HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-05-06 - Orange Coast Pilot. '
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• e1nec r1a or
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" .. •nag.tin1e~ Dan~es Kidnaped Wo1nan
Freed on Coast;
In Fast Baja. ·na~e Abdu~tor Es~apes
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DAILY PILOT
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 6, 1974
\IOL, •7, NO. 126, 1 SECTIONS, 26 ,AGES
Firs·1 to Finish
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FIRST ACROSS -The first single.hulled yacht to finish the Ensenada
race was Ragtime, a 62-foot sloop skippered by Stan Miller of the
Long Beach Yacht Club, with 18 hours of elapsed bme.
R(lgti~ Speeds Way
To Ensenada Finish
By ALMON LOCIWIEY
IHllllt Editor
ENSENADA-Thc fastest and ca lmest
Newport to Ensenada race In the 27-ye?-r
history or the event came to a close
today as hair of the yr.lchtsmen were on
their way home.
The speed of the race was due to brisk
westerly winds that prevailed from the
Saturday start lo the finish early Sunday
morning.
Tot.al calm prevailed in Ensenada from
about 8 p.m. Sunday as most of the non--
yachting crowd had left for home or were
in jAil 1 and many yachtsmen were
ONE SOLITARY AD
SOLD .EVERYTJIING
One ad -six sales. That, in a feW
words Is, the story of a '1ew words, in
l'hc right place." anolher suc.cessful
Dolly Pilot classlijed ad . Here It is:
120" SOFA. $250: Jove seal, $50,
TV console, 175: din rm iet. lt50:
12' boa\ w/mrt. & trlr., $250.
MEC reloader, 135. (Phone No.)
The ad originally v:as published just
one "'cekcnd and sold all six Items listed
in It. or course lhc advertiser was
happy! You'll be happy with ,...uils, !""·
1£ you jusl pul "a few words 1.n. Ibo right .
place" -in Doily Pilot classd1eds. Dial
the direct lino: tf12-5678.
preparing to up anchor and start the long
uphill drag to home ports.
Ensenada police made a bust at the
Bahia Hotel about 6 p.m. Sunday to quell
a disturbance. A dozen youths were
hauled away to jail but none of tbcm was
connected with the yacht race.
Ensenada and Newport Ocean Sailing
Association officers said today there
have been no problems compared to the
near riot conditions of last year.
There '\Vert relatively few. problems in
th e race itseU. Two yachts were still at
sea ear\y today but bad been accounted
£or. They had overshot Ensenada and
Were beating their way back.
There were several minor collisMms
and one major ooe on the starting line
Saturday. The 37-looi sloop Wings
collided with another on the starting line
and rammed a hole through its hull. The
damaged yacht was noJ klenUfied.
The· yacht Double D which had rtported
she was taking on water soon after the
start repaired·· whatever damage was
responsible and started the race two
hours late and rmisbed Sonday night. :
First yacht to. finish shortly arter 5 ·
a.m. Sunday was th~ cataraman Seablrd,
owned and skippered by Bob Hanel ol
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Clu~. Seabird was
also first to finish last year.
~'Int single bull lo finish. some 40
minutes later, was the 62-root sloop
Ragtime sailed by Stan Miller and n
thrce·mon Long Beach Yacht Club
syndicate.
·Jack Baillie's Ncwslloy. !he perenniol
(See ENSENAOA, Page Z)
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Perjury Charges
July Trial Date
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Set for Reinecke q
WASHINGTON (AP) - A July 15 tr ial
date was set today for California Lt.
Gov. Ed Reinecke on perjury charges
Sll'mming from the I'IT case.
The action by U.S. District Judge
Barrington Parker indicated the court
lvill turn down pending motions by
Reinecke to dismiss the indictment or,
failing that, to move the trial to
California.
Reinecke. a leading contender for
California 's Republican gubernatorial
nomination. was indicted by a Watergate
grand jury Apr.ii 3 on three counts of
lying berore a Senate committee.
Trial had been set for May 13. but
Reineckes lawyers aSked for the delay
while the change of venue motions and
other matters y,•ere handled.
Reinecke originally had pressed for a
speedy trial to have the matter settled
before the California primary elections
June 4.
Reinecke \Vas one of the principal
forces behind a decision to hold the 1972
Republican National Convention in San
Diego. The convention later was shirted
to r.tiami Beach, Fla.
Newport Driver
Will Face St1it
In . Traf fie Deatl1
A Newport Beach man who drew a
county jail tenn after pleading guilty to
hit and run charges in the death -of a
pedestrian has been sued for more than
$52.000.
Andrew Keith Skiver, 28, was named as
defendant in the Orange County Superior
C.OUrt action filed by lhe parenls of
Patrick Kirk Silvis, 25, of 1560 Placenlia
Ave., Newport Beach.
Jose ph Robert Silvis and Jacque
Rickles claim Sltiver, 217 3Sth St.,
Newport Beach, was reckless and
negligent when his car struck Silvis oo
May 19, 1973.
The dead man's parents state tl'lc
young man was crossing Pacifi c Coast
llighway near the Arches In Newport
Beach when the Skiver auto struck him.
Court records Indicate that Skl\1er was
ordered to serve rour n1onths in the
county jail on charges reduced front
manslaughter.
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The indictment charged Reinecke with
giving false statements to the Senate
Judiciary Committee about when he first
told former At ty. Gen. John N. Mitchell,
who "·fs Nixon's 1972 campaign
1nanager, about a $400,000 offer from the
She raton Corp. to underwrite the San
Diego convention.
Reinecke was accused of lying when he
said he did not tell Mitchell about the
offer until arter favorable settlement of
an antitrust action against t h e
International Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
parent company or Sheraton.
The grand jury also accused Reinecke
of lying when he said his first disc~sions
of holding the convention in San Diego
came in a social gathering of San Diego
citizen s in \Vashington in April 1971.
ln other court papers, the special
prosecutor's office has said the first such
talk was between Reinecke and then
\Vhite House chief of sta[f H. R.
Haldeman. The date of the alleged
discussion with Haldeman has not been
disclosed by the special prosecutor's
office.
Reinecke's testimony before the
Judiciary Committee in April 1972 came
during hearings over the nomination of
Richard G. Kleindienst for attorney
general. Kleindienst was confirmed but
later resigned.
Bostori to Bari
Girl Ballpla ye r?
Ul'I TtltPl'lll'-
Held ha Caracas
British singer Tom Jones is
being held accountable for an
altercation between his body-
guard and a Venezuelan news-
man and is being detained in
Caracas. See story, Page 4.
Victim of Kidnap
Found on Coast;
Ahdt1ctor Escapes
The lddnaping or a young Los Angeles
woman by an armed assailMt ended
south of San Clemente over the .,..·eekend BOST0:-1 (UPI) -Janel Bowe planned to march today with the banner of the when the victimis ca r ran out of gas
North Allston Braves to the dedication of and was h!t from behind.
Smith's Field, despite opposition lrom But the kidnaper of 18-year-old student
the · UUle League's nation al Pamela Dawn Fanner managed to
headquarters. escape in adjacent. hilly areas and is still
Braves coach Daniel Bausch said he at large.
was t.old Jest Week the· Utt le League Jhvestigators for the San Diego County
office in Williamsport, Pa., wanted him Sheriff's oftlce sakl the young woman
fired ir he allowed Janet. 10, on the team was abducted as she entered her car in
or allov.-ed her to march in the parade to Los Angeles by a man armed · with a
tho new playing field . Bui Bausch bar; hand gun . backed down. The yotmg Vt'Oman told otncers she was
"I'm going to have her carry the forced to drive 90Uth but as her car
banner," Bausch said. ''The girl did passed San Clemente It ran out or fuel io
register and she paid her dues." a traffic tanc of the San Diego Freewa y.
Bausch said he was told further that a A car came upon the stranded vehi cle
scheduled game Wednesday wlih the and hll it lr<>m behind. ollicers said. .
North Allston Cardinals would not be No one was injured in the crash, but
counted in the sltindings if Janet Is sl\11 a i!l:Uss 1'"'arme.r managed to flee from the
member of lhc Braves. !See K!DlilAP, Page I)
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Neighbor's
Reaction-
'Ohhhh No'
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of llMI O.llJ Pilot Sl11f
A little girl's unwise weekend visit with
a special school friend ended happily for
Newport Beach police and her family
Sunday after her hostess' father opened
his morning ~per.
Kimberly Denise \Vi lson. 8. whose
disappearance was the number one story
on the front page, was playing happily In
the shocked man's home as a guest or his
little girl af the time.
''He opened up his Daily Pilot and
said" "Ooohhhhhh, no," Newport Beach
Detective Bob Hardy explained today.
The embarrassed father immediately
called police and Kimmie-as they call
her-was quickly reun ited \Vith J\.trs.
~1argaret Wilson, of 117 15th St., on the
Ba lboa Peninsula.
Investigators said the \\'3Y I he
Peninsula is laid out was one partial
factor in the limited area searched by
police after the little girl '''as reported
1nissing Friday night:
''She supposedly didn 't have any
friends Y:ho Jived beyond 15th Street,"
said Detective Hardy, one or several meft
detailed overnight to the anxious search.
Homes of all known acquaintances
u•ere checked.
''Those guys worked their tails off .... "
said one policeman when contacted for
(See FOUND, Page 2)
Orange . Coast
Weatber
It'll be stighlly warmer Tuesday,
according to the \\'Cather service,
11rith mostly sunny afternoons in
the inland portions of Orange Coun-
ty. Highs at lhe beaches in the
mid-60s rising to the low 70s in-
land.
INSIDE TODAY
Skyscrapers around 1he world
are r.}1a11gh1g tlle weather, ac-.
cording to a group of scienti$ts:.
They act as 11iou11totu1, which
conf uses tile wi11d a1id rai11. See
story a11d photo Page .J..
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2 D~ILY PILOT s
l{issii1g~1·,
G1·omyko
Pla11 Sess io11
JERUSALEM (UPI) -s.c ... tary or
Stale lll'nry A. Klssin~er will breuk otr
his l'lliddle East shuttle diplomacy
bet1A·een lsra<'l and Syria to n1eel Soviet
Foreign rtfinisler Andrei Gromyko on
Cyprus Tuesday, U.S. sources aMounced
today.
Gromyko had been
conferring with lhe
Kissinger has been in
Amman, Jordan .
in Dama~u~
Syrian!! while
Israel and In
"St.'Cretary or State lfenry Kissinger
and Soviet Foreign Secretary Andrei
Gromyko have agreed to meet in Cyprus
on ri.1ay 7 for a continuing review or U.S.-
Soviet tt'lations including the situation in
the Middle East," the announccrncnt
said.
"\Ve express npprecialion to the
government of Cyprus for arranging the
n1eeling on short notiCf:," S t a t e
Depart1nent Spokesman Robert J ,
~tcCloskey said. "It was \\'Orked out with
the full understanding and approval of
the government or Israel." He added
that the date for the meeting had jelled
in the past 24 hours.
Kissinger is expected to take off for
Cyprus Tuesday morning and be back in
Israel Wednesday to conlinue his efforts
to bring about an Israeli-Syrian troop
disengagement in the Golan Heights.
The announcement or the meeting v.•ith
Gromyko came shortly after he arrived
here from Amman.
The meeting on Cyprus will deal not
only with the Middle East but with such
questions as the strategic a r m s
limitation agreement, the European
security conference and other issues
leading up to President N i x o n ' s
scheduled tri p to Moscow in June.
Kissinger and Gromyko met in Geneva
a little over a week ago when Kissinger
received a pledge of Soviet rooperation in
bringing peace to the Middle East.
.Gromyko. cochairman with Kissinger of
the Geneva JI.fiddle East Peace
Conference, flew to Damascus Sunday
for talks with President Hafez Assad.
U.S. officials said Kissinger is not
going lo Cyprus to make a deal with
Russia on the Middle East and that none
is eJtpec~.as a result of the Gromyko-\
Kiss inger meeting.
It was understood that the Soviets
requested the meeting originally in Syria
but that the United States suggested
Cyprus as an alternative. It also w-is un-
derstood that the meeting was expected
to deal ab o u l half and half "-'ith the
~-liddle East and pre-summit issues.
Lngunct Police
Seeking Mystery
Muggi1ig Victini
A pool or blood and an anonymous
caUer's report of a man being beaten
with chains and kicked as he lay in an
alley behind a tavern loclay perplexed
Laguna Beach deteclives, unable to find
a victim to the crime.
Police searched the city and contacfed
county hospitals follo"ing the reported
vicious mugging just after I a.m.
Saturday at Gavlota Drive and Cress
Street.
An informant \\-'ho refused to identify
himself called police headquarters and
told officers he had witnessed the bruta l
beating while waiting in his vehicle
nearby.
Lt. Al Olson and Palrolman Donnie
Abshier sped to the scene of lhe crime
behind the Little Shrimp, 1305 S. Coast
JUghway. They found a pool of blood on
1 lhe side\valk, but no body.
the side walk, but no body.
The infonnant said he had watched two
men repeatedly maul their prostrate
victim with chains and kick him . The
man's \~·allet was taken during the
attack.
Del. Gene Brooks speCuJated the
beating could have been delivered as part
of a "drug bun1" or retalia!ion for a
sexual advance.
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ORANGE COUNTIANS PLANNING JUST 'A LITTLE SUNOAY RIOE '
Jim Richardson, Linda Thorpe Plan Transcontinental Trek
Two _Co1mty·T1~ailhlazers
To C1·oss U.S. 011 Bikes
By \\'tLUAJ\1 SCH KEIBER
01 1111 t>oily l"Uol Sl1tt
Linda Thorpe and Jim Richardson of
Santa Ana have planned a little bike ride
lhis summer -3,500 miles across the
continental United States.
They will be the first ofricial riders to
traverse the proposed Trans·America
Bicycle Trail fronl the coast of Oregon.
through the nation 's heartland and
ending in \Vashington , O.C.
The two young Orange Counlians "-'Ill
blaze a trail that organizers or the
national bicentennial celebration hope
will be followed by millions ol other
Americans during the JO-year, 200Lh
birthday party starting in 1976.
"The trail is just on paper right no\v
and we will mostly be using established
back roads through small tovrns," sai1
Richardson, a 27-year-old student at
Pepperdine School of Lav.·.
"We hope to generate some interest in
long-distance biking as recreation," he
said. "Eventually \ve'd like to have a
system of hostels along the route like
they have in Europe."
During their long journey -which will
be made aboard a IO-speed tandem bike
starting ~1ay 28 -Richardson and Miss
Thorpe wi ll be promoting a program
called "Bikecentennial."
The Bikecentennial bas been
sanctioned by the national bicentennial
commission as one means to bring
Americans closer to their land.
"'l'hc hope is that the trail can be
ready for the centennial celebration ,'•
said Miss Thorpe, a 22-year-old Long
Beach State Uni\'ersity g e o· graph y
student. "\\'hat better v.•ay to sec and
sense America than by riding across it
on a bike."
Richardson said lhc trail will never
actually be a paved route across the
country. He said the goal is to establish a
string of camping areas and hostels
along the chosen route for riders to use
on bicycl( camping trips.
"Right Jl-0\V. all our-young people
interested in thi s kind of riding go to
Europe \Vhen 1\merica is really Ideal for
it." snid Miss Thorpe.
The route followed by Bikkentennlal 's
cross country trail "'ill take the tv.·o
ric!rrs through the states of Oregon,
Idaho. \Vyoming, Colorado, KaMas.
~fissouri. Illinois. Kentucky, Arkansas.
\Vest Virginia, Virginia and the District
of Co!o1nbla .
"Eventual!)'. 1\'C hope 10 have a link
running fro1n Southern California. across
!he desert and lying into the mai!J trail in
Colorado.'' Richardson said. ··ror lho~
\vho don't like dC'scrt riding, they c:in
:-;kip it by riding the train."
The trip planned by Richaidson and
l\l iss 11Klrpc 11•ill take aboot i6 days at a
pace of 50 miles per day, Along the \tay.
they \\ill stay In the homes of local
residenls or camp out.
T ee1t Dive r Dies
l1t Beel of Kelp
AVALON (UPI\ -A 16-year-old
Calamesa scuba diver drowned Sunday
when he became entangled In' a bed or
kelj:i white swimming off Catalina Island.
The victim, .Joel A. Szuk8la, was
swimming nbout 10 ft'Ct btlow the
v"ater's mtrfact \\'Ith a friend , Robe.rt
Chase, 16, of Big Getger Cove, authorltlf!:s
&aid, when he. ~ame en!Angled In the
kelp and his air hO!!c "-'as ripped off,
Chase Ahllred his air supply with
S:tukala f9r a time, sheriff's deputies
said , but when tht air supply ran out. he
went for help. Wh n rescuers reached
Szukala . he w111 dead.
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"\\'hen \\·e originally got the idea, 11·e
'''ere planning to do it in 30 days,"
Richardson said. "The record is 13 days,
six hours set last year."
The tandem bike they 'viii ride should
average around lf>-20 miles per hour -
except \li'hen they hit the Rocky
JI.fountains.
•·1 eJtpect \\'e'll sec a lot more scenery
when \1-C hit the upgrades,'' Richardson
said.
He said ~liss ThQl"PC has lhe best Jong·
haul stamina or the two but he is better
on hills.
"Bctv.·een us, \1·e should make It ,'' he
said .•
They are obviously confident because
they will have no backup units follo\\ing
them -only themselves, one bicycle,
some camping gear and a few spare
tires.
The trip will cost about Sl,500 and the
two riders had pla!Uled to volunteer the
costs as well as their time ..
But the Orange County Weight
\Vatchcr's organization offered to hold a
fund-raising event at 2 p.m. JI.lax 18 at
Fremont Junior 11igh in Anaheim.
It seems l\;liss Thorpe and Richardson
met for the first time over a \Veight
Watchers diet plate and lost a total of 94
pounds together.
Fro111 Page J
l<'OUN D .•.
progress on the hunt for Kimmie , after
!he weary investigators had gone home
Saturday.
.Throu,ghout the mystery
disappearance, they could onJy bear
in mind another overnight search from
Friday and Satun:lay last July, for
ano!her missing girl.
Linda Ann O'Keefe, abducted by a man
whose identity and whereabouts is still
unknown, was molested and strangled
and dumped beside Upper Newport Bay.
Kimberly and her friend, whose family
lives at 2208 \V, Ocean Front, seven
blocks from the \Vilson apartment,
simply pulled an adventurous prank that
got out of control.
Investigators said after walking home
from school Friday with her youngerr
sister Sarah Jane, 7. that Kimmie and
her friend decided It would be fun to
spend the weekend together.
Gift to Nixo1i
Drn"rvs Pe1inlty
WASlllNGTON (AP) A
Pennsylvania corporation, Le.high
valley Cooperative Farm e rs,
pleaded guilly today 10 making an
Jllegal $50,000 contribution t o
President Ni~on's 1972 campaign.
~ roopcrotive \Vas fined
15,000 -'by U:S. Dlslrict Judge
George L. Hart Jr.
The fine was the maximum
pMslble.
Special Prosecutor Leon
Jawo"ki charged fhll 1 h c
l'ontributlon was made between
April 19 and April 27, 1m, "In
connection with lhe aforesaid
genera.I elecUon and wUh primary
elections, polltl~al conventions •nd
ca001Jt.S held to select candidatu
for the om... • • . In vtolallon ol
111< United 5101 .. oode." ·
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Ron Zi~gler Denies 'Blitz~
Of Pro-President Publicity :
By HELEN THOMAS
WASllJNGTON l UPIJ -A presidenlial
spokesman denied t o ti a y that the
White ·llouse was conducting a public
relations blitz. to aid Presldl'nl Nixon's
antl-fmpeachment crrort and lo discredit
John \V. Dean.
Ronald L. Ziegler, "-'ho serves in the
duat role of' presidential adviser and
press secretary, said the President now
feels that "the full story 'Of \Vatergate"
has been made publlc with the
transcripts of Nixon's \Vhite l10U$e
conversations.
In resp:onse lo question.'!, Ziegler
rejected a suggestion that t h e
appearance of Aleaxander ~1. Haig,
Nixon's chief of staff, and Jan1es. D. St.
Clair, his chief i1npeachment counsel, on
television Sunday "was part or a J>R
blitz."
"It's our ertort to speak to the issue
and present the White House viev.•poinl,"
Ziegler said. "I think they did so."
Haig had refused last week to testify
before the Senate Watergate Committee
about a $100,000 Howard H ugh es
contribution to Nixon. but appeared
Sunday on ABC's "Issues and Answers"
while St. Clair appeared on NBC's "?o.1eet
the Press."
The day before, the White l-Tou.se
released e long document attempting to
sho\v contradictions between Sen:ite
testimony of Dean, former Nixon counsel
who . is his princlpa1 accuser, and the
transcripts of his conversations \\'ilh the
President.
Ziegler urged that th~ public and the
House Judiciary Committee read all Ute
transcripts, ';line by line," saying "the
scope and the entirely of lhe transcripts
provided could lead any fair and open
minded per.son to realize they have the
\f.~ole, s_t_ory of Water.gate" and proof or
N1Jton s lllilOCeDCe of any wrongdoing.
Other developments:
-J. Fred Buzhardt, a member-cl the
PresidL-nt's ·Watergate legal team, .\vas
questioned for several hours today by a
federal grand jury that has as one of its
prime responsibilities an investigation or
the erasure of 1811.z minutes of one of
Nixon's Watergate conversa~ions, three
days after the burglary took place.
-Fqrmer Allomey Genernl John N.
?o.litchell today joined in an effort by
special prosecutor Leon Jaworski to
force the \Vbite House lo surrender
addiliooal evidence for the .Watergate
cover-up trial scheduled Ior September,
Driver of Van
Dies in Crasl1
On Grove Street
One man was killed and three others
injured in a grinding crash on a rain-slick
Garden Grove street Sunday night, police
said tOOay.
Donald E. Van \Vinkle. 30, 0£ Santa
Ana. was dead on arrival at Orange _
County ?o.1edical Center of injuries
suffered in the 10:15 p.m. accidCflt on
Westminster Avenue.
Police said Van \\'inkle was driving a
van in the eastbound lanes of the street
\.\'hen he Jost control of the vehicle on the
slippery pavemeflt and rammed another
van parked at the curb.
Van Winkle "-'a5 throY.n clear of the
crash but was fatally injured \vhen he
hit the pavement, officers said.
Silas White, 40, also of Santa Ana, a
pa~cnger in Van Winkle's vehicle, \\-'as
trapped inside and had to be cut free by
a fire deparlmcnt rescue team. He
sustained moderate injuries and is in
guarded rondilion today at Riverview
rrospital.
Tu•o occupants of the parked van were
also injured and are in guarded condition
at Riverview.
They were identified as Salvador
Aquilar. 28, and Aliseo Cervantes, 25,
both of Sanla Ana.
Police said Van \Vinkle had been
drillking prior to the accident but an
autopsy "-ill have to determine if.he y:as
under the influence of alcohol when the
crash occurred.
l\f csa Thief G1·ahs
Stereo Equipment
Stereo equipment and record! valued
by the O\l'Jler at nearly $1,300 were stolen
durtng the weekend by intruders who
pried open !he sliding glass window of a
Costa J!.1csa are~ apanment, Orange
County Sheriff's officers said.
Deputies said the valuables v.·ere taken
from !he home of service station
mAnn:ger h.fark Andrew Yi'a lraden, 19, of
2550 Santa Ana Ave. while he was absent
from the apartment.
~·Utchell's uLtorne}'S said ' ' I h e
su.bpoenatd ma1er1Hls are ne«SSary and
relevant" to preparation of the defense.
tl-1itchell Is one 0t the seven defendants.
-House Speaker Cirl Albert sakt that
\vhile impeachment shou1d not be
undertaken for frivolous reasons, failure
of Congress to llCt "when the integrity of
the governmet1t is al stake would be a
bigger mistake."
-Ziegler indicated the \Vhite llousc
would not oppose granting of immunity
10 \Vilnesses in the impeacllmcnt inquiry.
Nixon has re-Instituted the principle
or eJteCUtive privilege in prohibiting his
close advisors to testify before com1nit·
tees. Ziegler said.
Ziegler told reporters: "\\',,: feel \VC
ha1·e produced !he whole story and that
tile committee should now ns.ses.! it with
a fair and open mind."
He said that the \Vhtle House was not
going to respond lo the "n1~1sing~ and
reflet•tions" on the conversations 1n the
transcripts and was not going to
Interpret then1 point by point to
repor1m.
He ind icated !,hat Nixon feels that the
den1and for l!lpt.'S nnd docun1ents has
bec."Ome insatiable. '·You c:in n1ake the
point that as long as there are fllH and
tapes in the \\lhile 11ousc" there wtll be a
demand for thein, he said. ''The
President believes th.:it \VOOld lead to a
total disintegralion of executive privilege
<ind separation of powers."
Tape '"Erase II'
Pa11el Confr1ns .Mystery Gap
NEW YORK (AP) -A panel of tape experts has reaffirmed its
prelln1inary conclusion that an 181h-minute gap in a \Vatergate tape
resulted from several erasures and re-recordings, according to an
assistant to one of the panel members.
ON SATUROAY THE six·man panel gave the fi nal draft repart
of its six-month investigation to U.S. District Judge John J. Strica
in Washington. The results were not made public.
However. Ernest Aschkenasv, an assistant to ri.rark \Veiss. vice
President or Federal ~cientific Corp., said in an interview Sunday
that the final draft is substantially the same as the panel's prelimi·
nary report to Sirica last Jan. 15.
IN THAT REPORT the tape authorities said buzzing that re-
placed conve rsation was "put on the tape in the process of er asi ng
and re-recording at least five, and perhaps as many as niJ1e separate
and contigt;ous segments."
Distaff Englislt
Guerrilla H el£l
In Tlief t of Art
DUBLIN. Ireland (AP) -Bridget Rose
Dugdale, English debutante I urned
re\'olulionary, was formall y charged here
today on five counts in the theft of 19
masterpieces worth $20.4 million -the
biggest art robbery in history.
J\liss Dugdale, 3.1, was also charged on
five other counts involving possession of
explosives and fireanns in County
Donegal. a trouble spot on the Irish
republic's fron tier with violence·torn
Northern lreland.
She was charged In Dublin's Special
Court aft.er traveling under heavy arn1y
and police guard from County C.Ork
where she was arrested Saturday at a
remote cottage "-'it h the 19 oil paintings
stolen 10 days ago.
?o.Iost or the casti'heard at the Special
Court involve me rs of the outlawed
Irish Republican !'. y, a predominantly
Roman Catholic guerrilla movement
battling to oust the British from
Northern Ireland and unite it with the
republic.
Police earlier named the woman
arrested in Saturday's raid as Or.
Bridget Rose Dugdale, but noted that she
refused to confirm her identity.
Daughter of an English insurance
magnate and a doctor of philosophy, she
has been sought by British security
forces since February in connection v.·ith
anns smuggling into Northern Ireland .
Police in the British province also want
lo question her about a bombing ra id on
a border poti~ base Crom a hijacked
helicopter earlier lhis year.
The police said !hat in the cottage they
found 16 of the 19 paintings stolen ApriJ
26 by a woman and four men from the
country home near Dublin of Sir Alfred
Beil. and the olher three paintings were
in the trunk of the car. They included
masterpieces by Vermeer, Hals, Rubens.
Goya and Velasquez and were valued at
more than $20 million.
The gang had sent the police a note
saying it would destroy the paintings
unless St.2 million in ransom v.·as paid by
?-.lay 14 and unless the sisters Dolours
and Marion Price were transferred tp a
prison in Northern Treland. The sisters
.are serving life sentences in a London
jail for bombings in the British capital.
Fro111 Page 1
KIDNAP • • •
vehicle and her abductor, armed with a
pistol. ran into the hills.
Offlcers :said the suspect was described
as a male Negro In his mid..JOs. He wore
an Afro-style haircut, a ·black leather
jacket and blue denim pants.
From Page 1
ENSENADA. • •
first finisher from Balboa Yacht Club.
finished seventh this year. The race
committee was still feverishly compiling
handicap results today because of a
number of protests. The trophy
presentation is schedull'd lale tOOay.
The first 10 boats to finish : I. Seabird
2. Ragtime J. Sirius II, Bob Lynch,
Newport Harbor Yacht Club 4. Afaloma,
Jack Swart. Orange Coast C.Ollege 5.
Soliloquy, Ken Burns. SMYC 6. Anitra,
Fred Preiss. P~fYC 7. NewsBoy 8. Lani
Kai (ca tamaran) Martin Crumrine,
Balboa Yacht Club 9. Serena, Steve
Bragg.· SCCYC 10. Imi Loa , Vic Stem,
Seal Beach Yacht Club.
Unofficial handicap winnen: President
of ~lexico Trophy <Ocean Rach.ing·D )
Cohort, ~lilt Vogel. HHYC; Pre~ident of
U.S. Trophy !PHRF-F/ Hampshire Rooe,
Dennis Burnett, SSSC; U.S. Secretary of ·
State (P HRF-0) Cambria, Bi 11
Larson. PVYC; U.S. Secretarv of Navy
~ PlffiF·A) Viva Cruz, Tony Cruz. CYC;
Governor of Baja California (PHRF-C)
Serena. Alex VanOyke, LBYC; Mayor of
Newport Beach (PHR F-B) Pacifica, Stan
\\'illis. SDVC; Secretary of Foreign
Relations (OC.C) Promotion, I :arshall
Beck, BYC: Mexican Secretary of St.ate
fOC·B) Kari II. Dick Keltoo. LAYC;
Governor of California (QC.A) Shamrock
Roy Disney, CYC: U.S. Coast Guard
(MORF-A) Sallsh_aker, ·Bob Boyes,
Anacapa Yacht Club: Jeff Deaver
(Cruising Club of America ) Paradox
Tom Armstrong, CYC; Emigh Famil.Y
r-.·~cmorial Trophy (~10R1''-8) Good
Times, Crane and Smilh, -· ··c.
Clerks' Strike Ends
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Arter an
8~irmonth strike. lhe 300 retail clerks at
two San Francisco Sears stores return to
\\'Ork today.
Purse Snatclted
Fro111 Ltigu1ia1i
A 74-year-old Laguna Beach
\\'Oman 'n"3S thrown to the ground
and her purse stolen by two young
thugs near the "-'Oman's Cypress
Drive ·home in Laguna Beach Sat-
urday.
The daylighl robbery netted the
men Sil cash. Police found the
wo~an·~ empty pu~e nea rby.
Police said the woman was shaken,
but did not requlro medical
treatment.
The spunky vtcllm of Ibo crime
described her 11ssailants to police as "typical dirty l ong -haired
hippies."
Un~anny Caniff Cartoon
Famed Artist Ju1ik ed .Seri.e_s 011 Kirl1iaped Heiress
NEW YORK (UPIJ -Imagine thi1
sctnarlo: A young heiress is kidnaped by
terrorlst.t:, jokq her captors. gives htrstlf
a revolutionary name and send1 taped
messages lo her parents for rBnsom
money to finance guerrlll8 activity.
the Patricia Jlearst affaJr? No, an
abortlv• comtc l!rlp sequence cre•ted hy
Milton C&nlff for "Steve canyon" fiye
"'Ceks before ~Uu llearst's kJdnaplng.
Acconllng to People M•gulne, Gani!!
qulcklj> j1mked lhe "'IU<nce when lhe
Jlearst story brd.<e and worked overtime
In his Palm Springs otudlo lo wrlle and
draw a l!Ubstllute plol, which b now
running In 6!0 newspapers: .
'111 would have looked like t was
making lWl of the. ltcarst !amUy '' ho
said In the People article:. '
_ In fact , said C.nllf, the Idea came
•
from the kklMping In llaly lut )'Ur of
J. Paul Getty Ill, granctaon of the
mllllonalre oll011n and not from any
!"Yehle. anticipation of lhe lleaut
abducdon.
Canl!I said ho decided lo make the
kidnap victim a girl "because people are
95 percent more Interested In women In
dire circumstances than they ani I•
mm.''
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•
Gover~ors' Prestige on· Block
Gilligan, Wallace Facing Tests of Power in Primaries
By Vnlted Press International
Although he ls practically certain or
renomination Jn 1'ue!day's priniary
•election, the prestige ol Onio Gov. Jotu1 J .
01n1gan Is at stake ln another primary
battle, this one for the U.S. Senate seat
now held by Democrat JI o. w a rd
Metzenbaum.
And even though A1abama Gov. George
C. \Vallace appears headed for easy
renomination to a third term, he, too, has
prestige on lhe line.
In the nation's capital, where nobody
will be elected in Tuesday's balloting, the
size or the turnout could be as important
as the issue -a reJerendwn on the city's
first home rule tn a century.
Other primaries wHI be held Tuesd ay
in IU!nols and North Q:irolina.
ln the Texas printa ry Satu rda y. Gov.
Dolph Briscoe easily disposed or
challenger Frances Farenthold's politlcnl
ambitions In the Democratic r&C<!, but he
still is faced with u $2.5 million campaign
practices suit filed by Farentho1d at the
IJ.S. Report
opening o( her campaign.
R<publlcan Jim Granberry ,ov.!rwhelm-
tnWy defeated Odell McBrayc r for the
GOP nomination for governor. Gran·
berry, former J,ubbQck mayor making
his first try for a statewide orflcc,. con· ·
fldently predjcted he can upset Briscoe
and bccotne the first llepublican to gov·
em Texas in more than a century.
Democratic Rep. Wright Patman, dean
o! the House, easily defeated his nearest
rival in Texas' first district to win
renomination for a 24th tenn.
In other primaries Tuesday, all 11
Indiana congressmen are expected to be
reno1ninatcd without trouble. In North
Carolina. 10 candidates are vy ing for the
Democratic nomination for the seat of
retiring sen. Sam J. Ervin .
In Ohio, _ bottt-Gilligan and the
Democra tic State Committee arc backing
r-.tetze nbawn over former astronaut John
Glenn, trying for a Senate seat for the
third time, and malting "bossism" a
main issue.
Efforts Paying Off; More
Wl1ales Spotted in Herds
The Californ ia gray '''hale may be
recovering rro1n near extinction, a report
fron1 the U.S. Department o{ Co1nmcrec
indicatc.'<i this ,,·eek.
Thanks to prote<:t ion by I h e
governments of both Mexico and the U.S.
and the concerns of envirorunenlalists.
the annual mating migration or the
-wha.les·from ·the frigid Bering Sea to the
warm waters of Raja Call foniia is bcing -
made by a gro,wing her'd. ·
In 1967, a count of j,120 \\'hales Y.'aS
recorded fron1 lhc Co mm e r c c
Department Nationa l Oceanic a nd
Atmospheric Administration nea r
itontcrcy.
During the last mating season. y,·hic h
ended in eilrly spri ng. almost 3.500
"'hales "·ere sighted. an increase of 15
pcret>nt over the average of the
preceding six years.
Dr. Donald MacLean.. dir ector of the
Floating f..1arine Laboratory for the
Orange County Department of Education,
said local y,·haJe-y,·atche rs ha\'e obsen·ed
the same pllenom<OOO.
"Both ai t-.tonterey and at the other
major counting point In Ensenada, every
year there are more," Ma clean sald.
By the time the whales reaeh the
y,·ann "'llters of Scammon's Lagoon 450
miles south ol San Diego on the Ba ja
peninsula, the f~males arc ready to bear
the ir young and that is th e first · place
they usuall y do go.
''They ha''e ·been very \..·ell protected
over the last few years," Maclean
oonunented, "NO\\' the lo.I ex i c a n
go\'cmment is alarm ed enough about
people bothering them in Scammon's
Lagoon that it is considering further
measures to protect them.··
The ~1ontercy whale count begin! each
year ;tround mid·Deeember as soon as
v.·hales are seen · regularly during their
southerly trek.
Some gray v.tlales begin leaving Arctic
waters as e-arly as October, moving
to wn rd the calving lagoons far to .the
south.
The whales return to their northern
habitats in large numbers in May and
June as the ice brea~ up, but while
migrating north o[f the California coast,
they are much farther offshore than
during the southerly journey.
Allen \VolmM . director of this year's
count for the federal government, added
however that a variety of factors such as
\\"eather. \•isibility and ocean ..currents
affect the counl.
For that reason. the lmpllcatkms of a
higher count may not necessarily be !lrm
e\•idcnce of a greater ¥.'ha.Jc population.
"There is ooc spooky aspect of this,''
r-.tacLean said. "Recently m a r i n e
zoologists are noticing that more and
more of the ¥.'hale3 apepear to be going
farther out to sea •.. apparently to avoid
so many whale watchen."
1"1acLean said com:idering t h e
relatively high intelligence ol the gray
whale, ii v.-ould not be impos-;ib&e for
them to learn over a period oC ycan to
avoid the urba!J coasts of 1..06: Angeles,
Orange County, and San Diego.
Some "'hales may live as long as SO
years, he said. ...
Growing numbers are not found on the
Asian side of the m i g r a t I o n route.
MacLean said. "There are t\\-"O herds
whichdonotseemtomix -7he
California herd and the Korean herd,
'''hi ch migrates south by Japan."
33,000 People Visit
Gtenn may have his best chance thls
time around. State leaders and labor
olllctab had been unable to persuade
Gierut to abandon hb senatorial goal and
..;.k the Ueuteoant govemorshlp Instead.
Aa a result, Glenn campaigned against
"b08slsm," and a victory by him would
embarrass Gilligan and the party
prof ... lonals.
Wallace, who has spent more than
$300,000 In hls J)rimary campaign in an
eUort to wln by a huge margin, now has
unptt>C«leotod support from b I a c k
polltlclans.
Campaigning from a wheelchair, the
governor crlsicn:med the state telling
overflow Crowds that his previou.s three
bids for the presidency have brought
them natlooaJ promlnence. His campaign
is seen as attempt to prove hJ.s: vote-
getUng ability ln!lldvan<e of a possible
presidential cand,lilacy In 1971.
'!be Clwlotte Observer, North
Carollna's ·larg~t nempaper, endorsed
Woman Seeks
Her 'Treasures'
SACRAMENTO (AP) A
Sacramento woman who lost her
''greatest treasures" to burglars
last month has appealed for their
return. · •
Ingrid Puglia, wife o! Superior
Coort Judge Robert K. Puglla, said
the treasures included the baby
teeth of her children and the
military "dog tag" of her deceased
father.
In an open letter published
Sunday by the Sacramento Bee,
P4fS. l'Jlglla said, "Worthlm to.
· you, these things were my greatest
treaain'e11"
Plenty of Wheat ·
-No $1 A Loaf,
Says U.S. Aide
•
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -HOU!e•ives
don't have to worry about the price of
bread soaring to $1 a loaf, the u.~.
Under.le<:retary ol Agrlcultur< .. Y" It's
just !lllfilething dreamed up by the baiting
industry.
•*1befe's plenty of wheat available,
more than we can use," declared J. PhU
Campbell.
It's jun that for the fin! time, the
nation's bakers have had to go out and
find available wheat, Campbell told the
Associated Press Society · of Ohio
saturday night. The government has
stopped keeping track of ft, he said.
"They came in and told us, 'There's no
wheat," Gampbell said. "We told them,
'It's there. You just have to go find it.' "
Henry Hall WllSOll. former President or
the Oli.cago BGard or T1ade , for Ervin's
seat.
Most polls have \Vilson. who returned
to his native Mooroo , N.C., last year
after a 12·year absence, running third
behind SlalA! Attorney General Robert
lttorgan and tonner congreSsnlan Nick
GaU!ianakls.
Washington, D.C .. '"'nds oo the verge
ol an elected government for the first
time in 100 years. A charter, calling for
an elected mayor am 13-member city
oouncil, b 00 the ballol !ts adoption
appears C.rtaln, although a low turnout
cou1d embazTa.sl: civic and congressional
leaden who fought for home rule for
years.
Opposition to the -stem! from Con~ having final authority over the
budget and from the requirement that at
least three Republicans serve on the
council In a city overwhelmingly black
and Democraltc.
World Champ
Pole Sitter
Dies in Fall
C!UCAGO (UPI) -Since t b e
defll"'-'lon years, 71-ye&N>ld Richard
"Dixie" Blandy was a fixture on a
flagpole. A friend said flagpole sitting
"was hls life."
Sunday il ended In tragedy.
Blandy, who claimed to be the world
champion flagpole sitter, was perched on
an aluminum chair at lhe top of a 5().foot
pole in !iOllth suburban Harvey, calmly
waltlng through tlie final few hOOrS Of a
f0<r-day !hopping center promotion.
He asked through a communicaUons
wire attached to a trailer bele>w that a
security guard move the trailer aside to
make room !or equipment which would
whbk Blandy to the groond at day's end.
But when the trailer moved , the wire
became taut. The pole snapped eight feel
above the ground and crashed -along
with Blandy -to earth, police said .
Ambulance paramedics tried to he:lp
Blandy, of Dayton, Ohio, as he lay
CM!C'ious, writhing oo the parking lot at
tbe Dixie Square Shopping Center. They
rusb«1 him to Ingalls Memorial lloopital,
¥.'here be died three boors later of a
maas1 .. s k u 11 fracture and mulliple
Internal btJirfes.
The Gu!Mess Book of World Recmls
credits Maurie ~e Kirby o f
Indianapolis , Ind., with setting the world
record for "pole silting" or 211 days.
nine bolas, in 1959.
Earl Lakes of Dayton, a friend of
Blandy's for about 20 years, said Blandy
claimed a world flagpole .sitting record or
103 days about seven years ago in
Sweden.
Niguel Park Huge Success
Lakes' wife said Blandy was able to
make hi! living through nagpoie sitting
since the late l!ms. and once "'as paid
$900 a day for 44 days in a promotion in
Pennsvl!!e, N.J., about JS years ago.
Somellmel he e""1 pedaled a bicycle
nonstop throughout the promotion.
When the weather got nippy , Blandy
\\'OUld just :tip up a transparent tent
around his chair for protection. He was
using the tent In gusty winds Sunday,
police said.
1
INHY ,lltl lllH l"llt ..
LACK OF TREES HASN'T HAMPEREO USE OF NEW PARK
Addition of Blullfill and C1tf11h Added Attroctlon
Laguna Niguel Regional Park· doesn't
have a stately appearance with big,
towering trees, admit& Larry Leeman, of
the Harbors, Beaches and P a r k s
Department. .
But it has been the most successful
new park in Orange County in recent
years, he adds with satbfactlon.
From its oPening date La.st August,
through April of thb year, more than
33,<m persons have come throuih the
park. And now that the 35-acre fake is
stocked with bluegill and catfish, park
rangers expect even mOre parkgoen.
. · Leeman attributes tbe success of the
park to shaded picnic shelters, tennis
courts and the lake.
''The park may still be shiny and new,
with Uny trees, but people are 11n!ady
making the park a habit," L<eman said.
The county agency selb 110 annual
passes al eacb of their eight parks, which
allow people to visit any of tbe county
facilities free as often as they wtsh. A
' parking fee or 50 cents Is regularly
required.
The annual passes at Laguna Niguel
ha"" aold like ltotcake1, Leeman asya.
1be 170 sold so far this year are more
than sales at Ute other seven parks
combined. ·
"Now that we fiave both fi9hlng and
tennis here1 people want to buy the
passes so tney can come any Ume and
come and go d u r l n & the day '\\'ilhout
having to pay a 8 a I n each time," ex·
plained Park Ranger Rlcbanf Sancb<z.
During the wlnter season, the Laguna
Niguel park b open only Willi !Wldown,
but from now WIUI fall, the parlt will
remain open Wltil 10 p.m.
Besides lhe ftaltlJti and tennis, visitors
have accw to bll<lni and riding traits.
turfed playf .. lds, and the platlc shelters
equipped with w I le r , electricity and
barbooucs.
Two Killed in Plane
HERMOSA BEACH (UPI) -Two
pcr80lls were believed killed Sunday
when their single-engine plane crashed
about otte mite off tho coast. Their
Identities were not available.
BJ.aody's 90ll, Richard, of Tampa, Fla .,
said his father started pale sitting in the
late l9:1A!. Richard gajd be disapproved
"for safety's aake."
Mrs. Lakes aald Blandy •'had even
been struck by lightning several times
while he was up there. And once in
Texas, tornadoes blew down h1s pole and
he spent some time in the hospital.''
"He liked It up there,'' she said. "It
was his life. He said be felt near G\ld."
•
"WHEN I FIRST SAW HIM , I WENT 'YECCHHH'"
Ellan Br.i>wn With Grand Champion Rex Cat
55"000 Feli1•e
Mescui's Cnt flas Touch of Class
By RUDI NIEDZJELSKI
01 IM DtilY f'Uol Siii!
sauntering through a back alley. ol'
"Red" Ryder n1ight easily be mirlakcn
as one of the other vagrants \\'ho roams
the garbage cans in the neighborhOod.
He looks like he hasn't had a kippe r in
two 'veeks. his ·whiskers arc scraggJ~·.
and there's not one hair left on his pointy
ears.
But Red Ryder is no ord inary cat. In
fact. he· might be just about about the
fanciest cat in all of College Park. \Vith a
name like Grand Champion Rodelrs
Ryder of Pinkerton and a $5.000 price
tag~ who ¥.'Ou1d argue?
The Rex breed o{ \Vh.ich Red is an
outstanding example, just plain looks
pecuJiar. It's the whippet of the feline
world-the looks sort of have to grow on
you.
"When I first saw him , I went
yecchhh," admits his proud owner. Mrs.
Ellen Brown, 205 Dartrnoulh Place, "'ho
co-owns Red wiU1 her husband Scotty.
"But as soorr as I picked him up we
were off an running. He is really an
affectionate cat."
As grand champion with more than 100
ribbons end trophies to his credit two-
year-old Red 's offspring are vcrv much
in demand. The Browns have a standing
Older for kittens at $500 apiece.
Although they seem strange at first ,
Rex cats have some unusual features.
'Jbey're the only cats with curly ltair and
their coats look some,vhat like a crushed
velvet pillow. Their noses are distinctly
Roman, they have curly whiskers, bald
ears, and are said to be more intelligent
than most other cats.
Bargaiu Session Off
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -A marathon
bargaining session between negotiators
for striking Teamsters Local 473 and the
Akron Beacon-Journal was called off
Friday night after trouble developed on
the picket line.
The around-the-clock session had been
s.c~uled to begin at 9:30 p.m .. but e:ir-
her 1n the evening, a picket was struck
by a car which the teamsters said 1ras
leaving the newspaper plant.
Nobody kno11·s ror sure where they
came ri~m . 'T'hcre are two populru·
tlteorjes. qnc that the Hex is a nat.uru!
niutation nod lhe 0U1er that it is :1
dt'~cendAnl of the Egy1lllan cats.
··They 11.)()k like those in Egyplian
sculptures." says ritrs. Brown. "Every
Pharaoh had a cat and "'hen you look :.it
pictures of those cats you'll see that they
'"ere ha!d on the cars 11nd that the ears
.\\·ere high on their l1eads."
Lending fl1rthcr support lo the second
theory ts that mummified ca t s .
un"Tappcd arter being taken out of
Egyptian tombs. also had curly hair.
cording lo 1'1rs. BrO\\'ll.
Ancient lineage or not. Red gets
treated like a prince around the Brown
household and he is regularly taken lo
cat sho\\'S where he usually devastates
the opposition.
Al home, t'nc J!n?11ns rerrain from
calling him by hi s noble name. "\\'e just
call him Red or all sorts of things.
depending OD What he·s doin~including
some of the biceps in ihc Nixon
transcripts." confides Scotty.
There are two other cats in the Bro11·11
household. both Rexes and of champion-
shi p caliber. but Red remains the top
cat.
··\Ve "'ouldn't put a 1>ricc on Red ."
says Sco tt y but Mrs. Brown confesses
tha t if somebody came up "'ith $5,000 sh e
would "cry all the way to the bank ."
Just one thing. Don't pick up an aller
cat and expect it to be a Rex. Red Ryde'r
trasn ·1 seen a garbage can in his life and
he IA'OUld probably stick his aquiline nose
up at a kipper.
Police Probe Blast
I 11 LA's Bell Canyon
LOS ANGELES IA PI -A hug('
explosive gouged a JS.foot-wide hole in a
rcmot~ hillside ncnr suburban Bell
Can)'On and investigating officers said
later .they found pieces of rrleta l tha 1
could have come fron1 a homb.
The blast Sunda:v sparked n search <il
first for a crashed plane. officcn; said .
)
Master
Charles
awa11s ttie
arrival of his
luncheon guesl
1n his line ,pin-wale
5Ull by tmp
Cnanes. 4 year::; old
,.,, the son of
Mr and Mrs Rober! Edmu!"lds.
ol Corona.de! Mar.
THE RED BALLOON LTD.
~...,.,.ON l'iLJ\Wf)
~1~..::11 ...........
t(lwN,CQUN1'1• en...,.. 11•1.....wt
•NWT+"IQTQH""°~llt ,, ..... , ....
I
i
·-
.J DAIL V PILOT Monday, May ti, 1q74
Dairy Co-op Sotigh~~ Funds for Mills
l\1en10 Crops
Up .4.gain
'8ACKPEOAUNG DEPT.--Oh dear, dO
I 01\·e an apology to our Fifth District
Su pervisor Ronald Caspers. who
rrpresents much of our coastal sector on
!he county board. \\'hat I said he hadn't
done. he has.
Caspers. you may recall. is seeking re·
election lo another four-year term this
June. lie L<i being challenged by Marsha
Bents and Dr. Nolan Frizzelle of Newport
Beach and ex-mayor James Thorpe of
Sa n Juan Capistrano.
Anyway, I suggested that the campaign
1\·as pretty dull and usl'd as an example
that incumbenl Caspers hasn 't even
mailed out hi s memo pads, computerized
letters or American Flag decals like he
did last time.
NO SOONt:R DID J rattle lhat one out
in th is corner than the Caspers Handy
ffome ~temo Pad s began arriving in
mailboxes out there in the precincts.
The men10 pad ha s <in American Flag
across the top and comes 11•ith a hand y
list of all the emergency numbers in your
area .
This means. of course. that the pads
have to be printed for particular zones
\11ithin the Firth Supcrvisorial District.
since emergency nu1nbcrs aren't the
sa me for l\'ewport Reach. for example.
as Lhey are in S.1n Cle1ncnte. Mission
Viejo. Laguna .or ot her points coastal.
\\IASHl.NGTON (AP ) -A top dairy
<'OOperative ofhc1al allegedly -·anted to
raise $2 million In tash to help llep.
\\'ilbur D. ~lll!J tD.·Arit.,1 'run for
P~Kttnt 1n 1972 against Richard r.1.
Nixon . who had been pro1niscd $2 m1lhu11
in <lairy m~)' hnnself
David L. Parr, the for1ner second-in-
cornmand at Associated A1ilk Producers,
lnc . belif'1<ed 1'1llls could "'in thl'
Oemocrutic 1>resid1:ntia l nomination and
beat l\'ixoo. accord!n'g to statements
attributed lo 1>arr·s former asoociatea al
the gianl dairy cooperative.
. : t .•
"DAVE PARK wanted tq, build a kluy" ot-salaried a»peratlw -mployes to
for \\'ilbur ~!Ills of $2 million." tM eo-assist 1he wl1 draf_t·~1 1Usicampaign, an
op's form t' r lobbyist. Boh A. Lilly,.,.ts--~~ Tiolatlon d f~eral · la'lt'
~uotcd ~~ s<iylng. ''I-le wanted this to be ,. p(OhJb!ting ~ °'. ~atb "Jl\Ofley in
1•1 cnsh. .caarpa1ans. ~. .... ...-. •
The 1 rnilk producer's present cblef i J. ,.::··•-r Ttll\NEQ arown a lltopoiN.chl-ck·ol(
cxccu11vt. George L. Mehren. ls-quot:cd • -· iit.elDp~es bt.~arr lind ga'ft" Clirectlons
n' saying he rut ofr some el Parr'S aid fo · -hat a-Yiaiiieon\flry to. oom)any policy
i\1il l$ when i\1ehrcn took over kmd<l:rsbip 'nndi~ld>~fiot. ~.fllltowti(J if'•rr remind·
or •he <XKlp In early 1972. ejt ipe lbat it '"'as for Wjlt,tj\ t.fllls and
At that time. just be f o r.e Milts tMt \\'e;.Owed l>im e. good"d.ta!,'" fi:lt>hren
announced himself its an acth'e calldidate is quoitd as saying. "'
for the Detnocratic_ pre sj den Ii a I Th.e • .....-ctiec.k~rf was apperently for _ a
non1inaUoo, Parr had assignt!d a number fundril!fng rf(ort for 1'1ill~ thtU rarr • • -•
•
wanted to CQl)d~ amonl the oo-op'J
e:mplove~. according to ,.~rce close to
-the Sena1e WAtergate com m It l ee 's
investigation of lhe affair.
A1ehfen i&: quoted as saying th.31 he was
told fi ve co.op employes "'·orked oo the
~Ulls campaign. Lilly named six
employes "''ho he said actual~· 1'."0rked
for 1'1 ills. A seventh CO-Op employe has
been identified as the n1ain ad vance nvi.n
for !\fills. ·
·Parr ran the milk p~ucers' office jn
UUle Rock , Ark., in Afills' congresslonal
dis1rict. lie beUeved lhat 1'1illi., head of
~
Poll Shows·
Nixon Dip
After Talk
PRINCETON. N.J. IAP• -Forty-t"·o
percent of the people "'ho vie"·ed or read
about President Nixon's t e I e v ision
address last week on the \Vatergate
transcripls'now have a "less favorable"
opinion of him, according lo the Gallup
Poll .
A special telephone poll of 694 adults
also showed that 17 percent "·ere left
with a more favorable opinion. Thirty.
rive percent said their opinion had
remained the same. but there 1\'as no
""ay of determining how this group felt
about the Pr"esident. Six percent offered
no opinion . ..
TllE POLL ALSO showed that. by a 44·
to-41 percent ma rgin. An1ericans believe
there is enough evidence against the
Prtsident to bring him to trial before the
the lloose Ways and 1'1eans Committee.
could go "all the way" llnd win 1he White
Jiouse, actorrling to '" s t e t em en t
attributed to Robert 0. Isham. the mlllc
producers' forme r C()ntroller. I
THE STA1'Eo\t~NTS ol Liiiy, Mehrerl
ond Jsha1n ~·ere 1nade public In a cow1f
proceeding after the J us t I c el
D e p a rt nt e n t • i antitrust dlviRi<>n1
subpocnatd the investigaUvc notes O(
F,d\\•ard L. \Vright , a pron1incnt Liltle(
Rock attorney who probed the co-op·s
political activities on aMignment from its•
boar~ of directors.
U"IT ........
FACE S CONSERVATIVE
Franco is Mitterrand
Com 11111n.ist Pick
Also, the first computeri1.ed letter
came with !he pad. Again. 1 \Vas wrong.
Caspe rs' platform this lin1e is a little
more complex than just a sin1ple call ror
Leadership.
Senate. .
However. by a . <9:t<c38 .ma rgi n, the £o ... Pr·csi·d ent national sample said 1t didn ·t beheve,the--:.... -.
President's aclions at this t i me
WALDIES TOP GOA L, NIXON
• ., OUSTER. Story, Pi g• 9
U."4. Telftt!"N•• \ ' -.,. This time , il"s six good, solid
paragraphs.
IN ESSENCE , it tell s you the next four
years will be crucial and you'd better not
change hotses in the middle of the
stream. That may sound familiar . but
that's okay. · Dig~· Rise Rain· Make):.:-
~-.warranted 'ihiS being removed from
•·· ·office. '~---
• ·• The speeit11I poU \vas take n to measure
-public response to the President's
d,efense of his refusal to surrender <12
lape recordings of \\lhite 11 o use Supervisor Ron also says he 's saved
Upper Ne\\'Jll)rl Bay. had held the wild JfOUSTON ( Ut>f t -Skyscrapers in big cities can affect
development interests at ba y also, and the weather like mountains do. and they hal"e significantly
you best re·elect him if you don't wan t to changed ra,infall p;1ttcrns all over !he 11·orld. acrording
see the Orange Coast covered with to research scientist l)r. Joseph L. Goldman.
concrete. "The !all buildings act as a n1oun1a in 10 the wind ...
~1EAN\\'JllLE, AS Supervisor Ron was said the University of St. Tho1n<1s professor. associate
getting out his letter and memo pads, dirrctor of the Institute for Storm Research.
lwo Qt.her candidates. the aforementioned ,
r.Irs. Bents and Dr. Frizzelle. were "AS TllE \\'IND BLOWS over this ve ry low sloping
fighti ng for the endorsement of Ulc . surface. ii impinges on these buildings. Some of it goes Oran~·County Coordinating Republica;t : .. Y. ~.up. Some or it goes around. • ·~ -
Assembly, a quasi-unofficla l ann of the ··~ •-· :••WtJert it goes up .1nd <iro.und. it is lilted," he said.
GOP. '1~ "It cools and condenses. fl form s and then it rains.··
frizzclle figu red to get the "· He said the effect of skyscrapers has already sho11•n
endorsement since he 'd been state up in meteorological statistics. In Houston, for example,
chairn1an of the outfit in '65. But Mrs. the cast side received more rainfall than the west be-
Bents got it. Frizzellc abru ptly screamed <?Use)i is nearer the primary source of moisture, th e
about. ethics and power tactics. Gulf . .of ~1exico.
\\'ell, it ~·as reported that there wns "We now find that it is dryer in the do111nlown area
some cast of characters plugging for 1vhere it used lo be 1vct before." Goldman said. ··1·ne
~lrs. Bents, including 1'1rs. J ohn Sc hmitz. '
"'ife of the ex-congressman and AIP ' --
. . '
11'est used lO be dry relative lo the downtown area and conversations,. lo lhe House Judiciary
the east. ~ ~ Committee. Instead , . r\ixon pro1·ided
"It's ha ppening all over lhe world ,'°1 he said . cdiled transci'ipts.
Gold1nan suggested the change in rainfall pa tterns By a ratio or n1ore than ~-1. Ameri cans
caused by the buildings be applied to practical urban • -eaKt the Judiciary Commi!lee was right
problems .. such as planning drainage systems and 1ttie -irrits decision to reje~.t the transcripts as
problem of sinkage. ~ I· r a • substitute for the · tap'.es. On this
The\'a.nd sin~e -up to 6 inches a year in Jme z 'lJUl:tion. 62 perceht agreed 1vith the
areas -is CauSt>d by giant industries sucking millioti of ,.. committee. 2• perc!erlt disagreed, v.·hill!
gallons of "'ater from beneath 1ne surface. It would help 14 percent had no opinion.
_!or the ind!Jstri~s to switch to surface "'ater. , f ''f!·· ,1 ~ ~. • 1 ~C.:C~.; ANS ~ t~ "Whose sta~ements GOLD~IAN SAID BIG (:ITIES require a great aml».IAl .:.. a ul ~\'a~_e_!'g<1Je .~k }'~ more inclined
of \\'ater to survive and he takes issue with lhose who ~ o heve , John T.>ran s or l'resldent
1hink there won 't be1 enough in the future. · ··Ntton's?" .. ~i~on edged Dean J~ lo 36
"f'm sort of an optimi st." Goldman said. "I think • 11Cfcent. with 28 percent having no
it's very possible \\'e can progress inlO the megalopolis opinion. .
1\•ith a very efficient system . The source of moisture is A second Gallup st ud y sho"'cd Uiat
right here. I think \\:e'IJ have all the water resource we'll Republican pa rty a!filiation is at an all-
need. '' "time low...;: 24 percent -with 42 percent
, describing theolselves as Democrats and
-.> ' ' ~·-• ;.1 .. -.!.. •• ;w percent in<tependents.
presidential hopeful : Assemblyman Bob
'Badham and his aide Ed Ward ;
Congressman Andy Hin sha"' and sidekick
Chip Cleary and state Senator Denny
Carpenter.
· .. Sii1ge1· Held iI1 . V e11ezuela Pro11oue Blas1
. Jn terms or political philosophy, 38
--percoot eensider Ulemselves consel"V'a·
·---tives while-3&-,eroent place themselves
in the liberal camp and '36 percent are
undecided.
The proportion of conserv atives is the
highest rfeorded since the question was
~ nrst askt!d by Gallup in 1936.
Burns 8 W 0111e n ~. I don'! kno\11 about the ethics. but the
power seen11..'<I to be there.
THE ETHICS COi\IE in \\'hat in
thunder is a partisan Hepublican outfit
doing cetting so involvC'd in a non-
partisa n election ? Next thing you know
they'll be endorsing for doi:tcatchcr.
t",\HACAS, \'('11('zurla I \!'I -British
singer Tom Jones 1~·;1s ore1·1•ntcd from
leaving Vcne1.uC"l;-i 1\·hc11 he tried to board
a plane for the United Stares.
A !oral nev.·srnan. ~·lnnuel Olalquiaga of
the "(:;I Universal." got a court ord er
against Jon es for injuries allegedly
inflicted by Jones' hodygua rd .
O!alquiaga s:iid Darid Perry struck
him on the hrad last '\'ednesda y. Pl'rry
rcponedly left Venezuela the next day.
Jones reportedly 11•as being delayed
pending a court appearance today. A
spo kesman at Jonrs' London office said
they received a ea!l from him afler he
11·as stopped from lcaring Sunday and he
11'as "totally ix'"'ild!'red .. :•
. '
At Rllncli Site
DUBOIS, Wyo. IAP) -"The flame
just came out 'whoof' -and then it was
gone." said a young cowboy.
Mean¥,.hile. nme magazine said a poll
taken tor the magazine just before
Nixon 's announcement that he \\'Ould
release tl;te transcripts showed a jump in
the number of Americans ~·ho want the
President to resign or be impea'ched.
"S ure of Win"
PARIS <UPI 1 -Fr<incois ~1illerrand,
the Communis1-bncked candidate for
presi4,e-nt of franc·e , said 1oday be is so
sun.> of \"ictory in ne:<t Sunday's runoff he
already has slarled \\'orklng on his fil'st
dec isions as head of state.
"I go into 1he fight ""ith calm
rt'.SOlulion ... he said . "Already toda)' I
ha\'C begun f o rmulati ng 1he
responsi bilities I 1\•i\I have to assume
after ,_lay 19."
In an ele<>lion this StJnda y that spelled
the end of ~ Ga,ullism'.s 16-year rule.
~tilterrand won 43.4 p('fcenl of tho vote
and his leading rival, conservative
finance t minister Valery G is c ard
D' Es1aing, 32.9 l)t!rccnt.
The 10 r1thrr ca ndidat es. includinJ.:
(;au/h11r Jal'qurs Chaban-Delmas 1\·ith
14.:> pcrcrnt. \\'ere el1mina1cd and
~Lluerrand and Giscard l)'Es1aing 1\·ilJ
fight a straight battle in a run-off \'Ole
\l<ty 19. Political observers ga\'e Giscard
D"Estaing a slight cha nce ol winning
next Sunday.
~litterrand also said France \\'OUld
continue to be independent of the United
States.
··Our nalional independence is not
assured \\'hen \\·e do not defend ourselves
againSt the hegemony of our principal
partner." he said in a, clear reference In
\\lashin gton. ''Our independence is not
as.sured 1\·hen \\'e refuse to aHo"' Europe
lo take its o"'n decision."
~ewsmen at a conference cal led by
~htterra\'Jd took this to me11n the
Socialist leader felt l:iscard D'Estaing
11wld ho"' to the Ll.S. desire for
cr,>nsultations \l'ith \\'ashington before E~ takes major policy decisions.. r.reanwhile. supervisorial candidat e
Thorpe didn 't even seek the Republican
Assembly endorse1nent. ~taybc this is
because he's a Democrat.
-HUT INCU1'1Bl:i:NT S up e r visor
Caspers. who is a Republican. apparently
didn't bother much \\'ith it either.
All of on•hi ch proves Caspers ha s more
political sense than certain parties ha ve
given him credit for .
Hang in there. Ron. Just slick \\'ilh '
those memo pads.
~i x Killed iu Fire
LONDON fAP I -Fire S\vep~ through
t11·0 apa rtment houses in Clapham in
south London c<i rl y today. killing ~i x
persons and injuring at leasl IO men,
authorities sa id
Jones cabled Prirne ~linister Harold
\Vilson for aid. A spokesman said \\iilson
11'ould be shovin the cable after he
ret urned from a .trip.
A spokesman for Jonrs said the delay
"·ould cost him ·•tens of thousands of
dollars because "·e 11,·ill 111iss recording
sessions scheduled for tonighl i n
Alabama.··
He had just witnessed a propane gas
tank ex.plosion that left eight \\.'Omen and
girls critically burned at a Qr~l)ding
operation this weekend.
Six of the victims were flown to the
Brook Army ~1edica\ Center in San
Antonio, Tex., and two others to ihe Utah
A1edical Center in Salt Lake City.
Another woman was in serious condition
and authorities said 10 more rpen and
\\"Omen v.·ere also injured. • •
Melee in India P1·ompts
Cuvfew .at Delhi Capital
Sun Warms Most of Nation
Golf Ball llllilstones Batter Griffi1i Park, T exas
' '
Tetn,per11f111·es
Hotll LOIM l'CJ,
AI01.111ue•11ue
And>t>riKlf
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f111e~1
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l'••\1111 " .. 61 2 $1
H r>Olulll
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'~"•.tri•r>01<1
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DtllVfRY SERVICE
Dclrve~ ol the Oar~ P1kll
1s giJaranlted *"" frCJr1 W !'Ii ie NI llff ftllf
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A J11nn~ •llrmoon 1U•r mornf'lt
tlOudlfllU W•J Of(ll'l'lfled tor IOflW lly
Ille N•llOll•I Weeollef Sff~(t. Llll!e
,...,oe•lllll'•' en•• Ind -''91'1' 1moo eito wt1• 101.c111.
CIOUCI\ .,...u n'tll.,,. lle(I, lfllO IWtt!I ••tff llefort alvll'ID Wlv It i.,,1v
U.S. .s 1111u11;nr11
L••<H. wro1 ol !tie n.111111 eniovtd
IUl'lllV 1~ie1 Suno1v,
F"•l• 1~le1 covertd most o• IN
western n111 OI 1ne <OUrtlry. 11\1 m1oor1
Ml11l11lool Vtllfy, illt NO"llltl!'• Dltlls o,r IN Onlo V1!1ev tt'ld outi.tr11
l'!Orlde. Tempe!"1hirt1 in IN tlOs 1no 7°" or1virlle0 ov~• mmt of tM c°"""•· 111ou11n llM NorttM•tl l'elNlned cool,r. sno..e .. 1 ... e1 rn11no1r!liorm• t011ti111111e1 111 ,.,. Gurt Co.\! •rod 1i.rn Ar1an1lc
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C1111.~tfll lt'eathe r
Mostly WIYIY loelfly. t.ltnt ve{f1Clt
wjno1 nleflt tnci morri!no 11o11tt 119-
coml1111 Wft!..-ly I IO II knp!l I"
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S11n "''" 5:)t •·'"· s.11 1:40 1>.m.
Mton rliQ l :H. o.fl'I. Sitt ':1' •·"'
The blast and flash fire occurred at lhe
Double • Diamond Ranch 22 miles
northeast of here. ,
"\Vhen the tank ble1v I thought it was a
sonic boom,'' sa id Tye Dagley, 24, who
was roping calves about 120 feel--away
fro m the corral where the \\'01nen.· were
helping wilh the branding ..
"f looked around and ttris Jtta( bur~ of
names came out. J don 't image ii was
O\'er just a few seconds:"
Deputy Sheriff Eddie -Apland said a
JOO.pound butane tank !plit down the side
and spewed the volatile· ftquid Over 'the
nearby 'group. The gas Ignited In a flash
\Yhen it touched the Open nafne c6{ a
heater being used to fire the brM.i ilg
irOns. "I.:"'.
"It's always kind of a famll~ :irfalr,''
said Dubois' Fire Chief Bob uake~ in
explaining why so many wqmen and
Chihtren v.•ere present. Several' of the
fll milies were pla1U1ing a picnic 'dinner
~·heri the work was do'ne.
Bagley said the men. who wtre further
away t'tom the exploding tank than the
\VOmcn, ru shed to the group and tried
beat out the names with their hands and ·
coo ls. They then loaded the women into
car~ end trucks and hfshed !hem to the
Dubois Medlcal Celinlc.
A spOkcsmnn nt the Brook . h1edlcal
Cenle.r uld the victims were Charlene
Bazor. 4: Sandra RogcrS, J7:· Daphne
Rogers, IS: Catherine Bazor, 10; Donna
Albrighl. t6, and Rhonda Albright , t8.
Llst d In crillcal condition at lhc
linlversity of Ulah Medical Center was
~targaret Cargill, 3S, and her daughler,
Linda, JO. •
NEW ol!!UJi Ind ia fAP) -Federal
police and '.1tuops enforced a round-the-
clock curfew 'tbday in a croWded market
area of Delhi ~·here at least 10 persons
died Sunday. ft "'as the u"Orst l~indu
Moslem rioling in the lndian capital in
years . •
Unconfirmed reports said at least 20
persons were killed. More than 60
persons "'ere injured . Ten were reported
" IN SH{JRf ....
'
, in seriQUS condition rrom gunsho l "oonds
suffered during t{lc day-long clashf!S.
-: Police s.1i<:{ ITIOl'\Jhan 250 persons \\'ere
arrested, man:Y'toe Violating the curfew.
e Cnmbodllt Cindie• ' ..
SAlyON (UPI)--·Sooth -Vietnomesc
t~ and tanks dra\-e tour 'Tnile~"into
Cambodia in a new operation SUnday but
Nie<• 1)opj>eil by h<avy Communist
resistance bt a cambodf»a village.
field oU!ctrs~ld · 111an ~ gov-
efi\ment troops ,,_4 ~tanks push·
ed aerou the JTOillier •long ~'f;:Y l ,a~, 3$ :·• -~t, of
e 1tnl11 M;ldntiftfill -.
• 1 .... "' ,.
GENOA. liali (AP) j-~ k!Wpero
of Genoa's di'Jlrict 8ttome11 t\.Dve
threatened· to klll 'him unlrs1 eight
uttralcf!lsts . are frttd from jaO,. pollcc
reported todny.
, The ·police "id the kidnnper•. on
ex-tremJst organization called 1hc Red
' -·,,
Brigades. said thC'y 11·ould release }.lario
Sossi if "eight Communist oompanioos of
the October 22 organiza!\on" are no~'ll to
Cuba, North Korea or Algeria .
•Air Strik e Auerte d
OO'TAWA (UPI ) -Canada was spared
a nationwide airport shutdown Sunday as
air traffi c oontrollers voled in favor of a
propo;;ed oontract by a narrow 57 percent margin .
Con!n?llers at ~1ontrcal nnd VictoMa,
B.c .. mrpons. "'ho had . lhreatened to
"·atk oot· no matter what the national
vote was. decided at the last minute to remain on the job.
• J•e t111 Ce111r111 Probe
~HILADELPlltA fAPI _ A lederal
cr1.nun.al investigation h.is devdoped
evidence that some high officials of the
Penn Ce~t.ral r11ilroad mudt milllom of dol!ar~ in. personal profit before
nation t sixth lar1:;e!'t corporatl .the
ban krupt in June 1970 on ~cnt
with the case say. · sources fanullar
A r~!!rt!I grand jury that met '
In Phllll<i<lphla for 18 months 9'a'etly
business Jaie 111 ~ • went out of
ask«I to indict an»·or!~~he :U,~ ~~g
• $ftdftte fntilte
BEIRUT. Lebanon fA.P) •
Nixon has sent Preskl ot An;. Pr~ldcnl
Egypt 1n invitation to vlsh tr.e SaJ~1t;J
State•, the Coiro wtd<ly ROie 11 Yeo.,./ report~ todt\v. '111e rePort al!IQ
Nixon :rould visll Egypt durtnn the An Id ~·eek o June. " rat
•
'
•
·'
•
Ja
TIJU
. Thousa
turning
Baja C
G'usto1n
.here S
hour r
United
major
MCJ<l
more
from
cro
Cali
Th ey
traffic
ob,. rv
lhe A
the st
sea so n
Ne wpo
yuc hl
attend
along
eu
LOS
t-~aced
cha ng
tlons,'
is tri
ber s
spok
"Th
t"'O
spoke
"\Ve'r
perce
"·ee ks
i I." •1
Nearl
expec
loday
called
Brick
,_·la
offici
The
two y
see in
18.53
!IC
ma yor
• ol th
Club
meet
Gil
~1oss
oucle
They
Ove
tl\ey
pota
crea
" peop
ser1
drun
just
Ove om
con•
org
wee •
Gov
sig
con
bull
eart
u
buil
Fie
by
TM
bullnt1
T<
Hwy.
WH
Dr.,
T•• ~ t• 1•1• , .....
~,...11
r
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' ' • nM ,
" ' lhlt lndlw
Tllll ,_,
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'"° ISl
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'
-.
100,000
Motorists
Jain Baja
TIJUANA, Mexico (UPI) -
Thousaoo.. ol mOU>riots re-
turning )rom a weekend In
Baja California lined the U.S.
(...'usto1ns border entry go.tu
here Sunday, waiting up to an
hour for clearance Intl) the
United Stoles and creatin& a
major traffic Jam. ·
l\'texlcan officials estimated
more than 100,000 ve hicles
from the United St ate a
· BRIEFS-
e Ba11k Layolts
LOS ANGELES (AP I
Faced with "the d r as t i c
change in economic condl·
Uons." United California Bank
is trimming its 10,000-mcrn-
ber staff by some 300, a bank
spokesman said.
"The layoffs started about
ty,·o months ago." t he
spokesman said late last wee k.
"\Vc'rc about 65 percent to 70
percent finished. The next fe\\'
y,•ccks should 5et the end of
it. ...
• 1 ~0.0-~trlke-LOS ANGELES (API '
·Nearly 1.500 brick1ayers were
expected to stay "off the job
today in the wake of a strlke
ca lled Friday by th e
Bricklayers and Stone Model
f\tasons Unton Local 2, union
officials said Sunday.
The bricklayers. ~·ho struck
two years ago over wages, are
seeing an increase In their
$8.53 ho1rly base pay.
'• J\'e1" Preslde 11 t CLAREMONT (UPI) -
Kent Gill. a Da\•is junior hig!l
school t,eacher and former
mayor. WIS elected president
of the 143.000-member sierra
Club dnrll'tg its·annual two-day
meeting hert this weekend.
Gill succeeds Laurenct 1.
CALIFORNIA
FB I Still
'Baffled'
Four Yo11ths
Kidnap Man
U>S ANG ELES (t.:Pll -A
kidnaping victim \\'ho had
beer! lclt j>oot\d .and gagged
witMut any food or watc~ ror
..
8 Jailed
1-n Death .
Of Youth
JERI'S FLORIST
1 .... & Ceutry sai.,,1 ..
C..._ • H•,.S.,N• ~·
962-0013
COSTA MESA
FLORISTS
• 117 lr••clw1y
C"t• Men
548-6071 Moss, a Washington, t>.C.,
nuclear physicist.
e Food F ighte r s
five days was found In -the r;~~~~~~~~~~~I back seat of hls car Sunday by,
a passerby.
LOS ANGELES (APl -
Some call them "loodabollcs."
They call the m selves
Overeaters Anonymous and
tl\flY fi ght daily battles agalilst
pot.aloes. ice cream. whipped
cream and other delights.
"Your problem is that
people don't take overeaters
ser1ously. You never hear-of •
drunken eater. But we h6rt
just as much," !aid Gloria. an
Overeaters An o n y mo.us
officer, at the a nnu a l
convention of the 14·year-old
organization during t h e
weekend.
e Schoob Vsed
SACRAMEPITO <AP)
Gov. Ronald Reagan has
signed a biU allowing
continued use of s c b o o I
buildings that don't meet state
earthquake r e si s t a n c e
standards if "'ork is under
~·11y on replacement buildings.
Under current law. school
buildings not meeting the
Field Aci ·must be e¥acuated
by June 30. 1975.
PUBLIC NOTICE
J ames Buford, 30, Lake
View Terrace, was taken· to
Wa<kworth Veterans hospital
and listed in fair condition. He
,was only semiconscious when
he was found.
Bufonl w.., kidnap«! by four
youths \\'edne.sdav after he
had booght them' sOme beer at
a liquor store. he told police.
They pushed him in the back
of their van and drove him to
a garage he said.
Note Drifts
6,500 Miles
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Stuffing a note in a bottle and
tossing it in the ocean isn'~ the
best way to get a pen pal, but
it worke-d for three Los
Angeles youngsters.
The bottle drifted 6.500
miles in 490 days and was
washed up on the beach on
Eniwetok Island, about 1,060
n1iles southeast ot. Guam .
Jack Ball , on a scientific
expedition to Eniwetok. found
,,CTITIOUI IUSINISS the bottle and wrote a letter to NAM• STATIMINT
The toltowl119 HrlOl'\I 1rt dolno Bill and Diane S1eel of San
REHER'S MISSION
FLORIST & GIFTS
• CAL\
837-6502
21171 M•t •••llw ......
M ...... Ylojo
PARTY PLEAZERS
FLOWER
• SHOP
546-9172
301 3 H•rbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
BROADWAY
. FLOWER
'SHOP, INC.
• CALL
546-8284
2150 Horbor Blvd.
Cost1 Meu bu.i~~'~,.."1i l"ll:o SHOI'. >037 E co.11 Pedro and their cousin ~1ari
Hwy,, c~ dtl ~r. c.n1orn11 m's Wallace, of suburb.in Rolling Wiii~ Arfhllf" I OMS, ]10 loollDlll
or., L-a1H11 h9<Ch, C11!1ornl1 t16.SI l;~Hi~-~IJ~s.iiiiiiiiiiii;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;.l:iii:;;:iiii:::ii:ii:iiii::ii:iiii:ii::::; Gerold Mil~, 1105 SM1r!119ton No. ---· ----10S, Ntwp0rt Bt1t!'I. C1llfoml1
JKQve R. Orlgry, i110 ~rrvlfl'Ol:ld,
Or,111111. QUfot11l1 '2667
TMI fluslM11 It ~ltd bY I llmlled °"''-s.l'llp. wm. A. 1-t Tl•h 1t11t:"""'t w11 lfltd wllh flit Coun-
ty CJtrk ol Or•ntt: COlilll'Y on Aprll It,
1•11 ""y ( l'ublll'l':!! Or1noe COii! DtHr Piiot,
Aprll n, ,., Mey" lS. "" 1..,..,,
r-PUB.LIC NOTICE
-f lCTITIOUS •UtlNI SS
NAM• ITATIM•NT
flt I
TM fo)llOWl119 peoon !1 do!llO bu1ll\fll
fll TH~ SICV STONE. ~,, Marl"f 1630 w• M•Am ... llftl., H• ~ "'-c .. .., • '44-4060 A-. NtwllOrt 11•1<1!, (1tlfor11l1 1 • • ._, !~~
I ""' 441 l•t 171'1t Sttfft, CMte ...... '41·1144 John I'. MtcllMll'I. Jr .. '"° GlfnHf~ll. 1tlv.r,1~, C11Utor11!1 t2SOt .----• - -----
' T1'1!6 llllllMl6 11 Condlr.lfll DY 1111
lt1CU¥1du1I. JDhfl I', Mldlloll Jt.
Tiiis staltlllt'fll Wit fllflf Witn II\
COIHllY CMlrll ol ()IJ119t COll'lly Ol'I 11.Pfll
"· .lf1C, I N l414
l'VDUill!M Orlf'IOt COlll 0111\' Piiot.'
Aptll If. 11'111 Mt\' •• ll, '°' lf11 1"6o7f
l'UBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOVI IUllllllSI NAM• ITATIMINT
TIMI !oltowll!f "''°" II dcllng INMf\"'
'" TH~ VERY OltY fLOltlST, •:U >0!11
ltrHI. Ntwpotr l•Kl'I, C1t1tor11ra "''° l1t1Mr1 I(. l(tntty, IU l111!1t00
lltl)ld, (Ol!I Meui, C1ll1otnl1 .,6».
Tl'lll MIM" 11 (OJlll«ttd ""lV •fl 1111-ll\¥hhlfl
l111Mr1 I(, ICf!ll,.,
'fl'll1 1t11trM~I w11 !l!tO wUh 1"41 COilfl-
tf Ci.tll o1 Ortntt t-1\' M ...,,ll 11,
111• ,.m" JMO HAllOI ILYD.
COSTA MW
FLORIST
•
W• H•11e4' Sii
M•l•r Credit C•r•
546-5525
\
-
,. . ;· '
DAILY PILOT 5
Reinecl\:e, Flo111·11o y Split
State Party E11clo1·se1ne11t s
attracted a · back·and·f()rth
shultle of c<andidatcs from
bolh sides or the RCpubl1tan
philo.wphical fence. but the
groups split sharply in
endorsement s of u th c r
statewide candida!es.
Both gath<>rings 1:1cklffi thP
issue of pres 1 d e n t 1 a 1
in1pcachmcn!, but lntcrnpl
birkerirrg ll'd to neither one
inking 11 position.
S.•n. Jotu1 L. llnrmer ot
r:tendale ca ptured the unoc
endorsement for h1:utenunt
go,ernor, but only aflcr bein,g
t•rillcizC'CI for ea rli er asking
Heinecke to drop out of the
i::overnor's race because of the
J1"'T controversy.
c,.a11d Jur y to flear ·
'Z ebrc1 ' Infor111ant?
A green and
growing plant with
fresh flower accents.
Usually available
for less than ~"""'
~250*
. \lusl1n1 minister
~l11han1rnad identified
Jo hn .
the
:;1~,,~,,
&
!~li!;rll ~'
0
0
Choose lhe lovely oll·floral .Sweet Surprise;•
or the S,weet Surprise with green plants and •
freshllower accents. Both come in a dainty ·
hand·painted ceramic bucket. And remember,
we can send your gift almost anywhere by
wire the FTD way. But do order now ... call
or visit your neirby Fro Florist todoy .•.
becouse supplies may become limited. (Most Fro Florists accept major credlt car'ds.) •
A fresh flower arra ngement.
Usually available for less than
•As an independent busfnessman,
each FTD Member Florist sets
his own prices.
O 1974 Florists• Transworld Dell~
@t1p
~:~j~~i~f~lm
niwm
~~]j~~l1!l~1l~
~vour
fxtr• Touch -""""'"
Four more FID Extra Touch'" flo ral gift ideas to delight Mom.
IMPORTED tHtNA
CUP AND SAUCER
Blos'°"3 gild lht inside
end dr.cotaie the outsick. Sht'll loYC both.
JOtE DE FLEUR'~
PERFUME G
COLOGNE
Within your booQIJ!tcl flo-r) neslles )p!'ll)'
perfuminir wioqiw, 11
da~ flOl'al l10,uo1n<e.
11 J'IC' lou•\ llow\'!f.'1 •••
Jolt: de t'le\lf '
' FONDCJE-FOR·TWO ~r~blos50ITI hom.t
Nppy .,...1io... fondue pot
with• nl6tth!ng andle -
"""''""'-
Pulllllf!ttl Ortl'lft Co.it O•llY l'llc1. L---------------------.11-----------------::------;----------------------·------------AP'll Jl, !t, Mey,, lS. lt14 141)).111
·'
'
6 OAU,Y PROT EDITOBIJ\L P 1\GE
Soaring School Cost·s
The cost or educating Orange County's studen,s.
rro1t\ kinderga rten through junior college, has more
than doubled in the past decade. Nine percent of the
increase occurred during the last fiscal year.
1\ financial report issued by the county Department
of Education reveals that the $834 million spent on
education in 1972-73 averages out to $907 for ea.ch pupil
in rounty schools. 1'his is $75 more than the amount
spent in the previous year and n1ore than double the
cost or education 10 years ago. •
In n1ost districts, teacher sa laries consl ituted the
largest single expense, accounting for an average of 60
percent of the annual budget.
Dy districts, the cost·per-pupil spending ranged from
Trabuco Elemcntary's relatively n1odesl $711 to Laguna
Beach Unified 's $1,211 . tops in lhe -county.
The school cost figure!ll cannot be called all that
i:t1rpris1ng. in \'iev: of reduce d class sizes, more sophis-
\1tated intructional programs, greatly increased buildjng
costs. and of course general inflation.
The state has spread the tax load so that the prop-
erty owner no longer is footing the whole school bill -
bul one way or another, it's the taxpayer who has to
come up with the n1oney.
l\f cdical l\filesto11e
To Orange County's 50,000 Jewish residents, a
unique medical screening program to be conducted
tomorrow night in Anaheim has particular significance.
To all residents. the pilot program could be a key
step toward elimination of such genetic diseases as cys-
tic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia and muscular dystrophy.
The Anaheim program will concern itself with iden-
tifying carriers of Tay·Sachs disease. Found principally
among Jewish children, Tay·Sachs is an inherited genetic
disorder that afflicts infants before they are born and
invariably kills them in early childhood.
'Vhile it is relatively rare, if a husband and wife
Welfa1·e
Versus
Ah·ortio11
( RUS WALTON J
Back in August, 1972, the state ·welfare
department decided thal an unborn child
was not eligible for st.ale assistance. The
department refused t.o allow additional
fUnds to a pregnant woman who \\'as al-
ready receiving Aid to Families with
llcpendenl Children (APDC I.
'J'h r mother claimed ~he needed the
extra money to care properly for the
unborn child she v.'as carrying. The state
\\'elfare people said the fetus bad no need
for food or clothing
or shelter as Jong as
it v;as snug Jn its
mother's w o m b.
\\'hen the child v.·;,s
delivered. that v.·as
soon enough ti1'-start
the" additional wel-
fare grant
The mother, a
Shasta county resi·
dent and the California \Velfare Rights
Organii.atlon disagreed. They took the
case to court.
Last y;·eek. the california Supreme
Court ruled against the sta le 1-l'elfarc
department. The court found for the
mother and her unborn child. It held that
the fetus \\'as legally entitled to the
nlon thly aid and that the mother's body
t·ou!d not be considered an economic
resource supplanting the stale support.
SO:'llEONE y:ho thinks logically might
c·nntl ude that the court considered that
unborn child an individu:il -a living
p1:rson in its own right. l mean, that rlocs
i.i·cm manifest in the court's decision.
Y!,lJ do not award 1-relfare assistance to a
noth ing, a non·bcing: yoll gi\·e assistance
10 (I person or to a person for the care of
:.inother ind l\'ldual.
Th us. ll \\'OU\d "(•tm valid 10 assum e
!hat tile c:vurt rccogn\1,t:d the unborn
Dea1·
Gloomy
Gus
1'1y Quaker father used to complain
abou t the v.urding of sonu! Qua ker
documents, saying they \\'ere cflen
full of •·Quakerese.'' One thing he
never mentioned \\11.S "expletive
deleted !"
DEMOSTHENES TU
Gloomy Gu1 etll'IMeflll •r1 su'mllled by
rNOtn •lid .. ""' llKellffilY ffilkl Ill•
vltWI l'I IM _,.Hf. S9NI YMll' HI
""" It Glo.my Gui. Diiiy l"llof.
chi ld as a person in its ov.'fl ri ght, to be
protected by the law.
That, of C(ll.JrSf?, has al\vays been the
contention or the pro-life (a nti..abortion )
fol ks.
The life of Ille individual begins at tile
moment of conception, 1i1•hen the egg and
the sperm join to become the zygote.
From that point on. the unbom child is
entitled to 1he full protection of the la\\•:
a basic rigflt that commences \\'bile the
unborn child is in the a q u e o u s
environment of the v.·omb and simply
continues when the child is delivered into
the gaseous environment of the world.
AND, sinc.e the taking cX a human life
is murder. abortion-legalized or not-
is murder.
If consistencv is a virtue in law as \Veil
as life, the coUrt must no\\' face the fact
lhat it is on the horns of a contradiction
of its OVi'fl making. Because it has, in the
past, upheld the state's Beilenson Act-
thc liberal therapeutic abortion law that
permits abortion virtually on demand
through the 20th week of pregnancy.
I put it to you this .way:
Is the unborn child that Is entitled to
\lielfare benefits not also en titled to the
rigRt to life? If an unborn child is to be
protected from malnutrition, is it not
also to be protected from slaughter by
the curette or syringe?
U, as the Supreme Court holds. a fetus
is not a person, how in heaven's name
can a state vest that non·person v.·ith the
sta tus of a person for limited purposes?
\Vhat's with all this on-again, oil-again
jan:? A person is a person, period.
1-forally and biologically a fetus is a
human, a living being -the expediency
of legislative counsel and the double
standards of the court notwithstanding.
are both carriers, some of their children almost cer·
talnly will be af!licted.
L>octors estimate there may be some 1,500 carriers
In Orange County. The new screening process can
identify them and If married couples are iovolved they
n1ay choose to avoid having children, adopt, or medically
ter1ninate an existing pregnancy. It is p<>ssible to deter·
mine early in pregnancy U an .infant JS afflicted.
The streening to be undertaken tomorrow evening
at Temple Beth Emet, 1770 West Cerritos, Anaheim, is
the first of its typo In the county and could be a medical
milestone in the control or diseases of genetic orlgln.
HigJ1,vay Arithmetic
If th e California Highway Patrol thinks the 55 mph
speed limit is a. nuisance. just wait till the latest pro-
posal wends its way through the legislative labyrinth.
The Assembly has passed and sent to the Senate a
bill that would permit local 'authorities to post dual high·
way speed l.imit signs showing the limit in metric fig·
ures (kilomgters) as well as miles.
• \V ith the entire nation apparently moving slowly
but su rely toward conversion to the metric system, the
dual posting proposal makes sense on the surface.
But until the driving population gets some inten·
slve education in mental arithn1etic, it could be dyna-
mite -as anyone \Yho has negotiated the spectacular
Ensenada Free\vay in Baja California can testify.
The speed limit signs approiching those fancy
"curvas" may read "50" -but that's kilometers, and a
kilometer is only six.tenths of a n1ile, as 1nore than a
few startled motorists have realized when they failed
.to translate the metric sign to the intended 30 mph be-
fore entering the "curva." And just imagine the con·
fusion with signs that combine "100" (kilometers) with
"60" (miles) ...
This one will take some study.
-.
;Well, Well. If it isn't Pinocchio himself'
lg11ores Critics to Enabrace Liberal
Fo~d Shakes Hard-core Republicans
\\'ASfDNGTON ·-The nature and
strength of Vire President Ford 's _party
leadership were solidified in San Jose.
Calif., April 20 when he ign~ed intense pres.sure and embraced en1ba tied liberal
Rep. Paul N. (Pete) i\1e loskey of ·
California without sustaining t slightest
damage.
\'1hilc stopping short of endorsing i\1a\··
erick McCloskey 's uphill battle for re-
nomination in the June 4 primary. Ford
lert no doubt he is
Pete l\.fcCloskev's
pal. That infuril'liect-
the California Re·
publican bard core
"·ho seem near an
old drcanl: driving
1.fcOoskey f r o m
Congres.4'. Neverthr·
less, t h e in!'idcnt
ended \\•ith i\tcClos·
key·s prestige enhanced and Ford as
st rong as ever.
This reaffirms that Jcrrv Ford's
ascendancy in the Republican· party to-
day is such !hat he can offend the
sacrosanct hard core with impunity.
r.lore lmpcrtant , his embrace 0 r
~fl'Closkey reveals a Republicanism
totally at odds V.'ilh President Nixon's.
\Vhereas the McCloskeys on the extreme
Republican left lead r-.1r. Nixon's
voluminous hate li st. Ford trul y v.·ants to
keep them in a broad-based party.
ACTUALLY, Ml'Closkey's mercurial
attacks on fellow·Republicans often are
hard to take even for moderates. \Vhcn
Ford was proposing impca chnlent of
Justice William Douglas, he f e I t
McCloskey's sting. Neverth eless, in seek-
ing good felaUons with all sorts of
Republicans, Ford as House minorky
leader became McCloskey·s fr iend.\·
Thus, last fall McCloskey wa-s -one of
only four Republican Congressmen (the
other three were conservatives) \.\'horn
Ford requested to testily at Senate con·
firmation hearings for Vice President.
McCloskey respcnded v.1ilh a ringin g en-
dorsement.
It soon became McCloskey who needed
help. Obnoxious to hard-core Republicans
ever since a win over Shirley Ten1ple
sent him to Congress In 1968, r-.1cCloskey
became anathema with his abort«! 1972
presidential race against ltlr. Nixon. He
now faces his toughest . congressional
( EV~S·NOVAK J
challenge from multi·1nillionalrc con·
scrvative Republican Ciordon Knapp. __
So, late last n1onth, h1cCloskey took out
full-page nev.•spaper advertisem ents with
this headline : "Republicans Like Gerald
Ford Are Proud of Prle ~1cCloskey:'
OUTRAGED conservatives malled the
ad to Ford and confidently asked him to
repudiate both it and r-.tcCloskey. \Yhat
they got was quite the opposite. "The
v.·ording in the advertisement was ac-
curate." Ford \\'T'Ote in reply. ", .. I am
proud of my personal relatioruihip with
Pete ~fcCloskey. He is a gooci friend of
nl ine."
Encoura ged, ~rcetoskey asked to in-
troduce Ford to the Republican state
convention in San Jose April 20 but was
turned down nat by Republican state
chairman Gordon Luce. "If that hai>
pened," Luce told a friend , "l could
never sho\v my face around the party."
Undaunted, ~tcCloskey next invited
Ford to appear that same day at "a
discussion of the future of the Republican
party" to be held at the Hyatt House
hotel down the street from the con-
vention. Ford accepted, and McCloskey
sent out invitaliom In envelopes em·
bossed y;·ith the vice presidential seal.
Not only the fanatically anti·P.tcCloskcy
hard core but state chairman Luce \\'ent
into orbit. What one }o~ord lieutenant calls
a "tremendous pressure campaign·•
sought Ford 's cancellation. Protests
poured in to Ford political aide G\\·en
Anderson and the Republican National
Committee. Even Sen. James Buckley or
New York, scheduled to addres; lbc COO·
vention at the same time a! the Ford-
McCloskey seminar, complained that the
Vice President was up6laging him.
FORD did not flinch . but dkl insist that
conservative Rep. John Rousselot of
California (a John Birch Society member
though a longtime McCtoskey friend ) ap.
pear at the seminar as originally
scheduled. When congressional buslneS8
called Rousscl ot back to Washington,
Ford indicated he would not appear with
McCloskey alone. Rousselot agreed to
return to California.
In San Jose. Ford told an overflow
Crt'.l\.\'d at the Hyall House that lhC'
Republican "\\ldc spectrum" has roon1
for l-.1cCloskcy and Rousselot. \Vhi!<' he
made no overt endorsemenl. the Palo
Alto Times headlined : '·Gera ld Ford
Boosts r.lcClosk<'y C a n1 p a i g n . · ·
t.lcCloskey \.\'as ('('Static. ''Ford is the 0111•
guy who brings all us llcpublicans
together." Nixon-haler f\tCCloskey told
us.
NOBODY at the state convention dared
conrroot lhe Vice Presidrnt. Although
Luce had been firing back rocictts to
\\'ashington accusing Ford ol Political
blundering, he entertained the Viet·
Presick>nt in his hotel suite wit hout ul·
tering a v.·ord of criticism.
The reason is e.'\plained by a cnn·
st'rvative congressman "'1th no love for
l\tcCloskey : "Nobody is about to knock
Jerry Ford He's all l\-e've go t." Th.it
spells boundles! opportunity for the Vl('l'
President. in sharp rontrnst to Spiro T
·Agnew and Richard ~I. Nixon. to embark
on a mission or conciliation ~1thin th~
Republican Party.
Movie Mutterers Are Anarchi,st,s
\Vhen I happen to mention that 1 rarely
go to -the movies, people suppose it is
because of my high taste and severe
standards. but they are v.'?'00.g. The
re3S(ln I rarely go to the movies is not
v.·hat is on the screen but what is on the
scats. In fact , I perversely enjoy some
bad·fllms.
Althou gh not a truculent man (I think 1
had my last fight at the age of 12). I am
roused to homi cidal rage by movie-
talkers. I have a threshold d absolute
zero for tolerating whispers ,munnun,
!he rustling or candy bags, 1he munching
of popcorn, and the whole gamut of
distracting sounds to 'be heard in the
average n1ovie house.
And . as if to punish me for my vast in-
tolerance, the gods invariably seat me
direct ly in front or back of some
monumental talker -usually a woman
who has brought her retarded and deaf
grea t-aunt to the movie, and is laborious-
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
ly explaining the dialog and plot as they
ensue.
abomination composed by a spastic 1n
the final throes of deliri um.
And, as 3 reporter. I was tot~lll'
oblivious to the raucou~ sounds of th~
city room around me \\·h1l{' 1<1pping 001 a
story under intense deadline pressur1•
You have lO tune everyih1ng out on a JOU
like that.
THIS DRIV ES me absolutely crazy. BlIT WHEN I am trying lo C'"""ent-1,• And changing scats doesn't help, r... on ~, '" the !eCOlld try I inevitably find myself on characters and dialog . and to im·
adjoining some nubile oouple lacking mersc. myself tn a .story on ihe screen ,
funds for a motel room, or a husband and there is no v.·ay to lllSUlate oneself fro n1
wife who have lelt the children at borne the popcorn peons, thr babblers. the bJl·
to seek a secluded arena for marital--. tiers and the babes in arn1s \\·ho su r·
bickering. TI1ese people couldn't care rowid me like a bubbling sea of
less if the screen shov•ed nothing but quicksand.
grass. \Ve are an uncivil folk , basica1ly. unrl
It isn't noise as such that bothers me: v.·e e~cn delude ourselves that this con·
1 can sit Jn our living room and read my duct is .so.m.~how "democratic" or .. in·
paper happily, 'A'hile the Jdds in the ad-divlduahst1c -~'hen actually it is sb<>er
joining room are torturing the bi.fl to Its anarchy based on nothing but bad man·
ultlmate decibel with some musical nc111 and Ignorance .
House Investigators Flay Nixon Estate Expenditures
\\'ASHINGTO;\I -In :'I sllzl1ng. ::.t·1·1"1.:l
repr;rt v.·hich ncpublic;ins are f1gh11ng to
supprp.;,~. 11ouse m\'c~11 ga1ors ha\c
ch:1rgt'<I that President .'il:<on has spt'llt
517 nnl lion in public funds on lus pri\'.'.\!c
e;l;J lt•:i,
1'h,• r('porl la!lhcs the rcspoo s1blc
govcnirncn: :i.gen-
clcs for their caval.
lier :.pending and
calls upo11 thcrn to
"seek rl•!Uitution" of
tile ;•11n~uthorized
expenditures."
"(Th ey) hilve
1bused the discretion
given Utem," charg-
et lhe report.' "They flllve permitted pub-
lic fUnds to be used to procure non!"J>cur-
lty Item!. They hive J>(!nn ltted 00!\·:'0\·.
ernment personnel to rommlt fffier:i1
eovemment runds. They h~l\f' :"ibanrlor\l,d
(local responslblllty .•. "
1'1£ SECRET SERVICE l"'.tlORl1·d IJUI
for atJowini President Nixon to unpro'.•·
hJ1 private property In ti)(· n.~n1•• nl ~U'· 1b1I. ·:pas tarnlsh\'tl llll LlllJi.;•·
or a once highly respected organizo-
11on." declares the report.
Thf COSI or providing protection (lf'I
private pres idential property has soared ,
states the report. "from practically
nothin,:.: durin!i' the Hoosevelt·Trunuin era
In rnorc Ul;jn $17 million during the first
five ycarll of !he Nixon Administration.
1'1us is rnort" rhRn lhe combined salarirs
or all Llnit t'l'I S1ates Presidents."
l'rc:-~id1·n! ~IXOll is lectured for "im-
1xi..,1nA hurdens on the taxpayers or the
nation \talntalnlng prt\'atc residences
for use a few days ea ch yea r," acolds the
report, "Imposes a heavy burden on the
public 1re.asury ...
"FUT\OS f\t:EOED to pr 0 vi d ('
president1;iJ strurity should be, have
hllf'n and are readily available. lto'l\cve.
C·\•1:ry dollar thal is diverted 1n10
nonse('\J rlly expenditures under 1h1s pro-
Rrarn 1~ a dollar that is not then
.1v;11l~1blc to provide nttded additional
N'fllf i!V "
Ttll•
0
1s lhe lnll'st "Yrord on a scandal 1.1·e
pnt rJ OJl\:n Ofl (.k·t 3, 1972, "·hen ~ii!
rt•/.Qr!t'tl !hat lht• t;1xpavers \vere finan
111;.. i111provt11ncnts at (•tesidont Nixnn·~
:S<in l 11.'.mcntc '1tate.. A House sub-
J.
commiUec, headed by Rep. Jack Brook.5,
l)..fex.. conducted an cxNnlSUve io-
vcstlgatlon.
The findings were approved by the
O.mocrata but rej•cted by t h e
Hcpublicans, who h~vc now ,prOduced
their own report. We have obtalncd
bootleg copies of both vmlllll!. The dif·
ferences are quite revealing:
-'l'llE REPUBLICAN venk>n com-
pleU!ly ignores the ·qu<sUon ~ poylng the
t.axpayeni back (or "unauthorlted ex-
penditures" on President Nixon's San
Cl•mente and Key Bls<ayne property.
Yet the Joint Taxation Committee, which
inve!itlgatccl ~1r. Nixon's tax returns,
counted these expenditures a.~ extra In·
eome nnd ruled that !he President 01,1,'e(I
laxes on them.
-The Rcpubllcan version delete$
cvldcnoo that the Nlxon.11 personally ran
up the government gardening bill oll\ey
Biscayne. Referring to the Nixons as
"our clients," a General Services
Administ ration memo reports that they
"had vtsltcd Key Biscayne and some
changes had been made in the landscap-
ing plan .'' This resulted in a $4 .~.70 In·
crease in the original bill.
-TIIE REPUBLICAN report al!O
treats as routine the Installation of an ex-
haost fan in the fireplace: of the
President's San Clemente den. Not men-
tioned Is a memo from the secretary to
President Nixon's attorney, •1 c r b
Kalmbach, r•porting that the secret
Suvlce had agreed lo "pay off the ln-
IWl•tlon or the Jireplace fan after I ln-
Ionned him (lb< agent In charge) that It
definitely was placed for security
nisson and bow would he like It if yoo
know who was aspixlated (tic)."
-The GOP version doesn't make clear
that the tallj)ayers shelled out $5.300 for
the Installation and purcha.11e of 13
lanterns 10 light and beautify lhe
presldenllal grounds . F'our are still ~Ing
stored ln a warehouse.
-AT SAN .Clemenle, the govemmtnt
shelleti out $57,582 for a wall lo encircle
the 26 acres of land which the President
originally purchalled. He later ...id aJI but
§Ix acres to Abplanalp. Yet the Broon
report notes that "no ef!ort was made to
relmbmc the federal govenmen,t in
any way,'' Defend.Ing the Presidenl, the
Republican draft araucs: that Nixon
didn't benefit from the wall .
-Both report.• agm that the Pftoi·
clonl paid only $1,0l3 for ptwlng at San
OU.fr4M COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert "N. Wtrd, P!lbfllhft'
Thomas Kem:, !:di tor
Barba"ta Kr<lblch
l:dltoritil Pao• l:dUor
Monday, May 6, 1974
a .emente "'hile t~ taxp;i ycrs wound up
with a '21.044 bill. Tiic Hn>0ks rtp0rt
dies. a memo from the President's ~rch1~:.Hal Lynch, suggesting the pav.
mg cost be shored equnlly by the COil·
tractor, General Services arid the &!er t
Service ... The GOP document pretID~
to \'.lew the pa\!lng ns serving ''a pro.
tecllve purpose or incident to 011.. ..... tcctive work.'' u~r pro·
I
.,
I
I''
'
' t
I
t
I
I
I
I
L.
cmb
lollo
one,
dov
babl
tri c
plai
sloe
n
lorn
the
WJd
pan
dra
hcf
his
(;er
·ag
Ch"
far
100-
'""
Ell
th•
sta
po
, ..
!
I
I
I
••• .• .. . ' • • • f • ~ • . ,
L. ltl. Boyd
Stooping Wears
Out Pantyl1o se
Athletes tend to recover much more quickly from that
ailment known as the kissing disease than do other slu·
dents. I mean mononucleosis. Qul!:stion arises as to why
those muscular boys get well 56 soon. Some observers say
it's simply because they•re in iiood physical condition. But
a medical expert named William A. Noleo, M.D., contends
It's because the OOys are so cager to get back with their
,-. -. learns that Otey refuse to baby them·
, selves. He claims most cases of mono
are nowhere nearly as serious as
they're made out ot be. The mono
patient becomes immWle to it there-
after, incidentally.
EGGSHELLS
Were you aware that about 11 .2
percent of every bird 's egg is shell'!
Record shows that Alice Roosevelt Longworth once
embroidered on a davenport pillow in her living room the
following : "If you can't say something good about some-
one, si t right here by me."
Babies born in the summer months are Jess likely to
develop mental ailmcnls as they grow up. Less likely than
babies born in the winter, anyhow. So far. seven psychia-
tric studies indicate that. But none of said studies ex-
plains Y:hy exactly.
Once rl'portcd that file clerks wear out more sheer
stockings than girls in any other job. BecaUSe of their
need to scrunch down on their haunches to pull out bot-
tom drawe rs. A reminine subscriber now asks how long
the average file clerk can keep a pair of panty hose in
undamaged condition.' About 10 days. Thal wise girl whose
panly hose last longer keeps all her folders in the top
drawer.
MR. FORD
Q. "\Vhat ~·as Vice President Gerald R. Ford's name
bl'forc he became Gerald R. Ford, Jr.?"
A. Leslie Lynch King. Jr. \Vher1 he \Vas 2 .years old,
his parebts were divorced. I Us mother then married one
~aid R. Ford, and she renatncd her m ""85 8 .JWiiol-'
.again.
Q. "How come sailors are called 'gobs'?"
' I
QUEENIE By Ph il lnlerland i
·,~"."." ' ~ -. . .... "====.,.·~·~.,~-;~~·:·~~~n , . ( " I . . • ;i.,' •·
1'Lc('s face it. I Lhink 1 ·m getting into tennis a
late."
mite
Property . Taxes
Drop for State
SACRAMENTO !UPIJ -
The average property tax rate
in California dropped during
fiscal 1973·74 (or the first time
in 23 years. the Slate Board of
EquaJiz<ition has reported.
The average rate went from
$1 l.46 per $100 of assessed
value ln 1972·73 to $11.15 in
1973-74, aceording to George
R. Reilly, board chairman.
tax rate of $12.91 , down from
the previous year's high of
$13.54. Coo tra Costa wa s
second at $12.88, down from
$13.16, and Alameda wa s third
at $12.82, down from $13.15.
The only other county with a
ralc over $12 in 1973-7 4 was
San Francisco at $12.34, down
from $12.60.
The lowest rate in the state
again wa, Alpine c:ounty at
$4.75, up from the previous
year's $4.31.
DAILY PILOr 7
U.S. Illiteraccy 'Alarming'
WASHINGTON (AP ) -One
million U.S. children aged 12-
17 years caMOl read even al
the fourth-grade I e v e I ,
according to a new federa l
report.
Results of the specia l four-
)'ear testing program ,·
suggesting illiteracy to oo
more pervasive than ever
before realized, y;erc termed
"alarming and discouraging"
by Dr. Ruth Love flollowa y,
the government's r ea d i n g
expert.
The problem was round to
be the most severe among
low-inl'Ome black males, one
out of five or \vhom could end
formal schooling without being
able to read a s i 1n p I e
paragraph.
THE NATIONAL CE~'TER
for flealth Statistics, an ar1n
of the Depa rt1n enl of
Health, Educa t ion and
Welfare, said the findings
indicate that e xi s t ing
government definitions o f
literaiy "might lead to serious
underestimates" of the prol>-
lem .
Part of HE\V's Health
Examination Survey, t h e
special reading tests were
administered to a sampling of
6,768 youths between 1966 and
1970.
The scoring showed that 4.8
percent were illiterate .
Projeeted nationwide. that
ROOF FALLS
ON PRIEST
CASALE MONFERRATO,
Italy (UPI) -The Rev.
Giovanni Gasparolo, 71, y.·ho
planned to 3Ill)'.lunce h i s
retirement the next day, was
killed when the roof Of St.
Eusebio Churcti collapsed on
him.
means about t million of 22.7
million schoolage children who
should be in grades 6 through
12 cannot read a fow1.h
grader·s materials.
ILLITERACY \\'AS four1d to
be most prevalent among
boys. especially blacks fro1n
Jow·inco1ne fa 1nilies where
parents had little or no form11I
education.
For eicamplc, 4.7 percent of
y.•hile males and 1.7 percent of
white families could not read,·
compared with 20.5 percent of
black males and 9.6 percent of
black fa 1nilies.
In families y.•i1h le:;,.~ th an
$3,000 annulil inconlc, 9.8
percent of v.hlte youths and
22. l percent of blllck.s v.crc
judged lllll('ratf'. But the
inability to rl·a9 dropped to 3 5
percent and 12.6 JX'rtC'nl.
respectively in the $5.000.
$6.999 income level. encl 10 .8
perct:nt and 4.1 percent In
families earning more than
110,000.
IF PARE~TS had little or
nil form n! education. 2~
percent of v.'hites and 53
percent of bllicks cottld not
•
pas~ tile test. \\'hen one p;1rent
had rinisht'<i <~ I e n1 en I n r y
school. the ilhlrracy rale fell
to 6 pt·rtcnt for white youths
and !ft J)l,'rt·en t for blacks.
f)r. director of llE\V's Right
to fiend program. s~id t~
tcS'l ing results \\'('TC '·a1'1rmlng
:ind disccurag ing."
.But, she. add ed. •·t wouldn't
argue with the ,·atidity at all,"
"lt1s an alarmin~ figure but
even n\Ore alarming when
you're talking about people tn
school. The schools obviously
;ire 11ol meeting the kids'
needs ... she said .
RINNINGBI
3 fllgl ltS daily to San Francisco.
Or go with the unofficial state bird to Sacramento. Come and
. get 'em. Ca ll your travel agent or PSA. f'$Aglves you :alltt. • •
• '
A. The Navy boys picked up that nickname from a
Chinese word meaning sailor when the fleet sailed the
far Pacific several generations ago.
Tl1e drop means that on a
$20,000 house !:he average tax
'i\-'OU}d be $362 after the homeowner's exemption. !-------------------------------------.-. --------------------
Q. "•lo~· much faster is a cheetah than a man in the
100-yard dash ?"
A. Top chei!lah speed, ma ybe 4.5 seconds. Top man
speed , 9.1 seconds or thereabouts.
Q. "\Vbat's Carol Burnett's zodiac sign?"
A. She's a Taurus. Even cfs is Barbra Streisand and
Ella Fitzgerald. Taurus folks tend to be highl y vocal. If
they can't sing, they're apt to talk a lot Or so say the
stargazers.
Addr€sS moil to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Boz 1875, New-
port Beac.h 92660.
FROM
THE
Reilly attributed the drop to
tv.'O sources: 1972 ~gislation
which increased state aid to
education thereby decreasing
its reliance on property taxes
and also imposed limits on the
growth of local tax rates: and
the impa ct of federal revenue
sharing funds .
Statev.•ide, the net taxable
assessed value of properties in
all counties is $59.6 billion.
which by law is 25 percent of
the full market va lue of the
properties. Reilly said.
Sacramento County again
led the state, with an average
NEW
RATES
ON LAGU-NA FEDERAL'S NEW TERM
SAVINGS CERTIFICATES ' AND
ALL PASSBOOK ACCOUNTS!
RATE t.llNlr.t Ut.f ll El.D FOR YIELDS
71/io/o" $1,000 4 YEARS 7.79 3
term certifica1c .
63'0 $1,000 2Yi YEARS 6.98 3
1crm certificritc
6~% $1,000 1 YEAR 6.72 3
lcnn c:ertificalc
533 $1,000 -90DAYS 5.92°'°
tenn ccrtificacc
And most popular of a/I-the convenient
PASSBOOK ACCOUNT for dail y needs'
5~ •/e day-in , <lny·out interesl yields 5.39% per annum
•\Yilhdr:iw:ils hcfore m:a1udty rrom lcrm ttrtificah: account~ are ~ut-.icct 10 rt'due1lon to current
t)a.'>sbook rule fron1 d11tc of iMullnct', plu~ 11n 11ddi1ion11l lhrec monlh~' interest forfeiture..
llO~IE Ofl-"lC'E: 260 Ocea n Avcn~. L.:1.guna Beach, California ?2651
Telephone: 494. 7S4 t • LACUNA NIGUEL: 3 Monarch Bmy Plaz.o. • SAN
CLh~I ENTE: 60 1 No«h El Camino Real •LACUNA lllLl.S: !4018 Calle
de la f11all\ • LAKE t:LSINORE: 600 Wc5t Oraham Avenue
SANTAANA
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
(,.pc. p!Jce sen in~ of Queens Fancy
Save! 25·piece sets and hostess
sets of International stainless
2 5 % reduC1 ions
Enjoy excellent s:iv ings on four gleaming 6·pc. place
scuings including pl:ice fork, l:nifc, SJ!ad, sou p spoon
and 2 1raspoons, plus serving spoon.
