HomeMy WebLinkAbout1975-06-16 - Orange Coast Pilot/ .. -
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'Uavorting Nude'·
M 00Nr;>AY AFTER'NOON, JUNE 16,' 1975
VOL 61, NO. 167, 2 SECTIONS, 24 !'AGES
.Jabbar to LA . .
JohlJar to Lakers
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, star center of the Milwaukee
Bucks will be traded today to the Los Angeles Lakers
for ce~ter Elmore Smith, guard Brian Winters and the
Lakers' two top draft choices -forward Dave ~e~ers
of UCLA and guard Junior Bridgeman of Lowsv1lle.
Details on Page B4 today.
.CIA Jobs
Remairi
Mystery
WASHlNGTON (UPI> -All
major CIA activities have had
presidential approval, according
to both Vice President Nelson
Rockefeller and Sen. Ba rry
Goldwater, (R·Ariz. ). ·~
But just what those activities
were is still a big mystery in
Washington and still provoking
debate.
Meanwhile, a key Rules Com·
mittee member said today he
will propose .... abolishing a special
House CIA investigating commit-
tee because it has been torn by
dissen.,ion.
Rep. B.F . Sisk, <D-Calif.), said
he.would introduce the resolution
to disband the House Select Com·
mittee on Intelligence because of
a move by Jive of the commit-
tee's seven De mocrats forcing
the resignation of.the chairman,
Rep. Lucien Nedzi, <D·Mich. ).
Rockefelle r , whose com ·
mission report on the CI A was re-
leased last week, said Suyday
one reason the panel did 'n<>J. de·
velop conclusive evidende ~ al·
leged CIA foreign assassination
plots was because so many
persons implicated in them are
dead.
He hinted his commission may
have obtained information Presi-
dent Kennedy and his broth~r.
former attorney general Robert
~Nude~ Mesa Cook
Nabbed by Police 'Kennedy, were involved in the al-
/
/ leged plots but he emphasized ~
none of the secret information
was strong enough to support
A restaurant cook who was al·
legedly cav~rting in ~.e nude at
an intersection was Jailed, ~arly
loday, captured following 'B 70-
mile-per·hour chase by Costa
Mesa City Man ager Fred
Sonabal, who pursued the sus·
peet's car into Fountain Valley.•
The Costa Mesa Police
'ellcopter Eagle II, plus ground
• patrol units and Hqntington
Beach police, along with Foun·
· Thieves Get $250
-Steaks at Hilton •
~· BUl'Jlare who CDtered the
Mt.ch"1 area after the restaurapl
lied dosed tor the night carried
di 1teak1 valued at $250 from the
Jlllton tan Lagu.na Hilb, during
the weekend, Ounge County
.sheriff'• officers nport~ today.
Deputies said witneaes told
:\hem they saw two mfft leaving ~hotel at hlgh s pced·in a yellow
1hortly after the choice cuts « meat were taken from a
wllkin freeur.
tain Valley officers were even-
tually involved in the speedy
midnight motorcade.
,James R . Ayr es, 24, ol ~ E.
20th St., Costa Mesa, remained in
custody this' morning, booked in·
to jail on charges of reckl~s
driving and indecent exposure.-
. Huntington Beach PoUee <>f-
ficer James Cutshaw final~ suc-
ceeded in pulling over Ayres'
sport sedan at Ellis Avenue and
San AQM>nio Street in Fountait\
Valley Aortly after midnight.
Sorsabal told police that be, his .
wire Mariene, their two teen~ed
SOft8 and a y_ounf friend•werere-
tuming home from an ev~
out, with aon David, 16,.ddvilil,
when they !int encounterecl tbe
naked man ata~ in the in·
t.enection of Suva Circle and
Mesa Verde Drive.
The city manaaer dropped off
hls passengers at their nearby
home and sped back aft.er report·
ing the Incident.
Soreebal chased the fieeb\a
auto through the Mesa Verde
areo at s peeds up to no mUa
per hour on residential streets,
ace<?rding to police re~. ,
conclusions of guilt.
Goldwater, a member of the
Senate committee investigating
the CIA, backed up Rockefeller
by saying no m ajor CIA action,
such as an assassination, "would
have taken place without the pre-
sident knowing about it."
He also sald Sunday he had
seen no evidence any CIA as-
sassination plots were ever at·
<See CIA, Page A.2)
A.DIN PILOT
SOLD TR4ll.$R
"The trailer sold because ot
the ad in U\e Pilot. 'Ilise were.
lot.a of calls as a result ot the ad.''
That's the advertislns success
experienced by the. Costa Mesa
woman who placed this ad in the
Daily Pi lot: ·
22' TRAVEL ttlr, com
pletely self-cont, sips 4.
$1500. XXX·XXXX
. lf you have umping equip-
ment lo sell, c:alJ 6'2·5678. Put a
few words to work ror you.
In the Daily Pilot.
et. a a .r
Presidents OK'd
) . ~. . Top CIA Aet1on ______ _
··Roeky, Barry
/'
•
•
~ Missing Face
Stephen Smith of
Garden Grove waa not -
among h i s fellow
graduates at Stanford
University Sunday. He
and another student,
Carrie Jane Hunter of
Atherton, are being
held captive by re-
v o 1 u t I on a r i es in
Tanzania.
"They are very
mu c h i. n our
thoughts," said St~
ford Pr esi den
Richard Lyman 1n
opening remarks at
the unlver i y's com-
men ce m ent ex-' ercises.
UPI Telephoto
Nine Die in ~us
Crash in Scotland
From Wire Services
A bus ~arrying a party of elder·
ly vacationers collided headl~mg
with a runaway tractor·tra1ler
truck on a main highway 55 miles
south of G.Laliigow, Scotland to-
day. · Police said nine passengers
were killed. Another 33 were
hospitalized , 22 of them in
serious conditio n.
Eyewitnesses s aid a truck lire
Court Nixes
Fixed Fees in
Real Estate
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The
·Supreme Court s truck down
minimum legal-fee schedules for
real estate transactions today in
an 8 too decision which probably
also spells the end ol fixed fees
. for other legal services.
'l'be court ruled that minimum
fee schedules established by
at.ate or local bar auociaU.ons
violate federal . antitnist Jaw.
benever the fees affect in· .
terstate commerce.
The decision waa a victory for
a Virginia couple, Lewi• H. and
Ruth GoJdf arb, which ehallenaed
th• Fairfax County Bar Msocla-
tion '1 "fixed minimum fee for
lesal won required when tMy
boulbtabome. n also was a v lctocy for the " .
blew out and thot the \'Chicle ran
out of control on a straight
stretch of road a nd ploughed
headlong into the bus.
ll was the second bus accident
involvi ng elde rly persons in
Europe in t wo clays. Sun~ay, a
tour bus carrying pensioners
careened down a mOWltain road
in Villach, Austria, killing 2l
pt!rsons and injuring 23.
It was Austria's worst bus dis·
aster, and authorities said brake
failure was the ca us~
Police said smoke was seen
coming from the brakes as the
Aus trian bus s t arted down
7,106-foot Mt. Dobratsch. One
survivor said bus driver J osef / Ramsbacher yelled "Jump ~rr
the brakes are failing!" before
the bus hurtled over an embank-
ment and tumbled 120 feet into a
rocky ravine.
The passengers were old-age
pensioners from Carinthia pr<>-
vince. Ra msbacher, father or
four, was among the dead.
The roof of the bus was torn orr
and many of the passengers were
killed when they were thrown out.
or the vehicle. Several survivors
pinned ~eneatb the wreckace
were £reed only after a crane was
l>rouaht in to pull the debris off
them. .
"Il was dreadful, .. said Helmut
Neumueller, who witnessed the
crash. ••The roof of the bus was
tomofL.Thc dead were scaUered
over• wide area. And the injured
Jay amon1 them ceylngJor aid."
Dr. Brigitte Norvat.h, a physl·
clan, said some of the dead had
(See CRASH. Paae A.2)
Sanity
Hearing.·
Slated
By TOM BARLEY
01 lite D•ilY Pilot SUH
Steven Craig Hurd was found
guilty of two murders today by
a n Orange County Superior Court
jury which must now determine
if t e bus hy-haired defendant
was s e when he participated in
two kil · gs within a 24-hour
period.
T he jury ended two days of de·
li beration by ruhng that Hurd,
25, was guilty of fi rst degree
murde r in the slayings five years
ago of Mission Viejo teacher
Florence Nan c y Brown and
service sta tion attendant Jerry
Wayne Carlin.
Hurd was with convicted killer
Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse,
now 21. on June 2, 1970, when
Hulse used a roofer's ax to chop
to death Carlin . 21, in the
restroom of his se rvice station.
It was all~ged in Hurd's trial
that he repeatedly stabbed. Mrs.
Brown. 31. of El Toro to death in
an Irvine orange grove the next
. d ay afte r the teacher was
dragged from her station wagon
by the gang of drug-using drifters
led by Hurd.
Opening statements in the sani·
ty he aring now faced by Hurd will
tie delivered later today in Judge
f'rank Domenichini'scourtroom.
Lawyers for both sides have
scheduled psychiatrists as wit-
nesses and ·defense attorney
William Gamble hopes to put
Hu rd on th(' stand as his final wit-
nec-' ~ (See H URD, PageA2)
OrH~e:+ C-••
<=-~b'e!
Weatller
Mostly cloudy through
Tuesday but partial clear-
ing in the a fternoon inland
portions. LitUe change in
temperature. Highs from
mid-60s at beaches fo new
70inland.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Thi11een person$ ho-bun
injured in.a disturba.~.ot a
women's coN"ection center in
North Carolina. Sfory, Page
B6.
J
,.
.
...,,,,._ • f .... '""' •
German
' ··President
Visits u .s.
By BELEN THOMAS
WASRlNGTON CUPJ>
President Ford welcomed West
German President Walter Scheel
today with a strong reaffirma-i
1lon of the United States' com-
mitment to defend Wes tern
Europe.
· ln a sunbathed welcoming
ceremony on the White House
-south lawn with full military
honors, Ford told Scheel the
United States is ··strongly com-
mi Ued to safeguarding the
freedom of the West." ··we remain committed to th~
freedom and security of Bettin, ..
he said, adding that the United
States sees the security of
Western Europe as "a true test of
what is known as detente. ''
Scheel, who arrived by
'helicopter from Williamsburg,
Vu., where he and his wife spent
the night, was the first president
of West Germany to visit the
United States in 17 years and the
second since World War II. He
has visited the United Stales
several times, however, as a
private citizen .
Ford greeted Scheel whlle Mrs.
Ford presented Scheel 's wife
with a bouquet of American
Beauty roses. .
Both presidents stood at atten-
tion while the Marine Corps band
played ·:Deutschland lJber Al·
les" a nd the "Star Spangled Ban·
ner."
Scheel, in perfect English, told
the ~athering that his visit mir-rored the "excellent " relations
between West Germany and the
United States.
. Referring to World War JI, he
said the Germans ··owe a debt of
gratitude to the United States for
. the help it afforded its former
enemies.
"This help will never be forgot-
ten."
But insteal of dwelling on the
past, he said, the two countries
must focus on the future of
s trengthening the Atlantic Al··
liance to deal not only with the
problems of common security
but to developing a ''common ap-
proa ch to economi c and
monetary pr..oblems." ·
Scheel also invited Ford to vi sit
West Germany, Ford was ex-
pected to do so, perhaps in'early
· August should there be an East-
Wcst SUQlmit meeting following
the conclusion of the European
Security onference.
f'ro• Page AJ
CR ASHES ...
been thrpwn· from the bus and
were hanging in trees lining the
precipice. She said nine dead
were found under the bus.
Today's accident occurred· at
Coatesgate on a four-lane
highway with a central strip
separating the north and south-
bound roads.
According to first police re-
ports, the truck crossed through
a gap in the m edian to join the
road on which the bus was travel-
ing. Police said the bus over-
turned and the driver was among
the dead.
El Toro Nursery
Loses Money Bag
A money bag containing
$814.27 in cash was stolen during
the weekend from an El Toro
nursery, Orange County Sheriff's
officers reported today.
Deputies sa id the cash,
• representing a day's receipts at -~Green Thumb International,
: 23782 Bridger Road, was taken
: Jrom behind the counter while
: employ es were working in
• another part of the store. '
... ..
~
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
• Tn~ 01 angf! C.oa\I (Jody Pilot w1tn Wht<t'\ Is com·
bmed tht Nl'w"°·Pr•''· I\ pt,;bllsntdbv t~Oran~ Coe\l PubU~lno Como•nv 5~.tr•tt f'Oluo~ &rt
., publi"*' Mon<l•Y t~ro119~ Ft1Gay lo< CO.I.I
. ..
• ~w. Newpor t Beach. Hur1t1noton Bft•t h;Foun·
• Uitn v.11 • .,.., lrvrtu•. S,HSdttNt k V•lt•v fnd
: • L.ll!OUN S.•cr.1 South C.0•\t A ,.,,ote r•olon.1
., ~c1111on 1~ "°''"""'"' Satu•OdyS ""° ~un<h>y• T"" • princ .p.,t publl~n1ng r>l•nl " •• JOO -•t Bly
Sir°"''· Co\•• Mr:••• Cat1lornl•9i~1o.
RoberrN. Weed Prt~iWnt •nd Pu.,.1\1\oOr
Jack R. Curley
\' (ft p,,..,1dent •nG Gf'n•r•• Mien.0tr
Thomas Keevil
Editor
Thomas A~ M urphine
IM,,•01119 E<Mo<
Chl'!rle~ H. Loos Richard P. Natl ,\UJ~t•nt '-'4"•0'"0 EOHOf~
Offices
C.0\111 MttM: no w .. 1 a.y !ttreet ........ ,, fH .. ,,. ))J> N•-•I 86tJl•vard
L"""o .... ~II, I I .. 0'-"""Y'• Str .. t
H""1t"91.., 8<'t<ft! 1'tlS a.e<fl ..... ~.v ... d Wddttt.clt Venn: n201 u ,. .. --.eo ., ~" 01-o<I ,,,_.,
Ttltl*one (714) ... 214221 Cln~tfltd AdVtttllfnt'M2·'671
~lol>o(t Vall•Y NtM OlflUJ
511·63\0 ,,,_...,c.i._..,.
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,,_ "'°'tfl On .... C....My c.or-fllff
540-1220
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GUILTY OF MURDERS
Steven Craig Hurd
Fro •PageAI
HURD •.•
Hurd accepted the two verdicts
today with no display of emotion.
He is under daily sedation follow·
ing a California Supreme Court
ruling last month that ne could be
tried on the murder charges pro-
vided be is tranquilized at all
phases of the trial.
Lawyers for both sides agree
that Hurd is only capable of tell-
ing the truth or understanding
testimony while he is under the
supervised.sedation.
He faces life in..state prison on
each of the two convictions if the
jury now finds that he was sane at
the time of the two killings.
Deputy District Attorney
Frank Briseno declined to ask for
the death penalty on either con-
viction when he made his final
argumenttothejury.
F r o•PageAl
FEES ...
Justice Department, which has
waged a long-standing battle
against fee schedules established
by professional associations. The
d e partment supported the,
Goldfarbs in their lawsuit.
In other action, the court :
-Ruled 7 to 2 that states may
not constitutionally prohibit the
advertising of abortion servi'ces.
The court s aid s uch advertising
is protected by the constitutional
guarahlee of freedom of the
press.
-Upheld a robbery and as-
s ault conviction against J ack
Roland Murphy. the celebrated
Miami, Fla., jewel thief who is
the central figure in the motion
picture "Murph the Surf.''
-Agreed to review a ruling of
the U.S . court of Appeals in
Washington th a t the Federal
Power Commission may not give
natura l·gas producers built-in
authority to shut off the gas supp~
ly of interstate pipelines when
their contracts expire .
-Declined to review a Ken·
tucky family's claim that its pro-
perty rights were violated when
its land was strip mined without
the family's consent. The family
does not own the mineral rights
to the land in question. .
Writing for the court in the
legal-fees case, Chief Justice
Warren E . Burger said, "ln
terms of restraining competition
and harming consumers ... the
price-fixing activ?i·r found .here
are unusually da ing."
He noted that e Goldfarbs
could not buy a home without a ti·
Ue examination and that only a
lawyer licensed in Virginia could
p e rform the work, so the
Goldfar bs "could not turn to
alternativ e sources for the
necessary service."
Virginia lawyers ''were prac·
ticing under the constraint of the
fee schedule," he continued.
The fee schedule issued by the
county bar ·aseoclation
established "a fixe"d, rigid price
fioor" and the schedule "wu en·
· forced throu1h the prOlpeet ol
professional dlsclpllne from the
state bar and the desire of at·
torneys to com ply with an~
nounted prof eaaf onal norm1,"
Buriersaid. • ·
"These I actors coaleaced to
create a prld n1 system that con·
aumere could not reaU1tlcally
acape," Burger wrote . .,On this
record the bar a1IOOiaUon'1 me-.
t.lviUH con1titute a claulc IJ.
lustrallon of prjce·flxing." .
..
r
..
. ~ -.
.
Cuba to Give
Money1Ja£k Lady Lu~an TA iks
..
Says Earl Tried to Strangl,e Her
.,. WASHINGTON C0PI) -
The Cuban aov.rnment
· hu agreed to return a ..
mUJlon r unsom obtained
by skyjackers ln 1972 from ·
Southern Airways. Sen.
Georse S. McGovern, (I).
• LONDON CAP) -Lady
Veronica Lucan, wlfeotthemiss-
lng British earl who iB souaht in
the murder of the family nanny,
said~for the first time today he
had tried to strangle her on the
ntghtofthe murder .
She told a tense inquest ~t Lon-
don 's We1tmln1ter Coroner's
Court: •'He· thrust two t)oved
fingers down my throat 8ncl we
a.tarted to fight.' During the
.
course of it he attempted to
·1uan1le me trom in front."
s. D.), announced today.
In a letter to Mcq<>~em.
COnJJJy WOrkers
Tbe inquest was hearing
evidence on tihe de_ath of the
Lucan family's naMy, 29-year·
oJd Sandra Rivett, who was bat-
tered lo death in the Belgravia
home of the Countess of Lucan
last Nov. 7. Lady Lucan, 37, was
alto badly injured by the nanny's
aualluU..on that day.
Lady Lucan told the Daily Ex·
press "I shall simply tell the
court what happened, and if
Cuban Prime Minister
Fidel Castro said his gov·
ernment has decided to
give "a po1illve answer"
to requeata that the money
be returned. .
McGovern said he re-
cei ved the letter from
Castro Friday.
Drop P~tests ' asked I shall reveal the name of
the man who attacked me -the
man who "at .. on the stairs af·
terwards, cried on my shoulder ,
arid told me had killed Sandra."
Tbe countess s aid she waited
until th~ man calmed dowit-and
then ra~ to a nearby pub for help,
streaming blood and crying
"murder." Mi ss Rivett's
bludgeoned body later was found
wrapped in a canvas sack in the
basement ot the three-sCory
CIA .•. County employes agreed today
to call off demonstrations
pla nned for Tuesday to protest
stalled 1975-76 salary negotia-
tions between .Orange County of~
ficials and the Orange County
Employes Association «>CEA).
Tuesday's demons trations
were to have included a before-
work rally in Santa Ana Bowl, a
mass vis it to the board of
supefvisors meeting and a noon
rally in the civic center. ·
According to OCEA Executive
Director John Sawyer,
the decision to postpone the de-
monstrations was made after
county negotiators agreed to
meet with OCEA officials and a
state mediator Wednesday.
At issue in the discussions are
w'age and fringe benefits OCE~'s
9,700 members expect to receive
in the coming fiscal year.
One source said the county so
far bas offered two percent pay
raises covering about 2,000
employes and 4~ percent pay
hikes for OCEA's r emaining
members.
The same source said county·
negotiators are demanding· a
three-year salary-fringe benefit
contract while the association is
holding out for the customary one
. year pact. ,
According tQ James Shelton,
the county's chief negotiator, a
meeting between himself, OCEA
officials and state mediator Tim
McCarthy ended in ~·impasse
shortly-before midnight Friday.
As a result, militant county
workers opened their garages
ov:,er the weekend to sign m aking
parties.
While Tuesday's demonstra-
tions have been called off,
Sawyer indicated today that
should Wednesday's meeting end
in an impasse the sign-making
effort may not have been wasted.
house. •
Some detectives have
theorized that the murderer
wanted to kill the countess and
got the governess by mistake.
-The 40-year-old earl vanished a
few hours after the killi~g.
Scotland Yard, after interview-
ing the countess, issued a war·
rant for his arrest for murder
and for the att,ck on his wife. He
has never been traced despite re-
p0rts that he w' .. s seen in France,
Australia, South Africa and Latin
America.
tempted but that he "wouldn't be
surprised" if t~e White House
considered kilhng Cuban ~!~:
mier Fidel Castro. ·
Time magazine reported Sun-
day the CIA pl.,tted in 19m tO kill
Castro by supplying him with
poisoned dgars, but never car-
ried out the plan beCa\lse there
was no assurance Castro would
not give the cigars to other people.
pie. · _, __ .. The Rockefellel' CQmuWNtlOn
nport was to be given officially
tOday to the Senate Investiga~g
Committee,· which Wedn"8day
will hear from CIA .Direftor
William Colby testifying un~er
tight security about ·~e 1963 ~s
sassination of South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Dinh Diem.
Valley Police Nab.
Pair in Robberies
Most Scotland Yard men say
they believe Lord Lucan com-
mitted suicide in some remote
part of Britain. But some senior
investigators think he iS still
alive and being bidden by
friends, here or overseas.
Raiders Get
Guns, Ammo
From Armory
Rockefeller's hint of..Kennedy
involvement in assassination
plots resulted in a statement
from two former aides of Robert
Kennedy, who accused the v~ce
president of ignoring· the con-
clusions of his own report or "de-
liberately lying.''
Rockefeller said ms JJroadcast
interview (NBC-TV's Meet the
Press) the commission failed to
complete the assassination in-
vestigation becaust. it ran out of
time and encountered too many
difficulties. An alleged baseball bat wield·.
ing bandit and his companion
were arrested by Fountain
Valley police early today, ending
what officers said was a 90·
minute market robbery spree in
four cities.
In custory are Alfonso Men-
doza Jr., 18, of 1497 Purdy St.,
Midway City, and Richard
Kneeland, 20, of 1529'l Neece St.,
Westminster, both on charges of
arme(f robbery .and ~qlt with
a deadly weapon, police said.
They are being held at Orange
County Jail, and no bail has been
set.
Three market clerks and one
customer were injured when
they allegedly were struck on the
arm with the bat.
The spree allegedly started at
a Huntington Beach market, then
moved to Garden Grove, then
Westminster, before the suspe~ts
were arrested outside a Fountain
Valley market. .
Huntington Beach police al·
leged Mendoza entered the 7-11
Market at Newland Street and
Warner Avenue at 11:25 p.m.,
slapped the bat down on the
counter and ordered the cle11k to
turn over some cash.
She reportedly gave him $100,
police said, then he allegedly fled
in a car , driven by Kneeland.
Fountain Valley police allege
the pair then drove to Garden
Grove, where Mendoza entered
the Tic Toe Mark et, 13211
Brookhurst St., smacked the
clerk on the arm with the bat,
then fled with an unknown
amount of cash.
At 12:14 a·.m ., they allegedly
stopped anbe Quick Stop Liquor
Store, 13690 Golden West St.,
Westmin~ter, where Mendoza as-
sertedly smashed a glass jar on
the counter with the bat, then
struck the clerk in the arm, .and
SS C a talina
Sa id -Targe t
Of S~tage
SAN PEDRO CAP> -Sand was dumped into the main bearings
and a main electrical line was
damaged on the SS Catalina, the
white steamship which ferries
passengers to and from Catalina
Island, a steamship company
spokesman says.
A ship engineer, Raymond
Burnham, told police Thunday
someone broke into the engine
room, put sand in all the beartnfs
then smashed electric cables
wtth a hammer.
Switchboard operat«t at the
Catalina Terminal Benb 95 told
police that a bomb threat had
been made against the 11dp Wed·
naday. They said a man had
called to wam that the Army ot
Cambodia would bomb the •hip
at 11:45p.m. Wednadq.
Police are inveati_ptlnt the in·
cldent and the Aprtl bomhln1 of
th•Carlb SU1r,tbe Catalina'•~
t.erahtp.
T!• _pre1lc1eftt of Catellna
M~1'Ulln Roberl 111-on told
police the ••nd wowd have
cauHd a1 much a• '40,000,
damaae U the ship had nm with it
undetected.
I
again fled with an unknown
amount of cash, police said.
Mendoza allegedly entered the
7-11 Market at Euclid Street and
Warner Avenue at 12:41 a.m., of·
ficers said, with the now-
splintered bat stuffed into his
trousers.
Officers allege he pulled it out
as be entered, smashed twe glass
bottles on the coqoter. then
struck clerk Robert Kaiser, 22,
and C\lStomer James Stobie, 21,
on the arms.
He fled with about $209 in cash,
police said, but.officers had been
signaled by an alarm and were
on their way to the market. ·
The pair was stopped outside
and arrested without incident,
police said.
The market was the same one -
in which clerk Mike Finklea, an
Orange Coast College wrestling
star, was shot and killed last Oct.
31 during a holdup, police saitf
BELFAST (UPI) -Armed
raiders dressed as militiamen
overpowered guards at a
Northern Ireland militia · camp
early today, cleaned the armory
of its weapons and ammunition
and "8SttJ)"e'd in-two-stolen
military vehicles. •
: I( British army spokesrpan
sai<l the r~~ers escaped witll 148
seniliutomatic rifles, 3~ sub-
machine guns, three 3.22 rifles, a
general purpose ma chine gun, an
automatic pistol a nd "a substan-
tial quantity'' of ammunition.
"They seemed to know exactly
what they were af.ter,'' the.
spokesman said. ·
Tbe raiders knocked one guard
unconscious and overpowered
the rest, tying them up. They
then forced open a cabinet to get
keys to the armory.
"Let's face it," he said, "many
of the people have died who were
allegedly involved and others
were assassinated in this country
tragically."
Asked if he was rj!f erring to the
KeMedys,. Rockefeller replied:
"Well, as l said, we have no con·
clusive-iriformation,o\U the pre.
sident of the United States and
the attorney general of .the Unit· .ad.Sta~ 't.er.e i>o&h.¥S"'sinated tragically in this country."
He w..as asked if he ~ant the
Kennedys actually were involved
in such plots.
"Well," he said, "I said we had
no evidence on the basis of whleh
to draw conclusions. I said it was
very difficult to get inform•tion
because we go back 15 years and
many of the people who were in-
·vol ved in the CIA and in the White
House are no longer liYing."
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Delays Bother
War Refugees
By A11oelated Pras
..... Some Vietnamese refuf(ees say
111ey are being delayed from
st.rtlng tbelr n ew lives in . .America because or lost records
•t 111..itUe Saigon., I
Tbe allegations, specifically
leveled against the Jargev volun· teer aeency handling resettle..
meat of the n early· 20,000 re-falees here, were stouUy denied.
Joseph Battaglia, director of
the refugee services for the
volunteer agency, the United
States Catholic Conference, was
cm record today saying be "could
not accept the charges.••
He ~aid some refugees are
complaining because of "cam-
pilis,,, having been at Pendleton
since early May in cases even
though lS,000 refuge~bave. lefl
the Marine base pcrmanenUy for
saewhouies.
"Il's not t hat their file isn't
h e r e.'' Battaglia told an in·
terviewer. "It's going through a
mill.'~ He said that means the file
was being switched during pro-
~slng bet ween the agency's two tents and three trailers.
"What the r efugee has been do·
fng ::.coing into all the different ·tr.t · asking for his file," be
said. "Many couldn't get the
answer they wanted in their
desperation."
On the other hand, a refugee
named Quang, ,.No. 2602 in the
agency's files, fold a reporter he
h ad been mishandled even
though when he applied to the
agency on May 12 he already bad a s upposed ticket out -a
aponsor, nam ely his sister and
ber husband.
Quang said when he appeared
five days later, his file only con-
Gunplay Kills 2
M E XICO CITY (AP>
Gunplay between youths left two
killed and at least four persons
with bullet wounds Sunday at ·a
c rowded dog show organized by
the University of Mexico. The
Red Cross counted four wounded
and said there may be more.
lalned two names -his own and
his son's. He said he has bcen>ry-
ing for a long time to get thmgs
straight.
Ttie sponsor question ls crucial
because officials won't let the re·
fugee finish processing at the re-.
(ugee camp until arrangements
for bis future are concluded.
Thang, Cile No. 2AO, says he
came to the United States
Catholic Conference at the begin-
ning of May, but laments:."wben
I checked with USCC about a
week ago, I found my file was
gone. I was told the file may have
been Jiestroyed because my ap-
plication was incomplete. But
they never informed me it was
incomplete.•'
Thang continued: "1 went
there many times to speak with
the Vietnamese worker. But I
·Was always told be was too busy to
see me. Icouldn'tseeanyoneelse,
either. I got so discouraged I left to apply at another agency."
A Vietnamese lawyer a t one
camp section says that about 100
complaints i n volving USCC
came in d uring a recent week. He
said allegations ranged from
claims of misplaced files to al-
leged bribery for speedy process-
ing help.
Battaglia said it was predicta-
ble that the refugees would
blame Vietnamese workers. He
said the bribery allegation was
traced to an unfounded rumor
that sPonsors could be obtained
illegally at USCC.
The USCC spokesman said that
some ref ug~es were unhappy by
a r ecent decision by all or
Pendleton's helping volunteer
agenci~s that refugees cannot
switch from one agency to
another once processing starts.
USCC bears the largest brunt of
would·be switchers because "we
just happen to be Ute largest,"
Battaglia stated. Dissatisfaction
. by refugees. he concl\lded. "is
something that exists i11 all re·
fugee camps. It's born out or
their desperation." ·
"But I can't go by what the
Vietnamese say. They don't un·
derstand how we're doing things
here ••• "
Squirrels Go
From Heisler to ·uc1 Hilh
81 FREDE RICK SCHOEMEHL
• Of Ille 0.llY rll•UC ...
Laguna Beach's fine, Curry,
friends -the Heisler Park squir-
rels-are being relocated to new
bomes in the rollin g hills near UC •
Irvine.
About 200 of the bushy-tailed
burrowers have been trapped
and removed from t heir
beacbside haunts by a team of
UCI s tudent researchers. About
JOO still remain. •
The live-trapping and reloca-
tion program was initiated after
the students learned that the
equirrels were responsible for
erosion that has caused portions
of Heisler Park to tumble into the
Ha.
The students are using traps
that do not harm the squirrels.
Once trapped, they are placed in
cagesfortbe trip to Irvine.
The students volunteered lo
t conduct the squirrel study after
1 efforts to erradicate the animals
• ranaground.
' The City Council balked at a
I proposal to kill the squirrels with . a an anticoagulant drug and the.
l federal Food and Drug Ad·
• min istration told the city it
• c oul tl n 't ex pe ri ment with
• Mestranol, a birth control drug
' for squirrels. ·
: ''The students have not de-
termined what squirrel popula-! tion level is the most desirable,
I
·~Mt:m~~r1.!~~ ' ' ' ' ' J
' • ' ' 1
' c
I
' 1 • ' • I • • I • I
I •
but we recommend It be zero,"
said Stanley· E. Scholl, city
municiparservices director. •·u there is a desire to have
some squirrels in the park for
the people to feed, we recom-•
mend that some of them be
trapped and maintained in an at-
tractive confinement," Scholl
said.
·•Perhaps this would be the
beginning of the Laguna Beach
zoo," he quipped. .
Laguna Beach already is a bird
sanctuary by decree of the city
council.
Scholl said the city paid the un-
iversity $100 to conduct the trap-
ping program. T he money was
used mainly to buy peanuts to
lure squirrels io the traps.
"They also had to pay for three
of four parking tickets that they
got while trapping,'' Scholl said.
The enrichment class through
which the students studied the
squirrels ended last week.
Scholl said, however, that the
students probably will be hired
by the city to continue to trap and
transport the squirrels to Irvine.
The final aspect of the project
will be to plant the Heisler Park
bluffs with vegetation that will
prevent further erosion of the
cliffs.
"We want something that
squirrels won't eat/' said Scholl,
just in case the squirrels come
back.
Monday, Jllfie US, 1916
Race Action
Sunset Blvd. (right> skippered by John
Calley and Regulus II sailed by Bob Gar-
rison of the Newport Harbor Yacht Club
proyidc thrill for spectators as they eross
tacks in breezy Huntington Tidelands race
near Santa Ana River jetty. This race ac-
tion took place Saturday. See story Page BG. '
Profumo
HollQred
""\ By Queen
LONDON CU Pl> -John
Profumo, disgraced in a 1963
scandal with party girl Christine
Keeler, says his return to favor
won't change his new life as a
social worker.
"I will be back there at my
desk on Monday," Profumo said
after Queen Elizabeth Il honored
him for his welfare work among
the poor of London's East End.
The Queen made Profumo a
commander of the Most Ex-
cellent Order of The British Em·
pi re Saturday, a dozen years .
after he resigned in disgrace as
Secretary of Stale for War.
"The past is dead," Profumo
said of the Queen's decision to
put him on her birthday honors
list. "Everybody has been so
kind."
Profumo h as been working
without pay for Toynbee Hall, a
welfare agency aiding the Ull·
derprlvileged of London's East
End, since being forced from of·
!ice in 1963.
"All I want is to r etain my an·
onymity and to continue my
work at Toyn bee Hall," the
wealthy Profumo said.
The discovery that Profumo
shared the same mistress with
Capt. Eugene Ivanov, the deputy
Soviet naval attache in London,
touched off a scandal that rocked
the British' establishment.
Profumo told Parliament he
never had sexual relations with
the woman -20-year old
Chrsitine Keeler -but he later
admitted it was a lie. He said he
had tried to protect the feelings
of his wife, actress Valerie
Hobson.
The Secretary of State for War •
resigned from public life after
Parliament found him guilty of
contempt of the House of Com-
mQrts.
'Fhe 60-year-old Profumo
spends four days a week helping
the needy at Toynbee Hall and
two more as board member of
Grendon, Britain's only
psychiatric prison.
Miss Keeler dropped from
sight after a fitful career as a
model. She married, gave birth
to a son and was divorced. Capt.
Ivanov was recalled to Moscow
before the storm broke.
Sunday's
Sermon
Reported
By Tom Barl ey
f Editor's Note: This is a regular Monday feature in the Daily
Pilot , .a personalized account of the sermon at a church or
synagogue chosen at random from the newspaper's circulation
area. The church also will be the subject of a feature story on
Saturday's church page.)
Fathers who truly care for their families arc not si mply
making a living but are making a life for their wives and
children, Pastor Roy Gesch told his congregation Sunday in
a Father's Day serm9n at St. Paul's Lutheran Church,
Laguna Beach.
'·Many, many fathers find that their time is more and
more limited," he said. "And so many of us face demands
that send us from the home before our children get u~ in the
morning a nd see us come home when they are m bed.
"But despite all our present day pressures, we fathers
must giv~ our children every possible moment of our pre-
cious time," Pastor Gesch said. '·Our churches and our
schools, however hard they try, cannot take the place of the
father and the vital role he plays in the molding of our
children." .. .
Pastor Gesch told the fathers of his congregation that
they ahould admire Sen. Edmund Muskie for his r~ent
statement that, whatever the political pressure on him, the
family comes first in the Muskie home.
And he reminded his congregation that the Bibl e has
given us Solomon's wisdom, much of which was devoted to
the vital role of the father in a day and age that did not kn ow
the pressures and problems of present day America.
"But that is why the father is so absolutely vital in our
complex society,". Pastor Gesch· s aid. ''It is not just the
begetting and the providing -it is the exam ple, the dedica-
tion, the patience, the teaching and the love.
"It saddens m e that here in Laguna Beach this Father's
Day so many young people have drifted such a Ion~ way
from home and so far from theirfamily's way oflife,'' Pastor
Gesch told bis Lutheran congregation.
"And so very often they don't know why they are doing
this," he said. "They don't even know that the fathers who
have tried to care for them as only a father can <1rc wonder-
ing what went wrong and why it went wrong."
Pastor Gesch conceded that mothers are principally
charged with the teaching of their children but it is through
the Cathers. that the children really learn moral values,
responsibility and unselfishness, he said.
"He brings to his children the valu_es that we hope will
be reflected in them," he said in his moving Father's Day
message. "He brings to them his love and his life just as
Jesus brought bis Father's love to us by the supreme
sacrifice. ''Let us not lake the entertainment industry's view of
the bungling. fumbling yet lovable father as depicted in the
'Life With Father' image as being the typical American
father " Pastor Gesch warned. ·•fathers wield tremendous force by the power of their
example," he said. "They are the foundation of our family
life and the foundation of our family's future." ~
DAIL v PllOT A 3
Widow
Burned
To Death
MERIDEN, Conn. <UPI> -
Witnesses said a mam threw
gasoline on aJl elderly widow, set
her afire and watched her burn.
Mark Harrington , 22, was tAt be
arraigned today for her murder.
Authorities said he had a history
of commitments to a men\al
hospital.
''My God, ,J don't even know
him," screamed Mrs. Bertha
"Lillian" Bowen, 71, as her body
was engulfed in flames. She died
at Yale-New Haven Hospit .. I
about noon Saturday, some 24
hours after the ioci~ent Friday.
Harrington,-formerly of Sun·
cook , N.H., was arrested half a
block from the scene of the at-
tack about two hours after it OC·
I curred. He was held on a Sl00,000
bond. pe.nding arraignment ·in
common pleas court.
A s pokesman for the New
Hamps hire State Mental
Hospital in Concord said Jlar-
1;ngtori was in the facility for
eight months in 1974. Police re-
cords in Pembroke, N.ll.,
showed he. bad been committed
to the hospital on two previous
occasions.
Relatives with whom Har·
rington was staying in Meriden
while he searched for a job said
they became conc~rned when
they spotted him playing with
gasoline in their back yard Fri-
day before the attack on Mrs.
Bowen.
··Mark wanted to go back to the
hospital but his doctor said he
wouldn't commit him," one re·
!alive said.
Mrs. Howen, describt?d as ; a
"very cheerful, very helpful
woman who looks and acts much
younger than she is," was leav-
ing the Grande Prix Coiffures
after her weekly appointment
wh e n s h e was attacked,
authorities said.
Harrington was walking up the
street, carrying a half-gallon of
gasoline under his arm, police
said, when he threw the liquid on
Mrs. Bowen, set it afire with a
wooden match , watched the
flames briefl y and then fled.
The fire, which left an imprint
of hel· body on the ground, burned
off Mrs. Bowen's clothes arrd
melted her plas tic handbag,
a uthorities s aid. Witnesses put
out the flames and summoned
police.
Marine Held
In Rape of
Buddy's Wife
The 18-year-oid wife of a Camp
Pendleton Marine was raped in
San Clemente Sunday allegedly
by a friend of her husband.
Police arres ted Earl D.
Nathey, 24. of Camp Pendleton
and booked him on suspicion of
rape. ·
The woman said her assailant •
had followed her into the motel
where she and her husband were
li vi ng. Her husband had left
earlier lo go to thP m:;idnP base.
She said that after the incident
occurred the man left the motel
and went to a coltee shop.
Nath ey was arrested by
police at the downlO\m bus sta·
tion after Bob's Coffee Shop re·
ported he had left without paying
his bill. · ·
Form er Prime Mini ster
Harold MacMillan, who r esigned
a few months after the scandal,
later said he bore no grudge
against Profumo. +trnne Fob~
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wUla
To• 11rpldae
Weekend
Madness
-llERE & THERE DEPT. -1
\mew this past weekend was go-
ing to be one for the zanies when
the following bumper slicker
s·etup was sighted on an aging
foreign station wagon as it plied
Pacifi<: Coast Highway in
Newport Beach :
• On the left.band side of the rear
bumper it proclaimed <
.. Liberate Women." ,
' Bpt on the right side it advised:
"Ttke It Easy."
You are left wondering whi;,
way they really want it. ..
Even zanier, rumor had it that
the San Clevaente Police Depart.
J:PE:nt got throug h the entire
""fleekend without jailing a single
~erviceman for bar brawling.
Maybe it was the Father's Day
~pirit?
'SPEAKING OF ~lher's Day,
n~merous dads of our region now
flave a lot of new neckties to
wbnder wbal tp do with. -Yet
some kids li~y took advantage
6f' that sale out at South Coast
Plaza in Costa Mesa to offer
father a theme gift.
.Yes indeed, the headline on the
advertisement advised, Cuckoo
Clocks for Dad -Save Now for
Father's Day." •
Why, you could get cuckoo bid
da4 a clock with the tweetie-bird .
J&arting al $14.95 and ranging all
the way up tQ $79.95. And every
time it went tweetie, good old dad
would think of you.
Seems that there would be a
-message in there someplace.
MEANWH.ILE, DOWNCOAST
.. on this very same zaliy weekend,
/the county of Orange began lift·
ing junk a round in the skies
above the hills behind Laguna
Beach. •
This .,.,as the junker airlift.
They were using a helicopter to
c apture abandoned automobiles.
Alf this came about because
since the days of the Model T,
people have beer) using the ca-
n ron s a nd ravines behindJ
'Laguna to dispose of old chl!lker
car.s whic h h ave a bruptly
backfired for the last lime a nd
expired. ,.
Thus, over the years, the· hilly
areas h ave been Jumed into a
giant junkyard. Be fore helicop-
ters, there was rio way to remove
thts ~unk" from the pristine
folia~ of steep arroyos. Now,
powenul whirI,vbirds can drop
cable, s nare the ol(l junk cars and
haul them away through the air
to a regular j~nkyar-0.
SOME FOLKS HAVE 'suggest ·
' ecJirit might have been easier to
simply fa.a ke planter boxes out of
the old j unk and grow flowers in
them . Othe r s favored spray
painting the old junk into earth
tones so the clunkers wou ld blend
into the landscape.
The only real problem with the
helicopte r ~unklift, however ,
could have come because tramps
and hoboes have been known to
use those old cars for shelter dur-
ing the night. They sleep in them
sometimes.
SO HOW WOULD you Jjke to be
a tramp who was just trying to
get a little shuteye and abruptly
a waken t o find yourself swaying
on the e nd of a cable at 15,000 feet
and still climbing?
Tne way other events were
shaped thi s weekend, I 'm
s urprised itdidn'thappen.
•
Ro9•1Saltd.e
Queen Elizabeth II salutes
from horseback in front of
Buckingham Palace gates
_following the Trooping of ·
the Color ceremony in Lon·
don at weekend. '
Drink l,inked
To ·P~enger
Tr~in Cr~h
BUFFALO, N.~. (AP> -The
engineer of a Catladian Pacific
passenger train was charged
with assault Sunday after the
train rammed into the back of an
. Amtrak train in a s witching yard
on the U.S. side of·the Interna-
tional Railway• Bridge, officials
said., , •
They said 34 persons were in·
jure d . i!6 the c9llision, none
seriously.
~
Police said Canadian P~cific
engineer Lawrence Beebee, 63,
of'Ancas.ter, Ont., a(\mitted that
he had been drinking before his
two-car motor express crashed
into a s ix-car Amtrak train
beaded for Detroit. > •
The-Canadian train was on a
-daily run from Buffalo to
Hamilton and Toronto, Ont. ,
Police sald Beebee requested a
chemical breath test and re-
gistered .16 on the equipment.
They s aid a r..Jtading of .10 is the ma~imum altowable for the safe
opeiation of an automobile'.
' Beebee told police his train
was moving at 10 to 15 miles per
hour shortly before the collision.
A Canadian National Railways
employe who witnessed the acci· ·
lient said the Canadian Pacific
train r a mmed the rear of the
Amtrak train and five cars de·
railed -the front car of the
Canadian train and four Amtrak
cars.
Canadian National Railways
owns the track on which the col·
lision occurred.
The witness s aid the Amtrak
train was slowing lo a stop to
enter customs before crossing in·
to Ontario on the railway bridge
that connects Buffalo with Ft.
Erie, Ont., across the Niagara
River. •
Russell Boltz of Rochester,
Mich., an Amtrak passenger,
said the Amtrak trnin had
"virtually stopped" when it was
struck. · ~
..
..
~rael Sees H~Pc~ U.S. Deiiies
Dirty G~~in
Shipments Chance /or Interim Pact 50-50
By VaJted Pren laM:naU.al
Two authoritative Iaraeli
newspapers today quoted senior
laraeU officials in W~on as
saying there is a 50-50 chance for
an Israeli-Egyptian Interim
agreement as a result ol Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin's con·
ferences·lbere.
Rabin flew t<ome to Israel to-
day from talks with President
Ford and Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger. His vWt was
marred by an Arab t~t at-
tack on a border-village that
Israeli foreign m inistr}"offlcials
said was aimed at disrupting his
pea~e efforts.
The Arab terrorist raid Sunda)'
killed three Israelis and wounc1ea
six in the-frontier settlement of
Yuval near tbe Lebaate.e fron.
tier. The four Palettinian at·
tack.en were kmect by Israeli
soldiers.
Israeli planes struck Lebanese
vUlaae1 in reprisal and. both
Israeli and Lebanese artillery
dueled across the border today.
The Israelis said Arab gunners
h l t M e t u LI a , Is r a e 1 ' s
northernmost town and the
• nearby "ettlement of KtJr Gil~di.
No casualties were reported ..
Israeli military sources report·
ed a concentration ot"" guerri.118s
all along the frontier with the big·
gest concentration at Aila Ecb·
Cbaab, a village just across the
frontier and previous target of
Israeli ground assaults directed
uainst guerrilla bases.
Kissinger said Sunday after
NEW ORLEANS (AP> -
fUrlber talks wilh Rabln° ln New Grain inspectors here denied
York that the po1ltions of Israel charges Sunday that grain
and Egypt on an interim Middle elevators in New Orleans and in
Ea1t agreement have now been other port cities employ .. blen·
fUlly tlarified beyond any possi· ders" to deliberately add debris
ble misunderstanding. to foreign grain shipments.
Kissinger would not go into de-"They actually add dirt, and
tails but said that during the next that's what-the purchaser seea at
rew weeks "we.will be working in the other end,·' Rep. Neal Smith
diplomatic cbanrtels, with all of CD-Iowa) told the Des Moines
the parties tO(see whether it is Sunday Register. "Then h e
possible to U'anstate these ideas thinks Americaq grain ts no
into concrete progress." good, and that hurts sales."
-He saufhe cffa not expect to ce-. Harlan Ryan, chief 'lfain ln-
sume bis shuttle diplomacy ef--spector for the U.S. Department
forts. which collapsed last of Agriculture (USDA} in New
March, in the "next immediate Orleans, said he has never found
weeks." any operator deliberately adding
In Tel Aviv the newspapers dirt in the 25 years he has been an
lta'areb and Yedioth Aharonoth inspector.
quoted senior Israeli officials in •'Op e ra tors rarely put
Washington as saying there is a a ything back into the gratn
5Q percent chance f.or an Israeli· ich does not come out of the
Egyptian interim agreement. ain, •' he said.
They said Israel expecteA an said grain is graded ac-
Egypt to reply within two weel<s cordi to the amount .of foreign ,Bomb Blast Ro'Cks
t • to proposals on a new pact made matter in it, and foreign buyers
by Rabin in Washington. can purchase. any grade. Most,
In Jerusalem, police said they however, purchase lesser grade
arrested four young people dur-grains because they are cheaper, Bank in New York
NEW YORK (A P) -A thun-
derous explosion blasted win·
dows from the Puerto Rican-
based Banco de Ponce-early to-
day in mid-Manhattan's
Rockefeller Center.
A short time· later, a person
claiming to represent the
Weather Underground claimed
the group bad touched off the
blast in support of "the Puerto
Rican c~ment workers."
The only injury reported was
suffered by an unidentified
driver of a bakery truck who was
passing through the area at the
time. F1yiog glass cut him on an
arm.
The explosive device, which
police said was apparently a
medium sized bomb, went off at
1:43 a.m. PDT in a revolving
door Qf the bank at 10 Rockefeller
Plaza. The bank is on the corner
across from the sunken plaza
area containing· fountains and
the gilded statue of Prometheus .
Windows in the area around
the bank were shattered, litter-
ing 49th Street with glass. Win-
dows as h igh as the sixth floor of
the RCA building across from the
bank were broken.
"It shook Ufe whole floor'1 of 30
Rockefeller Plaza, said Ed Kane,
a Rockefeller Center worker who
was on the second floor of the
RCA building, headquarters of
the National Broadcasting Co.
A female caller to the Associat-
ed Press said th.e explosion was
set in support of Puertb Rican ce·
ment workers.
About 450 ~ement workers are
on strike in the city of Ponce on
Puerto Rico's southern coast.
There have been s ix incidents or
violence, includi'ng three bomb·
ings, since the strike began Jan.
31 against Ponce Cement, the
largest cement ·producer on the
Caribbean island.
Negotiations have stalled over
no-strike clauses and the length
of the contract.
In Puerto Rico, meanwhile,
four bomb blasts shook a San
Juan suburb today in a terrorist
attack against a telephone lines
installation company, police
said.
The explosions partially
DDify Pilot D-'i•er,
l1G1H1r..t.ed
Mond .. Fnday: II you clo not have
)'OUr paper by 5:30 p.m.. call before
7 p.m. and your copy will be de-
livered.
Saturday and Sunday: If you do not
receive your copy by 9 a.m. Satur-
day, or 8 a.m. Sunday. call before 10
am. and your copy will be deliver~.
c~T•llphua Most Orange County Areas 64J-4Jlf
~or1tiwest Huntington Beach.
and Westminster •••••... MO.tut
San Clemente. Capistrano Beach,
San Juan Capistrano.
Dana Point. South Laguna
Lagun_!t N10\Je1 ..•••.•.•• •n1uo
ing the night in connection with he said .
destroyed four panel trucks of an alleged plan to attack Arab New Orleans handles more
the Church and Tower Corp., a targets in the eastern sector of grain than a ny port in the world.
firm subcontracted by the struck the city in retaliation for the One· third of the natic;t's grain
Puerto ruco telephone authority. guerrilla attack at Yuval. exports pass througb th1s pert. iiiiiiilii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiii~'
THANK YOU VALUED CUSTOMERS FOR MAKING A
SUCCESSFUL 28 Y~ARS-IT~S OUR BIRTHDAY,
BUT YOU GET THE GIFTS ••• STOP IN FOR YOURS MOW!
Where ® YQU want the freezer
in your new ltm•no. refrigerator ...
on the side? on the bottom? on the .f21>.l
tlm•n• gives~ a choice
If you want yOUt zeto degfee freezer on the side, there's
the Amana Slde-by-~lde. Or you can have 1t on the top
or the bottom. They're all Free-O~Frost in both the reirlg·
eratOf and freezer.
And every Amina has two Independent temperature
controls, one for the freezer, one for the retrlgerat04'.
There's a "refrlgerator·wllhln·a-refrlgerator" that keep9
meat fresh up to twice a110ng a1 an ordinary meat keepet.
And a high-humidity compartment that keeps vegetabln
hash up to three weeks.
eome ca1d look at the~ Am••• has tor you. Then choose
the OM you want from gold. avocado, coppertone or white. .
~~~
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,
Monday. June 18, 1975 OAIL y PILOT Ai~ I Stunt111an Party
Thrown
By Guru
Nixon Strolls
Seen Along Red Beach
Sll.5 Bllllen
f .
Kelly Held
In .Shooting
·LOS ANGELES (AP)
-*Maharaj Ji, the 17-
year·old guru who was
renounced by his mother
for allegedly nving the
life of a playboy, threw a
Father's Day party 'for
himself that seemed
more of a je t-set gather-
ing than a meditation
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Former President
Richard M. Nixon left the seclusion or his San
Clemente seaside villa for recent strolls along
nearby Red Beach, it was reported today.
Assembly Ge~
State Budget ·.
"' LOS ANGELES (UPI) -John "'Flagpole" KeJ.
ly, a former stuntman who claims the world record
for si~ting atop a flagpole, was charged Sunday with
shootmg at houses in the Tujunga area of the city.
The 72-year-old Kelly, silting in wheelchair,
surrendered to police, who had cordoned off the
neighborhood and telephoned him to surrender.
Kelly was booked on suspicion of assault with•
deadly weapon. ·
The Los Angeles Times printed front-page
pictures showing Nixon as he walked with his
daughter, Julie EisenhQwer, and as.he greeted
persons near their campers at the beach, a
fa vorite for Southern California surfer s.
A third photograph sf\owed Pat Nixon dur·
ing one of the recent walks, described as the
third in as many days and lasting about 40
minutes.
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-A compromhse state
budget of about $11.5
billion goes before the
Assembly late today.
Cra~lt E..-lfeddlNfl Pia•
u,., T•~•· session.
N I ~ The guru, whose posi-~ ear rear tion as lead er of the
A two-house commit·
tee agreed Sunday on the
spending program for
the fiscal year beginning
July 1. Red Beach was a favorite spot for Nixon
during his visits to the West Coast from
Washington while he was in the White House. _
The exact total or the
compromise bill could
not be determined im-'--------------~--~~--------------~~ mediately. F4nance
SAN BERNARDINO <AP) f' _ Shortly after
dining together to discuss th~ ~edding plans, a
\raffic accident claimed the lite of the prospective·
g room and seriously injured his fiance. officials
D etente , based <>n Divine Light Mission r e a r 0 r nu c 1 ~a r was challenged by his
h · mother after he married Director Roy Bell s aid it holocaust , as . given his American secretary
the world. 10 to 20 and bought a •Malibu
yea1:s lo work out a mansion, hosted about
system of prevention, 1,000 of his West Coast
s a } d P a t r i c k followe rs who flew in
Moynihan in art ad-Sunday on less Utan 24
d res s S u n d a y to hours notice for the OC·
Stanford University casion.
Cowboy Pickens
LaudS Ford's Son
. was between the As-
sembly a nd Senate
versions, which varied by
about $86 million.
said. ~ Their automobile st ck a street div"der and
Tolled over twice, instant! illing Henry P. ay, 44,
of Valencia. Passenger Carol Jean Worth , 33,
San Bernardino, was listed in fair conditi n af.
lerward Sunday at St. Bernardine's ljospital.
Assemblyman John
Foran CD-San Francisco)
who presided o_ver the
a4 ~afJfJed bi Dr"fl Baut g raduating class. "I hope you enjoy the
------------grace and bliss that sur·
RAMONA (AP ) -just a celluloid cowboy, two house committee,
"The kid rides r eal missed a goring ~Y in· said it would be about
good," cowboy actor ches on Sunday's return $150 million above the
Slim Pickens s ays of -trip after a wild steer $11.4 billion proposed by
President Ford's was spooked out of a ca-Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) -Fifty-four
persons , 22 of them juveniles, were arrested by un-
dercover narcotics officers this weekend on drug
• •.md alcohol charges at a concert by rock star Ali'ce
Cooper.
Car Drags
2 Victims Police Sunday said .charges ranged from
drunkenness to use of dangerous drugs.(\ capa~ity MARINA DEL REY crowd of 7 ,000 attended Cooper's Friday mght
performance at the National Orange Show · CU P·I) -. One-of t~o auditorium women dragged for six • blocks Saturday beneath
Accident K.Hb Deput11 -
RIVERSIDE CA P > -As they prepared lo go
hunting, a friend accidentally shot to death a re·
tired deputy while showing him a gun, the
Riverside County Sheriff's offi ce said.
Killed was Harry Carl Bewlah, 44, a retired de·
puty with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's depart-
ment, officials said Sunday. He had been looking at
a .357 magnum r evolver owned by Dale Rix.
a hit-run driver's car
was still unconscious and
in criliclal condition to-
day at Marina Mercy
Hospital.
Hos pita t officials re-
ported "no improve·
ment" in the condition of
Marla Gable, 23, of Los
Angeles, who suffered·
scrapes, multiple frac-
tures and a crushed fool
in the· accident. Doctors
fear the worn an 's leg
rounds this house,"
Maharaj Ji told his
guests, who crowded on·
to the patio and tennis
courts of his white spUt·
level home on a cliff
overlooking the Pacific
Ocean.
ONLY "PREMIES" -
the sect's word for
believer s -were ad·
milted beyond the gates
of the mans ion.
·Those who made their
way up the steep, mile·
long road leading to the
house a nd past the en·
tourage of security
guards outside spent the
evening dancing on ten·
nis courts, sipping non·
alcoholic punch and ap-
plauding the guru during
his brief appearance~.
youngest son,Steve. nyon by, Ford and Dem9crats have 54
Pickens made the wranglers led by ex· votes in the Assembly,
comment as young Ford, rodeo star Casey Tibbs. the exact two-thirds 1·e·
19, wrapped up four days The st eer came up quired to pass a budget.
of cowboy fun Sunday behind Pickens' horse, However, one Democrat,
with activities s uch as wide horns swiping Curti-s Tucker of
chasing an 1,800-pound within inches. "I damn Inglewood, is absent re·
Texas steer and riding near got off an'd s tarted covering from heart sur·
horseback. running by mys elf gery. He was brought to
Ford man11ged to stay becaus~ those horns the capitol to cast the de·
on his horse despite looked hke the wings of a ciding vote on the As·
some live ly Wes tern ac-B52," Pickens said. sembly's version of the
lion but a Secret Service Ford, who in recent budget.
guard lost his saddle and months has worked on a If the Democrats are
Pickens himself had a Montana ranch, stayed one vole short on the two·
closecallonthe24·mile alongside the stee~ but hou se compromise
weekend ride at El h~ an~ the other nders budget, the Republicans
Capitan Gra nde Indian were unable to corral have agreed to cast a
Reservation, home of the him although they gave courtesy vote so Tucker
Missionjndians. chase for nearly two won't have to m ake the
. Picke ns, who as a miles and just missed trip Crom Inglewood
former rodeo star isn't herding him in. again.
Boy, 15, Dies fn Fire may have to b e am-B • EUREKA (AP) -A 15-year-old Washington putated. t t
boydiedinafireaboardafishingboatwhileinporl Anoth e r woman , e an tns an .her.e, local {ire officials said today. Deborah Hendricks, 21.
The victim was identified by the coroner as di ed on arrival at the
Russell White, of Westport, Wash .• who was on a hospital s hortly after the d • 1
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Win a free Sunflower Sailboat.
If you've always harbored a secret desire
to be master of your own vessel. this could
be your chance.
From now through Friday, June 27.
you're invited to register for a free
drawing at any of the offices listed
below. Anyone can enter and
there's no obligation.
Five-thirty P.M. on Friday the
27th is the big moment. The winner
(who doesn't ever) have to be
there) will become sole owne_r
of an 11' Sunflower sailboat.
Of course, if you have
something a little large r than our
sailboat in mind, we do offer
something special in the way of
boat loans. If you have a
Combined Check and Charge
Card, and use our automatic
transfer service, you qualify for
special lower rates on financing.
So come to the bank with an
ocean for a middle name. You have
nothing to lose but your status as a
landlubber.
I
The budget worked «Jal
by the two-house com-
mittee rejects Brown's
proposal to borrq_w·
money for college ccfh-
struction with a future
bond issue, with the~
to pay if voters reject tbe
bonds.
"It's all 'pay-as-you•
go'," said Sen. Anthony
Beilenson, D ·Los
Angeles, the other co-
chairman of the lwo-
house committee.
Missiles
Inspected
By NATO
VANDENBERG AFB.
( U P I > ·-D e f ens e
.Secretary Jam·es R.
Schlesinger Sunday con·
ducted· a tour of this
coastal space and mis·
sile center for defense•
ministers and officials of ,
six European countries
as a prelude lo their
NATO nuclear. planning
group meetings thi~
week.
The NATO defense or-
ficials will meet in Mon·
terey today, and Tues·
day to discuss possible
change$ in the alliance's
strategy and the pro-
lifer a tion of nuclear
weapcms.
• • REGULAR $3.98 YARD
: Fortrel• '' 1 trtdel'l'llrk of F 1ber lndumits. Inc •• 11ubs1d11rv o( ~!anew Corpor11lon.
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SECURITY PACIFIC BANK
SOMETHING SPECIAL .
Beach & Edinge r: 7777 Edinger Ave.
Brookhurst & Adams: 20061 Brookhurst St.
C:Orona Del Mar: 3435 E. Coast Highway
Costa Mesa : 196 E. 17th St .
Eastbluff: 2501 &ls tbluff Or.
Huntington Beac h: 202 Main St.
Huntington Harbour: 16911 Algonquin St.
Irvine Industrial: 18622 MacAtthur Blvd. ·
Newport Beach: 3475 Via Lidd
Newport Center: 550 Newport Center De
Springdale~ Edinger: 5812 Edinger Ave.
0 1m.,,.. ..,...."'°
Af DAILY PILOT
.. .
J•.t ••
·::!ii w1c•
T e• arplaiae
~~~""··~~~~~·
W eek end
·Madness
HERE & THER.E DEPT. -I
knew this past weekend was go-
ing to be one for the zanies when
the following bumper slicker
s"etup was s ighted on an aging
foreign station wagon as it plied
Pacifi-e Coa st Hig hway in
Newport Beach:
• On the left-hand side of the rear
bumper it proclaimed :
•'Liberate Women."
~t on the right side it advised:
"T ke It Easy."
ou are left wondering which
way they really want it. ..
~ven zanier, rumor had it that
th~ San Clemente Police Depart·
ment got through the entire
"\Veekend without jailing a single
~erviceman for bar brawling.
Maybe it was the Father's Day
~pirit?
SPEAKING OF Father 's Day,
numerous dads of our region now
have a lot of new neckties to
wonder what to do with. Yet
some kids likely took advantage er that sale out at South Coast
Plaza in Costa Mesa lo offer
father a theme gift.
.Yes indeed, the headline on the
advertisement advised, Cuckoo
Clocks for Dad -Save Now for
.Father's Day.''
Why, you could get cuckoo old
dad a clock with the tweetie-bird
*'8.rting at $14 .95 and ranging all
the way up to $79.95. And every
'*"te it went tweetie, good old dad
would think of you.
Seems that there would be a
message in ther e sQmeplace.
MEANWHILE, I>C\l.VNCOAST
()n this very s ame zany weekend,
the county of Orange began Hft-
ing junk around in the skies
above the hills behind Laguna
.Beach.
This was the junker airlift.
They were using a helicopter to
capture abandoned automobiles.
All this came about because
since the days of the Model T,
people have been using the ca-
n yon s a nd ravines behind
Laguna to dispose of old clunker
cars which have abruptly
backfired for t he last time and ,
expired.
T hus, over t he yc<irs, the hilly
;ireas have been turned into a
giant junkyard. Before helicop-
ters, there was no way lo remove
this. junk from the pristine
foliage of steep arroyos. Now,
powerful whirlybirds can drop
cable, snare the old junk cars and
haul them a way through the air
toa regularjunkyard.
SOME FOLKS HAVE s uggest-
ed it might have been easier to
simply make planter boxes out of
the old j unk and grow flowers in
them. Others favored spray
painting the old junk into earth
tones so the clunkers would blend
_i nto the landscape.
The only r eal problem with the
helicopter junklift, howeve r ,
could have com e because tramps
and hoboes have been known lo
use those old cars for shelter dur-
ing the njght. They sleep in them
sometimes.
SO HOW WOULD you like to be
a tramp who was just trying to
get a little shuteye and abruptly
<:1waken to find yourself swaying
on the end of a cable at 15,000 feet
and still climbing?
The way other events were
s h a p e d thi s wee ke nd, I'm
s urprised itdidn'thappen.
Rotfal S al..ie
Queen Elizabeth II salutes
from horseback in front of
Buckingham Palace gates
following the Trooping of
the Color ceremony in Lon-
don at weekend.
Drink Linke d
To P~enger
Train Crash
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP> -The
engineer of a Canadian Pacific
passenger train was charged
with assault Sunday after the
trrun rammed into the back of an
Amtrak train in a switching yard
on the U.S. side of the Interna-
tional Railway Bridge, officials
said. ·
They said 34 persons were in-
jured in the collision, none
seriously.
Police said Canadian Pacific
engineer Lawrence Beebee, 63,
of Ancaster, Ont., admitted that
he had been drinking before his
two-car motor express crashed
into a six-car Amtrak train
beaded for Detroit.
The Canadian train was on a
daily run from Buffa lo to
Hamilton and Toronto, Ont.
Police said Beebee requested a
chemical breath lest and re-
gi stered .16 on the equipment.
They s aid a reading of .10 is the
maximum allowable for the safe
operation of an automobile.
Beebee told police his. train
was moving at 10 to 15 miles per
hour shortly before the collision.
A Canadian National Railways
employe who witnessed the acci-
dent said the Canadian Pacific
train rammed the r ear of the
Amtrak train a nd five cars de-
railed -the front car of the
Canadian train and four Amtrak
cars.
Canadian National Railways
owns the track on which the col-
lision occurred.
The witness said the Amtrak
train was slowing to a stop to
enter customs before erosstng in-
to Ontario on the railway bridge
that connects Buffalo with Ft.
Erie, Ont., across the Niagara
River. .
Russell Boltz of Rochester,
Mich., an Amtrak passenger,
s aid the Amtrak train had
"virtually stopped" when it was
struck. ·
-' • f
. . U.S. Denies .Jsrael Sees H~pe· .... Di r.: • rly u~~1n .
Chance /Or Interim P(lCt 50-50 Ship~enls
By Ulllted Preu lmenaaUaaal
Two authoritative Iaraell
newspapers today quoted aenior
Israeli officials in Washlniton as
saying there is a 50.50 chance for
an fhra~li -Egyptian interim
agreement as a result of Prime
MlJlister Yitzhak Rabin's con-
fenmce:J there.
Rabin flew home to Israel to-
day from talks with President
Ford and Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger. His visit was
marred by an Arab terrorist at-
tack on a border villag& that
lsraeli foreign ministry officials
said was aimed at disrupting bis
pea~e efforts.
. The Arab terrorist raid Sunday
k1Ued three Israelis and wounded
six in the-frontier settlement of
Yuval near the Lebanese fron·
tier. The four Palestinian at-
tacken were killed by Israeli
sol di era.
Israeli planes struck Lebanese
villages Jn reprisal and both
Israeli and Lebanese artillery
duel~ across the border today.
The Israelis said Arab gunners
hit Metulla, Israel's
northernmost town and the
nurby l'ettlement otKlar Giladi ••
No cuu1dties were reported.
Israeli miUtary sources report-
ed a concentration of guerrillas
all along the frontier with the big-
gest concentration at Aita Ech-
Cbaab, a village just across the
frontier and previous target of
Israeli ground assaults directed
ualnst guerrilla bases.
Kissinger said Sunday after
turther talks with Rabin· ln New
York that the' positions of Israel
and Egypt on an interim Middle
East agreement have now been
fully clarifis:d beyond any possi·
ble misunderstanding.
Kissinger would not go into de·
tails but said th.at tluring the next
few weeks •'we will be working in
diplomatic channels with aJI of
the parties to see whether it is
possible to t'tanslate these ideas
into concrete progress.''
He said he did not expect to r e··
sume his shuttle diplomacy ef-
forts, which collapsed last
March, in the "next immediate
weeks."
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -
Grain inspectors here denied
charg es Sunday tbat grain
elevators in New Or!eans and in
other port cities employ ''blen-
ders" to delibe rately add debris
to foreign grain shipments.
"They actually add dirt, and
that 's what the purch83er sees at
the other end," Rep. Neal Smith
<D·low~) told the Des Moines
Sunday Register. "Then he
thinks American grain is no
good, and that hurts sales., ..
Harlan Ryan, chief grain in·
specter for the U .$. Department
or Agriculture <VSOAYin New
Orleans, said he has never found
any operator delibe~ately adding
dirt in the 25 years he bas been an
inspector.
Bomb Blast Rocks
In Tel Aviv the newspapers
Ha'aretz and Yedioth Aharonoth
quoted senior Israeli officials in
Washington as saying there is a
50 percent chance for an Israeli-
Egyptian interim agreement.
They said Is rael expected
Egypt to reply within two weeks
to proposals on a new pact made
by Rabin in Washington.
"Operators rarely-put
anything back into the grain
which does not co~out of the
grain," he said.
Ry an said grain i graded ac-
cording (o the amo of foreign
matter in it, and foreign buyers
can purchase any grade. Most,
however, purchase lesser grade
grains because they are cheaper,
he said .
Bank in New York In Jerusalem, police said they
arrested four young people dur-
ing the night in connection with
an alleged plan to attack Arab
targets in the eastern sector of
the city in retaliation for the
guerrilla attack at Yuval.
NEW YORK (AP) -A thun-
derous explosion blasted win-
dows from the Puerto Rican-
based Banco de Ponce ·early to-
day in mid-Manhattan 's
Rockefeller Center.
A s hort time later, a person
claiming to represent the
Weather Underground claimed
the group had touched off the
blast in support of "the Puerto
Rican cement workers."
The only injury reported was
suffered by an unidentified
driver of a bakery truck who was
passing through the area at the
time. F1ying glass cut him on an
arm.
The explosive device, which
police said was apparently a
medium sized bomb, went off at
1:43 a.m. PDT in a revolving
door or the bank at 10 Rockefeller
Plaza. The bank is on the corner
across from the sunken plaza
area containing· fountains and
the gilded statue ot Prometheus.
Windows in the area around
the bank were shattered, litter-
ing 49th Street with glass. Win-
dows as high as the sixth floor of
the RCA building across from the
bank were broken.
"It shook the whole floor" or 30
Rockefeller P laza, said Ed Kane,
a Rockefeller Cent er worker who
was on the second floor of the
RCA buil<ijng. headquarters of
the National Broadcasting Co.
A female c'aller to theAssociat·
.ed Press said th.e explosion was
set in support or Puerto Rican ce-
ment workers.
About 450 cement workers are ,
on strike in the city of Ponce on
Puerto Rico's southern coast. '
There have been six incidents of
violence, including .three bomb·
ings, since the strike began Jan.
· 31 against Ponce Cement, the
largest cement 'producer on the
Caribbean island.
Negotiat ions ha~·e stalled over
no-strike clauses and the length
of the contract.
In Puerto Rico, meanwhile,
four bomb blasts shook a San
Juan suburb today in a terrorist
attack against a telephone lines
installation company, police
said.
The explosions partially
D ... y Pilot Dtll•ery
ls GHr..te.d
Monday-Friday: If you do not have
your oaper by 5:30 p.m.. cell before
7 D m and your copy will be de-
lrvef'ed.
Saturday and Sunday: If you do not
receive your copy by 9 a.m. Satur·
day, ex 8 a.m. Sunday. call before 10
a.m. and your copy will be delivered.
Clrulliffe9 T1l1ph1n
Most Orange County Areas 64MJ2t
Northwest Hunhngton Beach,
and We1tmlnster ••••..•. M0-1120
San Clemente. Cao1strano Beach.
San Juan Capistrano.
Dena Point. Sooth Legvna.
Lagun~ N1g'uel ••••.....• 4 t5-06l0
destroyed four panel trucks of
the Church and Tower Corp., a
firm subcontracted by the struck
Puerto Rico telephone authority.
New Orleans handles more
grain than any port in the world.
One-third of the nation's grain
exports pass through this pert. F
THANK YOU VALUED CUSTOMERS FOR MAKING A
SUCCESSFUL 28 YEARS-IT'S OUR BIRTHDAY,
BUT YOU GET THE GIFTS ••• STOP IN FOR YOURS NOW! ~ ~ YQU wani the freezer
in your new lfmana refrigerator ..•
on the side? on ~ bottom? on the .tgp_l
,4;,,on~ gives you a choice
If you want your zero degH treez• on the side, there's
the Amena Slde·by·Slde. Or you can have It on the top
Of the bottom. They're all Free-~Frost In both the relrlg·
eratOf and freezer.
And every Amana has two Independent temperature
controls, one for the freezer, one for the refrigerator.
There's a "rafrlgefator·wlthln·a-relrlgerator" that keeps
meat fresh up to lwlce as long as an Ofdlnary meat keep«.
And a high-humidity compartment that keeps vegetables
fresh up to three weeks.
Showers Drench North
MADE
ONLY .41 BY.
Vz_fliiJi]@][ii]«J.
Tornadoes Sighted in Somh and Midu:est
T emperat•re•
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Nl<hot'~ "" •U -.All.rt• 7• #IS ,10 Ballersfield 100 1S
Boston f>4 S1
°"~ ., 6~ .!>II C.lndnnatl 80 "" ,73
Oew!Md IS ... ..39
O.n11or 86 48
Elolffka j. .. .,
Fr.-9" M HOflOIUIU IS 71
Houston 86 76 tndl41NPoll5 11> 67 .02 ~City 11 .sa
LMV-OU 101 71 ""*"' e .. ci. 'I() 16
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~.en. 71 )6 ,, S7
Seel.,.,. .. ., SI
SC. I.AUis 76 .. .40
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•
-
-
/
Stunt111an
Kelly Held
In Shooting .
-
Monday, Junt 18. 1975 OAILYPILOT
• I -,. Party
Thrown
By Guru
Seen Along Red Beach
Nixon Strolls · '11•5 nuu • ..:
Assembly Ge~
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Former President
Richard M . Nixon left the seclusion of his San
Clemente seaside villa for recent strolls along
· LOS ANGELES (AP ) nearby Red Beach, it was reported today.
.
State Budget
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -John "FlagPole" Kel-
ly, a former stutitman who claims the world record
for si~ting a top a fl ~gpole, was charged Sunda~ with
shoot!Jlg at houses m the Tujunga area of the city.
-Maharaj Ji, the 17· The Los Angeles Times printed front-page SACRAMENTO (AP> The budget worked oat
year·old guru who was pictures showing Nixon as he walked with his -A compromi:se 'state by the two-house com·
renounced by his mother daughter, Julie Eisenhower, and as he greeted 1>udget of a bout $11.5 mittee rejects Brown's
for allegedly living the persons near their campers at the beach, a billion goes before the proposa l to borro'W The· 72-year·old Kelly, sitting in whe.elchair, ~urrcndered to police, who had cordoned off tbe
neighborhood and telephoned him to surrender.
life of a playboy. threw a favorite for Southern Ca lifornia surfers. A1u;embly late today. ll\Oney for college cdn·
Father's Day party for A third photograph showed Pat Nixon dur-A two-house commit· ~truction with a future
Kelly was booked on suspicion of assault with 1l himself that seemed ing one of the r ecent walks, described a_s the lee agreed Sunday on the bond issue, with the s~
more of a jet-set gather-third in as many days and lasting about 40 spending program for lo pay if voters reject the
ing t han a meditation minutes. the fiscal year beginning bonds.
u"IT•••llo•• session. Red Beach was a favorite spot for Nixon July 1. "It's all 'pay.as-you·
deadly weapon. ·
as .. -•-• EO The guru, whose posi· during his visits to the West Coast rrom The exact lot al or the go'." said Sen. Anthcn.)'. nr_.-.c r rear '"'ti on as l eader of the compromise bill could Be i 1 e n s on , D . Lo 1
SAN BERNARDINO (AP> -Shortly aner dining together to discuss their wedding plans, a
traffic accident claimed the life of the prospective·
groom and seriously injured his fiance, officials
said.
Washington while he was in the White House. De t e nte based on Divine Light Mission t# not be d etermined im-Angeles, the other co-
f ear of nuclear was challenged by ~is ------------------~m edi atel y. Finance chairman or the two.
Their automobile struck a street divider and
Yolled over twice, instantly killing Henry P . Lay, 44,
of Valencia. Passenger Carol J ean Wortham, 33,
.San Bernardino, was listed in fair condition af-
terward Sunday at St. Bernardine's Hospit aJ.
holocaust h as ·given ~other af~er he mamed c boy p k Director Roy Bell said it . house committee.
h ~ .. ·l·d lO t 20 his Amencan secretary ow ;c ens was between the As-l e WOl 0 and bought a Malibu SI semb"ly a nd S e nate
years to work ou.t a mansion, hosted about versions, which varied by
S4 Nabbed In Drug,,.,.,
system of prevention, 1 ooo of his West Coast · s about$86million.
s a i tl pat l' i ck f~llowers who flew in Lauds vo .... J's on Assemblyman J ohn
Moynihan in a n ad· Sunday on less than 24 i"' 1 • U Foran <D -San Francisco) d res s S u n d a y t o hours notice for the oc· who presided over the
Stanford U nive r sity casion. RAMONA (A P ) -just a celluloid cowboy, two house committee,
graduating class. "I hope you enjoy the "The kid rides r eal missed a goring by in· said it would be about
-'----__.;;;...-----grace and bliss that sur-. good,'' cowboy actor ches on Sunday's r eturn $150 million above the
rou nd s this h ouse," Slim Pickens s ays of trip after a wild steer $11.4 billion proposed by
SAN BERNARDINO (UPI> -Fifty.four ·c Maharaj Ji told his Preside n t Ford 's wasspookedoutof a ca-Gov.EdmundBrownJr.
perso.ns,22of the mjuveniles,were arrestedby un· ar Dmns guests,whocrowdedon-youngest son,Steve. nyon b y Ford and Dempcrats have 54
dercover narcotics officers this weekend on drug • ~· to t he patio and tennis Pickens made the wranglers led by ex· votes in the Assembly,
and alcohol charges al a concert by rock star Alice 2 T7.• • courts of his white split· comment as young Ford, rode0 star Casey Tibbs. the exact two· thirds re-
Cooper. . ,-1Ctl111S level home on a cliff 191 wrapped up four days The steer came up quired to pass a budget.
Police Sunday said .ch arges ranged from overlooking the Pacific of cowboy fun Sunday behind Pickens' horse, However , one Democrat,
drunkennessto useofdangerous drugs.Acapacity · · Ocean. with activities such as wide h orns sw iping C u rti's Tuck e r of
crowd of 7,000 attended Cooper's Friday night MARINA DEL REY ONLY "PRE MIES"-chasing an l ,800·pound within inches. ''I damn Inglewood, is absent re·
f t th N t . l O Show · (U PI) -One of two h • d r . T s t e and n·ding near got off an·..1 started · ( h t per ormancc a e a ion a r ange women dragged for six t t: sect s wor 01 exas e r u covenng rom ear sur-
auditorium. blocks Saturday beneath(b~hevers -were ad · horseback. running b y m ys e If gery. He was brought to
a hil·run driver's car milled bey?nd the gates Ford managed to slay b ecause those horns the capitol to cast the de·
was still unconscious and of the m ansion. . on hi s horse d espite looked like the wings of a ciding vote on the As·
in criticlal condition to-Those who m ade th_e1r some lively Wes tern ac· B52_.'' Pickens said. sembly's version of the
day at Manna Mercy way ~P the stt;ep, mile-tion but a Secret Service Ford, who in r ecen budget.
RlVERSIDE CAP) -As they prepared to go Hospital. long 1oad leading to the guard lost his saddle and months has worked on a If the Democrats are
hunting, a friend accidentally shot lo death a re· . . . house and past the en-Pickens himself had a Montana ranc h, s tayed one vole short on the two-
tired deputy wh ile s howing him a gun, the Hospital oCf_icials re-tourage of security close call on the 24!milc alongside the steer but h o u se co.mpromise
RiversideCountySheriff'sofficesaid. port~~-"no im~~ove-guards outsid e spent the weekend rid e al El he a nd the other riders budget, the Republicans
•. . ment m the condition of evening dancing on ten-Capitan Grande Indian were unable to corral have agreed to cast a
Ardde nt Kilb a..,.,,,,,
Missiles
Inspected
By NATO
VANDENBERG AFB
( U P I ) ·-D e Ce n s e
Secretary J ames R .
Schlesinger Sunday con·
ducted· a tour of this
coastal s pace and mis-
sile center for defense
ministers and officials ot
six European countries
as a prelude to their
NATO nuclear. planning
group meetings thi~
week.
KJlled was Harry Carl Bewlah, 44, a retired de-Marla Gable, 23, of Los n,is courts sipping non-Reservation, home of the him although they....,if8ve courtesy vote so 'Fucker
puty wit~ t~e Los. Angeles County Sheriff's d~part· Angeles, wh6_ s uffered · alcoholic punch and ap· Mission Indians. chase for nearly t wo won't have to make the
ment, officials said Sunday. He had been_lookmg at scrapes, multiple frac· plauding the guru during Pickens, who as a miles and just missed trip from I n g le wood a.~7magnumrevolv~ownedbyD~eR1x. ~r~and acrushed~t .hi.=·s~b=n~·e~f~a~p~p~e~a~ra=n~c~e~s~.-~f~o~rm~e~r _r~od~e~o_s~l~a_r_i~s_n'_t_h_e_rd_i_n=g_h_im_i_n_. __ ~~a~g~a~in~·------~-w_e_a~po_n_s_·~~~~~~ in the · accident. Doctors -
The NATO derense o(-
ficials will m eet in Mon.
terey today, and Tues·
day to discuss possible
changes in the alliance's
..str ategy and the pro-
lifer a tion of n uclear
B.Ofl, J 5, Dies In Fire fear t.he woman's leg
EUREKA (AP> -A 15-year-old Washington
boy di ed in a fire aboard a fishing boat while in port
h er e, local fire officials said today.
may have lo be am-
putated.
A n o lh e r w o m a n ,
Deborah Hendricks, 21,
died on arrival at the
hospital shortly after the
accident early Saturday.
.
The victim was identified by the coroner as
Russell White. of Westport, Wash., wh9 was on a
trip on the family boat Marcard with his father.
I
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Beach & Edinger: 7777 Edinger Ave.
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Eastbluff: 2501 Eastbluff Dr.
Huntington Beach: 202 Main St.
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'
"
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PAILY PILQT EDITORl.'\14 P:\GE ,.. . .,
Suits ·.Cos~· Ev~ryOne
The fact that soaring malpractice insurance rates
are renected in the fees doctors charge their patients
has become fairly well kno"''l1 during recent debates
un the issue
But far more citizens are likely to be hit in the
pocketbook by increasing rates cities must pay for
liability insurance to protect themselves against
citizen sw ts.
The current duemma in Newport Beach is fairly
typical. The city formerly p<lid an annual premium of
S97,000 for its liability insurance. When lhatagree-
ment ended it was forced to accept a new .. low" bid of
5207,000. But that pact was cancelled alter a few
months. Now the city must face up to setting aside even
more funds for even higher premiums.
And of course the fu~ds come from the taxpayers.
Suing cities has become even more popular than
~uing doctors. At almost any cit y council meeting, up
to half a dozen '·claims'' are ref erred to the city's in-
~urancc carrier.
·They come from people who stumble and fall on
~llcgedly uneven sidewalks, whose cars are scraped
by unkempt tree branches, whose homes ar·e
damaged by water leaks for which they feel the city
may be responsible ... the list is endless.
Some of the claims are valid. Too ma ny are <.a n ob-
vious grab at what appears to be easy money by vie·
t)ms of everyday mishaps that probably are nobody's
fault.
The settle ments usually are not spectacular.
:Most of the threatened suits never get to court. The in-
~unmce can;er and the alleged victim of civic
negligence just agree on a suitable payment and thl'
matter is concluded.
But. over the years the settlements add up to CJn
t·normous amount. Hence the soaring premiums.
Perhaps the way to break the plague of •·swt-itis''
would be for the citie.s u.nd their insurance earners lo
gamble on taking more of the cases to court. It might
be more costly in lbe beginning, but it could serve to
break a pattern that threatens to break the tax-
payers.
IRS Eyes Lawmakers
The Internal Revenue Service definition of a ''tax
homeJ' as opposed to a physical residence threatens
to cost California legislators some money.
l.Jnder present arrangements, the lawmakers re-
ceive. in addition to their base s alary of $21,120 a
year, a S30 tax-exempt living allowance for expenses
awa~ from home every I day the Legislature is in
session . .
And s ince California now has a full-time
Legislature, this becomes a substantial annual incre-
ment. ,
While it is true that most of the legislators main-
tain r esidences away from Sacramento, the IRS, it
seems, regards (;I taxpayer's residence -fQl· tax
purpo.ses -as the place where he earns most of his in-
come. For the legislato1:s, this would be Sacramento.
And tha t would make the per diem pay an item of
taxable income, if cou1t rulings in favor of the IRS in
other s tates serve as a precedent.
