HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-05-20 - Orange Coast Pilot• •
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Wonaan · Beports Sunday Terror· •
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Porter Released
Early Fro111 Prison
For Good Behavio
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DAILY PILOT
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Reineeke 'Denied
Chan·ge oi Venne;
lndietJDent Stands
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on _..oas '
1ews MONDAY AFTERNObN, MAY 20, 1974
VOL.,,, NO. ue, i s•CTtoHS, ... AG.I
lndict11aent Stands
·.· Reinecke Oenied Niguel 's
Change of Venue Porter
Released WASHINGTON rAP\ -A federal inconvienences for Reinecke if he is
judge today refused to dismiss a perjury schedu~ to stand trial here but he found
indictment ai;ainst LI. Gov. Eci Reinecke that lhey "are not unduly oppre5Sive or
of California or shift his trial to that bur~nsome."
st.ate. Parker said he examined in chambers
a financial net worth statement and From \\'ire Ser\'iCf's U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker Herbert L. Porter -:oT Laguna Niguel.
d ·ed 1· b R · k · tto income tax returns ¥1'hich Reinecke cn1 mo ions Y einec es a rneys fonner scheduling director of the
ho t d d Olhe 'hi gs that 1ubmJt•-, and did not agree that the "' con en e among r n ~ Committee to Re-elect the President, I h d •---· led and lra-' by expense of a trial in Washington would be ie a UL-u1 mis t<....-\\·as relea.c;cd from the Fed er a I feder I pro·-·1 · to cooperatrn· g with an unsupportable financial burden. a ""'"" ors in Corr('ctional Institution at Lon1poc three the'., m· ves11·ga11·on • The J'udge said a· transfer to California · da~'S early for good behavior.
"The court finds that f.ir. Reinecke jS« REINE~~· Pa~e !) The \rarden's office said Porter, 36.
v.·as unable to point to any •~tement \ \\·ho pleaded guilty to lyi ng to the FBI
made to him about a promise tt-k!fdency Seal Beach Ma.i· about the disposition of funds of the . . . in the Wleqaivocal manner he. ., committee, v.·as rele36ed Friday after
suggests," Judge Patter ruled. . . serving 27 days of a schl'duled 30-day
''Even if he belie,ved . a promise had ' sentence.
Ileen made. this belief · must · he Dies iii Bayside Poner, son-in-law of the Arthur Briggs
buttressed by sublitantial proof ... Such of Monarch Terrace, entered the prison
proof is lacking." the judge said. April 22 after voluntarily arriving at the
Reinecke and his attorneys contended Brid,ge Coll isiOll. prison gates early to avoid reporters.
!hat the lieutenant gove.D)Or freely Hi.<>. sentence included one year of
provided docun1ents because he bclic\'ed probation after the short incarceration.
special \Vatergale proseculOr.s pron1iscd A head-011 collision on Newport Beach·s Porter's sentence sten11ned frC1m a
he would not be indicted. narro1'' Ne"·port Bay Bridge 00 Pacific story he admilled he told involving h<nv
A three-count indictment retumOO Coast Highwny Sunday night claimed the $100,000 given to convicted \Vaterg ate
April 3 accuses Reinecke of lying to the life of 8 Seal Beach man. conspirator G. Gordon Liddy y,•as
Senate Judiciary Commiltcc about llobert 1C. Styden, 31, of' 219 Centrfil distributed.
certain aspects or his role in the selection A.\·e., was.('n route ho1ne from his job as Originally Porter told the FBI the
of san Diego as the site of the n1anager of an Albertson's market in El money \\'Cnt to conservative students. He
Republican National Convention. It Toro when fhe fatal accident occurred. lat('r told the Senate \Va t erg ate
subliequently \\'as transferred to ~lianu ln\·estigatioo was continuing today into Con1miltcc he had given the money to
Beach, Fla. factors that apparentlv caused the Liddy.
Amgrig other things, Reinecke is headon crash, \Vhich also injured the He :>aid he niade up the story at the
accused of perjury about when he told driver of the other car involved. urging of deputy can1paign dlrector Jcb
John N. Mitchell, former attorney She was identified as ~1rs. Arico Stua11 f.1agruder.
general and manager of President Gurney, 40, of I22l Starboard \\'ay, Wben he corrected his original
Nixon's re.election campaign, about a Newµort Beach. staten1cnt. Porter said the reasons he
$400,00l offer from the Sheraton Corp. to NeY.'J)Ort Beach Police Officer Jim told the lie were related to appeals to his
underwrite the conventton in San Diego. Donaldson said the accident w 8 s vanity and to his loyalty to the President.
•Reinecke is a candldate "for goverpor of apparently caused wben Bryden's small The General AccoWltlng office,
California. and ts opposed in the JWle 4 foreign pickup trl.lck suddenly swerved watchdog ann of Congress, &aid the I H l from westbound Janes of the narrow primary by state ,coolr<>l er ouston . bridge into oncoming lanes. $100,000 was used to pay off the
Flournoy. 8" trial Is scheduled to begin He died at ll.30 p.m. at Hoag Memorial Watergate wiretappers after their
July 15. -Hoopital, 1.., ·than one hour: afler the ' arrest<.
He petitioned t~e court to move the colliskln in ' which he suffered 1head . ~orter, his wi re Carol, and their three
trial to San Fra.ncisce or Sacramento on injuries. . ~ ch1k1ren sold their Washington, D.C. ~that ti would be ••undue burden Investigators Said' Mr1: Gurney was home last •pring and have been living
for hllll w bring deltMt witnesses to tttatOJ! at~ ho!pital,.wbere siJ stilcheo , ws~!.\.l!'e ~rlggs' in Ll)guna !iiguel ever
Washinglon. •nd \ha~ \ht"' liad ·beqll ~,wtre talctn w cllii<! a head laceraUori "~~
prejudlcl•I publlclty In the capital. and releaaed 14 recover at home. ' fn an Interview last summer, Porter
Judge Parker old thel'e will be No skldmarks wel-e fou,od at the """" said. "Telling the trutlt Is the most
and until f11rtber lnveJl!gaUon, poJlca vl~orou.s regimen I know. We tell our
J(ing Loses Hope
NEW DELHJ. India IAP) -The King ot Slkl!lm said Sllnday that Hope Cooke.
the debUW!te who beume his queen,
moved badt to New '(pr1< sfter oppos!Uoa
polllk:ianl accuaod her of being an
Am<ri<on spy. But King Palden Thondup
Namgyal. 49, ukl In an htter1lew ht.re
that be bopa his Wife will return to
~Im """" da;r.
were ot a-!Oos. to explain whl!t may have chlldreo.w do k and•~ should do it This
caused Ory~ w cross the center line. is good tberopy for Individuals .involved
The "'!lllslqn was the laleJI In a long aod for the oountry."
series or aeci4enll -both fatalities and. •
fender-bendtn-whlch have occurred on Two Granted Asylun1 or near the narrow old bridgo.
A cltizeo'a oommlttee appolntell to LISBON, Portugal IAPI -The
atudy waya fo l~ve tbe 1K11atlon Is deposed leadera of Portugal, Premier
due on June S to make reoommendatlon.s Marcello C&eumo and J'retldent Amerloo
• to the Newport Beach City Council. Thomas, left the Ponuglle1e lal•l\d of
A May IS publle bearin1 baa already Madeira today for Brazil, 1 government
lleo COWSION, Pate I) apotesman •Id.
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UPI Telt.lotlolos
ANGUISHED FATHERS -The Rev. George F. Hall. lleft) pastor
of St. John's Lutheran Church in Lincolnwood, Ill., and Randolph
,\, Hearst express sorrow after Friday night SLA slayi ngs. Hall
learned that his daughter Camilla was killed in holocaust \vhile
Hearst got word that his daughter Patricia was not amon g I.he six
victilns. Additional stories, Page 5.
Patty Hearst Offered
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$500 for LA Apartment?
LOS ANGELES CUPI) -A white police rcp'.lrtcd today.
u'Ortlan, belifved possibly to be Patricia A dragnet for the 20-ycar-0ld heiress.
Hearst, and 1wo black men. offered ~500 now listed as armed and dangerous and
to rent a Hollywood apartment for 24 / liable to be shot if she resists, was
hours and one of the men lunged at the spread over the metroµolitan Los
landlady with knife when she refused, Angeles area after six members of the
Symbioncse Liberation Anny were killed
Boy, 12, Dies
In Ha1uls ta11d
YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP) -
Twclye-ycaM>ld HiroyMU Takagl
was ~ to Cllssmates as some-
thing o fan el{eprt at 'SWnding and
walld•& on his hands.
• Police said the boy !tied •
handlland today on a window ll'd~•
at his school. He fell 37 feet to the
ground al}d died three hours later
in n hospital.
Friday. .
A spokesman ror the FBI said the _,,__ ··-. ·-·--·--
MORE HEARST STORIES
· APPEAR TODAY ON PAGE 5 --····--·-:---------H:lllywood lncldent was one of a number
,or reports coming in from excited
citi:i:ens about the whereabouts of Miss
H•aro( •nd that thev had no •Ktenc. to
ltnk it directly w the wantl'd"girl.
A report by the Loa Angel.S Police
Department, ho,..ver, Jls~ the Incident
as "po9Bib1e St.A connection.~·
An I.APO olflcer mid the incident
O«Urred al'OUll<l 9:3il Sunday night at an
•parlmont building on New Hampshire
Avenue In the HollVlYOOd area .
The report '3ld the trio were carrying
(5" BEARST, Pa1e II
Govemo1·
'Lobbied'
By G1~oup s
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of lht OlllY ~llol Siii!
Go\'ernor Ronald Reagan came to the
Orange Coast today to lobby for support
of the June 4. $250 million state parks
b::ind issue.
He left having been lobbied hy two
special interest groups \\.'ho arrived by
land and bv sea.
Three L<iguna Beach girls pulled up on
horseback to the cliffsidc ne,vs confer·
ence just south of Corona de! ~'lar to
d('Jiver personll!l v a petition. Reagan
read it lo the ;i s.,cmblage or dignitaries
and ne11·smen.
"There have been horses here for the
last 50 years. \\·e hope there \rill be an
equestrian center in the ne1\' stale park
thnt will occupy this land." l~eagan said
the µetition requested.
"l'rn going to lobby for it,'' Reagan
said. recalli ng a cavalry Sl'nlin1ent:
"Nothing is so good for the inside of a
1nan or a 11·oman as the outside of a
horse."
The go1·ernor said he \1·ould pass the
j>Clition on and ""'ork to keep horses
11·ithin 1hc a1neniti('S the 1600-acre state
p.1rk may offer if the bond issue pro-
vides the Si.6 n1itlion needed to buy it
/See REAGAN. Page 21
Orange Coast
Weather
lligh clouds arc on the horizon
for Tuesday, but it "'ill be swiny
and 11·armer. according to the
11·eathcr servic(', Highs in the UJ>-
pcr 60s at the beaches to the mid-
70S inland. Overnight lo\.\·s 42·52.
'l\'..\•10•·: 1'011 ·\ y
President Ni.J:ou p11sl1cd l11s
11atiollat l!ealtli i11s11ra11ce plan
over tlie 11otio11 's .pir1voves ruday,
declartuo tlu1t tl1e e11d to price
controls n1oy boost doctor bills
by 22 perce11t tl1is year. s~e
story, Page. 4.
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WwMI Nw'I t
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l! DAILY PILOT • Monday, May 20, 1~74
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U1'1 T11et11lo10
lrela1ad i11 Li1nbo
Supporters of the Uister \Vorkers Council n1a.ke a
hun1an barrier across the Shore l{oad in Belfast to
stop traffic duriRg the general strike which has
brought Northern Ireland to a standstill. The mili·
tant grOup called the strike six days ago to protest
British plans for givi ng 1ninority Catholics a share
in ~unning the province.
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Wind Gusts To11ple Ma11y
Newport Ha1·ho1~ Sailboats
Aboul 20 sailboats were capsized by
high \1•inds ln Nev.·port Tl arbor Sunday
and lhrec large sailboats had to be
rescued outside the harbor. the Orange
CoWlty llarbor Patrol reported today.
Sgt. [lean Cordell. harbor patrol \\'alch
commander. said small craft warnings
v.·cre posted "but people seemed lo
ignore them ."
"From noon to about 3 p.m. v.·e \\'ere
~xtre1nely busy." Cordell said, "four
harbor patrol boats. a lifeguard boat and
a Coast Guard cutter v.·ere all on call.''
lie said there v.·ns a steady v.·ind at 25
miles per hour v.·ith gwts up to 35 mph.
Despite the many boats w h i ch
overturned. Cordell said there were no
1najor injuries.
The largest sailboa t rescued was the
Iii-fool While Cloud owned by Kenn eth
Lynch of Los Angeles. Cordell said the
boat's auxiliary engine y,·ent out. its sails
fouled and they had no steering.
The \Vhlte Cloud \.\'as IO\\lc.>d in front
about t.,.,·o miles outside lhe harbor
entrnnce channel by the U.S. Coast
Guard cutter Point Divide.
A 48-foot sailboat, La Cueca. belonging
lo 'J'crry Ward of Torance, disrnasted
off Shorc<:!iffs bclv.·een Corona de! ~tar
and Little Corona beach.
Cordell said the masl shrouds became
1anglcd and hung into the "''Rler so that it
\\as necessary to cut the slays. I-le said
the harbor patrol to.,.,·ed in the boa I ·s
rnast and the lifeguards tov.cd the
sailboat back into the harbor.
The third large sailboat. the 40-foot
1\cgir belonging to an Oceanside 1na11
1dcntificd only as B. Johausen \\JS
From Page 1
REINECl(E ...
11ould probably generate a.s n1uch
pretrial publicity there as \Vill occur in
\\'ashington because ltcincckc is a "''cll-
kno11·n 1>nlitical figure in !he slate.
Judge Parker s:iid 1hat if lhe s11ua!ion
thangl's bct~·e<·n 1101\1 and .July 15 ''I 1\·ill
be cxtrc1ncly .1icnsl!ivc to thi.~ 1nat1cr
. I mys;e]f 11·il! lnke st('l>S
unc;olici!ed" if it appt>ar s th11t ll n1.:iy be
1mpossihlc to oh!ain a lair lrn1! here.
F. Joseph l)onohuc . Rein cc k e's
principal \Vash1ngton :iltornC'y. asked for
R dctny in efrccti\·cness of the ordl'r un til
Friday \~·h1lc he consult,.. \1·1th colleagues
and 111th Heinecke ro dc!crn11nc "·hc!hl'r
rhry \1·ill ap~al Judge Parker's ruling Iii
!he l S. Court of Appeal ~.
OIAMGI COAST ~1
DAILY PILOT
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rescued by the harbor patrol 1ust outside
the harbor entrance after it dismastcd.
and lost steering. :
"In addition to the 20 overturned boa!s
\\·e rescued, nurncrous others overturned
but \vere saved by private citizens,"
Cordetl said.
lie added, ''When prople ignOre the
small craft warning!>. they make things
\·ery difficult for us."
Frona Page 1
REAGA N ...
from the Jn·inc Company.
The lol:lbyist for surfing interests v.·ho
came to the pres!I conference bv
surfboard \\las marathon paddler LarrY
Capune. 31. of Balboa Island .
The sun-tanned. sa!t-cnkcd surfer,
veteran of marathon paddles including
one from Ne.,..JX>rt. Rhode Island, lo
Florida, drew considerable attention
garbed in a swim suit an1idst the suit <ind
coat-elad crO\\'d.
Capune carried a plastic y,•aterproofcd
pouch containing litf!rature outlining his
desires for preservation of the st.otc's
prime surfing beach.
Capune told the governor he would like
10 sec htc 3.5-mile Ir.rine Coast bero1nr a
state beach. "Thi~ coast is a breather lor
all v.•ho live inland," Capunc contended.
He also asked gubernatorial .;;upporl
for his next marathon trip surfboarding
from Vancouver. 8.C. to San Diego.
Governor Reagan 1\·as introduced by
Irvine Company President Ra ymond L.
\\.'atson.
Reagan said the Irvine Co as t
acquisition \\'ill be possible if \·otcrs
approve Proposition 1.
\Vhat the state is buying is thr
beachfronl bet,veen Corona de! ~1ar and
Laguna Beach. t1,1·0 inland can~·ons
:'11oro and Los Trancos-and an offshore
natw·al marine preserve.
The state purchase will acquire !he
property for half its appraised value.
rteagan said.
''That, my friends, \\'OUld be a great
bargain for the people of California now
and for future generations to come,"'
Reagan said.
300 Soeecr Fa11s
Sec Plane Crasl1
SAi\ FERNAl'\DO t1\Pl -~lore than
~00 persons \\'ho sho,\ed up to v.·atch a
socrcr garne becan1c spectators lo a
pl.1nt> cra~h.
1\ single-engine Ccsana 182 \\'ilh four
pc·rsons aboard crash1>d into n goal post
in the p;1rk Sund3y. 1hcn bounced off and
struck (\1·0 c:ars in an adjacent lot.
Authorities said it apparently lost pcJ1ver
1ninut(•s after laking off fro1n Snn
Fernando Airport.
The pilot, ~lax Calvert , 27, of Van
T\uys . and p:1ssengcr Christine Boyd. 24.
of North Holly"•ood, were reported in
satisfactory condition at a hospital \\'ilh
possible back injuries.
, f'rona Page 1
COLLISION. • •
been set for citizens to air their own view.s
on various n1ethods of eliminating both
the tra(flc accident hazard a n d
streamlining the flow of traffic on
Pacific Coast Highway.
Authorities anticipate that the panel
wiW reC<>mmend that the aging span be
replaced with a higher bridge which
\\'OUld be at least six lanes wide.
Following the fatal accident Sunday
nlght, Bryden's body was 1.ransferred to
Baltz·Bergeron li'Wleral Home, Costa
ri.tc£a. where servi&1 were pending
arrangemenu toda)'.
Tht v1etlm wu manager of an
Albert>on'• Market Bl 21681 El Toro
Road, El Toro,
1
f'rona Page 1
1-IEARST ...
a shotgun, one of the men had a svoitch-
blade knife and that they "possibly" had
hand guns. Mi!ls Hearst .was reported to
have left !he shootout house in a black
area of the city v.·ith l\\'O black men
hours before the gun battle Friday.
The report said the Jandlac\y told police
that one of the 1nen attacked her 'Ajth a
kuife v.·hen she re.fused lo rent the
apartment for 24 hours and cut throuJ:h
the fC>lds of her skirt. She v.·as not
injured.
The U.S. attornev's office wa s
preparing to file a "complaint in San
fo~rancisco toda1 charging ?\liss liearst
and tY.'O kno"''n members of the SL.A still
at large y,·ith \'io!ations of federal Jaws
pertaining to possession and use of
automatic v.-eapons.
\\'illiam A. Sullivan, assistant director
of the FBI. said illis~ Hearst •,ras the
\\'Oman 'AOO leaned out the front ,,·indow
of a red and v.·hite Volks.,.,•agen van and
opened fire with a 30-calibcr carbine
Thursday afternoon. as SL.A member
\\'illiam Harris struggled \\'ilh a clerk at
).1e\'s Sporting Goods Store in lngle.,.,·ood.
ilarris v.·as accused or shoplifting a pair
of socks.
"She is a federal fugitive and if she
resists arrest she v.·ill be treated. like any
other federa l fugitive,'' Sullivan said.
She is considered arn1cd a n d
dangerous, he said, and if located she
will be told to surrender immediately. If
she tries to shoot. he said, "We would
undoubtedly shoot back."
The f'BI said an agent who believes his
li fe i!I endangered ma y open fire on a
suspect.
?\tiss Hearst .,.,·as kidnaped from her
San Francisco apartment Feb. 4. She
later renounced her former life and said
she was joining forces \.\•ilh her
kidnapers.
But the FBI maintained that !lhe V.'as
forced to make the statement. Even after
she v.·as pOOtographed v.ith a machine
gun during a bank robbery, the FBI said
she ... ras an oov.illing participant.
Five persons, including Don a Id
Defreeze. 30. v.ilo as head f the SLA
called himself "General Field 1'tarshal
Cinque," "''ere killed in the flames and
gunfire, police said. A sixth body, that ol
Camilla Hall , 29, \\'as found Sunday.
James Johnson, 18, who lived at the
home destroyed in the gunfight, told the
Los Angeles Times that Miss Hearst Oed
from the house Jess than 24 hours before
the shootout.
Charges against Johnson's mother,
Christine Johnson. 35. of harb:>ring
fugiLl\"C!I, v.·cre dropped Sunday night and
she v.•as /"('!eased. police said today.
Johnson said ?\liss Hearst told him
Thursday "They'll ha\·e to kill me before
I go back."
"She told me she \\'as with them -on
their side," said Johnson.
He said l\liss l1earst y,·as wearing a
pistol and wanted to stay v.•ith the others. 1
but they apparently sent her ay,·ay to
keep her from being involved 1n the
gunfight.
"I tt,ink some lblack) brothers tipped
then1 off that the cops v.•ere onto then1 I
and that 's wh,v they got l'a!ty out of 1
there -you know, their love for her."
He said a van contai ning t'\10 black 1
men drove up, and J\tiss He(;lrst gol into
it ru1d lert with them.
lie said he talked to her for half an
hour and "she was a beautiful person to .
me, real intelligent and all.''
The others killed In Friday's shootout
.,.,·ere identUied as Patricia "Mlimoon"
Soltysik, 24, Nancy J.jng Perry. 26, Willie
\Volfe, %2, and Angela Atwood, 25.
T een-ciger Dies ;
Refuses Blood
NORWALK, Coon. (UPI) -Merrill
Nunamaker, 19, died over the weekend
after r~(U!lng needed blood transfuslon
because of his religious beliefs.
Police said Nunamaker was seriously
Injured Jn an automobile eccldent Friday
night wjlen lhrown through t h •
wlnd"11eld,
Nu.namake.r, told Norwalk Hospital
olri<alls tllat his beliefs as 1 Jehovah'•
Witness prohibited hlm from liking 1
whole blood tronafUJio1t
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Kissinger Visits Damascus
As _ Israelis, Syrian.s Bl'.1ttle
'
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By United Preis Intematktruil
Syrian and Israeli forces today fought
artillery, tank and arn1or battles on f\.11.
Hermon and along the 40-nille Col::1n
Heights front for the 70th da~' \\ililc
Secretary of State ltenry A. Kissinger
conUnued his shuttle d1plon1acy in the
search for a formula to separate the
armies.
T'lOrtars arc taking part in the fishting."
the Syrians said.
They clahned undettrn1lned ''losses"
on the 1.~racli side.
No new I1raell reprisals against· •.
Pale:;tinlan refugee can1p! In Lebanon
y,•cre reported today after three days of
air and sea raids.
The Israeli military ron11nand in Tel
1\viv reported no casualties.
Lebanon said the Golan fighting spilled
o\'er into ils terrtiory when an Israeli
patrol e-nlered Lebanon in the foothills of
~I L ifennon. The Beirut defense rninistry
said Lebanese onny artillery fired on the
patrol and the Israelis fired bock at a
Lebane!\c army post but reporled no
casua\lies.
An Arab League n1eeling in Cairo said
Lebanon's defenses n1ust be bolstered by
otber Arab states. • ~
Egyptian roreign l\finlliter Jsma~.
Even v.·hile Ki.s.singer conferred in
Damascus .,.,·ith President 11afcz Assad in
what could be the final stages of his
three-week peace-seeking in is s ion ,
Pale!ltinlans .'itaged a memorial service
for three guerritlis \Vho died in an allack
on an Israeli schoolhouse at ?\taalut
\\'ednesday. A speaker'." p ! at for 111
co llapsed under Nayet l~a .... ·atnieh, leadi'r
of the Popular Democratic Front for the
Liberation of Palestine. and part of the
cro1\•d fled in panic ~'hen guerrillas
started shootiug in the air.
Fahrni said at the opening of the C&ir&-2
parlev that the Israeli rcprisJtls wertt:
Rggrfssions agRinst Lebanon that the":
rest of the Arab world "does not take;
lightly" but speciried no <."OWller-action. ;:.
'
"011 Mud' Flares,
Fire11ien S11iother Blaze
In Huntington Field In Jerusale1n, Prime ?\1inister Golda
l\Ieir and Defense Minister f\.lo.ihc Dayan
told the Knesset 1parlia1nent) that Israel
n1ust intensifv its \~·ar against 1\rab
guenillas follo.,.,·ing the massacre at
f\faalot in "'"hich 21 school children ~·ere
among 30 persons killed.
"The blood of our children calls upon
us to intensify our .,.,·ar against the
terrorists and to persevere in order to
get to the nests of the terrorists ~·herevcr
r'ney are," l\trs. 1\leir said.
Huntington Beach firemen smothered a
potenlia\ly dangeous oil flrld fi"e Sw1day
morning to prtvent a n1ajor blaze from
breaking out along the Signal operation
on the bluff.
The fir e flared up about 8:30 a.m. \I hen
spa r ks fron1 a \1·cldcr ign1t<'d "oil
mud"' used to cool a drill bit. according
to Fire Captain Roger Hosmer.
and firemen sa~· ii \\'<IS a ininor blaze. It.
took about 20 1ninutes lo ('()lltrol, said,
Hosmer. \\'ith the use of a special foa1ny
substance called "llp;ht \\'ater" whirh
floats on the surface and smotben an oil
fir<'.
"Fierce fighting is going on in la rge
sector!I of the front 1ilnce this morning,"'
a Syrian n1iiitary communique said an
hour after Kissinger's arrival i n
Dam:iscus on his seventh shu1tle trip.
Flilmcs v.·ere contained to an oil 1\·ell
platform area on 1he inland side of
Pacific Co.ast !ligh11·ay , north of Golden
\\lest Street , but thcv did lhrcatcn nearby
hlgh pressure gas lii1<'~. s11id !lnsn1er.
Firemen said a \.\l·ldcr .,.,·a.~ rrpairing a
rig about !lO feet aoo1·c ground wt.e n
some sparks. fell into a tank holding ··oil,
mud." an oil·\\'aler substance used lo
cool drilling hits. ·
ffosml'r !>aid the fir<' never got into the
11tll itself. a11d the greatest dange r
st ~rnn1t->d fron1 !he nt•arby high pressure
g!I.' lines "hirh rould h;11·c caused a
major fire if they had ruptured.
"t.:ni!." of tanks. field aritllery and
rockets as well as-various types or
The fire cau.!.cd abou t S5.000 darnage to
the drilling rig . but no one .,.,·as injured
·\
-
Note Went to Top
Presicle11t Finds _ Sailor's Letter in Bottle
KEY BISC,\ YNE. Fla. (AP) -Walking on a
deserted beach in the Bahamas, President Nixon
found a green.tinged bottle v.·ashed ashore amid
the sea,veed. carrying a message inside.
Jt had to be broken open to get at the son1e-
v.•hat \Valer-logged note that read:
"l"m aboard the U.S.S. Guam. I have a ,,·atch.
I had nothing to do so I'n1 \\'l"iting you . . if you
find it please \vrite to this address and tell then1
you found this message from their grandson."
The \Vhite I-louse checked out the Jetter fron1
La rry l\letivier after the President found it on his
\\1eekend beach st.roll v.·ith friends C. G. "Bebe"
Hebozo and Robert ..-\bplanalp during a visit to
Grand Cay.
The young man is an airn1an apprentice. 18.
\\'ith a Navy helicopter squadron a'nd had been
aboard the Guam being transported from Norfolk.
l
\'a .. to his present eost at Jacksonville. Fla.
Then Sunday night the President made a tele.
phone call to Larry's grandfather, \Villiam L.
Staples of ttaverton. Pa., whose natne and address
\\'Cre on the me!isage dated !\larch 23.
Nixon told about finding the n1essagc. and ac-
cording to a \\"hite !louse spokesn1an. a so1ne\\'hat
!ita rtl ed grandfather said of his n1essage-'i'-·riting
grandson: "He's a good boy -he's a fine boy. He
didn't do anyt~n g V.Tong . did he."
The President assured Staples that the c31l
fro1n the nation's con1n1ander-1n-chlef didn 't in-
volve any trouble. and i'\1xon s11id he wa" proud
of the Navv and al! the n1cn \rho s c r v e in It a
\\lhite 11ouse ~pokrsrnan relatt'd. '
In Jacksonville todav, \leli\'irr ~aid he wns
surprised "'hen he gnt the telrphonc ca\1 fron1 his
mother telling him \\'hat hJppencd to the bottle.
"I nev~r expected to h<>ar anynne had found
that bottle tor about 10 year~." ~letivier said.
NOW
SAVE
HUNDREDS
OUR ANNUAL
ALL GRANDS
REDUCED.
SPECIALS
START AT. ~895°0
GRAND PIANO SALE
CLOSE-OUT
WE'RE FAMOUS FOR OUR RECONOITIONED GRAND PIANOS, AND RIGHTLY SO WORLD
REKNOWNED EUROPEAN CRAFTSMEN IN OUR SHOP PROOUCE SOME OF THE FINEST
GRAND PIANOS IN ALL OF THE WEST COAST! CHOOSE FROM MAJOR BRANDS!
ou• BIST BUY LIST
WURLITZER PIANO ~:.'.l'n ..................... '395
HAMMOND ORGAN :r.'.;,','i , ........ """ .. '650
WURLITZER PIA.NO ~:Jg,o, .................... 895
LOWREY ORGAN ~.l:". .......... "'" ...... -.. '1295
FARFISA ORGAN ~l't • ., ... "'" .......... , ........ '488
HAMMOND PIPER ~"'..,. 10, ............... '999
HAMMOND ORGAN ~t~~.~~ .......... '2175 PLAYER PIANO m'.,,,., __ ,. ......... , .. ,_ '1885
•
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
-3400 BRISTOL·COSTA MESA
540·2830
[!!'.!lllll!!''11'1lfl l!!1Pf !J!lrr1'l1111111 nll THl KlYIOA•D
Of THtwtm
•
GHAT tt•"ll ,.II OILIYllY
HOURS
-. .n1.
10 AM-'"" lAT• TM 1'M
MINo I I ·I Piii\
•
'
I
r ..
"
' ·1
•••
' -' ..
I
The
Commls
Clemen
ctJJ's'bi place
railway
At l
believes · .. I sen
~ lh• p
Fi
Q
nu-..
the M
upccm"
vision
n..
in the
West
set.
portrai
The
t""-o y
States
too1pl
Othe
[loo
public
of
wan!
Re
w
Ip
A
invad -·
•
•
• ;
s· DAILY PILOT !J
UC ·'Snubs' Clemente on Pier Crossing Plan
The Ca!Uomia Public u t 111 t I e s
mmlss!on •wears to be mubblnfl San
emente city ollldall mce again oo the
ty'l'bld for a new hearing into plans to
lace a pedestrian crossing across
liway tracks at the pier entrance.
At leaot City Eqlneer Phil Peter lleves that to be the caae.
"I sent the forms requesting a bearing
the PUC two mouths ago and haven't
beard one· won! yet," the ofllclal said
""""1Uy.
Peler and others in the cliy staff have
believed for some lime that the state
agency ln San Fraoclsco bas been miffed
with the 1 a t e a 't bid for PUC nicon·
sideraUoo of its earUer denial. ·
Relatloos betw ... the city and state
agency appeareil strained tole laat year
when San Clemente successfully woo an
ally for the pn>ject -the South Coast
Rqlooal Zoo~ Coastal Conservation
Commlulon.
That panel agreed to grant permlulon
for Improvements at the pier entrance,
)>ut Clllly if thooe indlXled an at.grade
crossing.
Within days of that decision, PUC
offlclals ·wrote to the commission staff
and asserted that the coastline panel bad
trod on ground which should be the
province ol the PUC.
The city then asked for application
forms to seek a hearing.
"It l<!gk ua mootbs just to ge t that
piece of paper," Peter said.
"I can see why they've taken their
time on this thing -because I don't
think they really know what to do about
ll," he added. ..
City councilmen have explored diverse
ways to improve the pier entrance -
proposals ranging from moderately-
priced facelUts to full-scale urban
renewal projects.
The main obstacle however, ls the
design of an entrance to the pier.
The current underground entrance has
been deemed an eyesore by critics,
including public officials.
The prefer a special system of safety
gates which would lead pedestrians
across the Santa Fe tracks.
Earlier requests for PUC penni.salon
for the crossing were rejected after
hearings during which city ofricials clalm
they were subjected to verbaJ abuse at
the hands of PUC aides and railway
representatives.
Sometimes on Sunday
Gas Squeeze Curtai.ls 7-duy Dump Service
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
ot !tit Dally ,..... Sltff
Orange County Supervisors have been
told there isn't enough fuel available to
resu me full , seven-day operations at the
coUnty's four dwnps. ·
But County Administrative Offic-er
""'Robert Thomas said in a letter to the
board that limited seven-day operations
are possible if the current reduced level
of fuel consumption is adhered to.
operations, said Friday sue h a stlpulation
\l'ould probably mean idling some of the
dwnp equ ipment to conserve ruel .
;'It certainly means Y.'e y;on 't be able
to use all our equipment and somt!
garbage mi~ht be exposed to the air
longer than il has been.'' the spokesman
sai-J. ''It mighl also mea n longer lvaits
for dumping."
Thomas' other altern atives included :
-Continuation of present six-day
operations.
-Continue six-day operation but close
on a \l'eekday instead of Sunday.
-Seven-day operations until fuel nms
short.
-Se\·e n-day operations on reduced
hours for all days.
Saved Motorist
FIRST REHEARSAL OF SEASON AFTER CAREFUL SCREENING OF PAGEANT APPLICANTS
"The Pn.lrfe Is MY Garden" With, From Left, Ci ndy Cannon, Kim Bolen and Germ11yne Cullen
TOOmas said the county purchasing
department and major fue~ oil suppliers
have indicated supplies would run out by
Ju1y if full·scale operations are reswned.
The facilities were closed oo Sundays
starting Jan. I in an effort by supervi sors
to conserve on the diesel fuel tha t
Saddleback to Commend Y out'1.s
Pageant Folk
Fi gure in TJ 7
Quiz Prograni
Three \Vorks from the 1974 ·Pageant of
the f\t1sters figure prominently iD an-
upcoming Truth or Consequences tele-
vision "1ow filmed recently with cast
members of the "Living Picture!."
The sOOw will be screened in late May
in the eastern United States and Canada.
"'est Coast screening will-be in late
summer or fall. No exact date ·has been
set. •
THE PAGEANT OF THE MASTERS
recreates. well·kno\\ll art ~"Ol'ks in
Laguna Beach using Jiving models.
Wor~ lndllded on the TV show were :
-"1be Mtnnaid'' by Norm an
-....u poeed I)\' Dale Haynes of
Loguno Beach and Boonie IJppe of
N<wpo<t lleleh. •
-"St. Looginw" by Gian 1""'m>
Bernini poeed by Con Coonrajl ol Laguna
Beach.
-Shipo' figurehead.-of the C\Jtty Sark,
loor of a oollectipo of bt'ightly painted
sculptures which once graced the prows
or clipper ships. The figureheads wen
poeed by Max and Carolyn DuM of
Newport Beoch, Susan ViloMa ol El Toro
and Barbara Travis of Huntington Beach.
Guest of the show was a Nigerian
student whose wife and two sons were
flown to the United states from Nigeria
and posed in a fourth painting, a family
portrait.
The family, whom be had not seen fOr
t"''O years, will remain in the United
States tnil the young man's studies are
cunpleted.
O&ber J)<!.geanl representatives were
Don Williain..on, director; .Sally Roeve,
public relaUons director for the Festival
of Art!: Betty Coonrad, in charge of
wardrobe; Sue Anderaoo, in charge of
casting; Dorothy Day, makeup : Carl
Callaway, technical director; and Don
Herbert, in charge of beaddreases.
Rebozo Otarges
'Witch Hunt'
WASHINGTON !UPI) -President
Nixon's close friend , C.G. "Bebe" Rfboto. accused the Senate Walefiale
committee and some of its staff
members today of pursuing a witch bunt
against him I)\' subpoenaing his bllslness
and financial records.
In papers liled in U.S. District Court,
Rebozo also accused staff members or
"maliciously and falsely" distorting
testimony of witnesses, of leaking false
stories about him to the press and
seeking to "bumlllale 'and embarrass
him" tbroUgb their . intensive
investiption.
The committee Is seeking llddltlooal
evidence from Rebozo In connectloo with
Jl.t ~esUgatlon of hla llandllng of a
•100, coolrlblltloo froin bUlionalre
Howa Hugbea to the Prelldenl
Weird Flotilla
l~vades River
ATLANTA (UPI) --The odd !lolllla
Invaded the Qla~ JU'{W again _; Coofedllrate 11pnbol~" floating
colfina, .,... .,.,.. ,,_ 1'1111, IN>er
tubes, ~ ~. blklnl-dad
&IJb. The occuioll S.lllldly .... the lilth
annual "Ramllllo' l\alt Race'' oo a 9.2-
mlle ltftldl 0( Ibo river. U there Wll I
wlaner. ht -loll ln Ille blllrif)>.
11be ol8del nalei'' accordln& to .-t O'N a loudlp6aker, "la
~ you -lo set bombed before you -""'·-·· 1l>on -"" to be wldoopnacl comJ>ll-wfUI .... nlet,
•I I
operates the fill-moving equipment. Two Mission Viejo High School track
At their last meeting, supervisors team members and one Tustin runner agreed to special dump openings this
Sunday and next to accommodate major v"ill be commended tonight by the
community cleanup campaigns. Saddleback Valley Unified Sc hool District
At that time, several board members Board or Trustees for their quick action
indicated they would like to reopen the recently to help save a mo!orist trapp..."'<l.
dumps on the regular schedule be<:ause in his burning car.
of an appattflt easing in !,he fuel crisis. The three young men vaulted over a
Thomas said in his report that the fence several weeks ago and rushed_ to
San Joaquin, Tustin High School, . Tustin
Elementary. ·and Trabuco Elementary
districts. This item ~·as requested by
former San Joaquin trustee Rev. Preston
Howell who claimed the San Joaquin
account may be short by $400,000.
-Final approval of a Marin.e Corps
Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps
Un it for El Toro High School , scheduled
ecooomy moi.•e has saved 16 percent of the man's aid when his car crashed ne:Jr --~ the fu_el normally consumed by dum'l the field \vhere a track 1neet y.·as in --~--"'-'"---~~of operatiOO on-Saturda~gress. --:·~--. .
--m-b·cgin next fall . •
-Approval of a trip to Sacramento by
•
ASSISTANT HEADDRESSER WITH YOUNG CAST MEMBER
loward Lavelle and Cindy Cannon of L1gun1 Buch
~p .Deal
Dairy Fund Received
By Kalmbach-Nader ~
From Wire Senilcts
Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport
Beach, President Nixon's chitf __ fund
ra.lser, is saJd to have received money
from a dairy cooperative which a lawyer
for oonsumer advocate Ralph Nader
Sunday charged with agreeing to commit
$2 mlllkln in campaign rums in exchange
for milk price supports.
1n a four-page letter, WUl!am 0 .
Dobrovir1 the lawyer, urged U.S.
Attorney Earl J .· Silbert to begin a
Hdiligent inquiry" and to file a civil suit
to recover funds that were loet to the
federal goi>munent ·~use of fraud \n
!be alleged COllllpiracy.
Dolrovir aald one of the dairy group!
delivered $100,IXll to Kalmbach in 1969
and IQ'l,IXll Iller the prl<e support was
raised Merdl 21, 1971. "There may have
been tmre," he added.
Dobrovir said he sent a copy to
Attorney G<t>eral Wllllam Saxbe and
made "similar demand on •him.''
Nadtt, tbroogh Dobrovir, bas fought
for IMDlhl In U.S. Dlstrlct Court to roll
back a 1971 lncreaoe In the federal )lrke
aupport for nw milk oo lf()Unda it was
an admlnlstntlon l"IY-<if for the $2
mlllloo commltrqeot.
JOdge Willlam B. .1<aes hlnled last ...ea,"°'""''· that be may dJsmlaa .the suit .., g1ooll1do that there ha•e beell
anouaJ inC:reua In the price support -
•Jone -~ licllon -linct 197l and Nader) complailt ii now moot.
"We. demlDIJ therefore that you begin
I cllll8Mlt lncjulry , . , and that you
(JrOml)lly thereafter bring a dvll -
Oii ~ of the Unlled Statea • • • to
-lhe -loll to the Jttpury by -ol ... mud ... falae claims Mllned," llallnr#lr said.
"We are aware, of course, that the
head of the conspiracy appears to be
Richard M. Nixon. currently Presickr>t of
the United States. You will agree, of
course, that he ls not by virtue of that .
office placed above the law."
Dobrovir charged that the conspiracy
exists among three major dairy co-
operatives -Asaociated Milk Producers
Inc. (AMP!), Mld·AmElica Dairymen
Inc. and Dairymen Inc. -a former
adminislralion and Nixon re<!lectlon
olliclal.
In addition to Nloxon, he also named
Conner Treasury Secrelary 'John B. eon.
nally Jr.: former Attomey General John
N. Mlldlell, former White Houae aides
II. R. Haldeman, John · D. EIJrllchman
and Charles W. Colaon, and others.
Dobrovir said be was aware 'the justice
deportment was d el end Ing the
~lure departmmt aplmt hla
allegations,
"We are of the view, however, that you
and the attorney general are oot thereby
relieved of duUes ~ oo you by
virtue of your offices," he sakl.
7 Drown in Auto
SABINE PASS, Tex. (AP) -Seven
pmm1 di1>wned SUndaY nlgbt when ~Ir
runa!'llY car plunged Into Tesu Jla1oti
near bere on the upper Tew C-. Jbn
Bohler Sr. of Kountoe, Tex., oae of lbree
llUl'Vlvors In a famlly party o/ 10, eald, ''I
d!Yecl In .... bUt Ibo --llWlll." Bystanders l'tllnlned Bolll« ll'Oln
fat111er ........ efforts.
were also sOOrtened from 7 a.m. to 5 Honored will be R1 c.h .Tom~v~ and
p.m. Weekday operations run" from 6 Wilbur Greg~ry of ~l.1ss1on V1eJO and
a.m. to 6 p.m. Steve ~lar~us1c of Tusti n.. .
"Jn the opinion of the Purchasing . Other items on tonights agenda
Departmerit and same of the suppliers mclude: . . . .
•.. the Supply of fuel is not adequate to -;Authorization to h1re an outside
support , equipment on a seven-day, auditor to close the accounts of the old
twelve-hour schedule beyond June of this
fifth graders al-Del Ce~rG School in
-Authoriz.ation for summer recreation
contracts with Orange County Servic'!
Area Six and Good Shepherd Lutherar.
Home of the West.
The meeting is set for 7:30 p.n1: in the
multi-purpose room of Los AliSOi
lnrermediate School, El Toro.
year," 1bomas said.
Thomas has laid out five possibl e
alternatives the board can pursue when it
takes the matter up-oo Tuesday.
Rehabilitatimi CeJate 1•
The final alternative was deemed best
by Thomas and his staff.
He recommends that the seven-day
operations be resumed with Saturday
hours applying to Sunday and y..-eekday
hours staying the same.
But he said the existing reduced fuel
oonsumption shouJd be maintained.
''nlis alternative would require close
management of fuel consumption in that
the allocation of fuel oil to the refuse
department would remain the same,"
Thomas said.
A spokesman for the county road
department, which oversees d u m p
W alkotit Halted
By Bricklayer s
Orange County bricklayers picked up
their trowels today, ending a 13-day
strike and accepting a management offer
which would increase their pay and
fringe benefits $2.29 over the next two
ye.ars.
The agreement between the 600-
methber Bricklayers and Stonemasons
Local 22 of Orange County and the
California Conference of M a s o n
Contractors includes a $1.01 increase
retroactive to May l , which brings a
journeyman's wage to $9.43 an hour plus
$1.46 fringe benefits, according to local
secretary Bill Meier.
The bricklayers stopped work May 6,
but picket lines \Vere not set up.
• I
Comity's Sllllllner Camp
Aid s Di sabled Youth s
The Rehabilitation Institute of Orange
County will · open its summer day camp
July I for disabled youngsters age three
to 13.
The program, designed for youngsters
with delayed development or orthopedic
handicaps, is divided into four two-week
sessions running through Aug. 2.1.
No one will be turned away for lack of
funds, according to camp director Haze l
Tobis, but children must have letters
from their physicians saying they arc
free from ci>mmunicable diseases, are
able to participate and listing any special
restrictions.
Activities at the camp include painting,
clay modeling, collage \\.'Ork, \\.'ood
working and sand and water play.
The program also includes outdoor
activities such as swimming. h i k i n g ,
pony · rides and field trips. Creative
dramatics, puppetry. music, story
telling, cooking and science are designed
to help campers' language development.
An individualized special education
program is also available, of!ering
reading and mathematics as well as
sensory motor training for children with
learning disabilities.
The camp, Mrs. Tobis said. provides
participation in group activ ities and
exposu re to new things and places often
denied youn gsters with disabilities.
Further information may be obtained
by contacting the institute at 1800 E. La
Veta Ave., Orange, phone 633-7400.
S111oki,.ig Tr uly
H ealtli Hazard
FORT WAY("E, Ind . (AP) -Whal
happened to Mary Jo Plac-e is beyond the
health hazards warned of on cigarette
packages.
Mrs. Place took a pistol from a dra\ver
and went to investigate during the night
when she thought she heard a prowler.
Finding nothing unusual, she put the
pistol on a nightstand and y,·ent back to
bed .
Sunday morning, she said she a\voke,
took out a cigarette, reached to the
nightstand for the pistol-shaped lighter
stie keeps there and shot herself in the
left hand.
•
A birthday partv
'i s a cake, presents.
and a
Ruth of Carolina dress •
.from The Red Balloon, Lfd.
.Andrea Coates Is
wearing a party dress
from the Ruth's Original
. Couture Collechon.
Andreit 1s a student at
Carden Country Day Scl'lool.
and the daughter of
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Coates
ol Yorba Li nda.
THE
RED BALLOON
LTD.
I
, -MINON&AHC ---,_,........, °""". ,,,.,..._
~TON~ ,,,.) .... t919
4 O>llV PlLOT
Nixon Cites National
Kf:Y BISCAYNE. Fla. fAPI -
Ded>ring that !be Clld ol oootrols may
booot clocto< bills by Z% pec""1l tbls year .
Pn:Sdent 1'-min said today that national
heellh """1'llJCe Is .-led oo "every
American hao ftnanc:i<ll aCC<S! to high
quallt)• health tatt."
In the text of a nationwide radio
address. Nixon aaid he v.'t'lcomes rival
""""""' bills sponsored by otben and
professed willingness to COfTtpi Olilise 00
rus own plan .. long as lhu does oot
Police Shoot
1, Arrest 2
In Chicago
OOCAGO ll'PIJ -Three men who
called lhemselveA soldiers in a black
liberation army executed an unanned
railroad security guard and then got
caught in a police shootout late Sunday.
One of the three was killed . The others ,
David Beverly and Lonnel r-.losely, both
( NEWS BRIEFS )
21 ·ytar-0ld students at Ch i c a go' s
Malcolm X College, where charged today
with one count each of murder and
attempted murder.
Police Sgt. Francis Lee said three men
who called therl'IM:lves "Self~yled black
revolutionaries" broke into a piggy·back
freight car in a South Side Penn Central
railrood yard. The security guard ot the
tracks, a trainee ol only three weeks,
spotted Lhe break-in and hunted down the
thieves. ·
....,omfrClteck'
LONDON (UPI! -Scutianil Yan!
official! ordered nepped-up security
checks of government offices, mail
deliveriM and other likely tar.gets today
to head off a reared new wave of
bombings in the capital.
A suspected Irish Republican Anny
ORA) car bomb exploded Sunday in a
Heathrow International Airport parking
Jot hospitali zing two persons, sowing
panic among travelers, and closing the
airport for nearly five hours .
e India'• Bomb
NEW DELlll !UPI) -JLibllatioo over
India's explosion of a nuclear device
swept the country today, bolstering the
troubled government <lf Prime Minister
Indira Gandhi and overshadowing the
nation's ecooom..ic woes.
"We may be hungry," one young
Indian celebrant said in a typic-al
comment. "But now at least we're
someone to be reckoned with."
Defense Mini ster Jagjivan Ram said.
however, India would never use its iicw-
found nuclear dout for military pur·
~· "Our OOjective is to use oor
knowledge in nuclear science only for
peaceful pc.rrJ)()~." he said.
e Oltlo Relignatlon
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) 0 hi o
t:nivcr.liity President Claude R. Sowle,
after more than a ~ of disruptions
and student protests, handed in his
resignation Sunday becall'le of what he
called "insane conditions" and "seoseless
acts."
A school spokesman said the
1·esignation Mo'ould become effective this
r~er.
J'wo nights of rioting May 11 and 12
-rr.;ulted in 38 arrests, .several student
~nd police injuries, looted shops and
t-"!ashM windows in the campus area.
'3Auslie Win
"'tYDNEY. Australia (AP) -Prime
; tinister Gough Whitlam today was
t·Xpected to remain head of the
;.::ivcmment, but returns from Australia's
~.ill inconclusive national elections show
)ltronger than expected suoport for oppo-
silion laeder Bill Snt'dden.
Rt'lums fron1 Saturday's election were
stlll l>clng counted today and final results
were not expected for up lo a week .
'''iota.te the basic principles ~ our
proposals.'.
HOWEVER, HE complained that two
competi ng ~atic spomored
measures woo Id rely too heavily • on
management by lhe federal gov<l'TIJT\""'·
Soting at !he outM!t that the Sellat<
F'mance Committee will beg'in hearings
'l'u€oday on health lruourance legislation,
Xix~ said:
'·f am gratified to see that serious
N .Vl[TNAM
Jcti.on on this most vital matt.er is gotng
torward on both side1 ol the capitol and I
am confident that the esecutive and
legislative brancbet of the govememnt in
a spirit ol statesmamhip a n d
cornf:t001i3e can work .together to resol\'e
the problems ol providing beellb
insurance legislation which meets the
needs of all Americans."
~i.xon reported that health care cost.s
have risen more than 20 percent in less
than three )"ears. aad added, "And ~·,
SOUT>i
CHINA.
SEA
UPI........,
FIVE .RED ROCKET ATTACKS HIT HUE CITY
Heaviest Atta.ck Since Signing of Peace Accord in 1973
New North Viet Orders:
Step Up Battles in South
Yi'ASHlNGTON (AP)-North Vietnam's
Comnumist party has ordered inteflSlfied
attacks in South Vietnam over the next
rouple of mon1hs, L'.S. mtell1gencc
9'.)UrteS report .
However, military analysts said the
orders indicate the attacks \\ill be short
of a major offen51ve.
Widespread fightin g across South
Vietnam in the past few days may reflect
( NEWS ANALYSIS )
the new orders, which sources said the
C-Ommunist command rectnt!y issued to
its main-force troop units there.
THE ORDERS were sajd to be based
on a resolution adopted by Lao Dong ,.
party le-aders in flanoi. calling for
increased military operations to supJX>rt
what was called "the political
struggle" in the South.
U.S. intelligence sources said the
First Lady Hits
Tapes Release
NEW YORK <UPI) -Pat Nixon
COMidered the White House tapes
relates to Watergate like "plivate
love letters" and did not believe
President Nixon ~uld release
them, People Magazine said Sun·
day.
People said fo,frs. Nixon told
Helene Drown, a longtime friend,
the tapes could be compared with
"private Jove letters" meant for
"one person <Jlonc."
~1rs. Nixon also indicated she
shared Nixon's distrust. " ne>•is
media by telling tvtrs. Drown "It's
right out of 'The Merchant o!
Venice.' They're after tt.e ]a.st
pound of flesh," People said.
Communist battle plan g e n e r a 11 y
forecasts a paltem of sharp thrusts by
main force units, v.·hich then would
v.ithdraw after inflicting casualtles on
government forces.
The Communist aims, as U.S. analysts
read them, are to bleed Saigon's army,
panic South Vietnam civilians and erode
their confidence in the S a i g o n
government.
This is in line with overall Communist
strategy for 1974, as outlined by
intelligence reports I as t December.
Basically, this strategy seeks the
progressive weakening of the Thieu
re gime v.'ithoot escalating tbe war back
to full scale.
The Communists already have made
considerable progress toward another
objective, gradually widening rontrol in
border regions of South Vietnam..
THE STEPPED-UP fighting comes at
a time when Pent.a.goo officials say the
South Vielnamese will have to be sparing
in their we of ammunition because
Congress has reejcted an increase in U.S.
military aid for the last tv•o months of
this fiscal year.
1~-leanwttile, North Viet n am es e
engineers virtually have completed a new
490-mile supply corridor from the old
demilitarized zone to within about 60
miles o( Saigon.
Tha t two-lane highway, all inside the
western border of South Vietnam,
permits the Communists to keep supplies
rrwving southward, while heavy rains
slow traffic on the old Ho Oii Minh Trail
route in neighboring Laos.
At the same time, the N orth Viet-
namese are branching out with construc-
tion of feeder roads linking their bases in
South Vietnam to forward supply distri·
bution points. Nearly 1,000 miles of such
feeder roads have been built .in South
Vietnam since the cease-fire agreement
L6 months ago, according lo U.S. intelli·
gence estimates.
About 16,000 tons of ammunition and
other military materiel was reported lo
have been moved forward in recent
weeks from Dong Ha, which the North
Vietnamese have ainverted into a major
storage depot below !he DMZ.
Flood -Wate-h-in 2 States
Tornadoes Add to Woes i11 Nebraska, S. Dakota
Temperature•
Hllll'I U.. ,<D .. ~ U 1o1 Al ~ ~ I,! 4! fl ,,~ ·,~ Ii: ;l '° "* n " . . '" .. 11 I: 11 u ~
DAILY PILOT
.DELIVERY SERVICE
Oelivety o1 III! D.liy P1•t
;, £11Mlf111W •t•• I ,. II ..... JW
""' "' lll ... al .. ,. "" .. .. ntM ..... Call ....
UI"' ... -~-,.··"'. t IA ~. • I JllL .......... .,. ..
,. ........ 11 ...
,,~.
....... c.r ........ 141~111 ___ ....
.. .. , I t "' "' '7 • l*llll s.-•·• s.•---11111 -_..,.. 411"41
•
Health 'Insurance Need
in !be absence ol controls. !be c<ltllltry
faces a possible annual lncreue of 2?
pttcent in physicians fees alone.''
THE PRESIDENT said Caspar W,
• \\'einberger, !eefetary of h e a 1 t b ,
education and v.·elfare, urged the ht.a.Ith
industry earlier this month "to take •
every action at their disposal to prevent
the rapid escalalion of C05tS. and
indicated that if cost increases "·ere not
voluntarily cootrolled, it could lead to
d r a s t i c , co n g msVmlly·impoled
mandatory oootrols, II
While sa)iog he strooc!Y sha"'5
\\'einberger's CUIC'ern, Nb:on said, " ...
'-ol.tmtary resraints wi1I oat be enough.
We mu.V have legislation to tnsure that
e'"er)' American has financial a<X'e9S to
high quality health care."
Nixon said bis ov.n iD.suraDoe plan aim:S
at ttree basic objectives that "must not
be sacrific<d er compromised." H• listed
French Election
May Benefit U.S.
PARIS fC PI) -Valery Giscanl
d'Estaing, winner of a razor-thin victory
over Communist· baeked Socialist Franc-
ois Mitterland in the French presidential
elect.ion. moved swiftly today to form a
'"new look" government to head <lff
economic chaos threatened by lhe leftists
y,·ho nearly defeated him.
He said he will toke office officially
next ~tooday, name a premier the same
day and hold his first cabinet meeting
next \\.'ednesday. He spoke to newsmen
after a 40-minute conference \\'ith the
senate speaker who is acting as interim
head of state.
ALmoUGH GISCARD d'Estaing, 48.
has promised to follow the foreign policy
of his predecessor, President Georges
Pompidou, he is expected to soften
F'rance's traditional toughness with the
L:nlted States.
...
so -and the two chatted in English.
Giscard D'Estaing emerged from the
E1ysee presidential pa l a e e today and
told newsmen, "I have told the interim
president that I intend to see to it that
my functions go into effect as soon as
possible.
AIDE'S SAID one aim of the new
cabinet v.·ou!d be to formulate economic
policies aimed at beating back
threatened labor unrest.
Warnings of the tough battle he faces
already have been issued by Georges
Seguy, chief of the Communist-dominated
Confederation ~neral Du Tr av a i I
ICGT l, France's biggest labo,r union,
who said "tough strikes and eventually
chaos" will follow the finance minister's
election.
them" -The maintalnance of a paJlent's
freedom ot d>OOSe his owp physician.
-USE OF mE ox~ting private health
care system and avoidance of re1)laclnG
it with "a c.wtly, federal dominated
structure.''
-The provi~on that all concemed will
have "a direct stakt in rrialdng the
system Mlrit."
UPITt .......
WINNER IN FRANCE
Valery Giscard d'Estaing
One of his kev ministers will be :l
fervent Atlan ticiSt, Jean Lecanuet, who
brough t bim crucial center party support
during-the campaign: ·Sperulation on-his
choice for premier centered on Lecanuet,
Health Minister Michel Poniatowski and
Equipment Minister Oliver Guichard .
Washington BeJH!rt _~
Supporters clawed happily Sunday
when Giscard d'Estaing, in a mO\'e
unprecedented for a French president,
happily repeated in English for American
television crews the victory speech ~c
had just made in French.
Franco-American contacts got off on
the right foot \\"hen President Nixon
telephoned his congratulations to Giscard
D'Estaing -the first bead of state to do
Edward Kennedv •
Bares Federal
'73 Tax Records
BOSTON IAP) -Sen. Edward ~1.
Kennedy paid $217 ,844 in federal income
taxes oo an WJadjusted groos income of
MSI .4+Hn 1973, according to tax records
he disclosed to tv.·o Boston newspapers.
The Boston Herald American and the
Boston Globe today published ~ joint
tax return filed by Kennedy and his wife,
Joan, reporting t h e Massachusetts
Democrat's income beyood his
congres.sional salary of $42.500.
KENNEDY'S INCOME included $21 ,567
in dividends, $270,080
from the Joseph P.
Kennedy 19'l6 trust.
$126,257 from the
Joseph P. Kennedy
1936 trust, $3,355
from publications,
speaking fees
and miscelJaneous
sources and $1.623
from four oil wells KENHEDY
in Texas and Louisiana owned by the
Forest Oil C.O. The late Joseph P. Kerr
nedy was the senator's father.
Kennedy deducted from his gross
income $38, 773 in current taxes CXher
than federal; $24,98f) for mortgage
payments; $4,678 for c h a r ! tab I e
contributions; and $26,308 m net
miscellaneous deductions.
Kennedy also claimed a net loss of
$3,938 on two rental properties in Boston
and Madison, \Vis.
With exemptions for himself, his wife
and their three children, Kennedy
reported taxable income of $353.189. on
which he paid $217,844 in federal taxes
and $26,348 to the state.
He also said he paid $1 1,351 in real
estate taxes. $64 in gasoline taxes, S362 in
general sales taxes and $648 in taxes on
personal properties.
Distaff Officers 'Doing '
As ,Well As Me11'-Study
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A sludy of
police.,.,'Ol'nefl 's p e r form an c e in
\\"ashington, where they pull · the same
duty as men, shows that women o(ficers
generally do as well in tough patrol work.
The Poi.ice Foundation said Sunday
that a study of two precinct.s conctOOed
sex is not a valid consideration in ~
or assigning police officers.
Foundation President Patrick V .
Murphy said the study is significant
because the 1972 Equal Employment
Opportunity Act requires every police
department to hire and assign men and
v.'Omen on an equal basis or
"demomtrate there is a legitimate
occupatiooal qualification for not doing
so."
"WHILE 1lHS evaluation measured
the effectiveness of Was bing ton
policewoman oo patrol, we believe the
results are generally useful nationwide,"
said Muq>by, wbo formerly beOOed police
John Moss Wins
$150,000 Take
In Card Games
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -A 68syear·
old card room manager at a casino here
has won the fifth annual World Series of
Poker, taking home a tidy $150,000 for
his efforts.
John Moss edged out C r a n d a 11
Addington, 36, a San Antonio, Tex., real
estate developer, to win the game
Saturday afte~more than 20 hours of
play stretched ver a four-day period . It
was hi..'i third since 1970.
Moss collected the $10,000 anled up by
the other 15 players who entered the
game Wednesday night '!'be winnings,
including his own $10,000 ante, were
presented to him in a silver cup at the
downtown casino where the game was
played.
Addington het his last 145,000 on a
bluff, hiding only an ace and deuce of
clubs. Moss' three treys took the hand
and the liUe.
1be featured ''hold 'em'' game -wrapped
up nearly two weeks of preliminary card
games in w~ch an estimated $1 mHllon
changed bands. •
departments here and in New York Ctty.
The study contained these conclusions:
-\\'omen and men on patrol performed
generally iJI the s.ame way. There was no
dtffermce in their ability to deal with
v1oliem er potmtiaDy ft:l4ent situati<Jns.
-'¥\-~ :::.3de I-ewer arersts and gave
fev.-er traff:.c ucUts than the men di~.
But the v.-ornen spent slightl y less time
on patrol. About ooe fifth ci. the women
made more arrests than men did.
-~IORE \lE.S than women were cited ror "serious unbecoming conduct.''
-Women got light duty as a re~t of
injuries more often than mm but did rot
lose more time from ¥.Wk because oC
injuries.
-Driving accident records for men and
\\"omen were about the same but women
needed tv.'o Y.-eeks more time to pass the
police driving test. -
. ' ..
•• '·• J 't '
J1,'-••
~.
N!
Big Eat Rock Festival
Ends With . 2 Stabbings
LAWRENCE, Kan. ( UP I )
Partlclpanta In the Big Eat rock festival
headed home Sunday ending a weekend
marked by two stabbings.
The DouglliJ County Sheriffs Office
said the crowd estimated at 300 to 500
pel'IOns, began to disperse Sunday
afternoon. Among those attending were
members of t\VO motorcycle dubJ.
The >berUJ's oUJce IdenUlied the
stabbing victims as Tom Flgle, 13, Sioux
City, Iowa, a member of the EI Footero
Motorcycle Club, and Greg Burnet~ 25,
Oklahoma City, of the II an gm•,•
Motorcycle Club.
Flgle was report.cf tn fair COlldIWon at
Lawreoce II-rial Hoopital with a stab
wound to the tipper abdomen. Bumtrtt
was treated and released from the
hospital with a cut to his hand.
Authorltlet,aald the .two would not aay
how they liad been wounded. No
wtlnet,.. to the Incident aJtlld be
located.
Th• event,, which began Friday night,
was moved to federal pr1)perty nur
Cllnton ReservoJr, after attorney general •
Vern Miller obtained a temporary
reslralnlng order preventing the lesUnl
from being held on a farm near
Lecomp!Ga.
Miiier contended there would be
violaUDDS of atate dtug Jan at the fes\l~al. t
Ro11al Ll1'f119
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llllnols, Is eerved brealr:lut
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from.among S1 llrb at Nlipn
Falls, N.Y.
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Dandy Day
Develops
For Denny
.
ANGELS CAMP (AP) -Tl
was a dandy day for E.
Dynamic Denny.
The muscular bullfrog
leaped 18 feet and 4% Inches
to -earn first place in the 1974 r'J
Calaveras County Jumping JI'
Frog Jubllee Sunday. It won
him repeated kisses from his
sponsor, Santa Clara
holt!f!wife Kay Cuzules who
garnered $300 from the
victory.
The tradilion began 120
years ago in this Sierra foot-
hill town when Cold Rush min-
' •
THE SIXTH BODY
Camilla Hall
•
•
A KEY WITNESS
Tom D. Mathe wt
•
Monday, May 20, iq]4 j DAILV PILOT $
'Agony, Grief' for Hears(.Family .
mWBOROUGH (API -
11lte didn't say anything. He
just sat In the chair and
remaiped quiet for a very long
time."
Randolph A. Hearst was
stunned and speechless.
For the past 106 days, since
his daughter Patricia was
kidnaped by the terrorist
Symbionese Liberation Army,
Hearst had endured 3
nightmare of emotions
wrenched from him by the
capricious will of the SLA.
Always he responded with
calm and dignity, trying lo do
what he could to win back
Patty, the third of his five
daughters.
"Because of the gravity or
these charges, Mr. Hearst he.s
decided not to make any
statement a this time." fn Los Angeles, FBI official
William Sullivan said Patricia
had been charged with federal
gun viokltlons as the woman
who trinered a shooting spree
at a suOurban sporting goods
store last Thursday.
The FBI charged that Miss
Hearst sprayed the store with
30 rine shots to a 11 o w
suspected SLA m e m b e r s
William and Emily Harris to
escape. Harris a 11 e g e d I y
bungled an attempt to steal
some socks.
For weeks afler she was
kldnaped, Hearst held out
hope his daughter wouid be
released as he complied with
SLA demands for -2 million
food program !or California's
needy. But after that was
implemented . the SLA
demanded another $4 millioo.
The Hearst Corp. pledged the
money on the condition his
daughter was reltased.
He waited . In vai n.
* * * * * *
Two months after the
kidnap, his hopes soared \11!h
the announcement in an SLA-
released tap;e 'that Patricia
would be set free in 72 nours.
But one day latei he was
deeply hurt by a .. stin ging
rejection from Pa tr i c i a
herself. In two tapes In April,
his daught e r s's voice
contemptuously renounced her
family and said she had
decided to take up arms with
her captors. Hea rst said his
daughter had been coerced, or
brainwashed.
i'r ·', ,._
Terror~·ts -'Tripped Vp'
\Vhen Patricia 'vas charged
as a material y,·itness in a
bank holdup in which she was
(timed by security cameras
holding an· autornallc weapon ••
1-lea rst sli ll believed she was
an unwilling participant. And
most authori tii;:s agreed.
But the Jo~BJ said over the
weekend it believed l\lisi;
Hearst had joined forces with
the SLA.
And, again. there was agony
upon agony, grief upon grief,
for Randolph lfearsl . his \\•ife,
Catherine, and their family.
• . .
Police Find
'Arsenal'
[ ...... _s_ta_te __ ) ·'SLA Back Broken';
But the sOOck of hearing th e
FBI describe his soft-spoken
Patty as "armed a n d
extremely dangerous" in a
warrant for her arrest on
federal gun violations was
overwhelming.
By Cheap Pair of Sucks Of Weapo11s
Only hours before he was
waiti ng in dread. fearing the LOS ANGELES (AP) -The nation's best lawme n for 31.~ Clues to the t c r r or is t LOS ANGELES (AP) -
awful news that Patricia's Symbionese Uberation Army, months, apparently slipped up group's \vhcrcabouls we r c Police compiled th is list of crs v."00.ld take a break from
panning to pit their pct
jumping frogs against those of
their comrades. The distance
ls calculated on the basis of
three jumps.
Frogs from 39 states, along
with Aust r a I i a , West
Germany, England, France
and South Africa, were on
hand for this year's
competition.
e Boycott Falls
.3 Fugitives Remain body might be among those which eluded hundreds of the on a ruii .. of cheap socks. 1 h v.·C'apons found in the charred r ~ n1cager un til ast T . ursday,
found in the charred ruins o ~-------------------~ remnants of ~c south central an SLA hide<lul raided by an when SLA rnen1bcr \\'i\Jiarn
LOS ANGELES (UPI I -
And then there were three.
The FBI is convinced that
the Symbioncsc Llberation
Anny's back has beeil broken
and the terrorist g a n g has
been reduced to t h r c e
fugitives in an inaeasingly
tight spot -one of them lhc
~ woo was the SLA 's
with an appeal to Los Angeles anny of lawmen Friday night. Harris ~hopliltC'd ;1 4~·ct•nt Lo~ Angeles hou91:' v.·hcre st:t
rMidents to ca1l the FBI with Hearst had watched the bloody B • p • p.<1ir of socks fro rn a sporting incmbers of the Symbione&
any sightings. gunbattleontelevision, orn ID r1son soods store. lie \Va s Liberation Arrny ,\·ere killed
Police have acquired from praying his daughter wasn't in in a shootout v.·ill1 police, r·r1·
San F1ranc~ed.scveral dogs the house. confronted by a clerk. and in day,
specia ly tram "' react lo SLA Tlir:ved 01' v:ole1ice the on~Ling battle Harris M,.55 Hearst's scent. --dogs SHE WASN'T, he was told " " " d d th 1 1. • -A .JO...caliber Rro,111ing \vere along when po11
;; and after authorities identified the roppc a gun a po tcc automatic rifle . commonly
bodies of three women found traced back to his wife, known as a BAR.. FBI agents raided a suspicious 1.0 the rubb'e Bui hi's relief SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The Symbionese Libera-Emily, also a member of the Th 1 house Sunday. 1bere was no '1 • tion Army preached love. but practiced violence. • -ree .30 ·ca ibcr l\1-:?
evidence the SLA had ever wlas s~ort-lived. Ah~tixth body, Its leader said he would fight to the death for his goals. S~~le llarris was struggling ""gu~~i-nes, clas.5ifiod as machine
been there, police said. a so o a young w t e woman, He di(t .d •-lo . h h . y,-as found Sunda}'. And it wa!; Spavro.ed in a California prison, the SLA burst from out.si c 1"~ 5 re wit 1 e • -One 11-1 carbine and
SULIJV AN SAID it was only after hours more of obscurity last November with the carefully calculated clerk, shots frofmedanf automatic one semi-automatic rifle \\'hich
SACRAMENTO (UPll -A most spectacular victim. California Milk Ad v is or y
Board spokesman says the The trunt for Ule kidnapcrs
~·eek.Jong nuid milk ~t of Patricia llearst has
which ended Saturday. failed narrowed to a sea rch for
to score a major in,pact on \Villiam and En1ily llarris
state milk consun1ption. form<'r student radicals from
d agonized waiting that he hoo weapon were ir rom a van police described as of unkno\\'Tl believed the Harrises an Miss assassination or Oakland Sc ls Superintendent Dr. Mar-l~earst v.·ere in the Griffith learned the body was not cus A. Foster. parked across the street. caliber or origin.
Park area FridJy, lhe day the Patty's. The kidnap of newspaper heiress Patricia l-learst. 20, Harris. his wife El n d • -Eight sawed· off 12-
six hard core members of the John Lester, who has been from her Berkeley apartment foUowed in February and a nc1vspapcr heiress Palricia gauge shotguns.
SLA. including lht> bani.l's Hearst's spokesman since the commando-style bank robbery was executed in April. I-fears!, whoin the SLt\ • -1'wo .380 t\fauser auto· "At thi s . point.'' s a id Kenneth ltoll. "\Ve are under the Uni,·ersity of Indiana and
the impression that t h l' t\-liss llearst herscJf.
leader. Donald Defrceze, died kidnaping on Feb. 4, said The SLA had its beginnings ln meetings of a self· kidnaped 106 days ago. i\'erc malic pistols, a 9--mm Brown-
in the gunbattlc. Two other Hearsl was taking Sunday's he.Ip group called the Black CuJtural Association at the state charged Sunday v.·ith gun ing automatic pisU>l. a .38·
alleged SLA "soldiers" are events "very hard." prison in Vacaville. violations stemming from that caliber revolver. a JO.ca..lib('r
awaiting trial in Oakland ror _ _'Les~l'.::e'...r~t~o'.".ld'_'n~e:_w:.'.'~m'.'._:_e'._'.n_:.·~===================='--_:'h:::oo:::<•:::•t:_:in nearby fn glev.·ootl. -revolver and thr<.'C bayonets. boycott has had a very limited TI1e three, known to be tr a-
influence on sales." H:._ said a _ _y£.!ing_together in the Lo6 An-
survey of Bay . A r e ;1 geles area, missed the battfl!" supemiar~cls and cha1~ stor~s in which most of the rest or the
murder. _ :'I
-The -FB[ is baSlng lt3~r~---------------------------------------------.
showed milk consumption d1tl . . . not drop during the boycott. SLA died. Friday in a had of
accusation against Miss
Hearst mainly oo the.report of
an 1 18-year-0ld high scOOol.
student, Tom iiathews., that
she and the llarrises e Aids CJ11fdre11
LOS ANGELES IUP!l
The California Social \\lclfarc
Board has called for an
expanded sen1ice system to
prot.e.:t illegitimate children
arter .dropping an earlier
proposal which couJd have
taken certain of these children
from their natural mothers.
ln a 101-page report
released last week, the board
called for a program or
protective service workers
who would respond to famil y
• ' e m e r g e ncies." Robert
Mitchell, board chairman .
said, "Thls is an alternative
by which. society "''ill develop
a program by v.•hich these
youngst.crs can be looked
after." .
e Pollre J11j11red
RIVERSIDE fU Pll -Nint'
policemen were injured, none
of them seriously. when a
disturbance broke out at a
party in the Casablanca
District, authorities reported
Sunday.
Police said two officers were
questioning two juveniles who
had been at the party when
another guest threw a beer
bottle. Officers said verbal
threats were followed by a
barrage of bricks. bottles and
other objects. About l 0 0
persons were involved in the
disturbaoce.
e Snaooth B11s R1111
LOS ANGELES (UPl l -
The contraflow bus lane ,
which pennits S o u th e r n
California Rapid Tran s i t
District buses to run against
the normal flow of downtown
traffic, seemed to r u n
smoothly in Its first day of
operation Sunday, an RTD
spokesman sald.
Th e spokesman said no
accidents were reported, but
added that the real test o( the
plan will be during this
afternoon's peak traffic hours .
e Expert Hired
RIVERSIDE (UPI) -The
Board or Supervisors will hire
an archeologist in an effort to
prevent the,-destructlon or
·artlfacts b y construction
arews in the Perris Valley, it
was announced over t b e
+ weekend.
The board said it had
evidence that ancient pottery,
hand tools and other artifacts
were being destroyed during
the construction work.
•
Give Yovr Wifo .••
SECURITY
wilh on .itclronk
p~dooroptNr
Ill OUI Dtsl'l.AY toOM
324 N. Newpon ll•d.
NIWl'O~T ™°' ,HONI 2·S766
bullets from police and the
FBI and a fire that destroyed
their hideout house.
TilE FBI, in announcing
Sunday that ch a r g es 'Tere
being brought aga inst l\1iss
Hearst as a v.illing member of
the gang, who aJlegedly fired a
mAChine gun in a robbery .
wid that the r or c e of more
than 100 agents assigned to
track her down here was being
augmented by an unspecified
number ol additional agents.
l\1is!'I Hearst and t b e
Harri.scs are believed still to
be in the L<>s Angeles area
said William A. Sullivan.
assistant FBI director and
head or the Los ~es office .
The y are believed to re
short of money. he said, and
issued detailed descriptions
a::mmandeered his van and
abducted him for 12 hours laSt
TOOnday. lie said he saw her
loading a submachine gm in
the van and that she boasted
to him of having willingly
taken part in the Hibernia
Bank robbery in Sa n
Franci~ and or having
opened fire from the van on a
sporting goods store that da y
to force a clerk to release
Hanis, who was c a u g h t
shoplifting.
A motorist, Frank Sutter,
told of being abducted by two
,,·01nen hitchhikers v.•ith pis-
tols Friday, Sullivan said. 'll1e
women took his ca r but
abondooed it.
Sutter and Mathe~·s were
both released near Griffith
Park. the FBI said.
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Li
MEDICAL
CLINIC
-•
• i-11syour
electric bill up?
Because the cost of oil is up.
Even though you've rut down on your
use cl electricity, your bill may still'
be up. Naturally, you're concerred.
So ore we.
The main reason for the sharp rise
in Edison rustomerl>' bills is the
spiraling cost of foreig n oil. To produce
eleclricity in our generating plants.
weuseocleaner·buming, low-sulphur
oil imported mostly from lrdonesio.
It's expensive, but it's required to
{"""I regulations set by loco! air
pc>iution control districts.
Just four yeors ogo we po id $222
•
perborrel. ln November 1973,
we poid $7.53. This February it was
$13.54. And some utilities have
po id almost twice that much.
. The price of oil is a maier expense
we con't control. That's determined
by foreign.oil producing governments.
Should the price we poy drop, we'll
poss these lower costs on to you.
Meonwhile. w..1 continue to rut
all expenses we ?(n control. Economy
pn;>gramsare in force right 00>/l/at
Edison. So ore rigid cost controls.
And we11 continue to do everything
else possible to hold down the price
you poy for eleclricity.
You con help by conserving
eleclricity r>:m. And using less
eieclricity will 50\/e you rmney. too .
For some 70 ways to conserve.
serd for our free Conservation
booklet. It's important. Do it rem.
Write: "Conservation;' Edison,
P.O. Box 800, Rosemead, CA 91770. se.e
Southern California Edison
An [Qual OPPO'tuntry Eml)loycf
•
• DAU.. Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
TV Help for Voters
In art Orange County first, KOCE·TV, Channel 50,
has planned a series of pre-election forums to present
supervisorial and congressional candidates to voters be-
fore June 4.
The first 90-minute program will go on the air
tomorrow night at 8 o'clock, with working reporters
who regularly cover the Board of Supervisors inter·
viewing supervisoriaJ. candidates.
Viewers will be invited to call in questions for the
candidates while the program is in progess.
Next week, on May 27, 28, 30 and 31, four more
programs will feature candidates for each of the county's
four congressional districts, with editors of major news--
papers doing the Interviewing.
Participating in the project. in addition to TV
personnel and the newspapers, including Daily Pilot
staff members, are the Orange County League of
Women Voters, the Orange County Press Club and the
Orange County Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi.
With growing voter concern for quality in govern-
ment at all levels, programs of this type can be a con·
structive force. Concerned voters should mark the dates
and make it a point to tune in.
Dangerous Use of Power
Among the more disturbing aspects of \Vatergate
have been the revelations of White House attempts to
use other government agencies -the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, the Internal Revenue Service and the
Federal Communications Commission among them -
to harass opponents of the administration.
some smaller television stations had been threatened
with licensing problems if they carried too many "con·
troversial" programs from the larger networks.
Now the Nixon transcripts reveal that the Washing·
ton Post, which played a major role in uncovering the
Watergate scandals, was directly threatened by the
President with economic retaliation.
During an Oval Office conversation with John Dean
and H. R. Haldeman on Sept. 15, 1972, reference to
the Post's investigative reporting team spurred Nixon
to remark, "The main thing is the Post is going to have
damnable, damnable problems out of this one. They
have a television station' ... anc;I they 're going to have
to get it {the license) renewed."
At that time two television stations, in Jacksonville
and Miami, owned by Post·Newsweek Stations Inc. were
due to come up for FCC renewal of their licenses.
Shortly alter the November, 1972 Presidential elec·
tion, four challepges to the Post's ownership of broad·
cast properties were filed with the FCC by persons as.
sociated with the Nixon re-election campaign.
According to the Sept. 15 transcript, Haldeman
told the President, "They've got a radio station too."
"Does that come up too?" asked the President, adding,
"It's going to be damned active here (regarding licen·
·sing). The game has to be played awfully rough.''
The FCC challenges, for which the White House
disclaims any responsibility, are still pending, so the
fate of the Post-Newsweek television operation remains
in doubt.
Now it is not unusual for broadcasting licenses
to be challenged through the FCC, usually by would·be
competitors seeking to make a buck or gain a better
field of operation. But .the game takes on a different
taint when the executive branch of the government
considers using licensing to punish critics. These and similar agencies are supposed to insure
justice and fair treatme'nt for all citizens. The Nixon
administration has gravely misused them.
Early in the investigations, it was disclosed that
This is the kjnd of maneuver used with great suc-
cess in dictatorships. It's frightening a.nd it doesn't be-
long in the U.S. 'ME? WHY, \'VE BEEN HERE ALL THE TIME."
De ceits Spark~d
GOP Stamp ede
WASHINGTON -The passionate
intensity of the Republican stampcdr.
against President Nixon can be traced to
last Oct. 31 when Gen. Alexander Haig
went to Capitol Hill with soothing
reassurance for the party·s Senate
leaders -clearly one of the worst _or
infinite Watergate miscalculations at the
White Hoose.
On that day, White House chief of staff
Haig told worried Republicans that the
tape of the President's fateful March 21,
I 9 1 3 , convers~tion
with John \V. Dea11 m ~ .. ould prove lhis
was his first knou·-
ledge of the Water-
gate coverup. It is
"excuJpatory," said
Haig· Similar assur-
ances were given
k e y congressional
Republicans by Haig
during lhe next few weeks. From them
stemmed Senate minority leader Hugh
Scott's resounding defenses of Mr. Nixon
and less stentorian declarations frorn
lesser Republicans.
NEITHER Scott nor the others accuse
Haig of deception.IThey suspect. in fact,
that Haig himself was misled. But these
Republicans are livid, not only over ttie
contents of the transcripts but because
they feel like dupes.
An example is this private remark by
one Republican leader: "I campaigned
up and down my state all winter
proclaiming Nixon's innocence because
of what I was told about that March 21
tape." Such fury has created an
u n bridge ab I c chasm betv•ecn
Republicans and their Pres id en t ,
converting his defense fron1 political to
narrou'IY legal.
HERE, then, is yet another. perhaps
fatal \\'hite liouse miscalculation: but it
seems based less on a naive misreading
( EVANS·N()VAK J
of the transcripts than on an underlying
belief in lhe Nixon inner circle that they
v.•ould never be read by Congress.
That is certainly the best explanation
for testimony before the S e n a t e
Watergate committee last July 30 by
former Nixon lieutenant H. R. Haldeman.
Based on personally listening to and
taking notes on the March 21 tape.
Haldeman swore that Mr. Nixon said "it
u·ould be wrong" to raise one million
dollars in hush money -testimony that
resulted in his perjury indictment In an
Aug. 22 press conference, f\.tr. Nixon
generally confirmed Ha\den1an·s version.
EVEN AFTER Mr. Nixon agreed Oct.
23 to surrender the ~larch 21 tape to the
grand jury. White House aides thought it
never would reach Congress. That was
the situation Oct. 31 when Haig traveled
to Capitol Hill to reassure worried Senate
Republican leaders. When he told them
the tapes showed r..1r. Nixon first learned
on March 21 of White House involve1ne11t
in Watergate, Scott was elated.
Scott's elation soared when he \Vas
later shov.11 a transcript and quickly
scanned it. Another key S e n a t e
Republican was told by Haig on three
occasions thal the March 21 transcript
would "exculpate" the President. Al·
though few defended the President so
loudly as Scott, many publicly declared
Mr. Nixon v.'OOld be redeemed if only he
"·ould release the tapes.
NOT UNTIL the House impeachment
proceeding raised the possibility that
Congress might get the tapes did !\Ir.
Nixon, in a Feb. 25 press conference,
change his tune about the March 21 hush-
money conversation. But never did the
White I-louse "'arn these Republicans to
Dear
Gloon1y
Gu~
r·m glad Jesuit McLaughlin is not
in the \Vhite House ''in a religious
capacity" because it is hard to ac. ...
cept his post-posl-Watergate moral-
ity! Or is it post-Jesuit morality?
DEMOSTHENES Ill
Gtoomy Giu comm•"l5 ire Wbn>ltttd by
re1oe,.., 119 dll !>QI nectu•rilv rttlecl lht
YltW• o! '""' ntWIPIH•. Srnd your plf Pttvt WI Gloomy GU", Dli!y Pilot.
hedge their bets even a llltle.
Thus. J\'1r. Nixon·s announcement April
29 of the release of the transcripts
brought sighs of relief. By ~1ay l.
however, Scott 1vas grov>ing nervous. He
and his staff huddled for three hours
before issuing a One-page sta tement
reaffirming his confidence in !\fr. Nixon.
It was not until the follou•ing \1·eekend
that Scott and other Republicans got
dov.11 to serious reading. They letimed
that Mr. Nixon was informed of \Vhite
~louse involvement in Watergate before
Jl..1arch 21 and that he by no means ruled
out hush money on that occasion. Scott
was aghast to find he had not seen the
second of l\YO Nixon-Dean conversations
of March 21.
Haig, \.•:ho lo this day has never
personally hea rd the tapes. is not blan1ed
personally ("I think Al is a victim as
much as , .. ,.e v.•ere," says one Senator ).
Aiming their anger at the President and
his \a\\'yers. the Republican defection
then began rolling \Vith Scott's harsh
statement of i\1ay 7. During the next 48
hours, three prestigious groups of
Republican Congressmen -the S.O.S.
Club, the Wednesday Group and the
Chowder and J\rfarching Society -met to
privately echo Scott's public statement.
Mr. Nixon v.·as politically finished in the
}louse.
THE WllJTE HOUSE, fully a\\-·are of
this, now must rely on James St. Clair to
save Mr. Nixon on grounds he committed
no impeachable offense. That leaves the
President's efforts to v.·oo Capitol Hill
Jiepublicans at a bitter impasse.
Could Fae e Proseca1tio11
'Citize n' Ni x on's Outlook
\VASHJNGTO~ -The devastating
reaction to the raw record of President
Nixon's complicity in the \Valergate
break-in aftermath has brought him to
the brink of a catastrophe he was trying
to avoid.
The depth of the chasm O\'er y:hich he
teeters is awesome. Criminal prosecution
of a resigned or removed President of
the United States advances from the
hypothetical to the posslble, This
possibility requires
important assump-
tions, but it is a {
factor \\•hich Presi-
dent Nixon must \·~ F
henceforth \V c i g h ~ 4--\
in every rnajor im· 1 l!f
peachment -relater!
decision he makes.
The time may have f:
passed \1·hen any
protective legislation or Agne"-·-like deal
could be arranged to save Presid<'nt
Nixon frolfl'lo.crim.inal prosecutiolf if he
resigns or is removed from office for
complicity in obstruction of justice. In
lhat event. Special Prosecutor Leon
Jaworski may find himself Y.ilh no
v•orkable alternative to seeking the
criminal indictment of private citizen
Richard r..t. Nixon.
This is a drastic change from the
previous outlook. There have been those,
like the recognized authority. Raoul
Berger, \'lfiting in the May, 1974 Yale ·
Law Journal. who argues that the
President can be indicted even thoogh
tJle Senate refuses to remove him in the
rfupeactunent process. These argwnents
were largely hypothetical, and while
supportable. strained credulity.
Tii.E SHOCKED reaction to t h e
\\1atergate transcripts has changed the
atmosphere. It may change more if the
issue over lhe President's delivering
more tapes to the prosecuting authorities
is resolved by the Supreme Court against
the President. So it may be judged that
the nearer the President moves toward
impeachment, removal or resignation,
the nearer he also moves toward the
possibility of criminal prosecution.
Passage of legislation to relieve the
President of any criminal liability has
(rueHARD WII.SO~
been discussed in the House of
Represenlatives. Representative \\.ilbur
Mills (Dem .. Ark.I at one time offered to
sponsor the proposal, presu!Jlably as an
inducement for the President's
resignation on lhe Agnew pattern.
FORr.1ER Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew escaped jail through t h e
equivalent of a guilty plea, but his
successor as Baltimore county execvtive
has been cooviotcd of the same kind of
crimes with which Agnew v.·as charged
in a Department of Justice aca.isation
v.·hich \\.'as made part of the ]Xlblic rec-
ord.
The adverse reaction to Agne,\·'s
getting off with resignation and a fine
\\'hen the crimes of y,·hich he~·as
accused v.cere of a magnitude \\'hich ay
send his successor lo jail for many yea .
complicates a similar treatment of
President Nixon.
NOR IN Agne\.\"s case was the record
so starkly ugly as that revealed in
President Nixon's transcribed
conversations with felonious associates
and those charged 1'-'ith feloo.ies. Justice
u'Ould be strained if H.R. Haldeman .
Jolm Ehrlichman, Jotm Dean, and John
r..1itchell go to jail for crimes in 1'-tiich
Nixon was involved but for which he had
been legally forgiven.
Prosecutor Jaworski, under oath to
enforce the Jaws. could not ignore a
congressional finding , or even a
reasonable presumption, lhat Nixon was
a leading figure in a oonspiracy for
v;hich hls closest associates were
indicted.
TllE SUBSTANC~: is mudl. the same if
Nixon resigns. No longer president.
t\ixon "-OOld not be inunune to
prosecution in th(' absence of
arrr.ngcments or legislation to give rum
immunity.
There is a different way in which
Nixon might be impeached and removed.
lfc might be found not to have been a
knowing and Intentional accompiice in
obstruction of justice, but !K> negligent
and morally bankrupt in the ~nee ol
such a ~piracy that he must be held
politically respomible in the · extreme
degree. Then no primary basis for
criminal prooecution might be 11Kl.gl"d to
ex ist, and rtmoval from office in total
disgrace 111luld be deemed sufficient
punishment.
ALL. OF' ~E p:mlbilit~ have
advanced out of tile purely hypothetical
s!age because the transcripts, in their
rawness. h.1\'C ~riously eroded the
position of those v.·ho defended him or
vrished to keep an open mind.
The impeachment montefltum has
increased markedly, and with it the
helpless fteling of defenders that maybe
the President cannot be protected from
cri'!linal prosecution, either. Again the
\\1hite •louse calculati~ have been
""Tong. The "full story" has not
exonerated the President, but increased
those who believe him guilty or rulpa~
and call for a resignation he cannot
safely offer.
Ethnic Jokes Old Hat
I am glad to see the decline, if not
disappearance, of the Polish joke; but
while I deplored the ethnic slur. f
couldn't believe these jokes did any real
or permanent harm. Up where t spend
my summers in Wisconsin, they had been
rerounted dozens or years before--only
as "Belgian jokes."
(SYDNEY J. HARRI~
Ne w Ap proac h to School Fin a n cing
It seems historically that every
coWltry at one time or another
designates some particular region or city
as the special home of fools, or
simpletons, or eccentrics, or somewhat
mad characters. Every nation. so far as
I can discover, has perpetuated a legend
that somewhere within its borders, or
adjoining them, there exists a
commWlity to be derided.
of King John, and has become
immortalized in the three "wise" men of
Gotham "-'ho "'ent to sea. (Actually, the
real-life Goth.amites affected idiocy in
order to dissuade the king from
purchasing a castle there and saddling
them with the expense.)
\YHEN I "'BS growing up, Brooklyn
was the butt of .our na~ional derogati~.
and any coml'd1an could raise a cheap !~ugh ~Y a deprecatory mention of that
city, Its all forgotten now and so will
1hf; Polish jokes be when y®r children's ch1ld~en are chuckling over "the two A-iartaans."
Back 1n 1~71, in Serrano \I,". Priest, the
Califo111ia Supreme Co:.iurt de:reed that
lhe state's method of financing public
education through the local property tax
"'as unconstilutional. The coun held that
differences in district tax rates and
assessed values deprived students in low
wealth areas o( educational opportunities
equal to Ume afforded kids In wealthier
c:lstricts.
Said the court :
c:bUdren should ha\'e
tbe ofilme education·
al opportunities re-
prdless of where
Ibey Uve. It told C.l·
lli>rnla to gtt crack·
181 on a plan to
oquallze school ex·
peodilures per eoob
md ... 11 student.
Since lbeo the baUl• has bten ra~ing be-
twetll the 0 hawks''. • '\\1\nt "equall·
atklO-onw .. "and the "doves" who ftivor
•yadualllrn."
41 Ille lime ol the supreme Court .. .,....m, the wealtblest district In the
-wu 1PCodln1 aj>out ten lfl!l<!s as
-,.-lludent u the poorest district.
IN Jflt, .-.mbl)'man 8111 lla&ieY. R·
Ila llfMI. ...,. up wllb a fonnola to
· #m -•1p11on. Jt cun..i the
.,.,... "' iapoDdhures 1n hl&h .. auh . '
( .... _R_u.,...s_W'._i\_LT_O_N ____ J
districts while allowing lo\v wealth
districts to hike their spending at a rapid
rate.
Here's bow the Bagley formula \\:orks:
Say a high wealth district has an
assessed value of about $60,000 per
student, K-12. It could incre9$C it's 1973·
74 eX]l<lldltllres over 1972-73 by about 1.5
percent. However, a low wealth district.
with an .... ssed valuation of ooly $4,000
per student, was permitted an increase
·during that lllll<! of 24 percent. Thal'•
without voter .appnival.
'!be plan did serve to clooe the gap
between expendltum in the Wl10ithy and
poor dlltrlcts. Today the dJsp&rlty bas
be"1 Cllt.ln half; meaning Ulal theapread
b<tweeo the ""8lthiest district and the
poorest dls1rict Is only r....-In
terms of expenditure per studenl The
1><oblem with the •Pfl'O'lcb, though, ls
that the properly Owner.I In the low
wcolth and middle income dlstrlcls,
which ore allowed the largest tax
increases, .,.. already paying the hlgbeat
tax rates. ·
AT ANY RATE, bY implementing the
)
Bagley formula v.·hich was enacted as
part of SB 90 in 19'72, about 95 percent of
the school districts could be within five
percent or "equality" in from 15 to 18
years.
Recently a superior court judge in Los
Angeles said thaL wasn't good enough.
Quit messing around. said the judge; find
a way to achieve cqua1Jzation of
expenditures among the 1.100 school
.. districts within about six years.
Now, as Bagley puts it, "the appellate
courts face a frightening task and the
state faces an ominous fiscal problem. lf
'lmtant eqlljllizalion' Is ordered, l"' will
..., either an in.stant riwlng olf of
diatricis with enriched pro g r a m s ,
reoulting In mediocrity ••• or, the state
will be required to ralle tax .. to the tune
of about one billion dollars to Increase
levels of exptt>dltures of all 'lower
\\>-eallh' dJstrfcts."
Either Wlly, 8'IJ'S Bagley,lt could bring
educational, social• and economlc cbaol.
Bill C&mjlbetl, a former sdlool
admlrnstrator and lllale leflslator who ls
ninning for the Aooembly this '/fM, -
the court decree at another reoaon to
adopt !ht edllcatlOll "vouch<r" plan.
UNDER THAT pl.an, the slatb would
&uboldizo the 1luclent rather than the
s)'lltm. Each year It would JJIGVide the
pa-. Qf a r-chlk{ wtlh , an
education voucher. The voucher would
increase in dollar value as the child
progressed through the gr~des (K·12)
and could be "spent" at a school of the
parents' choice.
''That". suggests Campbell, "would put
the heat of the free market ~stem
(competition and the law of supply and
demand) on the existing public education
monopoly. It would make schools
(boards, administrators and teachers )
accountable to the parents ( t h e
consumers). If parents were dissatisfied
with the educational product al one
school they oould shop arotmd and enroll
their child elsewhere.
"And, wbat's aillO Important, In view of
the court.' deolslons, the! voucher plan
would Instigate on equallt.aU011 of
experdl-per student wblle holding
state Intervention In local lsCbool pollClos
to a mlnlmum."'
And there, ol coune, Is the darlt side ol
the equallz&Uoo demaod. ll lbe state
• tak., O\'er the fullding of locll ocbools '-
II It inllllWl«I a 1talew1de Pl'OPCflY tax,
for uample, and dilttibuleO. that to the
locll diltticta -It w111 llUTe ea hed<
graduali1 take over OOCJ)plete O>nlrol of
tho. lchoo~ . • • and sian bonding the twto that llVW therein.
'!be -pilln is being tried In New
ffil1T411hlre, C&llfornla lhoold give IL a
loo-. I •
THIS GOES back beyond Biblical
times. In ancient days, Phrygia was the
"home" or fools in Asia Minor. Abdera
was a laughing.stock among th e
Thracians, and Boeotia of the Greeks.
Classical literature is filled with such d~pretafory references. -
Nazareth waa a town of this type to the
ancient Hebrews, which adlh an irony
(unknown to most modems) to the
Biblical phrase, "can any good thing
come out of Nazareth?" (John 1:46.)
That this village . should produce a
Measlah seemed ·like a poor joke to the
sophiaUcai..t Plle4ilnlans.
· And Jesus'• ~ble of the Good
Samantan would have much more force
today If we realli:ed that people In
Samaria In Bil>li<al llme4 we" regarded
much 11 many wlliles looi<ed down upon
blacks In our culture-<he Samar1tana
wero the lowest of the proletarians,
almoet outcaata, and JelUS ra1secl ooe to
a ranlt beyond that ol the ocholars and
rabbis.
AMONG MODERN .. ua... the Ame
tend"1C)' bu peralmd. Moot famous,
perllapo, II lbe dty ol Gotbam 111
toglllld-wblch WU -the Mm~ of "folly" -the medlovil ci. .. 1'
\
OlAIH COAST
DAILY PILOT '
•
•
'
Bu
a nu
her
loot
jum
wh
door
apa
Cyp
she
trail
1.
t
in -a
tele
e
"l
atJn
"It'
go in
into
Fo
dati
!or ..
b>
this
a rte
Even Der ·Friends
' ' KISSIMM\'ll!l, Fla. (UPI) -
1be joke abollt Nie · !ully-
clothetl llrellter In a nudlsf
camp got out qulcily dW'lng
~ brle! run o! the streaking
lad--;.
Just u pfedlctable was the
oomment ol the girl with the
all.over • tan, teasing · h e r
vlslwr for wearing cl0the1 and
for always looking at · her stralsl>t In the eye.
"I GUESS I'M a lull-time
streaker," giglod Deb b I e
Goals, . 22, the dart-haired
queen; of an enclave of
orthodox nudlJts hidden In the
boondocks ·o! Osceola County.
But Debbie, the daughler o!
a retired Air Force major,
views public streakers as
"exhibitionists." Thls flve-
fot>t·two sun buff, recenUy
picked as "Miss Wintertari'' in
a. nudist beauty contest, does ~
her streaking behind an eighl-
root fence and always keeps a
jump suit handy to leap into
when someone rings t h e
doorbell at her 'Orlando
apartment.
U~I T-..rtttt
Behind closed doors at the
Cypress Cove · Nudist Camp,
she sits for an interview on the
screened patio of a house
trailer, wearing only painted
toenails and a go)d locket. She
introduces her husl)and, Ray.
who excuses himseU to watch
'l'M FULL-TIME STREAKER' -DEBBIE GOALS
Visitor Always Looked Her Str1ight In Eye
>.
l
l
a basketball game on
television. out of my clothes. You stiC:k nudists. But. I am \\'hat I am . I
out like a sore thumb wiUt don't want to shock them, but
ACROSS 11fE street, an clothes on. if what I do in privacy is
elderly couple are mowing and "You figure this is it. Ttlls is offending to them, I can't help
watering a carpet of St. the great unveiling. You just that."
Augustine grass, s ma 11 take your clothes off. 1bere is Debbie said she also was
children are playing o n · not going to be any drum-surprised to find so many
bicycles. rolling, no inspection. After topless bars ln Orlando when
It's a quiet, swmy afternoon. awhile, you forget about they moved from Fort
Everyone is naked. looking everyone straight in Lauderdale several months
"It's not a sexual the eye.'' ago.
atrnosti'6ere," says Debbie. A year tater she married "I told Ray, 'My gosh, there
"It's like a family outing, like Ray, a housewares salesman must be a lot of sex-starved
going to a playground." 11 years her senior. They people around here,'" she
Debbie first took the plunge spend almost every weekend said. ,
into nudism five years ago in at the camp and seldom wear S e l e c I e d a s ' ' M i s s
Fort Lauderdale when she was clothes at home, unless they ·~'Wtntertan' .. n -e-ypress-eoft';
dating Ray and he was looking ·have some non-nudist friends the fourth largest nudist
for a place lo play volleyball. as guests. colony in the country, Debbie
doesn't approve of some of the
"IT WAS A SHOCK at first "WE DON'T discriminate national nudist beauty
to see all these nude people at against people who are non-contests.
this camp," she said. "But nudists," she said. "Some of
after about five minutes I was our best friends are non· "A LOT OF 111D1 bring in
. . : ,
CHRIS.-.AUG. l913 . "
l>c~tt 11"11 -. oi:ic,
1.A!.T $1/HNL<"tl. W~<;. i4 tl"'9L "ellH11ilR 1
7}I I ~ S' II M ti 6"l. J:. llJ 14 IJ "r "l1l rt ~ V e-j: V 1.J )
iSv\' J: r.iiqtJT To ~now \Do I --· --· ---· . -.
'' "-'l!'w .P~ fll EC~ a) JQV'h l.S 11 H 19-r. A -·-___ .. ___ _
ii ll l!'ltl Pno ~t>_,. "1 FOfl. 1~1'o S r-n 1 "'I
{! rr; 11. • C nui ts f"I er'') Tl! i:y H 1411 c;
Ct..'\,~"5 ·llJ $1lll./IJ(,J IWT""'-T10i4t..
J; ~~4. I~>' I AJAlll •'4 illAIJ OC.V19U4' &fliiPU-Y1
fl -rRr*'' "to lllAtt11Jt7'J,,llUO 1 ~ F1$ H I
H19T'tH"'l?.'f ltut> • u fl RQ,'°911'~ lle-5Slfl.. •
.GACH (01/t2~tr ""~rs ~i,~I!' Wlf61(~.
""~ s.,,.n-r!. 11.J :r111JG'1 7'1fff 0P1tm.11J ~\I i,ri.11, iT 11.JL'f Clt.t-!..f /"1.<;"~1 llu()
1)1to'Tlf'' $TILL T1~·f1> Tti 49-'T" Mi> /AJ
e•'7>11!(l.. 1ur;;. (1)"'1I0~11.1a 1='.#n "~G' t=1n,,-
'''"''~' 1.S · \TCJ.AJG ·~!11',) ,
. 'B'G''."t>A.o,y111~Tl~~s COST 1-1'0·1l6'
Tl't~ u i'.>f ! S Pflo r.11111"' • 1"4 INI~.,.... '-" l" 11"
~wttot l.. •
:\ ---....
N1wporl ,Oteanaullcs. ~nd Mor Int lnslilul1
P. Q, Box-4046 . · ' ' Irvine, Califoraio 92~64 •
' .
' I
Non-nudists
these topless dancers ~nd A N D LI K l!l G I R LS
strippers just for t he everywhere, she en j o y 1
publicity," she said. getting ~dressed up for special
Debbie and Ray don't go to occasions. "It's fwt," ·she said. 111 like many pal'.lies or bars in the "clotbed world." Occasionally, getting dressed up hi a loog
they go w a publlo beach with _dre_ss_,_the __ w_ho_le_b_l_l '_' ___ 1 another eouple, although she
dislikes wearing II swim.suit.
0 You get saitcf in it, and it
makes marks, W you're
always tugging at it and I
wondertng ii it looks right,"
she explained.
"But we go sometimes, and
when we get back everybody
geb all showered up. Who '
wants .to bother with putting
on clothes then? 1be girls will
be In the kitchen and the men
will be enjoflng g o o d 1
conversation, goc:Jd food.
"'1'111!lRE IS A FEELING o!
unity. By not having clothes
on, you drop a lot of baniers, ·
' a lot of defenses. You can just ('
.....
. UPI TtM!t!IOlo
be yourself. I think it's"'--..
ridicuJous when s o rn e o n e .,:,~
considers themself '. ·
unattractive. I don't have a
standard of beauty ." Naughty, Naughty
Debbie said nudist camps
have started attracting a
younger c r o w d , especially
since the legal age for joining
such a club has been lowered
to 18 in Florida.
"That's good," she said.
"We need some new blood,
some young people."
Julie Nixon Eisenhow~
er says she some times
uses 'expletive deleted_'
herself. She said use of
words such as those de-
leted from edited
White House tran-
scripts is merely a way
to release pressure.
I ... -·• ' U .. L '/ P;LOT 7
For Weekender
Advertising
Phone 642-4321
PHAR~ACY
WE QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE ... ANYTIME
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o ... ·~ ''"' . s ... ,.,. .. 79• 99<
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Clowd Sundoys and Hotidays -
reshape, firm'n trim with a body that's fit to live in.
•
'
you do11't ittst
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Diet Alone C•n~t Do II .•• While you ~hedpounds that cut down
ugly la!. you 've got to fi rm up to eliminate unsightly flab .
The resu!I , a shapely ftgure trimmed down. wilh texture tight
as a drum . ll's all here-dielary and exercise programs designed ·
lor you~ 1nd1v1dual need. Instructors and exercise machines
that get maximum res.u.lls in the shortes1 possible time.
Plus Sauna. Steam .. Whirlpool. Sun Rooms, and Swimming Pool
to make the complete change. Before you know ii, you'll be
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you don't just get a shape: you get in shape. Make yourself
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There are SEVEN different programs to
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Beginning as tow as •.• ~ 11:.
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BUENA PAAK s10 s. 811ch BO\lle••rd, South of llncotn A•enue 821-0381
ORANGE 122 £111 Jl:•l•ll• A•enue, W11t ol Tu1lln A•1nue 639·2441
COSTA MESA 2300 H1rbor Boule••rd, H•rbor Center 54g..3368
WESTMINSTER 1757 W11tmln111r Aftnue, W1•tmlntt1t c1ni.r 8944387
HUNTINGTON BEACH 11su Metn·lttMt. M1l11 st. at &Melli 1mi. 142-1451
LONG BEACH 4t01 Att1nt10 1oulew1rd, Cotner or C1r1on 4214174
.ENCINO 11031 1111>01 9a&oe330
' .
• , •
•
•
B OAIL Y PILOT
•
6 Oubs
Observe
Opening
By ALl\tON LOCK.ABEY
awtl11t £dl1-r
Fourteen years ago Hume
Seyniour, a local pow<'r boat
~kipper. thr<'adc<l his way
through Ne\\'port Ilarbor on a
busy summer Swlday. dodging
sailboats from one end of the
bay to the other.
•
'I • •
• "
Suit Rent PUBLIC NOTICE ----;or1c• Of" INTENTION TO
ClltlATI! SICUlllTY INTllllST
IS.C'-"'*"'°' u.c.c.J .,, lJ d H 1 T NOTICE 11 11trtbY OlWfl 10 •
i-1 O'War ug ies ar get a~::~~s p~l .. ~~~u.'Nn: .. ~·~·::"S
From Wlre Service
Howard Hape. bas been
been named In a $8 million
court action which charges he
was behind a year in his rent
al the Sliver Slipper Casino in
La.s Vegas and should be
evicted.
The suit· seeks $1 million in
real damages, $5 million in
punitive damages, and return
of the property to its owners.
Hughes leased the Silver
Slipper April 30, 1968, from the
group for $32,000 a month and
has not paid the rent since
May, 1973, according to the
suit.
* Actor Clint East°"''OOd has
declined an offer to receive
the Reno Chamber of
O.blort. ~ wit:-• "~('~ntr o1 W1ln11t. Nl!WPOl'I fC ' J tr1tl 1 city ordinance ban n Ing °"'~· s1111 ,°' c1;1::;:c,.111t4 ov
mokln In bu I ~ MC:urlly lnt1r9't 1 ltle'U '" 11 Glfll!I S g pu C p 8 ... =· Oeb!OI' 11'd 9r111led IO Cl!&r ' !Id
Now that the hearings are and M11rv 01.,gl 1nd JOl'~~«!i''1~~~1T11,
over. Saffran says he has =r1:,111::,a~: .. ,, 11 Ortr>f W•~~:i';
given up smoking. M~' euch, countv ot '"''• * of C1H10t11l1. I II !ht Stclll'llY
TM PrOPC'flY In ~ c ;1 In o•n1r1I.
Seattle nightclub f I g u re ~~1:,~~~I 1~\~ ... ~ .~·~IDm~nt, lurnl\¥:.: Frank COlacurclo was found ind fvrnl1h1nos of Oe1blo:06 c~v:i~ut
guilty in federal COt.if't Oil lWO ~e'!'~~~ 1te'::n, 't:~~v :f Orano1. ~It!~
COWltS Of income tax evasion. o! c.111torn+11. tnd 1>111lnei~ ~nowro ll , · I MILO HEAL TH CLUB. ·11 The )Ury returned a verdict 0 TM iforMold so<11rl!V lr1n11ct:n ~~V innocen~ on a third count. ~ ~011wr;;i;.31:~ 1o;' :,M~1:~· ~:;,,.1 ean~ 1be jury deliberated 13 01 ~~1ie'. •11 N Cen11111 Ave·
hours before returning its Glendale, Calllornl~, 1,. in$1:11rn~;::1f.1rtv. SO •far ill ltnow'l to !ne 'o<~ verdicts, convicting him of 111 b<!slne1r. nam1• 1l"<l ..id•e.1e~ ~i":a~t evading taxes for 1967 and the Oeb!or lor 1111 t1>ree y11rJ • '
d 1rt: Sime. 1969, but' not for 1968. He ha oated : April •· 1910• 1 . C1>111es R:. ar>Q been accused of evadmg more M••v Gan~1
than $87,500 during the three JK°!;~e~in:'~!~!;,,
years. c1n1r;11 11nll ot G1end•l1
Se. . f J 111 N. Ctnlrtl Ave. ntenc1ng was set or une o1i11d111. c.1111. ti:aJ 28 Etc,.. No. ltllK · l07U 11 p 101
(
* Publl\l>~d Ordnat Co~;! 01 Y ' • J. A 73-yegr-old British Navy ~~1':... --
11~9•1' PEOPLE deserter ~ho surrendered to PUBLIC 1'0TICE
officers aboard the Royal ·---,0-,,-,,,;0 ,,--
Co N ~ J . · $a HOTICIE ' nunerce's "Silver Spur avy 11·1gate up1ter tn n OF auLK T1t.1.HsF1ER
Award'' given to successful Diego in March has been •s•<•. ••014101 u.c..c.1 No!lte I! 1wrebY 9l~en to 1ne (rtdHo•~ Western film stars. granted an honor ab I e OF CHARLE S R. c.1.N·:.1. M.1.Rv GANGI,
E ~• 'd he did d' har h B · j · h JOHN .1. BAZACAS itnd KATHERIN E
It \rasn't exactly a ne\v
expcrienC"C for Seymour or any
of the scores of other power
hoal skippers, but it \Vas
lraumatic as usual. All that
many young sailboat skippers
know is that they have the
right--0f.11•ay over power
vessels. :1ud thev exercise th:it
right-of-way 'viih liltlt• or no
regard for the difficu lties of
the po·wer bo:its in keeping
clear. Thoroughly shaken,
Seymour finally pulled into his
berth at the n1arina and was
greeted by hls old friend,
Gordon Snow, another
"stinkpot!er" of Jong standi ng. SHARK ISLAND YACHT CLUB OBSERVES 14th OPENING DAY
Power 80<1t Club Occupies New Half-million Dolla.r Clubhouse
ast~ ........... sa1 not 1sc ge, t e r I Is BAIACA5. uans1e""~· ""°''" b<!s1..,.s~ have time to come to Re.no tO Coru;uiate Said ~~ress i1 106 ;'14ln11t. Newpgrl Slafn, · · pcd Cwnly ot Oranoe. S•att ol C411!o•nl~. tn~t accept the award. WaJ~r Talbot, who ]Um • 011lk tran1!e• Is •bOUI 1o De "1ilde !o
"\VE'VE GOT to do
~omething lo help bring about
a bell.er understand in~
between the rag sailors ;ind
the po\\·erboaters." sa id
Seymour to Snow. "Why don 't
we organize our own yacht
club, exclusively for power
boaters?"
Race Won.
Bv S1nall ,.;
Vessels Sno"' agreed, and that "'as
the beginning of the Shark
Island Yactil Club \vh1ch
~turday .celebrated it~ 14th~.\
birthday 10 a nt'W $:i00.~ -.... J){'spit 0 blustery \\·ind and
clubhouse on l3ayshore Dr1vl' sea conditions. Los Angeles ha~d b~· the Ualboa Island ''acht C!ub"s SIC\\'art ·rrophv
Bndge. -a site that for ye~rs r;ice around Ci.!talln;:i Island
\1::is occup1rd by th(' old f\l'n Sa turday turned into a 1~dt·s Restaurunt. bonanza for the small boats.