Queens F.i.ncy or Fronrenac. 25 pcs. Reg. S75 .. ~6.25
r.!Jtching S-piece hostess. Regularly 29.95 ..•. 22.46
New Ch.irin 2S·picce set. Regul.trly o.?.SO .... 46.88
M:1tching S·piece hostess. Regularly 2,i.95 •... 18. 7 J
1i>day, Gigi 25-piece sec. Regularly 44.95 ••... 33.71
~farchin; )-piece hosrcss. Regularly 15.95 .... J 1.96
Evangeline, Dubonner, 25 pcs. Reg. 29.95 .... 22.4-6
r.J Jrching 'S·piC'Ce hostess. Regular ly 9.95 ...... 7 . .t6
Otnin~ Accessories
Uubon11(t
Evangeline
~
c " " ··c;;-:: .c I 2 ""
'
Ni,twChJrn1
' U_JJ
S.i.\'e 25 ~~ on hostl".'!S .-.e1s:
Including sugar spoon.
bu teer kni fc. gr;i \'Y 1Jdlc, cold
nle ac fork, prtrceJ spoun.
Gi ve American Tourisrer
luggage with Mo1n's initials
25 % savin gs
If j·ou'n: lcJv1ngon 1he next pl.Ull'. \\h)' nor talcc (';!.'0
.t;re'.u ir .n·cl1n~ \On1r«nion~ .il un,,t:. 1\l11n1 and Amt·ric.in
li1t1ristrr~ You'll boc!1 :1pprl'c1,uc: rhe li~hr st;iinless
steel fr.1n1cs, 1hC' t011,!-th fibcrgl.1~!'!·rc1nforcC'd vin)·I cov·
erings. Zinc locks ha\'C "" ~pr1n,i;s HJ bre:ik or catch,
h<tndles arc padded. AnJ \\ c·11 · pcrson.ilizl' you r choice
with three iniuJ.ls Jr no <.h.1rJ;c. Ltdies' styles in blue_
gold, plun1. sc~rlt•r, i;:rt·cn l\lt'n's \\•Jlnuc,
A. LJJ1e~· XL Juctrt' ;.:.1r111l'n r cJrner. 99.50 .. 1·&..50
8. l;1d1~· or men's c.1r b.1g. Rc:.~uJ.1rly S38 ... 28.50
C. Ud1l'~· j()" nvt"rsr.tS. Rcf:ul.1dr S75 ...... 56.25
' l>. L.td1es' l\'<:ckend <..1rry ·11n Rc_i;ul.1rly SJO .. 37.50
t::. l,,1,lics' room}' bt.iurr c.1St. Kt f:. -12.SO.,, .3 l .85
Not ~lll)\\'n : ~l t·n.s 111.·11.,uirrr Rt·.i.:ul.1rly S6S •. 4.S.7!1
f\{en '.s 1~1rce·suitef, RtJ:Ularly SiO, now .,, ... S2 • .i0
t.fcn's attachc cases: -
l" llt~ch~. Regularly 22.SO ... ,., .. : •.. , ... 16.9.i
5" tttt!lche. Rrgu!Jtly 27.~0 ••.•....•...• , .• 20.60
Other 5itts are .1\~1l:ible nt similar sJ.vings.
Lug.safe-
.Shop Monday thru Friday, 10:00 &.m. 10 9: 30 p.m. I Bullock's Santa Ana, I Fashion Square, 2800 N. Main Street, San12 Ana, Tel<phone : 54'.721 l
· Saturday, 10:00 a.m. 10 6:00 p.m. Bullock's .South Coasc Plw , San Diego Freeway at Bt~tol, Costa Meu, Tclrphone: 556-00 11
• I
6 DAD,Y PROT EDITORIAL P .o\.GE
Soaring
The cost of educating Orangt! County's students,
fron1 kJndergartcn through junior college. has inore
Lhan doubled in the past decade. Nine pcrcenl of Ule
increase occurred dur1n~ the last fiscal year.
1\ financial report is~ucd t'>y the county Department
of Education reveals that the $fl34 n1illion spent on
education in 1972-73 averages out to $007 for each pupil
in county schools. This is $75 more th an tht: a1nou11t
spent in the previous year and n1ore than double the
cost of education 10 years ago.
Jn n1ost districts, teacher salaries constituted the
largest single expense'. accounting for an average of 6.0
percent of the annual budget.
By districts, the cost-per-pupil spending ranged from
Trabuco Elementary's relatlvely n1odest $711 to Laguna
Beach Unified's $1.21 1, tops in lhe county.
The school cost figures cannot be called all that
~urpr i sing, in vie\\' or red uced class sizes. more sophis·
ti<:ated intructional prog rarns, greatly incr eased bui lding
costs. and of course ge neral inflation.
The state has spread the tax load so that the prop-
erty owner no longer is footing the whole schoo l bill -
but one way or anoth er. it's the taxpayer who has to
come up wiU1 the n1oncy.
Medical Milesto11c
To Orange County's 50,000 Je~wish residents, a
uniq.ue medical screening program to be conducted
tomorrow night in Anahein1 has particular significance.
To all residents, the pilot program could be a key
step toward elimination of such genetic diseases as cys-
Lic fi brosis, sickle ce ll anemia and muscular dystrophy.
The Anaheim program will concern itseU with itlen-
tifying carriers of Tay-Sachs disease. Found principally
among J ewish children, Tay-Sachs is an inherited genetic
disorder that afflicts infants before they are born and
invariably kills them in early childhood.
\\7hile it is relatively rare, if a husband and wife
are both carriers, some of their children almost cer-
lalnly will be af!Jicted.
Ooctors estimate there may be some 1,500 carriers
in Orange County. The new screening process can
identify them and if m&rried couples are involved they
n1ay choose to avoid having children. adopt, or medically
1er1ninate an existing prel{nancy. It is possible to deter-
mine early in pregnancy if an ,jnfant is affl icted.
The screening t.o be undertake n tomorrow evening
at Temple Be th Emet, 1770 \Vest Cerritos, Anaheim, is
the first of its type in the county and could be a medical
milestone in the control of diseases of genetic origin.
Higb,v.a y Arithmeti c
If the California Highway Patrol thinks the 55 mph
speed lin1it is a nuisance, just wait till the latest pro-
posal wends its way through the legislative labyrinth.
• The Assembly has passed an d sent to the Senate a
bill that would per1nit local 'aut horities to post dual high-
way speed li mit signs showing the limit in metric fig-
ures (kilometers) as well.as miles~
\Vith the entire nation apparently moving slowly
but surely toward conversion to the metric svstem, the
dual posting proposal ·makes sense on the suiface.
But until the driving popu1ation gets some inten·
sive education in mental arithn1et ic . .it could be dyna·
mite. -as anyone who has negotiated the spectacular
Ensenada Freeway in Baja California can testify.
The speed limit signs approaching those fancy
"curvas" may read "5011 -but that's kilometers, and a
kilometer is only six-tenths of a mile. as 1nore than a
few star.tied motorists have realized when t hey failed
to translate the metric sign to the intended 30 mph ~
fore entering the "curva." And just imagine the con-
fusion with signs that combine "100" (kilometers) with
"60" (miles) . . . •
This one will take some study.
'Well, We ll. If it ·isn 't Pinocchio himself.'
Welfare Dea~·
-·-Gloomy
G us
lg11ores Critics to Et11braee Liberal
Versus·:-
Ah·ortion
( RUS WALTON )
Back in August, 1972, the state welfare
department decided lhat an unbo rn child
was not eligible for slate assistance. The
department refused to allow additional
funds to a pregnant v;oman V.'ho v.·as al·
ready recei ving Aid lo Famil ies with
O.pcndenl Children !AFDC).
Thl' mother claimed she needed the
extra money to care properly for the
unborn child she "'as carrying. The state
\velfare people said the fetus bad no n~
for food or clothing
or shelter as long as
it v.·as snug in it~
mother's w om b.
\~lien the child "'!15
delivered . that v•as
won enough to start
the additional wel·
fare grant.
The mother, a
Shasta county resi·
dent and the California \Vel fare Righ ts
Organization disagreed. They took the
case to court.
Last \.veek. the California Supremf!
Court ruled againsl the sta!C \•:elfarc
department. 111e court found for the
mother and her Wlborn child. It held that
the fetus v.•as legall y entitled to the
n1ohthly aid and that the mother's body
could not be considered an econornic
resource supplanting the state support.
SO~I EONE 'vho thinks logically 1nighl
concl ude that the court cousidcred that
unborn C'hitd an indivklual -a living
1x·rson in its own right. I n1ean, tha1 floes
Seem manifest in 1he cou rt 's decision.
You do not a"·ard Y:eHare assistance to a
nolhing, a non-being: you give ass1stan<'c
to a person or to a person for the earl' ul
<inother individual.
' Thus. it \\'OU!d seen1 v~lid lo assume
that the court rccognlt.l-d the unborn
1'1y Quaker fa ther used to complain
abou t the v."Ording of some Quaker
documents. saying they \\'ere cften
full of ''Quakerese." One thing he
never mentioned "-as "expletive
de leted!"
DEMOSTH ENES 11)
Gloo"'~ CUli ~r. 1<1 HO~lHed ''
rHlllrl 11\Cl .. 11tl n«1»1rllr reflK'I tllt
v!twt. ... rtll lltWliH"r. S9ftd JIMlt' 'ti
"".,.. I• Cloo'"r Qua, ~Uy !"lit!.
child as a person in its 0"11 right, to be
protected by the Jaw.
That. of course, has ah,·ays been the
contention of the pro-life (anti-abortion)
folks.
The life or the indivklua l begins at the
moment of conception, "''hen !be.egg and
the sperm join lo become Lhe zygote.
From that point on . the unborn child is
entitled to the fu ll protection of the lav.•:
a basic right that commences \\'hile lhe
unborn child is in the a q u e o u s
environment of the "'omb and simply
continues when the child is delivered int o
the gaseous environment of the world.
AND, since the taking oi a hum an life
is murder, abortion-legalized or not-
is murder.
If consistency is a virtue in law as \Veil
as life, the court must no"' face the fact
that it is on the horns of a contradiction
of its own making. Bccause it has. in the
past, upheld the sta1e's Beilen.son Act-
the liberal therapeutic abortion la\v that
permits abortion virtuall y on demand
through the 20th week of pregnancy.
I put it to you this way:
ls the unborn child that is entitled to
'."'elfare benefits not also en titled to the
right to life? If an unborn child is to be
protected from malnutrition, is it not
also to be protected from slaughter by
the curette or syringe?
If, as the Supreme Court holds. a fetus
is not a person, how in heaven's name
can a state vest that non-person \vith the
status of a person for limited purposes?
\\'hat's with all this on-again, off.again
jazz? A person is a person, period.
r.torally and biologically a fetus is a
human, a living being -the expediency
of legislative counsel and the double
standards of the court notwithstanding.
F9rd Sh·akes Hard:~or~ l!epuhlicans
\VASIIlNGTON -The nature and
strength of Vice President Ford's .party
leadership were solidified in San Jose.
Calif., April 2{} when he ignored intense
pressure and embraced cn1battled liberal
·Rep. Paul N. (Pete} McCloskey or
California wilhout susl.aining the sl ightest
damage.
\\1hile stopping short of endorsing i\lai··
erick McCloskey's uph ill battle for re-
nomination in the June 4 primary. Ford
left no doubt he is
P e t e l\1cCloskev's
pal. That in!urillied
the California Re·
publican bard core
\\'ho seem near an
old drean1: drivinit
t.1c0oskey f r o m
Congress. Neverthc·
less, I h e inrident
ended v•i!h 11cC1os-
key 's prestige enhanced and 1:ord as
strong as ever.
This reaffinns tha t Jerry Ford"s
ascendancy in the Repu.blican party to-
day is such that he can offend the
sacrosa nct hard core with impunity.
~lore important. his em brace o f
Mc:C\oskey reveals a Republicanism
totally at odds \l.'ilh President Nixon's.
Whereas the ti1cCloskeys on the e1Ctreme
Republican left lead 11r. Nixon's
volumtnous hate list, Ford truly v.·ants to
keep them in a broad-based party.
ACTUALLY. h1c:C\oskey's mercurial
attacks on fellow-Republicans often are
hard to truce even for moderates. \Vhen
Ford was proposing impcachn1ent of
Ju.slice William Douglas, he f el l
McCloskey's sting. Nevertheless, in seek·
ing good relations with all sorts of
Republicans, Ford as House minority
leader became McClosk.ey·s friend.
Thus, last fall McCloskey was one of-
only four Republi can Qmgre.ssmen (the
other three were conservatives) \\'horn
Ford requested to testlfy at Senate con·
firmation hearings for Vice President.
McCloskey responded with a ringing en-
dorsement.
It soon became McCloskey who nreded
help. Obnoxious lo hard .eore Republicans
ever since a win over Shirley Temple
sent him to Congress In 1968, ~lcClqskey
became ariathema with his aborted 1972
pres idential race agalnst ?\-Ir. Nixon. He
now faces hlS ' toughest congressional
.
•
( EVANS 'NOVAK J
challenge from n1ulti·mill ionnlre con·
S<'rvative Re publican Gordon Knapp.
So, late last n1onth, ~1cCloskey took out
full-page newspaper advertisements with
th~ headline: •1Republicans Like Ge rald
Ford Are Proud of Pete l\lcCloskey."
OUTRAGED conserva tives mnllcd the
ad to Ford and confidently asked him to
repudiate both It and 1\-lcCloskey. \VhAt
they got was quite the opposite. "The
"'Ording in the advertisement was ac·
curate.'' Ford v.·rotc in reply." ... I am
proud of my personal relationship with
Pete ro+lcCloskey. He is a good friend of
n1ine."
Encou raged , McCloskcy asked to in·
troduce Ford to the Republican state
convention in San Jose April 20 but was
tu rned dov>'n flat by Republican state
chairman Gordon Lu ce .. "lf that bai>
pened," Luce told a friend. "I could
never sho\v my face around the party."
Undaunted, li-fcCloskey. next Invited
Ford to appear that same day at "a
discussion of the future of the Republican
party" to be held at the Hyatt House
hotel down the street from the con-
vention. Ford accepted, and McCloskey
sent out invitations in envelopes em-
bossed v.'ilh the vice presidential seal.
Not only the fanatically antl-1\lcC\oskcy
hard core but state chairman Luce "'en!
into orbit. What one Ford lieutenant calls
a "tremendous pressure campaign''
sought Ford 's cancellation. Protests
poured in to Ford political aide Cv.·en
Anderson and the-Republican National
·Committee. Even Sen. James Buckley of
New York, scheduled to address lbe con-
vention at the same tlme as the Ford·
Mc:Closkey . seminar, complained that the
Vice Presktent was up&aglng him .
FORD did not flinch. but did insi st that
conservali\'e Hep. John Rousselot of
California (a John Birch Society member
though a longtime McCloskey fri end) ap-
pear at the seminar as originally
scheduled. When congressional business
called Rous.1elot back to Washington,
Ford indicated he would oot appear with
McCloskey alone. Rousselot agreed to
return to California.
In Sa n Jose, Ford told an OV!!rllow
cro"'d al the Hya ll House that the
Republican ""'ide spectrum" has roon1
for ~1cCloskry and Rousselot. \\'hile ht·
made no overt endorsement. the Palo
Alto Times headlined : "Gerald Ford
Boost! ~tcC\oskey Cam pa i g n . ' '
to.lcCloskey y,·as ecstatic. •·Ford is the one
guy v1ho brings a1l us Rl•publican s
together." tiixon-h.iter ~1CCloskey told
us.
NOBOD'' at the state convention dared
confronl the Vice President. Allhough
Luce Md been firing back rockets to
\\'as hington accusing Ford of political
blundering. he entertained the Viet
President in his hotel suite without ut·
lering a v.·ord of critic ism.
The rcnson is cxplainE'd by a con·
servative congress1nan "'ith no JO\'C for
f\.tcC loskey: "Nobody Is about to knock
Jerry Ford. He's all v.-e've got." Th.1t
spells boundles.s opportunity for the Vire
President, in sharp cootrflst to Spiro T
Agnew and Richard Pol. Ni:<on, to embark
on a mission of conciliation within the
Republican Party.
Movie Mutterers Are Anarchist,s
\\'hen I happen to ment ion that I rarely
go to the movies, people suppose it is
because of my high taste and severe
standards, but they are v.TOng. The
reason 1 rarely go to the movies is not
\\'hat is on the screen but what is on the
seats. In fact. I perversely enjoy some
bad films.
Although not a truculent man (I think I
had my last fight at the age of 12), I am
roused to homicidal rage by movie-
talkers. I have a threshold cX absolute
zero for tolerating whispers ,murmun,
the rustling of candy bags, the munching
of popcorn. and lite whole gamut of
distracting sounds to 1be heard In the
average mov ie house.
And , as if to p.mish me for my vast in·
tolerance, the gods invariably seat me
directly in front or back of some
monumental tal ker -usually a woman
who has brougti t her retarded and dear
great-aunt to the movie, and is 1aborious-
ly eiplaining the dialog and plol as they
enoue.
TJUS DRIVES me absolutely crazy.
And changing seats doesn't help, tor on
the secona try I inevitably !ind myself
adjoining some nubile cnipte lacking
funds for a motel room, or a husband and
wife who have left the children at borne
to seek a secluded arena for marital
bickering. TI1esc people couldn't care
less If the screeri shov.·ed nothing but
grass.
It Isn't ooise 33 such that bothers me:
t can sit ln our living room and read my
paper happily, while the kich in the ad-
jQ!ning room are torturing the bl41 I<> 113
ultimate decibel with some musical
abomina1ion romposcd by a spastic in
the final throes of dellriwn.
And. as a reportrr. I was totaltv
obli\'ious to !hr rnucous sounds of th;.
city room around n1e "'hile lapping 001 t1
story under intense deadltne pressurl'
You have to tune <'VCl"}tlung out oo a Job
like ·that.
Btrr WHES l nm trying t.o concentr11l1'
on cha racters and dia log, and to im-
merse myself in a story on ~ scr@en
there is no v.·ay to imulate oneself fro n;
the popcorn peons, the babblers. the b;n-
tlers and the babes in arn1s who sur·
round me like a hubb!ing sea of
quicksand.
We are an unciv il folk~ !JO!lic:illy and
we e~en delude oursel\'~ that this' t'Qn·
duct IS somehow ''democratic" or "ill·
dividunlistic"-when actually il l" sheer
anarchy based on nothlng but bat.I ni:in· nern and Ignorance.
House Investigators Flay Nixon Estate Expenditures
\\IASl-rINGTOS -In a .s ~zzli n~. secret
rr.pO r1 v.'hlch Republicans are fighllng to
supp rrs!I. House investigators have
cha rged that President Nixon has spent
~1 7 milllon 1in public funds on his private
C::il<J l.CS.
'fh" rl'rlort la~hcs
govcrr1111cn. :igcn·
t ll''i for tht"tr c;iva l-
l1cr ::p•·ud1 ng and
calls U[>1111 thcrn to
•·seek ri.:~11tutlon'1 of
lhc •·11n:u11horized
CXIJ('nd1tures"
''(Th e)') h:ive
1bused the dlscrelion
given them/' char~
the responsible •
es the report.' ''They hnve permitted txib·
lie funds to be used ·1.o procure non~cur·
lty item!. They have pennittt!d non-gor-
emment personnel to commit fcdi:r:-il
government tund$. They have abandoned
!is<al ""ponsiblllly .. ,"
TUE SECRET SERVICE Is singll<l oui
lot allowing Preaklent t>-1xon to impro\'l'
h.ls private property in I~ n.anlC of
-•Y· This "has larnished Ille Imago
or a once highly respected organlzn·
1100." declares the report.
Th<-cost of pro\•iding protection on
pri\'atc prcsiden1ial property has so11;red,
slate$ the report. "from practically
nothing during the Rooscvclt·Truman era
to more than $17 mill ion during the first
five ye:irs of the Nixon Administ ration.
'rh1s is morr thnn the comblnl'<I salaries
or nll lin1IL'fl Sulles Prl!$ldenls."
f'rt',.idcnt l\'h~on i$ IOC"tured for "im-
po'iinit burden,j on the ta xpa yers of the
nation .. ~laintaining private resilknces ..
for us<' a few days each year," tcOlds the
report, "imposes a heavy burdep on the
public lrtaSUrY ..•
"!'UNIJS NEEDED to pr ov Ide
prestdcnlial security should be., have
been and are readily available. Howeve, •
L>very dollar that Is diverted into
nonsecurlty expendlturtt un der th is ~
gram Is a dollar that is not then
a\•ailable to provide needed addlllonal
~1rlly."1
This 11 lhe latest "·ord on a scandal !A'e
pried open on Ol1 . 3. 1972, when "e
reported tha t the taxpayers \V'rc fiMnc-
lng hnpro\·amcnt.5 at Prcllidcnt .Nixon's
San C)j iii'Fruc estate. A llouse sub-
I,.
(JACK.ANDERSON)
commlUee, heoded"by Rep. Jack Brooks,
J).Tex., conducted an clhnustive In-
vestigation .
The findings \\'ere approved by the
Democrals bul rejected by I h •
RepubUcans, who h:ive now .produced
their own report. \\1e have obt.nincd
bootleg CO!liCS of both vernlons. The dil·
ferencts are quite revealing:
-THE REPUBUCAN version co m-
pletely l(!llOl'tS the que•Uoa or paying 111•
Uixpaye.rs back for "unauthorized ex-
peBdltum" on President NllOll'S san
Clemente and Key Biscayne property.
Yet ·the Joint Taxation Committee, which
inVfstlgatcd fl.fr. Nixon's tax returns,
counted these expenditures as txtra in·
come and ruled that the President owed
taxes on them.
-The Republican version d Jell:!
evldenl'e that the Nixon$ pe.rsonally ran
up lh< governm<nt gordenmg bill al Key
Biscayn e. Referring to the Nixons as
"our clients/' a General Services
Adm inistration memo reports that Ibey
''had visited Key Biscayne and some
changes had been made in the landsc.l~
ing pllln.1• This resulted in a $4,685.70 in·
crease in the original bill.
-TUE REPUBLICAN repo<t also
treat! as routine the Installation of &n ex·
haust fan In the fi replace of the
President's San Clemente den. Not men·
tloncd is a memo from the secretary to
President Nixon's attorney, lt e r b
Kalmbach, reporting that the Secret
Service had ag=d to "poy off lhe in-
otalialkln of Ille fireplace fan ofter I in-
lonncd him (111e agent Jn chargO) that It
d<finltely was placed !or security
'"""' and bow would he Jlke It II you
know who Y.'8.'I asplxla ted (sic;:)."
-~GOP versiOn doesn't ma ke clear
that the taxpoyers shelled ot• 15,300 for
the Insta llation and purchase of 13
lanterns to light and beautify lhc
presidential grounds. li'our are still being
stored ln a warehouse.
-AT SAN .c;Jemente, the government
s!tcUcd DUI $57,582 !or. a wall I<> encircle . '
the 26 acres or land which the President
ori ginally purchased. 'Helattr !Old all but
six acres I<> Abo!aiJlp. Yet the Broo!<s
repQrt notes that "no eflort was made to
reimburse the federal govenmm.l ln
any way.'' Delendlng the President. the
Republican draft araucs th::tt Nixon
didn't benefit from lite wall.
-Bolll ... ports ., ... that the Pm!·
d<nt paid only 11,Ml for paving at San
'OUN•I COAST
l•fliclij!(1)I
Robtrl N. Wttd, PublilMI'
ThO!ll4f Ktevil, Editor
Barbaro Krt iblch
Editorial Page Edilo r
Monday, May 8, 1974
' .
ct.cmente while the taxpa yers v.·ot1nd u l ~,th a '21.044 bill. The Brook." repo~.
cites. a memo from lhc President's
.architect:, Hal L)itch, suggesting tht! P'I''·
mg cos t be shared equally by the con-
tract.«, General Services Rnd the Sec t
Scrv!cc ... The GOP document prefer~~
to view the paving as servin,q .. tectlve N•rposc · Id a pro-. "" or inc ent to other iiro te<:hve "'ork. ·• ·
,,~ ro1torl11J M~c or the 0 11 Pilot 1~k.' to inform and ltimu~ty
readers by Ptt9t'ntlria on !his 0
diver.e oomm('nltry on to~ :1c
ttn!:'t by 'S)'ndlcated columnilti A:; canoon.1,11~ by Provldlna: n lorum tor
' !'t'Mlert: views and by Pl't5<'nti111 tl'lt newspaper's opinlon1 and \(!eu !I
l'UM"l!nt top\cs. The tdltori11 oplnio:
of .u.. Dtil)' Piiot appt1r only In the
cd1tort1I _column It lhe top ol lh
page. Opinions eitprtl!fd ey. the co~
umnlllt 1.nd eartoonltl• •lld 1 ·
"'rllen are their own •nd np ~
mt!flt ot their views by I.he n..11 ••
Pilol JhOuld he tnlf'motl. __,
r
I
l
L
aih
den
•m foll
on
de
bo
tri
pia
s
n
"' th
un
pa
dr
fa
El
th
s
p
•
... ··~ .
•
L. !ti. Boyd
Stoopin g. Wears
011t Pantyho se
• ••
. AtWetes tend to recover much more qTuckly from that
a11tnen t known as the kissing disease than do other stu-
dents. I mean mononucleosis. Question arises as to why ~se. muscular boys get well so SOOll. Some observers say
tt s Slf!IPIY because they're in gpod physical condition. But
a ,medical expert named William A. Noleo, M.O., contends
ll s because the boys are so eager to get back with their
teams that they refuse to baby them·
selves. He claims most cases of mono
are nowhere nearly as serious as
they're made out ot be. The mono
patient becomes immWle to it there-
after, incidentally.
EGGSHELLS
Were you aware that about 11.2
percent or every bird 's egg is shell?
Record shows that Alice Roosevelt Ulngworth once
embroidered on a davenport ·pillow in her living roon1 the
foJJo.,.,.ing: "Jr you can't say something good about some·
one, sit right here by me." .
Babies born in the summer months are less likely lo
develop mental ailments as they grow up. Less likely than
babies born in the winter, nnyho"'-'· So far, seven psychia·
Irie stu.dies indicate that. .Qut none of said studies ex·
plains ¥lhy exactly.
Once reported that file ck>rks wear out more sheer
stoc kings than girls in any other job. BecaUSe of their
need to scrunch down on their haunches to pull out bot·
tom drawers. A feminine subscriber now asks how long
the average file clerk can keep a pair of panty hose in
undamaged condition. About 10 days. That wise girl whose
panly hose last longer keeps all her folders in the top
dra\.\·er.
MR. FORD
Q. "\\'hat was Vice President Gerald R. Ford 's: name
before he became Gerald R. Ford, Jr.?"
A. Leslie Lynch King. Jr. \Vhen he was 2 years old,
his parents were divo'h:ed. Jlis mothe{ tl)en ma.rril'd one
Gerald· R. Ford, and she renamed her son as a junior
a_gain.
Q. "How come sailors are called 'gobs'?"
A. 'The Navy boys picked up that nickname from a
Chinese word meaning sailor when the fleet sailed the
far Pacific several generatioos ago.
Q. "llow much faster Is a cheetah than a man in the
100.yard dash?"
A. Top ch~tah speed. maybe 4.5 seconds. Top man
speed. 9. I seconds or thereabouts.
Q. "\\'bar s Carol Buml'Lt's zodiac sign'!"
A. She0s a Taurus. Even as is Barbra Streisand and
Ella Fitzgerald. Taurus folk! tend to be highly vocal. If
they can't sing, they 're apt to talk a lot. Or so say tbe
stargazers.
Address mail to L. lit. Boyd, P.O. Bo:t 1875, New-
port Bea.cli 92660.
•
~londay, May ti, 1'174 OAtL V PILOT 7
QUEENIE By Phil lnterla.ndi :U.S. Illiteraccy 'Alarming'
.. !~ •.
. ' ~1 ", I ,.,,. -Cl •'
'1Let's !ace it. I think l 'in getting jnto tennis a
late.u
Property . Taxes
Drop for State
mite
SACRAMENTO !UPI) -lax rale ol $12.91, down from
The average property tax rate the. previo~ year's high of
in California dropped during· $13.54. Contra Costa was
fiscal 1973·74 for the first time second at $12.88, down from
in 23 years, the State Board of $13.16, and Alameda was third
EquaJization has reported. at $12,82, down from $13.I S.
The average rate went from The only other county with a
$11.46 per $100 of assessed rate over $12 in 1973-74 'was
value in 1972-73 to $11.IS in San Francisco at.$12.34, down
1973·74. according to George from $12.60.
R. ~eilly, board chairman. _The lowest rate in the state
Th e drop means that. on a again~ was Alpine c.ounty at
$20,000 house the average tax $4.75, up from the previous
)·ear 's $4.31.
WASJll NGTON (AP! -One
mi ll ion U.S. children aged 12-
17 years c;;innol read even at
the fourth·grade I e v e I .
according to a new fed eral
rcpol'L
H.esults of the special four-
year testing pro g ram .
suggesting illiteracy to be
more pervasive than ever
before realiz.ed, were termed
"alar1ning and discouraging"
by Dr. Ruth Love Holloway.
the goverruncnt 's r e a d i n g
expert.
The problem was round to
be the mosl severe among
low-in~'Ome black males, onc ·I
out of five of whom could end
formal schooling without being
able to read a s i m p I c
paragraph.
THE NATIONAL CENTER
for llealth Statistics, itn ar1n
of the Depart ment of
Health, Education and
Wel fare, said the findings
indicate that e x i s t i n g
,government definitions of
literaiy "might lead to serious
underestimates" of the prob-
lem.
Part of HEW's Health
Examination Survey. I h e
special reading tests were
administered to a sampling of
6,768 youths between 1966 and
19711.
. The scoring showed that 4.8
percent were illite rat e .
Projected nationwide. that
ROOF FALLS
ON PRIEST
CASALE MONFERRATO.
Italy {UPI) -The Rev.
Giovanni Gasparolo. 74, "·ho
planned to announce h i s
reti'rement the next day, was
killed when th~ roof of St.
Eusebio Church collapsed-on
him.
means about l million of 22.7
million schoolage children 'il'hO
should be in grades 6 through
12 cannot read a fourth
11radcr·s nutlerlals.
ILLITERACY \VAS (ouud to
be n1ost prevalC'nt among
boys, especi.illy blacks fro1n
low-inco1ne ftimlHes wh(•rc
parent s had little or no for1nal
education .
For example. 4.7 percent or
white males and l.7 percent of
v.'hite ramilies could not read,
con1parct1 with 20.5 percent of
black malrs and 9.6 percent of
black fa milies.
In families \.\'ith less than
$3,000 annu11I inco1ne, 9.8
percent or \\tll1e youths and
22.l percent of bl<ick!l \\t'rt•
judged 11l1te"tllt". But lhr
inability Ill reay droppc·r! to J.5
percent and 12.6 f)C'rr.rnt.
respectircly \n t!I{' 55.000-
$6,999 inco1ne IC'\'l'I. and to r.
percenl a11d 4.7 percent in
famil ies earn ing nlorc thnn $10 ,000.
If PAREt\TS had little or
no formal l;ducatiou . 2:!
pl'rcrnt of v.·hit.ts and 5:1
percenl or blt1cks tould not
pa~s the tC'st . \\'hen one parent
had hnlsht.-d e I c men 1 a ry
school. lhe illiteracy rate fell
tv 6 ix·rcent for white youths
ttnd 18 pcrtC'nl for hlacks.
J)r. dircttor of 11r:\V '~ Righ t
10 Hc:id progrtim. ~aid the
tc·~u1.i: rt·sults i\{'re "alar1n1ng
;ind disccurag1ns.··
.nut, she addt!d. "I "'-'Ouldn't
argut• with the \"Jlidity at all,·•
"It's rn1 alar1n ing !1gure but
l'Vl'll 1nr.r1• alarming when
\f'\l're tallon~ about people in
'ehool The schools obviously
:ire not meeting the kid s'
11f'PC!s ·· she said -------
would be $362 after the
homeowner 'sexemption. 1------------------------------------------~--------------
Reilly attributl'd the drop to
two sources: 1972 legislation
which increased state aid to
education thereby decreasing
its reliance on prope'rty taxes
and also imposed limits on the
growth or local tax rates: and
the impact or federal revenue
sharing funds.
Statewide. the net taxable
assessed value ol properties in
all counties is $59.6 billion.
which by law is: 25 percent of
the ful l marUt value of the
proper1ies. Reilly s::Ud.
Sacramento County again
led the state, with an average
SANTA ANA
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
6.pc. pl.ice se11ing of Queens Fancy
Save! 25·piece sets and hostess
sets of International stainless
2 5 % reducrions
•
" ..
l::v aogelinc
'
,
New Ch.uni
, ' y Enjoy excellent savings on four gleaming 6-pc. pl3ce
settin£;s includi ng pl.1ce fork, kn ife. salad,. soup spoon
and 2 re.upoons, plus serv ing spoon.
. I EVERYBODY BENEFITS
FROM
THE
NEW
RATES
ON LAGUNA FEDERAL'S NEW TERM
SAY INGS CERTI FICAT ES' AND
ALL PASSBOOK ACCOUNTS!
.
RAl'E f\.11Nl~!Uf\1 HELD FOR . YIELDS . • 71fi% $1 ,000 4 YEARS 7.79 3
•term certificate
63 3 $1 ,000 2%Y EARS 6.98°'0
term ccrtific:11c _
6~·1. $1 ,000 1· YEAR 6.72 3
lcnn crrtifica1c '
533 $1 ,000 90DAYS 5.92°k
1cnn cer11fic11tc .
And mos t popu lar of a/I -the convenient
PASSBOOK ACCOUNT for daily needs!
5 }4 •/. day-in, day-out in1ercs1 yields 5 • 3 9 % per annum
• Wiilulrawah he' fore mnttn ii}' from 1crn1 ccr1ificatc i1c-cnunt~ arc 5111'jcct 10 rcd11c1io n 10 current
pasi.boOk ralc from ll:r.tc or i,,uancr. phi• an aJdi•ional lhrtt 111on1hs' !ntcrc~I forfeiture.
JIO'.\tE Of'f-'fCt1 260 Ocean Avenue. t..agun:i Beach, California 9:?6S I
Telephone: 494·7S 41 •LACUNA NIGUEL: J P.tonarch Day Plaza• SAN
tLl~IENTE: 60 I North El Cam ino Kcal • l..AGUNA Jl lll.S: 24038 Calle
de I.a Pla1:t • LAKE El.SINOR£: 600 West Graham Avenue
Queens FJncy or.. Fronten.tc. 2; pcs. Reg. S75 .. 56.2.>
fo.!Jtching 5·piec:c hosress. Regula rly 29.95 .... 22.46
New Ch.irrn 25-pi('(C' set. Rcgul,1rly 61.)0 .... 4-6.88
f\t11ching 5-piece hoscess. Regularly 24.95 .•.. 18. 71
Ttxfay, Gigi 2S·piece srt. Regularly 44.95 •.... 33.71
~farchin:; 5-piece hosrC"SS. RcgulJrJy I 5.95 .... J l .96
Evangeline, Dubonne t, 25 pcs. Reg. 29.95 •..• 22.46
f\tuching 5·picce hos1ess. Re,&ul:uly 9.95 ...... 7.-16
Dinin~ Accessories
u
Sav~ 25 ~~ on ho5ll'~S ~l't\:
Including sugar spoon,
buncr kn 1 fc. gr.1\ y 1.idk. c1ild
mrat fork, picn:eJ ~poou1
Give American 'fouris ter
luggage with Mom's initials
25 % savings
•
If you 'tl· lc.ivin,;; on chc ncx1 pJ.111l·. \1 hf nor ta.ke two
grc.lt cr.11·t·l1ng con1p.1n1on~ Ji• u11:. l\\um and Amer ican • l l111 ristt>r! i Ou'tl bod1 apprcc1.uc the Jighr stainless
sicel fr.1n1cs, 1hc rou.~h fibcrgl.1-Q·rl1 nforced vinyl cov·
erings. Zinc locks h.1.vc no ~pnnos.10 brc:ik or ca«:h,
handles are padded. AnJ "'e'tl pt•rsonali :te yoyr choice
with thrC'C in i1ials .it no th.ir.:;e. Ladies' styles in blue.
gold, pfun1. srarlt't, _l:tClll t.ten's walnut.
A. L.iJ1C\0 X l. Jueui: ~;1r111cnt c.irner. 9').50 .. 74....~0
D. Lidie~· 11r n1co's {·.1r b.ig. Regularly S38 ..• 28.50
C .... clit'~· 30" overS<".lS. Regul.1rl)' S7'5 ..... , 56.25
I>. L1dics' 'l\'eckcnd c.1rry·On. Regult1rly S50 ~.37.50
.. :. L1Jie\' roomy be.1ury caM.. Reg. 42.50 .... 31 .83
Noc ~h09.ll! ~!ens tv.·o·~uite:r. Rcgul.ar\y S65 .. 48, 7;;
~ien·s thrcc·suicer. Rcgul.irly $70, now ...•.. 5:?:.50
t.·tcn's atttchc cases:
1" atr.1cht'. Regul:r.rly 22.50 ••••••••••• , ••.• 16. 95
5" auacht'. R~gu l~rly 27.~0 ...•....••••...• 20.60
Orhe:r iize~ are a\'ailablt' nt simil.i.r SJvinp.
Luggae:e
.Shop Monday thru Friday, 10:00-a.m.ito 9: 30 p.m. I Bullock's Santa Ana, I Fashion Squatt, 2800 N. Main Su<tt, S•nfll An•. 1·,i,phon<: )•'·721 1
· Saturday, 10:00 &.m. t0 6:00 p.m. Bullock's South Coast Plaza, San D"go f.....,ay at Bristol, Costa M<u, Telephone: ))6-0611
• I •
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8 DAILY PILOT
Other
Deatlis
SAN DIEGO (AP) -J .. L
Sbtll, ""hose son Jo~ C.
Shell, ran against Richard
Nixon in the 196 2
~ubematorial pMmary, died
here Sunday. lie was 82.
Monday, May b, iq74
Political Notes
F 01·d Will Speak
To Comity GOP.
•
lly O.C. HUSTINGS
01 tile D1!11 ~Uof Sl1H
Vlce President Gerald Ford
i!: scheduled for the top ORANGE COUNTY
Trial Date Set
In Purse Theft
SANTA ANA -A man who on Bristol Strett in Costa
allegedly grabbed an trvlne A1esa.
woman's purse as she left a p 1 · id he heel hit Costa Mesa store and was 0 ice sa (PUS rs.
arrested after she tracked him Banks ·lo the gr6und but she
ln her car has been ordr.red to quickly recovered, ran to her
fa ce trial June 7 in Orange . car and lralled Rowen through
County Superior Court. nearby streets. She reported
for Mother's Day ...
a gift of
jewelry
Froni someone who cares .......
Shell dropped out of law
school but continued. h I s
studies on his own and pa.s,,ed
·the Bar In 1922. lie later
served for 26 years as a
~lunicipal and Superior c.ourt
judge. Joseph Shell is now a
legislative representative In
Sacramento.
speaking spot July 12 at the '----------
Judge James Turner set the his license number to police
trial d.Dte !or Donnie Leon who arrested Rowell the same
RoweD. 18, of santa Ana, and d
What better way to show your IO\'C a~d arprttl:.'ltion
than with a piece o( jewelry made of sohd 14K or !BK
Gold aet with ~er favorite gemstone. Each of our stores
h11 8 large $election, pictured below .:ire but a few.
Death Notices
UC I Grad
Heads Unit
For Blind
flfichael Hingson or
Orange QJunty Republican
Central Committee's 400 Club
banquet.
County GOP chair man
George E. Delahanty said the
event \•:ill be at th~ Disneyland
llolel in Anaheim.
•
CATHY O'NEILL, V.'hO
wants the Democratic
nomination for secretary of
state, will make a swing
through Orange C o u n t y
Thursday.
She'll SJ)('ak at 10 a .m. in
Room 213 of the Computer
Sciences Bu'ilding at UC
lrvine.
Then, at 1:45 p.m., she is
scheduled to appear before the
Ca l ifo rnia Parks and
Recreation Society's southern
section meeting in Anaheim.
In the evening, she'll appear
at a mt'cling of the Laguna
Beach Democratic C I u b
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at the
Laguna Federal building.
*
FIFTH DISTRICT
11:1ton 8~•i•h ';.~;1;!.~11Mourried bv 11;, Palmdale, a graduate student :~ son~lt.1~':.. fJt;_ae£ f1~~,·~ H~·'g!~~fe in physics at UC Irvine. has 1e1r~r>1 1: son "!Id a .. vo~1er.1 ... 11w or. a. been named president of the
Mrs. Ralp~ 8 . Polltr, Jr. !J .. nl 0 Count h t £ th
pr.tndctllldr"1 Brian, OOU11111 •nd 011rie range Y c aper 0 e supervisorial candid ate
Blrnlt . Anne Anllr-. Jll'MI & Mar11••el National federation of th':! Poller; niece. Pal Pf,11• !IKk; ne-~ ~[arcia Bents pJans to Call ~~1c~·.l~!'11~~.1,n:r:t:.:,,;::~~1:w. Blind or California. attention to all the women
Mr & "'"· Jonn w. Irwin IMat"llarer Hln~son e a r n e d the offl~holders m· Or a n g e Bordf'1), Mr. & Mr1 Fr1nc:l1 !.. While """
11e,nv eor~l. Mr. a. Mr1. 'j11N. wiu11m1 baehe r•s· degree in physics Count P'oW~~~ s~Y~i .:.i'1f ~''t.eld"'T~vr~Z'v~ with ho. nors in_ 19.72 and was · c1.~ Y,.: -m· g 8 """lute Mliv 9 1'7• 11 1:30 PM.1 ~?lll'Cft of !I'll ~ ~-.•""'Y• .x. ~:~v ~,t;.' il'.:.":t;ig'•f~rJ.!:<f awarded the fll"St annu.a~ to womeu ·leaders or Orange L•~"2'f:::Jl1 ' For:t to ~~wn ''t::,~ -schol~J!llp..~the..UC~-A_Jumnt -county" Saturday at the g1;eer.t•·n::dl1t.ttoof~-,,.;:Hf~~r1~~~ A.ssoc1a t1?l1 1n apprec1ahon of · Newporter Inn. It will be a ~ftiili:#~'"C:t2~wrA' "t'.'!~'c~i:d'! h!S contributlons to campus. luncheon, with tickets priced
ot 11e World', Los A1111e1n. c:.n1om11. A s an undergraduate, at $10.
01r~ sreurv. ~.~~~,v of ~n J~•n Hingson received a University
~:~l~:no;...,1,!(~1(~0tt1.1~~n1151:' J~~ President's undergraduate
ca..i~·~·-_ fellowship to work o n
development or a tactile
sensor for potential use in a
reading machine for the blind.
•
TJIE CONSERVAm'E
California Republic Assembly
{CRA l of Orange County has
endorsed Dave Gubler's bid to ARBUCKLE& SON
WHTCLIFF MOllTUAR1'
427 E. I 71h St., Cosio Me:IO
6-'6-4888 -·-IALTZ-llaGllON
FUNllAL HOMI
Trailer Space Approved
ay.
ordered the defendant to• --'----------
oust incumbent Andrew return to his courtroom ~1ay 11 •&Bin
Hinshaw as the G 0 P :zt for a pretrial hearing. [,{~ "'""'
candidate In the 40th Rpwell is a~ed o! ·~ · AUTO-HOM•0•111•111
Coogressional District along grabbing Ille purse from Ille . INSURANCE
I hand of Shirley Lorraine ':r,.,{'=ii' 1fl4 H•fitor lo11J9vord
the Orange Coast. Cub e}; is Banks , 13671 Onkayah, Irvine, g COSTA MISA 1~
backed by John Schmitz, the as she left a department store 549 .. 5554 /~
area's former congressman. --;~~~~;:~~=~=~1========~~~~-~~-~·
Io the central county's 38th Kid Lik t
Congressional District, the 8 e 0
CRA nod v;eri. to former PO\V d.
David Rehmann. Ask An )"
Charles \Vig gins, the,====~=====:::::; I
i,ncwnbent GOP corlgressmnn l1
in tlie north rounty's 391h THE
district, failed to v.'in CRA
support. Joe Conrad, county
chairman Qf the CRA. said it
may have been Wiggins' pro.
abortion stand that turned off
the CRA delegates.
•
IN THE VARIOUS
Assembly districts, C R A
endorsements went like this :
69th, John Briggs; 70th.
Pl111Mlntr. N11lln, Air CIM.
Tl11'14 St1rh •I ywor dMr
LlltJlll·SlddltNdl Alt Olllert
495.0401 642-17$1
• WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNTY
•
Floyd Wakefield : ?Isl, Bob
Bark; 72nd. fi.1arlin fltcKcev·
er; 73rd, Bob Burke, and 7-llh.
Bob Badham.
JN COUl\'TYWlDE races,
the CRA backed \\'llliam
Hulsy in the race for district
'attorney, Brad Gates for
sheriff-coroner, Dr. .Robert
Peterson for county school
superintendent, and Dr~ Ray
Preston for rounty assessor.
CALIFORNIA'S LARGE ST LAW SCHOOL
OFFERS A CHOICE OF FOUR
PRQqRAMS OF LAW STUDY: ., .
In the supervi sorial
districts. CllA endorsement.S
went to Da\·e Baker in the
Second district and l\.larcia
Bents in the Fifth district.
There \\'<IS no endol'Sfmcnt in
the Fourth district.
• 11'1 1111411 11/1 er , YfAIS ef fUU..f!Ml l1w 1h,ody
11!1·16 cl111room hou" pet week). or
.. IN llTHll l 1'1 •r4 YIAIS of r.uJ.TIMI d1rl rtenlng,
er' w11kend low ihldy lJ d11115 p1r week, J., h.oUr•
pt1r du.ti,
e Yev can 11m yovr JUllS DOCTOI !J .0.) degfff •nd .., ....
"Eil(;IBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
wirif: 01 PHONE FOi CATAlOGUf
800 South Brookhurst
An.1heim 92804
17141 63S-3453
We ho•• a lt.;g1 11l1clion of r.;l1ur1d peorl
p•ndonh oll t ll In •Ol•d 14K gold. , • 11
,1yl1~ in oil. fo<h h a t1.1p1• bur ot 011r
dtoron<• price. Valuet from S.32-$4.S 1111:1\.
Indian Jpwelry
al 40' ( Discount
EXTRA 20"4 DISCOU NT on all "Australi an F ire
Opal" J ewelry. Ch0ose from our fine selection or
Opal fings in soiitaires, clusters, with or without
diamond, pendants in filig ree, tie laks, drop style
earrings, or pierced studs , all in solid 14K Gold.
• LONC BEACll,4313 A llo111/tAP.
•SANTA ANA, 2015 N. ~la111
• TOR RANCE, 24455 tlowlllornt Bf.
• lllH/17/ER, 12911 PllUodtlp"/GSI.
• Nlr: lllPORT Bl:ACll, I 1 F11h. So.
• TORRANCE,01IA1r10F••"io11S4,
• 11£DONDO B&AClf, S, B•>' Ct11 t1~
• OllANO£, ThtMallofOl'Ylntt
• ANAllA'J,\I, A nolltlm Pla11
• LOS ANGELES, A rro Ple:1
MASfll CMAIOI • IANKNii'flKAIO • SOI CllO!T r lAN
Coro no del Mor ·
(OJIO Mesa -·-
673-9.4.50
646--2424
llLLllOADWA1'
MOITUAR1'
Juvenile Hall Will Expand
APPLY NOW FOR THE FALL SEMESTER,
BEGINNING SEPTEll\BER 5, 1974
ALL FOUR LAW STUOY PROGRAMS
AVAILABLE IN FALL 1974 Nearly Everyone.
I I 0 Broadway, Colla Me Jo
548-3<133 -·-
McCORMICK LAGUNA
llACH MORTUARY'
1795 Lo9u110 Canyon Rd.
49-4-9• 15 -·-McCORMICK
MISSION MORTUARY
28832 Com11>0 Cop1Jtrc1110
Sa n Juan Copisiror><>
49.5-1776 -·-PACIFIC VllW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemelery Mo11uory
Chapel
J!iOO Poc1lic Vi-Drive
Newpo11 Beoc:h, Colilorn10
644-2700 -·-PllK fAMIL 1'
COLONIAL fUNlllAL
HOMI
7801 Balsa Ave., Weslm!11s!er
893-3 525 -·-
SMITHS' MOllTUARY
677 Mo1" St.
Hui'.11n91on Beoch
536-6539
THE
NEPTUNE SOCIETY
(lmjllf!I Cr.INllM lfl"tkn
Wilt! dllMmlMfllll 11 -Ttte Oitnltled Slmltl1 Al'-"'111'¥1
Tl Trte (Oltly ltlYOJv..S Mw!Wry
F-r•I C.mtlery S11t.m
Z4 Ho11r Senk• 114·646-74l1
PUBLIC NOTICE
HOTICE OF ,UILIC MIA•INO
NOTICE tS HERE8V GIVEN lhll 1
p1.1Dllc t>e1ri119 wlU be lllld In conlirnctlon
will! IMI proposed pl1n tor 11n!lk1llon of 1111 Founl•ln V•lltV khool Ol•lrlcl on
MO"dly evt'nlng, Mii' 70, ltU. I! f ;O')
P.M .. hx:•llon ot I~ :iubllc ""''"° 10 ~ 11 Ille Foun!1ln V11t1v Sthool 0111r1c1
olllce. loo;:ll~ '' Number I Lf!llllhov!.t Lltnt. \corner of N...,.l1nd Strtet l n<l T•l&ert !rreel) in IM cllv ol fwnllln V•ll~v. C1Jot0tnl1. 01tt'd 11111 urn div ot Aor!I, ,,7,,
R.D. Hiiiman, Ool!'p\lty
0.•"9" County !vperlnltndtnl of ~cllool1 PIJbf!~""' Or1119• Coell O•Hy Pit~.
Aprll 2', Ind MIV ,, 11. lt7A 1'11·74
PUBLIC NOTICE
I •
•
LOS ANGELES
Listens to Landers
Personal Checldng Account
Why pay a .. rv1ce charge to have a cheeking account? You canha'8
one free -including your ftnt order of personalized checks -at a
cooperating statewide commercial bank. Required: a Los~
Federal Savings Account of '2500 or more. PLUS• free Infonned Bayon "Club" Membenhlp, Safe Oepooi\
• Bos. Travelen Cbecka and ·more than 20 more free aeJT•
lcea (iiome reqqJre minimum balan<:e).
Most Tnmortant Service ·
at each LOSTnire1.;Fed:ra1 Savings Family Financial Center, ol
coune ls . '-biP interest. year after year, on insured uvlnp
You also get the valuable assi1tance of the Los Angeles Federal Savil\p
Counselor, who 11 trained to
-translate the 80l?letfmes baffling language of ftnance into plain
English (and aometimes even plain Spaniah. Japanese. Chi ...
neae and other languages).
-handle all the detail• for you when you want to transfer roar
account to~ Angeles Federal Savings.
-help you decide which account. or combination of aavinp: ac-
counts. will give you the tftghest income on insured aavinp •'\.4 the be!t protection for your estate.
START YOUR LOS ANGELES FEDERAL SAVINGS ACCOUNT
TODAY,ONE.JollNUTEANDONES!GNATUREISALLITTAKES.
ANNUAL INTEREST RATF.S ON INSURED SAVINGS
---------Allklttreslcompoundeddaily·---------.
5%% 6X% 6%% 7~
NEWPORT BEACH:
8325 Newport Bl•d.
(714) 6754500
(Aero11 the ot-t from City IWI)
HEAD om CE -00'1'/NT()ll'No
-.. -· u ..... ~ . ,.., ..... ......
FEDERAL
SAVINGS riot ML \..-------....:.---y.J tHAAtl• "'°TICYION
One Wlllhlre Bulldlnr. Wilflhire Blwl. •t Ol'MCI Lao Anpl41; CalU. 800t7 • 626-7341or1.entth !1891 ..... ,i-.. __ .... _
lee .... , ............... .... , .... r. ....... , ......... ., ••
''°
D
•
• . ' ~ . . . \ .
•
'°'1ondo:1y, Mi\y b, 19/4 ~~ --'-~~~~~~~~~~"-•_•'-'~''~'~o-'-"'11 •
Top Goal of CandUlaw
Waldie: Oiister .of Nixon
SACRAri1ENTO (AP \ -rl~ht than be pres Iden t .
~lo1·e th11n n c·Pntu rv ago . Jcro1ne \\1aldie \\'Ollld rather
ll~nry Cla,v said he's rather be see r resident Nixon
~:EBIG~TAll~
1912 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
BRAD SUEDE JACKETS a s50. •
"8j~0 1i~~ ..... i1~H:~~~1~:·
r'l\ll M!s-1•1< 'IJlw ~.c
MEN'S WCAR STORES IN C~fjSI • 1111 ~l.,,.•600 Ctt1!n
Impeached thnn be co me
gove mor ol Cttllfotnia.
"lmpeach~nt Is a helluva
lot niore Important than my
campaign," the Dernocratic
congressman says.
.. My first rtSfX'l'!Slblllt)' l!l to
the lmpeaduncnt of the
President .''
\\raldie commutes from
\\'aslllngton to Callfornla an-t
back in an effort to serve two
masters: his impeachment
nuest .. as a member of the
ltouse Judiciary Committee
and a candidate for the
Democratic nomination for
go\·emor iQ rile June (
primary.
" ... \Ullt-: lS R U\~1XG £ift 11
i'l n poll of Democratic:
r•r,ntt .. onder~. but he st i 11
. ..
•
THE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane
H .. f>.ol..;, ... •
... 1~ .... 1, •• ~ .. .
"The McCouleys Mo ve their wading
alreody!11
" ' pool set vp
Casket
Profits
Heftv •
:-;£\\' YORK <L'Pll -A
stud y rcjXlrts Ne~v Y o rk
runer::il home directors reap
profits averaging more lhan
11'11'1 peret'!nl on the s.1 le of
ca s kets to bereaved
C'US!omers.
A.<;semblyman • .\ndrC\\' Stein.
chairman of the Temporary
State Commission on Living
Costs and the Economy, said :
''The funeral hon1e huslncss is
an ext raord inarily profitable
industry u•hich \111uld readily
'<''i thstand ,a more intensive
con1pe1itive environment.''
•
HEAL TH NEWS ...
Whether It's Housework or
Golf, It's Still Bursitis
E\'tryone. at ont timt or
3notht·r. h a~ t''l;l1<'rll'flr1·d u
!>udd <'n sh11 r r p.1111 111 lhl'
.!<.houldr r , r lho\\', or k111·c 1o!nl
Quitc often thJs 111 c:i!il'd .. bur
Silis."
The: condit1ou 1~ 1;un1n1C1nlv
ossoclntcd \v1lh 3lh!eh·s.
"Uut it's JUSt
a s rom nion
\\" I h
h011 S('\l'i\'l'$,
o(fil'l:' workers.
rc,l:'ardless or
O(·ru11;ition .''
s a y s I> r .
Couture of th C'
C f) U l II r t'
"' ("h1ro 11ra tt1c
Dr .. Gory ofl1cC'
CCMINr•, D.C. Thc J!<11 •d
dt•po!-1ts 11 ill sho\\' 11 1' on the
"Ur!~l'1• 111 lhc hun1'" 111 tht'
JOHii' hl· ""''
And 11 · ~ I n .. '<111cnlly .1 111<1~1
d1 ~tress111,.: pruhl t>n1. oHcn .t.~
~Ol:lall·d \\'llh ~c1·erc pJ1n and
ron11nual d1"-romtort sec m1n p.1~
un:tfh•(·t1•d hy rcsllnl'.! the affc1·-
tcd joint. Qr hot or cold packs.
"l)f co urse I think that a per·
son ts loohsh to resign himself
to ull o"·u1g a burs1li.~ attack to
run its 1·ouri>C hy simply gn l·
ling ont•s teeth :ind tx>a nng the
dL!>comfort:" !>a)S Or. Couture.
"Trul', the process of hea\lng
huri;ill-" has no exart time limtl
fron1 one patient to another ..
;\l :iny factors influence th e
ll·ngth of tune necessary for
rceovcry: ho"'' Ion~ 1t has been
co1og on before seek ing hclv.
the age of the p;it1e11t. and pos·
sihly t·xistcncl' o1 othl'r bod~·
m;.d1unl·lions th.it rn:iy cK isl at
the 11;i n1c t1n1t•. ·
SOUfHfRN CAl IF ORNIA l~R•"'I 11,.l'l ,;,.1tooo .. 81•~ 010 !••or IUll• • tieliev~ he has a chance for --------------· --
The rommission's study said
th<' arcragc prices an1oria: !he
"least expensive" funera ls
offered in the state i s
approximalcly $960.
doct or point.s out th.11 hu rs1\Js
is :u1 inllamation or lht.• joint
rapsull• anrl results in a sll'l'I·
ling .ol !1:-.:-.uc trorn irnlat1u11.
'l'hc 1rnta t1un 111;.iy he chcn11ral
rron1 d 1 .~r;1.,1~, t ro tn O\'l·r·
lal1 i:111· or· 11 0 111 e xt ern.i i
bruist·~
"llut h.v al l means The p:1111
1·;111 be :1llc\·1a ted a11d the 1·1111
dit 1C1n ;1tt11 ckcd \1·ith a 11L·r -
n1:1ne.nt s0Jut11111 111 1•1c "·:· :;;1~:-.
\)r. Coulurt>.
the nomination. lie ha~ bc('n
nclivelv campaigning .for the
crnce fo r three .vcars.
But if it ca1n1J d0"-'11 to the
11,:pothc!ical question o f
p11r~in11: 4mncuchment or the
gove':TIOrship, there is no
question \\'hat he \\'Ould ~o.
"There's no choice at all ,"
\\raldie said in ;:i teleohone
inter\"ie'<'' from his V.'ashington ·
office. "T "·ould ta· k e
impeachment. Thi.sis the most
important issue confronting
the country."
But he has. no intention or
droppin!( out of the go,·emor's
campaign, \V3\die ~Id.
"No. 11\o. No. Never. Not in
the slightest." he said.
llE SPESOS Tue sday.·
Thursday at !louse ses!ions, in
\\";ishin~on and then flies to
·-Calilomia,far a long w~kend
of campaigning.
"AUCTION "It's terribly deminding and
a terribl,; expensi\'e thing," he
said. "It makes It very
difftcult to get around the
state as often as I'd like." Jewelry, Antiques, Furniture
The Southtand~s most ele9ant gallery is now
holding pub}ic auction sates every Monday and
Tuesday evenings. Quality merchandise mos11y from
bankrupt stocks. custom seizures. out-of-pawn. estate
cons1gnme n1s. From SS.DO to $50,000 and up. Partial
But \\'aldie said his ab.wnce
from the state "'1len his
oJ>POO("nt.s are stumping the
state dallv is not '<''hat makt.S
lhe diffe rCnce in the poll~.
"t-.1\' biggest problem is l',·e
not been able lo attract the
h('avy contributors that the
et he r guy s ha\"e attracted.''
ttst
~~~~~~·~~~~~~ • 1.w .. M4Kffoll of _,._,._ cry•MI
• Fi11• porc.W.. -S.wrK, D,. .... U-,,•
• l rOM•I 1"9wdl -................... lo6
. st.rt\"' Slw..--,. .. "irtl
• Orl•titol It-• FiM prtrio4 ..........
•
• SS00,000 •todi of .,oeity ;twiriry, ......
diolftCH'llh tr-I ~ I 0 '''· • Gotd fewdry • lole1, 0-,0. P....,....G.,.,,,
• llfMJ' & ~s -nibi.1. 1Mtt.W.,·.,.i1
• A11tkple j._.,, • r..,,..w 1.&.i T ......
~ ........ lllOf'« ·------
Terms 13 of A. r..l <1srer Charge pi>rs.onal checks, cash.
lnspocl1on I 1. AM lo 5·30 PM Monday lhru Saturday Fnday n1tes"hl 9 00 PM.
Sales Monday and Tuesday evenings at 8:00 P.M.
-i s..t""J ,.....,...etioflt _,. IN ... by ,..._
This allows them to buv (':t:ncn~\'e timl!: on rad\o and
televi!!ion and get matewide
exposure. \\'11ldie said.
Ile Is relying on a corp..q of
\-olun~r~ to~belp'him win the
hul k of llberal-activist votes
June 4.
DESERT GALLERIES WEST, INC.
\\'aldic is ir.te nicv.·cd on
national nffl-ork television
almost dally in regard tt> the
in1pc>achn-:ffit inouiry. but he
doesn't belil!:Ye this helps hi!
eamp..,ign muC'~ if at all .
"Tll<'y the \"Otcrs don't
relale that to the
gubematori3l thing." he said. 2542 W. Coast Hiway, Howport loach 92660
17141 645-2200
HOTICf: W• _.. ccnll btrpn fot' row ••..t.d i-wetry, .......... \\"aldie said he might not
ha\·e run had he realized how
much ti1ne the impeachment
iSSl.Je \t'Ould ha\"e consumed.
Ml,tt, •fc., or, c0Mf9i ot1 c.-.11"°9 le _. wettdy .c.._ ......
HANDBAG
FASHION ISLAND-·NtwpertltlCh
~NAHEIM PLAZA -Anaheim
•1VElSIOf 'lAl A -l !.,,.nidt
T't'lEl MAl l -•;...."ide
CENTllAl CITY MALL -Son ... nordlno
FASHION VAlllV -So!'l Oiego
18.00 to 36.00 values! e VARIETY OF LILTING SPRING COLORSI
e NEWEST STYLES. SIZES ANO SHAPESI 1199 2J99 e BEAUTIFUllY CRAFTED ANO OETAllfO! ._
e SOME WITH POCKETS, EXTRA COMPARTMENTS! "'
HURRY-THIS SPECIAL SAlf FOR A l/MITED TIME ONlY/
US[ VOi.iii IAMl(AM[JllCAJIO·, .MA!iT(rt CHAlOE. ,AUl AllAl'il CHARGE
Spanking ~Destructive' According to the sludy, the
a,·crage price for the lcasi
expensive casket; in funt ·ral
homes surveyed \\'as $303.
\l'hile the n\anufacturers' price
n·as under $140.
"As yuu 'a11 \1·1·11 in1ag1111·."
hr 1111lt_·::.. "household chore~ nr
any physical at•11\·ity on the Jn!1
<ir in the hun1c c;1n cau~c t ht.• ir·
rilat11u L
SACHAMENTO (UPI) -
Repeatedly spanking a school
child or threatening him v.ith
C:Of1Dral p.mlshment stunts his
ability to handle mathematical
problems. a Berkeley psyehfl·
Jogist says.
"C.orporal punishment Is
Yery destructi\'C," Dr .. Adah
f\taurer told the State Equal
E duc ationaJ Opportunities
Commission.
The psychologist s a I d
althouzh more research Is
needed it OO'>'' appears that a
h11ppy. secu re child \\' i J l
delight in arithmetic ..
''Jn one school \\'he r I!:
corporal p.mlshmcnt w a s
abolished," she said, "the
reading scores went up, and
the math scores ~"ent worn."
Dr. A~aurer appeared before
the commission, ~thich is
appointed by the State Board
of Educa tion, to urge support
of a biU which v."OU!d ban
corporal puni sh ment of
handicapped children.
Casket prices ranged frnm a
S60 box which cost the funeral
home $22. to one selling for
S6,800 for v.·hich the hon1e
paid $3,100, the study s;:l:id.
The study, Stein said, 11·11s
based on data pro\ided by the
state funeral home directors
association and represents the
first ana1ysis of price m3rk-
ups in the funeral industry· in
New York.
"I h11\·c a p;1tiC'11l 11u1v und rr
C':ITC "'ho :-.ustatned a sharp
!>l1ncin c )1:11 11 i11 his lt·fl
i>houldcr as hC' 1\·;is hftin ~~ a
sl aC'k of records from one
O\'erhead shelf lo anothC'r .
Granted, th is J.I year old man
had the physir1uc of an athll•tc ..
hut lhc aeli\·ity th<il caused his
prol.ilcm "·as anything but
:ithlctu·."
Ur. Couture notes that 1n
many ca.scs. rest periods ";11
C'lear up ;1. mild condition of
bursitis. "llO\\'cver, if th<' con·
dition continues. calcium
Mal<e
Yourself
A Promise
Jn'74 A
'
reshape, firm'n trim with a body that's fit to live in.
you don't just
get a shape
''you get in stiape''
•
Diel Alon. C1n~t Do II •.• While you shed pounds that cut down
ugly lat . you've got to lirm up to eli minate vnsighHy ltab.
The rl!:suu . a shapely ligure lrimmed down. with 1exture light
as a dr.um: ~rs all here-dietary and exercise programs designed
for your 1ndtv1dual need. Instructors and e,;ercise machines
thal gel max imum results in the shortest possible li me ..
Plus Sauna, Sleam, Whirlpool, Svn Rooms. and Swimming Pool
lo make the complete change. Belo1e you know ii. you 'll be
firm, slim and trim. You'll look greal, reel great. Remember
you don'! jusl get a shape; you gel in shape. Make your serf
a promise -Call Today!
There are SEVEN different programs to
choose from to suit your Individual needs.
Beginn ing as low as ••••
2weeks
at the
Spa foronly $10
'
Hotif!la~ if~ ~~~!1Hw~l~BS
callt*Y·
BUENA PARK s10 s. aooch Boul,.~rd, sovlh or Lincoln ~ 826·0381
ORANGE 1:22 E••' K111Ut '"'""'· Weal of Tu1Un Avtnut 639~2441
·COSTA MESA 2300 li1rttor loult'ftrd, H1rbor Center 549·3368
WESTMINSTER 5757 Wtttmlnattr Awtnve, Wt1tmln1ltr Ctnltr 894~3387
HUNTINGTON BEACH llSH Mein ll'"L lbln sr. at Buch Bl•d. 842·1451
LONG BEACH 4101 Atl1ntlc loult'ftrd, Corner of C1r1on 426-8874
ENCINO t703f Ve111wr1 lowl e'ftrd, w'e1t of 81 l bo1 986-6330
:'\o fln e cont l'::.l!> the fact Jh:.it
bursitis is thr prnblcm for tht"
1noclern cloctor "11 ~Ou l111 1·e ;111
unt·x11lainc1! t 11·1n~l' of pain 111
the kll i'l~. clbn\V. arn1.
:-houldl'r. :-eek acruratc d1a g-
11os1.s aud cffccti\'l" trc•1tment .
!l n1ay go il\\'ay after a t1m1·
hut its return is just as prC'd 1r-
tahlc as taxes ... 1t the con·
d1lloll 13 le ft untreated ...
llr. Couture maintains Qlf1C(''l
at Tht· Cou1ureChiropract1r 0 1·
f i e <', 20 43 \Vcstcl iff !Ir .
:'\c\\·port Beach (cnrncr 171h &
lr\'111r -near Coco's) l'ho11t·
l>l.l·~.
IL'l ARS 19i.&
I
·I
I
,
1 •
•
'
-
•
"
JO DAILY PIL OT '
Tax Increases Seen
As Inflation Rises
By SYLVIA PORTER
\Vhile \Vashington's vole-
hunting politicians n1umble
about giving us a tax cut to
1nake it cjlsier for us to
survive toda y's cost~f-Hvlng
squeeze, the fact or the matter
is that millions of us earning
1nore than $13,200 a year are
facing a certain tax increase
in 1975-and so are all those
v.•ho e1nploy us.
1'his tax hike will come ln
tax. of $824.&; as against
$Ti2,2 Othis year and '631.80 as
rt:cently as 1973. Your Social
ties the &icial St!curity tax
v.· llge base as v:ell as Social
Security i:M'nC'fits to chanr.cs 111
the cost of li ving. Even the ;idrninistralion estimates that Security tax has rnorc th&n
the rise in the ConsWl1er Price doubled just since 1970!
Index (our cost of liYing AU of your enlploycrs must
index) ~:ill come 10 7 pcrl'ent 1natch that tax of $824.85. so
i n l 9 1 4 · T h a t D 0 \\' the combined tax on employc-''conservatj\'e" rate of rise emp loyer will come t o \\"ould pul the \\'age base at $1,&49.70, up $386 1 Oor ntore
$14.100, up a full $900 In 12 · I t month:i. If the rate of inrlation than 30 pc.~rccnt in on y \VO
for !he full year is higher . so years.
may be the hike in the \\·age If you ar~ self-employed
b and earn $14.100 or more.
the form of
another hike
in the ,,·age
ba se o n
''tiich ,,, e
pa y our Ser
cial Security
ta'tC'i fro:n
t h i s yeRr's
record high
of !".13.200 to
aSI'. I Let's say, though, that later yuur Social Sceurity tax ti'li!
in 1974. today 's Inflation rale rise to $1, 113.90 in 1975, up c~n be reduced to such an fr om $1.£»2.80 this )'car and
extent that , by year-end, the $864 in 1973.
pace f~r the full 12 months ~ Al'\D this increase is taking ~ '? only 7 percent pl ace ,,·lth the Social Security
fbcheve it or not , that Y.'ould tax rate standing still at 5.8
be great news ): per cent. That rate won't
another ne\v peak of ti t Ira!.!
$14.100 and ii nlay he more.
THE REASON : the law no\v
TUEN ::ill of you who are remain there much longer;
<'mploved' and earn more than under today's law, it will rise
$1 3.200 an d all of your ahovc 6 percent In 1978, 1
employers and all the' millions combined rate of. nwre than 12
or self-employed at th i s percl'nl.. And w1_Lh the "'a~e ~WAU.u 'Al~~ income level \\i ll pay high~r base going up in au~omatic r;'W'tlT ,,.....,_ ~"'1 Social Seeurity taxes. leaps, the burden of this form
tr If you earn $14,100 or more . of tax w!U become heavier and :.ti~_., '$ you'll pay a Social Security hea\lier. · ..... ,,.~ 11;::==========;1 for millions of you in the
CONNELLEASE middle-Income brackcls. the
Social Security tax you pay
Oft fM(
OINUIWI
UIATfR
ffiRSTfR
El I 11 I each year is now almost as
large as your total federal
income tax. Your factory Auth«laed
'fb1ust-locli Collar'
TOILET TANK BALL •-n..·. , ..... '-"''
ClleYralet Leasl11t Dealet For millions of you in tne
• lo\\'-middle income braekets,
New '74 Y~o Hatchback your Social Security tax is
S6840 i-ER MONTH higher tha n the federal incomt>
Ph11 1ill( & LI<:. On ~~~. Credit lA Mo. 0 .E.L.
CQHNELll CHEYROLtT
2828 HAltlOR ILVD.
Ti.. •ll<~itt Wor-! !!°''"'" i~1to~•lt11o1» .... 11o .. el .... , •• "''•• ... h ~ •• , ... ,.
7Sr Ar HARDWARI STOltlS COSTA MESA !46-1200
tax yoo pay each year. for
instance. a married man \vith
two ('hi!dr.cn eaming $5.060 :t
year ""ho uses the standard
deduetionpars about $120 in
Tormenting Rectal Itch
Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues
Promptly Relieved
Jn many c:1ses Prcp.;ration H
gi\les prompt, ten1porary r<'l ief
from such pain and itchin~
:ind actually twlps· shrink
S\\'elling of heinorrhoitlal tis·
s ues caused by infiammalion.
Tests by doctors on hun·
dreds of patients showed this
to be true in many cases. Jn
fact, n1any doctors, t hem·
sclvrs, use Prcp<1rotion {-/!)or
rl"<:Ommcnd it for lhC'ir fam-
ilie.'>. Preparation 1-1 oi ntment
or suppositories.
federal income f;:lX. This same
1nan has $292.50 deducted O\'er
the year for Social Security
laxe s, more than t\\iCC as
much.
AND FOR millions in the
\ol'.·-incon'e brackets. the
Social Seeurity tax is the big
load , not the incoroc tax. That
n1arried man earni ng $5.000 a
vear \\'ho has five childrcn
Ov.·es no fede ral int>ome tax if
he uses the stan dard
deduction. But · he'll have
S292.50 deducted from his
\\·eekly paychecks for Social
Security.
OmtFederal has
somedaing for people with big ideas
and a little mon~
With the bclpof Coast Federal
the.re's no reason why everybody,
slowly but surely, can 't build up
a big savings account
High Interest Rates. Based
on an annual rate of S.25%, our
regular passbook accounts yield
5.399'0 annually. And you can
lake money ou1 anytime.
Certificate accounts rctum up
to 7 Yi% a year, 1bc highest rate
allowed by the government.
Federal regulations require a ,
substantial interest penalty on all
certificate account withdrawals
prior to maturity,
Our f rec booklet !ells all; 35k
for one at any Coast office.
Fringe Benefits Package.
Herc are a few benefit~.
Free Checking Account.
,rce personal checking account
at a major bank ; just keep a mini-
mum balance of $2,500.00.
Free Safe Deposit Box.
With a minimum bala.ncc of
$2,500.00.
Insider's Club. s. .. on
appliances, furniture, jewelry,
tickets for shows and games. All
it takes is a S 1,000.00 minimum
balance. r
Free Travele7s Checks.
Iniklcr's Club mcmbcl"3do not
pt)' a service charge : the u me
applies to money orders.
Home.lmprovement Q
Loans. From ca.rporu lo tT.-;:;
CMJ'dl·
Saturdays. We'reopenSatur·
days from 9:00 a,m. to I :00 p.m.
(Fridays. all offices except down·
town Los Angeles, art open until
6:00p.m.). •
HowtO~t
tbemOSt
Out. ofwbat
yOU~ • •
' ·-·-"-~
More for your money.
. ANfl• Ml COAST ~,,..-:
FECERAL•SAVINGS' . . ... ~ . . . . . -"
0.... B1!11or> Oollllt. e
More for your money.
tlawd .,._Bad: Ofritt: 91 ll unlinaton Ct ntt1 (7 t4) 1197·1o.t7 • r.1•1n"Offke: 91b &. lf iU, 62l-tljl
Coovcrutot Olf1ct11 Throuabout C:allfonll1 •
\
Tlw B1iildi1ag Goes ~u1111n1111111n
Constructio n continues in Irvine ofl the n ew corpor·
ate headquarters for l\fazda l\totors or America
scheduled ror completion Sept. 1. The $3 million
project is being built by Don Koll of Newport Beach.
Architect for the 120,000 square foot building is
David Jacobson of Los Angeles. The structure is lo-
caled at 2100 S. Main St. ·
·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Pay TV Co111es to LA
Witli, I/uglies Bocking It Can't Be Bad
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Pay television has been
kicking around in various
guises and sha:>es for the past
qua rter century. Everyone
agrees it has ··a. tremendous
potential.''
_ But. for one reason or
another. it has remained
fragment~ P.nd '~·iplOut ~ny.
real 1nomentuni. 1here are 11
pay TV co1npanieS in tbe
United States, but their
mark et is lin1itcd to 38 of tbe
smaller cities.
Pay TV has moved into the
Los Angeles area for the frrst
time. 1l1e. tele vi sion,
entertainment, ex hi bi tor
sports and adve rtisin g
industries \\ill be \vatching
closely.
THETA CABLt-: Tc!cYision
is offering s ub s cr ibe r s
reecntly released major
n10tion pic\..Ures -eight a
month at an ex1ra cost
monthly of"$6.95 per homC.
The first two films offered
Teleprompter Corp.
\\'ere "Save the Tiger' and
"Play it Again &;m."
Theta has aOOut 63.000
Ho ,vard R . Hughe s
reportedly has a 17 percent
interest i n Teleprompter,
"'hich n1eans ·that the
eccentric billionaire controls
the operation. and anything
that llughes gets involved is is
taken seriously.
Theta Geni:ral 1n a n a g e r
J ohn \V. Al\\'ood atlempted to --------~ ___, ----~-
••• 'lhe eccentric
hllUonatre c o ,..
trols the operfl•
tU>n, and nnythh1g
that Hughes gets
i111:ofved ba is tnl•·
en serlon•ly.
rebut arguments that pay TV
could play hnvoc with the
net\\·orks. tl1e 1novic. industry
-particularly exhibitors -
and advertising - sponsored
sports.
Under FCC safeguards. he
said. pay TV 1no\'ies cannot be
sho~11 until they have a
general release in thealers.
They eannot be put on pay TV
once they arc t~·o years old.
The FCC decreed that series
type 1 pro gr am s ""·ith
int e r e on n e c t e d plot or
substantially Ute same cast of
principal characters." such as
··AU in the Family," cannot be
cablecast.
Another regulntion forbids
cable:asts of sports e\lents
televized ory regular, local TV
during lhe past fy;o yl'.?W-s. -.
Atwood aknowledge s that a
great nl&ly people able to get
uninterrupted showings or
relatively new niovies in their
li\'ing rooms at mode.st price
are not about to dri\le to a
movie house to pay $3 and
more for a ticket.
llfS ARGUJ\IENT is th at 1hc
movie house audience already
is predominantly made up of
teen-agers and younger people
who look on it as a social
occasion and a \vay lo get
away from home.
It's peanuts so far. But no
one is taking lighUy Atwood's
prediction that thi s is the first
important "beginning," and
that there \\·ill be at least
:'ll,000 subscribers in Los
Ange les with in a year.
Coast Firn1
Purchased
By Celeseo
Cclesoo lndustries Inc., of
Costa h1esa, a manufacturer
of lrigll technology products.
has agreed to purchase for
cash capital stock and stock
equivalents of International
Biophysics Corporation o [
Irvine, according !o ·Celes-co
president R.G. Vande Vrcde. _
IBC manufactures precisior1
sensing de'tices for n1cd1cal,
ecological and i nd u s t rl a 1
appli<'ations. Blood oxygen
analyzers and c a t h e t e r
eleetrocles arC'Ollnted f o r
approximately 55 percent of
1hc firm·s nearly $1.000,000
sales in 19i3. The remainder
eame fron1 sales of n1edical
and \\'atei:: quality oxygen
n1onitors and p11 meters.
As a Celesro subsidiary, !BC
1\·ill conlinuc lo opera!<' fro1n
il<; 30,000 sqUare f o ot
n1anufacturing and
administrative {acil iti<'s at
2i00 Dupont Dri 1·e. Under the
lerms of the stO<'k purchase
agrecn1ent. Cclesco \\. i I I
as..,ume operating-control of
113C \\'l lhln the next 60 days_
Handn1ade
Cigar llis
Specialty
LOS ANGE!£S (AP\ -I
When it comes to small,. bus!· j
nesses. Rafael Rey~ is M I
small as you can get.
It's a one·mon operation
producing quality cigars by
hand.
But Reyes, at 51, has great
hopes or getting bigger.
FOR 37 YEAR.t;; he has lx>en
making cigars in his native
Cuba. ~tiami, Fla., and now
Los Angeles.
\\'hen Fidel Castro tOOk over
Cuba. Reyes decided he didn't
11.·ant to live under
Co1nn1w1ism. T\vo years later,
in 1968, he and his ran1ily were
pernliUcd to emigrale 10 the
United Stall's.
After a brief stay in 'tiaml,
Reyes moved to Los Angeles
and got a job as a cigarniakcr
with the National Cigar Co.
Last year he was laid of(,
but fortunately was introduced
to a Cuban loan officer of the
Bank of America. Through
this meeting, he obtained a
bank loan lo open his ov.'11
faetory.
REYES \\'ORKS JO hours a
day, six days a "'eek rolling
bel\\'ecn JOO and 500 or what
he considers to be "possibly
the finest haodn1ad c ciga rs in
An1erica . ··
lie makes nine different
sizes and shapes of whole leaf
cigars and retails them o\lcr
the counter al his factory in a
converted bank buildink. lie af~ n1akl's custom eigars to
order-JG-Inch pantellas and
other unusual shapes. llis
cigars an.' priced from -25
C('n!s to $1.25 each.
Reyes said he hopes to
discontinue selling-cigars at
his factory <1s the business
grow:s. He has named Alamo
lnlernal ional of \llest Loo
Angeles as distributor and his
Hau brand of ·cigars \\'iii be
1narketed through t o b a c c o
shops, hotels. rountry club6.
liquor and gift shops and
better re s taura nt s in
California and Nevada.
.. TllESE CIGARS are not
designed for mass sales."
sa ys Rcyl'S. "The g i a n t
ci~ar companies v.·ith th eir
· au1oma1ro n1ac hinrry c ;i n
make lhC'1n faster a n d
<'Ill' aper Hrt u \\ill n c v er
ccu~p1:te 11·Jth them.·~
Mmes hooked into ils cables,1 P"---~~-------------------------------------.. v.·h.ich hilherto have been
ca rrying a smorgasboard of c } t M"d d A • S k L" t educational programs. Spanish omp e e . I • ay mer1can toe IS
lessons. high school sports. a
TV auction, a psychologist,
call-in shows. ne\\"S a n d
weather and ancient movies,
JO or more years old.
A Theta spokesman said
about 1,800 homes had been
signed up for the commercial·
free. uninterrupted movies.
That is not about to e.-..:cae
any executives fron1 the
tov.·ers of Rockefeller Center
or ~1adison Avenue. but it is
the Jong promised potential
that could shake up a fe\.\'
board rooms.
FOR ONE TIIJNG . Theta is
owned 50-50 by 1{ u g h e s
Aircra f t Corp. and
Marketh1g
Club.Hears
Trade Talk
"Impact of the Energy
Crisis on Foreign Trade'' \\'iii
be the topic discussed by Dr.
S. Stanley Katz when the
Orange County International
~farketing Association holds
its monthly IWlcheon meeting
Wednesday at the Jolly Roger
Inn re~urant in Anaheim ..
Or. Katz is with the
-Oepartment of Commerce in
Washington, D.C. attdeputy
director or the Bureau of
Internalionl Economic Policy
and Research. He has recently
been engaged in formuJatlng
government policies to L'Ope
with adYerse affects or the
fuel shortage OD foreign trade.
He "'ill comment on other
erononliC factors pertaining to
the International marketing as
well.
Guests arc \Ve I c om c .
Re~rvations may be obtained
by calling 635-6180.
* For
Weekender
Advertising
Phone
642 ·4321
*
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NOMATIER'WHATthey're inth.e market for, our readers find the DAILY PILOT is the best
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DAILY PILOT
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Tops in Pops
By Associated J>ress
The (ollo\ving art>
Billboard's hol rl'COrd hits for
the week ending l\lay 11, as
they appear In ntxt week 's
issue of Billboard magaiine.
HOT SINGLES
1. THE LOCO-MOTION
Graitd Funk . Capi Lal
2. THE STREAK -Ray
Stevens. Barnaby
3. DANCING r-.1ACJ-ll t\T. · -The Jackson 5. r.1otown
4. TllE ENTEltTAINER -
1'.farvin Hamlisch. l\ICA
5. BENNIE & 'rHE JETS -
Elton John. r.rc A
6. TIIE SJIO\\I ~l l:ST GO
ON -Three Dog: Night.
Dunhitl
7. TUBULAR BELLS -
h1ike Oldfield. Allant lc
8. TSOP·~1FSA . Colu"lbia
9. r vE BEEN SSAHClllN'
SO LONG -Chi c al{o.
Columbia
10. MIDNIGHT AT THE
OASIS. -l\Iaria ~1uldaur.
Reprise
TOP LPS
1. THE S TI NG
Soundlrack. l\!Ct'\_
2. CAT STEVENS -Budciah
& The Chocolate Box. A&~f
3. JOHN DE~~'ER
Greatest •lits, RCA
4. MARIA MULDAUR
~rise 5. CHICAGO -Ch.icago VII,
Columbia
6. GRAND FUNK -Shinin'
On. Capitol
7. PA UL McCART~'EY &
BttrlOll Still
1~1 Ho s1Jital.-
sANTA MONIC/1-. (UPll" -
RJchard Burton's slay in St.
John's hospital \vill be
extended another 10 d;iys, a
friend says. until his broken
Jcft hand heals and ::i bronchial
disorder is clC'arcd up.
The actor. v.·ho announced ,-----------an impe nd ing divorce from f
Elizabeth Taylor . las! ,,·eek, A II
entered the hospi1al April 14
after completing his nc\v ·~
movie. "The Klansman., on
location in Oroville. ernon·s ?\1.iss Taylor rcn1ains in
seclusion at a Beverly •fills
hotel a fcv: n1ilcs a\\·ay and SPORTS\VEAR
has not visited her cstran'ged t
husband. A spokesman for the t
actress said she \\'ill le<IVC for t YIES1CUFFPl.f.ZA. BALBOAISLANO ,'·-
1'.lonte Carlo to J)<!rticipatc in a L ~~n 2l~~;~~.
Red Cross gala with Grace _ Kelly later this rnon!h. ._ _________ _,
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I
,
Mar]oe: Acting Com.es Easy
By BOB Tfl0~1AS
LOS ANGELES !AP)
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to acling. Billy Graham wouJd
make a marvelous actor. In
fa ct, he is."
pants. When he was 7, Warner
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hlm as a latter-day Shirley
Temple. Marjoe's dreams of
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when his parents turned down
the coo.tract offer.
radicalism at California State nontaxable,'' he remarked.
Univt'r'slty at San Jose, he "The company buys the
decided to lace bis sennons cher hLs i-A .. A-his \Yilh antiwar talk, portraying prea uvu . .-,, car
Christ as a revolutionary. It · and pays ell h1s expenses.
didn't work. ~ Billy Graham can uy he pays
"I was te ling them hhnself a small ·wary, but
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\Vas explaining why he had an
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can1era.
"I WAS THE wage earner in
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he said.
hear," he said. he receives." He r eturned to fire and_---~------_:_----------~-------
brimstone and believe:<t he was
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with visions of his own
tel evision show and religious
''All my life I thought of
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30. ··My training for it was the
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Marjoe continued as an
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"I never really believed what
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admitted. After a taste or
corporation.
"Tl"IAT CAN rpean big
money, because the income is
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Judy
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MS:
Stories and Photos b)' ALLISON DEERR
Of tt1e Diii¥' Pilot S!1tf
Judy Goodfield llolm lives \Vith
uncertainty.
One day she can clean her house, cook
her meals and tend her garden.
1be next, she is flat on her back Jn bed,
too v.•eak to move.
Judy is a victim of Multiple SCierosis,
a disease that strikes the ceol[al nervous
system. It Is irogressive and there is no
cure.
· "I take 00e day at a time, -that's all
yw can do," said the J4..year-old •
Fountain Valley woman. -
She was diagnosed as an lo.IS victim on
her 28th birthday, but the symptoms had
manifested themselves in her teens.
"I'd sit at a bus stop for a feYI' minutes
and y,i>en I got up my legs v.·ould
ha\'e gone completely numb. I'd fall Oat
on my face." she recalls.
"I started having prob I e m s
pronouncing words I nevrr had trouble
v.ith before_,, And . at work. I'd try to walk
through a doorway and miss by ty,·o feet
Help
Given
MS
·" Victim
-
,J ••• f ~ • I I . ' . ' •
I
e
BEA ANDERSON, Edito•
Me11t11r. Mir '· 1t1t P•t• 11
Multiple Sclerosis strik.es
young adults like Judy
Holm, who at 34
lives one dav at a time. '
Day . to Day, and Coping
-·
and run smack into the wall .
•·Sometimes one arm would go
oompletely numb. It \Vasn't so bad for
me. because I'm ambidextrous, but it
"''as frightening."
She v.•ent from doctor to doctor for
more than 10 years until one diagnosed
MS.
NO CURE
"lie told me, 'Judy, you have a rare
disease for which there is no cure. I can't
help YO!.!_.'
"What v.'OUld you do in that situation~"
Judy Goodflel<J, then single and "very
s~bbom" wouldn't settle for a diagnosis
v.ilhout hope." She went to the local MS
chapter for information and help.
'"I'hey helped quite a bit. A volunteer
came to my home · and thoroughly
explained the disease to me and made it
a lot easier to live with. .
"\\rhcn I lost my vision, they loaned me
a talking book machine (record player
\\•ith books on recordings) to listen to
books recorded for the blind and
• • • ....... l
An estimated half millim. AmericaM
ha\-e fl.fultiple Sclerosis.
In Orange County, 350 MS victims are
registered with the county chapter of the
Natklnal Multiple SClerosis Society:
"We estimate that . there are 900 to
l,000 MS victims in the county," said
fl.1argaret Sprunck, director of patient
services ..
The director kno'-''S the shock 0£ MS. A
friend 11almost like a daughter" to her
and another close friend have fl.1S. Since
1966, she has worked as an MS volunteer.
The Orange COunty chapter wa.s
organized in March ol 1970.
"MS nonnally strikes between 20 and
40," she said, "but we have had victims
as young as 14 and over 65."
The disease is a great financial burden
to families, she added. because two out
of three MS victims cannot work.
The local cha[ller "tries to make the
life of the MS ·victim u pleasant as
possible," she explained.
SERVICES PROVIDED
Services Include help with acquiring
any equi,pment such as whei!lchairs or
talking boolc!, volunteers who visit
victims to counsel or o f I c r
companlonsh!p , and annual p a t I o n t
jnfonnaUon procrams.
11A Ji\ajor problem for us," she·
asserted. 11is that the!: general public
•
'
handicapped by the Library o t
Congress," she said.
';Then , one morning, I found I couldn't
move my legs, couldn't get JUt of bed. I
called the society and they told me not to
move. Someone was over in no time with
a wheelchair."
J\IS symptoms are capricious. 11lcy
may appear at any time, without
y,•arning. in any combination.
Numbness. double vision , foot
dragging, returrent colitis, loss of
balance. pins and needles prickling, I<>$
or· coordlnation, hand tremors, 'speech·
and hearing difficulties and pain. And,
for some victims, parilysis.
Judv Holm has experienced them all,
except paralysis and hearing loss.
LJVES \\'ITll PAIN
She lives vdlh C()nstant, excruciating
pain. d:Jy and night. Son1e of the pain and
discomfort is alleviated t h r o u g h
medication .
"I take pain killers. lranquilizers and
sleeping pills ." she said. "\\1ithout the
sleeping pills I \\'Ould never slee p. Some-
ti1nes, al night, my legs v.•ill cramp up
knows nothing about Multiple Scler--
osls."
MS Society literature explains that MS
"is a disease that attacks the myelin
sheathing of the central nervous system,
destroying it in patches which arc
replaced by scar tissue that interrupts
and distorts the flow of nerve impulses.
"The resultant symptoms may or may
nor be present in all cases depending oo
the site of damage to the nervous
system."
Symptoms include p a r a l y s i s ,
nurnOOess, double vision, foot dragging,
loss oC balance, extreme weakness, piM
and ne<dles prickling, los.o o 1
coo"rdinalion. tremors and speech and
hearing difficulties.
"\\'e have had many cases diagnosed
as something olber than fl.1S, because
many of the symptoms fit other diseases
as well." the director. said.
uSpontaneous remiss ions,'' the
literature states, "are common and may
last for months or years. MS, however, is
progressive, with a series o t
unpredictable attacks. each usually
causing further disability."
RESEARCH NEEDED
AB yet, there I! no known curei no
sp*111c treatment and little Is lolown
about prevehtlon. But. some symptoms
can be alleviated by good Cltdlcal
treatmc.nL
•
and the pain is unbelievable. I couldn't
sleep without the pills."
Constant pain In her legs makes
walking any distance i m po s s l b I e .
Shopping and outings must be by
\vheelchair. At home, however, she fights
using the chair.
"l probably should be in the chair
three or four days a \veek. But, I rarely
use it more than tv.·o. I guess I'm
stubborn. ·
"I'm sup?)Sed to Jie dO\'•"D se•eral
hours a day, moi:ning and afternoon,
al .. • -so. -
A oold , she explains, can put her out of
action for t~-o months. It lingers on, and
often goes into pleurisy and can become
pneumonia.
"There's no 'such thing as just an
ordinary bug for me. My resistance, the
resistance of all tifS \'ictims, is very
weak."
Despite fl.IS, Judy finds too much in life
to enjoy to d\vell on her condition.
GOOD DAYS
"f\.fy imagination stretches too far to
be limited by MS," she said.
Research into cause and cure ol MS ta
"predicaled on the Idea that the diesease
process is most likeJy the result of a
slow-acting virus or an auto-immune
respome, or both.
···Evidence Indicates that
environmental factors play a causative
role, but genetic factors determine a
predisposition to M's."
The Natiooal MS Society has allocated
$22.~ million to research and millions
more for patient services. There are
182.000 members on 182 chapter societies
with an estimated volunteer corps of
800,000.
Sixty percent of funds raised stay with
local chapters for patient services; 40
percent goes to national research.
. ..... "We need volunteers," urged fl.1argaret
Spnmck. for the fund • raising drive be-
tween Mothers Day and Fathers Day,
May 12 to JUDe' 16.
· "We also need \'Olunteers to "'wk in
lbe chapter office and to help provide
patient servll'eS. We urgenUy need help
~1th the c1oor-t..ooor rwid drl .....
Those interested in organliing a
support auxlllary for the Orange Coonty
Chopter, joining the chapter or worlting
as volunteers can contact :
Margaret Sprunck, MS Society, 'Orange
County Chapter. 11752 Garden Grove
Blvd., No. 115, Garden Grove, CA. 92643
••call 636-2171.
Her home is immaculate. A large
bacicyard contains an ample vegetable
garden. "I have everything for 1ny salads
but lettuce. I'm letting it go to seed this
year."
Although she can only see vague
shapes and shado'\\·s now, she cooks
meals for herself and her husband,
Roland, "on good days" and makes
double batches and keeps TV dinners on
hand for days \\'hen she's too weak to "r oook. .
· .. My husband has to do tbe gr))Cery
shopping (or me. J 'm too \\·eak to run all
over the market. "But we do go out,
wheelchair and all.
"We go to ballgames although n1ast of
the time I can't tell if the field is empty
or if those ants are players. We even go
to auto shows. I can't see but I Jove the
excitement of the CJ'O\\"d, being around
people."
As you talk '\\'ith her during a long
altcrnoon, you see an occasional flicker
of sadness acroo; a usually beaming
face.
It happens ~·hen she talks about other
•
-.
!\tS \iclims, ones she's met who can't
handle it as y.·ell as she has "because I'm
so stubborn" and simply gave up.
But the cloud passes quickly, when she
thinks of the adjustments she has had to
make. She laughs about constantly
tripping over her tv.·cryear-0\d Gennan
Shepherd, Simba. a 75-pound companion
"tio likes to lie in the middle of
door.va ys.
STILL A<;TI\1E • ,._ .•.
··I had to give t1p target shooting. for
obvious reasons, "~she quips, then a litUe
sadly, "I was just getting good."
But, •·r still body surf," but only with
t\vo strong male swimmers. She bowled
in a league and only her team figured
out her problem.
Her children's paintings, hanging in
many a child's bedroom, have been
superceded by textured collages Of sea
shells.
And, she's taking guitar lessons. •·1
can't read the sheet music, of COUT"Se, so
my husband enlarges the music for me.
It's going slow, because sometimes my
fingers are numb or I'm too weak to
practice.
"When I've mastered guitar, I want to
try piano. That's a lifelong dream.."
She had to retire from her job as an
accounting clerk six years ago and is on
Social Security Total Disability. "I was
too weak to work and my vision was
getting \\"Ol'Se," she said. But she types
letters and short stories (IY.'O about her
dog have been published ) with seldom an
error.
MS victims must oontend With a
staggering walk that some mistake for
drunkenness. "Every MS victim should
wear a Medic Alert bracelet and carry
such a card in their wallet."
FEEUNG -NORMAL
It can be embarrassing she said, but
she loves to go out to dinner and
"sometimes, to dance.
"Even my husband can't believe me
sometimes. I'll limp into the restaurant
and after dinner, limp onto the dance
floor, then limp off again. But, being able
to dance makes me feel more like
normal." .
Nonnal , for Judy Goodfield Holm, was
synonymous with active, very active.
MS, she feels, has slov.·ed her down,
limited some things, but hasn't stopped
her .
{See COPING, Page l~)
•
I llll ll
•
~J~'~l _D_Al_L_V_P_IL_OT~·---------M::'..onday, May b, \q74
. '
Fro m Page 13
• • • Coping
"Of course . thtre are times,
every thr~ 1reeks or so.
when J have to have a good
cry. That's not uncommon for
~fS. It's norina.l for anyone to
get depressed once in a
'"'hile."
Outings in the park. U.!>ua:ly
!11ile Square Pitrk in fount ai n
Coles Tell
Of Troth
~tr. and ~-1rs. llo,~:ird K.
Cole ot Laguna Beat h ha \'C
announced 1he engagement of
!heir daughlt'r, Cy nth i 11
J\1arilyn Cole, lo Donald r .
\\·ard. son of :\Ir. and ~lrs.
Donald L. \\'ard, also of
Laguna Beach.
The bride-elect. a graduate
of Laguna Beach i'ligh School.
plans to allend Saddleback
College this fall. Jler fiance is
presently stationed "'ilh the
Navy in San Diego on the
U.S.S. Constellation.
The couple plan to set a date
for the wedding as soon ao; I he
groom-to-be completes h i s
Naval training.
HAtBARS
Valley, are made ~·ith her
collapsible white cane.
"I got the cane alWr an in-
cident in the park. I had tx.-en
feeding the ducks and decided
to head for the car and n'<lit
for my husband and Slmb3.
"I headed between ~-na t 1
thought were t1&c"O trash bar-
rels and suddenly the barrels
started talking. I had walked
right through a picnic.
"No\\'. I carry the cane and
the ''ague shapes and shadows
move out of my ~·ay," she
laughed.
··People mu hink rm
crazy "ilen they ·see me
nose to the ground weeding
the front yard." she said. "but
I won't let that hother me.
I'd rather people laugh than
feel sorry for me."
Whenever she's do i n ~
housework, the talking book is
on. She v:as a voracious
reader before she lost her
\•!siqn, and can"t kick the
habit.
Judy doesn't walk U1rough
the house, she charges
throu~h.
"I have a lot of bruises to
show for ii, too," she laughs,
"but I don 't have time to do
things slowly. I've got too
much lo do , too much I v.·ant
to do." -
FLOWER BASKETS FOR MOTHER
Remember Mott'ler with a basketful of gingham !lowers
that tiririQs a sptlngllke touch of coii:A"to any home
and holds your thoughts long after real llowers have
~one. Many d1llerent styles and ,colors.
Bring along this ad and save 10% olf the regular price
01$12.50 .
Also for Mott'ler; see our Gingham Shadow Boxes; ln-
doOr Gardening kils; Hand Painted Flower Pots; Hum-
mel Music Boxes; and Figurine seleciion.
Master Charge Bankamericard Courtesy gift boxes
IN COSTA MESA
2300 Harbor Center
(next to Edwards Theaters}
IN LAGUNA NIGUEL
30232 Crown Valley Mall
(next to Thrifty's)
ELECTROLYSIS MEANS A
SEAUTlf1JL HAI RLINE. OR A
S MOOTH ~OMPLEXIQN.
OR CL.EAR ARMS
AND L EGS. COME IN AND LET
US T ELL. YOU ABOUT OUR SAFE
AND GENTLE KREE METHOD OF
PERMANENTLY REMOVING
UNWANTED HAIR.
F INO OUT WHAT
ELECTROLYSIS COULD
MEAN TO vou!
ROBINSON'S
BEAUTY SALON
"""'"'"' Graduate Corsetieres Spec1allz1ng in L thru FF cups
370 E.17th St.-Costa Mesa ~
.. -~~;~~:;;.,~~
MRS. HODGEBOOM MRS. COHEN MRS. ROBERTS
Coast Ceremonies
Pledges Solemnized
HODGEBOOM-
THOMSON
r~ollovo'ing a honeymoon in
Puerto Vallarta, Jam es
ti.1ichael }fodgeboom and his
bride, the former Julie Louise
Thomson will reside in Seattle.
The daughter of '.\tr. and
~Jrs. Donald F. Thomson of
Irvine and the son of the Leo
V. Hodgebooms of Bellevue,
Wash. were married in Peek's
Family Wedding C h a p e I •
Westminster. Offit-iating "'·as
the Rev. William Powell.
Attendants were ~I i s s
\Yendc Slover, Miss Anni ck
Lubesquc. Karen Hoberson,
\Villiam Harris Jr. and D.
Steven . Thomson.
The bride gratluatcd from
Kotre Dame l-Iigtt SchooL
Alameda and attended St.
Joseph's College of Nursing.
San P'rancisco. Her husband
will graduate in June from the
University of Washington.
New Outlook
COHEN-KI RK
Ka1hcrinc Kirk and Slewart
rit Cohen \\'ere married during
ceremonies conducted In the
NeY:porte r Inn.
The bride. daughter of !he
Herbert N. Kirks of Newport
Beach, \vas altendecf! by io.lrs.
1-lenry J . Louis. Her hushand,
son of the Milton Cohens, also
of Newport Beach. asked
Michael Davenport to be his
best man.
Others attending the
ney,·!yweds were Lisa Nunls,
!\1ichelle Parizo, Patric i a
Carter, Cynthia George, Biii
Rigdon, Bill Cohen, B ob
Parizo. Jack \\'oods . and
!\lichael Davenport.
The bride is a graduate or
Corona del !\tar 11igh School
and Chapman _College.· while
her husband studied at Rancho
. A1amit os ~igh School and
Cypress College.
They will reside in Corona
dcl l\1ar.
ROBERT S-BEEBE
St. Joachim's Ca I ho 1 i c
Church, Costa i\1esa was the
setting for the double ring
nuptials linking Janet ?.tarie
Beebe and Bruce L e o n
Rcberls, both of Ne1vport
Beach.
TI1cir parents are the Leon
C. Beebes of !\forro Bay and
Mr. and r•1lrs. llarold R.
l{oberts, Fannington, N.!\t.
Of(iciant was the R e v •
Thomas Nevin.
Honor attendant! were Jana
Jllnkens and Jack 1i1cWain,
while others in the Wedding
party \\·ere ~larilyn and Glenn
Roberts, ~lrs. Eric COpe, Greg
SmoUS<!, Jeff Blackman, Bus·
ter Olsen. Richard Berg. Ron
i\ev•man and Barbara, Nancy
and Larry Beebe.
. The newlyweds · attended
Orange Coast ~tigh School. She
is a ' graduate of Newport
Harbor High School and he is
an alumnus or Farmington
High School.
Insight Credited
DEAR ANN LANDER S: l
sa>A' myself in your colunu1 a ~---/
fe>A' days ago, the child v;ilh /? ____ Q.;,·~ r--'
~1any of the \vomen told me it
1nade their lives exciting and
they really cnjOyed it a lot. the t1\·o prelty sisters and a ~ \\'ell, I'll tell you what it did
for me. It made me despise
myself and my husband ror·
bringing this ugly, rotten thing
into our lives. When I think or
v.·hat I have dont I get sick to
my stomach. I must have been
out of my mind to have agreed
to this insane set.up.
mother "'ho favored t h e
''beauties."
When I was a small child I
remember mama taking us
out for walks and always
pulling my hood down over n1y
la<:i! or wrapping a scarf
around my head so only my
eyes would show.
My sisters looked like dad 's
side of the family, all of them
blonde. b lu e-eyed and
beautiful. Once a neighbor
mentioned this to n1ama and
asked, "Who does THAT one
resemble?" Her answer cut
me like a knife. She said,
''Someone must have dropped
her on our doorstep."
I grew up thinking I was the
ugliest, most, ~"Orlhless thing
in the world. It affected
everything I did. I actually
hated to look in the mirror.
A ~'Ooderful person changc j
my life. She was my firth-
grade teacher. That wise "lady
sensed my anguish and kept
me after school one day. She
told me I was really qu.ite a
nice-looking girl, that my face
"'as "interesting" and "'hen l
grew older I "·ould probably
be considered very attracli\'e.
She asked me to st.:iy aft er
school frtquenlly to ''help
her." We had many talks and
I can truthfully say that \vise
Healeys
Tell Troth
• Costa ti.1esa fligh School
graduates Linda Gail Healey
and Norman D. Young are
planning to be married Aug. 31
in St. Andrew 's Presbyterian
Church, Newport Beach.
The affianced pair, who also
attended Orange Coast Col-
lege, are the daughter and son
of Costa Mesa residents l\lr.
and Mrs. ~fichael Healey, Mrs.
ti.1arie Young and the late Mr.
Donald Young.
and generous lady gave me a
truly ne\\' outlook on life.
1 hope all teachers
evety"vhere "'ill read this
letter carcfu\1}1, It will give
them some insight into the
importance of kindness and
emotional support to the less
attractive student. God bless
~1iss B .• \\·hercver she is.-
GR 0 W N UP ANO
GRATEFUL
DEAR GRATEFUL: Thank
you for a bea utiful letter. Has
it ever occun:ed io you to
make an effort to locate Miss
B. and tell her what she did
for you? I hope the woman ls
still Jhrlng. It's so much nlctr
"'hen you ca n gi\'e flo~·ers to a
person ~·ho can smell them.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A
year ago my husband asked·
me to join a club called "WS
Unlimited." J~e heard about it
at "'ork and knew three
members. lie said it would
help add zest to our marriage
and he \\'as very enthusiastic
about it.
I am filing for divorce and I
hope to God I never again see
another member ol WS!
Unltd., man or woman, as long
as I live. -SHMIEF ACED
IN MANHATIAN
DEAR S.F., About I I ve
yea.rt ago when 1 Unt started
to rettive letters about such
clubs I found It bard &o belle\·e
they actually edited. Then
several couples wrote joittt
letters telling me lt'bat a shot
in the arm It had given tbelr
marria ges. I came &o tbt
conclusion that they were
bonkers and 1 told them so.
Thanks for your testimonial,
dear. Now that you ha ve
scraped the scum off yoanelf
I wish you tuck In making a
new life.
After the first meeting I gotl-;::=========~I the idea. It ,\·as a \Vire.I '
Swapping group. I hated the
ldea from the beginning but
decided to go along with it
because it was so in1portant to
him. The people were creepy.
MOTHHS:
Ii SAfl..-tlOT SOllY!
SWIMWSOMS ·--··°""""·---~· ... Ir.., Off '-"MTHIS Al
VIRGO SWIM SCHOOL
17141 U6-Z550
EX.TEND YOUR LIFE
EXTEND YOUR ARM
BLOOD PRESSURE CHECK
FREE!
in
Girar d 's
Beauty
Coll ege
SPECIAL
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY
HUNTINGTON BEACH
TOMORROW, MAY 7th
HARBOUR VIEW ELEMENTARY
4343 Pickwick Circle
7 P.M. 'Ill 9 P.M.
DAYS FOR
SPECIALS
.Girard 's
Bea uty
College
---•---
~MWAYE
Styh~11 mcludes
flair cut. Shampoo
' >nd Set. a.,_ Sll,00
"""" s7so :: .. TUU!
---•---
COLOR DAY
Any color-cl'\o1ce •
in Rouk Product
~·W/ahamooo & set
....... '5
••try WID.
3021 So. lrlslol, Santa Ana
t /10 Mia. W. of So. c ... t P1n• 1-40.0667 SS6-ttJO
' -All wor\ dOM tllf ._. .. Al •~ ..,..,,.11H1 .., litttnic:Hn.
I •
A Public Service from
Huntington Beach
Rotary Club and •• Orange County Heart Association
Your Horoscope Tomo rrow
Aquarius on the Go
TUESDAY
MAY 7
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 191:
Accent Is on ''higher
teaming," travel. spec i a I
corrm>0ndenct. writing and
advertising. SPotlight t h e
unique. Find different wayi, of
presenting product -and
yourself.
TAURUS (April 20.May 201:
Money. costs, investments are
featured. Partner or mate
plays -significant role.
Inventories, expenditures, tax
write-offs a r e considered.
Contract can be revised.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Finish rather than begin -
find where you stand and "'hat
current situaUon means lo
your future. 'Aggressive
associate does have your best
interests at heart.
~ANCE R (June 21.July 221 '
Vitallty returns. You make
in1pressive nev.· con tac t s.
Bring forth c re at Ive
resources. Show that you can
handle task ~·hlch co-v.·orker
fumbled. Keep resolutions
concerning diet, health and
"·ork.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221:
Good lunar aspect coincides
now with romance, change,
variety. Your int u i t ive
intellect is sharply honed. You
gain by following hunch.
VIRGO IAug. 23.&(>t. 221:
Stick to the practicai. Build
solid structure. Older: family
member sOOuld be given
chance to express \rje1,., Be
flexible enough to rP.v1f.C plan
that Is nimsy.
lJBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22l:
Spotlight is on out.o(-v.•ay
places. Find what you 1leed by
making inquiries. Throw aside
false pride. By stating your
needs, they can be fulfilled.
Short trip brings surprise -of
pleasant variety.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Ideas ronceming I n c o m e ,
rmanclal security are
highlighted. You can make -l----------
1Jl<l(l]Mes' oI\d ·ooum valuable I rl-=----------...., informalion. Key i. .U> take WE'VE MOVED! Initial Step. (-
SAG!TI ARIUS (~. 22-l\.:::11!1. KNIT 'N
Dec. 21): Lunar cy<ie Is such STITCH· that you feel more like do ing
things and going places. You HOW AT: .
are encouraged by attitude or 1810 Monrov ia Ave.
famil y member. Your timing l-.ldOl!llj,
improves. L-.l!IUlQ,Q'si~ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ~-
191 : Look behind the scenes. SPECIAL SALE
Cooperate with spec i a I I 001 OFF project involving char I t y 10
which benefits hospital or .!:!.. ':f' ..... ,~.
institution . See situations ,
individuals in light of rea lity. CU
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 40°/o OFF
18): Money. achievement and P.tchwcwti-W..,.IMJ.
emotional satisfaction can be ....
featured. Friend s bl p is 10 rt. MoRo C.•••
transformed into mcaningfull Foctor., Sec: ...
relationship. Efforts b r Jn g JUST ••• $2.00 yd.!·
solid results. · HElDLIPOt.lP
. P ISCES \Feb. 19-~1erch 201: flHISH IMG!
You receive backing; one who KMf• ld9f' 'S 14
has confidence in you say~. in PILLOW ......... .
('ffect. ''show your stuff.'' l\ry lox ~ S 18
is confidence. Ac t in MU.!.~~~
authoritative manner. Vievr \ LJ::;;;;;;;=o;;o::;....d..J
from the top will be pleasi ng.
petma~ ......
short story: the cut
/
HARIOR SHOrl'l~G ClHTER
COSTA MESA
for Appl. 549--0757
short story: the color
both long on appla11sel
· ~r"'P,ixle" short cut enlivens
your appearilnce. And so cloes
our M!ss Roux hal1colorlng.
Covers the gray. Brightens
'the cl11ll sltands w!lh
n.atu11l looklng color and
lustJe. And conditions
·as It colors. Quick, too · ·-..:.1 reany shOf'I slDry rQ
you1 llalftolor sur.~ss:
"''Ct) :;;.'~ . ...
t .75
Now
IMAlllPOU·lM M•tRCOlORIMl:O
875
~rumJOOJffi[ labrlc sav1nus
GIVE YOUR MOM A MERCHANOISE
GIFT CERTIFICATE
FAMOUS DAN RIVER
•HOYA FANCIES
Beautiful machine washable polyester/cotton blends
from Dan River Mills. Plaid~ and fancy weaves you 'll
love !or Spring and Summe1. 44'./45" w ide.
REGULAR $1.69 YO . SAVE .42 YARO
127 yd .
cool Summer sewing
AIRLAWN PRINTS
SHEER VOILE PRINTS
-NATURAL FLOCK FANCIES
JACQUARD PRINTS
KNIT SOLIDS & FANCIES
44"/54" Wi a£
ALL ARE MACHINE WASHABLE
Colloni, Polye§ter/Cotton & Rayon blends.
J49d Y ..
J69 yd.
2 29 yd.
298
yd.
298 yd.
GIFTS FOR MOTHER
SAVE 25 3 ON ALL @ _--....
SEWING
BASKETS
Our entire huge se1ectlon of all sizes
5h1pes 1nd colors are included in this
special $ale for Mother's Day .
SPECIAL VALUE I
ELECTRIC SCISSORS
Stronq and dofable Traum Eleclric
Scisso r s No . 60, ~pec1a!ly p11ced,
'REG . $5.99 Pa"' SAVE $2 .02 Pa;, . 3~Z
II HOUSE OF F~BRICS
• always fir st qualit y f abrics ..... ......
IJlfl ........ ..._.,.,_.~
,, .. tl41
(
HOMr ,,na
11 .... -
Sonto AM-543°5551
lwllO P'ri Ct..t"' lo, __ ,_
lut"nO P'ork-12f·6l2)
•• . ,
1 ' ' •
' .,
' '
~ I t I l
MIXED SINGLES . .,
~00MeR,1lll'3 oou.
I'M wmt IM~IH
,-.,-... \ <SAi~ A WOil!> !
11ll1NK
11U. 6ET
AJO~
MUTT AND JEFF
. . -...
"'' NANCY
!WON A
GRAMMAR
CONTEST
AT SCHOOL
TODAY
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Packs
<>own
noise
~2 Backed
'-into -
t1ghtlv ~4 F ea1ed
6 Worl!. g1eaUy
rnonoton-!>B Luminous
ously bodies
10 Seafood S9 Qperalic
14 lo pieces heroine
15 Veino! Ofe 61 Conlan"lef
16 S1ockfr'lgs 62 ···---.
17 Commercial Brute! ..
ship 63 Austrattan
18 Ulilizes 1ree N
19 Dog in 64 Gleek
S1turdlly's Puul• Solve(!.