Legislators who do live in Sacramento probably
should not be entitled to the tax-free living allowance.
But those who regularly commute to homes elsewhere
should be compensated for that expense.
Perhaps aboljshing the flat per diem paym ent m
favor of some combination of a higher~and,fully tax-
<tble-regular salary, along with bona ficf'e expens~
statement s would solve the problem ·
..
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YES,SIR,M'BOY! Ail YOU HAVE ro
DO IS KEEP YOOR EYE OH fHE
Utrl.E GREEN
PEA ....
---
Our Foreign Policy
Still Backs Loser8'
Medicine
Should Be
Was the Crisis Necessary?
WASHINGTON -J erry Ford, [ ]
what are you doing in that pie-VON HOFFMAN ture with an octogenarian
Spanish fascist, riding in an a nti-
<iue Rolls Royce accompanied by <1 •
:.i wing of museum-piece Horse· · you"!g adullh?od now resemble:.
G uards ? Polltical values aside, an .1.nternat1onal_ refuge for
they learned you better common polJ~1cal hack s dispatched l~
:;ense than that in Grand Rapids . Bruss~ls br home .g?vernments
Where did you d evelop s uch a who find at converuent to get
nose for s melling outJosers? The !hem out of the country. A nurs-
entire Jberian rng borne for has -beens.
peninsula is
c.iuaking with
revolt, revolu·
tion a nd re·
belli·on .
Portugal h as
~lread y over-
thrown its dic-
tat or .
Catalonia is in
a s tat e o-r
martial la w and insurrection, the
rest of Spain is close to blowing
.up and you 're traveling l o
Madrid to have a conference with
Prince Juan Carlos de Bourbon
about the future? Jer, in case
flank h<.1 s n 't told you , the
Bourbons don't have a future. All
they have is a past and you don't
want to be part of it. Where are
you going on your next trip?
.Rhodesia?
WHY DID HE go to Europe?
We 've been offered so many ex-
planations. Was it to sell guns?
Specifically t he F-16 fighter,
which the pa pers describe as
"the arms deal of the century."
'The NATO meetings did sm ack
of a convention of Saturday night
:;pgcial salesmen. Even so. if
America must earn her foreign
d aily bread by peddling muni-
tions, does our President h ave to
be the one with the sample case
mid order book?
We're also told that this was
the propitious time for yet
another hollow reaffirmation of
NATO. H ad the President gone
()Verseas with some proposals to
redesign it, that might have
made sen se . P erhaps that's
what's behind that official, not·
:for-attribution-exactly g u sh
ubout the Portuguese Trojan
Jlorse, if you can imagine an
animal of s uch strange mixed an -
cestry .
Not likely. Mt. Ford was sell·
ing the idea that Portugal may go
Communist and when it does the
Reds wiJI have access to NATO's
secrets. Maybe. Portugal will go
Red, but NATO does n't have an y
secrets. It doesn't even own guns
that shoot compatible a mmuni·
tion. The powerful military al-
liance formed in Mr. Ford's
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Re Ou.s June 10: Tuveling
70 mUet1 to Encinitos at the
legal 55 mph I saw the
HJgbway Patrol stop nine
cars, presumably for
spttding. Give credit due
to th ose wo nderful
.Highway P at rolmen.
M.P.
c;....., ... ~·"'· ............... .....,..,.,._._...rily....._.tlle ............ ,.,., ..... ,...,... ............... o.f.., ,..._
THE PRESS has also been
printing speculations that the
trip is part of the look-tough, feel-
tougb, be-tough campaign to ~on·
vi.nce the Russians and-or the
American electorate· that Mr.
Nixon's last appointee is a big,
busy President. In the back-
ground of his European voyage
he has his Secretary of Defense
blowing an obbligato about tac
nukes, while we are reminded
every 24 hours that his orderiog a
• bunch of people to an early and
promiscuous death in Cambodia
j s an unmis takable sign of
states manlike r esolve. In truth
all this noise has the small dog,
yappy sound of men who lack the
very qualities they insis t so
.stridently are theirs.
Amid the assurances of con··
stancy to international arrange-
ments arrived at a generation
ago, Mr. Ford returns again and
again to his anti-isolationist
theme. He talks about it so much,
one is encouraged to find out
what these horrible isolationists
were saying that haunt men of
the President's vintage.
He re are the words of one, the
historia n Charles A. Beurd, writ-
ten in 1935: "There will be an 'in·
cident,' <.1 ·provocation.' lnci·
dents and provocations arc of
~lmost d a ily occurrence. Any
government can quickly magnify
one of them into a 'just cause for
war."' ·
To Ford-Kissinger such talk is
inimical to the sane conduct of
foreign policy. Others m ay not
find it so irresponsible of the
isolationists to oppose presiden·
tially,made wars and to try and
stop them with ideas like the
Ludlow a nd Bricker Amend-
ments .
THE LUDLOW Amendment
would have required a national
r eferendum to put the United
Stales into a war. The Bricker
Amendment would, inter alia,
have forced Senate ratification of
executive agreements with
foreign countries, thus making it
more difficult for our President!>
to invent new wars on the basis Qf
.secret commitments.
The isolationists also took th~
Washingtonian injunction
against entangling alliances
more seriously tha n the men who
run our government do. That ii;
not to say they were really
·'isolationists." xenophobes who
thought we should have nothing
to do with foreigners. Many of
them f avored disarmament
agreements and other peaceful
treaty arrangements or a more
swcel)lng kind than anything con-
templated today, but what they
were not going to buy ls what one
of them called .. perpeUwl wor tor perpetual peace .•·
Jer, you climb back down out
oC that Rolls Royce, you get back
over here where you oolong, and
don't be forgetting you were
brought up to know a good Grund
Raptdl boy docsn 't play '1round
w1th Bourbons either In the bottJc
or on the tbrooe .
Reversed
The re latl\ e~· hl·w idea -in
this country . at lca!:>l of Hea lth
i'vtaintenancc Organizations.
makes a great deal of sense to
me. for one incontrovertible re-
;.ison: ther e 1s at pres ent no
meney in pre\'cntive medicine.
AJI the money in the medical pro-
fession comes
after people
get ill. By
then. it is ter-
r i b I y CX •
pensive to re·
c'ove r, and
som etimes 1t
1s too l ate .
These day s
c!:>pct·wlly. an
oun<.·e of pre-
' cntton cun be bctkr than a
thousanq pounds of cure.
In old t hina :l am reliably told,
they handled this matter much
more sensibly. You paid your
doctor as long as he kept you
well ; when you took ill, you
(SYDNEY HARRIS)
stopped paying him until you re·
covered. He was, in effect. being
rewarded for his part in preven·
Lion, and not in curing.
THIS IS the way a sensible and
rational Heal th M aintenancc
· Organization would work. The
patient. or fomily, would pay <.1
regular weekly or monthly fee
for checkups. advice. prescrip-
tions , and· r egim ens. Half or
more of the ailments in this coun-
try could be eradicated or con·
trolled if they were caug ht in
timl'. includin g many types of
t•an<:ers.
But most people don't go until
it 1s too late. For one thing, they
:.ire lazy. For another . they an:
fearful of lt'arning the worst. a
childish attitude that our present
system ~f public health educ<.1
tion dOl'S l1lllc to overcome.
Most 1mj>0rtantly, howevei-.
the presc~.s ystem -·or Jack of it
· 1s sim ly too expensive. A
good . all-·o und exam ination
would run at least $70, and should
be had al least twice a year.
IF WF. could C'ul our hospital
admissions by t!ven one-third
(whi C'h a sound program of pre·
\'l'nllvc medicine could surely
a ccomplis h ), th is would relieve
~in enormous burden from th(•
colle<'llv<.' !.hou ldcrs o f the
hospitals , lht' insuring 1:1gent~.
<.1nd the p:lt1cnts. Nol to mention
tomp1:1ny em1>loycrs, who beur u
largl' brunt today in the form of
fringe bt>nt>f1t s.
Our whole m<.'CJ1cal system is
topsy 1 un·y ll s hould cost us
mon• to stay healthy (which Is
worth itJ, und pructically nothing
when we l(et t;ick. 8ul, as thC'
medical profession ls organ lied
today, doctors gel nothing when
we are healthy Cor when we stay
eway fro m them, Ignoring our
!Symptoms until they get ucutc).
und then have to charge too much
when we finally do go for
emergency aClenlion.
All the allied medical pro·
fessions have tonK bleated about
the need for "prevention," but
they have done next to nolhi.ng to
make ll u practicable i·~allty.
When the government finally
doe s. th e y wl ll scren m
"soc1aus' ··
Appease~ent and Oil
·W A .S H I N G T 0 N
Congressional investigators have
gotten hold of so me explosive
·docume nts, which suggest that
the world oil c risis could have
been averted.
The d9clfments allege that
Fr a nee wanted to break the
oil-producing
cartel back in
December .
1973 . The
F r e n c h
believed that
the cons um-
ing countries
could ha ve
prevented the
disastrou s
price rise if
they had stood together. accord-
ing to the documents.
This completely contradicts the
popular impression that France.
more than any other nation. re-
fused to hold the line against the
oil increase and. ~hereby. pre-
cipitated the collapse of con-
sumer solidarity
BUT THE documents lay the
blame on Sccretal'y of State
Henry Kis singer. claiming he
favor& cooperation instead of
confrontation with the oil bloc .
Hi s pursuit of a M id<lle East set·
tlement, it is alleged. led him to
take a soft line with the Arabs on
oil.
.. He seemed to ... un-
derestimate economics and over-
estimate.the Middle East political
problem." s tales one confiden-
tial paper.
There is no dispute about what
happened thereafter. The 13 na-
tions, which control 85 percent of
the crude moving in international
commerce, quadrupled the price
of oil.
The consuming nation s
scr ambled to make separate de-
als with the oil potent.ates. Oi 1 that
"as produced in the Middle Ea,,;t
for 11 cevts a barrel suddenly
began selling for $11 a barn•l
Some frantic comparucs bid up
the price of oil as high as S23 a bar-
rel.
This gave the Western world the
greatest jolt sin ce World War II .
~re was a massive transfer of
th from the eonsuming coun·
lJie to the oil producers. The
world's financial system was
strained to the breaking point.
And the industrial nations were
plunged into an economic c1is1s .
NOW THE 0 fl, potentates. even
as they are wallowing in their new
We<Jllh, ure talking about raising
prices another $4 per barrel ln
Seviember. This continuing
economic assault upon the oil
importing n ations ha s caused
II r
~Y don't we ltlt thtl Are/>$
buy them, wait flv• y#rs
~ n11tJonM/n them}'
(JACK ANDERSON)
I
more damage than u militar~ at
tack.
Sen. Frank Church <D-Idaho1 u
power on the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee. is prepar
ing to challenge the C.S. policy of
placating the oil-exporting cou.n·
t1ies. He wants to know what the
United State~ has received in re-
turn for-arming Iran and Saudi
Arabia, the kingpins of the oil
<:a rte I.
The Shah has spearheaded the
d1i \'e for hig her and higher oil
prices. The Saudis. on the other
hand. have s hown more concern
about the economic damage thl·y
<1re inflicting upon the West.
are needed tf the consumer gov-
ernments are to have any effec-
th·t' ll'\'l'ra 1H· o,·l.•r t the oil
t«ll'tl'l 1 lf thee L S unilate1'ally
t•u ts off ;.1rms s h1µments and
other in~ustri<.11 J,!oods to lran. the
µossib1lit~· l'Xi:s b thal the f'l·ench
and oth<.•rs wou Id step in ;ind take
the bus111t•:.:. .
·· (But 1 the Frctwh care more
about hcadtng of.f another oil
price ris e tha n about selling
~ti r ages to the Shah ...
The reason the French Jeft Ule
otht:r oil-impot'ling .countries and
began negotiatrng their own oil
deals, ac·cord1n g to the docu.
ments. was because Kissinger
t1;<.•d todictatetcrms
.. Kissinger made it impossible
µolitkally for the French govern·
ment to coopcratl' with the U.S.on
Senator Church has ordered his
subcommittee to delve into the in·
t1icacies of oil diplomacy. He
believes the consuming coun-
tries. before they are left in
economic ruins, mus t ·take a
tough. united s t and against the
oil giants.
. the oil problem.'' st<1tes one do-
cument. ··Put diffen~ntly.· the
breakdown in U .S. · France rel a·
tions was not O\'er an um\illing·
ness to cooperate but over the
stru cture within w hich that
cooperation would take place."
llKHAS information, however~
that it is not the French. but Kiss-
inger. who still wants to appease ·
the oil cartel. As one confidential
document puts it, "Since 60 per-,
cent of the dollar value of raw
matenals exports moving in in·
'tcrnational trade today
01iginales from (the consuming!
countries, the French have taken
the position that the m ajor oil con·
sumers should not fear discussing
this s ubject with the oi l pro-
ducers ...
"Closer l .. S. · F1·ante relutions
A STATE Department spokes·
man disputed this . r\ny French •
offer of cooperation. he said,
"had no pract1c<.1 l significance.
When we tried to lie them down
to somethin g s pecific. they
would a lways refus e t o go
along.··
Kissinger·s first p1ionty in late
1973. the spokesman reminded us ,
was to keep the Middle East
.. from blowing up again." The
Secretary had to keep this objec·
live in mind in his cleaJjngs with
the oil product•rs. the s pokesman
said.
How to Beat Time
People who a re always rushed
and feel they cannot squeeze
t.'Very thing they want to do into a
few hours will find a powerful al·
ly in The Time Trap: How to Get
More Done in Less Time by R
Alec Mackenzie (McGraw-Hill
Paperbacks" $2.95).
Why do so m e individuals
m anage to· accomplish an im-
pressive amount of work each
day, and still find it possible to
contribute to their communities
and enjoy their private lives.
while others wake. up out of
breath . figuratively speaking,
and wind up harassed after chas-
ing an unremitting clock? The
former h ave long be e n
Mackenzie's models: .
.. For the past eight years, l 'v\.'
been s eeking them out ,•· he
writes. "I've encountered these
exceptional people a t ~eminars
and lectures· in ten countries. on
planes. in homes of friends."
THE RESULT: an inspiring,
s tlmulatlng a nalysis or
tlmewasUng and a no-nonsense
guide lo working one's wa.Y out of
the snare. Tlte Time Trap is
packed with practical, eaay.t,o.
apply tips and techniques for
overcoming the problem.'i of pro-
c:ra..Unation, inte.rruptlons1 de·
cislon·malcing, organJzation, artd
delegation of authority ..
The s uggestions in this useful
book will help business people,
managers, sccretarieis, teachers,
public ofitrlals -a ll those who
want to ovcrcoml' the daily stress
of time-pressure, a nd· ~tilt have
vaJ~atJJe Umc for whnt Uley real
( THE BOOKMA.N ]
l y con s i d c r i m port ant o l'
pleasant. ''
A lawyer and management '
consultant, H. Alec Mackenzie is
a West Point graduate and presi·
dent of his own management con·
sultant firm. He has held high
posts in numerous foundations
and professional associations
.ind h.as lectured extensively
throughout North America and.
Europe.
,
J O-ANN Di LORENZO
d°RANGE COAST , •.
DAILY PILOT
Rob,rt N. Weed.11ubli.~ht•r
Thomas Keeoll. F:rlitor
Barbara lfrcib1ch.
Edttonal Pag<' Editor
...
~ I • t , , , ....
I 11' t .. The editorial pugc of the O~ily ,1 Pilot seeks l o Inform and
sUm1:1late renders by J)rcscntlng oo this pa u diverse commentary ' •u on topics ol interl'~t by syndlcat• ~ .Jt:
C!d columnists :in<t cartoonftts, by • • 1J
provldinR a fO(,um for ~crs• 1 1. "
views and by presentlna this 1
newspaper's opinionll a1'd Jdeas 1•1 ..
on current topics. Th edltortal
opjnlon11 of tbc Dally Pilot appe•r 1 •w
only In the cdltorl3l column at the ' "''-'
top of the page. Opinions ex· "1•
pressed by the columl\ista and • 111
cartooni11ts and 1.-ttcr writers are 1 u
their own 3nd no endor~mcnt of , u.,,
lh<'lr views by the Ouily Pilot , •u
should be inferred. • •• , ..
Monda
0
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sevE
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ro_u_EE_N_IE ____ _.,;B:.!,y..:.P.:.:.hi~I ~ln~••::,rla:,:n:,:d~I 8 Comt _Mo_n_da_..y-'-. J'""u_n..;..e_t .;;..6 ...;f..;..9.;..;75;;.._ _______ 0::.:A~l.::.L Y.:....:..P::::IL~O:.:.T_U!...7.r.. ~ I
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··Send Ill an underling: ..
S(•l1ool Cl111119e
Year-round
Plan Studied
Capitol News Service
Sacramento The
traditional nine-month
school year evolved from
a search for a school
term that would win the
consensus of the nation's
rural areas and its cities.
The nine-month school
t erm is a compromise
between the rural areas
where farm work dictat-
ed that children :tltend
school only in the w:nter,
and the cities where the
·school year once lasted
11 months.
lack of available con-
structive activities is the
cause of increased van-
dalism and drug use."
These sociological re-
asons for the year -round
sc hoo l co n ce pt in -
variably outshadow the
economic reasons for the
year long school. Build-
ing utili za tion is
e nhanc ed and over·
crowding is relieved by
the 12-month school pro-
gram.
Gov. Brow11 l'ietv:
S~ms
Get Degree He Wants It Plain, Simp~~
Claremont College has
llstoo eight Orange Coast
is tud e nt as June
graduates :
Fountai n Volley-
Steven Anderson, the son
of Mrs. Norma Parrish,
15852 Norwic h Circle,
graduated cum laude in
economics-accounting
and Steve Raupp, the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Aloys P.
Raupp, 16538 Hemlock
Circle, economics; ·
Laguna Halls -Neil
Langberg, the son of Mr.
By DOUG WILLIS
Al" hlltlul Wrlwr
SUSANVILLE (AP) -
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.
tugged at the Indian
necklace around his neck
and smiled a s he
described how he fights
back again s t
bureaucrats.
"'I don't sign anything
I can't understand," the
37 -year -old Democrat
said as the twin-engine
Convair new over the
s now-ca pped Hi gh
Sierra.
an d Mr s . Samuel "I DON 'T want
Langberg, 3289-C San anything written in state
Amadeo. grad u a l ed government that isn'lin-
Summa Cum Laude with telligible. The govern-
departmental honors in ment belongs to the peo-
economics: pie. and if the people
Laguna Niguel-John can't und erstand it,
Reichert, the son of Mrs. forget it."
Josephine L. Dominick, This plane trip was on
24135 Windward Drive. what Brown ·called a
graduate Cum Laude weekend day off. But he
with d e partmenta l started in San Francisco,
honors in history: . gave a speech in Santa
Clara, pnd then flew to .Newport Beilch -·, Susanville for a bear
P..1cha1:d <;ramer. the son· dance and a state prison
of MaJone W. Cramer, tour. 1~77 Rutland Road, 1:e-Dressed in r~gged de-
c 1 ev e'd . a dc g ~ee. in nims and sporting the ln-econo~1cs·account.m g, dian necklace, he ap-
and Richa rd Longpre, peared at the front desk
the son C1f M1:s. Grace of the r e mot e s tate
Longpre, 23 ~-inda Isle, prison in eastern Lassen gra~uatcd with :.i dual County fo r a n im -ma~~r of e~onom1t·s and prom ptu tour of the
poht1cal sclC.'nC<.'. facility. S~n. ClcmcnLt• ;\l;ino lie f1 rl'd a dozen qucs-
"who write in unintelligi-"More and more or our
b l e l a n i u 8 g e s • ' • t h e resources are de v 0 t eel to r~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~r ed er al. government in trying to prop up failures
general and federa l in society ... By a
grants in particular. . peculiar reversal, it
Brown com plained gives the rewards to the
that government is in· very kinds of attitudes
terfering in the lives of and behavior patterns
individuals and business, that we're trying to
and he advocated decen-minimize."
tralization of govern-He said he is annoyed
mentpower. by federal bureaucrats
He talked at length -especially plC1nners
about welfare a nd other and bureaucrats whose
social service programs, r egulations intrude in
q u es Lion i n g the private industry and
philosophy behind them : local government.
"We have got to be .. They speak in the
compassionate. But you alphabet soup. Planning
can only take that so Car is just wheel·spinning. It
before you begin to i:e· proliferates options at
ward those c h arac-the hig hesl level of
teristics of your society abstraction such that no
that are not building it," one can perceive that
Brown said . very little.is being said."
THE SYMBOLS
OF SATISFACTION
HYPNOSIS
Lt•urn T() Ccmlrol Y ()Ur Huhilis
Lose Weight • Stop Smoking •Relieve
Insomnia • Gain Self -Confidence •
Re lieve T ension • I mprovc y our
Me mo1 ·y and Concentration.
July Seff Hypnosis
Oaues Now Being Formed.
San Clernente Hypnosis Center
655 Camino De Los Mares,· Suite 126
'\l,t1h .ti P1.-u1 \\ 1 ti,~'\ f1•ttn ~nt It roentt r.l·nu ->I ll·""l'llul •
PHONE493-3332
ltt\Yll ftt Ytt11r
8 SUITUCT ...
The lle-t\es of eon11119 uP .,,,,_ a t>•Q Clown
peymer.I.
8 DIVIDE •..
Less. ooi,i,n 10 1ncre1\e
WOflUnQ UOtlll
0 EQUALS .••
fne reeions wnt 'fCiU
•hOUIO le a $e 11\to
CONNElLEASE weyt
CONNELLEASE
2121H..t>or11¥d.
Co•t• Meso
st i\\illitt11•t • The economy may be down, but cheer
up. The smart money is investing in rooms
-living rooms. dining rooms, bedrooms,
conference rooms, board rooms and
reception rooms. Since you are spend-
ing more time at home and working 1 longer hours, put your money where
it does you the most good. In a room
where you can see it and enjoy it
. every day. Call us. We can do a lot
But now that s chool
enrollment is on the
decHne, ,the year-round
school concept is t>eing
kindled in a number of
schools in California.
Mamero, thl' son of Mr t10ns al officials toured
and M ~s · Ma no Ma tn<.'ro. for 25 minutes and left.
210 Cn stobal. ~n.1d~~lt'd Al u local annual bear
Cu.m Laude 111 poht1c~I dance celebration of the s~1ence . 11,t· '~a ~. rcr1· Muidu Indians, Brown
p1ent of tht V. 11liam H. stopped by-and was pre-
Alamshah A~::.ird fo~· stu· se nt e d with the
dentleadcrs h1p . Mainero multicolored bead serv~d as ~ludenl body necklace.
CALIFORNIA LEADS president this pu st year. 546-1200
-. ·-.,.....:•J.•. •,.,.-' with a million pennies.
~~~~· Lois Harding &Associate
thenationinthenumber So uth Lugun:.i DURING TUE Elay-
of schools where the KennethDn.•w.theson of long trip , Brown
year·t"ound concept is be-Mr. and Mrs. ~hr~·in W dl:'scribed his philosophy
ing put to practice. Drew. 32251 Stonint,,'1.on and goals in a wide-..
There are now 126 Road, ~radu:.itcd Cum rangingintcn·icw.
schools in 38 California Laude 1.n mathcm;.it1es-He was skeplit-ul of
ASID INTERIOR DESIGN
202 Newport Center Drive, Besign Plaza, Newport Beach / 640-6640
316 South Tustin Avenue. Orange I 558-2721
IN A REPORT on i11· school dis tri cts that accounting. planners and experts itiati n g year -round operate unde r somc .-------.:_ ________ _:=:_:.:.:..:~_:'..:..'...::~~::..::._:~___L~~~~~~~~~LJ_ ______ -=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~
school programs titled. form of the ye:.1r-round
."Year-Round Educ~tion plan. Sixty other dis-
Handb<>ok," recently is· tricts arc conte mplating
s u ed by Cal ifornia's the switc h from tne
Deoartment of Educa-· traditional school year.
lion, the nine-month
school term is viewed as By eliminating sum·
no longer an economical -mer vacation -a con-
ly or educationally feasi· siderable gap in formal
ble tenure. ·training between 'June
'"The c hangin g and September -
lifestyles of the post· sc hools can offer
World War II ttra ha ve youngsters an education
made it increasingly ap· much higher in quality.
parent that the tradi-''After the long summer
tiona l re:.1so ns for the vacation, s tudents and
nine-month school cal~n-teach ers mu s t s pe nd
dar no longer cxist, 1 valuable time in r eview
claims the r eport. "The because of the loss of
long three-month sum-learnin g during the three
mer vacation finds hosts months away from
of children and youth school." claimed the re·
jdle and bored. Often the port.
Newp~rt Girl
Scouts Lauded
By ELLIO'IT ALMOND
Of tM Dally l"llot Stall
It took them th1·ee
years of training but
they finally made it.
Eleven girls , all ninth
graders at Newport
Harbor High School, re-
ached a plateau in scout-
ing when they were re-
cently awarded First
Class. the highest honor
a girl can achieve in the
scout program.
The First Class symbol
is equivalent to the
Eagle Stout in Boy
Scouts.
After three years of
concentration and hard
work, Mrs. Blanchard
believes the girls do de-
serve recognition for
their recent awards.
TO BE ELIGIBLE for
First Class, the girls
choose the traditiopal
route of qua lificati()n.
This includes passing
four challenges and six
badges.
The c h a llenges in -
clude d social d epen-
dability, emergency pre-
paredness, a c tive
citizenship and outdoor
'THE GIRLS ARE s kills.
Mary Allen, Mary An·· "Our girls formed a
d r e w s , B e 1 i n d a petition lhal was passed
Blanchard, Cindy Dos-around Harbor High to
t a·I . D i a n c J-1 o s kin, request a trigger signal
L i n d a H u t c h i s o n , at 17th Street and Dover
Stephine Foreman , Driveforbicyc~es," Mr~.
Cathy Kendrick, Carolyn Blanchard sa1~. · 'T~1s
Leith, Barbie Moore and was part of their active
Diane Smith. citizenship challenge.
The girls s tarted in And the city council
1972 with 24 others in the passed the request too."
seventh grade at Ensign she added.
Junior High School. "We
started with more than BESIDES THE four
we. s hould have," scout challenges, the girls
le"-d er Mrs. Roger completed S'ix badges in
Bl.nchard said. Mrs. order to complete their
Bl~nchard has worked requirem ents.
with these girls for the Th e bad ges were
last three years in the earned in art, home,
caclette program of Girl citizenship, o utdoors,
Sc put T r o o p 1 2 2 3, health and safely and in-
.Ney;port Beach. temational understand·
"These girls have ing. Mrs. Blanchard said
completed eightyearsoC the challenges and
ac~ting " said the re-badees did not overlap
ce"Uy ;eured scouting learning experiences.
lea.,er. Instead, she said, they
~ut she quickly added complimented each
tha~ m<>1t plan to con· other.
un\fe. "The girls will be "I've been told that
entf!ring lbc senior scout slrls who partjclpate ln
pl'OlfOm. We have two the 1cout1n1 program
troops an the area." Mrs. are the ac.'tivc ones 1n Bl~nchard said the hlsh school because of
senfor scouts parUclpate their training,'! Mrs.
Jn outdoor activities such Blanchard 8ald. "I don't
u ullintt and communl· know yet, but l 'm wait-
t.Y service projects. lni to seo."
'
Gelling around . D~ange . County
gels ea-ier p~ Jl&ly 4th.
Riding the bus has never made more sense
than it does today.
Orange County Transit District will take you
more places in Orange County than ever
before. There are more buses -all modern,
comfortable and air conditioned. More bus
routes. Redesigned schedules. New services.
Everything is changed and improved.
The price, however, is still only 25<l=:
There are new ideas. Park-N-Ride Express J
has introduced a series of nine new commuter
routes to g et you to and from work in peace
and comfort. The cities of Orange and La Habra
offer door-to-door Dial-A-Ride motorcoach
r·---·---------------·--------------------------------··-. , • OP
I WANT TO GET THERE.
Please send me schedules and mformation on:
0 New routes serving my area: _______ _
0 Park·N·Ride Express commuter service.
0 General Orange County Transit Information.
Addres . ..._ ________ City _____ ZiP·----
(Mail th.19 coupon lo O;•no• County Transit Dunrlct, l200 NOfth Main Strll(lt. Sant• An .. Cahfomla 92703 ) ---------~---------·-----------------------------~---·--~
I \ . ..
service for·50<i:. Brea begins Dial-A-Ride soon
and ~ther Orange County cities will follow.
Chances are there've been changes made
in your own neighborhood. Right around
the corner from where you live or work .
Every day, riding the bus gets easier and
more en1oyable.
The time has come for you to g ive your bus
system a try. You may be surprised.
For information call:
547-3311
Toll free, call the
operator and ask fos:
ZENITH 7-3311
,,
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~ -;t_8 DAILY PILOT
ORANGE COUNTY
...
...
Monday.June 16. 1975
.Politieal Notes
Will Congress OK .
Hinshaw's Arrest?
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Of lll• O.lly PllOt sc.tH
lt may take upproval or the
U.S. House of Representatives
for Rep. Andrew llinshaw ( R-
Newport Beach) to be taken into
custody on an arrest warrant is-
sued by an Orange County judge.
lected against sjbpoena wlthout
approval of the House.
The parliamentarian said that
if Hins haw were ·arrested "it
would be in violation of the rules
of privilege of the House Qf
Representatives."
.Professor
Nagel Launched German Progran:i
~ • leaching al UCI Nagel degree of specialization, ~ 1967 the ll~xiblli-notes that economic con· but tbfs specialization •
ty of a ~ew institution · ditions are making ~-will become sterile it t
lured German literature roads in student purswt people lose the survey of •
professor Bert Nagel of,l,hehumanities. . the whole, ir they are so 4
from the oldest universi-In times of economtc specialized that they are ! t y in Germ 8 n y _ har<tshlp," he said, :'!Jle only a f\,lnction and no
Heidelberg -to one of study of t_he humanities longer ~ person ," he
the newest in the u .S. _ is often .mistakenly over-said. ' • 4
UC Irvine. looked m favor of more Nagel will be a visiting 4
He will retire .this direct solutions to the ·professor of Ger man t
month as proressor problems or u_nemploy-literature at UC San ~
emeritus. Als(> this m~ntandinflallon. Diego this rail and at UC t
That is the opinion of a House
parliamentarian who said that
members of Congress and their
records are constitutionally pro-
, Orange County Superior Court
Judge Walte r Smith issued the
warrant last Wednesday. It came
after Hinshaw failed to answer a
subpoena to appear in court in
connection with the pending trial
of James Bertolino, an employe
of the Orange County assessor's
office.
month Marianne Itis truethatmodem Riverside during the
0.111 ,. ... swtt,.,... Armstro~g or Santa Ana, ..,lif-:::::e=r=eq=ui=re=s=t=h=e=h=1=·g=h=e=s=t==WUl=· =t=e=r=. ======:;;;::;::-:z TO RETIRE · the first student to re-1
.Seal Beach Wins
Annexation Battle
~ANTAANA Seulll<'ach\\Oll
:i minor annt•l<LJlton battle with
Huntington Beach when the coun-
t y's Local A gt•ncy Formation
Aquatic P arl,c that Huntington
Beach opposed, as'did the county
harbors, beaches and parks de-
partment.
Bertolino, 52, was indicted on
charges that he worked on
Hinshaw's 1972 Congressional
campaign on countr tim e.
Hinshaw was head of the as-
sessor's offi ce until his election.
\ (' . d omm1ss1on grante ;.i J,400 acre
expans ion lo the no rthe rn
neighbor.
City officials argued that Hunt-
ington Beach is better able to
serve the p ark.for police and fire
protection, while the county said
a nqexation to Seal Beach means
an additional $3,500 a year in tax-
es ~hich will be passed on to the
park users.
The judge directed that the ar-
rest warrant, which carries bail
of $500. be held until June 26 to al-
low Hinshaw time to make a
voluntary appearance. • •••
The total annexation com-
pletes the physical growth of Seal
Beach, expanding it to all of the
border s considered within its
sphere of influence.
ASSEMBLYMAN Paul B.
Carpenter (D-Garden Grove)
has been appointed to the As-
sembly Education-Committee.
The annexation included 1,194
acres of the U.S. Naval Weaoons
Station, 103 acres of the former
Jiellman Ranch, and the county's
9()-acre Sunset Aquatic Park.
1t was lhe.anncxation of Sunset
Seal Beach had already an-
nexed a slim finger of territory
near the aquatic park, which was
why the LA FC considered Sunset
in the Seal Beach sphere of in-
fluence.
"My role on the committee will
be to a dvan ce progressive
legislation that is beneficial to
maintaining quality education
for o u r c hildre n ," sa id
Carpenter .
For The Record
Death Notice• Costa Me•d. Ca Oate ot death J""" ts.
19/S_ S11rv1Y<ec:t by hi• w1te M1Hj0tie ol
TILLOTSON Costa Me\a; two sons, Gary arld
HARRIET MILLER TILLOTSON. Stephen Pdddoc k ; two brothers,
re•1dent of C:>\ta Me '"· C.;te ot deollh Burnell of S•n Diego and Vate of
June 17. 197S Survived by her hu,band, Salina•, Ca.; two 9randth1tdren.
oooa ro 0001
SCHIOUUO
LIMOUSINE
SERVICE
TOOl .. Ow•
LOS .ANGELES
A"4TM
NEWPORT-LAGUNA
AHA "
~ I Q OO rY rYSOH
OHi 'WAT
Jam•' A. T1llol ~on, daughter, Serv1co w1llbe hetdTh11r~dayeven1nq '..---l~ ~· .... w
Virg11>1.t1ou Cole; three grandchildren; at 8:00 PM, B•tl Broadway Chapel. In· 1 ~----l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!j
213-459-1923
brotl\t'r, Clyde 0. Miller ~rv1te~ wlft termenl, S19nat Hill C"metuy, Lonq ,._
be l\elc:t Tue•day. J11ne II. 191S at tO·JO Beacn, Ca. Bell Broadway ~rtuary
AM. Peek F amity Colon1.il funer.;t d11ec1or•.
1-<ome, WHtmtn\ttr, Ct< tn 11~11 ot •
flower> tl'l(> family ~UllQ~m contrlbu· Dissnl11t ions 11on~ 10 The Anwr·1ctln C.dn(t:t ~1cty.
Orange County CnartN
LYMAN
ELLA. L. LYMAN, '""dl'nt ot
l •utdd1a. c." Oate ot death JVl>e tJ,
101; Surv·v~d by l\t'r \On F rN>erick A.
l~m•n ano o.,ugntrr. E; 11<1 L Fran·
C•\.C.O ~'"'cc~~ °"''ti be n<-ICJ dJ 1 00 PM T~.O.av. P.JC•f1c Vif'w Cna~t Inter
lt'l'nt. Pac1t1( View M<mortdl Pao ...
Newp0r1 l:le.:1c n, c... Pac 1llc; V1t:N
Mort11¥y c:tirec to"
LO<><t·ICtLLlY -Apr ), RobPn
A • ,;, ot • ount.:tin' va11ev. dnd
f ,,,, u. q j1 c.f An.Jt'\t't01.
l:IRUCIC JAMERSON Apr. S Wit l•~HI H• JH y JI v i Uut>nd F-dr>., or.d l 111J 1 C., 111 Jr JI ~t~ trnin-.1t r
r.1LL' I r.icc Aor. I. M1Cl).l•·I
J . .,w "II dnc.J ChL r )'I L~ora, 1d. 'b:>tn
.... 1 v.~ .. ,,, 1n< t· ,..
l:LIYt ~KIGHT - Apr, ;, RolV'rl
t THE
EARL'S
P\UMllHO, HIATIWG
Alll COHO.
Ser•ice Time Stwts At y_. ooor I 495-0401)
OOIT YOUISIV · HOU AT 21922 Co"'i"o Copistr-.. . ...
MEYERS '-
VVONNE L. MEYC.RS, rc\1dcnl of
#W~s1on V•e10. Ca. D.tte ot death J mne
13. IWS. Survived bY her hu\banc:t,
tic:rman e. Meyen; on• -· Eciw.d J. Meyer~; one daugl\ler, ~. Con\t.ance S. Dudley; a... gr~.
Bretl EuqeM Du4tey; mother. Mn ..
""4e Gray of To~kil. Kan'>d\; 1-
broth•'' and one \1\ll'r. funeral ~·••<ts Tue\day 3 30 PM, McCormick
Ll1911n• BPacn 01.tpf'I. McCorm.ck
L.aguna Beacn Mort11.iry OirectOl'S.
~ ~1::~ ~~~,l~;~a J <'<>n, :SJ, boln ol r-:::=====-========:.-1
MEYERS
V.IL">-ON·HOGATE -Apr, 8. Jimmy
L .• 3Y, and Penny Eurl~ne, JI, baen of "-C>O<l &eacn.
MOOK·SELLUZ -IN>y 18, ~ynard,
S'I, end Fl0t~nce M .. SO, both Of Hunt·
lnqton 8each.
PRITCHET T·BROADLICK -Ml>y
18, Gregory Lea. 26, ar><t Jennifer Jill,
29, both of san Juan Capistrano. MERRICK·GRAYSTON -Mav 19,
Albert L., 47, and Mary Lou, 37, both a. we,lmln\ll'r.
HARTRIM RUSSELL -May 19, Ron.lid W , •b. of F1c lton, and
GP0•9.:1nn, 28, ot Fountain Vall~y.
C,OOCH ROOKER M;iy 19, O.llr
SOMETHING
'1'0U SllOULD .KNOW ABOUT
CADILLAC:
Nabers Cadillac is
having its June Sale.
UCl'a Nagel ceive a PhD under a
-----------postgraduate program in
Coed Award ·
Mass I.uura C1.1tlin, of
719 12th Street, Hunt-
ington Beach , was r e-
cently gl'a duated from
Columbia University in
I'ew York City walh a
B.S. Degree in Dental
Hyg1enl'.
German put together. by
Nagel, will be awarded
her degree.
Nagel, a Laguna
Beach resident, received
the Grand Cross of Merit
of the German Federal
Republic in 1972 in re-
cognition or his contribu-
tion to German culture.
On lea vin active
NEED HELP?
Call
ALCOHOL HELPLINE
eave a lorelgn
allalr with the most
exeltlng-ear in the world.··
PIATXl/9
8 ~ ~.:~.SJ 0 aasa
.~ i\1: ALCDHDU$M couNcJL 01onng•&ourrtr Mission Viejo Imparts
______________________ ,,,\... Son Oteoo Fwy at Avery, Mission Viejo· 831-1 740 •~S-1700
~~::-.:·.~·, •:; F0~u~:::~~~o~l~c~~ ViclOrld Th e problem isn't just taking it off ..•
Oe:AVER·TRUMAN May 70, 't' t k' . ff . ht o· t I 't as low as $10.
Rooort Le .. ter. 28, and Ellldb~lh Allll, Nabers Codi"--I s a mg It 0 ng . 1e a one can Regular memberships are also
t • I
I
t '
LOUISE B MEVERS. Dateof elealh
Jun" 11, 1~7S .;t lh( age ot 8t. FOl'tner
re~•cH·nt ot Hunt1nqton Bt•cH.h, (d
.Pr~\o;ntty ,; "''oenf ot Lonq I>< a< h, C<l
Ser•1Ct'~ will t,e neto Tu•,Ody, Jun•· 1T
~m1ln-.1 MUrt1JJry ChJP•)I. ln~,.rmen1
w ill be pr1v,Jh. ~Orf ~CJ\f•Crttn\ Nd
t1ona1 CemetHy, S.in 01cgo, Cd
5m1th$' Mor lu.iry lltrcc to".
COTTLE
37, both ot We•lm1n•tcr. """-d ' 11 b I h WYLIE·BOYOSTUN -May 20, Ran-2600 Harbor B lvd., 0 It a ' ecause two peop e w 0 :,;~t"~~t~a~n<:t ocboran Ly""· 20• r,:::::::'::os:::•";:M;:e;:1;:•;:S4;:o;:.';:1;:00=:::::~: weigh the same can look so different.
find that, whi le you 'r~ overweight here,
you're underdeveloped th ere. And we
have compl et~, balanced diet and
exercise programs design ed to help
you sli m down and shape up. Plu s
steam, sun and sauna. Programs to
change· the way you look, fe.eJ , and
live. Five different programs starting
available at low cost. Lower on your C
first visit. ' ALLEN 0. COTTLE. JR. r"idenl ot
Co.ia ~w. Ca. Dato; of deatn Jun(' 13,
19'i. S11rv1ved by his wife IS•l>elle; i.on,
Cir. Allen 0 . Cottle of Newport Beach,
t wo Drotner\, Norman E. Gome of
Burbank and Bertrand H. Collleof Sdn·
t a Ana; $1$ter. Cecil F. N10eY<er; foor
9randclllldrtn. Services will be held
V\oedne...,o. June 18 at 3 00 PM, Pac1t1t
Vil'w 0>.tf)"I. tn1erment, PfClhc Vie"'
~mori.;I Park, Newport Btkn, (a
Pacific V1tw Mortuary d•rectOl'S.
McDONOUGH
BRIAN c McDONOUGH, resic»nl of
La9una Be<l<h, C.i Dille ot Oeath June
H t91S. Survived bY his Pdfenls. Mr &
Mr<,. Ll'e Mc Oonoug" ot Laguna
6utcn. brother ot 1<.11 and Molli"
McOonougn, Mrs Anne H•rt1og dnd
'"'' Bein 5m11n RO\My T11<'°'1Y 7 JO PM Ma"weone doY 10 OOAM,botlldl
St. CatMrine of S1end Catholic Cn11rch,
L.ag11n• Beacn. McCormick Ldg..na
Bt-iK n Ntor ludr y dtrt•c tOr\
SANTACRUZ
MICHAEL H SANTA CRUZ, re"·
~nl ol Cosld MP\d, Cd Date ot de.1111
June u , 197S SuN•YNI by his w1I• Jiln
n•tt. $On, Mit h.ii<! ot Or.tnQe, Cot .
1nr~t brotne", D<1n1•I ot Ark<ln\ds,
Artnur ot Co\ld Mr •.i ,\nd Carl Cnecos
uf Co!\1a M t'\ll oru• ''"' r* Conn1t.-Jordon of Cosla Me\.t llo,,.ry ~rwJay
r v~n1n9 nt 8 00 PM, 01'11 6rOdlJWcW
C""P!'I, Md\S Tuf'SdJ Y 10 00 AM, St.
Jo•cn1m Church. I ntt"rment Holy
Seputcl'lt'r Cem1 tt ry. In lll•u ot tlowrrs
Oonf\t•Ort"' fT'htY tJ•• Mdd' to Th• Orf>nQt
(011•11• '""" r r und IJctl [Jrod<lwdy
HOrludr'f chn < ttJr
PAODOCI(
R O'>S A PA CJ DOCK' ,. \ldtnl ot
Suit Lost
By Williams
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Ralph Williams,
whose folksy television
commercials a nd talk
show appearances made
the us ed car d ealer
famous, has Jost his $1.5
million m alpractice suit
GLASS
HOBBYIST
.ct
lllDftllf ochrtrt
,,.,. ..... _ .. .._ .. o.
-·~ ...... o, ..... =·=· ::::·..r·l~ .......... -........ ~IUJ-Sl.t .. ·-.................. ... IJMHI
aga in s t his form e r S~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~ lawyer. I.
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT'
The following persons are doing busi·
ness "'' Btt<E BARN, 4010 East Cnapman,
Orang••, CA.
l:.dw.ird Boq.irt. ?21>91 C.t'nova,
l.agund Holts, C;, qJb~l
Margaret l:lOQdrt , 12691 GI-nova,
L..1911na Holl\, CA. 91bS3
J• rry E. Jones, t370S S--mora, Ce<
rito\, (_A
~rL A
\rcmon·s
SPORTSWEAR
'M~IUIFF Pl.ALA '8Al60AISlAI'()
Newport Beotl\ 216 Mo!mt Ave
549.,121 675 1904 -======-==:::a:::====::;I MKna.-1 t<. Jonet, 13205 Semorct, r C~rrilOlo, CA.
ULTI-IERGHOH
FUNERAL HOME
Corona dPI MJt 73-9450
646-2424
IEUHOAOWAY
MORTUARY
1 1 O Broadway. Costa
MrsJ
6 42-9 150
McCORMICK
MOdUAIY
l aquna Beach
494·941 !:>
San Juan Capistrano
4951176
rACIFIC VIEW
MEMOalAl PARIC
~melery Mortuar,.
Chapel
3500 Pac1 f1c View Dflve
Newoort Beach,
Ca1tforn1a
644-2700
PIH'AMllY
COl.O .. IAL AIMH.Al
HOid
780 1 Bolsa Ave
Westminster·
893-3525
SMITHS' MOaTU1-IY
621 Main SI.
Huf\lington Beach
636-8539
Tri!\ bu~1ne~s rs conducted by ii µ~~~~~~~~~~~ gener41I partnf'r~h1p.
MdrQ<Jret Bogarl
Th·~ \lat"rn~nl W c:l\ h l.-d w1lh 11\r
County Clerk of Orange Counly on Jun(>
•. t9n.
F444Sl Publi~hed Oren~ Coa\t Daily Plfol,
June 9, 16, 21. 30, 197S 1119 n
fl\ fA RAIBln
~-iNSu°RA°Nce
~r1'14H-'-lee~
'r COSTA MESA .~II ~ 549.5554 Lm;
June
Cadillac
Sale
Nabers Cadillac
2600 Har bor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa 540·9100
The Couture Chiropractic Office ..,........
Free Leet.. & T •1ff119
Dr. G_., c ....... D.C.. c.rtfflelll .Ac .. •clwfsl
A d.•0111trcrtfott of _...... ,....../,..tel• ... •ciw• tut for~· -.d otMr
dlcJntlH OIT ..trfffohal ... INH.
: =~'~':'.·.IC ... •ly.; d••
.......
• W""lttt&.eu ..................
TUESDAY, JUNE I 7th, 7:30 P-M.
200 Wetklff Dr., He~ leiech
c-... ,.. ........ __ ~ 645-5 300 . , ____ ,_ .. _..... ......
Th e answer is sh~ping it up while
you 're taking it off. And th~ right place
to do it is with us. TajJ< to our
conditioning experts. You'll probably
...... ~
51 O South Beach Boulevard
South of Lincoln Avenue
(714) 82~81
C..t. .....
2300 Harbor Boulevard
Harbor Center
(714) 549-3368 ........
17031 Ventura Boulevard
West of Balboa
(213) 98M330.
...................
18586 Main Street
Main St. at Beach BIVd.
(714) &42-1461
Leftt ...... 4101 Atlanllc Boulevard
Corner or Carton
(213) •2MS74
~-
822 Eat K1tell1 ~nue
West of Tuttln Alie.
(71•) 830-24• 1
...........
6757 W.Stmln1ter ~~
Weatml01ter Center
(714) 89'4-3387
Call us. Changing the shape of your S
body can change the shape of your life. I
And the shape of tomor1ow •
starts today. .. l
; • • •
• I
J
•
I
t; I •
(
f .
• "
..
•
..
ltlll NIM,
CNMLI&
1NtOWN!
'
'•
..
STEP ON MIM!
00 AN¥THING!!
ttlt MIM 111111,.
•WfPAM.
UIEL1 SUfSCRJSE 1Q ONE !f!! · ~
AND
J 642·4321
.FORHOME I Y
• •
d • • _ ....
r-
•
..
\
•-r
•
:'a J V Ul\IL Y PILOT
~lit
' 1 . -'
up
•
Every morning, daily interest is added to
.every Los Angeles .Federal Sav·ings Account.
Passbook Savings -Certificates of Deposit -·
Investment Certificates
All at highest rates
J
Energy Sav er? 0.11, l'llot ,..... 11rr '"•"'<• O'o.-n LOS ANGELES Savings insured to
$40,000
The rig that Mrs. Diane Pattison of Costa
Mesa uses to· bauI her three sons around
doesn't use any gas and doesn't pollute
the atmosphere, but it does take a lot of
energy -mom's. But wh~n it comes to
transporting Morgan, 10 months; David,·
3, and Bruce, 4, Mrs. Pattison doesn't
mind at a ll.
Trustees Mull Funding
Sactdleback College trustees
will be briefed Monday night on
new legis latfon which could re-
duce state s upport of the college
by $79,500 next year.
The s p ecia l sess ion is
scheduled for 7 : 30 p .m . in the col-
lege library.
As presently written, the stale
bud~~ill would Jim.it state ap-
proJ>riations for enrollment
growth at community coll eges
from three to fi ve percent.
For Saddleback College which
has forecast a g rowth of 16.5 per-
cent next year, this could mean
withdrawal of state funding for
about 1,200 students.
business man-.ger, estimated
this W1>uld add about one-half
cent to the district's projected
94-cent tax rate.
Barletta explained that state
support for each Saddleback stu-
d e nt cons is ts of $125, con-
siderably less than the $600 per
stude nt state subvention for
Orange Coast and Goraen West
college students.
He said state aid represents on-
ly a smalJ portion of the Sl,500
budgeted for each student but
that college officials s ill aren't
happy about plans to curtail state
allocations.
Barletta pointed out that some
New El Toro
School to Be
However, a compromise move
by the Assembly Ways a nd
Means Committee would allow
the college to make up the dif-
ference between the state ap-
p r op ri a ti on s and actual
enrollment to be collected from
the taxpayers.
Boy Barletta, the district's 'NaTri,ed SerratW
I I Serrano Intermediate School
has been selected as the name for ·
the new junioi:-high scheduled to
open next winter in El Toro.
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District tr ustees selected
the name from three suggested ., J .•. : .. '\. ·! <,. ... ' ...
efforts had been made · to
persuade legislators to change
their minds but that the board o(
trustees had not yet formally op.
posed the measure.
''We are not as badly off as the
Coast Community CoUege Dis-
trict or any other school district
which r eceives a substantial
amount of its income from state
sources," Barletta explained:
''We ar e considered a wealthy
district in terms of our assessed
valuation. We have a large tax
base. Our s upport for. ADA
(average daily attendance) is not
that great and therefore the im-
pact would not be that great."
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Safe deposit boxes
and the most wanted
savings services
Newport Beach Office
3201 Newport Blvd. • 675-4500 (Across from City Hall)
Head Office Downtown: Los Angeles Federal Savings
and Loan Association One Wilshire, Los Angeles 90017
Other offices throughout the area
10 IGHI
8:30 P.M. e CHANNEL 11
See
MAHARISHI · MAHESH YOGI
on .. ·· \:·{ ~~
l I .. ; • I i . .
by Ray Garubo, new principal
for the facility. and a committee
of t eachers, parents and stu-
dents .
. The winning name was that of
a Spanish grandee who owned a
land gra nt in the days when
Spain ruled California.
THE ffiERV GRIFFI~ SHOW
~2\' \'0'~;
~ .,,..,-
.'
..
Saddle back
Hires 2 Neiv
College Aides
The reject ed choices included
Vista del Lago (Lake View) and
Rancho Lindo (Beautiful Ranch)
Intermediate School.
All three reflect the district's
pattern of us ing the area's
Spanish-Mexican he ritage in
naming schools.
The name Serr ano reflects the
historical significance of the geo-
graphical area of the site at the
corn~r or Jeronimo Road and
Canada Roud.
Don J ose Serrano's Spanish
. land grant extended over the
land now known as Lake Forest
and El Toro.
Wate r Rates
.Going Up • Trustees or the Saddlebaek
Community College Dis trict
have added a financial aid offi cer
and a public information assis-For VieJ· o? Lant to the college staff but dc-
1 ayed action on the hiring of a n
athletic therapist-trainer. Water rates are expected to go
The aid officer will coordinate up soon in the Santa Margarita
finan"Cial assistance to students Water District, which serves
a nd keep track of federal, state, part of Mission Viejo and Coto de
and local aid payments. The posi-' Caza. Afso appearing.
)
c
I.Jon carries a salary range of S828 Distric:t Genera l Manager f im
to Sl ,054 depending on qualifica-Smith said he will ask directors
lions a nd experience. Tuesday to authorize a rate study
Ellen Corby (Grandma Walton). State Senator Arlen Gregorio, ·
and psychiatrist Or. Harold Bloomfield who all practice the
..
The public information assis-and to set a public healing in Ju-
tant will help information officer ly on the probable rate hike.
Dan Armstrong with t he col-.. The rates will-go up." Smith
Jege's community relations pro-said, "we JUSt don't know how
gram. Proposed salary for the much.··
position ranges from $769 to $981. He said a 30 percent increase in
Trustees are expected to take the cost of power and a charge in-
action on the third position at a crease of about $10 per acre Coot
s pecial meeting scheduled fof or water as s up plied by the
7:30 p.m. Monday. Metropolitan Water Dlstrict is
Board members balked at ap-prompting the rate study.
proving the pos ition last Monday "We are not sure bow the in-
night because the job description crease charge would be collect-
made reference only to the treat-ed." Smith said. "U we don't in·
ment or athletes for injuries. c rease the m inimum charge
At the suggestion of board (which is now · four dollars per
Chairman Robert Bartholomew, • month) it would go on .as a user
the trainer -therapist's duties wiJl charge, apread out among all the
include the treatment ot all stu-·people who are using water."
dents who might require whlrpool The public is invited to the
baths and other therapeutl~ .,c. w a t e r b o a r d m c et I n gs . medi'5 Tuesday's is set for 2 p.01. at the
The salary of the trainer-Santa Margarita of~ce, 25S'T1
therapist would ranl{e from $869 Marguerite Parkway, Mliaion
!<> $1,108 ~r month. Viejo (Plaza Viejo).
,
•
Transcendental . Meditation T ... TeChnique i
FREE INTRODUCTORY LECTURES -8 P.M.1
NEWPORT BEACH Tues., June 17 =::1:·~~~~~y
HUNTINGTON BEACH .
LAGUNA BEACH
Thurs., June 19 :::w~~M•TOM -·a IJaWettaT._.
\
Mon., June 23 LA9UMA MOULTON
PlAYHOUSl -
606111• 1C...-M
FOR MORE INFORMATION
CALL 17141 642-4741 or 17141 499-2739·
)
4 J
,~( I
(\
11·.
l
I ~·
i J
Tonight's
TV Highlights
KHJ (9) -44Don't Go Near the
Water." Glenn Ford stars in this wacky comed~ about the peacetime Nllvy over-
seas1 with Gia Scala, Anne Francis Fred
Clark and a hilarious cameo by Mickey Sha~l{nessy. .. • \
KCET (28) 9: 00 -Levi and the Law. Attom~y General F.dward H. Levi is
questioned by law students at
Georgetown University about con-
troversialissues oftheday. '
CBS (2) 10:00 -On th~Road With
Charles Kuralt. Amerrca's "m~
streets/' country roads and unbea•
paths provide the backdrop for this series of specials.
• J.
. .•
\
,
. TV DAILY LOG ...
~ ,· .~---------------------------~ Monday
Evening
COIWlnced that IM illd Mallde
should sen IM !louse and the ap.
pll1nce store and rnove to lilt Ct·
nadian wilduneu.
(j)TlltU~ u CD m S.W.A.T. "Hit Men~ (R)
• A hospital btcomes a battlearound
u Hondo ind his tum attempt to lhwart a second asussinalion
•llempt on a mobser scheduled to
tntily btlOlt 1 Se~lt eo111mittee.
Rolltrt Louil and Jess Walton cu est.
&HM leW CIMs -
fl\Hlm!m &.tori l tM la "A ~uy 'Krtb lht Attorney Gt11e111"
Lew studtllts at Geottm.a Unim •
Illy question AttOIMY Ge11er1I Ed·
w1rd H. Levi 1bout controvtrsill is·
sues, MICll u cun conl!ol, the de1lh
1Nnal1y, 111d covemment suMU·
lance ol citizens.
eJllllJAcrMecidt
t :JO U @CJ.) Cl) RWa (11) Distract·
td by Yislton wllo ~ lfttenuptlnr
her WOik at home. Rhoda opeM an
office and soon !tams about the
problems faced by 1 woman launch·
in• 1 busintSS ol htr own. e...,,
El'.) Wu~UlctH Sltlicht T1lk mu Tierr•
\
10:00.0 @(j)~ CIS Ntn Special ''On tht Road Witll Charles Kuralt"
A ~ecord of C8S News Correspon·
dent Charles Kuralt's odyssey 11on1
America's "Mein Streets," countsy
roads and ullbutew P1lhs in surdl
of the 111dclrint nlua, practices
and tNradlr ot Ille ,.oplt.
•
' t
DQUf)News
@ ""1 ...
0 CJ) Q) Car I h .. flowen of
Duth" (lij Ben and Mali tsace
tht JOUrce of • 11111ltilllllio1Hlolltr
opium opeutioft to n *1i¥t 11111-
lalld cut. Gi-~ .,.,_
Carr and Jules McMalllll cuest. mw s.art
911 ... 11 Aats m ni... ii Allerlcl "Tht Con·
trKtor" Dold StoH(a play co11-
cernin1 1 1roup ot British wort·
men, ptfformed by the Chelst1
Theater Canter in Brooklyn.
10:30 D M Fllrillt'• SIN• ROOM mm...,,
QI AllT'4 Hitdack
11:00a rn umm,....
B (J) fil 0 Cl)....,
1:000 !lZ) @(j)Cu1111k1 "The hit et lliW* Squ1w~ (A) Fleeinc frOl'll his lt) SCl 1ao
doublecossed pert11trs and M11· D Tiie LllCJ Sllow ..
llltl OMloll outlt'# Grl$ty Callloun QI MlssiM: l•peniflle
(flltst Joh~ Suon) finds tlltt his &> MM 54-.M
SUMYll Ill tilt badlands deptlltll (11) (i} ,..., ... on an l11dlta 1101111n. · ~ fii u ..... ..._ o tlJ Cl> di m • ....., 1ra Ci)> w.ntilN ~ ,.,. fllrM leMNll Tums to IM 1n· ..,,.,., Cont'd ·
~· (C) (~ "Of 'lM & 11:30 U IHHJ) Cl) CIS l* liltwle:
(dfl) '63 -lilffll Obtlttl, ~ 1:, ~;-':e -::Wr!'
Clirt Jurrens, John · Alt<, Stm Geo1ci1n1 Coo-!OIJJ Merrill. •
Cochran. o 9 Cl) a ID ..._., eane. w~~,...watMlts "Jud1· ktrylewis lS pat. !lost .. Anne
l!lenr' (R) Aller tlnmtina lht Mu11 and Tiit Poillttf Sistus
1ttt111pled Ueculloft of I PfOlllffMnt ·~ • f Judi•. Tt11Y Mc:omtt 1111 tar,.l IOI (t) MM: ......, It MWllic~t"
111urder by 1 wn111nce·setkln1 ( ~42 hll LQosi
I b1othtr·•lld·sist11 t1111 plott)n1 to 0su$1 wW. WtrW ...;.._ "K is
I t•k• lh• tivu of 1n wllo Wtll re· . -1-· I --•"I I t•· lm"'isonment of tor lhnt' (") Glyle Hunnicutt l ,...,.._ • or "" ,.. stars.
t ...._, Tlll'I FrWIJ (mys) 42 -J11111t Meson, Joyce
, s-.t flM Meik.t How11d, Miry Clare.
6 lth•io:~~ Chtb 0 M~: "flle Ntcht Has £.ra"
, Mtwll: (C) (!lw) .,._nltct It.II-lZ.'tcl 8 Mtwit: "LIM It ti the ,M•· a:. lln se,lt" (com) '64 -Sophll ;Ms" (com) · 'Sl -Sid Melton, I Loren, lhrcello Mutrolannl. Mal'I Lynn. 'fJD I IPICfL~ M'"'1 et 1.-. GI Del111I w •1.ttijtn t rubllc lntel'lsf' A G) 111t S1111rt •
1 docu1TM1nt1ry on the costs of lttJI
' 1'1'Vic41 In th• U.S. Ind wm to 12:30 II, ... ftr ....
i :::· cllt•ptr ,,,., &eMct avail-l:OI Bal,...,,..
(QI.())> ltllenfltW 0,,... '-'· (])Cl) u (j)...,,
i .,., Continues to· lAM. 1~1 ~ IMll: (C) "WIJ tf A Chdle"
t u. ~ r1) ·sz -Rldllrd Boone, G111e • ....... ~ ,,..,... ilmey, ltoiy Ctlhoua. a:' .. ...,., lrtfrll..., J• 11....-: ~" (dr1) '47-e @rn(I).,.. ~ Witter ROkrt YOlln&. ltoMtt 11)111, Robl<ft
returns liOmt lrom • llalliq trip Ml"""'"·
Tuesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
e...,.. bll9f" (dra) '31 -
~ Niwtll, Metlt OMl9ll, lrilll
Alltrnt. (I)""' ......... (CIOM) 'U -
0.111 Andrews, Lll11 Pahatr.
• '1lll .............. (•dv) '54
-Jt1Me MtMll, Clalrt llootll, HM· ... ,. Mttt.
l .................. (llM) l5J -Tommy SIMI•, Hu.nt11 Han·
Cid. 8 (C) .,.,._ Tltll II Miii"
(dfl) '65 -Jack '•Ilia. Y'f0n11t
. f11rnu111.
1.'IOlll (C) .......... (dra) '67-Rob-
ert ~. Jill $t. Jollll. 9 w (C) '1lll CellN" (d11) .. n -1t1c11tr11 ~ t:11ar1es BoJtr. uum a..1, Glorie Cra·
f11111, Jollll Jeetr.
1:J1 (J) (C) ..... .._ • lM" (dra) , •'51 -Jeff Clletldllr, [allier WH·
Iiams. II (Cl '1lll ._. tf Me Yet"
lliYl 7l -Oou1 ~rt. Darren
M«lm11, lllcbr11 ltatllart.
4:00 t '111t Utt n.. I IN Ardllt" com) ·51 -Robert Mitchum. Jack
tbb, Don IC1101ta.
ting' Producers
Ian 'T&P' FilDJ
LO~ ANGELES CAP) -Althou1h tMlr mar·
ae ls asunder M1chael and' Julia Phlllf Pl will re· te to produce' another ftlm, "Taxl Driver," star·
Robert DeNlro and Cybill SMpberd. · ·
e Philltp1e1 won Olean f6r produdna <with
'I Bill) "The SUn1," belt pl ct UR' of 1973. The
ple have 1lnce separated.. The new flhn will be
ctcd by Martin Scors ... (•8an1tbe Drvm Slow·
•Alice Doean 'l Uve Here Anymore">. .
OcNiro winner of the best supporting-actor o1car this year for "The Godfather," will play a
taxl driver who becomes \nvolved with a political
e1mpalgn worker, Mlas Shcpbel'd ..
Mpnday, June 1 e. 1975 DAIL y PILOT 11 ~-~-~~~-------~-------·~----~~ ~HE~MYR~-B~~a~.M~ 9. THERE f SAID IT -Margo Smllb, 20U\ Ccn-
Tops in Pops
..
By tbe Auoelated Prea
The followina are BtUboard'a hot record hits for
the week ending June 21, as they appear in next
week's issue of Billboard magadne.
•· HOTSINGLES
1. LOVE WILL KEEP US TOGETHER -The
Captain & Tentne, A&M ·
2. WHEN WILL I BE LOVED -Linda
Ronstadt, Capitol ·
3. WILDFIRE -Michael Murphy, Columbia
4. I'M DOWN,·GETOOWNOetOnThe F1oor -
5. LOVE WON'T LET ME WAIT -Major
Harris, Atlantic
6. SISTER GOLDEN HAIR -~merica,
Warner Bros.
7. THE HUSTLE -Van McCoy & The Soul City
Symphony Avco
8. GET DOWN, GET DOWN Get On The Floor-
Joe Simon, Polydor . .
9. LISTEN TO WHATTHE MAN SAlD-Paul
McCartney " Wings, Apple
Th8fTrial
Billy Jack
THIS ,.OCHAM OH\. Y
ALL SEA TS-t9' .__.,,_.. ... °""'
.... U.f,-SUM.-6.0t a t:IS
l;J•t:J•tt••• c-.--• ''IRUKOUT"
J:JS.7'1S
FOUNTAIN VAL.LEV•
••••• .... •a11~•til ~1G•\OD
I .... II<•_....,.. 0.olt .. INID THAT TWE f()flG()f' ._,..c._..._ ... ~
1.10.1:1~40
CHARLES B NSON.~,: _ IREAKDtW,~. ,~ .
hlH:tMU -)~~ ... ~ ..........
"POSSE" nM""-••H TIE~,tH
C.EN EAIH CIN EMA CORPORATION
.JAMES GAAM Ill
"ROWRBAll" w.....,,.., 2.1 ........
Edw .. ....,.,.
Newport leec"
PAUl MIWMAM llt
''M DROWNING POO." w.....,,.,..21
H.tlorTwllt ...-. .. w ....
S BRONSON
t ... BREAKaur
2-1 .. "WH'f"' • "W.W.&fteDIU.0-II,.
1"41t ''C..,,..".
THIOOHSAMI
llLARIOUS.
.14CI LIMMOM (PG} ANNI IAMCROn
"THE WIHD
AHD THE LIOH"
w.-..,,-.25 a....c....,
H.._. .. Ad•s
ECIHIMA CEMTH
~·"'""~ ..a.A ... ~
97'·4141
IAlllA STHISAHD
JAMES CAAH
-.uNMY LADY" IPGJ
.. lllUmMC»
THI PINK PAKn&'" ....
11TOMMY11
'°GODFA Tt8-PAD II"' J I J ·
& 'SHAH'S TliASUH'" IPGJ
"'W.W:>& THI
DIXll DAHCEIUHCiS" IPG>
"IMP'UOI OF THE MOtlTH"
"IJGll SANCTION" llJ
& "RO~ PAGE'" IPGJ
"FUNNY LADY11
W ... ld9i/. Jw 25
HtwporltC.... ... ..,.,.. ....
G...Hec-.i.·
"FRENCH CONNECTION II" w.-..., . .s..2s
lritfolC..._
lrisW .. Mec:Arllilr
COllft • I "1 r1•1!*9tAL WC:QIUt
kwwi-d
"EARTHQUAKE"
W.-..Y.J.•25 c.._w .. t
WcA I ltwwl6 .... W..t
.tt.llll4 CllRISnrs
"MIJRDlR O~ Tiii
ORll~T llfRlii ••
,NcJiMlcw--' w ...... 1Httyt.
"FORTUNE"
w..._,,..,2 ..... ,.
..w .. A._
WALT ·DISNEY 'S
"BAMBI" w ... ..,,.,..1s
c-..c ..... ..w ......
so .11 02
ll'GI \-~'
I
AMD ~MAl'flN~, ~ /~.~·~
;r..r. rlTll O'fOOLl lHE LION IN WINTER . UTHlllMI HENUIH
T Y CURTIS
'LEPlf
THE KING Of MURDER, INC.
PWS "Pam" ---··---
44-0760
.\UO Mlftft SMOW ..... ..__...,_
--NIPM-tt'
Wll~C-.U __ ... .._.. ·-· '-------~
£CHMAWlST __ ., __ , --nf..449)
c..-.ACll4TH
.......otahta:oS
tOll•-ClllOI
979-4141
"" JoM W.yw ,.IUNNIGAM'' .
LU.ry •
10. TOUCH THE HAND -Conway Twitty,
MCA '
EA.SY USTENING
l . MIDNIGHT BLUE -Melissa Manchester, Ari$ta •
2. WILDF(RE -Michael Murphy, Epic
3. WHEN WILL I BE LOVED -Linda RoMtadt, Capitol
4. OLD DAYS -Cbicago, Columbia
• 5. SISTER GOLDEN HAIR -Arflerica.
Warner Uros. ~THEWAYWEWERE~RYTOREMEMBER
-Gladys Knight & The Pips, Budd ah
7. EVERYTIME YOU TOUCH ME I Get Hlgb
-Charlie Rich, Epic
8. LIZZIE & THE RAlNMAN -Tanya Tucker.
MCA
9. THE LAST PICASSO -Neil Diamond. Columbia
10. LOVE WlLLKEEPUSTOGETHER -Cap-
t.ain &Tennille, A&M
"THE LAND TIME
FORGOT" #
"TERROR IN THE
WAX MUSEUM"
6:45-10:45 SAT./SUN. 2:45-6:45-10:45
Jwat._r s. .. ~
"Mrmnttm"·
7·9: 15 Sat /S.11-2:30-4:4S.7:00-9: IS
FREE PARKING
..EMMANUELLE' lXI
9:00 s.t/S.. 2:00.5:30-9:00
"COMFfSSIOHS OF A WIMDOW ClUHER"
7:.20-1 O:lO S.t/S-3:45-7:20-10:30
HEY!-IT'S
SURFtNG TIME
AGAIN!
START THE SEASON
TODAY! SEE ••••
"TALES
FROM
THE TUBE"
"THI SUPll YIXIHS"
"YlllMS" lxt
A "SHAH'S TltEASUH'· ~ · "WISTWOltLD" IPG>
~ 11VUFr1 930pm.
Sat ts..n/HOI 12 30
MOn. ttw\I Fn 10 7 P "' -ti H
•
"'1MI PASSIM•H" Ill
..,AT cm• cat
"'SUP8 m .. s .. ext
'"¥1194S"CXt
'
-NCftl!lll .-o.t•"""' ,.tOl,. Q)' JO SAT-fl 1 JO UID .. _.., 6-1116" 11XI700 --·--SHAMPOO ..
""' • aAc:a lllCMOl -
LAST DITAfl 1111 (6 Ill
ADVISES In tlN
DAILY PILOT
. .
•' I:! DAIL y PILOT Monday,.June 18, 1915
Dy Bil Keane
.. h. .~
"When did God hove hi~ picture token?"
O ne Um~re
Almost Kille d
•·Kill the umpire!" That's the venerable
cry of the baseball fans Qut'Stion arises as to
whether any um pirc actually has been killed
by irate fans. Pritncar. Llmpire' Billy E vans
a lmost died after he was beaned by a bottle
thrown from the stands in St. Louis. He was a
borderltne bed case for three weeks.
IT'S ESTIMATED that only fin• percent
of the l ' .S. population now reme mbers that
Eleanor Roos.eve It ·s maidf!n name was
Eleanor Roosevelt.
EARLIEST known vending machine was
a device that cropped up in the 200's B.C. to
d1s pensf! holy water in a
Greek temple.
)10l'RNERS in Japan
wear" hite.
Fl'TURE MATE
Q. ··on which day of
the week are you most li~
ly to meet your future
mat('·!"
A. Saturday, says our
Love ;md War man. Mon·
day 1s next. After that, Sunday.
Q. "WHAT would be the value of an opal
as big a s a loaf of bread? ..
· A. Can only r eport that one such found
about six years ago m Aust rah a is known to be
worth Sl.6 million. Weighs 6 5 pounds. They
say it's the bi ggest opal ever.
WILL YOU B UY the notion that the
seafood from the Atlantic tastes better than
the St'afood from the Pacific because the
Atlantic's waters are colder? That's a fairly
popular contention on the East Coast.
HEADACHES
There·s no ~·ord in the Albanian language
that means .. headache." Albanians don't get
headaches. Serious ly, that's the claim of a
pharmacology rese.arch'er. Remarkable, if
true. Can't really a rgu<'.thc matter. however.
I don't get headacht's. either. Unless you want
to count that dive year s ;,igo in the shallow end
of the ··y ·· pool.
VENETIAN BLINDS were. not invented
l>y the Venetians. plN1se nofe. but by the
Japanese ... Din YOU KNO\\'thatoneoutof
en1·,· 10 dirtv mov1<·s is filmed in Miami? ...
TESTS SHOW the IQs of mo~l football player s
'rank in tile top 25 pcrc<.·nt ... THAT WORD
.. ventriloquis m ·' translated literally from the
Latin means .. belly !'J>t'ak·' ... IT'S AL~
TRUE that the I r1i,,h city of Dublin w·a s
founded a bout A. D. 840 by Norwegians.
THE LAW OF AVEJtAGES says that if
you throw a pair of d1cc 100 times. the num·
bers tossed always \\ tll add up lo just about
683. Try it.
TWICE AS MANY \\ h1tcs as blacks arc
color blind. proport10n·a1cly. Anet twice as
many blacks as Amert('an Jnd1ans are color
blmd. porpo rtwnately. 1\nd twice as many
American Ind<tans as E.'>ktmos are color blind,
proporliopcitely.
Address mall to L Al Boyd. P.O. Box 1560,
Costa Mesa 92626.
BffOllE AND
AFT£1l S-~HOOL
C'ARE FOR
~rllDENTS'
~ WORKIN(;.
PARENT~ $'eH(l(Jl De~~
FVRNICllBJ FOR
ll~E AT" HOME R[QISTHTIOll FU t 10 QQ
On request by parents, HCS students will be loaned a
modern school desk to use while studying at home.
Colt or write for further informotion:
In Fountain Valley
16835 Brookhurst St. (North of Warner)
714-962.J312
SUMMER DAY CAMP for f.HILOREN to 14
June 25 thru Aug. 3 0-Daify or Weekty Rates
Fltld trips, swimming work ahop•, picnics. Bible study, etc
(Summer Classes in Reedlnq 11nd Artlllmehc held at the achool
from July 7 thru Aug. t -hr thru 71h grldes -Enroll ~w)
i. •
\
•
•
· SMJ.l Intbrmation Series:
"Nol a'I unleaded: gasolines are
alike.Your car, old or new,
might show you lhe -difference:'
I . ,
By Bob Awe, Gasoline Product Manager, Shell Oil Company.
significantly higher than the minimum.) It
may be better than having your engine
detuned and possibly wasting fuel.
. .
A Shell fuel expert tells why the right
gasoline for your car might just happen
to be unleaded. And offers help on
fighting knock in a '75. §ll::t I I I 1~,
6% O" 1• ~ ~ •· s· Ei9 First, I'll tell you how a thing like lead got into
. gasoline in the first place. Then rn talk about
some problems that the right gasoline can
solve. Afte r that, I'll tell you why there's talk
of "detuning" some '75's.
•
At the end, I'll give you some infonnation
about our own Shell Super Regular
Unleaded.
How lead got there
in the first place
nw .. first gasolines didn't have lead. They
worked jw:;t fine 4t the low compression
engines of the early 1900's.
Later, the higher compression engines ran
into "knock". When an engine knocks, some of
its fuel-air mLxture explodes all at once instead '
In nonnal operation (A). the fuel-air mixture inside a
cylinder hums :>moothly. ~tarting at the spark plug.
When an t"nJ.,rine knorks (B), some of the mixture
explodes all at once.
of buming smoothly. You can hear this as a
pinging, rattling noise.
Jn 1921 it was discovered that adding cer-
tain lead compounds to the gasoline could
prevent ~,'-and this discovery paved the
way for high\i:efficiencyengines.
Since octane numbers measlll'e the ability
of gasoline to resist knock~ you could say that
lead increases a gasoline's octane rating.
Because of emissions standards for the '75
cars, most of them are designed for unleaded
gasoline and the law requires them to use it.
In th~se ga..c;olines, the job of lead is usually
done by high-octane hydrocarbons.
Unleaded in your pre-'75 ca r
But the pre-1975 cars don't. have to use
unleaded. ::>a why should you even consider it?
Because one of the unleadeds just might turn
out to be the right ga...c;oline for yow· car. By
Octane Facts and MJJhs
Test yourself
The more octane, the better.
Myth. An octane rating any higher than
your car needs does no good.
There is more than one kind
of octa ne rating.
Fact. For exitmple, the octane rating used
most in owner1S" manuals comes from the
Research octane te8t. The Molol' octane.
test gives a lower rating. The number you
often see on gasoline pu mps is, in accor-
dance with a government rule, an avera~
of'the two. It's usually three to five num-
bers below the Resear~h octane rating.
Run-on can bt au octane problem.
/i'act. Jr your car keeps chugging on aft.er
you turn off the key, a gasoline with a
higher R~earch octane rating will help.
4 t
right, I mean the one that gives you the. best
balance between price and performance.
Here are three performance problems that
might be cured by a change of gaso·
line -perhaps to one of the wileadeds.
1. Stall out-the engine dies when you
put it in gear while it's cold.
.,2. Hesitation -that stumbling feeling
when you try to accelerate before the
engine is fully warmed up.
3. Run-on -the car keeps chugging on
after you turn off the key. ·
Of course these problems car, sometimes
· have mechanical solutions, tOO •. But if your car
is in iw1e it'.e ~ to try ~ solve .. by
switching·gasolirJe ftrst. And when you shop
aroUhd for the right g1SOline, don't leaVe out
the unleadeds.
If you do end up usmg an unleaded, you get
a nice little bonus. Your spark plugs ·and
muffler will last longer.
Tip: If your owner's manual does not recom.
mend unleaded -and· if you ·drive at sus-
tained high speeds -a tankful of le~ed fuel
every 4th or 5th fill.up protects exhaust
valves against excessive wear.
There's more than one way
to fight knock in a '75
The Jaw says that· unleaded gasoline must .
have a "Research octane number" of at least
91. (Somewhat less for high altitudes.) Most
unleaded ga.5oline is only slightly above this
minimum. ·
But some '75's are knocking with these
fu&. And we expect more of them to start
••• We estimate that one out ,
of every three 1975 cars
will eventually develop knock using the averllge
unleaded pioline.
knocking as they get older -about one in
three of them, in fact.
"Detuning" the car, -that is ... having the
ignition timing retarded -is one way to fight
the knock. And this is one of the remedies
being considered. '
But detuning has some bad side eft'ects. It
might hurt perfonnance. And, all other fac-
tors being equal, detuning can hurt your gas
mileage. (See chart, next column.)
For example, if your car's ignition had to be
retarded by 4 degrees to get rid of knock, you
could expect a mileage 10$8 .of ~ut 4 percent.
That would cost you money -as muclt u if
you paid about 2c tnore (>et gallon at today's
prices.
And detuning may be against the law.
Check before you have it done.
The tllht gasoline miPt bi
~•swer
There are dif(erences in the Qctane ratmp or unleaded gasolines, just 88 there are with
leaded gasolines. So if your '75 knOcks on the
average unleaded, try switching to an
unJdCled with higher octane. ('lbereare alew
• •
Oellrilg (Degrees ljJlition Is Retatded)
Mileage decreases by about one percent for every
degree the timing is retarded from the proper set~
.ting, up to six degl"e('s.
Tlis is one of the
li&hel'octane
unleadeds avalable-
Shel s..--Regular
Unleaded.
Shell Super Regular Unleaded gasoline
bas a Research octane of 94 or 95 in most
partB of the C!Ountry*. That's3 or4 numbers
above the federal minimum and signifi-
·cantly higher t~n most other unleadeds. If
your'75 car knock.-., u~ing this could be the
solution that will let you m·oid having your
car detuned and maybe wasting gasoline.
In addition, Sh ell Super Regular
Unleaded has excellent detergent proper·
ties and is blended for good driveability to
help solve problems like cold-engine stall·
out and hesitation.
·Maybe one
of our leaded
gasolnes
is right for
yoll'cac
I ....
Shell Regular has a Research octane of
about 00 or 94• and good detergent proper·
ties. If you can use this (and )'nore than half
of our customen:; do), stick with it. It's our
lowest priced gasoline. ..
Super SheJJ is our top-p1iced leaded gaso.
line with good chiveabilify, excellent de·
tergent properties, and Research octane
of about 99or100.• It's blended for top rate
performance in pre-1975 cars that require
high octane fuel.
Tips: If you use Super Shell, give Super
Regular Unleaded a try. You could save
money. IC yQu use Shell Regular and have
d1iveability <?r nm-on problems, try Super
Regular Unleaded before going all the way
up to Super Shell.
·Somewhat less for high nllilude areas.
.
Any questions? Write me.'
Sens.l your questions to Bob Awe, Gasoliae
Prof!uct Manager, Shell Oil Company, P.Jj.
Box.61861, Civic Cente1· Station, Ho~
Teds77208. •
. If you like, ask for our free booklet of~
line .. ~ving tips, "Confessions of A ,Mileae
Champion." ,.
And to help you keep an eye on yoW' ~
line consumption, many Shell stations are now
giving away free "nomograph" mileage calc:u-
lator cards that Jet you figure your gas rnde·
age in a few seconds.
I
People _ .~ •
.working
with enera,
•
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.Pub I icaf.ion PeeJel-powei-ed
If someone told her of plans to
start. a newspaper wttJ) $5.000,
Elaine Holt would respond,
"You're absolutely nuts. You
can'tdoit." ·
Yet that's exactly whiltshedid.
Tttis moplh marks the first an·
ntversary of her e_ubllcation,
Bicycle Motocross N~s.
The tabloid, which is sold in the
Orient, Great Britain, Canade
a nd Australia as well as this coun-
try, has grown from 10to40pages
in its formative year.
· And she can boast, "We made .
our first profit 1 ast month. • .43
cents."
That's pretty gcfod, she said.
She was told she should have
enough cash to carry the publica-
tion for a year and warned not to
expect a profit for three years.
Although she worries about
money, and hates it, she's also
thinking of other ventures for her
company, Westword Publication
tions. ·
NO EXPERIENCE
She attributes her appareot
success to "partially luck and
partially kind of having your eyes
open, too.''
She c~rtainly can't credit ex-·
perience! she had none. Nor did
she have any training in the busi-
ness.
She's stepped into the
publisher's position from a doc·
tors' office which she managed
forthreeyears. '
"It was not the most challeng-
ing job in the world an.d-1 am one
who likes to be challenged," she
explained. So she "moonlighted"
for a friend who was getting into
bicycle motocross equipment.
She was to h andle the promo-
tion a nd advertising, a difficult
tas k because the r e was no
medium reaching the youths in-
volved in the s port.
Mrs. Holt admits the decision to
fill this gap was ''scary."
She remembers r eading of the
poor economy and rising un-
employment. She thought of
women with more education not
-
. -
Publisher
Elaine Holt
checks
details of
her
ye;v-old
taliloid,
Bicycle
Motocross
News
·.
being able to find work while she
was givin g up a four-and·a·half
day job which included profit
sharing, medical insurance and
great bosses,
But a friend, a woman she met
in a management course who was
a bank vice president, believed in
what she was doing and got her
the $5,000 loan.
LEARNED BY DOING
She got herself a good book on
advertising and learned the
p hotography, writing and
pasteup by doing it.
She went and watched the prin·
ters prepare ·the first issue.
"That's the first time I'd ever been in a big print shop. I was
just dying for it to come off the
press."
It looked great, until she got·
home and l'ead it. The center
spread story had been laid out
backwards.
Ten thousand papers had been
printed and a couple hundred had
been sent out. $he bad the er~or
corrected and the paper printed.
over.
"It w'aa an expeasivemistake.
•"Now, I'll tell.you, I read ever-
ythingbeforeitgoes."
•. But mistakes are still made
sometimes. Once she roi:got an ad
"and th at was terrible."
She h as l earned, "Whether
you've put out one issue or 12 is·
sues, you still have to pay atten-
tion to every detail.''
In that first issue, the publisher
said, "I didn't even ask for sub-
scriptions. I really didn't know if
it would go or not and I was spend-
ing my grocery money on it.".
The response came quickly.
There were phone calls asking
when the next issue would be
out. • advertisers .... and
circulation in bicycle shops.
KIDS RESPOND
''The kids r eally enjoyed it and
it just kind of snowballed," she
said.
Except for Boys' Life, she
knows of no other publi cation
which is gearect to youths in their
young teens and doesn't talk down
to them.
"We believe kids are in-
telligent:They don 't always have
the best judgment but it's up to
adults to guide them.
''1 like the idea of being able to
give them recognition."
And when she's feeling har-
assed by the business. she can
open the mail. "We get some
super letters from kids and that
really, rea l ly m akes it
worthwhile," she explained.
"Maybe that's our forte. We
communicate with kids.''
Alt)]ough she had the help of
friends and consultants, she did
most of the work herself until
November when she hired an as-
sistant and a secretary.
''The stage I was reaching I was
absolutely going bananas," she
expl ained.
WILL STA VIN BUSINESS
Although there are times when
she really doesn't like the pre-
ssure of publis hing, she intends to
stay in the business.
"This has been the most excit-
ing year of my life. I certainly
can~t say t hat I have not been
Coincidences Sketchy
I\ ...