COi\fi\lOOORE \\'IRT ''Bill''
Shumaker presided ·at the
club's offi cial opening-in the
ne•v clubhouse, introducing his
fellow flag officers. Vice
funrnodore Albert ~1athe~'s
and Rear Commodore Ed•vard
Danielson.
Shark ls!<ind ''acht. Club is a
mcmlx'r of 1hc Southern
California Yachting Associa-
tion and is active in sponsor-
ing predicted log contests
under rhc auspices of !he
Southern California Cn1isc r
Association .
SIYC ,\·;1s one of six y;icht
clubs obscrvinj! season
opening ;uid flag r:i ising
ceremoni('s Saturday.
Balboa Yacht Clu/:l put on
the most colorful sho\v \\'ith
the observance of its SOth
anniversary, making it the
second oldest yacht club in the
Newport I !arbor Area.
Co1nmodore David Lang in-
troduced a long line of staff
rommodores and presented
medals of appreciation to
members who have contri-
buted most to the ·welfare of
t.llc club during t'nc past half
century.
CUOSEN FOR the honors
V.'l'rc Llovd '·Swede'' Johnson
Bill Tayior, Staff Commodor~
Convl'rsc Wurdeman. Staff
Commodore Ed Riesen, Harrv
Bourgeoi s, Staff CommodorC
Carrol! J~udson. Cared Smith,
Staff Co1nmodo r c Don
F'ranklin, Staff Cornmodorl'
Bill Campbell. Argy I c
Campbell. !Juve l'l hnan. Andv
Gram, and Chuck U!hnan. ·
Also honored w<is H.amon
Najero, club cu stodian, who
has served lhC' Club for the
past 25 years.
Jim B~illcy's Lion -35
Didjeridoo \1 on bt'.'>i in Hect
honors in tbe club's annual
inspection. Olhl·r inspec:tion
winners \\'('rf':
JUNIOR DHY STORAGE -
David c;a/cs S:ibot.
SENIOR DR\' STORt\(;E -
Bob Riley's f\fctcalf. P111;11a .
SENIOR DRY SJ'ORAGE
OVER 14 f'EET -£\tarhru
(Lldtrl4) Jack ,\fcClart}.
DAV SAILEH -il'ladn('SS
(Rhodes-33) Bruce D'Eliscuc.
SAILBOATS 20-30 FEET -
Red Dog ( Ranger-29 ) Charles
Sparkuhl.
SAILBOATS OVER 30
FEET-Didjeridoo.
OLDEST SAJLBOAT -79
year old Oscar Tybring.
BAY LAUNCHES -Kend1a .
PhiJUp Cornwall:
POWERBOATS 20-35 FEET
-<:.arina {Grand Banks·32J
Bert Zillgitt and Dave Lan g.
POWER BOATS OVER 35
FEET -Sea lAire, f<'ran k
Gebhard.
Corrected tirne o,1.·inncr v.·as
]ltoon Shado\v a Class D entry
skippered by Don Peters of
.H.iclunond ''acht Club.
\Vinds of 25-40 k n o t s
hammered !he combined
ncets of the Whltney, Little
\Vhitnl'y and Harris Series
Sa!Ltrday resulting in several
dropouts because of gear
failures.
Tl{E f{ACE stn rted at 1 I
a.ni. Saturday front Lo s
Angeles Harbor. First to finish
nl 8:20 p.n1. \\'r!S Allen
Pt.rckeu·s Blackbird for an
elapst:d time of 9 hours and 20
n1inult•s fo r the 68-n1ilc course.
Course rcrord is 7 hours
and 48 llllOU\cs set by John
Kilrov's Kialoa II in 197l.
overall wlnner in the Midget
Qce.an Racing Fleet for the
·rrttle \Vhitncy Series \\·as
White Lightnin. saill'd by Dick
V('\thoen of Anacapa Yacht
Club. Karl Klokke's Viva.
LA \"C. Y.'as the winner in
Performance Handicap Racing
Fleet for the !·!orris Series.
Race sunun:iry:
IOR OVERALL -(11 Moon Snadow 121 Zeu•, 6ill c;a~rl, PMYC; \)I Blat,bird.
IOR-A. -Blackbird. IOR·B -!1) Para-che, Roel P~•1'., R•tl>mcnd VC ; (ii Lu,kv f'v!!. O•c• Fo•~. BY(, \Jl !liusoon, Ed MtOo,.ril. KHV(.
IOR·C -(1J Zeo\; 111 R:e<I ll~ro" II.
1!111 Hat19e, HHYC; OJ Kerl !I, Oicll ICel!OI'!, LAVC .
IOR·O -(1) Moon Shadow; 01 El Ti9,e II, B•ll PelCr\on, CBYC: llJ
Vl~im\ey Tre\, Hugh Rc,gers, LAYC.
1>•0RF·A -Ii ' w~;1.~ L1a111n,n; 1 ll •~Tre>s, Cundoll1Vldtk,ns, CflYC. lJ• Soloro, erown1 Fol1te~stein. cave.
l/ORF·B -11) Oowllcne•. Oon HU<:•er. L5F, (2) A'Te, ~lc~·•nlpsl Pa!riccoo. CBVC; (Jl GOOd f1m~1. Cra11e/Srri11n, BCVC,
PHRF·A -{l\ V;va. Klol<ke. LAVC:
Ill Reslle-.•. BOO Young, LA.YC; [JI
~1om,, Oitk R"mage, LBYC.
PHRF·B -(1J Oubl>t', V."ll(r !loch~•~'· SI BVC; ('l Aroon'1Ula, r R. Dillmon, LAYC; (JJ Gra>~hop;>e•, Ha!tM'fl4ml>ol!, LAYC. PHRF< -(I) Flnrc>~e. Hol ,.vo,we, cave.
Skip]Jers
Of C<lM
Triu1n1Jh
Corona del ).far High School
sailors. headed by skippers
Br;id \\"heeler and Phil Greene
J1'. \\·on th~ Ca!alina Challenge
Cup. syinbolic of the
Int ('r s ch o I astic sailing
cham pionship Saturday.
The series was sailed. in
Lido-14s and Lasers in 8-12
knot •,•;esterly winds inside the bay,
The win was the second for
Corona del Mar in four years.
The school won it in 1970 with
,\larllee Allan as skipper. Miss
BAJilA CORJNTIUAN Yach t Allan is now the top skipper on
C1ub celeb111ted its 16th year the Princeton sailing team.
with formal flag raising and a Second place in Saturday's
gala lx>at parade throughout compelilion went to Harbor
the harbor in the afternoon. il igh School with skippers Bill
A spokesman for the ship in Montreal in 192{), STEPHEN L-PEtLETIF.R ~n<I CVNT,H I~ . . PELLETI ER. l>11•Wnd inO ,,,te ~• o•n thamber said the Silver Spur boarded the Jupiter, wluch !enanh, Tr~nster~s. w-t>uslntn •--'ed p · Cl I I 't ad<lre•S ls 11l6 Walnut. N~wPOrl Beatn. had not ~n given in recent earn r1nce 1ar es an(. 1,s C011nTY o1 0,.~, si~te ot ca111ornia. . years because no \Vestem film crew. J1e saluted the ships rne prope<ty 10 w 1ransttru·<1 "
hi · · h · 1oc,1rt'd ~I ~06 Walnut. NewPOr! Se~lh. star "''as deemed worthy until W te ensign and, Wll tears in Cwnry 01 Ora.-..,,e. s1~1e of ca111ornla.
East.,,,·ood rose to prominence. his eyes, asked for sa10 P<"~riv Is oe•c .. ~d •n ~e·•• ' · · " ~s· All sloe~ In tr.,Je, ll•l~res. e<tU•pmet1t * 'pernuss1on to sun·cnder. ~00 good w•ll of rn,1 "~•ITh club bll')l11e's Lockbourne Air Force Base -------1o.nown ... , MILO 11EffiH CLUB 11"'1 PUBLIC NOTICE loc11 tt'<I "' 7G6 Walnut. Newport Bedcl>. at CoJwnbus, Ohio W 3 S Counrv of Or11nge, ~!~le M C11lllornl1. dedicated as Rickenbacker Air B nm T"" bulk 1r11n~ttr w•U tot <on•ummat1<1 SVP"l'll:IOll: COUltT oro or 111~ !toe :)Olft <l'v ol M11y, 1970, '' Foi\'."C Base in honor Of Capt. COUNTY Of' Olt.1.NG• 10 A.M. al C1ntr11I 611"< or &lend1lt, lll Eddie Rickenbacker, a native No. *"' N. (t-nl rlll A'lt' .. (O!JnlV Qf Los A09ele•. NOTICE Of' S.l.LE SUit ol C11l1lornl11. Of CoJwnbus and the "Ace O( MOXON, tHC ., 1 Cilllornl• (Ol'POl'lllion. So far'' ~roow" !o tM Tr1ndettt•. •II Aces'' in \Vorld \Var I Plt!nr111, ~s. ARTHUR FOY, 11.,1, Y. y bl!>!ne•s nA~' •nd ~<1d1eHe• u~d bi .. , MERU. FRANK B.1.HNSON, INSTITUTE Tr11n11ero" !or !l>e tt>,ee Yt'llti 11•1 PIS• Rickenbacker, commander FOR CREATIVE ORIGINATION PRE~S. d1~: S11m•.
of the 94th Aero Pursuit OOES 1 t11rovo1> v. !nt!usr"", o...ienoont• 0~100~1 A~rll BL 1~~1 •i~ ~,~'"'"''
Sq d k , t'-"H I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN t!tal 11\e C~ll>~: P~llch"~ Tr~n~:ert• Ua ron, nO\\n as •n:: a Un<!er>IOned will •ell, i! public tox!lon. lo Cl'n!ral tlank ol Gltlldita in !he Ring" sq u ad r 0 n , '"" hi11nt•.' l>icrcrer. 111 1n2 Mlr""11.,., ,11 N. c...,,,11 .1.v•.
• Drive. Irvine. C1ll!ornl11 9l66'. ol l .00 O!tlldllt C1llf 'lMil downed 26 German aircraft. p.m. lln June '· 1Pll. tl>e Pf'r\Qn~I Escrow Ho. 1l11K Hls squadron shot do.,,,·n 69 l>f!Jlle•tv c1e1c•ibe<I •• toUow'· 1 · SPt-r•!•r . 101u Proct<Kh Receiver, 1n!l(le( WVTR ; 1 • SRC 1'11,.h~~~cr 0r&nQe ':t1111I O&•IV p;f~I, enemy planes. 10 01~1>1av. moi1et 1s11.YQ9; 1 -s1i c M•v 10, 19''· 1111 /j Control Function P•r>el, mooei 61~..-~ * -SRC 01~1•~. "1odel 6511"601; 1 · SR C PUBLIC NOTICE Willy Brandt has .fia'Ml to Tl!ne cocre Gt'rt .• moc1e1 6190-9S~~11.J , i, ----~~~--
di '-~ dest" · • · -SRC Pe!cl> Pariel, mocre! 660!).J:rn; 1 •· ~---=; ,.-7,,.--= an UJ1 SC~ Jnatton In SRC Time Code Tran•, mooel SnG-100; I L . 1
~ FICTITIOUS IUSIHl!SS Norway for a JO-day vacation · sRc Remo11 011t11a'f, model 6l21-1CM ; 1 · N.1.ME STATEMENT 'th hi ·r SRC Time Code Trdn1 .. mode-! '211).109; 1 l1lt' 1011.,....,"9 ""'''on• d•• .io•~!I Wl S Wl ('. · SRC Power S.,pply, model &1C>11S; l · buione" •• A spOkesman for his Social SRC ()pui Vl!f"i!;c1Uon, n>D<!tl l19--IT·!iloi· llfVINE HOST MOTOR 1-<0TEL
De . rt 'd tk-!Oil; I · SRC Op u1 Gt'ntr11or, mooel m . COMf>ANV, A "'""~''"'O· 161 & mocrafJC pa Y sa1 ltc ~1-514-lCO; 1 ·SR( Opus Ger>er•tor, "1odel Pullmllfl A'lt'nue. Santa ,O,nf. (all!orn:~ Brandts left inunediately after n 9..el-S1&-IO'J; I -SRC Tlmt (Dd• SANTA ANA VAlLE:V IRRI GATION
I · f hi PrOQr•m, model 10 ns1.9!)9, 1· SR( COMPANY a forpO<~hOI'! 1'>4 Nortn e eci\Oll 0 S party deputy, Eldp.eel Time .l.CQ11h!1f<>n O,.play. tnod•I Gll!Utll, O~~ngp, Calllorn,0 ' V)~. It e Im u t Sc b m Id t as 6S7'~J; 1 -SRC T•me Ols.plAv, mOO•I MAR1"1E CAPITAL. 11ic, a ') t • S?00-900; l -SRC Oous Vl'f'1flcar.on, mo<1el ""Po'•"""· 11l81 eu .. rte>i c .... ier Orl•r.
1
chancellor. Brandt resigned rn.a1-s.12-110t: l -SRC Otlu• Verllkotlon. Irvine. Cali!()rnla '11M~ . the post May 6 because of a mooet SS7-10S! 1 -~RC Remele D•IOl~y. JOH N " ""d PF.NfLOf'C .I..
:.. . ~ spy scandal. ~~;1der';,1..a;1,;.~;/1o~c~s~."•: s~ny. ~= ~~1~1~~.~dT "-n!:~81 i,~;~• a1.a, Tv11;~. ... * Remot• (Ofllfol P•nel. mo<l•l RM·lli: 1 · Tl>" buline>s ii CO'lducllt(! bf • t, ' . Mllrlnlz Mixer, moctel )300; l -M11ani1 ~c!nersn,p. • ""~ Deputy City Alty. Wllllam Ml~~. model ZSO; 1· M1ra"!l Ml.tr. J01'N .1.. HULllEll:T. l'a>r"'' ., -,,."" \ \. Saffran or San Diego smoked modtl :lO: l -Maranll :"'he•. mod"1 l?OO: Tl>ii Sld!e<nent WOI t•!ect W•1M t~t •"'ilill" 4 """J • 1 • . 1 • Ploneff Stereo O••Pl~y. rnocrel SD· county Cl••~ ol 0.fr>ge cov"!y 0~ M#Jr three packs of cigarettes daily noo: , -Kooltronlc Fan, "•ode! KPcs2K>; 1, 19"·
DIDJERIDOO WINS FLEET HONORS AT BYC the last z.s years before being ~oi;s~:;;rT~:r~~~~'C!;,t';':·~~ 11:111sM.1.1<1 .1.1<10 scHMtt:srNio
0 J . B 'II p di H · p · ned t · ..............,.....i 520-11)(: 7 Wooden C1blnet•; s E!.-crronic 133 O-OV.r Drlvt, Suitt 6 wner 1m a1 ey rou y 01sts ennant ass1g o write a t""t'"'x'"' Ricks: 1 00~ Mi•cei•~neov• Paneii. HtwJMtt1 1wch, ceu•orn11• n"6 ---------------------------! Cablei. HardW11rt, '"cl lndtscribtt>le f'Uln / Mallf". Put>liln<1d Orang• (0.011 O~+ly P<101. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN tl>et u l<l M8y lJ, l'O, 11, and Junt J, 191• 1!!!·7' --------------------------·lule wm be mbct1 lo sallifr a lu<lllmtni ----------ar>d • Htn acQuired bv 1~ un<1ersl9ned !n PUBLIC r.;OTICE Sul)t'rlor Cout1, Cou~l'f of Or&ngt. Celt Numbef' X166611, tor raoor, l~ilt a...i --·----------Boat. Dismasted A'ovCATJSEMC.NT
Health News ... mocrltlc1t1011\ •~It'd to said penon11 SLP-7UM
Strong ,Breezes The Golden Period
For Whiplash Injuries
oroc:>erfy Jl'I 11W wm of SSl.014.73 and tor SUPfRIO. COUllT OP THI! coo!$ of sale. ltn<! !nat m0<e ll>an !•n (101 ST.I.TE OF C"LIFOllNt.I. l'OR <la•• l>itVI elapHd ''""'••Id sum became THE COUNTY OF OR.I.NOE oue Ha. A7ttlf oATEO: Mil¥ 16, 197, Oll:DER TO 11tOW CAUSE"'* (H.l.HGI MOXON. INC OF NAME 61' Elliot O llurlck In l~o Matt..-of M.t.<,jU[L L\1(10 BUll:ICI( AND t1Lo0MGAll:DEN OIOSOAOO For C""n9'f of ~am .. .l.ll'or!ll'fl •f Law WHEREAS. !l>e applictli:.n ol l.IA.N UfL
''°'WI '' II LUCIO O!OSOADO lor Cl'l8"9e o! "'"'' II ,.. ....,,. si.. 211! ~ ... l>l1tfl CIUl'I' hlt'd will\ !Mt' cltr>. ~! 11>1\
81"'1'1' HUl5, Catllwnll 90212 . Court. 8f\O I! apewar lng !rf'm '"'<l Dr. Garv Coulurc of the' movl'mentofthC'hendandncrk. Pu!>ll'hff Ort1>99 Co.st Oellv Pilot. •PPlltetl"" 11>ar ,did •1>1>1•c~n1 <If\''~' I<> " • I ·d 11 " D C M•y lO. 197' lSOl!·I~ have l>ls """"' cMr>ged To ll>e proPoHd Couture Ch1ropraclic office h:is .' nci enta y, r. outurc --n.ome o1 MANUEL o1oso.1.oo. JR
Buff et Regatta
Californi.:i Yacht CI u b' s
lnvitational 0 n e-Design
regatta scheduled Saturday
and Sunday. drc\V a '"'hopping
132 boats in 12 classes, but
s!rong northerly \\'inds on
Sa turday virtually blew them
out of the \\'<l.\cr.
One race \1·as s .:i i 1 c d
Saturday but the r a cc
i:ommittce canceled any
further racing a fter on c
catam<1ran \vas dismasted in a
collision and there were
:.everal capsizings. Results 0£
one race:
TORNADO -(I 1 Screaming
Yellow Zonker, Tim Taylor.
CBYC : (21 Duck J~a\vk, Rick
Taylor. CBYC: (3) No More
Trouble, Art J\1c\vman. CYC:
141 <;o You Turkey, R. Paul
Allen. SDYC.
P·CAT -ll 1 ;..tiss Chris,
Kurt flfiller. KHYC; ( 2 t
Yel!ov,: Submarine. '0 wen
fl1inney. SSSC: 131 Banshee,
Ken Bartlett, ABYC; (4) The
Sting, Norman Dean, KHYC.
SOLING -fl ) Green Flash,
Ben Mitchell, CYC.
PC - ( 1 l Brigadoon, ri.tike
Schachter. SMYC: (2) First
f<~iddle Hilliard Brown, SMYC.
TEMPEST (I) Imp
Streak, Lee Wesson, SCCYC;
(2) No name, Doug Steele,
SCCYC.
CA!r25 -(I) Windseeker,
Gene McKinnon, PMYC; (2)
Get With It, Harry Frank,
CYC; (3) Liquid Giant, Harry
Chesley, SBYRC; (41 Quest,
Don McPherson, PMYC,
CA!r20 -(I) Thundet1Tlug,
Stu Angus. WYC: (2) No
name, Jack Wilder, WY.C.
COLUMBIA·24 ( 1 )
Riparian, Bill Worden, SMYC:
(2) Dabbler. Tom Worland,
SBYRC: (3) Borracho. Jack
Bohn. S\tYC; (4) Papa's
Pacifier, Mike Mintz, SMYC.
RHODES-t9 (I) The
c:rcat Pumpkin, Hal Gicdt.
SF'VSC: (2) lnspircd, Bill
Stern. VYC.
GEARY-18 fl) Exit,
Austin Peeples, CBYC; (2)
Confusion, John Sch i b I er,
CBYC,
470 -(1) Dave Ullman and
John Jakosky, BYC; (2) Tom
Linskey and Curt Langford,
\VYC; (3) Grubbs and Marble,
CYC : (4) Atkinson and Rice,
\VYC; (5) Al and Mary Smith,
ABYC.
Snipes Hit
By Winds
;i strong appt·:.tl to :iccidC'nt \'ic-pc11n1 s. out, "the research coun· PUBLIC NOTICE NOW. THEREFORE, it " ~01etw
· c'I of the US A"r F has 1--------orcrart'd and nlr«!e<:1 111a1 ell ""'"'''" l1ms lo make !hrm aware of the 1 • • 1 orce Slf'-1u10 on1ertl!tc1 In rne $elo m11111 M <h"'nqe M importanec of immcdi;ile dcmonstrat~ that the normal FICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS name aPPt .. r Deto-ra above en1i11ed couri. m 0 d , .• n neck can withstand a forward H.l.ME STATEMENT In OeponmtMI J lne<'Hlt. lo:.8tM "' 100 ' · 1·1 · " I I The lo11owlfl0 Pllf'•Dfl ls c1oin51 M lnf't' Cl~ic Ce-nT..-Drive Wei!, S1n1~ And, .:hi ropracti c snap~1ng I ty limes u1e ~rce o ••: c1111o-rn·•· on,,,. Zod oav or Julv, 1o1,, ar rx:.tmination i:rav1ty before producing a GORDA Ltz, 900 811yslde Orlvt. !t>e ri.our of lO:OD •m. tllt"O afl<I ifte•• to · · · b ( 1 b k NeNOCM BtdCI>, C&ll!ornl1 t2o.60." V>Ow C~UI!, If any lf'>ey h~ve, wnv tit• for whipla:;h maJnr 1n1ury U ony.a ac -FAR WEST SERVICES. INC., "'~PllllCfttion forth1not-ofn1,,..,hoo1<1no1 injuril•s. Jn a ward snapping of '.1ve times the Celllornl• corporation. T6n Reynold>. t>e !tr•nre<1
·.·1.·1i"ffi<'lll I>•. force of gravity can be Senti .l.nl, C.•lifl>rnle 'l11'0S IT IS FURTHER OROEREO l~~t • " ~ • Tl>I• bll1l11e1s 1, cOf>dyc!t'd ~Y a coor o1 '"'' 010er be P1JbliY1"1 "' tha Coutur~· no\('d tol1•ratcd. '' corPOritlon. 0.111. Pi101, a 11ew•11aper o1 Pfflt'!'•I
th •. ,, th• f1•·.·1 ll also. s.hould be noted that FAR WEST SERVICES. INC. <ttlUlalion, Pfinte<l I nd Du~I '~ .,., '"" ,. '" Witllam C. Mcln!yre (lty ol (MT~ M•~•. (QllnTy of D•ftnll'f, three U'Ccks the rlast1c1ty of the neck struc-Vice Pretldent si~re M ca1;f0f nie, once 1 -t~ tor
a f t C r a tUfl'l) decreases u·ith advancing Th j\ >!1!1me<1! WAI lllfd w:tn the fo11r (fJ •UCCtO\ive "et~\ Dtlr<r 1<> 11'1t ' /. "I I " D Cou111y Clerk ol 011~ Cwnly on M•Y cr~11 above •l'l for !he r101r1no or ~~·d •P. .. ~ ' "'.'whiplash in· ai;:c. n genera, says r. u, 1,,.. Dllcenon.
Dr.G...,. jury co~ld he Couttrrc "the older the victim SOHENSHINE a. All:MSTll:OHG DITt'd Mtv 16, 197(
Cout.n. D.C: ca I I e d th c the more likelihood or injury 500 NIWPOl"I Ctr. Or. FRANK OOMENCHINI d d · b .1. h h N1wJl'(tt1 Blttft, CllllOMlll flUO RONAL~udf.' l'~E~h:Ei.VPff•or Co11rl 1'goJden period Of treatmenl, '' an. IS ,a I l ty l rou g Ttl '40-tllO JlS Wttl Tltinl S!rttl
"If individuals would only whiplash.' • • . f'llm s1n11 A111, c.11uorn•a
T h I c l Of Publl•h<!od Oranoe Co;nt Cady Pllol. (nf) 1.ll-4J3I reali ze the need for immediate e comp 1 a ions M•v :io. 'O, -.Id JvrM 3, 10, 191, 111 .. ,. Anome.,. tor P•UtiMrr
examination and treatment whi1>lash injuries are many and Publl•hl'd O<~noe ,.,,,~1 o~;i, Pilot.
following an accident," says varied, Strain.s,. s~rains, frac-PUBLIC NOTICE M"y 20. 21, "nd J~ne J. io. 197• 1810•14
Dr_ Couture. "In the three lures, nerve lnJuncs, muscle ---SLP-1011 PUBLIC NOl'ICE ___ _ \\'tl'k period following ;in ;ic· spasms. ruptu~ed disc., nerve F1cTrT1ous BUSINESS __ _
cldl'nt proper care and lrc;1t-ro?l comr~c~s1nn, brain and NAME STATEMENT NOTICE TO CREDITORS
I " th ( t t I Tl>e fo!lowlng perton Is dOlt>Q buslne1~ SUPERIOR COUR• '' .,, rrH·nt of a whiplash injury c:in ~p1na _c?ru ITIJUry a s re c 1es a): s • ,
'nlo .. ,.,ntusu"llyth•catcnsthc "'''"' '"'''· .. ~ M•<'"'"' TATE OU.l.LIFOll:Nl.1. FOil olten save a person a lifetime .. "' . ., " • . eivcr .. Nrwport Belich, c-:i:iornia"O'/MO. THE COUNTY OF ORANGE of p;1in and discomfort." JOlnts with traumatic ar-FAR WEST SERVlCES, IN(., i Na. A·ltSOO
t thr·r." a D c t C1lllornl1 IOl'POl'llion. 1612 Rrvnold1. Elt ... te 01 ALIC E c. Ll~TER:. Decto\l-ld ")'ou must remember.' says .,1 is, s. YS r. 00 urc. sani. Ana. Celifornl1> 91105 NOTICE is HtA:fav GIVEN ,0 1~
Jlr, Couture, "that a whiplash _All lo~• _frequently an old Thli bu'Jneii I• con<ktct~ by • cre<:1itor1 of '"e a1xwe namtcr dece<1t-nt
'
· .. ,· ... y do".•n't alwa~ ma"1·reet whiplash 1n1ury c.omes back to (orpora!lon. inet atl PetMtn• h1vir19 tl•irns •o••n~t tr..
" ,., .... ~ J~ " " FAR WEST SERVICES, INC. "_Id <le1:0!'d<!nt are ru1virecr lo file t~m. itself until 48 hours or more af-haunt a person if he has not w1111am c. Mc1n1vre w•th '"" ne.c:ena•v "0Utller1. in tne o!lkt-
tcr :in accident. Oncn a victim reccivrd proper c:•re and treat· Vice Prtllde111 °1 the clerk of 1ne above rnlllltd co11rt or
t I II · h · · " This st1tem1n1 w11 fll..:I with 11-. lo pre .. nt l~tm, wl!h tne n...:e$;,ry i.-; 'st unned' rii;:ht artcr an ac-men ° owing t e tnJury, coun1v Clerk 01 Or•!!!I• COllrlfy °"Min v011C"'9rs, to 111e uoder~lgne<1 e1 t!>e oltl(, t:idrnt and doesn't note any or says J)r. <.:outure. "When we 11, 1914. 111 lier attorney, ARTHUR o. GUY J1t
th · • Id · d' S.....i.IM •1111 AITl!ttrt119 .l.llornty '1 L\w,_.1:t:J Oovtr O•ive. 'su11~ the whiplash effects. Jlowe~·cr, say ere is a go en peno set Mewl*' err. er. 1, Newocr1 BM"cfi', c111rorn1~ 01660, wnleh
:ifter a night's sleep, or cvl'n after a whiplash y,·e mean just NtwllOM B..U.. c1utom1 .. nuo 1, the fll•ca o1 t>u1lnn1 01 !hr vnder1;9neit that It's the one ond only '""'In '11 tn•llers Prrtalnlr>g 10 tile r\lat1 cl longer. he will usually ex-' • Publl~ oranoe Coa1t 0111v Piiot, i.alcl decedrn1. wi1~111 lour mon1,.1 •!Irr Snipe sailors in King Harbor pcricncc a sti rfness or sorcnC'sS 'golden opportunity' for proper ~Y 20, 21, 1nc1 June J. 10, 101' 1111.1' Ille 11r11 Pllbllcarion o1 1111, noiic•
Yacht CI U b • 5 1·nvo'tati'onal 1n the neck. This could be con· care. lrcatmcnL and correC• 1-------Oe1e<:1 M•~ J, lfl•
Sidcrcd 0.1 positive tip-0fr of a . lion." PUBLIC NOTICE ~!~~r'fxH.:·,h~o,::~ o1 regatta Saturday found \\''ti rd t t t t r • \Vhiplash ini"urv," 1 1 rega o rea men o SV'·74112 11e ebov1 """'"° cre.c:t'Cl•nt themselves submarining at '" · · · · h Id be A1tTMU11: o. ouy, Jit. • 'Of course:• adds Dr. 1nJUr1es ll s OU remem· FICTITIOUS BUSINESS ""°""'I' II L•w
times as the 20-25 knot winds Couture, "the whiplash symp· bered thaL more than 700 Tr. to1~!'r! ST!~:'.'"!,,.. c1o1na ~:1,.~r Drl\09
built up a vicious sea. toms can be presenL right leading insurance companies tM.t•lneu ••: ""'""' .. The regatta was canceled awa.v." recognize chiropractic care as J a. J ENTERl'RISEs. 1s.o SinierfOI' T ... cn11 ~~•Uforn1i n~
fte t (th scbed led f. t ' d t th C tu re .-,,,_,cost• Mt>H, c111ffltn1a tM27 Att.mn for l•tt11t11 a r woo e u 1ve The most prevalent symp-prac ice a e ou J1m1i "'· Lat, 1s11 HJotiland Orlv., Publlshe-c1 Ore •, 1 .
h d be 'Jed Tb Ch'ropractlc off•'ce Tho·s ln· Nf1'110rt Be&ell. C1lltornl1 92'60 Mo 119' °"1 D••t1 fll!OI. races a en sat • e toms arc the stiffness and ten-1 • J•tk M. $ykt•, 1211 Klntflsll« Dl'l\09, Y " 13. 20. 21, 1t11 isn-11 winds were even stronger on dcrness in the neck and eludes automobile llability, Hvn1111111on lkl.c"' c1111om1• ""'
Sunday. .headaches. There can also be medical pay and on-the-job In· This 11v11111•• 11 t1e1no conducied Dr 11 ____ P~UB..:.:L~l~C~N~OT::_IC:e::_ __
Trophy-WfMers on the basis 11;1us<'a. blackouts. di;xinE'liS juries covered by workmen's 1NrtntnJ"~!;., A.. t.• SLl'·'•:Ni r and \'ISUOI disturbances. "And'! com~nsotion. • Thi•,,,,,.,.,,.,,, IHtd Wlltl IM Clllmly NOTICI TO Cll:IDrTORS o two races: (I) Tom Nute, \Vhen should , ... 'onvcsto'•ate cterk °' 0r111191 coun1Y on Mav 11, n14 suf'•R10tt cou•· 0 , .,, MBYC; (2) Eric Conn, ABYC; he notes. "in .better than sq · "' ,.a,.. sTAT• otJ CAt.1111011141.-, ;011:
SANTANA-12 (JI Fancy, pcr<'<'nt nr lhC cases tbcro is· thepossihilityofawhiplash? Publlantd 0r;1rioe C0tsl 01Uy Pllol, THICOUNTYOFOll:ANGE (3) Dave Schibler, MBYC; (4) b , After any acc'odent-r any M.ly 20, 21. •nd .111r11 3. 10. 1'1• uu-11 H .. A·1Mti Bob Martin, SMYC; Troll, Ron Ron Fox, ABYC·, (5) Jin1 lo\v uck p:.tin.' LI -. .., E1t•t• ot JOSElllH J, kLESs Otcei"' What is whiplash and "'hat ls me you ~xpencncc oi sorcne1ts PUBLIC NOTICE NOTI CE 1s HEAE&Y c;ivEN to ,.-_K_as_ln_e_r_, _sccv __ c_. ______ BoJ __ dl~,_KH __ Y_C_. __ • ____ I ilscuu~e'e or stiffness In the neck-you u·tc111or1 °' in. •bov• n•mtd cle.c:.tiM~t
'"fC'chnicully s""'akin"," sa•.. Should consulL the Couture PICTITIOUs aus1N1.ss ~; ~~· h•v1no t1ahns 1111tn11 ._ I ~ • '" Chi ) lfi ""-n.... MAM8 ITATIM•NT wllh...... •r• ..._,Ired lo tilt ll'!ttn. Dr. Couture, "a whiplash neck ropract c o ce. Jue uvo.;• TM 1onow1no P9'Mlfl 11 dOlno 111.rtlnMt °' 1~'ti.t.T:':Z ::11er1, In 111e otllt•
Injury is the jnvoluntary4hrusl ton are spec:iaUsts In $lructural ": 10 """"'' """'• • 1n1111tc1 to\trt, °'
Commod De . . fllerrill in Lido 14s and Phil ore Jerry vir1an Ra • La Mnr11-""t
introduced flag officers ROO mmmg ia sers. Third T tin Re tal Itch
Scha I . modo B was Wilson High with Broce Olm.en g C pe ' vice com re; · Golison ia Lid1>ll3 and Mark t;;~i~~:n=.and Vredenburgh In Lasers and OfHemorrhoidal Tissues
Voyagers Vodlt Club Jed off fourth was Calallna Island • Promptly Relieved the day's activ!Ues wilfl Its School with John Rose and
Jradlllooal brealtlul ·at IJs _T._Cortlrt _ _.:::Y:...· -----I lnmanyCl""Pn!pantlonH dredsolpatl..,l&lhqwed !hit
'quart.rs atop the Blue Dblphln · pt •·m-ry,.J'•! to bet""' In motl• <aSeS. In Building on Via Lido With chairman Frank p ..... P.,,.. ,w ~.. -' CommocMe Ue Armstrong ~nted peri>etuaJ u;J': ~m :C:a1~in~= i~~j~~ !:fJ~m!.nyi>!=:~t~~; Jll'!llldlDc over t!>e formal Oil! wmoers of the Campbell Sloop awe!Hn• of hemorlhoidal 1;.. .....,,mend ii for tlsoir !Am· rilllaC and inlnld!Mllioo al rs1ce, Laguna C !'""" Calollna .., .... UJ<d by Jnllammalion. lJieo. l'rnparallonHolnlmenL
..-. Trvpby ~~"Blleell ls and race, Ship Roct race Too!S by doclon on bun-or auppoellotieo. llo4n alllf r..... commn and Eoocrulda race . •
I
d • I d'so de-• d w,,, NEEDl.El'OIHT JUNCTION, '°" --·· ...... -· .. ~, !ht NH:tuery of th~ head and neck in any an sp1na 1 r '"' nd .w wimw Avenue. H1i1n1111111on '"""' Oflk:~ ... o, JMIES 1.''""' 11 IM......, direction, and the resultin• advice you Crankl)' an sin· c11tRrn11 f'U.17. w .. 1min.t1r,., MASON, 1n1
.lnslic recoil of the head and cerely. Should )'OU require ad-•· c. IU•ltt, 1°'° lrookflnl "*· ""' mQ. \Vhkll 1:-ttt:'f,11111"'""· C1n+orn111
d I I ed. I h Ill 1 .. c11, C1UtOl'nl1. 11141 \ll!Otl'll-1 ICt of IMJMM ffl n-0ck In the OJl!X>'lte direction, It ona m tea care l ey w T"'' MIMt• ,, COtlductld iw 111 to, ..... 1,1• o1 w':ct'J:•'••u Ptrt11rr1111 with inJ'ucy to tha. surroundln~ tell you and coopetate rully wJth 1rw:t1v1®1I month• ,,,., 1111 tlrn ... ~nt1 • '11111111 ltllllr • h h I I c $. c. 1111111 nollc.. ,....., ''''°" Of 1t111 and supportln~ tissue1." ot er P YI c ans on your cas • Tiii• 1t1t1m1n1 w;11 1111!1 wlltl 1111 D•l9CI Aiwu 17, 1,7.._
The common causes are •uto Or. Couture malnlPlns or~ c:ountv ci.r• • Ot••,<wMY o.. t<My f, SUZANN! M KL•••
h C 1f7A, -·· ' colHi;iop. a :;udden jerk or one rices at T e oulure 010.,01 "-•ooaas ... •r•trl11 Of"" 1.-.. ti
(Ir both arms. a vtofent ~ow in Cl'llropraclle ()(flee, 2043 West· AllwMY ., Law """"'' ":. ~~111tc1 ~
the head or chin, a r'"rlex cJJrr Dr., Newport Stach <cor· 11171 h.c.ll ''"" n11 Wtllwtt•ttr .., .... ' h •· l I N1Mrl!lltl111 BNcll. Ctflflftll• MW .......,_,, Clllftn1i1 fMl2 JcrklnJt or the head due tQ f.r1&ht ntr l 7t 1:11' rv ne -near rt11 a1•1 ..,.,.., 111•1 IM<tltl
or :iudden noise, or anY Jdnd ot a OOc.o\t), PhDlle M$S300, """''""" 0.-.... CM•t Diiiy '=." ~ ="':!1.• fall that cau.se1 forcerul CC( ARS 1974 Mir 13, 20. 11, 1nc1 """'a.,,,., 111,.1• "rJI :p, •ftd Mt';., 1a. a• .,:;:11., 1=•
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Nt •ll 197' J•He Sur'V• ·-~· cf\lld ~1rvl
Ott• Wt•I
Ab!I> w •• ,
cle<>T ·~· •M ...
H1' Cl>ur
"°"' (Mii
Hett Bree Survl
"~ B•<e L•~c "' '" ~arlt
~' View
BeS\I N.~~· Survl
b .. ,~
·~ •l~!e Gw s•ver '"' Oir
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Deatlis
~ Elseivherc
SAN FRANCISCO I AP\
SUn Francl!co buslnCS! man
:ind yachtsman J)aa E.
London, 68, suffered a fatal
heart attack Sw1day at his
sumrncr hrnnc in Kali!i-pcll,
Mont., it was reported here.
L<>ndon, I o n g t i m e vice
president and general man.
ager of the St. Francis Hotel
uotll rotlrcment in 1970, was
adviser lo the president of
United Air Lines al his death.
ENGLEWOOD, N.J. (AP) -
Evans Tyree Glenn, 61, y.·ho
played trombone with Lou.is
Armstrong, Duke Ellington
and others, died Saturday In
Englewood, N.J. GI en n
continued to play in clubs
around New York u n t i I
r~nly.
ATLANTA (Ul'l) -Funeral
services were to be held today
for Jackson S. Smith Jr .•
president of the S & 11 Green
Stamp Co. Smith, SI, of
Atlanta died Friday of an
apparent heart attack.
OTI IEl.LO, \\'ash. (UPI) -
Dr. Roald Fryxell, 40, th e
anthrofX.llogist who discovered
v.·hat are believed to be the
oldest documented h u ma n
remains in the Pacific
North"·est. died over the
Y.'N.'kt.'1ld in a car accident. In
1968. Jo'ryxell discovered thl'
f\lanncs ~-Ian remains in
southweslem \\'ashington. The
bonl's are bclicvl"<f to be nlOrc
!han 10.000 yea rs nl<.I.
LOS ANc;r.:LES (UPI! -
~larlin Sackler, 75, lather of
J>ulitzl'r 11 r1 ic-Y.· 1 n n in~
play"·right Howard Sacklcr,
dit'd at his hon1c. llis son is
lhe author of '"The Great
White !lope." for "'hich he
fl't'.Ci\"cd a Pulitzer in 1969.
YONKERS, N.Y. (UPI )
Naxwell Eckslrin, 69, a
con1poser. pi :1 11 is I :ind
arr;inger. \\hO !'[X>cializf'd in
educational music. dit-d at his
homr. 1--:Ckstein \\'JS a
('OOsult:int ;ind former pi;ino
t'<iilor for a musical publishing
compan~'. (:._1r l F1sctwr. Inc
lie-prepared th<' J-A·ks1c1n
piano course and tile "Let Us
!lave ~lusic" Sl'rics.
Death N otices
OllEEN
V~1n.on Gr~...,, •••·~~nl rl' l""un• "••ch D•T~ "' <1e111t1 M11v 19, 19". 5t"<"•""'
l>e'f'dlnQ, ~ ... li .. H6~fAal~NCh MOfl~d'•
Ntllle O "'""'"II 01t• o' n•'"'" .Y•v H
1'1' 11 -10. Wfl • re,.oen! ct \(91] Jtll~r1on SI. /.\Jdwll• (•!y, (~l+I Surv.~ bv l>f'r i.on. Wdllam Kr.te<ne•. two ,111••1 M•r111e •nd Glad•• l llO<"'I>"'''
one b•o!M•. Cl.trrnce Hi"d"""· '" c••"ll cMldrfn •r.d 11,,.., orf .. ! U•.tn(l;1>l•nr•••
Strvl(fl win be l>llld luttO•••· l )0 ""'· Ptt• F"tm.lv (olOfl;tl Funeral Home. We11m:n1•e•. IC•SPEll
ACtllonv Pllollo i<;d,O<'r ''"d•n! cl II.-) Wtll Wol.c>n. (<"!.t I.le• .. (dill QA!~ ot
r1..,1tn Mil JS 191• Su•• •t<I ti~"''"'''' Jt"'r M1r f ICI""'" ~ i.on1. Sle•fn Ind TllOm.tl l(.tYfr (!llJQ~lf• ~u•An Alll•o~ lwo 1i•lt" R0>11•v IVHtl .. •. /,.,,v 11. ltl• 1.00 PH.. St J~·•tll•ml C ll~ .. ,,, Church. M.tn, Wfd~v. tnlermenT.
Good Sllllor.era Ctme!e•v. 81lll·Brro,ron
Co"• MHI OlrKl:.?l!s
Hrlen Quth Nl~ •tl•d""I &I la<iun,. Bite" Oalf ot M-.ttll /J.tv 1P. 191• 5UNl....:I bV he• hu1band Nr1u1n P Nott: dalr<lll!fr. ,,.,I•• N8"CY JI. Nt•• ol
!h>.er1!•r!d, C111ot .• 1>•otne• .. Re>Mfl J
Leach otrair!.t• . Cahl St''"~' 11 OD AM T'l•'<l~v ...... y ~1 ltlJ PAd' ... v.~ ....
(hap.pl lnlrr~I P11cll.c V•tw Memci•l•I
Paro. lllt' t"moiy •u9~1, COfltnt>ullOft \
bl< m110it lei 11>1 Cane...-!.oclrty. P1clhc
Vi•w Morluerv. d,.rc,,,,,
SUDEMll!llG 8P"le G !,11aefltw"O. rt1idrnt nt C!>'O!~ M~,. O•le o! dte!h MllY 19, 19)(. Survived bv her tlu•Mfld Jonn; '"'0 ~.,In•"· E•errll V1....,erPC1CI ol Ntbrt1~1 l f'<d CltrMcll Venderoool ol tow1, two ~l\1f'1, M•• Je1~l1 Pt!rv ol 10....1 11...:1
Gl"O•Gll Bau nt Cortonwr;>Od, (1111. 1~ve•~1 nl~~•• and n•nnrw• s~•vk~•
Tue..sav 4::J!! p.m. Bt!I Breadwev cn1pel,
Olrr.;tor,, BeU Broadw•v Mortuary.
AlllUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MOllTUAllY
i.27 E. 17rh St. Cosio Mesa
646-i.888 -·-IAL TZ-IEllGfRON
FUNERAL H9ME
Corona del Mor 673·9450
Cosio Mesa 646-2424 -·-llLL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway. Cosro Mesa
548-3433 -·-
McCORMICK LAGUNA
HACH MOllTUAllY
1795 laguna Canyon Rd.
"494.9415 -·-McCORMICK
MISSION MORTUARY
28831 (ammo Cop1strono
Sao J..,oo (op•1rror>0
495-1776 -·-PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAllK
Cemerery Morl\/Ory
Chapel
3500 Pocolic View Drive
Newport Beoch, Colilornio
644-2700 -·-PHKFAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOMI
7801 Soito Ave .. Wes1m1n5ter
893-Jl2~ -·-IMITHS' MOllTUMY
627 Molt! $1,
Huntington e.oth
536.6539
You cCln Charge
DAILY PILOT
laul~d Adi
642·5678
' • • • • •
• -•
Monday, May 20, 1974 DAIL V PILOT 9
Gates . Ap ears los88t to OG Sheriff's Badge
Bv O. C. HUSTINGS Or .... a.nr Piiot 111tt
Since he first took office In
1~7 , Orange County Sheriff
James MusiCk has won re-
election every four years
•lmost without a fight Nobody
could budge him.
Now. after 26 years as tbe
county's top law enforcement
officer, he is retiring and six
rpen are competing to replace
him.
ONE OF 111E~1. 35-vear-old
Sheriff's Lt. Bradley Gates, of
Capi~rano Beach is thought
by some to have. been ~
picked by Musick as his
suCC<SSOf,
At this point, just about two
weeks from the June 4
primary, Gates is the man to
beal
11is closest comp et it or
seems to be former ~XPfCSS
Police Chief George 5avord,
now a lawyer.
At one time, Savord's record
as a lav!'man earned him the
support of most county police
chiefs and a growing base of
communilv support
But thcil. after starting out
fas!, his forces fell silent for
111any \l'Ct'ks
tinlil just be-
fnr<' the fil-
ir11:! dcad!inP..
Sine,. then .
a <;eries of
mis1ake" 11nd
, ..
S<'I b.'.lcks 91"";::
m:iy ha \' e ~J-. -~
dnnl' irrepar-:1,
:1h!t l°':trn' If) SA.VOID
his chanCt'S o{ outrunning
Gates.
lie almost missed the r..tarch
8 filing dC'adling, but got a
reprieve \\'hen a legal quir~
rx·nnitted a th r Pe· day
l'Xlension of the deac!line.
TllEN HE failed to file his
candidate disclosure forms on
time f\1ay IO and had to pay a
$10 penalty fee to file t~
la1r.
Beth errors were altrituted
to staff problems.
the support of a large pre net
organization run prlmanh: bv
members of the oounly's
Mormon commwtlty. He Is one
of 4,000 Latter Day 'Saints
now living in the county.
Also In the contest is Gene
Vinlove, a Fullerton
businessman who o w n s
several beer bars, one of
wN<il m in Costa Mesa.
VINLOVE, A former Vernon
Pollce Department lieutenant,
has the ~inction of being the
flI'St man to annoy~ his
candidacy for the job, having
entered the race I ast summer.
Vinlove has also targeted
the county jail as his chief
campaign plank and says he
wiU "personally inspect all
facilities If cle(:tetl."
A longshot, La~na Beach
businessman Spero Janise, is
seeking the job, but has run an
extremely low-key campaign
so far.
His few pieces of TilC'rature
also criticize the jail nnd J1<'
claims the sheriff has allowed
drug problems in tne cou nty lo
get out of hand .
Janise also is no stramger to
political undcrt ak1n11s. ha\•il•i.:
been active in local politics in
Laguna Beach.
Another candidate is 32-
year-old Jerry Lee Lav. r<'nl'c
of Costa M(•sa, a s e l f -
,
proclaimed "herb ttealer" wh,,
1s due to gQ on trial for
marijuana sales oo election
day.
LA WR ENCE, WUO ha s
done no campaigning, says he
is aiming his campaign at
young people and adds that
marijuana has "restored my
life."
ll he is convicted ol the
felony charge, he would be
dlsqualified for life from
holding elective office, even if
he were elected.
If there is any coolest left. It
would appear to be the fll<.'<Ofl
between Gates and Savord,
with Norris looming as a
threat of pushing the raee intO
a November runoff.
G a t e s , a good-looking,
amiable man, freely admits he
has been preparing for the job
for a Jong time. His past
record and educational efforts
show il.
11e has a maslers degree in
incriminalogy and h::1s bce:i
exposrd to most 11spccts or
the Sheriff's operation· !Jc h<i s
served in patrol. detectives.
administration and in the
jail and t'OOrdinated t h e
mutual :iid pact \Yilh the cities.
But his critics claim Gates
has been too closely identified
\vith Musick, Vl'ho has come
under stiff criticism in recent
years for falling to provide ag·
gressive leadership in lbe de-
partment.
THE COUNTY jail opera-
tions, though housed in one of
tbe mOS'l modem facilities in
the state, have been criticized
by the Grand Jury as a "clau-
roorn for crime" and nothing
better than a warehousing
operation.
Savord and Norris have fought it for years. Gates also
capitalized on the criticism said he will make some
with vows to improve the sit-changes in the jail system.
uation. DESPITE THE handicap of
But Gates has s a id a poorly-run campaign, Sa.
repeatedly he Is running with vord is making many appc-ar-
Musick's endorsement, not as ances -and seems to present
his stand-in. his stand on the issues clearly
Gates, for ex.ample, was a -·--.;.;jil!iii!jii.iimlli!!i!ii~~
strong backer of a substation m•" uR~• Ct\lll wAP. . the th M . k ~D OOLLS CllOGUNS m ~u county' USIC .
and "'ilt educatt-d authority.
It appears do u b t f u I ,
however, that he will be able
to overcome the lead Gates
hns built tip in support or
money unless the remaining
competitors draw en o u g b
votes to force a runoff.
RABBln
~..-,~/ • AUTO-HOMEOWNalS
'Sky' Du11lap Honored
At Sa1ita Ana College
MAl'INlNG'.S. . COLLECTORS
SHOP •.jJl!VL.t
rt:· INSURANCE ·.·-'t/'-' 1914 Harbor lo11leword ~-,' COSTA MESA ~ ~ -, 548-5554 ' ----· -·
HURRY-UP I HAIRDOS:
SANTA ANA - A new Four-
story building to house social
sciences and language arts at
santa Ana C.Ollege will be
named Dunlap Hall i n
memory of John ''Sky''
IAlnlap, an Orange County
journalist and H).year member
of the college staff who died in
1968.
Dunlap, who graduated from
SAC in 1931, worked with the
Los Angeles Times, Santa Ana
Register and United Press. He
helped found the old Santa
Ana Globe.
In 1953 he began a 10-year
stint as assistant lo the college
president. He left to found
Pacific Clipping Service which
his widow, Velma, s l i 11
operates.
The new building, the tallest
on campus, will open for
classes in Sep t em be r .
Dedication ceremonies will be
held during ho m cc om in g
\Veekend ip. November.
The $2 million facllity \\'ill
include 14 new classrooms.
seven laboratories. th re e
lecture halls, !oor sentinar
rooms and faculty offices lo"
the sociaJ sclence a n d
language arts divisions.
CUT, BLOW 'NGO!
we show you now 10 care for them step by step. Our
curl coax ing SCISSOR STYLES are all lu ss-lree and
lunc11onal and are easy 10 do as just shampoo! In·
eluded are !amp cuts. l inger lumble cuts, curling iron
culs. blower cuts. wash towel dry. brush ·n ltufl cuts
or simple wash <ind wear cuts. They are all SCIS~
SORED. take-care-of-yoursel f styles. Good !or any
age. n11y hair. NO teasing. 110 rollers. no pins. NO
POLLUTING HAlR SPR AYS . ALSO NO SET PEA·
MANENT WAVES YOU MAY NEVER WANT TO
SE T YOUR HAIR AGAIN.
JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING
Huntinafon Beach
'S64 HamittOfl •• ,,.
968-3535
Fullerton
305 H. Harbor ll•d.
879-3863
Opr11 Doily I .t..M. to I 0 l".M. •Sol. S-t to S, .M.
Sale Pri<es Ho....i ·
Maa.6' Toes., MOJ 20 6' 21 /ptin9 !pC'cial1 ..•
For Homca & Gatdcan
" Cro ss®
GARDEN SHREDDER
''Makes Valuable Holural Fertilizer Al Ho Cast -Ho Hauling or Burning!''
• Powerful 5 h41., 4rydt1,.ine fer lawn & garden wasl1
• Shreds, cvts & pulftfizts materials & dtpasits in Lag.
• No saeens to cJov-dirld driu for more power. Gates. on the other hand, is
running a smoo th , .-------~
redudng, rnltdting & cempnt molting. S'S
• RtrrtOYoble hopper with safety c1"ter, rubber deflector
mh'in & safety cvt•ff swittla. "·ell-choreographed campaign f~~~~~
01le1I by con-.i~
I r i b utions
from llepub·
litan parti-
san<> surh as
John \\'a~ne
;ind C H r I
Karrl't'!"
I.a~! \Vcek.
G:itrs re -
f1'1rled nav-OATt:s
ing collected a tot.i.I of
$-15 .000 in his Qll<'St for
\lusick's job.
The other three candidates
rrpr('Sent a broad spectrum or
t:ounty population.
TI!E TttAN WllO appears to
bl• running in th ird spot i.s
Supcrioc c.oort Clerk ~1arshaJ
F. Norris, a formcr sheriff's,
l:t•Ul!'nant \\hose majo r
com plaint is poor j a i I
conditions and a lack of
cooperation among lawmen.
Norris is no stran~er to the
campaign trails, having lost lo
r-.·lusick in 1970.
Non:is says he is relying on
Ast1ima Kids
Go to Camp
Iii Selection
SAJ\1TA Al~A -Ai)plications
are being accepted by the
Lung Association of Orange
County from ast hmatic
children age 10 to 14. who
would like lo spend a w~k at
the organization's medically
supervised summer camp in
Running Springs.
Seventy Orange Co u n t y
children will be seleded to
attend the two camp sessions:
July 29 to Aug, 5 and Aug. 5 to
12.
Camp applications
contributions to the Lung
Association's campership fwxl
may be made by oootactlng
the association at 1717 N.
BroodWlly, Santa Ana.
Irish Dance
Scheduled
ANAHEIM -An lMI S1111>
mer diince will be held by
the Orange County division of
the Ancient Order o I
HlbernlMS May 31 at I p, m, 1t
Saint J\alln, Martyr Hall, 2050
W, S.ll Road, here,
The dance II open to the
public,
Tickets may be purchaled
at the door or by -tontacU"I
the ll'OllP at 711 S. Verona St.,
Anaheim, 92804.
THI!
NEPTUNE SOCIETY ---... -., · ·--= ht ................... "" ... , .. ._ ... _ .. --. ---
\
Proctor-Silex
ICE CREAM
.MAKER
1'1fo Int Cr.om Tosffl
So Good As Old
lnltioMd HOIM Madel"
• •~·'""'kk•Cf'Hm .... r _,.,, ..... ..,.,,_ •.... ,,.o.1....,_ .. ... "'"' .... ~ • Ptwlll ............ ..
5 10''
• Use year 'rnnil -helps soln your lawn & garden dean up ~
probltllS -bvy 011 with Cl neighbor, share the savings!
Ornamental
<'',<~
,i .,
WROUGHT IRON
RAILING
• O.S.,..i.,,.,dttrr._•Mtn.
• S.tifl Mid: fimblt -iii 4-ft. ... '°"· · ~-
RIG. s 119
'1.25 -~-
Howord 10 '"
Di11ton• TWiii
t
Redwood
PICNIC TABLE
&BENCHES
REG. '169.96
MODEL#46SO
1 Stwly,......t.Mt,1,,nr.'-11.IM!f. •3 4 9 9
I a.r!i ..W. &a.-:1Msk111:!HI lfl tllfl
...,.,.._ ,
3
R
9
E.G
99
• . ,..., .. fhik. r..t...4 Wis., Hwtiftlly ........ ...,,..r.
Ah.nt1lnut¥1
, . " General Electricl>
LIGHT
BULBS
i
& a
New from Utt·lroolil
1
j
' •I ..
·CHALUMGIR
HAllDIAW
DllLLID
DAILIRTOP
COATING 11Jst n .. fnr
At This Low Prlttr•
•,_..G,t •.-iilJ.
GUTTIR
MIMDIR ...... , ..... _ ..... .. -. ._,~ ......
~ •239
'
·""· s3s9 '4.2' w.
• hnNt ""'"· liilcWeMHtM•t.
• I0,7S ... 100nts.
I
•Sfqyc ........... .... ,...,.,. .
I GJ..t f.r t.,..-S. ..... """''· .,_,. ~
J 0 OAll V PllDt Moflday, May 20, lll74
,, .,,,.
• TONIGHT'S
1 TV IDGHLIGHTS ~ CBS G 8:00 -Gunsmoke. A refonned criminal,
returning to Dodge City after se rving 12 years in
penitentiary, attempts to pick up threads of his fl Ii!e. <
·' liBC 0 9:00· -"Shoot Out." Gregory Peck. ~ James Gregory. A rehabilitated ex.gunman seeks
(f revenge from . his former partner.
~ ABC 0 9:00 -"The Executioner." George Pep-
pard, Joan CoUins, Judy Gee.son. A spy drama.
4 -i KCET ED 10:00 -Pacen1 in Terris Ill: The Issues
of Detente. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger,
Senators J . \\lilliam Fulbright and Henry Jackson
clash on nation's foreign policy.
'
TV DAILY LGG
,
Monday
Evening
MAY 20
C!J Movit; (C) (90) "81tllt at
Aptthe r1u" {wes) 'SZ -Jo~n
Lund, Jtlf Ch•nd1er. CE> r1no,.m1 "o'ltla
9:00 0 ()0 CU> (jJ Ht1t's Lucy (R)
Ll!CJ t11es to 11hst Carol Bu1netrs 6:00 ; O O OC_' m ID CB "tin •1d m r11s1n1 money lo build a
J '19.ll'.l:D?i:Jl2!-Cttl "tin school gymnasium. l onallla 0 Q:l (!)a;) "IC MondlJ Mo~1t:
•) Koa•n's Klrot'S (~) (Zh1) "Sltool Out" (R) (1'rtS) '71
I !ltrtrlf Hillb!lllts I -Gregory Peck, bmes G1tgory A
Mi1.li011: lmposs1bl1 rth<1b1llttled e1 gunman seeks it·
Mod Squad wen&t lrom his louner parlntr. who.
£1 robre G0111fl11 seven years eart1u, shot him 111 ~6 Mnle; (C) (Zhr) "llesu11td1on !ht back and tS.CllPtd w1!h !heir
of Z1th1ry Wbt1lu " (dr1) '11 _1 ·stolen money.
811dtord 01\lmotn, Angrt Otc~mson (() Tht l1ld Onu ED Kod&•J!Odae Lod1t 0 !}7; ~})CD AIC Mond•J Movie:
('£1 StMed R1cti (C) (2hr1Sm1n) '1ht C1tt11lion1(' (susp) '70--Geotge Peppard. ioan
6:30 C•J De1ler'1 Choice Collins. Judy Geeson. Oscar Homo I 0 Did v .. Dytit k1, ~11!h Michell. An 1n1e!hgence
(l2J Mt!'¥ 'rittin Silow optril1on 1n V11onot is dtSIToyed
I (J) Ho11n'1 Huo1s by couMer·tsp1onage i gtnts llnd
Zoom! one spy esc.apes bu.k 10 Lo~iJon,
Tr1ttl r11m conl'rnced that i double agent at
M1f11rit1 O'J1rrill Sh•• headquar11rs 1s r1spoos1bl1. When
little Rasull he d•s.covers which 12ent is it
7:00!(])00EDC!>CDNt•I I sponsible ht kills !ht tr1itor and
lowlin1 l'tf Oo!lln "" <1ssu111es his idtnroty lo untOYtr the
6 Movie; (C) (Zt11) "'Tiit Wild It s! ol 1111 doubl1-.1gent oper•hon_
"Ofth" (1dw) '52-S1ew1rt Gran&er., DQ) MOYit : (C) {2ftr) "Ont·E~d
Cyd Charisse. Jld~~ {drl) '61-Mllr10ll Brando,
I Wild Wtrld of lnir111!1 J Karl Malden .
wtiafs MJ Lin1? ID S11n Funci s: Tht"' Art MJ
1 LO'ft llc:y I footsteps It Takts l Th itl ([) Muy Airidttido
(J) I Drt1111 ol /u nnit 9;301J (jf ~)())Dick Yan Dytt m llm1r11da ' ShoW (R) Oick ftCt!VtS a ltUU Slit
•2l@ Drarnct 1n1 th•t tie is w•nted m a leEal ED Wa~hin(lon Stu i1ht Tait iKtion 1n Germany.
( lt ([1) lobby Goldlbo10 Siio• 0 "ews
@I) Dnm1 Eil Ytltcid1d 6) Thrtt Stoo11s ED DE!IUT P1cem in Tu ris Ill: The
7:30 I) Jonalllan Winlt1s Show (II) hsuts of Dtttntc Setrdary ol St.Ile
(3) Hoi•n's Heroes Henry K1ss,.nger. Sena1on J. Wilham O Poltu Surieon (Ill Dr Loe~ Fulbn2ht and Htnr, hckson clash
ind U GOldon try to kee ~ ltll e I on th1 na!ion's lore1gn polity to•urd
01!1ce1. from. wr1tk1n1 ,:, ch1no;;1 EE ~::~·
IOI exonerahon lrom an 1nd1scre I
tlon made when he was 1 1ook1t. 10:00 IJ (Q!j (!))CU Me dical Center
I MtlplhJHtlPbor I (HJ When i! is d1St()Y!ltd that a "ew ltat th• Clot~ I br1111ant youn~ pianist r111u11es a
Kt•Trtnuft H11nl k1dfley transplant. Dr. Gan non·s 0 Millltn $ Mnie; (2h1) "The s11rch fOf a su1tatlle kidney donor
Killtls" (mys) ·~6 -Burt Lan uninten11onattt rips tht veil 11om
taslu, Avl Gardner. [dmond 0' a lon...1:.hi<!den t1m1ly stctel.
Brien. I 0 W m i.t "t•s
(i"O) Wild lnnfdtlll C•J re1ry Mason ~ ltwilthtd CEI l'raiM the LOld Club
&J fij ~'eJ,·~,: l~~~ht '10:30 MlourntJ lo Adventur t m A·ll•b Surnmt1 All e1plora11on, ~ICic:~bJ ri o~1 the dyin1 1rt ol strett ll11eksler : Theatre 1~n' A~uita (9-0) · H<i
1
1 · ()JI "•s!Mllt Music I gan's Go.af' (RJ
JillllllJ °''" Show t €11 Mu11UI ComtdJ
EK1111rie Theatre
1
11:006 0 €11 a;) Ntw1
ro!lct Sll(ptn 0 ks! ol lifOIKllo
Thi Gllou t C1n1 [it) "i1llt Cialttry l:OOEl(~(jJ)(J.J Ciu111111ok1 "l1kt ii '~~~@ Nnn
Old Times" (Ill A relorm td cromin1I. 0 MO¥ic: .. Th• SttltrsH (dra) ·54
11!urnin1 lo Ood&t City 11ter selv· -Jae~ H•wk1ns. Gl.yms Jo/\os.
ing 12 pars in !ht penit1nt11ry m Mission: tmpon1btt
1Mtmpb to p1cl up the lhreads (() Tiit Untoudlablts
of ll1s l1fL Nehemiah P11sofl 1nd ti!§ lht S.inl .
Gloria OeH1v1n _J_Utst. I (~Cl;) The P1oneen
D i»OOttj Wlh1 M11ician ll:ISQ @ (!)l'tews
"Th• Illusion ol tht Curlilus Coun I (UJ@ Sttrt t File
terfeir· toncl. Janet Kee111n. . _ _ daugMrr of ll reformed crimi111I is 11.lOI) (~ OOl ~•CBS li lt Mov1r:
kidna pped as prison 0Uk1i l P~u1, (C) "Sand ol Angtls .. {dra) '57-
Gunttier's robbery plan progie"ts. Clar-Gable. Vvonoe DeCatlo.
Carol l1nlty, Lloyd Nolan •nd John 0 Q3: @ J.21 ED Johnny Ca non C<Jlicos guts!. Telly S.valas is e:ueu host
0 Mnit; (CJ (Zh1) "Gunlie:ht 1t 0 Movie: ''The Conquering Horde"
Com111Cllt Ctetk" (Wtl) '63-Audit (wes) '31-R1tha1d Alle n, fay Wri1
Murphy, Colleen M1lltr. (!)Tll'ili&hl Zone
O :WaJ CDTht Roe~es (RJ JJ:•5
Thiet aus•d1n1 nuns ciust prob-1 0 WIDE WORLD MYSTERY
ltms when they open 1 storehont,
communny cenllf 111 a ne1ihbor *MOON OF THE WOLF
hood 111 which 1 Pf1 tst w•~ sl11n. David Janssen Stars
S.lan t. Ad'ttnture "Moon ol the Woll" (R} m O..t~r's Chtict 0 @ (}) tl) Wide World Mysltry
Ttalfl dtl LIMS
'' Mo¥it: (C) (2hr) "Tiit S.• lZ;OO (i]Ont Sltp li,ond Cltlw" (ICN) 'SS -John Wa,ne. ID MO'li1: ''fuller Brusl'I Gi1r (com)
t1na Tu1~t1. l '50--t.ucille Ball, Eddie Albert.
ED P\tct lor "o SIOfY .le11al vie.,. C!J W1nderflltt
ol C1l1lorn11 from Mt Shll$!a ta Los I tt:l D17 •t liflc11t
An1elts. 1:00 0 (fJ TtMOITOW €D l'tntheu1t m Mo'lit : Mlt's l•n I'm Alte('I 1:45 e Mowit: "1'11 "mr fO!ill You"
(com) '37-Lt$ht HQlotrd. Olivia del (d11) '!il-T1rone Powt1, Ann Birth.
Hav1ll1nd. Btttl IJ1v11. I 1:10 e Movie: ''Wolf Lantn" (adv) '58
l :JO m Mtl'f Cirilhn Silow -Barry Sulliv1n, Pete1 Graves.
Tue5day
DAYTIME MOVIES
ID (Cl "Cm ol Outlaws" (wes )
'52 -Macdonald Care,. Alexis
Smith.
l :OO (I) (Cl "Tripll Crea" Concl. (dr1)
'67-Y11I Brynoe r. Llurtl & H•rdJ
Ftltlllttt. 1:00 0 (C) "1"ht Uft61rw1111 tltl" (lj (C) '"lobin a. tilt 5t¥ttt Hotels"
(df1) '6Z-WiHi1m lundi11n, Julot (com) '64 -Frink Sinatr a, Olin
Adams. Martin. S.ml'llJ 01vi• Jr.
t :>O 0 "ltlle tf tht Nittttlts" (tom) l:XI 6 (C) "lww C... lld* (com)
'34-MM West. Ro1e1 Prt0r. '62-Doris Dey, !lock Hudson, Tony
11:001J .,.tit SI.,. CMny" (11t)'S) '5(1 Rind1IL
.c-Johfl Btilty, Zen• Marshall (})"A Qat1Mri111 il4 tl11t1" (dr1)
....... t , A l -I l •51 '63--Rod Hudson. Rod T.,tor.
Dt"nls P~ct. R';.1 ~l'SOft u IC) '11le S.nl reballn" P•11 I (ldY) '66 -SIM Mc:Que1n, Rictl-
12:00 m "Tiit Rtftn1tr l lht Jedh1HI.. ard Attenbofou1h. Ctrtcliet Ber1en.
(l'Oftlll 'SO -Dick Powell, lune (fij (}) (C) "I f~• Ottt1 S,m"
Nlyson. Oci·nT '6'-lOSlliyl Wmki, """"
l:OOtJi(t) "L.«Q M1" (mus) '54 _1 Neil. ~ Doris 0., RoNrt Cllrnmln1s.. ~Ci' (C) ""Tk lfttN" (dr1) 6! ' , I -Mal 'l'Dft Sydow, Vvflte Mil'ftltu•. 2:tffJ-.llllOI 1M1" (d"l ,,.__.,, ''IO(!lt(l))"ho _.. (dro) 'SI &a,er, C.Um 1ec1n, r11ridl Nell. Mliii Stlnlty, LIOfd Bridpt.
What',s ci Pooka? Ask Andy
A.,,., I• a l'ooka (an •If who answers
ll'l•lon•). Ha ... his elflng In a
c1•1n ••91l' loturday on the famlly
,... .t Mly Piiot.
I
Engitaeer's .Job
E11ergy Efficient
_i\11tos Next Tasl{
Uy CARL CARSTENSEN
Of Ille 01Hv Piiot $tiff
A Ford Motor Company
execuLive has said that by
1985, tota l travel a n d
automotive energy use will be
40 percent higher than 1973
levels because of the
iocreasing number of cars on
the road.
Herbert L. Misch, vice
president of the environmental
and safety engineering staff,
said "the task of an
automotive engineer must be
to offset this growth by
improving the energy
efficiency of our automobiles.··
"I SAY IM P ROV E D
efficiency rather than the
development of a l t e r n a t c
~N HIGH GEAaj
fuels,·· he said. •·t>eeause it is
my belief that \Ve will be using
petro!eum·based fuel s for the
fore seeable future ."
l\lisch said ford and ()thcr
automakers arc "\\'Orking on
al!ernale fuels like hydrogen.
mc!hanol and gasoline from
shale and coal, but the
complexities of this
de\'elopment are such that an
early tin1e frame for bringing
them on-srrean1 is
Jn1jXlssible."
~lisch emphasized I h a t
continuing concerns O\'Cr the
l"ost .fi:P.d ..:1•A'.l.ilability of f.uel
'·\rill insure that fuel econon1v
rc1nains a top priority." Btit
he added that he believes the
energy future lies '1not in
denying ourselves comforts,
but in meetin g the challenge
of providing these comforts
with improved ef!iciency."
"To reduce demand " he
said, "there are ~ who
v.·oold have us trade off our
station wagons, fa m i l y
vehicles. small trucks, as well
as automobile air conditioning,
pov.·er steering and pov.--er
brakes.
"TII ERE ARE still some of
us who have large cars merely
for luxury sake. Our tradition
has always been to meet the
cha!lenge -not a cc e pt
limitations." he said.
As promising fuel economy
t~hnolo.e;v, Misch cite d
''imaginative .JT1atcrial sub--
situation, including hi g h ·
strength steels. aluminum.
and plastic." lie \\'arnt>d !hat
"some compromise \\'ill have
lo be 1nade in the power to
\\·eight ratio. but t h is
compromise can be mi!i~ated
by betler use of material~."
* Chevrolet set an all·time
lruck sales record for April
v.·hile also enjoving its best
passen!!er car sales month for
the ca I e n d a r vear·to-date.
Robert l\f. O'Connor.
Chevrolet general s a I e s
manager. has reported.
"N'e\I' truck retail deliveries
for April totaled B 5 . 8 8 6
breaking the mark set just a
ye;ir ago.'' O'Connor sairl.
o·connor___aiso reported that
Anril retail p::issenj!:er car
deliveries of 195.654 bettered
the il?arch total by 22,048
units. •
Chrysler, Gl\1 Ordering
20,000 \T ehicles Bacl\.
D8TROIT ( U P I l
Chrysler Corp. and General
~lotors Corp have announed
recalls covering nearly 20.000
passenger cars. light duty
trucks and motor homes with
suspected faults.
Gl\'1 s.iid il is asking owners
of about 10.000 current model
Chevrolet Lagu n as and
Chevrolet and G~1C light duty
trucks plus 1973 n1 o d e I
G.\IC motor homes to retum
thern to their deale:-s Jor
inspccUon.
\\'hile 2,800 light duty trucks
may contain defective bolts in
the front suspension .
In addition, the G).1C truck
and coach division said about
3.700 vehicles require new
accelerator linkage and rear
v•heel bearings.
Jn no case. the two car
compa n ies said. were
accidents reported.
•
U,I TtltPholo
MISER COLLECTS -Armed guards <ransfc r JOO .
000 copper pennies to New Jersey bank after coi-
lec tor Peter Hollander surrendered them for a ten
percent bonus offered by bank due to shortage.
J-lollander colJected $1.100.
Penny Pin~h
Shortage llurti1ig Industry
WASHINGTO~ (UPI)
'I'he penny short.'.lge ha s
reached crisis proportions and
chain stores may have to start
giving customers paper scrip
instead of pennies in change,
the supermarket i n du s Ir y
sa~·s.
... The situation is very
critica l in Chicago. very
critical-on the \Vest Coast. It's
spreading all over and it's
only a maUer of \\·eeks before
it's nationv,.ide,'' said a
spokesman for the National
Association of Food Chains.
TllE GROUP said some
chains already have asked
lhe treasury for permission to
start issuing scrip -paper
nioncy \\1hich the stores will
treat like nioney on return -
for as long as the shortage
lasts. The ;issociation said the
general counse\"s office at the
treasury is very reluctant to
grant such permission.
Thesh:irtage d eveloped
because p e o p I e began
hoarding pennies aft er the
Treasury revealed that rising
prices an d scarce ~1..1ppli!'~ of
copper may force it to start
minting pennies thal are not
all copper. The mint has
stepped up prodoctioo, turning
out about 35 milllon pennies a
day, and recently imposed a
ban on melting and exporting
copper from pennies.
The association said one
chain of stores in Chicago
needs several thousand dollars
v.·orth of pennies a ~·eek but
has only been able to get $300
\\'Orth .
IT SAID tHAJNS in Santa
'Barbara. have not been able 10
get rolls of pennies from the
banks at all since April. and
the same is the case in
Pueblo. Colo. Stores in
Oklahoma City. it added, can
get only about 150 pennies per
store per day \\'hile in Phoenix
the range is fron1 500 to 2,500
p<>r v.·eck per store.
The Association said the
cnly solution appears to be fo r
people to empty their piggy
banks. jars and paper bags ci
penn ies and tum them in. It
said a bank in Akron, Ohio,
recently offered $1.10 for
every 100 pennies turned in.
and v.'as deluged by JOO million
pennies from people who took
up the offe r.
Money's \Vorth
You Can Be Left
•
Holding the Bag
By SYLVIA PORTER
Across the nation,
Americans in evt>ry income
bracket have been and arc
speculating on a huge scale in
bags of U.S. minted silver
c."Oins o! 1964 vintage or
earlier.
You need only turn to the
financial seclions of daily
newspapers from coast to
coast to see
glov.·ing ads
tooting thrse
"inve5l·
ment·· op.
port un-
ities-on the
basis lh;1t ::is
the '"'orth of
the U.S. dol·
l;1r shrinks.
the value of silver coins \1·i tl
so3r. Publishers <11"' rushing
to market books on 1hl' <'lllir"
subject of speculating in
c.'Orrunoditles-particularly 111
gold. sih'er and platinun1
bullion and gold and sil\·rr
coins.
1;\1ERELY TO suggest !he
\'Olume of ac1i..,·i1v. one
Cal ifornia·based c o in p a n y
acknowledges that it alone
sold '273 million or :-1lver
roins last year. S23 •nill io:1 of
the sal{'s just in ~'il'\\' 'York
st.ate. !U.S. coins minlet! :iftrr
196• are not in\'o!vcd lil't".111~·'
they have nn .•i'1·c· conil'n\ \
S'f·elling the \'olun1e of
trading beyond any reasonable
expectations 1s the !Ure !o
investors lo purchase b.1gs of
coins on margin L2S pcrrC'nt
down. !he rest of the nionC\'
borrov.·ed at 1\ha1e1·er intereSt
rate is charged L so that the
cager inveslOrs can buy four
1inies as manv coins as thcv
could have afforded if the}o
had to pa~-100 perCTnl cash.
"But look out~" 1\·arn.s \r1r
\'ork stal e Attv. G<'n . Louis J.
Le f k o \\' i t ~. nil t ional!v re~pertC'd crus;iding I ;i ,i·
enforcetnent officer in the
sp her e of consu m('r
pro1cct1on. "You may be thl'
target of some of th c
slipperiest s\\·ind!ers operating
in the entire field of finance
today_)-
JN l\.1A!\'Y lr\STA\'CES. thC'
coins you ha\'e purchnsf'd on
margin are not being held for
you in son1e lo c;_il
depository-or anywhere else,
for U1at n\<1tter-<iesplte wh at
you have been led to believe.
"The bulk of the contracts for
the purchase of bags of coins
on n1argin are hedged, in
reality, b~· future contracts
through the various
co m rn o dities exchanges."
emphasizes Lt>fkowitz. a fact
of \vhlch the Jtt"'nera l public is
ul\erly u1ui1\·ar('.
As a waming signal o!
possib\£' deep trouble ahead
for the 01vners of these bags or
coins on n1argin. U.S. minted
sill'er coins arc cu rrently
bf'ing n1eltcd <it an estimated
ra!e of 2.000 or n1orc bags per
\reek . If the present mell rate
$hould conlinue, Lefkowitz
points out. "il is conceivable
thnl b.'.lgS of these coins mig ht
bl' in \C'ry shorr supply in the
no1·1oo·i!istant future." 'I'o
trnn.~lah· that conunent into
brutally plain \V111·1l:;, !hen 1ht!
h;igs of coins thal you think
ar(' being h('ld for you in
s:ift•ke1•ring 1n;iy not e\'f'll
f'Xi~t! ''ou·11 be holding ...
nothing:.
TII E OIARG ES you arc
pa~·ini;: the St·llf'r of the coin~
for safrkrt'ping of your bags
and rhargcs for o I h c r
purposes v.oulc!, under llK'se
cirrun\St:inCt's. a Is o be
charges for . . nothing.
\\'hi le of rourse. thcrf' arc
n1any '1'orkl·fan1ous and
r('pu t:iblc housrs draling In
prrciou.:; 1neln!s. "]<lit"']\' the
ficlil has bcron'I(' !it.erallv
linl'rrd 1vith firnls a nd
sa!e.~n1cn v.·hose background is
totally unrelated 1o in\'<'Sling
Jn co nl n1 o d i t i·c s . ' 'savs
Lrfkov.·itz. ·
Thi~ is a fi~l d 11·hich is
('7\lren1rh· sophisticat('d and
romplirated. and demand~
1ha1 both sal~man and
customer ha\'e a high degrer
of background know!tdgr and
training, Yf't, ~ra\·itating to it
:i~t· persons concrmrd 01h·
111th m a k i n g a fa st
buck-former nonsts. whisk\'
salr~men. constr u cti o n
,\·orkers, etc.
"Our in\'estigalioos have
uncol'ercd exa mple a ft er
example o! n1isleading and
fraudulen t sales," Lefkowitz
rl'\·caled in a v.'ide-rangi ng
series of inten ·iews on the new
consun1cr traps of 1974.
Chrysler .\totors sai d 3.600
Lagunas 0'41Y contain a hood
latching plalc out of position
In one case. Chrysler said.
6,880 Imperial and N c v.·
\'orker Brougham m ode I s
may contain a faulty clip that
retains the folding sea t back.
If the clip comes loose. the
seat back could fall back from
its proper upright position.
Complete .Mid-day American Stock List
SUBARU
TEST DRIVE
SUBARU
DICK MILLER
MOTORS
Hew & Used lillports
120W. w.._.crtSo.MaM
s..taA11a 557-2112
In the second case. Chrysler
sald. 1,537 Plymouth \1aliant
and .Satellite and Dodge Dart.
Coronet and Char~er mod ets
may contain a defectiv e
transmission cl'n!rnl levrl.
Because steel in the lever
did not meet specification, the
company said the lever may
have cracked or become
brittle when heated. As a
result. it could loosen nqd
allow the driver to niove the
gea r selector '\'ithout actually
shifting the transmission.
L:A. CALLS
41/2c ·~•
f'ri.,11ft' Lints -lllniM•' Sft-.,ict
Only -Call for broc~ Clftd
-'Illy rate -Son ft'DnCisco
Lintt A•ailobll' -
T~e Telephone Company
Of California
JOO I Rtcliill, C.M.
17141 979·1234
v~•. ,,.,
ld.i (!\O
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CONNELLEASE
~ [i
Y a•r f«twy A11tltortnd
Cheonol•t l.Ht.1191 DMtet" • New '74 Veiga Hatchback
S&840 ,ER MONTH
Ph.IS 11x I. Lie. On Appr, (rldll 2~ Mo. O.E.L
CONNELL CHEYROLIT
21128 HARIOR ILYD.
CO~TA MESA !46-1200
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HAYE YOU READ HARRY IRO'WN'S NEW toot<
"YOU CAN l'ttOFtT FROM A MOHETARY CRISIS"?
w. s,.c.ltlu ht
GOLD STOCKS. GOLD MUTUAL RINDS 1. SILYU
PINN cotl 497·1721 240 Fenti A•• .. L.pii. ltKll .
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Buy ·The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts!
..
Her•'• here'•. here's here's
SCHROEDER,,. ind
last but not lees\,
hert'a
CHARLIE BROWN ••• end LUCY .•• and l 1NUS .•. llt"d SNOOPY
Pho11e 642-4321 (Circulation Departn1ent) to have the
wh~le Peanuts gang come and visit you dally •
I •
·'
•
J J! DAIL V PILOT
BeauteQus
Worke1·
Rehired
ROCK ISLA~D. Ill. (AP> -..
A '.\toline 1roman 11·ho sa~'S she
11·as rirNI ~larch 15 front her
job al International Har\'ester
because the co1npany felt she
v.·as too preltr has bl'cn
reinstated. a comp a n y
spokcsn1an said.
Peggy 1-lughcs. 23. 1rent
back to 1rork last 11·cck. 1:1c
spokesman said.
~ con1pan.1' has refused
con1n1ern on her disntiss:il.
"THE CASE lti\S been
rl'SOlved, ., t he spokesinan
said.
She said union officials ,,·ere
told she recci\·e<f "loo 1nuch
ntalc attention."
Monday, M•J tO, lY•.
"We're looking for someone to handle customer
compl_aints. How are you at lying?"
An in,·cstigJtor for th(' Rock
tsland lluni:1n R e 1 at i on s Ci;in11nission sair! · · nl ale •• -. ... _,,_., __ _._., ___ ,,., ___ ,,., ___ ,..,.,...-_.., ___ ,..,_,.-,..,_,. ___ ,, ___ ,, ___ ,, ___ ,, ___ _..~.
co1rorkcrs found l1cr so
11tt ra ctirc tlX'y \1·erc
di!"tracted front their nor1nal
duties."
TI-IE LOCAL con1mission
recently \"oted to take ~he case
10 the 111 in o is Fair
En1p!oymcnt Practices
Commission. ~ ~liss llughes. blonde. 5-foot-5
v.·ho v.•eighs abou1 110 pounds.
could not he reached for
comment. After she \vas fired,
she said:
"In a. ,r.,,· T felt sort of
ron1p!imentrd. I ne\'er thought
of myself as a pretty girl. 1'1n
just an average 1 o o k in g
\\·om an.·•
L.1ll. Boyd
Stiel{ to Ow11
Han· Style, Gals
One in e\'cry 10 shoppers in the supermarket v.•inds
up at th e checkout countrr \rilhout enough 1noney to pay
the tab. Such is the report of a n1arketing expert. Question
arises as to \\·hat items such citzens \l'ith short funds are
most likelv to send back. Research reveals them to be
candy. JtuTn, ice creanl. cookies .books, toys. pet foods,
"Go11c Witl1
Wind' Set
For Video'!
beauty aids. polis hes. •l'axcs and air
fresheners. 'l'hat itC'1n least likely to be ~ s<nIA ~:,'..~~:h::::;,iso::~1clrisl hos
developed a con!act lens that enables a
· colorblind citizen to !ell one hue (rom
ano!11er. l\o. not to see them exactl.v.
\'E\V YORK ( APl -"Gone
\\'ith the \Vind," the 1!139
~fG~t classic that has been
rie\\'cd In theaters by 1nore
people lh.'.lll any other ~110,·ie.
reportedl y ,,·ill br sho\\ll on
television for the first tin1c in
1976.
'l'he r•:ev.· \'ork Times said
that NBC-TV paid about S5
million for the right to show
the n1ovie once. the highest
price c,·cr paid for a single
program .
A~ l\'BC 0 F F I C 1 A I.
confirn1ed the transaction and
said the Ciril \\'ar dram<i·
romance \•:ou!d be sho\r11 as
part of thr nrt\1·ork's
contribution lo the nation's
bicentennial celebration. the
ne,1·spapcr said.
Released just fi1·e times
since its Atlanta prem iere,
most recent!~· in 1967. lhr fi!m
has attracted a total audience
of about 145 million_ T·he
Tin1es said thr anticipated
!ele\'ision audience for one
sho\\·ing is 130 million .
The 3·hour, 40-minute epic is
the_ third biggest 1noncym:-ikcr
ol all !iTne hchind "The
G·odfathcr" and "The Sound of
~l usic ." \\·hich ha\·c rnio1·ed
higher theater ad n1 i s S i ·on
prices than "Gone \\'i!h the
\\'ind."
TI1E STA'.\OARIJ price pnid
1'~· nf't11'0rks for 1\1·0 runs of a
But at least to identify them. Some
help. anyway. ·
' That singing Boone named Pat started out as Otar!es
Eugene.
BAJ\'ANAS
Exactly JOO years ago in Boston. a dol!ar·s \1·orth of
bananas \\·as one.
Q. ·'I sa11· a police sho1r 11·here the detecli\'c found a
broken looth at the scenr of the crime and figured out it
had belonged to a 11•hite man. Ho11·?"
A. Under ultraviolet light. a ,1·hite man's tooth ground
to pcl\\·der glov.·s green, a black man's tooth ground to
po\l'dcr g\o\.\'S reddish orange.
ff you plan to can this fall. n1a·arn. helter buy vour
canning jars early. Looks as though a shortage is Cotl1ing
up there. too.
HAIR STYLE
"Best beauty adriee I c;in offer you .. 1·oung lady. is
gel a hair style that suits your personality." Such \l'as the
counsel of British theatrical producer George Edwardes,
v.·ho qualified as a connoisseur of fcrninine..pulchitrude. It's
said hi s sbo\.\·s 11·ith Ulndon's Gaiety Theater Company
paraded more beautiful \1·omen than other stage productions
an~·\.\·here. He y,:as mightily opposed to those identical hair-
does, suc h as beehives. put out by the assembly-line salons
to make all 1vomen look alike from the eyebro"'S up.
:\ot unusual for a dolphin to gro,v five pounds a month
in ifs first 111·0 years ... Ail cnv!ronn1entalist 1\·ho1s lobby-
ing to protect endangered species points out. "Once there
\1·crc three \rise men" ... Some scientists no'v are eol}-
1·inccd thc.v can prognosticate the v.·cather by analyzing
changes in tile soil.
Inasn1uch as they must be taxed. 1nost citizens nation·
1ride prefer the sales tax over anv other sort of tax. the y
repeatedly tell pollsters. That tax least favored is the
i>ropcrty tax.
Address n1a i! !O L. JI. Boyd. P. 0. Box 1875, l\'eu;-
port Heach 92660.
though "blockbusters" or1ng ~---~ -
hi.l!her prices. JIM 'S INTERNATIONAL
HAIR SlYLING CENTER
NEW Dl~1ENSIONS INHAIR
fl-'1t:N-WOMEN-CHILDREN
The highest price preriously
paid for a feature film \~·as
S3.3 million. 1\"hich ABC·T\.
bid last year for "The
Poseidon Adventure." to be
shou11 this fall.
"Gone \rith the \Vind" could
c;irry up to 30 n1inlll••s of c1Jn1 !
mercials if sho1111 in pri1ne
1;me. I
Tl1at's a Lot l
Of Puffing
LOS ANGELES (AP l -I
Federal d r u g statisticians
estimate the marijuana scizrd
in California betu·een Jull' 1.
1973. and l\tarch 31 , 197i -was:
sufficient to roll 33 nilllioo '
cigarettes.
Federal a~ents s e i zed
293,000 pounds of marijuana
during the period. th~ Drug
F.nforcement Administration
announced here. I The agents also seized 24
million ill<!gal an1phet.&1nine
tablets. 191 pound~ 'lf hi:!roin
14J pounds of cocaine. 1.-4
milllan pounds of barbituraie
tablets, 688,000 hallucino c:ren
.tablels, 855 pounds of hashish
and lesser amounts ol 0.1 ~ r
dnip.
TBB
UllL'S
"""l.r".:r"'
T•l'9ttl .. __
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• ~" ~"'''P B.~tr;• f:o•vt'"" & OPsogn • ~aCOIJI St•uCl'!ll'es
ROFFLER SCULPTUR KUT ME7HOD
• •. , '6 lG~~ HJH ,.,-~··~o . CtJ>tam HJ•f Pieces
~"' A.'!r•M'r"!~T C::ll .•
'642-2631
222 E. 17ffl St. -Costo Mtte
To Start Your Week
On A Happy Note, ·
Here's Something Special
For Monday and Tuesday
"'*' Soup • Sunomono Sa lad i1$> Lobster Yamato
~ Shrimp Tempura
,._ Chicken Tcriyak1
,,._ Beef Teriyaki
• Vegetable • Rice• Tea
$695
RESERVATJONS ~HONE 1714) 644-4811
11aaat11
'60 FASHION ISUND, NEWPORT CENTER
• •
•• ,
Wiggling
Noticecl
• BALA-CYNWVTl. Pa . (U PI\
-The tnanager of the San
?\1arco Restaurant says the
phone has been jangling J!Ver
since a belly dancer named
"Yasmin" swayed and
. wiggled for the dinner crowd
last week.
As it turned out, Yasmin
\\"as 24·year-old Joanne Shapo,
the daughter of Pennsylvania
Gov. Milton J. Shapp. She
belly"anccd through two 15-
minutc performances at the
suburban Philadelphia club
Tuesday night.
•
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.. Todays Beautyre.st •••
Bdore tomorrows ,pri~!.
,, •' ·~,_..
.. TO '40 o o!'l s1zP sA\7£~10 . -. , '\."" J --./,"
• '!\:t"' . ~'";,.{
This is your Joi,.l c h;inc~ to Oll'n v
Beau1:,1es1bt'f01c•1hc priCl':-go up.
I:kc~e. soon l'\''-"n tho.' co~t ~
good night":. ,\._.,:p 1~1ll l•<! l~1~1ht!r. )
pocketed coll~ conionn to 1hc
not'Ural contour~ of ~uurbod~ The
flor.il prin! 101er ;~ S.:ni Sl't1l · 1\vin Sizt' Muttn~s~
prol.:-ctcd lu !H1.-n d u:_;,:;11~1 b.icll'li,1, or Found<1tio11
11lilde\~',\l1J v,h•: $119.95
•
C ,il<h ,1 B>!.1u1,,_1 ,·~t l'•'rl~'. bee .a1SI.'
thi~ i~ ..i limili!d t1n1..' oft,,r !
"I DIDN"T KNO\V \l'hO she
11'.'.IS. only by her stage name ,''
said Mrs. Carol Rotfcld, o"·ner
and general manager of the
club. ··1 v.•as surprised and
cl'en niore surprised by all the publicity it's gotten." r!erau-~· ~·\1u ~r,·11..I 1 .I u( l'Oll r lik·
:11 \:lt>d. ~1'.>tl n \\.:O lu11• ~.'if I h" rn1111l•d
t.>..11f,:,· "1. ,. \l ,tto c'>~
• .r I "' •nd. •liu1 I i\lrs. Botfeld said th el ·rhl:' Lu1K1u~ l:i..: .. 11tl 1.,,1 h bt:;:t \ii-.<.!
II !hd! 01.l\'.1 G ... 11!!\l ~,1 r.11 1 ~111 L' l•JU • restaurant features a be V no olhL 111L;tt·,..:~'. l11d11 1d1i.1~ly 1 · •
' .. · r !Udil".'b,;o:•'l"llJUn1 ~1 ~111 :LL"~ $299.95
dancer every Tuesday night , .... ' " 1J ,,.,.., .,:.,·~··1
through arrangeinents made I Beau1yrest Back Cdrc l lx1r.1 l·irm.Be<iutyre:.t Suprcn1c I Norn1C11l·inn~$419.95
\rith a Philadelphia dancing
school kno1rn as the ··Navel 111 • IAMl,4MEllCAlD • MAST~ CHARGE. 1-\111'] !:-1 ":' { Academy." r..Uss Shapp ''"·anted it to be I oua OWM 11:vot.VIHG CHAIGE. 5'o'MONS
~~~:r~:;~;~\7L~,~~~~I ~~I ~~~-~-~~·-~-~-~~~~·-~~i'-:~~6~5~:Hi:-A:-:::~:OiR~B:L~pv~;~o~··-~:~-E~o~~;4_~~~-~~o:,~r~, :~:-:c:o::S~T;A~M~E~S~A~~~
•
GLORIA MARSHALL METHOD OF
REDUCING COMES TO COSTA MESA
Being A Woman, Gloria Marshall Understands
Lodie ~· Figure Problems -She Is In Constonr
Contact With Her Over 70 Salons Across The
Country.
And you're invite11 lo help ui celebnte the Grand Openinr of the most modern ind
reining figure S1lon ever. with lhfullim1te in reducing equipmenl. We can inure you
of a pleasant way to lose pounds ind inches. And there are no ricorous exercises or
diirobing, 10 you don'I have to worry 1bout ruinin& your hairdo. We rive personalized
altenlion in semi·orivate facilities, and you will be surprised al our reasonable rates.
Just call'1he Gloria f'J.orsholl Solon necrest you for your personalized figure
Of"lolysis and complln1f;ntory trea tment. There is JlO oblig.:ition.
soys .-..
"/hove never mef a woman yet whose figure I could not improve."
HOW THE GLORIA MARSHALL SYSTEM WORKS: On
your fir~t visit, for which there is no chorge or obligation, you will
receive a complete demonstration and sample treatment, You will be
weighed and measured (this does not require disrobing) and o
trained specialist will analyze your figure and prepare a personalized
program for you. ·
Gloria Marshall Salons ore not spas or gyms. The Gloria Marshall
system is designed for the busy, modern woman. Many working
women find the salon a more rewarding Way of spending their hmch
hours. Mothers and grand,":'lothers enjoy the relaxing, almost ef-
fortless way of reducing, also, the added benefit of increased
circulation and energy.
Since Figure Problems Are Different Results Will Differ AccordinglX.
71
Uhe /ace and /i9ure tranJ/o}mation o/ Pat Cliad
. . . th.rough. the nalionallu famous (;Loria .Aiarsh.all methods
f o fJ ,,, IJ • ~"7
I
' "'AFFIOA.VITS Of AUTHENTICITY ARE ON FILE IN THE HOME OFFICE."
• Santa Aol!-Cos\a Mesa
1/)
1
_• ~ _ / J'11.(J. 3851 Bristol. Shopping ~nter · IJ.~l I~ VZtltli (Acrou Irom Soul~ CQaSI Plaza!. J~ · 'aJw, • Ne::7:acn .
. FIGURE CONTROL SALONS 1801 Westcliff Dr.
wotlck le•dino llgure C<ll'lllOI ay1tem 642·3630
Open c\•ily 9_ to 9, Saturday 9 to 4
o-10 u-...........,. to ....na ,_ • Orange The Clly S/1opping Center
9117..0211
,
"' .
If.,\() '1rr1-: ·r 11 f: l>H .f JI I 'fl('
( ,,., ,,,,._. '·' f" 1c1.11. ff: 11·r ·nrs
( photu I ) If h1•11 Put ( ht1tl ~lflrft'fl nl
t:l11ri11 llur.•hulf'.• .•ho> u·l'i1tho>d :!2:!
111 ...
( plro/o :.! ) /II ri.•it« fllfl'r .•Iii• hn1( ,,/.
''"'"·\' fo .•t I ;-inl'hl'.•.
(photo :I) 111 ro•ror1f linu• .•llf" ht1.< lo1'l
(1.1 lb.• .. "'"' ;;;; i1u·~1·.~ ... hn• 1tone
.fr11n1 II 1lrPS1' .•i;t" :!1-112 '" (/ '"
'"'" i.< 1r1•lf 1111 hr-r 11·11.\' 111 hr-r p••r·
.fl't'I rlrr.•.• 1'i::I' .. , n I:!,
Pnt "'l.\'1', "I tri1•rl f"l'Pr,,·1hi11111n In~
11·,.i-ht. hilt n11thi11, 1rnrkp1/ •. \n1e-.
lht111k 11 to t;lorin .ilnr11hnll, I nn1
1111/p lh 11hnp fur nnrl h11\' t'lolh•lf
in 1·olor11 0111/ •t\·le11 I H;nlf ne"er
11/1/r to 11•enr bejnrr. Hf!liPt'f' mt>,
1rhP11 \'1111 lt'l'flr n ~i::p· :!·#.//:!, ,.n,,
hnnP ,,·,, rhoir•·! '' •
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Jeon
mcdl
heart
'
11 w
away
from
How
Io hot
handle
sirnul
"I h
that a
Jean
UC1
prof es
J-Iospit
"Wh
there
med ic·
I was
medic
,
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• -. ,, • .. • -~ission,. MOtivation, c ange .......
By AWSON DEERR
or , ... 0t1tr ~"' •••tt
Jean Carlin's plan was to study
medicine, lhen put 11<r skills to use In lhc
heart oC the African 1iinglc.
"J wanted to work directly With people.
away from evervdoy pressures, away
from paperwork."
How, then, one wonden, did she co1ne
to hold two administrative posts and
handle a private prat1icc in psychiatey
simultaneously? ·
"I have a strong commitmcnl to things
that are important to tne," explained Dr.
Jean E. Carlin, executive assoriatc deau.
UCI medical sc:hool and chief of
professional education, F'airview State
~lospital.
"\l.'hen 1 was a medical student, I felt
there muS't be other v•ays to tcal."h
medicine. \\'hen I was in general pra<'licc,
I \vas concerned about the quality of
medical care be ing provided.
''I've always felt that if you don 't like
-~ I ,. ' ..
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-
Daily
Pi tot
Photos
By
Lee
P.iyne
something, you should commit yoursell
to cpanglng It, or stop complaining. By
teaching, I felt I could helR \rain good
doctors. Through the n1edical school, (
rould imp(Ove. staDdards of health care. " PRIVATE PRACTICE
"Private practice." she added, "I do
for myself, to maintain n1y skills as a
physician.'' -
Her administrative roles n e a t 1 )'
interface. McdiC31 students from UCI
gain a portion of their training at
Fairview.
At UCL California Coll ege of .Medicine,
she serves as acting dean in the ab.sen~
of Dr. Stanley van den ~oort , dean ol the
medical school.
As chief of p1·ofcssional education at
Fairview, she is rc~ponsible for
continuing medical education of the staff
and O\'ersees training of medical students
and ,residents.
Students of psychiatry learn to work
~·ith the retarded and their families. 'fhe
~-·
·q:·' ' '! .. ~. . ', .
·-~
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-~ :~--'.... ' .... -,, r .. . .
• • i f .!I i ...... ' I I . 4 .
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•
general prad.loner l)eeds to know a~t
retardation in his ptactlce.
There are numerous eye a n d
orthopedic probl~ms re I ate d to
retardation, she explained, and students
and residents in those fields get a portion
of their training at Fairview.
"My job is to insure they are getting
the appropriate training."
UC! POST
At UCI, along with Dr. van den Noort
and several associate deans, she is a
member of an administrative team that
runs the medical school.
Her duties include proposal
evaluation, dealing wilh studen't
problems that are not handled by studenl
affairs and staff and personnel mauers.
The administrative team h as
experience as diverse as business
administration and neurosurgery 1190 we
pool our resourt'CS. Each of us
approaches an issue from a slightly
different perspective.
\
. '
"I feel privileged to work wltn them." .
She met little discrimination in medical
school at the University of MiM.esota ,
where she earned her MD and a PhO'jn
psycOOlogy. She serwed her psychiatric
residency b.t UC Irvine.
"It was a lot of hard work, and a lot of
study, but that 's the same \Yhether
you're m1tle or femal e. Jn general
practice fshe practiced six years in Long
Beach) If anything the _sliscriminallon
was in my favor."
She was raised in a home "where it
never occurred to me that a ~unan
couldn't do v.·hatever she ~'anted. I never
decided to go to college . I always knew I
would.
"I wanted to be a missionary. ?o.fy faith
v.·as the motivation. I knew I had to ha ve
a skill they needed and wanted. If !hev
accepted my faith, too, that was One." -
But rebellions in Africa ended her
chances for a missionary post there , so
she turned in .other directions. "l do
regret never getting to go there," sh~
adlnilted.
·,
She's also taught, done res ea r ch ,
been an e,mergency room physiclaii and
even played pediatrician to a newbonl
Hokkaido bear. "They couldn't find an
'exotic animal vet, oo they called a
psyC'hlatrist."
Two tours of duty as a volunteer
physician for Vietnam, two n1onths in
late 1969 and three 1noo1hs in late 1971 .
provided ex perien(.'CS !ew Americans
have had,
Volunteer phys ician,,. are provided
transportation 10 and from the country
and per diem living expenses, but no
salary, explained the Seal Beach
rcsidenL ,
The first tour \\'as spent in a provincial
hmpital, 180 n1iles so uth of Saigon. "lt
took two days to fly do"11 from Saigon.
You couldn't get there any other v.·ay.
The roads were minf'd ." '
Th e hospital had no screens on the
\vindov.·s. no eleclricity. no flashlights. no
kerosene lamps ''but v.e did have
candles."
Lab facilities \1·crc nonexistent. "\\'e
e
BEA ANDERSON , Editor
MondJY, M•Y lO, 1'14 P•9e ll
l
t
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' • • the Park? Watch Your Barefoot "
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ilEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a male
h~ school student, age 18, and I happen
'to:'l!njoy idcking oil m~ shoes onJ ~oinK bahroot. I ~ver wear shoes when 1 m at tio'liie and l_,.,.v• lhelll often when I'm
In bllc. t ..
can'I explalp why,f I really get
cd on ~ biltt t ••..., parka la,..., ally rainy Mll!)mer
. wllelr ~· ... w klng their dotr~ thta Isn't ev,.~'• bag, but it tq be "'1llf -·'{'-'
t r ciurl u.m:11ui ta tile hllstn ~Y
})l<llllO· flto11• my UJestyle.
rtprimltfded II IOhOol ..,..ral
beclUle ol this. One teacher
my mother to discuss "the
' I ttdnlt 11'1 ridiculous. Aller all, wbo
am I lturUnl! I l"'duel• In June and I
I "
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\\'OUld j\$1. love to walk up on' the stage in
my stocking feet and receive my
diploma. Whal kind of reaction do you
thlnk I~ would create? -SHOELESS ·
JOE '4•-4~ ••
DEAR JOE: After tbe 1trealln1 't11ot'1
pot .. all ovtr tile coantr)I, • (•Y la·
steckl" feet Wouldn't even be notl*·
EnJOy )'ollndf0 Bib, bl! doa't step ..
•Df gla11, rutty Mils, 'or wllllt'ver
people mlRld step on lo porks wbere dogs
; arc walked. 1
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Alter ·I married, I took aome
electrolyais, but It wa111•t \!Orth the time
and money becauae half df the hairs ~rew back In. So niy tolullml is shaving.
Although It'• a nulaanct, It's the lllOlt t.lf~w l'•Y to rid myoelf or unsightly
DEAR ANN LANDEJlS: I em a facial hair.
woman 4-0 years ol age and ha\le bod to Now llUr daughter, age I~ itholl'1 slin•
sbaw my chin and moustache evor since of havlnr the amt prolliem. I 11111 slck
I l'H JI. I have trl!d t~ hair ,.mo'nrs about it and ID b, ._ ) need to know ll
available IQ drug 1t0tt!, hut the1 o<!ver I thl1 Condltloa of llllr on ~ feet Is
worked for me. ca...M bf a &Jandtdlr lml>alance tbal
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mlgbt be corrected by mediaiuon or
surgery. Please tell me what to do if our
dauahter conti.nues to grow more facial
hair. lo there anytblng new In this field or
should she just shavt, ., l do? -NO
NAME PLEASE '
DEAR N.N.: Your daapltt bas
eppomiUy lobtrited your Jlandttlar
·--aad DOtldnc can be doat to ....... u. ~ II rtll Ille belt -tlled for
,.....~ remo>lq UlllgloUy facial
hair. But It mu!lt bt doae by an exptrt.
some of 1be baln are sure to lfOW back,
but they can be desuoyed oa tbt 1tCOnd
go-round. With timfl, patltoct (orUtude
and mooey, hopefully, your daughter can
emerge Into womanbood with a clear,
•moOth complelloa.
DEAR ANN LANDERS:, Recently a
womon wrote to say she just haled her
Joli, but tile didn't have the ~· to tell
ber bo69 si,. wa• quitting. Her wblle ll!e
hatt lie<n that way. She couldn't face
llllpleoSll!t !ltuauom. She •I~• bad to
c<il> '"'t by writtna a no<e or leOdlng tho message Yia tOCDtOne-dae.
y,.. •Id: "TO keep -115 ou1 of the
felt In your piano, fasten bags of moth
could gel a simple hemoglobin and that's
about" the extent of it."
ONLY WOMAN
She was the only American woman, the
only American ~·oman doctor, in four
provinces. Tv.'O other Amerlcaos. both
male. \\'orked on U'f general wards and
in surgery. Dr. Carlin handled pediatric
cases. "Vietnamese'people have been at v.·ar
or occupied by some nation for more
than 2,000 years. 1 ~·ondered what
mechanisms these people used to cope
v.•ith the horTor.I of war.
"How do they deal with 1he realities of
\\'ar all the time? We, Ameri cans. knov.'
\\'e'll be going home . It ~ end for us.
But for them. it won't be over."
She felt learning the answers to these
questions . and visiting the country at
~~~·m~~~u~rs hse~ h~ a!"pa~~:~~ with
"I had never \iv¢ in a country at v.·ar.
so t could not relate to soldiers returning
from \1ictnJm."
She found that "although Vie(Jlam is a
very small country, travel is difficult.
There v.·~re many areas \\'hich had little
or no contact \\•ith other areas.
"How yc11 s;1\1· the "'ar. or anything
else. depended on where you \\'ere. II was
like the six blind men describing the
elephant. American Gls paired with
\1ietnamese. as in our area. beeame good
friends and understood ·what the \\'ar v.·as
about.
PERSPECTIVE
"Americans in all·American units
became disenchanted ."
Because the Vietnamese men over the
centuril's had learned the necessity of
interfacing v.<ith occupying troops, but
u·omen did not interact at all, Or. Carlin
found the women accepted her the oi\ly
~·ay possible. as another ~-om.an.
"Thev 'taught me and I taught them."
She f'eels, that th e mvth of death being
so common that the Vietnan1esc put little
\'a lue on human life. is just that.
"\Vhenever a member of the family
v.·as in the hospital. the entire family
came and staYed 24. hours a day with the
patient. "ill of 1hem sleeping in one bed
under the mosquito netting.
"There rarely is 24-l¥>Ur nursing care
in hospitals in the provinces, so the
family must feed and nurse the patient .
lf life is so cheap to them, why would
they go to so much trouble."
The Jack of pubUc displays of grie£.
usual in the United Slates. is probably "a
final act of respect to the! dead" she
theorizes.
I !er second tour of duty was spent in
Saigon teaching ~lietnam~e medical
students and in charge of pediatrics in a
plastic surgery hospital in ~igon .
EXPERIENCE:, RETOLD
She has given "at least 100" talks on
her o\'erseas experiences and a book1 on
the subject was accepted for pubUcation
last year.
Her Vietnamese medical colleagues •
she adds. did remarkably well with the
equipment and facilities available to
them. She still corresponds wi{h friends
there.
After learning and dealing with the
taboos and totems of another culture. she
tould return to her own country and look
at it from a different perspective.
"The v.·ay v.--e deal with emotions and
''alues are culture dependbt."
Dr. Jean Carlin
conducts class
at Fairview
State Hospital
for UC lryine
medical
students. Med
students are
familiarized
with working
with the retarded.
Step
crystaJs inside the piano at each end and
let them hang close to.the wood."
Do yw honestly think that advice will
help her? -STILL LAUGHING
DEAi\ mLL: Tyi>tsetten ore .. 1y
buman 1Dd l:iamau 1nake mlltak~s.
Occat!oaally 1•met1tblr odd er.Po "P 1"
... ,,.,.,., alld IUt "" certata}J ole
GI lite ocldet~ "'
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Are )'Our perena too llrld! llanl to
reach? Ann Landtrl' bootlel. "Bua<d
by Parenb! How to Get lllGro ~ .... ..,,_ ..
oou!cl help you ~· Ille -•liall pp. Send SO conb In ' coin with )'>Ur r-...i
Ind" • 1oa1. •tatrn><d, ..u.-11114
envelope te Ann Landon, 'P.O. Baa IMt,
222 w. Bank Dr., O\l<qo, Ill .....
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J 4 DAILY PILOT
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Lido Living Beckons
r\ostalgia v.·ili set the mood
for the Lido Isle \\'01ncn's
Club home tour Thursda~·,
1'1ay 23. as rhc tl1e club
celebrates its 25th
an11i\•ersary.
\l.1ith the thcn\e U1e Good
Old Days. the 1-5 p.1n. tour
'viii offer a )ook nt the Pi.ISi
along v.·ith a g\iinpse of five
bayfront homes oo the island.
Guests Vlill be transported
betv•een hom~ on the Belle of
Balboa or the Queen of
Balboa. and while aboard.
they 1,1,i\I be entertained by
banjo players. Double decker
buses also .,..·i ll be a\'ailable for
the shuttle.
On display v.·ill br the
residences c.f the llichard
Godbers, Earl Sawyers. H.oger
:\. 11-facG regors, Eugene
''eagers and Rolla R. Hayses.
At the clubhouse aftj?r the
tou:, gues!i; "·ill be treated to
a box social, with tasly food to
be ea1en on the clubhouse
terrace or Jay.11 or on the
tennis court, \.\"here an old-
fashioned tennis match v.·ill be
in progress.
A barber ~oop quartet will
~rcnade in the clubhouse v.•ith
old tunes from the past.
For antiQuc car lovers . a
collection c! rcfurbishc-d autos
,1·ill be on display acrcss from
the cluhh(JUSe.
Tickets are priced at !5 and ,....-.-~
may be obtained in the hon1es ....... ~~--~....,.,..._, and clubhOl.!se on the
afternoon of the tnur. 01· fro"'
ticket chairmen l\trs. John 1'.t.
Franco and :\frs. Rav 0e;..101t,
or at Richard"s Lido ·;..1:iirket.
Thur chairman is Mrs.
Richard St. John and her
. '
,
Couples
Recite
Pledges
IRVIN-WINSTON
Sun Valley. Idaho \\'ill be
home for King John Irvin and
his bride. the former Linda
Kny Winston who w e r e
married in SI. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church. Newp:irt
Beach with the Rev. Dr.
Charles Dierenfiel<l officlatit1g.
Their parents are f\1r. and
i\1rs. Jan1es It. \\'inst.on of
i\C\\'])Ort Beach and i\·lr. and
Mrs. John \\'. lrYin of
P()('atello. Idaho.
Honor attendants 1\' c r c
Susan \Vinston and Jan1es
In·in. Others were ritrs. Kathy
~1c\.uire. Peggy Winston ,
Cheri Onyelt, Susie Stev•art,
Jerry Stnith. Ted Winston.
\Vill\am Scott and l~ o d
Primack..
The bride is a graduate of
San ?o.tarino High School,
University of Souther n
California and earned her
teaching credential at
California State University.
1..oog Beach.
MRS. IRVIN
Bcgt n\8n \li'AS ri1 ark
~tcLaughlin, and ushers were
Ray Conzales, O;ivl! Brill and
\\'illiam Wa!U.
The bride is a graduate of
Tustin High School a n d
all.ends Orange Coast ColleAe
v•here her husband graduated .
Also an alun111us of TlfS, he is
the son of ritr. and l\lrs.
G<>rdon E. Bruss of 11.istln.
·nK'y \rill reside in El Toro.
