tip 21118 2 Welhttl C'p t'•+ 1, lip 111 J Arist~r Inc ~+ '• Up 100 4 l.Orll Cori> I \•+ 0 Up ll I Ackll'llfP~ • + t; Up .. I • 1'.le111eB .me l + 1. U11 r1 1 M1cm111 .2~ G + \, Up 11 a Th111~!t 7~ 4~ + ~(~ Up i 4 • C11¥ nv wl• u HI+ I Ul up, " 10 Phlll lad 4•o+ ~It Ua ~ 3 11 C1111 t.< IOI a1v. + 2'< Up 1.2 U Predktl :10 I '*' '• Up 1.-U PNllJIU .!!<Ml I~~, Up ll 4i 80 87 .37 830,49 90 07 • off up arr off 0 21 0.16 7.20 0 .46 Nt•u.' Y<>rk 15 /Htul Ar'liV<' NEW YORI( ~UPI) -TIWI lS ac\lva stocks Ir~ °" the New Stock E KChlnQit TueMNy .... 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EXJJlorcr, the m ystery ship the CIA used to recover part of a sunken Sov· iet submarine last July. Global Marine Inc., the firm that d0$i,gned and o_perates.lhe_ 618-!ool ship. l1_~onsiderillg an~°'.' \0 buy il, a company s pokesman said at a $tocltholders meetin g Monday. I' ! .. ·•· . , " • • .. I \ . -. • • • -.......... ~ ..... -........... . • • • ,&.. DAILY PILOT Wod-oy. Moy21 , 1875 ~:sffotul ol PORC :-! lf' Race Set Friday ; : The second race of the Paciric l Ocean Racing Conference (PORC> 1 · will get under way from Los Angeles Harbor Friday over a 198-mlle course around the Channel Islands. The 4S-boat neet will leave Santa ~·Cruz and San Nicolas islands to port • and fini1h off Parsons Landing, ' Catalina Isla nd. Many of the yachts : are expected to spend the remainder i. ·of the Memorial Day weekend at the island before heading back to the : mainland at Maria a del Rey to be on , -hand for the third race! a triangular NewsBoy (12·meter) J ack Baillie, Balboa YC . l}awkeye (48 foot sloop) David Cl&Ckler, New Port Harbor YC. l:!,JCKY PUFF (Morgan'42 ) IU~bafd Foxx, Balboa YC. · Re~olus II (48 foot sloo~) Robert G~rns'On , Newport Harbor VC. · Hui:rlcane Deck (40 foot sloop) Mor· rie Kirk, Balboa YC. . Firebird (43 foot sloop) Bob Longpre, South Shore Sailing Club. Questar (44 foot sloop ) William Power, Newport Harbor YC. d•y·race on Santa Moruca Bay start· ,, jn,gJune7. I· SAUDADE (47 loot sloop) William I'. THE CHANNEL Islands race is ex-Pascoe, Newport Harbor YC. 1 peeled to prove a real test for men and Loco Vien.le Ill (40 fool sloop) Jim ; , ~ats as the area around San Nico1as Seals, Balboa YC. •, hland is noted for strong winds this America Jane ll (35 foot sloop) ! time o( year. George Tooby, Newport Karbor YC . f_.t-The first race from San Diego .. to . Aorangi (53 foot sloop~...i.Richard ~:l.ong Beach last .weekend was sitiled ' Wheeler , Newport Harbor Y~. :•IJt extreme ly light airs. Rc;>bur (~3 f1;>0t sloop) Burton Yale, .--:T 1 . Bahia Cor1nth1an YO. ·' ·"' ;l :'" Fourteen or the 44 yachts entered in Drum Beat <Ericson-46) Don Ayres, : the series are flying the colors of Newi>ort Harbor YC. ~Newport Beach based yacht clubs . Raider (Ericson-46) Jim Lin- . J.,ocal entries are: derman, Balboa YC . I Nordic Now Japanese Man Sloop A 39-foot sloop built in Santa Ana and shipped to Japan is back on these shores with a Norwe&ian name. . Vind Fempe-Del , a Norwegian name. means • .. "wind force ftve" in English. Its 21 year old: Japanese skipper, Toru Chaya, with a crew of fi ve arrived in Los An geles Harbor last week after a , JS.day crossing from Japan. ··' In a few Y.:eeks they will leave Los Angeles - -again on the 2 ,225·mil e Transpacific race to Honolulu. CHAYA'S CREW ALL have Japanese names and none or th e six Japanese sailors have yet ex· plained how or shy the yacht got a Nordic name. Santa Ana is a loi:ig way from the fjords of the Norwegian sea . BOATING New Series Slat~dOff < . Hunt"nlDfl.n i. oe ""'n .-.-• < • ,. • .,. ... t 2Airlines . 'Get PUC OK SAN FRAl'ICISCO (AP> -The temporary authorl· ty of Air California and Pacific Southwest Airlines to serve the Tahoe Valley airport a t South Cake Tahoe .~as extended for anothe'r 90 days by the state Public Utilities Com· mission. The original 90-day authority was granted Feb. l9, to filk the void cre.¥_ed Feb. 5 ..then Holi- day Ali-lines ·ceased its ~vicetO'Tahoe. ' Mideast Cash For Coal'tal -' Park.Studied . • ( v • ' Gatiiers Support •• This Stocklf,~lder ·r Firm's ~011rs~ienc.e " By MIL'ro!'4 ~OSKOWITZ ~ biologist who became to11comiod •!boul,b!l'ds caU1ht In oil spi1ls h411 formed an organ$~aUon lhat l1,betttiv1d lo be unlqu~ ln the annals of U.S. business hlstoO'. ~ 1 , ., ' ' The biologist is Dr .. James H~y 1!!'14 tttd org1nl1atlon ts P-l'O· ject Standard Oil CPSO), a nonprofit -1roup of dl111ldtnl sqareholders or Standard Oil Co. of California. These stockholders are each paying $3 dues a year to su_p~rt PSO in its role as ihe socuil cons· cience of S!andard Oil. -. Money Tree The California petroleum giant ranks as one or the largest corporations in the world., with sales in 1974 re· aching nearly $19 billion. Its gasoline is marketed principally under the Chevron label. NO OTHER COMPANY has spawned an organization quite like P&Q , I Dj1sldent shareholder groups are,· of1 course, not new In Am'erlcan busines;i. However, they ' •are. u!iuall]I formed by shareholders who want to replace the current '"'anagement. That's not PSO's aim. ' LEUCA.DIA ~f\P) -Mlddle Groups which attack corporations ror social reasons 'are not Eastern money Is ready lo invest new,. either. In fact, they have been fairly common in recent in a $13! million Disneyland-like years. But they have been norm·ally organized under the auspices amusl!menr"}JBri' along the north or church organizations or social activists such as Ralph Nader . shore-of .Batiquilos Lagoon, a•de-l>So did not evo,lve from either of these sources. veloper says. · . Hoy started PSO because he was bothered by some Standard "nteMiddleEaslisn'ltheonlY Oil practices -and he happened to be a Standard Oil investor,'' Romm Doulton of Los stockholder. He owns l:W sh.ares, now wc;>rth about $3,300. Angeles told th~ Leicadia Town His original concern was With the birds killed or maimed by Council, but he .said it would be , . oil spills frqm Standard Oil tankers·. It later branched out to in- financed completely with foreign elude political contributions made by the com~ny and lnade· funds. quate disclosure of information to sh,areholders. Hoy expressed Doulton said the Nemo's Secret these concerns by ellercising his right P a shareholder to submit Harbor Develo"pment Co. has proxy resoluf,ions that were considered a.t the annual meeltn&s of worked for six years on plans for Standard Oil Of California. a park dealing with underwater . HOY'S 'NEXT MOVE was to organize other concerned· sci~nce fi~ti'on . 11tockholders into an ongoing group -and that's not as easy as it If government agencies give might a'ppear, the problem being: How do you reach Standard Oil the go-ahead, he said Monday stockholders?· · ni1ht that his parfc, cou1d open in A mailing to the 280 ,000 stockholder list would have been very 30 months. cosUy. And Standard Oil wasn't about to alert its stockholders to the 3ctivities or Jim Hoy. What the company did allow Hoy to do There would.be 5,000 employes after the 1973 annual meeting was lo inspect the proxy cards re· and h,ousing · for l ,SOO families turned by shareholders. What they never expected him to do was when the development is com· , plete, he said. Egyptian officials to hire a microfilm outfit to photograph the 14,000 proxy cards have discussed construction of a which had been returned that year with antimana1ement votes. It took two and one-half days and the help of a high-school 37·story pyramid park, said volunteer group to separate the cards and photograph them. Al Doulton. Among the first features would the end, though, Hoy had a list he could mail to, inviting mem· be make believe rides on a berships in Project Standard Oil. glacier, submarine trips to the PSO IS NOW FVNCI'IONING with a m embership of 390. Hoy FINANCE SBA Taps Wilek To Panel Thomas S. Kleppe, ad· mlntstrator of the Small B iqess Administration Ab has annoupced ln alhlngton the Appoint· ent of C. Thomas Wilek,. vice preaide~t of 'PL\blic Affairs for the Jryine Company , 11 a -hlember of the national advieory council of the SBA. Kleppe said that Wilek ha1 been selected for council membership in recognition of his know)edge of and in· teresJ tn problems of small business. As a member of the national council Wilek will take · paft in the semi-annual meetings where th e offds' of the local small bUsiness communitY are disCu111ed and the means by which SBA can m<>!t effectively meet these needs are considered. l Newport Finn Now Drilling Chaya and hi s crew departed Handa Harbor in Japan April 6 end traveled 6.200 miles over the ;-::'"great circlf route north or Hawaii. The 38-day trip is believed to be somet'hing or a record. "And we were held up two days by fo g off the California coast," said Chaya . depths of the ocean and other ex-runs it out of his house in Hamden, Conn. (88 Woodlawn St.). At cursions to the "center of the the inost recent Standard Oil annual meeting, held last month in Capistrano Bay Yacht earth," patterned after the Jules San Fr-aucisco, a PSO-submitted resolution mandating non-' Club, newest member or Verne novel, ''?O,OOO Leagues partisanship in political camapigns garnered 8 million the Southern California Under the Sea.,,, · shareholder votes or morethan6 percent or all the votes cast. O:Koco-Inte rn ational, Inc., a Newport Beach indepe nd e nt oil com- pany, announced com- mencement of drilling operations n ear Man-avgat, Turkey. TllE SKIPP ER'S NEXT voyage will be from Los Angeles to 1\.1 arina del Rey where he and the ·: .crew will start tuning the yacht for the Transpac Jt _ +is one of three Japanese yachts entered in the race. Yacht,ng Association~=:=::::;:::=:::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~ will sponsor ·a new of- fshore racing series starting June 1 with a Other cre.w m en are Yo shi a ki Kubo. 23. navigator ; Kiyotaka Mori . 22, purser , Yochiyuki Ogas awara, 26 , enginee r : and tw.o ~e amen ~ 1\1asayuki Akatsuka. 23, and Toru Sakuram't. 21 race around the Hunt- ington 20-fathom buoy off Huntington Beach. ·The new series will be knov.rn as the Ocean Rae· ing Series (O RS> and will consist of s ix races ending NoY 15 with a race from San Onofre to Newport Beach The series is open to yachts rated under the Jnterna. tional Offshore Rul e (IOR), Performance " Coast Guard Sets New Radio Codes Yachtsmen planning lo cruise along the coast -of Southern California this season will be in- terested in r et:ent changes in aid s to navigation announced by the Coast Guard. John G . Barry has been promoted to general manager of the Passagemaker Trawler division of ·-·Jensen M a rine, ac- . cording lo Charles Thomas, president. Barry h as been with Passagemaker for a year as n a tion a l sales and marketing manager. . The most significant Handicap Racing Fleet changeshavebeeninthe (PHRF> and Midget radio beacon Charac Ocean Raci ng Fleet teristics from San Diego CMORF> to Santa Barbara The Officers or Capo Bay n ew codes are as YachtClubsaldthenew follows: series was established to Point Lorn a Light rill a need for offshore (LL·l ), L (.-. ) racing not now filled by Los ~ngetes Light (LL clubs in the Dana Point, 20 /424lA(.'-) and Capietrano Bay Point , Arguello Light areas. CLl.25)0 (, .. J) Only other series in the Oceanside Light areaisDanaPointYacht (Ll..335), OC (····.-.) Club's season long series Mission Bay North Jet-limited only to yachts ty (LLS/320) MB (-.. , __ ) rated PHl\F., Newport na·y West Jet- ty (LL 13 1341) NE (._ .) Long B.each Light (LL18/410) LB L -.. · ... ) Avalon (LL 371) AV(.. .... ) . Marina del Rey Light CLL466 ) MR (--.-. ) Anacapa Island (1 1 26) AN (. ... ) Santa Barbara (LL 516)SB (. ______ ) Snow Tires SACRAMENTO · (AP) -Gov . Edmund Brown Jr. has signed legislati9n extending the period for use of studded snow tires on public roads. The bill by As se mblywoman Pauline Davis , (0· Portola), authorizes the use of studded snow tires between Dec. 1 and March 1 eac h year through 1978. Esquivel Gets Post Gene E s quiv el. formerly managing editor of Sea Magazine, has been appointed vice pi'esident and • general man8ger of Pennant Publlshin1g Company, publisher of Pacific Skip· per, a West Coast boat, ing magazine, and several other special in- terest magazines. Pacific Skipper, formerly Pennant, is published in Newport Beach. ln addition lo his former association with Sea, Esquivel was aleo rormerly on the staff or the Los Angeles Times and later conducted "his own publi c relations firms in Laguna Beach. ' ' i Catamarans Star ' I 1- • • Silver Lakes Race Set ' . '·. ! , ~An ln•ugural regatta I for the north lake or ~Sliver La kes Resort, north of Victorville will lie h e ld over th e ~11ilemortal Day w,eekcnd .._with Prind1e ·l6 catamarans being the ¥j1tarperformers. Bridge Regatta on Lake Havasu. ~: Anothe_r hot pedo,rPter entered 1n the ~!~t is Horry Pattiaoa of Newport Beach, who won the nation·a1 cham· pionship In Prindle·l&s at Corpus Christi, Tex. Pat-tiaon's wife, Sue, who crewed for him ln tbe ch•mplonahlp regatta, 1"111 asaln be on the' reature trophy tiveD~ wltll Ove heau ~aeb_.., a; dltterent course set °" the 165-acre man-m~ lake -determining the point winners of more: tllan. S200 In tr01>hles. SilYer Lakes Resort la owned by Ill cCulloch Properties, Inc., the firm that developed La•·• Havasu Clty on the Color•do RLver. It . ls PALM SPRINGS' BIGGEST VALUE ..• SY FAR! The n1agniliccnt faiJ.lay 1~ondominiums of Sunrise C.Ou ntry Cl ub have outsold every other new community in the desert. In fact, Sunrise Country Club has quite ... ' . ... ' '.· -........ ' " .,. • ~ c • / t -. . !(. .. Dennis Ralston - Resident Director of Tennis .•. ,. ~ .. ~~ -i:'°" . i ., • I .. ·~ ·~ possibly sold more new' homes than all of the Qt.her ~ country club communities combined. Such overwhelming a buj·er acceptance ca n only be based on one thing. Value. If • SunriscJCouptry C_lUb simply offel'!i mqre. for the money. · ·,~ , Jn short, H.'"S the deserL~' best buy. I .. ~' • '~ I .~\; ~;(lft:tr~:·~mft'.0<,_ '"" ,tt Su~rlse. Country Club ownership or a ~t..,_., ~n-·· 1 ·:" ·' .fJ.~· 7"7"" beautiful single-story fa1N·ay condo- ;F-4\'<% '(l",., j..,,, ·41', -~ minium in a 24-hour ga~ guarded ,. " .,'\ , . l t ~~':,(" ·~,community brings with it all of the 'L-l t.. . ·1 ' ·., advantages and pleasures of belonging " 1 ~l' ~ ·' J to the most elegant private golf and .' .... • ' ~ t ennis clu b for the Pric<! of co ndominium · ~ownership alone. Proprietary membership _{t-..,,,:.i· .i:"W rights in both the golf a nd tennis' clubs .:)"~ . come with your con domi nium . You pay ~.,.~,. no initiation fees. To make your in\'estment even more v&.luable, there are only about four fairw ay homes to lhe acre -on land you own. With i1it~reRt rateR at a two·yt~ar 101(.1 and a liniit.cd number of homes ready for occupancy, this is the perfect time lo buy, Visit Sunrise Country Club tod ay . You'll find the secret of our :;uccess is no secrel J t's e\'erywhere you look. And · it's spell ed V-A·L-U-E! From Palm Springs. take Hwy. 111 110uth, lert 11.t Pie~ n~ me you~ full color bn>C'hu~ and · · r··~·-·······1 Counll")' Club Dr. f'rom Loe Angeles, take llwy I ~d1tio al 1n(ormat1on. Mall to: Sunrise I 10 to Ramon Rd . (Rancho Miraite Count C)ub, 71 -601 Country Club Drive, ""•i.e."•,,..• exit) lcrt 00 Doh I lope Dr I ltancho .Mirage, Cahfornln 92270. I ~. -.. '1 Co 1 Cl 1 0 -I Attn: Director of Sales lnformr1t1on GRANO E)PENING 9th Unit Fantastic Fairway Loc:ations 'lo-;:":;•::;-:;'::''-li..,.:..,;"'"'a o un I")' u) r., I .,. ~"\. thcntumr1Khl N ->, i ta ;,.,•,a I am• • • I ,, c ... .i.,. t''-' o.-. s I Addie ' \ .,. •• 71-001 C.:Ountry Clu~ Dr., c·t s ZI I '1 Rancho M.irqe. .. t y. tale, p T~lephone:'{7J4) 328-3191 • I. • • • • • • • • • • .I ~~~!'19. -·' • ,.... t""1 ' $;~n~~QQ.Qtj[~1~B : , From $34,995 to $t.i.;9s '~' ' . I ;: 'The event is expected f'.~to 1ttract about 30 en· t "trl11, lncludln& Geort "'P'rindJe, de11aer of tlle catamaran bull and win· net of l11t montll'i first 'b•lt or the London ttapt&e. · · Afi oettle. will race as a fleet la Sund•y '1. located 111 , mllo,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J llOrtlleait or Loi An5cle1 orfoldHl1hw•ye8, I I • 100 ... ER by Wa F. Iron md Mel C-1e111 ,..----.:........ • FUNKY ~Nl<~BEAN FIGMENTS ' If 1llS OOESNl ~. IWH <NOW YMAr wiu. ! ----· ........ -' ' .. • ••• MONDAY, MAY 7" 1,73. byT-K. Ry• \'lllE;N YA &IT roNf,- M.All. If RlN'( amss byT-1~ . ., . by Dale Hale ---- '· by &nie lushiniller ,... .. _., ...... _ .. __ ... .. ..... ----- TDDAY!S ·caDSSIDID PUZZLE U~IT~.o .. t~~ ~Y?"'ctlo v-.-"'""' ~CllOSS ........ -~ 45Actot 1 M•k•• out welc:OIM wen 46 Set "" 601.aound 49~::: mind 50 mr 10····H•ri: T09¥-(' GermlnlPY 51M~ ... , ', 14 AepreHnt1-.£1~ live 52.EJllCll't 15 In series tultabll l6 It is •0 55 cauffd 10 17 Fallure grow 18 Future of 58 Math. min)' re11t1on contr1cl1: 2 60 DiltMH "11rd1 61 Suddene>1ln pttlla oiOT~op 20 Hlt1orlc1I SJ>llltll 9 Shetp inlulalor1 epoch 62 Nol thtlng 10 Se...,_n 41 Vlt 21 In dfeamllnd 63 Aclort · t;i Maktf----42 W. Getll'llft 23 Wash lightly Dailey and of ll'IOl'll't 11111 , 24Attemp11 8~.,. .12Verb_fonn 43--_-deF~ance 26The ··-···· 6.4NotfilM 13FtdlhekiMY 4STmtun1l: Desert S&S.Amer. 1ev-.. Abbi. 28 Cuming rne 22 Honey maker '46 Nameleu JO From thtn 25 FMI wrow Ir ink et: VII. unlil ntw DOWN tor 47 Turoene• 31 Ballery 1'6 Y..mtcf heroine lermlnalt 1 FOA'adOQ 27 Pilmir.. 48 Make ll'IOtt'' , 32 Hockey rink 2E11Clted .28 "lik• two cheeflut aru:2 . 3Eatat>lilhll J>9Uln • .t9LongliHI w«dl Ina MW ···" 51 Billolta,a 36Pay dlrt place 29Hurtlng 53Ducl PU NUTS --'!':----, .. JUD~E PARKER MISS PEACH IJ 1Hf EJID OF M 51Cll'I Of M 1*!f.LIT'llE 1'165. 1llE llJOl.f Ftu INTO A POT Of SOIUN6 lll'TER ... ~LEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK >-IMM., A ~•SCRIP"rlON ,-llltO.M. PA. S.MOCK, ... r . MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS . . , 37 Adora• 4 Coq>111 3001vldt Sito S4 Small childrtn 38 N~aUve point p1rt1 56 Mike a contunctlon 5 POIHlon 01 . 32 Mor• ftrt decision ' 39 Smaahed diatreu 33 llOllled 57 Equal fooling .t2 N, Amel1Cen 6 Sltongboxe1 34 Aqult\c bltd 59 Pet ye1r: -er: DO ANYTMN<; TM.AT WLL Tllfi ~ OuT! ll'lln'lll!'lal 1 BllTtn 35 S.. bird Abbr. 44 Gy!Mhll'll 8 Nagattve 37 Y'in of Ot'e • W!IJ( ••• ' ' " 11 lO l I • DICK TRACY I ,, I l6 ' ' I • I •· • r I -- ~I ® by Mel 'Nedn!ic!.r.Mtr21, 197$ DAll.YPILOT D by Rodc)er lracH,leld ___ ....;,.._-..; r l"»li· """' llllAT 1HEY (ALL ; I ME ... 0 HOW l!"L-SS PIP YOU "fHINt< Wli- Pli'CliPHe'Al!P "f'MllSEi 'fHINQS, L-APY ?' Gt,~ by Ferd Johnson rr's .JUST TO SHOW y,i.. }::::Z:~~===~~~~ WH~T1S FOR ~ I PROMISE 0 IN PRODUCE ... Wfi waN'T EVE'N U h' PASS N!:AA TH' MEAT DEPARTMENT. by Rodc)er Bollen .. :c~t:, <;OJVE eor ro lfA~ TO Ull><I'~ C:,OOR SfeP . ... THE GIRLS ~ "' '. . • ( I ··rm 'urc I .,:~';'ki1aYc hi.:i.:nmc !'omc famt1u,, l°l'.'t'>\1nai:;c in 1•11r hi,h•1 y t"lut it ju,t 'l'cn1' I no more lhan lini'h 11nc quill hu1 wh;it I 'la!1 11n ;in111hcr 11nl·." DENNIS THE MENACE - I ~ '• • I ! .#l0 DA"-V PILOT W9dnHd!y. May21, 1975 Tonight's Final Concerts ~ Slated ' TV ffighllghts ' This ls the time of year-when many a music Jov - er gives a great big yawn, casts his eye on a beuch thal daily becomes more lnviling and idly wonders if the (inal concerls of the season will be worth his Kl-IJ (9) 7 :30 -11lndiscreet ." Ingrid attention. . • Bergman and Cary Grant star in this It is this writer's considered opinion that romantic comedy from 1958. anyone falling into thQJ. trap in these \vaning days or the 1974·75 season stand lo miss what may be the ABC (7) 8 :30 -"Death Cruise." best offerings or a session that has provided us with Three couples, mysterious winners of a some magnifice nt concerts. Pleasure cruise, find the mselves on •8 one· It v.'ould take \vlld horst;s to drag yours truly out of town on Muy 24, ror example , when t'h e admira- ' TOM .BARLEY Music Boll: . l\tu sir " and those who miss this 8_:30 p.m. offerini' will get a second chance in O_range County . Ttic work Will be r epeated on June 2 In Clu bhou&_!!!fil t Leisure World. · way passage to death in this TV movie hie SidM.f •turth leaves his concertmaster's chair- with Richard Long, Pol ly Bergen, with the 11os Angeles Philarmonic Orchestra to lead ALL OF WlllCJf brings us to what has become Edward Albert, Celeste Holm a nd Tom the ensemble in its final Oran~e Co untv lhe grand finale here in our Orange Coast area - .Bosley. ef Philarmonic Society Offeri_ng of th~ S1!_aSon at JJC the final concert of the -Orange Coast "'College Com- \ Irvins's Crawrord 1-iall. -munily Symphony Orchestra v.'ilh m aestro Jo!:ie ph K C ET ( 2 8 ) 9 : 0 0 Great Pearlman on the podium. Pe rformance . The New York City Ballet llARTH IS ALWAYS Q joy to ~·a_tch and he hws This year's fin ale includes Tschaikovsky's prese nts th r ec dances b y G eorg c 8 jewel .of a program linecj up for the last concert : "Capriccio Italien ", Berlioz's "1-larold in Italy" Bal a nthine \\'ith Edward Villella , Sc-hubcrt 's Sy mphon y No. -3 in D. Rave\'s andHandel's"Mus1cforlhe"RoyalFireworks."A p 1 · · 'I B 'd K ,1 d p Rhapsodie ,Espagnole and Tschuikovsky 's worthy programbyanambi(iousandgiftedensem· a r1 c1a ll c r1 e, ay , •. azzo a n cte r magnificent Symnhony No. 5 in E. Great stuff for a Fight Tolts .A.li'~ Ratings Too . ' NEW Y011K (AP) -ABC's livelelecastol last week 's bout between M~aipmad Ali and ~n Lyle wi.ts th~ natlibn'a m4.1ft"'PQQ.l,llar even· Ute TV show , i een ln an estimated 17.4 million : !I.Om es, audience estimates show . ' · Al'cording to A. C. Ni"lsen Company tigures, another li veteleca6t -CBS' broadcast of.the Miss1USA pageant -alsp ctid well, rated ~.,seventh in,audienc.e popularity for the week or May 12-'Ie . Ac~ording to the Nielsen findings, made public ueliday, the nation's highest-rated sliowS las Wi'ek.afler lhe Alf ntiht we·re ''M·A· S-ll ·• "Good Times " and "Hawaii Five-0" <all1 c8Sl: ··s .W .A~T.'' CABC);~•\Barnaby Jones'' and "?ttiss USA Pageant" <bolh CBS): "Chico and the ?.1an " and "Petrocelli" (both NBC ); NBC 't; "Sanford and s0n" and CBS' ''All in the Family" Caratingslie ~. ~larlin . ble. fa rewell concert. ,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:_~~.,...;:.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~;:::::'. A ·"·eek later , !\lay 31, lhe Ir\'inc !\laster ........ ._. ... ,. ...... ..., - TV DAILY LOG --:· .. . . Wednesday Evening Mi\Y 21 Thursday . ---=---------; •• DAYTIME MOVIES • ... ...... ,..... ...... (dll) '&6 • ,. -Gary Mtn111, 01a Andtnon. ;•lJ'l •• '*ill tlle I.AF ... (adv) • 'if-T)'t'OM l'owtt, lktl'I' GHblt. tH..e .,._ • ....,. .. (dra) '36 ---;-r KlllllMI Htpttum. He1beft Mar-l aflall, Donald Cfl'!I, Y111 Hlfli11. JtJl.B-nt ltdure .r 1rue '-'•" • • (.,..s) 'SO -Jo1111 lr1l111d, Ann : D'torlk. CJ ljj [j)a;'!llM(ll l1•111 "ChHr$" (A) S.m Bollom$ IUtSIS 1s 1 student with 1 drinkina prob- lam ind a built-in reun!mtnl 10· •11d all offers of advite, espteially liom ht' 1e1clwl1, lutas Tanner. Ptt Hinlle and looiM L1!h1m also aunt. @ TIHI UnloucUWa t1!iJ lllffil: (C) (Ziii') "Chlqr el KHir' (dr1) '69 -[!yjs Pre5lry, Mary fyl11 MOOft . f1J S.lari h """6blrt fE Creal ,rtfor .. ia E11w11d Vil· 1e1i., P1tric1a Mcllridt, ic..1 Mauo, Pttei M1rtin,' and u11s11 rrom IM Ntw YIKk Cilj Balle! perlorm lhret billets dlolto1r1phrd bJ G1011e Balanchine . A ......,. MJ r_,.. (COii!) '51 .:Jo.ii Crftl'fofd, [WI Atftl\ Robtrt Yllllft&, rrMll i.-;o,. J:OO e ..,..,. ill .. Mlk"' (dra) '6l- Oun M1rtin, Gn"11diM P111, 'hett1 Mltm.11a. Iii let .,,_..... (dr1) 'i7-R1y- lllOIMI hn", Oon Ganow.,. IUCil CCI ....,....., 0.tiPW' {c;om) ;4t -blher Willlims, Rtd S~on, RC.rclo Monl1lbin. J:JO (})'(C) •AcMt M tu.•.M ... (adv) 'li-M1il ltldlfl'IOfld, We11c1tM eor.,. D ..,.....,, Lnt 5-tlln" eoncr. , (4'1) 'iO-ElL!abttll Ttyklr, Mont. ,...ry Clift, Klllla1i111 H~tur11. :- '-· . ' KOCE Televis'ion ... • Wl!DNllSDAY "'"<~<"•" 0""'" H••• <Cl Ar11M ll'ld 15"H111 ICI ll"tlSI ,Kl TM St...,,!) ICI .. !ti l'KIOf''I' ICI 111~/0ut lC I t:.mmo11.i1r of Livi TMnot-ICI ltclrlc C_,,.Nn'l',';!I ICTWI lllt!AIQrt CCI f~ISI '"!"'°'IM '7" ICI '' ~ ' It '(. ·-• Chorale \\'ill a g ain utilize Santa Ana's \"ery beautiful 1-~irst Baptist Church for a program that ,,·ill include Serg~i,Raehmaninoff's "Ve~pers, Opus 37 ." Oui .beloved lMC's final local offering' is ...,·orthil y lilied "An Evening of Glorious Russian Playhouse Bought PASADENA '(UPI) ·-The city of Pasadenµ has ugreed to purchase the nationally famous Pasadena Playhouse v.·hich has beeo vaca ntfo~ several years. The Pasadena 'Board of Directors \'oled un- animous approval of a motion authorizing $325,000 for purchase of the building \\'hich c urrently is o\\·ned by the Bank of America. THE CAYI DWILLHS by W-.. $aroy• . rn~n .. J"1,n') ... d...:am.rq ... 1eireshing .. .'' -TIM Mew Yft .r-.. a "'°'' of reruo<ne~i and beou1y. · -M. Y. Doily Mt•• ~ ..... "lo•• Ill ... ~ con-.-""'Q ia.. ol .... , ... ~ .. -· tl'j -p.,..,.,., p,,,, W<M•r>g ;wt,..,. QI lt1£ llME ~ TOUA ~lfE. ll s lftolll(I 11 •t>. ,,.,.,,1 SPECIAL l"IEYtEW NIGHTS -T• & W.cl, MCIJ 20, I 21 -U..50 • Have semelhinp: you wanl to sell ? Classified ads do it well -Call NO.W, 642-5678. .... "(:APONE" MOVIE RA11NGS FOR PARENTS AND . ' 'VOUNO PB>Pl.E ' ...~ "_ .......... ... ........ 0 .. ... _,,. ..... ,_ .............. _ t • . ' ,, ,:: .. ..-------- ' 1'IJ flNEST ADULT ~ IN THE MOST · t!fltRUINMENT ~'LUXURIOUS THEATRES ' lllHlf! Together For One Week Only!. • PUSS'ICAT Tl£ATRES PRESCNTS Alex de Renzy Week In Southern California His , sweet .. Newest ' ® Ml.ICM. JlllO ONE UNDER 11 aeony "411'A'-'',_ pkts-His ~Bi1arre·---,.. ........... ...... -FANTASY GIRLS FEATURING • AUllllHllt DlMONSIRITIONS Of UftlllN CRIFIS (by ._,,, .. ....._., • IMI 15 TllB[S 1£Pl£S00£0 • 'lllSrUI IND Sill Of lllWI BWltITS. BUDS, wms. irwru1. 1uGS. cto11111G. rn:. LA.II m.cte •d ..-cf by ..._riccwi hwlionsl ~ OLD TIME POW · WOW .~ INOIAN COMPETITION DANCING FOR CASH PRIZES MAY 24 thru MAY 25 1 ~00 P. M. HUNTINGTON e'EACH '. CITY FESTIVAL MAY 18 -MAY 19&MAY2l -MAY26 I 0 :00 .t..M. • 9:00 P.M. HUHTIHGTOH atACH~IH ST. & COAST HIGHWAY 1-.,_0lf.,._.I FREE ADMISSION nn Ma~L 50 Til 2<3.0 Senior Citizens . 1. so· at all ti SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES >-,....,..,,..,:; .... ;;' ,;'";:;';u"°[, FW't. AT IRI STOL SO.COAST w=,~ P• a 7• I . 7.1 .. , .. t-t,_,, .......... ,.Mil ..... LftUll "LT. tol .. c:ausoe" · *-t111 IMhl: /U• ~ .... 1 .. lt:ll f R££ PA !(1N S8 COM,T ·-,. .. 'Dfi7a •.. ·i::~= Ill , ~1&,,R . MON. ..... : 7t1M:IS • SIT.-IUN:: J':».i:»-S:J0.7:JO.f'.M -·••-- 0 Ml4 -· --lftllK --1111 I r'm114IP JecliHkMl.- M.n. Sc .. llWer '"THI PASfm•M .. INI IAlllA $TlllSAHD ''FU='t.i~~~PGi ·-Of THI PU« PJ..tfnB'" ,,., ""•OD'A~AaT r ·lll & "DU.TH Wl$H"' llJ ' ..w.w.&n.ow.o.r•-.. .. & .. S.P J.LS." INI _,., "' ... .,..,.,.., "lllHCAIMATIO" OF PITI• ·I raouO.. llJ ""LKIHD OF ~IU HOUSI"' "IJGll SAMCTIOM'' 111 ' I "flOHT PAfil" l~J • •• Burt .A.1 Y• Liti• H• 1e1t! C...._ s.t. I S.1t. J ,,_ w~1...._1,... lack m 1. :Z w.w. livojl'tii. 'SS Oki&, lcmd bubble gutn, counlry nmic. robbioiJilline lllalion& and a girl named Dixie. BUB'I' . IUITllOLDS '" . ·~·,~ vaam••• D4WC•A .... ....... CONNY VAN l:)YKE. JERRY REED· NED BEATTY ' DON WILLIAMS· MEL TILLIS .. &B'I' C•'.Rllmt' Backm1~ W.V(. !Mid n .. 'SS .,.,. ...... ._ rwn.~l'luic. ............ .......... .... ....... OiQ.. ,. ' ' ,, " .. . . .. . . .. ,.. ~ .. # • ¥ • • ·~ •• 117'' Produeer Declare• A Deruma Durbin . 'Couldn't -Happ en' lly VERNON BCO'IT HOLLYWOOD <UPI> -Joe f1st111rnak discovered Deanna Durbin in 1136 and made her a mll,jor 1tur. Today, by his own admlaaton, neither he nor anyone cJaa could uccompll¥h the rcut u1aln. -And it wus Pasltrnatk "'ho gUlded lh!;! brilJlant,' tern · peramttnt.!il Murlo Lani" to mo\I· ie 1l1trdom. Another triumph un- likely ID be repealed. JC Mario catme alone toduy Pll&lernuk would not hilve the ti&ft\e &UCtt&I. "I'll tell you why," said lhe 73 -yeur-old producer. "nlevision hus y,·teCked the sY§*I!~ of build!f1g up a Star, ahd th,,,p1cturc business is no loncer ot 'itnizcd to follow up u big ta enl V>'ilh guidance und protec- tion. • '~A SINGLE record can~ u hit and m:.ikc u 'star' overnight. WHen that happens the youngster appears on ll•lcvision over and over again. "Jnstant exposure. Ini:;tunt cx - pusure. And they IJ/'C forgotltn ju1l ·us .,quit:kly us I.hey cume along. , ''The people behJnd the scenes ~the prolJUC~r1, directors, <11enls , munugers -don't have the patiencl' to tuke the time tc 7--'""-M IT '1CTUh& • GEORG£ IK1'I' Hll,.L flM I tnr&n~ .... c .............. ·"M.R. MAJISYK" ( ~Ol'l.INU Ffi,f·lOplOo. Sall&un/HOI. 11.30 build slowly. They don't wttnt l1; work thathurd. "NO. Another Durbin or l~anza will ,neVer happen uguin for me or Mnyone else. If Durbin und Mario were to ('Oml' along toda)· thuy "'ould be instunt hlti, sure. But TV would havl' killed them in t\\'OYears." MARIO IS de<.1d. But Deanna, 52, still lives on tho outskirts of Paris. She has been rotired for two decades. .. , suw Deunn<.1 t"·o ycal'!i ago," Pustern<&k rtH:alled . ·'She looked \\'onderful und she is very huppy. Al lhat time the Sunds llotcl in Lus Vt!gas had given me a blank l'heck to have her fill in any c.tmoUnt she wanted lo play four '-''l•eks in the Cop;.i Room. .. De<.innu told m<' she wouldn 't do it for a'll 'the gold in P'ort Knox. She hi.is u s1n<1 1/ pension. lier · hUtil.land curns a ~ood li vi ng. 1 '-''Ondl•r ho'v .1nuny instant stars todu}\ \\•ill be ublc lo MUY that JS Yl'afs £rom no"'.'' Pastei'nak, who produced 105 movies in his time, 70 pt.>rccnt or thl·m musicals, is returning (o lhl• film bu&iness. lie is preside nt or a new com- pany, The Play 's the Thing, in l'Onjunction with New Orleans banker \\.'ilt>on Abraha m. He said former Cali(orni<t Gov. Edmund ,,, ..... . • ENTERTllJtMENT G. Brown "·us ch .. irmun O( the bOard. THE F IRST projeet for the group will be ··The Lost Summer'' to be filmed on location at Canada'!! Luke l .. ouise and the eommunity of Banff. ..'The company ulso plans some tL•lcv lsion n1usil':.i l SJ>t.'Cials an<l a number of shu\\'S for the coun-. trr's 300 lhl·alt·r ·rt."staur~1nts. ·· l\lui-.ie:il~, l'our:.l'. ··1·11e rc i · t.hl' n1·oblem ur cast· inM ·'rht.' l.ost Summer'." £><1.stcrnak suid. ··1'hl'rc is no tlllcnl for mus icul movies. Young singers 1nakt· so 1nuch money on rel·ords \vh.v should lht'y '-''Ork hard in plcturus. • '"So I find n1 ysl·lf looking ror an unkno\\'n girl lo play the lc <id. Sounds familiur. tloesn'l il 7 But if I did find another Durbin I don 't kno"· jf I \\'OU!d try to guide and protect he r ." . '., . ' . I, "'°"'·lhfu ffl. IO 1p"'·-•1.2!. l"MANDINGO". ~ .-,...__. -.--./ ·.~~---~, •-'"II . JAMES MASON · SUSA.N GEORGE PERRY KINO HIS UFIUNI· helcl I !Ir.the .... In ... hunted. '\ ' , ! ' ,. ' I ', ./.~ YY(· .• '~;i ' .. " . •;,,,., ·~ .. ...i.,,~ . ,~, STAID-Fl•AY MAY 23 IN HARBOit 'SHOPPIN~ l!bWARDS' HARBORcM'IAl HA!lllO. .i,vo. AT WILSON Sf, CoitA M!IA 94-·ofll I •· """*"' . U§. 7501 * JE"'ll PllCXJVC!OIS L!D 11'!1 ?tt.11..CO fll.'IS <10 go- ' PETER SELLERS . CHRISTOPHER PLUMMER ·' CATHERINE SCHELL HeRBERTLOM • BLAKE EOWARDS' The swallows "~"'""' ~n. MocAtlt'U .• ""'9fMdl • lt'C Fifttiss ....... -. Thl Sixtltswill -IWJrow tupecb'Cbuseoo -! ........ ll'lltlll ilt&illlf .. .. . ' -BURT ~Wouti I PETER AANE .._,._wB\AKE EDWAADS -wFRANKWA•OMAN .. 8'..Al<E EDWARDS "7'~~e~mr~·;r:viHG · (A • MtWl'OllT C NTE~ • ~} . . . . . . . . . . , .. ,, ....... , .... ~ ···-·· :~ . • Wednelday, May 21 . 1975 041L Y PILOT • 11:· • About Chico aml· the Man Q: Would you pleue gJ\'e •t 101ne pall history on FreddJe Prin1e aM .lack Albert1on! -Wendy Lummox, Plt t1bur•b. A: Jack Albertson. ••n actor's actor, hos ul""·ays bt!tin underr11ted . Born in Atulden,• Mass., he a~hteved a reputation as u IOC'al pool shark who, still In his teens. toured provincial poolrooms ¥.•here he challenged loeal champs. Later he entcrtaint•d with his dancing. A high school dro_pout ut 17, he went to lit!il on United Fruit Company ships. In 1931 he played .straight man for comedii.1 1~ Phil Sll\lefs on the Atins ky burlesque circuit. Albertson's recoenition as u fine dramatic actor 'Glad You A-sked that' by Mwllyo ....t Hy Gard- favorite hobby Is music. In his curly-early dttys he composed 1on1a. strummed the ilUllar. thumped the drum1 and took piano le1sons while 1tudying the ballet. To protect himst1lr from WashinJl'ton Heiehts hoodlums who looked upon a ballet danc«!r us"' sissy, Fredd.ie look up judo and kung fu. Q: Settle an argument -what Is the bos•• nu\'11'!' -W. C. Bickel, Phoenix.Artz. A: It was a short:Jived dance craze 1iveh mo1nl'ntu1n in 1963 when Eydie Gorme recorded the hot pl1i1tter, ·'Blume It On The 8os1a Nova.'' Actual· ly the bo1su craze ortglnated in Brazil in the early '60s, \\'hen Anlonio Curltis Jobim wrote ··ocaa(inado. '' Its meaning translated into English"! ''Slightly outortune.'' Q: I t'an'l belle\'e he'd do a thing like lhi& -but "·asn't Spiro Aii::aew offered hair a million dollars lo flnully wtnt public in 1909 when he ,.,·as voted belit play the role or a famou.s 1ambler, Nick the Greek, .supportiOg actor in the Osl•ar sweepstakes for his . In a rtln1ed ~iography'! -Walter Komphad, Cine in· 1uper'Cormance In "The Subject Was Roses." natl. Ffeddie "Chico" Prinze. \Vho 'll be 21 on .Junt' A: lt·s all Gret'k.lo us~ !'\eithe r ltlr. i\~n e"· nor 22. started "a<'ling" when he "·as only 4 ..,.... doin~ u pro<luel'r Bernard Sch"·artz "·ould take sul·h a gam~ hilurloua takeoff on Ed Sulli\'an. After attending bll'. Bl•lting on a sure thing. Sc·h"·artz handed the: various parochial elementary schools. he "'as uc-pr.u·t to superslur Telly Sa\'<.1las. lncldentall y,- l'CPted by the Ne"' York Jii gh &hool of Perform in.: 'fl•lly 's quilt! a erapshooter himself """hen he roams: Arts . lie got his sheepskin in 1973 as a drama major. the Vegas l'U!linos. Only this time. no matter: He paid his dues entert aining ~1t a s mall lnl · \~·hcthcr he wins· or loses on the dice,.hc'll be lUking: provisution club. usually "'ailing till 3 in the morn· home a rat bankroll. ' ini: lo get ori. A spot on the Jal·k Puur sho"· mudc a Send .11ou r que1ttoiu ro lly Gardner, "Glad You; king out of the Prlnze. ·· r\sked ThCJI ," 1:{1 rC? of this new.,,·paper. P.O. Bo.t 156(1. Single, he Slarted dating at the top: he \}'US re· Co.sra 1\lesa . 92626. /.tarityri and lly Gardner will answer cently linked in a hot romanc·e \vith Ra'Qucl \\'elch us 1no11y queslian.'I' oil' they can in their column . bul !II~ -he's 18 years younger! Nest to Raquel, "Chico's" t·olun1e oj mail rr1ali:es personal replies i111possiblt. in AnE•:ai ... .. IP.GI ENDS TUESDAY , MAY 27 f'· . ' } . . (> H4HOR at >.DAMS, COST4 MESA, PHONE 5~6 ·3 10 ON HAll~I llVD. -ONl Mlll SOUTH Of SAN Dl~OO 1WY. M OH CIMIMA ""-CIUlllU\-1 . . 4).9601147·60 1 :::KL.AMSMAM '"" 'THE NOT SINO;: l.O,IE SIO\Y-. OTHER SIDE OfTHE MOUNTAIN' c.tllAt ..... . (NI "U$T ...-.CAH .-0'" I --W.W.AND THE PIXJE PANC:EBll\IGS • NOT SINCE ; ., 1CWE STORY.~ Thr true shxy of Jill Ki11111ont. The AmericJn Olympic ski contender whose lrJgic fall lookewrything but her Iii.. And who found the courage to Ji_,, through the love of one \'cry spt.--c1al man. 'THE OTHER SIDE Of T HE MOUNTAIN' rin 1Httl~ ~:.1t OI ;tll Mt..11.'''"l'I So""'•M'\•ltrN ttAS§.1 1 r •• r.~ ,. ... ~ ... f!AI.' l•IUU'>., O,I ..... I• l.HlNlU I AIONIGOMIMY •,'IANr./AJllN UAl .\"i• lOtl~A.'1 •Ill l •1Nf • l'l'nllAl-le•rA ... 'T ~Ill "l>">1lAR~> l'HPCI l'~Olll.'C llO°"• ~·-"' 1>y DA\'JIJ!fl!Zl.t ,,.,J "'' , , .• ~ A (l>\C \',A\ \:!'' h · ! C I AU .'l:S • M•"' l>y Cl1•~llJIOI ().,.,,.,;~,I ~~~\ 111W(l• !'t""'l><N..,,IOWAllD'i !HUM~~ Al '1\(~S IL r K. i\J~I • l[(HSICotO• • !lll'N.1 SOJOR.O .llHJ&( ll0.~tl1 (Ml(.4 i!E~OS WI tAf!S/ 1· ,_,,_ ....... -.---1 ~POT°, .. , .. -_,_,. 6 J ...... -~ ....... -111• 1 .... !'~~-··••M N-· ... ~·--· NOW PLAYING 1 "'1' EARLY BARG AIM!. . W•STIROOI CIHIMAS WllTMM"rm AT llOOIUIT •.t.1De1GIOY1iJM4tl W1WOOO I """""HAllY CUO.. & Ill ........ . ••llllAH t• l'OICt AMYOMl-NIY llAT TO 7:30 P.M. OUR Uk" •R PIJCI $2.50 Allrll 7:Ji .-• • • .. . . · ••• DAl~Y PILOT * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *• Wod-•Y. Moy 21 , 1075 : .. " .. llP:lll 99 ( lt . ·&iZPIVr ~ -.~1t. C!!'utco111 ·: ~~'u:_._, ~ ~ CAITllKI 8 'M " .. . Theater Outlay Costly By JOYCE KENNEDY ·DEAR JOYCE: My husband and 1 are drama buffs and have just re- turned from a trip which included visiting dinner theaters i n several states. We think w e have found the pe'rfecl looale in the right city to open s uch a business. We have . some inform a lion but wonder what booklets, etc., are available? -T. W ., Philadelphia, Pa . START-UP costs are substantia l, often rang- ing in the $200,000 to $700,000 n e ighborhood. Some managers say that food gets s tar billing - that bad food will dampen an a udience's enthusiasm for even an outstanding show. A new 36-page Small Business Report e r profile , ".Restaurants and FOQd Services" includes a-dis· cussion or theater- restau"rants, along with many other types or eat· (Career Corner) • ing establishments. tr you're considering any kind or restaurant, you should see this publica· lion. It's available free at any Bank or America community of£ice in California, or by mail for $1 rrom the Small Busi· ness Reporte r, Dept. 3120, Box 31000, San Francisco, Calif. 94137. Don't send cash; make check payable to Bank or America. '.DEAR JOYCE : I would lik e to make crossword puzzles and sell them. :-c.F., Memphis, Tenn. I CAME ACROSS two references while check- ing DOWN mY lists : ''Constructing Q'065words For Fun and Profit," $S pbstpaid from &position Press, 900 S. Oyster Bay Rd., Hicksville, N . Y . 11801; and a chapter in "The Guide to Home Income.'' SS. postpaid from Ari· ington Enterprises, Box 4381 , Arlington, .Va . .22204. I don't know enough about crossword- iq: to judge the merit or ·these publications, so ·tou're on· your own. DEAR JOYCE : I am interested in initiating a delivery service as my eni!losed advertising fifer will explain. · . -F.M.,LosAngeles 'YOUR FLYER s hows You've already dis· covered the api>eal of in- stant delivery of any size ·Wdpment, and are using ~ilher a cadio or air ~enal pager to keep your v.an rolling errtcieoUy 1 frOm job to job. Try in.ailing pocket·aize rate e3rds to 'businesses in )rour deli very area aloog koith your flyer. Dis· trtbute additional rate cards in oCfice buildings. Don't overlook al· !Ol"neys, advertisibg IU?encies and printen. , M-io orten need courier I Wvice. Try ror more air · ~go business by quizz- cargo desk clerks on eh firms ship parcels i:10a't have their own y ltaff. In future ~\IaJliaJ&• stress re· -ding, and •• <er lower) ciQ '!"ilh the _.ibledellvery. . ' -•Q!H• "" .. '.":"".':~~·."-- (hoo.e you• lo•o•;'"' hom ou• t•<•hnq w-lt<toon of -..oodtn "Y"= de<o•otoa l•o-•. Mul~·pu1po.e '''"' ot Ba lO". 1 lal•", 12•2•" r.i••~! to, yov• lo•"'•'• poonhng~. d<OW•"<l' ot e••n o~o1o tnlo1r,iemenl~ "'"'Y on lodoy & >O•t·. ~lod ""now lo• h.olodo1 IM''"' t.l~m9 \/'011111 REPE~T OFA•AI SELL-OUT! ~Mf :L".? """' '""' , ......... ..,. JI •Wit lo!M1 Lttll ••·-"IM ...... to ~ e-111o •.• w ......... . 97 REGULAR 8.99 \\ TRIPOD MODEL BARBECUE GRILL 6iq 2•"' 1,1111 far 1or, al cooMg aeo. c~ ~· Bibi, IOt>e lripod cpl ~ • 601'°" ten.1tt1 Silt • 1-.11'4 1c -.. vi..,1 Censfntel'911 • Ptrftct ler PMI •r ... cit Us.e: " ' . "-6 MOTOR Oil -~s_,, .. 30&40 c REGULAR 7 .69 RUGGED, INFLATABLE 1-MAN BOAT . De~glitlvNr /lov0<ed cello·w•op~ (andfe~ by lhin•ho:ll .. monv loclu1c" ol the l•<>e>I lio<d (Dn~. T•r peppefmonl. opro<ol. <ho:f'r, r,i•t•n opple, fetnOfl. 0•0119". ' •o•pbe"r or !"'Dk<,,...lon Melt·m·raur·moulh goodnf'"· llirilty P<1ted' WEIGHT · QUART R~d. 0.,..""'n in!lotoble boc>• 10< pool. lok~a• bcoclt 11\<'. G1eo1 1 • gouge .inyl con;/Ju.:llin l0<'wo1oDn.olt1• --~·· Cola•ful inlcrior ond edtrlo•. Now ul r!.i; low -e<·~oW>n -.olw P"tt! Huny '" rJdoy o• lltuhy .o,;ng>I " ,.... '.(.' .. ·: .. 219 riii1fr1 = LOW "1CI! .. , cono• TERIY PRllT BEACH TOWll Nawelty P''"ted beoclt IOwtl• °"' l•lfD ob.O<ben1. lle,.11 lad111q. wal tlDI iw. f in• quol,.., ob.orbeftr <Ollon ~ry, HEINZ PIClllE lfllll ·•" 35c ·Ill• .,,. 1!11' . ea. ·costa Mesa 2JJ [ I 71tt SI. Costa Mesa ,,.. ........ - 1, , • lop qVt1lot~ 30 6. •0 '""'!II'! mo•o• O<I So!•rut rol•nrd non· u .. 1~r1,ren• 0,1 .,,1h lo .. <01bo<' ••••due ~lo<lo. up "°'"! • HIAVY DUTY • )9< • PREMIUM ..•• 6l< f; l ' • -f GotN Lite IOTTU Of JU RE,, 39c SPEEDOL 29c MOTOROIL ........ "· llCI. 25c "'.11111 121 32·0Z. Sin • I 1/1-11. Glau tr Plntic lottll ~i·~ina Eye· ·Drop.s .'=~~c:c.:r:. Mis• . • Clairol Creme Formula · -_ · 2'' Brick'"'cranla Rinse Spray 44 c IYBUTOL 1101 PLUS 13,. MUl,JIPLE VITAMllS c rt 4-0z: ltaill A.I·~···-~,~ .. ·""'·, .. .,.. oppe 'Ona ..... "Oil Now ii-.oilobl. ;~ 11>;~ lvll ,_..·, •upply ~ ' I I I I I I I I I I Af>o•he<o•y borllt ol 30~. Vol~! n,. 1.44 10-LI. IA' ROYAL OAK CNAICOAL Lindsay California Pi11td lllfl< oti1'ff SHASTA PLANTERS ~ -LINDSAY . llET SOFT IRIDS~, -PITATI CllPS llY· llASTEI PEAllTS ::1 12c;~ .... 59~. , .. 99c . . ' 1!.tl.c.111 ';., •Rll PICllt , CAllf•llA ' 1'11111 Santa Ana "' Fountai!I Vahey 1406 w ......... lri~ M ...... ofT .... ' BToro El, .. " hcilfleld Huntintfoll ltach , .. I._ ......... , Santa Ana l l ZS lritlol of M..Mlor FClldalnY~. 16141,.......tMagfr f ~ Westminster W11hi•a1w .t ~ Wnt • Huntincitoll ltac ti~C-. r . I· i CHARCOAL STARTER ' • ..... ~It ID flllll· OflllO l\llAM ll ik•lto' ""' .. "'"" l11twtT"'"1 J ' YUIAN FIEUE 11110 COFFEE IL. Huntinat0n leach . ZI Ill lidN of A-1 • 11 ••w, •ace ,,10: prG mu Wo ~ at al 1ple ' opop \pie, \ten' ·s IPE Thi ~Hw the ,co, .me! 'Aw '.Col ran •vie the s . .. mil ·we1 ty' Ser thi! I . syr . .. of sai. act res i de1 ble 'lop poi poc he\ , der F. goa . the Ion ,'QUE , rulo I ing sis I A ans 'W01 pro Whl ' .. , jus' pro ; if\\ E • pe< 1 wa: i me I 1 I mo me I DO I ~ t I I l pie Va SUI spi wh wii mt pa1 chi (bl po1 ve1 an dis mE brc bn I ucl to1 lfl anger: GnaWing Pr.oblem Grows ~HbyLAURIEXAllPER -... De .. ,,. ....... lt'a about time peoplit realize ••we are an endangerecl •pecles-.' • ~ 1ccordln& to Jean Armstrong, re- igional director for the weet coast proeram ot CROP, the Com· munity Hunger Appeal of Church 1 World Service. World Food Conference ,atatistiCs showed 400 milHon ~ ·pie are starving. Since lhe world .population is now fourbllllon peo-' ',_pie, "we are talltlng about one-· •tenlhofthe human race.'' ~ She was · the first or several speakers durine }{unger ... · "Th.ere'a Hope, A Worlcf'and Local ~Hunger Conference sponsored by 'the Interfaith Coalition, Orange :county Community Develop· !mentCouncil, Inc. and the Public ~Awareness Center at Santa Ana College. Morning talks covered the range of the topic, the world •view, welfare, group action and the in4ividual shopper. Durtne afternoon workshops, partlelputs had the oPPGrtunity to learn about _food co-ops, hot lines, cupboardl and t·egislation aa well aa living for less, organir.· tng church~• to meet hunger needs, welfare right.I and pro- grams for senior citiiena. At the end, Mias Armstrong urced the $0. conferees, many of whom r e.presented church flroups, not to leave without mak· 1ng a commitment, to turn their interest into an on.going effort, ·· ~ause ''talking is not e_nough. '' -1\lthough--others suggested legislatioi:a they could support, projects they could work on and methods of communication, the conference primari ly em- phuized-tbat people in the world, country and county are hungry. Miss Armstrong, who had spent two years in South Vietnam and was In between yislts to re· fugees in Camp Pendleton, ad- mitted she had been givenaD "im; possible topic,'' A Hungry.World : The Local and lnler,national Challenge. Do. Programs ~Get ·Through? Some people refer to welfare as a "mess" but DonTaMey, ad· ministrative supervisor of the 1 west district office of the coun- ty 's Department of Social Services, has never thought of it this way. Rather, he considers it a , symptom. ' "Our society has created a lot of people who can't cut it," he said. "This (welfare) is still a re- action to something we are all responsible ror." He was asked to speak orl his department's role in the food pro· blem. In thinking through the · topic, he admitted, he got to the point where ''our role is helping poor people, which, in turn, is helping hungry people" and won- , dered about effectiveness. He said be thought maybe the in the county. ln March : he said, 16,000 ' families, from ~ t.O 55,000 people, in thr" County were participating in the program. These people, who must meet certain income requirements, pay about $800,000 for about $1 .9. million in stamps. "As far as I'm concerned,'' Tanney said, "this is an obvious benefit for low income people.'' He noted that store owners also benefit because stamps enable people to ·purchase more food products.frorn them. Some people using the stamps are receiving Aid to Families with Dependent Chi ldre n (AFDC), These people are de- fined as a worn an with an unborn child or a person with a child or children through the age of 21 and meeting certain income re· quirements . Jn the next 10 years, •he pre- dicted, there V'ill have to be some moral decisions •nd radical chan1e1 made In terms of systema of production, distrtbu· lion and con.sumption. Since 66 percent of th~ grain traded on the world market is North American. ·ahe noted, this country hat the same control over the world food supply as the Arab na·tions have over oil. Last year, the United Nations discu.sed. e1tablisbing a goal ol having 25 percent of-the world's· manufactured goods produced in developing nations. Dy tlie year 2000. Although there was general agreement on this goal, the Unit· ed States abstained. As a . result of the present system of production and dis- tribution, Miss Armstrong said, "Even as things stand still, the gap between the rich and the poor grows larger and larger and larger." . And the United States, six per- cent of the world's population, each year conaumes40 percent of the world's output, she said. "We are moving int.O an era or scarcity. "There are some who say 1,11e ure on a lifeboat . I lend to say we are one yacht and we don't even know it." People who follow "lileboat ethics" will ask how much longer Americans can afford lhe world, she said. They will say that this country bas been supporting other· countries since World War ~ II and question why they can't pull ·tbetnseJves up by their hoo1.straps. ' But, she said, two-thirds of the world is aware that six percent is eating 40 percent or what is pro· duced "and they are beginning to ask how much longer the world can afford America." Recalling: a government of- ficial lament that tax re bates would be going to the poor who will buy "soft goods," such as food, rather than the rich who will buy "hard goods," she said, ''Lifeboat ethics is saying lo us , 'Let them eat television sets'.'' She urged, ''Lift above all other priori ties the needs of peo· pie, not plastics .'' · Jf this materia l mentality doesn't change, sh~ predicted, in two, five, 10 years Americans will flick on their televi&ion sets "and watch in living color the de· alb by starvation of hundreds of thousands of peopll! in the world." "We've got so much wealth, · that our .sharing of it can tum this lopsided cr-at:y world upside down." One person asked what or- ganizations are good to donate to. Although several were &ug~ gested, Miss Armstrong said it's easy lo give the money but more difficult to cut down on con.sump- tion. · "We lend lo rriake it an 'us and they' dichotomy," she objected. "We have a vested interest in giving.more of it up because we aren't going to make it unless we all share." Another person asked what ean be done ''in our own backyards· bicause·, that's where it a ll starts." People can garden and cul out waste in their homes. churches, local institutions i:ind the com· munily, she said. They can influence public opi- nion. She suggested they work with the m edia. ··we've had a press black·out of world hunger because the media figures that's not news, nobody is interested." And, they could have rnock con- ferences and <teterminc alternatives. In the political realm, she said the people should urge their representatives lo increas e foreign food assistance, support for rarmers and support or the World Food Conference. In the community. she s aid, in· terested people can support nutrition ed ucation ·•so we stop getting ripped off." And, they can question what the schools are t eaching about global poverty <.1nd hunger. How much longer can the world afford America? Six percent of the population consuming 40 percent of the output? goal is to keep the rich rich and . the poor poor. But hewasn'tcom· fortable with that thought so he 'questioned who is making the ' rules and if they are reallyihelp- ' ing the people who need as· sistance. Admitting he didn't have the ' answers, he told the audience he The stale, whicb sets the stan- dards for the program, is sup- posed to· be one of the most._. liberU in the country, he .11:aid. Through it, a famJly of three can get $262 a month and a fa"mily of four could get $311 a month. Ano.ther Look at Helping • would outline the department's programs and let them decide what the goals are. \. "One thing to k·e·ep in mind, ·just as we have created these , programs, we can uncreate them · jf we become involved.'' Another form of aid is county general assistance which is sup- posed to provide for the cOunly's indigent persons. Through it, a single person can recelve a max- imum of SlSO a month and a cou- ple can get as much as $186 a month. · "I do not believe in helping people who have needs," !Jr. Timothy Sampson said. "1 do1"ot believe in services." But', he said, he ~lieves most people really are happy with the i way things are in"·the depart- l ment. r The food Stamp program is the But there are, he said, str- ingent property and income restrictions so a person whose on- ly income is $153 a · month in Social Security benefits would not fit into the program. But he quickly added he was not attacking his audience, who h~d come to learn how they might help others. Rather, his as- sault was aimed at the "basic methodology. of so-called helping people.'' most noted program his depart- ' ment offers. Tanney said there is 1 no doubt it does what it was de- ' signed to do, increase the J purchasin1 power of poor people "Despite all this good stuff (the three programs he outlined) there are people who fall in the cracks," Tanney admitted. A critical lest or a helping rela- tionship, he explained, is how it m3kes the helper feel better and gives the helper more power. "It's the helper who is defined as strong and the belpt?e ~, ho is defined as weak," he said ·:rt's not a relationship of quali y. It's not a relation:;hip of empower- ipg. '' l I BEA ANDERSON, Editor CAROL MOORE, Food Editor .......... ,,JM,11,1n1 ,, .. c1 ' "Bread without justice is terri- ble. It tastes lousy.'' Calling attention to the Chris- tian belief that it is better to give than receive, he said, "Although we talk a lot about the charity part of our' traditions, we don't talk e,nough about justice." Dr. Sampson, one of the foun- ders of the National Welfare Rights Organization and author o( "Welfare: A Handbook for I . I Mix, , Fry, Crunch ' Although pasta Is Italy's most famous sta· lh cup unained flour . "' pie, its produce is, by far, its greater glory. l 'h cups seaSQDed bread crumbs Various vegetables thrive in the rich soil and Peanut oil :---- sunny climate." Combine egg and milk in small bowl; mix Tomat,..,. (simmered with herbs and thoroughly. Toss vegetables in llour, dip in spices for ~11sta sauce), broccoli · (cooked in egg mi~ture, then roll in bread crumbs. Place white wtne. garlic and oil), fennel (dressed in single l ayer on..cookie sheet ; chill 30 with oil 'Bnd vinegar and served as a salad), minutes. mushrooms (grilled with oil, garlic and Fry vegetables, a single layer at a time, in par,;ley), artichokes (stuffed and bak~d), z~· deep hot (375 degrees F.) peanut oil until chini (braised in tomato sauce) and eggplant golden brown, 2--to 3 minutes, turning once. (breaded 811d fried) are among the most Drain on paper towe'Js . Keep hot until all are popular. 1 fried; serve im.mediately. _ Suggested here is Fritto Misto, an Italian , The following quantities of ea~h vegetable vegetable specialty which may be served as serves 6 as a main diib accompaniment or 12 an appetizer or accompaniment to the main as a hot appetizer. Aby combination may be dish. ''Fritto'' means fried and '4misto'' used for added variety. means miX'ed. ...4 cups caulinOwerets Any assortment of raw vegetables· may be · 3 large green peppers, sliced into l/•·inc)1 breaded and fried In deep hot oil untU golden · · bromi. _ c-l -_ 1 _ nngs -3-largc..onlons, sliced Into V.·inch tings P eanul oil. tne g lest bf he andseRarated lyunsaturated cooking oils, works ' best to • .1 :Ncchlni, sliced into I»· inch thick slices achieve the very high temperatures necessary l pound carrots, peeled and sliced into to preserve cri"spness and seal in nutrients. l/.t·inch thick sticks , : FRITl'O MISTO l eound fresh mushrooms, sliced \~-Inch J egg, slightly beaten thick ' ' · 3tablesp0llnsmilk I 1 'pound green ·beans, parboiled for S. Vegetables .'-'e bclv. minutes. · I • Friend a nd, Foe'' who now teaches at S'ait Francisco State .University, described himself as an outside agitator. "The aiilatot is that part of your washing m a.chine that gets your c lothes· clean." He ex- plained that 'he is .brought in when local organizations still have dirty laundry. Asked to speak on Food Pro- grams: Cutting the Red Tape, he said he would offer some better ways to help people than the usual means which Ke dislikes so much. "First, I think that the work has to be done by groups. One by one by one is aot going to do it. One by one by one divides peo- ple." The more affluent an area is, the more hidden the problems are, he said. If Orange County is reported as better off than other areas, he told the people to go out and verify it themselves. lf assistance programs were really designed to get to the peo- ple in need, he said~ there would be 300 rather than three welfare offices in the county. ·There wouid also be ~housands of leaflets in several languages and radiQand television ads. t . "You know we, can deliver assistance and when we don't de- liv~rit, you have to ask why." He said they should assume that wel(are in the county is not a mess. "It's simply serving a dif.: ferent function and interests than those we share here." Evil, Dr. Sampson said, is or- ganized by people acting in their own interests, "So when I say the welfare system is evil, it's no small plot." Rather, it's a way that some people will hurt and many will ptofil. "Many have to begin to un- derstand what it's about. It has to begin together.'' Tile second guide he offered the potential activists was, "Don'tdo it murky. Do it with accoun- tability." They should ask how many people they h ave talked to, how many are on welfare or getting food stamps as a result. The next important thing is getting information to the people because ''information is power. "More information and count. Count how ·many people now have information on food stamps. ''Link up with the other forces," he continued. Dr. Sampson said he was glad to see that churches and com- munity groups were represented at the conference but asked if the unions were there. "Why not? There are unions in Orange County and unions have contact with low income peo· pie?" Finally, he said, they need to demand from both the people they were h e lping and themselves something in return. ''What are they going to do to help me and mine change this society?" People will respond, he said, because '!something for nothing" is really an alien concept. ''When you do get something for nothing .youdon'llike it.'' And, he concluded, merely feeding the hungry people is roughly equivalent lo standing on the bank of a stream and pulling out the people Who. are drowning. Although this is obviously im· portant, he asked \\'hy no one was going upstream to see \\1ho was pushing the people into the stream . FRlTTO MISTO: lTALIAN V_EGETABLE ME:>LEY I • = • Q OAILYPI LOT Wednetd11, May21, 1975 TV Preview: Bigger T,han Breadb~x By BEA ANDERSON CM .. OllllW ...... .., To t he delicht or her audience' Arlene 1'"rancis previewed an up· cominc television special, a 90-mlnute r e trospective of What's My Line? It will be aired May 28 on the Wide World or Entertainment. Closing the Town Hall lecture series. 1ponsored by the As· s-istance League ol Laguna Beach, Miss Jo'rancis introduced the !Um CliPI saying, ··Because. ·or the show's popularity oVer 25 ye_.,_rs, we were able to get almost 4ny celebrity we wanted as a mystery guest." Then, on screen flashed an ar- ray of Illustrious celebrities who were either gi.Jest panelists or. mystery guests. In another segment, Miss Fra1:1ci1 asks Loo.ls Armstron« to sing "Hello Dolly'" which ho does, receives a resounding ap- plause rrom the 1V audience and from Town Hall guests. Another delightful clip is or a guest who sturnps Ute panel. Miss Francis is the last que1tloner; John Daly cadls time and In · troduces ''Kate, who designs breadboxes." When panelists' spouse1 were mystery guests, Miss Francis, in· the third round or question&, re· cqgn!J~i tte.r husband's voice and says, "there comes a time when a man talks too much.•• However, she was not suc- c:ess(ul in a later show when her Son appears in the sam e role. or her only son, she said, "After he was born, I always relt I could never do as well again. FUN, BUT SAD ''Whenever w~ knew or thought we knew, we disqualified oursel ve11 .'' ~tiss Francis began her film career in Hollywood durina a summer vacation. She was cast In ''Murders In the Rue Morgue" but when her father saw the moY· ie Posters with her picture on them he called her back to New York. lie didn't approve or h is dauahter wi>rklng in movies or theater. HQwever. he sanctioned radio, so She wotked there., S®n..ahe.. was w0rk!ng at Ule . Mercury -1'healaL-'kilh__Martln. Gabel. They were married 2t years ago last saturday. ~ TRADEMARK . The diamond. heart, which bas become Miss Francis ' trademark, was her first an· niversary present. "I have never taken itoff." I all the good luck I've had In my Ille." · Durln& the celebrity (uncheon, ahe was aaked,.'''Wbat really hap- pened to Dorothy Kil1allen!" DISCOUNTS RUMORS 114191 t"ralltla aald ahe doesn't believe the rurpors lllat "she'd been doqe in ... ahe was the last tointervi!W (Jack) Ruby." ' She hod been ill ·1or •bout a year, Miss ioTan~la said ... Nol ill where it was notice•ble, but ill l ike nearlna:-a-nervous breakdown. She took Iota of pills and she would have• re w drinks. ··we-all know the)' don't"mix. 1'Shediedlnbersleep.'' , ln di1cus1h'1 her retllm to the stage, she said, "I was in 'Don1t ' Call Back' ... and they didn't." It was a s m ash in Cape Cod, but opened and closed the aame night in New York. ' Arlene Francis, a panellst of What's My Line? since .1950, closed the Town Hall lecture series In Laguna Beach. Some received special com- ments from lhe speaker. such as "JohhhY Carson ... as a boy, Merv Grtfrln ... Dick Cavett., .as a boy." CELEBlllTIES APPLAUDED At the conclusion of the pre- view, Miss Francis said, "It's lun · and yet s ad in a way to watch these reruns. So many have passed' away.'' She said there had been times when the chain needed repairs so sh~ appeared on What's My Li n e? without it . ''T fl e s witchboard would l ight up. Callers wanted to' know if we y.•ere havin g problems or were divorced. She said stte 'Spoke out agalnat · critics, even though she sot a faiily gdod review. CRITIC'S POWER this kind ol power. Others, she believes, do not have much in· Ouence. two , in London, $20, she said, Miss Francis believes that in New Xork if a critic pans a play and it folds that it not only dis- couraaes actors a nd actresses who are working in it, it also dis· courageS other performers, in· vestors, playwrights and pro· t.lucers. When pictures of the late Seo. In England, she soid , theater is surviving. People go a.nd don't pay a ttentiOn to reviews. Evere tt Dirksen we1·e s hown, the theater audienC'c responded with applause, and then cheered when former Gov. Ronald Reagan signed in. She said many people believe tltat panelis ts either have had some idea or clue about guests, as they we re identified so fa st. "Thi s was never so. "S.ince the n 1 have been afraid to btJ wi\t\O\lt it. It's brought me Miss Francis cl11ims that if Clive Barnes, theater critic ror the New York Times gives a fair- ly good review the play will stay ope n, but if he gives a medium one. "It can't make il." She credits only one critic with Another difference, she said , h1 the price of an evening out, in- cluding dinner and a play. In New York it cools about $50-75 for. ''Thererore, lhcalerdies.'' Weddings~· and Engagements To avoid di sappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have thttir weddina: stories with black and wh\le glossy photographs to the Daily Pi ot People Depurtn1ertl one "·eek before the \\'edding. Pi<'lU res reC'ei\'cd after that lime will not be used. For engagement announcem~nt s it is iQlper11ti\'e th at the stor}', a lso accom· po ni ed by a black and "'hite glos:sy pie· lure. be submitted six weeks or more before the "'edding date; other,~dse it will not be published. · To he lp fill requirements on b-lth wed· ding and e ng&gement stories. form.; ar e avail able in all Daily Pilot offices. Fur- ther questions "'ill be ans\\'ered by People Department st a ff members at 642·4321 . Virgo to Focus On Collections THURSDAY, MAY 22 BySYDNEYOMARR ARIES (M.a rch 21-April 19): Mate, partner acts in eccentric m anner. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Work, service and health dominate. GEMINI (~I Hy 21 -June 20): You have chance now, due lo delay, to refine techniques. CANCER (June 21 ·July 22 ): Business mat· ters dominate. LEO (July 23·Aug . ~):Neighbors, relatives may appear unreliable. ' VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sept. ~2): Mone y, possessions, hobbies that involve coll ecting - these are reatured. l.IBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Element of timing is on yo ur side. SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21 ): Social activity may be more than it uppears on surface. SA.Gl'l"rARIUS <Nov . 22·Dec. 21): Your likes, dislikes undergo sudden transformation. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): One "in charge" loosens purse strings. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18 ): Communica· lions crystallize. PISCES (f'eb. 19-r-.larch 20 ): Hidden mat· ters, assumptions , innuendoes are hi ghlighted. If today iii your birthday you were on your own early, had actual or J)diychological separa- tion from one or both of your parents. You will _ light your way out of emotional corner. ' Installations Seminars Slated COUNCILOFEXCEP· TIONAL CHIWREN: A one-day semina r on Ca l ifor ni a Special Education Credential In· for m ation will be sponsored by the Orange County Chapter, CECat8 a .m . Wednesday,May28, in Currie Intermediate School, Tus.tin. Keynoter will be Eli Obradovich, State Department Licensing and Credentials. Doidge, T~rrence Ben· nitl, Robert Cimini, William GrandoUo and Jerrold Cole. . PEN WOMEN : Ardythe Hitc hcoc k , writer. lecturer and teacher will speak on Slanting for the Coit· fession Market when she addresses the Orange County Branch, National League of American Pen Women. Other el ect~ ofricers include Abraham Orut· man, Claire nubin, Sol Snitz, Louis Sabatasky, Gertrude Klopper, Gertrude Kutner, Ruth Mitni c k and J erom e Kutner. PRO -LIFE POLITICAL ACTION C OMMITTEE : Th e Orange County group is under the leadership of Mrs. Dorothy ft1. Engebretson. Image D .. immed TE EN CHALLENGE WOMEN : A Fa mily Forum is planned from 7:30·10 p.m . Thursday and Friday, May 29·30, and from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, May 31, in the First Presbyterian Church, Orange. Cost is $16 for couples; $10, singles. The meeting will begin at 8 p.m . Thursday, May 29, in the Fountain Valley Civic Center. NEWPORT BEACH A SS ISTANCE LEAGUE: Mrs. Robert Lucas wiJI lead the group for tt\e cottlirtgyear. Assisting on the board are Gary Bouse, Mrs. Brigid Lucia , Mrs . Martha Bous e and Lester Engebretson. 8Y TOM DIEMER •• _ .. ..., ~, ... Wr,...,. SANDUSKY, Ohio (AP) -It's just a little r ed paper flower to you. Smiling women hold it aloft on street corners each year, as they will Friday. It's Poppy Day one~ more. "Buy a poppy, sir?" they ask. "Bu y a poppy, miss?" . To you, perhaps, just another annoyance on the way to lunch or to s hop. But, to a few hundred veterans •round the country who make those flowers, they mean beer money, escape from dread· ful boredom, exercise fo r crip. pied and arthritic hands. Those hands made 900,000 Of the red paper poppies this year at the old. stone Ohio Soldiers and Sailors Home in this city along Lake Erie. Tha.t 's a healthy percentage of the 14.5,milllon the American Legion Auxiliary hopes to sell Friday and Satur· day, in advance of Memclrial Day. !'ttost of the veter ans who make the poppies are disabled or elder· ly" Some were wounded in Viet- n am. They get $17 for every 1,000 GRAND OPENING Specials MAY 22·23·24 RINESHMl!HTS MAY 24111 20% OFF ·01:" ALL STOCK 50% OFF ON SILIC'rlD STOCK poppies a·ssembled. Some C'an produce ry1ore lha Q 3,000 a week. Across the nation, in 35 states, the poppy-m aking goes on at 115 Vete r a n s Admi ni s tration Hospitals a nd al two veterans' homes -the one here and one in Indiana. Ohio is the fifth largest producer. Wisconsin leads with 1.5 million paper poppies this year. New York produces 1.39 million, California 1.07 million, Michigan 1.02 million. 'J'he American Legion Aux- iliary. which runs the poppy sale and pays ttie workers, tiopes to· gross $1 .8 million next weekend, an average of 8 cents a poppy. For 54 years the little red PoP· TORANA ART LEAGUE: Annual meet- ing has been changed to 7:30 p.m . Thursday, May 29, in Bowe r s Museum. A slide lecture o n Velazquez: Evolution or Vision will be presented by Don La1erberg, as· sociate professor of art at California Stat e University at F\J.tlerton . JUNIOR E8ELL CLUB OF NEWPORT BEACH: Officers will be Named to her board are the Mmes. Joseph Metcalf, Wynnett Bedall Jr., J oseph Clarkson, Richard Ferda, Ri chard S todd a rd , Robert Basmajian, Henry Jones, Freeman Fisher and Wilbur Chapman. STANLEY MITNICK CHAPTER: The City or Hol;le s upport g roup begins its fourth year of service under the pre· sidency or Stanl ey Fasack. ~IEDELLAS: Mrs . Sam Kawanaml wi ll serve as president ol this philan~hropic and social organization ft>r the com· ing year. She will be assisted by l\.1rs . Richard Imaeawa, Mrs. Kenro Nis himine, Mrs. Wilfred Man, Mrs. Willard Wing , Mrs . Robert Osato and Mrs. Noritaka Kitaji111a. ORANGE COUNTY DENTAL HYGIENISTS' SOCIETY: Hanna.h Aaron , a Foufttaiin Valley resident, was in· stalled as president re- cently . • py that spread wild across the fields of Flanders in World War I has been the symbol of a nation remembering the soldiers who foughls its wars. The image has dimmed with the years. installed Thursday, May Ir-----~-------------, 29, during •a luncheon m eeting in Bahia Corin· thian Yacht Club. · "The interest has just dropped off '' said Opal Poling, who directs th e progr a'm for the Am erican Legion auxiliary in Ohio. She has trouble rinding smiling women to sell the pop· pies. Mrs. Robert River is president. Serving with he r a re the Mmes. Boyd Peters, Arthur Yeary, Tom Rae Gold, John MEMORIAL DAY SPECIALS BEEF STICK 20:. Dl5COUMT .,.,a....t wWelfltk SMOKIY•AR .... "-fi~ 2,.512' \ OFIASHION PASHIOM ISU.MD -AMA.HEIM PLAZA ... ... ........ '44-0011 ........ SUMMER EVENING SHOE by 2990 ANTON Gotd or Sliver Use Your BankAmericard -M1sltr Charge , . I , ' ·~ ... ,ti.' •. J ~ , •. • f ............ ,,. ,,r--....................... "'' ... . I I I I Class. tour .Educatio·n·al Mar High School, which By'JOOLSON OfiltOtJlf~llet ,._.. lf yo u're un sure or will lay the groundwork your vocitlon plans for for the places to be via· t he summer think about ited. this packagti'· Tfte bicentennial trip is You fl y lo Boston being scheduled this' spend several days ther~ s.ummer rathe r than for tours of the city and next so the expected s.urroundlng area, eat crowds. in the actual .dln.ne.r in th e Union cele~rJ,t1op year will be Oyster House and the avoided.. . Durgin Park fttark et T~e ~our is the 'Dining Ro om, then culm1nat1~n or a drea~·,. f°" trav~I to West Point for 8 fo~ Phylh~ McKo~n, a 1 .~ F specially guided tour. te_~cher at T~W1nkl e ""\, Then you soak up some Middle Sc h~I 10 Costa · '° m 0 r e h i s l 0 r y i 0 A1 esa, who will be one of t . ~: Philadelphia and visil thethreechaperones. 7 Valley Forge, Gel-"For seven years I've ~, .~, ~ l y s b u r g a n d wanted to arrange a trip William sburg. Toss in to the East Coast," she ·" thrl1e or four days in said. "I feel travel is the Washington, D. C., then best teaching th.at can be fly home to Los Angeles. done." Thlstrip,t1,1,·oweeksin Mi ss McKown , a length, actually 1,1,·ill take graduate of UC I who place beginning July 28, specializes in American under sponsorship of the hi story, particula.rly the 'Newport-Mesa Unified Colonial period, wrote a School District. special program last It is pri marily for slu· Summer designed to br· dents, since 10 units of ing Colonial America lo high school credit can be her students. earned, but it is open to During the c lass they families and adults a~ cooked early American well. food (such as pea'nut Preceding th e trip will soup, corn fritters and be a five-week classroom hot apple cider), quilted, program at Corona del embroidered, made Sue E llas, Christa Vausbinder, Adrienne- Hall check map of East Coast in bicentennial trip Newport-Mesa district offers this summer. . candl es, se w ed cos· tu'mes, built a model of Plymouth village a nd capped the whole thing with a Co lonial fair. Some or the same stu- dents from that class will be going on the summer tour, including Adrienne I-lull. Sue E li as. Lori Mowery and C hrist a Vausbinder. These girls all happen to be neighbors o n Kinglet Court in Costa ftlesa, and a ll are very excited about going. All are ear-ning part of the $722 fee by baby-sitting and washing cars. Miss McK own will be accomoanied by Ji1n Tomlin, a Corona del f\1ar High School history teacher, and his ''"ife, as chaperones. This E:1s t Coas t trip is the sixth tour orrered by the school district. 0th· ers have been to Russia, Central America. Germany, Japan :.ind Spiral Slired Wfaolr or Half Wednetday, May 21 , 1975 DAILY PILOT Cl TeWinkle Middle School teacher Phyllis McKown shows student Lori Mowery how gravestone rubbings are made for study. SEWING COURSES for young people ages10-19 ~ake'yourthing' ONLY prizesorawardsl 1n class as you Saturday classes, learn to o;ew, ga· and weekdays or sew better. '+" during vacation Eight 2Y. hr. periods. Enroll lessons,$17.50. PER HR ear ly! Group And you can win · rates available. SINGER Sewing Centers "So Good .•. It Will 'flaunt' You 'til ll'.S Gone" A HOt*YIAKED HAM FOKMIMOllAL DAY A tasty Honey Baked Ham will be .i tasty treat for your Memorial Day dinner and snacking, too. PHOHE YOUR OllDH TODAY! • ...., t. Srfe witti HOMY '• Sftk! G-. • 5p1n1 Slk"1 m. r., to lotto. . We,.. ... _, SW, tr-.Cont .. c .... • ~ 5..-rica Delk ....... ·~0..W.IMdW-... 3700 E. Coast ~y, Corona dei Mar -673-9000 ·--.. ·~-121ZS ..... ._..,lfWI&.; ......... 635-1461 DELANEY BROS. SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAY SPECIAL! 10% OFF ALL FRESH FISH Fact Stran,ger Than Fiction This Ad Must Accompany Purchas~ Delmiey Bros. Seafood• 2800 Lafayette• Newport Buch, 673·345 DEAR ANN LANDERS: If so· meone wrote and asked what you thought about a judge who sen· tenced a 23 -year-old woman con· victed or killing her husband by slashing his throat with a carving knife to teach Sunday School for five years -what would you say? · Ann Landers I'll bet you'd assume the letter was written by a Yale student ·and throw it in the wastebasket. Well, here's· the clipping. You can see that this sentence was ac· tually pronounced by a Dade County, Fla., circuit judge. The Wom an had previously been arrested for prostitution a nd the possession of marijuana. fhe judge said, ''.It's 'a difficult task to get people to teach Sun· d ay scho ol. It's som ethin g Worthwhile in my book .'' Will you comment, please? I am - TONGUE TIED Ai'JD O!fT· RAGED IN MIAMI DEAR T.T. AND .O.': So om I. If I had not seen the newapeper clippin g, I would"-.'t ltav ~· believed It. ftaaka for prevtac again th't truth Is l&ruger tlaaa · fiction. DEAR ANN LANDJ;:RS : Maybe you've given Ule ..answer to my question dozens of times, and I never paid any attention to GU.SS HOllYIST ... -..- it because ·1 thought it could never affect me. But now I'm having sleepless nights and J need to know something. When a mother suspects her son is "on something," how can she tell £or sure if her hunch is right? If it is right, how can she help him ? Jn this case, the son is not a minor, he doesn't live at home, and he avoids his father and me as much as possible. I've trjed to talk to him to learn What's bothering him but,be is very un· communicative. *· I might be mistaken, Ann, but be has under~~ such a com· plete personality 'change -he isn't the same kid we once knew. Help us, please. -C.M. DEAR C.M.: Personal(ty changes can be caused by sometblng otber &ball drags -an organic problem, for es.ample. Tbere'a no way aa obeer~ll!!r can tell for au.re wt.etller IOlll~ ~ 1· "oa 10metlla£'' ,, Introducing RUSS THOMPSON ....... _ .......... .............. ~ .............. "-' .. Formerly of'E.astbluff Coiffures • ~......._ ........ ... .. ~ ..... ,,...... .._ ................ ... ...................... ........ A • emons SPORTSWEAR '>Msra1ff P\N.A -·-S4-4121 'BAl.80.llSl.AI() 716Mcltint.l .... 67.S.1~ For Appointment Call 640-6023 ' DESIGJI PlAlA • fA.11\IOH ISWtD I I Your son sbould see a doctor at once for a complete physical checkup, and this is wbat you ought Lo aug:gest. If be tunes you out. you do nothing but let him knew you're tbere if be needs you. Good luck, dear. CONFIDENTIAL TO BAT· TING ONE THOUSAND I N BOSTON : I hope you will take a few m inutes out of your sex lire to read this. The fact that you are such a howling success as an al-' ley cat does nothing to elevate you in the eyes of a nyone worth impressing. How muC"b do you know aboUt pol, l.SD •. cocaine. speed, meth, uppers and downers, gl ue and herolll? Are all these drugs dlln1erou11'? Get Ann .Lander's new booklet, ''Straight Dope on Drugs.•• For e~ch booklet or- dered, send a dollar bill plus a tons, self-addressed envelope (20 cenh postage) to Ann Landen, P.Ol Box HIO, Elgin, Ul.60120. . I NOW AVAILABLE DOI TRAINING ' IN YOUR HOME 11Where The · Problems Are11 PROBLEM SOLVING To include: House breaking Digging Jumping Bartling Biting Running .Away Taking Food Chewing and more PROTECTION STEVEN D. COii ... ....... fonMDtt Dog TraiHr OBEDIENCE To Include: Heel Sit Stay Down . Come .Mr. Cobb features an "In-Home Training concept by which the ·owner can learn the cri of proper ciog tralnin9 in the convenience of their own home. This instruction wiH in no way Inhibit the playfuMess of your pet • CALL NOW FOR FREE EVALUATION IN YODR HOME ' . 494-1222 . I ~ .... --. .... OAll.VPILOT Weclnnda , Ma 21, im 1nvitation 1 -Appealing I , • . -· Ir dinner parties are too milch for your budget, "dessert your friends" insl.ead ot deserting them. . Dessert parties mean tha.t you can affor~ to see your friends more often. And when 1l comes lo lower-cost treats to make at home, bananas are the answer. Banana Blitz Torte is a sumptuous show_piece. It's a homem,ade...banana.c.ake with lemon banana filling-all sandwiched between two meringues sprinkled with sliced almonds. Another fine piece ot entertainment is · Chocol ate Banana Cream Puffs -very restive and fancy but within reach as to cost. You needn't alw ays be so spectacular. Passing the fruit bowl crowned with bananas makes very attractive refresh- ments. You may want to accompany it with • crackers and cheese. BANANA llUTZ TORTE y, cup soft butter or margarine l ~cups sugar, divided 2 egg yolks 1 cup sifted cake nour ¥:teaspoon baking powder 14 teaspoon baking soda lf.t teaspoon salt Jf.i cup mashed ripe bananas (about 2 medium ) lf.t teaspoons vanilla 4 egg whites ~teaspoon cream ol tartar lf.t cup sliced almonds In small mixing bowl cream butter and 1h cup sugar until light and Ouffy. Beat in egg yolks. Sift together fl ou' baking powder, bak- ing soda and salt. Blend nour mixture into batter alternately with bananas and milk . Blend in vanilla . Turn into 2 greased 8-inch round layer cake pans . Bake in 350 degrees F . oven 10 minutes. While cake is baking, beat egg whites with cream of tartar in large mixing bowl uhtil soft peaks form ; gradually beat in r e- maining~ cup sugar -and continue beating until stiff peaks form. Genuy· spread mer- ingue over cake baller after it has baked for 10 minutes and sprinkle with almonds. Bake 20 minutes longer, until cake tester inserted in center comes out clean. Remove from oVen, cool 10 minutes. Gently turn out cake layers on plates. Invert onto racks and cool completely, right side up. To assemble torte, place one cake layer meringue side down on serving plat e. Spread with Banana Lemon Filling and top with remaining torte1a)'er; meringue side -up . Serves 12 . BANANA LEMON FILLING % cw.p s ugar 3 tablespoons cornstarch ~teaspoon sail · ~cup water 2 egg yolks (See BANANA, Page CS) Banana Blitz Torte will make your friends glad they came for dessert and coffee, the saving way to entertain. Now you can do a week's shopping without forgetting a single Twa -ytar supply (104 li•t•) furi,ishtd in COftftlitnt tt1r-off ,ad (or jut $1.25 ( ptsll(t ,...,. id ) Send in Coupon Today llnd Become A Super S~opper ··------fill i1 /i11..r;;.,cli~~ ...... si.11: • P'illt f)lllllfl•111,i 1f Lisi f'Mt dlficl .... 1518 c.tl....,Wf.9262' ---------------------· ----. • ., • item! Use pre-printed shopping lists prepared for you by • PILOT PRINTING. 140 separ.ite prinled items. plus odd itio .. 1 spKH you con fill io JOU11ttt. lust dleck 'em off· DAILY PILOT I , ~ ~IOE·MAY • IOES-25~ ·CAllALOPE JUCE GRUNGES MUSHRUMZ COUNTRY CLUB OR WILSON'S CERTIFIED 5 CANNED AM FIOZll SLICED BEEF LIVER m~59~ LB. CAN .. OSCH MAYO MDT 01 IHF W,ISTWOOD ICE CREAM --~89~ ·~ -TARllOY FRENCH FRIES ~ .-"' ', ~·39~ "':::.:..""-:··~ 1 ' • • fHDI ''A •••1e1r IASKlr '°"" JfOll HIA• YOU/ _ .... -···-••··'I. "'----·-- -----Cl-:•lo~ :=.t.:::.::: • ,.............. . ....... --m·,---5*:~-.... llP-" ill-.... .. .... ~·-· ................... ri:, .... _ .:1:1 •• --------· --I -· ' u -. --' -••'" ,.._ -..... ,. ..... ,-="' . .-...... , .. __ --! II!-' _.. ·-· It ,_.,. -lflO•-... • ,,.,,-,,. .. ,._ .. _,_,._ l---·..... ,._ -· . •H--,__ ... .. ::-.=:-..:.:.-.=.: .. == .. :::: ····-:·-· . . .-....IG. . ...... ----.. . --... ·--,...-... r.···-..... ---·-·-------·--F -· ·--, ---· ..... -·--· ··--------.. ·---I" .... ....._.. .... , .. ;~-I ---......... -... ---............ :.;,\:;;;"'-· --·-'"'·-·-·-.:i• ' .,., ----.. --· ... _, =::~:.:::.:.:.·:=::-.: Z-¥'-'-1!1!·--,__ ~· ··"--.. ,,.--.... -.. -... =-~b .. r.:...._. .. ,,.,,, __ ---·--~-. m:~ ··-· ·--. -· r.; ·=-=--llNfl II ..... , 1!°"'9*111 I ,-'j ·--NII·--· -ll0>~-1 IM •,M-••• lo. 1.r --, ... , ... __ r - -\" I• .. ,.. l I l f • ' t ! I I I I I • !· • ' • l ( . ' ? • 1 ' I r • Ruby A la Mode Nestle sweet and juicy strawberries in a buttery, golden crust-and top with vanilla ice crea m for any occasion that needs a piece de resistance. The filling is a crushed, sweetened concoction of some berries that are thickened, then layered in the pie shell with sliced berrie:L FRESH STRAWBERRY PIE A LAI MODE 1 cup all-purpose flour 1;, teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons butler 2 tablespoons lard · : 3 to 4 tablespoons cold milk 2 pints strawberries Spicy Salads Add Intrigue Salads in the Mexican mann.fl can add just the interest necessary to spark economy menus. - BASIC VEGETABLE SALAD DRESSING To l/2 cup each salad oil and vinegar, add 2 teaspooris sugar_, 1 teaspoon each of chili powder anct ~alt, and lfi teaspoon garlic powder. Serve over lctiuce, cabbage or mixed vegetables. MEXICAN SUNSET EGG SALAD 1 'h cups water % cup sugar 11.i cup cornstarch 5 drops red food color Vanilla ice cream Combine flour and salt; cut in ·butter and lard until mixture re- sembles small peas. Sprinkle milk, I tablespoon at a time, over flour mixture, mixing lightly with fork until moistened. Shape into a ball. .. Roll out dough on lightly noured surface to a circle 1 to 2 inches larger th8n an inverted 9-inch pie plate. Fit pastry into pie plate ; trim to ~ to 1 inch beyond edge. Fold dough under; Out~ edge. . · The trick to stravy berry pie is the ' glazing technique. Ice cream ·top s the sp ectacular. Prick bottom and sides of crust with fork . Bake at 450 degrees, 10 to 12 ininutes or until lightly brown. Cool. . Crush 1 cup berries. Simmer with water 2 minutes ; sieve. Slice remaining berries. Combine sugar and cornstarch in saucepan. Gradually stir in sieved strawberry mixture, mix- ing until blended. Bring to a boil ; cook u ntil thickened, stirring constMtly. Stir in food color. Cool. Spoon half the Strawberries in- to pie shell ; pour lfi the sauce over berries. R_epeat layers. Chill --several hours. Serve with ice cream . • . ' Wednesd1y. M1y 21 , 1975 OAILVPILOT LET a.IONREFRESH~WEEKEND AND SAVElOU ~.100. Enjoy th. bti1k. refrM- ing llovot of l 191~ . Instant Teo.11 mokH per• ftct iced 1eo instontly, by tM pitcher ot by the glo"ful. 100~ ot lemon Flo'lored, you'll bl' pet· ting the bfisk, btl'k floYOr ond refreshment that i only comfffromreoll90, ' real Lipton. GOOD ON ANY Sin JAR Of LIPTON' 100')'. 15~ OR LEMON FLAVORfD INSTANI' TEA. !hlillilll• ... -·~ STORE COUPON IT-27 BAKED BEAN J.OVERS sloe To 8 hard boiled eggs and 1.4 cup of celery which have been diced~ add 2 teaspoons each chili powder and lemon ju.ice along with 1/"' cup mayonnaise and salt and fresh ground pepper to taste. ChiJI in mold, serve over lettuce leaves and garnish with stuffed olives (4 servings). From Page C-4 to prove to yourseU tbatnewVan Brown S ar Beans • • • Banana 1 te"aspoon grated lemon rind 3 tablespoons lemon ju.ice 1 cup diced bananas (about 2 medium) In medium saucepan mix sugar , cor- nstarch and salt. Stir in water. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly,· until mixture comes to a boil and thickens. Remove from beat and stir a little hot mixture into egg yolks. Stir warmed egg yolks into cornstarch mixture in saucepan; stir in lemon rind and juice. Return to heat and cook 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat and cool completely. Wh en ready to assemble torte, peel bananas, dice and add to filling. CHOCOLATE; BANANA CREAM PUFFS Crejlm Purrs: 1h cup butter or margarine 1 cup wa ler 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour 1h teaspoon salt 4 eggs In medium saucepan heal butter and water to a boil. Add flour and salt all al on- ce and cook, beating constantly, for 3 to 5 minutes or until mixture comes away Crom the side or the pan an6 forms a ball. Remcive from heal and beat in eggs qge at a time, beating well after each addition. Spoon batter into 8 mounds on greased bak~ ing sheet. Bake in 375 degr ee F . oven 40 minutes or until golden brown. "Prick tops with fork, tum off oven, and leave puffs in oven fOr 15 minutes· to dry. Remove and cool. :;-Filling: 2 tables poohs flour 2 lablespoons cornstarch 1.