News stories ~II too often are Costa Mdll convalescent home,
harsh or · sad. But when we can so be was una ble to contact her
tell about how ·one brought two immediately.
-people together after more than Ironically, he is an insurance
25 years, it is indeed heart· agent. Convalescent homes are
warming. his major accounts. But Beverly
An example is the s tory Manor, where Kay stays, is not
published about Kathryn Olsen in on his list.
the Wednesday, June 4, edition of Fortunately for us the home
the Daily Pilot. hadn't been named. Had it been
The coincidences are so great w·e might not be writing this
Uiat one wonders if the hand of story as we might not have heard
fate weren't geaUy guiding all about it.
the participants in this drama. A few days elapsed and •
Kay served as a volunteer at Bourgeois called at the office to
the Laguna Beach USO during find out where Kay is. He said he
World War II. She spent most of hadn't seen her since 1949 in
her time painting portraits of the Laguna Beach.
servicemen a nd mailin g Reminiscing about USO days,
them to a loved one, usually he said, "She was like a fixture.
Mom, back home. It she wasn't ther e it was like a
To accompany the stoey, oor piece oHurniture missing. .
photographer copied several "She was a very attractive
l?ages from her scrapbook. lady-the kind you noticed right
. However, the editor only chose away because or her eyes. They
one. had-so muc h love they just
The pne she just happened to thrilled you."
pick was too Jar~e for the space Bourgeois visited Kay. "When
allocated on the page. So, some I asked for her everyone wanted
ofthe people wer&cropped olf. to take me to see her. I could see
However, Charles Bourgeois she still is doing what she has
(unidentified) of Costa Mesa ap-always done-entertaining the
peared. -young."
But that night he didn't see the When he got to her room, she
.at.ory. He says, "I couldn't. find recognized him immediately.
the Sports Section so I didn't read They talked awhile and she
it." · showed him a display of the
His son Brad, an employe of .Christalas cards she received
the Daily Pilot who bed vlalted trom her "boys" 1 ast year. bis grandmother in Loulala,aa Bourgeois lamented that he
earlier in the year where he nw hadn't kept in touch when he
Kay's palnUne of bJ1 father, lived so close, yet "those from so
didn't see the picture or story tar away remembered ber.'~
either. "1 found out she hk es
But daughter Cookie, wbo re-chocolates."
membered seeing tbia photo-· Ke went out, bought a box and
graph In a .. crapbook, did. She returned.
brouabt lt to ber fat.Mr's aU.O· "f ,u ... I'll be doing that quite
ti on. . oft.en now.
Unfortunately, the ltcr)' only "And 1'11 be seeing her at leaat
roentfoned tha t K11. YIU tn a twice a week."
r
I
'
'We get
some super
letters
"" from kids
and that
really,
really
makes it
worthwhile.'
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Monclly, June U, 1t1S
challenged now.··
Although she expects that she
will soon have competition, she's
optimistic for the future.
"The s port 1s g rowing," she ex-
plained ... As it grows, we grow."
Bicycle motocross (BMX> is an
off-shoo t or motorcycle
motocross, a race on a dirt course
with obstacles. The diffE:rence is
••it's boy-powe r ed or girl·
powered," she explained.
Participants work out with
weights and run, s he said,
because the race requires
strength, endurance and a com-
petitivedesire.
Although most of the r acers are
boys, she does get letters from
girls tl'ying to get other gi rls in-
terested and organized.
'·That's fun to see. We en-
courage it, naturally." .
She added, "There's still a lot of
boys who believe girls shouldn:t
do things like that."
BRIGHTEST STAR
Mrs. Holt sees motocross as
"'the brightest star in, the bicycle
industry."
A year ago, she recalled, there
were only two or three displays of
motocross bikes and accessories
in tbe industry's largest show.
This year, almost every company
had a display. .
She contends BM X . which is
most popular in the warmer
states. is not a trend ... As long as
there are kids and bi<..'ycles," she
said. ''there will be racing and
good times." Wh y not BMX'!
"It's just that no one has really
stopped to or ganize it as a sport,"
she said, quickly adding that Pop
Warner football started on a
sandlot.
"And no one has stopped to give
it recognition. That's what we're
doing.''
'Charles Bourgeois of Costa Mesa recognized.
"himseff in upper left of wartime photo,
at left, anti visited artist Kathryrf Olsen
to reciprocate her friendship.
•
' 41#
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., 01'1. Y PILOT • • ~.Junef!, 1075~ \ -.
Advice
Offers
Choices
Ann Landers
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You have printed
two letters in the last severs! weeks advising
women on how best to protect themselves
against rape. The last letter advised screaming,
kicking, karate chops, etc.
I hope you will print my letter which is based:
on information from an expert. He is Frederic
Storaska, founder of the National Organization
for the Prevention of Rape and Assault.
According to Storaska, a woman should
never scream. struggle, run or t ry to kick the
rapist where it counts. If she does, the rapist is
likely to silence her by strangling her or cracking
her skull open. Struggling excites him.
What's more,' very few women are good
enough at self defense to throw a would-be rapist
and make a run for salety. As for carrying a
weapon, he says it would probably be in her
purse -the fi rst thing a woman drops when so-
meone grabs her.
Engaged
Dates Told
Laun-Clark
Kristine Laun a nd
Scott Meredith Clark
plan to be married Nov ..
22 in St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church,
Newport Beach.
They are the daughter
and son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Leon Laun of
Newport Beach and Mr.
and Mrs . P aul Meredith
Clark of P alos Verdes
Estates.
The bride-to-be, who
graduated from Newport
Harbor High School and
University or California,·
Santa Barbara , is a
tftember of The Spinsters
of Los An geles. She was
a Nation a l C h arity
League debutan~e in
1969. .
KRISTINE LAUN
Aug. 23 in the Lutheran
Church of the Resurrec-.
tion, Huntington Beach.
Their parents are the
Marvin Bryans of Run-
ning Springs and the
P1eadinf, accordin& to Storaska; ta the rapist's porno1raphy. It ~d merely intensity
his desire. U; a victim denounced him and
shrieked obscenities, it would Mly beietaten bis
rage and be would become even more dangerous.
<The rapist is1 as you know, not a woman-lovei:.
but a woman-oater. His actions are not based on
the desire for sex, but hil deep-seated irrational
loathing of women.)
Storaska believes the best way to deal with a
rapist is to turn him off by belching, scratching,
vomiting -something tbat will divert him from
the act. Storaska does suggest, however, that if a
woman feels her life la in danger she should press
her attacker's eyeballs into bis head as bard as
she can if she can reach them. This could blind or
kill him. .
While Storaska admits that reporting a rape
to the police is a distasteful business, he says all
women who have undergone the experience have·
a responsibility to society to report it in the hope ·
tl)at the rapist will be caught.
Catching a rapist and convicting him,
however, are not one and the same thing. About
65 percent or all rapists who stand trial, accord-
ing to this expert, are found "not guilty." -
AVID ANN FAN
DEAR AV: Thank you for aDOtber poiat of
view. We now bave two contraclktory sets of fa.
structlons. Dr. J ames Selldn, Director of tbe
Center for t he Study ol Violence at Denver
General Hospital, says "Scream, kick, yell year
bead off -unleH tbe rapist enters the bedroom.
and pals a gun to your bead or a knife to yoar
throat."
It's up to each woman to decide wblcb makes
the best sense. Selldn's positJon ls supported b y
some impressive s tatJ.stics. Fewer than a.lne per-
cent of tbe Denver women who screamed and
fought back suffered anything more than a cat or
a bruise.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have long,
beautiful fingernails. They are my best
''feature,'' if you can call them that. What I
mean is, I get more compliments on my nails
than on anything else. .
, My boyfriend loves to bowl. Every time I
have gone bowling with him, I've broken al least
two nails. I refuse to bowl anymore and be is
very upset with me. Is he being fair? What
should I do? -NAILED INN .J .
DEAR N.J .: Go with him -as a spectator.
Be bis cheering section. Applaud bl~ efforts.
Build up his ego. That should satisfy him. If it
doesn't -too bad. · ·
Even if drinking is the "in" thing in your
crowd, it needn 't crowd you out. Learn the facts
from Ann Landers' booklet, "Booze and You -
For Teenagers Only." Send SO cents in coin and a
long, self-addressed, s tamped envelope to Ann
Landers, P .O. Box 1400, Elgin, Ill. 60120. Her fiance a ttended
Mt. San Antonio College
and Californja State
University a t
Northridge. Kenneth Powells, Hunt-ington Beach. ---------..;...-~---------1
Bryan-Powell. Miss Bryan is a
graduate of Rim of the
Chapman College stu-
d ents, Michele Marie
Bryan and David Ken-·
n eth Powell will marry
World High School. Her r---------------------. fi ance graduated from
J
Edison High School and
Golden West College.
save a sew
Wilh FG's
Save up to 70% off the
cost ol ready-to-wear.
stretch terry
Solt, absorbent Collon-Nylon blend for
active sportswear • tennis, golf. swim-
suits. Machine wash. no iron. 58-60"
wide. r-Gs' r~ LOW pnce 3.98
Sp«lal thru Wld., June 18
.,,,,,,,,., laces 179-949 Cluny and galloon styles in black
and ~lte and assorted color5. " ' 1•
Sew lacy cover-ups. blouses and
dresses. 40.43" wide. ru· reg
LOW price.
,,,,,cloth
Another great summer labric For pa110 furnt·
lUJe covefs. sponswear. robes and sh1tts.
100-1. Cotton. 45'' Wide. r-Gs' reg LOW p<tee.
• JIWPCIT IUCH-
20 Nlliln ,...,
Mon & Fri. 1<>-900
• T uet .. Wtd • T'hurs. & Set. 1 ~ 9.11\ 12·5
ANNUAL
SALE
PRECIOUS
JEWEL,RY
20% TO
50o/o OFF
Once again you have the opportunity to
choose from the extensive
Laykin et Cie collections of fine jewels
and precious gems assembled
in our Los Angeles and Beverly Hills
salons to give you the
\ greatest M?lection ever. The collections
include many Laykin et Cie
exclusive designs as well as exquisite
examples from our treasury of
antiQue and estate pieces. Here are
beautiful gems that grow
more precious by the year, now at .
.. once-a-year savings.
WILSHIRE AT SlDfORO • ecvmy HILLS
WILSHIRE AT NEW HAMPSHIR£ • tOS AlfGCU'.S
·Horoscope: Leo .. BENEFITS: . Be Calm •ONE TEET..,Q.EANING
By8YONBYOMA&ll'
TUESDAY • .JUNE 17.
,
2
.ONE SET FULL-MOUTH X-RAYS 40 O•EXAMINATION
•DIAGNOSIS
•OirFICE VISITS
•PLUS SPECIAL RATES FOR
'60 PER FAMILY . OTHER DENTAL SERVtqes AallC8 (Mar~b 21-Aprll,19): Ue low; do more
U1tentn1 than . talkinc. ~t)ere are revisions
neceuary in manuscript. legal document. Know
it and be paUent enouch to set what iS-required.
•NO LIMIT lofA & M.C:.
,.Aua vs <~pril -..,.y 20 >: What ttad ~en·
taken for cranted lets i'elbufned. Means you will
have to chaqe routine. Deliveries a.re on d.if.
ferent 1cbedule. Ride with the tide.
CALL ED WICAMDER
1si-1161
GElllNI Olay 21.June 20): Good Moon upect
roincida now with chance, variety, intenaified
relationships. Creative energies find outlet.
CANCEa (June 21-July 22): Det.aila are more
important than usual. Be specific. Insist on fac-
tual information. Reject gossip. -
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You could temporarily
be at a loss for words. You soon regain com-
posure. Relative or neighbor 'will offer an
apology. Be calm.
VlltGO ·<Aue. 23·Sept: 22): Money picture is
not clear. There will be adjustments. Purchases
and budget will .be accented. Family member
wants heart-to-heart talk.
LIB&A (Sept. 23-0ct. 22J: What was a setback
now boomerangs -you become surprise·
beneficiary. Cash now is revived.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): What was hidden.
will come to licht . Cycle is·on upswing. You take
advantage of timing, circumstances.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Emphasis
on friends, desires and ability to earn more
through professional endeavors. Enlarging con-
cepts is a necessity. . ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): New ap-
proach, originality brings added recognition. Be
·independent -stick .W principles.
,.--... ~
.. ~I
Even the bes t .
cosmetics can't
hide e\'erything.
Hair, for instance. And
you know what? You
aon't have to have it if
you don't want it. ~all our Kree electrologist
for a free consultation.
Now. The sooner you
find out how easy and
safe the Kree Method of Permanent Hair Removal is, the happier '
'y'ou'll be. ~
Robinson's Beauty ~alon.
1(ak~~.
Newport 644-2800
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Check cor·
respondence, long -distance communications. ·
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Some money con-
trols are necessary. Don't be too trusting. Be
nexible without scattering your forces.
Complete coverage of county ·
government and courts.
DAILY PILOT
What is heing said Ghout
summer reducing
the Gloria Marshall way •••
-BURMA KNEPPER -Ml started my
Gloria Marshall program because I wu very unh1ppy with my appeuance. In a
short time I went from a sau l S to a size
· 1 and lost 4 3~ pounds and 6tH4 inches.
G:LIA COREY -"I went to Gloria
Marsh1ll, well, the re,ullt have been
fan1111ic. l have lost 45~ lb&. and 50 In.
Now I can gel into a size 12 dreu from a me 18.
JUDY FERJUER -MBerore gotn1 to
Gloria Maulnlrs. l w11 ~O pound• ove1-
we1Aht and needed to lotc II least 60 In.
Since I have been on th• pro,ram al
Gloria ManhaU't I have ruched this
1oel"
Your r esu lts start
t lae moment you do •••
Start your
summer rlflUre
today!
Your perfect figure is being
proud when you look in the
mirror; when you buy clothes
that compliment your figure,
not hide il.
We specialize in helping each
woman with individually
designed programh nd
nutritional guidance.
Because individual figure
problems differ, your
results will be different
than someone else's.
Call Gloria Marshall today to
see how good your result•
can be.
g~?!!no~&!t
Open dally 9 to 9. Saturday 9 lo 4 '
SHERRY GARMANY -"I c~n't believe·
it happened! I have lost 15'/1 lbs and 19~
inches.
I 1eel great knowing I look good.~
MARGA RET McDANIEL -At c k:ria
Marshall's Figure Salon I lost 29-% inchet
and 22 lbs. I look and feel better now•
than I haYl! in S years.. My husband ay1
JO too. If you need a f~ure lift, join
now! You won't be K>rry.'
CAROL BROWN -"J took my dilemma 1
to Gloria Marshall'•, how could I ev•a I
wear a bathing suit out in the backyard
wllTI so many bulgea? Now, 16 tbt.. anll ii
25 inches smaller, I am proud to •Y· •
'My 1,o•I I did reach so i1 la off to the beach."
CaU NOtD l'or A DetllOIUtration
'7twft'l1 met • W«Nrt )'It ~ fi(pe I~ t epPfCN& ",
NEWPOIT BEACH
1801 WESTCUFF Dl • 642·3&30
. " WOfld'e feeding figure control system
. SANTA ANA/tOSTA MESA
I
J ·1
3151 BRISTOL Sllll'PING CDtTE1•55&-471& I
IACIOH MOM~ CbASTPUUI J
,
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IOOMER
C'M()N , l!<xMcf~~
FA~e oor roe
A PAS'5 !
TUMBLEWEEDS
MISS HAMHOCKER, WHY t:'O YOU KEEP
CARRYING-HIM IN HERt: m Me TO
TRY IO FORCE: HIM
10 MARRY YOU?~
FUNKY WIMKERBEAM
by Wa. F. lroWll md Mel Casto11
«u.1 ~ve lo
PrlAC11CI tb~tNG
IA'( &~IVAL
8WOVtf, R1tJ'1 l 1 ~~~
by T Olft K. Rycm ,
by T °"' Bat;uk
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TENNIS BALL MAQ.\INE ! FASCINATING J I AUJJA'f5 WONDERED
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FIGMENTS
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• TODAY'S CROSSWDBD PUZZ.LB
UNITED Feature Syndicate Salu•day·s Puule Solved:
ACROSS 44 Malevolent "'c D C l D 0 F F s " U T
46 Backward
47 Shut up
49Compass
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14 The Altar • 51 Douglas fir. 15 Accustom· fOf one
Var. 52 Musical 16 Star Comb. l rans111on
IOfm 54 Jack ••••.
1 7 Firms TV celebrity
l9 Commence 56 Restaurant
20 Have· •••• ol check
lea 60 N Amer
21 Chronic counlry drunkard 61 Dialect 1'f11ted wllh machine
22 UnderwOfld 62 Degrade lnlerst1ces 35 Terrestrral
goddess 64 Stock 6 Took a 37 Obi
23 D1recllon market breather: 2 40 ~asy job ..
24 Mer.chan· group words 42 ······up! :
d1s1ng 66 Fathered 9 Hil hard Quickly
events 67 Knol again 10 Flowers 45 Pope's
26 Communists 66 After noon 11 Chess representatives 29 Buddy 69 Vogue position 46 Bristly plant
31 Professional 70 German city 12 Miscalculate 53 Cavalry
group. 7 l Airline fOf 13 Speck troops
Abbr: Nassau 16 Meat 55 Charged
32 Particle of pastry· 2 parl1c1e
dirt DOWN words 56 U.S. salellite
33 Ver'/ high 1 Arara 24 Shirt parts 57 Wars ol the
36 Sunken 2 Appeared 25 Gratify to
grooves 3 Packs down excess 59 English
38 "The ,,. tightly 27 Deceitful theologian
Hairy ···" 4 Carnivore·s person 61 Second
39 Expunges fare 28 Austere mortgage,
4' 1 Coin ol 5 Columnist 30 Poker stake e g
Libya ···Landers 33 Modify 62 Bl~head
4'3 Cinema 6 ltallan g1rrs fittingly 6G Small piece
name name 34 Srmple 65 R~hne
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" '•
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by Dale Hale
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CAN l BUY ONE
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ANIMAL CRACKERS
15
J.OCKEO
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----~~~~~~~
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HAVE A NICE TIME AT
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e1 !I f<
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2 HOURS AND 1,200
Muc; SHOTS LATER!
Mond!y. Junt 18. 197S DAILY PILOT 83
by Geonp LetllOllt
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Joh~
by Rodger Bollen
i,oµ<,> 00 r Ai.J.IWJS ffi
Ti4E iENlPERAMe~TAL..
CATC~ERS'f'
" . . '
"Of cu1ir,c. 1hc Jl\;11Jv.1nl.ige of 1h.11 one j, the men <it ( Jrc CoJ
might nl•l, let )OU alone luni; cn11ugh 111 pul'ui.: )llllr h11hhy 11f
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DENNIS THE MENACE
I ' ,
'Ht ... l'M WA\TING
fOR MY1>AO.•
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... DAILY PILOT Monday.June18, 1975
~~~el-8 Get Jahhar; Meyers to B~cks
UStwnbling
_Marshall Fades;
So Do Dodgers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mike
'•arshalJ, the Los Angeles
·lodgers' relief ace who won the
" • :y Young Award in 1974 and set a
iushel of major league r ecords in
ne process . has lost four straight
lecisions and hasn 't won a game
. inceApril 17.
When Greg Luzinski homered
Dodgrrs Slaf e
Alt ... -. M KAac °"' . ..,. ,. Housto... at LCK Angelu 7 2Sp m .
7.2Sp.m. 1 2Sp.m.
..,.. 11 Housto... at Los Angelu
..... 11 Houston at Los Angeln
1Cf Marshall in the eighth inning
·:u n day to power the
:>hiladelphia P hillies to a 4:3 vic-
r ory over Los Angeles, it marked
'darshall' s third loss in a week.
"I don't think that'll bother a
·:uy like Marshall," said Phillies
·nanager Danny Ozark. "It could
bother a younger pitcher. but not
'tfarshall. He had a great year in
i974 and evervonc e xoects him to
r·ome back and ha ve a year like
hat. It's tough. He might have
tried to come back too soon after
being hurt." .
. Idled with a pa inful cartilage
·njury for ne arly six weeks,
\farshall has appeared six times
.n the last 10 days. "I thought his
.tuff was better k>day than at any
· ime since coming back,·• said
Dodgers manager, Walt Alston. .
It didn't ease the pllght ot tne
lefending Na ti on al Le a gu e
··hampions. The loss was their
:'ifth in six gam es and seventh in
:heir last nine. It was also the
;eventh series in the last eight
1he Dodgers have failed to win
.md left them with a 16-19 record
. 1gainst the East,
The Dodgers, by losing, missed
.tn OPPQ{tunity to g ain ground on
Cincinnati and trail the Western
PHILADEL~HIA
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32 J 7 3
100 007 010~
200 010 000-3
DP-Phllaoelpni• 2. L0 8 -Plllledcll)hla s. Los .\t>Oe~S 7. 28-C•sh. 38-Cey. HR-c.ntl (2)
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2 I 1 1 1 J
Divis ion-leading Reds by 31;~
games. Cincinnati completed its
11-3 victory of Saturday's sus-
pended game with the Chicago
Cubs and then bowed to Chicago
4-3 in the regularly scheduled
game.
Marshall took over in the
eighth inning or a 3.3 game,
following starter Doug Rau, wtro
failed for the eighth strai~ht start
to post a win, and rookie Rick
Rhoden, who pitched H-3 innings .
Marshall fanned J erry Martin,~
but Luzinski s lugged his 2-0 pitch
into the center field pavailion. It
was Luzinski 's 13th homer of the
year, the Phillies' 19th homer in
June, eight of which were hit
against the Dodger s.
Hester Has
50-50 Shot
NEW ORLEAN S <AP) -·
Linebacker Ray Hester, 26, has
Hodgkins Disease. and doctors
say he has only a 50·50 chance to
live.
Hesler played three years on
s pecial teams with the Ne w
Orleans Saints in the National
Football League and last year
worked !l.is way up to a starting
linebacker's post with the World
Football League's Hawaiians.
He's proud of his reputation as
a scrapper and regaras n1s ms·
ease as just another challe nge -
the toughest he's e ver faced, but
nothing he can't whip .
"I've thought the whole thing
fhrough," he s aid. "After you
come to t he r ealization that you
.may die and face up to it, then
you put yourself in the right men·
tal frame of mind.
"'With the m ental part behind
you, you turn to the physical. The
idea of facing two years of treat-
ment which the doctors c an't
guarafitee will work isn't what
you call encouraging.
"But what the heck, I'm still
here. I've been through some
pain on the football tield. So you
take it as it comes." Hester said
the treatment will involve cobalt
treatments and injections -" A
real bummer.
"I've lost my sense of taste,
and I guess that's because of the
drugs I'm on. I've also lost the
feeling in m y fingertips, and I
dt>n 't know what's c ausing that."
He has alsolost35pounds.
"People keep telling me how
good I look. Well. maybe I look
good to them, but I'm used to .
looking like a football player."
UPITtlft)ftOtO
NEW LA KER KAREEM JABBAR, EX·STAR CHAMBERLAIN.
For Ex-gridder
Prison Term Next
FLINT . l\lich. CAP) -Sitting
b e hind his d es k al Hurley
Medical Cente r . wht>r e h<' is a
management intern, Billy Taylor
says it's hard to think a bout
what's ahead.
In two weeks, Taylor, the lead·
ing ground.gainer of all time in
University of Michigan football
annals. will leave his job -to
serve a prison form. "It's hard to
believe I 'll be leaving this and go-
ing behind ba rs," T aylor said.
there is some time I've got to
spend, and I'm just praying that
the people in the position to help
me reali ze I don't belong there
for any long period of time."
Taylor failed in a number of at-
tempts at pro football, and he
was running into financial pro-
blems . But he doesn't blame
thos e difficulties for his
pa rticipation in the robbery.
''Indecisiveness," Taylor said.
··Tha t .a.as cost m e a lot. That's
what got m e s ucked into this
whole thing.''
Sports in Brief
Winters, Bridgema"'
Smith Also in Deal
1
INGLEWOOD -T-he Los
Angeles Lakers acquired pro-
fessional basketball's top player,
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, from the
Milwaukee Bucks today in ex·
change for four players, includ-
ing the Lakers' top draft pick,
Dave Meyers of UCLA.
Al a news conference al the
Forum here today, it was an·
nounced that Meyers, Junior
Br i d geman of Louisville -
anotber first round pick-and
current Lakers Elmore Smith
and Brian Winters would go to
the Bucks for Abdul-Jabbar .
For several years now, Abdul-
Jabbar has been reportedly un-
happy in Milwaukee and has ex·
·• pressed interest a,boul playing in
either New York o'r Los Angeles.
The trade ter'minated a rela-
tionship that ranged from 1971 's
giddy honeymoon -an NBA
championship in the Bucks' third
season or existence -to frustra·
lion as the team unexpectedly
pl unged to last-p-~ in its
division this year.
Abdul·Jabbar asked the Bucks
to trade him several times since
they had won draft rights to him
in a coin flip with Phoenix in 1969.
Separation from his wife more
than a year ago and the team's
misfortunes intensified his dis-
e nchan tment, and be made his
feelings public for the first time
last March 14.
"I never s aid I was unhappy
with the Bucks or Milwaukee,"
he said. "The problem is, I don't
have any family or friends here.
The things I relate to aren't in
Milwaukee.
"Milwaukee is not the kind of
city I'm about. I'm not knocking
it or the people. H's just that,
' socially and culturally, I don't fit
in Milwaukee."
Milwaukee fan s wor&,hiped
Abdul-Jabbar the player, but few
knew or understood the man,
whose interests and tastes in·
elude his orthodox Moslem faith.
black culture, heavy reading and
jazz music.
None of those purs uits is
particularl y vi s ible in
Milwaukee, a city of about 15 per·
cent black population which is
stereotyped for love of beer.
bratwurst, basketball and polka
bands.
He seldom tolerated even the
briefest insights into his
personality or private life. He on·
ce purchased a home ifvd tree-
shaded suburb, but retr~ated to a
lakefront apartment after a few
days because the home attracted
-throngs of curious persons.
He usually consented to post·
game interviews in recent y4!ars, •
but his relationship with the local
media remained distant.
"Billy and I have a lot in com-
mon along those lines," he once
said of Bill Walton, like himself a
former All-American al UCLA
and currently the controversial
and enigmatic center or t he
Portland Trail blaze~.
"~e are both reclusive," Ab·
dul-Jabbar s aid. "He <Walton>
detects a certain callousness
among certain press people who
:are small-minded andouttoserve
·their own end. I talk to people I
.can.. relate to." .
Raised a Roman Catholic m
New York City ,-lhe former
Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor con-
verted to Islamis m in 1968 and
three years later changed his
name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.
The names translate to "Noble,''
''Servant of" and "Tyrant" or
"Healer ."
"I don't think C~ianshave a
very good history of practicing
what they preach," he once said.
··My people were put in bondage
by Christians. They were made
to become Christians, but they
have not been treated truly as
brothers on the basis of skin col-
or. That's totally wrong. It's not
what Jesus taught."
The .surge of racial conscious-
ness that marked the 1960s af·
f~led Abdul-Jabbar, as it did
m~y who reached maturity in
that decade.
Basketball fans received an in·
sight )nto Abdul-Jabbar's com-
mittment lo his faith when seven
persons, including five children,
were slain in a Washington
mansion Jan. 18, 1973. Abdul·
Jabbar had bought the mansion
for $78,000 in 1971 and donated it
to m e mbers of th e Hanafi
Madhhab Moslem sect,. to which
he belongs, for use as a spiritual
center.
Figueroa
•
Vs Busby
After Split
KANSAS CITY -Ed Figueroa
(5-2) goes against Kansas City
Royals whiz Steve Busby (8-5)
tonight as the California Angels
try to regroup after the weekend
disaster in Milwaukee, where
they dropped three of four
games .
The Angels split a 7-hour-long
doubleheader with the Brewers
Sunday, winning the opener 8-7
but losing the nightcap, 4-2.
Lee Stanton sparked the
Angels attack in the first game
A •gels Slate
All G•mts Oii KMPC (7101
Jun. l4'4111ornla at Kans.ts Clly
J..,..17 CAlllornla at Kans.ts C•IV June 18 atlllornla at Kan~as c;ty
S:2Sp.m.
S:2Sp.m. S:2Sp.m.
Sunday, s lugging his second
grand s lam in a week, the first
Aniel to do that since Rick
Reichardt in 1967.
Stanton's third inning slam
gave the Angels a 5-1 lead, but
the Brewers caught up in the
s eventh. Each team got another
run in the ninth, sending the
game into overtime.
He was sentenced early this
month to eight years rn p·rison for
his role in an a tte mpted bank
robbery in Barberton, Ohio, last
January. He waited in a car out-
side the bank during the robbery,
and surrend e r ed to po lice
without a struggle when the plan
went awry .
T aylor, 26. has until July 1 to
fini sh the civil service job he got
in February: developing an ar-
firmative action prog ra m for the
hospital's 2,500 employes. Then
he mus t r e po rt to th~ U.S.
marshal in Akron.
Angels Get Catcher
The Angels picked up the
eighth and winning run in .{he
11th inning when Milwaukee's
Billy Champion gave up a bases·
loaded walk lo Bruce Boehle.
Angel southpaw Mickey Scott
quelled a Brewer rally in the bot-
tom of the 11th to save the"game
for Don l<irkwood, who got bis
first major league win.
UPI Ttl*Plle40
THE COSMOS' PELE SLAMS INTO BOBBY MOFFATT.
He said he has tried not to think
about the future. "I realize I got
into a situation first by not mak·
ing my own decisions and by
straying from the way I've been
brought up." he said.
"If you've bee n brought up in a
God-fearing hom e, if that's your
~sition in life and tl)at's how you
h ve your li fe, then you should
s tick to it," Taylor said.
·•1 know that my involvement
w as ver y Ii m i le d. but it's
something I'm going to have to
pay for," he added. 'Tm f{oing
into it r ealizing that, first of all,
UC I Girl Wins
KALAM AZOO, Mich.-Lcc
Ann Fischer of UC Irvine won
her opening singles match OH~r
Ma lorie Snyder of Kalamazoo.
6·2. 6·2, but tea mmate J od y
Peterson lost to Claudia Smith of
Elizabethtown. 6·1, 6·0, in the
AIWA women 's intercollegia te
tennis c hampionships here Sun-
day.
BALTIMORE -Baltimore
Orioles catcher Andy Etchebar-
r e n h as bee n s old to the
California Angels for a sum in ex·
cess of the $20,000 waiver price,
the Orioles . announced Sunday
night.
An Orioles spokesman said the
s ale wa s made primarily
because Etchebarren, who has
spent his entire 15-year pro·
f essional c a ree r with the
Baltimore o rganization ,
threatened to retire if he was not
moved to his native California.
A ndretti llolb
MOSPORT, Ont. -Mario An-
dretti of Nazareth, Pa. led all the
way and held off the constant
challenge of England's Brian
Redman in winning the Formula
5000 auto r ace Sunday.
Andre tti. who qualified his
Lola for the pole pos ition in the
100-mile race. finished a split
second ahead or Redman, winner
of the 1974 Formula 5000 series
and winner of the opening r ace of
the 1975 nine-race series at
Pocono, Pa. on June 1. Redman,
also in a Lola, w as close bchjnd
~layers Try Too Bard ·With Pele
NEW YORK CAP> -Pele's
profeuJonal 1~cer debut was a
typical pttformaoce for Brazil's
Bl•ck Pearl, tha man who has
averaged nearly a goal a game in
his 1,254 career games.
Bu t there wos far mor~
11p1llcance in the reccptlon the lllPOfl f'eeelved -and probabl)'
will t0atinue to receive -now
that tbe 3"4·yeer-old supentar ls a
matkttabl• entJty lD the UnJted
a.ta. Qu ite 1 I m p I y , • No 1· lb
~erican Soccer Laiuo iame
' )
wouldn't have drawn national
network television coverage in
the United States, much less live
telecasts lo Japan, Costa Rica.
Mexico, Brazil, Colombia.
Quite simply, an NA.SL game
wouldn't have attracted some 300
ntwsmen from all over the world
to the minl;1turo pre s box at
Downing Stadium. Jt wouldn't
have attracted 21,278 fans to the
aged concrete structure where
there arc boards 4natead <:A seat.a
and light towers thet orifinally
stood atop Ebbt!ts Jo'ield.
Pro soccer jus t isn 't that
popular here, espttiaJly on a
Father's Day when the New York
Yankees w e r e gi ving a way
baseball bats and ther e was
horse racing at Belmont Park
But theY. came ; In buses, cars,
on bicy<'les anct ~om e even on root
to sec lhc Ul~ck Pearl show hi.I
stuff. Anet it w <tsn 't t•ven a lcngue
same;· It wu11 un exhibition.
In fact, they spent the first half
of Sunday 's 2 2 tie aaai~'lt the
Dallas Tornado try ing to fiRUrc
out what to d o. P ele's mere pre-
sence seemed to dictate that be
carry the ball throughout. take
all the shots ond score all the
goals. That's what helped Dallas
gain a 2·0 l~nd In the first half.
·'The younger players were
passing to me too mu 'h instead
of dribbllng more or passing to
other pJay r11 ," said P.elt-Mt~r
his lontz ownltt!d d~b~t. "The
team 1 saw 'tu c~doy (when he
watched the Cosmos for tb flrsr
lime after lignln• hl1 mult1'
mtlllon dollar contract) was
much n>ore coordmal.ed."
Andretti throughout most of the
race.
The victory was worth $15,000
for Andretti plus $1,250 for win-
ning one of t he preliminary
heats. ..
Warwick Brown of Australia
finished third in a Talon.
Courtnet1 Dies
ROCHESTER, N.Y. -Clint
C0urtney, manager of the
R1cbmond Bf aves of the Interna-
tional League and a fiery former
major league catcher who was
involved in numerous dW>utes
auring his playing career, died
early today in Genesee Hospital.
Hewas49.
Courtney played 11 different
seasons in the major leagues,
beginning in 1951. Five of those
years were with..,Jhe old
Washington Senators.
Berg Brena
. PARIS -Bjorn Borg, the 19·
year-old Swedish tennis star,
master ed Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina 6·2, 6-3. 6-4 Sunday and
won the French title for the
second straight year.
The dynamic young Swede,
who lost his Italian crown two
weeks ago, was right back in top
for m and made it a one-sided
final.
Women's Doubles
Chris Evert and Martina
Navralijova of Czechoslovakia,
beat J ulie Anth ony and Olga
Morozova, Soviet Union, 6-3, 6-2.
lelu, Bell M•
LE MANS, France -Jacky
Jckx of Belgium and Derck Bell
of Britain in a Gulf Ford wo.o the
43rd Le Mans 24-hour race Sun·
da)' after l~adlnt ror all but three
hours.
Jn second place were Jean·
Louis Laloue and Guy Chaueuil
of France Jn a LJglcr·Ford J ·S 2:
In the second game, the Angels
could only muster seven hits off
of Milwaukee's Jim Slaton and
Tom Murphy, and their two runs
didn't come until the ninth inning
when catcher Ellie Rodrigues
slammed a homer with one on. It
was too little and too late, as the
Brewers won, 4-2.
FIRST GAME
CALIFORNIA MILWA \IKEE
•b r It Ill all r It Ill
Rtmy2b S 1 3 O Yountss S 1 3 3
Afverscf 6 I o t e. Mitchell II 4 O o o Harper lb ' 0 I 0 Sharp II O O O O
Mtollu 2 I 2 0 C.MoorePI\ 1 o O o
Ullouel dh 3 I 1 0 G. S<ottlb 4 0 1 0
8.SmlthP' 0 10 0 A.lrondl'I 300 1
Stanton rt 4 2 2 s LUCM>O rt 4 0 I 0
Chall< lb 6 1 2 1 P. G.lrcia 211 S 1 1 I El. Rodrf11utrc 3 0 0 0 Porter c S 2 2 0 M .... tllttll O O O O 81a~olb 2 1 o o
COlllM If 3 0 1 1 1*9i1n ph • 1 0 0 0
Eoanc 2 o o o T.Jollnionlb i o o o O. Ramlrtrss 3 o 1 o ,G. Thomau t 4 2 3 2 Bochtt lb i 0 0 1 Ed. Rodri11u.1 p O O O O Tan~ 0 O O 0 Hausman p O O o o
Kirkwood p 0 O 0 0 O\a,,..,lon p O O O o
M S<otlp 0 0 0 0 5'>filQutP 0 0 0 0
Totals 4S I 13 I Totals 39 7 11 1 C.llfornfa OOS 000 001 02_.
Mllwaul<ff 100 031 001 Ot-7
E-0. Scott , P. Garcia. OP-C.lllornla 4,
MllwaukH 1. LOB-California 1•. Mllwaukaa 7. 28-Yount 2, Chalk, Stanton, Porter. HR-Stantlf'
(61, P. Gere I• m. G. Thomas (2). S8-Alwrs J• (olllns. S-Collins. Lallo~. SF-G. TllOmas..
IP H R IER aa 19
Tanana 71·~ a s s 3 " Kirkwood (W, Ml 3•,, 3 2 2 3 G
M.$(.ott • ~. 0 0 0 0 IJ Ed. Rodrl11vtJ S 6 S 3 2 \I
Hainman s•11 3 1 1 2 ,,.
0..1r41ion (L, 6-SI 2~> 4 2 ~ S I Spraoue v. o o o o 'IO
S.vt-M. ScOCt (1). HBP~y T~ (81MCf,
by Hausman (l!I. Rodrf11uei>. WP-T•nan•, Klr'llWOOCI. T-3:». • I
HCONDOAMe CALl~llNIA MILWAUICle
all r It -• all r II i*
Atmy1t> S 0 t 0 YtuntH S 0 It Rlwrsct 1 o o o a .MIW..lltf 4 o 1 Colllntll 2 0 I 0 INrplf I O I
leCJI .. lD 4 0 I II G.. SCettlll S O I p
Ufloud dtl J 0 0 0 Aaron Oii J 0 0 ' S40fll0fl ft 4 0 0 0 UI~ fl ~ O I •
Oeltllb 2 I O O P.Gvcla2b , 1 ti C:l.ftodrlQutlC 4 I I t C.Moorec 4 I I
M. Htttlts<I l 0 O O lllanco 3b t t t 0. fleml rti U J 0 I 0 0 ""°"1H <I 4 I I L.i-spfl I 0 1 II Slelollp 0 0
MMtlor O o O o T,Murphyp o o '' HeMltrp 0 0 0 0
T9tah " 2 1 , TOl•I• a. 4 I (alifOMla 000 000 002
Mflw..,1'ff 010 flO Ob
IP N It llt aa t6 Haul« (L, ).1) I It 4 ~ i .,.-.
Sitton IW. 4'41 l h 4 t 2 a b
T. MUf'tllly ~ I 0 0 t a.tw-T. Murpfly (I)). WP ..... Mltr. T-4: A-n.m.
I
. .
• . q •
Weiskopf ctaits I . rv1~e,
Jenkins Leads DoWney
• Golf Classi~
PHILADELPHfA
(AP) -Tom J enkins, a
non-winner who has a
certain affinity tor this
t~urnament, got the lead
and Tom Weiskopf got
down the toad in Sun-
day's second round of the
weather-plagued,
$150,000 Philadelphia
Goll Classic.
and is well behind the
leaders.
But while J eh kins
winner of only $1l,18d
this season, was hungrily
eyeing the $30,000 first
prize, Weis kopf turned
his gaze toward
Medinah, Ill., and the U.
S. Open that gets under
way Thursday.
Weiskopf, who shot a
fat 76 in Saturday's
twice-delayed opening
round, was one of more
than a half-dozen to
withdraw. •
The first two days or
th e sc h edule were
washed out b y heavy two delayed rounds over rains and a flooding
lhe frie~dly little 6,687 creek. The tournament
yard Whitemars h VaJleY"" now is set to end with 36
Country Club course. holes today, weathe.r
''I° jus t wish they
played about 40 tourna-
ments a y ear here,"
Jenkins said after his
six-under:par 65 had
given him a command-
ing, five-stroke lead at
134, eight under par for
•·1 don't know why, bul permitting.
my putting stroke just The forecast is for 60
seems to s mooth out percent chanceofrain.
w h e n I g e t. t 0 Second round scores Sund.iv In 1"41 White m &i r s h , ' • said iuo.ooo Ph11ac1e111111a go11 clUi•c on the 11,687-yard, par-71 Whot~marsh Jenkins, who tied for va11eyCoun1ryC.lubcourse:
third in this \ournament i-omJenttin·s •
a s a tour sophomore last Jim ~nt Hubert Green season. He has finished JohnnyMmer
llH7-13.tl
7?·47-ll'll
70·70-1'4-0
higher only once in his ~1es1arks JtorryMcGee brief career. Bue1A111n
·71-0'1-1'4-0
71-70-1•1
1tt1-n-1•1
71-70-t•t
09-n -1•1
71>-7 t-t• I 71 71-Id
12 10 t•2 1•-~-l•l 71-71 142
11-11-141
7~12-10 71·71-U2
o!>-77-IH
12·10-1•2
4'1·73-IH
70-12-142
72-10-142
61-7'-143
JJ-70-143
11·12-143
72-71-1.0 71-72-143
7.l-70-143
7~73-143
7•~9-143 12·11-143 7~73-143
73·70-143
74-69-143
/0·73-1•3
Alan Tapie of Newport
Beach, tied for third
after the first round, fell
to 144 for the two rounds
Area Girls
All-CIF
Four Orange Coast
area girls were honored
at Magic Mountain Sun-
day when the All-CIF
teams for softball , track,
gymnastics and swim-
ming were honored along
with badminton.
Kathy David of Edison
High, was nam ed to the
4·A first team as an in-
fielder in softball and
pitcher Susie Davis of
Mission Viejo gained a
spot on the 3-A second
team .
Lisa Gourdine of E l
Toro, was named as the
top long jumper in track
and Becky Daniel of
Newport Harbor gained
a spot as the team's shot
putter. ,
J.C Snead Tom Shaw Allen Miller
Frenl< Beard
Ranoy Erskin<' Don Boe\ Funy Zoeller
KenSltll J1mMu\erio
LouC.-aham
G<ler Jonn
John S<hltt M;arkHayes
Odnny Edwards
George Johnson
Bob Wynn
Bert Yancry
Odtt Newquist
Bob Dickson
Pete Brown
Terrance 0111
O.ve Hill LArry Wise Dave Elcllelbergel'
J Im Wiecners Mason Rudolph
Joe Inman
Mat Lessons
1At El Toro
Any boys of school age
interested in wrestling
arc invited lo attend in-
struction al wrestling
sessions at El Toro High
this summer.
El Toro wrestling
coach Bob Webbe r is
coordinating the pro-
gram that begins WedJ
nesday and will last
through the end of July.
' In Split
DOWNEY -Ri ck
Cornell's rbi single in the
eighth inning of the
second game here Sun·
day gave the Irvine
Collegians A split of their
doubleheader with lhe
Downey Reds in summer
intercollegiate basebaJl
action.
The CofJegians won the
nightcap, 5-4, after drop-
ping a 4-3 decision.
IrviAe was trailing 4-3
going into the eighth, but
came up with four hits.
Tom Soto a nd Herb
Tiderman led off with
singles and came home
on rbi hits by J eff Han·
cock and Cornell.
Mike Hickman pitched
the· full nine innings for
Irvine,· scattering eight
hits and striking out five.
Soto was the batting
star or the nightcap, get·
ting four hits, including a
t riple. Catcher Steve
Mort.on also tripled,
S1111set Le11g11e Cha111pio11s
Coach Bob Hailey's. Newport Harbor Sailors won the
Sunset ·League track and field cha mpionship and was
second in the CIF 4-A and state meets. Kneeling in.
front (from left) -John Phipps, Kurk Clarke, K.C.
Connell David Kurrasch, Brian Theriot, Vince Mulroy,
coach Bob Donald. Second row-<!oach J eff Pierose,
•
R on Craig, Tom Walte rs, Rich Harris on, Don
Fukumoto, Matt Dickey, coach Hank Cochrane. Stand·
ing-man::!ger Gary Parker, Jeff Wei ss, Steve Foley.
Joe DiStanis lao, Gary Ertz, Doug Eccler, Bryant
Humann, Hailey.
scoring Cornell in the---------~--------------------------------------------
fourth inning.
The Collegians were
not as fortunate in the
opener, b lowing a 3-1
lead. Downey scored
three unearned runs in
the seventh inning on two
walks and an error.
Hawaiian Gardens Baseball's
Irvine's r ecord is now
3-6.
Wins; GWC Falls Leaders
AMERICAN LEAGUE
FIRST GAME
Irvine UI
ab r
I
0 2
0
0
Bro.,..n, 2b Soto, SS
Tl<1erm1n, tf
P'>lland. p
H•ncock, c C.O.nell, ll·c.I
Morton, tb
Chard, lb
StollJ, rf
Baker. dh·P
Totals
.. • '2
0
3
l J 0 3 0 3 0 3 0
28 3 Score by Inning$
Hawaiian Gardens ex-
. ploded for 10 runs in the
., rt11 first four innings Sunday
2 1 night and went on to re-g g cord an easy 10-1 ·win
o o over Colello F ord in a ~ ~ Connie Mack League
~ g baseball game played at
o o Blair Field in Long ~ ~ ~ach .
Irvine
Oow11ey
r II
001 070 0-3 I
00 1 000 3~ 4
In a Metro League ~ doubleheader played at
3 Golden West College
SECOND GAME Irvine ISi
.tb s s
r
' I
1
0 ' • 0
S unday afternoon ,
h rbi Golden West dropped a
~ ~ twin bill to Chapman
2 0
1 0 J 2
I I
~
BA fTING (I~ at bats I C..rtw, c 011 e g e. l 0 s in g the Min, . .01. Hdrgrove, Te• .• JS8. Lynn, Bsn... 34. Mun~on, NY, .338, H1~1e, open er, 4-3, and the """' .. ,,. kUNS &urrougns, Te~. •O R. SeCOnd game, 1·0. White, NY 3'I Lynn, Bsn, 36 E. Mad-Jn a game that lasted :··NY, ll>; Remy. c.e11, 36; ous, l(C,
only five innings,' Tim RUNS BATTED IN -Horton, 0e1, Funke and Rick Hi bbard •s. G Sco11. M11. o : Bo11ds. NY, 41, McRae, KC, •O; Lynn, Bsn, 3'1; Bur· drove in two runs each as roughs, Tu.3'1 H awaiian Gard ens HITS.-Munson, NY, 7•; Rovers, Cal, fl ; C•r,.w , Min, 71; c. scored one run in the WaSl\lng1on,oa1<,11;McRae,l(c,1t•.
f. · h · OOUBLES -Chalk. Cal. 18; Rudi, ll'St, SIX in t e third and C>ak, IS; S1n9leton, Bal, 1•; Llmano, three in the fourth. M•L 14· Lvnn, Bs11. IJ; Clfambll>s, NY, 13; De11t, Chi, IJ. Wayne Douglas picked TRIPLES Rivers. ca1. 1: °''"· up the win for II a waiian ff~.~ ~i~~~e, Det, 4• Remy, c..1, •;
Garden~ which is now 5·1 HOME RUNS • Horton, oe1, 1s; on the SeUSOn • Bonds, NY, 15; Burroughs. Tex. IS, R. Jatk!.00, Oak, 13; Carbo. Bsn. 12 • Chapman scored three STOLEN BASES Rivers. ca1, 3.1: . h f' t . . Otts, KC,. 2'1, Palek, KC. 11 C. runs 1n l e 1rs inning wasn1n91on.Oclk.11: H•sle,M1n. •& against Golden West. but PITCHINC. 17 Oecos1ons) -R """"· · d . . h NY, 1·2 •. 118., 2 •l. Palmer, Bal. tO J, the latter h e It w1l two 7b9, 1 s1. Kaai. cn1, 9-J, 1so. 2 s<1.
Pro Net, Soccer
WORLD TEAM TENNIS Centr•I Oiv>1ion
E•,tern D•v•iion St Lo<.ois W L Pel. GB Denver
l'I J .82b -°'"""' 11> b .111 2•, Ch•ca~
'I 10 .•1• 8 ~Antonio
8 • 2J 17
S I> II 70
• 1 11 18
6 10 14
8 • 8 72
New York
Ptll~t>urgl\
Cleveland
Indiana
Boston
, p .3SO 10 I
It 18 .?SO 1J • Wester-n 0 1vis1on
WHlern 01v,.1on Colde11 Cah• lb 8 .641
Los Anqelo;~ I• 8 .ltl(, 1
Pno4!nt~ IJ 10 .St>S 21
H.iwau 1 t1 .308 6' • San 01~ l 21 . US tJ
S..a111 ..
Vt1nc.ou"er SclnJos~
LO\Ar>qeles
Portland
8 3 21 H
8 • 10 11
\ I> 20 20 ~ II 18 18 ) l I] 10
SuMaQScore
~2 71> 1/t ...
15 JS 10 34
8 "° ~
70 7• IQ ,.,
18 ..
IS 5"
1l Q
s.H\dav',M•lchn Colden G.tte 18. Se1n Otego 11
1na1ana ?S, H aw•Aioil.J LosAF>Qelr\ }I , P111Jburgn 2t
Cleveland 29, I nd1ana 70
Dall.is?, New York?, l1Pe •lltbtltot1
Tue.G•y•s Ga mt w.isn1nq1on al Pholadelphtd
Wimbledon Bre.ik, no matcttesJunl' 16'nrouqh July 1.
HORTH AMERICAN
SOCCER LEAGUE
W L FT FA 8P Ph
Rocttestcr b 20 n l'I 43
Toronto • b II I> II JS
Boston 3 7 IJ 70 11 JI Nt>wYork l I> 1• I• 17 JO
Hc1rt1ord 3 6 10 18 10 78
Eflltrn 0 1v11lon
T arnpa Bay 9 2 21 : 2 10 14 M1am• 8 7 1l 10 70 c.&
w.-.sn1ng1on ~ • II 14 18 •8
Pn1l•delph1a • • q " 'I 31 Batllmore 3 s 10 lo 'I 77
WednHClay's GamH 'Toronto al New York
St. Louis at O..nver
Dallas at Portland
T'huriday's Game ~n Jose at Vancouver
Fr.day's Ga m u Wa\hinglon di Miami
Lo~ Angeles at Roche~ter .Philadt!lphoa at Ch•Cclgo
T .impa B"Y at Oil llcl>
New York at Bo\ton
S<lturd<ly's Games Lo~ Angeles at Toronto
Tamp.a Bay al SI. LOU•~ S.in Antonoo di Portland
s.in Jose .ii ~a111e
Sunday's Game
Baltimore al Roche"er
Brown, lb
Soto. \S Tlderm•n. Cl
Hancock, lb
Cornell, If
Morton,c CMrd,lb
Stolll, rf
Baker. dll
H•Ckman,p
l 0 • 0 0 ' I 0
H•••tlan Gardens 110)
Frtman, ~~
Funke. 7b Boentk.<f
UDIO<t, lb
Oesr~1er~, c
H1t1oard. lb
Ntansotino, rf
.V1gNroh. If
Pa1ne,dh
Swett, pr-rt Douglas, p
ab r
• 2 " rbt
2 0 ·n the second and one 1·n Figueroa. ca•. s-2 •. 11•. 2 37; ..-------------------------1 Blyleven, Mtn, >7. 714, 3.7S finger>,
Tola ls
Irvine
Downey
" 0 0 0
la s
S<ore by Innings
0 0 0 0
1l •
r " e 100 100 070-S 13 3
• 101 020 000--4 8 •
MVTakes
I2-2 ·Loss
'TOl•IS
l 0
3 ' 3 1
J ' 1 2 I
1 0 3 2
0 0 0 0
15 10
S<eft llY I •nln<JS
1 ' 2 1
1 1
2 1
' 2
2 I
0 ' 2 I
0 0
0 0
13 10
Colello Ford Hawa11an Gardens
r h e
001 00-I • 4
106 ll<-10 IJ 0
First Game
GolCS.n West Ill
the third. ou. !>-JS-2 .. 11•. 2.09 STRIKEOUTS Ry.in. C1I, 119; Ci.
Tom John son was hit
by a pitch, Steve Namath
singled &ind they both
moved up on a wild
Perrv. Cle, 86; Blyteven, Min. BS; Blue, Oak, 84; Tanana, Cal, 81.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING 1140 at balsl • Mao100,
Ou •. 3"1: R. Smtih, StL •. l •S, MOrQcln, Ctn, .3'3; Wat~n. Htn •. 343, ~no. Hin, 45, Mor!l<ln. (.in. 41. Wynn, "Ut.,
41; Ke~sl~r. C.nl,3'1; B<tncl\,On,3't; Row, Cln. 3'I
RUNS BAT TEO IN -Benell, C1n,
SJ. T. Ptrtt, C1n, .t4; lultn$IU40 Ptu, •3. W•lson. Hin. •2: Winlteld. SO.•I. HI TS-M.tdlock, Cht, IS. Garvey.
LA, IM; Rose. C1n, 81; Cash, f'nl, W; •
Bencn, Cln, 76.
·pitch. Mike Se lwood hit
-an infield single. scoring
Johnson and Namath
came hom e on an en-or
for the two runs in the
sel·ond. DOUBLES -· Bencn, Cin, 21; In the second Jack C.rubb, SO, 21; ;adlock. c.n., 18; Cedeno, Ht11. 18, Rose. C1n, 17. l11sh1on•1and newpo1r bcacn 1>44-SOiO
Mary Diamond of Mis·
sion Viejo in singles and
the doubles combine of
Gigi d 'Angelo and Deb·
hie Pool of Estancia,
gained firs t team honors
in badminton.
The lessons will be
held twice a week-on
Wednesday· and Fri·
day-and will take place
in the El Toro High boys'
gym from 4-6p.m.
Mission Viejo com-
mittetJ six e-rrors Sunday
afternoon a nd dropped a
12-2 Ame rican Legion
baseball decision to host
La Habra.
Sulfltrland, II
Leone.u Hudl>Gn, cf Richards, dn
Johnson. c Houle, pr
Nemet!\ rf Rowe, tb
SelwOOO,lb
Rl'llher, lb Moll,p •
Mar~s. p
ab r
3 0 • 0
3 I
h rbi 0 0
1 0
' 0
Hudson s ingled s tole TRIPLES o. Parker, PQh, o:
second and sco;·cd on ~~~~6.~'{1!<;~~1~5!: Hin. 6• Mctiger. i•mii:immmiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiili;;miiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-Tim Richards' singk. HOME RUNS -Bench, Ctn, 14; 3 0 1 ' 1 0 0 0
0 I 0 0
l I I 0
2 0 0 0
3 0 2 I
• 3 0
0 0
WTT Swnmaries
La Habra ca me up
with three runs in the
third and five in the fifth
to deal Mission Viejo its
sixth loss against one·
win.
Tot•ls
0 0
24 3
S<0re by Innings
0 0 0 0
0 0
" 2
,.t lndlanaPollS
t"4111n<l U, H•w•ll 11
Women -Overlon·Mtver (I) beat Coun-Gourlav (HJ W ; Co11rt CHI bHl
Overton II) 6-J.
Men -Stone-Rullels (I) btal
Bu<llhOl•·Edelhtn (H) 4·2; Bu<hhOlr
IHI beat R11llelU·•.
Ml•ed -Stone-Meyer (II be.it
Edell\en-Gourio CH> •·3. A -700 (u11oll1c1al)
Al lndianllPOllS
GekMfl G•tus 21, 5.ln Dle90 16
\\lome11 -Klyomur•·KIOU CG) beat
fttdonclo.Cuypers ISO! 7·6; Stove (C.l
~at Cuypus CSO) 6-0.
W..n -McMlllan·BollrnstNff (Ci)
beat Ralslon·Cow1n CSO) •·3; Ral\lon
ISO) !>Ht Bohrnstedt IGI 6 3
Milled -SIOV8·McMlllan (Ci) beat 'l'oung-Stuerl ISO) 6·1, ,. _ 700 CunoHldai>
At Indianapolis
Lot Angeles 27, Pillsbur!lft 21
\\!omen -Casals-SluMt (LAI be.Jt
Gool"90'\9·Fox IP) lt·l; CaHIS (LAI
beat Gool.i90ng IP) 4·2. Men -Cox-Warwlcll IP) beat c.-
Muters ILAI 7-6; Cox IP> but Lutz ILA)6-3.
• Mixed -Case-Stuart ILA) beat
W•rwo<lt.·Fox IP) 6·l.
A 700 Cunoflicoall
Al ln<11anapolls c1evt11nd21, Indiana 10 Women -Jones-Slap !Cl beat
Overton-Meyer (I) 6-3; Jones <Cl beat
Meyer Cl) 6-3.
Men -Graebner·Glllinan IC> beat Stone-Rullels (I) 6·4; Stone (I) beat
Ci11tonan IC) It·•. M•aed -Graebntr-Stap CCI bea t
B.,tl\-Bostrum II> 6·•·
• Mlsslo11 Vltio Ul eb ,. h rbi
(.ooper,1b • o I o
J Greeley, cf l 0 2 1
RKhardson, p 3 o o o
Whllt.P 0 0 0 0
M<Oonald, 10 3 0 0 0
Zogq. S\ l 0 0 0 Ro\S,.U 3 0 I 0 ~ttr.lf" 0 0 0 0 McCarllly, lb 3 O O O
E.Greelty,c J t 1 o
Dolby.rt I I 1 0
Gu.tr,..c<I, rf 1 O O O To1111s 11 2..,. 6 2 S<ort by Innings
Mission Viejo
WI Habra
r h e
001 010 0 2 6 6
20l OS7 x-12 10 7
r h e
021 000 0-3 6 2
300 000 1-4 11 2
S.cond Game
GoldtnWest
c.n.ipman
Golden Wot IOI
Gui11n,11
HOule,U
Leone. SS
HudSOn,C
Richards, P
Jonnson. lb
Martin. cl
Selwood,lb
Macauley, rf
Rowe,pn Tolby, lb
S..lll<!rl•nd, Ph Tot•IS
ab r
2 0
I 0
3 0
3 0
2 0
3 0 2 0
3 0 2 0
' 0 2 0 I 0 ,. 0
II rl>i
0 0 0 0
1 0
I 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 . 0
0 0 0 0
0 0
0 0 2 0
S<or• by Innings
Chapman
eo1c1enwes1
r h e
001 000 0-1 , '
0000000021
FACTORY
Demo
SALE!
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct. GB
Boston 32 24 .571
New York 32 26 .552 1
Milwaukee 29 29 .500 4
NATIONAL LEAGUE
· East Division
W L Pct. GB
Pitt.Sburgh 33 23 .589 . -
New York 31 24 .564 11 2
Philadelphia 32 27 .542 21 2
• •
TOYOTA
EXAMrLE:
74TOYOTA
CELICA
4 speed. •If, radio. lle••er C8371<Hr~
53477 •
VOLVO
'74 VOLVO ·142
A11IO. •11, siereo. ,.llye w~Hlt. GT
11Mfl"9 wl"eet (40!1738)
55888
•
USED CAR
SPECIALS
69 DODGE
DART GT
S-11 v.e IUIOINhC ~ •l ... ong, ...
r-(YEN921l
5 1477
'71 OLDS CUTLASS
4 •.. ' AUIC>f'•I"-... cono Vt"'I' IOP
(U OOOIC1
~I 7 77 .
73 PIMTO
STATIOMWAGOM
6Quore lrtlrl IUIO"'lllC ,,, ll'ltt• ~ r11u (J)t()NPI
Detroit 25 30 .4'55 611!
Baltimore 25 32 .439 71 2
Cleveland 24 34 .414 9
West Division
Oakland
Kansas City
Minnesota
Texas
Angels
Chicago
35 24 .593
35 28 .556 2
28 27 .509 5
30 30 .500 511z
31 33 .484 61h
25 34 .424 10
S1111da y'1 Glllnft Oakl.and at Del roll, ppd" r•ln
Calllornl• 8·2, Mll waukH 7-4, 1st 91~ 11 In·
nlngs
Ntw York l, Chic•oo 0
Mlnn.sota s. Baltimore •
Boston I , K•nsuClly 1 Clevel•nd S, Tun 1
TOdAY'tG1m.s Baltimore (Palmtr IO·J> at Cleveland 18111hy
2 61 Boston (Burton 0.1 >at Oetroll <L.ollcl\ 1·•)
Milw11ukee (Brobaro 6· 11111 Ntw York IMly 1·11
Olllornla IFlguaroa S·2> al Kens11s O ty CBu•bv
8 SI OoklA<ld (Bosman 3'31 •I Ml'11'tsola fCampbooll 0 )I Only~messclleduled
T••••Y'I Games Oakland at Mlnnuoll, 2 MllW..,kH •I New York, 2
BIC11more at CltvtlatMI ao"on •t Ottrolt CAJlfornla It IOlllWS City
Olicl9011 TtUl
Chi cago 30 29 .508 41 i
St. Louis 27 29 .482 6 .
Montreal 23 30 .434 81 ~
· West Division
Cincinnati 38 25 .603
Dodgers 35 29 .547 31 2
San Diego 29 32 .475 8
San Francisco 29 32 .475 8
Atlanta 26 35 .426 11
Houston 24 42 .364 15~'2
SUtldO'IGlmft
Pltl">urgh I , All•nla II
Hoinlon I. SI. Louis 7
Montre•l 2·S, San Francisco 1·2
New York•. San Diego O • Phlllldelplli• •• Los An9tll'S J Cinclnn•ll 11·3, Chlc•go l·A, tst g;ime comple-
tion of Saturday's suspended Q<lme
Today's Gamn
Pllllldelpllla (Carlton 6-SJ at Ollc:ilQO !Burris
lril S.n Diego (Folkers 1·31 at S•n Francisco (BraCll•Y
IH>l SL Loul\ (8ry1111 ().OI al PltlsbUr9f\ (l(lson6 71
Allan!• (Niollro&_..> ti Clnclnna11IC.ullett8 31
Houiton IOlerktr 114) at Los .t.~lo !Sulton
10.SI Only 9ames sc,,.dule<I T ... st1a,·1G•mes
Pl>lladelpllla •t Cl\IYgo
New Yorll •l Montrtal, 1
SI. Louis al Plltsburgll
Atlanta•t Clncinn1ti
Houston .. LosA1>99IU S.n o.._ et Sin Fr•nclsco
DEAN LEWIS
TOYOTA VOLVO
1966 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA 646 -9303
\rr "" •· Parh ·Oody \hnp Opn• '>Doy ' o ,.,.,.It
l'orh Orpor lmr11I Oprn \aturr.loy· 'Io,.. 1 p,..
WE MAI<[ QV[RSEA~ DELIVERIE S
. Lu11nsk1, Pho, ll; Sch modi. Pnl, 12, Richar d s and Ron Baker,A11.11;wynn,LA,12. Meredith combined le sroLEN BASES -Cedeno, Hiii, 11; Morgan, Con, 26; Lopes, LA, 21; pitch a tWO·hitlCf for Brock.SIL,70, P.Mangual.Mon,14.
G ld W ·t · th PITCHING 11 Oec1111ons) 0 C ll CS l n ( Musersmllh, LA. 9·3 .. 1'SO, 1.18. R. second game, but Chap· Jones. so, 9·1: no. 1.s2: K1son, Pgh, , B b W If d Ar1 6-2 •• 750, ? 91, Gullet. C1n. 8·3, .n1. man S 0 0 an 2.09;Se.iver,NY, I0·• .. 714, t.87. Snnncer also combined STRIKEOUTS -suuon. LA. 10J; ,...~ . Me~rsm11n, LA, 97; Se.iver, NY, 14. Cot' a two-hitter. Chap-Reusc11e1., Cn•. n, Bonham, 011, 1>1;
man won the game wilt Gullttt,C•n,6l.
a run in the third.
Ar€a Duo
Gets Aces
Deep Sea
Fish Tale Two Oran ge Coast
DANA WHARF -199 .in91"'~ 133 an•a rt>sidents are eligi· ~,'feose~~s~. h~ltbut. 120 rock cOd,' ble to win $1 ,000 and a
LEASE A
llB/411
The FIAT more for less lease.
LESS Money.
FIAT FACTOJtY AUTHORIZED
ULU. UlflCL ~.I OYllUU.S PIUYltll'
OCEANSIDE • .., anglers. IOI frt>e trip to Scotland as ke~~~~s,e9::~~uti~:~,;.~'nktc~ ... > -the l'l'S Ull of scoring ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ''° ang1ers· 2 sand bets,, so ca1tco holes-in-one at the Santa
120 W. Warner at So. Main, Santa Ana557-2132
bus. It h<lllbut. 896 roc k cod.
cspor1tcshin9> -6 a11gte"· Ho roe• Ana Country Club.
cOd, 1 hal1bul. 310 ca1tco bass, 2 ting
co:AN PEDRO (SPo•tfi1hln9) -11] Ernie Ams he of ~Sta
anQlers: 3"lcallco ~ss.610rocku1<1. Mesa and Burl Stans-
3 1>a111><11. u2nc1 st. Landln<tl 106 bury of Newport Beach &nQll'r )! es rock cod, 36S blue bass, 383 .
ca11C:ob.lu. .J-became eligible for the ve~1::i.?.'.~~~a;;a:~~a~n,~~~\cx": Rusty Nail Sweeps takes
cod. :iouuco ba\s, 3• halibut. that is sponsored by a NEWPORT 10.vty'i Lo(ktr) -119 . . . .
anglers: 1 barracuda, 10 bonito, 110 I ea d l n g cl l s t 1 I I e ry In
sand bass, ns rock cod, 2 na1oou1, 1s Scotland meclterel. (Art's L•"dlngl 111 • anglers: 202 calico t>a~~. •'IO rock coo, The winner of the 15th
U lbhlebaS\ I l't' ·11 SEAL BEACH -10s angl~r~ 1,1•<1 annua compe 1 aon WI
rcx1t coc1. n cow <ad. is ~a11d baH. 1 be announced e arly next hellbut. 8.rtt 10• •nq,,r>; 21 bonl•o. 2 sand ba\S. 18 halt but year.
HUMPHREY
FL YING SAUCER
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CORD llLLS
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WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 11TH • 7 P.M.
SPONSORED BY
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DON MAYNARD'S FOUNTAIN VALLEY GOLF RANGE
AT
FOUNTAIN VALLEY GOLF RANGE
912S GARFIELD AVENUE (AT BROOKHURST)
Nationa lly known golf professionals, Jimmy
Powe ll, Dick Mayer, Jimmy Cla rk a nd Len
Studinger will give golf clinic, demonstrations
and answer yo ur questions. A great oppor·
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ALSO
BIG SALE ON GOLF EQUIPMENT
UP TO 40% OFF THRU
SUNDAY, JUNE 22
AT DON MAYNARD GOLF RANGE
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1811 AUllMl(AOAMS UUIUU) ....... ~ ' I
HUNTIN&TOll IHOH (114) 5H 5IOI • ., " I L----~-----------~~~~~-~
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•
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.
DAILY PILOT • lo Monday, June 18, 1975
4
New· Yachts Win •
i Hawkeye Paces PORC
By ALMON LOCKABEY
O.lly ......... , ... ··-
The 1975 edition of the biennial
PaciMc Oceun Racing Con-
ference (PO RC> went into the re-
cord books Saturday with the
sailing of Newport Harbor Yacht
Club's 26-mile colorful Hunt-
ington Tidelands race.
The PORC is a small scale
v e rs ion of Florida's famed
Soutltern Oce an Racing Con·
ference, and like the SORC, It
t urned into a s howcase for
several new yacht d~igns.
And when the trophies were
handed out at the gala dinner at
.NHYC, Saturday, al least two of
the top prizes went to two local
yachts so new they were almost
launched on the starting line of
the first PORC race .
TH E TOP CLASS A ptizewenl
to Dave Cuckler's 48-foot sloop
Hawkeye. a creation of Newport
Beach designer Bruce King.
Hawkeye is a n extremely radical
design with a 16 12 foot beam and
twin adju$table bilgeboards in-
s tead of the customary fixed
0~11, Pilot stat• Ptioto keel.
PORC WINN E R -D ave
•Cuckfer 's radically designed
48-foot s loo p Hawkeye
s hows her bottom in n1il-
d o\,·n breeze in Saturday's
Huntington Tide lands race.
She was Class A winner in
·Pacitic Ocean Racing Con-
ference.
T he adjustable bilgegoards, a
refinement of the centerboard
type yacht, were designed to re-
duce wetted s urface when sailing
off the wind in such races as the
Transpac and the races to Mex-
ico. It was King 's second such de-
sign. the first being Al Cassel's
35-foot one -tonner The Terrorist,
Class B honors in the five-race
~ * * Tidelamls Regatta
• Real Traffic Jam
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's
traditional Huntington Tidelands
race, a yachting event created
with tH c spectator in mind,
turned into a three-ring· circus
Saturday for participants and
spectators alike.
The Tidelands race w a s
originally conceived as a yacht-
ing eve nt tha t would g i ve
shoreside s pectators a view of
yachts beating. reaching and
spinna k e r -running ne ar the
beach from the Ba lboa Pier to
Huntington Beach and return.
1'UT I N THE intervening •
years other series type yachting
regattas hav e adopted the
course, making it somewb at of a
•·piggy ~at:k " r a ce. In additi_on to
Winds Buff et
Dana Point
Yacht Race
Freak, bluster y winds off Dana
Point Saturda y blew out sails and
conlributed to s ome rail-down
sailing in Dana Point Yacht
Club's P erforma nce Handicap
Racing Fleet Series.
Winds of 25 to 30 knots came up
s udde nly and were not ex·
perience d in a ny other are a
along the co:.ist. Race results :
CLASS A -1, Maker Clrwin-30>
-Savin and Doose, OYC; 2, Big
Kahuna 11 C Islander-36) ,Mark
Townsend, DPYC ; 3, Smokin
<Islandcr-41) J im Livermore,
CapoBYC.
CLASS B -1, Avoca (Cal-28)
-Tim Fu ll e r , DPYC; 2,
Whipl<.ish <Cal-251 Jack Pinhero,
OYC: 3. Jubilation CC<.italina-27)
Tom Hill. DPYC.
CLASS (' -1. Kiwi <Colum -
bta-221 Kurl Hu rley. Capo BYC;
2. 8<.1 r <.'foot1 n <Schoc k -22 J
Stewa rt Anderson. Capo BYC; 3.
.Bitter F.nd c Cor onado-25 > Jan
Biller. C<t po RYC.
MO R F 1 . Audac ious
CEncs on -2 !)1 ,\J1 kc Kennedy,
DPYC.
Cal Cup Race
lhe_Tidelands race -which re-qui~s no previous entries in
series races, the course Saturday
·was occupied by the Ahmanson
Series racers. the Midget Ocean
Racing Fle e t s ailing for the
Cork ett Troph y , and the
Performance Handicap Racing
fleet competing in the Dickson
Series, aod the Pacific Ocean ·
Racing Confere nces .
Here is the way the scoring
\\ent in all events:·
HUNTINGTON
T I DELANDS RACE
lOR -A-1. Hurricane Deck;
Morie Kirk. BYC; 2, Saudade, Bill
P ascoe, NHYC: 3 , Bandit, Steve
Morton, Chicago YC.
JOR-B-1, S ilver Fox, Don
Kellerher, LBYC; 2, Mistress 111,
Robert Ettinge r, St. FYC; 3,
Outward Bound, J. Lentha ll,
DPYC. .
IOR C-1, America J ane If,
George Tooby, NHYC; 2,
Whim sey Tres, Hugh Rogers,
LAYC; 3, Lightnin, Mike Chop·
pin,LBYC.
·10R-D-t. Chinook, T o m
Schock. NHYC; 2, Auspicious,
Ro b Batcher, S WY C; 3 ,
Quadriga. Ed Meserve, NHYC.
PHRF-1. G host ll, J ohn
Reynolds, NHYC; 2, Lumaran,
Bill Rohrs. VYC: 3, Hildalgo,
Rod Lippold, NHYC .•
MORF-1, Big Maggie, Mike
Harvey. BYC ; 2, Sail Le Vie,
Don OuBose, VYC ; 3, Vivacious
II, Bill von KleinSmid, MHYC.
AHMANSON DMSION
CLASS A-1, Saudade; 2, Ban·
dit: 3. Drumbeat. Don Avres Jr ..
NHYC. . .
CLASS B-Nuance , Ste ve
Austin, SSSC; Libe rty Bob
Babson, Capo BYC.
CLASS C-1, America Jane II;
2, 7th Heaven, L. Parril, ABYC;
3, Canadian Robin, J im Warm-
inb'lon. NHYC.
. PORC DIVISION
CLASS A-1, H awkeye, Dave
Cuckler, NHYC; 2, Aorang i,
Henry Wh eele r, N HYC; 3,
Swiftsure. Nick Frazee,SDYC.
CLASS B -1. Aurricane
Deck; 2, Saudade: 3. Invader,
Malin Burnham, SDYC.
CLASS C-J.k_ Silver Fox; 2,
Mistress Ill; 3,'(()utward Bound.
CLASS D-1, America Jane 11 ;
2. Whimsey Tres; 3, Lightnin.
' BOATING
PORC went to an equally new
boat, Hurricane Deck, owned
and skippered by Morrie Kirk of
Balboa Yacht Club. Hurricane
·Deck is a 40-foot two·ton con-
fig uration desig ned by young
Doug Peterson of San Diego and
built by Carl Eichenlaub. She
was launched only a few days
before the s tart of the first .PORC
out of San Diego. -
IN HULL DESIGN, Hurricane
Deck is a s ister-ship to Vendetta
which has won most of the races
she has entered during the past
year. She was the Class C winner
in the PORC.
The reason for the difference in
class between the two one-
tonners is that Hurricane Deck
has a sli ghtly different rig, re-
qui1ing her t o give time to Ven-
detta. Vendetta is saHed by Tom ·
Tobin and Art DeFever of San
Diego Xacht Club.
Big surprise in the .PORC came
in Class D won by Whimsey Tres,
a Yankee-38 own~d and skip-
pered by Hugh R~gers of Los
Angeles Yacht Club. Veteran ob-
servers had virtually conceded
the Class D series to George
Tooby's Sparkman & Stephens-
designed 35-footer, America
J a ne ll from Newport Harbor
Yacht Club. America J ane has
cleaned up in most types of com-
petition she has been in during
the past year.
The sponsoring Yacht Racing
Unio n of Southern California
does not compute overall fleet re-
sults in the PORC. In the class
competition , here is the way the
series wound up: .
CLASS A-1. Hawkeye; 2,
Aorangi,-(53 foot Lapworth
sloop) He nry Wheeler, NHYC: 3.
Swiftsure (48 -Coot sloop) Nick FTazee, SDYC. ·
CLASS B-1. Hurricane Deck;
2, Saudade, Bill Pascoe, NHYC:
·· 3, Invade r (Ericson-46) Malin
Burnham, SDYC.
CLASS C-1, Vendetta; 2,
Silver Fox, Don Kelleher, LBYC ·
3, Sting, Jon Byk and Terry Inch:
CYC.
CLASS D-1, WhimseyTres; 2,
America Jane II; 3, Ambush, Ed
. Perry SDYC.
Kialoa Leads
Atlantic Race
Jim Kilroy's 79-foot ketch
Kialoa from Newport Beach was
the firs t yacht to round the turn
off Cape Henry, Va., and head for
the open ocean in the 473-mile
Annapolis. Md., to Newport, R.I.,
r ace Sunday.
T he race. st arted Saturday af-
terrToon a fter a short d e lay
because of light winds. Weather
throughout Chesapeake Bay was
sunny and warm with winds in
the bay ranging from 10 to 15
knots from the south. Winds in
the Atlantic were 5to15 knots ..
The r ace, which features 85
yachts in five classes is due to
wind up late Tuesday.
Sorcery -Close Winner
It was Jacob Wood 's Sorcery,
from the host C:.ilifo rnia Yacht
Club. by one m inute a nd 24
s eco n d s ov e r Bil l Ni e mi 's
Sorcery. Scattl<• Yacht Club. in
the third a nd dec•1tltng race• of the
Cal Cup match rnct' :-.t·ne!'\ on
Santa Monica Bay off Maral)a de!
.Rey Sunday.
Th<' two 61-foot sloops had bat·
tled tack-for-tack and 11be-for-
jtbe for three days in match r ac-
ing that nvaled or outclassed the
~ame kind or competition m the
hallowed America•s Cup
J oli had sta1ed a great come.
from behind erfort on Friday to
wto the initia l race by 26 ~econds.
mJy to bave a gear failure drop
Mr-Mbind he r sister 6hip In th.-second race Saturday, losing by
211econd1.
SO THE ••G s pectator flct>t
W3JJ au ut Sunday to witness
anot.h r thriller. But. It didn't
malert•lfie -deapJl(! better
wind and M& coodi1Jans tban the ,,
two previous d ays.
The spectator fl eet cheered the
start as the two yachts crossed.
the line deadlocked with Sorcery
holding a s light advanla~ to
weather.
But when Niemi chose to give
up his safe·leeward posiUon and
engage Sorcery in a lacking duel.
it was a ll over but the shouting
and horn tcwting.
ON T H E HALF-h earted
duel up the first weather leg, tM
SeattleyacbtseemedtobetOOt.lns
as well as Sorcery, but after each
tack she fell rarlherto leeward. At.
the mark she was one minute and
19seconds astern.
As in t.he previou1J r aces, Joll
~eemed lo have better s peed orr
lhl• wind. On the nm to t.he r~·
<•t-hing mark s he gained 19
seconds on Sorcery and chopped.
another eight s~onds otr the de·
f1c1t on the rea.cb to the leeward
mark.
Back on the wil1d it was the
~amc story <.is the first weather
le((, despite a more spirited tack·
ing duel. Joli even tried enticing
her rival over into the spectator
fleet in ord er to force Sorcery's
crew into a mistake, but to no
uvail. Wood and his crew kept a
tight cover on J oli, gaining on
each tac k to build up a 1 :33 ad-
vantage at the second weather
·m ark.
BOTH CREWS set "bloo~rs·•
under their spinnakers on the
final downwind run, 8ivin1 the
spectators a thrill with their
clouds of sail. (A "bloopeT1• is a
large, light saal, similar to a spin·
naker but nown free on the · 01>-
posite slde .J
At the end or Lhc IS.mile course
JoU bad 1ained only nlne seconds
on Sorcery and tho MOit hotly
oooteated Cal Cup ln Che 13 year
hi.Jtory or the event wu all over
but the Bhoottng alfd bonrtooC.tnI.
·'~·' . ' '"'~ ... ~~~
PRISONER CARRIED OFF AFTER COLLAPSING FROM HEAT
Guards Break Up Demonstration at Raleigh Prison
Summer Work
U.S. to Provide
Jobs for Youths
I
'Women's Jail
Disturbance
Injures 13
RALEIGH, N.C. CAP> -A de·
legation of inmates met with
prison officials today following a
disturbance at the slate Correc.
lions Center for Women late Sun·
day in which 13 persons were in-
jured.
WASHI NGTON CUPI> -The
Labor Department says it will re-
lease almost half a billion dollars
for 840,400 summer jobs for
young people w hen President
Ford sig ns a bill providing the
money.
The legislation was passed by
Congress last week a nd the White
House said President Ford will
sign it. The summer jobs pro-
gram will provide 9to12 weeks of
t>mployment at wages of at least
$2.10 hourly for youths aged 14
through 21. The jobs arc intended
f or you n g people f rom
economically disadvanUiged
fomilies .
The $456,350.000 wi ll be dis-
tti butcd to 433 state and 10<.'al
government a gencies.
Grass f'btd
E UREKA (AP; Plastic-
wrapped bricks and bales of
marijuana valued at $40,000 have
washed ashore a long Humboldt
Bay and authorities say they
don 't know how it got there.
Humboldt County sheriCf's de-
puties refused Sunday to disclose
the location of th~ J"ind for fcai·
that beach com bers would flock to
the area.
\'out la Slain
MADRID (UPI > -A
policeman shot and killed a youth
in a bar in the Basque city of
Bilbao, governme nt sources sa id
today.
They said a group of youths
created a ··dis turbance" in the
bar Sunday. Two policemen tried
to calm them, but one of them
was attacked and pushed to the
ground . The other policeman
fired a shot killing Alfredo San
Sebastian.
His death was the third in 10
days in incidents between oolice
Lido R.egalta ·
Draws Fi.eld
Of67&ats '
Sixty-seven boats in six cJasses
turned out Sunday for Lido Isle
Yacht Club's June Small Boat
Regatta sailed in the bay off the
LlYC dock. Trophy winners: LID0~14A -1. Chad Twichell,
LIYC; 2. Rowland Lohman, BYC;
3. J ack M cClarty, BYC; 4 .
tie be tween Dudley Johnson,
BYC, and Marty Lockney, LIYC.
LID0-14B -1. Gaston Ortiz,
BYC; 2. Roy Woolsey, LIYC; 3.
Bob Mindte, LIYC.
LASER-A -1. T y Beach,
BYC; 2. Brad Wheeler, BYC; 3.
Mike Di Donato, NHYC.
LASER B & C -1. Keith
Kilpatrick, BYC: 2. Gay Koll,
LIYC; 3. Je(( Scott, LIYC; 4.
Mary Andrews, BYC; 5. Madelyn
Koll, MHYC.
SABOT A & B -l Mike Mick-
ey, BCYC ; 2. Moll y O'Hora,
NHYC; 3. Steve Otto, BCYC ; 4.
J ohn J)oyle, LIYC; 5. Liz Denny,
BCYC.
SABOT C -1. Ned Shelton,
LIYC: 2. Bud Coberly, LIYC; 3.
Burton Ogata, LJYC.
Newsman Expelled
SAIGON (U PI> -The govern·
merit llas notlfied one of lhree r~
malnj.nfl American newsmen in
Soutla Vietnam lie would have t.o
leave Ute country aboard the first
avaUabJe fil1bt. Daniel Rodill,
3', of Pblladelphla, 1aid aovern·
men< authorlUet told hlrri Satur-
d1y bis ex.-<on \vu part of a
~Unuln• procen ol t.hlnn1na out of the torelgra prau C«pe.
( IN SHORT J
and civilians in the r estive Bas-
que region.
l•le Sltaken
MORIOKA, Japan (AP> -A
severe earthqua ke at sea early
today shook the northeastern tip
of Honshu, the la rgest of J apan's
four main is lands. The Japanese
meteorological agency said the
impact on land was mild. and tht;r~ w~re no reports of damage
or mJunes.
Agency officia ls s aid the qu<.ikc
registered 3 on the Japanese
scale of 7. The epicenter was
located 40 miles offshore from
Iwate Prefecture, officials said.
CIA Tesd .. •11
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Senate committee investigating
the CIA is going back through the
E ise nhower, K enn ed y a nd
Johnson administra tions in an at-
tempt. to trace assassination
J?ldts and any actual murders.
CIA Director William Colby
comes before the committee this
.week to answer questions about
any CIA participation in the as-
sassination of South Vietnamese
President Ngo Dinh Diem and his
brother, jrnd Operation Phoenix,
a program of eliminating -
sometimes killing -suspected
Viet Cong agents during the war.
Meanwhile, about 150 oC the
prison's some 434 inmates re·
mained in the prison yard , pro-
testing conditions al the institu·
lion. The inmates vowed they
would remain outside their cells
until they spoke personally with
Gov. Jim Holshouser.
Holshouser was in Boca Ralon,
Fla., at a meeting of the Southern
Regional Education Board.
C. Gene Anderson, a top aide to
Holshouse r , was pat1icipating in
the meeting w ith inmate
representatives. Anderson said
he had informed Holshouser of
the prison disturbance early this
morning, and told him there was
no need to return at this time.
A prison spokesman said the
disturbance began abo4t 8 p.m.
Sunday when the demonstrators
refused lo return to their cells at
the evening lockup.
Guards forced the women into
the p1;son auditorium, where the
prisoners began breaking win-
dows and scuffling with the of-
ficers, the~okesman said.
Eight offi~rs and five inmates
were inj ured, officials said.
Some o f the inj ured were
hospitalized, but the number and
the extent of their injuries was
not immediately known.