DOLTER-FRY
MRS. BRUSS
College. Her husband is a
b'l'aduate of Loara lligh ScOOol
and Fullerton College and a1so
attended California St a t c
University, Fullerton.
Attending the rouple were
\' irginia. Ronald And St.even
F'ry. Robin Dodson. Elaine
Sligar. Jan Jon('S. Kathy and
Guy Homero. ~!urn· 1\chison,
l\1ike Baccaro and Al Katzer.
'I'he nc1ol"lyweds will reside In
An;1hclrn.
La ~lirada Creek Park v.·as ~-------
the setting for t11e weddintt
linking Gretchen Elizabtth
Frv and Steven ri.tatlhew
oOlter.
1'1f Re\'. Drury Parks read
the double .ring rites for the
daughter of the Robert L.
Frys of Balboa Island and the
soo oft.fr. and ~irs. Robet1 B.
liolmes of Anaheim.
The bride is a graduate of
Cbrona del Mar High School
and attended Golden \\'est
... assistants are the l\1mes.
Her husband is a graduate
of Wood Ri\'er High School;
Sun \'alley and ~!tended lhe
t:niversity of Washington. ----·-·--
• ' I • I
v Ronald ~lac:Gregor. Ear I
1-lardagc. Anthony. Tu I I~· , MRS. JOSEPH TRANKLA (LEFT) ANO MRS. ROGER MacGREGOR ENJOY VIEW ' BRUSS-HORN
.·
Robert Bonn"r. Robert Peach,
JosCph iran1c::ta·,_ £. f\forgan
Quinn. Richard Sass. ~icholas
Adamo and G. La1n ont
Snyder.
rnirers-arc-llle -~, 111-e s.
Dono.Jd illcCio11"an. Edv.·ard
Cook Jr .. \.·irgil (inlry, Ll'L' A.
• ~Jon lU1 PaUl Ch:lp'iilliif and
.\\iss Dc>rothy De Puydt und
f .. d;;ar (;iJ::-hrist.
Proceeds 11·(11 ga-tci the
f)t.ruia Duffield it a d 1 at i on
1'herapy ({'nter, ,. out h
·Probtrin C'enicr. Sea ·tion Aid
Program ~11d \l;irtlan School
of Educat1onu! 1'hcrapy.
Christ Lutheran. Olurffi,
Costa Mesa 1\·as the setting for
the double ring ce-rcmonies
linking Na ncy Ann ilorn and
Ron E. Bruss.
The bride, daughter of ~tr.
Mar1011e Stan-1Mr says
COME TO MY Nf.W
FASHION
BOUTIQUE
Programs Offer Talks, Awards, Sales
and Mrs. Thomas If. Hom
Jr. of Kev.-port fl<'ach, asked
Mrs. Robert Scott to be her
matron of honor.
Other b r id al attendants
v;ere the .\1lsses Janie Mertz.
Kay and Debbie Brus.s. Ju]je
PANTS SALE "' ro 50% OFF!
FAMOUS 11.t.ND NA.MIS
Dolphins
Ke Y.'J>(lrt businesses a n d
homeo1vncrs v.'ho have 1nadc
outs!..'.lnding efforts in city
beautification v.·iJ! be honored
by Dolphins, the ,1·omen's
division of the i'i e v.• po r t
Harbor Chamber of
Commerce.
The awards luncheon ls
planned at noon \'lcdnesday,
May 22. in In •inc Coast
CoWllry Club.
Las Tortugas
Senen Perlada. an exc~ange
student from the Philippines:.
"'Ill ke honored by Las
Tortugas. an Irvine social
group. at 8 p.1n. \\'edne~day,
fl.fay 22, in the hoinc of the
Fred ~luenchraths of .\lission
Viejo.
l\lrs. Tho,nas Kosvic is the
pl'csidenl.
Sale
A bathing suit sale, fron1 ll
a.m, to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday.
ri.tay 22. 1vill benefit the
~tardan Center, a day school
for children v.•ith learning
disabilities. Location of the
sale is the flunlington Beach
home of ~trs. Lloyd Basil.
Wednesday Club
During a 10:~5 a.in. brunch
and meetin g \\:ednesday, 1'.1ay
22. in the Balboa Bay Club,
!\trs. Paul Kneiseler will be
ins!alled president of the
\Vednesday J\lorning Club of
Cosla J\·lcsa.
Also on the board \Viii be the
!\Imes. Herbert Lynes. Stanley
Conne[l. James l\lorris. Billy
Davis, Clyde Porn eroy.
HO\\·ard Davis. \\'il!iam Beyer
and Robert Erbncker.
League
La s Olas
~lrs. Gcrala Wndsman v.·iH
open her lluntlngton Bi'ach
home for the meeting of Lns
(>las Toasiini);tress.:s at i ::io
p.m. \\1Nlnesday. ~Jay 22.
On the progran1 1vill be
members. ~!rs. Eleanor Page,
1'.lrs. Pat Jones and Mrs. Carol
Bailey.
Botanicos
Care of house and indoor
plants will be discussed by Jan
Vogel al a meeting of the
P.Jission Viejo Bot an i cos
garden club.
\'alerie Pingers home ,1·il1
be the selting al 7:30 p.1n_
Wednesday. ~tay 22.
Queen of Hearts
Presentation of a check for
$17,300 to Children's Hospital
of Orange County highlighted
the installation luncheon of
Queen of Hearts c:uild of
La.quna Beach.
J\'ew officers are the ~fmes.
\Villiam ll. Beck. \\li!liam
\Vittman, John Rudoloh. David
Almon. \li'il!lam ri.fcKin!ev.
Jack Carney. ThonIBs Bird
and John Newton.
HB League
i\iguel Comm1ini1v Cl'nler.
Under the direction oC ;..talic
Holleron. participants \\" i 11
create a design \\ith paJX'r and
cloth.
Christian Women
Renate Carllv.·a.y. a San
Bernardino resident, '-'"ii! be
guest speaker for t he
lluntingi.on Beach Christian
Y.'omen's Club at 11:30 a.111.
\\'ednesday, ~1ay 22. in the
Huntington Seacliff Country
Club.
A row1try fair v.·Hl take
place prior to the luncheon.
Art Leagu e
Laddie John Dill. sculptor.
\\·ill be guest speaker for the
Torana Art Leaiuc at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, f\clay 22. in
Bowers ~1uscum, Santa Ana .
He \vill present a slide
lectu re titled Contemporary
Attitudes in Sculpture.
AARP
Lou Yantorn. e xe cut iv e
director of the Harbor Area
Boys Club. and Roy l\1cCardle
11•111 be guest spea kers for the
Ncv:port Beach Chapler of the
An1erican Association of Hres1>, \fari!~·n l:crn an di How At ... 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mtsa
Retired Persons Thursda~·. Tan1nly ~!c~~al. llty TM ,IJIC.,,• Ho.rwl 64 Wlll
.\fav 23. i;.....,...,.,....,...,...-:'...,,..,.,.,..,...,.,...,.,..._,...,.,...,.,....,,,.1
T.he luncheon meeting .,.,;11 ---·---------· __ ::..:..;:'·
take place in the recreation ~,\.
room of the Kev.'PQrl Harbor
Lutheran Church. Entertili'l-
n1ent v.i.11 be provided by Har-
ry Livesay, pianist.
Betrothal
Announced
L~ A. Kot.tel of Santa
Ana and Kent Rogers of
Nel1·port Beach have
annOWlced thei r engagement.
No date has been set for the
\Vedding of the pair. whose
parents are Mr. and ri1rs.
Henry E. Kotte! of Riverside
and Mrs. Kay Rogers of
Ontario.
The bride-elect graduated
from Ramona High School in
Ri\'erside and her fiance v•as
educated in Detroit.
SCREEN PRINTED
BEITER DRESS FABRICS
Delightlul. mini care, machine w.i~hab!e crepe pr1nl~
in .i wide range of color~ Jnd dC~•gns, 44"/4~"
wide.100% cottons i nd 100% .itrylic~.
REG. $2.49 YO. T O $2.98 YD.
99c
yd.
FAMOUS DAN RIVER
HOY A FANCIES
100'1. toUon "Viv11" H oy.i\ 111 d \'1 •dfl \clecl1on
of cnlor\ Jnd natur11I bd Lkground;. 44"'/4!J" wide
Mac.hint wa~h.ible. ------·----·-----RtG. $1.09 YO, SAVE .42 YARD
Free hearing tests \viii be
offered for any child from 6
months of age to 6 years by
the Ne"\\·porl Chapter, National
Charily League.
Tests \\"ill be given fron1 9
a.nl. to 3 p.m. \\'ednef.d«y.
May 22, in the Orange County
Branch. John Tra(·y Clinic.
Costa 1tesa.
Applications are be i n g ..----------------------, 127
JANA RICHARDSON
Couple
Will Wed
Brent f . Russell , son of i\1r.
DAR
l\lrs. 011\"er Mlll68r "·ill take
orer leadership of the Col.
\\'illiam Cabell Chapter. DAR
during a noon luncheon,
\\'ednesda~'. r..tay 22. in the
Airportcr Inn.
Serving \\·ith her will be the
~fn1es. Reginald Silby. Donald
~facLeod. Leland Bo Ii n.
Charles Gavlord, Vaughn Gill,
Harold Zook. !<Tank Simmons,
(i;l''\" ri.teyers and Dorothy
Hutchison.
accepted for prosoecti,·e
students at the Hunlin~ton
Beach Assistance League's
Speech Center .
Children, from preschool
through high schnol. residinl!:
in the Huntington Beach Union
High School District whose
Parents cannot afford a
private clinic, are elii;!:lblt for
screenini;?:. Soeech therapy f~s
arP. adiusted to the parents'
ability to nay.
Niguel Art
A coUagt \\'orkshon will be
pre~nted by the Niguel Art
Association at 9 a . n1 .
\.\'ednesday, ~1ay 22. in the
and ~1.rs. ~l~x i\-1. Rus sell of ----
lluntington Beach. v.·iil marry
Jan:. I..ee Richard son,
daughter of Mr. and ~frs.
W.H. Richardson of Blackfoot,
Jdaho where Lhe ceremony will
be perfonned in AlfRust.
Richa:rdSon. a graduate °'I Corona del Mar High School.
will be a senior at the
University of Idaho. ~1oscov.·'
and his fiancee will be a'
junior.
J, A
ernon·s
SPORTSWEA R
r
BALBOA ISlA! m
2-IOM!w!ritAVt.
67$.190<
,
,
'T. ELECTROLYSIS MEANS A
BEAUTIFUL HA IFll.INE , OR A
S/\IOOTH COMPL EXION ,
OR CL EAR ARMS
ANO L EGS, COME I N AND l.ET
US TELL. YOU ABOU'"r OUR SAFE
ANO GENTLE KREE MET HOD OF
PERMANENTL Y " REMOVING
UNWANT ED HAIR,
F INO OUT WHAT
ELECTROLYS IS COULO
MEAN T O YOU ?
AOB INSON16
BEAUTY S ALON
SAVINGS OF 20% ON EXPERT
FURNITURE AND CARPE;r CLEAN INC .
Ha ve your c.1rpet s <1nd iurnilure cleaned in just
one da)'. (Jll for a free estimate and appoint-
ment no\v du11nA this semi·ctnnuAI savings
event. We'l l cleJn J 6 ft . sofa and 2 chai s
\\'ith the e)(clusivc Chem·i-Solv~ sy~lcm./il in
th(' ronvrn1C>.ncr ot yollr home. 1\1 ... Jvin~"·
31.95 reg. 39.95
C.irpets come c.ieJn when power shampooed
\vith our Chem-i-foam• cl~aning proce!ls.
re!\. 12c sq, ft., under 900 $Q. Ceet 1 Oc
reg. l tc SQ . ft ., over 900 sqoare feel 9c
carpc1 1 furniture cleiln ing minimum, $20 whlte,
off·\vhite, velvet or loose back cushions slish1-
ly higher.
<••1"'1 cleaning 747-all 21 siorts, ex!. 2971
or di•I dlrecl 749-2169 '
SEER SU CKER
PLAIDS
LI•«Jli \ '>Pring CCllor'> Jnd combo~ u1 WOYtn
ptJ1d polye~lcr arlU (.Olton. 44"/45" wide.
MJth1ne \'V,:i~h, Tumble dry, no 1ronin9!
REG. $2.49 YARD •SAVE .72 YARD
177 yd.
·SCREEN
·ZINGY
PRINTS
KNITS
Pr1111\ .inti dot~ 011 a cl1nqy, ;1nqy 1cr~ty
knit o! olC.CIJlC Jncl rayon. Bold ~creen
prinls on cotton c1cµe. Mac.h1ne wa\h,ible
44"/45" wide.
REG. $1.98 & $2.29 YARD
2 yds.$3
GO ·everywhere knits
Fabulous collection of bold, colorful warp!d knit screen prints on
texturized polyester. Machine wash, tumble dry beaut~es. 58"/60" wide .
REGULAR $4 .98 YARD * SAV E $1 YARD
398 yd,
•HOUSE OF Ft~·BRICS
alway& f irai qua lit~ fa bric,,
S.....CHtt,._. ..... ......... ~ C:-1'1t-5~S.llU
O...folrMoll ............... , .... 1.. IJ6-JIJ4
11~...... e~ ....
' "' ... "
•
-l'lft< ltftllllol .... s--so.11s1 _,""'c....,. .......... "-""
'-'""'-111-llJI
•
r' . ' :n.-
'
·.
I
I
\
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•
Sagittarius:
Be Intuitive
TUESDAY
MAY 21
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21·AP<ll 191 :
What was restricti\le is about
to fade a\vay. Yoo will have
ij'.~ater freock>ln or taought,
action. Key is lo choose
quahty, to avoid sct.ilerinC?
your efforts. Horizons 'A'ill
expond,
TAURUS (April 2tf.May 201:
Financial situation improves.
You locate what was regarded
as a "missing link." Do some
remodeling. Stream Ii n e
'
techniques. Get rid 0 f
deadwood.
GEMINI (May 2J..June 201:
Look behind clOS<d doors.
\\'hat :rou are seeking is
a\-ailable. Ask questions. Do
some pcrsooal investigating.
lie ren.:y ior cnang~. h avel,
variety.
CANCER /June 21-Juty 22):
Friend needs mooey. Be
dipl01nati.c without becoming
inextricably involved. Pride is
In picture. Tread carefullv:
remember past f3.vors. Do
·what you CM.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 :
Surprise Is due -ol pleasant
variety. Some of y o u r
romantic fantllsics will be
ful!l lled. ''ou receive valid
complilnent from member or
c.Spposite sex.
VIRGO IAUj!. 23-Clct. ~2 .:
You gain glifnpsc or \':h:H
4.'0Uld be where your pr1>les-
siona l future is concerned.
Grab opportunity. Accept re-
spomlbllily. Avoid the JuJ;e-
v.·arm -It should no1v be all
or nothing.
LIBRA !Sept. '!3-0cl. 221:
Finish rather than begin -
find ways or reaching .moro
pcnlOOS ll'l)fe 'of the time.
Shike chord ot universal
appcaL Leave the specialties
for olhers. Ccnununicat.c.
~'(:ORP10 !Oct. 23-Nov. 21 I:
l'\e1\' approach to partnership,
Ul3rriar,c, publir. relations is
necessary. Get out or rut.
Shake off lethargy. Briil.i; forth
creative resources. Vo u r
judgment now may be slightly
off target.
SAGmARIUS !Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Intuitive intell1,>ct
races overtime. You se~e
1vlwt is imix>rtant. \rhat is
trivial. DelpO~ what fl"ople
say, you are able UO\I' to di!f-
cem ihelr true moth·es.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
191: You nlay not be gi viog
)'ourself enough credit. Vou
arc reaclring and teaching -
vou are n1 a k I n " :ui
imoression. Ke1· is to kno11• it
and to ask for \\·hat you are
v;orth.
AQUARIUS !Jan .• l(f.feb.
JS): .Emphasis is on strai~ht.
talk. Persons v;·ho want to play
·\1crbal garnes should be pulled
up short . Do it. What seems
impo6sible is actua lly a
-------------------·------------~-----------------------------·--------
' .
• •
: •• I • •
' '
.. , -:
. .
' . ' '"' •·
'·
•.
•
CLINIQUE1S GREAT SOAP •
MIL.D. FOR T ENDER OR AVERAGE SKIN . $7.SQ [;
EXTRA STRENGTH• FOR OILY SKIN. $7.50 [j
CLARIF'YING LOTION.
1. FoR v<RY DRY. Sb u s1o u
II. FOR PARTCY DRY. Sb O $10 c
Ill . FOR OIL-TROUBLED SKIN. $60 $10 L.J
DRAMATICALLY DIFFERENT M OISTURIZING
L.OTION. $7.50C $12 .50 _=:
--·--.
CCEANS ING CREAM, $10 C
MORE FAVOURITES?
EXFOLIATING LOTION. CLEARS OUU.NESS,
AT $7.500
BEAUTY EMERGENCY MASQUE, $7 .SO CJ
TRANSPARENT LOOSE POWDER AND BRUSH,
PORES LOOK SMALLER! $6.SO D
WRINKLE STICK. $6 0
SPECIAL HAND AND BODY LOTION. $6 C
MAIL/PHONE, ROBINSON'S COSMETIC S ,
CALL 644-2800. PHONE ORDER BOARD OPENS AT 9 A. M,
MON, -SAT, OR MAIL COUPO~ TO ROBINSON'S• 2 FASHION
I SLAND, NEWPORT. CALIF. 92660, PLEASE SEND ME
THE ITEMS CHECKED ABOVE,
CHARGC [j
ACCOUNT NO , '.
PAYMENT ENCLOSED i
·, l~..-,,1 1-·
-'.._ ! -
c.o.o.CJ
NAME ------------------~
ADDRESS -----------PHONC -----CI T Y STAT C ___ ZIP ____ _
PLEASE ADD 6°/, SALES TAX IF DELIVERED IN CALIFORNIA.
SI SERVICE CHARGE ON c. o. 015. PURCHASES UNDER SID.
OR PICKUPS . HANDLING CHARGCS WILL BE AODCD OUTSIDE
OUR DELIVERY AREA. ND-5-20-12.
I
\
f
' '
This is the Favourite
Things Collection .
And it's your gift
with any $6
Clinique purchase.
INCUJDEO lh YOLIR GIFT. ORAMATICALL't OIFFERENl
MOISTIJRIZI~ L.OTIOP-1, BALANCED MAKEUP BASE:.,
EXTREMEL't GENTLl. CLEANSING CREAM , TRANSPARENT .
EYELINER, AND DIFFERENT BRONZE BLUSHER,
SELECl YOUR ALLERG'r TESTED CLINIQUE PURCHASES NOW!
/ -...
~ • '-
0
Ci.iDl!!®l£
dremaf.ic.ally difFercnt moisturiting lot io11
\. ~
SHOP MONDAY 10:00-9:30, TUESDAY to i oo -5:30,
I
I
•
644-2800 '
necessity. You can be frank
without losing friends.
PISCES (feb, 111-Maroh Zill:
~lovemeot, visits, me113ges
dominate. You are on trint of
chance for greater security,
Listen and learn. But don't
Pbandon bas f c obiecUves.
Build on soiHi base.
lf TODAY JS VOUR
RIRTllDAV you ha1·e fine
senf'e of humor, you tend to
eat too much at one sitting.
,.oo attract Gemini and
Sagittarius persons and June
should be your m o s t
significant month .or 1974,
..
JC DAILY PILOT Monday, May 20, }q74
Indy Hassle:
'
12th Row Set?
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -A.J. Foyt is
on tha pole, the field ia completed and all
appears ready for Sunday's 58th running
or the Indianapolis 500-mile a u t 0
raee ... but it might not be so.
Saturday, Foyt aat and watched 11
futile efforts to overtake bis qualifying
speed of llL&3% miles per hour, set May
11 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
That put him on the inside-of the front
row for the Indy classic ror the third
ti1ne.
The 39-year-Old Texan will be a strong
sentil\leotal favorite to win at lndy for an
unprec<dented loortb time. ,
Saturday's final session or lime trials
\vas marred by a nln delay of three
hours and 11 minutes, but the final 18
spots In the starting field were filled and
the day's two slowest cars were bumped
from the lineup.
Plenty of action also developOO after
. qualifications were. closed at 6 p.m. By
'-Jhe time aome ol the din raised by ~sts. charges and countercharges
affidavits from a representative of each
of the cars ln the starting field and the
two alternates which would free the
Speedway from possible legal action if·
trials were resumed.
At the request of the parties involved,
the deadline for geUlng those affidavits
to Speedway officials was extended from
11 a.m. SW\Clay to noon today.
By Sunday afternoon, the group -now
down to siJ: can: -said Jt had 13 signed
affidavits and verbal agreement from a
representative of each of the 33 starters
except the slowest driver in the field ,
rookie Larry CaMon.
CaMon, who mlMed out under similar
circumstances last year. said he would
not sign. But the protesting group
remained hopeful.
Wright Hugus Jr .. an attorney and an
associate in one of the racing teams
involved, then took a proposal to
Speedway Vice President Joe Cloutier
that would add a 12th row to the field .
tl"IT .........
be~ to subside Sunday, the Speedway
reportedly was .coruiidering a proposal
that an W1J>recedented 12th row of three
cars be added ·lo the starting lineup and
the protesting group was considering
legal action. if a compromise was not
worked out.
Under the proposal, the two alternate
cars -driven by Jigger Sirois and
DeMy Zimmerman -automatically
would be put in the 12th row and the
other spot would go up for grabs among
the six entries Hugus represented.
ROD LAVER RETURNS A BACKHAND TO WIN THE KING CLASSIC, $30,000 AND A NEW CAR.
After lhe trials closed, owners. drivers
and team representatives from nine of 11
cars waiting in line to qualify rushed
Speedway officials and demanded a
chance to take their four-lap. IG-mUe
trial runs.
Hugus._said that if an agreement could
not be reached, "at 12:01, we could go to
the federal district court for an
injunction against the race. We could file
a class action suit involving all the cars
not yet quallOed.
Form Good as Ever--Laver
A protest was filed with Speedway
sl.ewards on behalf of the nine cars and
was rejected. The protesting group said·
the Speedway's entry form promised
each driver at least one opportwiity to
qualify and !hey said !hey had been
denied that chailce.
''But that is just one of a number of
·remedies lo the sitnation," Hugus added.
"and I hope it doesn't come to that."
rr;~ only driver to come close lo Foyt
Ne1v Car~ $30,000 Bring 01it Best i1i Rod
,
Speedway officials said the rules had
been adhered to, and that reopening
qualifications would not be fair to the 33
drivers "1.>ho had qualified and the ty,·o
knocked from the lineup by fast.er
drivers.
Th.en, the protesting group was told by
Speedway officials the matter could be
reconsidered il they could get signed
Carew at .409
After Twins,
Angels Split
BLOOMINGTON, Minn . (AP) -What
are the chanceJ of 8 player hitting .400
for an entire baseball season? Please
don't ask Rod Caretv.
Carew spanked five hits in eight at
bats Sunday to boost his major league
high batting average to .409 and help the
l\fiMesota Twins gain a doubleheader
split with the California Angels each
team V.'inning, 4-2.
"This is definitely one of my best
starts," said Caret\'. "The .400 talk is
nice to hear and nice to think about , but
l'm not going to Y.'Orry about it."
Carew is a1so seeking a third straight
batting championship and the fOW1h in
his eight-year career.
• "When I'm hilting like right now a guy
just isn 'l going lo get me out." Carew
said matter-of-factly. "The talk doesn't
really bot.her me either. I've been around
.400 at times in a CO\Jple of other
seasons."
Carew has playCd in 32 games and
enjoyed multiple-hit performances in 18
-including a present string or three
straight. He has hit .3M! over the last five
seasons.
"I should have stayed away from him
(Carew)," said California pitcher Nolan
Ryan after Carew went 3-for-3 off Uie
Angels fireballer. "J made good pitches
on him, but he just pushed them over the
infield."
Ryan overcame a mid-game siege of
"'ilciness to stop a tbree-game California
losing streak in a ._2 victory over
Minnesota lice Bert Blyleven in !he
opening game.
"l slowed my rhythm a lit!lc bit,''
Ryan said. "Minnesota is a frce-s11•ing-
ing team and l stayed with my fast ball
and curve the Jast two innings.''
l'IRJf OANIE
CALll'ORHIA MINNESOTA
.all r flrllt .111 rhrbl
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ddg the qualifying runs was Johnny LAS VEGAS-There 's something about
Rutherford·, who drove his Offenhauser-a wheelbarrow full of silver dolla rs and a
powered McLaren to an average speed of new car which brings out th e best in
190.446 JTI.p.h. But Rutherford will start Corona del Mar's Rod Laver.
on the inside or Ifie ninth row because he' "I've never won a car before." said the
lost his chance to qualify in the fir st 35-year-old, "and the money is what
session , when a blown engine kept him----¥.·e're in th is game. f0t-." .
from getting into line before the deadline By decimating the normally pesky
that day. Marty Riessen 6-2, 6-2 despite a 35-mile-
Mike Hiss. the 1972 Indy Rookie of the per-hour "i nd. Laver collected $30,000 in
Year. \\'On the best position among silver dollars delivered in a whee}tlarrow
Saturday·s qualifiers. Hiss, of Tustin , and a $21 ,000 rvrercedes Sunday for the
drove his Penske McLaren to a spot on singleS victory in the Alan King Tennis
the outside of the front row with an Classic.
average speed of 187.490 m.p.h. First-day It 's the biggest prize on the pro tennis
qualifier Wally Dallenbach is in the circult.
middle of the front row 1,1•ith a 189.683 ··'.\ty form \\•as as good as ii ever has
clocking, been," said Laver. ''l\rlarty's strength is
Ul'I Tellpllclta
JUBILANT FLYERS, FANS CELEBRATE VICTORY.
Horns BJo,v, Beer Flows;
Philly Salutes Champs
•
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The Flyecs
have turned this city into one gigantic
block party, with people dancing in the
streets and saluting their first national
major sports champion in seven years
'A'ith unrestrained glee.
The City of Brotherly Lcive's seven·
year romance with the Philadelphia
Flyers erupted into an affair of ecstacy
Swiday afiernooo alter lhe Flyers won
lhe Stanley Cup.
Avenue became the scene of a gigantic
ouWoor party. Homs blew, beer flowed
and signs proclaimed the Flyers' new
status of No. l in the NHL.
Inside, bartender Joe Maro "'as limp
with excitement and not really sure he
should believe the whole thin~.
H. Jl:Ylft {W. S-•J t ' 2 1 I 1' 81~ (L. 3'•J 71/J 7 ' • l I Ktf'l!llMlf I 2/) I D 0 0 I
Hl~'ll\'lev.n (l.lhO;.od!. T-J:SO . ..._.,ooo.
llCONO OAMa
CALll'OllNIA MINNESOTA ff r .. ,,. •It rflrtll
R:l,,.,.,ef J o "'! o er-. II J o 1 1
It was the Mardi Gras, the Fourth of
July and New Years Eve rolled into one
as thousands or delirious fans lined
Broad Strett -Center CHy's main norlll-
soulh artery -to celebrale.
"It's about time we had a champ
around here. I've been a nervous wre<:k
all day. Bul that Flyers' goaltender
Bernie Parent is fantastic. Just imagine,
a shutout In the last game." 1t1aro
enthused.
And then the chant, "Bernie, Bernie.
Bernie," began outside and was picked
up by lhe·noisy group who had galhered
for some victory drinks. ~-... J 0 0 0 C•rtw, 2b S I ' D ....._.,. OIODHl.it,rl 4110 v ..... ..,." 2 o o • 01t>t1,dl'I J • • o ,lit..,..., dl'I • I I O lolMrfllm, )D 1 0 0 0 ftQthW', I.. 4 I J 2 lfV9, « 4 I 1 1 Jdll4• 4 0 2 I HOll,Jlt 4 I • I 19M(.c J I 0 t .....,_,c J t t t McO'IW1ttl J I I 0 0-.11 J 0 I 0
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The expanslont.t Flyers" blanked the
powerful Booton Brulns 1--0 to win !heir
NaUooal Hockey League series 4·2 and brlni the Stanley Cup to Phlladelphla.
Tile feltlvlU.. apilJed over "1to lhe
111burlla, with tbrongs ol lana driving
around Delaware Co<tnty honltlng their
car boi'nl IDd waving bannen. One Ott
company turned m Its siren in
Havertown,
"'nils ts more Important lhan lhe end or World War n:; sho<lled an exuberant
customer Inside Sportsman's Tavern
localed 1 rew'blocks from lhe Speclrum,
lhe SC<lle of lhe Flyers' triumph.
1be 1n1crsecllon of 8r04d and O!~gon
OUllide, three male lllteal<ers were
barely noticed, llO they pulled their panl4
back oo IDd began to aCI as volunleer
traffic -Three boun after the Cupcllnchlng
victory, the !esUvltles cont In u eel
1mabated IDd John Simpm, 29, ~
suburban Collngdale, appeared dressed In
a "Big Bird" costume In honor or lhl
Flyers' Don "The Bird" Sal..id
The celebration even spread 200 miles
norlhwest lo State College, P•.. where
9"Veral 1hl!a nd studeni. from the
Phlla<ltlpl>la attA eUend Penn Stale
Unlverslly.
his serve. yet it seemed he was hitting to
n1y forehand all da y. And once he got
behind , he had to press and things just
seemed to get easier.
"The wind was wlht us the entire
1oumament and was blo\ving sort of be-
hind and across,'' said Laver. "Y4lll~had
to put some tQJHpin on the ball to help
keep it in play when it "'as to your ba<'k
and had to serve hard to keep it down
going into it.
"A lot of my shots were just biting the
Jines because of that wind."
Laver, who came back later to team
"'ith Newport Beach's Roy Emerson to
\\'in the doubles over John Newcombe
and Frew 1tfcl\1illan 6-7, 6-4, 6-4 for
another $5.000, said he had anot her
incentive for playing y,•hat appeared to be
his best tennis of the season.
"I'm taking Some time off now," said
Laver. ''That was my Jut tournament
until AuguSt. It \\'as a loog season
because of the Davis Cup and I need a
rest. · --
"The season-is so long now I think the
players tend to pace themselves. Now
'''ith \Vorld Team Tennis there is even
more competition, so it's tough to be up
for everything.
··Here. th~gh, I knew it y,·as my last
match for some time, so I could go all
out."
l...'lver finished his season winning
SHJ2 ,a;o.
A.t Colonlal Open
Curl Beats Pressure,
Nicklaus With Birdie
FORT \\'ORTfl I AP) -Tough little
Rod Curl responded to growing pressure
with a crucial birdie putt on the 16th
hole. turned back Jack Nicklaus' stretch
chall enge with a two-wider-par 68 and
scored the first victory of his career
Sunday in the Colonial National Open
Golf Tournament.
Curl, who didn't take up golf until he
was 19 while laboring as a construction
"·orker in his native Reddin~. Calif.,
pulled away to a three-stroke lead shortly
after the turn but dropped back with
bogeys on the 12th and 13th holes.
Nicklaus and Courtney, playing behind
hirn . moved into a share of the lead "·ith
birdies on the 14th. Nicklaus scored from
some 35 feet and Courtney dropped a 20-
footer in the cup on top of it.
That made it a three-way tie for the
Fm.JI 'IC<><t ' •nd m~y·v.innin<n Sund.IV In !nt
Colonlal Nallc:~al O~n on lhe 1,1•1-y.ard, par-10
Colonial Country Club cours~:
Rod Curl, SS0,000
Jack Nicklaus. sn ,m
Chuck Cour!r~Y. S11.1SO
Jullus Boros, Sll.lSO
Le• Trevino, SI0,,50
G•r.,-Pl.tyer, $9,000
Sitve Melnyll;, Sl.<19•
Gary McCord, S1,09•
(h$rlt5 Coody, $7,0'/I
Lou Gr.Jham, $1,09•
Chi Chi Rodrl911e1. SS,061
J tck Ewlno. SS.062
Tom W~skopf, $5,062
Bud Alll11, l.5,061
Orvllle Mooav. $3,175
O•~ld Gr.!lhlm, lJ.115
Br1.1<• Devlin. S3.17S
Jim Simons, 1.3,815.
Can Siii.ff, S2,589
T11m Willson, S2,~9 Gay Brewer, 11.~
HUiier! Gr"n! S2.Stt Hale lrwln, I ,S89
a=~~=1r.'~~ '-" Eldtr, 11.ISO L1rry HfnlOl'I, Sl.tSO O~ve Hiii, Sl,150
Bob Mtn~, SI.ISO 011e OOWl111, SI.ISO
M.lson Rvdolph ll.411 Serr G,,_, sf.411 Tom Kiit, Sl ... 11
Bobby NlchOll, Sl ... 11
'l1rry Zletltr, 11,418
Monty Ktlfl", 11,01 Rav Flovll, Sl,411
KIPl'mll 2ar\tv, 11,100 Jim 01nt, 11,lOO Ktn $1111, Sl.ICll
Pt! FltulntnlOllt, 11,100
11'49./Jt-61--177
10-IJ6.10.n -111
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BROHAMER'S HIT
PACES TRIBE, 2~1
CLEVEL.AIID-Hunllll(tm Be a ch ' 1
Jaclt Brohanw-<il bU !Olb -
major leque borne ""' with catcber
Dave DunclUI m -to lead Clm!land'•
ilJdlMI to • •t ""' -lletrall Qmdoy In the 11111 game "' • doubiibeadrr,
Theo In lhl •lptcwp, llrollamet, who
has ~ mowd op to Ho. S In lie bo1tinC
order '*"-ol 1111 bot bi~ slammed another linilt lo drf,. ID 1 nm IDd
""'1blaD7 "'°""' hlmlflf .. the llldlMll
COlllplefod • -· M. la the firs\ pme BrolNu!u!r wH t~,,.
fo!'lN gJv!Qs b1tn a Ufte./~ PY
al the plate wlth thrt< rbl.
top among Curl. Courtney and Nicklaus.
It stayed that way witil Curl dropped a
20-25 foot birdie putt on the 16th that put
him ahead to stay. He went into a happy
little dance when the ball trickled into
the cup. He didn 't trail again.
He went to the 18th with a ooe-stroke
lead. lfe put his second some 8-10 feet
from the cup but missed the bird~ putt.
Nicklaus and Courtney, meany,•hile,
flew their second shot5 over the green oo
the 17th and both made bogey to drop
ty,•o shots behind. Nicklaus birdied the
final hole to take second place.
Ex-NY Owner
Topping Dies
AtAge61
• ~
~UAMI BEACH, Fla . (AP) Dan
Topping, the flamboyant sportsman who
was CCH>wner of the New Yori; Yankees
during the baseball club's dynasty years,
is dead at the age of 61.
Topping succmnbed Saturday pight at
the Miami Heart Institute after 11--leogthy
illness..
Topping and hi• partner, Del Webb,
owned the Yankees from 1945 when, with
Larry MacPhail, they purcha!ed the
team from tbe O!tale of lhe late Col.
Ja<Ob Ruppert. They held the club until
1966 when they sold !heir majority
cootrol to Ille Colwnbla Broadcasting
Sy!lem. During that time, Ille Yankeea
won 15 American League pennants and 10
world championships.
lbe.purchue price fer Topping, Webb
and Mcl'hail WU $11 million, and two
yean after Ibey acquirod the toam,
MacPbeJJ aold hit lhare to ihe olber
partners for 12 mW!m,
MacPhaU, reached at hit hOmo ncrth
of 1111,llmore, said he uw hit former
•partner two weeks ago and knew then
that Topping didn't have much looger to
live.
"I've never 1ee11 Dan happier,"
MacPhail uld. "l/Df-Jety, b e couldn~ 11"1' ....... '1111 -bod told bllll to llop, bat lie coaldll't.
"Ill -ooe -I fellow. l'ln terrlbf.r 9C1f!!'" lbcPball lddecl. • Aft« the ~ Toppins rtpllcod MlcPtwll u .......... Gearp .., ...
wu bnuChl In 11 ~ muapr llld
Cue)' Slqel became Ml .........
'11wt -... ID die ooe l/t Ille -......., .. ..., ln bllellaU blltocy. O..er
the period from IHI through Jiff, lhl
Yanke<t """' 14 AL p-mu~ aod -World Serlts.
J
Braves Rap
Rough Ball;
Reds in LA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -1be Atlanta
Brave" claim Don Sutton is intentionally
roughing up the basebaUs.
The Los Angeles rightbander says he
lln't and, alter SWlda1"• game In which
the Braves woo, f.2, he added :
"It's Ille first time anyone 111£
oomplalned about lhal after they beat
.. me."
"Smneone b roughing them up," said
Darrell Evans, the Braves' third
baseman. "I don't know who It ls but
someone is. Every one of the balls we
Dodgers Slate
All 01mtt tii KAtc 11'1>
1:2S p.m.
1:1J P,tft. J :ll p,m,
asked to have checked the wnpire threw
out of the game." ·
Sutton said, "\Vho cares. The umpire
threw out only one ball all day.''
Art Williams, the plate umpire said,
"The balls were discolored some but
there wa.s nothing wrong with them."
Eddie Matthe'A·s, the Atlanta managet
said, "The playera seemed to think there
\vas something Wl'Oili wUb the baseb&lll.
They thought they weni saaped up
some."
Bun Capra. the Atlanta pitcher who
made his first start of the season a
winning one, said, "None of the bail$ that
came back to me were scraped up but I
wi sh some of them were."
For all the controve~. the loss, only
the second in lhe last 12 games for the
l:>odgers, left them with a six-game lead
over Cincinnati in the National League
West.
The ilodgera and Reds begin a tfiree.
game series tonight at Dodger Stadiwn,
Jack Billingham, ~2. !tarting for the
Reds. against Los Angeles lefthander
Tommy John, f>-J.o . ----· --= ~--· , The Dodgers managed just five hits
off of Capra, now 2-2, and one of them
wa.~ Willie CraY.iord's third homer of the
year, in the second with no one aboard.
Atlanta got all the runs required in the
first innlng, scoring three times.
* * * A TL.ANT A
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T-1:79. A-.11.1'5.
DAN TOPPING
Gunfire Ends
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For· Sweep ·
LOS ANGELES -Southern
Callfomla 's baseball t e a m
destroyed a fine 0 r e g o n ,
pitching staff to win the
Paclfic-8 Conference title ond now faces an even more
,imposing pilchlng corps, !
Ed Putman and Marvin t •
Cobb slugged home runs •
Sunday as the Tr o J an s r; . .;w.
swamped the Ducks 14-1 to '~ ,
win the best 2-of-3 series tn '
two games. That gave the
Trojans (41·17) Ille rlghl lo
meel Cal Slate (Los Angeles)
in the first round ol lhe NCAA f '
District Eight playoffs.
e Gregg Wins
ONT ARIO -Peler Gregg
took the chec"'kered tlag while
limping across the tfart.finish ~
line Sunday in pit row as he
suffered a broken axle in the
last moments of the Ontario Angelus League Champs·
• • •
• •
t-.1onday, May 20, 1Cl74 DAILY PILOT 17
Tars, Chargers Face
{'1JJ, •. Tough .. Mound Foes
2!ii Pitching is lhe big question
•
J mark as Newport Harbor
High 's SiJilors and &Uson
lligh's Chargers move Into
second round com~tition on
the road in CIF 4-'K baseball
playoff action T u e s d a y
afternoon at 3: 15.
Newport llarbor coach Andy
Smith says he'll start Ernie
Hook on the mowid at Galvin
Park in Ontario a g a i n s t
Chaffey-which boasts Larry
Garcia as the big stopper.
Garcia staggered Mater Dei
with a five-hitter in posting a
5-2 decision Friday. The
question is can Garcia come
back with three days rest
against a rested Hook ?
And at Brookhurst Park In
Anaheim the Savanna Rebels
and All-Orange County ace
Dl.-.c~ te O.IW11 ,.,11, Oltl•M
Ttltt Rlvtr5klt FtMWtY !'0'111 IO Hklhwtv I' h1tnoll _,, el Cor°"'1. H~h on 1 '·2 mll11, rkttll on Euc:lld ~H "'l Ill. NorO• °" Euclld lo •tll 11 n Ol'I trio ft! CMtl9~ Hklh SChOl')I ) ,.. 1 on 'm ro Gr!IY9 Av<t. Ptrk locllf'd on rklllt. DlrKllMI hi •roofl.IWnl Ptr'c,
Alllllil+m P,rk loctl9d WHI Of 9!'1)(1•hur\I Juolor Hl11n, 1 .. s1 1.0<1rn ot S•nl• An• Frer.ot•~ 8rooknur11 Ju11lor Hi<in Is on ~, sloe of Brookhl.M"st. nortn of
Ltncoln =------~ know who will start against
Savanna," says Jensen. "l
may try to come back \Vilh
White to start but I also have
George r-.1eehan and Rick
Bashore available."
Hayes al!o~·ed only t\\'O
bascrunners in ripping Covina
Friday -!hose coming on an
error and a seventh inning
infield single.
The &-II. 16;-poOnd Hayes
uses a knuckle ~rve, a
fastball and changeup and ha!
excellent control.
His 12-5 overall record
includes a 1.00 e.r.a. and he
has slruck out 173 in 126
innings. He used less than 90
pitches in disposing or Co\i na.
Othea: guns in the Savanna
altack include catcher Joe
t\.-1artelli, a .450 hitter who
tripled in two runs against
Covina, and an outstanding
defense led by sophomore
shortstop Glenn Hoffman and
jtmior second baseman f\.larty
Castillo.
GT four-hour road race. Mater Dei High's Mona~hs captured the Angelus Tom Kirkness. Standing -assistant coach Bill
Gregg completed 118 laps League baseball championship. Kneeling (from left) Bowen, Jim Gardea, David Najera, Pat Eccles, Bob
Brian Hayes a\vait the Edison
Cha rgers. T,vo Net Tea111s Ho1ne;
Two Draw Road Tests over the fiat 3.l!M·mile, 19-tum Terry Canale, Chuck Linnert, Pete Doran, Gabe Macauley, Don Catozz a, George Hanna, coach Art
Ontario Mdtor Speedway Pettinicchio, Matt Smith, Mike Fahey, Dan Spain, Perry.
Edison coach Harvey Jensen
used Dave White for seven
course. His average speed was _________________ :.:_ ___ _.:c _____________________ _ * * * 98.276 miles per hour.
'Ibe Jacksonville. FI a , .
driver finished about a half
lap in front of fast-cioslng Bob
Boodurant of Sonoma, Calif.
Both were driving Carreras.
Third in the race wa s the
team of Mike Keyser, Towson,
Md ., and Milt Minter of
Ex-Orange Coast .Standouts
Help La Verne to B!g Season Fre3110.
Gregg earned a first prize of
$7,500. La Verne College breezed to another NAIA
• Randall Dies District baseball championship the other
PJIILAOELPIDA _ Roy E. night-and flve ex-Orange Coast area
Randall, Haverford's football standouts had a lot to do ~ith it. . ,
coach for ?I seasons and the Leopards coach Ben Hines has guided his
All·American quarterback of club to a 31-0 record thl15: fa~~ it 's far ~iv 't , , , I-from over. M~·· team :~s~~i~ 7i;:---La Veme,·aner polishing -off. Wmt'tief. .. 12-4~
Saturday in his Tuck~rton Cal ~tate (Dominguez Hills). _5--0, and .Whitti~r NJ hoOle ' again, 5-4, last week at Quigley F 1 e Id 10 The 70-y~ar-okl Randall bad Commerce, now sets its sights on the regional
retired in 1969 after heading
Haverford athleUcs for 35
yean. He joined the university
in 1933 as head coach of
football , basketball and
baseball.
He became head of the
department of p h y s i c a I
education in 1946 and
advanced to the positi on of
professor in 1951.
---CRAIG
SHEFF
e Waldrop Tops tiUe this weekend In Lewiston, Idaho.
RAI..ElGH, N.C. _ "I'm Th.en it's on to the naUooals a week later at
very shocked" was I he !Jberty, Missouri.
reaction of North Carolina's Hines woo the national Litle two seasons ago
great miler, Tony Waldrop, at Pboeoix and his team lncluded a trio of ex-
after being informed he had OCC stars.
been named Atlantic Coast Hines corralled four players from the
Conference athlete of lhe year. Pirates team of a year ago-pitchers Dan
Waldrop, who had run nine Qulsenberry and Tim Kelly, first baseman
consecutive sub-four minute Paul Fleming and second baseman Rich
miles received 15 votes from Fielder. Another ex·Buc-catcber Don
the 1Atlantic Coast Sports Snyder-is in his third season with the
Writers AssociaUon and wlU... ~s.
r e c e i v e the Anthony J Quisenberry, a rubber.armed right-hander
ttfcKevlin Award. ' who pitched a pair of nine-inning victories in
Runner-0p with 52 points one day a couple of summers ago, has had an
was another super star David outstandlng season.
Thompson rl North Carolina The Costa A1esa High graduate has an 11·1
State who led the Wolfpack to record thus far, including the 5-0 shutout of
the 1NCAA basket b a 11 Dominguez Hills last Friday. His e.r.a. was
championship. 1.95 going into the district playoUs. And he
was 5--0 in Soutbem California Intercollegiate e Sltlf!des Roll Alhletlc Cooference play.
BAASTAD. Sweden Snyder, ..who attended Corona de! f\.1ar,
Sweden's Davis Cup tennis batted .330 overall during the regular season
team, le d by young Bjorn and .348 in the conference.
Borg, advanced to the quarter-Fleming batted m while Fielder hit at a
finals of the European 1.one ,256 clip for the sea.son. Fleming prepped at
tournament, beating Poland 4-Marina but was not very well regarded there.
·l Sunday. ' Fielder, !rom Cosla Mesa High, balled .3 11 in
SC IAC action while F'leming hit .358.
Kelly did not have a record while pitching
in reli ef for t.he Leopards. His e.r.a. was LOO
in Tl innings.
This is Snyder's last season-but the other
four will be back-thus La Verne figures to be
stm:ig ag.a!n.Mlt.~a.r.----· ·---
Saddleback bas another top quarterback
prospect Dan.a Hills' Bill Springman, also a
flne defensive back, joins n:tuming letterman
Marty Ptlikkelsen, freshman Steve DeBord
(Tustin) and possibly Dan Dodd (San
Clemente) in tbe fight for the No. 1 QB spit
OCC's Tony Ciarelli, a very good tight end
along with being a top javelin thrower, has
narrowed his four.year choices to San Jose
State and Hawaii.
Shirley Babashoff, tbe Munich Olympic
Game1 swim star from Fountain Valley, may
compet.e for Golden West next season, says
GWC aquaUcs coach Tom Hermstad.
Min Babasboff bat been offered full rides
to MJaml and UCLA.
A pair of old teammates wili collide next
weekend when USC faces Cal State (Los
Angeles) in the NCAA district baseball
playoffs.
Pitcher :r.tark Barr (USC) and catcher Bud
Bulling (Cal St.ate) prepped together at
Lynwood High before playing two years under
Fred Hoover at Golden West.
Nogales pitcher Jim Salas was forced to
1bare a nc>-hlt&er with a ieammate last Friday
against Monrovia ln tbe CIF playoffs. Salas
was taken oat of the game twice for pinch
runners-the second time In the Last of the
slxth Inning.
Knowing that a player has to come out of
the game for good after the second pinch-
runner, Monrovia coach Arvin Wenzelberg
appealed 1he play -and Salas · w.a1 not al-
klwed to pitch the seventh.
It didn't make any difference as the
NogaJes rellefer set tbe WDdcats down
qulckly-tbikJDg out the side.
Wenielberg, who doubles as the school's
basketball coach, said later be felt kind of
sorry for Salas -but be was just doing
everything he could to win the game.
TIN.
TOYOTA
OWNERS
Baseball Standings
Month of
May Special
S7.?c~MT
•T'*-• .... 6,000 .... 12.000 --WITH 1111511.11 • "NOW
YOU CAN LEASE
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For.only
$1395.0,. -
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Montreal
New York
Chicall'>
Pittsburgh
Dodger•
Cincinnati
San Francisco
Allanta
•Houston
San Diego
w
20
20
16
17
13
12
West
28
20 • 22
20
20
18
L
16
17
H
21
20
22
It
15
19
20
22
27
Pct.
.'56
.S!I
,533
.477
.394
.353
.718
.571
.S27
,S()O
.476
.372
GB
" 1
4
511
711
6
7
8112
911
14
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East
Milwaukee
Detroit
Oeveland
Boolon
New York
BallimOCe
Chicago
Oakland
Texas
Kansas City
Minnesota
Angels
w
' 17
18
19
19
20
17
"'"est
18
20
19
18
16
18
L Pct.
16 .515
17 .514
18 .514
19 ,SOii
21 .488
18 .486
16 .529
18 .526
19 ,S()O
19 .SOii
17 .485
2l .462
GB
\\
I
I
1
I
111
2·~
CIF lat.eUll Pl1'l'Ott1 •·• Lakewood 11 P•lo• Verdes Orange Coast area prep Re<111nd1 11 Foolnll!
Eolson vs sev1M1 at Brookhurst tenrus powers Ne•~rt 11-~r Park !Anaheim) l: IS I"' OJ uu ~Wbu<'t' P1rk 11 H,,..Mme d r , d j '! he L• H11>r1 11 N"'""' Torr111ce an vurona e 1• ar are on I S11n M1rcos 11 LB MIUlk•n Lot Al1ml!os ., Eisirnllower road Tuesday in the CIF 4-A Newe>orl Hart>or Vl Ch•ftev 11 Galv•n
Park 10n1ar1oi J:1s quarterfinals while Orange
Aztecs Nail
Stars, 4-3
Cll" T~I l"l•Yirlb
4-A Cllwt.t'llr11h
FootnUI II Palos ....... .,...
Coron• oet M•r at l!le~tv HUis
S1nt1 Barber• 11 Slnla Morllcl
Newport Harbor II s .... ,,., Hills
J-A O..rtwrfff\ift
RIY01r510f Norm el Unl"'lt"tlty
Mlr1le5~ el C11r1mon1 ,..
El S"3undo 11 Ar11tla L ca g u e representatives Lvnwood ar San Bernerdjno
NOQalel ., Norwalk Laguna Beach and University LOS ANGELES -The Los
San M1rlno •! L19un1 1!11acn
wn11111r YI Harvard or sin
Otilspo undl<::iOtcl Coron1 et Uolano Angeles Aztecs, getting a goal A~iallon 11 Lomooc: are at home in 3·A action .
d I · I f I f · f~~~r~:: ~·~J~~ank an WO ass1s s rom e t v.•1ng caorillo 11 E~t•tslor Coach Pat \Vilson's Sailors
!·A Slfltlfl111ll
815~ 0 19911 II AgOU<I
Pasld11"16 Polv 11 C.nlrel
Pcler Filo11·s, dcfealed St. t-A 5''"111"a1' t I I t Su H'll Heme! It Norco mUS rave 0 nny I S
Louis 4-3 Sunday . to remain in aoniTa •11~,:m;.:~i~:11 after toying v.•ith Glendale
first place in the Norlh llr"h•en et w1ob 11oovcr _in first round act.ion, Ca11oln1eria al Mon1dalr 27 I Fr d
Ame . "---• , I ay. r1oan .:JUl.."1,."1,;!r League's Western Division. And Corona d~l Mar . meets
It was the Aztei:s' third E • S • B ev e ~I y Hills m a
-CO-tiV I( O"' ~as --ntries-e.--~emo~.ln-l!U-
Team Tennis
Summaries
rt!eclJ e Y c orJ m 11n i...: Beverly lfills scored a 22'11:-5 1 play ·2
Fiiotis helped give the LOS ANGELES -F.:ntries triLaumphQu~t ~na del Mar. d
Aztecs a 3· l lead with 28 are now being accepted for the mta s o v e r r a t e
minutes to play, passing to Uri Lo.s Angeles Maccabiah track Az~ecs . wen; lt~mpled by
Banhoffer for the second goal and field meet scheduled for Uru_versity ~ ~1rst ro~
and then to Ricardo DeRienzo June 16 at Santa f\.fonica City action . and Rivers1d~ North is
on the 1hird. College. now giv~ the unenviable task
Then Filotis scored on a Youths aged 10.18 are of stopping the _Orange League
penalty kick afler being eligible for competition which nn~erup TroJans at the . . Un1vers1ty couns. tripped 1n the ~alty box. It will be divided into men's and Laguna Beach. the 1973 CJF
was the goal which event~a.lly women's groupings and ages champion in 2-A circles. draws
won the game and nullified 10.12. 13-15. and tG-18. a home assignment against
two late_ Star scores. :\dmission to the everit is S2 longtime power San to.tarino.
The first Los ~geles goal for adults and free to tOOse 18 Laguna Beach buried Gahr
was sco red ~y Luis Maro~te, a and under. in fU"st round action, 25--3, and
20-yard shot m the 28th minute For furth e r information the adjustment moving the
of play. ~ contact the :r.taccabee Athletic Orange League into 3. A
L<is ~g~I~ leads the Club, 6392 Wilshire Blvd, or competition appears we 11
Western OiV1S1on of the NASL. phone (213) 651-3182. justified.
ut Ford Courier durability starts with a box-section
frame reinforced with seven crossmembers. An
independent front suspension features big coil
springs and a stabilizer bar. Long, wide rear springs
have ~ix leaves. Dual cylinder brakes
have 2 brake cylinders at each wheel.
The all-steel box is all-welded. And a
Courier easily carries up lo 1,400 lbs.
of payload and people.
porty The Courier pictured at right and
below sports a dress-up kit
that includes such optional
features as stfipes (in your
choice of 4 colors), wheel
covers, mirrors and a rear step cai1 or bumper.
There's also a popular bike·bar option (right).
And a deruxe box cover option (not shown) has
tinted side windows. Automatic transmissions
and air conditioning are also available options.
rl• ty Courier's spiriled. 1800-cc. engine gives
you alt the operating economies you'd
expect from a 4·cylinder import. And
th~ engine's 5 main bearings ... for
rigidity and strength ..• are designed
to help promote trouble·fret:t service over the long haul. For
more delails on lhis gulsy lillle economy pickup ... and ils
Ii Ille import price ••. see your Ford.Dealer.
• • ur1er
---
FORD ·
COURIER ,,
See your local Ford Dealer t
FORD DMSION
. ....,. __
l8 .... ~IL ( 1-'ILO I Monday, May 20, l'i74
-·
\ ;
I ~
•
"'"
BOB MESSINA <RIGHT) CHECKS TIME WITH UNI RUNNERS CODY BAKKILA (LEFT), MARK ZACREP.
A:rea Golf
--~Roundup
Mcado\vlark Countrv Ch1b
women's golf team defeated
~luntingt.on Seac\iff, 3-up, for
the Southern Ca I i f or·n i a
\VPLGA championship i n
;iction at Green River Country
Club recently.
In a criss cross tournament.
Jane DuRce \vas the a A fli ght
\\'inner V.'ilh 30 12, follO\ved by
FlorC'ncc Baker (31 ) and Cuba
Curl Cl3).
In R flight. the winner was
Freda Silverman at 301h with
Jean Hight second at 32.
Vickie ~·anace captured C
fl ight with 291h, followed by
Polly Myers (301h) and Fiona
t-.foore {321h:). FI o r e n c e
Ei ckhorn won D flighl wilh 32.
Jllission l'iejfJ
Jn a cross countrv
tournament for the \\'OmC'n .-s
club at t-.lission Viejo Golf
(:tub. Tudi Sher captured. A
flight honors with a 31.
c('{'(' Coury finished second
\\'i t~ 35 in A flight.
Edna Leon<ird \\'as the B
flight \\·inner \\'ith 3 O 1~ ,
foll ov.·cd by Jan Schudel with
32
lrene Kennedy won C night
,,·1th 3i 1 ~ nnd Shirley Lee was
1he J) Jlight winner v.·ith 37.
Tennis, ~cer
WQrld TNm Tennl• E••li'm Olvhlon
A!llnlit ~Kll"'1 W L I'd. Ga
Philad!"/phia
lloston
llal!ornore
New York
1 0 I.Ill»
4 J .511
3 3 -~ 1 • .200 centnol Section ~~~·~lir eY11a10 5s ~ .7\• .ill
(level~nd 2 ( .lJJ P1!!lOUrQn 2 0 .2)() WH!enl Ol~!olon
Ho us to~ Cli>CdOO r!inn~'ola f loriaa
Gutt,Pl1ln• section • 1 .aoo ) 1 .7H
J J -~ '2 ~ .HO P1dlk Secti~n Lol Anftltt l 1 .611
Golden GdJers 1 2 :.00 Oonver 2 S ,18(1
Hawaii 1 O .150 SllllMV'I Storn ~~jl\",:;.~u~~1~1~1t!:~~roh ll
Den...er 32. Detroit 18
OnlY marcl'lf!os s<hedU1!'d Torolc:ihl't Mll(llK
ealt!m!lf"e at New Yor11.
' '" ' ,,
1•' J''
". ,, '
'• ' ,, '
Lft A~., al pnHadelphla HQ\ll !Qfl .,.._ Toronto-Bulftlo at
Butta IQ (hl(.i!QQ at Mlnne101a .. Gold"" Gale" al Haw••• 0~1v ma1cnH sche<iYl!'d Tueid•Y'I M.llt~ Bal!JmQre e! 8Q•1on Lot Al'l<ltle• a! Pl!TS!>U•OM Cleveland a! Oerrol! .. Golden Goters al Hawa" Onlv malctle'S scll!'dvll!'<l
,.,.. Socctr
NA SL Narll'ltm Dlwlt.ion WL T•l'T"
Toronto 3 o o I 11 llotlo~· 1 0 1 111
R<>::Mf-!.!er 1 2 0 J ' NewYorlt Ol O •• E11ttm DIYillon pn11ai1t\ot1ia l o O 1 25 /./,oami ! 1 1 8 2()
Bollimore i I 0 1 " Wa•hl~Ton 1 2 0 ' ID
01111111 Cnlrll Ol\llMon, • o 8 14
S! Louli 01 ' 0 1 13
Oen•er W.,ttm DiylolOll ' o 2 l
Loi A""ltl 1 0 1 8 ;J $~n J ose 11'1971 ~~d"'" 111)11•
V;m(ovver l J 0 S ''
S111M11y'1 Scono$
ll:ocl'lf!os!er 1. New York 1 Taron!o 1, Vantoowr 1
Lo• ArlQ'el~ '· 51. Looi• J ~allle ], Sen Jo.e 1 w ... nesday, M1y n New York 11 Philadl-!phil
Friday, MIV 24
S~n Jo•! at Bdl!imore Wi!ShonQton a1 Miami S1!unf1v, MIV iJ Philadelphia at Dall•~ Sea111e 1! ~nver Los Anoele; a! SI Lours l'lo•!on al Vantouver
Sundav, MIY ;, S~n Joie al ll:<>::l'lf!oste1 Napoli {l!llY) ar Ne~1
exnibl1lon
YQ1k.
Goto !Je1\ds
ua C:roup
UC Irvine \\'i ll send it pole
vnulter and two relay tearn s 10
the NCAA college division
track and field chan1pionships
at Eastern Illinois University,
~lay 30-31 and Jlllle J.
Robert Goto, a freshman
pole vaulter, roared 16 feet at
the Fresno Relays to meet the
qualifying standard and also
to set a UCI school record.
On the 440 relay team that
has run 41.6 this season will be
Oa\'e \Villiams, Rick ri.1artin.
Jan1es Shirley and Pa t
d'Addea.
~lajor I .. eague Leaders
The mile relay team , with a
mark of 3: 16.9 at Fre.<;l'lo, will
consist of Richard Grout, Jeff
Raikes, Shirley and Martin.
AMIEIUCAH LEAGUE Smith, $1\., J1; a Wi!llam1, Chi, n .
l'IATT!NG !90 o! bah) -rare.;1, Ml", HITS -Garr. All, 'S; R. Smltn,
,,()9; R Jack'-0!", Dok, ..J'I}, McRte, SIL. \,l; MaO<k>x. SF, lJ: Rtlll, SIL. '9;
KC , .Jn. e Rob•n•on. aa1, _l:l.l: llYckner. LA, •91 G•rvey, LA. "9; D.
Ya1tne-msk" 9,.,, .JJJ; C.•"10te, Cle, TnQmo1. SO. '9. ,))]; Har9rove. lex. XlJ OOUBLES -Ro.e, (In, n;
Earl Jones, a long jump and
triple jump competitor, may
also qualify for the mect in
one or both events.
RUNS -CamoanPri,, Oa~. 18; Coric""'°"· Cln. 11: Ga~Y. LA, 12;
MoylX'HV. I(( li. R Jock•Oll· 0~~. lO: (l'd~nQ, H!n, 11 ; Maddo•, SF. 11.
Ya'!"C""""" e~ ... l•, Htndenon. en.. TRIPLES -A. Oliv~r, P9n." Garr. 71 Atl, •; Ru1.ell, LA, ,, BoolO!, SF. •: S
RUNS l'ATTl'O IN -lllJ"•ouoh•. T•l'd Wlln J.
Te •, ;I R J-JC>•on. (),\> .. ~· BrloQ,, HOME RUNS -Wvnn. LA, 11: Sla110. NY , 9, Aaron, All , 9; Bench,
M•I. n . G IJc•!l es. N1. 11; McRaf, Cin, ~. T Ptftl, Con, 8; Cl!'<leno, Htn, )J'S WHAT J;.
KC ?;, li•S"-' Mon,'/\. R11:lr 0••-.2S S; Ga•vev, LA. !, HIT~ -c~r•N, /\\1n, ~; I\ Jonn,on. !>TOLEN BASES -Brock, Stl, 11; CAR
~
A A --
i._.., 'oO; f:lu.,ouQh<., re,, •9. l!uoc o.~. (Ni<!nQ, Hin, n. MO•ll""· (In, 16; SHOULD BE
'8' Roi~1. KC. •6; /,\cl!ae, i<C. "6 ; L0Po1, E. Hernor>de1. SO, 13. DICK MILLER Ca,,,pan~n1. Oa~, ~ PITCHING I• D•cl1ionsl
DOUBLES -R.ydl. Oa~. H : /,'eUt,.mlth, l/I • C I 000. 1.11 ~a.
llurrovgn., Tex. 11: McRae. ICC. lO c SF. •-0. I 000, 126 r 1ldwell, SF, 1·1, He~IY, ~c . 10: I!. Jac~•on, Oak. 10 els. 1.•I Matlac~. riv. S-1 •. el3. 1.19 MQ11'QRS
TlllPL'E S -11 White, NY. •; McGlotntn. Stl, S-1. .Ill. 3.09 Grllfln, 'I Gare,~. 'Ail. J; Valenrine. (~I. J; Hln, S-1. 833. ?.l6 Jol\n, LA S-1, .Ill, H~W l Uwd 1--., J!·,~·1. (~I j Olis, ICC, 3: 1 A9 Hou111'1. LA, .. 1 •. lllO, ~1 .96. ..,,,_. •• (~.,,P~ntri~. Oo~ J. ~TR.IKEOUTS -Seaver, NY, 73; 12ow.w ....... atSo.Mollli
HO'l'E RUNS -G Ne11'e~. NV, ll ; Koo!m•n. NY, sa: P.Nllk•O. All, SB; 5-tGAflCI 557·21l2
• J~ckwn. Oak, 11. E1riog1, Mii, 9; M~ .. i~"~"~·~'~'~' '~'~' ~M~M~"~"~m~";"·~'~A~·~"~·~~~===~~~~~~~~ll Burroogh1, T~•. O; w Ho<"!.,.,, Oet. e. ----
STOLEN IHISES -Pate~. KC. IS;
Ncrm, Oak 1•. Camoane"'· O~~. IL
Vlonl!ord. KC. 10; LQWen11ein. Cle, 9;
"''e"· {al. 9 1>,,,,01e. Te•. 9
PITCHING ~· Oec;islcn;) -G Petry,
ci .... i.-1 1 6S1. 1 n Fin<.1e•s. Oak, .i.1,
.800. 1 u Colrman. oer. o 1 .ISi.i. 3.n
Medic~. NY . 6·l l>O, ?.99 Drago, esr.
3-1, .7!0, 7 Ml Fit1morrls, KC, J..1,
.l'ill. ~51 Mdle•, Del, S.2. fH. 1,]8
Hunter Od• 7.j, .100, 11!.
STRIKfOIJ TS -N 11van. Cal. !5;
t11~1eve~ If .~. 61, G. Perry, c1,, 31;
Sln<.1.,.-, (~I <• ll"lb•. 11:r \J.
NAT IONAL LEAGUE
8ATTltiV 190 a1 t>ars l -11:. Smlti..
StL. ,l97, C>•"· Al\, -~~; Reil!, ~1\.,
.])(), Gr~ ><!n )'8: Un.er, PM, .)..&7.
RUNS -ll~na,, SF, 311 Brock, Sll.,
3], Wy"n. LA, :11; Cl!"ClenQ, Hin, 30;
Cev. LA, 77
ll:UNS 8ATTEO IN -Wynn, LA, 37;
Cf<Jeno, Hin, l " Gi<Yt~. LA. JJ: R:.
Auss ies Nah
T ennis Y.ictory
NAPLES. Italy -Australia
won tbe Federation CUp, the
women's equivalent of the j
Davis Qip, Sunday with
Evonne Goo I a gong and Janet!
Young beating the United
States team of Julie Reld"'tan
and Sharon Walsh 7·5, U in
the decisive dollbles match.
UASl.474610
W.4GOl4Sff.at-· l•••O.u.
COSTA MISA DATSUN
"41 HAllOIM.YD,C.N.
HW410
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNTY
CA LIFORNIA 'S LARGEST LAW ·SCHOOL
OFFERS A CHOICE OF FOUR
PROGRAMS OF LAW STUDY:
• IN IUnttl 21,i, ., J TIAH of NU-TIMI law 1tudy
\15-16 d •uroom houo per wet kJ, or
• IN lllHfl l Y, .,. 4 Yt AIS of PAIT-TIME d•y, evening,
or wnk•Ml l•w 1tudy (J ct111e1 per wee~. J.4 houtJ
per. d•n),
• Yw tart t1m ywr JU•IS OOCTOI (J.0.1 degt'ff tnd .._ .
ELIGIBLE TO TAKE THE
CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
W .. ll 01: l'NOHt POI CAfA~OGUl
800 Soulh Brookhurst
Anaheim 92804
17141 635-3453
APPLY NOW FOR THE FALL SEMESTER,
BEGINNING SEPTEMBER 5, 1974
ALL FOUR LAW STUDY PROGRAMS
AVAILABU IN FAU 19711
)TUO{HfS IUGltll fOt ftOf•AU.,. tHIUllO SnlOaHf l.Ooo\IU
NrlOVlO lo, W'l'UAHS
}'ish Report
SAN DIEGO -!40 1n11ll'fl'. lll
vetlow1all, 21 while s~a t>.t". ll llOl>ito.
es calico t1_a~5. 11 hailbY!, 161 roe~ cll<l. Lt\Ul.\:UN bau.... -_.
MAL 18U -Sl anQle": m roc~ cod.
HIEWP'ORT tDaYtY'I Lockli") -69
.&Miers: 71 roc~ cod.
DANA WHAR F - No coar due lo h1Qh wind•.
•
Pro Track Helps Messina Loop MVP
To Abbott Relate to Prep Spikers Newport Harbor High' s
Morgan ,tAbbott was named pla~f the year in sunset
League baseball as selected by
the circUlt coaches.
By STEVE BRAND
Of tl'lt OlllY Pllot S1•1f
\Vhen a pro tal ks to high
school kids, they usually J;s-
ten. Jerry West has no trouble
getting the attention of a
basketball school and ri.terlin
Olsen attracts Ct'O¥.'ds which
immediately hush when he
talks.
Bob Messina is a pro. too,
and his kids listen . Only it's a
little different when the sport
is track and field .
"I think my turning pro
helped me more than it did
the kids ~o recognize me."
says tne 24-year-old Golden
West College and San Diego
Sta te graduate v.'ho is an as-
sistant track coach at Uni·
versity lligh.
Messina sped to a 4:00.6
n1iJc at San Diego State and
by his ov.n admission. "ran
under 4:03 at least 15 times
and kicked myself that many
times for not hav ing picked up
the pace somC\\'herc in tile
race to diµ under 4 n1inutes."
But last ve.:u:. \vhen 11.essina
\\·as student tC'oching in San
Diego. he had the ;<\l-tin1c
tortw·ous schedule.
Working at a racquet ball
center. he'd get off at 2 a.m.
and have to be up by 6 a.n1. to
m<:ike his classes. tic \\'as
assistant co a ch i n g at
South\\'estem College. \vhich
didn't \(':tVe time for training.
· ·'rlK' pros offered me a real
nice :o;a\ary lo sign and even
though I "·:is ottt of shape. l
St1\\' lt as a ,,·ay to quit n1y job
and get back into shape ."' sa~·s
:-.:essina.
l·lc sees no coonict bcl\veen
running-pro and Leaching
an1ateurs.
··rm still running because l
want to break: four minutes
Zip Phone
Blue Cross .
ol So\lthen\ Cllllomla
Your health
ls our only concem.
,
and it's fun'" says
·'But the truth is,
kids is more fun.
Messina.
teaching
"1 spend a lot more time al
it now than I dQ, in training;
There's nothing to compare
v.·ith teaching an athlete and
then suffering \rith him,
v.·hether it be in SUCC€SS or
defeat "~1v future is in roaching
and i know it. It'll even be
1nore time consuming next
year v.·hen I coach cross
country but I'm Io o king
forw ard to it."
ti.lessina. who lives in Irvine,
says he reels pro track is a
natural graduation from
college.
"You need someplace to go
and the clubs just aren't
strong enough. 1 say if ~·ou're
good enough to run pro track,
vou should have th a I
Opportunity," says f\-1essina.
t-.1essina's main message to
·his young runners is to !].4JJI:.•
"\Vhen you rel.~~·' ~oU don't
have muscle ti£htinr; muscle,"
he s:tys. '"fhc sudden rise or
40 See Action;
12 Ar c Pitchers
SAN FRANCISCO -San
the Africans like Kip Keino
and Ben JipcOO of Kenya is
becawe they have the ability
to relax.
"I think the same ~n be
said or the continued
dominance or the sprints in
the U.S. by blacks. They seem
to be able to relax and get the
moot oot of their ability.
''11le good distance rumers
all look like they could run
forever. Ifs because they're
relaxed."
Messina says he 'll continue
to run relaxed but his schedule
v.·ill be plenty busy.
Fl"I THfl'I
.. ... f>ltyef, ScllcNil
P-M1Jno1, Anahllm
P-Shu>dra, LI••••
(-River•• Wesler"
1nr-ttun1er, Sa~r•
lnf-ll:lcnirds, Wt!ttmLn1ter
1n!-Ev1n., W•ll'!'n tnf-Rel'fl, An.al\eu"n ln!-Flnn,,.!'.\1,,.-11.tiai>tl"', _ OF-Ouff:f, "Ntwpor1 ,,.,.,.
OF~llh>y.a, Loara
OF-Paine, WH !minster
OF-LQl'IOne<krr. Marina
Ulll-F~rer, Marina
Mtl• ,.
•·' .111
.•11
.•7D •• "' ,All .Jl6 ...
.JIO
,71 l
.ill
i t(tfMll Ttlm J~
P-Pa!!en. Sanre An• <" P-Hook. NeWi>Ql'1 fla•ex>r c -v lonarQll, Hun!lrl!l!on er cjl ,;i Inf-Mau.a, Loar• -1111 lnl---(nard, Nt 'l• 1 \~\~~ .an rlnqton 6~~ch _111
OF , We,11·rn .m
-10. M,.rl~~ , ••
O)be-rliOO, NrwPOl'1 Hartxlr l•I
F-G.as1t1Q, SM>l'1 Ana ,/!lo
"I'll rontinue to run for the ~
ITA pro track circuit as long
as I can," he says. "But I also
plan to devote the better part
of the day to teaching
coaching." u111-H1ll, wa,rmlnll".. 11' ·-----~____...
L>C-No 219~:1\°t•'
,!l!l~·sa
1675 Superior
Costa Mesa
Reploc:tmrnf
Pori'
0 11r Spec:iolty
"For A Wattt Heaiel' • A ICit-
c:hen °" A 1otti In S¥e -
and For Reol Quick St n'iet
Gi•t "Joe" A Dial"
AY SALE!
We need your Trade!
Premium pnces paid.
EXCfUENT SELECTION
Immediate Qelivery
NABERS
~
Ol'(N 1 DAYS
Ple11se Call 540-9 100
2600 Harbor Costa Mes~
~ ~ -.-==~--~ INE CAR OWNERS
Diego P<ictres ;ind San LEATIIER WorW't n.ttt ~I Yllyl r:1 ft' r Frnnci~co Gi;1nts baseball fans LIFE · oY_... at .... ..,., ... c.-11 l21ll '''"lttJ got their 1noney·s \\'o r th _L_..:::.:_::;_ _ _:..::=:..::..::..:.::::~..::..:::..::.:.::..:----'
Sunday \\'hen the P<idrC'S
dcfeatt.'d 1hc liiants 10·7 in 12
innings.
DOES YOUR CAR IDLE ROUGH? WE
START HARD? CA HELP GIVE POOR MILEAGE? N
THE CARBURETOR SHOP
1 ... 1 llAJAOll 114VO. Cot!A Mn4 .. 1 .. JM Ail-·---·-···-......
EaC'h tcan1 used 20 player.;
and of the _4() total 12 '"ere
pitdlers. Additionally. there
were 26 hits. tbrec of \\·hich
i,\·ere homers. in the marathofl 4-hour. 19-nUnute.game. ..__ ....... _ ...... _ ...... __ ,,.....,_..,.. __ ..,.. _ _. -
•
I
I
It cares for health and
budget too. The cost
of our new Small
Group Pla n fo r
growing companies is
as low as the lowest-
cost compa rable plan
you can fi nd. But
protection is big and
broad, and even includes $300,000 Major
Medical• coverage. Find out all about this
new well-rounded package of good
benefits. There's no problem in making a
simple phone call to 835-3855 or the re's
nothing square about sending in our I coupon.·
•underwritten by Health Service lne., an underwriter
wholly owned b)' the Nation al Slue CrOSI A$socia1ion
'
~·
' '
•
•
M
fD
SM
AL
Fl
M
Tl
~
1 • 9
14
15
161 17
19
201
n
"I >3
2•1
201
291
311
321
~I
381
39 • ., 43
441
461
"
17
"'
•
MIXED SINGLES
,_, /' ...
by Wm. f. ~rown and Mel Casson
. G~PSV, DO l/o/J
fHINK "THAT 50M€Wf\ol<?~
ON 'SOM€ Ollltl<?
PLANer. ..
TUMBLEWEEDS
... T"o</U' //JON!le/<?1N6
IF fHf'~e·s //IToLll6oNT
LIFe' O/l EAl<?TH?
0
. : .5)-t. •
d_ • • 0
~ 0 ...
fl I ARJ:tlT \tJU GOING 10 COMPLIMEITT
Cl.AUPE Mf ON MV NEW SU/1? MY 01.11 ONE WAS
Pl'f P RAVEN. 11115
JS Pfl'P JET.
MUTT AND JEFF
I'D LIKE A GCX>D
SMALL OOG.Ql~E
ALL ,._~'{OWN!
FIGMENTS
..
NANCY
MUTT, TCAN
VCT VOU A
S MALL DOG
FOR LE5S
T._IAN $/0.
OH.DEAR--A
MOUSE·--! BETTER
CALL MY CAT
A THOROUGf.lBRED.
ON[ WITH A
PEDIG RE.E?
HERE, KITTY
TODAY'S CIDSSWD!D PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Male bird
4 In the rear
9 Reprov~
14 Mrs.
Burrow:>
15 Allov-
coated
steel
16 Was s•cl.
11 Protn~tanl
19K1ndnl
4 7 Greek
godde~s
49 Milestone
~Wood
~I 1 '10lh:
Con-b.
to rm
!J~ WP.nt out
W 11h
~ Snake::
!JR Form
animal
flO Sall:
s ~turday"s Purzle Sol~ed:
.. ' .J l!. ~ p ~ ' 1;, t
• ' c ' ~ o ,. r (, ~ I~ ' ' " . " ' /, " P ! ' ' ' ' ,\ N (I Tl ' ' ' ' I ' ' ' -
• (AL S V fLP f ~'
' " JI N I ~-' ' ' /, r ,, I ~ T f 1, ~
(, :, I 'lli ' "''' ' ' f l T UR K S l ~
•l!P f'ROP O l~(S
I ~ ~ ; lB Un ACl~~•"
11, r f [ • A i-; ,\ > l
"" ' " R II C ' f (, p ~ '
SUREr
!'LL GET
HIM ~GIVE
ME THE
MONCY!
·-~.., .. -~~~·-..... ··""'
PEANUTS
.. ,
.. NoT IF
T~e<1ve 1Al<'.tN
A 6000 LOOK
1
'
Ao VG
LAff'-LY •
by Tom K. Ryan
COLOR-B!.INP, fH?
•••
I
by Al Smith
5-20
by Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
SOME
CAT
-r•·"·-..... -'' r~ •
d1um
20 Imped~
legally
L1 Vent1la!e
LL That g11I
23 Look
F1encti
GI Mis:;
ShOro
62 Color
64 Invent
66 Track
1(.. !; ' ' ' ' ' • ;, \J f
" ' •I! 0 A D S ' . '
o t1 1cers
B 1 eaches
3~ Gaspe
' ' ' '
THAT'S RIGHT! ERNIE STRAND MADE ONE
PHONE CAL.L. BEFORE GOING 0 A
TRAVEL AGENCY! HE HAS h-~o/
obl1Quelv
24 M1:ssSan
Juan. et al
26 Elect11cal
units
29 Calilomia's
Big-·-
31 Steal
Slang
32 Turbuferrl
disturbance
33 Rely
36 Aloof
per'°" 38 Tiiie ot
Stllr new lrrcks Part of
9 Wild time: Quebec 67 Delay Sloing 37 Su1ety bond
Sword • 10 Slrarghl 40 Small
68 andprper 11 Real umbrellas 69 ShOvel s relahve worrywarts 42 Hang around
70 Winter 12 Sea: 45 leg~I rugby
forecasl French pass
71 Precognition IJ N~ger 1an df\ Reserved
· city · /or tuturc 0
0·•w· N 18 Hoofed use O ma1TVT1als 53 Bes!
1 Desert 24 Issued a member
animal commar.d 55 1 rap
2 Extremely 25 Detected 56 Meat l)les
fat 27 French 57 Wool
3 Actress soldier source
RESERVATIONS FOR
MEXICO ClTY:
MISS PEACH
•
DOOLEY'S WORLD
Dr. SMOCK
WHA,-'s "l"'MIS? AN
I NVl.,-A"f'ION "'f"O A
F'SY'GH IA-fRIS'f"S'
coNve:N"flON :=-
GORDO
~l"s '"' \JIC,.T!M CF
A Cr<1Me !
MOON MULLINS
IT'S OUR
,ANNIVERSARY,
,AND l LIK'c To
'.-A;.-, 1.001< .AT MY
ENGAGEMENT
-,,---.J r---...•o.. RING ·-
ANIMAL CRACKERS
by Charles M. Schul1 ,..,----""""'-, U.:.:Ll , 60
AHE.-\D! (:\
F.:1LLUW1 Nf'.!
.. .... , " -. •. ~·---\".
by Mell hOnOr
39 Ballroom
• d&ntfe
41 Surrtlse
AJ Formot
wit
-44 Used in
themoulh
46 Blnds:2
words
Davis
4' Ontopol
5 Mlnlslercd
lo
28 Bed lhroal, 59 Had ute
tor short 61 Gossip:
30 Poelic Informal
proposilion 62-Mornirigs'.
33 Adul!6fated Informal ·
-AND AflTHl.ll< ~AY~ TMAT WHEN HE
'---=-c'1 r.rr:ow~ IAP, HE WANH
TO 13E A bocrorr:
131A1' SUPP~!< YOU
1-lAV~N'T GOT WHAT
IT TA/CEf TO &E
"TMEN IT'S
NO DiS<&~ACE
10 EIE A
TA~ENTED AMATEUR .
2
14
" 20
39
l
6 Legal
afla1r
7 Naval
s • '
34 Become 63 Vim
benelicial: 65 $1,000;
Var. Slang . ~' 10 II ll IJ
•
I
•
.
' •
'
O~ A 1...AWYE!t: ! A PflOFESSIONAI..
MAN, AltT~U~ ?
• .a-= ..
l
\ I I 1 t:~ "'•'" ......... "I. • -
'. ' , . ' ...;'
by Clfester Gpuld
Monday, May 20, 1974 DAILY PILOT
byR°'1er Bradflefd:-"
~...,
ALLEGRO,
. ALLEGRO,
ALLEGRO!!..
DOESNi'-
A"'IBOrN COMPOSE
MUSIC ANDANTE
ANY MORe?
by Geor9e Lemont
NOW ;r SHOUt..P
COLJCH "T'HIS veFlY !
CAi:t! e F="U l.-t..Y... •
'111 ·:11', I
by ~us Arriola ----SOMEO>IE
~1-JACKf'D se~~!
(
SMALL., '/cS·-
BlJT NOT
,A FL.AW
IN IT.
by Ferd Johnson
t-/oRooM
FOR ONE·
by R09er Bollen
... jl.)\D l<URr
1.ANl>!S FEEL.1~66 ?
:~; ·-'
' ·-... .: .~ ..
' '
L:....---------~'-THE GIRLS
~~5-Jo ,..Or course, the nite thing about Jcalher patche.'l is evtn
when you're not doin.g anything you look as i( )'OU are.'1
DENNIS THE MENACE
-------·.
'
'OPEN '!OtR WINOOW,Mit WU.SON, AN11Ell US
'JOOR FAV'RITE TUNE ! '
•
471-1350 '•
lWO GREAT
MUSICAlS
"RDDLBt OH
TH~ ROOF"
&
*'MAH OF
U MAHCHA"
. '
IGI
' ........ o.-c-,. ........
-•
fflOl'ld41. ""''' 20, J,. ....
l:arol Honored
NEW YORK <tiPl1 -Carol
Channing, CUTTently starring
on 8:-oadway Ul "Lorelei." bas
been given th'! aMual award
1 fOf' excellence in the art! by
the Dute~ Treat Club. She is
vtoman to be so
.... G....,..,,.
G ..... --·J-rtili........ ....... Bnc~ ·-,.,A Tuuch
Of Class
•'The Twelw: Chatrs 'i1 uproariou1 1 flf'll!A"'truelanof • P., ,
collttdt ki1 to 1ee it"~~ ................. , ..
~ .... ..-.•(o•
"THE LAST
MERICAN HERO"
ood
"Pit'f" • 011ily at 7. t 0: IS
s-de'f • l :'4S·1·10:1S
"Clwrir'" • D11ily at 1:'40
5-day • 2·S:20.8:'40
,..,..,.1 .... ~···-....-···-"
Lo ........ fl••·
S11·99IO
...... WOOi.fi
11..UINO IAOOUI -.
WHlll DOU n Hun ..
--.-....... 11-
,,__.,.,
•tL•motiSI
~1~ 1S16
lln•o•~ "••· .. ~.t ••
ll"Gtl
111·•010 °"'' Ol.UOCM COUNTY f ·I MOQWWl(ol
IONIT HWOID •MIA IMllOW
JHI OllAT OATSIT 1"'1
fANTASTIC PlANfT IC'l
~." !»•••
'··-·· •t ·--... ~/ 9611411
-..nOHU.U.OD
GOOFATHll 111
PUii • IUM ton
LADY SINGS THI llUIS "''
CLIMTUSTWOOD
"MAGNUM
FORCE"
Both in Cdor fR1
A "PAPIU.OH" V "DAY FOR MIGHT' ll"GI
•
"lOYIH' MOUY"
'""-J n.. p,_ ....,... Ill
• l"RWY (MANCHESTER EX.
G .G. FRWV (CITY OR. IEX .
•
"SllPfCO"
"OOH'T LOOK NOW" Ill
A "THE COHYIASATIOM" V "MAH OH A SWIMG" ll"GI
Bv Tk Anodal«I !'nu allNrRY ~ f o J 1o·w1 n g· art I. ~O CHARGE -~telba
Billboard's hot record hits for ~toot,gomery. Elektra
the week endang May ts. ai 2. PURE LO\'E -Ronni~
they appear in next week's ~Wsap, RC ·\
issue of Billboard magaz.ine. 3. THE STRE . .\K -R.::i~
HOT Sl!'\GLES St.evens. Barnaby
· l. THE STREAK -Ray t HO~"EYl!OO~ l'EELI~'
Ste\·ens. Barnaby _ Roy Clark. Dot
2. DA.~CISG llACHl~"E 5. I WILL ALWAYS LO\"E
The Jackson 5, ~Jotown YOl: -Dolly Parton. RCA
3. THE E.\'TERTAl'\ER 6. S0~1ETlll\'G -Johnny
~tan·m H.am.lisch. !.ICA Rodriguez. ~lercury
4.TIIESHOWMVSTGOOS ;_If YOL' LOIL'~'.!: Let·
-Three Do; S!ght. Durlhi~I ~le Kno\i· Singer Tony Bennett
5 BA:'\D CJ:\ THE RL:\' -8. LAST Tl\IE I SA\\' HI\! has received honorary
Paul '.\lcCatU\Cy and \\'ings. _ Dottie \\.est. RCA degree of Doctor of
Ul'IT~
Educated Voire
Capitctl 9. O'.\ THE CC\'ER OF TllE ?ilusic from Berklee
6. YOC '.\IAKE ~fE FEEL ~n:SIC CTT't' \[\\'S -liu•ck Colle'ge of music in
Bk.A\'O \'E\\' The Qv.·ens. Capitol lfouston
St\lisocs .. .\vco IO. COL.\IRY BL'\lPKJ~ -,-----"---7. lliD:'\IGJ-IT AT THE Cal Smith. AICA
OASIS -\!aria \!uldaur, EASY USTE'.\l~G
JU:prise I. HELP \IE -Joni
\"ideo ,\·ward
1'EW \'ORK (Ll'll -'!be
onh· 1973 Sldne\' H1Uman
FoUndation awa"1 in tbt
broadcasti!}g field went 10
Paul AJuneyer, producer -
't\Titer of the Group Yi
i\l estinghouse Broadcasting
Company J Crban .A.merica
unit documentat)', "Preedom
and Securny: the l "ncertain
Balance:'
Acziff Ada1nant
t\culr P.~GE 20 2·4a
."1amanl -nwrj XASHVILLE , Tenn. 1 IJP1 i
-Cowltry music l)l!l~l!r Huy
Acuff says 1r any con1:n!s111n1u1
or senator from Tcnnl'S~t·i>
\'Otes for lmpcachmcol of
President Nixon w i I ho t1 l
cc:J'l<nt.e evidence Acuff ~viii
peni:>n!Uy campaign agains!
him.
.. If impeachment i.~ 1'ul1•(t
\Vilhout i,:onulnt'. substantial,
t'Onerch' cyhk!llce ·~ In a i_~11u·t 11f low. clearly
rstahli~hh1g .;ullt on an
111111t·111·hublc offense under t~
ti i I' t' t' I rules Of the
\ uust1l11!ion." Acuff ~aid,. "I
will µcrtiOnlllly c n m pa 1 g n
:11.tolnsl nuy ond 1111 Tennessee
c•on~rrs51111•r1 t1nd 8l>nalor& -
l!i·puhll«nn 01· llc1nocrat
"'ho voll' for it."
:'\c\\· Opera •l ································~
GLE~S FA.LU. X.\·. tl'Pl1 •
-The Lake George Opera •
festival this summer "'iU •
present an opera w or I d :
premiere. The v•ork is "The •
(1uld" bl' Jose Raul Bernardo, •
a 3-1--\•eM"-old Cuban. and the •
first ·performance "'111 be on :
,\ug. 8 at the Performing . .\.rts •
Cen t('r, State L'niversLly of • • '.\e11.· \"erk 1n Alpany. •
'V.ROOI" Ill
• •
• • • • • • •
• • •
8. nfE LOCO.\fOTJ O'.\' -~1itcbell. Asylum + "'fAKTASTIC PLANET" ll"GJ
Grand funk, Can1tnl • 2. I \V0!\1' L..\ST A D1\ Y
9. r\·e Been SEARCH!\'' SO . WIT ll 0 UT ·y 0 t•
LO:,:r; -Chicago. Columbia Carpenters. A&\1
!IJ HELP :1fE -Joni 3. THE £'.\IERTAI\'ER
\fltchtll. ,\!>~·)um ~larvin Hamlisch. \1CA 5
TOP LP'S 4. OH VERY \'OL:\'G -Cat
1. TIIE ST I'.\ G Stevens. A&\f
Soundtrack. \!CA 5. YOL: \\'O\''T SEE \IE -
2. CAT STE\'E:\S -Buddah Anne \lurray. Car:>itot
and 'fht Chocolate Box. A&\I 6. TSOP -\!FSB. Columbia
3. \lAHIA \IL'LDAL:ll -7. SL1;\1)()\\'\' -G<irdon
Reprise Lightfoot. Reprise
4. Pi\L1. \fcCAR'r.\EY A~1J 8. IF YOlJ LO\'E \IE
\\'J;\f;S -Band On The Run, Oli\'ia \"e\1too-John. ~IC,\
Apple ' 9. KEEP 0:\ Si"\'Gl\G
a. JOH:\ DE\'\'ER !Jelen Reddy. Capitol
''THE GREAT G.4.TSIY" ll"GI -''SOMnlMES A GRU. T MOTi OM"
IG T 7:00
"TEAC..U" Ill • "WEUEHO wmt A IAIYS!TIEI."
'"THE STIMG" IPGI -"CHARLlf YARRICIC" IPGI
"PAPILLOtr IPGI -"FIST FUU OF DYMAMITP" IPG•
"'THRff MUSICfTffRS"
• •
• •
• • • • • • • •
SAH CLEMENTE t.11~ At.1"~ ~'I/ l(lY,
' " -"' -~v
SANTA Atil.4. f'ALJl,J lJ•'l\1 1'J 'i·l', 111•
be: JI .r .~PO. T r~:' .\;.. '( ;. ~,;.: ' f ' 1
SEAL IEACH 8A't ·111 01'>1 .... .. ~ ....
WESTMIMSTER V.'L'·TS• -. ' ,,~ 44;.;I
LOHG IEACH f-L AL.\ 47 · 'J
f'.A.LO Vhl:D~ Ar JD c;.r,.. ·,
LONG IEACH l ! Afr 4 : ~ ~l
• • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • Crtarcst Hit.;. J:c \ 10. I HA\'E TO SAY I LO\'E
6. f;HA:\D FC\'K -Shinin' \'OC I\' t\ SOXG -Jim CrOC'C -:~:f:!::t:~~~----_:·~·1:2~c~';;'~A~l~R~S~"-_,,.....,,.,.~~_!_~• ••••••it••••• .. ,.• •""' c • • ic • • • • • • • • • • • On. Capitol ABC '.'I . __ _
~"~:~rf:rco~~r:::~:\1~ -----LI NT EASTWO 0
,, .. '.
Court and Soark. Asylum
9. ELTO" JOll" -Goodbye , ·---\'cllov1 Brick Road. \!(;A
10. .\1JKE OLDFIELD
Tubular licl!s. Atlantic
fltOM r.tw llN( CIN(MA.
~-JIMI HIHDlll M
"JIMI PLA rs IBIREJ"
0 rouNTAIN \'AHi• .,.-: ... i-r........._I • .:;;v;:;oo;i. ~;-;;.;,., ••
.. ~l1tl"llm"
At 1130P"!, '"'l1tt Coti.,lnlrtioa• • "'Hwold & ...... ,~,
Hfdt!i1a
1.7~ Sit I Su<'I ·1~ 2 :)')
St••t Mcqr.-
Dt.1fln ftuff1nw ..........
Also IPGI
"Tht <Htowuy"
______ ,_ ----
(
GRAND OPENING -MAY 22
•Edwards New -Beautiful
Newport Cinema #2
•
..THE P'APll CHASl"
"C~ ut.rty"' Ill I-''-----~----------
5.oftlO ""• ,,_.., .....
llo1• Col-S~I 1011
, .......... --' --... ..,,UM laaGI •
•
"LOYIM' MOU. T" ....... -n.e ~ 5'owty"' Ill
Specl•I P•lc• 12:30 to 2100 g,m. l••cept Sun. t. Hol1.l ll.O
Open O.i1I~ 12 30 pm
m MANN
THEATRES
PA:PILLON
-l''"'··~1,_•1•.ll 1
Sometime• A Great Notio~ _y, 7: .. Ul,•5Ult 4'11M:Je .
l
'-·· -· ... ._ W ... ~ Opoo o1 ''"· -1:GO.l:lf ~ .... ,,.,,,,,
!.II. l.:~4:1 .. t:Ml-l:JG.1 l:H -,,....,1 ....... .J.
HAllOI .l,T •D.lM\
IU·lUl
j
II
... ~-MAN ON A SWING
.-· ·-·""" .. .., .... ' _ .......... ...
CO&IT HWT. &l MACAITH~t
•••·0760
,, .. ,
llCMAIO DU'111USS ·-..ow ... P.t.Ul.~T
/NI CAMOT cu.II
c-t'&m.
>-;.::M ·-;.~·wE~e~·
Olf ~~ ~? irC.I ;::: "'·;;;.J.jii.V ........................... _
fOWlllll::W~-....,, WISTM!N\Yll •T •OU>fll Wl\T ''l·••ll
""4'141 ,,
I
THE THREE MUSKETEERS
I
I I -1
' ' "'
p
• • '"' blrtl-lli WEST C co.. 121
C1llf.
JIOMrt
N•wll'D't , .... ._.
Thi• 111.1*1
ptrl!Wl'Mlp. • TM• 11•1
CDUfll'I Cllr
25, 1'74.
" • T,_ foll
MlnHI t i! cws
tnor( .. N H-• C•Hlort1lt
Arlen G ,.._,
Tl'lil bull ptrt,..r11'11p
H~
Tl'll1 1111
coun1y Cll'I' ,,,,
p
IVI'• STAT
THE
•• •• tn 11M
llOSAL VIII
N1Me.
WHEREA
l(of'ln !.~r
dulv llll'd w
ii •ppetrl
;aid •PPll<
c111nged lo sr...,,,.nol<v
NOW, TH
ed ind dlr
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.1J_,, May 20. 1q74 ll.AllL Y PILOT 2 f . ~
PUBIJC NOTJCE PUBLIC NOTICE Employm..t &
,ICTITIOVS IWllMIU
tt&MI •TATIMIMT ,_ follow!,. ...,.._... tr. doll'lll ITATI °' CAUIJOl:MIA JJCMl
91,..u. ••r THI COVWTY 0111 OllANH
WE$T CO$T l'QUl,.M!NT "ENTAL ..._ A·1'm
Ii I Rtof f•lalt .......• 1000.2999
Rtntoh .......... JOQ0.'699
Bu.mess. lnve•tmtftt &
f'ononclol .......... 50Q0.5(M9
The Blrgest Marketplace on the Ora11&e Coast
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Prepo<atioft ..... , 7000.7199
MefchondlM .. · • · · 8000-llO'l'I
Boots&Mcmt
o.. 127\lt '"" St .. "''"'"'' leaell MOTICI 0111 Ml•••M• OP r lTITIOflll •II'. ' fllOI llllOIATI 0.-Wlt.L ANO '"
•ooerl M. ~ 1211/'J ""' 51 LmTTllS Y•STAMllNTA•Y fWJIO'I h.cll, C.Uf '' Ellt.. ot ROSE Jl, tlOMIECK. Kt
L'°Yd A OM .. • 111"1 Mt ROSE l:OMIEC:IC, ~ .... 6
4
2
Announcements, rtftonals,
Lott & found ••.... 5050·5'99
StnKtl I Ropm 6()()0.6099
You Can Sell It , Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad [642-5678) One Call Service
Fast Credit Approval
Equipmtnt ••••••.• 9000-9099
Aulomobilot & other
Tranaportatlon •••• 9100.9099
.,..porr ~ C•lll, 11 \I., NOTICE IS ~EREIY GIVEN trial
1111 bullMU II tondllCIM b'f' t lltMf .. ALIEllT (, ltOMIECK AHO CLEO It. rtr1enlll11. ltOMIECK N1 llltd NN111 • petition for 11:*'1 M. Moil Probtlt Of Wiii tr4 tor II-nee Of
1111 1lt len,.nl .,..,, !lllld will\ 11111 Ltttfra Tffltmenlary to tllt l)IUllL_,,
ntv Cltrk Of Or1ng1 Coo.intv on APfLI rtftr1111:1 to wti.1(11 11 ~ for f\lrllltf
1tJL Pl•ltcvlafl. alld t111t 11111 tl!M tlld ~ I
1002 an!tral R.E:_ ---~~~-\ :G::'";;;e:r:•:I :R:::.E:::·===l:00:2:G::e:n:•:•:•:I :R:, E::::. ==;;1;:002;;1
~NMlt Of l:lllr~ JIMI .UIM .hlL tllftl _Mt for
<.1blllohtd Ortngt Cotat 0 .. 11'1' Piiot, MAY 2', 1'7A. ti t ::JO 1.11'1 .. Ill 1111
II Jt, tnd Mty ._ 11. 10. 1'1• 14+1• courtr1111rn of DllP1rt .... nl No. 3 Ill' wkl f----'---'-'---t-1, ti 1llO Civic C9111K Or Ive W.11, In PUBLIC NOI'ICL' '"-City 11t .s111t1 Ant. Ctttlornlt,
i;, 0111111 MIY t , ltJ ..
WILLIAM E. $1 JOHN County C)frtl NAMI STATIMllNT AltTHUlt D. GUY, Jlt.
M tonowlnv ""'°"' ••• dol no m ocw1• oa .. STI:. 1 1lntil II! Nl:Wf>Ol:T alACH, CALlfOl:NIA fU't • cws "4IYIW1tr11 ..... lm w. C11t11 ITI4t '4t•5'S1
lfWV., N~ 81Kh. C•lltotnl• '1661 "-"--"' ...... P .. I~ I THE "BLUFFS"-CAREFREE LIVING
Hlf'tlert O. Cook, ._,. Sevflla, lllbOI, ,.1tbll1htd 0..11199 Cots! Otlly Pllo!, I .11torn11 ntt1 M•v u. i" XI. ,,,. 1ni-1• 5 Brand NE\V 1-story 3 BR 2 bath beautiful
.1.rt•n G. wv1111. l ~ Fooi L•.,., 1 11 "Linda'' model. Cathedral ceilings, lovely Nr«'llllff 1116(,,, C..11111("'' t26llO r,,11 1N11,..,, 11 cllond11t1t-c1 br • oe ner11 PUBLIC NOTICE • I greenbelt view from choice end unit.
flMrtnlp 1, I I I 270 v· u b 0 il 15 Hlftotr1 o. c111111: 1 · 1 1 1sta m rosa pen Oa y ·
,,1, 1tt11ment "'"' llltd whn ,,,. a m'J ! I 6
1,tyci .. lot0r•n,.cwn1ronM•r3. 1~:::1g:cc,,t~::,.:r ... i~:
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· 1 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
l"lH" TH•COUNTYOl"DAAHOE 0 2111 s J . H'll R d llblis.Mod Or•l'l(le Coif>I o111y p1101 .,.., A·1"1t
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I an oaqu1n 1 s oa
., ,, JJ, 10, ,,, ltl• IJ7l·I• NOTICll D" Hl!AAINO 01" Pt:TITION 7 11 NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644--4910 l"Oll l'ltOlATI: 0" '#IL\. AHO fOll
PUBLIC NOTICE Ll:TT•rtS TllSTAMENTARY
E1t1I• ol RUTH JEAN NETTE I CA.Muse. •k• RUTH J. CA.MUSE, 1 I I
SUl'lltlOll COUltT ,DF THI °"''•1wd I
General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 ·--
Horse Ranches
BALBOA MODEL
3 BR ., 2 ~ baths
Tiburon
Assumable loan
$37.500
556-8800
* OCEAN VIEW* I
Two 3 Bdrm., 2 bath
units. $119.500.
Rental: 2 BR. yrly. Cpl.
only, $225 Mo. 673-7420. m REALTORS m
LJ3 S Local Offices To Serve Yo LJ3 1 u
General R.E. 1002 1 General R.E . 1002
' ' ST.I.Tl CW CALll"OltNIA fDll NOTICE IS HER EIY GIVEN n111 t j I 8 .
THE COUNTY Of OtlAN OI .. HILLIP WESLY CAMVSE hi~ llltd ·, I I Nt. A 1'1o12 ,,.rein I "'"ti°" lor P•oblle Ill Wiil 11'0 0•0111 TO sHDw cAu1£ 1or L1n1 .. T1111mtnt•r1111 ti. pe1111or1oer I ' lft R1vers1de * BAYSHORES * FOR CH.I.NOii 01" HAMI! "'""ic• 1o which 1$ m-lor tvr1,,., I I 11 I E\·erybody In lhe pool, you MUST SELL
I · SPLISH-SPLASH!! 'roo BIG
I • • •
1~ ,,,. Matter 111 tM Applki!I<'" a! 1>1rtlc11l1r1, alld t1111 111e 11..-111<1 p11c9 1 • A . l'Us~om .4 Bdrm,\ could be saying this soon if • , , I
SALYN KOHN SHER. for C1W1no1 01 0111e1r1"g111e 11me h•s bftn ~1 I« M•v ,I 1 IX'au11fully uppointl'd 20CXl 1 \'OU Y•ill just cnll to SCI' this Su[M'r horn~ nl'ru n11ll'.! squrue OPEN SAT/SUN l 5
,...., 11. ltl•, •' t JO• m , In the cwrtr1111m 01 , 1 I sq. IL i\ll iuicler·"l'OU!ld • 8· IG-BIG 4 BR. 2 Sloi·y · park. Forn1al dining. Huge · •
WHEREAS, ,,,. 1pp1lc1l1on ol Ros.n.lvn ~parlmtnl No. l Ill' 11od cwr1. •1 100 I I I I • I 2595 CRESTVIEW
'" tlltd w!ln 11\e cler' Of !hi• Cwrl, •M ~1nt1 Ana, C1!1torni1. 1 I nul(•s 10 frN'\\'ay 60. Fu!l dl·C'Oralrd LIKE A t-.IODEL. 1 Bar. Honus 'sill'cl yard.\ ,\ltracthl' Cape CM. nu·t>ly
n stwr tor ch•ng' 01 n•me ""' t>een c1~1c c1n11r D•!ve w,,,, '" IM Ci!Y c1 I ; 1 u!ililil's in & paid for. Just 3 I !\orth Cosla ~lesa hon1e. separate fa111ilv roon1. \\'et
1ppe1rl1111 trom 11ld 1POllc111an thll 01!td Mey lG, 1914 I : D I ' pti('C only S44,500. fl'<ilurcs I '\'ilh fl'atures like decorator liorne is alinos1 brand 11('11·. I dreorated; 2 bdr111 ., li.:t•.
Id •POllc1n1 oeslrt• lil n1v1 her n"m' WILLIAM E. $1 JOH~ I ' 1 ' 0 1\',"Ef' ''' ·sr GO'. T•ke lh·in"' i·in. !:icing l<•('. pa1io: ' 1n;ed 111 111e prOPOU<i 1Wmr Ill' Ros•hn cou"'' Cl9rk I 1 i Valley Re;illy's l'xi: USi\'e \\'ftll papers, f.lexican tile I .~ " " "' " "' '""n'k' srwr. MEAD AND llUEN 1
1
onr )f'ar !'t"rl\'Cl' \\'arrant)'. I floor:-; PLt:S convl'l'salion advantage -call 842-253.'i. l bl!-111 gas kitchen; ruoni fr•r
NOW. THEREFORE. u 11 ,,.r•bV ord•r· 1111 o. ... s1 .. sw111 1tt j ' I c 11 1 1 11h · r · t'on B-Q OPEN1IL 9. rrs FUN ro BE NICE• , boat storage. lo'A' lP11!'t~hold. and dlre<led ltlll •II pertont ln1err11e<1 N•wll'Orl •••<"· c1Ntwf111 ttuo ' a or u l'I' 111 01 n1a L . I pi!' gas fired BAR • & I '"' wld rntlfltf' 111 (fllflll• 111 name •D· Tel : UHi Ul·N» I A I e Cus1on1 4 Bdrn1, 3 car Bl::AUTIFliL USED BRIC1' :? Prh·. sandy ht"n<·he<:.
1>1tor1 •-• •nllflld cwr1 '" .1.11_,. fer: ,.t1111Nr I garage. l'\rar ne\\'. }~ult half ! DEC I\ 1 NG AR 0 U N D ' Plans a\·ail. for cxp:Ln)J1oJn.
""""' 3 tllf,rrot, •oc•ltd •' 100 Civic PuO.ill\ed or11111t Coa1t o1l1v Potot, ij I I acre Joi. Loc_att'<i close to i POOL. "A ~!UST SEE" if , I (h.·ner an.xious~ $57.~.00.
1111" Orlv• Wen on lfM lllh 01v al M•' IJ. l4. 70• 191' 1119'1' . ,I I f 60 II I "C" THOMAS , itJ•, ar ""' 1111ur "' 1o 00 o'cloc~ 0 lW'A·ay '. f' ~ ~1•1ce on .Y 1 you're looking for .a great
m .• tnen •nd 1i.r, 10 ~ c•ui.e, 11 111v PUBLIC ··~icE ' I_ '! I I • S·l2,600. plus Valle> Realty s hon1e, Call for appo1ntn1cnt. I REALTOR
v ,.,.,.., wny 1rw ''"'"'"'o" 1or tn•n1it '"v 1 I · ' cxclus1\IC OnC' year ser\'I("(' . .~7:~~~~'11tbeo11~;n~~11Eo th.i • SL,.Jntl ! j 'A·arranty. CaU I ~ COATS' CUSTOM BUILT !221 \\'.Cs! H'A·y. 5 1~~27
, 111 1r.i1 or<Mr bl 111111111,,.,, In '"' SU,.E••o• CDU•T OF THE ' 1 t I · , C & 1 EXECUTIVE HOME '.\'("1\'J)Orl Bt'ach E\'e.:-ri:r;'J643
'1~1 ~;~.~1~~ ::11~:~· .:,"'::',~ s::~Ecg~Nc;;1;:-D~:H~oE11 ' 1 1 i
1
· · W WALLACE IN !\IESA \"ERDE'S l\IOST
IM Cll'v ot Cott• MHI, Cavnly ot ,,. .. '""'" i L 0 REAL TORS I EXCLUSIVJ:: ARE,\ -5 anoe. S!tle ot Ctlllorn11. once e1 ch HOTICI: 01" MEAllllNG Of ,.ETITIOll I I &>droon1, hugt• fanllly roon1 BEACH COTTAGE
k for tw• !•l succenl~e ..,.,._, 1:irocr ,.011 1"11o•ATE 01" WILL AHO FOlt I -5...,.141.-11·1th firl'plarl' and !rrraao 40 Ft. frontage on R-2 !ot: 3 i!":::~.,T:"' ~t lcr int Maring 01 ~~i~tEtt~ TE~~~t..!~:A•:. SMITH, (Open Evenings) noo~. F?1,na! dining roo1n. 1 door~ to s<tndy, hfl'{:Uartlcd
o.11c1 M•~ l. n1• o.-te••td. I I y 1 , sunkt'n . IJ\·1ng roon1, heated I bl'::tch. L'se for ?nd hornf' &
fr1nk Oom..,lcllinl NOTICE IS MER EBY GIVEN lhU I ' I · SI 'Lill lHllg I I I rl J"""' 1111r.c s11perior cour1 "'"'T11e c. SMITH ,,.., 111ec1 M•tln , 1 i I 'i Assume 51;4 Loan I ----· ---1 1 poo • separa.t' rehuil !art'r. Q\\·ncr lea\·ing vn10 1:. aos•N l)e!IUon for Proc111 of Woll 1nc1 for 1 I '
1
BEST BUY 3rrl rar gara~I' or shop 1n . arl'a. 566,000. I
1 •· Tlllr11 st .. s11. •> 11111•.nce cl Ltner• Tct1men11rv 10 ,,,. , I • Existing FllA IQan \\ ith I rl'ar yard. lcleal for the : Call: 673·3663 673-8086. E\'eS.
y, C1lll9nll1 mo petlh-r. r9!e•t<1tl lo .mlch 1, m1d1 tor 11 lkl)'lllent of $lj.I pC'r mo 3 1 DOVER SHORES CXt.'CUtl\'C fan11ly that \\<llllS 0
associated , """"" fer ,.,1111-further p.erllc11!1r1, 1nc1 rh•' 11>1 11,.,. ancl I I B 1 f I 136 ft b f ·on! son1rthin"' extra Ol' need,·' · e.........., 11111 tu.-su p11,9 o1 M•rl"lll '"" ume II•• Dttn ,fl 1 bcdroo1n, l 1 ~ bath, bu11t-111~. , !'<Ill 1 u -on ay L ; :~
P11Dll11'1td °''* Co••t D•ilv Pllct. 111r Mav n. 1914, •' 9:30 1.m .. 1n lt>I 0
1
I lush carpet, large ~ard. l p1rr & slip. -I Lal'&l' bdt•ms, en!cr ta1nn1cnt spare.