{r. teaspoon salt IAt cup sugar, divided 112 cup sEimi -sWeet chocolate pieces, or 3 squares semi-s weet chocolate (3 ounces ) 2 cups milk 2 eggs, separ ated 1 tablespa·on brandy or 1· teas poon vanilla l ~ tups diced bananas (about 3 medi~m ) In medium Saucepan mix Oour. cor· nstarch, sail, a nd 6 tablespoons sugar. Gradually stir in milk. Add semi-sweet chocolate. Cook over medium heat, stirring · constantly, until mixture thickens and com· es to a boil. Remove from heat and beat "in egg yolks, one at a time. Return to heal and cook t minute, stirring constanUy. Remove Crom heat, add brandy and cool completely. Beat egg whites until soft peaks form, iradually beat in remaining 2 tablespoons augar and beat until stiff peaks form. Fold eeg whites into cool chocolate mixture, Cold in diced bananas. · When readf to serve, cut tops off cream puf(s, spoon in fil~ing and replace tops. Sprinkle with confectioners' sugar. Serves ~ ) " te rt ba d ·· s. Van Camp's is allowing you 10¢ off the purchase of a 15Y2 oz. can of iheir new -..., Brown Sugar Beans to prove a point. If "'Save 10¢ on a can of new ~ Van Camp's Brown Sugar Beans. . Prove to yourself they taste better than baked ·beans. MA, OE ALER. You 1118 11u1hori1et;1 i1 an agent ol Stoi\ely·Van Camp, Inc . lo Olll)lofll IOf' 1owi"d ll'le pul"Ch.llse or a 15\IJ oi can ot Van Camp's B•<>Wti Sugar Beans MA.If.. COUPON TQ StOllely·llan Ca111p 11\C P 0 Box 163. Cl•nl<l'f!, Iowa $2732 1 We w1H pay you !he v~lue ol 1h11 tOtJpon pltJS 5c•tiandhng lor each cbupon p1ov1d1ng you have tomphed w•!h lerms ol 1h1S o!ler lnvo1e•1 proving pu1Chi1M! ot su!1>e1en1 !.IOC~s or 01.11 brands 10 cover coupens 11ubm1lted mu1t bl! 5h0wn upon reouest F11il1.1re 10 dO M> a1 0ur ophon may void •II coupon• subm•lt•d CooPons good only on bf and spet.•l•ed aTid 1111 non•lf•nsl111bl1. Coniwme• must pay any 'ales IB• involved lh•S o!le1 vO•d wlle•e ta~ed. 1eslflCled. o• license requued Cash redemption yatue lf20 ot If Oller t1tP!111 Augu1131, 1975. • cco.10'"' I __ .... --· -·-· ' you like the taste of baked beans, we th ink you·regoing to like Van Camp's Brown Sugar Beans even better! Van Camp's started with small, specially selected beans. Carefully prepared them in a savory brown sugar sauce with special natural flavors. Then ins1ead of baking, Van Camp's . used its own pe netration method of cooking designed to bring out a taste better than baked beans in every can of Brown Sugar Beans. I Baked bean lovers, give your taste .a new treat New Van Camp·s Brown Sugar Beans! ·' ' I I ...... , .. ~ ·~·.·.•.•:;, ... ... ' DAILY PILOT Good Idea: Gumbo ' . w~nesd• . Ma 21 . 1975 ICE CREAM ' SNOW STAR IWIW.. c . . -.. ' I Creole cooks go in heavily for cayenne, Margarine Potato Chips Coldb•ook 3 9 Pa•ty Pride 7 9 bcellent ( Ideal Fo; ~ SA LAD OIL ~~~~~c:,, ~:~~~~~er;~!~e~ pepper and a dazzling '' riety or spices, s uch as 'file,'' made from· t!J{dered sassarras- 'Ves. One of th e mos t pula r ingredients is ra, which is translated. i Congolese and com· eiw;>ul Gumbo. Value p· · A d 9 ,. 1 ·lb c ICnlCl n ·Ol. · tn . Barbecuel Pkg . BEER Nu -Made LUCKY l.!GER I =.--•• $ 99, ~:: large Egg-s 1 ~~:~~~'.i· 5 4c Motl? l ·Do1 . ·I I-oz, . .__..J lucune, G•ode AA Qual ity ........... .,.. ...... : ...... Ctn. Ills. (;umbo can be made from a wide variety of meats. and shellfis h, such ~;::::::::::: a!j. _ch1cken , ham, veal ritibit, s quirrel, wild duck, crab, oysters and ~:: Pr.ese rves lb . · c . ·shrimp. I-l a ir· soup and half s"'w. gumbo is famous afi through the ~eep South, but it has reached the highest level of pJl!rfection in New Oflcans. CHICKEN AND OKRA £ GUMBOWITH-. ·OYSTERS 1 three-pound frying chicke n r 2 lablespoons butter 1 pound di ced SfTlok ed ham l · 1 medium onion , 911opped . 4 6 large tom a toes Jteeled and chopped ·e ~ 2 pints okra, sliced ad one half-inch thick Salt to taste 1.2 t easpoon tabasco 1.2 t e a s poon I: . ~ . """"" llO~Y ""°'"°""'c • • • !'.~!!!,~,~~~ '~;," 3 7 ( ~71-· @. 4 . ~w~ lag Jifi1 ~n!u~~e.~tv,.~~~~3g~·:3 9( · 29 . 01 • Quart Iott le c .. _....~. i SHAMPOO ~~·" . ...... Worcesters hire sauce Juice of half a lemon Fe°"' sprigs parsley chopped 1 ...... (Diel (r9ff1tHI Ot1art ... l7') APPLE JUICE HOT DOG BUNS @ ::~• G~;,~, 8 9 c ::~~:::.::d ~~. 3 9 c Pri<tl lffedi•e Moy 22·24, 1!75 In Ltl Anttlei, ~rtftft ' Ytnl~rD (tt1nlle1 (l1c1pl (1tlfl•). w.1 1n 1111111 o ... uiei o•,. j · 1 bay leaf I 6cupswater 12 shelled oysters !Cut chicken into 12 eces. Heat butter in llle and add chicken _,___ d ham. Cover and sim- m er 10 minutes. Add oOion, tom a toes and okra. Cook over high heat. stirring for five minutes. S~a so n with salt t;lbasco, Worcestershir~ .and lemon. Add parsley, bay leaf and water. Br· j~ lo boil, cover and st;rnmer two hours. @LEMONADE . ' '. ·-Corn or Peas )~ ~ ~l ~ ~~"' 15c \r~j sl,~~: 2 Si I. C 1 . Co°'""'"d 10 .. 1. -IO fl ~ : Can ... -ounce • ~ .. ~ -· Pock age @Shoestring Potatoes~;;:~1~.49• -=,c;;_E ;;;;....._. @Welch's Grape Juice .. 'i;:· 59' MILK '"""' asc Ice Cream Sandwiches 1;,:~ ;•:, s 1 n ~:::,. __.. _ __;:_ Add oysters and':(ook a few 'tninutes IOnger. Add additional salt if desired. ~~ves s ix. Good with a cfilllcd rose wine. · i Sara lee Cakes Space Food Bel-air Cream Pies "'' 99 ~PIE CRUST •SHELLS ''"''' · 4 9< 11·01. Pkg. ...... 251 "• IC It Corn or Peas 1;.~:; u ures """" !Crossed ' ·WASHINGTON CUP!) -Three orbiti n·g Americans might order Ukrainian borscht or Russian green soup when they visit a Soviet spacecraft in July. CANTALOUPES The next course may be spiced veal, chicken, pate. ham or sausage followed with a dessert of prunes with nuts, fruit cake and juices. low Calorie An Ideal Desse rt lb. The space agency said these items are ·on the .menu of the Russian Soyuz Cosmonauts who plan to share meals with three U .S . Apollo crewmen when the two ships meet 140 miles above earth in the first international space mis· INEAPPLES sion. Since all three Astronauts will not visit the Soyui at the same time, one might be in the Soviet ship for breakfast of Russian a~uaages, bacon, Borodinskiy special blflt:k bre•d, cof. ree , sweetll, 1pon1e cake and biscuita. ' en the two Russians t Apollo, they will be ed beef steak, rr• ad, cheese spreaCI. ooda, strawberries tea. Other Apollo . f ;aturea include tcr•mbled eggs for bre•kfa1t , chicken Hiid, allrtmp eoc!MIJ, dUcken a Ja Jda1, m .. t- balla: in hrbecue ••uce and tuna 1aJ1~. • '~:~~~!akfaat I ~•nJ4i (fhllled ptaeap"'tf chunks . .,.:~:~~.~~ #''lltfl• ''"'P frum , ,.._...,..and 11mllb Strawberries htl, Ii,.. S•"' ..... . Lett11ee .... "."'""' ···-· . lrtcceD From Hawai i , Serve Crushed , - or Cubed Each ,, ......... ,29' ~..,. ,_ ,_. '"''. . ... .... 191' .29 1 .101 ....... 29 1 GntaC••••• ""'Witt> c....w a.ff ... .. Artkllelc11 c .' S."'"9 Sv911••ll•n MIDGET BEEF s ....... , s~'''"''" TURKEYS FRANK S s ....... , Su19•01••" GROUND BEEF Grade 'A' Manor Hou$C Fro1en CSolewoy Skinless Flovorfu! And Juicy C f,.,h, Regular, Any Si1e Small Siitl 5.9.lb• .. lb. CANNED . HAMS - Soltwo1 $ ar Dubt1qu• funy Cooktd ·4-1b. Can 69 BAKERY BUYS! 12-01. Pkg. Beef Round Steak USDA Choice, Full Cut, Bone·ln . Top Round Steak .~:~"';:., s119 USDA Choice Bonelt'l Beef . . lb Package ~!~~!~~!~~~,~~ ............ ~i: 8 9 ( ~~~~~~,!,.Style Ribs .... lb. $119 ~~~!.~.'.~~~~!.1':;". 1b. $1°9 ~~~.~!::~~!~,?i~.~1s ..... 1b. 55c ~~~~1e0~0~~,~s .. S c~; $6 98 ~~~.~,'s~~dperoni ~~ 65( ~~~~~!.~~:1~ ~s!1 ~-~~ lb. $229 ~~!:!~~!~!:~.~stl~~ 79c LIQ UOR BUYS' •• CATSUP SAFEWAY PREMIUM ;:,.Vodka or Gin ~ Tow• H'"" 3 9c Bread i.'1 ! ..... c,, $ 7 59 14·01 . &ti, ... '''1'. 80 P1oor·Holf Goll on Round Top 49c !;.!.!.~~~l~lth$ J99 or Sandwich . I 'Ii-lb. loal IN OUR DAIRY CASE. .. WI NE BUYS 1 All SAFEWAYS OHi · . Potato Salad Table Wine MEMORIAL DAY ,.,.,.a• MOIDAY, MAY-16th . .. ,., 9 ·•.:. I ., M0<0,.ol °' . 4 (. cc Gollo~1 89 Colt Slow '•rV, Vineyard lt1<•rrte · Ctn. m WUSDAMdFOOD 1 Ch ....... '"""'" s 1 " M~!~uridy ~l!1'9 eese Strft Cht44tr-lollftm Wtt Ill ' AA Butter ...,, .... ST MP COUPOIS ' ' •' wllll a r.. Un1 crlap Jot •• , ••= .... ..,..-. .,•M.C.._ . .__ ......... e. IM:kz, c.a.w.•Jll l.17111 ff.. c..e...._ •Mll•C...a.. .. Ch: •• ........... 1111~·.... tl.417e.ft••·•* ... ·"· •14 ...... .., __ ._._..__ .. La,__...,. •2402 Mcpa•Dr.,....., .. ,,.... J 1 ' I ·~ I, I I I • ~URGER39( BUNS Or Hot Dog! Springfield -pkg. or 8 Grapefruit Juice 39c N atural Goodness! Springfield -46 oz Soft Drinks~ ~a:is79c Cola, Orange1 Roo t beer ! Springfield B · t 5119 r1que s 10 ll. IAG ••• Collier's -hard, long-burning ! Relishes •••••• 39c Burger, Hot Dog, S weet, India! 9¥4 oz ICE 89 CREAM ( Favored flavon1 ! Springfield half-gal. J ortilla Chips • • 49c Reg. or Taco flav or! 10 and 9 oz Alex Apple Juiee • • • • 39c Deliciously tempting! Springfield -qt Bartlett Pears • 59c Halves, in No. 21h can -Springfield Baked Beans • • • 69c B & M New England style! 28 oz Ripe Olives • • • • 49c Lindsay -Large size, pitted! No. 300 VIV-A 49 TC)WELS ( Strong! Ass't colors, decorated Luau Napkins • • 33c Colorful, from Zee! Pkg. of 100 . Potato Chips • • • 59c Granny Goose -big twin pack! Dressing ::SS. . . age F1atter salads! Seven Seas -16 oz. PalmoliveUQll •••• 73c Kind to your hands! Gt. (& 11o lff) Fab1u111DT ••••••• 5123 Giant size box (& lk lff) FRUIT 33 COCKTAIL (. Jn tasty syrup! Springfield, No. 303 ' . Frozen Food! Stouffer's 8 5( CAKE Crumb cake -Blueberry or French! Peas :=is. . . . . . 49c Springfield, large 20 oz. bag Macaroni .. CllfJ( •• 45c With ham -' Van de Kamp'• -·10 oz Hash Browns ••• 59c Ore Ida Southern style! 2 lb. pkg Gr•pe Juice • • • • 49c Welch'a, to be 1ure! 12 oz Bread_,. •••••• ate .Pit,. of thrff 1 lb. loaVH -white Whole Onions •• 49c ., >I ) lt'e a very 1pecial day ... and you'll be planning &omething to make it even more memorable. Let your plan• bel:in at El Rancho, and end in the patio, at the picnic, t~e boat deck or wherever. Ai the beach ot in the backyard -you'll be glad it all began at. El Rancho! Wf Will II UOSD -AY llAY 26 II OISllVAICI OF Ml•OllAL IAY Sliced Bacon ••• 5121• El Rancho's thicker ranch atyle Pork Sausage •• ggc. El Rancho's old fashioned blend! .U.S.D.A. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN Assure yourself of a successful cook-out with this tantalizingly tender, tasty. loin cut of U.S.C .A. Choice beef! Naturally aged, too, for the navor you'll favor! AGED STEAK Loin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef! FRESH! Thinking of barbecuing! You could n't do better than these! Lea'n! Tender! So much good eating! From Easte rn grain-fed pork for satisfaction! Beef Rib Bones 79c. U.S .D.A. Choice -bake or barbecue El Rancho hens ... 10 to 15 lbs. average Weight! Great for a main course -any time, , anywhere .. _ and they'll thank you for thinking of it! CURE 81$249 HAM · lb Hormel's boneless -whole or Half Horm el Cu remaster ... 2.89 lb. Ground Beef ••• 5119• Extra lean -bulk or patt ies Ground Beef • ~. 5149• . Leanest grind (Chopped Steaks, too -3 per lb.) Delicates en Delights! 'CHUCK STEAK lb. U.S.D.A. Choice-at a budget price! . lb. Pork Roast •••• s 1 2~ Eastern ~ Boneless rolled Boston butt ! ~~~f :::. 6 CJ~ Fresh Grade A fryer -Cubbison dressing! Ready fo r roasting. Meat Balls ••••• 5129• El Rancho's own -oven ready! Round Roast r:-s21~ T op or bottom USDA Choice round.' ll RANCHO'S 7 /I BEEF OR MEAT • • • • • • • • • I ii It. So juicy! So tasty! Tops in quality, and you'll love the savings, too ! 1 lb. pkg. Muenster Cheese St•~ Dorman'• Wisconsin . _ . by the piece CANNED $659 HAMsL1s. Harmony! Lean! Slice it or bake Laughing Cow •• 79c French cheese in wedges! 6 oz. BON BEL89( CHEESE French cheese -Laughitig Cow 8 oz. - Super Fresh Produce! Dessert CllESl CAKE • 4 ror s 1 Choice of delicious fruit flavors! 4 oz Monterey 3 9( JACK Cache Valley -sliced! ~ oz pkg Avocados LARGE! Large size! buttery! From California's own orchards to insure freshness and quality und ll avor! Potatoes ••••••• 12~ U.S. No. 1 all purpose White Rose ITALIAN 2"( SQUASH ... Frethl All grt1en for t.enderneas! ...., ...................... lie • LIY o;.y "'"' 7 Inch -Pkt· ol 50 ...., Plltes ..••.••..••• 41 ••• $1.H ~ o.,, -9 ........ okr.ol lo> 'I ' Cherry 39c Tomatoes ..... Red and ripe! 12 ounce by ket • Cold Cups • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 9IC Ealy Day - 7 ounce -pq. of 100 Instant Coffee ..•.••.••....• $1.45 Folpr'1 6 oa (II • ••• 1.K) Oranges •••••• 6 ... 51 Valencias , .. h~avy wi,th sweet juice! PINE· APPLE 19! Mat urity fruit from Hawaii! Inst.it sn. ............... $1.39 FO\lr ounce(l am .. ; Z.UJ lrin Coffee .••.••...••.•.•• $1.59 Ca.traln• [Jee! 1 lb. can ., r=::::-:-:-:-:~~~~~~..i.;~ SAVE $1.00 on . , · TEQUILA s4 9 .• : Authentic quali ty! Quart bottle Lord Calvert ••• ss~t..: Canadian wh iskey , . , quart '·'' Vat 69 Gold ••• 553!~ Favorite scotch whiskey! fifth r'~ B d · sis•· u we1ser sarlaloo n.'. ';\ "Pick a pair"! 12 oz cans .i: J G II W. s21~·! ao 1ne •••••. " Hearty Burgu ndy, Chablis! 11i gal. , r Carafesr11111ASS011 •• 5239 Burgundy, Chabl is, Rose! Quart VODKA s399· or GIN . If El Rancho's Holiday times -quart •I' FRESH s 119 SALMON •b : Chinool<! Whole or half IClllTlll arr STtMS ... z.11 .. l '" Fresh Sand Dabs5 18~:: Just right for the skillet! ". ·M hi M h" 521t a a 1 • • • • • .. T he real thi ng, (ron1 Hawaii \.\•a ters! :11,· •• Cooked Shrimp s1~f~ Pl a n on serving shrimp cocktail! "( Fish Sticks -.. 69,~:, F.xtra fancy q ua lity! (10 •· M1 .•. S.ttf Snapper rAallC.. • • 514::. Fresh fillets for flavor and value! - TURBOT ] FILLETS 7 91 - From cold,,cold waters of Norway! Prices in effect Thur. May 22 1j through Wed. May 28 : n Open daily 9 to 9 S unday JO to 7 .1 ,: No sales to dealers Cl.OSID -DAY . .. ... 11•l )•\ • ;·1 lo ,, 1 1~ Moc:he Jna ................. $1.\~ liu«1in1 Young Coffee -l lb. can . ,;H Elcetii Tablets ............ $1~ P11ck'-&t or 100 tablet.a I I . , I ( )I " 0 J> Y1 • ~ • " .. h e fr Ii' • r d •• • ' ~ I p ( ' ' ( - 1. ~ DAILY PILOT Wldnesdly, May 21. 1975 I Pssst ! .€ook's .Setret • • "; • \ I ' -. .. TRU E·FRUIT PUNCH steamtna is the prefe rrt:d melhod for v•1eta bl~ cookery. It can be dom,e tn any pan, pc;>t, -steamer in1ert or e ven large try pan lh1tftt1 the vegetable. A lO~·ittc;b fry pan is perteot tor-11para8u1. broccoli , green beans, spinach or artichokes. When steaming, do not fill the utensil more tha n 1f..1 to ~ full of vegetables. · Most steamed vegetabl es taste less watery; r e taining their full natural flavor. Deli cate veget ables are not jostled or injured during cooking and the small amount of water assures the retention of most vi tamins-ana ·min er als:- Cook ln 1 s h o ul d be1ln .\>; juice; c~v•f' Steom 25 lo SS medium heat a nd when steam mlnutey. .. appears around the lid, turn he a\ I BllQCCOiJ to Jow. 'ntis method may take a Remove la rfe le1 v~~ and little tonier, but the fresh flavor co11r1Se stem ends._.of' one pound is worth\~ extra minutes. , broccolt. Split lerfgthwise 1everlil .The vl ,etables sh9uld .be times. r1 ace In try pan with :\~ carefully lrtled to bQ tender· cup water; cover. Steam 15 to 20 crisp. 'It ts lmpo'rta nt to watch the minul_e~*VLI F•o·w·a pot and not let it boil dry. · .~ .:. Somei v eget a bles suc h ·a s With rp;knife cutoft'botto1n s_quash or.t.Qm atoes huve a hlfh •to roake auiirl.owe~Jevel . ~la~e water. <rOntent ; no extra liqwd in fry_. p , 1tem---down, with '"' needs to be added for·ste<1 n1ing. .-cup water ; cover. Steam t s to 20 AS PA RAGUS minutes.\ Cut off coarse .w,oody ends .or G .. RE.EN BE~NS . one , pound u.s par.agus keeping Place one pound green bcuns 111 th~m a_b_out...;_the ...sam e lenglb. frt p_an wU~_(U.P Wjlti:[. r de· Soak-in w8ter-se vertil minutes--to-s-i r-e d, tJ.·d:d-~m""ll·l·l-o·n·i o n-s-, remo1te sand. If desired, peel musLroo~s or c_ooked bacon; ste,fJls witb c ~rot pe~ler . cover . Stefm 20 to 25 minutes. The punch with th_e one-of-a-kind taste! A tieht fftting lid is essenP,al as it prevents the moisture 'from escaping while he lping 'to cook the vegeta bles. Arter cooking green vegetables, be sure to re· move the lid and ser ve im - mediately to r etain the attracti ve color. , Alte rnate _stalks and spear SPINACH ends in fry pan for even cooking. \\lash one pound of spinach lo Add lf..1 cup wa ter and·steam as remove spnd. Sepura~e_ leuves directed S to 7 m inutes. from stem.; discard stems. Place Punchy says take your pick. $ave 12¢ on two 46 oz. cans of Hawa iian Punch -or ART IC llOKF..S spinach in fry pan with 1/2 cup Remove coarse bottom leaves water: cover. Steam 5 to 10 The pan , PQt or Cry pan should be made of a good heat conduct - ing m at eria l so the a mount of heat the veget a bl e receives ·can be controlled. A good example of this, would be s tainless steel cookware with an <1 lun1inum bot · of 4 lo 8 medium urtichokes. With minutes. one take-alo ng size of ei ther 8 oz. or 12 oz. si x-pac k. And you can pick any great-tasti11g flavor of Hawa iian Punch . ··> Prices effective May 21 thru May 27, 1975. ' . HbURS,· 9i1.m. 10 9p.m., Mon.-Sal., lOi1.n1. 10 7p.m., Sun. ON TWO 4i OZ. CANS OR EITHER ONE 8 OZ. OR 12 OZ. SIX·PACK OF ANY FLAVOR HAWAIIAN PUNCH• '-<I tom. ·, • ' BMdllWcillD y .. l .,W • ~"' mero.antile SUPER MEAT MARK~T OF OUAt lTY MEATS AT DISCOUNT PRICES ! BREAD Springfield 1 lb. Loaf F 4 0 $1 R ~'l'HIT ( WHEAT ROUND TOP & SAN O~VICH l}S lb. t t>a"f: 39¢ Springfield HOMOGENIZED MILK 1 . 36 681 35<1 ~•\LLON HALF GAL. QT. (The fo~Yest p rices allowed by law!) MED. SHARl>.CHEDDAR CHEEZE By the piece ..........•.......... 1.19 lb. Holly Farms CHICKEN FRESH GRAOE A Farnily Pack Fry ing Ch icken Parts ........ 49¢ 3 U•••~l q1•s. v11<1h w,ngs and b.ck poruons 3·1tlg qtrs. wo !h b11ek po..-tlon 3 ea.""'""'· b11ek1, nec k1,live•I, guia•l'ls & ""'"" Best of the Fryer ............ ,.: ...... 791/ Breuts, legs, drumsticks, thigh$ .......... 8 8¢. Chaparral BEEF JERKY Thi n sliced pieces of beef seasoned and slowly smoked in ou r oWn smoke houses .... % lb. 2.49 FROZEN INSTITUTIONAL PACKS Th in cut potatoes ........... 5 lb. Pkg. 'h6 5 The Meat Mercantile is a new con- cept o f a qua lity m eat supermarket featuring both retail and restau rant sizes. Yo u can now' bu y restaura nt q uality aged beef everyday at prices you can a fford! VALUE FEATURES AT T HE M EAT MERCANTILE BEEF PRO PERLY AG ED togive you consi1- 1enUy tender, juicy and flavori"u l meat. T.OP DU ALIT Y pork, lamb, and poultry. MI LK-BREAD-EGGS at super discount pr ic'!s eve1vdav. BONE LESS MEAT CU TS our specially- you eat all you pay tor. WHO LE SUB·..PRIMA L AG ED .BEEF CUTS in vacuum pack;ages $UCh as whole top sirloins, and New York strips. You can cu l and wrap by yourself for i1ddi1ional savings-,...e'll tell you howl CUST OMI ZE D AG ING , CLJTIN G, bar·b-quin g or smoki ng 10 yo ur specifications. WI N ES selected for \lalue-quali ty and price- fr om $1.59 to $4.50/filth. EG GS RANCH FRESH L ARGE Grade AA 1 doz. ctn ..•..•..... , .......... , .. , 49¢ 21'1 do1.lla1 ........................ 1.19 LEAN GROUND BEEF ANY SIZE PK G ..................... 699' I b . TOP ROll ND STE A K BEEF ROUND ........... ,.,, ....... 1.89 lb. FRESH BE EF SHORT RIBS , • ·BEEF LATE ..................... 951 lb. Fully Aged Whole TOP SIRLOINS Bvthelb.{8-141b.ave.sizepieces) ... 1.99 1b. Beel loin , in vacuum pkgs. Old V irgi nia Tender & Juicy FRANKS 12 Ol. pkg .. , ...... ,.,. . ...... 591 BAl(LR SOUT H <;0.t.Sf Pl.t.lll P.t.U ARINO 'O \~ ST 1 sharp 'knife cut arr bottom of artichokes to m ake them level and cut 1,7 to 1-inch straight across top . ..With scissor s trim tips_ofleaves. P lace in fry pan with 2 cups -. water and a t a blespoon lemon Stea ming vegetables assures fl avor, color and texture plus retains th e most vitamins and minerals. " I WEEl(ENDER' Geti'lt ALL together Fridays the muriel ,, •'RESH VEGETABLE I MEDLEY 2 ta blespoons butt er or nlurgarine t l a rg~ onion,.s li cL-d l la rge grcen·pepper, cut in strips 2 pou;f s a:\lccbini, sli ct.>d . 3 la gc ri pe toma toes, quartered · 1 tablesi>Oon sa lt , 1 teaspoon basil 1 teaspoon oregano !(:i teaspoon pep~r In J01 ~-inch fry pan melt butter over,;rnedium heat. Add opion and areen pepper <1nCI saute until {tende r. A dd retn aining ingre- dients. toss gentfy; co\'er. Co ntinue cooking over medium heat until steam appears aroWld lid, turn he·at to low and eook all the \'eget a bl es a t otal of 15 n1inutcs. Remove Co\'er and continue cooking un til vegetables <.1re tender an,d ·,moSt or the liquid evapora leS, a bout 5 minutes. !\lakes 4' to 6 servings . • GA RD EN VEGETABLES :1-1 poup\l salt po11.: 2 po unds qew potatoes 2 pou nd!i \\'hole g1·cen bc:.ins 2 oniO ns, s Ii ced S carrots sliced \ ' I ' 1 :i tca~poon coarse! .. ground pepper 1 :i cup '''ater Cut r ind from s alt pol'k , slice into ~.i-in <•h slices. In 5-quur·t Du,t(·h oven bro\\·n salt pork on both sides over mt"<lium heLll. Rem ov.c fron1 heat ; drain orr ex· cess fat. ' Add remainin g ingredients in order given. Cover. Place over medium he:it and heat to boilin~. "'hen ste<1 n1 a ppear·s ;.1round the lid, t urn heal to lo\\'. Cook a total or 30 n1inutcs 01· until vl'get<1b lcs art' tcndL•r crisp. l\ta kes 4 tu 6 ser\'ings. TaterGems ................ 51b.Pkg.1.65 i-----------------4 Breadtd Veal Steaks ...... 30-402. ea. 9.55 Dover SQle fil•t~, ........ 10 lb. Bit 1.19lb. $500 IN PRIZES! Aegisfltr #Of' Grand Priu Orawi"el " nexl 10 Brookside Winery . . stever;i~ , show . . . mwtel .eeveni tem ' , cite '"flltery out of ......... ,th•"9M __ , a~ ....... },39 • '1 The Meat Mercantile is the country merC·antile store with: old-time · friendly at~e and quality m•rchandise ·sold at competitive prbs,-;-' -; • • • 1'1flll•fTlrllllm:· ILE UNCQNQITIONAtLY IUMAIQ'IR YTH ING tlE SHU. IF Wiii AR(!J~A LLY..IATlll'IEO.WITH YliUR N 11!.MLt OllffftfULL y Rfl'lJ\el : 0 Yp,1111 ORDE R. ·-t1111t1'J .. 1f~ll~ .. 1d. , ,"!.,.~.: 1st PR IZES Ten $25 Food Certiftc1tes ,... .. _ _..,,...------------------- 2nd PRIZES "' Fill in and depotit this coupon at the T., $15 f-C.rtili .. teo "---VII =... ~=.:..r~. ?'°;'1 ..,."°"'. . , r . . . ' " 3rd PR IZES l'· '""·~---------~--· Ten $10 Food C1rtificetes •l .J. -· 11 liltd,.is. ~------''-"-'-"-----(F of,J~'r1iliC.ft1 1tdftm1bl~ ~t tac1 v~iu;t. Limit ot11 ptlzt·per l1mBv. Exc ludes il1ms p(ot.lbfltd I Ci1v/S11te/Zlp ______ ~,,.....--b't !>!t•.N• puithlM .. ...,,y; En1r;u"'411 I ' , ~ c)Olo'clll FrllflY:·Mf'{?I 1~1s. 'w1nntrt Wfll be • :relepllon<. __ .~· ----~--""-~ notifitcl.l , ' • ·• • "'· 1 ' , • I r out Of .ouHf••· . tM doldruftl't: 'out of ........... wlll•1'• her-? ehe cook• with l ove. .. '"-NOWll'i-'-,,....,_.~. · N•wTl.me1 · 10to10:30 ··""' '• •nd • ' •• 7 to 7i30p'.rn. r r,llondey thrOug h frfday. 'I • 'ctM~ulitiY CAlllVISllN' lttlfll( -.lilWl'Olfl If Act! c;111llflit. J • Ii"') I "' .. <..... ! .. ;..: . . " and und erul ~' to 2U ton1 lal'e h 'l.o to 20 l)S in f d~· -n-s-, con; h to . ves lace cup 10 or t in es , ium und k all r is inue are quill les. ns und ·li ce uurt . on eut. C.X· s "' ver ing, the s m· i sp, 1 '- I " . .. • -=· ~·. • • • I· ' If you th.ink of swiss steak as a · long cooking e'ntree, this baby beef version disproves that idea. With ext ra t~der young beef you can do the whole thing in an open skillet on top of-the stove . Beca use it co m es from animals that 'are .7 to 10· months old all cuts or: baby beef are tender and take lo quick cook· irig. . • Sometimes l abeled C;.tlf or other double names such as Young Beef, Heavy Calf and Mature V~a l, "thC meat has a · a.lig htly differ'ent appearance' from mature beef. It is lighter in color and has less fat too. You 'll probably find fewer .cuts of baby beef and many of them with bone in . Because babyl beef comes from animals that are grass and milk fed o~ly , it bas a more <telicale, milder flavor than mature beef. . Baby beef s"'iss style is just right for the casual. gourmet. Eeonomit•zil, too, it calls for a · baby beef chuc;k steitk. Ghop~ onion and cubes of q~ef are cooked quickl}/. in butt~t ->-coat. ing baby bee fii:st with flour m~1kcs for richiJr broWning. Nl'Xl , whlte German ~ 1 ( mustard and thyme are added to the skillet and simmered for lY.'O minutes only ! 'Enrich the sauce with a little cream; then garOish the di&tl ·v.·ith parsley and onion rings. Potato balls or noodles are 'the' usual acoompaoiment. BABY BEEF SWISS STEAK 1 baby beef chuck steak, about l!'.4 pounds 2tablespoons fl our 1 teaspoon salt 1/s teaswoq pepper l-0nion , 'chopped 3 tablespo.ons ,butler ~~·cup dry v.·h1te wine 1 If.: teaspoons sharp German' mustard · ,1-1! teaspoon thyme 1.~ cup whipping crcnm Cut beef into small cubes, trim and.discard bon e. l't1ix nour, salt and pepper. Add beef and toss lo coat .. Sau~e onion in butler until tender. Push to side of -pan. Add beef . and 'aily remaining flour mixture. Bl-own over medium high heat. Stir."in \\'ine, ·musta:rd and thyme. Bring lo boil. Cook. stir- ting, 2 minutes. Stir in cream. Makes 4 ser'\.ings. . . . . . Wednesday.Mey 21.1975 DAii. V PILOT ('~J ' \ • •• ~ ,.tf . ,, ' ' ' • I :_ _ --- -- - - - - - -- - - -----~-~ _:.-~------_!!i141P'.J ·•. ~ I· BEEF .IS '011 .. • THE RISE-. • .. • • . , '• fl.ANKEN ' s129 ... H~W YORK 5161! RIBS R09-. CHEDDAR 1.49 CHEESE ........ ROAST ..... 1.79 1.39 COOKED 9.90 SHR IMP • .l:EAN SHORT RIBS ..... 79c._ 9.99 .•r .. 10 TROUT FILLETS LI. • IOX OSS RIB .ROAST .... . s 149 I.fl . .. ,, "C 'l2LI . LEAN STEW MEAT .... s 14t CRAB LEGS l.7f TROUT FILLETS s-12! .. ' ... s-2 2! K-B08S .... TRO .UT FILLETS S4J99 10 ... ... .... s 1,3! l.7t COOKED SHRIMP s990 . . .. ... .. • .. .. , ... !' .... • LOBSTER TAILS ... s 19! T; .. _s 14! ..., • ' .. BREADED BONELESS .69!· ~ ... ·•EW TROUT :? • 'I ~ , . ,,. 11 l . • .. ·• :i-•. ·.·~ .,.r, .. , ...... lo: 'I • ....... " ' ' ' I CJQ DAILY PILOT W9dn.Way, May21, 1975 Food Taking Bigger Bite OPEN MEMORIAL DAY PIOM 9 A.M. TO 7 P.M. FAI MlANO $691 CANNED HAM ......................... . CUllMASTO . s2s9 HORMELHAM ... ..LI WILSON flHOH MADI $191 BONELESS NAM ..................... . OSCAI MAYU: UO .. OI CHHSl $1. SMOKIE LINKS ...... ,,..,, ... . OSCAI MATU $239 HAM STEAKS ................ LI .... . OSCAI MAYO IOUNDOI SQUAU s139 VARIETY PACK ...... 12-oz .... . a110fAIM UG. OI SAGI 79c PORK SAUSAGE .... 12-oz. ,.. OSCAIMAYH . $143 SLICED BACON ............ LI. .... WE REDEEM osc.a.• MAY•• suc10 1139 1000 st AMPS THIN BACON ............. u-oz. .... AT ALL iui'KiicoN LISl 29 STORES HAUBUT · STEA.KS · FllSM FIOl UI • 1 B! Cdlf.I CUT · HEnY SHRIMP $19~ TRASH DOVER SO'l.E FILLET nu• $129 flOZEll LI. TURBOT FILL79 c 1 ANOl'llll AU NIW SJARl-hOi. MAttn ' AT -- 1105 PHlliDELPHIA AVE. & MOUNTAIN AVE. IN ONTARIO CHUCK ·ROAST GROUND BEEF BEEF • ILADI CUT STATER BROS. CERTIFIED FRESH • DELICIOUS ANY SIZE PACKAGE 79~ 79~ CHUCK FRANKSo• STEAK BOl.OGNA BEEF • STATER BROS. YORKSHIRE BRAND CERTIFIED • GUARANTEED 1 -~ND PACKAGE LB. . 7 CUT ·UP FRYERS ___ ... 49• 111 CU'I •Will fl!IMMIO • 1 89 l llf • M>NIUSS CHUCK • 149 BEEF CLUB STEAK . ......... ROLLED ROAST.................... " ' _l llf•STATllM05.CllT941D • 147 M••CMUCI CVT 99c ROUND STEAK •ON•·•N ... ..u . ROUND BONE ROAST..... " atlf •ST#tinlllOS.CllTlflllO $159 lllf•CHUCt a.rr • 103 ROUND STEAK"""'""·· ... 7·BONJ ROAST................... . .... •OIJf<KI CVT•.aM:-IN $147 llll'•STAfll MOS.Cfllll'llD , • 129 BEEF RUMP ROAST...................... RIB ROAST•·"'•'·"'"'"··-·" fHl.H CMOUHD s 129 ..., • SlAfll MOS. CMTIND • 1 •9 EXTRA LEAN BEEF ... ·-·-·· .u . Ria ROAST '·" noou 1-no ••• ..... ... '"~ 69' i1ATHllOS.C~•GUAU.Nl&O • 139 ROASTING CHICKEN ... _. " aEEF RIB STEAK ............ ·-··········-········"- I ' ,, I 'I c 9~ . Lii. i'iiti'01N 'i1kP •0 "'' ..................... 1 •. s I 89 aiucu'iisiiiK .. •1 9• .... • lOl'ol CUT $19• T ·•ONE STEAK . " lllf" • lOIN CUl • f!tO 1.U.5 •207 PORTERHOUSE STEAK ...... .. lllf•lOIN CUT $219 TOP 519'LOIN STEAK ............ .. W.N • IOHIUll . • 149 aEEF STEW MEAT ........................ ... • • " • • " f • • . • ' • ' >' I • • ,. . • .. ' . • ' ~ , ~~ ' [ ' ' ( ' ' . • !• • ~ . • • , Wednesday, M ay 21. 1975 ' • ' I • • • . I \. • Hundreds of reduced. prices! . . ' .· YoU'll Ii~ the total better at Alpha Beta. C Copyri1 ht 1975 by Alpha Bet• Comp9ny. All ri&h11 relOtYt:<l . OAILY PtLOT CJ·I ~ ' . .. i ' • ' . • 1 l l ' l • • . ' l • • I • l . • • • l • . l I l . • , I :1 • -i • I • l ·I ·1 • • i ' _, ' I :/ j :j ;l i • ~ ' 1 ~ • . ' • • • • ' POUHTIJMYAWY-11'90 w.,,.. HUHTIHGTOH llACH-9041...... HuMTIHGTOHllACH--21 411 ............ HUHTIHGTOHIU.eft-11411 M. MllM Sf. SOUTH LAGUH.4.-JOIJJ s. c .... t .......... COSTA MU•-IJH ........ m.4 COSTA ...u.-241, L 17tti St, LAGUHA HllJ..S-Zli41 c..llt •le,LliiM 11'11Hl-llCM4 c.l•w, l.WYM"Mfy P'w\ ' , I • l • • . • . . I • • "' OAILYPILOT ' * Wednesday. May21 , 1975 ' .• Have hln working out a fish rry that i!f both beer and champagne style. In other words, ror the sake or economy we used frozen skinlesa You've Other gray sole fillets a.nd coupled them with elegant fresh scallol)6 . NEW YO RK SLAW 1,1, of a 1 :V..-pound head of green cabbage, thinly shredded v, cup grated (medium-fine) Fish to. Fry pared carrot 1;, cup slivered green pepper l teaspoon finely grated onion, pulp and j uice • 1h teaspoon suga r 3 tablespoons peanut oil l tablespoon cider vinegar S~lt and pepper to taste . Thoroughly mix together all lhe ingredients; cover and chill. Keeps well. Makes about 3 cups -----:__ -slX'-lh-cupse-r-'11ngs.---==-----.;=--- SCALLOP · F ISH FRY ' 1 pound sea or bay scallops, thawed If frozen l ~und fish fillets, lha~ed if frozen 2 te.b lespoons f.lour I egg 1;.. cup milk If.I cup· fine dry while b:read crumbs, preferably homemade and frOm bread with crust! re· moved Sclips (about) peanut oil S•lt If using sea scallops, .quarter or halve as necessary so they wi ll be of uniform size. Spr ead scallops on paper toweling and p lc-k over t o remove any particles of shell. Cut flljets, following the fish markinis, in pieces as close as posaible to J'41>y l..inCh-Dcy..bolh • . • ( . .. . A~l ALP1f4. BETA . . I scallop11 and rlllets on paper with the crumbs. Turn the toweling. iicallops onto a sheet of ,. wax Put the scaltor,s in a clear paper, the fillets onlo another plastic bag, the r11 els in another; stle~t. add 1 tablespoon flour to eath In a , -heavy 3·quart sau<.'epan bag; shak..e well to coat well and heatithe peanut oil to 375 degrees evenly: on a frying thermometer; or use . Beal egg sliChtly; add milk an electric (rypan and follow the and beu.t lo combine. manufacturer's directions for Turn the scallops into a bowl, thetemperature. the fillets into another; pov.r half the egg mixture over the (In ;.l 12·inch elect.ric fryp;tn of scallops, the other half over the 4-quart capacity use 6 cups, but rillets ; with a spoon lifl and turn no more, peanut oil.) the scallops to cover completely Drop the sc.a llops without with the egg mixture; do the l'rowding into the hot oil. With a same with the fillets. slotted spoon, turn scallops on<.•e Put V.. cup or the bread crumbs and cook on ly until golden· brown in a cle·an dry clear plastic bag _no more· than 2 to 3 minutes. and add the scallops; put the re- maining bread crumbs in ThescallopswilltougheniC you another clean d r y clear plastic overcook then1 . Drain on paper bag a nd add the fillets. toweling or brown paper and Shak.e.each-bag--10-coaLeY.enl)'.-k.~p hot-;n:a::.w.ar.m.oven~ STORES Will BE - .OPEN .. -.. NOW OPEN 'til MIDNIGHT in sel1cted locations OtECK YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ALPHA SETA FOR ITS STOAE HOUAS. REIUUI HOURS MEMORIAL · DAY .. HALFHILL · e 112-0UHCE CAN AEDUCED 7c CHUNK LIGHT TUNA .35 Grocery Reduced Prices AUNT PENNY'S 32 . HOUANDAISE SAUCE • V-8 VEGETABLE JUICE MOTI'S APPLE SAUCE H()J.LYWOOD SAFFLOWER OIL HUNT'S C ... IBEANS ALPHA BETA MUSTARD 1-t12-oz. CALORIR W.TOIER • t.7-0a. PEANUT 9'JTIVI ~ 2-0Z. CA1t09 TIGER'S MILK CANDY BARS B&M BAKED BEANS S-1..8.IAO \ PILLSliuRY FLOUR RAL,STON FREAKIES CEREAL -COUllT-ZEE LUAU NAPKINS tl-1/2-0UIK:I! CAM NALLEY'& _,,,.SALAD ,...,. .. ---l'T. ROU. Cl& t:ON MLBI .38 ~55 " 1.63 .48 .39 .23 .70 .90 .62 .32 • 48 .52 DIAPERS' 1.67 .. WESSON OIL Grocery Reduced P r ices F'O..'G~:~~ 1 03 COFFEE . • 0... · MGULM · El.EC. """' • 41-0Z. CAN 3-02 tO-Of..IMCi JAllt FOL GER'S INSTANT COFFEE ....,.,,.,. .... NE8CAFE INSTANT COFFEE MMMCI ..... DECAF INSTANT COFFEE ·-""""' STA PUFF . FABRIC SOFTENER t>GMCl.MR MOREHOUSE MUSTARD .IUHA .,-A • -..OZ. 90X ALL PURPOSE DETERGENT ALL~· ...OZ.90Kt.M ..,.. ...... ....oz.eoa: .a UJW .... tf1-0Z. 90X. "' LOW IUDI · JO-L.a. .OX 4.4t 1.93 1.ae 2~39 1.oa· • •. 29 .81 VWA fTAUUf • YMOAR & 0tL · 1-0Z. llTL .51 7SEAS SALAD DRESSING -'OOOOUI . tt-OIMCI sn....., ~34 ~90T'n.I FRENCtrS · . ..-VE MUSTARD ..,.., .. "°'.I 11 I ~ "f"'°"'9Cia CM 5'1 CHI.I CON CARNIE : . Wl'11t IEANS .• --IWWI GRAPl&.LY .53 MWCOT1Pa:UM.1tr I ,,,_ · to.oz..wt .u S11UJJ .. attf '' 111 !WW · to-OZ. .Miii .11 A""8 wna · ll-OWIC&.MR .11 "IDIUlTO . °"°" . ~ -LPl'ON CUPA SOUP , . '------------.. · 1e-OuNcE: CAN REDUCED 13c OREGON ' PURPLE PLUMS .29 Grocery Reduced P rices STMI IUIT · •112•0Z. CAN · .. OL C.HUNK UGHT1UNA •t~CM .e2 t2·tl2-c>uNC:e CAM .I S MNITf · ll·l/4-ouNCE. HOC.AGE LONG GRAIN & WILD RICEMIX .60 TVTTt-l'lllU!TTI , ~ • ~ , ORANGE • CM1MY •PUNCH · STRAWRRltY • 5-l/4-0Z. INV. • FUNJilY FACE 49 DRINKS • 23-0UNCE TINS • CHERRY • PUNCH • GRAPE 1.88 ... <>UllC&""""' CRISCO ·. · Q!l. SIU •1"ROWN Mell. · 7-0UNCE .lM 'mFFED ·QUEEN OLIVES" ' MtMllC:m.wt Ii illZ .. SWEET PICKLES ...-ocmu MOP'NGLO a-Shine CINner 1~CM P1-All'JD'S MIXDNUTS 1.02 .87 . ,:e1 1~~8 .83 1~15 Dclic;it cssen Rcdu<"ccl Prices 1l'"OUllCI 90WL .79 ' fl "ICHMANN'S IOFT MARGARINE . ,......10-GUMCI CM .83 ~-·· • JOFl•lffei .49 Delicatessen Reduced Prices 8ilttDCM"W • «M.WCE MCKAOI OLD FASHIONED ~LOAF ...._. WMP &ICB ', 1-ouptel l'ltG.. BORDEN'S.UTE-LINE CHEESE ·. . . . llflOLD · t2-ouNCI PACKAGE .aRDEN'S SLICED CHEESE FOOD . . ._-..... BON BEL CHEESE -.0 · ttOT · ~CONT ..... SUNSET AYOC;ADC) DIP 4-oullel MOC.Mii l>ANOLA SUCEDHA~ ~49 : ~19 :. .ea : 1.05 .52 :: .83 ; Bake r y Reduced Prices ICHAT'I • 24-0UNCI L.OM' • r11DUCtD "9CR 6 5 SPROUTED.WHEAT : BREAD . " .... .TA • t.outa L.OAI' : T" CRUNCH 45~ •AD ii : ALAll lllTA "9-COUNT eox PLAIN . ·DOllUTS - -AU:ll MTA • 12-<MIMCI MCKMI .• ANCIEl. l'OOD CAKI! .ea .89. .. / • Fn•zcn Food Reduced Prices CIW ·~90X ITALl"AN WGET••n • I ' tMm 1171 .aa ·--. 1.54 .49 - .32 ;Et• 7-0UNCI CM .76 119TANNl5RY WM.CLEANER .. " . ANDeRHH'S SPLITNA IQUP ,CRUM TOPPING I ' ~· 11 \ r n s e e r r t t • e n u .,. d _, • W9dnelday,M•y21, 1975 DAILY PILOT Cl:J Mothers Work Wonder§,_ Wi_th Thri fty· Meats It you've heard Mom bemoan-•1, cup vlne•ar min to t In r u S · . In th l f h l·.-..1 l'• • u •. urn g requen y, un· ca11erole. pnnkle with cheese 'A c up boney e e sta e o er """"'budget, 1 envelope (~·ounca ) onion lildone. Sto81erviags. and paprika. Stir t ogctht!r t he rcn1aining in · i::rcdients und 11our over riblcts. 'fightl y l'O ver p an with heavy .... ·cighl foil. Continue bak· ing in the 32S·degrce oven until n1e1:1l is ver y tender -45 to 50 minult..--s longer. lt c1nove riblcls 11.nd keep warm. 1you 'rc about to find out why. ,s., gravy mix ·· l cupboiling v.•ater ·' be clever and use an economical Va teaspoon aarlic PQW.d.er * * * Bake al 400 degrees (or 10 to 15 1 ta blespoon chili po""•der or cut of m eat Uke chuck steak. 2 green peppers, cut in l·ln ch BAKED POTATO CMSEROLE minutes, until cheese is melted to taste and potatoes are hot. sservings. 1 ta blespoon prepared hot .. ~. Mom's Kabobs work wonders squares 1 1 ( 1 mustard , ,•:with chuc k, using 8 quick and enve ope S·serv ngs) Idaho maahed potato granules . · ··e~sy marinade stirred together Combine mu1tard with 1 teas-1h cup dairy aourcream '··with an envelope of onion gravy poon water: let stand 10 minutes 1 tableipoon chlv~ mix. to develop flavor. Stir in water, -2 -to 3 tableapoona shredded oil, vinegar, contentl of gravy CheddarorAmericancheese MOM'S KABOB.S~ Chuck s t e ak, about pounds cut in l ·lnch cubes tt~aspoon dry mustard mix envelope and garlic powder; Paprika 1112 pour over steak cubes. Let stand about t hour. Prepare mashed potatoes -. 'h cupwater J Y.. cup oll . Jollowin~ directlons_oo_ pacJt_a&e. -Alternate steal( cubet indPeP.· except ecreaae water to l 'A per squares on skewers. Gnll cups. Stir in sour cream and ~verh~l__coalsorbr0ilforl0to15 chive1. Spoon into l ·quart WESTERN RIBLETS • pounds (generous) lamb breast cut into riblets (l ·rib por- tions> 2 medium o·nions, chopped (1\\ CuPSJ 15-ounce can tomato herb sauce IA cup cider vinegar Place l'llbletS', bone side up, In single la yers in 1 large and I medium roasting pan. Bake on 2 center racks in a preheated 325- degree oven ror l lfJ hours. Remove riblets in large 1>an lo small pan. Pour -R,ff fal from laree p..an and place all t he ~blels, bone side down, in a single layer in it -riblcL'I will ·have shrunk. Pour s auce into a small bo\11! and ski m off as n1uch fat as possi· bl c. rcheul s<i ucc and pour over riblets. Or '<'hill r iblets and sauce scparatel.Y; remo\'c hardened f1.1L from sauce o.nd heal rfblets i'1 it in a la rge skillet. l\l akt>s 6 scrv~ in gs. Those Prices Guaranteed to be Effective May 22-May 28 AMBURGER .- ILL PICKLES Frozen Food Reduced Prices 12•0UNCI! CAN' TREESWEET GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 12·0UNCE CAN WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE AP't'LE • BLUUlR"Y • t :S·OUNCI! BOX SARA LEE FRUIT 'N DANISH 20-buNcl: acne CELESTE CHEESE PIZZA .57 .53 1.25 1.58 MOCCOU ... CMllOl"M • CHUCKWAOON CORN • vt0!TA9LU ONrHT • YlOETAalU l'OLYNl!SIA • VIOITA .... Oil ICM.· VEOETAkU Mil.ANO • tt-OZ • ..,.. Ml;NUMAKER VEGETABLES --TREESWEET ORANGE JUICE 12-0UNCI !=AN ... Non-Food Reduced Prices -=CATS OR DOOi ' · . Nnt's Sentry IV F,.Lµ COLLARS t:iHMY • P'Oft).AltOI DOOi ... gNnt's Sentry IV J I.EA, COLLARS .,Joc1.- M EDl-OUIK FIRST-AID SPRAY co.....nr l(fT· 1t ~ Gl;.AIROL NICE & ~HA IRCOLOR • 1.79 ' 2.19 1.59' 1.99 ------· I I SAVI! IOc WITH THIS COUPON I Of f IVTCBlrl PllDI I 50 ANY BONELESS o~.'M~ .. BEEF ROAST I LIMIT ONE ITEM• ON! COUl'ON, PER CUITOMIR I CO'-"ON VA.LIO 1-.....:"°'::.;T.1;::.3-' ••'-l.iii""i•mll!MA~Y1•~•-~MA~Y~n~ • • • • ~90TTU . MDUCED 20c BUFFERIN TABtETS Non·Food Reduced Prices Cl.MtOL• 11~ aonu.• flEG. Olll DTM•eoot HERBAL ESSENCE 1 47 CREME RINSE • · VASaMI! · t~eox INlENSfVE CARE BATH BEADS 4-coutn' MOU.GI SCHICK INJECTOR lWINBLADES RlOIAMI • l-OUNCll ~· DIAL VERY DRY AN11-PERSPIRANT 11-0uNce llO'TTLI FABERGE ORGANIC SHAMPOO COM)fTIOMlfl • , .. oz.. an.. 1.ot .99 .69 .63 1.09 Everyday Prices .,:QUNCI CAN SCHIWNG BLACKPl!!PPER 1>0UMCI CAM I PET MILK to-COUMT eox BAND-AID BRBD Pt.AS11C STRIPS f..QUNCI 90TT\.I! YITAUS HAIRTONIC .73 .28 .99 1.29 ·---• -""' -· I u 20c I WfTH THs COUl'ON TWIN PACll 9-0Z. CAN I PRINGLE'S I ~Chips i . LIMIT ONlllUI • ONI COUPON PIR CUITOMIR I I I . I I I -y-.,... __ .... _,.._~ • ;,.iiiillmiiiii-;L ... ~v~u~~ .. ~·~·•!•!J • • • • fWIHTQUAUTY L()f:AL, ALL QAEEH 'ASPARAGUS .49u. WHITE ROSE OR RED POTATOES COACltlU.A VAU.E't RED GRAPEFRUIT .12u. .19 El. Meat Reduced Prices -MTTV .... lllTC .. rl Ml BUDGET FL:w~P 5 9 FRAGl'ANT I I LB fUU •UNCHl!I (10 STEMS) • ' STOCKS • BU. 1 .2888LIJ. ~:.:~~;~;~HU12osr••11.99 BU. BURGER EXTRA LONG WIENERS LEANEST GROUND BEEF • ' (II STEMS) -""'""' LB ASSORTl!OCOLORS 1 29 CARNATIONS • BU. 1 6 9 8EAUTlfUL 1 2 I BONELESS LB FULL 8UNCHl!S • . -· POM PONS • BU. FAMILY.STEAK -LOOI BONELESS TOP Sl,RLOIN STEAK 2.29LB. :JFu~UETS 1.29 I U. · p UBUOUE 5-LB. 7 98 '""" 1 79 CANNED HAM • EA . . FULL •UNCH,IES (10 STIEMS) • """"'" .. ""' ' GLADS • BU. HORMEL 2 5 9 see OUR FINE SELECTION OF OTHER cur FLOWERS . LB ANO POTTED PLANTS. LEMON LEAF AND FLORAL BONELESS HAIU! . • • PAPER FREE WITH THE PURCHASE OF ALL CUT FLOWERS. • I I I I I • WBAT'l IK STORE ••• SERVICE IS OUR TRADITION 11'1 bct:n 75 yean lblce Albert Genwd, OM ot the founden or Alph1 Beta, Op!ntd his fin t meal mark el in Pornonri. There. e~ cwtorMI' wu oller.d the epilome of u:rvicc with 1 full su1111nttt on 111 the me11 .old. Sell• Wttt proYM!cd 10 the lhopptr could Witch while every cui ol me11 wa1 prcp1rcd accordlna to lht Individual'• spec:ill h'lllnictkNls. Of course, the wall miaJll bt 1while, but durin& lhrit time loc:al nt¥11i JrM eJ1chlnted 1114 ltetpll\I cOOkb\1 hlnlt could bt pro.-Hkd by the butcher . Todly busy .i.op,tn 11..Uy doa'.I hive time lo hll'e thtlf me11 culfom cul or pound. Since self·~rvioe mall beeline popular In the rir1iel, mo.I firtfer to •d«I their own pack.I JCS. It's much fa$1Cr ind e.uier to pick out the ab:e11k1 cul to Rt the f1mUy 1ncfbu•t needl . A.flu that 7S yffn Ulin• hrtt c~d at A1ph1 Beta, bul m1ny tradilton1 remain. AU the food IOkS 11 Alpha •11 still cmrin 1 lllO¥Y..-ck ....... If yoa a.e not completely Alisf'ied. And , after these 7S ytanl, Alphl Beta ttll eften arritt to lhl cmlo""1 wt.ta 11'1 net4td. Just ltf.k your butcher in the re.,; 1pron or your 11:..e ••pr M dM: bltte jtlcbt II !here 1rt qualtons •bout any product or if you h1'1't 111•.L,_...., lf"Cill requnt1. 1'htr11 Ir)' to bttf yoa, • ~ b!M er ...... W.ybe you'd like to Mn ow boJM econcNnlll, Sue Gt111, help you w11a. ttdpn or tM1I pl1nnin11 We 'd ~:::_;',,,,,.;.. like to~ from yOll. m s. tc..w II••. We hopt yot1'U Mlp 111 cekW.te _, •""""-1· Cornel'ilil 1n durkls O\lf Diamond Jubilee! LI H•lln,CA • .O.l l ------· • -----I I SAVl!12c SAVE29c WITH THIS COUPON I I WITH THIS COUPON II-OZ.CAN • FROZEN 1·LB. PKG. -· ALPHA BETA 15 I I ALPHA ·BETA .59 Orange Juice • I •• WIENERS LIMIT ONE ITEM• ONE coiJl'ON ' • . LIMIT ONE ITEM &.ONE COUPON PEA CUITOMER I I PER CUSTOMER COUl"<>N VALID No. 721 co VAUO No..720 --MAY U-MAV 21 ---· • --MAY -'-'AV 2t ---· . fOUHTAftil YAWY-lltcl w.,..,. HUMTIN4t1'0MllA.CH.-ft41.,._. H...,,...TOMllACH-Zl4JI lt11U II HVNTIHGTOH llACH-lltll H. MmM St. COSTA MIJH ...... ...._ ~OITA Mt•-·-z.41 IL 17• Ito ' LA6UHA HllJ.S..-.ZJ'41 c-t •I• Lliw 11¥1totl-~I044 c .. ,..,., ""''enity Pd •• \ j .. ' ~~'114 OM.YPILOT ·tf f, ·~;RefrigerQto r Salad : Deli -c iot:.1 s ~· . ' 'ay BARBARA GlllllONS Whatever it's called, this iype This crisp vegetable nllxture a week. In fact, lt 's better in the -q • Are you a salad-skipper? of salad can be 'deCepttvely seems to profit from a touch of latter part of the week! calorific, if it's m~e with lots of sweetness, but not the eoormous With a crockful or dell.style !Si If so, it ls more likely a matter '.ef1Ume than distaste. Most peo- ., .. ,fle, even those with pudgy «J•Qatebnds, enjoy crunchy salads. ...,.., But· salads need to be made up ~?fresh I<> be at their best. oil and sugar. amounts (750 calories per. cup· salad chilling in your fridge, you Because oil adds mainly ful!)usuallyused.' have1aladonhandforbothlWlch calories and little flavor to deli· We add sweetness and a touch and dinner. No need to skip salad style salad, we've cut way back ol fiavor by using canned apple anymore! on the quantity used in our Slim juice as part of the liquid. Then · EVER-READY I Ordothey? Gourmet a d aptaUon. (Each we further boost the sweetness REFRDIGEEL81·ASTT. 0YRLfi •• •o tablespoon subtracted cuts the with liquid no-calorie sugar sut>. ~ .... There's one type ot salad that Ells from .make-ahead: the arif:Aled vegetable melange ta alternately kflOJ1t'n as tliUltli-aalad'~' "'deli salad" t-ause heaping bowls or calories by llOor 115.) stltute. Don't worry, th~ won't 2-pound head of shredded We Suggest that the small be any tip-off aftertaste in this cabbage amount of oil you do use in this imaginat)ve mixture! 3 cucumbers, slic'ed s@l@.!'.l b~e a ]!i>lr_unsaturated We've purposely made our 2carrotssci-aped.aildsliced choice like corn or samower oil-. -.. ~'u'antities-targe;--beeriS€-this ~=:2 red·ontons;1hiiilf-sttced 1 Empty caloried suear is salad k·eeps welJ in the l~ cups white or.cider. lrinated salad areoft.enserved n the best delicatessen-sty&e another common ingredient. refrigerator for the better part of vinegar ~ restaurants.) '• • • Dandy A_spic Beer a.nd Seafood Aspic, differe'nt .and flavorful, is relatively simple to prepare. This torpato red salad looks elegant when placed on contrasting greenlettuceJeaves. Morsels of rich crabmeat are sprinkled throughout and the mellow brew adds a uni· que taste to the sparklingrmold. Serve with marinated\aSparagus spears and hot biscuits. A dessert of lemon sher be.rt will finish this luncheon off nicely. ' SEAFOODSALAD 21h.cups canned tomato juice ~-1i:cupbeer l staJk celery 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 small bay leaf 1 teaspoon sail JA1 teasPoOn pepper ,. 3envelopes unflavored gelatin 3cup cold tomato juice 1/4 cup vi negar !· . l cup crabmeatOrlobster Salad greens Combine 2¥.z Clips tomato juice. 1h cpp • , beer, celery, lemon juice, bay lellf, salt and · · .'. pepper. s;mmer, uncovered, 10.minutes; m,in. ,' MeanWhile, sprinkle gelatin into cold tomato1uice and vinegar; stir in hot mi:ir.· ture uiltil dissolved. Pour into 6 ntp mold. Refrigerate tomato mixlµre till con- isistency or unbeaten egg whites. Fold in crabmeat. Refrigerate until firm. Serve on salad greens. Serves 6. Tounmold: Run point or small knife around edge of 'mold. Dip mold up to brim in hot, but not boilin g water for 3 second&. Invert serving plate over mold, then turn them over and shake them sidewise. Gelatin will drop out. 'Sup er Idea Beans Blended th~ mushi'oo)ll liquid !ldd -h bolliiig waler to makelcup. Add I<> beans a.nd boll r<lpldly, covere4. wills V. te..,,..,., of Ilse salt unW ~rili» -about 10 ml""*( dioln. ,. Scotch SCOTS """ 80 "0"' ··~~ 0 Sa11111'1 v.o. ... <.,..,,.... s511 ·-· '"" ........ 0 Alci. Ill Age " ""'"" ""~' 1411 """""""' -"'" '"'" ............ o·erown Rune Vodka ·F-:. :::. '8" o Den Carlos Tequila .. ;~ .. ,.'4" o P1dr1 Ml1 Slngria Wine ;::. 11" ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• i Ft-C.C. VINEYARD ': : · lornla Wines 1 ull Oollon!l , OUOGllNO• 11·1· ! •VIN.a!.E #1 • • (HAIUS ! •PINI( : C11AaUS •A. : • _ ........................ ·-· Mort· lliJ: Fnmi ly Discounts! SfRlNGFltlO 15' 12"•25' . ~' ... a OUIU ... -w,·~ .... D r-it •.••••• .., '!· ••.•• , ••• 111•· D -HUmR UIS • .~i:..;,~:-... 1111 0 VO' IW. "y •Old,,;.::..;,;,»~; ·,;l;.)•1· • .,111 •i-O'' ,... •or ~·1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • u. ¥--lb' ~"" "" ,_. IS •Cvt •• ... •CO-•O•lld •*•"Ir;•(-MICfOu • • • • • • • I Playballs ,..;.:.,. 79c 11'°''"... ~ lolJNl ...... IOl!ON Cilppertone · \~ · s11• I'.., •••"' '· V. cup apple Julee lh cupwater / 3 tablespoons polyunaatural· ed ve1otablo oil 4 tablespoons 111.lt Optional : 1 tablespoon liquid sugar subltltute Combine all ingredients In u large non·metMllie bowl. Cover and marinate in the rerrigerator for24 hours or more. Salad Will keep several days and tastes best after at least two days or marinating. Makes about 25 single aervings at '2 calories each. More salad ideas ... Low-cal dressia1S. too! Send a stamped s~lf addressed envelope and 25 cents to ~LIM <;OURMET 'SALll'D-JtECIPES-in-.:are of the Dally Pilot, 50 West Shore Trail, Sparta, N.J . 07871. " -----~ • i.l': ' /, '******************!!*********· • TlllfTJMIT llCOllf IWUMllfq WIU W • • • Op Ml...iAI DAY 10 7 I·•· 8ft 111111DIY. MAY It I.I. 10 .. ~~ ( ~t( ~ WI!" •I)\)~ IOC .. ! I~~~ 11,W.~1 I QI. !ii'!(\/ 1( ~I O'I! "(/""~ *****************"******·***** o Cat-Up Fryers ."':". 55~ · D B .... , ' ""'" 98' , .... , .. ·; .. ·;-. .. .. DTh ' ~, '..... 89' 1gn. • • ~·.,·;-·, .,.,, • .. o Drumlllcks .. ;.,: •• 89~.+ D Best al Fryer ,:; .. ~:, 89~ , ~hlle In a skillet In Ilse buuer, gently coolc •onion ' until eol'den· brownj mix with· the beam. muhrooms, re- m11n1., Ult' end sour cream; relae•t. •M•sa V.,.d• C...tll', Harbor at A~1111, Costa Mesa •13922 lrooldttH"Sf, Gcrci.n .Gi:ctY• . . . . .,. ... """"'' •23111 El Toro, B T6ro • 1308 W. Edl19tft', Santa Ana •5851 Warn'er, H,ntlllflq11,l•a11:1i .l-' I t • I • " I . . . .· . .. • ;; .. .. . . • • . . . . . • •.' .· . Fill Avoca.do . . A · La Fr.a nee LAURA. SCUDDER ·PolAiO CH.PS FILI.EIS INSTANT COHH ctyiTALS CRESCENT"SPAHGIETI'I SAUCE MIX l l/1 oz. blYILO,E By CECILY BROWNSTONE AIMClttfllll ,tfll l"Mllll lf.llllMw Seve r a l y ears ~go when "Feusts· or France" by.Antoine Gilly and Ja e~ Denton Scott <Crowell ) was published, we were al a luncheon given lo celebrate the publication of thecookbook. On the menu was a dish that was the hit of the party -avocado halve.i; (barely warm) with hot tomato filling. The delightful M. Gilly, during his long career in the United States, was -the proprielaire of tw o fa .m ous New York restaurants , and it was not sur· FAB' prising that when he planned the m e nu he· decid ed to offe r somethiD& new, and delicious. AVOCADOS ·A LA . ANTOINEGIU,V 11.i eupolive oil 2 tabl es poons choppe d scallion 16-ounce can whole tomatoes , drained and chopped (111.. cups) 4 tablespoons soft bre ad crumbs , 1;.. cup freshly grate d Parmesan cheese 3 41.Vocados, each about 4 in - ches long . 2 tablelipoons butter, melted GIANT SIZE · EAU.NQ1W•· ~ . . . ~ DETERG~NT 5"1HGF11L.D • . DILL PICKLES FOREMOST SOUR CREAM- MORE ROUSE MUSTARD· CRISCO PIHT CAI.TON OIL 24 OZ. IOTILE • I OZ. IOTil.l .. G. 1.r TALL CANS BANQUET 5 s1 COOKIMG BAGS F , .. • CHICKlN ALA KING 0 • SUCID llfF 5 R •MEAT LO.Af •TURKEY OL Wed~esday. May 21 , 1975 1 :i teaspoon s uit ':i tca ~poon wh1lc)X.•pper In a I-qua rt SaUCl'pan t)eal the 011; add sc.a llion and cook genLly until li mp; stir in tomatoes; sim· 1n cr until bl ended and slightly re-- tlut'cd about S mi nulcs. Add 2 lablci:.poons or the bread crumbs and stir well. Keep hot over ver y low heat . In a cup or s rn ull bowl stir together the remaining 2 tables- poons bread crumbs and the cheese ; set aside. · Cut lhe avoc ados in hair lcnb't l~wisc ;_re move seeds; do not remove the skin. Brush the cut DAILY PILOT CIS • sides Cedges and cavilies) with the butler. t hen sprinkle with the salt and ~pper . Fill the t'l:i Vities with the hot tomato m ixt u 1~c. Sprinkle ,thL• l·rumb <t nd rhl'csl' mixturcevf!nly OVl'rlhe tom;.1to tt;i ix tu1·c. Broil fill ed avocado h alves about 4 inches frorn heat sourc;c just Jong enoug h to br<>Wn lbe top. piog -about 2 m inutes. Serve at once on salad plates with spoons~ Makes 6 first ·l'oursc di1111er servings. If offering as a .main luncheon dis h, use 4 Jare&e avocados with the filli ng given above. . u:s.01ATOES10.i~·c . . . • • • I • ·:.-.,· ··2·r·· '·~ . ' . LL .• .·,·1·9c ~ .. ·c ;i· '": ., : : • • .1 , , I •' ~ ,'. ' . ' . • . . ~' . It ,: l ' .• ' .. ' ~ . ~ ~ Iii ·'' " ;.'I ':' , .liliili, ·• -· 1 : I . ii;; 'l1:11RI , ..;· · ,~. ,~ . ., " ,. ,. . ., ' ' ~. ; . ,,, • 19~ . ' TOOTilPASTE C COLGATE· 79· .HEAD & SHOULDERS SHAMPOO 40...lotffe ' .,.. 1.04 SECRET DEODORANT I~ or I] Or. Dry ,...,... 14 0.. 1.39~ • SAUSIUIY STEAi : CAKES TOW.N . SQUARE YOUR CHOICE REG. 1.09 BIRDS ,4,. s 1· . EYE ci~ ~ · PEAS PKG. R COLGA T·E I 00 MOUTHWASI-! 24 oz. Reg. 1.84 CENTER CUT ROUND !-STEAKS .. ~: BONELESS ROLLED :·auMP ·ROAST S~IMMED & TRIMMED 'BEEF · LIVER . •. 1 6. BARM · • u: BOLOGllA 'SiiiMEAt 1~4! !t~~EAT "~"'"~ ~ _i__..;i_... ·-..i..--,-.-E-E_F__ ~. J......__9---1~ !~~~z~RS L -aAR-M • ----. ----1-. 3-,----t TURKEY ~~BACON • . "BREAST • • • r: · ·'REBATE ,SPECIA DELI SPECIALS .. ARMOUR STAR ASSORTED •• ~UNCH MEA Y.5 . A&L.~iAT • '10 • ~HA-1 ' C ....... ~ ' U¥1R-CHllSI .W OUYN'ICll I · PACllAH l l J . ' • BARGAIN BASKET • C VODKA·~ . , . Giii ............ 3.59 3.99 . 4.89 LB • BOURBON ... ·C 'scOTCH ~ 5.·29 LB. ., f · Mew Store Hours: 8 to 9 Daily Sunday 9-8 .l'rice·s EffectiYe Thursday , thru Wednesday . "4aY 2Z·Z8 OPEN MEMORIAL DAY I 0.7 ,riC•I AIDjKt to lfock Oii MMI We Gladly Acce,.t Food Stamps ' ' t I C:jti DAIL T 1"'11..v 1 Wednesday , May 21, 1975 - • . Pasta Fine, Sauce Risky centrattd, too low in bulk and that reatures pasta in triple but· Italy) to have a sandwich of a high in calori es," he said. ter. small loaf or bread filled with The higher the income, the Keys is a professor e1ncritus al lt's not the pasta but the sauce half a pound of cooked spinach worse the diet, says Dr. Ancel the University of Minnesotu that's risky, he said, adding that with Olive oil dribbled on lt. '' Keys, M internationally known School o f Public Health, a Italians, Greeks and others who· Theyulsokeepportionssmall. raearcher on diet and health. · medical r esearcher, consultant live along the Mediterranean Sea "Pasta still is the main part of Keys thinks most people would to the World Health Organiza· eat Jols of bread or pasta or both the meal, and -there's not much be better off on 8 workman's diet lion UNESCO and th e United and many potatoes and other room for other food aner that." and, specifically, the Mediterra· Nations Food and Agriculture vegetables. Keys haA another two or three nean workman's . Organization. He said they have about the years to go in following a multi· It contains relatively rew high-He and his wire. Margaret; a same intake of starchy (ood as nation heart disease study or cholesterol roods such 'as (atty. biochemist, divide their time people in cooler climates, but lS,000 men. meat.a and dairy products, but a between homes in Minneapolis they use olive oil instead of butter With Mrs. Keys, the doctor also lot of high. bu I k rrui t and and Pioppi , Ita ly , about 100 miles and eat many vegetables high in has written three cookbooks, the vegetables, mostly home-grown. south of Naples. roughage. latest or which is "How to Eat ''Considering the sedentary Ke ys recalled u Rome --"~I is _very common for a WelJ_andStay WelllheMediter- By JEANNE LESEM U~l,9"E.ilw : llves we live, our food is too con· restaurant popular with tourists workman e~tjng on th€ job (in ranean Way" (Doubleday). KEYSES DESCAIBE"OIET ;::_:_:_:=---~~_:__:__~~~~~~--'-'--=------,::-,~--==-----=~~---=-:__~~~~~---=-=-=.E=-===:.:=:.::.:.::---~-:-~- ·Calories? Tapioca Tabbed loatant nonfat dry milt is mor~ easily dis· aolved in water than re· gular nonfat dry milk and, because it mixes a litUe quicker, the instant is often preferred by customers. But bOth typ_e s are equally nutritious, and the produ~ta are often fortified with vitamins A andD. Plentiful supplies, di s- played in supermarkets during May and June, will remind shoppers that economy 'Sod long storage life in the home are additional features of dry milk products. Properly packaged and kept in a cool dry place, nonfat dry milk retains its quality for about six months. LOW-CALORIE TAPIOCA PUDDING 'h cup instant nonfat milk 3 tablespoons quick- cooking tapioca 4 tablespoons s ugar, divided lfi teaspoon sail 134 cups water I egg, separated 3/.i teaspoon vanilla Combine milk, tapioca, 2 tablespoons &ugar a nd s alt in saucepan. mixing well_ Add enough water, stir- ring, to make medium thick paste; sUr in egg" yolk. Blend in r emaining water. Let sta nd 5 minutes. Meanwhile, in small mixer bowl, beat egg white until foamy; gradually beat in 2 tablespoons sugar. Con- tinue beating until sort meringue; let stand with beaters in mixture to be used later. Cook tapioca mixture ever medium heal, stir· ring · constantly, until it comes to a full rolling boil ; remove Crom heat. Start beating meringue; g r adual l y a dd hot tapioca a nd continue beatin g until evenly blended. Remove beaters and cool slightly ; stir in vanilla. Chill thoroughJy. Makes about 3 cups; aP- proximalely five serv· ings, 106 calories each. Hashing It Over We've revived an old recipe Crom Spanish cuisine because it c.ills for little meat. oil SPANISH HASH Large pork chop 4 tablespoons olive 3 medium onions, cut in th ip strips · 1 pound z uc chjni, sliced thin 4·ounce can pimien- tos, drained and diced 8-ounce can tomato aauce Salt and pepper Cut away fat and bone from chop and dice meat fine. Jn a large skillet cook pork lightly in 2 tablespoons of the oil ; push to one side. Add remaining oil and the onion; cook gen Uy uatll onion Is willed liut not brown. With a slotted spoon remove pork and onion. Acid iucchlni lo oklUet: cook unt.il tender-crisp. Relum pork and onion to lltlllet; add remaining illfredlenu. 1BJmmer l.S to 20 [ll!li-.. Serve,wllh rice. •-.v1n1+ • ' Ralphs Meat Master Meats R1lphs Eu;lutl•e -A Blend ol Ground Fresh Frozen -Defrosted B11! 1nd Te•tured Vegelable Protein Farmer John SUper ~Spareribs ,._ .99 ~Burger ,._.49 . U.S. Grade A ~Ralphs Fresh Hen ... 99 ~Turkeys R1lptls or Wll1on Corn King Sliced . ~Bacon ,..58 1 lb. P1ck1g1 ~ ~.;d-e;o;;;~ Roast ,. .• 99 D Ground Chuck .. 1.09 ["~ Fi1stolth1S11son :"'"' 1 98 ~ Fresh Chinook Salmori,; • lb 2.49 lb.1.79 Super Spirits lb. l,89 E11111nP1emlum-12oLCans lb. 1.48 lb.1.39 Graln11elt ~Beer lb 1.29 lb-1.89 lb. 2.29 lb. 1.19 D s;gi.;.;;~·7 Whiskey ·::i 5.99 "-1.19 ~ l;;;p;too Tequila ""' 3.99 1 38 D lfm•odTimo-Sno .00 lb • WoHschmidt Vodka •• ~~~ 9.49 ,._ 1.19 Super Deli lb .. 98 -lb .• 59 Far~ John .. t25 ~Wieners "'· 69 ~ B*1d~ed"rurkey 1b .• 89 ~ v;;an:~>i~'chops ,-,,_ 2.19 ~ v;;ars~ider chops ,._ 2.29 Picnic 8 PatioValues ln1ulated Foam-30 Qt. Sit• Ice o Chests '"' .99 o Fi~~· Paper eups 'O:.'i. .11 D Wlnw1re-H••YJ Outr -Pl11tlc 24 cl 59 Spoons or Forks •'•· • D Gotl'l1m-Assort1dColor1-'hOal.lll• 3 Plastic Pitchers '"' • 8 Prices effective May 22 lhrough May 28 pll9 .• Counlry FreSh Large Grade AA ~Eggs ...... 51 ~ Fi;1'~01P~iato Salad 14 OL .47 [A A1lpl'l1 N1lur1l-Slked 85 ~Swiss Cheese ,.,: • 0~,.;;;~Chipped Meats ,OL .43 [A Non-Dairy r£J Whip-0 Topping '" OL .59 ~ Fbi,~'Pa'rtY ciiPs 8 01. 148 ~ Krift-64 Sin9l1 Slk• Food ~ American Cheese .... 3.89 ~;ft~rine "'-.78 Ralph.s will be closed Memorial Day, Monday, May 26. Ralphs has the selection and the low prices lo make your holiday meals a S.up~r success ... and help keep your budget intact. Whatever you choose, you'll save with our thousands of everyday super low pri ces and hundreds of Super Buys. Check out the savings and a Super Holiday least al Ralphs, the Super Market. Super Bakery Super Produce R1lph1 -H1mburg11 01 First ol th1 Season Hot Dog Yalow ~Buns ~Peaches ~ Firm, Ripe-Medk.nn Sl.zl ~Tomatoes ~ White or W1'111t ~ New Cropj Ve"ow ~Onions D ~emoved All Star ~Bread ""-.29 1011 Super Flowers F1e1h Cut ~Stock '"' ·85 ~ Fi~.:ie Lettuce o c~~c~~t;;s ~ Fresh, Crt1p 87 ~~ ..... bunch • ~ Cabbage ~ Coioff\11 • 97 D Jukr. Thin Sllin ~ Marguerite Daisies """'' • Lemons ~ Mi~:t Bouquets bunch ,97 D R'~t;;Jas Fr11! ltfl'IDn l11t Will! h...:11111 ol f1e11'1 C1>t Flowtfl ... ,._.49 ...... 29 p1rlb, ,17 ... ,~ .16 11ch .15 each· .16 11ch .19 ... lb .• 10 ..... 10 p1r1b. ,10 ------Super Grocery----- Ralphi-12 oz.. C1ns Frozen-Pini! or R19ul1r Sugar Free Ralphs ~Canned Pop. ..• 10 .~Lemonade IOL 14 "" . Light Chunk R1lphs-Fro11n Orange ··,~~.39 ~Juice loL 19 "" . Ralphs Old F11hloned Potato -~Chips Ralphs . ".~.&9 ~Ice cream ,~~.89 Sin F1m11tdo-£J1ttl L1r91 Ground PmadlUpe ~Olives MJB ·,~~ .45 ~Coffee '"· 99 c•n • Health U Beauty Pantry Fillen ~ Arrld XX E1tr1 Dry Anti-Perspirant ... 119 Cln 1 ~;rt;;;~F;~ 11oL 59 bottle 1 ~ ro;;'ihi>aste 701. n lube 1 ~~I NicXrteCPicldes 150L 39 j1r I ~ DlrKt Aid-By Jergens Hand Lotion "" 1 49 bonle • ~Sweet-Hot D09-H1mburg1r Heinz Relishes ·~"-42 jar e ~~la1rg11 20 oz. 1.09 ~R~oe;e, ""· 18 bottle Cln I ~ st\ampoo tor Tin'ted 01 Normal H1lr 12 oz. 2.14 ~ e;;uso;pre Scents .... 29 Milk Plus 6 bottle ..... Frozen Food ~ F;;;e·~ Coffee ... 131 jar 1 ~ Pet-OldF•lhlon ..... 59 ~e~~~Mllk Whipped Topping 1JOL 27 pkg .• c:an • ~ Vin 0. K1mp1-A•10rted V11\et111 7\.'ior. 48 ~ CliH11-~ ca~··"·· Enchiladas ""-53 pk9 .• c:•n • ~ Blrd11y1-l1byllma1or " •• 37 ~~-,;;;ea;·~ ..... 29 Broccoli Spears pllg, I ~ Witt! JmHadon l hatMnlte ..... 59 ~G~nd'~~ Eggo Waffles ,, .. 2 78 pll9, I Clln I .... n•""°'._.,_,,.". "• D ~............ " n''".°"""'' ,..... DR.,. .. __ ,_,,., ... , -· .82 1!£J M1c1ronl & Chee1e ,ii,· ,35 Swe1t Ghetlrilns :.-.19 nl.)Oel Monte Pfckla.• .. ; .37. Gelatln D111ser11 ... DCIH•H~··--•M .. ,._: .22 Diii Pickles -··· ... --n v ... o.•· ... ··-'"'"" •• o"-·--,. o· .. •-l..,..,.. ,.,. nl .... o ......... 0: 1.05 nl.J Chill T1males ,..: .59 SalHn• Cr1cktr• ,::~. •'92 · Freeze Orltdi;offet .., 2.34 l!(J Minute Rice Mhc I ['Jll-O.•o ... ·o-l ... fft ,..,... ot-·-or.,Olholi Tot r:JAloolllllT irtt. l)IM-TH• ~ 1.57 nl.J flth I Chips ..... SS SoHd White Tun1 .. ~ .13 nl.)T1co Shtllt ,.,.. .AS l'£.1Shower Cle1ner ,.et. n-.. .,..._.,_,,._ 11• c ~--u._..... ,... D.....,._...... • n 1-r-'"'°''"'' -.31 a!..!Fleh Dinners ,.,: .75 Tom1to S1uc:1 • ..; .51 S1tttowtt OH ...t: 1.51 l'£.1Llqukl Datergenl n-11oo~··-'-,.,~ rJ!e .... .,_t_..... 11 o--..... r:;w-... •• , ... c ... !.: 2.07 l'£JFl1h FHltta 1 ,. .. 1.H ~Dl1hw11her Detervtnl ,:: 1.311!£.JChttt Detergent ,... 1.31 nl.JRoot htr )I LJICll#--................... M• ~T .. l ... lo I ["Jlllol-.., ...... o-· ....::; 1.02.l'£JVtgtlablet Monterey• .... 41 nl.J P1nc1ke Mis:• .::. , f I l'£JSwttl Cheriy Peppers• ,..; .43 To1n1to ,111e• • .. N LA'"""''"'_ ......... _ ... ,,..: .83 ~Poll1h S•u••g•~ ,,.,, 1.17 tlW -o~ ...... -M .... ~ .H Rond~I• Chnse Spr11d•: .II ·~ h 0""'' ....... ..._.. -• Situ Chuie• ..... 71 ·~ o-... c-1.31 Strint ci,.ese• Tt .;_ 1.S3 •• 0 1-....._ .. ,11 .. " "" .21 Corn Dogs "",.: .ti "Asterisked items not available In the following stores: -.i.-.WJ W U.>~ Ol"""6o. IOll G-..•1 &.-0. ....,_.t/11 ...... ~. _,_., .. ,""-,_,, ... _ ... ...., \H ......... 10'0$Wn_, lH~~ww.,~.,,,Brl _ _,,_,~·1..,. ....... &•<J c-.111!>>1 c,....., ... lH ,,,..... .. OIO Se '"""'ot l11 ...... o,*5 1A&N l11 ......... umw..._,...,_ \11,........>olll w r-~ lH ......... t~ISW H!ilitel lH ......... llO!llWI""'' ............ tJllW!"'<e ... I 81 ,.,., lltO! ~11-.J , __ Oo•o.1J»-....i.lld.. ...... Jl;itlOf,~· .. _i;,.., .. ,.1 _., ..... Cll-1,l.'IJWI~ .... ~••l(I L~ ...... v .. ..,..,iW1 .,,,,,,,,,,,J..,. . ........ , .... ,.,(,_, ... ._ .... ,_ .... r••*'4•1••,r••@+1•-, I ,, ........ ..,r ..... c...,.. 113~ 11 -.. "·~-c..,.. •833 l ·=-79 11 =-' 49 1 I~ ·~~· II fl'mlk• ::_, I I U.lt o...""" •l'Mll O.e CollpOfl ,., Cuttolltlf 11 Lillllt o... ,..tn 11111 On1 eo...,. hr c......., I ... C..,.,. llfectm Mir n lfv--MIJ 2t .II ~ hMthe MIJ 12111fW1f1 Mey. L •• ~'i:r~~~-JL •••••••• J 9901 ADAMS llYO., ~NGTOll ll(AOI l5ol7l S. -lMtsr. WI~ o40l N. lOAIA, -6N2 WAllNfR, HUNTINGTON lfACH STOllE HOURS: 9-10 Daly, 9.9 ~ -, The~ msket wlth·Svp!f !!!!'prices M1P1tS STOllfS Alf IOCAT'!O AT: • 380 E. 17th ST .. COSTA MESA 2.4167 rASfO DE YAUNOA, IAOUHA HIUS 17261 17th ST., TUSTIN " ' , 'I ' I I .. ... ' F •• .. ·-' . • ' • II ~I _ ! \ • Wtdrtetday.M•y21.19'15 DAILYPILOT CJ7 .. Rhubarb: A Vegetable That's Used as a Fruit Thi• cobbler I• 1 unique que, dellclou1 treat U11n1 rhubarb. PINEAPPLE IUIVBABBC088LEB 3 tablHPoODI buuar or mar1artne • a tablespoons em1ohed nour " cup brown 1u1ar 'A teupoon nutmeg Dash s1ilt lcup,w~ter. 1~ c\ip1 rhubarb Melt butter or powder martarine In aaucepan. IA te•1poon 1alt Stir fn flour, 1 U8ar, "4cup1u1ar nutme1, and aalt. Add ~ cup shortening water •nd cook until Mi lo~ cup mtlk thickened, 11irrtn1 COii· Strt to1etber flour, llantly. Add rllubarb and bakln1 pl>wder, aalt, WlO P1neapple. Remove Crom suaar. Cut or rub in heat. Pour Into un· 1hortenla1 until mixture 1rea1ed 2 ·quart lacrumbly.Addmlllcto ca11erole. Top with ·make a ~f\ douah. Turn scone svilrla. out on ·lt1htly floured SCONl'J SWIRLS board or paotry cloth and dough a~out '14 Inch wide. Coil loose~, leav· ta11bout-a 2'..!..ea • Arranae on top of plneapple·rhuba.rb mix· ture wflh tbe ends meet· in& at the center. Bake in 400 de&ree F. oven S5 min utes. Serve warm witbcream. * * * (E.P . Dutton & Co ., $18.~). Thi• recipe utilizing two of the mott colorful and prolltlc fruita of spr- 'in&, Is from the coUec· Uon of personal and very ''American'' dtshe1 lnthe new and handsome volume. 1cup1uear 1 teaapoon Cor· mt.arch l 'h pint s f resh strawberries 1 cup whipped cream .1 teaspoon sugar 1 to 2 tablespoons strawberry juice chunks and place in a casserole; sprinkle sug - ar mixed with cor- natarch over and cover casserole. Bake tor 20 to 2S minutes until rruit is soft but not mushy. Remove rhubarb with slotted spoon and place in cooked pie shell. • halve .strawberries, then arrange them , rounded side up over the rhubarb. . Brush the strawbcr· rie.s generously with lhp s y r up .. l e t t i ~ g it penetrate to the rh'ubarb underneath. Let the tart cool, but do not refrigerate. Ccu&tntlncbplecea) l 'h cups sifted 1~ cup1 pineapple enricbed001io1r knead gently 30 seconds. Roll out tnto long, nar. row 1ttlp, 5xt2x'i-ii . CUt into 6 equal strips of Proof that American food now bJI it1 own identity can be found ID a new cookbook, Amertean Food, by Evan Jon•• RHVBABBAND STRAWBERR Y.TART lO·lnah prebaked pie 1hell Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Melt currant jelly and brush bottom of cooked pie crust with some melted jelly, re- serving rest. Add rhubarb juice to remaining currant jelly and cook over medium· high heat until it rorms a thick syrup. Serve with whippped cream, flavored with the sugar and strawberry ayrup, spooned over in stripes, or piped through a pastry tube over the fruit. chunk• 2 teaoPoOns baking 11'! cup currant jelly' 2 pounds rhubarb Cut rhubarb in large Remove s t ems and Taffy Takes Two This tar/y is a bit sticky to 1tandle durinC the pulllnt. but after it has been pulled it has a perfect soft texture. One person can manage the pulllhg, but it's a lot easier if two people puJI. MINT P VLLTAFFY 2cups su1ar l Y.z cups dark corn syrup · lf.z cup water 2 tablespoon• butter or margarine 2 teaspoons. mint ex- tract In a large saucepan stir together the sugar, corn syrup, water and butler. Cook over medium heal, stirring constantly, until sugar is completely dissolved and mixture· bolls. Continue cooking, without stirring, until temperature reaches 255 degrees on a candy thermometer or until a· small amount of mixture dropped into very cold water ro r ms a boll thot is plastic but hard enough to hold its shape: Remove from heat. Stir in mint extract. Pour into a buttered 9 by 9 by 2 inch cake pan. Let stand uqW cool enough to handle. P.ull until taffy has a satinlik'e finish and a li1ht color, then pull into long, lh·inch wide.!ilrips. With a kitchen scissors: cul strips crosswise into l ·inch pelces. Wrap each piece individually in wax· paper and twirl the ends. Makes about 1=44 pounds. Qu antity Meal's Sauced A six-serving version ot a popular main dish. POLE NT A CASSEROLE 1 cup yellow corn· meal 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup cold water 21f.i: cups boiling water 1 cup grated cheddar cheese Me at sauce, see below Mix cornmeal, salt and cold water ; gradually stir in boiling waler ;. cook, stirring constantly, until thickened ; cover and over low heat coOk, stirring a few limes, un- til very thick -about s minutes more. Off heat, stir in 1Ai cup of the cheese. Turn into shallow 2·quarl baking dish ; cool. Cover and chill until firm. Top with Meat Sauce._ Bake in a ·350-degree oven about 25 minutes; ' top. with remaining cheese; bake s minutes lbnger. Makes 6 serv- ings. Meat Sauce: Sk~llel· cook 1 pound ground beef; add a 15-ounce can tomato sauce, lh cup, chopped onion, 1 leas· poon each salt, su1ai'1 . celery salt and oregano; simmer tor 10 minutes. Dip S,tars 'gll•· dipping mlxtun 11 excellent with crlsp v•1etable relishes. Blend arated Swiss cheese, canned deviled 'ham, Cataup an,d chopped toaoted walnuts YOll' htMtiy frll •· 111 Hot dogs, hot dog /J and eva ,;,g else at Everyday low Prices. ._. .. _,....,.,._ __ ...-rma&111191 ._ ,_ •«IWNlD lllUllW,..,_. N • lflmlft -ci a11.,....,.,..., ............... .., ... _.,.,,,111,..,...., ... ,zn1.191s··. Al our m11t is "BONDED" for qllllity llld fllVllr. ~~::k~~~~.69~~::~~~:~28c . ~~-~ (!!~!~68~B~-~'.9.~. ~~-~ •• LB 148 oAHunt's Pork & Beans39¢ ..... . . . ... ·····~- Arm Pot Roast o-+Cut Green Beans 25¢ OIAMOND~ .••..•.........................••............ 160l~N .LB 1 48 80NEL£SS, BEEF CHUCK ••••..••.•...••••••.••••.• ~~C~.~~--~~~~.! ................ LB 88¢ ~Cottage Cheese · 115 LAOY LEE ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..............•..••.••••... 32 OZ CTN 7-Bone Roast 98¢ BEEF CHUCK .............. : : .. .":: :::-:;. :·: ••••..•. LB Canned Foods ••• .-4 Piii .. ~~ Y~•.s ........... .,ozCAH89o Ex.Lean. Or.Beef u AnySlnrockot-........... LI 1 Round Steak " ao11on.~.1eet ...•... t11 · Corned B•ef lodr '" st ltlllk•l.,olnll, (lovnd 1.37 lb) Lt 1 !.'!' ... ~!!."!. ......... : .ll 111 Peeled Shrimp 11 Cook.cf, M.dluni Sl1• ••.•.••. LI 1 Punt Pork Seuallfl• 0 JrmmyDeM ···~··•·12.0ZPKG 98 .-4 ~~!!!D,~!,EE.JS .......... 11 OZCAN31 O .-4~.ni.~~G,lA~_C_E ........... 11ozi11.590 ~°.~E·H·O.~SE ~ U~!~~°. ...... ,. oz ,.,450 · ... ~~~L~K-~. "°'"'"950 .-4 ~Y .~~~-R.M.1A.RE~l ~~ozJA11 82~ of4~~.~~~~.°.ll~~~OZCAH 45• .-4 ~~~v'!.U!,N~!Bu:".:E,R.,OZJAA1 71 .t< \VE~CH _lllA.l'EJ.ElLY ···· ,,0;,..,950 .-4 Al'l'l:~!l~E, Appl£~A~C~40 oz,.,89C ~::::=~~::::~uitTuic°E":: "'NK ................................. OZCAH Cron Rib Roeat " loNIMt, leefChudl ltolled .. l l 1 Cut HMn Sllcea 1 Smoked Silua11111 ot C«.ler,f1tllyCookM ........ LI 2' Former John .•••..••••...••• Lt 1 ,r. !~.~~0.1.ET ~~~.81:. 11ozCAN 14• .t<SEYEll UP BEVEMIE 121 llX PACI( •.•.•.•.•...... Y •...•..... 120ZCANS ri" LA°.Y .. LEE..F~_U!T ~(ll;~Al~oozCAH 370 Top Round Steak 11 IOMl9tt.1Hf •..•....•.••.. LI 1 Fuly Cooked Ham'";;'°'' Lady Lee Bacon 11 wt.oi.. Cur•ll &O.tor May•rll 1 S11c.d ............. , .. l·lli"KG 1 Top Slrloln Steak 1 · ton.Int, IMfloln .......... L1 2" YoUng Turkeys 0 Slleed Bacon 11 USOAGl'Od.A, 10-13 Lbt • , .. ll 69 HOOl'l•I, l1!Grod. .•... 1-l lPKG 1 Packaged Goods ..• ~-~~ ... ~~~~ .... · .. 2u Young Turkey . 480 HlrldquMlen, IJSOAGr•A .ll Slk:ed Bacon 1,, OtcorMGy9t (Thin 12-011.41) LI !&~.!,E!,~rc.E~£AL ............. IOZ '°' 81 0 .-491A~l~.R-~_C.11AC.~~~·"°''°"81 o ... BELL IRAllD POTAlll CHIPS 770 Pet Foods •••. .,..~~1i:r,r.,o~e Fo~_o········'""°' .. ,290 .,...~~,;~~~N 1)1)~ F.DOD ,.;,,,.. 121 _P~RR A LLT~~~ ~~r.Fo~~--'°' .. " 180 Household hems .•.. .... ~~lX~!X~~~l'll.1.N.8 ... 1 .. C1P1<G 45° <t'" LADY l£EAL~~IN~~ ~0 ~""""790 <t'" CHIFFON_ !~lllEL.S ......... 11.,, ""-' 520 ?J~~.STY~~~~~~ CUP~·-·· 5'C1PKo 45o ~/,~~ P~.PE~ P':A!E.s ......... 100C1PK•980 ~~A,~f OAL BRIQU ei:s ......... '~" ••• .101 ,·"~j " '11SCOUNT Cf::NTER TWINPACK .......................... tOZ"G Dairy Products • • . • of4~~·~E, ~Alls~~A~~~~ ... 590 LA~~ .L.EE_~°.8.U.~r. .............. 1ozC1•270 .,...~~~c:A~=~~oiii"°'"• 1•• LA~~ ·L·E~.V'.".'1'1'1~.a. ~~£A•. •0•CTH 420 ir, iAilAt iiiA i:oiia wiii liicE''"0390 LADY LEE 1ST QUALITY BUJT~~CTH 840 .r .................................... OLBIAG 111 . ······································· ..-sPAGHml SAUCE llX 450 Fl'Ozen food! . .. . . LAwAY'i ............................ :tozl'Ko SPRINGFIELD LEMONADE 37• ... AN!~~~~ ~~A_BH_Ef!1 .... "°'"""790 ;GiNO~sc iiEese iiinA"·· "°' .. "95,, se"•nfll!s -Spirits •.. · ............. ····················"°'"'" __.DAVIESS COUNTY BOURBON 911 fl"' PtCTSWEETYE6ETA8LES 89~ •"'°°' ....................... WM.FGAL1n """"""·······················-''oz"• .-4 CAllAlllAN LORD CA LVERT 511 · of4 HASH BROWN POTATOES 920 -KY'"""'°" ................. ou.<AT111. OM.c>A ............................ ""'""0 llALLD CHAil.iS BLANC WINE 21• of4 HAWAIAN PUNCH DRINK . 590 ......... : .................................. 0 ... 1111. COllCENTAAn ···················"°'""' !;!ICKY LABER BEER 1" '1'4 ~!rf!~ ~~~~~ .~.~.1~.~ .. 12 oz OAN 39~ u~V: A~AiLA'BLE ·;.r ·snJAES'WiTH ·i:ici~oz~~ PWTJ( PllCJllll DICllllll 2().ql. .-nlnt ,,....., ... bvlll In le• culK ,.tolMr. S.011 lifht . ..._lortH Deli ffllms . . . . lt~!,,~~-~IP ..................... 1ozc,_42o X~~T f'.OTA!~ .SALAD ........... »oz er" 790 ~~!-'!.~~.~~~~KS ········ .11oz><o 111 OSCAll llAYER SLICED BOLOGNA 101 • V.fJllETl!EI ••..•..•.•.....•....••....... 12 OZ PKG OSCAll IAYER LUNCHEON IEAT 141 i~ .. ~!E~S"IU°K1fu~~~::: 12. ~~!~~JRKR.A.~T . ··"°' ,..,9&o of4BRID8EaJRD PEPPER LOAF 520 st.ICED .............................. 4 OZ PKG ~J~ _ LE_E_ ~~ER1c·A·N· .c".E~~~ oz ... ao GALLO SLICED PEPPERONI 750 . ........................................ 30ZPKG ~,LAJ.Y.'!~J~0C~EA~ CH.EE~~"'" 21 o Heert/J and Beauty Aids ••• ' NICE I EASY HAIR COLORING 111 iiAi~f1~f.iJ P ·s .. ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·. · ... ~.·-·.· .. ·.· ~: 990 !,~P~SHB~!f~N ..ioz 111 s_c~.1.c.K. lfl:I E.~_oR ~~°.E_s.... . . "1 01 c_o~.T~~---······· ........................ ,., 111 IN THE ,AST 4 WEEKS WE'VE REDUCED' HUf'<.IMIOS OF ,llCU. WOllD-WIOE PRICES HAVE DECUNED ON IA.SIC INGllDIENTI SUCH AS WGAR. FlOUl ANO Oil. RESULTING IN lOWll COSTS TO Us ON HUNOIE05 OF CANNED ANO 'ACKAGED FOODS ... AND WE'IE COHSTANTlY PASSING THESl SAVINGS ON TO YOU. the finest qcwllty ptOduce avrir&le ... ~!':i·~.~::!1)11~ ..... J!89° ~=~!~ul V•tobt. ............ la 19 C ~~~-:.~,.,~-~ ~8.';.88° P•'!"lou• App1ea 33 o '1netf, E•lrl Foney, All ,utpoeeGold.n ..... ll "''"sac l·Z IOIL Plll lSSOtlTllllll' YOUR $qi.lot• Colt• ,.,,., lolll ,OM, CHOICE '"'"' Coko ''"'· ... '°" 99"' '°" Of Pi. ,.,., II~ Mhc '¥' FOR ALL'GENERAL MERCHANDISE ITEMS Colt• Ponl. 324• "'-~·&It 3n ··-·-·--.... __ ·-"'--- ·---·-._ .... ,, ... ·--·--· --· --- ........ , to a qiustard-llke con· sl1tency. Serve as an :: petl1erorcocktallsna ~ ~. . ca1114a,111t. ···'" _ _,,_ -I rJtw.u,,,_ .. ... .......... ca. .. ... --••tUMMA- 1 ........... --llln .,. '""" '''"._...,.. ........ JllQ . "'' &fl.Mita ,,.,... •m CAMI' ...... , U, •ti ~-· u. ............ wn. -••t.owa. ..... ......... ...... w •. -----..... ... 7 ,..,. ......... ,. ....... .... ........... Ul_Mll_ n..' -'' , ...... 'ut a few word• to work for u. ..... , ...... ___ , .. ·an4-.11•-"'9. ---SlttM.-lflln I - .. .. '• •• " ·.! . ' . ' ., f, •.l " _, '• •• . l ., .. J , ., ' } ., '• ;.~ ·1 u o} '' ·- . ·' '1 •. ·I ... .. , . "" •• "' ·'• .I , •I 14 I ' • ' • - • • ... • f ~· • '. • Everyone wants somethin.g different tq serve w.ith ·coff.ee. Peanut-studded Spij;e· C'ake is re-C.omrri~enqed! Spice Coffe~:. ·~our I Americans love their coffee - t J;ight or black, regular or decaf· feioated, hot or iced. Sometimes it's lea or chocolate, and always r j!'s.something else besides. r· _, Suggested here is Peanut Spice Cake, a moist tube cake laced with peanuts, cinnamon and { spice and topped with a luscious , Cream Cheese Frosting. A • sprinkling of chopped peanuts gives the cake added flavor and " . I " texture. PEANUT SPICE CAKE 2 cups unsifted nour 21h t easpoons baking powder ~ 'h. teaspoon baking soda 1;" teaspoon salt 'h teaspoon ground cin- namon ' El~gant ·Treat's "~asier Pols de creme au Chocolat is an elegant custard cream originat- ing in Fraric~. This luscious treat is usually served in small pot de creme C'\fPS with covers or d e mitasse cups. The original pot de creme was a very com- plex recipe or blended egg yolks, heavy cream and vanilla or orange flower water. Several years later , the chocolate version was in· vented. Now with the aid or a blender and semi-sweet real chocolate morsels, the simplified version can be made in minutes with very little work re· quired. Excellent as gifts or party ravors , thi s gourmet delight, with its fine flavor and texture, becomes a grand finale for any occasion. ELEGANT & EASY POTSDE'CREME Si.x·ounce package Cl cup) ·semi·sweet real chocolate morsels 112 of 11 'h ounce package milk chocolate morsels 112 cup sugar 3eggs l cup hot milk Jn blender combine semi·sweet real chocolate morsels, milk chocolate morsels, sugar and eggs. Pour in hot milk and blend on medium speed until mix· lure is smooth. Pour into 8 pots de .,i:reme or demitasse cups .and chill seveial hours. Garnish with whipped cream, if desired. Always keep under refrigeration until ready t.o serve. Shope Revised Buttermilk biscuit mix is \\'hat makes this re- cipe ready on short or- der .. When mix ed with sharp cheddar cheese, egg, milk , a nd a touch or mustard, this blend pro- duces a finely textured bread in an unusual shape. QUICK CHEESE BREAD 3o/.c. cups package buttermilk biscuit mix 11.1.t cups shredded natural s ha rp cheddar cheese 1 beaten egg l v~ cups milk . th teaspoon dry mustard Sesame, poppy, or caraway seed Preheat oven to 325 degr ees t_. Grease, generously , a glass· ceramic l lh-quart bak· rini dish (7 by SW by 3 in· '<hes). In large mlXlng l\')wl, mix al! ineredlents just to bleod. Beat1vigorouSly tor ooe mlDute. Pour into prepared P•I'· ·Sprinkle ·aop with H1ame poppy, or caraway .sud. , <- ' ' 1;. teaspoon ground nutmeg 1;. teaspoon cloves in cup marg~rine, softened . 1 cup sugar 2.eggs .Add dry ingredients alternate· ly with milk, beating until well 1 blended'. Stir in 'hi cup, peanuts.' Pour into 'greased and noured ---'O.inch-tube..p.aL -...... -. - Bake at 375 degi;ees F. 45 ~ I},, cup molasses l cup milJc 1h cup chopped cocktail peanuts minutesorUntildone.Coolinpan r-=~~;;~~~~~~~:;;:::;:;~======-~~~~~~~~--.. iiiil;;:ll~--~~;;~: for 10 minute's . Remo\refrom pan and complete cooling on. wire rack. When completely cooled frost top and g8rnish with 2 tablespoons chopped peanuts. , .. Cream Cheese Frosting (re- cipe below) 2 tablespoons chopped cocktail peanuts Sift flour, baking powder, soda, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves together. Set aside. In large bowl, cream ma.rgarine and sugar together. Add eggs; beat well. Blend in molasses. • Hoffy 5 Lb. Canned ' Cream Cheese Fr~ting·: in s mall rTiixer bowl cream 1 package (3 -0unce) creain cheese, 2 tablesi>oqnain.argarine ancY 1 teaspo(>n. yanilla extr~t toge!hot: Gradually add 2 cups confectioners• sugar. Beat uitUl crea~y and well blended. U.S.D.A. Choice Beel CHUCK • • \!• Qualily Sliced PORK Springfield Granny Goose HAM STEAK ROAST HAMBURGER POTATO 6.99ea. 9~. ' BUNS CHIPS :I .29LB. ·~ Qz. Beg THAIF·T.PAIC f1'ESH 4 Iba. Of U.S.O.A.atoa BEEF 80NEl£SS 1 49 LARGE l.OtN 1 29 GROUND BEEF ..... ~..... CHUCK FAMILY STEAK , LB. PORK CHOPS.................. , LB ~ ~o;;::r o.c..o ...... . 9 ... FILETolTURBOT ............. LI. o.AU....,BOLOGNA....... , U.S.0.A. CHOICE BEEF CEHTEll CUT 99c U.S.D.A. CHOa BEEF BONEl.ESS 1 49 . LOIN ENO 1 29 CHUCK ROAST ................ . LI. CLOD CHUCK ROAST .... , LB. PORK LOlN ROAST ........ , LB. GORTONS2LB.BOX . ·• 4 39 KIWT D<W""....,.. ·3 79 ASHSTICKS ..................... -1, ' CHEESESUCES ...... 31/lo. , U.S.O.A. CttOICE BEEF BONEl.ESS 1 49 U.5.D.A. CHOICE BEEF BOtE.ft. 1 49 FRESH PORK 79c CHUCK ROAST ........ 1_... , LB. ROUND RUMP ROAST.... , LB. SHOULDER PICNIC ......... LB. A$H'&CHIP$~~ ................ 1.09 ~Bis'Corrs .... .8i1 .00 WIS. PAIJTS 14 OL FAlllY SIZE 1· 09 P!N I QUU I OZ, CTM. 4oc FRIED ASH AlET ........... , 'ASSORTED DIP MIXES.... . . :I . . ' 3c """'~" U.SO>. """'-1 39 DUllUO\IE 5 LB. 8 59 LB, BEEF STEW..................... , LB. CANNED HAM ................ , · u. Cri sp Fresh ROMAINE LETTUCE · 15~A. CABBAGE ................................................ 1 oc LB. U.S." 1 OC WHITE ROSE POTATOES ..................... Le. LARGE NUT UKE 4 F $1 00 FLAVOR ARTICHOKES............... ~ , ~RESH GREEN 29C BROCCOLI ............................................. LB. rw.;:•rMB, 1 COUPON l , ________ .. ' a.u-of 1111...1 Yolum• pvrc:h. .. • Of 1N1rtuf•c:twllf'1 fwmporary promotion.I elow•-. wftM tMy leri • • • • •• WE SELL THDI LOWEii! YOUR FAVORITE •~"°"• .49 A-1 STEAKSAUCE ......................... 10~'°""'85 16 oi. PKG. . · ,,. , · 5 9 . CAMPFIRE MARSHMALLOWS ................... . 28 oz. CAN 69 B&M BRICK OVEN BAKED BEANS ............ . 10 oz. CAN GEBHARDT ' . 2 CHILI HOT DOG SAUCE iwJMEAr................................... 7 32 OL JAR . . 39 SPRINGFIELO MUSTAR b ............................ ·• 8 oz. JAR TASTER'S CHOK:E 2 79 FREEZE DRIED COFFEE......................... • 7 OL CAN REDot WIP • 79 REAL CR EAM TOPPING .................. ; ........... . t~ oz JAR. ' 39 HEINZ RELISH·AHn-................................. . & oz. CAN SPRINQAELD MEDtlJM 41 PITTED RIPE OLIVES ................................... . '6 OL JAR EARLY CAUfOAHh\ 89 POLISH OR KOSH ER l!ICKLES ................. • 22 oz. BOTnE PALMOl.IV£ 69 LIQUID DISH DETERGENT .............. •~."'"" • 2 BATH 5'ZE BAAS 59 LIFEBUOY DEODORANT SOAP ....... ""·"'"• 1'0<BO~ 3 '1 00 PR GFI LD CATsUP ........ ,............. I • -SPRINGFIELD NON·DAIRY WHIPPl;D ·OPPIN 'G. 10 OL tub 49c · 18 OL PKG. STOKLEY'& 6& MENU-MAKER VEG ET ABLES .................... ;I 20~BOXCELm< 1 59 CHEESE PIZZA......................................... • 9 .. 0PiES~ ...... ?!~~c;;.~ ..... , ....... 1.19· CAKEi:.~.~.~~-.. ~~~~T.89c. , ~-·-··-~-. · ... .. Sprlngfleld ...... Spo logliold "SUGAR 99.! Manhattan TASTY TENDER WIENERS A§,9.P~av~rs , ... CITY 0.1\ll IO. ,,,. llACH ILVO. 12 oz. Pkg. 59~ ' , ... ,.,. 12 Oz. c.n. 1 .. 0 TORRANCE . , WOODLAND HILLS ·-• VICTORY ILVO. .... HAWT.....a 111111 A'fS. ;( Bake for 55 to 60 · mlaatet. Cool 1ll1hUy lle(ore 11lclnf. Makes -loal. AT CAAOll:NOlllO\lt'a1.vo. a CITY DftlVI IO. MOH.11 .. .,.IA.T.fl•f luJrlOAV 1•M>·t COl'INllt 01' llM:H ILVD: • OllANCltTHO"'I ltOillll HOUfll .,... ........ , ...... . llMO ....... . 10. &fltlSTOL I AT OIU&TO\.a IUH,LOW'lfll Mon. ttlru S•I. 9:30to9 s"". 1010 • p.m . ~n MemOf"lal O.y CHATMOlltH AVI . ~ AT CHATIWOl'ITHa 1:1 ft- STOAI HC>Ufll ...... lhfll fri, 10 ... tel.t0•7......,,t •• COatllllllOfll vtCTOAY • CANodA AV(, MON .... ffU.ltel ...... IUN,tte7 ATHAWTHi:IMM •llf'Ulvt'oA ltTOillll HOWM , MOH. """MT.lt•MtJ)O ...,,.,.. ,, .. l, l i ' .. , ·. . . DAILY PILOi' ~;: A HOME! $33, 900! This Newport Vista 3 bedroom home has an'llJ)ple pie kitchen an exp1fns1ve living room with H massive eu'stom stone fiifJ't)lace'. Jts on an estaJe sized yard with ocean breezes & minutes to . beact}. eall quick 546-2313. -CUTE AS A BUTIOH! !\eat as a pin ! 'fhis dc!ighth1I home has 3 bedrooms, fan1ily room 13"' baths. Sc<·ludcd dining a rea overlookint.: rolling g ret.·n lav..'ns. lush greener.\' 11nd l.'t1lertaincrs patio. llidea"•ay t•ourtyard for faniil y to ron1p and pl<.iy . Alt the 1>rivac.v of the country right .here in the t'ityt Bring the whole ramily to sec this one. Won't last at S<l,2,93<1. €all 54ti·2313. FHA REP<> $34, 900 Take advanutle ~ his Joss your gain on lhi& 3 tiarm 2 bath home! $1750 'l'OTAL DOWN! Walk to beach, s~hooJs and 11hoppin_J! PJiced below market! Of£ered (or very limitt.od time. Don't wiat for thi s opportunity -it's knocking! CalJ for quick appt. 847-6010. ASSUME 71/2°/o LOAN .$199 MO. PAYS ALL 1lmmaculate 2 11,.year y~ng 3 bdrm 2 story with unbelievable financing ! Owner leavi9g area -s11ys bring any offer ? Take advantage or sparkling kitchen, fresh as a nowl'r paint and deep pile carpetin~ -u sunshine home - just for you? t'or appt. to ~ee call 847-0010. ·woRK OUT OF YOUR LIVE IN Hafd to find double use residence. Only one or its kind on market. $36,000. Call now & save. 646-7171. A WEDNESDAY SPECIAL FOR THE D'OCTOR 1'his has it all and it"s on the private Mesoa Verde golf .cou~e &!Country Club Greens -fairways -trees & ponds at .your back door. forrruJl dining room, billiards sized family room plus a trophy room or den -children's ~i.n& _ with playroom. 4 gi;1nt bt.."<.lroon1s & 4 baths. it 's an ~xtlusivc al only 5134 ,950. Call 546·2Jt3. I SPOIL HER \\.'ith this absol utely i..:orgcous Arist0<.·ratid l\1esa Verde 5 bc.'tiroom ramily home v.·lth walk-in wet bar and separate lauodryroom. There are three firePj.ices includ ing muster bedroom -(:;as barbecue too. Close to l\lesa VetuC Country Club and Costa Mesa Cd~try Club. and neighborhood park. It '1 air conditionOO, where you don't nt>ed it. This '>1.'ill be gone before you know it -.at S93.500. Ca ll toni ght! 546-2313. 2 STORY CHARMER 3 BR-POOL BEACH -$29,900 Classic entrance to large family s ized living room with ARTISTIC use or shutters & wood throughout. Formal dining room is conveniently served by large gourmet kitchen. 22' stepdoWn family entertainment center. Stairs s "·eep to elegant master suite & children's quarters. Take over 7 1 ;.