T H
"The Thin philosopher Man.. SS RespechYe 9 Forsaker ol connicts
'20 Prison Abbr a du!y 38 USSR's first
irmate 66 E · . 10 Auto premier
22 Assemblage dit~r 5 assembly 39 Duplicates
24 "It was . 67 ~~~e 1 I Feminine ol orig1na1
·--ShOw-nickname records
26 Vertical boy t2 Famous fur •2 Ripslnlo
slaif pans DOWN lrader pieces 2
27 Olscemmenl I Fine· 13 Edible words
JO Numerical gra11ied seeds 43 Great lake
prefix m11'181'al 2 1 Swlndle 46 Beetle
31 Grandparen1al 2 Puerto 23 Forelatl1ers . 32 PeepshOw Rican 25 Sludlers of 4 7 Raises
2 words plant books 48 Having less
31'Sportscaster 3 •••• Acl 27 Coarse dignity ~-· Atten 1910 hOminy 49 Bnel and
38 Guides U S. 28 Declare severe
40 The Anar legisla1 1on poslllvely 50 Negallve .c 1 Dissented 4 Succeed 29 ····Alto: contrac11ons
43 In surplus 5 Zobra CaUI. cily 53 Revelfy
44 Adjechve loalure 33 Superfluous 55 Curse
suffix &. Weallhy 34 Hold by 56 H VI'
45 Crudeness one law enry s
48 Smog: 2 1 ••• 35 MIM COll~e
words ,t.ngeies yietds 57-'Say "No ..
5 1 Hors.ey 8 Poems 36 Anned 60 Jahn · · -
I
-. .. l
,,., .. flLO• ,-, •
DOOLEY'S WORLD by ROCJB Bradfield • --------GOOD! l'D
APPRECIMTE ~
IT 1F YOU'D ·
KNOCK OFF
l SOMEHO'N. :r 1l<OU61<1" rr
W0111:$D A Ul'rl$
DIFF~Rl'NT~Y ·
'THAN nlAT
l
lll~ MUSIC ;;:;.,,..~
Dr. SMOCK
I M16HT
WANT 10 Rl:flRE. ' ! SOMEPAY l
OH,
YES,
SIR., t DO!
by Al Smith
GOOOIO.K.,JERRY.PRJNT
2.000 • IF JEFF CAN
UNDERSTAND THIS THEN
EVERYBOO CAN!
~
l
'
GORDO
~-C lt"' ----~ ---
by Emie Bushllliller ANIMAL CRACKERS
GRAMMAR'?'?--
·! THOUGHT
YOU SAJD
GLAMOUR
PEAllUTS
H!Rf'SJOE
COOL HAN61N6
l.r'~r>l--l AA<X!NO THE DORM-~
">'~~ ,,,,_ .-~~/--
JUDGE PARKER
UPSET WHEN SHE I Pl6COVERS TI-IAT •
5AM !<.NOWS A&0Uf
I HER CAL.L FROM .. ;, STRANO'S' 8ROTHE'R, }1'!' ::· ••
J'EAN CALV1"1, 1NSl5T5
ON TAKING A CAB
~ACK TO HER
HOTEL!
l/_"'11Qt0 JD / 1'~~~
MISS PEACH
DICK TRACY
~ y
. I OOPE 'I00
HAili> FUN
\Olll\.E t srr
HERl=IAIJ.. DIJ.J.
• by Charles M. Schulz
JOf COOl ALW~'IS KEEl'S
UP W!Tl-l THE .t.ATE5T
CAMPtl5 FADS ...
...
..,------..-..
ANO WHAT'S 'THE
LATEST CAMPUS FAD 1
.----------. I PROMISE TM.AT I'll. NOT
MENTION ANOTHER WORD
A&OUT EJtNIE STRAND.'
STREAK/NG.~lf
by Harold Le Dowe
SAM, I OOJ"l'T WANT YOU
INTERFERING WITH WHAT
I HAVE TO 00.'
by Mell
A~TH~lr, WHAT i<IND OF LAWYEI:
DO YOIA EYflt HOPE: TO EJ#CCME:, 1F
YOt.< 1(£,P ~AYIN6 TH11'14'S UKf :
~o~ Youc 1NFO(MA1'iON 1
I 1NflNO TO EJE:COME A-
CHILOlrfN'S i AWYfl( .•.
''Oltl'U~ POiL•"'T1;• AND
'NOl.O &A"1DON·P~I I'• •
I
TillS (;EAA C:AH
PIM-POINT
SIGMAl.$,OtSTANCE,
OtRECTION
AHO ELEVATION.
._,I 1 j
'i..~ · ... '-:: -'
by Chester Gould
by GeoNJe Lemont
by Gus Arriola
17 J
MAY
.SIXTH!
FULJ.-
MOON
70Nl6J./Tf
by Ferd Johnson
J:>ON 1T YoU GliT AW
Bl'!IGHT JD!;t>.5,
MooN MU\.~INS f
THE GIRLS
5~ '"~
\ • •
"I'll be rirht back-I Wl'nt to check with Mrs. BentJ1 ..... and
see how she's 1ettinr aloaa: with the boys.'"
DENNIS THE MENACE
'Ma.WILSl»IS4'1'S IF '!000. GET OIJTA 1llE SACK llflfH'IOlfl!f:·
s'FOSEO 'IO, I v.ooum ~~ 10 ~ ~sr ...._ ____ _. i..:........,....-~..,,___, ~ 1fl NEIGll!CQS.'
•
S1nitl1 Gets
18-4 Vault;
Allii1 Leacl s
LO~G BF.1\Cll -Steve Smith, the
v.·orld indoor rerord hold<'r in the pole
vault , soared 18-4 Sunday in a pole
vault cxhibilion aflrr the Long Be:i,,1
Jn\·italionat !rack met>!.
Smi!h. "ilo no\1' com~t~ n'"Oression-
nlly. made 17-0 on hi;; fir51 try, 17..t
oo his 1hird trt· .ind lll-4 on his third
trial. lie rnisscd· !hr{'{' attcmPI!'! at IU1l.
\li"hie:h 1rould ha\'c lied !he 11:orld outdoor
record unoffici:il\y.
tn the meet. .Jerry Proctor long_
jumped 2;).91 1 and Gary Ord1\·av "·on
1tlC discu~ at 197-t r?.:-·Ocld Dupree
·triple jumped 5{}-91 1 and Don Quarrie of
Jam:iica voon the 100 in 9.5 nnd the 220
in 20.9. •
. Jim Bo!dni(i ran th<.' 440 intermediate
hurdles in 49.8.
e .. -tllin Siii/ llol
DALLAS -After a Jl:..rnonth tour as
an artillt'ry officer in Vielnnm. Budd~·
Allin can't ,qt't too excited nvC'r a day's
postponemrnt in the S\50,000 Byron
Nrlson Golf Cl;tssie.
Tho. 29.ycar-old Allin was the leader
going into todny's final round of the
NC'lson \\'i!h a 12 under p..1.r 201 total. just
one stroke ahead of Homero Blancas.
e Clu1ppell 10 WTT
Bob Chappell, UC Irvine's defending
l\CAA college di vision tennis singles
chainpion. has signed a one-year contract
,1 i1h the Pittsburgh TrianJ?,les of \\'orld
Team Tennis for an undisclosed bonus.
C.'llappc\1 \\'ill join the tenm in Boston
Thursdav and will be under the guidance
of Ken· Hosc11·a\l, coach-player of the
'I'rif...ig!rs.
e T1111udis Die~
Ni\SHVll:.LE, Tenn . Fonnrr
Brooklvn•, Dodgers hurlt•r Vito C.
Tan1utis. 62. died of a hea rt ailment
Sunday at a Vct er:ins Administration
Hospital.
Tamulis. a nath·c of Cambridge, ~ta ss.,
pitched for 1he Dodgers during the 1938,
1939 and 19~0 seasons.
e Johnson 1fhu
TOKYO -Americans finished 1-2 in
the \1·omen's 100-m~ter dash in the
annual All-.Japan invitation track and
n.·td 111ect today.
Fornier San Clemente resident Patty
Johnson u·on in I 1.9 seconds and Janice
\\'iscr \\':tS runnen.ip in 12.0.
The 13-ve ar-old J\1iss \l,'iser also
ro111pctcd 'in the 400-meter dash and
placed Sl'l'Olld in a n1ect record 54.9.
1\t"uko Arin1 iz u of Japan iron in 5-1 .~.
e 1l ;;fec.< Fl!I
LOS ANGELES -Doug J\lci\.lillan
scored 11\·ice on pa sses from Uri Bon-
hoffcr to give the Los Angeles Atecs a
2·1 victory over the Seattle Sounders as
/he professional North American Soccer
League opened play in Los Angeles Sun-
~y. .
Si;.;1ecn fouls "·ere tissessed against
Stallle <Jnd tYt'O Los Angeles players left
"·ith in1uries in the game before an
announced crou·d of 4.107.
r~lsewhcre in the league Baltimore
nicked \'isiting New York. 3·2 : Denver
lo;;t at Toronto, 3-2: and San Jose turned
b11ck visiting Vancou\•er. 2-1. on a
tit·brcakcr.
e 1fl/111rd Trnded
RICl-lr-.tOND, Va . -The San Francisco
4!)crs of the National 1-~ootbaU League
have rradcd veteran running back Ken
\\'illard to the St. Louis Cardinals, the
Richn1ond News Leader reported today.
The JlC\\'spapcr said it had not learned
n•hether olher players "'ere involved in
U1c deal.
\~'illard. 30. a fnrmer star at l'.1orth
Carolina, has been in the NFL nine
seasons.
e Ro.<e1 c11ll IJ~set
COLmlBUS. Ga. -Californian Jeff
Bomv.·iak needed only 65 minutes Sunday
to defeat lotrseeded Ken Roseu•all of
Aus1ralla 6-1. 7·S in the finals of a $16,500
pro tenn is tourney at the Green Island
Country Club.
...
ANGELS CATCHER ELLIE RODRIGUES MAKES PLAY AT THIRD.
After ll'eekend s,,,eep
D.oivntroddeii_Dodgers
At Montreal Tonight
PJllLADELPHIA t.\Pl -Pinc-hhillC'r
f\fike Rogodzinski has a theory about
batting against ac~ Los Angel~ Dodgers
reliever l\fike ~larshall : ·•Just · don 't
suing the b.1t."
Batting against i\lar~h<itl fo r only the
second time in tlis short major league
career. Rogodzin,;;ki \ralkNI. on four
pitches to force in the 1\·inning run in the
hils 3-2 victory O\'Cr the Dodgers
Sunday.
Andy i\lesscrsmith. 2--0, pitch<"s for the
Dodgers tonight "'hPn they O[>('n a three
g::ime serie, at Montreal.
Rogodzinski. "'ho also "·alkcd in his
only other ai-baJ against ?-.larshall.
re\'eaicd he had the green light to S\vi.ng:
on a 3·0 pitch 11'ith t1ro out in the ninth
inning. but he took the cnicial pitch .
"It had the plate,·· said the Phils
batter. "It \Vas right over the corner of
the plate, but I kne\V it "·as too high.''
Plate umpire Ni ck Colosi contributed to
the drama by hesitating before calling
the pitch a ball. "I didn't kno\1' if he'd
give it to me," Rogodzinsk.i said. "I kne\\'
it 11•as high but I get lo hit once every
Flyers i11 Finals
Tha1iks to Pare11t
PflTLADELPlfiA (,\Pl -There is an
automobile bumper sticker that reads:
"Only the Lord saves n1ore than Bernie
Pa rent."
The New York R-angers will buy that.
Parent and veteran c:arv Domhocfer
keyed a 4-3 victory for the. Philadelphia
Flyers over th e R:ingers Sunday to
advance to the finals of the National
Hockey League Stanley Cup playoffs
against the Boston Bruins.
"Parent is a grC'at goalie," said
Rangers coach Emile Francis. "He was
the differenre in the r·1yers season."
New York 's Pete Stemkou'Ski offered
this lribute to the Philadelphia goalie:
"Parent robbed us. lie robbed Park.
myself. \Vall Tka czuk. Roel Gilbert and
probably a couple I didn 't notice that
.,.,·ell.''
t1•:0 \tix"ks and T \1·ouldn'I hal'e griped if
he hnd 1nisS('d i'."
Entering the ninth inning. it appea red
tt~ere \las nn \1ay 1he Phils 11'0ttld su'ttp
!heir thrcc-ga1ne 1\·eekend set \\'ith the
Dnd.J!ers. LA'llha1lder Tonuny John had a
2·1 lead on a four-hitter and appeared
strong.
But i\tike Schmidt OPt•ned l\'ilh a singln
Dodgers Sl111e
AH G•mts Oft IU.IC C7,0) l.'ey I LOI Angelts II Montrtll At~y 1 Loi Anoele• •I Mlll'l!re1I ;,lay I L'» Ar>gtlf'S 11 Mlll'll•e'1
J r.m. J p.m.
J p .....
to center, bringing up slugger Grrg
Luzinski. At this point. Phils 1nanagcr
Danny Ozark used the clement of
surprise by trying the hit-and-run u·i1h
Luzins ki. lie fouled the first pilch off ond
then came right back \\'ith a bunt.
John, u•ho suffered his first loss aftrr
fh·e straight victories. fielded the hall.
bul both second baseman oa,·e Lopes
and shortstop Bull Russell tried to cover
second.
TI1e result "·as a \\'ild ihro\v .:ind the
Phillies had l\\'O base runners.
Bill Robinson's sacrifice moved bo!h
runll('rs up and pinchhitter Del l:nscr
Y.'DS "'alkcd to load the b.1ses.
Tonuny Hutton u·orked the rount full.
!hen V.'al kcd to force in the lying run. "It
was a close pitch." Hutton admitlt'<I.
"but it \\'as a little in!iide." Bob BOOlle
popped 10 flrst for the second out but
!\like i\ta rshall \\1alked Rogodzinski on
fourt pitches.
L05 ANGELES PH ILAOEL,-HlA
Lecy, to
Mota.DI'!
Paciorft, If
Buck"''' II W'/11n. cf
Garver. lb
WCrawl(trO, rl
McMullen, pl\
LOPft, lb
Cey, lb
F.,.lll/Klll, c
Runetl, ss
John, p
Marshall, p
tb , "rttl
• 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
' 0 ; 1 l 0 0 0 s 0 1 0
3 1 0 0
I 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
' 0 I 0 ] 0 0 0
l 1 I l
3 0 1 0
0 0 0 0
DC/lrJ>.1b
8owa. '' Scl'lnikl!, lb
Lu1lnskl, If
Hnr"'°", Pf' BRobini.on. cf
MAncleri.on, rf u .. ~. Pl!
Mlll'l!l...,l, lb
Gro1<w11, pr
HIJ!!M, lb
817.0f'e. c
Ru!hYf11, I> TT,.ylor, pl\
Vla!t, D
Sc•rce. 1>
R!Jd71'1~i, 1)1'1
Totals 33 2 1 2 To!al\
Two out ~" Wll'lfllng nm St(tri!IO.
•II • l!rlll
' 0 0 0
' 1 2 0 3 1 1 I
' 0 0 0 0 I o O
J 0 0 0
J 0 l 0
0 0 0 0
l 0 1 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 I
J 0 0 0
' 0 0 0 I 0 O O
0 0 o D
0 0 0 D
0 0 0 1
JO l s l
LOS Ato9t>IH 010 010 000-'
P1'118delohft 000 ODI 002-]
E'-LUllMl<I, John. LO&--l.Gs Angel"' n, Pllllld1t-
plti1 1. 18-8ow1 2, Jo""'· SB-Wmn, c:>r1blrk-ll:,
811Ckner. S-John. Mot•, 8 . ROftl11ilOt'I. SF-Scl'tmld!.
I,. M Ill •1t aa 10
Jl)hn (L, 5-ll I S l I I 1
Mar$1\1U 21l o o o l o
RutllvM 16??'' W8!1 ;;3 1 O O ? I
sc~rce iw. J.21 J/J o a o o
PB-Fer11uson. T-': •. A-'0.0~0
Yugoslavia i11 Cup Wi11s
By The Associated Press
Nikki PiliC'. ~·ho passed up the start of
the professional \Yorld Team Tennis
~cason in lhe United States lo play Da1'iS
Cup lennis ins!ead, helped )'ugoslavia
p.1st Belgium in a European 7..one match
Sunday.
Pilic scored :t 2' ~-hour 7-~. 8·G. 3-fi, 6-2
1 ictory over Patrick lton1hcrgrn thal
clinC'hcd )'ugoslavi:fs Cup s-eries OV('r
Jeli:ium. 3-2.
Elscv.'hC'rc. Spain and West Germany
a1h·arK."'«i ton fourth round confrontation.
Spain completed a S-{l ~·cep over
1\'orn'BY getting singles vic1ories fro1n
~fanl1el Orontei; and .Jose Higuera5.
OrantM. Spain's No I player, defeated
11mrval Moc 6·3. 6-1. 6-1. and ll iguerns
dispooed or Per Hegna 6-3, 6-3, 6-3.
\\1es1 Gennany also s"·cpt, flniiihing off
DenmArk \\rllh two stngles 1'1('tori('S
~undoy. Jucrgcn Fassbender defeated
I ianish junior champion Finn Chrtsttni;rn
6-1. M . ff.I ltnd Karl Meiler camr b.·1t·k
Ii> bent Knud Erik Nielsen 1-6, 7-5, 6-1. 6·
I
Japan but had clinched the Eastern Zone
semifinal by \\'inning the first three
matches. Shashi i\·lenon of India beat
Kiyoshi Tanabe 6-2. 6-2. 6-2 and then
Tashiro &lkai gnvc Japan its only
victory, defeating Jasjit Singh, 4-6, 6-3 , S-
2. fi-3.
Tony Roche and Colin Dibley "'On a
marathon doubles 1natch. defeating
lfaroon Rah.in1 and Saed J\1cer to clinch
Australia's E2stcn1 Zone final berth over
Pakistan. The Aussies v.·on the match 20-
18. IH. 6·3.
After 1he doubles victory, which gave
Australia an unbeatahle 3-t edge in the
best-of.five test. Australia's nonplaying
captain, Neale Fraser, ordered the flnnl
t'A'O singles matches forfeited to
Pakistao, mriking the final score 3-2. The
ploy gl\'es thr Au ssies an axtra day to
prepare for the 1.one finals against lndin.
1\ustrin V.'on its European Zone test,
clin1lnalini.: NC\\' 7..ealand when Peter
Pokorny defcatec1 Jeff Simpson 6-1, &-2, 9-
11. 6·3
'
'
Surging Angels, Tribe
Open ~attle at Big A
...
It 11·outd ha\•e taken a calculator to add
u1> 1he heroes for the California Angels
Sund:ty.
For openers. you could start \\'Ith D.'ll'r
thalk, Torn J\fcCrav.' and Dick Scln1a.
Chalk 's one-out homer in the nin th
inning off Baltimore's •Grant Jackson
provided the streaking Ang els "'ilh theil'
sixth straight triumph, a come-rrom-
behind S-7 decision over thc..Jhlinping
Birds.
~tcCra\1', u·hose appearance in the
lillCUp has coincided 11·ilh the six-J?an1e
su rge, continued his torrid hitting.
C<lllecting three hits in four tries. twlcr
tying up the jlame v.·ith l\\'O-OUI singles in
the sixrti and eighth innings .
Selo1a. rescuing a \\'Obbly Nolan Ryfln
11·hen Baltimore scored t~·ice to take a i ·
5 lend in the seventh inning, firl'd three
hitless rounds at the Orioles to earn the
victory.
The Angels today find then1selves only
one-half gan1e behind Texas . in the
A1neriran League West and their "'inning
streak Is the longest since Bobby \\1inkles
inherited the job as n1anager last year.
A fl er completing a series s\1•cep of
Ballimore for the first time since 1963,
California tries to keep it going tonight
when the Cleveland Indians arrive for a
three-game set.
Bill Stoneman, 1-1. \\•ill throw for the
Angels against the Tribe's Fritz Peter-
son. 1--0.
"That 11·as the most exciting moment
of my career," the rookie Chalk bubbled
after his game-11·inning homer. the fourth
of the game by the Angels, y:ho accosted
thrt'e Baltimore pitchers for 14 safeties.
"But," he added \Vith a u•ry smile, "I
expect there'll be n1ore to come.''
r.Hckcy-U.ivers. Bobby Valentine. and
Frank Robinson' also homered· for the
Angels "·ho battled back from a 4-1
BALTIMORE CALl,OlllNLA
loumcrv. ti'
Co;.11•ros, d
C."cn. JC
J~o,·:cll, 1~
TQa,•I" dl'I
Hel'dr.C'•· e
811.0tll~son, 3C
Re-~b\OCl'I, rl
Bl~"· er
l'!l•na~r. •1
Mctoflly, tt
Ale-<•nder, 1>
GJackK<n. p
~c r h,._,
t o o Rivers, cl
• 2 I 0 Ch,ol~, •S
• I 1 I V1lt n!;r>1', U
5 o I l Flloojro.oo" an
2 l O O ROliv.,.., rt
l 0 I 0 MNtlll~, rt
J 1 l O Alo<Mr,pt)
1 1 1 o Sch,o,ol, ltt
0 O O 0 /,\cCrew, lo
J o I J Ell!o•~t, c
O O 0 0 l~l'l<>lld. cl
o O o O OOoylr. 1b
O O 0 0 Nllvan,p
Stl....,, p
Torals :l'l 7 I s Total\
One ovr wnen Winni~ run s~ed.
111 r hrltl s 1 2 2 s 1 1 r
• ' l 1 J J 2 I l 0 l 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
• 0 l 1
• 0 3 1
l 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
l 1 I 0
0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0
31 11'1
lalHmo•t 110 001 ?CC-r
(~lolo-noa 100 m 111-.
E-R. Oliver, N Ryafl. OP-8~11imor! J. (~111or.
nia 2. LOB-B•lt•mort h, Cdli!ornie 5. 2B-Rein1>1cn.
Oela..cer, R!Yert. Grich, J; Po-11. 0 . Ooyle HR-
Rivero (I), V1l°"'ll"" !I). F. RobirtSOfl 1!1, Chai~ (1).
!>B-Grlch. S---B. RD01"30n, T. Oavis. Sel.tn!;t'f, Alo.
"''" • Mci'lJTIV A!e-"".d~r c;, J4C~~ {l, l·J)
N ltYI"
~~,....., !W, 1·11
.-BP-by N, 11.Ytn
1.JI, A-11,12l,
1"' H If Ell! 19 SO s I 4 o 1
1 ) 3 ' 1 lll 1 1 ! 1
6 • , •
:!000 11
(Gr!clll. W"'-Alextnd~. T~·
deficit to hand Baltimore it s fifth
st raight selb.Jck.
Since bt1ing insrrltd into till' li11C'up.
Angel< .'ilv.le
All OllMI tn l(MPC t710!
1'-tY 6 (levtl•nd 11 An&llt•m May 1 Clevtl•nd 11 An~'·""'
"-IY • (levtltl'l<I I! AnAh.e!"1 l.'.!>r 10 11 .. 1"Ms Cl!r 11 An,1nelm
I '.I ~ m.
1 ' t "" I }I p.m. ; __ , p.m.
liicCra\\' has harl'cstt'd 13 hits in :!2 ilt-
bats for a .591 average.
"I'm disciplined enough right 1101\' to
wnit for 1ny pitt h <ind I\·r been forlunate
io gl't t>t~tter. \Vc\·e g~t .gC?1 kids -
"O!hcr1\·isc l c:in 't t•~pln1n 11.
··This is a good club." he continu~d
· \\\>rl' :1 ronlrndl'r flO\V but \1·c'rc ,coin~
to gl't bcllt'r. \Vc've got good ki~~ -
likr Hll'crs :ind Chalk prO\'t..'l'.I today.
'fhe one disrouragin~ asprct for lh c
Angels \1•as Ryan 's ine(feclivcness. lie is
3-3 for the y!'a r b11t his Elt~ is SAO. .
"I think he's over1hrow1ng and Lry1ng
too hard ," said \\'111kles. "!!e's no!
relaxed." ----
BUCKS COACH LARRY COSTELLO REACTS IN NBA TEST. ..
Milwaukee Defense Does It
BOSTO:-.' (1\P) -The ~1il\\·aukc>e
Bucks. noted for their might~· offense.
ialked of de(ensc and the defensi\'e-
minded Boston Celtics spoke of offcn.sc as
!he 11ro teams headed for ~-filwaukec and
the fifth game of tht>ir sho\\lio11·n for the
~ational Basketball Assoc i al ion
championship.
"Our defense \\'as a lot better. but I
expected ii to be as \\'e went along."
l\'lil"·aukee coach Larry Costello sa id
Sunday after the Bucks evened the best·
of-seven series 2-2 wi th a 97~ victory.
"We broke do\\'Tl offensively." Boston
captain John Havlicek sa id. "We didn't
have real good rhythm. Maybe 1>.'e were
cutting the u.TOng ~·ay. They played real
good defense, but "'e u·ere standing
around and being hesitant."
Costello, looking ahead to ~ay
night's game, turned to an old clidle in
saying "No1>.· it's a three-game series."
The victciry regained the home court
advantage for the Bucks, but neither
llavlicek nor Afil'A'auktt veteran Oscar
Robertson placed much emphasis on
that.
"Sure. this gives them the home court
•advantage. but \\'e iron in i\·li]~·aukec and
11·e \\'Oil t11·0 games in i'\eu• York i.n 1hc
Eastern Division finals," ~lavlicek s::iid.
"The home court just isn't that big a
deal."
''There's no advnnta~e at this point
wi!h t\\'O teams like this." Robertson
said . "What dOC's the home court mean
\Ve've splil t1>.o gan1PS in ~til11•aukee and
tu·o in Boston already.''
Costello pulled a surprise in the fourth ·
game in a move desisncd to break
through Boston's full-court press. He
started &-foot·7 J\1ick£'y Davis, nonnally a
forward, in the backcourt wit h
Robertson.
"The change he!P£'d us a lot .'' Costello
said. ''We had a taller team and 1>.'e also
had ITJQt'e player po\rer. \Ve figured that
at the \'Cf)' least it \\Wld . create
problems for the1n .
';Then. of course. ~·c had John
McGlocklin bade '.liow u·e're able to rest
people. l'vlcClocklin is still hurting. hut
he 's able to play."
Davis played 28 minutes and
contributed 15 points. eight in !he rirst
period. McGlocklin. playing 1vith his ·---------
injured leg hl·a\·1ly !aped. ~:i"· 22 1ninu1r.~
of :1c11011, sronnt: 10 prunt•
,\., ll,u;il. Karl'C'H :\1idul.,Jabh:ir ltd !h•
Bucks 1rith 3~ points. Boh Dandridge t11t
for 21 and flobcrl son 1'1. llavliet'k .'lr..-1
Da\'e Cri1•;ens lopJX'(I Bo~ton 'A'ilh 3J and
24. respectively.
The Rucks jun1p..""<1 to il 14-6 lead. bt1t
the Celtics ca1nc bark and the ad1·an1.1ce
seesa1ol'cd. Then . \\'ilh drfens1\'f" a('('-!)(111
Chancy on the bench ll'ith lhrrr. fouls. th"
Bucks out-scored Bost on 15·2 in a serond
f!Uartcr burst for a 49.39 halfiilne lend.
"That \\'as the big par1 of 1hc i:?an1e,
u·hrn Chaney picked up his third foul "
Boston coach Tom1ny llelnsohn said
"Ho"ever. ,1·e hung in !here and had a
couple of shots at them in the set'OOd
half. 111cn lhcy got !he lead back up 10
and they're awfull~· tough to catch i~
situations like that."
I-lei~sohn sumn1cd up evcr}lhtng \1hrn
he said :
"The.\' be.:it us. They pla~·ffi a suprr
ball gan1e. but 11·e 11ercn·1 mo,·inp,
offensively like 11e should. Thrv got thl·
shots and they mad(' them . \\'e thrc11 !hr
ball . a11ay a C<lllplc of time s. \\'c \rerc
getting shots. but not setting good picks
\Ve v.•ercn't moving .'' ·
The Celtil'S, \\'ho hit on only 36 of 811 noor shots compar1~d to l\1ih.,•aukce·s :.ia o:r 76, .closed t~ "'ithin tv.·o PoinL<; live
times 1n the third period before Abdul-
Jabbar cashed. a thrcc-poinl play iust before the buzzer. ·
The ~ucks maint ained their Pose the ~st of the \1'ay and lhe Celtics were
unable fo gc~ closer thrin three poinls in
the final period.
Mllwau1o.re
OM"'
l'l'ltle<f Oii!: 8011(111 ,,
,._; lS.310.
Brohan1er llon1c
Former 1-funtlngton Reach 1! i g b
lxiseball star Ja<'k Brohan1er and 1.
Cleveland Indians tca1n1nntes arc \11
Orange C:ottnty tonlgl~t IA> ht>gln l'i thrt·:
game s;r1es at Anaheim Stndlum agains~
the C8llfoml11 Angels.
Brohamer h11d .11 h&nt1 in Cleveland 's g..
3. nigh1cap victory ai O~klt1nd SutKlay lo
give the ln1tlan~ 11 split nfter dropp ' • the first game, 2-0. ing lndla and Australia 11lso advanccfl and
"111 m@t"t in the next round.
lndw. spin 11s final 1~·0 ma1 chc' 'A1lh
111C victorv mQved Austria into tht!:
rhird round Of Cup play for !he first time
1n 38 yt•ars. The Austrians will next n1eet
f"rnnet . KENTUCKY DERBY CLEANUP AFTERMATH FROM A CROWD OF 166,000.
lie doubled and 111\nglf'.ld for one rbl nlld
$cored 1 .... ·~t In Clivrland 's triumph
I • " I
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"' . . .. . . . . . . . .
Checkered
Flag
WITH HOWARD L. HANDY
. . ~
\
nus Is the \VCek they begin the fan1ed Indianapolis J\:Jotor
Speedway celebration that culminates with the A-lcmorlal Day
-weekend ~mile USAC championship race.
Practice runs began today at the Indy track and at leas t
three Orange Coast area drivers wi ll be on hand to lest thei r vehicles.
, Rich Muther of Laguna Beach is perhaps the most ent husias·
tic or the group. He departed by automobile with his \\'ife Tues·
day nig ht. TI1e car (No .• '51) was built for him in Costa A>tesa.
Jim Wri ght of The Engine Shop ·in Costa Mesa will be
Rkk's cre\v chief at Indy and after ridf's in cars that have
been less than championship caliber. the Luguna Beach driver
feels he has hi t the top this ti1nc and is looking forv•ard to an
outstanding ride.
nlfl/tler Drives for tfoods
John J\1ahler o( Newport Beach, wil l be driving a t.:1r ·he
hasn't been In and figures to go with the pack aad nnisb in
the top five U possible rather lhan making an all-out run at
the flrst 1pol.
1\1ahler signed to drive for Roy \Yood s and will ha\'e tv.·o
<'ars at bis disposal. One is a l\1cLaren an11d the other Is an
J::agle driven by oa,·Jd llobbli last year.
• ~ '
lll11 1\1.11 O I I DAILY PILOr J
C11111111it1gs Wins
ICCC Golf Title
Tom Cun1m1ni::s drfi::t!rd
Gene Hon:ilcl on thr third
extra J1ole to 1dn the mrn·s
club cha111pkinship al lr1 inr;o
Coast Country Club.
Other fli ght \\.inn f' r s
iT)("!UdC!d Dick llfrnu1n ::n l'r
Ken Hartninn in the X£>\\'IJOrt
flight: David \':ilc11t1n~ O\er
Chuck Heidebrink in lh\·
Balboa flight : rind H1·u1·c
Cllson O\('r Forres! Sn1i1:1 111
1hc ch<11npionshi1> consol<lt111n
flight f
1\11xl big even1 at Irvin~
is J\lav 22 11·hen the I 11/J :111-
nual Pro-am is staged .
,'Jn11ttt 1'11tt·
Bo \\leaver and Dr. Bill
Kincannon reached the finals
of the president's cup com-
pc1ilion lost \l'eek.
f\f;1ury Zerbrugge of San
Francisco to post a 66 score.
'fht nC'v• desert ooursc Is
ov.·ned by Arnold Poilrner.
In a low net tourn<iment for
the \1·01n1•n's club at l•'ountain
\'ulll'y \Iii\' &1urire Go 1 r
Course. llele11 L)oy!e \\"as the 1\
flight \\'inner 1~ith i'.?. Tied at
i.1 \11~rc ).l arilyn li<1rt. Jiu!
).large ln~erSoll.
l\ohh1e \\'ebb y,·ofi 1' fi ight
\I Jth 66, (olJO\YCd by Jean
Ca-;tor :111d llamac \Vhite at
73: Carolyne \\'est at i6; and a
tie bet\vecn Pauline Anderson,
L..1Combe at iS.
It Is qulle poisJble tbal 1\1ahler "111 have another Ne"'port READY FOR INDY -Lagu na Beach's Rick J\oluther driven by Lee Brayton, was prepared in Costa ~lcsa
Beacb n!Sldent, Graham 1\tcRae, as a teammate. stands beside the car he will drive in the Indianapo-and shipped to Indy Wedri'esday. Practice runs be-
\Vea\·er d c f e a t c d Jack
\\'ilder and Kincannon "on
o\·er Dr. Ned Khor cy to g:un
the title match.
June Duncan captured C
fl ight 11•i!h 71. fn!IO\\'ed by
Sally Lcsho at 75. Bernice
Covev at 76 and !l tie between Jt1nc.~lorton. Elvcta Ross and
Charlotte Small at 77.
!{osc ).tiller v.·on 0 fl ight.
\\ ith .68. Dee [){'e :\1cClelland
.ind .Jo \Voodbury lied for
~eeond at 71, followed by
Billye J\lcyer and Doroth y
:O.lurr;iy at 75 and Dorothy
Fitzmaurice at 76.
Mahler was Instrumental In ge tting 1\fcHae to n1ove to New· lis 500 this month. Muther's car along with th e one gan today.
port and w:ltb f\\'O curs at his disposal, he ntlgbt just talk \\1oods --• "'--------''---'------
Into putting J\1eRae in the other.
Grn11t Kee11• !iflme Ride
Jerry Grant or Irvine \\'ill return to Indy in the car he
drove lo third place at Ontario earlier this year.
Peterson~
' Rustlers Face LACC Lefty
ln the Augusta flight it w:is
Dr. John Abrilh:in1 the \\·inner
O\·cr Ed Ethel! for the title .
Hartley Spears and \\1<1!11•
Bennett \viii 1necl for tile
Baltusrol flight cro"11 .... -
Lily Diamond \VOn F. Oight
Ba rbara Anders-0n and Nevar
1\·ith 74 and 7..ora Benac v.·as
lhe n1nnerup at 76.
It is the car assignOO to Lee Kunzman but lhe latter hasn "t
recovered sufficiently from a broken neck fo ge t clearance for
driving nt Indy. -
Grant was happy with lhe \\'ay the .car handled at Onta rio
and feels he can do even better al lndv.
Blalieley
Honored
In Playoff Ganie Tuesday Sent•liff
Handy Karcher rind P:iu1
~lorro of Huntington Seat lif£
Country Club in Huntington
Beach won the betler ball of
partners I o u r n a m en t at
1\>leado\\·lark Golf Course re-
cently.
191/1. 'Hole
Four Orange Coast area
\\'Omen golfers are an1ong the
!O\\' handicap participants in
the \Vomen·s So u thern
California Golf Associatio n
lgumament ~to be s)aged at
fo\Jr desert courses TuesdaY"
and \Vednesday.
"I had trouble in the tum'li but ihat \1i1l be srraightencd out
(or Indy," Grant promised follo1ving the Ontario event.
Golden \Vest College's Curl
Peterson and Gord!ln Blakeley
Of course, the pre-race•favortlc, Robby Unser, , ..... 111 be drlv· have earned first team .be.rt~s
_ing l?r ano~e~Ot:ange Co_!1nt~an, Dan Gurney. on the All-Southern Cal~r;tia
lllss nrove• '" .l\'em .Slnb/e
Unser was the \\'Inner al OntariO-and It will be tough to Conferenct! baseball team,
beat him at Indy If be get.I Up front early ln tbe race. · selected by the c i r c u i t
l\1ike mu o( Tustin ha1 signed with a dllfercnt OY.'Der at · coaches. .
Indy , Dvlng J\tuther h11 chance with \Vrlgbt's crew. Peterson. a sophomore. '\'as
llls1 was movlrig up well wben he bit something on the sel~c.tcd to the flr sl base
track and puctured a fuel ttne. He had moved from 33rd to position and Blakcle~· \ra'i
!!ixtb place "·hen he was forced to the sidelines and !\1uthrr honored at s h or t st op .
feels be can do "·ell •·Ith the same car, barring the un expected . PC'lers-On. also ·th e Ru s1lers'
lop pit cher. battC'd .338 in
r on fer enc e play \l'hi!e
Blakeley hit at a .38'2 clip. Klug of Ifill 1Cei11Slflled
On the area scene. big cro\vds continue to invade the Ornage
County Fairgrounds for tho weekly Friday night motorcycle
races.
Promoter llarry Oxley has reinstated the popular King of
the .Hill match race competition, and most of lhe riders and
fans heartily approve.
At El Toro Speed...,·ay, A. J. 1\-Ioscerl announces the re-
turn of the CRA full midgets on a ooce-a·month basis.
The midgets will nm FMday nigbt for the first Urn e '"iUt
return dates on Juile 14, J uly Jt, Aug. 16 and Sept. 13.
Orange County International Racewa y is open every wee:k·
t'nd for bracket racing with olhcr races interspersed throughout
the sumn1er n1on ths. -
Ron "Slt>l'py" Tripp of Cost.a Mesa recently bent his VW
racer Jn a se nsational fli p at Chula Vista. lie was seriously in·
jured and is back at the track in a brand new Red Caruthers
bu.ill midget. ~le won hi5 fin;t race on return lo the track.
Grey Egerton of Costa hfesa has en tered a three-litre
Porsche Carrera in the Laguha SCca's !\lay ~1-12 .triple crown
of rocing.
0111nrio .Set.• T1co Et•e1116
The final race In the 197-1 \\'inst-On Cup grand nation""al
cbampion!ibip series will be staged at Ontarlo'"J.lolor Spe,dway
No\'. 24 and ~·ill be sponsortd by the Times.
The $120,000. SOO-mile slock car roce y,•ill be run on the
2.>-mil eoval course. Cale Yarborough and RJcbard Petly are
currently In a close battle for the series lead with Bobby Alli -
son. David Pearson and Donnie Allison rollowlng In that order.
Next e\•ent al Ontario Mi lhe GT challenge series 1\tay 18-19,
ironctJoned by lhe International J\1olor Sports AssocLaUoo.
J\1ore than 100 entries are expected for tbe Le J\fans·t\•pe
series or endurance e\'ents. Night racing with only the c3rs'
headlights used for illumination, "'ill make Its SOuU:iem Cali·
fornia debut during lbe weekend. ---------
Peterson y,•as named tri-
pla)'~r of the year along \\'ith
pitchers Rod Jett fC}·pressl
and Frank Sandoval (Los
Angeles CC).
Golden West third baseman
J\Uke Sanchez, outfi elder Gary
North and ~Pitcher P a t
Espinoza w~ selected to
second team btrths.
Catcher Jetfy R r o w n ,
second baseman Bill \\lhitC'lcy.
outfielder Randy ~fills and
pitcher Ed Orozco \V e re
accorded honorable ment ion.
Atl·k C•t COll,.r.nct
-Nnl Tttm
l"CK. !"layer COUl'ff
C-Bllt Pr•ll>ff. Cyl!'r$J
1 a-c1>11 P11~. owe
'B-Ron Sml11'1. LA.Ce
J&.--Frt:d Zimmerm.11.
Yr. Av9.
So. ,.l09
So. .JM
So. ...01
CYPl'ftl So. ·,~
SS-Gonion at1k1l1y, owe so. .ltl
OF-G1ry Browning, eyprtH So. .•05
OF-Oavld Arnota. Ute S.O. .435
OF-Ktn Hl1t,.1r, Rio Hl!flclO So. .194
Utll.-Alal! Oibon. eypr111 Fr. .1'1
P-Rod Jtll. (y.,r.11 Fr. 7·1
P-F<ank S1ndova!, LA.CC So. 1·3
P-Og.ug TllOmplOr\,
Rio Hoo!lo Fr.
St<cw:r T11rn
C-S!tv11 Alon10, R1o Hondo So.
18-Vi...:;I Murr1y, Ell! LA So.
?B-Otnnl1 Mul'>O.l, Rio Hondo So.
JI -Mika 11r•d11r. owe so.
SS-Olt l! 8r1d1h1w, SMCC So.
Ol"-01ry NDl"lh, owe Fr.
0F-R1ck Oomll!Quet, LACC So.
OF-O•lt Emmtr, SMCC Fr.
U!ll,-Mlkl All.,,. H1rtior So.
-~•I e1,i1101•, owe So.
P-Bob C•rroll, E•lt LA So.
P-Jlm Fox. ('fprtsJ So.
••
By CRAIG SHEFF
01 tht D•llv Piiot 51111
Golden \Vest Co 11 e g e 's
baseball team is"tloping that
old line abou t the third .time
being a charJTI_Will comC tn,1_e
Tuesday.
That's when coach Fred
11oover·s Rustlers face Los
Angeles City College at Golden
\Vest (2:301 in a Southern
• Califoniia Conference playoff
I ill.
1'he '''inner advances to a
S.1turday COtlfrontation against
Cypress to determine \vhich
learn \Vi ll advonce 10 the stale
playoffs. All three tied for the
SoCal title 11•ith 13-5 records.
The Rustlers s o u n d I y
trounced LAcc·s Cubs. 13-4 . in
a first round conference game,
but were not as fortunate in
the next two rounds -mainly
because of Cubs pitcher Frank
Sando\·al.
He tx-at Golden \\'est bv 5-3
and 5-2 scores -and ·both
tunes his victim \vas Curt
Peterson.
The t,1·0 left-handers are
expected to face each other a
thi rd tin1e Tuesday.
They are as different as
night and day.
Sandoval is a crafty pi1cher
\vho relies on his off-speed
stuff \.vhiie Peterson is lhe
o\·erpo\vering type.
Peterson is also one or the
Rustlers· leading hitters with
a .323 season average.
Other starters for l he
Rust lers Tuesdav \1·i1h their
season averages ·include:
Ciltcher -Jack Hudson
(.2251: first base -~1ike
Kiefer (.286l: second base -
Dill \\lliteley (.360); thi rd
base -A-li ke Sanchez (.326);
shortstop -Gordon Blakeley
(3~31; left fie ld -Gary North
NOW Baseball Standings
YOU CAN LEASE AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
\V J, Pel. GB
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East w GB
'74 VOLVO
164 4 DR.
Ne""' York JS 12 .556
Detroit 12 12 .500 I 1.'..
Cleveland 12 13 .480 2
Boltimor~ l t 12 .47B 2
Afil\\'aUkee JO JI .476 2
Boslon 11 15 .423 J\:
St. Louis
Philadelphia
i\lontreal
Chicaqo
Ne\v York
Pitt.-:burgh
14
13
JO
9
10
8
L
12
12
JO
13
15
14
Pct.
.538
.520
.500
.41!9
.400
.3&1
'I
I
3
3'1
4
Automatic. air cond ., 6
cyli nder, genuine leath er
1nter1or. steel radial tires.
Safety-Economy-luxury.
For only
MO.
•
WE HAVE ONLY
* 15 * 74 TOYOTAS LEFT
AT THE OLD PRICES!
CM• 111 ~w crnd SA Vf
•
AtM. TOTOT.4 OWN~S
MOl!fti of M.y Speclol
$ 7 5 0
DISCOU•T
.. _...........'" .... ····"·--~ WITHTHll AD
Texns
Angels
Chicago
Oa kland
,\'llnnesota
Kansas City
\\'est
15 10
15 11
12 II
12 13
l l 12
10 14
Slllldl't'I keftt
lt•f'I , ... &o!;lon J.IO MlnnHO" t. Dtrrou 3 ClllCIVO 4, Mllw•uklil 3 Kan'las City I, New York 2 01kl1nd l.J, Cttvel&l'ld M C•tlfornl1 I, l 1lltmor1 7
T11titflt't o.-
.600
.577 ul
.522 2
.400 3
.478 3
.417 4~~
e111c1t0 1,ttrtnotkl M J •' Detroit (Co1«n.n s-11
New York !Tldrow I~) 11 T••I• 1Cl'f1)9 I.O f CJtvel•nd {Plf'1'!IOll Ml I f C1lllon1l1 C$ton•
m111 l·I)
B1lllmott !Cllelllr 1).3) 11 01kJ11'1d tLlf>l:lblld l·ll Onty Nme1 Kl>t<!Ule<I
futl4••'•
Nlw Yl'll'k •I lt\•I (ftltotqO ~I Otl!rOll Ml11Mt0Ta a1 MllwtukH Cl,Ylltllld •I e11110<.,(I
!11i!lrn(lrt •• Ollkland Only tln'IM KMC!ulcf
Dodgers
11ouston
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Atlanta
San Diego
\Ve!it
18 9
17 11
12 11
14 13
13 14
12 16
S111Mf1Y'• Scor.t
.667
.607
.522
.Jl9
.481
.429
$1" 01'90 ,S.4, New Vorlt ._., 2nd t ll'nl 10 ll'lnl1>9'
A!l1nta J, Plll1burgh 2
Pl'llltd•lphl• l, Los Al!Qtl•t 1
S•n FrantlfCO ~..,. Mon••••I 0·1 Clnch1111ll 5. Cl'l!c;,go l
SI. LOUii 3. HOUUCll 1
Tfllltttl'• 0.lllft
S11! Dle9o IJ:r-.51!lbfll 2.(t) •I Phll«ltlohi•
!C1rllOt1 2·2J S•n F'rtncl•co. lBryanl 0·11 al New Yor• (S11vtt 1-
" LO\ ,.npoltt (Mn,~rm'l'th '·0) 111 M.intrc.il (/Jl(A.,•llY 1.J) Onlv g1me1 Kheduled
TIH.0.r'• Glmts
AU.inta •t Cftltll<)O lan D!too •I Pllll.o@lrihla I. LOUii 11 Clndnn111I LO\ /tr'l&Jtl II Monl•ff1 S1n Frt ncllCO 11 N•w York
Plt11bllroh •I Hou11c11
(.277); ce nter field -Craig
Kennedy (.227 ); and right field
-Randy Mill s (.385).
and NOrth have hit safely in
lhe last 12 ti lts.
Blakeley recently broke the
Golden West rbi record 1,1,·ith
\\lestminster. is the third his 39th \\'hile NortJi is the all-
Golden \Vest catcher to b<! . ·
Hudson. a freshman from
usCd this seas'on. The othei -i ime one-season scoring leader
t .... ·o -Jerry Brown and Bren! with 39. He olso has · nine
Partridge -have been steals to top the club.
sidelined with injuries. Hudson J\tills has probably been the
has also played third base. biggest surprise for the
first base, the outfi eld and Rustlers this season. l~e ·s
pilched for the Rustlers this been the most consistent hitter
season. and leads the team with a .38.l
\\lhiteley is another one that average. And he hit over .400
was not a sta rter \vhen the in conference play.
season began. He replaced the Golden \Vesl also has lhe top
injured Rod Brown at second reli ef specialist in t he
base nin_e games ago and has conference in Pat Espinoza. a
been so hot with the bat sophomore right-hander who
Brown can't get back in the has appeared in 2J games this
lineup. season and 43 in two years.
\'lhiteley carries a nine· Espinoza has an S..2 mark
game hitting streak into this year with six saves and a
Tuesday's game while Sanchei 2.74 e.r.!l.
. . Karcher and ~lorro ifnii~cd .
eight under par. postin g
birdjcs on five of the last si x
holes.
The Seacliff duo \Vasn't in
contention until the final hole
when Karcher sank a 2S.foot
putt froin off !he green to win
the event by one stroke .
~fi le Sq1u1re
Skip \Vhitt ct, head
professional a! Fount a in
Valley f\1ile Square Go I I
Course, \\'as a member of the
winning foursome in a helter
ball of partner's event at
Ironwood Country Club of
Palm Springs last J\1onday.
\Vhitte t playe<:I with John
Ru~y of San Diego. J\1ike
Hoed.inc of rronwood and
FORD COURIER
lncluded i/1 the list or 42
entries ...,·ith handicaps of 10...
or-less. are Dee Dee \\'bite.
club champion nt Irvine Coast ,
CC and Ann Teel. !itle holder
at El Niguel CC. both \\•ith six
handicaps.
Also in the top bracket 11•i1h
nine hand icaps are Conni4'
Kinzie of Santa Ana C€ and
!\trs. Frank J=>addock ot ~tesa
Verde .
The 16th annual desert event
\\'ill be played in fou r classes
with the top players at
Tamarisk and Indian \Velis.
Others \viii play at Shadow
ti to1mtain and Be r mu da
Dunes. '
..• the gutsy little pickup
•
from the No.1 truck
dealers .
When ybu're No. l in trucks (see be·
low), yo u don't sell just any s mall truck.
Ford Courier's rugged frame has box-
section rails a nd 7 •.• yes, 7 •.. cross-
members . Its big 74.5 in. x 62.2 in. steel
box is all v1el ded. An Inde pe ndent front
.suspension features big coil springs and
a stab ilizer bar. Double-acting s hocks a re
s tandard, fr ont and rear. The re are long,
wide 6-teaf rear springs. The trans mis-
sion's a fully synchronized 4-speed. And
you ge t all this in a pickup with a comfort-
ably roomy cab ove r a long, ride-smooth-
ing 104.3-l nch wheelbase.
.... ....
Sou•c• ~ I.. flo" " Co 11o••tt•!lo" '''"'''·
c:o11"11l1tl" l1aatrthlO •~•'a !''''' p1rlod.
'
4·cyl1nder 1800·cc. engine has
Rluminum alloy head ... 5 main
bearings tor rigidity, &lrength.
Deluxe bok cover with ita
11nte<l slde windows is a
popular option. Others:
automa1 te transmission .
air conditioner.
Courier shown with optional
striping. wheel covers and
mirrors.
S11ap-down bed liner option ol
dur11ble lndoor·OU!door material
ollers carpeted comfort
See your local Ford bealer
FORD COURIER
FORD DIVISION
-
,.-~J~8~_D_Al_L_Y_P_IL_D_T _________ M;,.ond:.:::•::>·:..;M1y b, 1974
• • • • What's Doing
Outdoors
Major
League
Leaders
Control Big Factor Th• Harbor Ar•a'• Newe1t
' SUBARU
• •
JIM NIEMIEC For Tritons' Janton Dealer
•
Factory Authorized Sales & Service
Specializing In All
European Car Repairs
,. ~ Fishing is sho\\'ing grent s1g1l'i of coming alive as the sum·
,_: n1cr season arriYl'S, \\'Jlh both salt and rresh Y.ater anglers
' enjoying fair to good fi shing. r-Iay is usually lhti· kickoff month
• for Southern Californla anglers and th.i s year \\'as no exception.
1'he first annual Los Angeles rtams-Garcia fishing touma-
;._ ment "'as held last \\'CCk at Punto Colorado, Baja California
C,: and featured Jla1ns linemen l\lcrlin Olsen and Bill Nelson.
The pair of hea\'Y\\'Cighls joined other anglers from Orange
~: County lo test the big game fish of the Sea of Cortez. On the ,_
first round the Sou1 hl1Jnd pros scored many times by landing
{ marlin, roost erf1sh. ~nd dolphin plus many other exotic big
; i:ame fish found at the Ca~. • Olsen <.ind Nelson n1atchcd fishing skills \Vith llov•ard Ashby,
Jim Johnson , Jim Corbell and other big game anglers. E\·en
though light tackle "'as used during the touniament, fish rron1
Baja fini shed in last place. 'l'he majority or fish hooked and
landed during the three-day event .,.,·ere released to test the
angling skills of other Rains players in years to come.
Top angler of the tourna1nent v•as Odie Lockhard of Hun-
tington Beach \l'ho landed the most fish, while Dr. Leo Peale,
11!so of Orange County, \\'as a1rardcd the conservation av;ard
for releasing, unharntcd , the most game fish.
Fishing was reported as slo1v prior to the starf of the con-
test, but as the sun rose acrGSS lhe Sea of Cortez on the first
day, the patlern 1\'as set. Billf ish n1oved into the area belv.'een
Rancho Buena Vista and the Cape and good fishing 1ras enjoyed
throughout lhc derby.
Anglers v.·ho 11ave made arrangements to visit the resorts
along Baja's coastline are in store for excellent angling for at
least the next five months. Live bait and trolled fl yers are
equally productive, but there is a strong indicalion that many
big marlin and swordfish \.\·HI be taken. on jigs this season.
Yello1cs Cr11isi11g l\'ate rs
Big yello\\'S are cruising the waters around San Diego and
sail \li'ater anglers sh-Ou.Id prepare for a good bite to develop
any day. Look for a mi>:ture of big and littJe goldentaHs to
show up in fi sh co unts.
As the .".a.l'r in Jbe channel v.·arms up those kelp patties
should be pl'oductive fo r ~ev.·port Harbor anglers se<1uling the
'\t'aters between Dana Point and Catalina Island. '
.,'ellows art!: v.·orking bait at bo\b·outer islartd!l. but as yet
bave not moved in close enough to. \li·ork the chum lines of party
boats. F'air to good calico bass action is on tap on v.·eekend
trips to the islands, but barracuda and bonito are li sted as un·
coope1111ive. /\lost catches consist of lots of bottom fish with
a few surface feeders' brought to ga ff early in the morning.
lltfif 1•/e11lif11/ in Aretf
As reported last \l'eek . expecta!ions for a good yea r are
shared by most \'Cleran skippers. Large schools of bait fish
are spread throughout the outer channels as registered on the
fish meters of boats making an early morning crossings.
Cold l¥e al/1er Greets A11glers
Late season snow faUs have put the damper on trout anglers
in the high co untry lakes, but hea \•ily stocked roadside screams
and lakes are awaiting fre sh ~·ater fishermen in all of California.
1\lcGee Bay on popular Lake Crowley will not open to the
) public until Saturday, but the rest of the rainbow troat lake is
' open to fishing. Lakes at higher elevations in the lligb Sierras
are notJce free, but should be rtady for l\temorial Day cro"'·ds.
Big Bea r Lake is producing some nice slringers of trout
to 2'il pounds. but limilis are not the rule as nm-ofJ has kept
·water tcn1peralure a bit on the cool side.
lleavy v.·eckl y trout plants at Southland lakes are respon·
sible for continu ed good ca tch reports. Check with your favorite
lake Ht least once a \li'eek to find out1 the hot spots and "1ilen
plan ts are being made. Both Irvine and Anaheim lakes are oow
open and close by for Orange countians.
lllfss 011 Biting Spree
i1ost C\'ery Jake in Southern California is now reporting a
consistent good bite on bass during early morning and late
eveniilg hours: Surface plugs arc productive as are spinner
bails and \l"Onns. Fish are now in the shallows and hitting
most anything tossed near heavy cover.
Channel catrish are also being caught on cut bait and v.·orms
v.ith Irvine, }fcnsht11v. \'ail and \Vohlford reporting hot action
in 12 to 15 feet of i,rater oYer v.·ceds. \Vohlford kicked out a 12·
pound cat last wee k as ,1·ct1 as a Junker 14 ~4-!Xlund bass taken
by Ed Steiner of Spring Valley.
New Look
For Elims
AMl•IC•N LEAGUE 11\Tft,.G !j S Jt b.t!SI -C4•t'W· Min. .'°2t A ft<lo.•Ol'I• 01~. . 31 0: V11lflen11kl, Bsn .• bl: Grl!!ln, lbn,
.l~!J~tfll:!l":: 1~~11.~'. Otk, XI; 0 ,
Ntl1on, TIA. IJ;G. Nertl1s. NV, 111 M~vbflr<v. occ1 !I_; 81ndo, O•k. 11. RUNS ~•II' Ev IN -A Jtckson,
Otk. 11' G Net!le1, NY, 16; BurrOVQll,•,· T1~. "; Solk••i. Cit. 201 llrl~•· M ,
201 Hl,le, Ml11, ~. HIT -ctr-Ml.,, II; R J8Cktof!, o .. \ JI: Roi••· i(c. ].I; SPl ~ltl. (It .:)); ll.1>11 C'ltk ll. DOUBLES -Ru<ll, Otk, II; He•l'f,
KC. 'I MCll•e. KC, I ; flurrOU!ln~. Te•. I; Gr c~. Bal, 1; Y1t!r1tmtkl. Bsn, 1;
Ctr,,... Min. 11 A. Jackwi:o, Otk. 1, lll!OLES -wt>lte. NY, 1; Garrlt , Mi!, J, Vlltnllne, C1I, J; Rlvt rs, Cit,
3·H'l]!~;eKiu~s -G. Nettt.s, NV, 11;
It J1c•1.P11, Oak, 101 Y1s1rz""1kl, B,n,
6. VI. Horton, Dtl, 6: Buir-ns, lt~.
1'sTOLEN BASES -Ptltk. KC. 11 ; Aiv11t•. (t i. I : Wot11ford. ICC.. I ; Lo~nlltl", Cit, 1: Nortll, O•I<, I; R, J~'"'""• o .. 1c. '' o Nt!""" Te•. 1 PITCH ING ll Oetl1lon1l -Hllltr,
Ot•. 3·0, 10.00, O S9 Jt flklnf' Tt• ... 1 • . 1s1: 1.U Colt m•"· oer. ~, ,13J. l.lS Me<ilcl. NV, ~-1. .Ill, 3.$0 G. Perry,
(le, •·11 .100. I.II OCatl. C.hl, l-1, .IOO. ~ 61 F>N1lr1, O•k, J-1. .7$0 J,0. s1ot!l1myr1. NY, ,.,, ,M,, J.00.
STRIKEOUTS -N. Av•n, C.11, 51: 81,ltvtn, Min. •5; G. Perrv, Cit, '1; Binb~. KC. 11; Jen1cln1. l••· 'l. NATIOHAL LEAGUE 8ATl lN'i 145 ~·bit<\ -Rtllt, SIL,
.380; R. Sml!ll, SIL, .)U; G•O£s, Hin,
J.~I ; Gert, AU .. lS5: Grubt>. SO. ·™· RUNS -Brock. S!L 26: Cedeno. Htn. 1lf 80.,<h, SF. 'l3; loot•. LA, 10; A. Sm•!~, S!L, 19; Wvnn. LA, l~; M~cklO•, SFi..19. Rllt<S 81\1 TEO IN -(ldfl)n. Ht.,, 251 R. Sm!Th, SIL, 21; T. Ptrer. Cln, 231
L M~v. Hin. 27; Ger,,...v. LA, 11. HITS -Garr. AU, 39 ; MtdOO•, SF, J9; R. Smit!>. SIL, ll; Reotr, S!L, 3$;
8•"<~, S!L. 36. OOU8LES -Concepc!on, Cl", 11;
Rcat, Cln, 9; Simmons, S1L, t ; Ctdeno, "'f'ii.~~LGF.•s~~. c:..-. 1An, ]; Gt•MilM. C!n, J; AuneU, LA, J; 8Md1, SF, l;
11 Tl~ Wilt> 2. HOME RUNS -H. A1ron, A!I, 1, T. Pertr, Cln, 11 Garvey, LA, 7; Wvnn,
LA. 1; Htbntt. Peil>, ,, R. Sm!ln, SIL.
'·STOLEN BASES -Brocl<. StL. 11; Cedeno. Htn, 15; L~. LA. JI;
Moroan, (In. 12; ISciwa, Phi, 9; E.
Hernt.,df1, SO, 9.
Pl1CH1NG (] Oecl1lon•l -KOOMINI"· NY, ).0, 1.000, 2.Jt Jolln, LA. S-1,
1..\11 (1t<1w•ll. SF. S·l. .Ill. 2.0S Roott1. Min. l·l, .800. l.29 BIHl.,9n1m, Cln, t ·I,
.aoo. l.CIJ BrlWtf'. LA. ,.,, .&00, J.00
Mltlack. NY, 3-!. ,HO. l.3' McGlotl.en,
Stkr~·1'iee~5fiTt'1:... St•ver. NV. "4.; K~mln, NY, 12; P. Nl"ro, SIL, '2;
Meutrsmlth, U , 36; (lrt!on, Piii, 35.
Deep Sea
Fisl1 Report
JV Baseball
Scont b'f IMilllll ' ' . Edison 001 700 0-.1 7 1
Coron• GDO 000 G-0 2 1 IEdl1on'$ l!ori Wein onched • Two. l\lner. slrlklno D<ll 11 •. w1lkll'l<I thrH.l
By HANK WESCH
01 1119 Dlllf ,.Itel lleff
The 14th annual \Vest Coast
~latch Game Eliminations at
Kona Lanes in Costa ~fesa "'ill
have a new look this year.
says tournament director Dick
Stoeflfer.
He's on the
Daily Pilot team • • •
The bov•ling classic. which
begins to.fa y 20. "ill be
sho rtened by three \\'eeks.
eocompassing 11 t.f on da y
nights and concluding Aug. 26.
The ne\li· format \\'ill include
fi ve-ga me blocks in the fivc-
wcek qualifying round. instead
of the four games per night in
the past. Another major
change includes cutting the
starting field to 32 following
the qua lifying instea d of to 60
for the semifinals.
Art Jackson. Jr. of Lomita
will defend his cha1npionshlp.
Wo111 e11's Tennis
'°"'*" c111torrtle Wtm111'1
l11t1~9''"41!1 Tl""'' Lt"ll9
CMmpl ... 1h!•1
Fl111l1
Sll!Clltt Urtd1~v No••e !UCI\ d~I Lindt Le"'11 !UCLA) .. 1. t 3.
OOllbltl Fortlll LiMhlY Mont.Jtl" N1cnt nd !UCl l de< #lfVI LAbt0111·0C1r"' R,1.,., (ttl '>11~ s~" Durool •-6. '1. ,., F•n•I k1m 1l•naln.i1 · 1 ur1 nn 1
UCLA Cl•I 3. ~'" 01"° Stt!t (13)
•. USC Utl J. C1I Stftt fl.Al 11.
JOE CARLOS
PLUMllHG CO.
lit "IQ 11 ~1 -548-5558
1675 Suoonor
Co~ta Mosa
a,,t«e!Mftf ..... °"!' SP.f"cic.Hy
''fw A Wett'f' H.crt"°. A Kil·
chH .,. A letti lfl Styh: -
-4 For •rat Qwlck Str•lct
(j.j'yp "'JM " A DMI"
.~.
... ·--: .• ::-:-.:::-
~ ....... -·· ·---.. ·-···
HAHKWESCH
High school a1hltit1c fields ore his
beat. Honk is orioiher ot !he Doily
Pilot'!. staff of profe~sionol sports
writers who con\'..entrotes on bringing
1'bi g league" coverage to locol
event5. Both in his column ond on
assignments covering specific Khool5
ond evenb. he brin95 fon5 (who ore
somerinie5 moms and dads of loc:ol
othleres) fcxe 10 foce with I~ facts,
fig ures and photos of the
competi1i11e .world in whic h their
"lo 'IOrile sons" function.
• • • Best in the league for -
Orange Coast sports news
DAILY PILOT
•
LEASE A '74 610
WAGON $99.89 mo.
• Ti•36fl'I0.0(.L.
COST A MESA DATSUH
2145 HA•IOl IL VD. C.M.
§40:6410
Harbor View Subaru
The H"~~~.~.1 ~~ •• w~·i,1~A! 8-·-;
shop for the young ••• and the young at t\ • ..-
hear1• I , 1-~
COME IN-REGISTER FOR OUR
llG ORA WIMG -V ALUAILE PRIZES
adidas
OUR SHELVES
ARE LOADED
WITH 1000s
OF PAIRS!
WE HAVE
THE LARGEST
SELECTION OF
ADIDAS
IH
SOUTHE•M
GALIFO•Hl.4
t; ;. .,
' '-:'
Goodrich presents another race from the
"Goodrich Rad ial Challenge Series" .• ,
.ONTARIO ·. -~~'V~~
MAY 18 ·-~::~
Guaranteed by Goodrich
for 40,000 miles. Its strengrb
and durabil ity come from
th e steel bell cushioned between
two double Dynocor> rayon cord
be lls, for your driving comfort.
And the-Lifesaver<' Radial
Steel R/S helps save gos, too.
.. 0,000 mll• 9uarant••: ln ~rmol driving,
you'll get at too~! 40.000 miles of trcodwcor
from !he L1lewver Rod1ol Steel R/S
on your car. 11 you don't get 40.0CX> miles,
See you at the races!
For popular whitewall •Iles
ER70· 14, DR78-14., DR70-13,
ond"'Gl70-13 plus
federal Excise tax al $2.32 fa
$2.79 and I.rode_
'$49 .• ·. for whitewall sizes
GR70 ·15, GR70-14, fR70·15
,and fR70-14 pl us federal
h cisc lox of $3.04 ta $3.22
and lrode: ·
$60 •.• for 'i'(hijewalf sizes
LR70·15, LR78-15, JR75-15,
•
lok.e !he gucronlee document bJck.
to ony BfG rcto1let. He'll ollow you credit
lor the d1fferellCC loword !he Then cur1cnt
exchongc/odjuslment price of new onc'i>.
JR78·15, HR70·15, HR78-15. HR70·14
and HR78-14 plus federal Excise
AAd odd o s.mOll 5efll1cc charge. lax of $3.15 lo $3.86 end trade.
'ways to chorge/Revolv1ng Charge, American Express. Mosler Charg~ BonkAmericard
B. F. Goodrich Store
s--.. ':::::":. HlRBOR BLVD. lat Bayl COSTA MESA ...!,:~~~· ...
iol. tklM:R 14MJ41 .---------------ALSO Al :°:'!'::::~'T-~~~~~----... ./ I . f , GOODltcH STORI I . f , GOODRICH STORE -1. F. GOODRICH $TORI
6182 LINCOLN ' 524 W. LINCOLN 200 SO. MAIN ST.
CYPRESS ANAHEIM SANTA ANA
826-4010 774-7578 547·7155'
• ·~
"
'
••
•
7
•
TONIGHT'S ' ~.Jr. Mis~es: No Cheese~ake , t•Jease
C=~7 •3~~~~~~~~~ and i
Betty Whi!Al .are hosts !or this 24th annual prese n·
iij talion honoring outstanding performances by ani·
1nals in movies and television. r
AB C 0 9•00 -"The Kremlin Let!Alr." Patrick V. 0 1Ncal, Bibi Andersson and Richard Boone are
featured in this 1970 dran1a of espionage.
t. ............ 'T ........ ,,...., ..... .--............ ---.
TV DAILY LOG
Monday
Evening I S1!1ri tt Adnn!Utt
MtmtR ni. FrstiY•I
l(CE'f Auctlotl 74
N1solro1 In PobrH
MoW: ..,,.., P•t• ••1111n ..
(dra) '35-Bettt Davis.
1:30 Ill Me.rv Grillin Show !1:00~ D !HI Hen Mo'lit: (CJ (90) "Gor10 .. (ltl·ll) Tiit iii Y1llty '61-Bill Trtve1s.
MAY 6
6J I lfft l11<' a!) P111C111m1 Howell il I Dre1m ol lt1nnit 9:00 i Le11·11t to Beaver -TONITE-MIKE LANDON Tht Flinbton11 _.
HIJll t111pa1111 * HOSTS AMERICA'S JR
l)JClt9111Ac11' MISS PAGEANT-LIVE!
Sl"•!IM•nll Mttll 0 (9 (I)) (j) I lflC11' I Amt1i.
6: Stir Tnk u 's lYMtt Miss ·r,,...1 Michael
: Milttr 101•11' Ntitfl...-d l1ndoft It host, llom Mobile, Ali ..
· D1Htt 101 !ht 17th 111nual Junia! Miu
• flM Pltnltri P1111nt, with 50 hlth·Khool u n1or1
· • H1uit 101 fnltftainrntnl "''"' tor the 11111 i nd 1 $JCl,OOO ~bl i.thol lBhip IWlld. '''° CllllllCIJ IDCIJ Nm O ROSS MACDONALD'S
T1mtf1111U * THRILLER-"THE
Ctdlli,., lddlt't FtllW!r UNDERGROUND MAN" Tiit Llltf Show llwlttlrltd 0 l1J @ ED "ac MOJ1d1r MO'rle:
' Dedlk Colltp1nr (C) (lllr) °'Tiit Und1111ound M•n"
. DOii WllMft's T.w• Talk (mys) '7J-P1tt1 Crnts, J1c~ ll lUR·
Thr" Stoocts m111, O.mt Judith Andt1~. C1lt111
5:00 OO fl J_EElm_CDNews Holm. Sh11on F1rre!I, Ven M1le<1,
(3 o;([1())U{.t)(a(f)) JMwi »Ann Plh11. tt.y Lenz. Jim Hunon. O ltfttllll A homic:•de 1114.ilt bt solved b1wd
1'i) Mofin's Herott on lht rtmtmb11nc1 of 1n !~·-,ti!·
I ln•!tf H1llblllltt olG 1!1t ol 1 u1me thlt look pl1ce
Mlt»H: lllpossitllt 'llh111 she 111111 3 Jllf1 old. ·
"" -. ~ T\e told°"" · I.I p .... bVllu @ ('1 (1D Alt ....., Mftit:
Of ...... .,......ftttm: (Cl (4M) {liiriT..U) "l1tt ~11llfl L1ttt1"
.. , .. ..__,.. (11h) 'S6 -John (drt) ·~P•trk~ O'Nt1I, Bibi An·
W"tM. (C) "Wf'ft .. ..,..... dttnoii, Ridlard loo111. A toin1e1
(COin) 'S>-th1tr1:phrf1 Bo&1rt. U.S. Navy CommanOtt Is prusllllld
Eli) KCtT MdlM ?4 Dill (213) Into becomi111 1 "" ift Otdtr to It·
663·M21. lritw: • ltttef tfl1t could llnl dl·
Ef) &ottf bdf U1lrV115 rtperCuuioM l lOlllld !ht
6:)(1 (i) Dukt'• a.kt wotld.
0 °"' '" °"' 0 "HIS LAND"-SPECIAL
I""' Crittio,.,. * MUSICAL JOURNEY
1 (i) Mt1u'•.....,. INTO IS RAEL
· Trntl fil11 0 (!llC!A~I His l•~
• M1r111iU O'flf'rin Shlw (1Q1 0..t: ( l (Ztlr) "A L-ly W1r
Utllt ll1Kll1 ti Oit" (drt) 'e.&-Kirk Dou1111.
1:00 t:J1 o om mm Nh1 EE to1ouot ••• 1 111111
lowl1111 ltf Olllt'I ED l(C£T AudlM '74 "Nt ' An-(~ Mtvlt: (C) (Zllr) "Htur 11 Utt t •• ~1U.~ftl~-;.ja::..!&.o0afd$. llQU~.:,-=
. ww • ..,u.r t:JO ,....
ILML.IJCy ' La ....
ttT.-ATWef 'lO:m tfdW>WM••lt1ltt•t1r
I l!l.: Douo ti -(M) A col ....__,,, ....... ~ dl~·it•ai11..U. lnm 1 lfil -71 .... • .. .... !'!rl:.lo•ort.
hiiuts Ni1llt" i!,,!t""" (ll!J CJ))...., 'olihMI• SMw .., "' ... I DflM · DttN
Tllrtt Sloops . , P11ls.t tllto\.W Club
7:30 I l•IC!A'J Titt ~41• ..._. * New This Wtlk on ABC r•ttJ A••1•s Bttty _White ~d Allen $IO 000 -RAMID Ludden to·ho1l !Ills $9l'111 pit· • r 1
senttd by th• Amtriu11 tfUl'ftMlt Mornin&5 at-11:30AM
Aulx.. ..-lllcll honors ouhl1~n1 10'.lO · ~ tt .........
Pft10tm1ncH bJ 1nttn.lb 111 !tie· Gtt Saltl
YIWlll t nd motion ptelUUS f0t 1913. lC£T AIKtiM °74
i Mfl•'• Hln'1 · Tl lllu-... • al Mtt Sorptt 11:00 D Cl ID Mtws
"'""' tWlf!ber kst .. , ...... .... luttti.C*t: .... m-. {ti .... Jiu-. Munt fB 9 CJ) NtW1
0 MllllH $ Mwie: (90) •rftb. . : iC> ""'""'"" {«HI) burp" (d••) '42 -Jolin WIJl\e. '71-Ptltr S1llt1S.
n!)j Willl llllP.· I Mbei•= l..,..aiblt Gt a..lttlttf Tiit U•lo11tlllblt1 lfll~'·'•"tfltlrvtl -Tllf:Sllnt
I "" ,nu i. Ript : aca Allditll ?4
(, ., i\) "•ltrtillt Min ic tat (f)I TM ~
. li•111r Dt"'stiow llJS O Q)M«wi :
• [Kenu}o TIK1tn (11) {i) Stcftt rllt " nt GMlll G1111 11:30 ih (~CJ.)) (J) CIS Litt Mftlt:
1:00 (~ (})) ([) I ll'CCoA( I I• (?'j "tit.ii Offtf lridt" (we'l '64-
crtdiblt niifrt ol t111 S... Gnu Buddy lbHll lois Ntltt.lon.
(Ill Ciltn C1mpt>t;H b bll11det1· 0 ~j (tJ Qi eD Jtlt•rry &irMll
n11r1101 tor t111s ctowmenlltY O Movie: "TIM Hooded Jt11.r
ch1onidin1 the nm11Ublt 2.!IOO· (Iler) 'Sl--lod Sl1ughte1.
mile mi1r1tory habits of UM Joo. @ Twlllfht ZtM
~00$1. 11:45
O ID.Cil®l !plM ·"'""" OWIDEWORLDMYSTERY
(R) Oun.n1Bl•k•'1cTnatin1 tel IOI * The Spiral Staircase 1 btnthf stiow 1bof1d tht Q111en . Mal}' robbers 1tt1mpt to llt•I thf Oorothl_ McGuire stars
lundl. m (}~(fl aJ Wi•1 WtrW MJllttY
0 .... : IC) {Zhr) .. r;mr, Moat-li:Oa OM Sttp kJtM
"" Dt .... (MllP) '66--0oft MMctlt. NiMI: "lid .., [lch 00111""
M1rth1 Hy'e1. (drt) ·~--Ch111to11 Heston.
O l!IJ (fl aJTIMI hoWH (RI ,. -~c..bJ 11hrtd pohctm•n, Lt. Rytier'• ••· 1:00 · ~O! ,,_,.,..
superior olticer, c111ltt. p1obltm1 1:4S M..it: (C) "'hft4j & lht M•sk
when ht invest111tes Ille murder ol Strpellt"-anlmattd c1rtoon. .
his best lrlend. J:IO 0 Mowlr. (C) """' va.. IM Nicht m Dulel's Choict Mtftsl.tn;,. (Ki·fi) '6~BobbJ Vin.
Tuesday
OAYTIME MOVIES
!:00 0 (C) "Dt .. 1 PlaMt' (ltl·li) '65
-8111Y Si1Hlv1n, Normf BenaeH.
t:JO D '111t 11..t Mtlllll"' ldral '51-
G111t [VIM. SIM Bfodil.
ll:Oll D ""'" -'" 111-· '{irt) '.§7~1rrne !>unfit, Rt11doll)h ~ "Sltlt11 . AU!pmtllt" (II.ISP)
·~""' ''""''' 1%:00 cl "Ta ...... 'l L..i,-(dr1) '50-
Clirk Gtblt, B11b1r1 Sl1nwyc;k.
1:111 ID (t) •A Certaill S!Mlt" (d11J '58
-Join F011t1int. Rouano B11zzi.
2:00 0 (C) ..,., Ult Ant flMI" (m111) ·~trio L1ntt, Zw lu Glbaf.-
m "lMJ' hi A Ja•" (c.om) '42 -
lr1n1 Dllnnt. Rllph Btllamy.
J:OO (j) .. .._ W'ltll "" Wdt• Al•'"
P•rt I (d11) '56 -rr1nk Sin11r1,
Kim Now1k. O§J (Cl "Mintt" (dr•) '6~r•1orr
Ptck. Willer M•lth1u.
3:l0 D (C) "Strttp In.~ (com)
'6S -Roe~ Hulbon, Gina lollo-
bri1id1. (]) .,MMff 1Ae." (mys} '60 -
s1u1rt Whitman, Mrr Britt.
0 (C) "Co111t-llow Your MOO!"
(tdm) '63 -frank S1111lr•, Ton1
Bill, B1rb1r1 Rush.
(11J (]) "Prisone1 ti J1pt11" (dra)
'4l?--A1111 81•ttr. !!)@""' Stri .... (d~) • .,_
.luftllt Woodwt1d, Rithard lltyfnlr. uoca m>..,...,.,.. 1"'1 ·u -[dW1iiG. RoblftSOft, Glenn rOld.
KOCE, CHANNEL 50
OranftO County's UllF television station, KOCE-TV, has
sch<:;ultd the followlng special programs loday. Del.oiled
lislings of Channel 50's programs are carried in the Dnily
Pilot's TV Week each Sunday.
111• S•IAMI ST•lll (Cl 651 ICTWJ I 1 I I I 0 U ( A T IONAL SCMOOI.
INf'O•MATIOM ICI llCOCEI 111f JNSIN OVT ICI {HIT)
l1IJ I CAM llAO (Cl HllTACJ It .. COVI• TO (OVll CCI !NtTJ
"Ht•on of 11:~·· MJI" -A ct1ule In c1'1Udrt11 1 ll1t11111r1.
1ttl lU•l't.11 IC) (NIT)
111J ALl,J,IOUT YOU !Cl (NIT) 11•" IL•CT•IC ·coMPAffY CCI ,,,
CTW Ji• IMT•ODUCTtOtf TO , .. v.1c.u.
oaODllAIHY' tel (IJ, CONSOi!:·
Tl UM) "C...t11rroptllc Wff"*°'\, -
Lfs1l111 Jl S1M fl•llMANO I KITCMIMO IC)
CICOCWI ''lOlldnlonM. lt-•ftll.
• •nd ....,_11tlOl'I" -L~ tl
•1M c oHNtl'S UOTMIMI COltMl•
(CJ KOCEI "~ to S.lkl" -
LMIOl'I '' trJlll ILICT•.IC COMPANY tel :JN u;tw1
I i• SISAMI SHiil lCJ '51 fCTWI ,... iaocus ottAHI COUNTY iCI
(l(()(l!)
•1J111 DIMIMSlottS IN CULTUll:ll (C)
!KOCI) ''trltll Rlltl" -L111IC111
" 11• IHTllODUCTIOM TO l"MYSICAL
O I OO•Af'MY !Cl (LA C 0 N J 0 rt TIUMI "C11111,_I( Wtltl'Mr' -L.tlMfl 11 Ji• O•AMOI COUNTY IN WAIM• INOTON !Cl !l(OCEI •1• MOVA (Cl !Of (1"11) t 1• TMI DIVOUT YOUNG !Cl IM
lf'ISI
t i• DlMINltOMJ IM CULTU•t l ICI
llCOClil "C1lll1 1tltt1" -l•no11 i1 Ill min)
1vf'nt dov.n 1hrrc for a By VERNON SCOTI
HOLLYWOOD (UPI> -The
silly season is upon us with lhe
first televised beauty pageant
of the year, "America's Junior
~1iss" contest, be a m I n g
tonight at 9 o'clock on CBS,
OlaMel 2 to decide "'110 is the
fairest high school senior in
the land.
fitness . A pretty (ace doe sn't be 1101 a judge. "l'I' TAKiS j\1QRE than
hurt nt all." "1'1\1 GOING do\vn -there to physical tx:nuly to con1pe1f ln
JN ITS 17TH year. the fulfill an ambition ," Landon this one.'' he said , keeping his
Ainerica Junior 1i1lss pageant said. "~fy idol has always facr U!:i stra ight as he knt?I\'
J)('rsonnl appearnnct and lhC) ~~~~ji~~~:~~ prf'Ssed 1ue Into being emcee 1 ~
for ,two hours. I
'fhe officia l emblem of the
pageant states: • · Poi s c ,
Personality, Promise."
Ostensibly, i! one of the 50
entries representing her home
slate possesses overwhelming
qua ntilie5 of poise, personality
and promises she would look
li ke Totie Fields and still
come away the winner.
"Oh no,'' gasped a pageant
ofricial. "E~ch of these girls i5
a straight A student but the
judges nlso look for physle<il
., •
........... ---..._. ---
-'-'-· _.._
clalrns it provides the largest been Bert Parks.'' ho"'·
college scholarship fund -Park!. of course, is the ''\Vhat's nice about this
almost $55,000 -or all beauty too1hy and cnthus1astlr ring pageant l.:i: the girls can have
contests except lhe ··~1i ss niaster o! tpe Atlantic City self-respect. They don 't have
America",toumcy. contest v.'ho slngs "~tiss to show off their figures. And
The '1An1erica's J un Io r An1erica'' '\\'ilh the ardor of a they "'on 't have to gi ve up lhi>
Miss'' ~j11jgcant Ls held in patriot reciting the National scholarships just to promote
~tobilc,.Ala. Anthem. themselves to make money.
To emphas~ the cerebral ''I'll Introduce the girls, talk "The only other tlnie l was
approach to this particular to them a little bit and try to emcee or a bcaJllY contest \\•as
beauty contest, the e:nti:antl_d_o ...,.put them at ease." Landon "ithout "11rnlng once In San
not participate ln a sWim suit said. "Beauty contests aren't Anton io. Tex .. 13 years ago. I
competition. altogether new to me, ~1y ~-- -
This bit or logic would sister once competed in the -. .... , ..
almost elim inate the obtuse 'l\-liss Universe page ant' _ ..... -·--cattle-like par.ade of near nude representing New Jersey. She ...,,_,,.., ,_ ..........
females which usuall y is the didn't win."
high point of other such Already sounding like one of ·
\tompelitions. "'hlle a I s o the "America's Junior ~1iss"
rcinoving much of the male promoters. Landon t h i n 'ks
interest. these 16-19-year-olds have Aeling as master or ceremonies th is year i s more going for them than
Michael Landon, lo r mer l y m e asurements. pulchritude
Little Joe of the "B911anza" and gorgeous faces.
l~levision series. --• ----
For what ever
myopi2c perhaps,
* HEW SAMURAI * ACTION! .
"ZATOICHI"
Th• llind SwordlllMllt ......
SAMURAI HIT
OMI COMl'U'l"I ~
UCMl~-L"Ot,.-.
All SEATS -S2.00
IOUNfAIN VA\\lY ~ I '" \I S-'l· 6 "'"-'Tll. l:ll
WILL GEAR ..
"SILENCE",.,
~ou .. IAINVA (Y .• D ..... .-.. .
"SERPICO"
"KLUTE11
IU
2 Academy
A.word Winnen!
"PAPER
CHASE"1PG1 ..
"Cl NDERELLA
LIBERTY" Ill
lotlil !ft Color
MOW rl.AYIHG
CHARIOTS
Ol=THE
•DDS?
--~-
.. _.__ ...... -..... ·--=
.......
"fi•e S-Stories" • 5'nCJ,he1 2J·yeo-HOUr.e Reco.-d ot
CIKFOOMF 20::; + "FANTASTIC PLANET" IPGl TECHNICOLOR «i G b'ISlll~ Pro:!Wm~Ci
rhe Mnkl Theatre. Tf.e-e mu;• be
~orne 1eoton fo• th;, l il m'1
r..oouk--tv.
EMDS TUESDAY
MES• THEATRE ... ..,...._ ...... ::.. <r..:.l..J
-" "'""
a.lt«t Rffford -Mia Forrow
"THI ·eREAT GATSIY'' IPGJ
"'
' . "" Cotta Meta
"FANTASTIC
PLANET" ' .
"I didn 't have any prepared I
rnatcr1ill. so I had a fast-<lraw
shootout CQOtcsl for the kids
and asked for a lot or
questions fron\ the audience
This lin1l' I ~no11· wh\'lt l'U Ile
doing.''
Prcsu111ably discussing the
1mbilla11ce of 111orld trade with
17-ycar-old girls \1ho arc
~·"arlng long, modest pure
while gowns.
m MANN
THEATRES
GlNf HACl(MAN
"THE CON\IEISATION" W•l•J l.lt 'iJ11. .. ),1 •·
~--r The orandtll rn111~I ot them 111\
I LICH.LE UU. -~~ '-"' ,,. "AAMH" • ·*.;
0."1 1Ml1' ~f ,
"' WU Y.I. 5'11 l·) J_ .. lf ---·
Amerlc;1n Film The;1tre
Pre1ent1
'THR EE SISTERS'
~---"THI PAfll• (HAS(" Mr ! I 11.U; IWo: 1·11.'5
·N • c-.. .-•• 11. UWt, ....,, •• 1.-.t--•.~
S TAO/UM · I .-::,
.. .&'JH\•-1 "·"' .I'.• _ ... _,, ... "CHARLIE AND THE ANGEL" IGI
''THE STING" lrGI ..... Wfffr: Mi9't-
ri..t-7 •I O:OS
CHrioft l:Jt
Slit.• S..
..... 3:4CM:4~9:55
Ct.l~S;l)M:IO
Weekender For
Advertising SIAD/UM 1 .~
.. ........ ,_1.'_'11 •'. "'CHAILIE YARRICIC" IPGJ -... -·.~·· SIAO!UM •3 'C."
.. ...__,.,.. .. .J..!.!.t >C .1' _J -.... -.. STADIUM •!~~
.. ,.A..Lllll!X:ill>' •' •
..
"PAPILLON" IPG I ...
"FIST FUL:L OF ·DYNAMITl"
"THE CONYl!'ISATION"
'"' "SLEEPER" CPGI
SILENCE
s T•111rNG: WILL GEER 'Gr.odr• \\'•hon' .ell_,,,... ,,.. .. L<t1U•••'C.l•~·· .;:--(jl
lf'G)
IPGI Phone 642-4321 '
PIWL
NfWlll4N Rl:DfORO
ROBlRT6HAW . "
A Gf_OQG.E PQ>'Ml.l. H \I
THl6TING
'-~/Mattel Proch1etlon1 _..
'"
FrM••r 11 ,
I\ ll>ff'Oll $1.
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~·n~eln A••· .... , of
lln .. I 111~010 ... ,_.. .. _ ---·-·-1'HE GllA1' GAJ51Y' !l'G!
SOMrnMIS A OllAf NOTION 11"1
!o~ O••~• r ...... , •• l•<)O~h»"I (So )
~61-i•tl
S•ICW..JNcaGfMIHT
WlH Giit ''Cli"40'A WtJ.1~"
SllENCE ~1
Sl\IEN WONDERS OI THI WIST rG
...... 111.~ s... o• G.i~•" G•••• f,.,.,.,
~3•·6281
Olt.f DIM ... -IQl.dl &. l.t.ONTlS'
WHERE 'fHE LILIES
ILOOM fO)
fANTASTIC rLANn llO
rm.,.•l•I Mew·,.
' : . ' '-::.~:..•;,~· ..
171·1162
..... ~,.,..
~ ..... ..._
~S:l•4S6S
TW'I VMlll MIT
AMfllCAN GIAIFITI ""
THfY SHOO'f HOUIS
DON'T THrY !"I
,~ .. 2nd At Both Cinemas
"CHARIOTS OF
THE GODS"
P'EIFOIJ••Al'o!Cli ~CHfDUll
M811.. '"''" Wt<I .. Tl""" -1:11-t:JO Fridoy -4:4S·t :OO.I t:IS
where the
lilies bloom ........ , ............. n... ..
"'
-"IAMAMAS" --... "" .....
. " >m!l 81.ACH /COIT UJL/O() IM1 11.!llWIOO
l.Ol/CHW~BIUE D®olom
·~·
"JTl.lll C....,_ Utllt • G-w-.,
Mt! ......... """" ·-• ....,... ...
''HfYfR GIVE A SAGA AM EYfM
IREAK"
S.....AIWH......_o.tr'
•...,..."ll:CHAIRS"
kt;S.. -ll:OO.l:l~·4:l0.6:4§.f;OO.l l:IS • ..,~_....,..,...._.c•,.n• <•'·~· _ ........... ~·--·:" IWTWUI:="'..:~-.....
WESTMINSTER AT GOl.OE~f _.,.. __ _
lfl·44fl
lfl·7511
! .1 .. 1 •• ''" "-. "" •· • , . ., ""~ ~. -·· ·"·' • ••·•I • '"''
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979-445•
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Hol'l'y (0111 .... ;R tr•~
90 anywhere IO '~
bug o pro~ote
c:>r.>'t'rtol100
His l<ilents ore
uoeq1,10ltad
They've olreodr
be.o re\pon1•ble
for 1/vee rn11rd.ri
,., ......... ,...._.., --· ...
<iene Hockman. "The Conwlsdlon .
flO'ldl ,;;;'~
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ttArl.BOR.Z:.2 _._,, ....... -' •.• •<I• ..... .
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7:00.t:JO
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s.t.1:00 !i .. '•• t OWAll'O• •"'°": S.. 2!00 ..,1 ... ,,, :
1 11: .:1 .... .$,
t:l0.1 1:50 : I e ' .. ..II)
tll: •••• ~...... ••• : .... .......... . ... . ,,, •• .,.,. oo••O.coen. .. ~_. .. --·-.. ·---
20 DAILY PILOT
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P BLIC NOTICE Pl/BLIC NOTICt: PUDIJC l!IO'l'ICE
--tUitffiOI: COUl:T O' THf_ -----~ MOULTON l(~UIL WATllt DI !CT
tTAH O,. Col.Ll~I MIA ,Olt SU'-ft2'6 No t 1 1-. fllY •l~t" 1111t TM "oll<f "ICTITIOUS I UllNIS$ NOTICl INVITING SIALI O llDS SLP l'4
THI' COUMTY OP OlANGE SUl"l!ltlOlt COUltT 011' Tl41 0.J>~ -Mt•, ... Cit~ el cosi. M•" wlll NAMI STATIMINT l'Olt THI CONSTll:UCTION 01' SUl'lltlOlt COUltT Of'~ C•M N• A 1SUt STATI Of' CALl•OllOA '0« ~ti« • p1,1thc •11tllc~ 6 lll'Cltl"'tf Ttw lollowlnoil M'""Oftt A it dolr'l<!I O"l'ICI. IUIL.OINO STOlflM OIAIN STATI 01' CALUIOltNIA Ill
t!OTICl Of' AO/rllllOSTltATltlll S S.lLI TMI COU MTT Of' OltA1'101 l)l"Of\11 ll'C'CMflV O<I S•l1'r0t V Ml• 11 """NU •t TM •o.rd ol 0 1'"'°"' GI rtw Mov IOll y OI' OllA 01' 111.t.L 1'110,lllTY .. T l'll1Y .. Tl No. .. ,.,.. I '1£. ,, \0 CIO All 11 '""' Col•• _.. cws Aoml""U!'l lcll'I mJ w Co.11 Nlo ..... W•l•t Ol1h'toef ol er.... Cwn!~ 1'Hll CO~HT A 16111
SALE NOTIC• 01' Ml!A•11o10 011 'l'TITIOH POI >I O.p.l•lm1n1 " ,. r 0..IYI CO''' H"'v M...,pOfl a..c11 (1110<nl1 '16111 (II to•nl.1 ,..,tln.llfr In•-1111111\tM HOTICl OI' Hl .... INO OI' l'ITITIOH
EST Al E OF DOltOtHV LlLLtAN OR R l'Oft OllOlft Ollll!CflNG T l'I I M111 He.rlltrl 0 CODlf 06 kvlll l1IDOt r•ltrttd 10 II Ol1tr t i 00 Mf"lllV lftv 11 l'Oll OllDEll Ollll!"CTINO TH I
Ct<tlltfl I CONVlYANCl ANO fllANl,Fll OF Tl! 1 not t f luutca 11'1'11""' 10 S...:t t" (111011111 ttUI Ml~ ohit !(If \Ill ton......ino .,.i<:rllll'd COfllVll'l'ANCE ANO TllANll'lllt or
lllOT CE IS H l!R~8V GIVEN •n• llllAL l'llOl'lllTY TO COMl'Ll!TI! Xt!C.l lfld ?MO ' DI ,.... Cl! !0tft I Clyll A ltn G WVM 3 W!"Of<I FOOi LIN PVO It -~ Tht Conslru("llOl'I Of Oll1t1 lll'AL l"llOPEllTY TO COMl'LETE
S •II f' LEI: CUM M IN(; S '"' DliCEOE"IT I CONTllACT Coot N,..i>Otl 111!11 (11ll0tn • 92..0 Gu ldlr>O StQtl\'I Oti!ft l09tlhtr wllh Ill OIC:lOlNT s CONTltACT
•nl!lnll1r•t , ot l'l'll ''"'' ol Do<ofl'~ ESTATE 0,. EL.I.Ell E EVERETT If I! "I EtH Tllllbll\l .... ttltcerldue.ttolw10f'ltllllPOUrt.n1nl work 1n.r1to ll ,llOwn lft E STA~ OF ELMElt E E\IFRETT l!!i~Ot a«•lt.., wl!Mlll ~1 ,11110 1 CU.Ell E\IEIU~Tl •~• ELft[ll Ci-OIE ,.OFil"OL CE H rt11er,11la 1Ntlll •nGdtt.erl1l111 Lft lt1eol•n).p•~l lf1 E El. l!Vl!ltETT lk• l!LMEI. ·~. 10 ... Pt i,i..\1 "" tle'll Ill~ ......,.. COWtN EVER Elf •I• E E iOuDt u.d o ..... CN" 01llv 'lol .,., "'" 0 Coct. 111'11'11"'11. ..cnom.~nG tHtll c1tront P" •k• ti.. "'"' '"° ccino llotlt rttrilnit1r EvEl!ElT Otttll~ 1~1~ .. 1t11 11$.)..11 Tlllt \111_..i w1• 11111 v.111 lltt 1111 In lhf offlc1 IJI BO'l'k E11t1l-r1 .. ll!OWIN E\IEllET1' tkl E Iii
...... , -."" tulllfl:I •a tonl M.llon ~ NOTICE 1$ HEREBY c; ve N '"'"I Co.inly Cit~ ti°''"'' COVf\11 on ~1 3 C0toor1tlat1 l\1 lol.ll~ Lyon S1•MI Sttl!• l!Y~~~i ~·~~e:E l'f GL\IEN 11>11 ,~, Su~rlor Cout"I on JuN 11 1'1• 1 ELN•VNE E EVfl!Ell r1• • "'._ ,~ PUBLIC ~OTICt' 1t11 AIM C111ornl1, wlll9'1 oocum.nh trt Dy N 1 lht '*'' ot • 00 . ctoc • "'/, °' ,,.,.,. -• NI!°" •o• QOM" 0 fCI no l\t flUfl lft t '''"'....::' !n(Ot .... I ... lwrtln for El.WAYNE E EVERETT 1111 IH 119•• ft "',.,ft 1111 1111'1 110...ea 11'1 l~w II ,,... (OO'IVl~•llOP • ..., • ·~··· ~ ••4 ,. 00.lfll' ILP llUt Pu""'~ Orll'Qf CIMl'9 01lly p kif l\ITllllf ""'' cullfl. ri!,ftl\(' 11 ~l·t~Y • °''I°' lot or.W,r dl•fflll\ll '"'
• ' •... HI .... E "',,, • ·~" • ' (ono.r, f OKtM• • (!"' I ! .. , ~v ' " 20 ,, 1911 lJJJ.'6 MIMll 10 IAIG pl1n1 j;lfarlln e1r•wl~1 (0"'"'"''"'' •11<1 tr1nar ... O! 11.t•I l'•opt•IV .,. • • su,.111101 COU lf 01" THE ---i.tc!lon• Ind 1pKlllc1lll'llll !or 11'4 •OOYt IO (OMOkr. 0.<.0..,1. conlrtCI on
I Q" nl1 alf.I• ., 11117 llt&e:ll llwtr ~ ~ 'l!l>I' 1y I()(~ l'C .... •C~--o• ".,., ST•T• O" CALl,OINlA FOii OIM:fllltd [mprovtm1nl •Milled Coo ! Ml prQ!)lllV 1«11td Lft !he: county ot l.0$
! uM o O!'I ll1A{ll C•I t111n" n I • 1 a• S • • o '' o • • cti.< 0..0 11 lcl TlllE COUNTY Of" OllANOI PUBLIC ~OTICE Ooo;um..,h Ind c 0 n 1 1, u c ! 1 o 11 Ar>Otltl St• t al c-111ornl1 OtKr!btd 11
0111 I llt lnltttll """ •~t• f 01 '" """' NI. A 7•711 etoet•~ 1na .i1 ,,.. OM I ' ln!t ,,, THAT , Cl ~ r (' N or: TllE NOTICI! Of' N!AllNG 0, l'ETITIOH II 0 Sp111clllc..itlon1 •nd Con"t\1(1~~ Pl1n• IOt lcttOw• I'll! 111111 lll•I 1111 1111 ~DI Dolt h\I L 11 '-0"1;.fa ST ':I ..,PtE" Qi< THE FOi O•Ol l OlllEC-tlNG TN I SUPE I II C:OUltT OF THE !Ht tW!llluttlon of Ollftt fluilo:illll ~to<m '"rctl I Tiit norttle111.,1y i.t~tnlv
' ... 0' MetlW<Cl. ~I .. co; "" o~ OC't NOIJT .. NEST O~•l!T(i" OF ~ECTION STATE OF CAL L,OllNI• 1"011 Dttln ~·Id pl~• • ..., IP«'. Uc1nom mA~ ll~it '"' pl lllt no 11\wel l ant r>.undr1d
I on of l1w o• (IN ... M c•-"'•" Cl' ~ II ro ..... s .... I SOl.IT>t 11.Al<GE .l CON\IEY•NC:ll ANO T•ANl l't:I o" THE COUNTV 0' ORAN~E bl PY•C<lol..cl .. 1111 .ill<• ol Boyle ,.....,.1y an• , .. , al LOI flllv In D!IKk
llOCllon to, 11111 o4 ,,d dKfll,.;t" ,,_ f.IS fu.\°" tEltN.\ROIMO ll•SE A ~D l'lAL 'llOPlllTY TO COMl'LETll tilt A 1'Ml EPlll-•ng C0tporttl011 tar JIO P*• .. 1 ,,,,, .. of Ir.Kl 50S rKOI'~ II' llOO~ U
'ti e Ci! Her Ctlllll II' •nd IO~ l 11111 ti ~;i """" t. r .. E COUNTV or: 0£CEOlNT'l C:ONT•A<T 01101• tO IHOW C:.l.US'l CMI'.~ mutt De rnlde H y•bl• la Ille 111911• •• 11'111 ts ot l'lllll)I In IM oltlc• 01
ti!n ''"' pr(!Cllffy ,,1111,. " -c rv ,i IO\"Ell.SICl!e: $T.r.TE OF CAt.lFO•llllA ES T•TE OF EU.\Ell: E EVERETT ,011 CMANCJll OF NAMll!. Moullan Nlouel Wtlt• Olurltr the cllVf'lf~ rfo<Ol'G"' ol wlO cau111v I "4unlll'l{llM Be.ell Or'r.Q' Co:vn , C1 I Ct<,C il fE"' 11s ~O~LOWS •~• El.MEii f\IEllETf lkl El.MEit Ill 11'e M•ll1r cf !he APQ1c1fon ot Pursutn! 10 Int L1110r COIN o1 IM Sl11t Pt•c•I 11 Tiie soutrtwtsl 111.,_,,IY !lvt1
lo ~I• Cftultlld •• oll""" 8'lG ..,.,t"lG • ,,,.. Hor!l'lllJI cor~ E.~~~ioTTt!:'V61lETT •"-E E ROSA.LYN KOHN SHl!R IO< Ch.1nge ot.,. Ctlllornl• 11\e MouUan-Hlol>fl Wiie• IHI OI Ille notlllttlll DN f'lul'l(I~ f11!y 'n '"'' <e 11 " r1•! i>r~ IV " ~. el ,,.. ~ ,...11 <::wrtir OI Sec on 11 C1Kt1st'd lll1m1 Ois•rlcl ,,.& 1K1rl1lned '"' pr•v11ur.u '"' of 1111 "°''"west -11un1u1C1 County at Orl~e Sti 1 Qf C1I !Q n 1J fM.llA \lit¢to<I l l1>1'19 !I'll H,p llle<IY NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 111•1 WHEREAS TIM IPO( Cl! Oii OI Ra'M!hft r1 tot pe diem WIOtl ol IM loc;.lllly In 11~.,11ty ont Itel ot lpl 50 In Dlo(M ) Of
ae•t• bed I • follc-11~ I l!n.t (f MIO 1 Oii IClllD rM 10 l t<E ELWA'fNE E EVEl.ElT llli I llCI l!trlln Konn Sll•r ta er..r,ot ot ftlMt 1111 !>Kn wllth tnl' w6rk II to 111 ptrtor......, to De 1 .J{I Slli ricorded In bOQli lS PIQ'I t6
PAICeL. I TM £11! llitll G .,. TRI.It POIN";'OF •EGINNINO f pe! I Oii I~ Of(le Olr...:tlng 11'11 duly tli.G wlrft TM (lltk al !ft 1 Courl 111<1 a• atlt lea In tl'll SOOJ!rit ft I Cl! torn 1 •NI ti al mapt lft lhe oflke ot tllt
N(l(!h ..... ,. ou.erttr ol '"' "~"'-•1' fftlN:I Soul~ly Ul.111 tttl •lono I conveyl!M.t Ind 1r111sf1r al' Reel Pt{IPl•IV IT ·~··no !tom •• d 1ppllcll an 1111t Mlill• LICIOr Agreem• I tlltd In M UllMIY ·~Ofdl ol s•l<:I covnlv
CU4"t of fftl ~rt/I "'I -' \Cl ! " ~f ..,11 1 IM 1 ltl "'I/I lM Efl!UI~ IG tOfl"Pllle °"''6fltll I u1nlt1CI °" W d IPO!ktnl o..i IS IG IMVt her name olllc1 OI lftt Attc'A:l l ICI Ot111r1I felefWICI lo -left It 'l'ldl for turthlf
11 C>C\ 19 al l rlC! N:l. e• 11 ""'°"'" ,,.. • 1 ~ N llt•'ti 11! <>I 0 P<oott" 10C1l«I In 1111 <OUlllV ol ltlv.-r changed 10 tllt P<OOOM<I 111111e ot Ra1al1n Conlr1etor1 al •me ca sou I II er n """cul••• ind tll.r.t !!'le tlrflt •<Id rne
"'11P tt-t•.C rt!orele<i " II«• I( P • S ~, 1~ Tfti>r 'II QU'~ 161 U •,• 1 •Ge ~111e o! Ctlllornla a~rl!Nd Ii lal Sll.lm1n1~Y Slltr C1lllornl1 C,,.ote• I>/ I'll ll'f S~ll"e Mi l>ffn otl
li l l'>O )6 al '' ti aneoo.tl I I • 1 1~ °" '"'' 11 t ~ te lo"' NOW TME IEFORE ll $ llt•fllV Ot'atr (QJ>n at lttt gen11al Pfl~I 111'19 ''I ot 11 ace 1 nq I k 1 m In ll>fr
fl (O -::.l ot 1~ <:I O 1"9" Covn ., • OflO • 1 ,.,. ll'lll 1• IMrllltl ""'"' 111 Lal U al Traci No lSC\7 11 0tr m1P ltd 1nd d eclf(I 11111 •11 111 IOt\1 nltrt1lltd per oltm w1911 •• a11urm ,.._. Dy Int tar Mn 2l 1'71 11 ' 0 c DI'.