•Y '· u. 10. v . "'' l!o.f•·I• cour•room .,. Oeptrlment No. 3 ot 11ld I j I CO\l'rerl palio and r harnHng I 4_ M lh_ '· + 2 J)O\\'dt!r. 1'00!11S· CALL 540-1151 •1111~1. 11 100 Civic Cen1er Dr ive Wnt, In I <' I f I h t""' c:11v 111 s1n11 •ni , c 111torn11 . I playhouse. 01\'IK'r says st'll~ .i:.xqu1s1 e . ~yer "!'' l
BROKERS-REAL TORS
20:ZS W Balbcll 67l·l l.lol
PUBLIC NOTICE O•ltd.:;~~1~...!.9~·. '"OH"' ' 1. I p 1111 l: -~ell! Price only s~.900. ~r;iceful \,\'!!ldJng stall"\\'ay. I f---.... "' Call j.16-2313 Paneled library & den. COllnly Clerk I I d 'I d .,. CE E sU,EltlO• CDUltT OP C.ILIFOlllHl.t.. EDWIN w. CHAFFEE 1 I I I I OPfN Tit g . irs FUN ro BE NJCEI \\'or s are fut1 !' to l'Scriuo: 1 PRI RED UC D
COUNTY OP' OltAND• ,.,0. •ox Mt 1 , I , , ~ thl' rich atmosphere o f this
1• Wnl Clvk CIO!ltf' °""'• •o•• I ® I TO $89 500 SAN CLl:MENTI!, CALI IA f.1611 I -· Sl'lect bayfront re~iclf'n!M!. -I • 1•.i• .1.111. C•lll9nll• (1u1 •n•1n I I f k' d II f I CASI NUM•l:R 1121» An_, ter: 1"et111-1 • d0~1110~,.~". c 0 a ·in -ca or COLLEGE PARK C M Just try dupl1ca1Jng •his
SUMMOMS PllVll•f'of<I O•lllllt C:ot~I O•HY Pllcl MIV " 1" ' ' ' I rl I' bl 1'11ontt11: 11E"TR1 c e LANG. 11, u, 10, 1,1• 1n,.1• , I argl' an 1\·a •' ruqo"1 1
O.ltfl<l1nt: w"'LLACf lllCHARD LANG _ ·-I -'==== hoenl' •n Corona dcl \!fir on
To ll'W Dt+elld.l"I: • clvtl compl1lnl h•• COSTA MESA ASSUMABLE VA • ' '
ov ..i111 to·Otttna n.11 11..,,.,;1, you m1111 \\1"ler g new ome. B~-droon1s. study. spacious II filed 1:1, tt>I pttlrthff t<;11fn1I '°"' II PUBLIC NOTICE I 0 bou ht h . I L
todav s market . .J
I• in mis covrt • wrilt.11 pt,1<111111 ;" --- -1 1 FOUR-PLEX Very anxious. Can sho11 fo>n1ily roon1, \'lt"W of ocean
ts.ponw lo 11'19 cotnp1 .. n1 cor 1 wrill'tn or SU,.lllllOI. COUltT Oii THE I I I Rnvtin1e Bea"it'fully de""· ' d e .. 11 p111donQ, 11 1 Jvtlk• couru wlmin ,. JTATI! 01" CAL•fOllMI• •o• I I I Call U!' Rbou! t h 1 s COMPANY · · " .._vi·• nn ....... iahna. Choice of
rs i ttrr 1111, wmmcwa 1, 11....., °" vw. THI COUNTY OF DllANGI l I 1 \ 0 hard-to-find i 11 \('st 111 £'Ill 1 REALTORS aled. Large patio. · financing <ind only S )Cars [
erw;,,., ,our <Mt1vn wlH bill ... 1tr.., °" w .. A·7"t:I I I . 1 646-392:8 Eves: 645--5253 • old. Fol' appoinrn1l'11l lo 1
wuciiiooi 1:1~ ""' 11'1•1!1tllf anc1 '"" cwr1 NOTICll D• HS:AllllNG OP "ETITION I I , opfXlr!uniry in a hl't\('r • SINCE 1944 _ i·--.,. , , flOll P•MATI: Of' w1u.. ANO 1"011 1 I ''"•ls•'d" 1-a•;011 ba•k"·g Io 67" .1.11\11. ins(X'ct, call 6i3-8550. ............ I ....,. • 19 ... '°" Cir '"' LETTEllS TISTAMEHTAltY (lONO ' I ,__. " "'-u .. ..... I -I °" llfllll' reollft rl!QUftlld !11 Ille W•IVEOI I a golf COW'Sl'. S610/lno ................................ OPCl/TIL g . TT'S FUN TO BE NICE' ";;'pl~nt;..."" ,. ""' tt.. ldwle. "' Ill E•tal' Ill' OPAL c . KHAUPP, ~ T ' I 1 inron1e could be more I ~ r ®' j
"-' I• t?lh '"'".,, ,.., ,,,... ... • ~~;i"Ci is Hlfl:EBY GIVEN ""' ! , ! I lo\\·-low \'acancy on l Y LOW DOWN ;. '
" NI ,,...-"•Mint• Ir "''' OAWH LENORE JOHNSON II.is li1eo . $6i,j00 1·
Y .. fllld •time. , '-eln 1 pe,11111111 for Procet• Ill Wiii encl I ' Call &H-7211 LOW PAYMENTS 11 , 1
11,• 0.lld Marc~ 11, 197,, for ll"llllCI al L1n.n Tnt1mero!1ry to, i I I I 1 ..._ ~
WILLIAM E. Sf JOHN. Clerk rtoe pellllone• !lond W•l'ff(I) ret.re<1C1 I I m.m CANT 1 I 8 1 DonNI Wlmwn, Dc1><11y 111 w~ich I• m.oe tor r11rtiwr pirlkvl•ri. 1
1 E7. to buy this. VA I The fastest dra1\' In the \Vest.
AlllllY E. HICICI and 11111 ""' 11mt 1nd piece ol hftr!"9 , hon1c. FrC'sh paint. Bonus ... a Daily Pilot Oassified The fastest dra\\' In the \\'esL
1111 aMC.l't •tv•. 1r.e wme 1111 billen i.et for M•v 11, 1914. I I 1 • stzcd R 2 \01 Q oS<' lo I b · · C f .,.,...,.... '""~• Ctllttf'l'll• tt'47 •t t :g , m . In 11>1 t011rlroorn 01 0.p•r•· --· It's a reeze. - . .sell your •.• a Daily Pilot lassi ied
"'' Ml-l•I meo11 No l llf wikl (Ou.-t, 11 7DCI civoe I 1 ~ shopping. A \·alue [ron1 Ad. Call 642-5678. Ad. Call 642-567~.
"....., Hlr ,.111~1111 / cenle<" Orlve Wnt, In '"" c11v ot :>..nr• , l c I )'C'Sll'r)'l'ar ! Call no\\'! G I RE 1002 General R.E. 1002 PUOll1htd Ortnoe c .... 01i1v P•lcl, J.nl, C1ll!orn!I. I I 8~2-2:>35. ·-~!1er• . •
•r IJ. 20 ,, i nd June 3 ltl• in' I• WILLIAM 11. St JOMN I , j i 1 ~-;;,;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;..;,,: • • ' • {Ill.Inly ci.rk ' OPfN ~Jl 9 • IT'S FUN TO 8E NICE'
-----~ -MUll'#ITL MUllWITZ ANO llEMEll
PUBLIC NOTICE 4ltlnltn ,, LI• , , ~ ,.~---------------, ~--·--,~=,,------I G ttM Strftl 1 , 1 t I• ,
r 5LP·JUIJ P. O. ••• 1Ul L ~ 'I. • , Ul'lllUOll COUllT OJI' CALll"OllNIA. N......-i hid!. Clllffrllil nut
CDUHTY D .. O•ANOI T11h fn4) 6l'Mnl
1M Chrl< ClftlK Drift '#HI, An~ fW .. tlUI_..
J111l1 A.Jtl, CIHhnlit P\lblhhfocl Or1flge Co.st Otlly Pilot,
c.1.sr HUMal:R D·ntll ,,,.,, IJ, 16, 70. n1• tn1-1' A I
. SUMMON$ IMA.ltilllAGIEI
In •• llW m1rrltQ1 cf ""lllonlf; ,,......, L. B1rr111 •nd iltHJ)Cllldenl; R•ul PUBLIC NOTICE
. 81rr1z1
To tt>t Rtspondl'fll : Tl'W Ptllll-r "11 SLfl·J.ntll
You~ Illa 1 wrllltn rt~ wltllfn lf STATE DI" CALWDltNIA 1"0111
•Y• cl IM d•lt 11111 1nl1 wmmon1 Is THI COUNTY Ofl ORANGE
associated
BROKERS -REALTORS
ZO:ZS W i lllboll 61l-l66]
ltd 1 P'f!Ulooi concerning YCIUI' m•rrl191. su,.r•1D41l COUlllT OP· TM.. s :.1·
ltrV'ld on 11111. II 'ftMI !•II 1111111 1 ,..r11ten Ne. A·ntn I
•PllllH .. 1111111 IUCll llmt, YOU<' 0.111111 HOT•C• 01" MIA.llNO OF .. ETtTIOll' I I ............................. ...
•Y bl LtrOl•red alld '""' c011•I m1y ..,Irr l"09: ,.llOlATI: cw WILL AND FOR I ' '
• ludomtnl tonta!nl11111 lnlvncll,,. Of otr.tr LWTTllS TllTAMlllllTAllT s $1500 DOWN Orr1 concerning lllvltlllfl of property, E1l1l1 llf PATTIE P'OLK IENHETT.
i,povwl WP90rf, CllllO C<.llllldy, cl'tlld Oacused. I 1 $29 950
UJ!PCll'I, •!!orn1v'1 '"" '°'"· •NI 1ucn NOT ICE IS HEAEllY GIVEM lh1I I I • , rtllll as mav bit 11r•nltd by 1111 ROBE RT L. I ENNETT ft.I• 111.., 11er11n 1 I I Sl500 down. Hard to find at tOllrl. ptlllioll '°' Probe•• llf W!ll Ind lor 11 , ... wllJI 11 w.ir; 1111 Mvkt ot •n l•11Mnct .,. L~iers Test1men11rv 111 trw I $29.%0. 4 huge ix'drootns. 2
atr.My 111 1hl1 mttttr. v1111 1"'°4lld .so .. ptllllonlr, r11 .. 1nce 1o wtolcll 11 midi: for bath~. Large kitchen. Ne\\'
,,,_...., ,. tMI reur wrtii-11 rtll*lll, 11 lut!her P1rtlcular1, alld 11111 l'l'te time and p 11 i n I . C 0 r n (' r I o t • --·---____ M ___ _
D•led o.trm~r '· 1t1l I« M•v ,,, 1914. ti t ::lLO 1.m .. lo Ille I FORREST 0 1-" TREES · l~EAL) courll'~ 111 0tiart1Mnt No. 3 ct wio F Boat gale. Patio. Don't \\'ail
W. £. ST JOHN, Cler~ <11Url. 11 100 Civic C..,lff Ol'lve Wri!, In 963-6767 &v at:rrv 111191rt, OfPlll'I' tt>e City .,. S.nlt .l.111, Cllll11rn!1. -·
PtlllOY •. OIOOl!NS O•lld May •• 1916, I OPEJIT/t 9 . rr'S FUN 70 BE NICE/
An-y It L1w WILLIAM I:. St JQHN, I
SL'PER SIU' 2100' !l\'O Sl<'lrv.
Nire and clean. P\ay100,, 1
is 6.l:l ~quare fi.'Ct hu~"· J·:x· I
r'l'llent loc11lion. 5-17.9:'Xl: ..\gt
S-li-6010 i
S::.'11.900~ Lo11· c11sh to rissun1e
SISS total p.'\yn1rnt. 71, 1',~A
Sharp 3 oedroon1 on ov('r·
siled Jot. Hurry: ~li·SOIO,
Agt,
down
A small price
to pay
1o move into a I
A. U"'111ClUI: tiC'MI:
CALL ME, l'M HARD TO GET-New listing,
truly UNIQUE! 5 Bedroon1, single sl~rY. in
(\arbor \.'ie\v Hills~ Canyon and h11l s1de
,·ie\\'S \\1ith maxin1wn privacy. t No one can
see you but CO\\'S). l\early 2600 sq. ft., ....!,-3
car garage and all on one floor. Call me for
$99.500.
UNIQUE HOME Realtors, 67>6000
2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
Ad\'rrllsl'rs may plat'!?
thr1r ads by telephone
8:00 a .n1. to 5:30 p.m.
~londAv thr u Friday S to nOon Saturday
COST,\ ~IES,\ OITICE
J30 \\'. Bay
ti-12-5678
?\E\\'POP.T BEAC1!
3333 ~•'l\'f>Or l B\\d,
tJ.t:.!·5678
I IU~TINGTON BEACH
)78-;'5 B£'ach Blvd.
5..a0-1220
L1\GUNA BEACH
22:.! Fol'est Ave.
494-9466
SAN CLE'.\IENTE
305 N. El Camino Real
. ·192·4-120
NORTH COUNTI"
dial !rl'C 5-10-1220
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Tu:>adline for copy & kl!ls
is 5:30 p.m. the day be-
fore publication, ex~pt
for Sunday & l\Ionday
Editions when deadline
is Saturday, l2 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: Advertisers
should check their ads
daily & report errors
immediately. THE
DAILY PILOT assumes
liability f or the first In·
correct insertion only.
CANCELLATIONS:
Whr n killing an . ad be
sure to make a record
of the KlLL NUr.IBER
given you by your ad
taker as receipt of your
cancl'llation. This kill
number must be pre-
sented. by the advertiser
in case of a dispute.
CANCEU.ATION OR
CORRECTION OF NEW
AD BEFORE RUNNING:
C:very effort is made to
kill or correct a new ad
that has been ordered,
but \\'e cannot guaran-
tee to do so until the ad
has appeared in the
paper .
Dil\lE·A·LlNE ADS:
Thesr ads are strictly
:ash in advance by mail
o r at any one of our of-
fices. NO phone orders.
0ea41ine: 3 p.m. Friday,
Costa i\.Iesa office 12
noon -all branch of-
fices.
THE DAILY PILOT re-
serves the right to clas-
sify, ·edit, censor or re-
fusr any advertisement.
and to change its rates
& regulations without
prior n otice.
CLASSIFIED
MAILING ADDRESS
General R.E. 1002 ----
10°/o DOWN
81/2 °/o INTEREST
C.D.M.
LO(lk at !hose tcn11!''. ~ Th!'.1
111:1.~· be history soon so 1lon 1
hl'~!tllll'. If )OU 1\'ant an
r'\tl'<l shal'p 2 Bl{ 2 B,\
POOL ho1ne in CORO;-.;,\
DEL '.\IAR on a bu:: tiOxlOO
l(lt I\ 1th pri\·ate con1n1un1t~
hl';u·h acl'ess.
Only SS.<l.;.oo
Call &H-Tlll ..
WE HAVE A
NICE ONE IN
COLLEGE PARK
D1.1:: 11\l::; 4 spacious bedrooms
and pool-table size fan11ly
rmrn. \\'alk to schools nnd
:-;hupping. Boal or tra1ll'1-
al'l'C'~~~ Nuff said! Call
;ttt).-2:)}3. ~I
OP£N rlL g • IT'S FUN 10 BE NICE'
THE REAL
ESTATERS
EASTSIDE MANSION
2800 ;:qfl 2 SIOry 5 bdrnl, ;';
ba, forn1al dining, laundry
1oon1. 1, ,\ere lot o n cul-de·
sac \\' 20'x:.J;)' H, F pool.
playhouse 11nd n1any, n1any
Pxtrns: Priced 10 sell fasr.
Only $:>9,900.·21:l~C rlo11'T\.
CALL 6-15-6646 f/'f' fRHg~E1
I NEWPORT BEACH
EXECUTIVE HOME
1 Ncstlerl nrouncl F: pa n i ~ h
coun;v~rd, exclusive 4 BR.
fam rn1, forn1al dining, :I
c~· garage. Roon1 for large
pool. \\'e v•or k 11·ith you on
f111anl'ing.
3 Bedroom Home
$21,500
Anyone can assume lh is VA
1% loan. $1S4. Month total
p;;.yment. cau for details.
CENTURY 21.642·lnl
. Eastside Costa Mesa
5 Bedroon1s, 4 baths. 3-lOO ~·
1 Ft.. huge 3 car garage,
S69.500.
Roy McCardle Realtor
1810 Newport Blvd., CM
548-7729
I I
' I
' I
I
I
I
,1,n-I« .. l'ffll-!Ill S..nt Mll11 $1., $111, UOI f
THE REAL
ESTATERS
m l••I l"lnl JI., si.. 2'S C.OU..ty C~• \ ~ ~ TnH .. Clllflnll• tUlt MILAN M. DOSTAi. I I
17141 UJ·7* A fll'lfftllMel C"""l+MI i !
1
.:. • ••
--· 0 II 'lo °""'91• C1llfenll1 ,.,...
PublltMd Ofllllfl (NII ' 1 .. , I, 1nU 1)5.ft14 '========== Mar 11. 10. 11. •"" Ju ... l. ltl• 1111>-I• AltwMy ""' .. l:TITIONE• -
\\1-IF.N BVrLfNG EGGS TN I
ALUl\IINITTI POTS add a I
little vinegar. This will keep
pan from darkening. Useful
P. 0. Box 1560,
Costa ?oles&
92626
1 -=~===~I J -~10" tolal p.1~'J11c11t nn
Pllbl11hfocl Or•• Clltll 01ily Pllol, E PUBLIC NOTICE Mtv 1l. 14. XI. 1t1• 110J.1• 1-------------1 . : •1cT1Ttou1 ausrNESS PUBLIC NOTICE 1 NAME STATIMINT
Thi following PKIOl'll 1r1 0°'"11 __
ll\lllMll •s: SLP-74311 D M)9 I.A.LOOCK AHO SOH. llXl1 l"ICTITIOUS lllSINISS
ltt.sl'tlll, l utldl"O 4, ,s-,,,i11 10•, C111r1 NAM• STATIMINT
Mflt, C•lllorn!• '2616 Th• t11Uowlng Pl"'IQIU, 1rt doing Goll {lllll'll Archllecl<.1r11 Ca .. l11c .• • IMl•IMU 11: C1IH11rnl1 c«porlllOt!. JODI Rtdlllll, CELCO, P.O. BtlLlf 1Sl01, 11092 Pllllrntn,
811lkll1111 4, Sull• l(M, Cot!• Mel•· lrvlne, C.1lforlll1 ttidO
C1!1tornl• tU,, I. Rttpft Ooclc. 1001 Cltll Orin, N..,... I
Tl'll• tMnln4rll It (ondUCled by I porl IHCh. C1lllornl1
CCll'PCll'lllOll. 'l. Dorothy G. Cle<k, 1001 Clltf Orlw. 1 I
Goll COVl'H Arcl'tlltci11r1I Ca., Inc. N•wPOJI lltKl'I. C1lltornl1. I
RClllKI L. lltlOClek, VICI Pr1sldifnl Tlll1 bllslnlU I• conduc"4 by Tllll 1tal-I ...... /Hid will\ IM lndlvldU.11.
cwnty Cl1rk ot Dr•llll'I COl/f1tv ao Aprll Jt1lllfl Clock / lG 191._ tltCKAl:D A. altDWN, Jft,
s0.11t1HINI' a AtlMSTROPllG tlOllltTIOM, HOWSltl •1111 4AtlU.ND .,.. c1"''"" Drtn r · -
-N"""'1 Cir. Dr, Nllwflll'f INdl.. Cal~ tl.U.._ N...,.,. t.-cl!, C1HI. (TI4) ... S.
r.i1 '*"1• p.,nm Tiii• 1111ement w•• tlltd with 11111
'1.IOlllNd Ort1'191 Cllt$I D•ll'I' p11111, C_.ty Clwtt Of Or11n111 CCIUlllY on May . , I ~11 "· •nd M•Y '· IS, 20. '"' IMl-74 17• lt14. """' 11
C , """''•1111:1 °"'"" qsu 01ltv Pllol, PUBLIC NOO'l F. ! ~~~ Jt>tW 1. 10, 191, 111l-1'
11---,cct<m=toUI ain1nu PUBIJC NOTICE
lllAMI ST~TIMDIT
TM "°'"""""' ,_"°" k ,_,,. lMl"'M ,tc'T'tTHWI IVSINISS 11• NAMI 1TATIMWWT ~THE P~Tt!S J!1N.M~ ir..~= n. toHowlng pif'llWI la dOlllf DuilnHJ .. -....... -_.. . . .. ~S Vll'llurtt. !ric: 1 Ctll'°""I' . THI IKY IJ~, l17 MtrlM
tefllOl'ltlOf'I. ....o HtH'.otn.s ,.....,_,,., =· ........,,.,. IMdl. Ctllfornla
c__. ... ,,..,, C.llfclnlll mis i__ Jotwl fl. MM11011. Jr .. um GllnHwlo.
TM• IWll,... II llfltlll '~ltd ll'f 1 tll ..... llM, (tlffomlA '2506 <or'°'1'J:n 1 . so.tk••• 1Ji~r-',_. 11 condllCffCI Illy tfl
Th" 11..._m fflM won 1t11 Count; Jann ,, "'""°"Jr,
Ci.B of Orl"fl COUl'llY Ofl Msr ~ 1'14 Tlll1 "•'-' ,... flttd '"'1ttt t119
l"\IMI.,_. Or... Ctnt Oall'; '..':: ~°"';':; ... Cltrll of Ot.,... C°'""l' Oii APfll
~V .. 1S. tD. 211 lt7• ' 1J12.14 PDlll
--l'Wll"*' Or.nge Cottt OlllY PllOt, j 1 PUBUC NOrlCE Aflrll lt1 Ind Ma'!' .. 1S. •• ,,,.. 1 .... ,, I
L ~UBLIC NOTICE I
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
.8
Don't gi\·e up the ship! but no longer needed itC"ms "!~1st" il 1n classified., Ship seU fast v.'ith a Daily Pilot to' Shore Re.suits! 642-5678. Classified Ad. 642-5678.
General R.E. 1002 1 General R.E. 1002
1
1
ti C~!~lt~n~!!
NEW FOURPLEX-OLD CORONA
Brand new 3 bedroorn 2 bath, each unit.
Owner will consider clividing these side by
side structures. Walk to stores and trans-
portation. $j!50,000.
EASTBLUFF-VIEW HOMEI
Near shops, schools, beaches. See this 3
bedroom, 2 bath home. Cozy !amily room,
sunny breakfast room looking onto court·
yard. $82,000.
BE A LIVING ROOM SAILOR
from your waterfront apt. 3 bedroom, 2
bath, cozy fireplace, priva te patio, boat
slip available, pool, immaculate gardens ana grounds. Offered for $125,000.
JUST IN TIME
for spending summer on Balboa Island.
Charming duplex with 3 bedrooms each
unit. Walk to shopping, bay and beaches.
Only $109,000.
BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED BAYFRONT
Over 41000 square feet in this cuslom built near new, exquisitely decorated home. 35
loot frontage _on exclusive West Bay. Dock
laclliUes. PJ0,000.
DIAi,_ 644-1766
j 2161 S.n Joeq.tln Hiiia Rd., N.8 .
A COLDWELL BANKl!R CO.
'~~-.!!II!!!!!!!!!
Make an almost immediate move. Newport Crest
is the exciting townhome community that
overtooks Newport Harbor and the ocean. Big,
bold spacious homes. Residents' Swim and Tennis
Center, Exterior ma intenance provided. Come -
let us show you how you can't afford not to Hve at
Newport Crest. 2·3_. bedroom residences
x~·m S63,000loS93,000.
g
From Pacific Cqut Hf;hwty
and Superior Avenue
lnlefltctlon, drive up
Superior to Newport Crnt
tfllrance. Salt office:
#12 Rotton Court. Open daily 10 A.M. lo Sun1tl.
(714) $4$-6141.
--}.-----· ------\
I i' 2.--; loan .'l.:'.~un1p11.111. .\
I
~.,-.,-.,---,,...,,,...,,,...,..J ' 1 ~\'t"h· f:unil\' St7t' hor1,· ""
Classified ads seU big iten1s,' h'J".:C; cul-dc-S:ic. ~up.·1· ~!r·1l
small items or any item. arY.I only $36.900~ Call a1:1.. i .Just call 642--:'i678! ~"~'7--"IT-'-'-IO~-~~~--~=!
, General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1001
MACNAB
IRVINE
OVERLOOKING THE BAY
One o( Baycrest's finest! Superb qualily
2 bedroom & · convertible family room.
Beautiful woods. marble & fixtures. Full
security. $175,000. Ken Hartley 642-8235.
(Wl6)
SPACIOUS & BRIGHT
Harbor Highll\Ilds 4 bedroom, paneled
family room/fireplace/vaulted ceilings.
Large manicured grounds. Early occupan-
cy. $54,900. Lois Egan 644-6200. (W23)
HOME & BOAT SLIP UNDER $100,000
Move right ln-<:ompletely furnished con-
domlnlwn close to everything! A real New·
port Beach hideaway. $87,000. Bartiara
Aune 642-8235, (W26)
[Irvine I
tol-•Dfl¥0 1'2•12'9
.... -.-.... uoo
tis t•rt.....,Cn"t&lllc-
I 1'1onday. ~111 20. l'i1-.
1002Genonl R.E . 1002 I G tner.ii R:-E. 1002 Bafboo Island 1006 Belboo l1tand 1006 I COiia Mt.. 1024 Huntington Bn<h 1040 1 Lagune Bt1ch 1048 Newporl it1ch 1069 IM d 11 Townhov .. Living 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,MESA VEii-DE 2932 Price Reduced IMMACULATEll GRAND OPENING
esa Ver e'S Besf Your Life Style? Redwood. bl.ft 4 br, 2 ba.. 52 400 2 Bdrm., 2 bath homC'; Newport e1y Tower• * REDUCED owner aru<lou< 15.al '""'' ,,.110 + lanol. , • landl<ljled. with lge . .,...., t A.2 BEDROOM
1 to sell his 3 bd r 111 1950 "" ·tt. $+4,900 Quick 2 Bdrm. + Pool le brick pa.lio. Ctote 1.0 new l'ONOOM:tNIUM HOMES
Jus "Montt>rey" mock'! \\'\lh 0ttupancy. marina. llurry on thls one I Baytront llomel T LISTED henm ceilln1i. fom'81 dining, MF;SA V>:RDE 161' Conioa, $22,600 at 136.SOO. Boat Sil,. E~ecutlve 2 story, 4 BR, 3 ba home. Lux-KQUrn1~1 kit1,.'hen. lanuly ,btn pool, tu-epit. 3 hr. 2 ba, NEW CUSTOM f'ull securl.ty JIJchl'lM ur1ously appointed with expensive plush roo1n, \\'et bar, air mod, & n-furbi.shcd, Hice n e \\'. You can pay~ ntore thRn OCEAN VIEW Steel It concrete constrUCtb'I
C
rpts be t d II . d (»i\·11te patio a«ludOO rnr AWARD WINNER I S-tS.500. VllCatit. this bfor • ne'v unltd CJ )'(llu LArte 3 bdrm., 2l~ ba. Private &lcon&et I
• a u . rps, wa paper, m.Jrrore intinu1te outdoor d!nln•. N 0 1 St l bedroo 13100 UNOOLN WAY, 2,Mll <:an uy my upgm "" un I cu.slam home·, almost ttady 2 '".irJge 1pa.twii: lor ~
Val l & I. edb I k · L 1 · ew reans ye3 m,3balhestate. -,, 12 ~-~1 1 1 • \ S rus IC US r c patto. g poo size \\'!'ln'I la~! At this pri<:<' sq ft, eleganl 4 br, 2 ba, fam wr1 ,vw uc 0~· rep acemen for occupancy. lla.s lge. unlt1.
Ya rd 'th tr Be 1 ,~.. ........ High ceilings, hardwood floors. massive fire-coe 11 1 • 1 11y .,,. 1 -·-• w1 many ees. st ocation _ on . ..,.,:....... I 1 1 . rm, n1nrble trplc. cus drpg, .. ...:._ do d . bl v ng am rm. w Roo 1or ..,,_ quiet street. Offered at $67,950, Hurry won't • MAINTE:NANCE t<"ltt<:F: Pace, ormal dining room, huge sundeck. 1 Lg. comer lot. $46,200 • uw-i11 ccn ., cs1m e bewn ceil & trplc. L&'t· yu.rd unusua Opportanlty to
last at this price. Call S46-
5880
. ' L1\'1NG ''"th thls 3 SR, Ultra prime island locate. Asking $122,000. 2'18.1 PUENTE. 1750 sq It ground level noor plan, l'Ai room lor pooJ, l\tature ' Purcli&R Baytront Propft'tY
'
·u1Y den. "''"lom w•"' SEE TODAY! Comer lot 3 br 2ba. 15xl~ years new, Freshly Palnttd _na.tlyrr h'tt"tl· A short wt1lk lo In Newp<>rt Stach.
STATELY STORY
$69,950--Secludc d 4 Bedroom, 2 Balh, New·
port Beach viC\V home on quiet cul-d e--sac.
l<~eaturi~g for111al din)ng, Separate family
roon1 · \\'llh largl' brick fireplace and lots of
v.·ood. 4 large bedrooms, newly decora ted
thruout. Beautiful family backyard. Com·
p letc \\'ilh paddle tennis court and basket-
ball & tennis back board. Just listed, \\"On't
last , call now! S46-5880.
.,, j."" HERITAGE . .
REALTORS
541>58.110
Open Eves.
pA?er. warm ....... r kh ,,.00d 1Wp gwsf or' pl~hou~~ with tastefully p&nl'led and the beach makes this &ti 310 Fe?nando rw., N.O.
1;iu1ellinR, la\·l~h OO!h ~·ith GRUBB & ELLIS CO , Assun1e GI Joan. $235 pei· mirrored livlnr, room, plush xlnt buy at $79.~. 67.5-8551 I
1nirrored decor, auto. g<1r. • I n\O, $36,750 Vacant _:~.pai:e..!ts din~ig cu~~; i •• ·• ,· hbl:PD , Love That PrlV•C'fl
door opetlC'r, sort \1a1rr unit . I Co1ta Me1a Realty -..-I ,,.._ ~--1lt'hwP 2 bdrn " private patio, s 00111 I 11 g I REAL TORS 67S.70IO SI 1951 .. _.. dra!X"fl, oversi:red pnnlry I .. ~·~ &:·i.:lurlNl hllttop
1
• w nee * ;rt0-n11 nrea, rustom tile counter ' . •
1
halh townhou~ 1vtilh 11
music for interron1 adds to _ All 6 PM c II 557 '"17 I ' I er · a ....., tops, shake roof, n r u r 491_1100 1..-·1n1tiful Ot"-'ftll v c·.,... ·
the luxuriou.~ oornforts of Coron• del Mir 1022Corona del Mar 1022 BIG MESA VERDE schools, ~·alkini• distance 10 4f4.S671 \ s unki'n Hvlni.: nn \l·i1h
thi!'! tm1•nholW'. Gri.'al life I "' n.• ! s!yle !or $4Z,51NJ. 1-funting:on ..fl'nler, s11·in1· Monarch B•y firt'pln('t'. 1>111111',( roon1. n l'
The Real Estate Fair
1
I CUSTOM nilng pool nnrt many pa1·k Ex c I u s iv e p 1· i va t c har. Front & rea.r pati)'
839 6133 536-2551 [3500 Sq. Ft. A builders own aJ't'a!. Now $~ below t.'OSl l'Otnmun.ity. on the OCfil,n f"IJil~. S"·1m pool, sau:;a, &
• or hon1c. 4 or 5 bedroon1s. new. (P r In c Ip a Is only side of !he higt11~·ay. Bfohin<t ll'nn1s $64.500. OU~"T ~D-
I !luge living roon1 + family olea!IC). Call !oclny &ruarrled g:ites, 11·ith pri\':t\l' ING VALUE Ca,ll &W·8T:.i0
Why not build it? room plus runipus room or 147.3095 lx'ach, h•:nni~. 1'\>;1l111·1·s I 1
* LOTS * hLlllard roon1, 3 baths, ~ca1· UREATI I o~~ hdrms, 2 hnth.~. t'om1al • ( m~~lL.J gnrugc. A 111ol'ld of fcatures NEW ENGL.AN!) 1\ining roon1, 01nuly 1\l(Jm. I ~ e VI E\V · S21 .!l~>O. 1Y10n1 for & elegance. $$,9.'.iO. TR1\DITIONAJ, i!Oi\t~:. Asking, .$79,500. Cal I 1
11,·o hon11.; 111111 1111 i:plit. A REAL RARE OPPORTUNITY 646-TITI. Nr.~1led 111 <1u1('t pn•1<>1ig1' .19-H(ro
-• R·2 • 60' x ZOj', 111kes .JI fo bot I t' I h 'th OP£HnL9 •ITTFUNroBEHICEI area. SY.'Ce)lltl~ slair.vay ~ [~-------~] 600 Nriii1Url Crnt1•r nrivl'. General R.E. 1002General R .E . 1002 units or hon1c .~units. I r a overs waning a uxury ome, \\'t past sky lihhl 11·indn10.' 10 1 fAABBL. -J.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; r F.ASTS!DE . llo~e prop. pier and slip at the water front. fvlain house; • ~ t·hildn·n~ \l'ini.:. It us 1 i l' RIK'-ON THE.WATER LIDO
I erty, oo· :.. 300', takl's i, 3HR .• 213A., p lus Gs t. qtrs. \\"ith bath. 2 • _, 1 • "Coppc.•r i..:ettt('" kit('h;'n. ~ I Bay hunt hon1l! un !Ill' :-.i1~t :; hon~l'S wilh lol splil and ! patios and n1uc.:h more. $129,500. !<~EE! Don't 1''01i1111l <tin . Suriny BAY . LM~U~~ . t!l'fhron1s plus sl•p;ira1t' 111111
~ J "
''anancc or ~uc~t housl'I lose this one by hesitat in g! Owner v.•ill trade \VINDO\\'S i11 rront d 1'11. : n\'<'r g:u-a.i.:" 11·iih ''11'1'-. C·•11
• . ,t-tack rm. f D I T . I l..ur"c gue~r qua r 1 c, .. . l~_S. Coast H..-·y., L.11._ I 11~ fur ap"I. G.11\.-7711
tn a • e or up ex or rtp ex. p 1 F s "' " -,. a : • NE\\IPOltT Bf.-; AC JI • oo or ummer 1n.1ster on 1~1 fl1X1 r. 3 huL:"c I
County. 0\'rr 1.'l,000 Ml· ft. $96,000--FEE I llig ~ bdrrn, 3 hath hon1e hatt1s. Prit'(' rnr 1hc Jr. BREATHTAKING PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES on quirt l'Ul ·dt"S!H' for l'X· \"'ti . f F h' I I d E . ll'llh f1unily l'OO!TI & bonus 1-::xl't'. \V/~:,\S\" TER.i\IS. ,.. . ' II I h' ' I 4'IU.'ii\'l' honll'. S2ll.:'4'.JO. vi ta Vle\V 0 ·as ion s an. :xpens1ve rootn. All modem kilC'hl'n. Bl'k. 962-ri.:111 If'~ ll a ron1 t IS ont . . Walker &lee
S IIO'\'i'' B" APl'OlNT'IENT • CllJ::STI.lt'\f':;1n•;1. $1,!YJ.: imported tile in entry, breeze ,~·ay, kitchen 1 H.('a r li\·inl.! rni. firC"placl'. -11 Bdrn1. + guest r111 ., p11tio. ,,,, f 1' J J.W & I f h' · · p ~ s111111a, Z cat• g<1rug1~ & "''~ 1' 10· x :ii.Kl ' 10·; d11. Ski· rea r yarc o t JS exqu1s1te ortofino home. :'lli:i ~si\'e s11·i111mini;: pool & MOM & DAO SUITE I suncli•('k. \\'ood panrl 011 nu·:-· . -1-070 hA\'1.'11 hidl.'·H\\':1y. Shal"l' Fee land I 3 Bl' 4 BA + bonus room AND p·t!10 11 1'(''1 Ro·1t uatr Newport Height• Linda Isle Waterfront
Cus tom 5l3R .. 3 bath home on 55 ft. lot.
(:arden Vie\V kitchen, \Vaterfront living fill.,
fan1ily rn1 .. l 'acht-$225,000.
341
70 Linda Isle Drive
l1r ime 45' lagoon lot .. $150,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Bay1ide Or., Suite 1. N .B. 675-6161
· \, ' . .'' . ' ::' · \\"Ith Its 011·n ki1chcn & 1~11h 1 ll'illl~. 1'f'n1odC'h'fi. '.\11111111111 '
11Jst \\·ith friend~. l l l II < '96 000 m1!s1dr l1<ht1n1• !G' NV\ ' many more cus om ea ures , a ~or "j' , • · • .,,. ..,uvv. 1n this raiiihhu~ ru!'lt'h s11 I•' ~ant (';1rC'. $76,!kJO. FOR All Call :HO--l720 hon1f' :: full ha!hS .I!. !01~· 1•! ~
FABULOUS
IRVINE
AIUS I $62,900 IN UNIVERSITY PARK? ( ] nth('f !'(lolll\ r .. r ~·our fan llly, ,, I
I A real greenbelt jewel! 3 BR . 2 Bt\ home & : TA~~l~ 11 has an llS"Ulllithh· ]Ill\ Oe,an
fan1 rm. 11ig hiy upg raded. l!uge brick pa· int('rci.t rate Ivan. sii hun1-. REAL ESTATE S:!~+.~. 1. NEW LISTING' tio, low maintenance yard. See this ! You'll I •
b
· f 900 I ' 1190 GIC'nneyrt• SI uy 1t or $62, . HUNTINGTON HARBOUR._ '494-9'17'1 ~l\HJ16 Spat'l<lllS 4 h1"'Clmon1 homl' in 29:,.=; lfarbor Blvd., C.l\I. ___ .,._ _______ 11 a i,.'n"al l<X'iill•"in n (',1 r
NEW RED CARPET RLTRS -M-o-ntiCello Condo -F.£A1.1Y 1 OPEN HOUS\'.: SUN. 1.:,, !'.lib s.:hoots 11nd pork. J>ri<'ed '"
"FASHION ISLAND" M"ll at $57.:il>. C1tlt 6i.J..'i72j 1 l Bdrrns., dinin~ an-a, 2 h;i fskyl i nc Di·.: NE\\',
561 San Nicholas Or., Suite 103 '.'lei\· P.>int s. t'arp;,>ts· 1\tovC'· li:.!.11_,co,~s:, l~\\.Y.i .. \\/s10.cC'p1ng ,-11·1v of '""'an
1 YR WARRANTY
• HOME
Air C"nndirionf'(] CALL 64()..8672 in t'Ondition. $Z9,9j(J. 1l4: ~lh-J .• '4 ,\' -13· 1'-·2;{lJ I ,(, hills. R1·.in1 •'l'lhn~s.
CAMEO SHORES 5 BO RMS : s::1,ri0 ruu Prit1' LIST INGS Nr:EDE.D FERGUSON-HESTER · dran1<1tio: 3BR/::S..\, :; r11rs.I
-'T
1
,-,, ------'-'--C d~l -M----1-0-2-2 Realtors, Inc. 833-9781 Assumable FHA 5,,,.,0 huL;C' !'.!amc _n1." <.ounl\f'T
!l('a1111ful :.!' J }l'ar old General R..E. 1002 crona e •r I " " k h \ k !1 I .,, I ho111c l'parkl"" l•k<' ,,.,,_ Fountain Valley_ 1034J ~n 11unl1f\'in::: Tu~·k your 11·,· · '1'1. · ..t ·'"""'·:sec ani
1002 1002General R.E. General R.E.
One of lhe (e\v, rc;:illy nice large ho mes • ~ · 111·l ·c n l'r
I II
.
1
. . 't f C ,\'1•11· :-h;"..:: ,·;irr ... ·1s !hnJUJ..:h· 111nlhi'l"lll·la11 11.1 tlu« ~u1>1'r e '..s~·A CLIFF" I\ 1., O\'(I a va1 . 1n llS pres 1g1o us com1nuru y o a-1 ou !. Ccn ri·al air SWING A MOP 1 GOOD INVESTMENT dnll J1otJ~~. J·.x i·l'l!l·nt · · . ·.,fl ..
n1eo Shores. j fl r ivate b eaches. each pre-I. \\;df. lo lx•111·h O\"('r "ol1i"n· ASSUME GI LOAN l0t:a!1on, f'loS!' TflO!"e.i n 11.ilk (.l(.'.('it llfront_ :.!Brt .. B.\ ,\sk •'<lllth1JO!'llng, u111J a ~l'eal u ~" S (XX) U\\C J se ntin i,: H d iffer ent vie\V of the exceptional FllA 7 '~': loan ii·i th SAVE A LOT n>1lfootl.Jridre.Thisduµk'x ,~6.00.) cash mo\'1' in. Huge to IHIL'" ~h!•PfJlllf<; cen!cr.I •J, ·, .~11· ,.
rock Jorn1ation. Shown by app 't. $142,500. payments of 31'2{)/inonth [ u1 l1u1rt .11·ra 11C'1:u· i::1T1111111;1t· · :.! s!ory, '.! llR. 2 ba, f<1r. 01\'11''r 1\·n1 t·iuTy l:irge 2nJ. ! su::-.t~tER R\'.:!jERVAT_~ON:-
.. Fl"E BEDROO\I'.· Sl"hooL •l bed., den 1\· ''"'I dinin!.', L•'. fan1ily ""'"' 11\i,500. I Ar-IEP.ICAN HO_ l\!E [ """, JUSI \\'al1 1ni;: lo be assun1ed. / v ,, "" .. " " REALTORS
OUR 25'H YE R
BAY ANO BEACH
675-3000
2QD7 E COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR
li<:'llrr hurry and call. ALL TER.\1.5 har. & 3 bnths do11·~1~1airs. I ·open<; ent~ !ounrlel'k. Lf:· If 49-1.7·13 \9.J.1001 fll l1'rf'rt pool on ~1 .. 1r1uu ... kJ!.
WALK.ER & LEE i Spacious, bt•an1 '"r1l!n;.:rtl,l 'l"Oun1ry kllchrn. 11·atk.1n J ,.,,.., •. 11,1-,11 • '·-J '·I I JBI' ZI 2 .... ;ind :1 h;1lf. $1.i:.!,vv.i. ~ J'iou ....... 6ain hunters had V<:r. 11pt. 01·er rnrpor!. pantry. scparo1tc nr!ry rn1, •, · ia, sty, .....:a 111 ·fl i; x_. ik ui ·
P.eal E.~lalC' , hcttr1· gel our your mops. Co1np11rc \'aluc 11•ith o!hcr hut.:r lot. 962·4471 ( ~;: J 546·8103 eriJin2. oct>an vie11· hoine,1 '
1 1 1 ~
545-9491 i' broon1s, and . buckC'lS and Crt.\I dupli•.\es. l BRASHEAR REAL TY . 1'iti.500. Ltt llughesl /Utr,' San Ju~n Cpilrn. 1078
C""<itl us on this one. Do a PRICE $99,500 842-7411 Eves 968-1178 Hunt. Harbour 1042 [(33.\:~j.l, 499-1731. A I A I little l'lran u11 and ~uu'JI 611 D.i111n l1un ,\\f'tlUI' : .. _ 1 ~1'HOLL Cit.rt S.an Ju,1n
I
ssume. ssume. h<t\"I' a hun1e that )OU'll !)('I Broker 6i."1-."i6::1: 6i."~ 16J.1 . EXEC DREAM I Lido Isle 1056 :?<';.!Bit"~,; all priet.'<i to ~··ll·
General R.E. 1002General R.E. 1002 A I pP•ud nf, Call 11011 . .:ind a:-.k 1 :'lln!!nifiN'nl • rourt\,'arcl ,111 )-un"•·r $1<•,0'lO 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; SSume. I :d.>out listing No. !J.iOl C I M 1024 ~ " ~ • BETTER BUILT Ccnrury :.!l/~hss1on Cuuntr:-1' 1 Newport West / os a esa
1
• lgL' :1uthen!1f' span 1 ~hi ,HH., 1 .1~1111 or 493-0?JO.
BROADMOOR
TURTLE ROCK
I WALKER & LEE TWO STORY fuunt;;iin. niany cllnis In'<''.. ......, IM·~1g111'<1 by Hu·hard L.. So-h-L 1086
I ,\s:-.11n1e ~l'\\"Pfll1 \re st P.l'al !-:State I l~r. 3 Ba, lain r in, furin.d i -'iru1ra. \\'ulr, _,,,.,~·l tu· ut aguna
Outstanding tamily home on quiel cul de s ac;
3 lge. bdrms., dining r1n. & viev•! Ready to
go at S58,900. lni.:l. land.
"__,_ I CORBIN-MARTIN, INC. I
\J'l llU~21 REALTORS 644-7662
~ Corona del Mar !
11·i-lr1C'I. ti ', lt1.1n. Sunk~·n 1 EXECUTIVE dinui;: 11n, z frrlcs. 0,.1,r OCEAN VIEW slrl't't. 3.bdrrn."' .. r:•mil ~ rn1 • /1vu1i: t"Oi1111. ~L'11 shag and I COSTA MESA , ~11 per;p;u•iou.~ :; be.droonis in '"JOO ~" 11 1-.,,..,"Vl !163ti L, 11. 1 1 + m<ud s fill. $136,000 l.lJ\\ f.P. l Arrh Ray, 3 HR~ ...., n: C't ti It -~ ..... · •··"""· • ;1\" \1,111'11n\t roni \•1ur NEAR EVERYTHING ha lrg. h\". rn1 1,/frnlc·.
,n1. Ill 00111. ut;:el 545-9491 1 Nf'1\'jll.tl't "1th fon11al 11111111-.: ~fora CilTlt•. !IG8-\.ll~. dinLn);! ronin. l;tl'l llMtt·hini:;I lurmal din. mt v.·/"''~~e\\" ~1'p;1ra1c F1\J\llL.'i' HOO:'.ll. roorn. Plus large fa1111I\ ~··"'Yr 1,_ . . 1 rroni vour dC't'k t\iagical 12 lldrn1s., family rm .. 2 oy O~'llrr m.tli'J
. ... ' · orona e ar roon1 11n1 \i·p ..... tr. ,\, l!uci• :.! ~1nr\", 3 ~ .'+ Fl~ 111on11•111s n1ah·r1;1llit• ht'fon": s;_ ~au 1. .an air Bn"hl c.:her t"' k 11 ch en I C d IM 1022 ' I 1 .... · .:-i.u. ,.,.,v."ll .,,,_ ... ,im''" (>.'lil. · · ' ' I bolh '· 1·1u1 h d I · 1 ~"~~~~~~~~~~\ ~orn1al dining. Separate ; beauty. Call now to S('e.
1
_.11 1,., i·•··~·-'k' 1 lhl' liti• 111 \'Our ni;uiini pit i qu1u_T) Ille in k1tchcn &I laundry roorn. Lots of 6"'--11 ·'11 n.:-. •. J•i\\;•ll<~ • I' il •~500 shutters. BIKE TO BEAOI. TOP·O-THE ,. .... u ,\:an ;;_:10 11,;d:t .... '. ~·ll.!llfl lf'On\1'rS:\llon ;•n':i) 1\ll this atll Y m i._,, · ~ '1~f8}>;?~~1r1~ •• :_.j1~~;,~~"~" 1~1';',' ~~'~'~vt'e~ ''~; Wa~ker &~ee l l ~~;'~~;';;Ls~~~R~~o ~~;~~I !
1 _ ... w. I~ THE REAL
ESTATE RS
bcnutiful!y deooratcd 3 BR lll•l (IT•Tl 1,(15( a .• mile fo the O<.'l.'tl n, REA1lY M ' . v·. 1067 1MobtleHomes nearlv nc11· 5 Bl~ hunic . 1ss1on 1e10 for sale 11
1002 1 & Den or 4 BR cus!om built H \\•/hu~C' recreahon r 111 ,1 1721 I C'OA~T JI\\"'\'. I . . . 1
1 00
•• .• 1 ' hoine \l'ilh hugC' gan1e roon1, UGE SHADE II rernlal tlin., <' ;i 1 h,. d r;i l 711: 11.ii;....1 ::84 ,\.: ~l1: ~192·2il4"> l BR, 2 BA, Air condihon.-<I, 1 , • IRVINE TERRACE • I formal dini~l!{, and luxurious TREES $27 500 l1'itings iri li v rn1 & h11itr ; e:u_1P':t .\.: rlraJlC'S S.IO,!KX>.· I Ari RACTIVF: 20.'XI I, f'nc.l. , *MESA VERDE*! BIG DADDY I mas~er i;uit~. Outside is C'~· 1 -; ranch l'll'IC' kiti:hen. Yiiu Irvine 1044 P_nnr~~lf's only. Phonf' tv J)R1ncl .\.: i;lasscne room. 2 OPEN AND AIRY ULTIMATE IN j tens1\·c ratio. ~eeks, bl~ IN C.M. I OIO.n !he ·!and on!y S.\6,930. \·iew 3$-1662 ! Bl •. 2 ba .. f':"<ltra_s Pr1mr
1002 General R.E.
1 ---------~-General R.E~
I 1n:-es and a Ko1 pond.1\11 RI FA~"T PO'SESSJO:-.; ~ N 1 B h 10691 :ulult JX'I p.1rk. ~.V. area,
Ch:i,1111n1' ~. !K•d1•Wlllt II 1t.h C?UALITY ANO TASTE I Collrgr r.Jl'k h.1<: lo11' l•J <Jf!l'I' I the end of a qui c I ' l~ur::: . lhi.s first t i Ill I" T1::i:::-.1s TO"~ s'L!IT !. Bk;.: WARMTH OF WOOD ' ewpor eac Sll,J)(). o~nC'r, :~:J~l.'14
1111 IJ!l11 .... tnd .i 11.ini!l·d suri,nsingl} in(':<pcnsi i~·1 & llus ho111r 1s th<' i.,'leRtf'"' l'U]-.{Je-sac. •1rht111sed !hi'\.'{' bcdroont ~2 --11 l.ovrly -I hdrn1 2• .. h;1 th IC\.:'>il'\FP 'i. Vl_l _\l'_·_I_ r~rn ~'' hnril l'\tl•' 1'1J1 1n1ry 1 \\hC'n you ('On<:irlC'r \\hat ~nu -I hig.Br s, 'I great l.>;1111~ & ' 1\ top_ \'~Jue at hoin.r ~n a free lin('d ~ll'CC'I ' -JJ · ' • ~ hon11• \111h !~1~t\y -r(•-.1 ·1. "'!f DO~OR~S * . ]>k.1 1>hl~\\"l{ko'. 2 Br.'\ikr~~~:
k1I< Inn 111th Ii 11 1 I 1 -1 n... 1 g<"t Rrstful livuu::-rooni. :i ... 1){'cnil guest A~ilh 11~ SW9,500 11on I [,1st long. 64&-7111. , O\\INEH~ rlC'~\lf'r.1~t'. Jiu;,,~ ··1 fonn<il dinin:.:, inirn.u~·d Jlrr~' ' A .sna.1.z~ JJ.ilo!Y'~ Han· buy at S 1 .>, 5 0 0
Pril":•t 1· 11:111n Hn•I a ;.:1~·;11 fl'ln1lal rli111ng, i.; o u r 111 C' t I r.1111 frplc. Bn1nd nC'~· Otl! 6447211 , OPE.vTIL D • rrs FUN 10 ~NICE' ' bdr_ni~ ,) Datil tri Ir\ rl. ~ ull ~~)(Jr.;, ranf'llu1;.:. :ind air ~l~.rt, .llr.<t 1 l_a~~ ,''On~!. :' 1 61;..5.12!1.
t•·111·et1 y;1rd l.ir;:•· C'JKllU.:h kl!l"h. ChP<'rful hrkf~t mi.I hi.lin~. , .. I ~@ · ~1 d1111~i; r n1, fanuly n11, 11111111111111111g. ThC' p;,rio"s 111 .p,tltOUS lldn11!; .• l ! ha1h. -·~-.-------
t r<:1r Jli)l'l. t .ill 11'11\' fur ... lu<I> <<ll•r-1. •I BR. 'It._. I I chefs k1tchm ~· r p I• 1 1 1 1 IM·«u1 1 ar<'"'' f.· 1!1·111}0.;· 11\IOBILE Home cah-1na 8i "' · $52 500 I · · ' · an• I le ;1111 -.e:ip1ng \"l'rv '" • · • I . . 'appo1nt1n1·nl *'' .,,.,. Cin i~ B.\. 0\1'\'~Jtrd ~ur. M'P
1
I, . , ~I Covered nat\O. Beautiful 1. ,. 1 . ·1 lovely ldl'crw .. "'/ jJ r 1 v .. pallo, bay \1e11. AdulL~. l ~· ·· ''"'1 1•1 I t • . '":':J • aurac IV<' .• ~cnr P'10 .in• '"'' 1 1 1 ., 100 r-,. ..,._. ............. 111nc• 11,,,,. 1.1ou1·1 1,1,rk ... h•)p.l~i.:c.:o,·e t"edpatio.• ' .. I pool-~ized Jot. S61,9JO. brk . . P· 11-9 . .Jlfl 1~l 1f)O\"crlook1n~onf'ofllH' sn1 pe ,.,.,, .tu.i-• .:.o,• \\.<II~ til~-k:i:~l. Q I I . Q ' ' • C 11 ""' ~· fl'(rt',ilJOn. IK'C' o '1
,l\J\J I I I '·II C II ua II\" t-on" t1H'tion. \1·ner I --a O'i-.io.tt. incl. !hf' huxl. '~\:~ iloes ~.~~1'l.'1'n.,..· s. a Acre•ge tor ule I 200
Ol"fN r1~" • 11 s ftJN 10 ,.,1 •. 'r h<t.'i alrf'ad~ purl·hasrd othl'J' REPOSSESSIONS CALL 552 7500 ! "'~ ''"'··
I
r®., . .., hon1c ;inti an.-..::ou~ to 1nake 2211 Newport II. DUPLEX : Eastside $36,500. I • I MORGAN REAL TY 4!1 BE,\lIT \Voodl'fl at"l"('!i: on 1\•11,.~~1n:1l·l· 1 t• r n1" 10 64c6°'.'°sMS-ll J SOUTH OF HIGHWAY C'">:lrenif'ly ~ha"' 3 BR. 2, J 1 1-·or inform.ation an,d location • VISION • · 673-6642 675-6459 t'flunty road 11 1 r 1 \;er
qualiflrd [lf"l~Jn. ~letkP !his, .,. f th Fl-I\ & \ \ / la'aur t''-l..itc \UUl'li. I 1oin1plrtely l'f'niorlC'lt'll Ba 111 pri1ne Ncwporl l tJ ese ' · r ion1c..::, I *OCEAN VIEW* fronl:\g1'. S.l:il per ai·,
1 ' · I I o,.ners u111L J::1c11·thing 1s ll.ii ipra Condo"s I.arr: c l contart · Red Hill Realty 11 Fromeveryrn1 of th1slge 3 °"''n<'r, 6-l>-l!OSO ---400 E.171' FOR All .
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Sun/ Eves. nr10. A sC"c!udPd rlt".ir!-cnd 1 family roo1ll, al! budt-1ns. '1 KASABIAN . . HH., :.! ba., tarn . rm. honie. I Condominiums
I CM .. =.. AREAS 646-5855 sir~et !OC'a\lon Brings 1n · 11lush C":lrpf'1Hlg .~ corner Real Estate 962-6644 r:~.ALT', .. llf.AL:<?HS lfugl' k1r. ~·/Dl'kfst. af\.'a. for sale 1700 • • s:11n tll'1l11 h llllllll\" k1t.:111on, JUSl_!~Slf'ff -bl'sl .. . Lniv l ark CC'nler, ltvinc dbl.doorcntry.PrL\'.bcach . ____ :_ ___ _c.:..:;:
HARBOR VIEW
HOMES
T11·0 Sll)/"Y ! l1!'il1<,••l;. ..
balh r1•i.11li•1u·P. l;,.,.,,.1,, 1•h
u11c:r:11lt'<I a 111! l.l ,l•·l·,~I\
land~e:q11•c!. t"I' I .1 ,., 1 I 1
li\'ini::: •1nri ~ r .t .. 1"11 ~
entertaining. ('<1n1,·1111·111 1<•
gr<•f·nb<-11 ;11111 ,. h••1! •. •111 ,,
c1uirt su ·1•e1. ~ " ! . •1 , II
!!'lclu•l1ni:: l:nut 111111•·1~t.11•
640-1120
CORONA DEL MAR
Home With Income
c·nzy :: Bn. '2 1, '· 11 1\i
l1r1·pl~vf' + nf'I\' :! J:J: l"·ru.d
over gara"e. f."or add1t111:1,,.
1nlorn1u 1 ioo.
CALL 540-1151
~o ~_.. HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
I 1 NEW ON Hl::OUC\'.:U TO $i9,900. (:;111 hurry -1'~Lll ..1-1.rit-124 Sou!h j O\\'r\L"R n1vs. Spacious 3 --- ---GEM I B'i' 0 11 ni•r 'Tu~l in J o~urio
In sre~ Q\\·ner says ni ake i Co .. ~.5:;d1orl'. lxlnn, 2 bath hn1nC'. }_'an_iily EXC_JTINL; N•'11· _:!l~!l •. 2. _RA. [ --:-. , 1 1+:. ,.0nrlo. :.! ·BR'.:!. Iii\, A~; MARKET offer! • BLUE-RIBBON rm, fr11lc, :ill the built-H'li . TO\\nhomr, U n 1' C' 1s1 r y 121).~ Tusun A\'e., N .H. t~illrl bliin~ 1 ~1 .
HARBOR VIEW 644-7270 I , I Patio, shakf' roof. Roon1 for Pal'k, Sup<'l' !J"K", lnrll'rp1ng, I RF:ALTORS 64~()2:1 '<'('U;.11v .11~· ',,.;1
1 ~1
s r ·
"LOVE BUG" 611ild!'r.< -~J)('{'Uhdors -Tiro Sharp anrl clean 4BR/~BA, I vnur ll()fll. Sl·l 9Jl. bkr Call clrps .~· upgraded crpt ~ l:fl11 I I .. s~.oji5oo' ~ . ( lhh~, r-1 P:ii,'f'l~. Cn.~ta r-.tc~a. 1 spi_r· & spnn .cler:t blt1n k1tch. g.;2.JJ7'.:. ' be inr!d By o~·nrr S4·1,900 I MONTEGO MODEL ~.~719,; ·· · O'' itoiin.
:-iupPr ~h;irr•. uscd linc·k.., r;,.JlJ ..\rril. TCJl;tl :.!5,000 sq. 1 Prime I01·at1oll nr. So. Co.:i.st Inrhirtr•s !aIHI :i52--0i?.li droo _;·~------
h 1·;l 1· ~ :-. ha k C' r o •1 1 . !I . f'rohiih!(' fl,.1.onc· to Pl&La. S-12,!lOO. 0\\'NER !vs. Dean Bros .. ] CUSTOr>.tJZJ<]) ll6:\i~---
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·I Be nis, 2 Balh : A°ssiJ~tE :1
11 •, 1-·11.\. 1.loublc
n1;11ucured landsf'np1ni.:. ,, 1~.~-:: nr .\ _ \\..ill Tr;idc for CALI. 968-4411 bdrm, 3 bath home ~'lfh T~I Rock 1 1 · j 1
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1
, LgeH"A01R"B"o1 Rio VgITIEcnWbelr. , f!llr<lt:'C'. 2 hdrn1, 3 ti.1th. X!nl lidrn1~. '.'. !.ath hn1ne.1 1 1 * Crest Realty family rm lrplc ~·et bar e ·.pro · ail{ s4·1x ·I • lflC'at1on. ~~ . .)00. :~1:...,~-.7 :··~. n<"'•lllt' Cnils in or ,,...,,,m ,,.,;,·n. -'i.~. b1..'. 4 Br, 2 1 ~ ba, ~\'fllnut 1 HOMES •~ Jl:.ip11.v Ji,1 rcl<·n-like J,;i1rh"n. <-. 1 • OJI d 1 u.~.. ...,.., .,., ........., '" .. D I U ,11lt• !•11• or th(' line hlt·111,. rir:ir '"'11 '1 ,.na. el'l' or ! Bt-' \UTIFUL· " h B 2 ' Call 8-12-fi691 p;ineHNI . !atn·rm, ·· e;•I'' REALTY 83' "780 I up exe1./ nits $69.00ll. Call 6.j(j..{)5..jj. J 1 • ·• uge r. 1 gar, $7Z,JOO By 0 11 n L" r. · -for s•le 1800 \'~u·,1111
1
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ncedin::
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an ! WANTED! [ g,h,oolclosch l•h . sho1~p1ng, O\\i\'FR ~rrifice. s 3 '.\~ ~1 R'.l.1-J::iG:: _____ • t ________ .;.::.;.::
"f•ln"•I.• 11·· tr1n1t' >U~C'l'.I ~c ~. c Ul'r' I'.~. J.S!>\ln1e 1 00\1n. :l bdrms, bii:t f;im1ly NEWPORT SHORES COS
,,,, lf':1~1'<t land. SO~l,:.,00. i l Qui f)f fO\\".n 01\'ll<'I' \\'~Ills ~o I ~"\'L _ lo:.i n. s::7,950. Ag!. rill, dining rn1, built-ins. Laguna Beach 1048 3 &!rms & den TA MESA C F Colesworthy . 11 1\dc a b.i.yh'O~t to,1n~u'.'<' ...:.''f .... 1739. I ;.lhai; carretin~. Beamrd \\"atk to DUPLEX • ' J 11 ith n large PI'1.'·~tc shp, 111 !\IESA VERDE. Jmntaculale f"l.'i linj!. S3'.l,9JO. brk Call MONARCH BAY Bcat•h, pools & lt'nnis 1
Rea ltors 640.0020 , l ~kc llC~· l'Ond1t1nn for a . :: BR, 1''arn. 2 BA, "·/rooni ~2-Z",Sl. A IO\'l'ly, f111C'ly . f1111l'h"d $46,500 'Curr aM pri\';1\r. Good ~~ • Corona 1!1•] :'.llar cluplf.'\. 1 for bo:i.t Prime cul de sac . entC'rtalnlng-& tan11ly l10n11: CAYWOOD REAL TY inoomr in n C""\osc-ln arcit.
ENJOY SAILING ~=~=~-c:.::=== lnlere!l!erl? : $4.,900 A"' &lz-s··,o · O\\':\ER nn.x. $219:i do10.·n. 2 \1i lh 4 b<hin..::., c\1•11, form<i l SlR,T.iO. Red Ca r pel
Call 6T..>-7Z21 w,, • : "· ,,'). · · bclrn1 con<lo ove~looks !he dining mt., 11.t!r. pool attn.~ I * ~1290 * lnveslmenl Divis ton .
,\Inn..: !hi' t·:in;:d from :.ou1· WA~1f-.D.· 11•.•1llP nr adult\ pool. !las bu1\t-1n!'!, 5ha~ jRCU7-li. \\"alk to Dcach.•, -OCEANFRON_T __ 979-2:150. O p c n
11 ,,i.·1 l"·<l!''••1u hah'flny or 1 i\l!l'nctivcly prict'd I C\I "H c h 1 t d \ ron._o. , " ;.'.'.~. a. a.~ . l'<1rpr_ . cus om r a Pe s . shopping, rt'slauranl & DUPLEX \Vceken<ls ...
l•,1111 f1r·11·I,; \'(·t':tntl.1 .. !.111l'ly Harhor N t 610.03:2 $Zl9j() bk Call S.'6-Q00.1 .~~='-"'--~----! l\o·;iu11fully :q•pn1111<·d :: f\P. ''l'11nncl" 111f)(lrl. · 0 agen s. · ' ' · r • ,. LO lhrTaUJreR. N!fE<5R.OOOASSOC VERY n.EXIBLE I NEW DUPLEX, BY OWNEH
"'"l't'/pqih l1<1n1<' i1i111 drn·k. l~'d!'ooin~. z baths, dining! R·:l U )T -nt'dl :~ HH/l 1,11 $2300. ASSUi\fE:S 7 ,1,. AN. • , FINANCING Li.:<' 2. BR, 2 bn..::., Se:i.r
,, ir 1 • .,111 .\.11 nni~. ~1;~i . .".Q<J, t•Hill1. L'pi:triu!NI r ;U'JX'tin11; I ~ ... , 11· rpl. t·r11t .~: drr;· .. ~11..;c Fi:-;:r, 4 BR. 968-s.io:i Bkr. Jlm N. Const Hwy., l..'\~una All ,1.00d, r,lass & rock 1 \Vestchff Center, S62,000 PETE BARRETT i.nr! drapt:·~· Bi~ backyarrl , Ln , S.1l .'i00. Oni . 64 .. ·J ~1 E,·cs. $2ffi. per iuo. PIT! 494-1177
1
year ne .... •. llu.11:c & GrRcious. $17,000 On. lo ~ S.15,00'.l
111lh par10 nnd ll: as [;i;~~~~~~~~~~ --~-.-· -~ ---$194,000. 49'1·0615, Agcnl. t'Onstruct: loan .• il 1:14. prt. -REALTY-H11 r·H-Q. Only $68.500. Call No Down-Brand New 1 NE\V PORTOF1NO home in t:t•n fl\ $:~. per m9. ~No
642-5200 tii'.;..K:i'J41. I DOCREEAAMN VHIOEMWE Cl~ -0 B\' ,( -fl "'C 'hie. & r. ... citinc coasl!inE' ViC\\' lron1 Hurhor vi('\\'. r·antas!it' _!!:E.~i;ts, p\co.<;e l S.12-126-\
General R.E.
nPENfllQ ·tTSFUNT08fN1C£1 0\!::a J..'"U ~). ~ IJ<.f•V su11decks oil hu"e_ 1nl\slel' vtcwtoocc. an.•. o·4_B.-.3•,I Oceanfront Du!'lt• ~~-I Ni<' this corner Iocurion :1 • '1
' ..
1002
1 G-._.. ._.. ._. ._. ---. kf81 ' That /nfr;guing Word Game w;flt a ChUck/e B~ & fam room with be~m Ba.. fam ily rm. din rm. I Deluxe, Spacious, by owner
• eneral R.E . 1002
1
• ~ be<lroon1, family I" 0 0 111 ce11lni;:-s -c.-.:cellent lociillon bonus rm. Lands c 11 pf.' d $1117,500! ~22. 642-3623 home. 1-lighly upgradert. lolitetf "' ClAl' •· POUAN and financing to match your lawn, Jge fee lot. Hy owner I &to-1634 ·
{ ·-. Enjoy the placid pool or us1• 1 0 Reorroftge lefterl cl the burlgel. $59.500 lo $66,500. 644-9425 t ;::-:---;;---,--~=-I
the private tx-aeh. A supl'r, lour K1ci111bled word• be-Only 3 lefl, huny! HARBOR VIEW Income Property 2000
THE REAL
ESTAT E RS
ASSUMABLE LOANS ----··----
MESA VERDE NORTH
3BH 2BA-l 12 ) 1·, uld i
COLLEGE PARK
:fRA :JflA ;:i1; \'.\ IJI" 111 ,\ I .\
\ ,\
EASTSIDE' W/POOI.
3BR-15xJO P0o1I. S:.!29 J\lo,.
_ •ESTSIDE DUPLEX
All 281{ l BA-
7"~0 VA s191 rm
$42,900
$42,000
$36,900
$36,900
PRESTIGE
_ ___..__HOMES
REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE
I ON THE WATER I Newport Beoch
, $."O.!lj()..Uock k fillip. 2' BR,
• ~1 ,; bn. dining, quirt ! Joc1111on. Jual llste-d , 1lurry
CALL 540-1151
--• -HERITAGE
~~rf;i.~. A truly he st huy 1 .1-_,_._1._._._1~_·_•_.,._,._-_m. Red Carf)9t, Re•ltor1 Lrg. fee lot across from lO UNnS
644-7270 I R u Q M I s 497-1761 . pool/greenbefl. 4 BR/2BA. _ ' lam. rm. 182.500. By o"""'· $145,000
l j 12 J I I OFFER .. ED. . • . 640-8140 Georg:l!Olls garden settinsi:
. .. . • . . ny b\ulde.r. Lovely 3 3 BR. 21~ ha, &. 1''arnily and 1D sharp unit!!. Best
1 bd11n .. :I beth 11unny hOme: Room. New crpt11 & paint \ooklng place on the block.
I T I L N E I dra nuUlc entry to sle~up thru-cut, atJ6 Commodore, ~'O llvr unit buildings.
II 1) llv. ml1 .• A[kc, d~k, s~1~~ 89.ycrest. $63,500, 673-9403 tnoomc Sl4"3 per month.
<-cram c 1 ~ \\'O • ' ·"""'· or 833-398:> Ga""''· Ov.Titt h: aRM•-·-The he~ b11y in beautiful · Prim ·~· • Lai.:uno! ror fu rther I POPULAH. H8l'bor V u e location. Coll now
• SOUTH" OF HWY. I R I F E A I ' l1•lom1atkln •· a pp 't. Homes, Palemio. 4BR. wel Ta2-..1700. REALTORS
1 N I R-..1 _ _, " Energy a isi1: When he sits "'
I HARBOR VIEW HOMES I tw y eutcor•t.., I' I J I' oo' couch ,wi1h 'gitl •n<I the ahOwlng, calf btu', 2 lrplc1, Jov<lY tow
' 3 Bdnnt ~ !:"'~.bwltlh ;;,nta~ . . . . Hgh15 go out, he $pendi"the * 494-0301.P clfl* ,.._ ma.lnt. lA~·1 .. • aide boat , . un t _,._.,. ,;,\! m t v• ers. f Sollthcoe.lt B c ~·v· !ltorqt, '""""'" u .
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r~: ] Tllr. REAi. I
L~ ESTATERS l~~h~~P~•~ ~ dent'to, Bo*lbo*o 640B•y14Pl4ropo*rt*lu I ~H E T R E T I :.,S'~ lhe evening repa~!:9 $39.ri®. SPECTACULARocUff BEAOI HOUSE ~,,!00 , .... • pa ,• • • • drive coutllne view. "'-n 1 Privacy .. Otancter. CAt..!J
l\1nny othC'r extru make ·1• I I' I • 1 O Corilplete !he ch11ekl1 quoted )'Our own opt. Wallace L. owner, info & appt. 645-8914 . .::::;*:i:,;TlUPLEX;;=;;;:;;;;:=c;:=M=::=.==~I
th18 an ou~tandln11: buy (et DUPLE.\'. at 611 Carnation, L-.1.--L-....J.C....J.-.1..-' !Y l1Uit19 In tilt-mlnln9 words Ne.tf, Rltr. 4!M-9318 I ~or (7141 328-3%13. New 3 BR,• BA• ·H..,.· + land hi h I yov develop lrcM .itp No. 3 btlow. • ' C ii' &16-77!1 So. Of & way, Pr < • OCEAN l'RONT FURN . POOL A Roles lo beck )'I'd 1'wq 2 BR, 2 BA Apt>. rtp1
WALn ' S99,SOO. Broker, 61:Xi631 8 PRINT NUMl[l!'O lfTTtRS ~r own :I BR. 2 ba apt. Nmb Bluff• condo, Prof. plfloit, l•undry. l:Ua*"111
1 KER & LEE 1 LARGE UNITS. South o( <N fHf!f '°''"" . Xlnt view, 1e<urll)', POOL, decOr. I BR, 3 ba, lo 110'1, I 116 Hamilton. do\1 641-411-4'
REAi.. E.C)TATE j H"'>'· (2) 3 BR'a, (J) 2 BR, UNSCIAMll£ l[ftERS Swartt Realty f9S..3X)5. 644--0134. e BY OWNER e •
The llUlltat dmw in the Wett. jlJ l BR. OWntr .. 83:H8M. I '01 ANSwtl! lfavt an extra SJ!f'Cle heater BJG CANYON CC-OfflMlle ~ Untta, moc:m
.... • o.tly Pllol C&llln.d s.u Idle t1<m1 .,tth a D&lly -with a OollY Pilot J mod. 4 BR. 1p0<:t. view. ll<lt Anaheim ..C..ttoo. 111!!!!!!!""""""-----------"""'I M . Cell -Piiot C-llM!d .a. -_.:S.:C;;.RAM-;..:;.;;.L;;.E;;.T.:S.:A;;.n.:•wen=='"'-C.:.l.:.•"=lfl.:ca.:.1.:.:lo:.:;n.:l.:08.:.0=1_a...=::'::fl<d;:..:.A<l::.l:..;&l:::Mm.:.:::=..-'1l9.llOlh 8#M or 8(2.49!!f) !135-857&, EvK.
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;;;;;;:;;;:-&::~=-.:=--r.--.,.-....,....-.,.--...,,.=,.,...===="'T"""T1=-:-==-,.·r-i-·;;--:-_,.,_,.---;::::r-,..--:---:-,.,-,,-.....,,....,,.--,...-,-,,,.. MoM.ty, MIY 20, 1974 OAILV PILOT f3 ln~me ~roperty 2060 I RO .... Furnl•hed I AOueH UnlumlihOd n urnlsf;;a C~1 Unlurn. 34~ I Aporl!MntJ Unlurn. Aportmenl1 Unfurn.
1
Aportmenl• Unlurn. Office Rent•1 --;
TRIPLEX G•norel 3)02 Coste MMo 3224 lrvlno 3244 BLUH'S; ~ BR. II> bu,, I Coste Mou 3824 Huntington Beech JIM(). S•nl• Ano 3880 NEW OFFICES
NEW OR new decor A <P1·• no J>ct•, 1--------l IN LAGUNA NIGUEL , p T s100-1110. trl'IL PO. HURRY! 2 BR, mo. 1q TURTLEROCK 3 Br, 2 Ba, i:m. mo., Days "4-Sm CHILDREN 'BEAUTIFUL
Jw;t olf Nowport BIV<l. _ <k.,>nf«>ll Bach apt 1. yaro, F•nced tor kids. ~ .':/!'·.~!'i~~ .. ~ pt< I 11t .. /Wknill 6#-:ll15 Only 42c per sq. ft.
Good Kcctlll fo Newport Nev.•port cusroM 2 Br, $UIO. Lr& • ._. o..>.r......,.., .,......_..,,. Duplex•• Unfurn 3600 NEW and parents love the IW'ttrundlni;s • cheerful· 4IXI ft. ,._ UP. All utll tac.I.
Costa Mtsa _ Sw1 DI~ 1 $145-UTlL PO. Bach, priv. yard. Fenced tar pel. L19une Buch 3248 large, s~clou1 apart· ~pn.cklus apts. Crpll, dr111, alr, wetbar.
Fwy. Centrt.J MND. locatlon.: patkl, new crpts/drpl, WONT 1..Mt 2 BR, 2 BA, DELUXE 3 BR, 2 bK, &hag ments at 8 a n b u r y e Attults Only z-,.32 Cafl lno Ca 'stnuio
Owne" Wlll "" 3 be<i<'OOm• . L8¥u••· 1185. Teahouse. Pet ok. ILIO-NICE 1 BR, No. enu. 1 2 & 3 BEDROOM c • 2 blk> 1rom s . c Plaza San Oleao Frwy to -<UninJ room -ramlly Sl!f.>.-UTJL PD 1 Br, frplc, H eff-..1--* '42 9900 Wa.l.k to ~ach & town. crpts, drpg, all appls, encl ~' ross. e R~ facll & clubhouse Avecy • .uiCwlll)' .um otf. room _ orcl\ld room • 2 deck, vie\v, gftl', Lquna. . om ,_., • $225 _ 2 Bit. 2 Ba apt, Lrg patio, dbl a:ar. $325. 497-1918 • Chlldpen 6 & youn~er la1-1600
'li;cplaC<"11. indoor BCQ. 36' SZSO..UTIL PD Octanb"ont 1 SINGLES A Students! 3 br, deck, goreeous view, nr. 20J1 !Aw-te Lit, Costu. Split Level Apts Unf. '1 Slutc llc""nte'd pre ,.;chi : ~J:~:~O~IO pets
pollociN'lcdlnwroughtlron BR. gar, prlv. patio, SUO. hcd lot kldJ/pels. beach. t-.tt•sa • e Chllrlrens play arc1t PARK PLAZA II
_ 2nd !"'tlO _ plwo gorgwu• Newport. Cl1S1'0M 2 Br, llJ)ll. l.zg • $25()-2 BR, 2 ba frplc. "'cd ' MATURE Cpl w;shes !um. 2 OCCUPANCY JUNE J • uu~< 2 & 3 Bl\ "P"· nlOrcl l)oth other units llN! NU-VIEW RENTALS yard. P'ned. Kida Ir: pets. ylU'd, Dana PolnL / Br. home/apt NB area for • 2 adult l"C'i'. l'C'ntl'l"S
2 BR -patktl -enclrnsrd 67~ or 4~8 PRIVACY! 2 Br, $225. Sngl1, $~ _ lITlL PD 2 Br, frpk:, sun_lmer. Starting June lst. , • Eio;y Ul'\:t"Sli •o most tun·
IID5 W. Stevens
( Oii Sunflower )
~ru.·ages. All thl• fur only C 24 fenced for k1dl le pell. big fncd yard chlld/pcts (71<1) 325-8396 Paint Springs. FEATURING ploy111cnt ruens
10"k, dow11 • J.~t redu1·1·d. osti Mesi 31 Homeflncllirt * 642-9900 Lag Cyn . ' ' 2BR, Eastside C.M., nr bus J Loft Bedroonts e ;·!'pl<"!< e : ~~mi;h~p~lng -~ fl'\\)'S. ~~1m:)nly $7:.t.JOO. C n I I E-SIDE 2 BR FURN I MESA VEROE-3 BR. 2 BA, $325-J BR, 2 BA, frplt', ?bl & ston.'S, older couple or J Ceramic tile kitthen11 0 £x· S SJ.
Santa Ana ~j...1121
~Furn/Unfurn 3900
· Water & a:ardener paid. fam rm, !rplc, crpl'a. drps, ~~ fenced yard, Mu;1non slJ18le , $1TJ mo &lu.666 posed Beam Ceilings e En· BANBURY CROSS lrMSTMllll\~I $295. M5-c22S beaut. yard. D 11 hwhr·1 .~Y'l· BR r 1 1 Apartments Furnished 1 rloscd Patios • Pool & <Ncnr Beach Blvrt & \Varner)
BRAND NEW
VERSAILLES ! ~ Re tr I Fncd yrd-'+.Nlr • rpc, po o l , I many other Convenlent:es. 1C761 VlE\"' POil'•!':· L!\"!i-; IM~"6'i;ii'll.ll Lido Isle 3156 sprinkle~ Avall June 22 2 ' magnificent white water C d I M 3722 Adults only . e 842-6604 e t \¥ ! LIDO LIVING 2 BR 2 BA children, 1 ~I . pet ok. SJ5o. ~! orona e er [ • t~or Ll:!ase. 384 sq. Ft ~ Ava.II Summe~. No p'efs. ' Lse, ~1675. NU-VIEW RENTALS BACHELOR, utllities paid, HAY lQfT APTS. I Beautiful Garden Apts. ON THE LAKE comm/bullneu. (2 ottlcH
Call fztl) 793-0427 la BR + lrg fam rm, new 673-4030 or 494-3248 $125. nlO. 6 .Pools. ,Tenrn!I. ~una. At &uth Coaiil Plaza. ~:~:Sge~"ept:ja~~ 1~:
A PAIR OF FOURS Newport Beech 3169 1 crpla drps freshly painted * $350 MONTH * 833-0821 j 283 AVOCADO 645-0143 Privacy. r rplc. lnd1v1d~~l Pool • Aeapulro Aqua Bar Orange C.ounty Alrport.
111 , .. _ I in i.:. out' '"' fncd ·-'.. C M 3 2 COSfA MESA pa1los. 1''r. Ocean. T£'mflc ! .~ J acuzzi. SJ)et"tal'ular 8
on 1 '"' inut·h In a pokt'r F'amlly, ;'° pets. {ii;,,~ Custom built 2 bdrm. home., osta esa 7 4 Et·al. 8Mi:!32:"$._ Aere Lake \V 1Toy,•<'ring Call 546-8801
i;:nn1r> hut lhii; pair of FOUi< ON bay, lownhouse: 3 BR., \V/\V arpe~ fi 1 I WAL 0 BE fo" t · l ~I'll' Doll -"""°'=.-c..----:-=.--;;--PL1'.:XES c•an du ;1 lot ru1' 21~ ba., 2 car gar .. boat slip. 547~791. c . ' rep ace, $30 WEEI( & UP Off Th B f p lh K T ACH oun RLns. ,~ i i ion ur ISOI W llff D
I
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Y I A ·1 71L l600 COLLEGE PARK lge. deck with ocean vtew. 2 e ea en 3 g, .• ,,d ,,, .... ,1•1 .. ,,. 1, ". 3 11,. Clubho1.1sc .. Gyn1, Sauna, e1tc r . your pans Ol" II ~·eure1 r !le. vat . c e st dlo"IBRA t ~~ .-.. ' T I EWPORT FINAN-·'
I · I f I p ( , 6"2700 nr garage. A-1 Cond. u <l< PS. Ct•p1', hll·>'>•.<. l>'Pl•·. ""~ .. ,1., ola ~·.:ur:tv. N ~ 1naur1;1 u tll'<'. rr i-'<'I y '1 ·ru-· 3 BR 2 BA walt'r gnrdener "-· e TV & Maid Sc-" A II ""' ~ I 1· n . CENTER
1 1 • • · t, .. ..,out •vice vn . S 1 Ad It G d A 22n St., llG. ll-l7.3957 or I 111rne1 1att' Vl'C11pan1·y ~111~1·< 1''' oY:ncr 1M_:Tup;in('.\': Bl::AUTIF1JL 1 ill'. hse. _,,n paid. $375. 545-()228, MISSION REALTY 494--0731 e Phone Service -Htd. pool pac ous u 1;1r t·n pis. "'?".<1.1!9?. AOUL TS Leasl-office 1ruc:e or u~V{'-.l1TK'n!. STI .~l 1•:1c.·h., \l"•lc•· w/d""k. Nicely !ul'n. e Children & Pet Section • Luxwious shag cal'pt'ls ,NU ··.-,.-1 · 11 I "" 2 BR, 2 BA North End. Close * Bit-ins incl Dist11vash('r ~nrry, No Pets CALL ON-SITE MANAGER 1~~1 ::111~:;:d1e~o $~~):~:o~u;·,7 ~pt. Bcll. $325. 67;;.n:-is El Toro 3232 to bench, bus & shopping. :n~~~ ~0.t * Lrg Pool & Gas BBQ's Ol~~l·I0~<1?111~;>TS I Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br's. fT14J642-3lll Ext. 246
so·. loan J>O!!!!lhlr or ?? Sold HoUHI Unfurnished Adults ~3 BR. 2 BA, Twnhse, Call 494-7079 1 FURN large 2 br apt. Close I ~ * Pnvate Patios \,2 ,f,,. 3 BR. Pr1v gar., pool.: from $175 per mo. OFFICE SPACE F 0 R
lng1•thl·r or s1·111u·i11l•ly. $29:'i. A/C, spectac. vu 2 car L•gun• Hills 3250 · 10 shops. Adlts/ no pets. 1 & 2 BR's. $170-~195 \1'1tsh1•r. dt Vl'I'. C!o~C' It• Santa Ana RENT. O>sta 1'1esa. J:larbor
Call 644-7211 I General 3202 gar. 532-6584, 5"4-3666 cvPs. Jnq. 179~ f{ochcsl£:' ,(1'C'a1·) Gas & \Vutt'r Pd • beat'h. 5.1S--0.13li.:._ _ --I 3700 Plaza Dr. rit Adnms. Be au ti f u 1-2 BR & l)(<n Condo. 2 BA. C '' Encl. G~1r:igc . 5149 28R CPTS rnodern. · Air, mu 1 i c .
/.Jn NI GEL
ElAILfY &
ASSUCIATES
TAKE YOUR PICK
HOUSE, El Toro, 3 BR. 2 Partial crp!s & drps. Gar. · · LA MANCHA APTS. . I 714-556--0466 1 j1111i1orinJ, Class A. Walker ,P.LA RENTALS BA. frplc. Lease. 24.531 Pool privlgs. $240. 581-3629 1 BR, rurn, Jrg, \v/len·oce. 77/\ Scott Plfl t'l'. C.:'11 . clnipes, gnr, pool. Spacious ~ -----& Lee Bldg. Call Gene Hill,
Penfield. $270. 496-3548 or 213·379-9808. Ideal for BachcloNi. Adults. l).12·2007 BR St!:l9. 812--03!'i9 or · ......... 'C\.Q·~-• \,;-m-.1 557-0136 or 64z..q.n},
SJ!i5. 1993 Church. 548-963.l 812-45().1 ~l ~'T.a 'UeJL,-ut~
f
Huntington Be1ch 3_240 Leguna Niguel 3252 LRG Bachrlor, liv rm, !;ep.1 New & Spacious Irvine 3844 ;XCl~INC JIEWCONCEPT ! 1st mo •. FREE
• l
e--. DU:;S•.s WALK TO Bel\Ch! 3 BR, $250 I 3 BR 2 ba VIE..'"\V, llv. rm, kitchen, batl\. Wtr pd. Pool. I, 2, & 3 BR, bll-ins, pm! PARKWOOD I ADllll lAKlSIDf.UVINC IX-1ux£' 3 ~m off1~. Carpc.t, ___ '!w.! ... sngl.1>, kids & pels. din. area, irplc, bit ins,. Adull, 110 pel. $140. 645-8965.1 Rec. ctr. Fr. $200 to $37.->. i ~MAU n 1s ACCIPno drapes, air conditioned,. U1
HOT
~TUDENTS & Singles! 1 BR I cpts/drps, 2 car gar.,· • New Port Villa Ad I & F 'I l Nc1\pQrt Beach near Lido
-1 ~EWl'OIT & IAY, c M. "42·131.J Mobile Home. $75. \l'k, Storage area trailer & lxlat, ! Huntington Beach 3740 l:H9 Placentia Avt'., C.l\I. New u t am• Y •Bachelors Sho11s. 520 sq. tt. $240
1st come, 1st served 1 SEE NO\V : REALLY Nice• 2 BR $225 min. yl'd. maint TIH12-2ll7 Apts. \ •1BR,2 BR n1onth. Call Newport Place Dupl<'~c:s-$3.8,T.iO and $10 500, e BACH Sl001$llO util pd. Gar. Fenced for kld11ipe1s.. Imn\aculate. $325/mo. lst: LOW WEEKLY RATES ! l,3 BR's F ron1 Sl ~::i/1110 Bil· •2 BR & 0 Realty 675-3600
2 hdrn1 and 1 bclr1n. e 1 BR SW sm!. complex. Homefinders * 642-9900 last & deposit. Avail, June E xecutive Suites i 1 BR in quiet -l·plcx. 111 range, garhai::t~ thspo~.11. en ==:.'-'=='--~~~~
2 on lot -2 bdrn1, :.t bath and e POOL 1 Br $135 E. Cl\1. 1 1. 499-2544. 727 Yorktown Blvd. : ~u1·1,v11rd s(•111111!:. Pool. d~h\\'hr. l)(<l uxt" shag t:tpt·g. From $175 -$485 DESK ~pare ~vaflable. $50
,. t hdrin Sl3.fiOO e LOVELY l br duplx 5195. LUXURIOUS Jrg 3 br, 2 ha, 1, SEA TERRACE Beach Blvd at Yorkloi,·n Jrtcu.:.:1. Sl~/:'llU. lnclds ull Draperie:.. mo. _\\1111 pro, Ide lum1.lun! , Js.79,j00-1 lxlnn unir .... All in • l!UGE 1 BR home, S200. sty duplex ~e. like new, 1 . .,. . , s•• ••if ut11's, rcfn~ ,i: r11cl ~ar. i1;,so Jo\'rlan A\'r :h):.!-O!lOO Mesa Verde East & Adams I "I S?· mo. (ii. n s we r 1 n g
...,, J.:•JOC1 <ll'C'illl ol Cosln r-.t rsa. SEVERAL SEPARATE ~1as evC'ryth1ng. ~ltn stC'rco , Striking ocean \ ew. NCI\ 31 '1V"V't , A<llt~. no J)!'1~. ;; 9 3 I 540-1800 service available. 178 7 5
l'LUS+-1 p!rx lluntinc.ion • 2 b $l60 HB & Cl\f 1 n t e r com, ftrl!/burglar . BR. $495. lt'nse. CAii , STUDIOS & 1 BR s. 1!;1tni!1on. 61:-i....4 Ill. Laguna Bea cl'l 3848 Beach Blvd., Hwttington • ,, , r gar. · alann. t-.tw;t see 1 o 493-5769 !or pass thru secur· e Full kitt'hl'n C-REF! 1.F-· ~~-· Beach. £12-~321_ ~· ----I Ht'a.eh-as~un1;1hlt! 7, loon -, e ~hr $1?5 !ncd, gar Ot. appreciate. perm. marrii'd Hy guarded gate. • ilcated pool A · : ·. · tuii!lh~t.· l1\1ng Spectacular New EW S73.~. Call fol' ;1ppt Rrd I . :.t Br ut1I pd $185. gar. t'OU le inf·111t ok sm no :; Br, 2'2 be•. p;onld den, fl('\\' Ocea n Vu To.:Vnhouses I .... ...,,-. N
.. c~1. t~chlroo: r_n\1·-.1111c11 t i • 2 Br ror. lot, $200 r.arc 1
1 ilog~. S.u-.12'7G. · -· Mesa Verde 3263 : ~~:C':;ur~~~litit'1> 1 1h'11s & l't'pt ;.;. ~111111 pool, \\. !k 1 ix' h 2 BR ... 1, I (St ~· Plush 0U1ce Bldg., 2 to 6 Rm ~ D1v1 s10n. 9~Z:l30. Opi.•n e 2 Br Vu CdM, 52501010 "' ., I cluhhsP &. re.. facil. a 0 :ic · . { r n '[J . suites. Conference rm .
.,. y.·cekr>nds. . . I .100 l\tANY TO LIST .. \ I MODERN 3 SR. 2 5,\, 3 BR. 2 BA fam rm., Jrg • Free linens Con\'e11iC'11t. &15-0202 o r ... \\'t't bar. tde palLos. frµll', ,. i~rrs Xerox copier. Near Q.C. air-
• 3 Bl' S325, fncd, gar. cr-.-1. Condo. Vacant. s n g Is. yard. Gnrdencr & \Vater pd .• T.V. & m .. ld S('l\ ;n':d!. i 6-M>-:1356. ('u~1-;in1 l'l'p\'i, 41,. p s 'I . . -.,; ...... II JlOl'I. 833-~0. ~. 48 UNITS I • 3 Br/2ba $250, lrplc. Kids/pets. I Children, JM.ls ok. $350 r-.10.1 • Bar,fi.Que 1 Il\ll\IAC. 2 BR Trt-pl ex bll · :i pphanc!'S, ~130 per 1110. 2 Bft. To11•n11t1usc. frpll', *WATERFRONT* ,. I• 3 BR/2 ha $Z7~ rch/2 I'ET & Pool! 2 BR, $200. 557-1247. 1 •Phone ser.1t'e ins, lge garage, Pl'. i \'. 8.'li-1871 fron1 $2:'if.l. t. BR. from SlfJ5. .· I ASSUME 51/20/o ca r. po Condo. Kids & pets okay. I Mission Viejo 3267 ' • 1 mile_ I~ ~n____ lndry-i·nl, $185. 545_~1 ~0 or 2 BR oceanfront apt in old Pool: tl'nn1s, cnnt1ncn~nl l'>t_1 ~l1: Newpo~ Beach oc.
' ' ' ha $325 B \\ION'T LASI'! 1 Br. $100. Beautiful Garden Apts :J4n-2381 Spanish Villa. Bean1 ceil, bt'C':i,,;fnst. SC'para!e fan~ily ~x('{utlve ~fhce!!. wll:rplc., l PRL\lF. LOC\TJO:-J ~ • ·1·f .. • '.\ Br/_1,:z . Bay. Furn I .-i U ll pd . • f.r plc· p•'•v .... ,,.,, ,,.,,, St'l't1on. Close to "hopping \\Pl bar. private bath . : . , ... ''. . ~ "':·' • Beautv 3 br Fil. $360 Irv. I . :x ,~_... I NE\\' 3 Br, 2 Ba 1\\"nhse, 6 Pools Tcnn1s Sauna LRG 2 Bil ., B ,. . • . "" . ' " b II G d Rll s= ~61 '! -lS r.,uden uni t::.. ,1,~u1nlf IV " ·. 1111 ~ h Homef1nder1*642-99CJO t'pl ,i......., aircond,1·ccfac. . . . . . . . w a, lin r1n. trees Pl'('ft!r couple Or &fl ncbeal'h.li44-2bll D1 runy r . •.rvi .11 ~·; Trus! 1,,.,d Fulh <' Sl'J'\ll'e u te ....... a( 1 •""Y"• . P11vacy. Frptc. lnd1v1d~1l l cpt/drp, stv/rcl, pool .. · ,. • N""\V OFFICE ~·-. • . eitiefl & Inland Oran•• Co BE 'O! 3 BR 2 s• No (lt'.:'ls S265 mo. 831-1309 patios. Nr. 0 C{:a n. Terrific \II ' . S l -O s~ngle adult. S 4 J 0 I mo· 1 I;., -• • wv roC>llUI 11•111l'.'fl All: ht !1vor.1, ·~ , ·I " area· • "· · De1ll. S-16-IJZi'. 16,1c.1~96-p m pets. 1 · \t'r,irs LC'asc.·1~1-2791. $155 & UP 15 .. x.15 ~ 10 x 12. All h·,th' .. d111.,,1 l HIO sq f! 111 ,1 \\e Have Many to Choose tan\. rm. , frplc, gas BBQ. Newport Be•ch 3269 _ __ ....,~ . .>. -, ------. ul!hties paid. $100 per
unit, ~::1rn" S~.; •,i i"''!' rr1·1111h LANDf•L~OmR. OS 1 N.r . !llC~ls, s~p'g'. 1enn1~, 1 _ 1, -· SINGL.E,re1!ec, pool , l blk 2 BR. t.:ttls PLL. Chiklre111'3 , B~, ilen, 2 h,i. PC'nlhl'<', GlGANTIC 1 :~· 2 BR. 1110nth. Costa Mesa at'ell. ,\sk in~ ,,111 \ s:,i \(J(~l? r," . btkc 11-atl . RC'f s req d. AvflLI I $17.i-2 BR. Cottage, ~ blk ' froni OCC'<lll. Appli's. SUO. ! 1 , lanla!.'lic Otl'fl n vu. tlc1·k, I Th<'y're Undrrpric~>d~ Lots of :}.IS-7729 or 642-83'l'2 ::ro.,,.~. l ourl;\l1 ,,1 s.111 .. ~ Oh .. I rF.E t"RE'E Call Us Tod:iy 6/12. $350/~10. 962-5((1(). beach, child/sml ~t. Bal. Call 960-2746 ~ ~ l'Onie, rno rils. 1j~ fru::. nu cpl. S·IOO lsC'. g1 c-en la1\1L Cover f'fl • :-~~ T'1k•~ ~. d \ ,1111 ·' .!l'. c 111 ALA Rentals 642-8383 0.1·ncr. SZ.-JO-Util Pd. Oceanfront 1 I H · I ,1
1.P1'1· p:i 10~ ,,1,9g~~"I 4!!!-8.}.~j. ('\'CS fJ6S--01~17. g;ir11f;1's. J\dulls. No pe1s. Business Rental 4450 ., BR. Gar prov patio unt. Harbour 3742 , 3 ace, apl "• v-.--•""' · .. . ""20 F II \ · 1 bl" Ji! 1700 ' LIVE HERE' 4BR , 2 b.i, frplc. ranch style , • ' ' . , . BE,\UT. Ocl•an Vlc'-1 1' m111 '! '"' ~ erton '\e. l " C · d I Mar INV[STMM l . I ki!, xlnt crpts & drp!, Ne\l'PIJl1 # STIJOIO + sunken f ),\2B1:,. 2BA, O('l"an. \ll\I . ht' ;ipr l11 4-pl!'X: No pet s. r.. of Ne\\'J)Ol'I ~l\'d. & 1 hlk orona e
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DMSION~ 2 hr. \\'alnut Sq. $2 ~o I ha!'t.l\\ood floor, I 0 \' r: I~ ~~,BR, 2~~b1~7tlc, pool a/('()\'{', 1..:11. fully equ?i,. l ~~~~s'smrcr~gR118~\: I ;~Ii Pool. S:.!i:J. 6T.>-6145 ('l'<'S. ;I~;~~ llityJ Costa Ale~. Over 1000'.. south .of highway,
' 3 br. Univ. P.lrk $3.~ I mo ?.1onlh to month or lse I · 1·r1y Jse. $225. 557-4577 ? · · 1 · . Deck. Encl Gar1:1ge. S325. Tl-IE EXCITING neighbor! Call 675-7225
•ftl 1 hr. Cdl\I $2i0 neighborhood, ltxl!!ICpd, S:\8.i. I NU .Jf-Ew RENTALS J at ur.:1. 1Cro-;.s hi\')' to bch. I appl's SlSO 979.5099 2 BP.. NI::\\' VIE\\'. Frplc. • · · kC',Y location with a great
• 3 br. Cd~1 $400 I Ask !or Dale, 963-€746. t 673-1030 or 494-3248 1 N B h 3769 S19t).~ Br. l ,3 . Ba Studio. Call f'\'f's, &.'ID-90'.Jl PALM MESA APTS.
3 br. llarhor \'IC\\' S-l~ I CORNER lo!, 3 BR. 2 Im, 5 B_IG BR's, kids/pets ok,' ewport eac Z~l?5• ~~· p~t~os :s: 7~i:;~c: Lido Isle 3856 ~1L~UTES TO NPT. BCH.
VA 4-Pl_[_X ___ 2 hr Cd~1 S~:-:.0 crpts, drps, 2 car gar, bltm SZ2.). Also Horse Rant'h., 3 e LA PARISIENNE e 21l59~-5g.· ' Bach, 1 & 2 BR. lrom Sl57
':"; br Bayfront $~ range & oven. S2SO, mo. Ask BR, rumpus rm, acreage, I 2 BR y.·urn. $UJ LIDO I s LE .o r a ni a 1 i e 1\d_ulls, No Pets.
1 I hr. llarbor ViC"\1' SJ:b I for Dalt' 963-6746. S3;;J) SA. Canyon. At,'l. Fee. A!l eleC'tric. Fireplace. 3 BR. 2 ba., All ne\1' dcror. 1·ie11·.\VHlrrfronl lBR Condo . G61 i\1esa Dr. ll i~h assumable 7~;. loan. ·I br. Lido, Bayfront $1400 •4BR ho~e. l % ha, drnpc•, 97!J-8.t30 Heatl:'d Pool. Adults. frpl c.,. patio, dble g~. Apt. S3'G/n10 inc. utit's. By (5 blks rro:n Ne>.l.·port Blvd.)
SI -• lh I hi Call 6~72Z e llARBOR VIE\V e 97"l2G8 \Vestclif!, Adults., 6.t2-ll:>.'i 0 ,, .• ,,., 67'.~' '< ~=~-"546-"--'9860==~~-l -..--;;c==.-.====-I
.7'). mon !i P" n r :i r · crpts, pat10, fent'cd yrd. y.·lk 1 """ '' ''"""" ~ e ST 5 (h1·nrrs y,·111 ra1Ty 2nd. 10 St. 1''nlr11.'ifl Scbool. Lease 1 3 BR, study, fam r;n. 2,2 ba, Across from golf roursc. Dana Point 3826 Mesa Verde 3863 NE\V, largC' 1 BR. l 11ils. ORE PACE •
$1.,,200 for 1-2 bdnn 11n1ts, $295. 5.'l6-2:rl5 \\"et bar, 2 fn>lcs, 2 sty, 20432 Santa Ana Ave. • incl., pool. \Valk to beach. In Cos!a Mesa MB?' South
only 4 years o\(I. TI<'rl Carpt>t 3BR 2,,, I Conm1. pool, ~/mo. , U)/\\'K UP. 1 Br 2 Ba & 2 BR, t'rpts, cl rp s , e HOl\.1E ATl\.10SPHERE S:m Oen1enle S185. 496--0616 Coa:.it Plaza, 801-B Baker
1rn·,,s1n1C'nt I) iv is io n. • ur· c ean. range, e Call 644-;i922 e BaC'h Color TV maid serv dishwasher, disposal. $185 Delu.xe 2 & 3 BR. Rental Ofc Rooms 4000 St. 2 blks W. of Bristol, 22c
!l79-2;i:,o. ~~L~~.1=· ~~~:itio.~~ EASTBLUFF CONDO, 2BR, 1 ixiol .. THE ~1ESA, 41 5 N'. mo. !'-sk for Jeff Hyde, 3095 t-.tace Ave. ~103-l foot. 2700 sq. ft ., completed
LOT ZONED for t~ npl. u1111 s I dogs, U'IO. 5JG..lTJ6 :.!ho, crpts, drps. b!tins, Ne\1-port Bl, NB. ~9681 I 838-2550 Newport Beach 3869 1 $SO. \\'ill share my lovely & readX to ~· adjacent to
rompll'lt' \1·/ all blrll':. plans. 1
1
lerracc & pool, $3.:iO phone I SUP ER ·1 BR Apl G . t ·-home ln Costa J\Iesa to a very ynam1c stor es • ~pet·s, bldg. pt"rnii1!1. {'1ty LANDLORDS! I \rACANT · fenced 3 Br. $210. 839--l431 UT~~~· ~A~DBEA)~~LY •
1
l\lana g; nt en 1 s. C~~; I refined l<1dy, refs. no in~Judes signs. Call Bob'
:i ppm\ta!s, Rt'ady rn hu ilrl. \\' ~allze in N r. 2 BR S165. &: 2 Br's Cr-.! . . " G73-l241 · • · 493..-0141 ., CHANNELFRONT 1 sn1oking, kiteh privl, patio. Wish. 546-2131.
Suhru'dinatrtl Isl TD on ~ach •Corona del ~ 9 $1;)(1. Ag!. Fee. 979-84 30. I Nf'-~\ 3 ~R '. tr.i .. !pl, lofH·.d 6T;>-5(W8 E · bl ff 3830 2 BR .. I bR. Room for bont. l lrees, flO\\'f'l'S, w/p\1 ba!h 00\VNTO\VN Laguna I:each
hind. 1\ttr;1~t1vr t <' r n1 s . & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· 3 BDRJ\1, 2 BA, near beach, ~·ii.. pat.1~· S\\1m~: d{7nnis ! NO\\' 'Iii June 28!h. Bayfront ast U $375 Unf .. yearly. SOO, 540-719j store', 1650 sq. 11. Parking P31 c-kn~e pr1Cf' $42,000. C1111
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vice is FREE to You! Try h;e yard, like nc11•, $;nl. 1 ~1~,;4 S~~~~·JOQ ;,., l.1~~ i 3 BR or 2B~. ·~ blk tu !he e DELUXE e WALK TO BEACH ROOr-.1S S20 ...,.k up. \Vilh NEWPORT & 17th St., Cost1t
919-00,\.1. 1"u·ViC'w! 536-0086 ' · ocean. 673-6510 3 Hdrnis 2 bath" kitchen: $30 wk up apt. l\1esa: 1100 sq. ft . store,' T ·o S 1RVINE TERRACE, :BR, S Cl 3 BR, 2 B1\ apt for lease. • l ., ·,. . . · 1s-9-5:i or 54· 3967 parking i 24 • \\ BR UNIT. NU-VIEW RENTALS 3 BR. 2 Bt\. Fncd yard, 2 b.t. dbl gar, pat io , an emente 3n6 incldspac.n1astcrsuite,din learyleasc.$3Jr-.lo. <J
1 ~ • CORONA Del P.tar deluxe[
Annhl'i m. "~la)'ll ! u 11 · · ' 673-4030 or 494-3248 1 frple, nr, sch\. $26J/n10. enclo5ed yrd 1 blk lrom NE\V 2 BR CXlN'DO rn1 & clbl garage. Auto door ~ Room & Board 4050 suite 325 sq ft
S?('nrlnhlr. ArokC'r 96(}.124.~. 1·ou Get .\II Th·~ Houses Hunt. H•rbour 3242 y, Lovely living. Pool, nr. go!{ Recreation area. Adults on· 2 C3.J.· gar. Fu111. $100 ROOl\1 & board for mature ea onom1cs, Bkrs. 675-6700 $28.JM. Sll ,OOJ. clo'.Yll. l l,...~ "RENTERS''" 1 j36...J777 or 53&-72SZ. b<1 675-3354 ' opener avail. Pool & i!OU:sE. : Bil, ~. b.1, frpl. i IR 1 ' · · ·
THREE '1·plexes. p:r c l'l I a\'l'lilA hle for l't'l\f in OUR H.V. (Bren) Homes, 4BR, course. $250. 492-1913 ly, no pets. PH: 644-8(64 r-.tonr.1, \'C"arly. single p1'tlfC'SS'l. working NOW LEASING
JocaUon, un<ler nir.rket , BULU.IIN ··PDATED 3 2BA, Spectacular vu, pa!~0 : Apartments Unfurn. e $307 e man. Nc\V residence nr. Mesa Verde Dr. Plau
$67.000. ra. J \v/V.\ loan timt's/week. ELEGANT 3 BR. tam rm, ~~· sprinklers, S~I.>, j 86.l Amigos \Vay, NB ocean ~7910 1525 Mesa Ven:le Dr. Last.
Prin. only. A~t., 5l&-':'739. Homeflnders * 64l-9900 fonnnJ dining room hon1e. Balboa Island 3806 Managed by Su mer Rental 4200 Ideal for Restaurant u 0 .... .. New crpt!I, xlnt landscaping. TO\\'NHOf\tE LUXURY, 2BR, m S • ..... ,
4 PLEX 132 Cabrll\o, C.l\1· \'acant $525. n10. Yrs. Jse. Tri-level :lrplc, enclosed dbl LARGE 2BR, 2ba, furn. or \\'ILLIA.i't \VALTERS CO. Drug Store, Serviei! Shops,
FREE FREE ; • gar, 645-6141 days, c\·es unfurn, $375 n1o., yearly, 216 ELEGANT 2 BR, 2 bas, sep. I PEN. Point -2 Br, l Ba. Blk & Deh1c:i10~ce.
e ProfC>Ssional Service e HUNTl~l-IARBOUR. 998-1537 Crystal 71~·728-2749, Din. rm. frplc, pool, $29;i, to Bay/Bch/pk. $200 v•k.1 _~==~===--:
llii::h assun1Ahlr 7': lo:in. *LANDLORDS* REALTY 8-18 Amigos \\lay, 497-1977 or PARK NEWPORT ! 673-9169 or 673-1194. * TWO MONTHS *
$150 n1onth 11pc ndab1". 3BR. Iba. 707 St JSJnes Rel. Capistr•no Beach 3818 &J.~ ·APARTMENTS 2 BR. frplc. 2 BA. Nr. park, FREE RENT o~:n('rs \\'ill 1•;irry 2nd. Homefinders * 642·9900 17214 COAST 11\\'Y. S350 includes gardener. No I ""-'-'7° -,---=-~~=I sn.:ro for 4-2 hrlrn1 11nil.~. ifol'nia's Large;;t 714: 846-138-1 & 213: a.q2-~lJ dog11 778-5740 lAnaheint l 1 OCEAN VIE\\' 3 BR, 2 BA, Huntington Beach 3840 Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedrooms Dearh & b<ly. S200 \vk. 3606 Excellent Olflce locations in
only 4 yf'IU'S olrl. !l<'~I c.nrpet I Rental Srn·tce: e 4 BR., 21ii ba.; 2200 sq. ft. 1 balcony, crpls, drps, -~ltns. and To11•nhouses • P:irk Ln. 67J..0473. Newpo11 near Hoag & Bay.
InvC'sllncnt D 1v1!'i1 on. B Ibo I I d
3206
Irvine 3244 Near beach. Avail. approx. \Vasher/dryer. 61Z..lli.>. !'.'E\V APTS • \VALK TO Fr. $194.50 Open 9-6 Daily Rentals te share 4300 250-1150 sq. It. Please call 9i9-25.'i0. Oprn evt's. , a a s an , 1 SIBS y 1 A BEAC~I. 1 S... 2 BR's from .:ipa Pools Tt'nnis 497-1215. ti · r Y· gt f>.18·1290. Corona del Mar 3822 $175 Iv $23.i EXTRAS. Across fron1 Fashion Island FEJ\tALE Roommate I NR N'pt Post ofc Store
Lots for sale 2200 * BALBOA ISLAND * TURTLE ROCK SLIPJ:.:R 4 Br 2 1h ba. fam, :'i3&-2579. at Jan1boree on San Joaquin , s!rai~ht. l't'~Ponsible & of~. & ii. morage All 2,968
Channing unfurn. 2 bdrm. 2 BR. 2 ba. den s:r!:i ?in rnt, club w/pooL S560 Cl~ARr-.fJNG 2 BR. 1 ~·. 2 BR, 2 ba. likC' Ile\\'! Priv. HJUs Road. I clean. Share house, $150. nlo sq. ft. for $475 per mo.
C·• llUNTINGTON BEACll h<line \V/f:rplc., garage &: 3 BR., 2 ba . S.100 tnclcl gan:len('r. 644-4186. \\alk 10 shppng & ~~· A~ail fncd back yrd. 2 blks beach. (714) 644-1900 , & 1
2 Utils. Phone 645-231-l lease. Agt. 646-2414
patio. YC'ar ly $375 Alo. UNIVERSITY PARK San Juen • ~~0~~ .... 1.• Lse $260. mo · d aft 5·30 -----1
60.000 ~q. ft. tot, Springdnle \Vm. \\'inion R.E. 67~1 ...,~0 No pt'ls. l chll · Avl 616. CHOICE Io cat i oti in · · · 600 SQ-:-FT:-C.M. $155
&. Y.'flrll('r. Fully in1provf'ff, 2 BR., 21 ~1h." ~' Capistrano 3278: DELUXE new 3 hr, 2 ba, all S230tmo. 968-0052 aft 4.1'5 Weslcl iH. Lge 1 br w/ bale. \\I ANTED female n:M?mmate iv/2 pr1. ntll!i. 646-2130
hot area, ready lo go. $3. , Coron• del M.r 3222 3 BR ., 2 ~ balh." ,....,., , bltns frplc "·alk 10 shopg & 2BR ,~·/gar, ne1v. dee. $160. Cpts, drps, pool. Adlts, no to share 2 bdrm apt 1n Dana • -
per sq. fl. 0....'!ler 530-4072 or ,----------3 BR ., 2\ii be., tum. $3T.> NEW 2 BR, den condo, beat•h. sari & S.'l.9S. 673-2918. Jo'ncd yd, water pd. 2710 pets. 1700-A Bedford Ln. Point. $115. n10. Call after 5 Industrial Rental 4500 t213 ~592-228l. SlTa-NICE 1 Br, bltn!'i, priv.: WALNUT SQUARE carpeted, yd., 2-car gar. , "A" Dela\\•are. PH bet 1.;>, EH6-6075. pm, 496'-0967
palio, oceanside of hwy. I 3 BR.. 2 ha., air cond •• $265 pool & rec. facll. 493-4808. BRAND Ne\\', So of Hwy. 2 6~4120. COTTAGE ON CANAL 'Y"07U'oN7.'Go-.~wo~r7k~;,,g-,-.. ~,-w-an~ts NOW LEASING
S>l1"-b-lk2 beBRa,chb.rick trplc, bltns, South Laguna 3286 :~. ~~in~1~~k. CHILDREN ,f, Pets ok. 2 BR. Small 2 Br, shag, bltns, f.ri>lc, to share 2 BR apt w/same. Huntington Be1dt
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$175. 3 BR, S26J. 16902 Lynn lge deck. Walk·in pant!)', Inq. 530 Wiison, Apt 28, NEW M-1
$2/;)-2 BR, frplc, gar, patio, OCEi\N VIE\V 3 BR homC', Costa esa 3824 St. Call 848·0631. Ideal for cpl. Adlts, no pcls. C.r.I. alt 6 Pr-..t child \\.'Cl('()tne. I priv. comn1. \Valk beach. I t-.tATURE r 940 &;. l't. & UP
Nu.VIEW RENTALS Rt'c. Center. Immed. poss.' 1 & 2 Br, pool, d§h11·h1·. util 2 BR, 1 ba. $195. 2 Blh.-s $285. Yrly. &15-6680. pro · 5 tr a i g h 1 Hamilton k Ne1v land St.
0 I St t P t 2600 Oc U 6 n1ale seeks same. Ocean vu, ALA1970 ut o a e rp y. 673-4030 or 494-J24-8 $475/mo Least! 493-5227 pd. Adult s, no pets. $165 up. ean. Ava /1, Ideal 1 or OCEANFRONT 2 Br, 2 Ba. Lag Bch 494-2761 nvo
22 ACRES No. \Vest ' WANTED I l.!ll Wtstem Benk Bldg. Condos Furn 3400 324 E. 20th St., 64:'>-4761. 2 .. dulls . 84Q.20CIO. Nr. Ne\\'. Security bldg. 49+-6ozg , o ri'."~~~~!!'!'~~!!!!~·
''PRlVATE BEA C H"
60Xl20' Jot. Cyprus Shon:'s
in San CleniPnle. Chl·ner
must S('I\. Pril.'t' S.">8.<tlo.
Term!. Brokrn;, ST:>-1220.
* USED BRIC.'KS * University Park, Irvine 2BR, S15.5, No pets, 1 child DELUXE 3 br. 2 ha In 4·plcx Adulls. $350/mo Yr I Y · 28-3:5 NEW BLOG M-1. 1200 sq. ft.