•;~ 1-~l-IA lottn. NO NEW LOAN COSTS . 520.300 bal. mus t s11<.'rific<'. llurry! Call 963-7881. "NEGLECTED" 4 BR-2 ·STY-POOL BEA.CH -$28,900 Purklike approach. large famil~· sized living room. Gourmet kitchen + dine. Sweeping stairs tn se1><1rate master & children.s suites. ·rake over 9'4 l-'l-4A lo11n. KO N 1-:\V LOAK cos·rs. S267/month pays a ll. l·IUHRY for this BAHGAIN -sacrifice. Bring paint & mukc SSS. Call !.163-7881. $1900 TOT AL DOWN 4 BDRMS + FAMILY ROOM Price slashed! Owner desperate! This s harp 4 bdrm and lar1e spacious fami ly room needs a· FAMILY! Quiet cul·de·sac lowering pines -walk to schools and shoppin'g! llurrY 'call 847-6010. BIG BEAUTIFUL $42.500 Sharp as pin. Enlarged li1•ing room + dining area seats 12. + 17 x 20 riesta room . Crackling fireplace . ., VERY gri;_icious living for just $1,250 do~·n. Ca\16-46-7171. And a Jwpp)'..,Jaomc lo .Ji\'C. Jn. JI Wt,! bed.roorns, 1·holee-Qf-two master suites. It '~ in the So,u,th Cou.sl .s hoppj'ng community -Cosl11 Mei1a schools -usl placed on the m&rl\et t'or the lat ttme ul on ly ~.950 ~ Cull 4uick S46·2313. 2 STORY CH~!-4TICLAIR BIKE TO BEA.CH WALK TO PARK This 5 year-younJ,C 4 bdrm net.'"Cls a family for its sunsHine kitchen, warm r11mily room and super formal dining room. 4 huge bdi'mli. walk to park with boating and fishing.1 Owners transferred. and need qui ck sa le -take advantage. ·Call 847-0010. TRI-LEVEL BEACH4BR ASSUME $23,250 Prime area. Dramatic entry toe~ga"nl liv· ing room wi th enormous stone rir1eplace. V.'ifc saver >.1H rden viev..· kitchen. Dipe. Ball . room sized ritmily room overlooks covered dance .Pavilion & lush grounds. Sweeping stairs to second story suites including huge hideaw;i)" master. Take over 5~~%-FHA. f'>o1) N !-.:\\' LOAN COSTS. S245 mo. pays a ll. o~·ner rnu:>t sacrifice. 1-lurry ~ Call9t53-7881. $1900 TOT AL DOWN $39,950 Divort·e forces sale of this 3 bdrm charmer with sparkling kitchen huge bdrms and sunk en living room, quiet neighborhood within walking distance of schools and s hopping~ EXCELLENT FINANCI NG! Seller says hurry. Can 847-6010. ASSUME $35,500 $335 MO PAYS ALL 5 BDRM+ POOL 2400 sq. rt. or comfortable Calif. living highlighted by gourmet kilt·hen, formal dining for cntert<tining and huge family room! A harbeque/ size backyard with sparkling pool and lowering pines~ Can't miss with EX C EJ.l.~NT financing and seller says bring a n offer ~ liurry ! Call 847-0010. THE CHARM! Begins at the front door. Elegant, spacious 5 bedroom. 3 b:.iths. large family room with fireplace & "·et bar. huge master suite. rorn1al dlnin~. Situated on quiet street in presligious neighborhood in i\lesa Verde .. Just reduced S3000 in price for sale this v..•eek. Phone 5"16·2313 for additional info and appointn1ent. PRIVATE PIER $139,500 Outs tanding entertainment . Center. gourmet kitchen. covcrOO lanai, spacious livin~ room. & priv11te dock '>l.'ili hold 2 boats. Call 646-7171 . S&SLAMER SA.'lE_'lH.O_USAHDS GOrl(COO!I Park Huntln~OO-'2900 Sq. ft. formal living und dinine. Spacious family roo1n ;,i;nd g.arden kitchen. l'ri\•atc guest suite. S"'·eeping s tairs to set·ludcd n1a !\t cr .;ind children 'i; suites. 000 SQ. F'T. UOXCS (;Al\l t-: R00!\1. $40011 BEL()\\' t>l:H L,.\.'}'I' 01"£. C:ill today! %3·6767. USE VA MESA VERDE HUGE POOL No money down plus elegance of "'rought iron renced yard ""ith ijas li~hling ror1n al entry hall. True 1ri level overlook.~ sunswept patio, 9' deep pool, huge diving hoard. Will go VA at only $7~.950. Call 646-7171 . CASA GRANDE SURROUNDINGS OH THE WEDGE Short walk to lhe surf fron1 "1'il E V.'EDG~." Extra large corner lot. !\car to bike trail. Secluded entry. Sunken parlor. 1-IUGE ll.UMPUS ROOt\-1 \\'1'1'1-1 VI ET HAil. Giant garden kitl·hen . Formal dininp; room. Kings n1 aslcr s uite . l\.1AMMOT11 PARTY ROOl\.1 . Separa1e wing to family bedrooms. Room ror BOAT & CAl\.1PER. Ov..·ner musl go -take advantuge call 842-2335. RAMCH ESTATE 4 !JR -2 STY -BEACH ASSUME -$33,000 Commanding corner location. Secluded ery.ritnce. Large fainily size living room "fllh massive store fireplace. formal banquet sized dining room. lluge country s tyled kitchen : Separate "'ing for llideaway master suite. Sweeping stotirs to childrens ,& guest qua'rters. Seller motivated. Take over 7'"~-VA loan. NO NEW LOAN COSTS ? S2951mo pays ull. 1-'irst to call gets this BARGAIN. ~-7881. CORONA DEL MAR SELECTIONS WITH PRIVATE BEACH Lo\·e ly o n e s tory· brick colonial. Spaeious four bedroom 11lus family roon11ion1c. Secluded corner lot '>l.'ilh 1imple room for s"·immin~ pool. It 's a new lisling so call us quickly. G73·855U. FOR THE LARGE FAMILY Custom buill Irvine Terrace. 3 bedroom plus convertible den. Great ramity home on FEE ldod. In tlp-(op condition with quality construction. An easy to care for yard which includl!:S sparkling heated and filtered qooJ and badminton court. Call 613-8S:JO .• GREAT TAX SH~i;,TER CORONA DEL MAR Price reduced to sell oo this super triplex one bloek from the beach. Owners unit "'ilh \'ic'>I.', firepl<ICI:'. built·ins and bean1ed Cei lin.E:. 1'\\"0 additional income units 1nake this Corooa del Mar's best jncomc property buy at $119.500. fi73·85b0. FAMILY HOME PLUS INCOME CORONA DEL MAH . Almost nev..·. Custom biiill for present owner. Five• bedroom home. Two blocks from the beach. ~eparale dining room Plus s paeious r~lly roon1. Tu·o bedroom r~ntal In refr uni~. Call 673-8550. THE EASY LIFE Coml' take a look al this attractive three bedroom home. In spotless condition and '>l.'ith minimum upkeep. 'l'op grade 1>anelling, wall paper. and car~ting . Convenient to tennis courts and s wimming pool. Prict.-d at ~72.500. Call now OiJ-8550. INEXPENSIVE YET EXCELLENT t'ORONA DEL l\IAR DUPLEX -L"·o identical units -open bean1ed ceilings -each has its own patio -2...., blocks rrofu beac h -great starter for inl'f:ime, only $62,500, {'al\ 6i3·~. SUPER EASTSIDE $4,700 BUYS IT Uri~ht !>UIUl} k1tl·hc1l, lat·,i.:l' 1l1uin~ arc:•. f1rc1Jhu·c Jubt ~7Ul1 dl'.1\\11 and its yours. Heller hu rry and c;1ll (j,H.i-7171. VA TERMS EAST SIDE COSTA MESA CR\1 is in. OK for -Vt!I IM.•rt•hast-. 3 bedroom I '!! haths, hard·wood noors. C<'ll no~· 646-7171. BEACH VILLA 4 BR+ 2 STY - POOL ASSUME $26,800 Parklike g round:. cnh;uu:c furn1:.d double duor t<lllry l.;1r1-:t" fan1dy SIZl'd li\'ing roont. Fnrn1;1/ dining rooni . ga rdt:'n vil•"" kill'hl'll. F1t::>t;,i pal"I) room overlooks walled ~ou rtyard . · Dr:un;llil· stair!> to clt:gaul rna:>tl·r & ehildrt•n "s :>Ull (•s . ·r o1ke O\"('f T', \':\ lo<1n''.'\O ~~:\\"LO~\'.'\ CflS'l'S. S:!-11'! 111.·r 1n11. pa.\"S all. ,\Just :-.:1l·nl"i1·l·. llu•T.\: Call ~J-7881. PRICED SLASHED 5 BR + LAND BEACH Rambling ;; lie <trooni. 3 hath. 1"0 story. F'or1nal entry, sunken 1lv1ug room. Enur1nous party.game room with fireplat'e. Gla::.sed in gourmet kit c hen . Exlcns 1\'C patio and \\·ander_iu i.: 1Jri\·;1ll.' gr ound.'> liousckccpcr:> qu ;1rtcr.~ St•J1;.i1"«\L' children ·s 11·i11!! <.ind hidl-.1\1;.n· 111;.i"ll'r suite. \\'alk lo hc:1eh . .lu:-.t $'"1i5o dul'>'ll . See "it now~ C:.ill ~ti3·ti'iti'i . PENINSULA POINT NEWPORT BEA.CH SURF-BAY !:k's! hu~· on thl' pu111t ~ Spac1u11 .... four bl..>droo1n, l :Hur)' bt:'ach honie. 'l'wu f1re1Jlacc:i. 2UU Sf!. ll. cnclOSl'° tana1. <,;ourn1et k1l l0hl'n. S\\"~111~ stairs to Sl'cludcd nla:-.t cr :>uite v.·ith p<.1rents' retreat and prl\'atc sun tlcl·k. ilcst ~l'v.-purt lnl';tllull . ~ d0\\11 . Call %l·lif67. , REDUCED THOUSANDS MINI-RANCH WALK TO BEACH H.u~l ll' Spanis h ranl·ho. Blocks to lht· beach. 1-ligh arehcd l't•ilings. <.;las" "·;11\<.'li fan1ll~· room . Kin~ Sile n1;JStl'r suite :111d µri\·atl' guc:>t qt1:irll't'S . Rambling secludt..'<l grounds. Assume lo\\.· interes t [<Jan . S.Hl511 do\\ll. Ut!l ter ~e it no"·~ C:ill ~i:.J·ti'iti'i . VILLA PACIFIC ASSUME $31,500 BEACH ~-urinal t'ntry to ::.pl.'ctacul:.11' h\"UlJ.: ;i11d fur1nal d111it1 ~ roun1~. <:r~•eklini-: hrit•k fir£>plal"t' SE P .-\H:i\TE f ,.\:\J ILY HOU:\\ -UE'.'\ \\·rr11 \\'E'I' BAH & goest bHlh. S\1·eepinl.! bl;1irs to tv.o cnorn1ous 111;1 s ler s uites t'al·h v.:ith pri\'lllt' baths. rr1 \·atc rellr grounds. Ov..·ner say~ hl•lp ' Call llO\I' !.16.1-li'itii. VAHO DOWN LIKE A MODEL HEAR BEACH , t'inest be:.ich area. 1'ruly CXCl'Ulive neighborhood. GorJ,:l'OUS larulsi:aping. Elegant enlryway. FULLY UPGRADED IN'l'F:HIOH . Gourmet kitchen. Formiilly dine. Family sited bed room s . 15' x 40· COVEH£D DANCE PAVILION. I-luge master suite -NO DOWN BUYS TlUS~ ! Take advantage call 842-2535. SEC\UD!=D ESTATE OWNER WILL FINANCE ''ou won't believe this. Secluded executive cstall'. 1 ~ acre of i..:rounds with H UGE 1'11EE:S. Enorn1ous s v..·immln )! pool . OPEN AEAi\'I CEILI NGS. llard\\OIKi floors. 2 huge fireplaces . GIGANTIC RUi\IPUS ROOJ\1 \\.'ITl-1 \\'ET B1\R. Separate formal dining roon1 + 2500 sq. ft . of charm. o~·ner says he '>l.·ill carry his own loan for ~·ou . 1\ rare find. t'irsl to call gets this b;u·j!lain. H-i2·2.'i:~S. LA QUESTA BY THE SEA HO DOWN YOL']{ opportuni~:.: ~ 2100 .~11 . n of ocean·eoolert ~randcur \\"ith .\"(J 1)0\\"'.'\ PAYi\l~r\"T. Fnur jun1bo bedroon1s . !\lost prest1~ious & dl·Sirl'd ;u·t•a. F1r.,t to <'\Ill gels this 1'H f::'-IE:'\D(>CS 13ARG • .\I.\". (.';111 K-12 2535. SPANISH HACIENDA 2 STY.-POOL-BEACH ASSUME $27,500 P ark· Ii kl' g rounds. Alriurn t'ntr\. Lari-:l' f:undy ~ized li\ulg ruon1 "1ih hui.:e floor tu ct•ilin!.! f1rcplat·c. l;urden \It'"" "'1fes u\"cr k1tehl'h & din••. F1c:-.ta party room oVl'rlt>oks lush w11lled eourtyard & tl'l"l'Hl"l'. \\'inding s1:11rs ltJ hidea"·a .\· uta ~ter s uite & beli-:1rat1~ ehildren'S 11ing. 'J'ak1• Ol<'I' f'. \'1\ loan. '.'00 X I-:\\' LIJA!'\ C:ClST'S. ~Uli lllU, pa~·s all. ll urr~· for b11r.,p:1.i11 ? C:dl !ttiJ· ;1011. MIWPOIT H ACH 1700 NewPC)l"I BIVO. 848-7171 COST .... MHA 2790 H•1bor Bllld. 54W313 ~leTptj -CH POUHTAIM YAU.Ff C-A Dll. MA& IHYESTMIHTS 1793t Be._:h Bl'l'd, 21030 e•IVll 8014 Warner Ave. 142·2635 936-1787 847-8010 •I \ 18109 BrOOk'-tt 332 Marguerite 963-7881 873-8550 ' • I 18882 MacAr1hur S1vd .. Suile 1oa Irvine 152-1100 • . .. =· .. :: ... .: . .. "4 ~ .. ,: . . ..... ·-. ... .. . .. . ... ... .. -:: :: .. , . ... .: .-iu:BUC !'(OTICE "-'ct•T•,Ul iut~ .. Its. Mo\M• ITATIMIMf * Tflt t.i-i"t .. ,_I) ............ MU•: .., POOAltN Ol!Vll:LO .. Mllft, ~ =...-0 UM, L•W"• Hllli, tal. ,, ... w. 1(1....,., t.Yl2 ~ U,.. ~ Mhl .. C..,t, tf6» Thf1 llUlol ... t I' (9fOlhKIH 11'1' ,11f1 Ii>< .......... !. frMW ... 1"990" _ ~'-c:~~~-= c'.~~':A'".:l 1J, ltJS. -· PWll ...... Of•ll~ (Goll\\ Otlly P'lloC, Notti. W, I\, 11, lt1i 1M1·1' PL'lll.IC NOTICE Wednllld9, M!Y21 , 1875 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTl<;B .. ................ '"" - ' ....... ~·-··--ti¥i" -n1• ~elTl' 011' P••q fl!e ... ~... 1 att _,..._.. lf-91 .. llt•Nil tuH• . ti :r.:::-, ... ...... ...., -,... .... "'"'., • ' i NOTIC=r.-t11A,•f .. OJ11PtfflTtcllt \ INTWODO OIS10M$, S'I ltto ~ T'M•'CI04t ' ~HA 'i "" , ,., °" ~1.L ......... tt••Mf•t.. M"'"" .. '°" ..... ti. cA. u§r 11t1..,,,,.. .... ....,. l•TTallt IST~I Y4•'f '1iW . -. t . Wtit!. .. ... l .... M W ll'LO•I H I AU T l•••l t •I MA._ I L4•11N Pr• l,_..11 Vita,•........... In Y ,,... •ITWeti.11• .. 0IH, ... "':i:r:se:.-:i::v Gl~llH ._ ~!::1:~~i~ .. 6=, t I IA• ~~, Ill MC"All• ~'!,·~=~-.::..... MCUtJM.N ~JA&ft, AN0lllt$0H ""'° 91_.,_ .... Hu11U,..i•n lo.cl, C,,.. 1C1i IS lllllY 'ttJYIN •ttt-""t'*ll118.tiftttl,..~ MINfllllNO LA"SIN ANDlllllSOH.,.. VI O!Hl.\ I . MC ,A•t-.t.Nb"9ill H Mlf llJMfflM .... , .. lllroll .. flle ht"'9111NMr•ITl•ptlllLWllW"'..., Triltlll.ll<lllft•i1 t•nduc1Hbyaliltlll· ~tpttllltfllw~ ....... Wlll ~ ._. • ..,..,._y _,.,,.91 M WUI 11111 ,_ l1Wt11C• OI t.t\"n: tll"8dfltr~lp. !trl....,_tofLttltrlTtll•llWll•• .. tf'llc.t ..... tltf'tl IM '9lo ...,....,,, feU•"'-"'''' lo Illa "tlU-r r. F<enkl..Vllt IN .... llloller, relarllK" lo 'tllflldi i. .... ~., .. ,.,....,.1.._,wttl! .. t.<'e11C1 M wll.kll Is INlcM lor ~ Tflh stattm...,. w•' 111111 wlltl It.I .._ .. 1utt ... , ,.,.'cwM"l. •• •""'11"*"'' .. Ml"-IHllH'...._ por1k11l•t1,t11dlhallhetl~MWllll11Ct ~,c1tr•otOr1no-Cou11lyOftAprl1 tllslltna .~ ptat• .i ,...,""'""S 8' '9M Otllee-' S.lyar • l.tl.;.t;M d htalltll lllt Mll'll lie! llHll wt 1W .U. tt1S. ""' '-"" Mt ,_ J11111 .I 1•ts, Ill t i -.C:Mff Ot,. .... Jlt, ~ ....... 1-...:11,• Mer ti. 1•1s, at t :>O •·"'·~ ln.lllt "*"' a.rl'l,.6illM•-'~4fo...., (lllt.t1Mt,Wfltat"U"pl6"d!MI· t-lroom OI OeNrlll'ltnl N" J d l'utlflNCI or.,_.. CH ti o.t1r l"tllt, Ne, J fll MW t-.11', •l Jte t1 ... 1c c..r ""'at lltt' .-.,,..,._ Ht •II n'\Mtll'\ PC BL IC NOTICE ~1..11100c.1 ... 1cc.n1er0r1 ... -.-.1n ...,11111.en11Mtiy1, 1t,t1,1t1s 1u1.1J 0r1 .... WHt, 1111t1e en.,., lol!CaAM, ~-. M .. , ............ ~ ---;;;;!TITiiwri"-iNiir---1--~=~· .... cllyol kfllOAM, C•UloUllL ~llef'ltl.t.. .... ! . .itl!t!ti ftlitf IMM• llM• -'"''· f'l(TITIOUS •uttHllS ,,,.,,,........... Ooll•ll Mar l. lt1S. o. ....... , 11 lt15. •ic•llMfllttlhMtlc.a. • HA¥1STATl!MI HT NAME STATEMI HT Wlt.t.IAMl!.MJOMN, PUBLIC NOTICE ••'-"·~··""-·· .... ,11.1•11. TM fo.11owln9 per:.oois ''' dOlng bull· . . ,, C8lilrltr Cltrll • . ~y lat* .., ... A, 14..,..,.., -·:r' ... ~:'!,':Olt"''"'9 ... rwn I• doing bu .. · "ATlllCCJ,,,l••IT"f. $1.ll•Jll.. nW&T,I• M•llflY•a 1..,.,.rt•flllNWUt I' 'llO·i\U ZER, llO t:.lll s,....,. CONTINENT Al INSURANCE .U"""'yatl.aw $UPl110111teU•1'o•Y'lfl WAI• tflfilt ..... Mfl'lffllt<8"ftt ..... th~.,Co'il•Me.w,CA.'1'2I ADJUST£ ... t lll Toucan Clrcll, -:i-=.._..... ' tT.t.llOPU.lt.1,.INI~... ,............... ~Yltt.SM.'tit '' P1n1c •1•1 1n11u11r1.,, '"'·· , ..... • ""'-'""' • • =r;;a-• :::0::""' ~ Folltlttl(l.Vlllfy,C.1Ul.tl/QI .. -..... ~. T POIA -, • • C.lllt""•t••~llOPl.,tl'Ol!a'il~ C.rai. M. Btflntll; fflt Touc•n Ttl~...... Jl'di1~ N : ' ....... Atftll,t 111M11S1 .. c.n11Mew.CA.'1•i1 '' ", '. u << ''''' ""' ...,.,.,.LC..,.il"-• ·=Tic•~ ·--ttJ 410 ·11 .__ ht=OMJ ....... T"I' b!.!Mhtl• Is ctnctutltll 9y a tot• rt · 0"" .," 1 ty, . Plftllllhtd 1,11'.lnO-C...$1 Dally f'IOI. ;'O'~ o• DI. DI. a C?'1. I .......... Or ... CMtl O.Or "lot, _,...,.., ......... . ••lb!. cr1J1t.t."'IN•t ii t ond\KleO by dll IA" IN1 1~ U,tl, 1tl.I ,,., c .... v" .. .--c-• • " ....... IMTll., IS,tl, "11 11 .. ,, ...... 1 ...... °" .... co..i 0.Uty ""'· Pltw(••>l lndu>lrltl, l"I:. Ger•IOM. B•"nelt NOP&ftTT ~•u.t.•1:1'01H"T.... llMy 14,!l,2',MdJWl•t, ~fJI 11U·JS Tlll l• ~t!;:;..s;::iw,..":~· f~::,;i:;~ tr. T"ls tl.110MTn1 .,.. ... tllt<I Wllh IM P U Bf.JC NO~f.! l•• ~ THoM4'5 H. SHl•UMH, ~yOar• 01 o .. 1n1t1 cou,,ty on "Pfll eo...n1, Cler• Of Or-.. .. Co...nty an "Pf•I l------~·'------1 °"T'!"a':.:..t:. ___ . c l.,ilng illlorftl 111 PlJaLIC NO'ftCE PtJ8l.IC N~ D. J,'7S. "·1'1" "'1,_, 11ttll • 111it..i~ ...... ,.,.Krtliilll: ~Ill Pub11~ ()r .... Ot co.i~t 0..11 l'tlllt, MOT1CSTOC••tUT~I&.' NOT.IC" "''Hit•l•V GIVIN INt .... ,. ,....,.~t.t.i.U ...... ••OI ~·""" o ... ,,111 CH ~I o ... ,, Piiot. Apfil JO, end Ma y 1, 1,, 11 , t•IS lj(ll)-1S St1Paa10• ce11•TOJll ~ lllJC!;\A,11110~11111 . cou 15 I"' s•u ,,11111 k"'8f OIMrkft UODL.• ... oc VAU.E"f UNIFll'.O'SC:MOOL.DIST••CT Ml1.U, ll.H.•ndJllft••. •tlS l 'iS'=Ji STA.TCO,,t.t.t.i~••uA.... OllGALA Pl 1:::otlSINIAU~·ft)H. IHllfit ...... 1 T ... •'<*•t:: .. ,.. ...... ,.,,,.. .• .,t.. . •· . , TMI COUNT"l"l111'0tA.... MNif1 0 """*' fw ..._, 4rarilftl "'lllfof SW -.Ct/fl!: Ofll • ._.,, ~-v.111t, !.Mlf~k.i'"' -:."PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO.TICE Me • .t.*4¥ <Aft ... .-C•« .... , ,.....,n,._1 Dholrkt,t_u,..,111 .... i.....,.H1ns.«l1tor,.._'1W · E~tl• of DOllOTHY W, DA.YI$, lo911!ficHI. t"-La .. 1 .. krl~of.... ,,,.)Hllfltltlilk_....,. ... ,.,.,,1tl!.,IEL(MSMTi•T$CMQOL JI" JlllCTITIOU&•·u-.-,-.-.-,-,--· I ---,-,-CT-.. -,-.-,-.-.-.-.-,-.-.-.-,---la1.,.. •-n .I\ DOROTHY WARING prQOtrty Ii : "'-0 "••ttlllllllel 0.vl~ .. M~i.tta,Arclll\ech, JOJ1 E . .:;.r· llfAMISt.t.TliMtNT OA\llS,Dec••Mct. TM 110t!h .. $ler11 » fMt M tJ1t "*-WtlH,A._.....11'1,.C..lhlnllt ..... 01~1 ..... 11 'TI!o lollllwlllf,_.,WM'll •rl lkltng.... NAMl&TATeMliNT bull-NOllCf IS Mi REBY GIVEN It '8111ht.1Uafly 1QO ttet el Lott'.. NOTIC .. IS HlftlllY Gl*i ...... .......,._. kMM Ol•lrlct 11111 11ti~at: Tiie lolle'lllln9 ,..._ertdoong \)'le crt0ll0f'$ ol I"' lbowe 11.mipd IJlilS:t· ~ Hel9MI f.S ....._11 f/111 ..,,p 't Orinft CWl!t'f. C.111 ... N•. Al IJy .. 1..,...... ii.I Go .. rlllng lul'd, ACTION LEASINO COMPAMY, """:~L A80UT TRA\/El, o•tl oen1 lilt! 4111 "''°"' 11•~1 ... cl~ ~CllMI Ill 9'611 •• Patt u ol Ml ........... ,...rtH ... 1 .. DliT•• ,"wltl,... ......... w ... ltffrtUntM 1131 ltwlnt Blwo., s.an11 Ana, C.111. 1 ..... 1111 Blvd .• Suile 1.60, Tuilin, Cltff. ~1ru.11new10otc10tnlar1 r~r.il can~.,....,, recard& et 0r..,.. •••"...,.J'-·•MM-""'lotH ...... d•MM•odfol'lfll811ew11111"•Nct. ftlOI lo /lit !ham, wiln tnt ""t•lw•r CollrilT.CllllVt1l•,••lttt11C•IOlollflltlil ....... 1.tKel_.i.IN"""'~ ...... -.... HM•flff.,.. W•rntr P. Bo•Oltr. lWIW.Ott .,,. '2tlO vou.c,...rs,ln1n.,111c'tellllt tllrtf,.rtllt 15 rnecM tor lutl,..r ,_.rlkyl.,,,_ Mid •1c1yr8"1lWdallM•~..-.---l'lac:•· ftot1t,~wporl htcl\. Ct1U.'ti!W1 Btrry H, Beeh!ar • 111 S H•• .1bov• tnlllltll co11rl, or lo Pf'awnl "'91 1,_ ll"'8 .,.11 plltt 01 htarl .. lhll e.-!lllt-tftM,.,."' •1111 .. ~W N•cMtratldKUll'l•~ll. 11, ... 11 P. B•rctl'' Jr., IOOI W. H....,.'111"' or., Co111 Me.s.1. Ctlllornl.1 them, .. Uh.,,. ntce~wry ,..ut/Wn, 10 -Ills ~ Ml !Of' J-n, lt1$, la'.c.h Me .-.n.,. •ctomo8flltll lillW.,. wcwtty ~'" e. Jn Ille c""'r•i n . , , • 0 c ~ tr. uncler•lgnad •• tntofllcelll Mf;l(ffl· •I t :to 1.m., In lh• cowrt•ll'Cirn of 11oe-11onfllrtllolblot,......-..C.-lriC1"f, " -... "11 ron • twport •.1c11. t hl, G11lt S. Bt ehltr , 111S Na• n.1andfltllfl{l,Hlhl"loor,3.(lSWllShiiot T OISTll CT 11'111~18 tM-'""' U ..... Of'I I Ir ttar!IPiftlrt Dr., Co»ll Me.w, C.1litlll'Nt ~lfl'ltnt No. 3 ot S•!ll t our1, .ii 100 flt I r•s•rves rt "" . "8 8WI Wt any ' Thlt buiini is 1~ ,0,.<1uc t•d l>v ,. a1vo., Lo• ••1•1, CA, too10, •Ille.fl I• Civic Qnltr Drive Wt$1, 111 l!ie: 01., Of ,....1ar11ttsor l"lor,.,,•1111•• in111Wi11111w l11 llidoll'!l· , , . '1Ut 11\epll(e otouill ... slofl,,.unlltrtl..,.. Siilll1Ana,C.111torn1.1. Tiit DISTRICT not cMltr.....,.,tt. ,...... .. (ilt"l,,,.lllM rftt If~· !iltm ..,..,~Pt>• nt•sh•P. R-•llh J. S,,Ckell. 912S Lino.ante ln•llm.>Uer$pert.1lt1lngtolhe"1Nol I hel It J wlll ht1'119_..I .... ,...,.,,._._Nell •111.,1 warn•• P: lktrOl•r Dr .. IMll!Oer, C•illornl• 906<05 • 0.1.0 M.ty t . 1915. _..,., "I ot•I r n c • er rP.e T''. ''.'.-·< • '''"' .,,. ,., Wlllllt\tdent,w!tl'lll\l"""mon1Ma,.., W/•••AME.••,OHN, 111-•"'anMadocllot"cutalJlfC$111rt(\, ......... ~: ,,_,. •s " '"' Mtltlt 8 . Sa<kaO, t 12l Lllldante thll t1r11 .,..Ollt•Oon 01 lhls nOllct. .. ... -1, <"-•k er..._ O&""tudoll,er T'tlilt C.UlltW Cl••• ot O•angt Cou"lyon """1 Or., WNttitr, C.lltornlt90t0S DlladMa., t , 1975. ......,, I ........ ll, tJJ. Tll/1 1111\lntl 'i IS (OndUt led by a 11...it• ~•llNNt:• a IU•T •llUlAV• Ft:nM .. ,.r1nerstiip. NE ILLOA\fll,lfld ffdlli$1f' ..... lt.,Stt.1tl ,,__.,._INlt.,1·S-11,NlllU"'8ll It.Mii O••noe Co.\1 DO iiy PilOI, G1,1ts. Bathler SECU•ITY PACl,IC .... u •• ca1Hw81an1•1 ...... , .. T .... ,...,,,,.yrr9n . ..... 1 '. '' '.'' '-'. p.iATIONALBAHK Tat'Ja.tal F.,."'911-l .... y .. ll1na11.llOlltt.11MoA •• ' r • • Tltls 'tllt-1 '#If lilect •ith the e .. ttUIOl'lol'lhoWlH .. • .. --...... T CllB ol Or_ C...,,tyan M.ly Atttntyslf/l/1 ... tff._, · "'rd8r• w.-... l'fNn. 01111t.1bo11e n.1mectoec.oen1 Putill""'° Ot'-c .. ,1 Dall•~"'· ,_ __ ClflPWI •"'' 11,,,.11,l'l)llt..-1M11 J,"1i. MclCl.N•AAND,ITTllllG ILll .. fbo '°""'"--;~~----------I FUU. .. .,...,. ...... w INY l4,Jl,l0,lf,11 11.q.IJ •••or.1.AVIEltSr•T~l.~SOMs ....... : ••••••.•.••.••.•.••••• ', • PtCTlftOUS IY,INl!ll "Y!"lw.d Oran .. CO.it 0.1lly Pilot, 2'tll "-' IAICJTtMoaas CLAW•'')··············•···•·•····••····••·•• • 1 • MAM.-ltATIMl!NT """''·"·21•20•197$ U7"JS MaSWlhllWillwll. PCRl.IC_ NOTICE CA•P«N'l'l•I 7-.1olltwl"'porto11s•r•dolngbvsl· L-. ........ a.e.t...•1• ~T ,...,.__.,.ctl.,.t,...,lllu~ l)liBLIC NOTICE A""'"''•fwlln<11tw$ · · .. ,.,,., ... ,,,..,,u...tl'll ,_Sl._n: Pllbll!Ne Or.1ii.,.·Coa$1 Dll!T ~ ... SUN•1°"-toll•TOJllCAllP'OIMA •ll•r ... tf\Mll-• 1>1v 1•s1•11g EOUITIES, "°" COUln,.YOPO•.t.•G• To1i.tti "··-· Siol1e 10, FOU"11.in 51.P ,11•1 Mlr lCt1.•,•ndJOM1•~. lt1J UJ>.71 o•ou TO •••• <•••• ••• c•lllMt,,l .. l.llit.1tif/lll-v.llfY, C.ltt0rnf8ft709 NOTICll TQ,CllllEl>ITOllS ·· wMtlllleM•r• ....... Wtltw, ..... )9.t• · 0.le Slu•r_d1 J To rrty Pines, SUPlllltO•COUllTO,THE PUBLIC NOTJCE CMA~OJllNAMI o•cllollff,..-"htum.ltkfllellttW """-tltacl\.uilttornltftWO STATIOFCA FQ FO • AtPll ...... tll.lflllf.'' ' "HE'"u· •• ~'o•o"•"•"•GE. 111 Iha MIUtt ol ll'lt ..... ~Ill ...__.,, '''" J,l.rfW'1811Hl"91oh,W01£astNo/tl • w •• lt.P·IJ144 OEAM ARTHU• MOilifi.AU 11111 .,.,..... ........................................................ ' ftfnc:lllllHCI, A ... rwlm . (;•111....,1.1~1 Ml. A-tUt• NQTICI. TDC1111DITOllt OEllifA .t.N'N MOAEAU IW ~9' Dfpi1n .. r .. ' ..... "" ··"' ..... , '' ....... :........ ............. M..M ........ c. Goldl11g, JlOll Clll'I Orlw . E1l.1t1 ol MARION THERESA SUPl•IDllCOUlltO"THt Ntrnt. , • • ~ ...................................................... "·'° ............. tth.Ct lllor11l.1t2WO GIOllANNll!LLD.Dtce11W'O. STAT•Ol'C .. t.lll'O•MtAl'Ollt DEAN ARTHUR MD .. e.t.u·-..................................... ,......................... 191·"' JWlll C. GolOlnO NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo lht TNI COUNTY Dl'OftAMOI! OEa•a ANl't MD!l£AU ,,. .. 'MIMI. T• ~rS.WO...tolor .................. · ............. ••·•• ... ,. ™' 1\lleMtnt w.11 !tted .,th lhf t l"edllon. al lht 1bow1 n•me<I de<:9llfnl · He.A.aM6 _., ,..._...kNolllr., PoMtSt...., ··•······ ...... , ......... ,.. to.,. ,..,111on lfl this court for•" wdlr .. tow. "ool L.-rot Sfll .... s , ...................................... , 11 ,n o..,..tylQtr• OI Orll'lft' Collnly an Apr II thtt. all ~ri.on• n1vin11 <I.ii ms 191inll E 1 t • t e o I A N T 0 t H ET T E 1"9' 1111111'-n lo cn...not lilltlt """" ._ .. hell.ti to 40 ». ~tJJ. tlw '!010 lll!te0.111 ar• r~uired to fllt I L A C IC 8 U A N I • t T 0 N I ''°"' DEAN ARTHUR MOREAU Wld ,,.., .. ''.'"' ""."' '"' "" """"'"" •·· ..... " . FU»'i tlwm, "'1111 lllt nt;cH M rr vouchers, 111 lll.ACKBURN.0.C•owd. DEaR.t. ANN MOREAU lo DEAN ROck•I"'-........................................ .,.,.,. ..... \, ... .0 1111•111""41 Or.1n1t COt st 0 111, ~~. !I'll olflc1 ol lllO clerk of the -"ow en-NOTICE IS MER E8Y GlllEH le 1"' o CAlllPET, LIHOl.IEUM & SOFT Tll.t: I.AYE•$ • ...... " .... " ,. tt.U ... '-A THURRUSSEl l..lnd OEB•AAMN C<MlHT-••-• .• 14..~1. JI, •nll J""t '· H1S 1111+1s llUtd CO\lrl, or to P••~nt them, with ll'w tr.illlorli 111 IM alllw• lllmtll .....,., lllUSSELI.. • For•m111'";"'.;;;;lor "'8t• C•-.IMQoni.11,.. ~-r WOtlChers, 111 lhe U'ldlrliltntd !Tl.II .Iii perSOf11 n.aw!ng C!t lrn1 f911nt.1 11 11 hartl>y orO.rtd lflll .111 tlllflllfll ,..,.,.., _, 1 •• , __ " PL'Bl.IC NOTICE ll'ICTITIOUS 8USINliSS r NAMC STATl"Ml!NT , .. ,ol-1"9 ".,..,., ••• <kllnQ bu~i· ..... : IHTflltNATIONAL HOUSE OF ·MNUICIS No, tel. J1t E. ,,,,, SI., c.taa •M. C.llfornl• .,;_,ltAMco RE STAURA NTS,. C.1fflf'&I• corPO<•lh1n, 10950 WllUilre tl.illd •• 11th l'l&br, LOI A .... IH, CA. 3t....boninH1,l1 CondU<MCI llY I UH'· ~ JtAMCOflESTAUll:ANTS • ltoOttlA.""',.,.l,Pfe1ldtnf T"ff •l•"""eltt Wilt 111" Miii llW ~TOtr~olOr~ c:ou...ir...,Al><il 10,tn). l"fJ1t7 Publlshtd 0r • ...,. C.W!>I o.n, PllO!, ,Ap<'lll0.&nd ... y1,1•.21,l'IS Ul2·7S PUBLIC .NOTICE PU9LICNOTICE 810 1J.1&1s..- ti 1111 Uw Olllce OI RICMARO J . tht Mid CS.(tlMlll •re rtc1ulr0<1 lo Ult Int led i I,.. 11• f -.Id ,.. _, "" Al BReCNT, •10 l'te•port Cenl« t>r., tntm, •1111 llW ,,.cat11ry ,,_....,., /n 19::':Morenthl$ c~rl j,. 41 c:....,.,.~ lflll'lor.il •11 FOl'lf'NftWld.,..llntelvt Ht-OOr18tK h, C.lllornla•264i0, Whi~h tht otlk9 ol I"' Cl•r• ot ll'w ..00... ~ No l I JOO Cl I C. I Ori Wt nol IHlth•U.OOpH .. , ............. Is 1111 plac• of ousJness ot 111e ...,,. llUad<OIH'I. w •• Pl'•tt11t thlm, withtht ~1 ! ean~ c 1 n '' J ";'.., ttrs· thectailr '•t• of IM~""*"-•ri.1~ il'I all matters perll!linlng to ntc.1u.1rr vouclltr$, lolllt u-rslg'ltd 1 ,: oo .,..., 1 kor; .:-on ..,.. ' .,_._ Clllllfkali..t-t~llf tnt n t•ltoluiddtcedenl.•llhinfour •I 1111 La w O llltt ol OAVI D :,... ~(ot 11· ••1:ci,:."*' and M t ralflO'l•lllUlly, ' monlhS•ll•rl ... llrslpuOHt.ationotlhls STEALING TINGLER. SQQ NewpOf't 'a CtuM, ...... ~ W,Wl'ly c.tmant .. Ml'IJoell,ntTm•11 .................................. ,. .. k.. U d ~\illon !or CfW;llQe Of flt""' Sl'Oll\d Cemtnl M.t••• (-......... , ='... • Otnltr Or .• Sit. too, Nt •port Blac:h, IW'I"' "aflled _.. • .., --• .. •-••"· '''' • · • terfl(10and1111111cc9"'.,.W -.... C.llfornl• nt.MI, wlll<h Is !he plac:t 11 Is tur1ntr orOtr•d that• c0py c1 .... ~ T 1 Ml CH ... EL E . GIOVAN. buslrwt.• Of Int Ulldt,\l{lnell In .Ill,...,. lhkoroer 'o~t.IU\t" P\lbllslle41ft Epqw, -· ............................................ . Nll!l lO ,.,, .. , .. lnl"IJ ta tti. altlla 111 'iOld 119. t!W 0.llY Piiot. 1 lll9$ .. Ptr of general c;tmtllt Ma-FINll ... & T,.,,...lflll Admlnisl•ator ot lht! E•late (tden\, within IO<I• monl"s altet !1111 clrcu1.iiwt,'l'Ubll""11 111 1111$ c-..ity .11 ,..di!• O,.rai..' · ·' ·' ·""""" "" •• •·" •· "' ·•''" •• ••• •• or t"'.1oow naMecl <ttceclient 11n.1JlllbficathMof 11111110Uc1. lffst-.. e ..,k for lour canMCl.lll"" Ootr a.111rn11 ... 1r.-tf ftltMAllb J, ALall l!CHT Dl! ........ U 2'. ltJS --411 PrlOf' 'tlhe day ol wld ....... "'°ll. SC ..... °"9r8'ar · · •• •• · • • · • · • ....... •• • · · · • •" •·• .. ·"" •• •· .. ,,........,.C. ... rDr. ROBERT R. llLACK8URM O.i.dM.tyt, l•lj. Gl'l111fl119MtclN1110Mr.1tor !tllfrPHl0 ......,_9t&cll,Call .... !11.1 t1... Allmlnlilrolorol tllt E~e 1.AMUEL DllEIZEN Jlcl!M111¥111f•""• a.M"'lltrlyge Tll.,; ...... 1tt oltlll'.aM"•,..,,.,.doH<tdtN · , J"'°"tfthto5-r>wC81.111 k ,..,.0..,.11.., ............................................. . j...,..,...,Adml•l.tb.tlt r DAVIDSTEllt.INGTIHGLl!lll: DEAN4•TllUIMOllAU , SC...l"IMMlllMO,.t•lor ............................. , ....... . PubOSlled Or.,,got ~n O.al!y Pil<>I, •Nt•~CHltr Dr. Ml!Dt.•U ...... NMOlllAU t:L•CTlllCIANS M11J.1•.21n.1•1s 1w.11 si..... zna..._.s-... GlntffdFare,....,. ............................................. . Mtw""'1 .. •ck,CtlH•raittUll CastoMow,C.11...,... ,; ~ •.•. , ................. ,. •••.•• , ...................... . ..... MU tel: 11141 .. J..Jlll 5ullfu!Wt1>811 .................................. , ............... ,. """""' tw A•Mlah lr.1111 I• 1"1"9 ... , C.W.l•tlcar • · •. ;. · ••• · ·. · · · · ... • .... ·""" ••• •• ............ · , Publhlltd O...,tt CM'il 0.1it1 Pila!, l'llO!ll.fled O••fltt: C .. ft Oally ~..,., GNlt $Pleat,. ... ,,,.. · · · • · · · ··" .. · · "· · .. · · ·" · · · .. · · ·" .. • ·· • '' ... • ..., WIN-, t.lne1no, T•C""'lcl .. . Tr.e S•ddll!bill(k \lillll!Y U11ilird ---------------ISclloo! Ohlr itl ,...,11 a ccept t>i~ "II to SLP-7Jt•I 1;00p.m .• M•J H. n1s. al low S.,,$;,..,, PUBLIC ~OTIC.'E 1Ny1, 14. ,,, ti, 1t1S 1"'2· t 1•. 21 , ll, .... Jllll• •• 1115 Ul~JS CtttllJHWtWer ..................................... ' ..... . PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Glt.AZll!llS .•..• , •. , .• ,,, •. , ....... , .. , , ...... ., •••....• , , , , .•• , , lllOHWOFIKERS PICTITJOUSIUllN•ss Snvlc• Ofllcl!, 2S100 l• Pat Ro..i. 1-----,.,.=.,••=T•o"<"•"•"T'•""""'"oo"'•c"'"''"'"'"•"•c·•···'""•"••"'"• ____ _ NA@ill&STATRMENT L•CI~• HHh, C•llforn;., for !hi! Tht lollo•ln9 oe•lionl 4're dojlWJ bull· turnl)hlflil OI: . School Di•lrlcl ; Co••• Comn'llf'lltJ Coll991t Ol"rk l Jiit!.$ t!i: CLASSROOM FURNITURE Bid 0.Mllr .. : l :OO p.m., Thuor!41y, Jl#W ), 191). TRI MED, 11l2J B••cll 8ou!ttv••d. Ll8RARY FURNITUR E PIK• e>I Bid Rectlpl: Otllc• ot Ille flvrcfWoliinq At•nt, Co.lit Com""'"flr Huntillgton B4•ch, C•H•ornl• 92fi.tl Ll•tl t;il ~i"'ll complele ~lail •• 10 OW COli.ge Dl1trk1 Admlnl1l••UOt1 Bulldlnt. 1J.1'0 ,.....,., """nue, ~~ M9M, l.n F . Slk~, M.D., 711 1 T•lbwt, C!l>Mllliy illn<I kind 01 •u1>1>li•~. ffi\llp· Or.,...Go\.lnlr,C.Utorn,I•. · ~glon9t«.ti,C•lllo•nl•'™' """'·ti(., 0.5!•<:!1, loo;i ... her .,..;,,.lull f'rol•tt lffnUllc•llon ,... .. .,., , Stfnl•Y Rosenlll.111, M.O., 16701 dlKrtpllon lf'lll •oecillc~~tioM. _ 0 ,0.MPU$ SIGNS -O"ANGE CD AST COLl,EGIE -Bl,D NO. S21 ·~ H _..,. PIK• Pl-tr•on lite: QlllU>oAtht 01>.trtctblrectorOI Pllyllc•I F.cll!Ot1: Fwtm.on: ••<•1••5notlH5._ ... ..., d8T morath.1nthedll1Yt•e1• M9htst buL1C1lno ,,....., ,._i11c.t11on e'tOr•tllchMll.11Sl.lflll'.,.._. WTlan tor meta l•onllliM1lw.t _ _..,.,, 1 thllll bol Hl.Cl.,;tey .,_,,.,...,.,., I• acl •• Foram•n. .i.1t11trCiflllronwtrt•r .................... . S1noc1wi1JronW.r••• ...................................... , •• Orll0"9M•I lrot1 Worller ..•..•..... , .. , ..................... . i• ' ""' ''·" '2.n ...n to.n to.n ·-.0.11 ...... "'·" ..... •f6 .• IOot,.0 "·" .... I -- G.,..rol 1002 ··········a••••••e••••• ••TTM THAHHl!W MILLION $ YllW AbtJol'utely n1oli l 1l'un· nin.ii View of thu•bor el1· lr~.ucC unll u cean . Keccntly r1.11nodel\.-d ttnd r(ldcc:urulc d . 'fup loc.a· •••••••••••! lion in Old CUroo<& .del Mur. Hichly pu1wled UV· ' ·n• -..,n and for1nal dln· l'llllll-"1Hot1 .. : ·~ Ing room und ~uutlful 'All r8al e1t11 te advi:rti.lied 11 u r de n k itchun. Coil l Jft thirl 0tlWSp8par Ir ltUb· tl7J~ !~ to the F~r.i tl"a1r • lou1ing Act oC 11HJ8 9f'i"fflLQ•11 'i111.:•9J 111r1• mllH$ill Which maki!S 1t-111~sat to adve rt is e "anr, 1>ru· (erence limH~l uo. or rlicr ma 11)1\'bttscc:r-on race. color, reli1CltM1, sex, or na tional ori11in, or un Intention lO IOUkt! UO)' such pre(erenct!, l!inlt11· tion, or dlscri1n:t.lk>n." 1'hi& new11pa1>t:r will not knowingly accepl any adve rtising for 1..,eal e atule which i:s in l'iolu· lionorthelaw. •Rao•niriga i.n ... of th. lour Kro111bltd .,,..,.d, ba· low IO fOflll l°"r ,;rnplo -rd1, EDAPA I I I I r h-li ~[~i-LT-1 O'-.t'-A-rr-lll IAYSIDI~ ... perfect for bo~l <lock . Lo i.s arc501 x UIJ' ~ALL NOW 752-7315 DONALDM.11 D As•ociol•s. •o•ho1' r . 11ve p art o f my p1ych9ck. ~_TA_L,_L...,.E_Drr1j •§ t remember when I ulo&d lo I I I r Nowadeys, !hings are 10 bed ':=====~~:;'....., the only thing I c•" )ftYt i1 th. r ___: the p•yc:heck c•me in. I VALNEE I ..., f-,,'-,1'"-'"1r,.,7r•11~~ 0 COl'lple!t lht ci111<Ue q~ored • • • • • • ~V "11onj In ii,,., ""'"ng ..,.,,d ~--~-~~-~~ '°" develop '°"' IJep No. J b.low. • PRINT NUMN•fO ·1· I' I' J',, I' I' lJ I' I lEllt•S IN JQ\!.t.Rf~ • . • -• • H • • • ror:~«· "'""! I I I I I I I I SCllAMLIT5 AM.;...,,.ln Clonlflcotlon 1080 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SU,.IRl;~~~tl~~ OF THE ~~(:~~~~! :~~i:::s ' STATl 0, CALI FOlt NIA FOR 1nt 10llo..,.lng po:rJO'IS .I<~ d01ng bu.,. fMI COUNTY O,OllANGE ,.is.n: Not.A·U111 CAL·HORT ICULfU ~£. 11ttt1 ~ft HOTICIOJllHlAlllMGOF"ETITI ON Jo~e Street , Foun •••n \ftll•y. fOfl ,..O•ATE Q, WI Li. AMO fO• C.1l11ot'l!a 91108 llTTl•STl!STAMt:"TARY A, 01!1.,IO Menoe1, 11191 S.1n Jo'IO E1late ol MAR ION C. WE 11..E R, .Ilk'" Sl•ftl, Founla•n \lallt y, C•lil. '7IOI \AAlllDN C AROLY N W EILE R, Gregory J. No~o~el. SIOI ~I No. .. l<fif. o., HuntlnQlon ~.at h, C•li•. ""'' NOTICE IS HEREBY Gii/EN \Mt A11d<>lph Lou" \1 19111.a'lo, 10JU Elk RANOY P AUL WE l l Elt h•i filed Ri,,.,r Cilurt, Fountain '<l•IM!T, C.1111. 'Wreln a pet II Ion lor P•OOtto ol WU! ana t71Cll lw l'iW.lll<I Ol ltlt•••Tt'ill rnef'l l.try!o Tl>t'i busir>e•• IS conducltCI II~ .. the Ptllli-•. rel•rentt to "'''k n ;, Qentrt tp.lrtne•ihlp, rn.ldt lor turllWr p&rtic .. 1.1r1, Ind tn.t RlldolpPI l . \11gg••no IN llme •net pl.1c1 ol ht.Iring '"' wn11: Thl• •t1l1m,;n\ ..; .. , tllfll w.lth t~ ""'been "' lor JUNE l. 1•1s. •t 9,30 Coun11 Clerk 01 Or.1"<je Counlv Ofl M.11 4.m .. in t!'\O t ou•lfoom of Depattmt"I 111, 191S. Ho. J ol s.1ld court, al JOO Clwic ~nl•r Jll•MIOJ Orl11e Wt'it, In th• Clly ol SM>li An•. PuOlltl'ltCI or;onge co.1iroell, Piiot, CtlHornl•. M.loy 11,1•.1n<1June 4, 11,l tlS 1U9·11 Oald M.ty It, It Ji. Wll.l.IAM Ii. SIJOHH, Counl~ Clt•k llOBEiltTT.MAROLO PUBLIC NOTICE J06 Print ti Ml Or. FICT1 TIOU5 BUSI" ESS P,0 .8o•1•14 NAM E STATEMENT C.$1.1 Mil''• C.1lll•r11l.1 •1tl• Tht' lo110.,..ln9 per 1.0n~ '"'e doing bu>I· fat: ...... ,.1 ,...~,II~: , ,....,._.,,, IMl&l119IOfl Bt•t h, C..11'°"11• ".1t.-nl of conoltio"~ gov~rnlOQ lhe ( '2N1 oldCllrlQ m&v be ~ecu red trom lhe Office of IW llrchllttl, WLIU•m Bh>l'Oc:lr. lo Partners. tlOO Nt""POd ~ , · Wllll1m P. Kltln, M.O., +11l1 G<'Hn Purt Miino Oep;irlment 411 the ab011e Newpot'1 Bt~h, c..11101111.1, '2..0. Pl..,.""' be otll.llned •I Ol;e ...,.dll\Kl'I of· f""'8ll"Mlor .............................................. .. LAtlORllltS-- 1<M.M lo.l,M 10..M t1.n Alltl'ntrler:Ptlllloner KE.NOON AMC/JE EP, 1 s1• PuOllillto Or•nQt Coa•I DllilJ Pilo! "'"rOOrBl •. ,Co•l11Mt s1!1,C•llf.'1li' .• M8,l1,21.11,1tJS 11u.1} ll't t1d On P o r st.ht Audi , .t ]•..-L.11,,., llYlne, Calllornla "664 add••~~, lie•. . ,.,. ,. · tr.11 tNflMs\ " con0Ut l9d by • 5A00LEBACK VALLEY •• HOT•ce ... HEiltEBY GI VEN th.II u... .lbovt·n.lmed Sc.lllOoM. Dhiri« .. 9'ner.11parl1Wrl.hlp, UN !PIEO S.CHOOLOISTRICT Oranoe Coun1r,,C.lllornl•. ICUt'IQ by .11'111 lh•OUQl'I lb Gowml119 ~d. ' l.4'oF s t k Mo l'ltftlMl'ltrrelerrt1tto11"DISTRICT",WUl rtcelW:u,plo,but110tlat«U....ti. . oc ' . . BllU CE YEAGER ""'""·•lMfll.llme,M•lldbl .. ,..IM-l'dlll•tOnlrlldfw_ ..... t""•)t'I. Tiiis sllottnllnl was Iii.II llrilh 11'111 P\lrtnt~ing Supervi!.Of' Clurlly Clerk ot Ort noe county Of'I Ml~ ll'O#m2$ l ids wi.tt DI recellled ~Uw Pf•• 14tntllled O(ID.,., .lfld llWU.,. mp9 .... .l!ld IJ, lt1S. 1'4$0 .,,.~~~.?:.1nge CNSl o.n ... ,~~j publ~~.~·:~1:ci:1:::.:, ~ri-::::i:e: Ml"'~ CIM-...t• .. ""*isllt<:I Or.1nQt Co•st o.u, PllOI, QU91'anllt llW rwturn '" a-cundlllon wlUoln t•"-<HTI .,,, ... tlW bid lltltfllftv ~""-,'-''~·:':'·~~:-~'~':'~,~~~·~·:·~":':'::;:'~'-"-'-' J __ _:~"='~~:·IC .'.OTICE ci.i•. L ·" E•<hbiO..,..st contorm.1ndbt~w101tatconlrac1doc-nt1. EKh biO s.h.llt Dt accompM>iod by lhe wo;urily rtf«r.il lo 111 llM contrkl PUBLIC NOTICE l'IC't1TIOUS BU'llNESS documenls •ndlly tht ll"ofprOPOMCl~lrKtors. ' NAME STATEMENT T"' DISTRICT rt~•Vtl Ult! •19'1t to f'lljfd....,."' .tll lllds °' .. w.1r..,. MIY Ir.' ifATIMINT D(il WITlllD•AWAI.. Tht! IOllOWing per_, l'I Oolnv b!N· rw9"11rlli•s or lnlorm1UU•1 lfl.1nytl4*Wl111Nbllldil!'ll. ''' ..... ,. .. lll:TNlllSNIJll' l'IH'i H : Tiie DISTRICT 11•'1 dettrmlned u. oent•ol Pf"'V•lllnQ ..... "'PK lllllm 0,. .... ,,,.. UND•• THE LIGHT FACTOR v . PHOTO •.1{110 In'"' loc.11/ly '" wlllcll lnl$ .on: ls lo bt perforl'Nd lor•Kh ,,.,, f/11 trps PICTITIOUI IUltHISS N""-'€ GlltAPHICS, 2211• lsl•m.>re I.II., El 111-r•m.1n ,_dell to t~t<Ult t!W contrac;l,to tm as llsttd .. IOw: T• fellow!,..-PK ton 1tt1 wlthdr.1_, TfH'O. C.llP. ti!t.JO AAJ c1e11lllc1ll0<1 not antk lpotfd lllld .__ 111i.r ttwll bol p&ld .ti IM cur. "''· • tt11er11 •••Iner l rom U•t David Ki r k Mc Knight, 2111• rent ••119 r11\11 lor lfl9 applk MJ!e lrtde 111111 clauffk.ltlllfl In 9tlkl wllll IM ......,.lllliD 9Jltfellflf under the lk· ltl-•• 1..11., El Toro, C•lll, ftt.311 ..00"" U1ltd Tr.o0t•·C8lilncll1. 11.,, '•'"I~ be!Ow•,.."" cilrt•lll ... -rt• n-111111lnt11 ntmt ol J & l Tf!.11 busllWSS Is conducted bY .., In· vlWd ey I•-"'~tms dlll'lftg IN biddlllQ Umeor c-lnKllofl II-,._,.,... itol,IT IN ELECTRIC, .11 1112 Bird QIYLOIHI. yf\lOI'" s.h.il bt cOllll...llfftd .I P8'1 ot llw bt~ lisl.il ft\11.. Ally Pwtllll, well art, .......... Mld>ow•y City, C::.111torlllan6SS Ot..id K. MCll:nlgll\ ~ot•flclll, ""°""°lion or 0111tr -flllshlll tit In a<lllillon lolhe belOw Utled .... 'T~ lkllllou• lh11l ... s1 .. ..,... st.ft.· Tiiis ll•temtnt WI S IU~d with the K•ltS: . .,..,_ ..,. tr.t pettntrst.lp w11 tllect on (ourllly Cit•~ of Or1n91 County on Mty 6-ttt, c111.mcat1w,.., Ty.- ~'l' ti, 1914 Jn '"' COUtlty of 1. \91S. •lltlCKLAYlill • Or.,.., "UiUI For.ma" (2to s ""'"I""' less 1n.w1i.o.i per t'laur a!XI.,. Jourrwyll'l•n Flfll Nam. .ind Addrtss of thll l'll!r-PubUs.htO 0ftfl9t CO.Ill 0.ill y Piiot, ratt, . ....,,. ........ , ·l•on•rll T. P1'19111, tk MtorJ, 1•, u, tt, 1•15 151a.1s enu.11yar l r>lont M•'°" . , ...................... . • S. Wl\Consln Av•nllll, FaUbreo~. •llllCll:TINDlll :-c.ltlenll•fl!W• PUBLIC NOTICE &let•....,_,··· ... ······· '· ! Slfnt'd:Lt0111roT.P1f11ln u.•PINTlllS, : · • ,.,,.. • .,4.. Fort"'8n 15f "'"°"'more tflMnlQlhffl cjnM1Jc.111ar11"""°'1W'd, Pllbll8'911 Qr.,,99 Coa51 Ol lly Pllol, ,ICTITIOUS lUSINf.SS ,.ce91.....-1tlc nt ilar or pO't!Wtr Haplw lrM 7,M,21,H,tt1S 1Sft.1S N .. MIST .. Tl!:MENT C« ... llltr .......... ,,,,.,,. · · ...... .. PUBLIC NOTICE ,.:_~,f,o11owrt1Q person h ooing bu'll· ~~:::~~~:s°''1110r ........... .. . ... .... ···~ -----.~==~----4 llEtll!!A'S MISSION FLORIST (Aman1Ma~FIW\ln111nct fr-Ung ... S&.,.·Jtl•S AND GIFTS, 2')11 M•rguirlt e MlthllWOpet.allll' ...... ............ ..Mo SUPl•IOlll COUii' QI' TNIE ~tr•wtY, Ml~tlOfl Vl•)O, Ca. tl•IS Ctmtnl MllOll Jourr1t1m•n · • ... · · · · · •· • &.lf , St AT I 0111 (ALI l'O•MIA ~It . f nil O Cur11 & Ciullt r f11'.l(hl11e Oper•ICl'I' lce,,.nl Ofl!yl ... ·........ •. . .. . • • . • • ... a.11 •' , fHIOOUHTYO .. OlltAN•I > ... J.',.,0"° urtula 1... !~~t"ll'IO, Forem..,.or,.rJMiur .100~.JOurNrmlflr"''· lw• .. , r11 Al'ld••w Plat•, _..taAl'WI, ILtCT•tCIAMS ·~· I 0'tt~0A!;=~" ,.lfttlCM ~f~,~ine'is Is t ondu<;•.cl bJ..,, In· =:::.~~.~,.::::::;;:::::::::::::::.: ···::::::::::;;::;;;:;;;::. :t~ _,_ 111~~1! Dll' Wit.I.. AHO Ll'D• llivldllat. • l}'S f'AMa'11tTK•Y Frank Oark•ngtlO Ml"c.,,o,.,....,. ••.. ~ ............................................. ,. ..•..• 10 ... t sf•I• ol LEMA fR UMIC IN, Thlt \l.l•tmt"I .... s tllld wltll IN '°""'*'""1tSclllci.r ......................................... , ....... lt.14 ~1»cMMll. COunt1 Cl•rt or o r.1ngeCowfttrOnwr, c.tlllSollctr •...•.. , ................................................... 10M .. fifQTICE IS HEllEB'f' GIVEN lhtl t ,l,I), '#l'lf'tl'l'l..,,l.l,,......1",Tfcllnlclan,OrtHLedW.IOer •......•...•.•.•.••.•••• 10.«I • ELLSWQltTM R. ROSTON"'~ lllfd F•»OI lltOfllWO•tcllltS 1'11rtl11••tilloft for Probtteol 'Mii .Ind Publi.,..d OrtftQll Cot st OaUy PilOC, Orn.1menltl Iron Wor-er ...... · .. ". · · · · · •. · • · • · · • · • · • · · · ·•...••..•....• 9.ft ... ,~.ot Ltllers TIH.llNM«,IO ,...,, I~. 11. ll,andJ1>11e •. ltJS t1SJ·JS ::=~.~-.:.~:~.;~~i~i.i ......... ,~1fi~ti.1M ............... t .n '. ... """''-" rtfartntl lo ~h k ,... .,.... .., tuttntr p.ert1cu1ar1, .11111 thtt PUBLIC NOTICE iuw~1'"· tht tlmt 9nd pl•• of 11earlno llw 'iOmt LAIOlltl•t ritf1"fl 'IOI 1 .... Juti. J, 1tlS, .11 •:JO --,ICTITIOUS•USINISS lf'blr•n.,9-r•1orcon1h11cli9",., .................................... 6-tl .1.m;; Ill ttte Uttrtroom ol 0.ll'Wl!Tlenl HAMI STATeMtNT 0Mr.1lort Ml4lan11tr1of PMUmafk .nCll •NO,' of ..... '""'"· It 100 Clvk ~..... T"" lllllowllll) ptrMf'I I~ 11111111 bi.Isl· elttlrk \(IOI\, wltwatlefl ITl6(hl1'19111111 .. rl'lll• m«llolllc•• ICIOll ' 0r1w w.11, 111~en,11 s.r.11 .r....,, ""111: ,......, .. 01yc1• .. 11i.1111•r•lff .......................................... '•·" L,'91Heofll<ta. TECHNOLOGY AES0UfllCES, """""1t•aqrtftdlrM1tr ............................................... , '-" , bltHM.t, n , 1•1s. 1.QO Eas• eoinoer, S.nt• .t.na, C.llf. AlfNlll SllOY•llf ................. ., .. " .................. , ..... "" ...... , •.n , ' ' WllUAMt.S,.IONH, Barl>lr.1 Henderson 8ru<t, 7'41 UlllhCa"'C..-.. nt•atlCllN~ .,..,,, ........................ ,., •.11 .. t • ~T C+tr• .. ~ Orlwt, He•POrt 9tacPI, CA. W•ttn~ ................ , ............................................. S ... ·~111,•osTOH & ,. .. VITT, INC. 9)640 ,,_m1111•citr'*"1inor• tllMhl~<l•ffflc•llOll I 'I 1.UWO•TH 11. •0$TON Tflls °"'lness h cond\ICltd tty..., j,.. O"lllATINOIHOIN••lll ~ ...... 11 ... ltt div/Ml. Gf'Ot.$1 ·••••••••••••·••••••• .. ••·•••••"••""''"''"'•••··•·····•·•"• 7.111 .::.,..:::::·~~=:..-1• '11 ..• ~::~~--=::':::;,,,'·= '"" t=: ~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:-:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::. ~:: ,. ,,,,.........., Oftll{lt co11t O•lly P'tlo( (AW!ly Clerkot OtMIOll county on "Pfll rfft\111 IOC "'' no11r mort t"81'1NQPl911 tl•Mlflc.1loll , > ,, tup.rYlaff. ~r l-. IJ,ll, 1•1t. 11•1·15 1.1 5. ,.AIHTlftS """' "' 'PVBLIC NOTICE Pvllli.ritd Or.1n0t Co•M 0<1JJy l"llol, FOf'"*' '-ttrw11wjn1l -50ftll011e Jou"'llJm1nr.1te. 1• •-'. liN!y 1, I•. 21. lt, 1•7S 1u 7.15 A~ul•r b!'U\111M1lnler , .••...•. ~ ............................. , ......... , 1.U SIOH,.AIHT•• tC-IMftlall :i~:l:i\~~:~·:i:~s · · · · · · .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .. · · .. ····· · · ... ··· ,.., Sllftl~l.,,,..••r ,,,,,.,,,.,., ....................................... t•At Fortman ........................................................... ., ... 11.P Gt<wr.11 l"orem.lfl -11 '°'''"'""""'""°'""-'*· TIAMtt••S '°"-* A or ITIOf'• Tt•mtlent,lllllllW Jurt.-C."91t9'TH1M1 ... SVff'-· ••• e111111,.. t11rtc1ulD''''"' tan,....,,,.,..,.. .... l"IMMKtaQ\llpPflltfll) ... -.,; -• A·F•-W $we111$h t rant,or\ll'nll« ,.,..~1 .................. ~ ....................................... '·" Ori ...... V•lll(+t Of com•IMtlolt" 'Afll( ... Of: l••lel -Vtltklts ~1 tllt116"""' • .,, ••• ,.,, ............. ~···. ... ••••• •• 1.U :_;i..~~::f..7:i~.=~ .. -:=.,•r··: ............... . 0r1v;rri:~:=:~~~·~:=~·;lr-it·~·~···~~·..:-: ~ Il l nowt. Tri. ••It '°1t.11Nl'Mll.-rt~ .... -lflll' .. 8' "'*"I llll'l•Mll ........ 11. It tflt/I flt ,,.,,._.,.,, .. ll'lt CIOffTlllM:Tott .. ....,.. tM aMIM I• _,.., ..,II \0"11 &I'll' lllt;C'""K'°' ""'°""Min. to IM'f"" Mt•.,_ ... MNI ~ll~tMotto•ll""'lr-~"'""""'*•---fltfll'dlltf«I, M0"1 .... r l'll'f wltM,. r.i1•1iwaW1M• ,.,. ... ,., ... l'tl•Ttaf*91t delf Mf '" l'M etlthlftt Int tld\. A otT"'tnt bol'ICI •nd • pt~!ot'INllU bl:llld iwll1" r+ciulrN jWlot' .. lllltll!!Je\ ,,... Contrtc1, Tiit P•Tmtfll OOt!d ~II bol In IM 1111'1'1\ Ml lorlll I" lllt c..MiH1 OO(urnenl5. , 1 COii 1 t COMM Uflifl TY COl.l.&H OflT ft I CT 1!10 .t.ROOJll T•u1te:a "' l'tOrm111 I . W•tlOfl SHrt1.1rr, 9"rdof Ttw..,1 """''"'"°' ... !It'"" 0..ll' ,.. ...... 'il4-.1"1 • ..,,. I - f'OOl'lffttft: Motlatill'llilll<l.IOlltP'mY-• . ll'lall 1"9 IUl!y WI got rMetfOW ...,...... t C!.1is.ltlc.111..-io,,.rMlkll,_l'lts,...,..,...., ANlfW>lt llaUr,l..ut•"'••lllll,.,.... ......... , ................. . ,, ... 1•.!IO , .... California corPOr.allon, 'SZ• Hf•llo• Blvd., Co)ll MIS•, C.ll il, q~1• 1--------------1 fh!S b~lflt•i h (OndUC ltd bt• (OF• pofilloll. ~lllAtwllr ............................................. . • 1ar11N011t ""'-"·· ........................................... . Cffwftt ~I• 1 •••ctwlorwfl'll.,.nll ....,..kit boll• ctfl'ttM I ...... , ..•.••••..•••• , •. , •• , • , .. , .•.• , • , °""'""""' ............. ' ......................... ' ......... . o..nl ... Mlf Ma"lillll'lf ol P.1ntt ...,._. , • , .................. ,, , • C..Crtto Gort C\ltt.r, OrllldtirW ~ ...•...••..• , .......... , c.ncmt Cw ... • lfh•rWIOlll .... ,.,., .... ,Wm 011 ... , , • , • , •• , • C-.retoS-~"· CwlllnO. Suir ... Olll., NtwOOl'ICl'ftl ...... 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JOUtL&t ... , ....... : ............................... . lltecllSI~ .. 1 ............................................. .. ~l8t (N811/0f!IMll .................................... .. TtO!ltfllnQ MMfllflt, Malllll .., ... , ..... , , , ...................... . WMClllw c~ ........ , ....................... , , ...... , ...... . UtiTHeRS .. , , .... ,.,.,. ,, ,, .......................... , Mllll:AT1NO IHOINIE llliS ,.,_, ....... r .. _ ...... ""'"'111 ... MtfWt\,.ill l11tlllffr IJtllltr Nt.....,.Nl"-t. ~1 ............................................... . Grt11111t .' ............................................ '.' .•.•..• ~········-······················· ........................ . ~· "·····~···' ........................................... . Gr*lfl ....................................................... . °"°""' ... ' ... ; .. " ............................. ' ............. . Grtollp7 ......... : ••••. ' .•.•..•••. ' .• '' ................... ' •••• ' Gr'8111tt . ·•••· .......... ' ...................................... . °' .......... , ............................................... . '"1111t1:.•s .. • an..tl ......... ~: .•...... : ..................................... . ,,..........,,,,1,,, ............................................. . ,....,,_,., ................................................. . ,,... ... , ... , ............................................. . ~..,.., .................................... , ...... . ,IPET•AOl:S 11. ' "'"""'-· ~,.._... .... ' .............. " ........ "' ...... .. ,,.,.. .. ......,.~ .... , ..................................... .. ..,_, & .......... °'"" f"lptl.,,. ... " ............ •••••• ....... ,. , AIC& .. lt'~tltrlc .. Mf'fl~ ................ , ........ . ..t1Jli':*':'"f ..... Piii.to ••••• , ..... ., ., ., .. ., ., ,., ..... , ••••.• ................................................................ -(······················· .. ···· .. ·············;"; .. "••T--......................... : ...................... . "°°"''"' ',. . ~ .... .., .............................................. .. -#WMf"""' .1· ....... ' ............................ ' .......... . IHlll'·MITALWO•tclftl -1 ,....... •.••• 1 ............................................... . ............................................................ ,.~=-~=~~~~ ..................... : ........... . T:::r=.lltiltMochlM ........ , •• ,, •• ,,,,,0,.,,.,.,,,,., •• ,, "'"' .... 6' ....... (llM, ., Nlftlt.fr ,.,,. ... ~IM dtlV'lr ... " .... "" •••• ....... ,. •••• , "" • ................................................................. Clllftlllt D._.,...., f tlltl .. , ..... , •• ............. , .... , ....... , ,,, .. 1• . .a 1j.10 • 11 ... 1•.n ,, ... 7S.10 "·" 71.H ,._,. .,._ .. 11 ... 7t.ie JJ.St 11 ... 11.U II.to , .... lj.10 ~-" M.1• ...I• .... •1 .:ro ..... ..... h.• .. .. .. .. ..... .. ... .. ... .. ... .. ... 111,tO "·" , .... 1au !It.to 101.n .,.n. .. .. ...n to.n Ill..» to1 ... "'" ·~·2' ..... .. ... ., ... Dl't'l9fof~lit ... UMlllM11efttf..,.,....W: ' , ........... :................................................ ,. ... , .................... '' ...................................... .. .• ................ ................................................ "·· PUBLIC NOTICE .. , ... NQTIC11"octl!OITQRS SU,,llllO .. COUft:TD' THI!. •• STAT•O,CAt.IJllOllNIAl"O• TNI: COUNTY Of' OltAHGl Ho. A.f.JJ» EJ1.1la Ill RAY\/, MARSHALl. iilk.a RAY llARl'tU.lol M"R S HA L.l. HOR AT IO !R A Y ) If A RN U M MARSHALL, A.II , MARSMA Ll. Orce.1std. NOTI CE IS HEREBY GlllEl't lo llw crt'C!Jtor• o! lhe •bo~t n.amed Mc...,.I lh.111 .111 lte!'-'i h•vifl{I cl.1lm• _.,.i""' !ht s.sid lltct<Hnl .ar• required 10 lilt '""'"'· wl!h 1"'8 nettlltry v~iwrs, In tl'lt ofllct 01 1'1fr <ltrll ot lht am"" t n· tlllldtoU.I, o• to pr•H.nl tl'wrm, w11n llW ne<tsllff vouchers, 10 \ht unde<'\i91'f'd .11 ... olll(tOI : Don.I Id C. MllChtU, J101 Wll.,.,lr• 81-d., 11h Ftoor, Lo'iAngelts, Ctlff. «I010, ... nltll Is ·~ PllC• DI b<BI· "'" ol the 1111dt••IQ'laO in .111 malter'i Jlltrt•lnl,,.. to tllt t•t•I• or sl!ll<I Clet•· dltfll. wlltlln four "'onths .1lle r lht li•'1 M!l<1ll0<1 ol th!' l'IOlke. 0.1111May16, ltlS. WILLIAM H, fllRNI E alld 8.t. RBA R A Bl RNI E C4·l•ecutor'i ol 1111 .lbllv• n.1 med d..;fllent DQNALDC.MITCHELL J111 Wll ... lte llvll., 1111 Flffr- ~AllS'ltts, C.IH, T•I: llll),..._.:IOO Attlofll•IY e.t c.1: .. cu1ar1 PllllUlllOd OrllflQll! Co.1st O•ilr PllOI, Mir 11. lf..11'1dJunt •, 11. 1t 1s 11.w.1~ Dt1"":f''Mflt•Ml11 tnoc1...,,.._ ....................... •1.u =.,.!:;"'"•MIJfr11Clr4 ... lf ....... :.;.,,,,, .• , •..... ,, tf.4"1 ,1---,----------1 ,.,,...,,,..11'"'""'.............................. 11,u PYBLIC N011CE a...c,....,,. .. ~.,.. .. -.,.,......... ................ ··"' ~,.:;"-·· .. •••••• .................... :,................ . If.to :c+~::::::i:::' ••••··••••·•••·"~ ............. , ••• ,., ............. , •••• ..-11... n. lllW1811t•,_OC>lntllln'• , • ...,. ............................... r..................... "''° ..... . T°.l;i 'ii.l''M,·•·•·••••••"""••••••"····•""'"'•·"~" .,,,. ,.,,.J-t,1 IVtrlR. ltJD l rllt'ltlro ..... ...:.. ~t:::::,;,'J:~.:::'..::::,,.-.;:.~U:,: r-" .'O,..,., L•tun• ••ocll, CA.. -:i.n !1111 ... ::•1 y' .,_ ... CONTR.tlOtll .. .._,.. lht _,.,"1 It J""9frl Hllft'rnan, 1.)6" .. 1...etilrO C.• ...,,,..,_ ... ..._ tltlMI ............. .., .. ..,........... fr.,~91Ml'l,CA.fXJI --::~· .. ..,.IMll......_.., ............... ..-.n. ~.::~~~4:.\~l.'::ri' C.· .... ::::,"""y::·-:::.~·-· ........ ,.,..,......~ .. ".,.,"" ril& hMM••-1• coPICIUc1-c1 ., 0 14_,..... Mid f MM,,... ........ If .. f'fllWlf'",,_lt hfll:tltlM '81 CIMttt!lp, :c~•t. ,_T,..tlll l9lil tNll •Ill IN ftnn Mt tor~ lft "" coritrocl M:;,1,:111~,:;:11 00=~~·~•0 rr.11 11•""""' •• , 111" w1111 '"' 11 .lil1 11 HIW t-'llrc:ltr•tfOrll'telCeu9IT111q,il ~ I.A AL'-1,UNl(llflDICHIO'-DISf•tcT JI. lt,S. f'o::J:' =·~~........ ' l'Wlflltllll Ortl'lft C08tl O.ltyri::;.~ ,,.., ••• ar.,..c....o.tty,. ... ...,·w.ii. "" 17Dtl Mly11 ........ JW'I0 4, II, •• ,. 11'6.Jj • I 1 K•ncton Por>tl>I AUdl Tiii• ~1.11.ment w.1~ 111ed .... 11h '""' County Cllrk ol Orl'lgt Count, on M.ly 16, 1915, ...... P\lbll$11ed Orilnoe Co.151 O.lly Pltol, ...... y1•,10,fl\dJUl'lt4, 11, !91S 1•7' PUBLIC, NOTICE JlllCTITIQUS•USINf.SS NAMIE STATEMENT TM t.11-ng per'°" h clolf19 1tus1.' ,.,,.s; . PSI DISTRIBUTING. 19t0 ltll'ISt •• HtWPGrt e..c:11, c.11. '2"60 Paul 81Kh)Chmldt, 1m t~ St., NtWOCITT ltot•<h, C.11. flMO Tl'llS buslntss Is conducted by f/111 1,.. dlYk:kHI Paul 81tch,chmlctt This st•ltrntnl WIS fUH with I,.. Cl!oJnlr Cle rll: ol Or11n...-County Ol'I Mllr t, 1•1s. ...... P\lblllhe-0 Ora,n""° c;wH 0.1Uw.F11ot. NvJy 1, 1•,11,21, 1trs 1Jto.1.i; PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE JrlCTITIOUl IUSIHISI NAMI STA Tl MI NT T"" kltlowlr19 Ptr!IOtl 15 dolnt -.J. ntU••: HERB MITCHELL ASSOClitfrES, UOI "'8rll'loltl Or., N1•Po0rt 9ttt" CA • ..... Htrtltrl (. Mllt"-11, IJOIMlrfM"I Of' .. ....__! hath, CA. '1MO -t Tii is MIMS• It t onduct•d br ... Ir.. e11v1-...i. • Htr'Mnttien f'\il:iil!Wo Or.1noe Coa" O.ll'f.~ Mar1, 1•,21,;ui, 1t1s ~71 Dial Direct~ 642-432 ~ Call Callee~ I lubscrlbe t'o thft . ' . newspaper th6J covers your ~ hometown best< .. TOUR Hometown Dally Newspaplir DAILY PILOT c 11i;1 "°" ... '"" [f\'i 1hnc '"' -~1 .... l11uJ SI JS corn 11erf ·1·ou H C< ~ucl grce ~15,· ;..lt:e ""'' ••• coo µlu.y Zon add $86, O.ti· Spu t;tl r !'o r cou brkf SIZC p ;.un fo r SHI. c. Ro 4 ba< sha Cu l bee Uta lo~ . . ' ---._.,..._ w MsiJll ... S. · , . J / ;::1.: •••••••••••••••••••••••!••'!'•,••••••••••••••••••,. ednesday.MaJ2t, 1975 DAILY PILOT piJ ................... _,, ·• _ .... s. H111nrorstilt •••NI . 1002e111r .. • ., 1ooa lt111e1Fors. . jHo...nForW. Ho.M1For s• ~.,.....,..,.~ l &...,... I OIZ ·-• •••••••-••••••••• •••••••••••••·•·•••••••• •••••••••••••••••••··•-••••••••••··--••••• •·•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••·••••••,.:.,,: , ........ ; •• ;,~;.oi;•oi•;;,••••;;•;;•;;•;;••;•;;•;;•;•;••;i•'•~ . 100 G1a1fel 1 IOGZ 1 ' .... ,.. 1001 G....... 1002 ~tMrol IOOZ eMNf ,· llOi.' ' .. -(I.) 7!~~ ,.,. ·:~~~:~:::;;;~ :~;;~.. ~ ·············$·l·O·~~· 0RE .. B .. A •• T .. E············ ....................... . ......•.....•.•.•••• ta&eli -with ·u.tt•(:hud We have a big sptiead in 't-ountain • g1i1ra1e11 ond trooihaded VaUey. Thig rambling rune er has 4 · .• , "t•«d >•rd•. •:..,..;do bedrooms, 2 baths. large fan ~Y room , ..4u,.-JM 5· ___ ,,J/~ CLP SE OUT SALE C.:OSl• Me11a , Ji\dJ price ;"1;'~ """"- • $JOO oou, C•li MU·HSt country kitchen, formal dining . REALTOR ONLY 1 LEFT :i~ fit $56,450. HURRY. CALL962·/l~I . n1kut*I: TWICE THE LIVll[fG ANNOUNCl ... G J Bd ... ll h ad ·---·--~ Do.uble 'our fam1h~ pleasurf1_Jn this 4 J " . rm , c. :.-al !\I e l complet.e Newport IHch Open Sat jSoo I ·5 2540 Vista lovo cui;tom ttome wilh hcuvy !.>tum ceilings in area of btiuutiCul 'homei;. J Ull !tU.lfe ma11tcr 1. 2 bath. r.rvTng-+-r.,.mlly.""f·ur1noil cJ1ne. Patio. LoUi or room fur c.otcrtainin" uround lx.'<lroom , 2 bath CENTURY j>HORES Cameo Shores with decor .. tnr items. El ec. garage 2 story ho1ne , Secluded ... ·ear yard Choite 3 bedroom and der1 Ocean door ,01>e11c1', J><.itio, t:lc. clc. Su1>crb faces CANAi .... Call now fo'f: fu ll details Vi ew ~lorn~. Sclecl carpets & drapes. location adJai:ent to 1'\/C\Vport ·s Back on the NEW L ISTIN G. ~50 ,900 . Spacious hreakfast area overlooks llay. 002:4454 esthetically designed pool and i>atfo . 2 . MES.A ~DEL MAR Years new. Warm, open feeling a nd ideal for enterlainin.l{. Access to $ ,950 privat.e beaches . }>resented by our re- 3 Bedroom DOii ·t-touse-locatCH on a s i clCnf";~qlccialis(s Shirley anct M4:1rS'h' ·1 quiet secluded ·s treet. Oversized lot ftich _ Call for u s11cak preview. $45,950 . For Ntfo,.motion call: 548-7221 t 6n._40D.Clb k 1LL .Or _ U 6·1) 64 ·-~ ··1 . .. . ·-'i DRIVE-BY SPECIALS • r\vai lable for quick rnove-in : Drive by • , i407 Novia. the IJ!uffs, beautifully · :. color coordinated Condominium, now $88.000? 1'hcn motor to 510 i\1 a ri gold : a CdM cutic pi e duple x. it 's vacant and tht:r~'ll prohaUly be a salesperson ., .wa1t1ng to grab you? So <.tart over to 1023 Dolphin 1'erracc. Irvin e l'crrace. 1'11is is the Dri vc-by Q.yy of the week. -PoOl'--PtUS-:J""'l'Oi')fir,-400 sq _ rt, d ct11 chl.'i.I ~;tudio llutJding. ill'i '"""""'J "-'ith manyj;Jrg_c trees. Profwsionally landsc aped . T iisTe ful ly de~oi':n-e-d thruout. This new listing 'vein 't last l<>ng. Call 640·6161 . -C-Al:L-644-7-2-7-0 - ~s2s E. Coast Highwpy, Corona del Mor by gos h ! 4 Bcdrms. pool. s pectacular t·farbor-View and full of decorator opportunities. l•'ee al onl y $179.500. If you need a map, ::;ee k Un ique! 675·6000. enmyer Realtor POOL TIME IS JUS'I' AltOUNO the cornel' 11ntJ we have the perfect home l'or ye;i.r ·round ·e11t erta1n1ng. a Bcdroorn , <::bath, enclosed patio (what a "recnhoui;e ! ). OlfcrL>d oal $;15,500. Call ~0·1151 ..o:~ HERITAGE REALTORS I 00 FEET TO BEACH Outs tunding buy for investor or person who desires beach home + rental income. Duplex consists of one unit with 4 bl•drooms, 2 baths + one u11it with 2 b~drms & One bath. Excellent s urhmer rental. C<.tll ror delails .. $89,500. 640·6161 4 BIG ONES! 'l'his fine 4 bedroom: s ing le stOl'f' home is only 11,:.-years NEW .! Located on a spacious t<>~11er lot with lov ely l andsca~ing, sprinklers a11d Sl-IAKI<:: ROOfo'. Vastly UJ>graded intl'rior \Vith pane.Jin,!.! and cus tom drape:-;. IT'S /\. BEAUTY AT $48 ,900. Ca ll 546-4141 DECORATOR'S D.REAM ·Many <:ustom extras. plush carPcts. lo vely ~ecorator \V<1 llpa1;,ers enhance the interior of this Lagunci Niguel 3 bedroom bea ul_y. Located on a neat cul -de·sac street with open hills <:.ill around . NO DOWN PAYMENT TO VETS ! S47.!IOU. VA Al'P'H .~ISED A'I PR PE -T •• Jiit llO•I\ 10. 11~1~(; ll!l(MVl'I HOM(S . fOtt UYI HC HCTWORK wt I•• .,,, 10• IW•. \UL. Ot lt~N ••r"iC/ 1• JOit ••HO• G-I 002 G-al I 002 , •.........•......•.... ~ .........•....•....... Being r_e modeled; c ustom 5 BR . 5 Ba. 6500 sq. ft . home on point. pool , dock . l.ovcly custom 3 BR & den. 3 1,:.-ba. on lagoon. Boat slip. $22.5,000, Beautifully decorCttecl 5 BR. 41.:.-ba., 1>aneling, 3 frplcs . Boat s li~. $260 .000. Custom 5 DR. 4 b<.t .. View, 80 lagoon. Ramp /float. $290,000. ft . on IF ECONOMY COUNTS .. here's a cute Cdi\-1 cluplcx; beci n1 cd ceilings. 2 b<.lrm . & l ·bdrn1. units; rl~· duced price S76.5UO "MOTHER" LEFT HOME .. l~e aving the dil ught er ran1hling around in this unus ually sharp 2 hdr1n . & convert. dc11 condominium ; hd,\·d. firs .. artistic s hutters; property in ··move·in ''condition. $85.00U -----'O~U~":...f.~.,,,5.~ VE A s::I BAY AND BEACH 6 7 5-3000 ,'<~U I I C.OA""T Ho,/IJV COs::IO NA OE L. M A R Ge-Mrol I ooz·Gmerof 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Prin1e loc;ation nl'<.tr end of l .. ido. \\'ith souther!.)' e xpos ure for ::;un bathing & sunset vie\\'S. 4 Bdr1ns. 5 Baths, formal dinin g. rumpus rooin opening · on sandy beach,, 1>icr & float . Fully " furnished. Pri<.'c redtu:ed to S?95.000. ·' BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J ,i1 Boy~•d<· o,,.,.,. NB b7S 6161 1002-al 1002· •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME IN IRVINE EASTSIDE FIXER UPflER N111etls work but "real putc nlial. a hdl'm, I bath hOusc with i;torage roo1n s & study or playhouse u1 luri::tt yard . ~uncd It·<:: with room for :J'dditiu nal unit. f>nl y $36.Soo .. Jus t listed. ti4li·771 I. Open Eves. - S47. 700. Call 54fi-414 I . BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 3 41 Bay~•d" Or"' N B o7'J 6 1e>1 1002G_.. 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• G..ra1 1002 GeMral •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002'1•--------•12 S 'f ORY :J br. 2 ba, Newport Beach Republic humc. ne v.· c pls, drps, assu1ne Vt\ Small 3 bdrm .. 2 baths. surrounding·. beautiful <.itrium . This is a fr ee standing ho1ne with no common walls., located close lo everything. Offered at · ~: $-5 1,500 ---'"" EASTBLUFf' BEAUTY ! Spa cious tri ·lc vel a blir m . ran1il y home: Jorm al dining <11·ca. country kit chen with brkr:il. area. Pool table s1z:c family rrn._fo'rcshly painlcd -vacant & ready for immcd. occupancy. $Hl ,5oo 1002-al 1002 Assumable Loan P ayme nts only ~!I, per month 1nl'l ud1ng taxes Jor this s harl-1 a bedroom, l bath Costa Mesa home. You'll lo \'e the massi\·t! brick l'ireplace, h uge kitchen. se1H•rate dinette area. covered p;.it10 and larb"\.' re ar yard studded Yt'lth l"ruJl. lrl'CS. New on lhc n1arket. l'ricL'li only ~.500. Calt a.u;.~, ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• C. F. Colesworthv HEW,ORT HEIGHTS fiuge living, roo1n wilh open beamed ceilings. Lus h secluded back yard wilh pool , aµpralst.'Cl at S&a ,000. Cal I ii.13-a.>18 Re alto,.1 640-0010 Open All Wk. I ~2 . 1074 Matjoo Way, SPARLING REALTORS PAIHTUI' FIX UP Co1taMesa 4 Hdrms , gen"rous balhs. oversized garag~. s hake roof, 2 patio areas. Cu l -d e -s a.c location between Sant,a 1\na & orange off 21st. HL-duccd lo~l.500. $30,QOO-VA.fHA 'fhis 3 bdrm. 2 billh home is the besl buy in Costa Mesa . Near shoppio g. transportation, schools. Greut potential for young family or in\•eslrnt:!nl. Call 545·9~91. 1£1~':!1 ~ Prap ... ti-· 752•1920 1490 QUAil St. NIW'POll1 •lACM ~ arm -al I 002G_,-al I 002 .························!····~········~·~:-··~· .. CORONA DB. MAR Charming tow11J1ouse -delightful decor. J·l ~1rdwood floors , lead ed windows. TV-music center and bar il"i con vertible den. ~.000. Fee. LUSK HARBOR VIEW HILLS · You wil l e11joy the outdoor fun of this charn1ing home with its pool. jacuzzi, twi11 ('har-broj ler & gas lights . 4 l>edroon1s, 2 1baths. $105,000. BIG CAH,YOH V.IEW & PO<>I. 'Beautiful eXtcriOf ~of \Vood 'Rnd stone .. nn l arge view -lot . 5 Bedrooms. family room. Definitely a home for e ntertaining. \Vood deckin g s urrOonding pool and jacuzzi. Sl79,500. . ' SPARKLING HEW IAY'110MT Never lived-in 4 bedroom 4 bath 'home w /sandy beach, pi"er & slip 'plus s pectac·ular Harbor & mountain views. Great locatiol1 on ree land for $269,500. . ' ;~yGLASS -BliST VIEW Panoramic v.iew of Newµort Beach. Bay, and .ocean. 6 bedropms, family room. bonus roon1. ro.,ewood peg floor entry, \vet bar. pool. jacuz.zi . Enclosed cou rtyarcl entry with fountain . S215.000. • CAN'T 'llAT THIS ,RICE Come see this neat 2 bedrootri' & a den Turtle Rock Townhouse' ,.llt·h tow maintenahcc, higtf cl»lirtgs. l\vo balhs & spacious dining ~rea ror • lig Canyon Buy BcauliTul Uover 1nudel. va cant. :\-Ju st sell ~ l Bcdroum & den. ::;11~.:>00. or lease $700. mo. VOGEL & BABBITT REALTORS 644·6056 OPl:-;N U,\ILY l·Sprn. :J621i CA 'f A"'l,\RAN llarbor View, CdM OWN l=:R "MUSl"' sell and cun give i1nm(..'CI. OC· l'Up. 6HR. rum rrn, din rm .. pool & jacuzzi . In g r e a l s h a p e (i\largueritc Ave. tu Keel Dr., turn leH and go lo end of cul-de ·sac. l 675-5511 Cole of MewPOri lSIS E . Coast Hwy Corona dcl Mar. ~HERITAGE REALTORS ELEGANT EASTSIOE Lucalet.I on beautiful cul· de·Sac Stl'cel IS this J Bcdruotn . <:: h<ith Otke & Colgrove built home. Ex· pressly s hown fur the particular b·o)'l!I' al this low prii:c ur Ju.st $59,500 linNowpo<oll. ~aim ANYTIME 1002 G....;.;.. .• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~ macnab I lrvlna realty DISTINCTIVE BA YFROHT Moo1"ing-for 60' boat 111;.ijcstic li v· ing room w /soaring hig·h bcamecl ceilings -s pac ious 3 bedroo1ns , :1 baths -wood paneled , library + ormal dining room·. ~84.500. J-{<Jr · ~iel Perry 642-8235. ( B75 i _NOTHING CAM COMPARE! Spectacular VI EW from upper & lower patios · :J beclrooms, 2 ~ ~ baths, pa11ele<.I fan1ll y roo1n . lo\'el-y· c..Ys.ta,I chandeliers! ~68.500. Hob Owens 642-8235. C B76J '.· .DOVER SHORES - CITY + IA Y VIEW Ctiarm everywhere in this ne\\'IV dc- t(rbrated" 3 1beMoom w tconvc1:tiblc den HOme. Formal dining -l:..trJ:!~ etegant m\aster s uite. $159.SOU. Barbara Aun\!642-8235 .. tll771 . "SUJIER. SHARP TIBURON" I N HAllBOR v 1 ~;w BILLS . Delightfully upgraded :1 bedroom. £amily room t10m c on lg. elevated secluded lot w /vie\v, Sll5,000. Belle 'Cl)•se Lee 644'·0200. lB78 ) ' ' "A ·WHALE OF A VIEW" HEW PORT HEIGHTS BRING PAINTBRUSH U1ll imited possibil111e!'> with jusl a liltlc love & c<1rc. 4 bdrms or 3 & family room. Hui;e lot, J garages. ope11 l.M.!;tm ceil- in gs. fircplaco.: & loLs ot work. Close to ever· yth in~. 1i46 ·77tl. Upl'll Eves. CONDOMINIUMS '""'" """' "''"""'"'" nr . So . Cs t . l'luza . 1-;xc lus f\•e 2 bc dr1n , Ow11r 1Agl. 7aJ ·551t.i S·l l,00 0 & i48,50U . F1replaee, s1>acious. DELUX CONDO 1>001. p;1tios. r·ur lhe bcsl I S1Jl1l h!\"C I, J Hr + \"ICV.'. ofrcLircment,c<illnow Onl y S t.i7 ,500. Call [ (Ufi~I N -MflfiTIN IHl J :: ~-REALTORS Waiker & Lee Reel Estele Hardwood RO«S DUPLEX ·• l~arge ~bedrms <A'1 <A'ardrobe clos ets . Bltns. L i\·ing rm w /fpic . Single. car garage•. Patios.· In good lirca. _,ea11 Mytinle 646-3928 ;E vlhi; 642-1447 . ® herbert ha wk.ins RlAlTOllS b4t ·J 155 a:!J.~1:1 I SPARLING REALTORS CAT ALINA VIEW 'Fro1n t h is e lcg:n1t & sµa c1o u:-. .1 lxlr1n . J bath fa1n1l y hom e "''i th 1----------1 !'>eparatc fa rni ly roorn & d ining. ·rhc beauti ful lrccs & greenery cun lra:-.l nii:e ly V.'llh the th1l'k s hake roof. giving a i:uzy feeling to this e :I>.· l·cllerit fa1n1ly ho1nc on quiet cul·dC·SUl' strl.."t!l. S77.!IUU . Call li·lt.i·i'i'll. ORCll Eves. PRICE SLASHED $5§,900. Lare=c.sl yard in ,\le:.a Verde North. H.uom fur pool.. g'art.l t•n. o"r paddle tennis court. Pre mium gratJ e Will!, (Joor a nti window Co\.·t!-rings . 'Natural WoQd grai11 kitcheu l'a!Jinl'ts, huge ' ~- Wailier & lee Real !state 644-7662 CORONA DEL MAR 1002'G-1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• HUHTIMGTOH B£ACH -Ss9,SOO Best buy in des irable Suburbia Pk. .\J~ul.\' cxt r~1 s in in1mac. J stor.v rancl) y,,4 BR . 1''1~ & formal dining. Beaut. ld scp, BBQ . air·l·ontl \\'Orks.hop. 2 I I I San Jo ... Hilli Rood NEWPORT CENTER, H.B. 644-4910 I ' I Lachenmyer mas le r s ul tc with ""a I k · 1 '!!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!!'!! in c loset and pr1' ate I---------• GeHrol I 002 Cor"'Ono del Mer I ON 1 gardcu atrium. 004::·7788 EASTBLUFf' Funr:VEH \'Ifo;\Y : 4 Br. 3 lJaLhs, 2 rrplc;:,.: 35 ft. game 1-00111. ,.\rea l !'ind. ~JUS,000 He alter ..............................•............. ~. SUPER SHARP!'. POOL TIME Just.listed. 3 "r, '&Jam. OCEAN~IOE CONOU rm. upg raded 1 tastP,ful· ·· OCEA .'lA SO U'l'll · DOVER SHORES J·:N 'rEH 'rAJ N I X S'l'\'LE; 4 Hr.~·~ ba., :1 frpl l's .. pool, un!Jcht.•\a· I.l ie vie "''· ran1ll)' rn1 .. tJ~n . libra ry, game rnl .. ;1 .,.,·ct bars lone pro · fcss1onal I ~28.000 Great entf'rtaining home in esla bl ishl>d. prc::.llge a rt!a. Nor th TU s t111 . C ui.ton\ built la th s .. pl•!llcr 3 or •I llH. fan1il~· rn1. wet bar, indoor blln l:llJlJ. Zonl'd lor hor~l'"· For ;iJditio11;.1I infurrnll · lion l'all 2 Char1ni ng houses oh 'A' I tic lot So. of hwy. Cd.i\1 , lkaut. i:iardens. g)i,SOIJ. Owne r, 073·-' !OJ ly decor'd. thruoul. !ll'ew 1\dull Com1nu11ity D!W & no·wax fir. in <Over-10 1 RENTALS kill'h. area. 1\ssume lo 2HR-2B1\. Ci·IUICI!; ono int. VA loan. SlJ,5: pays story l'nd u1nt. o\·e rlook · all. Onl)· $43,!Dl. inl!t golf euur::.c ·with D ,\ v I D B 0 u R K E glimpse OJ Ol'.l!an. Patio . Wl' ha,•e a sciecl nun1tx;r of rental s 111 ···01d Coro 11 ll · · Ch<irming rustll' units. somt"? with I 1 rcplal'es and 'A':Jlk to.'.3 11 1' l>ho µs anti t he beach. Frurn :i;27;j rnu. ltLTR. Enclosed garage. Clu.-.e C e ntu,.y 21 R.E. 979·1050 , , a<l&-9'.JSO . to cl ubh ouse , pool , _ .--....;;.. --:::;..,.-_ -jacuzzi. Short walk to w~l uus l i n e . :-Or . lar ge DECORATOR'S DELIGHT . LOTS SEECATAUMA I C.arl sba d s hopp1n~ \\'c ha\C a fc.,.,· chi>iCe bu1JtJ i11 g sites :Jvailablc. ,\n exceptional ·o'&?· and the bay and ocean · c'entcr. 3 rn1 . lo ocean. Ill · from almost every room n"e ss l"urces sale by in this a bcdi:oom,Jamily owner. Shown by app't. room home. Beautifully 5-18 ·3~~0 ~· ~~·~~ _ COMPANY n1-:1\1 :rl1H s SI r-;<.·1-; l~l-1'1 673-4400 OHL Y $35,SOO Bonus roorn 1s more than porluruty i.s lhe Io( On an1ple !or regulation pool Promontory we ha'\:e table . l l.;1rgc lJdrtns a\·ailalile a l practil•11lty s.ituated on the bluff. 1t makes the lllMl of the · p ll no r a m a be 1·0 w . i l65.000. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- lr•iM Terroc:• $79.SOu . Exq i:i i~iti:-3 bdrm. hohle v.'ilh pool. C us1o'm ,c;jrpcts· & drapes. fmincdiate Ol'· ~ c~pa OfY-Call Ludal14 • Hao;!!or.V;.wHllb . $tl9\500. 4 lJdrms .. rami· ly &. extra run room_~ pool & jacu~.zi. Best value in .~~e11; cal! to see! . HESTER·BRDWH .J & As soc .. Realto~ ' ' .BJJ.,711 ASSUMABLE v.,\. Loan. 3 Hdrms .. :! Li;4'thlli . f'rplc. l<:asts iJc Costa i\1 esa . l lu~e yar!l with acce:t':t". ::;.i1.aw HESTER-BROWN & AssOl' , l\caltors a·JJ.9111 JUNGLE , with 2':. IJ.1th,,, .-\ll ol Lhi,., urigu1a l price. · ·.' ,\Jillie pruning and tn n\" ---------µlu::. l>c BI).; <1 t1ccur.1t11r" DUPLEXES ... rning will really rnakc delight. Lo.,., dv~·n pa) . this JBR 2ba gem :-.hinc. OCEAMFROHT n1cnt will Uu~ th1.~ lar uul \\l e ha ve 11 wide r.il)b~ ·rhis Selel:t Property i!'> 4-PLEX h11ni..:. Ca ll :i45·!H:H a\a1lablc. A ch.arming adult occupied and hu:, Large J . IJdrm. furn . 11ro1Jert) on Carnation al had xlnl. care inside. 'apl .s .; s unt.l cc k : .i ~f!J.5W i.-; a stand·'<u1t. Prict:d r1uht ill Sl3,%(). garages: ~real ;-,tarter Four e xcellent pro· CALL NOW 556-2000 units. Si35.uw perues on L;1rks pur are ti73·J66J ~·W73 E\·cs ;1 1110:-.t c:itl'eplional sll~· 4=, SELECT ----11011. r\ i;1anl ··duplex·· on I PROPERTIES Balboa Island 1006 l'uppy ls one.of a kind. ~---~---••••••••••••••••••••••• ,\ndmany,manymore! 8\' U\VNEH. ·IHH.: fain •BY U\V :\:~lt * DOLL HOUSES .. rm. lba, nr..--So.-~sl :J Ur .. l H:1 h0111'1l· +·upl , \V e h a \'e ii \'arie.t·y Plar.a: l'ur'chuseJ new u1·cr garage. Xl11t 1!•1·•11!'> ;.i 1 aili1Ule l rom j u .~t h o m c, mus I s c l l . ----::il 2.J.\)1111. 101:1 117-'. helow ~1.1.llOl). One ha'°·a Con:ildc.r all offer.>. (71-t l l•---------lalboa PeninSllla I 007 µool. one a s 1nash1ni; tcr· 5.5,', d·4~>~1..:~.r,'. 5sp0,m,_ wktJays: STEAL THIS! ••••••••••••••••••••••• raced ~artJen, one a iwi.t .. .. ""'.. 1'wu2·bdrmhomc:-.-··111 ·law ·· "'illH. Gr~3 t •CAPEC9D• WATERFRONT ·rwo story .(HR & den, forml d111 , <:: frpli,:s. 3 cwr gar, Mtra prkg. $1~5.000. Sulln1it your t ... ..ide. JACOBS REALTY ti75·6b70 MUST SEE! lioodCostai\lt'Sah . .11:. :i 132.UOU·liii,\ 1 1ev.. :! .11·~ hu 1nc s lur s ma11 Hcducctl ~o&l2.5u0 uld . 3 st ~· 3 Ur,J Ha . t>pen ta znilics. .CALl. 675-7060 ua11.v .. 33:1 l.111110 .\v~. FIXER UPPICllls·'· ti"i5·1.itill ti-11.i·l"il."i ~ . GOV'TOWHEO 3 Bdrms .. 2 &ths Huntingt.og Beach $.l-'.9t.MJ. LoWJn .11yt. CALLS5WIOO lalboo l ay'""': Seldom 111 Shot'cclirrs is.a ."\"ice tJuplc>:, ."\"1·:. l.~I. 1 ! 1ixcl' upper il\·ailublc. BH. l ' ~ l.1t1. cu.::;:.,;; .->1)11 1 . \\'c c urrently have (hree :\la r:-.hall llll) t.i7.i 11;u.1 ~.u l'h home~ ;11·ailablc. Co,.onadelMar 1022 l\.\O. thr~c o r 'four ••• •• •••• •• •••••••• •••. h1!1lrouu1s. fo.ro1n S9'J,SI)), \\'hat a l'hance lo ro~l)y FAMILY HOME 1nuke a buy ·and ·lh~n PLUS INCOME customi ze your drc,u'm l'c rhups the n1o s l Re.,ttoM l·harminl( uµgradcd. -I Ur l~~~~~,i,...~~~ EXECOTIVE home In ~f csa Woods. I ilil a.'>lcr br & lt v r1n O\'Cr· look lo,·cl y ulrium IALIOA TRl"1X wt pl ush grl~ncry & nite DREAM HOME 4750 Sq fl O( Ju:1>.UI')' loc~1I ed in exc lu.siv~· (~.1\1·1· Shore s Sl'et 11111 u: .. , only $54 ,950 1 • Setlle into this beautiful 4 bedroom . fa m ily room home w /Protected pool '& ja~uzti. J·car garage. The · ul·- limate in VIEW properties. Appl. only. Elaine Svedeen 642-8285 . (•8791 ( 11 3HR 2ba. <2 ) 2BK .2ba. hghting . '1';1ke advunta&t fully (urn'd, Xlot 1·entals . or sellers ··l!rl't!l1 lhu1nh" Be low replace1nenl at as )'OU enjoy uutt.luor i I I 9 . 5 0 0 . C 0 ,\ST patio living surrounclt..'Cl Newport Ucach w11h ;1 panoram 11: vic1,, 5 Bdrrns. 5 iJulhs w o\'('f 5 15 ,000. U! C US l (•lll wallpape r and d1·a1x.-s, 2 we\ burs, :! fi rcplttl't::-. and r.-.mily rooms. fo'rom the immense mus.!live betlrm wilh sw1ken bath to t he trellised garden out or the pages of Sunset {;oirona dcl ,\l.ir. ,\l1nost hor1e ~ .,.. 11l·11·. 1na gr11l•l'l'llt, five LOVELY HoMES Uc d1·011n1 hu1lll'. ·r .... ·c What u scle,'lion. fo"our hl u('k '> 1r•irl\ h'"·a c h. bl·druo 1n estalewithpool :->c p ,1r;11e d 1u111~ r1101n and \'1ev.·s. $134,950. r our 11l u ~ s 1,;.11·111us t :~1n•l .1 bc1Jroon1 Colonial with rw111 1·1111 lk'tlt\.11 1111 r'c11 Ju11•n coasl vie 'A' in 1;!1 1n r c;.11· u1111 Al i ~!or1ou .~ Shorecll(i;..;, \'U!'>ltJITI l}uill. 1'!.1.-. I!'> ·' ~1 ~1).l!IJO . ·rhrec bedttifm 11'"'"' listin;; an1 I 1nu~l h~ 1::11~\is h rot lage \qlh :-t!c n 10 he t1)1µrl'l·1atl!J l'hitrn1 "ulorc $125,Ul>o. ,. ' J " A , HOME IH THE , AllK! Beautifu ll y · decora.ted <a nd landsc·aped Oxfol'\(i m il df\' ,town.b11us e on fh·e ·J>ark i n • Univers)ty Park. This• ·gre-at _3 ~room home has a dining roorg, and a ,bonus room. 914,950 · . 1 r • ltfNrOllT,.llACH \ _.,'644ol7U UGUH~.,!~H -, '494'074' _ A 'C;._ .. ILL l•Hl!IR•CO. 't , .. LAST LOT IH SHORECUFFS Huge lot w /view of beach, jelly & Catajina. Private be,ach access-In exclusive Corona del 'f<lar . YQu pwn the l~nd . .Ken H?rtley 642·8235. (880). } . ·' PftOPERTIES.673·;,410 b y la v i:i h ga rd e ns . , M•w 'IN IRVIN.E Priced only $62,000. G•lhedralce1hngsaddto ~UPEltB lhe roomy feeUng of thl$ • . "31x1'rm home. Sprlnklon Q M E S frt)n\~. re at at I.he pool ls ... Cempus NB Mt·HSS Jusl ilt,ps awa.y. Al '44,700 lhi1 property is a Did you mitilii the bo.aL on eoJ.ld v•lue. Brand new mi-riqa property ut On the mtrket.~·7711. New1>9rt Heac)? ~Mn · ' I dalit)' u .. y is your last chance. 3 B'il waterfront 'ji.!l~"ijiho\liie 'wi':b: dock. , 8~ ()w~ tvu "831·4023 ••• (. Call 61:1·85.ll.I. ·r....,·o tiedroo1n a nd ct.dn, 01¥~1 •11q •11)•wfll''-'''" 1• canyon u111l ~'t!.an Jf'w t~t1 1e1:n1I ~f~~;m~;:TI ~i M<tgazi"e .. thb home is S P1':CT ,\t:Ul .. AR view. an exeeptu~nal bu~ at JX)OI, 4 Hr . fu ro,il y 1·n1. 2"• $229.000. Wall <:ons1dcr Ha. dinini; rm, prol de· ~xchu11ges. ~y u1':'111L· cor<11 cd & l:JndscupcJ . m c n t.-0111)'. Ag .. nl tl74 ~undca s lle LJr . 152"·19~ $120,000. 640-82al ' I 7,. " . \\I.I.I·:' Hl\1 1) ' RI • I ' • • •• ' - ' BY OWNER. Prine. only. »·,.BR + lam Rm/Din. Eastsid~. See to ap- preciate. Miny extras. $(4,SOO. -ll3 Esther St. 6'$·2200. \ 'l•B): Owner-2 BR, sml . •i. fenced yard. $26,500. Call •' M6"0748 . 559 Hamilton. ''•'Gtl . i.'1&.f:AUT . Decor . f1.rw•llpaper. 3 br, 2 ba . • r:.'81g:, special b.lt. on fam ,..,·tm. w/frpl. ~lust see it! $12.900. Under list ·price -Tor quick snle. Ownr. 548·1005 ·•Folteae Park, reduced .... tM.000. Used brkent.ry, Br + la. lg, llv. rm .. din. rm:, !I covered palio, u s etl ~"brk trp l . -~1ec1 iu a.. dbl Jo~~¥ palnl. Sprlnlcleno. ·•' ... '-~.~.Sun 12..$. ,-: Coroitt Dr:CM ! by ;I· . . llU .. 230. F-!~ .. IXCB.UMT Oreenbtll location m~kes this 3 bdtm., 2 bath, 1 charmer ift dt· 1irable tJNl\IERSITV PARK . See ll today! ONLY$C8,~ rlTTIT RIAi. TY 512·7000 ~ • I ' I ' I .. •• • • . ' .. • • 8 d 0 I A c .. Cl B A c .. • • • • • • • D '• pa I 1 pa ... . l B or $15 z I ~~ ro W/ no l B ••• • •B •P •I NO m • " ~-M•Y21 117& • • ... I I ,. ~, "'" I ..... ,. •• • ' : · . : 71221211.,.fwiL • ... &k!l!tt'f: ql:iitlll Oflwl..... .... • ......,.Mer21 .1m DAft.Y,.LOT : • . DmA. ... U ..... -...... ... ""•••••t• .. ••••••tM-t _. u. ... 11.a •. itM •••••• ...,................ , . ::: •• ;.--:-.-.-.......... ...,..4zt2w•Uata-U.fllw. .... ...,...._.. ...,......................... • • .., JMI*" 4410Mwt1~11.T• ,,..,.. · .... 1 · ••••••••••·••• ••••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••+ft••••••••••• ••••i••·•••••••••••••••• ,..I ,. •••••••••••···~··•••••• ..... :.a: .... 11 , _,. o • 2 BR llolu ....... C •• ____...._.._ .,._ .. •a. •••••••••••.,. ... •-••• · re,_~ • M -..,_ ..... Jiii ..... 1114 "' -••••••••••••••••n••••• --. g:tt. ·~ .. + ~· m1 ··~·~················· •••••••• ,;············· ' ft,~v I SHOPS, ldul »catJon LO'NS up .... OI FLY. ·DRIYt: a1:•f!o.PM~24UI' OC&A.NVltW .Duatlex. 2 &·IJDl!lar1eatreaAnew ~r~•, " . ror boolr1lON1, candle ,. WI /0 EUROPE • ' · br 2 b1 , DJW, rerrif. a br, cbh.,hr, CJIU, tttMc, I ,_... :!:piJr •~C;_'l•ry , lltTDL•-•'/"'9 a .... -d trip••· ~~r 1.n Apelta11tiftwW••• Ve1 . Oarden. 122 . I •n~I. l•rapill, p•Uo J • ;/.. • ln •II •l ZMTDLw "'"""u nu:-,--_. •••••••••••••••••••••• 49'-isa4 lndry. f'lO. mo. Maf CORONADILllAR ~=::......... ~:e...,.ractory, N .B. 1:.o t Or Co Europe . StarV--Oion ............ 17 ~ 2 Br TowMMe = '" ,i W'~...... · w• raLn anae · Budget·lo·Break t '"' C ~· •••1 lrom-.1Bt~ .. •''.-' 'f. --o<•&uw••M'H s-.~c:., Bank Dolo .. Pl' • •••••••••••••••••lrlll -.... JIU l fl.J BR tanlln 1pW fl'Pl p I ,_ ··~ -~ ,. .,,_,.....~........, 842·2111 MS-0511.. 8 U R A U T 0 L o BAYrR9NT, 2 bedroom••••••••••••••••••••••• b /W r,vt pa~0t' lilt' II a oo, tun .. , eonblMnlal 1'11etl,_.Lw S.rvi.na: Harbor ania M· Vllla ae,N.b . ' ~ ~araQ:e, llrtplac., paUo'. SbarpZbr,pool,wa.lkbd, Irv~ nd.° arui. ti.ts~ * • --s... brtalU'att.SoQMoOCIUft6 122t $41 . ft. oppo1ltt years doorne1r property, carprt, adult.al• pet.a, tiOOmo.551·11U • "i..mti .Cal.Uu't'l~Le 'beach. MOO/Mo. Avaul~~:;;;;;;;;;---i. ' wn1tar1 1ndu.ptex.N 136CJ,W-181'fl/m.l&.u. Move In W/depo1lt1 lacnilJ.~ 0-. Lo 111n s r-IA••••Ct••••/ t ~ dock, but beauutuJ vie,.. 1·2 II W ft..OI" · only l BR $190 Z BR thoppln1 l n.. buch. WATHMONT ,.,..._, •••••••••••• .... ••••••• :· over North 84aytront. MIW OW\11 Pvt PaU., C'l'Pl,lyrlle saao Baft11. Security, iM·Jlill. Mew,.,.-..ai 1asoSq. n. rteaceomuor Lett & ...._. Sdlrrl1 •· · Fully furnlahedt lnclud· Delu• splll..leYel; 1300 Avalli'bleJunellt Pool, J acu.zzl • Rec. E•ecutivcotnc:es Broadway 6: CoMt Hwy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMtn.cHe. 7001 lna waaher IUtQ dtytt, aq ft, 2 bdrm w/klft..den, HAYliPl'f Al'1'S Bld1 wr /exerclae rm., '150·PS0Month A.akin& '815/Mooth Letel "*fleet 5200 •••••••••••,.•••••••••• Available 111 tub-rent.al ftpl~, plu.11!1 crpta, home-Zll A pf CM Blllardl, Color TV. HAllOUlueHTS View of boat16•ater CaU: Rtalonomics ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. now to June 14th. 1210 like 1tor11•. •alll·ln fM • A Limited nufllbtr ot llU.GUICY Bl'Okera '7U'l'OO I wlU not be -responsible llA week.Call6"-11'2. cloaela, bath 6 cueat 64,~14J lnlne Awe. at Mesa 1ptcloua 2 bedroom, 2 Realtor 1754181 .... .,. .. 1....., 4100 t,o r . 11! n y debts or c.._ .. ..._. 1722 ~~·. =~'no':Ck~ca~ CAS"n~RANADAAPTS · 565 4155 ::-.~~:·a~~.:..,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• :~~~t~e: ~°:'~·r~:~ TRAVll •••t•..t..u••••••••••••••• encl<>1ed car.,.w/laun· 2&r11drootn1 ·Pool LJVENeuTbeBtacb! 1110()S,ybfro1$1.ane, ..... wWhltlt• NE~. B!J_l'LDINGS at myHlf on or after thla IGEHJ Clean, Cloae to buch. 2 dry room. Pay only eltc· lteu. Rates m11i1-Cne .. s.I Huaun·ittan Harbour ~~==: !'::!: ::! : o.c. ~rport. atao tO 8000 date. April 18.1975. card A I BR., l ba. No pet1. tric. Adults. So; otCout SHARP 1 br SllO, attaa BeautifulAduJtA.ptl (1lt)N&4Ml aq fl . am~e parkln1. A..Roth,2630Elden C.H. Adulu only. Aat873·2222 Hwt. $ blk• from buch. CPl, drpa:, bltna, refric. ,,._ SllO Lincoln PropmtyCo. Newport Harbor;-wlth so at E u ITS )"OR · C teM S,415. 435 Goldenrod, Mo pets. lnq. 2818 21'61Brookburll,HB addllionall4009lf.fiadJa· SALE AT DOWN. Led&,._ SJOO " tte J724 C oron a de I 11 • r , LaSaUeA"'. l 5tf.3S24 96Z.'61l SPA~lhl/S ,1u =:ti. rent. Crpb, drps, amOle Koll/Irvine Cea&er. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLASSES START MON111LY . ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714J815·U3'7 V" ' "' u · -..,._ fNt p1rlllng. Cout l{wy Dan Curtis. C714)9'J'9.l206 LOSTJFOUNDAPET'! Earn commilos.ioo while you learn LOWUTIS $175. Z BR, alnale aty, "LUXURY BAYmONT" apli. Shig crpt, pool, a1Ne•portBl.6fZ-46M . -.2900.Adopc.ioo,Low •~.60Ni1ht•Up Charmin& c~r. 1 Br 1un· beam cell,, cpt.t, df1>1, Unobltructed.panoramic out.dc)or b~•· FAU9f I.be MIWPOITllACH MISSJONY'llJO C.LSpayflJeUtef'In!o. PACIFIC • udio&lBRApta deck,Lorer1nedLad,Y,No 2063 ''D'' Wallace. "Go wlew.l300Sq.ft.,2BR,2 &oodadulllfe1lihe . 3 Ofll M l ltandytoSanDie.90hy. TIAYILSCHOOLS •Wat.er Bedt pet.a. 613-1374/&M-oMa dlrecL ". 6'6·8883 or Ba, dbl aar, adults, oo WIST I.AT 11 ·ca, reee_, ra ZOO to 2000 sq.ft. Call LOST: Gray 6 mt Ausl. 6lO!: llthSt.S. Ana •TV & llaidSerw Avail SPACIOUS 1 br •M Walk US-1828 pelt . Boat slip a wail. 131E.18th, om. Men rm, A/C, ml.Ilic, deluxe ownerlll·l.00 Shep/Setter mix, male. 11:4;,,,55 •Phone Serv, Htdpool -$415. yriy. 233-19t.h Sl. ~Mo. Broker17$.610Q. Vic lllh. &c Coat Hwy, • - •Chlldren&PttSeci.ion to beach. Wetbar, frpl, Custom Duptex ! Br l'h: "C".675.0236 or&7s.file3 ··-· . , Costa Meta-Sant.a Ana HD. 536-4385 6 892·12.61. Accredlt.edbyNA'PTS •SS.ofrweekarentw/ad cpt, PY\. P•tlo. Cell : 81, Pwt. Patio, Gar. 4000 ::,o~~J'~td M·l, 1200/l320/1116aq fl. SlOOReward. Approved for · 2Jl& Newport Blwd, CM 613·1153Sat/Swt4 Eves. Adults. No pets. Like WE,STCLI FF acroaa fr ••••••••••••••"'•••••••• M • 1 ar v ' Of'c., W1rehse, prk'g. 220 Veteran Training S48»l5Sor645-31J81 new.$21j.675-«i62 Coco'1.2BR,2Ba,Frplc, ROOMS $20. wk \Ip wtth C. -1A r 1c1ondd., wood pwr.&46-1252/6'4·2238 LOST: Lab/Shep. mix, EatablWhedl963 · 2 BR &c Den, l"' BA. patio, crpts, drps, FIA kitchen $.10. 'wk up apt. pane wa s, rapes, male. Black. Vic. 18th' Fia.ancialAidProcr.- HOllDAY... ....... Crpts, new drapes. •T...,ic•P ... • heat, gar, walk to shop&, $68-975.sor6'S-.W'7. carpet, elec., mu1ic, 2 UNITS, 1200sq. ll. 1111·1, Placentia, CM. Anl. oo~~~~~~~~~ ..--..... Dahwhr.Sllns.RecsnUy 2 b •• •-bit M•• Ad 115 i=·1rv· janitor, park.inc. M.R. •/frat officp, lge rear •·Jake ''. REW.<RD!I"". DELUXESpacloua t Br, decorated . Share r, cp .... , ... .,., ns, 64~0239· u · __, me. LIVEATTHES&ACH St.ever, Ma:r.SS7.QJ,J6or door.2203-Phue.Unitl MS-2629 ..... W.tecl. furn apt. Pool. A ..... 18 A 1 spiral •l•ircase, real • ,,,,,.,, .-.. •. 1 f ol 7010 ...... garage. croas rom frplc, refrif, patio, cas & $30. wk &cup. i'13-M40 _._ • 8, 621 Terminal Way, LO •• I park!ng.Adull.1,nopeta, CdM Youth Center. waterpd541-ll6& Large 2 BR, l~ bath. PJNEKNOTMOTEL . 'Costa Mesa. Days, ST: Glasi;es in blk ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1985 Pomona Ave., CM Adult.I. 1 child olc. No Bltn1. Encl ear. Nr Hoq Under new Management SEVER.AL Su1lea 500 540-5710. Eves,fi46.0ll8l. leather anap case, ov.al, hicaco law school grad peta . Aw all July 1. 2BR,2Ba,bllna,baJcony. Hosp Adult$. '225 mo aq.n . thru .~150 aq.fL. purple frames . V1 c . seekingjob as law clerk. •Tropic•Pool• 644.·7800 Adults only. $225. mo. &f.2.059s ' 'LUXURIOUS. en. En· ·IOc,at~d ad1acenl to NEWPORTNEARHOSP. CoalaMeaa5/LS,ifround Ready for work July 1, 1 Br, cpts, drps, bltns, 8'2·Z23l or "2-3893 l~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;j tranc.• 6 bath, Maid m I . r • n • , •an k • U001q n ore tndtn'I. 3ex· contacl541.Sl• . 1975. Resume avaiilJbje. patio. All utilities paid. 2 BR, frpl, bllM, dla·l..:==:::.:::..;;=='--fl serv . Non -s mokers. resUuranlonCoulHwy tt. oles w/pvt baths• · Write· Classified ad.no 5'18·1168 hwasher, 1undeck, pool, CHILDl9COI( MISA YllDI M8·7191 al Newport Bl.' Ample vtew. 5 Jr exec oles. LOST :. Will the woman 422 c t~ Daily Pilot p' 0 • ---------1 adult.I, no pe\I. a:so. yr· 2 Brapll $110. Pool5,cpts 2 Bdrm.., l¥ii bath condo R r I __ .. , free parkinjf.&42-fl&M Coof. rm . Recept. area. 't"..ho•p'e'"1ooded 't~~& .. Tan. Box 1560, Costa MeSa . ca . l BR, prefer middle age ly,G73·l418ev•/wknds &drp& 54.8'19ll witbpool.$335Mo. ~~ or ren., \.vua.1fl£ Prod. ofc&. Assembly &c u;W ·~ eaH 92626 ' orrellred,liochild/pets.l-"====="-"==--1 -~~'.:·~~·~!._ __ STU'STOllACH pr1v1leces. Corona del •lMO.fREERENT• mariuf, area. Sound r e turn . Cbildrent-'-".:_ _____ _ _ s_1_ss_._64_2_·_58_•_8 ____ 1Cotte M••• Jl24 5 Min to bc h, zea, 2 BR, 1 ba. Winler$235 Mar. 61S-4730. 1·2·3 Rm. ofnces from studio optional. Brokers heartbrolr~a . Vic. CM. W..ted 7100 -••••••••••••••••••••••• crpt.J/drPi>; car., lndry, '----·tH-4150: $1 ~5 .Per i;no . Near we lcome . Mon -Fri . No quest ions a sked.••••••••••••••••••••••• ~na. lech & I ... Ex-• Offh-Polh Stw /ref,$1&5.ChldrnOK. 2 BR,lba,w\l,$28.S ,...... •~f\. Sect)'.~· 91'1 6'5-SfiOO 645-8259. ccounuPayitble ceptionallr Ilic•. z 110 D 3 BR, 2 ba, fwn, $375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Pnimill!ts. Noleue req, C · M l & 2 Br. AduJlS no pets, ays -S4 &·1~oo; eves. MEWPOITCUST . PVT. Rm. >\¥ail~ Smalt .1:;-.· m -32#9'nlnocn ' a..teh W..tecl 4600 WST: Golden Lab, male, ...,. to $700 _ew_~poi_rt_l_L~·-·_C_M_.'-~I dshwhrs, s hac cpls, '45·8161.Avall. ZBR,..,Baoondo$i2$ Lic 'd .. a.mbulatory Guest ~83S·2MoAfterriooei ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vic. TeWinkle School. Terrific oppor. for sin· 1035 Fu"----CM closed earaae, frplc, l BR, crpts, drps &r: bltns. WIHAYI HomeinCM.&&Z·i11271 ._. ' WANTED TO RENT C.M. 545.3054 cere indiv. lO join major ~ BBQ. Gu fl water pd. A.dulta,no-. SUM .MER RENT· ... ., New plUh oftke bldt, 2 b l dull coupl ., corp! Beaut. ores! Xlnt \ 1 BR Furn, 2 lrg cloleta, Poof Call &42-tOMaft.fi PM. ~ S 1r ..... 4200 to 6 r111 suites. Con· )' m~ ure a early e, FOvND: Grey ma.le cat, benefit.a. Call Barbara queen s ize bed, prlv, LA MAMCHA..t.PTS-••••••••••••••••••••••• ·rerenee• rm, xerox promasei TLC. \:".ear 2 s hort hair. Leather Mac, W ·2700. l>enJlil.& dressing rm, extra lrg 17SScott Plice CM 2 Br, crpt. drps, bltns, ONlbewater.Sunnyabr, "COpier. Nr. OC Airport frlBRonba,yorocean· ne c klace . Npt Hts De nn la Personn e l rooms , e n c I. gar. 642 -5073 • gar, oear attopplng, E· 2 ba, di1he1 incl. $5.50. 919 8J3.S&t() ron.t. &44·716&. .548·2036 Serwiee of Orange Coun· W/Storage. AdulLs on.I)', 1-------.-sjde , $115. no pe ls . Bayside Dr, apt G·3. ,. · SMALL 2 BR houle w/ FO ty, 2082 Michelaon Or, no pets.· CASA VICTORIA Sfi8·63S1 673-Ml.fi OfftCI S~ACIMI yard for working couple. UNO : Blac k Lab, Irvine. l Br, !"urn. Apt /Gar. $165 mo. 2344 Elden Ave. 842~734,.646·5145 al'l 4. $TUDIO apt, decorator furn 'd . Water/gas pd. ' $160mo. 646·5300 . 11111111"91 .. -3140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FROM$42 WHICl.Y E•tcvti•e Wies 727 YortJ-llYd. Beach Blvd al Yorktown 536-0411 STUDIOS&llls •Full kitchen •Heated pool •Laundry facUille8 •Free utilities •t'ree linens •TV & maid serv. avall •Bar·Q·Que •Phone service l , 2&3Br. unrurntFum Westcllrr Dnve, 4.50 sq. $190. or under. 646-5373 male. Has Collar but nOl-'-'-"=------ fr. $l69.50gas/wtr.pd. 38t,2.Ba,frpl.c,privgar, •LGE z br. 2 ba, pool, Lido Isle. 4 Br, 2 ba . fl., private bathroom, arts lags. ~ic . Victoria 6 Ass is tant Manager. Ir Adults-NoPeUSec.gate .