l"lltCIFL , Tn1 E11 l'lllt ~· n• ~~~·. i °"I .... I 0\:;,'~d letSl«..dO<'I .J1 I rtcoreltd n llOOll. :ns P'iot5 lS •nd lo! of IG 1111 Will 11111!1• Gf th1nge al namt 10 Oltfl!tt ~·· an t It II IH pr n(lp1I 1111(1 of cov•tr'CICI,"' .. ~',. D, fPl~~nt ~.~ ... ' ~!~1"1:
$:>un•e•I :1•11 rt t i ~ <;o ~ • I nt Y ',.,...,. ma~ In IMI ofl1(1 al IM tovftly llN• beli>re 1oove ffttltlf'd Court In llUJlnE!U to wl1 11181 AllMI CtH~ li:c<Jd cOUl1 1 ""' ... vc ,_ene
<WI f~ ol llt Nor1fl h• f •114 ~· n ~. No lll<!rl~ lne a; W 0 ~e(! OO'I 11 rtcordlt of w ll:I C~ 09partm11n1 J !Mfflll lo<•ttd 11 100 C!vlc LtgY118 NIOvtl (flllorft I Al r~ylteel DY tht dty of S.nli Aftl Cal lotnll
1eu htl~• ~ 1 f ol , N~ ""< 1 T,,.'ICf Eatttrlv 16' SS ~ tlono Tht rtte•enc• 10 wlllch !• Jn.01 tor lyrtlltr Ctnltr Drlvt Wtll °" lht lllh d•V of $let-1113 ot '"'-L•llOI" Coclt t~ 01ltd Jo.pr I XI 191<
oue • o• 1~t Nori" ~• • or Let \ n No '1ht Iv I r.e o! w n SKI an 11 to IM pa llt"ll" 1nil trt•I Ille 1 me •Ni uw Junt 191~ 61 1ne llO\lr 01 1D oo oclotit CO<'ll atlot IG whom !fte conrr1cr ••to<' WILLlll.M F. ~t JO Ht II"<~ U o! T aC! 'lo !1 ti '~"ti o~ ; po-tn <>I Mg'"' no;i pl•ce ol lll••llllJ l'ht wme II•• !>Mn "I 1 m tnen l lld lllt f lo 11'1o t•u1e I 1ny 11 ""'arota sn,1 I JIG'! a coov lntreol 1! CounlY Cler~ ~ 1~ rner~I f(oroea II' Book IC p~~t 1 E)(CEPl tM tlr9"11 port c.ns dltGl<I 1or MIV 73 lt1i ti' o'd ock 1 m In Ille trir. lllYe wf\1 Ille ippllcat on tar cnangt tlleh )oll)lle ftAllNES SCH AG J OHN SON KENNEDV s •'if 16 ol i. ,,, 14fle0\f\ 1 1r;1 •o ll vt oe Count~ C•lltorn • co«•room If Oep.irtmeftt N11. J of ,, a ot lUmli IN>ul<:t nol be oranrtd 11 ~•II be m•nd•lo v ypan ~n1 & CAllLlON
f«l'd• of wo<I O•lllOI COOJnly ~uolKI o CDlfetll~!I Cand 1 -(OUtl at 700 Cl•k C1nltf Dt ve Wt~1 ., IT !S FURTHER OROEfi:EO lHll 1 Ccnlrllftor to w~om 1 ccntr1cl It I Wittltd 4StS ~l<AllTHUI aL\10 I
""llCEL J lhl ,...11, I'll t cl 1MI ,.,._,,,, llnd •ewrv1ncn~ o• reco a If IM cl!v of 511111 An• c1111o•nl1 coriv 01 lhl• Ol'Mr be pul>l thld Jn Tiie •tld ypan 1nv 'ubcon r1crM undtr t lm to NEWl'OIT •EACN CALIFOlt:NIA t1'6t I S<~ ~·''"' QUI •er OI Ille Nor•H ,,, 1nv 011eo Acri! JO. 1971 Orenc;it Ca.•• OtllY ,, al I ~Clef ol P•Y 1101 llSI •twn Ille llld 11>Kltl11<1 rlttl 11141 '" .... OulM•t 0( !Ill Norlll hll I of LO 1 n rf'lt trw;e la ""'ell It m.lde 101 IY !Mr WILLIAM E St JOHN !IC'fle•ll c rtullllon print.a ind publbllt!l:I IC All llbotff• wcrkmlt' ltld mecllanki AllorM'fl llf" 1111 1'11tlloMf
Black 19 ot lrtcl No u 11 •MNn on ,\P• I cull t lfld Ille! IM lime llnd I"' county Cle~ 1., lht City of Ccttt Ml •I Countv al emplcrvf<I tw llltm In 111111<1<u1I00"1 ol Ille Pub~shld 0 1n11e C"11 D1llv PI~ I ..,~P Mrf<ll recorooa n !look 10 P~<a! 1>•1ct er ~.,., nq !rte 11m1 n•s b«n ttJ llAllNES scHAO JOHN~ON KE NNliD'f Orenge Stilt of c11lo•n 1 cnct eacn canl .ct Tht PCnJlfy tor l1ilure to M•Y 6 7 ll. nu 1!>1• ''
lS ir>d 36 ot MIU:11;il1nrout MIPS 10<' M1y 23 1971 ar t a tlot~ Im lft lf'tt &, CAllLION w•ek !Pr IOY (I 1ucce11 ve wee~s pr'° CCMPl1 l'le•f'Nllh Is 11 iOKll ltf fn S1clion
rt cord1 'lf 11 d O 111<1!! C:o111l1Y COU C'fln'I ot OtOi lmtn NC l ot ~a OU MtcAITHUlt l\'.VD TO int d6te •T>Ovt itl tor ht hearl"9 ol 111$ cf 1'°'1 Lit>cl Code
E)(CEPTING THEREFll OI.\ 'cm (aY' 1! 700 c vie Ctnltt Orl~t Wtll In NEWl'OIT BEACH C4LIFORN14 flftO ••O 1pptcal on Tfte Con rac!Or 111111 pav , ~Ytl 1no ,1 d Parcell l 2 atld l 811 u 111 u.., tn• r ly o! Sen~ A.n& C:al !Qtn • (llll t1' HOO Otled May 3 191• oub~lstefttt P"vmentJ IO eacl' workm.in
l!>O' um ll'O c!lltr ll'lllterlilt <1e!f m nt'd Oat.a All I 30 1971 •norrMYI tor tlll l'llll oner l"rtl\lt Dom.., cnlnl needed lo e•et11l1 lht '"'"'~ It 1ucll ----------------ru:'l~1nt 10 Ste! II" S(ll\ 1 al Ill( Al~"' c I l.LIAI' E SI JOH "i PuOI 111ea 0 inoe (oal! Oa ly Piiot Jl!Ool ot 1119 SUPtflQt Courl ! • ~ •nel lubllttenct P•Ymftl !. arl SLIL:7•26,
E ... 0¥ "'' cK , ..... •o bt ciec.ul 11111 CCOJntv Cle k M1y • 1 lJ lt71 IS10-7• 111\llNG E llOSEN aellllfll In 1t'.I: IPOllC•ble collec!lvt SUPl!ltlOI cl;IURT OF TH£ t~Mnl •! 10 IM PrOOU<!hin t;f Is• an•'l •
1
IAllNES SC HAG JOH NSON l(llNNf.DY ------tnl E Tiii,_ 51 511 W 1>arc•ll nlng 1~ ~emml1 tiled "'llft tM STA ti! OF CA.LLFOllHtA FOi
ma• 11 c.on!ilned 1., 111a 1•"'1 ... un '"* & C411LSON PUBLIC,,. OTICE Oow11ey Cillfflotl• "141 Deo1.rmenl ol 1nau11r 11 Rtlallons In THI! COUNTY OF OllANCJE
!i,tn! to t~ll• UPOl'I Ill" lal\CI and ~owe<! 6JlS M•cAITHUI IL\10 L'I All0tMY for Pthll_,lf' 1ccord1M.t '"'Ill StlcltOl'I 11131 OI llll NI A 76711
tar 111lns •Nl ,.,..o~e 1r.e same or •al Nl!Wl"OllT BEACH CAl.IFOll.NIA t1"4 T1llpi-t Ulll m .. ,., Lll)Or Coat HOTICI! OF HEARING OF PITITION I
-t otl verv !fttrto• wn.tn ~ <JdUCed Dy 1711 ) "' tt60 SLP 7•JU PullllW<I O••noe Co•st 01Hy Piia! ... neM °" Id rtc!e<I to Int prcvlilons ti FOi 01101!1 Ol&ll!CTIHO TN E
0 llt , •• <!Mr~ed n 1111 oeea !r~m ttw Allll'lltYt tar'"' l"tllll.,,.r SU,ElllOll COURT OF THE May 6 13, 20 27 lt71 1S91 7• Sec!lon1 1111 s, and l11I 6 al lrit LUiO• CONVl'fANCtE AND TIANSl'Ell OF
I.JM t<I SI• e• of •mer Cl IO G11'1!'111 VI Pu1111n~<:1 0 ·~ CCilll O•!!Y Piia• sT•Tll! OF CALIFOllNIA FOil Code concern no llW 1mplovmtnl ot ll!AL PllO,lltTY TO COM,Ll!TIEi
l ,tektr! diled "1111"" 10 9<? ano 111y 1 1 3 197• 1!>1171 THE COUNT Y OF OllANGE •PP enllcPiO DY lht Con!r1clor Of •nv OICEOENT'S CONTRACT ecorOfd Jn Book 1191 P1gf I • ot No. A 16711 PUBLIC N01 ICI' sut>c:an rte or Ynotir h"' ESTATE OF ELMER E EVERF.TT
Ot cle! Recoroi In t .... all ct 01 r.., NOTICE 01' HEAlllHG OF Pll!llTION Sect on 117 S as imtnOfd rtQV rts Ille l kl ELMEll EVERETT •kl ELMER
Count1 "'ca <:!If o1 Or•noe County PUBLIC f\OflCE 1"011 OROEll Dll.Ef.TING THE NOTICl TO Clfl!01TOll Cont ltlo or $Ubem>lrltlor frr'IPIOV"9 EOW1H EVEREn lkl E E C• l!orn , CON\lll!YANCI! AND TllAHSFEll OF SUl'El!IOll C0U"T OF THE ldttmen n •ny • P 0 t I n I 1 < t I b t EVERETT' dKU!.ed
ALSO EXCE PTING THEREFROIA SLI" 11lU llEAL l'IO'l!•TY TO COMl'LET£ STATE 0" CALl,.OllNIA FOi oo;cupet on lo •P9lv 10 •rte \olnt lllOTICE IS HEREIV GIVEN lhtl I
l"V "jhl 11 e 0t ln!e tll 11 tn.t We•!f ~ SUPEll lOI COUR T OF TH& OECEOENT S CONTllACT THE COUNTY OF ORANG£ IO!lrfnl ce•n G comml11ff nt'lrnl 1ne 1 le El.WAYNE E E\IERE?T hlll I led l'ltrr n
1S lttl olP1ce!l1cau edDvtneCovnly STATEOFCALIFOINl•l'Oll ESTATE OF ELMER E E\IEAETT Nt A1'MO ol the ouD!c workl orolecl •"" wll ch , polll!on lor arOer "1t«.llng !l>e al OrlnQe o Qultclt m attd I 0"1'1 1ne THE COUNTY OF OIANOE 1~1 ELMER EVERETT lki ELMER Esta e qi ALICE C LISTER OectaSll<I aomln•le l tHe 1portn!ltts~\p ProO am n (Ol"''""ncl l<ld lr1>nster ol Rtll p -rl1 v~ fl! SUlet ol Amtrlt• rJ•led Augu.i 11 N• ,. 11111 EDWl"i EVERETT ••• E E 1110TICE IS HEREllY GIVEN lo Ille lhll !ride for • cirllUtl!I al apjl'OVll lo complete OKedtnl't conlr1ct on
1919 DY PO 1 "9 IO corwev 11>e •Ir P ~f HOTICI! 01' N'lAllNG OF l"ETITION EVERETl dtCll-.ed creO !crs of Ille allOVf name<! <:lece<lfnl Tht C!rllllca•t '"' I also I ~ Ille rit G al proe>ftlY iocllt'd In !r>.e coun V of R Vt< I
1no $0 IHI w dt rich1dll<I whn n 11'11 FOR OlfOEI. DIRECTING TH E 1110 TICE IS HEREBY' GIVEN lh•T '""' a 1 pe M1n1 111~lno clams a11•lnt1 111c •PO•tnt t•' ID lourrieymt n !Nit wHI bf ilde 511 , at Ca11fol'l\I• dti<:•lo.d 11 1~ I
P• vMe Rold t~lfnd llQ I (ltlQ Int CONVl!'fANCE ANO TIANSFEll OF EL WAYNE E EVERETT !'lit I eG here n wr a dKtOen 1 t •M!Ullt'd to 1111 lh<lm Ul.ed n 1ne pellorM•l'Ct ol he CDnlfaCI I wet erlv 1 dt ti! llllKk 19 ;t.r>d !tw llEAL PllOfi'EITY TO COMPLITtE 1 pe!llloft tor oroet a reel f'O the w 1~ '"" neces•••Y vouchttl n 1111 o!Uce The r1I o ot DDP tn lcn lo !ournevmen II\ OwlTl'l4 So oth half ot thf Nofttl 11,11 01 !hf
Ell!f y ildt al II o<k 11 •1 •llOW" ton I ~ OECl!Ol!NT 5 CONTllACT cc;nveyantr 1na t 1n1ler ot R11I ProP1rl'V ot ll>e c t • ot !ht JbOve ent!tleo courl o sue/I <•1e• •hi 1101 tie l•S• lhtn one to Nortl!elll qUirtti' of 1111 Slu!l>wt•I
l!liP ot l tl tl No 16 wft ell Gt<Cd 1111 /'IOI ESTATE: OF ELMER E EVERETT 10 COrr'IPlete Otoe-nl 1 COnlf"I 1111 10 p f"nl lt>em w Ill lhf 11ecessltV !Ive e•CtPI q1'a Mir of Irie Sovtr>.we•I f!Ulrlef al ~•·~ reco ~~ ~· A t~cv ol v~;c.n t 8'i•~• ELlllE R EVERETT •~• EL/ilER prOl>C<'l1 IO<e!tld ln rne toun,y al I! Yf vl>IKhe 1 10 lt'.I: undf_,lg11ed II lhe ollft.I! A When ~nemp!ovm•nr \n !~t 1are~ al •eel°" 7 Tcwntlllp 1 $0!.nll 11:111111 l I
toeen •uQITll! f(I IP Ille Comp111y !or EOW!N EVERETT 1k1 E E ,Ide St~ f ot (lll!ornl• aHCrllled •• !ol ol "'' •lllll'MY ARTH UR 0 ouv JR co ... er191 Dy rnt alnt ll>P " ct.in~ Et\T San e ern1rd no Biii<! 111(1
f•a,....n1f(ltl EVERETT O"Ni~ loWI A!lo nev at L1w Ill Oovt Drw 5"'11 litnlT /let 11~\e•t-en ~ver~ge o M"trdliln
E)(CEPTrNG •NO RESEll \ll"iG unto NOTICE ts HEREBY GIVEN iner TM E~•l 11111 ol tne Soutr>.-est e Newporl BtKh c11Uorn 1 91660. which u "''f'r1 n 1., ~ <:ll!Y5 "'or .: the T ,..a end°"' ha f (2\.1\ ..:re. "'°'' or I
nt o 1n•o" ne •In 1 1 at Pt11tate11"' •ncl 'ELNAYlllE E EllERETT nis 1 led M , 11 11ua•ttr al Ille i<torlllta~I 11u• ter 01 lf'te 11 rnt p i re ot 1>•nlnt11 ot lie unatrsloned ••r..,t,,.,;;"" i::r ,,~~\: :; •GQ•en!lctt In 11-11 lnckfdlng well
cthc nYaroc•rllen tulll1tft!~ In on or 1 petition tor oraer <:tlrtct ~ •ne lllortM•ll querier o~ !ht ~ "'r~11eist !ft 111 mantrt p111rl1iftlng lo 11\f ttt•te of 1 11.,rng In lllf area ••ctt'di • ,11 a ti! r1l••tn(t 10 wlll<ll b m.ilfl kw lut!Hlf
111\0e IA a land conwyanci ind tr•n!fir cf Rt•I PrOPf 11 <1uar1er GI Stellon D IWlllMI P ou!n J<!ll<:I Of«<ltnl w 111111 tour mon•n~ lilt one to fi ¥t er p.r. lltYllP\. al'lll 11'111 tnt !lmt 1nd lt'.I:
5uDIM! la Currtnl tl•fS coven1nh 10 COll'Pl•lt Oeteci~nt 1 conrract an Range l E•sl Sin etrn1 alr.o llltl 1"d I/It I rsr pyllf (&!on al !his not ce ( WMn Ille tr•de can ,~.,..... '"31 1 • place cl ,,.,arlnp lhf ~lln)e Ill~ been HI
< on a !Ion• re1 r ctlon1 eH•""' on1 P -rtv l1Kated ln ine t1>11n!y 01 R!•er Me d •n lie n11 ! • acres more 0 Oaltd MIY J 1911 reol•d"9 111 lets! 1/JO at " far May 1J 191' •I 9 o clock 1 m ln the
'Qt'i' , ot>h ~ Wll' ,;•s;;;.;;~· i nd side s •• ol ear torn!• CICKr tied ., lei le~~SERVING THEREFROM I non f'i\ARILVN A ROWE fr'lmbe sl>lp n OVQ/I aporen ct•~ p cou.r oom ol Oeo1rlmtnl No 3 oi •• d
",1' ng tflCUm a 1~111 of i lt e lo,..1 e•clus ~• ••H""'nt 011., and It on !he E~ecy!rl• al Ille W 11 al fa nlno on an •nnY•I b11 , 1 llllWld1 01 courr a• 100 Civic Centt OrfYf Wt1! n M trrms 1n c ant ' er 111 1 c! 111 '' ot NW , al SW ~. QI !Ill tboYI nemt'd CIKl'denl lacAllY or Ille < !y cl S1111i. A.ft• Cat 10tnl1 '"' C&sn ln lawf..,Jrnoneyot lM Vn leG St•re' s.tctlon t3 lW 1S l lngt l E SBB SoulhtrlY lO INI for "'l•fll t9~IS .. llTMUIO GUY JR 0 Wht> TM ConlrJc 'r povdt1 Oat~•prllO 1'71
or A""" Cl Ot 1M1'1 cath Ind p1rl Crtdll rl-Y ng fMteltOM llW Narftlt ly PUDIJc r!Mldt OUDllc villi! fl jll(I u!.t of AnerntY 11 Lew l,. IYlnenct ,,,., JM Mipfoy' rglittrt'd IC>-WILLIAM E St JOHN
rrie term1-ol 1uch c•ed l IG tie Ae<•nlablt !eel for nan-e•clUllve eai~ IOI' tllt pullllc AL50 RESElfVt NG Ille Ul o. .... r Drlw1 '• p tnl t t5 on allot !'I t"'""'~'' on 1u1 (ountv Clerk
lo IM •dMlt1!t1r1!rl• Ind la IM Court lnq HI •lld ISlffU lor ratd ind vt lU11tt. Nortlle ly 10 le•! I S I hl>IW!•Cl1'1 ~t Wh• I 11nnu11I I Ye •ge al of 11..S l111n Ohl aAllNll!S SCHAG JOHNSON kl!)INll!OV
Ttn pe ct nl ot 111'1 1rnoun1 111<1 IG r•I• tnet lo tlfl'lld'I Ii ~ 101 lvr.11111' t1se<nMI !or l)IJDI c ur lltlts NtwPOl"I 11•1<11.. t;1tl(it:l'I• nuo 1p0r1n1 ce tl'I t1g111 lour~•vnei & CARLSON 1ccampany ll'le al!t• 1n0 n .. bl.lance lo per! cull!t\o •ild 111411 /rw 'time &rid ltll Grenlor Mreln reserves Int rlglll 10 Tel Ul•) .,_, S6J1: The Conlr•tlor t tqulrld 10 mike ISJS M..:AllTMUlt BLYO
tie ti• d Oii con!lr111Allc!' cl wit by 1"8 0 ace of llllflllll ll'll! AMI! .,_1 bttn !.ti gr1nt1 ind/or convey IP o!l'lers lhfl Ull ot AllOl"l'tY lor E•K\ttrl11. con rl11u!lo,..1 ro fundt tlM~ ~/ltd lor !ne N£WPOllT a EACH C:ALll"ORNIA •l ... co~rt Tfte t•1ml111 Ian ot till• rtcora no tor Mav 73 197~ 11 9 ., clock a m In Ille s1ld .. iernttnl.. And g•1n1or 111rt n Ptibl iheo or1"r.;' C~sl O• v Piiot ~dmln st 1!1on at '""'"'' ctil\lp 1>ro0ram' 0 111 ttt.ffOCI ~t con~tyante .tna any Ulla ln1yrance cou l•oom al Oe~ •mt nt Na J cl 1•ld ma~tl !hll G••nl wlll'I the rlQlll IH1! !ht May 6 13 20 11 191• 15?J 11 I lie emp oys f'!) l!t Id ~PO ent <es er AllorntYI fir , ... Pitlllontr
pa kv shill tie •I Ille t~pense al the cou 1 al 100 Cuc Cent 0 ve Wesl n ar>0vt dtltl tied e•!.tmenll m3V oe ourneym1n In 1111 1pprtnl ceJoL~ I ~df Pulllhhed o inot COii! Oa lw p tot
DU th••• 1111 c ly 01 Sinta Alla C•lltain 1 g inlet! llY !ht gr•nlt• l'lertln lo •11<1 0" PUBLIC NOTICL' on I x:ll con•tac11 ~nd I! cl e Con! 1>e!o•1 Miy 6 1 ll 1ll nt.171 f AU bas and ollttl mull be n w It n.g O•lta April l(I. 191, tor Int bfnef I cf The fee 1llle hcl<:ltr i.:. on tllt oub!lc workt illt ire :-na• l\!l Sl.Kh ------+-------I ~nd wi ll Ill re;:1lveo .,, the ot! ce al VllLl.-'AM E St JOt<N 1nd or hn!dl•i of other p O:lfrll1$ c~nt 11<1 ans HARRY E HICKS tl!Qfney far •1!0 Couniv Clerk reft tntt lo whlcll Is m1dt tor further a 111SO Tr>t CGntracJOt •1111 1nv Sutlotont 1clor ~d"'n•trll • 1111!11 Be1cft llau t v1r<:1 aAINEI SCHAG JOHNSON KENNEDY pirt1culit1 ;1na 11111 rhe 1me and tf\l' SUPElllOll COURT OF THE u/lllt• ~m YiaU tarnolv ,,.1111 Ille PUBLIC f\OTJCE
Hunl ngtCll Be~(h Ct llfo nl• '1617 II •t1Y & CAllLSON pl~ce cl 11e1rl~g !ht s.ame 1111 beeft set STATE OF CALIFOINIA FOii rlQU reh'le'lh of Section trn s Ind 1711 6 f---~ -----------"'' • .,., Ille II SI pUDllcal on "' In I IOI' M1y 11 1971 ,, 9 0 C11K• • m Ill Tiit THE COU NTY OF OR4NGE 1 .. th• ernplovmttll al 1ppr1n1 c·~ llESOt.UTION NO 71lf not ce •nd Delore Ille mik1"9 al s.a d salt 4StS M1cAllTHUll IL\10 cour!room 01 ~p.r.rtment No 3 ot \•Id NI A mil lnform~rlon el•! wt lo llPP tntk.ts~lp A llESOLUT IO" OF THE CITY
For tu !htr ln!or..,•tlon end b <:! forms N!!WPOl.T IEACH C4Llf'OIHIA tJUO cour! II JOO Clv c Cinle Or e Wesr n NOTICE OF INTIFHTION TO SELL staN11rd1 waoe SClltdll~s lnel ~!let COUNCIL OF TNE CITY 0 F
11 tnt oU ce o! said 11rornev for tht1 1711) t it ttOO ll\e tty of ~anta Ana Cal lofn 1 It IOl'IEITY AT PltVAlE r~ylrernent~ mt V be obllfl'W!d lrom IM FOUNTAIN VALLEV C4LIP0RNIA. ,dm nll II • 4ttor11ey1 lo~ Ill• l'e!l!loner Olltll •P• 1 XI l9ll sft"t p 0 rector al l,..du•I I ! RtlMlont !• oil~ G DECL•llNG ITS IHTl!NT10N TO
The Of\I 1 rttt ~ed lo reject •nv 1n<I Pulll 11\ed 0 ange Cct~I 0~11~ P !cl w LLIAM E SI JOHlll E\lclt QI ELIZABETH ;: COULSON &lsc the Adm nlstrator cf ~pprfnlitttll P SI~ VACA Tl A STllEET EASl!Ml!NT 1'011 I il Dds. M1v6 1 1l 1t71 ls..a11 COOJntyC!tr~ knovt1 as ELZA1!'ElH EOGINGTONF en•1co C1tcn~ or l om ne (ONDLTIONAt. USE PEllMIT NO 11 1
Oate A'O< 116 1'11 llAINIS iCHAG JOHNSON KENNEDY COULSON Oece•M" Dl~lsfon al App•ent ce1ll P Sl1n01rd$ end SETTING THI! TIMI! ANO l'L.l.CE
/1/MllS SH,RIE t.'lE Cl.IMM INGS U r·•"n-&-CAILIOH NO T CE IS HERESY GIVEN in&! tne lh branch aUlce• FOi PUlLIC: HEARING 'l'HEll!'ON
Aamlnl11r1lr •of !r>.t E1t1tt,of p BLl.G.l\0 u...a:. •SU MtcAllTHUI llLYD unaet1 ~f'llCI w 11 •f 1 •t pr .,111 ••It to NOTICE IS HEREllY GIV EN llWl1 lrit .lND PIO\llDING "Oii THE
DorallW Llllllft Or? o.r...u• :i .-' Nl!W,OllT IE.I.CH (.ILIFOllN1 4 t1U• lftC n ghe1I lnJ llfll 11e1 blGa•r sub !IC.I la Mou •or..Hlo~I VI• e Olstr t i Wiii flfCl'Vf' l'EllFOllMANC'l OF ALI. Ac T I
H••RY I!. '11CKS S1.J'.J4Hl lllll '" ttOll !'>e !<ll'lh4'mll on at the ,i~~ntl!led sea!MI bid$ 11 ll'>e olf tt al ! yle llEQOllll!O lY LAW (
Allornty 11 Llw SUPl!llOJI COUllT OF THE AnomeYI for 11,. Ptl I Mft SYPf!' O Court Cill !l>t U!ll day of f/IY Eng "'"' 11!1 Coroor1!!on '17 Soul'l'I LVc.11 ~/HERE'°'S lrit C•l 10rnl1 Govtrnm111t
11111 aellt~ l ou1tv1rd STATE OF CAt.IFOll.NIA FOR PuOllilll!d Dtilll'i9 Coa~I 0,111 p lol 1914 ~I 10 00 • m or !ht ealltr w tnln Strflt!I Sanla An• C1lllornl1 1J.P 1~0 tl'le (oCle ~·on 000 t i s"° known It tnt
Hu"! 119hln lli(h C1ll lornl• THI COUNTY OF ORANGE M•v 6 1 ll. lf1' 1!.1.1 1• Ille llrnt a la,.,t<I by l•w " !he oft c' ot "°"' GI 10 tlO 6 m "" IMV 10 ,. "' Slret! V1u!lon A" of lt•I OfOV Ml fcit 111•1 112 lltl NI • 7Ull p vnke ind PIYn~ttl 41; Oliv!-,Avenue wll ch t 111e 11nd Pac• Th•Y Wiii tie PYbl < Y tne p c>ctdu 1 wllfl'lllY ti\• C 11 <Tiav
Allo<nl Y tor Adml11l1lr1trl• NOTICE OF HE.I.RING OF PETITION Hvnt "9lO" 8 ,ath Co~n y cl O anoe ootntd J"a ta<! Sad te~ltd D ds 1r>.~ 1 be vac~' a aubl ( ettf'mtnl ind
Pul>llll'ltd Orllnge Ca4tl Oa ly Pll(',t FOJI OllDEll Olllll!CTING T HE PUBL(C NOTICE s ;tit ot C•l!lornli All lhf lg 1 111 e for he do "9 of Ille Public WOfk WHE REAS 1111 C!ly Pre1ent!y POS1eufll
MiV 6 7 ll 19U S))l• CONllEYANCE .,NO TIANSFEI. OF I nlett 1 and t•l~tt al 1 dKl!'(len di !hi llerenwto e OeKrl>ed and ordered n tl'le "Qyblc N 1m1n1 l~r ,,,.,., AnG hoh1
IE•L PllOPEllTY TO COMPLETE FICTITIOUS llUSINll!SS 1 me of M• Gtllh 1nd all the '91'tt ti1!1 s~ a •HD u on nu•OO~l IOc.il~ norlf't OI Slarllsft Avenue OECEDENT 5 CONTIACT and "trf sl lh&I ~ad e1t1 e l>il! ""IU rfd El<ll b d or :>rooos•I '"'"II tie mldt OUI a d ai»ra• "'llt1IY ~feel ea1I ot Ila •4~ PUBLIC /'\OTICE ESTATE Of ELMER E EVERETT NAME STATEMENT O DY l)Jlf'rallon ot law or otnerw st Clller and wo<Ti 1'tG 0<1 I lorm lo bl 00 alned at Strttl mort p1r1lcurarly d11crjllld 1 &~fl [I.MER E\IEl.ETT .~. ELMER Tll• to I low llCI OC'tSOni ' t 0 1'0 lhan 00' In addlt on ID nat of said Irie all Cf ot B0¥1e E n g In t fr I n 9 fo ID' 1 •nd ~'fl on E10r>. lllt 4 •tllcMO sUl'l!llOll COURT OF TM E E E llu1lnen II I 1119 N I M d tn ano C'>l'OClf"ll on 41' South l ran Slree1 Santa llereto 11nd tnold9 1 Pl I Mreal ST•tE OF CALIFOllNIA FOR 0\YIN \IEAETT 1~11 E E WEST COST EQUIPMENT RElllT•L acctG~n II I mli 0 ea n ~ •n~ Ci lorn a E•cl'I ~Id or prcomill Tit~! OC'I on al h! toUlh It *< t• ot
THE C:OUHt 'f OF OllANGIE EVEAETl d«ta•ed co 127 • ""'" SI NewpO<I Beath :0 a!~ Iha~ (~.·a" a~ea6:.n°':' IYS,sa:~·1 cl mu1t lie atcomp.a11IMI bl' • <•~" •• ' IM SoYIM11! OV.11rte r of ,,,., tlcit1Pte1•1
Ne A 1'1t! "iOT ICE IS MERE BY GIVE N !h~! Cal I ,.",,,, ' ~,,,' -•o tgl I<, I• r 1 y cneck or cf\fck cerl I e<I by • rt1pons Die Qua !Ir al ~!Ion JO Town1hlp S Sou f
NOTICE OF HEAlllNG OF PEflTION ELWAVlllEE EVEllETTll11te<lhetn R('ll;)erl M Mo" 117 '1 Ut/I SI ... orn1 "~ P• 11ankar •bid<le•t bondlof1n1moun1not Rt11$t 10 Wt$! I" Ill• RandlO:I L••
l'OI PllOBATE OF WILL ANO CO I Pf II on !er orde• a reel no 1~e Newpa ! Be~/\ Ce I! Oest lbe<I 11 follow• lo w ! illll lh•n. 10 111 ccr.t al the 1mounl o! lie Bo ••I n thfl C ty ot Founla n V• tY
OIClt. AN D DOCUMENT INCOIPOll ton~eyantf ana I 1nste Cl Ital PrCPf !y Lloyd A Otes 21 •In SI Tn• "°ulllt11!e•!y S? Itel ct Lo~ 26 b d a.-of !!IC total al\'loun! let whcll tlley COOJn!V ot 0fl"99 ••shown en 1 MID
ATED THEREIN BY lltl!Fl!RENCI! In (OMpfe!e De,tatnl t con1'1ct fl" Newpatl Be1tr>. C1l I Ind 2& In llllKk 2l1 of H~nl llOlon Beach "I' I actfPI a con acl •nd mlO~ p1y1nle &c.orded O lloo• !l PIOt It 0 I
AND FOi. L'lTTEllS tasTAMENT•ll'f P•OPt,IV loc•!ed In tnr coun!y ot R vf'!f' This bll•l"e•1 s conducted DY • gene • •• snown an • M1p rtco dtcl In Book li lo tht ord1r or n lht levor al he M K•llllrif'Oll!I lil•os 1., the otl ce 01 lhe I
E•tatt of CATH•RINE GREGORY 1lllt Stlie al Cat lorn I deKrlbeG 11 lol 01rtner111ip P1ge la ol M tcell•neous M.llps recordi Moul on N gu~ Nile• Ol11rkl Ellert Su(r>. COl.ltl!v Rteareltr cl Otl!tlo9I C1111ntv Oe<:ealfd lows Rober! II I css ct Or1ngo Coun V (11Uorn a Commonly Did or P•CIPO'll 1n111 bt i.t•ll'd •rid I led C•llforn • (leKr;oed 1 .fpllowt
NOTICE IS HE REBY' GIVE N tnal C Bell nnlng "t Ille lllor!Ptwt$1 corfter DI l l>lt tla!fm1nt "'as I eel Wllft !hf kntrNft as 1111 Olive StrHI Hunll"91Cn at Ille ott tt ot Tllfl Ol1trl I Al or lalO'f Beg nn no •I tllf narlhw ... I corn., of I
II ER OLD GR EGO RV H•!I !lied Ill e n 1 Ille Nortr>.e1sl Qu1 rre al lfte Northwt •I Counl~ Clerk al O•thllf County °" •pr I Be•ch Cal lo n a 1ne lime In thll not tt orovtcled The SGUll! 11 1ere1 or 'II d S.Ou1,,.,u1
Pf'! on fc-r Probe e ot w 11 •1'111 Cad di Quarter of Ste!""' 1 Tawnsll P I Soutn 15 l91C. Suo K l lo (yr enl l•~es cOYtn1nU rne at>o¥e n>entlontld CM(!! O• llond Ou•rllr tlllnce •Ian!! 11111 wei1 u .. at ~nd GCICUn"lenl !ricorpara e<I ine tin Dy Rance l Eall Sin 8erMrdlnc Ba'le a"d l'lll lO co n a 1!0111 teitrkl -. re.serv1t on1 sl\111 bf g ven •1 OUlf.lnlM 11111 lllt ""d SoulhN1\ Oulrll" South O lll 01 I
eftrtnct '"° tor 1,uarw;e ot Lttrt 1 Merld in Tl'le11ct Soullle ly S:Ja 00 IHI PuDI •llt'd 0 81'1Gf C.0.•I 011\v Pl ot r onti r glllt of w•w ll'IO ea11...,.nh of b a!ler w I mltr Into • contr.,;! II E111 !IQ 00 IHI lllen(e Notlll -~ Ill' 21
T!lllmtnlery to int Pet !loner eferenct • ong tne Wtslerlv 1 nt al the NMlhea!I A,p H 'lt I ntl M•Y 6 13 10 1'17~ 1•!' 11 ttGtCI SI <:I pr09tfly to tie sold as I ""'a net! 1n1 work •"" wlll bt c11lmed &s E••t 01 1lltl 10 The: north llnl ot 1a o ·~ wlllcll 1 n ~di lor tY !her oa ! cY a s QUll ter ot Ill llla<lhwtll QUlr!tr al 11 d -------AIL b d!I or otf1r1 mu1I be n wr I 119 and I au attea damage1 It 1111 wcceu fyl $1>1/!h 11 1crn '~' 12 let! lo Inf true
and !hill Ille 1 mtt •nO plice or lltar no tht Sect on 11 TMnce Ea•lerly l(U 11 le<! PUBLIC f\OTICE w l>f 1ece vtd 11 Ill• 1!n emtn1 o"'d D Od1r rtfYlfl 10 tnler lntti tlw conlrat! PO"nl ot 11etlnnl1111 tl!e1>c1 cont nu n11 !
same h•• t1ein 111 ta Mlv ;1 1911 ar •IOt>G • llllf '"'" !t P<'•I lel wll~ the olllce or mav bt I led w.tll lht c e ~ or lM ~ucces•ful b lldtr w I l>f rfQY ed 11ono 1" d "''' 1e1 1 ne North u o 10 7S , 30 1 m n 1111 cou ! aom 01 Ncrrhe Iv llM 01 ~11a Stc•lon 11 ---111e a11ev1-Tllled Cc11rt " •nv 1 Ml •lier 10 lurn 1h • raoor •fld ma t•l•I borld In an East 111 01 leel llltrw;e !.oYth o• JI 01
OePa tment No J al 11 <:I cou r 1t 700 lnen" "'°''"' V 5ll 00 lee! • ""9 I SUl'&:IUOllS\:Po~'i'; OF THE ll'lf ii••' pub! clllon of 11111 norlce af'ld 1..,ount tQual 10 100 Pl ''"' of ll>e E11t N•llltl to Ille e•tl line of 11 Cl
c 1..ic cenrtr Orv• west In ll'le cnv al Int 1111 Is P• aloe! wllll Tiit E1s1er!v before 1111 mt •lng of""' !iale '""""er 11t ce and 1 l•llllvl pertorm•rict Soulnt1i1 Qu1fttr ls.tll feel lo the 5~,.11 An• Ca a..,,.• 1
5
ne n al ~' , Nori~,' ,'",:'!r 01 ... ~a,11 'i~~·cg~NCT~l:~"o~'!H~~ll TERMS ANO CONOITIONS Of SALE borld n tn emcunt IQISll 111 100 P11Ct11t ot l'Ofll'I lint ot 11111 ptOPCrlY c;on'tl1M 10 I 0111<1 April JO lt7' « on o • ...,.n n '"' """'"' V N A 7"'4 (1$11 111 l1wlvl ~ al 111t Vnl!ed Stites 1111! conlracf price wkl bonds lo Ile lllt Sll1e at C1llfMn!1 11'1' cited fKOfClfd
WILLIAM 1! 51 JOHN line ti! 11 a Section 1 Tt>et>c:e We1lerly ' N ot Amer Cll Tf!I Jllrt1nt t10°ol ot 1111 $KUred tl'OfT\ I sunJIV C 0 "'P II n V lft Booio; 7111 P"Qel 106 lf\rttutn l'Ot
counlv Cler• •OiOO tttt •long tM Nartht• Y I ne cl :g~1~~0~~T~E:F11:t~L o:N:~~1;11~L •f'lovnl bld 111 lhfl '°'"' ~1 n clslllt•, er utl1!1ctO•Y lo lht Moulton Niguel Wa1f1' thtnce 51111111 11• 10' 2!' Wes• 11011g 11\t
I URTON GAUl.OIN TNOM~ON 11ld Serllon 11 to I paonl al 11ttJ nn ftg cer1 fled Cl>K~ to 1ccomc1ny 1111 otler O!Slr t i l'ortl>e lw lint of W d 11111 pr-ty & NELSON E)(CEPT TMElfEfROM Iha 1>11 I Oii AND FOil LETIERS TE5T4MENTAll.V end ne ballnce lo t• pjd 11pon All lfrMI end condl!lons conl1lned 1~ ll666 ffff lo I t1ng.nt cbrve tOllCll~f
Un an ltnk IU!IO nf det<itll lo R l~t sldt Caun!y Cal lorn I eo1:~Eot j5RA~~R~ll~US ~ v~·~··~~!1 cnnfl mar on of salt bV t~e SuHrlcr !f\t Informal 0<1 !or b dders 11!1thed le na 1nwn11rty lltY l'!f 1 tad us al 11 00
'10 N1wpart Center Or Ste UID SY~I« ro covtnan s (Cnd I on1 N 1 Cau t anti• part of !ht D d form sl11!1 9011e n 11 lltl !lltnt• easttrlv Incl n1111htt1V I
Newport lltl<ll c11Jornl• nuo ea1~men11 a.lld renrv1llon1 c;! tto d f ELp1
1SE 15W~N'!,R'[ON1 ";;1:11e11 dhe;~ncl! TM executor 11e ebv ••U ~•1 11\f rlglll ~ouo"' lullv .ie1c lDed hertl11 '"" •h•ll along $lid curue lllrou(ll> a c1n111I anQf
(J1t l 640 1070 a'lv tie1 t °" or ' a e 0 an , lo elec! anv or 111 blds ilso bKomt 1 P1rl ot !I'll contr-ct of 13' It J} 1111 • t dl•llnc1 cl 16 35
AtrlfftfYI tor l't! llent!• rf'fe eno:. !o wt><ft !1 111ade tor IYrll>et Ind for l11u.1nct ot Lfl!ers Ttsllm.,.,ll Y DATED Ap I 1J 191~ Tiie Moul onN ouel W1 tl!r Olslrlcl fftl !o • 1&119flll 1 ne lllfn(t Nor1r>. 0
Pulll tl>MI ()r1nge Co11I Od ly P1 OI P1rl culari an<! 111a1 1111 t mt inn tM lo the 1>1llll-re~t •1rw;t toll(lw;,1\11 1~1 LEROY ' Gl.A•l"ll: rtnrve1 IM right lo •tlKI any 11'1<1 all 31 01 Wesl 13111 IHI to l'ht lrut 00 nl
Mev .. 7 1J lfU 1~'5 71 place or toear no 1ne 11me Pt•t !Jee~ sel made lor lurtner' rir cu"'\ 1 1 he: E•tt<1lor ot tie 111a1e b a5 pr porl ont al '"Y l<1d an Didi. to of beplnnlng
----rar M1y 11 191f at 'OCIOC-1 m In nt 1 me an:i 1 P1•_: 21"';~1;"'11 ":° .;:';!, ., o! !lie 11111v1 named dt!etdenl 1werO 1 tonlrllcl for 1tu lllan •11 o! the WHEll.EAS s11d l>Ubllc 1111ment 1 PUBLIC NOTICE cou troom of D1partmtn1 No Jal s.ad oeen 11 0' ", 0 1,., 1 N 1 er PLUNKETT •ND l'LUNK£TT 1em1 IPr which 1ucll Dtd1 •rt Invited 0< un11Ktts.arv la• Presenr or oro,111<11..e
court •I 100 C v { Ct n f Or ·~ Wt•I n ~ court 1°"'\ 0 700 'tii::ic ~n, 1,..0
0, v• 4U OI v1 Avt to waive anv lnl01m11lty In I ll!d not llM btt lUM ol n9W dt¥11or>menl In !ht
SUPl!llOll COUllT OF TH E ne c '~ ot S1nt1 Ana C1lllo•n . SI Cl (CU• .. n p 0 I D• JH 1!!«.ttd .,, l1w ••• , no! reoulr1"9 !hi• rloM-or ..... av le
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TATI Of C•LIFOllNl.1. FOi Dared Acr I lll 1911 Wtll ft lllfl Cl30o ~.•,,ant• Anl (at torn 1 Hun I 109t1n l•ICll Clllfarnll tl~t MOUL TON N GUEL slrttl PUfOOl-ltl t w LLIAM E St JOHN (htll'd Apr I Tel !7"1 JU >OJO or JJ6.t07t WATER OISTfUCT NOW T ti E R E F 0 RE ll E lT
THE CO~NT! ~~JfOllANOE C:ounh c e ~ ~tLLIA~ Ek ST JOHN All11tn•yl lor E•ttwlor flv .&.le•ancler Bowle RESOl..VEO by IHI Clh Coundl cl the
NOT1CIE ()F ... ;AlllNG OF PET11'10N l411NE5 sctt•CJ JOHNSON KENNEOV NIC1'10L:~nt~o~riNEll MYERS PuDll111tO 0 an9e Co11t oanv ,. 101 Stcretarv c !y of Fountllft \/al ev 111al n l hAll h~d.
FOii Al'l'OINTMENT OF CONSEll & CAllLION O AHO£LO & Gl\11!.NS Apr I ·~ lO and M1y 6 1tl4 lit() It Pub!lshtO Or•rioe Co.Bil Dilly Piia! M11C heerlno for P1'fJIO'tl al ~!Mtlng
VATO• OF TNE El TATE OF ARTHUR •Us M•cA•THUlt •LVO »fl w111111r1 llt•• s11 JN PUBLIC NOTICE M•V I 6 1•1• 1' 514 """'
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I' WOLVIN NEWPOllT IEACH CALIFORNIA t1UO LOI •nt•ltt C1hlOl'lll• 1'11111 :~"(ovrw;ll ~ .... mt!rsf'Oo1
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IN TH E M.&.TTEll OF T HE 111'1 tn ftOI 12111 :JtO 1ua cou T E PUBLIC NOTICE I CONSERVATORSHIP 0 1" THE ESTATE All01'1MYt lar '"' 'tllllintr AnorlH!yl 1., 'inll-• SUPERIOR: IT 01' H Sl11tr Avt11U1 Fount11ln \111.... on
OF 4RTHVR p WOL v N COl!lffVllte PYblllf>fd Of•noe '°''' 01 IV p l~I Publ llltd Ol'•"Ofl Coa1t 0• IV Plln! s;~~Ecg~NCTA.;l~~~N~:N~~I. FICTITIOUS BUii NESS ~~:.: .~.~:r 2!, ~· .:.:..~~ ~n:-as
NOTICE rs HEREBY OlVElll t~·· /.\~v 6 1 13 1911 ISof.9 71 M•v 6 1 ll 197, Hl1 7• N• A 7t1)4 NI.Mii! STATEMENT BE IT FURTHER RESOL\IEO 1n1r ....
SU ZETlE WOLVI N n 1 w te h•1 llltt:I PUBLIC NOTICE NOT ICE OF HIAlllNO OF PETITION Tht !DI!""' no ptrton 11 dalno buslne11 c ty Cltrk 1r>.1H e11vs1 II to bl publl1Md
herein • Pfl I on lor 1pPOlnrmenl al r UBLIC NOTICE FOi. PROBAT E o" \YILL ANO l'Olt et In ,.... Or•noe Caail 0111¥ Pllol
ran!.tfVllOt ••e 1nct lo Which s madt NOTICE TO CREDITORS LETTERS TESTAMl!NTARY !BOND AEROOAl A S'fSTEM\ COMI /\NY 1! N1wsp1per durlno the two 11Kcenl...e
IC)I' f~r1h<!r pa cu art 111(1 Iha! Ille 'me NO A 1~lJJ NOTICI! INVITING 1110s WA l\IEO I l!ll Birth Street Ne\Ol pOr/ 8f1Cll Ca Wlfkt prtor lo lie llelrl~ al)d sh•ll
tnd Pl•ct of nt• ng rM same h•~ bettt1 f WJtl•ltr Court "' 1111 11111 11 C•l!lernll Not ce I• hereby given ttia1 rh• Bat rd of Eslale ot RUTH D tNGOLO DK111eo '1660 lurThlr c1Ust l'Ollc• al TM tlmt •rid Plit t
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t9/I II ·: ~ a 3 In Ill~ IOI IM County ol O•lfltl l u•lett ot Ille CCMSI CommunhY Colleoe HOT ICE IS HEAEllV GIVEN lhltl Slllcon Olli Irie l!ll3 lllr<ll Str~t! ol twerlng to ill p01.led In 11 1111! lh ft ~~~~ 100 c :t;,"~·:~. Ora YI .:.u11111 Ell•lt of FRANCES FOOTE Oe<t•sed Ol1tr!cl el Or•noe County Citl!Orftl• will DOROTHV I REICt-tLE 1111 t Jed lie • n . Newporl le•<"' C• 91660 ()) plKtlS •lono !he 11M ol 1119 ••Mmt nl
•ht City ol 51"11 An• Ctlllnrn 1 Natlct 11 llerrbv 0 Vf'll to c•l dllors nl rectl~ 1e111td bids up lo 11 00 Im ~t!/1cn IOI' Prablle of W ll Ind 101 11111 llusines!I 11 conducted 11¥ .I 'O<OPMIG lo De Y•<•led Olltt:I Aprll 19 1974 1111 l llCYI n1meo decf'dtlnl lf\el ell Tueld•V MIY 21 191.&. 11 Ille PutehlJlng 11 ... n(I of Le!t1r1 T11t1mtnlaN lo Ille Coroor•tlOfl.. PASSED ANO ,tiOOPTEO .II 1n
WILLIAM i !! JOHN IJll•SC<ll ... v ng cle!ms ..,.1 .. 1t !hf '~ n DfPI of \lld 5'hoGI dlitrlcl IOC11ed •' pel!t oner rtle enct ta wll ell ii mlCIC IQf Sii CO<! 08!1 IN; Aal-rltd l!eoLll•• met111'19 ol IM cu~
County Clwrk oecelltnl ar1 rtqulrt'd to Ille Ir.em wltll 1310 Adami Alltm.l't C!lilt M••• fUrli.t.r 011 'cula 1 •nd lh1I Ille llmt '..C: THIS l!l!le,.,.,nl w11 t led wl 11 tllt Covnc.11 ll'llt 1611> d•Y al April 1'74 I
TC HEU. S!L•ERll!IG & KNUPP nt ntcess1rv vouchers In lhe Oii te c;f C:I! torn 1 at Whltll t me wld bids wlll llt f!f1ce OI Ilea !no 1111 wme 1'111 bttft It COOJn ¥ Cltrk al Or1not Co,,nty on Aptll GEORGE 8 KOTT
" Cl k _, I '-~ bl I -fld d IOI' '" May n 197, ,, 9 JO I"' Ill !hi 76 1•1• MIYor 1100 Ct nf"'Y Plrll E11I 1111 e "' ne lbl>Ye t nl '""' COOJrl 0 PY c y P 1 t•t. CO"EGE (Ou I com al Oeparfmenl N11. 3 of Sil d F);i41S ATTESl UIJl U,,JOOf lo preJent them with Int r>1Cess1rv PR NllNG EVENING .... ..1 i 0 I fol' p 1 I vouchlrs to !Ill un/lllrsloned ii thfl oft (I BROCHURE FALt. ltl• 75 co11rl Ill 100 Cfv C Cen!e• 0,.11, We~! n Pub! 1hed Orlnqti CNsl a 11 P IOI EVEL VN H GR IPPO
AltlfM-" C I~~ lnfr DI JOtlN ti GOROON lll?I Sin .l."I°" c Al bias •re ta lie In iccord1tnce 'Nhn ltle (!ly a! Stnll Ana C1llf0<fll• April 29 •nd May 6 13 )0 lf7• 1ll6-l ll O®u!v Cly Cl1rk Lal A l f'V'l'I 90!)11 ,..... O•lt>d M•v 1 lt71 STATE OF CA Lll"Oll.N IA
"ulll •!)ed Orlflollt C011I 0..111 Pl Ol O!'lu1 Norw1r11, C.Ulornle 9065C Wlllt h 11 •Ill t111trucllont ..,,..,llant • n d WILLIAM 1 st JOHN PUBLIC NOT!'""' COUNTY' OF ORANGE ) 11 .,.,v 1 1 1). 1t1• 1~1• 1111 plftll OI MIMU or 1111 111ind0t'1i0ned In Soec llc1llon1 wl'llth Ire f'llT<'I on Ille Ind Covntv Cll•k "1'• CITY OF FClVNTAIH \/ALLEY)
1H mlttffl p1r11rrt1119 !O Ille l tltfl o.f W d mly tie llCIKICI In lfle ott!ct o.f 1111 OLINCY ANO OLINCY I E\IEL YN H GRIPl'O DIPll!v t ltv dKtdfflt w!tflJI' f-maflll'!I •lier lhe Purch.ltfllll Allfttl ol Mlcl t.ehoal Ohltl(I Art ,, \.IW f'ICTITIOU$ BUS1,.ISS c;1.,..k ot "" Cltv ol F-11111 \lllllY
first pl/bllc11lon et' 1!11t llClllct E1cf! bktrHr 1'!11111 wtirn!I with Ills 111-d I 1"'41-wr.llllrt l lY• Su/It 121 NA.Ml! STAT•MllHT Cilltort'll• 00 """'~ certl!T 11111 1111
NOTICI! 0, l'\laLLC HE.1.ll"IG D•ttd Aprll 10 ltlll tllhl..-1 C'M-ck ctrtlllld Cl'llC:k ar LM Mftlt1 CIU"°"'ll tt!01• Ttw lollowfl'IQ ptrlOn It doing bulln1t1 forl90lng l'flSOklllon _, r 1 O II I Ir I y
NOTICE IS HEAEllV GIVEN 111~1 • l:OY E' ltEYNOlDS l)l'ddtr's bond m.0. JH1V1lll1 to 1111 Otlllr Tll OU) 11f<U• 11 lnrrocucltf lo ll'lfl C!ly COU"C!I 1! Ill '"•l)llC ...... !no wHI tit hekl If\ con<unct -E•1eulor ot 1111 OI °'" Coe1I Commllllltw Cal!eot Olttrld Allarntn fer Plllll-r THI! PIRATES INN '"° HOllOll'tl'PI AG[ovrned 11teouF1r ll'lffllnt l'leld on 1111 ,.w '"' Wiii Of uld dtetOtnl llCM•d ot Trv'1MS In • ., 1fnOlll'l'I not !ttt 0 I O I< o<< < A111n11t C0<0lll dtl M•r Celilornl• <6<" ,. << '''' "° < • 111 th• ~Hd plAn !c v~ 1 c~• ~n 01 JOHH N OOltDON fhln ll'lle perc1nl is,;, I 01 tM ium llld 11 ybl \!ltd r•ngt Coa11 0 • Y o " O•f o .. pr e w11 I I Md
tht OCNn View St~! Ofitt ct on T:Mll 1111 Aflltfll• Orf.,. 1 gy•••nl•• tllal lllt bl~r wlU lllltr lnlo MIV 6 1 13 1t7~ 1591 71 f2J~s .,..,tyres IM 1 '•lllor~I• m":lng r1'9"'11ly Pft1std Ind IOC!)Ttd IW
P z:"1r11 •::;1":,,~·~ .~ ~~ •1 ,: 00 N1n¥llt. c-•111er1111 totM 111e prOP0111<1 con1r1ct 11 lilt ,,,... 11 PUBLIC NCYrlCE eouior•tlon 1..0 H~llotfopa A...-
1111 ,:V~ no 1o'o~~~EN Ad 11 f
T nU•ll l.l.l'lf H~lll ftO.,,, 11 M4 .l.ttomev far E•Kttllf' 1w1rded to him In 1111 1v1nt o.f +1llwr1 lo Caran1 ~I M•• C11lfornl1 '26,S Sl•nlon Scot! Hatlll\Clen svalilld
r;ll t0tnll fltll l'R 1141°' .nt1r !Mo ivtll contr1('1 lhl P<OCftdl 01 NOTIC'I TO CltlOITORS lhlt t111llne" II 1111"9 Clllduclld bf I NAYES COlfNCILMEN 1+t1M
O.ito tnh lllll div ot Ac !ti• Putlll.n.G Orll'!Ot Ca.ti 0.llY PHol U1e <~-will be twiellld 111' 111 thl CIM StJPEll.1011 COUltt 01' TNI!! torpgrllhWI .._ ABSENT COUNCILMEN N-
it O Hlllm•n Pfoutv ~P I 11 11 '9 MaY '-lf1ll UM-7• gt I llOlld !ht !yll sYm t!'1111'tcl ,.111 bl ITATI 0' CALtFOllNIA fOll JOl'!fl E $ovt<.ltn EVELYN M GR IPPO Onlll'tlll COllf'lly forftlltd lo tlld 1chOOI C!hlrlCI TNE COUNTY 0111 OllA.NG• 11111 1111tment lllld WHll 1111 Coufll1 DtPUly Cltv Clt1k
$0Clrtrlnttndelll of $(!>1»1 PUBI JC NOTlCE No D!Gdlr MIY Wltllclr,,.. till bid tor • NI. /I. ".,_ Cltrk DI Orll"IOI CllVl'lty DOI MIV l 111• PYbll11\td Or•noe CotJI O•llY '"al
... :u?l,;.h~no ~!';9: ,~",~,. o. v ,:i~o;, -~CTITIOUS IUSIHl.1S =~od .. ~for~J '!:n1C.::1,i:~ 011•• !hi :~~.'~eof 1~'LJi~11~ovtr~e-~~:":'h4 Pvtlll,l'led Or•l!Otl CHI! 0111Y "fi1': Mloy ' IS. H7• ,,,..,,
T"' 80.fel o! T•U\IHI r•1erv11 lh• cr1111nor, Of •~• 1oav1 n.tmtt:I dtt~nl May ., IS 'fl 21 1'71 1m 1• PUBLIC NOTICt<,
PUBLIC ~OTl''E '"' ,.~,•.•,,•, ST!!,'~,'"',,, 0 , fl<lvllt'Ofl ot tlttt!1111 1nv 100 •II bl(lt 01 t1111 1P pet1on~ ll~v no c 11m1 •a1rn• 1M ___ -----------'" " .,., ..... , o no 10 w•1~e 1nv 1rrt01111r111e, or \aid dKedt.,, •'• tlt(IYl•ect lo 11" tr.tM p•'-LIC NOTIC~ ---------D.. t ' ~\ !11f0tm1rllle1 In an~ bid If In 11111 lllGG ng wltll !he nettHl•Y yOll(hlrt Jn !I'll ofll{I V D .0:. FICTITIOUI aUSIN•SS
ST.1.TIMEMT °' WtTMDltAW•L FllOM 1101 8.t..lOOCii: A~lO !ON >001 Slflltd NORMAN E WATSON Of, ... ""' ol IM l l>Ol't e11t11lea court or NA.Ma ITATIMl!NT
flAllT MEIUHll' Ol'•ltATING UNO Ell ftf'tlMll ll11llr:ill09 4 ~vllf 10I (Olli SI<!., 80lll'd (II Trvt1"s to pr_,,1 th..., wllh IM MUHlry ,ICTITIOUS lUSIMlSS T111 ftlilowlno Pt1'110ftt 1r1 doltlQ
l'IC'TITIOIJS aus1N•1s """'!! lf•ll C1lll0<n . tin• OJN!• M.t' 21 1,,, 11 00 I"' ~111 ... lo ,,,., lll\Olfllg,,.d ,, QI! ,,nd NA.Ml ITATMINT tllltlntll II l~• *G-llOwfl'IO Pt"°" "' wr ~0)1W11 ., Giit! ,_,. •rtl•ltl'(:lurlf Cc. IN; • lloe•d MIY 27 UfWff .. 0 lo• Tm lllfWP()rl tetch lnt !00aw4nt Pff-.. ,.. dOll'IO CAl..ICO COUNT RY TIJCT11.es 1I057
• g-rtl Pf•IMr lrOtPI lhl NM._•111 0 C•l tDtn I coroor•l1on lOOI ltf'dlllll l'VbllM'ltd Ollf'IOt (otll 01Uy !tll(ll C1HtornlJ '1'611 wllkh 1$ 11'11 lllt«i al bvtl-I t Ml9f!Oli. ,tul'llllll'I V1llly Ctlltatllll
Mt 1tlnf1 uncltf 1111 llttUJ~ llu1 ,._,. ·~ lo no i Sul!t 10I Cotti Mnl M•Y 6 1J, lt7• 1111 1A IWlh'lltl DI !llt llft(ltl's-lontd In 111 m•lllf) l'l llSONNEL P U I L I S H I N G '111ll .,,,,,. al A I UIWNMOWl.11. SlllVltE 11 C1!110tnl1 "&'• _ --Ptrltlnlnt to 11\it ttlf'lt Of wkl dOtfOOftt SY5TEM$ CO -Wnlerl1 Pll<t Ttr'y It S1111'1C11ri 11111 S1ftt1
,..,, Hell 4v-Fovnt•lft \11l1tr C4I llll\ DutlnflH II tOlldll( Cd II~ • w!l11f11 1ovr monlltt titer rlie fir.I Nt"'""t ltltfl. C•~fl«nl• nHO L•urtlll Clrcll '11111111111 \1'1tlly
111> ~ 1 f'1ot. tlll'POrlllon publlelllOlt ti 11111 1'1611ct J•""" W 1111 IS1 ~II Cr1lo DI' C•!lt111111f tt1lll
T'-I e1r11ou, 11u1ln•t• 11•tnt llJ!ttM111 C.o f C'O\tt'.,. A,c,.llt(l\11'11 co Inc P,,IN April 16. lt7A. Or1ng1 Cl!!tor,nl• ""' Nlnty I. llilndtr'I lflfl S•n!•
.,,.. 1f\t. Plflntrlhlll ...... !!ltd on J.-1~ llOtll•I L l•ill(l(k Vic• ,.,,,llWll vo"u c~n C'.1..-rn• RO-IRT ""ttURWlll JOllll ti ltJt:Mrdt 1'2f "'"' Ao.I'd Ll lll'lll• Girt.It --.. l'Cllltllllf) V4Uey
1t!l j" !IX CWl!I~ o1 or,..._ '"'' 1ttltrntnt 11-~t I led wl111 tllfl I' w OU' _.v li:•"utor o.f tlll Wiii MltllW C..111'1111• f0'1U C•lllomll n70I F-Oll lll•mt •NI ACIOrttl of ttlol! "ton.on Count~ Cttrl 01 0r•"'91 C011'11\1 on A;irU ot fhf 1b!Mt ,.......,., dtetdif'l\1 Th!s ov.intt1 It ('OflOllCltd t~ I Of!t Tftlt ~·-Ii tond~llll bV • OOl"ttll
'Ith,. 1wl11• 10 1'71 DAILY PILOT HUll.WITt. H\llt#ITZ I RIMll ..,.,1 ,,.rnier.rir11 portper11tfo
lt(-1?1 E l rd!oftty, flQI hull! SON•fllSHlfllf & AltM•TllONO 00 Jlllf •trwet JAMES W tlllLL '~ l 5'yrl0t•I
Arlt\ 1 !NM• A111 C1llforO'i1 • 11, • .,.ri ''' D• Clasiified AdJ , o to~ ,,,, Tlll1 "•'•'""'t w•• /Hfl .i111 1to1 TJtl• 1t•twmtnt ••• nlld lftltlt lflll coun ltf!'flft Iii a .... 111.ay Nlw-1 Bit<"-C1Mf !ft.,., BHtll. C.Nftn1141 t2... {OVlllV C:ll•t ol OrellClt Cllultfv WI M.•v :l. IV (/trk o.f Ortr!n tol.ll\fy 11'1 Aptll It
,,,,.. T.i .-..1. 642 ·5678 1114) •U.ft2t Jt7• 1'1~ I "11&1l11ofd Or1t111t Coe~ D• ly l'llt:I , , ""' A.ller.p .., l tKlltef F»m fJnM
.... ,,, tl "#fy I I) m• l ll()l).1• 'ubt•llta Onllll), C0<0'1 O•llr l'l~ l'UOl"*I or.,.. Co.•I D•Tl1 l'llol Pu'blllt-ld Orano• COtil D•UY JllMI l'vllflll'ltd °'""' COtlol o .. ll'r PllOI •c•!I" •PIO 111•'1 .. I) Jt. .. ,. IUl..f• .t.,,n tJ 7t ""'M•Y. 11 1111 i!ti.7• MIT' n 10 f1 .. ,. IS6' ,~ ... 11111 2) ,, M•Y .. l). ,,,, lllOf.J'~
PUBLIC NOTICl
PUBLIC ~OTICE
~ ll4fltl f!AlrlitlpNct 911 !hi °'Miii (OHt
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS l ""' C.01 ....... """ ca. .. , • ""' • [ 642 ·5678 ..... """' -· T,P 11 With I w..t Ad
Geperal R E 1002
ERRORS Advertisers
should check their ids
d•llY & report errors
lmmedl1tely The
DAILY PILOT 111umes
h1b1llty for the first
In corr e c I Insertion 1
onl)'
( ~uforSale
DON"T MISS
THIS!
"
2 BR :lUcl dl'n ho111~ !;I ~ II
f ltUI) khlhl ti II 1lh ~
jlC!\Sl\I' 11ood JI I 11Cl1 !\ L:
be 1111\ful 1;31pet~ 111~1u
rhupes fll:oi)-<: ~1 1" \ 111\l:;.<'rq-.. I
Lill,! HllU !}()(JI It II J
i\llLLTON $ school 01111t1
aiu.ious o.nd 1nny c;inr tncl I
1' 0 Pi \(>(' 1Nh1("1'll 11
S6j jOO tall unn1cdl 1!\ Iv
BUY A
WARRANT¥ HO ME
3 BR
POOL HOME
\11 ~nu 11 unt1 11 purudl51'
l..Jll ~t l.'OlHllY lily\e hOlllll. J
h1.'(lr'OQ111~ 2 • 001h~ \111 0
1n '~"he r!1'fph1cc11 l.Ju'l.-e
fu1n lly rt111111 \\ fhrtplAl.~
\ l r} SJ)ll• lous 1Ji11lo urea
11ut1'0U1\dnli; b l'fl u I If u l
ho Hit~! & f!llrred 1K10I Cll.11
lo !ICC 963--IMJ.
f "' "' '., ... '"'' ' •' .... ,
\'.\l,LF\
RI: \LI\ . ~· "'·· ''' . ., .... ,, .... ~.,.~,,ci,····· .. ·~··· '"'""
DEFLATION
SPECIAL
1 B1.'(trooo1 !. l>iol h
p 1l11ttd 1ni:.1d\.' & Olli
tln 1h1" orn>1
nc11ly
111111)
Just Reduced To
:,~. '1SFUNT08£N<E $27,500 [~ ~ 2211 Now~ll
BUY A
WARRANTY HOME
5 BR
CUSTOM
BEAUTY
l~:lu!1fu1 <u~1on1 bn It hnn1..,
Iii\~ Ill \n) "pi;<'L II ft" 1 11•"
('('fl 1 \1 ...rt-. \ ll'' !1>11
(j[,,h11 h'h I :'\rd I l<l(I [1(11 I"
tXtl 1..,1\( !11) '011/1~1"/
lll'Ol{'f I Lt n 11la11 OH< \ ll
~•1 11(~ 111111 n11 r 111 1
96 3 .J 1 1 1 ra1 111)1,
1nf01 m 111 lo11
64t.'.lla'fi
Sun/Ev11
.146-4171
WE HAVE A
NICE ONE IN
COLLE GE PARK
Dii: 1hl" I sr111 lou<i b('ih,)f)nlr;
n I pool I hlr ~1z lr111111v
flll11l \\Rik 1(1 Sl hOOl!ot trld
sto1111n., Brmt f trailtr :l<'•"~' ~uff •111 (\!I
..Mir-~ ! ..
oPi.IV Tll 9
[~ THE REAL
ESTATERS
~~~~~~~-I NEWPORT ISLAND
LOTS O~ ~p 111 10 1no1t! Oupl1\ 1 Urlrrn.J 2 bfr
aroun t 111 \l111ost 180l'l h1 j " h U11 lf'l1Plu conwr tol
l')ud1ng I u~r> fam1h !'!'II) 11 in !)I 1,.11111!l10n Sll!001
it~)Qt'Xl l<i 11 g11 11 J.>ny on '1111 li7 3661 r. ,..1'!~11 !:1o;
tllh rl• hi:h1f ii rn 11 n I Qn1 1 Wa terfront Duplt•
8 1 "6010 to""'" A~t Bd1n ~ t ltth [JI 1 ~ !IJll
Outdoor ~port~ lri:.t 1 t ~
appt>al., Sri! \OUJ ('qUlJltlll'lll
1111h t lo"'-<•Jcl D nb 1'110 •
Cl 1s.~1f1ed \d 6.J~ 5678
01 .,;1nt1 111 .,uod lo.
I 1 lltlfl ( J 19 l(IO
Ct116 3 lti63
associated
BROKERS-REAL TOR~
JO:Z ~ W ilCl!boo 'J).J,.l 1 [~l~X ], .. --~·~· ~ l "'si-1ifiit:~ll!!w~~""""•~•.!!!®-
[ ..,..,,;,,, s.l j[-) 1 "'"'~-'1li111't!r~·l><lriio ' . . TD' I hull\ . 'f!f~1MI -!"'..,"\ljl
hu1!t Jn, rll~hl\lliher t 1.\ c1 •• s.f1c•tron -·-I 000 I Ot?S I '' I 1 '\tlflQIJS' l~I lll'llru:: ~
h Ill'~ Litll ~'; ) rrl P 1tk
lr;;;\ J•• J .£ 11 ux 1 Call -~ Jlll-l~J
~c1.-.. -,1 .. -... -.. -11 oo [~Til-~-R-R-~-l-L-,J
RI.ill Esl.illt !.IJ!i Genttll
1200 2999
1 YR WARRANTY
• HOME
HORSE RANCH
'--L-"_'_""'_'°"" __ __,I ~
\ 1 u~l6n1 4 IJflrm IX'nutlfully
111101ntrr! lO().'I "(I II All
un l<'11{rou111l u111hil'i. in 11nd
J)llld !or !UMI 3 nil 1U 1'\\\
60 Full p11cr unh SM ?!IOO
t l'RIUrt:s \ 11l1 v HcBHy !I
l'-.:1lu~1\C' one )<'ht ~(1'\1c"
1\iHr 1nl \ for furth e r
1n ro111111t1rm Call Vfl l It y
lttal1y 96;1-t.14'.\
'-----'""_'"'_1""'_11 ~1
-
10°/o DOWN
B1h 0/o l"-TEREST
C.D.M.
Look 31 1~ terms • They
ma.v be hh11ory !IOOM "° don 1
ht!'ilute U :,1<n1 w11nt an
rxtr11 ~h11 rp 2 UR 2 BA
J'0(.11 home In ('ORONA D ~L L\tAR on A hlg liOxlOO
lul \\Ith pnVlllc communl!y !It ai h a ere~
Ill'!. I Only $69 '"1 V Call &l1~nu
cc.,.1,-.-.. -1,-,-,,-,.-,-s-o_o_,o 1099 ~
['-___ ... _~ _ _,Jlitl ~Ila
$750
MOVES YOU INI Cl•111f1cat1on 9000 9099
' )ij] ~c::-1,•',-..,"n~,-.,~ .. -,.....,9-1~00 9'499
3 lkdroom 2 bnth Adult
Condo St'tJ('r I"\)-. all CO!IT-., No 1tlmmJcQ1 CnU 836-4200
Gr 8\""~ A1tnt.
l§J Sul(llr Bowl Cocton a:t
Autos ror s.19 r::i 01 anf:-t Bowl or a1iy kind _ .., or bowl v.111 aen wtth 8
Clt1J1fitat1on 9500-9999 I Dally PUot Cl!u1.slrh.'tl Adi _6~1i-lc;:"673.""------
G1ner1
23~ H
Just
ho1ne
k!e c
Maib
AS
Lo\CI} 3 p, u,:
Firt'plt!ll'l
bit 111<1.
cpt~/drp
('811 bt:
"'°m ~hopping
bt>ach
loan Fu
Call 1191'
To 1\'flM< rour be
llW' KT'°
one 111
On!' In
Nol1tt
Su1;h a
chall{'l'J
bt'~u!y
Ill 11 I
""""'
Eastsi
5 Broron
f'I h
169 :JIXI
Roy
1110 N
llUG E
cul di'
plat.-e!l
ra1nlly """'." I 847-001
•
50
red
ter
Vie
2 (
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Dr
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va t
on
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VIC
kit
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po
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..
Monl'.lily Mayb, 1q74 DAILY PllOT 21
1002 Gen.r•I R."'"E. ____ 1o0"2·"'G'"o-no-r•""l'°'R""."'E'".--"'1"oo'zc2-:G;:-o-n-e-ra"'1"'R"""'.E"'.---,,I00=2"'G'"o-n-e-ra°"l""R""."E-. ---,1"00=2-, -:G"'e_n_e_r'"'•l'"R"""'.E"'.--.. fOO-l~G-o-n-er-•~l "'R'"."E .--10021Gener•I R .E~. ---l700~2~Gene ral-R.E . 1002 ~
BACK BAY
Fee Land
2306 HEAT~ER i.'~NE-NEWPORT BEACH
uPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5
VIEW A FLOWERY BANK
and
' SHIMMERING BLUE WATER
In The
SPECIAL PRIVACY
of
" YOUR..OWN HOME
SBR 's-3 baths
$94,750
CHAR~OTIE R. LONG
Realtor Since 1950
PLEA.SE CALL : 644-1150
ener1I R.E. 1PQ2General R.E.
BIG CANYON C.C.-$295,000
1002
Ju st co1nplet.ed ! Beautiful NE\V custom
ho1ne \V/great golf course viC\\', Enclosed
11!e courtyd c11tr~1 • 5 Ufi : 1''fi . /ge DR . 5 baths
l\la rble, o~k paneling, air co nd + n1orc.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO.
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
2111 Sen 'Joaquin Hills Road
BUY A
WARRANTY HOME
o \\'RMI. ln•o l hl~ dcligh1fu\
four bedroo1n hon1e. Enjoy
thr ~at bri .. k fireplaet's -
Of)(' in the fan1ily roon1 -
on{' In the living roon1.
N1>lice the . """' kitchen. 1
Such 11 pity if yoo 1n1ss a
C'h..'\nce to buy thls \\'l'stcllrt
b<-11.uty. Call anti "~'ll look '
at it together. 673-85r50.
OPCN TII.. t • fT'Sl (llN ro llEJ.ltCCI --~P> HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT
50' on main bay \Yilh pier and slip. Recently
redecorated 4 bedroom home. Lovely brick
terraces. $27G,OOO.
SANDPIPER WITH POOL AND
View at Spyglass Ridge. 4 bedroom, 3 baths,
2 fireplaces 3 car garage wi U1 control~.
Wet Jlpr. All built in Kitchen. Dramatic
Cathedral ceilings. $129,:iOO.
-NEW 'LISTING BIG CANYON
Dramatic ho1ne with vaulted open bear"!l
ceilings. 4 bedrooms, 2% baths. Large pri-
vate yard on cul-Oe-sac street. Lowest price
on today's market $149,:iOO.
LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT
Custom 5 bedroom . 4 baU1 home. Water
views from large li ving room, family roo m.
kitchen and master bedroom . tst tj_me of·
fered. Be the first to see it. $285,000.
BIG CANYON
Charming 'Dover model with . expensive
extras -Mexican tile floors. tiled baths,
Corning cooktop. End location. 2 Bedroom,
2 bath, dining rooo m. $99,:iOO.
COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT
Small co mmercial building in West New-
port. Excell ent parking. Seller prefers short
escrow. P riced right at only $72.:iOO.
DIAL 644-1766
2161 San Joaquin Hills Rd ., N.B.
A COLDWELL BANKER CO.
·j ·, Ot JN!-fO._).;ES
. , for 11v~ry pocketbook
111 TH": 'i~IA !f/' COUPLE
\\'ho 1vishc1 to livt' In 1J1e
ct•nl\•r of On1n1<:~· Couurv
v.ill \l&nl lhl!1 \n11na<·ulatt.'?
bedroo111. \Vall p Ii p c r,
11rtrl('IJn~. om.I 1uh'1Yn\'ll
llt'':()r Is a l11.'\111•!(lu~ look. (
Ai1· co11dir10111n1;, 2 pools +
II jal'U:&:&I, l~l"lil \'UIUC· fo1·
$21.000.
+ RijS1'JC {.'1-tAR~I -2 1 11Jo1y 4 B1'<h'OOn1ie 111eludlnc
one <lt>\1·us1nh'I, pa.no vlev.• ·
i<;it1·hen/fan1H,v rnon1 , N•·1•r
flunily clublk!U.~t.· a11d poul.
Only S.~1,950. * O\\'NER ANXIOUS -to I
,.ell hill 4 l.1t.'<h'Ql'1n1 Tihu1Y111 I
Lurge living roo1n wilh
1 fo1·n1ul dining n.rc1.1 , counlry
style kitchen/f1:1.n1lly roon1
1
ovel'looks rustic putio and
rl~h ~1wn gnrdcn spot. Encl
urilt for lols of priv11cy. A
n1u.sl to Se<' lodo.Y, $•!0,900.
• rl~Smid.
REALTOR
OC:i:AN VIEW DREAM MOME
See lb'is corner location 3 bedrooni, fatnily
room home. llighlr. upgraded. Enjoy the
pl acid pool or use the private beach. A super.
large lot. A trul y best buy at $92,:iOO.
CALL ,644;7270
-.Q828-E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar
WE. CAN HEL, vo'u IUY,
SILL. OR TJllAM A HOME.
AN;t',tACE 1N THIE NATION
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
l'opular "So n1erse t n1odel". Largest plan: 5
bclrm s. & fam\13• rm. Upgraded car pets. cust.
drapes, 1vell landscaped -artistic red~11ood
decking. Xln t vie\V of \'a ll ey & night lights.
\'ou own the land (not leasehold), $93,500
2200 S~. FT. LIVING SPACE
Co nvenient "!:>plan", in ol'iginal ''Bluffs"
... \\•ith ~1t. & green belt vie,v. Lge. en('!.
courtyard entry . Ne\l,ily decor. 3 Bdrn1s. &
fain. rm. -21.~ baths, "\Vorth a look".
$74,MO.
STATELY 2 STORY
S69,95~Seclucled i bedroom. 2 both, New·
po rl Beach \ ie\\ hon1e on quiet cul .de-sac.
1:eatur1ng: forn1al cli11111g. separate fan1il y
roo1n \rith large brick (ireplace and lots f7f
\vood , 4 large hedroo1ns. nc,vly decorated
lhruOUl, fleautifUJ fan1ily bnckyard . \OITI•
pl cte ,,·ith ·paddle tennis co u11 and basket·
ball & ten nis b;ick board. Just listed, ,,·on't
last,ccill llO\V ~ 546-5880.
M.IN.I VIEW-MINI PRICE
$:J2,000-l~eautiful t-lunting ton Ueac h 4 Bed-
r\>onl , 2 buth hon1c. Qu iet tree·li ned street,
ohe block elen1entary school. Gorgeous vie\v
of Jiuntingtbn Beach fron1 backyard. \Von 't
last at this price. Op-011 U1i s weekend, call
!or details. 546-5880
~~HERITAGE
1' REALTORS
General R.E. 1002
+ h1AINTENANCE FREF.
LIVING -\Vilh !his 3
lx"(h'Q(ln1 t\-lontci:cy n1orlel.
Bean1 1.:cltlng~. fuluris\ic
kllehl'll 1l'ith du1 ·k ,1·11Jnu1
t'<.1hl11e1 ... , farllily r o o 111
o\'el'lwks ln1l111ul<·. S('('ludl~I
pullo. 11·et bi:.r. fonn11l
dl11i11g rn1., ai1· l'Oll{lh lonini.:•,
OUR "
Genoro l R~E-. -1002Genoral R.E. 1002 .25 * Balboa Bay Properties *
,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~~Y~E~A~·~~~~:::;;;;:;"'~~~~::;":0:::~·'~6~50~2-W. Oceanlront~~NEWPORT HEIGHTS
BAY and BEACH
REALTY
CALL 675 -3000 ANYTIME
:1 d {'rOl'l\li\'l' cJrlllilll. $·10,250.
The Real Estate Fair
839-6133 or 536-2551
On The Country
Club Side
$68,0QO
Of hfl'Sll Vrr1h• di-ive among
Ou· C'U.~tont h o n1 c s !
Chr•r·111iug Z ~to1y, -1 CALL ME , l'M HARO TO GET-New list· IW'(h'!\(1111 Mn1l". \'ou'11 he ·
!hl'1llt'll al th!' .-.ize or lhr l ing. truly UN lQ UE! 5 Bedroom , single story
t~M)J1\S. Sepnrntetl n1aslrl' in J !ar bor View Hills r Canyon and hillside
ti..1itr-io111. i\Iasstve stnnt· views \V ilh max imu m privacy. (No one can (~JulJll' fireplA.l:e. Beautifully see you but CO\VS ). Nearly 2600 sci. ft., + 3 landsc.·af)('(I extra dril·f"11·ay and pad for boat storage. t ar garage and all on one floor. Call n1e for
Call 546-2313. 899,500.
oPCNTltB . 1T'S f'UN TOBE NICC'
1
UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 675-6000 r ~
1
2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona· del Mar THE REAL
ESTATE RS \~l 1 General R.E. , 1002 General R.E. 1002 -~· ,__ __ _
I
1 YR WARRANTY
• HOME 1 YR WARRANTY
• HOME
'A''''-'""""''"''' •>lvl
\'.\l ,l ,~~,.
RI. \LI'
0 ~~M'" U•°t .. , .. >t
A .. [ M" f,O, ~] " ~I " ,,4.,,,( Ct> ........ ,
Charity and golf wilr highlight Wa lker &
Lee's community relations activities in the
month of May (Natio nal Mental Heallh Month) when the
Walk er & Lee Foundation will spensor two major'
amaleur golf tournamenls for the benef~ o.f the Orange
County Mental Health AsSociation.
W~N'S CHAMPIONSHIP
May 13-1.4
M1ss1onVieto GC
re en River GC
MEN'S CHAMl'lONSHIP
May, ~s. 26 & 27
Anaheim Hllls GC
Shoreclift GC
HunUngton Seacliff GC
San t 1emente GC
Green River GC
Riverview GC
Entry fee Includes: green fees; first round golf cart;
victory party, and trophies and awards.
--------------~---------197 4 Orange County Aniateur Golf Championships I I for tile benefil of the Orange County Mental Health Association I
I -ID Women's Championship D Men 's Championship I
I $37 .50 $50 I
I I
General R.E. 1002General R-:-e. 1002 Open Sat/Sun . i-5 I Dl1plex. Lovely 3 BR.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;JSandy beach. '''hite \Va· 0 ,1·ne1"s unit + 3 BR
LIDO \Va terfront. 3 Bdrm. & lge. family rn1 .,
or 5 bdr1n s., Y.1itH 6 bath s. Lido Nord. Spec-
tacul ar vie\v ! Pier & float. S275,000.
WATER FRONT LOT ON LIDO NORD
40 'x90'. J\lagnificent vie,v! $250,000
LIDO NORD
5 BR .. 5 ba. Prize 60 ft. \\1aterfront lot. Pier
& £1oat. $375,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
ter vie'''· 2 Unit s. \\'hat 1 ., 111orc can J say ? Co1ne rental. Best loc. O\vne r
lsec ! ! ~155.000. 675-7060. anxious $89,500 . 642-7491
BALBOA MODEL
3 Bl~ .. 21!2 baths
Tiburon
1\ssun1able loan
$37,500
556·8800
Newest & Mostest
All wood & glass. 4 BR + tam.1·1n., on Penin.
Pt. Drive by corner Bal-
boa & I Street. 673·7420. m REALTORS
L..C:! 4 Local Offices To Serve You
...34 ... 1 ... B .. •,;,Y• .. i .. de!'!!!!D!!r ....... s .. u .. 11 .. e .. 1,, ... N .... B ......... 6 .. 7 s .. -.. 6 .. 16!!1!'!!!!' IG_en-;e;::r;;•-;I ::R;. _E-;. "::::-:-;;1:-00_2 ! Gener a f R. E.
General R.E. 1002 1 General R.E. 1002 "" ~?,,~~"~O""~~""'·' Newport Beac;h
1002
M • V"ll L.."l1-ge cow111y style hnn1e in View Duplex ex1can I a prestige area. '.l b<'rtrooms. KINGS ROAD Mesa del Mar I Near Beach 2.1 ~ haths, h\'o inas.~i.\·e I Vic11· !r"Orn ev('ry rooin! F or . . f1rPplat"'C'.~. l..ru>gl" fanuly ' 1 11 1· , t J 1 o 8 O This ls a largl' ..\ bcdroon1, Enle!' through f1011"er covered i'OOin 11./fireplaC'C. \"C"i·y 1111 c C'r lll\C''S or. x
2 bath n1od('] ho1ni.' !ha t hali Spa nffih atrium. ~lcxiCan spaciou!' p atio are11 1 ~1._3 Ca r garng~. ~an add
heen l"Omptctely updiited \ tllC' cntry,\·ay. Step do1111 smi'Ollnding heated pool ' .1 pa1 lrncn1 fl b b ' e . :l ivi~l~_::r,10.~y (\t·1·01:H to1· l':-f1 ras. r living~ l'OOlll. SepBrate den i1·!ftr a "har. Ju~f"fK'rfccr for \ 6~1~11tJ1.0n1f'.. to_ remodel
ft"s 1v1flnn 11·alktl'" cllstan~'c 11•ilh oval hearth fi repl11ec. C'll!C'11ain ing. Call fo r I 01 .. ;,1.~_rl-:-<111 ~0· ~Rn Y
of al! 5':hools and shopping. Huge sepa ra~ fiesta ruorn private sho11·ing 96.1-4!'>-I::. 1.Xl~!'~ 1 ,1t~cs. ~allp or n e
It's just been I' led :1t \l'ilh abode fireplace. Gar-I in O• ~ation . . o r
S-t..\.fnl. If inte1~~1ed. ~'OU'll den kitchen. i\1assi\'e 1n;is1er a~point.men~~o ~11"'rdpect. Tr.yl
have 10 l:Uli quickly! !'ii.Hie u n be I i e ,, a h ! c Tus'. 11 \I~ • •-a cr a
•" oj~ >0 .. 0 >Alt f,T• .. A!I Of •ALU(
\'ALI,.~\''
RL\LI Y
· n-ar~ hat'ienda only SSl,500! Call · co: rs
· WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Evenings )
4 BEDROOM ,
Cal ifornia Rancher
$34,000
NO 00\VN TO \'ETS
This home sparkles, frf'sh
paipt insid" & ouL Dollar
brig'hl kitchen. big tree I
shaded lot & much n1uch
1nore all of !his plus no
do"'" 1ern1s to Ve ts or easy
5': dov.11 terms lo au.
Beller hurry on this Oil{'.
WALK~R & LEE
REAL ESTATE '
COSTA t\-1ESA
545-9491
110\V -842-.2,-)35,
THE REAL
ESTATERS
MACNAB
IRVINE -------•-------
NEWPORT CHARMER -$54,900
11n1naculatc 4 bedroon1, lg . fami ly roo1n
\V/fi replace . pa neling & vaulted ceiling -
on spacious grounds. Lois Egan 644·6200
IU26J
BAY & OCEAN VIEW
Oµ.e n down coast view of Ocean & Newport
l·la rbor fron1 th is spacious 6 bedroorn'
ho1ne . Lg . re creation room \\l/\\ret bar &
kitchenette. l'icr & float . $335.000. \Valtcr
King 644-6200 !lf331
"THE BLUFFS"
Spc1.:1aculac \'ie" of Uppe r Bay & Dover
Shores. 2 hedroo1ns. clcn . 3 baths, bean1ed
ccilin!lo;, 2 fireplaces & 1,·alk·in bar. $89,500.
.lnck Cus ter 642·8235. IU 131
A 61~G L'"UAP<o•St
A&URICAH ~TOC~ E>CH• .. \.I C.t)W A Hr
down
A small pric,e
1opay ·
~ ··-ro -11.1move111 a
n:ioonificent
f fom Pacific Coa.sl Hlgl'lway end SuperiOf' Avenue
lnlersection, drNe up
Superior to Newport Crest
entrance. Sale office: 1:12 Robon Co urt. Open
dally 10 A.M. lo Sunset.
(114) 645-6141 .
I Name· ne __ _
I Address I I
Street C1ly Slale __ Zip I I Handicap Club Afliliatlon t
... ------'8 75~ corwenhon•I l1n1nc1ng ol 30 year lean. Clah price Clll
Pt1n 1, $63.000. IOl1I dOwn PIY'"'"' ol $31S0.00: 360 month1Y ~ymen11 of l•I! 81 (Pf11"1C1oet and 1nteresl). 11!1.U a~ Hto-
t1at1011 l11t I00111on1t t 25'-ANNUAL HltCINTAGr RA.Tl.
I I
I To:o-,.e..ityGeHc:1........ a._-..car11o1-14 1
1 Wllttrl lff.flc. -r I 1411s.-11o........ •-car1May2• I
I 4 ..... 1..,CAtzlOZ --·~".::tt"'.. May27 __ _ --.... . I ... • .. --. ·-----·--••1t1t .. ••·--"-1-•1--
Irvine
IOI Dover Drive 1-42·1215
1144 M•cArt l'l'lr M•·t200
Newporl hacl'I, Calltornle.tZfl.t
N ... pc)rl cr .. t ll • llfOlf<;l ol Ptcik" C., Irie
~ lllOl>en H. Grant Oo•PO'•llll'I, 0-11 Oof>l•KIOI. •
1.!J!:::-· --=
Pt!(• QUO!ed OI• Ollll lllO l lt ... !•Oll lt l"t 1:>111 Olift'*H llH(:I d
!Iii l\OIM to •ll•cll ""'' bf' .aOd-tO •nr 10o:J•hOJ1•l cN•1111 to< IOlt Pf•· 11\o~llll 01QO!oOllll1\•111.J U (Udered by lk,-ytt nr. Stnll, •.clflc; fol C,
l"f: flll""ll tr.t t19fll 10 ~ Pf•tll, l"'1llC1f1Q 111111 bl.lllOlftQ t11111
•rid t11K1"c.t10<"1• •tt!IO<il nohc.. o--•G...,
------------------------~ .................................................. ~-~~-~-.--!!!!!!!,~!1-==========-1
•
• ,._. DAIL.Y PILOI --t.londay ~1ar b, JCJ; .. 1044 --Co rona de l Mar t022Corona del Mir 1022 Huntington Be1ch 1040 1 Hu ntingto •1 sti°(}, ~ ,. ........ ~~ ...... d~ .. ~~ .... ..,..,..,..,..,..,.f~ ...... .,1 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;l~~P~r~ic~e~R;.e:dhu:c:edd'
tten a Presentation o _ s2,4oo.
BUY A
WARRANTY HOME
Grcte nb:tlt Jewel
Unive rsity P a rk
3 Bit, ';l .:A honll' & fun1 nn.
JIJl!.hly up)Cto1dt>d. 11 U ~ I'
hr lt k IJllllO, I O\\'
n1111n1rn1u11-e )'tt.1'11. See thl'I!
r~~1·t1 huy ii for $62,900. II
II
Hear ·the dynamic,
world-famous speaker-educator
JOHN LUMBLEAU
President,
"
Lumbleau
,.Schools
Presented by
Real Estate
0
VALLEY REAL TY
Operating 36 wholly owned offices throughout
California ·
A Berg Enterprise American Stock Exchange Company
MEET-
the men and women who can help
your financial independence
Scholarship programs for untrained people
Advanced training program
for experienced people
8.:00 P.M. (SHARP
TUESDAY, MAY 7th
PACIFIC ROOM
IN THE
SIERRA TOWER
_DISNEYLAND HOTEL
No .Admittance Charge • Free
Refreshments
Hu·sbands and Wives invited
imited Space -·Call 639-1501 for Reservatic)n
•
• 2 Bdrm. + Pool 3 BR'S
$36,950
CHINA C.OVE •
is just a splash away lrom this charmlhg tr~ 0"1ner will carry some financing -
$119, . •
GRUBB & . ELLIS CO.
$22,600
You <"lln PMY ~ n1on.• 11um; Ltl\'t'!y ;: lol'<lirioin hc>nl•' 111
lhl.s for a ne"' unit or )'OU . 1 lghhortiond t·lo.;" 1•1
<:fin bey my upg1•1tded uni! it~~t· :ach. ("nnVl'llll't111~ '
for $2.00'.l belO"' rcp/1.1ctn1ent locu!J'tl n~·ar i.t·honl~. p;irlii<,
cost. , . 1 & shoppin1-:. Tl11s ho1nt• ht1.., 2 Bdrm l'Ondo., desn'llb e Vu.Ill')' H!•a!T~ ·~ ••\t·!u.~1\•' (
ground lev('I floor p!un1 l ~'J one year !>('!'Vici: ,,,1rranty I
years ne"" Jtb>sh\y Pa1nl~I Call 91 .. ~543 with taslefully ~eled and • ). ·
mlrrortod Jlv1nr. room, plush
(":tll ij.1()..Rtj72
t.Jstlngs Nl'edcd
REALTORS 675i7080 'vnllpapcred dining area,
L'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;.,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... oj,.!!!!,/ shag carpet~ & custom I'! drapes, o\"etslz:ed ll/ltltry
General R.E. 1002
1
t cost1 Mesa \)\02' area, rul!tom tile t"Ountei· I OU CAN AFFORD ---------;:.:;;:;.::-'"';:.:;:.... _ _,,~l~'i'I tops, shake roof, ri ear Y
MESA VER.;o.E 1
1 schools, y.•alking distnnce tC1 1 iiiiiiiiii_,..,_ ...... .-. lllL• eus-101n l.-:•·d 1·utit' \\'ilh ils
6 BEDROOM II HwtUng:on Center, t>"·ln1· I' ~ 1~11111:s .. 2 J.mlh~. Lreakf:ist
3 BATHS BIG CUSTOM mtng pool and many park Entertainers f ti.u-. utility 100111, '\•ash<'r , • . areas. Now S2000 below coi;! nnd drvrr. It hM lols ol
BL\IACULATE CONDmON l'iOO Sq, Ft.~ huilders n"''.1 new. (Principals only Delight I s101':1gt'. ;uit.I ls loca!NI
$11,500 FULL PHICE 1"°1 me.,. 4. 01 5 bedroof ".'1s. pleaseJ. CHll lorlay 81"aullful .i bedronn1. A~~unt•' 10u·ri11~~;"?JQOnl park and pool. uge 1v1ng 100111 + an11 Y 147.3095 71 \.A t S'">!I i•<'i' n 1 ..,.... • Th" '--nulifu/ hon1c 1"''1.v room plU5 l'\nupu<1 rooni or ~·' ' ci:in -_, 'CALL 552-7500 ....... "" n10111h n r nll1\'1•nl101l,u
qualities ror the \Valkf'r &J billlards rocun, 3 baths, J 1f'rn1l' J.1\:.ll l'1t<'h ••n .• VISION •
1 l..ee Homi" of lhc \Vct'k. i·ar garage. A "'or/d •01 vuuH1•d •·t·ihng"s, l1r«pia<•f'.1
Beauritul Shag ta rp e I 1 fea t;ures &: elc!gaflCl". SS!r.~. · prol lai•rl:<<"illll.'d. tl\1 m 1
thru-out, "'alk lo school 1-&16-TI7l. S"' ".-vi
-r ----lo c ntlon , and n1uch vr~N U.i•l1SFUNTOIJENICE• 4 BR'S
n1uch 1nore. For further ~ · , [ "I' ii/age Real Estate
Red Hill Realty
RE.\LT\. R~:ALTOP.S
1·n11'. r urk C<'ntc-r, hvi11e i11formul1on nsk abou t ' WITH A VIEW
Ji>Jing ~o 91&1 , I , , '62-4471 ( ~:;.) 546-8103
1048 WALKER & LEE I Beautiful . l'Xccutl\~ hon1f' Lanu na Beach
., , . . • _ _ ovrrlook1ng golf eoursl'. ,..----~---.:;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~ Hl· .• \l. EsT,~1E Pool & Rec Area C'lo!lC' 10 the beach. Super -Builders Closeout •
COSTA l\1£:si\ up-~raded ho1nc in A-1 Nf'il' I Bit 2 Ri\ hon1r. rnon1 I JUST FOR YOU _545.9491 Beautiful Ne\\·po11 Rlvil'ra 3 cond., rcndy for quick
bdrm, 3 ba!h IO\\'nhouse Cnll Jo •. ,.,, for pool nr eain.~'l',hll11'l1_1 Thi' ulriniu!" in eondri Jl\'ill~ DUPLEX. Tll'O 1•h11rn1ing
units as 11.n I n 1· 1• s 1 or· s
i;;tartl'r or Iii·~· in one anrl
help n1akC' Jl<l~·nu·nts 1\·ith
the olht:>t'. SJS.T.JO. Red
CarJ)C't lnvt•sttnent Division. I
979-25.""J(). I
'
-11 "" · I (' OC'Cupnncy. '""" r i•JJ!s thruuu1 g,1, in•. 1 , ... , 11·1.1 11tn1ng roon1. cir s \163-4a4:l. · l ·01 Slffl()n 1" pn•\'lilc'•! hy 111• .~nn(1
kitt'hl'n. ~·irepla('(', Shag !n~I yL<arc' e~j \'~!!rs~-1" r.' I l'ondo111iu111111i.. Thl'SC 7
t•arpcts. Just fl('\Xl"-~ (rorn ~,o1,,a/ll!\,1,1 .90' .. 1• ',, .,;,, tnu!s urt• f'flc·h in<llvidunlly the pool S: rec urC'a. Call 1nl .;. -. 1u -• . ' "• "" 1 " I J ''"17:!0 · s~ ;. · 1 1,,. \PRI st\"h'(! .t· i'<lnstni<' ru n R ve ..,,..,.... yrs ·.i ' !U · • ' ' · . ( I I lion l.o<:aled on Springdale St. 1ht' 1~Jll'l'-;siyn ° so 8 ·
( TARRElL J
~orlh ot \\"a rner A''e. Salrs I Thr ktl!'hens h11 ve eo1npal .. ~ 0 office: 846--50Zl: Re a 1 I 101rs •. thsh11·Rshe~:,,~h "'un'i',·
1,· !\ii , &16-\351 t' t•on1n,i:: O\'Cn. r:. 1--iiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiii I ~i.late l rut, · h11s an out~lundlng oc~an
2!00HarllorBlvo. Spanish Hacienda H~~t~s~P \ ;~~:;;,, ,., .... ii;.soo "
:! & FA..\l. R!\t. -50x174. R-2 . Hu~tiC" rolla~e siruatNI on a AtJ/.
Lot. 1962 !\laple -Vacant -\\·alk lo lx'nt·h. 4 ~h~nl, hill ne:ir th1.• !x>arh. Assu1nr O ;'I -
buy<'r net'ds 3 Grand. separalc fonnal d 1111 n !:-71 • ., \'A lonn b<ll:ul<'f' o! 1 14'1~
I G • d rooni. !\tust 11-L'f' lhis 2 i;tory Stl,()..11 1\ith l1•!<s lhtln rrn1 REAL ESTATE
I Uinta' to b<'lil'\'t' it. Only S.la,9j(), paymC'nls or onl_y $1Si. f)('T"
962 2456 l!YO Glcnnt•yi-e SI . • 1110 PJTI. 3 !"pac·1ou~ bo;'{!nn~ 1,11.~47:; ~,.i!M'J31G
I REAL TY 1 • nrC'd:o; 11 lirt!<' dt't'Ora1u1i.:
_Since 1t4' I' hut J"{'a!ly r!111n1nn;:-! Bkr Home ! Downtewn Costa M,.. 91;i.:..·,11, .-.--c==,---
Prin1e IOl'ation. L.urgc fan1ily i·H~:~lOR 642-2991 88650 Adams aEt !\lab~. llB SUNDAY
EXQUISITE
,\ P:1r if1e 1·1c"'· LiJu·a·1noden1
)d!i'h<'n 1tpf'l11111('(>s to n>·
iliH'f' )•lllr 11ork. Swiny dl'l'k
111-.-·11 no Chi' \\"Pl>'I i;i<fl' (or
the 11111,rnuun rrt~. L.ari:c
1,10n1s for 1• n re rt 11 in i ng
1t·1C'nds & thick carpels &
drapes for your everyday
l'!ljoynil'nL S.l.'l.fiOO.
ho1ne. Adjru:·c•nt ro Co1"0na . pen ven1ngs 1-S P .M.
de! !\.Inr lligh School and 'HOME \'r"ANTl!:D Ry private OPEN HOUSE
Newport Beach tcnn~ cl"b. l ""!'lY-~·-""'""· 130.000. REPOSSESSIONS 16622 BUSBY, H.B. 5 bedroo1ns, rarnily room. I $.Ja.000, Pnee Range. Cosrri .. . .
OCC'an vie''" Exh'eml'ly light !\1esa·NeY.'port areit. 111 us t For infcirmalion and location 3 BR, boo t door, fflbulous
and airy, In I ip-tdp have assuniable !onn. of thell{! l'l·IA & VA hon1es, pntio rind yard. $44,900.
condition -If your fan1ily I &12-1060. No Agents! contact . BKH. 842-2535.
needs elbo"' roon1 and 5 KASABIAN l~UNTINCTON
bedroom•, call quk kly -COLLEGE PARK TOWNHOUSP. ..A-$/an 673-8550. 1
1 lleated pool central air Real Estate 962..6644 4 BH, 2 BA, $:!4,990 oPf.N Tll i . ITS FUN ro BE NICEI . . ---------Sl ,150. dwn. S257. mo. ""'>'!' .. 111J cond, 3 BR, rll'n/chnlng ,,..
2 Ba I I B I PAY CASH J!}Sj() r~n1briclgr 1-<i.. Pool area: · .rp c. Y Oll'nl'r. Bkr. 5lll-77!1: f'v!'/ 5.~7-1617 REAL ESTATE ;~~ 1fr. ~~~?277· 2314 FOR YOUR HOME --11t-:....:Tt :\'l·To~'IJ--11!10 f.l<'nnC'y«' :--:1.
.__ 2183 PUENTE, lTJO sq ft. ' • : •. in 24 hours . ! 1:0\y:-;1'1ol·sE I 1!1 1·9~i3 :.19-0016
Corner lot 3 BR 2BA No G1n11111l·ks. fnlurni.111011 2 Bh, 11 i BA. 519,900
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
1022 J5xJj se.p guC:st n ~ l'Onfiden1ial. bkr. M42·7~ll ; I $00». d11n, S:!16. n1<1. 11..'lys all Custom-On 1/2 Acr~ l----------1 p1ttyh0l!S{>. Assun1e GT !0<111. ('\"CS: 968-1178. ~~~72 .l'onrincntal P~~p{1{1[ j,>(lrr~ or pn\·a!')'! Rlue
Corona del Mar
1 YR WARRANTY
• HOME
WANTED!
I $235 pc'r nlO. $36,IJO. Bkr _ -. -. _ Bkr . .::t'l~·Till; evC'. :.t:Ji-4617 Pa.-1111• 1·1f'11! :; hdnnc:,
5-18-7711: e,·c: 5.i7-4617. O\VNER i\act1(1ce. ---l'hf'r·~ 1i 1r1~hf'n, fin:"plll(_'(', 2 =~~~=-=-.---. -I Tremerido"' Spani"' 4 Pr1'ce Reduced $4500 I "" ; "'. r" mp'",,)' !\IESA Ve~e I614 Cor;uca, bdrni, 3 bath y.•ith custom 1,. n d ~ 1·" pr d Y.'tlh an
brfl ~I. firepi~. 3 br, -ba, interior. Family mi, trplc, Rbund:uK'r of lush greenery.
refurl;nshed hh-n e iv: dinl n;:: nn, built-ins. Bike lo Just look al th is grra1 :, I lk'arh & shops nC'arby, Gall
\\'e y.·o~d like Y?U t.o come to $45,~. Bkr. 548 • 7 711 . beach! Bkr Call 8-l~-he d room v.• 11 h Io v.· I ~IJ.µ(X}l
v.·ork in our office 1f ~u f!'el eve:557-4617 , • • , nlaintcnanee yard. shill? ,.-------~
you_ w_ant the opportunity for i $13,000 assumes 7~~·~ Joan \\A~, TO B.EACJ I. t11rpct anrl. much.more, tor '•( 'W'Aftftln IJ unlimited e~lna:s under , for 3 BR 2 BA house l\'/b:plc J BR, 1 •, bas ... Fnm-rn1. <.1nly $33,!KXl. I llft~._
the spo~sorsh1p ot one of ~e [ & llun ny patio. S200 mo. frplc, r:?.Y rd pRtio. 1\sgwn· 962 2456 ~
country s mos! ~ynam!c pnys alt. At,t. 646-741,1 or able 1 ,, loo?. Seabury • lMl.SlliU~
real esta~e companies. ~\e I a-i· 1261 Traci., Q\1·nt'r .~~9470. I'
offl'r a hb<'ral commission :>-• HE\TED pool & unique dbl 19:ta ~-Co•11't 1!11y, L.B. schC'dule. unllm!!cd fBEAUTIF'UL: J hu ge Br, 2 . ' . + ·, I-----
a_dvl'rtising bu_dgets, lull , Ba. l'!osc fW.e shopping, ~ir~~~I<'~ ~\~:~ br~:~~11srr& l&t6,; Arl ams iii :\111gnt)Jia. Hl3 ., M
1
1_NT COND~Tl.O~ t1n1e secretaries. I\' e 111 schools, cirtu'cft91i.. 1\ssume 1 ' \ . 0 E • . llr 1 n1. oy. ll· 1 •ul -u11 n .tpl.
IOC'alerl officei; stalfed by · gvt. loan. $38.900. Agt. 11! ,.the .extrru;. I ~:~.u,me pen ven1ngs I Clr•~t· In ~hop11ini:: & IX'AC"h.
loc-al ecople aod nun1f'rous 5-16-7739. !\·,,o l°'.trl. Sh~re<.:l f'Sl·:S.E. B{•aut 1!11I i:11rd1'n.~ & pa110.
in-house exclusiVt'S sU<'h as Hunl. Bch. 962-.:382· Li:" he11.tcd pool ,t; re!'.
l-I O l\I E WARRANTY Fountain Valley 1034 O\YNER desp. $219j dov.·n. Hunt. Harbour 1042 1 ar.·;1, n11tke this an
P ROG RAM, Co11temporary 2 bdrm --e'it'C'Jltlonal huy at SJ"Z.OCXl.
GUi\RANTEED SALES . rondo. Custom drapes, 1>hl1g m·". A· a-..,.._ PLANS, HARD MONEY Farm . Style_ Home situated carpets, FA heat. Ln1s· fll ~ ~Q: u.W~
2ND T .Ds. NATIONWIDE on . king :aze lot. Isolated privacy. 1-'ull priee S:ll.!ril. I .... HH., I ~ ~ AND ST ATE\\' ID E quiet lane. I-luge 23x23 Bier Call 846-0CJO.I. .__.
REFERRALS and n1uch,I bonus room ! Real =-~---·
h Ranch kllehen has every O\VNER anx. ~95 do1•tn. l Beach Tax Shelter 494.S6o11 •••.1100
muc ~7"6ra-72'15. ..latest fi.xture .. + adjal't'nl hcl_nn condo "1th catht'dral l'&> .. !his summrr. rt'nt if 0 -==o----TV room. Crackling btiek ee1lllli, shag e a r pets. FFEREO •.••
fireplace in f.onnal living built-ins. Sundeck u\<erlooks nl'xf "·inrrr. Just aeross •tiC"' ... tll' 11u1ldl'r. Lo1·ely l
room, bunk house size BR's. pool, Bkr Call S.12....fi691. i;f~e<'t f"?m milf'-; nr s;,nily 1 hd1111., ·2 hath ~unny home:
dra nd "" •• 1ch_. fo_nner nlO(l«'l _· rlc.· flranu1t1c tntry rn i;h•p-up Shutters. pes, a O\\INER mvs. As~un1e -;•; ~anti) fu1n1~hL'fl · IUl n·k1 ~ 11,. rm. ~ni• rtrr k ructn plush carpets thruout. Un· Joan. 4 lxtrms, family roon1. I 1 .,-7"-" . · ,., 1 • • ~ m ~.t'l=n L"Oll>{ ee. ,.Q. JV. t'1'1';11n11· tilo' ll'"l"k. Sl l,;-,JI(} believable price~.~. Bkr lrple. BuiH-lns, dlshwMsher,
962-S:;Jl Bike 10 the beach! Bkr CaU HUNTlf\KJTC)l"-J HARBOUR The' lw~t hiiy in hrauriful ~=~~~:;::;~~=: i ,;;iiii;ii;;iiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiii l.UL(llnn! Fnr fur I h ,, r -8-12-2561. I RfALlY u11111'1na11011 .t· a p p ' I .
OWNER POOL l-lon1e assu~:ible 7\2'/. li:?t I COAST '11\\'Y . .~how1ni;:. c:1ll
TRANSFERRED \'A Loa n, 4 BR, w BA. s~ake 71-1: 84£..l384 & 213 : 591.2s4;, * 491-0301 •
\\"ith a dramatic 180 deg. Must sell this J b<'drnom, roof, frplc, wrought iron !V+uth const l'aelhc f'fln•
plus ocean view, a family room home. I-luge fence nrounrf pool, $.'IDS 1110, -EMERALD BAY-
beautilully decorated 3 BR . eul-de·sac lot, only 4 l~ Must sell, Owner1agt. Irvine 1044 A lo\"('ly, ent1·r1alning home
& Den Cit 4 BR cus1om built I years old. Will sell all 842-().102 111th a l'"'e<'pirll:( l't't"'a.n vir"··
home \\'ilh huge game room, terms. Call anytime O\', NER lvs. \1il!n Paci lie IRVINE Ur\IVERSJT\' i 2 Blks. to 1t'nn1 ~ <'Is .. pools
formal dining, and lu.'<urious SCOTT REALTY condo. Wnlk to lhc b<';ich. 4 PARK. Lu.xurious 3 bcrlrm & r1111·k~ .. l u.i1111_c;. 21.,
master :.uite. Outside is ex· 536-7533 room, built-ins, PTestli;e Condonlinium in Prim c b111hs; ht'aut1f11lly h 11 11 1:
tensive "Hlio cl cc ks. big aN>a. Bkr Call 962-1373. location. 1-~ormal dining, lgr \\'.,ll k1nd."l·n1X'<I: Jow n1a!nt.
trees anrl a !\ol pond. All at Tl BU-RON CONDO family nn.. s Pa ci o us gniunt1s. s1:~~'-~ll.
the end of a q u iet kitctien anti huge n1astl'r TURNER ASSOC.
eul-<lt'-sae. 3 Bedm1, 21 ~ ba, y.·et bar. bed1111 su.ile. Priced for .11~ ~-Cl);i i.I lilly., Laguna
A top value at formal dining, super Ju1tafewwords lnuncdia1e sale 111 $62,9j(} + 494-11 77 11'9 """ upgraded. Elec garage door, hest hu1-·? Call :\li'l>.
Call G·-l~~l l , air cond.. brick BBQ, in the r.ight place... llanna. ;,1i.:8 1i 1.
~ assume Joan. Qui ck SourhCo, Hcnltors No Down-Bra nd New 1 ~session. Less than year Dao'ly P'olot Exc11in:.: l-1°,1sttin" \·\e1v lmn1 J UST Completed, 2BR, 200, J I , old. /I 1 1 nd 0 liU/IC eeks off hui;:e ma.~lcr • R T 'f' d d 1v rp c, 011·n a , y.·n.cr. BR & 1 •
' ' BRASHEAR EAL Y Cla••o 1e A a am "''"''n 11irh lr11m Unil'erslly Park $·11 .;.(l(I, .1. 842·7411 ; eve, 968-43n 552_92,.1 t'l'I 1rw;; · f''i1·1•1!r111 lnr11tk'ln
MOVE RIGHT IN! PARKSIDE ESTATES Dial the direct llne Buy a new '74? ''our oldl'r hut!ger. S."a:-1.flOO t" $Cl(',,~. I nnll f!nancini: 1 .. 111:11r·h ,\'nut .
Vacant, lnimac. 2 bdrm., 2 Assumable ]9/0 Loan model Cllt is in big demand Only 3 lt'H, hurry!
ba.. home, less than 1-block J 4BR/3BA, lrg f11.mrm, cstm 642-5678 ... Sell ii fa5T with ~ Red Carpet, Real1ors
to llCean & bay. Quiet area, drps plu~h shag rough~ ~;i.lot Classified Ad. _ 497•1761 just listed today at $7.J,500 v.'OQ(i panl'
0
g, wallpa.p<'r, wet I ~;;:;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;:J~~~~=====:. I
. OR bar. lovelv yard. OPF,N BREA'rlf-takln~ OCC.un-& !\1!n1--!!s lAte on q_ulet, SCf'('ne 1-IOUSE SAT/SUN, 16120 I a 1 N
()ccoun Lanl'. Brig.ht & shiny Gall<itin. 5.11-6023 ACT. $@ ~lA 9'£2} I ~1~1)1)!\ v~·11·. cw hnme 3 3 bdrm. 1vlth VIC\\'S from 't) a -C. 8 •. · lU , lllllin glnSl!
here to there. $112,500. BY 0\\11er, 4 BR. 2 ba. 14X17 J.." \J Cl'lhng, $62,000. Open J.louse.
Unt'versi'ty Realty ram rn1 _ 11·/frplc, Lg. lot. Th f I I · • W J G 'fh Ch ' 'I 581-2007. Park P I ace
C E V 7 a n r1gu1ng ora ame w1 a uc"' • ReAHo~. j 3001 E c t ti\.\')' 673-6510 ' OV patio, :<tras. A
. s . ---1'% loan. $46.300. 9684195. lilit.il .. , Cl,\'I' •. '°llAM 5 BR 1-1"0!\11-' "-.. .. I At~entio~ _Builders O~ER Weslmont 3 BR + 2 O Reorrot1g11 i.t1e11· of tlie ! Patio. rruu "T~.''s69,~~·
40>.120 lot. F.>:tst!n,q 2 Br, 1 Ba + tam rm. frplc, Liz. fovr Krambled word1 be-LAGUNA Rl-:ALTY 494-0077
Ba hou~. So. or l~'."'r· Ap-Corner lot. Assume VA. low to l0tm l1>11r '11'1'!Plt ""°'di I' laglin1 Hills 1050 proved plnn~ ror addthon, i,.i 552.9503 I •
huilt · Pll'nty of profit! I · l• JR OJ FJA' DJ E
1
I O\VNER, New \\'orld .l HR, 2 j $74.fiOO. 673-16511 011·ner Harbor View Hlllt 1038 · ·-· · · ha, bhins, ~h"I'.:" rrpl!ng t
DUPLEX At 611 Carn.ition, j Assume VA ·Call 5.l2·0003' \
SJ. of hlgh"•ay, pr I e e . ~3. · I
cS~;~~:~ir.t:~~ "~ WANTED! l1 (
11 N t El I i r · Ud~~;ERFRONT1056
O\vncr $93,000. 673-4169. f This conllortahl<' !ripll'x Yo111 I
Costa Mesa 1024 l\fot ivntcrl and q u a ·t I f l ('cl I cost yoo vtry little • Yt>Ur I
1 huy<>r \\'Mis ;i Portoflno I K Y D, E E g A female nudist: Slie'll 11· ''nants will puy lhc bulk of I
?1<1ESA V!!rde 2932 Redwood,
1
n1orlel in Phase I or 2 of it J
1
J
1
ways. remember lier first day fhe bllls. Ownt>ni Apt, plu~ I
blfi 4 br, 2 00. J5x33 oov Brtn Harbor VIC"''· lie has . . • • • . in camp. It's like let1rn ing to studio n.pt, 3 Bdrms., 2 ba. i
p:1llo + lanai. 1950 sq. ft. seen Ill\ th~ 5 e. in .fly, You never forget tlie first C<ich . U!nschnld. $l00,t'XXI. I
144.990. Bkr 5 4 8-7111; MUl,TIPLE l.lstmg and l T A N D E T 1-· ,_, LOVELY NEW HOMI
cve:5o57-4617 v."Ould llk<" to know okf IK>me • I 3 Bdrms .. ram. rm ., din I
Ofhl'r5 before he m11 es up I J I' I' I J ,,. Complete ..._ dlucH• q11ot1d I rm., 2~i ba. Owner .. _01,· 1 BY owner: as~ume 514 % hi Ind "' b 1 d ~. 9" m . · 'I ilht!f !ri ti!• mfislr19 \¥or i nff,r. l..C:\!IPhOld. $85,000 1 $1 2,000 VA .or $1 S,000. 71A'7r Cati 675-7225 yo11 dtv•Jop l1om 1t•P No, 3 b•low. FllA loan. 3 BR, 2 ba.
$27,950. \V III 'de for C.M.
Inc. prot>. I00/556-764.1
EXTRA CE CONDO ..
I Sty, 3 B ~ Den. 2 Im.,
fll,l)I'. l'll.'it m CPlll & dq>1 .
,., ... ~ ...... , ................. .
\'.\IJ.E\.
IH \I.I\
""" ·~,.,.•I' "'~I • >;i ._,
$.i1,!KX>. By, owntr 646-63116 '---------
'
Lido t11!11nd ho~'"· ll.'alklng .f) PRINT NUMBERED lf.TTfRS 4 '11&1tinc:t of llhciJl', cht1rthc1i
IN TK~Sf .SOUA!!E ! etc. '
.o ~~:c:..~~ ""'"I I I I 1-1 I I I
SCRAM-LETS Anawers In Classification 8080 !-------..::::; i _.LIDO dREAlTY'•" ,, 1~7"\(.11<1 .. ,,11
*673-7300*
I
•
cam
rock
lront
Shag
decor
Knise
Dh;t.
If'.
2nd.
&ft.
week
·OPE
2-
G
CON
Ba
Boat
Full
Steel
Privat
2 gar
units.
Roof!
Unusu
Pure
in N
310
,B
t1Rrbo
din in
gour
fiN>pl
I-las
"""'
Be
CA
run
11'!.
""" 110!\1
par
$30,
""" M
642-
BEA
P al
only
fpl,
ame
Ev•
prtv
"' anxi
682-
* Be8"
baC
14
. . . • •
i' MondJy, May b, 1974 DAILY PILOT Z:J
1067-r--1-no_o_m_e~P-ro_pt_rty_~2000= --H"'o-u"",.-,""'u"'n'"'1'"u-rn"'i'"1h'"tc1_,.-....,.,H'"o--.--.-,.,U,..nTfu-rn....,.l1"'hod....,--,Ho.,-u-,.-,....,U""n"'l'"u-rn""i"'sher-d'--:D'"u-p"'l•_x_e-1"'U,.,-nf'"u-r-n-3'00""'.;:'--'.,,A"'p_;_•'crlC:m:-ec:n711'°U"n"t"u-::rn=-c--.J..-p'""1."'r7tm=en"t"•-Un f u;:n.
SPACIOUS back yd, cio.e to --1111;1'! TRIPLEX Generel 3202 Cost• Mesa 3224 Irvine . 3244 LES Spac. 3 BR. 2 BA & 2 Coll• Mou 3824 Huntington Be•ch 3840 bch &. nlounlftlns, 3 BR fftm . BR, 1 ha. l''rplc, shag, drp",
nn, 2 BA, upgnodcd thnr [liiiiiiiiiiiii~ii~ NEWPORT $ RENTERS S 2 Bl\ Condo, A/C .. $2'J5/mo bltiru;, J<ar. •ncld pullo. NEW APTS • WALK TO
Minion Viejo
:;"·h1~k~~c~~'. ~blle Homes i~ 0:~r:wl~~ : i P!!:~Jii~~~~~c $~. ~al ~ :~ ~: !jg :::~ ~~acAtt Eaf o;·t\\Vk~ ~~\O:~ 1 ~U~ 6~~ 831·~ or 11le 1100 Collltt ?i-fcM • Sten Diero VEnY Nice 2 Br $17:> E. Cn1. 3 BR llome# .... $29-j & $ll5 _<::9o:1-c:Jm:.:::·c_ ______
1
536--251'9.
Newpart Be1ch 1069 MOBILE HOME Fwy. Central r.te.11 loctit1on. LIVE HERE! ftlCd \\'/garage, pct fine 3 BR lfomt's '· $325 &. Sl"5 3 BR, (!en or 4 1·r. 2 ba. Gar lr'llne
FOR SALE•, Ownel"'I' uni! ha11 3 bedroon111 FR.PLC 3 Br or 2 + den. 4 ~~ uonleS ''• •. $335 & $425 Ne"'• Jrg. Blt·in:ii • $3&1.
3844
-VIEW OF -
FASHION ISLAND
Expensive Imported tlle In
entry, bl'ee'.tll wuy, kJ ti.:hen
&. ttar )lard or I h i 11
E')(qulsht l:iottoflno home.
Fee land! 3 BR. 4 DA +
bonu1 roon1 AND ninny
more ttUito1n fcalureg, all
for $96,000.
Call 640-8672
llitings Needed
5br·3ba & Family Room
L..arge lot, room for pool, side
drl\'e lo lmtky;u"d for bonl.
crunpcr. Custon1 Driftv.·00<J
rock flrcpht<.-c>. Sprlnklel's
front & back. Co\'C'red patio.
Shag C!U'Pf!I. N i c (• I y
decorat(!(J. 1-lnl'bor llii:th.
Knis('r & \Voodland Sehl
Di111. 1 hlk. to Boy'Jll Cluh.
$00,500. (m·nrr \\'Ill takt•
2nd. 208-I Tus1ln. 646-SliO~
an. 6 "'ttkdnyti, 1t1cytin1e
w~kendii. .
·OPEN HOUSE Snt & Sun
2-5 pin. \\'('(I 7-9 pin .
GRAND OPENING
Ntwport Bay Towers
1 & 2 OEDROO~l
COND0!\1IN IU ~I 110?>-IES
Baytront l lomes
Boat Slips run Securl ty I llghrise
Steel & concrete construction
Private 811.l~nies
2 garage sp.i.ces for 1nosl
units.
Roof top sundeck
Unusual Opportunity Io
Purchase Bayfront Property : in Newport Beach.
310 Fernando Rd., N.B.
675-ISSl
. Best ~uy Around
Harbor \'iC\\' 3bdrrn .\\·(th
dining roon1. nil 111otlc>rn
J(OW'mCI kilt•hen, I a r g e
lireplacl?'. Patio, SJ!rinklers.
fins 11n ahunflancc o I
.ltJ'('f!nery. l'c>e land, Call
644-8750.
600 NC\\1>(>11 C.t'ntC'r Dri\'e
BALBOA
PENINSULA
3 bt-droom, 2 bath home plu!I
bachelor rc:n l1'1. Bu\11-ini;:,
fi.rrpl8ce and patio. $61,!XXI.
646-TITI.
oPE.N TIL 0 • trS FlM 70 BE NICE/
dln!J1g roon1 fan11ly 2 Br. \\'alnut Square $240 $290. AU fncd, 2 tar. 4 R 01119 · ·•• · -· · · ·-$500 Cost" 'le••· s~-1!30.
SILVERCREST ~m -orchid ~ni • 2 3 Br. Unlvcnily Park $380 XTltA.. NI~ 3 Br den 2 ha HANOI Rt:AL'T'Y a.