Arkansas, part tillable, near 87" """'" Day 552 -N " ht CONOOMINIUJ\ot Laguna ok, 753 Shalimar, · j nr 5 Pts. Encl gar. No pets. 673~TI9. I FE~ALE. to sh . 176. 2400' sq. ft . $355. 220-3 :.'!e~.s~~~~7. & river. tr"t.J<M 1 ·ivw rg 1 Niguel 2 BR 2 b a 645--0765 $275. 540-4484 or 962-3724 3 BR 2 BA J J bit \ (nice) 2 Br House or Apt. 111 ph. front Offire, crpta, large
_..,,,_. .,..,,_~ 3 BDru.1, frplc, lge living I ::=ii; look' Goll Co · + ' ' rg yn:' ns, Newport area w/same. rear doors. Anaheim A
Reil Estate Exchge 2800 nn, din rm. No pets or 2 bdrm., 2 ha ...... $300/360 I ~~~ tennis, bea~h~~ m'l111;~i1:1,1ln.1seFo:'a~~~:: ' 646-421 2 aft. 6 p.m. Terminal Way, C.M. Days
children. S295J 673-6974. 3 bdrm., 11Ai ba ••.•.•.. $300 w/a\l facilities available.! SEEK & r1Nll T rr. s· t':lll &12·1121. PROFESS. \\llman wishes to 646-5033 or eves 64&-0iSl.
DESERT HIDE AWAY
Costa Men 3224 3 bdrm., 2 ba ..... , $295/435 Lease unfurnished $340 or r1 ra ic ip1~ * SHARP 2 BR, 2 BA, one share lo.velsy E 4BHR home CI TY OF ORANGE
• 3 bdim., 2% ha ••• , , ••• $450 beautifully fUmished It fully level. Easlbiuff/CdM. Pool. \\.'/San1c. u1 . . wtt. Bch. New 3 000 sq ft unJtJ
1 MESA VERDE \' bdnn., 2''2 ha ,,,, ll00/4:15 equipped 13'11l/mo. Waler & G G P N R U T E D & A S S P L P L R T $"111/MO. 833-8971. ""ocean. PH' 968-4914 SPRINKLED; ·3 ·-.
'3 br, 2 be, top location CALL 552-7500 garden care incl. fol' R00i\1r-.lATE to s ha re offices. Wood \\'Orklng o.K.
Near Oesc:1 Hot Springs, I • VISION grPhoacne,·~: ..... ':8~.fr .. =~vi n g E N A L E L G N I S I S A E A E R S H 3BR, 2ba, Newport Shores, niodern 2 BR apt. 2 blks WM. Wintm R.E. 615-3331 completely furn Is h cd Weter & Gardener Paid J. .., ........ ..,. ....... ....,.. ~ Steps to sand yearly $325, A,..'"""" cottage • sleeps 8 . Price $42S LeeH, 545-0nl S I S D E A N 0 'fl N A S F S F C T S C. Property House 64l-33SO from beach ~/4944837 RENT new M·l, 1200.28«> aq
Sl5,000. or will txrhange, • Condos Unfurn. 3425 s c R 0 o 5 1· z G, p s T 5 p R 0 1 -1 Gerages for Rent 43SO ft. $170-$3&0 month w/oCc. ~tbie:;: E !1.Ely ~I~.: ~:. 8&!'•":: Reel Hill Realty WEST N...,,.n Beach, 1 s L E F T E L T ya 'II E o r N •is• R San -~-~.'!!..·~to 3876
WAR EH -2950 w. Cenl>'al,S.A.
rythl AveU ·-REALTY REALTORS New 2 S••, 3 BR. 2., bas., " O MINI OUSES Robert M"Uer R.E. 673-7V311 60-<353 '"" 'W· now, -· Uruv. Patlt Center, !<Vine ~ ,:;:. . ~ NL Y A FEW STORAGE NEW M-1 1400-5000., It -per montb lncldl gardener. ul"'c •• 16., pnv. patio. gar. N P D E A D E 0 N I 1 S ,S T C E I I L N Mo 1 Mo
NEWPORT Beacl'I CrJndo or Call Larry 546-583> 2 BR Cmdo •••• $235/mo 1Ae cUahwW, Near bu ge C E G N P N N 0 G T G S C S I S L L'iN 2 BDRM, 2 BA'nl A: ':han.-es"e-~M~r $7 ~·e;:: ~ .. ~ffices.. ~~ prkg. ~j aill:fle ~ wanted, CUSTOM bit 1 Br, F.A heat, 2 BRCobdos sreenbelL $3SO. mo. 3 BDRM, 2 RATH Apt.~. th • • -• P\lll"ou.-.. lft'., ""'ll
wUl oxchane< 118,000 oolld crpt, -· bltrB, petio, l 3 BR~ ..... $265 .l Im 557-mtl, ext 249 da1a, or L E N D B 0 0 D 8 S I R D T R B D L A QUTET, NORTH SAN """! . loc, nr. SO, !rwy. &16-1252.
2nd T.D. u down payment. CAI' pr. Compl fncd, Iola or 3 BR Homiu: :m~ ~ 673--0166 eves/wlmds. : B a' I 0 D D T c N R 0 0 A. B F g a L CLEMENTE AREA. Flrm HattllltOAtL~PW:C~ st .. HD ~i~ ~o~ ~
CaJI 64&-753S Mon-TUes-~ ca~~= 548--~'· no 3 BR Homes • $380,$3'7S, $395 N.B. BAYFRONT. Channing : rl:npt0n MMo.rement Corp H0-1970 17301 Bea
R .. I Estel• Wntd 2900 P" . ' . I BR llomes ... $335,1395, $425 1'1! 2 Br, 2 Ba, pluoh ctPl« L D r. R A T A S G 0 T 0 0 'II n F E 1 D Call 493-0141 ch, HB, llG-2834 . ' e •AlF.SA VERDE 4BR, 28A. RANCH REALTY A drpl, 2 car prk'g, oool. v STORAGE Garage fOl' Rent WESTMINSTEJt M-1 4100 1q
RESPONSffiLE pnrty wanl.s CIWl, and available now. * 55l·XIOO * Watch the boall sail b)'I A-A 8. C tJ R P E C I P P A R T F. Po D E OCEANFRONT Bluff Apt. 1959 laiaple Ave, No. 5 ft unitJ. lOc up. Outa1de
lo buy homt r.. low down ACT. Sl().7327 ~~~TY §!~,,.~~·~· Ask tor 11 & A R E V R tJ D s C Y L U S L S D p _Fa~Oi ~d:!. 'ti9 Colla Mc.a '10<'a&'!· S4l"'339.
paym<nt, 6'13-1619 EASTSIDE TUSTIN ' Buena vi.ta. (1) -1. 1 ma:r GARAGE. $21, mo. M-1 SPACE COSTA MESA
2BR, wat ... .l cerdener pd, * mllft;TY * NEIVPOin' TERRACE nr E D N R Y R 1\ R C II S I & 0 B I N L S NEW Ira I 2 BR 2 2176 Placenlla Ave, C. M. 1200 ... tt. LOGAN ST
12'lll, W.., ~ • TURTLER9Q<, lut 4 Plan ~~ex::: :~i D 0 N 0 T V C U N R V T T F E L A E D BA ',;.'i Ex~~ ct1y' & I crearJ. 6J6..4m belwn l.S Owner 64&-1252 644 -
I -.& VACANT 2 Br, $150 , •Yllll87CiPUeoCor1a lor Br.21'Be."""8tfed,o~151 M ocwiv!ew.~.-s. Olli .. Rentol 44!! * 2500' TILT-UP •
. -I ~iw,,.A ... "' f'°~ Hll, appt SU tfl1l3. m::«iii, "'"sreenbolt. $360,ff#l181), D R v EI u Q p BL c II I s ED 11 ,R S1nJ11>n CORONA dd MAR. Ea,,( w/)'Ud, -67S-lm._ l/ii~;iiiiiii!iiiii!il;:.!iii 1 ...,.u, ee • ~ EASTBLUIT Coodo. ma 1Mtnteli4)11J1 'Tht Jliddtl\ n111tet lllW 'bdow tPP"" rGrward, C1pltfr1no 3178 Coul llwy. Ottlce apace Rtnt1ls W•ntecl -
HoVMI Furnllhed l 4BR. 2 ~ cuklHa~ ~~ Communlty Pool • SytuuM :bl. crpts. dr'PI, bl&.: bactwll'd, up, ®wn. °' d~ iD Che l*ulc. t"fud CICb now a.vail. sioo. 6 up. --.. - -r--·-I
3102
ln>lcp. • no ... !""< I~,.~ maU Br, 2 Ba, Nr. echis. "'"""" It pool, $350 ph h~.,.,..,.,. .... ,... : LEASE/option to boy. II IRWIN i mwm, 'Bnl!On. RELIAllLI RENTll ---• praz. !'.:'4 UOO, ..,, ... ~ Oal-dM&C. $310 per mo. 8.19-!!SJ. 1:u11:Yr. 1.J:JTTU!t:' 11:111111t1.o~r. n!r1l applies to purch, price. l M4-6lll BUSlNL.Ss mlA. no~
1
BR hie ~ of. 1 BIO oorner s BR. dill pr, MO-Ol.4-s.m. 2 BR. 1 >"' old • Wiiber I :::;~:;~\..I\( =~~:~ fAAI ~~~6~: i: New 2 BR to w ah• e . KEW omczs no pets. wMt un1 '-·
111f1BR ·~11e, u 1-. HB, {!~,' qu~ ~,!,"'~ qls. " Tiii: Tem<e" Clrtllll ...__, ........ , adlie on'••, nO nlll .. , . .,>'J'lf' a,;nTTUM Sflit' ~ Orps I dhwshr I me I pool I Ul>. Quall SI. Newpoct S.Q lo $al0. mo. B<I. Ill!. ~· ,._ _.., oil. _.. ~~·~ ~~· t Br •ft-·--,~ -..,. ., I , __ ....,. " faal. ,,... .,... -nr O>mm1 Brollm m.&3!13 Bcl!, C.N. P.O. llml tiou• $1SJ u pd, IA1Una ' , • • --mo. ~ ..... H.B. 89H915 "' Oena M•rlna. Pl!. ---HlJ>I. Bcb. Dll/lllolm.
I !tt'~ :.~~ M',."!!!!,.°!':',:~ ~-3 BR, r:s::. ~t ::;R. air, pool !:.= l":t:.:11~'.!dw:::'r;s:!~ =.;:= =~ r.tw ~ Iha~ s!:'! ':~S~LIF~ ~~-a:.-..:
-· Ac1-Fee· 1 ----2 BA -. '""'"' .l DOOi Ude. '115 or w/ Will, $ZSO. ~lble'lo '5eek It Fled; s ... ni.-"""*lt. -"Liit" It In ~,_!"o Sell Wa ,_ with a Oell> 1111" or 1"'1e TltrP, '""""""'=------~======= I prMp $l2S/Mo. 815-all -aft & pm. i.u...1e-oltl>I>-. to Shore IWlll!!\ ....,.,~ Pilot ClullDed ad. -11 SNW><sry, Aft.
1 ' \ '
t •
•
•
24 DAI LY PILOT Mmay, M11 :!O, 1974
11ia1-. Ope~ JOOS I Por10Ml1 mo Gtftorol $;\4-_,Help w.-. m 11001 HO Ip wa;:;;.d, Miii 7100 Rolp Wont..t, MiP 1100
eCkU 0 u . YES YOU B l W MAINTENANCE [( BAKERS llelpor ll>ll! YI' old
• I -D -'l.l'e '30?.t cs11 find l)('ll(.'t of nthld, can Gen'! malnt., eltc-, plumbhijt A POSITIONS AT A Balter Tftnp. PollOqp male ftw surnn1er llard
• dn llo be:lltr on lhc job, mllk<' I "'•n PG]~~· No Job too ' URGENTLY , \\'Orie. 6 days .. 11. Apply Jn •Ptua-Take out $7~1 11!01'(' 11l0Hl')", lie ht111plt1r 1 alt ....,., ntes. 900-2'2ll l person.
•Bldrs Hdwe '4-00M Gr and TI)Ort" eff~'fti\·e at ll0n1e 1 lf.B. ~:?l~ C.~f. A AMES · NEEDED l{M1~t~\1!~81 . .'!, " .. ~1.~~.'-•3 Machine Shops 1
1
\l"ith 111 .. kidh. ProfejlJonal 1ro~tt. N• .. Et>S \VORK! ..... QU ·~~~~
' HOLLAND BUSINESS py<choloel" can h<lp thtU 1 All ,.,,.._ ot Ro .. tn
64&-ll"" 1 n t c rc$"1ing, inl•llpcn!il\'r 1 Sn1all Joba our Specialty Surea1.1 or ASSEMBLY '" SAl.ES M(H);Oi1 &roup discUAIOnfl in Co1ht Co.ut Home Repair 66-$197 £n1ployment ;\gtncy
I """-c.tl lll>-2288 lor HOME REPAIR I Experi1nc:1d
...-&rk
'
Help Wanted, WP 7100Holp ... ~. Mii' 1100 :-lpWontld, IA! 7I~
" E >" A CTORY Dtllvery-Sunday Only FP~~16'En5. 12. hr 10
tt141't. nlerit ralBe.S. ~125 OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE·
QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA·
TION WAGON on VAN. CONTACT MR
BENTON WILUAMS, 330 WEST BAY
STREET, COSTA MESA. TEu;J>HONE
642-4321 FOR APPOINTMENT.
Jo'ibcrglllllS
IMMEDIATE
OPENINGS FOR ~ ~ for ""• by schedul•. Carpentry, ?lumblng 100% FREE 1, TRAINEES I Proof o-ar An Equal Opportunity Employer N • P to cation · 1 * PALM & CARD Eloclrlcal. Rou. 549-100< ,.... -· -RJtM '::ii'~,';';'."' .,.._, READER * Heullnt 605l I UNITED Help W1"ted, M&F 7100 I Help W•nted, M&F 7100
fnv .. t Opport•y 5015 1 ~·s7~:n~ :~ r""'',~v ~l y A RD, earage <"le&.n~pt;. Co's Pey All j Interim I CALIFORNIA BANK COOKS J OONUT Shop, full·Ume nlte11.
PRODUCTION
WORKERS
WAREHOUSE
WORKERS
ATTENTION·· plant 10,·ers, \\'estmlnster, open 1 days ren\Q\'f' trtts, dirt, ivy, Ag.ncy FHt I Personnel Service 222 Octen Ave.. WABIUTSRBEOSYSSES I ~~t~~~ ~f:i;s~ A~~es.x;.~i
interior dea•--an, hair 893-98~t d~ivl'~·ays. stumps. ''SECRETARIES" 175•1 I I d I l egune Beech Apply, Mr. Donut, 13;i r:. "'"" "' o;os 1 . • rv no Blv , (7141 494-6546 DISHWASHERS •1'>'1"',,.tB, ,~etc.·· Prestige INCT!J.o.:~$1:; your bus1Hne, l·l · ~iov.i··G·~ , . •"I 1 ~''Pres. liKfy" $700 : •115 Tuafln ' & HOSTESSES ,.ti;i7ii'"ii5ii"iii"';;1;..,..,..,..,...I oca 11· or mort Into. call t·up i:;1zl"" 1n :! \\·k.,, 1.<.1 " '~ · ..... xa urn. or 1· 1 • -I 1~rniantn' finll ant.I 11econd 64G-13'1Q from 10 to ;; i, -.·e-'Pdr• .... ,or Mmml,.'·~ il'n. hau!!ng. 32 U. fun1. ' 111111u;t e vvll5 ii; lookiug for 13S.54&o An Bit~nl Oppo11unity Exper, Only Need Apply ELECTRONIC ~< .
Sundays ellJJ 6-Mh5063. I "'-,,"' c'~s o""'" ~~ •••• n·· ,.,,,,--..":'_:·. \'M . 64~. ! poised, charming indlv. to Equ,11 Oppor. Btnployf'r I 1'.J ployer Apply ln Person i.hift pot;ltions \\'ilh nlAJOr , .... u ., ,1·ork ni; hh; secretary M l , C ASSE"BLER nu1nuftil·lul'l'r of /lbergla1' Mort Trust D.ed SOlS • haltcrs/1ill·lnn1·ea.1-. Juanila, 1• 111\ULlr\G & l\~OVISG. f_nsl w/popular N.B. location. --· 1 BAR~! \W -·-0 Denver n1n9 O, M ' tuh nill.I i<ho1vcr Wlils. 1'~lber--' I l 8.12-4272. . low co!il ~en.'1N:. !Dxt 617, .\01\ilN. As-:1"1.:int for TCl'h. d· : , . h.ip s111a.ry .. pen 719 \\'. 19th SI. C~I 'n.•efcr ex:....-rlcnee but 11·1\I "Jat;s e.•;r .... ril'nCC preferred. 494-1003 ~87 "Record Co'' 4:£M Dept of sninll, ltX·al Co, a), nJlc) & \1J..nd sh111s. . , ": • • ..-.. ..-LOANS UP TO tr;. l SPIRITU.\L TlEADER i ' . ~ v a I" i 0 us rC!iponsibUities.' Call hc.t\l:ll .11 u1.:1 k G Pill, coo.K . SllORl' OllDf..:n, JI train. Sn1all Con1p1nty 11·lfh
1 I TD L. I Opt'.'ll 10 Ai\1 to 10 l':\1 1 llAULING &. J\l 0 VIN G .1'op skills qw.ility you for thi5 some lypin" Call 6'6-8981 j ?.lou·F'l"I, &'1.i-993:i daJS a, 1~k. r.1u8t W pleai;a.nt surroundi~~. Near L1niou .-:hop 11·ith f\lll bt'ne:fifi(. s oa ns Ar:lvii.;~ on all matter;::. LDC~~ 0!1 -: . pt'Og ressi\'c co. in Orang!' i\lr Probsi."' l ill:AUTY U-P I:: It-:\ T 0 r:I rel~nble. Apply Ill ~n;()ll, !hr Ol·Pan, in Ne\\·porl tllln!n1u111 $3.00 i:;tol1 rate,
312 N. r;J C<tmino Real
1
EH.>!:!19.. I Co. m,·olv<'d i:1 pop ret'Ord ASSl~"T.ANT i\l u~i h J v e l!lJ Canipus Dr .. Imne. Bca{it. J\pply at Nl':,\l('()ltT "Ol'S 10 ~J.4j £lfter 90 days.
2 d TD L I San Clen1ente. For appt. ee... llauHng·~fO\'ing·Trash I field. Calif. 1-o;;n1ot<lhl·,·,1 ... 1-; 11<.: COUNTER GIRL l\f.\lllN1':, 10 11,·'!,, .... I p.n1 . ...... n Oans Call 492 9034 192 9136 'ANTI I ., ~!07 Superior, :;.l..'-.ro · l'IC'•!'l' :i1)p/~ in p<>rson ~ ..-. --Trei' & shrub 11i1n or , "Finance" ~LSO Kl'..:N T.i'::\ll'Ll!:TON IJAJl~1 FULL TIME . \'ASt::cro:-.n· rcnioval. r.:i;t, 5-11-94.'.il ..., ST'il tsr "1.,-li."J7 I -! (\'"'1;'11 !l t1nd 11 ,\,t.\, Lo t 0 C La<ly 11·/l.e1· hC'lld 011 srraigh1 INFLATIONARY '.:._ ........:...:._~ ----JO''<'r 21. shirt June ls!. 1 EnlinHrs W•nt*<I wes rates renge o. · Confidcn.Hul int 0 r ma 1 ion I LOC,\L n1ovi11~ &-h;\;llng I~ i t:in bt-con1c top se .. ·y 10 : BOAT CARF!ENTERS 1 .\pply in person only, 2 to 4 . Interested in a 2nd lncon1C'.'
Settler Mtg. Co. roun~ehJ1S' k rrft·rral. l'tudt>nt. L.ari::e lnick. ftcas.' husy ,.,P iii N.C.. ~1gni1 . Products for Sale , 1-;x1K'r. oiil•·. ~JOU ~-su.-;;1.11 •
1
' J>;\J. nt>ll Sht>f Deliratl'l'l.~cn. I c·"I f"'" "1')·~ "2·"171 '"'·"'ll l ·\PC,\.RE. lncorp. A. Non· I '"'on·_,.,S',t-l'"'"'or .. .,o.n1,,,, t 1. 1 , 0 , U .. , Ad liD l\lanoi.:en1cnt. ru l.:a-<>~··1 -• ~ -1 r 61, \"'" J .., -..OJ .>.>..-or po cu 1:i,. I d MEN & . ..;1.ot;i ,\un. rOOh"hLtr.~I...: anu:., .. ---·------CER-Servin"' 1·,··bor 0 -0 "l ,.,. 'rnilA_;ency., --"""· 1-M • d H 1·1--: nee ·-------· ---... !': o ESCROW OFFI ' "' ... ~-""'-·-~_:.:_ L • •1 . ov1ng an ~u ng "SPECl"LS'' UOUl.:l\EEPEJ:. tu?l cht11·:,:-c, ~, .. 11· .. ~~893 I l 1 .. .,.,~~-. IFE or DF~:TH. U-t our , .. 10 " '* ,»!3 ,1 .. 1 "' WOMEN 'th ( 1 . 1 1 , , ,11 'C(""ll'--"-"---.,1 ~.~,~ .• = .. ~" J>rcstige fi 11n. ltcetnt <'"fl ....,.,, "· or ~·:"'"'; pa.1·~' habiel'i lh·e. For allcmatives I ~ . ..: u~. "" . ..,. J., W I I u·u 111a ;:1.anl·C . , ;:;. Iv•·. you Ul'ie ex ra ~ ... J • .,_.., Ground Floor Opport111ul.Y
$6-10 n10 incl 10". i,111. 8?_:-: " to ABORTION cnll LIFE Housecleaning 60S4 Sl'.:"y VP S7:.t: TIME & ENERGY Co. t").\JJ hclpfl1l. $;dar:v \ 11k"! I' I eves & Sais. J>rcr. 833--9770 * 100-/. FREE I :;~llj ! E. :Xli ro l.on11j Appl~ Vnlley. (a. I ii I! 1 li\E • U-''22 ?.J 1 rs I . I OJtt.•n. Call for iip11t. i ciupl'd. ~lr. U-vi 8-l&-~1~. ,, 1 1 \ ,\i\;\hc·iin, Calif. 242·3144 ' , ' J-a\) • -l . l ~''PE"IE''CEED I d ·11 )lf~. :-;.,,.·y $G:Kl ' h I MONEY 71~-;)lJ-2!::-.i , . ·--., ~as' Pe1.,;onnC' i ~ency . "'··.ST •1•o•AG•" !"ND ,.r:...._ ''" " a Y.1'"1 I W O OVe '"19\\'•sl·•·ly Nu N" ·~1 ' iil·ll 9'J3-t220 "~r 1
1
'. "'»-"" ""' :"" · · 1 do ho u s e cl ean 1n g. E\l'e . .\lr·d ~1;:i0 • • 1 JAJ(JJ\l\Et-:i-;J.:Jt d11·,•r,.;ifil'rl. COUNSELOR I Pieas~~c:i1 1'~or ·u;:C~li~ns I nn r11u:1I upportunily O~n 8'·~~.'~~~~. ~~-~. 1~: I ReferenL-es. Call 513-1013. . , Hnnk ~r"r ~6j() Call Mr , W1 lso n. 1.; .. J~· it1 11 ticldn;: .i. parr.; ln11nC'c!. opening in our l'lll[iloycr 111 f
Lo ..... '-~ I~ Ann. 557-00~~. . Painting/Papering 6073 1 ():instr Sec'y 165-0 835 3561 Uui.u1•'"s hl'lpful. Ins, pd be_a11l1ful ofc fur .a sale11 1 EXECUTIVE SECT~ . . . . . . ? • --;-
--:\leJ Sec'y $WO 1 • 1acat:ou.;,~12::-!~ 1 . ~nu~<~Cd, self 1_11 o t l ~·a. t e ~
1
!ill!."" C'.:utl exnnr rcq., typin):! f 1.1.1:. ( 1, , k. l II> -. '· r tx~r. I EXTERIOR ONLY I · · ,,1.1.1,,. \IAC"ll\I' Ot~"· lUdl\ 1dua.I. Sal,lry guaranlC'c "' 1~ l I I I' is !'il'l1IOr I '"''' "' · ·' · · n. + + ho •·· .,. S(}.\JO 11..,.,n,, sh 100 1\·pm, 1.1u:-.I •l ;i.~.~111,".r-1 11 ! -~ '. . . · "BOOKKEEPERS" ,APT. ~TA.i...,AGER for 12·2 br i 111!h 01f1er ,\.: l•kki1 ·; t;iinnl nus .. .:..:0.1 .... r. r fl J k (1111111 t r.ay
Lo.t & F ~ 5300 1• I l~ I Lic'd .. ln:;urcd, f'ree Est. "Cons tr F /C" .,00 I rurn units. No childr<'n ·!"H''.~. • 1.,1..._,rit'n<·e ... ,,,_,-~,,...; ... 1, prc1r.~. Coocl location & , be able to assun1c responl>I. ! •' 1
''
1 : ., . ' ' OUnu ~-....,.,. ·Rlchnrd979-:::~'Ci .,.. 1· · $~0 ff I i\I' .n.,.-uvo" 1r1 11t· • S<ll ary o pl'n . Scn1J1 ~lly,_Gll-·1.:W· ___ I
1---------1 f S!l"oni: bnckground 111 {~Jrnu1 "I / •1'·~ in. 1 0 rcn · \ ui. IJ(.)(ll.;1.:.YF PLl '-1u1· n1ct:-iiJ J' • a_ t A l.vrv-"T•.l<"•> '"'''"'c 1is1i11~1 FOREMEN
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiim l PAINTI!'\C & R · ~· . . . . duocs. Pr!'fer ni a 1 u r (' . : · "" . : ason gel gtncy ,,~,.. ... .. ... ANU.fAL ASSIST. LEAGUE:; ' · epau·, .,J YT~ & a pt d:\clopn1rn!: r\CI\ ~·oniaii Gti.9:>:.'0 flft:; P:'IL I f~lir1..:.at1un l'lhop, ~ L:'\p d, 17·IOO Brookhur.st, F. \'ly. prev e.~pf'r, job rci:pon. E"\perirnct..:I. l'>rrlcr Spani.~h
C/\l.tf. ANl~TAL CO;>;'fHOL 1 A t • 6001 "·orkmanship gullr. T<Lk<' I of cs clo.,(• to 1 1 v ! n <' 1 -----,---:!~•:fil S. l>road1111), :S .. \. Suite 213 963--077~ saial)' il'l'c!. a11d ~l'f.~ l"I .r. Englii.h Spt"o4kin;:::. 2nd
Hu111ington Beach Shelter II ccoun 1n9 ~rl''.'ln!a;;c or n1y ('·"fl I Co111p\e'I:. ,\),Ir l·l <ISSUl\le I APARTMF.NT l\l111agcrs, 9~ -ao-v·s· .&-GIRLS--I CO:'.IP!lt:Hr:NS!Vt-: CARt: shirt. Top 11·a~C'S.
, 8:>21 Edison St. 53&-2'"111 BOOKKEl '.PJNG Tax-. lor a:lf,...71}j6 . full l'Ci.p. Unlti::, G!lrdCn Gro,·c, ('.\pd COi I' ?'"' N rt C I G Y h C - ' "'" ' : roup\l', 7 l 4 -s 4 6-3 7 2 i, ,\c11spapcr Ca1·rie.rs. fl!JJJ. c & ~ · ~ l'ii·po . enter Mac regor ac t or p
(Back or Hun1ane Society I I imli\'iclual..s or co1npa11ys. t'IRST CL,\SS r-;xT. •If\'f .. "Finance Bkkpr'' $7SO ~32-91::6 age 10. l.iJu lslc, BalllO:\ red1"t ])r .. SullC' 2'12. r\ev•fKltl lli:"i1 Plnet'nlia ,\\"f\ C~f
-Adoption. s p ay i 11 g &:. Call 615 -0:>83 PAl;l,'TlNG, P.\Pl·:n11,\!\G· 1 .\l>lc to gn tl•ru TD. 11, .. ,. l'l'ninsula & lialbo·i Puint Beach. Calif. ~-At1n: --FRY-COOK ncurering infru111 . 33fi..2j\:; : , • I~G. Free £i;lh1u1tes ' Pl·rsonnel, or call &l-0-8!l:iO.
ANC\1A1-'i l~lPOUNDl::D \ Bi1by11tt1ng 6008 I 9i!f.j~9~ . ronsrr exp. s 0 n1 (' 0 n t• CunlHl'l ;\Ir. U1:1.t :;,;{l'l)l)l a1 Collect1'ons LXJX'r. Full, p.'l1n1c
T · · Bl V 1 • --j \\)!a111t d!!1·. ur C P ,\ !he PAiL\" PILOT or l·;,/J -Surf & Sirloin emer mt'I:, \ , em. · c.itnlSTI \N tJ . 11 PP.OF painter hone.;t 11·ork lx:k d Id b · 1 1 I &1·1 13''1 &. 1 r 1 Doxie m~:-:. B~\·n, Rik , ~·. o.ib};sit., Fen~~ 1c~'1.v.· ~ot r;as. ·1;11 . ;_~ . .' lJ·<'e ist i~n<1lc'. I -. g111 \\"OU e Jl ca . ASSEMBLERS I -· -, e;~ve app lea iu11.; EXECUTIVE j9~0 \\'. Coos! ll11y., t-;8
, Genn S/11 P~mter, :L. 1 in('als, nap~. call Joanne I,efs. !J.lS.21a!J. 6-12· ... 91.... i "Constr Bkkpr" $700 . BUSBOY . . , Clerk rt.il.L 1ii11e Sale~n1an ,,·anted ~~i·:~~~ lp,~p",'~lt·. i;,,, 1960-1:>31 PROJo'.. 1r~tlc_ovci111g:. sta!c , lntlh'. 11· / be kg r n d in ' L:pcr. PJ"efrr ,\nll'I". l"L{L7.Cll., SECRET ARY for l'a1io &. Outrll)()r tum·
Sh . rr· 1 ~JATUR~ v.·onia n \l"ill carc 1 lie. ;\o. ti9.il I. Insur, all : 1n1·csln1nt ... RI::, or con~lr. a _ ~nf;hsh or S 11 an is h, 1 uu1'f' ~hop. Appl} G~11, , ep nlt'I:, 1. cn1. 1 1 ~ . .,1 , ll ll""' "'"G inul'it. Sl;ibl". 1-,.. ,_, Four day 11or-k 11·l'ck. 10 ''i}l.'<.1 l·ang. Saln1-y a~l'\lnlin..;' Ne-• self starting indi·. So. Santa Ana arcfl. Start J.,1 1!:11·1,11 :<;uf1;rry Mrt Patio
Sh"p. "l"IB-•'>. '''''· for chi.tclren, n1y hun1c, SLS _lr,s 1·~ 14 r. _? .. ~-._~_: _ ~ ..... "-'.~ .... I I ti ll! \ t 1 l sg ' --•· J s d R ... ._," • , • nct.:ei.sarily ha\"C to be F C. 1 l(IUr" {ll'r < ay. . . In 1~ l··'-P.l'l'. , pp y ict11n :!:JJ1vidUal with 3 yeilrl ex· 11l-....; 111 unc .. e~ r~11n1r-. !'hnp, \'k·1un.1 & J1;c11'J}OCt
Poodle, n1Lx, \\11itc, n1a.J~ 11·l'ek . .i·n;::,j272 * Wellpaper Hanger* 1 , l::lOP:'ll. f;"1:pcl'i("11Cc h<'lpful, ~ t:.Al pu1 J!,u11h11rg1·r • . • C _,. d 1 ~ . . l Bh·d co~l;1 ~lc~a.
Poodlr, rnix, Ylhile n1ale.) L.ICENSED, lovin; 1.:1::1.re. C. Rehko ti-lli-~llC\ "SPECIALS" ll ut uot Jh'(".;.~.'a'·~. s~·.oo P<'r !l;intlct, t:OLJ ,\tl.1n:s, C:'11!per1ence in r.v1t •n 1 ~tatln:; ~lury ~l\niniu~1 -.-~-. ------
Lao, B!k, fem . ; f'ened yard near South , INT I EXT PAINTING FIL :'llanuf. $iOO llOltl'. Ct!Od 1: o r11 p u n ~· .\)>k fol' ,,!r. lfai;:en. : Collections. 10 key 11dd·, To C'l•;ssig~ '~ ('"· J:;G J. \ ~i~· J111;c il;u~!:~" \~~
Terrier n1ix. B.1"·11. rn.alr 1 Coast Pl;ua, C.J\1. :.\J7-72_7.o_ 1• ,,11 0 , .... , .. C'o. 3, ... , ,-,~ ... ?:,--" l)('nc(it,:;. Paid hc:ilrh. Hfr --CAFETERIA -·--ier by touch i1nd light c 0 ni >' 1 nt s 11 · PP r 1 • • •
G S 1 1 1~ I -"" L-" ..,.~"' I l;n\ Ofc ~600 1 in.sui·;111;~'. 1-;i(•;i!ivn" & ~ick "" • . • _ _. G~-• l>. Q. )]ox 13ti0 ~at. :l-tpm. t-:1 Niguf'I .-rm ·uintl'r, ')\""\\"II f Carpenter 6015 ----------· .ronn 1,.<1,·c. COOK 1 tvping requ1r~. ~ CO!<ta ~IC'i;i\, C;i 92\J:!r. I Cnuntry Club. 2 ~ 10 0 Te"'!l'r in_ix, B/\\', n1alc • Fll.l·:l·:. ifST" PROJ":.. .\s.~t Ukkpr ,'.:"', .. o c'UUI{ company benefits, "paid (111hhou.•r Llr.. L11gW111 Tern.er n11.-: B/\V, fcn1. ; JlATIO-Co\"ers & Deck.~. I i\L\rflt\_.0.: l~T. · EX l. A1.:e1·1.;:: Clrk oAf • J · ,.. ; Scof1:ie, B~k, niall'. 1 Cu>.toni designed expci1!y I • .;.11-ltr I * , 1 1 P F' 1in1c :\!on 111111 F1·i. L"\JJl'l".1health/lift insurance, ~ -·-Nigu_el_,--,,--.,---,.-
Terrter n11s flLIJ), '\•ht, ill. built. 1''ree estimates Pleiter/Repair 6077 In~. GillC'r i:~; App j n C'r~on picl"d .. Jfrcnkl:1s1 ,\: luu~·h vacation1 end tick .EXE~. SECRETA~Y 'F1·1.1. s, pflunc he I p,
I TeTTit-r mLx, Tri, n1alc i 61&-75!)8 8-l&-9-19:) I ':\!I'd l3klq\I" JU I Jll'l"p .• 1:JO. au!•! 11111. L11!l 1leave. c.11 for appoint·' f l't.' P11.1d . ?nc_ of our f1nt'SI COOl\.S. k DlllV'F:RS, 01·.-r
1· Terrlpoo, Sloiide, Blk: ill. JCUSTO\I \\' PATQJ PLASTERl:<;G 1\/I~ Oerk SSOO (~ tor ILJJIJI, 1>!1).Jj{)(J, t'\! 11~11 .• t f1rn1;; 111 t-asl11on ls!e St"Pks 21. Calif. cJri\·crs !il'. neat &
f.fb: Slit Pointl'r, ll/\V, :\L I . oochvor~. ren,1_oJ .. ! ,\II l)-'flC'i:;. freees111natcs I "RECEPT/G. OFC" PRIMARK ., ·C.~l::f:S. :.;eH-M:>r1·c-~;.i.: men . 'lop notch indi_virlual Pf'l't-Ontt~ll'. ,\pply 410 E.
; Tcr/Dox Brl\1"1 n1alf' p.i.nellng & repair. \1111·c 1 Call 510-GS:!j f I PRODUCTS CO I s1,,oiu11s. Shifts ;11'di.lu.blc ti i7l ll allJ.1020 . v.·~rl'('('n! .~l'cl'l'lnrittl <';'<~r. li!h SI .. C:\I. 6~1136.
SI »' Blk/I.\" ' r
1
Lenhoff, 536·8475 "Receptionitt" $SOO •. ,\.\!-!:! p :-.t& t:ll';\l-t.i Pi\I, Ii \\o·"'. ,u1 n .. c1.1y . \1·/\ ." .s. GAL FRIDAY ' l<"P inix, ·•11• en1. · : Roofing 6082 \I J. Jvb C ll C 1 1 Cocker n1ix. pup Bl\\', ,\J, . r•rpet Serv1"ce 601' I I Grci\I t\.B. spol 11·/!01~ 11f ilal11·J... Sl;1r11n~: J• ,, ~ PRfMARK ' so C'l !i. a o,~~1,1 & l'RI\' \Tr s"·c1· • ~ • .,,,, ... , o b 'r 1 I 1• '"'i"" I::. "''"''' *"' ,-11 t 1 ·.• I i'l'r··"nnel Age,,,., 2 • 90 • · ' •· · ~. ' '"b .. , •. ,poppy ""Ve•·al O\V. 0 . • ' .. \I~· n US}" rn < ('~,.;. 01•..;U • . . .J~-~ li'. ri l'l"\"1,·11·.; "" . . /I ' . A ,. ~ ._ "" •"" ,l..., *»-I:: ;\I :'\E\* · \·,·ry JitC' r~l'lni.: & lot" 01 S;t•1t::i.\n!l.. Cal if P:\L :\lull. :\l;!\" 2U PRODUCTS CO . lli,rlJorBh·d,C.:O.l..>-lQ...60jj. u~uusy exe<.i.iln!. gc cr.:.J.
' Terr/DOOie mix, B/T, i\l. .ivJIN'S C.irpet &. Upholsh'1;.· j C,\LL TL\! \\!::ST CO.\ST 1 phonci;. Fun job! I , E••fll·f>,~n ll:irlxll' & ,\µplieaiu" ui·er :;,u i\C'ln.•llll'. , ~~\J>I::J{-. -F'HOK·r OfFIL.1-:1 t rec lo lra\'<'l ~· h <' n
St. Bernard, Bn1'71, \\'hi, F. 01 I S h a m PO O , (Soil ' ft001''1'.':G, J'.\"C. &l:'i-JO% I F·:i in·\C''r, UilK·J•i 1~,. inu:.! h..' !S ~ 1., :l520 S. Susan t; I I{ I. \\" ,\ N T J.; D nel·ci:;i;ary._ S h 0 u I d . Ix' 1 Cock·a·poo, gray, ~l. Hclar<.!a.nt.'ll. Degreasers & Ri•l' \ll;s-. -11-,--•. -1;-:-"Med Recept" $600 i ~:iulh or ~\':li·n••r• "Id. 1,,, .. , •. , .. ,, ..... 1, .. 1,, ·'' 101 , Santa Ana, Calif. !=!~IOI lll\l"."l.\Tf'.l.l'. ''·''"''· Lnh·re~lc<l 111 . l" a r n 1 n g 1 CATS all color brighleners S.:. JO : :. ' ·~' '1 .. }1.c·'·. """~: 1 " C' ' ~ ·' ~ ,\n t"qual opport11nil) r v · " p rrl husill<'S!i i'.f r
G I I . 1 nii nuti• hl!'at:h for 11.hitf': ~.l<'e !'·'·.,,l:~<: 1:. :'~,k 101 1F:"tl'lhion /.~land toe. \\'ork f<il ~. l·:l 'an1uiulll'al,SC I:: 1 if ' l · l I !l.fl ;l · ·· ' · . ray, s 1t. 1a1r , £'111. \\rill ,,.11 sis K0-.0 0 hasy pl'di;i.trk·ian. ,\hie to .\n c•iunl oprortunil~ ------· n1poyer m
\\'hitc fen1. kHl eni::. I <h·<U"'p('t~:-Save your mo!l"Y ( S ' d·b-1 :"'.' , " . - . handle i<"11f ofi.:. Lnts <JI I :n111to~·{·r 111 /r Cl!:~ TH .. \L S.·1·1·1t·~ 1 ... ·11. \I iu ,.,,.~ ... ~~'"""""""'"'"~ YeHw·/\\"hitC', Sill, n1alc Y "il ''lllg nit" P'l:lra trips. i an ast1ng 6083 1 · ! r;i 1 11 • S \I" 1 11 .; "h 1 1 1 · COUNT E ll~h~IP-"t'11r1~. ' AND OTllERS. :;:;&-2-,13 1 \Vil! t·!ca.n living 111\., <lining ;°lt"{l\"i1y. r.:kkpn:; & hillin,; l~··r ... onncl <ll·pt. Hua;;: /[O:>jJ.I \\·orkcr. \',"ttk<>nd l\"~l'k £01
I 1111 .. k hall .tl5. Any rm. I \\'000 TC':-:t., Bldg5, houses, inclulk.O. I I\.~. girl, 17_20 )'fl'i. /\pply in
I LOST: English nu I! d 0 g ' S7.j(J, couch $J O. Chair $5. Jj ! boats, patios, S\\im pools. I "V . t ,. sr-ASSE~fBLf..:Tl.S ~!ale & I
• brindle & '"ht. Ans to , yr;i. e~:p. is "'hat rounls no!! Shop for snialll'r itcnis.1 .• arie Y . <IVY : Female, Ne11• p!anl in Col'lt:l CHEF fX'rson, Bi·iny Bill ".~. ?.lj E
1 "Pug.~ll'y". S ER I 0 US I nll'lhocl. I do "·ork mygelf. 1 Quick Sand Co. 6'6-4296. ~lO Jl;,h. ofc. looking for shnrp I ~lesa, \·C'ry .;::i.od l\·urldn:; _~Ith St., 0.f _
1 ALLERGIES. Vic. Dana ! <.;rod ref. :iJt-0101. 1 \\'.18th St c. t-.lrsa J~rso~i \\ho c~n !.1a11d!~ .~1ne eonditiom. ,\pply Stanlonl 't 1.cnL·~TER Help. P1•rn1. JJ<ll1
• Hill~ llisc·hl. f~l:.l\'AHIJ.1 L&f? Cl'pt Cln~. Hs<' $:!-t.9:i., 5--.-,A'I -. 6084 h~e f1g-1U'c \\Ork & !~ping. Applied 8ngincC'ril1~. :;ow Full <·l1Ar;;r 1ro1·kit1.; l 11.: j tirnc Jays. Apply
496-73:)1 e,·es 1 l~ni .~. Stnr h~ $l9.9S. So!a '. ew1n9 terat1ons \\11! al.'"'l a ct ,1..,. r('~ept. • Ainvar C\T 11;111tcd , 1.k'nPll1 ~: 1 op RL.f!CL:H 1-\J\'.r;
; O' G .,..,. . Salary nl'go. . . :-\.1\:11;., Pn11l \';1 t·a: I u II ·: ~01.-, llarloor Bl,·d c.:i.1. LOST. C:\I l•'c111 ·1lf' l"c•t. 1uo"I· -~1-t.:.i,J. uar. i oG--:>170 :\f/\RILYN 'S Cu.~1o'n1 Clothe,;: ,\SSE:'.llLlLE!lS 110,,i.o11.1\ ~ Lill' Jn>•!l':in, e.· ·
Jy IJlark 1,· ~1~~·.u.; 11/ .~.ii I· Ceiling• 6011 1 Clin k·. Dl'si~n or ttd{'Sign.: "SPECIALS" 1 Pr cc is ion elcl·lro.111c··li. .\JiJ.I." 111 l"'i"•t,u .. \J•i11 .. \1 ·~J ._ __ C_O_U_P_LE ___ _
& ."hi l!'. 61-•·llilQ, i r.'~" ~111.~. l , · . -j _6TJ--t:!S6. I :'lfl"d f/U!c ~r.o ' assen1lil)". 1:;.
6l>3~.\l<.111th1 u ~11, 1.m """''ILLAJlUPAINTl!'\G * 1Tel •1•0 R . 6090 iPHX $1j0 •P..e11u irl's: S!J'on;: ruc{·h.
to noon. Xc1'' Acoustical Cl'ilings + •vi 1 n epair General Of!ie<' s·12:i aplit urlc \ssen1bly or SAM'S SEAFOOD
LOST: \\11ite lo11g-haired cat,• rcpai.rs. Ory.\·a.l\ _& 1vall / T.\'. Servicing, si ne<' 19-17. Rec<'plionisl :\\jl) 1' 111nchinc s!lOp es Pc r.' 16178 Pacific Coi11t Hwy In o{fiC'c build\n-:;. appn>x. 71)
l grn C)'l', 1 blue eyc-. rll'a 1 tcxt, patch plastcnng. No.: $12.$ + part$ total fUnl£>ss C1erk $.i?.J help!ul. C.i\'f. &12-8080. 1 Huntington Beach, CA. off.),·1·s-. :\!11.s! ~ e::ipablr ?'
collar. Sun 5113. 41~ I!ard·I 281o:;s. &12-5775. ! shop \\"Ork nl'l'dC'tll.Rec:on<I. f\C.}"JlWl<:h Sj20 1 · !CIWOCAJ{E Li-1-. being: bond~d. Srar11\·ork in
' ing, Balboa. Rc11·;11·d. CaJI I Cement/Concrete 6019 T.V.'s. g~1itrantced. Loan Processor ~.I AT EASE ,1 11-ork froni :!:6. J 1\:_,._.., 1~~~1~. June.
1 675-28J.>. ~·RllNN SCllftOTH T.V.
FOUND: In Tur1ll'r•xk, -.. l'.!I CO~CRETi-; Patio!!. Patio 82.i \V. 19th. c.:'.11. 518-3386I~ ADMINISTRATIVE ;oF NEWPORT BEACH · n1t-r.f~ill tin1.~, 2 girl~·!.~ Srnd J~esumr
" c Qu·'lt .. R MALE DIVISION the irortd., r,·-.~ o•orc 1,,,., 11, Jo.I roro. SJ3.9123, 8:,(1.a.Xl:i Sta11n11; Salary ~1inimuni (Sunda"') Black ,t fa1~·n. 1, o. vcrs. •u Y_\\"Or..:. cas. Tile 6091 , , ""' ~ I T CJ .,._ .. \d ,.,
Be•"'•' niixh•ro p 0 pp)'. 1 . L:censed. &12-8511.
1
. . 'Perini Asst" $800 i n1rn. 11"01nl'n &: IXll'l'i dtsire" e_:·:es. o as9 k"t.1 1 no. ~ o -1' t l · t t I rlo Daily Pilot ' 833-~ or 714-;.<}J-.tS'16 'Cl-:~JF:NT & Block \\'ork. CERAl\1JC TILE NE\V & Oppor. for dPgrCC'rl l.lf'l"!-:On o iu·c ii n1a n C'llancc m~n I CLERICAL r . 0. P.ox l:X-11 '~UNO· C I f I I ,. • \\'all ~. patios, side.,.,·alks, j l't~n1txll'I. l''r{'C f'Sfin11tlf'.<.;, "'·/son1e l'Xper in 1·oca1 io11al of hi!!;h quality. It \1·011lrl l;c ..
hv,.,, bl':• ,',.1·,,.1'1".u". •,,1,,,',,"1," 1 etc. By hr. or job. &46-691;;. r, Sm ,lohs. ii·f'lt:om.-. ;)36.~J:!O lei;Ling pr o r <'du rr i:; to I ou a pern1aJK'n! JX1l·t-ti111e P lln1e 9a.n1,3pm, .\Ion thru Cusra ~fl'NI, CH 92626 " ' beoon1e riss t lo personn<'l I basis, You n1ust be ncat 111 Fri. As.sislant J\tJ>ayat>Je. __ ~
£: Ch1·cns. 960·Zll3 aft . j. CE\tf:NT: Patio, dr.:h:e.s.. /Top Soil 6092 ni.;:r in manuf. Cn\"in,nnll'nt. appearu111·e ~nd or gOQf! Payl"oll. Lile t~-ping J(J DELIVERY l\!a1• lot early
F'OlTh"D feniale sia(nesc c;it. 11•a.lll:s-Repain, Ra\\' li: : characttr. You 11"<•uld be 11·pn1., 01K'ratc 10 key Ai\r L.A. Tinll'~ home
Vie. \\'alnut sq. Ca 11 rcmo\"e. I-Tee f.'St. 5-U-8998 * TOPSOfL • C0i\1POSI' "Accnt/.Estim'' $850 l't"quil·ed to 'l"ork i\lon-Sun.: ildd hy touch. !teal Eslate dcli\·l'ry mute. A(lults only.
:,.)1-5449. JESS Cenient ContraC'tor. * ~fULCll * llED\\"000 Orangt' Co. autoniolive co 8:3(] A.tn.-2:3(] p.111. Early I i11ve1>tn1ent of<' S. U. free· Erononiic11l l"ar rcq"cl. 2 hr.;
' Dr. · d I k Call 56&-6930 1 looking for sirong indi\·. ~ti1·ec or dill<.'ttlled veteran 11·ay Laguna Niguel, ~fission per 1lay. No solicitin~. no
FND: Orarige labb~-. ,\!ale.: 1~·ei~r· ~ 1 e w a s' W " do Cl • 6098 11·ould I}('. 11't'"lrolllC'. Please VieJO· •cea. Phone 8.11-1600. c o I l . c c f i n g . '"o""g cat. 1.,.,.. 11,.,1,1,.,. patiru:. !»J-1125. 1n w een1ng 11·110 can gu lhru TB & P&L. IV 1 8 1 l ""' <"' call fi-t}...)()70 l\f-F. 9-6 ,\sk <'st n11n!'>tcr/ lntg c 1
Dr. Ir Irvine 1'.'B. :>1~1427
1
. ('F'.i\11':S1' \\.'ork of all k.inds.: * SUNSiilNE * ~\l~tr~~·ihi;. cstini.'.\tin:,:. I for ~lr. Boquett<". EOE nrca. 638-29:.!·I.
' I...orrt/Bas.o;et ftn1 !ri·eo!or nf'asonablC', lree E st . \\ .. Id Se . f -DELIVER"\' ,...,.., f .
u·ht n1~t prom'incnL Sa1; 4'38-J::Xi
11 0~~1 ~l;~~,;ec e$t 1 ''Cost Accnt'' $15K 11 T T8'<1),\NTS. Se~/ CLERK JYPJSJ f~arly n~~in;'°;~per ·~:1~C':
Jose lag. 96S--096·1. I Contractor 6021 r-.·eed expel" in gov·i contraels ! r;rls !'-1alionl'. sh i r ll!i I Tustin & h'\'ln<'. Pref.
, LOST, BLAO\ fen1111e i~ Lah, , • • Schools & ' ,~ kno11··1 or l'ilandard c·ost 1Jl'Ri1<1bl{' 6 A.\t-12 P:'.t & .12 , RECEPTIONIST · rnarriNI. L.A. Ti n1 es . 't creal O;lnc. puppy 1 nio I:: L ~.CTP..ICAL Co111_ractor Instruction 7005 · s~stcn1s. lf\'y manuf. cxpcr I l':'\1 -'i !':'\!, 6 c1uy/1rk. / n :>.U-8223.
l ·al ·-'?. -• ;:i,·ai!ahlc !or anyl'i1ze JOb, '!·i u1T•'~'· St rt' • 2 2 < / I ====-----~ old. r toun<I c l .1.11-1_ 1_1._ hout' service, l i c ens cd . 'ORGAN LESSOl'\S r 0 r: I n ing pay ., . " l r . I Df:L!VERY men. over 23
FOUND: Gr;iy hro11·n R~i-!)51 i Bcainn1.•rs. at niy ho111c. "Accnt Mgr" $16K 1/ ("1 1"~""'2.'o""·s, :!-1-1. P;\l, ,r-1?~.A N ~rt Be h 1· . k yrs. Pf'rnl. p/time. E;irly C k f l I .. . ll) . i pp icanr~ O\CI ,;v e1\>"'. ac inl1 s~ s inorn. ne1~·spapcr deliv. to oc RIJ?O cin~ l' puppr. J.\CJ\: T;iu!ane. p fl l 1 I) s,, 6-12-29?.6 Kini Clark. Degree. in acclng 11·/i;rron~ · 11c!('fl1ll('; olht'l"\\'IM-n111.<:1 / c:'\peri~ cler~ typ1s1/ NB honies. $200 pt'r nio. + ~is:; or 6l2-4G1!!. i·<'inod, <'ldd. Lie. n -t ~i2 1 I !<11pcn.·1.'1Qt'Y t>XJ!4.'I'. ..:1·ii1 hr t~ , r. fJ!cJ. Intrn·\r11·s J rereption1st. Tr111ng 5().60 bonus 642-1800
LOST :i1.i. alt. n1·1k· Lat. :\Ir \\'ay Co. 6-12-fi03. f f If 1f}1 sleeve type-, 11')! 11fr;iid 10 held ar 101 S. El C1.1n1ino 11-.p.111. 1\bility to \\'Ork \\·/ ·
' Grav ~·/Blk stripe-~. \\l1ite 1.,..--1 Id . Al . I ~''*'' I ~·ork. r::xp('I". i11 co" 1 J Real, SC nun1bers & keep accurate DELJVE."RY 1\1 A N· Ear I Y cheCt &.JX111·s.831-8$~~ ·O:lln i<_ 1t1ons~ te:ation: I Rcenlng. ~t t • M • reco rd s Plt"asanl morning L.A. T!me!I car .. .. _ . 1 I.I". Rehable. r ree Es1. Jay u omo rv• ar1ne , persona.lit)·.· & abillly to route. Tustin area. No
LOtfT: Dv.; Turi.1 . Jt.; ~· L 1 Joh11ston 6-IZ-t<IO::: I "Tobacco Sis'' $11K J Parts Warehous.~man .1 ha ndlt" l>usy desk. which rollccting, 83.1-7148. g,~:"6';f~1fi'.1~;~~~g J, ~ . Electrical 60:12 ; Job Wented, Male 1025 Aggrcssh·I' indiv. v.·/~h'Qn~ I'? \\"Ork ~~1 fasl gtO\\J~g bus~ includes use of dictaphone & DENTAL ttceptk>ni.st, oUice
1 -'~ OTEL G I <'X \)('r. in 1>alcs IQ "·ork S.i. f Jne~s 111111 opport'."Hty ro.1 I client t'Ontact. J::x eellenl n1a.nager. Specialty office. FOU~ P?:rnc1"nl'_1.111_. Pl•.';,<>•' l-:J:i'.:Crr:_IC!A.." -Lic:l'nse i • 1 l\.JJ\Ni\ En • '~"Ould Calif arl'•L \rlll 1 a k e 3d1_ancen1en~: JI.lust be <'.'I:· 1 ~·orking condilioos & ro. i" r 0 0 t ric !I k , x _ray,
identlf)". \ ,,._ ~'.1 !'·1·1.-.1\· d!lo ! ~o. 2'J..:1os. Sn1flll jobs, llkl'. 10 nta.nage niotel. keeps cosn1i>tic or g r ore r ~· 1 p<'n{'nccd 11 Ith ~ telt· benefits. insurance exp. a 111ul'il. Good
Stlnf1011·c1'. fli!!-~1Si.'1 1 1•i<1int & repair<. ;~w.-.·120:;. ' business UJI. I-lave refs. bark~rncl. , \hi,• 1·1 dc:1t 1 ?hone pl'.'rsonaUty. Xl~il 111td· snlnry. fringe IX'nefits, Send
F'Ot:'<·o .•. ~111 ,i<' chi :, :-..,111 • Gardening 6045 ~~~r,.1.-1-1.ifll or &16-3f_.:'.2· __ \\/.'11•11"•' ehai11 hl';ids .. t 1cut. ,t,.-_group heneftts. In· CALI. rrsun1e, held in confidence.
oyl'f.l. ·Job Wanted, Fmale7050 11i~U'i~J11r~11 ... rt'1"\·1e11111::;: hef\1·l'C.11 l p111 & THE. IRVINE CO. t1assificd 1\d No.37, Daily
611·7117 • CCU.EGE !rained Gardener . ··--·-~.-,, V 11111. 644-3389, 9.tm·noon 'l'11ot. P.O. Bo); 156CI. Costa
""':0 .,,_ . 11 1 , 1 11·ho is pron<l ot hi.~ quality Lady look.in;: tor Nursing Sales/Serv" $}2K ('OAST Dl::iTflllJL'TOI~ ~ 1, 1 0 E 1 1 :i.icsa. C11Jif !)26Z> 'V'. · ,;~1c1!1'1 ~11~1'·1 1 •11 · 11ork. Coniplctc nu1in1. ur' t'111plo~·n1e111. Cor ing for l~'IX''" 1111.111 111 hc•;il ~C"t1li11~ 1.17.J Lo~n. Cnit L, C::O.J '·'fU(t ppor. iupuycr Dl·:NTAL J\s-,-1-,-ta-,-,-1,
JC.._. i-; 1 · _. 1r"1 mri\\ & cd;;e · cleanups· n·y cl<l~rly sick or 2 adults ::i 1:i cqui!1• l'tf'l'lll 01Jf101·· .~"" j\iJTO-PARTSOU iSid C OMhodontlc ofc .. \Vilt lroin
96s..l9'21 I mo'>'·ing. ' nriyi;. Gooc.I rl'f"s. Lh·e in oufsirlc rcri for local 1-0. \\ill j SalC'"snien for gro11·ih" young, C L E R K 5 \1·/n1in. 1 yt dcntnl exp .. 1~~~~~~~~~~~1 GF.O RGE :-.19-20lj SR11111 i\na. 5;j7-1939. Uelly., <H·1·cpt l'lcc. back.,;n1und p•rt< ,.. bbct :\l~'il be I Sen<! resumc to t-.frs. F('rris. ·1lso. " · . · ' · ISP RINK L E R Repair. BOOKKEEPER -full eharge.; ' aggrcSSl\"t", ha\·c good . (kJod Clertcnl ~kiU8 I 17375 Brookhurst. No. 71. I fWsonlli ,,,, Plan!ing & CI ea nu p !< • A1·ailable tor wol'k at 00111<'. : "Med Sales" $11K f)l'n;onalltv & dc.,.lre 10 . At~untc Tvplng FountaJn Valley, Ca · 92708_
. . E.'pr-r. S.:. Reas. Ca 11 6~Zl74. l fast ~J'O\\ in11: l"l. looking r,,1. 1 make good 1non~y. Con1act . ou'tgofhr,: rersonnllty DENTAL Ass Is Lant,
1 , h46-490$. j BTOLOGICAL JLLUSTJ!A·; t o p i 11 d i ,. i 11 u a I .'i noger Glllaspy &n-0033 bet · :\lath Skills I e h a Ir 1 Ide . X -Ra Y.
' p I 5350 Pr'l[P.o;sional J a Po n rs c TION or related 11·ork l"ull ' \I /outstanding P<'twnallty. S & ;,. Nons1noker. Prel!'rably un·
; •r•OM • I ~~!.,rdt'nC't, 9e<>l'll"l'. IUush.l. j .:ir pan tin)e. 673-8232: ~u.n_ie colle~e & ~ o o d AUTO SAL~:s 1 ~;~Y11!,~ ii;,i;rn~.lr'.! dl"r 30, &14·00_·1_1_. ----
MASSAGE & SAUNA .. 11i Bluebird Ci r. C.\t.I J b W eel . j ni1htary record are f'<'llK<'\l"li.\f\\".s&us<'d~RN. PACIFIC MUTUAL IDEJ\"TAL asslstnnt l.ai,runa J ' ;~t'i--1072 ° 1 ant 11 M&F 707 I nucndatory. . ~t'<' i\Tllrlv Ros<'n 11t C'rt1·ii~r ~ , •lllht . I~I Toro uren. E:Xpt'r.
, ~~~~s·~r~l~.T\.r'L~.:~ ... ';,11 ~:t:ROPI::AS Gardcn~r. ~!::AT, altrt "'""P'd epic 1u l ., $l2K ' i\[olor.-:. ~ \\'. 1st S..1.nta •!JONpuyortOrDr.N.B. Satar.· open. Replies ~ l l·•l•lenai•-' ""d"•P•~" '°". , Plant Mgmt" I ,1,, .•. S", ._3171 · F-q111u (}pfm. £n1111eyer 1. ·1 u· 1 """I I~ " C IJ J)o t '" \21~ ' ' " ~· -~" '''' .. ,.. .>1.'> s f.ur i\l<m)Clll O( !S-4() '"" ... __ -C'Vll .K <'ll J · ~ .JU, ' a nn11 8 ;iu.:i-' Tree re 111 ova I \'c .. 'Exper. person in f01.1d or , · -, -~ -~ 8839 Adah1s Ave, Jlnli. Bch. 1 " · ry adult unhs 111 nice area. d.cun.· proc.>e!\..'11. en\·ittinnicnl. e COOKS e J)Io;NTAr. f1'011l De 11 k,
I rcn.!IOnabll'. &12-:.329 e\"1•11. Dependttblc · 11le~sant /I ~VON I • i 1..... . l'Rt-..;CNA~I? . , P.JO\\' & EDGE ot.'<n.rt + · L .. mdoble, SIG-lil 7 . · Able to a11sume run 1~11 :n r~ f)J~ll\Vo\$1-IEn.S to ,1·ork 11 i; 11 fa 11 ~ c. x · r a Y.
· ,,...anng, c r; n r 1 d <' 11 t 1 11 I ; r-Ornngc Co firn1. As s In rn11t food restaurant optn· t':ithuidaNllc &: c h e ~ r !.u I·
• cow1sclin& & r e I err 11 1 . de~ndable. C'!ll for prom pt I Htlp Wented, MIF 7100 I " [ PRIC'FS \r.f· (·Or~c· UP , lnl( soon In Nt'A'PQJ1 Benl'h. · N('\\'l'JOrl Center, 644-2.W
! Abotllon ltd opt Ion & .I rrtt ~it. John~ Buy•r'' $1'K S 11 Q V [. Q N , ;. · Youri. I Cull 752·0240 o .. 02-ll or e.pply DENTAL RECEPT.
keepinii.' EXPER. + C"PENDAllLt:: ~ ll<"avily expcr. rnan in buying F..V.fl~Y INcor..n;;? You In 1~nro11 l'.!'<per.-atJ phases of front
I APCAR1'; (142...4.(;;6 RE.A.SON.ABLE ~RlCES * * * AAll. Betltt Po;ition i for chllli1 storfl operation con help h:Y carnlt!J Cll;lrl'l l VICTOF!.J.A STATION cle!ik & takeX·l"llJ'I. Mlaslon * PAU! It CARO READEit CAl.L DOUG, ~S..76;;.& SECRETARY ~ !t-llln$C bl<tg & gardenin; money •~ an ,\\'ON RESTAUltANT _VJ!io· Call 83().1.100.
i AD/R.ElXJCTION. 1 f~XPERIENCEO Japanete U z; f<.c~ Aaen<-7 hns '1 ltenla. R E PRESENT A Tf\'E.; 9:90 Dt:rire St.. Ntv.'J'O!J_ DENTAL ASS'r Dp or D.A.
I l083l BEAClf BLVD. ; gardener )'ard, mAinteoance . :~1.8~/= f~d~ f'lexlble houn. I'll train I COOK· TRAINEE Sehl. ~. \Vknda
I SI' ANTON 527~ t and dw> up llU-llYJO ! "°'"'· ntc. hendwritlna, ro.. Dia I A Job! you, lnt.,...stcd! ca 11 Salary •CCO<'dlna IO .... -l~U Noon.
l.tALE,. caut'UlaA, t 3,; FINE EDGE J for people & rtpres. ~ru"r 540-7041. Prefer no 1tudt:tltl. !:.'it:per. DENTAL A.M1statrt. ~·d, I Ii~. 80t.lta nice fir!. • U.rd ~falnll!nance Strv\oe . l)'Pf!' 60 at.-cumtcty & bl' 556-1100 pret'd., but will train. AppUI l!uet1elk Ir: ch t' e r f \\ I •
.1J..)t. for JIOU. marrllll'· f Clt&nUPtt/11a.ullna. ~ I J:ood ipeUt"J', BABYStffiR l'.lt't'ded Mon bth\'Mn 2:30 I of:.rt pin. Ne.wpot1 Otnl~r • ...._K!i
):.,. Boi<GE 611~ ss;. m II YARD CLEANUPS .!:!! ~~h ~. 11ae,.~, I 2706 Harbor Bl .. SWlt 207 thtU f'ri, 10'~'"°· 2 Hamblqtt Hamle1, IMS DISH MACKINI! R
)lftlblema aolfod Q'Ukkly i i' l'Ul'I~ mAhit. 864109 Ne:;'n°&ach SUltllWl!IO C'o!Ju. Mesa ~11,'!"~ A~~· $l hr .• ~!:e~ CM. Ask fol' Mr. F.,;:ime,::;:: Pl):1~~
t --· $ C 0 -C 8 4 I ' L1wOC41ro by "'l G1l1" Ell&bllil><d l9IU «XI r;o, Eucllcl, An&b<tm ·BABYSITTER M>< homo. s I OOOK w/upd. •mplo)'ee b<n<llb. Apply
1 u.rttme. nt~~nupJ · 6Q·9907 ~ Can '11S.ata:I da).'l week, Cotta Ale11, 21 Call Ior aoot.Afoti IJ~ t"ri. Cotti Affllt M • mo r i a l y .. mil dfm!nlltd 1MOW • EOOE •llP<lrt""":t !Aenvrnt:.~ Dl!IEci'Olt boys, I ... cell all 5,30, 131..-. """"'"" 3111-\tlciarla, C.M.
-IMfantl" Qallj dep<n<iA.bl<. Call IOI' pronipt , Expor. prtr!l )'/time. mis llaWlhome SI..._ 6U-<1"52 s.u ldle u.mo wlllt • n.a Equel Oppor1un l11
..,..__ 540 •11 ~ ..._ Jd>n -I eonv. Hceplt&l -Piiot aua1n..s ad. ·w.sm P1lot Ouolll<d ed. /JEl~•!!flpia)>~~~-----
/
lASCO
INDUSTRIES
For Janitorial Work
quit.; C'ank.T u1 iuS\' -
1 ~1iil"<;'.Jl_!'Rt:l ic ~itricc: lhiurS! Jlr•hn1ann .• 213::-1»-19-IS.
I :J·l ..• ·1. o~~~~ Cou1urc. * GARDENER * . ' LOU \restl'liff Ur. Suite 10~. Br )onr 0\\11 !Josi;! Part or
;'>jc"·po.1.t Ueacl1. f/tin1c. \"our .... '"" ----llig>h lnc"Onl". Guaranlttd ! t-:XP1':JilE.\cr.u \\"ailre&.'te'S.
I Apply in pt!rson. Carro11··l'i Custon1eM1. }.Arn Now. Pay
ltcstaura.nt; b'2Q Aw. Plt'Q. l...'tf('t, ' 534-7187 or 534-3144 ' SC.
r:XPEltlLKCi'.:0 ladv 11ill do
hout;ecleaninc;. i{Cl~n.'lll'eS. GAR:'\lt::\T CU1"TER for
1 Call:H:l-lW'.) \\'t"t Snit l-lfg. Prefer
J." \llll lC \TOH.S & Sll 'E:T e:'r_w'ricnc! 01· 11i ll train. , ' E $2-j() Ju· . .i d:n· 11.·k. Appl\' 8 ~H:."1:AL ry1en needed for am.12 noon. s"1:i \\'. 18th ·st.
hghl1n;; fL:-:ture con1pany. Co !rt :l!c·ri
' Experienced ttnd,_ s. · .~. ·
n o n e s: P<'ricncel.!·1\"C 11-iJ11GE:\ F.:R.\l, nHrt:e work !& ' train. Contact \\'OOD .tt,1!f'<; dept. on The bay.
' LJG/ITll\G flXTt.:H.1-~ CO .. \·al'hlins: ,\s~. Corp. 2:iJ.j
I to:.:1 s. !; f.la1n St, Ir\'inc, \\'. c ...... st lll1y., ~.B. Call
Calir. 6Jfi..O:i!I aftl'moon. ---GENERAL OFFICE ' FACTORY A!.s1~1 busy .~t1 l('$;n1nn lo kt'CJl
their re<'ll l'Slllle offlL'('
Housewiv•• nu1nin~ Sll){)()thly. Sn.Jar;.·
!:100. Call Coo.slat P<'r:;;onncl
. \\"ou!tl you like lo work <:lose Ag-l'ney, :~. 2 7 9 0 1 lo hon1e in the In.ine In· Jf11rl>rlr Bh-d, C:<.t
du!:ltrial Con1plex as <1. ll'Slor G~~J::H,\L Office. Exp'd I of electronic con10011l'llls. rK.'t'. Full tin1e. \\"ii.son 's uf
I ~o e.~pcrienL'C nf'~SS!UJ.·. . California~ 1281 Logan. C.tlf. lfours · 7::'.0 to 4:00. Call:
' lJcUOic at j46.a,jjJ. Girl To Oper•te IBM • an cqulli opvortunily Hiltini;z-F..quipment. 8:30-2:00. ' einploycr n1 f rrrir round. \\'c 1\·ill train, ' I s~.50 hr l'itai1, l\1inor typing
F/C
.. .JO 11·pn1 rcq. Sina.JI fril'll<'.\!y
BKKPR to $750 Con1pany ncar Su. Coil •t
Fee Paid. Jo'ast gl'O~·ing lunrt Pla.:a Call Junr jjj....iJOl
dev(']OJ>f'r needs ~1iarp 111incl lx-fore noon.
to ;id\"arn..-e in 111anagemcnt. _ Z2 . 1 Also Fee Positions. Call
, Control Careers r.:n1pluy.IGU,\nDS ~ ""°' Ageocy, 556-831).;, '4001 SECURITY
I '"''" Hh·d .. N.H. OFFICERS
! 1'.lberglass Pro1notion to under CO\"Cf
' operatoc lo 180 day!!. No
I REPAIR ex per. necess. Foll • ' p/t i111e openi~. All equip. . .supplies. Contact Supervisor
PEOPLE Tu<"ll :i/n, 9am·12 noon &.
jpn1·8pm only. Apply 2300
I · \V. Llnroln, Anaht"im. I To rcpWr gl!l·r<ltttcd fiber· -----
g la.sf> reinforccU polyci;!er HARDWARE SALES
1·1:.'liin ba!htubf> and sho\\·crs. Reg. man for 11:1lles It. stock
· ~linin1um 1 year expei·it!llt't'" checkJng. Should have I required. Jo'ibergla6& Uoat r.ome exP<'r. in plumblng
repair acceptable. Ne1v 11100· suppl~s. electrical aus>plles
I
1 "JI plant in Anaheln1 nrca. or ICX'' · i\tust hr.ve outgoing
Union shop v.·ith tun bcna. pen;onolty for meetlne pub--
fill!. IW & be in good bell.th. Job
n1ay requtre IOTne heavy
Please apply in ptts011 : llfUng. \Veges commensurate
LASCO ~/exper. & ability. Apply
in peNIOn only. No J)bonl!
I ca.Us. tt.W. \Vrtibt Co, U6
INDUSTRIES ltochester, Costa Mesa.
HEAL TI! Spa la hi::,, ::"f
3261 F;. i\Uri Lo111tl J!CO~ that want to l!arn
l\nalt~ln1, Calif. are willing to work. (D4)
17141 003-1%.?0 8T9-Xl96 wkdy~. 9-5.
I An e<1lllll opportun1ly * * e
! en1ployer n1r r HELP I FIBERSLASS WANTED Sfl\ltTING }'ACIL.ITY,
Suptl" croupd floor Pm Um• drl""' ~unl\1 '°' indlvlduab lor I h CHOPPER GUN. G£L ,.,.., .. , .. dtllmioo.
co~ L.\MINATION alterooons. Moat ha YO
~ • Xlnt ft'qel, C&ll""""' drl-Uctnoe.
fully pold -" l piWl1 C..0 Mr. If~ a.l
lhat1n;.' c..:,,g•18).&aTJ or 612"321 for lnl .
* * * HOOKEl
INDUSlllES Jot a new tamlly room U.. -'"°"' 1-t~!fi 1009 Wiii ""°'*" ll, Onl&rio Datl,.t PPot; O•r,tllf~ ..,.w _un1,, .. ,..... twf)' da1f·
• ( • • •
' ' •
Por
man
~ .....
f':>o:N"l
!nr
O\'C"l'.
fOJ' I
Coll
H
ME
Cosla
llOUS
rnuple
llOUS .
public
$2 hl·
prPI.
if;r~tF.
F'ollo\
)fachl
t'XJ)('r.
opera!
I n!! p
n1cch•
proce.
r: .. pt'r
./\!ill~ll
• MOl\tllY, M1y 20, 1974 DAILY PILOT ~5
F 1100 H;ip Wa~ted, MiF 7100/H~lp WoniOCI, M&F 7100 f Holp Wontod, M&F 7100 Htlp Wanted, M&F 7100 Appllonc" IOll -
Lorge Co mpany
&ponding
L , "° n t f\ll ure
Deperidabte \.\1)l'l.lln !or w/68 yr old co. Rella, 21-46.
!lff'ad)I nlnht •'Ot'lc In Hi guard TIW\/1ady w /c&r.
N.D 40 hn 1 Mt. Levi, 846-5456.
S EC n ET/\ RY, F.'xp'd,
RECEPTIONIST I SALES 1
1 ~= lm~~'"":.-21~' 11
' TOOL MAKER 1 ';:";1"'111~; ~'i~;''ft. ~::
1
eralon, Wlliht:l'I , Dryert I. JYPISJ Gtound 1'-loor OpP')r1un1tr 1 Sr. Bu.yer 1ndus. 10 St4K TOOL ROOM . l1i!!hv.·111heN, ~ew W..r·
PE NNEL ASST
""'~' bttay per11on11el
m&J\83(11' ot I r o ,,.,. I n c
Newport ~ch flrni. Mws t
!ISO
n1eJl(·•l bide. \ -Su1fflni Nev.· Office 1 Sr. Proj{'ct c·1~lneer tllllly, (..'redit, B uf A, 36%.1
N 01 Leading Ind"* µrod . d<.elop 119K ,MACHINISTS , w. W•rner, SMta Ana, nur
OW HIRING 0 Peru 1 e e 1e c 1 ro n l " ln11urun<·e Company ~gal Se<'y, proball' s1r~ h.t 11.nd ?nd ~h.lf'S Pald med-1 lturbor. 9'19-2$21 .
per "f11 ~ej l dwork ln 1 1111iilch\x>(U'tl. A c cu n\ l c lo~xpa.nding $9.lei; Ofc• }'/C B!lkpr, Con~lr 1~. !c11I unrl life lnsurant•e .. • * flEBLT_ w;isher. dryerg, I
' 11·k. Benelits. Ph ~ M.AMEUSE, IOOd hrs., have iQO(I '8iln& "kl.Jiii.
I KEY PUNCH OPR. l1u.nUncton Beach. start · m. J Coutu!
1 J•nrt thne. & 10 l or U to 5. 9'S-12<1 . Per901111el Aaency, 2 l 9 O
\ ?illn. exp. 3 yra. 54$--1892 .. Jfarbor Blvd, CM ~.
rnanu ac ur ng, Jsu·ibulltii lyplst. ltl!n. 60 "'"P·"'· In No. \\'eJ11ern Sector Bkk:pr. Sf>f"y/Con!'lr to 7w O\tll'thue. di.h/\i·~h. s;;o & up LO l yr
"-Ins la I \at I Of\. No electric typewrlltr. Of Orange C.Ounly I Gent>ra1 ort!N."" 10 s 171 II i,:n ... 5~218 or 839-7620.
ox.Pf'rl<'nee n~!!IU"f dul:' to ror sales & !11.'l'vict in Long Heccp;Jonli.l Sl..'l''y $60(i E I I .t • ---~xcellrnt lra.lnlni prorran1 DRAFTSMAN I C11ll For Appl. l:W&l'h -\\'l"sln1lnlittr -Clerk Typllil to $50(' ven nq nterv .. ews·\ R•nt w •1her1/0 ry•r•
MECHANICAL I PHONE Sollcl1or, Be a' b
LHdlne Volvo ASSEMBLERS area, houl'iy wa .. & liberal ' bonus home · recreat1011al Manufocturor N0td•
for 1nen I: womeh 18 & : & cxl11Una Pl'oduct llnt1;. PRODU~O Indu$lrlal Relations llunt1ngton aJ'Ca.,, Leads & : S61:"y tu p1.,.s ~.:X. 8 A~l.fi P"-1. t.Soncht.l-' 1hru $2. \Vk. }o""ull maint.
O\'t't.
1
....... pc•, ,·n J· 1n1ed. openings. {'Otnpl_elf> tr111_n!ng furn. tu l.er<iil f'if't' i·orp ftB StiO< l'l'ldn). Aftf'r hours l'ull I • GlJ...1211.l *
L .. , • valve des\gn, Contact Tl1 fto!tll (714) 494-9401 qual1f1f'd apph<'ont~. 1 ,., I ., · -----·--~--TOP WAGES pl'O(ful·tlon toollng, toter-COROTE ·-t\O PHE\'IOUS r:XP I ~<>1·1-..·111.1) L<·ir:o l $70IJ r iuH ~u11t. at iil·I• ~.3 1:;1 OVE'.\', RHnge, ilnli:, trig.
11n1:e!' & fll:t . rtake detail K CORP.\ CLERK TELONIC NECt:SSARY I S..'1.: y tu ~l'll llli<:I' to S70f' Mn1b1nation unit.
. To a.i.:Hmble new produclli products. 642-3811
For ritore lnforrnntlon Dill. Urav.·lug!il dh'l?ctly front lti)'· 1281.2 Knott Street L!1·en!K'd L&lJ nppll!"ants H.ei1.•Jit 1·~p•~1
tv s5otl LEAR 673-36!
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Call M.!"a"~~e. Only ()Uf5, Xln't ~nctits. I Garden Grove 898·1389 l1ttn1l'liiate opening tor n INDUSTRIES 11\~~~:~~;ll ~~~:i~ii!ll~s. c.~r s:~ur,~1rrn;i~1,'lJ SIEGLER : ~~.~~~~>_Al~\f~. lc'~Xl~~-,,~t'~"-~-,-,~-.'
CLA .. VAL CO. ~tro1AN!c. bp. ...,, 1th matun! Ind.iv. ~'ho likes comn1issionf> f1-on1 NEWPORT 5.i: ... :i..~:)1
HELP WANTED-17th & Jlt1u:enti11., C~I diesel &. gasoline heavy challtnge & v~riety; c1U1 ! Laguna Bla ch $800.$1600 monthly Pe rsonnel Agency A"'u"c-'t71o"n-----~IO=l 5
:-ln't llC'ncfils. Free life It. TI\OIOrt. 1111>. & pd, vacatlou. auoocssruUy h & n d I e a I Equal Oppor. Employer 8: n1ore lo stru1. 833 Oov•r D r., N.B. TRANSPORT
f'\111 & PfUm~ ul('(t Ins. Pald abl:icnce & M2~9G1 I onevariety ol lnterdetapartmental !-"or Prrsoual Jn1ervie\1' 642• ••Jo
METRO CAR WASH 1·~l·ations, l'roft .shari.na. ~IEDICAL ,\SST, b" ck on one con c1s; can --C II C L B 'd I -DYN-AMICS 2950 llatflslr Blvri EqWl l Oppoi-. eniployer office, exp. v.·tinJechon", 1 \\'Ork independently 1\'/mln. RECEPTIONIST • · · r i ges CQsto. l\.teii:ll r..W-819! l''K(. l'I X I:. La : supervi11lon; can deal v.·/ No typing or shorthand, 11·ork (714} 635-7921 9am-Spm ~111 \\'. St-ge1'1'.rr .. 111
l!OUSEl<EEPEC. I C.'9k 101· L>:<:Al.-S.Cly: ' • w p 0 rt I G...i' 1.,::.. c~~y491-11S6. "· 1 detail & "'1°'~ the """'be'. day• 0, nights in • lovely I (71 4 ) 540.5082 6pm·9pm . SECURITY '''"'' 1;:::~~:·· .~ .. ~· ""'"'. ""~""" on ""' ,,.,,,.1. i
AUCTION!
N!uple-. Ll\'c·ln. fl!u c;t be Center, Exp'd per s 0 n a I i --· --1 ~an1c. Req s 2 )'T'S off1cc atnw~phr1"C. No . r '<JI · _ _ I GUARDS • . , _ , . , unemcumb<>rc1', BrautHul ' i11jur\c~ 641}-8()jl l\.fcrt.'handlsblg ' l'Xper. & i;kill ln opf'rn!inl?: necessar y, 11·c train . Apply lSCHEll' !\tarhU1e • S11 ln ... ~eed pflinie gua!'cls f·u·:i'_qu;il ''Jl/)1111111\~) •t11rl"~ll po1·(·•·\J1i11, ori1•nu1! ohjt>t'I~.:
home. 642-9600. I LtNDSE~ NUries H.rgistry & SKILLED 1 10 key & calculator. Typing In pen.on aflcl'noons ul'I )'hi 11 , S('I uµ & ru~ I !)range Co. uri·;i. 1--.)1.1 \lit Pf.linlin!!, J•'lj,'£-lry, nntitJu~·~.1
l!OUSEKE,f:PF.ll. Lido 1>1,: L I ~ D SF. Y M • d I c •I des•rable, but not mfd. '."'· 2llt llai·ho•· Blvd.. """"1"'• '"'' vhop. "'"' • hHm·iew C"ll ' ' 13 'I T OOL & DI E MAKE RS ~;;~;:,~,,,,~~·~~:,. S~t:.·~1 · · · r 1 DuncanEl-tron1·cs ~sta!-lf~i;a: ______ 111;u:h1nes, ,·rry good \ ·13:'>-S9:l9.1.a11·rr111·('_ , Ll \',C II\ or out. Local ref~. .ni,p oyn1rnl Agt'ncy. Nee$ on. 1 28°' ,. I ~. I RECEP'T'TON I .~ 11·t1yping1 \\"Orkin~ rond, ·'pp J ,• Security, In!'. l...Utu; UC':u;h. I·' .. 1r~ {')\jllf~Cll<'•' 111 T111·,.._ P\"('. at g P . .\1.1 613-9189 HS11, LVN'M & Pracli<'ali;, u 1 DJ A.l"'V C\I' Rd I b . C .1 . · : .. -.. -.---· -p1 u;:1'-•i.S11<' di•'' ,y l'•·u,,lt /n,,pc1;11011 .v 111·i1·at\' salt>•
fllnlc & fen1. For pvt duty, NSKILLED l Costa ~1esa 54.~i-82fil & .10 kr}'. !or US) .. '.\I.I ~. ~ 11 f ~rd .. '.'fl fl.11 <' <l st:;RVf(~. !'it;\. ;\!:111, 1.~1 1 t-:;1·111111:..: hot l"l llll;..( rl.<'• ilh1i1 . t hl1J Stit. !:.! :\oon to 1111
ovrr 40. f.ilt' invalid c;ire. ·' · /:..> oyer 1n I'd u y d o .. 1• ,~ ... , ., ' i •' " 11111 a i .. • lll" llOUSEKEEPER, pa1·t tim<'. staff ll:!lier 8:. other niedlcal I I F'•iuol Oppot' <'•npl 11 chiropruct1c of(-. ExJ)('r.[ l .11~111cC'1111:-,:, .:0:10 Atr.\·ay, Ll:.i~s. 1op \\Hi-:•'S -t ,.,,111111 111 1 11 1 I' \I.
,.
61
flelds.S.W-4S16,COAtaMera.• I pre · r. nr 11·oo • o...u,,,,,,l'.'3 i\pply Huy C;irt·y llll'\Ton ... ·I·... ,. DESERT GALLED'IES
,,e1vport, ~>-7:1fi3 ~1f~N .. 6l&Jr16 1-----, . ·o .. c I .i .. " i1n• i1 . ·~ OUSE -.--~,--,~-1 1.I VE-IN run1panion for I NFFI)FD , --'._. --.s ~~ ,\ .\1 s T I~ E s .'> i,· i t h , ::irt11i1n1, li, I :-i. va,,1 h\~ ., I ,\f~PLY Ar WEST -' l~blic ~a~i~'11s l';:~'fi,~~; ! eldrl'ly lady, vi1io n lin1lled. NQ1,v' ' PRODUCTION R. N . WANTE D ~~:ierirn··?· i.e11·bing cu,s~1uns _L;iR~1111Cl::._~a1_:!:_. -----I ASTE CH :o;i-12 \\'. Coas! lh1)'., .'\.U. I
$2 hr +hontUi A; · ~-1~, i\lu~t drlvl'. no s1noki1ig. 2 'i To 11·ork for tarie t'lf'Mrica] I For l\ll lT l::llnil' in liarrl<'n 1 <' < ~'. 1.1 Y O\lng 3E .VI ·: ~lu. ,\llt'11cl::1111 full I ,\ ili1 hir1n nf Till·~ (,,J•p. &15--2'200
pref. 831-93 IO. · cs .. or J 1.2!.~Y~ .v.·k off. :wr-2!M _ ronc.:>rn in Orange County r TECHNICIA I G1'0ve. Good hours, S Iv :.. ~g;:rt:'Fo.~iie ~~ .111 ~a 11 Y ·
1 ~ . plt1.1ni:: •. \ppl) t!.i!~:.. 30;:0 ,..:,. , n .. rlhill, s-1111;, .\rl::i * 1\0TIC~! * ----LUBE '.\IAN .,~-a-""''' I 1l_j'(';"1. N ~ton lh111 Fri. Sula1·v -~· "r,mll('lltl.tll }1\i.11. I '1 °,.~ n rl I L \llllll 71>, Jl)IJ Ad:HH~. C\t 11111·}10-11?1 '\\'(' \\ill b•n> your un"'·anterl 1~1~F.DJ \TE 0 · F I ' ' · .--•· ,., ' IMME -· .-11 P ov111e111 n1r 10 lua\'S -· ---' ~ o.v r·n · 1 1
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) flCT1lL~s o~ ~e\\1JC1l1 Center Shell, ~I DIATE 1 bencflts. ~nd 1·e~un1c to
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i·a··~tion. & gi·oliP SF:HVlCF: Stn. At!~•nrlnnl,1 E<111al opp<1rtu11!1~· f'1nnlrt}"f'l' iurniturr, je\1•clr)', antiquec; ,,° c~~n~~/ L
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f i:;
0
1 ,0 21" · E. Co1u1l 11\\<y, N.B. OPENINGS I Perform C'leclronic ehcrkout" l\~llt'I)', 9,3.hl ,Ch.a P rn a 11 • ill~llraner. s1 1111 hc'1\\·een lull & p/lin1e. 990 E. Cott,,\ ui· ~rll for you on ~ .. ~;. is req'~. It"! Sr!~~~fl l"&.I L\·~·SrOr\lP areas. NI : ESxp1r. Not Necessary (,If" m!C'ro "'R\"l' product~ & Gare.ten G1'0\·e ~....!_!.______ ~r:.00 & S3.j(} hr. Apply at ~11~ ·-N_.B. ___ --· u RG EN TLY ........ 11!>1gn1nenL
oper ate. Quality Conirol . sluft~ for •"·"flEll~-.:ion.f Due To f Hr . <'>~n~potwnts. '.,~l.1n1ral RESTAURAST i\lull.', 168811-lalr, lrvin<'. 5'.i7-407:i SHIPPING CLERK ~ In:11pe ·t or rl
1 1
Pt'1·,;onncl 1.Jcpt·, .11oag XlntTrainin nri<f'r\l'.f'St:'h~lt1 .u·:1n~ln 1'"en1ale 111 \rork days or .\nEqualOpportunily RC'spon~ilill' fur ui·dC'r *Col. R .F . By•rly*
. c . f'C' ro l!osp, N.B. \ 9 f'l1eh'0111cs. :\lln 1 yt"'ar night..;. RlirtGEP.. Kl:'\G, En1ploy•'r NEEDED ···CX' L"'(J ~=~~ll~a~ini~~~l:~f~ctl~: [ $150 WEEK Ly l'elttted C'XJM'riC'nCC'. l 6 3 ~ 1 Be a ch BI v tl .· ,,~,~."~'~l~ST~R""E~,~,.-,-,-•. ~;u~l~l -,-.r r~~c~·:~:~~ll, lt~~~l:i :\111~1~. ~~\ ,;: u~~;rsifir·~ Alll'~I~~~;:·) J.~-.:JM'r. pr<'f'tl . ElrMronlc t ' Cllll f'nr Appl. Huntington liraC"h. (part thne. Pattison SaU de-1•harn1nt:1•ut11·al f1l'OCIUil~.I ~,\T\0!\\\"IDE I ~~c;:~'~\ef;1 y c XO~ er sm~:: Mach·1n·1sts ! ~~/~~:.\:k;!t!1:~i~1~ lnctu~trial Ht>lations ROBINSONS I "lgn. 11:: 17~7. . ~:~~~:e i~~~:~t~;I ~~I~)'~ 11" c: ASSEMBLERS l.ICf;~st:?.~st.:~~D" D ;: D .,.
flN"tronlc ron1ponenls .. Xln't ! * 543-9226 * (714) 494-9401 ::iecre1a1-y ,\pply !11 P(·L"~r,11 ~1F\JBBR o~· SATIQS,\L
v.'tlrklnt:" 1'0nd:ot r, benefit~. TELONIC Fash ion Island O 1i:\l\1·9:30A~I & i\UCTIONl·:ErtS ,\SSOC.
Al<' bid"". Full 111·"" ,r,, d I :\tODELS \l'an,"d: 1·r-·I:~•" 1: SENJ R ~Ion, \\"eel . Thurs Or fL'L GlO ~. BroaJv.·11y S .\. ' ·~ w .. ~~ -"' !las Openin~ Fur J58-2:s9!) :;.i:s·:.!9S."i
d<'ntal plat\, F:OE. 01...... I nte rhntogrn;tier 111•<111:-1 nttr !C". INDUSTRIES SECRETARY L inwilco La bs ACKE Tnst1un1cnts, 102 E. Oa.kt"'r ' 'ml models, "!:'" IS-2'8 fnr FURNITURE 21 18 i\c11·1)1)rl J3h·d, C:'ll P RS Cameras &-EquljJ.-1030 .~~ta 111~~~· 919-~~I "'n1i-nuclr n1•x\cllnl!: 111'1t --------• ----~-----·-...;.......;... pin·uri. In i-r'urn l1Jr cu~·; Laguna Beach \\'ill support lhc Region11J 1 SHIP & RECEIVll\G
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\T\"ITAR Pre1'1?t 1~1n1 tel~.
INSURANCE SALES
t t! r c I[ r t 1"11 SAL SMA Snlcs r.tanai:::ct', including ' CLr..:~i..: . . VOLT J.~,;· Origlnnl hox &
lmm.diaite OfHin·
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/7\1~./f·~~· ') 10· l · a ' 1 r:qual Oppor. En1ployt'r E N cusr onier liaison. niaintai11 Expcr1.cnced, 111 r 1111 n ~ 1\·aiTonty slip $'2ll0. ;;oi~9'11
I ings for m11chinlst& -rcco1·ds of sales b00ki11gs orders:_ l'.nck111g, rrcc11·1~1:.:; Instant Personnel ca ts I03S
'.'\o r xp ncr•., cnrn \\'lu le ynli ; •nd oper•tors . on ~HJTf:L '.\!.1l1J\, 11·tll trn1n . PUBLIC Relat11J11s -S'l-lcs, ! ~I usl Be ~xperienrcd und 1·on 'l.'spondenC"C'. \rill & sh1pp1nc:. Clran lit e i\!;ijol' '.'ltedicn! Plan ---·-_
\rarn. pRrt tinit. ei·•·~ ,I.: 1st and 2nd shifts. 1 Apply h! (ll'r~n. Coi.t.i ;\lcsa J'ar1 Un1e, $200. rno sn lar)', 1 al~ handle typing 0 I : 11·ri~t produi.:ls. X 1 n t :'\01• Al'ailallle
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d f II
Inn, 3'.rl'.J Harbor 01., C:\1. lo hrl11 pt'Omotc tit•kct sales I ,•pply 1) ..... ~.onn"I 011,.,.,. reports for the Controller as cn1ploycf' bcnefi1 i:. Tcn1 porury SC'rvlce ;'i-~1 s, u tu.11C'\\h .nf111.1h·,eTURRET LATHES _________ ,, __ f t 11 ,, "'~ .. .... , -s1" ,. \"en· hon1el cl"ll k I' , •v MOTEL •MAIO or spor s €'Vents. r.~., 12-:; p;-.1, i\!on lhru Fri 1i·c\I 11;; c-o,_'"TCSj)()ndrnt:e. 1 1->ini:;:~lcy !\l rg Con1pany ., o ..:a1npus Dr., Suite lOCi . Y ·., 1 ·\j,·ec •) u
FREE TO YOUll
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l'armC'nt lnJurance Group II •TRACER LATHES EXECUTl\'f: SU ITES flC'Xllllr. ~tr. Pn cc, "'1'l--~0 ' No. 2 r·,u;h1on Ii:la nd, NB . . . ' '_1$1 Pl!cenlia ,\,·c., (;,\.!.:.... Ne~\ port Ueal'h 5-16--17-ll l.:ltlcn. t:t:I Lani* ·I0-183-4 •HONES !136--0-lll I Equal Oppo1· Emplo er \\e arc a cl)11a1n1c, ,:.ow1.; Sl!ORT ORDEH. C.00!. D . F~qu1t\ Oppor. 'Employer C"'_5_i_9·_•~33~8-'~'-"~'·-'~·~= _ _ _ .~ I 1 WALKER & LEE . . . Y t;'nipany _located n l':l ~' sl11ft. -IOhrs. ,\ppl~· ~i1 1 -; , , ,,_ '. Dogl I040
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;<.;SUR AN CE EXp;r·d
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eGRINOERS . NEW FACTORY : I ROlITE MAN, f 11 1 m c \\a:ner B\\d. a~d Harben person, ,\'ed·Sal, 2 •. ipni, i.:i • \IAITP.ES.".i \\ant~ 21 • .,..1 ;:.,;"-'--------'=
proj)('rty & Cas ally a, , . •BRAKE , ~ranch oullet~ Jullit opening
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. GROWS AGAIN I industnal laundry Great B!1d . Good fringes a!1d t\lgu<'l Counin· Club 237001 )cars old, Dny shift, Apply 8 PUPPY WORLD e
""-om rin Gooi u sala~·cnc-l ! OPERATORS 1 111 area needs the follow_ing : , . o PP or t u nit Y . for ~la.fJ.' oon1mensurate \\·1th I ClubhouSf' Di:, Lag u n al i~ IN~_son, ~Ci:l-Sal 2-lprn, \Vatch dogs -German Shep.
hent-fHli. Old Mtahii~~ I •EXPEDITORS ~l~t T'"11<' $185 \1 k . Ada~s-~1~1a J advancemE"nl. Salary + exJ)f'~~encc. Send rc!iume o1 ! ;o.;1guel I r.:J Niguel Countl'y Cluh, herds, Chihuahuu, TI n y
Laguna Bf'nch Agency. Ca!l 1 •DEPT. INSPECTORS \~~s"~::n 12' ~~I Office Nean pletlon 1 1.-0111111. 919-7382. applJ. 'SOCJ.\L \\"orkPr, ~I S,\", n1ed ~~<"flubhousc Dr, Laguna : Poodle!'l1 Pit Bulls: Cock.A· Roy~· :\larcum ,\ i.: c n c )''I •TOOL MAKER All benefit~. cArHr posiuons. i \\'e \.\"ill be opening our ne\l· I Sales !No experience okJ Standard 1 C'xper. Personnel Dept , · b'h O~d ~n.g~ilshki'>ani~cd, ·l!lJ-1Jl! eTOOL ROOM I 494-1064 offi<'c at the romer of ENGELHARD SILVER Hoag J-h1-.,;;pital, :\.B. I WAITRESS ac suns, us e~, gs,
I MACHINIST i ~ .. ·----1 ~l11Rnolln & Adanis in the . Memories, Inc .. l-STORE-CLERKS--1·,1u~1 be "'·ell groon1ed & 100 .i\IIXED PUPS! Stud INSPECTOR ,
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NITE AUDITOR : 1·rry nrar fut~. \\"(' fwl $600. Wk. Commission . , . .. . · reiiabll'. Exper hel tu!. ~rvice li-1~1 Brecd.11. Opeo
'•PROD. MACHINE ,Jlot!.'I or club exprr. reqrl., that this office 11·ill be !hr Llf\E }.ALLIXG A Subsidiary of IC.1!'011:rs, Stock Clel'k!', l'!oo.r Surf & Sirloi~ Cves=,·c:53=,l·~5027=~· ----
. OPRS. I l\11011i·lc-dgt:' of !\CR 4:l()I] L·1t1n1al i;-in a total Rc<il OUT OF BED APPLIED i\tAGSETICS · Cterks. Good luturl'. Xln t :t'l';O \\. Coast H · :\B GOLDEN Retriever puppies, l~·Jl1:"'"~". '.nSfX'C'ILon o f !'.\lust knm\· hluC'pr1nts .t F/linll'. St:\.> }>(0rsonnci! Ec;late S(>l'l.iee ccnler. \\"e ' IFYOUS°ELJ.: CORP. 1 tlC'~iefil ~. P<'rrr:nnl'nl f/~ilnc.I · .. · W} ••.• 6 \\"ks, AKC, .shot11. !l'! trotlll: as" t; iH b I 1 r." n1is.:.) I :\Igr. ' ha1·C! in1m('('!iate opening~ FOR 1'HF: TOP 'co~IPAN'i Wl S. Anne St. . O\er 21. r>;o . f It I n1,.. \\~.TTHES.~. & heacl gu_I. f'antastie ten1penncnt. SlTJ. f11~1"1E'C'ts 111.1C'h!l"K"I\ p.i1ti:. Paicl medical & life B1lboa Bay Club l bolh for licC'nsed sales 11{E TOP LI :-;'£• Santa Ana. Calif. 92'i0 1 I i.tuJents. Apply !ll per;;on, r.xpd & O\Cr 2:1, App~y Ill Good v.·01·ki11g d 0 i ". ~:~~';7n,'.;,,l"(r.,a~~· I I r~1r~·'~ insurant·e, paid pcn5ion plan I 1'..'21 \\'. Coai;t Hv.·y., NB i J'IOOI. pie~~. people \\'IKl v.·ould ~ ""!TH 1'0P INTEc1{1rY~ ,\n equal opportunity I i-· EPI]C:lh' c
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''.;'Ei\t . b;;~ri~ be~11c1en& si2 p~~·; C!)4..5lm. · · · . EVENING -. -. 1 1ke to ttu<f' ad\'antage of the I ENG E 1 HARD h· 11 . k ' 1a ~· • , os a 1 esa , . , ""''=":::;c===-~-1' r 1 n ts, i:; p ee1f1cat1ono;, : :\IGHT AUDITOR \\'anted. 1 \l'nlker & Lee Ji('('n.«I' " .~ · , . •1 niur s, employer --STRUCf lJR-ES--19th St. C.1.1. 1 DOG OBEDIENCE a.ASS
.i;.ainpl<'• & fl r or I'~ 11 e,. . : INTERVIEWS I Apply Surl f.c Sand Hotel 1 trnining progran\ t' 0 r i.~.riahzcs, _ \.\eli!1ts, -9 9 9 I WAITRESS wanted run rpart . TO Start \\'ed. June 5, ln tht Interprr~ _hlucprlnl s & 15..15 S. Coast llv.-y., L.Bguna I furthrr lnforniatioi; please : Jo ute E'a . -:11}.i/~50-100 oz. I . MECHANICS tinie. El Matador, '1168 Nev.'·' Ne~']Xlrt / Irvine area. Call
schC'n1uuc dtngrarns. I 8 A.\t·:i"~I. J11ond1;1y thru Beach -494-6.i iC. ! cidl Jnck Ayers 111 5-15-9-191 : b11r (and ENGELJ-IAIW ii SECRETARY Applicants should h 11 v e ix>rt Bh•cl Costa i\.fe!la A ! ,546-4""~92;=.8·'o-~c-c:--:,,.-~ I I Frirl11.y
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·I ,\LL 11·e sell?! J. If you al'1! N strong ba ck g r o u n d in 1 1 .~0 be
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Cllll For Ap~\ntnicnl Aflcr hour11 call Plant Supt. NOTE CLERK ho ntlable and 111C'an fl ANCE 1 aircraft or related mlg.;AJTRY n ~l n tweE"n 2 &a.[G:O~~~ AK~~ ~al~
ln(tu..,tMa.1 l«>lation• at t71 4l r,u;.3131 business, please ca 11 I industrial settings 1v Ith ESS -Food & n ' · rna ei,
opening in our Note Dept .. I ANYTl~1E ! Training and abilities in Isl article y,·ork Blue Beet. 107 Zlst Pl., N.B. I SlOO. " (714) 494-9401 LEAR '''c presently hnve an Walker & lee 67:-r213I or 5 4 7 -80 9 6 SECRETARY !IPN'lftc & demonstrate Cocktail. No dunimies. Ski's : \l·eek.s~ 17th. $65. to
TELONIC I ~lustbf'g~v.·!th figures_&j •1 •l 1•1 •1 t assistance? Ct'.'r.t ninly! as relates t'l airframe WELDERS i AFGl-IAN _Pupp!e~, AKC.
hkc detail \1ork. Pr ~r Real Estate Sales l\lanagtn1ent available. structural parts & tooling. AND · sh~' qUabty. ;\l/F. INDUSTRIES exJ>('r, helpful, but Jiu! 1 1J.'1ERICAN Position avail;:ible to sharp I GENERAL SHOP I 6~l>52 675-491 1
SIEGLER 1
ntocessPleue C:Ont11.<"I I $60 II. 1~7R AGE SILVER e.xperienced t'al"('('I' inindrd : Trail Rite TTililer li--1fg . 3100 11 ~ .O flHll,\ltU,\ PUPS ,.
Lanun• Beach Grer Nev.·land Licensing School ,:s,\LE:s · individual. lleavy stai INSPECTOR \.\'Cent-' Santa Ana, .... .J 1\eck.s ol!l. S.a • . EXPERIENCE typing, numbers orirnled ' S 0 . nu, .• ~o I * 5"8--jl'~i * y:: ual
0
F.
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Bank of Amerlc1 in helpful. Able 10 \\Ork under PRECI I N . phone calls pleaseJ •
.q ppor. .mp oyl'r TRANsftORT !\ev.·port Center Olficf' I Huntington Beach NOT NEEDED pr<' s s u re . £ x c elletit Pr1n1ary assignn1cn1 1~·111 WF:LDER experien -ed 1 ·itl 1 YR old Samoyed. 1\11 shots.
DYNAMICS
t·11shlon lslan_d t•l 11 B•ach Blvd. , $S~5 li-lin. to S2f00 monthly ccunpany benefits & \\llrking require kn o "'" 1 c ~ g e ol 11-roughl ' iron, cA P ~ 1 ~~ ~'e!"Y friendly. Ca.JI Jcf!.
Call ~350a I e r·a,;t St11..rl Training guaranteed. Con1n1is1\on ii oonditlons. ~urface_ plate & dct~1\ layo;.:1 ARTISTIC DESIGNS I~ 1-586-0S6U. 10 i\i\t . 6 Phi.
3131 W . $eg•r1trom Equa.1 Oppor. Employer 1 • Closed Cil'cuit TV \ qualirled. Conip..iny \'chicle, inspection operations for IRON, n 2 Yorktown, H. B. ltARLEQlilN Great Dane
(N•ar H•rbor & t.. Nallony,·ide Referrals I repeat buslneKs, l\'1.'t'kly & CALL maf'hlnes, parts, s ub-or phont' 5J&..7060 : puppies. 'Xlnt tcmpcrn1e11t,
Warner> ~U R SE S A I D ES, e t.ledical Progrant monthly bonuses. Daytinie THE IRVINE CO. assembly & us se m b I Y. \VHO \VANTS ;o \\'ORK? I AKC. 547.Jlti-4.
E X ~ E n I E N C E ' • :..lanagement Progran1s I y,·ork. No eves. Locnl nieat &H-3389, 9am·noon APPLY AT DRIVE A CAB' GREAT DANE Pu ·
S1nt• Ana PREf ERRED. All shiftit. I • J.·ree 3 \\'eek In Depth \\'hoi.esaler. Equal Oppor. Emplo)·er ASTECH Cl'OOS ... •1nur .. ~ .. _: k R bl ~ phopies.
11•11 •g ........ ss•\·,, ""'""'"'" '"Ith 1' Equal oppo~unlty en1"'"l''' u.,,,Jy 'lanor 2"52 v· T-' A d' . . TRE "' ... -#.,_ nuw ... , wor easona e to .,........... n1e.
INSPECTOR
ht Shift
' ~ • "'"" '"",~,.-• ., .. •~ t'""' a..E· ·ad l~ • ~ IB t i-!Llnlng Program !-.lr Mart.in, 2].3...77()..3543 , IVISIOn Of Corp. for yourself, be your oy,·n 1 Aft J pm 1136-5332
experif'nt·e in c hf'C'kl ng \ M/F Sll: a, ....aguna Hilts. e Earn While You Learn FACT IS 130:'.0 So. Redhill, Santa Ann boss. Men or women. Can '
n1atrrial t~ standard~ t 1 I i~1 NURSES, RN'• for \'IP J Call 8111 Flory 132·5440 E SECRETARY I (714\ ~4121 be slightly handicapped.! PUG PUPPIES, AK C, 1 I.Ii i ~.~)'~. c.?1 packag(' gorx.b. I MACHINIST I area.s, operating rm, JCU, Monday thru Friday veryone Eats Meat I EqUA\ oppo11un1ly employer Neat • Clean Appearance.; n1a.t!, 1 fawn male, (Z13)
·•1 cu~tonier J1hipnHp'",t·,'d· , all shifta for expansion • TARBELL -SALES-OUTSIDE STRUCTURAL Sttf'I General Vts .• retired. _,,,..e 25 to 70. '
6
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7
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r:xct>llf'n! bf'nttil~. I p 1 ~ ~ I ~
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Production, l'lhort run & : program. enio,. nn~ ......-pt., Outstanding opportunlt)• to Immediate o""••lng !or , , Shop Forcn1an, Star D Iron Sur. plement your inrome. COCKER SPANIEL Pups. 1
1ell th, life t n s u ran cc , 1 ... 1 J.long Hoop NB "~"' aCIV'I · · ,.... o b bl d I l blk • \·11.c:itioivi & sick lanve. ~-n, 1cty. Plcl\11a~t sus:ound· • • ~~ RECEPTIONIST, Fr 0 u 1 1 JOln 100 yea1· old co. shril'P sci f sta.i1in~: \Vo1·ks, 5.11-2246 nve a ca 6 hrs or more a on e ina c, v QI; taa
Apply In Pel"Sflll 111gH •• new Uld,R" 1n lrv1nl' In-NURSES Aide, f/tlme. 1-3, offl~ appeattoce, .1 it e : Extensive training progrHn1. lndh·idual .,..·ho d rs ire i:;; STUDEl\ J'S y,•ork: pi t now, day. Apply ln ~non, _fcn1 . 8 1vks, &la-0829
PRIMARK
dui:;t~al cornplf'x. Call :O.lr. 3-1 I: Ma~re. w I exp c r typ1r:g. phot~ order taking & Unlln1ited growth potential. va riNI re5ponsibiliti~ & · ti t Suinmer. Neat, rellaUle. '\'rllow Cab ro., 186 E. 16th Fr•• To You 8045
Challson. TI-1-979-3993. pref d. XJn t co n d s •
1
· pubhc re-h~hons. Contaf't ~Ir Co v.·ill spon!IOr for hfC' & 11·ork ind(>pendent!y. Typinl!'. i i tr. Rich.trds, 846--54:». St · Costa Mesa. _ _; ____ '-___ .:.;..c; I PRODU.CTS . 6-12-2410. PArkl"r 64>-5997· sre~1ty )icense. Salary to S0.90 11·.p.m., Sh 100.120 1 T !<I~G r . 1 \YOl\fAN 10 take catc of 1 ADORA BL!'.: CAT, spayed
MA-IDS F /T fME 1 NURSES Aides for VIP ' RECEPTIONisr for doctor's I SS65 Call Coastal Pcrsunnel 11·.p.m. Excellent 1\'0rking I fA ll •. ~!>P~lca~011j. 0~ invalid, Fri. n\Orning to I fem, very friend!}'. Jong
21';:'0 S Su See Perwnnel Man1tf!'e., i a.rea..!I, a.II shill$ r 0 i·1 office. 1.1ust type. \V\11 train, ~y, Bl ~· 2 7 9 0 conditions & benefits. I ~cc=~· 1f:a'";s~ U~l~~:1n'i, Sw1. eve. ~all aft_er 5 pn1 I hair, blk & v.·ht. &l2-7768 1·5
Sarti; ,\;,~. ~a;;!r. l2ZlBa
11
1booC Bay Club I expension. P~rsonnel [)cpl, I 642-121J7. r '. • 1 fumlshcd, salnrv open. Al.r Sun., any lime during wk. I _P~·~"~'·~-=-,--,-~---
Ne11.r llarbrir & \\'arner A\'e. -· ·. oast Hlj,-y., N.B. 1-foag Hosp, ~.B. I RECEPT / . j S ALES\\ O 1-f AN -f'unky THE I RC,V\LILNE CO. SO. !ull and paii li1ne sla· * 493-9252 * 12 !\tale Puppi<'s, 12 v.ks oltl.
ti14l 5-ll).4020 i Mtnf11ctory Work 2 OFFICE GIRLS I SECRETARY ~ranola Ney,•pol'1, . Cosla -tlon salesmen. Con{a.cl DIC{( YACHT RIGGER Afghan/SaJuki niLx. 0..Tict
Equal Oppor. EmprO'yt'r ; Small grmi.ing ooinpany near NEEDED Ko sh. Great v a 1. i e 1 v l e~' it5fn~:0~.1ble ~o 644-3l89, 91m·noon at DIC< PRlCF. Cl-IEVRON Progressive Marine Hard-ni.usl ba\·e fncd yd. 83&--4JSJ
1 ............................... 1 ~.Coast Pll\7.f\. $2.:i() ht'. to Radio telephone dispatch I position. Happy congenial i Di5tribulor. O....·n ~Arre or Equal Oppor. Employer 13172 C_11.hot nt La Paz, LR· y,·are ~1fg. has openings for -·~·~"~·-~~==--~ --llF ~At ~~ start. Ph. s.t:>-TIOI ask tor i Must be 25, able to drive offk.-e. I van. Ca.II Geo11te }·unk, l!U.," Hiil:11 emblttous se~s. ptod~c· * \VMT=D • P .-.... "· tr.. Kent . Apply In Person Call 540-6000 · 832·8599 anytinie. Secretary TECHNICIAN lo Q.C. H.r. llon \\'Ol'~er in Yacht Rig·' DAL.\f.ATIA.N PUPPY I •OiiiiiiijiiOiiOiiiiiOOiiOiiOii
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YELLOW CAB CO Coa:iital Pt>l'90nnel Agency 51ALeSLADY }~ . h 1 Steno 1 in e 8 r a 1n p \if I er s. g1ng, Splicing, Swagtng. Ex· call: 998-50.:.7 lAnaheiml
I 186 E. l&th, C:OSta M~ _ ~~ _J!lvd~M . 1 Sportswear.' exp·~.i; "'?aft \\'e presenUy ha\-'e a poaltion Communications ex p er. h~ &tt~.7t:P~1ln Mp@l'S()n. Furniture 1050
RECEPTIONIST $500 I V.'N!kends, Write Classified for sKretary steno, must · necessary. Pal EIE"ctronles, · • a esa. ~~.E~orD~~to ~~Kon Fee Paid/Also Fee Jobs Ad no. 51, c1o Daily Pilot. hklav1e1 good typing &. s/h ll 1J820 \Vestern, Ga rd en
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KINGSIZ\nclE be<!, x.lta linn., •-~·pl 50 Pl h 1 p O Box 1560 C:Os''l r-.Iesa s !I. Grove, Call J\.1r. Sac ks , i 1~ new, . matu-ess, box
:-OfKn1tgemt'nt Trainees
PHOTOGRAPHERS
&
order delk. f'reviOU !I ex.~r. ·~ i ch us 0 cs I c~1ir 92626 • I • PLEASE CONTACT I 894-33m. ~ aprln,ea & frame. $16J.