~mile (ron:i So. Coast ad I ls, sm p el ok. Completely tum. JUDe, air , etc. $115. per ltlO. ·Placenu .. cM,.642-5951 Uuyer, aggressiwe4.ex- p IR R Ele •--Pla&a Avail lmmed Eastbloll. 833·891',· July&A"g.-~-CallGeneH1·11 "~ .. ,,.....,.. CHRISTIA., •.1 .... want.a FOUND " per 'd for Balboa lsland 00 • ec. m., va..... · · · ,. .. .,, .... ,.., ,.,._._,,,, to rent ';,;;rr• house .: Key r:'n.g w/ 4 casual wear Jr. bouti· 52S Victoria,M2-i970 979-4631 or573-4274 833·l653 Mandalay Bay Wat.erfronl ORANGE CO.,.URPORT w/yaird. 536-9152AM'S keys, vic. Zlst St.. in Kntg que. Apply in per$on, MIDITlllAM•H 1 BR, Pool, bltns, adlts no $15.5. 3 Br, 2 ba. blk tobc:h. 3 BR Townhouse with Best bldg on BirCh Beach. Call to 1~Ury. Mon , Wed , Fri 10.12,Thc pets. $1S0.1D0.32>J 17th No pets/children. Yrly. dock . Memorial Day -600/900/lSOOsq.h . Slraightlawstudenllook· 536·8056· Top0rawer,221Marine. I BedrooYmlLLAGI Pl. See aft. 11 arn. W·Newporl. 642·1531 wkend, SlOO. Summer Ri&hl Rea It)' 9'79-8533 ing ror s,jmmer place in R~ward! Ladies. Cold wed· Asst. Manage., ex.-r'd rental $200 to $215 a bcb,area.Shareexpuplll d b d Fed ~ lBedroom&J.Den GARDEN Apt. encl'd. 2Broceanrront;lower week . owner PllMIWISTCUFF $115.Rich·-m.7163. •n g an• vic co, ladyover 25.DressShop . 2 Bedrooms gar, 2 bt, 1 ba. Cpls. over S350 yrl)' avl. 6-1, gar 805 /4S3-40Z3. OfftCI CM on 5/15. 64+6212 Eves No nighLS. 548·5383 2BedroomTownhse 2lonly.$195mo.846-1129 ~'h:Se h !W4;.fi340 l111l•e11/&.'t'est/ _oc.'..:w::k:.:•::•:::•:..· ____ _ 2400HarbotBlvd. . . •Ii 9f'e Laguna Beach • Lovely, MEWPOITllACH "--Ce , Attractive girl to model 2 Costa Mesa (114 )~7-8020 All Ut1I. pd.111 Br, patio, Easlbluff area·lrc I.fi.40sq. lge oceanfront home. 1,000 sq. ft. New~ & ••••••••••••••••••••••" 1f/5T: Irish Seller, mal~J afternoon a week. Must bltns, relrtg, $170. No ft. 2 BR, 2 BA, frplc, Avail. mo. of July. $1500. cpl. Frnl. " rear ~try . ._..11 ro. S, Coast Plaza CM have a nice figure &c be , PM II I.. p e 11 . 2 O 13 Ch a r I e . private entrance, 2 car Rita M. '1 e r s. R It r, Pvt. restrooms. if, SOOS Brown rtea coUar,· bald sophisticated. Great pay. S .. 5fl8·1517·645.as79 garage.640-6276afl6pm. 494.5.fiZOor96().l701 39"sq.rt. 0,pertwy spot lip of tail" cbelL Strictly for fun. Priva.cy WiOIM&Jttl ' 645.g117 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Please Relurn.548-1357. & discretion assured. DELUXEt,2&3Bl'Apls GARDENDUPLEX,2 br, 8 .. YSIDE · Beaul.Apl.inCdAllwknds Vendlnc Write d esc ribi.nc PvtPatios-HtdPool bltna, Gar. Pvt. p.:tllo, A & •kly. Prime loc. PRIV.AT~ Ole .. in CAMDYROUTI FOUND: lrish Setler, yourself . Wrileadf.386, Nr. Shop'g-AdltsOnly non.smokers over 40. No 4 br elegance w/beam Panoramic wu Wik Lo beaut1ru1 J::xec. suite. Excellent route ot candy ~~;~Ot v:~· s:~~a:~n: Daily Pilot. P. O. Box , M .... l•l JI r ~ pets. S210. 548-875.1 ceil'g., frpl, D/W, patio .. bcb. Resp ad~lla only Reasoilable. 6'.>3700 & snacks available in 847.'is.to . 1560, Costa Mesa~ 1111SantaAnaAve,CM I' • ._ .. -3840 $550 mo . 613-5719 673-2064 yoor af'ea. Ideal way to , .. A 113 .... "' ...... • ,_,.. eve/wknd . NlllltfT I I • FOUND M 1 ~-ml ed AUD. ITIONS ~-, mgr pt -••••••••••••••••••••••• Yoe_ I_ •2•0 Of 111. . v· supp_ emenl sa ary or : a e...,. x .4 CHEZO,ROAPTS S c 2Br ZBa dpl -"' • • . CSP•"in USH>n ie· pen1ion. Loca,llons., Shep. Ug ctay blk hair. ror a 2 act coml!Cly. Hec&e.d.DtMeM pa · • • x,_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• JO .Ir: Laguna Ni1uel as Installations .Ir: Tr'ilnina Magnolia & Elll!i HD. "LUV ". For appt Call 160 W w--. C .. M.: 8234 AUanta upr/lwr furn. $290 Nr. OCEANFRONT l(ewport low as 30c iq n in neworc •tur"ni s bed ~ l"lntll~clni 968.3442. Eves. Mike. S/20 thru 5/27, BE.AUTIFUL 1,2"3 BR. Priv. gar., Bc:h,Adlt.548.SUJO Beach w1cry ·or mcnUtl y bide . Call Owner, 1._-..,ilable: Can .w ex· 673-1384. NO INCREASE in lwn· GROUNDS pool, wa1her, dryer, BRAND NEw 3 br, Z ba rates avaU. Fully furn'd. 831·.l•· . 1 PUde~ to f\&tl..tlmt ·in · FOUND : TwoDalmaUons UT mer rent. Beaut.lbrfum ADULTS·NOPE'i's Closetobeach.536-0.136 Condo. View. Adults. no Zbr,cpt'd.it~ WN.~.wportBtvd.'llnlt come. Fort Worntallon W .. Garden Grove area A O •I mile to ocean , 0 . ~ .. M •• ~25 ... ~.7 ~ •• '""'···••,i7...... Mayt&.8'3·5665 • COU,._• apta $165 • $115. Spanish l minutes lOOCflan. Lge ML\I __,... pe .... ,... · J'KI...,,.. AOLIDA.Y~ SPECIAL; "8 " $95, "C" IRS. Util. t-''"=.;'·'=":=>-L.l=='---1-'=..::.=:..::=.__ n I""' atyl 1 e bldg, p1vtndryendadg1ar, ~n~~ ~~~s~~=-~.~~r. 2 & l IDIMS ScMtrl L...-3116 2BR hst"Pr: lmlts, Big paid. 615.,..57. Ora 0 ter Co. L,l~uor . to'ound : Beige Sia~se SALES poo ,sauna, ' ts. -·-Beautiful studio apts. • • ••••••• •• • Bear Lake f to I L1·ce"'"-..·r.0Jsale.' In· ca t . Dark b.rn t1.1e. r EXPER .. GOODOPP 11301 Keelson Ln., 1 blk eas heat, 1u stove, air di •• ••••••• • • · NO. Costa al5a Dental/ '"°"' 1~.-k Mi v W. or Beach o(f Slater. conditioning, awlmmln1 Frplcs , bltns, is· VIEW? Seeing ii believ-persona, 3 days $&0. Medical/Ofc sWtes•vall. venlory. Contact Carol 830mar s. s11011 •eJo. TO ADVANCE 842·1848 pool, rec. room, washers hswadsherks, 2Fcar ga~•,•.· ine. 2 BO, 2 BA, Mature (71.fi)W.1206 From Sl45t mo. Mr. or ROlandSlma,M!-lSlO. ·3867 . TOP PAY, PERM .. ---------1 &dryers. un ec s. rom -· adult.5, no pets, elew:ator • ...,............ 4Jot O'Keefe,&33·2900 PiANT SHOP in Desian LOS.'t: Presc~pt. alasses, MEN, s mall beach hotel. l-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 .536~~-'5~79~-----to Bch. & pool. Security. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Plaza owner iU •Ill sold rrame, in blk case. 3621 W. IST.S.AN~ . ' Rooms , $22.SO week. Lo•oAt ldllle 31155 Cst. Hwy. South IOOMu.t.ftS N'swly decorated off1.c~, secrifi~ ... Well ~ked, 5/11 , Fountain V, CM Apl8.$100mo.W.70M Lacuna ...,.. CdM . 275 sq. rt. Pacific area 5451988 l---------l62Bravail.F\im&un· · ·w1nted to share CoutHwyaddress. worlt wJdeslaners . · · · Automoliwe Newportle9dl 1769 furn. APPLE AP'I'S. A ApwltM•f1Fwwilllrtcl be autiful 2 bedroom Call675-20Sl. MO·l310or911ii-as7Z LOST : Hlshi &'I\trqootH DMYC1. llCf' I ••••••••••••••••••••••• unique idea in adult apt or U ...... dltd lffO rurnished or unfurnished -1 _...-4450 MOLi.AND Necklace . Vi c. 16th "-Bui ck, Op;::n British ! lBr,furnapl,2blkafrom Uwlng.6100WarnerAve, ••••••••••••••••••••••• apta at Oak.wood . '* Ora n ge, May 11 . Layland . Right (Se.I, bcl'I &:: Coast Hwy. $125 Huntiniton Beach. There's $1,000,000. In••••••••••••••••••••••• IUSIMISSSAUS Reward.LindastS-1591 141-6041. No lease. Sorry ~ recreation racilltlet. 1. Piz:ia Take-out . alership for top gal. mo.645·5016. ~ THE OL........,Y LOST old ~L ..... We're looking for 'xlnt no children or pets. DClllK Ill CMIPl! Complimentary l1ta11i1 C "'" 2 . Jew e Ir y Mr a:.· : JO mo. 111u-u1r background " cong:~al $29.95 WK UP. l Bdr, 2 Ba ,..Cl. ·-leuons, St.Inda¥ ~h. Wholesale/Retail blk dog, fem. 55 lbs. Vic. 11 ho Id "Bach. Color TV, maid UYI$.. ·SPACIOUS 2 & 3 bdrm. ~~C1-;,;;r Sports tournamM\ll. A p .30RET1 . .,~~~ce 3.ForeignCarR.epair Nwpt Blvd &r: 16lh St. :;;n:.,:~1.; w/~~- serv, pool. THE MESA, apt.a. Children OK. 11181 heton fulltlme activit.i• direc· nm• re ~e -4. com mer cl a I . N.B. &C.M. &t&-1023 Phone Mrs. Cameron· 415 N. Newport Bl, NB, TO m MA.Ml "A" Keel10n1 1 blk. W. of •hc11 2 II tor who plans pvt.le. '1 ay~lable large fl small. Reiidence ·Bauer Buick & 1 ... ....-.,, ~ 64S--008l Oftf' 500 tall tree• and Beach Bl. off Slater. •I • · BBQ's. We 'll evu help Old •orld ehlrm with MS-4170 sto.OIOI llWAID 979.2500 ··-:-lt 1 t re a m 1 w Ith 8'2·0389 • 2 II & 0.... you rind a room mite .. French wlndowl, 11bles LOST: Diamond Ring, 21;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;: NEW, ·beaut: furnilbed wMerfaU1 ~reate I re-· FrOM St7S ·$4&S Sorry, no one WMler 21 It ,,ic-tr Ha. Adjacent to Ambilioui Couple·needlag larger diamonds mount·~ exec. type townme ftl'. lul..,: aettl1tl for ,.Wt I Br, Gal Pd., Very Clean, Met41VIN9t llHt & Moms no pet.s. Modebopltl dai· Fe 1 t I ¥ -l o ( Ar Ls more iftcome. Unusual ed with 2 siaesol smaller ocean. ks Br, 3 Babbq, den, 2 :~~=:, ~·p~r:!~n!: ~!:·:;':1111~ pet.s. S•O·llOO Jy 1,0 10 1. See our larcer G~dsB.ROADWAY oppo1rtunwlt~~j~ ones. 675 -3615Bef. &am &c sundec s, gas . wet From SllS.-Furnllure ! ad 1n Lhe aparttnebt lff· LA-GU~AB""'"':..':..I eam nJS. ...,. _.....,,, cA.::ll::·c.:'"'::30'.!P:::m:::·c._ ____ 1 bar, tennis els, pool & NEAR Hunllnston Uon. , '" c.nut Part time or full time. ~OO 542 !J628 avall1ble. Sm1ll pel.I 1 PH: 875-6184.:P'l'L. LOST : 2 Blk Brief CIH51 AVON lilTMOll OUTOflJN!'. Jy, Avail. 8/15. Adults on· Falr\'lew Rd., Costa patio, encl. 11r. Adlta, no Irvine atleui. Balboa 811 Beach, Sum· Lot 5/19 Btn. 3 ;30 " Become the beiuty, "ex· sauna. · . OK. Achilta.only. Office Harbour, 2 br, ahas epta, 8. OAKWOOD GARDEN · 4f4•7f I 5 h1nl. 1 soft leather. Vi c. ·wATERf'RONT r br, yr· open t :«t to 1:00, 230D refrl1, r•na,, dahwhr. i'Mle APTS Hamb•r1er Stand on soo Nwp1 Ctr Dr. Park. Jy . No pets. 673·3531 an. Mesa. PhoneS45·2300. pets. $220. mt\.M&-4300 M mer lea••· ru.11y equlpt. t :30pm . Rtwal"d la Of· pert ln your terril.Ciry. o.) UPM • ZBR D I i..i.~ • ., 5-0550 TOP, LOCATION 611-1513. fered. SfO·MOO. Please Meet new -le sel"nl • . up ex, ......... erpl, Bl . ~MISA YllDI le ~ " -A~illl *e.a..__.a...llMG *•* ...... ; 'rple , patio, . G. 'W~rlrlnl Olrl hu IOYtl)' DllVl .. ..a.•.t. ASSOCIATE-,Liet. m ei~·-•c.•c.•.cm'-e"s"'sa-'1"•"'·----Jqualityproducts.No H:ll-I .. • "-L·-i·•-~ -1 r ,. • .!. Ind' carport"-laundry hOmeattlleBeach.Wlll ..--teachyouhowla··-inP--~1 5JIO Ing exper. necess. Call I Vft'T....--. -Poo crpt ... t"' ry 11 · c 1 • 1 r h w / t r ror itoi't or office. Ample ~" ~-_,.. D ••••••••••••••••••••••• d ils 117 E. 2irtd St' fac s. oup e .. l n ant s are ma u ~1 upper 5.,., tncorot ln us. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... 1 ays. -. •-"•-p 1 ··•-3107 a u · · OK no pets. $160. • responsible s&J. $181.~ parllina:. TownlrCOW'llrY SJ.OO inYeat. Mr. Webet PREGNANT•. -a ew•-Near8each.6'2·3MS 842.46&4leavernessage. mo/yrly + UUI. lJt 4 atntosphere. 1 -~ .... -••••••••••••••••••••••• ' I l & Ref Re "'d 1525Mesa Verde Dr. E. .or•-·· ·-· C1rln1 confidential , •ii BR . steps to beach, year SPARKLING 11~w spac. 2 New deluxe Beach area 2 from $165 r;;5~956S art6PM • . , eo.11 Me1a. MS-4123 $5,500 IUTS counseling 6 referral. Bank •. Jease,~25 . mo. Br, $215. Pa~o, cdrpts, Br, Z Ba , closed aar, all , .._ Eot•bllohed,· money Abortion, adoption le _' · 840·1789arL 7p.m. drps, beaut. 91r en. bltns, $21! mo. incl. uOI. qakw.ood ofrers the ttesp. (Ml t~ abr ·z hr keepln1. --'-~---~--1 Jmmed . occupancy. 846.13it ; 846_..agt.No ~1ne1tln c0:untryclubliv· Twrlhae,CM . (21·2:tltl00 MEW' maklnl boutique ln APCAR!s.47-2563 ··~n.. . ._,. $:150. 2 Br, 2 ba, 2 storY. 2 Adults, no peg. 527 W. fee 1ng al• price you can al· mo + ~. utll. Ew'et · 1 prime •rea. Invtniory car gar .• balcony/porch . Wilson,645·9814 · rord. There's $1 million ~· RffAIL STOii$ ne&otiable. P'ottedule! JIM W. Do I hive to wait TIUM ., Yrly. 64~·1531 . 2 BR , cpt, drps, blll\s. pvt. In recreation facilities, a -. Now 1vall. FOR LEASE ....... 'UITHE f'AIR? . a BR, 2\,;: BA StulliO apt. patio, no pets. Sl7S. 1501 lull time activities direc· Femi roommate &o lhr 2 I n p r I m e Co 1 t" l20-FT1i11Un A.Ye., N.8. A ~V.D. UMITID . DAY fllONT · Yrly l&e, Blln~, D/W · o:ptg & drpa. AfabamaSt, 5'4o:ll tor who plt1ns parties, Br apt, 111·4: 't1tr Dll, • Meta/Newport Bch. Jr REALTORS MZ...f821 dlx 2 br, 2 ba, pool. Patio. $215 mo. 16E 1 , BBQ 's, trips & more! mo+ tnelec.4P1l.Ca.11 ~iln Jutin Capl1tr1no ~·~...-" A:;ll ADAMS MASSAR Coll,__ Adu.It.a. Sllp ava~3~~ Joann.Agt.mal L11 :eUecll 1141 FreeSundaybrunch. ;M;wnt•t,&083:15, ate•. For lfttD. •1easln1 .~~.. , Clean private rc>om.S . :.tast1c view. ~· .,, -, und F1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plus beautiful singles, -• broch\lr1 pleiae coat·. •••• '~·· ....... •• M~aaae & SaWll. 88l9 ... •8kr. LARGE Gro . r . l br OCEANFRONT HOME, 1&2 bedroom apls 1 Roo!Jll'flat~wll'Ced;3br,Z tad:·rr..;._Babich,P.0 . •SiMliS~· . Adams Ave, Hunt.. Sch. Garden a pt. Pool, rec 27 27 Victoria Dr. t Yr. fumiahed le unfurnished: ba 'a pt on bda. S1S !BO. Box 1515, Newport ,_, llO;.ta.' · 963·124l, Mon Ul.N Sat · tkin't aive up the 1hipl room. '175· ?IO lath St. Lease, $600 mo. Or sum· Oakwood Garden Apta Call845·463'7 ~aeh C1. ta860. Jib ; au•l~e1, ... .._..i with llam 'til midnight .· "Liit" it In cla11ifled. •ZBR,lp•,Mes~Verd•. merrental.3Br,tlh.Ba . offers a~ exchWve "~Pi fEMALEtoskr.2brapt. 1lt·14.2.4000 Broll'er '~aUvetbi~.' Refined Gent to me~t CMonart:b Bay PlUa South Lagona . .. 1714149~127) 111411Jl-lt10 Ship to shore re1u.lls ! Adulu, 11r, a¥a1I. $185• Call 11~·•.filt:O!?;, Rent RA11e GY1rantee . Nr. so. Coa!l t Pla.1•. ~~;rtl~c~l~p~aU~on~we~l~co~me~.l~b··~~C~•~)l~M~~1t'~~an~i'' fin.an mature 'tll'ldow . ,.· '42•5678. Nopell.l3S*74 U . ue 2 Br 2.Ba ~1 We a:uarantee that your Ci11 :·1-523'.!858• , . .. . Rolla, M/Ben& equiv. , n1q . • · .. ..,. rentwlllnotberaLledfqr ---------,,. ........ Mne 3724c..,.W... 371 Ocean. v1e.w. Natural ONE f>"ULL Y!AR&:you HOUS& to ahr. Jlllt In Meanln&ful rtlaUonship . . .,._ wood pa.nehng, trfJCI, Ii\ still ha•e the O••l~Utr time for s·ommer. Please reply to P.O. Box An Equal Opportunh.)' ~er •••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••• .. •••••• blk N End N "' ""' 1001 CM 8ankTeller1a-·' ocean. · · 0 ol month 10 month ~ BallM>a lal. Yrt1. $130 1..:.=·c::.c=------I -~hlldrenor pets. $305mo. cupancy . Ren. ta from rno. Da": 833.frD, Nltet PROBLEMS' WE CARE .. Pre,....n •• AMBASSADOR INN BRAND llW ·s29so '"' ... .:=-.-\\ u..,. I I .. , ...... ... ................ ..... ,.... .WAtd....,_c.-.. ....... ''" ' --~~ ... ..... . -~ IT•... ........ • ........ ... ·,tt_ ................. w ..... ...,... .... • t •• ,. .. u.-sfll•H1 .. A.Ma.ft . ' . ,, , . . I ' ,11 • ,, 2277 "AllOll &YD. COITAM&\ '"cl utll. Yrs . lease $l&.s. Price• vary by loca· ·iv. met:a1111,.,.52-J.a3 0 NE w A.Y H Ii: L p For txcllln11 poallion.!ln 494-2191. lion. Mod.ell open 10 to 7, .. CENtEJl &lorloua ns~ banlr· In , Coattllnevu:Blktomain Sorry, no pets or •••1••fer .... 41IO 2.fihrl·lot.Lh11fl5.ax> dream loc. Super ,bo8a bth. L•e 2 BR, 2 BA, children-. •••• .. •••••••••-•••••• aenetOUJ ••I. 1wai~ F t P, Unfurn. Adults, Oakwood . STORAGE 1ara1• for DOYOUROWN •resslveindlv.Call ary ' •oo . Incl. garde ner. G-~--rtDL. 11&9 M1pk!Ave, No. DIVORCE llickle, 833·2700. Dl!rillt 4M,.1715,eves. ~ S;Cotta.aesa TlleWavePro.kct '-Denrila Persannol A __ _.__._ · a-E &1•· DIVORC&CEN'rER Service ol Oran1e O>un· ,_. _._ • .._ O•ra1e for nan • ... AtLyl !trained' Consul· tJ, 20U Mlchel.IOG Dr, •••P .. .._. Coata • Me1a, f20 mo. tanl.I to A.s11ill You. S'fS, 1_,1,_rv:,:1,,n•::;·c_ ___ ....,._ P.Ul"MIWPOllT • ,....,_a11t1N "2·Zll67 + lllin1 lee. 5'S·l216 lo< IAa.. . APAITI •.rrs . ' M!Ml&50 Office·--1~•-=.;...... _____ , Retired, p/Ume. °""' 1acM:ior1or2 TRB ltXcm~. ~ ~·••••••••••t•t•'t+••••'• lonely 11tracUw eklcrl.y Hose.JnH.B.M7-3SlS1.' llMrooowand PALM~AP'B. • 1101 Wc1ldffDf', aenu ..... w1a1w.,,.- T ~ · 1 ......... --a.1Clt _.... BARMAID 1'' OWl-slll atlNUT :rpNPT j fCewport .. ~ :r::,r; .. ~~.:.~ver, •WAITRESS· Fl'. -D.llO~OPonM • .,.., ........ OfW ..... 1-===-"--"="'--j-_!C~a!!.ll-~~....,.-o 8ach, 1"2BR.I""'!_..,,, ./ ,C-11 ... SllA-I IH·Poob-Adult.1,HO,,_. '(114JMl4U1Mtile Barmaids dar •,ftltt Aerosi from 'P'a1hlon 15111r11 .. Dr. 1•·• ' · H1v1 1omethln1 you want i hlft.I. Also. ~fl~·· lalaDd 1 tt .JambDNI Ofl (5 Bllu EaltotN...,-t '1fl0 up 1\0rHftlm ~ t6 sell! Cl1111Cied Ida do Sir Har•ey a 'tavern. .... '"'1...... ,.,, . ..................... . &uJoaqulnHWafta.cl. Blvd.>' drp1 air bath. i.:tao • It well -,Oall NOW, eall for lntervw:t•·t.. J ,,o.Ji&!;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~i,,,~1~1~14~1~64~4-~1~.to~0~1=====d .... ~ ... ~~i~l::::::==J:!Be~tcg·o~B~l~U~.B~.·~'41~·111~1M~::!J•~~~~~~~!!S==~f::==~~~~b64~2·~ .. ~18~.========:::.~ .... ~17~1~1 ======~~ 641-4140 • , l I . , I (. ' I I ••• ' •• • f .. " • ' ''I • ~, " • • "' • • ' ' ~• ,. • ' . . • • ... .. ' . OAILYPILOT -ti Wodneod .M 21 19'S ~==---=-===::.""::'"~~~~~~~ It. •• Build lt ... Diaper it ... Hammer It.'.. carpet SERVIC·E· DIREC ORY I . ' . lt.,Cement 11...Wire lt ... Hoe lt ... Ctean lt . .,Move . . , · ••. :n:• .. Press lt. .. Palnl lt ... Nail it.:.Plaster lf ... FiK it... . ·••· , ... :........ c.,..w ~. . C1er.,/C1n uh l•J 2•:1 • ••w•Ser""-H•••HJl11l11 w ilfe~Y"' ......... ! ..... '•lni ... JP.,;~ ooflltt · -···················· .··············~··· .............•......... ····-·····---..,., ................... , .... ··········-···~······ " ................. , ............ , .......................................... . CSTM tumdl. Additions, MJNORHOMEREPAIR B&ock·SJumpsLone Walla· Eirp"ert .Japaae se Practical Nune. lleliet/ EX C £Lt. JI: NT Fir•tl1ce1 ·Planler&· •THIHAMCl:ttel• REPAJRS, all ~ypea, d I l P . ~1 b D I G rd r--o d U • 8 I /C •• p tl , ReKs. Free e.t, Uc, aak ecorat ve e1tte r o Plumbln&~ at10 ~a •· r ves· • .ner, "'""...,..Me Y . pt me. Exp. DQct.or tic Houecle...U.C. ~ b)I r c oncre .... · at ,'11, o.Scbwart&&.~1301 w It 850•5020 woo.dwrk , concrete. CeramlcTi.te.540-S560 Planters.~ Services. Neat le Rella· patientrelitfW6.Ul14 lady wJuper. uepeno, Blotk wall•·BBQ P1t1. r . • • (:om9eti tive rate. ble. NB., CdMa.rea. Free owntr'1n1.1Ct..-W. Reis. Est.646-4Mit "••Nr/Re,... 1..:•:::RY!.1::•::m::•::.·---.,--- ' 846·70.il7 /848·5S83 Ge Custom Carpentry. LEONITECONCRETE ' £.stl(S.OllM t \ ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• C IL"'rKEDI t I 275905. STAMPING, Cob· . •••••••••••••••••••••••HOUSECLEANING ad,f, Mow:'--" PATCllPL .. .,..,.ERJNG llOOFS t.,.... (,'Oft r IC lo"'raming or fuUJ.b. Re· bleslone, bric ... , Ille,· o··~~ G d d bl ..J .... . ,_. Rcpa.ired4c,Rool .. ced od l/Add'tl $4!Ml'8 a n,--,"""'' Ll HT HAULING epen a e, """' •·~··•••••••••,•••••••• All Types. f'tlfe Eio· Dir1.1ct F11ct.oiy$ervlce 1411bplffl.. m e 1 00 ~tlos,etc.~. · , MOW6.fXl<i& CHAlNSAW :YARD 642·5299. 0UT&A~?1 tlntatei.C:'IU~ •·o'con••-·~96 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fas•·---WORK <U~~T Loe l ' le M I ~ --~ Custom Block & Brick . •-•·--.___. HOUSECLEANING a /Statewf , ~vnc Plt:549·2961 Will babysit for you my ~tacNeill ·Woodcralt k p . 1,_ Cl T c--n·enced ,...,, 7du .(reecM.~1·20'U VERY NEAT 'PATC]t1---'-"-----h0-ff\e . Huntin1to Cabinets, bkea1es. wor . auos. wa~ etc. eanups, reework GENERAI:;HAULINO LJL.--oe·s & Rt:S1'UCCO Bectch. Call 536-17._..,, doors , windows etc. By hr/job. &U-8512 G 11rdenin1'1/ Ml nor REASONABLE Reference.556·9707 Movl ... •/.Hau11.,,, ,Student J · THt ..., lndacp'1.1oyrsinarea. •646·5818• ... ..... 1-~ree Est. ~54·2481, ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,._,tS•r•lce 640·8292 Concrete, Pa'tios , S46·a693 &..NIM.... D~~~:t:&~~~:&.::1~;: 893·1439 C•~RA!'.tlC ·r11~E. New tic ••••'••~•~•••••••••••••• c..,.t S•rYice Dr i V e .w •Ya a nd MovinJ.·Haulinc, clean· ••••••••••••••••••••••• PluMblitt Remodel. i''ree est. Sml NANCYDt\RNES ••••••••••••••••••••••• walkw1y1.Cal1919-7576 J1p11ne1e C<?mPl.e te ups, A·l WorW:. Reaa. ROT,OTILLING$25 Pal..ff~/Plf!&:iR9 ••••.••••••~•••••••••••• jobJSwe!lcome.536-2-&20. T',0 ,. g Se lee I< c;•"•c: G11rdeni~1 Service. Free ~t: CoU. &tudent ·Landscapin&-SodSales. •••••.•••••••••••••••••• U TPLu·-·~? \" 11 r\' · eas J O 11 N 'S C • r et & -... P I a n t 1 n g I C u I • J S ,...,_,. T S II r at." by lh g P · anyt1me8'1·21.il6 f'rceest. MasLerchar11e Prof P •lot•r, honest op 0 '· 0 pa e 0 Upholslory .On'shampoo •••.•••••••••••••••••••• l•'n•/Cle ~ Est' " F ·1$er" Reu•""les & anup. r•ee · Days/eves960-2170Tom k Mli • ..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• hour.640-588SOf'M8·2'691 \soi l relardantli). Childcare my honll!I) hot &12·3102 ,. Re move asphalt, con· wor 'reas, Jnt/ext, free JustOneCallTo: •'l'opSoil•Compoti\.•' ConsultanWn financial Degreasers &. all <."Olor J'!nche». Two snacks. crete", soi.I. J\ouah and LAMDSCAPIM& ':.a~~jg1~efs . 548"2759 • JUST PLUMBING !J\lulch"\fteO..,...ood-. munagement. 3Jyrs eMp. bl'iHhteners-4.10 minllte hicenfed. Call see.·~. *EX e ER T Jap_anese linaJ 1radin1.-7.11.Q338 F 0 lte _ & _ _ . . _ -• 642-4111·• (.~illl 58tHSJO in ..6'trospace & rel1i1t bleach fo.r. your white o· -,.,_.,.. Gardenin1·servite. Frei -~ -PROF Pa1nt1ng E ter . ........_ •••-----Estimfle. ~3370 Houwcle•ilJt personaliited style in . · . x . L.lt. OTIS Plumbint::. T-s ... vlce ~stries. 1~ yrs as Sr. carpets, Sav_e money by •••••••••••••••••••••••I'---"-'--""--'-'-''---' complete landscp': 1or/lnt Lac . Jru; •Tee w htr 11 I dos ••• ••••••••••••••••!'•••••• · ·· · ,-· · at.er s,a s:.ie,s, • ••••••••••••••••••••••• offil'cr in m nior corp. saving me e1ttra trips. ri kl & c 1 &t 6311·7394 -d' 0 . . . HOUSECLEANING&aour sp n ers us. e· . posw.h;, stoppatie5, re-Ford. 's Tree Serv1'ce. 5364986. . Clean living room, aning ressmak1ngin 'lbe Quality I M a1nt/~dscpg Business. CaU Janice's sign, coAtact: p.l.U-.. 'IL-.-pairs. remodel mg and ' , C t rm & hall $15. Aoy rm European Manner. We ~. sprklrs, SOii cond, Raaiedy Anns.6?~ Jim Elmer -·_,-Al,.,,_. repiping. New Conslruc· Ren1oval ~ 1 ~lnn1l!K· wpeR •r i7.50,couch$10.chair$5. rui'nis~evel')'thing.De. clea nup 642 ·33.3 1/ . . GREEN HAVEN F.r.teest._ 675-3559Jim · 24 It J' & bood Shape . t:xp d. Lie. •••••••••••••••••••••• lS yrs exp is what counts, signed for you, Conlay 646-iWOS. • •HOUSECLEANING• GARDENS :;.~~tim rs. ic , Insured. 962·7817 s,\ VE & ProCit. Custom not method. I do work F-ashions. 556-'232 By reliable couple. Good 2123 Newport Blvd, C~t. GUSTO PAINTING rcinod, repair, add·on. _m=y~.e~l~L_G"--'d_.r~e~f•~·~"'='·~Ol~O~l l ---~"~Y-•~p~pt"-. onl=~'--Y A•D CLEANUP Rates. Refs. S41-627l 646.392'1 Low cost, exler/inter. insula1ion. Free esl. & Electric• · CompMainl 645-03091 -'-"='-""-'-'-'-'-='---Protect & beauliry home Ue ·g 64~ ......... Ca rpet & Upholstery W-i·ll do any lype Jo,ord 's Landscape· lnli· or bus . Exper'd,freeest, s1 ns. ..-.......... . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• G ol S •---<.:le an 1 n g . Steam & ftMf" en~ housecleanina:.Exper'd , tant Sod Lawns -guaranteed.b0$,WZ7 f."inish Carpentry Shampoo. Free est. ELECTRICIAN. Sml ••••••••••••••••••••••• own equip. Call arter 3, Sprinklers. Uc. Insured. Q rt p . f 1 l /E 1 Remodel-ltepair 646·7811 jobs. maint/ repairs. Z2 HA.NDYMAN-HOmes. & 548·1061 96.2·7817 ua 1 Y ain ine. n x · Vfln ce lM!hoff 536·847~ ----------1 y r s exp. lie 233108. Apts. Conscientio11s;1c:..::..:.:::..______ Low CO$t. Free est. No SPfllNG CLEANING 5411.5203 Craftsman. MS-6558. CLEANING U;"lLfMITED M•aonry job too sm all. M8·MOO tlitt '.s· CarpcnLry·642·6119 Uoors·Shel ving-Repairs Patio l'Overs·to·ormica. ft cfs. Let Monroe Carpet'I----------Fla~ lee, house-o,lrice, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cleaning helpyou. Classified ads.sell big "THINGS" by Moose. will do everything, last, WlLLIAMS & Sons t"ree E.llilimates ite~. small items or JUI,)' Gen woodwork, re:pairs, reliable It rel. . i\1asonry. Brick/Block/ 646-9598 646-1518 item. J ust call6'l·S18. · plumbing, etc. 642:5613. 962·G2:00 Stone. Call 581·78i9 •Wallpaper !lunging• By Former ln!;itructor Carl Rebko -ti46·Z.14!l l\tARV'S PLUl\tBlNG Trl!c Remov11.l, limbing &t •S4G·9807• Shrub clearing. Gen'I NO JOB 1'00SMALL clean-up. 546-6403. RHtOclel & R.,... ~!f'.~~~·~a. •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Quality home imp. Lic'd 25 yr:s uxp. l'"ree estimute f'air price. We cure. Kl!n eves&: wknds642·1770. Ruy dl.yi; 67!>·9llW: Reuphols lery, above a\'erage quality, below average price.536·2362 ltave something lo sell? Clctssilied 11.ds doll well , ' HelpW-cl 7IOOHelpWuted 7100Helpw~ 7100 ~,w-. 7100~W ....... 7100 HelpW .. tecl 7lOOHelpW...i.cl 710014e1pw .. 1ec1 710011e1pw ... 1ec1 7100 ................................................... -.................. .., .................... ··•···••·.••••······ ...... . ........... ·•········· ....................... . ............................................ . · · · Fa'°hion Consultant, lull · * * * * · 1·--------..;~l·---------or p/time . We will tt;1iri. INHALATION MACHIMISTS Real Estate ' Secretary ASSEMBLERS BOAT ASSEMBLERS !EXPERIENCED I Apply In PersOll COAST AL RECREATION, INC. 17422 Derian Ave, Irvine ~!.~~.-!.·.~ ..... ?!~~~.~.~ ..... ?!~~ BOAT MANUFACTURINJ GELCOAT TOUCHUP ·MEN & MOLDERS I Experienced I Apply .In Person Over 21. Call 96J.26S2 or THERAPY TECH Top pay fer skilled IROICll Olt\ SALES 846.7959 g-eoera l machinists. SS C: TE FORMERMAruNES !~~°o"o1fni.rSai:~r~~~ ~°:li~~·she°'!";'~~: SAL~S ~P1tN1NG · CLOTHING Jf your MOS is in one QI ·meosurate w/training & w/progresslve dies re-unusual oppbrtwUty for ,SPOllTSWEAR lhese criti,cal fields.o ~. e.xper.· Cont.act Mr. q'd C.M 6428080 Realtor/Associate. Call -Ha-illoq, "'"')·2734 ex1l-'C:::'.-"'·=·..::;~·-=::..--545-8424, .Associated NoW· accepting" ctpplica· os. 21. ZJ. zs, 33. 40, 43. 51, .... ,.._ , · f f · 59, 61 .. GaU 548-S847 •or 38'7. Cos,La Mesa M~fW,Mature SouthCoastBrokcr.;. t1ons o_r penn.' /time !l,6.8.-9.1.U. Tbt; ,.Ca/~et. MeJ'nOri a I Ho.spit a I. Colonial Motel '1 * • -• • position tn our F1\SHION Cor:ps wants YOU to re·t~E~O~E~ .. ~;;;;~;;;;.;;;;j~~l~9'1~-~N~e~w~po~rt~Bl~ ... C:.~M:..~ ISLAND store. Some ex· eoliSt. • .. R•CEnl..,...IST pe r . sellin g quality M·AIO-WANTED, Part v.n men's apparel pref'd. GRILL Cook wanted. timi!. '·Call Mesa Mblel, ., 1 , Liberal co. ~nefits. Xlnt Must have refs. Clean JANITOR WORK 643·9681 Progressive and growing discount. appearance. Woman pre· SUPPLB8fT Manicurist rorbusy motel manufacturer has an AppJy ·Jn Person C'd. F ull time. Carmels YOUR IMCOMI salon in c;:'d!'.f. July 1st. o p e n i n I lo r &Jl DESMOND'S Restaurant'. 497·2550. Wittl l hrsofe 642·0844 or 494.9907 ~P.ERIENCE.D, Wrp, GUARDS F /tim e. p /l im e . Unilqrms furn, Telepb & car req'd. cau 833-4693 appt. C .. .-...j . nite ---------1 out.goi'nir Reeeptionist. NEWPORT 6'.fPM' ,t~fi , Ma.ture l ad y to do J\.1inimu m I year with -m hous.ecleaning. Apply in p .BX cord I es s 3FASHION1SLAN.Q . At Clo6e TOltome· ' person, 31755 Cst. Hwy. swilchboard and lite typ: l ... ~~~~~~~~~J Orange Co.1.ocatJ"'ons Soulh Laguna·. ing required: Will handle r . . $2.50 rEIHR. 1 1 ~==="'-'CCC'-----·1 mail and office supplies. Sales &. !\faint. 1n a pct Phone,car,refs;req'd l'tolATURE ExP,erienccd Nice o£fice-Good shop.20 ltrsawk.$2hrto s h-oe sa l ~~ pe r son , benetil:;. Applyoi'l'all , start. 18·21 yrs. Neat & Call ;\I. Cleary P /time. Call for appoint· well groomed appear. (714 l 542-0373 , .. 1..:m::•:::•:::1c:4::"'.:.'.::21:.:96o::. :..· ----1 STATEK CORP. Some exp: helpful. Lantl Leave name&.phoneno. M'ATURE exper~nced (714)639-7810 & Sea Pet Co., 8-17·0100, your cal~ will be help for fasl food scr\'ice. 1233 All'arez H.B. · SECRETARY -PERSONNIEf.· r . We arc moving to lr\·lne in August, and ha\'e an immediate need ror a sharp per s onnel sel'relary. You must type so wpm and be familiar v.·ith company bcnefl ls : insurance, L'fD, processing, etc. We ofrer a n excellent starting salary and a full range benefits P'JCkagc. Please call for an ap- pointment. 213 /641-7700 X223 DEL MAR ENGINEERING OOUI W. Imperial Hwy HolfD4y..._P., 9AM-1Pi\f or fPJ\t.sPM o:r SPM -.9P]\t. Eitrn s100+ + per .. m doing enjoyable work in our brand new ore opening near O.C. Airport. XJnt o\:>portunity for ·posili\'e minded indiv. fo,or personal interview, cau 833-8093. returned promptly. Call 9·S, !l62·9874 Orange, Calif. <Off Main St. between J\.1ature male Sat & Sun t:hapman and Collins) Sales Rep--Trne L.os 1\ngclt-s. Ca 9QO.tS Or ... ·rite M. Cleary 7640 E. 5.lausoo City of Commerce, Ca 8·4, !\Ion-Fri 11PM·2A;\t. an equal 1·11 Store, 21SO Placentia opportunil)' employer CM ' WiM$800+ Car hpemes E(1ual OµportWlity Solid ca r eer future· i-.:mployerM/F Administrative Secretary •l-l.ln9tal llyland Laboratories baa an immediate opening for a bi-lingual Secn.i:tary reporting to our interna· t io n al i\1arketing Manager. Applicant who is fam'iliar with German and Spanish languages is highly desirable. Candidale mu.st be able to compose gener.al cor· rt!spondence per instruc- tions Crom manager and wo1:k independently in super\•isors absence. E~ellent working condi· lions 7thd fringe benefits. ·ro apply, Call: Dona Leverett 714 /M0-5000 ext 207 HYLAND LABORATORIES :\IATURE Mgr. Sm. bldg. REC PT /BKKPR. Lite Lite ma int. Free apt, typing, malure, sm. Ir,·. utils & cash. Call : Kurt law Cirm . $500 +. 833·362Z 541 ·5311 \I{ /prestigious marketing 1 ... ~~~~~~~~~ I firm awaits ambitious rep. Sulary is buse + Seely /lleccpt. for I girl 3300 l·ly land"Avenue comm. Call liary Jlunt, lt.r:. office nr. Or<inge Costa i\lesa, Calir!l2626 833-2100. uennis & l>cn-Cnty. airport. Pleasant, nis Pt:rsonncl Ser\'il'e or l'o ngenial atmosptlere; 1\11 equ<1l opportunity COASTAL RECREATION, INC. 17422 Derian Ave,'""'" HOME P AllTIES Sel l th e fun way . Cosmetics. cleaners or supplements. Use the Shaklee plan. ·We Train. Call 548'·52S31 2-4 Pl\t. Hospitals .JAHITOllS P /time eves. C.M. &S.A. areas. Over age 2a pre- f 'd . Apply al 17182 Armstrong Ave. S. A. Betwn4 &5:30pm. Phone 544).7814 RN CCU Orange Cou'nty, 2082 gd. skills requin.>d.. $500 ;.if!irmativeaction MKIMmics • Michelson Ori .Irvine. . c>~l=o~o~lh=·=SJJ~·=·~'~""~:--==-:--1·~~ .... ·~m;,;,;p~lo~>~·e~r~~~ I st Clau Nights, full or p/time. SALESo SECR·ET' ARY JEWELRY SAi ES For n ew AMC J eep Differential pay. Xlnl Wanted 4 women-ii hrs·.\ Secretary, l\linimu.TI3yti Help w .... c1 1100 H..,_w_..,f 1100 RH'• i\fed /Surg 3·11 & 11·1 0811-7 p/lime ICU/CCU l1·7, r/l, p/l Respircftry Dealership in busy Costa benefits. Contact Mrs. Shorthand 100, Typing exp. must have good Cust. Ringmakers seek· f F II b f' Jensen,. 64~·2734, Costa da)'S·$4 per ilr. Prefer I . I k'll S II •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ingcreativesalespeople, i\ esa. u erfe its, M . 1 H . 1 30 Women w/ family. Local 70. Western, Regional c.cr1ca s 1 ~· I .op· pre rer j ewelry and/or pleasant .Wor-king oondi· y.emo~ia C ost8E, 1 are<1. Need use of car & fl.1:in8ger requireti sharp t1onal. Call Mi.ss Tab.tit~. sales background. Xlnt.' -~l~i~o~o~s~.~C~a~l~l~O~o~nJ•~'~cl~o~r~"~·~-~M~-~~~-~~ phone. Up 10 ~fashion orgttnizcr & sell starter for appointment640-01Z3 IEAUTIC:IAHS l'iow interviewing £or: COOKS :\1in. Exp.·DayShift APPLY TllerapyTKM On call. 1 Y~e~_p-~~d Phy1iccil ,·~.~ Regis. P /lime days Apply•E'ersiidnel Ofc opp. for ri uht person. Richmond a'\54$..8023. "'•u·tlrul>e for those that with good pi:rsonality Se t r b y tit C ll 1 ••9• "' A Route Sales Trainee l'f , •'or ,-,,,,rv,·ew and f ro nt ofrice ap-. ere ary or usy ac " DERBY 1262S.E. Brist.ol ,Ci\l "46-8390 w. : 14.·""' .J_.. ttn; i\lEDICALINSURANCE qua 1 )· ,-o.: • , •• , S· J· m.' .Brokeruge on lhe Bay. 'Qary Need i\l edical Insurance' '$650+ COMM: ~all rcsidenli:il office, peara.ncc.' aai:Y co . Exper.skilledapplicants HeWpOrtel'lnll S.. Call: EH4 ·0661 or 540-851:12 t,ee Paid !>4ti·3lljJ. me.n:surate with e~· only. Please! 646-0551 . •' . . ..Girl w /recent ex · Become an area C:::O:.:"-'"'-------pcr1ence. M. LAi\'fONTr..:c:.:e.:.::..:.:=::.:..:.::..==:;_ 'JUNIOR SALESMEN ~rien.ce. t:ull or ,p;.trt· manager w/expanding SEAMSTRESS VINEYARDS. Newport SECRETARY IEAUTICIAH Newport Area. 548·1311 CREATIVE FIRM seeks Artists a ll types, includ· ing Production/Fine. Call Steve Sargeant, 675·5SOO S-C:-1 c:o-ity llospitol 31872 Coast """'Y So. Laguna400-l311 Age 10·15. Eam i20-$IO tt.m,e .&J~·l 754 nal 'I firm seeking stable Sail makers, cspcr. rcq .r..:Be=•~c~·h~.~'~"~·~18~1~7~---1 Controllers Dept. Type per week getting new career type to take over Top P"-Y· Ullman Sails. SIC:R1T••y 70. dictaph, IO key,$ Yrs Beautician for busy motel salon in l:dM. July l sl. 642·0844 or 4~·9907 customers for th!;! DAILY N~~~~~l:~~=~i. ~~10::ii{~~: estab'I roule. Fantastic i c":.:"~'c·69::.:.7U:_ _ _,____ Type 60" sh, ~nscribe .• e,~~r. ~ront ol'c ~ppear. PILOT after school and &12_059l . mMnagemt:nt oppor. Call IF YOU \Yill handle phone or· l' a,sh . Isl. area. &M-8400 Saturdays. Yoo must be•1.:.::-=='------·I Scott Sawye.r, 833-2700. d·-. k'cep "--"-& do ext226. . outolschoolby3:00p.m: A Is 0 Fe e. J 0 b s , ha\'e a servicetoorrer or ... a uuu..:. CUSTODl,\i"il HOlllecle~Svl and be able to work at Nurses Aides, 7am-3pm. Dennis & Dennis Person· goods to sell, plucc an a4 overflow Work of our SECRETARY/Bookkeepe; leauty o,..a1or No foll.owing nee. Comm guaranteed. 645-1050 forchurch&pre·school. Need women ~Sand least 3 daysptt.week.No ~xper . prer·d . i\lesa nel Service or Orange in the Daily Pilot legalsecy,.Full·timeon· pt.timew/previouse1tp. Some groundscape & older. Gd.· hours. Call deliveries 6r cbllkt.iAg~ ~=~~:r ~l~~~~ Hosp, 661 County, Z082 Michelson Classified Section . ly. Hunt. -ech. S550 mo to for Dr's. ore. nr. lloag.' ma int. l lo 7 pm, 5 days J anice's Raggedy AMs. Tr a n sportatiod'' pio'.1 ----~-----· 1 Dr, lrvine. ..:.P=ho~·~·~·~·'='~·>i=7~•-· ---1-''~t,_,,a_,r~•=·_:3:..::.3~·~·~1~6'.'..!9~6'.i~64~2~-4~4~IO".._ _____ _ per wk, some'rlexibility. 675-6553 vided. Call 963-5011 in OFFICE MAMA~ Saab 9760 Saab 9760.I Seiolt 9760 Boys & G'trl Mature gentleman pre· I.:"-'-'-:'-'---;:,.,...,,-.,.,,-:;:-Hun'ting ton Beach or To $800 for -"uslaslic S I 'd. Call 644·07~5 Tues ousekeepcr/Corripanio'n _ ...... u ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I d · 63i ·l495 inCoslaMesa organ1ied mature · 10to14years ofage.Oai-thruFribtwn9&3Corin-rem. i\ ust rive, no E I o · ,.--------------,..,.,.----------------------~ ~:~.i~t:::~~~i;;~:·1 ~·~·r_•_i~•-wD~·:E:H~T;Al.:;----1~;;.,~m~-~~~;'.~:~--L_i_·_·_·_i•_· _1_1_s L.:,:r~:!::~·u :·: i~~~~~e~r'~.i:~~~; A. L·Fin ft .... I. ME I •SAAB . li\•eries & cash, trips or Sharp, exper'd or lrairiee ~ousekeeper wanted, hve have so m c e" per . p ayable /purc hasing. m erchandise for selling rorbusy NewportClrorc. in, .room, board. ~sal. l TraOsp. Neal appear. NB . Send resume lo new subscriptions. For Chair & secretarial Ch!ld . P hone Joyce Call bclwn 7:30PM·9PM. Classirted Ad No. 388. · ' · information please call duties.640·0300. 66445~ .. -~~~-30 . Af,t 7pm ,_64_4_·_78_>_> __ ~---1 Daily Pilot P. 0 . Box c I ALITI 1' N I 642·4321 . From San ........ 91~ Costa r..1esa, Calif. , e <.:Je mente -Sa11 Juan Dntal A11ishmt ~_,.._,.._,.._ LEGAL SECRETARY ..,_.,. Capistrano area, call Chairside. !\t in 2 yrs ex· Corporate experience.' ORDERLY 495·0630 and Mission Vie· per. 10am·2Pn• :\Ion thru IRVINE PERSONNEL Newport Ctr 640-0800 °'"GS .Ar-ENCY For PM Shirt. Exper. ~~~!o.Toro area, call "'ri.963-458lbel\\11l0·6 SE~v 1 fl'i"f.-.J You don't neej! a gun to pre£'d . 496·S702 or Equal Oppor. Employer DISlJWASH ERS, day & 488 E. 17th !Al lrvineJ "draw fast .. when you 83~;1774 betwn9am·4pm ;~~~~~~~~~;I J"~lg~h~t~·:•p~p:l:y~ln:pe:r~so~n~. Suite 224 ChJt.1:1 ~1esa place an ad in tJic Daily zot NeWport Center Dr. C .. 642-1470 Pilot Want Ads! Call now P.ACKING Clerk $2 an hr. N.8 . ~"""'!!~"'!!o!!S~!'!I!~ , __ 64_2_·>i_7_8_. _____ 1 to start. Calif. T·Shirts ·-IOA T IUILDlltS I· " ..:64co6o.·oc11.o.87c... ___ _ Westsail Corp. needs a DISTRIBUTOR want~. Help °W.teti 7100 .... W-'"I 7100 Pay Person -100 Boat J::lectrician w/min 1 Ove~ 25. Jnti:rested 1n ••••••••••••-••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... yrs marine electrical ex· earning up to $1IOO per sno MG MT. I··... You'~~h~~:lrac· per. (including A/C & p/t. Call 6l9-6l23. • lion in this magnificent DIC work). Must have DOG GIOOMEll MAMAGEME new ·rirm! Accurale in- own tools & Lransp. Xlnt EM per, busy shop. Opportunities avail able in S~nta div. sought. ·Benefits? co.!>"ncfilstlr:future.Ap-EIToro 586·3422/830-8627 .Ana,• Newport Beach. Soutl:lern Call Chris Ba1tter, ply 1n person to: 1..:oc.=.c..· ='-'-=="-'=· r 833·2700. We1tlelC... DONUT SHOP Earty,AM Orange County area. Must be at Denni's & Dennis Person· 1638Placentia,l:M Shi fl . No exp. nee . . least 23 years of age, previous retail ner Sefvice ot oran&:e WomanAgeZ.S-45.Apply eXperie .. Dce h elpful ·b1,1t n o t County 2082 Michelson IOA T C:'c>MPAHT in person: llSE.17thCM necessary_. rfay· range for manager Dr,,lrvine • Molding Dept Foreman • Cab Shop Mill Foreman .\lust -have cxt.e.nsive e1t· ltt:r. ia fiber~ boat 1n .. nuf. Pacl11c Trawler Corp, 1723 S. Ritchie, S4 nt:i Ana.~ C\SHIER, Fllll ot part· EHGIHIM C h e mical, degree, ceramic, Non·Melallic & in organic chemistry. Call Marie Bemiss (21J 1 370-G204 beverly.crou ag'ency. 20912 Hawthorne, Torr . 100'7..Free to .. aPPliCaal.S M /F Eq. Opp. Empk>yer. Um< Apply In ... -. IX. SICUTAllT Si·.SP:'ll . COSTA MESA CAR Yo' .\Sit,, ?MA Harbor Excellent opportunity Bl d C ~ toe 1barp indiv. w/good --•-·-"-'-· ~----1 sh & typing s ki Ila Col students, p/t sls,. ~-w/rapldly, exp1odina UV'. Evei/Sat. Car, phone (lnanclal or1anlaatioo nee. Mt Lyon:ii 911-5455 IOOll to be loca&ed in O.C. area. Exper In real COOK ~1.tahanfood..NigbC e11ate deyeloement, ahilt. lklll tralD riaht Je1al.'or mOl"tllll bank· peDOA. km & Gilll'Po'•, ln& pref'd. Xlnl 'PQ le 190t Harbor Blvd. CM:·. ,benerita. 548-7.U~ Call Pereonnel Cit .. , r,fll-' Want•• or s mall 1Ul-L2· Equ1I ()ppor. E-e( Jio1pital., Wiii tratn. 'lbe rastest draW In the 4M·5102or~J:l714betvm ¥1e1t ... a Dally Piloc 9 6:4. ~ Claa1iried Ad. sc.:i8TS. - beginning at $760 per month for a 6 Pe rson 21 ·40, trn tor day w~t.k week, for assistant at $650. ipgm_t. $JSO wk &:uarn. Full range .Of compan y paid C oJ pref. Mr . Levi benefits, paid forrpal training: 1 " ~-M55 CLERKS.-' Preschool Director , noeeded $700 mo. Send re. Part t iFne '"OJ>portunil:ies available tume to, 1101 w. Baker rq·r Friday a nd Sunday wor.k. C.O.taMesa,Qi.26 Minimum 20 hou~ a week availatile · PROGRAMMER ·at ·si.26 oer hOur 1n vour own local MINl·COMPUTER neighborhood, working both even· M•~ mejor & account· ings and mornings. If you ~.re i•• .• exper •. desirable. m _ature, 8t l~ast 20 years of aife, i" ·Vlrid.Y of applicatk>tp in ,.need or extra spending mone)'; have &:rowi.ng co. a .. valid driver's license and car, we lrvine 5S6-003b .. an pu't you to work. • JlecepttSec1 .• ·, iotii2s B~ing a Catilornia Drivers License, · · • Tejt~C:.. "social security card, (all vets ·iJf'lnt eit.~:= ~ 00214 J' and call , ..... tore · e In· · 131·5565 .. ''iliv. "•klnrrarnous cO. or ~cme bv Sui~ 215, ' 1!111\'l"l)n "'"""'"'looP· l ' ~ por. Call 1ilsuy Hfckle, 11802 rvine I ? !m·ZIOO., AllO F~. Tu•ll~, Cll)Jfpm _ Deonb lo Det1nli . 16040 Mew._, Pom t•·T"'7 • nel serytce' al an(e 17141 IJl•tJ~I COun(y, 2082 Mlch<I..., Dr, lrv~ne . • • • • EOR THE FIR~T TIM~·fN HISTORY, TWO ' FINE CARS JOIN WITH TWO FINE CAR. DEALERS TO GIVE YOU MORE ... · • More Alias and SAABs to choose . from . •. Better service with two locations -more ~a .more efficiency. • More expertise .. , V)I~ know what you ¥(.,it. .. • !.,. ............ 1. .. 2· BEACl:l IMPORTS • &48 Dove S)reet ~---~N;,;aw;,:fio;::~ ~h· (714)752;0900 • I ) ,, " • ' , '' .. ' ~ ,, , DO<J• 1040 FrH lo You 1045 Funtlture 1050 Wedn!Mday.May21 , 1975 Hee; W..t.d 7100 H.fp Wnted •••••••••••••••••••••• •••r•••••••••••••••••• ••••••t uo uv ·~···~··••• _ ~ ... . ·-. •••••••••••••• .. ··~···• ••••••••••••••••••!!~~ llcycles 1 ·'1 8020 srtKY .'l'i!'fr1-ipupple1, \..., ~"·~· t,~ t ~ _( • ·~ #'1t9t S•• . 8055 Jewelry 8070 •Ster)-,...,.._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• A,J(.c:•Sl'lcd~s. odorle" FREI K 5 SM·h~OLD' 1qtoi>(t4/ tbl1 ·~····~····••••·····~· •••••••.•••··~··•••••••• ••~--~1oo"~'Pal Wult.russ&Cook,1'.time ,.w .. u4o_r.u.6Je. Rea1 . i' 751 ·'" f w$Jtee.-da:&i6 cbr1t.srb:A-r'f'(..1.t"QU WA""TED · ~-"'r.,. r1 COHSU•'-GUIDES 0028317 A•·mo1, •• •aoo. -Oak . 1 , 1':. c!Ol.'li;i;, 1"'111 Aceln~CU.1/Gcn Oro u' 11011 Pizia J""<' ""'"" • fLtrnltur d h r C ' Y"' -N l Ue tl1 \ I •. hJ r ~d~cboard $300. 2 m -. e .. ' .•s es, Cl'l'I ·ro·P CASll DOJ.LAlt L11 Re nder1A1oocy l'Own Vullcf Pli;w_y . ewe:., Ii u_y 6l11;ck Gorma" Shep .'~.n ng·l • w tu .. mt1la • set"r,···•p"(-·t··..1Ji>1P»i.. .8~ndi;,etc .. :Slttrt:1Thun1, p ,\JQ FOH Youn 4020 Bircb St,Ste'.lt>I Luaunu Niguel. , 111.No w Hure! pups, AKC. Angckort 1',tee to _you. Ywremove. 1•0'0. 0,-,,,.•, w' /•m"·,",',1"><1i'or & w1ll .l'un until ull sold ; 112 JEWELRY. WATClll·.·s. NewportSeuch 833·l'I 1hcSu·perLeMans Hru:. 6 wk~ old. Good Cull548·3794 _Du_y11, ~ 8th St H Ii -c11u tor ap"""'ntment WAJ'~l~ESS, over 21, r;x. , lly ~~oturio~. matcl\'g .. chest Sf.LS ea. & .. • · ARU' OBJECTS, GOLD. ~ pe1 l cncc d . ~I r . Corona U11J,MurB1kc.s c h un1 p . line; X:lnlKlll~ns. blond, blk /\\'ht. oihe1:misc.M8·2780 GIGANTIC Sale! Ofl". S,J t.VKI! SE H Vl CE , Service St,. Attend, lull CMunct11c11, 4:a! r.;, 17lh St. :J323 E. G,Oust l-twy. '("Utl·hdogs. 1\1 /F. $100 to gray1wht, long & sho1·t • , hou:;;eholt.I . hobfiy, l;1b,. ,t IN E I' .u nN & ·,\N -or p/l. Brown's Shell , .J\ot . C<1ll til5·76'16 $150. U4S·2a27 . -· -hair'. 7 wktt. $46·5.:AI'.?. C I{ F~ A r o a k T .b I electronic items M4'7·3901 flQUES. f,45 -220IJ t'4 ·1''x7G '') for din · · -~ -------· f;, CO•·at trWy, NB Cats • • 8035 Golden Rt11rie ... ·llrs Furniture 8050 iug1ofc; P ewte r t.:hl.in· Hor sts 8060 Machinery 8078 Servic'e Station Allen· We Cli--L ••••••••••••t•••••••••• l'urebrcd, 7 wks, STS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• dulicr, Singer port. !\tdl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• dant, 'exper'd. D1:ty & ..., PERSl1\N i\{l'l'ENS for f~_11~82bt w n 5 ·7 Pm · Great Suving.son Used 237, ncve1· l.1:1t.-d.o.10..Sl4U -llt:G. Ar:ib Gelding grey. l',\NKS for :.ale : ·1-sou ?AILY PILOT D1l;\'- ~l .... ~;fE0!~~~) 'fOP CAS ll OOLLAI\, PAii) i''l)R VOU1('i-l4 J EWELltY, WA'l'Cl-li'.;$/••• AltT OHJ t:crs, GOl.D . ~J SILVE lt S,E ltVICH ... h FINI-.: FUHN '& l\N· '' ,!IQU 1'.:~._645·:!200 ' -···~ CUS 'l'U 1\I Car p c,L-.1 1 Jn slalter. Your:>l ~linc. Ilea::.. 22yr s exp. 1\ll'-''11 1y11es. ti-llJ·l547 • • •• eves. Full & p/time. App . mountains. sale. 'fop l!uufity Ct "A ri:· Furn, Appli & Misc. fi Yrs old. Very 1<tff(t(_·. b<iri·el liolle<l If tush x 21 · I W,1 -~·, ""''"'.''N k 9' t..:ustom Oesi"n Cout'h, . .:1< Jy Shell_ Stotion, 17th .s,. i:: stcrcd. Ai .so p._,rsian Uurliug mixed (;('rmi.tn .s · ,.. ~ 1 oo b tion.11.te &. willu1g. :l-150. d1a : v11 f coils. 1-200 barrel ,_ _________ '!" I N 8 We ulso. swi m rivet". ·t d e I • d Sh 1 d I 5•15 19th St C ~f f'loral $LIO. 7"Couch, ~. c 11 K h 3 l6lh II 11 d ... r · · 11 Irv ne, . • It ., s u :s rv t'C . JOO :.an up. c p 1er pups, mu e 2 ~:1 ___ · · · · ll lh Gd C d .675 . ..,.... 1.1 al y, D73·15ltl 1 ::i "'i <t . , .,..·ct l' • Q CARPET BARGA.IMS , 1, St.:RV I CE STA1'10N, Cd M ' a r ea. S Qays , Sal/Sun ot'f. 1'op puy ror exper'd salesmun ovr 30. 67S·OS33 ~'k Cor Ojck. un rHp1d:.. C.:a1np out in PhoneS92·l!.170. nio. $10. 547·Jlt!2 ° · on · .,_,,, h1<>h x JJ ' 1..h<J . 1-litJ harrcl th. 'Id Quality Pecan din. sel. ~ R 11 "' 'fo11Qu:tl l\lillSet.-onds. w1 crnes:s. 1\nd ~ ;o.1 h f 1 cg. -cuarter, IV yrs. 1.,"w:tll,\\'cld1,,'<.l.12'high a le<irn. lo sui·vivc in :iny Sianle~l' Scill l>oint A KC J\e g , Doberman ~u.ue ~a('~ c~air:s, le<.1ves. ' ate ing so OJ / ovcse;.1t, flashy chestnut. 'I' rained x G' di<.1 . :\I U'I' .,11. , "·II Used C;1rpcl!i·AnJ' Size ... :,, l 'I I Pl «'" ..,,. ''47" avocadu·b<l"t:. Jlric ... -'tltc u ~ """' "CHE•"!!" • -·• c rri!•!'l·Wchavcto.lt's l 1Y<1cs~uel154!;·~ 111. n1ulc & fc o1 ,_>N.,,.,..., ... u, seJJ 751 .76~1." & s hown We s te rn 2I 3 /~3 1 ·378l . ~ OUl'JOl.t. tt c.anbe yuurs n~(_;·O i;Elf'-'I_A_N _KC-ol · cham 11 . bloodline . QUi\Ll'rY sofa & luv· Pleasure. 1\ffcct1onale. --;-------Ca11673·7 162 ·" {' tuo. J oln the pcopl~ 1 G d ,1 Bk 002·9874 e se<il, bc;.iut , nl·vci ~Cherry wood l>n'ill bed Prefci·s g1rJ.s . Needs M1sc•llone ous 8080 whu'vc.Joinct1U1cA1·rny. ens. dr<i~ .,.i~m1P-h · 5:-11 .,.1_.1.1.,.5 -,\KC.S .. hl"& usc<l.,moving.9tiij.8822 sets.xlnt cond.SSOcal·h. W()rk ing with . S!.15u .·••••••••••••••••••••••• TELEPHONE Sollcilors, ~l'Oun · ..-otenL1a s ow c. "' .. " 752.ll\iJ, IOQ-702J p/tirne, work•rrom youl' C II &--.. <1uaL 2 Crca'm, l Blul' Wh t, w /wh1t~ coll<t r .. 7 Qjnui~ 'fable w /(i ch~il't!.& -~~-------1-----------MA TIR_ESS BOSS IS HERE .,.,, home·~.25 hr+ l;!Qn.u:s. a _.'!'J Cr('am, 1 Wh1,,1;75.2«1z wk.:>.. Wulchdoi:.liJJ·5351 Chi na e-a b . Dani s h Naug-ahydc R·eclin e r ~ngli st\ Bor-ellle :1at.ldl e 110 tttihinglf!.v?\v~. Call Opporhrities =-----·-----l·==-=0====9=0451_w_a_ln_,_l_. $5~·_oo_._54t!_·_lill62~.·-·,_ Chair'tf an. Good Sha1>e. <like new J: Com1>l tack, *MADNESS* Lo hel11 your tJn:s Call NciJl.&12-34tH ... ,;,;) . " il!r.Organ,556· ~. 645•1240 Dogs 8040 Free to You sso.:>-18·9ti80.1\ftcr 5PM tiridlc, brus hei;, 'etc. *ALL SIZES* •,;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .... ...,~~ ...... ;;,;,;. __ •I••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sof<t bet.I, gd c.:ond. New 644·58W . =----__ __ Sii1'.:Plll::ll0 Pu1Js, 6 wks. Shcp/(,ab puppies, born recliner chair. Hoth re· Garage Sale 8055 I----------p • d I M , SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Mttds You Mow! • Keyr,'"'ch Opn * Typ 111 /Secy1s * bcrow Stcy'1 •PIX Operators Blk /whll " '1· & Wanted t • le-~~, ... "l' nee o ove. Wl·IO\VA:"J TS TOWOHK '! ul'•n. ~ ;:i Aµr1I 1st. I male, 1 asou<tble.ti42·1149 ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ""'" u ' DHI VEA(.;i\li~ Sl0.548·4742a(t 5 t'em<tle. 'l'o i;ood ho1ncs. --------Jtoun~ Oak tablt! & f,i qualified indi vidua l -H33·9ti25&6'16-!i61!6 Cll OOSE your hours ----646·14Kl. -Dark wbod dining rm set chairs, hatch ,·ovcr cof· h~rse suitable .for'bcM;in · 'Dll,\P EHIES&C,\HPE'r work for yourself, b~ A·KC l\fi::haiJ JTI<ile, bcaul. 1-----------41S · · squ<i re ta!Jlc w J! ft..~ table. 645.7!:1K£1 ner lei;.sons . Wi ll ~rov1de ilt!st Briccs· t"rce E.-;t. hlon<l. $5-0 /bS( ofr. Free Cl.fOC. L:i!Jrador rn<ilc. !f n e wl y. uphol stered ~--------complete care. 6"5·12J8 C<ilJ "-.lJ:S-''"lO your own l}O:-.s. ,\J t.•n or K c.,.·s hond ''!'11 O:i l7 · \KC I ll I h ' I 10 :30·4:30 Jl u11t1n gto·n aft9P\I 1-----"-C".'. ___ _ w. 01nc.n. Coin be sh"htly · · · -· rno s. 1 reg. ov;i Jc, ~ .. ~~. ,5,.4,7,_3,,~-_.,m c r. inc . · .. h 1 " Orun~c fric11dl y. 51!ti·72•J7 iJft . """ " llarbour, 17JJ6 Ctiurtne)'l----------- :Jll( ll'iJpµed . ,\Jeat · ------------5:JO ----Lanc .1-l.B .8~ti·1'0ti."i Jtwelry 8070 I,: lean ;\ppc;irancc . (JAL,\1A'J'l1\NS, I·'. AKC. ------------liLACK nau giJ hydt Vets., retired. A~e 25 to Great famdy dog, gd SllHUli-S lXVCOSMAl sof11.bt::d, <-luCCn·.s~ .. Cost Antiques. Hound o<ik tbl. 70 . .Suppl e1nc111 your in · lquk :s for breedin g . YUUD I G(!\'l~saVcrdcJ $-150/Sell ~165. Mtl7·555l H.efu1ishcd swiv~J oak ••••••••••••••••••••••• "·. 1'al'allc -V'oc;il -"'1· .. ,J Lo.uJJc -Leaven -•• ENVELfjp~ I l't:"1nc1nhcr ;o,•hc11 l us ed '' .! to s ;i \'c p;.irt of my -: " 1>ayc heck. .\io1v:td<1ys, , 1 Uung::. <ire ::.o bad the on· ly lh1ng I •:an ~a1•c Is the 1<.:NVl:'.LU l'E the µaych.,.•ck c;i mcu1. · .. •; co1nc. iJl'l\'l' :i t·iJb 1; hr:. !>i!:f·\i~2U C;\l • 54li·OfJ5J .-aft 7p~-·---. d~.sk·chair. a-&ti·5U~--- Wedding: Set. 1-1 11t di<tmond. Cost ~1·10. Anti· _1UC b<tnd. Offer67J·7<&5-I _ __, EARTHWORMS !"OH '(l·IEG,\HDl::N lOOu fur $1-~5 \\'orm l;asllng.s ~ Lul:l 17362 Gqthard. ll li 'fe'9f!O TemPQOary 1-lclµ ui: rnorc a d~iy. Aµply in A-.~-0-,,-~-.-.-w-· ---·------ 17802Sky P ark. Irvine pi::rson, y._.llo\v Co;h Co.. '" "" 9800 Autos, Mtw 9800 Autos Mtw 9800 Autos· Mew 98001.A.utos Hew 9800 .Calj 540·4455 l!!U E. ltilh St ., Custa •.•••'."••••••••••!.,••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••~•• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. ••·~··••••••••••• •••~• .. ••••••••••••••••• I 9100 Autos, Hew Autos, New 9800' ;ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• • l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1~~:.s:~andise ...... llll!llll! ...... !l!'l!lllil .. !l!'l!l"'lllllllllllll!l'!llll!liltlll!l!'lll"'l!l"''!'""'!lll"!!lillll!'1"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···~··················· !\f"41~ .. " " The Reuben E. Lee . j HOW HIRING MAINTENANCE MAN IExp•rleocedl Apply 3-5P M D<iily 151 E. Coast Hwy Newport e.acn Equal Oppor. Employer TYPIST. parl time. Your home. Pref. music exp. Heply: 1301','J W. Bay, Npt Bc h, Ca 92(i6(1. Upholsterer fExlw Antiqu~s 8005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1000 ENGLISll llallt rue, solid oak, 4 br<Jss coal hangcr s, bevcll.'<i mirror w/bench scat storage. xl nl cond, S17Sor l>c.sL of· fe r.OOU-2627 . ------- Appliances 80 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11 o ·rro1N'I' Gas Urycr , all cyele. $95. Kenmore clec. Urycr, all eycle. ~75. Fl'idg1d<1ire Washer. $.SO. Kenmore ~'asher , $50. 5,11.).!!672 --------- Nfo:W Chest Freet.er, $125. ltefrig. S75: Perfect cond. M-ll·Siluti --- Dryer , clt!ctric . Frigidaire : cxccllL•nl condition. S.So. 5i!l·l!lt7 Westinghouse Hcfrig., t wks old, 14 cu. ft . frost f ree, Sl25 . Li . I::. Uh l Oven. sclf·L'lcan. elc1:. blt·1n. $250. ·l!l:J·IWli . H Ef<'ll lG EilA'l'UH GOOD CONDITllJ,'I; $30.00 !>45·2220 ---Ai rcraft-Will consider ·Bicycle-s 8020 Auto. Salary + Comm. ••••••• •••••••••••••••• 549·2743. Ask ror Ken. Vet Ass ist.ant The Cats Meow! Wonderful Vet needs a sympathet ic in<li\1 . lo lend a gentle hand w/his furry little patients! Call Barbara Mac, 833-2700. Ucnnis & Oennis Person· ncl Service of Orange County,. 2082 i\tichclson Dr. tryine. Used Bikes1 Patts. SI5/up . Uuy t sel i/tr<ide . 24Kb ~_;_wpo 1~ Bl. C:\o\, !~12·7\JIU ~cwport Cyelery . ltaleigh . l'eui.:cuL, & Azuki . 2 110 Newport Ulvd. NU . ti75·l7UU Sunlour Aiuki !lacer . srJ.95. CYcle \Vorks Ltd. llS2<! Newport BL CM . 54!!-5783. A CONVEN1£Nl SHOPPING AN O ' .SCWING CUIDE FOR lHE ' CAL ON THE co._ For an Ad iri Womrn's Woiid c• so.. 642-5678, Ext. no Seamed-To-Slim Printed Pattern fj , ,, 9#3 10YJ.1•~ ,,,, 1lf.,.;_ 1lf...,-r- TWICE flallerhli -:-the tleevele•• eOfl.l g\t4ee ov<:r the lliod:r·•tlmmlng d""n with SEAMEU-TO·SLIJl.I sraee, No walU •••tn -Ml.)' to 1u1d Prllilt.d Paltet11 9463 : Jl•lt' 81Jel 10~ .. 11.1,i. 14>,i. tfll,i{ 11\i , 811114~ (bOtl 17) dr•d 1"-~~· 45·111~toat\J%. St~ 11.0lr or e•t pa ern. Add 2S «nt1 for etch p11Uern for l'frM.·cl1i• mall end 1pecl1I h1ndlln1; 0U1erwi1e' lll itd · cl .. dt\IYtl')' •Ill lake lhr« weeh flf more.<Srtnd to M11ri11n Mertl11, 442, ttlt Dilly Pilot. P1fltfJ1 Dtpt .• :a3 West 18th St.,jl'e• York, N.V. 10011. PrinlNANE ADDRESS, ZIP, SIZI and sTVLE NUMBER. ON;P'AEE PA'n'ERNof)'Mr dlol t t•tf!Mfor:onefl"eep•t· ltr l111lde NEW 5PRINQ· SU M ME R l!ATTERN CA'ML.00. tOO•l)'I~, lll•lin, freeiNUIM'n ~· Send 1~ nowrsi:w + KNIT 8CIOk with bll~tlMIHIPtltfMI ... , .. St,2$ •ln111l4olll f"aihilin lk>Olt ' .•• 11.00 I Stwlfll Book .... SI .00 I ' Lacy Crochet 72 49 TollH on thl~ h1e)' r uve 'for a touch ur r1uh!ot1 1111.J i;r~""· Pln,.apple rroch"I rr~al"~ <lfoe11 • borit,tr <1111 !llh. (;roclwl ('llJll' with fl11lerlnll •hll'01 •·oll"r or a 1>IY nna~.-11111 y .. .-. •. 1•11nern i Z·lli; :llaca l&·J8; ·I"· I'!: ~4 · 48 loclodetf, Send Sl.00' for e1oh palterro. Add 2$' for each p1111em for fint·ct.1111 m11U and \IJ'cial h11ndlln1t. Send to 'f\llre Hroots. 10$, lht Dally 'Pilot, Netdlecren Ocpt., Doll 163. Ol d' Chel&t• Shltion, Ne"' Vor~. N. ,v . tOOll. Prltit Name. Addrefi&, 7..ip. Poltttn Number. ,. S1ve dol l ars! Create be.•utiful lhlng,;stnd fOf New 191$ NeeGlecireft cat&!OI? • ' 3 dcslgnJ printed IN!de , .• \'"I New! Niny t'il\y Quilt. Sl.00 New! Ripplc CrochC't .... Sl.00 Sew+ Knit Book ., ...... Sl.2S N«dh-poin{ Book,., ....•. St.00 fi'lowff'CtOChtl floolt ... Sl.00 H11rpln Cl'Ol'het 11ook ...• &t.00 l111h1nt Cf'OChet Aooll. .. , ,11.00 Jn~t•nt M11t'r11me9ook .. 11.00 llUl•nl Mon•)' Hc:dl •. , 11.00 .Curnplf't• Gin 8ool< 'i ' .. ti.GO CompleteAffhAlllll 4 .,11.00 12 rri•• Aft1hln111l2 ••• , .. SO"r• RoflltoruiQull•s•t ........ w, tduuum Quilt Book. i2 , "· ,:1:1 IS Qv.llU ror Tod Ii)' t :l , . '' .. Yr. Doo1te.r11Jirr11tup .••••• Mr ' I I -- ' ' '"i·~ajj: ... :-.H ·~~;~ ~ ·(' l' - -.. ~. ..... l )'' _, , , OYER 40 USED MAZDAS IN -STOCK - '74 ROTARY PICKUP ·~~L~~~~1i '"'-'12sn 5199. 57599 I DOWN MONTH '74 .. MAZDA· ·'RX4 Coupe. U$ed. Low mi. f284K~~vr ~ IMMEDIATE .~::$2. 5, ·77 DELIVER ,Y ·. s1·99.. -57.. 5, " · . ' ·, .. 'J?OWN .. :MONTH 12~11 lull !)r•ce plu• •a• & "' ~I~ 911 101~1 mo omt '"'I la~ & 1,c & gll c••ry1ng cn1u;P.> lo• onrv 48 ""'' Oateo-red QByoTw:>M 12511 full oroce plu1 ••• & he I 75,9910lal mo """ ,nc1, '"' .& i.c & au ca•rying c'ha•gll• tor ol'tly .a m:i•. Oetat•llO ~,...nl -·-, ... !>'•Ce 138•6 ~2 '1>.nnu~I Pe•C~Magl! Rate 11 16'IO ' 1>'""9 1™6 52 "'nriual PeraJlllagot Rare 1'7.76,._ • -............................ ""1 .......................... -41""' .............. iliillililii .................................... ,5 ' '73 RX3 WAGON Air conditioning. (S124W140411) s1777 5lffDH 565~ .,) . . S1777 h•ll'fltiC,;p!U~ I••' he. se~.!16 1oi,i '"°· 11""! Incl ·.t.,.-& lie. & ail c.11)1j!'! criforpel tor only Mo 111)1. Oel8Ne0 QllV1l'9~ ,.--125511.88; Ann61! "-lc•n!lg9 Ra1e 21 . .a% '72 PINTO (152EJK) 11577 lull one• olu• !~• a he. 165.58 IOlal mo pm1 ,.,.,1, 1 .. I l«l. I 111 c••rv•r>Q cl\f,<ge$ lor only XI """"· Oet1r111<1 pay,...nl QnC9 12166.•0 """"ull Pertenlate Rite 21.73% '72DATSUN1200· 4 speed. radio. ·heat.er .. (776346 ) 11117 lu1! Dl'•t:i• pl"• lax & lie 16 ! olO tOla! tnO pm! >ricl I•• & lie. & all c.arryu'Q cnarg•U !Or on1v 38 """"· Oe!el'red paymen! pncw 12041.00 """"I! P...-cenr-Aale 21 73% '72 RX2 COUPE · {200GBYJ 51477 FREE 12 MONTH~12.000 Mllf FACTORY ENGINE WARRANTY • t .:. • • ' 'i': • ,<::;, •. ,f . ,1 ' . .,, +o; . "•i ~' .~. "4,,. ' ......... ~ ................................. ~ ............................................... -i ................................................ ~ ............................................. ~ •.. •~1 I .,. ' ' " '69 v'.w-. FASTBACK '73 VEGA WAGON '70 TOYOTA '72 CHEV. PICKUP ~;;~ (YPU 728) Automatic. (20SHGL) Mar_k II Coupe. (6 11CRN) LUV. 4 st>eed. radio. heiitet . (02126W) :••\, ;· ' . !,,, s55•s MO. 51171 lull Pl"•C• pl.n 1L. I !(c. S$$.a5 tgl .. mo.""''· t'>CI 1••' l•C .;. alO cau 11n~ ~h~ '°' O(llY 24 m<>• Dt•e,.•d o...11no~l pnce $1$41 80 Annueo ,Perctn1eQa ~le 21.IJ8% • , s199 S61 11 · DM. MO. 11677 lull price plus I•• • !1c. '61 18 tottl mo oml. int"! I•• I "c 6. "" ,<:•rrr•ng cn"'l1"1 1or Otl"I J6 .....,s, 0..1.,,lt<I P*Y""'"' pnce 12..01.4$. "'"null Pe•cen!lge Rate 21 46'!1. • s1377 5199 ·· , DMi. 11311 lull Dl'•te 1>lilS IM I Ii~. t54. I~ !otatnu .. ....., i~I, lao I he. a 111 c••l'V•flQ chMvl!o• tor oniy 30 ...01:•0.1.......s !>llrrr>llflt prlC• 11883.20, Annual Ptrc•nl-oa Rete 21.73" ' I 11877 lull Plic• 1>lu• ft• a he 16941 t<>lol mc1.om1 •<>Cl II• & kc. I ·~ ""'Y'1'9 cn.ug•s tor only 36 ...,, Oeler•.., ~""'"' pnci 12691 711 "'nnual Percgn1ag<1 Rfte 21 46'11. --.. • ' ' ' I .J · ...... ,., .I • "!'.._ •• I.' ) \,. ••• . .. • Mloeolloe•-1010 r oh 8017 Sporting G..,. 1094 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'11 8' Gold Couch Chairs ltooaters, Bantams, etc. Surfboard. Plastic ~·unl. loots It Marine leeh, Power 9040 ........ green. Wolnu't Lam11 Duby Ducks (f:l.SOJ ~12 XJnt ~h1tpe. "!' di.iu,:~. 'l' •• ~~f.~!~··•••••••• :•·,•:••B•••E"a"'T"R"A••:: y",..••·:~•••••••••••;~ CuastFlrewoodSupply **I BUY ** lllVl1'iE Country Club 'l'abl~s Japanes e M~sa Dr , C!l.t . Sat gun$50.673 ·7454 G I ' 9010 ., • 0 . ~s.corddeliv•red. •t •· n· f 1 c kt.a 1 'ch > 1· '·\ 546570:1 enera Spor1.tl1her ful•Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• DB DAILY PILOT Wadnesd i y, M«y 21 .11975 Mlscelloffous 8080 Misc•llantows 8080 Mi1cellaneous 8080 :: ............................................... ······················· \ ' ... 581·112'l Good ,used furniture & ~.~,~·~ff_'_'_"_'_•_'_'"_·_"'· oc t . I 0"'' llu e, . LYNX Irons left handud ••:•·•~•••••••••••••••• •Qul ppe-d . Like new. Chevy ,l Ton Flatbed .:~---'-"-'='---I appliances, or 1 will .:·~ll ·-\bV\ealouut ScO~~tS~try. l>Or;tr•v-Pianos & 0NJC8'S 8090 2·9+W. ri.ti~t l'ond. $175: 18 R ED_WOOO C».noc -s,""O. 1a•.••1• do•a, w/tour tool boffl. Alla . h f fl ""' . ur, ... croo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 830-44ij!t I II I •h-.. IRWV\ ~ vv ~".io""" i • ·2 c1g t oot uort~scenl for You. Pi.11· brand new sk i booti; iHluck/Whitel, L:unl>$. "O . ~;c..;c.;:.:_ ______ w sa , x nt \."\n"'. _.... 875·&226eves. tool box tor compac .. 1ights$15cnch.Call MASTERS AUCTION H U~·IANIC,s l:te8bcstor. u·r Stool · 642:·03-W l't 6 19 11 S llMEH Parlor TV R di 548 ·3316 pick·up111 . After epm •. • !IB8·497l • 646_8686 & 83,9625 fer 646·629:1 aJlertil'1\l. P au s. u · Grand, xhlt. tone & cond . H' .F~ 5°1• 8098 19' Ciah'g boat&. Lrlr, new,.:6'::2:.·::1~::.;.l _____ _ ~ ·' · Besl offer. 49'1·1235 eve:;. 1 1• •reo 70 \JW H.P : Jvinrude out.· paint. $4TS·Movln&. See1· C~rtop Jugga~c curricr, 1 ~-'o_,_s~U~N~O_A_Y_"39-'~·09c...74'-1 2 Obi beds fD2tJ. l'U. I 5 .\1UST SacriJ'lc<', Autumn ----------1······················· boa1·d . Little Utled . at auco's, 2l:ltiO llarboa· TOYOTA SAL£ usedoneli1ne.$3U.OO cull drawe r drc s!:i~r "20. lla·•••'l•'"kSlol··. KUR 'r Zi\1A NN 5'7 '' Al\1/f"l\1 Sherwood AMP, 968-7519evcniug:i Bl C pb -·~• .~o 4971 UED, Kin" Si, mattress • " " .._ <" d x \ I d 1· s k 1..:=-=::.::=="'---• or : iv .... ""°. · ., t\1lthentublc&·IL'h<1irs l'l46.tl()65 .run . n . con . 2 Ullr111near 1.eu ers . ..::c::..::.c.;c_ _______ , Box spring, frainc, xtra Sl5. 1 Fr1.:iUa1rL' i·cf· $1,lj5(). firm. l'vt. Pty. Alnto s t new . $150. Re cen tly divor ced ALLGLASS Pucemaker NIW '74 ~ Cerarnic Loilct llavalory, fir1n ;stillpatkagcd.~l5 frce:tt.·r $-1.U. 1 rc<:lining Mt.•eelloneo"• 4v:t-7704 4~1.u~J. emplyd mule wunts lo :?5', alOHt' Chry. Miuty .. , white $5 ca. Oiclaphonc (Value $525);Queen $19S. l'h:ur .,.,0. 5 D;.it,,wi tru(·k .. ll!ase bowt for Hve·on. xtras. $O,&OS/best ofr. STILL AVAi GoodcondS90536·2l·IO {Value $425). Incl. de· ~ Wanted 8081 PIANO WAN1'1~ll : Rl'-:i\101'8 CON'l'llOL. Rels. Jlep\y : P .O, Box G«·"°'l ·~·~ "'hee ls ..:.1. l'U . l ""·'·• ~ -li ve ry 6:11 -04!!8. Usually "' " ••••••••••••••••••••••• F ll 0 J\I t• RIV A 'I' E Zl.'nith portable Color 312, Brell, Ca . 92621 HUGI 5 OCK OF Movi"•'· 1nust sell ever· J'o"•e. Chevy Chort Olo('k SIOO. $$C'SH $$FOR l'\RTY 52 1 -1 lo-"""-'/ .. ., ... 1 ""' / . · ·.;v• 1·v. $85. l{l·mote control loots, Ma~lllOlllC;{ · an.,·,..,., .. ~ 75•1 ·"th ing . Gd <1ua l .l----------1 _!_.!:~_,,_4_9J_.,_.,_,._.____ .... mT··--· .; ---Good uset.I furn /rc!'ngs , ~ . HC 1\ console. ucaul. cul-Clil .... r 9010 UA:WI ~;;Jieasooablc. ss7-J9.lJ z50;0 OFF SALE Chroine desk & chair, ~5. f'rzrs /stovcs. 546·0708' 1 IANO, ~l udio upri~h.t, or pil·turc. $150. 962-2343 S•r•ice 020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• luy or L ... """" ,:Jittndcrafted Porcelain Furn, appl's .. clothes. 110 'frains. (·ars, a('Cess. Musical . :~~~~~~~~~h. $l50. Alt. M ;i g ccn=a=v~o=,~=,=1~,~,~,=:-ol ;;1:;;,~l~:~:;;:;;~;;~;; IF YOU'D11AnB "W\ La...: a ·:jewelry.'l'heio"'artoryft5. books, mi sc. Us ed t rack , l>ld gs. ~ti5 . 8 AM /1''~1 . l"f\1 !>tcrco. · l ·'I · · llSAIUMG UUIO .:.-.1')5 30th. SL N'pl. Bch .' Usables, 2560 Newport :\qua r1 urn pu1np, Stu ln5truments 083 Sewinn Machines 8093 1&'\Ruin bi~t-, .~.~~ aEnti~n why not ch.,a~---~own · [I] ...,.. •••••••• •••• ••••• ':II slereo phono walnut, 5'. epatr n............ • • ...,. -v BJ. CM 9·5, l'n<is f\'fay 1'JU·Ul ';U. • • •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'2-"'57. · · I SANTANA · TOYOTA '.~:::_ frei9ht Ocsnoged 2.3rd, all sale::; final & as EJuctric 1-:uitur, 6 str. and -c~:.::cc•c•'---------I llepair (in boall. Scorpio immac c ea~, · .. :-:.:Scar 's Co mpactor is,cui>honly. Pecan Ht.lrtn Set amplifier. &th~~ or H&lltSINA ~ 2.5"LA'r B1\1dl.C6\orTV. l\-larinc .. 5'1U7Q.t 2'7?E\'_eryUunanecfor u • ,1 .. ,._ .. ,-. NO W ~. "'h"r·~I ----~~----w /bookca se •& cot'1lc1· l.Jestoffer979·i.itil5 .SEWING MACHINE W , Unde'w"I'' H·"\ Clean· gb,1e0•<,-•0•1·10r,. SJ1P60,•0; aedrusayl-. 1966tt,Otbor,C.M.64679303 "'""" "";, .x: .. ., J acuz:ti\Vhirl pi_>OI dc,;k . \Vrougl)t l ronl C~.o.:.c.:.:..o,~==---1 Suvc theS376.00 thathus Xlnl cond. arrty on .. w - ·10 ga I Wate r Heall' I' bath lik e new S75. dinctlc set w tt.i chairs. 10 Office Furniture & b c en p rJ id on th i s tube. Sl65. ~UJ·29UJ ing, inspccj.ion, i·eplace weekends, or week. Call '$6 Truck, 4.6. ton. SSO or Sl5:J .!19, Sl3.,i . Sc>ar',; 20" 642 1:HIU Spd. Hike. ,\JJ \l•ry ~d. Equipment 8085 IabuJous topmodcl,free-props,zinc9,etc.548-125S af\.6 pm,613·5T12 will con sider tra~. gas stove $1.,19.95, Nl>\V • · • CO•'d. Alt . 'I", I ~ ,0_..,.78_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .• ,m ""'"'.''"· '·Id new Sell things fast with Daily MT 671$ · ' .. " .,.. "' .. .. ~ Pilot \Vant Ads . Boat1, Power 9040 loots', Sail 90601-""-'. '-'------s1 2~. ~I US l' SAC. Cha nip . EX('SVl(.:hrs.$.l~/35,::;i:('Y for $tiJ9 .UO. Jus t re· Dod Truclr:~Tcn. UsedorOemoModels juice r. g u1 L<1r, lamps, Portable SAU;.;,\-likc (·hrs $6/24, desks, dt't g posseSscd and available •••••••••••-•••••••••••• ••••~••••••-.••••••••••• 1965 ge Coldspol 11 cu ft Rcfrig din. tb!/chrs. PlanL'i. end new. S.~5. was SJIJO new. now for the account HOW IS THE TIME SEARAY SllV 100.235HP 22' Herreshorr American Gd: tires, runs Sood· :5419.9~. NO\V $3'19. Ken· Lbl s .. 10 spd. bike, inis('.1 -'-o.=15~-22=' ='="---~}i~~~~~.~Z7k s\V ~;l~. de~'~, balance of only S?GJ.OO. for job see kt· rs to ch(.oek 110 , XLNTCONO. Eagle gaff rigged with $550. 5S6·6337 1n o r c puwc rm atc 301Avocado.C:\'I ---645_7.111 Just like new & fully the Dally l'Llot l·lclp 968·5075 teak option aC dealers vacuum, reg. $199.95. DRIFTWOOD "uara>>l"Cd. SI0.00 a Wanted l'lassi!'it·:.i.tion. If H cost/reduced.M&-7172. '74 CHEVY 0 1• r· h <> " 16' GLASSPAR, 75 Pl.:====="'-=;:;_-1 $159. Cra l't~n1cn power D N'T P U o I anot er r· r o in U r cg o n . ''uahty t'XCL'.Ul1vc "L'" month OK or will <I>-"· Lhl! Joh you "':int is not · · . 1. . '< " . Evi nrude, all ski eqwp., Sabot fiberglass racing EHNE mowers up to SIO Ot~F. n1te o gelling l'O mp. Jma,g1na t1 vc pieces tor shaped dl'.sk l"rl'dcnza, countforl·ash iorcashin thercypu1111 ghtconsit.lcr ' · CHEY .t\!l Bicy('les up to $40 sleep. Custom Cr<1ftcd l<.t1HJ sc:1pini;. SL'.Ulpturc. bar /refrigerator, and 90 days). p & J Cox oflerin~ your :,se rvices trlr.$7oo .493·8285. Immaculate, new .sail. ()l<'F. Sears Re>t::buck & \Vater beds by L\lichacl n1acr•101c. t.i' to ti"'. Hy sldt: ch;iirs . Cort Fox 25&! Agcnc y. ( p :tll'i ci a & with au ud u1 the Job I:J74 Reinell Cabin 22', 651 -'$3~25~·~·~75~-~6883='-----I Super 20. Au&om1tlc, Co., 270 E . 17th St, CM . 10 yr Guan. I deliver : pil!t:e or \V/l olc load. Ne wport Hlvd., Costu Jerry t:oxJ . 5<1!'1--1,125 \Vant ..:d category. !'hone hrs. loaded, 714·996-~1 Col. 26 ' MKll ready to power steerln1, air cOD· 540.511~. -'='-'·_1_46_7 _______ 1 5·11l ·H203 alt ._G_l'_.1_1_. __ i\ll'sa. O.J5-:ltitil. any tune. li·l2 ·5073 · or !i91·Utiti0 cruise. Very ciean. $8900. ditionin&, heav1 duty . ..,.., cam·per equipped, exlra Avtos, Hew 9100 Autos, Hrw 980 Autos, Hew 9800 Autos, New 9800 Auto1, Hew 9800 Auto s. Hew 9800 Autos, Hew 9100 2131697.6""'"'· tank, likeoew.Only1,8&S " • .. ' ". .-·: -. .. . . ... .-' . ' .-' .-:-1 . , ' •• .. • •• . , ;• :; •• .. : . ' • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••• 2 USED 14' HOBIE CAT mile», (83S3$W) BRAND NEW $ PRE-MEMORIAL DAY SPECIAL SALE! '75 OMEGA ORDER TODAY BRAND NEW '75 STARFIRE $ '69 ANC JAVELI N SST Automatoc, rad.a. flt.alrlf 1LVE. lOC.1 O RDER TODAY TAKE YOUR '68 CHEV. NOVA t< <-yhnO'lr dulnm al•C. <.>rJ'O. l>eJt°"' V•8N Hi~! '68 DODGE DART A ulo matoc . pow.,, <,t ,·e ••n'! air conr!,\oon1ng V•L 9.( 1) CHOICE BRAND NEW '75 CUTLASS $ ORDER TODAY HONDA c~y1c #I HONDA CAR DEALER IN ORANGE COUNTY 1973 HONQA N••vr>r br>en reg•~1are<1 L o w . 11'.!w •m iles tSOA101171 3) 5977 SALES-SERVICE-PARTS 51677 '70 TOYOTA CORONA Aot COOd•l10 A>rl\I. au!omahC, 51177 Duc~ttlseal& i /3100E1 '71 OLDS 88 ROY ALE COUPE 51577 Couoe Full oo"'er, ladory d''· srereo I tit w 1>1 • vi n yl t on - 1 ~1 50MI ) '72 CHRYSLER B<ooghom "72 OLDS TQRQNADO New Vork<1f F"ll s2377 r:r:;e;Mra;,1~;t1~· 52677 """" """"' '"' wl>eel l095FJSI '70 Y.W. BUG '68 PONTIAC GTO 11a"sm1ss1on. · ' ' · · ·· 51377 '· •! 'l ,j 0 I I (J ro I U <j wax9n3, 5977 TAKE YOUR CHOICE '77 DOWN IMME DIATE DELIVERY LARGE STOCK OF HOHDAS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '71 CHEYf WAG-OM . '~ ..... ' ..... ......... , .... "''""' .... ·~·· "'""'" '11 "'ONf l C._~LO .... - ' ..••.. ~ ' "' .. ".' 'u. 1"""'-"'J s57M!~ .,. . '•· '" ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Brand New GMC PICKUP 1975 GMC SHORT 4·w D BED • • $ $ ORDER TODAY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 15110031 • • ~ I ! J HULLS . need work. Make Offer. 548-0138. $4977 P -CAT No. 229, gd .. cond. d'INlllLA11,;I w/cvr. _All rac'g, ge-1!.r . -""" UlllU Splnnak:er & pole. Alk ~ $1,1001orc.S48"'825·· ~ VOLVO 24 ' CANADIAN H in-t erhoe ler Sloop, 6HP 11166 Horbor C.M. M4 9303 Evin. Fibe_rglass hull. 'l1·8 cylc·OMC ~ T. & Dan~ Pt. shp. Gd. cond. Camper. Sl(is.6. :f3(lOO. ;,~~~ $4,000. Eves. EX'l'RAS! 6.f.5-4388. LIDO • i·k ans 9570 14 , 1 e new. com-••••••••••••••••••••••• Pfetely eq~ipped. Trailer ·73 Chev van, aelf con- $1395, S4S-~ · tained. Lo mileage SBJO Boats, Sli_pa/ · or trade. 645-8379- 0ocks 9070 '69 f.'ord Van, 411,500 orig. ••••••••:•••••••••••••• miles. New tires, brakes, l'RIME SLIPS mags, custom rosewood Ne~portBcpch interior, Gd mileage. A II sizes :iil200. or best. 495-6418 673-5253 6"5·8506 afl. 6 loah,SpHd& Ski 9010 lJ Ford Chateau Club Wagon, 12 Pass. PJS, ••••••••••••••••••••••• P /8 , auto. Fact. air SK.I B·OAT 17' Flatbottom frnl /rear. Am/Fm w /black Walnut deck, stereo tape. Low mi. New 427 Blue printed Chevy. tires. Load deck. Exler. Casale V ·drive. Finish spare 50 gal (uel tank. Line Cavitation plate. Below book. 546-2399 Aft. Cust. 'Tandum lrlr. Used 6, 968·4550. · little. Immat:. cond. W ~• 9590 $4 ,000. 557-9901 or Autos •nv 557·3262 aft. 6JlM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Boats. Storap 9090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE PAY TOPOOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS Boat Storage-daily · weekly mont hl y· Security-24 hr. launching ramp. Newport Dunes, 1131 Hack Bay. 644·0510 U your car is extra clean soe us first. IAUIRllUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa• 919-2500 Tranaportation ••••••••••••••••••••••• Compor1,Sme/ Roni 9120-••••••••••••••••••••••• H.EALLY Clean!~lo~· 4 Star camper coac h. Refrig. & jack. Sips. 7, $1,500. Pvt. pty.546-0739 TOl'Dou.All l'AID IMMEDIATB.Y FOIAiL FOREIGN CARS CALLORCOMllH TOSllUS CABOYER Cmpr. will fit s m . pk up & '64 thru 'b'7 El Camino·. Gd. cond. $l50. 846·61~2 6 Pack Camper w/boot for :.mall truck. Best orfer. 644-5515 aft 8PM, [i!UJf'I Jl\T lf•1f'[]I\ I '.i Motorcr,cle1 / 3180 W.c.tlllly.U. 642·9405 Scoo ers 9150 ·····'················· WE BUY. 1973PENTON125CC. IMPORTS Xlnl oond. Many ext<a>. Veryfasf.586-2747. Top Dollar For ADJ I ---'"'-"'-"-~-'----1 Make or Model. °'"· 1971, onl11100 mi-JIM PANOS like new -street legal $450. ><5·545• MAZDA HOHDA.1974 750 20015. Manchester $1600 6'5-9952 Anaheim 636-6000 73 Honda CTOO, Ttail & Or-te ec..fy"s Street. Auto. $199. Highest S..,... 847-3911 on IMJIAll 3Rack Bike Trailer lift MaxeyTllVllN Call Arter8PM Call Roaeror 1tm 644·551S 847-&SS5 HONDA CL4SO. 10.soo mi. FRIE APPRAISAL xlnt cond. SO MPG Must We buy used cars Ir see to appreciate. '675. trueks. Call GROTH 1 ..:•c.'=be~•:.;l:.;Oc_ff:.;ec.'=· 5'2=·=01!06=-· _ 1 CHEVROLET for.a free '73 BULTACO Desert apprai.:oal. Bike, many xtras. $575. G~~~~tie~:':~ET ONO 673'2861 Huntington Beach '71 HONDA CB-175, 1900 847 ·6087 549-3331 miles, like new.,$350. An . c.EUl~G YOUR~••? !I pm-644 -6515 'I! " -1..:c==='-----1 · TOPPRICISPAID '72 HONDA 150. Equipped For Imports w / $680 in touring a.ccess. Paid for or Not Jm m ac cond. $1600. De•Lewia ...... 645-4785· 1966 Harbor, ~IL 74 Honda 175, aooo mi.1 ____ 64_6_--~~3 __ _ Xlnt Sllape. '650. Muat TOP -••u! Sell. 586-1827 "",,_.., I c====:.:..----·' For clean used earl &: MotorHCHllH., trucks ! Howard Salo/R"I 9160 Chevcolet., 0o,. le Quall •••• •• ••• * ••••••••••••• StreeLs, nr, MacArtbtar, RENT the best.·'73 Ex· ecutive 25', all tux xtra1. Free mi. 919·90665-lpm. Jamboree and Brlltol. Newport Beach. 1133-o555. Wllllm 1974 Chinook 18 +, lbgis USID CARSI body, 11,000 ml. Dodae Top · DOLLAR F Oil 360 en1. $10,000. 751-6174. GOOD '11 • '12AND ;a '75 COMMANDER 24', DOMES11CS 4000 mi, loaded W/Xl.i'u. Ir IMPORTS Bel.o..w ~holetale. $15,500. THEODOR£ . 67S.0261aft.6 p.m. ROllHSl'OllD 2080 Harbor Blvd. TNllon. T....... 9170 COSTAlllll:SA •••••••.•••••••••••••••• 642.ootO WANT TO BUY ·14'-15'1----r"-'=--- Ariatocrat Travel . Trallec. 11l11JI be clean, I lllJ'J-*C.. gas. r e frlg. Dinette in $47-'Dfl , front & bed in rear. . 637 -41 56 aft , 3pm NEW dealer wlUa empty weekdays anyti m e lot nee d• used cars weekend1. ' · : deaperaWlY .. Old or DIW, an.,y mak•. l 'mmed. MIA. '72 Lancer trailer. J7 ft. 639·99?2MM:J..'178J '12 Travel-AU 392 HP.1 Xlnl con d . USOO . SELL Idle I'--a --· 1lallJl'PllotCIW!OolAd. I " • t • • b r 0 • c , " H 7 " d •• R • • • • ' A.tos.u .. d DAIL V PILOT 09 Autos, Imported · Alllos, l•portocl •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Wednesday, May21 , 197S ....... 1!.ll'W ........ ~ rW . •·~-I ........................-. ...,..., .,...w ••••••••••••••••••••••• •····•··· ....... , ..... ······•················ ' A"'fflo ...... , . ,7 Mon••• hm 9740 Voll1w -977 Voi111w1HJ9n 9770 Volvo 9772 Codlhc 9915 """'•,UHd .....,.,UHd 1,UHd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• .,.. 0 ... TOUD •••••••••••••••••••• ·G2 vw nuo. ;\lust St·JI ll7 \'olvt1, 911,000 1n1. Nccd11 Eng. Wk. $J5V !Uti·OK!Hi. CADILLAC CMv,.olet 9920 Ford 9940 Plymouth 9960 19'10, llOS, Mint t:.ond. full ' ' Runli Good. ~-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Over 70 to choo6c from. • 61 AP.lllln HelJnM i»ower. Dk Gray, ~ AUAllS..$11VICI overdrive, roflb1r, nu lle11t0fferti7J-J.m ' EXOJIA.NC~ llr""o p•tnt, tdw.U.l "1(13 & .RBBUILDS :;ooe1.1. 17Jl·Wl. 190· rebll. eng: ntiw BROOKLYN BUG CO. . -r a d l.itor & tir es . Call uft 4 P~1. :iro·.5.:170. --t"rom $199.5. GMAt: Fi nancing&: Leasina. CONNELL CHEVROUT SALJO;S & SERVll.:E 2828 Harbor ll•d. 71 Ranchero. gd, l'()od. nu tirei1, radial11, PIS, P/B, Ale, $1400 or btit offer. Eve 675·3404. ATLAS IMW 971-J AM /1'~M. xlnt. cond. 1-.:sli mates ~-9141 •••••••••,••••••••••••• Vet'i econ., must sell. l u u Y J u N K v w OllAMCtl COUN'l'Y'S $1,05. Offer. 541t·7U Engl11cs1Can1. !179-003.5 ·~2 VW liug, xlnt cond. $2,0SO or ofJ'cr. Cull 67.5·6.524' 1~74 \'W lil'Cllt:, radio, sunrQQ(, lo nu ., xo·:1:1, fl.tur;t St1ll, 8:15-21627 M-1". '7l Volvo 164. 40r Sedan , .au lo1nutic transmission. 1.11r cond1 L1oninH, power a.lccr1n1: l:kuuurul metulhc p(l1nt I ov.·11cr car w11h only 2.l,UUO actuul 1nil es (o:J.1-1 J ....._CocH1c ....... -. COSTA MESA '66 l'~ord Country Squire 546-1200 Wa gon. S250. r\ulo. llttl. Chrysler ~mouth Open Oaily & Sun. 't1I 10 PJI ----. -----------1 t-'ac u1r. P.I'. 640-447 1 01 2U29 l-iarbor Bl,J, <.:osl{I i\l~a O&D T Privtite Party-·74 '50"SLC ~tu~~ lOa 1n or aCl Spml Wcekdu.yscall '.59 V W , n ew n1olor , 833 -~. '72 VW JJU'C A~1 /fo'M dunt:l>ugtt,Y SOOJ. M -'--Ben eiio .. ~d. <'Ond. ·M•k• '-:----'*"'-· _·0_740-'---C:revlerlMW 2o8 W. l~l Street S111le1·Service·Lctuilng. frCeu.a I oli'ar. Call : 213·64.l-2Hll 1Volvo 9772 loy Cenrer, lite. Ex t' C ~ ... " ""''· 11ue3.1190 Santa Anu 1:135-317 1 Ho11'lloyte. BMW tCU IYt er ""''· - ... E. l71hSt. 450 SE :;;;v.,-s".-"-""-,-. A-,-,,-"-•. ,,. Cost8Me11111 5'46-4-W.t .. •73 IMW $252.80 gd. oond.""'·""" -----~ 1 .. ~ 'lt9. V W !;a mpe•. •Int -~·-Air, power windows, .. "'"· l\o1 e talllc p ai nt , AAl t FM s t e reo, lbw cond.AM J.f'Mt;.&>e,now oautomatic tranami&&lon, milei, 36 month """"n end ~adiu ls, reblJ. enat,. $2300. 11.ircohditloniha,AM /FM tease . ..._ Ph: 615 -58..56 1 rudio, 1 owner car. (3356). Cre•i.rlMW 208 w. lit Street Solnla Ana 835·3111 $15,00<J cosl ; Uuy -l>uck $10,3.54 ; Uepree. $464.6; Int . $44.µ + 'f.ix & Li e. $:!14 ; .Sec. depot;i t ; Ser. f!:029714 . • Cloaed SWMby e Q $ Jim Slemons '72 VW DUS, New cng. gd cond. $2500· 5'18-7&rt '7J v.w. CONVEftTllLE 30,126 m llea. Lo{'al garage kept car. t-'ar below m1c1rket. ~l ay be Seen at • ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPECIAL VOLVO SALE! lieut p rice i ncreH!e. Super s tock, All lil9del:. J>riced to Sell. Oversea~ Delivery SpccialislS · e Closed Sund:.y • && '71 VOLVO 1800COUPE 'I !i peed transml:.:sion lAft~I 11verd ri vc. 1\i\I , F:-01 eGJt. U.UW radio. (!}33DD\V ) ~.VOLVO $4177 1966 Hurhor C f,I 64b '1101 •GJftll\ luvib ORANCiE COUNTY ~ YOLVO ~'A VOL VO 't>S C,\O Scd;u1 1JcV1llc, all puv.·er. t;Ood l'Ulld1llon, S750. ~2-355\.1 '72 ConvCJ·liblc. 45.lAlll mi :-Ol any l.'X lra:.: $1895. -l:J-1-3~16 or 'i!t!:l·21-19. '72 Cou1>e de Ville . Low 1966 Impala convl'rtlblc 1n1 . 1.u;11Je ll ! ikst ol"l'er 'fune-up 100 rrulcs ago. over ~200. lJa)·.., &IO·l'il lti Good lrans porlalion or t-:\·cs ti4u -tltilti. Call Gene ti73-~eves i2 .SE IJ,\.:\'. lk \'1111;. lo Com~t 9927 nu, Lanlluu, leather. F.\l ••••••••••••••••••••••• .~lert:o lupc, till. SJ .WU. li..! t:O.\J ET. Only 7M.OOC tlJ5·2f>..!5....j.•\"t•:.. ti75 iliG.l 1n1. ti cyJ, •1uto. Sl51.Jur Of-___ r ,. s•') •.•. h'"· .,. 72 Cud . Cpl· Uc\"1lle, c · ,._ .... "" ,._ uuld/v."h le Xl11 t. Cont.!. Cottfinentol 9930 Xtras, $4?5V ti-lt.1·51~1, ••••••••••••••••••••••• i:I C.:OUJ'E ur: \'JI.LE I Ul\"rll·r, 2~Ut!tJ nll, ilcv,· 1·;uJ1al llrc,,. slnl cunt! li·lti·:ll:il Comoro 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·73 '"'fown l"OUJ)I.:'". Heal luxury . ,\JI l'Slra:. & im- mac. f)k . brn. w/tun \'Lnyl top. Sl.:t!t5. Can n nance $-1875 if <h .. >sirc<l ' 01· take O\"l'I' ll•ase al SIJ7 .ti5 µer 1110 tiJU-0072 548-2054 t: ve.'J. 546-1934 .~~.'!~:1. .......... ~! .. ~~ POfttioc 9965 .ti6 i\.I US'f ,\~G . $375. Needs :.0111t! txxly .,.,·ork .. 6.!2·355\.1 ---'7-1 Mu:.tang II , like new, 4·:.pd, r11d10, radials, 4 cyl., 21 mpg avti: .. ap- pearance gruup, fold ing rear seat. S<!.li:JS. Call 8J7-67-2l. Oldsmob"il•--9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale:. and Scr\'H:t:! OLDSMOllLE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS University Olds 2850 llarbor Blvd. Cosla ,\l csa .S.10-9640 Pjnto 9957 ........................ . ........................ . PHONE 546-8 0 I 7 NO CASH NEEDED TO Rl!V ANY NEW PON"f lAl: IN S"l'f><.:K• Example; 1,.and Mew 1975 Grand Prix ( Ul51!75) ~~"' $141 75 UO\\'N .\li). THANK YOU Imports '°' allowing us to lead 17141131-9300 .Southern Culirornl111 in•l-----'--'-'-'-"-;:..:- sitles for 1915. '73 4$0SE, immac., lo •'l'he all new 530 i is miles. /dust sell or lease. available for imrnedlat <Warren ) 521·5920 or EXCLUSIV ELYVlJLVO 1'100 Hnrho• c 1,1 lid/, '1)01 Largest Vo l\'u De aler 111 Oran ~e C11unt~'~ BUY or 1.1-:.t\.._')I:'. ......................... OIRE<.:f uick 9910 "70 C~unaru S.s:JSO PS l'B, ,\.\l ·f<':\I , a11". good rub· lier \'111yl t up $195-0 tii5·1ii!JI Cht-v,.olet 9920 ......................... 'i3 Cont1ncnlal, ·I dr, gold v.· wht \"1nyl toµ. fully l'<1u1pµl'd v.· <ill :\lr;is. Xlnl cond. 4U,ll()o eas) miles. $-1700. E\·c:. onl.)' ! 8-16-WIS '68 1 .\11'.~l.A . :!door HT. 72l:1:i). Ur·hn1. p ...,, p1b, Lea \ 111 g Country -1!17~ ~Pin Lo '.I.' a gun. 17 .aoo nu. 4 :op. :.ll'l"l.'0, tal·h. S:%OU ! low Uouk J 5-13-U:!o Immediate Oell,·ery •loll rnos. S4~79 rull pr·1t ·1• inc l . 1'&L . 51;K(l l dererred p rnt . pr11·1· incl. T&l. & all carr\·1111.: c-hargc!'i on' appr1;\ 1•d (·rt."<i it. A.P.R. tti.2·1'. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC delivery _& lesldri\·e. tJ79 ·8ZJ5 alt. 5 p.m. ~'·~· ~[~-,,~·~ ;~·:~·y·J ~.~7-~·~:0•:1•0•m•. ·,·.~1•1 327 VM. vth1 ll'. air cond., a ;ur, rcl·liu Pa ~:.. scat. "' .. " '"' ~ .. guo<l running, solid eat.-. Like new. ti·l0·15ou XI90i . 68 • • 1>0wcr, v111yl top. (.;ielln. P vt. party. 64-1 ·41~ altc1 'jj"'2-7J:!ti. •Still some remaining ·250SE·Very goodcond. Prit·c d to sell ~825 5.Jtlp.m. ---__ '74"s a t attra<.1.ive sav. asking $3150/reas of!. 2025 S Manchester ~_!_-M7~Mc".:_l'_:_Y.-knds _ --------ti91'<Jltl.\OCOl>ra. ings! 544 ·4644 artcrJPl\I". find wbi(t-you want in A · 2 lh1\·c sumcllung to Sl·ll":' P IS. l'/I\, ~\1 t:, Xlnt 0 ·1 nahe1m 750-011 Scll1dll•llc1ns 1;12-5t.i7M t:la.~s1 t1et.lad . .;dool V.'cll. ~ Porsche 97So i c::::••~>'-'P~il~o~t~C~l•:•~•~if~ic:-"1~>~.-I ----___ __ ___ ___ Cond.645-255ci afl .. J ::~ Plymouth •••I ........................ ·v-1\',\Llr\N"J',61') 1. • 1480 HARBOR 8t'IO Cu•lo Mt'\O l'lean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.i7:l-24JXe,c:.. 12 Vega 2 Or lhail·hh.il·k. ---ruu car. Rest oiler O\cl° \\'ant ad results 642-5678 ;>1100. ti7:J -3ti82 9800 •We have a tremendous ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... _ N 9800. •·• N 980 • ----1·------· ·election of .... ~ BMW ' -•· ew -.-os, ew 0 .... utos, Mew 9100 Autos, N•w 9100 •·•os, N•w :. ....x..-.... S PORSCllL" ·-,3 914 , Ap· ~~ l hooa f "" •••••••••••• .,... • • •• • • • • ••••••• I ......... I •••• " ................... I ...... . 9800 Autos, Mew 9100 Autot, Mew oc e rom. pea r . Group , l\-1 .ag , .. M I . . wheels, A/C, very clean, . .............................................. . • '* ~ny easing ophons 673_5,.,,,. ... 1, •v m available. inl\I.. · • • !Ill BLACK Coupe Xlnt. Cre•ler-..W cond. A/C, Ft~I . s spd. 208W.lttStreel Must sue. Lse or Uuy . Santa Ana 835-3171 1_49_5_·69_95 _____ _ e ClotedSunday e '14 914 LOADED. Air, ~ lft:t. $100 . Ca!!i h Re bitte to .., " Buyer,496-7265 • Capri t71 I '68 912. New engine, run- ••••••••••••••••••••••• nlng gear , smog device . . • '13 CAP HI V6 4 spd. air $4500. Days 640-8116 or . ,s unroof. p'p. $2 .'995: ~ves 6'10·0026. 044-0686 ---~-------1 '74 Porsche 911. Choe. Dobun 9720 brown, tan int. 5 spd. S· ••••••••••••••••••••••• inst. Am /l'm 8 track WlLLBUYYOUR s tereo. Alloys. 17000 mi . U nd e r warrant y. DATSUN.TOYOTA PERFEC1'! $11 ,JUU. OR VOLKSWAGEN PAID FOR OR NOT.,1-''_3_·'9_77_·--·--- W I L L P A Y T 0 P 1970 Porsche 91.1 ·r. 5 spd'. DOLLAR. CALL KE Ste reo. Al UST SELL! ALLEN, MO-GW2 675-4456. -----~----; 73 DATSUN 610, lo miles, Rolls Royce 9756 2 dr. AM /FM, xl nt eond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tii5-5342 after S::xl #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ·1 -1 D a t s un 8 ·2 1 llutchback. H!l-1. ~lags. Pin slripin l!l'.. Jo'uJI crpt 'g. 75 HP 1300 CC. 37 J\IPG. lmma{' cood. $3,075 or best offer. 536-6:W. IOY CAIVEI ROUS·ROYCE 2l-' I.17th St. COSTA MISA 5'4--44-44 73, 240Z, lo mi. 33M , White ClOSl.D SUNDAY$. ext. Re·d int. A/C, Mass. ot 9765 Xlnt Cond. P.P. $4,SSO. OJ a 547-1171 days, 499-3745 ~··•••••••••••••••••••• nite. 72 MK. 11 WGN. Auto, '70 DATSUN STATION WAGON 510 . 4 speed transmission, Alff radio. t956LGC) $1377 air, radlal5.'""A·l cond. S2 ,4!f5 /ofr . r.t ust sell. Trade OK. 962-7935 TOYOTAS lrOlld Now '74s ONLY IOI.EFT Also 14- at TRE MENDOUS fQll lf.IDU• SAVINGS Example '74 Corolla Wagon Auto., r itdio, bumper ' TOYOTA . """'"'· ''"'" •• 1"4 lfo•bo•. CM. 6'6·93°' $2997 Flot 9725 fi l . ......................... toll bDt4 ORANCiE COUNTY'5 ~ MIWIST•LARGl5T ~ TOYOTA IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 19'6 Horbor. r M 646 9303 All Models &Colors 71 TQyota Corona sed. Dick Miiier Motors Air. Lo gas consmptn. $1595 833-9326 r:.amB 13 c oRONA Sdn. x1nt Cond. AM /FM, stereo, 8 120~. W;imer trc. tpe dck, $2000. . ul So. Mt1in ~A6 8701 5.anla Ana 5.57-21:12 ,,.. · · '74 Fi ft X 19. $3950. Work (Lynn) or 8000 ml, 833·1511 '69 TOYOTA CORONA COUPE 839·~5 Aulornalic transmission, Alr conditioning, AM ••••••••••••••••••••••• r.wdio. <YRX89-1 1 : H-9727 . Honda . $1377 SGAlrl fi l ·. 100/o O•orFeelor'f fall UDlA IAYoke , ,-, • OYOTA ' plus your choice of ••· ·. T · ceasories, T &: L. Mn Frl••••r 1966 Horbor. C.M. 646·9303. •, 53'7·5464 ssa-7566 1912 Toyot• Corona. Xlnt • •Macie. t731 cond. •1950. , :.••••••••••••••••••••••• CalJ 548-5491. .... MAZDA ANNOUMCIS $500 C .... SH lllATES ALL MODELS AVAIL.ABLE llACHM.•P4 17131 Bt8$b Blvd. Hunttn1ton Bl•('b 142 '''' Tri_., . 9767 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RAii 71 TRIUMPH • GT·'"MAlll 111 Exceptional condition. Prof. maintained. Many xtras. Lo Ml. 9845. Pvt. Pty. 847·4193. . '72 TRIUMPH GT& COUPE 41 speed tran1ml1slon, '71 MAZDA radio, heflle_~. wire n • wheeJ1 , l319EYf) -•• ~~~ ... !!,•Ir $3117 condlllonln1. tllllOIO cdllll II lfJDi.6 $1077 <. • .. • -· :. ·fjtlA lflOU -~ VOLVO .:_ • • • , 1'66 Hctlbor (,M. Mf 9.)03 :; ·. TOYOtA IDTRJ·A ... C!Mllc"Qlll · f\U lop. Runs 1uper, 1966 Harbor.CM M6.IJ30l '96·1827 MuslSeJl. • '\ • 1974 PINTOS As low •• llAND NIW $2088 '75 ELITE 2 DOOR HARDTOP SUPER SPECIAL SUPER SPECIAL '70 MAVERICK '72 GRAN TORINO s tyl . auto. lr•n~. M•ler. •YREI!• •i<dlo. V 8. aulo Iran~ .• !a<!ory aor cond•lioning, oowe• $tl'e.,ng. vonyl roof. •9SS·EJB '75 MAVERICK 2 DOOR SEDAN ?j.0 Cl06<vl. erog•ne J'loor Shill, A.'/. RIJd•O. FR. Bumper Gu.J•d~, D<lr k Btue Mel.Jll lt. ~S K91Lll8•l1 t IRAND NIW SUPER SPECIAL '74 MUSTANG II 2 •2 ?XIOc:c. • c yl. • .Julo. Ir ans .• r 11Clio, helllC'r. L•CCnse •72~KG8 SUPER SPECIAL '74 LTD WAGON V,8. a .1., .,Ir, p. ~lrg . pwr. (di~). b•k$, r&h, pwr. ,.,,/g<Jte. lugg/roKk. Lk. 9~SOIU $1688 $2988 $3688 s99=~ l'MT. $40·97 ~o:;.,y l'YMT. ' ... "'.._. ........... ----· ..... ''"' *""'-' .-.• ••c ••01111 • ..,.,., .. -"'""" ......... ~.,. .... '72 MAZDA WAGON $6 J47 ~ci~i.,r PYMT. .. , ...... -~---"·'" '•'•' ......... . .... ,., . ...,,. .................... ,.,., • ,.~ ''"I• RXJ • Ulffd, foKlory •i• conOl!ioniog. AM FM rMI~ Ju~! like new. i..la!~ NO '191GNL. • lltCl&l llNAHl-AY.llWll Idell ICM" OV9fnigtll hol>I. or for ,,., MKll. or IV•' • 9ood wo•lthorM. SGTAPll~•S'I. $199=~ l'MT. $399 ~:;~ l'MT. $8440 ~"ci~.ty l'YMT. $ 9 9 8 0 ~"ci~i.lY PYMT. 'O' .. ·-.,.. ff·p•O ... ,, .. ,. '•'•' '"'"'"'<• <k' ... , '""" °''•"·~ ............... .. ,, ... ~ .......... ·-·-........ . . . '"' ......... ,~ ...................... ' -~ ~ " . """ ..... ~ ..... :T~s~!''v~.~~~~~P..0!wer "~•ing. DOWer bro~ts. raoio, ti~a!er. ll<~nse NO. llJHOO llKIAI fllUHClltl AYAIUILI '72 fORDWogon Lo.dl'O 1nc1ua,ng r11crorv "'" condotiooing. plus 111! 11\r c•lril\ • 1600ILI ~<IAl flNAllCllG AYAIUlll '70 CHEVV WAGON 9 P•nr~r V·I, outo lr<JnJ_, 1ir, PD"""' !IHr•llQ (161 1\EJ I '73 PLY. DUSTER f ccnomicol Uic~ snlrr, power .steering. r,a<Jlo. healer. Ll,cnie No. 1'tJPL PttW llMIHCING AVAii.Aili '7S FORD Bubble Top '---.. _ .. _ ......... ......... .... ·--·-· ,_, .. _ .............. . .., •~-••o• ..... -...... _ ............. -... . ...... __ ... ,_,.., -... ·--... .._. -~--·-·.-... -_·_-. _5_2_9 ___ 8~8---11 ~I;!:~~:~.~ =.•• ·'75 FORD CAMPER VAN -·-·--.. - '688 '7l CHEVY . ...... " ............ .,, ...... _ •·· ·-·-· .......................... .. ·~ ....... '"'" -· ... ·-... ··-· ·• COMPLETE WILO'NOOO C-'MPEll CONVER.SI~. S!.W:, It~. OtMll<!'l. tArpeli"ll, rw d1Mlk. 4E0.11~'!7901 • •4388 •43aa '68 CHEVY P.U. ..... l·-····· "~·-· ·-·-.... """'"'' '3788 '72 COURIER --·"···-·-""'"' ·····-·-,,._ ... ···" ---··-· I I ' ......................... ....................... .. GOLDEN NUGGET 17' RAVIL nAllflt. IS1SS02J91 ... _9 All THE COMFORTS Of HOME ltlADY FOi IMMIDIArt DfLIVlltY Al50 AVAIUllE 8' • lO' • 23' • lS' '11 Fouo ~100 ·~·· 1tt1 n->~1 '71 . ........ ~-, ... l••OUl•"lll))I ,.,,. °"'"· t' l • I· 1> OUTSTAIDllG VALUE '73 OPEL MANTA COUPE Auromatic, AM/FM radio. POwer brakes, white walls, air <:ond1tion1ng, bucket seats. sunroof. vinyl top. console. (206JAO) '73 PINTO STATION WAGON Auromaric. radio. heat9f', Whrte walls, ai r cond1tron1ng, luggage rack. (3T1 2X23 1468J '74MAC GREMLIN SEDAN CARS '73 LINCOLN CONTlle(r AL 6 cylinder, standard transmission. radio. heater. bucket sears. X-Pac, rally wheels. !A•E465E75809SJ Coupe, VB . automatic, AM/FM srereo, cruise control, vinyl top, · white walls. air condit ioning. (840HFPJ 52695 51995 51925 54550 : '70 PLYMOUTH DUSTEI COUPE VB, automatic, radio. heater. power lleerrng, PCJwer brakes. wt111e waHs. air cono111oning. f0088S.x) '73 PLYMOUTH DUSTER COUPE VB, aulomat1c. radio. heater. while wall s. vinyl too. rlucket seats. custom •ntenor {948KMPJ '74 MUSTANG 2+2 COUPE 4 speed. radio. heater, power stee r ing , w hite w alls, air COnd111on1ng, "9g Wheels. {766LOZJ '72 MERCURY MAllOUIS BROUGHAM V8. auromatic, radio, hearer, llOWet Sleering, PQwer brakes. POWef seal, wh1fe walls, air conct11iooing, vrnyi : lop, 1111 wheel. (029EHM) 51195 · 51995 53150 52355 .. • } ' • ' . l ' "'-·CL.EA HEW '75 SCOUT 4 WHEEL DRIVE ~r C:Onditiontng, IUtomltic, "99 Wht4Ms, off ro.a hres. C\latom 1ntenor, folding,_. Net, tritiler wiring, •le. • $ eo,..1.1w ''lleffY ,..,, .. MrYice CIYailalile for y-R..V. Rec. llie best -Ylc1 Iii Or-. Co. Foot, folr & frlellClyi '· 'i, 7 J ' J J J • ' I J • ' • 1 1 j • ' • • I , I ~ I I I I I I 7 . '-' . • ~· .r J ' . ' • --· • . -' . • I _.• • -• L Laguna/Soutlt. Coast Today's Ooslag N.Y.Stoeks ~ ... VOL. 68 , NO . 141, 7 SECTIONS, 86 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY CAL..IFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1975 TEN CENTS Surfers Clash Over· 'Kight-of-wove' By F'REDEHICK SCHOt:~I EHL 0 11111 Dau, Piiot lt.111 Coaj'irm ed body a nd bour-d sur~ rers alike search for an elusive oc;;eanic form c·nlled the right wave. When they rind it. they com · pete for it. So it has ~een for years at Trafalgar Lane beach in San Clemente. tt•s bell~r kno~·n;as T Street. Lifeguards often have been syrorno.Md to mediate disputes arising at the T Street break - the area whe re the waves form and roll out. Bpdy surfers have been struck by surf boards . Board surfers have been struck by body sur· Cers. Lifeguard s have been alternately heckled and ignored. Last Summer there was a partial thawing of relations at T Street. descr lbcd by some as one' of the best body surfing beaches along the California coast. Under the city's surfing or· dinance, board surfers were al· lowed to use T.Street until 11 a .m . on wcekdayti and 10 a .m. on weekends from June l to Sept. 30. Body surfers Could use the beach the rest of the day. Last month, however, Coun· cilman Thomas O 'Keere, a board surfer himself, gained support ~towed ' in the water on the hO\lh from two other councilmen fo~Oili--side or the.tine, boar-d-surlers on new yolicy to allow both body and the south. board JSUrlers to use T Street at ' Bo8rd surfers would be re· the same lime. quired to wear s_urf leashes ~ O'Keefe's plan. which was to six:lool elastic lines connecting be tried this summer, was to their surfboard to their ankle, divide the b1·eak by placing a thus reducing the chance that a buoy in the water and a marker board could s tray and strike a on s hore, thus creating an im· body surfer~ aginary line. The plan has been ripped in 14. Body surfers would be al · letters and petitions bearing 112 names that "'ill ~e presented to the eity eouncil , mectirig at 7:30 tonight at City Hall. One of those unhappy \\1ilh the new plan is Robert Gardner , pre· sidin g judge of the state Court of Appeals in San Bcrnurdino. Gardner is the author ·or the book, "Thl' Art or Body Surfing ... .. le has been body surfing at T Street ror 30 years. . (SeeSURf'ERS, PageA2) Grove Student· in Africa Slowdown Continues • County Doctors Cite 141 % Hike A. 141 p e r cent increase in malpract ice insurance has been slapped on Orange County doc· tors even as som e of them went into a work slowdown over s uch ·ins urance costs. The bad news came for Orange County doc·tors and physicians in Orange County Tuesday, the day after most of Orange County's 125 anesthesiologists deeided to s top partic ipating in n on· emergency s urgeries. The s urgery slowdown was beginning to take its toll today with most hospitals in the county discontinuing non-emergency o perations. Nearly all of the hospitals in the county are ex- pected lo be shut down for all sur- geries except obstetric, cancer, a nd eme.ri:ency operations by Friday. • Travele r s Ins urance Corn· panies, .~n a letter t9. custom~~ Tuesday, termed th_e mcreDe." a minimal one" needed to main· tain coverage while the stale legis l a ture holds a s pecial Laguna Civic Groups Meet A joint meeting or the Laguna Beach City Council. Planning Commission a nd the South Laguna Civic As sociation will be held a t 7:30 p.m . Thursday in the Laguna Moulton Playhouse to discuss th e c ity's proposed sphere of influence. A sphere of influence is a legal· 1Y recognized designation by cities over county territory cov· eririg areas found to have an im· pact on c ity planning and land use. A s phere of influence also is the first step toward annexation of county land by a city. The proposed Laguna Beach sphe re or influe nce includes South Laguna to Three A~ch Bay. Body Discovered REDLANDS (U PI) -The b od y Of a 54 -y ea r ·Old S U· permarkel checker was found Tuesday locked in the me n's room of the 24-hour m a rket. Police s8id Warren G . Roberts, Redlands, was shOt several times and that $82 had been t aken Crom the cash register. Cea•t Mostly s\Jn n y skies throu g h Thursday. Warmer with highs in the uppe1· 60s at the beaches to 70 inla nd areas . Lows toni ght near SO. INSIDE TODA V (..o.guna Beach 1rn't t~et.only plcu:e where beach goers int~ ,al.together .are catching city of/ieials·wtth their ordinance• dow n. ·It 's .a nationwide phrnomenon. Ste Rage AJ%. MY-W'lk• A) ~ ... IMU@lt aa e;;-.. L.M.liiW ': A11 •1•11 ~· .u .,, 'c;anwr ''I - -• flf'I C1•t ...... lie-:-;• 44,11 • ' I lt~,Att-11 It C1• " .,. ,.,,_ ,., ...... "1 • ell~ <1! allTc ... .. ::::::... A4,1t session on the malpractice cris is. By today, the· withholding of non ·emer g~n cy services by anesthesiologists was expected t o affect hospitals i n Los Ange les , Oran ge, San Be r · nardino, Santa Barbara and Ven· turacounties. Surgery at 41 hospitals was re· ported down 80 percent. The loss of revenues from would·be sur- gical patients was estimated at $400.000 a day, according to the Hos pital Council of Southern California. Milkman SaJJPs Man From Fire A milkman ma.king his morn· ing rounds at Laguna Hills Leisure World-Tuesday was credited with saving the life of an elderly cancer patient. Firemen said Adohr Farms driver Tom Obenshaw was de- livetirig miilk to the residence of .A. E. Carter, 317 A Via Buena Vista, when he saw smoke com· ing from the four-plex unit.· · Obenshaw. rushed inside the building, :piCked Carter off the noor and d ragged him outside to safety, firt:men said. Recentl,y operated on for can~er, Carter had been to the bathroom and was walking back to his bedroom when he was overcome by smoke ·and dropped to the floor, according to the firem e n on the scene. Fire Capt. Tim Sappok said the (See RESCUE, P .. eA2) Caltech Wins $10,000 From McDontdd's LOS ANGELES (UPI) - McDonald 's ;w-ill havetosell more than 12,000 extra Big Macs to pay for the' great Caltech computer caper that blitzed the hamburger chain's contest. Bec ky Hartsfield was the big· gest winner in the college prank, showing up Tuesday at the award ceremonies to collect a new l)atsun station, wagon and $3,000 worth of groceries. All told, Caltech students, us- ing a computer. won $10,000 worth of the $50,000 in prizes of· fered by the hamburger chain. McDonald's , caught by its own contest rules, announced earlier that for every prize won by a stu· ·dent, a matching prize would be offered to be won by other contes· tants, adding $10,000 to lhe ex· pense o( the contest. The students &bocked the chain two months ago ~Y programrnlng <See Ci\LTECll, Pa1e AZJ. Hypnosis Center Reports Burglary The ; theft ot S835 worth or furniture and sltreo equlpment from ttie San.Clemente Hypnos,is ·Center, 655 Camino d e Los Mares, 1was reported to San Clem en le .Police Tuesday. Intruders forced open·+1a win· dow to 11ln entry to the centerrs 111i1e la Ille 11U1J4ln1 and removed reclining chairs, a_n end table, ot· toman an~ al~reo, poUcesaid. • t . Dei(Y ...... "--.,. ~•llf'kll O'o.MelA FIRST LADY. BETTY FORD MET REFUGEE THRONGS :rODAY ·AT PENDLETON Mrs. Ford Chats With Camp Commander Gen. Paul Graham Prior to Her Tour Suspect Eyed In Second Death Charge The Rivers ide County District Attorney's office Tuesday issued a second murder complaint against Gregory Glen Co.ates, 18, \\'ho is awaiting trial on charges he burned his s(epmother to .de- ath May. '4 in he r San Juan Capistrano home·. Coates, held in Orange County Jail pending trial, was charged with the murde r of Mira Loma housewife J ean Stephens, 37 . at her home Jan. 22. Riv e r si d e Sheriff's in· vestigators a llege Coates shot the woman twice. in the head \\'hile smothering her with a pillow. Details on the Riverside Coun- ty case were not immediately available but a spokesman for the Sheriff 's ofrice a ll eged Coates also raped the woman. He was d escribed b y i n· vestigators as ··a friend of the family," having known one of Mrs. Stephens' children. Coates has. been in custody since May 6 when he was arrest· ed in connection with the burning death of his stepmother , Mrs. Belty Goates, 47, of 33911 Via Agua, San Juan Capistrano. Coate~. who lived at 6366 Stobbs St\.;-.Riversid; is the son of Mearl Goates, 42, who shared the San Juan home with the dead woman. Coates h ad legally changed hi s name-fram..the earlier Goates, in· · vestigatOrs said. lt is alleged that Coates had (See MURDER, PogeA2) THIRD CALLER BOUGHT YACHT "The ad produced many cal1s and I so1d the yacht .on the third call. I'm very pleased." That's the success story told by the ~untington Beach man who placed this ad in t~e Daily J>tlot : .. COL UM BIA 22, 3sails. .. knot meter, c ockpit cusbions. NewportSlip $2IOO. XXX~l:X ~ ' Jr ·you have rif.boat sell, call 842·54'tl to -~=k::~~ie~n \If# .i Along U>e e right place i.s tii • • First L<uly . Visits Perulleton Refugees By J 1\CK CJIAPPELL 011h1 o .. u, Pl101 s1 .. 11 First Lady Betty Ford toured a Camp P e ndleton refugee center of 5,400 Vietnam ese today in· specting living areas, schools, and ?T!ess halls. l'l-trs. Ford arrived from San Diego at about 9:30 and went fi rst to the refugee processing center A REPORTER VIEWS 'LITTLE SAIGON'-A7 where she was met by Pendleton commander Brig . Gen. Paul G. Graham and Nick Thorne, civil coordinator for the inter -ai;:ency task force. She was given a IO·minute briefing on the resettlement pro· gress being made at the sprawl· ing Marine base in the hills behind San Clemente where so far 26,000 Vietna mese have ar- rived. There are currently 18,000 refugees at Pendleton. . fl.frs . Ford went first to meet with repr esentatives of the r volunteer agencies who ar~ as· sisting in r esettle ment of the r e· fugces. ,.Sh e then \\'e nt to a dining area. a l\'l arine messh all and ten olive drab tents where s he talked ~'ith re fu gees. Leavin g th~ 1nessh all area J\lrs. Ford vi.si led a .. s urvival English" school wtiere 10 to 11 year olds Vi etnamese were being ·taught the rudim e nts of English la nguage. The class has been un· der way {or about three days. From there l\'lrs. Ford was lo \·isit a PX area \vhere refugees v.•cr e a ble to purchase clothing and t.oilet. a rticles needed ,for e \·er\'cla\' hre. i\l1:s. Ford \\'aiked along a line of rnore than 400 t ents in Ca mµ Eight a l the refugee center, one of several te nt a nd quonset \'ill ages no\Y known as Little Sn igon . In one of those tents former Vielnam vice president Nguyen Cao Kl' is a resident. !\ilr s . Ford a lso visit ed the recreation area before her de- parture from a· southland visit .extended cspcL•ially Cor the re· fu gee visit. Tax Rote ~same' Clemente Council To Eye Budget Bid San Clemente city councilmen t onig ht will r eceive a pre- liminary $6,047' 760 budget for ris - cal 1975 that would maintain the city tax rate at Its current $1.44 levy. ' -Earmark $450,000 for con- s truction of a two million gall on water r eservoir near Pres id en- tial Heights. -Set aside $108,110 for street construction and repair; $69,915 (or water line installation and replacement ; $68,489 for new city vehicles. and $14,000 ror re- c.on1tru.,cll~!l of tw..p·~s al the ·mu'nlclpal go!( co11ts"' Councilnlcn will receive the • proPosed spending" program dur· Ing ,a 7:3q p.m:. meeting.al ~Uy 3 Taken At Game , Reserve DAR ES SALAA~f. Tanzania (U PI ) -Three Ame rican stu- dents were kidna pcd from a wildlirc research station b y armed Africans in a remote area or northwestern Tanzania, U.S. embassy offici als said today. A Dutch s tudent a lso "'·as ab - ducted. The sources said the kidn apin g took place Monday night at a game research station run by J aue Goodall. a uthor or severa l boo~s onanimalbehavior . ,. (Stanford University said il h ad been informed by Stale Depa rtment ofricials in Tanzania that 40 armed m en fr..om Zair e seized the three students and a n administrative assistant. (Slanrord said t he students kid· naped were Ba rbara B. Smuts, 24 . Ann Arbor, Mich.; Kenneth S. Sm!~, 22, Garden Grove. and_ Carne Jane Hunter, 21, Atherton. Calif.> The research station, in the Gorn.be game r eserve, is located north of Ki.gom a on the s hore •of Lake·Tanganyika nearlhe Burun· di border. The embassy asked the Tanza· ni an governme nt to la unch an in- vestigation, the sources said. Th e Americans a nd th e Dutchman were among about 30 students working a t the statWn. !\lost of the s tudents are: from Stanford. !\liss Goodall and other me m• hers or the resear<'h station wit· nessed the kidna ping. They said the kidna-pe rs were armed with rifles. but their ide ntity was not known. <See TANZANIA, Page /\2) * * * U.S. Citizens Terrorized .Around World From Wire Services Ame ricans cam e under in- creasing attaek todaY Vlroughout the world. Two U.S. Air Force of- ficers "'ere murde red in Iran, an Am eri ca n civ ilian and two P..1ari nes were held hostage in Laos, and three Stanford stu· d e nt s wer e kidnaped i n , Tanzani a. Terrorists stopped a car carry- ing l"'O unarmed U.S. Air Force officers lo work thi~ morning. or· 1 FORD SAYS BOMBING NOT PUNITIVE. A4 . dered their Iranian driver to the fl oor of the car , then shol and 1 killed the Ame ricans . The U.S. E mbassy identified the dead a s Col. Paul R. Shaffer J r., 45, a native of Bryan, Ohio. and Lt. Col. Jack J . Turner , 45, from Carbondale, Ill. The Iran ian government said the assassins , who escaped, were Marxist guerrillas, and "no ac· lion will be spared lo find thl" murderers and bring them to justice ... A wom a n who said she spoke for the "Iranian People's War-1 riors Association" called The As· sociated Press and said "the ex- ecution of Am erican officers was a reply to the execution of nine Iranian revolutionaries in prison lastmonlh." She also said that as Shall Mohammed Reza Pahlevi is "a stooge or the 1\.mericans, we tlierefore murder Americans." Meanwhile, a mob of about 200 Laotian leftists demanding the ouster or aJJ Americans wtth the U.S. Agency lor lntemttional Deve!opmeol adzed l~e Al» ISeeTERROll, hgeAJ) ( 41 DAILYPILOT L/SC U.S , Oil Review ' ' Sought _;SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. .t'Almund Brown Jr. wants the federal government to lake another look at energy and the economy before leasing new sites for oil drilling off the Southern California coast. The Democrat governor said Tuesctar tie has written actiflg In - terior Secretary Stanley }lalhaway asking for an "ap- propliale period'' of delay. California has no control over drilling in federal waters more than three miles off the coast. But a bill Is pending in the Legislature that Beeks to give the state veto power over pipelines · between those wells and the shoreline. Brown's lette r said the federal government has not given the state t he information it requested about proposed new offshore leases. ·• ... immediate offshore de· velopment ... has not been justified in t erms of a C'lear na- tional energy policy," the gov- ernor said. He said proposed leasing pro· vi sion s seem ''excessively favorable to the major oil com- panies and prejudicial to the long.term economic interests of the nation's citizens.'' . Bro\\.'n also said new leasing should not be allowed until Congress decides how to com- pensate states for adverse effects of drilling in federal waters. A well blowout on a federal Jease outside the three-mile limit touched off the massive 1969 spill in the Santa Barbara Chaonel. It led to a moratorium on new drill· In g on state supervised leases. E'ro• Page Al TERROR .•. of Cambodia and South Vietnam. Twelve Americans were still under house arrest by leftist stu- .dents in Savann akhet, the former right-wi ng stronghold in central Laos which was t aken over by the Communist Pathet Lao Tuesday. -U.S. embassy officials said they lost radio telephone contact with 1the six U.S. AID officials and their wives, although th ey ·believed they were safe. In Vientiane U.S. Charge D'Af- 1f aires Christian Chapman met . with Prime Minister Souvanna Phouma and Foreign ~1inister . Phoumi Von gvichit, the ranking Communist official in the coali- tion government, to protest the s"eizure of the U.S. compound. In the third incident, three American stUde nts have been kidnaped from a · re mote animaJ research station in Tanzania by armed Afri cans. The report s said a Dutch stu- dent was also abducted. About 30 students work al the r station, most of them from Stan- : ford University. Coast Future , Talk Thursday "The Future of our· Coast and :he CoastaJ Commissions" will be the topic for the Orange Coun- ty Coast Association (OCCA> at a poon luncheon Thursday. The session will be held al the Bahia Co rinthian Yacht Club in .Corona del Mar. The speaker will be Gilbert W. Fergusol}, director of the Counci l on Environment, Employment, Econom y a nd pevelopment (CEEED). The luncheon is open to the public. Reservations can be !'made by phoning 962-6ii61. The ~pri ce or the lunch is $5 per person. ,. ' ,. " ORANGE COAST LISC DAILY PILOT fr.°'-CM" o.11r Pllol, ~Ill"""'" llCorn• -.. '"' .._,...,.,..,,, , p.,11111.,... w ,,.OrM191 C.0.\1 Put1ll"'•nt Comc>•n,. Sot-•!~ Nol-.; .tr• PV~lli.fWCI MO""•' '"'°"'" F1l<MJ 10< CM~ "°""'• ...... _, a.ac11. H11n1!"91on 1111 .. 11,,..,.,... l••n Y•lltf, lr•lllt. ~•ddltbac~ Ytli.y •nd u ...... 8t•<llf1.o .. lll eo.11. "' ti~ •tel-• td•loon It puDI+-S.hlfdtr• -SI.May\. l~ ptlllt~ p..Dll\lllnt pltnl ' •t D) ....,.,, l..ly ~trfft. C0\11 ......... C•U!ornl• n..it. Robert N. Wff!d ,.,.,,l.,.nl •nd .... bll""'r Jack R. Curlev YKt Prnl.,.nt •"Ill 0.,,.. .. w ... .., Thomas Keevll £011 .. Thomas A. Murphlne M.o ... ,1~, £.itor I Charlt!!!s H. Loos Richard P. Nall Altl"tnl ............. Edll.,.t Tei.pr.one 1714) '42-4:121 Clo1sslll.ct Adv•rtl1lng '42·5671 Laguna Beo1ch All OePolrtments: T•ttohont 4'4·9466 '0"' "°" t•tmrni. 495·0630 COtfrl1lll, 1•11 0•.f"lt (Otl1 PuOlltlll~t C-IM>y, No ...... •1 .. -, oll.,.l••I•.,,.\, 9d1ler••1 m•llOI Ir l<IWlrl•\*nltM\ "f•t!" ffl•t a~ t••••dw(tll .. 1111ow~ IPt,••I "'""lt•Oft 01 <01rr19J1t1w"'' k c_,,d t l•I• 10.119' ,.10 01 Cot l• M•tt, ~llOfllll. SubM.lf .. lon !Ir ,.,,.., U 00""""' nty, .,_ltM.•-1Nr1 m1111.-,9"11~111-u.oo _ ... ,. Wednesd9, May it, 1975 Dlllf Pilot SIMI Pllott Beached Sea Lion , . ' 12%C'U_,, Cost of Living • Sp111·ts < By Tbe Auodaled p.,,.. Consumer prices in the Los Ans:ele1 m ;t r9politan area continued splr.lll.nl upward", cltmbint almo1t 1 percent 'n Aprtl, Department of Labor ot- !lclals said today. Depart.ment statl1tic1 indicat· ed. an increa~e of ~2 ~~nt In the -c06t-of living as compared· to April 1974, for Los Angeles and Orange Counties. Suzanne Sadowsky, head of the department 's southern California Bureau, said the con· sumer price index in the Los Angeles area to April was 155.6, meaning that it, cost $15.56 to buy 10·15% PETROLEUM HIKES SEEN. A4. • m April the country. Retail prices the past three months have risen at a seasonal- ly adjusted pnnual rate of 5.81>er· cent-c n the-U .s .. DuriPA: the :tame three-month period tn,\974, retail prices rose at an adj~ted annuul rate of 11 .8 percent. The Labor Department said Jest month's increase naliQllilll)' reflected an u pturn in food prices. followin-g two months or decline, and a large increase in nonfood commodities. , Prices were reported up in th e U.S. for many items, including used cars, furniture, houses, gasQJine, m agazines, auto in· surance, natural gas and foods sul'h as fresh rruils, eggs and beef. E'ro• Page A -l A sea lion that lifeguards theorize died from a lung infection washed up on San Clemente's North Beach Tuesday night. Th e large sea lion was r emoved from the beach today by Orange County Animal the same goods and services which colt $10 tn the bpe year 1~e pufchaaini power or the 1967 dollar dropped to 64 .3 cents last month, s he added. . SURFERS , Control officers. ' E'ro• Page Al BUDGET ••• than the $5,048,559 budgeted for the current fiscal year. In a letter to councilmen ouUin- ing provisions of the budget, Carr cited two factors that helped mold the fin a l spending recom- mendation : the poor state of the American economy and los!\of a federal police grant that helped the city provide protection dt.ar- ing S an Cle m ente visits by former President RichaJ;:d Nixon. As an illustration of economic pressures, Carr said that cost or electricity for waler and sewer operations is expected to go up 65· percent next year , from $187,303 lo sa10:1s6. Carr proposed that the in- creases be offset by a 50 percent increase 'iri sewer rates, meaning an average homeowner would ·be paying $4.13 a month for sewer service instead of the $2.75 now charged. The proposed 10 percent water rate increase would raise the bimonthly minimum billing from $5.50 for7 ,500 gallons to$6.05. Police department positions that would be deleted include one lieutenant, one detective, one desk off icer, one policewoman and ,a clerk typist. The positions represent personnel who have either r e- tired or resigned this year. There wi ll be no lay-offs in the de.part· ment. The addition of one person on the fire force would be made by eliminating one fireman's posi- tion a nd creating two new fire engi neer positions. Carr noted that the budget car- ries no provision for salary 'in- creases or fringe benefit im- provements that the city may a wa rd its various employe groups. Policemen arc seeking in- creases between six and 13 per· cent. depending on rank : firemen want pay parity wi th police, and miscellaneous city employes have s ubmitted pay de· mands which they have refused to reveal publicly. Any inc reases awarded the employes, Carr said, would re- quire "a·commensurate increase in the property tax rate or other revenue source ... '' The Bonito Canyon park de· velopment project would include refurbis hin g of the existing baseball diamond, landscaping,. picnic areas, walkways and re- lated improvements. Warning Issued WASHI NGTON (UP I) -The Senate Armed Services Commit- tee has warned against any ma- ,jor shifts in military forces over- seas or any manpower cuts in the Pacific until a post-Vietnam era foreign policy is formulated . Supervisor Seeks Ban On Nudity Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley said Tuesday he will propose that the board of Supervisors adopt an urgency ordinance that would prohibit public ·nudity in unincorporated areas of the county. According to Riley, the pro- posed ordinance authored by couiity counsel Adrian Kuyper is both copstitutional and effective. If enacted, Riley's ordinance would make it a misdemeanor for any person over 10 years old to appear in a public place, in- cludin¥ beaches, without opaque covering over at least some por- tions of their body. In announcing that he will ask for adoption or the ordinance next week, Riley said public nudity is offensive to large num· be rs or people. If adopted next week the supervisor's ordinance will be~f fective immedi3tely . Laguna Beach hasjuitadopted an emergency ordin,11nce , whi ch made the law immediately effective -outlawing nudity for persons over 10. E'ro• Page Al RESCUE ••. blaze, started in the bedroom. by a smoldering cigarette, caused Sl,500 damage to the building and its contents. "ti-1r . Obenshaw's heroiC ac· lion definitely saved the li!e of the Leisure World r esident," Sappok said. E'ro•P~Al TANZANIA The e mbassy sources said ther e was no a pparent motive for the kidnaping and relations between the .studen~ at the re- search sta tion and toc·al villagers were good. However. the border area of Burundi near the area of the kid- naping was the scene of military operations against disside nt tribesmen this m onth. The U.S. embassy in the Burundi capital of Bujumbura also was working on the kidnap case, the -sources said. Tanzanian police were flown to the scene in a helicopter and Derek Brysoon, director of the Tanzani a national parks, also new there to help with the in- vesti'°ation. 3 GM Recalls 50,00I) Autos Involved DETROIT (UPI > -General Motors Corp. said lo· day it is recallin g about 50,000 current model Ch evrolets, Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles and Buicks because some models may contain steering, ac- celerator and air conditioning defects. (Related story, Al4 ) GM said three separate recall actions are In· volved. About 3,100 Chevrolet Camaros and Novas, Pon· tiac Firebirds and Buick Apollos and Skylarks, ttte company s aid, may contain defects that could caus\ drivers to lose steering control. Another defect, which might make it impossible for cars to idle properly, may involve about 16,000 Pontiac Venturas, Oldsmobile Omegas and Buick Apollos and Skylarks, the company said. In addition. GM said, about 31,000 Camaros may contai n faulty fa n blades in the air conditioning unit. These cou ld break under engi ne vibn,1tlon. No injuries have been reported as a result of the delects, GM said . E'ro• Page Al CALTECH a computer to churn out 1.2 million entries. A band of stu- dents drove carloads of the forms to McDonald's stands throughout Southern California and wound up submitting a third or the total entries. • The top prize was a new sports car and a year's supply of groceries but the students did not collect that. It went to Lillian Rob·inson, 28, an office manager. Steve Klein, one of the brains behind the p lan, sa id h e regretted using the computer. "We should have used offset. printing ..-it's cheaper," he said. ''It cost us about $500 for the com· puter. '' McDonald 's has a lready thought of that. "In any future contests, each entry w ill have to bear an original, handwritten, signature," a spokesman said. Building Backed SACRAMENTO (UPI) Legislation providing $42 milll.on for restoring the century-old capitol starting next fall has ad- vanced. to the AaHmbly fl0or . Heavy increases in transporta- tion a nd hou sin g costs were largely to blame for the rise in April's cost of living, Miss Sadowsky said. Nationally, the rate o( inflation quickened a bit in April as grocery prices reversed a two- month decline and helped push over-all consumer prices up six· tenths of a percent, the govern- ment reported today. _ The April increase, though double that of March, was in line with th~ Administration forecast . of an annual inflation rate of about 6 or 7 percent this year for the U.S. The White •louse had said it did not expect the lower rate of in- crease in March lo continue. -The highest prevjous monthly increase this year occurred in January, when prices also rose by six -te.nlhs of a percent across E'ro• Page Al MURDER • • bound his" stepmother h.and and foot and then set the mattress on fire. The remains of a towel were discovered over the Vic tim's moUth b y homicide in · vesijg~tors. _ " Gardner r ecommends in his letter that the council reinstate the ·•mornings only" policy for board surfers. Essentially the same message is carried in letters from a Corona de! Mar youth, an Arcadia dentist, a San Gabriel banker and numerous San Clemente residents. City Clerk At ax Berg said no letters have been received favor- ing the new policy. Power Bill ASlwcker RENO , Nev. (UP I) Mrs. J osie Elliott knows utility bills have been gel· ting bigger lately, but the one s he received in the mail thi s we ek is ridiculous. Usually, her monthly bill for gas and e lectricity is around $50. This time it was $12, 729.97. A Sierra Pacific Po"·er Co. spokesman explained the meter reader someho\v got his figures crossed and the mistak e s lipped through the billing com- puter. I ' -Cla:vi.s :• b ·r()wo Model FP1·170T FRIGIDAIRE Family Size REFRIGERATOR y ONL s3"ts • FRIGIDAIRE HE.+. VY DUTY WASHER s2599s DRYER s1799s This Frigidaire Heavy Duty Wa she r can deliver dependable . tr oub l e-free performance with its heavy duly motor and othe r qompenents used in Frigidai re Commercial Washers. You can wash permanent press. Collons. and heavy work clothes efficiently, or reduce wear on delicates with Normal and Gentle Wash cycles. The matching Frigidai re Dryer lets you dry up to 18 pounds of laundry all at once. With the turn of a dial. match the drying time lo the type of load, includ ing permanent. press and knits. s399•s FRIGIDAIRE LAUNDRY CENTER This ,s pice -s aving Frigidaire laundry Center combines a farpily-size washer and dryer into a single slim cabiner. Plugs into any separate 15 amp conventional household circuit. - ' . .. ' . 11TtllS 1 DECR£AsE," SAYS a recent ieport b}' a special ~el"!a tc Finance Co.mmittee panel , "undoubtedly rerlects increased attention lo fnmil>: planning, moee and better birth control methods, and major Chanees 1n life styles of s ome segments of bur society." · Should this trend persist. the popuJatien 20 to 64 years of age would \sta bilize early in lhe nt!xt (entury, but the number of elderly would continue tp cxpa¥ lor &ome time. Jt then would t ake a higher proportion of goOds and services produced by acti ve workers to support the over·65 in the 2L5t century than:tt has in the 20th. ' And "this is true," emphasizes the ''white paper" pre- pared by five fo rmer Health, Education a nd Welfare Secretaries 1a nd three former Social S'ecurity com• missioners, "quite aside from Social Security" -meaning tl includes private pensions, pubhc assistance, 'etc. · BVTTHERE WJU. BE offsetting factors . (1) f( the ~u rden of supporting the over-65 IS increased . the burden of supporting and educating children w1U be r e- duced -a nd with smaller ramihes, more wom en will be able to earn paychecks. But we also should not accept so bli ndlf estima tes stretching so far 1nlo the future and s ub - Ject to so m any unpredictables. As the Sen a te Finance Com mittee's panel report notes, "With the humJI1ty learned from m any past ex periences. aemographers J:4gree that tl is hazardous indeed to forecast '. 1uture rerttlily rates." And sure enough: the steeply declin· i ng birth rate seems to be slowing, reports of the National 1 Center for Health Statistics suggest. Jn 1974, (or the r1rst time since 1970, the number or births rose -ev~n though by only 1 percent. And r ecent sur· veys show that yq ung married couples are planning to have enough children to produce a n a tional rerl1hty rate somewh at above today's. -' '~ . . . . (2) ANOTHER UNFORESEEABLE ts wh.al actually wi ll happen to wages and pnces during the next 75 yeais. If, for insta nce, prices were to rise al an average annual r ate of 2 per cent and wages at a rate of 5 percent (unlikely but not 1mpossi}>le ; jl bas happened before), the pr esent f1 nanc- 1ng of Social SecUrity would be eti.tirely adequal'e . This wo uld hold true even with the changed rati o of r~l1rees to wo rking peopl e. But under qt her assumptions, ther e will be a need for some addili()n al income to the system in the long r un. ·And 1C tha t turns out to be thl! case, almost certainly there will be a gradual 1ntroduct1on of fu nds from general revenues, bCginntng around 1990'-Both former Socia l Secur ity commissioner Robert 1\.1. u all and former HEW Secretary Wilbur J , Cohen point out·lhal 1l is usual in most other countries for Soci al Secunty to be £1nan ced Via various sources. The usual ur\d Well-tested comblnation o{ fin ancing 1n other lands: +a rt by direct contMbut1ons 6f workers. part by contribut1ons4of em ployers, part by conlt"ibutions from the federal government's general revenues THE LONG-RANGE COSTS or the progr am also wo uld be substantially less than now estima ted if Congress were to change the beiiefil increase formi.tl a to ausure that benefits would be lied .more closely to increases ih wages and not so closely to price increases The "white paper'1 signers propose that Congress con- sider substituting a rormula wh ich assures that protec(1on wi ll automaticPlly keep pace with wages, but hot exceed in· c:reases in wages. · This change a lso would p'rovide you, as a wor'ker , with a greater certa inty that your benefits would refl~ct your level of living at the tim e of your retirement. When ob3ect ively examined, neither the short.term nor the long·lerm financing problems seem a cause for panic, do they? • Gulf Chief Def enth ·Payoffs to Nations , ' .... WASHINGTON CUP!) - Mul~in alion a l corporations have been forced to m ake secr~t payme_nts to foreign government orfi cials because of a vacuum in U S. policy. accordin g t o Gulr 011 ch a1 rrri an Bob R. Dorsey. "Jt ~oes ba~k lo m y lifetime experience~orr getting very lit· tie aid from the gov'ern· ment," s aid Dorsey. behind such corporate pay. ments. Later hearings will delve into the internal affairs of the Northrop Aerospace Company, the United Brands fruit compa ny and possibly Ash la nd Oil a nd Phillips Pe t role um , w h ic h h ave ::icknowledged"mak1ng nearly $4Q million in secret pay. ments to foreign officials. . ' . . . . ' • . ··········~ ... ~ .......... . Profits CoUa p ... WASHI NGTON CUP!) -Business ,profit&, which soared out of sight in the pu t two years, are now under10· 1q.g a st arUln1 collapse. ·The Commerce Department report- ed Tuesday that profits alter t.Ues or U.S. corporallonJ In, tho fl[al three lllOllths o( lt7S declined $17,7 bllll"" to I · .-i.a•llllllon, ot 22 peccenl at aa an··. nUai tam. · I . ( ' ' ' . ' " .... o..ILVPtLOT . W-oy,M1X21,1t7S fr ir~ond ,°.f PORC .. ~.;.: Race Set JTriday. ·!'. • . ·1 ·., The second race of the Pacific ! Ocean R•clng Conleren<'e CPORC) : will get under way from Los Angeles :. Harbor Friday over a 198·mile course :; around the Channel Islands. 1 !! The 45·boal fleet will le"\Ve Santa ' Cruz and San Nicolas islands to port I fl;nd finish off Parsons L"'nding, :! ... 'Catalina Island. Many of the yachfs1 :1 are expected to spend lhe ~mainder '.: of the Memorial Day week.end , at the1 ~".Jsland before heading hick tcr the mainland at P.1 arina del Rey lo be on •lland for the third race. a triangular .i!-day-race on Santa Monica Bay start· ·: iniJune7. ., !• ' . -~ · THE CHANNEL Islands race 1s ex· :: i>ected to prove a real test for men and : .. boats as the area around San Nicolas :; lfl&nd is noted for strong winds this !·Gmeofyear. ; ; -: The first race from San Diego lo 'f;g Beach last we ekend was sailed r extremely light airs. ' • Fourteen of the 44 yachts entered ~n ~e series arc flying the colors of ·~ewport Beach based yacht clubs. ~LocaJ entries are: NewsBoy (12·meter) Jack BalUie, BalboaYC. 1 Hawkeye (48 toOt sloop) David Cu ckler, Newport Harbor YC . •,i:VCKY PVFF (Morgan·42) R18ha,rd foxx, Balboa YC. '}\egulus II (48 loot sloop) Robert Garrt.aon, NewPort Harbor YC. VHU.rrlcane Deck (40 foot sloop) Mor· rieKl<k, Balboa YC. . Flrebird (43 loot sloop) Bob Longpre, South Shore Sailing Club. Questar (44 foot sloop) William Power. Newport HarborYC . SAVDADE (47 loot sloop) William Pascoe, NewPorl Harbor YC. Loco Viente III (40 foot sloop) Jim Seals, Balboa YC . America Jabe 11 (35 foot sloop) George Tooby. Newport Harbor YC. Aorangi (5~ foot ~lqop) Richard Wheeler, Newport Harbor YC. ~ Robur (43 foot sloop) Burton Yale, Bahia Corinthian YC. · Drum Beat ( Erlcson-46) Don Ayres, Newport Harbor YC. ' Raider (~ricsoq-46) Jim Lin- derman, Balboa YC. Nordic .Now Japanese Man Sloop A 39-fool sloop built in Santa Ana and shipped to 'Japan is back on these shores with a Norwegian name. Vind Fe mpe-Del. a Nor\l.·e~ian nam e, means "wind force five··· in English. Its 21 . year old: Japanese skipPer, Toru ChaYa. with a crew of rive arrived in Los Angeles Harbor last week after a 38·day crossing from Japan. '- In a few weeks they will leave Los Angeles •:again on the 2,225-mile Transpacific race to ;-·Honolulu. '' . CHAYA'S CREW ALL have Japanese names . and non e of the six Japanese sailors have yet ex· :_ plained how or shy the yacht got a Nordic name. :-Santa Ana is a long way rroin the fjords or the : Norwegian sea. · Cha ya and hi s ere"' departed Handa Harbor in . Japan April 6 and traveled 6.200 miles over the :(""great circle route north or Hawaii. The 38-day trip is ~,.believed to"be something of a record. "And "'e "'ere held up two days by fog off the California coast,·· said Chaya. BOATING New series Slated Off '" . Hu,n!tiitgion ' '2 11.irliiies Ge.tPl)C OK SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The temporary aulhori· ty of Air Caliloroia and Pacific Southwest iAlrUnes to Serve the Tahoe Valley airport at South Lake Tahoe.was extended for another 90 days by the stale Public Utilities Com - mi11ion. The original 90 -day authority was grahted Fob. 19 lo fill the· void Created Feb. 5 when Holl· day -Air1lh-es ~ftased its servlcetoTahoe. Mideast Cash For Coastal Park Siudied ' .. ' ., LEUCAI?J~· (~i» -Middle. Eaat~rn monly ~.ready lo invest in a $13fmilliqq Dlsneyland·like amuseme:n~ park. •long the no~ shore of Batiquit.os~Lagoon, a de-veloper s'aYs ..... ,, , · "'l'he Mlddl~ East Isn't the only investor," Romip Doulton of Loa Angeles told the Leicadia Town Council, but he said it would be financed completely with foreign funds. -· -Doulton said tbe'Nemo's Secret Harbor Development Co. has worked for siX years on plans for a park dealing with underwater science liction .. If government agencies give the ·go-ahe;ad, he said Monday night that his park could open ln 30months. There-would be ~.ooo empJoyes and housing for 1;500 families when the development is com- plete, he said. Egyptian officials have discussed construction of a 37·1lory pyramid park, said Doulton. "'Among the first fe'atures would be make believe rides on a glacier, submarine trips lo the depths of the ocean and other ex- cursions to the "center of the .,. fiif:ltlaerJ S!JJPort This · Stockholder ' ' '' I I firm's Cons~ience · ':t By MIL'ft!N~OSKOWl.;.;i'i . , • 1 A biologist who became concerned abob\l,lllrda caqhl In oil spUI' hH formed an m:1aniutlo0 )llat i1 bell .i to be unique in theaual1ofU.S. buslneelhij\bry,.' ·1 Tho blolo1i1t Is Dr. James' Hoy •nd'hl~ ganlzaUon 11 Pro- ject Standard Oil CPSO), a nnnprolll 1roup of diHldent • sharek9ldera of Standard Oil Co. of ·catifornla. Th~se alockholdera are each 'paying ' -· 1 S3 duea a year to support PSO ~----...._ in Ill rOle as~the social cons- .cience of Standard Oil~ Money Tree The California petroleum giant rartks . as one '!.f the largest corporations 1.n the world., with sales in 1974 re· aching nearly $19 billion. Its gasoline is marketed principally under the Chevron label. NO OTHER COMPANY has spawned an organization quite like PSO. ., Dis~ident shareholder groups are, of course, nol new in A!Pfrican business. However, they ·are ·usually formed by shareholders who want to replace the current management. That's not PSO's·aim. · Groups which attack corporations for social reasons are not new, either. In fact, they have been fairly commori in recent years. But they have been normally'organlzed under the auspi~es of church orl:anlzations or social activists such as ~alph Nader. PSO did not evolve from either of these sources. HOy slatted PSO because he was bothered by some Standard Oil practices -artd he happ·ened to be a Standard Oil stockholder .1He owns 134 shares, now worth about $3,300. His original concern was with the birds killed or maimed by oil spills frdm Sta-itdard Oil tankers. It later branched out to in· elude politiCal contributions made by the company and inade- quate disclcisµre of information to shareholders. Hoy expressed these conce~hs by Pxercising his right as a sharll!!holder to subinlt proxy resoluti~ns that were considered at the annual meetines of staadard Oil or California. HOY'S NEXT MOVE was to organize ..other concerned stockholderj into an ongoing group -and that's itot as easy as it might appear, the problem being: How do you ~ach Standard Oil stockholderf? _ A maiti•g to the 280,000 stockholder lisl would 'have been-very cOstly. And Standard Oil wasn't about to alert its stockholders lo the activities of Jim Hoy. What the company did allow Hoy lo do after the 1973 annual meeting was to inspect the proxy cards re· turned by shitreholders. What they never-expected him to do was to hire a microfilm outfit lo photograph the 14,000 proxy cards which had been returned that year with antimanagcim~t voles. It took two and one·half days and the help of a high-school . volunteer group to separate the cards and photograph the m. At the end, though, Hoy had a list he could,maij to, inviting mem-r berships in Project Slandai"d Oil. PSO JS NOW FUNCTIONING with a membership of 390. Hoy runs it out of his house in Hamden, Conn. (88 Woodlawn St.), At the most recent Standard Oil annual meetiqg, held last month in San Fra11cisco, a PSO·submitted resolutio n mandating non-· partisanship in political camapigns garnered 8 million shareholder votes or more than 6percentof all the votes cast. .. ' FINANCE SBA_'llaps Wilek To.Panel Thomas S. Kleppe, ad· · ministrator of the Small Business Administration (SBA> has announced in W.ashington the appoint· debt or c . T.homas Wilek, vice president or Pµblic Affairs for the Irvine Company, as a member or the national advisory council of the SBA. 1 Kleppe said that Wilek bas been Se lected for 'council membership in recognil,ion of his knowledge of a nd in- terest in •problems or small business. As a member of the national council Wilek will take part in the semi·annual meetings where the needs of the local small bUliness community are discussed a.nd the means by . whlci. SBA can most t!ffectivtlly meet tti.ese needs are considered. I Newport Finn ~ow Drilling Oxoco· l nler national, Inc., a Newport Beach independent oil com- pany, announced com- mencement or drilling operations near Manavgat, Turkey. TllE SKIPPER'S NEXT voyage will be fi'om '! Los Angeles lo Marina 'del Rey where he and the .-<>rew "'ill start tuning the yac ht for the Transpac It ~ js one of lh.ree Japanese yachts entered in the race. Capistrano Bay Yacht earth," patterned after the Jules Club, newest member or Verne novel, "20,000 Leagues the Southern California Under the Sea." Yachting Association ,;:::==::=::=:::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::::=:=:;::=:=:=:=:=:=::::; will sponsor a new of. fs hore racing series .,,. Other crewmen are Yoshiaki Kubo, 23, starting June 7 with a race around the Hunt- ington 20 -fathom buoy off Huntington Beach. -navigator; Ki yotaka Mori. 22 , purser, Yochiyuki Ogasawara, 26 . engineer ; and t'A'O seamen The new series will be known as the Ocean Rae· ing Series <ORS> and will consist or six races ending Nov 15 with a race from Sa n Onofre to Newport Beach The series is open to yachts rated under the Interna- tional Offshore Rule (IOR), Performance Handicap Ra"cing Fleet (PHRF> and Midget Ocean Racing Fleet CMORF) · r.1.asayuki Akatsuka, 23. and Toru Sakurami. 21 ... Coast Guard Sets !~New Radio Codes ,_, . if Yachtsmen planning I' fo cruise a long the coast : of Southern California (this se:rson will be in· ter ested in recent changes in aids to navigation announced by the Coast Guard. The most signilicanl ch,anges have been in the radio beacon charac reristics from San Diego to Santa Barbara The ne~ codes are as follows : Point Loma Light CLL·l ), L ( .•. ) Los Ang,eles Li ght (LL 201424 l A·c.. l Poinl A:fguello Light CLL25)0-(•··) Ocean.side Light CLL335), 0C (-·-·.-. l Mission Bay North Jet· ty CLLS/320) MB (---... I NewpOrt Bay West Jet· ty <LL 131:J:4J,) NE<· .. ) Long J:iach Light (LL18/410)':LB (. ... • ... ) Offioers of Capo Bay Yacht Club said the new series was established to fill a need for offshore racing not now filled by clubs in the Dana Point, and Capistrano 8ay areas. Only other series in the area is Dana Point Yacht Club's season long series limited only to yachts rated PHRF. Avalon (LL 371) AV <-· ~ ... ·) Esquivel Gets Post. rr.-.ied " John G . Barry has ,been promoted to : .. general manager of the Passagemaker Trawler division of Jensen Marine, ac- ~..cordin g to Ch'a rles :: Thomas, president. : Barry has been with :• Passagemaker for a ::year as national :•sales and marketing ' :•manager. Marina 'del Rey Light CLL466l 11\R (--.-. ) Anacapa Is land (1126) AN (.··.) ';o1 ' ' Santa B';libara (LL 516 )58 (. .. -... ) Snow Tires Gene Esquiv-e l, former ly m anaging editor of Sea Magazine, has been appointed wice PfeSi~ent arid ge~eral mariager of Pennant Publi.sbing Comp<Jorly.; publiiher of'P'acinc SkJp- per, a West Coast !»at· ing magazine, and sever al other specia~1 in SACRAMENTO (AP) terest Magazines. · -Gov. Edmund Brown Pacific Skipper, Jr. has signed legislation fOrmerly Pennant, is eitending the period ror published in Newport use of studded snow tires Beach. on public roads. The bill In addition to hi s by Assemblywoman former association with Pauline 'Davis, <D-Sea, Esquivel was also Portola), authorizes the formerly on the starr of use or studded snow Ur~ the Los Angeles Times between Dec. 1 and and later conducted 'his Marc.h 1 each year own public r elations ' 1?1\LM SPRINGS' BIGGEST VALUE •.• 8¥ F'AR! '' " /··t ' I . ..... ' ';:,;, Dennis Ralston-1<11N) Resident Director of Tennis throuJth.1978. firms in Laguna Beach. •: GRAND " ;(:atamarans Star 0J?ENING 1 ~: Silver L~kes Race Set i~~.~:.~ :, .r1-.... fairway Locations .. :.. inaugural regatta •• r,n' . jl r the north lake o( ,~ilver Lakes Resort, !;r:torth of Victorville will 'lbe held over \he. .f~ emo(t.al Day weekend ·with Prlndle ·l6 ; : atamara,ns being the • tar ~rformers. ' ' ' The event is expected ~, attract about 30 en· '1trJe1. including Geoff ~Prindle. designer or the C.ataimaran ·hull and win· ner of last month's first ·hall of the 'L~ndon 1 Bridge Regatta on Lake Havasu. ' Another hot i>;erformer entered in the , event is llarry Pat t•i,sctn of Newport Beath , who won the national cham- plo'hship in Prlndle-16s at Corpus Christi, Tex. Pat- ti son's wife, Sue, who crewed tor him in the champions hip regatta, will ~a:ain be on the trapeze. feature trophy ent.. with fivo'heall_.••b on a different rour1e ae't on the. 185-acre m a"'1'ftacle lake -<1.<rterinlnlng' Ille Polnt ~era of more than l200 In trOphl ... . su¥.i.< ~;., R .. ort 1a owned by McCulloch ProperU ... Inc., the firm that d•oeloped Lake Havasu City on t .. e Colorado Rlve'r. Ii .ls located 118 miles All eptrl•• will race as DOrtheHt of Lo1 Aogelesr-----.:~:---:--------:----..---------------"'""'-------~-----1 a fleet in Sunday's. ofloldW11>w111N< ' I " l I , ' ' l \ j ' I I l • Saddle)laek • EDITI N VOL. 68, NO. 141, 7 SECTIONS, 86 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T oday's Closing N.Y.Stoeks WEDNESDAY, MAY 21 , 1975 TEN CENTS School Paddle Goes Way of 'Rack?' By JAN WORTH 01 tlle D•ll• flllet Stall The paddle may be lil thing of the past in Saddtebal'k ValJey 1tchools if district 'trustees take the recommendation or Mission Viejo High School student representative Eric Van Horne. Van Horne told trusteeS in a r speech at a board meeting this' week that in his opinion "cor· poral punishment is no longer a viable aspec't or the educational p_roc_e_ss." He· asked tr..ustecs to abolish their present policy, which al· lows the school prioripal or his designee to punis'h a student ir a witnes5 is present. It also re- quires a written.report of the in- cident to the superintendent. · Trustees ·had mixed reactions to Van Horne's proposal but de- ferred actlon. "Maybe I'm old-fashioned, but It seems to me that sometimes a warm bottom belps....thi! top .'' said Board Preside nt George Henry, an ele mentary school Principal. Trustee Dennis Smith said he · h1 not .satisfied with the present. policy and would like to see a pro- posal for possible changes -in· i:luding abolishing corporal (bodily) punishment. Asked what he believes about corpora l punis hment, Supelin· tendent Willi am Zogg said, "I .don't like it, Blldl don't believe in it in the school.s. We have found that the control factor is virtually nil." Dr. Ri chard Welte. deputy superintendent , favored retain· ing some form of corporal punishment. "'I don't believe any educator believes In violence," Welte said. "But from time to time a pat on the back -low enough -might dOsom e good. - "Compare it to capital punis h· menl. The threat is often deter· rent enough." . , Va n Horne C"laimed the exist· ing policy is abused -by teachers not reporting the inci· dents or not having witnesses present. Though only several dozen in· cidents have been reported in the last two school yeal"s. Van Horne <.·laimcd there have been "hun- dreds'' of unreported incidents. Asked lo be more specifiC', Yun J-lorne said most or the abuses oc· C'Urred in the athletir department of Mission Vi ejo High School. "But it's not m y place to point the finge r ," Van Horne said later. ·<See PADDLE, PageA2l r Grove Student in·Africa Milk1nan Bero Pulls MQn From Home Fire A milkman inaking his morn- i ng rounds at Laguna Hill s !~eisure World Tuesday was credited with saving the life of an elderly cancer patient. -Firemen s aid Adohr Farms driver Tom Obensh;,tw was de- livering milk to the residence or A. E . Carte.r, 317 A Via Buena Vista, when he suw smoke com- ing from tbe four-plex unit. Obenshaw rushed inside the bui lding, picked Carter off the noor and dragged him outside to s afety. firemen suid. Recently operated on for cancer. Carter had been to the bathroom and was walking back to his bedroom when he was overcome by s moke and dropped to the floor, according lo the firemen on the scene. Fire Capt. Tim Sappok said the blaze. s tarted in the bedroom by a smoldering cigarette, caused $1 ,500 damage to the building and its contents . "Mr. Obenshaw's heroic ac- tion definitely saved the life of the Leisure World r esident," Sappok said. Malpractice Rates Hiked ·Amid Crisis A 141 percent increase in tnalpractice insurance has been slaj>J>Od OIJ' Oranae Counlf doc· tors even as som"e of them.. wen\ Into a work slowdown over sue~ ~ura.nce costs .• The bad news came.ror Orenie '.':.ounty doctors and phYsiclan& in' Orange•County Tuesday, the day <1fter m ost of Orange CoUnty 's i25 anesthesiologists decided to :.:top participating in non- emergency sutgeries. ·The s urgery slowdown "'as ":>eginning to take its toll today with most hospitals in the county .1iscontinuing n on-e mergency ::>perations. Nearly all of the !'lospitals in the county are ex· peeled to be shut down for all.sur- ~eries except obstetric, cancer. .and emergency operations by Frid6ly. ' Travelers Insuran~e Com -p~u •. in...., J•µer to customers Tuesday.._ t;ermed·the increase '"a min.iff?A~one" iaeded to main· tain covera1e while the state legislature -ttolds a'. Special session on the m·alpractice crisis. By today , the withholding of non-emergency &eivices by anesthesiOlogists was expected to affect ho s pitals in ~os Ange les , Orange, Sa·n Ber- nardino, Santa Barbara and Ven· turacoUnties. Surgery at 41 hospitals was re· ported·tt.own BO.percent. The loss of revenues from would-be sur- gical patients was est!niated at· $400,000 a day, according to the Hos pital Council· of Southern California . Condominium OK'd For Laguna Hills Orange County planning com - missioners Tuesday .approved a S94•unit condominium project in Laguna !tills despite health de· j>attment warnings lhat its resi- Warning Issue d WAS HINGTON (U PI) -The Senate Armed Services Commit· !ee has warned against any ma- jor-shifts in military forces over· s'eas or any manpower cuts in the p acific until a post-Vietnam era joreign policy is formulated. Or•:~: a ~ .. , Weatller l\tostly s unny skies ~through Th·ursda y. • Warmer with highs in the .. ·upper 60s at the beaches to 70 inland u reas. Lows .; toni&htnear 50. I NSIDE TODAY Laguna Beac'h f.lrfl the onlu place whert beachgoer1 in the • ol.logether 41re calching cit11 official• with their ordinances down .· It 's a nationwide J phenomenon. See P.ape AJ2. dents would be disturbed by military plailes flying overhead. The Laguna Village project was issued a \)Se permit because planning commissioners were satis£ied that sound insulation materials would reduce the noise to an acceptable level. The condominiums will be con- structed on the south side or Canada Road, about 1,400 feet weStof Moulto_n Parkway. -eealtlf aepal'tment officials pointed out that tbe project is close to the flight path of. jet fighters from El Toro "Marine Cor.ps Air StaUon and that the planes frequently stray over-the p,operty when 1?_racticing carrier landings. -However, Robert Kreis, presi- dent of Laguna Village, Inc., pre· dieted that once his project is completed piiOts will adhere more rigidly to the flight pattern than now, when it doesn 't really matter because the land is va· c3nt . Commissioners based their de· cision on a 1971 zoning ordinance which requires the attenuation of interior sound leveis to a degree acceptable to county and state of· ficials; Dog Inoculations Scheduled in Viejo The Mission Viejo Kiwanis Club will give your dog the "nee· die" May 27 during a low·cost r i bles clinic sponsored in cooperation with the Orange County Health Deportment. Bi'ln1 your Jfoo<h to La Pat Pla%1between7 6nd8:30p'.m. for •IZ ~hot. Dop 1bduJd,be at least lour 1111ooill1 old. Ra-vaccln•· U-ons are. required eVery two yeara. I • • • • i .;. ~ . ' FIRST LADYBETIY FORD.ME1"REFUGEE THRONGS TODAY AT PENDLETON Mr1. Ford Chats With Camp Commander Oen. Paul Graham Prior to He r To~r Mrs. Ford Sees Viets Gre etiTlgS Given to Pendleton Refugees By CAROL MOORE 01 th•~fllW PilM Slffl Betty Ford brought gr eetings from her Presic;leot husband and "the warinth of the American people" to Vietnainese refugees inCainp Pendleton today. "The President, our children and. I have suffered along with your misfortunes and want to A !IEPORTER VIEWS 'LITTLE SAIGON'--A7 give you help. happiness and sun- s h ine .'' \va s h er ·g reetin g, translated to a crowd of several hundred in a recreation area. As the first member of the First Family to visit any or the refugees' compounds, Mrs. Ford toured the largest of the tent cities and emphasized that she came to m eet each and every one of the refugees. Nuclear Ban Plan GENEVA (UP I ) -,Sen. 'Edward M. Kennedy CD-Mass.), today proposed a six-point plan to limit the spre ad of nuclear weapons starting with a ban on all nuclear testing by the Yn!ted States and the Soviet Union .. Ken- nedy, speaking in a privale capacity, put his plan to the con- ference reviewing the nuclear· non-proliferation treaty fiVe yeai-s aft.er it was enacted. · ' THIRD CALLER BOUG H T YAC H T "The ad produced many calls and t sold the yacht on the third • call . I'm very pleased." Tllat's the success story told by the Huntington Beach man who placed this 11.d ln the Daily Pilot : . ' . COt.UJ\.tBIA 22. 3sa1ls, knot meter. cockpit c:ushlOns. Newport.Slip $28001 XXX•XX.XK' Ir you have a bdit or sail s to sell. call 842-.56'fJ.'.~oniy take'». . feVJ words l o the ~L place o mak~ a sale. ~ f. t Al•ng the On .... eoat, th< right pl ace is Uta D&Uf Pilot • • • ,r ' I "All of us here are volunteers. willing to help you adjust. Things 1wiU be bette r over the hill, but it will.take time.:· · A-1rs. Ford had lecgt.hy con- versations with both forme r President Nguyen Cao Ky of South Vi etna m and ex-President Kh oy of Cambodia. The First Lady 's entourage passed through dining areus, a classroom in its third day of learning E nglish and a Post Ex· change set up as an open-air marketplace for refugees. Within each lent a particul ur ch ild .,.;ou1d attract her attention (See VISIT, PageA2) San Jua·n Murde r Suspect Indicted In Second Death The Riverside County District Attorney's of£ice Tuesday issued a second murder complaint against Gregory Glen Coates, 18. who is awaiting trial on charges h~fburned his stepmother to de-.. New School Architect Appointed Trustees of the Saddleback Valley Uniried School District have appointed a n archrtect to begin designing a new $2 million addition to Mission Viejo High School. The addition, to provi de room for 450 more students, may be r e- ady by September 1976. It will br· ing the capacity of the school to 2,250 students . Allen and Miller Architects or Santa Ana were hired for the job at 11 fee of eight percent of i:on· struction costs1 • Allen, and Miller designed one •Other 1chool in the district -San ,Jootquin Elemeritary -and 't'OD an 1rchl\ectura\ •)l'"'d rot It. .th~ tioard hlrod Allen Jll)d Miller ln11ead Of D av~l•·l!W1-1'mc AJJSoclales w}.lo,had riiilbm· meJlded, 'for lh• Joll; lll,. ad· mlhl1traUon!"1'1e bo&rd'hu aaid lt.'wanis ~o . use d)ffe'f~nt •<"'"'SCHOOL, l'•rtA!) ~ --, . -. . ath A-lay 4 in her San. Juan Ga pistranohome. Coates, held in Orange County J ail pending trial, was charged with the murder of l\.1ir a Loma housewife, J ean Stephens, 37, at her home Jan. 22. Riv ersi d e Sheriff 's in - vestigators allege Coates shot the woman ~wice in the head while s mothering her with a pillow. Oe"tails on the Ri verside Coun· ty case wer e not immediately available but a spokesma n ror the Sheriff's o ffice alleged Coates als.o raped ltle woma n. He was d esc ribed b y in- vestigators us "a fri end of the family." having known one or Mrs. Stephens' children. Coates has been in custody since May 6 when he was arrest· ed in connection with the burning death of his stepmother, l\.1rs. Betty Goates. 47, of 33911 Via Agua, San Juan Capistrano. Coates, who lived at 6366 Stobbs St., Riverside, is the son o( Mearl Goates, 42, who shared the San Juun home with the dead woman. Coat es h ad legall y changed hi!) ~a.me from the earlier Goates, in· vestrgatoi's said. I\. is alleged th•t Cool01; hod 1b0una 'his stepmother hand and root arid th~~ set the mattress on fi re. Tile remainit or a towel were discovered <.ove r the victim '1 mouth b y homi c id e in - vestigators. " ... -. - 3 Taken At Grune Reserve DAR ES SALAAl\1, Tanzania CUPJ ) -Three American stu- dents were kidnaped from a "'ildlife researc h st ation by armed Africans in a remote area or northwestern Tanzonia, U.S. embassy officia ls said today. J\ Dutch stude nt also wus ab- ducted. The sources said the kidnaping took -pluce Monday ni ght al a ga me resea1·ch station run by Jane Goodall , :.1uthor or several books on animal beha\'ior. CStan£ord Universit y said it h ad b een informed by Sta le Department officials in Tanzania that 40 armed .men from Zaire seized the three students and an administrative assistant. (Stanford said the students kid· naped were Barbara B. Smuts, 24 , Ann Arbor, Mich.; Kenneth S. Smith, 22, Garden Grove, and ... Carrie Jane Hunter. 21, Atherton. Calif.) The r esearch station, in. the Gombe game reserve, is located north of Kigoma on the shore of Lake Tanganyika near the Bu run· "di border. The embass y as ked the Tanza· nia n government to launch an in· vestigation. the sources said. The Am eri c ans and the Dutchman were among about 30 students working at the station. !\-lost of the stude nts are from Stanford. l\·l iss Good all and other mem· bers or the research station \\'it· nessed the kidnaping. They said the kidnapers were armed \\lith rifles, but their identity \\las not knO\\'ll . <S.e TANZANIA, Page A2 > . * * * U.S. Citizens Terrorized Around World From Wire Services Americans ..,came under in- creasing attack today throughout the world. Two U.S. Air Force of- fice'rs were murdered in tran. an American civilian a nd two l\'larines were held hostage in Laos. and three Stanford stu- d e nts were kidnap e d in Tanzania, Terrorists stopped a car carry- ing two unarme'd U .S. Air Force offi cers to work this morning. or· FORD SAYS BOMBING NOT PUNITIVE. A4. dercd their Iranian driver to the fl oor of the car, then shot and killed the Americans. The U.S. Embassy identified the dead as Col. Paul R. Shaffer Jr., 45 , a native of Bryan, Ohio, and Lt. Col. Jack J . Turner, 45. from Carbondale, Ill. The Iranian go,vernment said the ussassins, who escaped. were l\.1arxist guerrillas, and "no ac- ;tion wi ll be spared to find th e murderers a nd bring them to justice." A \l.'Oman who said she spoke for the "Ira ni an People's War· riors Association" called the As· sociated Press a nd said "Lt-ie ex· ecution of American offi cers was a reply to the execution of nine Irani an revolutionaries in prison last month.·· She also said th at as Sha1' Mohammed Reza Pahlevi is "a stooge or. the Americans. '-1.'e ther~fore murder Americans ." Meanwh,ile. a mob or about 200 Laotian leftists demanding thu ouster of all Am ericans wilh the U.S. Agency for International Development seized the Allr (Se~TERR(lR . Pake A!) . All OAILY'Pl~OT . SB su .... fing Factions Compete Confirmed body and board sur- fers alike aearch for an elusive oceanic form called the riihl wnve. When they find It, they com· pete for it. So it has been for years at Traf1le:ar Lane beach in San Clemenie. It's better knowri as T Street. Lifeguards often have been summoned to mediate disputes arisin1 at the T Street break - the area where the waves form and roll out. Body surfers have been struck by surf boards. Board surfers have been struck by body sur- fers. Lifeguards have been alternately heckled and ignored. L ast s ummer there was a partial thawing of r elations at T Street , described by some as one of the best bod'y surfing beaches alone the California coast. Under the city's surfing or- dinance, board s urfers were al- lowed to use T Street until 1i a.m . on weekdays and 10 a.m. on weekends rrom J une l to Sept. 30. Body s urrers could use the beach the rest or the day. Last m onth, however, Coun - cilman Thomas O'Keere. a board surfer himselr, gained support .from two other councilmen for a new policy to allow both body and :board surfers to use T Street at ,the same time. ; O'Keefe's plan, which was lo be tried this summer. was to 'divide the break by placing a buoy in t he water and a marker .on Shore, thus creaLing an im- :aginary line. Body surfers woul d be al· ,lowed in the waler on the north ·_side of the line, board surfers on the south. Board surfers would be r e- quired lo wear surf leashes - six-fool elastic lines connecting their surfboard Lo their ankle, thus reducing the chance that a board could stray and strike a : body s urfer. The plan has been ripped in 14 ·letters and petitions bearing 112 names that will be presented to lhe city council. meeting at 7:30 tonight at City Hall. Six Gunme n .. : Spray Crowd RIOHACHA, Colombia (UPI) -Police reported a 10th death to- , day in what has been termed the "revenge slaughter " or a group or persons machine-gunned as they watched television. The victims were shot Satur- . day night in El Conejo near the · Venezuelan border in northern Colombia wh ile watching a box- : ing match on television. Police in Riohacha, the de- ~-partmental capital or Guajira, said 100 persons belonging to three families were watching the bout in the home of Carlos Arturo Perez when six men burst ln and began firing s ubmachine gurus . Learning Center Directo r to Speak Dr. Elnora Schm adel, director _ of the Lea rning Center in Sant a Ana, will be the guest speaker Friday during the monthly meet· ing of Pare nts Without Partners at the Laguna Hills Hilton Inn. Dr. Schmadel will discuss educational therapy as prac- •.· ticed at the Learning Center.at 8 · p.fn . Single parents are invited to attend. •• ? • ORANGE COAST sa DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wff!d Pf ............ ,.,..,., .... . Jack R. Curley Vic• ..,_,,l<Mn1 •"" o.-.i _,....,.. ThOmas Keevll ldltor ThOmas A.. Murptllne --t•nt (11<10f Charles H. Loos • Richard P. Nall ., ........ -... ,."'11 l•••' S.ddl•blCk Vfllll•Y Offlc• 2Sl'Ol Lt "9r illootl •ts,.., oi.;o ,, .... .., Otlltr OftiCf'S C:ftl•Mrw IJI0""•11M>,~1•"1 • Ht~•t«fl Ull N•--1 ..,_•~•d H ... lfflt!M S.tl " l'ltl .... ~ 9o\llo•••d UOW\AS.Kll. llM~ft?)l,..I T•ltpllone (7141 wt-4321 ClfllsslllH AdverllM"I M1·M71 $.MNltlMt • ......... "•'" Ofl>(t Sl1 ·6l10 r rom S..fl l•f"'f"'' 4•5·06JO (OPrfl11fl• ltll o •• ~00' '"'" p.,.l!<Mfll l-1>~~· Nt"<'•• """' <'!11•1'"""''· ff!lo<l•I "'tilt • or t d•• ft•\•..,•n" ~orf lft "''' " r t p<nt11 <•t1 • <r ,.t •r• ·•' 11~fin+.,•on 01 ttoDr"t~I tn•"· k(tnd (l•>\ ~01t•~ NII> •• ''"• M•••. c111111n·• s .. 1 .. 1 11tllfN•~r .. ,,ie, .a oo-11•1v: *'"' ••.1111mor.1111,, IN 11..,.y•1t..,•l+l"11J 00 -· ~at·•• ' Cost of Living 3 GM Recalls ' ' I 50,000 Aul.a• Involved DE'llROIT (UPI> -Ge1111ral Moton Corp. utd t.o· d ay it ls recalling nbllllt S0 ,000 current, ·model Chevrolets, Pontiacs, .Oldsmoblles and Bui cks because some IJlodels may contain steering. ac· celerator arid air cond itioning defects. (Related Spt11·ts in April Ul"IT1~ Ne.. (J.N. E•"'°"1 . Daniel Patrlrk Moynihan, former counselor to Presi- dent Nixon and ambassador to India, has been nominat- ed by President Ford to be the new U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, suc- ceeding John A. Scali. Supervisor Se e ks Ba n On Nudi ty Orange County S\lpervisor Thomas Riley said Tuesday he will propose that the board of Supervisors adopt an urgency ordinance that would prohibit public nudity in unincorporated areas of the county. (Related Story PageA12l. At.cording to Riley, the pro- posed . ordinance authored by county counsel Adrian Kuyper is both constilutlo{lal and effective. Ir enacted, Riley's ordinance would make it a misdemeanor for any person over 10 years old to appear in a public place, in· eluding beaches, without opaque covering over at least some por· tions of their body. In announcing that he will ask for adoption of the ordinance next week. Riley said public nudity is of(ensive to large num- bers of people. If adopted next week the supervisor's ordinance will be er- rective immediately. Laguna Beach has just adopted an emergency ordinance - which made the law immediately e£fective -outlawing nudity for persons over 10. l'ro•P~Al S CHOOL ••. architects instead of exclusively the two designa ted last year as official district architects. The dis trict architects are Davis-DuHaime and Porte r - Jensen Architects or Sa n Clemente. Robert F erguson , district director of planning and develop· ment, said study is just begin- ning of what racilities will be in· eluded in the expansion. He said more room is needed by the band, dra ma classes, and in the shower and locker room areas. Part of the project also will be to refurbish the existing racility, which has been heavily used for double and extended sessions during the past fi ve years. By Tbe A11ocl1ted Pren Consumer prices in lhe Los An geles metropolitan area coritinued 1plr.aling up.)Vard, cltmbtng almost 1 percent in April, Department of Labor of- ficials said today. Department statistics indlcat· ed. an increase of 12 percent in the coat of living aa comp.,-ed to April 1974, for Los Aneel• and Oran1e Counties. &.aaanne Sadowsky, head ot t.he d tP:art m e nt 's Southern California Bureau, aatd tAe con- sumer price index ln the Los Anaeles area in April waa 155.6, meaning that it cost $15.'8 to buy 10·15% PETROLEUM HIKES SEEN . A4. the same goods and services wh ich cost $10 in the base year 11161. The purchasing power of the 1987 dollar t;lropped to 84 .3 cents last month, she added. Heavy increases in transporta- tion and housing costs were largely to blame for the r ise in Apri l's cost of living, Miss Sadowsky said. Nationally, the rate of inflation quickened a bit ln April as iirocery prices revened a -two- month decline and helped push over-all consumer prices up six- l're• P .,,e Al VISIT ••• and a clasp of the hand. Older children, oblivious to the-pro· minence of t heir visitor, were ushered forth by their parents for recoiinltion by the President's wife. But her arrival at the outdoor sports area-a basketball court actually -was announced in both English aqd Vietnamese languages and attracted a cheer· ing crowd. Mrs. Ford's visit Jut.ed , less than an hour, after which she de· parted for El Toro MCAS and a (light bac• to Washington tonight. T ERROR ••• of Cambodia and Soulll Vietnam. Twelve Americans were sU ll under house arrest by leftist stu· dents In Savannakhet, the former right-wing stronghold in central Laos which w.as taken over by the Communist Pathel Lao Tuesday. U.S. embassy officials said they loat radio telephone cont.ct with the six U.S. AID officiW.s and their wives, a lthougti they believed they were safe. In Vientiane U .S. Charge D'Af- faire1 Christian Chapman met with Prime Minister Souvanna Phouma and Foreign Minister Phoumi Vongvichit, the ranking Communist official in the coali· lion government, to protest tbe seizure of the U .S. compound. In the third incident, three American students have been kldnaped from a remote animal research station in Tanzania by armed Africans. The reports said a Dutch stu- dent was klso abducted. About 30 students work at the station, most of them rrom Stan· ford University. Ex-Fairview Aide On Coumy Trial A one-time Fairview State Hospital aide, accused of brutal!· ty against mentally retarded male patients when he came back to work there after two years as chief bear trainer in an amusement park, went on trial again today. Angel Hernandez, 35, of Alta Loma, is in the sixth day or his trial before Judge Robert C. Todd in Harbor Judicial District Court on charges of assault and battery against two ho1pltal clients. Charges were filed following analysis by the California At- t orney General's Orflce of evJdence submitted by ofll clals of the Costa Mesa h<>1pital for the handicapped. Her•a ndez was e mployed , berore being fired , i n the Behavior Adjustment Program, whose d irector, Dr. Bernat Htrskovets, was one ol the first witnesses called to the stand. Hernandez testtrted Tuesday In hi s non -jury tri•I thit he was employed by the state h01pltal system in 1958, received his psychiatric technician cerUflca- lion in 1959 and t;as taught 1ta.rf trainees In clas•a on behavior modlftcation. The derendant also tettitied that he took a two yea.rt' leave of ' absence rrom F airview to work as supervisor or bear training at the now -defun ~t J apanese Village and Deer Park amuse· ment center in Buena Park. He began his psychiatric technician career a t Pacific State Hospital in Pomona and later transferred to lhe big Colta Mesa facility ror the retarded, housin_g more than 1,700 patients. nfe' two male patients he al- legedly aesaulted for apparent misbehavior ar e both adults, one in his 30s, on one or the ward&, hospital officials have said. The defendant was fired im- mediately after a review of his alleged handling of the rnen. and misdemeanor c riminal charges were Initiated later. Hernandez was notified of the crln\tnal complaint earlier lhJs year and surrendered hl1n1elf direcUy to the court, aecordln1 to Cotta Meu police, who sold he was not booked jnto jail dlrtttly. Court otrtclala said as Hernande& took the stand to t .. ury In his own l>thall •Jain that a verdi ct could be reached today. Several employes ol the bla hospital were charaed with si milar offenses durlpJ a SU.If upheaval more than 10 years ago, but char1e1 wire d11ml1Md lD the cues of all but..,., · tenths of a perceni, the gOvern- ment reported today. The Apri l increase, thou1h double that o( March, wu lQ line with the Administration forecast of an annual inflation rat.I ot' about 6 or 7 percent thia year for the U.S. The White Hou1e had 1a1d it did 1 1not expect the lower rate of-in ... cre.11se in March to continue. The hit:heat previou.s monthly increase t.hia year occurred in January, when prices also l'06e by six-tenths oC a percent across the country: Retail prices the past three months have risen at a seasonal- ly adjusted annual rate of 5.8 per- cent in tbe U.S. During the same three-month Period in 1974, retail . pr;ices rose al an adjusted annual rate of 11.8 percent. The Labor Department said last month's increase naUonllly rerlected an upturn in food prices, Collowin& two months of decline , and a large increase ln. nonrood commodities. PADDLE ••• He said the concern of students was not to have the abuses re- viewed b\.it to have corporal punishment as a diatrlct policy outlawed. · "Psychologists tell WI that not only does corporal punishment Call to alleviate discipline pro·. blems. but In many cases actual· Jy creates them," Van Horne said. It has been used by some teachers as ''an easy way to skirt more dtrftcult emotional a.nd psychological problems,'' he said, "and is a means of aveng-, ing incidents." "Cori>oral punishment com- promises the goal of and hinders the educational process," he s aid. He pointed out that corporal. punishment has been abolished as a recommended pracUee in prisons and with delinquent children. ' "This should su11est that cor· poraJ punishment policies should be reviewed in this district," he said. story, Al4) • GM said three separate recall actions are In- volved. About 3,100 Chevrolet Camaros and Novas, Pon·. tlac Fireblrds •and Buick Apollos and Skylarks, the company said . may contain defects that could· cause ~ drlvers·to lose steering control. ~. Another defect, which mi ght make it impossible for cars lo idle properly, may involve about 16 ,000 PQn~c Venturas1 Oldsmobile Omegas and Buick Apollos and SkylarKs, the company said. In addition, GM said, about 31,000 Camnros may contain faulty fa.n ·blodes In' the air conditioning unit. These could break under engine vibration. No injuries ha ve been repo1·ted as a restilt of the defects, GM said. Su perviso rs Okay $3 ,500. Promotion Orange County ,l(overnment will chip in half the estimated. $7,000 needed to launch an in- tensive public relations cam - paign over the next two months lO draw customer• to shape in Dana Point Harbor •. The County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously Tuesday to allocate $3,500 in harbor tidelands funds to the pro- motional project which could become an ongoing etrort, ac- cording to merchant.a. Supervisors Laurence Schmit and Robert Battin voted for the runds, b'ut they aaid they still believe private enterprise should pay rorits own promOUona. But Supervisor Th'omu Rile)', whose district includes the coun- ty-owned harbor, said county government is a partner in all en- terprises there and muat bear part of the responsibility for ac· ti vi ties that cost money. The Dana Point l-larbor Merchants Association, a loosely knit organization of people who hold sub·lea1u on store sites In the harbor, in ade the proposal for joint funding. Supervisors were told that the . association alone couldn't afford the kind of campaign needed to bring visitors to the harbor and its shops. TANZANIA The embaa;sy sources sald there was no a pparent motive for the kldnaping a nd re,Jations between the students at the re- search station and local vi llagers were good. However. the border area or Burundi near the area of the kid · napin1 Was the scene of military operations against dissident tribesmen this month. The U.S. embassy in the BurUndi capital of Bujumbura also was working on the kidnap case, the sources said. Tanzanian police were now n to the scene in a helicopter and Derek Brysoon, director of the Tanzania na tional parks, also new there to help with the in- vesti,atlon. Random Shots Kill 3 in LA LOS ANGELES (UPI'> Three persons were shot in the head and killed and another wBfi seriously wounded late Tuesday in a four block area of South Los Angeles. Id entification of the victims was being-withheld pending noUflcation of relatives. Police said the shootings, all within a two ho.ur period, were apparently unrelated. WASHER s2599s DRYER s 179'5 This Frigidaire Heavy Duty Wa sher ca n deliver dependable. tr ouble-free performance with its heavy duty motor a nd oth er components used i n Frigidaire Commercial Washers. You can Wash perrrenent press. cations. and heavy work clothes efficiently. or reduce wear . on delicates with Normal and Gentle Wash cycles. The matching Frigidaire Dryer lets vou dry up to 18 Pounds of laundry all at once. With the turn of a dial. match the drying time to the type o f load. including permanent press and kn its .. ~94 FPt-170T s399•s FRIGIDAIRE LAUHDlY CENTER FRIGIDAIRE Family Si ze REFRIGERATOR Th is spece·saving Frigidaire laundry Cen1er combines a family-size washer and dryer inlo a &lngl• Slim cablner. Plugs into 1nv separate 15 amp conventional household Circuit . \ " ,.,; ii:. !l '• "· •11: " ~ c•1 ii• COi n,· wil ha th' at1 an pl• Ca bo mr err pl. tol ar po ar er ~ J ·~ ~ r. (o ~ < I I'll ~ ~ ~ " .I Cl . .;; ;; ... • qAILY PILOJ EDITORIAL PAGE ' I •J .. ''· An Expensive Game flow A80U1' t>ETENTE~ SUl>~ENLY I HAVE THIS <RAVING . FOil. HAVANA <ldA~S. " '1 In a script -rooted In a bad decision by the pre- us board ot trustees, an unsavory behind-the-. enes game to u.ndercut Su t. Wllllam Zo g Is un- dlng In the Saddleback ~alley Unlfle~ School strict. The current trustees, elected March 4 alter a o~mpalgn wherp Zogg's administration was a central llaue, are unhappy with the district's top leadership. But because the previous board sealed Zogg•s contract last December for the next four years, the new . board "has no possibility or selecting another withoul buying out hi; contract. ' MC!l!l trustees """ ptivately they would prefer to have.Or. Richard Welte, now deputy sui>erintendent, au1>erintendent. . · d . Publicly, in !\ii aJ>Pl!l"ent effort to" un ercut Zogg, y have i~creasect Welte'• authority and given him ,000 a year raise which at $38,000 ls more than gg's:$37 ,800 salary. . . These actions encoiirage that ZQgg be bypassed the chain of command and create morale problem!l Further, the s11111e trustees who campaigned for rm~ny and economic good sense now are makiitg· em1es and cttooelng to maintain two superinten· nts, each with a,steep~alary : This unhealthy situation is getting the district where. Trustees must find a better solution in the blic interest. School Financing The figures were admittedly sketchy ~s the Irvine ool board recenUy took a first look at next year's trict budget. The ouUook was for tighter finances d a suggested tax hike.- The budget proposal calls for an increase of less one percent in Ute amount of money spent per dent, a figure which falls far short of the available buylng power in an era or inflation. At the same time, the amount of the bu.dget for employ e saJaries and benefits is to increase from 70.76 percent last year to 71.98 percent next. Meanwhile, a shift in the apportionment of district in come means the share derived from locaftaxes is to j ump from 61.l8 to68.2l percent of the total. Three trustees already have voiced opposition to any tax hike . In the coming months of budgeting, they likely will be looking !or places to trim, each with its . attendant press!Jre groupL The initial resolve to keep the tax rate constant should be ·kept in mind · throughout the process. Road Priorities Recent improvements providing left turn lanes and center dividers on El Toro Road between Rockfield Boulevard and Bridger Road were long in coming but {it last provide relief for congestion in the area. Now . Orange County Road Department officials shoulil focus their attention on the other end of the Sad- dleback Valley, especially in the La Paz Road business section including the Wild West Plaza1 the new Mis's ion Hills Plaza, the school districl headquarters and th e Hilton Inn. · Because or a steep hill on La Paz Road, visibility is pc)or and turns onto Mcintyre Street-are dangerous. With the opening of a new restaurant and several ·more shops at the corner of Mcintyre and La Paz, traC-~ fie has become more congested. Add to that dozens of young pedestrians and cyclists on their way to and from Mission Viejo High School and Ila Paz Intermediate, and you have an area with high accident pote ntial. Road safety improvements in this area need highest priority. SB Split· nFord Loeul Age11cies ft111 . ..\d111i11isfer Cot1st Plt111 • • ec1s1on EVANS.NOVAK ASHINGTON -The gamble en by President Ford in using ed rorce against Cambodia, ing with air strikes against bodian gunboats last week, s based above all on thiS hard clusion: ,th,e U.S. had to seize occasion or Cambodian acy to prove It both could and Id react with decision and er to jnternaUonal l&Yileas• •• . here was no split of any kind the National Security Council SCJ . ln - ed, every official in e a d · nistration ree d that , atever the k, a show of w er was olutely es- tial followin g the humiliation uth Vietnam. n ordering American attacks the Cambodian gunboats to k an obvious Cambodian ef· to remove the American 'w of the Mayaguez to the mbodian mainland. neither the P~ident nor the NSC even att e mpted to figure out an a1nswer to this potentially ex· plosive question : what if the Can1bodians s hould use the gun· boat attack as lhe pretext for murdering some 40 American crewmen? ·'Of course we had contingency plans," one top presidential aide told us. "But we couldn 't sit uround and try lo estimate every possible contingency when \\1e are dealing with a primitive gov- ernment which hes Virtually no out.side cont.acts with the world. Wf!hadtoact.'' THE UNDERLYING assump· ijpn of the President's aides was tlat the U.S . must deal with such ip act of piracy as a Western na· ~n acting in a ci•ilizcd fashion :. mand immediate return o( the f Ip and crew and map a cont· iqencr plan lo seize both by (orce i the demand was not met \filhin.a reasonable time. I . !