1
' ·~
MOBILE HOME flrepl11ct1. Indoor BCQ . 36' 3 Br, Bayfron1 -Slip $j()Q $.'00, bbq, D/W, FP. 2 rlU'. •551·:ml * A,.rtments Furnished
M' x 5.1', 2 81.J 2 a; carp., patio circled In wrought lroo 4 Hr. J>cnin.sula -ALA Renta ls 641-8383 1 Lagu1'a Be1ch 3248 PINECREEK
draped, bll·lns., rtftlo., -2nd patio -~lus gorgoou1 Unyfront SSOO Find 2 Bf I""" Coroni del Mar 312l LIVES UP • • Bot! t It ·' "t', Lido 0 •ylronl Sl400 JIARD to ! · f, ,f,W. l . C1o•tom ~·lit , 2 bdrm., wMhcr & elect. dryer, wired more. 1 0 ler Wl s are " ..., '"'~U ._G!a-'lZ"' Gar. L.rg yt'd for kids. 1,,.,.. w/;; c •, P ., •, $120-\\'/ ulll. turn Bal•h . non-TO ITS NAME •
lot 220 air cond., kitch. 2 an -putlQ!j • enclosed 'A' w llUllRY! 2 BR , cnrl fl!!tlo, " ' mo k er, bus In cs!lman.
clock, Klorage shed, la.nd -£1\Ml"es. All this for only $lSS. Garage. Kids ok. · fireplace, lie. deck \\•/ocean Spolleiii. Quiet. S/h\\')'. O\'er 500 tall trees ruid 10
PARK WEST
APTS.
Family Apartments
2 BR. I Buth "°"' f!Vl!llahl~
fron1 $22'J. On CUiver Drive,
ju.•n ort San Diego Fr,vy.
3883 Pai·kv\cv.· I.Ji. 552-S200 acaped patio. Tiu-ee yra. old 10% down -aioklng S74,900 CLOSE IN! 2 UR, $l90. view, 2 ca r garage. A-1 Gr.l--18:59. streams wit~ v.·atertalls
• !Ike nu. Localed in new full prl~ce. Take advuntagc • '·· C'.._ .. 1 kid / 1 coudlUon lhru--OUt. , create a relaxllli seltif1li for 38 ,8 adult pk. aiva, trom noisy Call 1:)2-J'r.Xl, Dpi.x. ru~.-. or & pc · $350 MONTH LG deluxe bach. \\•/~ltchen. your ap9.cious tie\\' 1_ or 2_ L1gun1 Be1ch " ;6,,,·~~~7152• .... E,~V,!.E11s~'.~2~:h~~90":· 1\'11·"·NVESIMll.~}l\·.~I ~~:e~;!~; : e~2;':,. 2f·Atr:~ +
4 o~~~tsR!\t k~~1 t~rttir;~. sm. can m;~'ru~ft'u":eme~t~J~~~ Spectacular, New Mtu .l.o>"W't"'fV ---··--tam rm. din nn, fi'Plc. Buill-i.n kitchen. 1'1 replace. BACHELDR apt, refrig, no '()liice open 9:00 10 6:00. Z300 Oce~n Vu Townhouses t'rpls, drps, fncd yrd \\'/\V carpe111. Patio ki tchen. References. No 1'~airview Rd., O>&ta Ate5a. \\"fllk to beach, 2 UR+ den
CAN BE SEEN AT: __, ALA 1.ENTAtS &liHi728 \vfbar-b-q. An excellent pets. 613-3109 or 673-9432 Phone: 545-2300. + v.'et bar. tile pa1ios, trplc.
CRESTMONT !."lily home custom <'''"l~. dr1)t1, ap.
Wtwtcw1111Hutv1C1 Dana Point 3226 · Costa Mesa 3724 PHfVACY ':i Br. 2 story. l1: pliances, it3o pei· nlo.
ESTATES 12 UNITS• $450 MONTH ba. >''l'lc. dn "''· bltin" Sl1-<S71
JOO! '"'•Dr., Bn?a. !Central EASTSIDE COSTA. f 3 BR. Beach How;e S'J75, + MISSION REALTY 49+073J $30 WEEK & UP patio, •undcck & dbl •"'· '~=------~ Ave. acros!li fron1 Breu ~ ~SIS SIOO Securily, near r.·tarina, $225--ATI'RAC 1 Br. hse, e Studio & t BR Apta. $250 n10. Avail now. No 2 BR oceanfront apt 111 old
COmn1. lfosp.) Lot #46. $175 000 I JUJ DUl'li. !Pnc<'d yd. 495-4486/·lgg..1331 Lbl!n~. ya.tel, deck. So. e 1V & f.lald Servi<.'e Avail. pets. 6M Center St. C:'\t Spanish Villa. Bt>am cell.
CONTACT RAY, PI\. l\IGR., t 3232 1 l.Jt&'Ul\a e Phone Service -lltd. pool 61;>-6614. frpl c, pnv. beach. :'\[any
lor 1tlowins:. Step up to this 12-unit HIWPOIT & IA't, c.M, 642-IJIJ El Toro I $260-1 +. Office or Studio. e Children & Pet Section 1·,=a:.:R=&::.LO_F_'T_APT~-s-. -P-oo-1, I recs. Prefer coople «
'74-20X44, 2 BR. 2 ba In l'llrnplex v.·lth .15% rtol'.'n. $RENTERS$ JBR/2BA,~fan1rm, upgraded H~f ~eek. Steps to ocean. 2316 Nt!'l'Pl)rt Blvd., Cl\t jacuu.I, re-nt inclds all util, ~ingle adult. $4 5 0/mo .
B<'HUL Hemet. Pf.rfe<:t for Close 10 shopping. Owner \\'e . l\ervlce all the bca\·h ci-pb, drps, bltins, comp rec ~·~torta Beach. MS-9755 or &15--3$7 refi•Jg, encl gar. $100 & sm. 1-'-·'-"-"=Lc"'a~'~'·~'~"~t-~2'19=!.~-
"11keods or great lo r v.'ill earry 2nd. $2015 mo l'lt1t11 & Inland Orange Co. lac inc S\\·imming OOatlng S:l1:Kl-IARMING 2 Br trplc El Puerto Mesa Adu1ta, oo pets. 3 9 3 TllF. DOI.PH.IN
l-elltcment. Prof. lndscpd, lnt'(lme. Red c.arpel $LANDLORDS$ . &_tennis. 831-9115' home. South Laguna.. Hamillon. 645-44ll. Xew 2 UR lrple, ICITl\t:e,
In new adult 5 ~ll\r' l'•Tohile lnvcst_ment Dlv tslo n . FEl' }'""RE~~ Call UsTodn , $300-2BR1rplc,sep.dt.n.rm, 1 BR. Furn. $165 Up QUll:."1' E I id ZBR 11 pool. Ocean t Rik. Leases
II P k All 97D-2550 '• ... S $y, I Fountain Valley 3234 deck, gar. child/pet. All Utt'I Paid • .. as 5 e -·:: from S.151'>. 494-3521 onie ar . extras ,$,A~A RENTAL . NU.VIEW RENTALS • BA. Patio. Garage. ,~ blk
1'0n1p. furn . 1 y1· free renl. NC\\ l>OI t & Bay, Cl\1 642·838.1 LIKE Ne'v extra lrg 2 BR, + 673-A""" • or 494_3248 No Children, No Pe0t
1
s shcppiru;-Adults, 110 pets. BI-:AUT1FU1. Ocean View.
$15,000. Call 5-18-2554. "RENTERS![.. huge rumpus rponi: can be ....,,,., I Pool &. RecreaUo 271 Cabrillo. 6,12-0-461 tllt. Front 2 Br apt in 4-plex, 8'X2~' TRAILER with You Get All Th'e !louses used a.~ lrg BR, 2 ~~· 2 car Jl,l ODER N 7 r o ~ m 1959 Maple Ave, C.M. Sp n1 Pool. S27J. 6/a-6145 eves.
J2'X24' built on L.R. & B.R. available for rent in OUR gar. S\1·!mpooL K1cls ok. w/panoran1lc ocean Vlew HOLIDAY PLAZA 1·2"'o'°R",-m-A-.-oce-a-n--v-ic-,v. Mesa Verde 3863 1-:"'poscd beam (.'eillnq, all BULLE'rlN "'PDATED 3 Only S269 per mo. No Fee from Palos yerdes to ~ DELU>-.'E Spacious 1 BR Dshv•shr, re!rig, c r pt s , -------~--•
\l'OOd panelling. $ 3 3 0 0 . Un1c1t/\\•eek. Agt. S.t2442l. Clenicnt.e $39;i mo. 49-J...-0509 furn apt. $150. Pool. Ample drps; S~ lBIVtBA, all e H0~1E ATJ\10SPHERE ~~~~t Bc1:1ch. ( 7 14 l Homefinders * 642·9900 I Huntington Beach 3240 ~ v es/weekends. 8J3.-3387 parking. Adulls,00 pets. appl s. $180. 979-5099. Dt:!llL'(e 2 & 3 BR. Rrntal Ofc.
132 CabrlJ\o, C.l\1. 1 $ RENTERS $ ays. • 1965 Pomona Ave .. Cl\1 3 BR. 21.~ ba, crpls, drps, 1 309.'i J\Iace Ave. ~16-1034
10 x 50 HIGO Jo" I ce t wood ' LANDLORDS! LON'ELY ""ch ~~ nov:. ocb,EandAN;;",~NTpen~.:!...~f!U ~ APT. Jl,t~NAGER .for 12-2 br cOICCecl &st\', frcshlyhylaint, nr Newport Beach 3869 '->ood cond, Adlt park, nr BALBOA UNITS • on. -~u.u ,......,. .' .........., furn units. No chtldren-pels. shppng, c 1 dren ok. ;;;;;;'.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
bcRch, swim pool, jacuzti, $l 9 OOO BUYSI \\'c Sll@CiaHze ln Ne\vpor. Close to beach. Ut1l pd. sq. ft. frplc, decks, Chit Dr. Lh·e in. $70 off rent_ t.tin. Avail June l ::t, 539-3413
club hou&>, 2 sh eds , 1 • &>ach"e Corona del Mar e PAL...\1 Tree 1 br dplx .S155. 2 $600 t.10. Yrly. 494-0615. duties. Prefer 111 at u re ATIRAC fro 2 BR 1 CHANNELFRONT
sk'Ni ln l . 1.-. ' blks bch. pet ok. ;\\'llll. 2 BR 2 BA N rth End Cl 642 "'"20 f 5 P'I · nt ' ge 1 ng, a11,11 gs, v l1l 1:'. 'l'ru<'! V'"'Y sharp triple)(. & LD.guna. Ow-Rental Ser-UNBELIEVABLE 2 b & , o • .ose v.'Oman -~ at • . gunny palK>, gar. Atature 2 Bit. I ba. Roon1 for boat.
area, 53&-7236 One block to bay -t\\'<l Nviuccv,·','.~. REE to You! Try den. $225. Patio, gar, pe~ ok. tCoaJ~~<;h707900.S k shoppmg. BEAlIT FURN. 1 BR lols or adult, no pets. $190:.. ~ A S3W75AULnKr., yTeOarlyB.EACH
12.X60 2 BR's. Aduh·pet park. blocks to ocean. OCEAN &: SEE NO\V! J br 2 ba $2&5. :rr-bit-ins, pool, walk to shop-Rutgers Or. 1-213-451-:>ll}t
S."1800. 193.iO \Van:f St, llntg. BAY VIE\\IS! G r eat NU·VIEW RENTALS frpl, bltns, 2 car, pet ok. L H .ll 3250 ping, mL from b ch. $180 LRG 2 BR 2BA.
Bch. Sp 46. appnx:iatlon a r ea. 3 673-4030 or 494-3248 ALA Rentals 6424313 I 19una I I $150/mo. 931 \V, 19th St. Immac. In quiet 4-ple)(. 1
Acreage for 111• 1200
Must Be Sold!
900 + ACRES
. $295,000 .
bedroo1n o .... 1ie1-s unit plus 2-548-o.i92 Tv.·o bedroom units. Oosed FREE 1--REE NE\V World 3 BR 2 ba -"'~°""'-------[ child ol.:, no pets.
garage. New roof St!llcr will •Professional Service • \\11\LK TO Beach • 2 BR bltins shag nice 1n'd.M-ping: SPACIOUS 2 BR. \Jlt-in a.p-~LaSalle, Apt 1. 5~9-3524
finan(!('. Sl9,Cl00 dowo. 1'"ull *LANDLORDS* $210. . crpt. 0$285/mo. Ca JI 5.52-9503. pl iances, Ydk-in clOllets, nr $100 Up. 2 Br, 3 Br l ~i: Ba,
· Sl" ()00 ll 1 f th Homefinders * 642 9900 Fncd for kids & pets. , Shop ctr. Adults no dogs. pool pl•" .-t cpl• -P't!Ce ""· · car 0 e C .. ,.1 . " , ~ ·, 2 BR. $185. Custom Duplex. Laguna Niguel 3252 $169.50. 536-5114 ' 2212'eo1~1-e''"No'. J. ,.;_,, ,,..,.,..·. Peninsula. Call today -tuL orn1a i; ..... rgcs Be h area ~.. ~
752-1100. e Rental Service!e Sl~~LES Delight~ 2 BR, 3 BR condo Niguel Golf 1 BR, Ne~ix>rt Bl\'d nr, Del 3 BR, 2 ba., All new decor. INYJ:Sili~ll\~I . 'r 2 BA, Condo. S23Cl. course, 2 car gar, $315/mo. 1..1ar. $145. mo:.. frplc., patio, dble gar.
!-; I Balboa lsl1nd ·3206 Homefinders * 642·9900 Bkr/ownr 493-5768 642·0390 \VestcJlff, Adults., &12-115a
j \ ' Ll~LE JS'-...... ,.....,, -Newport Beach 3269-* EL?i-1 GARDENS APTS. LRG 2 br, 2ba, din rm. , * • • ....-..•~v * LUXURIOUS lrg'3 br, 2 ba, 1 FURN 2 BR. Apt in cptfdrp, l!tv/ref, p 0 0 I .
NClll" Yucaipa & Cherry L ; Chaxtning, unfurn., 2 ~. sty duplex h<>t11~. like new, $ RENTERS $ Family Se~tibn. rn F;. Adlts, TIO pets.$170. 64~.
Valrey on wide paved coun-ll&me w/frplc., garage & has everything. Bltn stereo 22nd SI.. CM. 642--364:>. 2 BR, 2,,1 ba, ···/lrplc, ry rood bet\\·een Oak Glen Lots for Ille 2200 patio. Yearly. in 1 e r c 0 m , lire/burglar 1-IEY Look? Just refurbed ..
& neau1nont, lc!IS lha.n 10 \Vm. \V!~ton R.E. 675-3331 alarm. r.tust see t 0 liach's $145 yriy. 1 Br $170. 1 BR, spacious, 6 unll bldg, enclosed gar, No pets. S2"0.
1ni11u1es !rom Fr.vy 10, 60 l.o1's \\'ANTED '.VANTED appreciate. Perm. married Util pd. Stv/ref, full kit. like new. Gar, $11i0. Adul t1. n1c. 5-15-7755.
to fMJ 1ninutes fron1 almoi;t through down payment· & * USED BRICKS * couple, infant ok, $2'75, no LOVELY 1 br dpl't S175.. nr. no pets.~ Elden, 6-16-1512 PRIVACY y,•/ 3 BR, 2 BA,
r1nyv.·here in So. Calif.. I-tills sub.Jrdlnation to b u ll d 87().4;;&t dogs. 842--3276. \\·ater. Big kilch-girls.. aft 6pm. frpl, gar, lndry, yrd, patkl.
& \•&.Uey11;, dramatic 100 mile custom homes in coast area. I REAU..Y! 2 br $250 yrly. Nu $100-$150 NICELY f 1 &. 2 •~-" " • · fro il 'b C•p•'•trano Beich 3218 ! BEAOI. Area ·2 BR. $19"j. C&O, "v/rcf, Dl\\I. Now. urn n;i pets . .....,:;. &11>-'t414 view m eas y access1 Jc Vie"" prefem>d, but will br trail-Adults oo pe" Gara"". Kids & pet ok . CllANNELFROoNT 2 b' 2 ba Jl2 W. "1,.-"--. t;A:.' A"""· • PRIV ·\CY & 2 BR. 2 BA. hilltopa. 3500' to 5000' eleva-c.-onslder exclusiV1! areas as .. -,,.....,,, ~ • tions. \Valer, elecllicity & v.·ell. 979-1525 RENT OR LEASE VACt\NT-3 BR & Den. 2 $35(1, Frplc, bbq. Sngls ok. gar, pallo & yrd. No pels.
great forestry roadi. thru HAMILTON ST .. C~t R-3. ~'~i~C 2~!t~A·c:i~~: g~goE ~~~.&2 ~~~2z. ALA Rental' 642-8383 Huntington Buch 3740 $.210/mo, 646-4-114.
prooerty. . Surrounded by 26,250 ~. ft. $47,000. Agt. \\'alk be h Larg < H . H bour \VESTCLIFF 3 BR, 2~ ba, LOW WEEKLY RATES LG. 2 BR i>tud io, gar, nr. Nallor:~I Foresl, near some ">JS-55'" ,~,,.,, ~' to ac · e am Nr. unlin&ton ar · U,,I • F N •hop'g Adult• no pets ~, f I -•1 b I tn H f' de * 642 9900 2 c a, am rm, ·ew Ex-"tlV• e Su.tte1 • . "• -. = or Cal1r. flnest apple groves ' •. rni. rp c, <LI s • ome 1n rs --F rdham Dr ~3485 &: beaut. nev.• Yogi Bear T\VO level commercial lol'I cpls/drps, 2 car garage. crpt, drps, paint, dsh\\--sr, 727 Yorktown Blvd. 0 · ·
Camp. f"antaslic potential on Lm. l\tolinos, San Lots of storage space, fncd 400 YARDS to Beach. 300l fenced yd, Pel 0 K . Beach Sl\>d. at Yorktown E/SIDE 1 BR. bltns, palio,
for dc\'elopment now or Clemrnte. By o1vn r, 492-4506. yd. $325. mo, 49&-9100. :~!~· ~ ~~·h! ~me~~~ ~=ror ~~-15. mo. 536-0411 1 adult-no pet. $155/mo. uti\
,....,..; J t t ;\gt-Ray. ,pd~. &l:::::,2-_:cl'60=o:·=--,,,.,,-~~ "'."'"••m':. nves. men group Mount'n, DeHrt, C II p k 3~0 boat storage. $575. mo. ***·SPACIOUS 3 BR STUDIOS & 1 BR's. =-.1 . hqulda.1'<>11 v.'1th gr ea 1 R t 2400 o eg• ar '" SJS.-2921 • Full :dtchen 2 BR ApL $140. Uu 11\Cl'd. tennis or v.ill consider trade esor study, family rm. 21,3 BA, Older lenants only. ~20'20
for hirome propeMy. LAKE Arrowhd beaut mount Syracuse l\lodcl. Community lc~~dr!~ok-~1c;;r].~~~~ \\<el bar, 2 frplc's.. Pool : ~~~~'7a1cilitles or 642-6560. RICK ALDEREfTE homesil~orth Shore view :;;!: ~r B~·ht;, ~-d~:~: 530-7658. ~· H.:~:s!Vie$ 550: • 1'~ree ulilitie& "D"'•"n"1"'P"o"1"'n-t ____ 3_8_26
3 R<lrlTll'I .. 2 baths. frplc.
Yearly lease. $325 ~lo.
associated
BROK ER S-REAL TOA:S
1015 W Balboa 67) 16tl
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
Bachelor l or 2 Bedroom•
_ and Townhouses
Fr. $19-l.50 Open 9-6 Daily
Spa Pools Tennis •
Across tronl Fashion I1lar.d
•t Jamboree on San Joaquin
Hills Road.
(714) 644-1900
DREAM COTTAGE
on canal
Sm11\I 2 BR. shag. bltns.
[rplc. lrg dec:k, \V/D. Ideal
for 2 girls. Adult.~. llQ J)f'ts.
$28.'l/mo Yearly. 645--£680 '
BA YFRONT. charming lrg
2BR, 2ba, plush crpting &
drps, 2 car pricing, pool,
\\'lllch the boats sail by, slip
avail, $515 mo., aslt tor
'"Rusty'', 6Ta-85!:l.
1850 E. li~7~~;_. .. Santa Ana ~~ ~~~~l-~,IXX> Jr)() per n10, 640-4ll4, 4BR, 2BA, block from school. &W-5922. • Free linens • .,....,.ru.;I' ''" !,j2-7SOO. $285 /BRAND new Harbor View. e T.V.&maldserv.avaU. SvUP1.eE•~·2 BRTAhpto'm·pG,ce0ant
I -· . A BEAUTIFUL ,~e;\v lot in "·'" 8213 962 7413 e Bar-a.Que I~~·~·~·~,.~~~~~~~ IF IFTY + View acre .s Idylh\•ild + lot in Arkansas. S Y H. AC USE ~1 ode I "".> or -$"25. 3 Br, 2 Ba, trpl, mir-e Phone service J\lnnagemcnt Corp.
"FIRST CABIN" \\'(seasonal t>tttr.u:n, adJ. T !»l-4S86 ('Oll,;l?.IUNITY Pool. 4BR, 4 BR Condo, crpt11, drps, I rored wardrobes, patio, e 1 mile to ocean 493--0141
THE REAL
ESTllTERS
EXCLUSIVE Westclilf area,
NB. 2 TownhOuses, 2 BR,
21).i BA, Frpl, clubhouse,
pool. $2'J5. & S325. PH:
&16-1231.
BAYFRONT
CHANNEL REEF
sn1t11l c om n1 u n 1 ly _ In erm!I, · · 2BA. crpls, di'J:IS, nr schls, pool, clubhouse. patio. $250 swim'g/tenn~s Pr v I gs · 1 BR. $l5' ,165 -LG 1 BR. SIO\.'_e, refrig, 2 Br, 2 Ba, .,..·et bar. pool,
slips. $550. lease. O!A.'ller,
after 6, 673-2067 This beauti ful Dolores nlOdel , process of higher d~ltilly Out of State Prpty. 2600 cul-df'sac, S350 per n10, per nio. s.tS-140j, 640-1327/5.%-~124 or 640-1500 NE\V DECOR. Prt,..v --gc crnts, d.-nc:, $l65. month.
is first class in every wne chan¥c:,.Chlly 1.t min lo -640-4U4. 552-7800 1 I ext 1465 b .... ~ 96-·• 7058 ·•" wk nd
T ( 11 d llarEL/BAR Gd · c BEAUT 3 BR hon1e,_ frp c.·, . ' . 1 ~..1-. cm Ne"·er s~";•I> 4 eves or e s. LIDO I S L E D · rcs~t! nstc: u y cc· Newport FN•y. T erms, . -. . 1ncom • crpts, d.ps, 1..'0Vd pntK>. S260 PALERri-lO uo. ....... ,. .. ....--all bl 1 • ram a t 1 c
orated&: beAutlfully main-Possible r;ub.ordination or Clean all'. Limited legal Coron• del Mar 3222 nio. 536-3777 or 536-72S2 Harbor vu Homes, 4 BR, Adult Complex:. 2 mi. So. of HUGE lBR. Ins, cosed View • \\'aterfront ~ 1 BR
taJ.ned. Spacious 3 b<lnns.. joint venture. O\\ner, Reply gambling. By owner . F Rm 21• BA t bar San D~go Frwy. 17301 garage. Ocean View. $185. Condo. Apt. $J7;>/mo Incl. 2~J baths, on the loveliest P. o. Box 824, Hunting1on ?i-ticky Van Hom , Drum· Irvine 3244 i:::::iac, jxx;i pri~l:S~ $550'. Keelson Ln. HB. 842·7848 Adu1t.s. PH: Bob. 675-5232. ulil. By Owner. 6Ta--OSJ4_
gree-nbelt. Call now lo see Be8fh, 9J;.l8 mond, t.Tontana. Box 205. 644-592'1. BACH apt. Large. Very nice. E1stbluff 3830 OCEAN FRONT, 2 BR, 2
this! 46 BEAUT Wooded acres, oo (4161 288-3511. "fURTLE ROCK HARBOR Vu Phase Ill, Residential tract So. of ba., Nr. ne"" security bldg,
MORGAN REAL TY county road wt r 1 \'er 10 ACRES Beautiful U1ah 2~ ba, upgraded crpts &: Hamilton near Edison High. e DELUXE e Yrly s.150.' mo. 67J'.-Ol19
67).6642 675-6459 frontage, USO per ac, Fottst Land. $850. per acre. UVE HERE 2 BR. 2 ba. den = drps, comm pool Ir. tennis Under priced al $150 mo. 3 BR, 2 BA apt for lease. =EA"'=ST~BL~UFF="-"2'°'B°'R.~l~b8-I
owner, &15--8(8) ST.,...6608 eves. 3 BR .. 2 b6.S TY PARK $590 "'" •• ,., Incl until 968-6925. lncld spac. master suite, din ,...,, ' 1 ...;,•
MONTEGO MOOEL
4 Bedroom~. 2 Bath
Lge lot llf')(I 10 grt'CnbPJI .
3 Br.-brand new $375 UNIVER I crts, mo., U'IU""'l-U •• .,.c, new cpts, poo. s~.
Ranch••· Firms, 2 BR 2 ba'"-·-552--7800 Lanuna BHch 3748 rm & dbl garage. Auto door n10. Adults, no pet• Call
C t L t I · J Br.-Harbor Vie\V $ol50 .. u"' ~ -.. il Pool & ~ •me ery 0 ' Groves 2700 s.;=, ". BR., 21,· ba'"-$350 HARBOR vu. 4 °R, 2" BA, opener ava · · 644--4767
C lsool l -..;:.~;.;;_;------2 Br.-Shorcc\iffs .J'J ·' u..,, P 73' EFFICIENCY A fro $57 Recreation area. Adults on-rypts 4 Br.-llar bor Vie\\• $525 3 BR.. 21.2 ba., furn. S375 2 ttplc, \\"etbar, • beautiful pta m I PH 644..so64 --~-------I s ACRE Hon1esitc. Oak 2 Br.-0\llnnel Reef $i00 WALNUT SQUARE vu. Adjacent park, comm. \\'eek. Pool, m~. ph, lndry. y, no pet11. :
CEJ\r"--"1'ER1 LO'I' -Plot in trees, utll. J\1ain road. CaJI 61~72'25 3 BR., 2 ba., air cond $265 pool. SUPER Decor. Mature Village rnn, 494-9436. • $307 •
DUPLEX. Nr beach 3 BR.
2ba, fprlc. crpts. drps, gar,
:'t'Tly, aft 6 Owner 675-4644
HARBOR VIEW
HOMES
REAL TY 833-0780 established area at SanlA Plantable lo avocados. Good yard. Avall June. 644--4799 Newport Buch 3769 ~865 Amigos \Vay, NB
J\na's 1-"airhaven J\Iemorial 1ern1s. Call 714-833-3212. ?i-Ianaged by 3 & 4 BR Prime unils. steps
P.:1rk. $11.>. 6'1~. 20 ACRE A\'OC8do Ranch. 3 BR. 2 BA. bltns, OW, v.·a1er • LA PARISI ENNE e \VlLLIAM WALTERS CO. to beach. Children ok. Rltr.,
NEWPORT SHORES Very attraclive term!!:. Fall-lcon<1.375 ,Mdble Z1~\,lg~cor 115ot. 2 BR Furn. $245 Huntington Buch 3840 _&1""-Z.-'385~7----~=~I
3 Bdnni; .t· den Commercial Prpty 1600 brook area.. 714-833-3212. o. vo..u ay · All electric. Fireplace. .. San Clemente 3876
\t'•lk to Owner/ Agent 642--0596 " LESS THAN Real E•t•te Wntd. 2900 H v IB 1 H <BR, Heated Pool. Adul ts. Bear ... pool~ &, tennis . . ren omes, 9'19-1268 UNDER NEW
NEW MGMT. CAYWOOOS46,~EAL TY 7 TIMES HOME WANTED By private * SPYGLASS mu.* ' tst Western Bank Bldg. :fS::~~~=~· ~~: Across from golf rourse. 90 pa My. No agents. $30.0CJO-Spectacular views! No. 67 University Park, Irvine &W-'lJll ~Santa Ana Ave. * ~12 * GROSS $45,000 Price Range. Costa l\-fontccito Dr., open Sat. & Days 552-7000 Nights NU HV 4 br/2 !pl. welbar, $35/WK UP. 1 Br, 2 Ba & ASPDAUCILOTUSLIAPTSVING.
NE\'I/ GARDEN APTS.
2 BR, 2 BATII, $19.>.
3 BR, 2 BATH, d:shwhr,
irplc.
$250. Call 493-01.tl.
FIRST TIME i Mesa·Ne .... •port area. l\lust Sun. 1-5. Brand new exec. Bach Color TV maid serv 30 Commerdal units in Costa have a 8 s um ab I e loan. ho 4 BR + •--u Vu, comm pool /tennis. $550. · ' . ' Fmm S~ & UP NE\\1, extra lge 2 BR, 2 bas,
OFFERED 'I me. . ~" y nn., J <HJ791 <•"8235 pool. THE MESA. 415 N. e 1 BR 1 b th . " esa. 642-1060. No agenl11! 3 'baths, 2 trplcs. & patio. 2 bdrm., 2 b'.i •••.•• $300/365 oycc, .,...... • ...... -• Newport 81, NB. 646-9681 , a pool. Exciting city &: ocean n~ • .-..~t prestige 181? apt, $175,000 2 OR 3 BDR', f bou~"" Balboa Bay Prop. 6'5-100J 3 b<!nn., l ~i: ba ••• ···-. $300 J BR. 2 BA Condo. No maint. e 2 BR 2 bath vie\V. $25CI. -19&-0016 D<l..T'-'"" I " '"' bd 2 ba $295/43S 1 BR tor female. Avail. June • full balcony. gorgeous v cw. \\'/existing IBA or VA Moving Allowance 3 rm., ...... l story, pool. S400 mo. l'.Xl & July. •'Kii. mo .. pool, e 2 BR, 1 bath San Ju1n $79,500. Q\\'TlC'r, 67l-U4'1 1 Prt 1 "= "'·'7 3 txlrm., 2~~ ba •.•.•..• $450 Vista Suerte, SU-7252. -
•·-•· oan. n. on y. ~ -SIOO Off J11t Mo's Renl 2 ba $4'"" te1U1is &: spa. 644-8490 e He1ted Pool Capistrano 3878
" 4 bdrmc.A' Ll>L 552'-'7'500···· · -San Clemente 3276 -~-------1 1..:=::....-==-,---,.= NEW 3 Br, 2~S ba, frplc, 1 BLK to heh 2 Br tum. Util Adjacent to lat'2e lovely 1101\IE \\'ANTED hy 1invalc ""'· •uper neighborhood'.. ' • k 2 bl"· t SD F & $205. 2BR condo, \\'/w crp!.
p 8 r 1 y , o 11 Ren !I -$-IOO. 6T>-l0i6 aft 5 : BR., l A, 6vvu ne1g r-July ht. $265. 646-4071. ne\\· 188 store \\'estmL~ter range/oven, rctrig, 2 car N t • • VISION • 2 B ~ · hho pd. Kids/pets ok. Now thru par • ~ o .. l"\\'Y.
$.«1,cro-s4S.OOO prlce Rangc. 337 Ncvo'poli Blvd., N.B. a.m.-6T.f-2925. hood, fnod. walk to shop-mall shopping center 1 Blk gar. Pool, lawn. faciL 26-iz.t
Costa P.lesn-Nc11·po11 attf•. OWNER FINANCED • ping, beach. $3'i0. 492-3800. San Clemente 3776 t ~-Ide W• t Coli 4 Paseo Cannel. Pll: C21.J)
J\-.1Ulll ha\'C assumable loan. 2 BR, 1 ba. \Valk to bch & Red Hill Realty . Condos Unturn. 3425 ~If~ to ?he besach. o~g~\· 2 681-4658
&12-lOOO. No agenls! * Top LOC'atiOn stores. Sunny lerrace. No REALTY REALTORS .:::;;;::::;c,_;:;;:;.;;;,:;::__:..:;:: I 2 BR, den, aJso 2 BR. both ~~-~-----
• Ta• Sheller H F • h d pet•'' ~'Id ~7335 / h't l 1 vacanc.'..11 left in family sec-2 BR, Condo, crpts, drps, BEAUTIF'UL Harbor View ·' OUHI urn11 e .. -,u ' '111' • Unlv. Park Center, Irvine IRVINE Townhouse, Univer-w "' 1 e wa er v e w · Uon. bltins, Slve, refrig, pool, 2
Pal-w/vi'cw. Prtnclpals '* Capital gains Costa Men 3224 •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I sl .. , Pa.k, ail cpt'd, 2 BR, Heated pool, c ar P 0 rt ' HERMOSA VISTA ·1 "·"--$225 _,,_ 2 * S10.IXXI Do\\11 General • 3102 ---------v lndry/BBQ ~as close to mi es to ,.uu-uia., • only. 4BR/3BA, f1unm1. .. ... ,1 1 _., r 2 BR. 2 BA end townhouse. 2 BA. llv rm/din nn, trplc, ' APTS. n .j...641)-1839 e\·es & wkends
fpl, lo upkp yd. J\-.1any * r ... Y eas11:1.1 NEAR PARK, schools and Frplc & vaulted cell !iv rm. lge kilcben, garagt: + car-Cbch"-'.'...:&O-'p::l•.::r·c.4::92-4::...:7::00::.... __ I
amE'nlti('s. Xlnt c <P"n d . Real. ~n1ics, Bkn. 675-6700 $1£15..UTIL PD. l Bl't, frpl, Boy!! Club, a roomy 3 BR 2 2 car gnr. E-Z nlaint yards. port .. Nr. adult pool & rec. FABULOUS \Vb.lie \\'a ter Rental ore., IS.A Santa An1 3880
Eve/wkenci11, 640-009.J BAYFRONT SITE deck. v\C\V, LagUna. Ba home v.·lth private yard, Greenbclls. Bike t ra 11 s. fncUs. $350 mo. Lease . V~w. Heated Pool. Near 15425 Golden \Vest, H.B.
BAYSHORES J•or boat repA.ir & sales $250-UTtt.. PO. 1.i;i; 1 ~ BR patio. find --•~ngle c !' r Adults only pool wt jacuui. 552..()359 eves. beach. 2 BR & 2 BR, den. 192·5217
Prin1e Newport Beach loc. hse, bcnut. vie\\'. '' hlk glll'ai;re. E)( .. '\:_Uent castside Tenn's hop' ne8l' by $2'15 to $250. 491-4700. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
0 W NE R Df.:SPERATE· Bl\\ Grundy Rltr. 675--6161 beach, Laguna. locat10n $300/mo Ag t -Lea~.' 55;_9444g or 871-6101.. ** NEWPORT BEACH nr. CHl'·DREN J..EAVJNG AR EA. •1 BR, -$3~1-IAR!\I & Prlviicy 2 644-i2ll Hoag Hosp. OCEAN VIEW. Apartments Unfurn. ..
3BA + den. $ 6 5 , O 0 0. Income Property 2000 OR, 2 BA, frpl c, view home, VACA!~T-3 BR, 2 BA, $250, IRVINE I-louse for lease. 2 BRAND NEW end unit, and 1Mre1th love the
&12-3494. ·Ln.guna. · r~cnt:C'd for kid&. BR, 2 00, trg f:11n rm. forml 3BR/2~1 BA, upgnded, on Balboa l1l1nd 3806 lirge, spacious ap1rt·
BY O\VNER-EASTBLUFF. HOME & INCOME NU-VIEW RENTALS DELUXE-2 BR, 2 BA. $225. dln rm. frplc. S32S mo.. greenbelt. $37S. 6#-l480 NORTl-1 Bay front. 3 BR 2 mentl 1t 81 n bury
Dramatic &: clean 3 BR. 21 i Uve in one, ttnl the other. 67J.-4040 or 494--3248 Vacant & ll'ICd for kld:ii. avail approx June 1st. Ph. Huntington Beach ha., cpt, drps. {rplc. gar., Cross.
BA "Y" pion on lrg Dupli!X near lhe beach. 2 & $65 COTI'AGE, C.J\f. 1 BR EASTSJDE-3 BR, $290. 5.11-2007 aft 6 p.m. 4 BR Townhouse, xlnt cond. .,.,'asher &: dryer. $450. n'IO.
ireenbelt nr &ck Bay. 3 Bedroom•. Shag c:a.rpets, Hou.q: $l':O uUI pd, HB. 1 HLl'g Yef•>:<f dfor kid*s ~_pc219900. NE\V 2 b r ~ ba. Uni v Pk ~ $250. cau 9lj,S.9765 Adult&., 646-7213 e Oiild!en 6 & younge.r
Eves 640--15.18. shMke roof, double garage. BR sep. garage unil, $125 om 1n ers -• NE\Y 3 br 2 bff. Univ Pk #o.T<H C.Af. 2 bl", 2 ba, wet bar, gar, Coron• del Ml:r 3122 n State Uc~mcd pre schl
LIKE new 3 BR 1.,.,11hse. 36' ACT ON TI-IIS NOW. Call util pd, Lag. Bch. l BR hse MESA VERDE 3 Br 3 Ba+ .bonui Rm 2 r;ty bltins, pool. Newly crpt.s It .:::;::.::..::;:.:..::,:;:;_.._.::.::.: e Oilldrens plAy attn.
priv. boat slip. fee tand, blk TM Real Estate F1ir utll pd brand new, CM. ~~ft Univ Pk ~: drps. 545-6206. EXTRA .s Pe c I a I • • Lille 2 & 3 BR apt&.
CHILDREN
ANO ADULTS LOVE
PARK PLAZA II
2&3BRapl&.
Play Area
Pool, jacuzzi, aauna
Rec. clubhouse
Licensed day care cent.
From 1190.00
PARK PLAZA II
805 Weit Shvens
{OU Sun!IO\\•e.rJ
S•nt• Ana 565-1121
to bch. Riverside O\\'l'l('f nsk for J ack T. or Jack H. Bach Unitl, IW $45 mo ?t 3 Br, 2 Ba, D.R. trple, bltn vw1ft.' T nhou Unf 3525 arc:hitttturally deidgncd 11 s • 2 adult rec. centen anxious, ~2.m ( 7 I 4 ) 5~1551 $90 NB $125 AJtt. Fee. bbq, fenced yd. 2 children, 1 NE\V TurUe.rock, Broadmof'e ow " rn )Told 2 BR duplex apt. Lois • Euy access to most em-South lagun1 3816
662--7424. 979-8430. pcl ok. \Vater, gardener pd. No. 3 .. 3 BR. 2 bos. + roey llwitington '8eRch -.,.,,Jk to of space and beautiful ployment ~-eu LARGE Untum 1 BR a L * 340 MONTE VISTA * --Lido Isle 3156 $425. lse a4."t--02'i8 drn. Lary<lscaP'd &. draped. beAeh. 2 BR TownhOuse, n a I u r a I wo od • Nr. shoppmg & fr\.\'}'S. 1 Iii paid l l,i: biks to be ~
Btautltul home &: yard In Put Your $$ to Work SllARP, <I BR, 2 BA. ~tesa pool pnv. lmmcd. pou., pool . $275. mo. 962-1171. le)(ture5-$325/mo. Sh o ._,, n e trom $165. ' ~ pets $185 499--3930 a
back bay on R-2 Joi. fn1-•t In the'" 5 ""it• In LtOO UV1NC. 2 BR, 2 BA. dcl Mn.r home. Close lo • $-125. ino Owner, 644--(5.t7 D I F 3550 Sunday only 644-7211 Ail· BANBURY CROSS ~· ' --· --~1ho·~ A·-,·1 now .. ~ up exes urn Apts Furn/Unlurn -$47,500, Agt'nl &&1""'' llunlington Bcuch fk'.!llr lhe Av11ll Summer. No Pets. '"~"·~ ·oe·, ~.. • .-,,. UN IVERSITY Park, 2 BR, 2 -(Nt'ar Bt'ach Blvd & \Varnt'r) .ii:rvv
BEACH llOUSE s,,,,500 ocean. EACh unit has Call (213) 793--0477 per nionth inclda gardener. b&. TO\vnhouse, "Int loc. nr t.AG\JNA Beach, Lower lb"i61 VlE\Y POIN1' LArlE ntE £XcrrtNG
Privacy Chll.NlCIPr fireplace, bllns, ~a rba. If e Newport Be1ch 3169 Cnll Larry 5''6-58$) ,iacuu l, pool, lennls. $:llll Duplex fum. 2 BR. I VJ BA. e 842-6604 e PALM MESA APTS.
CAil owner. tnfo & ftpp'I ~t>O"l and diahwRSher. l\lESA DEL l\IAR 3 b<lnn, 2 Imo. Call 552-8088 alt 2 pm forced air, Mt.I, Ill? private ~lL~t.rrt.:s TO NPT, BCH.
&15-0044 or (TI~JJ28.-3233 Stl0,000. Don't dela.y in \VATE'RFRONT. very ettm.c:. b8., erpta, bltln.<1, 2 ear or v.·kend~ paUo. ~k>std aarage, near $149 $169 2BR Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from Sl57 BLUFFS Condo•SBR-2%BA. !!Celng lhls ~rty. Call 2 BR, 2 btlth houR. RPr, paUo, h'plc. $300. Ph. NEW Turtlerock home, 2 beach, North end. $250. Jusr REDUCED, 3 Bit, 2 Spite cpti dr pr pool AdultJll , No ~ts.
'.Beftt buy In Blufts 6Jl\t. Open The Rnl Estate Fair AccomlTIO<e :. pwr boat. 545-7913 all 4 pm BR.. 2 b8s, den. Cold 1h1tg Lea~. 49'J..9601. ha, Frplc. nt&r beach.. $400. lBR s~· petlic.ld oic IT361 1561 ?i-lttM. Dr.
"·t 4 Sun. 64,._..143, Uf..6133 or 536-2551 $500. mo. Yrly or wUI rent 2 BR, 1oo1 yrd, pr, quiet, cpl, compactor, 2 car gar., HOLIDAY WE."EKEND! 317 lleUotropt. 6"!M1i01 or Keel90Tl Nr Beach&: Slatr.r (5 biles from Newport 81\'d.)
"" ...,~,.,,."!"'!!!!"""~""~li-Su='Om::imi'er.:;IWC:::ln:;:t:;:cr.:... :.;6::~:;;::~ 0U·1lr. Adil cplt • No pets. $385. mo 61&-5847 DELUXE Octtintront i BR 644-4174 ' Imo + $50 dep. ~love in ~\&-98fi(J
Newport Heights 1070 4 APT lfnlt1 on 19,600 sq ft 5 BR, yearly, cheerful, $185. 54&-1400, 54W251. ·TURTLEROO< new 3 1i F.R. w/frple. Dy Week. AYflil LOVELY l BR &: Dtn 842--4504 ()r ~ ·H-UNT--. B-E--A-Cl~l -O._l_ux_e_a_d-ult
~R. 2BA. dlhlng or fan1 rm, tot -Zoned C-2 Newport Im mac. llarbor Highlands. MESA dcl Mnr 3 Br, 2 Bil, J 2 Ba. pool ln 1't'<: a re a . now. 4fiO'l Seashore Dr. NB. w/ga:. $30'.l. mo., Call 2 BDR.'I. 1 BA, crp111. drp!!:, poolalfie gnrdcn bunplO'l'f',
lf'I' pool, lo! &. ''· $62,000.
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B!vd., C,l\J. $5;KI mo \ocon1e . Avail about 6-~. Agent yr lse. AvaU. 6/lf>. $300, $415. 833-8·188. 714-6'13-8499 or 629-2546. 714-".J37·7'7G1 111w1<hy. garage. $150. mo. nr ocean. fC'flc, lrt paUo,
$48-0520 OwnM' Good for com mt r c i R. 1 64~ -~ _ mo. 546-4268 UN IV. Pal'k '°""'h~. 3 BR, 1 BR, utll pd, No pets. Qulf-1, DELUXJ.; new 3 br. 2 ba , all 1841 Slatrr A\•e. (213) 6 pools, n un'1, tennis. MS-
A OAB OF pE.TROLEU~! clevelopmt:nt. $ 6 5 , 00 0 . HouHi Unfurnished EASJ'SIDE; Charming 3 BR. famnn. 2 113 BA. Village 3. mature man, $250. mo. bltns, lrplc_r walk to sho~ 'i .,:;~;;,:1,:::898~""'-=-c-,-,==-W . A1llO 1 Br. from Stla.
P.=LLY 8J10lltil lo thi• O'!A'llf!r-Brokt:r, 642.-0000. I 3202 2 00. hOuBC. Etll'1. }>allo, $425. mo. &W.7770. Now lo Stpl. 8.1.,6i'.....361~ beach. $31.> & $:m. 673-18. CHILORfo::N ft: Pet.s ok.:? BR. 2 B~. Bllnl, pool, nr
U•N!•dl< ot <Jngemal
1
1
1
polish HOUSE + TWO Genera 1285. ""'· 675-4101 LOVELY 3 Br • ., Bo hou••'. NE\llPORT BEACH 1 BR. RUSTIC CABIN 3 BR. 2.~· $17'. 3 BR. 00. 16002 Lynn ohop ctr & b<ts. AdltJ. JM!
and g1ue bonl!:!t w I ~p l·ltBR;2 BA I-louse plmi l BR HOU!e Sl20 HB. 'l BR LRG 2 br home, cpts, cftp8, bPaut. land!l('Aptd. $-12S. mo. netu' beai:h. AdullJ~ only. hltlns. lrplc:, ttbl. lllJ', ...,, ... SI. Dill MS«.11. Pomon&, '°I. 642-3S77.
lfitllds &om sticking. 'frY i,.2 BR. 2 BA Apts. Patlos, $:160 llB. S BR NB $225. 2 rtf!:li, h'lcd yd, i:te.r. Adults , Al'lll. l\lay 13th. 6iS-60S2 Inquire: ~2L'U Pet 01\. &12-9666. EXTRA try 2 br 2 be deluxe NE\\I, t;e 1 'BR. Utl11 Ind. ~ Dta~.Pi':u oa;tn~e ~~ ~a. yards, 1 au n d r)'. llR Hone fbn('h. Npl lts;:ts. $18.), 6i';i-l827!673-G7. ClauUlcd Adl Olli 6-12-5678 Sell kfle il<':lT\I with a. Diiiy Stll \die ltPn11 with • DA.lly JIOC)tskle •pt nr be6c:h. $16a. t:ml Walk to bteth,. 11!16. ~ttf\lrc. garqeic. ~Hl-4. -sr;s: Agt . 'F'l't !J19..3.1J'.t ct.A~ SP.:t..l.S -642·~ today! P1kl4 ClatlliUect ad. 6UJ6li Pilot Oassitkd ad. 60--S6i8 m F1oridA. ~ 4!)6.....l))JS
1
I
•
I.
2..i OAILV Pll.OT Monda~. May b, 11')74
Apt1 urn/ Jnfurn 3"100 1 Garages for Rent 4350 I ~trial Rentol •SOO I Lost & Found 5300 Furniture 6041 1 Top Soll r>llY.l Http Wanted, M&F 7100 Help Wanted, M•F 7100Help Wa nted, M&F ilOO
BRANO NEW ·, o.-2 "'" '"""' 1n c""'" f C.\LIF ANIMAL C<.>'TttOL Rt'palr • R"'"" Now• n .. 1. • TC 'SOIL • COMPOST Delivery-Sunday Only
)J('h}I, <i:)J rnonlh. NOW LEASING llun!l111o:1nn BtMrh ~h1.•l1cr Refinishing Jubilee j * f.?UIL'll +-RED\\'OOD ACCOUN.TING ~;:! . .J9j:.! Huntington Stach 1 M2t Edbon s1. a36-25It dential/Comnu~rtlul. Vlnyl, 1 cau ~ OF DAJLY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-
VERSAILLES NEW M·1 !Hack or Huinanc Si>cll·lyt \\oOd, l1il'ile. s, 1una11. \\'j!f Schools & QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA
l.A KI: i Offl~e Rental 4400 I ""~:~,,','.: ,.,';· :.,,~~ ,,, An~\,.t.,';;,''~.::.~m~;•'g•"' ~':g~'.·,f~ & dclivor. ln•truction 7005 TION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR:
At ~.i.1 ~" '""" 1 u-:.1s.~g·~•c[:,sP,\CE: 960-1970 ":;~f;;::'f_,1n:~~~ci1 ~-itf,i3
ardenlng 6045 WE NEED CLERK . ~.f:~Ji#: 6b~1A~\~s~30r~i~J1Hg~~
r ool • Arnriulr.• ,\{l\lfi n nr· ~('"' nirpor1 bu~int""'~ !'"nlt•r Cock-·1-1100 1111-:, B/\\', F TRAVEL 642-4321 F'OR APPOINT1i1ENT. S.· J !\<.'Ulzl Sp•~·1111 u!nr !I offlr t' bldi:. fo'ui1' or unfurtt. IN Dt:~rRIAL I <~rn1 ~heµ HI !.. f .. n1. ~ UROPEAN C. t1 1\1 en er . Two y11r1 experltnce In ~.('r(' 1-'lk(' I .To11·f'rit1i: I HL'<16 l't'L"t"ptint1 n r .. ;1 ·I oc,o,','c~'.~~1~~1,.1[1 ~. l\r1~1111·l rn1;.;, Ul k. fi'11\ ~:alntenancc. Lnnd11caplng. G c g1ner•I office, prefer-' An Equ1I Opportunity Employer ~nun1nins-'2~1111un l"lollnr lSAl:i c:occc. 1,u1i'C', ::i llXHJ • :-. t ~. f'hll111ahurt 1nlx, O ,r, f,•111. t't'f' re1no1•nl . Very A EN y bl A tl HI h -Ct11t1hou~. Gyn1. S;1\Jllfl. 1 Ai lj.iin!ng •ff!il·(',;, l-"a.Sc:! 01, Jo~ l.eMiw 11.1 chol.c..: ;\l!ssl~1~' :'he i> 111i,-, 0r11n/\\'ht, 1t•n1. ttasonable. Gt.i!-5329 e1•r1, • Y ccoun ng. g Help Wintid, M&F 7100
1'r•tl\\ &>curltv rt>nt uvlnthlY. \\'ilh t·rrts & \ lc.10 . 11r' r1. c;o.....1 fl.'\\) lil>agl<·, Tri. fPni . f>rofcllslona.l J a Pa n e ~ e tchool gri1d w ith flgur•pH~e~lp~W:•~n~t~e~d~,;M:&:::F~7~1~0~0~ 1;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;1
ADULTS drp1 & furniture $·150/tno. Ruultor ti IJ.1ttlclpation Chlhu11.hua, l'\lk/81'\\'n. F . 2n1 Hlueblrd Cir. CJ\I. To mllCI the many .requests touch light typing •nd BOAT BUILDERS 1)111a Proce11lng
ln1nu'Cll:itc C>cc u1n111l'y I drpl! S·I00/1110, \\'ilh crplll, t\<X;'f!ss flt Avery, Prln1 ~Y· T1·rriµoo, \\'hit(', ninle Gardener . Grorge l buihl. TRAINEES NOW i1ptltud1, 10 key byl·
~rry. No ~,141 Cal l f,-,1• appl. l(:i.W2l:l, J\lr. solicited. S3t-1400 Bassel! 1nix , Tan, 111ale 545-7072 by ngencles for 11uallf!ed k j I d II Need i'xper. cu..rpentuni for EAM OPERATOR
Bachelor, I, 2 & 3 Br's. !i111lth. CITY OF ORANGE llru'hshund, Hlk/Rt>d, 1nnlc en1ployee11, we nre offer1ng ••n nt•rest " eta 1
• qur 'lty aa::!)()at n1n11ut. 4 OJ>("nlng exhils In Ne\Y}lOrt
from $l75 pt1r mo. I ~EW OFFICES :'lie\\. 3,000 !i•i· fl. unl!!I. P~1 lf', wThll t'. mnlt•, c~~~,?i~: 7~~~~~:~;~~~~ a specbl.I night c I a as Good company btn1flt1. O.'ly \Vk. Xln'I bent'tltll. Beach bftaed flnnncla.1 oo.
A IN LAGUNA NIGUEL SPRINKLl-:0; 3 n!r<·mid. \\ r'1• 111·. et'!.' mix. \\'ht. r . ,.~ree est. XJ>c:•r & rellnb. beginning 14 :r.tay. Call now Pe id h•elth/llfl Insur~ Drop by for nn intcrviey,· for EA!\! 0 p fl rat 0 r
370
50antP•la "f D Only 42c n.r sq ft otr!('('11. \rood i1 ot'k\11~ o.K. ss"1"'1rn1ix, v.B·",',''1'11f1f'n1. ' 963-1072. 1'10"11•edunllficalluo .. ,mtervle .... ., anc1, vac•tion1 •nd sick J\W!on 1,""'·1Thc""',· 9 ",",'1'1'opnm. c ... pc-ricnced In the follo"•lng za r. ' r-.' • \r111 . \Vint on rt ~~. GT0>-3331 lt'P ('IT. . ll. 1nn (' m enro men. l••ve. Call for appoint. II Sal 0 po IUl\1 e ;u1pmen1. 00. 088, Jl4--S5~CM&& ·l!Xl IL t~ UP. All ulll Incl. -Eng. Shetp l:>o<{, SJ i\\"h\, }''. FINI': EDGE Pacific Travel School ment·. 1638 Plal-entie, C.l\t. alt Kno\i•ledge of panel Crpt~. dry:;, a.Ir, v.·etbar. * COSTA MESA * Grrm Shep, Blk/T11n, r . Yard J\laln!enance Scrv\C'<-610 E t7th St i.·
1iii.ililil•-ililii 1 :tffi9:Z Ourino Ca 18trano 1100 -1300 . 17-,0 . :..lf!OO ~I It 1 Collie, 81'\\'tl/\\'hl, nialc Cleanups/Haullng, 31S-8625 • ·• ROOKKF.F:PER/C\.31Ut:lt wiring helpful, but not '' t
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Santa Ana (71 4) 540-4020 i\uton1otive . Imrnerlinte niandatory. f'\easa submit I San Dlt>go 1-'l'\\'Y to 11. >·s!rl<.11, l'll~l s; ~E:i;:.: Aus t srn:p. Tn. !t11i. PltOl-'ESSIO~AL y:ll"d n1ab1t 0 p e 11 in~. E "'c e 11 c n t ttsun1e w/rt>CCnl aallll)'
A\•ery .·1trk\\·ay .u1'tl off. J.OBE.1.T i"\,\nlt ... ss Doxh· pip. Blk/Ta.n. f('n\. Roo"••••blc prf-• 543·6655 PRIMARK
•
•) 1600 R I ,-. • l 979 .. -1 -""" ""' ACCREDITF.:D BY 11.1 \TTS PRODUCTS OJlpo1·r1Ulity (<lr right P<-.l'son. history to: • ., • c:i tor-.... u~Ul . CSU-·ti.JI :'hl•pJTcn· nilx, n r r. 1\1. Ask fur Doug. f>-18-76.:'>-I ~ I'' .. ~\Ct•ll1>Jl\ salary and n11 C arol Smith
Nf:\VIJL1X:-:,1.1. 1200 sq. ft~ Lnb/Shcp nth:, l'n. ~('111. PHOFE'iSIONi\1, Curdenin.t: f:STABLISHED 1!163 COMPANY <-'l.ln1p;_1ny bent·fil ii. Call ~lri;. Avco F lnancl1I S1rvlce1
• • l l~J: Tu11•1l~•U~•'. frpl•', I
fm11l ~,!,r1. I i.;1:. fn1:11 S19j,
Pooi. 1<'11111'. <'Onti rw:·nt:ll
h1'1",1kf'1~1. S<>purate lluruly )
l'C'el 1011. r1"'t! ro ,,hopping
S: fine he:1ch. 641-2611 I , •
s,,;;~"''~~f~';,:,.~, ... I *Deluxe Offices*
Close to ~hopplni: & bl"u:.:h. I Lu.'iur~oui. shag crpts, llltins Yor Lease, :;84 Ml· Ft. comm/
ln!·lud(' 1!ish1\a.,her. Lt.:. busin('ss. (2 offi ces plus re ·
poul & ~:ris n BQ S.· pri\'lltC l'Cjl!ion Uf'('a ,t storage), 1\d·
pa1io.~. 1. 2 ,\:;;UR , $J(jj). jarcnt to orange Cou11t y
$2.W JICr 1\ll). Ga~ ,\! \llHl'I" ,\1rporl.
poid. Call 546·8801 j~~ .')!'Olf Pl:H'I'
Gl2-200i. =---Rooms 4000
------~---1501 Westcliff Dr.
:\ 1:: \\' P 0 RT FINANCL\L
CEKTJ-.;ft
ROO'.\TS $20 "'k uri. "'ith Leasing office space
kih'he11: !'..]} 11·k up npl. CALL OK-SITE :'\l,\i'\AGER
$l7t.i. :!·KlO sn, It. ,i:r1a. :tlO.:l ~l~e. IJJ.k, Bc.1~1'. 1' • f ., f Tennis Instruction 26~ S. Sl"'Rll ff,,, .... , r . CON~. I·,·' L ·• ,. l \\ H r 11e1·v l:l'. 1no"'· ~.ge & c ean "' ~"' .... 620 N l Ct D flh . front Of1l1'1', c•rpls. IArgr • ~an11·,, n11~, I • 1·m. ups. Sl6-!tll9 Free l'lil. Prl. & sen1l·pd. lessons on Santa Ana, Call! CHBVHOl..1'-:1' 5'16-l~'OO t!\\'JlOr r r.
r<'ar dooni. AnNhcim & h l!<~ ~tt~I . fll'<t: n1nlc pri. l'Ot11ts. 673-6;).)9 Newport Beach, Calif. 92660
Ternlinal \\':i~, t'.~I . I) a y s Tcr1·1t'r n11\, B/\\, f1•1n. °EXPERll-::NC'ED Jnpnncse Afteii'IOOu Bob un equal opp or I u n i l y UOOKKi:;t-:PER'S As 11.11 I · Equ1tl Oppor. Employer
6-'6-5033 or e\'('1' &IG·OG8l . Poodlf', Churcon~. leni. gardrn('r yard. m11lntenance 1 0"'.'.R~C~.u~,~. ::_,L_E_SSO--N~S-~r~o=n em11loyi:!r Purl hnie. Hrs nex1bll'. J • ..,;..~oi"~!""~"""""I
• C1\T:, nnd clenn up 963-1020 m/f Approx. Zi hrs "'k. 10 key DAY \\'ORKER. Thun or
Rentals Wi1nt1d 4600 Slan1esf'. Choe', Betgc, ;\I. Ikginners. nt my hotne. ,..,.,...,..,..,..,..,.,...,..,, adder expcr. nee. PhOne ;.;.;;.;c;:;.:_:c:..:;:;;.:;;::_....:.;;;;:1Trl c. Ing hii ir, n1alc ~10\\' & EDGE -nionthly &12-2936 Kim Clark. Ad ' • 642-Sa-19 for appointment. 1-'rl., htu.'lt ht-exp'rl. $3. hr.
BALBOA PENIN. Blk, niale nialntcnance yard l'lcanup INEXPENSIVE vert1s1ng Asst 213-.'>92-~ • fmuff"C c-rgo ••s Gl'" • BOOKKEEPER """ lime to I 305 PALi\1. 1500 sq ft blrlg. AND 01'HEH.S. 5:l&2513 "' " · ""' · ..., ' ..., SAILING Lt~SSONS .....,.. 1)~;1,IVF:RY n111n r P.IU' Y
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I •-'·· YARD CLEANUPS "~. '8"' I for aet'Ounting oflit'<', ll. J3. A~t 'f'h11t's J'\lute. Adull s
or PR!IC, ne11r lu•.: rn1y. ~lf!lf!lf!lf!lf!lf!~"."!!~~I .,,...,. .. "" to work In 1nultl media of-"""'· "·'7-8111.
$.100/n'o P f' 61. '"19 & f t · f 64"-"~,.,... ,._ '" only. J\lu:o;I lu1ve l't'Ol'IOmical . -.: .>-...,,. • comp i" e n1e 1n . · ,,.wu::r flee. Bact. ....... und In art,'""· . I ~ ~·" ~ BOYS & GIRLS cp r. 2 1.~ hrK daily. No
Fireman & fnnilly. Lse. yrly. ] • I 11 ••I ou!, & 110me copy. General i;olil'lting, 11 o collectlng. :l-4 BR. F.1n1. 1'tli. 2 BA· '1rsontl• " Generel Servlc1s 6046 llf4IPfo'JrnMl I o!flce experience dcslred. Newspnper . Carriers. l\Un. \\'cstnllnstcr & llunt . Bch
min. f-lun1!ng1on B<·h nw11. '=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-:.ii~I ~·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·;;ii;;:I J<ull or pnrt t.lmc. Apply age 10. Lido Isle, Balboa nr~n.~. 638_2924. 1-,;xc. per. & pi'Of. l'('fs. ~ PLUl\IBlNG, ELECTRICAL, • Richards ~1arket, 9 ain-Peninsula & Balboa Point. 213-2~2937 Co\lf'('t Per1onal1 5350 CAltPJ-::NTRY · No job too Job Wanted, Mel• 7025 3 pni, 3433 Via Lido, NR. Contact l\1r. Backstron1 nt • J)F:LIVERY •
sn1nll. F & B llon1c-Repnlr, ------·------! lh" D'ILY PILOT or calf ~fen needed lo ca rr y AID, fcn1, Live-In tor a " " 1 or 2 llR fun1 . Sub-let for 2
or 3 i;un1n1l'r n1o's. Prefer
Park Ne1\'110rl or Onh."\\'ood
Gat'rlens. (ll 32j..1579.
INCRE~E yt1ur bu~tline, 1.3 ~1~3.:___ ATTENTION! 1..,01,klng feni Invalid. Salary 642-4321 & leave appliclltion. niornln~ LA 'fin1es auto
cup szes ill 2 v.·ks, no 1101\JE REPAllt Experienced Clnss 1 dri\':t'. ""· 894~:>. ~TJOO. BURGLAR Alann instllllcr. routr. l·l .B. Need ex er c is c s , pads or Carpen!lj', ?lunibing 1 1 k d t I dependable cor,12 1 hr1 per
gimmicks. Custon1 filling. 1'.:lect!'lcal Reas. !'>19-1W4 °11 ? ii·or ue 0 L'Ompuny 1\ll night Shift full or prllrl Expel'. Send ltesumt! 10 1norni11g. $2-Kl. per nlO.
A Is o hallers/swimwear. Haul'i
9
,051 =g9.~le~~·~r Tea~~~i:ti: '" time, no cxpe~. nee age 2:). 9P.,;,,O~ Box 1455, Costa !-.lesa. 847-8979.
Juanita. SJ"l-1272. n uv • 1 go 11 1 op-45, Appl ~Jr. Donut 135 E. 1 ~~-~·=,,..-,.,---,-".':'.::C. , JX>tl.-•lty. If you 11'<U1t n 171 h St. C:'\!. •BUSINESS l\lana;::('r v.·anled DEL l \'Jo: It~ !-.lun for * TIRED OF LOOKI:\G YARD, garage rtca.nups, rt•.iable 1na~. call !Wb at API' 'ICR ll'nn 1 _,, _ !or !Jusy 1 doctor nied\et1I op11Jiancrs & TV. lli:!aV)' FO!t A GOOD S'ITLJST? remove trees, dirt, ivy, 8·Mi·lliTI an ·un1f'. ''. cu f . 0 C ~I th . 1if1in~ n'l.1'(!. Steady Y.'Ork. The1• STOP. Cnll John. drive ways, stumps. ~ . Opport11111!y for co u PI e . o c 111 range. o. us 81'-' IJAVIS-BltO\\'N C0.,411 L.
SI ~IOTEL manage~l\'Ould hke J.Jusband for maint & repair, some s~pcP1:1SOry exper .~ 1~11 s c J\I
j-18-9'i:i:, u1· 64:1-:~:Kii . (n-l1&12-3Ul Ext. 2·lti [
BAUlO.\ 1.:: .52.G k 11·int~r. 1 UESK spa('(' available $50 tln.nc:ial _ .ll • 1
Sharl' h,11h ,\· k1tc-hrn. Qlll('l ' nKJ. \\'ill provide furniture t. jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj-~·j;i~
n1n to1·t• n1.~·1. Gl:1-3ii l:I. al $5. n10. An s "'' er in g I
summtrRen1al1 4200 Sl'M.rlcc availablt'!. 1.7875 [ Busin1ss Oppor 5005 &arh Hlvd.. llunungton 1 _
HOUSE:: SITTF:H liea1·11. t-l:l-.4311. I
lor J une . Au:::ust. ;\latur€' UNLY .51~iCI RUSTIC RESTAURANT
fem 1e11cher . "'·11n!s locat \t111 .\j(I sq It ol crptci, dr~, A/C E.'icll1n.te. chnn11inl(, prolit-
in Ne1\'pnrt Bcui•h. 600·22~1 office sp!:lce; visiSlc to j nblt'. Bcl'r-\\'in~ lie .. Priiiir·
aft. :1 p.111 . street traClie. 1\n1ple pkg. :-.'c11po1'C B<:h. ut·ea. $j5,000,
LIDO 1SLF:-.-J101u::e Con1p. RIGHT Realty 979·8533 t ·oll' uf :\i!\\'fl0t1:
furn. 2 BP.. 2 b.'l, Frp!t., New 16'~.~~~~,1~
00-2183. ~hampoo, Cut & 7-2666. manage niotel 1n ~a or p!unil>ing ele. Nice salary. t 11('count1ng sk~tls. J\ledlcal r 1 1' ·• ·
Style, SO. up. ~10\'ING, llauling. Exper. can 1-e!ocate. R<-!'s. &10>-1791 blk to ocean, llB. Pool. ore expcr. dt'si.red, bul no) DELIVERY &
"A Ne1v Approtteh 10 Diellng lteli11.h!e. Reasonable. Fl'ff or G-l&-363:.!. 213-433-5424 or 960-2508. nece11s. Starting salary $!ID STOCKMEN
& figure probl1>n1s." Jn-est. S32·WSl. Job Wanted Fmale l050 APPRENTICe-$1000 per nio. dl'pt'!nding on Full Ji111<' 1lays. ~lust be 18 or
<•\·er. N('llt appear. Stt
H111uld, 495 E. 17111, CJ\t. dividual, Semi-pril'1.1te & ~IOVING? Local furn. 01. ' _ t(uaHf1l·at!ons. J'l.li-66+1. all , ~ ~ . Liv!' in posilion. Sh1tffer s~~ ,. J:l'OUP sessions. gen. hauling. :fl t"'t. Iw·n. NEED .help at home. \\e Lotguna Ikarh !-.lartui·n.·. CASHIER to$500
S.'i6-1'iti20 van. 6·12-0."ilJ. ha\'e a1~es, nurses, hskpl'!<, -191-1535. ·1!17-18.'ti. ~~ f'\'l' Paid. Gren! spot to use
. PRES:~A~T'.' Hi\ULING $10 & up, garngr L'?1~pan1~n_s., Hon1en1akcrs f, . , your Pl\ ,r.c niath. No typing.
Caring, ronfLdenllal couns('f· cl1>an up moving bi• lfat UpJOhll a-1.-6681. i\IFJDJCAL f rn111 llfc & 11 . Fee n...sill<>"' c 11 · < -f Abo ' ' -e · re<:ept exp'd onl m t no • »tJ .--v · · a ~~gopt\~n 1& 'ke:;~i;ig. rtion, bed, rcns. 642-4032: Exp~1:len~e(! .P..:\,. des~rc!I Type ·60 ,-Use J i'cta;i:ne. Control C~r ~'!1plo~rn1•nt
PC RE " A LOC \L JllOl'in"' & hauling by por..111011 ll~ Dr s office, cluilc I 1-h'll. 9.. ''•"-frt·. 11.0: Agenry, ~. 3 4 n 0 ATTE~TIO~. • 11f1tnt fov"t·-i A A . &l.-t.J36 1 .. d 11·1af ''" "11 ' •r ' I . Bf d NB . '": · student. Lru~e truck. P.eas. 01· ui us · ,,...,,., ~7-8585. rv1ne \. , . ·
l'lec-1···. ,\,·n il hu1c-~· .. 111 .,-.., -~~·-!f:ii'.\-l'.lG(i-Oi·-67~·1.;,'l . ·-··• · Plui;h oftice·Bld1~ .. 2 to G Rn1
__ _ _ _. M • 1 "u!te,., Confet'i'nee rn1.
DF:Ll\.'t-:R\' Boy or Girl,
rrt'('\\'llY Auto S u p p I y ,
,\\'t'l'Y Park11o•ny at San
Oi<'b"() F'l'\\')'., !-.tl11sion Viejo.
Lll-~NTAL ofe. ~!I front
desk girl who is alllO
qualil.ied to lake X-ittlyg &
11ss\i;t at chair 1v ht! n
net•('J1 Sary . Pleaiant
v.·orking conditions. Call
i\lr.~ \\'ells at 5"8-3669 aft 3
P;\J
LIDO, lg romforl .i.blr. n1rely f .\'.l'l'OX t'Opif'r. Near O.C. air-
lu1i1, :: 1.:n. Sunny patio. Nr 1xi11. 833-JO.IO. •
hc:ich<'~. Sun1111cr or yearly. I 11t\'l:\E _airport area. Offie('
Ac:rnt r.12-·120Q -----spa..:~ 'ljt,: pl'L' SIJ It incl.
Pi\! ,\l:')PHli\C:s furn ~ Bi·.
1
1 crpts, Urps, j:.111itorinl & util,
pool. Dny. v.·cck'.~ month. ~IULl.A:'1 Het.!1 ~'. J·ILO Irvine
j l Hlm or C:'.8-1.96is. 5 10-~Jro.
Vacation Rentals 4250 01-·r1c1'c:-~s~p-,\Cf.: no \1·
FOft rc11t on Pncifl1· C!<t 11v.-y
in llun1i11gt on l.A•h, lraili"r,
sleep§ :1. S:iO per Y.'k.
l'tcsponsibl(' ndulls only.
~.lS-!081
~enta1;to share 4300
111·ailallll' on East Coast
ii\\')', Corona dcl ~tai·.
lH.\\'l .'\ & IR\VIN
IlE.\LTORS. 644-6lll
*WATERFRONT *
J>rime Ney,·port Beach Joe.
E."'<-'CUlive offic:cs \\' /lrplc.,
\'OUNG !'.Oph. fnll. c\~lres 1vct bar. pl'ivnte bath. :}tl Bayside Dr., NB GT.rfiltl SUCCE~Si'~UL f 1 rave I __ ~-----
C'X('('·typc mulf'' to .shnre 1 l~'lr-.IEDli\Tl',; OCCL"P,.U'\C\"
exp. for chic r ar t y Olflcc .I. Storage, approx.
pc n t house lmmedinte\)'., 3COO sq ft. \Vest Ne"·port
&S0-1 8j6 I $300. 111thly. 645--0651 or
'''Ar\TED: SQpl1, e n1 p I . ;i$-3856===~~~--
f<'n1nl r 10 sh;irl' ~ BR NE\V OF"FICE -T11·0 rooms
pn·~ti~C N.B. hOT1il\ "'' 1J x IJ and 10 x 12 .. All ~trni~ht r'i<'t' 111 t1 1 c. ull!ltics paid. $100 per
tl-~1121 I month. Coste r..tesa area.
\Vll~I. Slli\Rf..'. renl suprr 548-7729 or 642-8372
:!BR/ 1 1 ~BA apl & 2 sn1l l OFFICE Suites, 2-J..I rooms,
rlow; \\'i!h ni('C '1'0r~!n.~ ~!ll. I ~ foot, 1770 Orange, Cl\l,
Pool. :;:-.unn, <'ti'. Utll s inc. Sult11ble D.R., Dent .. Ins.,
St® ea. :i:i7-4:iiS nfl TPJ\I. rt.I=:., 6-12-1272 ·------TF.AClli-:Jl nee!d~ rnnnunatc. 2 OFFICES, paneled, bar,
Almos1 of·rnn frn111 . ycarl~'. shov.'t!r, C•trpets, intercon1
your shore Sl :l!l /1110. Cell phone systen1 in, $125. 15-19
\'inCC' 497-20~·1 aflcr 5pn1. Superior, NB. IHG-663'1 ------\VORli:I:\\. \\'01111•11 1nld 21}:. NE\\' OFFICES
\\'ill ron~irll'I' rhild or one 1200 Quail St . NC\\'fXlrl Beech
anin111I. Llt l"f:'I' fe1u·rd ynnl. Conun'I Broke.rs SJ::-tl393
_2_2_l9_~1_n1_"_·~r~:... <c..':..I __
YG \\'OP.Ii:!\'(; Gi rl ro "hnr!'
lovPl\· ~ br hnn1r !n (\! 1\'
:;:-.n1C. S!JO. C11l l 9i!'l-~1 ~ r•1
D,\J{K Rn1, liho1\er "'' l4x24 storage gar all. I 6 5 2
N~'i!Jtlrl Blvd, C;\I 51~9766
1611-WESTCLIFF-NB.
~\6-2:'.1 ;) -----. :;1;1 !)!] !1 & l 'f> ~-11-51.l'.?2
ulterior rlcsig11e1·s, h n 1 r VASf.:CTOr-.IY Barry 531-1235 or a:ID-!1438 H I W t d M&F 7100
t1tyJisrs, etc. . . Presth;c · Confidenlial in r o r 111a ti 011 ' · -e P 1
" e ' ASSEMBLERS CLERK-JYPISJ
Jocn1lon. F'or n1orc Info; eull counseling & refen·aL MOVING & HAULING
GIO-l.1i0 fro1n 10-J Sundays APCARI::. lncorp. 1\ Non· $10 & up • 963·&152 •
call &iG-~3. Profit Agenc:: .. li42--44:!6. Housicl••nlng 6054
f~1'-:AliT\' shop for !;ale. 300 SPIRITUAL READER
\V. Coa~t lfll'y, N('\1·purt Oren 10 "''I to 10 P:'\I HOUSE OF CLEAN
Bcn<'h, 642--()8.1.1 or 49.1-9907. Ad' ire 1111 all n1att('I'~. Carpet.;;, \l'indo'>\'S, fioors,
Invest Opport'y 5015 '.ll:? :"\. !··1 C"1m!n11 !lea.I uphol. f.iperinl rat('S for ITg. Sa I rl('nlent c. }o"or app\. Sf'fv, 6-12~2-I.
ACCOUl"TING
KEYPUNCH
OPERATORS
IBM 129
BAH.-bcer/11·ine , l> ko•s, 120 Call 49Z-90:!·I 492-9136 STEA.t'I Clenning, ·• • e p • S G u .. \\'e havt! lmn1edlet(' c;1 ~<'~ per n10. re~ trade, MAS A E & SAUNA extraction, dry within 3 hrs, requirement for (2J
()(){}! tnble, shurne boaNI, Clran mom!<, pleasant flt· sanitizes, Sa I Is faction qualified JBl\1 129 operalors.
r·our day \\'Ofk \\'etk, 10 hrs .Net•d n1:Uul'C \\'Om;tn for
I p<'r day. 6 A.J\1. to 4:30 P.J\I. l11rge off1c(' In Costn 1-le~:L
I ExJlE'rii"nce helpful. but not i\lust be ab!t: to f)'P'-' I necl'saary. ~2.00 per hour. \t'le1:1ricl, use 10 key 11Jdlt~
good bcneflt1. Apply in 111a{'hinc, file, n n ~ v.· c r
person. pholl<'s ere. ~lust be allle lo PRIMARK \1 ork an OCC'aslon::I day on
PRODUCTS Co
the 11·eckcnd. E xc ,elle.nl
• <-'On1pany benefits 1nclud1ni;,:
pnirl 1·aea1ion, paid n1N.l li:al
& retirement pro gr a n1 ,
juke/pin b 11 I I . \\'Inc mosphere, TV & lou11gr. guar.557-67-12 Experience on accumalator
L'OC'ktalls nlOl'ing \\'el I . Cnll Don11a at %,~ ..... 1247 Pi1intlng/Paperlng 6073 desirable. Excellent co. I
Shopping: C('ll!t'r proxin1ity 1 AA""39,,_;:A~d~'~""'""''~\v~•~·!H~n~«~·~Bc~h~. 1---""cc;.-"c.;.....:;;!.-.o.:.c;; benefits. Day shill.
~20 s. su~an
Sll.nta Ana, Calif ..
{Beh\·e('n Harbor &
Fairviev•.
Opportuniti"es for
ad\•anccment. Pleaae Y.Til('
OassLfit'd ad !'lio. 150, Daily
Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 C~ta
Mesa. Ca.Ill !nln6.
B('~ch. Intrrcst('d pilrtit"s l LIFE or DEATI-1: Ut our PAINTING ,t,,, Repair, J.j )TS THE IRVINE CO. _,
~1·.n1e only for rletalls. Cla~s-hRbie!ii lh·e. For altemotivrs \Vorkmanshlp gui\r. Take. Please call
South of \Varnt!r)
An f"Qual opportunity
Employer m/I 1fli"rl 11d no 53, ,. 'o D11\ly to ABORTION call LIFE advantage ol n1y exp (714) 641r3389
Pilot . P 0 Bo . ..: 1560. Costa Ll~E 5-11-5.122. 2.J hrs. 5.16--1056. CLERKS ~\co:A C l'f 92626 h k .C..CO====~=~=~ SA.I\! 'ti! Noon ASSEl\tBLERS · n 1 no ro el' * p,\L:'\I & C.\llD H.r:ADEP. QUALITY W\V COST Equal Qppc>r. Employer Pre c \ 11 Ion clectro-mech.
MUST SELL! AJ)1 RE!)IJCTION. R~ld1>nt1al or comm. p11int· I :::=i:z::::i:i:z==~ assembly.
f2) Duplexes Santa Ann. IOSJl LII::ACll BL\'D. in)'.:. !:~L·lnt. 1\ll or port. I 1 -1 Requires: Strong me eh,
Typist • Experien<-'t in
proof-reading & slat lyp-
ing. ssoo Per n10. Valu $72~1 STANTO~ 52j-J JOO Call L)le. 612-ljij9, 6•16-S.11~ Accounting aplttud('. Assembly or
Di~r1·essed pt•ii:e $63~1 BEST ~!1\SS,\GE• IN N.B. Int. & r~xt. pa\ n t 1 n g. machine !iihop exp er. S l2~1 Cash needed 3100 I · s · 1 [ GENERAL h I f f C 'I &12 6~11 , Ist 533.7620 · rv111" A"r .,. u1te 03 t Carpentry Srrv!ce. 1\mustic r p u . "'. -SOSO. MATH CLERKS
Open ll A:'ll. i\1on. \\'ed. fo'ri., ('('ihn~i; ref)flinted. \\"or k OfflCE Money Wi1nted 5030 Ann. 5.i7-0i19. ~ulil'. Call 835-0609 anytiine ' 1~ '~ •,.., Good math l't'asooing.
\\10RR.'" & !-'EAR elin1inarrrl PROF. painter, honest v1ork, \''C' havC' nn opening for a Apply In Personnel Dept ~l'lj(I, RE-PAID $8j. Df:I' n10.
rr · 21 nios., Totnr ~2.0.10.
'\'e:ll secured.
TI<l-539-99~
\\',\'.\! TO BORRO\V SZi.000
on $99,<XX> trust deed
499-lj88
Mort, Trust DNdt 5035 -
LOANS UP TD 90%
1st TD Loans
2nd TD Loans
fnl'('\·rr inslllntly. C a I I rcas. Int lt•xt., Iree e1Un1111e. b1igh1. enerL tic go-getter f.1on thru Fri 9am-11am
anyti1nc. S.I0-4S.l-I Hf'f.~. f>.18·t759, &12-3913. to handle accounts payablt! PACIFIC MUTUAL
Japanese boy '~:ant~ to live-in PROF. \\':tllcovering, state ass ls tance, S\1•itchboard , -~ 700 Newport Center Dr, NB
\\ilh family in e:iichange for lie. No. 279514. Insur, ull rcl.iet and miscellaneous ~ Equal Oppor. Employtt
somr \\l)rk. ~~IS-l1J,I lypcs paper. TI-1/842--4386. typing and filing. ~tLlSt be
*w II H en accurate typist,
a paper anger* preferably "''ilh stal typing CLERK
I )~ C. Rebko 6~24'19 c."\pcrience. and have 1 Busy order desk 11t major
SeMees Hd"epeirs Plaitir/Repi1ir 6077 year's previous genera I ~PERSONNEL Orange County boat builder . . ofl.icc expcrien('('. Please nl'eds ma.tu.rt', quick
PATCll PLASTERING apply: SERYICES•AGEJ\K:Y thinking petWn to hllnclle
Carpenter 6015 1\ll types. Free estiJnates Standard /\sst ~li;:r/Retail $500 boa• & l)llns nrder function. Call ~25 lndos/!llt'cti Engr $1 31' Good trleptll.1ne pcrsonalUy
PATIO Cn\'l'i'S & De<·ki; i\I & L PLASTERING & All Memories, Int. Boat 1\fcch/Diesel SS6j a n1ust . Call J\lon. for appt., C11 ~to1n designed expertly ty(l(!s of plaste1ing F/C Bookkeeper S~ 9~28Sb Judy DeFrisoo.
hul:t. fl'Ct' t>stin1ates 64&-6949 A Subsidiary or Scc/dictaph/constr t() $7j()l!!! ... ---..---... -
646-759S 8'16-9-19:J Plumbln ••ia APPLIED J\I AGNE TICS r·icld Clain1s Adjuster CLERK· TYPIST
Tuni Your Garage into a 9 vv CORP. Tme, degree to $72:> \VIII train right ncrson for
r.iee Family Roon1. $830 up. L.R. OTIS PLUr-.tBINC I 2221 S. Anne St. ~cretari~s . h> $700 ofc. assi!IL position. ~tuio
\\'A\"T1-;1~turr str:ticht I s-· -R I "50 ni:ilc 10 .~hr 4 Br h~e $..-u!I!· j us1ness enta "'"' Lowest rate' Orenge Co. a 1r1 l11'h, JIB. SIO:•. * * PHI~li:'.: Coinni('rcial ' Sattler Mtg. Co,
2n )1'S exp. 51S-i637 e\'('S Remodels & Repairs. Waler Santa Ana, Calif. 92704 Jru;~r Cla.uns Assistant be nccurate. (No pcn;onfl l
·honte-dt·•~•fs lurn•ces An ~ual opp or tun,. t y Jo ire & casualty to $700 fll'Oblems). Apply 3 lo ; ADD, remodel. alter. frame •n, ··-·-·• ~ ·• ~., Sales Rcp/l\lech $700+ 11 790 N • '" & offices. fin ish stores, dsh\\•ashrs. &·1~263 r-.t/C & employer Payroll/EDP $600~ -Oyt, ' e1vton \Vay, C.711.
91i2-,%1!.j.__ C-2. /\'c1,·port Blvd at l!lt h. 642·2171 545-0611
1TATURE STRT Pr11fcss 1nnlt' S600 1110., I )T leuse, li\t & Sen·ir:.& Ilarbor area 24 r rl'.
set'ks !<!l nl(' 3 BR. Oen Vu la.~l. Hldg appt'OX 2,000 sq fl. SG2.000. 2nd TD. 2 j-;,;
t rn. !H0.'·1121 x374. Res. dblc gar. storage: bldK. priq; di-:L'O\Jn!, San Diego offir·r
• 4fll-27(il. i11 l'<'l1r & ul ~·urb. lge luL RJdi,;-. $100,000 dO\Vll. Cull
\rOHKlr-;(; (;IRI. hn"' 2 Ill:.) 11•1~1 "'I tt . llt':J\')' lraliic ex-0 11\'e, Bkr. :"HT-7006
homes. !Xi2-l!l61. B/A. Complete Plumblng Keypunch Op!' to S56.'J CO.\IPE.IENT ~'Ian Io r
Service. Lie. 27269-1. ACCOUNTING MGR. Acctng Clerk $600 S<'rvlcc station work pu1111J
2 '''.
".\'. 1,, ,1, fK•~Ul't. 4~1 to 00,000 ..:ars dal· r :r rf' 1r ~.'Jilli' I 1791 y. ~1;1y CH U li\'C in. ld~al !17~i.n.11 1 nr 9t":2-\or .\111111uc~. Nursery, et~"·
1
J[g]
: G ;ra ges-fOr-Rent 4350 /\\'ail. ~J:i)· lot h Keep j Lo•t and found
1·alli11'.{. t):;6.Jsj3 of /lit 5, ~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·~~
1 ' ' ' ' !
I
I
I
'
MINI WAREHOUSES , ""-;;it::.
STORAGE '-NOW LEASING
\ Lost & Found 5300 :'\11 '.\i<o\ i ·!.1 01
(·h.11 ~l·~. rrurn
m••nli•
lore nu• Mesa V•rd1 Dr. Plau ~'i'.50 JI r
llnn11ll"'l i· :'\. 11 l11n' S!., llf;
A LLSPACE
960-1970
Aptl'Furn/Unfu~900
LAKE-SIDE
LIVING
•
EXCITING
VALUE
•
Adults·Smoll P•I•
lackelor
One ...
two
B.R.
175
•• 41.5
Meic1v.rde Eottot AdOms
540-1800
J.1J._1 _\[~.-.a \·1·ril~· 1)1'. c.a ~t. LOS'f. $:-1(1 RC\\'ard, fem . se11I
Idc11l lor lt<'~t11urnn1, Liquor, J'l(lint Si:ini•·Sc cnl, 5 yrs.
lJru" SVJl'(', S.•r1·i,'t' Shop:i, nJrl. Nn!I. sl('ndl'r .... hy, In-
~· Oclu:-.•· Offit'<' Spa(•c. ""loor cnt lOlil In r ountnln
Call :;r,. 112:1 \"11ll1·y llucic11dn tl't•cl nenr
TC1J•-J.OCATI0:\'.-1:;. JTt h I l-'111,·on & \",·,1ril: Fri .. nill'.
!'IL C,:)J. ·r.'tl l'!(j. ft. ,\,.ru:.!!i l'l<;11sc ltf'lp . j:!'nef s11:u·k1>n
1ru111 ~de\\11y, T h r j f , y, f111111ly includ1n K her 1ncon·
A!11ha Beta. Q 1v 11 c 1·. :.olnblc broth('!', they ha\'l'
:,1g-:>.;11. E\'Cli :)18-6::r62. never before been i;eparnt-
----Cd 008·326! '~~~lll~rn~~r c~po~~~1 100~; LO~T bro~n-Atrnchc case i~ lou~y !l1ret:r, C~I. 117il ~q. tL rnrking lo! of Sofey,·ay on
Only $-IOO. Ai:;t. ;,i&.-u,Yll, Fa i r v I e 1v Rd., C.!11.
r·\'Cll 5 l!Hr iG2. Tte1varrJ. 6 12-8686.
LEAS!:; 2'.l:-,O ~11 tt·30 11 fl 'Oll· LO S T, Col I i e, fc n1. t1\~e nrar !\c\\·poi1 U1.:nch Sabl<!/\Vht, 5 nlO old, P"~t (Jrfh 1·. f.12-9:i10. Hr\\'llrd, Vic : ()(w.•nto\\·n
,STfiltr. nr~ N"'pr~~oi;tOrt i1.:e JIB. 53&-_!,:o!I".:... ____ _
,\ (irt•)hournl dt•pr11 :.,g7 St,1.1.\!t ~IATli ltE Poodle. Lo~!
l·t. 3100 :'\1(1, Ai<'· 6•1G-2lll ahflul 1110 1vceks. Vicinity of
I d , 1----f.ll·t"ndtl<'n and f;<11vnrrls.
n ustr1• Rent1I 4500 Plione i.'97-Trol or 907-G9a2. ---NE\\' 1'1·1 :.100.~ Si-i Fl Lf1ST ""°{:'1lppcd \\'hife !-.t11ltC'~C
Sh11r• k Office~. 1\mtil prki,; n1til f' <l/."J). 1\lnt11rc. "Shag··. 4'~ ~ 1th:o:r Jh\'r.1ra.'\h 1o1•r \111'. l~t·iu•nn J~:1y. Rc\vorcl.
\Int Ith , nr S.O. rrwy, t'ij,',_~r.17 or 6 14-Si22
tl l'/-12:12 ~f1IJNI) _ \rhH(' German
711·1-DLL>C:-;-1$1)}~fl~ 11 1-~IM_·p, rcinol~. \'le. Bob;n
ll;q1, ~'4"ioid Hil h SI. Nl'wp(lrt ChlCH & Erllnger. Gayle
Hrneh Location. I..c:c ~ti r 8"WH>i21 or S.'6-6009.
r~·nc·ed )ard. A\nll 6/1. LOST: Large mnl<' Jrl1h
l :11S-l0l5 S<>ttrr. OeR l'Ollar, VIC'lr11t)'
RE.'.'T nc1\• l\1-1, J20().~ 11q llnrbor, Vlctor13, Ca 11 ! ll, $17().$360. mo n 1 h . 5-18-637."1
! ~·1ofti("('. ~ ~ \V, Centrnl. f foi'°1'D':...,f>~'!l---,-m-•"ll~bf~k~&
s .. \., bkr. 613-1039. 11 ht l1·n1t1r i\llUc. 5th &
1\F:\\'f'OltT &-al'h offlr(' & llarhor, -~-Al :.:i1-G6-,
\\'IH't'h(IU/11', <1ppro:~. 900 kl ~.;-OUN!) Do" fn1I Blk "
'.'· :tlj() 1110. ~lullan ~<·::illy, 1\hl n11u·•11111eii~·4.1; 1~°' old.
__::.1(11 Jr, tnt·.~1!, a4()..~ ne11r l h1n1lllo11, Ci\1 6i2·1966
1 :-.:1.\\i"Or~T r.:i.r. AR E,\
ll'iil' lfl ~ •. nul'
C11!! 61:)-.:?910
I Jt..!.>-l l'.~''')l'<'~. Offiet'~.
ln1lh11hJol 1ur, o.>nrt I. bath,
11'3tl1 JJ.·actl. JIU, S'2--28.l4
L.Osr rnnle ornngt• tlM;t'r c111.
-If:?'«. \llr, Snn Rf'mo,
l.111tun11 UJ lls. 8.'\l)..."A53.
~'Ol'ND: A(lriMt Toy tf'm.
Plutll,, w/i•ll OO & red
1'01lor, Jl,B. •r'f'fl. ~.
Carp•t Service 6016 Roofing 6082 Fee Paid. Outstanding firm rtecept/1ypist $500 gas hghl n1cchunlcal 1~urk
JOHN'S C'nrpct & UphOl<1tc. ,. seek A accountant Secys/litc sh io $600 Call 556-8760 or 54:>-U861
Ort SlHUllJXIO, (Soi I REPAIRS, nit ~ypei;;. Reas. \V /insurance background. Ci\LL TRISH HOPKINS COOKS f~t"' "vi l I• d Ask foe Sal•~ To Sl4K. Al'° fee JERlt l \VHI'ITE~IORE . ~ R1•tardan1i;;l. Degreasers ~. II·' ·1'1 <.n • • • ~.J Ap ply rn penion 9am a <x a 5"1 1188 SJ0..5020 Job•. Call Sally Ho". 488 E. 11!h St (at Irvlncl Cf\1 · pm, oil color hri~hteners & 10 · -• · '' S . Harry's New York Bat & n1inul~ hfcach for "'hitc S1wing/Alt1rationt 6084 54-0-{,()55, Coastal P eMIOnnet uite 224 642-1470 Crtll, 4248 Martingale \Vay,
!.: Agency, Z7!IO Harbor Blvd, ·•-A. &11. N rt n. h carpels ... ave your money C'l 'YV"' ....-.,., •••41 • '14 ewpo i=ac .
by s.ivlng nie' extr:i trips. ~!1\R_ILYN'S Cus!om Clothe!ii " -COOKS & \VAITRESSES
\\'ill clean lhini,:: rm .. dining C]!1111·. Design or ttdeslgn. ACTORS/ACTRESSES AUTO LOT MAN Expe1ienced
r111 .. & ha.II SW. Any rm . 6i,>-~•~~=~~·-·------Co1npany producing medlcnl f For oni" or Orange County's C1rrows Restaurant
$7.:ll. couch SlO. Chnir $:i. l:J Tile 6091 film nl'f'ds men & y,13m;•n Largcsl Ford Dealerships. 6'l0 Avenide Pico
)'I'S. C'Xp. is \\'hnt <'Ounts m !I_:;;;:. ______ ....;.:;::: !or nr:tors. No exp nee. P.len F.:XJ'lf'rlrnee prrf<'rrcd Ap-San CIC"nitntc
1ncllYM1. I do \\'Ork myself. CEltAF\11C TILE NEW & a.'ieS 30-40, \Vnmen vari<'<i. ply ln per140n 10 George Ray _
Goorl rer. 531-0101. r<'nlOd('I . Free f!!iil. Sm jobs ~l t •-·1 Frfdn >l 2M" HARBOR BLVD e COUl\.S _ " US .,.. UViU Y 1 ay vvv • e \Y,\l'ff'ESSES
c,1.1i°P1':T&-Uph 0 \" t er y y,·eJcome. 536-2426. 641o~h;,.,,,.,FGr audition cell CO:fJ'1\ i\tt;&\ eI-IOST~SSES
clrunlng. Finest equip. Col\ CLASS SEl.1.S -612-56'IB ..-.u~ Q i 3 " n('1•' for free est. Drnnis. -I AVON see J\1r. u nn, to ;,, !-.Ion
<71 II r~i-t---1755 thru Fri., -..c_~-.c -----1 ---------:----------, S LOltENZO'S C t Cl I r • I •Y• • · • arpe ean ng SEEK & FIND In Wond~rland PUT SO~lE ZlNC 2101 E. Edin11:er AVe
Floor Care l Windows INTO SPRING Santa AM, 8'>-2377
Outch i\laint. Se1·v. 537-150!1 Decorate your house or buy COOK-TRAINEE MM OC K ETTSEStl CUDMFQS Ceilings 6018 new cloth es withe n1oney Salary according 10 exp.
F A P.f O C K T I T I, I. L 0 C E A T U S you earn s"lllng Avnn Prefer no students. Expel'. * \VILLARD PAINTING *
~1>1v Ac..'Oustical Ceilings +
r1>p11lrs. Dlj'\vall &. ,,·nil
lr"\t. pnt('b plastering. i'o.
28 1038. (i.12-571:).
Cem•nt /Concrete 6019
Ct:i\ll:;NT \\'ORK: 1lrive·
\\'ny.i ,s1dc,1·nlk.~, park"·ay:c.
pntio isl:11Js, Su11th Coa s !
5'.-rvircs. * 673-90.".6 *
CONCRETE Palios. Patio
Covf'r.t. Quality \\'Ork. Reas.
LICCn'-ed. 6-12-8:;1 I.
CEMENT: PnUo, drivel!!,
walklJ..ftepaln, so.iv It
remove . fl'(!(? cit. 5.J4..s998
Contractor 6021
Jack Taulanc, pa 1 lo•.
reniod, o,dd. Lie. B-1 269072. ~1y \Vay Co. 64z..4703.
l\ARL K":NDAL.t Gi:!n Con1r.
Tll!'siden<!e & Comme.rciril * ~>18-1 537 •
60:12 El•ctrical _ --~-~~"'-~-~
F:LECTRJClAN • Uetrise
NG. 2331().g, Small jobs,
1nolnt & rcpal:rs. 34~
C!.A:!.'tSELL~--11
l
A R R riNJM M. 8 8 R 0 T 0 'I' T D S E E Products, t"lexible hr1. In pret'd .. but will trt..in. Apply L!.....!!J your own nclghborlllX>d. Call betwetn 2: 30 / 4: 30 p111.
.,. C I. C~ 0 D A n R M R JI I T A r. H ,-,40-1041. Hamb~er Hamlet, l!;L'l J\dam11, CM. Ask for Mr.
IT A 0 R ,, S S Jo' A T E U R I. K N C BABYSITTING & 11 t c llagcn.
•· II r. til 0 C R B R B T F: 0 0 I h ousck~cping, Sun!liet/1 . .JB c"o"'u"NT""'E~R~t~IE~LP~~W~Al~NT=ED= .. . : ~ fl A · A 1:1rtn, I child, Mon-F'r\, 2.30 Basic knowledge of sewing.
R A ,,, t: II R E D II W R E Q T K n F D ) U!1111 , early eves, ~t d~s, Exp. prererrcd. CI l y
W R 0 t: II R fl 1 t; I A 11 U 1 S n C 11 R i $~! "k, 5'.l2-l430 & j,92-lalO Clooncrsc.<c:!!.J...:C:l.;JS=· ::.,,=--
, 111\ JY~ITTEn. 2 l'hildl'<!n, c OUN TE R GJRL.. 2
I F. S Q U I II +I l R ' II fo. S I ~I R 0 0 niy hon!(', muxt hui·c OY.'n exper;cni:ed girl$ needed for ~~ans. call nlt 6 wkdny1, Clcnners. 644·0932 betwL-'Ctl
I. S D I N ). II L R I. I T T •: II 8 A. ~1 _:~18 S·l.2 a ,in.
I II R M R U I S N M
A 0 E E 0 A Q t E A O
A ' 0 • l
N , N 0
WR F
L T T
0 Q U f; ~I Q E N ~f 11 U U 0 .A 0 L S I -M S Q t.: H U II S E II C B S N ftl JI 0 0 II
R I. 0 8 Q U ~ ~ ~ 0 F II A E E B 0 L W
l11tUVe6otu: The hldd1n nam1t HOtd bdow appc11 forwud,
b1tkw1td, up, doW11, or dilllon~l!y In the puttk, Flfld each
hidden ntr111 •nd hok it In•• thown:
Al.I• r. 01J1:11r_•!I ~Altf':H llAIUI r.1u.~111nli CAT fATllF.Jl •11,IJA)f ~Ol.K Ttllltl,t •
lll"-'ll l.l)BSTF.R Vl'tF'lllF!ltAlml ~ OOR\l\)U~£ ~ \{) llA ntill "'lllTK ltAflflJT ~ 'f~·,M.-Jnf l~lW1ol'.llllw ll.5. Ii'
To ordtt 1ny or Ill of ihf' •xp1nded '"Sttk A Find" books,
n11mbt'n 2 throuif\ 7, ernd 60 cent• f0t tach. n\lkins thttb
Pll)'•blt to "Sttk A Find," St11-Tt:~ S1adlcl1c, AddrN
l..11-1 .. 1'"'1' nf fbit MWMM!Mr.
BARTENDER COULD you ui1e exlnt $.1:).$50
1',;x1~rlenced. Pny according wk! P i t eves & Sats. Prtf.
to nbllhy. tmpl'd. ~tr. U!vi 846-6455.
CASHIER HOSTESS •COUPLE to manage brand
Non student. Wiii train but new buildini In Costa ?.1eu.. ~r. expcr. Apply betwn Salary It apt, No 11~1~t.':~mAfn~~b~.~ chUd/pe1t1. (ZJJ) 949-1731. I CM . Ask !or Mr. Hagen. CiREDIT CHECKERS
DEAlfJ'ICIAN Asll!iiUlnt or Im tel 0 pen Ing s lor
Shampoo Girl. MAie or ln3iv1ciu11.I• w/\lle t)'l'l\nJt
Female. Licensed. !'lfi:J.3433. ,_klll~ 10 ~NOrk In il:!ailng
RF.Alfl'Y Shon tor ta.la. 300 dlvl!tlon.
\V. Co4st Hwy. NP.wport For Ap'pL Contact
Beach. 64~ or 494-0007. Cerol Smith
UEAIJTY Oj)ernlor, bu.I!)' 644-5800
shop. Ne•• llcen!le OK.
JIEADY'S, m-oMl8 Avco Flnancl&l Servil~
Equn.I Oppor. EmplOytr
f)E/l:T AL Assistant. Nt:\\·port
lkur h Orthodontic office,
rh11.lrslc~. Approx . .t day~/
11:rek. Top $1\lkl')-', llbcrnl
fr1nl{{' l°i<'nt'fil~. C'Onl:'t>nial
en\ iroment, orlho ex per.
l'f'(111tl'e(I. No 1n1oklng. Age
1&](1. &12·2626
Dt-:NTJ\L Asst, min 5 Yr!!
chalnlde dental f'Xpcr. ~ ~ rert!f!cl\te. l\lust'-.....h.
neal, efficient, quick k lik,;
Jlf"Ople. General denti.stry in
N.11. Progl'f'ssi\'e 111odern
ote. Call fi.ts.-9470.
DENTAL ASSISTANT
~IO!ltly chail'l'l1de. Expe:r, &
:<·ray certlflcallon pref'd.
Snla.ry open. Call ~.
Afler 7pni or "''kn d !I
61:1-3-103. .
DENT,\L See., Bookketper,
ll!'<'epf. 20 lo ll i:!xper. or
eoJlei,;e. ;,.lft.3000 {~l·f')
'>\'ke'nd:i 110-21 536-8965
DE'.\'TAL ASSISTANT, oral
surgery & X-ray He. a mU1t.
Jmn1ed. opcnlni,:.
~un
Dental As!list11nt ehalrsldt:
exp, prelerttd, Newixirt
Beach, &12-7998.
Dict1phon1 Typitt
Fl.'e Paid. Plush t'a.,hion
Island ofc. Great CO-\\Wkrrs •
6..· OUL<:!Andlng b Ct\ e f i t s.
Start $."l{Lj. Also FL'l' Joh!;.
C111J Sally llart, J.1()...6().')5,
Cooi;tal Pcnonncl Agency,
7190 Hu..rhor Blvd. C~1
Df:1\PElt\• tt11 b I" r, no
ellper!cncc nt<.'ef>~ary. 1618
l)hns \llay, Collla ~ll'sa.
DRIVERS
('rof,:~·Country. No ~t't'ci11I
ll.:en11e l"t.'Q'd. Apply bet"·n
H)ani & 12 noo11,
MacGregor Yacht Corp
1631 Plucl'lllla, Costa ltlc!UI.
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMBLERS
As!iemhlrn1 nrolf'd v.•IPC
botlrd & Mld('rini; ex.per.
Sonic h'tlincc J'lO'h ion!I open
Pf:!rmanenl tn1nl•iyment I~
µlea88nt i;urmuiKllng~.
C:1ll For A11pt.
lndulitriril Hclatlons
(714) 494-9401
TELONIC
INDUSTRIES
Lagun11 Stach
Equnl Ofipor. Ernployer
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMBLER
Prcf<'r "'<;"ri<-111,.. bu! 'llil/
trR ln. Sn1all ton1111111y 'll'llh
rt.·111111111 1urrl'llJ11•ll n1,'!C, Nt:itr
!hr (}('f'11n, In Nf'\1qX)l'I
Benrh. Appl)' 111 1·:·:\VPOHT
i\IARINE, Jn " m •4 P 01 507 '1uprrinr, J·1~~~1 '
¥
Electronlc T1chnlclin
2 Ye11n1 •chool + 2 Yt'lltl
experlenc11 de1\r1~,i.. win mist devftlt1prn,.ni' 0 t
mtdlcal tn1trum1tn1A, Stnd
rosume to Rio Dynamlai
tne., 17542 Arm11ron1t Avt.' Irvine, Cllllf. '
APPL'l IRON-ON TAPE i'O I
TROUSErt l'OCKETR wh<:n
troutfn are now. Tlll• Will
l'flnrorc' I.ho J>Oeket• llnd
let1Sl!n the Ch11inctf r1f hol•1.
ETtjoy "'°"' cloq1 ''""' bY 1tlfl1\,11: "don11 ~d"" wllh
I 0.tly Pllol Clu.tnett Ad
s,t:H,C'B, • '
E
Imme '" . \York
T
M
Exe
10 U
dyn'
'" t·ludi
hiu;
SUlr
""' poi.n
C E
• \\'fl!'
Kno
BP
pati
eler
Full
G
s
T«
AP
Co
' Ari
G
Ace
"" "' J
17
Sul!
nc
he
1
ski
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G
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B•
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9-
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--.,
Ulonday, May 6, 1974 DAILY PILOT 'S
"H=11;:p-;W...,.•n::t;:!<f" ..... M"&=F"'1"'1oo=""H'"o"'lp-,.,W.,..1_n_te~.d-, M~&~F~1-1 -oo~H-e~lp~w-.-n-te_d_,-M~&~F-1~1~oo=H-=-e""1p-W""a-n'"ted..,.., 7'Mi""'F"'1"'1"oo~H"'o""1-p"W"'a-n"1ed=;""M&=F....-7"1b0""""R"'·1;:p'w=.n::1;:,a:r.-:M"i*l'r;1:;1,00M'1 1ISf•,CR-ET~.,"'nv""""""...;.;. . .;;;r.,H'i:e:T.1p'W 1nl•d. M&F 7100 Help Wonted, M&F 7lo<I
--
EL1'::cT1UClAN, .t::.'<J)
salary open.
llll-3'82
ESCROW OFCR
Imn1edl•ttc o~nlng. F.xpe.r.
In liBIC & 101111 e51.·1-ov.·•.
\York In Srlnt11 Ana,
Call ~inl. Sch"·cr
Tuffdny &. Thurxt.111y 9'it)...J600
l\1on, \\'ed &: fr1duys ( 21.'I) 67()-()200
ESCROW OFFICER
f;xpcr. Full-time
Security Pac lfl~
Na t ional Senk
5M NC\\'])011 Ctr Or, NB
644-0113, ('XI 265 r:ctua.I Oppor, E1nploytor
Executive Secretary
to the T'resi<lent of this
dynain!c firm. !\lust pos11c11s
oil lhe rt'rintd i;kills, In ·
1·ludl11:.c bro»(! at1n1inl!ltrllllvc
l.w1rkg"1und, Salar)' open.
Slnrt ln11ncdinh•ly. Phone
l\lnl'ie An n Ha1.e for RP·
poln1n1ent. 752·1700.
C l':XPEH.IENCF.D Resin
\\'r11 kf'rs. Rei;rxin•ihk• &
Kno1Ylf'd~eilblt'. :ood pny,
:.2·1--0610
EXPl::ltlEN\ED in l!0i!pll111
piilie nl UH>lll'<Ul\'C lilllln.it
1·Jerk. &18->1000.
FRY COOK
Expi~r. t'ult, p1tlme
Surf & Sirloin
r410 \V. Coos! ll"'Y" 1'B
*GARDENER*
Be your ov.•n boss! Part or
f/llme. Youl' 0"11 &rea.
lligh l ncon1c. Gunr11.nlC1..'tl
Customers. Enrn No\\'. P11y
L;1tcr.
534-7187 or 534-3144
GARDENER
Ncwporter Inn n(•1•cl~
gurdCllf'I' for pcn11. pO!.lllOn.
NO PIJONt--: C ,\ LI,~
PU~A$}'..: Apply In pt'rson
bctv.·n 7.3 Ask For ('13)'
J<Jli11 1107 Jan1borrc ltd,
N.B: -
GARDENER •
1'"ull llme. lnvncd. Openlni;:.
Apply In Per!IOn
HILTON INN
-LAGUNA HILLS
25205 l.l\ l'\..: Rd.
La.a:una H.~. Ca
GENERAL LABORERS
Skilled & Unskilled
TC'mJl()l'ary Employm1·11t
Apply 6:.ll Aro.I, l\lon-t'ri
MANPOWER, INC.
418 \V. 19th Strecl
Cost• Meta 645-2043
Tll N. Anaheim Hlvd.
Anohelm 77-
l::quul {)ppor. En1ploycr
HANDYMAN ro•· u 8hnrc MASSAGE TRAINEE ORDER PROCESSOR ' EXECUTIVE
.t'ixlln'<' Co. Some ('11!\'.lricaJ YoUI"l2 lrttly 1!8-281 for let.?HI· For 1miill n1an11faciurer or RECEPTIONIST TEMPO'S GENERAL
ALL POSITIONS
AT
& jllnltoriul exp er i en r,. 1nn1e lull lilnc pOJslllon. No rreclll!On rools. S ln i c r f'anl&l'ltic co. "'111 PHY fi·c lnr SECRETARY n~1.om1:y .. Contttc·t I he-t>.xp. ncrl'K!Jilry, .,.,e ii;cnd 10 coinputrr exper. pr cf· cl , 2'purkHng pel"liOnallty I 1)
Wnori L1ghllnx FIKture Co. school, enrn while )'.(IU letirn. Pl(•tuionl worklng oonch.: & i!'l·eft their cllenL•. Lllr ADMINISTRATIVE
SECRETARY Dial-A-Job! AAMES •m31 So th Ea~ 'l"'ln !;t .~..a Id "· II• t)•pin .... Also Fee Positions. o;v , u • i:i' •• « • • Apply 11ny uncrnoon 01· }.'\Iv!.• co. pa .,.,ne !I. ·•
lrv1nu tx·twPt'n R:30 & 5 rn1, eve, 2112 llll.l'hor Blvd,, Tapmatic Corp. J ason Bfl1t Age ncy
M1>ncl1ty Lnru TI1w·sd1ty. Cogtu l\1r&11,. u151 KeJteriflR:, ln•in<' 17400 B1"00khun11. F'. VI~·
llEU' \\!ANTED: ruu.. 01i 979.6080 Suite 2L3 963-6775
Bure•u of
Employment Agency
J>ART-TU.1E. c NIC L • tn•ll 963-14". ME HA A ORNAMENTAL IRON RECEPTIONIST-
llOSTESS ASSEM BLER Y.'ORKER. v.·elder I.: ill· Ftt Paid. llf>autlful n10dern
100.% FREE
PART Tl!\1~ \\lt~EKENDS". i.taller. Exp. pref 11 r r c d ofc. •I Day v.•ork \Ytek. Must E..xperil'nce v.l!h hnn~ too ls 49·1-6376 be elflclenl on push button \YJll trnln. conlnrt Duve 11t lll'@fCl't'ed. Sn1111t Con1pany -' ChnrliC'S Chili, 670-71191 PART l1m1· girl, Irvine urt'!h'. •console. S.1l11 ry tn S.550. Al~ \\'ith 1i!tu~·111t sw·1-oundini.:11 XI t t · f!IJ '!I F J b C II o. II 11 t
llouo ... c•fcpEI' n-·dcd. Li"• ti ,..,_ . N t n yp1ng. ng, .,. l'e o !I. a .:><l y ar , ~ -" ~"' y nl·ar 1e ..,.:e1:111, ui • t>wpor phonr11. Ar1·1u1gc own h~. 5~()-fiOaj, COll.51:&1 Pcl':!IOnncl
In or out. Titkc 1·ttre ot tv.'O Beach. A11ply 111 NE \VPORT AJiµi-ox . 20 pt'r "'k. Call N:ency, 2790 1111.rbor 81\'\I, "",..!,"'· !) & 7 yTVoars 'tr 'c'"~11 ~~1 SINE., 10 .. ~~n_!;-22-1 j1.fll. M:-!3-:'ll50 bcfOl'l' 12, 0 r C~I ~r vttte room, , f' t. A .1.1 upcr or. -"•..:r.w • !"ll:>-1728 aft 6pm.
doyi. ~252-1 nnd evl's""""""""""""""""""""" RECEPTIONIST 't '"" k J T · ·1 PART time-Sundays · 9&1·!1:X.U as or oru. to.IF DJCAL ·re e tu1 ~,.Inn , I , . Thii-i~ n v.'f'il Pstttblished
NO-ONE EVER ___ ~-· \\lf:'dnC'l'ldayrc. t~11e r .1i:C'IL <: NH 1· p-• re' I l lOUSE\\'IVES -l\10Tl1 ERS 1' e ch n l c i an Trn.inel'e hl•lpc r 10 v.•ash ll"uCkli. Cnll · · 1rn1. ·~er P vious
PAYS A FEE 11s part timt-m n id 11 . puslllon, nvttllnhlf' in l)r ·•~lli-~·~°'~·''~O'=~----= rccepl. t'xpcr. i\-tust have AT AAMES f ll·xible hi·r::. Cri ll Ne1vpurl Ronuld Phelps ollicc. No = nice 1:1ppe11rance & l:"ood
THE EMPLOYER C.'hunnel Inn. 60.10 \V. Coos! exp n~. bcyonrl the Persnl Clrk to $600 phone personality. Salary to
ALWAYS OES
1 hvy, N.B, Ask Io r v..tllingncss lo help sick t'~ Pt1.id. \\"ork v.'/great $500. Call Coastal Personnel
D houM•kN.>ptor, &IZ.36.10. JIE'<lple gel well, &l&-0516, JCl'OUp in Irvine. An11v.·C'r Agency Z790 Harbor Blvd, i";:~:'::~::'::'~~;::-llJ:t:16~B~roa~~d~w~•Y~·~Cos~t~a_l,~10~sa~ phones, rtat ryp\ng. Some __::C~M'----------
Euc. Sec'y $650 INSURANCE SALES I L """°""'' ''"'''· req·d. Alo;o RECEPT. $550 \\"ork Joi· inll'J'na1\on;1I co. . MED CA ~\'f• Positions. Call Control
I I I 0 ~ I R t · d :Fee Paid/al~ Ftt Jobs centruly Ot'ilt!'( in range cmpoyer e a 1ne Car('('t' E1nployn1<.'nt WESTCLIFF
Co. New position, ~ 11 No exp ne\'., t'llt'n whill• ynu Jn Phy~ic\11.ns Offices Ak{l'nty, 551H!5!)5, J .i 0 0
f1ppor1unl1y !ti set-up ;>'OW" lo•iu·n. piu-r tinie, c~·es & lf'ls bl-Un/Span ro $6:JO lrvht(' Bl. N.l:i. ,PPrsonnel Agi·ni·y
O"'Il syRt11n1. CN'at pince to \\kllci::i, (ull tinic \vhcn tiuall· Ilk ufc bi·lin/Sp:i.n to SS.}() _:;_;cc;:__;=-'-'=-----(Mark llf Cent!'rl n1t~·t & 11111kf:' lot.t ur n1•v.• rit'<I. &:rut> u•1·h 11 IYfA' $GOO PERSONNEL SEC'Y lWl E.J='1". S.A.