About 50 additional guards
were called in from nearly Cen-
tral Prison, which houses male
p1;soners.
I 00 Boats Compel~
In Reverse Argosy
The ocean from Hunti.pgton
·B each t o Newport Beach
swarmed with sailboats Satur-
day as nearly 100 boats from Los
Angeles Ha rbor sailed through
the Huntington Tidelands fleet of
.about 100 boats.
The fleet out of Los Angeles
Harbor was bound for Newport
on the first leg of the Bahia de
Cabrillo R ever se Argosy co·
sponsored by Cabrillo Beach
Yacht Club and Ba hia Corinthian
Yacht Club.
After spending the night
rafted up to BCYC's guest dock
the fleet gathered off Balboa Pier
Sunday for the return race to San
Pedro. Skippers and crews of the
visiting yachts w ere ~ntertained
at a gala dinner party and dance
at BCY Saturday night.
THE REVERSE Argosy is a
copy of Newport Ocean Sailing
Association's Alamitos ,Bay
Argosy in the fall in which the
yachts race from Newport to
Long fleach o n a Saturday,
whoop it U\) at LBYC on Salu.rduy
beforesaibnghomethenextdny.
The argosy t ype r aces actually
stemmed from the Newport to
Ensenada bash which combines
good hard racing with a dash ot
social hilarity thrown in. Here
are the results of the two race. of
the Reverse Ar101y :
.... Los Aacelff to N'-ew-po1-rl"
(8ahlrday)
PACI FIC Multihu ll -1.
Mi.rage. Forest Stewart. VYC;
2. lmi Loa, Vlc Stem. StBYC; a.
Aud acious, Doug Gibs on,
SUYRC.
IOR -1. Holonul. Geqr&e
Pascoe. CBYC; 2. Cheetah Dick
• Pennln1ton, KHYC; i , tJe
.: belweeen t.tn1er Longer, Dkk
Winn. CBYC, and Dandelion,
Dlclc Rle1m, LBYC.
MORF -Dubhe. Walter
Richards, SI BYC; 2. Gladiator,
P aul Smith, LBYC; 3. Hawk, Don
Hucker, LSF;· 4. Maid Of the
Mist, Ken Stiles, CBY.£; 5. Pop
'N Us, Peter Kent, LBYC.
MORA --1. Cannonball, Slan
Teel, CBYC; 2. Scalawag, Steve
Jost. CUYC; 3. Cohor t, Milt Vogel, LBYC.
PHRF-A -1. Impetuous, Carl
Coe, Navy YC ; 2. Geisha Frank
Dair, CBYC; 3. Pape~ Doll
Gilbert Thompson, SAYC; 4:
Aurora, Ed Underman, LSF; s.
Tonic, Bill Howard. LBYC.
PHRF-B -1. Lepl'echaun
Whitney Collins, LBYC; 2. Ven:
taries, Martin . Green, LSF; 3.
Ginger Ale, Bruce Golison and
Jane Kent. ABYC; 4. Fineue,
Hal Pudewa , CBYC ; Green
McHine, S t eve Bui .Butler
ABYC. •
Newport to Los Angeles
<Sunday)
PACIFIC MULTIHULL -No
results.
IOR-1. Cheetah; 2. Dandelion;
3. A.Monte, Lou Comyns, CBYC.
MORF -1. Five Skjppers,
Harry Carr, LBYC; 2. Mistress •
Dick Watkins. LBYC; 3. Pop 'N
Us; Malihini, Ed ZimmertnDn,
.CBYC; SS Leo, Henry Uch8A.S·
tein,CBYC.
MORA -1. Grasshopper, .lob
Hatch, CBYC: 2. Scalawag,
Steve Jost, CBYC; 3. Cohort. ;
PHRF-A -1. Impctu1; 2.
Aurora ; 3. Zephyrous, Joe
Degenh.ardt. Sl BYC; 4. Trident.
Phil Novrodvorsky, Navy YOi 5.
Flying Cloud, Eusene Feldman,
CBYC.
PHRF-8 -l. Blackjack,
>toward J ackson. LBYC; 2. BobA
bll;'BUI Lovelllle, CBYC: 3. Lupi
Tai , Joun Kind , CBYC· 4 .
Fortune, Fred Stevens, LA YC; 5.
GlnlU Al(!. • .
I
,
I
s
r
d
.,... . ....--=:._ ~--------.--__ a -• '"'____...,..._,. J., -----, .
. -·
PUBLIC NOTICE PVBl.IC NO'ftCE PUBL.C NOTICE
"CT1TIOUI IUllNllS l'ICTlTIOUSIUJiNllS ~ NA-...1 $TATl.MINT NAMISTATltif•NT f'ICTITI US BUSINESS ~~IOWlllQ PtUOns •re doloOOl&t• Th• IOllOWlflt a.raon I• Oolne biol· NAM ATEMl!Nt "'»•s. TM follow Ing rsons are dolnq Ml
*nc~~~ 1, 41l0 Blrcll St., Sult• AQUA BLUf. POOL SERVIC:6, MIHS: Jiwin ath,CA'1W.O 167'1 Wanda, Hu111Jn9ton &eac:h, CA JEAN JE SON'S PARTY FOOC l(Of!WIMr, .1to7 layao.re T '2647 "NO SERVI E, 1101 Got! Courw ~ ~IK~, CA '2•U '"'" &an i...ita~nt. l•nt wenci., ~uni• Drive, CMta Mase, Ce.111. ,,.,. LAl•A _,Mr, 760 N, La O~ l"910118Uch, CA. t26A7 Jamie I, J•mlwn, 42) Fair Drive
slo' ':::r,.,~~Nt L ' di th 1 Is b~M$S b conOucteO l>Y on In· Gosw Moe, c.111. 92626 ' Anoolt•. CA tOo.. · • Cl•~. L.Ot v dual, JH" O. Jtmiwn, 425 Merrtmec
Fred Jan I '9en UIP•rne Way Nol A•3<M, ~OSI• M•S•, Cati! 92626
Angeles CA na.!:._.f N. La Cleneo.. L~ This stettl'flent wes llled with tilt J.an MI. Ofson, 1S2 t Sunlt-No.
This b 1-, C.O..ntyClerkofOran99CountyonM.ev X·l,SantaAn•,Callt 9270<1 u.s n•u is ctnctucted. by 1 2t, HIS. Thli busln•Js Is condu(ted by • oentr•I Ptf'tMrst\tp. ,...l•J oener•I pertnehhlp.
Jolin Konwlltr Pubtlllleel Orenoe cout O•llY Piiot JHn 0 . Jemison
'Tllls st•l•mtnt WH flied wt th the Junu, 9, 16, t3, 197S ms-1s This s tatem•nt wh flttd with tile
COunty Clerk of Oreno. County on~ 1---------------1 C:O..ntv Cttrk o Orange County on June
n..ms ~ P UBLIC NOTJCI<: s, l97S. F44sot
PvbllMcs Or1noe Cont Oally'=t-------Pubtjshed 0 ngt' Coast O•llv Piiot,
May26,anc:t Ju"•2, 9, 16, t97S 1906-.7! HOTICl INVITING ••os Jutlet, 16, 13, t97S ~IS
PUB P UBLIC NOTICE
Notke Is lllrtbv 9lven tllat the Boero
of Tr..,slt'es OJ tile Coast CoMrn.inlty
Collt'Qt District of Orano4l County ---::~:--------__:· C.t1torn11, wllt recelvt M:altd bids up 1----.,.o:,~C:;T':"tT;+;~U7.S:-B=--:-:u""s-t N_E_SS __ _
"ICTITIOUS aUSINESS lo 11:00 e.m., Tutsday. June 24, t91S, at ttAM STATEMENT
NAME STATEMENT ll'lt Purch,J'.lt\ij Department ot Sdld The fotlowin person Is dOI"" b<ISi· 'Tiie following persons ere dol"9 busi· W:hool district looted at 1370 Adams nesus: . .,. 111ss•s; A"!nue, Coua Mes•. C4tlfornla ell Pacltlt ·C•I Constr 1
C
FASHION CONSPIRACY SOutll Wllich llm• said bldS Wiii be puoitcly Oowr Orlve 0 11 ~~ton rte~ 833
oast Ptar•, 3333 Brl~tol Costa '"'-sa ~neaandrcadtor · CA921>61 ' ' · ' wpo ach,
C..llf.92416 ' ' CONTINUOUS.TOTALCOPY Wiiiiam Ral Swann 718 W
Fashion Consplra~v. tnc. 8717 SYS TEM. Front, NtwPQr Buch CA'>21>6i Ocean
92
Co1m23Ptex Drive, San Diego, c:a1iiornia lhAtl bias are to be In accordanu w1111 This buslnes Is conducted by •n "" e Instructions ond Conditions and Olvidual,
Tiiis buslneSl Is conducted by a cor· Speciltcatlons wlllcll are riow on lilt Wllllarll R•y Swann
porallon. ~nd may bl! secured In the olllce of ttw Tllis S1atem•nt wu tlled with 1 ·.Fashion Conspiracy, tnc. Purcl\dslng Agent of ~aid schOot dis· County Cter~ ol Oronge county on Md""
M. Countryman, trit '· 22, 1915 Y
, Exec. Vice Pres. Each bidder n•ust submit wltll nls bid F~
PUBUC NOTICE
"CflTIOU,.aUllNHS
NAME. STA•eMeNT •
The tottowtno 11trson It OOlng buil· "'"H. DOMAA ENTERPRISE'S. 10641
=-rson.Ave •• Gercltn Grow, C!'
Ooll',llU W. Wo. 1060 Hend9~
Aw , Garden Grove. CA • ., .. 3
Tiii\ bu'lness b conesucteel l>Y •n In· dlvldU•I.
oouotts w. wn
This uatement w•• flied with ttw
County Cler~ Of Ortn94! County on Jun<1
•• !97S.
F-
Publl"t'd Orang11 Cout Dally Pilot, Junt9. 10. U . JO. t91S 1068-1~
PU BUC NOTICE
"ICTtTIOUS IUSINESS
,.AME STATEMl!NT
T"-lotlowlnQ per .on Ii d04ng b\1)1
neiS.S: CHRISTOPHER'S MEN'S HAIR
DESIGNS, 2211 Martin, Irvine, C..
921162
AnthOny J. Matano. 32oq Tyrol Or.,
l..a9U"" Beocll. CA 916S' Thli lluslnus 1., condu<ted by an In·
dlvlQuat,
Ant1·w1ny J Matano
This statement was tiled with '""
CA>untv Cttrk of Or<1nQe County on June
S. 191S. F44501
Published Orange Coast Oally Pltot,
Junet, 16, 23, 30. t91S 2096-15
PUBLIC NOTICE
&Secretary • cas11:er s check, certlllcd c~k, or Pubf1shed Oranoe coast 0•11 Pltot 'Tnis '11temenl was liled with the bidder s bond made p<iyabtc to me or Mav 21> and June 2 9 16 1975 11937.7~ FICTITIOUS BU St NESS
County Clerk of Orange Counly on May Cler ol the Coast Community Colleqe ' ' ' • NAME STATEMENT
22, 197S, • District Board ot Trusleo In an amo<Jnl PUBLIC NOTICE The tollowlng persons are doing bu>I·
"44064 no less tllan live percent (S I otthe sum nus as:
Published Orange Coast Oaily Pilot bid as a guarantee tllat the bidder will ---::::-:::==~~"."".""-----! T & B DEVELOPMENT CO., 1991
May 26, anc:t June 2, 9, 16, 1915 l'1il$-lS enter Into tile proPOsed Contract ii the "ICTl~OUS aUSINESS Randolpll Ave., Coste Mesa, ca1ifornia. samelsawardedlollim.lntheeventol NAMESTATEMENT 92627 ,
·------·-------,lloilure to enter Into such contrect, tne 'The following person is doing busi· Roberto. Briggs, 18'>0 Capri Circtt, P UBLIC NOTICE proceeds ot the cht'ck wilt be lorteited, nessas: CostaMesa,calltornia92621 or In th t CYPRESS EAST CLEANERS Th J P 181 M Cl I ,------11"· • f e lclat ~ o a bond. the lull sum 10063 Valley View. Cypress, Calil . ..,......,: r-1 ~':as c' ierry, .,.,,"~·au. re e, FIC:TtTtOUStU$tN "Sc ,..,r~o w ""forlelted to said scnool ........, ....,. •~~sa, at torn1a,." N .. ME ST•TEMEN~T· dlitnct, .Joseph Benezra, S46t Diamond Thls business is being conducted bya .. .. N b dd Drive. Hunlin9ton Beach, CA. 92M'I Pa tne hi 'Th• followin9 persons are doing 0 1 er mav withdraw hh bid lor a fhis buslnen Is co"ducted by an In· r rs p. business as: Pl!' 1od ot forty.five 1'5l days alter the dividual. ROBERTO. BRIGGS e•ke~HS~., CFO~ StaH_~· RsaM, CEAN. 9~602:· 11101 da~~:e~~;,~~.f Pi;'_:~~e~~e~~! .. ves lhe Joseph Btnma • Ct!~~s ::a6e:-;;~: l~!~n7~1~h~une 12.
p • """' ' " 1 1 This s tatemtnl was l1led with the t97S Gary R. Paddock, 312 Magnolia privi eqe 0 rei~ctinq any and all bids or Countv Clerk 01 Orange County on May ·
Costa Moosa, CA. 92626 ' to wa1,ve dny "'.eqularitics or h>-28, 1'15. P Ii -~ F447SO Stepllen w Paddoo 1970W&ll torma1111e' 1n any bid or In the bidding. ub sh"" Orange Coast Dally Pi tot, C~taMesa.c~.92<~6 ' ace, Slgneo NORMANE.WATSON . F44244 Ju""l6,23.l0,Juty7,t91S 2220-IS ~ .. v< Published Orange Coast Oally Pilot
Randell R. Jones, 11101 Bak~r St JIHle2, 9, 16, 23! J975 , 2024·7; Costa Mesa, CA. 92626 · n SectY. Board ol Truste~s
This business Is conducted b a Ope June 24, t97S 11 oo a.m general partners hip. y Pubt •shed Orange Coa't 0,111y Pilot. PUBLIC NOTICE
G.lry R. Paddocll • June,, l6, 191S 213/·H ---::--:-:,,-.,.--------
This statement was tiled wllh the ----_ FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
CountyCterllofOrangeCountyonJune PUBLIC NOTICE NAMESTATEMENT "'·ins. Tiie tollowing ptersons ue aoing t>usi·
~sos:
Publl F444S1 8676S9 WHITEY'S MIC, 2110 Harbor
shed Orange Coast Dally Pilot. SUP ERIOR COURT OF THE BIVd., Costa Mesa. CA, 92611 June'l,l~,23,30,t97S 2072-H ST •TEOFCALIFO"NIAFO GeraldE McGuire 319SG•'k•att~r " " R • • ~ ¥ • THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Costa Mesa. CA. 92626 PUBLIC NOTICE
B67'SS
NOTICE OF SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
AT PRIVATE SALE
NO.A·lllSt
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE
OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF
ORANGE.
tn the Matter ot the Estate ot MARY
JANE YOUNGQUIST, a~a MARY J.
Y 0 UNG Q UIST. aka MARY'
YOUNGQUIST, decused.
Notice is hueby given that subfec;t to
confirmation by lfle u1d Superior
Court, the undersigned, as Executrix ot
the •bo~ named decedent wilt sett at
private sate, to the highest and best bid·
der, upon the terms and conditions
herelnatter ml'nlio"ed on Thursday,
lhe 26111 day ot June. t97S, or thereafter
willlln the tlll'll' allowed by law, at the
otllce of MARVIN TINCHER and
EUGENE TINCHER, Attorneys for
Executrix, all the right, title, Interest
and estate ol thl' aoove·named dece·
dent, allCI all the r1ght. title, 1ntt'rest
that the said estate has. by operation ot
law or otherwise, acquired other than
or in bddl\loo to tllat 01 said deceased at
1he time ol her dHlh, ol, In and to that
u~rtaln lot, piece, or parcel Of land,
~1tuate, lying and being '"the CoUtlty Of
Ounge, City ot Huntington Beach,
Stat e o l Callforn1a, ana more
p;1rtlcutarly described as follows, te>
wlt:
Loi 'l. TrMI 4881, as per Map rt-
COrOed In Boo~ 181, Pages 31>-Jl In· "Cius!~ ol Miscellanl'ous Maps, 1n the
omce of the county recorder of said
county.
Commonly known as. 6421 Crandall
Drive, Huntington Beach, California,
Tille sublect to current ta-.es, cow·
nanh; conditions. resel'Yattons, rights,
rights of way, easements and assess·
mentsOf record, it any. The Offeror shalt deposit 10•;, of the
purch•se prl<e with the otter to
purchllse. A c;ommlsslon 111 an amount acceplabte to us will be paid onty to real
e-st•le broker submitting a wrlttenolll'r
accepted by us, Any commission is sub-
ject to acipront by the Probale Court, II
confirm•tlon of safe is require<!. Said
commission Is payable only upon con-
summation of sale 10 purchaser u
evidenced by conveyancl' ot lhe pfOl)er·
1y. No commission will be paid In con·
neclion wltll sale to any 1enant of the
premises tlste<I above unlcn otherwise <19rffd In wrltlng In advance of the sale.
'The property Is ottered for sale In its
"as Is" <ondltlon, without warra1>ty as
to tile condition or suitab1tlty ol the SOii
°"of any Improvement thereon tor con-
slruellon or o<eupancy and withOut
termite clearance, termite Wllf'k or O\her repair work to be pertonned by
.,,. us. No w•rranty Is given as to the ron·
Ing of th• prl)l)ertv nor to the COl'I·
fllf'manc·e of Ille Improvements locate<!
tllereon to present day zonlnq. or build·
Ing code ordinances. The terms and conditions ol sale:
C..sh In lawful mnney of tlle United
Stein,°" as may be contracted fllf'; tel'
percent of the pu(thase money to be
paid 11 01e time ot the bid; balance on
confirmation ot sale. The pur<l\.tser Is to assume the PilY·
ment ol, a"d t.ke Ille properly
purchased by ri1m, subject to ell tile
,Stalt and Cou,.ty Tues. and all auess-
ments of wllatsoever name or nature
Wlllch are now or m•Y hereafter be
chargul>ta to or a lien aqalnsl Ille Pf'O-
perty purc11ased by 111m.
All blOs or offers must be In -ltlng
and mn be left at the office of
MARVIN TINC~ER and EUGENE
T INCHER, AtlOrtll•YS for said Ex·
Kutrlx, County of Los Angeles, State of
Calllornla or may t;>e delivered to Mild
Eucutrlx personally In salel County of
Or111191, or may be filed In tile office of
No. A·'92'S Lulle J. McGuire. 3194 Gibraltar.
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL C.OSll Mesa, CA. 92616
PROPERTY AT PRIVATE SALE This buSillUS IS co"ducted by a
In the matter ol tlle Conservatorshlp general partnership.
o t l he Pers on and Estate of LestteJ.McGulre
FLORENCE MARGUERITE SMITH ~raldE.M<Guire
aka MARGUERITE J . SMITH, ak; This statement was tiled with the
MARGUERITE JUNE SMITH County Clerk ot Orange County on May
Conservatee ' 281 1'75.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that F44241 the unc:terslgned, JAMES E. HEIM, Publlslled Oral'lgt' Coast Dally Pilot,
Public Guard tan, as conservator Of the June2. 9, 1•. 23. 197S 1973·1S
person and estate ot FLORENCE
MARGUERITE SMITH, a~a
MARGUERITE J . SMITH, aka
PUBLIC NOTICE
MARGUER!TE JUNE SMITH, con• NOTICE OF INTENTION
servat .. e, Wiii sell at private 'iclle to the TO DEDICATE EASEMENT
hlQheSt and best net bidder, after de· NOTICE IS HEREBY GtVENthalon
duct Ion of any requested broker's com· the tOth day of June, 191s, the Board ol
mission, upon the terms and conditions Education ot the Newporl·Mesa
hereinafter mentioned, and subject to Uflllied School Olstrlct of Orange COUn·
confirmation by the above·ent1lled ty, California, adopted a Resolution ot
Superior Court, on Tnursday, June 26, tntefltlon to dedicate an easement to
197S, at the hour ot twelve o'clock._.,, Soutllern Olllfornia Edison Comp;1ny a
ortlll!reatterwithinthetimealloweaby corporation, for e lectrical tl~e
l~w. al the Ottlce of th• Public Guar-purposes, said ea~ment to be located
d1a1>. 1300 ~utll Grand Avenue, Santa over. on and across portions ollhat said
Ana, Calllorn1a. all ngllt, title, interest, parcel of land located at 14th Street and
and eslate of said FLORENCE Balboa Blvd .. tn t'1e City of Newport
M ... R G u E R I T E s M I T H • a k II Buch.
MARGUERITE J . SMITH, aka Apublic meetingupon'thequestlonot
MARGUERITE JUNE SMITH, ron-making such dedication will be held at
servatH, 1n and to that certain real pro-City of Costa Mesa Counctf Chambers,
""rty~crlbedastollows, to wit: 11 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. California,
Lot 16ot Tract No. 3911. ln\heCity onthe24llldavo1June, 1975,atthehour
of Huntington Beach, County or ol1:J~o'clockp.m. •
Orange, State of Callforn1a, asper map BOA.RO OF EDUCATION
recorded In Book Ut, Pages 2Sand26ol NEWPORT·MESA Mf~ettaneous Maps, In the Olllceottne UNIFIEO SCHOOL DISTRICT
COUnly Recorderot said County. Bv Thomu W. Hl'nclerson Jr
EXCEPT all minerals, oil, qas. Clerk of said Board ' ·
petrol•um and other hydrotarbon sub-P\ll>t1she<I Orange Coast Dally Pilot,
st•nces •n and under. or which may be J1111e 16, 1915 2243-15
produced from said land which ....,.
derlies a plane P'arallet to and SCO feel
below the present surtace ol said land
tor the purpase of prospecting for, the
exploration, development, production,
extraction and taking ot said minerals,
oll, gas. p e troleum and o ther
llydrocarbOn substances trom said land
oy meaM of mines, wells. derricks
and/or other equipment from surface
1otat1ons on adjolninq or nelQhborlng
land, or lying outside ot the above
described land , as reservt'd by F E.
Farnsworth, et al., lessors under tl\at
certain ground lease, a memorandum
Of which was recorded October 21, 1%0,
in Book 5484, Page 1St, Olllclal
Re<ords, which provides tnat teswrs
shall t>ave no right to enter upon the
surface ot said teued premises "°' 10 use said leased premises or any POl'hon
thereof abo'.le said plane parallel ttand
SOOfeet below the pntsen't surtao of tile
leased prem ise~. for any purpose
whatsoever.
SUBJECT to all exceptions, condi·
tlons, restrictions, easements, ex-
clusions, ru ervatlons, liens, Tights,
and rights of way, of record.
commonly known as: 82A2 In·
dianaPOllS Street, HuntlngtOI' BHch,
California. Bids or otters are Invited for said pro·
perty and must be in wrltlng and wrn be
received at the Office of the Publlc
Guardian. 1300 South Gran. AvenU&,
Sant• Ana. Cattlornla, 9210S, or may Ile
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 8 USINESS
NAME STATEMENT
The tollowlng per'°ns are doing busi-
ness as: FULLERTON APARTMENTS
LTO .. PHASE II, 20</t San Joaquin Hitt;
Road, Newport Beach, Callfornla92660
The Alison Company <Catilornial,
2091 San Joaquin Hills Road, Newport
Beach, catllornla 92660
M1ddlese" Oevelopment Corpora·
tlon t<:atifornia ), USO State Street, Spr·
!nQlield, Massacllusetts Ot 101
Forge Oevelopment Corparallon
<California>. 12SO State Street, Spr·
lnglleld, Massacllu~ttsOl 101
Thi\ business Is conducted by a
limited partnership.
General Partner:
The Alison Company,
Roger M. Allson, ltspresldenl
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk ot Orange County on June
2. t97S
OOUMANl,ALORICH &
WORTHINGTON, ATTYS
10M0Wllshlr·e 8Nd., Suitt 2120
L.A .. Ca 90024
Atten-Mary TIS<hler
F44lSI
Publi:lhed Orange Coast Dally Pl lot,
Jurie 16, ?3, 30, and July 7, 197S 22t0.7S
PUBLIC NOTICE
tiled with tile Clerk. of said Superior
Court, or mev be delivered to said
Puollc Guardian personalty, at any
Ume afl~r first publttation of ttus ------l>Ollce and before the ma•ino of said FICTITIOUS BUSINESS sale. NAME STATEMENT
TERMS OF SALE: Cuh, lawful The following persons are doing
money of tile United Sta1es, or part l>uslnessas;
cash and balance evidenced by"°'' or FULLERTON APARTMENTS, notes secured by mortgage or trust LTO .. PHASE I, ioq1 San Joaquin Hiiis
deed on tile property so s.otd as may be Rood, NewPOrl 8edth, Calllornla92060
acceptable to the Court l.IP(ln conflrma· PBO, c/o Roger M, Alison, 2091 San
lion. The sum ol '1,000.00 In cash, Jo.tquln Hills Road, Newport Beech,
Gtrtlfled check, or money order must lllor"la 92f>60
accompany eacll wrltlen bid°" ofter. iddluex Development Corpora-wltll the balente of the pure ha~ price lion <C•llfor"lel, nsq State Street, Sl>r·
to be paid upon conllrmallon of Mtle as lnolleld, Massachusetts 01101
illJP<OYed bV said Superior Court. Forqe Development Corpor1111on
Pl.BLJC NOTICF.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
The lollowing person 1s doing buSI·
nessas:
GEOROEAN CONCRETE CONST.
CO .. 1610 S. OaK, Santa Ana, Callf. 92707
Georgia Ree Hottman, 1610 S. Oak,
Santa Ana, Cillit. 92707 ·
Tt11\ bu~ine•S 1s conducted by an in-
d1v1dual.
Georg1a'Hoffman
This statement was II led with the
County Clerk ol Orange County on June
S, 197S.
F44448
PubliShed Orange Coast Oally Pilot,
June 9, 16, 23. 30, 191S 2092·15
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEME NT
The tollowlng persons are doing buSi·
ne'sas:
HOLOSCAN OF ORANGE COUN·
TY, 620 Newport Center Orive, Suite
826, Newport Beach. Celifornia92660
Michael Patrick Holleran, 29 Seo
Isle Drive, Long Beach, California
90803
Thomas L. Brennan. 880 Rosalind
Road, San Marino. California 91108
This business is conducted by a
general partnership.
Mitltael Patrick Holleran
Thi\ statement was tiled with the
County Clerk ot Orange County June 12.
t91S.
"F441S6
Pulll1sllcd Orange Coast Oalty Pilot.
Juriet6,23.30,Juty7, 191S 21'J0.7S
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
The totlowing persol\ h doillC} busi-
neu as:
TYPE II, TYPE 2, TY'PE TWO,
1180S A Sky Park Circle, Irvine, CA.
92705
5u1anne Barwic It, 140<11 Chagall,
tr vine, CA. 92105
Tris buslness Is conducted by an in·
dlvlduaL
Su1anne Bwwick
This statement was filed with the
County Clerk ot Orange County on June
•. 19/S F44-4SO
Published Orange Coast Oaity Pilot,
Ju"e9, 16, 23,JO, t97S ?081-IS
Pl'BLIC SOTICE
f tCTITIOUS BUSINESS
· NAME STATEMENT
Tiie following person is doing busi·
nessas:
ANTHONY J BARBER SALON,
18700 Ma<Arlhur Blvd , Irvine, CA.
97062 AnthOny J. Matano. 32~ Tyrol Or.,
Laguna Beach, CA. 926S 1
This business is conducted by an 1n
dividual.
AnthOny J. l\Mtano
Tiils statement was tiled with the
County Clerk of Orange County on June
S, t91S.
F44SOO
Published Ora,.ge Coast Dally Pitol,
June 9, 16, 23, 30, 19/S 2116-IS
PUBLIC NOTICE
FiCTtTiOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
The following persons are doing busl·
nessas:
IRVINE PLAZA R EALTY, 210f
Mlrtln St., Suite 102, Irvine, CA. 92101
Oavld Gonzatu, Jr., 61SO Allmar1t
Ave., Whittler, CA. 90601
LelQh Roland Ratclltle, 5261
Borduux Ave .• t rvlne, CA. 9270S
This business Is conducted by a
general partner~llip,
Oavld Gonzalts. Jr.
Tllis statement wa~ filed wltll the
County Clerk of Orange County on May
28, ms.
F44Ml
Published Orange Coast Oally Piiot,
JIHle2. '· 16, 13, 1975 1910.15
P UBLIC NOTICE
, the Cltrk of this Court, at •ny time after
,._ first publlc•tion of this notice of
All bids or offers rn1.1,st be submitted CC.lllomlal, 12SO State Street, Spr ~
on a torm furnished by the seller. ingffetd. Massachusetts 0110 t -------------
Tiie right to reject llflY and all blds Is This business is conducted by a FICTITIOUS UUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT • •saleandt>efore making said ule.
• OATEO: Jun• 111 t'7S MAJ l<ENANNETTE
PORTER,
E aecutrlaof tile Estate
otMARYJANE
YOUN GQV Is T. <1eceHed
MARVIN TINCHER
EUGENE TINCHER , Att-vs tor l. .. cvtrl• .
..-.w.0cea11•0ttlenrcl,No. U4t
&M11le.Cll,C:.ll1tr11latol0l
,,.....: 21i-u1+i0> • • Pulllislled Orange Cont O•llY pf1ot,
• June 16, 17, u 1 tt7S 2i.1s
PUBLIC NOTICE
lleret)y reserved. llmlledpartnershlp.
OATEO: June9, 197$ Generot Partner:
J AMES E. HEIM PtlOaCa11tornia
PUBLI c GUARDIAN Roger M . Alison
as Consel'Yator of the This statement was flled with the
Pe non and E)tate ot County ol Cler II ol Orengo CCMHllY on
the above·narned Cooservatee June?, t975
ADRIAN KUYPER F44U7 COUNTY COUNSEL a11d OOUMANI, ALDRICH &
JOMN fl\. PATTERSON, DEPUTY WORTHINGTON, AllY•
615 Clvl' canter Dr I ff Wtsl 10MO WllJhlre Blvd ., Suite 2120
Post Office 8oa 1l7t LA.; Ca t0024
S.nta Ana, c;alllomla t2702 Alt ... -Mny Tlselllel'
Published Orange c.oast Dally Pilot, Publlslled Or1tnoe Coast Dally Piiot,
June t6, 11, 23, 197S 2237-IS JU"e 16, 23, 30, and July 1. 197S 2109-75
PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE
G E N E RA L R Ev EN u E s H 'A R·I N G p LA N NE 0 u s i R E p 0 AT . <>--" llev•.,.. S~"'"' ~ •..ieoet turci. .,.,..l!v to IOcal •ftd •Wt ~"""'"1• "'" ,._. ot vou• p L M·• plan r. publ"hed
, t o t n<OU•• •IHrtn P•rhC:tP•t""' In det•mlninq VOU• oo-n,,,."'(a clec•-on how ti.. mo....,, w~I be -'' NOit Any eompl•lnU of ~lll('1imtMtioft In tlle uH ol theoe fllMt may be -to ,..-...,....,..,...------..;..--.....;.---....;;~~--~
•he OHie• of..._"*~ WMll.. p.c. zo2u. lHIGOV11111M1~! lF"' iC1( CIT•
, • 111 ".ANNEO EXPeNOITOllES ANnci,Ar1110,. G£Nl""' ~cvlHur SHAlllHG rAY .. ENI 01 °fl <;t;', b3 l
IAJ t.A1100111U lllCAl"lt&~
1 P\llllC"'ICIY • 1: ·i~.~=llTAI. • , I I • l'Ut\JC l ... N,l'OaTAnQ<I •
• HlAltM I
~·)·--I
td'4Ul-U I
, Jai':Al:~ • ·-.,,.T 3~~\._, • t'/\ t ! =Jl,7{~:g:f •llD • .~ •'f'DUO'•m I ,II ~l~-"' I
• .111 ~~ot\.~1 •
•IM~r"' s
~·L CllMIJllt-..,. .. I
·" "'IOt•I* • -o~
jQ 0'lAA TING I MAINHNAll(;I
11
s
• • • •
I
I
.
I
FO~ THI Sll<l>t (NTl!llMlNf •t~•OO JU•V I. 1911 lH~OUC)M JUl<E >o. .. .,. l'iA"' 10sn .. o1Hl5l IUNOS fO~ IHI l'U!ll'OSU SMOWN. v •nouNI NO. 05 2 030 90'
JPVlNE Clio' 04:96
ADntNI ST~MTI VE PIRE~TOR
F'O !Oii DZ
1F,!Vlf1( C""-.IFOFrtt" 92664
w....u,1.1D1".n..111i.. .. n..1.111i.1111 ... 11 •• ni1.1
101 ._.,,._.,.,.,....___.,_!If Jyne 24. 1925
•• The trv1ne C1 ty Coun~ • _ ., _ ,_. _ _ ... _. __ ..... ~ .........
~ 4201 Campus Drive, Irvine. Ca. 92664
5
Tiie lollowtng person Is doing busl•
I'll'~ .is: JAY TRE SSEN .ANO AS·
SOCIA TES. t621 Port Barmoutll Place,
Newport Beat h. Catlfornl• ,,M>O
Jerom• Fr•nk Tressen, 1621 Port
Barmouth Pltce. Newport 8eac11.
CalltornlA 92660
This buslnes.s Is conducted Oy an in!
dlvldual .
JtrOl'Oe F. Trnsen
Tiiis statement wu rnea with ttwo
County Clerk of Oranqe County on May
U, 197S. .... s
PubtlShtd Orange Coa\t OellV Pilot,
Mey 26, and June?,'· 16, 1t1s t936-1S
P UBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSltojESS NA"'ESTATEMENT
The to11ow1ng per son Is dOing bu\1
nessas.
OCTIGON PROO, tS8t t Oun!!Alk
Lane. Huntlnqton Beach, CA. ""41
Scott '-'urence Browll, 1se11 Oun
clellt Lane. Huntington Beech, CA. "Ml
Tiiis business ls conducted by an In·
dlYlduat
S<ottL. Brow11
This sletement wn f1111d wttn tho!
County Clerk of Orengo County 001 MllY
28, tt7S.
Publl5/led Orange Coast D•llyF~
J-2, t, 16, U, 1'7S 2022 1)
PVBLIC NOTICE
"tCTITlOUS IUllNlSS
NAM a $TATIMINT
Tiit foliowln9 Pff'Otl I• Oolng Ou•I·
M••as: P~NT Tl-llNOS, 11"6 O&k SI ,
ftountaln Velley, CA. t270I
Vtr9lnl• W. $poon.,, 111o&o0etdit .
Founlell\ V•lley,CA. tJJOI
Tiiis blnlMU It tOnOIKltd by an In•
dlvldual.
v1ro1n1aw. 5poonef
'"'' \l•tt~nt ..,., fitted witfl 11'11 C*#lty Cltr• OI Or•ntt CCH1nty on /'M'f a.ms. ~· Mil"*! 0ta119t GCNISl D•Hf Piiot. J-t. t, 16, Q, 1'1S 202H1
-
•••• .f • • ...
Monday, June 16. 1975 DAILY PILOT 8 l .
Just a FeW
words
in the
Right Place
2 !)Ales Ill
ON SIN • 'ADe
(',.,,.'1.0 ~alt·.,. Cle AD
>'SJfi('d. s or lh ~ rh:11 ·. .td. e Prir
)
~
Cl 1\", ·' th(• . e Of &J :'i°
:-io/c1 < \J l><>J'l lJ ~<.l<·c'"'s ., . inch•
l " . llut fJ , ( cl(•/) ·' OJ)· 1. J. .Jn 1111h 'nit .. IJ111 t1 . 01<111 ,,.h c <Jfe<1 b, ..
< J.1/ lfJ<•· Os··/· . ·~ 'I \' [J· <ll'S I 'h •<ti~ h (),Coe.,'.. '''>t : ' t>11 thi~. e Or; ·G/\fi ,.1 • 41<1
I -~· 0\•• ' ,, J)f (' ' JJ "nr. A · · "'lcl . S!125 (. /' " . xxx.x .,,
)( )( "·
PVT A FEW WORDS
TO WORK FOR YOU
"rm another satisfied customer,''
the caller .from Huntington Beac.h
said. · .. I sold my car," he added.
Here is all it took to make lhe con-
nection lor the sale:
~~3 GALAXY V-8. S250
XXX·XXXX
SVCCEss
'WITH AlJ::lJBLED
... , nut 1 SALE
·!'old ... a ot of C'<Jll • r . · . \1·hor~>.v <·<1r. t oo. To st 1 01~1 :::iris c.ind ·rh . !ll<' to st·<.• it ·. he ftrst pe,.. ,If .: t I . . .'iOI) th '' h.' <10111 I · <' l\ewp . ) c .suct·c·~s · I Pla<'t'<I thi . ~· r. Be<•<.'h b..,·~, t ,t' :1fNf l>y ~"'''"the fJ · ·1 . It: lor Who . "' Y Pilot :
fi6.6rv1 C P/S. P.!B .. on:soh'. W/aut ..... -. :st~ro vi . o .. :S19~. ""x . . .. , r.., nice• .,,. ·XX.'<.'<. ·
Put a Few Words
To Work for You.
In the Right Place.
Call
642-5678
DAILY PILOT
,,
HousHforSale Ho.us For Sale ...... .,.. .....•.......•....•.••................
GtMt"ol I 002
I 002 ••••• ••••••••••••··~··
•••••••••••••••••••••••
4 +FAMILY
Hutto.......
POOL
PAIUC&
TEMHIS
wilh professio nal
landscape, air cont.I. a11cl
ts 111 sharp cond1lioo.
ONLY $.51,950.
AAent 644-7211
THE
QUIET VILLAGE
J.TYLE
Call and let us show you
on!! of the finest 3
bedroom homes at this
prtce in The Bluffs. In ex·
cellent condition. Jn·
BEACH CONDO
$22 ,900
Carcln·l· hvmµ 1.:un b<t
yours 111 this con\lurtablc
one bc\lruum Condo.
Adult devclt1pmcnt j U!ll 2
miles I rorn ocean. Walk
to shopping & !Jank:-..
Price includes
washer /d r)'t r anti rl!fng.
New hstmg. Won't J;,st
long
640·6l61
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE I INC.
Ltnor decorators own ___ _
home. Convenient to ten· S & S L"' MER ms court & P'>OI. Only A
$72 ,5 00. Cal l now SAVE
673·8550.
OPI N lll9 • llS FUN108fNl<t• THOUS.ANDS
! ......... '.:',.:_::. ! Gorgeous Park llunt· ington Woo sq. It. tormul
..:.. li v 1n ~ und din1n!.!. · ... J;, Spacious l<1m1ly room
-----------and gurdcn ktlt lw n. Privall! guc:-.t ::.Utl c .
Big Canyon Buy
Beautiful Dover model.
vacant. Mus l sell! 2
Bedroom & den. Sll!J,500
or lease S700. mo.
VOGEL & BABBITT
REALTORS
644·6056
ASSUME 71/t'/o .LOAN
$199 MO.
PAYSA.LL
VA/FHA
Repos
in OrangeCount.y
Keys inofCicc
WORLD
REAL ESTATE
Speci al ists in govern·
menl financed homes!
556 ... 7777 anytime
BETTER TH.AH HEW
Sharp 4 yr old wilh loads
of upgrades. This 3BR,
iba Select Property has
a spacious kilch, Cam.rm
with a w:.ill of glass lo a
secl ud e d fro nt
courtyard. Priced right
ul 545,900. with an as·
sumable loan . CALL
cffi1ckly. 556·~'
Swee pin g ::.la111;; t o
secluded mas ll·r attfl
children:. :.ttlll'S. liOO ~~>.
F 'f . B U N lJ S C A M 1·:
llOOM . S lllllll BELOW
OUH LAST O~K Vall lo·
ti a y ! ~J6:l-t:71i7.
'''''J-., i •
(® : : I . '. 1 I•
: h' 11 · • • ;p.
--
HOME & INCOME
Eaststde C M. 3BH, 2ha
home, dbl g:.ir + !Bil
apt. Assume: 71 :i'·• VA
loan. Small down.Owner
will carry Znd TD. Must
:.ell· Full prtC't.! $50,900.
CA LL PR ESTIGE
HOM ES. HEALTOH.!:i. 1
6~5-6&16
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
202\ W Bolboo 671-Ht>l
HORSES·
&INCOME
One atre in Uit· mul.'n'
soug ht a lter Hack Uay
area. Enclosed wttb
heavy guugc chain ltnk
Jenee 6 horse corrals,
chicken coops. room for
ex~rcismg :.ind lounging.
Income no w SliOO. per
month. possihl<: s~oo.
From (2) 2 bedroo m
homes s urrounded by
fruil trees. Many extra:..
·~ -
~
@ herbert
hawk ins
REALTORS .c;:::SELECT -.
I PROPERTIES 1-------646·3255
Spiral Staircase
Gi g antic Spanish
Mansio n wilh hu ge
master hedrm suite +
s eparate parent 's
relreat, formal 'dining, 5
bdrrns . Assume existing
71.-.i•f< loan. Full price
$72,500. CALL 962-7788
KEY .
.P.€ALTOP.Sli
OCEAN VIEW
RETREAT
HOUSE
OF GLASS
Spanish Hacienda
3 Br, formal d111111g, scp
fam I'm w J frplc Assume
1'/r VA loan or S:34,8')().
Condo Penthouse
2 Ur dose to be:.ich.
Great starlcr home.
Hurry , wolt 't last at.
$2!1,500
Villa Pacific
Sever:.i I i&:i UH units in
this poµular communily ,
pnt·es start at $39,000
CALL 968-4405
Salcspcopll' Needed •
EASTSIDE
DOLL HOUSE
Sharp Cos ta i\'11.'s a 3
bedr oom. 2 bath with
h e a u l 1 I u I l' a 1· p e t s
thruoul Larirc covered
palm. tlblc garage. Room
I' or ho a l 11 r t •r a 1 le I' .
Hurry, first time orterecl
$(g\tJJ1A -~"Ec!rS !t
That lntri-guing Wore:/ Game with a Chuckle
ltlo1•tl by C\AV t . POU.llN -------
0 h orronge ~11er1 ol the
lour >erombi.d wo•d• be· tow 10 lor1t1 lour ><mple wotds
Hr1~r11
I CUMIS I ~.:·· . I I I I 1
. •
I' D 0 T s 0 Ii . 15 I' I I DlvorcM""'c•in l>I' trying I . . . . know o 11vv "' •I) wovnd up
.,., _ ... L_Y_X __ A_G __ A ............. -1
1
with -ot h•s rno thor 1n~'.~.~-
r I I r 17 C) CO">n1 .. r .. Ill~ iW'u<lf., ~lilllR!
t.v l1lltn11 ·~ "·~ ltl•uong WOid ..__._...L.._...__._..___, yov develOI) ltorn 11e,p No. 3 beio-
8 Pl lNl NUM80(0 lEllOS 1 •
IN ltiES~ SOllARLS
! ~~F:.~~!~t, irnm 10 I I I I I I I I
SCUMLET$~WW1h1C:taniflcatiott8080
•
-
'88 OAILYPtLOl Monday.June 18.197S Ho.HForSaN IHotn ForW. IH Fo.-W. I
Hti••H --.r...a... 1~ IE--C'.....1-........... ......... • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·····~···~············ •• c:'!~ •••••••••••••••• ~.. • .., .. ...... For w. .....,.-~ .,,..-~ ----...... ....... &.--~ .... • •••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••,••••• ~ GtMf'Gll I 002 G........e 1002 G4"Mt"91 • 100• ... --......... 1002 "'-~• del ...... -,_., ••• ••••••••••••••••••1:••• A .,.......... ~ .....,-IVA• 6....-.1 I 002 Gwrail I 002 Gwr91 ( I OOJ. G...,... f1>0 •••••••• • • • • ••••••••••• ••• • • • • • • •••••• •••••••• •••• •• • • ••••••••••••••• ••••••••• • ••••••••••••• •••••• • • • • •••••••••••• •
•••••••••• • •••••••••••• ••• • • •• •••• • ••••• •••••• ••• ••• • • • ••• ••••••••• •• •• J llVIME t-• "'Ce. ••••••••••••••••••••• rm ~ 5
Ilcinf,! remodeled; custom 5 RR , 5 Ra.
• fi..500 !'.Cf. It. home on point, pool, do(.'k.
Lovely c us tom 3 BR"& den, 31 ~bu. on
la~&on . Boat sltp. ~25,000.
Jkautit'ully dt'l'On1ted 5 BR. 4 1 :.i ba.,
paneling , 3 frpks. Uoat s lip. $260,000.
Cu~to111 ;, UH. 4 bu .. View, 80 It. on
lngoo11 . Boat s lip. ~~:s.ooo
Tr;ulttiouul 4800 ft 5 Rr. ·I':! ba .
~·11--<·011d · On \;1goon : hoat slip. $325.000
B"ILLCRUNOY, REALTOR
341 Boy!.•dt· Or111t· N B b7S -bl61
GeMrol I 002 I GMet'al 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ESLEY N
~YLOR CO
H.EALTOHS ~IIH'l' t ~Mf
H .B. SPECIAL! $59,500
• Best buy in lbvc ly Suburbia Pk. near
beach ! l mmac ulute l -story home w /4
H~, FR. & formal dining. Try 10r,r, dn.
~ 2 I I I San Joaquin Hills Road
NEWPORT CENTER, H.B. 644-4910
I 002 GeMral I 002
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••
LANDMARK
S BR2 STORY
BEACH
• A~S"""~
, REALTORs'
FANTASTIC OCEAN VIEW
1 N FANT l\S'fl C Laguna. Look in~
<town on FANTASTIC Divers Cove. ~ew 2 .b~droom, 2 bath, fireplace
ondommium. Furnishings included.
/\ F_ANTASTIC buy for ~.ooo. Also
avatla~) e fop annual or s ummt:r rental. ·
ALL-644-7270
2828 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mor
PR P Y M NA EM NT
llO~~~·.o. HOMlS roit LIVING NElWORK
\IYlhiC.
U o<OUH WI (U ... ~ '" "'· Jiii, 01 1101 u rl'UCI 1• 1111 ••llO•
Ge-neral I 002 Generol I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
SEASHORE DUPLEX
I mmaculate, la rge, well fu rnished
d uplex. Only a f cw steps to our best
beach. 4 Bdrms., huge living r m .. 2
baths up; 2 bd rms., huge living rm.
down. Enclosed garages. This is a
splendid investment property, which
has been a great lax s h e lter for
present owner. $99,500.
VEAR
BAY ANO BEACH
675-3000
0!407 f. COA ST H WY CORON A OEL. MAR
•
A nN: HUNTINGTON IEACH
HOUSEHUMTBS
Uni q u c JI om cs has a w i n n er ! ·1
bedroom. µool home on a large lot in
the Landmark Homes development.
Sparkling clean. beautiful wallpapers,
burnt orange carpets, built in shelving
and lwo and a half baths. A listing of
Gudrun Coa<lv al onlv $7.900.
UNIQUE HOMES, Reattors -546-5990
M50 Mesa Ver~ Dr., Costa Mesa
' Gettffol I 002 GtMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
BIG CANYON
.Just lis ted popular Monaco Mode l. 3
Br. 2i:: .lia., wool crpt, tile patio,
$130,oqo
E legant 3 Br, ~Ba, 3 car gar., pool &
jacuzzi. Highly upgrad ed, $135,000
Lowes t priced 3 Br. 3 Ba in the
~nyon. Fully landscaped, 1 story, 3
car gar, $124,500 •
. CORONA DIL. MAl AflawlesS3BRHomeon
R 2 CUTE C Cod 2 BR l ari oversiied rorn ·r lot • • ape • I p ans for With beautiful 8talnt:d
second unit. Only $65,000 11ass windows, leaded
R-2, DUPLEX: 2 BR with bachelor
unit. Lovely home with income, South
of Hwy. $72,000
VIEW. with income. Two on a lot. Two
separate 3 BR hom es, sharing pool,
pat tos. · $177,500
HARBOR
COMPANY
REALTORS
2865 E. Coast Hwy., Cot"'OH •t Mor
.. S•Mhtg Real Estate hi Newport Hwbor
· Siftce 1944"
673-4400
glass bookcasc:s, noturn.1
wood & brick t~xtureAt
and much much more.
Call 64<'·7211 Quick. Ool1
$9.5.000. Agent
2 Charming houses on
wide lot So. of hwy. CdM.
Beeut. gardens. $91,500.
Owner, 673·(100
OUPLEX·CdM for sale or
trade for multiple zoned
lot in Costa Mesa. New,
each 3 BR, 2 UA w/
frplc 's. Brokers ok.
$127.500. Aft 5 PM,
644-4033.
GREAT Nj:W DUPLEX
3 br, 2 b'tt frpl. cpts, &
drps, will consider 2nd.
675·2024 e ves 673-2925
Costa Mesa I 02rf •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOWEST PRICED
3 lied, 2 bath family
home on a tree lined
I
1002GeMf'OI
street in COL.LEG to; 1002 PARK. Fireplace, cov'd
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio, DW. nu paint, &
HOME IN IRVINE
Small 3 bdrm., 2 ba ths, s urrounding
beau t ifu l atriu m. T his is a free ·
standing hom e with no common ~alls,
workbench in garage. At
only
$42,500
~~
. . -AHYTl'f'E
IHt) MESA VERDE
located close to everything.
Offer ed at $.51,500
( [U~BIN-M1'~TIN
· REALTORS • JUST LISTED. Beautiful
644-7662 CORONA DEL MAR :i bedrm home w/gian1.
GeMrol I 002 l~ol I 002 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ add-on family rm. Only
I ~.950. One block frorn
1 Geeeral I 002 GeMral I 002 golf course. Owner anx·
'
............•••.............•...••....•....•...
ltamblm~ 5 bedroom J G I I OO bath. Lwo story. For~al ftlero 2 I. 0 l<l.CKb1YOURSELf! USE VA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ious ! Call World Real GetteNll I 002 on l ame us if you MESA VERDE Estate, 556-7777. •••••••••••••••••••••••! miss this quaint Nan-EASTSIDE $59,500 i--. --'--------
._I;
C::AMEO SHORES k. I ••••••••••••••••••••••• entry, s un e n 1nni.; ! tucke~ s tyle ho~c. Stale· HUGE POOL Elegant living & im-SIR BEAUT. Decor., wallpr. 3 · Pr:,es t1 gc: <in OCEAN room. Enormous parly· ---------VH,W, secluded patios, g am c room w i l h
JJr1valc bc"ch, spacious fireplace. Glassed in
LAST OFITS
KIND
NEWPORT
DUPLEX
ly shingle rool, res~ful Enjoy elegance of mediate occupancy on I br,2ba. Big, special bit.
yellow stucco, l>rick wrought ironfenceyard thisEastsideeasymain-POOL-IRVINE onfam.rm.w/frpl.Must
.t:iwn~~ plus a ··spic & gourme t kitchen. Ex-
• -;pan three bedroom-tensive patio and wan-
1am1ly room humc-for denn!! private grounds.
the vcr.v s pecial buyer. llous~kcepers quarters.
Just $127.SOU. Separate chtldrens wing
. 675-5511 and hidea\\ay master
Cole of Newport suite. Walk to beach. ~51 5 E . Corist ll"b' Just $5350 flown. Sec it
Corona clel :\-1;,ir • now! Call 963·6767. • l '•Hni4 Y·tr
TREE LfNa)
CUL-DE--SAC
ONLY $59.950
'fhi~ l'harmini.: nt•w lbl·
in,.: h<is l'Vcrylh1ng. J
O\cr::.11.cd hdrm!i, lan~e
tc1m1ly room. rumpus
room with ample space
J or your pool table.
Completely rcdl.'Corated
1 loor to cc1ltn~. Heavy
:c;ha kc roof with the
charm of t::a~t.sidc Co~ta
.)lcsa. Call 5~j ~1!11. . ..r---
•111
[~;~
Harbor Vi~w Honws
You own the land! Best
value in this prestige
ne1ghborhoud. Sharp
Monaco model fcalurtn).!'
2 bdrms .• convert. den. 2
baths & lge. country
k 1tehen: elegant dmin~
area. Lge. patio with
ea s y maintenance
landscaptn:,!. Just $68,750
C. F. Colesworthv
REALTORS 640-0010
Gnerol I 002 GMeral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
SPARKLING NEW BAYFRONT
Never lived-in 4 bedroom. 4 bath
home w /sandy beach, pier & slip
plus s pectacular Harbor &
mountain views . Great location on
fee land for $269,500.
3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH LUSK HOME ·
Qwet s treet, private yard. Near
schoob, s hops. and be ach. VacanC
and r eady for o c<:upancy. ~2,000.
PRICED REDUCED
Beautiful Bi g Can y on
condominium. 3 bedrooms. ocean
view. wood d<:c-ks, continental
charm and· g rJce. All for only
$149,500. Call today. ·
HEW LISTING -BIG--eAMYOM -
RIGHT OH
4 bedroom. dining room, family
room. dccoruted by Dale Farney.
Usable and lovely yard landscaped
b y Compr<.·hen s ivc De s ign.·
Cus t omized l'X lras everywhere-.
mirrored ward robes: marvelous
family home priced to sell quickly
at $164.950.
FORMER MODB. HOME
Now better• than model. Beautiful
Rutgers plan in University Park.
Next lo pool & tennis. 3 bedrooms,
·den, and dining room. $68,500
.includes the Jand !
SPYGLASS TWO STORY
FcaturinJ,! five bedrooms and u
honus plus gorgeous custom pool
with JUCU'l.1.i: fire pit. <i nd gus
trnr·h·CfU{\. Gt'cat location on nature
park. $169.500 fr<'.
LOOK DOWN ON IT ALL
• The mos t <>utst a nding :l hedroom 2
bath home in Harbor View Homes
• to add to this . a super view of lhe
ocean and Newport. area. $107,500.
COUNTRY FREHCH -IRVIHE COVE
SJ)t'cl<•<.·ular OC'ean vjew residence,
desagned ror family living on 1 :•
acre 7 Bedrooms, formal dining
room. break rast room, den. ex-ka
larg() billiard/family room.
Charming enclosed used brlck
patio. pooJ. children's play yard.
$435,000.
·JUST LISTED
Be firs t !! 4 bedrooms in
llalecrest. 17 x 24 den ad·
dition with beamed cc1l
in~s. pam·ltng. Over 1900
sq. It. Un qu1 cl cul -de-sac
s treet. Mui:.l be shown hy
appl. only.JUST $45,500.
1>lanters. g ra ce~u l with gas lighting formaJ tenance residence. Close True! $59,500 is the se47it! $42,900.~nderlist
lands cap1ni.r. Massive entry ball. True tri-level lo shopping. Convenient lowest price. This model price for q uick sale •
master bdrm, & 3 other overlooks sunswept to every thing. Only • in tract! Quiet cul-de· Ownr. 548·l OOS
4 big bedrooms up + 3
111g bedrooms down. In
\ll!l"Y j!OOd {'Ond1tion
throu).!hout with new
wood ~h1ni..:lc exterior.
fen yard-; lo sun ualtnng
& waler. l>on·l t<.•11
an) 0111: al $120,000. J usl
call 5-16·2;113.
bdrf!ls. J'arqu~t floors, patio, 9' deep pool, huge S36,000. 646·7711. Open sac. Massiv~ 2 s tory! 3 BR , 2 BA. dbl. gar. lg:
family style kitchen, 2 diving board. Will go VA Eves. ~00, sq. fl. Large for~al fnced. yd, nr. sch ls. b.aths.Closctoshoppin~: at only $79,950. Call 1111· · d~mng room. Sunsh1~e Q u iet str eet. Wil l GI or FllA terms. Won 't (>46-7171. kitche n Pool tabl la::.t. $:1 9 ,500 ! Ca l l o•'tN '•,Y·ll SfUN J.:>ll Nr'f' , • • • f 11 • . e 1~ cooperate. VA, OK to ~m Y r oom stuy.s. pr i nci p als. SJ5,400.
s91-u:i21 . [~.: ~ VIE'W;: O.C. ~•u :,~~~r:J::~~~E 548·:':.,35'POOL •
546-4141 ~
~
COATS& WALLACE _ ~ ~ Common pool & leMis Delightful JBR 2ba horn~ & LIGHTS courts. Walk lo school. + Cum rm, pool-table-sz
REAL ESTATE . INC.
'·• ,, • •1 • I' r fl/ :or1 ~ ..
THE REAL
ESTATERS
SALE $44,900 7~r/o. $353 mo. Hurry on an enclosed cuJ-de-sac st. I Rusuc charm abounds in this Irvine bargain. cau $46,800. Leave message. ~ VA Joan can be assumed playrm, blln B·B·Q & on
. the unique beach estate. 7 5 2 -1 7 O O l o d a Y. 494-8611 Laguna Uch.
WESTBAYAVE. Circulardrive.Hugcliv· OP!NlllY•ll,ll/NIOH ii 1' Agt. ~~;~1:nuf~~~2:~abulous 1--M·e·w·p·o·rt-Harbor----, ~a:~ ~ ~\ llot u'~ a~e~~ fireplace t~~d us~><!wb~~ f~nogl.r~r°c°c;pl~11"~hagc~~men r~i&~ I' ...... '.· .. ·~ .. "~.::'l'Vll.li!!·:u1~ -ASSpo-i~-t-~-~-m-7-<e/,,-2 Loan-..,-.Y-.-4-sB·-aR-n.dl:
CALL 675-7060 HIGH SC~O?L-only a Truthfully " very rare blue Pacific. Enjoy the .~~ l;i;\H:~ . "" re~ blocks away from find. Call us for more in· pool and jacuzzi and an BREATHTAKING glass Ba, sep fam &din-rm. Nr
this preferred Eastside formation. Plicecl to sell all new kitchen. SL22,500. w a II view. Gourmet So. Coast Shopping & GOV'TOWMER
J HR , 2 baths. $33,500
~50 Down. S700 Costs &
impounds. SWl PITl
CALL 4 556-8800
Balboa Bay Prop.
home. Big 2 s lory,_ 3 at only S39,500. Call 642-5200 kitchen & dining. lrvinelndu.at.Park.Only
bedroom +formal din-673.8550. Separate wing or Only $4000 DOWD $57.950.0wner.SS7·5589
1ng, break last nook and j <Jl'lli 111 v. r , ._' ,, , '· , • hideaway master suite 1---------11nmen!>c f;imily room. r ~ With view + chs ldrens lo assume fantastic 7%
l:'1<alures <'.irµcls, drapes e :: • . quarters. Hurry for this VA loan on imJJlacuJate 4 4 0/o
<in<l\ bltn~. lk;iut1fully .;:.: • ' oncl' in" lifrt1nH.' drl'arn bedroom home in f'oun-is total fee you pay fo ..
tlone msulc & out. Ready l=~~.-~~~~~~ horn<.' at <I H.\RGAIN lain Valley. UnbeUeva-qualified r eal estate• Realtors tomovcinlo.Otfcred al ....: 1·---------pnn·~963-788 1. ble low price of only $67.500.Call540-.i.151 I BRAlto..ID lto..IEW .. CAPE COD" OPrN1119.1r s rtiN IOUNl(i• $32,500. Vacanl. Call when you list with 4 BR FAMILY """ """ Worl d Real Est a t e C h arles Quint ard ,
BUNK HOUSE -$42, 900. ! ~E::::r~ .[-~: .. · .. _.:~.:_·'..:.:1•~¥!;!11~ 1•
556
-·.
11
•
1
•
1
·------~a~=~~0~u~~:0t~:0:~~~
Bunk house on Irvine CUSTOM 3 tx.'Clroom, 2
1
1 Cb a rm in~ 2 story cape _ ·~: -~~!!1~JJ in dollar volume for list· Ranch ! Quicl cuJde~ac.l--lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--bath, for Summer oc-Cod o n cxcl u s 1·ve lalboalaland 1006 ings sold in 1974. Over
k ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5000 I l II Spanis h arches entry cupancy. Pie .~our o~n1 sec l ud cd hideaway BAYCREST sa espeop e & a 9 Spacioussinglestory.All TENNIS colors and opt1i'Jhs.1"1nc
1
street. Warm th of 1 SUMMER FUN Orange County-multiple
glass living room 2 STORY C.M.locat100. I crackling ltreplace felt $73,000 ... Winter profit. Litth: listingboardsavailable.
Cheery k1t('hcn. 4 king f l f · C t h f ' l I d 0 I /3 BR e • £ d
s ize bedrooms mclu<ling1 REDUCED $2000 .... Quail ~· . 1 1 ~~~L~nr;% 1\~::~~~~1.n4 s~:cf:J1y ~~s~gne:Ju~1:1o~ o~~~r·s :n':t~xTr~es in Uln10T
butll·in b~nk beds-Jus t •reduced S2000 for liiil Plac• hag bedrooms,ph.IS den. fess1onal office & 4 vited ........ $139,500. REALTY
ranch style. Decorator 1mmcd1ate sale. Belong Prap...ti•• I ,Patio has feeling of bdrms & family room. HALPIMCHIN SINCI '946
wallpaper & wood lhru· lo exclusive lcnn1~ club! 752-1920 I seclusion-Just $7,750 Separate entrance to of.I ASSOC./REALTORS 33SS Vio lido, N.a. 5"'te 29S
out. Pool :.1te yard. As Huge i !>lory Spanis h. 1400 OUA1Lst HIWPOttT HACH 1 "claims" and you're iri. fice thru lan~c garden 2727 E . Coast Hwy. Pho.:-642-2991-Anytime
sume VA loan S:J17 mo.1 1 m m a c· u I at e l y I Call 646-7171 area. Room for pool. A 675-4392 How much net cash do
Pnt·ed to show & !>ell -land!'capNl &demrated. FLOODED WITH 01·1N1119 •11 ,1u,11opr"•'r • very special home for ---------you want to walk out or h_~ r ! y l a 11 n 0 w ' s.unkl·n It\ 1ng room I SUNSHINE! I [ e . . I special people. 646·7711. Capistrano leach 1018 escrow with-? You tell 7~;;.~ ~~., ·. ~-urmal. dtntng. Fant·y 1 & crispy clean. Big two' · , Open J::ves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• me. 30t h ye a r o t
garden k1l< hl'll Sp.1cwus I story, -I big bedrooms I • 1111 New Custom 3 Br, 21r.z Ba, leadership in sales~all [~ ~ h1.de :1_w_a~ .,two lcve_I • dtntn~ room. 2000 sq. ft.'.1 lge s undeck, covered now-thank you.
I maslei suite . r\Jlly mu 14 times betlt:r than new' I . . • patio, frpl, d~. crpted. <SaveThisAd>
. rored pnvatl' bath. 4 trom tip to toe. Lol.s 01 1 1 Cul-de-sac. Ocean View.~~~~~~~~~
huge• bccl ~ooms. Luxury lus h rolling yards &; NEW EASTSIDE By Owner. 714·524·1716 ~ ac. Horse Property. in
3 BR FA RM lt~ing plus tennis for JUsl ~rcenery . Walk to Southl TRIPLEX ' M ' ~-6~·.90~.!
11
Tukc _ _.te~va n-Coast Shopping in Co~La Ready for inspection -GeMt"at 1002 Getteral 1002 counti • Corrals, tack WATERFRONT age-ca now 7.)2 111111· M e s a • O w n e r cus tom built. with lop ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rms cozy house. On ''~""'''"''' ""'" "'· ,, I 1. b quiet street. Agt. To~ with pier &slip. · [ transferred. $55,950. Ccill qua 1ty ltns , carpets, ~ 835.0381.
Completely remodelcrl to e ~ now 546-2313. drapes. & many special
new, in & out. Much bet· ·": 11111" .,, v .. 1 \lllN ,,.,,, ~w , features incldg deluxe macnab / Irvine A SLEEPER
ter th"n new 1,1 fact . ' ., 1~· I owner's unit, fireplace,
$149,:;uv. . : l'a';H1tl ~:~~~ind~~~~r~~;sF~end reeltg ~o~~n~~ r~'!'a~ms~~te~
JACOBS REALTY Live on the Mesa . -~fil.-,.~ garages, and lots of Coast Plaza. Comer lol,
6 75-6670 Enjoy serenity in pre-parking. Excellent loca· lrg. back yard. $48.950.
M1g1ous Mesa Verde. Up· . BEAUTIFUL Lion, big lot. Offered al COLONIAL J,!raded espc<.'iall y for $83,500. Call 540·1151
BEACH you. :1 UH home. private SPRAWLllto..IG y ard off ol )11asler """ ESTATE bedroom. lovel y GROUlto..IDS ~HERITAGE
backyarc1 and lanai. oi ..... 6 BR, GUEST lered aLS5S.oOO. Bcaul1ful s prawling ---------TENNIS ~ · · grounds with lrwt trees
• REALTORS
Pri ... atc 1rcc hnl'<l slrc•cl O 1\'L'IPEEHSO and rose gardens sur· Lo mammoth f;,i n11l v round this lovely 3
home on (·..,talc s1lcil hedroom. l·'~ bath home.
gruunds. Ii b«lroums 1n 3848 Campus NB 549·8655 Fresh mint from Y-OUr
cl. guest SllllC l)csigncrl -- -own tre llised i:ardcn for
a r o u n d b a I co n Y GIANT COUNTRY cool evenings, loo. A staircase. Garden view screened-in family room
kitc hen s erves formul for the pool table. and for KITCHEN Dad and the kids the
dining. Larl.!e famtly ••• · ••• gurage has a rear 8-foot room. Walk t11 schools, II i g h ., w 1 <I e a nd d I d" · park. bike t.n11l & lenms handsome w1t.h vaulted oor ea mg onl-0 an 1m·
courts. Near beach. ceiling too, and acres of mense concrete patio.
Great area '()r C"iildrcn. b. l · th 1 Double gate access to the • ea tne s in e peop e· rear yard too. Owners Lottahomcforalow.low kind of kitchen. New ·
S h anxious nt $49,000.
57,!>50. Call today. s a~ ~·ar pelin g II IQuall ·~··. 812·2S:i5. lhrou~hout lhe house,
11••1tn11 9 .,•• w11 •011 111r1• bonus f1i1 mlly gatne Plac• [. I room . !>lone fireplace Pr . · ·:lt~_llW; ~ .. ~ ':;~:~~:..~'~: .... ':..':~-!~!~. ""· _ ---=··-==-=~· sumableloan.S<i1.950. --·--
Owner muy carry 1st TO 11 jQuall ·~-· · at 8'{ no loan rces This • Plac•
lovely Mesa Verde p opllrtt-( o r rn e r m o d e I • 3 1
752_1920 bedroom and family t"OOOUAIUT NfWPOllTtfA<H
room cream puff wtthl---------
b\ult·in ~Lc•reo/lh t-'l·AM ·
FM. Localed on qwcl
CUI de l'3C street With
hu1tc Jot. Japanei;e
garden and A11:enhou~t.'.
waterr.,11 . tropical
planl•. frull tre~ and
room for pool. Muy
lcaite •o .. tlon orrcr
~.000 &42·5&'111 Bkr
JUST LISTS>
BiJ[ Canyon popular
Monaco Model. 3 Br. 21 2
lia, w1K'l crpt. tde patio, $130,000 ,,
PAUL W. BRUMFIELD
& ASSOC
549·8505
ASSUME $31,000
$275 MONTHLY
Sundpointe's finest. 3
years old! Ornate brick
10 terraced yard-Lile en·
Lry 1ntn soaring cetling
and plu ~h carprll
Sun!lhlrH! kitchen with
room for dmina room I
Mammoth muter and
itpaclOu!I bdrma. Only
$5100 down ! Or at.sumo 1v.•k end '375 mo. pa)lf'
all. Seller houJ:ht new! _»rine an oHer. 84'7~10.
O/>(N1(1¥• II\ '1 '~ IOltf• ft
4 IR· 2000'
ATRIUM· PARK
Prime University Park
2. Cul de sac i()('ation.
Ra re Exeter model.
Massive 20001 s ingle
story gem . ImmacuJate
landscape. Mexican tile
e ntry. Beamed s tep
down lavin g room.
Formal dine.· Lush cen·
tral atl'ium. Garden
kitchen. Bold fiest a
room . Laundry room.
Acres of red brick patio
& built-in BUQ. Oog ken-
nel & much more! <.:all to
preview 752-1700.
<"ll'IN '".,. 11' 1ur; ·0111 II< p
['11llltl
01M11 DaMy 1-5
305 lroodway, CM
COME SEEll Large de·
lachcd rumpus room w /bath Ir (pie. Plu.1 3
bedroom!I, completely
refurbl11h d , tgc
wur(trobe Cl0$Cl.a, liv rm',
dtntnll area, top.grade
shag crpts & drp:i . Uuat
or t,t'aller gate oo 111loy.
GoOd financmp nall. ; . • : .,,.;1 .
"STATUS & PERFECTION"
One-of-a-kind condominium -2
. bed_room, 2 bath end unit w /private
patio & many ot her truly upgraded
features. Near pool! $4,500. Belle ~hase Lee _644 -6200. (F59)
llG CANYON DEANE HOME.
Magnificent 3 bedr<>?m Monaco -
u pgraded w /b eau tiful decor.
VI E W ! ·$129,500. 'Tom Queen
644-6200. (F60)
' MEDITERRANEAN STYLING.
DOVER S H ORES . -V I EW r
Custom built 4 or 5 bedroom +'
ram~J)'. & dining r oom. 5th bed room
is b illiard rm. or library. $159,500.
Larry Dyer 642·8235. (F61)
• CUSTOM DOVER SHORES.
A vc~y special home -for very
selective people. Spectacular 5000
sq. ft. of ~pace -fo1· entdrtnining &
art! 3 fireplaces -magnificent
mas ter s u ite -jacuzzi -4
bedrooms. $289,500. Barbara Aune
642·8235. (F62)
DOVEi SHOllS -
tl 6' Fii IA Y'AtONT.
Pier & slip for lg. yac.'tlt. 5SOO sq. ft.
luxury home -for sale or excha nge
-comm. income. $450,000. Appt.
OnJy. Mrs. l<'ny 642-.8235. <FG3)
64WJJI 644-6200
IL HAVEN
p OL
3 Be ro m . 2 bath!;
hard d floors, dbl~
garage, quiet street $38,500. •
RoyMcc.cl.
Rffltor 1110 Mewpo(t
Costa MesaS48-7729
\II Acre, 2 BR home, ~
for rec vehicles boal/·
trailers etc. h orses
possible. $450.mo. &r·
rett Rily 642·5~
NO DWN TO VETS
Up to $70,000. Call: Btll
or Steve. A gt~.
546-8640/S48·9871
BY Owner I Agt, ~UM}":
VA or new GI. Nodo~3
br. $37,950. 5t6·77~9· 968·7944 •
MESA VERDE immac
3br 2ba, fam rm. OWnt'.
$49,950. Prln'.s only SSM~ . •
EASTSIDE-Beaut ldsc~
38R l "'ba, tptc, pvt paUo
Ir (i8h pon d. Asklll)
$45,000. Principals onl~ 8y Owner. 845·1ff
f\33~S
'·l
Have aomethlng )'OU want
NIWPORT IEACH 6-44-1766 to sell? Cl~• lfit'd qd11 do Classlfi •d ads sell bla
' A COt..DW!U. IAl«Ell CO. it well --Call NOW, It.ems. small ileml or aey [-1111 lachenmyer I01 Doww Ort.. 1M4 Mt1$Attl!w
NewpOn .. act!. c.tltornll tmJ
Don't 'Ive up tho 1111tp1 ''List' it In cJua~
Ship to s hore r•ulLtt
642-5678 • •••••••••••••••••••! 642-5871!. item Ju!llCllll642-:i6'i&.
R1•.1l!or I
..
\
"-"Fors. ........ Fors. . tto..wt For . . c;1;••U•U••H•euH ....................... s-. a miu rc:I.. mco •• Prop..+y 2000 HcMtMt u~ ••. W... IOJ4 l"IM 1044 ....................... rrop1rfy 1600 ...... , ............. , ............ , .... ,....... Mondey June 18· 1975 OAILYPtLOT __
••• .. • •• ........... ... .. ..................... L .... Ma-.....1 I 052 ••••••••••• ............ TWO 4.ft.IXIS , ...... y....... 1234 ....... U ....... d •-1 .... L-1-L-~ ... ' .... I._.__' 'PA-IDED'l"DLEX v • .,... SIDI _.,. ..........,. .....--.....u ,..., ..... _._..... ~·0 ..,... MO"'lllGff'l'IH •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• COMM.COttlB IYSIDI ••••••••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••"
a1t3 Bdrm. By Owner. To lhls 3 bdrm., 2 bath • CUSTOM for ule b' owoer. Hl&b income, Low down. VACANT. Huce 4 Br, 2~ L•••• leoc.Jt 3241 Coste MH o 3724 Cost. Mut1 JIJ4
S5&·o:sa7 detached home lo uoo 1q. n. 4.BR, huce OQlden oppek,unlty for Xlnl toe. Perteet tor b a . Pre• t l 1 e ··~··•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
II
,, UolversJiy Park. Hu ram rm, din rm, 2~ba Pottery, NW'lft'>', etc. Owner/Oc:cupaol or lo· ne11hborbood. t&SO. per • OCEAN•'RONTWllurn Casa de,,,.___. _ OH .. .._,.. .. gl• a..a. 104 rormal dining rm •• wet hom on cocner kit wlth 497·ll11M. vestment. • mo. Ask for Ke.rtb, Wu-•BR. Almost oew. AvaU . Vl"V l"', .. •-.. Br .......... _ DO
-•••••••••••••••••••• bar • near rccreatloo view. SBl.~ ""$49--0el) IS4CHS'710 96l·4'71 now. Enclosed garden & ALL UTILITIES PAID • • ~ ,....., ..
PruU&e Mom 48R or 3 centu. A:sk ror Frank BONO REALTY INC. CON MMERClAL Pt"OQen rt>' Soulb Cout Investment Bio t .. BR ho POOL. $1200. per mo. Compare bet ore you ~!'!·.~•h:::::.~. 1rpc~.
Br +Den. Jmmac. Up Jolly 27812 For~ n--d ewport •to.re• ot.. en. •• vacan • me. lease. rent Cu1•om "'~I" ~... • • srraded.$61,9$0,8'g.3Q87. jRYIMI HOMES LagunaNigu';isn-9Cu 1UJlits.fricedrilfhl.caU COVtM•TOH Only $300. mo. Close to feat~ring:· ~.n~ BBQ. Gu•~ PSS.
Formerly Petlll Realty T e d . T r e 5 5 c n • 4..PLEX everything. Eve'{ybody • 3BR 2BA unlurn. home ~Spacious kitchen with Pool v •c ... ...-Realtors 552-1000 * WE KNOW • <714>639-17ooor"4-!i47 Ao o_pportunlty for the ::~~o~~at:~~ Ol'ld on the ocean side. Ava,il 1ndJrect llahuna LA MAMCHA APTS ~ ~· U•UMAMGUB. O•do..Jlll-1oph11Ucaled Inves tor 7·1. Reterences re<fd •Separatedln'aarea 778ScoUPface.CM ~~· mGOV'T SALE! -i Uruversity Purk, Village * IEST " for,... 1700 seeking rapid appreda· CONDO 3 br & tg. bonus Lease, $4~. per mo. •llome·Ukestorqe
64
2--5073
lol.r v]~12k ~~b ... l!~gh
8
1.re. n2~ •. ubn!~.· bFaoc~aump .t
0
4 TERR 1 F l C Jo'am I ly ••••••••••••••••••••••• tioo Ir an e.xt.-ellent tax rm. 2Ya ba. SJ2S mo. RealEEDsl~t~WA:~~ ,,.,.... •CP1rlvedat.e patM» Pri.t h R ...... "" .. ..... Home •BR ram m d' abelltr. Tb1s 2 yr old 9611-1502 .. ~ ~ ......_._ • os gar w/storage econdllipned. Cal plaza. Close lo tennis r ' b" • r • LO building contain11 6 •MarblepuUman Swro•ila91 anytime. crts & r .1 l m, ca toets galore. OrEHIVMMG'S gauges u car port & 2BR 2BA. Brand new Blk. from Coa8t Hwy; 2 •Kingslze Bdrms DELUXEl,2&38rApCa scon ..... I ·yy a ma y poo . Real swim~rs pOOl GI Vlllage Cardeas ls now • a s .' I l • 1"1 Br, den, 2 ba ·• oceon YU p l B be Pvt PaU -llt.d p--· ...-.. $54,000 By Owner, 11SSumableloanH4900. separate owners unit w1m poo, enrus, a • oo. ar ques-sur-os uu. 516-7533 552-8947 L Ml-..:.,,..,;,,t__ · open Tuesday thru with 2~ Ba. Nestled In 11 adult. $290 mo.646-9532 liv. rm. Blk. to shops. rounded wtth p l us h Nr. Shop'g-AdlLsOub' CICJ'MCI .,.... .,...-.. 'l'hursday evenings til cul-de-sac for complete u .-.u-.6 •--" Stove, refrlg.; lge. p<atlo lllndscaplng. Martt.I .. .&.A.
WALK AMYWHERI
$55,900
3 bed rm. 2 balh home ln
perfect location. Walk
s uper market, stores
high school, churc h
school, beach. This sha
home, atrium model o
eds, boat gate, adult oc·
cupied. Our best value.
Call for showing. Bkr.
536-8836.
*JUNE •·
NEWLYWB>S
l>erfect starter home.
Sunken entry; expanded
Liv. rm. 3 bdrm 2 bth.
Easy terms. 2 Car gar,
Only $39.950. 968-4456
SHARr, SHARP!!
Walk to ocean, excel.
schools, low mainl. yard.
Jovely wallpaper, cozy
FP. spacious kitchen.
Boat access. 968-4456
-Real Estate
byMLVAY
830·5050 49M040 9:00 so come and see the privacy, its Huntington ..-.._,.Oft --3240 & rear yd. $350 Month Ill Adull.8 . No Pets 1777 Santa A.n:lA~Cal
Al You Uk. It best buy ln Oran&e Coun· Beach location provides ••••••••••••••••••••••• o~n~r pays utilities 1 BDRM Furn $215= M A Dram~llic, upgraded, Mewport .. _.....
1069
ly. At $19,950,, for o aauperbreotatmarket. BEAUT.4br,2ba,family MumonRealty "94-0731 36SW.Wilsoo642-l9'71 gr plllJ 646-55C2
greenbelt :surrounded -beautiful 2 bedrm, 2 bath Call Agent. ....... 7 .. ""' rm. Close to school & L-..,1__. 3•52 . 2 BR, 2a,; BA Studio a-
ll Dd pri ced al only .. ,.;R,;;;;~;;;;:y••••• ~~~~ltns. ~:-5 heal & Lotlfor al "'""";~OO beach.$450.~2734 .;?.";;-:::.r.:: ••••• !' ••• Mesa Verde; dlx. 2 Br., Bllns,D/W,cptg&m;;:
$45,000. A 2 bdrm .• 2 -Cl--J· ou canDeangowrong. s • DELUXE TOWNHOUSE Spacious 2 bdr l 'h b 1"41 ba. Walk·in closets, Patio. $265 mo. 768 balh, with recreation IAY H~ O>CV erryor at•lOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• _m, 8 patios garage· cust cpl Joann.Agt.838-8081 facll1t1es, lighted Luxury waterfront W.5tbSt.,Sant.a AnaorORANGE AVE C M ~ 3~r.Zba,enc.gar,pallo, ho me, w /bltlns, lrplc, le drpa bll·u°is· s~ali ___ _::;..~___::.:..:..::___
walkways and shopping homes priced from call839·8321· Ac. Vac. SeU 1~& pians kids/OK.$300.64S-50'7l Slfll room & coastal Mtn. c hild OK $2Z5 agt 2·1 IR LOFT ONLY , ( 7 . views, Pool & re<:. fac. 833 • · 1 convenience. Yours to $211,300. SS waterfronts. or . untlS. ~.000. or Im med. occupancy.3 Br 2 Adults $37S &IC>-lM-4 ·1768 -2 IR W /lot:f
enjoy ... theirs to main· 607 Bayside Drive, ~xes/ w/bu1ld for inves tor. Ba. Newly decorated. · · • PvlPatio,frpl,l yrlse
lain. Newport Be ach. 673-3900 OtUts &m. 1100 Agt. 548-8642 Frplc, dshwhr. Cul-de· BEAUT. Northview 3BR. tt.ti-6 leeclt 3740 Available June lit
-u••••••• .. •••••••••••• I sac. Selected singles, 2'h ba, fam rm. $525. _.,.CMa HAYLOFT APTS BA YFROHT MEW 4.PLEX£S Rettfa&s i,children ok. $310 lse. 3 or lease inc. pool privil's. N••0•••1N••C•R••E•AS•••E••in••••••• 283 Avocodo. CM
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 BB. HOUSES AVAIL 49:>·1164 sum-.~
Vis.. 2 Custom Homes ... near the ocean. Good 7 / l nr ocean 963-62lS mer rent. Beaut 1 br rum "5·0143 N BALBOA PENINSULA tax shelters. apprecta· Houses Fumished ' . ' . 2 BR, l 'h BA, med. yr. apts $165 & $175. Spanish ••Al.TY E)(cellent location on the uon. $110,000. and up. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new $70,000 home 2 Gardener. $300 mo. style bldg, pvt encl gar. E-SLDE 2 br! 11, ba, encl
Ocean. Each home has 4 Gftlffal 3102 Slate Beach. $495. mo. 17301 Keelson Ln, 1 blk ly. 548-7692or644-0878
552-7500 Bay &only 'h block to the I m1 from Bolsa Chu~a Lease. 213-782-o.tm pool, sauna, lndry, adlts. garage, patio. Adults oo-
bdrm s, 4 baths & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Formal living & dining Newport leach 3269 W. or Beach off Slater. ADUL
REDUCED
Gallery. 2 fireplaces, MOVE now CdM house rm spac f I t ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842·7843 T 1 BR, frplc, pool. • , . am rm w we $185 mo 1975 Pomoo•
wetbar, ultra modern frplc, $225., uUl pd. Walk bar. l bdrm, blilhdn, up-4 BR. 2i.i Ba, Back Bay. CM.Cau645.1956 ... PRICE kitchen & private pier. R E AL TY INC. lO beac~ c9ttage, H.B. stairs 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 3 PoolL gardener. 2 car WEEKLY RATES
Fee land. Se~ at 1200 714/846-1371 $100., ulll pd. Also Costa car gar .. custom patio. gar.'400.64<>-000J hecutiveS.itn
~g~~n~~L~~ i~1 ~~!d;f ~:if~1~:~~g~orB~~~ d~~ IKome Prop«ty 2000 :resf~~~~~::~;,~in~~~~ ?Jt~:l 963"4581 • home 180 DEG. VIEW 727 Yorktown llvd
Irvine's most desirable tails. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 979-8430 Newport Harbor, ocean Beach Blvd at Yorktown
Ea1hide Ina 2 Ir
Bltns, w /W, re1rig, pool.
$190 Ad lls-no peta
642·9520 villages. 3 Bedrooms, PRIME 4-PLEX 3 BR, lo/.i BA & Catalina. Beaut, new Sllt-0411
den and family room. MEWPORT SHORES H U DOLLHOUSE! Lg. yd exec, Bluff home, 3 br, 4 STUDIOS & I BRs Hear c~-
NOW ONLY $55.9~ Large 2-story 4 BR. :i $83,750 ouses nfuniished w/!ruit trees &room for ba, vaulted wood ceil., •Full Kitchen .... ..,..... • ._.