(Following seiz ure of the !Cllyaguez by Cambodia j ust ~ter midnig ht , Suncfay, the · esident allowed a lmost 48 urs lo go by without any llitary response. Next, the ~sic plan or isolating the little and ln th• Gull ol Thailand,· here the Mayaguez was held. ~ent astray when Ca mbodian g.unboats moved toward the Inland about 15 mil~ away. e President then gave bis or. to halt the gunboats. • Al that point, the U.S. went lhe l~ll and ,neceuary di•lance to ·prove wnlt Mr . Fon! and hit Sec.retarlCs of State and Defense, ~Qry_ ~uslnaer and Jam•• hll!llJ!lej: hid been preachlne n·ttop ever aloi-e the t'ala1trophjc end or lhe Vietnam ' ' Dear Gloomy Gus What is Just Plain Henry's target of opportunity ? Could it be the taxpayers of Orange County forced to . cle&n up his Alice in Won- derland litter? M.W. ~" 09' <-114• .,, MlllfrlitMll ..,. ,....,. ...... ltolMCtlW•lly....,_l'llo9 .................... , .... .,_. ,..... "'G...._, Gwt. o.11w, l"l1ot. war : des ?i'le that na tion a l humiliation, no foreign country should make tbe mistake that the U,Dited States was discarding its role1 u worJd ·lead~r. or Was re· luctanl to take· strong action where demanded. INDEED, the private remarks or top o£ficials here make it a bun· dantly apparent th at ·the Mayaguez seizure became. the ideal case to prove the point. Jn the background ...,,as lhe ut- ter failure of all efforts to open so m e kind 9f circuitous diplomatic channel lo the revolu· lionary Cambodian government of the Khmer Rouge. The Soviet Union h3s been kicked out of Phnom Penh for failure lb break with the old regime. The People's Republic of China, according to one hi gh official, informed the U.S. it would try lo help, and did so. but proved the point Lhat the jingoistic Cambodian ·regime was simply beyond reach. On Tuesday evening, Mr. Ford ordered word passed to con· gressional leaders that ''ap· propriate action:• would soon be · taken. ·Perhaps irt'retrospect the President should have s um- moned these leaders to the White House for a (ace-to-ra ce con· versation. Sen. Mike Mansfield o f Montana , th'e Sena(e .Democra.tic leader, for example, said later that he had not been . •·consqlted," on the theory h~ Was told, not asked. OTHER CIUTfCISM In ·a Co ngiess no~ sho~ing d angerOus . symptoms or taking over ~-Metican foreign policy from its feuding committee rooms was a lso heard. raislnr o min·ous ·'questions about a vicious partisan debate erupting Crom the President'&. bold acliOlf: But on that point Mr. Ford and his Lop aides, often indecisive and vacillating on lesser mat· ters,· s howed no concern this tlm ~. They assumed that whatever pai"tisao outcry m1ght ensue. the.American people as a whole would react with over- whelming approval to the Presi· dent's Powerful response LO an unprovoked act of plracy on the high $eas. , , • "SUre lhey'lhry todeineaorue it.," one sentor presidential aide told us. ''That's par for the · coune. But no one coneidered th1111t al pert or the problem.,, THUS, in this fit$l, clear shOw • of American powci .since the Jn. dochineae fla irco, Mr. Ford has demonstrated what he is often eriUcized ror latkinc: a talent for. leadership_ and commilnd, in a <ase void or ambltul\Y IO hlm und his a dYiaets . Deipll• politl.:al risks, nO one aroyhd· him exhlblted secOad lhou1hu &1)9ut the obllsalloD ollbe.U.S, lo '"i"'erwrite the rule or law !n the world. Commissions Should Dissolve To the Editor: Realtor s and many other Ame ri cans would have to find other work under governments \vhich now control more than half of the world's population. The simple reason being that individuals are not free to own property in those countries, Could · this freedom be Jost here? Only if those interested fail LO act when the bundle o( rights that go with properly ownership suffer infringement. It would seem that property owners, current and prospective, lo protect their own interests would turn out to vote againsl. all e ncroachments. In actuality, voler. participation in recenL e lec t ion s has been declining. The problem seems to be that many are working too hard to have the lime to identify critical issues or to r espond a ppropriately. The Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors r esponded to this problem by (orm ing a Political A££airs Com mittee lo study Issues and recommende d appropriate actions. RE COGN IZING lh e infringem ent by the Coastal Zone Conservation Commission on the rights of the City of Newport Beach as well as on many property owners seeking to improve their properties the Political Affairs Committee decided lo explore the situation. We learned Lhat the commission, while mandated by Proposition 20 (which a large majority o( i)range County voters turned down ), was c harged wiLh preparing a coastal plan and ·expiring. After· further study the committee proposed and the bOard or directors approved the following statement: ·•'As the Newport Harbor·Costa Mesa Board of Re'<ors has witnessed considerable client experience wit..1 the impact of the Coostal Zohe Conservation Commission .c-reated by Proposition: and j•·As we con sider th e commission will h'ave served its purpose by m aking local government aware of the need to • protect the environment or the coastal area; "As actions of the current ·COmm1ssions have proven costly :to Cali£ornia in jobs lost : to the -proPert,Y owner and the ultimale buyer in lime a nd money spent even for minor construction : and "'As local general plans are Wlng completed to sUpPort the coastal plan, which genera l plans can be a dnlinistered fairly , consi s t e ntl y a nd ~ jUdiclously by local elected of· flclals s upervised by existing state agencies : ••we, th e r efor e, urge the mandated expiration or lhe Coaital Zone Conse r vation Commission be lullllled." .SINCE "the state Legislature will m ake the final 'decision on the commission and its plans, we ·have fo rwarded the above statement to each board of rtaltors In the 1\1te asking them ,to protec-l the inter~ts of lheir elients by Impressing their Le1illator1 with the importance ol this matter .,.r-. • LYMAN S. FAULKN ER Chairman PoUUc~l A!CalraQ>mmittee, "Newport Har1i9<.coet.I Mesa Board of Realtors ' • ( MAILBOX ) Len .. s from •••dt•I .;, welc-. TM .1.,.1 10 c..-.nw 11111110 Iii I P..C.• Or •llmiiw~ liOOI" re· Hf,,.111. Utt••• .t >00 words ff 11-1• Mii oo gl~•" ~ff'10tt. All Mllerl m1t1t !Ml,,. "9Ml11re •nd .,..lli11t...,.•11 •11t 11•me1 m.1, Mwlt-i.&n•• ..... 11II 111fllcl1nt •••Miii II 'PIN'""'· Poot., W!ll Ml ... ,..111111114. "'"'"Show To the Editor: Who says we don't h ave ·'theater'' right here in Irvine? Last night the missus and I at- tended the twice monthl y performance of Kafka Players' ''The School Board Meeting.'' We sat among a surly group or philosophically diseq[ranchised ·as the opening gavel fell. An abundance or tension. pathos, bickering and irony made the five-hour evening Oy by. When. one of two new cast members moved the adoption of a manua l of procedure by which to run the board (it spends over 12 millions annually) she was skillfully bickered :it b y "Chairperson" until the motion died. A modest request for a S.'.J.500 basic lighting system al Uni High pool was adroitly turned into an $18,000, 6-pole. 2·lier, 12,000 wall debacle which scared the pants off everyone. A request by the other new c~sl member that public demand for traditional education be met by meeting with outside traditional schools was transparently coun· tered by scheduling eight meet· ings, only one of which was v.:ilh a traditional group . The n ew cast member 's frustration, so clearly expressed, was a sheer delight to see. A PROPOSAL for evening adult six week' summer session at net lax1;1ayer cost of about $27~ per student (after ADA), result ing in a projected loss of $41 ,250 a1 150 enrollm ent, .... ·as quick!} passed over the objections of lht two new cast members. After intermission, upon re· turning from the bathrooms, v.·t found the tempo still building. One new cast member pro· posed that mini reports be both limited in length and prepara'tion or eliminated altogether for lack o( time. Response was devastat· in,g . ''We don 't gel to the schoOls ... how can we tell wh at's goi ng on ... etc." Finally, a lest r esult for read· ing a nd math showed that three- fourths of the (irst grade are above the 80 percent mark (by national norms) and that upon being exposed to our schools through the 11th grade the rotio slides lo one-fourth of th e slu· dents above the 80 percent mark. This indicated to all present, except perhaps the administra· lion and board, tha t the children ...,.ere being educated more effec- tively a l hom e before enterin g than they were after being in our · schools. Everyone s hould attend ·the Kafka Players. We 've all paid a couple of thousand dollars for season tickets. anyway. And it is a fascinating evening of pure "theate r." RlCHARD L'll'ONC[;ARK ""••II Don<• . To the Edh.or: As a middle-aged housewife and mother or a young Marine, I fe el l must say this : Thanks a lot all you "armchair know·il·alls.'' I do not ...,,ant \var: v.•e are a Christian family, but sometimes one has to slap hands. . The President· had a big de· cision to make: it must have bog· gled his mind. T he s hip is safe. the crew is safe and most of the r.t arines are safe-thank God for that. Those boys need a "Well Done" -not a "No, don't do that." So. shut up or go do it yourself, all or you kno""··il-alls . C.HARRlS Bil.:•• l .. 1111,.-s To th e Editor: 1 am writing in regard to the bicycle safety lanes and paths in Orange County. I think these paths are a very good idea; they serve many people everyday. The main point is that these bicycle Janes get cluttered up \\'ith rocks, g lass and oth er debris whi c h punctur e many tires weekly. I know that these p a ths are r arely cleaned of debris and I am writing because I feel bicycle safety lanes should be cleaned as often as possible- st least once every three weeks . TOMMlLLER The Tyranny of Doing Good "Machttrleb": The r econdite German word a l the head of thi s column .came to m y atten· lion, and was with gratitude added to my vpcabulary , by the in · du s triou s young British journalist Aub e ron Waugh. Mr. Waugh transl8tes the word as "The manic desire lo impase df· cisions on other people." And he added, "I am convinced it (machtlrieb) is the prevalent disease of our age, responsible for most of its evils.·· J have long held a similar view about the activities or moral busybodies, both. within and without legis latures. If Mr. W3ugh feels so strongly about the matter Within hi s sceptered Isle,. t suggest he avoid distress by keeping as far away rrom its wayward of£spring, Ameri ca, as possible . THERE IS som ething about CHARLES McCABE '''ith a legal abortion at Hoston City J.lospital. TliEKE ARE tremendous is· sues here \\•hi ch '>''ill be discussed .late r . The most urgent of all might be: \\'hat jury, any,vherl'.' and at any lime, has the right to be making decis ions on such a matter of private morals us tht.c• matter of fetus-killing? On another level the Calirornia Court or r\ppeal m a de a landma1·k derision recentl y \\'hen it ruled lhut county s upe1·ior eourts did not have autho1ity to order t.he involuntary sll'riliza· lion of an ::id ult in~ompet ent \\'Ord . The practice had apµarenl ly been going on for years without. s erious qu~stion ,,·h e n the Am erican Civil J,.ibertics Union early in 1974 appealed on behalf of I lolly K ., a mildly retarded bluck "·on1an \\'hO hnd been or· dered sterili zed at lhc request of herfaLher . telling other people what is good TllE CONTRA COSTA Count.y for them, or more frequ('ntly Superior Court, fitting as a pro· '''hat is bad for them. that is ns bate ('Ourl which has jurisdiction· Ameri cfln us blueberry pie or over guardialn·"·urd matters. bo1nbing in the na1ne of defense· g r ;.1nlcd I he petition fo r « reaction. L.e t us ~onsh1er just a st<.'rili211t1on . Again, "'hY lh1s fe\\' of the 1t e1n.s 111 t~e ne,,·~ re-publi(' concern O\'er one a:irl's cent ly "'he.rein th1.s anc1en_l_sterili2a tion. e1nd the authority of passion is being exercised. lhe courts to enJotc.eJ1 either In Boston. u J4.ry of nine men \\'a)'? _o....: and three ,,·omen debated a mat· ter or no less ma"gnltu<te than. \Vhen Does Lire Begin ~ The case. involved a youn~ doctor, Ken· ·neth C. E:delin , '>''hd was Indi cted ,by a Suffolk County grand jury for mans luughtcr in conneclion THE ' BRl.LLIANT .Drili•h apQlogl St (or Chri&lianity, th l' l•t• C. S. Lewis . pUI it Lhus : "Or all tyrannies a tyra11ny c.xtrelsed for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It may be bl'tte r to ti,·e under robber barons than under omnipotent mor~1I busybodies. The robbc-r baron 's cruelty m ay sornetimes sleep, his cupidity may at sbme point be sati ated ; but those '''hO torment us for our O\\'ll good \viii lorment us \\'ilhout end fo1· lhey do so ,,·ith the appro\·ut of their O\\'n conscie nc(' . . "To be 'c ured' il:gainsL one's "·i ll and cured of states \\·hi ch "·e n1ar not regard as diseu~e is 10 be put on a Je,·el ,,·ith those,,·ho hu\'e uot yet l'(';_1ched the age of l'('i.lSon, .. \'ou sturt being 'kind ' to pl?'o· pie before you have considered their rights. and then forec up0n them s upposed kindnesses which they in fuel had a right 10 refuse. and finull ~· ki ndnes:; '''hich no one but you "'ould recognize as kind· nesses and \\'hich thl' recit:>ient \\'ill feel abominable cruelties.'' ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Ro~rt N. Wttd. Put>lillltr Thomat Kttuil, tditor Barbaro Kreibich. f;dltoriol Page Ed1IQf' The edltorlal page or the D:illy , Pilot seeks to inform and stimulate rtfders by presentint on this page diverse commentary on topics or interest by l)'Rdicat· cd columnists and ca rtoonists. bY, providing a forum ror readeri' views and b)' presenting lh.i.$i1 ne"'·sptriper·s opinions and ldtol: oo cu rrent topic11 . The edltori-i·· opinions or the Daily Pilot appea\I' only In lhr editori al t'O\umn al lht top or the pasc. Opinions t:X• press ed by the columnists aria ~ cetrtooni11ts and letttr \lo•rit~rs art« their ow n 11nd no endorsement OI their views by the Dilly Pi1ol shou ld be Inferred. · Wednesday, May 21.197_5 l \.. Antismog Standards Tightened LOS ANGELES (AP> -Cars- sold in Calirornla in 1977 will --have to cause Jess smog than those sold elsewhere in~ nation -even at the cost of _higher prices and poorer gas mileage. The federal Envjronmental Protection Agency granted the state permission Tuesday to im· ' • Body qf Oirl, 14, ~ ,_ Found in Orchard MORENO (UPI) -A severed human bead torn Crom the body of ·a lf·year-old girl by animals was found Tuesday ln a backyard near the girl'shome here, seven miles e•stof Riverside.· Rlveraide County Sherill's Lt. Nell Adkins sai.d Ill• body pf Susan w._re, missing since April 10,.was found in a cltrus_or:c.harct 100 yards Crom her home. The--.be&d was discovered by a nel1hbor, Carlos Mart1ne11 who notified deputies. Wedneld11, May 21, 1m rooirapy iui Jn· PQt Uiae , •.<LOS A'NCELES-(llPI) !...: Llnda E ..... tman MeCartne1, wile of former Beall.e Raql Mc~artney, can go to a -psychiatrist in London instead or Jail in Los Aneelea for poa*8ilon or marijuana, ,a Judge ruled Tuesday. J DAil Y PILOT ,f.~ Wimis ·Rip Bay Ate'1;, ~Dead ·q By The /\11ocl1ted p,..,. The high winds th't r No11hern Calilornia,on '.1-u~li wlll 1ubs!de todaJ<, but there may be aome tsnow shower ... t.h8 Sierra Nevada, the Nati Weather Service said. 1 ___ _,,P<>,.SJL!.,!.ricter smog standardsJor 1977 cars because California's air pollution proble m s are the worst head bad been torn from the S Investiealors said the ( · ) -tono by animals -_after !be, .tale _ Mrs. M&C•rtney, 33, was arreateq Marc h 3 by.. a hi1hway .. patrolman who stopped .a car carr.y,ing. \tie singer and hls fa!llily for· going through a red Mcht.. -1 The.ofITcer1a!a.he'lleiect,_ ed the smell of marij'uana • One man died and another ls believ~d dead after the high ·winds, solrielimts "reaching ;iO mites per hOur, ·apparerit'ly • tilllililllJ]j.O'Sf.a"'!\'.IWlf. ~ fjsKlhg boDl based in San Pablo, ~e • • • ' • ' .• • ' ' ~ $ • . • ' • ' l in the country. A STATE OfFICIAL call~ it ••an important step" toward cleaner air. Auto manufacturers, on the other hand, say the re- quirement will mean: -An increase in purchase1 prices of from $5 to $180, depend- ing on a variety of factors;_ -A drop in fuel economy of 5 percent to 15 percent; -A smaller selection of dif- ferent models, because not all models can be modified to meet the standards. TO MEET the tougher regula- tions, the 1977 cars will be equipped with the conlroversial catalytic converters that remove pollutants from exhaust gasses. Stricter 1977 standards were scheduled to go into effect for the eotire country under the Cederal Clean Air Act. But EPA Ad- ministrator Russell Train recom- mended earlier this year that th e standards be delayed because o( potential health hazards from the converters. CALIFORNIA officials, in ask- ing to be exempted·from the de- lay, said they believe the dangers from converters have been vast- ly exaggerated. Tom Quinn, chairman of the California Air Resources Board, said Tuesday that Train had told him receiitly he regretted mak- ing the recommendation. "Everything that has come out since th e warnings of health hazards has confirmed our judg-· ment that there isn·t any im- mediate sulfate danger with catalysts," s aid Quinn. Red Leader Sick LONDON (AP) -Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev may be suffering from cancer of the. jaw, the Daily Telegraph 's Pt1oscow correspondent reported today. The correspondent~ .John Mille r, said there were "fresh re- ports" that Brezhnev _was having radiation therapy for jaw cancer. Parole Date Set Sirhan Sirhan, 31, sentenced . to death in the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, will be paroled from San Quentin on Feb. 23, 1986, after serving 16 years and 9. months in prison. H o m osexual Mo m .to Keep 2 Children LOS ANGELES ·<AP ) -Two children of a self-admitted homosexual woman will be al- lowed to live with her, under a ruling by the s uburban Torrance Superior Court. Lynda 1\-lae Chaffin, who lost custody of he r two daughters after she admitted to being ales- bian, wa's granted a modification. Tuesday of the original custody order. THREE PSYCHOLOGICAL experts testified living with fi.1rs. Chaffin would not be detrimental to her daughters, aged 15 and 12. The girls ran away last January from their legal home \.\1ith Mrs. Chaffin's parents in l\·Iarysville, Wash., and had been living with their mother. LAST JAN. 31, the original custody was upheld by the 2nd District Court of Appeal, which ruled denying Mrs. Chaf(in custody of her children was not entirely due to her admission that she had been a homosexual. Cheryl Bratman. a law student intern "'ho worked on the case, said the custody inodiCi cation \\'as obtaln,d... becau.se the Tor· ranee court agreed w.ilh experts \\'ho !"aid "it ~oufd be detrimen- ~al for the children to be taken away from 'their mother at this time." CITH( CAP 1974 Levi's can1natch· any kid. Sure, kids are tough. tlrl's death,.which is being in· _ veetigated as a murder. ------------J, .,....,,. o,,,,__ A11" Ta%.l11ereflff SACRAMENTO CUPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., laced with a 'shrinking budget surplus and mounting demands tor in- creased spending, dug in deeper today in opposition to new taxes nexlyear. ' • "I'm not going to support any increase in general taxes, be s·aid. "I 'm going to resist very strongly efforts that will make that a necessity a year or two down the road.'\ Brown discussed taxes with reporters Tuesday following announcement of updated fis- cal estimates which showed state government in the fiscal year starting July 1 'fould spend $257 million more tban it took from taxpayers. Tflr ee Audit..,.. GuUt" 111 Fraud Ll:>s ANGELES (UPI) -Three Cor~er auditors o( Equity Funding Corp. of America, which went bankrupt 'in one of the largest business Crauds in U.S. history, were convicted in Federal Court Tuesday of securities Craud and filing fa,lse statements with .the government. . • . U.S. District Court Judge Jesse W. Curtis ordered Julian S.H. Weiner Solomon Block and Marvin A. Lichlig4 to return to court. June ~for sentencing. They were among 22 persons indicted in the' massive securities (raud case. Slaf11 SLA Metrlber'• B r o d 1er Talia SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Slain Symbionese Liberation Army member Patricia "Mizmoon" Soltysik came to her brother's 3chool one day in 1973. She told him Marcus Foster deserved to be killed. Fred Sollysik, testi(ying Tuesday at lhe trial o( two reputed SLA members charged with F<M;ter's murder, said her visit was the last time she spoke to him before her death in 'fiery shootout with Los Angeles police. Stephe~ Weed, fiance of fugitive heiress Patricia Hearst, also made a brteC appearance for the defense at the trial o( Russell LitUe and Joseph Remiro who are accused of the Cyanide bullet staying of the Oakland Schools superintendent and the attempted murder of his deputy, Robert W. Blackburn. S uper.,f.....,, t o Prebe SWAT llnlt SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Diego County supervisors have asked Sheriff John Duffy to meet with them June 4 to discuss the sheriff's Special Weapons and Tactics squad. The unit, commonly known as SWAT, was heavily criticized by the county grand jw:y after a February incident in Oceanside in which a lS·year-old boy was mistaken tor a sniper and killed. 2Arral91N!d 111 l l Million Fra 11d LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two men were arraigned Tuesday on charges of grand theft and fraudulent stock sales for allegedly bilking more than $1 million from investors who sank money in a purported "fuel-less engine'' which ran on the static electricity in the air. · ' Edwin V. Gray Sr.~ 50, Northridge, and Richard B. Hacken- . berger, 52, Van Nuys, were ordered to a_ppear June 2 for a pre· liminary hearing. Gray was freed on $10,000 bond and Hacken- berger released on $5,000 bond. · in the auto and a search turned up 18 grams of il in Mrs. J\.1cCarlney's purse. Asseinhlyman Denies 'Fix~ .. . . Of Citatio n .SACJ.\AAIENTO (AP) -The CaliCornia Hiihway Patrpl says it reissued a ' ticket to A !:i - semblyman Louis Pap&n tor ~ving 90 miles per hour;n a 55 mile zone after an are ;,com·~ mander erroneously Voiiled ft. Papan, <D-Daly City), says he didn't try to get it Cixed. · NEWSMAN Bill Branch of KOVR-TV in Sacramento said 'fuesday he started making in- quiries after th·e station received an anonymous call that PaPan ·· had received a ticket and that it had been voided. CHP spokesman Kent Milton confirmed that it h.ad been voided by· the Vallejo area com- mander, but said jl was done "in error" and was "inapPropriate." ' THE CHP zone commander . had the ticket reissued,. M,illon said. · · Papan told KOVR he got the ticket last Wednesday while driv- ing on Interstate 80 between San Francisco and Sacramento. He also said he contacted the CHP lo question the way he was clocked by the patrolman, not because he wanted to get the ticket overturned. ''I'M GOING to pay it. I did not make any threats. The allega- tions are not ·true," Papan told KOVR. Branch said the nnonymou·s caller claimed there was a pat- tern of lawmakers threatening to vote againstCHP salary'rais~s to getoutoCtiCkels. . But ipew t:HP Commiuioner Glen Craig s-ald be knew of t.hl"ee or tour legislators ticketed in the last 30 days, Const Guard reparted. ' THE .BODY of Glenn· Doug~as Page, 26, .was recovered ntipr Angel Island, a spokesman s~d The Coll-St Guard J &id Page left the San Pablo Yacht 1.fartf>r Monday w-itp Kenneth Wllli ~gis of Richmond. The search <:qn· tinued (9r Williams. I Elsewhere, the unpredicfod _stor.m clO$ed roads, flip~ o •r a small aircraft at San Car OS Airport, felled trees and' caused power qutages, perhaps Qie mpsl serious in the east San Franci1co Bay area where-thousands~or homes were out of power::,.at times. • THE WE<\THERMAN blamed \he storm on a low pressure a11:ea which today dtifted eastward., "Higher pressures edging inlo California will herald a return, lo more typical May weather," s~i<l a National Weattler Serv,4ce forecaster. ., 4 A small craft adVlsoty was ill in eCfect for northwest winds 15 to 30 miles per hour in the an Francisco Bay area. 1 GALE WARNINGS were in..er- fect early_ ·tpday-for gusty winds of 20 to·40' miles Per hour on the far northwest coaSt. 1 It will be warmer in most 2'ec· tions today, with Bay area highs ran1tqg from 60s to low 70s. Th'o mercury. should climb to the mid 70s in the valleys. t A warming.trend in the Sierra Nevada will begin Thursday,Ahe weatherman :taid. Utility E Vict s ' P U C Meets ' I SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Diego Gas and Electric Company says the Stale PubJjc Utilities Cbm· misiil>n can no longer ~se SDG_&E's audi~ocium for ils beanngs; · SDG&& president Walter ZWau •aid. Tuesday it woutdr 00 betlerlor both 1rou,. it tbe l';\JC • round another place to m~ ill San Diego. •, . ' • Fur Clearance. ·F 9ur days only. May 22, 23, 24 and 25. , .... ' .. It's the season for smart shoppers to put their m"9n.ey on a fur.,Prlces are nicer. than they've been al.I year! Natu"ral Tourmaline® mink/leather stroller; Now $899. Dyed ranch mink stroller: Now $l599. Natural Tourmaline® mirr< cape. fll"ow $399. Natural Autumn Haze® mihk)~et. !'low $599. Natural Orchid Autumn Haze® mink coat<1Now $1499. Natural Tourmaline® mink· strQiler: Now $1Q99. Natural Azurene® mink c..,e. Now '$699. ' But Levi's• Oouble·knee outfits are tOugher. Because the jeans have twice theatrength right where you need it. In the knees.And they look sensational, " Natural Autumn Haze® mink coat. Now $1999, . Dyed ranch niiril; coat. No\v $2199. . Natural ranch mink and white mirik.shlrt: Now $499. ' Especially when you add the rugged, 11ls handsome thatching jacket. It's a great match. An outfit that's perfec t gag for dressing up. But wears like iron when it's time to play. See our supe r selectlon of shapes and colors. In sizes 2~14 . • Fall Into the Gap . We're strong on kid stuff. WESTlllHSTER • WESTMI NSTER MAU • Plf llAE 194-5399 Of'.t70ATIAW...MO~SAT. llt0t.SUM.NOOMTOI . . Tip-dyed raccoon battle jacket. Now $399. Natural Tourmaline® mink jacket: Now $1899. •• Dyed ranch mink Jacket, NOW S1799 .. Bleached white mink.straight.stole. Now $1699 .. Yellow-dyed and Whlt .. dyed mink jacket. Now $1~. Natural Apoll~ mink coat. Now $3299, . All subject to prior sale. Ask about ourcreclifplans: Robinson's Fur Salon • 9Ermt Miftk • usdM' At#n. Ml fwn llbtltld to lhow oountrv ~of lt'nPtft.:il fYn. ' . I , 2· FASHIOJ"' ISLAND SHOP WED., THURS. li·SAT. 10.6:30, FRI: i 9, SUN. 12-5. • • 7 • Vt • be pe m m: WC SU ca in J A1 « cl Ai fii 'I ~ Il fc d II e (j (j .. 1 l'-i ;. i ~ 1 ~ ~ • . . ... ,,1 ••..••... , ...... _. .... ' f ' • • ' . l Jr:rlfte • Today's Closing. N.Y. Stoeks i • EDl'Tl9f'I VOL. 68, NO. 141, 7 SECTIONS, 86 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA WEONESOAY, MAY 21, 1975 TEN CENTS 141.% .Malpractice llike Jolts Doctors By ALAN DIKKIN-- Of llN D•llr Pl--Mlit! Orange County doctors have been slapped with another 141 percent Increase" in the cost or malpractice i ns urance pre- miums even as they w'enl into a work slowdown tn -protest over such insurance costs. The increase, effective July 1, came in a letter lo 8,500 doctors in Orange Co unty and Los- J2~ 01• Angeles-County_w.ho are.insur.ed oy Travelers Jnsurance. The 'hike C·iiTI.e with the Legislature in special session to work on bills to solve the crisis. But the strike spread to two more cowitietfin Southern Calfifornia. Hospitals in Orange County to- day informed staffs that work hours will hive to be reduced. On the strike front, these were the developments today: Cost of Living Spu1·ts in April By The Assoe""l1ted Press Consumer prices in the Los A.ngeles m et ropolitan area corltinued spir.aling upward , climbing almost l percent in April, Department of Labor of. ficials said today, Department statistics indicat· ed an increaSe of 12 percenllin the '" UP'I T•,.,..... Nete f!.N. E.....,,1 Daniel Patrick Moynihan, former counselor to Presi· dent Nixon and ambassador to India, has been nominat· ed by President Ford·to be (h,e new U.S. ambassador to lbe United Nations, sue· ~edin g John A. Scali. ' ·' J ' cost of living as compared to April 1974, for Los Angeles and Orange Counties. Suzanne Sadowsky, head of the department's Southern California Bureau, said the con· sumer price index in the Los Angeles area in April was 155.6. meaning that it cost $15.56 to buy the same goods and services which cost $10 in the base year 1967. The pµrchasing power 0£ the 1967 dollar dropped to 64.3 cents 10.15% PETROLEUM HIKES SEEN. A4. fast·month, sb-e adde4. · Heavy,iner-ea1es-in transporta- tlon .'!Jld..:. )louain1 :..costs were large1y to blame for the rise in ApritiJ ~ cost of living, Miss Sadoiiky said. Nallllliiilly, (he rate of Inflation quicktnid a. bit in April as grocery prices reversed a two- nlonth declin e and helped push over-all consum'er prices up six· tenths or a percent •. Ute govern· mentreported today. --The April increase, though •double that of March, was in line with tile Administ'ration forecast of an • annual inflation rate of about I or 7 percent this year for the U.S. The White House had said it did not exeect the lower rate o( in· crease in March to continue. The-highest previous monthly increase this year occurred in January, when prices also rose by six·tenths of a percent across the country. Retail prices the past three months have risen at a seasonal· ly adjusted annual rate of 5.8 per· ISee PRICES, Page A2) 5 an .Juan Murder . . . Suspect lndi:cted In Second Death , The Riverside County District Attorney's orfice Tuesday issu·ed a second murde r -complaint 8gainst Gregory Glen Coates, 18, !ho is awaiting trial on charges 1fe atller ' Mostly Sunny skies through Thur s d d~. Warmer with highs "ln the 1 upper 60s at the beacties to ]70 inland areas. Lows tonight near so . I NSIDE T ODAY Laguna Beacfl isn't the only plaCe where beachg~r• in the . altogether art catching city official• with their ordioonc11 down. It '1 .a nalionwfdt phtnom"'1on. See Page AJJ. ' 1 ... I he burned his atepmother to de· ·ath May 4 in her San ·Juan Capistrano home. Coates, held in Orange County Jail pending trial, was charged With lhe murde.r or Mira Loma hoU6ewife Jean Stephens, 37, at her home Jan. 22. Riverside· S'heriff's in· v,-tigators al leg~ Coates shot the woman twice in ,tile head while smothering her with a pillow. Del3ils bn the· Riverside Coun· ty case were not immediately available but a spokesrri.an for the Sheriff's off.ice alleged Coates also raped the woman. He was d.escribed b ¥ in· vestigators as "a friCnd of the family,'' having known one of Mrs. Stephens' children. Coates has been in custody since May 6 when he was arrest· ed in connection with the burning death of his stepmother, Mrs. Betty Goates, 47, of 33911 Via . Agua, San Juan Capistrano. Coates, who lived at 6366 ' Stobbs St., Riverside, Is the son of Mearl Goates, 4~ who shared the San Juan home with the dead wbman. Coat .. had legally changed his narDe fr9r.n the eariie.r GoateS , in· vestigators said. It j& •llued that Co•I•• had bourid li11 atepmolber ·tiarid ond foot and then set the rri.aureSs on nre.. The Nmllnl of • towel were dl~overed over ,the victim's moUth by. <homicide in · vHtlgawrs. ' -Physicians-In SaniaJiarbara arul_Ventura counties have voted to join the strike beginning next TuesdaY. - -Another report said that several hospitals in San Diego County are expected lo be affect· -ed by the anesthesiologists' ac · ·lion by the end of this week . -Surgeries at 41 hospitals in Southern California"Were report· ed do\11n today 80 percent. The loss~olre:venue rrom wouU:i-be patiepts was estimated at $400,000 a day. Ho~g Memorial Hospital of· ficials in Newport Beach an· nounced today that elec - •tive surgeries, which amount to about 7S to 80 percent of the .operations at the hospital, will be .discontiftued from next Tuesday. 'This will result in a revenue loss of $28,000 .a day. 40 percent or thedatJy tn.c..o.me.. accord.1.QiJo acting administrator l..ouis Kaa. Kaa liaid I.fiat Hoag is trying lo reduce. "'ork hours by 40 percent by urging personnel to take early vacatious and leaves of absence. He said that the hospital may soon be on a four-day week and that layoffs e\lentually may ~ necesasary. ,• Tom Richards, administrator of Cos ta 1\1.esa Memorial Hospil<ll.. s.aid tha.t he expe~ttld that only tmergen<.·y and urgent surgeries will be performed at the hospital by the end or the "'eek. ·'\\l e arc taking a wail and see attitude, '''atchin~ the sur· gery schedu le .·· Richard'i gaid. ··we will react ,,,i(h voluntary time off at [ir.s t but if it beCOffil'S more traum atic then "'e ""Ill have to take rnore traumatic <See DOCTORS. Pal(eAZl inAfr·ica r ~ • f • • 0.11# f'lloit f'Mte B; P•t.rk k 0'0.llM11 FIRST LADY BETTY FOR.D MET 11 GEE THRONGS TODAY AT PENDLETON • Mra. Ford Chat• Wlth ,Cemp .Com nder Gen. Paul Graham Prior to Her Tour ~~.::::.::..:.::::::.:::==..::.:.:::=:;;3-C:::..::..:r=.:::.:..:....::.=.cc.=.--=, 3 GMR~ealls "D~~~~a~=!::dlo· day it is FecaUirig about 50 ,000 current model Chevrolets~ .,P6ntiacs, Oldsmobil_es and . Buie ks because sortfe models may contain steering, ac· celeraior~ and air conQiti_oning defects. <Related story, Al4) · GM said three separate recall actions are in· volved . About.·3,100 Chevrolet Camaros and Novas, Pon· liac Fkebirds and Buick Apollos and Skylarks, the company Safd, m ay contafn defec,tf? tha t cou ld c.ause drivers•to l-Ose steering control. Another defect which might mt1ke it impossible for cars to idle pr~perlY, may involve ::ibout' 16.000 Pontiac Venturas, Oldsmobile Omegas and Buick Apollos and Skylark~. the company said. In addition, GM said, about 31 ,000 Camaros may contain faulty fan blades in the air conditioning u11it . These could break under engine vibration. No injuries have peen reported as a result of the ,defects, GM said. Milkman Rescues Patient: in. Hills Fire A milkman maki1'g his morn- 1ing rounds at Laguna I-tills Leisure World Tuesda:y was credited with saving the life of an eldetlY cancer pa~ient. Firemen said Adohr Farms driVer Tom Obenshaw was de- liverfng milk to t he residence of .Panel OKs Hathauay W,ASH!NGTON (UP() - The Senate Interior COm· mitte.e toda·y recom · mended confirmation of former Wyamin·g Gov, ·Stanley K. Hathaway as In- terior Secretary. The vote A. E . Carter, 317 A Via Buena Vista, when he saw smoke com· ing from t'he four-plex unit. Obenshaw rushed inside the building.-picked Carter off the floor and dragged him outside lo safety, firemen said. Recently operated on for cance'r, Carter had been to the bathroom a nd was walking back to his bedroom when he was overcome by smoke and dropped to the floor, according to the firemen on the s~ene. F.ire Capt. Tim Sappok said the blaze, started in the bedroom by a smoldering cigarette, caused $1,500 damage to the building and tts contents. "Mr. Obenshaw's heroic ac· lion definitely saved the life of ·'the Leisure World resident," Sappok said. was9to4. · , Sen. Jo ho Glerip, <D· , .• 'l'llg..hhiolll< L..-.::1..,l'· ~ ·'. 'OhfO>. joi·ne d three. ·i 1 ,?'\~-.. ~~~-, Democra.ls who a'nounce<\,1• •. ':WA!IHTl\(GTON (IJ!,'Q \!..... 'flic llI>l'!l!l!l<>n~eatJl~fuamsl gen•\!! ArD'ied S.,rvices.~~il· oonlil'ma'Uoil or tl(e,iorm.~ II"' h~ w""'nea,.l!ainsto\i& a· Republican gove= • ,)Of •f;J mti•t.~y fo~~.' ,o .. '!ll'· . Halhawat'• r ~ 'j L ~.... ""!th' been under 1tt.1 Y ilt(. sea * ma11r.vw~r clft'l c vironmcnt.alist.s. ~ • Pa u~l a ;pf>st·~etn' a o 1i9Uc~'.lt (b m~I ed. .... ,,,,. .. ' • .1 1 • J ,.,,, I " • Be t ty F o r d Visits Viets At P e ndle ton By CAROL MOORE Ct,~. D•Uv Pllol St•ll Betty Ford brought greetmgs from her President husband and ·'the warmth of the American people" to Vietnamese refugees in Camp Pendleton tcxlay. "The President. our ctiildren • and I have suffered along with ·your misfortunes and want to A REPORTER VIEWS '.LITTLE SAIGON'-7 give )iou help, happiness and sun· sh in e," wa s her greeting. trans lated to a crO\vd of several hundred in a recreation area. As the first member of the First Family to visit any of the refugees' compounds. Mrs. Ford toured the largest of the tent cities and emphasized that she C'ame to meet eac h and every one of the refugees. ·'All of us here are volunteers. \Villing to help you adjust. Things ~will be better over the hill, but it will take time.·· Mrs. Ford had lengthy con· \'e rsations with both former President Nguyen Cao Ky of 'South Vietnam and ex· P resident Khoy of Ca1nbodla. The First Ludy's entourage passed through dining areas. a classroom in its third day of leart\ihg English and a Post Ex· change set up U;i oin. open-air marketplaC'e for refugees. <See VISIT, Page A2) .THI RD CALLER BOUGHT YACHT "The ad produced many calls and I ~old the yacht on the third call. I'm very pleased." That's the success story fold by the Huntington Beach mJn who placed this ad in the Daily1Pil~t : COLUMBIA 22. 3sniis. , ,.kqQ.l.,tJlcle<, cockllil 1 . ''"· ;eu~t.ons. Ne.wport Ip \ . $!800. J~X·XXXX , ,·If you ha~e a 'boat o sails to ' s.,1t: call &12:5678. J.t onl ~ak~:,; lJ (cw words l~ lhc j-fght J}Ja ce'1 to 1 rnnke a sale. . · Along: the 'Or<ingtl CU.st, he right place is the Daily ·11\101 -. I ' 3 Taken At Game Reserve DAR ES SALAA!\f, Tanzania <UP I ) -Three American stu· dents were kidnaped frOm a "'iidlife research station by armed Africans in a remote area of northwestel-~n-Tanzania, U.S. embassy officials said today. A Dutch student also 'vas ab· ducted. The sour<.·cs said the kidnaping took place !\1onday night at a game research station run by Jane Goodall, author of several books on ani ma! behavior. <Stanford University said il had been informed by State Department officials in Tanzania that 40 armed men from Zaire seized the three students and an administrative assistant. <Stanford said the students kid· naped were Barbara B. Smuts, 24, An'n Arbor, ~tich.; Kenneth S. Smith, 22, ·Garden Grove, and Carrie\tane 1-lunter, 21. Atherton, Calif.J The research station. in the Gombe g3me reserve. is located north of Kigom a on the s hore of Lake Tanganyika near the Bur·un- di border. 1'he e mbassy asked the Tanza· nian government to launch an in· · vestigation. the sources said. The Americans and the Dutchman were among about 30 students \vorking at the station. l\1ost of the students are from Stanford. Miss Goodalt and other me m- bers or the research station ,,·it· nessed the kidnaping. They said the kidnapers "'ere armed with rifles. but their identity ,,·as not known. ' <See TANZANIA, Page A2) ·* * * U.S. Citizens Terrorized ' Aro und World .\ From Wire Services I Americans ca m e under in- creasing attack today throughout1 the world. Two U.S. Air Force" of· ricers v.'ere murdered in Iran, an Ame rican civili an and two· l\larines were held hostage in Laos. and three Stanford stu· dent s were kidnaped in Tanzania. Terrorists stopped a car carry· ing two unarmed U.S. Air Force officers to work this morning, or·, FORO SAYS BOMBING NOT PUNITIVE. A4. dered their Iranian driver to the 1 floor of the car, then shot and killed the AmeriC'ans. 1 The U.S. Embassy identified the dead as Col. Paul R. Shaffer Jr .. 45, a native of Bryan, Ohio. 1 and Lt. Col. Jack J . Turner, 45. from Carbondale, Ill. The Iranian government said the assassins. who escaped, were fi1arxisl guerrillas. and "no ac· lion will be s pared to find,. the murderers and bring them to justice." A woman who said she spoke for the "J.ranian People's War- riors Association" called the As· soC'iated Press and said "the ex· ecution of Ameri can officers was a reply"'to the execution of nine Iranian revolutionaries in prison last month." She also said that as Shah 1 J\·tohammed Reza Pahlevi is "a s tooge of the Americans, w therefore murder America.ns."' Meanwhile, a mob or about·200 Laotian leftists demanding the· ouster of all Americans with the U.S. Agency for Jnlernational Development seized the AlD tSeeTERROR,1'ageAU • • • • • • • --·- n .f ' DAii. Y PILOT Doctors ' . Implore~ To Cease SACRAMENTO (U PI) -Some lawmakers said today strikirig physicians have made their poinl and should return to lheir jobs while the Legislature fipds solu· tiona for the medical malpractice emer1ency. "I call on the doctors and anesthesiologisl s to r elurn to urelr Wbr-k-now, their point has been made," said Sen. George Deukmejian, minority leader of the Senate. But striking doctors felt lhat they were no c.loser lo aetting re· asonably-priced malpractice in- surance now than when the crisis began. · There a ppeared to be a grow- ing frustration among some lawmakers Tuesday, because .they Celt lhe Legislature was "go· ,ing all oul" lo solve the im· .mediate and long-range malprac- tice crisis and the doctor$ have not. responded by returning to their jobs. 1 Many physicians have boycotted surgery theaters in San Franc isco. Sacramento and areas or Southern Ca liCornia to protest m edical malpractice in- , sur:ance premium incre~ses or as much as400 percent. ~ "I think we have proved that v•e have moved as fast as poss i- ble to provide legislation for im- mediate malpra ctice insurance premium relief for the doctors," ~aid Assembly Speaker Leo T. A1cCarthy, adding th at doctors should go back to work now. Dr. Donald Walker, chairman · of the anesthesiologists section of the San Francisco Medical Socie- . ty, sajd legislation to immediate- ly roll back malpractice rates would force doctors to pay Jess ~ow and more in the long run. DeukmeJiBn, a Long Beach · Republican, warned that some · hospitals face closure because of the strike and pa tients who need medical attention must be cared for . "Nothing will be gained and · much will be lost if the doctors persist in curtailing their 15ervices, ''said Deukmejian. . He said a special session has been called by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to deal with Jong· range reforms . * * * FroaPogeAI DOCTORS measures." One hospital not affected is tlle Orange CQunty Medical Center where doc tors are either . 'employes of the county or the University of California and are + covered by the group policies of those agencies. In a development on the legislative front, Assemblyman ·Bob Wilson, a L a Mesa Democrat who is chairman of the Joint ·Legislative Audit Committee, in· troduced a resolution directing his committee to probe the un- derwriting of malpractice in· aurance. Wilson's action was hailed by the California Trial Lawyers As · sociation 1,1,.hich said in a s tate- tnent: " ... it proposes the first. real solution to the medical. malpractice problem." T he bill's introduced In the special session include ones to: · -Set up state boards to di s- .qua Ii f y doctors for inco m · petency. -Creat e an ad mini strative system for handling malpractice ·claims, wlth maximum fees for lawyers, a three·year statute or ·1imitations on claims, and state review of insurance premium s. -Put the state in the malprac- tice insurance business. -Limit doctor and hospital fees. and hold down unnecessary ·construction of ho~pital beds. OAA.NGE COA.ST DAILY PILOT Robert N , Weed Prf\1 ... "I •M '°UDll .... t Jack R. Curley V+<, ~.\!fot"I '""' c;...,..,1 W"'Off Thomas Keevll ll:•llo• Thomas A. Murpl'l lne ...... ,!"tllOllOf' Charles H. Loos Rlchard·P. Nall ,UOlil•nl w ... 91119 lo9!10t1 Telephone l7141 '42..u21 Classlllact Adv1rtlslnt 642··5'71 S.MltlHK-V•llt• "It.., Ofll<• Sl1·6310 '''"'I-en (lt,,.nW 4•S·06:JO '''''!ffll, 1•fl Ot•ntt <·o•~t Pu1tlh~ln9 Gf"llN"'· 1<11•M .. 11IOl"ln, m.,.1,11-. .,.u .. ..i "''lltt •• •d•1111.-monh ~••t •n rn1, te '""•tu~•O .. u~ .. t 1.-l••I "'''"'""'~ 01 (#111'' .. ~'·#Mr . I I h <Ol'ld ll•tt , ...... •••Cl •I (Mii Mt ... C.llltl(11Mi. ill'llK•llll""' .. .;..-•lo• •l.CIO"*"'lllf I ff -i1 M.IO """1~1,; """'""' _IMI...,._ U,IO ~"'·· • .... ' ·w~ ,!;"'~ .. . --_ ... ' Surfer R igh t·o f·wave Body Whompers, Board Ri~n in Conflict 111 FRIDERICll SCRO!!M!!llL l~t.r that tho council relnatat. Arollill•,4,~U.t, a ,11'11 Gabriel ' ' Oi"ijleat11,,.1e1 ... " the "mornln&• only" policy for banl<er and numerous Sin ' • board surrers. Clemente residenl•. Connrmed body and board sur-Essentially the 11a me message City CJ erk Af ax Qe~i aaid no fers alike search ror an elusive is carried In l ette~s from a 14'tler1 have beep. received favor· oceanic form called the right Corona de l Mar youtht a n ln1theDewpolJcy. wave. When they find It, they Com· pete for it. So it has been for years at Trafalgar Lane beach in San Clemente. ll'a better known as T Street. Lifeguards often have been summoned to mediate disputes arising at the T Street break - the are• where the waves form and roll out . Body surfers have been struck by surf boards. Board surfers have been struck by body sur· fe ra . Lifeguards have been alternately hec kled and ignored. Last summ er there was a partial thawing of relations at T Street, described by some as one of the best bod y surfing beaches along the California coast. Under the city's surfing or- dinance, board surrers were al- lowed to uae T Street until 11 a.m. on weekdays and 10 a.m . on weekends from June 1 to Sept. 30. Body surfers could use the lieach the rest or the da y. Superviso r Seeks Ban On Nudity • Oran1e County Supervisor Thomas Riley said Tuesday he will propose that the board of Supervisors adopt an urgency or<Jinance thPt would prohibit publi c ·nudity in unincorporated areas of the county. (Related Story PageAI2). AC'cordi ng to Riley, the pro- posed ordinance authored by county counsel Adrian Kuyper is both constitutional and effective. FN•P-..AJ ' TANZANIA The embassy sources s aid there wa1 no a_pparent motive for the kiitnai>l"n-1 •nd relations between the atudenll at the re- search atation and local villagers were1ood. However. the border area or Burundi near the area Qf the kid· napln& '!"as the scene of mllttary operations against dissident tribetmen this monlh. The U.S. emba11y in the Burundi capltiJ of Bujumbura also was working ~ on the kidnap case, the sources said. Tanzanian police were flown to the scene in a helicopter and Derek Brysoon, dlr~or of the Tan1anla national parka, al10 new there to' ·help with 'the .In· vesti~ation . · Monk ey B udness Last mon th , however, Cpun· cllman Thomas O'Keere, a board s urfer himself, gained support from two other councilmen for a new policy to allow both body and board surfers to use T Street at the same time. If enacted, ~tiley's otdinance would m ake it a misdemeanor for any person over 10 years old to appear in a public place, in· eluding beaches, without opaque covering over at least some por· lions or their bod y. In announcing that he will ask for adopti,on of the ordinance next week, Riley said public nudity Is offensive to large num- bers of people. Random Shots Kill .3 in LA First Lady Betty Ford, on her first solo venture outside Washington since recovering from breast cancer last year, snuggles up to a furry friend named Loretta at the San Diego Zoo. O'Keefe's plan, which was to be tried this summer, was to divide the break by placing a buoy in the water and a marker on shore, thus creating an im- LOS Ai'!GELES <UPI) Turee persons were shot tn the head and killed and another was seriously wounded late Tuesday in a four block area of South Los An1ele1. aginary line. Ex-Fairview A ide Body surfers would be al· lowed in the water on the north side of the line, board surfers on the10Uth. I f adopted next week the supervisor's ordinance ~ill beef- fective immedi a~ely. Laguna Beach has just adopted an emergency ordinance - which made the law immediately efCective -outlawing nudity for persons over 10. Identification of the victims was being· withheld Pending notification of relatives. Police said the shootings, all within a two hour[eriod, were apparently unrelate . On County Trial Board surfers would be re- quJred to wear ·surf leashes - six-foot elastic lines connectine their surfboard to their ankle, thus reducing the chance that a A one·time Fairview State Hospital aide, accused of brutali- ty against mentally retarded male patients when he came back to work there after two years as chief bear trainer in an amU1ement park, ·went on trial again tOday. Angel Hernandez, 3S, of Alta Loma, ta in the sixth day of hl1 trial before Judge Robert C. Todd in Harbor Judicial Diltrlct TERROR ••• of Cambodia ind South Vietnam. Twelve Americans were stiJl under house arrest by leftist stu- dents in Savannakhet, the former right·wing stronChold in central Laos which was taken over by the Communist Pathet Lao Tuesday. U.S. embassy of£icials said they lost radio telephone contact with the si x U.S. AID officials and the ir w ives, although they believed they were safe. In Vientiane U.S. Charge D'Af- faires Christian Chapman met with Prime Minister Souv,nna Phou ma and Foreign Mini\ter Phoumi Vongvichit , the ranking Communist official in the coali· lion government, to protest the seizure of the U.S. compound. In the third incident, three American students have been kidnaped from a remote animal research station in Tanzania by armed Africans. The reports said a Dutch stu- dent was also abducted. About 30 students work at the station, most of them rrom Stan· ford University. Supervisors Okay $3,500 Pro m otion Orange County government wtll chip in half the eaUmated $7 ,000 needed to launch an in- tensive public' relations cam- paign over the next two months to dr'aw customers to shoos in Dana Point Harbor .. The County Board or Supervisors voted unanimously Tuesday to allocate $3,'°'1 in harbor tidelands funds to the pro· motional project which could become an on&oing effort, ac· cording to merchants. Supervisors Laurence Schmit and Robert Battin voted for the funds, but they s aid they still believe private enterprise should pay for its own promoUona . But Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose d istrict includes the coun· ty-owned harbor, said COWlty government LI a partner jn all en- terprt1e1 there and must bear- part of the r••Pon1lbility for ac· ti vi ties that co1t money. . The Dana P oi nt H a rbor Merchants Astoclatlon, a loosely knit organization of people who hold 1ub·lease1 on 1tore sites in the harbor, made the proposil for jbint funding .. Supervl1ors were told that the auoclation alone couldn't afford the kind of campaign needed to brtna visitors to the harbor and Ila 1hop1 • l " board could stray and strike a Court on charges of aasault Bnd body surfer. battery against two hospital The plan has been ripped In 14 clients. letters and petitions bearing 112 Dynamite Found PRICES •.. Charges were filed following names that will be presented to analysis by the California At-the city council, meeting at 7:30 toi;ney Gene.ral's Office of toni&htatCityHall. · cent in the U.S. During the same evidence submitted bY officials one of those unhappy with the three-month period in 1914, retail of the Costa Mesa hospital tar the new plan is Robert Gardner, pre· prices rose at an adJwted annual handicapped. . . sidlne judge of the state Court of rate of 11.8 percent. ORANGEBU.RG, S.C. (UPI) - A 95-stlck dynamite bomb - powerful enou1h to level the buildtn1 11and anythln& near lt,.. -wu found today In tJi1 bue· ment of the Orangeburg County <;ourlhou1e. The. building, and all oUter structure• within a two block radlu1, were evacuated un· der police order and demoUUon experts were called in from nearby Ft. Jackson Army Train· Hernandez was employed, Appeals In San Bernardino. The Labor Department sa:d before being fired, tn the Gardner is the author of the last month's increaae nationally Bebavior Adjustment Prorram, book, ''The Art of Body SUrting.'' re£lected an upturn in food who1e director, Dr .. .Bernat He has been body surfing at T prices. following two months of Henkovets, was one of the first Street ror 30 years. decline. and a large increaae in witnessescalledtothe1tand. ~ Gardner recommends in his nonfood commoditie5! in& Center. 4 Hernandez testified Tuesday in 1-----..,-----------------'-----------------hls non-jury trial that he was ·employed by the state hospital system in 1958, rec•lved his psychiatric technician ·certiflca· lion in 1959 and has taught staff trainees in classes on behavior modification. The defendant also testifi ed that he tOok a two years' le.,.ve of absence from Fairview to w-qrk as supervisor or bear training 'al the now -defunct J apan ese Village and Deer P,ark. amua~· ment center tn Buena Park. He began his psychiatric techniclan career a t Paclflc State Hospital in Pomona and later transferred to the big Costa Mesa fa cility for the retarded, housing more than 1,700 patients. The two m ale patients he al- legedly assaulted for apparent misbehavior are both adults, one in his 30s. on one of the wards, hospital officials have said. The defendant was fired im· mediately after a review of his alleged handlin g of the men and misdemeanor criminal charges were initiated later. Hernandez was notified of the criminal co mplaint earlier this year and surrendered hims.elf directly to the court, according to Costa Mesa police, who said he was not booked into jail directly. Cou rt officials said as lternandez took the stand to testify in his own behalf again that a verdict could be reached tOOa y. Sever al employes of the bi& hospital were charged with similar o£fenses during a staff upheaval. VISI T ..• Within each tent a particular child would attract her attention and a clasp of the hand. Older children, oblivious to the pro· mlnence or their visitor, were uehered forth by their parents for recognition by the President's wire. But her arrival at the outdoor sports area-a basketball court actually -was announced ·tn bolh English 11nd Vietnamese languages and attracted a cheer· ln1 crowd . 1· Mrs. Ford 's visit tasted less than an hour, after which she de· parted for El Toro MCAS and o fligh t back l o Washington tonight. Both tht' presidents tipped her hand and asked that she relay •their 1ratitude to the President. "That'• what we're here for," she replied. Mrs. Ford was wearing 3 two· piece beiee suede suJt with brown polka dot scarf and Jooko'd healthy as she wound up her Calllornla tour. - I Model FP1· 170T FRIGIDAIRE Family Size REFRlGERATOR y OHL S3ft95 I ,, flll l•.IDAIU HU VY DUTY' WASHER s2599s DRYER s179ts , This Frigidaire Heavy Duty Washer c an deliver dependable. trouble-free performance with its heavy duty motor and other components used in Frigidaire COmmerclal Washers. You can wash perrrenent press. cottons, and heavy work clothes efficiently. or reduce Wfl' on delicates with Normal and Gentle Waah cycles. The rretchlng Frigidaire Dryer lets you dry up to 18 POUndS of laundry all at once. With the turn of a dial, match the drying Um~ to the tyl)e of load, Including permanent press and knits. '399'' FRIGIDAIRE LAUNDRY CENTER . , This space·t'avino Frigidaire Laund~ Center combines a family-size washer and dryer Into a single slim• cabtner. Ptugs Into any separate 15 amp · conventlonal household circuit I ).,- . Jlunthlgt«an Beaelt F.oant•ln Valley . ,. w • EDITIO'N .* * VOL. 68, N0 ... 141, 7 SECTIONS, 86 PAGES I ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' ' . T oday's Cl osing N.Y.Stoeks WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1975 TEN CENTS 141 % Malpractice Hike Jolts Doctors By ALAN DIKKIN 01111• Dall, ~ii.tltlH Orange County doctorshave been slapped with-·unother 141 percent increase In the cost of -malpracti ce insurance pre· miums even as they·went into a work .slowdown in protest over •Uch insurance costs. The incre~se, effective July 1. cume in a letter to 8,500 doctors jn Orange County and Los . A:~~le:s County who ar e insuri:d o :a.v.eler&-lniiu.r_a_nce. The hik e i::a m e with the Legislature in special session to work on bills to solve the crisis. But the strike spread to two more counties in Southern Calfifornia. Hospitals in Orange County to- day in"formed staffs that work hours will have to be reduced . On the strike front, these were the developments today : -Physicians in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties have voted to join t~ strike beginning next Tuesday. -Another report said that several hospitals in San Diego Cou nty are expected to be affect· ,ed by the anesthesiologists' ac- ,tion by the end of this week,. -Surgeries at 41 hospitals in Southern California were report· ed down today 80 percent. The loss or revenue from would -be p atients was estimated at $400,000 a day. ltoag Memorial Hos pital of- fi cials in Newport Beach an· nounced toda y th at e lec· live surgeries, which amount to about 75 to 80 percent of the operations at the hos pital, will be discontinued from next Tuesday. This will result in a revenue loss of $28,000 a day, 40 percent or the dailY income, according to acting adQ'lin'istrator Louis Kaa. Kaa saia'lhat Hoagls LrY1ng to reduce work hours by 40 percent by urging personnel to take early vacatious and leaves of absence. He said that the hospital m ay soon be on a four·day week and that tayoffs eventuall y may be necesasary. Tom Richards, ad ministrator of Costa Me s a l\1emorial 1-lospital, said that he expected that onl y emergency and urgent surgeries will be performed at the hospital by the end of the week. "We are taking a wait and see atlitude, watching the sur- gery schedule," Ric hards said . "We will react wi th voluntary time off at first but if it becomes more traumatic then we v.·ill have to take more traumati<-" <See DOCTORS, Page AZ> 1Grove Student a in Africa. -' J2%VH_,, Cost of Living Sp111·ts in April By The ASso clated Press Coqsumer prices in the Los An~e l es metrpcpolitan are~ continued spiraling upward, clim bing almost 1 percent in April, Department of Labor of· ficials.said today. Department statistica indicat· ed an increase of 12 percent in the Tran.sf er Of Pmrol A,pprpwtl '• By WILL1A91' sciiJIEIBEa ottMo.11, .. u .. ...., Over theobJectlcinaot~rt Be'1ch city offieialal"Orange CoUDty s upervisors voted ''.4-1 to- day t o transf e~ t~e c ounty Harbor Patrol to the sheriff's de- partment. Su pervisor T homas Riley, whose dist rict includes Newport and Dana Point harbors, voted against the transfer. He claimed suCh a consolidation would pro· bably be effectiv,e only in the south county harbor Which is sur· rounded by county territory. He supported contentions by Nt)VPOrt Beac.h City Manager Robert Wynn t hat creation of a second law enforcement agency within, the incorporated boun- daries of a cit y would only create winecessary conflict. The transfer also zirfects &inset Acquatic Park and Hunt- ington Harbour. The transfer proposal was m ade by Sheriff-Coron er Bradley Gates and endorsed by count y Administrative Officer Robert Thomas. Thomas said he feels the transfer could e ffect a savings of as much as $82,000 if harbor patrol ofricers are made into sheriff's deputies and given en- fo rcement powers that must now be · performed by deputies on patrol in squad cars. Wynn said his city is of the opi - nion that the couilty would be bet· ter off contracting with city policemen for enforcement in Newport Harbor and he said the (See PATROL, Page AZ) Or•~··~=••t • •" .,_._r Mostl y sunny s kies through Thursda y. Warmer with highs in the upper 60s at the beaches to 70 inland areas. Lows tonight near 50. INSIDE 'i°dDA 'l' Laguna Btoch l1"'l the'Only place where beoi:hgoers in the .olt.oget.her . art catching cUy o/f1cial1 With their orctincmces do wn. It '• .a nationwide phmomenon. Set Page Al2. - cost of Jiving as compared lo April 1974, for Los Angeles and Orange Counties. Suzanne Sadowsky, head of the departm e n t''s Southern California Bureau, said the con- sumer price index in the Los Angeles area in April was 155.6, meaning that it cost $15 .56 to buy the same goods and services which cost $10 in the base year 1967. The -purchasing poWer orthe 1967 dollar dropped to 64.3 cents 10-15% PETROLEUM HIKES .SEEN. A4. last month, she added. Heavy increases in transporta- tion. ait~~hoasing • costs were la'?gelr. to blame for the rise in Ap,ll .. 11 'cos't . of living, Miss Sadowsky said. NaUoaalJy, the rate of inflation qulcli:ened a b it in April as . grocery prices reversed a two· month decline and helped push over-all consu mer prices up six· tenths of a per cent, the govern· ment reported tOOay . The Apr il in crease, though double that of March, was in line with the Adm inistr ation forecast of an· annual inflation rate or about 8 or 7 percent this year for lheU'.S. The White House bad said it did not expect the lower rate of in· crease in March to continue. The highest previous monthly increase. this year occurred in January, when prices also rose by six-tenths or a percent across the cou~try. Ex-:.designer In Early-day Movies Dies One o! Hollywood's first ladies of costume tlesign, who added sex appeal to the silver screen as architect of suits for comedy director Mack Sennett's bathing beauties, died today· at Fountain Valley Comm_unity Hospital. Stomach caOcer claimed the life of Gladys Rousseau Karaskiewicz, 76, who put the ·Ooh in Ooh La La during her days as Sennett's studio bathing suit designer. · She leaves her husband Joseph Karaskiewicz. plus a daughter and 'two granddaughters,-all oJ Santa Ana. Swim wear had little sex ap- peal before Sennett hired Mrs. Karaskie wicz to head the wardrobe department of his Hollywood studio. She snipped yards of material off the unsightly costumes so that the beauties could flit across the screen in s mart but brief swimsuits. Newspaper clippings Mrs. Karaskiewici saved credited her with originating a new bathing suit each week !or Sennett's beauties. She and her . .alster Grace came west to Jtollywood from F~·. Wayne, Ind., in 1918, and got wardrobe jobs with producer Cecil 8. DoMille. , They wen( to work for Senhctt lnt924 . When the scr een vamp began to'?epll:ce the bathing beauty in the mld·l9209, Mrs. Karaskiewicz W9ll tailed UPoD to tr .. te slinky · -tho\ 'lfO~ld lend,ap air of i:nystery to the wearer. ,,., ,'.} ' 3 Taken At Gaine Reserve DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania (UPI> -Three American stu- dents w~re kidnaped from a wildlife research station by armed Africans in a remote area or -northwestern Tanzania, U.S. embassy officials said today. A Dutch s tudent also v.'as ab· du<-"ted . The sources said the kidnaping took place Monday ni ght at a game research station run by Jane Goodall, author of several books on animal beh'avior. (Stanford University said it ha d been informed by State Department officials in Tanzania that 40 armed men from Zaire seized the three students and an administrative assistant. (Stanfor-d said the'Students kid-· naped were Barbara B. Sm.uts,24, ·Ann Arbor, Mich.; Kenneth S'. ·Smith, 22, .Garden Grove, and~ Carrie Jane Hunter , 21 , Atherton, CaJif.) -r Diii' ............... ~.ll•kk O'i:io-tl The re!earch station, in the Gombe game reserve, is located . north of Kigom a on ure-shore or Lake Tanganyi~a neitrthe Burun- di border. FIRST LADY BETTY FORD MET REFUGEE THRONGS TODAY AT PENDLETON Mrs. Ford Chats With Camp Commander Gen. PIUl'"Graham Prior to Her"Tour Mrs. Ford Sees Viets The embassy asked the Tanza· nian government to launch an in- vestigation, the sources said. 1 The Ameri cans and the : Dutchman were among about 3& stud~nts working at the station. , 1"1osl of the students are from Stanford. Greetings Gioon to Pendleton Refugees Miss Goodall and other mem· 1 bers of the resear<-"h station wit· · nessed the kidnaping. They said ' the kidnapers were armed with 1 rifles, but their identity was not , kno\Vn . By CAROL MOORE 01 IM D.iollr Pilot St.lift Betty Ford brought greetings from her Pi:esident husband and "the warmth of the American people" to Vietnamese refu gees in Ca.mp Pendleton today. '"l'he President, our children and I have suffered along with your misfortunes and want to . . A REPORTER VIEWS 'LITTLE SA!GON'-7 give you help, happiness and sun- s hine ,'' w as h er gree ting, translated to a crowd of several hundred in a recreation area. As the first me mber o! the First Fi:lmily to visit any of the refugees' compounds, Mrs. Ford toured the largest o! the tent cities and emphasized that she came to meet each and every one of the refugees. "All of us here are volunteers, willing to help you ~ust. Things 1 will be better over the hill, but it will t ake time." Mrs. Ford had lengthy con· versations with both former President Nguyen ·Cao Ky of , South Vietnam and ex-Preside nt Khoy ofCambodia. The First Lady's entourage pa~s.ed throµgh diQing areas, a <;lassro9m in its third day o[ learning Englis h and a Post Ex· change · set up as an open-air marketplace for refugees. Within each tent a particular child would attr act her attention and a clasp of the hand. Older children, oblivious to the pro· minenc-e of their visitor, v.•ere ushered forth by their parents for recognition by the President·s wife. But her arrival a~ the outdoor sports area-a basketball court actually -was announced in both English and Vietnamese. languages and attracted a <-"heer· ing crowd. Mrs. Ford's visit lasted Jess than an hour, after which she de· parted for El Toro MCAS and a flight back to Was hing ton tonight. Both the presidents tipped her hand and asked that she relay their gratitude to the President. "That's what we're here for ," she replied. 3 GM Recalls 50,000 Aul.os Involved DETROIT (Ur'I > -General Motors Corp . said to· day i t is .recalling about 501000 current model Chevrolets, Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles and Buicks because some models may contain steering, ac-. celerator and a ir conditioning defect s. (Rel ated story,Al4) · . . GM said three separatt? recall actions are in· volved. About 3,100 Chevrolet Camaros and Novas, Pon· tiac Firebirds and Buick Apollos and Skylarks, the com1>any said, may contain del~ct~ that could cause drivers to lose steering contf<!l. j/<h'.' Another defeM, wh\ob inillb~~e it impossible r0r c~rs tQ idle proper~. m~y i valve about 16,000 Pontiac Ventu.ras. Oldsmobile egas and Bwck Apollos and SkyUirks, the'compa said. . ' Jn addition, PM said, ab6ut ()()()iCa m.aros may contain faulty fan blades ~ tbe conllitioning unit. These could br.ea\ under f\!!klne all.on. No inju.rie)f~ve beefi' ~,a.res.ult.or the defects, GM s~~ .t · '!) ' Mrs. Ford was wearing a two· piece beige suede suitwtth brown polka dot s c a rf and looked healthy as s he \':ound up her California tour. 2 Slain in Iran (See TANZANIA, P age A2) Americans Under. Mounting Attacks From Wire Services ·Am ericans cam e under in· creasing attack today throughout the world. Two U.S. Air Force of- ficers were murdered in Iran, an American civilian and two -Marines were held hostage in Laos. and three Stanford stu· d e nt s· were kidnaped in Tanzania. Terrorist s stopped a car carry- ing two unarmed U .S. Air Force officers to work this morninJC or· U.S. Agency for lnternatiopal Deve lopment seized the .'AID 1 or Cambodia andSQ..uthVie~nam. 1 Twelve Ame ri cans w~e ·still I under house arrest by l~!st stu~ i dents in Savannakhet. the former • right-wing -stronghold· in central ! Laos which was talceil over by the 1 Communist Pa the{ i.ao Tuesday: U.S. embassy ofric'ials said they ; lost radio telephone contact with 1 , the six U.S. AID officials and ~ th e ir wives,,lalthough they 1 believed they were safe. FORD .SAYS BOMBING In Vientiane U.S. Charge D'Af .. ' NOT PUNITIVE. A4. raires Chris tian Chapman met . . . -with Pritl)e Minister Souvanna· • dered their Iranian dnver to the Phouma and Foreign Minister fl~r of the ca.r. then shot and Phoumi.Vongvichit, the ranking killed the Americans. . . . Communist official in the coall· The U.S. Embassy 1dent1f1ed lion government, to protest the the dead as Col. Paul R. Shaffer seizureoftheU.S.compound . Jr .. 45, a native of Bryan, Ohio, and Lt. Col. J ack J . TUrner, 45, from Carbondale , Ill. The Iranian government said the assassins. who escaped, .were Marxist guerrillas, and "no ac- tion will be spar ed to find the murderers and bring th"em lO justice." A wor,ian who said she spoke for the "Irani an People's War· riors A!!isoctation'' ,called t ~e Asf sociated Press-and said 1'the ~ ocution of American off,ctrs w.,s a reply to the execuUon ·oJ niqe Iranian rcvolut!onaries it'\ 'prisi: lasl month." , . She also s&id that as' Sh h rtjohammed Rt i.a Pahlevf is ··a s tooge or th e~ 'A m eric~ns, ~ lhei'.efore'mµi:~\l\mtrleJili~·'' ~ , Meanwhile, a ll)Ob o( al>oilt Laotian ie((lsfs demanding 11\e ouster of all Am eri cans with the ' T,H IRD CA LLER , BOUGHT YAC HT 1 "The ad produced many calls.·; and I sold the yacht on the third . l ed " ' ckll. I 'm very p eas . 1 That's the success story told by ' the Huntington Beach man who \ placed this ad in the Daily Pilot: COLUMBIA 22, 3sails, knOt in eter, 'cockpit cushions. Newport Slip $2800. XXX•XXXX I ·~' . . If you have a boat or s ails to sell , call 642·5678. It only takes a few words in the right place to I make a sale . , t Along the Orange Coast, the right place is the Daily PUol , ft.· • I .~. OAJLVPILOT H /F Mother ' ' Upset at ' Kidnap A Garden Grove mother of one of three Stanford University stu- dents kidnaped from a wildlife refuge in Tanzania said today her !1mUy was very upset, but took comfort· from the news the lkidnapers were soldiers. "We're very upset right now," said Mrs. Mittie Smith, mother or Kenneth~Smilh, one of lhe 11tu- denls. , "'But I feel a lttUe better this .morning. The State Department ,:ailed us and said it was a un- iformed group of about 40 men and [felt a little better since it's a plilitary group. . ''We just did not sleep last night after we heard," she said. She said the State Department failed late Tuesday and again .early today. "We had a letter from him 1'1onday and he w as so enthused -about his job a nd he just loved it over there," she Said. Smith, 22, and t\VO others were .kidnape d Monda y night by a rmed Africans from the re- liearch station run by authoress ·J ane Goodall. A Dutch student also was ki dnaped. ··Kenneth is working on }lis .master's degree now." M'rs. Smith said. She said Kenneth's professor, David Hamburg, who ·"·itnessed the kidnapings, called her from Dar cs Salaam. · * * * Fro• Page Al TANZANIA : The em bassy sources said ·there was no apparent motive for ~he kidnaping and '°elations • between the students al the re- iiearch station and loca1 villagers were good. However , the border area or Burundi near th e area or lhe kid- naping was the scene of military ·operations against dissident tribes men this month. The U.S. •embassy in the Burundi capital of Bujumbura also was working :on the kidnap case, the sources said. Tanzanian police were flown to ... the scene in a helicopter and 'Derek Brysoon, director of the .._.Tanzania national parks, also flew there to help with the in- ·.v.estigation. · . . .. ... :;City Changes ... Transit Stand · The city of Huntington Beach reversed its previous stand Mon- day night on hoW directors of the ··Orange County Transit District «&hou!d be selected. 1.Members of the council voted .;4.() (Harriett Wieder, Henry .·Duke and Al Coen were absent at :this point) to back an appoint· ~ment system rather than a general election. Six-weeks ago the council opt- ed for the election of the transit .ilistrict's five board members, "'but Monday night Mayor Norma Gibbs said she felt the earlier de· cision had been "a little pre- mature." The council 's new stand is the ·same one s upported by the ·orange County League or Cities ·<.ind by county supervisors. . Ford Picks Rocky NEW YORK CUPI) -Presi- dent Ford, who says Nelson ·Rockefeller "has proven to be a : good partner'' as vice president, ·plans lo have Rockefeller as his runni n g male on the 1976 ·Republican pres idential ticket. ORANGE COAST HIF DAILY PILOT '"'Or-to.SI c..11r Pllol, wll" ~" ''('"'· tloM<I , ... f'ojf""·Pr•.. • l>Ul>ll-by ,,,.Or_ Cw\! F'\lttlh.r"nt CofTl;l•n,. ~••!ttOll-••rt pu&11"""° _na,, '"'°"11" "'"'"¥ '"' CM1• Mew, ,_wpOfl k•th, 'lunll~M Oe•t"/Fo...,. l•!n ll•lltf. l•v•nt, ~•dOllN<l 11•11•• •<>G y_. 8*t<;,/SQulh Cll••l. A. 1lfl9lt rtol-1 l'Cl•l\Otl ;, Pllbllllitd S.!u•~•~• --.Ort. The l"l""llMI PVl>lllli•llll l>ltn! " •! JOO Wo~I !Ny '"-· ""'"-'"· ''"'"'"••"lllll.. Robe rt N. Weed P'rU•lkM •ncl P"bll-r Jllck R. Curley Viet Prt•llknl •ncl c.. ...... ,, Mt.....,. Thomas A. Murphine ,,,.. ... , ... ,E.111100' Ol•rles H. Loos Richard P. Nall AIMll•nl ,,,....,,,"11 [•1"'1 Terry Coville · Wf\l Ot•ntt COii"'' [dllor Other Oltlces u....,. ltt<io. 11M G-v-. "'"' (itt!f loltW JM"''" I•, Sl•MI ........ ,, ltt<" )JJI l'ff•...-1 lllllH-t 1-odai..O.c ' ll•ll•y >IXU U ... , ll:!Md II '°'" Dl1''9 ''""''' Ttlt phont C7141 642-4J21 Cliisslfleel Advt rtlslng M2·S471 l'tom.Nqrli. O<•"llf Ctllfli• ~119\ .. 540-1220 . (01>Y"9~!, "ii O••~q~ Cot1I P"tll•"l~O I , ~ny . NO~IW\"ll•it\, lllu\l<fll01 .. ,tcl+lorl .. l lflfllll '' tlht•tl1tmt~1l llttl•fl "'"' Ot •• rttrt•¥<1~ """°"1 l llf<ltl llt•,..IUlt" of Ulpf•lfl'H o ....... S.COflf (lltl po\I~ Jlflcl t i Cttlf MIM. '-1ltttlll1, .Millt< • •IHIM e., ''"'ti.r U Ollll'IO<llMy; .,.,.,.11"""""""''"1...iu•.,•--•-w.oo "'*"lllf. ' UPITI ....... Nftf:l 11.N. E•N•1' Daniel Patrick Moynihan, former counselor to Presi· dent Nixon and ambassador . to India. has been nominat- ed by President Ford to be the new U.S. ambassador to the U nited Nations, s u c- ceeding John A. Scali. Fro•PageAl DOCTORS measures.'' One hospital not affected is the Orange County Medical Center where doctors are either employes of lhe county or the University of California and are covered by the group policies of those agencies. In a development on the legislative front, Assemblyman Bob Wilson , a La Mesa Democrat who is chairman of the Joint Legislative Audit Committee, in· troduced a resolution directing hi s committee to probe the un · derwriting of malpractice in· surance. Wilson 's action was hailed by the California Trial Lawyers As· sociation which said in a state- ment: " ... it proposes the first. real solution to the medical. malpractice problem." The bills introduced in the special session include ones to: -Set up state boards to dis· qualify doctors for incom - petency. -Create an administrative syst,em fol'> handling m"a1practice claims, with maximum fees for lawyers, a three-year statute of limitations on claims, and state review of insurance premiums. -Put the state in the malprac- tice insurance business . -Limit doctor and h06pital fees, and hold down unnecessary construction of hospital beds. Fro•PageAJ PATROL ••• . , same would probably hold true for harbors in the west part of the county s urround ed b y in· corporated cities. 111 Buntl..;,toa Teache..S Blast Contract Delay fttore than 200 teachers In the . ltuntington Beach City (elemen~ tary) School Ut strict marched IP- to the board or trustees meeting Ocean View Teachers In Protest Teachers in the Ocean View School District have accused djs.· lrict trustees Monday of follow - ing a "plan of negli gence" during this year's contract talks. More than 200 angry teachers attended Monday night's school board meeting to ask for "more Tuesday night to protest what they said was stalling In contract talks. M11.n y carried signs reading "What next? Food stamps?" and "'Quitstalling." Teachers tn the district :have asked' for a 16.S percent pay boost, plus a quarterly cost of Uv- ing adjuatment based on the con· sumer price index. The board has offered no amount, but h as promised to keep teachers in the top ~S per- cent ot Orange County elemen- tary teachers. , Tuesday nia:ht, teacs asked the board "to start negoUaUng in good faith,'' instead of continuing to reject teacher requests. In a prepared statement they claimed the district has a 25 per· cent reserve fund of $2 million, while most other districts main- tain a three to five percent re-meaningful " negotiations. serve. _, Marilyn DeVore, president of Deputy Superint endent the sos-m e mber Ocean Vie.w Charles Palmer today denied Teachers Association, asserted that claim, explaining the dis- that the school board isn 't mak· trict has been s pending its re · ing its own decisions this year, serve this year and expects to but is following plans dictated by have only about $300,000 le ft by the California School Boards As-year's end, a 12 percent reserve. sociation. Palmer said .the 12 percent ''Local control is a myth," she level ls where district of(icials said. ''O ur school district hopetostay, management is dangling reek-"We don't have to go any lessly on the strings pulled by lower. I don 't see why we CSBA '" should," he said. Linda Boitano, executive Teachers claim they are paid secretary for West Orange Coun-an average of 19.S percent Jess ty United Teachers, has said it than high school teachers, and appears the CSBA has urged dis· they said district administrators tricts thoughout the state to stall. r"1k among the highest paid in contract talks past the end of California. school lo avoid strike pos-Palmersaidhedoesnotknowif sibilities. those figures are accurate. · But board members Monday "You can take any statistics night refused to discuss the con-and draw any conclusion you tract talks during the open school want,'' he commented. ''They board session. Instead they said have taken figures that prove the matter should be debated their point, and I don't blame during private negotiation them." sessions. But Palmer pointed out he ,, • Boy, Club Seeks Tooh The Hunllnrton Be1c~ Boys' Club needs tools for cratta and hobbles, wela:ht lifting equipment, photo- graphy gear , games ind 9lher items for lta youth program. Contact program dlrec- to r Bob M ee pahan, 536·9'1~. if you can otter any ll•rila. The club will pick up donation• Jt neceasary. Music Fest Set in Valley' T he Fountain Valley Com- munity Band's "Spring Fantasy of Music" will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the city's community center, 10200 Slater Ave. There is no char1e for ad. mission. The group will perform murches , overture• and setec- .Uons from the musical "Fiddler on the Roof." . Individuals wishing to join the community band may attend weekly rehearsals at 7 p.m . Thursdays at Cox School . 17615 Los Jardines East. Questions may be directed lo the Fountain V~lley School District at 842·6651, extension 217. Random Shots Kill 3 in LA LOS ANGELES (UPI) Three persons were shot in the head and killed and another was seriously wounded late Tuesday in a (our bloc k area of South Los Angeles . Identification of the victims was being withheld pending notirication of relatives. Police s aid the shootings, all within a two hour period, were apparently unrelated. Festival Program Listed As part of the downtoWn mall celebratlon ln Huntington Beach, merchants have lined up .. a Hffes of entertainment tor niunday afternoon through Mond.y. According to Joao ·nennet of the Village Hair Smtth', the enter- tainment schedule is: THVRSDAY~ -3 p ~111 .. Edison H igh Madrigal Singers. -7,p.m., R.G. Country Folk. -7:30 p .m ., Bailey's Dance Group. ~ p.m ., R.G. Country Folk. FRIDAY: --3 p .m., MaranaUta (singers from Calvary Chapel). · -7 p.m., Maranatba. -7 : 30 p . rri., barbershop quartet. SATVRDl\Y: -11 :30 a .m ., Handel (baroque music). -2 p.m., local fa4hionshow. -2:30 p.m., M8ranatha .. -s p .m ., Southern Pnctrte (rock band) . -.7 p.m ., Maranatha. -8 p.m., Southern Select Blues Band. SVNDAY: -11 :30 a .m ., 'The Brahma Crock band). -2:30p.m ., Ma ranatha. -3 p.m., barbershop quartet. -4 p .m., Golden West College Square Dancers. -Sp.m ., a rock band. -7 p.m., Mliranatha. MONDAY: -1 p.m ., Marauatha. -1:30 p.m ., Derringer (rock band). -3:30p.m .• Maranatha. -4 p.m ., Joy Ride <rock band >. All entertainment"Wtll be held on the city's mobile stage Set up at Main Street ·and Olive Avenue . • Six G••mnen • Spray Crowd Because of the crowd, trustees believes teachers are well paid in moved the meeting from district the district. In the past, he said, offices to nearby Crest View the board maintained their pay School. at the SOth percent level among Teachers in the district have county elementary districts, but W · , T'-ll-S · RIOHACHA, Colombia (UPI) asked for a 13 percent pay hike, a recently moved it upto7Sth. riling ilUA et -Police reported a 10th death to. greater voice in decision-making Board President Steve Holden day in what has been termed the d · d t rr· Author Ardith Hitchcock will •• I ht " f an increase s a mg. referred to teacher charges as a revenge s aug er o a group Th d . t · t h off ed th discuss "How to Write the True f h . ed e 1s r1c as er em ''two-way street. . o persons mac 1ne.gunn as 3 5 t din to M Confession Story'' at 8 p.m. th t h d t I · · . percen , a.ccor g _ s. "The board is meeting with the ey wa c e e ev1s1on. Dev h ·d Monday · ht Thursday at the Fountain Valley Th · t · hot s t ore, w o sa1 .rug ·teachers staff in negotiations," e VIC ims were s a ur- there is room in the budget for a he said. "We are talking and con-Writer 's Workshop. day night in El Conejo near the larger increase. sidering various pro-a.1st and, it The meeting, open to the Venezuelan border in northern "Funds to ·r~· th ' ~ public, will be at the civir center, c I b.. h.l t hi bo imp vve e pro-is 'all being taken care of under :o om ta w 1 e wa c ng a x- gram are available,'' she said. the routine process.'' 10200 Slater Ave. ing match 0'1 te;ltiy~sioq. , .... , • "Its a matter of morality and fis-1-----~-----------.,.-----------------.c...-...;.. ___ ..;;.~ cal common sense." Sbe said the district will re· ceive more th a n $1 million in new Income next year , but only $300,000 has been earmarked for teacher pay hikes so rar. She noted last year the district used all new s tate money for salaries . "Where are the other monies going?'' s he asked . ''Are teachers lower in your priorities this year?" FltlGIDAIU HEAVY DUTY WASHER 525995 DRYER Physicians Urged To Return to Work 5 179'5 This Frigidaire Heavy Duty Washer can deliver dependable, lrouble·free performance with its heavy duty motor and other components used in Frigidaire Commercial Washers. You SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Some lawmakers said 1J;day striking physicians have m'ade their point and should r eturn to\ their jobs while the Legislature finds solu- tions for the medical malpractice emergency. "( call on the doctors and a nesthesiologists to return to their work now, their point has been m ade," said Sen. George Deukmejian, minority leader or the Senate. But striking doctors felt that they were no closer to getting re· asonably·priced malpractice in- surance now than when the crisis began. There appeared to be a grow- ing frustration among some lawmakers Tuesday because they felt the Legislature was ''go· ing all out" to solve the im· ,mediate and long-range malprac- tice crisis and the doctors have not responded by returning lo Family Facing Blast Suit A Huntington Beach couple and their 15-year-old son were sued Monday for $50,000 in damages by plaintiffs who claim that thelr son was seriously in· jured when a pipe bomb exploded last June 29 in the defendants' home. Connie and Adam Brandt, 6951 Lennis Circle, Huntington Beach, claim in their Orange. C.ounty SUpertor Court action lhat defen . dant Bruce Norton, 15, Uia:gered the explosion in the gar1ge of his home at 16"2 Ma rte Lane, Hunt· lngton Beach. when he struck the bomb with a hammer. · The Brandls state that their son, John, 10, was seriously in· jured when fra.1menll of the pipe bomb struck him. Mr. and Mn. Warren Norton, the acruscd boy's parent.a, are named u co- defeodanll. \ their jobs. Man y physicians have boycotted surgery theaters in San Francisco, Sacramento and areas of Southern California to protest medical malpractice in· surance pre mium increases of as much as400 percent. "I think we have proved that we have moved as rast as possi- bl e to provide legislation for im· mediate malpractice insurance premium relief for the doctors," said Assembly Speaker Leo T. McCarthy, adding that doctors should go back to work now. Dr. Donald Walker, chairman of th e anesthe~ologists section of the San Francisco Medical Socie- ty, said legislation to immediate· ly roll back malpractice rates would force doctors to pay less now and more in the Jong run. Deukmejian, a Long Beach Republican, warned that some hospitals face closure because of the strike and patients who need . medical attention muat be cared for. "Nothing will be gaJned and much will be lost if the doctors · persist in curtailing their· services,'' said Deukmejian. He said a s pecial session has been cilled by Gov. Edmund G . Brown Jr. to deal with Ions· range reforms and there la a measure <AB928) in the As· sembly Ways and Means Com- mittee which would immtdJately limit premiums for a seve•- month period. Legislative sources said As· sembly leaders planned to hold a hearing In Ways and Means on the measure Friday. Then the leadership planned to rush the bill by Asaemblyman Robert McLennan (R-Downey), to the floor the same day for a vote. T he bill would roll back malpractice premium.a to 50 per- cent above the Jan. 1, 1975 pre- crlsla level. Insurance carrien annuounced since then that pre- miums would be lncreaaed aa much as 400 percent. Model FPl-170T FRIGIDAIRE Family Size REFRIGERATOR A 100% Frost-Proof ONLY Refrlger•fo r·Freezer that $3",5 bOasls a generous 17.0 cu.