~'OtllflCIS. &>cretarlal skills F:1 rnu•I'!' lnsurnnC!' (;roup t'1'Unt Office hl s:i;io Bu'iy personnel dept needs ----=~~---
necessu.ry. Ed 1...ani * 5-10-liGI Jt.N. p/timc ht'ly to $-1.:io rr!icient secretary to liandle RN·LVN-AIOB 11·7 I.:
Service Sec"y $650 !:-::::==::::::: ME01SEARCH C.'Onfidential p e rsonn e I othf'rs. Cowitywidr. Top pvt
Lnts Qf custon1el' L'(ln lact A Professiona l Agency records & secretarial duties. duty pay. Imnied JlllY for
ovt'r' th1' phorH'. busy d{'~k. 11··s AMAZING. · · · · · ~tc 23,; 18662 MacAr!l1ur Ca.II Rita Johnson, 5'\G-6055, staff. fn\CM.'¥.' !\Ion thru Sat
\\'ork for ruplc!Jy c'xpunrling !low Of1C'n your nutuntl h·,•inc S.U-1"33.'I CoHstal PcrsonnC>l Agency, 9-5. Lescoulir N u r s C's
llrangr Co. (.'Oni~Ul l'I' fu·ni. aliility in caring for l>t'Ol)l<' 2790 Harbor Blvd, c~ Registry, 351 l·lospital Hcl,
J)~nan11c young o s s DON'T OV!CRLOOc· US'.'· ~1erch'g. t.:An b ha!I been operlookrcl. N.B. Lobby Park Lido l\led I
/I . h IQ -I bk' r -n KILLED Bldg. 642-9955 or .......,..99;:.i. "' ug is o ing or \\IE Nl'.:ED YOU:! s
individu11I who rru1 kf'f'p up /Practical Nurses HERE WE
v.·thin1. Vnrir!y ol duti('~ GROW AGAIN
"''"'"'h 0 pp or _ Jor /Nurse Aides OR PHOTOGRAPHERS
1idvant·t•n1rn1. Top To p /Convales. Aide1 UNSKILLED
Bt.>ncrl ts'. w'Vi1iting Housemother$
Secreta ry $600 ,(New Infant Care MEN & SALES REPS
Work in fas 1· i n a I I n K \Ve offer you an opportunity NEEDED recorilln~ ln<lu~try. Be<:o1ne to oo lill'.lmeth1ng specinl In NO\V
a part of one of 111<' fa!'.tC'SI the hon1e hcal!h care heir!. To 1vork ror large elt'Clrirnl
growing r eco rdin g Givf' u1' w1 oppm1 un1ty to l'.fJfl<.'1.'rn in Orange County
(.'Ompanif's handli ng top discus.'I our prugran1 \Vi th nt'ea.
entertainers in pop music v<111. All ,,·ages paid "'eekl,v. IMMEDIATE
$175 Week Salary +
Commission E arnings
$225-$300 Per W eek
rleld . Orange Co. location. i\pply Tues \\fed Th11N1 Fri OPENINGS Lot$ of roorn for salnry k 8:::0-12:30 & 1:'.l(}-4:30 The nation's leading &
position arlvan<:en1cnt. UPJOHN E xper. Not Nece$sary lustcsl ~v.·ing department
l\!Agnolia·Adnn1s
Offi ce open soon
Our new office at the co1T1er
of 1\lagnolla and Adams v.•ill
'soon b opening, Virf' have
openings for c a r e e r
niotivated !<alespeop!c eilhl'r I
licensed or "'anting to be
trained ror a license. Please
call Ja,·k Ayrl'S at 54S-9-191
Legal Sec'y $750 HOMEMAKERS Due i:o. s1orc photography co mpany
Lnrg1• So. Calif. lirn1 lookin~ 3.lO \V. Plaeent1a Xlnt Tra1n1ng llC'C!ds .sharp d c d i cal e d W fk fl L
ror hettvily expcr'd leg:il NL'\\'j)Or\ Beach 64:J...5531 S150 WEEKLY pcoj\le \\ho like hard \\'Ol'k a er ti ee
"('C'y v.•/Jllig'1llon C'Xpcr. I Entrance Cl)rner or & PL'Ofits. 1..x~ence not l ~==;"~"~'iiii";;'~'~'~';;::;;~ ~retarial llikills a mu~I. Placf'ntia &· FlagshipJ nCCt'ssa rv.
8 kkeen. $700 ,,,. per v.'Ork ai;:l'l'rrnen1 "'"..: \v1Ll~ TR,\IN
,.1
00c ~r ' ... d * JANITOR * For n1ol'!' infornw tio11 Positions are llO\I/ open in ,. expe r. , · n.i)()V.'lc f:C * S4J..9226 * !he Los Angeles, area.
nlX.'t"sli !or lhl11 loc:·tl manuf, Ff)r animal ho 5 P ! I :1 11 ,...,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,. j \\'HAT ABOUT YOUR llnn. All hnnd hookkl'Cpiog N<'11"fXlrt. Days 1'11-f. Call1: F1JTURE? 01-ound t~loor Opportunity
SALES
$11hst&nti&l l')(per. in rhe
l>l'OiOllllt:l fll"!ld h I g h J y
Ue!iill'table . J \'earR
experience nl drpt head
level a muitl, DP. t fl 11
consclou.~. t)'PE' SO w.p.n1.,
~h & a)jJlity to draft lellen
& dcaJ ·w1a11 Jevel5.
Cnllor send n->!!1une to:
THE IRVINE CO.
;).10 Nt'wpo11 Cl'nh'r !)1·
Nc\\•pon Bt11rh, 92663
(714) 644-3319
9Af.I 'ti! Noon
Eqwll Oppor. E1nployer
SECRETARY
PROOUCT
DEVELOPMENT
\Ve ilrt"! a n1edium sized com· I
puny in a fa st nioving, dy·
n11n1lc industry. rou will be
11'0l"king in an arcu of lh<' 1
1'0rporatc office Iha! re· I
(juircs an a111·ac·1lvc indivirl·
ual \1•ilh good typing, n1od· 1
<'rate shot1hand, and <'Xl'Cl-
lenr phone skllls. Apply Ju
person or send rcsuml' to;
"J'Ei\1PO offers a truly un1qu~
F.xrt?llent shOrllu:u?d and &: tlmt? ~vlna opportunity
1y11ln1:: i;kllls n't1uired ln for skilled • -
addulon 10 goocl telephone KEYPUNCH
e11q ue11,... l\-1ust bt' fl";i:lblr , SECRETARIES
In approach lo 1hr job 11nd \Vho "·a:-il rllltflll!ed &
""illing 10 tt.('Ct'pt " vari1!1y sth11ul11!1ug Ion~ or shorl
or h1~k~ as 1he \\"Ork 11).'\d tenn u.•llli.'nlnt•nl~ • fe"'
dcmandl'i. $ 11 h s tan t i" r d;•y~. l"Oupl1• W<'t'l..l! or rev.•
pr t' v Io us ~ r r r('htl'!al rnonlilll . you decide! N()w
exprrlence rtqu1n'<I. ~·ou r11n . , , , .
APPLY BY PHONE
\\"« ofh·r ~xce~f'n! sal~ry Cnl! :,w-1-150 & 1~ 1 w; kno1\.'
nnd frlnR:c b<'nef1ts ~ncludinR: i\·hrit )CJUJ· sk!ll~ are. No
con1pt111y p1'.ld h(1: nn•I ntNJ 10 ('()nh' 111 personally . ,
n1e<l1cnl ln1iu1a11i.:c·. uu!il \I C' hl'l\'1' thr 'just right" ,
11pot for you: Apply In Person
LEAR
SIEGLER
TRANSPORT
DYNAMICS
~EV~R A 1-"~E ,\T 'T'E~1PO. '
Tempo Temporary Help ,
Tfo:R)JITE INSPECTOR
'.\Iu'-t t..:-licensed. Xlnt oppty.
t ·-~"'~'.-';192;-. ................... 1: ' TRAINEES
:1131 \V. N-o;:,•1'i'it.ro111 "'"
{Ne1tr Jlarbor & \\";111'\Crl "'ill 1rnin ckpend:ihle peoplr
Siuila Anfl fn het.'OffiC plRstJc injl'('fj(ln
Go' LDEN WEST Equal oppurtuniry t1n111o~<'r 1nnl1lini: operatori;. ;\lust !)(' l\)/t" atile lo S1l1nd f'nlirt"' shi ft , If
MOBILE HOMES I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I '"'"'""'Y· 0,,,·ning.< "" 2nd ~hifl S2. \4 to,~1:11·1. Raise in
INC. 1 Secretary /Typist ·" • 90 days.
1308 E. \VakC'hnni 1 APPL,.
Santa Ana, Calif. (lo s.;oo, l\lusl hnve all th e * Or11.ngc Coasr Pliu;ILcs * An Equal Oppol'luni1y girl 850 \Ves:t 18th St.
Employer skills to be a. one gang l"'os•a -''"".-•. Cal•l-in a Rl'al Eslate office full '-' "''
vf bu.'ly brokers -·JE:::l:::::l:::::l:::::l:::::l:::::l:::::l:::::l:::::l::~[
Hut\Lington lladJ01· Really. TYPIST
SECRETARIES Call Tuesday ONLY -Janel S-;6--0041. Gro1,1•ing <.'O, • \l'ill 1 ra i n
I a1·c·11rntc typist to oj)('rate
\\'e have inunediale opc'n· SECRETARY l\lCST machill£'. Go0<!
lngs for secreta1ies wilh I No sh, but 1,.tood lyp111g skills. .!ftart.ing salary & xln't
substantial experience in I Co. prefers someone v.•I brn,..fits.
construction or f i nan ce. e'iprr in ryping oontrael~. Jason Best Agency
finance candidate musl be Xln't bcnelill!. Salary to 17·!00 Brookhurst, F. Vly
excellent statistical !yplst & $650. Call Coas!al Personnf'I Suilf' 213 96J...677;j
numbers oriented. Typing 70 Agency, 54<J....605j, 2 7 9 01l::==:=::=::=::Eli!!:::l:::::l::tJ
w.p.m., Sh SO w.p.m_ Good 1-larbor Blvd, Cl\l l•
public & t e leph o ne SE·CRETARY $600
J)E'rsonality A l\.1 u ST . .,... """ h M A . r Excellent co. benefits & •J'JX' "'"'· s ~ l>§ist 0 c 1ngr. Learn. future!
v.-orking condition.'\. 833-9770 * 100°/o FREE
THE IRVINE CO. Cash Pcrsonn<'l Agency
Please Calt 4019 \Vesterly. NB. No. WI
(714) 644-3389 Please Call For Oire<'tiOns
9Al\l 'Lil Noon
Equal Oppor. t:n1ploycr Security Services Co.
VALVE
MANUFACTURER
NF.EDS
MACHINIST.
ASSEMBLER
.-.-.. '"' o. 9 -Stafnng Ne\v Offi c-e S)stem usC'd thru T.li. "" 61•1-;:,...,,, ..,..•11-\·n ·=>. NCR PROOF OPR \\'E PROl\10TE t• R 0 1\1 o r •. 1· '"""'ac ing * Secretar·1~ P&L slaten"\ents. Pay1-oll & J UG ·~. Gavel_ Rt"Staurw1t Plush local branch. Great \\'ITHIN Insurance Company 'Iii~
PART-TIME
WEEKENDS
NIGHTS
Full Or P tiine
4140 \\'Cf!k
CLA-VAL CO. qu..1rterly f"xper, a Is u now hin~ "''atll'E!S&'!l, bus bf"nefits. Start S-t:D BenciilS u1clude co mpany Relocating Sales Ofcs * T pists
Jle('('IS, hoys, help for CO!"ktall Call Gloria Gray, ~ paid lile, health, major In No. \\'estcrn Sector Y
A/Pay•ble Clrk $600 l<'_ungc. 14160 Beach Blvd, Coastal Personnel medical & profit sharing. Of Orange County * Bookkeepers
Gr1•at N.B. ICX'alion for \~f'st1nlnstcr. Apply I 11 A ~ For sales & service in Long
I I ti·" 1 ""™>n gency PHONE FOR I Beac:-h -Westmin.~tcr ·Hunt-* Acctnn Clrks perron "' 10 ltl~ .... mug 1 _,~ · 2790 1-Jai·txir Blvd, Cl\! I "' knov.·letlge & 1rr1i11in~ on a APPOL'1Tl\1ENT TODAY ington areas. Leads & * G 'I Of
heavy AIP desk. \\IHI Ill:' KEYPUNCH OPR NECECJTA 0 peradilra PHOTO complete training furn. to en c
handling thl!I phase only, Data Pto1·ci::s. Pan.rime rl e me q 11 ina , E"lCelen1e qualified applicants. * File Clrks
but hl'lps lf per.s o n •1·7 Dnily lr.ibajo. Llama &lj-1797 NO PREVIOUS E..XP.
understands other areas ol CLERK TYPIST ~EW ACCOUNTS CORPORATION NECESSARY VOLT
Jnceresting O.C. :1.rca jobs
I0-40 hours per v.·eek
Sf'curity for special
events, ell'.
$2.2j hr. Call bef 11 nn1
546-9571
SECURITY GUARDS
F/timf'. Contact l\lr, Ford,
Security Supervisor
Balboa Bay Club
12'21 \V . Coast Hi\)'. N.B.
17th &: Placentia, Cl\1
Expcr. req. Xlnt benelits, * t'ree life & med Ins. * Paid absence & vac
• Profit Sharing
Steady Employment
Ov.·n Tools Required
Equal Oppor. Emp\oyf'r bkkpng as v.·cll. r,11 .. ineerin ! dept. f tlinl' CLERK Licensed L&D .applicants Instant Personnel .. -v.·elcon1c. Outstanding .1 CLA-VAL CO. l'resentJy \\"C have an OF AMERICA management opportunities, ~lajor l\fedical Plan SERVICE station pcrsonn<'J. VETERINARY ASST. ADMINISTRA 1 VE lith & PIRl'<'ntlt1, l'~l upc'ning for oe1v accounts con1n1lssions fro1n Now Available :Full or part lime. Ex!):CI'· For cleaning du t I es,
MALE DIVISION
Exp(•r. n'q'd, :\Ir-fl bcnl.'fit~. ~·l·~rk. Prefer exper. !\lust $800-$1600 monthly Temporary Service pref. Tap pay & benefits. Newport, Prior cleaning
l''N'C life & med ln.~. Pu ul have i;ood typing skills. WESTCOAST & more to start. 3848 Cainpus Or., Suite lOO Chevron Station, 3000 @Xper reqd Call &W-5460
Adm TralnM $12K ah!lt'nce & vacations. Prnrh !">LEASE CONTACT For Pe.nonal Interview Ne\.\-port Beach 546-4741 Fairv.ie\v, Costa ?i.tesa. 'betwn 9-5.
S b k shnrin ... Equal Oppor . G...,.,. Newland C II C L B 'dg Equal Oppor. Emplo)--er 10-0"===---;:;--,-,.,,-.,c,-lrong a c R round in ° ·-o a • • r1 es SERVICE Sia. 1-lelp, 2 men \VAITRESS, over 21. Immed.
hus:iness desin..'<i ror lhi!l cniµloyer. Bank of America (714 ) 833-8752 (714) 63S-7921 f/time nights. Exper. only. opening. Experience
grc3t oppor. I<> join multi 500 Nev.-port Center SECRETARY Apply Boyd's Arco. 490 E. preferred. Apply ln person,
mlllion S division of int'I LEADING VALVE Fashion Island Sales <No experience okl 17th St., Costa l\.lesa. 3709 S, Bristol, S.A. I Blk.
fin». Work ror operallot" MANUFACTURER 836-3505 E.NGELHARD SILVER Englnters Wanted North ot ·s.an, So. eo.
n1gr V.'/much potential for Needs Equal OppoJ· en1ployer. Office Services Interested in a l nd inconie. Pln.za
GENERAL OFFICE advancement. Exper ln DRAFTSMAN _ Ne"s"a..,,.r CarriC't-s· PllOTO LAB TECHNICIAN $600. Wk. Commission CorTespondence secretary -1--"""'"A"l"T"R"E"S"S°'E=s--!
Accurate typing, lile po~n~ inventol'y control, rost E. .......... r. in val\•e d~1gn, BrO.-YS & GIRLS H. Cliffo~,P!°l8'"1 & Assoc. LIKE FALLING v.·ith business co lle ge Management. Call 639-6123. W
required tor local jcv.•rlry 1tcc1 ~. sales rt'ports, price .• ,... 1 .......,....... OUT OF BED be.ck-·--". 2 ye a r s SERVICE Sta. Attendant, Bob Bums Restaurant
XJ 't _, & , __ 1 •• "·· t t et pr i:xl u c t ion t. no In.!!'• 10 yrs & Older •·~-tlm ~ E 37 Fashion Island NB ro. n _,ary ...,...,..., 1'"' s .. ._. ... s, e c <:. nccess. toll'ryif"ICCs ,~ fits .. !\takl' DAILY PILOT PIZZA l\1AN \VMTEO, no lF YOU SEIL: CXJ)E'rience automaUc typing fuJI &: p/ e. ;,;rv • Coast ' · ·
Jason Best Agency Di:'~ not mandatory. dcuu\ drav.•tllgll direclly 1'xp. fuU lln1c. Apply 30242 FOR ntE TOP CO!i.IPANY equipment desirable. Typing Hwy, N.B. WANTED l!\fl\1EDIATELY
17400 Brookhurst, F . Vly Accnt Trne $800 from Juyout. >..1n't benefits. ,CJ'O\\'Tl Valley ParkY"ay, TiiE TOP LINE! 70 w.p.m. Sh 100. Willing lo SEWERS FRONT OFFICE GIRL.
SUhe 213 963-6n5 Opportunity lor degr ee d CLA-VAL CO. Laguna Niguel. WITH TOP INTEGRITY! lean1 \\'Ord pro c e ss \\'Ith commercial znaehine at Mature, quick learner, in
att"Ontant to llCC 1hc ''urlfl l Tth & Plaei?ntla, caf Has Routes Open PLUl\1BERS Service l\lust ENGE r. HARD hallmarks, c q u Ip men t , he avy home Needed by local busy Chiropractic OffiCC".
GEN£RAL OFF1CE, Exp. ut companies expeni;c. \\1111 Eiiual Oppor. Eme_loyf'r Dana Point have exper. Non union, out serializes, weights, . 9 9 9 Ir ans cribing, statistical manufacturer. Call 831--0264 Hours 9-1, ~7. Dr. Gary
neces,.qry. Full timr, lrain h<'rc & then bl' sent or slate OK. Best \\'Orking Fine ee.. 5-lG-20-50-100 or typing. or 831-1102 Couture.
\\'ii.son's of Calif. abroad. AtWll h11\'e I-2 yn; LEATHER cone!, benefits, :r.fust have bar (and ENGEUIARD ta Call or .send reswne to: 645-5300
12Sl Logan, Costa l\Jes,a of gen"! acctng f!xper. Lrg PRENTICE Cap"1strano Beach tools. Top scale +. \Vorklng ALL \\•e sell!!). If you are THE IRVINE co. ..._ B Ind t s1~L· 2().0 \Vestcliff Dr., SUite 107
Gll{l. t'RlDAY, 2 ni.a.11 international orguni1.ativn \V iii t.m ·tight person f•)t' trcnn Anaheim Re r v Ing bond ab I e and mean 550 Newport Cenler Dr. $~. ~~t e~neer 0
,,.. Nev.']Xlrt Beach
industrial •11ales o r f i <' c, based in Orange Co. responsib ltion l!l grov.· J C • 1 Orange County. The Earl's bus:ines6, please ca 11 Newport Beach, 92663 Indus prod. develop $19K WANTED
loc.'8.tcd in Westcll1f area, Cost Accnt $900 ing Co. Apply ..,..;, ., ay <1th San uan ap1strano Plumbing Inc, 772--0970. 6T_,-.2131 or 5 4 7 -8 0 9 6 (714) 644-3389 Industrial Engr $13K Boys & girls in Laguna
Newport Beach, needs l')(pd No. Orange Co, company only. 10 AM to I Pi\l. 1-loyl, PRINTER Experienced 011 ANYTll\'IE! Training and 9AM 'Ul Noon Ship/Sched. Spec to $''.!F\ Beach. Earn Extra spending
offke help. l\lath app!ltude looking for expci-. cost 790 Nf'\\'IO n \\'ay, C.t\I. CALL M ·L d t-.·lielc Rota.Print & A.B. assistance? Ce r.t a in I Y ~ Equal Oppor. Employer Legal Secy, probate $700 money with a Da ily Pilot
/ICC. Jl,letll l !i background a<."C'Ollnlalnt \\'ho is also LEGAL SEC'Y r. ow er Dick. f.1tL~I be a produeer l¥1anagementavallable. l ~ZZi!! Acctng Cashier $520 PRper Route. Call Mr.
helpful. Somf' typing, bi-lingual rui 3 t ro n g Fe<> Paid. Presligious la\\' ____ 4_9_2_-44~2_0_~--that can rut out good clean Al\.fERICAN Gen'l Ofc Tme $450 Lambert at 642-4321.
lOkf'y calculalor & T\VX ....--.ibUity for rclocation 11 · SA 'l 1 "" U O qu•lity v.·ork on tin1e. HERITAGE SILVER Secretary F/C Bkkpr. Constr S850 WAN~D • MALE •
h ,.,..-rm in · · "us ,..,\·c NITE A DIT R SUPER SECRETARY "~ skills. GooJ t c I c P o n C into ooe of their foreign I" 1. o .. Iary t f.1 at u r i l y & df'n<>ncfabilify SALES • Cleric Typist. $150 FE"" •LE Part-time or ,, • ., o..u::.., '""· 1_11ga Kin ex.per. ~ 0 Hotel or l'lub ex,....r ........ d. ..~ "u.. -technique a must.~-concen1s. U'.forree oocess & $50 .• Also Fee Jobs. ~II Knoii·IC'dgc of NcR ·4200. v:ithout "over the shoulder EXPERIENCE \'i'ith top skills needed. If Insurance Biller to ~ F'ull-time help. ·Apply aftf'r
GIRL FRIDAY Cas!ilian Spanl11h. Glor ia GrH.Y. 5 4 0-6 O:i5' F/timc. Sec pf' r so nn e J supe.rvislon" is essenUal. If NOT NEEDED qualified call Now. Payroll _Clerk lo $750 1 p.m. KENTUCKY t'RIED
Run the shmv! ll ea v y Food Sales $750 Coastal Pl.'rsonncl Agency, J\Tgr. you have a r e 11 8 b I e RIVI ERA c't"'°e,kun,,t.~1,1 to '500$600 ClllCKEN 2929 E. Coasl
· & ' -r--• p-sal-· 2700 II rbor Bl d CM B Ibo B Cl b Imaginative self starting $825 l\1in. to $2400 monthly •.:r.-H co •1 phOncs , ni0<lernte lypini:: Q~~,.. c~':"" i~kfni;co. t~~ a v ' a a ay u proven background, this job guarant eed. Commission if Employment Agency, Inc. Reee-pt/Typist $475 ivy, . ·" . . ~h-Some billing. SI~! fl.{'· 1.nd,·... who h•• , 0 m, LEGAL SECY to $700 1221 \\'. Coa~t Hwy, NB can pay v.·ell. 646-0198. quali fied. eon1nany vehicle, 2082 Business Ctr Dr. Call Jeannie Sisco \VANTED: Assistant i\tgr Call Rlla Johnson, ;1'1\r'W.'"J.j, ¥ ~ d -l.iiii.iiiiii;;ii; ... ;i;iiii ... -. "'"' •--1 83J-••10 lrai p · M 1~ exposure 10 food industry. Fee Pai . Assist attom<'y. NIGHT CLERK, F/P time, repeat busi~ss, "'eekly & .u v ne '" & Std Hoffman nee. izza an, "~
Coastal Personnel Agency, Y.'ill be handling Orange Co. Xln't typing. No sh. Also xlnt \\'Orking cond. Newport PRODUCTION monthly bonuse11. Daytime 31878 Camino Capistrano NEWPORT Harbor, C.l\1. &l2-~52 Alt 4
2790 Harbor Blvd, Ci\1 tenitory. Co car + exp + 1'~ee Positions. Call Control BcacJi Travelodge. 612-8252. \\'Ork. No eves. Local meat San Juan Capistrano Personnel Agency Pl\t.
GRAPH I CS LEADMAN bonus. CA1'ft'rs E m P I o Y 111 en t ioiiioio;iiiiiiiiii ... iii.oiii \\'hoiesalcr. 493-6lOl 833 Dover Dr., N. B. L,~VE-::-"w'"on-t'""'Y'"o-u~ic:r-,-~-u~ha,--,·e
1::xv'cl wanted foi· tntt'riar lndui Sales $1lK Agency, 5.')6....8.iO.I, 3 40 0 NURSES CONTROL CLERK / ~lr i\lartln, 213-770-8543 SECRETARY Exp'd, 1 .,.;,.1 642•3870 chalrsldc dent.al assisting
ll<'Cflr nifg. ('O. IX'~lr1"tl 1. -1 k' 1 Irvine Blvcl, N.B. RN's-lVN'S FACT IS .. -exper .~ v.'OOld enjoy tront
1 ,.1k National 1rn1 '" oo 1ng or offiee, seU starter, a ble to ,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,.1 b I\ 1• kg r o u n (I n ~1 aggressivr cxpcr outRide LINDSEY Nurse Rr~istry ·:.: Everyone Eats Meat . ( d . SOLICITOHS desk \\'Ork,. Ch«!r ful, run Scl"l?<'nlni;, ~lural painting. -• I . .:...ct LI N D SE y lil ell l c :i I EXPEDITER handle vanety o ut1es, orfice \Ii/growing pracllcc. ~culpture. re!lin \1-ork, and ~m~rv;:J~ ~~~=-n i~v. Employment Agency. Needs SALES good typing, S/H helpful , Telephone "·ork , tron1 ~-our Call 962-2403 for lntervie\\'
knoWlcdge of ll'ttei·ing style. knowled RN's, LVN's & Practicals. !lave 'i'ou Eve.r \Van1ed To AGGRESSIVE GIRLS insurance exp helpful , good home. $2. hr. + comm. Call H.B.
,\LfREO l\l. GORDON "'hO has !IOO'Le ge or I f I" d I HOLD ON & LET GO !Ugh malh aptitude required. Looking for a hill time lelepllClne personality good collect I -991-l:r..'O l.~'='==-~---~-exlJO!'Urf' to th <' heating, air l\1 n c & cm. or pvt u y. Al The Sanif' Tirn•'? Scheduling & Folloi~ up .. ofl•'-ap~aran-. 8J3-'IOA1 . \VELDER, short arc, 1 )T oi:;SIGNS, COH.P. cond, or plum bing Industry. staff relief & olhe.r medlrnl \\'EU. '\'OU CAN!! -· pennancnl position in a · '"" ,..... ..... "'" Stalf' licensed Oeaner & ex P e r ie n c e , 2520 So.
2fi0 t'ischer St., C.1\1. Co car + bonus plan cu-e fi eld!!. &16-4816, Costa l\1eM. Able ~o read blueprints & very active boutique. Good SECRETARY for Re a I Spo!lt•r, call fo1· appt, Bro<tdv.·ay Santa Ana
f'or h1trrvicws, 540-2860 only sonll' of the benefits I !OLPDROOFN.E:SSr910vNOUR type "'.p.ni. 1~~~~~tlen':~1~fsM~;t :'~~ Estate hfinn,dtyping7060 wpn1. ~.~s~~r;'3 ~~!ilJ022Cleane.rs \VHO \V~TS TO WORK'
GRAVEYARD SHIFT ..... 11.vail to lhls person. So. MACHINIST Call For Appl . Sho rt an wp1n ..... .,.......,,, Or 0>'1<rl -oo•vE A CAB'. -
Cal,·1. t-~to'Y-LET C.O OF TflE R I · exper. in boutique cloth ing n>lnhnum 3 .,..., ex ..... rten<.1!. Cl ~
4 Nights a v.-eek. 12-8 a.m. ,_,,, E 1 1 h k Industrial e aliOns sal<'S & Need A Job NOW. ,1•·· ... ~ -IOOSE your ho\aa \VOl'k
J,\c"' IN THf'. BOX, !105 Plant Supv $12K Exper. ngne al c ivnr ·. \\'ORK WAD CaU for OSl<''ntment Excellent Co. b e nefit s. STENO fr ··-·U be • ·" -Short lot. Your ov.•n ll('!·up. (714) 494--9401 Phone 639-0420 for Fee Faid """itlon \\'/hmd 0 yo,.. ..... ' your own S.1k<'r St., C.1\1. 5-10 Yrs exper. n<!<.TS5 for TOI) pny, ovtr tlmr. ~ignal Cr<!RI<' )"our Ov.·n THE L K 644-6500 appoinbnent. ,,.,.. boss. Men or women. Can ~u,\l{l):i this new poslllon in food 11111. Apply t\1on·f'ri, S.5pn1. \Vork \\leek!! TELONIC SALES I raisi ng organization. Good be slightly bandicapped. "' n1t1nuf. finn In Oranbre Co. \V 2 8 1 • .. -pe.rsonne \\·anted SECRETARY-Sales OHicc. secretarial skills -" Oair for Neat -Clean Appearance. SECURITY EXl)!-'r \n food processing or ~~~~f', t.onC:B1;18ch. t 1 ,: Our ho5pitnl stnft ttlief INDUSTRIES for1 '&ens re~ail ~t;1ing. Exp, required. 1\1 us t record keeping. Also Fee Vtl!., retired, Age 25 to 70. OFFICERS d a 1 fY pro c es li Ing i So. of s o . ~·v.-y). Pt'O$'r:ln1 &: private duty Fu I • part t me ...-tions be. responsible & personable Positions. Supplf'ment )'Our lnrome.
c n vironment manda l?1'Y· ~range. off r.inip nu~ing cun provide n avall. at Laguna Hills or Type 4f;..\1/PM. Xlnt salaey ~aso9 Best Agency Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a
Full & p/time. All uniforms F..d uca.tlon open for right n1cttnin~ful opporlunity fo1· Laguna Btctch Costa Mesa location. For & benetlts, Call for appt. 17400 Brookhurst, F. V\y day. Apply In oenon,
& equip. supplled. Top l'l'!.•Y· J)E'l'90n.
1
1\fGM'.I' Tme. icln'\ future those nursf's \\'~ are ~ Equal Oppar. Employer informalk>n M;Hi152 or ~K).9830. Suite 213 96l-6i75 Yellow Cab Co., JS6 E. 16th
r npld ndvanc<-mcnt. Apply Mfg Engr $12K \\•/68 YT old co. Relia, 21·46. !v~ "~~~~~ek1.v:ce. 1-====i!!=i!!=== S&l6-4ALES24W2.0"1AN A t SECRETARIAL good oppo~ STU DENTS k I St.. Cost& l\.fesa. 1330 17th Sl, S.A. l\lay gih. S!rong lndlv. who has Hi gu.am nw1/lody. l\lr, .-.. 1"' Ii " -ss · mann-portunity for bright girl who Wor P t nov." ).'ARD care, Apt comp!~. 1 -'9-~1~2~o~nl!Y~·;;-;,;-;;;-;;:.----I t."'posure to product Io n Ltovl, 846-5155. Apply Tue!! \Ved Thim; Fli REAL ESTATE ger. glfl shopg in Newport enjoys dealing withe pub-Ut Suntmer. Neat,_ reliable. Need dependab\<! student for
GUARDS rotes, lln1c sludy &. 81l """"""'"""""""'"""""""'I 8:30-12:30 & 1:3o-4:30 You hn\•e your ov.·n private & COlite r>lesa . Part time or lie, xlnt telephone · voice a l\tr. Rlchards, 846-5455. \\'tekly maintenance. ?tlu.<1t
lninH•d. employment, ruu p ha s cs o t I n fl us . MANAGER HOMEMAKERS desk & phOne. Same Jocntlon full time. Exrd. mature. In· niu!ll, good typing skills, TELEPHONE Ans. Serv. have equip, l\.Igr ..
linH'. pl"U1 thne. Inside engineering. Exper. is more UP JOHN JS yrs. New or exp'd real terviews Thun1, May 9, 4-6 AOme gen. ollice duties, f\1in operators wanted. Expe.r 2610 Florida. It B.
.. ~,k \\tori< 11 nl shift. 1mportiu11 lhan de~. eslRte AAle:s p 0 0 p I e pm, Galleon Girts, SOulh 2 yrs office exp, apply in pref but not. nee. 496-&ID2 ~~~~~~~~~~~I •v • I d 3.)(1 W. l~lace.ntin ,.. __ I Pl ~--1• 'I C ~~=~}J(-nfd!.r c"ost" if\;·e.n ~r=:'hantcBI !1;~ TRAINEES New~~r!!~h ('Onl(!l' ~11 ~t~~~e~,~ e: con for c~~·~"~·~ll38-::.:!:,~'~?•~· -~-·-~"-'_'_"_· ._, ~~~;~""'~N~B~,500~s~u~r~t;~·~;;i;;""-~--·-"'_er TELLER -I -11~ j
artn.. (all l.nu Vickery, <l~lgncd for manut. flrm in Phu:entla .~ Flagship) \V. 1'~. Lactienmytr SALESGIRL. pe.rt linie, Exp *Sec'ys, Bookkeepers local bllnk nel'ds l''ipt'r. . V
83.l-¥..00. rxt. 46!'13, 9 Af\1 to Oi-anl(t en. e1111:nged in lhe Full & p/time 1860 Newport Blvd ., C.'-1. I Ready to \\'eAr, Saturdays !lave too many''"' list tellC'r, l\'lu11t tikr public l';;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiiii
3 Pl\1 J)roduclion of elcct.ro-mech I n t <' r v If" v.· In J:" No"' for Nuns Es A 1 o E-S, 646-3928 or Eve. 67J..4S77 & i::on1e v.·eckday howi;. Ph. Lli Relnder's Agency contttcl ·'i hn,·e n ca 111
parts. po8illons ~ Oranlt(" Co. E x p F..: It l E N c E C:::li!!:C::::::-:1.-,6'6-:.:·.o'c-~1.18=-"~-~----<!020 Birch St., Suite lG-1 appearance. Gl'l'at !ltrtrlln,t Antiques I005 HELP WANTED Technlci•n $900 f\lurt be ovc~ \ bo~A~:e & PREFER!l.ED. All shifts. REAL ESTATE SALF.S: Job ShQp printe1• Newport Beach 833-Al!Ml salary&. bef)('fil!. -Ch '-1.--T--d----p-,-1
IMtrumentntlon background In good phy~ en con · ?"e !Jrverly J\1nnor, 24452 Via needs exp out!llde mM. Dial A Job 13i.o&SS Jason Seit Agency ar 1es ra 1ng 01
L.rg. Company n ecesll ror Joell I car & lclcphonc. Co to rte Estrada, Lit~Unl\ Hills. SALESMAN Good ron1m15!1km. &W--0198 No Char"• To You 17400 8 rookhu"1, F.V '1~·1629 Tre Marktl nenrc~ )'OU or·1,.;:;;;,;:;~-=-==-"='---Wh "-t '"· 1 ti t • s · 2 3 ~· ~ WE BUY WE SELL environmental t e 11 tin a lelephonc our oIOct'S. NURSING Y not v.-o ... n u ..: Ml ts SALES. no e>ip. necessary, Ellt<1bli~ed 1965 wte I ~i '" • Expanding laborfll()I')'. 3 Yn exper. ln li1 4) ~7417 RN Stipervl!!IOt', l-fl {/time area, Huntington Full or Pftl'1. tlmr. Great Antiqut."5, ~te111111, Junk
analoi' do.to &. fcductioN For lnforml\tkm il 11·7 p/timt':. Akle-i1 all Beach I Fountain Vrilley? advttll('Cment , 832-4272 ~ECRETAaY/Glrl Friday, ANTIQl'ES-J n homl'.' t.alf' In
Now HIRING necctS Le t us train ;-ou. Call Phil arehltl'C.tunll planning firm, TELLERS, EXPER. I
. TIC TOC SYSTEMS AAlf1•. lluntlnat~n Vnlle)' l\tc NamPe, v J Lt. AGE Secretary bc3uttrul olllcet located ln APPLY /\C"'JX'''t Benl'h. C"3 1 alll'r pn~n~a~c~:~~ d~~:ootl~ Dial A Job! ~=;;q::ua:l :O:p:"":'~·:!:~":'P:loy::":.-1,-°"'221·00~~1~~c~~~Ts REAL ESTATE. 00.14567. \"c p-nt~u'iw':t ll -ltlon !~~~~c Isl7f.'1. m1n1pr:r, BANK OF NEWPORT Alppmp1i:::
1
· " ' In I t n 1l n 11 o n. No , ~ "'"l""" ,I ...,.. njo . I d I Dovt'r At 16th, N. D. ~encl! necf81Ulry due 10 \ NEEDED RECEPT/SEC to $550 for s«retary •ie110, mu$l e Y a variety o ut ''· Ste l\lt·. Smilh
"""" In! 556-1100 MANAGEMENT TRNE Radio teltphonc dl1"ntrh F P Id II' k I ha\'e --typing &: t/h hours S:J>..5, f'flll bet. ll & Equ1i..I Qnnnr, F.mplo)·rr t./\DY Kenn1of(' Auto ocel~I ltl\ "IC Prorra•n 6&1.. or Mnkln~ t'xptr. •" ('() " • or w ext'CI, """" 12 '641 !'1104 1 ... .;,,.,..-•..,r·.,._,..,..,,..I \\'tt~IW'r R ncle, nihlt I for men " '11."0mtn 18 & 1 hi 1 d Id 1 !\lust l;c 25. Able lo drive }I and I e t r a v e I 11klll,., · ·, • TELLER guarnntN'd Si$. •tltt dtl,
I Sul """' drs rn. '· n v u a .i\p~v in ~ "-...... cmcnts. XJo't 5kllls. PLE . F. CONTACT SECRETARY ~w -over. 2706 llarbor B.. te w• w/potl!nttal & lnlli'Hlh~ 10 YEL "W CAB CO -·-~ r N 1 nd ,.~~" Co&ta Meaa branch u • Also \\I ft>e Pn!lltlorui. Cn.11 uret: ew a Busy sal'• office need" BeRullful nXKl<'m bftnk, 1\hle•l""~===--:---:---
TOP WAGES ~1~~1~;r~ sGg 0 !:;1 1 Sat 1.86 F.. 16111, Cost;& l\ft11-i Conrrol CarC't"r Employment S.nk of Amtric1 rltlck!nt lndlv. lo keep the to d!'itl \\"t>ll "'llhc publk'. • * REBLT_ 1'·uMr, dryt.n,
fiOO No, Euclid. Anahclni A ---Al<l'nt)'. ~imi. 3 4 0 0 OCIO Newport Ct'nl~r or. of/tt•t' runnln11 1mooth.ly. I.ii<' l)'P lnl(.. ~llll')' to $L10. d•h1""'h. $50 &. up to 1 yr
}"or l\tom51r to2Srm91ollon Otll Call Tm-8l20 ~1·,_.11 u r. Kelly .,,_,,,, ...... -Coll--lrvlnc Bl vd, N.D. f"llshion Ii!land I Call Rlln Jcihn$0n, un ·~;. C'nll ~lorin Gr.·~', -;,.i~. J:fl" 5~218 or 839-i'Q.
,,.. 2153.S H1"'1horne 8'vd. 979.3600 _____ .. .,.. . ..:;._ ·~· I C"lnl'~lrrccf AOI. Ciill i;.ci:5iffi: ·-83'.lSOS Cl)Utal Pel'llQIU}fl ~·. C·~·l~I \"'(or1-0n~I Altf'n('), Put )'out f>ud((tl baek °'1
Call MM! & Tues Only Torra.net 213/:112~7712 "'"""""'"""""'""""-c' "------~--·-----' '--"'""=''-"I'-------Equnl Oripor Empl~'l'r 2700 lfnrbor Bh~. C~t , 27"!n 1~11rT-.or Bl\'1Ul -u~-if11•k - ---r.e111rttr lt~
"
8010
. '
I
26 DAILY PILU1 MOnday Mayo. \"11 ..
App lenc•1 1010 I Furni•ure 8050 Gar•g• Sale IOSS f Pianos & Organ1 8090 otorcyclH/ " I AUTOS IMPORTED
Scooltrs 9150 Alfa Romeo 9705 GAS STOVt: s:lO, I ~dl il'LlST Sfo:l.L! If. ft ("lH"l'ed \\'AGON \\hoohs, tn(llOl'C)"Cle 1 • PIANOS
llONO,\, Clt<lPfX'\I, \\/J1!r;1 !il'lfn, El·ru rolo1·, S\00 raC'kl, lurnllLu<e, dii;he~ -.1r.: • O"GAN
li-,une & Ul'C'S. S2 $12\1 .• tt.S-l:l'\.i2" Uevt·led 31 " gJa ro r'A'isc. ~Z:\6'1, &a.3--40T-I a S 7198 81ik for Carol. C\:('~ II I I I ---Run!! j!;ood. R~lll IU!ll!-up. ,,..11~"' ('"U ('t' ;~ ih> cl~! ONlfl~'llll. HOusehOld Goods 8065 Rentals fr $5 NL'\\' chaln & sprocket.
11"1.r <N SI~ Bronze tt\lildf'd lan1p ,t· $375
Rent Washers/ Dryers <hailc, S-W. Firrn (1111--:l•n site CAHPF:'r. nrw 11otorf' n0t ye1 : * *
$2. \\'k. i''l.dl n111l11t. lxi.\ Kpl' n11111 trnnlf', 2 M'•~1 {'On1plett'd-no rooni. 2 Open N ights 'til 9 S42--U19 All day Sai...Sun.
• 63J.1200 * .i.hc<>ts, , ~~~; Pr o I trut•kl0ttdil 'lllrcady arrived. Sat: 'til 5:30, Sun. 12-S 1971 -.-.-.--~ ' '} ~ . • 1n!~n')J'S, 21 '.)' SIO. ,\ntlc1ue Huge dik'OUll!S sh fl G !I' *Pl & G d llarley s_portster .. Rbfo. t IC!-;. l l . HEfo s. :>lt\111 di'!t!!eS 15' \\ldt' + 2 1 ·h h' I 8 l JlJ •nos r•n s* $18:.0 1\Pl~L. & ~~~I' t.lf:l'AI. I Sl'l~ tic Mck~. 3' \\idc e:1 + ~7~~1 ·4~i L"O or!!. M>ne Bn.ld'A·ln •. C11.~le • .Chi~ke:ri11g ~·111-:U~fter 6 pn1.
• 67~~ * !'Oils. ~"'(). ;>46-(}1G9. • t~.!IC'l\et · Ka"·111 • Klm.?all ,72 SUZUKI, !Sj CC
31f' STOVfo:: 01 ~11 A· !Jroili•r. ~ 1~1 , 1 1 J ewelry 8070 · Knube • i\la~on & !hut'.,· u:i rnllell $400 ~ultahl1' l~r 11111, s1:1. Cull ;)C·A.1'\;(>d'"~100 I c.:~::'.~N •• 111~;n i\lu1'3('sl·I . So&. lc'?1'"•' . \'~llein·., ____ ·_·~·~•'-:...::"'~:~,--·--51~-1202 I , : ~. · · ·, DESPERATE. Ladle~ r11u:, v.ny .. rt.y ;;r • , nter1 PIH)1 I I I.inn $1~. 1\n1t r. Sapphll-ci;, Dinn1onds and • \\'1u·lhzel' • Ynn1aha Motor Homes,
Sicy_c_I_•_•_ 8020 uphols rt.;hn\'r, :t:l~l. I>o~ n r:uble11. nppr. $1500. Si·ll New Spine111 lr ........ $.l95 S I ~---i.1uff1·1J C.hal~I' lounsir SI 1~ ssoo. s:~9-::.o% u. • e/ Rent
\'¥'ANTED 10 .\o(K.<Cd guy's or \\'nil l·locki: S:xl 10 $100. B & l '~~ 1.1'11~,1
........... , "~55 .•
'66 HONDA 450
9160
"63 bU' A 1300. nu bks. bat.
tunt>\lp, \'Iv adj. Runs gd.
25n1PS $500 hn. 6-14·2983.
Audi 9707
AUDI '71-1001.S auoo, 4 dr.
nir. A!\.1/F'~t 11ereo. Xlnt
cond. Near m>"'' tires, Pa!
833-2977. or 536--0278 eves.
AUDI '73, 100 1...5. auto, :snrf,
;\!\f/1'~M. 6 mo 1va1·1·cu1ty.
&le. $4995. 673-"l"~"---
72 AUDI lOOt.S. Autornat!C'
trruu;rnlssion, !IUnroo f &
A~flf"l\1. 831-~0 Dir.
I' b'k \\'Pi ii ·rv $ti0271 ~(n; .......... ~,, •Vf\CA llON • \:a ,\, 1 ·e. . 1 t'O :. nt:11 • • M i1cellaneou1 8080 Gnu1d~ " ......... $:'r.15 AT )'OUP O\\IN PACE . , BMW 9712
:>IS-2886 ~101 nh1g • C"n~on H d , *ORGANS* Cl ' Cd.'11. 675-2122. ~e f1'0m So. C&lif. -:;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Dog1 8040 ~ ~ Bald11•in ·Conn · 1-luniiru;in~l • ''LEu·gelil Se lel'tion.'' •
MIOF>.\·UEU, \\·hlte r\aul:il· BAR Kx"·nl . i-;in1ball. Lo1vrey. (01-:"er 40 l\linh; & M.ll.'sl. e P UPPY WORLD e h}'dl'. Drk .Jtetl chrur & Hodge1'5 -Thon1as 4 .n1· DAL.ES .Wiil DUlllt TDlt
ot1on1nn, Nauguhyrit•. Ex<.'<'I. ohu . \Vurlitzer. MOTOR l·IOl\.1E BAVARIAN'
Mnda 9731 AUTOS USED
'72 fltAZDA 81anon \\'ARQn Gentr1I 9901
4 cyl & clean! 1!182 GIP> to"·' SA VE 6'>-5100 Stati11n W nl'IC'ns
'11 ?-.lAZDA, R.."2, air t'oncl, '73 PLYMOUTH
new ena: .. loaded. Uke ne'1' • Sa1elllte cust. 10 pass. F'(U ..
$219;;. 21J.59U™· 1ory air. roof ·rnc.k. loaded.
M1rcede1 B1n1 9740 !\tany extrfta. U563J5l. cc.;;_.;;;;,:;:.:...;:"'-" _ _;,;_c;;1 $3283
35 USED
MERCEDES
ON DISPLAY
'69 PONTIAC
\\'agon. Real nice. Loa.lied.
fG80GDEl.
$1580 • '72 MERCEDES BENZ
LUXURY 4.5 SEDAN
Beats the 1't'IJ>lit, 111oru nlilt>is DAVE ROSS
JX'I' ga llon, tl41tilg.n & eni;i;~nf' PONTIAC
for !ong , tin1~ ow1!f'l'!lhlp. 2480 llar bo r Bl1•tl.
classic hnes, ar1st01·1·ut~c Costa Mes: ~2-8017
beauty and f:afety, $8195.
C.'ould arrange lt'MI" !or
isultable pa.rly .'173GBZI. • n111nws, df'l"Orutor 1tems. stools. Black di s t re s s ed Lo S " " H AMC 9905 .'iln\lln~. ffiUt'h lo sell. "'ood. Has shield~ ln front . "'l'l')' pu~t .....•.. Sl95 Redhill & San Juan. Tustin 0 ;,_,; ~ ouse of Imports "---'--------
ro11c1 .. Cinn('rn e<1u1pn1'1, Beautiful [.;panish bar w/'1 Opilglln ................. Sl:Al RENTALS M 0. i
'·'"8991. \\'/~·ords. Lights "" both \\urlllter Sp1ne1, ne\\' .. $4~ ITI41 838-0000 T 2•72 -" * WIN FREE * 5 ~ 50 '69 RA1>1BLER "·agon, 1 O\\'n·
=--,,..,---,-,..,-..,--1 ends & S'A'Ol'Cls on bottom. 1973 17· \\I I N N f,; B A G o OR I · · k 6 I •l(l :\ILTST sell 5 I)('· 11alnu1 bdrm \\'oul~ he beautiful in ORGAN LESSONS ~'!Otorhome has e\ _,.i.;n,.,_ E..XEC. CARS YOR LEASE. er. 0 nu. sue ' cy · ~
si•t. IJke riew. "-in g SP11n1sh style horne. Crt>atec; p ' ,,.,.... ,,:.0C..'3 "'"-.. Choose from 4 fully equir>-l\tPG,, ~ Gd.• rond. $895.
For<l ___ • __ '9;.;.llo40;;
Jtl67 Jo'ORD \\'ICOl't, 11.r, new
trlln•.. air 11hocka, steel
tll't's $600/best oil. 847-4363
·71) Ltd ...... Btougham, lo ll)i01,
ll.11 p'AT. $1595.
Call 6464962
'950 .
'72 MARQUIS Brghm. Pmi·t r
M.'1\ts, \\'lndow11, AJC, etc.
$1800. 4~·ln9, TJ9 Oaviota
1 •. B.
Old1mobllo
Sa.lea I~
OLDSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS
HONDA CARS
'955
UNIVERSITY OLDS
Co1t&~e!~ BJ~9"1J I
'ti7 OLDS t..ORON AO O ,
ChooolAte brown, xlnt cond.
n1akc '0Uer, 640-4114,
552-7800
'64 QI.OS $200. 1n very good
shape.
8'l2-I 128
\\ atc·h dogs • Gcr111v11 Sht'Ji·
hl'r<.IS, Chihuuhuai., T I n y
Poodleti, J>1t Bull~. Ox.:ka·
p..o:i, J11.p11nese SJh.'111., il'bll
Sellers, llusk1es, J'ugs. Bull
Dogs, 100 !\llX.t:D PUl'S.!
Stud Scrl'll'!' l\lost liNt_'Cls.
Open l::\·e .... 5ll-J00tl'---
-Airedale Pups AKC
Clwn1p1on sired. 6 wk.~
11/he11dboard. 2 nigh! Libs. '1 atmosphere fol' party "'/all FULLERTON MUSIC ~eas. rates."'-',._.,,.,,,, pt'i1 lov.• mileage 450 SE ~&l&"'-'5c..c"~·-------
lg. drel'IM'rS & mirror. SSOO. ilgh1s out except bnr llghts 1181911.-.uclid, Fountain Vaill')' T •1 T I 9170 1974 BMWs 36 r.10 lease S215.i8 per 010. Buick 9910 P into nr be~I offer. Call :;51-6."1.".1~) .l ccndl£'s. Paid S·IOO. Sell 557-4836 ral ers, rave 2002's, Bavarlas, 3.0 SA's OEL + Tnx Lie. SerlaJl..:.:;.:.:.:. _____ _cc;.;_
IJt'f. 9:30am or bt11·. J:30 & for $200 or reas. off.:or. Cun l22 N. Harbor, Fullerton NE\" TRAv<·L TR,\ll ERS Order your car for delivery No. l)).116. Take )'OUJ' clil' in '73 CENTURY LUXUS Pinlo llatc-hbnck '71. 7nm S"<' Sat s l 1 4410 " • "' • jJ1 Eul'Ope NO\\'I d llrei;. Pl'h'nle parly. ,. · .t' , or un ony a 871 ·1805 FACTORY DIRECT · ti-a e.. 2 Door hardtop. Air eondi· 61&808.1
9957
Ne\~'
nachshunJ pur1s·AKC rl·i::.1 i-:1KGS!Zt: bc'd, .-..:rra flrn1, \\'. Sunswepr, Santfl Ann. . . Jim Slemons Honing, pc"er steerin". 1:1)11, Std. B!k & Tan & 1\ll 111,11 , incl. niaHiX>~s. hox rr.o up llarhor Blvd. to . Fu~t S ~ \-'I!~ or 11'1t:ttiut EXCELLENT .. '7 1 PINTO, &uto,Alr. radiAls, "'~"~"·~S="~'·~'~,1~5--06-"-~11-._~~~ ! _,p1·111~s & flan1r>. SJ!).j. ~~~st~~n~~:'Tl ~~vdNe'A~~~~~ co'?t~J~ N gJs~t; F~ij~ toilet. ~~R~SN~!els. PRE-OWNED BMWS Imports :~~;;~· \\~:1~k~~~st,il!~f~1g:~~~· G~~~925r,eluxe. $1,650. PH:
old Cnll IQ!.j{X,;:1
IHISll Scltt'l". lc1n .. Al<C 8 f1\·f/rth ~::;1 0 '· Quf'ensize mnke .. another left & S~~: ADULTS. Every Tuesday RECREATION PRODUCTS 4 '69 2002 • 4',i;peed 1301 Qua.II CHOICE OF 3
1no::.., all shots. (~ hon1c SI 1.·1. lnt'. rlt·hvf'i')'. Usually sii·ept is lsl St. T 11 r 11 lefl 7:30pm .. St8:rt ~y "'eek. 12~91 Nelson 51: Gai·den • 'TI 2800 CSA· sun roof NC\\8,33.i.1~9t300Beach $3233 '72 ,\,,-A. \\'GN. 4 spd. 25
~!PC:. Lo n1i . Xlnt cond.
$19951offer. Prl/pty. 673-2380 ;1 n111s1. S67>. 5-18·:iJ5L__ hrnnc >C:l-2·1Sll. ngain. 3rd hou~c h'On\ t'OI'· i:om D1et~1ch . in charge. Gi"Ove. 10 0111 to ;, pni Tues • '72 3.0 CSA · lo\v miles
\\'Ell\!All1\NJ::ll 11ups. Al\C, U.\NISll J.ov1•se11r, hlu gt·een ncr on l'ight side ) Coai'lt ~lus1c Costa l-.Iesa. thn ' Snt (7}-ll 8-17-0741 e '72 2002 · 4 speed ENTER .FRQl-.1 1\11tcARTl-IUH • ~llmouth 9960 J:l wks .. Shn1v & field hat'k· I 1\1;1l('hin~ 11alnut ChO\I' rhls, · Ne~iport Blvd. at Harbor. • '72 BavJ•'ia 4 speed US l-.'lf.:RCEDES Benz 2:xJ
"round. C<tll 8.19·3'190. . 4~\'lifT !lil. l;1111n!', 11l1·1111'l's. -~ .,...;.,..~·~·2;·;285:-~l !!!!"'"!!!!~li ~~~~~~~~~~ • ,. BARTLETT " · 50000 ·1 s1-:. 4 dr sedan. Poi\·{'r, DAVE ROSS
BEAUTI FUL St Bernard J ~luke. offer. \~'a:-:her & d~·C"r I [ ~ l ;J r~:!nahle ~tla~lv.=.inty ,\f_C. AM/F'!\1 rndio. $29:-0 PONTIAC ATLAS Pui>p ies. 6 wks old, cal! ~nr 1 und. S7.> both. 6~-l·ti.1138 FLOOR COVERING \\fl-IJTE STARR BABY Auto• lor~t• 1974 & ,73 BMW's. 61:>--23_79 Eves. p 1· 1 vat e
%::r3963 or 6-12--0800 aft 511111 6 il!O old l\ing si7c bed, xtra 788 W. 19th St., C .M. GB.AND PIANO, in ntint o"'!K'I 2!80 llu1·bor Blvd. Chrysler I Ply"'°" th
Open Daily & Sw1. 'tll 10 PN
2:929 Harb)r Blvd.,
Costa Mea.'
THOROUGHBREU--Cockci'
1
1 ftrtll. X!n1 i.,"Ond._S200. \\'ork: Personalized Installation. S~~· 6-2iS 1=::· . 1170 MBZ 280SL rdstr. 4 speed Cost.a l\lesa 546-8017 Spunicl PuiJs, 7 'Aecks, ,';trl-6611 f'Xt ::i9. _ask for Name Brand Carpet. ia-3 1 Auto Ser. & Parts 9400 r~ I l'2"ll' & air Ks'l-20-lO Dli-. •
(j.Lj.....()829 Trrry/Res:_ 841-0SW Guarantee(!. 0\Tr 30 yrs PL\NO, Lyon-Healy, b.1.by ~ £:\'ECUTIVE Id · 1 exp. grand. Ne"" Beaut. tone. l961 ECONOLINE 3 Spd .._... 6.1 l\lBZ 220SE sedan, auto.
PUREBRED \\'t'11nan111 er · ~ . ~~ sii·ive FREE ESTIMATES Best offer. 6T<Hill6. 11·ans $23. Stat11·r $7. :'lli~c. ~ !"~'~"'~· ~&~ru~·~,~83~l~-~-~~D~l~r·:._.l (c;;jjjj-;;:-=-'--oo;i< pups, 6 "ks old. Alter 6pn1, flfll~e rha1r . Si;: \\'hl'el Call 646-1442 I c __ ..;.a __ ..:..;'-"'--'-...;::~ TI l\IBZ 280 Sk: 3.5 C'"". Cadillac J915
546-1934
Call .)j2-8-M}6. _<"ha11:-$100. 673-t1IO SCRAM LETS TV, Radio, HiFi St. 8098 9GS-19T1. Aftf'r I p .m. 2Wl2 1'1ruguerite Parkl\•ay Alrearly 1:t classic & ni~l' ,72 CAO &'<Ian 0cVine.
Free T0 You 8045 j 1\1\UGll. Jh·ing rm. coueh. • 2.)" ZENITH COl,.Oll TV 1962 f"ALCO~ ~uto trans $12. USE A·\~sR·~!1 PV\\i*EX'IT. 831-20-W> 01.r. tC,000 'II. p ER>' EC T . i-;1rhy s \I' e e pc 1·. all N . C11·b Sfj, radio SS. Aft er ·I · c. i .1. -"
<·E<'o HOND I•-", JI h"'ky I ;1\tal·hnients. Call Sl6-3j72. eiv PIC-IU~'E! lube, guar. :dn! 0 111 938-'9TI 831·2040 e 49:J.49-l9 1963 l\IERCEOES 220, xlnl COi'\D. ,\1r cont!, po11·er
Ponti1c
PONTIAC
SALE " ~ ''""' " ANSWERS t."O.id. $250. 51S-139J aft. 3 · · · -· cond, Radio & air, $lj()() e\·el')·thini;, leather, F?-1
1ype 1 fl"male, 4 months. \VA!\1 ~:D p.n1 . Rec Vehicles 9530 ORANGE COUNTY'S 6-l:>-·1730 slC'roo & tape, \;nyl top·The
6i:>-2.):tl • L"~E:D BRICKS * 2··· p•·i C I ,.,, -· \\'ot'ks! $-1%0. 67~. ~=-~ 8/Q .. [J6-I Fedora -Fei"n -1,· .. ,·-1 -,, "1 co_ o Ol' v.snsolc, Lk \\'11.L BUY )'OUR REf'.RE· OLDEST n.....1 9 46 ;..t:EO JOY in your life'? lei .. ... .. , """' $125 01• be ·t offl'r --~,_ ________ 7_ ·73 SEO. IX-•·,·11 ... 19.000 ,,,,·. '74 LE MANS
k I Id .l.OVESEAT & ""f", ""'l"m Attend-TAKE·OFF ' . :; . · ATIO~AL \1EtllCLE Pr\10 ~ ... lh1s l'at strea '-tn. ns e ...., " ._ u 847-732-1 FOR OR NOT. CALL US & OPEL RALLYE ·-,u. v··,., I steel rncHal tires: al I 2 Door hurdlop. Air t'Ondi· only. r>l9-1Sl6 1nade • very gd qual, ne,·er A len111.le nbeudisht: S~1e'IJ aJ. FOR BES. P!ttC£. OPEN .. , .. y ai·ailaPle rx!ras, o 1· i g: tloning. auton1etlc. po"·er
2 /\DOH.ABLE c.;a!s, i;poyed, used, usually hn1, 968-7910 \l'ays 1'en1en1 r er first day !OJI. Auto. lrn ns. 25 n1pg. O\Vnt'r. Sa595. 64H565 aft .6 steering, JXll\'er brake 8,
'
"">. V"•·y ,,rr-·••·o••··t". ,-1U-ST II f . in can1p. lt'!!i li ke IC'arning I~ ROAD. l'.UNT I NG:'ON _Private Ply. 6-12-1472 "'kdas/all day "'knds. radio, heater, White v.·all
.... ._ "'-" ... 1' • se · ·re rig, queen to rly. You never forget the Bolt• and tC BEACtl, 1SSC1 Beal'h Blvd., 6~2-7768 call noon to 5 . hldl'-n-1~. 1\laytng \1•shr/ first TAKE·OFF. Mann.Equipment 8~z.2504. Peugeot 9748 ~60(ADILLAC tires, very lo\\' i::niles. <126-
____ dryr chairs, beds. 673-2423. ""~=c=~~--..,--~ 716). 2 FREE l<lTTENS -. BARTLETT . GAS TANKS ''"'"""" by 1974 BMW' NEW PEUGEOT . ~·"" $3480
CALL AF'T~R 7 i"i'\I Qi.;EEN i:i:te bed for sale, & FLOOR COVERING i\1ajo1'11a}'. Trucks, ln1ports. S DEALER Camaro 9917 ,74 GRAND PRIX e 549-1338 • n1isc. itcins. Boats, Meint/Ser. 9020 858 \V, 18th, ·c.?o.L in stock ready for immediate
Furniture SOSO :>48·6997 788 W. 19th St., C.M. --·-··----------4 Wh ID. 9550 dcliliery. Excellent sa\'ings Complete S.'lles and Scn ·icl". '6! SS .CAl\lARO. 1970, 350 2 Door hal"d1op. Jo'aclory air
_ ·-· -· DREXEL buHet, hutch & Qunlit):' c~1stom. f 1
1
o or BOAT Carpc-nl('r. 20 y1·s ee rives on remaining 1973 models. 50 contr-1.c.s on display. Eng. Xlnt oc:nd .. Sl400. or rondilioning, Al\1 /f?,;I sl~,
SHHH! FURNITURE corner shelf nite coffee t"O\"er1ng. Fent unng Nafco, e.-.:per. Only highest qua1!1y LANDROVEll 109 .. "'hi SALl::S.SERVlCE!..t:ASl~iG PACIFIC MOTOR u1akl' oUer. 613--0526 JJO\l·C'r steering;-power 101~ bt-d, bk~asl'. 675-Z690. Arn1s11·ong. ~ Con~leum. \,·ork: 6·10-ll&tl alt. 6 1-'l>t or ' -. · · . OVERSEAS DELIVERY h k llJI h J tJl AT WHOLESALE! . Guai-anteed tnstallatlOn & "'kC"iKl.s base Sta. \\ag. 1966 Classic. ROY CARVER, Inc:. 1973 CAl\1ARO. Jo1nll\CUl11 tc r11 "· r Y w ee11, t
894
-2020 rl 0 C!ran, \\'Cll 111aint. l 01vnr. IMPORTS and looded. Call alter 5;30 whee•/, vinyl tap. (101699).
G S I Boss pe orntanc·e. vcr 30 yrs. · Boats, Marine Eq. 9030 s·.'.~0• PH ·. 61.' ·,ooo $4820 arage a e <>-•·. ~ -~ ROLLS ROYCE B"W PEUGEOT/SUBARU PM. "''°911 '. I
OLD FASHIONl::D BUff}~T ..-----2:1
G
" E-II 1 Id FREE ESTIMATES EV INRUDE El••t. -, ·flP ".'>I '\'ILL\"S Stn '''gn, OID. l E. 17th St. •=7 \\'. l.u•ooln Av•.. Chevrolet 9920 '74 VENTUR• Goon con<l, r.takl' offer. Kit· ARAGE :-;AL ouse 10 "... " Mi k Costa r.1esa e a46-444-1 ...,., ... ""' chcn tbl & 6 ehrs, SIO. afl itcnts. Sal. Sun. l\l'l11. & call &Mi-1-142 Outboard n101or. Con1 pl I s1., sp,a::~~~l . 2 Chevy CREVIER W. Anaheim 533.,1\220 1··1 NO\'\ R II 'I P-S l'loor. \"cry IO'N mileage.
6
, ,0•39 T •=Fl c 'I I BUY'' 1\/rontrol, also "'16' boat r. _engine;;. "t.°>'JUC>; • BM p h • 1 · '· · • "r, 1• · Far10'"'' air co-.. '1'·n;ng, I -~s...... ues. •l<l" O\\er. . 1 • I "" or5c e 9750 """ · 'I \ II I · k ., •~ ~ •• UlC"r, 67J-j3()() ~299. _ Trucks 9560 Sales • Se:'liee • 1.easin'C """ c.i. 1' ui. ~ 111~ l\'l'C · a uton1n ric. po1,·rr slttrinR. ~ .......... .G1 Good, used lurn1tu1-c & Boal• Power 9040 1 ···o \" l't S I ""31"1 PORSCHE ·11 T. T111"'a .. c'_""stfn1~. loon. ,,.19-'.!7J8 i1·hl!e "all ti1't"li. loaded.
)
A CONVENIENT SHOPPING AND
SCW!NC CUIOE FOR THE
CAL ON THE GO.
For 1n •d In Women•s ~arid
oppllancesor\1·illsell foryo" ' 196-CllEV d 1·· l•k 6 '"'-"' ·~. ' ·'· ......,. • " "= C!llV C 4 d •l""-1 " ~ .~ · ~ i\ery 1 • USED BMWs n1ag!I, 5 spd, r~I tape deC"k, "'"'. · ~ . ap1·1l1>. 1-. .....,.,.j· I.
MASTERS AUCTION CLASSIC Ccntw)' Bay boat ~}I,, sllC"k. r\.ev,o b~s~ .i;; I .71 200'.! Yello\i'. STJS:>. 714-6-12-3970, l::xt-el. r.totol'. air l"Ond. $3499
646-8686 or 833-9625 18'. 4-60 Gray cng. Runs i;hocks. $600 01 of r. 67:1-1646 I .70 200'.! 6-10-1766 Bargn1n $600. 646-1-Ll6. ~ft 6 o: ~.:;iday, _great. $1250. 197-1 LUV 11·ith can1per shell, I ·59 2500 Toypta 9765 'iO ~IONT_E CJ\RW. 1 01vncr. •
839-09 .• · Y..>-3ro0 -548-634.9 b73-94S4 616-llil carpeted thruout. I ·11 Bavaria -~--------, Good m1lea~e. Good t_"Ond.
ANTIQUI! BERTRAM 25 TWIN-61";..6326 838-3961 Ca ri 9715 '74 TOYOTA 8"'1 olfer. 61;.6116. DAVE ROSS
SWAP MEET .Excellent cond., $10,00J. '69·~~ to~ Dodge P .U._ al8-2 .;:c;;<.P:c.-____ _.:..:.;:: "' Continent•I 99lO PONTIAC
Sunday !\-lay 191.h. Santa Ana 67~8546 bar I. 5950· PH: 963-3053 "T.l1. CAPRI, l-.lint Exec. car., Seit Deal A-twherel 2490 Harbor 81 \-d,
College . Parking L ot. 16' GLASPAR Avalon, 45 HP Vans 9570 3,000 nti., auto, ne"• radials, """' '70 CONTINENTAL Costa ?otesa 54G-8017
Re.se.rvatJons day or t'\'e. l\lerl'ury Trailer xlut cond !lacing Green/Saddle inter-LEASE OR BUY 2 Door hardtop. Full power,
542-4376 or 5 4 3 - 3 O 8 6 . $1095 21:i-Mli-27a2 ~ft 6 '6.:i DODGE \\"indo1v \'an. ior. Asking S3.095. 552-0766 All Mode Iii faclory nir ronditioninx.
Sponsored by Santa Ana ' ------Perr. mcch'I cond . Lo n1i. or 552-0516 eves. vinyl top, lilt \\'heel. Al\1
J·I is to r icaJ Preservation Boats, Rent/Char. 9050 J?/1-1, auto $800. &12-3 193 Datsun 9720 DEAN LEWIS f,~~·1r:ro. leather interior.
C1ll Mary Beth 642-5678, ext. 3~0 • Sew in an Hour! Two-getherness!
Sociely. 42' NEW Chris·Cr~ Autos Wanted 9590
}'QR S1\LE TIE'W unused Fly·Bridge Sport Fisherman. WILL BUY vobR TOYOTA
Sea1-s Electric La'ol·n Mo"·cr Plush. f~ull electronics, full CADILLACS DATSUN, TOYOTA
$2988
·n FtREB IRD. forrnula 400,
nil \\'hllc. 4 iipd, ale. pis,
p/b, Rnllye "'hl11. 14 ,000
•
mi. lik<' new, $3400 494-8'153
or 675-72S.1
••
at C'Of;t. \\'111 l'eturn to seller galley. sho\\·er, etc. For • OR VOLKSWAGEN
if unsold next five dayi1. No charter by day or \\-et!,k. 6 Largest Selection
reduclion in price. Phone people DUL'\. Fish, cniii;e In Orange County PAID FOR OR NOT. \\'ILL
496-5208. cocktafl, etc. 64~2200 days, Coupe DeVille-: • Sedan De-~~TO~~ CALL
'70 SCOUT 4 whl, dr. 3().l..VS. 962-2301 evertings/\\'eek~nds. Ville.s · El Dorados . Co1 ·
4!1,000 miles. loaded EXPLORE ISLANDS vertibles. Also n1any 01.her '69 DATSUN 510 Station
\\'/actess. 1-: x c e 11 en I On beaut. 57, KETCH. Xlnt select Cad:llac Trade-ins. ~~~ ;~5~~t.$850. Call
cc.ndiUon $2195. T)'J>C"Titer rates, days or \Ve e k . · . table S5. Chrome hubcaps R Bo 31· NA~r.&Alll&t' -~· lJ" whls $3. 893-&160 alt eS£"rv. req, x 6, ~ 'W""I _,-(:.'Jl'i 7Pl\I or Sat·Sun. Balboa ls, Ca. 92662. 2600 Harti1r lhd.
't.:, 2.WZ, 4 spd. mags. Sharp!
\\'hlte w/ Black & Red
int., $4100. 547-5062.
"'. QUI LTING & IlfUST sell <laur.ht\r·s '71 Cetf9 .... Mo-91 "ffifi\J~'~·°''I patch"·ork KA\\'ASAKI 100. GOod oond.1 ~~~~~~~~~~ '73 DATSUN PICKUP. lo
;JI t•la~ses. Start r.tay 7th. _!29.i. Call .6-16-3.lj7, !-TOP DOLLAR PAID miles, xlnt cond, below
l\lake your O\\'T\ heirloom market, $2560. ~2251
pilto\\.·s. placemats & quilts. Boats, Sail 9060 IMMEDIATELY '68 DATSUN, 2000. Clean &
The Hall Tree, Cannery 21' TEi\lPf.ST boa FOR ALL !'OREIGN CARS sharp! New trans. & brakes.
Village, N.B. 673-3240 or 1000 lb k 1""''cn I. Cali or come '.n to see us. " &i5-2'960 ·ee, en o 11 1 ",~1300~-· _83_7_-1188_~·---
Spinnaker, Self cont, sips 4. Fiat · NEWPORT . 9725
j CABINETS for Kichen & Bath 110 6", xlnt cond. F'inn
Unfinished Prefinished $WOO. ~9238.
Counter Tops also. =-=c=~~----l.JARDEN ENTERPRISES ISLANDER 30, 4 mos. old, · IMPORTS ·;
Sic \ 8 S C Ped. Stef'ring, ext r as,
. ;i V. 1 th • 1• .l\l Ekau l.iful. $19,500. Fir1n. 3100 \V. Coas· lh\)'., N.B.
642-9405 &12-2842
TOURl\tALINE mink &
ll'all1l'r ballle jacket, "-on
on quiz show. Great for
l\lolher's Day. Appraised at
$67:1. SAVE! 838-3961.
838-0M.1 alt 6.
BEAUTIFUL 12' Catamaran \V,\NTED Jaguar Roadster
carries on caf. 5300. Good: in xlnt l..'Ond. Can be any or
cond. 5.U-7398. rite follo\\•ing ye11rs: '64 '* 40 FT. KETO~ '* lhru '69. I will pay
Ahnost finished Sl2 500 \1·holesalc Blul' Book \\"/all 1-~or details 1i ~9·2 allo\\·able xtras + ltJ<'k. Pvt ca party, Call 833--0751, ext 2508
LEASE
CANCELLATION
ON
'74 FIATS
Z dr:. & 4 drs.
REAL $AVI NGS
540-4491
{ask for Contino)
Honda 9727 SPHING SPECIAL ~~ olf
normal price on Steam
CIE'anlng yoor c a r p e t
546-57-15.
16' HOBIE CAT, 200 !leries, be fore 3:30, aflcr 551-6510. 'TI SEDAN. 35 mpg,
I
Good t'Ond., 1v/trlr. $1375. TOP CASl-1 for clean used S895
642-9686 cars and trucks • 548-1309. •
Boah, Slip•/Docks 9070 Howord Chevrolet J09uor 9730 :--"--~~~~~~ l\tacAt1hur and Jamboree
Newport Beach
&1:l-0555
'65 Jag. M 2, 3.8, ClaS!'iic,
$800. Cash. l\1ust sell,
111ovtng. 539-063.1
1972 JAGUAR V12 coupe,
auto & air, 17,000 mi, $5850.
firm. 494-6707
Turn your gou clubs Into
a stereo. Sell them with
and use the money for a
stereo! Call 64Z-567ll Today.
a Dally Pilot Clusified Ad
1966 Harbor, C.l\1. 645-1.:·,t':t
lL\SE A BRAND NE\\' 'i4
TOY OT A 1200 Corolla Sedan
for only $55.25 per mo. 36
n.os. open end lease.
DAVE ROSS ·10 FIREBIRD, rormwa 400 ,
PONTIAC lull pw" E<ceL cond .• Orig.
owner. 67~8896 EvcslWknds
2·'80 Ha rbor B1·1d. 1970 PONT. GTO Conven.
C.Osta ~fesa ~8017 , complete overhaul , Sl400./
BILL MAXEY··
TOYOTA
l''' i ~\CH! :.\"I> ,;~ ,v:;
l'\ '\Ji'\!,1n\ I\~ \(1!
• Corvette 9932 --'------'-·
~~~--~----'73 CORVETTE 45.1. Xlnt
N
e lb971 TOYOTA 1600 e t_"<Ond. 10,IXXJ ml. PIS, air
cw rakes, tires. boll. Kon! A!\l/fo-M 4 spd. S6350'.
sh~ks. ~tuned. Low Zl.3-596-<r110. ;\lo n -Fri
mileage. Ong. owner. 9am-5pm. ~lake offer &15-2342 w"1;:L7L_:cP=Ac,Y~T-O_P_DO~LLA--R
TI. TOYOTA_. $565. Lo miles, r·oR YOUR VET"l'E dlr.,
Hit In lhe f a.nny, Otherwise 842-884•1 PEH!i'ECT. Piu1s for .=-:.:...-----~
Oat.suns, Toyota!!. 673--1784. Dodge 9935
'71 t.1 ARK II STATION '69 DODGE DART 2 dr 383
\\'AGON, A/T, FIA, Xlnt blov.•n head gask~t. 4 ~~rt:
cond. Bel. IQ a.m. 644-6/).13 posl, headers. S350 ~Trade.
'TI TOYOTA Corollu. C'.ooc:I e M4·3417 a
rond., Excel ~a.'S mi .. netA• Ford 994(j
hriikcs, Best orfl'r. 968-91!\.'( --- -
'68 TOYOTA Corona 4 dr, 3 MUST SELL '67 CORTINA.
spd, ";de tires, new eng. Gd. t111nsp. C"ar. A gas AAV·
Best offer, 4gg...2169
ONLY 13
1973 PONTIACS
LEFT
flurry for saving5 of a life·
time.
30°/o OFF
Factory suggested list price. • DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2840 Hurbor Bl vrl.
Costa l\lesa. 54&-SOIT • ~ega '974 Good conrl.. 962-5756. er! S500 or best oUer. Ph.
Triumph 9767 c:"",:::,:·3365::::::~--~--'72 VEGA Station \"/agoo
---·---------'70 FORD Wagon, l.TD. fully GT option, 4 speed &. air
069 TR!Ul\1Pl-I TR-6 xlnt cquip'd, $1175. (176F\VN)
cond. 1.tust sell. '$1800.1 · 642-(}59(1 (Dlrl SAVE 66-5700
645-5128/645-7799 \Autos, New 9800 Auto1, New '800 '74 Tri. Tk-{i, Br 0 \V n __ ;.:.._ _____ c::;;_:,:.::.:.o,;:!...:,::c;:., ___ :::::
convert. 5,000 1nl.. 4 spd, II"' __________________ _
A.M/F!\.1 8 Irk. $4500. 540-73.r.l]
1972 TRlUil-fPH Til-6 lmmac.1
cond. Lo miles. Pvt ply.
$,1700. or offer 962-4:.">9
Volkswagen 9770
'64 V\V Bus, reblt: '66 eng &
trans, New: .radial .,.,
shocks & brake11. Reason:
Owner student 11 e e d s
Maney. S950 675--8155
'65 BUG, R/H. Xlnt cond,
S700. 675-6825 a!I. 5 ~II do.y
Sun,
'68 VW CAhf PER, '69 Eng.
Al\1/F'M, Jo.ml, gd cond.
xtras. $ll50. 67r>-5757
'72 VW Bug. Good condltkm,
$1100. or be11t offer. 1 501.-:;101
'67 V\Y Bug, cle11 n ln!!lde &I
out, ooly 1D'.I n1!1e1 on rcblt
eni. ~. Evn 963-1256
Volvo 9"2
'74 VOLVO
8411 Dd l Any\llherol
LEASE OR BUY
All Modol1I
0•1r.;M~A.~ .-J .:.rv1 ,R\"
~Pi:-:CIAI ,J.'IT"
DEA!i LE~J[S
vctv:
llS.1 1-1 rl:lor, •. ~1 "
21st Anniversary Sale
EVERY CAR IN STOCK
>
SPECIALLY DISCOUNTED
BRAND NEW •••
DEMOS-USED ..• ' .
SA VE THOUSANDS of DOI.URS!
ENTIRE MONTll of MAY
2626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS
COSTA MESA s.I0-5680
r.
\
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San Cle1nente
' Today's Final
Capistrano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 67, NO. 1.26, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA \ MONDAY, MAY1 6, 1974 TEN CENTS
Nuclear Foes Plan New Suit to ·-Halt Onofre
By CANDACE PEARSON
QI llM D•llr .. llot Slaff
Oppanents of the San Onofre Nuclear
power. plant said today they will file a
lawswt In San Diego Superior Court
Wednesday in a new erfort to stop the expansion.
The California Supreme Court 'last
week refused to hear the .plea against the
state coastal comn1ission's approval of
the $1.4 billion addition. of two nuclear
reactors Jess than three miles ·south of
San Clemente.
Lorell Long of the Environmental
Coalllion of Orange County said today
that the opponents decided Sunday to go
on with their fight.
They are opposed to the plant
expansion because they say it will cause
substantial harm to the marine life
offshore and will destroy valuable coastal
bluffs.
Some of the environwentalists are
more opposed to it on grounds of
radiation dangers, a topic the coastal
commission was told not to consider.
Assistant Stale Attorney General Carl
Boronkay told the commission ·that only
the federal Atomic Energy Commission
has jurisdiction over radiation safety.
The environmentalists contend that the
commission was ill advised when it voted
Feb. 20 to approve the plant after first
denying it Dec. 5.
Miss Long sai~ the Wednesday filing
date is tentative but she is sure the ca.se
will be continued.
The state Supreme Court refused to
take orignal jurisdiction of the case, in
part, Milo L<lng said b_cause the
lawsuit had never been filed in the ]ower
Superior courts.
The oppanents of units two and three
started their action with the Fourth U.S.
Court of Appeals in San Diego, which
also had refused to hear the case.
The opponents are represented by
Donald Stark, a private ¥ittomey with
offices in Corona, and Frederick
Sutherland , from the Center for Law in
the Public Interest in Los Angeles. Also
involved in the suit are !he Friends of the
Earth and Group Unite d Against
Radiation Dange r (GUARD) of San
Clemente.
The two 1,14G-megaw31t reactors and
-tlw: existing reactor are owne<J by
Southern Cslifomia Edison Company,
which has 80 percent Interest and the San
Diego Gas and Electric Company which
holds the remaining 20 percent interest.
San Juan Officials Mull
New Decision on Freeze
Bala1aci119 A~t '
Rodeo cowboy finds the hurricane deck of saddle bronc a tough
place to remain as pair exits chute at San Juan Capistrano's main
attraction during weekend Cinco de Mayo celebration. Rodeo drew
hundreds of spectators at makeshjft arena near drive-in theater and
lasted two da ys, with preliminaries held Saturday and finale on Sun·
day. Prize money was offered in officially-sanctioned event.
A Happy Ending
'M issing' Girl V isitirig Fri e1id
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 tl>e O.llr PUol Sl•ll
A little girl 's unwise We<?kend visit with
a specia l schoo l rr iend ended happily for
Newport Beach poli ce and her fanlily
Sunday after bcr hostess' father opened
his morning paper.
Kimberly Denise Wilson, 8, whose
ctisappearance was the number one story
on the front page, \Vas playing happily in
the shocked man's borne as a guest of his
little girl at the time.'
,;11e opened up his Daily Pilot nnd
said" "Ooohhhhhh, no,'' Nev•port Beach
Detective Bob llardy explained today.
The embarrassed father ilnmcdiately
called police llnd Kimmie-as they call
hcr-"·as quickly reunited with ~1rs.
J\largaret \\'ilson. of 117 15th St., on the
B.ilbon Peninsula.
Investigator s said the 'vay t ~ e
Peninsula is laid out was one partial
ractor in lhc limited ::irea searched by
police after the little girl \vas reported
missing Frk:lay night.
"She supposedly didn 't have any
(riends who lived beyond 15th Street,''
said Detective Hardy. one of several men
detailed ovemjght to the anxious search.
Homes or alt known acquaintances
were checked.
''Those gtiys worked their tails off .•. ,"
said one policeman '"'hen contacted for
progress on d.he hunt for Kimmie , after
the weary investigators had gone home
Saturday.
Throughout the myst ery
disappearance, t,tiey could only bear
in mind another overnight search from
Friday and Saturday last July, for
another missing girl. ~
Linda Ann O'Keefc, abducted by a man
\Yhose identity and whereabouts is still
unknOY.'tl, was molested and strangled
and dumped beside Upper Ne\vport Bay.
Kimberly and her (riend, whose family
lives at 2208 \Y. Ocean Front, seven
(See FOUND, Page ll
Capo Growth
Trustees View ,
Student Shift
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School. District tonight will try to reach a
definitive decision on proposals to shift
students from Dana Hills to San
Clemente High School so that a better
balance exists in enrollments.
But although lbe issie has stirred
several major puliie hearings attended
by coocerned parents and students,
. ,
Lightning,
Thunder flit
Coastal Area
A spring stonn complete with ligbtning
and thunder blustered over Orange
County Sunday night, snapping off power
at nearly 10,000 homes.
Though the ooostal areas of Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach.
and San Clemente reported only light
rain, inland areas had ·heavy rain for a
haU·hour and some lightning damage.
Lightning struck the ~1 o u l t o n
su~tation of Southern Cslifomia Edison
in Laguna Hills at 8:46 p.m., causing
major power outage in El Toro, r.,tission
Viejo, and Laguna Hills.
Though thousands of residents "'et!
without electricity fo r a hair hour, Edison
Company spokesmen said neither of two
nearby hospitals, Saddleback Community
and htission Community, were affected.
Lightning struck and set fire to a
power pole in Laguna Beach near
Victoria Beach but Edison spokesmen
said no power outs were reported as a
result.
The aerial light show and sound
spectacular, mostly over the Cleveland
National Forest, provided r a re
entertainment .to Orange Coast residents
in areas where the lightning and thunder
were most intense.
But the storm front left as quickly as it
came. leaving a forecast of scattered
clouds and scattered Ehowers for toniicht
and clearer, wanner weather Tuesday.
The National Weather Service forecast
inland temperatures in the low 70S for
the first three days or the week.
R.Un totals locally "'ere .20 inch in
h-lission Viejo: .08 inch in Laguna Niguel
and the coastal areas.
district officials stressed that -officially
-tonight's session will not be a public
airing of parmt complaints.
The current rerommendation is to
begin s~ high school students !tom
tl>e area ti;>\ ¢ tbe f'3" lli*· Freeway
~Juan C.plstralio and Mission Viejo
lo San Clem.nte mp 5chocl In the (ail.
1be district's Growth PI a D n i; g
Advisory Commilslon (GPAC) i>eld its
latest hearings on the proposal early last
·v.-eek. Its recommendation remains
despite oomplaints from parents.
Trustee President George White said
that reiteration d last week's testimony
at tonight's session starting at 7:30
o'clock vtould not be necessary because
trustees have received minutes of the
GPAC sessions.
Trustees have grappled twice before
with the attendance changes but each
time have sent the matter to the
commission for hearings and possible
compromises.
The serious concern bas persisted that
enrollments at Dana Hills are growing
steadily and forcing the relatively new
campm: to the saturation level. On the
other band, San Oemente1s student
population is remaining somewhat static.
Other matters on tonight's board
agenda include a bid by Dana Hills high
school students for t""O board members
to join a committee to discuss an open·
campus policy. San Clemente High pupils
won the privilege early this year in a
(See GROWTH, Page Zl
T ee1i Diver Dies
l1i Bed of Kelp
AVALON , (UP!l -A 16-year-old
Calamesa· scuba diver drowned Swnlay
when he became entangled in a bed of
kelp while swimming off Catalina Island.
The victim,· Joel A. Szukala, was
swimming about 10 feet below the
water's surface with a friend, Robert
Chase, 16,, of Big Geiger Cove, authorities
said, when he became entangled in the
kelp and bis air hose was ripped off.
Chase shared his air supply with
Szukala ror a time, sheriff's deputies
said, but when the air supply ran out, he
went for help. When rescuers reached
Szukala, he was dead.
o NE soLITARY AD Ensenada . Race
SOLD EVERYTHING
Fastest • Ill
Ono ::id -six sales. That, in a few
\vords is, tho story or a "few words, In
the right place:· anothtr successflll
Daily Pilot classified ad. Here It Is:
120" SOFA , S250: love seat, $50,
TV console. $75: din rm set1 $150;
12' bOllt w/mrt. & lrlr., $250.
MEC reloader, $35. (Phone No.)
The eel originally was published just
one weekend ond sold all six Item s li sted
in it. ot oourse the advertiser was
hBPPY! You 'll be happy with resullS, too.
i( you just put "a rew woflls 1rl the right
, pince'' -In Dally Pilot clwifleds. Dial
the direct line : 642-56711.
. •
By ALMON LOCKABEY
IHHlll •a&fM'
ENSENADA-Thc fastest and calmest
Newport to Ensenada race ln the 27.ycar
history of the event came to a close
today :1s half or the yachtsmen were on
thtlr way home.
The speed of the race was due to brl&k
westerly winds that prevaf1ed from the
Saturday start. to the finish early Swlday
morning.
Total calm prevailed In Ensenada from
about 8 p.m. Sunday as most of the non·
yachting crowd had lcll for borne or Were"
in Jail and many • yachtsmtn were
preparing to up anchor and start the long
uphill drag lo home ports .
Ensenada Police made a bust at the
Bahia Hotel aboot 6 p.m. Sunday lo quell
a disturbance. A dozen youths were
hauled away to jail but none of them was
connfct.ed wilh the yacht race.
Ensenada and Newport Ocean Sailing
Association officers said today there
have been no prob1ems compared to the
near riot conditions of last year.
There were relaUvely few problems 1n
Lhe race Itself. Two yachts were still at
sea early loday but had been. accounted
for. They hod overshot En5enada and
were beaUng their way baek.
There were several minor colllalons
and one major one on the slatllng llne
Saiurday. The S7·1oot sloop Wings
collided with another on the starting line
and.. rammed a hole through its hull. The
damaged yacht was not kfentified.
Tho yacht Double D wblch had reported
she was taking on water soon after the
start repaired whatever damage was
responsible. and atarted the race two
hourt late and fln\'hed Sunday night.
First yachl lo finish shortly after ~
a.m. Surxtay was the cataram11n Seabird .
owned and skippered by Bob Hant! of
cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. Seabird was
also first lo flnlsll ~L year.
First single bull to finish, some '40
minutes Jater, wu the 62-foot sloop
Ragtime sailed by Sian Ml11tr and a
three-man Long Beach Yacht Club
Held ha. Caraeas
British singer Tom Jones is
~ing, held accountable !or an
altercation between his body·
guard ind a Venezuelan news·
man and is being detained in
Caracas. See story, Page 4.
Victim of Kidnap
Found on Coast;
Abductor Escapes
The kidnaping of a young Los Angeles
\li'Oman by an armed assailant ended
south of San Clemente over the weekend
when the 'victim's car ran out of gas
and was hit from behind.
But the kidnaper of 18-year-old student
Pamela Dawn Farmer managed to
escape in adjacent hilly areas ·and is still
at large.
Investigators for the San Diego County
Sheriff's office said the young woman
was abducted as she entered her car in
Los Angeles by a man armed "'ilh a
hand gun.
The young woman told officers she was
forced to drive south but as her car
passed San Clemente it ran out of fuel in
a traffic lane of the San Diego Freeway.
A car came upon the stranded vehicle
(See KIDNAP, Par,%)
History
syndicate.
Jack Baillie's NewsBoy, the perennial
lint ftnisher from Balboa yacht Club,
finished seventh this year. The ra ce
committee was s.till feverishly comp iling
handicap results today because of i
number of protests. The t r o p h y
presentaUon is scheduled late today.
'The flrsl 10 boalS lo finish : I. Seabin!
2, RagUme 3. Sirius ll, Bob Lynch,
Newport Harbor Yacht Club 4. ri1aloma,
Jack Swart , Orange Coast College 5.
Soliloquy, Ken Burns, SMYC 8. Anitra,
Fred Preiss, PMYC 7. NewsBoy a. Lani
Kai (cetamaran) .dartln Crumrine,
Balboa Yacht Club 9. Serena, Steve
(See ENSENADA, Page II
Action Eyed
Until :Plan
Gets Okay
An extension of the freeze on building
applicatiOns will be considered Tuesday
at the first joint meeting of the San Juan
Capistrano Council and P 1 a n n in g
Commission.
City Planner David J . Smith is seeking
the extension until after the city's new
i:eneral plan is adopted and rtlated
ordinances are approved, a ti{De period
lhat would last unut Ille end of
September .
The m<eting wl!J beglli at 7 p.m. In the
council chambers and will include a
presentation on the status of current
development in the city and how it
relates to the recent Petaluma decision.
The Petalwna decision is a court case
which detennined that a city cannot put
numerical limitations on the number of
homes built each year and control growth
in any way except through zoning and by
meeting market demands.
The city planner believes that as long
as market needs are bein~ met. a
moratorium is legal and not u1 conflict
with the Petaluma decision.
In a report to council and commission,
Smith says there are currently a
potential 6,081 conventional and mobile
home unit s in San Juan Capistrano.
Those ready or occupied number 3,950
and the others, Which are in various
stages of approval, are adequate to serve
housing needs until 1977.
"The city is and will continue to
provide housing based on a rational
market until the year 1977 without the
approval of new subdivisions," said
Smith. "In planning staff's opinion, this
growth would countennand arguments
against a deferral ot applications based
upan the recent ruling i n v o I v i n g
constitutional rights made in lhe
Petaluma case. This position would hold
if the deferral were lifted about eighteen
months before the demand overrode
supply. However, the market must be
constantly monitored to insure lhat the
demand factor is not miscalculated."
Smith said it takes 18 months to
process and construct a new tract. He
said the city can anticipate tremendous
pressures in spring of 1975 to approve
(See FREEZE, Page %)
Oraage Coat
Weather
It'll be slightly warmer Tuesday,
according to ·the weather service,
v.i tb mostly sunny atternoons in
the inland portions of Orange eoon.
ty. Highs at the beaches in the
mid"°5 rising lo the low roa ~ land.
INSIDE TODA V
Skyscrapers around the world
are changing tlle weather. ao-
cordfng to a group of scie11tists.
Tht~ act a..s mouniaim, which
confuses the .wind and rain. Ste
1tory and pholo Page 4.
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'
t:t DAIL V PILOl -SC MOl'lday, M•y 6, 1974 -----
D1Hr f'ilol Sl11f f'llcl~ ORANGE COUNTIANS PLANNING JUST 'A LITTLE SUNDAY RIDE'
Jim Richardson, Linda Thorpe Plan Transcontinental Trek
Two ,Coi1nty T_railhlaze1·s
To C1·oss U~S. on Bikes
By WILUAl\f SCllH.EIBER
Of lllf 01Jlr f'Uot Sl1fl
Linda Thorpe and Jim Ri chardson of
Sa nta Ana have planned a little bike ride
this summer -3,500 miles across the
continental United States.
They "'ill be the first official riders to
traverse the proJ)Osed Trans-America
Bicycle Trai l from the coast of Oregon.
through the nation's heartland and
ending in \\'ashington, D.C.
The f\\'O young Orange Countians \viii
blaze a trail that organizers of the
nationa l bicentcnn\al celebraUon hope
v.·ill be follovo'cd by mill ions o( other
An1ericans during the IO-year, 200th
birthday party starting in 1976.
"The trail is just on paper ri ght nO\\'
and voe \\·ill mostly be using established
back roads through small towns," said
Richardson, a 27·year.(lld student at
Pcpperdine School of La\v. -
"\\·e hope to generate so1nc interest in
long.distance biking as recreation.'' he
said. ··Eventually \\"c"d like io have a
system of hostels along the route like
they have in Europe ."
During their long journey -\\·hich vdll
be made aftoard a J(}..speed taodem bike
starting ~lay 28 -Richai:dson and :\tiss
Thorpe "111 be promoting a program
called "Bi kccentennial. ''
The Bikccentcnnia\ has been
sanclioned b\' the natio nal bicenlennial
commission ·as onc means to bring
Americans closer to their land.
"The hope is that the tra il can be
ready for the centennial celebration ,"
said J\Iiss Thorpe, a 22·ycar.(lld Long
Beach Stale University geog r a p h y
studen t. "\\'hat better \\'ay to sec and
srnS{' Ameri ca than by riding across it
on a bike."
Europe when America is really ideal for
it," said Miss Tho rpe.
The route followed by Bikecentennial's
cross country trail \\'iii take the tWo·
riders through the states of Oregon,
Idaho. \Yyoming, Colorado, Kansas.
Missouri, Illinois, Kentucky, Arkansas,
West Virginia, Virginia and the District
of Colombia.
"Eventual!;'. "·e hope to have a link
running from Southern California , across
the desert and tying into the main trail in
Colorado." Richardson said. "For those
who don't like dcsf:rt riding, they can
skip il by riding the train."
The trip planned by Richardson and
~Uss Thorpe will take about 76 days at a
pace of SO miles per day. Along the way,
they 'will stay in the homes of local
residents or camp out.
"When we originally got the idea, we
\rere planning to do it in 30 days,'.'
Richardson said. "The record is 13 days,
six Mu.rs set last year."
The tandem bike they \\ill ride should
average around 15-20 miles per hour -
except \\'hen they hit the Rocky
j\.1ountains.
··1 expect "·e'll see a lot more scenery
\\'hen v.·e hit the upgrad es," Richardson
said.
lie said ?-.liss Thorpe has the best long·
haul stamina of the t"·o but he is better
on hills.
"Bet\reen us, \re should make it," he
said ..
They are obviously confident because
they will have no backup units following
them -only themselves, one bicycle,
some camping gear and a few spare
tires:
The lrip \viii cost about $1,500 and the
i1vo riders had planned to volunteer 1he
costs <is \\'Cl! as their time. ,
Coast City
Has Backing.
By WIWAM SCllf.E1BER
01 11" 0•111 l'ilOI $1ttt'
Consultants for Lhe Orange County
Transit District recommended today the
Orange Coast clties o! Huntington Beach
and r,owitain Valley be placed in a toi>
priority category for imple1ncntalion of
Dial·A·Ride bus servi ce.
The door·to-des1ination bus service
could be started in the west county cilie!
by July of 1975 if lran!il directors
approve a final priority list at their June
3 meeting.
Dr. r.1arcel 1.obrak, consulting engineer
from DAVE Systems Inc., said a total of
eight ~y cities me1 the criteria for
immediate t:>ial·A-Ride service.
Besides Huntington Beach a n d
Fountain Valley. no other Orange Coast
co1nmunities \terc ranked nea r the top of
the priority list.
It had been thought n Dial·A·Ride
service area '~·ould be in1ple1nentcd soo n
in ttie Saddleback Valley area· but ap--
parent!y, other areas wt-re deemed to be
in greater need of !he scrvic right a1vay.
Exparu;ion of the service. which is
already operating in the city of La
llabra, will cost about $l.6 n1illion. of
v.·hich $1.3 million 1\'ill be CO\'ercd by a
grant from the federal Urban ,\lass
Transit Authority fUhlTA ).
According to 1.obrak, a key to installing
the new systems will be the success of
failure of negotiations \~·ith tlie cities
themsclvC!'I.
Under the regulations of the transit
district the cities \1•ill have to come up
"'itha 33 percent share of the system's
operating costs. If they choose to
contribute less. the sys1en1 ,~·ould be cul
back accordingly.
Highest priority for the se rvice 11·as
given to the citi.es of Oran ge and Villa
Park. "'hich comprise two of 27 possible
Dial·A·Ride service areas in the ·county.
Those cities oould have the service in
operation by lhe end of Ibis year.
Next on the consult ant's list is the city
of Brea which \\'OU Id be an extension of
the existing La Habra sys tem and "·ouJd
be operating by JI.larch of 1975.
Huntington Beach and Founta in Valley
arc in the third and fourth spots on the
priority li st of five service areas.
Huntington Beach v:ould be served by
June of 1975 and Fountain Valley by the
end of summer in 1975.
The final Oial·A Ride service area on
the list is a combination of Buena Park.
Cypress and La Palma, to be served by,
late 1975.
Zobrak estimated that 70 new buse s
v.111 be needed to expand the service to
all the priority areas.
Zobrak said the pri«itics he came up
with were based on a complex rating
system.
He said such things as the percentage
of aged and young people livin.; in an
area , the percentage of people without
autos, the percentage of people with only
one car , the amount of existing bus
service and expected D i a l • A • R i d e
patronage were coosidered.
A key factor appeared lo be the
exi sting fixed·route bus service per 10,000
people in a particular area.
7.obrak said any area with less than 2.5
miles of bus routes per 10,000 people v.·as
put in a top priority category.
This appeared to be one major reason
the south county was left out of the high
priority classification.
1.Dbrak said the lowest mileage in the
south county v.·as in li-1i.ssion Viejo with
3.58 miles per 10,00J people.
The city of Irvine which could
ultimately have three Dial·A·Ride service
areas has the highest bus mileage in the
county at 13.25 miles per 10.000 people.
Transit directors agreed tc> hold a
special public hearing on 11ay 13 in Santa
Ana City Hall to detemtlne if the
priorities named by the consultant will
satisfy the general public.
Richardson said the trail 1\'ill never
actually be a paved route across the
counlry. 11c said the goal is to establi sh a
siring or camping areas and hostels
along the chosen route for riders to use
on bicycle ca mping trips.
First of Nine Parts
"Right no"'· all our young people
interested in this kind of riding go to
OIANGICOAST
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Coastal Panelists Okay
Plan's Ma·rine Element
By CANDACE PEA RSON
01 tilt DiU1 Piiat Sltfl
The marine element-the first part of a
nine part coasta l master plan-was
approved 10 to I today by the South
Coast Regional Zone C o n s e r v ;:i t i o n
Com1nission in Long Beach.
The docun1rnls "'ill now be sent to the
state coaslal con1 mi sslon in San
Francisco.
There planners v.•lll lry to co mbine it
"'ifh simllar efforts from five other
regional commissions .
1\ public hearing on lhe statc\Yide
rnarinc clement has been scheduled for a
111·<Kfay meeting in Los Angeles JWle 4
and 5.
The \'Ole today came one week alter
1hc second public hearing on the marine
element. The commission v.·as supposed
10 vote last week but C{)mmlssloner
James llaycs of Los Angeles asked for
the delay because he'd missed the
mornJng session.
Commissioner Jton:ild Caspers, Orange Count~·s Pift h District supervisor, at
that fime suggested nn unofficial straw
vote lo sec if the dr11ft report would pass
without h1.9 pr('.~ence today.
The straw vote .!ihowed nine In favor,
t\1·n again~! and one abstention-Hayes.
Bur commissioner Louis NoweJJ a Lo!
Angeles city councllnian, was the ~Te no
'
vote today. Carmen Warschaw, who last
v.·eek said she opp<>sed the report, today
voted for it as did Hayes.
Caspers v.·as absent. There was no
discussion before the vole was taken.
The marine element recommends
establi shment of a marine park preserve
along the unincorporated coasUine beteen
Corona de! Mar and Laguna Beach, a
public park at Crescent Bay Point in
Laguna Beach and a public overlook at
Dana Point.
It also puts a high priority on the
re!loratton and preservation of Upper
Newport Bay and Balsa Chica ltlarsh ln
lfuntington Beach.
Other proposed policies ere:
-Increased educational efforts in the
tidal areas along Doheny.
-Federal water quality standards
c.alllng for seeondary waste water
treatement by Hm must be met.
-All remaining estuaries and wetlands
be prestrved.
-Fees be charged ror damage from
thermal,"Waste water and other pollution
to finance marine research.
-All existing marinas must provide
ernucnt dlscllarge syttems and ne.w
marinas must have discharge hookups
for boats.
-Dredging In estuaries would be
prohlblled unless absolulely n.....,,ry
!or Ille public welfare.
f
MAJOR WINNER -\\'inning one of the top trophies in the Ense-
nacla yacht ral'e was t.he llangcr 29 sloop. Saltshaker. with Bob Boyes
of ,i\nacapa Yacht f'lub at the heln1. The boat won the !t.1idget Ocean
Racing 1'"1eet Class l\ division for lhc Coast Guard perpetual trophy.
J1il11 15 Tabbed
J11dge Sets Reinecke Trial
Date oil Perju1·y Cha1·ges
WASHINGTON (APi - A July IS tria l
date \1•as set today , for California Lt.
Gov. Ed Reinecke on prrjury charges
stemming from the ITT case.
The action by U.S. District Judge
Barrington Parker indicated the court
\\'ill tum do"·n pending motions by
f{einecke to dis1niss the indictmt'nt or.
fa iling that , to nio\'e th e trial lo
California.
Reinecke, a leading contender for
California 's Republican gubernatorial
nomination, "'as indicted by a \Vatergatc
grand jury_ April 3 on three C{)unts of
lying before a Senate c<>mmitte<>.
Trial had been set for l\.1ay 13, but
Reineckes lawyers ask:ed !or the delay
\\'t).il~ the change of venue motions and ot~er matters \\'ere handled .
l~eineckc originally had pressed fnr a
speedy trial to have the matter settled
Traffic Signals
For Intersection
Fi1ially Oka)·ed
After fou r years of picas from
concerned businessmen in Capistrano
Beach, a count;.i official announced today
lhat tra ffic signals at Doheny Park Road
and VictoMa Boulevard will be a
certainty sometime in July.
And Pifth District Supervisor Ronald
Caspers admitted that ' · person a l
intervenlion by a supervisor" finally
achieved what four yea rs of formal
correspondence did not .
The signals -long deemed a necessity
for the busiest crossing in the colony's
shopping village -are expected to be
complete within about t"·o months no\11
that legal snarls are over.
Caspers blamed probate proceedings
on a parcel of land needed for the
!Mtallation as the latest reason for
delays.
Victoria Boulevard is the main access
route to the lowlands of the convnunity
from the residential areas in the
Palisades.
Caspers said that after r e c c n t
discussions with resid ents and leaders ln
lhe business conununity (the chamber of
commerce has led the fight for th elightsi .
he then began a series or ta1ks with the
county road department.
"I have learned through experience."
the official said, "lhat occasionally the
pe rsona l intervent of a sup1•rvil'Or
in these matters is the best way to speed
th ings up."
Caspers admittl'd that the crossroads
"is a very busy intersection and
presently there are not enough controls
to prevent traffic snarls." .
11c added tl)at conditions tor mnny
years have been "a haza rd to motorislS
and pedestrians alike."
llc said he and fellow supervisors pJBn
to rev/e\v and probabl y approve the
signaJ plans on May 21 and soon
thereafter bids \Yill be sought for the
installation.
The lights, replacing a two-way stop
deemed Inadequate by local residents,
should be in full operation by Jul~',
Caspers proml$ed.
From Page 1.
GROWTH • • •
separate bid.
T~·o summer school pilot projects, high
school ditch days at Oana !tills a.nd field
days at Capistrano School, al.so are on the
schedule for dlscwlon and trustee
action .
before the California primary elections
June 4.
J{eincckc v.•as one of the principal
forces beh ind a decision to hold the 1972
REINECKE, FLOURNOY SPLIT
PARTY ENDORSEMENTS,
Story, Page 5 -----Republican National Convention in San
Diego. The convention later was shifted
to !\iiami Beach, Fla.
The indictment charged Reinecke v.•ith
giving false statements to the Senate
Judic.iary Committee about when he first
told fo rmer Atty. Gen. John N. ?<.titchell,
who was-Nixon's 1972 cam paign
manager, a~ a $400.000 ofter from the
Sheraton Corp. to underwrite the San
Diego c<>nvention.
Reinecke was accused of lying when he
said he did not tell Mitchell about the
of£er until after favorable settlement of
an antitrust action against the
In~ri:~t~a~Te!ephonc & Telegraph Co.,
parent J:l>ffipany of Sheraton.
The grand jury also accused Reinecke
of lying when he said his first discussions
of holding the convention in San Diego
eame in a social ga thering of San Diego
eitizens in \Vashington in April 1971 .
In other court papers. the special
prosecutor's ofricc has said the first such
talk \\'as bct .... ·cen Reinecke and then
White flouse chief of staff It R.
Haldeman. Tt)c dale of the aUcged
discu ss ion \\•ith ~faldeman has not been
disclosed by the special prosecutor's
office.
Reinccke·s testimony before l h c
Judiciary Comn1iltce in April 1972 can1e
during henrings over the nomination of
~hard G. Kl eindienst for attorney
!(t'ncra l. Kleindienst was confirmed but
later resigned .
~-
Fro ha Page 1
KIDNAP • • •
and hit it from behind , officers said.
No ont? was injured in the crash, b.Jt
,:<.ti ss F'anner managed to flee from the
vehicle and her abductor, anned with a
pistol. ran into the hills.
Officers said the suspect v.·as described
as a male Negro ln his mid-30s. He wore
an Afro-style haircut , a black. leather
jacket and blue denim pants.
Junior College
Offices Burned
SACRAMENTO CAP) Tho
treadq ua rt rrs office for Clllifomia's jun-
ior colleges l\115 hit by a lire early this
morning that caused an estimated $70,000
damage. authorities reported .
The fire at the California community
colleges headquarters, located in the
downtown area. broke out at l :M a.m. It
tbok 40 firemen about half an hour to put
It out.
f"rotn Pase J
FOUND ...
block• from lh• Wiison apartment,
simply pulled M adyenturous prank lt)at
got out of control.,
lnves!lilltor• ,.Id Alter w•lklng home
from school ~'rldoy \vllh her younger
sister Sarah Jane, 7, that Kimmie and
her friend decided It would be fun lo
spr:nd the weekend together. ~
F'rorn Page J
:ENSENADA. • • ...
Rrugg , SCCVC 10. tr11I tc:ia. Vic Stem .
Scnl Beach \'ncht Club.
Unoffi cial handicap winners: Prtsfdenr
o( Mexico Trophy 10ct11n nachlng·DI
Cohort. ~1ilt Voiicl. llllYC: l1rr~ldent of
U.S. Trophy \PllH F·FI l~anlpsh1rc HOSl'.
Ocnnis llurnetl . SSSC; U.S. St·t>rciary of
State 'PllHF·IJ1 C1u11l>ria, Hi I I
Larson . J>VYC: U.S. Sccretarv of Navy
(P!IT(f'.A) Vivn Cruz. 'l'ony Cruz. CYC.
C:ovi•rnor of B11j:1 Califorr1la 1P/fl{F·C 1
Serena, Al t'x Vnn!Jykc, Ll:IYC; ~loyor of
N<'1vpor·t Bi"a('h ! l"IJHl•'·1~1 P11C'ifica. Stn11
\l'illls, SL)YC : Sl'Cl'l'l.'.ll'Y or For<>ig11
Heltlllons !OC'·C) l-'ron1olion. : ·arshnll
neck. B'i'C; 1i1cxic•ln &.·cre!ttry or Stat1•
~OC·Bl Knrl JI . flic k l\('lton , l..A YC .
<;ovl'rnor of C'~1 tlfornia !OC·A 1 Shrtmrock .
Rnv !)1snev. CYC : U.S Co<1s! (iuat<i
1 \l'oltF·A I · Saltshaker. Uob Uo y t' s.
A1111cH11il 'i'acht Cl ub: ,/l.'ff Dl'aver
<C ruising Club of A1n~ricaJ J>arndox .
'font Arrnstr1lng, CYC:.:: Emigh family
~lC'mOrial Trophy (r-.·IORF·B l l~ood
Times. Crane ond Sn111h. • ·c.
Fro111 Page J
FREEZE ...
ne\\' npplir:11io11s.
The Petal urna dccislon s!.att..'d that a
citizen's conslitutiontll "right to trnvel "
\1·as l'lolated i( a c·ity h11d nun1crical
1;ro1t.'lh 1in1itations. City !\tanager Donald
G. \Veidner said !he dC'cislon 11·ns very
i1nportant to San Juan Capistrano
because it ind icn ted a dircclion the city
should not l:lkc. Ile Sllid the Rcmapo.
t\.Y .. theory of gro Y:th lin1itation by
prot.'iding city services to one area al a
linH•, \\'as a more legally defensible
position, but he docs nol believe it
adequate for San Juan.
Sn1ith believes lhe adoption of the ne w
general plan will insure gro"•th ln an
orderl y manner. He expects to receive all
of the elements by July 29 and has
tentatively set Sept. 17 as the date or the
formal public hearing on the total plan.
\llhi\e the moratorium affects new
d"evelopments in the city, it also limits
commercial growth. Bul Smith believes
It.at based on current ~nd approved plans
enoug h slores are developed to serve lhe
consumer base In Sa n Juan' Capistrano.
"The approval of commercial plans
docs not provide sales·tax revenues to
the city -sales do," he said fn his
report. "The commercial market is not
as artificial as the housing market. A
commercial development usually docs
not build on speculation and assumed
need. The city has an obligation to
consider the public interest as well as
private interests and it does not
necessarily serve lhe public interest lo
have mo re square footage approved than
can be reasonably built and used."
Also on the agenda will be a
presentation by Walter Richardson and
Associates on the use of 1,800 acres of
land behind the San Juan Hills Country
Club. Plans for future deve lopment will
. be d.lscussed and approval o! concepts
sough t from the city council and
commission.
Border Officers
Round -Up Many
l\'1 ex ica11 Aliens
Despite another siege of heavy freewa y
traffic. immigration officers at the San
Onofre cheC:kpoint logged another large
weekend of alien arrests and the
migration continued through early today.
Spokesmen said the tr::iditional
roadblock had to be called orr Sunda y as
returning trafric on freeway lanes n1adc
it impossible to halt all four Janes for
routine searches.
Nonetheless, more than 300 aliens \\'ere
detained by officers staked out to
observe passing cars.
The roadblock resumed lnte Sunday
and smugglers then changed lheir tactics
by stoppi ng short of the checkpoint and
dump ing aliens along the Freeway.
Thal maneuver forces the immigrants
to cross freeway lanes or hop fences for
a hike upcoast through Camp Pendleton
and the beach areas.
Eighty-five had been picked up since
midnight as they tried to sneak past the
checkpoint on fool, of!lce.rs said.
Indonesian Oil
Find Reported
JAKARTA (UPI) -The first major oil
fi nd in fndone sla this year ha! been
made off the jungled coast of \Yest lrian,
oil ofncials said today.
They said the strike v.•ns made by
Phill ips Pctrolcun1 Co.. Cone c o
(Continental Oii of Indonesia ) and AGIP,
the Jta1ian State oil company, working
jointly with the Pertt1mlna oil concern of
Indonesia.
lt was only the second major oil find in
\Vest Jrian, about 2,000 miles from
Jakarta.