RAISOR'S baths; 2 sundecks, patio. Coving lo n 4 · p I ex. ••••••••••••••••••••••• garden. $350 mo., 1st, formal dining rm, Cam •Heated Pool CEDAR WOOOS
Walk t.o beach, t~is. Perfect location. $1000 Geftfl'Of 3202 last & $100. refundable rm, 2 frplcs , wet bar. •Laundry Facilities 329 University Dr. near
REALTORS etc. Needs .TLC. priced plus cash spendable on ••••••••••••••••••••••• s ec . Ca ll : Janice massive ma s lcr •FreeUtalilies ~~c~.B~~~:::-·$2 1b8r5&c.
nghtal$61,950.Call $8400 down payment. FREE · FREE 963·6767, 642·5215, bath/Roman lub. lge •FreeLinens 4523 Campus Dr., Irvine CAYWOOD REALTY Earns $900 per month. . 548·7002 country kitchen w/View, •TV & Maid serv.avail Easlside, 548-7437 or
Campus ValleyShopCtr. *548-1290 • Hurry, call (714) •Profess1onalServ1ce• I bbq, compactor, self •Bar·B·Que 641Hl64 CALL
13
3-1
600
752·1700. •LANDLORDS• VILLA PACIFICA clean oven, service •Phone Service CASA VICTORIA
HOME to CHERISH INVESTMENT Hom• f I ad er s * 2 condos ·2 &3 BRs porch, 3 car gar/opener, •l Mile Lo ocean 1.2 &3Br, Unfum/Fum
LOCJUftCI leach I 048 JBR luxurious home bas DIVlSlO~ 642 9900 ' Call 968-2297 central v~cuum system. ---------f $169 SO
••••••••••••••••••••••• fam rm, din rm, jacuw THE REAL EST TERS Calilorni~'s Laraest 3 BR, lo/.i BA. Bltns, crpts, $1350. mo. 645·7102 or LCICJUftCI leach 3748 A~Utts-No #~~ .. g~te
• BARGAIN PRICED and many xtras $82 500 TWO-S · b · R t l "'---W.:1 $ 3 6 0 M 0 Days 64S-6l77. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool, Rec. Rm, Elevator
R , • • unit apt ldg JUSl • en a ~ "-i-·· · BAC•lELOR beauty. 2BR. Crplc, park· anney s Rltrs 956-2050 completed ror sale. Close 1 213 I 94 3 ·8 535; Eves IR VINE TERR. Pvt. . apt, Laguna 52.5 Victoria,642-8970
like g rounds. $69,500. HARBOR ViewHome4br to major shopping COSTA Mesa, fncd, 2 br. 846·4288. home 1 blk. from bay. 3 Village loc. ~ blks beach. ----------OPEN s t /Su 1 5 1 • t . $155. pets ok. Or 2 br b 2 'b dbl d Mr .• Hagopian, 837-7722 "THE VICTORIAN" a n · ! 2th ba, many xtras, cen er. lst yr wnte-off. h H B kids ts Avail. Now-4 BR, 2 BA r., a , ·gar, Y · & or536·2494 Newly decorated, 2 br,
Lowse. BKR.4.99·22'77 priced to sell by owner. $l4M. 536·2579; !>92-5010 sf~fes. · Aiso w~lr t~ $375 per mo. Ask fo; patio. Yrly. S7!>-33S4 ---------l lh ba w/gar. Adlts. cpts,
STOr WRJTIMG SPANISH STYLE Pfin. only. $88,500. Fee. waler N.B. 2 br, singles Keith, Bkr. 962-4471. BACK BAY View. 3 bror2 Mewporl Beodt 3769 drps, fncd yd w/palio, RENT CHECKS Firm. 644-4374 after 6 10 UNITS or families. CdM house, br & den. Pool & Tennis. ••••••••••••••••••••••• waler pd. Call betwn 1-S
Easy to afford, this 3 2 sty home, poolsz. lot pm. E""STSIDE ulil pd, kids, petsok. Agt. Super 3 bedrm, 2 ba + $595. Lease644-0634 . $29.95 WK UP. l Bdr, 2 Ba ~-4120. bedrm, 2 bath, added-on w /oceanvu. 3 lg sun· ~ Fee. 979-8430 den. G.rpls. drps, R/0 , & Bach. Color TV, maid 667 "K" Victoria ... $190
fam rm. Large lot; decks, 5 br, 4 ba, huge By Owner Harbor View Walk one block to 17th $350. mo. 963-4500 ask for HARBOR View Homes, 3 serv. pool. THE MESA,
Ready for your personal fam rm, 3000 sq. ft. By Home. 4 Br, 2 Ba. Mon-Street shopping. (9) one BALBOA 3 br, 2 ba, kids Bev or Joe b r ,· 2 b a , ' x l n l . 415 N. Newport Bl, NB, 120 ALBERT PLACE
louch.Callnow96S-4456 ownr. $119,500. Sally: tego. Nr. park, school. bedrm +own e r s 2 CdM_3br,2ba,kids/pet neighborhood. Walk to 646-9681 Deluxe2br,lba,adults, '"'RE YOU FUSSY? 714 499 3967 714 c'>G 9701 pool Well landscaped bed 't Sch-' led Want a nice family to rent • t $185 Call A • • • .......,. · · room uni . .:ouu H.B. $140. 1 br, appls. our home 4 Bedrm 2 b park, pool & schls. nope s. · :
This home sells itself. 833·1861 for Appl. Prin . income $1825. mo. Full H.B. new 5 br, 3 ~a. kids cpts & d. ps R/O. DWa. mo/yrly. lease&IC>-l289. WATERFRONT lbr, yrly. 530·3572 833·9781 OCEAN VIEW Only. $81,500. price, $179,500. <Owner s A $155 2 b k d t r • • Adlts only-No pets. $275 Upgraded crpts & drps · · · r, 1 s, pe $325 963 """ k f ' H ff •---" Built1n breakf~t nook: CONDOMINIUMS may help finance.) Call S.A. bach $145 ulil pd. ·mo. .4,...... as or PANORAMIC VIEW mo. 673·3531 eve/ Day un '")ton~ 3140
Friendly cul-de-s ac St. 4 Overlooking Aliso Beach Eastbluff for details. Fee/ Bkr Bev or Joe Bay & Irvine Hills. En· 556·6965 •••••••••••••••••••••••
bdrms,2bths.968-4456 &pier.1,2&3Bdrm.un-View Home w/Pool & ExclusinWith HOMEFIMDERS New carpet, drapes tertainer's delight ..__1_ .._ llKETOIEACH
R
its, close to shopping E I d F y d 642 9900 · t 4 B d 2 b ·th w /pool & game room. ~ ...... nn """~ '"'R SH,....."""G
M .&MRS. beach.Startingat$36,500 4 :~~s7a m .r~~-:;27 -~11 ...__.~fil~l * · * pam · e rm, awi Fantaslic new4br.3ba, Unfurnished B:;~iful ;;:;·~BR Rea!4y~!4!~~up
1
.n the . Cassia St. NB, $92,500. lalboa Island 3206 ~~-o~ mo. 96J-45W 4000 sq ft custom home, ;;.;.:;;;···.~~~::••3••8•0•7• studio apts. Frpks,
world? Change your Bayfront, brand new 3 BR 3 Be d r m , 1 'h: b ~ , many extras. $1250. mo. ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• garage. Sundeclcs. From e~fkalP&-640·1406 Owner. ••••••••••••••••••••••• wood ceilings, 3 frplcs, en•~ bltns, dishwashers, 2 car
lifestyle. Numerous up-~GW11111111~.-...... ,. ...... ~~ ..... .-1 ANYTIME duplex; 2 baths. $700 washr/dryer/refng. tn· 645·7102or645"6177 PLUSH2BR,2Ba,inSec. $260.S36·2579
grades in best location. 499·2800 LIDO ISLE Mo/yrly AgentS75-4000 cld. Vacant. S:WO· per Bldg. Pool, 2 Prkg ---------Newly listed, don't wait ---------1 . mo. Ask for Keith, Bkr, Bluffs Condo, 2 sty, 2 Bdr, spaces. On the main bay. Love At ht lite
968-4456 SPANISH Villa. ocea VIANICE --BalboaPninsula 3207 962-4471 Cvt den, 21~ Ba, frpl, Summer,$425.wkly,or l&2 Bravail.Fum &un·
----------• view, 3 br, wet bar, fa Love ly 3 br, 2 ba, 4-PLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . C&D, $375 1nc pool $450. yrly. Ask for Al, furn. APPLE APTS. A.
rm . No down GI. f i re p I a c e. $ 8 2 M ' """ Li "-! -...... that Most exceptional home on lrv•M , 3244 mantc. 549·4~7 833-9300 or 673-543'7 eves. UJlinue idea in adult ant Reduced for quick sale. ....ew s • ......., --. . . . ••• • • • ••••••••••••••••• ... r -Real Estate
byMLVAY
IRIMGYOUR
CHILDREN
TO THE rARJ<.
This home is Qnly one
block from school &
park. Clean & nice .
Ready for your family to
move into & enjoy. CALL
NOW 842-9371
$
7 000 9 7
p · Owner/Agent. reallY makes cents• Pomt. ~ lol, 28 liv rm. THE Bluffs 3 br, 2 ba, end Corofta del Mm-3122 living. 6700 Warner Ave,
onty. · 4 4·577. rm. 673·6489 AJl
3
Blf.2 B well ·ed formldmrm,48R,3BA, *RENTALS • unit on greenbelt nr.••••••••••••••••••••••• Hunting ton Beach. ----------1.,...--.. ~.., .. -111-._..~..__.,.~..,•---~~.-.-..,.._.,..,_ f XI t' atal. ca0r sunrm, elev .. gardens & UNIV. PARK pool·schools. Lease $400 """EW D"-~v 847-6047. No lease. Sorry or. n ren area. W' 1 b M ·r· l 2 BR l '"'a $315 · "" vr~ h"ld ts BY OWNER New 3 BR 1 . r g ca ana. ag-ru 1cen • , "" · ... · ·. · · · · mo. Call 644-8129. Av~il no c 1 ren or pe . h ' . , MEW LISTIMG! exc us1ve. Agent. panoramic view or bay 3 BR. 2'h ba ..... $375/425 A g 1 t Deluxe s plit·level: 1300 :~·Ti~~~~n~~~s~~=~i Hi g h l y Upgraded _54_9·_08_1_2 ____ 646-__ 61_1_0 Lse By Owner$1000/mo: 3BR,2Ba ........... $425 u · s · sq ft, 2 bdrmw/loft·den, •NEW TRIPLEXES•
Make offer. 543-1420 Westcliff Home. 3BR, DELUXE 4-PUX l-538·3998or67S..9644 3 BR TU~TLEROCK hnmediate Occupancy, fj~~c, :~~~~;~tit,~~~i~ ~·t ~!~~.$ftP.~
PORT
... fl~• ~~~ f~~~~~~~SpR~io~lsl G_ a rd e n Grove. Capistrano Beach 3218 c"OiLE.GEP~425 ~xecdHome. 4Br~ZBa . closets, bath & guest Huntington St.SJS.6779
A """' Fireplaces, pool, l ·l, 2-2, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 .BR, fam. rm.+ bonus pts/ rps, attach dbl bath, bltn gas r ange & ---~------
L •Gu~ .a. manicured y~rd ideal for 3 b d gar w/auto open. Fnc'd 2 BR cpl d A ""' E l · e r ooms, en ~I. OCE/\N view new 3 br rm., 2~ ba .....•..• $540 oven patio deck 2 car • s. rps, new invites you to inspect ntertaining. /\gnt. ~arages. Xlnt apprec1a· condo, 2'h ba. Pool, ten· ~ yard. Annual lease. $.595. encl~sed garage ~/laun· paint, near fwy & major
their panoramic vie _54_9_·08_12~&_64_6-_._fT_l_O_. --lion area. Only 10%down nis ct, clubhouse. $400. Ph : 640·1289. dry room. Pay only elec· shopping. $175. No pets.
building sites overlook· IMMEDIATE PSayment. Call 833-3.544. Call after 6 pm. 493-3541 3Br, 2'h ba, frplc .• bltns, • tric. Adults. So. of Coast 545·
0760
or 84
7
--007°
ing beautiful Lagun POS<ESSIOH parliog Investment VISleN $350 mo. 631·0685 ev & Hwy, s blks from beach. ILOCK TO BEACH
Beach. Also finishe "l:: Corp. Corona del Mer 3222 wknds. $425. 05 Goldenrod, homes. BKR 494-9388. LIDO ISLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• RIAl.TY C oron a de I Mar . 2 Br, cpts, clrps, blt.ns,
CALL TO SAVE • MAKE NO MISTAKE
If you're ready for ac-701 4 BR & fam, 3 car gar. SSl-7500 $425. 3 BR, 2 Ba . Frplc, (714 )675·9337 gar.2osi5tbSl.S36-3058
lion, may be ideal for /0 .. $700. mo. Avail July 1. . room fC?r camper, boat Be t l"ght& · 1 you; 3 bdrms., 2 baths. Assumable loan ava1la-H.V. Hills 675-mOO . 2 yrs new·6 BR, 4. BA. air 2826 lrvme. 646-8883 DELUXE Apl. 4 br, 3 ba, au ·new,
1
airy •
parquet firs., copper ble on this north Costa cond. Bltns. All carpet· . · nr. beach. $600/mo. 2
&
3
BR-garden apts. GREAT VA.LUE Lots to be done here. bu
This home has top quali· has great potential. 3.
Ly carpet & tasteful de· ft. charmer on 3 lots. Ha
cor through-out. A Cami· unfinished apt. over gar.
ly home you will be pro· pool & ocean vu. BKR
ud to own. It's yours. _4_99_·22_77 ______ -l
842-9371
FAMILY HOME
OPEN DAILY
1-SPM
Sparkling new "condos'".
Top quality construction
and appointments. From
$54,500. See today at 42C
N. Cypress. CaJl'675-7225.
' ' • • q I t y ~ t I .Ill 11
plumbing. Xlnt condi· Mesa 4-Plex. All 3H.V.Homes 4~r.2lia+ ed. Planted yard.Patio. LOvelyBluffsgreenbell,3 673·m!l2 Plusbrustorchoc.brwa
taon. $107,500 bedrm, l~ bath units. F. R. Spect. view w/pooli $490. 551·3270. BR, 21h ba. Walled entry. . c r P l • f r P I c s ' Owner will help finance & tennis cts avail. $575. Steps to pool Choice area, 2 Br, 2 Ba, all washer/dryer hookups,
Lido Realty Sig
EASTBLUFF
lmmac. 3BR, Deo, Beaut
decor/landscp'g, $84.500.
Own 640·8023 Open
Sat/Sun 1-5. 2915 Catalpa
with minimum down mo. lse~644·2877 • RENTALS $500 Mo. Agenl644·1133 bllns. P_vt. l_aundry rm, ~·J;r~~-Nr. ocean.
$89 950 Call 54.5-84.24 As · I 2 BR 2 B $300/3S0/360 pvt. patio, garage. New· . · U7 No pets.
soctated South C~a~L TOP LOCATION & beaut.I 3 BR:, 2 B'A · ........ S385 Exec type 3br V12ba condo ly decorated. Adults, no • LIVE NEAR THE
Brokers. dupl~x on oceanside ofl 4 Br 2~ 8 bon "'"'>" t w n hs e, pool. $37 5. pets. 675·2051 BEACH-N d 1 Bayside Dr. 3 blks. from ' a, ~ · · ..,_, 642·0042 ew an near Y Big Corona Bch. 1 yr. old 3.4 BR. Funushed NICE 1 br, ref rig. stove, n~w 2&_~1:\R. AJ?ts· Some
MONEY-MAKER 2 br $4.00 mo avail June SUMMER RENTALS S-Clemente 3276 cpts, drps. 1st & last. with ut1htJes pwd. From
BALIOA ISLAND 6. cau 557 .654Jrrom8 t05 RAISQR'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• $225. mo. 548-4017eves $275. OPEN HOUSE, 406
2Shops&2apts.withoff· or55l ·584S/545--0882eves BEAUT. Ocean View. 22nd St. 12-5. No fee.
s treet parking. Fully · RE brand new, upgraded, 2 Costa Mesa 3824 T 0 BIN RE ALTY•
leased, on large lot, 3 Br, 2 Ba house. Pvt ALTORS S t y , 3 BR . 2 Ba.••••••••••••••••••••••• _84_6-_1_3_11 ______ _
s how s pride o t patio, garage. Beaut. de· 4523 Campus Dr .. Irvine Town home. ~50. mo. LGE 2 br. bltns, dshwhr. 2 BR 1 ·BA dshwshr
ownership, ideal for in· corated. Pvt. Laundry campus ValleyShopClr. Lease. At Mira Costa adts no pets New crpt wiw'c l d ' u· !
H.ARBOR VIEW uoMES est u Onl e,.g 500 R II bit Ad Its v ·11 O · II ' . . P • rps, pa os o, n v or, ser. y ....,, m, a ns. u , no CALL 833-8600
55
17_
6069
as. r ca owner. $180. 645-4291 ba.lconies. Encl. gar. 'h
St.
PORTIFINO 3BR 2'r.t ba down--pets. 675-2051. + sep. lB-R lba guest hse REALONOMICS . Immac 3 BR din rm 2BR & YARD mt from ocean. No pets.
If) ACRE ideal for teenagers, Hve-Brokers 675-670C EXCLUSIVE ShorechCf Turtl~rock townhom~: Rent or S~ll, By owner. 2208StateSt. CM $2~/mo. Wa~er&Bolsa 5 IR 2 STORY in help, relatives or of· ---------Rd. 3 br, 2 ba. pvt. access Sgl. level. $400 Mo. Lo Panoramic view over· Call 646-0944 Chica. 4662 Milo, apt. A.
New on the market! * W O O D s CO V E fice. 2600 sq. ft. Must see to beaches. Beaut. yd.. careful tenants. No pets looking ocean. 1500 sq fl. _
84
_
6
_·
584
_
7
______ _
\ \I .LI ~:,·
HE \1:1''
A 81 RG fNTlRPRISlS CO
Seller packing! 21h Yrs DUPLEX. Ocean view, to appreciate noor plan. yrly. lse. s.s95. 842·2026 or Easlbluff Rily 644 1133 San Clem. 2 Lr.I{ br & 2 2 Br, 1 Ba upstairs. Nr. LARGE 2 b tucr t' exec home. Deep pile frplc, xlnt. cond. $91,500. Nr pool, clubhse & green· 675·4869 . lrg ba, plenty sLorage sp. everything. Adults only. rs . io, pa io, ---------TH E T E RR A C E Call day or eve collect No pets. $235. 646-3487; fncd. Couple, infant o~ .
.carpet, decor drapes, BKR.499-2277 belt. $95,000. Fee. SPACIOUS 3 br, p vt . T h N 3 BR 2 7141998.7361 548-6173 No pets. $167.50. Avail huge family, brick fplc, 3 644·7866 patio. $450. Yrly. 609 own ome, ew • after June 16th. Also2 br ba's, 3 car gar. ONLY C· I Comer Lot . 8 Acacia. 673·1776/&M-0611 Ba, Wet-bar, Bllns, near Townhouse lMMAC. Lg. 2 br. owner·s studio avail July Isl.
$51,950. AND ASKING On North Coast Hwy. Big Ca~yon. Brand new Clubhouse & Pools, $385. Unfumished 3525 unit. Frpl, D/W, encl. 847-4440
FOR OFFERS ! Bkr Oceao side. Level 80xl05. Deauville L~home. 4 Cosio Mesa 3224 lease. 833·9442 Evel:i. •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• dbl. gar. Adults only, no -------. ---
962·5511 $169 000 Br, vu. Q01 ck sale HAYE-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• TURTLE ROCK 3 b 2 b ADULT i t pets $265 mo 581·5768 SPACIOUS 2 br s . $159 &
T
.URMER '"'SSOC. 64neo.e~.,~~· $177,ooo Agt w•...-MES'"'Yatftll: . r. a. common y-. . $169. Children OK. 17391
By O~ER " '1'7V'V A,...,_ A ~5 wet bar, atnum. Lease C?ndo, 2 bd, 2 ba, ocean 2 br, crpts, drps, rncd yd, "A" Keelson, l blk. w. o( * "" * UOSN.CstHwy.Laguna 4Plexw/22-bdrms. 4 BR, 2 BA. Very clean. $4.25.m9.833·1927 view, clubhse, $350. mo. gar&laundryfaciJ $l80 Beach Bl. off Slater
,Approx. 3 yr. old vacant. 494-1177 s-.... c •. 1e •• "' ..... ", ......... ' 0 •• 1.6. ·--•U•n•it•s•4•~•o•l•SO--Fenced yd. $37!>. 557·3138 Turtle Rock 3 Br. 2 Ba, Laguna Niguel, 496-7037 831-9276 . . 842·0389 prestige 2 sly home N" B Dupl U fur-ft 3600 ---------w/lmpressive entrance. S 0 View •Ct!; 2 r Apt. Sml yd & crpts, drps, trash com· exes " $21!>. NEW 2 br. Patio. DELUXE 3 br, l'h Ba,
4 b 3 b lg F
'ly yper c.,_ DOM"T FORGET! paUo. $220 mo. pactor dshwasher, wet •••••••••••. •••••••••••• Adul•·, no ...,..,_ .,..., w. washer/dryer incl. .. ..-.
r. a, · aou rm, 2 & Oen DR Crplc 1 Yr 545 ~ b C l t 2 BR M d I "'' .., .,......, -· ~ Jovely kilch. w/brkfast. · ' • · No one gives away a 20% · a r · .0 5 e 0 • · arrie coupe. 1~0 Wilson 645·9614· 642·1603 638-7275. 2019 Delaware
bar. Stepdown, spllcious New . $79 ,500. Brkr. return on Laguna Beac Mesa Verde 5 Br 3000 schools,shoppmg,park& children. 1 SlJlall dog. • •tiv. rm w/frpl. Frml. 493·9242 units. Here is a chance t sqft. Buccola Ho~e on pool. Avail lmmed. No $155. mo. 2165' B Charle 3 Br, lower, encl. patio .• 2 BR, 3Ya Mi. to beach,
fiin. rm. & 20x22 game HILLTOr COHDO make money thru g Golf Course. Huge Fam. pets. $42:>. 833·8447 Dr. Costa Mesa. crpts, drps. Nr. OCC. crpts, stove, encl. gar.
rm.Cpls.&drps.inlux· W/OceanView.2lir,2~ management.Askingon Rm $700 per mo 3BR 2Ba Nr schls & $220.After6,5S7-0350 $185.mo.870-7770
1wious Park HunUngton. Alluri ng southern vu. ba, 3 patios. $43,000 :~!'t;~n~~:°~s9i::I S57·Wl. . shop"g. Av~il now $325. Apartntenh Furnished 2 BR CLEAN, new paint, Newport leodt 3169
.i,g. lol'w/concrete blk. teak bar, 2 frplcs. 3 Owner.496·4875. BU"'GALOW2 br kids Geor(.te832·7l51 C••••~•M•••••••••••3•7••2•4• bltns, gar . Eastside. ••••-•••••••••••••••••
.wall. Massive heated levels. Fenced yd on 2 xlnlbuy.Call: BA, .. CKB 3 t •. . W OIJV esa $180. No pets. Ph : 3 BR l I d 1
pool in secluded yd. lots, 3 bdr m. $7t,950 PRESIDENT 1 AL REALONOMICS ay >r, kids, pct 2B R Condo 1n alnul ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548.6357 • ove Y up ex. w/lavlsh prof. lndRcpg. HEIGHTS New Condo BROK ERS 675·67 SAVE $40 mo. 4 br, fam $quare. Din. rm. wilh or LOW RATIS Frplc, crpts, gar, patio.
Nr. schools &shopping. 2BR,2ba,poolbullt·lna., rm.2br,klda,pet,xtras wilhout washer/dryer. NEWBREEDAPTS. Walk to Npt High. $37~
$19,500. Prln. only. L..-a MICJHI 1052 single s tory $39,950. PRIDE ~-M1. :~65. 2 br, stv, kids. Gar. Ba lcony. ~627 :~~r;~ :e1d~R Apts Lrg bach. w/loft, pool, lease. 640-0899Aft. 'Owner.~·71.56 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner 67S·3587 Of ow--L•lp ee r. Kaxan, $245. 846·0641 *'rV&MaidServAvail jacuui, encl gar, uUl's WESTCLIFF2br l\o\ba MobHe Holftft na-.. HOMEFIHDlltS Donna. Leave message. •PboneServ,Htdpool pd. Adults only. $205. 393 townhouse. Adult., n~
l IDlMS For S• ti OO Presenl ownen have al * 642·9900• •Nice Neal College Park •Children Section Hamllton. 645-4411 pets. 1728 Bedford Lane.
• • .,.,et.eranSs lorl •FHASOO b•"•ers ••••••••••••••••••••••• the work, all YoU have 3 BR 2a,; 8 1 1 Home. 38r, 2Ba, prot 2376 Newport Blvd. CM •T 1 11 Pool• $285. mo. Avail 7/lS. "i ...., do Is raise the rents • a, rp c, stove, 1nd 1 c p • g • d r 8 p e 8 • 548-97SSorM>3967 rop c 548-7533
• ~· welcome on this Owner. Fleetwood 12x60', Huge bedrooms a n lotely yard. $300. mo. gardener in cl. Nr 2 Bt', c:pu, drps, bltns. ---------ite•l value. Just a few en.laraed lo 20x60'. U~· closet.a make thia triple S40-7730 Park /pools & school. HOLIDAY PLAZA spiral s t aircase, real NEW 3 br, 2 b.'l duplex •
.minutes from the beacb l graded. Nice ILB Par , wlth two 2 bedroom, l . 2 Br, l Ba, lge r,..._.--"d. 2 551-4623. DELUXE Spa~ 1 Br lrplc, refrig, patio, gu & D/W, cplS. drp&, gar. 3 '"°·•II before ll'I gone! Daya 529·2134. evn bath unlta a nd one car gar. Forc~~j;hc•t.. 48 furn apt. Pool. Ampl~ waterpd5'8·ll88 bl:~o=n/fn~ mo • • ~$8'7lor556-~. 9eO 1316· bedroom, l bath uni $250&42·&343,cvcs. L•f•• .. ecll 32 parking. AdullS,nopets. DwPHtt 3126 _2_1_· __ . _____ _
. (
---.irr opu1y 1400 •l••y,a !.u.U~ Larg ...................... 196SPomonaAve.,CM ........................ 18B Duplex sundcck nr
••••••••••••••••••••••• fenced patio yard fo S POTLESS ' br, 2 ba OC£ANFRONT Laguna S t 2 8 2 b B h N • t s' • each teo•ot. Close home. Gard~er incl. R.oy&Jo Condo 3 br 2 ba $145-Mo. 1 br dlx mobile Pac 0 u 1 r • a c · 0 pe s. en.
""' 4 8 E D R 0 0 M PllMI OFRCI aafagei too. A pa1nl $3SO. mo. 83HJ873 2000 sq. rt. aar. frpi, Sec. home. Older cpl. prel. No w/Crp~ Near new. $2:50 Callzens only, $22S yrl)'.
•.,.•u_ .. ________
1
MONARCH BAY. lower IUILDtMG mvcalmenl starlet a auard. ''9S mo. Lsc children or pdl. Quiet a. mo. C 4'·9'M.2. _67_s-_-0_11_s _____ _
, terruo, nHM\eW home $150,000 Yurb Income $81,500 . B Toro 1212 Adlll" onl)'. T\4-411&-2771 secure. Ponderoea Mob. Br.and New Condo. 2 Bd, 2 2 BR. 2 BA, frpl, rr1, &
~
Walkr.r l~ l Hr.
Heal lstale
-1 lfte 1044 can nnL be duplicated Excellenltulbt!lter II IQ all l-· •••••••••·~··••••••• .. • Est. 1991 NeWPQrt Blvd, ha. awlm • .sauna, tennis. stv Nice Penlnsula klca·
•••••••••••••••••••••• v Great Newport Location U • 3Br & Den Condo. Dbl l&tll", You don'\ need • 1u.n lO CM. 8'6-8373 $285.131·2160orl3l·lS'18. UOG. $275 yrly. $'7S-8415 ·~nlver1ily Pa~. ' Br, '3 f0t ...... t3$.000. SUper Flnwt-q! Place '. paUo, bl'-"1· $330 per mo. "draw fut" wbeA )'OU
Ba, ChanoeHor Model. i.~~~ UnderOneMUllon$'1 P••••rl... da y11 833 -1710 , placeenadtntheDaily L99hrallr-$200 OCEANVJ!W ~3Br,2ba,b0ttobc-h.
Fam. Rm. Din. l\m. l"""CYel ... , ... ••il TedHuberU1~ : m-"20 eves/wknds 581-5175 or PUot Wanl AdlSIC&Uoow bltn.s,w/w,dtps,pool 2 br. tor qu.al'd. people. No pell/children. Yrly
•fJtM,OOOSU.9TOUr751·T39\ ~ ~ 815·~ "oo OUo\il-11, Nt~f9bQC 862·1022 -M.2·5'78. adllS, no PCJU.142·9520 ~l. An. SPM W-N1wport. SC.lD ,rtm::========L==========l:===========:=l.::============3::=========1=========:!=::======::::::::r=:::::::::=::::::::::==.i=:=:===:==:== , ...
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Add It... Build t ..• Olaper it...Hammer it ... Carpet
it...Cement it. .. Wire it. .. Hoe it ... Clean It... M ove
it...Press it ... Palnt it ... Nafl it ... Plast~r IL .Fix It ...
,
SERVICE DIRECTORY
....... s....nc. c..,...... ~.., • .,.._9 s.rnc.. · Hoaeclemtl"9 "r•ttag/P .. •ing ,._ .... , •• ,. l...octel & Repair ·······•··········•···· ·······'··············· •••.•........•......••• .............•.••••••• . ••..........•......•..... , •.........••.•••...
ProfesslonaJTypina· Kemodel·Rm Add·Pa\J06 Oreasmllkina in \he EUJ"O-ualtty I Ma nt/Ldscp& HANDYMAN-Homes & tlOUS£CLEANlNGis our Prof P •intqr, honest PATCH PLAS'rERlNG Cwitom kitchen & b"th. Rcasonabl~&Eff1C'1cnt C•banet s -Car Ports· pean Manner. June sod. sprklrs. soil <"ood, Apts. Conaclentlou1 Busineu Call Jaruce's work, rea.s. Tnt/cxt, Cree AIJ Types. t'ree Es· rempdehng. Addl.lion.1 &
....................... ...•••••.........•..... .••....................
Pb M~ :_~_~ ___
1
G rages. Mr Leo. special FREE swim awt clean u P. 8'2·3331 / Craftsman. 64$-6558. Raga:edy ~nna. 67~ esl. Hefs. 548-27S9, IJmates. Call540-682S alteraUom1. Ur\lque & un·
--N-A-NCV UAltN£5 ~ ~:ra~~·.:a:~u:~c:r S4G·4903· •HOUSE.CLEANlNG• 642'3913 VERY NEAT PATCH ~~:i1b;0r:uw:~crot-'!:~:
'J'yp1ni; service. Heas. MASTER Crartsmans youbyCordayFaahloas. apaoe se Expert Glens · 8yrehabfocouplc JOBS & RESTUCCO. 962•11314
rates by the page or Specially. ltemodellog, By appt only. 556-4Z'? L 8 n d s c a Pe · Free • •••••••••••••••••••••• Gd ratea/refs.54.11-6271 •Wallpaper Hanaing• Free est. 893 1439. ----------
hour. tuo.~ors.48·2&11. rimsh work, refs. Free Estimateis & Designs. By Former Instructor RooflltCJ est. Guar work499-3lM. Bectrical Specialized in patio cov· Wiodows. winds hields, Xlnt. housework, IUllian Carl Rebko . 646.:fA49 ,,_.ln9 •••••••••••••••••••••••
luild ••••••••••••••••••••••• ers, fencing, fi.:;h pond. mirrors. etc. Standard & cooking, babygit, altera· •••••••••••••••••••••••REPAIRS. All ly ei;.
•r• c_.,.tS•nlc.e ELECT R ICIAN S-l Any other General yard custom. Mobile service. tion.Rererence.548-3932. R.L.SINOR.Statelic/m· JUSTPLUMllMG7 Reas, tree est. lie. {Yalt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . .· ... work 979 7731 aft3 T H E GLASSMAN srd Exler· QUALJTY J b I I t / 22 . · • ~ • · tor. Fast Serv Reas Rates 830-5020 anytime. R~modol ni•w <.'Ooi.lruc· c l & u h 1 t 0 11 man repturs. &t2·0895a[t6. 898-2350 Lmtd1capl1tCJ &ECONOMY.979-3335. tion l·iel·tricai ~erv ctpe . ~t 0 s erL yrs exp. lie 233108.1----------1----------••••••••••••••••••••••• Just one Call To: o ' & u l1Ju1 .,· eanini.;. eam _548_·_5_203_. ______ Cleanups, Treework , F~rd 's Land•cape. Sod •TOP QUALITY JUSTPLUMBlNG e:.q:ri u ... Shampoo. 1'~ree e:st. 1.1-.11--" ;... •642·4111• 55\;Wt15 _ 646.7811 GarageDoorOpcMrs Ga r dening, Minor ·~~ awns. Sprinklers. Lie/ PAINdNG•
Tiie •••••••••••••••••••••••
J\dt.hl1on1 rcmdl1rcµa1r
µut1otlUCL'hll home or
oll1l'L' comrl'l1t1ve bid
H Mt:Culloul(htH6 OWt> -
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lnd:scp'g. lOyrs m area. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Insured. 962·7817. Interior & Exterior
Cf'fMttt/Conc:rete •GENI E OPENERS• 6'6-2003. YOU CALL WE HAUL Call Lee 830"7278
••••• • • •• •••••••1•••••• S S . l · ROTOTILLING ~ LEONITECONCRE'fE ummer pec1a IS. TOKYO TOM ALWAVSAVAJLA.BLI!: Landscaping.sodSales. WALLCOVERlNGS Installed & Guar. Gold Weedy! Care of every-YAROWORK. 556-0347 Froe est. Master charge INSTALL/REMOVE S T A M P IN <;J. Cob · Coast. Elec. 5Sl·62'75 & thing for you. 642·1939 J E s c·>a "'"' bles looe, brick, tale, 5111·1122. CM Remove asphalt, con Days/eves960-2170 .. wenson..:...-....... 1
Cobin•t Mold ncJ pat10.~. etc. 640-4349. ----------1----------1 crete, soil. Rough and MCllOftry
L.R. OTIS Plumbing ERAMJC TILE. New &.
Water btrs, nil sizes, dis· Remodel. i''rec est. Sml
posals, s t oppages, re· jobs welcome. 536-2'126.
pairs. remodeling and
rep1p1ni;:. New construe-Top Soil
lion. 24 Hrs. lie & bond ••••••••• • •••••••••••••
642·6263 •Top Soil* Compost•
••••• • ••••••••••••••••• C-ti t Gard.1tl1HJ Selting-Renting House'! final grading. 751-0338 •••••••••••••••••••••••
C:.tm t:Jbanct'. bo.it wk •• ~ •• ~~.~~••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CleanUpthatGarden MOVING, hauling, WILLIAMS. & Sons MARV~64SP6~9807Ul't~BrNG
Patio cvr. kikh rmdl, lat MIKE'S GARDENLNG Full reg. Serv. 751·8414 M B k/BI k/ ..-.H.Gerwick&Son Q It y rdM t "&rage cleanup. Reliable asonry. n c oc THEH"'M~ur.u NOJOBTOOSMALL
PAPER HANGING
Profess1on•I. reas. fo'ree
est. Aft. SP M 673·5829
•Mulch• Hedwood•
Ca II 586-&)30
l1l'ewk.t.t65l l~---Add/Hemod NBu.~J~.C~1•u'!~~ GeMra!Senicn faslservice.963-6452 Stone.Call581·7829 * "' ~• TreeSer•ic~ No. Bl-114321 ...., ••••••••••••••••••••••• D. Schwarti.Sr. 558-1301 Lew & Waynes Plumbmg. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Carpent~r 6i3·6041 549-2170 Landscape Maintenance General Maint&remodel •HAUL~• PaintfltCJ/PoperiltCJ Rep1pe-R emodel-New Ford 's Tree Service.
Com pl cleanup/service Comm/mcome/residenc EFFJCI ENT FAST ••••••••••••••••••••••• Patios Const. 20 yr. exp. 675·62til Experienced Crew • •••••••••••••••••••••••
SA V !!; & P rol 1t Cu~tom
r~mod. f\:pa1r. add-on.
1n:.ulJllun F'l·cc c:.l. &
Dc:.1~n:-.. 645 ~139.
DICK HUFFMAN Esttmale. 546-9107 Mac Neill • 640-8292 •• 556-0347 ** Lie/Insured 962 7817 Add-Remodel-Patio ---------------PAINTING JNTER· •••••••••••••••••••••••To Place Your "Fast ..
Shelter-Decks-Gazebos. Gurdenlng-Landscaping Creative iron gates· GEN~RAl,.HAULING !OR/Exterior. '}'o fit Cstm Patio covers.,cooc Result" ServiceTreeRemoval,limbing&
Lie. & Bond. 644-7598. ,t;xp. & Dependable raihngs-wiodow guards. •REASONABLE• your budget. I' rank. decks. Expt. bll. Du1ack. Directory ad ..... call Shrub clearing. Yard
None better! Call George 213·693·6598 213-436-5190 421-1005 CALL 646-5848 554·5996 646-7598/846-9495 eves. now. 642·5678, ext. 322. Care. 546-6403.
Apartments Unfurn. Rooms 4000 R•ntab to share 4300 lutiness Rental 4450 lutiness [PersOftols • 5350 Help Wanted 7100
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Opportun1°ty 5005 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Help Wanted 7 I 00 Help Wanted 7 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
M•wport B~ach 3869 . . Female room'!'ate want· ••••••••••••••••••••••• PREGNANT? Attractive girl to model 1
....................... Dix, across from OCC. ed to share C.M. home. TOP LOCATION On S~le Liquor License. Carin g confidential afternoon a week. Must •hauty Opetator•
PARK MEW'PORT Neat male student. Cook $115 incldg ut1I. Age MESA VERDE i ~o inventory. No loca· counseling & referral. have a nice figure & be Haircutlers, rmfor3.
Boal Manufacturer
ISLANDER YACHTS
MASTER INSTALLER
2·3 Years experien·cc
MASTER CARPENTER
2·3 Years experience
AP "'RTM~s pnvgs. $25. wk. 556·0637 23·30. Child ok. 548·9653. DRIVE PLAZA la on. $35,000. Contact1 Abortion, adoption & sophisticated. Great pay. min l yr cliontele. 70%
"' tc;l"'lll • I str· ti f r p · . comm & CASH bonus. Bal'l)clor I or 2 Summer R•ntals 4200 Seeking Guy or gal lo for store or office. Amp1e Carol or RolaJ'ld Sims, keeping. ic Y or un. nvacy Apply in person.
Ht•tlrnon\!> and ••••••••••••••••••••••• share 3Br, 2ba Duplex. parking. Town & counlry 842·1310. APCARE 547-2563 & discretion assured. Hair West ·1·11w11l1000~c""' BALBO \ P · ., b t Modern furn Newport atmosphere.
1
: W ril e describing • ASSEMBLY
CARPENTER ..., -~ ' coin.' r <IP ' • • 1525 Mesa Verde Dr. E. ln•estmnt PROBLEMS? WE CARE yourself. Write ad 11386, 3305 Newport Blvd. N.B. Fr ~:m ..JO Open 9 li l hlk to bay & ocean. Shores. $1ti5 mo. Ken. 0 -..1..·-lty 5015 0 N E w A y HE L p Daily Pilot, p o . Box 0 .. Hlv S 120 wk. July only. 631·004K. Cosla Mesa. 545-4123 ppo.-.--BEA UT Y Salon space ~pa P1)t>h ;rc·nn1s 962-K&:IO ••••••••••••••••••••••• CENTER 1560• Costa Mesa 9264!6 avail tor rent Lido lsle 1 Vear expenence
HARDWAR~~
INSTALLER Aero:.!> lrulll i''Jshion -Mob1le Home1nN1ce N.B. DE~UXE .office, comm'I Growing custom pipe & 24hrHotLine645-8800 area.675·4100
ls la mi at J.unlion.-e on LIDO Lux. 2br. 2ba apt. Park. Looking for male & mdustnal spaces. Also electronic organ firm DO YOUR OWN AUDIT CLEA.I(
SanJoa<1u1nlhlblload. Frpl.~atio,.30'deck,wtr. l8·27.$96mo.64.2·2377 min• warehous es in needspartnertohaodle DIVORCE l Yr ore exper. Good ,7 141 6 4 .. 1900 v1ew .ti75-6359 L~g.una Niguel&Mission manufacturing. Good figure aptitude, lite typ. ,... -----•Office Rental 4400 V1eJO areas. Handy to potential national clien· The Wave Project ing. X~nt working conds
--Blk to beach-New Condo ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Diego Fwy. 200 to tele. 30 y~s exp. Call Mr. DIVORCE CENTER & co. benefits. Phone
1.1\'I: :-.li.:nr1'hl• Beach' Jaruzz11vollcyball. Sips PROFESS'LCLASSA 2000 sq fl. As low as JO< Eby, Newport Organs, Atty. Trained Consul· 644-4360 or apply 500
Coso ~Sol 6. Sl2S-wk. ~5700. Bldg, 2790 Harbor Blvd, per sq ft. 831-1400 645.1530 for appt. tants to Assist You. $75. Newport Clr Dr, Su ale
tkauL1lul 1\tluJl,\pls c .M. Air cond .. wood +filing fee. 548-4216 for 600, N.B.
f rom $1 80 OCEANFR'QNT 1508 & pane l walls , drapes, 2 SHOPS. ideal location Money to Loan 5025 appl. ---------
.,1..,.,11.rookh"""l l'B 1800 W. Oceclhfront, NB. carpet ~iec musi'c for books tore, candle ••••••••••••••••••••••• . -vv 9,6266..,Sl_,.,-. 675·i777 •. 673 -3752,. , ... k .. MR' shop or art gallery. LOANS AVAIL 0 l· lncreasey~urbustlmel • 559-4221 JSanitor' par mg. 1.36. . Located in the Mall al . 't I tart'' pera . to 3 cup stzes, 2 wks or AVON
l Year experience IEA.UTY OPRS 1922 Barranca Rd
'dependable-no following Irvine. 9'l705 req'd. Guarantee. Call ----------
eves. 673-0968 Corona del BOOKKEEPER. parl
Mar. time, full charge, exp.
only. 831-0691
tever, Mgr. 5.57·0 or Th F l NB mgc~p1 a .s ups, ex· your money back . 646-8396 673_~ a c ory • · · pans1ons, etc. Call Bob 894.0641or 846.7959 Lloyd, Jack Carter Real· ----------1 MESA v~DE BALBO,~ Pen. Ocean-
BOOKKEEPER
Exper'd in all phases of
ofc bkkpng. Contracting
exper pref'd. Perm.
THERE'S A t I t i m e . Rep I y to
~ front Collage or Apt. 150 I Westdiff Dr. lndudrial Rental 4500 ty (714> 487-7100
WORLD WAITING Classified ad no. •131, c/o
SPIRITUAL READER FOR YOU... Boys & G·irls -Daily cPilot, PM. o. Bocx 2 Uclrmi. . ·' '~ IJ;,ath condo Family size. sips 6·8.
with µool :s;~15 Mo. $200. p1wk. 673·2405 eves.
STEPS TO BEACH & wknds.
Newport Fmancaal Ctr
Leosin9 Office Spac~
Call on Site Manager
••••••••••••••••••••••• Money Wanted 5030 Open 10 AM to lOPM 1560, osta . • esa, a
NEW BUILDINGS at ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adv1ceonallmatters. A s an Av ON 10tol4yearsofa ge.Dai· 9262_6 _______ _
l UH, l ba. unf. ~
MEW PORT CREST
2 OH, 2 Ba cundo~25
Balboa, weekly. modern :i (714 >642-3111ext2'16 0 .C Airport.2400to~ Bank TruslOffioer seck· 312N.EICaminoRea1 REPRESENTATIVE. ly Pilot delivery .routes Bookkeeper, 1"/C, cxpcr.
s.q ft. ample parking. ing $25,000-$35,000 2nd SunClemente,l<~orappt. You meet new people & ~~y be a~a1labl~myour AtP, payroll, quarterly
WE HAVE
SU~MER H!:;NTALS
Ur. ~~::!5. Bach. $100. --------
G75·6712 a fl er 6PM. SOME UNITS FOR TD on Bayfront re-Cal1 :492·9034 492-9136 havexlnt earrungs.Bet· arca.Ea1nprol1tforde-reeort · •en l•dgcr &
SALE ~ T 10·,~ OOWN. sidence. 642-3111, X·244 ter than silling at home'! hvem~s & . cas~. lnvs. or bank r~·co~ciiiat~on •. Sal ~----~~---· ,\1oDl!:HN 3 br , rear
house on ocean. Compl.
Jurn1shed. S2SO. wk. West
Newport. 646-7971 for re-
servation.
WESTCLIFF BL DG.
NEWPORT BEACH
Koll/Irvine Center. Call or673.4303. Mr. Paige PHOTOGRAPHER-Artist Call: 540-7041 or zenith merchandise tor selling :; Dan Curtis. (714) 979-9205 seeks sponsor for foreign 7.1359 days new subscription:;. For open. 714 16_45_.m_oo __ _
associated Cornpr Wt.'"\ I< hf' ()11vv .1nd tr,.,,., Ave
../. JUt c..tOl!lonlne ;/~ ...........
./-
MISSIOMV.IEJO Mort0~do~es, Tnat SOl
5
t,avel. Will serve as --------• information please tall BOOKKEEPER .... ,. ~wde. companion for one ----------642-4321. From San Real Estate rental ofc
HandytoSanDiegoFwy.
1
....................... or more persons. John. Babysiller needed. San Clemente-San Juan accounts.1-'lexiblehours • BAOKEAS-AEALTOAS
ZOZS W Bol boo I> 11. JI>/> J ----------./u ....... ./Fw11---./l!efo• __. ./Secy ..-.le• .. .ii.
./--pet11"'9
200 lo 2000 sq.ft. Call · P. 0 . Box 4923, Carmel, Clemente area . Our Capis trano area, call 673-9060
owner 831-1400 LOANS up to 80% ca . R e fer enc es . h 0 me. 5 day s wk. 495-0630 and Mission Vie· ----------WANTED bachelor 55 or
---over Lo renl lge apt w/o·
cean & mountain view.
499-2403
1 (408)372-1547 7:30-5:30. 492--8711.5 · El T 11
1200 Sq. Ft. M-1 w/front 1st TD Lo-..81/2% ~1='6310. oro area. ca CAREER-TRAVEL
office, lge rear door. 220 2nd TD Loans Travel 5450 BABYSITTER Few hrs.. Equal Oppor. Employer 3-Phase. Umt 16. $185. 629 Lowest rates Orange Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 days a wk. for 13 yr. old Guys-Gals over 18 yrs.
• BEACH TOWNHOMES Terminal Way, Costa Sotffer M'-Co. SEE EUROPE girl. Own trans. Irv. ______ .=..__ __ Immediate openings.
Call Mr. Howard
645 ·6101 lN SUNSET BEACH. Mesa. Days, 540·5710, 642_2171 • .,. 545-0611 area. Call: Mon thru Fri. ----------1 Travel entire U.S .. Mex· CA LL (7 14) 840-1648/ ---------• eves 646·0681 . BY CAR bef. 5PM: 546-1161, aft 5 ico, & Central America. 2
838·5013 55' PER SQ FT Servmg Harbor area i 4 &wknds. 551~45 BOAT Weeks expense paid
WANTED PARK 1617:'G~i~~~NB 2~r,~c r:: ~~~po~;t _Y _ _:__a_~ ... s ....... -------• ~~rrchf~~ adn:li~~~rf~ ----------}~~~~~~d.T~adural~~lt~~
Refni:erator Se<'unty. NEWPORTApt.Julyor 963·7878 ~c•menh/ Europe&letusplanyour Banking BUILDERS barrier.Ifyouwouldhke
Pool J al'Utll Re·· UI·'•• Aug. 2-4 wks flex. Call or $140 up s tore·offices cpts enonals/ · individual lour. From S "'LE ESCROW above average earnin••s · · ~. u.., wr1le J. ~1 eller , drps air bath. 17301 2500' M-1 CM /17th & Lost&FoUnd "' " w / e >. c r r 1 :. c r m . .-Be 1 8 p 1 t . 2 2 0 •••••••••• ••••••••••••• take-off to home-landing, OFFICER w ANTED while traveling with a Hillaarcb Color,'\' 115-435-2056 23 Sonora ach 8 H .. 8'12·2834 a ce n 1 a · you'll be m the hands of youn g fun group. Call
IRVIN F \T MFS \DH Ct. Tiburon Ca. --• . --pwr/prkg/exhsl air. 12" Lost & Found 5300 experts. Also lease &ren· We have ah immediate Corp•nters Mr. Hornnes at 536·H.2t
;', 1 ·' • ---' NEW plu• offlc:e bldg, 2 It. 646-1252/644·2228 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lal cars . EURAUTO, challenging oppor. for a Etectrictians for appointment 10 J\M •
·I.> ~i PRIVATE 'ttome on the to 6 rm s uites. Con· LOST/FOUNDi\PET1 Lido Village, N .B. qualified ind1v1dual w/2 Mech'llnstallers 5PM Tuesdayand Wed·
Beachfront i.:n •.Jt \tcw, WaterfrontmCoronudel ference rm. xerox Lease l OOO sq. It. w/ of· 960·2900Adoption,Low 673-4550 yrs sale escrow exper. Muslbeexperience<.1 nesdayonly. •
qwet bcal·h. :i Br.<! Ba, Mar. $2000. mo. July & copier. Nr OC Airport fice~l 0·220 voltage. CostSpay/Neuter l nfo. ----------rn dividual will b e ~ara,:!c SS.iv Ltal me I'd. August. 673·2875 for appt. 833·3640 Hea ' hot water. New '1:loy111ent & responsible for handling "''5-02•15 bldg. Good Joe. 645·2244 HOMEY! -parat1°on V"I • N E W P 0 R T • WA TERFROHT •... all Escrows in the Santa
WATERFRONT JI & C3SHOP 1800 sq fl + LOST female dog.••••••••••••••••••••••• Ana area. We offer an Eas tbluff· T nh:-.e beaul. \ u Y , Newport~ach · · · · · K D RK b apt .. 2 Ur 3 lia, bltns, Aug.) 2BR 2 ba, lully Executive offices 400 sq. fl. dlx office. 3-12 DA Rid •b A k rowfn, Jobs Wanted. 7075 xlnl fringe benefit pro·
lrpli:, palm. pool. Avail. furn'd., sll:cps 8. Pree $l50·$22SMonth It. overhead drs~ ~nroe cou e m ista en or ••••••••••••••••••••••• gram, a good starta,ng
S350. i;.14.03.;5 hoat dock . S300. wk. View of boats& water loc, San Clemente.» sq. black. Part Cocker and EXCELf..~NTTYPlNG salary, terrific work sur-,1 ----675-6169 or 774·4384 U fl. part unknown Wearing in my home roundings & lots of work.
TWO bdrm 1 gar. Beach --BILL GR M~Y RED CARPET collar and tags. Answers Call Pal 675-4177 For appt., please call
Pri v. 1.ido !>hoppann
1
. BALBOA ISLAND Realtor 675-6161 REALTORS to HONEY. Vic. Walnut Mr. Pren lice, 541·3314. " 3 b " b on be h A I 497 1761 ~u:.arc between Jeffrey 35 yrs exp. Pamt/ren,.irs/ area. S2!t.> mo. 673-2828 r , " a . ac v . OFFICE s•~ o I . ""t ..... _ _ _ _ _ 6 28 to 7 /l2. 67J..324S . or ...,re ,..enta Rd. & Culver Dr. lrvme.1 plumb/elec. Maint work GLENDALE
lBr Condo 1n Lux B:.ayfrnt ---700 sq. It. Oceanview. 552-5697 after 5.30 or Apt complex. 536-7056.
,\ d u I t li I ti ~. u nlNewport-:'lew-2 Br, 1111 S . El Canuno, San Business/lnYnt/ weekends. 14633 Kalani --''---......:...------FEDERAL
Penln!>ula Pool, many Ua. S2:!5 per wk & up Clemente Financ• . St. I YACHT WORK wanted. SAVIMGS
.XLra!>. S2i.> mo. :>-'8 9695' 675 1453 N 1 d led l ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Very expenenced. Crew 51 Fashion Square orij.jS l"tn • ew Y ecora . carpe · Bu · LOST : small femalel ormamtenance.675-9637 Santa Ana ~ · --Laguna Bcal'h . Lovely ed 2 room olfac:es. J::asy bnessrt u.. SOOS Siamese. Vic Bushard&. • Equal Oppor. Employer Son C leme nte 3876 lge ocean I ronl_home. lo find, ample parking, ppo '"'"' Adams, H.B. Reward.'H•lp Wanted 7109
••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail mo. of July $1500. xlnl location. 779 W. 19th ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962·766Daft. 6&wknds. •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 RR ., ba hlL ·• Rita M .vers, Hllr. St. $75 & $85. 548-1945 or Vending ~...........-.......-.·---------•I • -, "·'· ' car C ...... DY ROUTE OST B r I gara g e t:olf course 494·5420or900.1701 548·1954 ~" L : oxer ema e , Acnts /F /C Bkprs to$15K BANKING
& ---E II t t f d fawn/whl, Dana Point. Mach Sho S p to $15K ~~~~j9 S2 Js. s25o. • NEAR NEW WR 2ba Separate Office. 180 sq f & x~~a~~/~uv!ifa~l~n i~ Reward. 496-5079eves. Automoli~e ~~h t.o$l2K
________ 1 w / all bltns. close to bay + storage. Pacific Coasl your area. Ideal way to Ex Secrelar1es to $9S<J
Apartments Fumilhed & beach. $225. wkly. Hwy. CdM. 675·5444 supplement salary or FOUND. Siamese male. Person Friday to $6.'i-O
orUnfurnished 3900 •3 BDHM,lha.frplc,''2 aoo· f ()(' -h--pens ion. Locations , ~ai~f.iel8d.r9?,~~-~trst & 1°VINEPERSONNEL ••• •• •••• • ••••••••••••• blk lo beat:h. S250. wkly. o c + 4 I wa~e ousc, l t II . & ·r . . "° ...., " • LIK1': NEW. xlra lrg carpet, l1lcd cc.ii g/prkA. ns a al1ons rrurung ---------SE°'VICESG-A ·GENCY ~lB R 2i,2 ba w /all the M ·L zone $225 mo. furnished. Financing FOUND : maleChjhuahua " n Vi~Ttt1>l't l ilU(Y,• bltn s A 0 DOCK 646·1Z5_2 ______ available. Can be ex-w /col l ar. Bols a & 488F..17th (Atlrvine) · panded to full time in· Brkhrst. Westminster. Suite224 Costa Mesa
UCITlllC lllW COllClPT I
ADULT LUESIDl LIVINC
SMAll '91\ ACCl'110
• Bockelors
• • 1 BR, 2 BR
•2 BR & Den
From S 175 -$485
PHIV '~ AVAIL. S295. •lMOFREERl::NT• come. ~'or information 531-6266 Call642-1470
wkly. 1·2·3 Rm. offiC'es from ph. 714-&79-1284 JA.COBSREALTY $135 per m o. Near FOUND : Small male ~~
675-6670 airport. No lease req. ii---11111!1------i shaggy puppy, blk & tan. "'d rt• · r -'--
833 32239T·1 Distributor l7thSt,CM.642·1968 "' Ye •S•Q9~ Vacation R•ntafs 42SO , . . i noon Outstanding sales oppor.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaul. private Newport CANDY SUPPLY FOUND : S1lk1e or Yorkie Sell advertising space
F o r L e a s e i n exec. orrice an suHe. ROUTE Terr, blk/tan, fem. Vic. for Orange County's
Mesa Verde East & Adams CR EST LINE. Custom Reasonable. 645-3700 Port or foul Time Hamilton & Bushard I fastest growing publica· S~o 1800 b It d h Pl h H B 968 ""24 t1on . Immed. opening. .. -w ream ouse. us . Now available in your · · ·c.o Tht · • h d
3600 sq. ft. Cha l e t EXE~UTIVE swtesover· are a. Reliable person s pos1t1on req s ar __________ , w/every conceivable lookmg Newport Harbor. wanted lo refill and col· Found: Smoky Gray Kit work, intelligence &
bltin. Horse corral & 400to2200 s q fl.6'l2·4644 1 t f . ten. Vic: Newport. Hgts. most important profess. ec money rom com 6/12. 548-5256. selling ex per. Compensa·
Downey SavincJS
& Loan
Has openings forofc soon
lo be localed 1n -Orange
Co.
Loan '5.r.,, Clttk
Exper. in S&L, banking
or related field pref'd.
P•rsonnet Clerk
Min. 2 yrs personnel ex·
per. Good typing ability.
Call Per~onnel Ofc
213/869-0512
Equal Oppor. Employer
IEA.UTICIAHS
Now interviewing for:
Mewporter""' Won
Ca 11: 644·0661 or 54()-8582
We pay top wages
Excellent co. benefits
mcludang co. paid
hea Ith ins & ltfe ins
for our employees.
PACIFICA BY
KIPPER YACHTS
928 W. 17th Street
Costa Mesa
BOAT BUILDERS
Westsai l Corp. h as
vacancies in the follow-
ing categories :
Hand Lominators
Gelcoat T ouchup
P /t Sec. Gucrd
Top wages. xlnt co.
benefits, good working
conds. Please apply to
th.e gale guard at
Westsail Corp.
275 McCormick, C.M.
CASHIER
Full-time. Over 18
Good pay. 5 Locauons.
M~tro Ccr Wmh
l950 Harbor Bl. C.M.
CA.SHIER
For cafeteria 9am-2pm.
Mon-Fri. Apply Pacific
Mutual Bld g , 700
Newport. Ctr Dr, N.ll.
644·7761
Caterer /Coo#t.
Experienced
Hours approx. 8AM-2PM
daily, 5 day week. Must
have ability to prepare
li g ht lun c h tor 120
employees. Co. soon lo be
located in Orange<.:o.
Phone 213/SW-0512
Equal Oppor. Employ~·
College student w/ln·
dusl'rial Arts backgrounct
to work with youth ---------•I between 7 18. 642-1:1372, IOA.T 9·5pm -.....:....------~-
CA.RP E HT ER S Col students. p/l sis. de· W~s tsa 1 I Corp. needs liv. Eves /Sat. Car, phone
skilled boat carpenters nee. Mr Lyons 848-1004
w/mm l yr boat exper. ----=-------
Must have own tools &Cook Supervisor for
trans p. Apply to gate Bayview Conv. ijosp. Ap
guard al: plicants must be enrolh.:d
Weshoil Corp in a dietary superv1s~r
275 McCormkk,C.M. program at O.C .C. __________
1
Salary range $3.25·$-l per
hr. 642-3505.
CLASSIFIED will seJJ it. tack room too! Ph : CdM . SINGLE to 1750 sq. operated dispensers. All lion commensurate
1714)338·1244or338·2200. ft.. Hwy. Drps, AJr Cond. retail outlets arese<:ured LOST: Silky Terner pup-w/abilily. Male or fem . $£rK & r Pf/' Cooks W.ted
NEWPORTsteJ)6tobeach Elev .. Crpts, Prkg. 40" by company exper ts, py, blk, brwn & silver. Call Mr S kolnik , liii rfNa1 BreedufCattJe . Breakfas t, dinner, ex·
mod,2 &4 br.$l6Sto$450 MASTERS Owner/ therefore. no product V1cofVillaPacifica,HB. 7141894.4781 for in· pe-rience w /good OP•
('ORONA DELMAR wk.642-3490 Realtor.673·4120 selling. No experience Contact963·5878. lerv1ew. 'J FA I THYSASR l WSNY.ORB portunit y . Apply in
2 Br Tuwnhuw.c. lrplC', . necessa ry . To qualify ----------person , Jolly Roger from 5275 1 Drl'rom $205. CAUl.N, 1,Jig Bear. sleeps SUI-LEASE you must have a <'ar, 2·8 LOST: lge ~a.le ~la~k APARTMENT Manager. A y R S RM X lJ z O N ER ff 0 E C P Y Restaurant. 400 S. Cst.
Pool. lt•on•~. <'<.inlinental 12. Col 1 V, pooltbl, 2 fpl. NEWPORT CENTER hrs. per week <days or LAB. Ans. to Ri~k Vic. Must be mature couple to c II A 1. t: A D o A t. L N 1 E T 1-1 t. o 11 Hwy. Lag. Och.
dk D I k 494 ""11 4 Fl H' h . Offl eves ). Lake Forest, El Toro. manage 75 uru•~ i·n pr"·
l'rcukl j "l ~~m" IV•Aan & sun · h ay w • -.,., 1 oor 1g -nse cc, Ow ers are heartbrok "" " K O Y. L P ~ o N C' f' I 1-: C K ~ o Y. ll t ' COUNTER SALL·"MAN " . ..., ~ ·~"' L .. B Oc •-B · 1164 Caah lnYest11 ... t n en. stige area 1n Costa Mesa. ..., Cawlan,1 v11•w.,. Seµ~rate a., c · eafn °'May t~fw, · R ... ....i-........1 Reward. 581-ED54 Must he . experienced & I N c o 1 H P A N F R p A F. R K p o F. for morine st.ore. lf<>al•
Jam1ly "l't·t 1on. Close to R-tals to ·h-.. 300 sri . t . on Y rent· ..-,-nru ing exp pref'd 5:i7 !!QM .... .. -... .. $826.32 Call. 64().1680 or $2160. LoST: Yellow LAB . 5 mo. re~iable. Salary + apt & F. L 0 p N E B tc I ~ y T •: ,.. v A N N v . -. =w=·. <;hoppan~ & llnc beach ••••••••••••••••••••••• 496-627l For more info. or a old fem ale. Vic. Lake uullliei;. Xlnt job for DentaLAss1sl. II
tM 2611 2 Roomm<iles w<inle<l. p e rsonal inter view Forest. ,t;I Toro. Please r.'ght ~o upl e . Write fo' ES D N R w o DA Z U R 0 AD Rb A PREVENTIVE
Yearly. 3 BR apl. Walk 444N.NEWPORTBLVD. write .• , CAN Dy return for reward. Cl~sslfaed Ad No.318, RlB R F. 'E o sltt " <:~NP H M t' O \\ R CONTROL ,
THE F:XCTTJNG to beach 8i bay. July 1st. Unll "C" $85. DJVJSION #2.3 P 0 Bo 581·61154 Daily Pilot, p O Box E R D ft J U ~ N ., J o 1. U ti c B
r "'LM MES.., .,. ... 5. $lt0 per mo. 1st & last re-Ulil. Pd. 675-8457 • · · x 1560 Costa Mesa.~ "' THQAPIST '
,.. "'~ 1 -q 'd p f m t l'be •I l?39, Covina, Ca. 9l722 or FOUND: Small fem. lite ' , . B A M 0 I R L T R t. O H R T I R Must be super motivated MJNU1'ESTONPT · re · 11 ure,1 r lmile111R....-4450 caU(213)331-8263 beige dog, looks like Apt. Mfrs, 15 uruta CM tofillcxc1tmgpoBiUQl\11t
nCH. =~tl~~67~-~195 530-28CM; ....................... Peek-A Poo has had re· marred cpl, bus b s HK Rs Lu E s ic AT TL ElA R c A progressive preveli(lon
nach.1&2BR ffflm$16S. BROASTERCHICKEN cent surgery. Jamboree w/maintabilty.847·7327. o MEN Av RR H 1 R g KN Ru o NH program. Exp. In pre•
AduJts,NoPets Luxuryapl.nodmountaln THE COLONY TAKEOUT. Beer/Wane Rd.&Alton.6'4..t088 AR~ You Looking For ventlon desired. Mustb4 1561 Mesa Dr. C'ab1n. both $150 mo. li A t""'"' ..... ,0 "" ~ AT O V BA TO L B J AO E Q H" C Shllrp1
N .... RETAlLSHOPS cense. gen v•.,.,...,, FOUND.· Blk "· whl kit· JOB SECURITY? The · ' (5 Blks Enlof' ewport Female. Eves, 962-~. -°' u N l f' y c lJ g R N A E y R p E R 0 T Call for Appl 562..ll'»tt aivd.) Prime reasonabl apace ten, vie. ol 18th & ARMY has tt-andt pays · ·~
54.S·98b0 Responsible female to available large & small. i---------•I Pomona. 548 ·9878. 7 well. Coll 541-2929. ask TA 8 DHtal Sec'v~ ----1 sh•re xtra large 4 Br, Old world charm with Mfl ~M gr. Merge weekaold. for lOS. t~c _ ..,_ ,_..... & Assistant. 16cp;ttl'd' •
aooms 4000 duplex. i., blk to Ocean Frcn<'h windows. Rabies Piua Take-«atTerm1' ----------~ • .,, .,., .. ,.._., i. 111e ,...... PIM_.. colJege. S.6-3000
••••••••••••••••••••••• s120 mo. mcl. ulil. Avail. & trees . AdJll.ceot to Mrg. Jewelry/Sales FOUND· Peek A Poo Vic A.SSfMllRS ~-..,M111ti.u M••11
ROOMS $.20 wk ISP with 7/1 Garys.4S4665. Festival of Arla VWRepair,13~000. of Jamboree Ir Irvine Some mech'I ~mbly, AHltDHNANGU~ HOWN8Wll'8 to:JU!PORO D...talA.Ml1'-t•
kll1·h•n ..... wk u1> upt. Grounds. HOLLAMD IUSIMESS Rat iUlehea. a.7256. sol<ferlrrg, or mach. shop A'flt."ltflQ CJUQWAT KOUl'TElllf ~ Or tho· ch a 1 ralde, -• ... " ..,v WANTED R 't -'d cuu .. ..,_., BRAHMAN OALl,OWAY R.IO,OLUl : .... 548-o7G5•1r&4.5--M7 . : oomma e , 580 BROAINIAY 6'5-4170SALES~ • __ _., 53•0 exper req ...... ~ 81tANOU8 OUlltN IY llHOltTff01lN..4 per'd, p /tim.e 2 dayi., StnJ"hl. mature maJe to L"GUNA BEACH ,..,.... _.... 111 110MOllltOW1-... •"" Wlllu f'tac• • • Irvine "'5~7800 I • n ••••••••••••••••••••••• Asaf'"'t&nl Mal\Jl--: Mid· ·., a-· f CietlUeman. refng .• walk share luxurious 3 br con .. "' ...... •··beach. V1<" Pac. Coast do, beaut. furn. JacuuJ. 494 79 5 INCOME TAXBmJness "-'nklng prob!-? die age cooplt, 80 Lill.Its. En,oy m11rh larpr "Seek & P1nd" punle4 •Ith nvtr M ~ntal Recept. Fronl'~rc ""' I un .,.... "'ve "-wk'"dl phone d!Ml0Wrie1 per panel in •n •ll·M't •*"'" ~2~·pe1e bookl11u. ~ Hwy le Beach !U . pool in Jrv1ne. JJ,75. mo. • No~keep1.ng.Mostly Call AlcoholfleJpJ1ne it. • .. 'Toord.ervolum .. 1 nandnl Hndttmrt:i1eh.m1kln1cheekt Expernet'. P tt1m .4b11 ,~53&-:::a5~1~8~..::::::=::=::::=::l~S4~7-6~N~l~==========::t~~~~~~~~~~==~Or~•~n~a~e~Co~.~64.2~-37~29~:b==24~il~rs~a~d~a~y~83.S-a30~~~=1:"5-0832::::::0:r:~:::1:M::·::::Jl.!.,.~Y~•~b~•~1~o~"S~·=·~k~A~F~lnd~"2'"~cu~·~o~r~1h~~~"·~--~1111~pe~r:=-~~_l~d~ary~.963-~.~458~~1 ====:::i:=:
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tWpw•-. 1100He1pw~ -> ....................... ••••• 7tOI ~W~ 7llO HtlpW-'ted 71 .... W..t.d 7100 D04JS 8040 Monday. Juno 16, 1975 DAIL y PILOT BJ I ' --------~'---·-·~·~·~··~·;.:·;: .. :·::·:.: .. =· .. =· ... ....... ............ ... .. ...... ........... ·~·· .... ····· ·········· ...................... . llAL ISTATI 1--------TEl.EPUONESALES Muu Sch.naltzer. AKC, 8 Ml1ullaeoua 1010 4lh. Pewer 9040 Mofwcyclfl/ U.VO" Comm. Superb Part uine or full llrn~. wks, Cbamploa blood ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Scoot.rs 9150
prlvas. aod Kml-prtvate 10 m lO lpm or 5pm to hnu, ma/fe. S59·4911l /f: ••••••••••••••••••••-.• ortlcu. £dueatlonaJ, Needod kn Sept. Spm.Kacellenleamlngis eve. Beautiful id Ma p)e1973 14 ' boal 3SOB,
JUNIOR SALESMEN
Ages 12·16. Earn $20-~0 per week
getting new subscribers to the DAILY
PILOT after school and Saturdays
Must be ou~ of school by 3:00 PM. No
C1e llver1_e s or c ollecting.
Transportat1on f urnishcd. Huntington
Beach-Fountain Valley areas call
8'7•4360 '-I
training and rt1n1e CompJele lnlJWlg pro· salary or com!TUS:$iona: ovcrslulfe rocker, re Americ an lrlr Nylon '71 Su;tukl 'l'S.125 Du.stu.
benefit.I. RosldectJaJ and cram wlU atatt July 646-4100 art. spm • "'tt~E! ! centJy upholstered, and conv top. $2W. Privah: <A>nverted for dirt, but
tov .. tmonl ~DP lot for tboae who qualify. 3 1' em"e L•brudor Pup matchinl( footstool, onJy 962·0348 all slt'eet equspment 10-
B role or 1 and Call Mn Stntlon, Tf';LEPJIONING urn pies,7wks.old 847·2595 $55.Twomatchingstet'tlO . eluded. t:xtrlf'ltires.Qood S&Jeanaraona. Capistrano Unified xtra $$at home calhng speakers, 6 V.1" x l0" 18' Winner. 75 £vinrude l'Ondition. Must sell $300. ... r Yfellow1 Labra~r 5 mos. neve r u:1ed, onlv $lS Vanaon trlr. 2-25 lllll gaE 64<Ml577. · Cl)UAIL!LAC:I . School District, Sam· or re t&rded children ema e . AK<; Champ 642.6840 " tks Open bout. Perl. fot
PIOPHTIIS :t:llOpm,496-121.5. pro.:ram.' H .B. area. llne fleldtrial.G44·6o.is lishtslli.$1395.545-7616. ·74 HONDA MT 250
D• ...,_ 6"·6l01 I.. E N 0 X <.; h I n u Elsinore. Like new. $850.
1714 ) 7l~l9ZO TERMITE INSPECTOR Rel\; Great Dane Femi.le. "Windson g", Lennox Douui needed. lisl & &t1m See a l 3215 Cl•y, N.8.
Equal 0pportl101ty Employtr ,, R.E. "Insurance Bl'Okers Secre~ry
Must be licensed. Good 2 rs. Gd. P!'1Ce to gd. stemware "Moonspun", w/us at no cost. We havt 64$-8998.
opportunity w/ growing home. 675-7656 art objects, paintings. b u Y e r s • BC y ll .• ----------
eo. Xlnl :udary. 992:1292. 3 Yr DOXIE, fem. All Cash ! 536·2335 714 /848-1304. • 78i~tA~1~1.A ~Ende!:: for expanding corp. Full
HelpW-.d 7100 &.a...1 .. W . or P /T . Call Ray •••••••f-•••••••• • ...,. •ted 7100 Overturf, 646·3487
FINANCE
SECRETARY
shots. beaut & loving. BOXES any quunllly, 32' C.enlu~y Cab. Cruiser. $400 .. AC.·l·essories .. Pri.
UTILITY Veryrc;is.847-Sll>l tap e, abras ives & Twin Ghrys ler en ~. Pty-.546·3286 . ...... ······················· ---------M •1..aT. ............ Free to You 8045 pac.kaging supplies $12,000. Call 675-5774 Den tu l Asst. Ort ho Uve-ln companion for ac·
Chairside, appr01'. 4 livee older lady. Non
days wk. OrthO exp. req. 1mo1er. SS2·74M. Irvine.
llTAIL a.JIU(
Per50Jlab1e & attractive
w/relail & clerical ex-per. Opportunity for ad-
vancement. Call 842-8513
~ " """'" Abaco Pack g Co • -KAWASA KI 1-'2 '68 run!I Exper'd man needed for •:••••••••••••••••••••• · 3 ing rp., 18 ll. '73 Riviera OMc ltlS good $95 ' Immediate openin1 tor all around mainten""CC Gute, s mart, orange & 18090 Euclid, 1-'ountatn UP s t r d S• . , experienced t .... Vall"'v, 979 ... t>'W\. u n °. vc. ..ert!O, • 673--l:l>J * w/good sh & ~:~ti~~ work. Xlnt co. benefits, ~h1tebkikttens. ll wks, "'" ~ C.H. radio. conv. tol'. air ---
typing skills. Able to top wages, Apply to gate ouse ro en. 673-5925 horn, ri~h well, bait bag YAMAHA 125cc MX 175 Start $3·$4 hr. depending·--------• on exp. No smoking, agei-
20-30. 642· 2626
DIMMllt COOk '
Exper. short hrs, eves
Su rt & Sirloin
5930W. CoaittHwy,NB
MACHINIST
A variety ot sbori run RN·CCU
k rouard "'t · GOl .... G r.•SH1~-. and purnp, compass. Kit. Fast & dependable wor w/several people . ., .. · FREE . Au s tralian " " ....,.r
I l II W.IL-11 c~ s I'S WORM f •BL.ii swim ladder, anchor & $300 or ... 839·0004 re a ewe to numbers & n.u hepherd & Shepherd -.... h & -----willing to learn use or 275McCormick, .M. puppies. 751-6957. 8 OpenDailY"7Amto6Pm ~:~~pie span S4700 1974 YAM AHA 650. less
time share terminals. Sh weeks old.. Nile c rawlers. Meal than 1000 miles. $1&>5-
90, typlng70. Waitress.Applyinperson KlTTENS-6 wk long Worms. African Night loots.Sail 9060 846·5204eves &wtcnds.
alt 4 S'd' Bl Be • Crawlers & Red Worms. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M_..._-H • I s ue et, 107 haired, blk. & wht., 17362 Gothard. HB. 27• ERICSON 1 yr old u._-omn.
production work. Req. Nights, full oc p/time.
min. 3 yrs shopexper. in· Differential pay. XJnt
eluding l~aJ work his· benefits. Contact Mrs.
tory. Must do own Balestreri, 642-2734 ,
---------•setups. Cos ta M e mori 1J I
DISHWA.st•• DUNCAN Hospital, 301 Victoria,
Call 644-3319
9AM-NOON
THI IRVIHE C:O.
550 Newport Ctr Dr
Mewportleech
Equal Oppor. Employer
21st Pl, NB calico, all blk. Trainea. Cal1847-514l ,U eauttfully furn. & Sole/Rettt 91~0
642·6818. ri • •ed. 4U4 ·3503 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAITR SES
Sharp/Neat/Exper'd
Surr &Sirloin
5930 W. Coasl Hwy. N li
---------_£G 25' EXEC. All l::xtras. Lo
MAC:Hl.,.ON ELE. CTRONICS -c~.M~. E~O~E·~~·~ HiJ hscbool grad . _
F /llme. M-F. 6:30-3PM .
EOE. Apply in person,
Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital, 301 Victoria,
C.M . Ask for Mrs .
Dunlap.
YNG . red Germ Shep · p male, gd watchdog, xlnl Formica counter top with LIDO 14 w / trailer. ·m1. lush int Sl7,SQ8.
w/ children. 673.2015 double smk. Woodgrain Complete. Good cond. 831·0379or •\!i5-118>1
DISHW ASHER-Exp'd.
Apply in person,
WIGG Y'S Steak House
2645 Harbor Blvd, CM
DISHWASHER
Experienced/Neat
Surf & Sirloin
5930W. Coast Hwy, NB
DISPATCHER
Graveyard Shirt. Apply
in person,
YELLOW CAI
186 E. 16th, Costa Mesa
NOPHONECALLS
PLEASE
••DISTRIBUTOR want·
ed, mature. Interested in
earning up to $800 per mo
p i t . Call 639·6123
DOCTORS ASSIST.
Young lady (18-28) t.o as·
sis l in Health Spa. No
exp. req. we lrain. Apply
any aft. or eve. 2930 W.
Coast Hwy., Newport
Beach.
ELECTRICIANS
Wanted. Service or con·
sfruction exper. req'd,
Top pay & benefits. App-
ly in person at. 17795 Sky
Park Cr, Suite G, Irvine.
Exec. SKl'efary
lmmediaLe opening for
secretary to exec V.P. in
fast growing co. We are
looking for a career
oriented individual w/
~Int typing &SHskHls.
Call 714-752-1249
'Experienced waitresses.
Full & part time. ~e
Miss. McLeod. 499-2663.
FIGURE MODB.S
WOMEN 18-35 needed by
Orange County's leading
studio. Make up to $500
p /wk. No experience
nee. Ph. anytime,
1714)821-0180
General Office
& lldca MaW. Work
Oppor. lo advance into
sales or production for
right person. Must have
own transp. & live local·
Jy. Call Char or Rosie,
for appt, 549·1167
2865 Fairview
Costa Mesa
Equal Oppor. Employer RN
EMERGEMCY
MAID WANTED P/lime 11-7:30 shin. Xlnt
Part time• Call benefjts & working con,.
Mesa Motel •646-9681 ds. SOE. Contact Donna
Roache, RN, Costa Mesa
MaJe help wanted full & Memorial Hospital,
p/time. Apply Kentucky 642-2734.
Fried Chicken, 2929 E. ~~~~~~~~~ Coast Hwy, CdM =
Medical Transcriber/ Of
flee Seely for Radiology
Office. located in NB.
Call 642·6464 for appnt.
MOTOlt ROUTE
ROBINSON1S
Fashion Island
Has Opening For:
Secretcries
Typists
•Dictaphone
•Polfcy Typiat
•Mog Card I & II
•lepro * Stctff 1tical
•Tecllnicol
pattern. used . $20. MAKEOFFER.642·7979 W I -•
WANTED 2 Lo h · d I k. 5491506aftc 3 a ntec Lo rent-Motor ; you.ngprelly ng .a1re mae itten, · r 18' SEAGULL wi t I Home approl<.25ft S/C females to run survey & bx trained, 8 wks old. Dlk . , r r • A ', . , · • market new service in & wht, and gry & wht. Kn~ sz. Drk Green qwlte<l g?Od rigg1.ng &sails, as 1s u~. 9.31. ~-·90_28_. __
Newport Beach Mu11l eves 837 -5718 spread. Xlnt cond. $25. $600, K47 ·1338 w :\ N 1' l b h · ·, · · Lamp s, Wht/gold . ' o. u y ave open rrund, sharp r.... •tu 8050 c r· m·c $20 both '74 Erickson 27. lOhpO/B, MOTORllOM I::, clean,
personality & car. Apply "'"" re re aS3i5• p eaWohrt f II .clec starl. Very Sharp! used 2ti·28'. 548·2633 in person 8:30-9 AM ••••••••••••••••••••••• or · r , u . M · Xl, · p · ---------
Mo.n-Fri. Wage + Com· 1 Gr~at Savin~.on ':Jsed length ~rapes .. $15. A'>· $l:.~. <2[3a,s~l-8;~1~ty. Trailer5, Trani 9170 m i s s i 0 0 s E A 1' urn, Appli & Misc. sor~ed pictures Sl to $5. •••••••••••••••••••••••
LANCERS 201 E Coast Wilson's Bargain Nook Sohd Walnul contrhp. 15' Sad Boat w/sails , '68 Nimrod Tent Trailer
Hwy, N.B.' ' · 545 W. 19th SL C.M. end lamp. tbl w/drawcr trailer & newly retond. inc porta 1>otiy. icebox. . . $30. All in Xlnt cond. '• H p M • S 3 7 o · k & SI AdJ·ustabeds,2dJ~twi·ns 551·'"\A2. 848" .8937. o.or. ·sin sto\e ceps4. WHOWANTSTOWORK'! .... """ Xlnt cond ~!.15, 197-1241 DRIVE A CAB ! incl. ltnens. 2 yrs old, un· . afl 5 CHOOSE your hours. der warranty. Xlnl cond. 11081 E 16, 1mma~. & ----------
work for yourself, be $850. 549-0507. S~ECIAL!! loaded! Owner anxious. Auto Senice &
your own boss. Men or PLE D 1 al . . ·fi · 83!1·7518. Make rcasona· Parts 9400 Bookkeepet-Wome.n. Can be shghlly MR~om s~~P·:,c ~;~1:~ Arti cialGros.s bleotter. .. ................... ..
DELIVERY
Delivery of the DAILY
PILOT to subscribers i
Newport Beach. Profi
plus generous aJJowanc
for auto. Approximatei
3pm to 5pm daily an
Saturday and Suuda
mornings. 642-4321, Ext
handi capped. Neat· motif, table & 4 chairs. Only $l.9 SSqYd Boab, Slips/ TRUCK CRANE CASHIER .Asst Bkkpr Clean Appearan ce 547-3182 Call 673-8162 Docks 9070 CLorain J 25.000 lb capac.
In The Bank(){ A unf Clk Vets., retired. Age 25 to ••••••••••••••••••••••• Model MC 42-\. Sl0,500. CredttOffice CCO 70. Suppl~menl your in-OVERSIZED Vinyl Club Mink Stole natural SLIPS NewportBeachl Call Ja c k Wilke n.
Mus t be experienced come. Dnvd a cab 6 h~s chr. & Ottoman, Orange. autumn ha1.e appraised Sail or Power weekdays. 8am-5pm.
in balancing. F/time :aeckha~~e of :~~r~;!: ~~0°;,e Yell~~ ~!tt~~ S75. 556"6036 __$500. Sell $37S. 646-8458 673-5253 645·8506 s.ig 9711 .
Apply Personnel OHice benefits. We pay top 186 E. 16th St., Costa, Des k. Home or Office, lndoor plants for s ale Boats Speed & 1'
l0:30·l2;30Mon·Fri wages. All office & in-Mesa. I Shag Cpt. 40 yds . large & small. All kind!>. Ski' 9080 Autos for SaJe
219 N F h. Isl d dustrial skills are W I Orange. Make offer. 557-0322 •••••• ... ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• o 2 as ion an , NB needed. o m a n 4 O · 5 5 o n 556·8338. ----· ------Music ian s, remal EqualOpporturuty \ telephones. No. sales. , Dbl. kitch. sink, compl Classic Cracke.r Bo x. Antiques/
vocalist wants to for EmployerM/F Apply Jn Person PBX exper. prcfd. N.B. G l R L S Qua I. bath r m v a n it Y Hemi Head Chrysler. Classics 9520
versatile group. Need ---------•I VOLT 645-0336 betwn9A-9P Thomasville bdrm. set, drs/frames pr Occ chrs' Great s ki boat! Gooo •••••••••••••••••,.•••••
Some ma le vAcal trundle bed, needs re· B t/ r 499•31o.s • cond. w /trailer $1200. Ver y RARE '53 Nash
642.6072 v SALES. Fashion Career. TemporarySenices Woman to design & sell finish'g. $150.644·0914 5 0 r. · 675·~579,5-6pm Healey with '59 Cad ---------1 Need 3 Women. Sales to 3848CampusDrive window shadcs &drapes, ~ 8 t S e ngine . Make off~r.
Nurses Mgmt, starling immed. 546-4741 5 Day wk. Will train. Sofa., LoveseatlHigh Miscellaneous ' oa s, toraeJe 9090 675·0lHO. as k tor liill.