-ft. overall. The 4'. 75 cu .-ft. freezer teetion offers 2 Ftex-Ouik Ice Trays and an Ice server. ~avls•b ! - •. , can wash p&rlT'Snent press. cottons. and heavy work clothes efficiently, or reduce wear on delicates with Normal and Gentle Wash cycles. The matching Frigidaire Dryer lets you dry up to 18 pounds of laundry all at once. With the turn of a dial, match the drying time to the type of load, ·including permanent press and knits. s399•s FRIGIDAIRE LAUND"RY CENTER This space~savlno Frigidaire laundry Center combines a family-size washer and dryer Into e single lllm cablnor. Plugs Into any Mparale 15 amp conventional household Circuit t I I I I . j ' • ·~ ... DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . . ' ·, ' -....____ _. ' -.. -..... ... -· ~ ·~rrallsfer t ••• Tax Needed , \.low A80UT t>ETENTE~ SUt)l>ENL.Y J HAVE THIS <RAVING FOR HAVANA <.t<SARS. 1 1; ... '' Nexl Tuesday's city election in Huntington Beach JlC'()bably won'l spark half lhe Interest it should. There n't any colorful politicians running in it, and it sn't involve any great emotional issue, like cat d dog licensina. But it does involve taxes -the clty's half percent h.at estate ~ransfer t~x -an issue which may ~ave a 1&t lo do with what kind of city Hunllngton Beach is ..over the next few years. The reites tafiHransfer tax is a cniirge on FeSlile- of real property within the community. It raises a Jit. lie more than $1 million annually to help run the lown. lt s a significant source of revenue . . There have been misleading ·commenls on bolh es of the issue, For his part. Cily AdminislratOt' ve Rowlands likes to use· a-veiled threat -warning ut the use of other taxes if there ii1n 't a transfer · -a threat that .has not been backed by lhe clly uncil. The real estate brokers, who comprise the main poslllon to the tax. claim the city budget is fat and ght l.o be ~ut -:-but·h~.ven't found ~ny specifics. Perhaps city hall claims that this truly is a "bare es" budget are a little pver·pious, but the DhilY. lot does believe lhe city leaders are atlempting to ntroi municipal spending. We do Qelieve tfle nsfer tax is needed, at least for a few years, as a urce of revenue. Retention of th.e transfer tax shou ld not be a nal to the city council, or city administration. to let on tight budget procedures . .It would give eathing room· in a ' period ·or unprecedented icipal money problems. It should be lhe aim of the city council to eliminale the lransfer tax as soon as possible. And it should be up to tesidenL• of Hunlington Beach. if lhey do r10t want such taxes, to let the council know what services, wl1at governmentul luxuries, they can do without. We urge a "no'' vote on 'fucsday's ballot -a vote that would retai11 the real estate transfer tax in l'lunt · inglo11 Beach . Valid Questions Some re£idents of the Fountai!l Valley School Dis · .trict have questio11ed continuing the community schools progra m next year in the face of that dis- trict's budget cutbacks. Their questions J1ave merit. District officials claim the $45,000 program is not financed by money normally used for general educa- tion. Instead, it is funded by a specially levied five - cent civic center use tax. one perm"itted· by state law to pay for the expense or allo\vi ng community grQups to use schools af.ter hours. . But perhaps dist1ict trustees should take a second look at the spending of those funds. Some residents have suggested using them to finance the noon duty aide program for example, so teachers can l1<.1ve lunch hours free. The popular cr.ilfts and evening classes have been well received in the community. But if the district 's budget is indeed short on funds, this might 'be one place to look forrevenue forregular classroom programs. H Split n For.d Loettl rlge11eies Ct111 Atl111inister Cottst Pinn • • ec1s1on EVANS-NOVAK ASHINGTON -The gamble en by President Ford in using ed force against Cambodiu, rting with air strikes against mbodian gunboats last week. & based above all on this hard cl us ion : the U.S. had to 'seize occasion of Cambodian acy to prove it both could and uld react with decision and er to ... jnteraational law~.&· s. . : , ... _, ti here was no split of any kind the National Security Council SC ). In· d. every official in e a d - niStralion reed that atever the , a show of erican I I a n d w e r was olutely es· . lial following the humiliation uth Vi etnam . n ordering American attacks the Cambodian gunboats lo 1 k an obvious Cambodian ef- t to remove the American w of the Mayaguez to the mbodian mainland . neither th · President nor the NSC even utte mpted to figure out an answer to this potentially ex· plosive question ; wh·at lf the Cltmbodlans should use the gun- boat attack as the pretext for murdering some 40 American crewmen"! "Of course ~e had contingency plans." one top presidenti3J aide told us. "Birt we couldn't sit around and lty to estimate every possible codtingency when we are dealing with a primitive gov· ernm~nt which ha! virtually no outside contacts with the world. We had to act ." THE UNDERLYING assump· tion of the President's aides wus t.at the U .$. tnust dl!al with such ail act or piracy as 'a W~stern na· ~n acting in a civilized fashion:. d'mand immediate return or the ~P and t'rew and map a cont· iuency plan to seize both by flrce if the demand was not met \lijthin a rea~onable time. ~ Following seizure of the }6ayaguez by Cambodia just alter midnight, Sunday, the atesident allowed almost 48' ,ft(;urs to go by without any •11tary res1>onsc. Next, the d'isic plan of isolating the litUe ,W~nd in the Gulf of .Thailand, !'lere the Mayagu-ez was held, "nl astray when Cambodian ftnboals moved towa rd ttie nlnnd about 15 mJles away. President then gave his or. to halt the gunboilts. •Li l lhal point. lho U.S. wonl the ~( and necessary distante to 8lJ;'vr wbal Mr. Ford and his a.cretaries·ot Sta.t:e and .Derense, y Kiasinger a nd James inaer, h•d ,.,een pre_.chjnc atop ever sfnte ~he lropliie end or the \lielnonl Dear Gloomy Gus From our Vietnam fiasco we should try to remember that · politicians acid statesmen make lousy generals. Let's 1eave future wars to the pro· fessionals so we'll have a chance of winning. ·L.D. GWmy G-. (Olfltn•f\11.t(•1.-mlnM llf ,..._,_ ...... ,..(11t.trlly,.11itct-. vl-s 01 tlM MW~..,.,. S.M )'911r ,..c ... ,,.l•GIOomyGu1. O.tily ~Uot. wa r : de s pite that nali.ona l humiliation, no foreign country should m ake lhe mistake that the United States was discarding its role as world leade~, or was re- luctant to take strong action where demanded. INDEED, the private remarks of top officials here make it abun· dantJy appare nt that th e Mayaguez seizure became the ideal case to prove the point. In the background was the ul· .. ter failure of all efforts to open some kind or circuitous diplomatic channel to the revolu· tionary Cambodian government of the Kt) mer Rouge. The Soviet Union has been ki cked out of Phnom Penh for failure to break \vith the old regime. The People's Republic of China, according to one high official, informed the U.S. it would try to help, and did so, but proved the point that the jingoistic Cambodian regime was .simply beyond reach. On Tuesday evenir\g,:Mr. Ford. ordered word passed to con- gressional leaders that "ap· propriate action'' would soon be takep. Perhaps ii\ rdrQspect Lil~ Presidel)t should have sum· mooed these leaders to the White I-louse for a face-to-face con· versation. Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana, the Sena•e .Democratic leader, for example, said lat,r. that he bad not been "co}tsultedJ'' on th'e the0ry he was told, not asked. • •, OTHf:R ClllT-ICISM in a Congress now shoy.'·in g dangerous symptoms or taking over American foreign P,olicy from ' Its feudi·ng committee rooms was also heard, raising ominous questions about a vicious partisan debate eruplin"g from the President's lx>ld action. But on that ·pOint Mr. Ford and his top aides, often -indecisive and vacillating on l~er mat· ters, s howed no conc~rn this time.· They assumed th a t whatever partisan .outcry might ensue. the American people as a \vhole would react with over-· whelming approval lo the Presi· dent's powerful response to 8.n unprovoked act of piracy on the high seas. "Sure lhey'll lry to4cmago.ue lt." one senior presidential BJde told U$. ··Thal 's par for the "course. But no one conaidered lhat as part of the prOt>lem ... TflVS. In this first. C'Jear show of American power tince the In· dochinese fiu:!co, Mr. Ford hits demonstrated what he is-o;nen criUciz.ed !or Jackina: a tnlent for~ leadcrah,ip, and command, in a. case void of ;imb1gul~~ to hllJl. a nd. his advi sers. u efpite· political risks, nP one arou'llCl him ••hibile<i. '•ec'oild thoughts about the o~ll1alion ol lbe U.S. lo un~erwrlte the fjU~t-of Jaw in the \\'Orld. Commissions Should Dissolve To the Editor : . Realtors and many other Americans would have to find other \York under governments which now control more than half of th.e world's .popuJatiorl. The simple reason being tbal individuals are not free to own property in those countries. Could this freedom be lost here? Only if those interes~ fail to act when the bundle of rights that .go with property O\vnership suffer infringement. It would seem that property owners. current and prospective. to protect their own interests would turn out to vote against all encroachments. In ac.-tuality, voter participation in recen\ electiop~ hps beep de.~linin·g. The problem s-;ems to' be that many are working too hard lo have the lime to identify, critical issues or to respond appropriately. The Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors responded to this problem by forming a Political Affairs Committee to s tudy issues and recommended appropriate actions. RECOGNIZING the infringement by the Coastal Zone Conservation Commission on the rights or the City of Newport Beach as \Yell as t>n many property owners seeking to improve their properties the Political Affairs Committee decided to e·xplore the situation. We learned that the commission, while mandated by Proposition 20 (which a large majority of Orange County voters turned down), was charged wiih. preparing a coastal plan and ·expiring. After further stud)' the committee proposed and the -bdafd· of directors approved the following statement: . ••As the Newport ·Har_bor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors has witnessed considerable client · experience with the impact of the Coastal Zone Conserv8tion Commission .created by Proposition; and · ''As \\o'.e con sider the commission will have serYed its purpose by makin g local government aware of the need to protect the environment of the coastal area ; "As actions of the current .commissioris have proven costly to California in jObs Jost: to the property owner and the ultimate buyer in time and money spenl e·ven !or minot construction : and "As local general plans are being completed to support the coastal plan, which' general plans can· be admin istered 1 f air ly , consistently and jUdlciously by local elected of. ficlels supervised by existing stale agencies : ''We . therefore. urge the mandated o"piralion of the Coa1tal lone Conservation Commission be !ulttlled." SINCE the state Legislature wlJI make &l'le final decision on the commission and Its plans, we have forwarded the above s tat"ment to each board of re1.ltors ln the state asking them to protect the interests or the.Ir t'lients by impr·esslng their Legis1alor•· with the tmpcrtance ot this matter. LYMAN S. FAULKNER Chairman PoUUcal Alf airs Commlllee; Newport H arbor-O:Msta. M~a, Board of Realtors • ( MAILBOX ) UUfr• !tom ••Id••• 1rt W•lcome. TM ri~t lo <0'"'-11•• •1'9•• to lit •P.-:• o• 1tlimi11att li!wl •• •c· .. ,.....d. ltU•r• ol JOO ... o•d• or It•• ... 11 iw 9•"~" ~••••n<•. AU l•tt••• mu•l inc:luci.-litn;ilur• 111d m.ill11t 1ddt••• but n.tr•otl ..,...,. IM ,..11""-ld on rt- q.,.H ii 111!Utitn1 rt.tt.011 h •Pl>l•tnl. Poetry will notlM~lll'l.o". ffnffd fft1.:ffrd To the Editor ; In this letter I would like to re· fer lo the road conditions and the hazards they may present in our fair city, Huntington Beach. The, haiard on Goldenwest Street between Slater and Warner streets stands out especially. Heading north in the right hand lane, there is a series of telephone poles running along this section ol Goldenwest. These poles present big problems to motorists needing the shoulder of the road to avoid a crash. A persOn could be seriously inj,µred if he had a collision with one of these poles. I strongly suggest they either be :replaced with new breakaway :poles or removed. This strip of road and others like it should be revised lo make motoring in Hunti~gton Beach a safe and fun pastime. Our object is to make roadways safe, not to build cars to nieet tl!ese situa- tions as on .GoldenweslSt.reet. TONY W!NTEROWD Well Do11e To the Editor: . As a middle-aged house\\'ife and mother of a young Marine, I · feel I must say thjs; Thanks '3' Jot all you "armchair know-it-alls." I do not want war; we are a Christian family, but sometimes one has to slap hands. The President had a big de- cision to make; it must have bog· gledhismind. The ship is safe, the crew is safe and most of the l\otarines are safe-thank God for that. Those boys need a "Well Done" -not a "No, don't do that ." So. shut up or go do it yourself, aJJ of you kno~·il-alls . C. l!ARRIS Bil.:t• Lt1ttc•s Tot he Editor: I am writing in regard to the bicycle safety lanes and paths in Orange County. I think these paths are a very good idea: the)' serve many people every day. The main point is that these bicycle lane~ gel cluttered up with' rocks, glass ancs other CSebriS\ w h i c h p u n c t u re m a n Y· tires weekly. I know that these paths are rare ly cleaned of, debris and I am writing because I feel bicycle safety lanes should be cleaned as often as possible- at least once e very ttrree weeks. . TOM MILLER The Tyranny of Do1ing Good "Macbttrleb'': The recondite 1 J German word at the head of this CHARLES column came · lo my aften -,.,...,~. ._ ___ M_c_C_A_B_E __ __. · lion, and was #~ . with gratitude · ~"!/ In Boston, a jury of nine n1eJl added to m y ;.,. """3'i.) and three wo1nen debated u m<.il · .vocabulary, ~-· ter of no Jes.s magnitude thoui. b y the in ---\VhenDoesLifeBegin'?The casc dust r i o u s involvedp a young doctor, Ken- young British · ·neth C. Edelin. \\·ho \\·as indicted journalist by a Suffolk County grand jury A u b e r o n for manslaughter in connection Waugh. Mr. \~·ith a legal abortion ::.it iloston Waugh translates the word as City Hospital. "The manic desire to im)X)se de· THERE ARE tremendous 15. cisions on other people." And he added, "lam convinced· sues here which \\'ill be discussed it (machttrieb) isl the prevalent later. The most urgent of all disease of our age, responsible might be: \\'hat jury. anyv.1here for most of its evils.•• and at any time. has the right to J have long held a similar view be making decisions on such a about the activities of moral niatler of privat e morals as the matter of fetus -killing"! busybodies . both within and · On another level the Ca li fornia · without legislatures. If Mr . Court of ,\pp ea l made a Waugh feels so strongly about the. , matter within his sceptered isle. landmark decision recentl y \Vt'len I suggest he avoid distress by it ru!e'd that · county s uperior· keeping as far away from its courts did not have authority to wayward offspring, America, as order the involuntary ste1;1izu· Possible. tion of an adult incompetent T•IERF. IS soml'thing <tbout telling other J)eoplc what is good for th e1n. or more frequently \\"h<.1t is bad for them, !hat is as ,\nlerici1n us .blueber1'Y pi~ or bombing in the name of defense ri:•uction . L('t u.s consider just a fl~\\· of the it.em s in the ne\vs re· c ~nllv ,\·herein this ancient pussiOn is being exercised. PUNCH ,,·ard. The . practice had apparently been going on ro r yeurs ""'ilhoUt. seriou s question when the American Civil Liberties Union early in 1974 appealed on behalf of !loll y K .• a mildly re'larded black "'·oman \Vho had been or· dered sterilized a t the request-of her father. TllE CONTRA COSTA County "Where did we go wrong, Eunice? That's wt.of I keep oslcing myself." . .. r Superior Court. s itting ~is :1 pro· bate coui'l ,,·bit h h~1 s _iu risdi ction O\'t'r g ua1·di an·\\ ~1rd 111atte rs . ~ranted tht• p e t it io n f or ;;i sterilization . A g ain, \\hy !his public l'onccrn O\'l't' one t-\irl 's isteriliz<tlion. and lhl' 1.1 ulllori1 ,,-or the eOUl"t s to cnl'ol't l' it. either .TllE BRll.1.1,\:\'T Br1t1sh apologist for Chris tianity, the late C. S. l.e\\·is. µut it thus: "Of all tvr annie.s a tvr ann v cxt•reiSl'd for {he good Of ils \"ietinlS Ill:.(\' \Je the most o ppres.si\"c. ll nia.v be bctlL'r to li \"c unde r ro lJbcr baron.s than untiL'I" 01nniµotcnt moral busybodil'S , The robOc1· ·baron's crul•l1 \' Ill a\· son1etinll'S isleep. his <:uµi.d it ~· ;nu~ ut son1e point be s ati1:1ted : but those \\·ho torm~nt us fOr our o\\·n good \\'ill torment us \\'ithout t>nd fur they do tiO \\'ith the a"ppro\':il of their O\\'ll consrien<'C ... •·To be ·cured' Hb•nnst one's ,,·jll and eured of i:;tates \\·f1irh \\'e nla)-' not reg<ird a.i;di sca.sr is to be µut on a \e,-eJ \\"ith those \\"ho ha\'e not ~·et reaclu.•d the uge of rt•ason. · ''\'ou sl art bein g "kind ' to µco · pie beforl::' you have consider1..•d th1..'ir rights, ;Jnd lhen fort'e '11pon lhen1 suppoSL'd kincln<'SSl'S ,,·hi,·h they in f<1ct h<1cl a right to refuse. ~1nci fin a I ly k indll('.SS whil·h no one Lul you ,~·.oulcJ recognize as J.:ind- ru:ss,~s and \\"hit'h the r~cipient \Viii feel ubon1in ubll' c:ruelties:•, ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Ro~rl N. "'eed . P11bll"lier Thomo~ Keirvil. Ed11or 8arb<lra Kririf)it·h. f.ditorlal f'oae l:.'duor The editorial pal{e of the ll~il~,· Pilot seeks t o inrorm and ~ stimulate readers by presenting on thi!! page diverse comment.1u-y. On topics of interosl by !lyndlral· ed coiumnl!l.tS and cartoonists. by providing a forum for read ers' vie"·s and by pre5enlln g thli nev.·:;.papcr's opini ons and ideas 1 on rurrent topi c:i. Tho cd itori~J ,. opinions or th(' 0 :1Hy Pil ol appear onl)' In the editor! al column ;;it the ~ ' top of th t· PH l!t" Opinions ex\ pr1..•11sNI by th e co\uml).ISt!i a~. t·<1rtoon1i ls and \t.>lter writer.~ rat1:i!1 their ov.•n and no cndo~t'ment «• . their \'ie"·s by thtiM Oitil:J f'ilril should be Inferred. Wedneioay., May 2l,.J975. " \ i • • '· ! t '.• ' ' • • I l ! ' - ' ,--!f. llay21, 1'71 C:WLV PILOT ,fjJ .t\ntism.Og Standards Head S.,vered ' • Th':erapy Aid Jn ·~Pot Ca«e ~· Winds Ri ' . -p . Tightened LOS ANGELES CAP) -Cars sold in California in 1977 will have to <'Buse less smog than those 1old elsewhere in the n8tion -even at the cost of higher prices and poorer gas mileage. • Body of l;irl, 14,f . . Found in Orchard MORENO <UPI) -A severed human head torn from the body of a 14-yeer-old girl by anlir)als was found Tuesday in ~ backyard ne-ar the girl's home here, seven miles east of Rivertside. Riverside County Sheriff's Lt. Neil Adkins said the body of Susan WaN, missing since April 10, was found in a citrus orchard 100 yardl from her home. The head was disc:overed by a neighbor, Carlos Martinei •. who notified deputies. LOf ANGELES (UPI) - Linda Eastman M~tftney1 wife of former Beatlt Paul McCartney. can go to • psychlat.rfat in London. inatead of Jail ln Los AngelesJor posseulon of mariju{lnt1 , a Judce ruled Tuesday. ' .'~at~ -·o~Dead ~ By Tbe Asilo<laled Pftio The bl1h wln~•. i!l.!t r11 Nortber.n Calllo•1!.l!,D<1;h• will subside todax;:;;Q\tlrlhere · inay be some anow sho\l(.er the Sierra N.evada;the Nati Weather Service said. The fede r a l Environmental Protection Agency granted th e state permission Tuesday to im- pose stricter s mog standards for 1977 cars because California's aiT pollution problems are the WOrst in the country. head had been torn from the Slate Investigators said the ( J ....torso .by_ animals. after the. Mrs .. McCartney, 33, was arrested March 3 by a highway patrolman who stopped a car carrying the ' singer and his family for· going through a red light. The officer s11:ld he detect· ed the smell of marijuana in the auto and a search turned up 16 gr a ms of tl in l\trs. McCartney 's purse. ., • One mun died and another ls believed dead art.er the high winds, sometimes reaching rf(> miles per hour. -appar enijy capsized-the Sea Wilch, a fishipg boat b-11$ed in San Pablo, tte Coast Guard reported. A STATE OFFICIAL called it ''an important s tep'' toward cleaner air. Auto m anufacturers .. on the other hand , say the re- quirement \\•ill mean: -An inc r e ase in purchase prices of from $5 to $00, depend· ingon a va riety of factors;_ -A drop in fuel economy of 5 percent to 15 percent; -A s maller selection of dif· ferent models, because not 311 models can be modified lb meet the standards. TO MEET the tougher regula· tions, th e 1977 cars will be equipped with the controversial catalytic converters that remove pollutants from exhaust gasses. Stricter 1977 standards were scheduled to go into effect for the entire country under the federal· Clean Air Act. But EPA Ad· 'minis trator Russell Train recom~ mended earlier this year that the standards be delayed because of potential health hazards from the converters. CALIFORNIA officials, in ask· ing to be exempted from the de- lay, said they believe the dangers from converters ha ve been vast- ly exaggerated. Tom Quinn, chairman of the California Air Resources Board, said Tuesday that Tr-ain had told him recently he regretted mak· ing the recommendation. •'Everything that has come out since the warnings of health hazards has confirmed our judg-· ment that there isnl any im- m ediate sulfate danger y;ith catalysts," said Quinn. Red Leader Sick LONDON (AP ) -Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev may be s uffering from cancer of the j a w, th e Dail y Telegraph's ~toscow correspondent reported today. The correspondent, John Miller, said there were "fresh re- ports" that Brezhnev was having radiation therapy for jaw cancer. Parole Date Set Sirhan Sirhan, 31, sentenced to.death in the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, will be paroled from San Quentin on Feb. 23, 1986, cifter serving 16 Years and 9. months in prison. Homosexuat Mom to Keep 2 Children · LOS ANGELES CA P) -Two c hildren of a self-admitted homosexual· Woman wjlJ be al- lowed to live with her, under a ruJing by the suburban Torrance Superior Court. Lynda l\1ae Chaffin , who lost custody of her two daughters after s he admitted to being ales- bian, was gra nted a modification Tu"esday or the original custody order. THREE PSVCHOLOGIC,\L experts testiried li ving with Mi's. Chaffin would not be detrimental to her daughte rs. aged 15and12. The girls ran ~way last January from their legal home \1:ith Mrs. Chaffin's parents in i\·Iarysville, Wash., a~ pa<l been living with thei_!' mother. LAST JAN:. 31,. the original custody w "!S upJl,ld _~ the 2r)d District Court 9f:iAppeal , which ruled denying. ~ r.s. Chaffin custody or Iler children was not entirely due to .her admission that she ha.ct been a·bomosexual. Cheryl Bf'atman, 3Iaw student intern wljo worked on the case, said the custody Jb'.odifi cation was obtained because~ the Tor- rance court· agreed wlth experts who said "it would be detrimen- tal for 'the··Childreri"to be taken , awav tto'.ih ih:elr rilother at this ti~~-" • ~ . Levi's can1natch any kid. ~re, kids are toogh. But Levi's• Double-knee outfits are tOugher. Because the jeans have twice the strength ri ght where you need it. In the knees. And they look sensational. Especially when you add the rugged, handsome malching jacket. If s a for dressing up. But wears like iron when ll's tjme to play. See our super . . selection of s hapes and colors. In sizes 2·14. . •. Fall Into th~ Gap. We're strong on kid s tuff. • WESTllNSTD • WESTMINSTER MAil • PHONE 194 5• onM71AffAwmt.~SAT. ltTOf.llM.NOOMTOI . • • • lffi's death, which is being in- veetigated as a murder. -----------~ ......... Oppe•ea ...... r~ ... ., ........ SACRAMENTO (UPI) -GQ.v. Edmund G. Brown jr., feced with a shrink.ing budget surplus and mounting demands for in· creased spending, dug in deeper today in opposition to new taxes next year. "'I'm not going to support any increase in general taxes, he s·aid. "'I 'm going to resist very strongly efforts that will make that a necessity a year or two down the road.'' Brown discussed taxes with reporters Tuesday following announcement of updated fis· cal estimates which showed state government in the fiscal year starting July 1 would ~pend $257 million more than it took from . taxpayers. Tllr-A...Uton Guiltl!f in Fraud LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Three Corri.er auditors of Equity Funding Corp. of America, which went bankrupt in one of the largest-business frauds in U.S. history, were convicted in Federal Court Tuesday of securities fraud and filing false statements with .the government. . . · U.S. District Court Judge Jesse W. Curtis ordered Juhan S.H. Weiner Solomon Block and Marvin A. Lichtig to return to court. June 23' (or sentencing. They were among 22 persons indicted in the massive securities fraud case. Slai11 SI.A M~'li Brot"-" Tallui SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Slain SymbloneseLiberation Army member Patricia "Mizmoon" Soltysik came to her brother's ochool one day in 19.73. She told him Marcus Foster deserved to be killed. Fred Soltysik, testifying Tuesday at the trial of two reputed SLA members charged with Foster's murder, said her visit was the last time she spoke to him before her death in a fiery shootout with Los Angeles police. Stephen Weed, fiance of fugitive heiress Patricia Hearst, also made a brief appeara nce for the defense at the trial of Russell Little and J oseph Remiro who are accused of the cyanide bullet slaying of the Oakland Schools superintendent and the a~tempted murder of hi s deputy, Robert W. Blackburn. Super1>i...-. to Probe SWAT (lnit SAN DIEGO CAP) -San Diego County supervisors have asked Sheriff John Duffy to meet with' them June 4 to discuss the sheriff's Special Weapons and Tactics squad. The unit, commonly known as SWAT, was heavily criticized by the county grand jury after a February incident in Oceanside in whi~h a 15-year-old boy was mistaken for a sniper and killed. % Arraiglled 111 SJ llfilUon Fraud LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Two men were arraigned Tuesday on chaJ:"ges of grand theft and fraudulent stock sales for allegedly bilking more than $1 million from investors who sank money in a purported "Cuel-tess engine" which ran on the static electricity in the air. · Edwin V. Gray Sr., 50, Northridge, and Richard B. Hacken- ~rger, 52, Van Nuys, were ordered to appear June 2 for a p~· liminary hearing. Gray was freed on $10,000 bond and Ha·cken- berger released on $5,000 bond. -Assemblyman Denies 'Fix' Of Citation SACRAMENTO CAP) -The California Hig hway Patrol sa·ys it reissued a ti c ket to As- sembly man Louis Papan for driving 90 miles per hour in a 55 mile zone after an area com- mander erroneously voided it. Papan, CD-Da ly City), says he didn't try to get it fixed. · NEWSMAN Bill Branch of KOVR ·TV in Sacramento .said Tuesday he started makihg in· quiries after -the station received an anonymous call that Papan · had received a ticket and that it had b~ett vqided . CHP SPokes man Kent f\1ilton confirmed that it had been voided by the Vallejo area com- mander, but s aid it w,as dqne ;'in error" and was "inappropriate." • . ., THE'. CHP . Zone cOmmander . had the ticliet reissued, Milton said. ' Papan tol'd KOVR lie· got the ti cket last Wednesday while driv- ing on Interstate 80 between San Francisco a nd Sacramento. He_ also said he contacted the CHP to question the way he was clocked by the patrolman, not because he wanted lo get the ticket overturned. ''l'M .GOlNG to pay it. I did nol make any threats. The allega· lions are not ·true," Papfn told KOVJl. · Branch said the anonymous caller ~!aimed ther e was a pat- tern of·lawmakers threetening to Vote against CH P salary raise:s to getoutoftickeU. But new CHP Commissioner Gl en Craig said he<knewoCtbree or four legislators ticketed in the' last 30 days, Fur Clearance. THE BODY or Glenn Douglus Page, 26, was recovered n~t' Angel lsland,-a spokesman sd:fd . The Coast Guard said Page le~ lhe San Pablo Yacht 1-Iarljbr l\1onday with Ke nneth Willia.itts of Richmond. The search c&t· tinued for William s. t Elsewhere, th e unpredict.\?d storm closed roads, flipped oVer. ·a small aircraft at Sao Cartos Airport, felled trees and caused power outages, perhaps the m'itsl serious in the east San Franci*o Bay ~rea where thousandsWr homes were out of power 'i'.iit. limes. THE WEATHERMAN blamed \he storm on a low pr;essure.atea which today drifted eastward.r• "'Righer pressures edging ~nto California will he rald a returtf.to more typical May weather," St.id a National Weather Servh:e forecaster. t A sn1-all craft advisory was s\ill in effect for northwest winds Of 15 to 30 miles per hour in the ~an Fran·cisco Bay a rea. ' GALE 1V ARNINGS were in;ef· feet early today for gusty wii}ds or 20 to 40 mites Per hour on the far northwest coast. ~ It will be warmer in mosl s'ec- ti°'\s today, with Pay area· highs rangirig from 60s to low 70s. ~e mercury shOuld climb to the tpid 70s in the valleys. · A warming trend in the Sict.r• Nevad4 will begin Thursday; he weatherman iaid. · Utility Evict~ PUC Meets ·i. • r SAN DIEGO CAP) -San D~go Gas .and Electric Company ~ys the Sta.le Public Utilities Cfm- mission can no longer use SDq&:.E's auditorium for it!i hearings. · SDG&I': president Waller ZiUau said Tuesday it would''ba !!ell!<!' fOJ both jrou!IS if the Pl.re fotiiti! atic,tber place to meet in SanDiegO. • ' " ' 'l .. ~ l ' ' • \ Four days only~ May 22, 23, 24 ·<:tnd 25. t. • It's the' season for smart shoppers to put tlJeir money on a fur .. Prices are nicer. than they've been all year! - Natural Tourmaline® mink/,leiither .Volfer. Now $699. ·Dyed ranch mink stroller. Now $1699. Natural Tourmaline® mink C.,,e. Now $399. Natural Autumn Haze® mink jac~el. Now $599 • Nawral Orchid Autumn Haze® mink coat.{Now $1499; Na1ural Tourmaline® mink stroller. Now $.1o!l9. Natural ·Azurene® mink cape.'lllow $699. Natural Autumn Haze® mink coat. Now $1!199. . Dyed ranch mink coo .• Now $2199. Natural ranch mink and white mink.shirt: Now $499. . Tip-dyed raccoon battle jacket. Now $399 •. Natural Tourmaline® mink jac~et. Now $1699. Dyed ranch mink jacket. iolow $1799, · Bleached white mink s.traighl stole. Now $1699. Yellow-dyed and white-dyed mink locket. Now $~'899. Natural Apollo!!!> mink coat. Now $3299. All subject to prior sale. Ask about <>Ur credit plans. •Robinson's Fur Salon. CIErN:MI Mink.._.", Aet'n. All fun lllbll«f to ~ OOU""Y of Ofliln of lmpon.d tu~ • 2 FASH IO~ ISLAND SHOP WED .. THlJ . & SAT. 10.5:30, f'.Rt: 10.9. SUN. 12·5 . • ' 1l I> " rr " SI c. i i - ' • A c c ! ~ I I l • Orange Coast . . EDITION 1 1 ' Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks • VOL. 68 , NO. 141 , 8 :;ECTIONS, 98 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MA':( 21, 1975 N TEN CENTS • . 1141 % Malpractice Hike Jolts Doctors By ALAN DIRKIN Of 11 .. D•llr f'li.. Sf.lff .orange Coy_nly .dQC.lo1s_ haye_ been slapl!ed with another 141 perceiit inC'reusc in the cost of malpractice insurance pre· miums even as they went into a wo_rk slowdowg. in protest over such ins urance costs. The increase. effective July I, came in a letter lo 8,500 doctors in Orange County and Los. Angeles County who are insured by Traveler• Insurance. . T.be--blke came w'th t-he Legislature in special session to work on bills to solve the crisis. But the strike spread to two more counties in Southern CaUifornia. Hmpitals in Orange County to· day informed staffs that work hours will have to be reduced. On the strike front, these were the developments today: -Physicians in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties have voted to-join the strike b-egtnning next Tuesday. -Another report said that several hospitals in San Diego County are expected to be afrect· ·ed by the anesthesiologists' a c· ·tion by the end of this week. -Surgeries at 41 hospitals in Southern.California were report· ed down today 80 percent. The . loss or revenue from would-be patients wa s estima te d at $400,000aday. Hoag Memorial Hospital or- ficials in Newport Beach an· nounced .. today that e le c - tive surgeries, which amount to about 75 to 80 percent or the operations at the hos pital, will be discontinued rrom next Tuesday. This will r esult in a revenue loss or $28,000 a day I 40 percent or the daily income, according to acting administraio'r Louis Kaa. '_Ka_a..uict.tbat.l:foag is trying ta reduce ·work hours by 40 percent by urging personnel lo lake early vacatious and leaves of absence . He said that the hospital may soon be on a four-day week and that layoffs eventually may be necesasary. • Tom Ri chards, administrator of Costa A1 -e's;i Me m o rial Hos pital, said that he expected that only emergency and urgent surgeries will be performed at the hospital by the end of the week . "We a re taking a "-'ail and see attitude, wa tching the sur· gery schedule," Ril'hards suid. ··we "-·ill react with voluntary lime arr at first but if it becomes more traumatic then we will have lo take more traumatic measures.'' Har r Patrol Transfer Okayed 12o/0 CliJnfJ Cost of Living .Spu1·ts in April By The Associated Press Consumer prices in the Los Angeles metropolitan area continued spir.aling upward, climbing almost 1 percent .in ~pril , Department of .Labor of- Jicials said today. Department statistics indicat- ed an increase of 12 percent in the cost of living as compared to April 1974, for Los Angeles and Orange Counties. .Suzanne Sadowsky, head of the dep ar tm ent 's Southern California Bureau, said the con· sumer price index in the Los Angeles area in April was 155.6, meaning that it cost $15.56 to buy the same goods and services which cost $10 in the base year i967. . The purchasing power of the 1967 dollar dropped to &t.3 cent& > • > • Newpora..Mesa last month, she added. Heavy increases in transporta· lion and housing costs were largely to blame for the rise in April's cost of Jiving, Miss Sadowsky said. 10-15% PETROLEUM HIKES SEEN. A4. Nationally, the rate of inflation quickened a bit in April as grocery prices reversed a two· month decline and helped push over·"all consume r prices up six- , tenths of a percent, the govern- ment reported today. The April increase, though doub~e that of March,.,was in line with the Administration forecast qf an annual inflation rate of about 6 or 7 percent this year for the U.S. . School Budget Cut By $3.1 Million By HILARY KAYE Ott ... D1Uy .. ilet1UH . During the past few months , tru!'ilees of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District have slashed about $3.l million from the district's proposed budget for 1975·76. The district will operate with a budget of $39.S million --about $3 million less than this year. However, trustees maintain that the cutbacks will seriously hamper the district's educational p,rogram and have proposed a spending increase of $100 per pupil, or about five cents added to the 1975·76 tax rate. Voters will be asked on May 2"I to approve a ta " hike from $4.07 this year to about $4 .12 next year. Due to stale legislation, an un· successful e lection will mean lhal the tax rate will drop to abput $3. 76 . * * * School Chief Won't Accept Salary Hike iohn Nicoll, superintendent of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District; said today he will ilof accept a raise for the coming y~ar. · "It has become increasihgly evident to me that the PoSSibiUty of m y receiving ap increase in sBhary .. .is being used by some f -citizens and staff alike -as an excuse, a cop.out, t-0 justify a negative vote on May 27," Nicoll ;aid. . Next Tuesday. the school dis- trict..,s asking voters to approve a 36-cent override tax. Nicoli's current s alary is ~.soo annually. Trustees have already agreed to otfer .the s\.)perintendenl a new, tbw'·Yt&r contract beginnlnl July l . · At the beginning ·ot Ille year, 1n11tees 'dlscu51ed offertn1 Nlcoll an Increase of $3,500. However, (!licoll at that time !Alld lbem to hOld off on his salary until later, Now. with the election Ju1ti 4.&11 away, Nicoll announced, "I have advised Iha boll'd ot edUu· tlon that.' there should be no (:hJnce In the •terrm; ti my ~ $ent contract dbring 1975-78. win or lose on May 27.'' DurinJ these last few days before the t;Iution, trustees and district officials are emphasizing ways the district will be affected' if the $39.5 million budget is used. If voters approve the election measure, $2.S million in extra revenue wlll come into the dis· trict, creating a budg'et or $42 .1 million. or that amount, $1 .25 million will be put back into the budget in the form of program r estorations and the remaining $1.25 million will be used to boost emergency reserves to $1 mi1lion and lo pay salary increases and fringe benefits to district personnel. The current $39.5 million budget has no allow~nce for raises other than ·the standard step increases for teachers. Trustees have recentl y weathered several stormy school board m.eetings, where large numbers of parents , and· teachers, have jammed into the meetint room and demanded that certain cutbacks be ie· instated. . Al a result, trustees have re· instated the primary reading pr~gram ($250,000); special music teachers ($65,000) and some transportatiorf services ($55,000). · Or the $3.1 million reduction, about $2.3 million co~ from ac· tual cutbacks, $680 ,000 from ex· peeled teacher attrition plus $80,000 from reductions in extra pay to teachers for afterschool duties. . (See BUDGET, Page AZ) PRICES' WORRY ' DAMPENS DOW NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market. closed broadly and sharply lower today in mode rate trading on the 'New York Stock Exchange as invest.on: showed concem over a rise In the cost ol living. The Dow Jones industrial average, a seven ·polnt loser Tuesday, lost 11.81 paints to 111.•. l>ec.U.nes outdistanced ad·· vances by ·~bout a JO-to-three mar SIA. Prlcee were lowet in moderate trading on the 'Amerlean Stock Exchange. \ • DIJlt Pll•t ~•i •Y P•lrkk D'Oo-11 MRS. FORD WAYeS TO ENTHUSIASTIC REFllGEE CROWD AS SHE DEPARTS l!ENDLETON -Refugees Joined Newsfne.n In Seeking Sn•pshota of the First lady.'• Visit Mrs. Ford Sees Viets . Greetings Given to Pendleton Refugees By CAROL.MOORE 01 lh• Dilly .. llotstlH Betty Ford bfought greetings· from her Pr~sident husband and "the warmth of the American people" lo Vietnamese refugees in Camp Pendleton today. · '·The President, our children and I have suffered along with your misfortunes and · want to give you help, happiness and sun- shine,'' was her greeting, translated to a crowd of several hundred in a recreation area. As the first member of the First F amily to visit any of the refugees' compounds, Mrs. Ford toured · the largest of the tent cities and emphasized that she came to m eet each and every one of the refugees. "All of us here are volunteerj. willing to help.you adjust. Things 1will be better over the hill, but it will lake tim e ." Mrs. Ford had lengthy con- versations with both former President Nt,l uyen Cao Ky or A REPORTER VIEWS 'LITTLE SAIGON'--A7 South Vietnam and ex-President KhoyofCambodia. The First Lady's entourage passed through dining areas, a classroom in its third day of leirning English and a Post Ex- 3 GM Recalls 50,000 Autos Involved DETROIT (U.PI) -General Motors Corp. said to- d ay it is recalling about 50,000 current mode l Chevrolets, Pontiacs, Oldsmobiles and Buicks because some models may contain steering, ac· celerator and air Conditioning defec ts. (Related story, Al4) · GM said three separate recall actions arc in· valved. . About 3,100 Chevrolet Camaros and Novas. Pon· tiac Flrebirds •and Buick Apollos and Sky larks, the company sli,id. may contain defects that could cause drivers to lose steering control. Another defect, which might make it impossible for cars to idle properly, may involve about 16 ,000 Pontiac Venturas, Oldsmobile Omegas ~nd Buick Apollos and sk:ylarks, the com'~y BUid .' In addition. GM said, abbut'Sl,000 Camaros may contaln>faulty fan blades in the air conditioning unit. Thesec911lft')>reak •rengine vibration.• No injuries Jiave been reported as a result of the defects, GM said. · • · ' I • - change set up as an open.air marketplace for refu gees. Within each tent a particular child would·atlracl her attention and a clasp of the hand. Older children. oblivious to the pro· minence of their visitor, were ushered rorth by their parents for recognition by the President's wife. But her a_rrival al the outdoor sports art?a -a basketball court actuall y -was announced in both English and Vi etnamese languages and attracted a cheer· ing crowd . l\olrs . Ford 's visit lasted less than a n hour. after which she de· parted for El Tol'o MCAS and n flight ba ck to Washington tonight. Both the presidents tipped her hand and asked that she relay their gratitude to the President. "That's what we're here for,'' s he replied. Mrs. Ford was wearing a two· piece beige s uede suit wiltt·brown polka dot scarf and looked healthy as she wound up her California lour. Four Dotlgers Due At Costa Mesa Park Four m e mbers of the Los Angeles Dodge rs will conduct a clinic in Costa Mesa's Lions Park Saturday. Outfielder Tom Paciorek, catcher Joe Ferguson, pitcher Tommy John a nd coach Tom Lasorda will appear from noon to 2 p.m. to teach the basic SkUl s or baseball and coaching strategy in connection with the Harbor Area Baseball Program. • Newport Objects To Move By WILLIAM SCHREIBER Ol ttl• D.1Uy PllotSUff Over the objections of Newport Beach cit y officials, Orange 1 County supervisors voted 4-1 to· day to transfer the county Harbor Patrol lo the sheriff's de· pai-tment. Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose dis trict in cludes Newport and Dana Poi nt harbors. voted against the transfer. He claimed such a consolidation would pro- bably be effective only in the south county harbor which is sur· rounded by county territory. He supported contentions by Newport Beach City Manage r Robert Wynn that creation or a second la\\.' enforcement agency within the incorporated boun- daries of a cit y would only create unnecessary conflict. The transfer also affects Sunset Acquatic Park and Hunt- ington Harbour. The trans fer proposal "'as made b y Sheriff-Corone r Bradley Gales and endorsed by county Administrative Officer Robert Thomas. Thomas said he reels the transfer could effect a savings of· · as much as $82 ,000 if harbor t patrol officers are made into sheriff's deputies and given en-1 forcement powers that must now be perrormed by deputies on patrol in squad cars. Wynn said hi s city is of the opi- nion that the county would be bet- ter off contracting with city policemen for enforcement in Newport Harbor and he said the same would probably hold true 1 for harbors in the west part of the county s urrounde d b y in · corporated cities. Riley claimed the savings cited by Thomas and Gates would not be "hard cash " because he said ther e a re other wa ys to streamline enforcement in the harbors without m aking a major consolidation. Warning Issued WASHINGTON (UP[) -The Senate Armed Services Com mit· tee has warned against any m a· ,jor shifts in military forces over· seas or any man power cuts in the Pacific until a pos t-Vietnam era foreign policy is formul3ted. Or• .. •_g~:••t Weatller !\los tly s unn y s kies throu g h Thur s da y. \Varmer with highs in the upper 60s at the beaches to . 70 inland areas. Lows tonight near 50 . INSIDE TODAY . • ·' Laguna Beach i.m 't the onl.y place where beachgoers in lhe .altogether are colching ciJ.y officials wilh lheir ordinances down . It 's a nalion wide phenomenon. See Page J\12. Index ' ... _, ' . ....,1 I ,. ........ J Front Grove , NEWPORT-MESA DISTRICT BUDGET CUTS. • • Tanzania Moh ' . .. •• .. ., ' .. • ., ' The bll1est cull ~me from the ~el •111!'1•1 1lloulloe, l•· du<llq ffilucUon1 In olllce sup- pllea, ~uipmttnt, coDJukants, mile•1e. dUpllClitlng services ~ professlon•I mffllnp . Ot.h•r eut1 'lnvolve cleaning, re· palrle1 1nd p1lbUn1 bu!ldln1s. reHarch and development prc>-rrama. pupil transportaUOll, dlo· trlct publlc1Uon1 and ~uoed sabb&Ucal leaves fOC' t••Mf[11 And, 31 maintenance Ud opera~ tlons positions have b een elimlnated. SCHOOL: . Newpert Hai rbor Hlth: Cerofta d•I M•r Hit": c;osta Mesa H lgh : Estancia High: Lincoln Middle : Ensign Middle: ToWlnkl• Middle: Kaiser Middle : Davis Middle: RNMidfle: Vlcterla: Whittler: WliMll: ...,rstr11t: Cell ... Park: IClllyltrooke: Paiulairino : -·: Balearic: Calltornf 1 : Mesa Verde: Bay View: ,..._Vista: District wide ca\e(Ories that RESTORATIONS IF ELEC- TION APPROVED One count1elor, one teacher , moth and language lab assls· tants, PE equipment man, some after.school acUvtUea. student bod y support tunds. Smaller classes, more En1lish, social studies, math, science, art, industrial art.a, and home economics classes, keep night science lab and night library open, PE equip· ment man, student body sup· port runds, some arter-school activities. Smaller English clasSes, PE equipment man, some after· school activities , student body support funds, clerical aides. Activities director, social studies teacher, security gua rd , some arter-school ac· tivities, student body support funds . Smaller Englis h classes, cou ns e ling and nursing services, teacher aides, some aflei'-school activities. More classes in math, social studies, and English, counsel· ing. some arter-school ac· tivities. Smaller classes, nursing , couns e l ing and library services, some a(ter·school activities. Smaller English classes, voc al music teacher, instnac· tiohal aides, some arter· school activities. Guidance lab personnel , coU n seling, nursing and library services , instruc.- tional aides, some arter· school activities. Smaller classes in English, social studifs, and home economics, counseling and library services, some after· school activities. Smaller classes in primary grades, instrumental mu.sic teacher, nursing services. Pilot 4 pre-school program, reading teacher, instrumen· Lal and vocal music teachers, nursing services. PE teacher, instrumental and vocal music teachers, counseling and nursing services. Reading teacher, helping teacher, vocal music teacher, counseling and nursing services. Instrumental music teacher, teacher aides, counseling and nursing services. Smaller classes. helping teacher, instrumental music teacher. Learning center teacher, re· ading teacher, instrumental music teacher, teacher aides, counseling a nd nurs ing services. Learning center teacher, re· ading teacher. instrumental and vocal music teachers , learning center aide, counsel· ing services. Smaller classes in K, 4th and 5th grades, vocal and in· strumental music teachers. instructional aides, student aides. Smaller classes, instrumen· tal music teacher, nursing services. Reading teacher, ina t.ruft"len· tat music teacher, counaeline services. Pilot 4 pre-school program, instrumental music teacher, learning center stafr, counsel· ing and nursing services. Instrumental and vocal music teachers, teacher aides, counselinc services. Vocal ·and ins trumental music teachers, lea rning center aides, teacher aides, nursing 1ervices. 1 A learning center, inst.rumen· tat music teacher, nursing services, clerical aides. PE teacher. instrumental muaic teac her . read tn1 specialist, counselinc and nursing services, clerical aides. · Reading tescher, coun1elln1 and nur11lng services, clerical lidH . I ' will reeeive reinstatements if the ·election Is successful, Include 1cbool nunes, paycboloalsts, 13 maintenance an d operations posltion1, the pre·acbool pro. gram , replacing stolen ec1uio· ment1 s_pecial . education .. some; home-to-school transportation, Woodl•nd : and district help to student ac- tivities s uch 11 drama, pep 1quad.I and band. Individual 1cbools will be If· footed In differing ways ii the voters approve the extra re· venue. The accompanying chart outlines the effect on each school. Reading \_eae:her, instrumen· t a l mulic teacher, PE teacher, helping teacher , counsel ing and nurslng services . Andenen : •Smaller classes, learning center teacher, vocal music teacher, counseling and n_urs· Ing services. COron• del Mor: Eostblull: Harbor View: Newport: Newport Heights: Mariners: Final Rites Learni ng center leicher, classroo m t each er, In · strumental music teacher, nursi~g services. Voca l music teacher, PE teacher, learning center stafr, clerical aides. Smaller classes iq primary grades, teacher aides, noon supervi sors. Smaller K classes, learning center a ides, instrumental mu s i c tea ch e r , reading teacher , nursing servi ces. Reading teacher , instrumen• tal and vocal music teachers, le arning center aides, counse lin g and nursing servi ces. Instrumental music teacher, counse lin g and nursing servi ces, clerical and teacher aides. Mesa Chamber OKs Override . Seizes Student'-- DA R ES SALAAM, Tanzania <UPI ) -Three American 1tu· ·dents were kidnaped from a wildlife r..eae1reh atatlon by armed Africans in a remote area of northweatern Tanzania, U.S. embassy officials said today. A Dutc h student a lso was ab- duc.ted. The sources aaid Uae kidnaplng took place Monday nJeht at a game reaearch staUon run by Jane Goodall, author or several books on animal behavt«. (Stanford University said It had been informed by State Department orftcials in Tanzania that 40 armed men from Zaire seized the three students and an administrative assistant. (StanfOrd said the students kid· naped were Barbara B. Smuts,24, Ann Arbor, Mic h.; Kenneth S. Smith, 22, Garden Grove, and Catrie Jane Hunter, 21, Atherton, Calif.> Th e research staUon, in the Gombe gam e reserve: is located north of Ki goma on the shore of Lake Tanganyika near the Burun· ·di border . The embassy asked the Tanza. nian government to launch an in· · vestigation, the sources said. The Am ericans an d th e Dutchman were among about 30 students working at the station. J\1ost or the students are from Stanrord . Miss Goodall a nd other mem· hers of the research station wit- nessed the kidnaping. They said the kidnapers were armed with • rifles, but their identity was not known. 1 The ern baaay sources a aid there waa no apparent moUve ror the kldnaping and relatlo(ls between the students. at the r.e· search station and local villagers were good. However, the border Qr~a of Burundi near the area or the kid · naplng w•a the scene of military operations aealnst dissident lrlbftmen this month. The U.S. embassy in the Burundi capital of Bujumbura also was working on Uie kidnap case, the sources said. * * * U.S. Citizens Terrorized Around World From Wire Services Ame.ricans came under in· creasing attack today throughoul the world. Two U.S. Air Force or. ricers were murdered in Iran, an Am erican civilian and two Marines were held hostage th Laos. and three Stanford slu· dents were kidnape d in Tanzania. Terrorists stopped a car carry. ing two unarmed U.S. Air Force o£ricers to work th is morning, or· FORD.SAYS BOMBING NOT PUNJTIVE. A4. ·THIRD CA.LLER dered !heir Iranian driver to lhe fioor of the car , then shot and BOUGHT Y. ~CHT killed the Americans. R The U.S. Embassy identified For Pioneer Costa Mesa Chimber of Com· merce direc tors have endorsed "The ad produced many calls the dead as Col. Paul R. Sharfer and I sold the yacht on the third Jr., 45, a native of Bryan, Ohio, Anthony K. "Tony" Plummer, the tax override that goes before call. I'm very pleased." and Lt. C_ol. Jack J. Turner, 45, . .d I of Balbo d voters of the Newport-Mesa Id b f C I a pioneer res1 en a an Unified School District next That's the success story to y rom or bond a e , Ill. tbe retired head or the the Huntington Beach man who The Iranian tovernment said I Tuesday. Penlnsu a 's post office -died Chamber directors voted 14_2 placed this ad in the Daily Pilot: the assasjiins, w o escaped, were Monday at Sun City. 1be seven-Marxist guePrillas, and ''no ac· th-1eneration Californian would in a secret, written ballot at a COLUMB IA 22, 3sails, tion will be spared to rind the luncheon at the Mesa ve--Golf k t et cockp1·1 have been 69 in August. 'VI::' no m er, murderers and bring them to Mr. Plummer, who moved to and Country Club TUesday .. Six· cushions, Newport Slip justice." the Harbor Area in its earliest teen or the 21 directors attended $2800 . xxx-xxxx A woman who said she spoke d d Ith fi the meeting. Wi ays, serve w the post of ice Directors favoring the over· If you have a boat or sails to for the "Iranian People's ar· for many years and in his spare rid 1 eel th 1th alit r sell , call 642.5678. It only takes 8 rtors Association" called the As· U I keel the _____ ... es res1 a equ yo a d h me a so wor in 1K.JWJU h 1 d" t . t ft . k rew words in the right place to sociated Press and sai "t e ex · booth of the old Rendezvous ' sc 00 is ric 0 en is a ey make 8 sale. ecution or Ameri can of£icers was Ballroo d criterion used by firms in decid· r · m an as night manager . h 1 1 t their h d Along the Orange Coasl, the a reply to the execution o nine d Ibo T i.ng w ere o oca e ea -· · tor the ol Ba a heatre. rt N pok alnsl righl place is the Daily Pilot Iranian revolutionaries 1n pnson He and his~ile, C..therine, -q~u~a'..!!:e~r~5~·~0~0_n_e_•~~e-•~l~~~======================.:::::___'.'.Ia~s~t:m:o:n:th:·~·-·~~~~~~moved to sun l,..;ity 11 yean qo ,. the issue. after his retirement' from the postal service. .. Besides his widow, Mi. Plum- mer leaves a son, Reid, of ·Capistrano Beach, also a Harbor Area postal employe ; ·a daughter, Mrs. Ruthelyn Wilson of Newport Beach and another son, Anthony K. ''Ken" Plummer 'Of Costa Mesa. Others include-a brother, John L. Plummer of Bakersfield; nine grandchildren and two great-grandchildren,. Services .will be held at 10 a.m. Friday in Evans -Brown Mortuary Chapel in Sun City. Graveside services wiU be at 2 p.m. on the same day at the fami- ly plot in Hollywood Cemetery. Friends who wish may make memorial contributions to the Am erican Heart Association . Chamber to Hear Councilman Store Newport Beach City Coun· cilman John Store will be the guest speaker at t he Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce luncheon Thursday at the Balboa Yacht Club. The social hour will begin at 11 :30 a.m., followed by luncheon at 12:30 p. m. and then store's ad· dress. The public is invited to the gathering. The cost for lunch is $4. ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT ~Otif>9'1 (N•I D<llll Pi IOI, ... tllwlokll I\ C- -tM l<+l""·PreH, lpytl!!-1>'/llWO. ..... C...•1 Pvll'l~!"9 to"'l>tnr. ,...,_,ft.Oii-•• "°'1>11-Mo""•' 1~•...,tll F•""'Y tor Cool• lllow. !ff•-• e...:11. H""u""''"' 8"<111,._... ltl" "'"''· ••••"•· 5•1Jdleh<-v.1 .. , .,,. ~ lle.tth..,,.,ulll COt •I. A .inole •t"fl-1 e0111 .. I• """"'~<I S•lurlll•• -SWlcla~•· Tiit Cl">n<l.,.1 PWll'•~lno pl•nl ,. 11 JOO ~•I &ay 101'"'· tt';ll llilt••. Ctl•lo•nlt'16i.. Robert N. Weed ,.,.,,.,. .. , . .., "'"''..,,... Ja(k R. Curle'( \l•Ct l'•H•Ot"I •"" Gt"•'fl ~""9"' Thomas Keevi l (d•!O< Thomas A. Murphi~ Cha rles H. Loos Richard P. Nall A\~ •1•M ""-""0•"9 lOOIO<l Newport Be;ach Office 1))) ..... 11<1•! o.ovo. ..... .11M uo"9•N••n "0 119•\I U,t?W.J Ttltphone 17141 642-4:121 Cla11llitd Advertising M2·S47S ';aflr•I•"''· !ti} 0••"~ tN\I t.i1o11u11110 (-0~"' No.,••••lot,.>,•lt<"lt•l ....... 11! .. 1•1 "'ftltr tf fd•••l•>•-"'0 llt,.t l• mt, M ••P••l~c•d •llftOUt '""~!f1 11t1ml•t ;.., OI 'COOyhf~IO,.M•, l>•t•"d ..... ''""" ...... '°'~ """"· C.•1<10•~••· \ub..._,,.,.,..,,IW ,,.,,.. U.to-lllf; "',...,I ... OD"'°"'"'•: mlhtW\i' ... llllf! ..... "1.• '-IM• Model FPl·170T FRIGIDAIRE Family Size REFRIGERATOR A 100% F r ost-Proof OMLY Refrigerator-Freezer that $399'' boasts a generous 17.0 cu.·ft. overall. The 4. 75 cu.•ft. freezer sedion ollers 2 Flex-Ouik Ice Trays and an ice server. FRIGIDAIRE HU.VY DUTY WASHER s2599s DRYER . s 17995 This Fr igi daire Heavy Dut y Wa s h e r can deliver dependable. tro u ble ·fre e performance with its heavy duty motor and other combonents used in Fr igidaire Commercial Washers. You can wa sh pern...nent press, cottons. and heavy work clothes efficiently, or reduce wear on delicates with Normal and Gentle Wash cyctea. The fT'atching Frigidaire Dryer lets vou dry up to 18 pounds of laundry all al once. With the turn of a dial. match the drying time to the type of load, including permanent press and knits. SJM'S FRIGIDAIRE LAUNDRY CENTER Th is apace·saving Frigidaire Laundry Center combines a fam ily·slze washer and dryer Into a single slim cabiner. Plugs into any aepa,rate 15 amp conventional household circuit. ' ~avls•bro ! ' ---' .b"AtLY PILOT' E Dl~ORIAL PAGE II• A ·vote Of Conscience HOW ABOUT t>ETENTE~ ~Ut>l>ENLY I HAVE THIS <AAVING FOR HAVANA (l~ARS. .. 1 " . ,, In another atmosphere. in other limes. a school .(inancing Issue such as the one before Costa Mesa and 1 l)Jewport BeaCb voters next Tuesday would pass like a reeze. 111 The amount or money involved per household is . no\ that si1nlfic.ant. nor does It involve any glamor ' 1 'pending or hokum. .'.', Based on the tax rate he paid for the current (1974·75) school year, the owner or a $50,000 to wi.ooo . house would pay only from $6 to $7..!0 more per year · for the Clve•year period of the authorization. Com- pared to what the school tax rate will drop.lo if the --electioif?illa·, tlfat home owner will pay an additional $30 to$40 per year. Trustees and administrators of the Newport· esa Unified School Distrlc_t had.little choice but to . ek some increase in the present .per pupil expen· 1tureto t.ry to catch up with inflatloh·caused cost in· reases. They see the issue as necessary to slow do,vn to ss damaging speed what seems to be a n inevitable ecline in the quality of education in the local system. They h.ave ~ul their budget in ways least likely to fell in. \.he . teo~hing aJld student activities Pro- rams, atJeast through the first year. In s ubsequent ears, the loll will become more visible. The school folks deSe~ve credit for trying to do hat their critics told them lo do last fall after an lection ror a larger. Per-pupil revenue increase was rned down by the voters: -They have counseled with the community, eeking recommendations for budget balancing from ommitlees representin' various school a reas, '!nd ied to reconcile c9nflict1ng recommendations. · -They reduced the a m ount of their request from "150 per pupil to $100. -They cul considerably more out of the 1975-7G budget than the addilionlll $100 per pupil will provide. Even If the election succeeds. $1.7 million will be cut .. -They have set a lime limit of five years on thC meas ure. A 1972 stale law allows Newport·l\.1esa to increase per-pupil s pendin~ only three percent to offset infla- tion. Obviously, this is totally inadequate. No m a tter whether the issue wins or loses. the quality of education in the Nei.•lport-Mesa district isn 't likely to be as good as it h as been. Even with declining enrollments In the lower grade levels-;-and witll reduc · l ions in personnel where state law permit s , inflation will outrun revenue. All of this_p.oses a hard.decision for many families in the district who are sufrering the same problems of meeting inflation with fixed or diminished incomes- or even unemployment. Scarcely a family exists th at has not, had to change its habits, its s pending pat- terns, its priorities und its way of lire in today 's economy. So it is not illogical they expett s('hools and other public agencies a lso lo accept a little surfering. Thus the election Tuesday becomeS a matter of priorities and a difficult m atter of cons cience for all or us. The opportunity to perhaps "save" some money even at the expense of our schools is te mpting . But ir the voters do adopt this line of reasoning , they should know erosion or a fine school syste'm \viii be accelerated. Experience is that, once s t arted, de- terioration of a school system is difricu ll. costly 'and slow to reverse . Our opi11ion is that the $100 per pupil revenue in- crease on next Tuesday's ballot is worthy of 1>ossagc. It represents a modes t cfrorl to ho ld onto a superior educatio n system. 'fhe investme nt appears a 'vise 011e. N Split n Ford L•1c11I .!\ge11cies C1111 .l\1lu1i11ister Co11st Pl1111 ~ ) • • ec1s1on EVANS-NOV AK WASHINGTON "°'"The gamble ken by President Ford in using med force against Ca mbodia. a rting \11ith air strikes against ambodi an gunboats last week, as based above all on this hard nclusion : the U.S. had to seize 'e occasion of Cambodian racy lo prove it both could and ould react with decision and wer lo international lawless- ss. There was no split of any kind the Nutional SecuMty Cou ncil NSC )" I n " eed . every p official in h e a d • 1nistrution greed that hutcvcr the sk, a show of meri ca n i I I ;.1 n d ower \vas bsolutely es- ntial following the humiliation South Vi etnam. Jn ordering AmeMcan attacks n the Cu mbodian gunboats to lock an obvious Cambodian cf- rt to remove the American rew of the Mayaguez to the ambodian mainland. neither e President nor the NSC even attempted to figure out an answer to this potentially ex- plosive Question : what if the Cambodians should use the gun- boat attack as the pretext for murdering some 40 American crev,.men ? "Of course y.·e had contingency plans," one top presi dential aide told us. "But 've couldn 't sit around 01nd try to estimate every possible cont ingency when we are dealing with a primitive gov- e rnme nt which has virtually no out1ide conta('U; -.;ith the world. We had to oct." · THE UNDERLYING assump- tion or the President's aides was that the U.S. must deal with such \n net of piracy as a Westero n11 - 1tion 11cting in a cWilized fashion :. .femand Immediate return or lhc J.QihJp and crew and ma.P a cont· .'fngency plan to seize bolh by 1Jorce if the demand was not met r!'ilhln a reasonable time. ~,.Following seiiure or the ;.m.ayaguez by Cambodia just f(l~r midnight,. Sunday, the ,President a llowed ulmosl 48 •ours to go by without ony lrnttitary respons e . Next, tJle .J>asic plan or t&olating the ~ilUe jsland in the Gulf of Thailand,· . •here lhe 1\.1 ayaeuei waii held. ~we'pt aslryy when Cambodlan ~u n boat s mov ed toward lhe •1rnalnland 1.1bout l!i .miles away. ,"l'he President then gave his or- /~erto halt the g~•bo"'" ' ,'<-At Ulat point, the U.S. \\•ent the \e, ond necessary dist"nce to I rove whot Mr. Ford and hl.s 8 returies of State und Defense, . e-nry Kissinger and James 'ltl'lleslngcr. hud been preaching '!pn·ato p ever 1ince the tt:taalrophir end of.the 1Vltilnarf1 ' Dear Gloomy Gus Whal is Just Plaiq •lenry's target o f opportunity? Could it be the taxpayers of Orange County forced to clean up hi s Ali ce In Won- derland litter? M.W 01.-n1y GVI Ctlflm•11t1 •r• t"'llmll ... loy r.-.n..-dt IMlt ... ,., .... 1., .. 11«1 IM WI-I •I ..,_ llf•,11•"•· S..IMI rMI• 11"'1 ........ ttGlotmy GVI, Diiiy ~119C war : despite that n3tionnl humiliation. no foreign country should make the mistake that the United States was discarding its role as world leader. or was re· luctant lo tak e slrong action where demanded. INDEED. the private remarks of top offi cials here make it a bun· d a ntly apparent t h a t tJie Mayaguez seizure' became the ideal case to prove the point. In' the background was the ul· ter failure of al l erforts LO open som e kind o r circuito u s diplomatic channel lo the revolu- tionary Cambodian government of the KtJmer Rouge. The Soviet Union has been kit·ke<l out or Phnom Penh for failure to break v.d th the old regime. The People's Republic of China, according lo one hi ~h offi('ial. informed the U.S. it wou ld try to help , and did so. but proved the point that the jingoistic Cambodian regime ..,,..as simply beyond reach. On Tuesday evening, Mr. Ford ordered word passed to con- gressional leaders that "ap- propriate action" would soon be taken. Perhaps in. retrospect the Presi'dent should have ~um· mooed these leaders lo the While House for a face-to-race con· versation: Sen: Mike Mansfield of Montarra, the S e nate Democratic leader tfor example, said later that he 1nad not been "conlrulted," on the .theory he was told, not asked. OT.HER CRITICISM in a Con 1res1 now s howing dangerous symptoms or thking over Amedcan foreien policy ·rrom iti leu_dlng committee rooms was also heard, raising ominous questions about a vicious partisan debate erupting from the President's bold action. But op that point Mr. Ford and his top oldes} often Indecisive and vacillating on lesser mat- ters, showed no concern thi s time. They a s sumed th a t whatever partisan Outcry might ensue, the American people as a whole would react with over-· whtlming approval to the Presi· denl 's powerful response to an unprovoked act or piracy on the high seas. · ''Sure they 'll try todema.gogue it," one senior presldenUal aide told us. "That's p•r for the cour11e. But no one considered that *-5 part or lhe problem ... TtlVS, In this rlrst. clear show of American power since the In· dochlnese fiasco, Mr. Ford has demomtraled what he Is orttn critlclted for Jacking: a talent ror. leader1hlp and' command, in a cuse void of ambiguity to him 11nd his udv lsers . Peapite pollllral risks, no one around him exhibited second lhou11ltv about the obll1at1cin of th• U.S. to --underwrite the ruht of law in the •'wor1d. Commissions Should Dissolve To the Editor : Realtors and many other · Ameri cans "·ould have to find other work under governments '\'hich now control more than hair of the world's population. The simple reason being that individuals are not rree to own property in those countries. Could this rreedom be los t he re? Onl y if those interested fail lQ act when the bundle of rights that go y.·ith property ownership surfer in£rin gement . It would seem thut property o wn ers. current and prospective, to protect their own interests y.·oul,d turn out to vote agains t a ll e ncroachments. In aC'tuality. voter partici pation in rece nt e lections has bee n declining The problem seems lo be that many are "'orking too hurd to have the time lo identify c ritical issues or to respond appropriately. The Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board 0£ Reetltors r esponded to this. problem by rorming a Political Affairs Committee lo s tud y issues and r ecommen d ed a ppropriate actions. RE COGN I Z I NG the infringement b'y the Coastal Zo,c Conservation Commission on the ri ghts of the City of Newport Beach as well as on many property owners seeking to improve their properties the Political Affairs Committee decided lo explore the situation. We learned that the commission , "'hile mandated by Proposition 2Q (which a large majority of Orange County voters turned do'4'n ), was c harged with preparing a coastal plan and expiring. After fu rther study the committee proposed and t he board of directors approved the rollowlng statement: ''As the N e wport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of R'ealtol's h·a s "'ilnessed considerable client experi ence with the impact of the Coastal Zone Conservation Commission .created by Proposition; and ''A s we co n s id e r the commission will h·avc served its purpose by ma kin g loca l government aware of the need to protect the environment or the coastal area; "Aa actions or the current ·commissions have proven costly :to cau·rornia in jobs lost : to the ·property owner and the ultimate buyer in time and money spent even for minor construction : and ''As local general plans ar c being completed to support the coaslal plan , which general plans can be a dminis te r ed fa,lrl y, consistently t1nd judiciously by loc:al elected oC- ficials supervised by existing &late agencies : ''We. thererore. urge the m a ndated expirotion of the Coastal Zone Conservation Commission be rulfilled.'' SINCE the stole Legi!§lature will make the rina l decision on the comm·lsslon ~nd Its plans. we have forwarded the above 1t a te m enl to each board or realton in lhe state asking them to protect lhe Interests of their clients by lmpresJJlng their .Legislators with the Importance of this m atter. L\'MAN S" FAULKNER Chairman Pollticnl Affairti Com1n lttt.-e, Newport Harbor·Co&to Mesa Boa rd ot Realtors ' ( MAILBOX ) ._.11 ... , lr•m rt•O••• ••• w•IC-. T'"° rioM to <011Hn~ fllt•• ta 111 •11•ct or tllrt'lin•lt libl!l l• •t· -wtO, ._.lltr• OI )O(I '"'''di'' lft• will bt tjlwe11 1H'tltrt11<•. •11 ltllt•• "'"'" low:I-M~hrrt •n.d ..,..11111q •dd•••• lowl n•mt5 may IOt wit-Id on re· qWttl II •wll•u1111 ••••on'' '"llfW'"''· "°"''will 1111tk po,1bll1fltd. S1111bli•·~ To the Editor: In reply to fl letter rrom your 'reader, David Curtis. may I say that philosophically he is right, but statisticall y he is wrong. A well-documented survey taken in California last year shows thal over 42 percent of revenue limit increase elections Passed. Also, it should be pointed out that the Newport-Mesa school district is req uesting of the voters just that: A revenue limit increase, not as Curtis wrote, "a bond issue." Maybe he does hav e reference to some statistical re· s ui ts concerning school bond is- sues, but obviously, revenue limit increase requests are not difricult to pass. Let's get the nam e of the game right; that makes it easier to win. FREDERICK BLF.CHSTEIN M:i.st• I t1 t·c•sf t11et1t To the Editor: The excellence or the Newport- !\.1 esa schools has contributed ·signiricantly to the social and economic stability of our area. Good schools are a function of ascending property values. They attract the families that build a pr.osperous . enlightened a nd cohesive community. I know, I am a realtor and .. sell " the com- munity every d ay. Good schools a lso produce responsible citizens. We have a ll witnessed th is aspect of ex- cellence in education. Let us con- tinue this tradition . On a $100,000 home, the increase would be only $12.50 a yea r ; on a lesser home the additional tax is even less significant. To avoid this invest- m ent opportunity is to invite the mediocrity a nd di sarray that is so common throughout our coun · try today. It is a very good investment to vole yes on Tuesduy. P.tay 27, and urge others to do the same. JIM \\100D Opp11sc's l11erease To the Editor: The Financial Report 1973-74. Orange County Department ol Education, published Dec. 1974. From the facts r gathered herein, I am surely convinced to vote No on the J\.1ay 27 Newort-Mesa Unified School District election. Orange County has 11 unified school districts. Their average daily attend ance (ADA) cost was $1,030 . Newport-Mesa Uniried School District 's ADA rOst was 22.38 percent more, or $1.260.86. Nine were low er . · NEWPORT·MF.SA wants you 3nd me lo increai;e their revenue limit to Sl.372. the highest of the 11 un ified districts. Already Ncwport-Meso sc hool district In- come (general fund) from local sources is 77 .17 percent. which Is 20.84 percent mOrc thun the average for the 11 unified dis· · lricts. Newporl,·l\·tesn Al>A for 1973·74 wali 26,534 , which is a decrease from three prior )'Cars, 1972·73, 1971-72. 1970· 71 . whereilS the t.otal for the 11 unified distri cts in Orange County was increased . With this Nc'4'port -Me s a decrease in ADA , the re should be a like reduction or expenditures . During 1973-74 e nding June 30, Orange County school districts had nine elections on finances . Eight failed to pass : Cive of these eight were for revenue increases. Evidently, most Orange· County taxpayers and parents feel it un - necessary to s pend their hard - earned d oll ars on more l axes , already earmarked for a tax rate increase of up to 30 cents per $100 assessed valuation on property. This increase a lone could add about $100 to the county taxes on a$40,000home. I will vote N.o on the increase of revenue limit on May27. · BRUCE HARSHBARGER S11pporl Ill 11si<' To the Editor: In March, the Newport-Mesa Board of Education .authorized the reduction or music instruc- tion services at the elementary level and planned to serve notice of intent not to r eemploy some music teachers. As concerned parents and sup- porters of music in the schools, we collected 2.165 signatures of pare nt and community members a nd 2,574 .signatures of students who support music education. These petitions a nd many pre- , senta lions were given to the board or education al a meeting on April 9. This resulted in reten- tion of $65,000 tor District support to the program. This funding plus individual school requests will provide approximately ro per· cent of the funding necessary to continue the elementary music program which currently in- cludes music instruction in the schools, the honors program ror students in grades four through twelve, teacher inservice and Im- provement of instruction. ln· di vidual-schools have req~sted the other 40 percent necessafy lo maintain the program at current levels only if the up.coming elec- tion is successful . WE FEEl;.that our Newport- Mesa students should have the opportunity lo participate in music education ir they desire because they can benefit greatly. both socially and emotionally as well as academically. The music education program is only one example or the pro- blems facing our total school pro- gram unless we can pass the election on May 27 . We urge our friends to support music and th e ~duc8tion.of ou r Students by vot- ing YES on A-1 ay 27. MR. & MRS. PAUL HILL MRS. RUTH ANN NASBY J';ewport·Mesa Muslc Patron5 1fff'''ri11g f ' t•t'" To the Editor: I found your comments regard- ing the increase In mooMng rees interesting, but not complete. While 1 cannot contest Lhat the basic fee is , as has been stated, a bargain basement price, there are olher considerations whi Ch have not been mentioned as to why a moor1n1 Is a bargain base· mcnt value. The ftn:t ls the m andatory cost of moorin1 maintenance. My put lwo bills for mooring main· tenance h•ve averagc.-d in excess or $100 per year. Fllrther con· 1ideration1 are that a.sopposed lo a dock or sll~ there are no conve- niences or racllltles such ¥$ ( restrooms. sh0'4'ers or electrical and water sourC'es. You must also consider that vou cannot park your car und Walk up to your bo at. You have lo transport a dinghy to a pubU c beach, preferably close to your mooring, leave it and all you wish to take on board while you look for a place to park, in - va.riably at a meter, and then wDlk, back to the beach. Next. you laun ch your dinghy, having to wade in the water. and row yo ur passengers and goods to your boat-y.•hich normally takes more than one trip. OF COU RSE, I recognize the need to gouge all those than can be gouged for everything the}' can possibly be gouged for, short o( a revolution or lack of votes, as a common precept of all govern- ment bodies. How else can they continue lo grow. thrive. spend, support a nd care for their own. However, it does gall one when you consider the long term, low cost leases for the Lido Isle beaches recently renewed for the ~se of relatively few people. -Especially '>''hen there arc niuny more of less m eans y.·hocannot af· fort the extremely high cost of thl' limited number of Newpo r t Harbor boatslips. When none or these aspects arc considered . perhaps you can justify. raising mooMng fees by 400 percent. But let's not kid ourselves. Those bureaucrat!\ who voted the incre ase are privy to these facts a nd purposely vol· ed in this rip.off . As a Jong time beach resident, boat owner and one of the scg· ment of our res idents who use and enjoy our beaches, ocean and harbor facilities, 1 urge you lo print this side of the picture. While it will be to no ofric ial avail, it will, a l least, give voice to those or us who regret the loss of our port· to developers and commercia11s m . J·t . W. HANSON Quotes Sex appeal is 50 pe rcent wh~l yo u've got -and 50 percent "'hat people think you ·ve got. -Sophi a Loren. We ought to be as cheerful as \\'C c'a n. ir only because to be happy ourselves is a most effectual con- tribution to the happiness of others. -John Lubbock. . I ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt i'V'. Wt"t'd . PuOl1.tfu.•J ThlJmtJ, >it'evil, Ed11 or Barbara Krt"ibich, fd11 onol Pagt' 1-:ditor The ed\to r1;·11 pagi: of the D11il, . Pilo t sel'ks to inform and'-' .stimulate rcuders by presenlln~ ....... on this Pl\Rl' dl\'l'r!le rommentat'y•..- on topirs of int eren by syndiC'al- ed columnists and C'.artoonist~. b~ 1Jro,·id1ng a forum for readt>rS\f" \'lt \\'s Hnd by prrst'ntlng this .. nc·"·sp.apcr '!I vr lnion:-1 nnd lrlt> i, oo current to1)ics The editori opinions ol t he Oall~ l'1lot ll Pl)C only in lh itedhorlal rolumn a t lh top of lhl"' JHIJ.!<'. Opinions e 1>reS!H'(I IJ,· lhl' t•olumnist" an 1·urttM1n1 .. t:-:ind lettr r "·rilers a tht>ir 01An and no cndon;emcnt the ir \'j('UO! by the Daily r11or 5houhJ bl' ln (trretl Wednesday, M a y~l .1975 ' • J I DAILYPll.OT ... 1 ·Antismog Standards Tightened Bead~vered • "'I • \ • .. The Aid . -rapr Winds Rip LOS ANGELES (AP) -Cars sold in California in im will have to cause less s mog than those sold .elsewhere in the nation -even at the cost of higher prices and poorer gas mileage. , Body <>f Girl; 14, I F owul ,in Orchard ' . MORENO (UPI) -A severed human head torn from the • body of a 14-year·old girl by anitnals waa toulld Tuesday in a backyard near the girl's home here, seven miles eaatot Riverside.· Riverside County Sheriff's Lt. Neil Adkins said the body .of Susan Ware, missing since April 10, was round in a citrus orch&f1! 100 yards from her home. The head was discovered by a neighbor, Carlos Martinez. who notified deputies. head had been torn from the State torso by animals after the. lnPoe .Gw LOSA GtLES <IJPO - L ind a Eastma n McCartne)', wlfe of former Beat~e Pa..ul McCartney, can go to' a psychiatrist in London ln1tead of Jail In Los Anrelet for j>oa.-lan of marlju&na, a Judge ruled Tueoday. Mr1 . McCartney, 33, was ar-rested M:arch 3 by a highway patrolman who stopped.a car carrying the singer and hls famUy for' - . ~~y 4rea; ! ., One Dead r: llyTlle A11...,lale.1'Nu 1 The high wind• 't11a! r1 Nqi:tbern CollfOrnl".., · y will subside today, but~ 11 may be some snow MG'fers in the Sierra Nevada. th Natlo u1 weqthirservrccsara. The federa l Environmental Protection Agency gi:anted the state permission Tuesday to im- pose stricter smog standards for 19'11 ~ar~ be~a use California's air Pollution problems are the wors in the country. Investigators said the ( J- --g1r1·s-dt"ath, which is being in· : ~ ve§tigated as a murder. ~~i:~r}:1c7~~:.: h:~~: -«I i.he---amell~of marijuana- in the auto and a search turned up 18 grams of lt In Mrs. McCartney's purse. • One man died ond unother Is believed dead after the high winds, sometimes r each'ing ~ miles Per hour, apparen§y ,ca_pslzed the ~ea Witch, a fish g ~bOaLbaaed-111 San~ Pablo, e .Coast GQard reported. ). A STATE OFFICIAL called it ••an important step'~ t oward cleaner air. Auto manufacturers, on the other hand, say the re· quirement will mean : -An increase in purchase prices of from $5 to $180, depend· ingon a variety of factors:. -A drop in fuel economy of. 5 percent to 15 percent; -A smaller selection of dif· ferent models, because not all models can be modified to meet the standards. TO MEET the tougher regula· lions, the 1977 cars will be equipped with the controversial catalytic converters that remove pollutants from exhaust gasses. Stricter 1977 s tandards were scheduled to go into effect for the . entire country under the federal Clean Air Act. But EPA Ad· ministrator Russell Train recom- mended earli er this year that the standards be de layed because or potential health hazards from the converters. CALIFORNIA officials. in ask· ing to be exempted from the de- lay, said th ey believe the dangers from converters have been vast- ly exagger ated. Tom Quinn, chairman of the California Air Resources Board, said Tuesday that Train had told him recently he regretted mak· ing the recommendation. ''Everything that has come out since the warnings of health hazards has confirmed our judg·· ment that there isn't any im· mediate sulfate danger with catalysts," s aid Quinn. Red Leader Sick LONDON <AP) -Soviet leader Leonid 1. Brezhnev m ay be s uffering from cancer of the jaw, the D ail y Te leg r aph's Moscow correspondent r~ported today. The correspondent, John Miller, said there were "fr~sh ~c ports" that Brezhnev was ~villg radiation therapy for jaw cancer. Parole Date Set Sirhan Sirhan, 31, sentenced to death in the assassination of Sen. Robert F . Kennedy, will be paroled Crom San Quentin on Feb. 23, 1986, after serving 16 years and 9. months in prison. Homosexual Mom to Keep 2 Children ' LOS ANGELES (Aj') -Two children o f a self-admitted homosexual woman will be al- lov.·ed to live with her, under a ruling by the suburban Torrance Superior Court. Lynda Mae Chaffin, who lost custody of her two daughters after she admitted to being a les- bian, was granted a modification Tuesday of the original c ustody order. THREE PSYCHOLOGICAL experts testified living with Mrs. Chaffin would not be detrimental to her daughters, aged 15 and 12. Th e g irls ran away last January from their legal home "'ilh Mrs. Chaffin 's parents in l\1arysville , Was h., and had been Jiving with their mother. LAST JAN. 31, the original custody was upheld by the 2nd District Court of Appeal, whic h ruled denyi n g Mrs. Chaffin custody of her children was not entirely due to her admission that she had been a homosexua l. Cher yl B.ratman. a law student intern who \Vorked on the case, said Lhe cus tody modirication <A'3S obtained because the Tor· ranee <.'ourt agreed with experts "·ho said "it would be detrimen· tal Cor the children to be taken awav from .their mother at this tii:n,e." - OtHE: G~P 1974 Levi's can match any kid. Sure, kids are toagh. But Levi's• Double-knee outfits are tOugher~Because the Jeana have twice the strength right Where you need it. tn the knees. And they look sensational. Especially when you add the rugged, handsome matching jacket. It's a for dressing up. But wears Ilka iron ~ hen It's time lo play. See our super selection of shapes and colors. In sizes 2~14. . • _Fall Into Iha Gap. We're strong on kid stuff. WESTlllllSTEI • WESTMINSTER MALL • PHONE 894-5309 oNie 7 D.A.YSA ~ MO~UT.10 tot. MM. NOON TO I .,....,,.Opposes A•ll Toz l1ten .. e SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.,,faced with a shrinking budget surplus and mounting dema.nds for ifi· creased spending, dug in deeper today in opposition to new taxes next year. "I'm not going lo support any increase in general taxes, he s·aid. ''I 'm going to resist very strongly efforts that will make that a necessity a year or two down the road.'' Brown discussed taxes with reporters Tuesday following announcemeht of updated fis· cal estimates which showed state government in the fiscal year s tarting July 1 would spend $257 ~illion more than it took from taxpayers . Tlaree Auditor• Guift11 I• Fraud Ws ANGELES <UPI > -Three for~er auditors of Equity Funding Corp. of America, which went bankrupt in one of the largest business frauds in U.S. history. were convicted in Federal Court Tuesday of securities fraud and filing false statements with .the governmenl. . U.S. District Court Judge Jesse W. Curtis ordered Julian S.H. Weiner, Solomon Block and Marvin A. Lichtig to return to court. Jwie 23 for sentencing. They were among 22 persons indict~ in the massive securities fraud case. Slal• SLA Member'• 8rotlaer r.iu SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Slain Symbion·e~e Liberation Army member P atricia "Mizmoon" Soltysik came to her brother's .sci.001 one day in 1973. She told him Marcus Foster deserved to be killed. Fred Soltysik, testifying Tuesday at the trial of two reputed SLA members charged with Foster 's murder, said her visit was the last time she spoke to fiim before her death in a fier)' shootout with Los Angeles police. Stephen Weed, fiance of fugitive heiress Patricia Hearst, also made a brief appearance for the defense at the trial of Russell Little and Joseph Remiro who are actused of the cyanide bullet slaying of the Oakland Schools superintendent and the attempted murder of his deputy, Robert .w. Blackburn. Super1'1...,.. to Probe SWAT ll•lt SAN DIEGO CAP> -San Diego County supervisors have asked Sheriff John Dllffy to meet with them June 4 to discuss the sheriff;s Special WeapoM and Tac;t ics squad. The unit, commonly known as SWAT, was heavily criticized by the county grand jury aft.er a February incident in Oceanside in which a 15-year.old boy was mistaken for a sniper and killed. 