"Tills Is the first offshore slrike (this
year) off Wes t Jrlan and the first for
Indonesia th.ls year. lt was unexpecttd
and we hope it will lead to more," 1U1
elated Pertamlna o(llclal told UPI.
'The o!Ddal 1ald Ute now of oil from
the well. 5,880 feet down on a mloccne
bank about 300 yard., off the coast, was
12,186 ban-els per day.
Town l\teeting Slated
The Town lfall Anoc:latlon of San Juan
Capistrano, an organlzalkm tha t focuses
on current Issues in the dty, wilt meet
,_hursday, at 7.;4$ in Marco Forster
Junior High llbl'llry.
New members are welcome.
j
.. " ..
" ~ b " 5 W ~~ I ~ l~ " n A
" N ". "' '" '' l'I
!I J ii
N "" 5'«
f
.-,.
Monday's
Closing Prices
,.,,Ol'd.ty, May 6, l!J74 SC o.-.Jl v PI LOT , I
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
'
--------
Year's High-Lows
Appear Every Saturday
NEW YORK (UPJ) -Stock prices declined in some of
the dullest trading o( the yenr on the J'.;ew York Stock EX·
change ~tonday In an at1nosphcrc of pessimis1n over rising
interest raleri.
The l)ny,• Jones lndustrul\ nvcrage. recovering a bit
from earlier '~·cakncss. was orr 1.25 to 84-1.65 n11n11!e$ be·
tore the close. The index \i;ss more lhan seven poi11t~ Jowcr
1n the morning, but analysts l'OU!d ftnd nothing in the news
lo explain later buv1ng.
Standard & 11'oor's 500-stock lndex had dropped 0.31 to
90.98. Declines outnumbered advances by about clght·t~rtvc.
among the mort: than 1,701 issues traded.
Sales at the close tot:iled approximately 9.500.000 shares,
compart-d wi th 11,080,000 !iharcs the previous session.
•
LOS Al'>G ELES (UP I) -
Two men snatched a woman's
purse containing $12 near the
UCLA campus in \Vest\\'ood
early Saturday. then shot the
woman's husband lo death
\\'hen he tried to get 1t back,
poll~ said.
Dead of a single gunshot
wound or 1he chest was Carlos
Vagara , 32.
Police said the Incident
began a£ter Vagara, his wife,
Susana. and another woman
left a cafc shortly after
midnight and \\·ere approached
by two men .
One or the me n grabbed
l\trs. Vagara's purse andJ
turned to run. Her husband
lunged for the purse and the
second drew a .22-caliber
revolver and shot him.
The men fled on foot and
police late:r round the woman's
purse. containing $12, and the
revolver in a nearby trasbcao.
Boy's Foiles
~
Lose Suit
REDWOOD CITY (UPI) -
A jury has ruled In fitvor oC
Sa n ~fateo County and a
shertfl's deputy defendants tn
n $21;11 .000 suit ror the wrongful
death of a 1$-year-otd youth.
The )"OUth, Gregory ll'hllt.
t.lenlo Park. was shot and
killed In Mar<h 1m· ..
officers pursued him on foot
from a stolen car.
'The boy's parents brought
the damage sw l •iainsl lhe
00\ltl\)' and depuly Larry
Brlnghunt. %9, who w a 1
clenrtd of criminal cha.ries.
\ •\ •
'
.......
GRAND OPENING·
Tops in ~Qps @) F MIRRORS J u \\~t\ions of Bt?/!J E
_Marjoe: Acting_ Co~es Easy
By Associated Press
The follO\\'ing at<'\
Billboard's hot record bits for
the week ending ~lay 11. as
they appear in next week·s
issue of Billtx>ard n1agazinc.
HOT SINGLES
I. THE LOCO.MOTION
Grand F'unk. Capital
2. THE STREAK -Ray
stevcns. Barnaby
3. DANCING MACHIXF. · -
The Jackson 5. ~·Totown
4. TIIE ENTERTAINER -
l\rarvin lfamlisch. ri1CA
5. BENNIE & THE JETS -
Elton John. ~1CA
6. 11-fE SIIO\V ~!UST GO
ON -Three Dog Ni.itht.
Dunhill
7. TUBULAR BELLS ·-
Mike Olrifield. Atlantic
8. TSOP-~IF'St:l. <'olu..,hi:"t
9. I'VE BEEN S"'ARr"HIN'
SO LONG -Chica,:o.
Columbia
10. MIDN!GIIT AT THE
OASIS -~!aria 1\.1uldaur,
lteprise
TOP LPS
!. THE STING
Soundtrack. l\JCA
2. CAT STEVENS -Budriab
& The Chocolate Box . A&rit
3. JOHN DE~"\rER
Greatest !~its. RCA
By BOB THOMAS
LOS ANGELES !AP!
\\!(NG Band "Preach.ing is \'ery much a.lin 5 -On lhe Run, to acting. Billy Graham "·ould
Apple make a marvelous actor. In
8. ELTON JOHN -Goodbye fact. he is."
Yellow Brick Road, ?.!CA 9. ?i!IKE OLDFIELD _ This was the somewhat
Tubular Bells, Atlantic cynical assessment of Marjoe
pants. When he was 7, Warner radicalism al caHfomia State
~ros. had vlsl~ of grooming Un1versity at San Jose, he
him as ,a latter-<lay Shirley de<lde<I lo lace his sermons
Temple. Marjoe's dreams of , with antiwar talk. portraying
the acting life were shattered Christ as a revolutionary. It
When his parent.s turned down didn't work. ·
nontaxable,'' he remarked.
"The company buys the
preacher his house, his car
and pays all his expenses.
Billy Graham can say he pays
the contract ofter. "l was telling them himself a small salary, but
something they didn't want to look at alJ the other benefil!
hear," he sa1·d.
R w
N ~i 0 E
I --"UNIQ UE DECORATOR ITEMS" '<1 L
T 410 £. Baiboa Blvd, E u · Balboa, Caiitomt. 9266 1 R
R y
f: 1714)673-.1230
"COME SEE YOURSELF" IO. DOOBIE BROTHERS-Gortner, onetin1e kiddie "IWASTHE wageeamerin
\\llat \Vere Once Vices Are evangelist turned actor. tie the family, and 1 was making
Now llabits. Warner Bros. ~·as explaining why he had an more money as a preacher,"
I he receives."
He GtJumed to fire and'.------------L------~-------..l..---~ brimstone and believed he was
on th'!' brink if superstardom,
""ith visions of his own
television sho1v and religious
easy lime moving from behind he said.
COUr-..'TRY SINGLES the pulpit to before the Marjoe continued as an
L IS IT \VRONG For 1Lovbing1 camera~ evangelist during his adult
you -Sonny James , Co um 8 "All my IUe I thought .of b t his d. ·11 · 2. COUNTRY BUJ\.lPKlN _ years. U 1&1 us1on grew. co rporation .
Cal Smith. ~fCA being an actor,'1 said Marjoe, "J never really believed \\'hat
3. NO CHARGE_ ~1e1ba 30. "~fy training for It was the I was preaching." he "TllAT CAN mean big
jfontgome-ry, Elektra best I could ha\'e had. admilled. After a taste of money, be(ause the income is
4. TH INGS A R E N ' T 1ipmml!liil!lii~~~~!iliiiii!i~l!i!~iiiii~mmiiiiiii ~', 'IO E M 1 "AFTER ALL, a preacher! HUI'.\'. UP H IR H~~~~ A~~'t;ol R -ere has to memorize and rehearse I\' ?Y-1 A DOS:
5. JEA7'1NIE MARIE YOU his lines. He has lo deliver CUT, Bl.OW 'N GO! them before a live audience \VERE A I.ADY -Tommy and keep theth listening. Ov£'~"eet. Dot We show you how to care !or ttiem step by step. Our
6. HO\"EV~!OON FEELIN' "l rehearsed more for my curl coaxing SCISSOR STYLES are all fuss-free and
_ Rn,. rla~k . Dot sermons than l do for an functio_n_at and are easy fo do as just shampoo! ln-
7. PUR~ LOVE _ Ronnie acting role. eluded are lamp ci.its. finger tumble cuts, Cu rling iro n jfi~li!"'. R/'A "I spent four or five hours a cuts .. blower cuts, wasti )owel dry, brust'\ 'n ftull cuts
8 Sl"~ri:;; KIND OF \VOMAN day memorizing new sermons, or s1mpte wast] and wear cuts. Ttiey are all SCIS-d 1 SORED. lake-care~l-voursell styles. Good for any
-F'a"f'" ''riu11rr l\f .. ~,.11 .. y .an tried them out early in age, any tialr, NO leasing, no rollers. no. pins. NO
· 9. WE SHOULD BE the week, when the audiences POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS. ALSO NO SET PER·
TOGETI-IER -Faren Young, were . smaller. Then I MANEN T WA'!/ES. YOU MAY NEVtR WANT TO
~fercurv tightened them up until I could SET YOUR HAIR AGAIN .
10. A VERY SPECTAL do ' them to perfection on
LOVE SONG -Charlie Rich, Sunday." JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING
Columbia '!'he youthful ~1arjoe became H · Bea h . 1 b . unt1ngton c , Fullerton
EASY LISTENING a minor ce e rity with hts 0564 H~• • ... Oii "'· lOS N. Harbor lf'f4 1. TSOP-l\tF'SB. Coltt,....bia soul-saving, a t tract in g 968-3535 879-3863
PHARMACY
WE QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME
-CHECIC THESE SUPEI SALE SPECIALS-S1111. •11.~ Our •tt. l"rk• I ~1.yla~ta Antacid, 12 oz .... : ....................................... $1.98 $1.39_
Colgn c Toothpaste, 7 or. ........................................ $1.10 -95c
Kodacolor Ca1·1ridgl" Filn1, 12 Exp ......................... Sl.40 $1 .29
Old Spice After Shave Lotion, 4 az ................... ,. .... $2.00 $1 .75
Salt l"1 k•
$1. !9
80c
99c
$1.35
2700 E. Coast Hil!hw?.Y. at Fel"''P.~f.. Corona del Mar
AMP'LIE PARKING IN KUR
Howrs -9:30. •:OO Doll,
CIOMd S1111doyt ftd Holldoy1
644-7575
4. MARIA MULDAUR -
Reprise
2. Tlr~. EN~ERTAIN=R _ attention by perform in g " '~ · hil · Opt11DailylA.M.tolOP'.M.·Saf.Su119taSP'.M.
l\1;i,.vin Hamlisch. l\·fCA I _im~a~r::_n~a~ge~s_:•~·~e_is~tl~tl~i~n_'sh~o()lr~t ~~~~..;;~i!iii~~.;iiii~~~;,;;;;,;,;:;,,;;;.~~"""li'.~~~111111111111111111111111111111~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3. K-.:-:EP ON SINGING --1 -
Hf'len Reddv, Caoitol
5. CHICAQ.9 -Chicago VU,
Columbia
6. GRAND FUNK -Shinin'
On. Capitol
7. PAUL McCARTNEY &
Btirton Still
~n . IIospital
4. HELP l\fE -Joni
l\fitchell. Asvlum
5. l WON'T LAST A DAV
\VTTHOtrr YOU -Carpenter,
A&M
6. f'LL HAVE TO SAY l
LOVE YOU IN A SONG -
Jim Croce. ABC
7. OH VERY YOUNG -tllt
Stevenc:. A&l\f '
8. MIDNIGH.T AT TilE
OAStS _.:. l\taria l\Iuldaur,
Reurise ,
9. PIA!iO MAN -Billy J!)el.
Columbia
IO. ALL rs FAIR IN LOVE
-Barbra Slreisand. Columbia
-SANTA MONICA IUP!i -
ruchard Burton's stay in St.
John's hospital \viii be
extended another 10 days, a
friend says, until his broken
left hand heals and 2 bronchial
disorder is cleared up. I
The actor. wbo announced .-~----------~I an impending divorce from i
Elizabeth Taylor last \\·eek.
entered the hospital April 14
after completing his ne\v
movie, "The Klansman " on
location in Oroville. A
emon·s ~1iss Taylor remains in I seclusion at a Beverly Hills
hotel a few miles away and SPORTS\VEAR
has not visited her estranged I
husband. A spokesman for the I ' I actress said she will leave for WESTCLIFFPLAZAi 0ALBOA!StAND t
Monte Carlo to participate 1n a ~fi?=h 2!~~~ve. 1.
Red Cross gala with Grace I
Kelly later this n'IOllth. "---... -------!
FOR MOTHER'S DAY -
GIVE FABRICS
- because she loves beautiful
fashions. You won't find a nicer or
greater se lection anywhere at
FG ·s LOW prices.
Values to 2.00
Solt, lovely patterns and
colors • n Perm a Press
Polyester-Colton blend. lt's a
popular lash1on choice for
dresses. halte r tops and·-~
camisoles. 45 ' wide.
FLOCKED
SHEERS
1~!. 1~~ Values
to 2.50
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Sat 10-6PM
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Laguna Bea~h Today's Final
N.Y. Stock s
-VOL. 67, NO. 126, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 6, 1974 TEN CENTS
Coast Regional Agency Okays Marine Plan
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of 111.• Diii~ f'Jlot Slelt
The marine element-the first part of a
nine part coastal master plan-was
approved 10 I<> I today by the South
Coast· Regional Zone Conser v a tlon
Commission in Long Beach.
The documents will now be sent to the
state coastal commission in San
1''rancisc0.
There planners will try to combine It
with similar efforts from five other
regional cofnmissions.
A public hearing on the statewide
marine element has iJeen schE:(luled for a
two-day mectlng in Los P.ngeles June 4
and 5.
The \'Ole Joday came one week after
the second public hearing on the marine
element. 'Ille commission was supposed
to vote · Jast week but commissioner
James Hayes of Los Angeles asked for
the delay because he'd missed the
morning session.
Commissioner Ronald Caspers, Orange
Col.Ully's Fifth District supervisor, at
that time stl:ggested an unofficial straw
vote to see if the draft report would pass
without his presence today.
The straw vote sho·Ned nine in favor,
two against and one .abstention-Hayes.
But commissioner LouiS Np,well, a U>s
Angeles city councilman, was the sole no •
\'Ole today. Carmen Warschaw, who last
week said she opposed the report, today
voted for it as did Hayes.
Caspers was absent. There was no
discussion before the vote was taken.
The marine element recommends
establishment of a marine park preserve
along the unincorporated coastline beteen
Corona del f\-1ar and Laguna Beflch, a
public park at Crescent Bay Point in
Laguna Beach and a public overlook at
Reinecke Perjury Trial
Scheduled for July 15
Purse Sn.a tc lied
From Lagunan
A 7~year-0ld Laguna Beach
woman was thrown to the ground
and her purse stolen by two young
thugs near the ""Oman's Cyp~
Drive home in Laguna Beach Sat·
urday.
The daylight robbery netted the
men $11 cash. Police found the
woman's empty purse nearby.
Police said the woman was shaken,
but did not require medical
treatment.
The spunky victim of the crime
described her aasailantl to police
u "typical dirty long-haired
hippies."
Lagun.a Police .
. Seeki11g Mystery
Mugging Victim
A pool or blood and an anonymous
caller's report or a man being beaten
with chains and kicked as he lay in an
alley behind ·a tavern l';)daY perplel:ed
Laguna Be.a.ch detectives, unable to find
a victim to the crime.
PoUce searched the city and contacted
...,.1y hospitah following the reported
vicious mugging just after 1 a.m.
Saturday at Gavlota Drive and Cress
Street.
An informant who refused to identify
himself called police headquarters and
told officers he had witnessed the brutal
beating while waiting in his vehicle
nearby.
Lt. Al Olson and Patrolman Donnie
Abshler sped to the scene o( the crime
behind the Little Shrimp. 1305 S. Coast
llighway. They found a pool of blood on
the sidewalk, but no body.
The informant sakl he hAd watched t\vo
men repeatedly maul their prostrate
victim with chains and kick him. The
man's wallet was taken during the
attack. Del Gene Brooks speculated the
beating could have been delivered as part
of a "drug burn" or retaliation for 1 a
&exual advance.
Nea1·-drowning
Victim Critical
A 22-year-0ld Ontario man remained In
cr!Ucal candition today at the intensive
care unit of South Coast Community
Hospital alter a driving mishap end near-
drowning in Laguna's Diver's Cove
Sunday.
FAward S. Norris, was Alven extemol
heart message and artificial
resuscitaUoo at the scene by Laguna
B<aclt ureguaros and fire department
persooncl. Norris was found floating on lop of the
wattr and pulled 10 shore by an orr-<Iuty
Orange County Sheriff's deputy, Acting
Chief Guard Bruce Bairo '81d.
Baird said there Is no explin(ltion for
the mishap.
Clerks' St1·ike Ends
' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Alttr an a~mooth 1lrike. thL300 retail clerlc1 al
two San Francl>co Sears &!«es relum to
work today. -
•
•
Mi-ssing
Girl Found
With Friend
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of t11e Dell'Y 1"11.t Sl.rif
A litlle girl's unwise weekend visit with
a special 1ehool friend ended happily for •
Newport Beech pollce and her family
Sunday after her hostess' fathe r opened
his morning peper.
Kimberly Denise Wilson, 8, whose
disappearance was the number one story
on the front page, was playing happily in
the shocked man's home as a guest or his
little girl at the time.
'·He opened up hls Daily Pilot and
said" "Ooohhhhhh, no," Newport Beach
Detective Bob Hardy explained today,
The embarrassed father immediately
called police and Kimmie-as they call
her-was quickly reunited with Mrs.
Margaret Wilson, of 117 15th St., on the
Balboa Peninsula.
Investigators said the way the
Peninsula is laid oot was one partial
factor in the limited area searched by
police after the little girl was reported
mlsslng Fridey night.
"She suppooedly didn't have any
friends who lived beyond 15th Street,"
said Detective Hardy, one of several men
detal1ed overnight to the anxious search.
Homes of all known acquaintances
were checked.
"Those guys worked their tails of! .. ,,"
said one policeman when contacted for
progress on the hW1t for Kimmie, after
(See FOUND, Page !)
•
Fare Familiar ,
This voter flashes a familiar
smile as she cast her ballot
Sunday while voting in the
French presidential election at
her Riviera precinct. She is
movie actress Brigitte Bardot.
Ex-Supervisor Featherly
Dies of Cancer at Age 77
Former Orange C.Ounty supervisor C.
ti.I. "Cye" Featherly died Sunday in a
Santa Ana convalescent home after a
long battle with intestinal cancer. He was 77. -•
Featherly. who resigned his First
District seat in 1969 alter serving on the
board for 20 years, will be honored
Tuesday by Orange COunty's supervisors
who will adjourn the meeting in his
memory.
"This is a tremendous blow to all of
us," SupetVlsors' Chairman Ralph Clark
ONE SOLITARY AD
SOLD EVER YTHING
One ad -six saJes. 'lbat, in a rew
words ls, the story of a "rew words, in
the right place,'' another sucee~ful
Dally Pilot Classlfled ad. Here It Is:
120" SOFA, $250; Jove scat: '50.
'IV console. 175: din rm set, 1150;
12' boot w/mrt. & trlr., !250.
MEC reloader, 13$. (Phor\C No.)
The ad originally was pUbllshed Just
one weekend and IOld all slx items listed
in it. Of course the advertiser ~·as·
haPJ>Yl You 'll be happy wllh ,...u111, U>o.•
if you just ~t 11a few words In the right
plact" -In l>ally Pilot classUleds. Dial
the direct !loo : 642-54i78.
•
l'ommented today. "Cye was one or our
greatest public servants and it is good to
kno\V at this moment that his memory
will be perpetuated by the park that ~·as
named after him."
' Funeral services for A1r. Fealherly
have been scheduled for 3 p.m.
Wednesday in the \Vaverley Chapel or
l<'airhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana.
He is survived by his wife, Sue, and a
stepchild. •
Featherly, who was succeeded in the
First District seat by its present
occupant. Robert Battin, served as a
deputy sheriff in Orange County before
winning election to the board in 1949.
' A native of Wyoming, he talked
wbimsicaUy on his retirement of the way
In which he rode to Orange CoWlty on
horseback more than 50 years ago.
"l didn't have a Job to my name and I
couldn 't find anyone around here who
Wis willing at that time to give me one,"
he told his fellow supervisors.
Only Second District Supervisor David
Baker remains of \ht last board on which
~tr. Featherly served.
. Shazar Ho p italized
JERUSALEM (AP! -Former
l;<sldent Zalman Shazar ts in the
hopsital lor the ......i Ume In less than
two mooth!, bul his doctors soy his
condition Is good. ·
Shazar, Bl, w.. h<lspltal~ed ror a
gastrointestinal allmenl
'
Dismissal
Motion May
Be Denied
WASHINGTON (AP) -A July 15 lrial
date was set today for California Lt.
Gov. Ed Reinecke on perjury charges
stemming from the ITT case.
The action by U.S. District Judge
llarrlnglon ~rker indicetad the court
will tum down pending motions by
Reinecke to dismiss the indictment or,
falling that , I<> move the trial to
Calilornia.
Reinecke, a leading contender for
California's Republican gubernatorial
REINECKE, FLOURNOY SPLIT
PARTY ENDORSEMENTS,
Story, P1ge S
--,-----,-----
nomination. was indicted by a Watergate
grand jury April 3 on three counts of
lying before a Senate committee.
Trial had been set for May 13, but
Reineckes lawyers asked for the delay
while the change of venue motions and
other matters were handled.
Reinecke originally had pressed for a
speedy trial to have the matter settled
before the California primary elections
June 4.
Reinecke was one of the principal
forces behind a decision to hold the 1972
Republican National Convention in San
Diego. The convention later was shifted
to Miami Beach, Fla.
The indictment charged Reinecke with
giving false statements to the Senate
Judiciary Committee about when he first
told former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell,
who 'vas Nixon's 1972 campaign
manager, about a $400,000 offer from the
Sheraton Corp. to undeNTite the San
Diego coovenlion.
Reirtecke was accused of lying when he
(Sec REINECKE, Page %)
Police Probi11g
Four Burglaries
l 1i Laguna Beacli
Four burglaries including the theft or
$1 ,090 in gold jewelry from the A1idas
Touch, 1400 S. Coast Highway were
turned 'e'er to Laguna Beach police
detectives today for investigation.
Ralph B. MCConnell. f\.1idas Touch
owner, said a braz.en heist In his store
took place during the day Friday. A gold
A1exican coin valued at $350 and several
other articles of jewelry were taken from
a tocked showcase. ·
Two burglaries occurred on the same
block of Cypre;s Drive.
Richard B. Pope, 225 Cypress Drive
!<>Id officers two men fled ~gh the
back door of hi.s home as be and guests
entered the front Saturday night Pope's
television and stctto had been Wlplueged
for removal. Only $3 waa missing.
The men had removed , three Jou vered
windows to gain entry to {be residences. Anita R. Argratt of 2'IS Cypress,
reported the theft of her color tel evl!lon
~-orth $430, a juice extractor valued at
$120 and a roll of nlckela in a burKlary of
her home Friday.
llan>ld T. Bur!<>n, 29$4 Mountain View
reported the then or ~ cesh from hi~
home Sunday. Entry was made through a
sliding bedroom window, police believe: --
Dana Point.
It also puts a high priority on the
restoration and preservation of Upper
Newport Bay and Bolsa Ollca ~1arsh in
ltuntington Beach.
Other proposed policies are:
-Increased educational efforts in the
tidal areas along Doheny.
'T'Federal water quajity standards
calling for secondary waste water
treatement by 1977 must be ,met.
-All remaining estua ries and wetland s
be preserved.
-F'ces be char_ged 1or damage from
thermal, waste water and other pollution
to ffnance marine research.
-All exis1tng marinas must provide
effluent discharge systems and new
1narinas must )).ave discharge hookups
for boats.
-Dredging in estuaries would be
·prohibited unless absolutely neces.sary
(or the public welfare.
--MAJOR WINNER -Winning one of the lop trophies in the Ense-
nada yacht race was the Ranger 29 sloop Saltshaker, with Bob Boyes
of Anacapa Yacht Club al the helm. The boat won the Midget Ocean
Racing Fleet Class A division for the Coast Guard perpetual trophy.
Ensenada Racers Compile
Fastest Times in History
By ALlllON LOCKABEY
... ,.... lldltff
ENSENADA-The faste~t and calmest
Newport to Ensenada race In the 27-year
history of the event came to a close
today as half of the yachtsmen were on
their way home.
The speed of the race was due to brisk
westerly winds that prevailed from the
Satilrday start to the fini sh early Sunday
morning.
Total calm preva!Jed in Ensenada from
about 8 p.m. Sunday as most of the non-
yachling crowd had left for home or were
in jail and many yachtsmen wtre
preparing to up anchor and start the long
uphill drag to home ports.
Ens~nada police made a bust al the
Bahia Hotel about 6 p.m. Sunday to quell
a disturbance. A dozen youths were
hauled away to jail bt.!t none or them was
connected with the yacht race.
Ensenada and Newport Ocean Sailing
Association of!icers said today there
have been no problems-compared lo the
near riot conditions of last year.
There were relatively few prcblems in
the race itself. Two yachts were still at
sea early today but bad been accounted
for. They had overshot Eiisenada and
were beating their way back.
There were several minor rollisions
and one major one on ihe starting line
Saturday. The 37·foot sloop Wings
collided with another on the starting Hoe
and rammed a bole through Its hull. The
damaged yacht was not identified.
1be yacbl Double D which had reported
she was taking on water soon after the
start repaired whatever .damage was
respon sible and started the race two
boon late and finished Sunday night.
Lecture on Lesbians
AL UC l 1·v in e 1'uesd ay
"Everything Yoo Wanted to Know
•bool Lesbianism, But Were Afraid to
Ask" I! the Women's Month at UC Irvine
lecture program set for Tuesday,
Members of tbe Les~la~ Feminists of
Otange County will lead the penel·
discussion which begins at 1 p.m. in room
:l!2 Humanities Hall.
I
First yacht to [lnish shortly after 5
a.m. Sunday was the cataraman Seabird,
owned and skippered. by Bob Hanel of
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. Seabird was
also first to finish last year.
First single hull to finish, some 40
minutes later, was the 62·foot sloop
Ragtime sailed by Stan Miller arxi a
three-man Long Beach Yacht Club
syndicate.
Jack Baillie's NewsBoy, the perennial
first finisher from Balboa Yacht Club,
finished seventh I.his year. The race
committee was still feverishly compiling
handicap results today because of a
nwnber of protests. The trophy
presentation is scheduled late today.
The first 10 boats to finish: I. Seabird
2. Ragtime 3. Sirius 11. Bob Lynch,
Newport Harbor Yacht Club 4. l\laloma,
Jack Swart, Orange Coast College s.
Soliloquy, Ken Burns, S~1YC 6. Anitra,
Fred Preiss, PPt1YC 7. NewsBoy 8. Lani
(Sec ENSENADA, Page Z)
Weather
It'll be slightly warmer Tuesday,
according to the weather service,
with mostly swmy afternoons In
the inland portions of Orange Coun·
ty. Highs at the beaches in the
mid-&>s rising to the low 70s m.
taD<f.
INSIUF. T Olti\ l'
Sk11scroper1 oround the world
art chat1ging the weather, ac·
cording to a group of scie1ttists.
The11 act at mou11tah13, which
confuses the wi11d and rain. Ste
story and phoio Pagt 4.
L, M. _..,. 1
Ctlltw'llMI t C'9ulllff 11·,.
CM!k:s lf
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l.Mwt•W...t 1t ilhltl!Ct 1 .. tl
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A" LtlMltrt 11
'
• •
.
'
2 DAJLY PILOl LB Monday, May b, 1974
D•Ur .. Hot Sf•lf ""9to
ORANGE COUNTIANS PLANNING JUST 'A LITTLE SUNDAY RIDE'
Jim Richardson, Linda Thorpe Plan Transcontinental Trek
Two Co11nty Trailblazers
To C1·os s U.S. on Bikes
By 'VILUAi\1 SCHREIBER
01 IM D•Hr Pllo1 $1111
Linda Thorpe and Jim Richardson of
Santa Ana have planned a little bike ride
lhis swnme r -3.500 miles across the
continental United States.
They will be the first official riders to
traverse the proposed Trans-America
Bicycle Trail from the coast of Oregon.
1hrough the nation's heartland and
ending in Washington, D.C.
The two yoWlg Orange Countians wilt
blaze a trail that organizers ol the
national bicentennial celebration hope
will be followed by millions of other
Americans during tl'lc 11}.year, 200th
birthday party starling in 1976.
"The trail is just on paper right no\V
11nd y.·e will mostly be using established
back roads through smal l towns.'' said
Richardson. a 27-year-old student at
Pepperdine School of Lay.·.
"\Ve hope to generate some interest in
Jong-distance biking as recreation,., he
sa id. "Eventually v.·e'd like to have a
system of hostels along the route like
they have in Europe."
During 1heir long journey -y.•hich y.·iJl
be made aboard a JO-speed tandem bike
star.ting !ltay 28 -Richardson and ~1iss
Thorpe will be promoting a progran1
called "Bikccentcnnial."
The Bikecentenni:il has been
sanctioned bv the national bicent ennial
conunission ·as onc means to bring
Ameri cans rloscr to their land.
"The hope is that the trail can be
ready for the centennial celebration,"
said ~liss Thorpe, a 22-year-Old Long
Beach State University geography
student. "\\'hat better v.·ay to sec and
sense America than by riding across it
on a bike."
Richardson said the trai1 \Vill never
actually be a paved route across the
country. lfe said the goal is to establish a
string of camping areas and hostels
along !he chosen route for riders to use
on birycle camping trip.s.
"Right now. all our young people
interested in this kind of riding go to
F.urope when Ameri ca is really ideal for
it ,·• sz:id Mjss Thorpe .
OIAHGICOAST
DAILY PILOT
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The route followed by Bikecentennial's
cross country trail will take the · tv.·o
riders through the states of Oregon,
Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas,
f\.1issouri, Illinois . Kentucky, Arkansas.
\Vest Virginia, Virginia and the District
of Colombia.
"Eventually. y.·e hope to have a link
running from Southern California, across
the deSert and tying into the main trail in
Colorado." Richardson said. "For those
\\'ho don't like desert riding, they can
skip il by riding the train."
The trip planned by Richardson and
Miss Thorpe wHJ take aboot 76 days at a
pace of 50 miles per day. Along the "''ay,
they will stay in the homes of local
residents or camp out.
"\Vhen we originally got the idea, ~·e
\\'ere planning to do it in 30 days,"
Richardson said. "The.record ls 13 days,
six hours set last year."
The tandem bike they Y.ill ride should
nverage around -15-20 miles per hour -
exctpt when they hit the Rocky
f\.tountains.
"I eq>eet we'll see a lot more scenery
when v.·e hit the upgrades," Richardson
said.
He said Miss Thorpe has the best Jong·,
haul Stamina of the l\\'O but he is better
on hills.
"Between us, we should make it," he
said.
They are obviously confident because
they 11'ill have no backup units following
them -on~y themselves , ooc bicycle,
some camping gear and a few spare
tires.
The trip will rost about $1,500 and the
tv.·o riders had planned to volunteer the
costs as \VCIJ as their time ..
But the Orange County \Veight
\Vatcher's organization offered to hold a
fµnd·raising event at 2 p.m. ti.fay 18 at
Fremont Junior lligh in Anaheim .
It seems Miss Thorpe and Richardson
n1et for the first tlme over a \Veight
\Vatclwrs diet plate and lost a total of 94
pounds together.
From Page I
ENSENADA. ••
Kai (catamaran) -~1artin Crumrine,
Balboa Yacht Club 9. Ser('na, Steve
Bragg, SCCYC 10. Tmi Loa, Vic Stem,
Seal Beach Yacht Club.
Unorficial handicap v.·inners: President
of J\.fcxi~ Trophy {Ocean Ra-ching·D)
Cohort, to.11lt Vogel. HHYC; Pr~ident of
U.S. Trophy (PHRF·F'/ Hampshire Rose.
DeMis Burnett, SSSC; U.S. Secretary of
Stale (PHRF·D J Cambria, Bi 11
Larson, PVYC: U.S. Sec~tan• of Navy
(PHRF·A) Viva Cruz, Tony Cruz, CYC;
C"r0vernor of Baja California {PHRF·C)
Serena. Alex VanDyke, LBYC ; J\.1ayor of
Newport Beach (PHRF·B ) Pacifica Stan
\Villis. SDYC; Secretary of t~~relgn
Relations (QC.C) Promotion, J :arshall
Beck, BYC; f\.1exican Secretary of Staie
(OC·B) Kari II, Dick Kelton, LAYC;
Go\•cmor of California (0C.A) Shamrock
Roy Disney, ..CYC; U.S. 'Coast Guard
(i\10RF'·A) Saltshake r. Bob 8 o yes,
AMcapa Yacht Club; Jeff Deaver
(Crulslng Club of America) Paradox,
Tom Armstrong. CYC; Emigh r .. amily
?o.temorinl 1'rophy (MOR.F·lll Good
TimCJ, Crane end Sm.1th, ·c.
Snspccl Surrenders
LONG BEACH (UPI) -A Michigan
man wanted for questioning in the
5labhlng or a woman whose body w1s
round In a motel surrendered SUnday to
poll ....
-i
I
Coast City
Bus Service
Has Backing
By MLIJA!\1 scnr:E18ER
01 tht O.ltr '"Hot St1\1
Consultants (or the Orahge Cowtty
Tran.sit DistriC't recommended today the
Orange C.oast cities or Huntington Beach
and Fountain \'alley be placed in a top
priority category ror Implementation of
Dial-A·Ride bus servict.
The door-to-destination bus service
could be started in the y.·est county cities .
by July or 1975 if transit directors
approve a rmal priority list at their June
3 meeting.
Dr. Marcel 1.obrak, consulting engineer
from DAVE Systems Inc ., said a total of
eight county cities met the criteria for
immediate Dial-A·Ride service.
Besides Huntington Beach a n d
Fountain Valley, no other Orange Coast
communities were ranked near the top of
the priority list.
It had been thought a Dial·A·Ride
service area v.·ould be implemented soon
in ttte Saddleback Valley area but air
parently, other areas \Vf're deemed to be
in greater need of the scrvic right away,
Expansion of the service, wh.irh is
already operating in the city of La
lfabra, \Viii CQ7it about $1.6 m!Jlion , or
,~·hich $1.3 million will be rovered by a
grant from the fed<'ral Urban ~lass
Transit Authority (U~1TA).
According to :zobrak, a key to inS;talling
the ne\\.' systems "'ill be the success of
failure of negotiations \\'ith the cities
themselves.
Under the regula'tions of the transit
district the cities will have to come up
Y.'itha 33 percent share of the system's
operating costs. If they choose to
contribute less. the system y.•ould be cut
back accordingly.
Highest priority for the service y.·as
given to the cities of Orange and ... Villa
Park. y.•hich comprise tv.·o of %7 possible
Dial-A-Ride service areas in the county.
Those cities could have the service in
ope ration by the <'nd of this year.
Next on the consultant's list is the city
of Brea which v.·ould be an extension of
the existing La Habra system and v.'OUld
be operating by ?i.1arch of 1975.
lfunlington Beach and Fountain Valley
arc in the third and fourth spots on the
priorlty list of five service areas.
Huntington Beach would be s.el"led by
June of 1975 and Fountain Valley by the
end or summer in 1975."
The final Dial-A Ride service area on
the list is a combination of Buena P<1rk.
Cypress and La Palma, to be served by
late 1975.
Zobrak estimatro that 70 new buses
v.ill be needed to expand the service to
all the priority areas.
l.obrak said the priorities he came up
\vith "'ere based on a complex rating
system.
He said such things as the percentage
of aged and young people livin.; in an
area, the percentage of . people Y.ithout
autos, the percentage of people with only
one car, the amount of existing bus
service and e1pected D i a I · A • R I d e
. patronage v.·ere considered.
A key factor appeared to be the
existing fixed·route bus service per 10,000
people in a particular area .
Zobrak said any area with less than 2.5
miles of bus routes i:ier 10.000 people v.·as
put in a top priority category.
This appeared to be one major reason
the south county wa s left ou t of the h.igh
priority classification.
Zobrak said the lowest mileage in the
south county \\'as in Mission Viejo with
3.~ miles per 10,000 people.
The city of Irvine which could
ultimately have three Dial·A·Ride service
areas has the highest bus mileage in the
county at 13.25 miles per 10,000 people.
Transit directors agreed to hold a
special public hearing on ti.1ay 13 in Santa
Ana City Hall to determine if the
priorities named by the consultant voill
satisfy the general public.
Junior College
Of fice s Burne(l
SACRAMENTO (AP) The
headquart<'rs office for California's jun·
ior co lleges was hit by a fire early this
moming that caused an estimated $70,000
damage, authorities reported.
The fire at the California community
colleges headquarters, located in the
downtown area, broke out at 1:54 a.m. It
took 4-0 firemen about half an hour to pot
it out.
Three firemen received minor bruises
and sprains but \\'Cre not hospitalized,
said Sacramento City Fire Department
spokesman Stacy Cox.
. •
·, -
D•llr '"11•1 ll•tf ,....,.
DRAWING BY FIFTH GRADERS IN LAGUNA NIGUEL INCLUDED YELLOW SUBMARINE
Creative Essays On Occupations R•nging From A to Z Were Accompanied by Art Work
'
•• A1n •~e Qnbe Eater!)
Crotvu Valle)' Pupils Corne Up Wit1i Uuusulll Jobs
By lULARY KAYE
01 !tit Dilly Piiot Sltlf
"Hello. I'm an ice qube eater." wrote
Kevin Jt'ffries, an ima~inative speller, in
his latest creative writing assignment.
''My mishine eats ice and it ;ilso makes
it. Some times when you get a' drink and
some ice and only need a few pieces, you
say too yourself. \\'hat do I do \\·ith the
extra ice? \Veil, thats v.·hat my mishine
Spring Stor1n.
dose." continued 10-year~ld Kevin's
story. • '
Kevin's occupation ~ an "ice qube
eater" y.·as just one of 22 jobs the kids
ea1ne up with in Adrienne Ault's fifth
grade class at Crov.·n Valley School in
Laguna Niguel.
Each child drew a letter of the
alphabet out of a hat, and \l'as told to
''Titc an itnaginativc story about an
Coastal Areas Blasted
By Lightning, Thunder
A spring stonn complete \vilh lightning
and thunder blustered over Orange
CoUnty Sunday night. snapping Off po14·er
at nearly 10.000 homes.
1llough the coastaJ areas of Nev;port
Beach. Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach,
and San Clemente reported only light
rain. inland area.! had heavy rain for a
half-hour and some lightning damage.
Lightning st.ruck the M o u I I o n
substation of Southern California Edison
in Laguna Hills at 8:46 p.m., causing
n1ajor power outage in El Toro, ?i.-1ission
Viejo, and Laguna Hills.
Though thousands or residents were
\\ithout electricity for a hal£ hour, Edison
Company spokesmen said neither of two
nearby hospitals, Saddleback Community
and Mission Community, were affected .
Ughtning struck and set fire to a
power pole in Laguna Beach near
Victoria Beach but Edison spokesmen
said no power outs v.•ere reported as a
result.
Tbe . aerial light show and sound
Spectacular, mostly ·over the Cleveland :
National Forest. provided rare
entertainment to Orange Coast re sidents
in areas where the lightning and thunder
\\'Crt most intense.
But I.he storm front left as quickly as it
Slides 0 11 Art
Se t for Churc1i
A color slide lecture on 20lh century
art will be held Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in
Bridge Hali of !he Neighborhood
Congregational Church in Laguna Beach.
The I e ct u re, under tf'.!. auspices of
Art-A-Fair, will be by Jeanette E.
Pincus.
f\.tiss Pincus, who has lectured and
taught art for many years, studied at the
Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, the Art
Institute of Chicago, and the Ame'rican
Academy of Fine Arts.
The lecture is free and open to the
public. She wiU be discussing hidden
icons, subtle lines, spaces and forms
v.1lich reveal a visual language in paint·
Ing.
ca1n<'. leaving a rorecast of scattered
clouds and scattered !:hoY.·ers for to~ht
and clearer, v.·armer weather Tuesday.
The National \Vealhcr Scn1ice forecast
inland temperatures in the low 70s for
the first three days of the week.
Rain total! locally were .20 inch in
ri,tission Viejo .. 08 inch in Laguna Niguel
and the coastal areas.
From Page I
REINECKE ...
said he did not tell ri,1itchell about the
offer until after favorable settlement of
an antitrust action against t he
lnt.ernalional Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
parent rompany of Sheraton.
The grand jury also accused Reinecke
of lying when he said his first discussions
of holding the convention in San Diego
came in a social gathering of .i.an Diego
.aitizens in Washington in Aprif.1971.
In other court papers. the special
prosecutor's office has said the first such
talk was betv.·een Reinecke and then
\Vhite House chief of staff H. R.
Haldeman. The •date of the nlleged
discussion with Haldeman has not been
disclosed by the special prosecutor's
office.
Reinccke's testimony before the
Judiciary Committee in April 1972 came
during hearings over the nomination of
Richard G. Kleindienst for attorney
general . Kleindienst .\vas confirmed but
later resigned.
Gurney Sc uffle Told
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) -U.S. sen.
Ed\\•ard Gurney, (R-Fla.), F rid a y
brushed off questions about his recent
indictment and pushed a seat cushion
into the face of one television repQrter.
Heporter Brian Ross of WCKT·TV in
Miami said. "I was shoved and pushed
and hit with a seat cushion. Curney
shoved the cushion in my face. He shoved
hard."
occupation beginning with that Jetter.
Kevin's letter was "Q".
The creative essays, enUtled "What
\Vould You ~. From A to Z?", were
acrompanied by even more unusual
drawings. in ntany cases. They depicted
such zany jobs as panda Dear watcher,
lon1ato checker, yeUow submarine maker
;:ind y.·alrus rider.
f\.liss Ault says .her youngsters l!lrc
particularly imaginative, and points to
Joe, who \\TOie about being a streaker
selector, Deborah, y.·ho decided to
become an octopus opto1netrist, and
Kelli. a noodle nut inventor.
.. A streaker selector is a person who
chooses who is good enough to be a
streaker," begins the story by Joe
llullinger, who was ~igned the letter
"S".
'"If they make it. they get put in
factories, re-slaurants, penlhollS('S, of.
fices. on streets. in cities and at sports.
If they don't make it, as a punishment, I
buy an Eskimo's outfit and glue It on
them," continued the streaker selector.
or roursc there 's always th ('
traditionalist in the class. Young Jeff
PatterSon wasn't about to let a creative
Writing assignment stand in the way of
describing his an1bitions v.·hen he
bec0n1es a grown-up.
lie couldn't imJgine the letter "F"
standing for any occupation other than
fireman, and \'Owed in his essay, "I
would go up in skyscrapers and put out
the big fire ."
f'rona Page J
FOUND ...
the v.·eary investigators had gone home
Saturday.
.Throughout th e myste r y
disappearance. they could only bear
in mind another overnight search from
Friday and Saturday last July, for
another missing girl.
Linda Ann O'Keefe, abducted by a man
\\'hose identity and whereabouts is still
unknown, was molested and strangled
and dumped beside Upper Nev.1>0rt Bav.
Kimberly andAter friend, v.·hose farriily
lives at 2208 W. Ocean Front. seven
blocks Crom the Wilson apartment.
simply pulled an adventurous prank that
got out of control.
Investigators said after walking home
from school Friday with her younger
sister Sarah Jane, 7. that Kimmie and
her friend decided it would be fun to
spend the v.•eekend together.
"They made up a cock·and-bull storv
about her Mom going out on a d<1te and
then phonied up a telephone call to f\.1rs .
Wilson," Detective Hardy explained
today.
The second prank ca ll was for
permission to stay another night.
Investigators noted Mrs. Wilson , whose
estranged husband is seriously ill at the
Long Beach Veterans' Administration
Hospital in Long Beach, was not going
out on a date.
She was, in fact, preparing to move her
three children and illelr mother to the
"OUr Town" family apartments at 2825
, t'airview Road, in Costa Mesa.
Bettei• Balatace Smaght
Detective Hardy said when the full
impact of her weekend odyssey became
apparent, Kimmie was even reluctant to
telr pol ice how her worrisome
disappearance occurred.
Shift of Students Studied
Trultee! of 'the C&pistrano Unified
School District tonight will try to reach a
definiUve decision on prwosals to shift
studenta from Dana flills to San
Clemente High School so that a better
balance exists in enrollments .
· Bui although the Issue has stirred
S<veral major pubUc hearings attended
by concerned p&m1tl and studentJ,
dl$tl1Ct o[Uct&IS •tressed that -o!flclalty
-tonlghL's ,...;on will not ba a publlc
airing of parent cornplnlnts.
The current recommendation b to 1Jestn ahlltlng high school otudentJ from
the art• ... ol the San Diego Freeway
in San Juan C.plstr•no and Miaalon Viejo
to San Clemente High School Jn the fall.
.-
The district's Growth P I a n n in g
Ad•llOry Comml..,lon (GPAC) held its
latest hearings on the proposal early last
week. lts recomme.ndallon remains
despJte complaints from part'nts.
Trustee President George White SDid
that reiteration of la.rt week's testlniony
at tonight's session starting at 7:30
o'clock would not be necessary because
tru!tees have received minute! of the
OPAC seasions. Truste~ haVe grappled twice before
with the altendflnce changes but each
time have l<llt the matter to tbe
commisslo.n for hearings and po.ulble
compromises.
The serious C011cem has persl.stcd that
enrollments at Dana Hills are grow1ng
steadily and forcing the relatively new
campu.! to the saturation level. On the
other band, San Clemente's student
population l5 remaining somewhat static.
Other matters on tonight's board ·
agenda Include a bid by Dan.a Hiiis high
ochool studentt for two board members
to join a committee to diSCU55 an oP,!:n.
campui policy. San Clemente High puplla
won the privilege earb' Ulla year in a
separate bid.
l'wo swnmer school pUot proJectJ, hlah
school ditch days at Dana lllll1 and field
doys at C.plstrano School, also are on the
scf)cdule ror discussion and trustee
acllon.
No disciplinary action was anticipated
unless it occur! behind closed doors: of
the Wilson residence, because the whole
episode was innocent, if alarming.
"We are going to have a talk with th~
other family,'' Detective Hardy~
concluded.
He said they would be advl!ed that
next tlme one oI t.he.lr daughter's
playmate> wants to visit that It would be
wbe to call the parents themselves to
conllrm permission.
Sometimes It la un"lle to let the
children do II, lhey noted wryly.
Royalty lo Vi it
l'Hll,.AJJELPll!A (lJPI) ._ Princess
Margaret of CrearBritaln and her
h11.1band the Earl of Snowdon acoepi.d
lnvitallons to help dedicate Philadelphia
Children 's Hospllal today.
•
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Saddlehaek Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 126, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 6, 1974 TEN CENTS
M~sing
Girl Found
l •
Reinecke Tri~l Set
With Friend Judge Will Hear Perjury Case July 15
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
, ot tllt Otllr ,1111 lltH •
A little girl's unwise weekend visit with
a special school fi;lend ended happily for
-Newport Beach police and her famlly
Sunday after her hostess' father opened
bis morning paper.
Kimberly Denise Wilson, 8, v.•hosc
~lsappearance v.•as the number one story
on the front page. was playing happily in
the shocked man's home as a guest of his
Uttle girl at the time.
"He opened up his Daily Pilot and
said" "Ooohhhhhh, no," Newport Beach
Detective Bob Hardy explained today.
The embarrassed father immediately
called police and Kimmie-as they call
her-v.·as quickly reunited with t.lrs.
Margaret Wilson, of 117 15th St., on the
Balboa Peninsula. .
Investigators said the way th e
Peninsula Is laid out was one partial
factor in the limited area searched by
police after the little girl was reported
missing Friday night.
"She supposedly didn'l have any
friends y,•ho lived beyond 15th Street ,"
said Detective Hardy, one of several men
detailed overnight to the anxious search.
Homes of all known acquaintances
were checked.
"Those guys v.·orked their tails off ... ,''
said one policeman when contacted for
progress on the bunt for Kimmie, after
the weary investigators had gone home .
Saturday.
Throughout the mystery
disappearance, they could only bear
in mind another overnight search from
Friday a.nd Saturday Inst July, for
another missing girl.
Linda Ann O'Keefe, abducted by a man
whose identity and whereabouts Is sllll
unknown, was molested and strangled
and dumped beskle Upper Ne\vport Bay.
Klmberly and her Jrlend, whose family
lives at 2208 W. Ocean Front, 1evea
blocks from the Wilton apartment.
simply pulled an advcnturoua prank: that
got out of control.
Investigators said after walking home
from xbool Friday with her yowtger
sister Sarah Jane, 7. that Kimmie and
her friend decided it v.·ould be fun to
spend the v.·eekend together.
"They made up a cock-and-bull story
about htr Pi1om going out on a date and
!Sec FOUND, Pap Ii
El Toro Higli
To Get M<1rin.e
Ju1iior ROTC
El Toro High School is one of three
high schools in the nation which has been
accepted for a . Marine Corps Junior
Reserve Officers Training Co r p s
program, a school district spokesman
said today.
. ,The program is scheduled to start next
fall when El Toro ltlgh opens on its new
campus.
Inronnation on the RCYrC possibilities
will be presented to the board of Lrustees
o{ the Saddleback Valley Unified School
Disbict at their regular meeting at 7:30
o'clock tonight at Los A I is o s
lntennediate School, El Toro.
Other item! on tonight's agenda
include:
-AnnoWlCe Los Alisos teacher Carol
Stanfield ·as a new member or the
Teachers Hall of Fame.
-Consider final action on a proposed
employes mileage re-lmbursemeat policy
which will pay 13 cents a mJle and
gfadually phase out exclu'slve use or
disl.rict can by top administrators.
hdlntr ,.,.. ..
MAJOR WINNER -Winning o e of the top trophies in tbe Erlse-
nada yacht race was the Ranger 9 sloop Saltshaker, with Bob Boyes
of Anacapa Yacht Club at the helm. The boat won the Midget Ocean
Racing F1eet Class A division for the Coast Guard perpetual trophy.
Ensenada Racers Compile
Fastest Times in History
By AL!l!ON LOCltABEY . --BNSENADA-TM fastest aiii! calmesl
Newport to Ensenada raceltn the 27-year
history of the "'ent came to a close
today as half of the yachtsmen were on
their way home.
The speed of the race was due to brisk
v.·esterly winds that prevailed from the
Saturday start to the finish early Sunday
morning.
Total calm prevailed in Ensenada from
about 8 p.m. Sunday as most or the non-
yachting crowd had left for home' or were
in jaU and many yachtsmen were
prtparing to up anchor and start the long
uphill drag ID home port>.
Ensenada police made a bust at the
Bahia Hotel about 6 p.m. Sunday to quell
a·· disturbanre. A dozen ·youths were
hauled away to jail but none of them was
connected with the yacht race.
Ensenada and Newport Ocean Sailing
Association officers said today there
have ·been m prohtenl.!I compared to the
nea,....r.iot conditions of last year.
Thert were relatively few problems in
the race itself. T¥l0 yachts were still at
sea early today but had been accounted
for. They had overshot Ensenada and
were beating their way back.
There were several minor collisK>ns
and one major one on the starting line
Saturday: Tbe 37-foot sloop Wings
collided with another on the starting line
and rammed a hole through its hull. The
damaged yacht was not ideotilied.
The yacht Double D w!tich had reported
she was taking on water soon after the
start repaired whatever damage was
responsible and started lhe race two
hours late and finished Suncfay night.
First yacht to finish sliort.ly after 5
a.m. Sunday was the cataraman Seabird,
ownea and skippered by Bob Hanel ol
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. seabird was
also first to finish.last.year. .
Finl """''~· ....... minutes ·jate?;-wa;s-:"the-62-ofoot sloop
Ragtime saUed by sr.n Miller and a
lhre .. man l.ollg Beach Yacht Club
syndicate.
Jack Baillle'a' NewsBoy, the perennial
first finisher from Balboa Yacht Club,
(S.. ENSENADA, Pare !)
Dial-A-Ride Bus
Service Pushed
By Consultants
By WILi.LUi SCHI'.EIBER
Of .... ~ ,, ... Stiff
Consultants for ·lhe Orange County
Tramit District recommended today !he
Orange Coast cities of Huntington" Beach
and Fountain Valley be placed in a top
priority category for implementation of
Dial-A-Ride bus service.
The door-to-destination bus service
could be started in the west county cities
by July of 1975 if transit directors
approve a final priority list at their Jun~
3 meeting.
Dr. l\.tarccl Zobrak, consulting engineer
from DAVE Systems Inc., said a total of
eight oounty cities met the criteria for
immediate Dial·A·Ride service.
Besides HUl'ltington Beach a n d
Fountain Valley, oo other Orange Coast
communities were ranked near the top of
the priority list.
It had been thought a Dial·A·rud• service area would be implemented soon
in the Saddleback Valley area• but ai>
parcntly, other areas W"re deeri'led to be
1n greater need or the s:::rvi.c right away.
CS.. BUSES, Paie Z)
.
• WASHINGTON (AP) -A July 15 trial
date was set today for California Lt.
Gov. Ed Reinecke on perjury charges
stemming froril the I'IT case.
The· action . by U.S. District Judge
Bah'lngton Parker indicated the court
will tum down pending motions by
Reinecke to dismiss the indictment or,
failing that, to move the trial to
California.
Reinecke, a leading contender for
California's Republican gubernatorial
REINECKE, FLOURNOY SPLIT
PARTY ENDORSEMENTS,
S!Gry, Poge S
nomination, was indicted by a Watergate
grand jury April 3 on three counts of
lying before a Senate committee.
Trial had been set for May 13, but
Reineckes Jawyers asked for · the de1ay
Lightning,
Thunder flit
Coastal Area
A spring storm complete with lightning
and thunder blustered over Orange
County Sunday night, snapping off power
at nearly 10,000 homes.
Though the coastal areas of Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach. Laguna Beach,
and San Clemente reported only light
rain, inland areas had heavy rain for a
half·hour and some lightning damage.
Lightning struck the · M o u I t o n
substation ol. Southern California Edison
ID-~ l1IUJ...;il $:46 p:ii!~· causin& ·major 'f6Wer CxiU'ie 1n El Toi'O, Misston
Viejo, and Laguna llills.
Though thou.sands of residents were
without electricity for a half hour, F..dison
Company spokesmen said neither of two
nearby hospitals, Saddleback Community
and Mission Community, were affected.
Lightning struck and set fire to a .
power pole in Laguna Beach near
Victoria Beach but Edison spokesmen
said no power outs were reported as a
result.
The aerial Light sho\V and sound
spectacular, mosl)y over the Cleveland
National Forest, provided rare
entertainment to Orange Coast residents
In areas where the lightning and thunder
(S.. STOR!I!, Page !I
Clerks' Strike Ends
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Alter .an
8 ~month strike, the 300 retail clerks at
two San Francisco scars stores return to
work today.
while the change or venue rhotions and
other matters were handled .
Reinecke originally had pressed for a
speedy trial to have the matter settled
before the California primary elections
June 4.
Reinecke was one of the principal
forces behind a decision to hold the l972
Republican National Convention in San
Diego. The convention later \\'as shifted
to Miami Beach , Fla.
The indictment charged Reinecke with
giving false statements to the Senate
Judiciary Committee about when he first
told former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell,
who was Nixon 's 1972 campaign
manager, about a $400,000 offer from the
Sheraton Corp. to underwrite the San
Diego convention.
Reinecke wa s accused of lying when he
said ~be did not tell Mitchell about the
offtr Until after favorable settiement of
UP'IT ..........
Fare Familiar
This voter flashes a familiar
smile as she cast her ballot
Sunday while voting in the
French presidential election at
her Riviera precinct. She is
movie actress Brigitte Bardot.
•
Irvine Officials Break
Ground f 01· New School
.-Irvine. Uni!i'ed School District offictaJs
broke ground this morning for the first
district-planned school to be built in
Irvine sinCe fonnation of the district.
Irvine Coun~lman ffenry Quigley and
school boanl memben R. Dean Olson
and Charles Boulanger were among
dignitaries ~nicipating in t h e
ceremonies marking the 0beginning of
construction or an elementary school on
the former Hoeptner property.
'The school will be built near the Ranch
and proposed Smoketrec V i 11 a g e
developments along Jeffrey Road . The
school sit e adjoins homes on Strasbourg
Avenue and Tourraine Way. Access will
be rrom Jeffrey.
-Consider arproval of a 300-page
. ~t.er plan o growth, facilities and
• eft_Ucational development or the district
p'repared after eight months study with
parents. teachers, a.nd paid consultants.
• ..:Receive information on pending
d!Stzict programs. Including summer
sChool, career education workshop1 and a
marine oceanography program.
Two Counti:aµs Plan Trip
'
The nearly $2 million facility is to be
designed by Cal Porter Ar"l1!tects.
The property presently is planted in
orange trees and the public is invited to
coll ect oranges or firewood f'rom the site
~fore the trees are destroyed,
Councilman Quigley said today.
ONE SOLITARY AD
SOLD EVERYTHING
One ad -six. sales. That. In· a few
, .... Ords Is, the story ol e "few words, in
lbe right place." an Other successful
DJijy Pilot classified ad. Here ll ls:
120" SOFA, $250 ; love seat, $50,
TV consolc.1'15; din rm oct, 1150;
'12' boat w/mrt. & trlr,, $250.
MEC reloader. $35. (Phone ·No.)
The ad originally was published just
Qne weCkend ond sold all six item1 listed
in it. Of course the pf1•1ertiser was
hippy ! You'll be happy with results , too.
If you just put "• few worlls tn the right
place" -.In Oally Pilot classineda. Dial
the direct line ; 64Z4618.
•
·will Ride Bikes 3,500 Miles . Across V.S.
By W!WA.\I SCHREIBER
Of tM ~ l"lflt Stett
Linda Thorpe and Jim Richardson ol
Santa Ana have planned a little bike ride
thi s summer -3,500 mlles across the
conlinental United Slates.
They will be the first official riders to
lravene lite proposed Trans·Am<rlca
Bicycle Trail from the coasl of Oregon.
through the nation's heartland and
ending In Washington. D.C.
The two young 0r .. ge Countln wlll
' blaze ' a trait that organizers of the.
national bicentennial celebrat!on hope
will be followed by mllllons, o! other
Americans duflng tne 10.year, 200th
birthday party-.tarting in 1976.
"The trail is just on paper right now
and we will mostly be using establbhed
back roads lhrougb small towna." said
Rlchatd900, a 27·year<>ld student at
Pcpperdln< School ol La>/ .
. .
•'\Ve hope lo generate soipe interest In
lonfdistance biking h ··recreeUon,'1 he
said. "Eventually we'd like to have a
sy1tem o! hostels along the route lilt•
they have in Europe." _
Durtng their long ~•Y.' -which ·will
be made aboanl a 1o.lpee0 tanc!Cm Dike
lllarlini May 211 -Rlchanlson and ~"" Thorpe will be promoting a program
called •'!!ikecentennial."
Tiie Blkecentennlal has b e • n
.anctioacd by the national bicentennial
commlasion as • one means to bring
Americans closer to their land.
"The hope ta that the trail can bo
rendy for Uie centennial celebratk>n,"
said Mia 'l'horpe, a 22-yeal'Old loog
Be:ach State Untv~rsity g ' o g r a p h y
student. "What better way to see and
1e11se America than by tiding across it
on s blke.11
Rlchardaoo said the trail will never
•
actually be a paved route across the
country. He said the goal is to establish a
string of camping areas and llostels
along the chosen l'ClJte tot riders to use
on bicycle camping trips.
"Rlght now, all our young people
Interested In thb kind ol riding go to
Europe when America ls really ideal for
it," said t.liu Thorpe.
The route followed by BlkecenteMial's
cross country traU wlll take the two
riders through the states o! Oregon,
Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, Kansas,
Ml590\.lrJ, rlllnols, Kentucky, Arka.M35,
West Virginia, Virginia and the District
or Colombia.
"Eventually, we hope to have a Unk
ntnnlng from Southern California, across
the deterl bnd tying Into the main trail in
Colorado." Richardson said. "For those
who don't like d.,.rt riding , they can
(See BIRE TRIP, Pore ii
He said participants were told today
there are no plans to recycle the trees
for firewood. The developer of the
adjacent property will clear the school
site and dispose of the t...., probably
within a week, Quigley said.
Uni High Coed
Tops in Speecl1
A University lllgl\ School student
rtcently placed flrst In tti e girls' oratory
division of tlje Pepperdlne Specdl and
Debate toumiment at Malibu.
Juliette Deinum, one of 900 in the
compelit109, was awarded a scholarship.
Miss Delnum will attOnd · a fou r.week
Institute In ll)eC<h skills lo be held this
5Ummtr at UC Jrvinc.
Other Uni High final lsls were Lauren
Mayer, Roll ace Lyons, David Kastle,
Marlin Cronin and Marti Spoin.
an antitrust action against th c
·International Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
parent company of Sheraton.
The grand jurY also accused Reinecke
of lying when he said his first discussions
of holding the c"onvention in San Diego
came in a social gathering or San Diego .
citizens in Washington in April 1971.
In other court papers, the special
prosecutor's office has said the first such
talk was bety,•een Reinecke and then
White House chief of staff H. R.
Haldeman. The date of the alleged
discussion y,•ith Haldeman has not been
disclosed. by the special 'prosecutor's
office.
Reinecke's testimony before the
Jud iciary Committee in April 1972 came
during hearings over the nomination of
Richard G. Kleindienst , for attorney
general. Kle indienst was confinncd but
later resigned.
Ex-supervisor -
Feaiherly
Dead at 77
Former Orange County supervisor C.
J\-1. "Cye" Fealherly died Sunday in a
Santa Ana convalescent home after a
long battle with intestinal cancer. He was
77.
Featherly, woo resigned his First
District seat in 1969 after serving on the
board for 2tl years, will be honored
Tues(lay by Orail~ County's supervisors
who .will adjourn the meeting ln bis
memory.
"This_ is a tremendous blow to all of
us," Supervisors' Chairman Ralph Clark
commented today. "Cye wa5 one of our
!,'realest public servants and it is good to
k-now at this moment that his memory
will be perpetuated by the park that was
named after him."
Funeral services for Afr. Featherly
have been scheduled for 3 p.m.
Wednesday in the Waverley Chapel ol
Fairhaven J\1eroorial Park in Santa Ana.
He is survived by his wife, Sue, and a
stepchild.
Featherly, who was succeeded in the
First District seat by its present
occupant, Robert Battin, served as a
d~puty sheriff in Orange Cowity ~ore
wum.ing election to the board in 19~9.
A native of' Wyoming, be talked
whimsically on his retirement of the way
in which he rode to Orange CAWlty on
horseback more than 50 years ago.
"I didn't have a job to my name and J
cculdn 't find anyone around here who
was willing at that time to give me one,"
he told his fellow supervisors.
Only Second District Supervisor David
Baker remains of' the last board on which
A-Ir. Featherly served.
Lecture on Lesbians
At UC Irvine Tuesday
"E\•erything You Wanted to Kno"'
about Lesbianism, But Were Afraid to
Ask" is the Women's A1onth at UC Irvine
le<:ture program set for Tuesday.
Members of the Lesbian Feminists of
Orange County will lead the panel
discussion which begins at I p.m. in room
232 Humanities Hall.
Oraage Coast
Weather
It'll be slightly "'armer Tuesday,
according to the weather service,
with mostly sunny afternoons in
the inland portions of Orange Coun-
ty. Highs at the beaches in the
rnid-608 rising to the low 70s in--
land. "
INSIDE TODi\Y.
Skyscrapers around tht world
are changing tile: wealher. ac-
cording to a grou p of scie1ltfst1.
They act o.s n•ountoi'ns, which
confuses the w;·nd and -rai11. Ste
story and pholo Page -I.
L. M. '"'' ' ... " " C1Hfet!ll1 • Mtli.-.1 Mtwt • Cl1nlftM fl .,, Or111trt C..trty • , ... u " ·-,,. ..
C"u...n " SYNll '°""W ,.
Dtlffl Millett • """' 1&.11
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" w ..... , • ... ..-. " .... _ •
) •
\
'
;? DAILY PILOT Monda,r, May b, 1974
Jtfiss . Saddleback 1' aUeJt Fron• J•age 1
BIKE TRIP • • •
Julie Norie_ga New Queen ...
skip it by riding the train ."
The !rip piaMed by RlcJ>ardl;on and
lt1iss 'lllorpe \Ill.II tnkc aboot 76 day, at a
J>ai)C of SO mile~ per du.y. A.long the way.
they "'ill stuy ln tho homes of locul
residents or camp out.
Juli Noriega! 18, of 2~861 Spadra La ne l:n ~ti sion Viejo , was cro\1·ned ~tls:.;
~1ddle ·ck Valley 197t Sunday night al
~lission Viejo lllgh School.
J1oliss or\ega 1 the d3ughlf'r of Jesse
and El 1.abeth Noriega . perfonned a
Combination 1nodem and jazl dance in lhe tall'nl presentation.
First runner.up in the contest \\<IS
Mna Gtubbs. 19, of E1 Toro, a J;inuary
graduate of ~lission Viejo J1igh School.
,5he sang a ml'dlcy of religious songs.
Pamela llohTl<'s, 19. of ~fission Viejo,
took second runner-up honorJ "'ilh a
'1ancc routine.
1 l\liss Noriega. u•ho plans to make the
:perfonning arts her career, \1·on $1fl0 and
'is eligible to compete in the ti.liss Orange
<:ounty pag"eant this summer.
She ha s "·on a variety of ay,·ards for
her talents. including the Regional
Exchange Club lalent aw; rd last year.
She is active in the l\1ission Viejo High
School Thespian Society and has had
leading roles in n1any productions,
inchxiing the upcoming "Romeo aOO
Juliet."
Sponsor for ri.tiss Noriega was \Vhit
\Vhittingham, a Mission Viejo realtor.
Miss Grµbbs, daughler of Roy and
Kathleen Crubb, won $75 as Orst runner
up and was sponsored by the \Vet Seal Qf
Laguna Hills Mall. ~liss Grubbs has been a cheerleader
and Associated Student Bodv secretary
at lw1ission Viejo 11igh School and v.·on
first place in lhe 1973 poetry contest at
the school.
She plans to attend Long Beach State
or Kansas University.
Miss Holmes "'on $50 as second runner
Gunman Visits
Home, Collects
.$3,00_0 Bauble.
A Santa Ana lleights goldfish breeder
"'ho walked from his home Sunday to
"·elcome what he thought was a visiting
fish fancier "'as trussed hand and foot by
a visitor who left y,·ith a $3,000 diamond
ring.
Orange County Sheriff's officers said
the suspect took the jey,·elry from the
home of Jerry and Denise Scoggins, 20252
Bayview Ave. after ransacking the
residence in a search for cash .
Scoggins. 33. told officers he and his
wife, Denise, 31, asswned the gunman
"·as looking for goldfish from their v.·ell
stocked pond when he entered the
driveway and v.•alked towards the home.
Instead, they said, he produced a gun,
bound them hand and foot with masking
tape and warned them after leafin g
through Scroggins' empty billlold, "don1
try anything and you won't get hurt."
Officers said Scoggins managed to free
himself shortly after the suspect left with
a diamond ring from his wife's jewel
box.
From Page 1
STORM ...
"·ere most intense.
But the storm front left as quickly as it
came. leaving a forecast of scattered
clouds and scattered fhowers for toni~ht
arxi clearer. v.·armer weather Tuesday.
The National Weather Service forecast
inland temperatures in the low 70s for
the ftrst three days of the week.
Rain totals locally were .20 inch in
J\1ission Vlejo .. 08 inch in Laguna Niguel
and the coastal areas.
Gurney Scuffle Told
ORLANDO, Fla . (UPI) -U.S. Sen.
Edward Gurney, (R·Fla.), Frid a y
brushed off questions about his recent
indictment and pushed a seat cushion
into the face of one television reporter.
Reporter Brian Ross of \VCKT·TV in
Miami said. "I ""as shoved and pushed
and hit with a seal cushion. Gurney
shoved the cushion in nly face. lie shoved
bard."
•
OlANGf COAST IS
DAILY PILOT
f""·O'•llQ" Co.~I 0..•lv l'llt,I ... 1~ .,11.e.ft" CO"'"
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i;.., Cle""'"'"'Slo """" C.1>>1r1"" ,, ""'1--·~I 90•!""' 10 ~ &.!"'1llYI •'Id SU"'
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hlo l(,,.l .. y Voe.,.....,,.,._G9_......_,...
~I(""'"" ....
Oolot.H Lcr,•, v ... ~P.I~
AMw..,.~E-.
Offic11 CDL!a ...,. .. 3.l0-1 5'1'5-
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s .. c~ A.If DtportilMfttt:
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(-
up and •'U !pOfl...-.d by Torocenter Coln
Laundry In El Toro.
Some 200 people attended the pageant,
sponsored by the Saddleback Valley
C.'humbcr of Commerce. Susan 11aggard,
U1e 1973 l\1iss Saddleback Valley,
CT'OY.'O('d the new queen.
~l aster of Ceremonies y,•as Abe RlgdoR,
husband of Chamber or Commerce
man;Jger Daisy Rigdon. Pa g ea n t
coordinator was Joanric Hockaday
f'ro111 Page J
FOUND ...
then phonied up a telephone call to itrs.
~'ii.son,·· Detective !lardy explained
today.
The second prank call was for
perrnl~ion to stay another night.
Investigators noted Mrs. Wilson , whose
estranged husband is seriously ill at the
Long Beach Veterans' Administration
Hospital In Long Beach, was not going
out on a date.
She .was, in fact , preparing lo move her
three children and their mother to the
"Our Town" family apartments at 2825
Fairview Road , in Costa Mesa.
Detective Hardy said when the full
impact of her weekend odyssey became
apparent, Kimmie was even reluctant to
tell police how her worrisome
disappearance occurred.
o disciplinary action was anticipated
unless it occurs behind closed doors of
the Wilson residence, because the whole
episode was innocent, if alarming.
"We are going to have a talk with the
other family," Detective H a r d y
concluded.
He sald they would be advised that
next time one of their daughter's
playmates wants to visit that It would be
wise to call the parents themselves to
confirm permission.
Sometimes it is unwise to let the
children do it, they noted wryly.
-,r
Driver of Van
Dies in Crash
On Grove Street
One man was kiiled and three others
injured in a grinding crash on a rain-slick
Garden Grove street SUnday night, police
said today.
Donald E. Van Winkle, 30, of Santa
Ana, was dead on arrival at Orange
County ~1edical Center of injuries
suffered in the 10:15 p.m. aceldent on
Westminster Avenue.
Police said Van WinkJe was driving a
van in the eastbound Janes of the street
when he IOBt control of the vehicle on the
slippery pavement and rammed another
van parked at the curb.
Van Winkle was thrown clear of the
crash but was fatally injured \Vhen he
hit the pavement, officers, said.
Silas White, 40, also of"Santa Ana, a
passenger in Van Winkle's vehicle, was
trapped inside and had to be cut free by
a fire department rescue team. He
sustained moderate injuries and. is in
guarded condition today at Riverview
Hospital.
Two occupants or the parked van v.·erc
also injured and are in guarded condition
al Rivervie\v.
'I'bey "'ere identified as Sal\'ador
Aquilar. 28, and Aliseo Cervantes, 25,
both of Santa Ana.
Police said Van \Vinkle had been
drinking prior to the accident but an
autopsy y,iJI have to determine if he was
under I.he influence of alcohol when the
crash occurred.
Border Officers
RoLmd Up Many
Mexica11 Aliens
Despite another siege of heavy freeway
traffic, immigratio~ officers at the San
Onofre checkpoint logged another large
"·eekend of alien arrests and· the
migration continued through early today.
Spokesmen said the t rad It Ion a I
roadblock had to be called off Sunday as
returning traffic on freeway lanes made
it impossible to halt all four$s for
routine searches.
Nonetheless, more lhan 300 aliens were
detained by office s staked out to
observe passing cars.
The roadblock resumed late Sunday
and smugglers then changed their tactics
by slopping short o( the checkpoint and
du1nping aliens along the Freeway.
That maneuver forces the immigrants
to cross freeway Janes or hop fences for
a hike upcoast through Camp Pendleton
and the beach areas.
Eighty-five had been picked up since
midnight as they tried to sneak past the
checkpoml on foot , officers said.
Junior College
Offices Burnecl ,
SACRA"'ENTO (AP) Th c
headquarttJrs office for Callromla"s jun··
lor coll~ge!> wa3 hit by a fire early this
morning that caused Sn estimated $7D,000
dam.age, au1boritles reported.
Ttte Ure at the Calirorrun community
colleges headquarters, located in the
downtown arf!a, )>rOke out at I :s.t a.m. II
lOOk 40 firemen aOOut half an hour IO put
ii out
C.roen. The Mission Viejo High School
music department furnl!hed intermlsslon
entertainment.
Judges !or the nnnual event included
Rachel Bean1a11 , rron1 \Vestern Video in
Hollywood ; Eliazbcth Kappel, fonnerly
with designer Irene in 1-lollywOod: Rose
?ltcKee, O\vner ol. K and !11 Escrow
Corporation in Santa Ana ; and Dr. Jack
Norman , a voice instructor and UC
Riverside. ....
School S1iift
For Bcilance
Under Stucly·
Trustees of the Capistrano . Unified
School District tonight will try to reach a
definitive ~ecision on proposals to shift
students from Dana Hills to San
Clement e High School so that a better
balance exists in enrollments.
But allhough the issue has stirred
several major public hearings attended
by concerned parents and students,
district officials stressed that -o[ficial\y
-tonight's session will not be a public
airing of parent complaints.
The current recommendation is to
begin shifting high school students from
the area east of the San Diego Freeway
in San Juan Capistrano and Mission Viejo
to San Clemente High School in the fail.
.,. ~Hy ,llet Sl.tf """9
..When we originally got \he idea, "'c
\Vere planning to do it i~ 30 days."
Richardson said. "The reeor ls 13 days,
six hours set last year.''
The tandem bike they \1111 ride should
average around 15-20 1niles J>er hour -
exl.'tpl \vhcn th ey hit the Rocky
?ltounl a i 1"16.
''I ex1>ec t 1ve'll s~ a lot 1nore scenery
v.·hen we hit the upgrades." Richards0n
said.
lie said l\1iss Thorpe ,has th e besl long·
haul stai:nina of the tv.·o but he is better
on hills .
"Between ·us, v.·e should make It," he
said.
They are ob\'iously confident beca~se
they v.·ill ha\•e no backup unlls fol101v1n g
thc1n -only lhcn1sclves, one bieycll'.
romc camping gear and a {cw sp:irl'
tires.
The trip will cost about $1.500 and the
two rider~ had planned to volunteer till'
costs as v.·ell as their tin1e ..
But the Orange County \\!eight
Watcher's orgnnizalion offered to hold a
fund-raisi ng event at 2 p.m. ti.lay 18 at
Frcn1ont Junior Hi gh in Anaheim .
It seems Mi~ Thorpe and Richardson
met for the first time over a Weight
\Vatchers diet plal!t'and lost a total of !»
pounds together.
From Pagel
BUSES .. :
The district's Growth P I an n in g
Advisory Commission CGPAC} held its
latest hearings on the proposal early last
"'eek. Its recommendation ·remains
despite complaints from parents.
ORANGE COUNTIANS PLANNING JUST 'A-LITTLE SUNDAY RIDE '
Jim Richard50n, Linda Thorpe Plan Transcontinental Trek
Expansion of the service. which is
already operating in the city ~ ol L.a
Habra. will cost about $1.6 million, of
which $1.3 million "'ill be covered by a
grant fro m the federal Urban ~lass
Transit Aulhority (UMTA ). / Trustee President George \Vhite said
that reiteration of last week's testimony
at tonight's session starting at 7:30
o'clock would not be necessary because
trustees have received minutes of the
G PAC sessions.
First of. Nine ~arts According to Zobrak, a key to installing
the ne"' systems "'ill be !he success of
failure of negotiations with the cities
themselves .
Trustees have grappled twice before
y,•ith the aUendance changes but each
lime have sent the matter to the
commission for hearings and possible
compromises.
"" ~.§erious concern has persisted that
enrolll'ifefils at Dana Hills are growing
steadily and !orcing the relatively new
campus to the saturation level. On the
other hand, San Clemente's student
population is remaining somc"·hat static.
Coastal Panelis~ Okay
Plan's Marine Element
Other matters on tonight 's board
agenda include a bid by Dana Hills high
school students for ty,:o board members
to join a committee to discuss an open·
campus policy. San Clemente High pupils
"·on the pr.ivilege early this year in a
separate bid.
Two summer SCliOOl pilot proiects. high
school ditch days at Dana Hills and field
days at Capistrano School, also are on the
schedule for discussion and trustee
action.
Girl, 13, Drowns
OAKDALE (UPI ) -A 13-year-old San
Jose Girl disappeared after a canoe
accident on the Stanislaus River during
the weekend. Searchers probed the river
Sunday for the body of RosaMe Trapp
who y.•as in a canoe Y.ith her father , Bill
Trapp, and ty,·o others when it hit a
submerged tree.
Ronieo, Jlo11ie9
By CANDACE PEARS0:-1
01 1r.e Q.llrr Piiot Stfll
The marine elemeol~e first part of a
nine part coastal master plan-was
appro\'ed 10 to l today by the SouUl
Coast Regional Zone Conservation
Commission in Long Beach.
The documents will now be sent to the
state coastal commission in San
Francisco.
There planners will try to combine it
l\'i th similar efforts from five other
regional commissions.
A' public hearing on the statewide
marine element has Oeen scheduled for a
tY•o-day meeting in Los t.ngeles June ~
and 5.
The vote today came one week after
the second public hearing on the marine
element. The commission was supposed
lo vote last "'eek but commi~ioner
James Hayes of Los Angeles asked for
the delay because he'd missed the
morning session.
DflllY 'll•t Stiff ""lo
w Carol Attinger will be Juliet and John Diller will be Romeo in the
· the coming production of the Shakespeare classic by the Mission
Viejo High School Drama Department Directed by Anna Vardantan,
drama IMITUctor, tho play Is scheduled for 8 p.m. "May 24, 25, and 26
In the school's multl·pUl]lOSe rooms and 2:30 p.m. May 26.
I
Commissioner Ronald Caspers, Orange
County·s Fifth District supervisor. at
that ti me suggested an uno!licial slraw
vote to see if the draft report would pass
without his presence today.
The st ra\\' vote sho·,.•ed nine in Favor,
ty,·o against and one abstention-Hayes.
But commi!isioner Louis Nowell , a Los
Angeles city councilman, \¥BS the sole no
vote today. Carmen Warschaw, wbg last
week said she opgosed the report, today
voted for It as did Hayes.
Caspers was absent. There was no
discussion before the vote was taken,
The ntarine element recommends
eslabnshment of a ma rine park preserve
along the unincorporated coastline beteen
Corona del ri.tar and Laguna Beach, a
public park al Crescent Bay Point in
Laguna Beach and a public overlook at
Dana Point
It also puts a high priori~y on 1be
restoration and preservation or Upper
~ewport Bay and Bolsa Chica Marsh in
Huntington Beach.
Other. proposed policies are:
-Increased educational efforts in the
tidal areas along Doheny.
-Federal water quality standaids
calling for secondary waste waler
treatement by 1977 must be met.
-All remaining estuaries and wetlands
be preserved.
-Fees be charged for damage from
thermal, waste water and other pollutk.ln
to finance marine research.
-All existing marinas must provide
efnuent discharge systems and new
marinas must have discharge hookups
for boats.
-Dredging in estuarles would be
prohibited unles,, absolutely necessary
for the public welfare.
From Pagel
ENSENADA. • •
finished seventh this year. The race
committee was still !everishly compiling
handicap results today because of a
number of protests. 1be trophy
presentation is scheduled late today.
The first 10 boats to finish: I. Seabird
2. Ragtime 3. Sirius II, Bob Lynch,
Newport Harbor Yacht Club 4. Maloma,
Jack Swart, Orange Coast Cotlege S.
Solilo<iuy, Ken Burns, SMVC 6. Anitra,
Fred Preiss, PMYC 7. News Boy 8. Lani
Kai (catamaran) .dartln Crumrine,
Balboa Yacht Club 9. Serena, Steve
Bragg. SCCYC 10. Imi U:>a, Vic Stern,
Seal Beach Yacht Club.
Uno!Cicial handicap winnen: President
of Me1lco Trophy (Ocean Rachlng·Dl
Coliort, Milt Vogel, Hl!YC; Pre•klent of
U.S. Trophy (PHRF-F) Hampshire Rose,
DeMll Burnett, SSSC: U.S. Secretary of
State (PllRF·Dl C.mbria, B 111
I.arson PVYC; U.S. Se<tt!arv of Navy
(PllRF-A) Viva Crut, Tony Crut, CYC:
Governor of Baja C.lllomla (PHRF.C)
Serena , AJex VanDYke, LBYC: Mayor of
Newport Beach (PHRF-8) Pacifica, Stan
Willis, SDYC: SCcretary of Foreign
llelatlons (\)CC) Promotion. I :atshall
Beck, BYC: Mexican Secretary ol Stale
(QC.Bl Karl fl, Dl~k Kelton, LAYC :
Governor of C.!lfomla (OOA)Jlhamrock,
Roy Disney, CYC; U.S. Coast Guard
CMORF-A) saltshaker, Bob Boyes ,
Anacapa Yacht CJub; Jc(f Deaver
(Crul•ing Club of America) Paradox.·
Tom Annstrong, CYC : Emlgtl Family
Mcmorlal Tropliy (MORF·B) Good
TimCl, rane and Smith , ·c.
Under the regulations of the transit
district the cities will have to come up
"·itha 33 pcrCC'nt share of U1e system's
operating CclS . If Ibey choose to
contribute less, the systen1 ""Ollld be cut
bac;.k accordingly.
Highest prtority for the service \\'3S
g\1•en -10 the cities of Orange nnd Villa
Park, "'hich comprise t\1'0 of 27 possible
Dial·A·Ride service areas in the county.
Those cities could have the service in
operation by the end of this year.
Next on the consultant's list is the city
or Brea whiCh \\"ould be an extension of
the existing l..1 J~abra system and v.-ou.Jd
be operating by March of 1975.
Huntington Beach and F'ountaln Valley
are in the third and fourth spots on the
priority list of five service areas.
Huntington Beach would be served by
June ot 1975 and Fountain Valley by the
end of swnmer in 1975.
The final Dial-A Ride service area OCI
the list is a combination of Buena Park.
Cypress and La Palma. to be served by
late 1975.
Zobrak estimated that 70 new buses
"·ill be needed to eipand the service to
all the priority areas.
Zobrak said the priorities he came up
v.·ilh were based on a complex rating
system .
lie said such things as the percentage
of aged and young people lhin.; in an
area . the percentage of people "ithout
autos. the percentage of people y,•ith only
one car. the amount ol existing bus
service and l'xpected 0 i a 1-A · R id e
patronage "'ere considered.
A key factor appeared t\) be the
existing fixed -route bus service per 10,000
people in a particular area.
7.obrak said any area "'ilh less than 2.5
miles of bus routes per 10.000 people was
put in a top priority category.
This appeared to be one major reason
the south county was left out of the high
priority classification.
Zobrak said the Jowac;t mileage in the
south county was In J\.1ission Viejo wllb
3.$8 miles per 10,000 people.
The city or Irvine 'A'hich could
ultimately have three Dial-A-Ride ser\.1CO
areas has the highest bus mileage in the
county al 13.25 miles wr 10,!XK> people,
Transit directors agreed to hold a
special public hearing on Irlay 13 in Santa
Ana City Hall to determine if the
priorities named by the consultant will
satlsly the general public.
01.d Plane Hits
Truck; One Dead
HAW RIVER, N.C. fAP) -An antique
private plane attempting an emergency
landing on Interstate 85 clipped a panel
truck and crashed Sunday, officers said .
A passenger In the truck di«! of lnjurits.
The highway patrol said the t942
Steannan, which was retumin' from nn
air show in nearby Burlington, lost
altitude and snagged. on a power line.
Officers said the airplane sheared orr a
comer ol the truck , ~lammed Into 3
bridge •. abutment and c:rashed on a
riverbank .
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Vemoo Bell Dll:keraon o! Loubburg,
lhe pilot, wu lnjlD'ed and lis1ed In fair·
loilood coodlilon. Vernice Al People, 23,
of Louisburg, a pell!CJlger, was reported
in serlom condition.
Jr' ANT TO BUY
HOT ANCHOVIES
BOOTON (AP) -Somtw~re • .,m ..
one has tho moklngs of a big antipasto.
State poUce reported a tractorlrallcr
load«! with 146,000 In Imported anchovies
was stolen In South Boston. The empty
1railer was recovered over the wt.-tkend
In Weston, police said.
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Huntington Beaeh
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VOL. 67, NO. 126, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 6, 1974
Two Coast
Cities Top
Transit List
By WIWAM SCHr.E1BER
Of 1111 0.lfJ Piiot Sl•lf
Consultants for the Orange County
Transit District recommended today the
Orange Coast cities of Huntington Beach
and Fountain Valley be placed in a top
priority category for implemen.tation of
.Dial-A-Ride bus service.
The door-to-destinaUoo bus service
could be started in the west ~r cities
by July of 11175 If transit directors
approve a final priority list at their June
3 meeting. ·
Dr. Marcel 1.obrak, consulting engineer
from DAVE Systen\3 lne., said a total of
eight county cities met the criteria for
immediate Olel ·A-Rlde service.
Besides Huntington Beach a n d
Fountain Valley, no other Orange Coast
communities \\'ere ranked near the top of
lhc priority list.
It had been thought a Dial-A-Ride
service area \\·ould be implemented soon
in tbe Saddleback Valley area but ap-
parently, other areas w"re deemed to be
in greater need of the scrvic right away.
Epnsion of the service, which is
already operating in the city ol La
Habra. will cast about Sl.6 million, of
whJch $1.3 million will be covered by a
grant fro nl the federal Urban Mass
Transit Authority (UMTA).
According to Zobrak, a key to installing
the new systems will be Lbe sueces3 of
/allure ol negotiations with the clHes
themselves. -__,..
Uodtr !be regulatlcn ol tho transit
dlllrlct the cities wiU have lo oalllO U,P
witba 33 percent sharo of the syttem s
operating costs. If lhey choose to
contribute less, the system \\'ould be cut
beck accordingly.
Highest priority for the ' service \\'as
given to the cities of Orange and Villa
Park, which comprise t'A'O of 27 possible
Dial-A-Ride service areas in the county.
1bose cilies could have the service in
operation by the end of this year.
Next on the consultant's list Is the city
of Brea which would be an extension of
the existing La Habra system and would
be operating by March of 1975.
Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley
are in the third and fourth spots on the
priority list of five service areas.
Hunlinglon Beach would be served by
June of 1'15 and Fountain Valley by the
end of summer in l97S.
The final Dial-A Ride service area on
the list b a combination of Buena Park,
Cypress and La Palma, to be served by
late 1975.
1.obrak estimated that iO new buses
, will be needed to expand the service to
all the priority areas.
Zobrak: said the priorities he came u1>
(See BUSES, Page II
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Huntington Girl,
11 , Molested
Huntington Beach poHce today were
investigating a reported c h i 1 d
molestation involving an ll·year-old girl
wh1ch allegedl y occurred S a t u r d a-y
afternoon at Edison High School.
Police said the incident happened when
the girl and her 6-year-old companion
"'ere riding bicycles at the school. They
said a man asked them to help him find
some boys he said were breaking
windows.
Police said the girl was molested artcr
the man told the young boy to look In
another area and he lured the girl to an
isolated area in the !I04.lth end of the h1gh
school mall.
ONE SOLITARY AD .
SOLD EVE~YTHING
One ad _: six sales. That, in a few
words Is, the story of a "few words, In
the right place," another successful
Dally Pilot cla!Slfled ad. Here It Is:
120" SOFA, $250; love seat, $50.
TV c!onsole, $75; din rm set, $150;
11' bollt w/mrt .. & trlr., iiso.
MEC reloader. $35. (Phone No.)
The ml originally was published just
one weekend and sold all six items listed
Jn It Of course the advertiser was
happy! You'U be happy with resuli., too.
If you Just pot "a few words m the right
plaal" -In Daily Pilot .cla.,ifled!. Dial
the.direct lbt<: 64Um.
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• ers error1ze
Elderly Ste_ward Felled by Indy Race Cars .
Troubles started early at Indianapolis today as Assistant Chief Stew-
ard \Valter Myers. 71 years oldJ is shown moments after he apparently
slammed to the pavement when brushed by one of two race cars in
the background. He suffered a broken left hip and wrist. Both cars
were. reportedly "racing,. to be first on the famed brickyard circuit
on • the first day of practice for the Memorial Day 500-mile race.
Drivers are Tom ·Bi gelow Oeft), and Mike Hiss of Tustin. Hiss won
"race" to be first on track.
Councilnie1i Mull
01ie Gllra.ge Sltle
A Y ellr i ii Beacli
Ex-Supervisor Featherly
Dies of Ca11cer at Age 77
Judge Sets Date
111 Perjur)' Ca,se
Against Rei1iecke
Homeowners in Huntington Beach may
be limited to holding one garage sal e per
year, if the city council approves
proposed restrictions on such sales
tonight.
An ordinance . ouUining how garage
sales may be held and establ~hlng the
need for-a city permit to hold one, will be
reviewed by councilmen during their 7
p.m. meeting.
The proposed permit Would allow a
garage sale to last up to Utree
consecutive days. or two consecutive
weekends, but no longer.
It would also limit the seller to posting
only one sign ror the sale , placing it on
the site of the .s~le and not allowing It to
be more than six square fe~t in size.
A garage sale ordinance ·was first
proposed Jan. 8 at the .request or
CoWlcilman Jack Green, who was
angered prltnarlly by the prGliferalion of
garage sale signs ta~ked to telephone
pol.,, street ligh1'· and in other public
places.
But When the wri.Uen ordinance · was
prescoled lo the council, Green and
othe~ turnoo ii down; complaining that
as written It was too restrlctiv1.:
Tht ordJnance proposed tonight. is
menlially the same one suggested in
January, except this Ume the city
attorne-y's of£ice has dropped one see.lion
which required tho garage .sale to be
contained entirely within tht stller's
garage.
Councilm•n had also objected to the
onee-per year limil and the need ror .~
city permit, bul lhcre has been M
ind\caUon how they will react to tho
pro"°""' law tonight.
Former Orange County supervisor C.
M. "Cye" Featherly died Sunday in a
Santa Ana ronvalescent borne after a
long battle with intestinal cancer. He Was
77.
Featherly, who resigned his First
District seat in 1969 after serving on the ·
board for 20 years, will be honored
Tuesday by Orange County's supervisors
who will adjourn the meeting in bis
memory.
"This is a tremendous blow to all of
us," Supervisors' Chairman Ralph Clark
con1mented today. "Cye was one of our
greatest public servants and it is good to
know at UHs moment that his memory
will be perpetuated by the park that was
named after him,"
Funeral services for A-fr. Featherly
have been scheduled for 3 p.m.
·Wednesday in the Waverley Chapel of
Fairhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana.
He is survived by his wile, sue, and a
stepchild . r
Featherly, who .. was s4c_ceeded in the
· First Dl!trlct seat by 11.9 present
~P.,:,t, Robert Battin, serv<d as· a·
~eputy lhertlt In Orange ·County beror<:
winning eltction to the boird ·in 1949.
A native of Wyoming, ht! talked
whimsically on his retirement or the ·way
in whlc he rode to Orange County on
horsebaclc more than 50 _years ago.
"! didn't have a Job lo my mim~ and I
cculdn't find anyone around here who
was willing at that time to give me one,"
he told' his fellow supervtson.
-Oilly StOOhd Disl'lct SUpervlaor David
Baker remains ot the-~t bolJ'CI on•"hioh.
Ml. Feofhtrly semd. ' J
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l;.OSES·BATTLE TO CANCER
• E"Suporvlsor Foothorly
)unior Mi OU TV
WASHINGTON (AP) -A July tS tr ial
date was set today for California Lt.
Gov. Eq. Reinecke on perjury charges
stemming from the ITT case.
'Ille action by U.S. District Judge
Barrington Parker indJcated the court
will turn down pending motions Uy
Reinecke to dismiss the indictment or.
· failing that, to move the trial to
California.
Reinecke, a leading contender for
California's Republican gubernatorial
REIN.ECKE, FLOURNOY SP l lT
PARTY ENDORSEMENTS,
Story, Page S •
nomination, was indicted by a Watergate
grand jury April 3 on three counts of
lying before a Senate committee.
Trial . had been set for r.tay 13, but
Reineckes lJlwyers asked for, the delay
Y.ilile the change of venue motions and
other matters were handled.
Reinecke originally had pressed for a
s~edy trial to have the mat~ settled
before the California primary elections
June 4.
Reinecke was one of the principal
forces behind a decision to hold the 1972
ltepubllcan National Convention in San
Diego. The convention later was shifted
to Miami Beach, Fla.
The indictment charged Reinecke with
giving fal se statements to the Senate
Judiciary Committee a.bout when he first
told ronner Atty. Gtn. John N. Mllchell,
who was Nixon's 1972 c a m p a I g n
manager, about a $400,000 offer from the
MOBIL!il, Ala. r\JPt) -America's t974 Sheraton Corp. to underwrlle the Son Diego conventkm.
Junior Min will be l:l'Owned ton ight io Rein<cke was accused or lying when he IN nationally televised r1nai. or tho five-sald ho did not ttll 'Mitchell about the
day ~pageant. Contestanlt spent the offer until after fa vorable stttlement of
~·eek end rehtarslne for the broadcast ..... ao antitrust 1 action against t h e
which will be'scen the CBS ltl . • Jl\lemallonaJ Telephooe & Telegraph Co., 00 evis.ion parent t'Ompany of Sheraton.
networlc •fter lhrto.ctayS, or pr~llmlnary The grand Jury al10 accused Rclnecke
competitk!h whleh began 1ail Thursday. (See REINECKE, Pat• II
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N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
our
Holdi1p Me11
Fo1·c e Pair
From House
By KATHY CLANCY
Of ti. 0111, l"llol Sl1ff
Huntington Harbour residents v.·erc
recovering today from an uneasy
v.·eekend, the result of a Friday night
robbery and kidnaping that involved four
Humboldt Island homes.
Detective Brian t.1oorc of t ti c
Huntington Beach Police Department
said investigation is continuing into the
incident, which apparently started \11ith a
planned robbery al the Henry Krueger
home at 16352 Maruffa Circle.
The two robbers panicked during the
holdup. Moore-sa id , then one or both tried
to force residents of two other homes to
help them escape before kidnaping a
thinf couple and forcing them to drive
one of the robbers to downto\'in
Huntington Beach.
Moore said the second robber probably
escaped on ·foot or by boat.
The violence started at the Krueger
home about 9 p.m., when a man posing
as a police officer told Krueger he
wanted to check for a robbery suspect in
Krueger's ya rd.
Police said when Krueger opened the
door to his home. the robbers forced
their way inside and bound the hands of
Krueger and his v.·ife', then led Krueger
upstairs and forced him to open a safe. ·
l\trs. Krueger in the meantime ,
managed to free her hands, then ran next
door to the Robert Nystrom home to
summon help.
Mrr. NyStrom called police, while her
husband and daugl)ter. Judy, returned to
the Krueger home with r.trs. Krueger.
Police said the. three apparently
surprised the robbers, who were then
beating Krueger on the head, and they
forced all four persons to lie on the Ooor
while they fled on foot.
Police said one or both robbers then
went to the home of Mrs. Lucretia
Walsh, 3889 Mistral Drive, where .they
made two neighborhood youths. Steven
Kidd and James A. Brown , both IS, who
were standing outside, ring the doorbell ..
When Mrs. Walsh answered , poli ce
said, one of the youths was told to kneel
down and a n;i)ber, pointing a gun at the
boy's head, told lttrs. \Valsh he would kill
him if she didn 't hand over her car keys.
Recognizing the youth and thinking the
incident was a hoax, police said Mrs.
Walsh ordered everyone to leave.
Again, police said, the robbers
panicked and ran, this tiJne to the home
of Mrs. Janet Moffitt, 16455 La.dona
Circle.
Mrs. l\foffit. police said, was accosted
as she was pulling into her drive\\•ay.
One or both robbers grabbed her
around the neck, pointed a gun at her
and ordered her to give them her car.
Police said she "fought them off".
refused to give up her ca r and again the
pair fled on foot.
About 10:30 p.m., one robber forced his
way into the home of Terry Norman
Tiffany, 16552 Carousel Lane, and
demanded th\lt Mr. and ~1rs. Tiffany
drive him off the island.
Leaving their children sleeping at
home, the Tiffany's drove the man to the
Htuttington Manor Apartments, 16942
Huntington St.. in Huntington Beach,
then \\'ere allowed to return to their
homes. police said.
Police said the robber apparently
(See ROBBERY, Page II
Orange (;oast
Weather
It'll be ~lightly warmer Tuesday,
according to the weather service,
V>'ilh mostly sunny afternoon s in
the inland portions or Orange CoWl-
ty. Highs at the beaches in the
mid.SOS risin8 to the low 70s in-
land.
IN~IDE TODAY
Skyscrapers around tlie u1orld
art cl1anghtg 'the weatiier. oc·
cordit1g to a group of scientists.
Th.ey act as n1ountams. 1ol11cl1
cot1/1u;es tilt wi11d and rai11. See
st ory a11d photo Page .J.
L M., tm ' Mt\litt " c.11 ...... 11 • H1tioNI ,,....,. • Clattllltll 21·26 Or~ C9¥fll1 • -•n " ·-1).11 C:rttt..,. " '""II l"lfll'I' " DHlfl MoOcn • tMrll" , .. ,.
l•li.rlll ,. ... • ll'Kli. M1'11th 1 .. 11
lfll#tl'-tftl " T.._•i'lloll " ,......, "'" ·-· " -· " w .. , ..... • A_M LtlMltn " Wl'l'IC MIWI •
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2 DAILY PIL01 H
Hall for·-Huntington
By TEllRV COVILLE
Of ... O.ffrr ~Ult ••tff
A 4!l-pai;c staff rl'J>Ort rr<-omn~ds
that llun tin~ton Bl'ach sho"lrid build a
$600,000 mE'et1ng hall and ac11~·1 1~ ~ntcr
for Huntington Beach senio,..t'1tlu-ns.
It also says the new facility should ht_.
con structl'd at the-old ci\·ic ('('OIC'r site,
Fifth and ~hun St reets, t<1kinR th e place
of the nov.:-\·icant ~le1norlal !!<ill.
Th(' rc1X>rt. dcvr!op('(f by a· four·
mernb<>r ~taff con1n1.itt~. Y.Ill bt
prts('ntl'd tonight during lhc city
council's 7 o'clock businc~ n1('('tlng.
\\'hlle <·tty staU members feel
From Page l
BUSE S ...
"ith "·ere based cm a complex rating
sys tem.
lie said such things as the percentage
of aged and young people l1vin~ in an
area, the percentage of people \\'ithout
aufos. the percentage of people Y.ith only
one car, the amount pf existing bl.ls
sen·ice and expected Di a J. A -R i d c
palronage v.'ere consid ered.
A key factor appeared to be the
existing fixed-route bu s se rvice per I0,000
people ih a particular area.
Zobrak said any area with less t1µ1n 2.5
miles of bus routes per 10,000 people wa s
put in a top priority category.
This appeared to be one major reason
the south county y,·as left out of the high
priority classification .
Zobrak said the Jowcst mileage in the
south county was in Mission Viejo with
3.58 miles per 10,000 people.
The city of Irvine which oould
ultimately have three Dial·A·Ride service
areas has the highest bus mileage in the
COWlty at 13.25 miles per 10,000 people.
Transit directors agreed to hold a
special public hearing on MaY 13 in Santa
Ana City Hall to determine if the
pri(){"ilics named by the consultant will
_satisfy lbe general public.
Fountain Valley
'School to flost
Women's Session
The first in a lhree-pa.rt workshop for
women will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at Cox School in Fountain Valley.
construction of a new st.iuors' hall ls the
best answer Jor lhe elderly, thefr report
does list .severat alttrnatives.
One poulbillty involves renovation of
the cily rt'Crl'atlon headqunrtl'I'! a1 17th
S!reet ;ind Orang!' A\'et1lll'. A staf(
es11n1;ite suggests it could be made
.su11ablC' for St>nior act1\'itil'S at a cost of
about $70JIOO.
That Lrist inel udl's br!ni:ting the building
up to ci \y fire codt'S an d rcloeat1ng the
rlX'reation depart mt•nl "'orkers in the
nt'W City Ji.~I!.
Jf councilmen Y.·ant to save )lemoria l
Jlall for the se ni9rs. the cost or
renovating It and makin&: U sa fe cllmb5
lo l800~ lo fl mWJon ..
Building Director John BOOrens and
Fire !lllef Roy Picard have both
recommended that ~femorlal Hall be
dt'!!lroyed,
\\'h ichevc r method ls selected. sta ff
. members feel lhmtlngton Beach can pay
for a large measure of it by acquiring
•·social service" funds from the county,
The administrative .staff contends the
city can reasonably as k the county for
$~00,000 to $600,000, If a news nior hall i-"
built at the old civic center site , or if
ri1emorial Hall is refurbished.
0.llY f"llol '11ftl ...... The workshop, sponsored by the
Fotmtain Valley School District in
cooperation with the UC Irvtne spea,kcrs
bureau, is open to all area residents
without charge.
SEVERAL HELPING HANDS EASE TRAPPED MAN'S ORDEAL
Phys ician I. Page Sowers Was Pinned For One-half Hour
Topics and .speakers arc:
May 7, Mary Buckharj, UC! Assisljinl
.Dean of Students, discus.sing women's
changing roles;
Ma y 41 , Linda Moore, president of the
Laguna Beach Chapter of lhe National
Organization of Women, speaking on
progress in legislation, courts and
organizations supporting equality;
Ph.ysician One of Four
Trapped in Auto Crash
May 21 , Edythe R. Peters, direct<ir of
the UCI Women's Opportunity Center,
who will discuss the center's history and
relationship to the women's movement
FronJ Page J
REINECKE ...
A physician y.·ho \\'as treated by
colleagues as he lay trapped in his
ma ngled SJX>rts car for more than 30
minutes was one or four persons In jured
today in a headon collision westerly of
The Arches overpass in Ne~·port Beach.
Officials at Hoag !\1emorial Hospllal
confirmed shor1ly before noon that three
of lying when he said his first discussions of lhe victims of the West Coast High"·ay
of holding the coovention in San Diego crash y.·ouJd be admil!cd in serious
came in a social gathering of San Diego condition with multiple injuries.
citizens in Washington in April 1971. Hcscue workers finally freed Dr. L
In other court papers, the special Page So"•er.s. 58, of Costa A·tesa, after
prosecutor's office has said the first .such another doctor and nurse \Vere sum.
talk was betv.·een Reinecke and then moned from Hoag Memorial Hospita l
\\Thitc House chief of staff H R on the hill above to help.
Haldeman, The date of the aiieged--~ The~ provid~. em~rgency . treatment.
discussion with Haldeman has not been 1nclu~1ng ad~m1.stratt~n of nrtravenous
disclosed by the special prosecutor's solution as police and firemen la~rcd ~o
office. free . Dr. Sowers, Y.'ho practices 1n
Reinecke ·s testimony before th e Hunlington Bea~. . .
J udiciary Committee in AprU 1972 came ~e ""as a.drn1tt~ to t~ hospital 1n
during hearings over the nomination of ser1ou~ ~.d1t1on w11h multiple head and
Richard G. Kleindienst fo r attorney chest in~unes. . .
general . Kleindienst \\'as confirmed but !\1otor1st l\lrs. Lou ise Whitnack, 30, of
later resi ed. 3-0:' l..aguna_ St., New1_><>rt Beach, sus-gn tamed mult1ple lacerations and possible
int~mal injuries, while her daughter
Juli e, 7, .suffered head injuries. OIAMGICOAST
DAILY PILOT "' Hospital offi cials said both were listed
in serious oondition and that Julie "·ouJd
be kept under ~urveillance i n the
intensive care unit.
A second child of 1r1r. and ~lrs.
Kenneth Whitnack, little Zachery. l. was
riding in a car seat and only suffered
minor injuries which v.·ere patched up in
the emergency room.
The headon collision occurred in
v.·estboond lanes of Coast High"A•ay near
Howard 's Restaurant but police v.·erc still
investigating the cause of the accident.
NeY.'JX)rt Beach Fire Department Gapt.
John Brannon reported the coUision
which occurred only a moment or two
before he arrived on the scene in \Vest
KeY.'JXlrt.
Glass and other debris was scattered
over the pavement by the impart of Dr.
So,\·ers' sports roadster and ?vlrs.
\Vhitnack'.s compact station wagon.
Gasoline tanks were not· ruptured,
however, and there was no fire , which
co uld easily have claimed the life o! the
1rapped physician.
He lay almost horizontally inside the
crumpled foreign roadster, while none of
1 he other victims were ejected from their
heavier car.
Julie Whitnack lay unconsCious in the
back seat, while her mother sat dazed
and bleeding behind lbc wbcel and li!Ue
Zachery wailed in fear and Pain.
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Tl1ree Sculptors Compete
For Civic Ce11ter Project
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The field of sculptors compeling for a
$40.000 contract for the HL01tington Stach
Civic Center has been natTowed to three
by Lhe city's all ied arts commission.
A Lhrce--mcmber panel has selected
.sculptors Karel Appel of Paris, Berna rd
lto&cnthal of i'lcw york and Jack Zajac of
Santa Cruz.
The three will now make scale models
or the type of sculpture they would like to
place 111 lbe patio of the new civic C(!tller.
They have until July J to submit their
scale modcts, at which time the WJ,000
tontract for Lhc real thing will be
a.warded to one of the three.
Each of the finalists wUI receive $1.000
And the scale models will become ttie
property of the city.
The three finalists were picked from a
list of 4G scultpors who submitttd
sketches and photographs of their
previous works.
Th(' final K-ulpture musl be 1
I
)
minimum of 10 feet tau an either
"pollslled stainless steel, bronze, cast
concrete, carved marble, _granite, fired
ceramic or brick.
One art work, a 15--foot, bronze naked
surfer, sculpted by Edmund Shumpert.
was originally scheduled for the site, but
was shi.lted to the beacbfroot when civic
center architect Kurt Meyer and City
Administrator Dave Rowlands said they
di(ln 't feel It fit with the civic etnter.
The selectioo panel was composed of
local 9Ctllptor Rick Anderson: Los
Angeles Times art critic llcnry &!ldls:
and Kenneth Ross, director of tbe Los
Angeles Municipal An Co'"lrplssion.
~1eyu and the dty'1 art~ OOl'llUltanl
Joseph Yoong wilhdrew from lhe
"lecUon p•nei during Friday's Judging.
Meyer dropped out bieclD.te he
coMidered It a oonnict sihce lhe art work
will go wllb his building. Young dropped
out wt;en Meyer did to le.ave. .!" odd.-
numbered pant!.
Senior Citizens
Whi le lhe city does nol have lo provide
50 percent matchlni f\Jnds lo obtain t'hc county mo~y-(from the oounty·s federal
revenue aharlne pot), it mu.st show
su bstantla1 lnvolvtment In the project.
That involvenlcnt could be obtak\ed by
allowing extensive use of the old city hall
offices for several "people Sl'rvice" type
agencies, at no or very low rent.
tenaals Include Lepl Aid, Saivatlon
Army, Human 11....,_ Council. Sir
Thomas ~tore CJii\lc a"iKt the---mtional
Alltance for Family Life Foundation.
Urged
redevelopment pion· !lnoily ere a led by
ttie engin~ring fi rm of Voorhies Trindle
and Nelson tVTN).
Tonight 's 49-p<1gl' documl!nt is a.n
improved version of a four-page rcpor1
submitted thrc<'·V.'C'l'k!'i ago by Ule samr.
four-n1ember L"011Ul1ittce. Counci lmen
rebuked the oon1millee for Hs previous
shallov.· report.
1 Part of the staff report recommends
use of the old administrative building and
y,·hat was the planning Jnd building
department home for special service v
agencies.
The city council has already promised
use of the old pollcc detective office to
the Huntington Beach Jo"ree Clinic. The
new staff report al.so suggests that part
of lhe old cifY hall be usOO for lhe
proposed Kuska l\.1useum, connected to
the library.
While strong suggestions are made ror
use of the old 3.S.acre civic center sill',
the report recognizes that future use of it
will depe-nd on lhc type of downtov.11
Con1mittec mcn1brrs -Parks Dl rrctor
Norin \\'ol'thy. pt11'k aid(' Toni !\1osely.
JJ brarian \Valier Johnson and planner
Ed Selich -will :1sk th£> cou11cll lo take
some drf\nitc act ion to h('!p the seniors
al t<Jnight's m~ing. Some agencies mentioned as possible
Ensenada
Yacht Race
Fastest Yet
By ALMON LOCKABEY
•Mth111 Rtltof'
ENSENADA-The fastest and calmest
Newport to Ensenada race in the 27-year
history of the event came to a close
today as half of the yachtsmen were on
tbeir way home.
The speed ol the race was due to brisk
westerly winds that prevailed from the
Saturday start lo lhe finlslt early Sunday
morning.
Total calm prevailed in Ensenada from
about 8 p.m. Sunday 8!I most of the non.-
yachting crowd bad left for home or were
in jail and many yachtsmen were
preparing to up anchor and start lhe long
uphill drag to home ports.
Emenada Police made a bust at the
Bahia Hotel about 6 p:m. Sunday to quell
a disturbance .. A doren youths were
hauleQ away to jail but none of lhem was
conoected with the yacht race.
Ensenada and Newport Ocean Sailing
Association officers sai d today there
have been no probl.ems compared to the
near riot conditions of la.st year.
There were relatively few problems in
the race itself. Two yachts were still at
sea early today but had been accounted
for. They had overshot Ensenada and
were beating their way back.
There were several minor collisions
and one major one on the .starting line
Saturday. The 37·foot sloop Wings
collided with another on the starting line
and rammed a bole through itJ hull. The
damaged yacht was .not idenUlied.
The yadil Double D which had reported
she was taking on water :soon aft.er the
start repaired wbalever damige w.u
responsible and started the race two
houn late and finlshed Sunday nighl
First yacht t<i finish shortly after S
a.m. SUnday was the cataraman Seabird ,
owned and skippered by Bob Hanel of
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club. Seabird was
also first to finish la.st year.
First single hull to finish, some .a
minutes la ter, v.·as the 62-foot .sloop
Ragtime sailed by Stan Miller and a
three-man Long Beach Yacht Club
.syndicate.
Jack Baillie's New.sBoy, the pereMial
first finisher from Balboa Yacht Club,
finished seventh this year. The race
committee was .still feverishly compiling
handicap results today because of a
number of protests. The I r o p h y
presen~tion is scheduled late today.
Tbe first 10 boats lo fin~h: I. Seabird
2. Ragtime 3. Sirius · II, Bob Lynch,
Newport Harbor Yacht Club 4. Maloma,
Jack Swart, Orange Coast College 5.
Soliloquy, Ken Burns, S!\fYC 6. Anitra,
Fred Preiss, PMYC 7. New.sBoy 8. Lani
Kai (catamaran) .dartin Crumrine,
Balboa Yacht Club 9. Serena, Steve
Bragg, SCCYC 10. Imi Loa, Vic Stern,
Seal Beach Yacht Club.
Unofficial handlcap winners : President
of l.1exico Trophy (Ocean Raching-D )
Cohort, Milt Vogel, HHYC; Pre!ident of
U.S. Trophy (PHRF·F) Hampshire Rose,
Dennis Burnett, S$C; U.S. Secretary ol
State (PHRF·D) Cambria, B 111
Larson, PVYC; U.S. Secretarv of Navy
(PHRF-~) Viva Cruz, Tony Cruz, CYC:
Governor of Baja Calilornia (PHRF-C)
Serena, Alex VanDykc, LBYC; Mayor or
Newport Beach (PHRF·B) Pacifica, Stan
Willis. SDYC; Secretary of Foreign
Relations (OC.C) Promotion, :i ~arshall
Beck. BYC: Mexican Secretary o( Stale
(QC.BJ Kari II. Dick Kellon, LA YC;
Governor or califomia (QC.A) Shamrock,
Roy Disney, CYC; U.S. Coast Guard
( MORF·A) Saltshaker, Bob Boy es .
Anacapa Yacht Club; Jeff Deaver
(Crui sing Club of America ) Paradox,
Tom Arm.strong, CYC; Emigh Family
Memorial Trophy (MORF·BI Good
Times, Crane and Smith, -·c.
FromP"IJel
ROBBERY ..• ,
warned lhe couple lhat be would harm
lheir chlldre!l u lhey loid polico about the
lnclden~ '° lhey planned not lo, until
they were stopped at a roadblock al the"
Island and questiooed by police.
Police wc-re alerted lo lhe kidnaplng by
a lriend of Mrs. 11ffany, wbo wu talking
wilh her on the telephone when the
robber entered and who htard Mrs.
111fany 80'fam. Upon Investigating,
poUcc di!!COVtred the couple missing.