Clinic Manager Big $$$, 963·2652 or (Across from OC Cus tom S had e & qualtty.B~aul.nev~r Wanted 8081 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----
LVNorRN.9to6PM.N 846·7959 Airport.) gra~ery g:~P· 3535 E. used.Movmg 968-8822 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lioatkS1tora ge-d a lly· 4 WheelDnves 9550
_w_e_e_k_e_nd_s_._9_79-_5680 ___ ~ Sales help, l8 yrs. old. Ap· Equal Oppor. Employer st wy, 552·8803 i Lge Solid Walnut Dining I SS CASH S$ FO~ ~e~~nty~4h';1 fa~~~li~·~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
OFFICE Allendnt. Eves ply, 1120 So. Cst. Hwy.I~~~~~~~~~~! X-Ray Technologist for; set. 6 ch rs. $250. Good used lum/refn~ rump. Ncw1.10rt JJuncs, 70 TOYOTA Village Fair, Sundance Radiology office in NB. Call 64.5·3614 Frzrs/stoves. S46-0768· 1131 Back Day. 644-0510
pt.time, TradingCo. Must be ARRT r e -· . RADIO TELEPHONE LA.,.,..D 642-3505 SECRETARY · l d & h 1 Used Furn1tur~ all tn gd · 1
,...,. • Sales Help needed, ex-~~lle~e2_646tr~~ a yr. ~xp. cond.Med.coffee table, & wante~ for auto or porta-Transportatiod' U S
PARTS DRIVER per'd. Parl lime or Jf you can take Gregg ppn . glass top,E nd table.Din. bleumt. UsedO.K.Low ••••••••••••••••••••••• CR I ER
Counter person. Foreig f /time. Apply in person, shor thand at 100-1201 Young woman to operat~ Rm. table w /6 cane back or high freq. O.K. Ask for 1 wheel dri \'e. removable f ear~eJ.x ~~~~et!!.~~ e:1f Jackie's Fashion Center wpm, type belw~ 55.75 John Wayne Tennis Club chairs. i''rench Prov. IOV· Jack. 644-1140 Motorcycles/ hard lop, warn hubs. out•
driver's license wit 75 Huntington Ctr, H.B. wpm & are looking for a Nursery. Pref. girl w/ eseal. 644-1943 · Musical I Scooters 91 SO staryrling condil1on.
good record. neat WI or 24232 Laguna Hills challenge, then send us kindergarten or pre-S CRIF C 1 I "-·-h 8083 •••••••••••••••••••••••
M 11 L H.lls your resume h It h. A 1 E, qua · furn, nsn~en '7 KAWASAKI good work habits. Con a • ag. 1 · sc 00 eac ingexp. couch. buffet. chrs,patic ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 500• xlnt NEWPrlf\T
lMPORTS t.act Don, parts manage Classified Ad 00362 640·8830or6'4-0000 furn, etc. 642·0065 Gibson J -SO Guitar w / cond_. Musl see to ap-at 645_5700. SALESLADY C/o Daily Pilot Barcus Bery pick up & prec1ate 979·7260
PART TIME
Auditln g /Secretaria
exp. Work in your hm
Start $4hr. or by job. Cal
Purcell 642-3146.
Part. Time SECRETAR\
for new corporate office:
near Orange Count:
airport. l(lteresting l
diversified position fo
qualified individual. To1
pay. Send Resume.
Write ad no405, Daily
Pilot. P.O. Box 1560
Costa Mesa, Ca 9262S
~x~:~~: ~;~~e;:!ri Cosr~ ~·e~~~9262S ~~~~!'.~i:~••••••••••• RsA0Rl1dE dbi1.nrcinhg r$2m65Huptchh: case 1 yr old. Pen. $285. HONDA, CL175, 4.M mi,
H ~~~~~~~~~ · · · 830-9446. I t c d $450 or p/time. rs & salary _ 962.4504 x n on . .
flexible. 893-.5947 ask for Antiques 8005 TV Radio 559.5339
Pat. SEC~ETARY . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gara9e Sale 8055 H' iF1· St:..-8098
3100 W.Coast Hwy. NB. ·
642-9405 -------------· For Lex1tron Video Exquisite Gold Thread ••••••••••••••••••••••• • "''"'v '74 BMW R75/6, 750cc SALES/MANAGEM ENT Type Willtrain Sh&the EMBROIDEHED S'lk . ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /windjammer & M38-Al. Complt tdy re-. · . • 1 GARAGE SALE, moving. R CA 20'' C I TV t ddl b done M·11·tary "1akcotr Sharp G~/Gals a~11tty t? direct other Ceremonial Court. Robe. everything must go. 353 o or c us om s a e ags. . 1 1 . •• • Exper'd in higfi fashion girls req d for environ· Xlnt cond. Purple field Fl C M Console. $95. $2750. 968-9181aft.6 p.m. 675-9024 . men 's & women 's mental planners & w /CE L F: S T 1 AL ower, · · Call644-1458 ----------
sportswear, iooking fora engineers. Pleasantofc. DRAGONS . Thun -Hones 8060 25" MAGNAVOX Color
career in retail sales & lA~cat eld Rneabr BO ._C. derbolts,5ClolKbol lformSks.& ••••••••••••••••••••••• TV Console, 1~yr. old. mgmt.Callforappt&i.n· 1rpor . au . etn, (SHOU) ym s. 1rt HORSESHoarded. Ask 'g $325 Call aft tervw Fro.s t Jk Assoc. 1401 w /blue, yellow & red Box s talls or corrals. 6pm. 968.832o ·
THELOOK Qua11,N.8 .83J.0070 stripes & FOO lions-Rid1ng lessonsandtrain-1--''---·-------1
644-6500 , Ch'ing Dynasty. Collec· ing reas onable. Call GRUNDIG
•Secy s·Several Lors Item. $1300. 645-2094. 751·6957. MAJESTIC STEREO
$550-$900 100"/o Fee Paid AM ·FM radio and record
A CONVENIENT SHOPPING ANO,,....-,~
SEWINC CUIOE FOR lHE
A~clng Clks/Gen Ofc Appl. 8010 Jewelry 8070 player combo. Make of-
L1z Reinders Agency tClftCel •••••••• • •••••••••••••• fer
SALES PERSON·exp'd in
PBX Att1werillg Sen telephone sates. Hourly
Afln & eves. Wknds in ' rate + incentives.
CAL ON THE CO.
4020 BirchSt,Ste104 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WA.,.,..TED 546·993.1
Newporl Beach 833.8190 Frigidaire refrigerator, ,...,. eluded. EOE. 540-1962 Call 557-5662 For an Ad in Womrn's Wortd
Call Sue 642-5678, bt. 330 SALES-RETAIL Callforappointment white, 5'h rt. tall. Oood TOP CASH DOLLAR RADIO-TELEPHONE working condition $50., p A ID FOR YOU R wanted for auto or porta-
women 's specialty shop 642-3963after5pm ii JEWELRY. WATCHES. ble unit. Used O.K. Low GetAHEADlnThe PIX
A RM:;k~~~ t:·2929 RECEPTIONIST· Fancy Fan Design
----------1 Opening in Orange Co.
GIRLS·GIRLS
Easy fun job, day or
night. No exp nee., we
train you . You must Like
people & be at least 18.
Apply any art. or eve.
2112 Harbor. Costa Mesa.
for sharp indiv. w/PBX
0exper. Front ore appeat
& pleasant phone voice
necess. Xln't pay &
benefits. Call Personnel,
213/861·5713
DowneySavift9s
&Lo.
Equal Oppor. Employer f{ousewives: Earn an ex·
tra $5 to $6 per · hou
teaching hobby classes
wlt.h Tri-Chem Liquid Person 21 -40 trn for
E m b r o i de r Y. Ca 1 mg mt. $150 ~k guam .
979-3488 or 963-2300 aft Coll. pref. Mr. Le vi
6pm. 848·1004 ---------1dea1 Summer Job
(Part·TimeHours> PHYSICAL
Work 4 hrs a day in our THERAPIST
new cool ore across from <Registered)
O .C. Airport & earn P/time. Excellentsalary
$100+ per wk. The work & working conds. EOE.
ls fun & perfectly suil.s Call JacK' Wilder, RPT,
on Lido Island. Position avail for high booking Secy's with Sh Will buy refrig. Appl. run· ART OBJECTS. GOLD,, or high rreq. O.K. Ask for
sales women interested Typish ning orno&scrapmetal I SILVER SERVICE , J ack.644·1140.
T T mpo ary LI 1 ' ·1 FINE FURN & AN· . in top Conte mporary e mpo e r 1 e P 675·5258anyt1me. TIQUES 645_2200 t PR Cer~an Vega 211
fashions. Full or p/t1me 17802 J~1) ~~rvine .74 Kelvinator Side/side,f . speakers. ltkc new $110. ~1!118;8 ~6~6~.c ~s7: %~1----------1 no frost, l!l cu ft. Refrig. Miscellaneous 8080 ea. Also. Panasonic cc;>m· 545-9882 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pact syst em-A M IF M,
_L_i_n_d_a _______ Service Sta. Attendant I BSR turntable $50. Ph·
•SALESLADY* f/time days & p/time Kenmore Washer & Gas CARPET BARGAINS _6_73_·2_0_56 ______ 1
Earn up to $l50perweek. days & eves. Exper 'd. Dryer $180. Maytag Top Qua I MillSec~nds Boats & Manne
Full or part time+ ex· Must be 18. Refs req'd. Washe r $65. Guar/del. UsedCarpels·AnyS1ze Em.t.ipment Good earning potential. 546-8672 "CHEAP!!" ,-
penses. Enjoy working in See Fr.ed, 9am-3pm, C 11673 71 •2 So. Orange County wkdys. 3131 Harbor Kenmore Washer/Dryer. a • o Boats. Maintencnce/
•••••••••••••••••••••••
areas, calling on expec-Blvd. CM $295. Xlnt cond. 1----------Service f020 tanl mothers for ---------842·6800aft 5:30pm •••••••••••••••••••••••
BABYLAND. Leads & SHOE SALES
girts furnished. Will train We have an opening for Bicycles 8020
mature, personable lady. •••••••••• • •••••••••••• an expe rienced Shoe CONSUMER GUIDES
Newesl. Best Buy For interview, 547·0l21 Salesman or Woman in
Bernice T. BreMcr. high grade lamily shoes
Full or part-lime. Apply
in pers on. Hemphill 's
Shoes, 54 Fashion Island,
Sale1 & Teoch.r
p /time for Pianos &
Organs. 581 ·1200. N.8. 644·4'223
ls Now Here!
WANTED Electrical-Woodworking
TOP CASH DOLLAR Plumbing-Installation
PA JD FOR Y 0 UR & Repair. Inboard En~.
JEWELRY. WATCHES, Repair (inboat>.Scorpw
ART OBJECTS. GOLD Marine. 548-9704
SILVER S ERVlC f';. Boats Power F INE FURN & AN· ' TIQUES. 645-2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.-:__ _______ SO' dsl Trawlers SSOM
9040
people who enjoy putting 6 .. 73 c u
'their verbal capabilities 42-~ 4• osta , .. esa ---------•1·---------
t o work. Students,l•M•e•m•o•n•·a.l•H•os-pt'.'taJ_. __ I SALES A WOMEN
The Super Le Mans
By Centurion
Corona del Mar Bikes
3323 E . Coast Hwy.
Call 675·7666 MATTRESS
•MADNESS*
•ALL SIZES*
40 ' dsl Trawlers $35M
JO' Trawlers $22.000
Compl'd pnce. Finished
& under const. Atlantic
Pacific Mari lime Co. h ousewives & moon-1----------94' SILK lighters are welcome. PLUMBER NEEDED (&a couple or good men)
Cameras &
Equipment 8030
Call for more info & 2lo3Yeal'1ilE>tper. WEOFFER: SCREENER personal interview. Time Call 537-2211 l . A career in adver\ising Photography Y(orkshop Priced to Move!
675·8945/646-5491 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LifeBooks,833-8008. •----------& public relations w/a Mude&Fcnhioft 833_9625 &646-8686 40 'CUST.Diese1Trawler, successful & fast grow-Min . of 3 years ex-M-...1...11 und er const. Gran<I
·JANITOR
R eliable man over 28
with restaurant kitchen
ti' exp. 6 days. Good pay.
'Steady job. Apply btwn 3
' & 5 PM. at AMBROSIA nm . 21 l sos 30lh St .. Bat
Penn, New Port Btach.
,JEWELRY sales opening.
Jnstde s ales. Eves
wknd hours. Hourly +
<:ommisalon. We lcain.
492 4730 or 498-1236
PRODUCTION
CONTROL
CLERK
ing co. perience in all phases of vvin I BUY Banks type. $30.000
2. Easy sales w/a down screening. Exper. relat-Available. * * * * comp. 547-8976aft. 7PM
lo earth product lhat ed to multi·color, critical Hollywood typesets Good used furniture &
s mall businesses ap· registration, & informa· 549-8660 appliances, or I will Sell 27 fl. Tolly Craft, 1964.
preciate & can afford. tion d\splay panels de· Cah 8035 tor You. Boa~ yard special. lteblt
3. Daytime work-No sirable. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MASTERS AUCTION eng. ~ew elec. Quick
Eves-No weekends·No STACOSWITCH PERSIAN KITIENS 646-8686 & 833-9625 sale. $6000. 645-0901.
1 travel. CF'A t lit Or SUNDAY 839-0974 15 1~ · n e w fiber$1 lass Knowledge or materia 4. No gimmicks or high IMC. .,751rs~001· 0'!:~.~?wwl" walkthru, new 85 HP.
or Inventory control de· pressure selling. 1139 Baker, Costa Mesa • -,po""'""" OAK & IRON Trunk $50.. Mere. & trailer. $479.'.i.
aired. LiJthtty~, good 5. Short. but complete 549.3041 Wanted .Long Ha 1 r . Milk cans. S25 & $18.SO, Make ofr. 642-8559. ho:bn~uwerip~~~·hclnop(:ll.edge training program. Equal Oppor. Employer brown. auburn. Tabby llell Star hlmt sz 71/• $35. ----------1 6. Fasl pay-absolutely remale kitten. &'2-7623. Zenilh 19'' B/W TV, port. IMMACULATE
STACOSWITC'H top com rn lssions & $.35. 645·8161 or548·7800. 25' LYMAN
. IMC. bonuses. Sitler needed, my home, D09s • 1040 . --HARBOR MOORING
1139 Baker, C.O.ta Mesa 7. Exclusive lerrilory own trans. 8:00 am to ••••••••••••••••••••••• COUCH.. h:urs, Laml>S. Radio, sndr, marlin chr.
udy Senior Citizen Need &4t-J041 controls to proled future 3 : 30 pm. 2 lods. No •PET WORLD• Tables. Slereo. Any re· $6500. 675·4618 1 S;me lo Share Balboa earnings wknd1. 645·0006 asonable oHcr. 642·6344 1 s l a n d II o m e . Equal OppGr. Eft\ployer 8 $200 'weekly draw Llas u·Apso, Chihuahua, --SS'CHRIS ca.AFT
')tererencea. Call betw V.:henquallfled. ' STUD&n'S Poodles, Shlh -Tzu , FRIGlDAIRERefrig.$'75. Twin Caterpilla r
& S pm. Let pbooo rin~ P/llme Plant Malo· AND MUCH MUCH 18 dr over . College ~cbn~uier, ~· Oox· Amana Chest Free7.er, • Oleaela
x: ~eraJ llmu. l'JS.'219 tenance poeltJon ror pN(-MORE trained men & women ~o: .. ~O:~\~ed Pl~::.:· s:is. 892·1754 Rush deck motoryecht
J,.andacaper, must be U · ty, personable, planl ForperaonalapptcaH wiUbeconalderedtosup-Stud serv. most bl'ffds Slffn& IO!Td«M<ll!
• ~r1• Ovc~2~1un ~!:~~~a:~·~:; 6ll·0414t_6,. ~l1:r'f.'0~~r~u~f.{e~; 252S W. mhatFairview, SCRAM·LETS OMLY$7S,000
Jt1 •area,_,__ proflt.bie po&3lblll1Ju. 96~.JIOJ )'ouna people.l'<Nr own SA. Open EvesMl·S«l7 ANSWERS Willard Yachts
,y, LAUMDUSS _644_-8099_______ HH/Wt lbt t aae. These positions are DOG O B ED I ENC E 3.l3G Vta Lido67!U780
lilalurt peraon. call ror Real vahle. llcensed l~~~~~~~~~·I full lime, s ummer jobs. CLASS to Stort WecJ. Abduct Mu:.lc Chrlscraft Classic 30 appointment 8425861 "' SearchJna roruppliCAnt.'I June 25. 7 .30 p.m Stood Cal~ixy Sedan. New tWln cngs · ' · u leapeoRle. Wb)' oot SChoo) Bus Driverneeded who are depen<\ablc & Ne wport 8 ch -Jrv1 nc <.:USTODY <teu than 40 hr!4)
Uve·ln woman lo care for orlic In ~hottest area for Pr1vate School part who .re hard workeni. area. 546·4928 Oivort ~ ('nn be try in I{ Completely refasten('!1 ,
elderly couple, lncludlna Huntl~tton Beach/Foun· Umc. 54.00 per hr. Be1tln Xlnt opportun1Ucs dur· l kn ow a J( u y " hn new winn1t. in,lr\lments. llnvalid $300mo.Rm& taln alley. Cal~ Phil tngSept.Wllltralnfre . Ing ~ummor For in· Jrls h Scllllr,6mos.old : wound up 'with et c Super Conditio n '
brd. Refll rcq'd. Cull McNamee al Village 494 H 32 9-10 :30 am. tervlc.-w oippt., rull lemale.Championlinca Cl1ST()0\'of hismothl'r Mus t Sell ! SncriflN•! GU·~CVC!I Real Estate96.1-4567 4!>4-0220i·9pm 53.1·7481 Mon. aCt 9 t\M. Sht)U. $75.5.'>I 2003 hi low $7000. R42 l~I
' t
"
9053 a.is .
"" 1fT ""i '-1Tf e...-r ....
\'ou'll btlitlltt'D tll' tho non~
Ito 11111 IUDbUr•i·d><rl .. cl J)Alll·
Aull or •Ir·••• 'f\:Jlh 11 11:rat'1•ful f .. ori•r'• lnok tn II l'ull•on
1>11nl• J11tv11 1•IU1lll '1\11111.
l'rlntNI l'•tt•·r u ~oc.3·
Mt•••••' f4lr.1>1 ft, 10. 1:. )4, Hi, 1~ ~IMI i2 (bU~l 30 l':Crai•ull
~·. yaMb iG lorh '"bllr. ~nd SI 00 IM t ath r>allorn
Add 2S rl'nt• lc•r •·•rh pauc>rn
for fl~l rlu• m11l 3nd ~P'."tlal
h•1t1dl1ni: othl'rw1•e thii<I
r l•"' dfolhtry v.1l1 l<1kt thr~ ..,.,...11.11rmo1t ~11<11n M1man
~IMtt 1n, «2, lhr l)aoly 1'•104 .
Patttrn De-pt • :zJ2 \\ ~l llllh
Sl, New VMk, N V 10011
f'l1nl NAME, ADDHESS. i 1P, 811.t; and ~TVLt: NUMllt!lt
ON& F'H Et: PATI't:RN of )'our tl'O•<Y lo tt"nd ror. 00(' frtt p•t· ll'rn lnaldi' Nt'W Sl'RINC
~ ll M M t: R P A T T It R N
l'ATAl,()(l tOO\lylH. 111 •lrH.
lrtt patltrn COllJ>(WI Sl'nd 7k
now, SEW ~ 1\:-/11' Rook "'Ith
hHlt'llUUf pallern JI ZS
IMltnt t'••hlon l\(tok $1 00
1,...ian1 !W!"' Int llooll St 00
~h .. li"t your •ho11lchoia •Ill' tlll• ~•••·"CUI (111111 .. ·ll •bawl
I .. u." fo.n .i .. .a~n 11n•l O!'l'll-
"••rh 1 ""H" .i lou•I). h•<') 11.•c-
"fl) f'IOf hl't tthtn~I" tdUt\\l
nJ l,,_t: f )'KfU nn\\ fur \IU'll•
.... ,. ,atlt •f'flll~ l'1ttl•Ol'll 1340:
pat-y du .. , trfmR
Mnd JI 00 for tecli pa\lt'rtt
Add 25' for e111•1l P•lt~ fw
r.rst rl•'• mnU and ~lal h anc1lln1t ~end to Alic•
flrooh, 1(1~. 111.-Ually Piiot.
Nttdli:cr3fl t>f'\K , !lox IG.
Old l'hl'lst'a Sl1•t1nn, New
Yorlc . N Y 10011 Print
Nam1>, Adc1re». Zl p. P•W'.tn N11rnh.-r Sa•'l' d nlh r<' C"rl'l\l' bnullful th1n11s ~ for New
IW7SNttdlttnl\ C"•l•to.I' 3d~11tn• pnnted tNlldl' • 'IS"
Nt"W ' Nlny fon.y Quila. It 00
Nt"W ' R1pplt' C"r'OC'IW'l •• J1 00 •
Sew 1 kntl ~ ..••• SU$
Nt'f'dlt'polnt B«* ... Sl 00
f1awff Croehf't 9ollk • • 13.00
lt••rt>ln Cnwhtt eo. .... a.AO \ nst• nl Cr<K'h~ 8ooll ••• '1 00 lnJ>tant tcacr•~ 8oo11 •. ll 00
tMtan1 Monl'Y nook .•.. a .oo ~m~Oln 9ollk ••• u..oo
C'omlJltl• Afghans 114 •• S$.OO
12 Vrtte ArJh•M 1\2 , ••• IO'
Book of lS Qvlh.t II •••••. SO"
Muu um Qvilt ~ JI .••. IO'
J)Qullb for Today lrJ ..... fO" &ciltoCIUI~ Rup ..... .IO" '
•
f
M 6 975 A.tot. ••ort.d Allto1 •• 1 .. , ... ,w .. A.Mtot. u.... Alltot. u .. ct ...... UMd ...... U-4
onday,Junel .1 ••••••••e"I••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••~••••
..,._.. l•part.d . A.tos. l•,...ted ................. !?.~~ v ...... ".o •• • ........... !??.~ ~~~ .......... !!.'.~ ~4!'.~~ ........ ~!!!~ ~••••••••••••••••"•••4•0• " •• ?:'.~'.'?! ... -•• !!~ .... -•••••••••••••••----•••••• ....................... -ta ... ,.. 9701 ,... 9725 88 OPEL. 4 spd, radio. CADILLAC 1968 Corveue, * ooov., •71 FordT ..... GT.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• hea ter • buc ket seats, SPECIAL Over 70 to choose rrom 3SO, • sp, Am/Fm. Very f1450 Call ~l.29 ATLAS whale sidewall tires~ Nice · iitood cond. MWi\ Mil by · •
LAMBORGHINI 1973 AAJ car. Lie. 876321 , Dir. VOLVO SAlEI. FF.roam 1 °?.~5-· •• Glnr:!'AC 6/28.497·3087. Mwcwy 9950 C~llerJPll2a1:aufh
...cw.. 646-4448 ID DC D ._ uc.. "' •••••• • • • ••••• •••• • ••• • ' •-' il 11 A!'ltNOUNCJNG • 124SportCoupe _.,., Heat pri ce increase. Dodge ttl5 73 Monteeo 9 pasa w.:n. Open aily w • l '
..
81.1 DAILY Pl~OT
T,_b ti •••••••••••••••••••••
New '74 PitDll
STILL AV AiU:iU-
plus
HUGI STOCK
75'•
AU T 0 Cl ASS IC S Mlnl Co.nd 646-8202 his is a Qood car toouy. Super slock, AJI models ••••••••••••••••••••••• 30 000 I Reblt PM 2929 Harbor Blvd., )
0 .71 850 Convl. Yellow , '69 OPEL S_tation wagon Pri~ed to Sell.-Overseas '73 Challenger, V-8, P/1, B~and ::!.;.. 11t!.et r~!i Costa Mesa LT·n . mags AM /FM. xlnt . wt new engine. $900. call Delivery Spec1al1sts P /b, air . Very c lean! Urea nu brakes" shocks
Orange Co u n l Y 1 s $1 .5o'o. 675·1438 or 64b. 4-ti8G61" or 67h3-4493d ails~and GJ""11 L,.,n:1 $2600. Days 218/448·4.584 XII\ t c 0 ~d . s3ooo. ___ 5_4_6-__ 1_9_3_4 __
newest, most modern 673·2945 agg covert e et · t411\ UUW '66 Cad Conv. Ex roDd. or Eves 34e.5039• ~?·S831. '67 BARRACUDA, auto,
au.lhorizeddealer! . 9730 Porsche 9750 ~·~ Comp!. pwr. Tilt·telc. '74DODGEllOO '7ZMIRC air, P /S, P/B, WJW,
SPECIALJZINGIN : JCICJUClr •••••••••••••••••••••• , ~-:; VOLVO whl,. Am/Fm stereo. s··--v.. COU'-•·xa· 7 bucketseats.Uc.521.41~
I •• • • • • • • • _. • •• •. • e e • e • e • .. $ 300 645 2094 ........ ._.. W llt.R Sa es . Service ,73 "E'' 1958 Porsche. Xlnt cond. l · · V 8 t t • • Dlr. $499. 646-4448 Leasing 12 cyl 2+2 a 'ar m·-t· $2,750. Call Dean 494.2795 1966 Hmhor c M Mb 9301 . • au o. rans., JlOwer V·8, auto. trans., factory
Ivy or L .... MOW!
·~euilfmiA
\IJroYOTA . THE NEW· .' . ~ .,. • or 542.5603. '75 Coupe de Ville. de steering. New inlerior, alr conditioning, PQwer,
1975 LAl\1MORG 111~1 548·2920 or 673·3586 ORANGE COUNTY Elegance Model $8650. only 16,000 miles. (37548) steering. AM/FM stereo, Ponffac: .9969 1~ ~~!>or. CM 646 9303
71 FORD
RANCHERO.
. URRACO Jensen Rolla Royce 9756 VOLVO PP. 640-8988. $4695. whitewalls, vinyl root •••••••••••••••••• .. •••
9732 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wheel cove r s . Real '67 Catalina. Air cond. &
NOW ON DISPLAY · ••••••••••••••••••••••• #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO $3950. '7l CAD l'leetwood .-rvll<EMX'.W &hur p ! R adial Ures. Radl9. Power. Good
Automatic transmissjon
power s teering,· ma
wheels, very low males
in garage kept condJl1on
Fortbe fastidious buyer!
Talung Orders On
The New Esoada' s
ARRIVING SOON
Open Mon-Sat. 9 to 6
Cl06edSun.
Must Sell '73 Jensen LargestVolvoOcaler Brougham, lo miles, r ~AiiiienJllll!IDii" (VYL292)$2995. cond.$400.548·3215,
Healey. Xlnt Condition. ROY 10 Orange County! mint, xtras. (213)592·522'7 2524 HAReoR -.vo.
Call 645·0414 ~ CARVER BUYorLEASE Che•rolet 9920 COSTAMESA 549·8023 ~ '67 Firebird 400. Loaded.
Rous·ROYCE DIRECT Primo cond. Stereo, '73 J ENSEN·llEALEY. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1969 Dodge RT, 440, mags, $ 500/b f "'"'" 7""2
All black beauty with on· 2M1.111h St. ~·,·~· .'~-,,~.·~ COMMB.L wide tires, green/stock. ..~ 2
52' HARllOfl llLVO.
1
st
0
r . .,_. "' · ly 15,000 miles, pnced to COSTA MHA -• - -• -• --CHEVROLET $1800. Rick, SJ6.7189. Cll.liA MESA 549--8023 '73 GRAND PRIX
sell, will trade. 831·2040 54•-4-"' Clean, everything OD ill ClOHD SUNDAYS SALES&SERVICE ,7 D C S · I ME RC. '72 Montego, 8
dlr. 2025 S Manchester 2828 Harbor Blvd. E"d1t~ort 2udstomHT, pe$3600caa pass. wagon, auto. A/C, $3,450. 556·6337 Saab 9760 an, ~r · . P /B P /S AM /FM Mttcedesle111 9740 ••••••••-••••••••••••••Anaheim 750-2011 COSTA ME.5A OnJySSOOm1.-Autolr&n.s. stere'o. luggage rack , '64Calalioa.Auto, NfJJJPlH\T
11'-lPUf\TS • ••••••• ••••••••••••••• 546-1200 6 cyl., fact a1~ cond., pwr radials. $28SO. 548.3281 ' PS/PB, Runs good! l
• '74 MBZ 450SL coupe 173 SAAB EMS .Autos Used strg, pwr disc. radw, $250 ~I
---------roadst er. E very con· $3,100. 645-87361 •••••.'••••••••••••••••• '64 CO RV AIR Coupe , vinyl lop, virtually new MU1t9"g 9952 -,
AUTO CLASSICS, LTD.
10591 Bechler River,
Fountain Valley, Ca.
714 /557·3345,
714/963-8381
JIOI W.c.nt Hwy. NA ceivable extra. this beau-9762 AMC 9905 R/H, gd gas saver. Lie. condition thruout. Call ..... '••••••••••••••••• I ~Jj2 9405 r I I Subaru VZMS67 . Dir. 6'16-4448 557 7839 ~ • AffaRorneo 9705 ty as or sa c, ease, or ••••••••••••••••••••••• · '74 M USTANG LI, 4
t d I U '>t 2'"0 II . •••••• ••••••••••••••••• d . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~"" ·.,.. < 1. • _ '73AMC JAVEl.JM '73 MALI BU. 16 ,000 ford 9940 cy lin de r , 4 spee •
'57 Ford Pickup. Rebll'71AIJaSp1der.44,000mi, .68 MHZ 2805L coupe Z'-spseeul~~ru!t~~ed;!.~~~ 2 DRHT "/ o ri gi!la l mi_l ~s ·••••••••••••••••••••••• e co n omy plus. Wi ll eng. New clutch. Campe AM /FM. $3700. Call for d 11 • • • . . . . autom atic transrrussaon •66 F d w Gd d trade, super b financing shell. 642.1150&675.3631 . d l .1 494_3661 ro.a . ster . l own~r. a wheel drive, & priced to Factory air cond1llorung, , d"f . , & . ed or . agon. . . con . available. 831.~dlr. e 81 s . origina l, automatic. air. sell. 831 -2040 dlr. V-8. auto. trans., power air c,on 1 iom~g pnc New tares, lo rru, $625.
S2 Chevy Pickup. Runs ex· '73 ALFA ROMEO Spider 831 ·2040 dlr. steering, radio, heater, t o s e I I. W 111 trade· PP. 645·5686. '66 Mustang. 6 cyl, auto.
celle nt. $450orbcstoffer. roadster 23 000 original , , • -. -.-Toyota 9 765 vinyl roof, tinted glass.' 831·2040dlr. H/H, gd. condition $650. TO BUY ANY NEW )
642·3963 aft. 5pm miles iike' new, will 66 M BZ 250S ~, coup~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Four others to choose j '71 VEGA H l hb· ·k BY OWNER Ph: 645·6741 PONTIAC IN STOCK! • Absolutely a nunl ch.1ss1c . · a c ac · Example : \
'67Ford RangerP.U.'73 trade.831·2040dlr. w i th a u t o mati c TOYOTAS from . R ea l s h arp !! Clea n /runs great. 1973.GRAN TORINO Oldsmobile 9955 BrandM~wl97S t
rear e nd, '72 trans, new lrans mission, leather in· <342G VC) $2695· , R e c 0 r . cl s · N e w SQ U I R E ST AT 1 0 N •••••••••••••••••••••••
brakes,newcarb. (sharp BMW 9712 terior&sunroof.831·2<>10 ':;~dy~~~~ llllPTV7KEMXW I c lutch/tares. $135o. WAGON. P /S. P/B,A/C, S'alesand Servic~ Grand Prix j
body) $1400. 646-0907 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dlr. r ~Aiiien~ . 556·6337 · ne w t ires. Lug. rack. OLDSMOBILE' ll65875l
9570 ORANGE COUNTY'S Also 14 Demos 2524HARBOR Olvo. i '75 MONZA 2 + 2. Must Like' ne w cond. Low GMC TRUCKS !'\O $14175
V•s OLDEST '70 MERCEDES at COSTA MESA 549-8023 1 sell ! Lo. m i. Best offer! miles. $3750 private par· CASH ••••••••••••••••••••••• 600 TREM ENDOUS ! 556·0l37 before lOam or ty. Ciall548·8778. HONDA CA.RS DOWN MO. ·~e~~~~~~~r:V~~s.con· & . Low mileage, re nt or Examp~AVINGS '69A2MDCRJSAS;B.IM I after5:30 pmweekdays. 1972FORD>/4TOM ui:ri~~~ ~'~:~~~;9Dr~1:1v~~rce 1
645·9m0 lease. 10015291 'H C l!:LICA l '74 Camaro, 3-spd, rallye Camper Spe<iat in c I · T & L . S 6 8 0 4 t Sales-Service·Leasing J1·m Slemons 4s p ced . air. radio, V:8, au~)ra~ .• f:ictory ; whls , AM /FM. x lnt. V-8, auto. trans., radio, Cos ta Mesa 540.~0 deferred pmt. price
'67 VW Camper Van Pop Roy Ca"er• Inc. h ca t e r . ( 8 37 KHN ) air con ' io~ng, power i cond. MUST SELL IM· beater. Full camper '66 Olds, forced to sell. incl. T&L & a)I carrying t
top. 4 spd. tape player. ·Rolls Royce BMW Imports $3477 steenng, radio, heater .I MEDI ATELY $3900. equipped. Cab over New tires. Xlntcond. Lo l'harges on a pproved r efrig, crplg, panelling, Real sharp! Low pncc ! I • · • 1 ed"t ' P R 16 24r· 234 E. 17th St. •YWK229 >. $lJ95. ! Cal 551·3796. camper. Slee1J6 sax, ice mi. 831·().186. l'I' 1 · "· · · · /
s ips. 4 . Fane cond. L.1c. 833 9300 · --' b t d
646-4448 •68 230 Sedan 4 spcl. air, aUuu1. UIJW .-rvlKE.M>OH Carlo. Salver Moon Du.st < > T S ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM t FM, blue. Good buy. r ~AIWIC1JJEEP . finis h, sport console.I PRICED O ELL 74 Panto Wagon, 4 spd.
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC 823NCP Dir. $1699 . Costa Mesa 546-4444 • e· 1\·""lllAHw& 1·74 CHEVROLET Monte ;~9t ove an oven. Pinto 9957
68 VW Camper, reblt eng. 536-8932 TOYOT~ COST 2Ms2[4SAHAReOR BlSvAo9. 8023 ; bucke t seats. factory airi 2300 Eng. R/H, air, lugg., Needs paint. Runs great. A " • conditioning, power win., rack. Xlnt Cond. $2850 1---------
$lOOO 645-4840x1205 $' sr,. HOADWAY MG 9742 b . dows, power steering, llllPTV7KEMX'.W firm.842·2694. V
2480 HARBOR BUO
Co\to M l'\o
'73 Dodge Van, xlnt cond. SANTA AHA ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1966 Hor or. c M 646 9303 70 Gremlin, 26 MPG, R(H. power brakes, 17,000 r ~Aiiieil~ I ~ga 997'4
$3000. or offer. '65 MG •72 COROLLA A:IC, St~reo, .Mags, Wad~ miles. Like new luxury 252.4 HARBOR BLVD. '72 RUNABOUT lo miles, •••••••••••••••••••••••
675-5403 835·3171 Xlnt. Cond. 644.4196 Xlnt cond. Sl6SO tares. Sade pipes, Lo ma. for only $4395 (026_KRQ > COSTA MESA 549·8023 auto, stereo tape deck. '72 Vega GT, clean. Auto
ntE ULTtMAnoA1v1HG MACHINE Xlnt Cond. Best offer. I J ohnson & Son LlncotnJ . mag whls, wide oval. l $1600. LIC EOH3L7. Priv.
Chev. Van 1962. Good run-Opel 9746 --~~35· 546·9t87. I Mercury 2626 Harbor 67 CORTI NA, 4 spd, ownr. Call : 5!&5·8709 Dr. ply. 557·8537 aft5.
ning cond. Customized.'70BMW2800CSASilver ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·12 Coron a Mark IT Blvd.,C.M.540-5630 ~~· R /~, GT mo:!j· Adams,3016Java,Mes a
$700. 642·1272 with blue leather in· ,68 0 1 K d 1~ 11 Wagon, auto, air, 58000 Buick 9910 C • 1 9930 VI·1 Es98g0
1° ·o~uns .,g799 · Verde '74 Vega Wagon, Air terior, mint condition. pe a ett ~a ye ma. New tires, gd cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ontinenta -.. • r · ~ · G.T .. P /S. $3100. Call fo1
Autos Wanted 9590 Will trade. 831·2(»0dlr. 49,0~0 orig mi, 4 s pd. $2200. 640·5345 · '62 SPECIAL, auto, small ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-4448 '72 Pinto Runabout details. 494-3661
••••••••••••••••••••••• Radio. Xlnl cond. $775. e n gi n e, R /H , good '71 CONTINENTAL Mark .75 Granada 2 dr, white, 19,000 mi 's. A/cond ,
WE PAYTOPOOLLAR '73 BMW BAVARIA. 4 830-8665 '68 Corona, 4 dr, 21 mpg, transportation. Lie. Ill, full pow~r. xlnt cond. vs auto air loaded a uto. a m rad, cust. inter. ·71 Vega 2 Dr Notchback FORTOPUSEDCARS s peed , 8 track stereo, --auto. 100,000mi S450. QOU088 DI $299 Best offer 644-6474 J ·' ' ' ' Xlntcond$2100.963·2055 tape dk. Best offer. Aft FOREIGN,OOMESTJC s uperb, will trade. Maida 9738 551·0592.Callaft6PM. ' r . . . --mmt.SJ995.494·780l _ -----6PM,640·1426.
or CLASSICS 831 -2040 dlr . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646.4448 -•
1
. 7 3 C 0 NT IN ENT A LI· .73 Torino Wagon Perl Pontiac 9965 . . ,_
If your car is extra clea Volkswagen 9770 '73 BUICK REGAL ~oupe. 4E~!!°; .ScdanlTo-.ynd Car.
1
cond, new radial~. tint ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~41 nie~~n~T t!.z'b~~
IAUER BUICK REPAIRS-SERVICE Low males & priced to luxury anterior , only -a /c , xlnt ruruung $475. mi es. u • air, cus n see us firs t. &' MAZDA ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fully luxury eqwpped. n::c rac _ven _wm ows, gls.S2700.645·2116. 1968 Fury, radio. heater, 1 A to. · 'to
2925 Harbor Blvd. • Exchange & Rebuilds sell. 831·2040 dlr. 23,500 miles, l~ath~r. in·l '64 Ford Falcon. good Pvt. Pty. 979.1341 1.nt. $3,275· CaJI 4ft 4 PM
CoslaMesa · 979. BROOKLYNBUGCO. . . . . --tera or . me tallic finish. cond. Hi-perl.engane. __ 64_5_·_17_08_. ------
Estimates 548.9141 72 _;8wc~ R1v1era, 58,000 $5695 (05?HMH> Johnson• ssoo. ••646-5806. '71 WAGON A/C, P /S, ,71 GT Hatchback •spd
TOP DOLLAR
PAID
IMMEDIATB. Y
FORAU.
FOREIGN CA.RS
, CALL OR COME IM
TO SEE US
Hard to Find
530i &2002
NEWPUHT
Ir11POHTS ll 1-2040 .• 495.4949
3100 W.Cust Hwy. NA . Co;;;••••, ..... .,. llllT
642-9405 •••••••••••••••••• !?.'.~
WE Buy '73 V6, Decor. AM /FM,
sunroof, must sell
IMPORTS 644.2432
T op Dollar For Any Datsun 9720
Make or Model. •••••• • • • • ••••••••••••• WILL BUY YOUR JIM PANOS DATSUN, TOYOTA
M •zo .& OR VOLKSWAGEN
A A PAID FOR OR NOT.
2001 S. Manchester W I L t;-p A Y T 0
Anaheim 636·6000 DOLJ,.AR. CALL KEN
Or•ge Ceutty's
Highest S Buyer
011 hnports
liU Maxey Toyota
Call Roger or llall
847-8555
FREE APPRAISAL
We buy used cars &
truc ks. Call GROTH
CHEVROLET for a free
appraisal.
GROTH CHEVROLET
18211 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
847·6087 549-3331
ALL£N. 540-().1.42
1!1 71 Dats un Statio
Wagon. Very good condi·
tion, good gas mileage.
Good paint & interior.
$1400. Call before 6 p.m .
642·9338
'71 Pickup. w /can11>er. Lo
mil e s. Bes t offer.
979 -6030.
1968 Datsun Pick·up. New
camper shell , 28,000 mi.
495-0319.
71 Dats un 1200, auto. good
cond. $1500 645-8275
SEU.ING YOUR CAR? Fiat 9725
TO, PRICES PAID •••••••••••••••••••••••
For Imports ORANGE COUNTY'S
Paid for 6rNot NEWEST & LARGEST
De• Lewis Imports IMMEDIATE
1966 Harbor. C.M. 1'fELIVERY
646-9:nJ AU Models &Colors -.
TO, CASH! Dick Mill~r Motors
For clean used cars & momrn tr u cks! H owa r d ~
Chevrolet, Dove & Quail
Streets, nr. MacArthur, 120 W. Warner
Jamboree a nd Bris tol, a t So. Main
Newport Beach. 833-0555. S<inta Ana 557 21:12
I BUY
J UNK CARS!!
847·72.43
~
J
'71 850 Convl. Yellow,
mags, AM/FM, xlnt.
Sl .soo. 675-14311/&'73·2945
CASH RE~ATE
FIOM
Mazda Mtrs.
tf America
Your Price Only
Loaded ¥f ith:
AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION
IMMED. DELIVERY
lncludin CJ a ll th is
Econom1ca1 powerful
S•ll<V s moo th r otary
engi ne w•ah 3 yr 50.000
mile factory warranty
healer rec11n 1ng
naugahyde bucket
seats with memo ry
front passenger-seat 5
radial ply tires• Power
d isc bra kes. lu ll
carpeting. tachometer
console rear window
defogg er ele c tri c
c lock tinl ed g 1 ass
tocking fuel cap, s1m
wood s1eer1nq wheer
Al so muc h more
equipment too
numerovs lo mention
AX3 Coup!! (Ser
#166582)
WICAN~fl'l
YbUALLTHI
C-R·l·D·I· T v .. ....-. SHI s..., ........ ,
'74 VW. Xlnt cond. $2300
S e c t o appreciat e .
644·1458.
'72 VW. Squareback, re-
cent valve job, new bar·
rels & pistons. new gen.
& batt. Am/Fm stereo.
S2100 or best offe r .
645·7119. -------
VW R epairs. Engines,
Trans missions Rebuilt
or Exchanged. Tune-ups,
mufflers, brake jobs elc.
H1:asonablc. Work Guar
Steve 556-9306.
'70 VW . Many Xt ras.
$1500. Steve 646·2994 (8 to
1 5 wkdys) 642-8720 ev.
'69 VW Camper. Reblt.
engine. $1700 or best of,
fer. 64 6·7805 ·
'69 VW . 4 spd, R/H, whale
s idewalls, mags. La c.
YXN 507 . Dir. S999.
646-4448
·54 VW, 4 s pd. Riil. runs
good. Lie. KDU682, Dir.
$599. 646·44.48
'73 VW SUPER BEETLE
walh low miles, AM /FM,
xlnl. 831·2040 dlr.
69 VWBUS
. 7 pGHencJer Outstanding condition.
Tan with tan interior. l
Owner , m ust see to ap·
prec1ate.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W.Coast Hwy. NA
_ __:;,.642-9405
72VW
Convertible
Red with black top & in·
tenor, only 34,760 miles.
Outs tanding; if you're
particular. you'll buy
this fine automobile!
NEWPURT
IMPURTS
3100 W.Coast Hwy. U. .
-6 ·9405
Mus t Se 3 VW Bus, new
Ures, tape deck, runs gd
$650. 675-7418
'71 FASTBACK
4 spd . AM /FM,.sd. cond.
673·5868
68 Fastback, re blt· eng.
new brakes. $975oroffer.
751-1653. ------1
'64 VW Van. 2 Twn t>ed~.
Lable i.tereo. w1AM/l"M
rud1u Best o ffe r
548 3535. Call any mom
an~.
'69 V. W. Bug. Dar.le blue
with white Interior. ski
rac k, rebuilt coa:lne,
radio. $1550 <YCL250)
Jahnaon & Son Lincoln
Mercu ry 2626 Harbor
Blvd., C.M. 540-5630
..
ma s . L1k~ new. Power & Son Lincoln Mercury . . P/8 , 3 s eals. New Stl· fantastic ~ 0 0 d
everyth in g. Am /fm 2626 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Fmd what you want in belted rads. AM /f>~M . s1345 /bestoffer642·247S
stereo. $2800. 548-62:66. I 540·5630 Daily Pilot Classifieds. $1,5'10. 968-1148 ---· -------
Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, H~w · 9800 Aute>S, Hew 9800 Alltot, Mew 9100 Autos. Mew tlOO
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
HOWARD Chevrolet jnvites you to see and drive
. CaliforniaS
little sweetheartl
NEWNIONZA TOWNE COUPE.
IT'S DRESSY. IT'S FUN TO DRIVE!
BIG STOCK OF MONZAS ON SPECIAL SALE NOW!
Excellent Selection of .~-~I~~ ~nd OptiQns!
ALL THESE FEATURES ARE STANDARD:
• Formal vinyl roof • Lafge opera windows
• Classic-grid grille • Deep front bucket seats
• Bucket-styled rear seats • Choice of vinyl or
cloth upholstery • Cut -pile carpeting • Map
pockets In doors • 3-speed manual transmission
• 140-1 4-cyllnder engine.
Come see how much tun It Is to drive a new Monza at
' • , ;'
t '
•
I
I
7
Toda~s aos._.
N. Y. S'9eka ...
I
' ·VOL. 68, NO. 167, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1975 TEN CENTS
Freedom~ 'Fl'aiii ~lans Capistrano Stop
'l'he Freedom Train will make
a three-day stopover iJl San Juan
Capistrano in January while
chuaging from coast to coast on.
its Bicentennial tour.
Mayor James K . Weathers
said today he bad received a tele-
gram from the Freedom Train
:.Foundation agreeing to the San
--Develop
BanHii
By Unit
The city of Laguna Beach has
been stung with a $250,000 claim
from owner s of a crescent Bay
Point lot who maintain they cad·
not develop or sell the property
because of an open space de-
signation applied by the city
council one year ago.
The claim was filed by
Margaret Sandra McKnight
Russell, Earl Kenneth Russell
and Eva May Goalder, as
trustees or Russell Trust for
Children or 1972, owners of the
blufftop lot commanding an im·
pressi ve view of the Laguna
Beach shoreline and the Pacific
Ocean.
The lot is just south of three
Crescent Bay Point lots jointly
purchased by the city, county
and state from the Russell trust
earlier this year. Purchase price
was $550,000. The site will be de·
veloped as a view park.
The claim cited a June 1974 ac·
tion of the City Council stating
that it was not the intention or the
city to purchase the lot if agree·
ment could be reached with the
owners on a "visual easement"
over its seaward portion.
According to William Wilcox·
en, attorney for the Russells, this
, was construed to mean that no
construction would take place
within 60 feet of the top ol the
bluff.
The owners allege lo the claim
that the action designated the
land tor open space lor park
(See CR ESCENT, Page AZ)
.Juan stop providing two condi-
tions can be in~ ..
One involving secu.l)lng
permission from the ~ta Fe
Railway for the use ot 1,200 feet
of rail siding, and the other iJ to
provide a guaranteed income ol
$15,000 a day tor the train.
Weathers said be ls con!ident
those co11tractual obligations
can be fulfilled. He noted that the
town of Archibald, Ohio, was
able to meet the financial request
·by pre-selling tic1cets for ad-
mission to the train.
The train, carrying valuable
artifacts from America's 200-
year history, will be drawn by a
UPI Teltttllolo
Profunao Pardoned
John Profumo, made a Commander of the Bnush Em-
pire by Queen Elizabeth for his work among London's
poor, gets congratwatj_ons from barrow boys in street
market today. Profumo resigned in 1963 as war minister
over the Christine Keeler party girl SC{llldal. See story,
Page B6.
Presidential ApproVal
'CIA Hcul to Get 0.kay' -Rocky, Goldu:ater
WASHINGTON. (UPI) -All
major CIA activities have ~ad
presidential approval, according
to both Vice President Nelson
Rockef etler and Sen. Barry
Goldwater, (R-Ariz.). ..
But jus~at those activities
were is still a big mystery in
Washington and still provoking
debate.
Meanwhile, a key Rules Com·
Iriittee · member said today he
will propose abolishing a special
House CIA investigating commit-
tee because it bas been torn by
dissension.
Rep. B..F. Si~k, (D·Calif.), said
he would introduce the resolution
to disband the House Select Com-
mittee on Intelligence because of
a move by five of the commit·
tee's seven Democrats forcing
the resignation of the chairman,
Rep. Lucien Nedzi, <D·Mich.}.
Nine Die in Bus
·Cf.ash in Scotland
Rockefeller, whose com -
mission report on the CIA was re·
leased last week, said Sunday
one reason the panel did not de-
velop conclusive evidence on al·
leged CIA foreign assassination
plots was because so many
persons implicated in them are
dead.
He hinted his commission may
have obtained information Presi·
dent Kennedy and his brother,
former attorney general Robert
Kennedy, were involved in ~he aJ .
leged plots but he emphasized
none of the secret information
was strong enough to support
conclusions of guilt.
From Wire Services
A bus carrying a party of elder-
ly vacationers collided headlong
with a runaway tractor-trailer
truck on a main highway 55 miles
south of Glasgow, Scotland to-
day.
Police said nine passengers
were killed. Another 33 were
hospitalized, 22 of them in
serious condition.
Eyewitnesses said a truck tire
Or~~:r-t :••
1t'eatller
Mostly cloudy through
Tuesday but partial clear·
ing in the afternoon inland
portions. Little change in
temperature. Highs from
mid·60s at beaches to near
70inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Tldrl•~ per.ata1 haw ~
tn"jur«l in a dfnurbonce at a
womma'• corrtcUon ccntn in
North Carolina. Sfort/, ~
88 .•
l •tlex
AU
AA •• . ,., ., ... ,
At
AU AU M
M
r
blew out and that the vehicle ran
out of control on a straight
stretch of road and ploughed
headlong into the bus.
" It was the second bus accidlnt
involving elderly persons in
Europe in two days. Sunday, a
l0'1r bus carrying pensioners
careened down a mountain road
in Villach, Austria, killing 21
persons and injuring 23.
It was Austria's worst bus dis·
aster, and authorities said brake
failure was the cause.
Police said smoke was seep
coming from the btakes as the
Austrian bus started down
7,106·foot Mt. t>obratsc:h. One
survivor said bus driver Josef
Ramsbacher yelled "Jump off -
the brakes are failing!" before
the bus hurtled over an embank·
ment and tumbled 120 feet into a
rocky ravine.
The passengers were old·age
pensioners from Cartntb.f a pro-
vince. Ramsbacher, father of
four,wuamonglhcdead.,
The roof or the bus was tom otr
and many of the passengers were
killed wben they were thrown out.
ol tbe veblcl~. Several survivors
pinned beneath the wr~kage
were freed only after a crane was
brought.in to pull the debris off
them.
"It "•as dreadful, .. said Helmut
Neumueller, who witne.Md the
craab. ''The roof of the bus was
tom off. Xbe dead were Katleted
ovec a.wlcle area. Andthein,iutM
Jay amon• them cl')'ina ror aid."
Dr. BriJltte Non~ • pb)'tli· ciao, said aome ot the dead had
(See CRAIB, P• A.2)
Goldwater, a member of the
Senate committee investigating
the CIA, backed up Rockefeller
by saying no major CIA action,
such as an assassination, "would
have taken place without the pre·
sidenlknowing about it."
He also~id Sunday he had
seen no dence any CIA as·
sassination lots were ever at-
te mpted but that he "wouldn't be
surprised" if the While House
considered killing Cuban pre·
mier Fidel Castro.
Time magazine reported Sun·
day the CIA plotted in 1960 to kill
Castro by supplying him with
poisoned cigars, but never car·:
ried out the plan because there
was no assurance Castro w9uld
(See CIA, Page A2)
AD.I N PILOT
SOLD TRAILER
"The trailer sold because of
the ad in the Pilot. There were
lots ol calls as a result ol the ad.''
That's the advertising success
experienced by the Costa Mesa
woman who placed this ad in the
I Dilly Pilot:
22' TRAVEL trlr, com
pletely self ·cont, sips 4.
$1$00. XXX•XXXX
11 you have c-.mptna equip..
meat to sell, uU 842-!678. Put a
few words to work (or you.
In the Dally PiloL
I
restored steam engine and dis-
played on a section of track north
of Del Obispo.
In addition to San Juan
Capistrano, the train is
scheduled to stop in San Diego,
Los Angeles and Anaheim. No
specific dates were given for the
San Juan stop.
Weathers said it will carry the
original Declaration ol lndepen·
dence and the original U.S.
Constitution. a car filled with
Lincoln memorabilia, and
several other historical docu-
ments.
Those admitted will vjew the
exhibits fro.in a moving sidewalk
constructed inside the train.
San Juan Capistrano applied.
for a Freedom Train stop
because it also will be celebrat-
ing its 200tb birthday in 1976.
Mayor Weathers noted that one
of the Freedom Train obligations
-that of providing· housing for
the train's staff of 125 -had
already been solved by putting
1 lhe crew up in a local motel.
Hurd Convicted
Of Two Murders
By TOM BARLEY
Of tlle Dally Pllotslatt
Steven Craig Hurd was found
gui lty of two murders today by
an Orange County Superior Court
jury which must now determine
if the bushy·haired defendant
was sane when he participated in
two killings within a 24-hour
period.
The jury ended two days of de-
liberation by ·ruling that Hurd,
25, was guilty of first.j.egree
26-cenl Tax
Hike Viewed
B y T~tees
Laguna Beach school trus tees
will consider approval tonight of
a tentative $5,435,660 budget for
the upcoming school year that
would raise the tax r ate an
estimated 26 cents.
The budget -is about $416,000
greater than this year's
$5,019,380 spending program.
The increase will cover the cost
of educating new stude'nts and of-
f setting inflationary increases in
many budget accounts.
About $346,000 is set aside in re·
serves. This figure will be re·
duced when school trustees de·
cide on salary increases for
school employes.
The board will meet at 7:30
p.m . io the Education Center. 550
BlumontSt.
The projected 26·cent tax
rate increase would raise the
overall rate to $3.12. This rate is
based on an eight percent in·
crease of the assessed valuation
of property within the district.
The owne:-of a $60,000 bome
next year would pay $505 in
school taxes. He paid $429 this
year.
Following review of the ten-
tative budget by the county
Department of Education, it will
return to the district for final ap~
proval by the boar~ on Aug. 5.
Saddle back
Trus t ees E ye
Pay Demand.s
Trustees of the Saddleback
Community College District will
meet in executive session tonight
to discuss salary demands by the
district's 180 t eachers and
classified employes.
The secret deliberations are
scheduled toward the end of a
public business meeting set for
7:30in the campus library.
Although the salary increase
requests have not been made
public, a spokesman for the col·
lege indicated both groups are
asking for increases of 18 per·
cent.
Action on the wage proposal is
unlikely tonight.
Purpose of the executive
session is to discuss the demands
with college business manager
Roy Barletta who was appointed
by the trustees as negotiator in
May.
Saddleback trustees have his ·
torically granted wage increases
only in percentages matching the
government's official cost of liv·
ing index.
For 197S this would amount to a
salary increase or 12: 1 percent.
Dad, Girl Drowned
MARCPOSA··CAPJ -John ·A.
Spauldlng of Santa Ro6a and his
3·year-old dauchler. Dominique •
drowned wben their car ran 4ff
HJghway 140 and plunged into
Merced River near Briceberc,
lhe Mariposa County sberllrs of-
• fice a.aya.
murder in the slayings five years
ago of Mission Viejo teacher
Florence Nancy Brown and
service station attendant Jerry
Wayne Carlin.
Hurd was with convicted killer
Arthur Craig .. Moose" Hulse,
now 21, on June 2, 1970, when
Hulse used a roofer's ax. to chop
to death Carlin , 21, in the
restroom of his service station.
It was alleged in Hurd's trial
that he repeatedly stabbed Mrs.
Shark Bites
Man on Leg
FOLEY, Ala. (UPI> -A
shark Sunday attacked a
27·year·old man live miles
off the Gulf Coast, but he
t>Scaped with only 35 teeth
marks on his left leg.
William Wayne Daniels
of Bay Minette, Ala., was
listed in satisfactory concli·
tion today at a hospital.
Authorities said Daniels
was swimming near his
boat in about 15 feet of
water when the shark al-
· tacked. His wife and
daughter were in the boat.
By. batting at and scaring
the shark, D a niels was
able to break loose and
swim back to his boat.
. SS Catalina
Said Target
Of Sabotage
SAN PEDRO CAP) -Sand was
dumped into the main bearings
and a main electrical line was
damaged on the SS Catalina, the
while ~amship which ferries
passengers to and from Catalina
Island, a steamship company
sookesman s ays.
A ship engineer, Raymond
Burnham. told police Thursday
someone broke into the engine
room, put sand in all the bearings
then smashed electric cables
with a hammer.
Switchboard operators at the
Catalina Terminal Berth 95 told
police that a bomb threat had
been made against the ship Wed·
nesday. They said a man had
called to warn tha t the Army of
Cambodia would bomb the ship
al 11:45 p.m. Wednesday.
. Police· are investigating the in·
cidenl and the April bombing of
the Carib Star, the Catalina's sis-
ter ship.
Brown, 31, of El Toro to death in
an Irvine orange grove the next
day after t..be teacher was
dragged from her station wagon
by the gang of drug.using drift~rs
led by Hurd.
Opening statements in the sani·
ty hearing now faced by Hurd will
be delivered later today in Judge
Frank Domenichini'scourtroom.
Lawyers for both sides have
scheduled psychiatrists as wit-
<See HUR D, Page A2)
Teachers
To Picket
CVSDMeet
Teachers of the Capistrano
Unified School District are ex-
pected to picket a meeting of the
district school board al' 7: 30
tonight at San Juan Elementary
School.
The teac~ers hope to un-.
derscore their demands for pay
increases in what may be their
·final chance this school year.
The demonstration is being
planned by members of the
Capistrano Union of Federated
Teachers which r epi:.esents a
fifth -about 60 -of the dis-
trict's teachers. The others are
member of the Capistrano
. Unified Educators Association or
belong to no organization.
' Representatives of the protest-
ing organization were not availa·
ble for comment today.
· The smaller teachers group
·has voted to boycott pay negotia-
tions with the district because of
its contention that the meetings
have not been productive.
The larger group is continuing
t alks and has agreed to un-
dertake its own review of the pro-
posed school 1975· 76 budget to de~
termine where funds coulld be cut
to pay for increased teacher
salaries.
The current preliminary
budget of $19 million, does not
make provision for teacher cost
of living increases. Increases for
experience and education are in
the budget.
It is estimated that $100,000
will have to be cul from the
education spending for each per-
cent increase the teachers are
given. Initial demands were for a
"'20 percent increase.
District officials have forecast
an 82·cent tax rate increase un-
der the preliminary budget, an
increase which would cost the
owner of a ·$40,000 home $132
more in school taxes next year.
A Missing .Face
Stephen Smith of
Garden Grove was not
amon g h is f e llow
graduates at Stanford
University Sunday. lie
and another student,
Cerrie Jane Hunt er of
Atherton, a re being
held captive by re-
v o I u t I on a r I ea In
Tanzania.
"They are ve.ry
much In o ur
thoughts," said Stan-
f ord Pr esident
'fUch ard Lyman In
opening remarkt at
the university'• com-_
m encement ex· erd•••· UPI Tel,,,,..
NI
~-.......... ' •\. ....
·Conntess .
Relates
'Terror'
LONDON <AP) -L ady
Veronica Lucan, wire otlhe miss·
ing British e11rl who ls sought in
the murder of the family nanny,
said for the first time today he
hud tried to strangle her on the
night of the murder.
She told u tense inquest at Lon·
don's Westminster Coroner's
Court: "'He thrust two gloved
fingers do"'n my throat and we
s tarted to fight. During the
course of it he attempted to
.strangle m e from in front."
T h e inques t \\'as h earin g
evidence on the death of the
Lucan family's n anny, 29-year-
old Sandra Rivett, who was bat-
tered to d eath in the Belgi-dvia ·
home of the Countess of Lucan
last Nov. 7. Lady Lucan, :n, was
also badly injured by the nanny's
assailant on that day.
Lady Lucan t old the Daily Ex-
}>ress, .. [ shall simply tell the
court \Vhal h appened, and if
~sked l shall reveal the name of
t hf.' man "·ho ultacked me -the
man Viho sat on the stairs af·
terwards, cried on my shoulder
and told m e had ail led Sandra.''
The countess said she waited
until the man calmed do\\"n and
then ran to a nearby pub for help,
s t reaming blood and crying
··'murder .'' l\1i ss Rive tt 's
bludgeoned body later was found
wr apped in a canvas sack in the
basement of the three-s tory
house.
Some d e tectives h ave
theorized that the murderer
wanted to kill the countess and
got the governess by mistake.
The 40·year·old eurl vanished a
fe"' hours after the killing.
Scotland Yard, after interview-
ing the countess. issued a war·
rant for his arrest for murder
and for the attack on his wife. He
has never been traced despite re-
ports that he "'as seen in 1'"rance,
,\ustraha, South Afric<t <tnd Latin
Ame1ica.
1\.Jost Scotland Yard n1cn say
they believe Lord Lucan com-
mitted suicide in some remote
part of Britain. But some senior
l n vestigators think he is still
a live a nd being hidden by
friends, here or overseas.
Cle m e nte Nabs
Pistol Packer
San Clemente police arrested a
Grants Pass, Oregon, man. They
said a 9mm automatic pistol
.slipped Crom the man's trousers
and clattered to the floor of a
dov.'nlown cafc Saturday.
David Gary J ohnson, 21, was
booked on sus picion of carrying a
concealed weapon without a
p er mit a nd for al lege d
possession of dangerous drugs.
Officers \\'ere called to the
llalfway House Coffee Shop, 218
S. El Camino Real , by a ccife
employe.
Police reported that after drop.
· ping the ha nd gun, the man calm·
Jy picked it up a nd put it back in
the waist band of his pants.
'Tr easure' Found
HUNTING DON, E ngla nd
(UPI) -Archeolo'glsts and.
Britis h l\o1uscum officials report·
ed Sunday the discovery of 25
pieces of church s ilver making
up possibly "the earliest kno\1:n
collection of Christian church
plates in the Roman Empire."
T he silve r. "·ith an estimated
value of $120.000, v.•as turned over
to county offi cia ls for a decision
as to whether it is treasure trove
-thus going to the government
-or whether it will be given to
• the finder.
ORANGE COAST LISC
DAILY PILOT
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V ~ndali.Sln Report
CUSD Cites .Damages Up $7,481
By ANNE COOPER
ot ... oai,.," ... S&aft
"We ar e ler.1rning finit hand
that vandalism is not confined lo
ghetto communities," says Joe
Wimer. director or ad·
minlslrative services for the
Capistrano Unified School Dhi ·
lrict.
"We are also finding," he says,
"that vandalism isn't limited to
kids.''
Vandalism h as cost the
Capistrano school district more
than $14,000 since July 1, 1974,
Wimer reports. That is up from
$7 ,481 the previous fiscal year.
Actual damage done amounted
to $7,867 lasl year and $19,303 lhis
year , he says. Restitution
amounting lo $386 ~as collected
in 1973·74, and $4,650 has been ap-
plied for this year , bringing down
total costs to the district.
Most restitution comes from
parents of children responsible
for damage to district property.
.
,
"It is lmporta,.at for pare]its to · Comparing Capistrano to other
reallie thafthey.will be held Uf.· county school districts, Muon
ble for damage their children says local residents pay leas for
cause to school proper.Ly," '\tandalls m . Tbe county average
Wimer stresses. "lf they know is S2 per child. The Caplst.rano
this, they ma y emphasl:se district pays closer to $1 per
responsibility to the community child, he says.
more at home." Citing a Stanford Research
Some restitution comes from Institute r eport on school van·
the vandals themselves -adults dalism, Wimer says that social
who have stolen school property. scienti&ts emphasize the im·
Theft most often occurs, Wimer portance of community support
says, on sites where new schools in combatlftg the problem.
are being built. HomeoWners Ma&on agrees with the experts.
ha v e b een knov.•n t o help "The kids who damage school
themselves to sprinkler heads property don 'l feel a part of their
and lumber at l ll.,xpayers' ex· school," he says. '\Instilling in
pense, he reports. students and area residents a
Hal Mason, director of fiscal pride· in their school has a de-
services for the Orange County terrent effect on vandalism.
Department of Education, agrees Planting colorful flowers around
v.<i th Wimer. "Kids often get the a school building has proven ef-
blame for things they don't do," fective. The Fountain Valley dis·
he says. "Crime is on the upsw-trict h as made school walls
ing generally in Orange County. available to students for Chicano
Vandalism is not keeping 'pace murals."
with overall crime figures." Wimer points out that school
pr9perty is partic~arly vulnera·
$1 Per Gallon
ble during s ummer vacation.
"Now that school is out," he
says, "people who live around
the schools can really do their
communities a service by keep-
ing an eye out for mischief and
reporting suspected problems to
the police." Solon Predicts Gas Price
' ' I
Cuba to Give -
Money Back
WASJJ!fil'TON (UPI) -
The Cuban government
bu agreed to return a S2
million 1.r anaom obta.lned
by akyjackers. ln 1912 from
Southern Airway$, Sen.
George S. McGovern, (I).
· S.D.),announcedtodar.
• In • letter to McGovern,
Cuban Prime Minister
F1del Castro s aid his gov-
ernment has decided to
give "a positive answer"
to requests that the money
be returned. ·
McGovern said he re·
ceived the letter from
Castro Friday.
E'ro• Page AJ
CRASHES. • •
been throwl) from the bus and
"'ere hanging in trees lining the
pr~~ice. She s11>id nine dead
were found under the bus.
Today's accident occurred at
Coatesgale on a four-l ane
highway with a central strip
·separa ting the north and south-
bound roads.
"According to first police re-
ports, the truck crossed throua:h
a gap in the median to join the
road on which the bus "'as travel-
ing. Police said the bus over·
turned and the driver was among
the dead.
•
..
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senate Democratic Leader
!'.like Mans field says American motorists soon will be pay·
ing about $1 per gallon for gasoline if Congress and Presi·
dent Ford can 't get together on an energy program.
Mansfield said Ford's full $3-per·barrel tariff would
raise gasoline prices to about 70 cents per gallon. "On top of
that. you have the recent decision by the OPEC (oil·
producing) countries to raise prices by 30 percent in Sep.
tember," he said. · • ·•Jf something isn'l done by Congress and the President
together, we stand to see an increase which will bring. it
somewhere around a dollar," he said in a weekend in-
tervie\\'.
Mans field said gasoline prices will rise in any event, but
Congress and the White l~ouse must agree on a program to
cut large·seale \\'aste -"around 40 percent" or the supply.
High Court Krwcks
Fixed Legal Fees
WASHINGTON (APl -The
Supreme Court struck down
minimum legal.fee schedules for
real estate transactions today in
an 8 lo O decision which probably
also spells the end or fixed rees ,
for other legal services.
The court ruled that minimum·
fee sch edules established by
state or local bar associations
violate federal antitrust law
v:henever the fees affect in-
terst ate commerce.
The decision was a victory for
a Virginia couple, Lewis H . and
"Ruth Goldfarb, which challenged
the Fairfax County Bar Associa ·
lion's fix ed minimum fee for
legal \\'Ork required when they
bought a home.
It also v.·as a victory for the
Justice Department, which has
\\'aged a long·sta nding battle
against fee schedules established
by professional associations. The
depa rtment s upport ed t he
Goldfarbs in their lawsuit.
In other action, the court:
-Ruled 7 to 2 t hat slates may
not constitutionally prohibit the
advertising of abortion services.
The court said such advertising
is protect ed by the cpnstitutional
guarantee of freedom of the
press.
. -Upheld a robbery and as·
sault conviction against J ack
Roland l\turphy. the celebrated
Miami, Fla., jewel thief who is
the central fi gu1·e in the motion
picture '' Murph the Surf.''
-Agreed to review a ruling of
the U.S. court of Appeals in
Washington tha t the Federal
Power Commission may not give
natural-gas producers built;in
authority to shut orr the gas supp·
ly of· interstate pipelines when
their contracts expire.
-Declined lo review a Ken·
lucky family's claim that its pro·
perty rights were violated when
Fro• Page AJ
CRESCENT
purposes, and, thus. had reduced
it in value and rendered it un·
saleable.
The claim demands the city
pay the owners $250,000 for the
lot, interest on the property since
'I June 1974 and legal costs as-
jociated with the claim.
City Council members will con·
sider the claim al Wednesday's
regular meeting. They are ex-
pected to refer the claim to City
Attorney George Logan and the
city's insurance carrier.
Wilcoxen said the Intent of the
claim is to seek a detennination
Crom the city on whether It wants
to pu~ha11e the lot or free it for
development.
He sald the Ru!lseila Want to
build a private re1ldence on the
alt.a, but that he has advised them
not to 1pend money on plann.lng
tmtll the open •pace luue iJ re· ........
He.noted that any development
onjhe property would require ap·
pc;oval from the regional co11st.al
commission.
its land was strip mined Without
the family's consent. The family
does not own the mineral rights
to the land in question.
Writing for the court in the
legal-fees case, Chief Justice
Warren E . Burger said, "In
terms of restraining competition
and harming consumers ... the
price.fixing activities found bere
are unusuall y damaging."
!·le noted that the Goldfarbs
could not buy a hom e \\1.thout a ti·
tle examination and that only a
la"•ycr licensed in Virginia could
p crrorm th e work, so th e
GoJ dfarbs •·could · not turn to
a lte rnative so urces for the
necessary service."
Virginia lawyers "were prac·
ti cing unde r the constraint of the
fee schedule," he continued.
The fee schedule issued by the
count y bar assoc iatio n
est ablishe(:! "a fi xed, rigid price
floor" and the schedule "was en·
forced throug h the prospect of
professional discipline from the
state bar and the desire of at·
torneys to comply with an·
nounced professional norms,"
Burger said.
·'These factors coalesced to
create a pricing system that con·
sumers could not r ealistically
escape," Burger "'rote. ··on this
record the bar association's ac·
livilics constitute a classic il-
lustration of pr_ice -fixing.''
F r ont Page Al
CI A ...
not give the cigars to other people.
pie.
The Rocke feller Comrilission
report was to be given officially
today to the Senate Investigating
Committee, which Wednesday
wi ll hear from CIA Dire~lor
Willia m Colby testifying under
tight security about the 1963 as-
sassination of South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Dinh Di em.
Rockefeller's hint of Kennedy
involvement in assassination
plbts resulted in a statement
from two former aides or Rohen
Kennedy, who accused the viCe
presid ent o r ignoring the con-
clusions of his own report or "de·
liberately lying."
Rockefeller said in a broadcast.
interview (NBC·TV's Meet the
Press} the commission failed to
complete the assassination in-
vestigation because it ran out of
time and encountered too many
difficulties.
. ".Let's face It,'' he said, "many
of\he people have died who were
allegedly involved and others
were assassina ted in thJs country
tragically,"
Asked if he w1s referring to the
Kennedy a, RockefelJer replied:
"Well, a1 I said , we haye oo eon·
~lu1ive information, but the pre-
sident of the United States and
the attorne)' general ol lhe Unit·
ed Sbte1 were bolh uusalnated
traclcally ln this counlr)<."
He wa1 a1ked lf he meant the
Kennedys actually wereiD_volved
in such plots.
(
'
South Coast
Water Bond
Set for Vote
The South Coast County Water
District will resubmit a multi·
million dollar bond issue to the
district voters in the fall. .
The district which serves the
area from South Laguna lo Dana
Point failed by a natrow margin.
to obtain voter approval for $3.5
million in improvement bonds in
March.
The new iss ue will be trimmed
of a proposal to finance construe·
Lion of a controversial 3.5 million
gallon water reservoir.
Contention over construction of
the reservoir comprised the only
organized opposition to the bond
election.
Citizens Against Development
which organized in the last days
prior to the campaign, ha:d
charged that the reservoir was
growth inducing.
Failure of the bonds lo pass -
it was 11 votes short -has
caused a delay in the st art of a
Sl .2 million water main project
of the district and the Laguna
Beach County Water District
which h ad been scheduled to
start in Septe mber.
Completion of the joint project
will be delayed u ntil adequate
fina ncing is provided, according
to South Coast County Water Dis·
trict.
O.lly """' SUff ....... GUil TY OF MURDERS
Steven Craig Hurd
E'ro111Page A J
HURD ...
nesses and defense attorney
William Gamble hopes to put
,Hurd on the stand as his !inal wit-
ness.
Hurd accepted the two verdicts
today with•no display of emotion.
He is under daily sedation follow-
ing a California Supreme Court
ruling last month that he could be
tried on the murder charges pro·
vided be is tranquilized at all
phases ofthetrial.
Lawyers for both sides agree
that Hurd is only capal;lle of tell·
ing the truth or understanding
testinionY while he is under the
supervised sedation.
He faces life in state prison on
each of the two convictions if the
jury now finds that he was sane at
the time of th e t\\'O killings.
Deputy District Attorn ey
Frank Briseno declined to ask for
the death penalty on either con-
viction when he made his final
argument to the jury.
Raiders Get
Guns, Ammo
From Armory
BELFAST (UPI> -Armed
raiders dressed as militiamen
overpowered guards at a
Northern Ireland militja camp
early today, cleaned the armory
or its v.•eapons and ammunition
and ~esca p e d in l\\'O s tolen
military vehicles.
A British ·army spokesman
s aid the raiders escaped with 148
semiautomatic ri fles, _35 sub·
machine guns, three 3.22 rifles, a
general purpose machine gun, an
autom atic pistol and "a substan·
ti al quantity'' of ammunition.
Light Crou:ds
At Beaches
Gloomy weather made things ,
bright for lifeguards along the
south coast this weekend.
Guards in both San Clemente
and Laguna: Beach reported
generally light crowds oVer the
weekend with Sunday being the
heavier of the two days. No inc i-
dents we re reported:
For the. second weeke nd,
Laguna Beach guards reported a
heavier than normal inllux: of
scuba divers caused by a re-
certification law passed in Los
Angeles County.
• • Mariners gives you
up to a s1,soo tax
deducti9n this year. .•
. .. A ND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU
CA N BUILD A T AX SH ELTERED RETll'IEM ENT FUND
AT MARINERS , W ITH "IRA " -TH E INDIVIDUAL RE·
Tl REM ENT A CCOUNT.
Mariners Individual Retirement
Account Is a personal tax·sheltered
retirement plan . "IRA" was devel-
oped by Congress to give you an
effective way to bu ild your own relire-
ment fund.
You can save as much as $1500 or
15°/o of your wages, whichever Is less,
.and your savings wlll be a tax deduc-
tion during your working .years. If
yo ur spouse wbrks , your combined
tax~shel1ered savings can be as much
as $3000 per year.
Come In to Mariners and start your
own lndlvldual Retirement Account .
You 'll pe saving tax dollars now and
building a much brighter fu ture, For
more Information, come In or call any
one o,f our convenient locations.·
"
HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS
''IRA •. ACCOUNT. lndr.,.,dual R1111t11m11nr Accountl aro pr11!11n11y
t/Jfl!11lp 7lo '* Plr yaar wh/ln placorJ lfl II 6· ~Hf ctflll.C.fe. Your
annual yiarrJ Is 1ncr11111/ld 10 /1 big 8 06'• wn•11lnt11r•1f1J add/Id to
Ill• act:oun/ b11l11nc. and compounrJarJ <J••ly. Wiii! /1 m11.umum
1nolvidu111 contribution ol S'l500 t/Jch ytar, lltr11's how your
monoy will 9row: -WITH TAX WITHOUT ext:RA
SHELTERIO TAX MONEY ... SHl!L TERED FRO~TAX
AFTER Pl.AN PLAN D!,ERftAL
5 yrs. $ 9,510 6,730 $ 2.780
10 yr1. 23,5<10 15,7150 7.790
20 yrs. 74,640 65.B«l 30.5e0
30 yrs. 185,550 95,030 90.520
"AtlOve 11g11ni1 •r• blHd 011 8'Yo ll'ltOme bra>Ck•I. F.O•r•f
t9g11l•HOfll t/Jqulr• IUbttlllhll pon11111 .. !Of N tly wlthd•IWl lS
troll'! ct<t!lic.111 aocoun1t.
•1\lariners ~vinys. and Loan AssociatiOn ~ ..
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102• &o111d1 Dr. (71 •) •••·7506 13810 S.ol leoc:h l tvd. (21::1) !15.3-3000 11•7 1111 ... erty llvd.
{71•) 6112·•000 (0,[NING SOON) (213) S9t-7626 (213) 6S7 ·41.t1 '
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·Food A.d Rules
Pushed ·by FTC
By SYLVIA POltTEll
While the Federal Trade Commla&loll Is pusbin1 touah
nales covering food advertising in lbe U.S:, an even banter·
hilting appl'oacb lo lhe explosive Issue of food ad¥erUtln1 la
being urged by a group of the fTC'a own 1Wf membert.
. The FTC "Slatr ProPOHLs" call for "AfftrmaUve Dis· closure·• -or disclosure requlrement.s where no ~ulre ...
meats exist today -in food ads on the grounds that
omission of nutrition in·
formation. in food ad·
vertising constitutes n
;·deceptive and unfalr"
practiee over which the
FTC h as leg a l re·
jfulator-y authority.
Here's a rundown
bn these proposals :
l .
Money's
Worth
· (1) IF A FOOD CONTAINED art added nutrient, or if
ny nutrition el aim or piece of information respecting nutri·
·on were m ade on tho label or ln the ad, advertising for the
roduct would have to identify up to tour key nutrients pre-
ent in nutritionally significant -amounts (10 percent or
ore of the U.S. Recommended Daily Allowance for one
erving of each nutrient). The ad al-so would have to show
e actual percentage or the RDA represented by each
~utrient and number of calories in a servmg.
; A TV ad for a can of spaghetti and meatballs, for in·
f>lance, would have to disclo.se something like this on the
6creen: "One l lftt oz. serving provides the following percen·
tages of the U .S . RDA: Protein 15, Niacin 10, lron 10,
calories 100."
' (2) Ir a food did not contain any significant total of any
)"lutrient, the ad would have to disclose that tact in a state·
111ent such as: ·'This food does not contain 10 percent or
more of the U.S. RDA of any vitamin, mineral or protein."
(3) lf a food did not have any nutrition information on
its label for one reason or another, 1ts ad s till would have to
disclose the number ot calories per serving and the defini·
lion of ''serving'' also would have to be stated tn the ad.
· (4) FOR FOODS WJOCH were not required to have
nutrient labels, the ads would have to disclose spttifically
that the food did ·'not contain 10 percent or more of the U.S.
RDA of any vitamins, minerals oi proteins" -If that were
tbecase.
· (5) As an alternative to these propqsed "affirmative
disclosures," ads would simply display the nutrient labels
themselves from the food packages -for a given minimum
number of seconds.
Cons umer groups also are calling for:
-Disclosure of added sugar above 10 percent of any
product's calonc content, cholesterol untl sodium content
above certain agreed-upon lam1ls. fat above 30 percent of
the calorie content. fiber less than cert:.11n levels.
-Full disclos ure of chem1cul food uddit1ves including
preservatives, colors . fl a vorings plus :.i special indicalton
1f no additives w re contamed in Lhe food. The absence of any
additives could be indicated -on food labels and ads -by
some simple system of symbols which could be easily re·
cognized by the public.
-MUCH MORE EXPLICIT labeling of fabricated or
synthetic products, across the board from cream lo ice
cream, juices, bacon, eggs. Such labeling might apply to
this type of product not only as it is sold m grocery stores but
also as it is ser ved in restaurants, airplanes, etc.
-Clear warnings -on labels and in ads -of the health
hazards of eating loo much sugar, salt. c holesterol.
-A simple score<:ard system of nutrition a-rading of
foods on labels and in ads -similar lo grading of school
papers. .
-A full six years ago, the White House Conference report
oit Food, Nutrition and health declared that "one basic right
of individuals in our society 1s the right to proper food." An
exteosion of this right is the "ri ght" to know what you're eat·
inj. •
·'We need a r eordering of priorities m the food in·
dustry," says Or. Michael J a cobson. director of the Center
tor Science in the Publi c Interest in Washington -now or·
~anizing a na t1onw1de .. Food Day'' for April 17, 1976 to
dramatize our nutrition gap and the urgency of overhauling
food advertising. And adds Jacobson: "top billing" in the
new order would be "the customer's health."
YOU HAV E BEEN .. invited" to write your views to the
Federal Trade CommJssion, William Dixon, Special Asst.
Dtrector for Rulemakmg. Washington, D.C. 20508. If you opt
for doing nothmg, you will have only yourself to blame if you
~slike.the outcome.
Recall the $2 Bill?
Well, It May· Return
WASHINGTON CAP J -
With inflation having eroded
the doll ar, a decision will be
made within a month or-two
on whether lo bring back the
SZ bill in 1976, s ays Deputy
Treasury Secretary Stephen
S. Gardne r.
·•Per son a lly I Cavor the
idea, and I think the secretary
Uvors the idea," said
G'ardner. Treasury Secretary
WtU.iam E . Simon r ecenUy
s~1d he tends to support it.
:Oardner said t he $2 bill
JT)HY be more useful to people
now because of changes in
phce levels m recent years.
The bill was r emoved (rom
cireulation in 1963 on the
ground that it was not being
used.
A RECENT SURVEY con·
ducted for t h e Federal
Relerve Board. by students at
the Harvard Graduate School
of Busmess concluded there
still js not much public sup·
p0rt for a $2 bill, a board
spokesman said .
The Harvard survey said a
"cons iduable mar kctln t crrort .. would be required to
galrt public acceptance for
tlle $2 bill.
But Gardner said in an in·
terview that he doesn•t have
much fa!lh In such surveys -·~ go out a nd 11k people lf t~ey would use something t.Ji.tt. 3re not now usinJ, in part encourages negative
aruwers." Th~ Treasury Department
will probably make the final
declslon by mldsumme,r, but
the Federal Reserve Board's
opinion Is considered ltnpor·
tant beeauc:" the boa1 ,ould
be respon:-~ for putting the
bills into c1reulation.
tF A DECISION IS made to
. ..
go ahead with it, Gardner
said one reason for pnnting
the bill in 1976 is to overcome
past public resistance by ty·
ing the blll to the nation's 1
Bicentennial observance.
A controversy would be
almost certain to develop
over whose portrait the bill
should carry. There is some
sentiment in Congress for a
woman, such as the late suf·
Cragette, Susan 8 . Anthony.
However, Gardner said
there also will be support for
using the portrait of Thomas·
J efferson, the third president,
whose portrait was used on
the old $2 bill. Proponents of
Jefferson argue he would Cit
the Bicentennial theme.
There would b e real
economic benefits from the $2
bill, according to one ad·
vocate, Director James A.
Conlon of the Bureau of En·
graving and Printing, the
agency that prints the nu·
tion's money.
Conlon has e stimated his
agency would save $3 million
annually in printing costs,
since fewer Sl dollar billa
would be needed.
THE COST OP PRIN'nNG
a thousand bills of any de·
nomination is the same, about
$11, up from $7. 76 per
thousand In 1972. Since 1&46,
the larfest bill printed Is the
$100 bll .
Conlon said one reason the
S2 bill wasn't accepted before
was lbat nol enough of them
were printed~
Call M2·M7t.
Put 1 few word•
to worlr for JOU .
'" th• i@lil ijml
.. ... Uond!r1JuM 18, 1t'f9 DAIL V PILOT ' .41
. .