2 A rral91w:d f• SJ Mllllo• Fraud LOS ANGELES (U·PJ ) -Two me n wer e arraigned Tuesday on char ges of grand then and fraudulent stock sales for allegedly bilking more than $1 million from investors who sank money in a purported "fuel-less engine" which ran on the static electricity in the air. · Edwin V. Gray Sr., 50, Northridge, and Richard B. Hacken· berger, 52, Van Nuys, were ordered to appear June 2 for a pre- liminary hearing. Gray was freed on $10,000 bond and Hacken. berger released on $5,000 bond. Assemblyman Denies. 'Fix' Of Citation SACRAMENTO <AP) -Tlie California Highway Patrol says i·t reissu e d a ticket to As· se;mblyman Louis Papan for driving 90 miles per hour in a 55 mile zon e aft.er an area com· mander erroneously voided it. Papan, (D-Daly City), says he didn't try to get it fixed. NEWSMAN Bill Branch ol K.OVR -TV in Sacr amento said Tuesday he started makj,ng in· quiries a fter the st ation r eceived an anonymous call that. Pai)an had received a ticket and that it had been voided. CHP ·spokesman Kent Milton confirmed that it had been voided by the Vallejo area com· mander, but said it was dOne "in error" and was "inappro_priate." THE CHP zone commander , had th e ticket r eissUed. Milton said. · . Papan told KOVR he got the ticket last Wednfsday while driv- ing on Interstate. 80 between San Francisco and Sacramento. lie a lso said he contacted the CHP to question the way he was clocked by the patrolman, not because he wanted to get the ticket overturned. "l'M GOING to pay it. I did not make an y threats. The all ega. lions are not ·true," Papan told KOVR. Branch said the anonymous caller claimed there was a pal· tern or lawmakers threatening to vote against CHP salary rais~ to getoutoftickets. But new CHP Commissioner Glen Craig saic;J he knew of three or four legislat9rs tic;ketedin the last30days, • ' Fur Clearance. 'Four days ·only. THE BODY of Glenn Douglas Page, 26, wa& recovered n8ur Angel Island, u s pokesman slid. ·The Coast-Guard said Page left the San Pablo Yacht HartH>r ·Monday with Kenneth WilliD1'\S of Richmond. The search c4Ml· tinued for Williams. ~ '; Elsewhere, the unpredictied storm closed roads, flipped o~r ·a small aircraft at San Cartos Airport, felled trees and caused power outages, perhaps the most serioUs iD the east San Franci~o. Bay area .where thousands :of homes were o ut of power .at times. THE WEATHERMAN blamed ' \he storm on a low pressure area which today drifted eastward .. "Higher pressures edging into California will herald a returrt•to more typical May weather," said a National Weather Servtce forecaster. A small craft adyisoi"y was still in effect for northwest winds of 15 to ·30 m iles per hour in the San Francisco Bay area. · G~L~ WARNINGS were i~<ef· fe,ct early today for gusty w1nds of 20 to 40 miles j:>er hour on "the far northwest coast. • It will be warmer in most -tee~ lions today, with·Bay area highs ranging from 60s to low 70s. The mercury s hould climb to the mid 70sintt,evalleys~ • A warming t rend in the Sierra Nevada will begin Thursday, the weatherman 1taid. · Utility Evicts PUC Meets -SAN DIEGO CAP) -San Diego Gas and Electric Company says the State Public Utilities Com- .mission can no lon ger u·se SDG&E's auditorium for its hearings. SDG&E president Walt·e r ZiUau said' Tuesday it would"i>e better for bbth groups If the PUC found· another place to meet irt San Diego. ' I May 22, 23, 24 ·and 25. " (, It's the season for smart shoppers to put· their money on a fur·~ Prices lfl' nicer. than they've been all y'earl • " · Natural Tourmaline® mink/leather stroller. Now $699. 'Dyed ranch mink stroller. Now $1599. Natural Tourmaline® mink cape. Now $399: Natural Autumn. Haze® mink jacket. Now $599. Natural Orchid Autumn Haze® mink coat./Now $1499 Natural Tourma~ne® mink stroller. Now $lo99. Natural Azurane® mink CIP"· Now $599. Natural Autumn Haze® mink coat. Now $1999. . Dyed ranch mink coet. Now $2199. . Natural ranch mink and white mirik.ihlrt; Now $499: . Tip-dyed raccoon battle jocket. Now $a99. • NaturafToul'INline® mink Jocket. Now $1699. Dyed ranch mink jacket. Now $1799, Bleached white mink straight atole. Now $1599. Yellow-dyed and wh it&-dyed mink jacket. Now $16119; Natural Apollo® mink coat. Now $32911. All subject to prior sale. Ask abOut our credit _plant. Robinson's Fur Salon. 9Embe Mink 111~• AM'n. All fun labtted to lhow C'Olanttv of orifJn of 11.,,~.,..~..,.:..· run. 2 FASHIOfoj ISLAND SHOP WED •• THURS. & SAT. 10.5:30, FRI°. 10.9, SUN. 12·5. ' ... ., I I ) ' 1 • Crisis Ahead? I I . ~ial Security Prp~lema By SYLVIA PORTER fThirdfna.sm••~ ~ , ln·t940, there were 11.7 Americans age &for over ror every 100 or us of working age ; tocJay, 'there are 18.3 for ·• every 100; Jn the next century, according to estimates by Social Security actuaries, there wlll be tlo1e· to 30 •Americana: 85 or over .. I, I I l :tor every JOO aged 20 lo 64 . Money's 'Worth Why ? Becau5e 'beglnnin& with the year "2010, the bab1es born during the post-World -War II baby boom-Will ;be reaching 65 and collecting Social Securily bener1t1. After .the 1950s. the birth rate began to drop precipitously. And .since 1960, lhe national rertihty rate. which measures the iexpected number or births per woman for all women between 15 ana 44 . has plunged rrom 3 7 to 1 ll$ • .substantlaJ- ly be.low the Zero Population Growth level or 2 I children. ''TlltS DECREASE," SA YS a ' recent; report by a special Senate Finance Committee panel, "undoubtedly renects increased attention to Camlly plunning, more and better birth eontrol methods, and major changes in tire styles of some segments of our soc1e\y. '' Should this trend persist. the population 20 to 64 years of age would st a b1hze e;11·ly 1n the ~ncxr century, but the number or elderly would continue to expand for some time. Jt then would take a higher proportion or goods and services produced by active workers to supp9rt the over·G51n the 21st century than 1l has in the 20th . And "thi s 1s true," emphasizes the "wh ite paper" pre· pared bY five former Health. Education and Welfare Secretaries and three former ·social Security com· missioners, "quite aside from Soctal Security" -meaning it includes private pensions, public assistance, etc. Blfr THERE WILL BE offselling factors : (1) If the burden of supportinli the over·65 is increased, the burden o( s upporting and educating children will be re· duced -and with smaller (nm1hes, more women will be able lo earn paychecks But we also should not accept so blindly estimates !l'tretch1ng so far into the future and sub· ject to so many unpredictables l. As the Senate Finance Committee's panel report notes, "With the humihly learned from many past experiences. demographers agree that 1l 1s hazardous indeed to (oret'as l future fertility rates" And sure enough the steeply dechn· 1ng birth rate seems to be slo,1nng, reports o( the National Center (or Health Stat1st1cs suggest In 1974, for the first time s1n('e 1970, the number of births rose -even though by only 1 percent And recent sur· veys show that young married couples are planning to have e nough children to, produee a national fertility rate somewhat above today's (2) ANOTllER UNFORESEEABLE 1s what actually will happen to wages a nd pnces during the next 75 years IL for Instance. prices were to r ise at an average annual rate or 2 percent and wages at at ate of 5 perceqt <unlikely bul not 1mposs1ble. 1t has happened before ), the present f1nane 1ng of Social Sccunly would be entirely adequate This would hold true even with the changed ratio of retirees to working people Bul under other assumptions. there will be a need for some add1t1onal income to the system 1n the long run And 1f th at turns out to be the c<Jse. almost certa1nl} there will be a gr,1dual 1ntroduct1on of funds from general revenues, beg1nn1ng around 1990 Both former Social Security commissioner Robert M. Ball and former HEW Secretary Wilbur J. Cohen point out that 1t is usual m most other countries ror Social Se<'ur1ty to be financed via various sources The usual 1&n<l well-tcstet.I comb1natton of financing in other lands: part by d1recl contnbul1ons of workers. part by contr1bul1ons or employers, parl by contr1but1ons from the federal government's general revenues. THE LONG·RANGE COSTS of the program also would be substantially less than now estim ated 1( Congress were to t·hange the ben'ef1t increase formula to ausure that benefits would be tied more closely to 1n ereases in wages and not so closely to price in creases The "white paper" signers propose that Congress con· sid er subst1tut1ng a formula which assures that protection will automat1cally keep pace with wages, but not exceed in· creases 1n wages. This c hange also would provide }OU, as a worker, \v1 th a greater certainty that your bener1ts would reflect your level of living at the time or your retirement When ob1ect1vely exam1ned, neither the short·lerm nor the long.term f1nanc1ng problems seem a cause for panic, do they ., ta11i11~rN 11i1ff l.f».'lf:"rs Now York IUPll -T ... foliooot"Q U~t snows lht 'tocks 111•1 h1vo 911INd most ~ 1011 tho mcu1 b1stll on ll'f'~111 ol < .... "90 on tho: NIW Vork Sloc.k E11tntr>Qe Nol Ind pt•<•nl•90 <hOnQllS ••• the dUlorOMO IM't-on TIM pr1wl00 tlmll'IQ l>'i<o 11\d tho 10Wrr1n1 tl0$lng prl<.1! GAINERS I C1n11ron Sr 1 lo • 11 Up 11,I 1 Ewons Prod •'• • '• Up IJ6 l Noll Home• J~• • S. Up 11 1 4 W1rnq1! \~, 11 • 1 Up 10 S S Purotan F"~h 2\o • ·~ Up UIC 1>A~t0Cp wls 0...1 11•1.JP ,1 •GAC Corp l<o • ~•Up IJ 10!M.otroM 250 1 , .., Up 11 11 GUA PIA :lO J3 • 11, Up I J 12 lnlerton Ov 11,~ • Vo Up I I U Leh Vol pf IS , 1 Up , 1 14 Tolirpromp I>'•, >\ Up 6 4 U Cll 111 Alty 2'1<+ 'I• Up 6J 1• Appilod M11 2'•• ~. Up S• NP1t· " •• ,.,,, l:; .H<•.•I A <'I it•p NEW YORK lUPI I -Thi! mosl lthd SIOCkS ltl(Md on lMI Nl!w York SIOClt. El1Ch~ll9e Wldrll!Sdl~ Solos Clftl CJl9, Evans Prod •••• 211,100 •v• ,.. ~ Am Tel&T .. t 19S 100 ol8\• -i1 Genir•ol EiC 16.8,000 ll~o -1\ l( .. •o• 132,200 IS"' -I~• (;ult Aesou• lll,l>OO nv. .. ~ HOward J 11S JOO 1l'lt -'h Hou"n NI G~ ns 100 •1•\ Po1•ro1d 110 200 Jl'l'o Gull 'Sol Ull~ II• 300 11~o Intl Mn&C""' 110 100 42 c1n1 Sowesi 10'1 •OO 1' un corblOI! tClll ~ •l -Ht -l ''i -,, -· '· ... U,.,L inc 10?.aoo 11•. 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VultnM 1 IO 6 4 31""-"" -ww -W•<h(p76 9 •C 1• -I;., Wacnpl 1 XI I 4Gl.-w1,; 'NdCNl\I 0..b 1• JV)-'Iii WalQrffll I I I 11 11 -•, WolkfH I 40 10 t JO'h-~~ Wiii Ill.IS SS ' II 12 ., WaUMllr toe s II 9:i.:.-.,. Wollpt 110 l 21:. ., WolMatt 1220 13000 10"'1 4-1 .... Woll.QI. G4bU 21 " -VI Word Foods 2• II l \t -" Wonw.c:o IO <I 33 I 'll '" W•mc:pl 1\1\ 9 11 •I warrtCm SO 6 lJJ 1••1o-\Ii Worum 92 18 :ns :M~-"Ill W•mrS 1 20 9 JI 20\'o ..-'r. WolllGs 1 1111 5 I 11"--\loo WOVINll IO S lS 11'(,-Vo WoNt DI 2'1t _ • 2•'1J-...\ll lw 1shw 1.s2 a JI 11•• , Wosle Mn111 10 •1 • -"-W•tt;nJ CSb 11 I' JIV•• Yo Woynt Q 40 IS 2 J~-V. Y.,..nU11 If>( I S 6111-\Iii Wen p11.2k •• • 1S'lilo t \Ii We1tfte.r 40 1 12 I -'Ii Wtbl>O.ICO' '' l'"'-,V. W.llMCL 60 S U1 11/o + "" WlllsMkl M t • 20 -· '1. W.lbUt Cp • )l 1YI-"\\ IWOI" F• 96 1 2" II -'lo WFMQe 10b •• I !Y•-11\ WP..,flltl 4~> • ISO S1 ~ I WslPI P!l!p 2 I •.S JS'I\-.. ~ WslnAr 40.t 7 II I ...-\.lo WSBlftc: l '40 1 21 j•W.•+ V. W~ltnCo NA S '' J -:w. Wi! 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' ' "-,L x1.-1 In<. 10I 3J 10\lii l llOY n • • ,,,-ro , ... I 11\dUS 6 • I!\-~ T11ttr pl I 11 10\ .. -""' TIMP.E 9• t S U\\-'• Yng'SolOr .0 ~ 5 I ll• •• Ten<lr Gorp 11lll19'-,._.,, 2•11-Corp .I• I Ml Ultiot ,\• To~C .10 ,, 10 •'•• V• ~II .0 J •l 2J.h -~ TKhncolor 6 I •"--14 llYrt Corltl S4 I t~ 'l:.-Tl<IMtlcOll U 10 11\-'• 1 leflUllR1d I 1D2 1tJ 14W. ~ "ll T••tronx 10 12 91 lS\>-'-Zurn llld 7~ 11 41 •"'l>-...i"' J ,. LOS AN GELES-CAP) Slorkholders have approved • p~ po&al for staggered terms ror Twen= tieth Century-Fox f"Um Corp. direc- tors a.s a means lo he.ad off any p~xy llMlltles • Under the proposal •dopted Tllet· d•y, on~·lh lrd of the 12-member board would .come up for election each year:, ·thus requlrlAg.a mlnlmurri of two ahnual meetlnp to 1atn con. trol. ~ ~LYPILOT t . Wedneld!Y, May 21 , 1971 j:.See!oad of PORC t, Race Set Friday \ . The scoond roce of the Pacific New•BoY 02·meler) Jack Baillie, I Ocean Ra cipg Conference (PORC) Balboa YC. will get under way frotn Los Angeles .Hawkeye <•8 loot sloop) Oavtd Harbor Friday over a 198-mlle course Cuckler, Newport Harbor YC. around the Channel Islands. l. The 45 -boat fleet will leave SanLa LUCKY PUFF (MorM a n·42) t Cruz and San Ntcolas islands to port Rlcha.rd Foxx, Balboa YC. 1 and finish off P a·rsons Landing, Regulus JI (48 foot sloop)' Robert 1 Catalina Island. Many of the yachts Garrison, NewPort HarborYC. ·,re expected to spend the remainder Hurricane Deck (40 foot sloop ) Mor- -of the Memorial Day weekend at the rie Kirk, Balboa YC . . 1.f!land befpr~ heacjing back lo the Fire blrd (43 foot-sloop) Botr ·Jiiainland al ~1arina del Rey to be on Longpre, South Shore.Sailing Club. I Fland for the th ird race. a triangular Questar CCC foot sloop) William day.race on Santa l't1onica Bay start-Power, Newport Harbor YC. ~tn_g June7 . SAUDADE (47 fool sloop) Willi am t ~ 'THE CHANNEL Islands race is ex· Pascoe, NewPort HarborYC. ~ ··ted to prove a real lest for men and Loco Viente Ill (40 foot sloop) Jim t 'M>ats as the area around San Nicolas Seals, Balboa YC. l •llland is noted for strong winds this Am erica Jane ~I (35 foot sloop) ~ij,rne of year. George Tooby, Newport Harbor YC. .;If The first race rrom San Diego lo .Aoranlii (53 foot 'sloop) Ri chard Wheel er , Newport Harbor YC. ng Beach last weekend was sailed Robur (43 foot sloop) Burton Yale, extremely li ght airs. Bahia Cori nthian YC. •: ...... Fourteen or the 44 yac hts entered in Drum Beat (Erlcaoo-46 ) Don Ayres, ;;the series are fl ying the colors of Newport Har~r YC. :-"tiewport Beach based yacht clu h5. Raider (Ericson-46) Jim Lin· :I.peal ent ries arc: derm an, Balboa YC. Nordic Now Japanese Man Sloop A J9.foot sloop built in Santa Ana and shipped to Japan is back on these shores with a Norwegian riame. , Vind Fe mpe·Del , a Norwegian name. means ·••wind force five" in English. Its 21 year bid: _Japanese skipper, Toru Chaya, with a crew of fi ve • arrived in .Los Angeles Harbor last week aner a ~-.38·day crossin g fr om Japan. In a few weeks they will leave Los Angeles \. again on th e 2,225·mile Transpacific race to : Honolulu. BOATING l i CJIAVA'S CREW ALL have Japanese names and none of th e six Japanese sailors have yet ex· plained how or shy the yacht got a Nordic name. New Series Slated Off Huntington ' ~ Santa Ana is a long "'ay from the fjords of the 1 Nor"·egian sea. 1 ... -Chaya and his crew departed Handa .Harbor in 2 Airlines Get.PVC OK SAN fRANCISCO CAP) -The temporary authori· ty of Air Callfomi• !nd Pacific Southwest Airlines to aerve the Tahoe Valley airport at South Lake Taho•. was extef\ded for another 90 days by the state Public Utilities Com· miasion. The ori1inal go .day authority was granted F.eb.-tt-to fill the· void created Feb. s when Holi- day Airlines ceased its aervtc~ to Tahoe. ' Gathe1"S Support , This Stockholder 1Firm's Conscience f' . . ' ' 8y MILTON MOSKOWITZ A biologist who became concerned about ~lrds caught In oil spllra baa formed 1n organization that is belleved lo be unique in the ana1l1 of U.S. business hlatory. Th~ biolociat is Dr. James Jtoy and his organization ia Pro- ject Standard Oil (PSO), a nonprofit group of dissident sharebolde rs of Standard Oi l Co. of Califor.n\a. These st.ockhOJdera are each paying S3 dues a Y••r to support PSO in its role as the social cons- cience of $tend8rd Oil. Money Tree Mideast Cash For Coastal Park Studied The California petroleum giant rank's as one of the larges~ corporations in the world, .wllh sales in 1914 re- l{ aching nedi-ly $19 billion. Its gasoline is marketed principally under the Chevron lilbel. LEUCADIA (APl -Middle Eastern money ls ready to invest in a $131 million Disneyland-like amusement park along the north shore of Batlquitos Lagoon, a de· veloper says. "The t,.!iddle East isn't the only investor," Romm Doul.ton of Los Angeles told the Leieadla Town Council, but he said it would be financed completely with foreign funds . Doult9n sai9 the Nemo's Secret Harbor Development Co. his worked for six years on plans for a park dealing with underwater science fiction. If government agencies give the go-ahead, he said Monday night th•t his park could open in 30months. NO OTHER COMPANY has spawned an organization quite UkeP90. DiSsident shareholder groups are, or course, not new in American business. However, they are usually formed by shareholders wbo want to replace the current management. That's not PSO's a im. Groups which attack corporations for social rea!lons are not new, either. In fact, they have been fairly common in recent years. But they have been norm'ally organiled under the ausplcu of church organizations or social activists such as Ralph Nader. PSO did not evolve from either of these sources. Hoy started PSO because he was bothered by some Standard Oil practices -and he happened to be a Standard Oil stockholder. He owns 134 shares, now worth about $3,300. His original C'oncem was with the birds killed or maimed by oil spills from Standard Oil tankers. It later branche<I out to in· elude political contributions made by the compi.ny and inade· qua~e disclosure of information to share'holden. Hoy expressed these concerns by exercising his right as• shareholder to submit proxy resolutions that were considered at the annual meetina:s of Standard Oil of California. HOY'S .,NEXT MOVE was to organize other concerned· stockholclers into a.n ongoing group -and that's not as easy a.a it might appear, the problem being: How do you reach Standard Oil stockholders? A mailing to the 280,000 stockholder list would have been very cosily .\And Standard Oil wasn't about to alert its stockholders to the activities of Jim Hoy. What the company did allow Hoy to do There would be 5,000 employes and housing for l,500 families after the 1973 annual meeting was to inspect the proxy cards re- when the development Is com-turned by shareholders. What they never expected him to do was plete, he said. Egyptian officials to hire a microfilm outfit to photograph the 14,000 proxy cards have discussed construction o( a which had been returned that year with antimanagement votes. "d k "d It took two and one-half days and the help of a high.school ~~:'c,1:, pyram1 .par • saa volunteer group to separate the cards and p~otograph them. At Among the first features would the end, though, Hoy hQ.d a list he could mail to, inviting mem. be make believe rides on 8 bershipsin Project Standard Oil'. " FINANCE SBA Taps Wilek To Panel Thomas S. Kleppe, ad- ministrator of the Small Business Administration <SBA) has announced in Washington the appoint- ment of C . Thomas WilCk, vice president of Public Affairs for the Irvine Company, as a member of the national advisory counCll of the SBA, Kleppe said th•t Wilek has been selected for council membership in reco&nition of h i s knowledge of and in- terest in problems of &mall business . As a member of the national council Wilek will take part tn the semi.annual meetings where the needs of the local small business community are discussed. and the means by which SBA can most effectively meet lt\ese needs are considered. Newport Firm Now Drilling f ... 1Wpan April 6 and t raveled 6,200 mil es over the , 'great ci rcle route north of Hawaii. The 38·day trip is l believed to 'be something of a record. : "And we were held up two days by fog off the ~ California coast," said Chaya . glacier, submarine trips to the PSO IS NOW FUNCTIONING with a memQership of 390. Hoy depths of the ocean and other ex-runs it out of his house in Hamden, Conn. (88 Woodlawn St.)'. At cursions to the "center of the the moat recent Standard Oil annual m eetin g, held last month in Ca pis tr-ano Bay Yacht earth," patterned after the Jules San Fraucisco, a PSO-submitted resolution mandating' non · Club. newest member of Verne novel, •. 20,000 Leagues partisanship in political camapigns garnered 8 million the Southern California Under the Sea... shareh4?1der votes ormorelhan6percentof all the votes cast. Oxoco-1 n tern a tlonal, Inc., a Newport Beach independen·t oil com- pany, announced com· menceme nt of 'drilljng operations near Manavgat, Turkey. ' • ' THE SKIPPER'S NEXT \'oyage will be from i-Los Angeles to Marina del Rey \lthere he and the ~··crew will start tuning the yacht ror th e Transpac It .' ~one of three Japanese yachts entered in the race. Yachting Assoclation-:;;=:::=:i=:=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; will sponsor a new of.11 fshore racin g series starting June 7 with a ' · Other rre"·men are Yos hiaki Kubo, 23, ~ navigator:. Kiyotaka ~ori. 22 , purser, Yoc hiyuki ,_ Ogasa1,1.·ara, 26. e ngineer : and two seamen ; .,_Jasayuki Akal8uka, 23 , and Toru Sakurami. 21 i ' race around the Hunt· ington 20·fathom buoy of( Huntington Beach. The new series will be known as the Ocean Rae · ing Series CORS> a nd will consist of six r aces ending Nov 15 with a race fro)n San Onofre to Newport Beach The series is open to yachts rated under the lnterna · tional Offshoq}Rule <IOR >. Performance \:,Coast Gzwrd Sets ... {.New Radio Codes ·- Yachtsmen planning :-_ tl? cruise along the coast of Southern California this season will be in· ter ested in r ecent c h a n ge s in aids to navigation announced by the Coast Guard. The most significant Handicap Racing Fleet changes have been in the (PHRF) and Midget r adio beacon charac Ocean Ra cin g Fleet teristics from San Diego (1'10RF> lo Santa Barbara The Officers of Capo Bay n e "' co des are as Yacht Club said the new follows : series was eS tablished to Point Lorn a Light fill a need for offshore <LL·l ), L (.·. ) racing not now filled by Los Angeles Light (LL clubs in the Dana Point, 20 /424 )A (.·) . and Capistr a no Ba y Point Arguello Light areas. CLl..25) 0 ( ... ) Only other series if\ the Oceansid e Light at'ea isDanaPoi nt Yacht (LL335), OC (·-·. ·.) Club 's season lon g seri es l\.1iss1on Bay North Jet· Jimited only to yachts ty CLLS /320) MB( .. -. .. ) rated PHRF. · Newport .Bay West Jet· ty !LL 13 /341) NE <· .. ) Long Beac h Light (LLIB/410) LB (. ... · ... ) Ava lon (LL 371 >AV ( .. .... ) Esquivel Gets Post ~f arina del Rey Light (LL466) MR(-·.·.) Ge ne Esquivel , for.m erly m anagi ng Anacapa Island (1 126) edilor of Sea Magazine, AN (.· .. ) has been appointed vice president and general Santa Barba r a (LL manager of Pennant 516)58 ( ... · ... ) Publishing Co mpa ny, Pro•oted publisher or Pacific Skip· per, a West Coast boat· John G . Barry has Snow Tires i n g maga zine, a nd been promoted to several other special in· general manager of SACRAME NTO (AP) terest magazines. th e Passagemaker -Gov. Edmund Brown Paci fi c Skipper , ,,Tra\\•ler division of Jr. has signed legislation formerly Pennant. is extending the period for published in Newpart i J e nsen l\1 a rine, a c-use of studded snow tires Beach. ... ~ cording to Cha rles on public roads. The bill In addit ion to hi s , Thom as, president. by Asse mbl y woman former association with ~Barry h as b een with P au lin e Da v i s, <D-Sea, Esquivel was also J Passagemaker for a Portola), authorizes the formerly on th t staff of ~year as n a tional useof sluddedsnow tires the Los Angeles Times ~ sales and m a rketing between Dec. 1 and and later conducted ·hb , manager. March l e ac h yea r+ ow n public relations ,,• ----''-------through 1978. firms in Laguna Beach. i !~at~marans Star :. Silver Lakes Race Set ·. An inaugural regatta for the north lake of Silver Lakes Resort, Orth of Victorville wilt ,be held over the emori al Day weekend with Prlndle ·16 catamarans boln1 the star performers. feature trophy event, with five beat.a-each tlll a different course aet oa the le5·acre man-made lake -determining the point wtnners of more than l200 ln trophies. ' PALM SPRINGS' BIGGEST VALUE ... BY FAR! D•nnis Ralston __ ,..'il;..iiD Resident Director of Tennis GRANf:> E)l?BNING 9th Unit Fantastic Fairway1 ,l,.~at~~ ~ The magnificent fairway condominiums of Sunrise l . Co untry Club have outsold every other new community ., . · in the desert. Jn fact, Sun'rise C.Ountry Club has quite .:~ .. , ... possibly sold more new homes than all of the other .,,,,.. '1' , "' co untry club communities co1nbined. Such overn•helming ,. ~ buyer acceptance can only be based on one thing. Value. ~ J Sunrise Country Club simply offers more for the money. In short , it's the deserts' best buy. . . ~ ·-. r .. . f-.;-· ~ . . ';,. J 11>:!,fl. .. ~ ~ ..... • 'a ,, · l'~\.-}:fM'~\]mimiZC~.l!~ A~'Sunrise Country Club owner.i hip of a . , tr'' ~ ~ ~ 1 ~" ~1~~~~~~~ be.a~tifu~ single-story fairway condo- } .1 .. ·'t i,l;T ~\f.' .. ' ?f ~ community brings with it a ll of the , . v ijl r "'~fi,~ r'3' mm1um '" a 24-hour gate guarded ,.. · r:_fi"' .. , -.,, ,... advantages and pl easures of belonging ~~'t~ ... l,~. to the most elegant private golf and J .~ "f.,~;, (> tennis club for the price of condominium :}:~ ownership alone. Proprietary membership :s-tj " rights in both the golf and tennis clubs come with you r condominium. You pay no initiation fees. To make your in vestment even more valuable, there a re only about four fairway homes to the acre -on land you own. With interelil rateR at a two-1,.:ar lou.J and 'R lim ited number of homes ready for occupancy, this is the perfect time to buy. Visit Sunrise Country Club today • You'll find the secret of our success is no secret. Ifs everywhere you look. And · it's spelled V-A-L-U-E! ' ............ , Prom Palm Springs, take Hwy. Ill-IOulh, left at Pie~ een~ me )'oui: full tolor b~huryi. and Country Club Dr. From lo& Angelet1. t:.ike Hwy. I add1t1onal 1nformnt1on._ M•ll ~: Sunn.se I 10 to Ramon Rd (R&nt'ho Mirixc Cou ntry C)ub, 7 1-60~ Co•!ntry Club Dnve, f r.t..." .. 11 · ,,_ 11 tl I RanchoM1rage,C.hforn1a92270 . I ,....,~. " exit.), 41 l on ouh , O!M! r. Attn : Direct.or of Sales Information "'..•\.. to Cauntry Club. Dr., I · I "',_.;;:;;:.;;;"!iT'\1 ..... ~~ tht'n tum nght .•. Name I I Add.... I 71-Ml Country Clu~ Dr., Cit State ZI Rancho Mu·1p. I. y, • P ,I Telephone: (714) s2s-31s1 '• • • • • • • • • • • • ;"lllo ..... _. . • ru.u.- c(f)'·~fJRI~~Q.t.!TKY. CLUB From $34,99S to $13;99S J I I • ·I Or ange . (oast ' • .,. EDITION T o d ay's c:lesl..g N.Y.Stoeks -· VOL. 68; NO. 141 , 9 SECTIONS, 102 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MAY 21 , 1975 c TEN CENTS I 141 % Malpractice. Hike Jolts Doctors By ALAN DIKKIN 01 "'' 0.11, f01"4 St4111 . . , Orange Coun\-y c;toct9rs ba"'e been slapped wllh another 141 percent increase in the cost or malpra c tice ins urance pre· miums even as they went into a "'Ork slowdown in prole:>t over such insurance costs. The increase, j!ffcctive July 1, came in a letter to 8,500 doctori; in Orange Count y and Los, ' Ange_l,es Co unty '!Vho are Insured oy_ Travelers·Insurance. The b'i-ke -Came wit·h the Legislature in special' session to worlt on bills to solve the crisiti. But tbe strike spread lo two more countie» in Southern Calfifornia. HoSPitaJs in Oi'ange County lo· day informed staffs that work hours will have to be reduced. On the strike front, these were the developments today: -Physicians in Santa Barbara and Ventura coWili& have Vote<! lo join the slrike_be,ginni_ng next Tuesday. -Another report said that several hospitals in San Diegp County are expected to be affect- ·ed by 'the anesthesiologists'· ac- tion by' the end of this week. · -Surgeries at 41 h06pitals in Southern California 'A'.ere report· ed down today 80 percent. The loss of revenue from would-be patients was estimated a~t . $400.000 a day. Hoag Memorial liospilal of· Cicials in Newport Beach an- nounc e d toda y that elec- ·tive surgeries, which amount to about 7S to 80 percent of the .operations at the hospital, will be .discontinued Crom next Tuesday. This, will result in a revenue loss of $28,000 a d ay, 40 percent of the daily income, according to acting adm'inistralor Louis Ka.a. Kaa said that Hoag is trying to reduce work hours by 40 percent by urging personnel to take early vacalious and leaves of a bsence. tie said that the hospital may soon be on a four-day week and that layoffs e ve ntually may be necesasar y. Tom Ri cha rds, administrator of Costa J\1e sa Memorial Hospital. s aid tha l he expected that only eme_rgen<.'Y and urgent surgeries will be performed al the ho~ital by the end of the week. · We are taking a y.•ail and see attitude. 'v atching the ~r gery schedule," Richards said . "We will react "'ilh voluntary lime off at first but if it becomes more traumatic then \A.'C ·will have lo t ake more traumaliC' measures." Mesa Budget Shows Rate Dip 12'%.Clitnb Cos~ of Living Sp1i1·ts in April ·a y The Associated Press Consumer prices in the Los Angeles metropolitan area coritinu ed spir.a l ing µpward , climbiilg a lmost 1 percent in April , Department of Labor of· ficials said today. Department statistics indicat- ed an increase of 12 percent in the cost of living as compared to April 1974, for Los Angeles and Orange Counties. Suzanne Sadowsky, head of the de p artment's Southern California Bureau, said the con- sumer price i.ndex in the Los Angeles area in April was 155.6, meanin g that it cost $15.56 to buy the same goods and services which .cost $10 in the base 1ear ~. I•,.· ... • . The purchaSing power ·or the 1967 dollar dropped to N .3 cen&I Nt;'w~Mewa Jast month , she added. Heavy increases in transporla lion and hous ing costs we re largel.Y to blam e ror the rise in April 's cost or living, Mi ss Sadowsky, said 10·15% PETROLEUM HIKES .SEEN. A4. Nationally, the rate or inflation 'quickened a bit in April as grocery prices reversed a two· month declin e. and he_lped push over-all consumer prices up six- tenths of a percent, the govern- ment reported today. The April increase, though double that of March, was in line with .the ~dininiatration forecast ol llli ....,,_al JnO•\l<l'I rate of aboUt e or 1 per cent Ulla year for !bell< ·- Sclwol Budget Cut By $3.1 Million By HILAR Y KAYE • OflMDell' ~lels..fl During the past few months, trustees or the Newport·Mesa Unified School District have sluhed about $3 . l million Crom the district's proposed budget for 1975·76. The district will operate with a budget or $39.5 million -about $3 million less than this year. 1 However, trustees maintain that the cutbacks will seriously hamper the district's educational program C\nd have proposed a spending increase or $100 per pupil , or about five cents added to the 1975-76 lax rate. Voters will be asked on May 27 to approve a tax hike from $4.07 this year to about S4.12next year. Due to state legislation, · un- success rul election wyl me that the lax rate will drop lo about $3. 76. * * * School Chief Won't Ac.cept Salary Hike John Nicoll, superintendent of the NewJ)ort·Mesa Unified School District, said today he will not accept a raise for the coming year. .. It has bec;ome increasµigly evident to me that the passibility of ll\Y recelvtnk .a n increase in salary ... Is being used.by some -citizens· and staff alike"-as'° excuse, a cop·obt, to justify a negative vote on Mciy 27," Nicoll said. · Next Tue6day, the school als· trict is asking voters to approve a 3&-cent override tax. During these last few days before the election, trustees and district officials are emph~izing ways the district will be affected' if the $3915 million budget is used. U voters approve the election measure, $2.5 million in extra revenue will come into the dis· trict, creating a budget of $42.1 million. - Of that amount, $1.25 million will be .put back into the budget in the' form of progr a m restorations and the rem aining $1.25 million will be used to boost emergency reserves to $1 million and to pay salarr., increases and frin ge benefits.to district personnel. .T h e curren t $39.5 million b udget has no alloWance for raises other than the standard step increases for teachers. Ttustees have recently weatht:red sev~ral stormy school boat"d meetings, where large num b ers o f parents, and· teachers, have jammed into the meetin g room and demanded that certain . c utbacks be re· instated. As a result, trustees have re- inatated the p'.rimary reading program ($2.50,000); special music teachers ($65,000) and some transport ation !services ($55,000). · Or the $3.1 ·million reduction, about $2.3 million comes from ac- tual cutbacks, $680,000 from ex- pected teacher attrition plus $80,00Q from redu.ctions in extra pay to teachers for afters·chool dUties. · _ (See BUDGET, Page A2) PRICES' "'.'°OIOlY DAMPENS DOW Nicoli's current saJary Is • $38~500 annually. Trustees have· already 'agreed to offer .the auperintendent a new, four-year ..._ NEW YORK .<U Ptl -The sto<k markel closed ~ly and sharply lower, t<>ifaY-in mciderate lradlng on the -Ne.w York Stock· Exchan10 ao lnveston ohowed concern over a rise lq the cost of living. contract beglnnin1 July 1. · At the beginnln1 al ~ ye~1 trustees discu11od o!l-INI""" an increase of Sl.500.. HoWever, Nicoll at that lime told tllem to hold off on his ilalaty unlil i.w. Now, with the oledl~ jiat days away. Nlcol~ed, "I h8'• advlud th1! af educ•· Uon thal U.ere oboul<I i., no chanre In lbt lorma af· my pre- 1ent contra.t dUrilll.Jm.'11, win ()r lose on May 27.'' , The Dow J one.s industrl al average, a seven-point loser Tuesd a.y, .lost 11 .81 points to Ill.ill. Dft)lntt outcllslanted O<I··, vanee1 by aOOUt a 10-tb-three in!ft:ln. .-. Prifft! Yfere lower in moderate \ ·~ .. lbe American Stock J:x<han10. .Assessed Value Up . ~ ~ 5 · Percent .. ... D;oJI, Pl19t PMIOI b, Plfl'kll aoa-11 MRS. FORD wll.~ TO ENTHUSl~TIC REFUGEE CROWD AS .SHE DEPARTS PENDLETON Retuge'e• Jolned.N•-m~ In .seeking .Snapshots of the First Lady's Visit ., ... Mrs. Ford Sees Viets Greetings Civen· io Pendleton Refugees By CAROL MOORE !"f 1111 0111, Pilot Shift Betty Ford brought greetings from her President husband and "the warmth or the American people" to Vietnamese re!ugets in Camp Pendleton today. "The President, our children and I have s uffered along with your misfortunes and want to give you help, happiness and sun- shine,'' was her greet ing, trans•ated to a crowd ol several hundred in a recreation area. As the first member of the First Family lo visit .a,ny of the refugeeS' compo~ds, 'Mrs~l Ford loured the Jar,ge•I o( :Ute te~ cities and ~mphasized thit slie came to meet each and every one of the refugees. "All of us here are volunteers, willing to he lp you adjust. Things 1will be better over the hill, but it will take time." Mrs. Ford ha d lengthy con- V.:?rsalions with both former President Nguyen Cao Ky of A REPORTER VIEWS 'LITTLE. SAIGON'-7 South Vietnam and ex-President KhoyofCambod1a. The' Fii:St Lady's entourage passe.,4 .thrOUgb dining areas,· a classtOom In its third day or learninC' English and a Post Ex- 3 -Gii-Recalls , . f ' change set up as an open-air marketplace for refugees. Within each te nt a particular child would attract her attention a nd a clasp of the hand. Older children, oblivious to the pro· minence of th eir visitor, were us her ed forth by their parents ror recognition by Uic President's wife. But her arrival at the outdoor sports area -a basketball court actually -was announced in both Engli s h and Vietnames e languages and attracted a cheer- ing crowd. l\1rs. Ford's visit lasted less than an hour. after which she de- parted for El Toro l\1CAS and a flight bac k to Was hin gt o n tonight. Both the presidents tipped her hand and asked that she relay their gratitude to the President. · "That's what we 're here £or ," she replied. l\1rs. Ford was ~·earing a two· piece beige suede suit with brown polka dot sca rr a nd looke healthy as she wound up her California lour. Four D odgers Due At Costa Mesa Park Four m embers or the Los Angeles Dodgers will conduct a clinic in Costa Mesa·.s.1....lons Purk Satufday. Outfie lder Tom J,>a c lore'k:, catcher Joe Ferguson, pitcher Tommy John and coach Tom Lasorda will appear from noon to 2 p.m. to teach tt;ie basic skllls'.of baseball af\.d . coaching' strategy in connection with the Har~r" ~a tJaseball Program. A proposed budget Cor the city or Costa Mesa reflecting a four- cenl tax rate decrease but a Cive percent estimated increase in as- sessed valuation \\1as presented to the city council Tuesday ni ght .. The budget also envisions the city spending $677 ,000 less tha n it ,,,.ill lake in, with revenue being $18 ,158,000 and expenditur es $17 .481,000. Presenting: the report .to the Council, City Manager Fred Sorsabal s aid the budget con· tinues "the Ci ty Council's lon g. established policy or maintaining cash reserves deemed adequate to meet all interi.m rinancing needs." Sorsabal est imated that the general city tax rate for 1975-76 will be $1:42 but with the open space bond issue included the .. r ate wi.ll be $1 .51, compared \llilh $1 .55 for the present lax year. Sorsabal said that the budge t 1 represents a total appropriation of $17 .5 million for operational and capital improvement needs, a drop of 7.7 percent over this ' year's budget. The plain reason for the drop, 1 he said', is that the pqlice depart· 1 ment will not be covering Irvine next year. Another reason. he said, is a slower pace for acquir-1 ing land for park s ites flom private owners. .Sorsabal said that he expects the city will have to acquire these sites through condemnation. No condemnation proceedings have ! been instituted since the passage or a $3.9 million park bond· issue 18 months ago, though school • sites have been acquired Crom ' the Newport-Mesa Unifi ed 1 ..School District. The operation s budget is ·pegged al $13.6 million with the capital improvem ents ~timaled lo total $3.8 million. ; The budget proposal does not 1 allow for salary increases, other ' -than merit hik es and I reclassifications, but does allow l for 16 new employes to be hired during the year. Five of these ne\v positions \\'Ould be in the 1 police department, four in the rire department, and l\\'O in the communications department. Sorsabal said that he expects revenues or $18.2 million, a 9.7 percent hike over this year's estimates. The estimated as· sessed valuation is $306 million. <See TAX RATE, Page A2) Or•._,n_g~~••t We•tller ~ .. l os t\y s unn y s kies throu g h Thur s da y. Warmer with highs in the upper 60s at the beaches to 70 inland areas. LO\\'S tonight near 50. I NSIDE T ODAY Laguna Beach isn't the only place uihere beachgoers in the ,allogelher are catching city . oJ/iciaJ.s wilh lheir ordinances down . ll 's a nafionwide phenomenon . See Page A12. I n d ex • ..... OAIL. V PILO f c Weurie&<lay, May 21, 1~/C> I ' ' ......... .41 Fro• Groee NEWPORT-MESA DISTRICT BUDGET CUTS. • • Tanzania Mob. 'l1le bl11e1t cull romefrom the central district a11ocatlon, in - cluding reductions in office sup- plies, equipm~nt , consulta.nts, mileage, dupli cating services and professional meetings. raearch and development pro- grams, pupil tianspQrtaUon, di•· tric\ publications and >..iuced 'sabbatical leaves for te•t.btrl. And , 38 m a intenance and opera- tions pos itions have be en eliminated. Other cuts involve cleaning, re-· ;pairing and painting buildings, District wide categories that SCHOOL :' Newport High ; Corona High : Harbor del Mar Costa Mesa High : Estancia High : Lincoln Middle: Ensign Middle: TeWinkle Middle; Kaiser Middle: Davis Middle: Rea Middle: Pomona : •victoria: Whittier: Wilson: Bear Strfft: COiiege Park: Killybrooke: Paularino: 1Sonora: A_da.ms: B•learic: C.lilornia: Mesa Verde: a..yView: Harper: Ulldbergh: \ RESTORATIONS IF ELEC· TION APPROVED One counselor. one teacher, math and lang uage lab assis- taqts, PE e_qulpm..ent man, some after-sch90l activities, student body support funds. S maller classes. more English, social studies, math, scien<'e, art, industrial arts, and home economics classes, keep night science lab and night library ope n, PE equip- ment man, stude nt body sup· port funds, some a fter-school activities. · Smaller English classes, PE equipment man, some af\er- school activities, student body support funds, clerical aides. Activities director, social s tudies teacher, s ecurity guard, some after-school ac· tivities, student body support funds. Small er English classes, counseling and nursing services. teacher aides, some after-school activities. ti.1ore classes in math, social studies . and English, counsel- ing, some after-school ac· ti vi ties. Smaller classes, nursing, counseli ng and library services, some after-school activities. Smal ler English classes, vocal music teacher, instruc- tional aides. some a fter- school activities. Guidance lab personnel, counseling, nursing and library services, instruc· tional aides , some after- school activities. Smaller classes in English, social studies,· and home economics, counseling and library services, some after- school activities. Smaller classes in primary grades, instrumental music teacher, nursing services. Pilot 4 pre-school program, reading teacher, instrumen- tal and vocal music teachers, nursing services. PE teacher, instrumental arid vocal music t eacher&, counseling and nursing services. Reading teacher, helping teacher, vocal music teacher, counseling and nursing services. Instrumental music teacher, teacher aides, counseling and nursing services. Smaller classes. helping teacher, instrumental music teacher. Learning center teacher, re· ading teacher, instrumental music teacher, teacher aides, counseling and nursing services. Learning center teacher, re- ading teacher, instrumental and vocal music teachers, learning center aide, counsel· ing services. Smaller classes in K, 4th and Sth grades, vocal and in· strumental music leachers, instructional aides, s tudent aides. Smaller classes. inslrumen· tal mus ic teacher, nursing services. Reading t eacher. instrumen- tal music teacher, counseling services. Pilot 4 pre-school program, Instrumental music teacher, learning center staff, counsel· ing and nursin g services. Ins trumental and vocal music teachers, teacher aides, counseling services. Voc al and instrumental music te a cher s, learning center aides, teacher aides, nursing services. A learning cedter, instrumen· Lal music teacher, nursing services, clerical aides. PE teacher, in strumental mus ic t e a c he r , r e adin# specialist, counseling and nursing service&, cleric a l aides. Readlng teacher, counscling and nuralng services, clertcal aides. ' wlll receJve reinstatements If the ·election Js 1ucce15ful, include school nurses, payc~. 13 maintenance and operations Positions, the pre-school pro- gram, replacing stolen equlo· ment-, syecial : education •. somq home-to-school transportation, and district help to 1ludent IC·. Uvltie• auch as drama, pep 1ciu1ch _.d b'and . Jndlvldual 1chools will be af· fected In differin g ways if lhe voters approve the extra re· venue. The accompanying chart outlines the effect on each school.' Woocll•nd: • Andersen: Coron.adel Mar: Eastblulf:· Harbor View : Newport: Newport Heights: Mariners: Reading .teacher. instrumen· tal music teacher, PE teacher, helping teacher, t.'Ouns ellng and nursing services. •Smaller cla.!i:iOS, learning center teacher, vocal music teacher, counseling and nurs· ing services. L earning center teacher, classroom teacher, in- strumental music teacher, nursing services. Vocal music teacher, PE teac her , l e arning center staff, clerical aides. Smaller classes in primary grades, tea cher aides, noon supervisors. Smaller K classes, learning center aides , instrumental mu s ic teacher, reading teacher, nursing services. Reading teacher, instrumen· tal and vocal music teachers, l ea rnin g center aides, counseling and · nursing services . Instrumental music teacher, counseling and nursing services, clerical and teacher aides. Mesa Chamber OKs Override Seizes -Studen.t DAR ES SALAAM, Tan1ania (UPI ) -Three American stu- . dents were kidnaped lrom a wildlife research station by armed Africaos in a remote area ol northwes tern Tanzania, U.S. embassy officials said today. A Dutch student also was ab- ducted. The sources said the kldna.plng took place Monday nlght at a game research station run by Jane Goodall, author or several books on animal behavior. <Stanford University said It had been informed by State Department officials in Tanzania that 40 armed men from Zaire seized the three students and an administrative assistant. <Stanford said the students kid- naped were BarbaraB. Smuts, 24, Ann Arbor, Mich.; Kenneth S. Smith, 22, Garden Grove. and Carrie Jane Hunter, 21, Atherton, Calli.) The research station, in the Gombe game reserve, is located north of Kigoma on the shore of LakeTunganyika near the Burun- di border. The embassy asked the Tanza- nian government to launch an in- ·vestigation, the sources said. The Americans and the Dutchman were among about 30 students working at the station. Most or the students are from Stanford. Miss Goodall and other mem- bers of the research station wit· nessed t.he kidnaping. They said the kidnapers were armed with rifles, bul their identity was not known. The embaisy sources. sald1 there was no appar~nl motive for . the kldnaplng and . relations between the students at the re- search station and local vtllugerli were good. . Jlowever; the bgrder area -of Burundi near the area of the kid· naplng was the scene or military operations against dissident tribesmen this month. The U.S. embassy In the Burundi capital of Bujumbura also was working on the kidnap case, the sources aaid. •• * * V.S. Citizens Terrorized Around World From Wire Services Americans came under in- creasing attack today throughout the world. Two U.S. Air Force of- ficers were murdered in Iran, an American civilian a nd two Marines were held hostage in Laos, and three Stanford stu· d e nts were kidnuped in Tanzania. Terrorists stopped a car carry- ing two unarmed U.S. Air Force officers to work this morning, or- FORD .SAYS BOMBING NOT PUNITIVE. A4. •THIRD CALLER· derO<I their Iranian driver ID the floor or the car, then shot and BOVGHT Y. ~CHT killed the Americans. Supervisors Okay Harbor Patrol Move · ,.. The U.S. Embassy identified Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-"The ad produced many Calls the dead as Col. Paul R. Sharrer merce directors have endorsed-and I sold the yacht on the third J r., 45, a native of Bryan, Ohio, the tax override that goes before call. I'm very pleased." and Lt. Col. J ack J . Turner, 45,. Over the objections of Newport .voters or the Newport-Mesa That's the success story told by from Carbondale, Ill. Beach city officials, Orange Unified School District next the Huntington Beach man who The Iranian government said County supervisors voted 4·1 to· · Tuesday. placed this ad in the Daily Pilot: lhe assassins, who escaped, were day to transfer t he county Chamber directors voted 14-2 MarXist guerrillas, and ','no ac-, Harbor Patrol to the sheriff's de-in a secret, written ballot at a COLUMBIA 22, 3sails, lion will be spared to find the partment. luncheon at the Mesa Verde Goll knot mete r, cockpit murderers and bring them to Supervisor Thomas Riley , and Country Club Tuesday. Six· cushions,NewportSltp justice." whose district includes Newport teen of the 21 directors attended $2800. xxx-xxxx A woman who said she spoke and Dana Point harbors, voted the meeting. If you have a boat or sails to for the "Iranian People's War- against t he transfer. He claimed Directors favoring the over-sell, call 64 2_5678 . It only takes 8 riors Association" called .the As· such a consolidation would pro-ride stressed that the quality of a few words in the right place lo socialed Press and said "the ex- bably be effective only in the school district often is a key make a sale. ecution or American officers was south county harbor which is sur-criterion used by firms in decid-Along the Orange Coast, the a reply to the exec~tio~ or ~ne rounded by county territory. ing where to loc·ate their .head-right place is the Daily Pilot Jranian revolutionanes 1n pnson He supJ)orted contentions by quarters. No one spoke against lastmonth." Newport Beach City Manager ,_t~h~e~l~s~su~e~.---~_::::::_::.::::.:_::=::.__:=========::;;===-::_::'.::.'.:=:::_ _______ _ Robert Wynn that creation of a " .a; second law enforcement agency within the incorporated boun- daries of a city would onJy create unnecessary conOict. TAX RATE •• an increase of 5 percent over this year's assessed valuation. Revenue or $4 .1 million is ex- pected from property taxes. The retail sales tax revenue is estimated at $5 million, a 14 .8 percent increase over this year's yield, but 12 percent of the in- crease will be inflationary with only 2 .8 percent of real growth. ' Allhough sales lax· increases are slowing, the city manager pointed out that the city will re- ceive about $300,000 from the new · South Coast Plaza Hote l due to open in September. The council decided to hold a study session on the budget at1 6:30p.m. June9. Football Signups Signups will be taken to TeWlnkle School,' Costa Mesa, from 6:30 to 9 o'clock tonight for the Junior All -American Football League. It's open to youngsters aged8to 14 . ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed ,.,. • ., ... M •1'CI P~l>ll ~t Jack R. Curley \/let ,.,._,IMlll .... C..M••I Ml~ Triomas Keevlt Thomas A . Murphlne ,,,,. .... ,1 ... (ttl!Ot ' Charles H. LOO!. Richard P. N•ll At~•1..,I ,,,,..,.91t1q Edl1«1 Teltptlone (714) 6'2-4321 Classllltd Advertising 642·U71 'o~r•11h1. ttll Or•no1 Co•1t P~toH1l'lln9 c_.,,. N• .,.,.., •••'-•· ll111•l••1ion1. 9'dlt0tl•I m•llt• tt •ll"l •ll••-nli htr•ln ..,., .. •t ptO••H•• wl11w1111 '"cl•• IHl'"'lu lon ot c"'rrit•1to•l'l4•. ~coMI cl••• ffl l•-LMICI I I C••I• JIM••. C1•1t0tl'tl1 l~I»< tlOI-..,,.,,.,, U.00 ,,_,111,: bV "'"' 1-1 ao ... a•11Nr;"""l••v••111•11-u.oo -011,. da.vis· MOdel FPl·170T FRIGIDAIRE Family Size REFRIGERATOR A 100% Frost-Pro o f ONLY Relrl gera1o r:Freezer that s399•s boasts a generous 17.0 cu.-ft . overall. The 4.76 cu.-ft. freezer section oilers 2 Fle:ic·Ouik Ice Trays and an ice server. ~avls• ! \ FRIGIDAlllf HIEA YY DUTY ·WASHER 525995 DRYER 5 17995 This Frigidaire Heavy Du t y Wa s her can deliver dependable, trouble-free performance with its heavy duty motor and other components used In Frigidaire Commercial Washers. You can wash permanent press. cottons, and heavy work clothes efficiently, or reduce wear on delicates with Normal and Gentle Wash cycles. The matching Frigidaire Dryer lets you drY up to 18 ix>unds of laundry all at once. With the turn of a dial. match the drying time to the type of load. Including permanent press and knits. s399ts FRIGIDAIRE LAUNDRY CENTER Thia sp1ce·aavlng Frigidaire Laundry Center combines a fam ily-size washer and dryer Into a single slim cabiner. Plugs Into any separate 15 amp conventional household circuit. I • I I , .. • ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • • ~ow ABOUT t>ETENTE~ A Vote Of Cons~ience SUt>l>ENLY .I HAVE "THIS <RAVING FOil. HAVANA (1<5A~S . . ' • 1n another atmoophere, In other times, a school cine t11ile aucb as the one before Costa Mesa and wport Beach voters next Tuesday would paaa llke a ze. ' The amount of money Involved per household Is '}lot that slggllteanl, rior does It Involve any glamor ".N;<indtnc or hokum. ' 1 'Based on the tax rate he paid for lhe current '.!1!174-75) school year, the owner of a $50,000 to $80.000 oouse would· pay oi\ly from " to $7 .so more per year for the five-year J)eriod or the authori•ation. Com- ' ed to what th~ school tax rate wlU-drop to if the- electlon'fails, that home owner will pay an additional q'40· S40 per year. . . ru1te~a and ,,adnUJll•tr.ato~S: of . the Newport-sa C11!r1ep Schopl Du1picLhad little choice.but lo k Some lncreasl»ln 1he present J>jf JIUJ>ll expen· ure to ~ry to catch u·p with. iitClation·caused cost In· ase~. " They see the issue as necessary lo slow do·wn to damaging speed what seems· to be an inevitable line in the qualit)'of education In the local system. They have cut their budget in ways least likely to felt . in the teaChing. and .student ·activities pro· ms:at least thrQligh the first year. In subsequent rs,'the toll will become mo·re visible. . The school folks deserve credit for trying to do at their critics ·told !Mm to do last fall after an tion for a larger per.pupil reveriU~ increase was ed down by the voters: -They have counseled with the community, king recommendiatiqns for budgel balancing from mittees representini various school areas, and to reconcile confii~1ng recon:'menda'tions1 , -They reduced the amount of their request from per pupil to $100. • ._They cut considerably more out of the 1975·76 budget than the additional $100 per pupil will provide. Even if the election succeeds, $1.7 mllllon will be cut. -They have set a time limil of five years on the measure. A 1972 sta~e Jaw allows Newport· Mesa to increase per·pupil spending only three percenl to ofCsel lnfla · lion. Obviously, this is totally inadequate. No matter whether the issue wins or loses, the quality of education in. the Newparl·Mesa district. i~n 't -likely!<> be as good as 1t has~been. Even with declinmg enrollments in the lower gr ade levels, and with reduc- tions in personnel where state law permits, inflation will outrun revenue. . · All of this poses a hard decision for many families fh the.district ~ho are s ufferi_ng the same problems of meeting inrlation with fixed or diminis hed incomes- or even unemploy ment. Scarcely a famil y exists that has not h ad to change its habits, its spending pal· terns, its prioriti ~ and its way of life in t oday 's economy. SQ it is not illogical they expect schools and other public agencies also.to accept a little suffering. 1 Thus the e lect.ion Tuesday becomes a matter of priorities and a difficult matter of co'nscience for all of uS . The opportunity to perhaps ''save'' some mone~' even at the expense of our schools is te mpting. But if the voters do adopt this line of reasoning. they should know erosion of a fine school s:yst em will be accelerated . Experience is that, once start ed, d e - terioration of a sch.._ool S)'Slen1 is difficult, costly and slow to reverse. ' ---~ Our opinion is that the $100 per pupil revenue i.n - crease on next Tuesday's ballot is worthy of passage. It represents a modest e ffort to hold onto a superior education system. The investment appears a· \vise one. c 9 Split nFord Loe11I .'1 geueies C1111 . .\ 1l111i11ist er Co11st Pl 1111 • • ec1s1on EVANS-NOV AK ASHll/GTON -The gamble n by President Ford in using ed force against Cambodia, ing with ia ir stri,kes, against bodlan gunboats last week, based above all on this hard I us ion: the ·U.S. had to seize occasion of Cambodian cy to prove it both could and Id react with1 d~ision and er to lnternationili 11wJ-..1 here was no split or any kind he National Security Council SC). In • 'd. every orficial in e a d - istralion eed that lever the , a show of erican I I a n d er was olutely cs- tial following the humiliation ulh Vietnam. otdering American attacks the Cambodian gunboats to k an obvious Cambodian ef- to remove the American '1 of the 1\1 ayaguez to the bodian mainland. neither the Pre1ident nor the NSC even a ttempted Lo figure out an answer Lo this potentially ex- plosive question : what if the Cambodians should use the gun· boat attack as the pretext for murdering some 40 American crewmen? "Or course we had contineency pl;;1ns," one tOp presidential aide told us . "But we couldn't sit around and try to estimate ·every possible coritlngency "'hen \\'e are dealing with a plimitive gov- ernment which has virtually i::io outside contacts with the World. We had lo act." Dear Gloomy Gus What-is Just Plain Henry's target or opportunity? Could it be the tax payers of Orange Couilty forced to clean up his Alice in Won- derl3nd litter? M.W. GN9mW Gtd <tll'llfl•"'' M"• 5....,,;tlH llw. ~--N ...e Mt••urllw "''"'' -........ """ .......... ,. ,,....., ,._,.. ......... GIMmrGlll, D.1Uw PllM. wa r : despi.t e that natronal humiliation, no fo reign counlry should make the mistake that the United Slate& ~as discarding its r.,,We ~ worlc;l 1eader, O! '-''&& r e·, luctant to take strong action where dE:manded. INDEED, the private remarks of top officials here make it abun- d an l J y apparent that th e J\fayaguei seizure became the ideal case lo,prpve the point. In the background "'as the ut· ter failure or all efrort.s to. open so me kind of circuitous diplomatic channel to the revolu- tion4'ry Cambodian government of the Kt)mer Rouge. The Soviet Union has bee n kicked out or Phnom Penh for failure lo break "''ith the old regime. The. People's Republic of China, accordtng lo one high official, informed the U.S. it would try to help, and did so, but proved the point that the jingoistic Cambodian regime \\'as simply beyond reach. On Tuesday evening, ~1r. Ford ordered word p assed to con- gressional leaders that ''ap· propriate.actjon" would soon be taken. Perhaps. in retrospect the President should have sum· moned these leaders to the While House for a, fa·ce.to-face con- versation. Sen. Mike Mansfield· or Montiana .· the Sena te Democratic leader, fo~.exampJe; said later that ht ~·d l\Ot been . "consulted," on the theory he "'as told, not asked.!' Co To the Editor: Realtors and many other Americans "''ou ld have to £ind other \\.'Ork und er governments \vhich now control more than half of the world's population. The simple reason being that indi viduals are not free to o"''n property in those coWltries. Could this freedom be lost here! Only if those interested fail ta·-.act when the bundle or rights that, go ""ith properly ownership s uffer infringement. It would seem that property owners. current <.ind prospective, to protect thei r o"·n interests would turn out to vote against all encroachments. In actuality, voter participation in rtcfnt elections has been dttllning. The problem seems lo be that many a re working too hard to have the time to idenlify critical iss ues or to respond appropriate ly. The Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Re<tltors responded to this problem by .forming a Political Affairs Committee to s tud y issues and recommended appropriate actions. RE COGN IZING the infringement by the Coastal Zone Conservation Commission on the rights of the City or Newport Beach as "'ell as on many property owners seeking to improve their properties the Political Affa irs Committee decided to explore the situation. We learned that the commission, • while mandated by Proposition -20 (which a large majority or Orange County voters turned down), was c harge d with preparing a coastal plan and ·expiring. After further study the cqmroittee proposed and the board of directors approved the following statement: .''As th.e Newpo rt Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of R ealtors h as witn ess ed considerabl.f client experience with t"he impact of the Coastal Zone Conservation Commission .created by Proposition ; a nd ''As ·we consid er the OTKEA 1CRITtCISM In a commission will have served its Congr)._e1·1 noW'r showlng p"urpose ,by mt1.kin g local .dangerou$ ,f )'ntptQm!I or laki'ng government aware or the need lo oVer Am~J•n lol-elgn Policy protect the environment of th e from . its feuding committee coastal area; rooms Was also heard, raising "As actions or the current THE UNDERLYING assump· ominou s .. queslions about a commissions have proven Coslly n of the Presidont's aides was vicious partisan debate erupting :~California in jc;>bs lost : ~o the t the U.S. must deal with such from the President's bold action. properly owner and the ult1mat~ act of piracy as •·Western na-But on that point Mr. Ford and bbyer in time and money spent . acting In a civilized fashion: his top aides orten indecisive even for minor construe lion : and d«nand Immediate return or th<. and vacillatin'g on lesser mat-"As local general plaq.s are ~p and crew and ~ap a con\· ters, sho"·ed no concern this being completed to s upport th e i'9rcncy plan to seize both by -time . They assumed that coaste.1 plan. v.·hlch general kc~ if the demand :--'as not met \\'hatever partisan outcry mia:ht plans can be administered ~1nareasonableUme. • ensue,theAmericanpeopleasa fairl y, consist.e n.tl y and "'hole would react with over· judiciously by local elected of· ollowtng sc.lture of the whelming approval to the Presi· fit'ials supervised by existing yaguez by Cambodia just dent's powerful re1~nse lo 11n stateaaencies: er midnight, Sunday, the u~provoked act of p r acy on the ''We, therefore. urge the sident allowed almost 48 1 highseas. mandated expiration or the rs to 1 1~ b y without any ··•sure they'll try lodemafoguc Coastal Zone Conservation itai'y response. Next, the it ·· one senior presldenUa aide Cofnmisaion be fulfilled.'' le P.la1n 91 l10Jatin1 .the little t0ld us. ''Th~t 's pa~. for lhe , ,.,...,c-.c ·1n .lfi.e. Cull ol ThaJland, cou""" But no one .ronsidered . ~lN(1.E the slate Legi~lature the Mayaa:uez was h~d, th&las'p1rtofthepr0b1em." ' ~ will make lh·e final decision on t astray when Cambochan • · the commlsslon and its plans, boats moved to.ward the THUS. In th\s lirst clear show we ht1ve lorward&d the above nJand 1boul 15 males awt1y. of American P,Ower 'Ince the In· stetement to each board or PreS;ldent then. cave his or-dochlnese fi11'co, Mr. Ford has realtors In the slate asking them •to halt lhe cunbOa\I. ~~on1lr•led •·hat. he Is often ~ protect the interesLs of their criltci&ed for laC?k,in1:'a,talen! for. tlleftls by tm pr ~1slng their leader1htp and cO$,mand, in a Ltcis11lors with t.ht importance t that point.. the U.S. went the ~ 1;nd .~ces11ry distance lo ve whQ\ Mr. F~ and ,,la tarle1 or Slate and Def'tn.lf, tY'. .Kl.-1ln1tr !nd. James pi:, bad been preaollloa .,.(op ever 4_tnr'e 'the caataslrOphlc end or the Vlelnam \ c1Ho ~vold or ambl.Wti to hllh of,lJlls matter. ' ••d 'hf• advt etl. 'Dti'plt•• ·· polillcal risks, no one arouatd LYl\1AN 5. FAULK.NEil him exhibited 1e<Otid lhougbta Chairman :.bo4&I ~ obllaallon/i{U..,U.S. lb Poll Uc al AC!11r1 Committee. llllderwrlle·\he NI• ol l~w ln.U.. Newport Hubor-Coola M .. a •'Grid. Board or Realtors • Should Dissolve ( MAILBOX ) Ult••• from •t•d••• ,.,, w•I(-. Tl'ot ,;,,.,, lo ¢onN11u. tller• lo 111 ••K • '' •limi11.11e 1lbill ••rt· urwt l . Ltllt'• ol JOO worch or i.,, woll De ''~'" prtl•••M t . All ltll•rt fnY•I i...:I .... olfft.11-.cl ,...,u.., .ldd•t•• 1>111 11.1me1 mllY De wll-1" on••· ,.,.,. ,/ 1Ylli<1•11t •t.l•o~ i• .l~rfflt. ""'''will llOIDe""'bl,.lltd. SI nl il<I h•s To the Editor: In reply to a letter from your 'reader. David Curtis, may I say that philosophically he is right, but statistically he is wrong. A well-documenled survey taken in California last year shows that over 42 percent of revenue limit increase elections passed. Also. it should be pointed out that the Newport-Mesa school district is requesting of the voters just that: A revenue limit increase, not as Curtis wrote, ''a bond issue.'' Maybe he does have reference to some statistical re- sults concerning school bond is· sues, but obviously. revenue limit increase requests arc not difficult to pass. Let's get the na me of the game right; that makes it easier t o win. FREDERICK BLECHSTEIN M 'iNt• fllL"f.9SC ........ , To th e Editor: The excellence of the Newport· !\'tesa schools has contributed ·significantly to the social and economic slabilil)'. of our area. Good schools are a fWlction of ascending property values. They attract the families that build a prosperous. e nli ghtened and cohesive community. I knov.·, I am a realtor and "sell " the com- munity every day. Good schools als o prod uce responsible citizens . We have a ll witnessed this aspect of ex- cellence in education. Let us con· tinue this tradition. On a Sl00,000 home, the increase would be onl y $12.50 a year; on a lesser home th-e .additional tax is even less signiricant. To avoid this invest· menl opportunity is to invite the mediocrity and disarray that is so com mon throughout our coun- try today. · It is a very good investment to vote yes on Tuesday, MBy 27, and urge others to do the same. JIM WOOD Oppc1Ne• l11('refl#e To the Editor: The Financial Report 1973-74. Orange County Department ol Education. published Dec. 1974. From the facts I gathered herei n, . I am surely convinced to vote No on the May 27 Neworl·Mesa Unified School District election. Orange County has ti unified school districts . Their average daily attendance <A DA ) cost was $1,030. Newport·Mesa Unified School District's ADA cost was 22.38 perC'ent more . or Sl·:260 .86. Nine were lower. NEWPORT·M ESA want> you and me to increase their revenue limit to SI,372, the highest or th~ 11 unified districts. Already, Newport· Mesa school district in• come (general fund > from lac~ sources is 77 .17 perC'ent, which 11 20.8-4 percent more thin the average tor the 11 un1ned dis· tr1 cla. ]'iewport-J\.1esa ADA for 1973-74 wu 26."4. which I.a a d~reu.se from three prlOT' yearz, im.73, 1971 ·72. 1970·71 . "'hereas the total for th'e 11 unified districts in Orange County was increased. With t hi s Newport ·Mesa decrease in ADA , there should be a like reduction of expenditures.- During 1973·74 ending June 30, Orange County school districts had nine elections on finances. Eight failed to pass; five of these eight "'ere ror revenue increases. Evidently. ,most Orange County taxpayers and parents feel it un- necessary lo s pend thei r hard- earned dollars on more laxes, already earmarked for a tax rate increase of up to 30 C'ents per $100 assessed valuation on property. This increase a lone could add about $100 to the county taxes on a $40,000 home. I will vote No on tr.e Increase of revenue limit on May 27 . BRU CE HARSHBARGER S11pp,.r1 :J111s1 .. To the Editor. In March, the Newport-Mesa Bo ard of Education authorized the reduction of music instruc- tion services at the elementary level and planned to serve notice or intent not to reemploy some music teachers. · As concerned parents and sup· porters of music in the schools. "'e collected 2.165 signatures of parent and community members and 2.574 signatures ·or students who support music education. These petitions and many pre· senta tions were given to the board of educati on at a meeting on April 9. This r esulted in reten· lion of $65.000 for Distri ct support to the program . This fWlding plus individual school requests will pr.ovide approximately 60 per- cent of the funding necessary to continue the elementary music program which curre ntly in· cludeti music instruction in the schools, the honors program ro r students in grades four through twelve. teacher inservice and im· provement of instruction. In· dividual schools hav1)'requested the other 40 percent tfecessary .to maintain the program et current levels only if the up·roming elec- tion is succe~sful . ' WE FEEL that our Newport- Mesa students should have the opportunity to participate in music education if they desire beC'ause they can benefit greatly, both socially and emotionally as well as academically. The music education progtam is only one example of the pro- blems facing our total school prO· gram unless we can pass the election on May 27. We urge our friends to s upport music and the education or.our students by vot- ing YES on May27. MR . & MRS. PA ULIULL MRS . RUTHANN NASBY Nev.·port·l\.1esa Music Patrons H11r11s•111c•11t To the Editor: My wire's recent garuac sale in Costa Mesa was marred by .only one unfortunate incident. . A man in an unmarked car stopped at an intersection where I was tiaving a conversation with my neighbor. 11e exited his car. violently ripped down n garaee _sale sign l had just put up and re· turned to his c•r. After a rtw mo· menla of stunned silence l uked this ·•aentleman t' by whMt · authoriJY he wa·s removing the sign. I received no •nswer other &}tan a slammed car door. 8aNCE l had no way or de· termining whether he had some offi cial capacit y or was just col· lecting garage sale signs for his· o"'n e"ent, I ('Ontinued to press n1y request (or who he was, what la"' ir any h<' "·as 'tryi ng to en- rorce and ror re turn or my personal property. To say the least, this man v.'as extremely uncooperative. belligerent, in- coherent and threatening. ,\fter my third or fourth re- quest for information on "'hat he ,,·as trying to enlorce, he final· ly handed mt> a one page sum · tnary entitled .. Residential Re<tl Estate Signs." Without allowing me to read or question him about this sheet, he proce~ed to dri,·e- off in a manner dangerous to both· myself and my neighbor and headed for other signs in an ef .. rort to beat me there. He did beat me, and confiscated the signs that J had said I would remove. - Even arter reading the han· doul, I'm not entirely clear of his powers. The underlined informa- tion states "Real E:<itale signs are only pe rmitted on property" bein11: ad\'erlised for sale, lease or rent." Since this '''as not a real estate sign and \\'as pl aced with permission of the property. owner, perhaps it "'as not, in fact, an illegal s ign . But whether or not he \vas v.·ilhin his jurisdiction is nol my poirit . This man 's attitude was one of harassment, not one or en- forcement. RiPpihg signs dov.rn \\·ithout an explanation does not seem to be a good enrorccment technique. Unl ess the people are made aware or a la"'• and unless they are given a n opportunity to .comply, the la\At enfor cers are no better than vandals. I , ror one, "''ou ld like to be tr<" al- ed with common decency by the people "'·hose salaries I'm re- quired lo underv.·rite. LAWRENCE\V. f\'IIDLA ND Bike Ln11es To the Editor : I am 'writing in regard to the biey~e sarety lanes and paths in Orange Coun.ty. 1 think these paths are a very good idea : they serve.many people-every day. The. main point ts that lhese bicycle 18.nes ~et cluttered up with rocks, glass. a nd other debris which puncture many tires weekly. I know that these paths are rarely cleaned or debris and I am writing because I feel.btcycle·11afety Janes should be cleanetJ as. oft~q "5 possible- at le81t once every three weeks. TOM MILLER• ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT R~rt N. ~''"'· Pu!Xlslltt Thomo1 Keevll. Editor "o.rbaro. Kreibich, £d1/oria! Page Edtlor 'rhe editori al· page or the Dlily. Pilot sre ks to inform and sti mulate readers by pre!4entJng on thh1 paged lverse c.omment,()>, on fopics of Interest by s)ndlc11t· td column lsts and cartooni1ts , by. proYlding a forum for reader1• - \'le~·s and by pr esenting thllf": ne"'t paper·s opinions and lded on l'Ur.t€'nt tapics. The editorial oP1nlun1' or the ))ally Pilot appt'a(1 onl)' In tht editorial l'olumn all~ lop or thl' pugc. Opinions e""' pl't'sst.>d tiy the columnists af\4 <"artoonists und letter v.·ritcn 11ij their ov"n und no ('t1dor$en\ellt ciiti th4!ir \'lti"·s by the Dail)' Piiot 1 11h6'1ld be infer.red .' Wednesda y. May21, 1975 • ' I • . ·: ' ' ,. ,. -' ' ' ' • ' ' " . .. • Antismog • Standards Tightened LOS ANGELES (AP) -Cars sold in California in ~1917 will have to cause less smog than those sold elSewhere in the natiop_ -even ·at .'the cost or highe'r prices an.d poorer gas mileage. ---- Bead~vered Body of fi.irl, 14, Found in Orchard MORE;NO (UPI> -A severed hum on-heod tom~from 'lb~· body of a 14-year·old girl by aniinats was found Tuesday in a backyard near t he git-l's home here, seven miles east of Riverside'..· Rive rside County Sheriff's Lt. Neil Adkins Said the body ot Susan W~re, missing since Aeril 10, was found in a citrus orchard 100 yards from her home. The head was discovered by a neighbor, Carlos Martinez, who noti(ied deputies. · head had been torn rrom the s torso by animals alter the. la le 'I'IWrajYf Aid /nP.o~U.S LOS ANG ES <UM)- L l n d a astman McCartne1 .• wire of former Beatie Paul McCartney, can go to a pey;c:hta.trt.t 1n London Instead of Jall in Loi An1ele1 tor poesetslon of marijuana, a· j'udse ruled Tuesd•.Y . DAILY PILOT t~ Winds ·RiJh Bf:IY Area; . .. , One Dead~~ By The A11ocloled l!"'°g The blgh wlnda, lh•I • d Northern California qn TU Y will subside today, b•i lher 11 may be some snow s how n the Sierra Nev•i•· the Na~i Weilttier Service said. " The federal Environmental Protection Agency granted the state permission Tuesday to im· pose stricter smog standards for 197'1 cars because California's air pollution probleril5-~re the worst _ in the country. Investigators said the (,.------------..i- ::=.--girl's death, whl<hlsbelngln· ---: Mrs. McCartne·y, 33, was arrested M u.rcti. 3 by a highway patrolm an who Stopped a car carr)'ing the singer and 'his family for· . going through a red light. ·' The officer said he detect- ed the sme11~or -meriJUana In the a uto and a search turned up 16 grams of it in Mrs. McCartney's purse. • ·One man died and onother Is believed dead after the high ·winds. aometimes reaching SO miles pe r ho ur, apparently capsized the Sea Witch, a fishiGg boat-based-in San-Pablo, the A STATE OFFICIAL <ailed ii ''an important step" toward cleaner air. Auto m anufacturers , on the other hand, say the re· quirement \Viii mean: -An increase in purchase prices of from $5 to $180, depend· ingon a variety of factors;. -A drop in ruel economy of 5 percent to 15 percent; -A s maller selection of dif· ferent models, because not all models can be modified to meet the standards. TO MEET the tougher regula· lions, the 1977 cars will be equipped with the ·conti:oversial catalytic converters that remove pcHlutants from exhaust gasses. Stricter 1977 standards were scheduled to gO into effect for lhe entire country under the federal Clean Air Act. Bul EPA Ad· ministrator Russell Train recom- mended earlier this year that the standards be delayed because or potential health hazards from the converters. CALIFORNIA officials, in ask· ing to be exempted from the de· lay, said they believe the dangers from converters have been vast- J.y exaggerated. Tom Quinn, chairman of the California Air Resources Board, ~~id Tuesday that Train had told him recently he regretted mak· ing the recomme ndation. "Everything that has coml! out since the warnings of health hazards has confirmed our judg·· nient that there isn't finy im· mediate s ulfate danger \\"ith catalysts," said Quinn. Red Leader Sick Parole Date Set Sirhan Sirhan, 31, sentenced to death in the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, will be paroled from San Quentin on Feb. 23, 1986, after serving 16 years and 9. months in prison. . Homosexual Mom to Keep 2 Children LOS ANGELES (AP) -T\<'O ·children of a , self-~dJnitte,d homosexual woman will>-be· al· lowed to live with her, ·under a ruling by lhe s uburban Torrance Superior Court. Lynda Afae Chaf£in, who lost custody of her two daughters after she admitted to being a les- bian, was granted a modifi cation Tuesday of the original custody order. Tffl!EE PSYCHOLOGICAL experts testi fied living with Mrs. Chaffin \\'ou ld not be detrimental to her daug_hters , aged 15 and 12. The girls ran awa y last January from their legal home "'ith 1\1rs. Ch"afrin's parents•in l\'Iarysville, Was h., and had been living.with their mother. LAST JAN. 31, the original custody was upheld by, the 211d District Court o( Appeal, which ruled denyi'ng Mrs. Chaffin custody of her children was not entirely due to her admission that she had been a homosexual. Cheryl Bratm an, a l'aw student intern \\'ho worked on the case , said the· cust~9Y modification was obtained because the Tor· ranee ,court agreed with experts \\'ho sai4· "it. would be detrimen· LONDON CAP) -Soviet leader Leonid J. Brezhnev may be suffering from cancer of the ja"'·· the Daily Telegraph's r.toscow correspondent reported today. The corresponden~· John Miller, said there were "fresh fe· ports" that Brezhnev was having radiation ther apy ror j aw cancer. ... tal for the c hildre n to .be taken ' awa:v Crom their mother at this time." •evi's can1natch any kid. Sure, kids are tough. v~tigated as a murder. .,....,,. f)ppoiles A119 Taz l11rreGM? SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Ji'., faced with a shrinking budget surplus and mounting demands ror·ln· creased spending, dug in deeper today in opposition to new taxes next yeal'. "J'm not going lo support any increase in general laxes, he Said. ''I'm going to resist very strongly efforts that will make that a necessity a year or two down the road." Brown discussed laxes with reporters Tuesday following announcement of updated fis· cal estimates which showed state government in the fiscal year starting July 1 would spend $257 rnillion more th4n it took from taxpayers . Tltree Audkon Gullt11 i" Fraud LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Three for~er a uditors of Equity Funding Corp. of America, w}\ich went bankrupt in one ·of the largest business rraud.5 in U.S. hi story, were convicted in Federal Court Tuesday of securities fraud and filing false statements with .the government. · U.S. District Court Judge Jesse W. Curtis ordered Julian S.H. Weiner Solomon Block and Marvin A. Lichtig to return to court. JU:O:e 23 for sentencing. They were among 22 persons indicted in the massive securities fraud case. · Slai11 Sf.A /tf-'>er'• Bl'Otlter Talfu SACRAMENTO (U PI) -Slain Symbionese Liberation Army me mber Patricia "Mizmoon" Soltysik came to her brother's oichool ooe day in 1973. She told him Marcus Fosler deserved to be killed. Fred Soltysik, testifying Tues~ay at the trial of two reputed SLA members charged with Fosler's murder, said her visit was the last time she s poke to him before her death in a fierr shootout with Los Angeles police. Stes)hen Weed, Ciance of fugitive heiress Patricia Hearst, also made a brief appearance for the· defense at the trial or Russell Little and J oseph Remiro who are accused of the cyanide bullet slaying of the Oakland Schools superintendent and the attempted murder of his deputy, Robert W. Blackburn. s..,,.,,..,,_,.. to P,...,.., SWAT V11it SAN DIEGO (AP) -San Diego County supervisors have asked Sherif( John Duffy to meet with them June 4 to discuss the sheriff's Special Weapons and Tactics squad. The unit, commonly known as SWAT, was hea vily criticized. by the county grand jury after a February incident in Oceanside in which a is.year-old boy was mistaken for a sniper and killed. 2 Arraig*"' i11 SJ Million Fra ... LOS ANGELES (U PI) -Two men were arraigned Tuesday on charges or grand theft and fraudulent stock sales for allegedly bilking mote than $1 million from investors who s ank money in a purported ''fuel·less engine'' which ran on the st atic electricity in the air. · · Edwin V. Gray Sr., SO, Northridge, and Richard B. Hackeh· berger·, 52, Van Nuys, were ordered-to appear :June 2 for ii pie- liminary· hearing. Gray was freed on $10,000'bond and Hackeit· berger releaSed on $5,000 bond. · Assemblyman Denies 'Fix' Of Citation SACRAMENTO (AP) -The California Highway Patrol says it reissued a ti c ket. to As· Semblyman Louis Papan for driving 90 miles per hour in a 55 mile zone after an area com- mander erroneously voided it. Papan, CD·Da ly City), says he didn't try to get it fixed. NEWSMAN Bill Bl'anch of KOVR·TV in Sacramento said Tuesday he sta r ted making in- quiries after the st ation reeeived an anonymous call that Papan · had received a ticket and that it had been voided. CHP spokes.man Kent Milton confirmed tha t it had been voided by the Vallejo area, com· mander, but said it was·dooe "in error" and was ''inappropri8te." ... THE CHP zone commander , had the ticket reissued, Milton said. Papan told KOVR he gOt the ticket last Wednesday while driv· ing on lnt~rstate 80 between San Francisco and Sacramento. He also .said he contacted the CHP to question: the way he was clocked by the patrolman, not becauSe he wanted to -get the tic.kel overturned. Coast Guard reported. •, THE BODY of Glenn DouglUs Page, 26, · was recovered ni' r Angel Island, a spokesman s The Coast Guard said Page I ft the San Pablo Yacht 1't arbor Monday with Kenneth WiUiat'hs 'of Richmond. The search con· tinued for Williams. " Elsewhere, the unpredlc.-ted storm closed r oads, fli pped o+er ·a ,small aircraft at San Cartos Airport, felled trees and cauS~ power ou.tages, perhaps the most serious in the ea'St San Franci~co Bay area where thousands ,'of homes were out oC power at times. · . THE WEATHERMAN blamed '\he storm on a low pressure area which today d rrfted eastward. "Higher pressures edging ihto Clilifornia will hera ld a rcturn't() more typical May weather,'' s8id a National Weather Service forecaster. A small cr aft ad.visoi'y \\'as Still -in effect for northwest winds or 15 to 30 miles per hour in the San Francisco Bay area. GALE WARNINGS ¥/ere in.ef· feet early today for gusty wtuds or 20 to 40 miles j>er hour on the far·northwest coast. 1 It will be warmer in most sec~ lions today, with Bay area higtfs ranging from 60s .to low 70s. The mercury should climb to the mid 70s in the valleys. A warming tre nd in the Sierra . Nevada wlll begin Th\frsday, ltle weath'erman $"aid. ·Utility' Evicts . "l'M GOING to pay it. I did not PUC Meets , make any threats. The allega• r lions arenot ·true," .Papan told SAN DIEGO CAP)-San Diego KOVR . Gas and EJectric, Company 511y11 Branch said th.e anbnymous lbe Slate Public Utilities Com~ caller claimed there was a pat-mission can no longer Use tern of lawmake rs thre&lening to SDG&E's a uditorium ror 'its vote against CHP salary raises to hearings. getoutorUckets. · SDG&:E president Wa lter But new CHP commissioner ZiO.au._a,id Tu~day it would be Glea Craig Said he-_of_ , IM!llili'lcif bOllt IP.'oulio'if.U)O P.lJC or four leg~slators'ticketed-1n·the . rolma ·~ber Ptac~ to meet iQ lctst 30 days, San Diego. { . _, Fur Clearance. 'Four days .. ·only. • May ~2, 23, 24 .and 25. It's the season for smart shoppers to put their money on a fur. Prices are nicer .. )hon they've been. all year! Natural Tourmaline® mink/leather stroller, Now $699. "Dyed ranch mink stroller. N0w $1599.' · Natural Tourmaline® mink·cape. Now $399. Natural Autumn Haze® mink jacket .. Now $599. Natural Orchid Autumn Haze® mink ~Oat.{NO)V $1499 • Natural Tourmaline® min~ stroller. 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Ask •liout our c'redit pl llns. Robinson's. Fur Solon. 9Embl ,.,. 9111•;•• Ali&'n. • All fun ~ to ll'tow country ot or}IM of . .,,...,.. ... 1-. ' . . • 2· FASHIOJ"l ISLAND SHOP WED., THURS, a SAT. 10.5!3(), FRI: .10.9. SUN. \2-&. ' . I . 1$ • \~ /' '