\.\'Otklng v.•1th customers 1 a Atta I · · Greg Newland V ('A-'Ol'th $ J. 5 0 I . Queen.size
l\l'Ce5¥fY. w1u proc ess WESTCLIFF .&_\LE_SPE~N. l"xper . for Bank of Amirica T•lephone Sal-I $1"5. Inc. deil\'ccy. Usua.llj
bUlln;'. use Karde-x, &nd do PeJ'IOnnel Agency I ltghtuig fixture co. Contact 500 N s •~ · ho 832-2488 · <~ustomcr follow-up. 1'1ust be (Matk III C4'n!er1 \\lood Lighting Fixture Co. Fe"frt Ce1 t"'nder Dr. C••t• Meia Area 8005 f -m:;;::•,..:;::,.:c;:::c·~·~=~=~I
good \Vllh flcures, and Ix' 1651 .£. Edinger, S.A. 2031 S. E. r.taln, Irvine. aiJr3505" I SHHHl FUkNITURE
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rRYJNE PERSONNEL able to oper11.te 10 Key 542-!1836 I 546-2901. Work From !11 A GNIFICEN'T Di!iplay: AT WHOLESALE! 1 MARKETING REPS
cr"''ICES.,"rc ... V""V i $175 Weik S•lary + Calculator. Also n1ust be RECEPTIONISf·ASSNT for ! SALESLADY, <'xp'd. One f've ~quel Oppor. Employer Your Home Period furnllurt, 0 a k, 894-2020 , .JU\J ,......."'-' I accw:ate typist. Xlnt nnim'll Jlosipiul. r-;e...,·poi·:.1 &: Sun. W H li\-I SE Y T C . l Bron:i.~s. fine c r y5 tal.1 ·
Account·ng Cl~rks to $525 ! Commi1l on Earnlnt1 1rork1ng conditions In ne1v Full or pai1 time. Eves. lill 1-IOLLO\\', SIJ. c 0 as 1 SECRETARY op omml11 ons porcelain, oriental art. cir .• I MOVING, no junk. Den I.: 11;-tndu~/Mcch Engr $13K $225--$300 Per Week Bldg.,, all frinae bcne~it!I, ! lOpm, or wkends'. \\'rile 1 Village. Call for appt Fee Paid. Key posilion ' * 558·73ll * etc., $ ~ 0 ,o, 0 0 0 inventory, f rm furn, 6 pc bedrnl aet, cci Boat Mech/Dle!ttl $865 Including Pl'Ofit shar1n~. 1 CleMUied Atl No. 103 , Daily 1 556-1692 w/voell t'stabl!flhet.I finn. \ SoWltland s most elegant : & end tbla, lamps. n1lrro11
VIC Bookkeeper $800 The nRtlon'a leading &: ~fi:{j penon, 9 a'!1-J Fol. t Pilot', P.O. Box 1560. Costa I Ability to 11·ork "\l.'/top TEl.EPHONE Ans. Serv. auction gallery, 'Yi'~ buy for TV. 1'u~!ln. 544-6924
Field Oeim11 Adjuster taste111 growln& department I MOLDI RNIA INJECT ON Mt!sa, CalU, 9:M2G. I CLASS SELLS_ 64l--5678 personnel & public. Al so operators wanted, E.x'per ca 11 h or a cce pt • GRANDFATHE·R-
' Tme. de#f'ee to $725 store photography L'Ompa.ny NG, 265 Brtgga Ave., ree PO!litlons. pre! but not nee. 4~ consignments. 64>2200. 1· CLOCK
Ltaal Secretuy to $700 needs sllnrp de di c at. d Costa Mesa. J a son Best Agency A-llances ao tO & ~~
M.arKellna Sec'y to $700 people who like hard "ork ! 0 RN A M ENT A L TRON 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly. , TEMPO'S _,.,.. 191-.ro....., lmur Oalms Aulslant & p1-oflts . Experience not WORKER, weldf!I &: STAR GA'ZEK-fe. ... Suite2l3 963-6715 11 FREE PICK UP. REFS. \\'ANTt~D
Firt ._ CuuallY to $700 ; ne(fl51U'y. instaJ\tr. Exp. preferred ,, e, CLAY k. l'OLLAN APPL. &: SCRAP f\-1ETAL • C'.:.ED BRICKS •
a.cyrrtUt/Eocrow to S650 WE WILL TRAIN 491-Qlll "' • ~ ,. ,~,,,..,,,,,,.;,,..,.. '"" SEC RETARY "''SO o I A J bl 67H S7t1-'564 M•a-Card Typist to $600 P<is\Uonfl are now open ln / ~~ MA~. l v 1:).. llff u <Ti .. ·,a 0 • 2S8 • I ''""" 0 =,,,;:c:;.=;:c:...,.--,.-1 t PB.~/ltectpHonlll $550 the , -An-\,. a-a. PAINTER <~"'"'· 11 ;:.t,"1<0"1•n11 '0 '~•1 '"r"· ocr nwl-Fee Pakt/Al&O Fee Jot. • • LATE Model COPPERTONE. •uvVESEAT i. aota custcrD ~ o· " Ex O I 711 o vropme~'oge or ot idriy, Sh M ~· 60 • d e ~ I CAU.. rr.:.~ll llOPKINS \YHAT ABOUT YOUR p. nly Appl)' . . . word~corrC1oponding tri~rs ' 7J>.6.lt;'. nv, '"'"1ng KENMORE Wuher. $75, i nta e \•ery au qua . never
J ERRI WJIITT'F.:MORE 1'1JTURE! Ste Pel"IOnl'ltl M&nelf'er .,. of )"OU'Zod1ocbirth s•ori. ..66-f'..__~ Good F'uturt: ttt-.1PO oUen a truly w1iqiie Guar 11: dell\ltrtd. 54&-88'?2 \-used' u.suatly hm, B-i9HI.
488 E. 17th St (RI Irvine) 01 \l.'E PROMOTE FROM B•lbu Bay Club 1 r.ti 31 " 61 ~···~\ K 01•10 WESTCL.IFF & tim.e uvlng opportunity SUlferlnc a storage crisis? QUEENSIZE Hlde·a-bed.
Sult• 224 642-1470 WlTHIN 1221 \V. Cot.al ilW)'., ND j~ ~i~::., ti:~··''" Penonnel Ai;cncy for alulltd ..... Sell no--k>n&tr needed 1tems \ Uke 1ie v.'. Cost $32S. f\.lklnc
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_,., ,4 '""4 i B<nellts Include c:ompony PART Tlmo 1.ockor Room l~~:• j;~"" :;~:::" •M"k 1ll Ceni.rl I KEYPUNCH "1th a DallY Pllot Oa..Wed , 1195. o' Be~ oller. 6r>l841
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•v.. -.. paid life, hca1th. mtJor Allendl!nt, Wornan over 21 .c,... J6!ew Y11--oo·~ l&,jl ~·,.~~!:r, S.A. SICRETAltlES Ad! &42-S78. I CLASS SEU.S -&42..fi6'7I
JAii'ANESt Lad) wnntcd for niedlcal & proflil 11\arln::. dtllrvd, Af:~ In ~. 1 \-~ lr w.u• •7 r • .,.., ·.,.._ Y..'ho want di-Ulod a ~
lro ho l d
~·-.. I C411 38\\'"'l 6fT01~• •-ntns, PYt nle. IY T\J~t. : • 3;00, f:I . ~·n•11t 3•...,,,i 6tH...i..J SECRETARY, 60 Y.'P~l 1tlntulal1ic Iona: ur lhort
tve1')"1,,.'1c:s. 673-Q.19 .... _ PllPNE n>R 1 N'-••t ""''"try Oub, 23700 lOGo··· •Of'ro!--i 10Sptcu101.., min., accurate, dlcta .. k....oo term ustr.menll • few ~-.a:ot --APPOIN1V-...o -.DA'' '6-..,.,,.... 11to•'">· •11• 11•~0"' • 10 ~-' .1R. Sl\t"ilTARY ;~..!~ '"' "' I C\qbhoun Dr, L.aiiuna 12s,......,4 •2Ait.a 11P•OllQOI, 111. key add, Ttsponstblf! IJIJ-'I, coupe weel\.s or fe\v
'tart a ' •·-!Jill~ r·-PHOTO Nl.&uel • 11 o.;~·1 tJ ,°"""' 'l W+lfl ~illon In busy Co!lta Mesa month1 • you declde'I No'l'i • -..,.....,, ~F1f\QO'll't0I ••(QUIJ 74No. QI ffi di"' Jw/)ICM'C .~mo firm. PART TIME;. wornitn, tie-1~11 ~-sw.,1J 1, 1, roprnctor o c...'t, n1e ci:u.1 yr.11.._qan .•.••
JWUI be iu.r.lln& putaha•ln& CQIPOlllJlON phol'le ioUeltlnc. Sab.ry + ilt~~.., !1~:_~ .. ,., ~'~-" hlrntlnolo.P-.·.f'~in.nce exp. APPLY IV Pt10NI dept. Otvt Pfb qtJO:te• • ., M comm. Vic. Harbor & Wil· ''"""' ier .. ,,., 1er'""~ SH PNf.!~~ccordlna to
1 ~a.11 ~Ii: Let ut k..'IOW ~II ~ Goad i.nlftl rm CM. ~33-16$2 ~~~' ~t':<JQlty ~~ifhl'1 tllJ) A rttl. 16 M-F 9-6 v.'llat ,our lkUl1 are. Ni>
lldlh. G ... t -to Of AMERICA PART T1¥E ofo & dMvln "" '"" ll '""' SECRET AiY n'<<I to come
1~ """""'Uy . advt.DCtW/thl•flflefl).C11U =N ce t 'ii~;" ill':. .,G.Md n-1 '"1 •th .-.-..1 unttlwtbavethe'Juaitr\aht' ~al PHIOtliiel Alt~. uun. o exp. ntct:Sl!lary. ..w': !>4~;:..Cn ~t'....,." '"'~'era.,..y w ~'t""''f:llCt 1?)1 for you! ~1 2710 HartlOr'"'Dlvd. ~l'ftl:fT UTr.t )S••""i 1;~ la A«t. Paya.b~. Purchu• ti~IE.RAn:EATTEMPO
0( llUNI '11GfJ nre.; r,~.ml :t~· ntcn Ing or Satu ~stna ln 1T•m ... T•mptraryHt1P tm;;; Put )'O'ir tiooaf!l blck on II-. ,1 ~td u ~~). 81 ~· Ht. " ,1o-rt'AldenOal con11truction.1 "'!'~!!"--~~~~"!"~ ~~..t~ ~:1 (714) w.rlft ~0:~~6:).1= f((;:,,j ~ i:;':" ~~ =t~ ,,,J 111(.tt' Saluy commensurate .,1th Ouutoot IPOrtl Oil It
llmP'-'":t~~ . . . Jim ~ Ol•\fted Adi Call cu..n .;_"'L~tt't: ,c~GooJ ® \JfftJt 111_ 1~'1!,1 n.,.1.J.l \.:, •• f"Xpetience. ~ i appt&I! S..U )'OW' tq11\pment
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,.u ~ •••••-••I x -~ • . OUslfled Ml ean W-4171 I •1th • ~.?'.! l'tlol _ fo&iy • I toclayl~ , C1u>llltd Adi ~ -
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••••tf•l"f , .. ,r
For Cias.il'ltd Ad ACTION
• Call
A Dolly l'llot A4-.i-
'42·S611
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. ... ,, • .. , ' '. . = 21 .. ··c 6-na f7M Volvo 97721MaY1rl 7
~~ _ r-----S ~VERICl( 'i2, 4 dr, o..uto, . 8060 M __ l~ll1neou1_S010 __ Musical ln1trvm't1 WA I Boats, Power Trailers, ravel 9170 : BM m9T IHI -1 i\ro Appy mn 111>lrl--;;;d I MINK COAT MAllTlN D-18 w/.,... sm. SO' WOOD IJuU wtlh C.M. 1
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14" BANDINO Trailor, beaut. 'T• MERCED>:S 450 SE Ex· •n VOLVO P -1800 E • 1 • '" ti;.,, nc•· brako:>-ltOOll.
'1xtf ·Rtntle Sl.50 da,yi/eves 4 .. Xln't contJ. \Yurtll~ elec. ! diesel. Sultable for cqmmer· artal"laf'mtnl, Uk• n e ~·, .Mil N'Jlb JOI
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1 e<:ptlve Ctr· one only 1$tr· _Call 673_~13_~ T.l\•t )')Hrty. 5.'.i6-1147
963-m:I · " p!Ano. 121'-613-0036 I <U.l or pleasure conversloo. 1700. Barraln. 83'-1355, _,.,,,....,,. .. , U.I No. Otnlt). Folly eqwp-AUTOS USED M stana 9952
· fltultl o,1or. Checker boArd \\'ANTED· Pltclrum Banjo 1 $9500, ALSO 41}' $1500 & 30' I 4119--1131 ~Y""'"U"U~ ped. $226.43 mo. lease foJ' _ -• u --" -~------1 ~~R~ !~w ~d ~i I delilgn. ~ length. Ranch <+i;ir1ng,' long neckl. · ! $2900. 615-89-l5.' Auto Str. I. Parts MOO I I i ! 36 mot. OEL + T&:L. WhJ.' Genertl 9901 'T.l ~tUSTANG, lo ml'•, xln'l 90-1'900 ~ • . , "'hite & a~enta J!llnk 841_198'l or S-al-.oo56 aft 6, •13 SKIP Jack 20 0 1 _,.. lease 4 )1'I from olhtl"I · cond. Amllnl Mereo. Good
or J $',!Ufll'(!&. \Vh1!4' nl t n k crulse 1 • pen : TIRE t.tachiM In K(IOIJ when you pay no more for 1 II.! 1'2700. 495-4207, iESrERN saddle, xlnt cond I knolched dbl fur rollar, Of F & E I IOl5 ' .. ,r. ow hrs. :;a,ie/pai1• ~-.:Ilion ~ .. ~ ~.~, Bee !' . a 3 yr leue With UJ. ,~~ 4°' g ::.....r· ----
. Sacrifice S50. . J>All'h pock~ts. dbl hreasled c. ~rn, qu P• Mrs.up or trac.e down. i \.~11.1 • ""'9'f'o'Q\l,_.,393 E Jim Slemons GAS SAVER '66 GT Cotl\'f'l11blc. 289. v..s. (D.3)592-5080 detiign. ralf1 $3."lOO. Bona -• -r . -~ ---·--1-493-9188. \ikdays. Union • · 5;.1i~I::R CLEAN? StOOO.
• tide Kpp1·t1isal $200}. Ne\·er DK_:.;; ~1" up, E."ec. r.wl chra I al' SOUTHCOAST Inboard J7th st, CM. Imports 1973 PLYfltOUT!I OUSTER' 1 Call 556-7166
'Jewelry IOJO ! \\'Orn. An x111 t 6uy at $1000 ~~~ ~~Y &h r1; $8~ I "'/trailer, good e n'g In e : CJJEVY 90 Brand 'ai"'tnkVlng 197' BMW1 lSOl Quall Std. trans., great (!:tu; n1lle-Oldsmobile 9955
I or best oft. For inlo Call . 2 Kl8 • • exterior nElOOll ~'Ot'k best neY.'. oomplt>te •m ·.g 1002'1, Bavariu, 3.0 SA'• I Be h age (o\·er 22 MPGI Only 1 JEWEL Ry. 11-t agnltlcent 832-0121. 64 4 3-! offer owr $650. 842-3163 motors. FIL! all Cllevy'A, ! Ot'deor )'OW' car tor dell\~
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New833pon9300 a<: t4..o00 miles. $2UJ5. Prlvnte , --
d I 1 p I a y ~ DI a R\ on d a Is· CR. AM LETS \VAJ.NUT Secretary ®ak I -$-i95. ea. delivered fretJ. 213 1 in Europe NOWI ~'1.lt'S' fif'.V ll"ftLE ~tralds. Rubles, Opals'. i • S\\~~·el <'h~\r ~ fillng cablnci ~1 ~\P.P "1' '..ahr: 'VT. F.'B, i 36,j...4719. 1 · , ENTER f"ROM l\JncARTl!UR part~ 551•5151 * ' OLOSMOBI
Top nan1e y,•alchei;;, Omeii!B, 1 $1 •a. 4£Mi-1054 after 6:00 d e~t'l, fbgls. l\iany exl.rns : U.S. 111ag 1\.iml'I · 5 lug11. 1 EXCELLENT MGB 9744 "it GMC TRUCKS
Rolex. flfovado, Co ii n1. ANSWERS 1'·"1· ! 511•500· Owner. ~s.;&3. ; Exr.eUent cond. 14". A»kina: PRE.OWNED •MWS --~~ HONDA CARS
• Many Antique p I e c es .1 L·SllAPED de.Ve $15. S\l.ivel Boats, Rent/Char. 9050 SIOO. Call 530 634fl. • .72 Bavaria. 4 sp & ai.t· '67 ?i.1GB. 61,000 11)i. Gd r«'<'h.,.AM:::.:::C:___ _____ 9'IO_ 5 UNIVERSITY OLDS
I pocket \l.'a.tcl\Cs S 5 0 0, 0 O 0 c•hair $25. Side chairs $2. l 1962 FALCON iuJto. trans. e ·n 2.:.00 • Aulo. It p111 ndJ some b6d,Y w 0 r k ·1· j Inventory. Southland'• most : Squirm -Inlet -Afjl'C' -\\'orit desk s:.n. 493-6025 N<20• NSE\KVIP0.Pr<E~R,-,.,l1F1 ,:1n. Ca.rb, "$5 968-4971 after • .70 Bavarias. 3 1n stock l"amlly ,!,~~~"J;1 ?-.JUST '73 lfORXET H11tt'hb:"it·k: :lll50 Harbor BJ~~"a.11-'"
t'lf'pnl Auction Gallen·., Tether -Tiii:: }"US~ 4PM . at rf'<Juced prict1 SEU.. $:r.r:i. ,,..,....._,.., Inlrll!lt'. rond. };1'0non1~ b C'os1a ri.tC's& .nu·;vw
; Ca11h. Tern1s or trade. \\.'e _ l'.:ner;y 1·ris1s: \\lh('n hr Pianos & Organs 1090 ,, YOU'RE QUALIFIED : i9Eil . ECONOLINE 3 spd · Porsche 9750 ryl, H II. 6-12-~''1 or \i'k· B\" O\\'Nl<.'.H. '7'2 88 Of;J,TA
• bu,y your jl'\\tlry, antiques, s1 ; on a ('(IU('h "'ilh a ~1l'l --t'lv·Brk4:c Sport Fisherman. !rans. $2'0. Slarter $5 .. ~=~r:Jdc· 11 -· days. 83\l.·HOO evrs & \\knds. I RO\' ALE. 34.000 n1L Be111
furniture or aettpt ronslgn· \and the l1gh1s go our, ht' • PIANOS I Plush. Full electronics, full 1 968-4971 alter 4PM. .,.,,..1.4V , I '68 PORSCHE 911., E~t-ep-. 1 olft'r. 968-ii.1!ll nfL 5 dally
men1s. Call for inforrnation, I spends the 1~s1 of the ('\'l·n· • O ' I Ralley, shoy,·er, efe. For • ~ ... , .• tk>n:9J ('ftr, looded w1(lpt1onal Buick 9910 Url 11<~·11 Sun.
714-662200. ing rl'pturing THI!: FUSE. RGANS ('harter by day or ""'ff'k, ·1 t:x::.. equip, kl\v mill'I. 1 ·p· '-------,,.,=57 EUROPE--ff Rtal f t5 I Fish. eruise, t'ocklail, etc. I 1 1~ l ·72 PORSCHE 9UT. A~f·F~I. 1969 LeSABRE. 2 dr hnr<l1op. into
Mi1cell•neou• 8080 e s r ~ I 645-2'.!00, 962-2301 Sund1:1y 1 Autos lorSall ~ Mru~rlte Parltwa,y mags. full ln.lilrun1enlu1ion.1 Fuil n1 .T, air. Rest OUl't'. ----------/
-·-S~UUt:N0~s.
0
TEAC~l::~S! i only. Mission Vl:!Jo Call for details. Call an. 6: &l-l·0.172. '72 PINTO CARPET HOU SE . Al\IP N \\'lll-~El. "--n Nights 'tH 9 -• NEW BOATS • I U)E AVERY P\l'Y ~ 673-5162 \'I"'' n-f. , .. 11 <i··~r h1s!..._Je \our u1v11 l\"htels' Order any .......... 5 1. ,1.15.30 S 12-5 1 Ch 1 B D 1 G•n•ral 9510 · ' .C-"-••· 9915 ""' .. ~ 'l
2013 Ntv-1>0rt 81, C.ri.t. "" ,11 ('llr .,.,.1111 a : 1 • , un. ar e:r y ay 1 8U·2CMO • 4!)5..49.t!I PORSC11E Cadillac f, 'our, nuton1a1ic tr11nsmis·
OlOl'rlinatcd tt'a\'f'l stu!l) *P1•nos & Gr•nds* ! Also Executive cru•~ P~i:1YS -!Z2EE · ·7~ 914 2.0 -----sion & 1011· n1ik•:-1. i!ISOF'VCI. Pre-grand opening sale, lo•\'·
10\.\' prtces on ear,>et, tilt'
and draperies <' x p e r t I v
Installed. \\'e honor B1nk
Amerlcard.
lttint'l'ary. Earn un iv. Baldwin . C.1ble . Chickerln~ I c_atere<l. to . your s~1hc1•· '71 TOY OT A CREVIER BMW : t\Jlly luxury e q u Ip n I> Ii . '13 SEO. O.~ Villl'. 19,000 mil. 0 ;"t('f $1995
•. , )-vi.,,..,, • risrher. Ka"'·al. Klmball lions. ror 1nformat1on call Complete. Nl:\V. S!t\'C hke stt..>cl radial tirt•s. a 11 1
•·'-1.,11,;1 u 573-1;;51r . Knabe. M., on & Hal"r··, • Calif. l.Risure Boat Club, 1500 enr.lne. New brakl"s, Sales • Se:vice • Le!isin& craz}'. Black on Black. avaUablf' rxln1~. 0 1• ii:. ;
.., .. ~ ...... u ! .. Hug, suile Hll fllussr•t . Sohmer • Slein· <)fficr-, 675-8866; r-.tarina, tires & batt. !<onl shock..;, 2U8 W. 1st, S.A. Sl.>3171 $7695 oy,i1er. $.'i.19.i. 6-1.'rl,16.J :ift 6 BA RWICK DATSUN
FREE r::STl~IATES
6f"1-4S92
_,,11., .. .:w~lt, 1,e1.,.110rt Bcu{'h w1:1y _ Storf'y & Clark. \.\'in· 640..4540. Dyno-tW\ed. Lo1v inileage. I USED BMW1 Phone ~lOOJ DLR. wkdas/all day 11km!s. 1
MANY E}~TRAS. 0 r I g. ./ '71 200'l . 4 4
~· '"'~'
33375.c.AMlt+O WIST-ANO
l•H JUAN CAPll TIANO
'"' aA•'V•l'"'!)oo.' & ........ BARTLETT ----~er · ~'rulilzer · Ya1nah~ •Coats, Sail 9060 O\\'Tler. Private party. Best -I ,70 a'.m : 71 9.1·1 PORSCIIE. xlnt ~nd, Chevrolet 9920
FLOOR COVERING N~11' Sp1ne1s : ......... $:i~ I I offer. " -I '69 2500 I asking $-1,000. days 673-301'1, . • , ' .. 493.3375 or 131 -1375
788 W 19th St CM Us~ f.1'01,i;i ............ S9~ OLD Sou!lr Coast Sailing 645-2342 : ./ '11 ·Bavarlil ' eves 673-2000 ~ EL Cl A>i!INO. ! /~. P/B.' ~~~:;~~;;;;;~1 I BUY!!
Good, used furn1t11r,• .' • . . ·• • • Playi rs .. . ......... ~~ Dinghy. Ne\.\' s1:1il id!h
1
, 'GS PORS2ll!·~ :ll'.! $.t..~l~ r,1 a,1r-L'0.'1~, O~\' 1111 s $2.~!.'ill. '• annl•fl"l"f""~ r" 11 ,11 ~r', ·~ .. '"•:1 l.!1..t«lnj <.us101n. 1 loo r Grands ........... $39:> I railer, S.100. 597 Park J)r. I anylhne 9715 1 best offl'r. i\IUSt Sl•!J 1,1 s '' .. -I H: &-la-32·1J J GAS SAYER
MASTERS AUCTION l'Cl\.l'l"•~g. l' l'aturi,ng Nalco, *ORGANS* L'Orner Anal1ei1n & Park or: 1· -----Capri ~ "i·""'>1 '6i CHE\' Capr1t•r I dr 646-8686 or 83).9625 Arn1st1ong & t.:ongoll·u111. Bald'll.•in -Conn -Han1n1ond • 1 C7'.I Rec V•hlclh 9530 •7'1 CAPRf VG 4 pd I . 9765 Exe<'! t-.loto1· An· rond. 1~73 1-'l.\'~IOUTJI i)U~IF:Jt
uuara111ced inslallation & Ka'>'·ai _Kimball. UliiTcy., · · 1-• s · 8 c, I Toyota Bil ain $}50. &k.i-l4.l6. Sl~I 11'11111'. g~~'Hl ~~~
•".", •• ~~.~-_o·.on t~·~,_·,·.','l.r~.". per1ormanl'e. over 30 yrs. Rod . Tl AQUARIUS 23. 0\1.'Tl 1 ~ for i \VIfJ.. BUY YOUR RE<:RE-am/fm radio, decor group, rg nll!t•:ii::•' (O\Tr !! i\IJ>G \ 81~1)'l . .., -,.,\f.M'f. nha se\~·~rlilz1:1~8s · m· I S825 + $-13.21 per n10. Xlnt , ATIONAL VElflCLE PAID hte blue, 16.000 mlleil, 1 '74 TOYOTA '68 !'OVA, fully ('()uipf)('(I. Only 11.000 niill·s . $~135
---BARTL ETT FREE ESTIMATES Optig;n ........ .' ....... st:iO f cond. Trlr. 9 H_P 1ntr. ~ii..lley I ~OR O~ ~OT. CALL US 1 540-0842 1vilh nir. Xl111 cond. Ut·s1 SS Pri\utl' pnri.v. ;;.;1-5151.
FLOOR COVERING t·uli b-iO-J<H~ Lo S. 1 Sl'5 & hr11d, sips ;i. 830-4656 or tQR BES PP ICE. OPEN 1 Colt 9717 ,: hu~·sl! .JRG..6965 eve. ~=-----wrey pine ........ I R.10-1807 · ROAD l'UNTING "ON • D-D I ------788 w. 19th Ct., C .M. l\IOVING Play(_ .. Piano \Vurlitzer Spinel, ne\.\' .. $49!1 . I BEACH issc.1 Be h Bid ucSt ea 'GS 1~1PALJ. Hardtop. 1\ulo. ·73 l'l:O:fJ'O \\'ai..'011, top
Personalized lnslnllation. ·l{otls, \·.'asher & Dry~r. *WIN FREE* 1 1.~U'. .. c.~T~.~hfARA1N.' 842.'.?54H.' ac v ···~Dodge Colt ~llltion l A.....&. 1 air, r~t. p/r:., tr111ler h1tch.1 n11lt';'~"· 011111"':,,.;,ur. A 11'('JJI
Name Brand Carpet pil!IO !urn, dining rm set, ORGAN LESSONS I -niro1n \\II ,~_r. \'1agon, good n11lf'age. n, ........ ere. ~495.Call&l4--1m. I bi·i.ur~: 5:'11--0'Jor~ 11kn1:,: &
Guaranl{'('(j, Q\·('r 30 )'fl'. Plee broom. lantps, 2 c.·hrs & • Extras, Good rond111on, I GAS. TANKS installed by Superb cond, 16.900 n1i.. LEASE OR BUY Chryaler 9925 C'\~.'.".----
exp. end tbls, sofa b'e d FULLERTON MUSIC i S800. 832--703() • l\}3J01,'Way. Trucks, Imports. Must Sell. 6/"J-1597 I All Models! ·73 l'l~TO ltuna1HlU1, 11ulo,
FRE! ESTIMATES C:oUa·tabl~. Zl:_rl Seville 18191 E.uclid, t'ountain Val!l'y I ISLANDER 30 Sloop. Near 858 ''. 18lh. c.r-.1. j Datsun 9nO '!)II CHR\'SLER \\'AGO;>;, 1:.1;,11 , lo\\ 1nllr"· \ln1 l'Ontl.
CaU li-iG-1142 A\·t'. Balboa Pcn1n, 613-2177 557-4836 I ne11·. \\.'111 steer, extras.: Trucks 9560 · 1\ ....... l • Lollrled, tUll po\.\·er. VACA· I S"24!1j. fil4-i:..'&I l\.II~K COAT. f~length, lZ2 K. llarbor, rullerton _Sl9,150. 67~7376. 1. ~. i 240Z' -lUUlft. e"1t& TION SPECIAL. Cart'd lor '"D !'!~TO~ 44 ~r-.1. '.!.) ~1PG. '71T I 1600 I natl blk. cross n1ink \I"/ 87J,180S l!OBI~ Cat 14', 19_73 , 72 ~OG~ i\dvcn_tu·"I S TOYOTA since ne\\·, 5-10.700.:: or S:!:::~J.ororr1.•r . OYO Q I rnatch Pill Box Hat. Cust , · · 11·/tn11ler, n1anv xlras. ltke i Serr('r:., • Ton Pickup. • 6-16-9197. l ·l~J.~ll"'-
1'\('11·. brake.s, ruv.~ & batt.1 nu1.de. Jr7l. Pcl'f t'Ond. WE RE DIFFER_ ENT_ I ne\\". s1200. 21~2S7-Jlfl2 I F1bl_'rglass shell. V·8, R/11. 240Z's 11 • · '61 CHRYSLER 1n1""11a1 ---
K I k ~ t I ' di I I c Pl P/B 642 0880 ... ·~t l'l:\rO. 4 Spd. H&H. good on1 s
1
1oc s. , yrio-urirc . S2<!25. appri;l, Mc ~l:!IJU. t 1·gas css o t 1<' '' r ;1111ast1c B~AtlTlrUL 12. Catamaran ' ~. .830 , 90 -
1
1966 H:u·bi1r, <. M 6~6-~: · '.': crown roup.•. an dlx \tr:•~. 111111·;1;.:•'. gwd •·und., $Jj()(),
Lo1v nl!C'flgf'. 1!1111)' c'rn1s. J52-11'l1afl 6pm Prit'es" Iha! one reads • . !J(l!l "---i· 11kdays. or r-ol eves & e ·io-·.·~ .• ,·r.&o•"g'
0 . p 1 . . . ,,_ th I . ti . ('UITU.''$ on ('<ll' • VVUI.' k d ... ,........... ... ... L1'~ASE A 'BRAl~l> NE\V '14 $.')(XI, 6-l&-'.!0-13 .,l:..l~il !i i.•)';·,:. rig. o'>'·ne1-. n . pa1 y, 1 • • auuut, c aci is iat 1 • • .-2 · 98 , I II" n \· 1 -,----~=' Br-~1 ,, offer. 6 4 j-2 3 4 2: SUPER CAR.PET SPECl.\L! 1-orn()<'titivn keeps pril-1•s , ~idtW__n. ;i.::i -73 19?J i\IAZDA Pick Up Stiek 1 e '72: 4 speed air & mags TOYOT:\ 1200 Corolla Se<lt1n Comet 9927 P 1Ymouth 9960
1\nytiml'. 90 yd~ •. antique i;old nylon nloout ihc san1(' 1rheJ'('\"('r 1 LIDO -M. No. 2896. SIJOO , . 1 • • _ ·u . ' · for only $61..26 o:!r mo. 36 /----------
---__ -~. _ _ plu~h. lj(I yd~ Searoa':" gt:~ you ~!..np. \\"c Jose \'l'I)' [l'iv 1 11·i1hout 1rlr. Racing eond., 1 ~tft. l.J,00!1 nules. ,31,JO.; • '7J · 4 speed, alr. "-1nags 11.us. open end lease. ~·IERC. CO~IET '"D, 6 ,., I.
4 Ae. wire..inags & tJrl'S 5220,j plush .• ~ub_?whrrors. &12-Zl;:i;:i sales _by bclng-underi>old,..f-IM&-3133----· ---I ~~--· -' · -!\!i('li, 19 to 22 t\IPG. r.111-1 4 ATLAS Tr11.:~::;o-hlt<.41-·71.·73 Mus· I 548-4~~ \\'!''rl! 1liffC'rcnr because ou1·' Boat' Speed & Ski 9080 ,
1
TRADE NCI\' oulboi1rd n1otpr I • LOTS OF Bro1•;n, Spot'ty & sharp: unr
tang-s.10. Thir1I 1nen1ber I \VATER SOFTENER, ;1ln1os1 salCSHlC'll lislC'n hiird to , for I~ ton pl~k up. l'hone I 240Z's. O\\"ner. $2,000. Chrysler/Plymouth
I"ositrac1ion uni! fi1s i\'lus· ne"''• automatic. Guaranteed 11·ha1 you say, lhcy"rc · 1.~· 1970 CENTUR,. Rcsort('r, &12·8323. 968-48Jil Cull an~1io1•'. 1 01'1.'n !1,11ly .1: Sun ·11J lU P~f
tang.Torino SGO. Panasonic
1
to \l."ork. S 3 0 0. Io ff er. i;cns1tivl' to 11·hat you re11lly 1' 250 h.p. Xlnl cond. Sacri.lice 11973 Chevy :;. T. 4 \\'lleel Or. TO CHOOSE FROM '66 CO~IET Cyclorf' (;T, :tJ!J Harh:ir Bh·d.,
S·lrack A~l/}'M stereo with 979-0929 ~ant & they ha\'e thl.!. sale S3500. 646--0330 Cheycnnc. Loaded. Xlnt TR_Y US BEFORE \·ou Good · Cosra ?.le~a
1urn !able $110 Before 3 pni G u11'l'ntory 10 make the 1 • "'4 .. ~~ rood $.) 000 ~4-2&18 I BUY ror.dition, $550. 546 1934 997 2748 I .9!17 7976 J\10VIN overseas, Beds, pt'rf.:ct inatC'h be I we en ' 11 . oor· fhe1· ·'' ··nd a' . ' . . I 1146--0975 •
-• a ter . . I refrig, .. Jam~, ~ 0 r. t: Organ & Org11ni!'t, Piano & I trailer. $1000. 642-5220. I '-l9 roRO, 1 ton. step \'an. I i '71 Toyota 1600 COntinental---9930 Pontiac _____ 9'165
CABINETS .f(ll' Kllehen &
1
d s. h_\;'shr, ..,\ashc1/df)e1, Ptanl1!1. if you are thinking I $600. or ofle!._ I
. . Bath . . et<:, ,),)1·3499 aho"I 0 k•yboard • 8Ja...<li0:! i Nl"\I' brake:'.:, tiJ"PS & ball. 1...,-A-F 11 r,mr1 " " ' I Kon! shoeks.. Dyno·lunt'd. ~. . u iX""'.r. ~· .. Unftnl~hed Pref1n1shcQ NE\V DOUBL_E BI::D $50. in.,tru1}1('n!, g~1·e us a lJ~·-1 ~TORE for your foreign rar. Low nlileai.:-r. ~l1tny extras. ror.d!t1nn. Lo1\" 11111~<>. S.i._~.
Coun!er :op~ also~ 1 968-9521 \\e. thu~k )'OU ll agre(' that I l[i] runnin)? or not. fndepPndent Orig. O\l'Tlf'l'. Pri. paiiy., ~It li "I' nn \\·kn~!< 613:_9001 H,\R~E.: EXTf~RPRl~ES IM ' W ted I08l 11c re dlfll'r~nt . Transport•tion Ill pays fl lOl'('. Call 6T.l-.146a 3100 \.\'. C""!'' HI-\-'}'., N.B. Bri.t oftrr. 6 I :i-'.! ~ -t 2J Corvette 9932 sw \\·. isr~ s~ c. J\I. isc. an .. t'OA!-.'1. i\IU~I<; :-. -1001F·ORD-PlcKt:P-642-9405 Anyti1ne.
s.12-28-l-I \VA~T TO BUY: ;\('\\pDlt a~~·· c .. I. 9110 I EXCELL£i'\T ~1oro,1.~.4 WILL BUY YOUR -~-------·\\"ILL P.\ y TOP ll()IJ_-\J:
PLJ.CER gold in natural I PW\TE:: BURNER and Broolihurst &t Talbert, F\' 1 Aircraft _ Sllil. 96:..-.,1;:,9 DATSUN, TOYOTA ·•81:1E \U'l'OT\".?TS~ 4 dr, A f-1~t;·ul'll \".t:TTF. t!!r .. ~~ror inforniation call I .l\.1u;·rw~~t7 c:ndJ. 963-431:~1 i lL\l\G GLIDER. rag a I Io '61 Jo'ALC.'O:"\ Ranchero. It PAOIDR >VOORLCKl•.SWNAOTG~.~ILL -' 6..&1\J~ Cougar .. I 1\'Pf', IS"·S:\00 OJ' bt:'!>l offer. • $300 . • n 9933 TRA?.lPOLIN.ES; for the \\'ANTED: Sceretary desk & C 0 NT IN U 0 US FREE Call &15-1878. 61:>-1117 aft 6 ' PAY TOP DOLLAR. C \LL '71 :\IARh: II, ,\/T, F'ac. air. ~ -.
home. all Sl7.f'S, Fron1 $78.1 chair, Good condition & ORGAN CL.ASSJ::S Jo'OR I KEJ'..'T ALLEN 540-.-0442 [ like nc11·. l-ljl)) n11. Qn(' 1!171 ((ll'G.\H Xl{-7 r'Ql1\".
894-9268 or 99j....J824 ReasoM.ble. 642-3293 ADULTS. E\•ery Tuesday Motorcycles/ , Autos Wanted 9590 ! • ~ ' . , • 01\·n('r. $21::0. 5.'l6-!l662 I .£"a1h1'r, tape, \"~ue ru·"~.
7:30pni. Start any Y•eek. t Scooters 9lSO · I 69 STATION \\GN, xlnt I • :>Q,000 n11. Pt'rf•·i-1 cond. Pit
A CONVENIENT SHOP1'1NC AND
SEWING CUIDf FOR THE
C'-L ON TH[ CO.
For en •d In
Cell Mary Beth
Women•s Vtorld
642-S678, ext. 3:!0
Toin Dieterich in charge.
1
CADILLACS 1 rond. \.\-/records. ~ll or Triumph 9767 ply. o11-l167:04 11:;b.
Coast ?>.lusic Costa 1\fes;i, e SPRING e Largest Selection [ rr11dl' for lat!"' :\ldl. \'an. '73 TR STAG Fofd 9940 N~1l'port Blvd. ul Jiarlxlr. · 675-~..a!lj aft. 4 P.~1.
6.2-2$;}\ I LIGHT \VEIGllJ' In Orange County :o,\TSUN, 2--10 z.j,000 111i. I"'""'"'""""'"'""'"""'"'""• 1 e SALE e Coupe Dt'Vllle~ • Sedan De-I F.xlras. &st oflrr. I'll: Pr:JVATE: PAHTY \\'ANTS 1 \\'e service \.\·hnt \\e sell. Ville-: -E' Dol"ados • Co1 ·, ;i46-33.Jl
TO BUY l'IANO t'OH Buy now "·hile good selccuon \"e11ihle~. _Ids:> n1any other '71 OAT __ S_U-.N--P-.-U-.-G-.00<1 ,
CASJI. HisA>Rlilli E;ny·a~JDabAleV: I DSON I select C:i.d.llac Tracie-Ins. '1 <'Ondition S700 ca~h. takl' !
• ~17-9-l lj • 1 over pymfs. G47'-3276 aft l. I
Kl:\!li.\Ll~ Ba1·1· G:an<l p1· of \Vesr1ni11ste1• 196-D'TSIJN d I.,~• ' ''''' ' 9'~ 8oJca, \\'"'"-'tOll.<<"t•r I ,""\ L t'0.1. ~!Cl' Luu ' ano. \\T1lnut rini.d1, in .JVll ... '-" "' Good --•1u ·~· Pl · !ech1TI Brookhw'St & i\h1"11olia • ... -.... .... on, """"· wn.! 1· eond. SOCIO. j !!J.Q}o'I 893.627-1 5~,., ::-IO 1 ,9"7cc.·~31~.11J~------
Con\'enihle 11"llh ttn101·11blt' '72 FOR!) "r1u11·0 !' p:i~.~. :--1.1
hard -Io p. Au tonl<t1i<· \\'•1;.:. P/.~. l'IB. ;1 i r.
tr a n s m is~ ion , power A~l/F~l ~t('l"C'Q. Jui.: 1~1 ,.k.
.~leering, air conditio11in2. & Ori~ 011·111·. t..i::--1~7:1/l'\"( '·
loaded 1\" i I h l'Jo. tr a -l9-4-2712
equipn1ent. (~jJfR). 1·------------10 LTD \\·agun. lo 1111l('11i:;r.
a/c, p/s. p/dis~ brk.~. lu'.!
rack, nl'w hres, $\\j(},
842--fllSl
NEWPORT
IMPORTS ~~--'1-1 F'ORO Ran('hero. 1-"ullv
I
swap. 8096 I UO Z 1913, air, mag11, good j
I---'---------1 AWARD condition. Best offer over 1
T f V . TRADE Neii· OB nlot<ir for MOTORCYCLES / 1M¥EDIATEL Y _ S500'.>. 6i3-4911. r
1 OpS OT QCQftOn 1: Ion pick t!p. Phone Honda, Tr1un1ph, Ydn1aha FOR ALL FOREIGN CARS · Honda 9n7 '6!1 LTD Coun1t:y ~nui;:;-:--,,·;.~_
&11-8313. 1680 Nc\1port Blvd, Cost<1 I Call or come !n lo see us.! -1 Volk1wagen 9770 Xlnt Mnf.. :\lust ~L·!l. s1:i:" •.
equip'd. One 011Tier. Sho11 i1
by appt only, 833-8320 :aoo w. (".,MSt Hwy., N.B.
642-9405
' M"a · ' '72 H da C 'l&-26:\J TV, Radio, HiFi St. 8098 642-4345 on ar '69 VW .72 RAi·',°"·CH=ER=o-. -0c 1 u-,-..
Oss P. i Super saver! !039GCB! I \IAPLr: HCA St!!l'f.'O consol", 1 • A-1on{'{'r ·ii mod(' I . 1 0 I $1095 Sunroof ,t lo'>'' n11leuge. 1ndl. Like tH.'\\', Xln1 l-Ond.
Lastern bit $165. Lear c;u· Xln't cond. 850 actual tni's.' n Y 1 YED96.1l SZi(Xl. j..1~2 8 an1·.i pin.
LEASE
'74 FIREBIRD ESPRIT!
ru1.1l 1011. iur 11 .. u1d1t11)nu1~.
;,uu.111.111,·. r<illy II 11h1.,.I,,
1••1\t•r ~ll·rnng. Ul'dl'l" ·i,,.
1la)
$84.99 MO. I 1:~:, ~,~~:~,~~;~ I
Bu .. krt ~r~ ~. ··onsoll•, :i.lr'
1·on•lir1nn1ni.:. 1 in)l lflJ).'
11<1\1rr ~1rrnn:,:. Jlfi111•r 1J1"'
hr:1 1\r,, <1uto11u111.· 1ran.•n11~·
s1n11. l1un1l"h 11• dl·h1"('1".I 1
$98.12 MO.
plu-. 1.1\. ~(~ 1110. 01'.I ..
'74 VENTURA 11
,\urr,n1nt1<'. tint('([ ~ta~!<. d1"
Ill\(' hUlllTlf'!"<, n1r •111l(h·
tiorun~. In1n11•d1;1t1• 1h•l11 l'IJ
$76.66 MO.
plu:. IOL'i. ::6 n10. OEL. • DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2~AA Hal'lior 81\d.
stl'rro S90. ~5-~7 ~ Bike r1:uiler. All~ ~teel 0 I $1195 --··----Ji!!!i!!!i!!!i!!!~~~~i!!!~ t'Onstruction. ifolcis .J bikes. t 3100 W. Ca<ts Hwy., ;1.3. n Y '74 FORD ltan•·hl'1ll. ~·ull~ • · -~;tt·9 L~2 11L111or equip'd. One 01\11er. Shown
. _:i -.l. . I -•7-3337.S CAMINO CMSTIANO by appt only, 83.1-11320
..... .... '72 NORTON COM't-~\00, , TOP DOLLAR .... N .... CAllS"-'MO --------. -----·---
Co1-la :\!~·s: ~. i-'\Oli
Marinefquipment l 7j(I cc, tnust see before '",...""""""'11'•,..,s......:• 3337.SCAMINOCAltSTlAHO '66 FAIRLANE. ning-5. I spil, "ii GR.\:\'D Pri-.. ::o.noo 111i.,
l';;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii I buying ne11·. ::HZ>-3134 Best 1. FOR 4tJ.JJ75 or 111·1375 1.t.M.1UAMC4"STUMO · hearler.i, n-blt Pill,!. $GOO or fully P<tuip., vin,i! lop. $21.iOO. I off('r. 1 ,,.,.,..A..t_r.-.•~.... OC>i;t offer. f>.16-%31 1 ~l:l--7 1()6
General 9010 SPORTCARS ' 191t HONDA Sedan, Go• ci ; ~~4~n~-~ll~7~5~"'~1f1;1·~1~n~s~1~~~~~~~~~~11~111-;-;-;-;-:!::-1----------1 '72 1101'\D,\ SL 11;,, X!nt ' ,\JJ models ,t-year~ cond, 3SMPG. 1 _ _ _ A •Jtos, New 9800 , Autos, New 9800
LEARN oo«d. SOO m;, Mo v; n g < 548-1309 / 73 SPORTS BUG
· 01·c1was inust sell. SEE US FIRST! 1 Z>.li-:l4!"19 1 Jaguar 9730 I Silver·Blue, Cuslom \'/het!ls. BOATING SAFETY 1 1__ Radial tires, AM rri.1 !!lereo.
S,\IL QI{ PO\\IE!l BONO,\ 3JO CV. 1973. 4.000 _ ...,.,.....,,_,, • ..,.11.~•w-• 70 JAGUAR 1 ll,000 Dlilts. 2 Ye:ir f1:1etory ~'HEE CLASSF.:S
1
. n1i. SSOCI. or lake 01·er pymts , · : ......,., ...... ,_'"'"~ / \'larranty. S29ro or hesl ofler
By B11Jboa Poirer S11u<1dron al $4{).71 mo., 962-703i I !l~llMllllllrt_c.i. WS-llif ' XJ6 , 892-1832 bero1-e 3 p.m._
4
start ~lon., Juue 3. 6:::0 p111 T\VO Premier heimels. Jge i -·:\'toss ~een with blaC'k , '67 VW BUS. home·n1ade
fl.'e11,·po11 Jfa1·bor Ya1·ht Club I '.''" "''·"· S'" e•. Call ' TOP CASH for clean used ... · bit , • ~ • j d k interiar. Full factory campe~. r<> eng ... mo or i20 \\'. Bay SL 67~ .. 8176 eal's an true s 4000 ~ ~·1 7 30 .::.~·c:.::..:.._______ H d Ch I equipment. Low mileage & _ nu. warr'. 1""'"~ : ~~~I ,~:s T'.il cc KA\\'ASAKI '72, xlnt I owar evro et absolutely nawlei\S. AM to 4:30 P:\1, Duffy,
. ' · ! rond. CaJJ after i pn1., :\lacArthur and JAmboree JAGUAR DeALER GOING o\·crsea", must ~II
Boat1 Maint/Ser. 9020 548-2389 \ Ne1\·port Beach A1nt '72 V.\V. Campr .. lent,
' . .
1
1 '71 NORTON CO~tl\·l,\J\00, · 833-0555 ::. exlrai;. SJ,800./Besl offer. Salva~c s~1p r~pa1r, h~JI all ne1v, "O" miles, ro1nply \\'E l11..'Y 1 ._963-=~"'='°'---------1
cll'an1ng'. inspection i:ea1r, I chopped, sharp. ~1--6628 I L\fPORT:;o i\UTOS ; 1951> V\V Bug 200'.lcc engine, pro~, zinc, eh:. ~12aa. .74 Hondai;; ij(] & 550 BEST PRICES PAIDI dual \\'eber CRrb., new
EXPER. Call Geo r ge : xu·as. 51950 &. SiiOO I Dean Lewi• Imports uphlstry. VOO instrun1ent
Chilson. Repair Rcrinishini:, 4~ =,9 "S• H "-CM .,_11.' ,...-.n~ 3100 W, eoQ5t H~ .. N.B. patX'l . 960-Ij23 e\.·es.
eh.'. 675-1.':116 or 6-12--l585 1 -..12~-S~U~Z~UK~~~,~~=~-:,o~---c~·7c .... ~ ~r·JUr. ·1 · """'"""'~ 642·9405 -l9b'9 BUG. nef'ds &0n1c
21st
Anniversary
Sale!
B M . E 9030 I , 1 , : \\'ANTED to buy 1 9 6 J d 9738 ·ork Pvt. ply i850 oats, ar1ne q. Superiol· st. mac h i n e. I Che\'~lle J\lalibu stat Ion M•l a y, · 9~_· · . . . I eustom extras, 839--01-"lO i 1ragon. rnust have good 1 -, i-. · ~~'E;~~~~~;;;~ 1 ---'~;:---l;~~~~ \\AR~ER. velvet d r 1 vc, ,_2 i\lAICO body & good interior. Call 1973 J\IAZOA Station \\agon, •69 V\V Ca1nper In ~oocl cond.
n1an11c trans. Uke ne}V, for 1 ' 1 • ·, 1•00 alter 4 P nl 968-4971 1',actory Alr·AM·FM Racli?, I with new tires & ract. rebll
3:.!7 Chevy. AlflO, Cbrysll'r sec 0 appreciate. 1 · · · 12,600 Mi., Excellent Cond. en~. $1900. :>48-5711
"Parr up 10 i:o pl;tcr~ in easr· ~t48S Royal marine, xlnt 536-l6G7 CASH FOR Askina: $3,200. CaU ~7-8044
linii. h11rmnnlxing tori~' replncemenl engine. Best ?>.lusl sell 68, 3j() cc. YOUR CAR alter 5:30 p.m.
flallPr for )·uu, pullo1·Pr ror ofr. 61-1-1295 1 Riverside $16:>. or best 546-7070 '12 u•~A. RX2, ai·r, '""°· l1ln1! Kn lt or ~pon yarn !n: [ IJ C Ii II < o.o 0079 -·---·-"~~ l'Olora In alU>rnatio~ baby 2 NEW 28 -18 propellers. 0 er. 8 a er d. O'Ur""\.IO JUNK CARS WANTED leather. vinyl roof, eJec .. 68 VW Sedan, good cond.
and blr;a:er ubL~i;. l'au .. rn One G.l\1. 671 J:ilo\ve1', ! '73 YAMAHA 100 ;'\lX, rebl! Running or not. \Vill pay ' antenna 839-0440. With ski rack $900. or best
V. W. Pop-top, 56,000 n1I,
new palnt, Excel. rond. 22
MPG. $2400. 979-4240
i'Oi~: Men'a al7.A11 ~6-t::; llliSA· (neWl. 1 G.flt. 671 head. l ! l'ng. $3.iO. ;>J.9..432j after j:JO 1 up to S6S · 968--3200, 1 "13 •RX3 MAZDA WGN 17000 offer. !'i>7·911T. ~':':n';i:!~ 'j.~~~~;l~io~'.;\'n ri;' f>·I~ included. 11vb1 disc G.M. transmission PM ; AUTOS IMPORTED ' mHca. Best offer. 494-3917 .66 V\V \\'01nt-n'1f:ltr111ri>~L l ~,.1nrh AJ:~E=ft.~h~:~ GTr894J Mobile Homes 9140 1 • -Evl!S.: Xlnt cond. $600.
bua.t '"'Ith hl·luch hip), ~b 11" for-firat~_ lau mail mlspeci•I CRO\VN MARJNE E.."'NGJNE Audi 9707 iaie~r~c~ ...... ;;;;~-.~·~L;;;--.r.;_." I 5S2-9147 bust. 42 hi Pl : :i ... ( 1: bu"t, 11 h d I b 3 10 I P • MUST SELL B •·1 m 9'19' 71~ -=~,,,.;;=;::..~:......_. __
h l '( • 1 1n 1nJ ; ot erwiae loltrans.J ~ .1•lake ·yawner.~ 'l2AUDilOOLS Aulo.•--.. • Ip:.\ t4b11~t,,1ih1.1:1'.! Wntl ell
1
. 1 ll "~~ 'G6VWBUG u.., 'tires c au very will td:e offer 714/546-5569. up 1n am y park. 60 x 2~ OYER • .,. llf • 1~6 bual. 48 hip): 44 f IS bu't. ••--_,.,,,. _ •-nd to incl""'-sunroof, '-immaculate in IL , GOOD CONDmON Mlhlt1):48t:.tlb111t,S:hl111 . uu...,.. .. .... .,,.,,., Trailer, 1!1T2 Am erica n .~1 many exi.ras. out.831-:l»ODlr. I ' 4&~~: S~~:i· ~o'r h~!h pattern. = ~~.~~ Tandem. 3>-1>' boat, all I r!~~o sell. 53&b'285 e1·e. BMW 9712 15 USED --;~(/w~r)-
Add 25 t:ents ror eath patlr'm JG, o~ Chellea station, New exltu. $69:), 4!H--061J. • MERCED·"S ., for<lr1t~la11 mall ~nd ll)ttlll von. N.V.10011. Prinil Name, D--~ p C.Uft Motor Hontts, ORANGE COU.NTY'S rs I Clean, $Ul(I, $46-5396
handl ing; o th tt\11'1 ~(! ~:!~r~·· Zip , P~ttetn -11
'' owir ,_ Sale/Rent 9160 OLDEST oN DISPLAY Volvo , 9772
thlrd-tla11 dtU\'fl'Y wlll t~kt N 1 t~ '69 CO'CORD -~ I three wee\1 or mort. Send to " mott popular"-· ""'• ~ur. g I., e VACATION e ,.-Mp;~!.ian Martin, <MZ, tbe 01111 ~:1•z,1!J:,~~~~~~ '[1~ 2'ljVH, Ffuel 120•. tathob., AT YOUR OWN PACE . . • & House of Im~
....... lo"rte d11lcu tntlde -·-.. ·-1'1 ' ' oul·rig.s, t. ~ from So. Calif. mr-••
P•ttem Dtpt., 21!! \Vt11 lStlL Nn! hw +Knit lffk-lank, sun1·log. ln1mac. Pr., .. , ..__,Selection." 523-1150
''" X11w Yerlt. N. l'. 10011. hu Bu!CTlllJ\I• Palfern tt.19 pty. s I s' 8 0 0 . Day.i ._. .... I Is ·n. MBZ 250 . Sedan 'Auto. ,·...... ... __ , PJJQt NAMI, AOO"ISS, ltP, N1w l Needli~lnt aotlc 11.00 (i141~23-3874, eve II wk.nd (Over 40 Mn A M.H.'a). _..-UW9I
tlZS•nd STYLI NUMIER. Newl FloW9tCroohetlkfl.OO 493--6111.'i. ~ DALES trans., i 1ro'° AM/F)tt l.Uch, "'&-r:fel o•••·REIWA'n't:llNoO-ot" Ho1,,10 0....,,1..,, ..... t1.oo , , MOTOR HOME 1974 IMW' . X radial•/ .l low mlltlir. -
rllolte IO a.nil tor, ~nr, '""'' lr11t111t Cn1ch•t 86ok ...... 11..00 10 li 10£1\GLASS In b rd RENTALS S 831·2040 l>Cl\o~ L" •• Oil llUY
ra,1"'11 ln,111e ~F.\\' ~Pltl:\'ll· h111b111 M.o,.,,.. ... k -ft..00 . y11chl lender, Sia 597 Park In AIOck ~for Unmedlat• 'MN" Ir I -SU:.IW:I! J'Ai,·1·:l!N (',\TA· 1n-u111 NCNMy itoek _.11.00 Dr, corneJ' Aluihelni It P'.t.l'k Redh!ll A: Se.n Juan, !J'Ultln delJ•-. Exeellent uvtno 'TI.-~· ' •al -pw,r, very O;V1Jtt..,~"i D~1fV1!.R'l 1.00-l(i(i It)·! ... , n.u 11i~. fl'M CoMpl•t~ Glfl look ·-~~ .. .$1.0D Dr CJ\I cn41 D-0900 on,::::.~ •• , ...... ...,., __ .. &1.. dean. vtter. OWJN!I' W!Cdl• ftPtCl~LJR'ts
.. lltill M)ttJIOn, .... nil ~ti~ no"'. Cotnpt.U AfthaM "14 ..,.ft 00 -~~·---------~~1119.1 .... ....,,., IJJYU'l:'l"G ~ • •
'74 ·VOLVO
-Our FAMOUS "Golden TOtJ<h" New Corsi
Immaculate "Previously Driven" Car•I
Demonstraton -Ex1<ut/v1 Corsi
· ENTIRE MONTH Qf MA y
1tw.;.1<N1T ~k -.1111 bft~lr ,,,... .. ..,,,i.a,. •ta, ... _ iot 22 IT. Eddy cran cabin ; SHARE WINNEBAGO SALESSERVICE !.EAS '" ft'; I•-'• ~"':.:,i::!:ro1~ ."'"'k ·.'.:..:::~ =:':Ucr.'::' -·~-&o, cruiser. xtn1 runntng cond. 1 :Kl~ tnternt, use 10 weeks• Ro0vEYRSKASC .. ROEL!VllRYER, .._Y._ 1. ~~-~.1 ~~-eow,1_!. • ¥11.f.-ft ~ , ... M .._,111111Nilt--tt.ff 11 ...._,_.,TMar"'.,_-:!! $21(0). Call: 12131 tQ....2$98 -~ear. Phol1e 640-0482. A 1'"'9 -.-~·-guw (llr' ..._,,J nn fMllOR Bl.VD Of roH ~ I "'" " 11 Jlnr ""' --i;; OWENS XL 19' Inboard, with ltT3 zt' WINNEBAGO ntoltll"· ROW ROYCE B¥W Of 11<1'.-1 \oUI otll "1th i ' .....,.
tnulcr. New englne, Xlnl hOme, htl ever)'thlfts. lteaa. 234 E. l7tb a.. I DlllY P11ot Oulltled Adl j • , ., I ~b!!!~t11S1:;;~~;;~!!!!"!!!~54G.;~5=e10:!"!!!!!!~I
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San Cleittente
' ' Capistrano EDITION
VO~. 67, NO. 1'40, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
••
• J
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stoeks
MONDAY, MAY 20, 1974 TEN CENTS
.e1rs nnex
Did Patty Seeli Room?
Hollywoocl Woman Tells Knifing Incident
LOS ANGELES IUPll -A white
Y.'Q.man , believed PoSSibly to be Patricia
Hearst, and two black men, offered $500
to rent a Hollywood apartment for 24
hours and one of the men lunged at the
landlady with knife when she refused,
police reported today.
A chgnet for the 20-year-old heiress,
noy,· listed as armed and dangerous and
liable to be shot if she resists, was
spread over the metropolitan Los
.-'\ngeles area after six members of the
Impeaching
Could Affect
Coast Funds
The increasing intensity or t h e
Presidential impeachment prelude in
\\'ashington. D.C., is sending shock waves
3.00l miles wcsty,·ard -to San Clemente
city hall.
And the shOOder is D\'er a large
a!TIOWll of federal .grant funds which
have under.\Tilten major eqienses in
police budgets for the past five yurs.
In a rare insertion of any items related
to the President, Cily >.lanlp Kenneth
Carr in his cover letter nlatmg tO the
Pl<!iiminary budget said ·he blid three
serious concerns about the city's fiscal
future In the next budget year·
He cited Lhe "questionable continuation
of the federal police grant a s
Presidential impeachment Inquiry pro-
ceeds. ''
The statement coincided with the city's
filing of an application for about $244,000
in grant funds for the next fiscal year
undtr the program administered by the
Law Endorcement Ass Is tan c e
Admini5trelton ( LEAA).
The latt'St application seeks funding for
the salaries and benefits for e!ght
pen;onnel on the department force,
$30,000 in training costs for the entire
department, rolling stock and tltttronics
gear -all related to the President's
protection while in San Clemente.
Although Carr has reglster..i fonnal
concern, Public Safety Director Clifford
Murray took mild disagreemenL
"I dm't have any fears at all that the
grant program would stay In effect, even
if impeachment resulted in the remov81
of the President," he said.
He Is oonfident of the succeM of the
current application through the next
fisca1 year.
"I also think that ti ,..ou1t be simple to
jU9tify continuing the pn>gl"tm even jf
the President v•ere out of office under
the security provisions related to former
President!," he added.
Long range plaMlng -determined
long before the President's Watergate
troubles surfaced. called f o r
maintenance of the grant through the
eight·year tenure of the chief executive.
. By then, ti 1ru hoped .that growth in
the c~y would be slgnlliCM1t enough to
justify the extra officers [unded by the
grant.
Symbionese Liberation Army were killed
Friday.
A spokesman ror the FBI said the
Hollywood incident was one of a number
~~ -· -
MORE HEARST STORIES
APPEAR TODAY ON PAGE 5
of reports coming in from excited
cit~ about the whereabouts of Miss
Hearst and that they had ·no evidence to
link it direc!ly to the wanted girl.
.
Juice Back On
At San Oriofre
The San Onofre 'n u c I e a r
1-generating station was returned to
service at run power today,
Southern California Ed1'on Co.
announced.
The plant had been shut down
since April r1 for maintenance
1;1;'0rk and repairs to equipment on
the non·nuclear side of the facility .
Gov. Ronald Reagan w a s
scheduled to tour the plant today.
San J.uan Panel
To Pick Office1·s
.4.t P·uhlic Meet
Ofllcen o[ the new San Juan
Capi>tnmo Planning Cmunlsslon will be
elected Tuesday at the body's first
business meeting.
1be commisalon, appointed b y
members of the city council after the
March ; eleetlon, has been to limbo while
its members wett engaged in a learning
period by the council.
In addition Io thO election at the 7 p.m.
meetlrig in council ch ambers ,
commlsslooers wi)I oonduct six public
bearinp and 'make comm It tee
apPQilllmtnts.
One 'btortng will concern the granting
qi • qiJ)dltlooal "'" permit to ~·te a
''reeydlii8 ""''" for tbt reCMrtblrtlon ol ~ paper -~· 'nla!ed materials. App~t CIU? Lejault of ~ Beach
wu recenllJ ~empted by the city
COODcll from t11e·c1ty's .moratorlum on
new b<illding applications.
Le(ault lnteilds to establi1h his
buslneu at 32107 Allpaz, j1181 across the
river · from 'World Repair, Inc., a non-
• profit JlCYCllng center which operates on
a chllnli of city land 1161 to city hall.
Other beJrinp will concerp Jl1"anling ol
conditional ..a; .~II for 1 cabinet
shop, two beeNDd-wlne llceMes and two
noJK:Onforming yards.
Under new business the <OllU!IWIM
wtu be wed' to di!cuss tilt mallbox ftgbt
between 'ibe city and the U.S. Po,t
Olfice. .A city ordilWICe 1tatea that rural·
type lllliJb9les c;an oot be b;atod 1'i tbe
publlc rigbl-«·way, but tho; post office
haa·encouraged dtvtlopers to place them ·
the.,,, "l!l"llY, ·~~ to findings pl
the City !tall· .
A report by the Loo Angeles Police
Departn)ent, however, listed the incident
as "po&ible SLA connection."
An LAPD officer said the incident
oocurred aroond1l:30 Sunday night al an
apartment building on New Hampshire
AYe.DUe ln the Hollywood area.
The report aaid the trio were carrying
a sbotgtm, one of the men had a nitch-
blade knife and that they "possibly" had
hand gum. Miss Hearst was reported to
(See llEAl\ST, Page Z)
Herbert Porter
Freed Early •
From Prison
Frem Wlre Se'rvices
Herbert L. Porter of Laguna Niguel,
fonner scheduling director or the
Committee to Re-elect the President,
~·as released from the F e d er a I
Correctional Institution at Lompoc three
days early for good behavior.
1be warden's office said Porter, 36,
who J>lelded guilty to lying to the FBI
about the ~poSitim 'of funds of the
committee, was releued Friday after
serving 'If dai't of ·a scheduled 31klay
sentence.
Porter, son-in-law of the Arthur Briggs
of Monarch Terrace, entered the prison
April 21 after wluntmly arriving at the
prison gates early to avoid rePorters.
Hi8 senteoct included one year of
probation after the short incarceration.
Porter's sentence stemmed from a
story be admitted be told involving how
$100,000 given to convicted \Vatergate
conspirator G. Gordm Liddy was
distributed.
Originally Porter told the FBI tilt
money went to conservative students. lie
later told the Senate W a t e r g a t e
Committee be bad given the money to
Liddy.
0He aid he made up the story at the
urging of deputy campaign di.rector Jeb
Stuart Magruder.
When he corrected his original
statement, Porter said the reasons he
told the lie were re.lated to appeals to Jlis
vanity and to his loyalty to the President.
The General Accounting O f f i .c e ,
watchdog ann of Congress, said the
SI00,000 was used ·to pay off the
Watergate wiretappers after th e i r
arrests.
Porter, his wire Carol, and their three
children sold their Washington, D.C. hem~ last .spring and have been living
with the Briggs' in -Laguna Niguel ever
since.
Jn an interview last summer, Porter
said. "Telling 'the truth' "' tht most vigorous regimen I Jcoow. We tell our
dJUdren to do it and we shouJd do it. This
ls good therapy for individuals involved
and for the country."
Dlitr l"lkrt $llff PIMM
FROM YELLOWED CLIPPINGS, EARLY SAN CLEMENTE HISTORY
Printer Grimm MtDon•ld With History Director Blythe Welt.on
Early Clemente Papers,
Films Due f 01~ Showing
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Ot rr.1 01l1r Piiot 51111
Treasured editions of San Clemente's
first newspaper and a set of the earliest
films used to promote land sales by
founder Ole Hanson will form a special
program Thursday at the community
clubhouse.
Although the display of the first copies
of "El Heraldo" and the film showing
technically are part of a meeting of the
hstorical society, spokesmen stressed
that all residents are welcome at the 7:30
p.m. program.
The films will be sho"-'Il. and narrated
by Hanson's grandson, Ole "Bob''
Hanson, a local realtor and head or his
grandfather's company.
1be silent movies were produced in the
late 1920s to promote the advantages of
Hanson's dream ol. a Spanish village at
the seashore.
Society Director Blythe Welton -the
head of the "El Heraldo" project -said
that lM> select editions are expected to be
ready for display after undergoing a
special plastic lamination process to
preserve them.
The society several weeks ago obtained
permission from city councilmen to sort
through a boxful of the old newspapers
which have been kept in municipal vaults
for decades.
From the stack she and a CQmmittee
selected the best editions and arranged
for the lamination.
Plans call for binding the plastic pages
to fonn a book and to initially display the
items in a locked case at the clubhouse.
Negotiations then will CQntinue with
city officials to settle on a permanent
home for the bound editions .
A short business meeting, marked by
the election of four new directors of the
society, will be part of the evening
activities.
"We think that thi s program is
especially interesting to anyone who has
a fascination for the color(ul past of San
Clemente.
"The films and newspapers haven't
been shown for years and we have been
told that they offer a wonderful -and
often amusing -insight into the earliest
days of San Clemente," said Mrs.
Welton.
Hignway P~trol
Offi~ers · Pit;ket
For Parity Pay
No Clemente Tax Hike Envisioned
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -cauromi.
blgltway patrohnon, their wives and
cblldren, tolallng about 200 perlllll!I;
began plclcettng the CHP headquarten
her< Ill 7 a.m. today. 'Ibey were oeeldn1
PlritYlJOY with five other pollce ageocles
ln"the ltate. , · . ollm II-QIP publlc affairs, aald .
the · offlcori wanted an aver11e of the
wqe ocaleo belJlll neeotilled !or· law
dil<aqelnflll qfflairs It Loo AnaeJea dty
and couoty, Ookland,. San Ftaneloco al!ll
San Diego~ •
Only off-duty offlceri wtre taking pert
Ill the 4"monstratlon, Munsoo said.
• 'nlO new wqe acaln lor the other ftve
acencleo art to become effective July I,
lMi llild.
: "We're llOI "'*1ng for the highest ,amount, 1 ... 'Ill .,,...... of the, nve,"
llllllllOO lald.
lfe lald Ibo ...... WU lboul $200 per
1nOldll al Ille IQll .r ti10 -and a1>o1A
'100 ........ at ..... -ialll. ..
' n
I' ,~
budget 8nd agree on a series of study
aessions .for later in the month.
CUstomartly, the panel holds nightly
sessions on vdrlous budget elements and
approval of. the final document is
~ lllitU alter public hearings early
in June. 1 In the depths of the document. Carr
propo8l8 more than 1407,000 In capital
J.mpn>vements !or the corning year.
The JaiJ!est single expense is the
N~vy Rescues Fou,r .
)
JOllNSONOALE (UPll -A ·N&lY
reacoe ~Pter pl11Cked four Southern
C.lllornla residents of[ a JooH•ide.Jedge
Saturday .. ~after Ibey' wm tJilpped
by a .., In the sout\ltm i;ierra.
'J'ulare· CJoonty SheJiJrs a .. p U lj 0 I
ldenllfled the rour .. Don CI.ttm, M; his
dlu&httr, Pauy. U; LIJa O•ltfffe, 17.
ud Ann ijeJJlllJllll, 14, all of TboUlall4
Ooltl. ' I
• •
propoged second ·staee construction of the
new city yards at $135,000.
Street improvements vlould amount to
about 187 ,DOii.
New water mains would add $58,986
more to the budget, and vehicle
replacements would add a like amount.
Assessed valuation In tbe city bas
m ad e "'bstantlal pin, according to
preliminary ,projections. San Clemente's
unprecedenle<\ -bll(ldinJ boom wblch
be(an ·with Ille. -II" )>I Pfu9<>1Ulon 20
early last .1ear II ttpe¢ted, t~ cau1t a
jump In Vlil11<1 of taxa6Je ~ from
tl\ls·year'• 116;9 million to 172.1 million.
· ' ·Tat rtVttiuts, thcre(ort, wtll increese,
Olrr 3ald, from thts year's projected net
of $1,111,1168 to next 1'!•r's Jl<'Ojected net
Income of 'I,211,870. •
Delptte tlle -In tax tnoneJ , bo'*'wr, QOlt• projects that the city
revenue next fltcal ·year will actually he
leas, ..
'Ila yeor'i loOouMo will be 1bout
f),llt,817, uMI lh:e new budget lhows N.N~ for. the (l\)mln( budge1 °YW"·
• ••
Councilmen
To Consider
Oil Acreage
By JOHN \'ALTF.RZA
01 Ill~ D•llY Pltol Sl•tl
Three heirs or the ori gu1al owner or the
spra\111ing Forster Ranch Tuesda y \~111
ask San Clemente city eourfcilmen to
annex the 2.000-acre spread -including
47~ acres \\·hich n1ig ht bcco1nc an oil
field .
:\larie. Jerome and Rosen1ary forster,
through a !ay,·yer. are asking councilmen
to apply for the huge annexation to the
Local Agency Formation Commission
(LAFC ) .
Some of that land several weeks ago
figured in a nap before ·~ county
supervisors durin& a request to annex '
acreage ·into a sanitation district
Fifth District Supervisor Ron a Id
Caspers led the board in the defeat of the
plan because he asserted it was "growth
inducing."
Lawyer John Solomon gives city
councilmen several options in lhe
annexation - all keyed to the retention
of pennission to drill for oil on the prop-
erty.
The strong indications tha t oil drilling
is proposed for the acreage located
northwest of the present city limits
marks the first time along the Southern
Orange Coast that major oil exploitation
has been openly discussed.
Several test wells were sunk in the
postwar years in inland hills, but have
never been ccmmercially significant.
Solomon's options are :
-In the event that the city will honor
existing county permits to drill for oil
and if the city will allow the drilling by
amending existing city codes relating to
the practice, the Forstef's ask that the
entire ranch be annexed.
-If the city will forbid the drilling for
oil. then ·the applicants ask tlrat the
annexation proceed with the 475 oil acres
remaining in county control, and drilling
y,·ould still be allowed.
"To preserve the natural beauty of the
hills," Solomon said in a letter to the
council, "the Forsters have insisted on a
clause in the oil leases requiring
undergrounding and landscaping."
A final request from the lawyer calls
for the waiver of any annexation fees by
· (See ANNEX, P•ge !)
Rate Up Agai1i
-11314,% Now
NEW YORK (AP) -First
National Bank of Chicago. the
nation's ninth largest commercial
bank, today announced it was
raising its prime lending rate to a
record 11~~ percent from 11.40
percent effective Tuesday.
The rate lops tile 11 112 percent
announced Friday by a number of
major CQmmercial banks, including
the country's three largest. Bank of
America, First National City and
Chase Manhattan.
Chauncey E. Schmidt, president
of the Ctµcago bank, said in making
the announcement that he expected
an easing "before long" in the
prime rate.
Orange Coast
Wea.tiler
High clouds are on the horizon
for Tuesday, but lt will be sunny
and warmer, according to the
weather service. Highs In the UI>
per 60s at the beaches to the mid-
7lls inland. Overnight lows 42-52.
' INSIDJ!.; TODAV
Pte1idet1t Niion plll'hed his
notional hcalf~ it1.suro11ce pla"
over the nation's airwaves today,
declaring that the e11d to price
controls ma11 boost doctor blll.s
by 22 percc11t tbis year. See
story, Page 4.
\
• " ' .....
" " • • " , .. 11
" II
I
• • •
< •
~e DAILY PILOl SC Monday, May 20, 1974 ------··------______ cc;
Be-u:gan Cainpaigns on Coast lor Prop. I
By GEORGE LEJDAL
Of flle 01Uy PMot S"ll
Governor Ronald Reagan came to the
Orange Coast todny to lobby for support
of the June 4, $250 1nJUion state parhs
bond issue.
He left having been lobbied by t11n
special interest groups ~'ho arrivl>d br
land and by sea. ·
Three Laguna Be:\C'h girls pulled up on
horseback to the cliffside 'IC\\ s ronf('r-
Mi<kast
Fighting
Continites
By t:nlled Press Intern.:itlorial
S~'rian and Israeli forces today fought
artillery. tank and arn1or battle's on ~IL
llermon and along the 40-tnile Golan
Heights front for the 70th day v•hilc
Secretary of S111.te Henry A. Kissinger
continued hls shuttle cliplon1acy in the
seart h for a fonn'ula to sepa rate the
armie s.
Even ~·hile Kissinger conferred in
Dama!'cus \l'ith Pre~ident Hafez M."'.:id in
"''hat could be the final stages of his
three-\l·eek pt'ace-secking mi s s ion .
Palestinians ,o;taged a memorial service
for three guerrillas v.·ho died in an attack
on an Israeli schoolhouse at ri1aalot
\\'rdnesday. A speaker'.<; p 1 at for n1
collapsed under Nayet Hawatn1eh, leader
of the Popular Democratic front for the
Liberation of Palestine. and part of the
crowd fled in panic when guetrillas
started shooting in the air.
Jn Jerusalem. Prime 1'.1inistcr Golda
J\feir and Defense J\1inister Mo.">hc Dayan
told the Knesset ~parlian1entJ that Israel
must intensify its "·ar against Arab
guerrillas follov.·ing tile 1nassacre at
J\[aalot in v.·hich 21 school children v•erc
among 30 persons killed.
··Tue blood of our l"hildren calls upon
us to intensify our \rar against the
terrorists and to persevere Jn order to
got to the nests of the terrorists v.·here\·er
they arc.'' 1'.lrs. Meir said.
"fierce fighting is going on in large
sectors of the front 6ince this morning,.,
a S}Tian military commwtique said an
hour after Kissinger's arrival in
Damascus on his seventh shuttle trip.
"Uni!.> of tanks. field aritllery and
rockets as "'ell as rarious types of
mortars are taking part in the fighting,"
the Syrians said.
Th~y claimed undetermined "losses"
on the 1.~raeli side.
The Israeli military coinmand in Tel
Aviv reported no casualties.
Lebanon said the Golan fighting spillec~
over into its terrtiory when an Israeli
patrol entered Lebanon in the foothills of
1'.ft. Hermon . The Beirut defense n1inistry
said Lebanese army artillery fired on the
patrol and the Israelis fired back at a
Lebanese arn1y post but reported no
casualties.
No ne"' Israeli reprisals against
Pale.Atinian refugee camps in Lebanon
\\'ere reported today after three days o[
alr and sea raids,
An Arab League meeting in Cairo said
L:?banon 's dcfen.~es must be bolstered by
other Arab states.
Egyptian Foreign l\fini.<;ter Ismail
fah1ni said at the opening of the Cairo
parley that the Israeli reprisals \\·ere
aggres.sions against L:?banon that the
rest or the Ar.ab world '"does not take
lightly" but specified no counter·aciion.
UPI diplon1atlc corre.c;opndcnt K. C.
Thaler reported from London that
Kremlin leaders are seeking a 1neeting
"·ith Egyptian President An\~·ar Sadat to
prevent him from falling farther and
faster under American influence.
In l\1oscow, Arab diplomatic sources
said thal Libya, one of the most 1nili1ant
Arab countries, secured a Soviet arins
deal during the visit of Libyan Prenucr
Abdel Salam Ja\loud.
01'-HGlCOAST SC
DAILY PILOT
l"t' O<lnwe C""" O.,ly l'•UA. -..1h ,.h•c• " 'GI"'
b•»ea .... 1-j.,..,.p,~'-l," l!UU!o\""'3 DV toe Ota"Q•
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pub"'""~ "'<>M•v"l"'<IYll" fno.ov lilt C~<'I
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'~'" Y1'1•1 L1~un1 Seot• 1""'"'!'.a""lto;i<.• 1nd
s ... Cle.moMt'Sfll J!.oon Coe>"",., ,_. ''"''~
f"l)•oroai .:t~H•n II out>'''""" S..lu<~•>" ''~ &.in·
a•,, Thi pronc•l>l'I ~·""~ ~1nl '' 1• 330 We•I
&1vs"-Co111 M"" C.11bln ... !116<6
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loci R (,,1"1
y,~ ~!lllnl '"'"'""''I l.l1n1g•r
H4~\ A.. t.'•rr,·•e
"''M11'"1 l0•'"
s ... c~rOffic.c
Jo; Notll't 8 (QrTl•ll? i ~li
Othw-.Offfcn
C1>11•Mtwi X!Owt1tllay$1r<r•• NtwOQll 8..efo· W3 No&.._ &Q,,,t"6f\:I l•~nll"Ofll" llf'~~ 17&~ 0.Kn !lwlt•~rd
uioi>uS.'""" ~?'fr.tl•!A~ ......
Tt ....... 17141 64Z.4J2 I °'"""" ~ 641·1•7•
... C-.....AI~.:
T ........ 4t1·4•Jt
ence just soul11 of O>rona de! 1\far to
deliver personally 11 petition. Reag;in
read it to the assembl<'pt! of dignitaries
and newsmen.
"There have been horses here for the
last 50 years. We hope there wlll be an
l'questrian center in th(' TI('\\' sta!c park
that \\'ill occupy this land," Heagan said
the petition requested.
"1'111 going to lobby for 11."' neagan
s.i1d, rt.-"<:all1ng a cavalry srnt1nH'n!:
··Nolhing is so good for \hi• tnside of a
-.•
--1t~ _.,.
: ~,..
lrela1ad i1i Liuabo
man or a v.·oman as the outside of .1
horse."
The governor said he would pass the
petition on and work to keep horses
within !he arnenilles the 16Ql>.acre state
park may offer if ttie bond issue pro-
vides the $7.6 million needed to buy it
!rorn the lr\"ine Con1pany .
The lobbyist lor surfing interests wbo
cant{' 10 the press conference by
sur fbo ;ird \\'as m<irathon paddler Larry
Capune. Ji, of Balboa Island.
The sun-tannod, salt-caked surfer,
veteran of marathon .. paddles includ.ipg
one frorp Ne"•'J'IOr1, Rhode Island, to
Florida, drew con~iderable attention
garbed In a swim suit amidst the suit and
coot-clad crowd.
Gapune carried a pJ:istic waterproofed
pouch containing literature outlining his
desires for preservation of the state's
prin1e surfing beach.
Ca pune told the governor he "'ould like
to see hie 3.5-mile Irvine Coast become a
state beach. ''Thi s coast is a bre"thtr for
all v.·ho live inland," Capune contended.
He also asked gubernatorial 5upport
for hls next n1arathon trip surfboa1·ding
from Vanccuvcr. B.C. to San Diego.
Governor Reagan "'as introduced by
Irvine Company President Raymond L.
\\'atson.
lleagan said the Irvine Coast
acquisition will be possible if voters
approve Proj)Osltion I.
\\lhat the state is buying is the
bcachfront between Corona del ~lar arid
l.3guna Beach, two iQland canyon11-
l\loro and Los Trancos-and an offshore
natural marine preserve.
The state 1>urchase will acquire lhe
property ft;ir half its appraised value .
Reagan said.
''That. my friends, would be a sreat
bargain for the people of Cali fornia now
and for future generations to come.''
1leagan said.
Reinecke Denied
Change of Venue
\\'ASlllNG TO N (AP ) -A fed{'ra!
judge toda}' ~efused to disrniss a perjury
indictment against LL Gov. r:d Reinecke
of California or shift his trial to that
11tnlC'.
l.S. l;>ist rict Judge Barrington Parkt·r
ci('nied nioti ons by Rcineckl''s attorneys
1\·ho contended among other things that
he had been misled and trapped by
fedi.'raJ prosecutors into cooperating \\lith
th£"ir investigation.
""The court finds that ~tr. Reinecke
1vas unable to point to any .<;taten1ent
1nade to him about a promise of l('niency
in the wiequivocal n1anncr he
suggests," Judge Parker ruled.
.Judge Parker sa\rl there \rill be
incon\"i('ncncrs for Reineck " if he is·
s~·hedu!e~ to ~lillld trial here but he found
that th ey "'arc not unduly oppre&Si•e or
burdenson1t'.''
Parker ~aid he ('Xaniincd in rhan1bfr::;
a finAncial net 1ror1h statement and
income !<IX returns \\"hi ch Reinecke
submitted. 11nd dJd not agree th111 the
expen:Sl' of a trial in \\"a~hington ""'ou ld be
3Jl unsu pportable financial burden.
Tur jud~c s.•id a tr11nsfcr to Californ ia
, v.·ould prob<1hly i,:enerale aA n1uch
prelrial publicity !hen• ll'S \\"ill occ ur in \Va..~hington because Rt'inf"tke is a wet\."
kno1rn political figure in the state.
Judge Parker st1id !hat if 1hc ~Huatlon
changes bcl"'('fn tlO\\' ;tnd .Jul.r 1~ "I will
Ix· rxtrcn1rly sen!'iti\•<' 10 !hi.<: 111atter
. . J tlly$rH v.·1!1 takr l>h'PS
unsol1ci!ed'' if it appettrs that it may be
1n1po~sible to obtain ;i fair tru1l titre.
Supporters of the Ulster \Yorkers Council n1a.ke a
hun1an barrier across-the Shore Road in Belfast to
stop traffic during the general strike which has
brought i\orthern Ireland to a standstill. The n1ili-
ta1~t. group called the strike six clays ago lo protest
. British plans for gi\"ing 111inority f'a.tholics a share
in running the province. •
"E\'en if he brlic\"ed a pron1ise had
been made, this belief rnust be
buttressed by sub.<;ln ntial proof ... Such
proof is lacking ," the judge :said.
Reinecke and his attorneys CQntendcd
that the lieutenant go\·emor freely
provided documents because he bcliev<'d
special Watergate prosecutor.Fi pron1ised
he v.•ould not be indicted .
F. Joseph 11onohu<'. ltrineckt-'5
principal \\'a!<h1ngton attomey, oskl'd for
a dPla\' in efftcth·encss of the order un1il
Frida~: 1\·hile he consult."> v.•1!h rollea gues
:ind v. ith ReinN:kr to df'h'rn1ine 1.rhMher
ThC'y 1ri\1 appt'.'al .Judgr Parker's ruling to
the l" S. Cou rt of 1\pprsils.
Frotn Page 1
HEARST ...
have left the shootout house in a b!ar.k
area of the citv \Vith t\\'O black men
hours before the.gun battle Friday.
The re-port said the landlady told police
that one of the men attacked her \\'i!h a
kn ife v.·hen she refused to rrnt the
apartment for 24 hours and cut through
!he folds of her skirt. She \\as not
injured .
The U.S . attorney's of!icc \\"as
preparing to file a ·complaint in San
r~rancisco today charging J\liss Hearst
and tv.·o kno\vn mrmbers of thf' SLA s!ilt
at large \\·ith \'iolations of federal Ja11;;
perta ini ng to possession and use of
automatic \veapons.
\\'illiam A. Sullivan. assistant director
of the FBI. said r-.liss Hearst y;as the
v.·on1a n \\"ho lea ned out the front v:indow
of a red and 1vhil e Volks\1·agen van and
opened fire v.·ith a 30-caliber carbine
Thursday afternoon , as SLA member
\\'illiam Harris st ruggled 1rith a clerk at
J\1el"s Sporting Goods Store in lnglev.ood .
Harris ·was accu sed of shoplifting a pair
or socks.
"She is a federal fugi!i\"e and if she
resists arrest she v.·i1J bE' treated like any
other federal fugitive ," Sullivan said.
She is considered anned a n d
dangerou s. he said. and if located she
uill be told to surrender immediately. If
she tries to shoot. he said , "\\'c v•ou\d
unOOubted!y shoot back."
The FBI said an agent who believes his
life is endangered n1ay open fire on a
suspect.
ri1iss Hearst \.\'as kidnaped from h!'r
San Francisco apartment Feb. 4. She
later renounced her Conner life and said
she .,.,·as joining forces v.·ith her
kidnapers.
But the FBI maintained that she v•as
for ced to make the statement. Even after
she "'as photographed \l'ilh a machine
gun during a bank robbery, the FBI said
she \l'as an unwilling participant.
f-'ive persons. including Don a Id
Dc freeze, 30, who as head f the SLA
called himself "General Field l\larshal
Cinque." "'·ere killed in the names and
gunfire, police said. A sixth body, that of
Camilla Hall, 29, was found Sunday.
James Johnson. 18, \\'ho lived at the
ho1ne destroyed in the gunfigh t. told the
Los Angeles Times that ~fiss Hearst fled
fron1 the house les.s than 24 hours before
the shootou!.
Charges against Johnson's motht">r,
Christine Johnson. 35. of harboring
fug:tires. were dropped Sunday night and
she \1'as released, police said today.
Johnsoo said t\.Jiss Hearst told him
Thursdiiy ''They'll have to kill me before
J go back."
'"She told me she u·as with !hem -on
their side," said Johnson .
. 1-Je said Mis.5 1-fearst \Vas \\'earing a
pistol and wanted to stay with the others,
but they apparently sent her away to
keep her from being involved in Lhe
gunfight.
"I Lt.Ink some (black) brothers tipped
them off that th e cope were onto them
nnd that 's why they got Patty out of
there -you lmow1 their love for her."
He said a van containing1 two bl:lck
men drove up, and P..1iss Hearst got into
it and lert with them .
lit said he talked lo her for half an
hour and "she was a bc!autlfu) person to
me , real lntclllgCflt and all.''
Mission Viejo
Y outl1s S11ared
,i\.f ter Pursuit
A car full of ~fission \'iejo youths.
speeding a"'ay from the scene of an
attempted gasoline syphoning, cruisrd
through a Laguna BC"nrh police sl 8kcout
Saturday and ended up caught after a
\\'ild chase through the Art Colony.
A 14-year-old ~1i&sion \"iejo youth v;as
charged with petty thcft gasoline . and a
16-ycar-old \Vas char~ed \1"i!h reckless
driving following the episode.
Police said a plainclothes polic-e
dC'tecti\·e in a unmatked car spoiled the
you ths' auto \\"ith its lights oot , coming
cJov.·n Nyes Place at a high rate of speed
after dark.
The car \1·as s!oppca at Laguna Canvon
Road ~t Can~·on Acrrs Drlre. Police ~id :
the dri ve r faded to stop nunierous limes
for pedeslri<Jns in crosswalks, and ran a
stop sign.
The youths told police thev v.·ere
en route from a Dana Point party 11•fn:on
1hey rt~ll low on gasoline. An attempted
syphoning \vas quickly ended \\"hen the
syphonrr v.·as interrupted by a passerby.
f'ron1 Page 1
r\NNEX ...
the ci!.1·. or -_at least -a postponement
of the fees un!il development takes place.
Were the annexation to be i
cons~11:nmated, city proposals for building 1 dens1!•es on the inland hills would can for I
a total density of l.5 units per acre under
a cluster conc-ept. l
The steepest portions of the acreage ·
\l'Ould remain OJX'tl space and the more
buildable sections would be constructed
for planned-community and other uses.
Bes~des the major annexation request,
counC'llmen Tuesday will consider these I
items in a meeting which was called to /
replace last v;eek's session that was
cancelled due lo absences : i
-~ resolution from traffic and 1
pa rking commissioners opposing the I
desi gnation of Coast Highway as a
Lran sPortation COITidor as suggested by
1
the Orange C.ounty 'T'ransit District .
-Afl?ther letter from the sa1ne ~incl
endorsing ont-\l'ay traf(ic on a single
block of Avenida Del Mar from Ola Vista
to El Camino Real. The proposal would be one-way southbound.
-Discussion of possible projects to be
included in the next phase of the federal
revenue-sharing program .
-Discussion of the possible enactment
of a local ordinance requiring guarantees
on house11. The sugg~tion comes from
Mayor '11\omas O'Keefe and follows the 1
launching of similar studies in the city of 1 San Juan C8piatrano.
Gas Blaze Continues
At Natural Gas Well
I
S. J1iets Launcli
Counter-off euse
BE~1 CAT. South Vietnam (APl -
Back<'d b~-hcal'y air and artillery
supJX>r1. South '\"1('tnan1c...,c troops
launched a three-pronged rounter-offcn-
sive today against Norht Victna1nc!ie
forces 25 miles north of Saigon. <Relat ed
ncv.·s an<ilysis. Page 41.
They v.·ere moving against the village
of Ari Oien, captured Friday by the North
Vietnamese. about l '2 miles southwest of
Ben Cat in the strategic "Iron Triangle··
area along th e Saigon Rh·cr.
Government artillery and planes \\"ere
blasti ng the village, rrun1b!ing scores of
ran1shackle tin-roofed homes. l\1ost of An
11ien's 2.000 civilians reportedly hal'e fled
to government Jines.
•
A three-count indictment returned
April 3 accuS<'s Reinecke of lying to th e
Senat<' Judiciary Con1n1ittee ab o u t
C<'r1ain··asjX"CtS of his role in the selection
of San Diego as the site of !he
Republican Nalional Convenlion . lt
sub.c:equent!y \l'as transferred to ;\tian1i
B<'ath, !"la.
AlnQng: other things. Reinecke is
accused of perjury about \\'ht'n he told
John i\. rihtchC'll. forrner a!tornc\'
gi>ne ral and n1anager of Presiderit
Nixnn'!< re -tlection cam paign , about a
M0!).000 offer frorn lhe Sheraton Corp. to
under\rri!e the convention in San Diego.
Reinecke is a candidate for governor of
C1lifomia. and is opposed in the June 4
prin1ary by slate controller Houston I.
Flournoy. H~s trial is scheduled to begin
July 15.
lie petit ioned the court to n1ove th e
tri<i l ti> San Francisco or Sacran1ento on
growids that it .,..·ou!d be an undue burden
for him to bring defense witnesses to
\\'ashington. and that there had been
prejudicial publi city in the capital
'Strangler' Kin
Seeks 810,000
ROSTO:\ 11\r 1 -Thr brother of lh'
self-professed Bos!nn ~!rnngltr says he
11'.ints $10.000 11ndcr a ~!<issachusrtts Jaw
providing cornpensation for innocent
rirt1ms of r10\enl c-r1mr.
TI1e claim 11.·.i<> n1.ide b~· Richard E.
DeSalvo, administrator of thr es!ate of
Albert DrSatro.
1\lb<>rt rkSalvo said he v.·as the
strangler. a!thoufll:h he \1.'as nev£"r trird in
ronnC'<"tion \\'ith the s!ranghn~f'. He v.·it!
gerving a life tt'rn1 for assaults on 1
nun1ber of Boston·area \I-Omen .,..·hen he
\\"as stabbed to death last !"ovember at
Walpole State Prison in \l.'alpo!e.
NOW · SAVE~·
HUNDREDS
CLOSE-OUT ~· i~Ii;", ~895°0
GRAND PIANO SALE
WE'RE FAMOUS FOR OUR RECONDITIONED GRAND PIANOS, AND RIGHTLY SO. WORLD
REKNOWNEO EUROPEAN CRAFTSMEN IN OUR SHOP PRODUCE SOME OF THE FINEST
GRANO PIANOS IN ALL OF THE WEST COAST! CHOOSE FROM MAJOR BRANDS!
OUR alST auY LIST
WURLITZER PIANO ~'i:....... '395 WURLITZER PIANO ~t~:.0. .. ~ ...... '895
FARFISA ORGAN ..... '488 RG NIW tit.. '650 HAMMOND 0 AN 110.vu ..... -
LOWREY ORGAN Vtc!:. .......... --..... -'1295 HAMMOND PIPER rll.'.,110 ... --·-··'999
HAMMOND ORGAN.~n·.~~ ..... -... '217 5 PLAYER PIANO :/r.,, ................. !l-885
SOUTH COAST PLAZA OllAf tllft: '~II DlllV lY "
HOUllS e-..111. lt/4. 0... C-' ~""" (;olft-,,.,.; "° .... *"--~"...,,..., ... .,., Or -..i-ni. .,,._ 11111 M ""'°°"'*' ...... ..w....--oi~-. The others killed In Friday's sllootout
were khmtlfled &8 Patricia .J'Mlzmoon"
Sollyslk. 2l, Nancy Ling Perry, Ile, Wiiiie
Wolfe, 22, and Angela At"""!, ~.
STOCKTON (UPll -Famed TtUA I
fire fighter Red Adair says It may take
two weeks to ccnquer a natural gas well
fire that atnt flames roaring 300 feet Into
the alt. Adilr dlrocted an arouncMhe-clock drilling operation at the tfl'-
·SUnday, hopln( to lnterctpt the lhalt
fttding the bumlnl weU.
3400 BRISTOL-COSTA MESA
·540-2830 ' -.... ,. "' '-""' ett&•,...... ,... ., 00.• Mtte, C.lllQf· ... ~.,..,_~~~00~,.., ... ~ kOO!Mr'llll!r.Mll•ll!Y_..9"1)00~
\
' .
·r-( I / .
THI ICfYIOARO
Of THIWlm
.. _.,. "'" ,~,. SUN• ll•t PM " •
I
j
f.
.... ~•c• fl•~·' 1!!1~1r 1·1r.
i:,1: • . " '
I" ~W:;t .. ' I.. ' IJlll
I"" IL~. ~1£ c!!!ii
I .... I"° • " •• 1::11
f w~• •. w.l .....
....
M..;11, 1111 20, 1974. S( DAILV I'll.OT J} .
r" ........................................ ~·-. ... -. ................................................ ··.., .. ..,.., ..................... ..,u:
Mondav'•
\
•
Closing Priee•
N-t' .... Biiiet \'el.-e
II 'l.ol '""''""""'jl · fill! ... :·::.:::::::::I ................ ..................
I
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
• I .
.. 'fear's.High·Lows
Appear Every Saturday
:•...-
Dampens Market
•
~IJ lo Ille Daily Pllol
LOS ANGELES -Fluor En&in<or• I< C.Ostructors Ill<.
h13 been selected by Cei1ex
Assoclatfs to carry out a
2roirram which collid lead to
D'le engineering and
coru:tructicn of a m a j o r
uranium enrichment plant in
the United Stites.
Ctnge1: Associate! i3 3
group former$ trom Enon
Nuclear Co. JO(;. and General
Electric Co. to evaluate the
feasibility of private industry
entry into utanlum
W1chmtat.
e Gltl Pro'1lelll
•
'
•
12 DAllV PILOT
Beauteous
Worke,.
Rehired
ROCK lSLAND. Ill. IAPl -
A fll ohne 1,1,-oman \\'ho says she
\\'as fired ~1arch IS fronl her
job at lnten1ational Harvester
because the company feh she
\\'<'l.!J too prt!llV has been
rei nstated, a compa n y
spokesman said.
Peggy llughes. 28, u·rnt
back to u·ork last 1,1,·eek. !he
spokesman said.
The company has refused
corrunent 011 her di!.missal.
"fllE CASE
resOlvtd." l h c
said.
HAS been
spokcs1nen
She said union officials \~:ere
told shr retei\'ed '·too much
male altenlion." '
" . ;. ...
MOflCay, May cu, ',,
"We're looking for someone to handle
compl11ints. ~ow are· you at lying?".
customer
All in\·estigator for the Rock
Island lluman R e I at ions Commission said ''male··---~-.,-.,. .. ~.
CO\VOrkers found her so
at tr active th<.>y \Yer('
distracted from their normal
duties.''
111E 1.0CAJ.. commission
reccnt!r roted to take the case
to 1he T 11 i no i s Fair
F.n1plo~·menl P r a c I ice s
Cotnmission . ~ ~Uss Jlughe s. tllondP. 5-foo\·5
"·ho "'eighs nboijt 110 pounds.
could not be reached for
co111ment. After she u·as fired,
she said :
''In a \ra\ T felt sort of
complilllE'nted . I ne\·cr thought
of n1yself as a prettr etirl. I'm
just an average I o o k i n g
v;ornan.''
'Go11c Wit11
Wind' Set
For Vicleo'!
NE W YORK (AP) -"C~ne
'''ilh lfle. Wind." the 1939
7'fGi\1 classic that has been
\·iev.·e<i in theaters by n1ore
people than any other n10\·ie.
reportedly uill be shov.·n on
television for the first tin1e in
1976.
1be Ne\v York Times sai<1
that 1'\BC·TV paid about SS
n1illion for the right to show
the movie once, the highest
price ever paid for a single
pr9gram.
AN NBC 0 FF 1 C I AL
con finned the transaction and
1 said the Civil \\'ar dra1na-
romance \vould be shO\\'Tl as
pa rl of the net w ork ' s
contribu tion to the nation's
bicentennial celebration, th<'
newspa~r said.
I
Released just five times
since its AUanUl premiere,
most rccentl~· in 1967, !he film
has attracted a total audience
of about 145 million. 'T'he
Times said the anticipa!rd
tele\'ision audience for one
shov.•ing is 130 mi llion .
The 3-hour. ~minulc epic is
the third biggest moneymaker
of all tim{' behind "The
(i-odfathcr " and "The Sound or
r..tusic." which have enjoyed
highe r theater ad n1 i oc; 5 ion
prices than "Gone. \\'ith the
\\'ind."
cRrr:V up to 30 minutes of Mtn·
mercials if shO\\"ll in pri1nc
time.
Tl1at's a Lot
Of Puffing
LOS ANGELES IAPl -
Federal <I r u g stati sticians
estimaie !he mariju;ina !ieizedl
in California bel"·t'<·n .Julr 1.
1973, and to.larch 31. 1974 \11as
su fficient to roll 33 n1ill1on I
cigarettes. ..
Federal agents s c i z c d
293,000 pounds or marijuana
during G.e ~riod, . the Drug
F..nforcement Administration
announced here.
'Ibe agents also seiz.ed 2~
million Illegal amphetamine
tablets, J91 pounds of heroin
141 pound& of coca ine , 1. 4
milllm polllldo-ol bart>iturale
tablet., asa~ooo ballucino~en
tabl«s.'855 po<mds or ha shish
and lts9el' "b!mOUDls"' of otller
drugs. • •
• •
L.M. Boyd
Stiel{ to Ow11
Hait· Style, Gals
One in e\·ery 10 shoppers in !he supcrn1arket \\'inds
up al the checkout. counter \vithoul enough 1noney to pay l
the tab. Such is the report of a n1arkcling expo..•rl. Question
arises as to \\'hat ilems such citzens \\•ilh short funds are
most likely to send back. Research rcvc;ils them to be
candy. gum, ice cream. cookies ,books, toys. pct foods.
beauty aids. polishes. \raxes and ~ir
fresheners. That iten~ least likely to be
sent back, it's said, is beer.
A ~fassachusetts opton1etrist has
d<'velopcd a contact lens thal enablrs a
t'Olorblind citizen to tell one hut:> from
another. ~o. not 10 see thc1n exactly.
But at least to idCntify them. Some
help. any\vay.
That singing Boone naincd l'at started but as Charles
Eugene.
BA.\iASAS
Exactly 100 yc<1rs ago 1n Boston, a do!tu.r's \\Orth of
bananas \\'BS one.
Q. ·'f sa\\' a police shov• "'herr the dct cetivc founct a
broken tooth at the scene of the crunc <ind figured out it
had belong!'d to a \\"hile man. !lo\\"?" •
A. Under ultraviolet light, a \rhr1e man's tooth i::round
to pcl\n:ler glo\\·s green, ,1 black n1an·s tooth ground to
povider glo\\·s reddish orange.
If you plan to can this fall, ma·am. bcllcr buv \·ou r
canning jars ea rly. Looks as though a shortage is Co~ing
up there, lOO.
JIAJR STYLE
"Best beauty advice I can offer you. young lady, is
get a hair style that suits your personality." Such y,·as the
counsel of British thea trical producer George Edy,•ardes,
\rho qualifi!'d as a cormoisscur of feminine pulehilrude. It's
said his Sho\VS \Vilh London's Gairty Theater Company
pa raded more bcoutiful "·omen than other stage productions
any\~;herc. lfc "·as mightily opposed to those identical hair-
rloes. such as beehives, put out b.\' the assembly-line salons
to make all "·ome n look alike from the c.vcbro"·s up.
r\ot unusual for a c;lolph.in lo gro1r five pounds a month
in its first tv.·o years ... An en\•i ronmentalisl 11·ho's lobby·
ing to protect endangered species points out. ··once there
...,·ere three ,~·ise men" ... Some scientists TI0\1' are con·
\'inced they can prognosticate the 11·cather by analyzing
changes in the soil.
Inasmuch as they must be Uixed. most citizens nation·
\\'ide prefer the sales tax over any other sort of tax. they
repeatedly tell pollsters. That tax least fa \'Orcd is the
property tax.
Address n1(1f/ to L. '-1. Boyd. P. 0. Box 1875. Neu;-
port Beach 92660.
--------
To Start Your Week
On A Happy Note,
Here's Something Special
For Monday and Tuesday
"'9: Soup • Sunomono Salad
• Lobster Yamato
• Shri mp Tempura
• Chicken Teriyaki
• Beef T eriyaki
• Veget able • Rice • Tea
$695
,
RESERVATIONS PHONE (7141 644·4811
11an1nt11
060 FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER
I •
. .
Dancer's
Wigglirig
Noticed
BALA.cYNW YO, Pa. 1i;r1 l
-1'he nianager ol the San
l\tarco Restaurant says the
phone has been jangling ever
since a belly dancer na med
"Yasmi n" s \Ya y c d and
\\·iggled for the dinner cro1\·d
last 'reek.
As jt tumed oot, Yasmin
\\':lS 24-\ear·old Joanne Shapp,
the daUghter of PeMsylvania
Go1-. \tilt:>n J . Shapp. She
belly-d:1nccd through t1\·o If>.
1ninute performanceo; at the
st1burb:in Philadelphia club
Tuesday nt ght.
"f DIDN'T KNO\\' \\'ho she
11 as. onl>· hy her stage name,"
s<.iid ~trs. Carol Rotfeld, O\rner
and general manager of the
club. ··r '\as surprised and
C\'en more surprised by all the
publicity it 's gotten:·
:\!rs. llotfcld said t he
re:;taurant fraturrs a belly
dancer every Tuesday night
through ;u·ranr.;cn1rn1s made
'rith n Philadelphia d::incing:
school la101\'n as lhc ":'\avcl
Acade1n~·. ··
~liss ShaJ)P ··11·antcd it to be
anonyn1ous." but a local
nc"·spapcr go! \1·ord of it and
had a r c po r I e r and1
pholcgraphl'r in the cro11·d. I
•
ThlS t. your la:.t c h<11icl! !o 01111,i
B,·.:iut)lle<ol bc\01., 1h<' prk'-') go up.
Becouse. ~oon t'l~n the co<:t of .1
!lood n1gh1 · ... ::.le,·p 11111 Ix h1gh,•r:
C a1(h d Bt:>au11, rL'5t C<lrl~·. bl'c.:1u~c
lhb 1s .'.l hn11t.zd 11111._• off~r !
'fhc f<1n1nu~ lk •• ut\r.:<.t i$ built lik..:
no 01her111.:ittTc~~. lnd1\1du..il1y
•
pocketed coil~ co1ifom1to1h ....
n.irur~l c:on1011r~ nf 1,our bod1,: fh...:
Jloml pn1l! \Ol,·1 1-·'-111i ..;,',11
protected 10 1111.•td ... ~.1111-1 b,,ct.::i.1,
111rid.:01\ <111J oJu1.
Bec.1u,1' l'Oll '!lend 1 ;~ ot l"Otlr Ii{,·
111 l•cJ.1,011 (ll\C \Our-eh th• ro 111f.-,1 !
'J\1in Site i\1,11 11,·~~
u1 Foundc1t1011
$119.95
l !,1,.b\• ..,, ,. <>t.11'" .,
•I I' ,•1<1d.,!1•''I
$299.95
tod,1); b\'fOt" !oJlll<'Ht)\\ ~ [lrll"~' lJi ,,., .. 1 ..;., .· .,··
h.111 l :.-1 ...: 't
Beaulyl'C$t BackCdre I E:i.tra l·Jrrn.Bcitt!,!YTC~t Suprcn1c I Nom1al l·1rn~. $419.95
I I mi mi IAHkAMEllCAlD • MASTEi CHAllGE • '
I OUll OWH REVOLVING CHAllGE. SIMMONS '1 1865 HARBOR BLVD., DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
••• , __'.____~ PHONE 548·513 I
--·---
GLORIA MARSHALL METHOD OF
REDUCING COMES TO COSTA MESA
Being A Woman, Glor;o f'.l,arsholl Understands
Ladies' F;qure Problems -She Is In Constant
Contact Wi•h Her Over 70 Salons Across The
Country.
And you're invited lo help us celebrate !he Grand Openinc ol the most modern and
relaxing lieu re salon ever, with the ultimate in reducing equipment. We can assure you
of a pleasant w1y lo lose pounds and inches. And there are no ri1orous exercises or
disrobing, so you don 't haie to worry about ruininc your hairdo. We cive personalized
attention in semi-orivale facilities. and you will be surprised al our re1son1ble r1tts.
Just coli the Gloria Morshoil Salon neores: you for your pE!f)Onalized fiqurc-
or.u ,.s1:> and complimentary rre;::i1men1. There·i5 no obligation.
says ..•
"I hove never met a woman yet who.se figure I covld not improve.''
HOW THE GLORIA MARSHALL SYSTEM WORKS: On
yo ur fi rst visit, for whic h th ere is no charge or obli gation, .. you will
receive o complete demo nst ratio n a nd sam ple treatment. You will be
we igh ed and measu red (this does not req uire disrobing) a nd o
traine d specia list will analyze you r figur e a nd prepare a personalized
pragrom for you.
Gloria Marshall Salons a re no t spas or g ym~. The Gloria Marshall
system is designed for the busy, modern wo ma n. Many work ing
women fin d the sa lo n a more. rewo rdin g way of spending their lunc h
hours. Mothers and grond,.,others enjoy the re lo)ling, a lmost ef-
fortless way of reducin g, a lso, the added benefit of increased
circ ulation and energy. .
Since Figure Problems Are Di fferent Resul ts Wi ll Diller Accordingly_
uhe /ace and /igure tranJ/ormation of Pat Chad
• . . through the nationally /amouJ (iforia .JlarJhall methoJJ
f o
•
..
~
.\,
-')".
u~ "' . ' ..
·""AFFIDAVITS OF AUTHENTICITY ARE ON FILE 'IN THE HOME OFFICE ."
FIGURE CONTROL SALONS
world• l11dln9 figure control •~stem
Open daily9 to 9, Saturday 9to 4
0Yfr 70 Solooll Mtllan., lo ...-.ic. r-
I
• Sa.nta Ana-Costa Mesa
3851 Brtstol Shopping Center
(Across from South Cout Plaza) 566-1786 .
•
N ewpqrt Beach
1801 Westclitt Or.
642-3630
Orange ,
The City Shopping Center
997-0211
J
.11 .. '\f) \OTf: Tllf: DH I \t t ·r1<·
fll.·1.\Gf : I.\ f '.ffl II. f "f; ITl "Hf."S
( pholll t ) JI" h"" Prrt (.hnd .•t11rlf•tf nt
<;fori" .\l'1r11h,,/1'11 11 h1• 11·1·i~h1•rl :!:1:.!
lh•.
( phntn :! ) l(J ri11il.• ,,.,,.,. .•111• hnd ,,/.
'""""·'· /11 ,, I';' i1H·l11••.
( phllto .1 ) /11 r••1·11r1/ 1in1v "''" hn.• /11111
6:1 lb.• .• "'"' ,;,; i11rh1•11 ... ""·" ponr
.fr11n1 11 '''"All ~i:P 2-IM 11:.! /11 " 11
11n1/ i11 11'Pll 011 h,.,. ll"fl.\ '" hPr 1,.,,..
.f l'I'/ "'""···· 11j;p ' •. II I :1.
Pot ""·'""• "I trivd "''"'·\·thi111t Ill l11 ~e
H"PiRht. but nnlhin( 11·orkp,/. \n1(',
1hank11 to Clorin .\far11hnll, I nm
nble lo 11hop fur 11nd b11.1· rlo1he11
ill rolor11 and 11t.1·I"" I H'n ll ner,.r
nble lo 1\f"fl'f befnrt'. R¥lif'rf' '""·
1r hen ~·nu K'f'ftf f'I ~iu> 21.1/2, \Ofl
hn re nn rhn;,.,.!" ·
Grand ·o~ening
Special Reduced
RATES
I
..