Monday'e
Closing 1 Price& NEW YORK STOCK #EXCHANGE
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MoH1pf1 20 •• 4 ••• e~;,i~.~ f,~ p~·-~ Dollar Mixed =e:i~r.J i:i 12J :L.:.·~ ~::u::· '1~· .: !1~ BRUSSELS <UPI) -The dollar ~!l!'!..".'n' ~ J~ • -= l'ICI t.>o J .s ""'~ "' """ned mlxed on lnt~aUonaJ monov ................ 11141 ,a I •U 10...• \It -~ ..,, =~~i~ ':= : fl 1~ ~ SJ fc ·'° . ..,;.iJVt-~ market& Monday. Gold opened prac·
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........ OUI 4f ,.._+ ~ M rMU U io 31 .__ "' W~kend • ~Ppf 1 • .0 .. J Jt -W. • •
• f J
I
Energy Sav er?·
The rig that Mrs. Diane Pattison of Costa
Mesa uses to haul her three sons around
doesn't use any gas and doesn 't pollute
the atmosphere, but it does take a lot of
energy -mom's. But when it comes to
transporting Morgan, 10 months; David,·
3, a nd Bruce, 4, Mrs. Pattison doesn't
mind at a ll.
Trustees Mull funding
Saddleback College trustees
will be briefed Monday night on
new legislation which could re-
duce state support of the college
by $79,500 next year.
The s pecial sess ion is
scheduled for 7: 30 p.m. in the col-
lege library.
As presently writtert, the state
budget bill would limit state ap-
propriations for enrollment
growth at community colleges
from three to fiv e percent.
For Saddleback College which
has forecast a growth of 16.S per-
cent next year, this could mean
withdrawal of state funding for
about 1,200 students.
However, a compromise move
by the Assembly .Ways and
Means Committee would allow
the college to make up the dif-
ference between the state ap-
p ro p ri a ti on s and actual
enrollment to be collected from
business manager, estimated
this would add about one-half
cent lo the district's projected
94-cent tax rate.
Barletta explained that state
support for each Saddleback stu-
dent consist s of $125, con ·
siderably less than the $600 per
student state s ubvention for
Orange Coast and Golden West
college stude nts.
He said state aid represents on-
ly a small portion of the $1,500
budgeted for each student but
that college officials s jJl aren't
happy about plans to curtail state
allocations.
Barletta pointed out that some
New El Toro
Sclwol to Be
the taxpayers. .
Boy Barletta, the district's ·Narn,ed SerralW
•-----------• Serrano Intermediate School I ~~~ I has been selected as the name for ·
the new junior hig h scheduled to
open next winter in El Toro.
Saddleback Valley Unifie d
'J ,_ '' ...... \ ·' \· ... ' ... ' ..
School District trustees selected
the name from three su~gested
efforts had been made · to
persuade legislators to change
their minds but that the board of
trustees bad not yet formally op-
posed the measure.
"We are not as badly off as the
Coast Community College Dis·
trict or any other school district
which receives a substantial
amount of its income from state
sources," Barletta explained.
"We are considered· a wealthy
district in terms of our assessed
valuation. We have a large lax
base. Our sup.port for ADA
(average daily attendance) is not
that great and therefore the im-
pact would not be that great."
-....
Every morning, daily interest is added to
every Los Angeles .Fede ral Savings Account.
Passbook Savings -Certificates of Deposit -
Investment Certificates
All at highest rates
LOS.ANGELES
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Savings insured to
$40,000
Safe deposit boxes
and the most wanted
savings services
Newport Beach Office
3201 Newport Blvd. • 675-4500 (Across from City Hall)
Head Office Downtown: Los Angeles Federal Savings
and Loan Association One Wilshire, Los Angeles 90017
Other offices throughout the area
TO IGHT
8:30 P.M. e CHANNEL 11
,
See
MAHARISHI · MAHESH YOGI
• • on
.; \-'{ ~~ 1 I . ; ' .1
' •• f
·r-1
by Ray Garubo, new pnncipal
for the facility, and a con;:imittee
of teachers, parents and stu·
dents. THE ffiERV GRIFFIN SHOW
--~.
1..,· 7·
/,)"\ '..__ \~~ ·....-;-. ('
..
: ~ '·, •\~I J '• ._
Saddle back
Hires 2 Neiv
College Aides
·Trustees of the Saddle back
Community College District
have added a financial aid officer
and a public information assis-
tant to the college staff but de-
layed action on the hiring of a n
athletic the rapist-trainer.
The aid officer will coordinate
finan'Cial assis tance to students
and keep track of federal. state,
and local aid payments. The posi:
lion carries a salary range ofS828
to $1,054 dependini;! on qu alifica-
l.ions and expericmcc.
,.The. winning name was that of
a Spanish grandee who owned a
land g rant in the days when
Spain ruled California.
The rejected choices included
Vista del Lago (Lake View) and
Rancho Lindo CBeautiJul Ranch)
Intermediate School.
All three reflect the district's
pattern of u s ing the area 's
Spanish -Mexican heritage in
naming schools.
The name Serrano reflects the
historical significance of the geo·
graphical are a of the site al the
comer of J e ronimo Road and
Canada Road.
Don Jose Serrano's Spanish
land grant extended over the
land now known as Lake Forest
and El Toro.
Wate r Rates
Going U p
For Vie jo?
Water rates are expected to go
up soon in the Santa Margarita
Water District. which serves
part of Mission Viejo and Coto de
Caza. Also appearing.
Ellen Corby (Grandma Walton), State Senator Arlen Gregorio,
and psychiatrist Or. Harold Bloomfield who all practice the
,,
Cl
The public information assis-
tant will help information officer
Dan Armstrong with the col·
lege's community relations pro·
gram. Proposed salary for the
position ranges from $769 to $981.
District General Manager fim
Smith said he will ask directors
Tuesday to authorize a rate study
and to set a public hearing in Ju-·
ly on the probable rate hike. Tr3nscendental · Meditation Y.M. Technique .. . ..
Trustees are expected to take
action on the third position at a
special meelin~ scheduled fot'
7 :30p.m. Monday.
Board members balked at ap-
proving the position last Monday
night because the job description
made referen~e only to the treat·
mentor athletes for injuries.
At the suggestion of board
Chairman Robert Bartholomew,
the trajner-therapist's duties w11l
include the treatment o( all slu·
dents who might reqwrewhirpool
baths and other therapeutic re-
medJ~.
"The rates will go up," Smith
said, "we just don't know how
much."
He said a 30 percent increase in
lhe.c:ost of power and a charge in·
crease of about $10 per acre foot
or water as supplied by the
Metropolitan Water District ls
prompting the rate stUdy.
··we are not sure how the in-
crease charge would be collect·
ed," Smith said. "If we don't ill·
crease the minimum charge
Cwbicb is now · four dollars per
month) it wou Id go on as a user
charge, spread out among all the
·people who are using water."
The public is invited to the
water board meetings.
Tuesday's is set for 2 p.m. at the
Sant.a Margarita office, 25571
Marguerite Parkway, Mlaslon
Viftio (Plaza Viejo).
FREE INTRODUCTORY LECTURES - 8 P.M.
NEWPORT BEACH Tues., June 17 =::•:·~~~~~y
HUNTINGTON BEACH
LAGUNA BEACH
Th J 19 THI HIW HUMTl ... TOM urs., une llACH UIUIY
·Mon., June 23
....... ww&T._.
LAeuMA MOULTON
Pl.A YMOUSI -,,
WL I 1c_,..111.
FOR MORE IMFORMA TIOH
C)4Ll 11141 642·41~ I or C7 I 41 499·2739
..
The salary or the trainer·
therapt.t would range from $8Q>
~ $1,lOI ~r month.
t, I "I + .....
' • j •., ..
I
17
l
I
17
J
I
)
'
Saddlehaek Totlay•sa .....
N.Y.Steeka
VOL. 68, NO. 167, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1975 .TEN CENTS
Shopping Centers:· Fut11re Blight?
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of UM DAll'f Piiot se.tt
"Hell, every time 1 come out
here there's a new shopping
center somewhere," grins a
Newport Beach resident who
commutes to the Saddleback
Valley.
The humor belies a real con·
cern among county planners.
They believe there is too much
commercially zoned property in
the Saddleback Valley, encom-
passing the communities of. El
Toro, Laguna Hills and Mission
Viejo.
The planners warn that blight·
ed commercial areas may arise
in the future if all the current
commercially zoned property is
allowed to develop.
Commercial zoning -how
much is needed and where it
should be located -is a difficult
subject to grasp, even for lbe
planners.
But commercial zoning stan·
dards that have been developed
over the years are violated gross-
ly in the Saddleback Valley,
according to a 1973 study pre-
pared fbr the county planning de-
p~rtment by Danielian, Moon,
Sampieri and Ilg CDMSI), a
Newport Beach planning firm.
Hurd Convicted ~
Of Two Murders
D~ily PilOt St.ti Pl!Me
By TOM BARLEY
Of tlle D•ll'f Piiot SIAtt
Steven Craig Hurd was found
guilty of two murders today by
an Orange County Superior Court
jury which must now determine
if the bushy-haired defendant
was sane when he participated in
two killings within a 24-hour
period.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY NEAR EL TORO ROAD AWAITS A BUYER
Site la a Stone's Throw Aw•y From Four Other Shopping Centers
The jury ended two days of de·
liberation by ruling that Hurd,
25, was guilty or first degree
murder in the slayings five years
ago of Mission Vi ejo teacher
Florence Nancy Brown and
service station ·attendant Jerry 'They've Overdone. It' Wayne Carlin. ·
Hurd was with convicted killer
Arthur Craig "Moos~ Hulse,
now 21, on June 2, 1970, when
Hulse used a roofer's ax to chop
to death Carlin, 21~ in the
restroom of his service station. Saddleback Merchams Assail ExpariSion
"I think they've overdone it. It
seems like there's a shopping
center for every 100 homes."
· Robert Tonso is owner of Tonso
International Imports, a well-
• manicured delicatessen and Li·
quor store in the Wild West
Center, corner of Mcintyre
Street and La Paz Road in
L3guna Hills. He has been in
business in the Saddleback
Valley for a year.
Tonso said he thinks the valley
is saturated with shopping cen-
ters.
"Five years ago, anyone who
opened a store would be an im-
mense success, no matter how
they treated their customers,"
Tonsosaid.
"But I don't know why anyone
would want to go into business
now. Those who aren't ag-
gressive won't survive," he
warned.
Fellow Wild West Center
merchant Robert Barr, owner or
Pet Safari, said, "There's more
commercial than the area
needs."
Even so, he said, merchants
are being solicited to lease space
in commercial centers that are
still on the drawing boards.
"What they 're offering, I don't
know. But it's dumb to start
El Toro Nursery·
~ses Money Bag
A money bag containin g
$814.27 in cash was stolen during
the weekend from an El Toro
nursery, Orange County Sheriff's
officers reported today.
D eputies said the c.a.dl ,
representing a day's receipts at
Green Thumb International,
23782 Bridger Road, was taken
from behind the counter while
employes were working in
another part of the store.
Or:--:a :•t
Weatlaer
Mostly cloudy throuah
Tuesday but partial cleat·
ing in the afternoon inland
portions. Little change in
temperature. Highs from
mid-60s at bea~hes to near
70inland.
INslDE TODAY
Thirlten peraon1 hove been
injured in.a dbturbanct at o
wome11'1 corrtction center in
North Carolina. Sto'l/, Pagt
B6.
l•tlex
somewhere and then go to a new
center."
Barr also complained that
there are too many like busi·
nesses in the Saddleback Valley
-pet and plant stores to name
two. ·
"Tbere are certain types that
never seem to r.eaeh aatu(ation
-liquor stores, supermarkets
and restaurants, for example,"
he said.
"Business has been fairly
good. or course, it could always
be better," said Doris Tuttle,
owner of El Toro Hobby and Ten-
nis Shop, 23684 El Toro Road, El
Toro.
"But we're just being saturat-
ed with shopping centers. I'm
alraid we're all going to be
dragged down,'' she said.
The owner ot a Saddleback
<See PROTEST, Page A2)
It was alleged in Hurd's trial
that he repeatedly stabbed Mrs.
Brown, 31, of El Toro to death in
an Irvine orange grove the next
day after the teacher was
dragged from her station wagon
by the gang of drug-using drifters
led by Hurd. r
Opening statements in the sani·
ty hearing now faced by Hurd will
be delivered later today in Judge
Frank Domenichini 's courtJ100m.
Spef!ial Meeting
Zogg Pact Announced
By JAN WOR'111
_ ~'!"~11 .. P'I~~ _
A special meeting to act on the
resignation of superintendent
William Zogg has been called for
tonight by Saddleback Valley
Unified School District trustees.
The meeting will be held at 7
p.m. at Los Alisos Intermediate
School; 25171 Moor Avenue, Mis-
sion Viejo.
Trustees said they will an-
nounce the legal and financial
agreements made between the
board and Zogg's attorneys in
secret negotiations over the past
few weeks.
Zogg, who has clashed with the
board repeatedly since an elec-
tion March 4 brought in three
new trustees, has not been
a vailable for comment since the
week before last and is no longer
at bis former office at district
headquarters in Laguna Hills.
The resignation was effective
Friday. Dr. Richard Welte, depu·
ty superintendent, was an-
nounced by Henry as interim
superintendent.
In a four-paragraph statement
Henry said was joinUy tNritten by
Zogg and the board, the resigna-
tion was attribute d to
''philosophical differences
·respecting district administra-
tion . . . which appeared to be ir·
reconcilable.''
The statement did not specify
the differences and ·Henry
declined to comment on them.
But since Zogg's biggest sup-
porters, Chester Briner, J01eph
Peterson, and Vince McCullough
AD IN PIL<TI'
SOLD TR4JLER
"The trailer sold because oC
the ad in the Pilot. There were
lots of calls u a result of the ad."
That's tbe advertising success
experienced by lbe Costa Mesa
woman who placed this ad in the
Daily Pilo~:
22' TRAVEL t.rlr, com
pletely self ·Coat. alpe 4.
$)~. xxx-uu
If you liave campinc equip-
ment to ell, call Na-5811. Put a.
few wotda.to work/or fOU.
In the Daily Pilot.
were defeated March 4, the
. superintendent and his new
board have been in conflict re-
peatedly.
One or the incidents came
when the new board asked Zogg
to notify all top district ad-
ministrators that they might not
be rehired because the trustees
felt the district was top-heavy .
He refused, noting that the new
board had not yet been sworn in.
On another occasion, the board
questioned Zogg in a public meet-
ing about the fact that he is co-
<See PACT, PageA2)
ui-1T ........
.JafJltar to Lakers
~ . Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, star center of the Milwaukee
Bucks wtll be traded today to the Los Angeles Lakeni
for ce~ter Elmore Smith, guard Brian Winters and the
Lakers' two top draft choices -forward Dave Meyeni
of UCLA and gua-rd Junior Bridgeman ' of Louisville.
Details on Page B4 today. • I
r. , ___ _
--..·----··· • •
. Lawyers for both sides have
scheduled psychiatrists as wit-
nesses and defense attorney
William Gamble h~ to put
Hurd on the stand as his final wit-
ness.
· Hurd accepted the two verdicts
today with no display of emotion.
He is under daily sedation follow-
ing a California-Supreme Court
ruling last month that he could be
Shark Bites
Manon Leg
FOLEY, Ala. (UPI) -A
shark Sunday attacked a
27-year-old man five miles
off the Gulf Coast, but he
escaped with only 35 teeth
marks on his left leg.
William Wayne Daniels
of Bay Minette, Ala., was
listed in satisfactory condi-
. lion today at a hospital.
Authorities said Daniels
was swimming near his
boat in about 15 feet of
water when lbe sbartc at-
· tacked. His wife and
daughter were in the boat.
By batting at and scaring
the shark, Daniels was
able to break loose and
swim back to his boat.
Saddleback ·
Trustees Eye
Pay Demands
Trustees of the Saddleback
Community College District will
meet in executive session tonight
to discuss salary demands by the
dis trict's 180 teachers and
classified employes.
The secret deliberations are
scheduled toward the end of a
public business meeting set for
7:30 in the campus library.
Although the salary increase
requests have not been made
public, a spokesm an for the col-
lege indicated both groups are
asking for increases of 18 per-
cent.
Action on the wage proposal is
unlikely tonight.
Purpose of the executive
session is to discuss the demands
with college business manager
Roy Barletta who was appointed
by the trustees as negotiator in
May.
. Saddleback trustees have his-
torically granted wage increai;es
only in percentages. matching 1.:he
government's official cost of bv-
iog index.
For 1975 this.,would amount to a
salary increase or 12.l percent.
tried on the murder charges pro-
vided he is tranquilized at all
phases of the trial.
Lawyers for both sides agree
that Hurd is only capable of tell-
ing the truth or understanding
testimony while he is under the
supervised sedation.
He faces life in stale prison on
each of the two convictions if the
<See HURD, Page A2)
TeacJters
To Picket
.CUSDMeet
Teachers of the Capistrano
Unified School District are ex-
. peeled to picket a meeting o( the
district school board al 7:30
tonight at San Juan Elementary
School.
The teachers hope to un·-
derscore their demands for pay
·increases in what may be their
final chance thls school year.
The demonstration is being
planned by members of the
Capistrano Union of Federated
Teachers which represents a
fifth -about 60 -of the di:;-
trict 's teachers. The others a're
member of the Capistrano
Unified Educators Association or
belong to no organization.
Representatives of the protest-
ing organization were not availa-
ble for comment today.
The s m a ller teachers group
has voted to boycott pay negotia-
tions with the district because of
its contention that the meetings
have not been productive.
The larger group is continwng
talks and has agreed to un-
dertake its own review of the pro-
posed school 1975-76 budget to de-
termine where funds coulld be cut
to pay for increased teacher
salaries. The current prelimitTary
budget of $19 million, does not
make provis ion for teacher cost
of living increases. Increases for
experience and education arc in
<See PICK ET, Page A.2 l
Toro Trailer
Park Weighed
Members of the Orange County
Planning Commission will meet
at 2 p.m. Tuesday to consider is-
suing a use permit for a 257-space
mobile home park in El Toro.
The park is proposed for loca-
tion on 32 acres of land on
Cornelius Drive near El Toro
Road.
Commissioners wiU meet on
the permit r equest by Ray H.
Prothero in the county engineer-
ing building, 400 Civic Center
Drive, Santa Ana.
$1 Per Galloit
Solon Predicts Gas Price
WASHINGTON <UPI> -Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield says American motorists soon will be pay·
ing about $1 per gallon for gasoline if Congress and Pres i·
dent Ford can't get together OA an energy program.
Mansfield said Ford's full $3-per-barrel tariff would
raise iasoline prices to about 70 cents per gallon. ·'On top of
that, you have the recent decision b~ the OPEC <oil·
producln1> countries to raise prices by 30 percent in Sep-
tember," be said. -
.. U aomethlnc lan't dooe by Congress and the PTesident
tocetber, we stand to see an increase which will bring it
somewhere around a dollar," he said in a weekend in·
lerview.
Man.sfield said guoline price$ will rise in any event. tM.tl
Contreas and lbe White House must agree on a pro1ram to
cut larte·ttale waste -"a.round 40 percent" of the svpply.
' •
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.12 DAILYPILOT SB
u.s.M.CA.S.
El 10RO
IRVINE
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Train
Slated
The Freedom Train will make
a three-day 1topover ln San Juan
·Capistrano in January while
chuggtq from coast to coast on
its Bicentennial lour.
Mayor James K . Weathers
said today he had received a tele-
gram from the Freedom Train
Foundation agreeing to the San
Juan stop providing two condi·
lions can be met. .
One involvi n g securing
permission from the Santa Fe
Railway for the use of 1,200 feet
of rail siding, and the other is to
provide a guaranteed income of
$15,000 a day for the train.
We 1thers said he is confident
thos., contractual obligations
can be fulfilled. He noted that the
town of Archibald, Ohio, was
able to meet the financial request
·by pre-selling tickets for ad·
mission to the train.
COMMERCIALLY ZONED PROPERTY (SHADED AREAS) ABOUNDS ALONG THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY IN SADDLEBACK VALLEY
Orange County Planner• Believe There Is Double the Commercial Zoning ~hat U~lmately· Wiii .Be Needed
The train, carrying valuable
artifacts from America's 200·
year tfistory, will be drawn by a
r~tored steam engine and dis·
played or.-a section of track north
·of Del Obispo.
f'ro• Page A I
SHOPPING CENTER BLIGHT • • •
County planners rely heavily
on the findings of the report in as·
sessing com mercial zoning in the
Saddleback Valley.
The report concluded:
-There is at least twice the
amount of commercially zoned
acreage in the Saddleback Valley
that is needed to s upport is pro-
~cted ultimate population.
There are five areas along
the San Diego Freeway between
the south Irvine city limit and the
north San Juan Capistrano city
limit that aspire to be major re·
gional shopping complexes when
only two, at most, wi ll be re-
quired.
The DMSI study is predicated
on a probable .. concept of de-
velopment·' in the heart of the
Saddleback Valley -defined as
a corridor extending two miles
on each side of the San Diego
Freeway between Irvine and San
J uan Capistrano.
The area is unincorporated
a nd, thus. governed solely by de-
cisions of the county planning
comm ission and board of
supervisors. Advisory input com-
es from the Mission Viejo
Municipal Advisory Council and
the Saddleback Area Coordinat·
ing Council.
Under the probable develop-
ment model, the ultimate popula·
lion of t he va lley would hit
250.000 p e rs ons. Its current
population is more than 70,000 •
persons. .
According to the study, the ul-
timate population would require
22 commercial centers -16
\neighborhood shopping complex·
es. four larger community cen-
ters and two major regional cen-
ters.
The 22 centers would require
no more than 500 acres of com·
mercially zoned property, ac-
cording to the DMSI study.
An inventory of commercially
zoned properly in the study a rea,
however. s hows that 1,077 acres is
available. double the ultimate
population require ment.
f Particular stress m the stuay 1s
placed on development of re-
gional sboppmg centers.
The report s aid. ·-. .. it is seen
that five separate locations along
the freeway show concentrations
of commercial which aspire to be
r egional centers according to
Jand allocated.
··Normally. regional centers
are located with a separation of
at feast fi ve miles. The typical
distance between the concentra·
lions noted he re is one mile." the
ORANGE COAST se
DAILY PILOT
1 ., .. Or•nQt (Ott\I O•t•y ·Pilot. w1tnw"4cn '' <~ .. b4~d t~ N•W\· P,-t\\, i~ publhtwd by the Or•neJr
C.O.or.1 P\lbf"h1nq Comp•ny Stp•r111fPf'dlhon\ •rt • PYb""'~ Mond•v thro"Q"' rr1day '°' Co\tA ~w. Nt'wOOf't S.Mh. Hwn l1flflQ10t'I &tt.t<.h ,oun
••·n V•lh y ''"'"f-SaO,,ltbaCk V•ll•V •nd LAQ\f,,,_ t:f.P4" h So~h C.Oa\t A )>t111•9I~ ff'9t~I
td•tlon fs c>u~hhf'O Saturd•'t\ M\d S....Odn. TM
prlMipal publi\"•"0 ptAnt ,\ l't JOO ~tot S.y • Strrr-t, (0\11 M t \t1, C•l1form• 91616,
Robert N. Weed
Pr~\11Mnt and Pubh\nllr
Jack R. Curley
'Vier Prt">•Otnt •.-.d GotN"•' M.tn.t .. •
Thomas K eevil
Ed•tor
Thomae; A Murphme
M.tn•olnq Ln,1nr
Charl1>s H Loos R1c"'1rd P. Nall
_., , •t •"' M4f\•Q•f\I' Editor'
Saddleback Valley Office H101 l • "-' Ro.., at S•" O•~oo ,.,_ ..
Other' Offices
(t. ft1 A/If> • llOW•\I E\4v Strf'lft
t.., .,...oort I•• flfrt ))JJ Nrw~ eovt.•••d • ..,.,,,11q1~ OUtll 1/1/l ~.OC" lloul•V•trd
W>OuM n .. , 11 II••(,~,.,,..,,. 54rf'O't
Telephone (714) 642-4321
Clauitled Adver1lsl"11 M2·S67t
!wocldl•lw<-V•llO M•W'I ()Ito<•
Sll-6)10 ........ ~o.-111t
4H-o630
'opyr11nt "" O••"tt C...••f """'""'"' C.on\,,._,r Mll n••J 0~''" 1llw•,.1 .. .-. f(lll0<1.ol
m•U•f or •d••f hM.,,.f'lh Mt•'" m•y .. •••••dutel "'''"""' •He••• perlft.10 1•11 11 .~ ..... -· l.<t•-tl•U "°"~ •••J .. <-Kt• Meu, ~ ... -~·-•WCOolN,.,g,.~, ..,....,,.~ aomon1111r,M11tt.,....,, .. ,..11°"'Nt0 ....... ,. ..
report stated. ·blighted, substandard areas."
Concern also is expressed· in ~The only circumstance that
the report over development of a ay alter that outcome, Moore
department store and specialty said, is a realization by owners of
s hops center on the so-called1f commercial property that
·•golden triangle" bordered b there's too m uch commercial
the San Diego, Santa Ana an and that some of the property
L_aguna freeways. should be rezoned for other uses.
Laguna Hills .Mall, a develop-Moore and Tso agree that the
ment of major department stores likelihood of this occurring today
and specialty s hops, is ·iu.c;t. ~ '''"" is remote.
miles down the freewa~. Said Tso, "Yes, there are ways
It is the freeway itself that has to reduce it, but it takes a lot of
contributed to the overabun-convincing argument on the part
dance of commercial zoning, of the pla nners to convince the
said Jim Tso, a senior planner board of supervisors to rolJ back
with the county Environmental the commercial. You're telling a
Management Agency. guy to cul back on the profit of his
Historically, it has been com-investment. Thal is not a popular
mon practice for investors to thing for a politician to do."
purchase property along m ajor Moore was m ore blunt. He said
arterials like the freeway, since comm ercial property owners are
commercial development, taken interested in building today and
over the Jong run, can generate making a profit. "They don't
the most profit, Tso said. think about the future."
· Access ii; critical lo the s uccess He complained that the county
of any commercial development. planners' attempts to change the
The San Diego Freeway provides commercial zoning allocation in
that link, Tso explained. the Saddleback Valley are in·
Land along the freeway w as terpreted ·as "anti-commel'cial''
zoned long before the county en· attacks by the landowners. He
tered its general planning pro· denies this is the case.
gram. Had the general planning While holding little hope that
program preceded the zoning ap-the existing zoning picture in the
plications, things might have valley will change, the planners
gone quite diffe r ently in t he noted that firms designing new
valley, Tsosaid. planned communities in the area
''But what we're seeing in the are sensitive to the commercial
Saddlcback Valley is_ very stan-zoning situation.
dard across tke country," said T he Moulton Ranch General
D~v!d Moore, county zoning ad-Plan, for example, slates, "It
mm1strator. was recognized early in the plan-
.. For example, the city of Los ning process that there is an un-
Angeles once did a study that realistic amount of Jand allocat-
showed the commercial zoning ed or existing in commerciaJ
along Olympic Boulevard could along the San Diego Freeway
s upport a population of 20 and surrounding communities.
millioR, ".Moore said. Because of this, commercial uses
Moore claimed that as lime have been held down within the
proceeds.theeffectsoftheover: MRGP and would4be used
zoning will be felt more and more primarily by M RGP res.idents."
within theSaddleback Valley. Similar statements are made
"What happens when all the in planning documents for the
comme r cia l areas a re de-Glenn Ranch, Rancho Los Alisos
v e 1 o Pe d ? ' ' M o o r e ask ed and Rancho Serrano in the El
rhetorically. "We'll end up with Toroarea.
CUSD Vandalism
lncTea,ses $7,481
By ANNE COOPER
OftlM D•llr .. li.tSUff
"We are learning fi rst hand
that vandalism is not confined to
ghetto communities," says Joe
Wimer , dir ector of ad ·
minislralive ser vices for the
Capistra no Unified School Dis-
trict.
PACT ..•
oWner of an Anaheim shopping
center with Frank Greinke, the
district's oil supplier and trustee
atSad~leback College.
Zogg said he had been assured
by the Orange County Counsel's
office that the investment liaison
did not constJtut.e a conflict. of in·
terest.
But trustees maintained that to
them, the partnership was in-.
dilcreet, if not illegal.
Throughout the transition to
the new board, a sore point has
been t.hat the old board gave
~ a ,four-year contract ex·
ten11on -through 1978 -last
December.
Thi• placed the new board in
the predicament or havin~ to buy
outZoi1'1 contract iHt wished to
replact him.
The boara 11 expected to an-
DOWlce • buyout •jJl'eement of
"5,000 tonleht.
"We are also finding," he says,
"that vandalism isn't limited to
kids."
Vandalism bas cost the
Capistrano school district more
than $14,000 since July 1, 1974,
Wimer reports. That is up from
$7,481 the previous fiscal year .
Actual damage done amounted
to $7,867 last year and $19,303 this'
year, be says. Res titution
amounting to $386 was collected
in 1973-74, and $4,650 has been ap·
plied for this year, bringing down
total costs to the district.
Most restitution comes from
parents of children responsible
for damage to district property.
"It is importa.nl for parents to
realize that they will be held lia·
ble for damage their children
cau se to school property,"
Wimer stresses. "If they know
this , they may emphasize
responsibility to the community
more at home."
Some restitution comes from
the vandals themselves -adults
who have •tolen school property.
Theft moet often occurs, Wimer
Hys, on sites where new schools
are being built. Homeowners
h ave bee n known to help
themselves td sprinkler heads
and lumber at taxpayers' ex·
pense. he reports. .
Hal Mason, d irector of ClJCal
services for the Oranse C.OU.nty
o.p.artmenl of Ed~attcln, aims
with Wimer. "Klda often .et the
blame tor lhing1 they don t do,•·
be 1aya. ••cnme 11 on the upew-
ine aenerally in Orang County.
Vandalism is not keeping pace
with over all crt me fil'Jl't'S.' •
E'ro•PageAl
PROTEST
Valley doughnut shop, who asked
not to be identified, said the pro·
liferation of shopping center after
shopping center "is bound to hurt
somebody.•• ~ .
In addition to San Juan
Capistrano, the train i s
scheduled to stop in San Diego,
Los Angeles and Anaheim. No
specific dates were given for the
S~Ju~nstop.
Weathers said it will carry the
original Declaration of Indepen-
dence and the origin al U.S.
Constitution, a car filled with
Lincoln memorabilia, a nd
several other historical docu· "We have a duplication of
shops. While I'm not afraid of
competition, I wonder ... ," he
said.
men ts. · oaur Piiot Staff ,......
"If the shops hold up, they help
open up jobs. They provide more
variety. But there's only so much
variety in dopuls," the baker
added.
Those admitted will view the
exhibits from a moving sidewalk
constructed inside the train.
San Juan Capistrano applied
.for a Freedom Train stop.
because it also will be celebrat·
ing its 200th birthday in 1976.
GUil TY OF MURDERS
Steven Craig Hurd
f'rom Page A I
HURD ... Only one m erchant contacted
during a r a ndom s urvey ex-
pressed a view different from the
others. Mayor Weathers noted that one
of the Freedom Train obligations
-that of providing housing for
the train's staff of 125 -had
already been solved by putting
the crew up in a local motel.
jury now finds that he was sane at
the time of the two killings.
"Banks and supermarkets are
opening down here. They'r e con-
trolled by s mart people," said
John We lch, owner of Lake
Forest Gourmet Me ats, 23401
Muirlands Blvd., El Toro.
Deputy Dist rict ACttorncy
Frank Briseno declined (bask for
the death penalty on either con-
viction when he made his final
argument to the jury.
"People who say there's too
much comm e rcial are afraid.
They don't like progress. My
business is outstanding.". PICKET. • •
Thieves Get $250
Steaks at Hilton
the budget.
It ls estimated that $100,000
will have to be cut from the
education spending for each per-
cent increase the teachers are
given. Initial demands were for a
20 percent increase.
t Burglars who entered\'the
kitchen area after the restatlrant
had closed fo r the night ca11"ied
off steaks valued at $250 from the
Hilton Inn, Laguna Hills, dunpg
the weekend, Orange Co~nty
Sheriff's officers reported today.
R ed Ship Docks
SAN JUAN (UPI> -A Soviet
hydrofoil took refuge in a Puerto
Rican port lo escape a storm and
was forced t o remain over the
weekend, the U .S. Coast Guard
said Sunday. Police in Mayaguez
maintained a cordon around the
pier where the 100-foot hydrofoil,
Kometa, was docked.
District officials have forecast
an 82-cent tax rate increase un-
der the preliminary budget, an
increase which would cost the
owner of a $40,000 home $132
more in school taxes next year.
Deputies said witnesses told
them they saw two men leaving
t he hotel at high s peed in a yellow
jeep shortly after the choice cuts
of meat were taken from a
walkin freezer.
· .. ·~·, :--~ j ~··. • .. /
~· .. "' . . Manners gives you
up to a s1,soo tax
deduction this year •••
... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU
CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND
AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" THE INDIVIDUAL BE-
TIREMENT ACCOUNT.
Mariners Individual Ret irement
Account is a personal tax-sheltered
retirement plan. "IRA" was devel-
, oped by . Congress to give you an
effective way to build your own ret ire-
ment fund.
You can save as much as $1500 or
15°io of your wages, whichever is less,
and your savings will be a tax deduc-
t ion during your working years. If
your spouse works, your combined
tax-sheltered savings can be as much
as $3000 per year.
Come In to Mariners and start your
own Individual Retirement Account.
You'll be saving tax dollars now and
building a much brlgh(er future. For
more Information, come in or call any
one o.f our convenient locations.
HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR MONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS
.. IRA ·· ACCOUNT. lndlv1dual Retiremtfnl Accounts are presently
elffltng 1'~ % per yHr when pleclfd 1n a 1 yHr ~rt1l1c11rt> Your
ennuel yleld 11 mcrHSltd to a tJ19 8 06°;, w an 1nrartst 1s edded ro
Iha 9"ount bel•nce end wmpound~ daily With • maximum
individual contribution of S r!>OO e1tch year, tiere·s flow your
montty will grow'
WITH TA)( WITHOUT EX TA A
SHELTEAEO TAX MONEY
IAA SHEi.TEAED FROM TAX
AFTEl'I PLAN PLAN DEFERRAL
5yrs. s 9,510 6~730 s 2,780
10 yrs. 23 ,540 15,750 7,79Q
20 yrs. 74.640 65,6-'Q 30,560
30 yrs. 185,550 95,030 90,520
• AbOv• llgvrea are based on ~·~ lncoml bt<'Ck" Feoc,.r
r99ul~llons raqulre tubstant1a l 'pen•ll•l'S tor •atly w1thdr•wa1s
lrom cetllflcate .ooounts
Mariners Savino .~ . • @-·~ ~I.Dan Association.
leetlffch
..
N•w,.tt ~ .... _.,, leec1'
(Molft Office) (8oyald• Center)
Lf11V"e le4Kh
310 Glenn•yr• St.
(11 4) 49'·1~
(OPfNINO 500N)
(lel1vr• WCHld)
l,.20hal leoch llvd.
(213) 59fl·7616
hverly Hiiia lo• AngelH
396 So. 9everly Or (Opp.Mt Sinol Ho•pltol)
IS 1 S W•tt,lilf Or. 1.02A hyt~ Ot:
(714) ,.., • .cJO() (11 4) M 2 4000
r
(213) 5'3·~ lt141 etver1y ll lvd.
(213) t>S7 .fl.f l
7
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7
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I
. VOL. 68, N0 .. 167, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
'• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1975
Today's ~loslllg
N.Y.Stoeks
TEN CENTS
~resident . :Approved All . ·cIA Action
....,
WASHINGTbN {UPI) -All
1 major CIA activjties have bad
presidential approval, according
to both Vice President Nelson
Rockefeller and Sen.· Barry
Goldwater, CR-Ariz.). _ ·
:·
But just what those activities
were is still a big mystery in
Washington and still provoking
debate.
· Meanwhile, a key Rules Com-
mittee member said today be
'Flood'
Cosm
Looming ·
Beginning in July, the cost of
housing id Irvine will rise by $87
a year, the cost of flood insurance
under a new federal program.
Irvine is one of several cities in
Orange County's flood plain the
Army Corps of Engineers
believes would be partially inun-
dated in a lOO·year flood.
Under the flood insurance pro-·
gram, all cities in flood hazard
areas must join the program. In
those that do not, mortgage
money will not be loaned by
banks after July 1, according to
planner Mike Hal'ris.
However, some banks already
have refused to loan money for
Irvine mortgages and home im·
provement loans pending the
city's joining the program. ·
The city council has decided to
join it, despite disa·greement
with the federal government on
how much of Irvine is iri the
hazard area. Current official
maps put the whole city in the
flood zone. ·
City planners have protested
that new studies show a much
smaller area of the city in the
f lood plain. However, Barris
·~aid, while the federal govem·
ment bas accepted the smaller
area as accqrate, it will be Sep-
tem ber before t he maps are
chapged.
Meanwhile, he said, all loans
on Irvine homes will be subject to
the $87 a year charge for fiood in·
surance. After the maps are
changed, only the homes in the
flood area will have to have in·
(See FLOOD, Page A2)
will PtOPose abolishing a special
Hou.se CIA Jnvettipling commit-
tee because it has been tom by
dissension. •
Rep. B.F. Sisk, <DCalif.), said
he would introduee the resolution
to disband the House Select Com·
mittee on Intelligence because of
a move by five of the commit-
tee's seven Democrats forcing
the resignation of the ·chairman,
Rep. Lucien Nedzi, (l)..Mich.>.
.
Rockefeller, whose com·
mission report on the CIA was re-
leased last week, said Sund~
one reason the panel did not de·
velop conclusive evidence on al-
leged CIA foreign assassination
plots was b~cause so many
persons implicated in them are
dead.
He hinted his commission may
have obtained information Presi·
dent Kennedy and his brother,
laflhbr'to Lakers . ' Kareem AbduL-Jabbar, star center of the Milwaukee
Bucks, will be traded today to the Los, Angeles Lakers
for center Elmore Smith, guard Brian Winters and the Lakers' two top draft choices -forward Dave Meyers
of UCLA and guard Junior Bridgeman of Louisville.
Details on Page; B4 today.
Extension to Begin
Miche/,son Drive Construction Scheduled
If there are no snags in fund·
ing, construction of the recently
approved Michelson Drive ex·
tension from the Irvine In-'
dustrial Complex to ·university
Park should begin next spring,
Irvine Public Works Director
Brent Muchow said today.
Redesign of the bridge over
San Diego Creek from the
originally planned four lanes to
the two lanes approved by the ci·
ty council will take too long for
the project to be started this
year, he said.
Construction in flood control
channels can take place only
between April 15 and Nov .. 15,
said Muchow.
The size of the mile stretch of
road was trimmed from four
Janes to two by the city council
after University Park residents
protested that the road would br·
ing industrial traffic \hrough
their area.
The delay could jeopardize
funding for the San Diego Creek
bridge, set for $1.2 million in
county financing, Muchow said.
A state commission, he said, is
reviewing how gas tax money -
the source of the bridge-building
funds -is dispersed.
Among the commission's in-
itial findings is t hat Orail2e and
LOs Angeles counties are receiv·
ing the bulk of the money while
many other areas do-not receive
enough to maintain their existing
county road systems.
A change in the financing
system may be made in the next
year, potentially drying up the
funds for the bridge, said
Muchow.
Muchow said be also is at·
tempting to find funds to widen
on·ramps to the San Diego ·
Fr eeway at Jamboree
.Boulevard, a step proposed as a
way to keep traffic from follow·
ing the Michelson extension to the
Culver Drive on-ramps near
University Park.
Shuttle Bus to Cut
Thumbing Students
In an attempt to cut down the
number or University High
School students hitchhiking, a
shuttle bus in operatidn on runs
between the high school and the
SELF school in the Irvine In·
dustrial Complex will start mak-
ing an extra stop next fall.
A hitchhiking task force at the
high school has determined that
students thumbing rides to Carl's
Jr. accounts for a large share Of
the noon and after-school
hitching.
The task force, chaired by high
school Activities Director Lance
Otis, has recommended that the
shuttle bus, which makes trips at
20·minute intervals from the r
SELF school to University High,
make an intermediate stop at
Carl's.
The bus service is run to take
SELF students to classes at
University High that are un·
available at the SELF school.
The task force hopes the f ~ee
transit service will reduce the
number of hitchhiking students. _
former attorney general Robert
Kennedy, were involved in the al-
leged plots but he emphasized
none of the secret information
was strong enough to support
conclusions of guilt.
Goldwater, a member of the
Senate ·committee ·investigating
the CIA, backed up Rockefeller
by saying no major CIA action,
such as an assassination, "would
bave taken place without the i>"e-
sident knowing about it."
He also said Sunday he had
seen no evic\ence any CIA as·
sassination plots were ever at·
tempted but that he "wouldn't be
surprised" if the White House
considered killing Cuban· pre·
rnier Fidel Castro.
Time magazine reported Sun·
day the CI/\ plotted in 1960 to kill
Castro by supplying him with
poisoned cigars, but never car·
ried out the plan because there
was no assurance Castro would
notgivethe cigars to other people.
ple.
. The Rockefeller Commission
repqrt was to be given officially
today to the Senate Investigating
Committee, which Wednesday
will hear from CIA Director
William Colby testifying under
tight security about the 1963 as·
(See CIA, Page A2)
' Hurd ConVicted
Of Two Murders
By TOM BARLEY
OfUM O.lly ,.lletStMf
Steven Craig Hurd was found
guilty of two murders.today by
an Orange County Superior Court
jurf which must now determine
if the bushy·haired deferidant
was sane when he participated in
two killings within a 24·hpur
period.
The j ury ended two days of de·
liberation by ruling that Hurd,
25, was guilty of first degree
murder in the slayings five years
ago of Mission Viejo teacher
Florence Nancy Brown and
service station attendant Jerry
Wayne Carlin. ·
Nine ·Die
'-.
In Crash
Of Bus
From Wire Senices ·
A buts carrying a part~of elder·
ly vacationers collided headlong
with a runaway tractor-trailer
truck on a m ain highway 55 miles
south of Glasgow, Scotland to··
day.
Police said nine passengers
were killed. Another 33 were
hospitalized, 2,2 of them in
serious condition.
Eyewitnesses said a truck tire
blew out and that the vehicle-ran
out of cont rol •on a straight
stretch of road and ploughed
headlong int-0 the bus.
It was the seCOJ\d bus accident
involving eld~rly . persons in
Europe in two days . Sunday, a
tour bus carrying pensioners
careened down a mountain road
in Villach, Austria, killing 21
persons and injuring 23.
It was Austria's worst bus dis·
aster , and authorities said brake
failure was the cause.
Police said smoke was seen
coming from the brakes as the
Austrian bus started down
7,106-foot Mt. Dobratsch. One
survivor said bus driver Josef
·namsbacher yelled "Jump off -
the brakes are failing!" before
the bus hurtled over an embank·
ment and tumbled 120 feet into a
CSee CRASH, Page A2)
AD IN PILOT
SOLD TRAILER
"The trailer sold because of
the ad in the Pilot. There were
Jots of calls as a resultofthead."
That's the advertising success
experienced by the Costa Mesa
woman who placed this ad in the
Daily Pilot:
22' TRAVEL trlr, com
pletely self ·cont, sips 4.
$1500. XXX·XXXX
If fOU have campin'g "equip·
went tQ sell, call 642·5678. i::ut a .
few words to work for you .
In the Daily Pilot.
Hurd was with convicted killer
Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse,
now 21, on June 2, 1970, when
Hulse used a roofer's ax to chop
to death Carlin, 21, in the
restroom of his service station.
It was alleged in Hurd's trial
that he repeatedly stabbed Mrs.
Brown, 31, of El Toro to death in
an Irvine orange grove the next
day after the teacher was
dragged from herstation wagon
by ~le gang or drug-using drifters
led by Hurd.
Opening statements in the sani·
ty hearing now faced by Hurd will
be delivered later today in Judge
Frank Domenichini'scourtroom.
·Shar k Bites
~anon Leg
FOLEY, Ala. (UPI) -A
·shark Sunday attacked a
27-year·old man five miles
off the Gui£ Coast, but he
escaped with only 35 teeth
marks on his left leg •
William Wayne Daniels
of Bay Minette, Ala., was
listed in satisfacto17-eondi·
· tion today at a hospital.
Authorities said Daniels
was swimming near his
boat in about 15 feet of
water when the shark at·
tacked. His wife and
daughter were in the boat.
By batting at and scaring
the shark, Daniels was
able to break loose and
swim back to his boat. .
Saddleback
Trus tees E ye
P ay D emands
Trustees of the Saddleback
Community College District will
meet in executive session tonight
to discuss salary demands by the
district's 180 t eachers and
classified e mployes.
The secret deliberations are
scheduled toward the end of a
public business m eeting set for
7:30 in the campus library.
Although the salary increase
requests have not been made
public, a s pokes man for the col·
lege indicated both groups are
asking for increases of 18 per-
cent.
Action on the wage prOl><>sal is
unlikely tonight.
Purpose or the executive
session is to discuss the demands
with college business manager
Roy Barletta who was appointed
by the trustees as negotiator in
May.
Saddleback trustees have his·
.torically granted wage increases
only in percentages matching the
government's official cost of liv·
ingindex.
Lawyers for both -sides have
scheduled psychiatrists as wit·
nesses and defense attorney
William Gamble hopes to put
Hurd on the stand as his final wit-
ness.
Hurd accepted the two verdicts
today with no display of emotion.
He is under daily sedation follow·
ing a California Supreme Court
ruling last month that he could be
tried on the murder charges pro-
vided he is tranquilized at all
phases of the trial.
Lawyers for. both sides agree
that Hurd is only capable of tell·
ing the truth or understanding
(See HURD, Page A2)
Court Ends
Fixed Fee
Schedules
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
Supreme Court struck down•
minimum legal-fee sch.edules for
real estate transactions today in
an 8 to 0 decision which probably
also spells the end of fixed fees
for other legal services.
The court ruled that minimum
fee schedules established by
state or local bar associations
violate federal antitrust law
whenever the fees affect in-
terstate commerce.
The decision was a victory for
a Virginia couple. Lewis H. and
Ruth Goldfarb. which challenged
the Fairfax County Bar Associa·
lion's fixed minimum fee for
legal work required when they
bought a home.
It also was a victory for the
Justice Department. whlth has
waged a long-standing battle
against fee schedules established
by profession al associations. The
department s upported the
Goldfarbs in their laws.it.
In other action. the~urt ·
-Ruled 7 to 2 that slates may
not constitutionally prohibit the
advertising of aborl!ion services.
The court said such advertising
is protected by the constitutional
guarantee of freedom o( the
press.
. -Upheld a robbery and as -
sault conviction against Jack
Roland Murphy, the celebrated
Miami, Fla .. jewel thief who is
the central figure in the motion
picture "Live A LittJe, Steal A
Lot. ..
-Agreed to r-evi ew a ruling of
the U.S. court of Appeals in
. Washington that the Federal
Power Commission may not give
natural.gas producers built-in
authority to shut off the gas supp·
ly of interstate pipelines when
their contracts expire.
<See FEES, PageA2)
or~:a ~·s•
. 1t'~at•er Lion Safari
Sign to Stay?
Lion Country Safari of Irvine·
may get to keep its new jumbo
gypsum hillside sign that tells
the world in 32·1oot letters that
the wildlife park is snapping·
back at its current economic
bard times.
Irvine
) .
Stadium Faces Snag
Mostly cloudy through
Tuesday but partial clear·
ing in the afternoon inland
portions. Little change in
temperature. Highs from
mid·60s at beaches to near
70inland.
The park is expected to ap\)lY
Within the next week for a sign
\lariance allowed under the clty's
pew sign ordinance, according to
Planning Director Claudette
Donatella.
lf the plannlog commlnioo •P·
proves, the big wbi1e 16ltors pro.
'claiming ''Lion Country" wiU
tttay, she said. .
Without the sign, fark offldal11 ~tend., potentia customera
eannot find Lion Country.
Unless the Irvine City Council
decides lo go ahead with a pro-
posed stadium at the new Irvine
High School Community Park
aile, the city financial situation wm preclude building Q stadium
for at. least two yean, according
to Community Servlces Director
Paul Brady.
Thee cl&.y councn bas elected_ to
punue the blah school &tadium
alW'natlve·aner ofCldalJy shelv·
in& a three·Wa~ venture with
Jrvfne schools and UC Irvine to
build a 1tadium at UCI.
But the UCI stadium proposal
bas surfaced again, with .UC re-
gents approving a proposed
agreement with the city and
schools to build the $308,000 in
llgbUns. seating, scoreboard and
public address system intended
to make a stadium of UCJ's
athletic fie.Id.
City., schools and UCI
_.representatives huddled .Friday
to discus. whether talks OQ a
joint stadium at UCI may be re·
opened. ·
Chances afe.alim, laid Brad)'.
The tity's only source of
fi,nancing for an athletic f.acillty,
he said, are park bond funds.
Those funds may be used only at
city parks and could not be used
for improvements at UCI, be
aald. ·
Following Friday's meeting,
dty and aebools representatives
8;lned lo consider the matter
qalo arter receiving a.copy to-
~ay ot the l',.\fised stadium pro-
posal. •
Howevef>i Brady added, 0 oone
of us are wedded to tbe J.rvlne Blah School atadlum ... " .
1
Another possibility, he said,
would be a joint venture with
Saddleback Community College
District, which is presenUy seek-
ing a second college site in
Irvine.
A ·stadium at 'the Irvine Higb
site has been.criticized as inton-
"enlent to nearby restdenta due
to the noise and tr-attit that would
accompany gamH.
However, that is the only
alt~mative presenUy under con-
sideration that could be ready for
games by the fall of 1976. due t.o
the tight city financial situaUon.
INSIDE TODA V
Thirteen persons have been
injured in a disturbance at a
women's correction cenler in
Norlh Carolina. Story. Page
B6.
All •• •• .... •• ... , .,
AU
&II
&4 A4
•
...
· /IJ O~IL Y PILOT
Lady Luca~ Tails
.
Says Earl Tried to Strangk Her·
LONDON (AP ! -L a d y
Veronica Lu can, wife of the miss·
ing British earl who is sought in
the murder or the family nanny,
8aid for the first time today he
bad tried to strangle her on the
night of the murder.
She told a tense inquest at Lon·
don's Westmins ter Coroner's
Court> "He thrust two gloved
fingers down m y throat and we
:>tarted l o fig ht. During the
eourse of it he attempted lo
strangle me from in front."
The inque s t was hearing
evidence on the death of the
Lucan Camily's nanny, 29-year-
old Sandra Rivett, who was bat-
tered to Heath in the Belgravia
home of the Countess of Lucan
last Nov. 7. Lady Lucan, 37, wa~
also badly injured by the nanny's
assailant on that day.
Lady Lucan told the Daily Ex·
press, ''I shall s imply tell the
court w hat h a ppened. and if
asked I shall reveal the name of
the man who attacked me -the
man who sa t on the stairs af·
terwards. cried on my shoulder
and told me had killed Sandra."
The •countt•ss s aid she wai ted
until the man calmed down and
then r an to a nearby pub for help,
s treaming blood and c rying
··murd er.'' M iss Ri ve t t 's
blud.fleoned body I aler "as found
wrapped in a l'anvas s ack in the
basem e nt of the three-story
house.
S om e d t't e ct i vcs h av e
theorized t hat t h<.· murde rer
~nted to kill the countess and
Teen Injured
As Car Rams
Into Mailbox
An Irvine teenager is recover·
mg today from accident injuries
s uffered S unday onl y a fev.
seconds after h'C dropped off a pal
at his home following an evenfog
out on the tow n. police said.
Alan J . Duran. 17. of 14541
llighcresl C'1r cle, reportedly
turned around in the car to see if
Steve Lewis. 16. of 14801 Don.
easter Road. had gotten into hi s
house all rig ht.
Officer M 1chael White s aid
Duran ·s dist raction caused him
to tum the steering wheel and he
veered o(( the road into a brick
mailbox fixture at the home ol
John K. Smith, 14781 Doncaster
Road.
The youth staggered back to
his friend's house, bleeding from
a head lacer ation and hi s nose
and was taken to Tustin Com-
munity Hos pital, then the El
Toro MCAS d is pe nsa r y fo r
emergency treatment.
Aide Denies
~
CIA Report
C HI C AG O CL'PI >
Congr essiona l leaders have been
told the CIA v. as involved in the
early stages of a plot to as-
sassinate the late Gen. Cha rles de
Gaulle. the Chicago Tribune re-
ported Sunday.
ln another story. the newspaper
r eported a CIA li a ison man gave
Cong re ssi~n a l le aders pre-
liminar y in formation that the
FBI had ad vi sed two aides to the
Jate president J ohn Kennedy to
withhold information concerning
Kennedy's assassination. One of
the two aides ha s denied the story.
The infor m <1 t1on dealt with the
_location of the gunfire directed at
·Kennedy and was not presented to
'the Warren Com m ission which in-
! vestigated the assas~mation. the
s tory said.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Rober\ N WPed
Pr,.\tdf"n\ •nd PYbl•\I •,
J ack R. Curlf'y
V•t•• p,,.,,Clft'nt •"" CrUH"'•I MiiM~r
Thomas Kecvit
fOllO•
•, Thomas A M urphine
•• Miln~11ino Editor '• ~: Charles H. Loo., Richard P. N1111
A1o\.•\l41nl '"'°""'',l'f'O (dlilor\
Otlice•.
t.MI• '*'" J>O W•• I S.y Slro•t ..... _, 8-•<" lJJl Nt •-1 8oulrwMd
'-"ll"M h«" 1 ... "~""'~·· '"'' 1 -•I'll.,, .. •<" 111H &."'" l!ovv•••d ~ .. N<~Y•ll•t H10l t•P•1SI°"° el S,.n Ott1t0 f,H••Y
Tetepftorw C7 14l M2-4J2t
CSnsHIH Adverllsinq 642·S671
.. ..,..._, Y•ll•v ~·"""' r111t •
Sl1•6l10
,,...,. WO\ c.1 ... ,..,.
4tf.0630
got the governess by mistake.
The 40•year-old earl vanished u
few hours afte r the killing .
Scotland Yard, after interview·
ing the ce1.mtess, issued a war·
rant for his arrest !or murder
and for the attack on his wife. Ile
has never bee n traced despite re-
ports that he was seen in France,·
Australia, South Africa and Latin
America.
Most Scotland Yard men say
they believ~ Lord Lucan com·
milled suicide in some remote
part of Brit ain. But some senior
investiga tors think he is still
a live and b e ing hidde n by
friends , here or overseas.
A Missing Faee
Dally Pllol Sl•ll PllOlo'
GUil TY OF MURDERS
Steven Craig Hurd
f'rom Page A J
HURD ...
testimony while he is under the
supervised sedation .
He faces life in state prison on
each of the two convictions if the
j ury now finds tha t he was SQne at
the time ofthe two killings.
Deputy Distri ct Attorney
Frank Briseno declined to ask for
thetdeath pena lty on either con-
'(iction when he made his final
argurnentto the jury.
Truck Stolen,
Set on Fire
Irvine police are probing the
theft and stripping of a Santa
Ana serviceman's 1975 compact
pickup truck which was set afire
and destroyed in an orange grove
Sunday.
Daniel Clark, a Marine. and his
wife, Chery l. apparently didn't
yet know the little truck had been
stolen.
Orange County Proba tion Of·
fleer Frank C. Wrightdlscovered
the btaiing vehicle parked at the
dead ald or Sand Ca nyon Avenue
at the San Die10 Freeway before
dawn and called author1tl cs.
Officer Pat Rodgtrs said it ap·
peared the vehicle had be<'n de·
liberately torched in an effort to
destroy any evfdence that might
have connected tho perpetratoT
to tbe-grand-theft.
(
Stephen Smith of
Garden Grove was not
among his fellow
graduates at Stanford
University Sunday. He
and another student,
Carrie Jane Hunter of
Atherton, are being
held · captive by re·
volutlonarles rn
Tanzania.
"They are very
much In our
thoughts," said Stan-
t or d P r e s i d e n t ·
Richard Lyman. in
opening remarks at
the university's com-
men cement ex-
ercises.
(JPJ Tel ephoto
Fro•PageAJ
CRASHES •••
rocky ravine.
The passengers were oJd-age
pensioners from Carinthia pro·
vince. Rams bache r , father of
four, was among the dead.
The roof of the bus was torn off
and m a ny of the passengers were
killed when they we re thrown-out
of the vehicle. Several survivors
IJ pinned bene ath the wreckage
were freed only a fter a crane was
brought in to pull the debris off
them. ,
.. It was dreadful," said Helmut
Neumueller , who witnessed the
cr ash. "The roof of the bus was
torn off. The dead were scattered
over a wide are a . And the inj ured
Jay a mong them crying for aid."
Dr. Brigitte Norvath, a physi-
cian, said some of the dead had
been thrown from the bus and
were ha nging in trees lining the
pr.ccipice. She said nine dead
wrrc found under the bus.
Today's accident occurred at
Coat esg ate on a four-lane
highway with a central strip
separating the north and south-
bound roa ds."
FrontP~AJ
FEES.;.
Decli ned to review a Ken·
lucky family's claim that its pro·
pcrty d ghts wer e violated when
its land was strip mined without
the family's consent. The family
does not own the mineral rights
to the la nd in question. ......._,_
Wnting for the court in the
legal-fees ca se. Chief Justice
Warren E . Burge r said, "In
ter ms of restraining competition
and harming consumers ... the
price-fixing activities found here
are unusually damaging."
He noted that the Gold farbs
could not buy a hom e without ::i ti·
lie examination and that only a
luwyer li censed in Virginia could
p e r form th e w ork. s o th e
Goldfarbs .. could not turn to
1 fl lte rn alive so urces for t he
ncces~a ry se rvice."
Virginia lawyers "were prac·
u cing under the constraint of the
fee schedule." he continued.
The fee schedule issued by the
c ount y b a r associ a tion
established "a fixed, rigid price
floor" and the schedule "was en·
forced through the prospect of
professiona l discipline from the
state bar a nd the desire of at·
lorney& to comply with an-
nounced professiona l norms,"
Burger said.
''These factors coalesced to
create a pricing system that con·
sumers could not r ealistically
escape." Burger wrote. "On~his
record the ba r association's ac-
tivities constitute a classic ti·
lustration of price· fixing."
Front Page A J
FLOOD ...
surance.
Problems with loans to· date
have bee n reported only on re·
sales, said H arris. The Irvine
Company reports no financing
problems on its new homes.
A lOO·year flood, accordina to
county Environmental Mana&e·
ment AJency Assist8Dt Dlrettot
Carl Nelson, is a, major fiood with
a statistical probability 0( h•P·
penlna once a century.
Tbe lut m ajor flood that would
flt Ule lOO·year nood criteria OC·
curred in 1862, he saJd. .
t
..
U .. ITtl.,._..
Profunw Pardoned
J~hn Profumo, m~de a Commander of the British Em·
p1re by Queen Elizabe.th~for his work among London's
poor. gets congratulations from barrow boys in street
market toda}'.. ~rofumo resigned in 1963 as war minister
over the Chnstme Keeler party girl scandal. See story
Page BG. '
Art Museum
German
I
President
•
Visits U.S.
By HELEN THOMAS
WASHING'J'ON (UPI> -
President Ford welcomed West
Ge.rman .Preai~ent Walter Scheel
today with a strong reafflrma·
tion of the United States' com·
mitme nt to def end Western
Europe.
In a sunbathed welcoming
ceremony on the White House
south lawn with full mUitaTY
honors, Ford told Scheel the
United States ls "strongly com·
mitted to safeguarding the
freedom of the West.''
"We remain committed to tb'e
freedom and security of Berlin,"
he said, adding that the United
States sees the security of
Western Europe as "a true test of
what is koown as detente."
Sch eel, who arrived b)I
helicopter from Williamsburg,
Va., whe re he and h1s wife spent
the night, was the first presld~nt
. or West Germany to visit the
United States in 17 years and the
second since World War II. 'He
h as visited the United States
several times. however as a
private citizen. '
Ford greeted Scheel while Mrs.
F?rd presented Scheel's wife
with a bouquet of American
Beauty roses.
Both president.a. st~at atten·
tion while the Mliine COrps band
played "Deutschland Uber Al4
lea" and the "Star Spang_led Ban-
ner."
. Given Gra~t,
Seeking Funds
CIA TESTIMONY • • •
Newport Ha rbor Art Museum
trustees are trying to rajse a t
least $5,000 to matcllb federal
gr ant.
The National Endowment for
the Arts has given t.be museum
$5,000 t o s pend orf acquiring
works of art, according to David
Steinme tz. president of the
museum 's Board of Trustees .
Steinmetz s aid the grant and
the matching funds will be used·
t o begin th e museum's own
permanent collection. The only
works now owned by the museum
are 34 pieces of contemporary art
donate d by A vco Financial
Services in 1971.
The acquisi•ion council formed
to spearhead the fund-raising ef-
fort is headed by Mrs. Johann
Jonas and John Martin Shea,
both of Newport Beach.
•
sassination of South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Dinh Diem .
Rockefeller's hint of Kennedy
involvement in assassination
plots resulted in a statement
from two former aides of Robert
Kennedy, who accused the vice
president of ignoring the con-
clusions of his own report or "de-
liberately lying."
Rockefeller said in a broadcast
interview (NBC-TV's Meet the
'Treasure' Found ·
liUNT ING DON, England
(U~.I ) -7\rcheolog_ists and.
Bntish Museum officials report·
~ Sunday the discovery of 25
pieces o{ church silver making ·
up possibly "th'e earliest known
collection of Christian church
plates in the Roman Empire."
The silver, with an estimated
value of $120,000, was turned over to 'county officials for a decision
as to whether it is treasure trove
-thus going to the government
-or whether it will be given to
the finder. .
Press) the commission failed to
cotnplete the assa&Slnation in·
vesligation because it ran out of
time and encountered too many
ditriculties.
"Let's face it," he said, "many
of the people have died who were
allegedly involved and others
were assassinated in this country
tragicaJly."
Asked if he w.as ref erring to the
Kennedys, Rockefeller replied:
"Well, as I sajd, we have no con·
elusive information, but the pre-
sident of the United St.ates and
the attorney general of the Unit·
ed States were both assassinated
tragically in this country.''
He was asked if be meant the
Kenriedys actually were involved
in such plots.
"Well," he said, "I said we had
no evidence on the basis of which
to draw conclusions. I said it was
very difficult to get information
becJM(se we· go back 15 years and
many of the )>eople who were in·
volved in the CIA and in the White
House are no longer living."
• • M~r~~ers gwes you
up to a s1,soo tax
deduction this y~ar. ••
. .. AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU
CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND
AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE-.
TIREMENT ACCOUNT.
M ariners Individual Retirement
Accou nt Is a personal tax-sheltered
retirement J?lan. "IRA" was devel-
oped by Cdngress to give you an
effective way to bu ild your own ret ire-
ment fund.
You can save as much as $1500 or
15% of your wages. whichever is less,
and your savings Wi ll be a tax ,deduc-
tion during your working years. If
your spouse works, your combined
tax-sheltered savings can be as much
as $3000 per year.
Come In to Mariners and start your
own Individual Retirement Account .
You'll be saving tax dollars now and
bulldlng a much brighter future. For
more Information. come In or call any
one of our convenient locations.
HERE 'S HOW FA.ST YOUR MONEY GROWS fN A MARINERS
"IRA·· ACCOUNT. lnd1111dval R•flr•m•nt Aocovnta ere pr.Unify
H rnlng 74• ~. p•r yH r tttll•n pl1c•d In• 8-yev c.rriffute. Your
•nntlfl/ yield Is tncrH t ed·to a big. 8, 06~. wften mtereJI is added 10
th• ~ovnr bel1noe anti compounded dafly W1tll a meJUmvm
1na.11ftJ111/ contr•bullon of srsoo eacll year. ll•re·s h Ow yovr
monty will grow· -WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA
SHELTERED TAX MONEY
IRA SHEL TEAIED FROM TAX
AFTER PLA N P'LAN OIFEAllAL ,
6 yrs. $ 9,510 • 6,730 $ 2,780
10 yrs. 23 .~0 15,750 7,7'¥J
20 yrs. 74,640 65,840 30,560
30 yrs. iM,550 ~.030 90,520
·Above flgu,.• are twlHCI on 2'·~ lncc>fM bfadlet. JedM•I regutallon1 require 1ubttanllal ~lti.t for .. r1y wit r-•••
flom '-rtlllcate eccount1.
~ '"'\Mariners Savi~ ~ and Loan A .. sociatlOn . .
New,.,. leedt New,.,. letlc'h lev•rly Hlllt LM A,...t..
I
" .. • •
(Main Off1tt) (layt1de Center)
ISTS Wt"llltttf Dr. T02A loyt1de Or,
L•9111\e leech·
310 Glenneyre St.
(71A) 49A·7506
(OPENING SOON)
S..lle«h
(lelture World)
13120 S.ol .. och llvd.
(213) Sft.7626
390 So. leverly Dt (Opp. MOlnol liotpltol)
(213) SSS-3000 1747 l•verly llvd.
(213) 6$7-41 Al (714) 6'2·4000 (714) 6A2·A000
,. ,. I
I
7
7
-
VOL..68, NO. 1tr\J SECTIONS, J.f PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A . MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1975
••
To•ay~s Clos~ag
N.Y.Stoek8
TEN CENTS
President Approved· All CIA Action
W ASHlNOTON (UPI) -All
major CIA activities have bad
presJdentlal approval, according
to both Vice President Nelson
Rockefeller and Sen . Barry
Goldwater, (R-Ariz.). ..
But just what those activities
were is still a big mystery in
Washington and still provoking
debate.
· Meanwhile, a key Rules Com-
mittee Jnember said today he
Parents
Support
Board
By KATHY CLANCY
Of .... 0.11\' ~ .. $&Ml
A group of Fountain V~lley
School District parents is start·
ing a "back the school board"
campaign aimed at presenting
their view of last week's teacher
strike and what they believe is a
struggle by teachers to seiu con·
trol of the district.
They will meet at 7~30 tonight
at the home of M ~ Fteddie
Douglass, and those wishing to"
attend m ay phone her at 842-9116
for directions. Her husband, Don,
will be chairman of the new
group.
Trustees Karen Ackley and
.Board President Roger Belgen
are expected to attend to outline
teacher contract proposals and
discuss the impact they could
have if adopted, Mrs. Douglass
said.
.. Teachers are taking control
of the district " said Betty
Rivers, another m ember of the
fledgling group. "We just want to
make sure our kids aren't com-
ing out on the short end of the
stick."
Janet Gasky. another member
• of the group. added ... We are sup-
portive of teaellers. We •ant to
s upport them, but what is haJ>-
pening isn't right ...
They urged parents to go to the
district offices and study teacher
proposals, then to attend
Thursday's 7: 30 p .m . school
board meeting.
Mrs. Gasky said the group also
hopes to halt the recall effort
against Belgen and Trustees
Sheila Meyers and Bill Crane.
Another parent group, beaded
by Fran Johnson, started that ef-
fort, claiming trustees had been
••unresponsive" lo teachers and
parents.
But Mrs. Douglass• group
criticzed teacher conduct during
the three-day walkout and
praised the board. .
They said, for example, and
district officials confirmed, that
about 180 teacher s went to the
homes of Belgen, ~ckley, Crane
and Meyers, demanding to see
them.
Only Mrs. Ackley was at home,
district officials said, and she
was afraid to go outside.
T hey also reportedly conlused
Crane's address and picketed his
neighbor instead.
Christi e Illingworth, a
McDowell School parent, said the
~trike upset her 6-year-old son.
<See PARENTS, Page A2)
will propose abolishing a special
House CIA investigating commit-
tee because· it bas been tom by
dissension.
Rep. B.F. Sisk, (D·Callf.), said
he would introduce the resolution
to disband the Rouse Select Com·
mittee on Intelligence because of
a move by five of the commit· ·
tee's seven Democrats forcing
the resirnation of the chairman,
Rep. Lucien Nedzl, (D-Mich.).
R ockefeller, whose com-
mission report on the CIA was re-
leased last week, said SUnday
one reason the panel did not de-
velop conclusive evidence on al-
leged CIA foreign assassination
plots was because so many
persons implicated in them are
dead.
He hinted his commission may
have obtained information Presi-
dent Kennedy and his brother,
Kareem Abdul~Jabbar, star center of the Milwaukee
Bucks, was traded today to .the Los Angeles Lakers
for center Elmore Smith, guard Brian Winters and the
Lakers' two top draft choices -forward Dave Meyers
of UCLA and guard Junior Bridgeman of Louisville.
Details on Page_ B4 today. ·
Huntingtori Police
Reject Pay Package
Huntingtgn Beach policemen
rejected a new pay package from
the city Friday, opting instead to
turn the matter over to arbitra-
tion.
Officer David Gammell,
negotiator for the 178 member
police association, did not re·
lease exact results of the secret
ballot vote but said the rejection
was "substantial."
In the meantime, negotiators
tor tile city and firemen ap·
parently still face a wide gap in
their ·contract talks. Another
round is set for Tuesday.
The police pay package in·
eluded an eight percent pay
raise, time and a half pay for
overtime over 40 hours a week
and retirement pay based on an
officer's highest year of earn-
ings.
Gammell said the city proposal
equals about a 12 percent in-
crease in total pay and benefits.
However, police also had asked
the city to pay the officer's share
of the retirement fund, which
Gammell said would boost the
package to 16 or 18 percent.
High Court "i(.TWcks
Fixed Legal F ee.s
He said today the fact finding
process will begin as soon as the
arbitrator is available. Police
and the city chose someone from
a list submitted by the Americian
Arbitration Association.
Firemen and the city reported·
ty are much farther apart in their
contract talks.
former attorney general Robert
Kennedy, were involved in the al·
leged plots but he emphasized
none of the secret inlormation
was strong enough to support
conclusions of guilt.
Goldwater, a member of the
Senate committee investigating
the CIA, backed up Rockefeller
.by saying no major CIA action,
such as an assassination, "would
have taken place without the pre.
sidentknowing aboutlt."
He also said Sunday he had
seen no evidence any CIA as-
sassination plots were ever at·
tempted but that he "wouldn't be
surprised" if the White House
considered killing Cuban pre-
mier Fidel Castro.
Time magazine reported SUn·
day the CIA plotted in 1960 to kill
Castro by supplying him with
poisoned cigars, but never car·
'
.
ried out the plan ·because lb.ere
was no assurance Castro woul4 not give the cigars to other people.
ple. •
The Rockefeller Commission
report was to..,.be given officially
today to the-Senate lnvestigatin~
Committee. which Wednesday
will hear from CIA. Director
William Colby testifying under
tight security about the 1963 ag..
(See CIA, Page A2)
Sprees elched
Pair Nabbed in Valley
An alleged baseball bat wield·
ing bandit and his companion
were arrested by Fountain
Valley police early today, ending
what officers said was a 90·
minute market robbery spree in
four cities.
In custo~y, are Alfonso Men-
doza Jr., 18, of 1497 Purdy St., Midway City, and Richard
Kneeland, 20, oC 15292 Neece St.,
Westminster, both on charges of.
Hur~ 25,
~convicted
-tin Deaths
By TOM BARLEY
Of IM D•llr ruetst.H
Steven Craig Hurd was found'
guilty of two murders \pday by
an Orange County Superior Court
jury which must now determine
if the bushy-haired de"fendant
w~a sane when he participated in
two killings within a 2.._hour
. period.
The jury ended two days of de·
liberation by ruling that Hurd,
25, was guilty of first degree
murder in the slayings five years
ago of Mission Viejo teacher
.f'klrence Nancy Brown and
ser~e station attendant Jerry
WayneCarlin. .
Hurd was with convicted killer
~rthur Craig ·•Moose" Hulse,
now 21, on June 2, 1970, when
Hulse used a roofer's ax to chop
to death Carlin, 21 , in ttie
restroom of his service station.
It was a lleged in Hurd's trial
that he repeatedly stabbed Mrs.
Brown, 31, of El Toro to death in
an Irvine orange grove the next
day after · the teacher was
dragged from her station wagon
by the gang of drug -using drifters
led by Hurd.
Opening statements in the sani·
ty hearing now faced by Hurd will
be delivered later today in Judge
Frank Domeni chini 's courtroom.
Lawyers for both sides have
scheduled psychiatrists as wit·
nesses and de fense attorney
William Gamble hopes to put
Hurd on the stand as his final wit-
ness.
Hurd accepted th e two verdicts
today with no display of emotion.
He is und er daily sedation follow-
ing a California Supreme Court
ruling last month that he could be
tried on the murder charges pro-
vided he is tranquilized at all
phases of the trial.
Lawyers for both sides agree
that Hurd is only capable of tell-
ing the truth or understanding
(See HURD, Page A2)
armed robbery and assault with
a deadly weapon, police said.
. They are being held at Orange
County Jail, and no bail has been
set.
Three market clerks and one
customer were injured when
they allegedly were struck on the
arm with the bat.
The spree allegedly started at a Huntington Beach market, then
moved to Garden Grove, then
Westminster, before the suspects
were arrested outside a Fountain
Valley market. ·
Huntington Beach police al·
leged Mendoza entered the 7-11
Market at Newland Street and
Warner Avenue at 11:25 p.m.,
slapped the bat down on the
counter and ordered the clerk to
turn over some cash.
She reportedly gave him $100,
(See ROBBERIES, Page A2}
$1 Per G~llon
Solon Predicts Gas Price
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mcinsfield says American motorists soon will be pay-
ing about $1 per gallon for gasoline if Congress and Presi-
dent Ford can't get together on an energy program.
Mansfield said Ford's full $3-per-barrel tariff would
raise gasoline prices to about 70 cents per gallon. "On top of
that, you have the recent decision by the OPEC (oil-
producing) countries to r aise prices by 30 percent in Sep-
tember," he said.
"If something isn't done by Congress and the President
together, we stand to see an increase which will bring it
somewhere aTound a dollar," he said in a w eekend in-
terview .
· Mansfield said gasoline prices will rise in any event, but
Congress and the White House must agree on a program to
cut large-~cale waste -"around 40 percent" of the supply .•
'~ode' Mesa Cook
._
N ah bed in Valley
A restaurant cook who was al-
legedly cavorting in the nude at
an intersection was jailed early
today, captured following a 70-
mile-per -hour chase by Costa
Mesa City Ma nager Fred
Sorsabal, who pursued the sus-
pect 'scar into Fountain Valley.
The Cos t a Me s a Police
Governmenl
Gives Gram ,
To HuntingWn
Grants to three Orange County
cities including Huntington
Beach and Costa Mesa, totaling
more than $1 million in revenue-
sharing funds for community im·
provemenl were announced lo·
day in Washingt on.
The money a llotted by the
Department o f Hous ing and
Urban Development under Com-
munity Development Grants
legislation approved last fall will
cover a variety of projects .
helicopter Eagle ll, plus ground
patrol units and Huntington
Beach police, along with Foun-
tain Valley officers were even-
tually involved in the speedy
midnight motorcade.
1. James R . Ayres, 24, of 336 E .
20th St., Costa Mesa, remained in
custody this morning, booked in-
to jail on charges of reckless
driving and indecent exposure.
Huntington Beach Police Of.
ficer James Cutshaw finally suc-
ceeded in pulling over Ayres'
sport sedan at Ellis Avenue and
San Antonio Street in Fountain
Valley shortly after midnight.
Sorsabal told police that he, his
wife Marlene, their two teenaged
sons and a young friend were re-
turning home from an evening
out, with son David. 16, driving,
when they first encountered the
naked man s tanding in the in-
tersection of Suva Circle and
Mesa Verde Drivl'.'.
The city manager dropped off
his passengers at their nearby
home and s ped back after report-
ing the incident.
Police helicopter crewman Of·
fic er Sutton said the chopper and
<See NUDE, PageA2} . WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Supreme Court struck down
minimum legal-fee schedules for
real estate transactions today in
a n 8 to 0 decision which probably
also spells the end of fixed fees
for other legal services.
Ruth Goldfarb, which challenged
the Fairfax County Bar Associa·
lion's fixed minimum fee for
legal work required when they
bought a home.
It also was a victory for the
Justice Department, which has
waged a long-standing battle
against fee schedules established
by professional associations. The
dep.artment supported the
Goldfarbs in their lawsuit.
~ Missin_g Face A spokesman for the office of
Sen Alan Cranston CO-Calif. I,
said the funds are the first re·
leased under the new law. Or::a :•t ·
The court ruled that minimum·
fee schedules established by
state or local bar associations
violate federal antitrust law
whenever the fees affect in-
terstate commerce.
The decision was a victory for
a Virginia couple, Lewis H. and
AD IN PILOT
SOLD TR4JLER
"The trailer sold because of
the ad in the Pilot. 'lbere were
Jot.a ol calla as a result oC the ad."
That's the advertising succ~s
experienced by the Costa Mesa
woman who placed this ad in the
Dally Pilot:
22' TRAVEL trlr, com
pletely self ·cont, slpa 4.
$1500. XXX•XXXX
Ir you have camping equip-
ment to seU, call 642-5678. Put a .
few words to work for you.
In \he Daily Pilot.
'
Jn other action, the court~
-Ruled 7 to 2 that states may
not constitutionally prohibit the
advertising of abortion services.
The court said such adverti~ing
is protected by the constitutional
guarantee of freedom of the
press. .
. -Upheld a robbery and u -
sault conviction against Jack
Roland M urpby, the celebrated
Miami, Fla. jewel thief who 1$
t.fie central figure ln the motion
~cture "Live A Little, Steal A
•t ~
greed to review a ruling of
the U.S. court of Appeal" in
Washington that the Pederal
Powtt Commisalon may not atve
natural-gas producen buJft-ln
authority to abut olf ~ gu supp-
ly o! lntentate ptpdlnee when
their con\racu explre.
Stephen Smith of
Garden Grove was not
among his fellow
graduates et Stanford
University Sunday. He
end another student,
Carrie Jane Hunter of
Atherton, are being
held captive by re·
volutlonarlea In
Tanzania.
"They are very
much In our
thoughts," said Stan-
f o r d P r e • I d e n t·
Richard Lyman In
opening remark• at
the unlYe1'91ty'• com-
men cement ••·
erdMI.
UPI Telqitofo
.·t '
Cranston aide Dan Perry said
Huntington Beach is to r eceive
the largest allocation in Orange
County. a total of $460,000 for
three projects.
These include co,mml!Uty pro-
grams for the elderly and the
handicapped, public works pro-
jects and the acquisition of land,
Perry said.
Costa Mesa will receive
$229,000 for housing rebabilila·
tion and other community im·
provements, according to
cranston's office.
Garden Grove is to receive
$367 ,ooo in its Community
Development Grant allotment.
Cash released by HUD will be
used for storm drains, street
lighting, sidewalks, curbs and
gutters, street. improvements
and specialiied crime prevention
proirams.
Perry said the HUD fund re-
leases were announced throuah
Sen. Cranston's office because ho
is a mem~r of the Senate SU!r
committee on Housing.
..
1t'eat•er
M·o~Uy clo4dy ·through
Tuesday but partial clear-
ing in the afternoon inland
portions. Little change in
temperature. Highs from
mid·60S at beaches lo near
70inland.
INSIDE TODA V
Thirteen persons ho~en
injured in .a disturbanqi ot a
uiomen's correction center in
North Corolina. Story, Page
ll6. -
l•dex
"" •• "' at-t "' .....
"' AH AH ....
A-4
.
"' ,) # DAIL V PILOT H./F
German
'President
Visits U.S.
ByHELENTHOMAs
WASHINGTON <UPI)
President Ford welcomed W~st.
German Preside nt Walter Scheel
today with a strong reaffirma·
tioo of the Unite·d States' com·
mitment to defe nd Western
Europe.
In a sunbath ed welcoming
cer emony on the White House
south lawn with full military
honors, Ford told Scheel the
United States is "strongly com-
mitted to sa feg uarding the
freedom of the West .''
··we remain committed to the
freedom and security of Berlin,"
be said , adding that the United
States sees the security 6r
Western Europe as "a true test of
what is known as detenle." •
Scheel , w ho ar rived by
helicopter from Williamsburg,
Va., where he and his wife spent
the night, was the first president
of West Germany lo visit the
United States in 17 years and the
s econd since World War II. lie
has \•isitcd the Un ited Stales
several ti1nes , ho"•eve r, as a
p1;vate citizen.
Ford greeted Scheel while Mrs.
Ford presented Schcel's wife
with ;..i bouquet of American
Beauty roses.
Both presidents stood at atten-
tion while the tt1arine Corps band
played "Deutschland Uber Al-
les" and the "Star Spangled Ban-
ner."
Scheel, in perfect English, told
tbe gathering that his visit mir-
rored the "excellent" relations
between West Germany and the
United States.
Wine Tasting Fete
Set b y Boys Club
The public is Invited to a wine
tastin g party from 7 to 9 o'clock
toni ght. IL is sponsored by the
Fountain Vall ey Bo ys Club.
,\ S3 donation is being asked.
The event \fill be at J . J'i.1atthew's
Celler and Win e Garden, 16122
Beach Boulevard. Huntington
Beach. Prizes will be given. and
the club v.'ili auction gi fts donat·
·ed by businessmen.
'"'
Cuba tO Give
. MOll!!Y Bacfc.
WASHINGTON <U PI ) -
The Cub..in government
.has agreed to return a $2
million ransom obtained
by skyjackers in 1972 from
Southern Air"•ays, Sen.
George S. McGovern, (D-
S.D. ), announ ced today.
Ip a lettt!r to ttl cGovern,
Cuban Prime Minister
Fidel Castro said his gov-
ernme nt has decided to
give "a positive a nswer"
to requests that the money
be returned.
l\1cGovern said he re-
ceived the lette r from
Caslro Friday.
County Boy Hurt
In Huntington Dive
A 15-year-old Anaheim boy was
l n stable but "guarded" condi-
·tion today after diving head first
into a wave Friday and striking
the bottom.
Clay Currie suffered serious
·neck and spinal injuries in the ac·
'.cident o ff Huntington State
:feach, according to lifeguard re-
:PJrts.
ORANGE COAST . "'"
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Thomas Keevil
f:cl••O<
Thoml'ls A. M urphine ~no11•n11 Sci••"'
~Cha rles H. Loos Richard P. Nall
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Diiiy "'"" SUtl' ,,_..
GUILTY OF MUROERS
Steven Craig Hurd
Fro• Page Al
HURD ...
testi mony v.•hil e he is under lhe
s upervised sedation.
He faces life in state prison on
each of the two convictions if the
jury now finds that hew as sane at
thetimeofthe two killings.
Deputy District Attorney
Frank Briseno declined to ask £or
the death penalty on either con·
viction when he made his final
argument to the jury.
Fro• Page Al
A •..
sassination of South Vi etnamese
·President Nguyen Dinh Diem.
Rockefeller's hint of Kennedy
invol veine nt in assassination
plots r esulted in a statement
from two former aides of Robert
Kennedy, who accused .the vice
president of ig noring the con·
clu sions or hi s ov"n report or "dc-
1iberately ~ying.' ·
Rockefeller said in a broadcast
interview (NBC·TY's Meet the
Press) the commission failed to
complete the assassination in·
vestigation because it ran out of
time and encountered too many
difficulties.
··Let's face it," he said , "many
of the people have died v.·ho were
allegedly involved and others
"'ere assassinated in this cou ntry
tragically.''
Asked if he was rererring to the
Kennedys, Rockefeller repl ied:
··well, as I said, we have no con·
~lusive information. but the pre·
sident of the United States and
the attorney general of the Uni t-
ed States were both assassinated
tragically in this country."
He was asked if he meant the
Kennedys actually were involved
in such plots.
"Well," he said, "I said v.·e had
no evidence on the basis of which
to draw conclusions. I said it was
very di£ficult to get information
because we go back 15 years and
many of the people who were in-
volved in the CIA and in the White
House are no longer living."
Fro• Page Al
PARENTS
"How do you explain the situs·
tion to a 6-year old who says his
teacher doesn't love him any
more?" she asked.
Mrs. Rivers continued : "They
will lell you th e issue isn't
money. If it isn't then why don•
they withdraw their requesl for a
IO percent pay increase?"
Teachers &aid the strike Wl8
over leacber r espect from the
school board, more than over
pay.