Moore said police are still in ... llgallng
the Incident today and checldna Into the
whereabouts ol the lwo robbers . TbeY
e9C>ped wilh mo In cash and jewelry
from the Kruegcr1' home.
Oolr., '11•1 stiff ,...._
MISS FOUN,TAIN VALLEY ~ Candi Copeland was lhe judges' choice
Sunday night to serve as 1'1iss Fountain Valley 1974. The blonde 18·
year-old, a student at Cal State Lon g Beach, captured lhe title from
a field of eight contest.ants.
Candi Copelru1d Selected
Fountain Valley's Queen
Candi Copeland, an 18-year~Jd Cal
State Long Beach frestur.an, danced her
~ay into the Miss Fountain Valley 1974
ht1e Sunday night before a full auditori·
um at Los Am igos High School.
She topped seven other girls ln Poise.
chann, beauty and talent competition in
the city's annual beauty pageant .
In lhe ~liss Fountain Vall ev contest
girls must display some talen·t in addi:
lion lo poise and beauty. Miss Copeland
did a lively stage dance.
She was crowned by lhe 1973 queen
KikJ Lammers. '
Runner.sup were: Cindy ~lcGann, 17, a
senior at La Quinta High School ; Shauna
Acey, 19, a sophomore at Goldro West
Colleg~; and Shelli Pettit, 17, a senior at
r·ountain Valley 1-ligh School.
!\tiss ritcGann was also voted "l.li .s.s
CongeniaJity" by the other girls in the
contest.
The theme of ihe evening was "flash-
back'' with music and decor from the
1950s and '60s, Entertainment was pro-
vided by the "Good Friends11 vocalists
and band.
A Happy Endin
'Missing' Girl Visiti1ig Frie1id
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 "'° Delly '"°' '''" A JitUe-girl's unwi9C weekend vlslt with
a .lpeclal school friend ended happily for
Newport Beach police and her family
Sunday after he r hostess' father opened
his morning paper.
Kimberly Denise Wilson. 8, whose
disappearance was the number one story
on lhe front pago, was playing happily In
lhe lhocked man'• homa u a guest o! his
·little girl at tl!e time.
"He opened up his Da)ly Pilot and
saJd" "Ooohhhhhh, DO," Newport Beach
Detective Bob Hardy oxpl1ined lodly.
Tho embarrassed father Immediately
coiled police and Klmmle-oa they call
her-was quicltly reunited wllh Mn.
Marcarel Wibon , o! 117 lllh Sl., on the
Balboa Penln,.,la.
Investigators sakf the way t h e
Peninsula Is laid out was one · partial
factor In lhe lfmlled area aearched by
police afl<r the lilUo ilrl wu reported
ml1Slng Friday niJhl.
"She supr-<f!y dldn'l have any
friends who lived beyond lllh Street,"
.said Deteclive lfardy, one of .several men
detailed overnight to the anxious search.
Homes of aJI known acquaintances
were checked,
"Those guys \Yorked their tails olt" •• .,"
said one policeman when contacted for
.. progress on the hunt for Kimmie, after
the weary Investigators had gone home
Saturday.
Thro ughout the mystery
disappearance, they could only bear ..
In mind another overnight search from
Friday and Saturday last July, for
another mis.sinR: girl.
Linda Ann O'Keefe, abductod by a man
w~ ldcnll\y aod whereabouts is still
t1nknown, was molested nnd strangled
and duniped !>eslde Upper Newport Bay.
Kimberly and her friend, whose family
lives ttt 2208 W. Ocean Front. seven
blocks Crom the Wilton apartment,
simply pulled an adventul'OUJ pranlt that
got oul of control.
Jnve!!tlgator1 8'1-ld after walking home
from ochool Friday wiih her Younger
sister Sarah J'n•, 7, that Kltnqilo and
h" lrlend decided It would be tun .to
spond the weekend together.
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N·uke Plant
Foes Plan
Opposition
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of '"-' O•llr Piiot ll1tf
Opponents of the San '"Onofre Nuclenr
power plant said today they will file a
lav.·suit In San Diego Superior Court
\Vednesday in a new effort lo :ilop the
expansion.
The Ca lifornia Supreme Court la~t
v.·eek refused to hear the plea against the
state coastal commission's approval of
the $1.4 billion addition of two nuclear
reactors less than three miles sooth or
San Clemente.
Loren Long o1 the Environmental
Coal!Uon of Orange County saJd today
that the oppooents decided Sunday to go
on with their fight. ·
They are opposed to the plant·
expansion because they say it will cause
substantial hann to the marine life
offshore and will destroy valuable coastal
bluffs.
Some of the envtronl'J'lenta.lists are
more opposed to It On grounds of
radiation dangers, a topic the coastal
conunission was told not to consider.
Assistant State Attorney General Carl
Boronkay told the commission that only
the federal Atomic Energy Commission
has jurisdiction over radiation safety .
The environmenlalisl3 contend that the
commission was ill advlscd when It voted
Feb. 20 to approve the plant after fi rst
denying it Dec. s.
Miss Long said the \Vednesday filing
date ls tenuitive but she is sure the case
u·i\l be continued.
The state Supreme Court refused to
take orignal jurisdiction of the case, in
part, Miss Loni: said b~cause the
lawsuit had never been filed in the lower
Superior courts.
The oppooents or units two and three
started their action with the Founh U.S.
Court o! Appeals in San Diego, whi ch
also had ref~ to bear !he ca.-;e.
The opponents are represented by
Donald Stark, a private attorney \\'ith
offices in Corona, and Fred e ri ck
Sutherland, from the Center for Law in
the Public Interest in Los Angeles. Also
involved in the suit are the Friends of the
Earth and Group United Against
Radiatioo Danger (GUARD) of San
Clemente.
The two 1,1.fO..megaw:iu reactors and
the existing reactor are owned by
Southern Calilornia Edison Qimpany,
which ha! 80 percent interest and the San
Diq:o Gas and Electric Company which
holdl Lbe remaining 20 percent illterest.
Face Fanlillar
This voter fla shes a familiar
sn1ile as she cast her ballot
Sunday while votin"g in the
French presidential eleetion at
her Riviera precinct. She is
movie actress Brigitte Bardo!.
Distaff E1iglisli
Guerrilla Held
In Tlieft of Art
DUBLI N. Jreland (AP) -Bridget Ros~
Dugdale, English debutante t u r n e d
revolutionary, was formally charged here
today on five counts in the !heft of 19
masterpieces ~·orth $20.~ million -the
biggest art robbery in history.
Miss Dugdale, 33. was also charged on
five other counts Involving possession ·Of
explosives and fireanns · in County
Donegal, a trouble spot on the Irish
republic's frontier with violence-tom
Northern Ireland .
She was charged in Dublin's Special
C.ourt after traveling under heavy army
Victim
Found
and police guard -lrom County Cork of Ki@.ap Where she WU arrested Saturday al a
: ·~remote cottage with the. 11 oil paintings . -. ·-Co t• stolen 10 days ago. -On 88 ' Most of the cases beard al the Special
Court involve members of the outlawed Abductor Escal'lP8 Jrlsh Republican Army. a predominantl y r -Roman Catholic guerrilla movement
battling to oust the British from
Northern Ireland and tmite it with the
republic.
The kidnaping or a young Los Angeles
woman by an anned assailant enMd
south of San Clemente over the weekend
when the vldim's car ran out of gas
and was hit from behind. ·
But the kidnaper of 18-year..old student
Pamela Dav.n Fanner managed to
escape ln adjacent hilly areu and la still
at large.
Investigaton for the San Diego County
Sheriff's office aald the young woman
was abduded as she entered her car in
Los Angeles by a man armed with a
band gun.
The yotmg "'·oman told officers she was
forced to drive south but as her car
passed San Clemente it ran out of fuel in
a traffic Jane of the San Diego Freeway.
A car came upon the stranded ~htclc
and hlt it from behind, officers said.
No one was injured in the crush. but r ~llss Fanner managed to flee from the
\ vehicle and her abductor, armed with a
pistol. ran into the hills.
Officers said the suspect was described
as a male Negro in his mid..JOs. J~e wore
an Af~style haircut, a black leather
jack~t and blue denim pents.
Plenty of Wheat
-No $1 A Loaf,
Says U.S. Aide
COLU~mus, Ohio (AP J -Hou..ewtves
don't have to worry about the price of
bre>d soaring to SI a loaf, lhe U.S.
Undersecretary of Agriculture says. It's
just something dreamed up by the baking
industry.
•1There's plenty of wheat available.
more than we can use," declared J . Phil
Camphell.
It's just I.hat for the first time, the
naUon's bakers have had to go out and
find available wheat, Campbell told the
Associated Press Society of Ohio
Saturday night. Tho goverrin»nt bas
stopped keeplnf, track d It, be said. •
'"T'hey came n and told us, 'ntert's no
· wheat," Campbell 1&ld. "We told them,
'It's tMre. You Just have to go find it.' "
~
Bargain Session Off
AKRON Ohio (UPI) -A marathon
bargainlnl session between negotiators
for striking Team5tera Local 473 and the
Akron Beacon.Journal was called off
Friday night •ftcr troublo developed on
lhe picket Une. '
The arotmd·the-e.lock session had been
!Cheduled to t>og!n at 9:!0 p.m., bu\ ear-
lier in the even1ng, a picket w111 struck
by a c.ar which the teamsters aaJd was
leaving th~ newspaper plant.
Police earlier named the woman
arrested in Saturday's raid as Dr.
Bridget Rose Dugdale, but noted that she
refused to confirm her identity.
Daughter of an F.nglish insurance
magnate and a doctor of philosoplly, she
has been sought by British security
forces since February in connection with
arms smuggling into Northern Ireland .
Police in the British province a1so want
to question her about a bombing raid on
a border police base from a hijacked
helicopter earlier this year.
The police said that in the eottage they
found 16 of the 19 paintings stolen April
26 by a woman and four men from the
country home near Dublin of Sir Alfred
Beit, and the other 1hrec paintings were
io the trunk or the car. They Included
masterpieces by Vermeer, Hals, Rubens .
Goya and Vela squez and were valued at
mo re than $20 million .
Uelcl h1 Caracas
British singer Tom Jones is
being held accountable lor an
altercation between his body·
guard anrl a Venezuelan news.
man and is being detained in
Caracas. See story, Page 4.
Mondaf1 May 6, iq74 H OAILV PILOT :J
Marine , Element Wins
CoQst Regio11al Pci11el Votes 10-1 for ~faster Plan Part
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 f"-DMl't "ilot lt•H
The ~rine element4he first part of a
nine rt coastal master plan-was
approv 10 to ,1 today by the SOuth
Coast ional Zone Conservation
Commlss n in Long Beach.
The documen ts will now be sent to the
state coastal commission in San
l{issi11«er Set b
For Gromyka
Meet on Isle
JERUSALEM (UPI) -Secretary or
State •lenry A. Kissinger will break off
his Middle. East shuttle diplomacy
lx!tween lsr3el and Syria to meet Soviet
foreign Minister ·Andrei Gromyko on
Cyprus Tuesday, U.S. so_urces announced
today.
Gromyko had been in Damascus
conferring v.•ith the Syrians "'hile
Kissinger has been in Israel and in
Amman, Jordan.
"Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
and S<>viet Foreign Secretary Andrei
Gromyko have agreed to meet in Cyprus
on May 7 for a continuing review of U.S.-
Soviet relations including the situation in
the Middle East," the announcemeni .. :
said.
"We express appreciation to the
government of Cyprus for arranging the
meeting on short notice," S t a t e
Department Spokesman Robert J .
McCloskey said. "It was worked Out with
the full understanding and approval of
the government of Israel." He added
that-the date for the meeting had jelled
in the past 24 hours.
Kissinger is expected to take off for
Cyprus Tuesday morning and be back in
Israel \Vednesday to continue his efforts
to bring about an Israeli-Syrian troop
disengagement in the Golan Heights.
The announcement of the meeting \\'ilh
Gromyko came shortly after he arrived
here from Amman .
The meeting on Cyprus will deal not
only \\'ith the Middle East but with such
questions as the strategic arm s
limitation agreement, the European
security conference and other issues
leading up to President N i x o n ' a
scheduled trip to Moscow in June.
Kissinger and Gromyko met in Geneva
a little over a week ago when Ki.Jsinger
received a pledge of Soviet cooperation in
bringing peace to the Middle East.
Gromyko. cochairman'"with Kissinger of
the Geneva Middle East Peace
Conference. fle\v to Damascus Sunday
for talks with President Rafez Assad.
U.S. officials said Kissinger is not
going to Cyprus to make a deal with
Russia on the Middle East and that none
is expected as a result of the Gromyko-
Kissinger meeting.
It \\'as understood that the Soviets
requested the meeting originally in Syria
but that the United States suggested
Cyprus as an alternative. It also W;\S ur.·
derstood that the meeting was expected
to deal a b o u t half and half "ith the
~liddle East and pre-summit i~sues.
Driver of Van
Dies in Crash
On Grove Street
One man was killed and three others
injured in a grinding crash on a raiMllck
Garden Grove street Sunday night, police
said today.
Donald E. Van Winkle, 30, of Santa
Ana. was dead on atrival at Orange
County Medical Center of injuries
suffered in the 10 :15 p.m. accident on
Westminster Avenue.
Police said Van Winkle was driving a
van in the eastboond Janes of the street
"'hen he lost control of the vehicle on the
slippery pavement and rammed another
van parked at the curb.
Van Winkle WM thrown clear of the
crash but was fatally injured when he
hit the pavement, officers said.
Silas \Vhile, 40, also of Santa Ana . a
passenger in Van \Vinkle"s vehicle, was
trapped inside and had to be cut free by
n fire department rescue team. He
sustained moderate injuries and is in
guarded condition today at Riverview
Hospital.
Two occupants of the parked van were
alM injured and-are in guarded condition
at Rlverview.
They "·ere identified as Salvador
Aquilar, 28, and Aliseo Cervantes, 25,
both of Santa Ana .
Police said Van \Vink.le had been
drinking p-ior to the acddent but an
autopsy will have to detennine if he was
under the innuence of alcohol when the
crash occurred.
Lechu·e,on · Lesbians
'
At UC Irvine Tuesday
"Everything You Wanted to Know
oboul Leablanls111,. But Were Afraid to
Ask" Is the Women's Month at UC Irvine
lecture 'prqgram set ror Tuesday.
Members o{ lbc Lesbian Fell)!nists or
Orange Coonly wlll !cod the panel
discussion which begins at l p.m. in room
232 Humanities Roll.
.
Francisco.
There planners u111 try to combine 11
y,•ith similar efforts lro1n five qthi.'r
regional commissions.
A public hearing on the statewide
n1arine element has 'ueen scheduled for ·n
ty,·o-day meeting in Los l'.ngeles June ~
ands.
The vote today came one v.•eek afti.'r
the second public hea ring on the matinc
elenH!nl. T~ commission was supposed
to vote \1.1st week but oommissioner
Janles Jlayes of Los Angell's asked ror
1he delay bccausi: he'd nlissed th('
n1orning session ,
Co1nmissioncr J{onald Caspers, Orange
C..ounty 's Fifrh Dist rict supervisor, :it
that time suggested an unofficial stra\11
-U,IT....._M
KEY IMPEACHMENT FIGURES? -Congressional sources suggest
fate of Nixon impeachment may rest with 11a couple of guys named
Pete and Ed." They mean Rep Peter W .Rodino, Jr. (D-N.J.), Oe!t),
House Judiciary chairman; and Rep Edward Hutchinson of Michigan,
senior GOP committee member. They are shown huddling earlier
this year.
\ o!e to sec if th(' draft report would pass
~11!hout his presence today.
The straw vote sho·,,·ed nine in favor.
\l\p against and one abstention-Haye~
But commissioner Louis Nowell, a Lo.~
1\ngeles city Cfluncilm11n , wns the sole no
\'QI(' today. Cn rnu•n \\':irsrha111, 11.•ho last
1~cck ~'lid she OpPoSi.'rt \hf' report, today
1otl·d for it as did l-lnyes.
C;ispers 1ra~ abS<:·nt. There w,1c; 110
di&russion lx'li)r.~ 1ht1 l'Olc· was ta ken
The 1n.1ri11c f'lcllll·nt r1't"Om1nends
t·!.tt1bli~h111('Ut of ,1 m<irine p;irk preserv['
:::ilr1ng lhc u11in<'nrf)(lr.111·d c-..1a-;thne bet('Cn
UJrona dC'I ,\lar and Laguna Bcae;h, a
public park a! ('resc('nt Biiy Point 111
Laguna Beach and a public overlook JI
Dhna Point.
II also puts a high pri ority on thr
rcstnration and prcsc r\'a fion of Upper
:\cwporl Bay and Dolsa Chica !\larsh in
llunflnglon Beach.
Other proposed policies are ·
-Increased educational efforts in thr
tidal areas along Doheny.
-Federal water qualir y staildards
calling ror secondary waste water
trea tement hv 1977 must be met.
-All remaining estuaries and wetlan ds
be preserved.
-Fees be charged for damage fron1
thermal. ~·aste water and other pollution
to finance n1arine research.
-All existing marinas must provide
efnuent discharge systems arid new
marinas 1nust have discharge hookups
for boats.
-Dredging in estuaries would be
prohibited unless absolutely necessary
for the public welfare.
Storm Rattles
Coastal _.\reas;
Dainage Slight
Anti-impeachment Bid
A-.Jipring storm complete with ligtitning
and) thunder blustered over Orange
County Sunday night, snapping off J)O'A'er
/' at nearly 10.cm homes.
Though the coastal m-eas of. Newport
Beach, Huntington Beach, Laguna Beach.
and San Clemente reported only light
rain. inland areas had heavy rain for a
half-hour and some lightning damage.
. .
Denied by Nixon Aide
• By HELEN THOMAS
\VASHJNGTON (UPI) -A presidential
spokesman denied t o d a y that the
Wllite HDu,,e was conducting a public
relations blitz to aid President Nixon 's
anti-impeachment effort and to discredit
John W. Dean.
Ronald L. Ziegler, who serves in the
dual role of presidential adviser and
preM secretary, said the President now
feels tha t '~Uie fill! story 6l \VatergS.te"
has been made public with th e
transcripts of Nixon 's \Vhite House
conversations.
Jn response lo questions, Ziegler
rejected a suggestion that t h e
appearance of Aleaxander M. 'Jtaig,
Nixon's chief o( staff, and James. D. St.
Clair, his chief im peachment counsel, on
television SWlday "was part of a PR
blitz."
"It's our effort to speak to the issue
and present the White Hoose viewpoint,"
Ziegler said. "I think Ibey did so."
Haig had ref~ last \li'eek to testify
before the Senate Watergate Committee
about a $100,000 Howard Hu gh es
contribution to Nixon, ~ . appeared
Sunday on ABC's "Issues and Answers"
while St. Clair appeared on NBC's "~1eet
the Press."
The day before. the \Vhite House
released a long document attempting to
show contradictions between Senate
testimony of Dean, former Nixon counsel
who Is his principal accuser, and the
transcripts of his conversations with the
President.
Ziegler urged that the public and the
llouse Judiciary Committee read all the
transcripts. "line by line." saying "the
scope and the entirety of the transcripts
\
provided could lead any fair and open
minded person to realize they have the
whole story of Watergate" and proof of
Nixon's innocence oi any wrongdoing.
Other developm ents:
J. Fred Buzhardt, a member of the
President's Watergate legal team, was
questioned for several hours t.00.ay by a
federal grand jury that has as one of lts
prbne responsibilitles,an inveaUgall~f
the erasure of 18~ ·minutes or ·one "'of
Nixon's Watergate conversations, three
days after the burglary took place.
-Former Attorney General Jolin N.
Mitchell today joined in an effort by
special prosecutor Leon Jaworski to
force the White House to surrender
additional evidence for the \Vatergate
cover-up trial scheduled for September.
Mitchell 's attorneys said ' 'the
subpoenaed materials are necessary and
relevant" lo preparation of the defense.
Aiitchell is one of the seven defendants.
-House Speaker Carl Albert said that
wh ile impeachment should not be
undertaken for frivolous reasons, failure
of Congress to act "when the integrity or
the government is at stake would be a
bigger mistake."
-Ziegler indicated the White House
"'ould not oppose granting of imm unity
to witnesses Jn the impeachment inquiry.
Nixon has re-instituted the principle
of executive privilege in prohibiting his
close advisors to testify berorc commit-
tees. Ziegler said.
Ziegler told reporters: ''W~ feel v.•e
have produced the \Vho!e story and that
the committee should now assess it with
a fair and open mind .··
I
Lightning struck the M o u I to n
substation of SOuthem California Edison
in Laguna Hills at 8:46 p.m., causing
major power outage in El Toro, Mission
Viejo, and Laguna Hills.
Though thousands of residents .were
without electricity for a half hour, Edison
Company spokesmen sald neither of two
~t!I?>: bospita!s, &idd!ebock Community
and Mission Comnwnity, wm affe<'ted.
Lightning struck and set fire to a
power pole in ~guna Beach near
Victoria u.acb ·oot Edison SJIO.kesmen
said no power outs were reported as a
result.
The aerial light show and sound
spectacular, mosUy over the C1eveland
National Forest, provided rare
entertainment to Oral!ge Coast re!ldents
in areas where the lightning and thunder
were most intenM!.
But the stonn froot left as quickly as it
_came, leaving a forecast of acattered
clouds and scattered thoweni for toolght
arxi clearer, warmer weather Tuesday.
The National Weather Service forecast
inland temperatures in the low 70s for
the fu-st three days of the week.
Rain totals locally were .20 inch in
MLssion Viejo, .Ill inch in Laguna Niguel
and the coastal areas.
Jr1ANT TO BUY
HOT ANCHOVIES
BOSTON (AP) -Somewhere, 11>me-
on e has the makings or a big antipasto.
State palice reported a tractortrailer
loaded with $46,000 in imported anchovies
was stolen in South Boston. The empty
trailer was recovered over the weekend
in Weston, police said.
Master
O\arles
awaits !he
arrival of his
luncheon guest
in his fine pin-wale
SUll by Imp
Charles. 4 years old
is the son of
Mr and Mrs. Rober1 Edmunds
ol Corona del M>tr
THE
RED BALLOON
LTD.
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.J "· OAILY PILOT
'Ie1110 Cro1Js
Up .!\gain
llACKPEDA l.J/\'G OEPT.-Oh dear, do
01,·e :in apology to our Fifth District
Supe rvisor Ronald Caspers. \\'h o
represents much of our canst.al sector on
the county board. \Vhat I said he hadn 't
done. he has.
Caspers. you n1ay recall, is seeking re-
election to another four-vear term this
June. lie is being challcn.ged by htarsha
Bents and Dr. Nolan Friz.zellc of Newport
"Beach and ex-mayor James Thorpe of
San Juan Capistrano.
Anyway, I suggested that the campai gn
\\•as prelty dull and used as an example
that incumbent Caspers hasn't even
mailed out his memo pads. computerized
letters or American Flag decals like he
did last time.
NO SOONER DID I rattle that one oul
in this corner than the Caspers llandy
Home ~temo J>ads began arriving in
mailOOxes out there in the precincts.
The n1emo pad has an American Flag
across the top and comes "'ith a handv
list of_~ll the emergency numbers in you·r
area.
This 1neans. of course, that the pads
have to be printed for particular zones
"'ilhi!l the Fiflh Supervisorial District.
since emergency numbers aren't the
same for Newport Beach , for example,
as they are in San Clemente. ~1ission
Viejo, J,.aguna or other points coastal.
Also, the first computerized letter
came with the pad. Again. I was wrong.
Caspers' platform this li1ne is a little
1nore complex than just a simple call for
Leadership.
This time. it's six gocxl. solid
paragraphs.
IN ESSENCE, it tells you the next four
re·ars will be crucial and you'd belier not
change horses in the middle of the
stream. That may sound familiar. but
that's okay.
SuperviM>r Ron also says he 's saved
Upper Newport Bay, had held the wild
develbpment interests at bay also. and
you ·best re-elect him if you don't want to
see ~ Orange Coast covered "'ith
concrete. --
rttEANWHILE, AS Supervisor Ron \Y.!is
gettilf .. out his letter and memo pad~
t\\'ct.6Uler candidates. the aforementiontd ~Jrs. Bents and Dr. Frizze!le. ~·ere
fighJipg for the endorsement of ·'the,
Or. County Coordinating Republlean
Asseftibly. a quasi-unofricial ar!TI ·of the
GOP.
Friuelle figured to get l he
endorsement since he'd been state
chairman of the outfit in ·ss. But Mrs.
Bents,got it. Frizzclle abruptly screamed
about. ethics and 'J>O"'er tactics.
\Veil, ii y,·as reported that there was
some cast of characters plugging for
Mrs. Bents, including Mrs. John Schmitz,
~·ife of lhe ex-congressman and· AlP
prei!dential hopeful; Assemblyman Bob
Badham and his aide Ed Ward ;
Congressman Andy Hinshaw and sidekick
Chip Cleary and state Senator Denny
Carpenter.
r don't knoy,· about the ethics, but the
power seemed to be there.
THE ETffiCS CO~tE in what in
thunder is a partisan Republican outfit
doing getting so involved in a non-
p:irtisan election? Next thing you know
they'll be endorsing for dogcatcher.
r.teanwhilc, supervisoria\ candidate
Thorpe didn 't even seek the Republican
Assembly endorsement. Maybe this is
because he·s a Democrat.
BUT INCUJ\IB ENT Supe r visor
Caspers·. ""ho is a Republican. apparently
didn't bother much y,•ith it either.
• All of y,·hich proves Caspers has more
political sense than certain parties have
given him credit for.
Hang in there. Ron. Just stick wilh
those memo pads.
Monday, May b. 1'~74
•
··Dairy £0-op Sought F_uit'~s .for lYlills
'
\\'1\Sllll'\(~TO'\ tA P! -A top dE1irY
coop<'ra!h'e off11·1al allegedly "'anted to
rniM" S2 n1illion in l'ash lo l11•l1> Rep.
\\'1lbur I). f\1 il!s 1ll.·Ark .. 1 ruu ror
Pr"!iiden t in 1972 :iguf11~t Richard ~1.
i\'i.~on. "'ho had lx>l'n pro1n1sed 2 ntilho11
in dairy 1no11ey hun!>clf.
Oa\'id L. Pcirr. the (orn1cr !«?COnd-111-
l'Ollllnand ;1t AS!'iociatcd ~l i lk Produc1•rs,
Inc.. behc\·cd 1 1\l 11ls C1Juld \Yin lhc
l1cnlocratic presidential 11on1lnalion and
bcp1 i\'ixon. accordtn ,t: to staternt'nt ~
aUribult.>d to 1-'arr·s lormcr associates at
the giant dairy C'OOpt_'rati\·e.
•·nA\rE r~RR ~'anted to build a kllty of salaried cooperative employes to
for \Vilbur J\IH~ or U million ·• the. c».-wist the early dratt.~1111s campaign. ao
op'i f o r nl e r lobbyist. Bob .\. Lilly, ls 1. appartnt violation of federal law
quoted os ~uying. ··11c wunted this le be · pt'Chibiting use ol corporate n1oney in
in crl!ih." campaigns.
Th t· u11lk prcxiu<:i!r'5 present chirr 1•r TUltNED·down a proposed check~ft
executi \'e. Georg(' L. rtlchren. is qootcQ or employes by Parr and ga,·e directions
as saying he rut off son1c of Parr's aid to that it ~'ftS contrary to comp.1ny policy
~lills "'hc·n f\·lehren took over leadership nnd would not be allowed Parr r"'mintl-
of the CG-Op in early 1972. ed me that it was for \\1ilbur Nlills and
At that time. just be r or c Afllls that y,·e owed him a good deal." J\(ehren
announct•tl hi1n~eir llS an active candidate is Quoted as saying.
for the f><on1ocratic p re s i den l 1 a I The rheck-0ff was appnrently for (I
11on1ination . Parr had assigned ll number fu ndraising rffort for f\tills !hut Pnri·
..
. •
High Bise Bain Maker
•
\\'anted to ~uct amonr tM co-op's
CJ.nployes, .a ding to a sooroe closo to
1 'ht> Senate rWat fgatf comm It te e 's
Investigation of the affair.
Mchren is quoted as 58Ying that he wRs
told fiye co-op e:n1ployes worked on the
t.1lUs campaign. Lilly named s i x
employcs who he said actually \\'Orked
ror J\1ills. A seventh co-op employe has
been identified as the main advance man
for Mills.
Parr ran the milk producen;' office in
Uttlc Rock, Ark .• in J\1ilts' congressional
district. He believed that MUb. ~cad of
Poll Shows
Nixon Dip
After Talk
PRINCETON. N.J. (AP l -Fortv-fy,•o
per<:i!nl of the people who viewed or-read
about President Nixon's t e 1 e v i s i o n
address last week on the \\ratergatc
transcripts pow have a "less favorable"
opinion of Him, according to the Gallup
Poll .
A specialJ telephone poll or 694 adults
also sho1A·ed that 17 percent ~·ere left
\\'ith a more favorable opinion . Thirt~·
five percent said their opinion had
remained the same. but there ~·as no
V.•ay of determining how this group felt
about the President. Six percent ofrered
no opinion.
TllE POLL ALSO showed that. by a 44-
to-41 percent margin. Americans believe
there is enough evidence against the
President to brtn8 him to trial before the
Senate. 1
However. b'y a 4~o.S& margin. the
"national sa~id it didn't believe the
President's actitp1s at this ii me
WALDIES TOP GOAL : NIXON
OUST{R. Story, Page 9
\1'3rranted hi~ being rcmo\'ed frotn
office.
The special poll y,·as taken to measure
public re~ponse to the President's
defense o( hil· refusal to surrcllder 42
tape recordipgs of \Vhitc House
HOUSTON I UP I/ -Skyscrapers in big cities can affect
the "'·eather like moontaihs do. and they ha ve significantly
changed r3infall patterns all over the \\'Orld. accordin g
10 research scientist Dr. Joseph L. Goldman.
"'est used to be dry relative to the do\vnto~·n area and conve rsations to the House Judiciary
.. The tall build ings act as a mountain to the 11·ind. ··
said the University of St. Thomas professor. associat e
director of the Institute for Storm Research.
.. AS THE WtND BLO \VS over this 1·ery lo1v slopi ng
surf<ice, it impinges on these build ings. Some of i.t goes
the cast. Committee. Instead. Nixon provided
.. It's happening all over the "·orld," he said. edited transcripts. ~
Goldman suggested the change in rainfall patterns By a ratio of mgre than 2-1, Americans
caused by the buildings be applied to practical urban said the JudiciatV Committee y,•as right
problems. such as planning drainage systems and · the •-Tri its deciSiOn to~~t.th! i'a~~· as
problem of SiH~age. · .; · a ·substitute fo~ Uie' ''taJ)es. • YTi • Ufi!
The l'.lPd sink~ge--:-up .to 6 i~ches a .year .in.:somc \; ZQUestion. 62 perfept agrE;ed w~tb . th~
areas -1s caused by gtant 1ndustr1es sucking m1lhons of • ·• c()rnmittee, 24 pJrcent disagreed. while
r.~ we--&>Qle of it goes ara.uod~--. -
• · "Whcri'~il. goes up and around. it ls lirted," he said.
gallons of water from benealh t"e surface. It woul4 help ._ 14 persd no opinion.
jor the il\dUStfies to ,~witch to surface water. ~ 1 I •l:J r.; .. • .. , 1 1, • • '' , . • : \ ~·u -~L>· IN s e Whose ·statemenls
GOLD;\IAN SAID BIG CITIES require a great ainottnt-~--about ~atergate~re; ro:-i lllQre inc!ined "It cools and condenses. It form s and then it rains:·
of \1'ater to survive, and he takes issue "'ith those wbst ~ __ to be!•e~·.e, John Dcao s, or President He said the effect of skyscrapers has already sho11·n
think there \\•on't be enough in the future. I ''Ntxon s? ~IXOT!l edged Dean 3'.I to 36 i up in meteorological statistics. In Houston. for example.
the east side received more rainfall than the \Yest be-
cause jt is nearer the primary source of moisture. the
··1·m sort of an optimist·· Goldn1an said. ··1·think pc~c~nt. With 2' percent having . no
it's \'Cry possible \Ye can progress into the n1egalopolis op1n1on. ·
111\th a verv efficient system . The source of moisture is A second Gallup study shOY.'ed that ~~ Gulf of l\1exico~ ·
"\Ve noy,· find thqt it is dryer in the do"'nlo~-n area
y,•here it used to be \Yet before." Goldman said. "The
right here. ·1 think we'll have all lhe \vater resource we'll Republican party affiliation is at an all-
need." time low -2• per<:i!nt -with 42 percent
describing'tbemseh•es as Democrats and
34 percent independents.
'Si11g~1· Held i11 Ve11ezuela
CA RACAS. \'cnczuela I .'\P 1 -Britisb
si nger To1n .Jones '"as ore\'l!nt..ea-'ifo·m
leaving 'iene:r.uela when he tried lo board
a plane for the Uni~ed Staies .
A JOC"ctl ney,·sina11. l\ianuel Olalquiaga of
the .. El Universal.'' got a court order
against Jon es fOr injuri es allegedl y
inflicted by Jones ' bodyguard .
Olalejuiaga said Da vid Pe1T)' strurk
him on the bead last:'\'ednesday. Perry
reportCdly leT1: Veneiil'e1a·the next day.
Jories rePorte<lly was be ing dela yed
peOOing a· coutt appearance today. A
spokesman at Jones' London office said
they received a call from hITT! 3.fter he
was Mopped from leaving Sunday and he
11-as "totally be"'ildered ... "
Propane Blast
In terms ol political philosophy, 38
percent ooMlder lhernselves mnserva-
tivcs ~1lile 26 percmt place lbemselves
in the liberal camp and 36 percent are
undecided.
The Pi:?j>Ortion of consen·atives is the
-highest~ recorded .since the question y,·as
first askcCt by Gallup in 1936.
Burns 8 W 01nen
At Ranclt Siie -· .. ; , 'MeanwtW~~ maga~ ~id a poll
• _ i ":biien fot:>:.me wagntn~ ! jus;t before
Nixon's armbtmcement that be would
DUBOIS, Wyo. <AP) -"The name release the transcripts show~.a jUJTlp,in
just came out 'whoof' -and then it was the number of Americans who want: the
gone," said a young cowboy. President to resign or be impeached .
He had just y,•itnessed a propane gas
l
th!! llouse Ways and f\1e<tn~ Comm lfftt,
could go "all fhe. Y.'QY;, and win the \\'hite
HOuse. ncconff ng tn 'a h 1 em en t
attributed to llobert 0. lshan1 , the milk'
produc('rs' fonner controller.
. THE STATEMENTS of• Lilly, Mehn·11
and Tshan1 were made public in n coW'l1 proceed ing after t~ J u ! t i c e'
0 e p a rt m e n t ' s antltrust division
subpoenaed !he lnvesHgatiYc notes of
Edward L. \\'right , a prominent Liltlc1 Rock attorney who probed the CO-OP 's
political activities on assigtunent from its
board of directo rs.
V'IT--
FACES CONSERVATIVE
Francois Mitterra nd
Communist Pick
For President ·
"S ure of Win"
PARIS (UP!l -Pra ncois J\litterrand.
the Communist ·backed candJd8te for
presiden1 of France. sa id loday he is so
sure or Yictory in next,Stmda}"s runoff he.
already has started working On his first
decisions as head of state.
"I go into the fi2ht with calm
resolution." ,be said. "Already today I
have begun formulating the
responsibilitie9 I will have to assume
aftfr li1ay 19." ~
~ an election this Sunday that spelled
the end of Gaullism'a l&-'ye.ar role,
r..tftterrand ~oo '43.4 perrent• of the-vote
and his leading rival. conaervative
nnance • minister Valery G i1 card
D'Eslaing,_•J2,9 perccrrt:'
The 10 other candidates, including
C.aWlist Jacques Chaban·Delmas "ilh
14.5-percent,. .~·ere ·· elb:ninated and
t.-1itterrand and Giscard D'Estaing Y.111
fight a straight battle in a run4f vote
)·lay 19. Political observers gave Gi.soard
D'Estaing a slight chance of vdnnilli
next Sunday.
l'l1itlerrand also said France ~oold
continue to be independent of the United
States.
"Our national independence is not
assured "''hen we do not defend ourselves
against lhe hegemony of our . principal
partner," he said in a dear reference to
Washingkln. "Our independence ls not
assured y,·hen we re!use to allow Europe
to take iii own decision ."
Ne~"Slllen at a conference calJed by
Milte!'Tand tOOk this to mean the
Socialist leader felt Giscard D'Estaing
Y.'otdd boy,· to the ·U.S. desire for
consultations With" \Va shingtOn before
Europe takes major policy decisions.
Six Killed in Fil'e
LONDON (AP ) -Fire swept through
IY.'O apartment houses in Clapham in
south London early today, killing six
persons and injuring at least 10 men.
authorities said.
.Jooes cabled Prime l\tinisler Harold
\V ilson for aid. A spo kes1nan said Wilson
\\'Ould be shO\\'n the cable afte r he
returned from a trip.
A spokesman for Jones said Tue delay
would cost him ··tens of thousands of
dollars because we will miss recording
sessions scheduled for tonight in
Alabama."
tank ex plooion that left eight "''omen and
gi rls critically burned al a branding
operation this weekend.
Six of the victims were OO\Yn to the
Brook Army ~1edical Center in San
1 Antonio, Tex., and two ot~s to the u_t.ah, .
Medical Center in Salt Lake City.
Another woman was in serious condition
nnd authorities said 10 more men and
Melee h1 h1dia Prompts
Cm9 few .at Delhi Capital
Sun Warms Most of Nation women were also injured.
The blast and nash fire occurred at the
Double -Diamond Ranch 22 miles
northeast of here.
NEW .oEiJn. India (AP) -Feder.ii
police and, &oops enforced a round.-Ole-
clock rurfew todav in a C1'0Y.'ded market
area of Delhi wbfre at least 10 perSons
died Sunday. It \vas 1the l\1lrst lfindu-
A-foslem rioting in the Indian capital in
years.
Brigades. said they would release 11ario
Sossi if "eight Q}mmunist compank>ns of
the October 22 organi1.atioo" are nown to
Cuba. North Korea or Algeria.
Golf Ball llailstones Batter Griffi1i Park, Texas
"\\'hen the tank blew I thought it was a
sonic boom," said Tye Bagley. 24. who
was roping calves about 120 feet away
from the corral where the women were
helping with the bn;mding.
Unconfirmed reports said al least 20
persons "·ere killed . ~1ore than 60
persons ,.,.ere injured. Ten were reported Temperatures
Hl9'ii Lt• ~c-. " ~· 'J •} ,, ~ . ,.
62 •• .OJ
M ,, .. " .~ " • • " ~
" " • " ' " " " '" " .. " • " •
"
1,11'! WI AIHll IOIOC:A.ST .
'1 n n n ·'' &' JS .tn to .. .'1 .... ~ !l
;i u
ff ff
= 17'7;1 ~l,\IM l!:U'HOW
m"'.:':l .__ ~ 11 ~Uf()WflS ~ ftOW
wrislliM Ind Illa!\ lrf"Ol!••hllll l11 11111 lower 60s, foret"•s!er1 Mid. DIJtrl <!lfrs win h•~ IOW·Mlll<llnn clOl,lds will> I t1!11Ke of IOlnt t1rly
morhlfll $l'o0Wtr1 111 t'l'll mounl•ln$.
P1!md•te wlll llev• 1 top l~ml!<'rllu•e of 82 MOl\l14V. with P~lm .Sorlnqs rtt!slerf119 "· B~nk n 11111 Lonv
lllKll n,
V.S. S11 m111ar11
L1ro1 iwirts 01 lllr nation ffllOYed
SllllllY skits .SIJl'ld•Y.
F11r skies covtf"fd moll ot !ht
wtslern h1ll of Ille counlf'I, lht ml<ldlt
Coa#lal 1l'eather
'1I looked around and this great burst.bf
names came out. I don 't image it was
o\'er ·just a few seconds."
Deputy Sheriff Eddie Apland said a
JOO.pound butane tank split dO'll'n the side
and spewed the volatile liquid over the
nearby group. The gas ignited in a nash
when it touched the open flame of a
hea ter being used to fire the branding
irons.
( IN SIJORl: .. ,.-.) •
in serious condition from gunshot "''oundS
suffered during the dny-long clashes.
Police .soid.mbre Ultln 250 persons v.'ere
arre:sted , many for violating the curfew.
• c.;,,.,,odia Cla1he1
"It's alwnys kind or a ramlly nffair.';
S3ifi Dubois Fire Chier Bob Baker in
explalning v.·hy so mnny women ond
children were present. Stveral of the SAlGON (UPI) -Sollth V1etnainese
families were planning a picnic dinner troops and tan drove"lour·mna·tnto
when the work was done. cam~ )n a new operation Sund:iy but
Bagley said the men, who were fUrlhef \\ite s(Opped by h(>avy Communist
away irom the explodi ng tank than the resistance at a CarntMstian vlllai! ..
women. ni!ihed to the groop and lried to Field offictrs satd ~ thin _lOO.iov· w1~':~19~-ln.,~m!f"~n~i·~~ bear out the Oa1ncs with their hands Md emment troops.arid dCld JO tanks push-
t1ln'l!no .,..."ri' I io ,, k"°'' In COlllS. They then loaded the women Into ed tlCl'O!I u,. QtmNta JJUntler along :!t~~.~~ ,::,.i~O:..~~!: cars an~ trucks and ru!hed them to the 1Salll!h1gown"1. !'~t ~ 8!'* . .Mth~st or
·•• ''om "5 to,u . 1nl•1111 trmper•-Dubois Merllcal Cellnlc. lvrft r•nee: frOtl\ JO to t2. W•ltf" j ''"'"'"~ .. A spolcesmon at th< Brook Medical e It I K. Id
·"°••n. ~IDf>ll. Tides Center said lhe victims V.'ere Charlene a fl • , n .. g ~,
MOflOAr Rn>o~ l4 : Sandra. Rogcn. 17: Daphne GENOA , lla!J (API -'ri>e.).idnapers
t:tS "'"· .. , Roge~. 15: Catherine Bazor, JO : Donna of Genoa's dhitrlct att""1Cy ·have Tu•so•v1'~'·"" •.J 1\lbrlg:ht. 16, nnd Rhonda Albright. 18. -threatened to ktlt him unftss e:lght
,1.11 111111 11:1t '·'"· '-' Lisled in criti cal condhlon at the ultr11leftl1ts are rreoo frOOl"ja\I, pollc~
Finl ..... 4:JJ. '"· 4 • University or Utnh ~1Mlcal Center ~M .. ·~-st 1""'"Y· ffcoNI ~'"' 10:11 P.l'I· J.t • \i-t"" ' .,...... stcoroc1 •ow •:QS J'-''"· 1.1 1ilargaret cargill, 35, and her daughte~. 'M'IC police said lhe ktdnapcrs. an .=.. ~ s,~ ~;:;-= r;: : :· Ul1(fa1 10. extremist organiz.atioo called t~ Red • ~ -.
I I
e A Ir Strtk.e A-..ted
OTI'AIVA (UPI!...., Canada was spared
a naUonwide airport shutdown Sunday M
air tra!Oc controfters voted in fa\'OI' of a
propdlied contract by a narrow 5T percent
margin.
~rollers at Montreal and Victoria ,
B.C.: airports. who had threatened to
wa!k OOt no matter what the national
vote ·was, decided at the last mlnute to
remc:in on the job. . . e Pentt Central Probe
Pl\!LADELPH!A (AP> -A federal
criminal lnvcstigs.tion bas developed
e!l®nce !hat !Orne high olflclals i>f th•
Ponn Cen!nll Ml!lroad made mnlions ol
dollars in per80!13l profit before the
nation's ahtth larg~ corporation wait
~ bankrupt In June 1970, sources familiar
with ~tit .... &ay. •
A federal grand Jury that met oecreUy
in PlitJRdelp"hia for .~8 months "'Mt out of
bte1lness late la!t year without being
askct to uldict anyone, the oourceo say.
e !!date ln1>lte
' BR!RU'.I'. Lebnnon · (AP! -President
Nixon has sent President Anwar Sadat or Eg)'~t an invi!lition ro vis!l the Unit«!
Sta1111. the Coiro wctkly ·Role al YO<J
reporled toda v. The report a1'o .. 1d
Nixon would visii Egypt during the rir
y,·eek or June .
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I
Today's Fl~al._ .
Orange C~!!t N.Y. Stocks
•
VOL. 67, NO. 126, 2• SECTtONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 6, 1974 N TEN CENTS
' Ki1ninie Found Sale-in Honae ol Friend
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of Ille O.llY Plitt Si•ff
A Utile girl's unwise weekend visit with
a special school friend ended happily for
Newport Beach police and her family
Sunday after her hostess' father opened
· his morning paper.
Kimberly Denise Wilson, 8, whose-
dlsappearance was the number one story
on the rronr.. page, was Rlaying happily in
the shocked man'! horn~ as a guest of his
little girl at the time.
"He opened up his Daily Pilot and .
~id " "Ooohhhhhh, no," Newport Beach
Detective Bob Hardy explained today.
The f:mbarraaed father immediately
called police ind Kimmie-as they call
her-was qulCkly reunited with Pttrs..
Margaret Wilson. of 11715th Sf., on the
BaJboa Peninsula.
Investigators said the way the
Peninsu1a is laid out was c:iqe. partial
£actor in the limited area ~arched by
police after the little girl was reported
missing Friday night.
"She supposedty dldn"L have any
friend> who lived .beyond 15th Street,"
said Detective Hardy, one of several men
detail~ overnight to the anxious search.
Homes of all known acquaintances
were checked;
''Those guys worked their tails off .... "
said one poll~ when contacted for
progress on the bunt for Klnunle, after
the weary investigators had gone home
Saturday. ·
T,hroughout the mystery
disappearance', -they could only bear
in mind another ove~ight search from
Friday and 5aturday last July, for
another miaing girl.
Linda Ann O'Keefe, abducted by a man
whose idenUty 'and whereabou~ is still
unknown, was-molested i nd strangled
and dumped beside Upper Newport Bay.
Kimberly and her friend , whose family
lives at 2208 W, Ocean Front, seven
blocks from the Wilson apartment,
simply pulled an adventurous prank that
got out of control.
Investigators said after walking home
from school Friday with her younger
sister Sarah Jane, 7, that Kimmie and
her friend decided it would be fun to
spend the weekend together.
"They made up a cock-and-bull story
about her Mom going out on a date and.
then phonied up a telephone call to Mrs.
Wilson ," Detective tlardy explained
·today.
The second prank call was for
permission to stay another night.
Investigators noted l\trs. Wilson, whose
estranged husband is seriously ill at the
Long Beach Veterans' Administration
Hospital in Long Beach, was not going
out on a date.
She was, in fact , preparing to move her
three childten and their mother to the
"Our Town" family apartments at 2825
Fairview Road, in Costa l\1esa.
Detective Hardy sa id when the full
impact pf ~er weekend odyssey became
apparent, !timmie was even reluctant to
tell police how her w o r r i s o m e
disappearance occurred.
No disciplina ry action \vas anticipa ted
unl ess it occu rs behind closed doors of
the Wilson residence. beca use the whol e
episode ~·as innocent, if alarming.
"We are going to have a talk "'ith the
other family," Detective Hard y
concluded.
He said they "'ou\d be advised that
next time one of their daughter's
playmates ""ants to visit that it ~'ould be
wise lo call the parents themselves to
corifirm per mission.·
Sometimes it is un .... ·ise to let the
children do it, they noted wryly.
'7 4 Ensenada Race Fas test in History
Reinecke's
-.
Trial Set
On Jul)'d5
WASHINGTON (AP ) -A July IS trial
date was set today for California LI.
Cov. Ed Reinecke on perjury charges
stemming from the ITT case.
The action by U.S. District Judge
Barrington Parker indk1ted the court
\\'Ill tum down pending motions by
Reinecke to dimiiss the indictment or,
failing that, to move the trial t9
California.
Reinecke. a leading contender for
California's Repub(ican gubernatorial -REINECKE, FLOURNOY SPLIT
PARTY ENOORSEMENTS,
Slory, Page 5 ----nomination, was Indicted by a Watergate
grand jury April 3 on three coWtt.s of
lying be:rore a Senate committee.
Trial bad been set for May 13, hilt
Reineckes lawyers asked ror the delay
while the change of venue motions and
other matters v.'ere handled.
. Reinecke originally had pressed for a
speedy trial to have lhe matter settled
be!ore the California primary electlons
June 4.
Reinecke was one of the principal
forces behind a decision to hold the 1972
Republican Natiooal Convention in San
Otego. The convention later was shifted
to Miami Beach, Fla.
The indictment charged Reinecke with
giving false statements to the Senate
Judiciary Committee about when he first
told former Alty. Gen. John N. Mitchell.
~·ho 'A'as Nixon's 1972 cam p a i g n
manager, about a $400,000 of(er from the
Sheraton Corp. to Wlderwrite the San
Diego convention. ·
Reinecke was accused of lyi ng when he
said he did not tell l\1itchell about the
offer until after favorable settlement of
an antitrust action against t h c
International Telephone & Telegraph Co.,
parent company of Sheraton.
The grand jury also accused Reinecke
or lying when be said his first discussions
of holding the convention in San Diego
came In a social gathering of San Diego
citizens in Washington in April 1971.
In other court papen, the special
prosecutor's office has said the first !lllch
talk was between Reinecke and then
White House chief of ataff H. R.
Haldeman. The date of the alleged
dlsct.Laion with Haldeman bas not been
(See REINECKE, Pago !)
Oraage «:east
Weatber
It'll be slightly warmer Tuosday,
acoordlng ·to the weather service,
with mostly sunny afternoons In
the Inland portlooa of Orange Coun-
ly. Highs at the beadle.o in the
mld-llOs rising to the low 70s iJ>.
land.
INSIDE TODA V
Skyscrapers around tht world
are changing tht! weather, ac-
cording to a group of 1clentf.tt1.
They act OJ mo1tntah'8, whfch
confiue1 the wind ond rain. Sett
story end pilot<> Pao• 4.
I,. M. tn• ' M9YI• " CflllfWltla I H•tltMI Ntwt • Chottlfft' Jl·tf 0r ..... '"""' I ' c-II ::...,,... )1-14 c....-II " _ ...... I. -, .. ,.
Ctllllftel Pfft • Shell Mtftlf• , .. 11
•M911tlMltlll " ·--" ,,,_ , .. 11 ........ " ... ,..'"' " WMffltf •
Aftl Ul!Mn " Wtf'M Nflft •
•
• o.HY foli.t 11111 .....
SEVERAL HE[P1NG liANOS ·EASE TRAPPED MAN'S ORDEAL
Physician I. Page Sowers Was Pinned For One·h1lf Hour
Ph.ysician One of Four
Trapped in Auto Cr.ash
A physidan who was treated bY
oo!leagues as be lay trapped jll his
meng1ed sports car for more Wm ,30
minutel was one of four persons injured
today in a headon collision wcste.rly of
't'he Arches overpass in .Newport Beach.
OOicials at Hoag Memorial Hospital
confin!le<I shortly before noon that three
of the victims or the \Vest Coastttighway
crosh, would be. admitted . In serious
condition with mu!Upl e lnjurieS.
Rescue woi:kers fiDally freed Dr. J."'
Pag~ Sowen, SS, or Costa Atesa, after
another doctor and nurse were sum-
moned from Hoeg Memorial Hospital
on the bill above to help.
They prOvided 1emergency treatment,
Including administration of lntravenOO..
aoluUon as police..aod llrtmM labored to
free Dr. Sowen, who procUces In
Huntlngtoo Beacb.
He was. attrnltted to the hospital In
aerlous condlUon with -mulUplo he•d and
che3t Injuries. .
Motorist Mn. !Autae Whitnack', 30, of
304 Laguna St., 111"".I""" ~ch. sus-
tained mulilple lacerat-and pc=alble
Internal Injuries, ,w1\il• her daughter
Julie, 7 suffered ~ lntu1es.
Hospilal o!flctals "Id hoth were listed
In serious c:oodltioo and that JulJe wool~
b< kepi under surveillance I n the
inienslve. care unll _
A iecond child of Mr. and Mra.
Kenneth Whitnack, little Zachery. I was
riding in a cor oeal and only sulfered
mlnor Injuries which were patched up In
the emergency room .
11le beadm collision ocClU'Ted in
westl)ound Janes of Coast Highway near
Howard's Re!taurabt but pollc;e were still
investigatlng. the cause of the acciden t.
Newpot;_t ~ach Fire Department Capt.
John Brannon reported the collision
which occurred. only a moment or two
before he arrived OD the scene in Wes t
Newport.
G\cm and other debris was scattered
over the pavement by the impact of Dr.
Sowers' sports roadster and Mrs.
Whi~ck's compact station wagon.
Gasoline tanks were not ruptured,
however, e'nd there was no fire , which
could easily have claimed the Ille of the
trapped physician.
ONE SOLITARY AD
SOLD -EVERYTHING
OlfO ad -six sales. That, In a few
WOrds It, the story of a "few words, in
the right place," another auccessful
Daily Piiot claaailied ad. Here It Is:
t20" SOFA,.~[. lpve s.at, l50.
TV console, $7$: Mfim ae~ll~:
12' hoot w/mrt. Ii !rlr.. !l50.
MECreloedor, 115: (Phono ·No.)
Tbe ad orlglnally was published just
one weekend and BOid all she Items listed
in it. Of course the advertiser was
·11appyl Yllli'll be happy WHh rosults, too.
U you jusf put "a few ~ in the rlgbt
pl ..... " -tn Dally 'Piiot c!IAlfleds. Dial
the direct line: M2-S67a.
' • ·'
Seabird,
Ragtime
•~ead Field
Theodore Robins
llurt irt Crash -J
With .1 Others
Longtime Harbor Area auto dealer
Theodore 'Robins Sr., his wife and two
friends with whom they were riding were
injtaed Sunday night in a rear-end car
accident OD the Newport Freeway.
Robins, 81, of 2164 Ocean Blvd.,
Balboa. end bis wl!e Mae, were taken to
Hoag Memorial Hospital, along with P.lr.
and Mrs. Lee O'Kelly of ~ W. Balboa
Blvd., Balboa.
Hospital officials said Mrs. Robins was
treated and relea~ while her husband ,
named Costa Mesa Man or the Year a
Week ago by Chamber of Commerce
officials, was admitted.
He Js li!ted in fair condition with a
dislocated hip and bruised ribs.
The .O'Kelly couple wns also admitted
surfertng from lacerations and were both
!isled In good condition today.
Robins, founder of Theodore RDbin!
FOrd Inc., originally a Newport Bea<h
flnn now localed at 20!0 Harbor Bvd .•
(See CRAS11, P'4le I)
FIRST ACROSS -The first single·hulled yacht lo finish the Ensenada
race was Ragtime, a 62-foot sloop skippered by Stan Miller o' the
Long Beach Yacht Club, with 18 hours of elapsed time. -·
Ex-Supervisor Featherly
.
Dies of Cancer at Age 77
Former Orange County supervisor C.
M. "Cye" Featherly died Sunday in a
Santa Ana convalescent home after a
long battle with intestinal cancer. He was
77.
Feathcrly, who resigned his First
District seat in 1969 after serving on the
hoar~ for 20 years. will be honored
Tuesday by Orange County's supervisors
who will adjourn the meeting in his
memory.
"This ia..a tremendous blow to all of
us," Supervisors' Chairman Ralph Oark
commented today. "Cye was one of our
greatest public servants and it is good to
know at this moment that his memory
will be perpetuated by the park Uiat was
named after him."
Funeral services for Mr. Featherly
have been scheduled for 3 p.m.
Wednesday in the Waverley Chapel of
Fairhaven Memorial P!U'k ,in Santa Ana'.~
He is survived by his wile, Sue, and a
stepchild.
Featberly, who was succeeded in the
Firat District aeat by its present
occupant, Robert Ballin, served as a
deputy sheriU In Or""ie County belore
winning electton to the hoard in 1949. .•
A native of Wyoming, he talk°ed
whhnslcally on hls reUretnent of the woy
In which he rode to Orange County on
horseback mor< than 50 years ago.
.. , didn't have a job to my name and I
ctuldn't find •nyone around here who
LOSES BATTLE TO CANCER
Ex-Supervisor Feitherly
Junior ~liss on TV
Cler.ks' Strike Ends was willing at !hat time to give me one ...
be. tolclhls lellow supervisors._
MOBILE. Ale. (UPI) -America's 1!114
Junior Miss will be crowned tonight In
the nationally televised final.:1 or the five-
day pageant. Contestan ts spent the
weekend rehearsing for the broadcast
which will be k.'tn on the CBS &clevlsloo
netw0<k after thr .. days of preliminary
C<llllpetltlon which bega n lasl 'lllunday.
SAN fRANC!SCO (AP) -Alter an Only Second District SUperviJor David
=~~: ;t~~~! ~~~ ~~ \Biker remains or the last board on which
work today. fr. Feathcrly served.
_, -
2 DAILY P_l_LO_T ____ N ______ M_o_o_da_Y_, M_•_l_b_,_1•_1<
Subpoena· Okay~
Siric<.r Hints Accord '01i Tapes
WASlllNGTON (APJ -U.S. District Judge John J, Slrica said toda y
there is r1 posSibility th(' \Vhite House and the special prosecutor may reach
an amicable ugreement for delivery of subpoenaed White Hoose tape record·
ings.
\\'hite llouse hnvye r James J, St. Clair ha d requcstl'<f a rl\'e-dby delay
in legal proceedings over a subpoena in which ~~ial Prosecutor Leon Ja~·or
ski dema.ndrd tapes or 64 \Vhite ~louse convcrsallons.
1'he judge granted a four-d ay extension. until. Friday: "for the pur~.of
facllit11ting discussions leadirig to po5Sible comphance \\11th the subpoena .
St. Chiir hnd gone into court last v.-eek Y.'it.h a mouon lo stop the subpoena
and S1rlc11 had set today as the deadline for the prosecutor's response.
Ca1rif f Cartoo11 Scena1·io:
IGdnap Similar to Hearst
NEW YORK (UPI) -Imagine this
scenario: A youn g heiress is kidoaped by
' terrorists, joins her cap lors, gives herself
a revolutionary name and sends taped
messages to her parents for ransom
money to finance guerrilla activity.
The Patr icia Hearst affalr? No, an
abortive comic .strip sequence crea ted by
J\1il ton Caniff for "Steve Canyon" five
V.'Ceks before ~1iss Hearst's kidnaping.
According to People li.tagazine, Caniff
quickly junked the sequence v.'hen the
Hea rst story bro!il.e and worked overtime
in his Palm Springs stud io to write and
draw a substilule plot. y,·hich is now
running in 650 newspapers.
"It would have looked like 1 v.1as
making fun of the Hearst family," be
sa id in the People article.
Jn fact, said Caniff, the idea came
from the kidnaping in Italy last year of
J. Paul Getty Ill. grandson of the
millionaire oilman and not from any
psychic anticipation of the Hearst
abduction.
Newport Driver
Will Face Suit
In Traffic Death
A Newport Beach man who drew a
county jail term after pleading guilty to
hit and nm charges in the death of a
pedestrian has been sued for more than
$52,000.
Andrew Keith Skiver, 28, was named as
, defeodant in the Orange County Superior
• C.OUrt action filed by the parents of
1 Patrick Kirk Silv;s, 2S, of 1560 Placentia
Ave., Newport Beach.
Joseph Robert Sil vis and Jacque
Rickles claim Skiver, 217 35tb St.,
·•Newport Beach, was reckless and
negligent when his car struck SilviS oa
May 19, 1973.
The dead man's parents state the
young man was crossing Pacific Coast
Jtighway near the Arches in Newport
Beach when the Skiver auto struck him.
Court records indicate that Skiver was
ordered to serve rour months in the
county jail on charges reduced from
manslaughter.
01.d Plane Hits
· Triick; One Dead
HAW RIVER, N.C. !AP) -An antique
private plane attempting an emergency
landing on Interstate 85 clipped a pa nel
truck and crashed Sunday. officers said.
A passenger In the truck died of inj uries.
The highway patrol said the 1942
Stearman, which was retu rn ing from an
air show in nearby Burlington , lost
.altitude and snagged on a power line.
Officers said the airplane shea red off a
comer of the truck, slammed into a
bridge abu tment and crashed on a
riverbank.
Vernon Bell Dickerson or Uluisburg,
the pilot, was injured and listed in fair!"
l<>iood condition. Verrlice Al People, 23,
of Louisburg. a pa·ssenger, was reported
in serious condition.
'
ORAHGlCOAST H
DAILY PILOT
1"9 Or•nv. Cou r o.i1y P.IQI. """'Mooe~"~
~·l'IMl -N~W··~ "'~"hldtl'l'!t>o 0u~
Co.ti" Puo>·•"'"ll C:0..-.1 Senart!• .,, • .,...., ....
f'l.lllj••"td 1,>ona1• "'' ' '"'••· IQ! Co.i. ~-N•wPD<f fled " .11nQ1on lk«"/r,.,,~
""' Y11••,.(""\•'>U"• 9' .,.,, ,,....,,,.,$1<1d~~c• an~
So" o.m .. n••1S... .1u1n c..o .. 1•1no " ""ll'•
r..i'°""' .a11oon -. Pl>ll'"""" St•unll"' ar'ICI S...n·
Oltl t~ l>"~""'l llV!>'•\~l"O nlllll !t I! 3XI WH!
flnSv..i. Cati• -c;..;i.,,,,. t l&<'!
R:ot,...i N w,.~-J ,.,_.. • .., Pvt>I,,...,
N,wp...t ~9C.ll Officr
1 •ll ~""-r•f' ~ .... ., i
•":J."""1>.Mr· P ) ,..,.., 181 91661
OtMrOffkrt
(.,..•"-'•" l)O l'oo··•il1<''1-
~rJ onl llf.• • ?n ~-••tr.~ .....,..."'WI~"' •"" 11'"tf«"9ou"'vrl .... ci....,.,.. )Ot.NoOrlfl[!(.---
T...,lleM 17141642·4311
ci...1fletl Ad?rrlh .. 641·5,71
~-''''-~~"""""""°°""""' -l\jo -Jt(ll'ft. .......,,,..,.,., ..,.on.i ,,.,,.,
Of .....,,,. .......... ,_ """~ °' _.., ~WiftOll~,,,IXICl'l"'t"'
~$111 _,,.!*!I_ 0-• ..... ("a<.,,. -~·~ ... ..-•ioo_..,..,..h_ t•OOMOMNr._..,,,....,.._.100~
f
canur said he decided to make the
kkinap victim a girl "because people are
95 pereent rpore interested in women in
di re circumstances than they are in
men."
Fro11a Page 1
ENSENADA .. • •
Ragtime sailed by Stan hiiller and a
three-man Lon g Beach Yacht Club
synd icate. .
Jack Baillie's NeY..'SBoy, the perenni al
first finisher from Balboa Yacht Club,
finished seventh this year. The race
committee was still feverishly compiling
handicap result!: today because of a
number of protests. The t r o p h y
presentation is scheduled late today.
The first 10 boats to finish : 1. Seabird
2. Ragtime 3. Sirius II , Bob Lynch,
New_port Harbor Yacht Club 4. Maloma,
Jack Swart, Orange Coast College 5.
Soliloquy, Ken Burns, S~lYC 6. Anitra,
Fred Preiss, PMYC 7. NewsBoy 8. Lani
Kai (catamaran) .'1.artln Crumrine,
Balboa Yacht Club 9. Serena, St.eve
Bragg, SCCYC 10. Imi Loa, Vic Stem,
Seal Beach Yacht Club.
Unofficial handicap winners : President
of Me"x.ico Trophy (Ocean Ra chlng·D)
Cohort, Milt Vogel, HHYC; President of
U.S. Trophy (PHRF-F) Hampshire Rose,
Dennis Burnett, SSSC; U.S. Secretary of
State (PHRF·D) Cambria , B i 11
Lar>0n, PVYC; U.S. Secretarv cl Navy
{PHRF-A ) Viva Cruz, Tony Cruz, CYC;
Governor of Baja California (PHRF-C)
Serena, Alex VanDyk e, LBYC; Mayor of
Newport Beach (PHRF·B) Pacifica, Stan
Willis, SDYC; Secretary of Foreign
Relation.! {OCC) Promotion. 1 :mhall
Beck. BYC; Afeltican Secretary of State
(OC-B) Kari 11, Dick Kelloo, LA YC;
Govermr·of California (QC.A) Shamrock,
Roy Disney, CYC: U.S. Coast Guard
CMORF·A) Saltshaker, Bob Boyes ,
Anacapa Yacht Club; Jeff Deaver
(Cruising Club of America) Paradox,
Tom Armstrong, CYC; Emigh Family
Memorial Trophy (MORF-B) Good
Ti.mes, Crane and Smith, -~c.
Gunman Visits
Home, Collect'>
$3,000 Ba11hlc
' A Santa Ana Heights goldfish breeder
v.•ho walked from his home Sunday to
y,·e\come v.•hat he thought was a visiting
fish fancier ..,.·as trussed hand and foot by
a visitor who Jert with a $3.000 diamond
ring.
Oran ge County Sheriff's officers said
the suspect took the jewelry from the
home of Jerry and Denise Scoggins, 20252
Bayview Ave. after ransacking the
residence in a search for cash.
Scoggins, 33, told officers he and his
wife, Denise, 31, assumed the gunm an
was looking for goldfish from their well
stocked pond when he entered the
driveway and walked towards the home.
Instead, they said. he produced a gu n.
bound them hand and foot wit h masking
tape and v.·arned them after leafing
1hrough &roggm..' emp<y biJUold, "do!l~
try anything and you won't get hurt."
OUiei!ni said Scoggins managed to free
himself short ly after the suspect left with
a diamond ring from his wife's jewel
box.
I ,
Two Drownings
Told' in State
MARYSVILLE (AP) -A te<n-agc
epi leptic and two men drowned in
~parate incidents during fishing trips,
sheriff's deputies said Monday.
B"""' Moore, 15, of North lllgblands,
suffered an epileptic seizure and jumped
from a boat Sunday la the Camp Far
\Vest Reservoir. Officers said hb two
companions lrlcd to rescue him, but
Moore bit one In !he hind during thtlr
wisucoessful 11ttcmpt .
Sherill's depul ieJ said Frank VinC<nl, «, and James Owlscy, 54, cl Eal!
Nictnlas, drowneci ·in 1he Feather River.
Their capsized boat w11s found three
miles south of Nicholas.
Girl, 13, Drowns
OAKDALE (UPI\ -A 13-ycar-dd San
Jose Girl di~ppeared after a cande
accident on the Stanislaus Ri ver during
the ~·cekend. Searchers probed the river
Sunday !or the body of Rmanne Trapp
who was In a canoe Y.1th her fath!r, BUJ
~:~·rg~ tr~~ others when tt hit a ..
i
More Herds
Of Whales
Reporte(l
The California gray whale may be
recovering from near extinction, a report
r rom the U.S. Department o( Commerce
indicated this week.
Thanks to protection by t h e
governments or both ~1exico and the U.S.
and the concerns of enviro~ntalist s.
the annual mating migration of the
y,·hales from the frigid Bering Sea to the
wann ~·aters of Baja California is being
made by a grov.ing herd.
In 1967, a count of 3,120 whales \\'as
recorded from the Co m m e r c e
Department National Oceanic a,n d
Atmoopheric Administration n ea r
Monterey.
During the last mating season, which
ended in early spring, almost 3,500
wilales were sigbted'. an increase of 15
percent over the average of the
preceding six years.
Dr. Dona ld J\.facLean, director of the
Floating Marine Laboratory for the
Orange County Department of Education ,
said local whale-watchers have observed
the same phenomenon.
"Both at h1onterey and at the other
major counting point io Ensenada, every
year there are more," ~\tacLean said.
By the time the whales reach the
warm v.•aters of Scammon's Lagoon 450
miles south of San Diego on the Ba ja
peninsula, the females ~ rea~y to bear
their young and that 1s the first place
they usually do go.
"They ha ve been very v.·ell protected
over the last few yea rs," AfacLean
commented, "Now the Mexi c an
government is alarmed enough about
people bothering them in Scammon ·s
Lagoon that it is considering further
measures to protect them."
The Monterey whale count begins C'ach
yea r around mid-Dece mber as soort as
whales are seen regu larly during their
southerly trek.
Some gray whales begin leaving Arctic
waters as early as October, moving
toward the calving lagoons far to the
south.
The whales retu rn to their no r1hem
habitats in large numbers in May and
June as the ice breaks up. but \vhile
mi grating north off the California coast.
they are much farther offshore than
during the southerly journey.
Allen Wolman . director of this year's
count for the federal government, added
hoy,·ever that a variety of factors such as
wea ther, visibility and ocean currents
allect th!! coont.
For that reason , the implicat ions of a
higher count may not necessarily ~ firm
evidence of a greater whale population.
"There is one spooky aspect of this,"
MacLean said. "Recently ma r in e
zoologists are noticing that more and
more of the v.·hales apepear to be going
farther out to sea ... apparently to avoid
so many 'vhale watchers ."
hfac.Lean said considering t h e
relatively high intelligence of the gray
whale, it would not be im~ib\e for
them to learn over a period of' years to
avoid the urban coasts of Los Angeles,
Orange (.qunty, and San Diego.
Some whales may live as long as 50
years, he said.
Growing numbers are not found on the
Asian side of the m i g r a t I o n rout e,
Maclean said. "There are ty,·o herds
w hi c h do not seem to mix -7h c
CalUornia herd and the Korean he.rd,
which migrates south by Japan."
Junior College
Offices Bnrnecl
SACRA~NTO (AP ) T he
headquarters office for California's jun·
ior colleges was hit by a fire early this
morning that caused an est.imated $70,000
damage , ~rilies reported.
The fire at the California communi ty
colleges headquarters. located in the
downtown area, broke out at 1:54 a.m. It
took 40 firemen about half an hour lo put
it out.
Suspect Surrenders
LONG BEACH (UPI) -A Michigan
man wanted for question ing in the
stabbing of a woman whose body was
found in a motel surrendered Sundoy to
police.
Daley Ruslied
To Hospital
CIUCAGO (AP) -Mayor
Richard J . Dale:y WJS taken by
ambulance to a hospllal today and
admltled for lrea!ment In llic
emergeicy room, a spokesman for
Pr .. byt<rian.St. Luke's lfospilal
said.
A spotetrnan at the mayor's
office said Daley went to ·the
hospllal after "'mpllillng some
paper work but could not elaborate
on Doley'• C(Jlldltloo.
u.-,.ld· the mayor tltd-not a I tend
a acheduled luncheon at the Palmer
House Hotel.
There have been no prevlou1
lnclloatioos that Daley .... m.
<
•
'
• HEADON COLLISION JN WEST NEWPORTSNARLS TRAFFIC, DRAWS SPECTATORS
Coast Highway Collltlon Hospltalited Thr .. of Four Pertons ln1ured Today
Newport Man Will Pre.si_de
At 67tl1 Reunion Banquet
By JACKIE HYMAN
01 trM n.11¥" ,Hot Sf•"
George \\'iiliamson of Nev.'p<lrt Beach
remembers the first motion pictlJre sholo\'11
in Los Ange les.
"It was December II. 1911," said
Williamson, who 11·as 9 years old at the
ti me.
"I dido 't get to go but I remember
hearing about it the next morning," he
said . "The projector broke down and
they had to give everyone a rain check
f~ the next night."
Williamson ho moved to Orapge
-eounty in 1956 "to i;c.t out of the smog"
is c:ummUy president .<>f, i!le Hollywood
Hlg!l School Alumni A&sociatioo and will
preside at its 67lh Annual Banquel
Saturday.
"Achieve the Honorable" awards will
be given to alwnni.
One of la.st year's winners was Sylvia
Livingston Bogen of Newport Beach,
class of '22. She was honored for her
oontr1but ion to education and Y.iU be
installed as a director of the al umni
associa tion this year.
Williamson, who is now a rea1t0l" and
manager of Balboa Bay Properties,
graduated in the d aQS ol '24 andTrecalls
some famous people he bas known.
"[ knew Joel McCrea , the_ actor, very
well," William.son said. ''We · grew up
together. You can see his moviea: oow on
the late late show."
Re gradua ted in the same class as ~x
Bell, the cowboy star who nVut"rec\ Clara
Bow and betame U. 'Goveni&r cl
Nevada.
"Then there y,•ere some girls who
changed their names and became
famous, but I can't remember what they
changed their names , to,'' Willlarmoo
said. .
rn the 50 years since his high school
gradua tion, Williamsoo has graduated
from Occidental College, <M'Oed a gas
station and done physical therapy on the
East Coast with polio t nd cerebral palsy
. victims for the Milton Berry Foundation.
He has been a realtor for the la!l 20
yeani and has also made a conunercial
for Der Wienerschnitzel.
But he still has roots in Hollywood. "I
go back to the days when they called
Hollywood Boulevard Prospect. Avenue,"
he said.
At Hollywood High, Williamson y,·as
head yell leader for three years. He also
\\"on the nickname "Stra~·bcrry" because
of his reddish hair.
Recalling the days of Prohibition,
\Villiamson said. "Not many people know
this, but Los Angeles County \vent dry
Dtjly ""' , .... ,.... HOLLYWOOD HIGH ALUM
'Strawberry'· Williarmon
two years before Prohibition. People
used to go to Venice and Vernon to ~ve
a good lime."
A3 for the fabled Hollywood parties,
"We never saw them," he said. "'nle.
movie people confined the parties to their
own estates."
He did however inadvertently end up in
a movie one day when, as a young boy.
he was working on a horse-and-buggy Ice
delivery truck. ·
"We drove by a movie crew filming a
comedy," Williamson said. "They u.sed to
shoot everything on locaUm in those
days."
''As we drove by, the director spotted
us and decided to work us into the movie
then and there," he sakt. ''So he talked
our driver into it."
For entertainment in the Roaring '20's,
Williamson and h.IS friends used to ride
the streetcar from Uis Angeles down to
Balboa. "I was one of the original~ Bal
Week Bad Boys," be said.
"
l·le laughed and stroked his OY..11 goatee.
"The only dif ference between us and the
boys today Is that we didn't smoke
marijuana."
Small Weekend Crowds
Visit Newport Beach
The smallest v.·eekend CT0'1t'd since
before Easter Vacation trickled onto
Ne"'J)Ort Beach shorelines this weekend
as a result of gray skies and ~gree
temperatures.
About 5,00> beachgoers were counted
Saturday and 8,000 S<alday by Newport
Beach lifeguards, y,'flo had been reporting
croy,.1is of up to 80,000 a day on SUMY
April weekends.
Gray weather, howe ver, didn't deter
FromP,,._eJ
REINECKE ...
disclosed by Jhe special proseculor's
office.
Reinecke'& testimooy before l he
Judiciary Commillte In April 11172 came
during hearings over the nomlnaHon of
Richard G. Kleindienst for attorney
general. Klelndietist wu conflnntd but
later resigned.
Gurney Sc uffle Told
ORLANDO, Fla. (UPI) --U.S. Sen.
Edward Gurney, IR·Fla.J , F r Id a Y
bnished off queslions about hla recent
lndlclmonl and pushed a •••t <tishloo
Into llic face of one t<)eylslOil report.r. ~porter Brian Ross of WCKT-TV fn
Mia mi said, "l was sbovtd and pushed
and· hit wllli a seat CU!hlOn. Gurney
shoved Jhc cushion In my IJco, He sbo•ed
hard."
•
Jhc 8J>Pl'Olimal<ly 500 boalen •ilo
depart<d from Newport Harbor In Jhc
Ensenada Ract Saturday morulJ1&.
It also didn'l det.r jellyflsb, which
continued to swarm onto Orange Coast
beaches and sting tmfortunate bathers,
Newport Beach llfegua(d.1 n!porlod .
"It was a lousy weekend," a lifeguard
spokesman said today.
The spokesman said water
temperatures were about S9 de~ all
weekend and there was a s1lght 90U1h
swell with waves tbree to four feet high.
"There was nobody to speak cl In the
water," he saJd.
'l11e spokesman reported ooe lncidenl
Sa Jurday when .a )'OW1f boy feIJ abou\ 30
or 40 feel al Roclty Point In 01ina Cove
near Corona det Mar whU-.watchlng the
l!art cl the Ensenada Rac:t.
"PolJc:e and JUeguarda rushed ...,.
thmo but lhe boy Ju9110t ilp, brUlhed
hlmttlf off' and waited away,'' the
spokesman said. ' ..;r-
Tht Orange Counl1 H~ •
reported one boll dlll\Med. appon!lllY
an Ensenada Raee partldpaot.
"The boll, tl>e Doulle D, lfU pi<ktd
up by the Coast Guard culler Point
DiVtde afl<r 11 lool powc and started
shipping waler," a Harbor Patrol
fP"kllllman said todq. •"We ,....lvtd a call about t ;llO p.m.
Saturday to Jalte ovv b>WI,,. Jhe 43-foot
o ilboat into the harbor,11 be said.
"The boll wN almd(. fl'l1!lPecl city by
the lime we took ..,.., ' lhe .......,.n
sa id. He 911d II repined llOIDO -and was able to return aalely to 111
mooring.
/
From Page 1
CRASH ...
Costa ?\1csa, said he Is getting along all
right except he doesn't feel y,-eJI_. .
California Hlgh\vay Patrol officers srud
the O'Kelly car in \vhich tbe Robins
couple rode y,·us ran1 mcd on the Ne v.1>0rt
Fretv.•ay at Bak~r Street on the edge of
the Costa 11-1esa ciJy limit.
The other driver in the t0:30 p.m.
crash \Vas identified as Ronal d G.
Schme ltzer. 35, of 301 \\1alnut St..
Nevtport Beach .
lndo11esia11 Oil
Find Reported
JAKARTA (UPI) -The first major oil
find in Indonesia this year has been
made off the jungled coast of West Irian,
oil officials said today.
They said. the strike was made by
(C.Ontinental Oil of Indonesi a) and AGIP,
the Italian State oil compan y, working
jointly with the Pertamina oil concern of
Indonesia.
It "'as only the second major oil find in
West Irian, about 2,000 miles from
Jakarta.
"This is the first offshore strike (this
Phlllips Petroleum Co., Co n e c o
year) oft \Vest Jrian arxl the first for
Indonesia this yea r. It was unexpec1ed
and we hope it will lead to more," an
elated Pertamina official told UPI.
The official sa id the flow of oil from
the well , 5.lfM> feet do~'n on a mlocene
bank about 300 ya rds o(f the coast, wa.a
12,186 barrels per day.
Long J~il Term
For Shutterbug
BEffilIT, Lebanon (AP ) -Ed
Franklin, a 34·)'ear~ld school teacher
from Nebo, Ill., told a news conference
he was Interrogated and kept mostly In
solitary confinement but not tortured
during 16 monills he spent In a Soulli
Yemen jail.
Franklin. who taught at an American
school in Kuwait. saKI he was arrested
while taking pictW""eS In a mountain area
near Aden, and Jefllenced to five yean in
pruoo. "They said I was taking pictures
of a military area," he reported.
R<p. Paul Findley (R-III.), D"' to
Aden last week and obtai.oed Franklin's
release. The Unll<CI Siales and Soulli
Yemen do not have diplomatic retaUons.
Cras1i Injures 8
Persons iii Cars
DAVIS (UPI) -Elglll ll""""'· six ol
them women en route home from a
religious retreat. were Injured Sunday Jn
a two-car collision on. Interstate «!.
The ca!ifornia Highway Palrol said a
car driven by 65-yur<>ld Lloyd Kollum or Freemon\ jumped the center divider
and bit a car driven by Sharon Williams,
33, Folsom.
Her ear was carrying five other women
home from the Evangelical Free. Oi.urch
~lrtal In the Sania Q'ui mountam...
'M>ey were Betty Wiley, 49, Represa;
Belle Mays, 66, Folsom ; Juan I t a
Butterfield, Folsom: ,Bernice Burgess,
42, Folsom; and Sue Bridges, 23, Rancho
Cordova.
·'
Gift to Nixon
Draws Penalty
WASIGNGTON (AP) A
PeDDl)'lvanla corporaUon, Lehigh
VaDey Cooperative F a rm e r 1 ,
pieadecl gullly today to making an
!Utgal 1511,000 conlrlbutlon lo
Presidenl Nlxon'a 111'12 campaign.
The OJClj)Orltlve was fined
15,000 by U.S. Olsirl<I Judge
G<ort• L. U.rt Jr.
The fine was the mulmum
possible. S~lal Pro s ecutor Leon
Jawo~kl charged lhal t b •
contribution was made between
April 11 and AprlJ 27, 1172, "In
cohnecllon wtlh lhe !fc>raald
-•I election Md with primary
electlona, pollllcal "'nvenUons and
caucuseo held to select eandldalu
ror the olflcea ••. In vlolallon of
the United States code."
)
I
..
c
p
car
~cl
•nd 33,
H
ho
Rat
'lbe
Bel
But
42,
SU •
. -
II ,
Or•nge Coast
. -..
-t
•
T oday's Final
· N.Y . Stocks
VOL..,.-6'7, 0 . 126, 2 SE -GRANGE-COUNTY, CALIFORNIA I MONDAY, MAY 6, 1974 c TEN CENTS
•
1• U'I Tetwftoll
Elderly Steward Felled by Indy Bve. Cq .. , .
. ~ "• I • ..., ~ ~ ~-1' p '., "Jt ' I
Troubles started early al lndianapolii today as Assistant Chief Stew-were-reportedly "racing" to be first on the famen brickyard circuit w Walur Myers~71 ye~n olft, Js sbown-mQmeali~ H~-apparenUy on~ the lirit day-of ·practice for the ,Memorial Day SOO·mile race.
slammed lo the pavement when brushed by one or two race cars in Dt'lvers are Tom Bigelow Oe!t), and Mike Hiss of TUstm. Hiss won
the background. He suffered a broken left hip and wrist. Both cars "race" to be first on track.
Crash, Injures 8
Person,s in Cars
On Hi gh1 vay 8()
DAVIS (UPI) -Eight persons, six ol
them women en route home from a
religious retreat, wert injured Sunday in
a two-car colllsk>n on Interstate 80.
. 1be California Highway Patrol said a
car driven by 65-year-old Lloyd Kottum
"of Freemont jumped the cente r dlvider
and hit a car driven by Sharon Williams,
33, Folsom.
Her car was ca rrying five other women
home from the Evangelical Free Church
Retreat in the Santa Crui mountains. ~'Ibey were Betty w'iley. 49., Represa ;
Belle Mays. 66. Folsom; J u an it a
Butterfield, Folsom; Bernice Blll'ge.ss,
42, Fol!om; and· SUe Bridges, 23, Rancho
Cordova.
Girl, 13, Drowns
OAKDALE (UPI) -13-year-old San
Jose Girl disappeared after a canoe
lccident on the Stanislaus Ri ver during
the weekend. Searchers probed the river
SUnday for the biody of Rosa nne Trapp
Who was in a canoe with her father. Bill
Trapp, and two others ~·hen it hit a
submerged free .
'
• Oraage Coast
•
.. • Weatlter
It'll be.allghlly W11nner Tuesday,
accordill( to the weather service,
with -mollly IUlln)I afternoons in
the inland por1lonl o[ Orange Coun-
ty. lllgbo al (he beiO~ in the
mid-tOs rising IA> ·the low 'IOI Jn.
land. '
INSIDE T ClDi\V
Sk111crapers arovnd the world
are changiJi{I Cfle 10ea(her, ac-
cording to a uroup of 1cientf.sts.
Thell act a.s mountaim, wltfcli
con/we1 the wind and rain. Set
slo'11 and photo Paa• 4.
I.. M • ...,. ' "'"" ..
C;tlfel'fll• • tc•tlfllll ,....., • c""'"" 21''' Or11191 CIMllllr • , __ . " ·-, .. ,. , __
" sr1V11 ,.,,~ " De.nt Nitlc•• • ..... ..... .. ...,.., ,.... . Si.di Mlft:ttl '"" .,...,,.......... 1t T11tYl11ti! " .-1t-ll Tllllltfr• " .. WHlhlf • HtfllCIFI ... .__ " Watt• H.-•
A Happy E nding
'Missin g' Girl V isiting Friend
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of JM O."' P'Ulf Sl•ff
A little girl'S unwise weekend visit with
a special school friend ended happily for
Newport Beach polict and .her family
Sunday after her hostess' father opened
his morning paper.
Kimberly Denise Wilson , 8, whose
'<iisap~rance was the number one story
on the °Cront page, was playing happily in
the shocked man's home as a guest of his
little girl at the time.
"He opened up his D~ily Pilot and
said" 110oohhhhhh, no," Newport Beach
Detective Bob Hardy eiplained today.
The embarrassed father immediately
called police and Kimmie-as they call
btr--was quickly rewtlted w!lb Mrs .
Mafgaret Wil,on, of 117 lSlh St., on the
Balboa Peninsula.
loveitigators said the way th e
Pentnsula is laid out was one partial
fllctor in the limited area searclied by
police alter the little girl was reported
milsing Friday night.
"She supposedly didn't have any
.'.Jtd1 15 Tabbed
friends who lived beyond 15th Street,'1
said Detective Hardy, one of several men
detailed overnight to the anxious search.
Homes of all known acquaintances
were checked.
"Tho!e guys worked their tails off ... , ''
said one policeman when contacted for
progress on the hunt for Kimmie, after
the weary investigators had gone home
Saturday.
Throughout the mystery
disappearance, they could only bear
in mind another overnight search from
Friday and Saturday last July, for
another missing girl.
Linda Ann O'Keefe , abducted by a man
whose identity and wherea6outs is still
unknoWn, was molested and strangled
and dumped beside Upper Newport Bay.
Kimberly and her friend, whose famil y
lives at 2208 W. Ocean Front, seven
blocks from the Wilson apartment,
simply pulled an adventurous prank that
got out of control.
Investigators said after walking home
(See FOUND, Page %)
Judge Sets.Reinecke Trial
Date on Perjury Charges
WASHINGTON (AP) -A July 15 lrlal
date was set today for caJlfomla Lt.
Gov. Ed llelnecke on pei:jury chari!es
stemming from lbe ITT C....
The action by U.S. District Judge
Barrington• Parter indicated the court
will tum down pending motions by
other matters were handled.
Reinecke originally had pressed for a
speedy trial IA> have the matter oettled
belore the caillomia primary elections
Ju.ne 4.
• Reloed<•· IA> dismlsa the Indictment or.
failing that, to move the trl.a.I to
Colifornla. '
Reinecke was one of the principa I
forct! behind a doclslon IA> bold the 197\l
Republican National Coawltlon in San
D~o. The. convention later was shifted
to Miami Beach, Fin.
The Indictment charged Reinecke with
giv ing false statements to the Senate
Judiciary Committee about when he first
told lormer (.tty. Gen. John N. Mitchell,
who was Nixon's im cam pa I gn
manager, about a $400,000 offer from the
i\hcraton Corp. to underwri te the San
Diego convention.
• I
Reinecke, a leading contender for
Ca!Komla's Republican gubernatorial
REINECKE, FLOURNOY SPLIT
PARTY ENDORSEMENTS,
· Story, Page S ----nomination, was·tndlctcd by a Watergot~··
grand jury April 3 on three· counts ol
lYing before a Senate committee.
Trial had -"'t !..-May 13, bu\
Relncckes law)'<rs asked !or the delay
while the change of venue mollons and
•
•
Rein•ci<<-wuaccuse<lof.\ylllfl when he
sa id he did not teU Mitchell abqllt tbe
ofrer until after favorable sctUemcnt or
an antitrust actioo against . t h e
(See REINECKE, Page I)
Tlieodore Robi1is
l lurt in. Crash,
W itli .1 Others
Longtime Harbor Area auto dealer
Theodore Robins Sr., his. wife and l\\'O
friends with whom they V.'ere riding were
injured Sunday night in a rear.end car
accident on the Newport Freeway.
Robins. 81 , or 2164 Ocean Blvd.,
Balboa , and his wife 1\-lae. were taken to
Hoag Memorial Hospital, along with Mr.
and Mrs. Lee O'Kelly or 809 \V. Balboa
Blvd., Balboa.
Hospital officials said Mrs. Robins was
treated and released, while her husband,
named Costa Mesa fl1an of the Year a
Week ago by Chamber of Commerce
officials, was admitted.
He is listed in fair conditioh with a
dislocated hi p and bruised ribs. ·
The O'Kelly coupl e also were admitted
suffering from la cerations and ~re both
listed in good condition today.
Robins, founder of Theodore Robins
Ford Inc., originally a Newport Beach
firm now located at 2060 Harbor Blvd ..
Costa Mesa, said he is getting along all
right except he doesn't feet well .
California Highwa y Patrol officers said
the O'Kelly car In whi ch the Robins
couple rode was rammed on the NewPort
Freeway at Baker Street on the edge of
the Costa ~1esa city limit.
The other driver in the 10:30 p.m.
crash was identified as Ron ald G .
Schmeltzer, 3.$, -Of 301 'Walnut St.,
Ne \vport Beach.
l\'Iesa Thief GraJ>s
Stereo Equipment ,
Stereo equipment and records valued
by the owner al nearly $1,SOO were stolen
during the weekend by intruders who
pried open the sliding gW. window of a
Costa Mesa area apartment, Orange
County Sheriff's officers said.
Deputies said the valuables were taken
from the home of service station
manager t.1ark Andrew Walradcn, 19, of
2MO Santa Ann Ave. while he was absent
from the apartment.
Cle1·ks' Strike Ends '
SAN FR,u;GlSCO (AP) -Aller an
8\.t-month strikC, the 300 retail clerks at
two San Fra.bcl5CO Sean stores return to
work today.
• ••
M esci Ver de
Residents Hit
Project's Plan
ti.1csa Verde homeown ers say !hey wi!l
attempt 'to block the construction of a
500-Wlit apartment project in their
neighborhood by protesting to the Costa
!\1esa City Council tonight.
A force of about 100 dissatisfied
residents has been must ered for the 6:30
p.m. council hearing during •,vhich
council members will decide the fate of
the $12 million Mesa \'erde Villas,
according to ?\lrs. Patricia Armstrong,
secretary of the ~1esa V e rd e
Homeowners Association.
The apartment complex, to be located
on 20.4 acres or land on the southeast
comer of Mesa Verde Drive East and
Goll Course Drive, would be adjacent
the existing Vista Del Lago apartments.
That fact forms one of the basic
objections to the project. according to
Mrs. Armstrong, ~·ho insists that no
additional apartments are nee ded
because the Vista de\ Lago has a 40
percent vacancy rate.
Like the Vis ta de! Lago. the ~fesa
Verde Villas are planned for construction
on " land which is roned for apartment
purposes. However. it is subject to a
"conditional permit" requirement which
means that the project has to be
outsta nding. •
"When this land ~·as zoned for
apartments from agricultural in 1969 the
z.oning was sold ·to us on the basis that
whatever was built here \\"OUld be an
outs tanding project ." maintains Mrs.
Armstrong.
"The Vista del Lago was. not an
outstanding project and we do not think
this is an outstanding project."
·"uilder Walter q~yner @.10embcrs of the Costa Mesa P'.lannlilg C4inmlssion
disagree. Commissioners last month
recommended unanJmousJy that the city
council authorize the conditional permit,
even though planning aides claimed there
were "design flaws" in the project.
Gayner asserts the woods and lake
project will be one of the most Innovative
in all of Orange County and that the $200
to $400 monthly rents would eliminate
any problems with a ''transient
element." ·
But the homeowners, especially those
living in the $80.000 hfesa Verde Est.ates,
say the apartments will also immerse
them in a host of other problems.
"These apartments are infringing on
our environmental ooncerns," asserts
Mrs. Annstrong. "The traffic will be
horrendous and anyone who lives in our
area will be affected because the only
way to get to the main part or the city
will be to go lhrough them or around
them."
Concerned that the apartment design
gives the project a "hiird look," the
planning staff had recommended a
Yeggs Check In
·At Mesa Motel,
Get $3,000 Loot .
A Costa Mesa motel closed and all
jacked from its foundations ror a move
across Newport Boulevard to a new
loCalion has been hit by burgla rs with a
$3,000 loss.
Representatives of the Sea Lark Motel.
2301 Newport Blvd., di scovered the loss
, of assorted rumishings i n c I u d i n g
television sets and toilets over the
weekend .
In vestigators said the burglars pried
open the front door or the temporarily
closed lodgings and went down the
hallway from roon1 to room, kickin~
do"'ll doors .
The Joss included color television sets,
commodes, a roll or carpet, mirrors and
a kitchen range . according to AJex J.
Gorby and Philip L. Brooks, of Los
Angeles.
Motel operators shut it down severaJ
months ago pending removal to a new
site on the opposite side of Newport
Boulevard.
Construction of the Newport Free.way
southward along the present mote of
Ne,,..-port Boulevard will soon eliminate
business along the westerly right-of.way.
Junior ~liss on TV
MOBILE, Ala. (UPI ) -America's 1971
Junior Miss will be crowned tonight In
the nationally televised final~ of the five-
day pageilnt. Contestants spent tht>
wetkend rehearsing for the broadcas'
which will be seen on the CBS television
network after three days or preliminary
competition which began last Thursday.
\
complete redesign or the !\1csa Verde
Villas.
Among the recommendations. deleted
by the commission's acllQn. l'l'ere the
elim ination of large par~ing lots and
their replacement with s'nit(Uer clusters;
opening up the interior to give a better
view or the artificial lake : adding more .
recreation space. and encompassing it
\Vith pedestrian pathways.
°""' ..............
LOSES BATTLE TO CANCER
Ex-Supervisor Fu therly
Ex-S upervisor
Cye Featlierly
Dies at .4.ge 77
Former Orange County supervisor C.
M. "Cye" Featherly died Sunday in a
Santa Ana convalescent home after a
long battle with intestinal cancer. He was
71.
Featherly, who resigned his First
District seat in 1969 after serving on the
board for 20 years, will be honored
Tuesday by Orange County's supervisors
who will adjourn the meeting in h,ls
memory.
''This is a tremendous blow to all of
us," Supervisors' Chairman Ralph Clark
commented today. "Cye was one of our
b'l'eatest public servants and it is good to
know at this moment that his memory
will be perpetuated by the park that was
named after him."
Funeral services for ~fr. Featherly
have been scheduled for 3 p.m.
Wednesday in the Waverley Chapel of
Fairhaven Memorial Park in Santa Ana.
He is survived by his wife, Sue, and a
stepchild. .
Featherly . who was succeeded in the
First District seat by its present
occupant, Robert Battin, served as a
deplity sherifr in Orang~ County before
winning election to the board in 1949.
A native or Wyoming, he talked
whimsically on his retirement of the way
in which he rode to Orange C:Ounty on
horseback more than SO years ago.
"l didn 't have a job to my name and 1
cculdn't find anyone around here who
was willing at that lime to give me one,"
he told his fellow supervisors.
Only Second District Supervisor David
Baker remains of the last board on which
Mr. Featherly served.
ONE SOL ITARY AD
SOLD EVERYTHI NG
One ad -six sales. That. in a fe w
words is. the story of a "few words, in
the right place." another successful
Daily Pilot classified ad. He.re lt is:
120'' SOFA, $250; love stat. $.50,
TV console, 175; din nn set, $150;
12:' boat w/mrt. & trlr., $250.
MEC reloader, $35. tPhone No.)
The ad originaUy was published just
one weekend and aold all six items listed
in it. or course the advertiser was
happy! You'll be happy with results, too .
ii ~u just put "a [ew words in Ille rl!l"t
place'' -In Dally Pilot cl alSllleds. Dial
the direct lln~; 612$11.
1
'
i l? DAIL V Pl l~-c
Otte Sqttffslaed 8119
1\fotorist Denise A. Guinn. 23, fared better than her
foreign car Saturday ni ght when she lost control
and brakes reportedly failed on S·curve of Estancia
Road and Swan Drive in Costa .l\1esa. Car slid
E'ro•n Page 1
broadside into power pole, then hit fence, strewing
debris and ripping out engine. 1'1iss Guinn, of 1325
S. Arapaho Drive, Santa Ana, sufferred n1inor in·
juries but declined treatment.
~~~~~~~~-
FOUND ... E11senada Racers Compile
'
from school Friday wilh her younger
sister Sarah Jane. 7. that Kimmie and
her friend decided it would be fun to
spend the weekend together.
"They made up a cock-and -bull story
about her Mom going out on a date and
then phonied up a telephone call to Mrs.
Wilson," Detective Hardy explained
today.
The second prank call was for
permiss ion to stay another night.
1nvcstigators noted Mrs. Wilson, whose
estranged husband is seriously ill at the
Long Beach Veterans' Administration
Hosp ital in Long Beach, was not going
out on a dat~.
She was, in fa ct, preparing to move Qer!
three child ren and their mother to the
"Our Town" family apartments at 2825
Fairview Road, in Costa Mesa.
Detective Hardy said when the full
impact of her weekend odyssey became
apparent, Kimmie was even reluctant to
tell police how her worrisome
disappearance occurred.
No discipllnary action was anticipated
unless It occurs behind closed doors or
the Wilson residence, because the whole
episode was innocent if alarming.
"We arc going to have a talk with the
other family," Detective Hard y
concluded.
lie s'aid they would be advised that
next time one of their daughter's
playmates Wll nls to visit that it \\'Ould be
wise lo call th e parents themselves to
confirm permission.
Somelim es it is UTI\\'ise to let the
children do it. they noted wryly.
Costa Mesa Tavern
Burglarized of $623
A burgla r "'ho tried to cover his tracks
by replacing a pried exterior door lock
looted a Costa J\1esa night club of $623.85
(Iver the weekend, then apparently left
via a fi re door opening outward.
The Joss. co1nprising the tavern's
entire bankroll. was discovered by Pier
l l 1nanagcr Thon1as Elsea ·when he
opened up ro'r business al 19i6 Newport
Blvd .. Sat urday. Investigators sai d the
burglary is the latest incident requiring a
JXllicc ca ll to the premises operated by
Jerry Owens.
Rovaltv to Visit J ,,
PfllLADELP HIA <UPI) -Princess
Margaret (If Great Britain and her
husband the Earl or Snoy,·don accepted
invi tations to help dedicate Philadelphia
Children's Hospital today.
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Ttltr.hoiw 17141 64Z·4 l 2 I
Clo~tlf td Ad.-erl!tl'"J 642·56 71
(~ !lf4 '""""" f?>'• "'""'"·~""'! ,,,.._
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Fastest Times in History
By ALMON LOCKABEY
IMll"9 l!dlt1r
t:NSENADA-The fastest and calmest
Ne,vport to Ensenada race in the 27-year
history of the event came to a close
today as half of the yachtsn1cn v.·erc on
their way home.
The speed of the race was due to, brisk
\Yes terly winds that prevailed from the
Saturday start to the fini sh early Sunday
morning.
Total calm prevailed in Ensenada from
about 8 p.m. Sunday as m()St of the non·
yachting crowd had left for home or were
in jail and many yachtsmen were
preparing to up anchor and start the long
uphill drag to home ports.
Ensenada police made a bust at the
Bahia Hote l about 6 p.m. Sunday to quell
a disturbance. A dozen youths were
hauled away to jail but none of them was
connected with the yacht race.
Ensenada and Newport Ocea n Sailing
Association officers said today there
have been no problems compared to the
near riot conditions of last year.
There lvcre relatively few prcblems in
the race itself. Two yachts were still at
sea early today but had been accounted
for. They had overshot Ensenada and
were beating their way back.
There were several minor collisions
and one major (Inc on the starting line
Satw"day. The 37-foot sloo p \Vings
collided with another on the starting line
and rammed a hole through its huU. The
damaged yacht was not identified.
The yacht Double D Which had reported
she was taking on water soon aft er the
start repaired whatever damage was
responsible and started the race two
hours late and finished Sunday night.
First yacht to finish shortl y after 5
a.m. Sunday was the cataraman Seabird.
owned and skippered by Bob Hanel (If
Cabrill o Beach Yacht Club. Seabird was
also first to fin ish last year.
First single hull to finish. some 40
minutes later, was the 62-foot sloop
Ragtime sailed by Stan Mfllcr and a
three·man Long Beach Yachl Club
syndicate.
Jack Baillie's NewsBoy. the perennial
fir st finisher from Balboa Yacht Club,
finished seventh th is year. The race
committee was still feverishly con1piling
handicap results today because (If a
numbe r or protests. The tr (I p h y
presentation is scheduled laLe today .
The first 10 OOats to finish: I. Seabird
2. Ragtim~ 3. Sirius II. Bob Lynch,
Newport Harbor Yacht Club 4. ,.1aloma,
Jack Swart, Orange Coast CoUegc 5.
Soliloquy, Ken Burns, SMYC 6. Anitra,
Fred Preiss, P!\1YC 7. NewsBoy 8. Lani
Kai (catamaran)-.'1artin Crumrine,
Balboa Yacht Club 9. Serena, Steve
Bragg, SCCYC 10. Imi Loa, Vic Stem,
Seal Beach Yacht Club.
Unofficial handiCap winners : President
of ~1exico Trophy (Ocean Ra ching·D)
Cohort, Milt Vogel. HHYC; Pre~ident of
U.S. Trophy (PHRF·F ) Hampshire Rose.
Dennis Burnett, SSSC; U.S. Secretary of
State (PHRF·DI Cambria. Bi 11
Larson, PVYC: U.S. Sccrctarv of Na\'Y
(PHRF·A) Viva Cruz. Tony Cruz. CYC;
Governor of Baja California (PHRf\C 1
Serena, Alex. v8nOyke. LBYC ; Mayor of
Newport Beach lPHRF-B) Pacifica, Stan
\Villis, SDYC: Secretary or l''orelgn
Relations (OC.C) Promotion. i ·arsha\I
Beck, BYC; Mexican Secreta ry of State
(OC·B) Kari II. Dick Kelton. LAYC:
Govemor of California (QC-A l Shamrock.
Roy Disney, CYC; U.S. Coast Guard
IMORF·A) Salt.shaker. Bob Bo.yes,
Anacapa Yacht Club: Jeff Deaver
(Cruising dub (If America) Paradox,
Tom Armstrong. CYC: Emi;::h Family
t-.1emorial Trophy (l\10RF·Bl Good
Times, Crane and Smith, -·c.
•
Junior College
Of fices Bm·necl
SACRMtENTO IAP J Th c
headquarters office for California's jun·
ior colleges was hit by a fire early th is
morning that caused an estimated $70,000
damage, authori ties reported.
The fire at the California community
colleges headqu arters, located in !he
do1Yntown area, broke out at 1:54 ~.m. It
took 40 fire men about half an hour to put
it out.
Physician One of Four
Trapped in Auto Crash
A physician \\'ho was treated by
colleagues as he lay trapped in his
mangled sports car ror more than 30
minutes \\'as one of four persons injured
today in a headon collision westerly of
ThC' Arches overpass in Newport Beach.
Officials at Hoag Memorial Hospital
confirmed shortly before nOon that three
or the victims of the West Coast Highway
crash 1\'0U!d be admitted in ,sertous
ceitldition with multtple injuries. .., '. -~-"i"rkcrs finally fr.00 Or. 1-
Page Sov.-ers, 581 of Costa Mes8, after
another doctor and nu rse were sum-
moned from tlo.ig ~1cmor1al llospital
on the hill above to help.
They provided emergency treatment,
including administraUon of intravenous
solution l1S police and nremcn labored to
free Dr. SoY"e rs, who practice1 In
Huntlngton Beach.
He Ytli.S adnlltted to the hospital in
serious condition with multiple head and
chest injuries. ~totorlst l\ln;. l..Llulse lYhltnack, 30, of
3tH Laguna St., Newport Beach, sus-
tained multiple Jaccrallons nnd p:..:.aiblc
internal injuries, whlle her daughter
Julie, 7, suffered he.id lnj11rtes.
llo•pllal oflicial• said bolh were listed
l
' .
in serious condition and that Julie would
be kept under surveillance i n lhc
intens h·e care unit.
A second child of l\1r. and l\lrs.
Kenneth Whitnack, little Zachery. t, \Yas
rid ing in a car seat and only suffered
ntinor injuries v.·hich v.1ere patched up in
the emergency room.
The headon collision occurred in
'vestbound lanes or Coast ~Hghway near
Howard's Restaurant but police were still
investigating the cause or the accide nt.
Newpxt Beach Fire Department Capt.
John Brannon reported the. coll ision
which occurred only a moment or (\VO
before he amved on the scene In West
Newpon.
Glass and otiler debris was sca ltered
over the pavement by the impact or Dr.
So\\·ers' sports roadslcr and to.1rs.
.. Whitnack's compact station v.1agon.
Gasollne tanks were not ruptured,
however, and there was no flre, which
could easily have claimed the life of ljtc
trapped physician.
He lay almost hori1.on tnlly inside the
crumpled foreign roadster. while none of
the other victims were ejected Crom their
heavier car. JUlie Whltnack lay unconscious in the
back seat, whllc her mother sat dazed
ond bleoding behind the wheel and lllllc
"Zachery wailed in fear and pain.
,r
'
Coast Cit y
Bus Service
Has Baclill1g
By WILLIAM sc11r.E1RER
01 lllt oally '1101 s11u
Cons ul tants (or the Orange County
Transi t District recommended today the
Orange Coast cities of l~untingt(ln Beach
and FoWltain VaUey be placed in a top
priority category for imple1nentation or
Dial-A-Ride bus service.
The door·to-destination bus service
could be started in the west county cities
by July of 1975 if' transit directors
approve a final priority list at their JWlC
3 meeting.
Or. Marcel Zobr8k", consulting engineer
from DAVE Systems Inc., said a total of
eight county cities met the criteria for
immediate Dial·A·Ride service.
Besides Huntington Beach a n d
Fountain Valley, no other Orange Coast
communities were ranked nea r the top of
the priority list.
It had been thought a Dial-A-Ride
service aTea would be implemented soon
in t'ne S"addleback Valley a'rea. bu~ ap-
parently. other areAs W"re deemed to be
in grea ter need of the scrvic right away.
Exparu;i(ln of the service, which is
already operating in the cit y of La
~labra. will cost about $1.6 million, of
which $1.3 million will be covered by i;l
grant from the federal Urban Mass
Transit Authority (UMTA ),
According to Zobrak, a ke y to installing
the new systems will be the success of
failure of negotiati(lns ,~·ith the cities
themselves.
Under the regulations of the transit
district the cities will ha\'e to come up
witha 33 percent share or the system 's
operating costs. If they choose to
contribute less, the system would be cut
back accordingly.
Highest priority for the service "'as
given t(I the cities of Orange and Villa
Park, which comprise t"'O (If 27 possible
Dial·A·Ride serv ice areas in the county.
Those cities could have the service in
operation by the end of this year.
Next on the consultant's list is the city
or Brea which would be an extension of
the exis ting La Habra system and would
be operating by March of 1975.
Huntington Beach and Fountain Vall ey
are in the third and fourth spots on the
priority list of five sel't-•ice areas.
J~untington Beach would be served by
June of 1975 and Fotmlain Valley by the
end o! summer in 1975.
The final Dia l-A Ride service areri on
the list is a combioatioo of Buena Park.
Cypress and La Palma, to be served by
late 1975.
Zobrak estimated !hat 70 new buses
'rill be needed to expand the service to
all the priority areas.
Zobrak said the priorities he came up
·with y,·crc basl'd on a complex r ating
system.
lie said such things as the percenta:ge
of agt'd and young people livin.; in an
area, the percentage of people y,'ifhout
autos. the percentage of people \Vith only •
one car. the a1n(lunt of existing bus
service and expected D i a I • A - R i d e
p..1tronage were considered.
A key factor appeared tu be the
existing fixed-route bus service per 10,000
people in a particular area.
Zobrak said any area with Jess than 2.5
miles or bus routes per 10.000 pe<iple y,·as
put in a top priority category .
This appeared to be one major reason
the south county was left out of the high
priority classification.
Zobrak said the 101\·est mileage in the
south c.ounty \\'as in rvlission Viejo witti
3.58 miles per 10.000 people.
. .
O•ltv Pll1f S11ff f'Nf9
"WHEN I FIRST SAW HIM, I WENT 'YECCHHH'"
Ellen Brown With Grand Ch1mpion Rex Cat
55~000 Feline
Mesan's Cat Has Tozicli of Class
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of llMI OIH1 Piiot S11tt
Sauntering through a back alley, ol '
"Red" Ryder might easily be mistaken
as (lne of the other vagrants who roams
the garbage cans in tbe•neighborhood .
He looks like he hasn't had a kipper in
two weeks, his whisk ers are scraggly,
and there's not one hair left on his pointy
ears.
But Red Ryder is no (lrdinary cat. In
fact. he might be just about about the
fanciest cat in all of College Park. With a
name like Grand Champion Rodell 's
Ryder of Pinkerton and a $5,000 price
tag. who would argue?
The Rex breed of which Red is an
outstanding example, just plain looks
peculiar. It 's the whippet of lhe feline
world-the looks sort of have to grow on
you .
"\\'hen I first saw him. I \\'ent
yccchhh,'' admits his proud owner.-Mrs.
Ellen Brown, 205 Dartmouth ,Place. who
<."O-Owns Red with her husband Scotty.
''But as soon as J picked him up we
Y.'ere off an running. lfe is really an
affec!ionatc cat."
As grand cham pion with more than 100
ribbons and trophies to his credit two-
year-old Red's ()(fspring are vcrv much
in demand. The Browns have a !landing
order for kittens at $500 apiece.
Althou gh they seem strange at first .
Rex cats have some unusual features.
They're the only cats v.ith curlv hair and
their coats look somcy,·hat like a crushed
velvet pillow . Their noses are distinctly
Roman . 1hcy have curly whiskers, bald
ears. and are said to be more intelligent
than most other cats.
Nobody knows for sure where they
came fro m. There are two popular
theories. one th;:it the Rei is a natural
Dlllr I'll .. Stiff I',_.
mutation and the other that it is a
de'Scendant of the ·Egyptian ca ls.
"They look lik e those in Egyptian •
sculptures,'' says ~1rs. Brown. "Every
Pharaoh had a cat and when you look al
pictures of ttose cat! you'll see that they
were bald on the ears and that the ears
were high on th<.\r heads." ,
Lending further support to the second
theory is th4t mummified c a l s .
unwrapped after being taken out of
Egyptian tombs, also had curly hair,
according to ~1rs. Brown.
Ancient lineage or not. Red gell
treated like a prince around the Brown
hou.sehold and he is regularly taken lo
cat shows where be usuaUy devastates
the opposition.
At home. tbc Browns refrain from
calling him by his noble name . "We just
call him Red or all sorts of things,
depending on ·whai he's doing-1.ncluding
sorn& 61' :me bletps • lri ·1bc Nixon
transtttpta," confides Sootty.
There are \v.•o other C4ls in the Bl'O\\'TI
""1sel)QI~, bqth !!exes "I'd .of champion·
ship caliber, but Red remains the top
cat.
"\Ve \\"Ouldn't put a price on Red,"
says Scotty but Mrs. Brown confrsses
that if somebody came up with $5,000 she
would "cry all the way to the bank ."
Just one thing. Don't pick up an alley
cat and expect it to be a Rex. Red Ryder
hasn't seen a garbage can in his life and
he v.·ould probably stick his aquiline noR
up at a kipper.
Boston to Bun
Girl Ballplayer?
BOS'l'ON (UPI ) -Janet BowC' planned
to march today with the banner of the
North Allston Braves lo the dedication of
Smilh 's Field, despite opposition from
the Little League's n st ion a I
headquarters.
Braves coach Daniel Bausch said he
was told last week the Littl e League
office in Williamsport, Pa .. wanted him
fired if he allowed Janet. 10, oo the team
or allowed her to march in the parade to
the new playing field. But Bausch hasn't
backed down .
''I'm going to have-bar carry !he
banner," Bausch said. ''The girl did
register and she paid her dues."
Bausch said he was told further thal a
scheduled game Wednesday v.·ith ~
North Allston Cardinals v.1'.lUld not be
COllllted in the standings if Janet is stlll a
member of the Braves.
From Pagel
REINECKE. • •
International Telephone & Telegraph Co ..
parent company of Sheraton.
Th e grand jury also accused Reinecke
of lying when he said his first discussions
or holding the convention in San Diego
came in a social gathering of Sap Diego
citizens in Washington in April 1971.
In other court papers, the apecial
prosecutor's office hes said the first such
talk was between Reinecke and then
Whit. Hou.e chklf of stafl H. R.
Haldeman. The date of the alleged
discussion with Haldeman has not been
disclosed by 1hc special prose<:ulor.,
olfice.
Reineclce'I testimony bel,,.. l h e
Judiciary Commlllee tn April 1172 came
during hearings over tht! nomination of
Richard G. Kleindienst ror attorney
general. Kleindienst wat confirmed but
later resigned.
• •
Suspect Surrenders
SEVERAL HELPING HANDS EASE TRAPPED MAN 'S ORDEA~
Phy1tcl1n I. Page Sowers Wai Pinn.-:J For On•half Hour
LONG BEACH (UPI) -A Michigan
man wanted lor questioning In the
stabbli\I of a womnn whose body was
found In a motel 1urrendcrcd &mday to
pollct.
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