7
l
J
• '
v
Or
ol
bo
s
Ia
ho
I
d
w
a
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s
of
A
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$
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L
Laguna Beat!h
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocki""
VOL. 67 , NO. 140, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 20, 1974 TEN CENTS
Beagan Canapaigns on Coast for -Prop. I
By GEORG E LEJOAL
01 lllf D1Uy ,Hot St1tf
Governor Ronald Reagan came to the
Orange Coast loday to lobby for support
<1f the June 4, $250 million stale park.s
bond issue.
lie left having been lobbied hy two
special interest groups \vho arrived by
land and by sea.
Three Laguna Bench girls pulled up on
horseback to the cliffsiCc "'C\rs confer-
'. WINS EARLY FREEDOM
L•guna Niguel'\ Porter
• ...
llerbert Porter
Granted Early
Prison Release
From \\"Ire Ser\·icrs
llrrbcrt L. Porter or Lnguna r\igucl,
forn1er Sl'hl'duling director of the
Comn1i1lcc to J{c-clect the President,
u·as relea;>('() frorn the Fed c r a I
Corrretionul lnstuullon at L-OOipoc three
days early for i;ood behavior.
The u·ardcn's office said Porter, 36.
u·ho plc;i.dcd guilty to lying to the FBI
about !he di sposition of funds or the
comn1iltce, \\as rclcMt'<i Friday after
serving 27 days of a scheduled 30-day
sent ence.
Porter, son-in-law of the Arthur Briggs
of htonarch Terrace, entered the prison
April 22 afler voluntarily arriving at the
prison gates ea rly to avoid reporters.
llil;. sentence included one yea r of
probation after lhc sho rt incarceration.
Porlcr's senlt•nce stc111med fron1 a
story he admitted he told inv.olving how
$100.000 given to convicted \\'atergate
conspirator G. Gordon Liddy \\'as
distribu ted.
Originally Porter told the FBI the
money went lo conservalive students. He
later told the Senate W a t e r g a t e
Committee he had gi\'en the money to-
Liddy.
He said he made up the story at the
IS.. PORTER, Page 2)
'
Orange Coast
Weather·
liigh clouds are on the horir.on
£or Tuesday, but il will be sUMy
and warmer, accordin¥ to the
weather service. Highs m the up-
per 60s at the beaches to the mid·
70s inland. Overnight lows 42·52.
INSIDE TODA. V
Pre#dtnt N~on pu.shed 11i1
natioriol 1leoltli inauronce pla1'
OVtf the twtk>n's alnoaties todau,
dctlartng lllal lh• <t1d lo prier
cont.,.0!1, mau boo1t doctor billl bu 22 .perce1ic tliia vear:. See
1lor~. Pog• 4.
ence just soultl of Olrona del Pi.tar to
deliver personally a petition. Reagan
read it to the assemblP.fe of dignitaries
and new!rpen .
"There have been hor se! here for the
last 50 years. \Ve hope there will be an
equestrian Ci!Jlter in the new state park
that will occupy this land," Reagan said
lhe petition requested.
"l'ni going to lobby for it." Reagan
said, recalling a cavalry sentiment:
··Not hing is so good for the inside or a
3 Officials
Back Bid
By Taylor
• Tu·o former Laguna Beach t•nified
School Dislrict superintendents. and one
long-tinle foolball coach at Laguna Beach
ltigh School. ha\·e come forth in supJX>rt
of Larry Taylor. a trustee candidate in
the Saddleback Community College
Uistrict.
Alfred A. Ar1use. supintendenl·
president of Sant.a ~tonica Co1nn1unity
College and superintend ent of Santa
r..tonica tnified School District. has
v.·rittcn letters to local nc"·spapers in
suppon of Taylor's candidacy.
Artuso. superintend en t in Laguna from
1959 to 1964 , said he worked "'Ith Taylor
v.iten he \\"&6 oo the Laguna Beach Uni·
tied school boadr, and caJ:ed him "a
strong leader."
Taylor was involved in the formation of
the Saddleback Junior College District in
those years, Artuso said. He added that
bc<:ausc of this, Taylor's candidacy is
"especially appropriate."
Another fonner Lagun a superinten-
deot. \Villiam L. tnlon1, currently super-
intendent of the Mount Pleasant School
District in San Jose, ec\1oed Artuso's
~ntiments.
'"f ean assure you that no single
individual in the county has greater
knowledge of the planning for and
(Stt BACKING_, Page Z)
l\'1issio11 Viejo
Y 011ths S11ared
After P11rsuit
A car full of Mission Viejo youths,
speeding away from the scene or an
attempted gasoline syphoning, cruised
through a Laguna Beach police stakeout
Saturday and ended up caught after a
\rild chase through the Art Colony.
A 14-year-old T\lission Viejo you th v•as
charged u·ith petty theft gasoline, and a
16--year.()Jd 1A"as charged with reckless
driving following the episode.·
Police said a plainclothes police
dete<"tive in a unmarked car spotted the
youths' auto v.·ith its l!ghts out, coming
down Nyes Place at a high rate or speed
after dark.
The car was slopped at Laguna Canyon
Road at Canyon Acres Drh~e. Police said
the driver failed to stop nurnerous times
for pedestrians in crosswalks, and ran a
slop sign.
The youths told police they were
en route from a Dana Point party when
they run low on gasoline. An attempted
syphoning was quickly ended when the
syphoner was interrupted by a passerby.
Laguna Canyon
Blaze Probed
man or a v.·oman as the outside of :i
horse."
The governor said he Y!'Ould pass the
petition on and work to keep horses
within the am€flities the 1600-acre state
park may offer if !be bond issue pro--
vtdes theo $7.6 million ooeded to buy it
fr om the Irvine Company.
The lobbyist for surfing interests who
carne to the press conference by
surfboard was marathon paddler Larry
Capune, 31, of Balboa Island.
The sun-tanned. salt-calied c;urfer.
veteran of'"l'narathon paddles including
one from Newport, Rhode Island. lo
Florida , drew considerable attention
garbed in a swin1 su it amidst the suit and
co.at-clad crowd. ·
Capune carried a plastic waterproofed
pouch containing literature outlining l1is
desi res for preservation of the state's
prime surfing beech.
C~lpUne told the governor he \\POUld Jike
to see lrtc 3.5-n11lc Irvine Coast becon1e :i
•
state beech. '"Thi s coast is a breathC'r fur
all \Yho live inland," t:apunc contended.
He also asked gubernatorial sup1xirl
for his next n1arathon trip su rfboarding:
fron1 Vancou\'er. B.C. to Sa n Diego.
t:overnor Hcagan \\•as 1ntrocluced by
Irvine Cornpa11y President Rayn1ond L
\Vatson.
Reagan said the lr\·1nc C o as t
acquisition l\'ill be possible if \'OIC'rs
approve Proposition 1.
\\'hat thC' st<.it r 1~ buying is the
beachfront bet1\·een Corona del J\1:ir and
Laguna Beach. t"·o inland canyons-
~loro and Los Trancos-and an offshore
natural marine preserve.
1'hc slate purchase \\'ill acquire !he
property ior half its approiscd value.
Heagan said.
··That, my friends, would be a great
bargain for the people of California now
and ror future generations to 1:~1ne.''
R('agun said.
·woo ? • Ill
·----· ----·---·------
'
• J ·~~-·~·· ~-:·· •
LAGUNA HIGH MALE TRIO SWEAT OVER THEIR HOT SEWING MACHINES IN CLASS
At Work (left to right) Jim Sims, Pete Cottam and Erick Heard Stitch Away
5 Boys Sew; So What?
Girls' F orn1er Domairt in Horne Econornics I 1ivculecl
By lllL . .\RY KAYE
ot t111 D•UY Plktf S!ill
"People in ~he ya rd age stores looked at
us kind of funny u·hen u•e first v.·ent in to
buy fabrics and patterns," said Pete
Cotta.in, 18, a good-looking senior at
Laguna Beach High School, \l'ho is a
lellerman in football. track and bascb::ill.
"But now they know us and accept us.°'
Pete continued and four fellow tailors
nodded in agreement.
llome ecooomics used to be classes
reserved for girls. But no\v more !han
half of the students in !he \'egctarian
cooking class this semester are boys and
the sewing l\-Orld is :.,Cing in\·acied too.
This semester. five senior boys -
Cottam, Jim Sims, Eric Heard·. Jon
Brockman and Ludv Curcio -rub
elbows with girls Seated at nearby
sewing machines.
So far, lhe eager tailors ha\·e made
S1Aimming trunks, shirts, pants. coats,
bow ties and even a fake fur co.,·er for a
grand piano.
''Hey. is it hard to sew on corduroy?"
one boy asks the patient teacher. t\1clinda
ti.fangs.
She answers, and then turns to
another, who is murmuring aloud,
"Terry cloth -that's that towel-like
stuff, isn't it?"
The terry cloth questioner is llcard. 18,
who Is trying to discover the right
material for a robe he plans to sew.
"I'm really surprised at how "°·ell all
!he boys have caught on,'' said Mrs.
I
1
1.1ang. ''They're really enthusiastic about , ,.
•
. ,
D1·ag11et
Sp1·eallii1g
F 01· Hei1·ess
".''d-.-M·-. ·-·• •• o ·• •--~ • -•• '"' ----•
LOS A\C:ELES (UPI I -A \Vfii.tc
11·01nan. believed JXlSsib\y to he Patricia
Jledrst. and two black rnen . offer~ $500
to rent a Hollyv.·ood apartment for 2t
hours and one of the n1('n lunged at the
l::indladv v.·ith knife \1·hen she refused,
pollcc i-ep:lrled today.
A dragnet for the ~O-year-old heiress.
nov; \isled as anned and dangerous and
liable 10 be shot if she resists, \\'as
spreaa O\'er the 1netroJX1litan Los
1\ngelcs area after six 1ncmbers of the
Symbioll('sc Liberation Am1y u·cre killed
Friday.
A spokesman for the FBI said the
Hollyv.ood incident u'as one of a nun1be r
MORE HEARST STORIES
APPEAR TODAY ON PAGE 5 --c------of repor!s coming in from excited
citizens about the whereabouts of Miss
11earst and that they had no evidence to
link it directly to the wanted girl.
A report by the Los Angeles Police
Department. however. listed the incident
as ··possible SLA connection."
An l..APD officer 1said the incident
occurred r.roond 9:30 Sunday night at a.n
apartinent building on New tlarnpshirc
A\renue in the Hollyv.·oocl area.
The report said the trio \\'ere carrying
a shotgun, one of the men had a-switch-
blade knife and that they "JX>ssi bly" had
hand guns. Mi!IS Hearst was reported to
have left the shootout bouse in a black
area of the city with two b{ack men
hours bcfore·thc·gun battle FMday.
The reJX>rt said the landlady told police
that one of the men attacked her with a
knife when she refused to rent the
apartment for 24 hours and cut through
the folds of her skirt. She was not
injured.
The U.S. attorney's office was
preparing to file n con1plaint in San
Francisco today charging Miss Hearst
and tv.·o knov.·n members of the SLA still
at large "''ith violations of federal laws
pertaining lo JXlssession and use of
automatic \\'eapons.
\Villiam A. Sullivan. assistant director
of the Jo'B I, said T\tiss llearst was the
Y.'oman u·ho leaned out the front window
cf a red and v.·hite Volkswagen van and
opened fire \vith a 30-caliber carbine
Thursday afternoon. as SLA member
\Villiam Harris struggled v.·ith a clerk at
(See HEARST, Page ZI
Laguna's F1·ee Clinic
To l\lark Annive1·sary
The Laguna Beach Free Clinic will
celebrate its fourth anniversary with an
open house on May 30, frorn 11 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. There \Yill be tours of the new
dental and counseling facilities, which
\vere constructed under the County of
Orange Re\"enue Sharing Program.
sewing and very logical. Oh, and J p •
mechanical, too. Maybe that's why they ,; e l S rU CtLCe
took to the sewing machines so ""·ell."
As well ... they're doing. lhe fellows w :if· Carrr·,ers still need a little assistance from the ~nr r 11o1 Slett f'Mtoa " "
:~l~perlenced sewers in lhe class -HOW TO BEAT INCREASING SUMMER SWIM TRUNK PRICES ' . . .
A f' Which did S2 000· daliMlg to "Yeah, they all help us. Like they • LBHS Athlete·S.amster Pete Cottam and Handiwork Jf you ve noticed more Jel noise
ire. · horn •Sund& ia e··-.i.-' thn!ad our m,achlnes if we,need it .. said" · than. usual late!~ nea r the El Toro Laguna ~00 e Y 1.1n1....::r Eric t , i .; , N • • • ' , ~1ar1ne Corps Atr Base, the reason ~~=Jes.today by~ <:ounty ~ ~ •• ·14.~J d'ecitted !'th. \al:~, said "'1·~.!··.··~\{1 : •• (t \; ' . "P.ly·\toaii n,V(\rlt'~..;t·d really is<1;~aycarrierlandingpracli~ ~ hlMlle ~ '/~ ':"t\E.,~ ·· !j~~~ 1;:'d~ti~tJ,~~~·,•~'t,~' · .11 .anyOO,e ,i;~,~ ~;hiii ~rt;..,.~ , 1ip;~ the>)!) ... am! I ~.Al ~Id lo tell pe~a~ spokesmen said lhe !raining
. Is· on · .. _ nr.~Jl ,..,,.,,_,,. yi, t t bf 0 !ge'lll ., brings i111 a ~·r of "p&n!J Io ·Jnehd 1\> ' mt. Dad at tlrsl. But tl\On 1 -em wed pei;iod Is ~uled 10 last through
·OOUDdal')'. Laguna dty llro unlll h lo l.fio°";~ ou~do co ell)ln ~I '~~ .· bet~ up~ Jlln, 18. • · 'he took a sewlrig cla!t, Ibo, whon'.lit Wllf ,'. ' • J\lll~ 3•'IO<l ·'In-' ~lg)Jct noise :r:f :.=·~rat~[; alann E';:!~ m ~f.!a!l . ~t~I( :ii '~ou : The ~ya ~ltt , they'd 'gi/ ra~d tn;the para~"·" 'Pete sa\d. · ' , levels o~ 10mttnearby ctlnmunl· ··-w· tl1 -'t ~ lo ~w· prelly 'b(Jdly Jii>m fellow slud"!'t! af •'When l went swlmrli\ng m the poal, \Jes. net doaned up and w lnvut 1ate the can , •' r "flll . up • ochid "Bui llflj>i tli!II finished 1ea91~ r.ty Dad w~• surprised the trunb stayed Aircraft of Uie Third Marino ct.Jt· 11re l>fCan iJi the bothroom of the yow• ·• l>Qy~; clot~I) ts· J: us, ilil:y wue l•l•leottd In whot we we~ tM!U..r,'~ Pt1e'a4ded ', ' , Aircraft Wing are fl ying day and
wood frame house oylled by i.cuna expensl • " '...t,Hd:"7l. : . ," J.'ii!ID 14111(. i:, __ , . . . ~Ludf. t7, 11 1he most eip,ne!ie<d tailor night missions Ill> .to 10 p.m., the
Realtor P1ul We111~k. Tbe houle wu tnmu i!ill-"~~·tijF <f'l""lti .. 'i!"· ltv• • .•,f,~ all, J:lt t<!Qk !hf Co.1i!ae for the spokes men said.
l<llledtootbenatlltellmeolthellre. ..,..1 . ~~ t.:'., "•'<',I •·,;· 1» · tS0..8E\iJN4;h .. I) ~-----------• • \>M ' .. • •1 :t,. r_ ~. • '. • • .. .. ·
'
•
I
Nixon Mus1 . Yield 64 Tapes
'
i
\l'ASHINGTOS IAPI -U.S. District
J ud&:e John J . Sirica toch1y ordered that
\.'resident Nixon turn over by Mey 31 the
1upcs or 64 con\·er-;ations subpoenaed by
special prosecutor Leon Ja11•orski.
But Sirica said he "·011 1d stay hi'!
decision if the President'~ la11 yc rs appeal
the decision. as expected .
The tapes are being sought by
J11v:orski as evidence for the \\'aterga!c
eovf'r-up conspiracy 1rial invoh ing se1·c11
lorn1cr \\'hitc !l ouse und f'l'ix11n re-
Decisions
On Lagii1w
Budget Set
Laguna Brarh Unifit'd St•hool District
trust('t'S Tuesday night 11·ill explain to
voters how the budget 1~·il l be cut or
expenses rcstor1!d, drpcnding on fate of
the JunC' 4 t:ix O\'erridc cleetion.
If !he tax p.isses. so inc budgrt cuts
rould bf." restored . If it fails, trustees
1nust cu! in se\'cral areas.
The budget study \1 ill con1e Tue>sday at
i :3U p.111. in the di~trict office board
roo1n. 5.SO Rtu1nont A1C'.
Two lrust£"cs. Patricia Gillette and
Gerald Li nke. last 1\Cl'k indicated lhC'y
arc dissatisfied 1rith s e v e r a I
r cc o n1 m c n d a t i on s for budget
reinstat<'n1rnts as suggested by the
district staff.
BcrauS<' of thei r criticisms, the
adn1inistration 11·iJI be presenting a
re\'ISl-d list of rcins1atcn1en1s -this list
~56.200 less than the previous one, vthi ch
retun1l-d 1271.600 lo the t97~-7;i school
budgcl. This is the an1own the district
111!1 reccil'C if !he <'!l·Ction is successful.
Hel'ised budget iten1s include:
-·Returning $.11.IOti to !he budg~t
rese r1·cs in~tl'ad of the 562.106 originally
---___ r_£!:'fl!!l ll1Cn~t.:Q, .. .,_ _ __ ··~
•
-~oL retu rning any ni oney to11·ard s
data· ·procc·sstng. The pr cV i~o-u·s
reins1at cn1 ... nt llsl included a $10,000
return in this category.
-r-iot reinstating any money tov.·ards
transportation supplies and equip1nent,
mstead of the $3.000 rerommcnded.
-Eliminating the S:!.200 re tu r n
rccon1mendcd for conferences.
-Cutting back the reinstatement for
staffing units fro1n $JQ.l ,OOO to S9~.54t
The list of cutbacks n<'edcd if the
elecrion fails v.·hich "·as prescntt'd to
trustees last \1·eek. has not been altered
by the administration.
The main area of contention mav be
the money al\oca!ed for data procesSing.
Although the adrninistralion follo\l'Cd the
trustees' directive ;:ind rli1ninatcd a
reinstatement of $10.000 in lhat cat<'gory,
Superintendent Don Wood i n g ton
expressed concern over lhe district"s
abandoning con1puter data processing
capability.
w·oodington said he "·ould recommend
lo trustees that they allocate enough
funds to retain data processing in the
district.
In addition to the budget matters.
trustees 11·i1l consider:
-AJlo"·ing a student representat il"e to
the board of C'ducation.
-Approval of an agreement with the
County flarbor. Beaches and Parks
District for lhe county to fund a
recreational aid e to assist the con1muni!v
of South Laguna in rec reational activitie.s
during after-school hours at Aliso School
,playground.
-Discussion of inter-dis! rict
attC'ndance agre ements \r1th Capis!rano
l' nil ied School Distri<:I. !\c11 port·\lesa
LniriNl School T>1s1ricl and Saddl ebac k
\"alley lnified School District.
Ford Lea,·es llawaii
\\'AJr.tEA . Jf;i\1·aii 1L"PJ 1 -\'ire
PresidC'nl C:C'rald Ford travels to Seattle
tOOay afler a rl'laxing: 11"l"(~kend of
golfing. s1~i1nn1in~ and dininf( on lhc
isl and of lla\\·a1i. The \·1ce president. 11ho
arrived on the .. bi~ island" af!er a hrt:lic
st:hedull' of speet"h1'l' Friday. played golf
Sa turday and Sw1d;iy.
OIAHGf COAST 1 &
DAILY PILOT
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L•qttM ~oc:lrl Offict
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C'''!O~ow llDW1r"9.o,'"••'
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Tek,tioM 17141642·4l21
Cl•1.ttle4 A4"""•""9 642-56 7~ &..,.... ....... Dep.rtwi.11h.:
,.,.,,.... 494-9466
COPtl''IJ!I !ti• Cl<lt'!lf Ct°t" P1~' •··; C""
r• ·; hO rwt•o ti-• >!tV•'1•'""' •1·'"'··•-~"t'
Ot A~""""'1.,... Tl --...... to •~n•A"-tJ
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~A-OQMtlllODO'l ... ~41 11 Col••,_..~, c;.1o1.,..
1 I "'Dtl:"~'"-~ 0... calrwtr 110Q ,...,,.,. ~'"'°I ... OO_,,.!y,"'"'1_..,~ion.IJOC"10'"l!ll,
el~llon committee aides.
The trial ts scheduled to be held befort
Slrica ln September.
Sirica ordered the \Vhite House to
prepare an inde.1 and analysis of what Is
contained on the lapes to be turned over.
including .any clal11_1s the President w_a_nts
lo n1ake to keep portions or the tapes
confidential .
Sirica follo\1·et1 a sim ilar c:ourse last
~·l'~1r \Vhcn Nixon's lawyers fought a
subpoena for the tapes or n i n e
conversations. tn that case, Sirica upheld
claims of -privilege for • two complete
conversation• and portlons of a third.
''The originals of au subpoenaed item•
will accompany the lode. and analyals
when transmitted. to the court,'' Slrica's
oin.e-page order said. "ln addition . a
~parate tipe recording -copies from
the originals -containing only thooe
portions of conversations si nce
transcribed. and made public should be
prepared and delivered along with the
sub~naed ma1 erlal1.''
Jav.·orski asked the court April t6 to
Issue a subpoena for the 64 conversatlOM
tpanning a year's period between June 20. im and June 4, 1913. Sirica ordered
the subpoena two days later and on ti-1ay
1 the \Vhite llouse asked that the
subpoena be quashed.
l11dict111e11t Stands
~fcan\l.hile. another federal judge.
saying the FBI "plays cat and n1ouse"
u·ifh people it is investigating, today
indicated he il! considering d!srni&slng
one charge brought against rorn1cr
prestdential aide Jotln D. Ehrllchman in
!he \\'hlte House Plumber!! case.
U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell
raised the que;;lion in 1'eference to a
charge 1hat Ehrlichm<in lied to the FBI
about his t;nowledge of lhc \\'hlte !louse
Plun1bers-"" unil's investigation of the
i>entagon Papers case. Reinecke Denied
Change of Venue
Gesell said that an Jo.Bl 111en10
summariling: the interview w i t h
f.hrliclunan did not make it clear
\\ hclher the agent asked Ehrlichman
about the "Pentagon Papers case" or.
rnorc specifically. about the break-in al
1he offi~ of Daniel EI ls berg:' .s
psyth!atri;.t.
\\"1\SlllNGTON . 1 AP I -A federa l
judge today rC'fuscd to disn1iss a perjury
indictment agains! Lt. (lov. Ed Reinetke
of California or shi ft his trial to thut
i;tatr.
U.S. District Judge Bnrrington Parker
denied n1oti011s b_v Rein et"ke's attorneys
\\'ho contended ;:1n1ong o!her things that
he had been rnisted <llld trapped by
frdrra l proscl·u tors into coope rating \\"ith
their in\"estigation .
"The court find s tk:it to.Ir. Reineckt•
\\'as unable to 1xiint lo any l\laten1ent
made lo him about a pron1ise of l<'nien cy
m the unequh·ocal n1anner he
suggests," Judge Parker ruled.
.. E,•en if he believed a promise had
been made. thiii belief n1ust be
buttressed by su~tantial proof ... Such
proof is Jacking." the judge said.
Rei necke said in Sacramento today he
11·ould not \l.·ihtdra~· from the Republican
race for governor dsepitc lhe major set·
back in his effort to clear himsel f.
"Quitting Is not a consideration. t ain
not pulling out of this race," Reinecke
told a hastily called news conference.
-·Reihc-cKe ah;o -p-rei:J1Cr~e-u·1;rJtd-\\'ln
the " prima1y e<>nt-e&l against i::ontrolle.r
~rouston f'~lou rnoy 'vho has a command·
ing lead in tJ1e public opinion poll .
fie charged Flournoy witn conducting
a million-dollar advertising campaign
financed by "big money special inter-
ests.''
Heinecke and his attorneys contended
that the lieutenant governor freely
provided docun1ents because he believed
special \\'atersate prosecutor.& promised
he \\·ouid nol be indicted.
A three-count indictment returned
April 3 accu.se.5 Reinecke of lying to the
Sena!e Judiciary Comn1ittee about
certain aspects of h.is role in the selection
of San Diego as the site of the
Rrpublican J\'ational Convention . It
subiiequently "·as transferred to ~tiami
Beach. Fla.
An1wig other things. Rei necke is
accused of pcrjlll')' about when he told
Joh11 r\. 1\litchrl!, forn1er auorney
grncr;il and manager of President
r-.:ixon ·.~ rt'.'-clection ca n1paign, about a
$400.UOO offer fro111 the Sheraton Corp. to
unrtcr1~-r1te the convention in San Diego.
trial to San Francisco or Sacramento on
grow1ds th<il ii \\·ou!d be an undue burden
for him to bring defense llitnesscs to
\\'ashington , and lhat there had been
prejudicial publicily in the capitaL
Judge Parker said there 'vil\ be
inconvienencrs for Reineck'? if he is
schedul~ to stand trial here bu t he found
tha t they .. are not unduly oppreJiSh:e or
burdensotne."
Parker said l1e exa1nined in chan1bcrs
a ftnancial net u·orth sl.1ten1ent and
income tax returns v.·hich Reinec ke
subrnitted. and did not agree !hat the
ex pense of a trial in \\'ashington \•;ou ld be
an llllsupportable financial burden.
The judge said a transfer to California
u·ould probably generate aA much
pretrial publicity !here as v.·iJJ occur in
\\'ashington because Reinecke is a v.·ell-
known political figure in the state.
Fron•, Page 1
HEARST ...
Ccsell al~ raisrd the J><?S.."ibility thot
the trial 111ight be delayed by as n1ut h as
a \"ear after the \a\l.·yer for another dcf~ndant in the C<i."e. Felipe de Diego.
said his client had been granted
in11nunity fro1n prosecutil)n \\·hen he
trsllfied about the break-in before a
Florida grand jury.
t:hrlich1nan and five others '.':ere
indicted by a grand jury on ~larch 7 on
rharges of conspi ring to violate the l'ivil
riJihls of Dr. Louis Fielding, a Bc\'t.'rly
llills r~vchiatrist 11·ho treated r:ll~berg.
The Plu1nbers unit allegedly engineered
me brea k-in in an attempt to put to-
gf'ther a psychological profile of Ell5berj.!.
Ellsberg '~as then Wlder nidictment on
charges stemming from the leak or the
PC'ntagoo Papers.
Fro"' P09e 1
PORTER ...
urging of deputy can1paign director Jeb
Stuart P.1agruder.
\Vhen he correcled his original
----·---·---·-----. --· -~l~t~men-t--.--Per:ter -s2!d-lhe !Nscuii..-~ ~1el's Sporting ~Goods sfo~ in_ Tngfev.·oocf. ... ta.ld ltle ue "'ere relftfed to appeals to his
Harris "'as accu.5ed of shoplifting a pair vanity and to hls foy-alt y lo ffle President.
of socks. The General Accounting 0 ff ice .
"She is a !edehl fugitive and if she
resists arrest she v.·ill be treated like any
other federal fugitive," Sullivan said.
She is considered anned a n d
dangerous. he said, and if localed she
v.ill be told to surnnder immediately. If
she tries to shoot , he said, "\\'e v.·ouJd
undoubtedly shoot back."
The FBI said an agent \!.·ho believes hi.5
life is endangered may open fire on a
suspect.
Miss Hearst v.·as kidnaped from her
San Francisco apartment Feb. 4. She
Jaler renotmced her fomier life and said
she Y.'as joining forces v.·lth her
kidnapers.
watchdog ann of Congres.5, ...aid lhc
$100.000 v.•a.!i used to pay off !he
\\'alergate wiretappers after the i r
arrests.
Porter, his \\'ife Carol. and their 1hrrr
children sold their \\"ashington. 0 .C'.
home last ,;pring end have been li\·in!.!
\\·ith the Brigg~· 111 Laguna ~iguel e\"er
sinC'e.
In an intervie"' last swnmer. Porter
said, "Telling the truth is the most
\·igorous regimen I knov.« \re 1ell our
children to do it and \\·e ~Id do it. Thi s
is good therapy for individuals inl'oll'ed
and for the country."
Fores t Fire Raoiu«
"' 0
GUADALUPITA. N . .\I. !AP 1 -Sta!C'
and L".S. Forest ~erv ice cre1r s battll·d
ll"lday to put out a 2.000-arre forest f1rt'
tha t had reached "·ithin 200 to 300 feet of
WORK STACKING UP FOR LAGUNA BEACH CUB scours·
Skip Crowl, Mike Brower Ready to Launch Paper Dr ive
'Lagi111a C11)} Sco11ts to Hit
01·rr h.ill. over d;tlr. the Cub Scout.~ of
Laguna Beach P:it·k 35 soon 11 ill be
h1n111J:: tht' trail. pulhng !heir ht!lc rrc!
"·a~ons twhind 1hen1 and rollec t1 ng old
11l'\\!ipapcr::;.
But before there are newspapers to
cnllcl·T. J'll'Opll' h111·c lo s!art saving thrn1
~nd nO\\' is lhc li1ne to star1 , 0l'l1 ~1othl·r
su ... a11 Crowl s:iid.
lh.'~ldt'nl~ 111.11 also !iring old papers to
rhe romrnurur1 l'rl·:.ln1eri;1n Church and
rit•JlO!iil 1ht·n1 111 a b111 at !he {'hurch
p~rl..ing !111 Oil '111r1d !'.111 l't·l be\\le<'!l 7
;1 111 ;ind 110011 J11;1• I
l';,p '!"'.'. llt'l'11 !J(1t hl' lit"I. hti1 ~h(111ll! ~
~l•K-ked 111•;1t l.•
;lll"l"jl!\ ·1!
'rl'" P]d p<ip•·r \1il1 11 .. ~old !o rrC,\'ClinG,
l.1n1 ;"id 11!H•1i•'~ r1·11 11i·d 1·,dl ~upport
!ht' p;i,.1;·, :" 11 1t11·' 1111.l'h 1nt'!Udc the
:1u!H1.il l'1tH' \\"01Kl !ll'rb.1. 1111·r1t a>1 ard~.
n1a11 n;.1 ..; :1111! ~111111111·r outu1~..; Ht>inccke is a candidate for gove rnor of
California . and is ol>posed in the June 4
prin1ary hy state controller ~louston f.
Flournoy. II~" trial is scheduled to begin
July· l;i.
But the FBI n1aintained ti1at she "·as
forc<'d to make the slaten1ent. Even after
she 1\·as photographed v.·ith a machine
sun during a bank robbery, the FBI said
she \\'as an un1\·illing par1icipant.
t~ivc persons. including Oo n a I d
Oefreeze. 30, who as head { the SLA
called himself "General Fi<'ld ~Iarshal
this ,·illage. '--'r.=============================================================::;i I
Cub scouL~ will pick up p<"lpt'l"S fro1n
no1\· to .l une 1. !he paper drnr rla1e
Resid<'nls 111;iy call ~trs. Cro\I.·\ at ~99·
2665 to arrange for oolle~tio11 .
lie petitioned the court to mo\'e !he
Tito Trausie1its,
Bo)·, 12, Hel<l
On Pot Charge
A 12-year-old Laguna Beach boy and
f\1·0 transients were arrested Sunday at
.\lain Beach after a police officer said he
observed them passing v.·hat appeared to
be a cigarette and drinking frQm a bottle;.
KeMeth Freestone. 18. of Norwood
r.tass .. and .\lichael B. Ziegenhagen, 19,
of Denver, Colo .. "·ere booked for alleged
posse~lon of marijuana. open container
of alcoholic beverage and contributing to
thi delinquency of a n1lnor.
The 12-rear-old was booked for
possession of marijuana. 11e ha s
previously been arrested for burglary
and curfew \'iolation.
Police seized a small plastic bag of a
leafy green substance believed to be
marijuana and a jug of white wlne.
Circle J udaica Sets
La guna Di scussion
A panel-audience discussion of "Rltual:
Expression vs. Suppression" w 11 1
highlight tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting
or the Laguna Circle Judaica.
The meeting, at the Laguna fo"ederal
Savings and Loan As.5oclation communi·
l.Y room, 260 Ocean Ave ., wi ll .also Include
discussion of plans to orgonitc conver-
sational Hebre"· classes and classes in
Talmudic interpretation.
Fron• Page 1
BACKING ...
development of the Saddleback J W\ior
College Dletrlct, '' Ullom wrote.
M T. "Rod" Guyer. a Lagwia High
football coach during Taylor·a year1~1 a
trustee, said in a lelter. '·Taylor 11 a inln_
, .• who can help make Saddlebad< an
improved and oul.stand1ng community
college bolh accademlcally and IJ)Orl.9-
wise."
Cinque.'' \1·ere killed in the names and ;
gunfire. police said. A si xth body, that of 1
Camilla Hall. 29. "'as found Sunday. .
1 James John.son. JS. \\·ho Jived at the
home destroyed in the gunfight. told the
Los Angeles Times that ~tiss Hear!lt fled
from the house less than 24 hours befor e
the shootout. I Charges against Johnson's mother. 1
Chr istine Johnson. 35. of harboring I
fugitl \·es, "·ere dropped Sunday night and 1 she \\'as released, police satd today.
John.50!1 said f\liss Hearst told him 1
Thursday "They'll have to kill me before I
I go back."
'"She told me she \1'3S with then1 -on
their side." said Johnson.
ffe said i\liss Hearst "·as "·caring a
pistol and "·anted to stay \1·ith the others. 1
bot they apparently sent her a"·ay to t
keep her from being in1·0J,·ed in the
gunfight.
"I tt.ink some lblacki brol~r5 tipped
the1n off that the cops v.·ere ooro thern
and that's "'hy they got Patty out of I
there -you know, their lo\--e for her." l
He said a \!an containing t"·o black
men drove up. and ~1iss Hearst got inlo '
It and left v.·ith 1hem. ,
l{e said he talked to her for half an
hour and "she wa s a beautiful person to I
me. real lntelligent and all .'' I
l 'ro"' Pqe 1
SEWING ...
fi rs t time last semester. and by now has
• sewn a woven linen, cream-colored
jacket, a shirt, a high-waisted jacket, .1:1
bow tie. pants and a halter top for his
girlfriend .
He entered Ills jacket In the Laguna
Beach \\'omen's Club sewing contest and ,
~·on a $10 first place prize for his efforts. I
He's ~-orking on a sult now.
Jim ripped apart hi!! old tennis .shorts
lo make a pattern from them . and is now
1ewing a new psair of v.trite tennis shorta.
Jon, 17, is working on a Hawaiian shirt
and matchinl bo w tie. ·He's already
!inl•hod a itaanllc piano cover lilr his
grand piano.
Plenty of serious sewln1 1et1 done ,
says Mn. Mang1, but the clowning
around in between is whit se ts thla coed
class aporl from her olher .. wing
cl uses.
"The boys love their sewing, IUld It's
really ln!eotlo<JJ," she ,.Id, sl>aklng her
-110CJC1.111turedly.
I
•
NOW
SAVE
HUNDREDS
~895°0
GRAND PIANO SALE
OUR ANNUAL
CLOSE-OUT
ALL GRANDS
REDUCED .
SPECIALS
START AT.
WE'RE FAMOUS FOR OUR RECONDlTIONED GRAND PIANOS. AND RIGHTLY SO. WORLD
REKNOWNED EUROPEAN CRAFTSMEN IN OUR SHOP PRODUCE SOME OF THE FINEST
GRAND PIANOS IN ALL OF THE WEST COAST! CHOOSE FROM MAJOR BRANDS!
OUR 81ST 8UY LIST
WURLITZER PIANO~:,\:',, ..................... 5395
G HIW "" 5650 HAMMOND OR AN ..... ,, •...... , ....... .
LOWREY ORGAN rt~ ........................ 5 1295
A ....... 52175 HAMMOND ORG N 110. ""'· ....... .
WURLITZER PIANO ~!~~ ••.................... 5895
FARFISA ORGAN :::.rr •••......................... 5488
HAMMOND PIPER~/:..,,,, ................. 5999
PLAYElt PIANO ~to'.""'· .................. 51885
SOUTH COAST PLAZA GllEAT TIRMS
•1t11 DILlVllV
• •
..
3400 BRISTOL-COST A MESA
540-2830
..,.,.,,.,.,.,,.. __ H ':
HOIJltS
MON,•IRI.
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Saddlehaek
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
Today's Final
VOL. 67, NO. 1'40, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES 1 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' MONDAY, MAY 20, 197<4 TEN CENTS
BeOgan Canapaigns on Coast for Prop. I
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 lfl• Dally , .... Stall
Governor Ronald RcagJJ.D came to the
Orange Coast today to lobby for support
of the June 4, $250 million state parks
bond issue.
He left having been lobbied by two
special interest groups who arrived by
land a11d by sea.
Three Laguna Beach girls pulled up on.
horseback to the cllffsidc "Cws confer-
eoce just soultl of O>rona del 1t1ar to
deliver personally a petiUon. Reagan
read it to the assembl ?.ce of dlgnitarie.s
and newsmen.
"There have been horses here for the
last 5G years. We hope there will be an
equestrian center Jn the new state park
that will occupy this land," Reagan said
lhe petition. requested,
"I'm going lo lobby for it." Reagan
said, recalling a cavalry sentiment:
"Nothing is so good for the inside of a
man or a woman as the outside of a
horse."
The governor said he would pass the
petition on and work to keep horses
within the amenities the 1600-acre state
park may offer if the bond issue pro-
vides the $7 .6 million needed to buy it
from the Irvine Company.
The lobbyist for surfing interests who
came to the press . conference by
surfboard was marathon paddler Larry
Capune, 31, of Balboa Island.
The sun-ta nned , salt-caked •surfer.
veteran of marathon paddles including
one from Newport. Rhode Island. to
Florida. drew considerable attention
ga rbed in a swim suil amidst the suit and
coat-clad crO\\'d.
Capune carried a plastic waterproofed
pouch containing literature outlining his
desires for preservation of the slate's
prime su rfing beach .
Ca1June told the goven1or he \Youtd like
to see 3.5-milc Jrvinc Coast becon1e a
•
state beach . "1'his coast is a breather for
al l who live inland," Capwie contended.
He also asked gubernatorial support
for his next marathon tr ip surfboarding
from Vancouver. B.C. to San Diego.
Governor Reagan "'"as introduced by
Irvine Company President Ra ymond L.
Watson.
Reaga n said the Irvine Co as t
acqui sition \\'ill be possible if voters
approve Proposition I.
\\1hat-the state is buying 1s the
beachfront between Corona del l\t:ir and
Laguna Beach. two inland canyons-
l\loro and Los Trancos-and an offshore
natural marine preserve.
The state purchase will acquire the
property for half its appraised value.
Reagan said.
.. That, my fri ends, would be a great
bargain for the people of California now
and for future generations to come ,''
Reagan said .
·woo Ill ? '•
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Jets Practice ..
Witli Carriers
If you've noticed more jet noise
than usual lately near the El Toro
Marine C:Orps Air Base, the reason
is a ~day ca rri er landing practice
period.
·h·vine Eyes
Cap, Gown
Base spokcsn1en said the training
. period is scbHlu\ed to last through
JW'le 3 and means higher noi!e
levels over-some nearby com1nuni-·
lies.
Aircraft of the Third "farine
Aircraft \\'ing are flying day and
nighl missions up to 10 p.111 .. the
spokesmen said.
Four Officers
In Costa 1\-lesa
Wi11 Promotion
Four members of"'lhe Costa ~1esa and
Irvine Police Department are now
wearing neY: stripes and insignia on their
unilonns, following ' a recent series of
promotions.
Irvine Detective Robert Lennert, a
veteran in vestigator, has been promoted
to the rank of sergeant in the
department.
, The department's Resources Bureau,
\\'hich deals with training, research and
community relations. has tvro promotions
'Aith Lt. Jack Calnon an d Sgl. Tom L..azar
rising from sergeant and patrolman
ranks respectively .
A fourth promotion elevated Sgt. Tim
Holbrook from patrolman and be v.111
now be assigned to superv~ry patrol
activities.
Court Reverses
Pollutio1i Rule
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Authonties
need not oblain search 'A'arrants or give
advance notice to go onto the property of
potential polluters to make inspections,
provided they make the inspections from
areas open to the public, the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled today.
In a unahimous opi nion written by
Justice \Villiam 0. Douglas, the court
reversed a decision of the Colorado Court
of Appeals which overturned a flndlng
that three alfa lfa drying plants violated
state air quality standards.
Douglas said that if there lll any
invasion of privacy Involved in the case,
it is "abstract and theoretical."
· Oraage C:Out
'
Weather
High clouds are oo the horizon
for Tuesday, but it will be sunny
and warmer, according to the
weathef servt<e. Highs in the up-
per 80s at the beaches to lhe"1ld·
1\11 inland. Overnliht lows 4UL .
INSIUE TOUi\ l'
Preoidtnt Nii°" pwhed hfs nationol htalth lna14ranc1 plan
oVcr iht nation'• airt0aw:1 toda.u.
dtcfartng tllat the end to price
control• mDJI boost doctor billl
bv 22 perctnt thi1 veer. See
stOfll, Paoe 4. --...... . L, M. .. M 1t
-· I _.,. fl·• c-ta ' ,, c__.. 1t :..:-=. : ·-.. ,...... ·ltoll
..... II ,_ L.l9tllrl ,,
. Undenv'.l·ite _ .. ~ .
Parents and students from Un iversi ty
~ligh School in Irvine have asked the
Irvine City Council to underwrite a
graduation party and pay rental for caps
and go'AT\S for up to 50 9ludents \1;ho
cannot afford to pay the $5.50 fee.
School officia1s, hov.·cver. deny there
is any cap and gown rental problem and
neither lhe school di strict nor the city
1\·ants to pay for the party.
At the city council meeting last ~·eek.
Craig Pi.1itchell, student body president,
said that up to 50 of the 396 graduating
seniorJ could not afford the cap and
go\\ll rental.
Hoirever, Gary Norton, assistant
prindpal of the high !Choo!, .,Id toda y,
"We found that seven student! had not
ordered thelr caps and go\\11S. Five of
them are doing so now and the other t\\·o
are not because they don't want to take
part in the ceremony. ·, "\Ve have never run into the problem
of students not being able to afford it,"
r\orton said. "But if we did. l 'm sure v.·e
could arrange lhe fi,n ancing."
. A GOOD SELF-IMAGE IS ONE GOAL OF TV STATION K-GATES IN EL TORO
Bob Miranda Watches Himself Audition As Newscaster In Elemeritary School Program
Paul Brady, Irvine director of
commwiity services, said the city was
also asked for about $4 ,000 to finance a
graduation night party at Cota de Caza in
Trabuco Canyon.
Class Put on Video Tape
The party would be in additioo to one
set for Disneyland a week before the
June 19 graduatim.
Gates Scliool Expa1ids Co1nmu1iicatio1is Program
1be J'eaS(ll for two parties, Norton
said. is the late graduation date, about a
week after other achools. Unless students
from Univenity High School attend the
DisOeyland party, the school will lose its
reservations for next year.
The student• also want to have a party
the night of graduation, he sa!d.
District Superintendent A. Stanley
Corey sai d, "Our position toward the
graduation party is that it is put oo by
the student body and parents and it is not
a school function."
Similarly, Brady said. "The staff
recommendation wU that we not provide
funds for the party.
"The city council decided to carry it
over for two weeks to see if they cou1d
get together with the parents and see if
there wu some other way they could
work out the . financing ."
Mission Viejo
Youths · Snared'
After Pursuit
By JAN WORTH
01 l'llt 0 1ily PIJ9! lt1ll
"Hey kids, have you tried that brand
new cereal Cheaties?" the girl asks
cheerlully on the glowing TV sc reen .
As the sing.song voice lauds the ~rits
of "Cheaties. the camera zooms In "on' a
dead pan sixth grader munching and
slurping, getting cereal on her chin and
looking somewhat sick.
The young audience watching the fake
commercial on "T\' Station K·GATES"
at Ralph Gates School in El Toro cracks
up every time.
It's ooe of their favo rite scenes from
!he many video-tape programs made by
students in the school's space.age
commwiications program.
Begun as a •·radio station " by Gates
School teacher Lee Finn three years ago,
the program has become one o! the most
popular on campus and through special
distri ct funds has expandeed this year
to video activities using a new Sony
camera and video i'eoorder.
"We started it as an innovation which
we hoped would :.timulate our students'
interest in school and iraprove their·
reading and writing skills," said Gates
principal Arnold Berman.
"We found that when the Students A, car full of Mission Viejo youths, knew they had to read something on the
speeding away from the scene or an radio station that everybody would hear,
attempted g~sollne !yphonlng, cruised they'd take it home and practice. Before
throogh a Laguna. Beach police stakeout we knew it we were getting reports from
SaturdJy and -•nd<d up caught after a parents and teachers that the child's
wild chase .<rough the""' ·ec1ony. skills were improving." said Bill Yates, ~ another Oatet teacher who h a a ~A 14-yeal'Old"'Mlaslon Yi•JO )'Ollth was coUal;>orated wTth t'IMOOlhe J>rogram.
cltal'(ed with peity tll<!t -~t ml a (\'Ith the volunteer help of par,ents and
16-ye&Mld Wllf. charred .,nth feckless other teachers, Finn and Yates built two
driving foUO!llng Ille epliodt. reconlln,I booths -<>ne in YateJ' sixth
Police saJd 1 plainclothes police grade daasroom and one in Finn's thin! ~~eroom. 1 detective in 1 ·unmarked car spotted the They figure the sttuctUtts, complete
~· auta with Its liihta out, aiming with legal wiring, mlcrophone1. plexlglu
down.Nyeo Place at a hll!h rate of speed wlndowa, and red "on the atr" llghta,
after doilt. . coal f/5 each. ·
The car WIS·stowed II Laguna Canyon From th• little eight·bY·llV• foot
Road at CanYQll Acrea Drive. Police said booths, the students a,.aaisted by flnn and
the driver r.lled to stop ~umerous ti~ Yates produce i ""51r'ev<ry tfl(l.woeb
for ped-in Cl'OSIWlllta, and ran a that Is b"'8dcast qi!, lhe publ\i:' l!ildrl:sa
ltaP tlgn. , system. . 1 ·
The YQ!llbl told pollct lheY wtrt The 1ormat lnclildel every1~1 fri>Dl,
en lllUte lrolll I DoiW Point party when • intarvle-witb t~ to bo9k re)llews
thef "!" r '"' gasoline. An attempted to wu!her (™I eel ma!« ""1ioV1) to
aypllmlnf n, QW<$l1 ended when the jokes IDd wel-to O<!W sludtnta. ~ ., .. Interrupted by a pasaerby. The ~lls often loci~ at~t·
I
f' nr
-· _ .1 --· Dllh' Pllll 'Jtaft l'htU
READING, WRITING AND 'RITHMETtC Go, Vii>EO AT GATES sCHOoL
Keith Stfoijp I• Ono Of Mony Students Lnrnlnt C•mer• TechnlqUes
written edltorlals and reports from the
principal and staff recosnl•ing student
accompllahments in citizen a'b i p .
behaylor, and classwork.
Ea<h cllssroom has a speclll envelope
for KGA'l.'ES news which is picked up
periodically by a monitor.
The talevlsloo activities mostly are
done·tfter.. tchool'ln an elective program
for lnt0'"9tecl studcnta with thtlt
part11ta' pennlsoloo.
'Asked K there was eny difference
between the lntareJt or ability cf ba'll
and glrb In the program, Finn aald, "I
certainly don't tee any. Tiit girl• are just
as Interested ... there Is a certain amount or tedmlcal kno'!l'bow involved and they
1
can handle iljwit as wen as the boys..,,
'nie TV prvgram started as a summer
school «>w'le last year •.
"At first there wasn't much interut "
Yates said. "But It has really cau~ht .;,,
We ended up producing a vld ... tapa u...i
Ort Cuinoel 50 (Orange Collst Cclleae
cablevlslan stalion."
The next pro Ject 1, to connect \he
school's ~ televlslon1 jo a ~tral
tranamllter · so programs can b e
bro9dast 0 Uve'' from one room to a,ll
the otllen_
Sludelll'lnv•riablf ,..ct to Melng and heailna themselves '* talevlsloo with
laocinallon. II'• a goOd IW'Ciae in
\SM VjllEO TAPE Pait I~
• • •
Dragnet
Spreading
F 01· Heiress
LOS ANGELES fUP I) -A \\'hite
\\·oman. believed possibly to be P.atricia
ltearst. and tv.·o black men. offered $500
to rent a Jlo!ly\~ood apartment for 24
hours and one of the men lunged at the
landlady \Yi!h knife \\'hen she refused,
police repo rted today.
A dragnet for the 20-year-old hei ress.
no\v listed as nrmcd and dangerous and
liable to tie shot if she resists, "'as
spread over the metropolitan Los
!\ngeles area after six members of the
Symbionese Liberation Anny were killed.
t~riday.
A spokesman for the FBI said the
Hollywood m,cident was one of a number
MORE HEARST STORIES
APPEAR TODAY ON PAGE 5
----·-·-·---of report s coming in from excited.
citizens about the whereabouts of Miss
Hearst and that they had no evidence to
li~k it c;!ireclly to the wanted girl .
'A report by the Los Angeles Police
Department. however. listed 1hc incident
as "pos.sible SLA connection."
An L.APO officer said the incident
occurred ;:round 9:30 Sunday night at an
apartment building on New Hampshire
:\venue in the Hollywood area.
The report said the trio ~·ere carrying
a shotgun. one or the men had a switch--
blade knife and that they "possibly" had
ha nd guns. l\tiss Hea rst wa s reported to
have left the shootout hou se in a black
area of !he city with l\\'O black men
hours before the gun battle Friday.
The report said the landlady told police
that one of the men attacked her with a
knife when she refused to rent the
apartment for 24 hours and cut through
the fol ds of her skirt. She was not
injured.
The U.S. <1ttorney's office wa s
preparing to file a complaint in San
Francisco today charging Miss 11earst
and two known members of the SLA still
at large with violations or federal laws
pertaining to possession and use of
automalic weapons.
William A. SulliYan. assistant director
of the FBI , sa id ~1iss Hearst was the
WGman who leaned out the front windo\Y
of a red and white Volkswagen van and
opened fire with a 30-caliber carbine
Thursday afternoon, as SLA member
\Villiam Harris struggled with a clerk at
Mel's Sperting Goods Store in Inglewood .
Harris was accused of shoi:lifting a pair
of socks.
.. "She is a federal fugitive and if she
resists arrest she will be treated like any
(See HEARST, Page%)
Irvine Teachers
Castii1g Votes
.On 8% Increase
Irvine Unified School District teachen
were to Vote thi1 afternoon on whether to
accept an eight percent salary increase
for the 1974.-75 school year.
~ raise, worked out between
teachers and district representatives
Friday, must be ratified by the school
board or education before It become•
effective.
Teachers originally asked for a 15
percent pay hike and a shorter school
year, but settled for the current 184
school days.
As part of the agrtement1 the average
number of students ln a classroom would
be reduced Crom J9 to 27.
Teacllm from the <; • rl l fl ca.to , •
Employes Council, Irvine Teochtn ,
Association •nd the Federa\lln of 1rv1no
Teachero were lchedul..i,to meet ai t:3t
p.m. to dllCIWI Iha~ """91111
• ~
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I
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•
% DAILY PILOT •
Nixon Mns1 Yield 64 Tapes Man J(illed
In Bayside
Auto Crash
WASHINGTON (API -U.S. District
Judge John J. Sirica today ordered Iha!
Presldenl Nixon lurn ovu by May 31 the
1a~s of 6~ conversations subpoenaed hy
special prosecutor Leon Jav.1orski.
But Sirica said he would striy his
decision ii the President's lawyers appeal
!he decision. as txpected.
The tapes are being soughl by
Ja"·orski as evidence for the \\'atergate
CO\'l'r·up conspiracy trial involvir1g .:even
forn1er \\'hitc !louse and Nixon re-
Juice Blick 011
At Slln 01iofre
The. San Onofre nuclear
generating 5tat1on \\'as returned to
service a1 full po'A'er today,
Southern California Edison Co.
announced.
The plant had been shut down
since April 27 for maintenance
\\ork and rt>pa1r s In equipment on
the non-nuclear side of !he facility .
Gov. ilona ld Ilcagan was
scheduled to tour !he plant today.
_,\nahei1n Site
Burns Do,vn
After Explosio11
Sr\•en units of an Anaheim apartment
complex wcrr drstroyNI by fire early
this moming following y.·hat one resident
termed a small rxplosion.
Fire departmcnl public informatio!l
officer Ken CIC'!ll<'nts said the blaze
broke out shor!lv b<"fore· 6 a.nl. Before
firC'n1cn could Put it otit. it causro an
e~timated $135,000 in damage. All n1e
residents escaped the fire.-
One. firc1nan suffcr C'd st'cond degree
burns n·hi\e battling the bla·1.e and 1ras
laken to Orange County ~ledical Center
for treatnlent. lie was identified as Kc!l
Bradley, who was due to lea\'e the
department at the end of this 11•eek to
accept an assistant chief's job in
Northern California.
Fitemen responded to 1he blaze only
1v.·o minutes after !hey were called and
v.·hen they arrived thry spotted flames
roaring through the roof of !he two story
building at 1250 S. Brookhurst St.
Clements said seven !ire engines and
32 n1en fought the fire for about 45
minutes before bringing it under control.
The upstairs portion of the buildin g
was completely gutted by names and the
downstairs sustained extensive water
damage, Clemen ts said.
'Strangler' Kin
Seeks $10,000
BOSTON (A Pl -The brother of the
self-professed Boston strangler says he
\\•ants $10,000 under a ~lassachusells la\v
providing ctlmpensation !or innocent
\'ictims of violent crime.
The claim was made by Richard E.
DeSalvo, administrator of the estate of
Albert DeSalvo.
Albert DeSalvo said he was the
strangler. although he was never tried in
connection \.11Hh the slranglings He \vas
1ervir1g a life tcrn1 for assaults on a
number of Boston-area y.·omen y.·hen he
1ras stabbed lo dealh last November at
\\'alpolc S!ate Prison in \\1alpolc.
Fro1n Page 1
VIDEO TAPE •••
"positi\'e strokes'' and developing strong
self-images. Bern1an said.
"The bes! part is y.·hen the teacher
shows the rilms in class." one student
said. "Especially if it means v.·e don 't
have to do our health."
OlANGICOA5T "
DAILY PILOT
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election committee aides.
Th< trial II scheduled to be held before
Slrica In SeP!<m6er.
Slrlca ordered lho White Houae lo
prepare an index and analysis of w~t ls
contained on the tapts to be turned ovtf.
including any claln1s the President wants
to n1ake to keep portions of lh\! tapes
confidential .
Sirica followed a sin11lar course Ja9t
)'ear 1vhen Nixon's ta-ft·yers fought a
subpoena for the tapes of n in e
conversations. In that case, Slrlca upheld
•• of privilege for two complete
CC\llv1r11tfooa Ind portions of a lhlnl.
"1be ori,tnall of all subpoenoed lleml will acoompany lhe lndn and aqalyal1
wbeo trlDIJnJtted lo the court, 11 Sirtca's
n.lne-page order saJd. "In addJllon, a
.separate tape recording -copies ff'()m
the originals -containing only those
Portions of conversations s Ince
transcribed and made public should be
prepared and delivered along v.·ith the
ltadietttteJtt Statads
Reinecke Denied
Change of Venue
' \\IAStllNGTON !APl -A federal
jud ge today refuS<'d to dismiss a perjury
indictment against Lt. {:ov. Eel Reinecke
of California or shift his trial to that
.... tale.
t.:.S. Distric! Judge Barrington Parker
denied motion" by Relnl'cke's attorneys
"'ho contended amo ng other things that
he h:id been n1islcd an d trapped hy
federal prosecutors into cooperating with
!heir invesligalio11.
''The court rinds that r-.tr. ReinC'cke
1vas unable to point to any 1'late1nenl
n1ade to him about a promise or leniency
. . . in the unequivocal manner he
suggests," Judge Parker ruled.
"Even if be believed a promise had
been made, this belief mu&t be
buttressed by substantial proof ... Such
proof is lacking," the judge said.
Reinecke said in Sacramento today he
11'0uld not. wihtdraw from the Republican
race for governor dsepite the major set·
back in his effort to clear himselt _
"Quit1ing Is not a consideration . r am
not · pulling out of this race," Reinecke
told a hastily called news cooference.
Reinecke also predicted he \\·ou!d win
the primary contest · against Controller
Houston Flournoy v..'ho has a command·
ing lead in the public opinion poll .
Fron1Page1
HEARST ...
other federal fugitive," Sullivan sa.id.
She is considered armed a n d
dangerous. he said, and if located she
Y..ill be told to surnnder immediately. If
she tries to shoot, he said, "\\1e "·ould
undoubtedly shoot back."
1be FBI said an agent who believes his
life Is endangered may open fire on a
suspect.
Miss Hearst was kidnaped from her
San Francisco apartment Feb. 4. She
later renounced her former life and said
she was joining forces with her
kidnapers.
But the FBI maintained 1:1at she 11as
forced to make the statement. Even after
she v..'as photographed with a machine
gun during a bank robbery, the FBI said
she was an unv..illing participant.
Five persons. including 0 on a Id
Defreeze, 30, who as head f the SLA
called himself "General Field Marshal
Cinque," were killed in the names and
gunfire, police said. A sixth body, that of
Camilla HaJI, 29, was found Sunday.
James John.son, 18, who Jived at the
home destroyed in the gunfight. told the
Los Angeles Times that f\.1Jss Hearst fled
from the house less than 24 hours before
the shootout.
Charges against Johni<ln's mother,
Christine Johnson, 35, of harboring
fugitives, were dropped Sunday night and
she was rtleased, police said today.
Johnson said P..1iss Hearst told him
Thursd3y "They'll have to kill me before
I go back."
"She told me she 11t•as with !hem -on
their side." said Johnson.
He said Mis.. Hearst was 11t•e.aMng a
pistol and wantl'<f to stay with the ochers,
but they apparently sent her away to
keep her from being involved in the
gunfight.
"! think some (black) brothera lipped ·
them off that the cop11 were onto them
and that's why they got Patty out of
there -}'OU know, their love for her."
•te said a van containing tv.·o black
men drove up, and Miss Hearst got into
it and left with tbtm.
Ile said he talked to her for half an
hour and 0 she was a beautiful person to
me. real Intelligent and all."
The others killed in Friday's shootout
\\'ere identified as Patricia "Miz.moon"
Soltysik, 24. Nancy Ling Perry, 26, Wiiiie
\Yol!e, 22, and Angela Aty,·ood, 25.
S. Viets Lau1icli
.
Counter-offe1ise
BEN CAT, Soutl> Vielnam (AP)
Baci<cd by heavy air and artillery
support. South Vietnamese troop B
launched a three-pronged counter~ffcn·
slve today against Norht Vlcln<.mese
lorces U miles not1h of Saigon . (Rel81cd
news analysi!, Page 4).
They "'ere moving ngalnat the village
ol An Dien. caplured Friday by the North
Vtetnamese, about t 1.1 mlle1 BOuthwest or
Ben Cafln the strategic j'lron Triangle"
an>a along the Saigon River,
Government artillery and planes were
blasUng the vlllag•, crumbling ocom of
ramshac-le tln·r<ofed hornet. Moel of An
Qlen's,l.000 clvlllani reportedly have Oeil
lo government Uoes.
'
lie charged Ftoumoy \\'itti conducting
a million-dollar advertising campaign
fina~~ed -by "big money special inter·
ests.
Reinecke and his attorneys contended
that the lieutenant governor freely
provided doctJ1nen1s because he believed
special Watergate prosecutora promised
he \vould not be indicted.
A lhree-count indictment returned
;\pril 3 accuses Reinecke of lying to the
Senate Judicia ry Comn1ittce ab o u t
certain aspeets of his role in the selection
of San Diego as the site or lhe
Republican National Convention. It
sub&equenUy was transferred to l\tiami
Beach. Fla.
Among other things. Reinecke is
accused of pr:rjury about when ht told
John N. ~1itchell, former attorney
general and manager of President
Nixon's re-election campaign, about a
$400,000 offer fro1n the Sheratoo Corp. to
underwrite the convention in Saf! Diego.
Reinecke is a candidate for 1ovtm0r of
California, and is opposed in the June 4
primary by state controller Houston I.
Flournoy. HMi trial Is scheduled to begin
July 15.
He petitioned the court lo move the
trial to San 1-'rancisC<l or Sacramento on
groWlds that It would be an undue burden
for him to bring defense wllne!ses to
Yi'ashington. and that there had betn
prejudicial publicity In the capital.
Judge Parker said there will be
fnconviener:tces for Reinecke if he is
schedule~ to stand trial here but he found
that they "are not Wlduly oppreosive or
burdensome.''
Parker said he examined in chambers
a financial net y,·orth statement and
income tax returns which Reinecke
submitted. and did not agree that the
expense of a trial In Washington would be
an Wlsupportable linancial burden.
The judge said a transfer to California
would probably generate a.. much
pretrial publicity .there as will occur in
\\'ashington because Reinecke is a Y.'ell-
known political figure in the state.
Marine Cvclist •
Criticallv Hurt " In Laguna Beacl1
A young El Toro l\1arine is in critical
condition today at Sad d I e b a e k
Community Hospital following a high·
speed motorcycle crackup Saturday in
Laguna Beach.
William James Scully, 20, suffered
severe head injuries in the mishap on El
Toro Raod in the preda\.ln hours
Saturday.
Scully \Vas traveling an estimated 100
miles an hour on his cycle outbound from
Laguna Beach when he lost control,
skidded 226 feet on the road 's dirt
shoulder. came back on the pavement
flopped the cycle and skidded another 321
feet on the pavement, accordin~ to the
police account.
Friends following the Marine said he
had bttn drinking but was not drunk,
Pol!Cll Sgt. Norm Babcock said.
Sgt. Babcock said Ille witnesses said
the Marine bad gotten angry while in
Laguna Beach, had hopped hi.s machine
and headed out of town. He reportedly
was traveling 70 miles per hour out
Laguna Canyon Road when he reached
Ille signal at El ToNl Road.
Then he beaded up El Toro Road, and
"really got on It." Sgt. Babcocl< said the
wilneMU told officers.
The two witnesses, a motortycle rider
and pe-ger. said they found Sc•ll)'s
body as they rounded a bend in the road.
Rate Up Agairi
·-1134% Now
.._NEW YORK (AP) -First
Natlonal Bank o! Chicaa:o. the
nation'• ninth largest conunercial
bank, today announctd It wu
raialnfJ Its prime lending rate to 1
reconl II~ percent fnrn !1 .40
percent erlectlve 'l'lleaday.
The rate lopt lht ll'I> peroenl
announced Friday by a num~r ol
major commercial batll<s. Including
tho country's three largest, Bank of
Aimrica, First NaUonal Cit)' and .
Chue Manhl\ltatl.
Ghauncey &.-Selvnld~ p .... ldenl
of Ille Clil••&O blnk1 aald In maklnJ
Ille announcem•nl WI he expoc1ed
II) euln( "before lone" In the
prime rate.
subpoenaed materials."
Jaworski asked the """t April ti to
Issue a s~bpoena fer the M oonvtl'lltloos
1paonbla a year•• period between June
Id , im and JW>e 4, Jtn. Slrlca ord«ired
the 1ubgoen1 two day1 later and on ~!ay
1 the White House a.sked that the
subpoont be quashed.
Meanwhile, another federal judge ,
saying the FBI "plays cat and mouse"
with people it is investigating, today
indicated he is considering dlsmlAsing
one charge brought against former
presideJIUal aide John D. Ehrlichman In
the While House Plumbers case.
U.S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell
raised the queAtion in reference to a
charge that Ehrllchman lied lo the FBI
about · hi s knowledge of the \Vhite House
Plumbers unit's invesUgation of the
Pentagon Papers case.
Gesell said that an FBI memo
summarizing the interview w it h
Ehrlichman did not make it clear
whether the agent asked Ehrlichman
about the "Pentagon Papers case" or .
more spccificelly. abo ut the break-in at
!he office of Daniel Ellsberg's
psychiatrist.
c;ese\I also roiiS('d the possibility that
the trial might be delayed by as much as
a year alter the la1vyer for another
defendan t in the ca.<>e, Felipe de Diego.
!'aid Jhis Client had bffn granted
immunity front prosecution v.·hen he
teslifled about lhe break-in before a
FIC1rida grand jury .
~:hr\ichrnan and five others "''ere
indicted by a grand jury on ~tarch 7 on
chargrs of conspiring to vio late the eiv1I
righ!s of Dr. Louis Fielding. a Be\'erly
!·!ills ~ychiatrist who treated Ellsberg.
TI1e Plumbers wiit atlegedly engineered
tne break-in in an attempt lo pt.1l lo·
gether a psychological profile of Ellsberg.
Ellsberg was then under nidictment on
charges &temnUng from the leak of the
Pentaam Papets.
Highiuay Patrol
Off ice rs Picket
For Parity Pay
LOS ANGELES (UPJl -California
highway patrolmen, their wive11 and
children. totaling about 200 persons.
began picketing the CHP headquarters
here at 7 a.m. today. They were seeking
parity pay Y!'ith fi\'e other polict agencies
in the state.
Jim Munson, CHP public affairs, said
the offictrs wanted an average of the
wage scale! being negotiated for law
enforcement officers in Los Angeles city
and county, Oakland, Saii P'rait<lb and
San Diego. · ·. 't.
Only off-duty officer• ft'ere taking part
in the demonstration, Munson said.
The new wage scales for the other five
agencie9 are to become effective July l ,
he said.
"\\.'e're not asking for the highest
anlOUnt, jusl an average of the five,"
~tunson said.
He said the average was about $'200 per
month at the top of the scale and about
$100 or more at 1011t'er wage scale!.
Gr£11ited Early . .
Prison Release
From y,·1re Ser\·icts
llrrbert L. Porter of ·La~una Niguel.
forn1er scheduling dirrctor of lhe
Comm ittee to Re-elect the President,
v.·as rel eased fron1 U1e F c de r a I
Correctional Institution at Lompoc three
days early for good behavior.
The warden's office said Porter, 36.
v.·ho pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI
about the disposition <Jf funds of th<>
committee, 'ft'as released t'riday after
ser.,.ing 27 days of a scheduled 30-day
sentence.
Porter. son-In-law of the Arthur Brigges
,of ~lonarch Terrace,. tntered the prison
April n after voluntarHy-aniving at the
prison gates early to avoid reporters.
iii.~ sentence included one year of
probation after the short inca rceration.
Porter's sentence stemnied rron1 a
story he admitted he told involving how
$100,000 given to con1·icted \\'atergate
t'Onspirator G. Gordon Liddy v.·as
distributed.
Originelly Porter told !he FBI the
money 11.·e·nt to conservative students. He
laler told the Senate Water g a t c
Committee he had given the money to
Liddy.
lie said he made up the story at th e
urging of deputy campaign director Jeb
Stuart P..tagruder.
\\'hen he corrected his original
~tatement. Porter said the rti.90n11 he
!old the lie were related to appulsjo his
vanity and to his loyalty to the P~deot
The General Accounting 0 ff t c e .
v.·atchdog arm of Congress, ~ld the
$100,000 was used to pay oft the
\\'atergate wiretappers alter the i r
arresls.
Porter, his 11t·ife Carol, and their three
children sold their Washington, D.C.
hoine last ~pring and have been living
11t'ilh the Briggs' in Laguna Niguel ever
since. . ·' M.----·-
A head-on collision on Ne-¥oipor1 Btach'11
narrow Newport Buy Bridge on Pacific
Coast H1gi1way Sunday night claimed the
life of a Seal Beach man.
Robert C. Bryden, 31, ol 219 Contra!'
A\'c., was en route home from his job es
manager of an Albertson's market in El
Toro when the falal accident occu1Ted.
In ves ligatloo was continuing today into
factors that apparently CBUSed the
headon er11sh, which also injured the
driver of the other car involved.
She was identified as l\frs. Arleo
Gurney. to, of 1221 Starboard \\'ay,
Newport Beach.
Ne11t·port Beach Police Officer JJ1n
Donald.son said the accident w a s
11pparently caused when Dryden's small
fo reign pickup truck suddenly swerved
from westbound lanes of the narrow
bridge lnto oncoming lanes.
He died at 11.30 p.m. at Hoag lvfemorial
llospital, less than one hour after the
rollillon in which he Suffered heid
injllrles.
Investigators said r.trs. Gurney \\'<JS
treated at lhe hospital, where six stitchC>s
\\'ere taken to close a hf'ad laceration,
and released to r&'Over at home .
No skidmarks were found at the scene
and until further investigation, police
v.'ere at a Jc>& to explain \.l'h..1t may have
caused Drvden to cross the center line.
The collision \\'as the latest in a long
series of accident! -both fatalities and
fender-benders-which have occurred on
or near the narrow old bridge .
A citizen's committee appointed to
siudy ways to in1prove the situation is
due on June J to make rerommendations
to the ~ewport Beach City Council .
A May 29 public hC'aring has already
Dren set for clUzens to air their ov.n vie'ols '
On various methods of eliminating bolh
the tra!fic accident hauird a n d
streamlining the flow of traffic on
Pacific C.oast .Jligh\\·ay.
Autlloritics anliL'ipate that the panel
'ft"ill recommend that the aging span be
replactd wilh a higher bridge wlucb
11t·ould be at least six lanes y,·ide.
Follo\.l·ing lhe fa!al accident Sunday
night. Dryden's body "'as transferred to
Ballz-Bergeron F'uneral llon1e, Costa
~frsa. 'ft"here services were pcnd101:
arrangements today.
The \'ictim was manlgcr of an
Alber!son's 1'1arket at 22681 El Toro
Road, El Toro.
Gas Blaze Continues
At l'atural Gas Well
STOCKTON lt;Pr1 -Famed Ttx.as
fire fighter Red Adair says It may ta ke
two "'•ffks to r-0nquer a natural gas v.·ell
fire that sent names roaring 300 feet into
the air. Adair directed an around·the.
clock drilling operation at the site
Sunday, hoping: 10 intercept the shaft
feeding the burning \\'ell .
NOW
SAVE
HUNDREDS
CLOSe-ouT ~ ili~{f~. ~895°0
GRAND PIANO SALE
WE'RE FAMS)US FOR OUR RECONDITIONED GRAND PIANOS. AND IUOHTLY SO. WOllLD
REKNOWNED EUROPEAN CRAFTSMEN IN OUR SHOP PRODUCE SOME OF THE "NEST
GRAND PIANOS IN ALL OF THE WEST COAST! CHciOSE FROM MAJOR BRANDS!
oua •18T •UY Ll8T
WURLITZER PIANO ~~r ... -·--'395
HAMMOND ORGAN :r:.:.~~~···--'650
LOWREY ORGAN :'fol .. -... '1295
HAMMOND ORGAN ~r.·,~~s ......... '2175
WURLITZIR PIANO m:.... ... --'895
FARFISA ORGAN:::....... ..::. '481
HAMMOND PIPER :::'11110. .. --'999
PLAYER PIANO~ll'.11"•· .. --.. -'1815
·soUTH COAST PLAZA
3400 BRIS_TOL-COS!A..M.ESA _
540-2830
1'' H~' 'IH!I! !l!,,ITT1!1!1!l1f ru,l!Hlf ,l!!!I TllE KIVaOARD
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·'
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 140, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 20, 1974 TEN CENTS
' Valley High Students React to Drug Arrests
By KATHY CLANCY
0t NiHI D•llY l"llet Steff
Students at Fountain Valley High
School have mlxed reactio:is to last
,,·eek's drug roundup that resulted in the
arrests of 59 suspected narcotics pushers
believed to be dealing on local high
school campuses.
"I really could care less," said a 10th
grade member of the high school swim
team. "If you're foolish enough to take
•
Huntington
Man Killed
In Accident
A Huntington Beach man was killed
Sunday in the Santa Ana mountain
foothills v.•hen the jeep he \\'as driving
v.·ent out of control and plunged into
Ladd Canyon.
The California High"·ay Patrol said
today John R. Riley. 48. of 6571 Rcdgrove '
Circle, was dead on arrival at Orange
County Medical Center after being
evacuated from the rugged hills by a
l\.tarine Corps helicopter.
A CHP spokesman said Riley was
crushed to death by the jeep in full \'iew
oJ his three teenaged diildren.
Witne&scs told police 'the Riley jeep
and another Vl!hicle were attempting to
winch down a steep firebreak with the
help of several hikers.
When he got to the end of the v.•inch
line, 'Riley apparently decided to try and
drive the rest of the way dO\\TI.
But officers were told the vehicle
started rolling faster and faster down the
&teep hill and finally plunged O\'Cr a
precipice, pinning Riley beneath it.
One of the hikers, Greg Hollows . 26. of
Mission Viejo had been riding in the
Riley jeep to help steady it but he
jumped out as the jeep started rolling too
fast to control.
Police said Riley was strapped in by
his seatbelt and could not escape before
the jeep went out of control.
The victim's son and two daughters
watched in horror from a vantage point
higher on the fire break.
Hollows and a friend applied artJflcial
respiration to Riley while a motorcyclist
rode to seek help from C0W1ty rtremen.
They freed Riley from lhe jeep and be
\\'as ~vacuated to the hMpital.
The other jeep driver, who was not
identified by police, left his vehicle on the
Jirebreak and was due to try to remove
it today.
Haig Report Denied
NEW YORK (API -Newsweek
rnagai.ine says White House chief of staff
Alexander M. Haig Jr. was so upset by
the Watergate tape transcripts that he
t6ld friends he had to "back up and re--
evaluate" his job. But in Key Biscayne,
Fla .. an associate of Haig said Sunday
that report was "totally false.''
• .
or .. ge C.ut
Weather
' High cloud$ are . on the horizon
for Tuesday, but lt will be SUMy
and warmer, aceprding to the
weather service. Highs !D the up-
per 60s at the beaches to the mid·
10s lnlal1d. Ovemig!lt l6Wa ~
INSIDE TOO,\ Y
Pre1fdent Nizon pwhed hl&
na(ionol health imuronce plan
over U&f notion11 oirwauu toda~.
.dcclomtll t/lal th< end lo J>Tic•
c:ontro" moy boo.at doctor biUa
. bu 22 perctttt 11&i1 ytar. S~e · •lorJI, Page 4.
,,
that stuff, you deserve whatever you
get."
"I think the whole U.ing was
thoroughly unfair," said another 10th
grader named David "The only ~·ay
drugs can hurt you Is when yoo get
ripped off by police. Some of my best
friends were ripepd off. They d;dn't
deserve it."
"Everybody knew it would happen,"
said freshman (',,olleen. noting drug use is
apparent to almost everyone on campus.
,
'WINS IARLY FRIEooM
Uguna Ni9wl'1 Porter
Ilerbert Porter
Gra1ited Early
Prison. Rewase
Several of the students described
seeing teenagers ill from drug overdoses
almost every day in school rest rooms.
Others said parents of rome students
sell drugs and keep their children
supplied.
Most sald students using drugs are
obvious. They're usually in groups near
the rest rooms, students SJ,f, so they can
go inside und smoke marijuana out of
slfht ol teachers.
'I'm glad it happened," said Renee. a ; .
Councilmen
Might Drop
Beacl1 Suit
fluntington Beach Councilmen will be
asked tonight to lake one of the final
steps toward ending the paper war over
the last stretch of private beachfront in
the city.
They are expected to approve a
reoolution authorizing the city attorney's
office to drop the city's suit in Superior
Court against the Huntington Pacific
Corp., owner of ;.s.miles of beach oorth
or the city pier.
The --~ Parks Department already
has. plaoed an '8.1 million check In
escrow for purchase of the private beach
to keep It open for p.ibllc recreation.
Oty Attorney Don Bonfa said he and
attorneys for Huntington Pacific Corp.
will meet with Superior Court Judge
Raymond Vincent Wednesday morning to
ask thal all suits be dropped in the case.
The city filed its lawsuit in 1970,
oonteoding that because the beach area
had been freely t1'<d oy the public for
more than five years. Huntington Pacific
Corp. ooold build nothing on the beach
which would . restrict public use.
Frem Witt Servtcr:t Attorneys for Htmtington Pacific filed
Herbert L. Porter of Laguna Niguel, a $100 million coontersuit, charging the
fonner scheduling dV'ector of the city with inverse condemnation.
Committee to Re.elect the President, State officials later came into the wU released from the F e. d e r a I picture and agreed to buy the beach for
Con"ectiollal Institution at l.ompoc thre< about $8.1 million.
days early for good behavior. Bonfa said that action accomplishes
Tbe wa,d~'.S office said Porter 36 what the city intended with its suit, so all
who plead;tl'.lUllty tQ. lyiJqpto the' FBi ,.,~t. can now be dropped. The state
about the tdispositton ... of' fubcb of the 'purchase does not include the Hunti~gtoo
committee, was rele88ed · Friday after Pacific Apartments, but Bont:a potnted
serving 'lT days of a Scheduled 30-day out there won't be anymo;e beachfront
sentence apartments built in Huntmgton Beach
· . . became aJJ of the shoreline will be in
Porter, IOn·m-laW of the Arthur Br1~ges city or state hands. of Monarch Terrace, entered the prison
ApMI 22 after voluntarily an#lag at the
prison gates early to avoid reporters.
His sentence included .ooe year of
probation after the short ,tncarceratlon.
, Porter's sentence stemmed from a
story be admitted he told tnvoMng how
$100,000 given to oonvicted .Watergate
conspirator G. Gordon rJddy was
dlltrlbuted. .,
Originally Porter' told the FBI the
money went to oometvaUve sUldents. He
later toll~ the Senate W a t e r 1 a t e
Committee:,he had given the money to ·
Liddy.
He said he ·made up the . stotY at the
urging of deJiUty, campaign <llUeto• Jeb
Stuart MagrudeJ\ .' . ' . . . • · • ·
When he CotffcteCf . bis ·.original
statement, Pofter said lhe reasoM he
told.&be lie were· relaled to appeals to his
vanlty 4nd lo!<\! loyilty·lo the Pr!!>ldent.
the ~ ~ccoun\lng 0 If Ice,
watdldog atl!l o!' COaaress, aaid the
$100,lllll. <WU. _used lo pay on the
Watergate Wlrttappera after I ht 1 r
arrests. ~. • ;, ~1 ~
Portert•hla wife caroi, alJd lh<if three
chlkfrt11.-.,ld • -tltelr WJStilngtoa, D.C.
horn& lair~ and tl!l"ve, lietn living.
with Ille ~ In Lactaa Niau<! evi!r
aince. , ~
In an Interview las\ swnmer, Porter
Ilic!. 'l':rtlllll( the tnitl! II the lllOll
vliOrous )"Oilmen I ""°'!• We tell our
clilldreit to do tt Ind "ft -Id <lo ll. Th1•
II ..,.! . lheraP¥ r .. i"!lividwtla Involved
and'{w !lie oiiiat,Y~ . "1
Sailors Pinclied
In Nude Swi1n
ANNAPOLIS , Md. (UPil -Twelve
Norwegian sailors were -picked up by
pqli:ce here during a disturbance in which ·UY~ral allegedly were swimming naked
ln the city harbor, o£ficers said.
The 12, whom police said spoke no
Engli&h, were taken -8atnrday night to
headquarters where ·"we explained the
situation to them," said Sgt. Gale .. Q.
Cole. Alt 12 were released within an hour.
"'nley _apparently came from a tanker
anchored out in the (Olesa)leal<e) Bay,"
sakl Cole. "They're in a foreign country
and they were just Jetting off steam, I
suppose."
Horse Tliieves
Hit' at Store
It 1118Y .have been 1 hone lover,
or tomeone lfler qulcll; cash. •
~v~r It wu. Fountain Valley
police today are ·soarcJllng for a
•mbsllt( cblld'1 ~.ride taken
lut week from the T G & Y store,
· *'14 Warner Ave.
..Police said the l)o~. llt&el< or
plasttc <!II 1 metal lllild, I• worth
~· OIOcen . dldra~ ......, how
·much ctwige may't>ave been in tbe
atta<;hed coin Im.•
'Ibo hone WU "'*'ribed .. Ian with bl1clc spo41 ... _,..._ a bladi Siddle. .,... ·-.-.
• . '
• •
freshman . "They were pushing it to little
kids at the elementary schools. When I
v.·as In elementacy school last year they
~·ere coming around at recess and
smoking marijuana."
"Kids can't even feel safe any more,"
said another freshman named Karhla,
referring to the use of underro\'er agents
posing as students.
"I've never even had it (drugs) but I
feet like someone 's trying to nail me."
Karhla and several of her friends said
•
•
they knew several of the students
arTested.
"It's sad because you know those
getting mixed up in all of this," Karhla
said. "Tbey aren't my best friends but
they're people I say hello to."
Barry, a tenth grader, added, "It 's bad
too because some of the kids got bustej
at school. Their teachers probaby \\'On 't
treat them the same."
"I'm glad they 're gettini:l: rid of the
problem," said a senior and member of
the school band. "I just don't like the
bad image it gi ves the school."
"Kids \\'e see at band contests will
rt'member and identify us as being from
the school "'ith the drug problem," said
another band member.
Se\'cral s1udents said their parents arc
discussing sending them to a differe~t
high school. while others said their
parents don't seem concerned.
··~Iy mom knO\\'S l smoke,' 'said a
(See REACTIONS, Page 2)
Ill .? • woo
•
FZZV
-......... Dr~net
Spreading
--Fur Heiress
UPI Terffhtft
,t\NGUISHIO FATHER~·-The Rev. Gej>rge F. Hall, Gell) .pastor
of St. John's Lutbebrl Church In l.ti!tollrwoo<l, lll., and Randolph
A. Hearst express sorrow. after Friday nlght SLA slayings. Hall
learned that his daughter Camilla was killed in holocaust while
Hearst got word that his daughter Patricia was not among: the six
victims. Additional stories, Page 5. ----
'011 Mud' Flares
Firemen Smnther Blaze
In Huntington Field
Huntington Beach firemen smothered a
potentially dangeous oil field fire Sunday
morning to prevent a major blaze from
breaking out along the Signal <>pef'ation
on the bluff. .
The fire Oared up about 8:3~ a.m. ""'~R
s p a r k s from a welder ignited ""Pi!
mud" used to cool a drill bit, according
to J<~ire Captain Roger Hosmer.
Flames were cmtained to an oil well
platform area on the inland side of
Pacific Coe.st Highway, north of Golden
West SI.reel, but they did threaten nearby
high pressure.gas lines, said H06mer.
the fire caused about SS,IXXI damage to
the drilling rtg, but no one was injured
and flI'emen say it was a minor blaze. It
took about 20 minutes to control, said
Hosmer, with the use of.a ,special foamy
substance called "llgbt water'' wbidl
noata on the surface and·BrnOtbers an oil
fire.
Firemen said a welder was repairing a
rig about llO feet above ground when
some sp.arks fell into a tank holding "oil
mud," an oil·water substance used lo
cool drilling blt..
S. Viets Launch
Courtter-off ense
BEN ·CAT, , Sootl! Vi<lllam (AP) -
Bactod by heavy ·•Ir and. artlllary
aupporth' South Vietnamese., t r o o p s
launcbe4"1 -pronged COUDt~en
slve lodQ agalnlt N0<1b V.letNlmese
!orces 2$ milts north ol Saigon. (Rela!ed
ne .. 1nil)'Ob, Page 1).
They .,;.,.. movlnc •lainst ~ vlllNie
or An Dien, '8ptund Ftiday,by the,N~
Vietnamese, about 111 miles southwut of
Ben C.t. In tho s\nteglc "Iron Triangle"
area alff Ille Saigon River. ,
Oov•mmel\I lrtlllary and planes were
blasUnc Ille vlllaa•. erumblfn& -of
nmtbacltle llp,roofed -· Moat IX. An
Dlen'a a,ooe dvUlanl reporltdlJI have !led
to CoV*11DitDtllnos •
Hosmer said the fire never got into the
v.·ell itself, and the greatest danger
stemmed from the nearby hlgh pressure
gas Jines which rould hnve caused a
major fire if they had ruptured.
F ou11tai1i . V allev
ol
Police Seeking
5 More Pushers
. Five swpected narcotics pushers were
being sou¢1 toda.J' by Fowttala V~ey
poUce in the;·lllSI ·ol lhe dty's ~
<I'!" ar1'eSt s.weop that lllarted la1t wtek\
The arrest of a juvenile at Marina High
School F)iday brought lo 59 the total
number arrested-20 adults .and 39
ju\'enile~ ' . :fhe arrUts, most of them wedllesdiy
night and early Thursday, were paf1 of a
several month investigation designed to
curb the sale of narcoUcs on the
CllµlpUSes ol Fountain Valley and 1""
Amigos Higb Schools. · ·
Police gathei-ed information by placing
two Wldercover N"ents posing u stUdents
on the campuses.
----------·-----
ZOO PREV A.LENT -.
IN PREGNANCIES
SAN PASQU-'L (AP) -Wben It comes
to babies, the San Dioio \\'lid Animal
Pll'lt 11 a moundloi success.
"Nearly evory bnedlnl.qe fel"f'ale Is
pregniu:it;" ays eeneral C\U'ator James
Dolan, "1nd !hit prollo~ly btclud'\I 1 ...
fen>alo 1or11i..:1 ' ' 'I1>en> ,.,. '1 specie. or ~i.·1o tht 1,-• .,_,,., which " deolgned to
encourace . t\>I reproducl!Gn ol wild and tnclan&erod apeclrs, and tJI but twa have
"'"" ~
LOS ANGELES (UPl l -A while
\.\'Oman, believed possibly to be Patricia
Hearst, and tv.•o black men. offered $500
to rent a Hollyv.•ood apartment for 24
hours .ind one of the men lunged at the
landlady "'ilh knife when she re.fused,
police rep:>rted today.
A dragnet for the :?(}.year-old heiress.
now listed as armed and dangerous and
liable to be shot if she resists, was
spread over the metropolitan Los
Angeles area after si" members of the
Symbionese Liberation Army were killed
Friday.
A spokesman for the FBI said the
Hollywood incident. was one of a number
MORE HEARST STORIES
APPEAR TOOAY ON PAGE S
--·---·-----of reports coming in from excited
citizens about the whereabouts of Miss
Hearst and that they had no evidence to
link it directly to the \Yanted girl.
A report by the Los Angeles Police
Department, however, listed th e incident
as "po~ible SLA connection."
An LAPD officer said the incident
occurred o::round 9:30 Sunday night al an
apartment building on Ne\v llampshire
Avenue in the Hollyv.'OOd area.
The report said the trio v.·ere carrying
(See HEARST, Page 2)
* * * Hearsts Plead
For Daughter
To Tur11 Self In
HILLSBOROUGH (API -Randolph
and Catherine Hearst today begged their
daughter Patricia , considered "armed
and extremely dangerous," to abandon
the Symbionese Liberation Army and
give herself up.
"I hope that she v.•i\l give herseU up
and conJe home," Mrs . Hearst told a
~ews conference. "1 just hope everybody
\Viii remember that physically Patty is
still a kidnap victim. All I can do is hope
(!nd pray that God will bring her home
again."
Her father added: "l hope that she will
give herself up, too, but at this point in
lime I don't believe that she will give
herself up to come home."
The Hearsts were stunned Sund$y
night when they learned their daughter
was named as a dangerous fugitive and
sought by hundreds of lawmen after six
SLA members died In a fiery shootout
Friday in Los Angeles.
Speaking at their home here, the
Hearsts a~ain said they believe their
daughter has been brainwashed or the
victim of mind control.
Hearst said he thinks she "honestly
believes now that she's a member of the
group this sort of brainwaslUng ~ not an
unheard of thing."
Asked if he believed tri! daughter
would willingly tetum. Hearst said: "If
she believes In the cause she says she
does, she's much better off and much
more important to that cause fret than If
she ls killed or being put in jail (or a
number of years.
"But If she does believe In tltis she"! a
lot better off being able lo write and talk
and trave1 and espouse the pbi)osophy
which she thinks she believes in at this
t1Jne thon she 11 being with the Harri.es
or In prison," Hearat said.
Miss Hearst Is being sought with
1tt1pected SLA members William and
Emily Harris.
"J jtt!I hope the Harrlsa d<)a 't gt! IDlq
another shootout and lor<:e the poke ..
d>me 1n and c•t lhtm," llWstllltl.
•
'
Nixon Told
rro Give Up
64 Tapes
\\'ASlll NGTON <AP) -U.S, District
J\ldgr .John J . Sirica loda.v ordered that
Prc~idl'nt i\"1xon turn over l>y ~lay 31 the
1<1pes of 64 ('Onversafions subpoenaed by
~ptcial prosecutor L«>n Jaworski.
But Sirica snid he ~·ould stay his
£1ecis1on 1l 1hc Prl''>Jdent's l~n~·y('rs appoal
the drc1:c.1on. i.'IS Clipccled.
Thr tapes :ire bf'ing sought by
.IJ11or~k1 a.s C\'idencc for the Watergate
,·01er-up con<.p1ra{'y tna! invol\'ing seven
rormer \\l1itc House and :\'ixon re·
rlr1 iion l'Otllrll•lll'l' aides.
The tr1al is ~chedule<i to be held before
S1rica in September.
Sirica ordrrc<l 1hc \\'hitc l-Touse !o
prepare an index and analysis of \11hat is
conlainrd on the tapes to be turned ov er.
1ncludu1g any clnims !hr President \l.'anrs
lo n1:ike ro keep por\lons of the !apes
conliden11al.
Sirica follo\\·cd a s1n1ilar course last
~ear \\·hen Nixon's la .... ·_vcrs fought a
~ubpoena for the tapes of n i n e
ron1·crsations. Jn that case. Sirica upheld
1·!ai1n~ of privi!l'ge for l\\"O complete
10111'ersat1on::. and por!ions of a th ird.
· The originals of all subpoenaed items
11 ill accornpan~' 1hc 1ndl'x and anal\"sis
11hcn transmitted 10 the rourl." S1riCa ·s
ninc·pagc ordtr snid. "In addition. a
F.cparate tape recording -copies fron1
the originals -containing only those
porlions of conversations since
1ranscribcd and made public should be
preparC'd and delivered along v.-ith the
subpoe naed n1a1crials."
.Jav.·orski a.i;ked the court April 16 to
issue 8. subpoena for the 64 conversations
~panning a year's period IM!tween June
20, 1972 and June 4. 1973 . Sirica ordered
!he subpoena tv"o d<iys later and on r-..1ay
I the White HollSe a."ked that the
subpoena be quashed. ·
~lean\\·hile. ano1hcr federal judge.
saying the FBI "play~ cat and mouse"
\\'ilh people it is investigating. 1oday
indicated he is considering dismis.sing
one charge brought against former
pre~idential aide John D. Ehrlich1nan in
1he White House Plumbers case.
L".S. District Judge Gerhard A. Gesell
raised the queI;tion in reference to a
charge that Ehrlichman lied to the FBI
abou t his knowledge of the \\1hite House
Plumbers unit's investigation of the
Pentagon Papers ca!le.
Gesell said that an FBI memo
~ummarizing the interview with
t:hrlichman did not make it clear
,~·helher the agent asked Ehrlichman
nbout the "Pentagon Papers case" or,
111ore s.pccifica\ly. about the break-in at
the office of Daniel Ell s berg 's
psychiatrist.
Gesell also raised lhe pos,,ibility that
lhe trial nlight be delayed by as much as
a year aft er lhe l'llwyer for another
defendant in lhe ca.w, Felipe de Diego,
said his client had been granted
immunity from prosecution u•hen he
lestifit<.I llbout the break·in before a
t'torida grand jury.
Rate Vp Again
-11 314% Noiv
'.'\E\\' YORK f AP ) -First
:\ational Ba nk of Chicago. the
na !ion's ninth largest co1nmercial
bank. today announced it was
raising irs prime lending rat e to a
record 11 3t perctnt from 11.40
percent effective Tuesday.
The rate lops the 11 1 ~ percent
announced Friday by a number of
major commercial banks. including
the country's three largest, Bank of
America, First Xalional City and
Chase 11-tanhattan.
Chauncey E. Schmidt. president
of the Chicago bank, said in making
!he announcement !hat he expecttd
an easing "before long.. in the
prime rate.
Oa.4~1COAST ...
DAILY PILOT
l"9 ~~It tcu• 0-.'Y ''"" ,.,,~ wl1'C~ 11 ((;..,.
l ·Md l~f N••l·~IM\ •t O<lfll·1'11G fly 1"-0ro"'l" c.c." r~t•·•"•"g tonto.ny S..Nrlit ea•:~"' •It
Dulllot"~~ "'~"••·• l"'""'l" r''"" tot [<111•
M .... Ne"IX'" S.oi:• 11.,,,l>r!flO" llttc~''°",,_
11.~ V11•; ll~~~~ S.1'• '"' nt S-•-c• 1"'1
i!1n CO•m•"~ -~•" "'"" °''''"'"" A 0,-.g • r911ionao .O>' on •I l'"•!ll"'f<I S••v•Co,, •"II S,,n
~l/'I T•• P''"''' .. ' 1'11!1"1""'9 D'•"' 'I 11 llO WfS/
loy !i!IH I tO•ll M1 ... ~.,fol,.,I tl'file
?of:,. .. ll Wte~
''"••Ol"1 l l'lll "'!ll.:./'t•
J~·i .. (.., .. , "'"' ,._,.,.,,, ,...., v~"'"' ,,.,,.~.,
Tf'()IT'i• IC~~,1
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M1r.oQN'lg l<lll.;1
C1'oir.H loo' ~ ·~dP N.:i'I
A111at1~ l.l1r •Q•"I I l·'O',
1""'¥(0··'-
W•tl Ori~" c..o..nt, l O·•c.t
H_. ....... ect!Offict
1151'> M:.:ft ilo..ceYll'd
t.\.;i,~ AddrtlL P . .J &,, J IJ.'•}t""
OttwOffkt• ll~ll"ll .. O(.I' 11~f(lif>lA••~ ....
t..111MfM J~V.••"f.fy5'rM'!
....... roort IHCO »Jl""*OO<l llou'f•I" Nn~ ...... 111. "'°'~''''"''1'111"'• ..
•
Pair Still • ID Co~nty?
T·iventy-1nontli-old Cri.me Still Puzzler for Police
•
Jlave the killers of Fountain V1lley
service station operator Lou Lovko
lcfl lhe county, or the state?
Pr.rhaps they did . but 11.-lth Lovko·~
death 20 nlOnths old now, and 'A'ith
police w1able to unrover any solid
\nfonnafio n on the stabbinl!:. µerh.:i.ps
they have come bacl...
Secret Witness
. .
,
~tt~ictmetat Stands · .,J
· 'Reinecke Denied~
--Ch~nge of Venue
WASHINGTON (APl -A federal
judge today refused to· di8f'lli&S a perjury
Indictment against U. Gov. F:d Relncckf'
of California or shift hlJ trial to that
atate.
U.S. Dittrlct Judge Barrington Parker
denied n1otions by Reinecke's attorneys
who contended among other th ings U\iit
he had been misled and trapped by
federal pr06eCUtor1 lnto cooperating with
their inveatigatklp.
suMequtntly was
Beach. Fla.
transferred to ~11ami
An1ong other things, Heinecke Is
accused of perjury about when he told
John N. Atitchell . forntcr attorney
general and manager of President
Nixon's re.election campaign. about .a
$-100.000 offer fronl 1hc Sheraton Corp. to 1
under\\'rite the convention in San Ditgo.
Reinecke ls a candidate for governor of
California. and is opposed In the June 4
prin1arY by state L'Ontroller Hou3lon .1.
Flournoy. Hi.5 trial is scheduled to begin
July 15.
DO YOU RECOGNIZE EITHER OF THESE MEN?
"'Ibe court f.mda that Mr. Reinecke
was unable to point to any litaten\ent
n1ade to him about a promise of leniency
• . . in the une.qu1vocal manner he
suggests," Judge Parker rul~d .
He petitioned the CQurt to move the
trial to San Francisco or Sacramento on
~rounds that it would be an undue burden
for hiln to bring de(ense witnesses to
\\'ashington, and that ther~ bad been
prejudicial publicity In the capllal.
Police S..k P1ir In 1972 Fount1Jn Valley Sl1yln9
Or maybe sorneone in !he fountain
\·atley·liuntington Beach community
\1·ou19 rtmen1ber or recognize the1n
('\'l'll froin the past.
llo111oride 111\'estigators have
developed 11110 skc1ches of Lovko's
pos~ih1£> .killrrs. based on descriptions
provided by \\'itnesscs to that event in
September 1972. The skrtches of the
tv.·o su spe<'IS are rrprinted here.
'11te Secret \\'itness is offering a $500
cash rc1rard for information \\'hich
1\·ill lead to 1he arrest and conviction
of Lov ko's killers.
All infonnation turned into !he
Secret \\fitness 'A·iJJ be k e p t
anonymous. Neither police, nor the
newspaper, will know \\'ho provided
the necessary clues to solve the
mystery surrounding Lovko's death.
Anyone who might recognize !he
suspects from the sketch~ printed
here, or who might have any other
valuable inform ation, is u:ged to
phone the Secret V.'itness at 642--0700,
or write to: Secret Witness, Da ily
Pilot. P.O. Box 790, Huntington Beach,
Ca. t926481.
To keep information anonymous,
sig n the letter l\'ith a six-digit code
usi ng any order of nu1nbt!rs and
letters (exainple: ABCl231 Keep that
t'(l<]e, because il \\'ill be used to
identify th(' inlor1n<1nt in order lo pay
!be N!Wj\rd.
Lovko, \\'ho ran lhe L and L Shell
Service station at Talbert Av£nue and
Bushard Street in Foun;ain \'a llt:v,
was stabbed 17 tinH.•s b/ une of '"''O
1nen 111ho had approached hinl earlier
the same evening asking to use U1e
station restroom.
The man who alleeedly did the
knifing has been described as close lo
six feet tall ; stocky; with dark brou11,
medium length ha ir which covered the
tips of his ears; dark brown eyes:
dark complexion, perhaps h" I f
Mexican, half Anglo.
His partner \\'as described as:
sn1aUer , about 5'7" or 3'8"; thin.; dark
•
flro111 Page 1 Baek Bay Bridge
broy,·n ~<1.vy. or curly hair, Jong but
combed back showing hi5 ears; brown
eyes: f\.fcxican-Amer ica n.
Police still aren't sure \i:helher the
nlolive for !he killing \\'as robbery,
revenge or just a sudden nare·up of
tcn1rl'r. A S2:i0 cash bankroll was
fovnd ln Lovko's pocket; lessening the
ch:111~·e of a robbery motive , police
Sa\'.
TI1c· Lovko killing is the first crilne
printed by the ne~ Dallv Pilot Secret
\\ 1:11css c.1lu1r.1\ but others \\•ill follow .
1'1c Se.::rt'i \\'i!ness reminJs
rrJders lhat information an 01hcr
crimes is ~ elcome. In son1e cases
there wil l be s1nall cash rc\1'ards paid
for this information.
After the first Secfet Witness
rolumn was published last week, one
anonymous tip led to the capture of
t1\·o market robbers in liuntlngton
Be<1ch -just 2~ hour$ after the
receive a cash reward once tbe statu'
robbery. Thot witneos will probabty
of the suspects if determined.
"Even II he believed a piomlse had
been made, this belief 1nust be
buttressed by sUb&ta:ntial proof . , . Such
proof Is lacking," !he ..judge said.
Reinecke said in Sacranu~nto today ht•
\\OOld 1\0t \\'ihtdra.w from the Rei}ublican
race for ·govemord~pite the major set-
back in his effort to clear himself.
"Quitting is not a consideration . I 11m
not pulling out of this race," Rt'inecke
told a has11ly called news conference.
Reinecke al*" predicted he 'A'OUI~ 11·in
!he primary ,contest against Cont roller
Hou ston FlollmOy who has a command·
Ing le.ad in the public opinion poll .
He charged Flournoy wiltl condueting
a million-dollar advertising campaign
financed by ."big money 5pecial inter·
tsls." '
Reinecke and his attorneys contended
that the lieutenant 1ovemor freely
provided documents because he believe<!
sptelal \W11er1ate prosecutor" promised
he "''ould not be indicted.
A lhrte-cowit indictment returned
Api-il 3 accuse• Reinecke of lying ·lo the
Senale: Judlclar, CommiUee about
ctrtain aspects of his role in the selection
of San Diego as the si~ of the
Republican National Convtntion. It
Judge Parker said !here will be
inconviencnces for Reineck'!: if he I~
schcdulf..; ~o stand trial here but he found
!hat they ··a re not unduly oppreASive or
burdensome .''
. J>arker said he exan1ined in chambers
a nnancial nel worth statement and
lnro1ne tax re!urns \l.'hich Reil'lecke
sub1nitted, and· did not agree that t~ '9
expt>nse of a trial in Washington 'A'ou ld be
an unsu pporlable financi1:1l burden .
The judge said a transfer to Califom i:i
would probably generate a., much
pretrial pu blicit}I there as \\'iii occur in
\\'ashington bccnuse Reinecke is a well·
kno11o·n political figure in the state.
flrom Page 1
REACTIONS • • •
SOf!homore.
A junior. \\'ho btklngs to the Polioo
E:<plorer Scouts said three members of
her organization ha\'t-' rrceivcd lhrt>at.\ ,
from fellow students since ttie arrests.
··Tuey think v.·e·re the ones w'ho· 1
gathered "'"idenct' for the police," sho
said. HEARST ...
a shotgun , one or the men had a switch-
blade knife and that they "possibly" had
hand guns. !l-1iss Hearst was reported to
have left the shootout house in a black
area of the city wilh two black men
hours before the gun battle Friday.
Seal Beach Mowrist 'S trangler' Kin
Seeks $10,000
··r )u~I don 't think the problem is that ·
bad, S&Jd another sludent . v.'ho also was
carrying her ju\'enile arrest repo rt fro m
a recent raid ~1 a n1arijua11a party. She
said she \\'&S just Httending the pany,
and didfft ha\'e any drugs.
The report said the landlady told police
that one of the men attacked her wlth a
knife when she n!fustd to rent the
apartment for 24 hours and cut through
the fol.do! of her skirt. She was not
injured.
The U.S. attorney's office \\'as
preparing to file a complaint in San
Francisco today charging Miss Hearst
and t\\'O kno\\'n members of the SLA still
at large ~;ith violations of fed eral la\1's
pertaining to possession and U!IC of
automatic V.'eapons.
\\lilliam A. Sullivan. assistant director
of the FBI , said fl1iss llearst .... ·as I.he
v.·oman "'tio lea ned oul the front 'A'indO\V
of a rro and ~·hite Volks"·a~en van and
opened fire v.•ith a 30-ealiber carbine
Thursday afternoon. as SL\ member
\\'illiam Harris struggled v.•ith a cle rk at
~fel's Sporting Goods Store in lngle'A-ood.
Harris was accused of sho~li fting a pair
of soclts.
"She is a federal fugitive and if she
resists arrest she will be treated like any
other federal fugitive." Sullivan said.
She is considered armed a n d
dangerous. he said, ai;id if located she
ui U be told to surrender immediately. If
she tries to shoot , he said, "\Ve y:ould
undoubtedly shoot ba ck. '1
The f"BJ said an agent who believes his
life is endangered may open fire on a
suspect.
flfiss Hearst was kidnaped from her
San Francisco apartment Feb. 4. She
later renounced her former life and said
she was joining forces with her
kidnapers.
But !he FBI maintained that she \\•as
forced to make the statement. Even after
she was photographed ·with a machine
gun during a bank robbery, the FBI said
she WM! an unv.illing participant.
F'ive per!j)OS:, Including D o n a I d
Defretze, 30, who as heed r the SLA
called himself "General Field f\.tarsh a!
Cinque," ~·ere killed In the Oamcs and
gunfire, police said. A sl11:th body. that of
Camilla Hall , 29, was found Sunday.
Jam<'S John6on, 18. who Hved at the
home destroyed In the gunfight, told the
Los Angeles Times that r.1iss Hearst fled
from the house less than 24 hours before
the shootout.
Charges against Johroon's mother,
Christine Johnson, 3S, or harboring
fugitives, were dropped Sunday night and
she was released, police said today.
Johnson said li-liss Hearst told him
Thursday "They'll ha\'e lo .kill me before
I go back."
"She told me she was with them -on
their side." said Johnson.
He said A1iss Hearst .... ·a:i ~·earing a
pistol and \vanted to stAy with the others,
but they apparently sent her a¥.·ay to
k~ her from beina Involved in the
gunfight.
"I tt.ink t1<>me (black) brothert Upped
them off thitt lhe cops were onto them
ond that's why U..y got Patty out or
there -you know, their love for tier."
He said a van containing t•·o black
men drove up, and Miss Hearst tot l11to
It and left with lhom.
He .. id he talked lo h<r for hllf an
hour and "she w11 a beautiful per10n to
me. real lntelllge:nt and all.''
~ others kllltd In Frid1y11 1bootout
we:re ldenU!led as Patrfc:Ja "A11irnoon"
SollYllk. M. Nanq un1 f'tnl/, II, Willie
Wolfe, 21, and Angela Alwood, 25.
I
Killed in Car Crash BOSTON (AP ) ~ 1be brother of the
self-professed Botton strangler says he
wants $10,000 under a Massachusetts la\v-
providlnl comptnfaUon for innoc ent
victim! Of vk>lent crime.
'"The proble1n will go on no matt er
u'hat they do ," she said . ··Drugs are
E'Vtrywhcre. and ue're old enough to
kno-.v ~'hat ~·e're doing."
A head~n collision on Newport Beach's
narrow, Newport Bay Bridge on Pacific
Coast llighway Sunday night claimed the
life of a Seal Beach. man.
Robert C. Bryden, 31. of 219 Central
Ave., ~·as en route home from his job as
manager of an Albertson 's markel in El
Toro when the fatal accident occurred.
Investigation was continuing today into
factors that appa rently caused the
headon crash, wh.ich also inju red the
driver of the other car ill\•olved.
She was identified as Mrs. Arico
Gurney. 40. of 1221 StarbOard \Vay.
Newport Beach.
Ne\vport Beach Police Officer Jim
Donaldson said the accident was
apparently caused when Bryden's small
fore ign pickup truck suddenly swerved
from westbound lanes of the narrow
bridge into oncoming lanes.
He died at 11 :30 p.m. at Hoag f\.f e1nori al
Hospital, less than one hour after the
coll is ion in which he suffered head
injuries.
Investigators said Pitrs. Gurney was
treated at the hospital, where si:t stitches
\4"ere taken to close a head laceration ,
and released to recover at home.
No skidmarks \4·ere found at the scene
and until further investigation, police I
were at a los,, to e:rplaln what may have
caused Dryden to cross the center line. 1
The collision was the latest in a Jong I
series of accident.. -both fatalitiH and
fepder-bencltrs-which have occurred on
or near the narrow old bridge.
A citiztns' committee appointed to
study ways to Improve the situation is
due on June 3 to make recommendations
lo the Newport ll<ach City Council.
A Mey 29 public hearing has already
been set fot citizens to air their own views
on various methods of eliminating both
the traffic accident hazard a n d
F ou1tt<1in Valley
To Hold Speech,
H ealtli Clinics
Health and spetth evaluation clinks
for ehtldren who w~I enter kinderganen
neit year will be held thh1 week In the
FounU!ln V1Uey School Dilrtlct.
On Tveodlly the cllnle will be at
Tamura School ror students re1ilte.red at
1'amura, Fulton, !'ountlln V•Jloy,
McDowell, Nloblu and Plavan Schools.
Wodnorday te1Ung will be 11 Limb
~hool lor studenU! '""" Lamb , 1 .Buahlfd; ArtV•loa, Glsl<r. Co•, Molola I
and Oka Schools.
111undly lbe clinic will be Ill Wanllow
Seltoot lor atudenU! at W a r d I o w ,
Newland, Tllbert and Harper Schools. ' Tiie eUnlCI are <0nduckd by dlalrlcl
1poedl and heartnf therapistl and
nutMS.
streamlining the flow of traffic on
Pacific Coast Highway.
Authorities antici pate that the paftcl
will recommend that the a&ina span be
replaced witll a higher bridge which
\vould be at least sii lanes wide.
The claim was made by Richard E.
DeSalvo. admtnlstrator of the 'uta~ of
Albert DeS11lvo.
Gas Blaze Continues
.<\I !\attu·al Gas Well
F'ollOt\'ing the fatal accident Sunday
night. Bryden 's body wa.s transterred kl
Baltz-Bergeron Funeral Home, Costa
~tesa, ~·here ser~lces were pending
arrangements today.
The victim wa s manager of an
Albertson's Pi1arktt at 21MI El Toro
Road . El Toro.
Albe rt Desalvo aaid he .... ·as Ule
strangler. although he u·a~ never tried in
connection ,~·ith the Jlrangtings ·He \Vas
serring a life ter111 for assaults on a
number of Boston-arts 'lomen uflen he
\\·as slabbed to death last ~o.,.cmber at
\\~lpole State Pr\90n in \\'alpole.
STOCKTON 1 CPI i -Famtd Ttxas
fire fighter Red Adair says ii may take ..
!\rO \\·eeks to conquer a natural gas ~·ell .,
fire that sent flames roaring 300 feet into .
the air. Ada ir direc1ed an around-the.' ·
clock drilling operation at the silt '
Sunday, hoping to intercept the shaft.
feeding the burning well. ·
NOW
" SAVE
HUNDREDS
OUR ANNUAL
REDUCED . S~GIALS i;
ALLGRANDS s.s9500
CLOSE-OUT START AT ••• ;
GRAND PIANO SALE
WE'RE FAMOUS FOR QUR RECONDITIONED GRAND. f!lANQS, AND RIOHTL Y SO. WORLD
REl(NOWNED EUROPEAN CRAFTSMEN IN OUR SHOP PRODUCE SOME OF THE FINEST
GRAND PIANOS IN ALL OF THE WEST COAST! CHOOSE-FROM MAJOFI BRANDS!
... ' ... ~ l\l',
WURLITZER PIANO m: ....... --·-'395 WURLITZER PIANO ~/cl:,o .... -............. '895 _,;',, '650 ' . " .. -' '488 HAMMOND ORGAN""·•""··--PARFISA ORGAN w ............. _._ ......... ..
LOWREY ORGAN~ ... -'12.9S' . HlMMOND ,PIPER ~::1111~ .. ---·-'999
HAMMOND ORGAN :::t',~ .... ...:.•217 5 P~AYlll PIANO r.:' ""'·" ............. _J 188 5
" SOUTH ·coAST PLAZA
' . 3400 8AiSTOl.~COSTA MESA
540.2831>
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Note Wen1 ·1o Top
Preside1it Finds Sailor's Letter in Bottle
..
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Walking on a
deserted beach ln the Bahamas, President Nixon
. found a green-tinged bottle washed ashore amid
the seaweed, carrying a message inside.
Va., to bis present post at Jacksonville, Fla.
Then Sunday night the President made a tele-
phone call to Larry's grandfather, William L .
Staples of Haverton, Pa., whose name and address
were on the message dated March 23, It had to be broken open to get at the some-
, what water.logged note that read:
Nlxon told about finding the message, and ac·
cording to a White House spokesman, a somewhat
startl~ grandfather said of his message-writing
grandson: "He's a good boy -he's a fine boy. He
didn't do anything wrong, did he."
"I'm aboard the U.S.S. Guam. I have a watch.