Mrs. llllngworth. who spent500.
boon u a pareut volunteer in the
dl1l-rict thl1 year, added, ''I
cou.ldn't believe my teacher•
weredohs& lhls."
"At flnt, I thoufht Just aee II
they &et me to volunteer next
year," she a ddcdi "But then l
tbougbt who would lhu'1,.ll I did
that-the k.Jd~, that'• whO,"
·Fugitive
I
Charges
Slated
A 2.8·year-old alleged fugitive
i1 to be arraigned this week on
multiple charges, including as-
l!l&ult with a deadly. weapon and
suspicion of armed robbery after
leading pOlice on a lengthy chase
through downtown Huntirigton
Beach.
The Friday night chase ended.
police said, when David Doyle
Lynn, 28, of 616 17th St., Hunt-
ington Beaeh, ran into the path of
a police car and was thrown over
the hood.
He was treated at Orange
County Medical ·Center over the
weekend and released to Orange
County Jail.
Police said the <:hase started at
10 p.m ., when a man stopped an
o£ficer, claiming Lynn tried to
run his car off the road. But when
officers tried to question Lynn,
he· allegedly fled, vo'ith police in
pursuit.
Durin g the c hase, along
Ora n ge, O li ve an d P eca n
Avenues and from about 15th to
18th Streets, police said, Lynn al-
legedly crashed into t"·o other
cars and hit a utility pole.
l-le jumped out of his station
'"'agon in an alley between 15th
and 16th , near Olive, orficers al·
leged, and I'an off on foot, as his
car continued down the alley un-
til it struck a pickup ~k.
A policeman then started' chas-
ing him on foot, and as Lynn
turned once to look at him, he
was struck by a police car,
en route to the scene to help.
Lynn also has been charged
with driving under the innuence,
reckless driving and illegally
carrying a gun . He is also wanted
on tV.'O ,.,,arrants, police said. Of-
ficers allege he \\-'as carrying a
gun during the chase, but tossed
it aside, and they were checking
today to see i·r he matches the_
description of any recent armed
robbers.
Day Asking
Huntington
For Back Pay
Herb Day, former oil field
superintendent for the city o!
Huntington Beach, is asking the
city to pay him for 325 hours of
overtime work he clajms he put
in between Aug. 7, 1967 and Nov.
1, 1971.
Day retired April 1 of this year.
He asserts City Administrator
Dave Rowlands failed to put the
overtime pay in his retirement
check.
Don Lewis, assistant personnel
director for the city, said he is not
directly familiar with Day's
situation but one of the problems
stems from a "lack of city records
on such overtime.
Day was considered a depart-
ment head and a c hange in the ci·
ty personnel rules eliminat€:d
overtime pay for department
heads after Nov. 1, 1971.
In a letter to the city council,
\\'hich "'ill be consid ered at
tonight's council meeting, Day
claims he h as documented proof
gftheoverlime worked.
l-fe ends the letter saying if
payment for the request is not
made within 20 days, he will con-
sider the request denied. Day did
not say ho'w much money he is
asking.
From Page Al
ROBBERIES
'police said , then he allegedly ned
in a car, driven by Kneeland.
Fountain Valley police allege
the pair t hen drove to Garden
Grove, where Mendoza entered
the Tic Toe Market, 1321 1
Brookhurst St., smacked t he
clerk on the arm with the bat,
the n fl e d with an unknown
amount of cash.
At 12: 14 a.m., they allegedly
slopped at the Qui ck Slop Llquor
Store, 13690 Golden West St.,
Westmins ter, where Mendoza as-
sertedly smashed a glass jar on
the counter with the bat, then
struck the clerk in the arm, and
again fled with an unknown
a mount of cash, police said.
Mendoza allegedly entered the
7-11 Markel at Euclid Street and
Warner Avenue at 12:41 a.m., or-
fl cers said, with the now·
s plintered bal stuffed into his
trousers.
Offlctts allege he pulled it out
as he entered. sm8.shed two glass
bottles o n the counter, then
struck clerk Robert Kaiser, 22,
and customer J ames Stobie, 21,
on the arms.
He fled with about S209 in cash.
police 1aid, but officers had been
signaled by an alarm and were
on their way to the market.
The pair was stopped outside
and arrested without incident,
poli<'e 1aid.
The market was the 1.ame one
. tn which clerk·Mike Finklea, an
Oranse Coast Colleae wresUing
star was shot and killed JISl Oct.· 3ld~r1na: a holdup, po1loe1aJft
----·--'
•
Murderess
Gets Paro'le .
BOSTON (.\,Pl -A 23-
ye a r·o ld woman was
granted a 2Mi:-yepr parole
inste~ a jail sentence for a laughter convtc·
lion todii so s.he could re·
turn horhe to care for a
daughter. 111 with cystic
fibrosis.
Mrs. Robe rt Shaffer em·
braced weeping r elatives
following the decision by
the state Parole Board.
"I'm extremely grateful ,
very happy," Mrs . Shaffer
·said.
Mrs. Shaffer was con-
victed of slaying her fiance
31f.a years ago and given an
indeterminate sentence of
up to fi ve years in prison.
Her conviction had been
upheld on appeal and the
trial judge granted a two-
week stay of sentence so
she could seek commuta-
tion from the gOveroor. •
Mrs. Shaffer; a divorcee
who also has a son, con-
tended a long imprison-
ment could hasten the de-
a th of her 11 -ye~r-old
daughter, E vie.
Lady Lucan
Tells Court
Of Terror
LONDON (AP) -Lady
· Veromca Luca n, wife of the miss-
ini British earl who is sought in
the murder or the family nanny,
said for the first time today he
had tried to strangle her on the
night of the murder.
She told a tense inquest at Lon-
don's Westminster Coroner's
Court: "He thrust t"'o glove~
fingers down m y throat and we
started to fig ht. During .the·
course of it h e attempted to
strangle me from in front."
The inquest was hearing
evidence on the . death of the
:Lucan family ',s nanny, 29-year-
old Sandra Rivett, who was bat-
tered to death in the Belgravia
home of the Countess of Lucan
last Nov. 7. Lady Lucan, 37, was
also badly injured by the nanny's
assailant on that day.
Lady Lucan told the Daily Ex·
press, "I s hall simply tell the
court what happened, and if
asked I shall reveal the name of
the man who attacked me -the
man "'f'lO sat on the stairs iif-
tcrwards , cried on my shoulder
andtoldme hadkilledSaridra." '
The countess said she waited
until t he man calmed down and
then ran to a nearby pub for help,
strea ming blood a nd crying
''murd e r ." Mi ss .Rivett's
bludgeoned body later was found
"Tapped in a canvas sack in the
basement of the three-story
house.
'
2 Nabbed
. I In &ach·
Shooting
Two men were arres(ed on I UI·
plclon of aauull with lm,nt 19 t
commit murdtr earl/today afteT
one ef them fired a &Wt durlna: an
argument in' downtown Hunt·
ington Beach .
Police said no one we.s lnjured
by the gunfi re, alt~ one or
the suspects suffe red cuts and
bruises as onlookers tried to sub-
due him ..
In c ustody are Joseph
Couillard, 37, of 8402 We1tminster
Ave., Westmiuater, the man who
allegedly fired the shot, and his
companion, Thomas HendersQn,
30,Downey.
Botb were in custody today in
the city jail.
Police said the lncldent oc-
curred at 1 a.m. as the pair left a
downtown restaUrant and argued
with residentS tn the 4'X> bloc::k of
Ocean A venue. ~ ,.
Police ·allege Couillard drew a
handgun a nd pointed it at the
group of residents who started
gathering, then ataiited to pUt the
gun away but firedAtb\ltead.
By this time a Jiearb'y police of-
ficer arrived, and was taking
Couillard into cusf.ody, when
some Qf ; the' residents tried to
hold Henderson for custody as
well, police said.
Huntiilgton's
Council Feted
'By Chamber .
The entire Huntington Beach
City Council "'h a:s been named
ho norar.y· d i r e ctors of t h e
Chamber of Commerce, accord-
ing to Chamber President Ed
Sullivan.
Along with the seven council
members, the chamber alsa lists
Assemblyman Robert Burke,
State Sen. Dennis Carpenter,
Superior Court judge Charles A.
Bauer, and City Administrator
Dave Rowlands . •
A g.ress release from the
· chamber says, ••honorary direc-
tors were selected oo the basis of
being persons so qualified by
election to high civic oOlces in
the community and who thusly
should contribute to the ISwiiness
community through official af-
filiation \\'1th the board." . .
The cha mber· also lil!lted seven~
advisory directors named at a re-
cent board meeting: William
Carlson, attorney ; Paul. Nagle,
President o! the Jaycees; Dr. R.
Dudley Boyce, Pres ident of
Golden. Wes t College; Herb
Vaughn, Top Hal Liquor; Paul
Loumena, Rainbow Disposal; C.
S. Carpe r , Cambra Manufactur-
ing Company; John Hile, Kaiser
Aetna Company.
·Shark Bi:tes .
-M_an"°"' ug
' FOLEY, Ala. (UP!l -A·
1hark 'Sunday attacked a
21·year-Ql~ man fJve mllee off th.e Gulf Cb111; oot be
escaped with cmly 3S teeth
marks on his left lea.
William Wayne Daniels
'of $.a!iy Minette, Ala., was
Q.~teCl In 1alisfactory condi-
. tJon ~ay at a hospital.
Authoriti~ said Daniels
was swimming near his
boat tn about 15 fHt of
water when the shark at·
·tacked. Hls wife and
daughter were in tbe boat.
By batting at and scaring
the shark, Daniels was
able to break loose and
swim bee~ to his boat.
' Sheri Chiesa
New Queen
Of Humington
·Sheri Chiesa, 18, was cro~ed
the new· Miss Huntington Beach
Saturday eve ning.
Th·e John Robert Powers
Mode ling School student was
chosen from among 19 applicants
for the title. -
A Huntington Beach resident.
·Miss Chiesa works as a hostess at
Granny's Attic re1taurant and
hopes later to bec9me a pro-
fessional model.
She is five feet, seven inches
tall,. 120 pounds_ and measures
34-24·35.
Runners up are Dana Christina
Lawrence, an emp1oye of Far·
rell 's lee Cream P ai-IOUr; Cherri
A. StQut, a student at Edison
High School ; J oy Robin&on, a
student at So'uthern California
College and Traci Kay Liv4
ingston, a Golden West College
coed, ·
Fro• Page A 1
NUDE ...
City Manager Sorsabat each
picked up the trail of a car speed·
ing out of the Suva Circle area
with its lights out at al;nrt..lbe
same time, just moments later.
Speed reached 70 miles per
.hour 3.s the SU&pect ~aded for
Fountain Valley, Jll~edly near·
ly eollidili~)Ut;:Otber. cars in·
eluding . Sorsiitial's toward the
end of the pursuit.
0£ficer Sutton said their
quarry; ·c·areened" thrdOgh the
parking lot of Marie Callender's
Pie Shop, 18889 Brookhurst st., in
Fountain Valley and chang_ed
directions before it was 4 fina1Ty
halted.
SorsJl}?al c hased the fleeing
auto through the Mesa Verde
area, at speeds up to 50 miles
per hour on residential streets,
according to police repo~.
• • Mariners gives you
up to a s1,,soo tax
deduction this year. ••
... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE! NOW YOU
CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND
AT MARINERS , WITH "IRA" -THE INDIVIDUAL RE-
TIREMENT ACCOUNT.
Mariners Individual Retireme nt
Account is a personal tax·sheltered
retirement plan. "IRA " was d evel-
oped by Congress to give you an
eff ective way to build your own reti re-
ment fund .
You can save as much as $1 500 or
15°/o of your wages, whichever Is less,
ar;id your savings wil l be a tax d educ-
tion during your. working years. If
your spouse works, your combined
t ax-sheltered savings can be a s much
as $3000 per year.
Come In to Mariners and start your
own lndlvi dual Retirement ACcount.
You'll be saving tax dollars now and
building a much brighter future. For
more Information, come In or call any
one oJ our convenient locations.
HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR M ONEY OROWS IN A MARIN~RS
·'IRA " A CC OUN T. lnd1vidu•I Relirement Aoeowtti •r•-P,.J«illy
eern.nrJ 7Jt •:, per ye•r wll•tt pl1c•d In ;, 6·yHf Cflrl/llclrfl, Your
lflflull y1•ld if incrHatd IO I lll'1. l.Ge:~io wheft lt!terwtis HO«/ Id
th• 1tOCQ11n1 flel1nce •"d comoounded O.ily. With I m•1d1rt11m
lflOl~lduet COfllfibut/011 01 $1500 ..cn r••r, h•••·• /low your
mon•r will grow:
Wt·THTAX WITHOUT EX1"A ' SHEL TEAED TAX MONEY ,,. IHELTEAJO fi'ROMT,t,X .
AFTElll '"'" PLAN \ DEFEllllllAL
5y"ta. $ 9,510 6,730 $ 2,780
10 yrs. 23,540 15,750 7,790
20 yrs. 74 ,6<0 65,840 30.560
30 yr1. 185,550 95.030 90,520
"Above 11gv1H .,, bN«I on 25'11....,•neorn. Dracllf/I. F«Mrai
regul1tionl 1eq11lr1 IWOtllfll,.t otntL!lee IOI' Mrly wlll'1dr1w1J1
ISOll'I ur!llk:lle ..::coun1a
..... ,.,...._..
(Moln Office ) ...
T515 We11clllf Or.
(71•) ... 2....000
-..r.-• (loytld; Cenl•r)
l•fUMI a..th -IHI IMch
(
llp• loyt~ Dr.
(7 14) ... 2-«00
310 G/enneyr• $t, [lel1ut• World)
(71 •) •9•·7506 13120 SHI leoc.h llYd,
(OPlNING SOON} ('213)191•7626
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Orange Coa~t
EOIT lON
\I
Today's ~IOf!jl•g
.Y.Steek
•VOL. 68, NO. 167, 2 SECTIONS, 2_. PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1975 N TEN CENTS.
I
Fireni.en, POiice to ~ake Pay Pitch
'By JllLARY KAYE
Of ... 1>1111 ~ ... S&lff
Newport Beach firemen,
)>Olkemen and city negotiators
are still deadlocked in pay dis·
~ussions and e mploye
spokesmen said today they will
mllke a pitch to the city council at
next Monday'J meeting.
.Firemen are TeQuesting a 12
percent pay htte plus manpower
boosts at three fire stat1om. 'l'be
JalJIJar to •
city's last offer was a 6 percent
increase and no changes in man-
power.
Police negotiations ar e de·
adlocked over retirement plan
improvements.
Large numbers of firemen and
policemen are expected to show
up at next week's meeting, dur-
ine which city councilmen are
scheduled to approve the 1975-76
budget.
Kareem Abdul-J abbar, star center of the Milwaukee
.Bucks was traded today to the Los Angeles Lakers
for ce'nte r Elmore Smith, guard Brian Winters and the
Lakers' t wo top draft choices -forward Dave Meyers
of UCLA and guard Juni~r Bridgeman of Louisville.
Details on Page B4 today:~ . -.
Hurd Foulld Guilty
Of 2 Grisly Deaths
By TOM BARLEY
Of the D•lly Piiot SU.ff
Steven Craig Hurd was nd·
gui lty of two murders today
an Orange County Superior Court
jury which must now deLermine
if .the bushy-haired defendant
was sane when he participated in
two killings within a 24·hour
period.
The jury e nded two days of de·
liberation by ruling that Hurd,
25 was guilty of first degree ~rder in the slayings five year
ago of Mission Viejo t eacher
Florence Nan cy Brown and
service station attendant J erry
Wayne Carlin. · ·
Hurd was wit nvicted killer
'Moose" Hulse,
now 21, on June 2, 1970, when
Hulse used a roofer's ax to chop
to death Carlin, 21, in the
restroom of his service station.
It was a lleged in Hurd's trial
that he repeatedly stabbed Mrs.
rown, 31, of El Toro to death in
(See HURD, Page A2)
County's Employe~
To Rally Over Pay
County employes agreed today
to stage demonstrations Tuesday
to protest stalled 1975-76 salary
negotiations between · Orange
County officials and the Orange
County Employes Associa-
tion (OC.EA).
Tuesday's demonstrations will
include a before-work rally in
Santa Ana Bowl, a mass visit to
PRICESCUMB
IN LIGIH TR4DE
NEW YORK <UPI> -Prices
pushed hJgher today in slow trad·
ing on the New York Stock Ex·
hcnage. News was scarce and so
were investors.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Averaee, a 5.16-point gainer Fri·
'day, was ahead 10.09 points to
834.56. Advances led d~llnes. 817
to 522, amopg the l ,76S issues
cr01sin1 the ta~.
The t urnover amounted to
about 12,300,000 shares. com·
pared with 13,190,000 traded dur·
Jngthe same period Friday.
.Prlcu wer e slightly higher in
moderate trading on tbe
.Amertcan Stock Exchange.
)
the Board of Supervisors meet·
in~. picketing of the county ad-
ministration building and a noon
rally in the civic center.
According to OCEA Executive
Director J ohn Sawyer, the de·
cision to hold the demonstrations
was made this m orning after
county negotiators agreed to
• meet with OCEA officials and a
state mediator Wednesday.
At issue in the discmsions are
wage and fringe benefits OCEA's
9,100 memb~rs expect to receive
in the comin1 fiscal year.
One intQrrned source said the
county so far has offered two per·
cent pay raises. covering about
2.000 employes and four % per·
cent pay bikes for OCEA 's re·
maininf members.
The same source said county
negotiators are demanding a
three-year satary -frinee benefit
contract while the association is
hold in& out for the cu.stomary one
year pact.
Accordlng to Jam~ Shelton,
the county1a chief neeotlator, a
mealing between himself, OCEA
omciala and 1t1te mediator Tlm
McCarthy ended ln an 10\Passe
shortly before mldniaht Frlday •
,
•
Stephen Silver, a lawyer
representing both groups, said
city .,mployes are hoping citizens
will attend to off er support for
police and firemen.
Silver said the firemen's re-
quest r efl ects a cost-of-living
raise and would place Newport
firemen in the pay range or
firemen from other Orange
. County cities where there are
high rise buildings, such as Santa
.Ana, An aheim a nd Orange. They are also asking that a flJ'e
• Newport Beach Ciremen with c_~ptain be assigned t.o supervise
four years experience currently _.)lie Balboa Island fire station.
earn $1 ,157 per month. Firemen The difference between the six
from Anaheim and Santa Ana percent hike offered and the 12
earn about $100 more per month, percent r aise asked is about
Silver said. $86,000 and the extra men would
In addition to. the pay request, cost the city about $300,000,
firemen are asking that the staffs Frank Ivens, tt}e city's personnel
of three fire stations closest to director, said.
high rise bwldings in Newport be Tb~ policem en's differences
increased. with m e city revolve around the
retirement plan, according to
Silver. .
Police are asking for the retire-
ment plan used by the California
Highway Patrol.
That means a policeman who
retiTes at age SO with 25 yeat"s ex-
perience would receive SO per·
cent of his salary as a pension.
Police currently have a plan
that has a pension of half their
<See STYMIE, PageA.2)
Rocky Ford's Choice·
. • g --Despite Grumh
Running
Ml\te
Assured
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -
President Ford m ade clear today
that d espite conser vative
grumbling, Vice President
Nelson A. R ockefeller .is his
choice for a running mate on the
1976 Republican ticket.
"I am convinced that both of us
can convince the delegates (to
the GOP · National Convention)
that individually and as a team
we should be nominated," Ford
said in a statement r ead to White
House r e porters by Press
Secretary Ron Nessen.
Tbe Ford eomm~t put his
personal at-amp of disapproval on
suggestions-from consenrati ves
in Congress that tbe choice of a
vice pre.sidential candidate be
left open by Ford as he seeks the
presidential n omina tion for
himself.
Nessen said the statement was
prepared even before Sen. Barry
Goldwater CR-Ariz.), took an ob-
lique public swipe at Rockefeller
during the weekend with a·state·
ment that he bad always believed
the vice president "would make
a great secretary of state:-''
In m a king the statement,
Ford, through Nessen, observed
the political fiction that a vice
presidential candidate is chosen
by the convention delegates
rather than by the presidential
nominee.
"T he President will be for
Nelson Rockefeller for the (vice
presidential> nomination,"
Nessen said in response to ques·
lions. "The delegates will make
the decision." In fact, every pre·
sidential candidate in modern
political history has chosen his
own running m ate and the con·
vention always has approved the
choice.
Seeking Recreotior
It m ay not seem like fun, but t~ese s leepy . Newport
Beach residents wer e out for a httle recreation early
Saturday. T his was the line around city hall at. 8 a.m.
when registration for the city's summer recreat1<;>n pro·
gram s began . The Line extended around three sides of
city hall. P arks and recreation officials said 654 people
signed up for tennis instruction. making that the most
popular activity of all.
Presidential. Approval
'CIA. Had to Get Okay' -Rocky, Goldunter_
WASHINGTON (UPI) -All
major CIA activities have had
presidential approval, according
to both Vice President Nelson
Rocke feller and Sen. Barry
Goldwater, <R-Ariz.). .
~ill propose abolishing a special
House CIA investigating commit-
tee because it bas been torn by
dissension.
But just what those activities
w~re is still a bjg mystery in
Washington anct'still provoking
debate.
Meanwhile, a key Rules Com-
mittee member said today., he
Rep. B.F. Sisk, <D·Calif.), said
he would introduce the resolution
to disband the House Select Com-
mittee on Intelligence because of
a move by five of the commit·
tee's seven Democr ats forcing
the resignation of the chairman,
Rep. Lucien Nedzi, (0 -Mich.).
$1 Per Gallon ·
Solon Predict,s Gas Price
WASHING TON (UPI) -Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield says American motorists soon will be pa~
ing about $1 per gallon for gasoline if Congress ~res•·
dent Ford can't get together 60 an energy program.
Mansfield said Ford's full $3-per-barre l tariff would
raise J{asoline prices t.o about 'TO cents per gallon. ''On top ~f
that. you have the recent decision by the OPE~ (011·
producing ) countries to raise prices by 30 percent m Sep·
tember.'' he said. "If something isn't done by Conaress and the President
together, we stand to tee an increase wblch wlll bring_ it. somewhere around a dollar, .. he sajd in a weeke.nd J.n·
tervlew. Mansfield sald gasoline prices wlll rise ln any event, but Cooara• and the Whitetlouse must airee on a program to
culla.rst·scale waste -"a.round 40 percent." of tho supply.
.
Rockefeller , whose com·
mission r eport on the CIA was re·
leased last week. said Sunday
one reason the panel did not de-
velop conclusive evidence on al-
leged CIA foreign assassination
plots was because so many
persons implicated in them are
dead.
He hinted his commission may
have obt ained information Presi-
dent Kennedy and his brother,
former attorney general Robert
Kennedy, were involved in the al·
leged plots but he emphasized
none of the secret information
was strong enough to support
conclusions of guilt.
Goldwater. a m ember or tbe
Senate committee investigating
the CIA, backed up Rockef~ler
by saying no m ajor CIA actton,
such as an assassination, .. would
have taken place w~thout the pre·
s ident knowing aboutlt."
He also said Sunday he had
seen no evidence any CIA as·
s assination plots were ever at·
tempted but that he "wouldn't be.
surprised" if the White HOU8e
considered killin g Cuban pre·
rnier Fidel Ca;tro.
Time magazine reported Sun·
day the CIA plotted in 1960 to ~ill
Castro by supplying hlm Wlth
'°isoned cigars, ~ut n.ever car·. ned out the plan because ~ere
(See CIA, Page A!)
'
L~gal
Fee Hit
By Court
WASHINGTON (A P > -The
Supreme Court struck down
minimum legal-fee schedules for
real estate transactions today in
an 8 to O decision which probably
also spells the end of fixed fees
for other legal services.
The court ruled that minimum
fee schedules est ablished by
s tate or local bar associations
violate federal antitrust law
whenever the fees affect. in·
t erstate commerce. ·
The decision was a victory for
a Virginia couple, Lewis H. and'
Buth Goldfarb, which challenged
the Fairfax County Bar Associa-
tion's fixed minimum fee for.
le&al work r equired when they
bought a home.
It also was a victory for the
Justice Department, which has
waged a long-standing battle
against fee schedules established
by professional associations. The
departme nt s upport ed t he .
Goldiarbs in their lawsuit.
In other action, the court:
-Ruled 7 to 2 that states may
not constitutionally prohibit the
advertising or a bortion services.
The court said such advertising
is protected by the constitutional
guarantee of freedom of the
press.
. -Upheld a robbery and as-
sault conviction against J ack
Roland Murphy, the celebrated
Miami, Fla., jewel thief who is
the central fi gure in the motion
picture "Live A Little, Steal A
Lot."
-Agreed to review a ruling of
the U.S. court of Appeals in
Washington that · the Federal
Power Commission may not give
natural-gas producers built-in
authority to shut off the gas supp-
ly or interstate pipelines when
their contracts expire.
-Declined to r eview a Ken·
tucky family's claim that its pro·
"perty rights were violated when
its land was s trip mined without
the family's consent. The family
does not own the miner al rights
to the land in question.
. Writing for the court in the
legal-fees case, Chief J ustice
Warren E. Burger said ... In
terms of restraining competition
a nd harming consumers ... the
price-fixing activities found here
are unusua lly damaging." Or:•:a:••t
tt'ea&laer
Mostly cloudy through
Tuesday but partial clear·
ing in the afternoon inland
portions. Lillie change in
temper ature. Highs from
mid-60s at beaches t.o near
70inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Thirleen penons have been
injured in a disturbance.at a
women's correction cmterfin
North Carolina. Story. Page
86.
l•dex
•• ""9¥iH
AU M•tleNllN••n Al Or....-CellftlY . ,.,, .......
aJ Sy1°"• ~rter ., *"' "' Midi Mltll«J 4U TtleYl.-
Al l ~ At -.tMr ............ ••
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• it !R DAILY PlLOT N
'Flood'
Costs -
Looming
Beainning in July, the eoe:t of
houaing in Irvine will rise by $87
a year, the COit of nood insurance
under a new federal program.
Irvine is one of several cities in
Orange County 's Oood plain the
Army Corps o f Engineers
believes \\.'Ollld be part.Jally inun·
dated in a 100-year flood.
Under the flood insurance pro-
gram, all cities in flood ha:i:ard
areas must join the program. In
those that do not, mortgage
money w ill not be loaned by
banks after July 1, according to
planner Mike Harris.
However, some banks already
h ave refused to loan money for
Irvine mortgages and home im·
provement loans pending the
city's joining the program.
The city ,council has decided to
join it, d espite disagreement
•:with the federal government on
bow much of Irvine is in the
hazard area. Current official
maps put the "'hole city in the
nood zone.
City planners have protested
that new s tudies show a much
s mall er area of the city in the
flood plain. Ho"•ever, Harris
said. while the federal govern-
m ent hcis accepted the smaller
; area as accurate , it will be Sep-
t ember before the maps are
ehanged.
Meanwhile, he said, all loans
on Irvine hom es will be subject lo
the $87 a year charge for naod in -
surance. After the maps are
c:hanged. only the homes in the
flood area will have to have in-
surance.
Problems with loans to date
"ha\·e been reported onl y on re-
·sales. s aid Jlarris. The Irvine
'compa ny reports no financing
problems on its new homes.
~\ 100-y ear flood , according to
county Environmental J\.tanage-
ment Agency Assistant Director
Carl Nelson, is a majornood with
a statistical probabiLity of hap-
J>t;ning once a century.
Art Museum
. Given Grant,
Seeking Funds
Newport Hi.rbor Art Museum
trustees are trying to r aise at
least $5,000 to match a federal i<ont.
The Natiotta l Endowment for
the Arts bi~'given tbe-muietim
SS,000 to S9end on acquiring
works of art. according to David
St einmetz. president of the
museum's Board of Trustees.
Steinmetz said the grant and
the matching funds wjll be used
to begin the museum's o"'n
permanent coll ection. The only
"'ork s now owned by the museum
are 34 pi eces of contemporary art
donat ed by Avco Financial
Services in 1971 .
The acquis ition council formed
to spearhead the fund-raising ef-
fort is headed by Mrs. Johann
Jonas a nd John Martin Shea,
both of Ne"·port Beach.
Airport Director
To Speak in Mesa ·
Orange County 1\viation direc·
tor Robert Bres nahan will speak
to membe rs of the Citizens
Harbor Area Research Team
<CHART/ at 7:30 a .m. Thursday
tit Glendale Federal Savings and
Loan As sociati on in Costa Mesa.
-He will report on airport ac-
tivities affecting the Harbor
..Area. such as takeoff patterns,
'ind the condemnation o·r·homes
~nder ni ghtpalhs.
ORANGE COAST N
DAILY PILOT
T~· O•"""" (""" O.•lt P•1at, ... 1.,"""<"" ,.,...,
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'
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Rober! N. We<"l'.l
P••>'<IO"' •"<I P1•t>l•\l!•·f
Jack R. Cur lev
""'''Pr~""""'""" C..""••l Ml"'ll"f'
Thomas Keevll
ihom cl \A. Murphine
Charles H. Loos Richdrd P. Nall .-,_,,.!a~I ,,.,.,,,.<1•"11 E.<tlt'"'>
Newl)Orl B~a cn Office JlJ\ ..... ..-6<> .. ~,y ... <j
Mol+lflQ 411<1"" "0. lie>• It/I '1.al
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Telephone f71C) '42-4321
Cl•ssltled Adv•rlislng M2·S671
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~ •.
A Missing faee·
· Stephen Smith ol
Genlen 4rove wea nal
emO!'I hie fellow
gredualeo al Ste-
Unlverolly Sunday. He
•nd another 1tudent,
C•nfe J•n• Hunter of . -Atherton, •r• being
held ceptlve by re-
v o I u t Ion a r I e 1 In
Tanzania.
''They are very
much In our
thoughts," said Stan-
ford President·
Richard Lyman In
opening remark• •l
the unlver1lty'1 c~
mencement ex.,
erclses.
UPI Telephoto
'Nude' Mesa Cook
N ahhed in Valley
A restaurant cook who was al-
legedly cavorting in life nude at
an intersection was jailed early
today, captured follo"ing a 70-
mile-per·hour chase by Costa
Mesa Cit y l\.1anager Fred
Sorsabal, who pursued the sus-
pect's car into Fountain Valley.
The Cost a Mesa Police
helicopter Eagle II, plus ground
patrol units and Huntington
Beach poli ce, a long with Fouh-
tain Vall ey offi cers "'ere even-
tually invol\'ed in the speedy
midnight motorcade.
James R . Ayres, 24, of 336 E .
20th Si .. Costa Mesa, remained in
custody this morning, booked i'n-
to jail on char ges of reckless
driving and indecent exposure.
Huntington Beach· Police 'Of.
fi cer J a mes Cutshaw finally suc-
ceeded in pu lling o\'er Ayres'
sport sedan at Ellis Avenue and
San Antonio Street in Fountain
Valley shortly after midnight.
Sorsabal told police that he, his
wife Marlene, their two teenaged
sons and a young friend were re·
turning home from an evening
out, with son David, 16, driving,
when they first encountered the
naked man st anding in the in·
tersection of Suva Ci rcle and
Mesa Verde Drive. ..
: The city manager dropped off
. his passenger s at their nea"rby
• home and sped back after report·
·ing the incident.
Police helicopter crewman Of-
ficer Sutton said the chopper and
City Manager Sorsabal each
picked up the trail of a car speed-
ing out of the Suva Circle area
\\'ith its lights out at aOOut the
same time, just moments.later.
.speed reached 70. miles per
.hour as the suspect· headed for
. Fountain Valley, allegedly near·
ly colliding with other cars in·
eluding Sorsabal's toward the
• endofthe purs uit.
Officer S utto n said their.
quarry careened through the
parking lot of ftlarie Callender's
Pie Shop, 18889 Brookhurst St., in
Construction
Permits Dip
For Newport
Building permit valuations for
construction in Newport. Beach
still ar e below a 10-year average,
but the latest data shows that the
slump is easing, city aides said
today. -
In the latest data released by
the department of community
development, permit valuations
for the month of May amounted
to slightly more than $3 million.
Although the fi gure is abbut S2
million under the average for
May, it does show a strong in-
crease over earlier months of
197S, they said.
A total 70 new dwelling units
were approved for permits dur-
ing the month with the largest
amount being $1 .8 million for 61
condominium units by McLain
Development Co mpany at Big
Canyon.
The l a r ges t commercial
permit was one for $68,000 for
alterations of the Irvine Com-
pany's building at 660 Newport
Center Drive.
Crew Working
To Cap.Well
INTRACOASTAL CITY. La.
(UPI ) -A drilling crew began
t.he tedious process of capping a
wild offshore natural gas well to-
day to stop the Oow of natural gas
and crude oil into the Oulr or
Mexico. .
The owners of the wel l said
sealing operations would take
from three toa:lx weeks. -
A spoke:sma.n said the crew will
bore a relief column to shut off
the leaking well a nd .also wrll ·
pump mud Into Ju lS,000-foot
:shaft.
'• •
Fou ntain Valley and changed
directions before it was finally
hallt'<.I .
So rsabal chased the fl eeing
auto through the Mesa Verde
area, at speeds up to 50 miles
per hour on residential streets
accordi.ng to P?li<;e repo~. '
•
CIA .••
"'as no assurance CastrQ "'ould
not give the cigars to other people .
pie.
The Rockefeller Commission
report was to be given offi cially•
today to the Senate Investigating
Committee, which Wednesday
will hear from CIA Director
William Colby testifying under
tight security about the 1963 as·
sassination of South Vietnamese
President Nguy en Dinh Diem.
Rockefeller's hint of Kennedy
involvement in a ssassination
plots resulted in a statement
from two former aides of Robert
Kennedy, who accused the vice
president of ignbring the con.
c,lusions of h~ ow.Di report or "de-
liberately lying.'' ~kefeller "said in a broadcast
interview (NBC-TV's Meet the
Press) the commission failed to
complete th~ assassination in -
vestigation because it ran out of
time and encountered too many
difficulties. .
.. Let's face it, 01 he said, "many
of the people have died who were
allegedly involved and others .
wer e assassinated in this country
tragically." •
Asked if he was referring to the
Kennedys, Rockefell er replied:
"Well, as I said, we have no con·
elusive information, but the pre-
sident of the United States and
the attorney general of the Unit-
ed States were both assassinated
tragically in this country."
f.le was asked if he meant the
Kennedys actually were involved
in such plots.
"Well," he said, "I said we had
no evidence on the basis of which
to draw conclusions. I said it "'as
very difficult lo get information
because we go back 15 years and ·
many of the people who were in· volved in the CIA and in the While
1-fouse are no longer living.''
Board Weighs
Teacher Fate
Newport.Mesa school trustees
planned to decide late today
whether t o rescind charges
against suspended Corona del
J\.1 ar 1 Hi g h School t eache r·
Michael M ang·or lo set a date for.
his public hearing.
: Trus(ees called a speciaJ meet-
ing at 4 p.m . today to m8 ke the
decision. Mang was suspended in
early May, charged with "un -
profe"ssional conduct,'' and issued
a notice9finl.enltodismi ss. ;
Mang, a social studies teacher,
appeared at the May 28 school
board meeting and requested a
public hearing.
Trustees can set a hearing date
no sooner than 30 days from to-
day.
'Treasure' Found
HUNTINGDON, England
<UPI ) -Archeolog.lats -and.
British Museum oflicials report-
ed Sunday the di scovery of 25
pieces of church sliver making·
up possibly "lhe earliest known
collection of Christian church
plates in the Roman Empire.·•
The 1llver, with an ntlmated
value of $120,000 , was tumed over
to county offirial• ror a dfflsion
as to whether it 11 treuure lroVf!
-thus 1oln1 to the eowimment
-or whether It Will be glvei to
the finder.
Neeeport P..0,,ra•
Tots Call ·Get
In the Swim
The Newport Beach Parks,
Beaches and RecreaUon Depilrt·
men\ has announced a new
format for its. swimming pro-
gram this summer.
Classes lo be offered include
"Mommy and Me," "Tiny Tot,"
beginners, advanced beginne~.
interme(liate, l i feaaving,
synchronized swimming and
ocean awareness ..
The "Momm y and Me" pro-
gram is for children one through
three who are accompanied In
the water by a responsible adult.
The ''Tiny Tot'' program is for
children three through five.
Lessons will be given at
Newport Harbor an(i.Corona del
Mar High Schools and at "N"
Street and 10th Street in the Bay.
Recreational swimming will
also be· offered at the two high
school pools , costing 50 cents for
those under 17 and 75 cents for
adults. .
The Newport Harbor liigh
School pool wi ll be open for
recreational swimming from
12:30 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. Mond1:ty
through Friday; from 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. Wednesday and Friday;
3 Newport
Officers Win
MA Degrees
Three members of the Newport
Beach Police Department have
"'on master's degrees in public
a dmini s tra tion from th e
U niver si ty of So~the~n
California. ~
The officers "'ho successfully
completed the program are Capt:·
Lou Heeres, Sgt. James Jacobs
and Officer Donald Chandler.
Heeres, who has been on· the
for ce for 15 years, is a 1960
graduate of UC Berkeley. He
head s the department's ad·
ministrative division.
Jacobs has been a member of
the force since 1968 and serves as
a fi eld supervisor in the patrol
divis ion. He earned h is
bachelor's degree in 1971 from
Cal State Fullerton.
Chandler , a 1970 _gi:aduate of
Chamlnade Colle'g"e, Hawaii,
joined the department in 1970. He
is a crime ahalyst in the ad·
ministrative divis ion.
Big Cars Stay
DETROIT (A P ) -A top
Chrysler Corp. executive insists
the financially troubled No. 3
auto maker does not plan to
eliminate its biggest cars in the
1978 model year.
•
,
and rrom 1 ·p. m . to • p.m. s'atw-. ·
day a.nd Sunday. .
The Corona del Mar High
School pool may be used for
recreational swimming rrom
1:30 p.m . to 3 :30 p.m. Monday
lhrou&b Friday; from 6 p.m. to 8
p.m. Monday ; and from l p.m, to
4p.m. Saturday and Sunday.
These schedules begin JUhe 23
and continue throuahout ihe
summer. More. information is
available at ~-2271.
Red Leader's
Visit Stalls
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Secretary of State Henry Kiss-
inger suggests Sov;et leader
Leonid Brezhnev may have to
wait to visit Washington until
there is progress on a new arms
·limitation agreement .
But in linking t he planned visit
to negotiating progress, Kiss-
inger was optimistic about a new
agreement. He said Brezhnev's
visit "will depend on SALT,"
be;cause the Soviet leader would
"prefer to mark his visit with
some significant result.''
SALT is the Strategic Arms
Limitation Talks between the
United States and the Soviet
Union.
Fro•PageAI
STYMIE •••
salary at age 55 .
Tbe city has rejected their
pension request, but has offered
a 7. 75 percent pay boost. .
Silver said the police would set-
tle for a 6.5 percent pay boost for
sworn personnel and a 10.5 per·
cent hike for civilian personnel,
if the pension plan is approved.
ADJN PILOI'
SOLD TIWLER.
•
"The trailer sotd beceUse or
·the ad in the Pilot. There were
lots of calls as a result of the ad.''
That's the advertising success
experienced by the Costa Mesa
"'oman who placed this ad in 'the
Daily Pilot:
22' TRAVEL trlr, com
pletely self-cont, sips 4.
$1500. XXX·XXXX
If you have camping equip-
ment to sell, call 642-5678. Put a
few words to work for you.
In the Daily Pilot.
•
0•11¥ l"llot Sbff PflM
GUil TY OF MURDERS
.. Steven Craig Hurd
Front Page Al
HURD ...
·an Irvine orange grove the next
day a f\er the teacher was
dragged from her station wagon
by the gang of drug-using drifters
led by Hurd.
Opening statements in the sani·
ty hearing now faced byHurd1\>ill
be deliVered later today in Judge
Frank Domenichini 's courtroom •
Lawyers for both sides hav~
scheduled psychiatrists as wit·
nesses and defe nse. atto.rney
William Gamble h~ to put
Hurd oh tbe..sta.rot'as biS final wit·
ness .
Hurd accepted the t"'·o verdicU
today wtth'\'lo displaytsr·emotion
He is under daily sedation follow·
ing a California Supreme Cou rl
ruling hist month that he could b<
tried on the murder charges pr°'
vided he is tranquilized at a ll
phases ofthe trial.
La\lo'yers-for both sides agre~
that Hu rd is only capable of tell·
'ing the truth or understandlni
testimony while he ..is under thf
supervised sedation .
• • Mariners g1ves ·you
up to a s1,soo tax
deductiQn this yeai: ••
... AND EVERY YEAR UNTIL YOU RETIRE!·NOW YOU
CAN BUILD A TAX SHELTERED RETIREMENT FUND
AT MARINERS, WITH "IRA" THE INDIVIDUAL RE-
'flREMENT ACCOUNT.
M ari ners Individual Reti rement
Account ~s a personal tax-sheltered
retirement plan. ''IRA" was dev~l
oped by Congress to give you an
effective way t o build your own retire-
ment fund .
You can save as much as $1500 or
15°/o of your Wages, whichever is less,
and your savings will be a tax deduc-
tion during your working years. ·If
your spouse works, you r combined
tax-sheltered savings can be as much
as $3000 per year.
Come In to Mariners and start your
own Individual Retiremen t Accoun t.
You'll be saving tax dollars now and
building a much brighter future. For
more lnfortnatlon, come In or call any
-one o.f our convenient locations.
HERE'S HOW FAST YOUR M ONEY GROWS IN A MARINERS
''IRA .• A CCOUN T. /nd1~1dufl Re1ireme1tt A"'0tin1S ,,. pr•Dntly
el!lrnlng 11,(,% ;Hr yHr wnelf tilined 11t e 6-r e.tr certil1C•I•. Your
•n1tu•1 riflld It lricr••sed 10 •big 8 oo•.i. wn•n 1(ll•res1 It1dd.,, ro·
1h• .CCOUlff blll•lfU flfd corntioundt1d d•1ry. Wi th • m•.umum
llfd/~fdu•I contribution ol S1500 e•ch yH•, /'l~e ·• how rour
"IOlllff will grow:
WITH TAX WITHOUT EXTRA
SHELTERED TAX MONEY ... SHELTEJIEO FROM TA)(
Anl!.lll PLAN PLAN DtiFERRAL
5yn. s 9,510 6~ell
10 yrs., 23,540 15, 50 7, 90
20yra. 74 ,640 65,840 30,~
30 yrs. 185.550 95,000 90.520
'Ai:Sollfl ligutH are bltSed on 2!!~~ !l'ICOm• t>tac.ket. F4tller1l
r90u11110111 teQu!re 1uf)a!•nt1•I pen•!!•et !or flllfly w1thdr11w1111
trom Wllllc.t• 11CCOun11. ,
If&\. Mariners Savings ~ and Loan~iatiOn
S-llffcll lot Ant•I••· --(Moln Ofllce)
1Sl5W .. tcUffD,.
(71C) M2·40CX>
,,.....,,'-ch
{loytlde C..-.ler)
102• Boytld• Dr.
(71 4)6'2·•000
l .. u-hedl
310GlenneyreSL
!71•1•••·7506
(OPENING SOON)
(leisure World)
13120S.011Hch llvd,
(213) 5'9-?6'6
.... rtyHlllt
3&0So. l•v•rlY' Dr.
(21.:1 ) 5S3·3000 ,
(Opp.Mi. Sino! HofPllol)
87•7 leverly l lvd.
(213)6S7·Cl41
" .;
(.
' t
I
ores Proposed
Food Ad. Ru·les
Pushed by FXC
8y SYLVIA POllTElt
While Lhe Federal Trade Commialoo is pvsblnl touch
1'Ules covering food adveitiaing lD the U.S •• an even harder·
• hJttlng approach to Ille exploelve lnue ot fOOd adverti&ia1 la
being urged by a group or the FTC'aownatalr membert.
· The FTC "Starr PrOP01aJ.a" call for "Afrirmatlve Dis· olosure" -or disclosure requlrementa where no require·.
· ments ~xist today -in food ads on the grounds tbat
omission of nutrition in·
formation in food ad·
vcrtislng coosUtutes a ~·'decepUve and unfair"
ractice over which the
TC h as legal r e·
ulatory authority.
1 Here's a rundown
pn theie.propo.uls:
Money's
Worth
J (1) IF A FOOD CONTAINED an added nutrient, or if
ny nutrition claim or piece of information Tespecting nutri·
on were made on the label or ln the ad, advertising for the
roduct would have to identify up to four key nutrients pre·
ent· in nutritionally significant amouJlts (10 percent or
ore of the U.S. Recommended Daily Allo.wance for one
erving of each nutrient). The ad also would have to show
e actual perce ntage of the RDA represented by each
utrient and number of calories in a serving.
A TV ad for a ca.n of spaghetti and meatballs, for in· ~tance, would have to disclose something like this on the ~creen : "One Ph oz. serving provides the following percen·
t ages of the U.S. RDA : Protein 15, Niacin 10, Iron 10 ;
f alories 100." .
. I (2) U a.. food did not contain any significant total of any
putricnt, tHe ad would have to disclose that fact in a state·
tytent s uch as: "This food does not contain 10 percent or
more or the U.S. RDA or any vitamin, minerul or protein.•·
(3i IC a food did not have any nutrition information on its label for one reason or another, its ad still would have to
(lisclose the number of calOries per serving and the defini·
tion or ' 'fterving'. also would have to be stated in the ad.
(4) FOR FOODS WIDCB were not te<tuired to have
nulrienJ labels , the ads would have to disclose specifically
that the food did "not contain 10 percent or more of the U.S.
RDA of any vitamins, minerals oi proteins" -if that were
tbe case.
(5) As an alternative to these proposed "affirmative
disclosures," ads would simply display the nutrient labels
themselves from the food packages-for a given minimum
number of seconds .
Consumer groups also are callin~ for :
-Disclosure or added sugar above IO percent or any
product's calorie content. cholesterol and sodium content
above cert ain agreed-upon limits, fat above 30 percent or
the calorie content, fiber less than certain levels.
-Full disclosure of chemical food additives including
preservatives, colors, flavorings -plus a special indication
if no additives w re contained in the food . The absence of any
additives could be indicated -on food labels and ads ~by
some simple system or symbols which could be easily re·
cognized by the public.
-MUCH MORE EXPLICIT labeling of fabric"ated or
synthetjc products, across the board from cream to ice
cream, juices, l)acon, eggs. Such labeling might apply to
this type of product not only as it is sold in grocery stores but
also as it is served in restaurants, airplanes, etc.
-Clear warnings -on labels and in ads -of the health
hazards of eating too much sugar, salt. cholesterol.
-A simple scorecard system of nutrUJon 11"8dinl of
foods on labels and in ada -similar to gradinf ol school
papers.
· J A full six years ago, the White House Conference r eport orl Food. Nutrition and health declared that "one basic right of individuals in our society is the right to proper food .•• An
extension of this right is the ''right" to know what you're eat-
ing. _ .
"We need a reordering of priorities in the food in·
dustry," says Dr. Michael J acobson, director of the Center
for Science in the Public lnteresi in Washington -now or·
ganizing a nationwide "Food Day" for April 17, 1976 to
dramatize our nutrition gap and the urgency of overhauling
food udverlising. And adds Jacobson: "top biUing" in the
new order would be ''the customer's health." .
YOU HAVE BEEN ''invited" to write your views to the .
Federal Trade Commission, William Dixon. Special Asst.
Director for Rulemaking, Washington, D.C. 20508. U you opt
!or doing nothing, you will have only yourself to blame ff you •
dif;like the outcome. ·
MARKET HIGHLIGHTS
NYSEldex
ASE Inde x.
Dow-Jones Ind
S & P 500 Stocks
INDE~XES
48.69
89.56
834':56
91.46
up
up
up
up
0.50
0.13
10.09
0.94
New York (UPI) -The lotlOwlng Hat
$1'10w$ the stocks ln•I have Qalntd mo'I tnO losl 1ne most based on perc.nt o
NPtr i ·nrk J 5
"0111 A ~ti ve
~not on Ille New Yori\ StoO 11 MOST ACTJ,YI STOCICS EIC<N nQe. NEW YORK (UPl1 -The IS
..
mos I York !'Ml •nd percentage cha11911 •re the t<llvt stocks tr•ded on the New difference between The prevlous <loSlnQ Slo<lt E•changt' Monday. ,,k• •nd 1rie Glrr/i.~ c1os1nv ~k•. s.... o-+~
1 • ._. Sh 1, 1 &cu:' 011 •••.•••• 2-...too 2n-....,.., • ,b &v.+ '1 Up 1'. •dntl ..... , 1't 100 18'4 + 'II 1 CJ~ Intl wts IS·l6+ "'° Up IS.4 ~ ,.,. •· •• ' 3 c I ,.__ I \4 l. 0.M\'$ Inc: ••••• 1N.500 17~ + ~ . ...,.·p l 11'1 + Up I ·• P111¥0id ...... 179,100 ~ + 2"'°
• S.Ule F RIE 4"°+ II'> Up }2·' Teuco ••••••• '67,700 ~ + -.S 1.A¥Slq .2t I""+ b Up 2.1 \Mlltt•kw •••••• , '60,300 '"' + 14 6 Am ~k .20 11'9+ l\.li Utt 10.1 So;Ahff11 CO 131,600 1211; -\'a l Atc.1taN .36 1t\9+ l\'a Up 10.7 Gelltf•I Mtrs 121,000 .,..., -\'a
• IDS Rlt .111> s• ... + ..., Up 10.S """ AlrllMS 111,600 7VJ 'fi ..... r Pl .IO 13•,. + 114 Up 10.4 Star,. G o 11•MO lWt :.:··~
CoojMf" I.Alb S\11+ V. Up 9.S Gull Ru Olm 107,300 ~ -~
I Gwrd MIQe 2MI +"' Up •.s Mirr Iott 11).1 IOO 12~ U BunllerR .40 1v.+ ~ Up t .4 • -·· Sl~ler ···•·•• 99000 '"" :.:··~
Glnos lncor 7.\lt+ ~ Up 1.t EDon orp •··• ~ ta + 1~ ff Oltmtr 1. 10 3S\lo + a Up 9.2 ...... '· • • 9' t h
s Puritan Fsh 3V. + 14 Up 1.1 l-un_1_°" __ c.a_,_11 __ ._. ·_·_•_s_. --~----111 •mrtp Cotp 3 "• + 14 Up 1.3
Copelnd 60 9V.. + '14 Up 1.3 H
ApKo COrp 3 'I•+ 14 Up 1.3
Coleco ln(lu 3~+ ~ Up a.o Mldtend R 1 16'-t+ H'• up a.o
1 LMI lnve~tr LOSERS '"' ... Ott ,,.
1 CNA Lilwln 1\o -'. 011 100 ~~Mlrn I\• '• Ott 100 l .... \t Ott •• s SuperGn 20 • ~. OH ..
• llCllAI pf •''t •6 4 Otl 10 1 GAC Corp 1l > • '11 Oii 1.7
1 Hernlsp c~ t•1-'"• Off 1.1
• WlllPS 1.0 n~-v-. Off 77 '° llCOf'tc~P In 3•11-·~ Oii 1.4 lt J 11111ce M19 31,,_ v. Of'I '·' e u-· Corp 1'1(,-"' Off •.7 Eltcl Memo 1h-Vt Off 6.3
(MMtf Inv 2 -t gr, u IS ftoy•I • Uo . -
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utdTecnn1 t e 337 s.v. + t'MI UldTe<ll pta.. St llOVi+ l
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Wl1EIP l.t2 " 201 21·~. I. WlsElpfl.'° •• t~ .. • Vt1K Ge\W1 , 14 111,, ••
WIKPS 1.J2 t 10 1S + Yo Witco C 1.10 t JI 22>4-\t Wo!YWI .OSI> U 12 Hoo •••
Wom!co 56 to 207 1S + "4
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=E~1:.1s~ .~ m h~· ."" Dollar Mixed ~~l=~~:: '!:J0 41 !1~~ BRUSSELS <UPO -The dollar
1>pG1nc11.10 1 o Hh • •0 opened mixed on lntemational money =':' :: ~ "~: ~0,~ + ~ markets Monday. Gold opened prac·
11toc1 &o.Jn '~ • •"" lical1., unchan°ed fired RU .IO • ~y \4o •• • .IJ • • :-tA ' 11: .: 1, '~~ : : $ In Zurich gold began lrado al
MCtl 1.to J ':3 m:• \,') 164.SO an ounce. the same H
mt.a 1'11 .. ~. 14:~ Friday's cloe~. In Laodon lbe metal
o.t 1 ~ •• ,. .. E~+ ~ was $164.00 an ounce at the momlna GtlfUO •• ii •'I" ,...._ '?"2 .. v.+1 fixine. a drop or 2S ceota o...-""' l"Sl 1JU • 1 ,., k d M nc1tJ110 ... wee e.n •
.,
••
+ Mcinoay.Junt 10. 1w10
\
...
Every rTiorning , daily inter8st is added to
every Los Angeles .Federal Savings Account. ...
Passbook Savings-Certificates of Deposit -
Investment Certificates
Dally Plto« PMto 11., Piltrl<lr O'Do11nen
E11ergy S a ver?
The rig that Mrs. Diane Pattison of Costa
Mesa uses to haul }\er three sons around
doesn't use any gas and doesn't pollute
"the atmosphere, but it does take a lot of
~nergy -mom's. But when it comes to
transporting Morgan, 10 months; David,·
3, and Bruce, 4, Mrs. Pattison doesn't
mind at all.
Trustees Mull Funding
Saddleback College trustees
will be briefed Monday night on
new legislation which could r e-
duce state support of the college
by $79,500 next year.
The s pedal sess ion is
scheduled for 7 : 30 p .m. in the col-
lege library.
As presently written, the state
budget bill would limit state ap-
propriations for enrollment
growth at community colleges
from three to five percent.
For Saddleback College which
·has forecast a growth of 16.5 per-
cent next year, this could mean
withdrawal of state funding for
about 1.200 students.
I
business manager, estimated
this wuuld add about one·half
cent to the district's projected
94-cent tax r ate.
Barletta explained that state
support for each Sadd.J eback stu.
dent cons is ts of $125, con·
siderably less than the $600 per
student s tate s ubvention for
Orange Coast and Golden West
college students.
He said state aid represents on·
ly a small portion of the $1,500
budgeted for each student but
that college officials s m aren't
happy about plans to curtail state
allocations.
Barletta pointed out that some
However, a compromise move
by-the Assembly Ways and
Means Committee would allow Neiv El Toro
the college to make up the dif-
ference between the slate ap.
proprialions and actu a l ScL-of •.-Be
enrollment to be collected from f'U.I IA.I
the taxpayers.
Boy Barletta, the district's ·Na1fied Serrano
Serrano Intermediate School
has been selected as the name for ·
efforts bad b een made t o
persuade legislators to change
their minds but that the board of
trustees bad not yet formally op-
posed the measure.
"We are not as badly off as the
Coast Community College Dis-
trict or any other school district
which receives a substantial
amount of its income from state
sources," Barletta explained.
"We are considered a wealthy
district in terms of our assessed
valuation. We have a large tax
base. Our support for ADA
(average daily attendance) is not
that great and therefore the im-
pact would not J>e that great."
I I the new junior high scheduled to ,
open next winter in El Toro.
All at highest rates
LOS ANGELES
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Savings insured to
$40,000
Safe deposit boxes
and the most wanted
savings services
Newport Beach Office
'
3201 Newport Blvd. • 675-4500 (Across from City Hall)
Head Office Do~ntown : Los Angeles Federal Savings
and Loan Association One Wi lshire, Los Angeles 90017
Other offices throughout the area
IGHT
8:30 P.M. •/ CHANNEL 11
See
MAHARISHI MAHESH YOGI
• on
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District trustees selected
the name from three suggested
by Ray Garubo, new principal
for the facility, and a committee
of teachers, parents and stu-
dents . THE ffiERV GRIFFIN SHOW
•
&uMle back
H ires 2 New
College A ides ..
•Trustees of the Saddle back
Community College District
have added a financial aid officer
and a public information assis-
tant to the college staff but de-
layed action on the hiring of an
athletic therapist-trainer.
The aid officer wi ll coordinate
fin anCial assistance to students
and keep track of federal, state,
and local aid payments. The posi .'
Lion carries a salary rangeofS828
to Sl ,054 depending on qualifica-
tions and experience.
The public information assis-
t ant will help information officer
Dan Armstrong with the col-
lege's community relations pro.
gram. Proposed salary for the
position ranges from $769 to $981.
Trustees are expected to take
action on the third position at a
special meeting scheduled fol"
7:30p.m . Monday.
Board members balked at ap-
provine the position last Monday
night because the job description
made reference only to the treat·
ment of athletes for injuries.
At the suggestion ""'--board
Chairman Robert BarthOfbmew .,
the trainer-therapist's duties W111
include the treatment o( all stu-
dent. who might requirewhirpool bet.hi and other therapeutic re-
~· The salary of the traln~r-
t.benplst •oaJd range from $8$9·
to'1.iotper month. . .
·' . . .
. The winning name was that of
a Spanish g randee who owned a
land grant in the days when
Spain ruled California.
The rejected choices included
Vista del Lago (Lake Vi ew) and
Rancho Lindo <Beautiful Ranch) .
· Intermediate School.
All three refl ect the district's
pattern o f usi ng the area's
Spanish ·Mex1c an heritage in
naming schools.
The name Serrano reflects the
historical significance of the geo·
graphical area of the site al the
corner of Jeronimo Road and
Canada Road.
Don Jose Scr n rno's Spanish
land gr ant ext ended over the
land now known as Lake Forest
and El Toro:
Wate r Rates
. Going U p
For Vie jo?
Water rates are expected to go
up soon in the Santa Margatita
Water District, which serves
. part of Mission Viejo and Coto de
Caza.
District General Manager Sim
Smith said he will ask directors
Tuesday to authorize a rate study
~nd to set a public hearing in Ju-
ly on the probable rate hike.
"The r ates will go up," Smith
said, "we j ust don't know how
much."
He said a 30 percent increase in
the cost of power and a charge in-
creue of about $10 per acre foot
of water as s upplied by the
Metropolitan Water District is
prompting the r ate study.
"We are not s ure bow the in-
creue charge would be collect-
ed," Smith said. "If we don't in-
crease the minimum charge
(which is now · four dollars per
month) it would go on as n user
charge. s pread out amone all the
·people who are using water."
The public is invited to the
water board m eeti n gs.
Tuesday's is set. for 2 p.m. al the
Santa Margarita office, 25571
Marguerite Parkway, .Mission
VleJo <Ploza Viejo). ..
. .
Ellen C?rby (Grandma Walton). State Senator Arlen Gregorio, ·
and psychiatrist Or. Harold Bloomfield who all practice the
Transcendental Meditation T.M. Technique
FREE INTRODUCTORY LECTURES - 8 P .M.
NEWPORT BEACH
I
HUNTINGTON BEACH
LAGUNA BEACH
T J 1 7 MARIMIR'S iJillWlY ues. I une t ... DOVIR & llVIHI
Thurs., June 19
Mon., June 23 LAGUNA MOULTOM
PLAYHOUSl-
606L1 .. 1C~M
'-OR MORE IHFORMATIOM
CALL 17141 642-4741 or 17141 499-2739·
. . .
•
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1 ~
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I
Plan to Restrueture 19th Street ,.
MOND~Y, JUNE 16, 1975
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Today's a .. lag
N.Y.S&eeb
c TEN CENTS.
. •
n>sta Me§a planners are suggesting that a downtown re-
development project be tied to a plan 'to realign 19th
Street between Newport Boulevard· and Patk Avenoe.
City Planning Director William Dunn estimates the com·
bined jobs would cost in the neighborhood of $3 million.
Some of the money would be public, some private, he
said. A key to the plan is to acquire a vacant market
near 19th and Harbor to provide new locations for busi-
nesses displaced by the street widening .
. Pre~ident Says Rocky is His Man
, .
Federal
Funds Set
For Mesa
Grants to three Orat\ge County
cities including Huntington
Beach and Costa Mesa, totaling
more than $1 million in revenue·
·sharing funds for community im·
provement were announced to-
day in Washington.
The money allotted by t he
Department of Housing and
Urban Development under Com-
m unity Development Grants
legislation approved last fall will
cover a variety of projects.
A spokesman· for the office of
Sen. Alan Cranston (D·Calif.),
aaid the funds are the first re-
leased under t he new law.
Cranston aide Dan Perry said
Huntington Beach is to receive
the largest allocation in Orange
County, a total of $460,000 for
three projects. ' ·
These include community pro-.
grams for the elderly and the
handicapped, public works . .pro-.
jects and the acquisition of land,
Perry said.
Costa Mesa will receive
$229,000 for housing rehabilita-
tion and other community im·
.provemenls, according to
Cranston's office.
Garden Grove is to receive
$367 ,000 in its Community
Development Grant allotment.
Cash released by HUD will be
used for stor m drains, street
lighting, sidewalks, curm and
gutters, street improvements
and specialized crime prevention
programs.
Perry said the HUD fund re-
leases were a nnounced through
Sen. Cranston's office because he
is a member of the Senate Sub·
committee on Housing.
Drama Critic Dies
DENVER (AP> -Robert
Downing, 61, Denver Post drama
critic and former Broadway ac·
tor and director, died ~turday.
Mostly cloudy · through
Tuesday but partial clear-
ing in ~be afternoon inland
portions. LitUe change in
temperature. Highs from
mid·60s at beaches to near
70lnland.
INSIDE TODAY
Thirl1m Ptf'IOftl how· bnn
injurtd In.a din1'rbonce.at.o
womm'• COTTICUon ccrdtT in
North Carolina. Skny, ~
Bf.
All :: 814 At ....
JafJIJar to Lakers
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, star center of the Milwaukee
Bucks, was traded today to the Los Angeles Lakers
for center Elmore Smith, guard Brian Winters and the
Lakers' two top draft choices -forward Dave Meyers
of UCLA and guard Junior Bridgeman of Louis ville.
Details on Pag~ B4 today.
Hurd Found Guilty
Of 2· Grisly · Deaths
By TOM BARLEY
Of ... 0.11, ...... Slaff
Opening statements in the sani·
ty hearing now faced by Hurd will
be delivered later today in Judge
Frank Domenichini 's courtroom.
(See H\JRD, Page A2)
Running
·Mate
Assured
WA~INGTON (UPI> -
President Ford made clear ioday
that despite conservative
grumbling, Vice President
Nelson A. Rockefeller is his
choice for a running mate' on the
1976 Republican ticket.
"I am convia.ced that both of us
can GmliM -4~tes tto theliaT"'O>Dvention)
that individually and as a team
we should be nominated," Ford
said in a statement read to White
House reporters by Press
Secretary Ron ?llessen.
T he Ford comment put bis
personal stamp of disapproval on
suggestions from conservatives
in Congress that the choice of a
vice presidential candidate be
left open by Ford as he seeks the
presidential nomination for
himself. ·
Nessen said the statement was
prepared even before Sen. Barry
Goldwater (R-Ariz.), took an ob·
lique public swipe at Rockefeller
during the weekend with a state·
ment that he had always believed
the vice president "would make
a great s ecretary of state."
In making the statement,
Ford, through Nessen, observed
the political fiction that a vice
presidential candidate is chosen
by tbe convention delegates
r ather than by the presidential
nominee.
"The President will be for
Nelson Rockefeller for the (vice
presidential ) nomination,"
Nessen said in r esponse to ques-
tions. "The delegates will make
the decision." In fact, every pre·
sidenlial candidate in modern
political history has chosen his
own running mate and the con-
vention always has approved the
choice.
Mail R estricted
WASHINGTON (AP>
Americans can send letters to
North Vietnam but not to the Unit-
ed States' former allies, South
Vietnam and Cmabod,ia, a situa-
tion the Postal Service is striving
to remedy by arranging for
service there.
$1 Per Gallon
Solon Predicts Gas Price
W ASHJNGTON (UPI> -Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield s ays American motorists soon will be pay-
ing about $1 per gallon for gasoline if Congress and Prc"i-
denl Ford can't get together on an energy program.
Mansfield said Ford's full $3-per-ba rrel tariff would
raise gasoline prices to about 70 cents per gallon. "On top of
that, you have the recent decision by the OPEC (oil-
producing ) countries to raise prices by 30 percent in Sep-
tember," he said.
"If something isn't done by Congress and the President
together, we stand to see an increase which will bring it
5omewhere around a dollar," he said in a weekend in-
terview.
Manafield. aaid &Wlline pr.ices will rise in any event, but
Congress and the White House must agree on a program lo
cutlarge-scale waste-"around 40 percent" of the supply.
Chas es His Car
Mesa ·city Manager
· HelpsCaptureNude
A restaurant cook who was al-
legedly cavorting in lhe nude at
an intersection was jailed early
today. captured ~following a 70·
mile-per-hour chase by Costa
Mesa City Manager Fre d
Sorsabal, who pursued the sus-
pect 's car into Fountain Valley.
The Costa Mes a Police
helicopter Eagle II, plus ground
patrol units and Huntington
Beach police, along with Foun-
PRICESCUMB
IN LIGHITRADE
NEW YORK <UPI) -Prices
pushed higher today in slow trad-•
ing on the New York Stock Ex-
·hcnage. News was scarce and so
were investors.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average, a 5.16-point gainer: Fri·
day, was ahead 10.09 points to
834.56. Advances led declines, 817
to 522, among the 1,765 issues
crossing the tape.
The turnove r amounted to
about 12,300,000 shares, com-
pared with 13,190,000 traded dur-
ing the same period Friday.
Pri~es were slightly higher in
mod~rat e trading on the
American Stock Exchange.
lain Valley officers were even-
tually involved in the speedy
midnight motorcade.
James R. Ayres, 24 , of 336 E.
20th St., Costa Mesa, remained in
custody this morning, booked in-
to jail on charges of reckless
driving and indecent exposure.
Huntington Beach Police Of-
ficer James Cutshaw finally suc-
ceeded in pulling over Ayres•
sport sedan at Ellis Avenue and
San Antonio Street in Fountain
Valley shortly after rajdnight.
Sorsabal told police that he, bis
wife Marlene, the ir two teenaged.
sons and a young friend were re·
turning home from an evening
out, with son David, 16, driving,
when they first encountered the
naked man standing in the in-
tersection of Suva Circle and
Mesa Verde Drive.
The city manager dropped off
his passengers at their nearby
home and s ped back after report·
ing the incident.
Police heli copter crewman Of-
ficer Sutton said the chopper and City Manager Sorsabal each
picked up the trail of a car speed•
ing out of the Suva Circle area
with its lights out at about the
same time. just moments later. Steven Craig Hurd was found
guilty of two murders today by
an Orange County Superior Court
jury which must now determine
if the bushy-haired def end ant
was sane when he participated in
two killings within a 24-hour
period.
The jury ended two days or de-
UbecaUon by ruling that Hurd,
25, was guilty of tirat degree
murder in the slayings five years
ago of Mission Viejo teacher
Florence Nancy Brown and
service station attendant Jerry
Presidential Approval
Speed reached 70 mtles per
.hour as the suspect headed for
Fountain Valley, allegedly near·
ly colliding with other cars in-
cluding Sorsabal's toward the
end of the pursuit.
Officer Sutton said thei.i:'
<See NUDE, Page A2)
Wayne C•rfln . ·
Hurd was with convicted killer
Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse,
no~ 21, on June 2. 1970, when
Hulse used a roofer's ax to chop
to death Carlin, 21 , in the
restroom of his servl~e station.
'CIA Had ro Get Okay' -Rocky, Goltbmter A.D IN PILOT
SOLD TR4ILER WASHINGTON (UPI)·-All
major CIA activities have had
presidential approval. accordin&
• t.o both Vice President Nel son
Rockefeller and Sen. Barry,
Goldwater, CR-Ariz.). .
But just what those ·activities
were is still a big mystery in
Washington and still provokint
debate.
Rep. B.F . Sisk, (D·Calif.), said
he would introduce the resolution
~to disband the House Select Com-
mittee on lntellicence because ol
a move by five of the commit-
tee's seven Democrats forcing
the resignation of the chairman,
Rep. Lucien Nedzi, (~Mich.).
dead.
He hinted his commission may • ·'The trailer sold ~ause ot
have obtained iof ormatioo Presi-'the ad in the Pilot. 'fl\ere were
dent Kennedy and bis brother, lots of calls as a result of Ute ad."
former attorney general Robert That's the advertising slk!ces&
Kennedy, were involved in the al-experienced by the Cost a Mesa
leted plots but'-be empbashed woman who placed this ad in the
none or the secret information Daily Pilot:
was 1tron1 enou1b to support , 22' TRAVEL trlr, com
conclusions of guilt. • pletely self-cont, sips 4.
Goldwate-r, a member of the $1500. xxx-xxxx
' , ... •• All
· Jt was alleged in Hurd's trial
tbat be repeatedly stabbed Mrs.
Brown, 31, of El Toro to death In
an Irvine oran1e rrove the next
day after tbe teacher was
dr&11ed from ber ltaUon waaon
by the 11n1 OI drcta-"'1Da drifters
led by Hurd.
Meanwhile, a key Rules Com·
mtttee member said today he
Wlll propose abolishing a 5peclal
House CIA investilt•dAC ~
te. because it bu ~ ._. w
Rockefeller, whose com·
mission report on the CIA was re-
lea1ed l•t week, said Sunday
one reason the panel did not de.
velop conclusive evidence on al-
Senate committee invetttilaUng If you have camping equlp-
the CIA, backed up Rockefeller ment to sell, call 64.2.5678. Put a. I ,
I All AA
M
. .
( 7,
dinen•k>o.. r
&.ctd CIA f Qfelan assassination
~ WU ·be.ca\lH 10 manx
,. .... Implicated ln them are
••
by saying no major CIA action, few words to work IOI' you.
aucb as •n aeaasslnallon, "-.;oWcl • In the Daily Pilot.
(SeeCIA, Pap.Al)
-~ • •J
44 DAILY PILOT c Moncsax, June l!, Hll:a
German
President
:.Visits.tJ .S. · TONIGlfl'
UCI LECTURES
''Conservatloo Gardening ...
Room 105 Social Sciences Lab.
''Sell Esteem ThrolU(h Tram1c·
tional Analysis," Room 174 Com·
puter Science Bldg. "Manage-
~ent Development for Women,"
Room 140 Social Sciences Lab.
"The Yellowstone," Room 178
Humanities Hall. All 7 p.m .
Leg~
F~e Hit
By Court
Steptien lmlth oi
Gerdln Greve••• nat
among hi• fellow
graduate• •t St•nfofd
Untverelty Suntl•Y· He
and •nothet' •tuct.nt,
C•rrle J•ne Hunter of
Atherton, ere being
held ceptlve by r•·
volutlon•rle• In
Tenzenla.
.
CIA .••
have taken place without the pre·
aldlDt lmowin8 aboutlt.." · Ho also said Sund~ be had
teen no evidence any CIA as·
aauinaUon Pto\s were ever at·
tempt.eel but that be "wouldn't be
aurpriled" ii the White House
considered .ldlllng Cuban pre-
mier Fidel Castro.
..
By HELEN THOMAs
WASHINGTON (U PI )
Pf'esjdent Ford welromed West
German President Walter Scheel
today with a strong reaffU'ma-
Uon oC the United States' com-
mlt men t to defend Western
Europe.
In a · sunbathed welcoming
ceremony on the White House
south lawn with full military
honors, Ford told Scheel the
United States is "strongly com-
mitted to saf eguarding the
lreedom of the West.'•
"We remain committed to the
freedom and security ol Berlin "
he s aid, adding that the Unit~
States sees the security of
Western Europe as "a true test of.
what is known as detente. '•
Scheel, w ho arrive d by
ltelicopter from Williamsburg,
Va., wh~re he and his wife spent
the night, was the first president
of West Germany to visit the
United States in 17 years and the
second since World War II. He
has visited the 'United States
several times, however, as a
private citizen.
Ford greeted Scheel while Mrs.
Ford presented Scheel 's wife
with a bouquet of American
Beauty roses.
Both presidents stood at atten-
tion while the Marine Corps band
played "De utschland Uber Al-.
Jes" and the '"Star Spilllgled Ban-
ner."
Scheel, in perfect English told
ihe gathering that his visit' mir-
rored the "excellent" relations
between West Germany and the
United Stales.
Referring to World War II he
said the Germans "owe a debt of
gratitude to the United States for
the help it afforded its former
enemies.
"This help wiU never be forgot· ten."
But insteal or dwelling on the
past, he said, the two countries
must. focus on the 'future of
strengthening the Atlantic Al-
liance to deal not only with the
problems of common security
but to developing a "common ap-
proach to economic and
monetary problems.''
Scheel also invited Ford to visit
West Germany. Ford was ex-
pected to do so. perhap.5 in early
August. should there be an East-
West summit meeting following
the conclusion or the European
Security onference.
Boa~dWeig~
Teacher Fate
Newport-Mesa school trustees
planned to dec ide late today ·
") wh€'.ther to rescind charges
agamst suspended Corona del
.Mar High School teacher
Michael Mang or to set a date for
his public hearing.
Trustees called a special meet·
ing at 4 p.m . t~ay to make the
decision. Man~as suspended in
early May. charged with •·un-
professional conduct," and issued
a notice of intent to dismiss.
Mang, a social studies teacher ,
appeared at the May 28 school
board meeting and requested a
public hearing.
Trustees can set a hearing date
no sooner than 30 days from to-
day.
14 Die iit River
RAWALPJNDI, Pakis tan
<U PIJ -A s mall boat capsized in
the Khia le Ri ver near Peshawar
.Sunday a nd 14 persons drowned,·
oUicials reported. Most of the
victims were r e ported to be
,.. women and children.
-•
~ .. ..
ORANGe.LOAST c
DAILY PILOT
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,.,.nclpal ,...bli.,,lnc;i pl1nt Is •t JOO W.sl B<ly
$tr-1, <;-•• Ml.w . C..lltornl1 t7•:00..
Robert N. WH:d ~ ... ldont Ind PullllSNr
Jack R. Curley
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Thomas Keevil
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TVESDAY;"VNE17 .
COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL
-Regular meeting, City Hall,
6:30p.m.
SENIOR CITIZENS CLUB -
Community Recreation Center,.
Tues., Wed., Thurs . 12-3 p.m.
UCI LECTURES -
"'Ame ri can F olk Medicine ,
Room 159 Social Sciences Lab, 7·
p.m . "F a bric J,)esign with
l>yes," Room 503 CdM High.
School, 7 p.m. ·
Lady Lucan
1 Tells Court
Of Terror ,,,.,.-
LONDO N (A P ) -Lady
Veronica Lu can , wife of the miss·
ing British earl who is sought in
lhe murder of the family nanny,
said for the first time today he
had tried to s trangle her on the
nightofthe murder. · ·
She told a tense inquest at Lon-
. don's Westminster Coroner 's
Court: ··tte thrust two gloved
fingers down m y throat and we
started to figh t. During the·
course of it h e attempted to
strangle me from in front."
The inquest was hearing
evidence on the death of the
:Lucan family'.s nanny, 29·year-
old Sandra Rivett, who was bat-
tered to death io the Belgravia
home of the Countess of Lucan
last Nov. 7. Lady Lucan, 37, was
also badly injured by the nanny's
assailant on that day.
Lady Luca n told the Daily Ex-
press, "I shall simply tell the
court what happened , and if°
asked I shall reveal the name of
the man who attacked me -the
man who sat on the stairs af·
terwards, cried on my shoulder
and told me had killed Sandra ."
The countess s aid she waited
until the man calmed down and
then ran to a nearby pub for help,
streaming blood and c rying
WASdiNGTON (AP) -The
Supreme Court struck down
mlnlmum legal-fee schedules for
real estate transactions today in
an 8 to O decision which probably
also speJJs the end of. fixed fees
for other let al services.
The court ruled that minimum·
fee schedules established by
state or local bar associations
violate federal antitrust law
whenever the fees affect in-
terstate commerce.
The decision WM a victory for
a Virginia couple, Lewis H. and
Ruth Goldfarb, which challenged
the Fairfax County Bar Associa-
tion's fixed minimum fee for
legal work required when they
.bought a home.
It also was a victory for the
Jus tice Department, which t>as
wa~ed a long-standing battle·
agamst fee schedules established
by professional associations. The
department s upported the
Goldfarbs in their lawsuit.
In other action. the court:
--Ruled 7 to 2 ·that states m ay
not constitutionally prohibit the
advertising of abortion services.
The court said such advertising
is protected by the constitutional
.J g uarantee of freedom of the
press.
-Upheld a robbery and as-
sault conviction against Jack
Roland Murphy, the celebrated
Miami, FJ a., jewel thief who is
the central figure in the motion
picture ''Live A Little, Steal A
Lot."
-Agreed to review a ruling of
the U.S. court of Appeals in
Washington that the Federal
Power Commission may not give
natural-gas producers built-in
authority to shut off the gas supp-
ly of interstate pipelines when
their contracts expire.
-Declined to review a Ken·
lucky family's claim that its pro-
pe rty rights were violated when
its land was strip mined without
the family's consent. The family
does not own the mineral rights
to the land in ques tion.
Writing for the court in the·
legal-fees case, Chief Justice
Warren E . Burger said, "In
terms of r estraining competition
and harming consumers ... the
price-fixing activities found here
are unusually damaging."
From Page Al .. murder ." Miss Rive tt's
bludgeoned body Jater was found ..
wrapped in a canvas sack in the . "NUDE basement of the three-story • • •
house. · ·
Some d e t ec ti ves have
theorized thit the murde r er
wanted to kilr the countess and
got tt>;e governess by mistake.
quarry careened through the
parking lot of Marie Callender's
Pie Shop, 18889 Brookburst St., in
Fountain Valley and changed
directions before it was finally
halted.
"They •re very
much In our
thought•," ••Id Stan-
t o r d P r e • I d e n t·
Rlcherd Lyman In
opening remark• et
the unlveralty11 com-
men cement ex-
ercise•.
UPI Telephoto
CounLy's Employes_
To Rally Over Pay
County employes agreed today
to stage demons trations Tuesday
to protest stalled 1975-76 salary
negotiations between Orange
County officials and the Orange
County E mp lo yes Associa-
tion COCEA>.
Tuesday's dem onstra tions will
include a before-work rally in
Santa Ana Bowl, a mass visit to
the Board of Supervisors meet-
ing, picketing of the county ad-
ministration building ana a noon
rally in the civic center.
Art Museum
.Given Grant,
Seeking Funds
Newport Harbor Art Museum
trustees are trying to raise at
least $5,000 to m atch a federal
grant.
The National Endowment for
the Arts has given _the museum
$5 ,000 to spend on acquiring
works of art, according to David
Steinmetz, p res ide nt of the
museum's board of trustees.
Steinmetz said the grant and
the matching funds will be used
to begin the museum's own
permanent collection. The only
. works now owned by tbe museum
are 34 pieces of contemporary art
donated b y Avco Financ ial .
Services in 1971.
The acquisition council formed
to spearhead the fund-raising ef-
fort is headed by Mrs. Johann
Jona~ and J ohn Martin Shea,
both of Newport Beach.
According to OCEA Executive
Director John Sawyer, the de.-
cision to hold the demonstrations
was made this morning after
county negotiators agreed to
meet with OCEA officjals and a
state mediator Wednesday.
At issue in the discuss ions are
wage and fringe benefits OCEA's
9,700 members expect to receive
in the coming fiscal year.
One informed source said the
county so far has orrered two per-
cent pa'y raises covering about
2,000 . employ es and four ~ per-
cent pay hikes for OCEA's re-
maining members.
The same source said county
negotiators are demanding a
three-year salary-fringe benefit
contract while the association is
holding out for the customary one
year pact. · ..... •.
According to James Shelton,·
the county's chief negotiator, a
meeting between himself, OCEA
officials and state mediator Tim
McCarthy ended in an impasse
shortly before mid~igbt Friday.
Airport Director
To Speak in Mesa ·
Orange County A viaUon direc-
tor Robert Bresnahan will speak
to members of the Citizens
Harbor Are.a Research Team
(CHART> at 7:30 a .m. Thursday
at Glendale Federal Savings and
Loan Association in Costa Mesa.
He will report on airport ac·
tivities affecting the Harbor
Area, such as takeoff patterns,
and the conde~l)iltion o'f homes.
underflightpaths:I
Time magazine reported Sun·
day the CIA plotted ln 1960 to klll
Castro by supplylnl him with
polaoned claars, ~ut never car-.
ried out the plan because there
was no 11surance Castro wou11d.
notaiveiheciearstoot.berpeop e.
pie. . . The Rockefeller Comnuss1on
report was to be fiven officiaJly
today to the Senate Investigating
Committee, which Wednesday
wlll hear from CIA Director
Willlam Colby testifying under
Ught security about the 1963 as-
sassination of South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Dinh Diem.
Rockefeller's hint of Kennedy
involvement in assassination
plots resulted in a statement
from two former aides of Robert
Kennedy, who accused the vice
president of ignoring the con-
clusions of his own report or ''de-
liberatelr ~ying. ''
Rockefeller said in a broadcast
interview (NBC-TV's Meet the
Press) the commission failed to
complete the.. assassination in-
vestigation becaflse it ran out of
time and encountered too many
dif(iculties.
"Let's face it,'' he bid, "many
or the people have died who were
allegedly involved and others
were assassinated in this country
tragicaJly. ''
Asked if he was referring to the
Kennedys, Rockefeller replied :
>"Well, as I said, we ha ve no con-
clusive information, but the pre-
sident ·of the United States and
the attorney general of the Unit-
ed States were both assassinated
tragically in this country."
He was asked if he meant the
Kennedys actuaJJy were involved
in such plots.
"Well," he said, "I said we had
no evidence on the basis of which
to draw conclus~ns. I said it was
very difficult to get .information
because we go back 15 years and
many o.f the ~eople who were in-·volved m the CIA and in tbe White
·House are no longer living.''
'Treasure' Found
H.UNTINGDON, En.g land
<UPI> -Arcbeolog_ists and.
British Museum officials report·
ed Sunday the discovery of 25
pieces of church silver making
up possibly "the earliest known
collection of Christian church
plates in the Roman Empire."
The silver, with an estimated
value of $1.20,000, was turned over
to county officials for a decision
as to whether it is treasure trove
-thus going to the government
-or w,hether it will be given to
the finder.
The 40-year-old earl vanished a
few hours after the killing.
Scotland Ya rd, after interview-
ing the countess, issuc..>d a war-
rant for his arrest for murder
and for the attack on hi s wife.
Sor sabal chased the fleeing
auto through the Mesa Verde
area, at speeds up to 50 miles·
per hour on res idential streets;-•
accordi_ng to p~lice repo~.
.,..,, ...........
GUil TY OF MUAOEAS
Steven Craig Hurd
Front Page Al
~HURD ...
Lawyers for both sides have
scheduled psychiatrists as wit-
nesses a nd defense attorney
William Gamble hopes to put
Hurd on the stand as his final wit-
ness.
Hurd accepted the two verdicts
today with no display of emotion:
He is unde r daily sedation follow-
ing a California Supreme Court
ruling last month that he could be
tried on the murder charges pro-
vided he is tranquilized at all
phases of the trial.
Lawyers for both sides agree
that Hurd is only capable of tell -
ing the truth or understanding
testimony while he is under the
supervised sedation.
He faces life in state prison on
eac.h of the two convictions if the
jury now finds that he was sane at
the time orthe two killings.
De puty District Attorney
Frank Briseno declined to ask for
the death penalty on either con-
viction when he made his final
argumenttothejury.
Italians Vote
In 'Showdown'
ROME (UPI > -Italians are
voting in crucial regional elec-
U on 1 expected to test the
stttngth of the Communist cam·
paign for a role in the coalidon
1ovemment.
Tbe two-day voting, which
beian Sunday, provide d a
1howdown between the Chri$Uan
Democratic·led coalition and the
larfest Communist party in the
Wtst.
But elections offici1l1 eaJd many Italians took advant..a(e of
the wnm, sunny weather Sun.
day to pua up life first day ol vol·
ln1 aod visit the beach.
i
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