I bad nothing to do so I'm writing you ... if you
!ind it please write to this address and tell them
you found this message from their grandson." The President assured Staples that the call
from the nation's commander·1n-chief didn't in·
volve any trouble1 and Nixon said he was proud
of the Navy and all the men who s e r v e in it, a
\Vhite House spokesman related.
The White House checked out the letter from
Larry Metivier after the President found it on his
weekend beach stroll with friends C. G. "Bebe"
Rebozo and Robert Abplanalp during a visit to
Grand Cay.
In Jacksonville today, Metivier said he was
surprised when he got the telepho.ne call from his
mother telling him what happened to the bottle. The ynung man is an airman apprentice, 18,
with a Navy helicopter squadron and had been
aboard the Guam being transported from Norfolk,
"I never expected to hear anyone had found
that botUe for about 10 years," Metivier said.
,
Clemente Annex?
Forster Heir~' Ranch
Has 475-acre Oil FieUl
Nader Oain1s
Kalmbach Tied
To Dairy Fund
By JOHN VALTERZA
0 1 ""' 0111~ ,llot S1111 -Three heirs ol the original owner or the
sprawling ft1 or5ler Ranch Tuesday will
ask San Clemente city councilmtn lo
aMel the 2,000-a.cre spread -including
475 acres Yt'h.ich might become an oil
field.
Marie, Jerome and Rosemary Forster,
through a lawyer. are asking councilmen
to apply for the huge annexation to the
Local Agency Formation Commission
(LAFC).
Some or that land several weeks ago
figured in a flap before county
supervisor! during a reque~t lo annex
acreage into a sanitation district.
Filth District Supervisor Ron a Id
Caspers led the board in the defeat or the
}Man because he asserted it was "growth
inducing."
Lawyer John Solomon gives city
toondlmen several options in the
ennexation -all keyed lo the retention
ol pemil!OiDn to drill b-oil OD the pnip.
trty.
The strong indications that oil drilling
is proposed for the acreage k>cated
nortl!west of the present city limits
marks the f11"5t time along the Southern
Orange Cba!t that major oil exploitation
has been openly discussed.
Several test wells were 5UDk in the
postwar years in inland hills, but have
never .been commercially significant.
From Wire Services
Solomorl°s options are: Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport
-In the event that 'the city will honol' Beach, President Nixon's chief fund
existing county permits to drill for oil raiser. is said to have received money
and if the city will allow the drilling by from a dairy cooperative Which a lawyer
emendill?<'>isling-e!ty-et>d"' •olo~s-to-T ----... --·av··--~1 m r; a the practice, the Forsters ask that the or conswner a .vocate na p a er
entire ranch be annexed. Sunday charged with agreeing to commit
-If the city will forbid the driUing for $2 million in campaign funds in exchapge
oil, then the applicants ru;k that the for milk price supixirts.
annexation proceed with the 475 oil acre5 In a (our-page letter William 0.
remaining in county control, and drilling Dobro · the lawy ' urged u s would still be allowed. vir, . er, ...
"To preserve the natural beauty of the Attorney Earl J. Silbert to begin a
hills.", Solomon said in a letter to the "diligent inquiry" and to file a civil suit
council, "the Forsters have insisted on a to recover funds that were lost to the
clause in the oil lea.."eS requiring
undergrounding and landscaping."
A final request from the lawyer calls
for the waiver of any annexation fees by
the city, or -at least -a postponement
of the fees until devek>pment takes place.
Were the annexaUon to b e
eon.!ummated. city proposals for building
demiUes on the inland hills woukl call for
a total density of 1.5 units per acre under
a cluster concept.
The stttpest portion• ol the acreage
"-'Ould remain open spa.ct and the more
bullctable sectkm would be constructed
for ptamed<ommunlty and other uses.
Bes.ides the major annexation request,
COl.Ulcilmm Tuesday will consider these
ii.em.! in a meeting which was called lo
replace last week's ~ that was
cancelled due to aboences:
federal government because of fraud in
lhe alleged coospiracy.
Dobrovir said one of the d&iry groups
delivered $100,000 to Kalmbach in 1969
and $627 ,000 after the price support was
raised March 21, 1971. "There may have
been more," he added.
Dobrovir said be sent a oopy to
Attorney General Williim Saxbe and
madl! "slmllar d<mand on him.''
Nader, through Dobrovir, ha.5 fought
for montm ln U.S. District Court to roll
back a 1971 increase in the federal price
support for raw milk on grounds it was
on administration pay-Off for tbe !2
million comm.ilmef'lt.
RehalJilitation Center
Judge William B. Jones hinted last
week, tm.tver, that be may di.nniss lhe
suit on grounds that there have been
annual increases in the price support -
along with coogreasional action -mce
1971 and Nader's complaint is now moot.
"We demand therefore that you begin
a diligent inquiry . . . and thal you
prnm~ytbereafWbMgaci~~~
oo bellalf ol the United States . . . to
rec:oY!I" the amounts lost to the treasury
by reason of. tile hucl and false clami..
outlined,•• Dobrovir said.
County's Summer Qimp
. ,
Aids Disabled Yo~~
~ ..
The Rehabllttation Institute ol Orange
County will open Its SllDlmet day camp
July t for disabled younpten·1;. three
to l3. ~' The program, des1gried for youngsten
with delayed development or orthopedic
handicaps, ls divided into four two-week
sessions running through Aug. 23.
No one will be turned away for lack of
funds, according to camp director Hazel
Tobis but children must have letters
from 'their physicians saying they are
free from communicable disease&. are
able to, participate and liltln& aoy special
restrictions. Aclivltle> at the camp Include painting,
clay modeling, collage won, wood
working and sand and water play.
,,,. -•!so lncludol oul!loor acttvittes suclr as-s~:·Itlk Ing,
"""1 rides. and. field trips. Creetlve
dramatics, pupPetry, 'mul!O,' a to r y
telling, cool<lni and aclenc:e aA detigned
to belp campers' laJJCUlg• clMilopmeot.
An Indivii!uall<ed llP<d'1-llducatlon
program is ~ . ""allablf; • offerlnil
reading and mathematlct •• ,...,u ••
sensory motor trall!fng far ~ wttb
learning disabilHles. ' · '.
'!be camp, Mn. T1lblt iail, provides
participation In group -and ~ to new tbinp ancl~ often dmlOd. ,...ngoten wttb .. disablOtloi. ..... .-
-lnfonnatloo may be oblllned
by cantadlng tbe tmtltute II ')ieo E. La
Vela Ave., Orlnge, pllooe a.MJll.
"We are aware, of course, that the
head ol tbe cmspiracy appean to be
RJcbard M .. Nixon, currently President of
the United Stata. Yoo will agree, of
COUl'le, that be is not by virtue of that
oflioe plaoed above tbe law."
DollroYir charged that the oonspiracy
'eDlta llDllDC tine major dairy co-
operatives ...,... Associated Milk Producers
Inc. CAMPI), lfid.America Dairymen
Inc. and Dairymen Inc. -a foriner adilllnbUatkm and Nixon ~eotion
olllcial.
In addition to Nixon, he also named
former Treasury Secntary John B. Con·
nalJy Jr.: lomlel' Attorney Genenil John
N. Mltd>eil, fonne!-White House aides
H. R. Haldeman, John D. Ehllidtnum
..i <llBrles W. Colson, and others.
OobroYir !aid be wu aware the justice
departmmt was defending the lllri<ulture department against his
allegations.
Never on Sunday-Almost
Gas Squee;e to Curtqil, Seven-day Dump Service
By WJLUAl\f SQlllEIBER
CH tM o.ity "" ...,. •
Orange Couoty SUporvl>on l>aft been
told there imt eDOUih fuel ... u.1i1. to
mume full, aeven-daY openU<m at the
.....,1y•1 four dllmpo.
But O>unty AclmlnistraUve Ollker
-'l'boma• said ln • letter to tbe boai'd tbat llmltod 1eve><lay operlllom
are poalble II the cumtll -lml .
of. luel -Dtlob )I -to. 'l'homu ..id tbe · llliuntf purcbulng
deplrtmenl and maJor fUll oil wpplion
have lntliosied IUJlplles would nm out by
July If 11111-acale operaUont ue rewmoll.
'Ille facllitla were clooed on &lntWyl atartln# Jan. I In on effort by~
to ........ Oil the dl9el fuel tbat _.les the ~~~vlnC equipment
Al. t!ielr -meeUna. aupem-~ to -"l dump .....,. tbia
&1111111 and -lo=-IDl)or .. ,. : ~·:.illlJ ..... -_,, ...
!Ddlaltod tliey -llk.e fo ftOplD tbe
•
•
MondaY, Mar 20, 1974 H DAILY PILOT :J
on Heights
Kissinger
C~tinues
Peace Move
By Uaited Press International
Syrinn and lsrt1eli forces today fought
artillery, tank and armor battles on Mt. •
llern1on and along the 40.mile Golan
Heights front for the 70th day while
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger
continued his shuttle diplomacy in the
search for a formula to separate the
armies.
Even v.•hile Kissinger conferred in
Damascus with President Ha.fez Assad in
what could be the final stages of his
three-week peace-seeking m i s s i o n ,
Palestinians :staged a memori31 service
for three guerrillas who died in an attack
an an Israeli schoolhouse at ~laalot
Wednesday. A speaker'1;. p I a t Io rm
collapsed under Nayet Hawatmeh, leader
of the Popular Democratic Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, and part of the
crowd fled in pan,ic when guerrillas
started shooting in the air.
In Jerusalem. Prime ~finister Golda
:\1eir and Defense ~1inister l\1Mhe Davan
told the Knesset (parliament) that lsfael
must intensify its \\'ar against Arab
guerrillas fo\10\.1:ing the massacre at
~1aa lot in "-'hich 21 school children \\'ere
among 30 persons killed .
"The blood of our children calls upon
us to intensify our "-"ar against the
terrorists and to pen;evere in order to
get to the nests of the terrorists wherever
they are," ri.1rs. ~1eir said.
''F'ierce fighting is going on in large
sectors of the front ~ince this morning,"
a Syr"lan miiitary communique said an
,. '
•
c11tr 'not S~ff ,..,.s
-hour .... 1.fter . ..Kis~'.s _ __artiyaj~_J...n_ -· _
Damascus on his seventh shuttle trip.
"Uriit8 of tanks, field aritllery and
rockets as "'·ell as various types of
mortars are taking part in the fighting, u
tl1e Syrians said.
ASSl~l'ANT HEADDRESSER -WITH YOUNG. CAST. MEMBER
Loward Lavelle and Cindy Cannon of Laguna Beach
They claimed undetermined "losses"
on !he lsraeli side. ._.
The Israeli military command in Tel
Aviv reported no casualties.
Lebanon said the Golan fighting spilled
over into its terrtiory when an 1sraeli
patrol entered Lebanon in the foothills of
Mt. Hermon. The Beirut defense ministry
said Lebanese army artillew fired on the
patrol and the Israelis fired back at a
Lebanese anny post but reported no
casualties.
Pagea11t of Masters Crew
Figure in TV Quiz Show
No new Israeli reprisals against
Palestinian refugee camps in Lebanon
were reported today after three days of
air and sea raids.
An Arab League meeting in Cairo said
Lebanon's defenses must be bolstered by
other Arab states.
Egyptian Foreign Minister · Ismail
Faluni said at the opening of the Cairo
parley that the Israeli reprisals were
aggressions against Lebanon that the
rest of the Arab world "does not talte
lightly" but specified no counter-action.
UPI diplomatic corresopndent K. C.
Thaler reported from London that
Kremlin leaders are seeking a meeting
with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat to
prevent ttim from falling farther and
faster under American influence.
In Moscow, Arab diplomatic sources
said that Libya1 one of the most militant
Arab countries, secured a Soviet arms
deal during lhe visit of Libyan Premier
Abdel Salam Jalloud.
7 Drown in Auto
Three .... ·orks from the 1974 Pageant of
the Masters figure prominenUy in an
upcoming Truth or Consequences tele-
vision show filmed recently with cast
members of the "Living Pictures."
The show will be screened in late f\-lay
in the eastern United St.ates and Canada.
West Coast screening will be in late
summer or fall. No exact date has been
set.
THE PAGEANT OF THE MASTERS
recreates well-known art VIOrks in
Laguna Beach using Jiving models.
\Vorks included on the TV show were:
-"The ~tennaid" by Norm an
Rockv•ell posed by Dale Haynes of
~guna Beaeh and Bonnie Lippe of
Newport Beach.
-"St. Longinus" by Gian Lorenzo
Bernini posed by Con Coonrad of Laguna
Beach.
-Ships' rigureheads of the Cutty Sark,
four of a collection of brightly painted
sculptures which once graced the prows
of clipper ships. The figur,eheads were
posed by Max: and Carolyn Dunn of
Newporl Beach, Susan Viloria of El Toro
and Barbara Travis of Huntington Beach.
Guest of the show was a Nigerian
SABINE PASS, Tex. (AP) -Seven student whose wife and two sons "'·ere
persons drowned Sunday night when their flown lo the United States from Nigeria
runaway car plunged into Texas Bayou and posed in a fourth painting, a family
near here on the upper Texas coast. Jim portrait.
Bohler Sr. of Kountze, Tex., one or three The family, whom he had not seen for
survivors in a family party of IO, said, "I two years, y.•ill remain in the United
dived in once but the "-'ater was swift." States until the young man's studies are
Bystanders restrained Bohler from completed.
further rescue efforts. Other pageant representatives ,.,,ere
Don \\'ill1amson. director: Sally Reeve.
public relations direetor for the Festival
of Arts: Betty Coorirad, in charge of
wardrobe; Sue Andenon, in charge of
casting; Dorothy Day, makeup; Carl
callawav, technical director; and Don
llerbert; in charge of headdresses.
A11al1eim Site .
Bums Down
After Explosion
Seven units or an Anaheim apartment
complex were destroyed by fire early
this morning following what one resident
termed a small explosion. '
Fire department public information
officer Ken Clements said the blaze
broke out shortly before 6 a.m. Before
firemen could put it out. it caused an
estimated $135,oo:t in damage. Alt tne
residents escaped the fire.
One fireman suffered second degree
burns while battling the blaze and \Vas
taken lo Orange County Medical Center
for treatment. He was identified as Kc!l
Bradley, "-'ho was due to leave the
department at the end of this week lo
accept an assistant chief's job in
Northern California. ---------------------
• •
A
birthday party
'1s a cake, presents.
and a
Ruth of Carolina dress •
.from The Red Balloon, ltd.
.Andrea Coates is
wearing a party dress
from the Ruth's Origuial
.Couture Collection
Andrea is a student at
Carden Country DB'/ Schoof,
and the daughter of
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Coates
of Yorba Linda.
THC
RED BALLOON
LTD.
·,~~ ............. .._ .....
T~ICOIJtl'lllY °'*""' lrl~ .......
.umNQTON~ 111•1•·1•
...
4 DAILY PILOT
Nixon Cites National Health In.surance Need
KEY BISCAYNE. Fla. !AP)
Declaring that lM-end of controls may
boost doctor bUls by 22 percent this year,
President NIXM said today that natlooal
hoolth Jnsuranoe Is neoct.d so ""'erY
American has linsnclal acoess to high
quallly health care."
In tho ~llt or a naUonwlde radio
address, Nixon said he welcomes rival
~ bUls !jJOOOOl"ed by Olle's and
prolessed v.ill!ngneos lo compromise on
his 0"11 plan so loog u this does Ml
1Police Shoot
1, Arrest 2
In Chicag o
CHICAGO (UPI) -Three men who
called themselves soldiers in a black
liberation army executed an unarmed
railroad security guard and then got
caught in a police shootout late Sunday.
One of the three was killed. The others,
Da\'id Beverly and Lonnel Mosely, both
( NEWS BRIEFS )
"violate lhe basic principle-s of our
propo<>als."
HOWEVER, !IE complained dlat two
e om pet in g Democratic Sp>r60red
measures would rely too heavily on
management by the federal govemmett.
Nol>ing al lhe out3et that the Senate
Finance Committee will begin hearings
Tuesday on hoolth insurance legislation,
Nixon said:
"I am gratified to 3"C that serious
N .VIETNAM
DANA"!~ . ~ ...... .... ··t' I
LAOS .":i:· ,.-• . ;:.' \, 1" .. '., .
:;' S.VIE~~~
cA Msoor:---\ . ··r . ..
aCtion on this most vital matter is going
forward on both sides or the Capitol and I
am coondent that the executive and
legislative branches of the govememnt in
a spirit of statesmanship a n d
compromise can work together to resolve
the problems of providing health
Insurance legislation which meets the
needs of all Americans.''
Nixon reported that health care costs
have risen more than 20 percent in less
than three years, and added, "And now,
SOUTH
CHINA
IH'A
... 21-year~ld students at Chic ago' s
Malcolm X College, where charged today
with one count each of murder and
attempted murder.
Police Sgt. Francis Lee said three men
who called them.selves "Sell-styled black
revolutionaries" broke into a piggy·back
freight car in a South Side Penn Central
railroad yard The security guard at the
traclo;, a trainee ol ·only three weeloi,
spotted the break-in and hunted down the
ttri.eves.
FIVE RED ROCKET ATTACKS HIT HUE CITY
Heavi est Attac}< Since Signing of Peace Accord in 1973
New North Viet Orders:
eBomb Che<"k .
WNOON ··tt1Pfl ~ SeotlMd Yard .
officia ls ordt!red stepped-up ·security
checks of government offices, mail
deliverie.5 and other likelf targets today
to head off a feared new wave of
bomb~s in the capital.
Step l-Jp Battl~s -in_.,Soutl1
A suspected Irish Republican Anny
(IRA) car bomb exploded Sunday in a
Heathrow International Airport parking
Jot hospitalizing two persons, sowi12,g
panic among travelers, and closing the
airport for nearly five hours.
' e India's Bomb
NEW DEI.JH.JUPI) -Jubilation""."!'
India's explosion of a"'nuclear device
swept the country today, bolstering the
troubled government of Prime Minister
Jndira Gandhi and overshadowing the
nation's economic woes.
"V'l'e may be hungry," one young
Indian celebrant said in a typical
comment. "But now at least we're
someone to be reckoned with."
Defense Minister Jagjivan Ram said,
however, India 'IVOU!d never use its new-
found nuclear dout for military pur-
poses. "Our objective is to we our
knowledge in nuclear science only for
peaceful purwscs,'' be said.
e Ohio Resignation
ATllENS, Ohlo (UPI) - 0 bi o
University President Claude R. Sowle,
after more than a week ot. disruptjons
and student protests, handed in his
r esignation Sunday because of what he
caHed "insane conditions" and "senseless
acts."
A school spokesman said th e
t"esignation would become effective this
v,nmer.
Tu·o nighl.5 of rioting May 11 and 12
!P'1ulted Jn 38 arrests, several student
i.nd police injuries, looted shops and
~ashed windovos in the campus area.
"Aussie Wba
"'iYDNEY, Australia (A P) -Prime
Minister Gough WhiUam today was
expected to remain head of the
boverrunent, but returns from Australia's
~JU inconclusive natiooal elections show
rtrooger than elCpected suoport. for opp>
sition laeder Bill Snedden.
Retwm from Saturday's election were
still being counted today and final results
were not expected for up to a week.
WASIDNGTON (AP)-North Victoam's
communist party has ordered intensified
attacks in South Vie!nan1 over the next
oouple of months , L'.S. inlelligcncc
sources report.
However, military analysts said the
orders indicate the attacks y,i!l be short
of a major offensive.
\'lidesprcad fighting at'toss South
\·ietnam in the past fc\v days may refl('(:t
(.__NE_w:_s_AN._AL_rs_z_s~)
the new orders, which sources said the
Communist command recently issued to
its main-force troop units there.
THE ORDERS y,·erc said to be based ,
on a resolution adopted by L.10 Dong
party leaders in Hanoi, calling for
increased military operations to support
what was called "the political
struggle" in the South.
U.S. intelligence sources said the
Fir st Lady Hit s
Tapes Releas e
~'EW YORK (UPfl -Pat Nixon
considered the \Vhite House tapes
relates to Watergate like "private
love letters" and did not believe
President Nixon should release
them, People 1i1agazine sald Sun·
day.
People said ~lrs. Nixon told
Helene Drown, a longtime friend,
the tapes could be compared with
"private love letters" meant for
''one person alone."
Mrs. NiJt:on also indicated she
shared Nixon's distrust of news
n1edia by telling t.1rs. Drown "It's
right out of 'The ~ferchant of
Venice.' They're after the last
pound of flesh," People said.
Flood Watch • Ill
Communist battle plan genera 11 y
forecasts a pattern of sharp thrusts by
main force units, v"hich then Ytwld
\\'ilhdrav.· after innicting casualties on
government forces.
The Communist aims, as U.S. analysts
read them. are to bleed Saigon's army,
panic South Vietnam civilians and erode
their confidence in the S a i g o n
government.
This is in line with overall Communist
strategy for 1974. as outlined by
intelligence reports I as t December.
Basically. this strategy seeks the
progressive weakening of the Thieu
re gime without escalating the war back
to full scale.
The Communists already have made
considerable p~ress toward another
objective, gradually widening control in
border regions of South Vietnam.
THE STEPPED-UP fighting comes at
a time when Pentagon officials say the
South Vietnamese will have to be spari.ng
in their use of ammunition because
Congress has reejcted an increase in U.S.
military aid for the last two months of
this fiscal year. 1~eany,itlJe. North V i et names e
engineers virtually have completed a new
49<J..mile supply corridor from the old
demililarized zone to within about 60
miles of Saigon.
That ty,·o-lane highway. all inside the
western border of South Vietnam,
permits the Communists to keep supplies
moving south.,.,·ard. \l'hile heavy rains
slo11· traffic on the old Ho Chi !1-linh Trail
route in neighboring Laos.
At the same time , the N orth Vief...
namese are branching out "ith construc-
tion of feeder roads linking their bases in
South Vietnam to forv•ard supply distri·
bution point,s. Nearly 1,000 miles of such
feeder roads have been built in South
Vietnam jince the cease·fire agreement
16 months ago, according to U.S. intelli·
gence estimates.
About 16.000 tons of ammunition and
other military materiel was reported to
have been moved for.vard in recent
weeks from Dong Ha, which the North
Vietnamese bave converted into a major
storage depot below the DMZ.
2 States
Tornadoes Add to Woes • in Nebraska, S. Dakota
Te111peratures
"i.I\ l..W ,~,.
Alb.tnV .. 1 3t At1c1n1a 18 M .01 6Dtton SI 46 ruflelO 61 i1
111rl0Me •• 61 .Ja Ilk.a.II ~ ~1
inclnnell J'O SI .19 Clewl1nd 6J .u ~!:~ :i ll ro11 .. .i ..... n " IC.enu1 City I 11
l.15 VMIS 50
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
~MIY ~ the Daily ~~t
~ guannl!!d _t .... ,. ........
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•
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r:J..w •
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• tt
:II
' . 00
In the abs<lnce of contrnls. the rountry
races a possible annual increase of 22
percent in physicians fees atooe."
TllE PRESIDENT said Caspar W.
Weinberger, secretary ot he a 1 th ,
education and welfare, urged the health
industry earlier this month "to take
every actkin at their disposal to prevent
the rapid escalation of costs. and
indicated that lf cost increases were not
voluntarily controlled., it could lead to
d r a s I I c , c o n g rtssionally·impoeed
1nandatory rontrols."
Whilo saying he strongly sllAr'-"
Weinberger's concern, Nlxoo said, " ...
voluntary restralrtb wUI not be enough.
We 1nust have legislation to insUre that
every American has financial access to
higb quality heallh ..,. ...
Nixon said his own lnsurance plan aims
at three ~c objectives that "must not
be sacrificed or compromised." He listed
French Election
May Benefit U.S.
PARIS (UPI) -Valery Giscard
d'Estaing, winner of a razor·thin victory
over Communist· backed Socialist Franc·
ois Mitterland in the French presidential
election. moved swiftly today to form a
"new look" government to head off
economil; chaos threatened by the leftists
who nearly defeated him.
lie said he v.·ill take office officially
next l\.1onday, name a premier the same
day and hold his first cabinet meeting
next \\'cdnesday. He spoke to newsmen
after a 40-minute conference with the
senate speaker who is acting as interim
head of state.
ALTllOUGH GISCARD d'Estaing. 48.
has promised to follow the foreign oolicy
of his predC'Cessor, President George'>
Pompidou , he is expected to soften
France's traditional toughness with the
Uni ted States.
...
so -and the two chatted in Enatish.
Giscard D'Estaing emerged from the
Elysee presidential p a i a c e today and
told newsmen, "I have told the interim
president that I intend to see to it that
my functions go into erfect as soon as
possible.
AIDES SAID one aim of the new
cabinet would be to formulate economic
policies aimed at beating b a c k
threatened labor unrest.
Warn ings of the tough battle he faces
al ready have been issued by Georges
Seguy. chief or the Communist--dominatcd
Confederation General Du Tr av a i I
ICG Tl. France's bi ggest labor union,
\\'ho said •·tough strikes and eventually
chaos" wi!1 follow the finance minister's
election .
them" ' -1'hc muintalnMr.t of a patient s
freedom ot choose his own physician.
-USE OF 11JE existing private health
care system and avoidance of repl~cini;
It with "a coolly, (eder.il dGn1inatcd
stnrlure. •t
-nle provision that alt cont't'r~OO \\•ill
have "a direct stak.c In making the
k .. system wor .
WINNER IN FRANCE
Valery Giscard d'Estaing
One of his key ministers Y:i!I be ::i
fervent Allanticist, Jean Lecanuet, who
brought him crucial center party suppor t
during the campaign. Speculation on his
choice' fof premier centered on Lecanuet.
Washington 'Report
-Hea~th 1-linister. Mic11el POfliatOWSki alld
Equipment Minister Oliver Guichard
Supporters clapped happily Sunday
when Giscard d'Estaing, in a move
unprecedenled for a French president.
happily repeated in English for An1erican
television crev.·s the victory speech he
had just made in French.
Franco-American contacts got off on
the right fool when President Nixon
telephoned his congratulations to Giscard
D'Estaing -the first head of state to do
Ed.,vard Kenned y •
Bares Federal
'73 Ta x Records
BOSTON I AP ) -Sen. Edward ~t.
Kennedy paid $217,844 in federal income
taxes on an unadjusted gross income of
S461.444 in 1973. accordin~ to tax record.5
he disclosed to t~·o Boston newspapers.
The Boston Herald American and the
Boston Globe today published the joint
tax return filed by Kennedy and his ...,;re.
Joan. reporting t h e Massachusetts
Democrat's income beyond h is
congressional salary of $42,500.
KENNEDY'S INCOME Included $21.567
In dividends, $270,080
from the Joseph P,
Kennedy 1926 trust,
$126,257 from the
Joseph P. Kennedy
1936 trust, $3,355
from publications.
speaking fees
and miscellaneous
sources and $1,623
from four oil wells KIHNEDY
in Texas and Louisiana owned by the
Forest Oil Co. The late Joseph P. Ken-
nedy wa::i the senator's father.
Kennedy deducted lrom his gross
income $38,773 in current taxes ciher
than federal ; $24,985 lor mongage
payments: $4,678 for ch a r it ab I e
contributions; and $26,308 in net
ml90ellaneo1.B deductions.
Kennedy also claimed a net loss of
$.1,938 on two rental properties 1n Boston
and tytadison, Wis.
With exemptions for himself, his v.ife
and their three children, Kennedy
reported taxable income of '353.189, on
wb1ch .be paid $317,844 in federal taxes
and $28,348 to the state.
He also said he poid $11,351 in real
est.a te taxes, $64 in gasoline taxes, $362 in
general sales taxes and $648 In taxes on
personal properties.
: Distaff Officers 'Doit1g
As Well As Me11' -St11cly
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - A study ol
police~·omen's per r or man c e in
\Vashingtoo, v.·here they pull the sam~
duty as men, shov.·s that v.·omen officers
generally do as well in tough patrol 'AWk.
The Police Foundation said Sunday
that a study of two precincts concluded
sex is not a valid consideration in hiring
or assigning police o(ficers.
Foundation President Patrick V .
~1urphy said the study i!!I significant
because the 1972 Equal Employment
Opportunity Act requires every police
department to hire and assign men and
v.•omen on an equal basis o r
"demonstrate there> is a legitimate
occupational qualification for not doing
so."
..WffiLE TIDS evaluation measured
the cHectivcncss of \Va s h i n gt on
policewoman ori patrol. we believe the
results are g('nerally useful nationwide,"
said ~turphy, wbo formerly beaded police
John Moss Wins
$150,000 Take
111 Card Games
I.AS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -A 68-year·
old card room manager at a casino here
has won the fifth annual World Series of
Poker, taking home a tidy $150,000 for
his efforta.
John Mou edged out Crandall
Addington, 36, a San Antonio, Tex., real
estate developer, to win the game
Sa<urday alter more than 20 hours ol
play stretched over a four-day period. It
was hi3.third win since 1970.
Moss coUected the $10,000 anted up by
the other 15 players who eni.r.d the
game Wednesday nighl The winnlngJ,
Including his own $10,000 ante, were
presented to him in a silver cup at the
downtown casino where the game was
played.
Addington bet his last $45,000 on a
bluff, hiding only an ace and deuce of
clubs. Moss' three treys took the hand
and the tlUe.
The featured 11ho1d 'em" game wrapped
up nearly two weeks of preliminary card
games in which an estimated $1 million
changed baruls.
departments here and in New York City.
The study contained these conclusions :
-\\'omen and men on patrol performed
generally in the !a.me v.·ay. There ...,·as no
diff('rcnce in their ability to dt:>al v.·uh
vioilent er potefllially violent situations .
-\Vomen made fewer arcrSts and gave
fewer traffic tickets than the men did.
But the v.·oml'n spent s!1gh!ly less time
on patrol. About one fifth ol the \'."'Omen
made more arrests Lhan men did .
-rtfORE l\1ES than WOTrft!n V.'ef(' ci.tcd
for "serious unbecoming conduct."
-Y.'omcn got light duty as a result o{
injuries more often than men but did not
l05e more time from work because of
injuries.
-Drivmg accident records for men and
"-omen v..-ere about the same but women
neOOed two week.! more time to pass thC
police driving lest.
...
•
•
~'
Big Eat Rock Festival
Enm With 2 Stnbbings
LA WHENCE, Kan. ( U PI )
Partlclpanlo in tho Big Eat rock fostlval
headed borne Sunday ending a weekend
marked by, two stabbings.
The DouaJu County Sherill'• Office
aaicl the crowd estimated 11 300 to IOO
persona, began to d!Jpene Sund•Y
aftomooo. Amon& thoM 1ttendlng "'"'
members of two motorcycle clubo.
The aher!lf'< offle< ltltnlillocl tbe
stabbllla -II Tom FIS)e, 13, Sioux
City, Iow1, a member of the El -
Motorqdt Club, and o,.., -~ 25,
Oltlaboma Ctty, of Iba H. Dam ••
MOIOl'CyCll Cltlb. 1'181• wu reporletl IA Wr OtllldlWtm II
IAWHDCe Alen>orlal Holpltal wUh a stab
'll'Ollnd to IM'al'I"" sbdomen. ami.tt
wu treated and relealtd from the
hOlpllal witb • cut to bla baod.
Authorities said tho two would not say
how they had boen wounded. No
witnesses in the'. lnlltltnt <Ollld be
loco tad. Tho mnl, wltlcb bepn Friday llllh~
,... moved to federal propotty oeu
()l/lltoo RM<rvolr, llW allon>ty g_..I
V om Miller oblalnetl • • tonlPQtllY
mlrllnloC order. pr"'911Uai Ibo le1Uv1l
!tom be!DI blld .. • l1t111 -1.eoomplm.
Miller ooal<nllod ~ ....W be
Ylolaliolll of state dnt& l111•s al lbe
festival
R1111al Ut!lllf
t
'I
MJu USA, Karen Morrison of
JllJnoll, l,s Hrved breakfast
In bed SwulaY mornlDg u she
begint her tint day u oew
CillMll fo r 1974. She wu picked
from amonr 01 !llr4 11 Niagara
.Fills, N.Y.
I
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•
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
• VOL. 67, NO. 140, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MAY 20, 1974 N TEN CENTS
Beagan Canapaigns on COast lor Prop. I
' .... ' ~ ' ' ... ~~
' , By GEORGE LEIDAL
0t NII 011$, , • .., Sl11f
Govt!mo r Ronald Reag:tn came to the
Orange Coast today to lobby for suppart
of the JW1e 4, $250 million state parks
bond issue.
He left having been lobbied by ty,·o
special In terest groups who arrived by
land and by sea.
Three Laguna Beach girls pulled up on
horseback to the cliCfsidc .. ews confer·
('nee just soutb of O>rona de! ~far to
deliver personally a petition. Reagan
read it to the asse mblrre of dignitaries
and newsmen.
''There have been horses here for the
last 50 years. \\'e hope there \\'ill be an
equestrian center in the new stale park
that will occupy this land ," Reagan said
the petition requested .
"I'm going to lobby for it." Reagan
said, recalling a cavalry sentiment:
"Nothing is so good for the inside of a
man or a "'on1an as the outside of a
horse."
The governor said he v.•ould pass the
petition on and v.•ork to keep horse'i
v.•ithin the amenities the 16ro-acre state
park may offer if me bond issue pro-
vides the $7 .6 mill ion needed to buy it
from the Irvine Conipany.
The lobbyist for surfing interests \l'ho
came to the press conference by
surfboard \Yas 1narathon paddler Larry
Capw1e, 31. of Balboa Island.
The sun·lannl'd . salt-caked ~urfer.
veteran of nu1 rathon pad dles including
one froin ~e"1>0rt. Rhode Island, to
Florida . dre1\· considerable attenli'ln
garbed 1n a sv.·un suit amidst the suit and
coat-clad cro11·d
Capunc t'arried a plastic 11•aterproofed
pouch contain ing literature outlining his
desires for preservation of the state's
primr surfing beach.
Capunc told the governor he \¥Ould lik~
jSee Rt:i\GAS, Page 21
Patricia Spotted • Ill LA?
Hollywood Woman Offered $500 for Apartment
!.'\' • ••.• -
o.u, l"llal 11111 l"IMll•
l.OS ANGELES fUPTI -A \1·hitc
v.·oman. beliered possibl y lo be Patricia
Hearst, and tv.•o black m€n. offered $500
to rent a Holl yv.·ood apartment for 2-1
hours and one of the men lunged al the
landlady with knife v.·hcn she refused,
poHce reported today.
A dragnet for the 20..year-old heiress.
nov.· listed as armed and dangerous and
liable to be shot if she resists, v.·as
spread over the metropolil an Los
Angeles area after ·stx members·or lhe
Symbionese Liberation Army v.·ere killed
1-'riday.
A spokesman fo r the FBI sai d the
lfollyv.·ood incident '"'as one of a nu1nber
MORE HEARST STORIES
APPEAR TODAY ON ~AGE S
of report.s coming in from excited
citizens about the whereabouls nf ~hss
liearst and that they had no evidence to
link it directly to the wanted girl.
LARRY CAPUNE TELLS GOVERNOR ABOUT UPCOMING VOYAGE
Newport Paddleboarder, Laguna Equestriennes Ask Reagan Aid
A report by the Los Angeles Police
Department. howe\'er. listed the incident
as ··possible SLA coonection."
An l..J\PD officer said the incident
occurred QJ'tlWl!i.-9:30. Sunday ni&hl at an
apartment bUi ldJng on New Hampshire
A\·enue in the Hollyv.·ood area. Baek Buy Bridge
Seal Beach Motorist
The report said the trio v.·ere carrying
a shotgun, one of the men had a switch-
blade knife and that they ''possi bly" had
hand guns. Miss Hearst was repo rted to
have left the shootout house in a black
area of the city with tv.·o black men
hours before the gun ballle Friday.
J(illed in Car Crash ·1 he report said the land lady told police
' ·;r
,\head-on colltsion on '.\;('\rporl Beach's
narro"' ~r" port Ba.r Bridge on Pacific
Coast lligh"·ay Sunday night claimed lhe
life of a Seal Beach n1an .
Robert C. Bryden . 31. or 219 Central
A\"e .. "·;is en route ho1ne from his job as
n1anager of an Albenson's market in El
Toro Y<hen the fa tal accident occurred.
ln vt>s tigalion y,·as conti nuing loda y into
fact9rs tt:at apparen1ly caused the
headon crash, which also injured the
driver of the 01hcr car involved.
She "·as identified as Mrs. Arico
f;urn ry. 40. of 1221 Starboard \'r'ay,
Newport Beach.
!\'ev.·port Beach Police Officer Jim
Donaldson s~ud the aceidenl w a s
IJaig Heporl Denied
NE\V YORK (A Pl -Newsv.-eek
magazine says \Vh ite House chief of staff
Alexander M. Haig Jr. v.·as so upset by
the Watergate tape transcripts that he
told friends he tlad to ''back up and re-
eva luate" his job. But in Ke y Biscayne.
Fla., an associate of l~aig said Sunday
that report v.'as "totally false."
Orange Coast
Weather
High clouds are on the horizon
for Tue>day, but It will be SWlllY
and warmer, accord.log to the
weather scl'\llce. lflghs in the up-
per 60s at the beaches to the mid· 1os inland. overnight lows U.5Z.
INSlDE 1'0Di\ l'
Pre11dent Nl:on 'pu1h'd hl1
natfonal healtk lnaurcnce plan o~r th• naticm.'1 alrtoavt1·todoy,
clecloftng that the .,u1 to price
controU ·may boost doctor blll1
by 22 ptn:ent thio Jl'OT. See
storu, Page 4.
Mlfllll I \., M. ...... ti C.tt1,.,,... t CleMI.... ,,,,.
,CM!lct 1f ·-" °""' WeMi f 1-.rtet ,_ • ·-.. ·-... , Meil $ t
AM UiMllrl lJ
•
apparenli)' caused v.·hen Bryden's small
foreign pickup truck suddenly swe rved
from v.·estbound lanes of the narrow
bridge into oncoming lanes.
He died at Il:30p.m. at Hoag ?-.lemoria l
Ho!pital, less than one hour after the
CQllisioo in which he suffered head
ipJttries.
Investigators. said Mrs. Gurney was
treated at the hospital. where six stitches
"·ere taken to close a head laceration,
and released to' recover ai home .
No skidmarks were fouod at the scene
and WJtil further investigation, police
were at a loss to explain \\'hat may have
caused Dryden to cross the center line.
The collision was the lat est in a Jong
series of accidents -both fatalities and
fender-benders-which have occurred on
or near the narrow old bridge.
A citizens' committee appointed to
study "·ays to tmprove the situation is
due on June 3 to make recommendations
to the Nev.·pon Beach City Council.
A May 29 public hearing has already
been set for citizens to air their own views
on various methods of etifnlnating both
the l.raffic accident ~ a n d
streamlinlng the now of : traffic on
Pacific Coast Highway.
Authorities anticipate that the panel
will recommend that the aglng span be
replaced with a higher btldge which
would be at least six lanes wide.
Following the fatal aceident Sunday
night, Bryden'a body was transferred to
Baltz.·Bereeron Funeral Home, Costa
Mesa~ where services were pending
arrangements todBiy.
Tbe victim was
Alberllon'1 Mm'ket
Road, El Toro.
manager of an
at Z268t El Toro
Hearsts Plead
For Daurrhter ~
To Tun1Self111
HfLLSBOROt:GH (AP) -Randolph
and Catherine Hearst today begged thei r
daughter Patricia. considered "anned
and extreinely dangerous.·· to abandon
the Symbionese Liberation Army and
give herself up.
''I hope that she \.\1ill gi\·e herself up
and come home," t.frs. Hearst told a
news conference. "1 just hope e'·erybody
will remember that physicplly Patty is
still a kidnap victim. AU I can do is hope
and pray that God will bring her home
again.''
Her father added : "I hope that she will
give herself up. too, but at this point in
time I don't believe that she will gil·c
herselr up to come home.'' _
The Hearsts \\'e re stunned Sunday
night \\ilen they learned their daughter
was named as a dangerous fugit ive and
sought by hundreds of !av.men after six
SLA members died in a fiery shootout
Friday in Los Angeles .
Speaking at thei r home here, the
Jlearsts again said they believe their
daughter has been brainwashed or the
victim of mind control.
Hearst said he thinks she "honestly
believes now that !!he's a member of the
group th.is sort of brainwashing is not an
unheard of thing."
Asked If he believed Iris daughter
woold willingly return, Hearst said : "If
!!he believes in the cause she says she
does, sbe's much better off and much
C R · mon Important to that cause fret than I! ourt everses she is killed or being put in jail for •
• number of years.
U , R "'le'· "But 1£sbe doe<J1~lieye In this she's• p 0 11tron u )ot bettei: Off being able to write and talk
• and tra'Jl and esPQUSe the philosophy
! which she thlnb she belle• .. in al this \VASIDNG:roN. (~) ·-.. Autbortttes lime lb.In she 11 being with the Hatrll'I
need not otJlaln 1Urch ....,.ma ratve or In prison "llearst said
•clvan<e notlocl lo go oo!O-q>t ~Y of ~Miia~ being. aougbt with
potonUol pollulm to in¥• lmpedlonl, !uopectec1 .$1<4 mom!>en William and
provld&I tllCI' mol<e U.. hlst>odl!n lrom Em"· Hanis: ' '' . · anu -1,0 the p0bllc, •,tlie U.S. ·"' ' • ,, • •
SUpremt'aJttrt 1\lled ~. .,, j r . '"'-.
In a unanimous oplnloll 11<ht"1 b)I T G _ c.t A ..j Juatlc:o. Willlal!l o. Douglas, .u. court wo rant~ s 1,u111
revenech dedlloo of !ht Cbiorldij Qlurt • · '
ol A_... Whlth O\'t!l'lumecl a ftnillna USBO~ """Q&ll (AP) -'M
that th"° allalla deyla( plonta •lol•ted .,._,.. """-• ,~ ....... ,,.....~ d~ :....;.;,; 'ot ........ ~ ••• =
state alr quaUlf 1landardL MaroeUO. CatlllDo ~· DoucJas >aid that If ·theft Is any 'l1anu, lell It. iilud ol
lnvutm ol \lri•llC)' lnvol\'ed In lbe .-, Ma4e1J11 _..,_. ..,. ..... t
It Is "•bolrict ml tbeorttical." • ' ............ 1'lit · : 7T"° •,
--1
•
;,..
that one of the men attacked her v.·ith a
knife "'hen she refused to rent the
apartment for 24 hours and cut through
the folds; of her skirt. She v.·as not
inj ured.
The U.S. attorney's office v.• a s
preparing to file a co1nplaint in San
r·rancisco today charging ~t iss llearst
and two kno\1·11 members of the SLA still
at large v.·ith violations of federal lav.·s
pertaining to posse ssion and use of
automatic v.•eapons.
\\'il!iam A. Sulliran. assistant director
of the FBJ. said ?-.1iss Hearst v.·as the
v.·oman v.·ho lea ned out the front v.·indow
of a red and white Volksv.·a~cn van ano
opened fire v.•ith a JO.<:aliber carbine
Thursday afternoon. as SLA member
\\°illiam Harris struggled 11·ith a clerk at ~-fel'S'Sporting Goods Store in Ingie'wood.
Harris v.•as accused of shorlifting a pair
Of socks.
"She is a federal fugitive and if she
resists arrest she v.·i\I be treated like any
other federal fugitive.'' Sullivan said.
She is considered anned a n d
dangerous. he said, and if located she
v.ill be told to surrender ~teJy.'Jf
she tf!es to shOOt. he ·said, ''We \\'OuJd
undoubtedly shoot ba ck."
The FBI said an agent who believes his
life is endangered may open fire on a
suspect.
!\1iss 1-tearst v.·as kidnaped from her
San Francisco apartment Feb. t She
later renounced her forn1er life and sa id
she \1·as joining forces \rith her
tSee HEARST, Page !J
UP'! Toi..lllfOI
ANGUISHED FATHERS -The Rev. George F. Hall, 1left) pastor
of St. John·s Lutheran Church in Lincolnwood. Ill., and Randolph
A. Hearst express sorrow after Friday night SLA slayings. Hall
learned that hi s daughter Ca1nilla was killed in holocaust while
Hearst got word that his daughter Patricia wa s not an1ong the six
victims. Additional stories, Page 5.
Herbert Porter Freed High Wi11cl, Tide
Wash A '\Va y Sand
At Ne,vport Pier Early; Good Behavior
From \\"irt Serl'icts
llerbert L. Porter of Lagw1a Niguel.
for111er scheduling director of lhe
Com1n i1tee to He-elect the President,
v.·as releAAed from the Feder a I
Correctional Institution at Lo1npoc three
days early for good behavior.
The v.·arden's office said Porter, 36.
v.·ho pleaded guilty lo lying to the FBI
about the disposition of funds of the
co1nmittec. \\'a:; released Friday after
scrying 27 days of a scheduled JO.day
sentence.
Po rter. son-in-law of the Arthur Brigges
of t.lonarch Terrace, entered the prison
April 22 after voluntarily arriving at the
prison gates early to avoid reporters.
HiA sentence included one year of
probation after the short incarceration.
Porter's sentence stemmed from a
story he admitted he told involving how
$100,000 given to convicted \Vatergate
conspirator G. Gordon Lkldy was
distributed.
Originally Porter told the FBI the
money went to cooserv11tive students. He
later told the Senate W a t e r g a t e
Committee he had giveq the money to
Liddy.
He said he made up the story at the
urging of deputy campaign director Jeb
Stuart Magruder.
When be corrected his original _ ..
statement, Porter said the reasons be
told the lie were related to appeals to his
vantty and to his loyalty to the Presidcnl
The ""'General Acoowrtlng Office ,
watchdog arm of C.00~ &aid the -uoo.ooo wu used to pay off the
Watergate wiretappers Iller t b e I r
armta.
Porter, his wife Caroh and their three
chlldlto sold their Wuhlngtoo, D.C. •
WINS . EARLY FREEDOM
Laguna Niguel'• Porter
home last ..,pring and have been living
with the Briggses ln Lagun.:l Niguel ever
since.
In an interview last swnrner, Porter
said, "Telling the trutll Is the most
vigorous regimen I know. We tell our
dtiJdren to do It and we should do It. This
is good theropy for incllylduals Involved
and for the country."
S,.. V~ts. Launch Counter::off e1ise ,. .. ~·BEN CAT, Soul> Vle\MlD fAP) -
~ 1>y """' all. and artillery '"-'-; i!oodh Vietnamese t r o o p a
laullW a ~ counter«! ...
slve ~ aplniil NOrth Vle\Nlmest ro..... Iii iiilJei QOl1h of Salp. (Related
.. WI IDllYail, Pop 4), m,.., .,.,.. moving aplnst the vlllage
• 'ft Ajl. °""' tfllUred Friday by the llortb
'
,./
Vlelnam<.e, about 111 miles southwest of
Ben cat in the strategic 11~n Triangle"
area olong the Saigon River.
Govemmenl artlllery end plane• were
bll!tlng the village, crumbling !'CO"' of
ramshackle tin-roofed homes. Most or An
Dlen'I 1,GOO clvlllans "'portedly hd\le Oed
to eovenunent linel.
High tides pushed by 30 mile per hour
\\'inds Sunday even ing washed a\vay
about SO feel or beach al the Newport
Pier. Ne\\-por t Beach lifeguards said
lodav.
''This is tbe fart hest back the bea<'h
erosion has gone yel in this area:' said
lifeguard Lt. Logan Locka bey.
lie estimated the tin1e of the erosion at
between 4 p.1n. and 9 p.rn . Sunday.
The advancing \l'afers broke a ce1ncnt
slab and a v.•ater niain and exposed pipes
v.'h ich carry \vater to dory fishenncn and
the lifeguard station at the pier.
Lockabey said no fishing dories \1'erc
damaged. adding that the lifeguard
station v.·as not seriously threatened.
"\\1e lost about four fffl of sand from
the top of the beach 1n front of the
lifeguard station but v.·e didn·t lose any
beach width.'' L<>ckabey said.
He said the front of the lifeguard
station is on \vooden pilings "but if the
v.·a ter goes back farther than that, we're
in trouble."
Lockabey said city equ ipment locked
under the pier was also threatened by
high tides Sunday. He said lifeguards had
iSee EROSION, Page Z)
Rate Up Agciin
• -11314% No1.v
NEW YORK f APl -First
National Bank o~ Chicago. the
nation's ninth largest commercial
bank, today announced it was
raising its prime lending rate to a
record 11~4 percent from 11.40
percent effective Tuesday.
The rate tbps the 11 12 percerit
announced Friday by a number of
mator eommerdal banks, Including
the country'& three largest, Bank of
America, Fint N1Uonal City and
Chase Manhattan.
Chauncey E. Schmid(, president
or the Chicago bank, lold In making
the announoement that he expected
an eastng "before long'' in the
prime rate.
, • ••
•
"" DAIL V Pll.Ol •
Nixon Told
To Give Up
64 Tapes
\\'ASJtlNGTON (r\P) -U.S. District
Judge John J. Slrica today ordered that
President Nixon turn over by ~lay 31 thl!
tapes of 14 conversations subpoenaed by
special prosecutor Leon• Jaworski.
But Sirica !'aid he would st3y hi"
decision 1f the President's la\A·yers appeal
the decis ion, as expected.
The tapes are being soui!hl by
Jaworski as evidence for the "1atergate
CO\'er-up conspiracy lrial involving seven
former \\'hitc House and Nixon re-
election comm1llce aides.
The trial is scheduled to be held ~fore
Sirica in September.
Sirlca ordered the \\'hitc !louse to
prepare an index and analysil! of ¥:hat is
contained on the tapes to be turned over.
in{'ludlng any cla ims the President wants
to make to keep porllons of tht! tapes
confident ial.
Sirica followed a sin11lar course la st
year \A'hen Ni.'(on·s la,~yers fought a
subpoena for the tapes ol n i n e
con\1ersations. ln 1hat case. Siric11 upheld
c\ai1ns of )lrivilege for tv.·o co111plc te
con\'ersations and portions of a third.
"The originals ol all subpoenat'd items
vtill accompany the index an4 analysis
v.hcn transrnittcd to the court." Sirica·s
nine-page order said. ''In addition. a
1.eparate ll)le recording -copies fro1n
1he originals -containing only those
portions of conversations since
traru;cribed and made public should be
prepared and delivered along with the
su bpoenaed materials.''
Ja1~1orski a..sked the court April 16 to
issue a subpoena for the &i conversations
:o.panning a year's period between June
20. 197'2 and June 4, 1973. Sirica ordered
the subpoena lv.'o days later and on t.lay
J ·the \\'hite J~Oll'lC Mked that the
!'Uhpoena be qu::tshcd.
i\lean~'hil('. a1101her fedcr11l judge.
say ing the 1''BI "plays cat and mouse"
'rith people it is investigati ng . today
indicated he is considering dismil!sing
one charge brouJ::ht agalast former
presidential aide John D. J::hrlichman in
the While House Plumbers case.
U.S. District Judge Gerh.!lrd A. Gesell
raised the que.ition in refe,rence to a
charge that Ehrlichman lied to the FBI
about his kno\A.'lcdge of the White Hoo se
Plumbers unit's investigation of the
Pentagon Papers case.
Gesell said lhal an FBI memo
!'ummarizing the interview w i th
F:hrlichman did not make It clear
uhether the ngent asked Ehrlichn1an
a'oout th e "Pentagon Papers case" or,
mo re !:pecifically. about the break-in at
the office of Uanicl E\lsbcrg's
psychiatrist.
Gesell also raised the possibility that
the trial ntight be delayed hy as much as
a vear after the la1\'YCr ror ancther
defendant i~ the ca."c. ~~clipe de Diego.
said his li t•nt had hecn granted
immunity ron1 prosecu1ion 11hen he
testified about 1hc brcak·in before a
Florida grand jury·.
Ehrlich111an and f\\·(' others "·ere
indicted by a grand jury on t.lar('h i 011
ch arges of conspi ring to viola te the ci,·il
rights of Or. Louis Fitlding. a Be\'erly
Hill\ psych iatrist \1·ho trea!ed Ellsbrrg.
f 'ro111 Page 1
ERO SIO N ...
lo n10\'l'.' thr ci1r's mot0riled si<le,\alk
.<;v.·eeprr to highl1i-~round. ·
Accon:Hng lo Lockabey. four nTori!d n~·s
of tidcg o,·cr six fret hi~h are expected in
lhe area. "ft shouldn't be too b11d unle~s
v.·e get a lot or ...,,ind." he said
The Public \\'ork~ Department last
1\·eek asked the Ney.·port Beach Ci'y
Council for permission to ex1end !he
pilings in front of the lifeguard station to
help prl'vent beach erosion.
Th e extension \\'Ould be an interin1
measure until a study could dP.termine the
brst method of preserving the beach in
the t-;ev.•port Pier area .
OlAMGICOAST N
DAILY PILOT
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Nt*llO'I hK~ C_. • (G'"
J>t1w,.,t ltech Off it it
1 lJ''"""'1 N'~~.~·1
MQ linq Ao11•1 p ") • '• I~'· ;iil(,J °""" Offlttt ~fro ,,.., • .l'le N• '"'· ~ •• ,,. L•I""' hoc~ lttf¢1t t• .l••·,.
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• . .
'
Lifeguards'\ Learn Reineclce's
Motio11 s By JACKIE 1IYMAN
()( 11'11 OlllV 1"11-11 i1tH
If you're a llfeguard 1n Newport Beach,
~·ou might have to swi m through
quickSJnd or rescue &n Injured seal.
You might be dropptd rrom a
hcllcopter Into the octao to !'carch for a
missing divC"r or swim through a riptide
to save u !5Wirn1ner from being carried
out to se:l .
"\\'e're trying to get a"·ay fron1 !ht'
in1age of a lifeguard as a n1usclt·bound
girl w:.itcher," said Lt. t.Ogan Lockabey.
11·ho's in cha rge of the Newport Btach
\larine Safely Departinent's beach
operation.
"\\.C''re hi~hly profe5sional no1v."
Lockabey said. ''There's no lime for
playing arow1d ,"
He said the lifeguards are freqUt>nlly
in1·ol\'ed in unexpected and dangerous
rescues. One of !he most unusual
occurred several years ago in the Back
Bay.
"1'\l;o boys \.\'ere \l'alk\ng across the
mud flats \li'hen they got stuck ." he said.
"The mud \A.'as apparently acting like
quicksand and pulling them under.''
"By the .time ..,,.e got there, the box.~
\\'t>re buried up to their neck~."
Lorkabcy said. "They couldn't even gr<ib
a tine from the helicopter that spotted
thern because their arms were buried.''
"One of our 1nen had to Sl\'im out there
and free tbeir ar111s." he said. "Then \A't
thre\li' the1n lines and !o•ved them out of
the n1ud."
Lockabey cxplainC'd that the \I'll)' to
escape from quicksand i~ hy l.ving fla t
and s\li·imming slowly.
Alth ough quicksand isn't often a
problem in Newport Beach. riplides arc.
"They account for 99 )X'rt'('rlt uf our
rt>scuc activity,'' Lockabey said.
He sa id riptides are strong currents
"·hlch pull out to sea . They can be
spotted because the \A.'ater in them is
discolored. froth y and sandy.
"You can hear the big ones hissing."
Lockabey said. "If they're really
ro~·erful. they can even get hold of
someo ne who's only wad ing in water a
couple of feet deep."
He l!aid the \\'ay to escape from 1
riptide is to S\A'in1 l\I a 45 or 90 degree
nng le to the current, not directly against
It.
"To save someone who's caught in a
riptide. a liftguard jumps right into the
riptid e himself and uses its force to give
him s~ed." Lockabey said.
""'hen he reaches the victim , he
lhroY.'S him one end of a buoy and then
to"·s him al an angle out of the riptide."
he said. "\\'e try to avoid lxxlily contacl
unless the victirn is uncOtLscious. b~cause
people tend to panic and drag you
under."
But before anyone can be rescued he
From Page l
HE .i\.RST • • •
kldnapers .
But the F'BI mainlained that shl" 11•as
forced to make thr stalenlent. E\'en af1{'r
she \ras photographed 1\'llh a machine
gun during a bank robber\. the FBI said
she v.·ns an un1Killing particip<lll\.
Fivf' persons. including 11ona1 d
Dcfree1.e, J-0. v.·ho as head f the SLr\
called himself "General Field t.larshal
Cinque." ""'ere kil\ed in the name!' and
gunfi r('. police said. A sixth lxxly. that of
Camilla !tall. 29. 11as found Sunday .
Jan1t's Johnson. 13. '~ho lived at the
ho1ne dest royed in the gunfight. told the
Los .t\ngeles Times that 1'1iss Hearst Ded
from !he house less than 24 hours before
the shootout.
Charges against Jolu1son ·s n1othcr .
Chri~tine Johnoon. 3~. of harboring
fugitives. "'ere dropped Sunday night and
she "'·as released. pollce Sllld !oda y.
Johnson said tlliss HeaNJt told him
Thursday ''Th ey'll have lo kill me Mfore
I go back . .,
"She told me she was \\ i1h 1he1n -on
their side ... said Johnoon.
J{e said ~Ii ~ Hearst v.·as "·caring a
pistol and "'·a nted !o stay ...,·ith the others.
but they apparently sent her a~·ay to
• keep her from being in\'olved in the
gunOght.
"I tt.ink so1ne <black) brothers Upped
them off that the cops ~·ere onto then1
and that's \A.'hY they got Patty out of
there -you Jcnow, µ,.eir lO\l! for her."
He !Aid a van containing l\lo'O black
men dro"e up. and r-.1iss Hear.II got into
it and lt:ft with them .
lie said ht talked to he.r for half an
hour and "she \.\'IS a benutiful person to
me. real intelli~e1il and all .. ,
nie othtrs killed in Friday's shootout
"·ere identified as Patricia ··~tizmoon"
Soltyslk. 24. Nancy Ling Perry. 26. \\'illle
\\'olfe, 22. and Angela At,rood. 25.
From Page l
REAGA N ...
to see 3.5-mile Irvine Coast btromc a
st8te beach. "This coast ls a breather for
a.II who live inland," Capune contended .
He al&O asked gubernatorial aupport
for his next maralhon trip surfboarding
frorn Vancouv er, 8 .C. to San Otego.
Governor Reagan was Introduced by
Irvine Company President Raymond L.
Watson.
Reagan said the Irvine Co a .s t
acquisition will be poS!iible If voters
approve Proposition I.
What the !tat• Is buying Is !he
beac1'1£tont betwem Corona del ~l!lr and
Laguna Beach. two lnl•nd conyono-
~toro and Los Trancos-and an offshore
natural marine preserve.
The atate purchase will acquire the
property for half lls appral>ed VAiue,
Reagan .. Id .
"1ba~ my lrl<ndl, would be 1 .,.at barialn for th• peopl• or Calllomla now
and for future-gener1t.lon1 to ex>me,"
Rtagan said.
Dlllr l"llOI Slllf 1"11111
'WE'RE PROFESSIONAL'
Logan Lockabey
n1ust be spotted.
"\Ve "''ork "''ilh the ~('"·port Beach
police helicopter." Lockabry !'.'.lid. "Thev
call us 1\·hen they spot pos.~iblc rr~cUl'S
or bu:11s in dislrt!'S in tl1e surf zone."
lie said !he he!icop!t'r 1s <>X!rc111f'I\'
useful becau5<' it can ge1 rlose cnouj.!h to
a boat in trouble to find out \1~1Jt·s
\\TOllt:.
The ht~licoptcr carrit·s 111 0 rrscur
buoys ...,·hich it can thro1v do\ATI to aid
swit111ners, Lockabey !'aid. He said the
helicopter also picks up lifeguard divers
and can drop then1 off~horr to ~earrh for
missing dh,.e rs.
•·Sometimes a lifeguard ~ iH ride alon~
as a rescue spotter.·· l..ocka~.v .said.
"Tho heliCQpter ha s lights, 11·h1ch are
very handy for night work ...
'fhc :\larin1: Safety Dfpan1nenl a1 s,,
1rort\s 11·ith lhc Orange County Harllor
Patrol. Lockahev said .
"Our boat lieUtenant has \\'Orkcd ""'Jth
thcn1. training their patrolmen in
terhniques of lxlal operation in the
surf." Lockabey said.
Although the ;\Jarinc Safet~·
Orpartmcnt has three boats nf its 01rn.
"\\'e're teaching the Harbor Patrol ho11·
Iv recognize surf hazards so they can
as~1st in einergencies," he said.
One particular danger area is nrar lhl'
groins or Jetties ""·hich were built for
beach erosion control in \\'c~t 1'e11.·port.
A<:cordlng to 'Lockabey, swimmers in
troublt! often htad for the tolid jettlt:i,
only to rind themselves dashed againllt
the rocks by riptides. .
"He&dlng ror the rocks is the wor~t
thing they can'*>." Lockabey said. "It's
hard lo make rescues there because of
the current and because you're so close
to the rocks."
lie ~aid that despite the hazards, only
one dro\\niug occurred last sun1mer.
·rhcre 'rere 16 nca r-drO\vnings reported
and one dro1\'Tling has been repoz:ted this
yea r dur ing Eallter week.
"The victim tumed out to ha\'e an
in(TNlibly high pfrcenta~e of alcohol in
his blood ." Lockabey said.
llr said an~·one who is drunk or
drugged is a good prospect for serious
trouble in the surf.
g,·en if the individuai is rescued.
Lock<tbry stressed that a near~ro\vning
111ay result in pneumonia or. if brtalhing
stops for 1nore thao four to six minutes.
in permanent bra in damage.
To prevent trouble. lifeguards v.•atch
for signs of drug and alcohol use.
"The police update us every year In the
recognition o fdnlg use.· 'Lockabey said.
Ill' said lifeguards call the police if they
spot drug or alcohol violalioos <alcohol is
prohi bi~ on the beaches).
"\\'e handle surfing vi o I at ions
ourselves," Loc;:kabey said. pointing out
1hat lifeguards ;ire e1npowered to~·ve
citations.
lie said most violations occur 11·hc the
'·blackball" flag indicating !h;tt surfing is
prohibited goes up on the lifegua rd
to\\·crs during hours v.·hcn surfing is
usually allo\\cd.
"\\·e ha\'e to do it if there's an
unusually big crG\\rj oo tht brarti and
lhl' surfs present a danger." he said.
"But they scn'.'am about ha\'ing their
hours atken n~·ay and sometimes rtfuse
10 stop surfing."
rn addilion to enforcing the rules
lifeguards frequen tly assist ...,·hen hrart
attarks or injuM~ occur on the beach or
in the bay area.
"~f~t.J)f ou r men are instrue1ors in
cardiopulm ona ry res u s c it at ion · '
Lockabey S3id. "ff there's a problem on
1he beach call us not the fire depart-
int'nt."
The lifeguards also find lost children
nnd help people v•ho fall off cliffs. ~nich
happens mostly in Corona del ;\far and
IO\\'ard Laguna Beach .
"Our 1nen have just been !rained in
rescuing people ·who fall or get stuck
half\A·ay dO\VTI a cliff.•· Lockabey said .
"Our problem is that Ne,vport Beach
has the n1ost varied coastline I know or."
h<: said. "\re have cliffs. retfs and co\'es.
shorl sloping be-aches and Ion;; nnt
bt'achc•s. ~o 11c hJ\e to be prt"par!!d fo r
anything ...
An.1thing also inL·uldes rescuing
injured animals. "I cot bitten by 1l sen!
once end spent 11 traumt-411C day because
nobocty knew whether or not they carry
rable1," Lock a bey said,
He said the anim11ls may be treated at
the mar1ne animal care center. which he
~aid Lil currently building a new facility
in Laguna BeaC'h. 'Dolphins arc turned
over to t.he Navy for behavioral re~Cf\rch.
In the off·senaon, Lockabey said the
lifeguards conduct a flt'C\'entive action
progranl. They pass out printed mat C'rilll
on safely hints oud give talks and sho'"'
films to groups ranging fro·n sc\!001·
chlldren to executivse.
t.ockabcy listed five things a carcful
S\1·immer can do to stav out of trouble.
11 Check "'ith the lifeguards at !he
lo"·er to find out \vhere lho dange r areas
art'.
2) Heed any signs warning of dangrr.
Pay attention to \A.'hether a green 1 saft' I.
yellow {caution) or red (dang erl nag is
flying at the tower.
J) Don't ove rextend your ability if
rou'\'e been eating or if you hal'en't
swum in a while.
41 Don't drlnk alcohol or use drugs and
then go 11wimming.
5\ Don't rely too ntuch oo floating
devices 1r you can't s"·lm.
What If 1•ou're not only careful yourself
but decide yo u want to help save others?
It isn't eas.v to becon1e a lifeguard.
according to Lockabey.
The Ne"'port Btach 1 i f e g u a rd .s
maintain a permanent staff of only 12.
plus a secretary. and hire 96 scosonfll
lifeguards. primarily local high. school
and college studen ts.
Each year inost sun1mcr positions are
filled by the previous summer's staff.
"''ho must requallfy by swimming 1.000
meters in 17 minutes or less.
Applications are accepted, ho"'·evcr.
and a few new lifeguards chose n each
year. ~flnlmum age is 16, with 17 and 18·
year-olds preferred.
An applicant mwit swim 800 to 1.000
yards in the ocean. alternately run and
S\.\'im ror 800 yards, take a \A.Tltten first
aid exam and submit to an orlil
interview.
"\1/e look for some maturity and some
kno\l.1ejtge of the ocean. not for who's the
best pool swimmer," J,.ockabey said .
Candidates then go through intensive
training during Easter .,..·eek and finally
\A.'a\t to fill opcnirtg:a.
According to U>ckabey. \.\'Om tn are
"·e!come to ·compete on· an equal basis
11·Hh men but none have ever applied.
As he pointCd out, tht lifeguard doesn't
ha\·e to be the traditional handsome
young man.
In fact. v.·ith an atltndanct of about 10
million expected this summer at city
bearhes. lifegunrds in :\e1\-port Rrarh
certainly \1;011't have tirne to si t around in
the sun and flex their muscles.
Reject ed
\\.ASl ll NGTO~ 1.\1'1 A federal
jud~e today r\•fuSt·1l 10 d1~11n:-.s .1 )lCrjury
1ndi<'lml·11t :ii;:a111!'I l.t l:\l\ F:d Rei11cckt'
of California ur :-hifl lu~ 11·ial lo tha t
stale.
L'.S. 01s1rict Jud(l.l' H:irtlngton Parker
dt'uicd n1otions b,I' Hl'illt·1·ke 's atton1eys
11·ho con1en1h•d au1011g othl•r things th11t
he had been 1nisled and trapped by
rederal prOSCCUlors Ul!O COOpt!rllting wilh
their i11vestlgnlion.
"The cou rt finds that f\<lr. Reinecke
\\'as unable to point to any 1.ilatement
made to him about a pron1ise of leniency
. . . in the unequ1rocal n1anner he
sug gests." Judge Parker ruled.
"E\'('11 if he belle\'ed u pronuse had
been nlade. I his b\.!li('f rnust bt
buttressed by sub."tanlia l proof ... Such
proof is lacking.'' the judge said .
Reineck~ said in Sacramento loday he
v.·ou ld not v.·i htdra1v fro1n the Republican
race for 'lovernor dSt~pite !he 1nnjor sel·
back in his C'ffort to clear hln1 self.
"Quilling is not a cons idcralion. I an1
not pulling out of this r:.iC<'," llcinecke
told a has1ilv called nc11·s conference.
ReineckC ilso prt'dictcd he \A.'OU!d 111in ,
the primary contest against Controller
Houston Flournoy v.ho has a command-
ing lead in 1he public opinion poll .
lie charged Flournoy \\ im conducting
a million-dollar advertising campaign
financed by "big nioney special inter·
csts."
Rcineocke nnd his attorneys contendtd
that the lieutenant governor freely
provided doc111nents because he brlie.,·ed
speciA I \\'a1ergatc prosecutorg pro1nise<i
he \1·ould not be 1ndiclt•d.
A three-count indictment returned
Apr il J aC'cuses HcinPL·ke of lying ID the
Senate Judiciary Co!lu11ittee about
certatn aspt!cls of hl.~ rol.e in the selectiol\
of San DieRO a!' the site of the
Republican National Con\'ention, It
s11h.'icqut'ntly ...,as transfe rred to r..1ia1ni
Beach, Fla.
An1ong othf'r thin~~. Reinecke i:•
at·cti~td of \'ltrjur~· 11hout \I hen he to ld
,John \. ,\ll!che!l. fornier auorney
general t1nd n1anager of President
!\1xo1J'5 re-<'lrct1on can1pa1gn. about a
$~00.000 offer froni the Shrraton Corp. lo
under~·ritc the con1en11on in San Diego
Wi11cl Gusts Topple Ma11y Gas Bl a ze Co ntinues
At \atural Gas Well
l-lin~l1a \\' lo 1'e ll
.\'larina Efforts
y,·nat is being done on 1hc federal lel'tl
to hrgin rhe dt·\·r!opml'nl (lf the Sant<l
t\na H1rrr \larina 11111bi.·1hc ~ubJC'l'I of a
talk 1'hur:-.duy by L' .S. Hrµ. Andre11·
Jll n.sha"'· Newport Ha1·llo1· Sailboats STOCKTO:'\ rt:Pl \ -F'an1ed Texas
!ire fighter Red Ad.!lir sa~·s it may Lake
tv•o \\'eeks to conquer a nalural gas ...,·ell
fire that sent Hames roaring JOO (cet into
the air. Adair directed an around·the·
clock drilling operation at the site
Sunday . hoping to intercept the shaft
lC'C'ding the burning \.\'ell.
ll1n;;ha11 1 H· '!c11 port Br.:1t'h 1 11 ill
addrc~s !hl' l'1l1tl·n ~ H:1rhor ArPu
Bescarch Tea 1n 1 l'll A HT i a! i . 30 a.n1 . 111
fh{· comn1un1l\' rooin ill Glffidalt• Fedrr;il
Sa1 lngs. 2300 ·11arbor BJ\·d .. Co:-.ta 1-lcsa.
Th<' puhlic is 1111 itcd.
Alxlut '.?O sailboats .,.,·ere capsized b.v
high ~·inds in \'c"·port ilarbor Sunday
<ind three large sailboats had to he
r('scucd outside the harbor. the Orange
Cotmly Harbor Patrol reported tO<lay.
~gt. Dean Co rdell, ha rbor patrol "·atch
co mmander. said small craft y.arnings
\\'t're posted ''but people secn1cd to
ignore them . .,
"From noon to about 3 p.n1. "'·e ...,·ere
extremely busy.'' Cordell said. "four 1
harbor }>'Jt rol boats. a lifeguard boat and
a Coast Guard cutter \\·erc al! on call."
lie said there y,·<1s a steady y,·1nd al 25
niiles per hour \\'ilh 11:usls up to 35 mph.
Despite the many boats ""' h i c h
overturned. Corde!! said there ...,·ere no
nlfljor injuries.
The largest sailboat re~cued v.·as the
lil·foot \Vhitc Cloud owned bv Kenne!h
J.yneh of Los Ang('les. Cordcil said the
boat's auxil iary engine 11·ent out, ils sails
fouled and they had no steering.
The \\'hite Cloud \vas tO\\C'd in from
about t...,·o mites outside the harbor
ent rance channrl by the t:.S. Coast
Guard cutter Point Divide.
A 48-foot sailboat, La Cueca . belonging
to Terry \Yard of Torancc, dismasted
· !>ff Shorecliffs bet...,·ttn Corona de\ 1-tar
and Little Corona beach.
•
Cordell said the mast shrouds becan1e
tangled and hw1g into the water so that it
v•as necessary to cut the stays. He said 1
the harbor patrol to""·ed in the boat's
mast and the lifeguards to\A'ed the
sailboat back Into the harbor.
The third large sailboat. tht 40-foo t
Aegir belonging to an Oceanside man
iden tified only as B. Johauien \A.'as
rescued by the harbor patrol just outside
the harbor entrance after it dismasted.
and lost steering.
•·Jn addition to the 20 O\•ertume<I boats
College Stude1its
At Ora1ig e Coast
To Wi1i $14,000
Orange Coast C.llere studenl! will
receive more Ulan 114.000 In •d.,larlhll"
Afay 29 during ·the colleae's annual
awards banquet.
Honan night will be held at the Tale of
the Wltale restaurant in Newport Beach.
The program beilm at 7. 1
Top !dlolanl1fp donations have been I
~ted by tilt Costt Mtll·Newport
Harbor Lions Club, fl,000: lhe Ebell Club ,
ol Newport Harbor, '850, and the.
Newport Harber Kl\Hnl& Club, f!OO.
More t.han 100 orudMla m IChe<!Uled kl ,
ttOO\'t scholarshlpt. '
In addlllon kl the 1eholanblpo, aervice .
and leade"'11,P ·-and •pod•! 1codemlo dtaUOlll wm be pmenlal. I
\1e rescued. num erous others O\'erturned
but "'('re savC'd by pril·ate citizen~ ...
Cordell said.
NOW SAVE ~
HUNDREDS
cLose-ouT ~ i~tr· ~895°0
GRAND PIANO SALE
WE'RE FAMOUS FOR OUR RECONOITIONEO GRANO PIANOS, ANO RIGHTLY SO. WORLD
REKNOWNED EUROPEAN CRAFTSMEN IN OUR SHOP PRODUCE SOME OF THE FINEST
GRAND PIANOS IN ALL OF THE WEST COAST! CHOOSE FROM MAJOR BRANOSI
OUR a1•T •UY Ll•T
WURLITZER PIANO ~~~n ... •·-··--'395 WURLITZER PIANO ~:~:io. .. --·--··'895
R .. ,;rw .,., '650 HAMMOND 0 GAN 110.112s. .. -• • FAltFISA ORGAN t::"UT ......... -............ 488
HAMMOND PIPER :1':'11 11 0 ...... --.. '999 ' LOWRIY ORGAN ~A ............ -... -'.1295 . . ....... '2175 HAMMOND ORGAN ., .. ,, ........ -•• P1AYIR PIANO:::,.,",., .................. ' 1885
.I
•
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
3400 BRIST01.·COSTA Ml:SA
540-2830
I' f IJUI'' I!" I' f I!'' I' f !'H I'm" !i flU' I!' I!!' I
•
THE KIYIOA-D
OP THE WlSTI
OllAT tl•MI
•111 Dl l.IVll'f '
liOURS
MON..J•1. to AM·9 ,M
SAT1 10-6 'M
SUN1 ll·S 'M
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Ora Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. b7, NO. 140, 2 SECTIONS, 2b PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' MONDAY, MAY 20, 1974 c TEN CENTS
Agreement Reached on Eventual Mesa Parks
\ .
Officials from the City of C.Osta ~lesa
and lhe Ne\\'port-P.lesa Unified School
Uistrlct have shaken hands on a deal
which eventually will give the people of
Costa P.1esa four new parks.
Permission to enter into an cscro1v
agreement with the school district for
three of the four sites '"·ill be requested
tonight by City ri.tanager Fred Sorsabal
'l'l'hen the city c:uuncil convenes at 6:30 in
council chll1nbers, 77 Fair Drive.
Costa Mesa
Up for Sale .
For Sale: One municipal \\·n1er
reservoir. good condition. \\if\1 1.1 acr('I;
of commercial property. A!l offers aOO\·_i
~90.000 considered
An ad something like that 11·il1 be
placed in the next l\1·0 11·ccks by the
Costa ri.tcsa County \\'atcr District \\'hich
no longer need s its rescr\"oir at 16th
Street and ri.1onrovia Avenue.
No one knov:s yet what kind of bidders
it will attract. but one thing is clear-the
11·a1er district doesn't want to demolish it
because that y,·ould cost an estimated
!29.000.
•·1 don't hno1,11 hov.· large it is. hut it"s
big, that's for sure." says v.·ater board
member Al\·in Pinkley. "It v.·as here long
before I came to Costa t-.1Ps.1 and that
\ras more thnn 40 years ago."
Pinkley added th.1t persons v.·ho aren't
interested in buying a reservoir could
obtain one under a long term \caK'.
''\Ile have a second unused reservoir
over oo Placentia Avenue on 1.22 acres ot
property. "1e 11·ould take take that one
down if somebody y,·antcd the property
even though the COS! of demolition is
$39.000." he said.
"\\'e don 't "'ant lo sell the propert.v
because y,·e still 1naintain operations
there and may have lo expand in the
future. But y,·e 'II be interested in leasing
it for a 10-year period or longer."
Also up for grabs is a \Yater district-
ou't'lcd building ncnr 191h Street and
Anaheim Avenue presently occupied by
the Costa ~tesa r-.tunicipal Employes
Federal Credit Union.
Pinkley ~id he believs the credit
union is inlrrcstcd in purchasing the
building and that the water district ,~·ill
be able to lease yet anoiher piece of
property il ov.Tis on Red Hill Avenue
and Bristol Street to a lu1nbtryard.
Haig Report Denied
• NE\V YORK f AP) -Nev.·s~-eek
magazine says While ltouse chief of staff
Alexander '-1. flaig Jr. was so upset by
the Watergate tape transcripts that he
told friends he had to "back up and re-
evaluate" his job. But in Key Biscayne,
Fla., an associate of Haig said Sunday
that report was "totally false."
Orange Cout
Weather
High clouds are on the horizon
for Tuesday. but It will be sunny
and warmer, according to the
weather service. Highs in the UJ>-
per 60s at the beaches to the mid-
70S Inland. Overnight lows 42·52.
INSIDF. TOD!\ \I
President Nixon puthed his
national health h1$1trance plan
over the notion's airwave1 todaJI,
dtclarmg that th• end to price
control• mat1 boost doctor bills
b11 22 percent this vear. See
~tort1. Page 4. '
... 11111 I L. ff.. .. ,. II
C•*-"le t C11MlfW 11·1-_ " c............ If --. ....... , .... ............. •· ,...... tt.U
""""'" 11 ...............
A study session at 5:30 p.m. in the first
noor city hall conference room will
precede the regular meeting.
Sorsabal will inform the council that an
agreement has been reached on the
purchase price of four former Newport·
~1csa school sites which were offered as
surplus by the district last year.
Costa r-.1esa voters last Sept. 11 \•oted
to acquire the surplus school sites as
part or a $3.9 million parks and open
space OOnd issue. But the price had tx•e11
at issue.
The negotiated prices of the proµerlies
are:
-$273,000 for fi\'e acres at the end of
Tanager Drive near the Costa !\tesa Golf
and Country Club
-$670,320 for 2n acres off Estancia
Drive adjacent to the FairviC\V Rcgion'.l\
P<irk property
-$176.~ for eight acres lying
in1mcdiately next to the 20 acres off
l::stancia Drive
--$411.200 for 10 acres off Sunflower
A\'enue near Bear Street in north Costa
~tesa.
The Sunno1,1:er Avenue property will
nol enter Into escrow immediately but
\1'ill sometin1e later this year, city
offiri<ils said.
Because of tel·hnicalities involved in
the lransfer of the properties, it is-:
@
unlikely that any of the surplus school
sites will be in Costa !\lesa's poses~ion
before the eDd of the current fiscal year.
city officials said.
The city manager also v.·HI ask council
men1bers toolght to approve spending
.'38.346 for the relocation of 152 trees.
~lore than half of the trees arc locat('d
in the ~lcsa de! ~far tract where citv
cre•1·s are currently reconstruc!ing roads
and side~·alks. tlon1eov.•ners are being
gi\·en the option of having their parkway
trees replant.ed on their own property or
replaced by smaller trees.
Sixty-eight of the trees "'ill be moved
to local parks from Fair\·ieu• Road where
a widening project is scheduled to get
under u·ay this summer. The trees are in
the \ray of bicycle paths planned lo
accomn1odate t"·o-v.·heel traffic from
Orange Coast College and Costa i\tesa
IUgh School.
Ill ? • woo
Rate Up Again
-113/,i.% Noiv
i'\EYt' ''ORK (AP) -Firsl
J'\ational Bank o! Chicago, the
nation's ninth largest comn1crcial
bank, todily announced it u·as
r71ising ils prime lending rate fo a
record ll~~ pe~cerit from 11.40
percent effective Tuesday.
The rate tops the 11 1-: percent
announced Friday by a numhcr of
1najor commercial banl-:s. including .
the country's three largest. Bank of
An1eri ca. First l\alional City and
('ha~,(' ~1anhattan.
Chauncey F.. Schmidt. president
of the Chicago bank. said in making
the anoouncement thRI he expcc1ed
an easing "before long" in the
prime rate.
Police Officers
In Costa Mesa
Win Promotio11
Four members of the Costa fifesa and
Irvine Police Department are now
wearing ne'v stripes and ir.signia on their
uniforms. following a recent series of
promotions.
Jn·inc Detecli\'c Robert Lennert. a
\'eteran inves1igator, has been pronlOled
to the rank of sergeant ir: the
department.
The department's Resources Bureau.
"ilich deals with training, research and
community relations, has two promotions
\l.ilh Lt. Jack Calnan and Sgt. Tom Lazar
rising from sergeant and patrolman
ranks respectively.
A fourth promotion elevated Sgt. Tim
Holbrook from patrolman and he will
now be assigned to supervisory patrol
activities.
Two Granted Asylu111
LISBON, Portugal fAP) -The
deposed leaders of Portugal, Premier
~larcello Caetano and Presklent America
Thomas, left the Portuguese island of
f!Iadeira today for Brazil, a government
spokesman satd. __ ... ____ _
,-
Nixon Told
To Give Vp
64 Tapes
\\'AS Hl:\'GTON fA P) -U.S. Distrir!
Judge John J. Sirica today ordered that
President ~ixon tum over by :\1ay 31 Tho.:
tapes of 64 conversations subpoenaed hy
spc<:ial prosecutor Leon Jav.•orski.
But Sirica said he ...,·ould s!Jv hi<;
decision if the President's lav.•ycrs appeal
the decision. as expected.
The tapes are being sought bv
Jav.·orski as evidence for the \\'atergatc
col'er-up conspiracy trial in\'O]\·ing seven
former \Vhite House and Nixon re-
election cOmmiUee aides.
The trial is seheduled to be held before
Slrica in Septe1nbcr.
Sirica ordered the \llhite I-louse 'o
prepare an index and analysis of v.·hat is
contained on the tapes to be turned over.
including any claims the President 1vants
to n1ake to keep portions of the tapes
c:unfidcntial.
Sirica fotlo\\"ed a similar course la~t
~·ear v.·hen i\"ixon's la11"ycrs fought a
subpoena for the !apes of n i n e
conversations. In !hat case. Sirica upheld
claims o( pri\·ilege for tv.·o con1plctc
conversations and portions of a third.
"The originals of all subpoenaed iten1s
v.·ill accompany the index and analysis
when transmitted to the court." Sirica's
nine-page order Jsaid. "In addition. a
lieparate tape recording -copies fron1
ISte WATERGATE, Page 21
IIi11sl1a\v to Tell
Mari11a Efforts
What is being done on the fed eral Je\'C I
to begin the development of !he San!a
Ana River A-1arina will be the subjec! of a
talk Thursday by U.S. Rep. Andrew
Hinshaw.
Hin.shaw (R-Newport Beach ) u·i!I
address !he Citizens Harbor Area
Research Team ICHARTI at 7:30 R.m. in
the community room at Glendale Federal
Savings. 2300 Harbor Blvd .. Costa r.tesa.
The public is invited. ·
••
ANGUISHED FATHERS -The Rev . Geor&e F. Hall, ilefll pastor
of St. John's Lutheran Church in Lincolnwood, Ill .. and Randolph
/\., Hearst express sorrow after Friday night SL.A slayings. Hall
learned that his daughter Camilla Was killed in holocaust while
Jlearst got worq that his daughter PatMcia was not an1ong the six
victims. Additional stories, Page 5. ---·-----------. ------------
Boo11 to Goat Hill'!
Cof c HeaI'S F an'gI'OUnds'
Cycle Speedway Operator
By DOUG FRITZSCHF.
01 111• 01lly Piiar Sl•li
As tr i de t .... ·o-v.·heeled nitromcthane-
furlcd bon1bs, \\•ilh steel-clad feet and
skidding tires flinging loose dirt. Costa
r.1csei·s speedway "glRdiators" blast their
\1·a~· around around the tight fairgrounds
track e~·ery Friday.
The 155 pound motorcycles, lacking
such niceties as brakes and
transmission~. act as little more than
frames for the 500 cubic centimeter
engines.
A layer of brightly colored leather, a
fiberglass helmet and a few inches of
space separate the skidding cyclists as
they jockey-frequently sliding sideways
lo keep their n\achines upright-around a
155 yard track "little bigger than your
li ving room."
Four laps and SS seconds later, 10,000
fans await the next heat.
Harry Oxley, president of the
International Speedv.•ay, Inc .. at Orange
County Fairgrounds, described the
rEbirth of speedway motorcycle racing to
a Cosla '-1esa Chamber of Commerce
audience Friday.
The sport. Oxley said. began at the
Sydney, Australia. Showgrounds in 1923
as a means of "'arding off bankruplcy.
It has grown to draw :Kl million fans a
\\'eek to 20 English race tracks and has
the biggest draw of any sport in Polahd
and Czechoslovakia.
On the shortest such motorcycle track
in the world, the Costa Mesa speedway
has the largest weekly draw of anv
nl<Xor event in the United States, he said.
11f\1ore than 300,000 fans will walk
through the turnstiles this year," he said,
"and for a little Goat Hill operation,
tliat's not bad.''
The thrust of the speedway's activities,
he 'said, is lo make motorcycle racing a
family spectator sport.
"We want you to get what you don't
expect at a motorcycle race. You expect
dirty leathers on dirty men In a dirt
facility. We're doing everything passible
to keep the place clean in an effort to
make it the kind o( plat'e the whole
family will want to come back to," he
said.
Which brings up the streaking incident
of a few weeks past which he termed ooe
of two incidents ln the track's six-year
history he felt a need to uplain.
"These screwballs started racin'g
around with no clothes on. Well. the
police had • !!Ort of hands-elf policy with
streakers-I guess everybody does.
"But we had one irate fan who was
intent' on doing bodily hann to these in·
ctiv1duals. SO, the oolice broke It up. "t took some nack _from lhe police.
~-tflltf ' ,
Pueru. and.lrltnda of 98 graduating aenlon wal<h
commellcenlent ce"mony at Southern C1U!Otnia
College In Ceola ~1 The coll'!&•· ~ ol.ie.t In
Orsngt COunt,y, hild 111 02nd &r*dUJ.tloo .... ~
Saturila1. J1eUglous Ulljon Isaac Canales of Cmbq
and Mark M,cLean of Saugus, spOkb durlrtg the bac·
calaureata tnd commencement. Bolh have won
graduate scholarships to ·the Harvard Divinity
School
And, I guesr. lhe pollc. took 1on1e nak
from the publl~ And the 1<ven streak<rs
went home as happy 11 clams at 'high
tide. '1
Tbe nreaklng inclden\ made up for
50llWl ol th• la<k ol publicity Oxley
complatned ol. While the track dra'l!I a
1llillY fans IS Ice hockey in Los Anades.
• (Soe CYCLES, Pa11 I)
I
Drag11et
Sp1'eading
F 01' Heiress
LOS A~GELES (LPfl -A v.'hite
\i:oman. believed pos..'>ihly to be Patricia
liearst and l\\'O black men. offered $500
to rent a Hollyv.·ood apart1nent for 24
hours and one of the men lunged at the
landlady \\"ith knife v.hen she refused,
police reported today.
A dragnet for the 20-year'<Jld heiress,
no\1' listed as armed and dangerous and
liable to be shot if she resists, v1as
spread O\'Cr the metropolitan Los
_<\ngeles area after slit members of the
Symbionese Llbcration Army ,~·ere killed
r~riday.
A spokesman for the FBI said the
ltoUywood incident "'as one of a number
MORE HEARST STORIES
APPEAR TOOAY ON PAGE S
of reports coming in from excited
citizens about the whercaOOuts of ~1iss
llearst and that they had no evidence to
link it directly to the wanted girl.
A report by the Los Angeles Police
Department. ho"·ever. listed the incident
<is ''possible SLA coMection."
An LAPD officer SRid the incident
occurred ;:round 9:30 Sunday night at an
apartment building on New Hampshire
A.\·enue in the Hollyv.·ood area.
The report said the trio ...,·ere carrying
a shotgun, one of the men had a sv.·itch-
blade knife and that they "possibly" had
hand guns. ~1iss Hearst "'as reported to
"li've left the shootout house in a black
\ (See HEARST, Page %1
I
* * * Hearsts Plead
For Daug l1ter
To Tun1 Self 111
HILLSBOROUGH IAP I -Randolph
and Catherine Hearst today begged their
daughter Patricia, considered "armed
and extremely dangerous,'' to abandon
the Symbionese Liberation Army and
give herself up.
"! hope that she \\ill give herself up
and come home." lilrs. Hearst told a
news conference. "I just hope everybody
n•i ll remember that physically Pally i.s
still a kidnap victim. All I can do is hope.
and pray that God "'i ll bring her home
again."
f{er father added: "l hope: that she \1·ill
give herself up, too, but at this point in
time I don't believe that she will gi\·e
herself up to come home.'' n.e Hearsts \\'ere stunned Sunday
night "ilen they learned their daughler
\\-'as named as a dangerous fugitive and
sought by hundreds of la...,•men after six
SLA members died in a fiery shootout
Friday in Los Angeles.
Speaking at their home here~ the
Hearsts again said they believe their
daughter has been brainwashed or" the
victim of n1ind control.
Hearst said he thinks she "honestly
believes now that she's a member of the
group this sort of brainwashing Ls not an
unheard of thing."
Asked if he believed his daughter
V.'OUld v.illingly retun. Hearst said: "11
she believes in the cause she says sh,
does, she's much better off and much
more imJX>rtant to that cause free than if
she Is killed or being put in jail for a
number or years.
"But If she does believe ln this she's 1
lot better of! being able lo write and talk
and tr•••! and espouse the p1111o,.,p1iy
wbtcb she thinks ehe believes In al this
time than she It being with the Harrlaes
or in prban." Hearst said.
Miss Hearst is being llO\lgh\ with
•mpectcd SLA memben Wll1111n' 1nd
Emi\yllarrls.
. '
_z2•1L v PILOT
lttdict11te1at Sto1ads
Reinecke Denied
Change of Venue
\\'ASHINGTON IAPI -A federal
Judge today refused to disn1iss a perjury
indictment against Lt Gov. Ed Reinecke
of California or shift his trial to thal
.;tale.
l..".S. District Judge Barring1 on Parker
denied motions by Reineckc's attorn('ys
"ho contended an1ong other things that
he had been mii.lcd and trapped by
fC'dera\ prosecutors into cooperating v1ith
thrir in\'estiga!ion.
"The court finds that r.tr. Reinecke
"·as unable to point to any i:;tatement
n1ade to him about a pron11se of leniency
. . in lhc unequivocal manner he
suggests," Judge Parker ruled. .
"Even if he believed a promise had
been n1ade. this belief must be
buttressed by substantial proof ... Such
proof is lacking." the judge said.
Reinecke said In Sacramento !oday he
11oold not ...,ihtdra\\' from the fippubll can
race for governor dscpitc the rnajor set·
f'ro1n Pqe J
HEARST ...
area of the citv \\'ith 111·0 black men
hours bl.>fore !he.gun battle Fr1dav.
'f'he report said the land.lady told police
thal one of the men altacked her \\ith a
knife \\·hen she refused to rent !he
apartment for 24 hours and cut through
the fol~ of her skirt. She 1\as not
injured.
The U.S. auomev's office ..,,. as
preparing to file 11 ·coryiplaint in San
Francisco today charg_ing J\liss Jlearst
and l\\"O kno11·n ml'.:1Tihc'rs of the SLA still
al large with violat ions of federal Ja1\·s
pen.aining to -possession and use of
auton1atic \\"Capons.
\\"illian1 A. Sullivan. as:.is1.1n! director
of the FBI, ~;iid J\li:>!> l-l e:irst \\:is the
"·on1an •,\"ho leaned out !he front 1~·inaow
of a red and ·.rhi!c Volksv•a~en "an and
opened fire 1vith a JO.calit5er carbine
Thursday afternoon. as Slu\ n1ember
\\"illiam Harris struggled with a clerk at
:'llt"l"s Sporting Goods Store in lngle"·ood.
Harris y,·as accui.c."<l of shorlifting a pair
of socks.
··She is a federal fugitive and if she
resisls arrest she "·in be treated like any
other federal fugiti\"e," Sullivan :-aid.
She is considered am1cd and
dangt'rous. he said. and if locntrd .she
'Aili be told to surrender immediately. If
she trles to shoot. he said , ''\\le v.·ould
undoubtedly shoot back."
The FBI said an agt>nt \\"ho bclict•cs hi<>
life is endangered 1Tiay open fire on a
suspect.
tiiiss Hearst "·as kidnapcd fro111 her
San rrancisco apart1nent Feb. 4. She
later renounced her ronTier Ille and said
she 11·as joinin~ forces \\"ith her
k.idnapcrs.
But the FBI maintained that she v.·as
for~ to make the statcn1cnt. Even alte r
she ..... ·as photographed \\'ith a machine
gun during a bank robbery. the F'BI said
she \\'<'IS an unwilling partieipant.
five persons. including Don a I d
Defreeze, 30, ,,.,..ho as head t the SLA
called himself "General field ~tarshal
Cinque," v;ere killed in the nan1cs and
gun fire, jXllice said. A sixth body. that of
Camilla !tall. 29, ..... as found Sunday.
Jamc!i Johnsrin. 18, \\·ho lived ;it the
hoine destroyed in the ~unfight. told !ht'
Los Angeles Times !hat ;\liss Ht•arst flC'd
frorn the house Jess lhan 24 hours be!orc
the shootout.
Ch;irgcs ;:i~ainst Johnwn's mother.
Chri.~tinc Johnson. 35. of harboring
fug:tives. \\"!"'re dropped Sund;iy ni~ht and
she \\·as relea sed. police :-aid today.
Johnson said i\li~s He,1rsr r.ild him
Thursda~· '·The) ·11 l1avc tu kill n1e beiorc
I go back.·'
back in his effort 10 eh~ar himself.
-"Q uitting is not a consideration . I an1
not pulling out of this ra ce." Reinecke·
told a ltastily called ne\\·s conrerence.
Reinecke also predicted he \\'OUld \\1in
the primary contest ai;?ainst C.Ontroller
Houston Flournoy who has a oontmand-
ing lead in the public opinion poll
He charged F'loumoy 111m conducting
a million-dollar ad,·er1i~1ng can1paign
financed by ''big n1onry special inter-
ests ...
Reinecke and his attorneys rontcnded
that the lieutenant go\"ernor freely
provided documents because he believed
special \\latergate prosecutor1; prontised
he \\"Ould not be indicted.
A three-count indlctmcn! returned
April 3 accuses Rcinerke or lying to the
Senate Judiciary Co1nn1ittee about
certain aspects of his role in the ~election
of San Diego <is the '"site of ihe
Republican i'ational Con\"Cntion. It
sull.<;equently \\'as transferred to Mianii
Ucach. Fl:i.
Aniong othrr lhings. Reinecke is
accu!ied of perjury about \\"hen he told
John N. ~!itchcll. fortner a!lorney
general and n1a11a~l'.'r of President
Nixon's re·elet'tion can1paign, nbout a
$400.000 offer from the Shera1on Corp. to
undenvrite the con\"rnlion in San Dicgn.
Heinecke is a candidatr for governor of
California, and is opposed In the June 4
prirTiary by state controller Houston !.
Flournoy. II~~ trial is scheduled to begin
July 15.
tie petitioned the court to move the
trial to San fo'rancisco or Sacra1nento on
ground-; that it would be an undue burden
for him to bring defense \Vilnesses" to
\\'ashingtun. and that there had been
prejudicial publicity in the c11pital.
Judge Parker said there will be
fncorwi enences for Reineck <:! if he l!.
1<chedu!e::.l 10 stand tri;d here bul he found
!hat they ''are not unduly oppressive ur
burdenson1e." '
Parker said he exan1incd in ch<1n1bers
a financial net \\."Orth stalcnu.•nt and
income tax returns \\"hich Heinrc~e
subn1itted, and did not agree that the
1'Xpcnse of a trial in \Vashington \\'Ou!d be
an unsupportable financial burdrn.
The judge said a transfer to Ctlifornia
\\"OUld probably generate BA much
pretrial publicity there as \\·ill occur 111
\\'ashington because Rrinecke is a \\'Cll·
known political figure in the state.
Judge Parkrr said th at if the situation
c·hanges bety,·een now and July 15 "I ~ill
be extremely sensj.tive to this n1attrr
J n1v1:e!f 1ri1! take strps
unsolicltrcl'; if it appt..•ar<. that it n1ay be
impossible to obtain a fair !rial here,
Meeting Slated
Over llousin.r ~
For Vetera11~
'Veterans affairs officials from Orrin~c
Coast Colle~e have scheduled a suntnut
meeting 1\·ith ~local rcallors ~l.:iy 29 to
help ease !he housing shortnge.
All rcallors from the HarOOr ,\rca arc
invited to attend the 8 p.m. session in the
student center.
··Housing for vetrrani; lil"ing in !his
nrca is c.'l.:trrtnely tigh!."' !>nys ~1is.~ S.1Uy
A!lton of the OCC Veteran's Affairs
Office. "\Vr are hoping !o build a r::ip1x-rt
1\·ith local rea[tors and case lhe
problem.''
She sald the lypcs of t"Ctera ns
attending OCC range fro1n :;irH!le vet.~
ffirollctl in day classes and subsist solely
on their GI lx>nefit..c; to n1arricd \"C1S
11·orking full lime during the d:.iy and
attending night classes.
,
WINS EARLY FREEDOM
Laguna Niguel'• Porter
Herbert Porter
Freed Earlv •
Fro111 Prison
t~ron1 \\"ire Serrirts
l!erberl L. Porter of Laguna Kiguel.
forn1er scheduling chrector or the
Conunittee to Re.elect the President.
1vas rclcal'ed fron1 the F e de r a I
Correctional Institution at Lompoc three
days early for good beha\·ior. o
The ,\·arden's office said Porter. 36.
"ho pleadrd guilty lo lying to the FBI
aOOut the disposition of fund s oJ the
comn1ittee. "as released Friday after
son·ing 27 days of a ~chcduled 30-da;;
~entence.
Porter. son·in·la1v of the Arthur Brlgge~
of ~lonarch Terrace, entered th e prison
April 22 arter l"Olunt11rily arriving at the
prison gate:> early to at·oid reporters.
II~°' i;eQtencc included one year of
probation arier the shor! incarceration.
Porter's sentence stem111ed fro1n a
storv he ad111i1tcd he told involving hot1·
$HXi,ooo gi\en to con1·ictcd \\'atergatc
conspirator G. Gordon Liddy ,,.,.·as
dislributed.
Origihally Porter told the r·s1 the
ntoney went to conserl"ati\"e students. lie
later told the Senate \\'a t e r g a I c
Committee he had giren the money to
Liddy.
llt' said he n1ade up thr story at t11c
11rging !"If deputy ca1npaign director Jch
Stuart :-.tagrucit'r.
When h\' rorrectrcl his original
!ilatement. T'orter said the reasons lie
1old !hr he ""·ere rcl~ted lo appeals to his
\"anitl" and to his lo1·alt\" to the Prcsiclcnt. ·r11e Grnera l ACcoUnting Of f i cc .
1ratchdog <irn1 of Congress, .~aid the
8100 .000 1\aS used lo ,p:1y off the
\IJ;itergatc 1\·jretappcrs after the i r
arrest~.
Porter. his \\ ifc Carol. and thclr three
ehildrcn solrl ihrir \\lashlngton, D.C.
hon1e last ~pring and have befn Ji,·ing 1
1r1th the Brigg~es in LagunJ :'>:iguel C\"er
i.1ncc.
From Page 1
(~\-(LES ...
it docsn·r get nearly the an1ount of
puhllcity. he said.
l\oise. the subject of some recent
publi{'i1y ;ihoul !he track. wasn't
men!ioncd b1· Oxle,·.
The !;i st nOise at ·the lunchC'on "·as ihc
n1~tle of cotnp!imcntary tickets being
distributed
'·She told nie shr "as l\'1lh !!1('111 -on
their side," said Johnson .
llr !-..'l id \Ii~~ lli•arst \\il!i 11e,1ring :ci
pistol and 11antf'd_ to i;ta.v ,,.,.·ith 1he Olhrr~.
but 1hc.1· apparentlv s~·nl hrr a\\·ay to
ke<·p ht>r rrorn being 1n\"ol1·ed 1n !hr
gunfight.
Cronkite Def ends Farr
OIAHGI COAST '-'
DAILY PILOT
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Nt"'f"l'l •• 1>•• \')' .. '•" ·~ ',·f
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\,
•
Over Freedom of Press
LOS A:\GELES 1:\P 1 -Trle,·ision
newsman \\.a\t<>r Cronkite testified in
Supeorior Coun herr today Iha! if
reporter \\'illinn1 Fa rr 11erc fort"t'd to
reve al his secret ncYIS so11rces. "l l \\"OU!d
be another nail in the coftin of freed()!Tl
of SJ>t'CC h and press.·· .
Tt'stifying in Farr's defensr. _Cronk !tc
said he believes th at "any JOumahsl
\\'Orth his salt \\·ould hold to hii;
confidence" with a soum:: c\·en if it
means the martyrdom of going lri jail •or
an extended period.
Cronkite said a reporlrr's pri\'ilege of
keeping ne.\\'S sources secret frequently 1s
the key to discovering inlonnation about
go\·emment corruption.
"If the "·eb of secrecy that all areas of
f(O\'ern1nen t attempt to cloak their
acti,·ities \\-ere oever pierced. freedom of
press u·ould be a mockery in this
country." he said.
Farr called as his first y,•itness Jack
t\elson. an investi~atlve reporter In the
Lo~ Angeles Times \V11 shln gton bureau .
!';elf!On said t.tl1tt he \\"Ould have actrd
exacUy as f>'arr did in refusing to reveal
a confidential source.
"Jn \\"ashing1on today, you could not do
in\'estlgatlve reportlog If )OU did not deal
witb CfuUdcntlal iO Urct!,'' he said.
Cronkite. 11 one or Be\'eral top rtporter1
achedulod IO appe1r at the c:ourt b<•rln&
to determine "''helher Farr, Who has
"":"od 46 days in jail, can be iniprboncd again.
Farr's planner! u·itnes.o; list also
included :';'BC-TV \\"h ite Hou s e
corert"$OOndent Tom nrokav; and !';ew
''ork Times' San Francisco bureau ch ief
\\'a!Jact Tumtr. Nelson and Turner are
Pulitzer Prize winn<'r~ .
The issue on \\-"hich they u'ere asked to
testify is whethtr r·arr. in refusing to
reveal sources of a story during the
~lAnSOn tria l, \\"as follo\\-·lng a n
established ethical and moral principle of
journalism.
The case, which has been in litigalion
more than three years, involves a
demand by !ltanson trial judge Charles
H. Older that Farr tell him which tu·o of
six attorneys in that trial violated a court
order by giving Farr infonnatlon for a
story. farr ref\Jsod, sai1ng he promised
his sources confidentlallty and could not
bn!ak th& t lr1Jst.
Further complieatlng the situaUon
\('ere the actions of the attorneys, who
took the stand before Superior Court
Judge Older and s.~rt they were not l~e '°",..,· This made two of them eligible
for per)W')' c)larges IC Farr namod them.
Wlth Older running against two
opponetlts for reelection and one of the
nltOl"Jley11. Vincent Bugliosi, a candidate
ror the state Democratic ~ttomey
general nomlnatk>n. the ea90 has alao
become 11 polltcaJ Issue.
A neutral judge -Wllllam !Avlt -11
assigned IO the n~w hearing and Farr 11
... klni a decision 0<1 a question which
c:ould end the UtigaU0<1. '
Man l\.illed
h1 Bridge
Auto Crasl1
A head-011 collision on Ne\\'JX)rt Beach's
narro1v Ne,.,·port Bay Bridge on Pacine
Coast lligh\\-'ay Sunday night clai1ned Uie
Jlfe of a Seal Beach man.
Robert C. Bryden, 31, of 219 central
Al'e., u•as en rl)LJ!e home from his .}ob as
1nanagcr of an Albertson's market in El
1'oro "·hen the fatal accident occurred.
ln\•esligRtion was continuing today into
factors tl:at apparently caused the
headon cr;ish, which also Jnjured the
dril"er of the oihcr car in1·0Jved.
She \\"as idcnlif1ed as ~trs. Arleo
r.urney. 40. of 122t Starboard \l.'ay,
t-:e"l'·port Beach.
Ne\vport lleach Police Officer Jim
Donaldson said the al"cldent w as
;ipparen!ly caused \'then Bryden's small
foreign pickup truck suddenly swerved
rron1 \\'estboond Janes of the narro1v
bridge into oncoining lanes .
He died at ! 1 :30 p.n1. at lfoag ~le1noriat
llospital. less than one hour after 1hc
collision in 11hich he suffered head
injuries.
Investigators said Mrs. Gurney \\'RS
trealcd at 1hc h1.lspita1. \\'here six stitches
11 ere taken !o clo~c a head lac('ra1ion,
~ind released to reco1•cr 11t hon1e.
~o skidn1arks 11·crr round at U1e scene
and until furth<'r in\·esUgation, police
uere at a loss to l'Xplain 1vhat may ha\·c
1:<lUSf'd Urrden to cro~s the center line.
The collision \\as the latest in a long
series of accidents -both fatalities and
fcnd('r·bcndcrs-11·h1ch hal"e occurred 011
or near the nar ro\\' old bridge.
/I. cilizcns· co111n11ttcc apJ>cinted to
~!udy 1\·ays to m1prO\"C the situatlon is
due on J11ne J to make recomn1endations
to the ~e1o.·port Bench City Council.·
Fro1u Pag(< l
\\i A TERGA TE . ••
1he originals -conl<Hning only 1hose
portion-; of COlll"erSAl!OnS s i II Ce
transcribed and niade public should be
prC'pared and deli\"ered along l\'ith the
subpot:n~ed materials."
J<t\\"Orski a.oiked !he court April 16 to
issue n subpoen.'.l ror the li4 C<ln1·f'rsatiC1ns
spann111g a }l'<Jr·s period between June
20. 1972 and June 4. J9i3. Siric.'.l ordered
!he subpoena t\\·o days later and on ~fay
l !hr \\"h1te House a-~ked that !he
~11bpocn:l be quashed.
~lca111\hilc. another federal judge.
sayin$!: the FBI .. play~ cat and mouse.,
1111h p.-ople it i<. inl"e.stigating. today
inlhrated he is consiclcring disn1i.'ising
enc charge brought ag:iin"t forn1cr
prcsiclt"nti!!l aide .John D. Ehr!ich1Tian in
the \\'hi!e House Plumbers case.
US. Jli~trict Judge Gerh11rd A. Gescl!
r.:ii:-c,i Ille que:.11011 tn rcfrrence 10 a
charge 1hat Ehrlichn1a11 lied lo the F'B!
about his kno~·ledgc of the \\1litc llou.~
Plumbers unit's in,·estigation of the
Pentagon Papers case.
OUR ANNUAL
' ' ., ,,_., ... ,,
' ' . fl . . \~ : . . .. '
LARRY CAPUNE TElLS GOVERNOR ABOUT UPCOMING VOYAGE
Newport Paddleboarder, Laguna Equestrienne• Ask Reagan Aid
Reagan Co11ies to Coast
To View Site for Park
By f.EOTl'GE LETDAL
01 tl!t Ot•IY P'ilel Jlell
f.oremor Ronilld Reagin came to tht'.'
Orange Coast today to lobby for supix>rt
of the June 4. $250 n1illion state parks
bond issue.
H~ left havini: bt>en lobbied by hro
special intcrrs1 groups who arri,·ed by
land and by sea.
Three Laguna Be.'.lch girls pulled up on
horst'back to the cli Hsid<' -r"·s co1lfcr-
rnce just sou tti of Olrona del Pitar to
dt'li_\"er personalty a rietilion. Rt>ar;an
read, it to !lie assembl<'re of dignitarirs
anrl ne"l'·smen .
."There have been horses here for the
last 5'I years. \\'e hope there "''ill bi:: :iri
rqucstrlan center i11 the nc~· state park
that v.-ill occupy this land." Rrag~1n said
!he petition requestNi.
"rm going to lobby for it." ncagan
said. recalling a cavalry sentiment :
"~othing is !\Cl good for the in~irle of a
n1an or a \\·oman as the out.side of a
horse.··
Th e gllvernor said he 11 ould pa':. thr
j'.lt'lition on and "·vrk 10 keep hor~1·s
"11hm the a1ncn1ties the 1600.;icre slate
park n1ay offer 1f the bond 1~suc pro-
\"ides the S7.6 rTI1ll1on nct"<led to h11 ~ 11
rrnn1 !he [rt inc Co1npan).
The lobb)ist for surfin~ 1n1ercsts "l'ho
can1e to !hr prtss CClllft.'rt'l\Ce hy
surfboard "l'<1s niurathon paddler Larry
Capune. Ji. of ll.1lboa J<;IJ11d.
The su11·f:1nncd. salt-c:tkcd ~urfrr.
l"t>!eran of marathon paddle~ including
one from ~e~'J>Ort. Rhode 1_,1and, to
Florida. dre~· consider<1h!r :1tten!irJn
garbt.-d 111 a s1o.·1n1 suit ;11n1d~t the !>'Ill and
cGat-clad t:ro1\d.
C;.ipune carl"ir<I a p!J~lll' 1\alcrproofrd
1xiuch cPnta lnin~ lill·ra1urc ou!l1n1nR h1'i
dc·sires for prcser\"a\1on of thr statr·s
prin1e :<ttrfini,: beitch.
(.:ip1111t' told !he go1ernor he \\"Clu\d lik"
to sec 3.~1nile lr\•ine Coast i>eeomt' a
st;i1e beach. "Thio; coast i!i a hrcathrr fur
<ill t1·ho llvc inland ." Capunc contended.
NOW '
SAVE
HUNDREDS
REDUCED. ·
SPECIALS
ALL GRANDS sa gsoo
CLOSE-OUT START AT. • •
GRAND PIANO SALE
WE'RE FAMOUS FOR OUR RECONDITIONED GRAND PIANOS. AND RIGHTLY SO. WORLD
REKNOWNED EUROPEAN CRAFTSlo!EN .JN OUR !;HOP P"ODUCE SOME OF THE FINEST
GRAND PIANOS IN AU OF THE WEST C~ASTI CHOOSE FROM MAJOR BRANDS!
ou• ••• , •UY Ll•T .
WURLITZER "ANO r:.1:. •..... --·-4395
HAMMOND ORGAN::::.·.~~.··-·-·· '650
LOWREY ORGAN!'.~ .. ··-·-.. ·-'1295.
HAMMON!> ORGAN ¥1.l~f.Z1 .... -'2175
' ' .
wuRLITZER "ANO r:.::.o ................ '895
FARF154 QRGAN ::l.lf.UT ....• -............. '488
AAMMtJNP PIPER~:: ........ --··-· ... '999
PLAYER PIANO~r.'.,, .................. -.'1885
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
3400 BRISTOL-COSTA MESA
S.0·2830 •
HOURS
MOH •• ,11 •
i' ~·~''I !' 1 !~' '' 'l!U 1.1riJ01!•1!1u' 'I'' 1 i' ''n~ THE KIYIOARD
Of Tiil WISTI
TO AM·9 PM
SAT• TN 'M
SUN: 11·5 'M
(
•
I
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7